Yea and nay found out and discover'd : Being a comical and diverting account of a certain Quaker, who as he was walking up Fleet-Street, met with Black Hannah, a Drury-Lane virgin, and told her the spirit mov'd him to please her to admiration. How she carried him home to her lodgings, and pick'd his pocket of fifty guineas and a gold watch, after which four bullies toss'd him in a blanket, then daub'd him all over with tar, and roll'd him in a bed of feathers, and then made him hold forth, and hir'd four link boys to light him to his own house, where a comical dialogue pass'd between him and his wife Rachel.

Format Electronic
Publication InfoLondon : Printed for Simon Pure, [1775?]
Description8 pages : illustrations ; 12⁰.
Supplemental ContentFull text online
Subjects

General noteBookseller's name in imprint is false.
General noteReproduction of original from Bodleian Library (Oxford).
References English Short Title Catalog, T179678.
Reproduction noteElectronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Cengage Gale, 2009. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.
Genre/formDialogues.

Availability

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Electronic Resources Access Content Online ✔ Available