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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 sound, nuncl'd her Mam, and got twice fifty pound. Those two fadillaes, as chaste as Jane Shore, live quiet, that never did so before. The tune is, Come sweet-heart and embrace thine own: or, The dancing of primrose-hill.
Alternative Title Dialogue betwixt them composed in verse
Uniform title Come sweet-heart and embrace thine own.
Dancing of primrose-hill.
Publication Info [London] : Printed for P. Brooksby, at the Golden-Ball, near the Hospital-gate, in West-smithfield., [between 1670-1696]



Descript 1 sheet ([1] p.) : ill. (woodcuts).
Note Date and place of publication suggested by Wing.
Verse: "VVhy how Nan, what is the reason ..."
Reproduction of original in the Harvard University, Houghton Library and the British Library.
Click on the terms below to find similar items in the catalogue
Series Early English books online.
Subject Broadsides -- England -- London -- Early works to 1800.
Mothers and daughters -- Early works to 1800.
Alternative Title Dialogue betwixt them composed in verse
Uniform title Come sweet-heart and embrace thine own.
Dancing of primrose-hill.
Descript 1 sheet ([1] p.) : ill. (woodcuts).
Note Date and place of publication suggested by Wing.
Verse: "VVhy how Nan, what is the reason ..."
Reproduction of original in the Harvard University, Houghton Library and the British Library.
Series Early English books online.
Subject Broadsides -- England -- London -- Early works to 1800.
Mothers and daughters -- Early works to 1800.
Alternative Title Dialogue betwixt them composed in verse
Uniform title Come sweet-heart and embrace thine own.
Dancing of primrose-hill.

Subject Broadsides -- England -- London -- Early works to 1800.
Mothers and daughters -- Early works to 1800.
Descript 1 sheet ([1] p.) : ill. (woodcuts).
Note Date and place of publication suggested by Wing.
Verse: "VVhy how Nan, what is the reason ..."
Reproduction of original in the Harvard University, Houghton Library and the British Library.

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