The Roxburghe ballads . reprinted. The other ballad version (p. 110) was printed for Philip Brooksby, only, andto be sung to an excellent new tune. The music of this, as already shown, wascomposed by Charles Taylor, and is not only in Playfords Choice Ay res, FourthCollection, p. 53, 1683, but also in the 1719 edition of Tills to Purge Melancholy,v. 336. Words alone are in the Que Hundred and Eighty Songs, 1685 and 1694,p. 321; also in the 1716 edition of Drydens Miscellany Poems, ii. 189 ; and TheDire, i. 43, 1724. They long remained popular, for a later musician, Tenoe,re-set them in Wattss


The Roxburghe ballads . reprinted. The other ballad version (p. 110) was printed for Philip Brooksby, only, andto be sung to an excellent new tune. The music of this, as already shown, wascomposed by Charles Taylor, and is not only in Playfords Choice Ay res, FourthCollection, p. 53, 1683, but also in the 1719 edition of Tills to Purge Melancholy,v. 336. Words alone are in the Que Hundred and Eighty Songs, 1685 and 1694,p. 321; also in the 1716 edition of Drydens Miscellany Poems, ii. 189 ; and TheDire, i. 43, 1724. They long remained popular, for a later musician, Tenoe,re-set them in Wattss Musical Miscellany,!. 84, 1729 ; they are in the MerryMusician, ii. 85. In The Vocal Miscellany, circu 1732, p. 204, the tune namedfor them is Gently touch the trembling Lyre. 203 [Roxb. Coll., II. 206; IV. 50 ; Euing, 140; Douce, I. 93 verso; Jersey, II. 47.] ©r, ?Williams Patience Ecfrjaroco iottfj the consent of ^rettg Nancy. To the Tune of, [ Would you le] the Man of Fashion; or, TheBoulting Virgin. [See p. 201.].


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Keywords: ., bookauthorchappell, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookyear1879