EBBA 30785
British Library - Roxburghe
The Mother and Daughter; Or, / A Dialogue betwixt them composed in Verse, / if you will attend, I will rehearse: / How the Mother did chide the Daughter for folly, / The Daughter with her Mother did not dally, / To silence her Mother her self she did fix, / And proved her Mother to be a Meretrix. / She still'd her Mothers tongue that so loud did found. / Nuncl'd her Mam, and got twice fifty pound. / Those two Fadillaes, as chaste as Jane Shore, / Live quiet, that never did so before. | |
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Date Published | 1672-1696 ? |
Author | |
Standard Tune | |
Imprint | Printed for P. Brooksby, at the Golden-Ball, near the Hospital-gate, West-smithfield. |
License | |
Collection | British Library - Roxburghe |
Pages | 2.340, 2.341 |
Location | British Library |
Shelfmark | C.20.f.8.340-341 |
ESTC ID | |
Keyword Categories | |
MARC Record | |
Additional Information | |
Part 1 | |
Title | The Mother and Daughter; Or, / A Dialogue betwixt them composed in Verse, / if you will attend, I will rehearse: / How the Mother did chide the Daughter for folly, / The Daughter with her Mother did not dally, / To silence her Mother her self she did fix, / And proved her Mother to be a Meretrix. / She still'd her Mothers tongue that so loud did found. / Nuncl'd her Mam, and got twice fifty pound. / Those two Fadillaes, as chaste as Jane Shore, / Live quiet, that never did so before. |
Tune Imprint | The Tune is, Come Sweet-heart and Embrace thine own: or, The dancing of primrose-hill |
First Lines | WHy how Nan, what is the reason, / that you look so pale and wan? |
Refrain | O Mother i've mumpt you now. |
Condition | |
Ornament |