The Roxburghe ballads . t he then intended on him to bestow;A Farm with full thirty good acres of land:He gave him the writings then with his own hand. Because thou wast careful, and good to thy wife,Ile make thy days happy the rest of thy life ;It shall be for ever, to thee and thy Heir:For why ? I beheld thy industrious care. 64 No tongue then was able in full to expressThe depth of their joy and their true thankfulness ;With many a courtesie and bow to the ground :—But such Noble-men there is but few to be found. jfinis. Printed for P. Broohby, at Sign of the Golden-Ball, in Pye-corner. [Bl


The Roxburghe ballads . t he then intended on him to bestow;A Farm with full thirty good acres of land:He gave him the writings then with his own hand. Because thou wast careful, and good to thy wife,Ile make thy days happy the rest of thy life ;It shall be for ever, to thee and thy Heir:For why ? I beheld thy industrious care. 64 No tongue then was able in full to expressThe depth of their joy and their true thankfulness ;With many a courtesie and bow to the ground :—But such Noble-men there is but few to be found. jfinis. Printed for P. Broohby, at Sign of the Golden-Ball, in Pye-corner. [Black-letter. But Roxb. Coll., III. 308, a white-letter reprint, Newcastle:Printed and sold by Hubert Marchbank four cuts. See Note on p. 328.] 331 [Roxb. C, II. 244 ; Ellis, I.; Douce, I. 108 vo. ; Jersey, = Lind., 1362.] Ci)e emitters 3Jobb; £Dr, t$t taviwt £>tmor of Walton Coton to a fair SpattJ,tontfi jjct moocst 3u0Uici:0 aito Conclusion of tgeirHftttemgt To the Tune of, Shacldey hey. [See iVofc, below.].


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Keywords: ., bookauthorchappell, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookyear1879