Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
PR3291.A1 .M34 1680 | The Maidens lamentation, or, An Answer to the seamen and souldiers last farewel to their dearest jewels ... to the tune of I am so deep in love, or, Cupids courtesie. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 .M35 | The maltsters daughter of Malborough [sic] containing a pleasant discourse between her mother and she, about the weary burthen of a troublesome maiden head, concluding with the mother's consent to the daughter's satisfaction : To the tune of, The Scotch hay-makers. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M35 | The maids complaint for want of a dill-doul this girle long time hath in a sickness been, which many maids do call the sickness green : I wish she may some comfort find, poor soul, and have her belly filled with a dill doul, : To a new tune, called, The dill doul, or Women. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M35 1670 | The maids delight; or, Divers pleasant love-songs full of mirth. To pleasant new tunes. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M35 1678x | The Maids ansvver to the batchelors ballad. Or, Love without remedy. Thou scriber! unto whom the vulgar crew ... To the tune of; No more silly cupid: or, The Duke of Monmouth's jig. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M35 1686x |
[T]he Maidens frollick: or, [A brief] relation how six lusty lasses has prest full fourteen taylors on the backside of St. Clements, and other adjacent places. [T]o the tune of an Orange. The Maidens frollick: or, A brief relation how six lusty lasses has prest full fourteen taylors on the backside of St. Clements, and other adjacent places. To the tune of an Orange. |
2 |
PR3291.A1 M35 1700 | The maidens desire. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M36 | The man in the moon drinks clarret [sic] as it was lately sung at the Curtain Holy-Well : to the same tune. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 .M36 1679 | The Man of destiny's hard fortune, or, Squire Ketch's declaration concerning his late confinement in the Kings-Bench and Marshalsea, vvhereby his hopeful harvest was like to have been blasted : together vvith his happy deliverance ... and several choice observations political and moral, relating to the present juncture of his Eminences arduous affairs. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M36 1682 | The Manner of the King's tryal at Westminster-hall, by the High Court of Justice, from January the 24th to January the 27th, 1648 also the manner of his being put to death at White-hall, near the Banquetting-house, on the 30th day of January, 1648, with his speech made upon the scaffold before he was beheaded : to the tune of Aim not too high, &c. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 M37 | The Masse priests lamentation for the strange alteration, begun in this nation, wherefore he makes great mone, and sings o hone, o hone : the tune is Poore shon. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 M37 1663 | A Marvellous medicine to cure a great pain | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M37 1680 | The Married wives [sic] complaint of her unkind husband, or, A Caution for maids to beware how they marry ... to a very pleasant new tune, O Jenny Armstrong, or, True love rewarded with loyalty. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M37 1682x | The Mariner's delight, or, The seaman's seaven wives. Being a pleasant new song; shewing how a seaman call'd Anthony courted a young maid whose name is Susan, in London ... To the tune of, Hail to the mirtle shades. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M37 1688 | Marvels ghost being the true copy of a letter sent to the A.b. of C. upon his suddain sickness, at the Prince of Orange's first arrival into London. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 M37 1689 | The Manner of the proclaiming King William & Queen Mary at the city of Oxford on Saturday, being the 16th of February, 1688/9 [i.e. 1689] | 2 |
PR3291.A1 M4 |
The merry hay-makers; or, Pleasant pastime, between the young men and maids, in the pleasant meadows. To an excellent new tune. The merchants daughter of Bristow. The tune is, the Maidens joy. |
2 |
PR3291.A1 M44 1763a | Memoirs of the life and adventures of Tsonnonthouan. | 1 |
PR3291.A1 M45 1645 | A Memorable song on the unhappie hunting in Chevie-Chase, betweene Earle Piercie of England and Earle Dowglas of Scotland to the tune of Flying fame. | 2 |
PR3291.A1 M45 1670 | A Memorable song on the unhappy hunting in Chevy-Chase, betweene Earle Piercy of England and Earle Dowglas of Scotland to the tune of Flying fame. | 2 |