EBBA 37454
British Library - Bagford
| [The S]econd PART / OF / [Old Mother] Bunch of the West: / [C]ONTAINING / [RARI]TIES never before heard of, / [?] was pleas'd to break open the / [? cl]oset of CURIOSITIES, / [?]olute Advantage of all young / [?]S, who may, as in a Glass, be- / [?]other, while they sleep, only / [?] to the Direction of the Book, / [?] instruct them how to escape bad / [?]d obtain good. / [?]veral that has made Tryal of them. / [?] Fruits of Forty Nine Years / [?]dy by Mother BUNCH, who / [?]ts it to the World, for the be- / [?] the young Men, Maids, and Wi- / [?] | |
|---|---|
| Date Published | ? |
| Author | |
| Standard Tune | |
| Imprint | LONDON: / [?] B. Deacon, in Gilt-spur-street. |
| License | [Licens'd an]d Enter'd according to Order. |
| Collection | British Library - Bagford |
| Pages | 2.104 Verso, 2.105 Verso Page Verso |
| Location | British Library |
| Shelfmark | C.40.m.10.(108*.) |
| ESTC ID | |
| Keyword Categories | |
| MARC Record | |
| Additional Information | |
| Part 1 | |
| Title | [The S]econd PART / OF / [Old Mother] Bunch of the West: / [C]ONTAINING / [RARI]TIES never before heard of, / [?] was pleas'd to break open the / [? cl]oset of CURIOSITIES, / [?]olute Advantage of all young / [?]S, who may, as in a Glass, be- / [?]other, while they sleep, only / [?] to the Direction of the Book, / [?] instruct them how to escape bad / [?]d obtain good. / [?]veral that has made Tryal of them. / [?] Fruits of Forty Nine Years / [?]dy by Mother BUNCH, who / [?]ts it to the World, for the be- / [?] the young Men, Maids, and Wi- / [?] |
| Tune Imprint | |
| First Lines | NOW against the Day [?] / ther Bunch deck'd up [?] |
| Refrain | |
| Condition | |
| Ornament | |
| Notes | A fragment, cut in two and pasted onto facing album sheets, of "The Second Part of Old Mother Bunch's Closet." According to the ESTC, it is likely printer's waste. Printed on the verso of EBBA 37453, "The Rarest BALLAD that ever was seen, / Of the Blind BEGGAR's DAUGHTER of Bednal-green." This item is not a ballad, but is archived in EBBA because it is included in the important Bagford collection of ballads. |