A pleasant new dittie: entituled, Jone Clenlies new ordnary [sic] for three pence a meal, at the signe of the broom in Kent-Street. For all sorts of comer; shee['d] daily prepare[.] For the number of twenty such new kind of fare[,] that Hollands ould [sic] Hodg-podg, and kick-shawes of France, (to the tune of come eate me,) my pipe shall say dance. To the tune of Cook Laaret.

All titles
  • A pleasant new dittie: entituled, Jone Clenlies new ordnary [sic] for three pence a meal, at the signe of the broom in Kent-Street. For all sorts of comer; shee['d] daily prepare[.] For the number of twenty such new kind of fare[,] that Hollands ould [sic] Hodg-podg, and kick-shawes of France, (to the tune of come eate me,) my pipe shall say dance. To the tune of Cook Laaret.
  • Careless gallant, or a far ewell [sic] to sorrow
People / Organizations
Imprint
London: printed for Fran. Grove dwelling on Snow-hill, [between 1623 and 1661]
Publication year
1623-1661
ESTC No.
R234268
Grub Street ID
105621
Description
1 sheet ([1] p.) : ill. (woodcuts) ; obl. 1⁰
Note
Text verse from second page only - "Let us sing and be merry, dance, joke and rejoyce,"

Not in Wing.

Date of publication surmised by cataloger from Plomer, who shows active publishing dates from 1623-1661

Filmed copy at Adam Matthew's set Women Advising Women: Part 5: Women's writing and advice, c1450-1720, reel 3, Douce Ballads 2[268], torn at foot with loss of text and ornamental border on first page; second work on second page appears to have a torn off section with an imprint at right margin, photographed along with the second page.
Uncontrolled note
Verify everything about two works mounted together, including imprint