Merry Drollery Compleat (1691)
Merry
Drollery
Compleat:
Or, A
Collection
| Of | Jovial Poems, Merry Songs, Witty Drolleries, |
Intermixed with Pleasant Catches.
The First Part.
Collected by
W.N. C.B. R.S. J.G.
Lovers of Wit.
London,
To the
Reader:
Courteous Reader,
We do here present thee with a Choice Collection of Wit and Ingenuity, many of which were obtained with much difficulty, and at a Chargeable Rate; It is Composed so as to please all Complexions, Ages, and Constitutions of either Sexes, and is now Completed.
Farewel.
| Page | ||
|---|---|---|
| Now I confess I am in Love | 5 | |
| Be merry in sorrow, why are you so sad | 7 | |
| Amerillis told her swaine | 8 | |
| Call for the Master oh this is fine | 9 | |
| Once I was sad till I grew to be mad | 10 | |
| When first Mardike was made a Prey | 12 | |
| Of all the Crafts that I do know | 17 | |
| The thirsty Earth drinks up the Rain | 22 | |
| To friend and to foe | 23 | |
| The Fashions | 25 | |
| Tobacco that is withered quite | 26 | |
| There was a Jovial Tinker | 27 | |
| Now Gentlemen if you will hear | 29 | |
| The Hunt is up | 30 | |
| Of an old souldier of the Queen | 31 | |
| If thou will know how to chuse a shrew | 32 | |
| Come my delicate bonny sweet Betty | 34 | |
| Nay prethee don’t fly me &c. | 36 | |
| A fox a fox up Gallant to the field | 38 | |
| Ah Ah come see what’s here | 40 | |
| Let dogs and divells dye | 41 | |
| A young man that in Love &c, | 42 | |
| There dwelt a maid &c. | 46 | |
| The spring is coming on and our bloud &c, | 47 | |
| Doctors lay by your Irksome books | 48 | |
| There was an old man &c. | 52 | |
| Come Jack let’s drink, or the Cavaleers complaint | 52 | |
| The Answer to it | 54 | |
| All in the Land of Essex | 56 | |
| My Mistris is a Shittle-Cock | 60 | |
| Will you hear a strange thing &c. | 62 | |
| Of nothing a new song | 66 | |
| Bacchus I am come from &c. | 69 | |
| Be not thou so foolish nice | 69 | |
| Aske me no more &c. | 70 | |
| A Sessions was held the other day | 72 | |
| I came unto a Puritan to woe | 77 | |
| Good Lord what a pass is this world &c. | 79 | |
| Walking abroad in a morning | 81 | |
| In Eighty Eight &c. | 82 | |
| Nay out upon this fooling for shame | 84 | |
| If every woman was serv’d in her kind | 85 | |
| Some Christian People all give ear | 87 | |
| Come my Daphne come away | 91 | |
| Cast your Caps and eares away | 92 | |
| When first the Scottish war began | 93 | |
| My Brethren all attend | 95 | |
| Come let’s drink the time invites | 97 | |
| In the merry month of May | 99 | |
| Roome for the best of Poets Heroick | 100 | |
| I tell thee Dick where I have been | 101 | |
| How happy is the prisoner &c. | 107 | |
| I met with the divel in the shape of a Ram | 109 | |
| The world’s a bubble &c. | 110 | |
| The Proctors are two and no more | 111 | |
| My Mistris whom in heart &c. | 113 | |
| Tis not the Silver nor Gold | 115 | |
| After so many sad mishaps | 118 | |
| Come lets purge our brains | 121 | |
| What though the times | 124 | |
| Lay by your pleading | 125 | |
| I am a bonny scot | 127 | |
| I’ll tell the a story &c. | 131 | |
| I'll go no more to the old Exchange | 134 | |
| Lets call and drink the Celler | 138 | |
| There is lusty Liquor | 140 | |
| Three merry lads met at the Rose | 143 | |
| Of all the Recreations which | 130 | |
| Tom and Will were shepherds | 149 | |
| Wake all you dead what O | 131 | |
| There a certain idle kind of creature | 155 | |
| The Bow Goose | 153 | |
| News while Bears &c. | 153 | |
| We seamen are the bonny boys | 162 | |
| My Mistris is in Musick passing &c. | 163 | |
| When the Chill charakoe blows | 164 | |
| Now thanks to the powers below | 166 | |
| A maiden of late &c. | 170 | |
| After the pains of a desperate Lover | 171 | |
| Blind fortune if thou wants | 172 | |
| From Mahomet and Paganisme | 174 | |
| God bless my good Lord | 177 | |
| Of all the rare sciences | 178 | |
| Heard you not lately of a man | 180 | |
| The Medly of the Country man Citizen and souldier | 182 | |
| No man loves fiery passion can approve | 187 | |
| When blind God Cupid &c. | 188 | |
| Come Drawer come fill us &c. | 190 | |
| Lay by your pleading | 191 | |
| Bring forth your Cunny skin | 196 | |
| From hunger and cold &c. | 197 | |
| Roome for a Gamester | 197 | |
| Gather your Rose buds | 199 | |
| A story strange I will you tell | 200 | |
| I am a Rogue and a stout one | 204 | |
| Stay shut the Gate | 207 | |
Merry
Drollery,
Complete.
Or,
A Collection
| Of | Jovial Poems, Merry Songs, Witty Drolleries, |
Intermixed with Pleasant Catches.
The Second Part.
| Hold quaffe no more | 210 | |
| Had she not care enough | 211 | |
| Here’s a Health to his Majesty | 212 | |
| But since it was enacted high Treason | 212 | |
| Cook Laurel by Ben Johnson | 214 | |
| A fig for care | 217 | |
| Let Souldiers fight for praise &c. | 218
| |
| Ne’er trouble thy self at the times | 219 | |
| Three merry boys came out of the West | 220 | |
| Calm was the Evening | 220 | |
| There’s many a blinking Verse &c. | 221 | |
| The Blacksmith | 225 | |
| Come my dainty doxes | 230 | |
| Come Imp Royal &c. | 231 | |
| The Wisemen | 232 | |
| How poor is his spirit &c. | 232 | |
| I am mad O noble Festus | 234 | |
| I dote I dote but am a fool &c. | 237 | |
| Ladies I do here present | 240 | |
| The Combate of Cocks | 242 | |
| Come let’s frolick fill some Sack | 246 | |
| What is that you call a Maidenhead | 249 | |
| When Phœbus addrest &c. | 250 | |
| A Brewer may be a Burgess grave | 252 | |
| Oliver Oliver | 254 | |
| When I do travell in the night | 255 | |
| Sir Eglamore | 257 | |
| If none be offended &c. | 259 | |
| Come drawer and fill us &c. | 263 | |
| The Bulls feather | 264 | |
| You talk of new England | 266 | |
| Come drawer turn about the Bowle | 268 | |
| Pray why should any man complain | 270 | |
| What an ass is he | 273 | |
| My masters give audience | 275 | |
| The Aphorismes of Galen | 277 | |
| Now I am merrier Sir John | 280 | |
| I have reason to fly thee | 281 | |
| I have the fairest Non-perel | 283 | |
| Are you grown so melancholly | 286 | |
| Sublimest discretions have climb’d &c. | 288 | |
| A pox on the Jaylor | 289 | |
| My lodging is on the cold ground | 290 | |
| From the fair Lavinian shore | 291 | |
| Fetch me Ben Johnsons scull &c. | 293 | |
| Now that the spring &c. | 296 | |
| Of all the sports in the world | 296 | |
| The wily wily Fox | 300 | |
| She lay all naked &c. | 300 | |
| Some wives are good &c. | 301 | |
| Call George again | 304 | |
| Pox take your mistris | 304 | |
| The Answer | 306 | |
| She that will heat her break fast | 308 | |
| St. George for England | 309 | |
| Arthur of Bradley | 312 | |
| On the Oxford Jeasts | 317 | |
| There were three Cooks in Colebrook | 318 | |
| The Blacksmith | 319 | |
| When Ise came first to London Town | 323 | |
| The merry good fellow | 326 | |
| The Rebels Reign | 326 | |
| Have you observ’d the wench in the street | 332 | |
| A new Medley | 333 | |
| Shew a Room shew a Room &c. | 339 | |
| Why should a man care or be in despair | ibid | |
| He that a happy life would lead | 339 | |
| What fortune had I, poor maid that I am | 341 | |
| He that intends to take a wife | 342 | |
| If any so wise is, that Sack he despises | 347 | |
| A mock Song | 348 | |
Physical Experiments, being a Plain Description of the Causes, Signs, and Cures of most Diseases incident to the body of man; with a Discourse of Witchcraft. By William Drage, Practitioner of Physick at Hitchin in Hartfordshire.
Bishop White, upon the Sabbath.
The Artificial Changeling.
The life of Tamerlain.
The Pragmatical Jesuite. A Play by Richard Carpenter.
Mr Shepherd, on the Sabbath.
The Rites of the Crown of England, as it is established by Law; By E. Bagshaw of the Inner-Temple.
An Enchiridion of fortification
Merry Drollery Compleat.
Butler, of War.
Ramsey, of Poysons.
Artimedorus, of Dreams.
Record, of Urines
The History of Fortunatus.
The History of Daphnis and Cloe.
Oxford Jeasts.
Dr. Smith’s Practice of Physick.
The third part of the Bible and New Testament.
The duty of every one that will be saved? being Rules, Precepts, Promises, and examples, Directing all Persons of what degree soever, how to govern their Passions, and to live virtuosly and soberly in the World. Dr. Spurstow’s Meditations.
The understanding-Christians-Duty.
A Help to Prayer.
Hell Torments shaken.
A New Method of Preserving and Restoring Health, by the vertue of Coral and Steel.
David’s Sling.
This work was published before January 1, 1930, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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