The Booke of bulls, baited with two centuries of bold jests, and nimble-lies, or, A Combat betweene sence and non-sence, being at strife who shall infuse most myrth into the gentle-reader a treatise in variety of pleasure second to none ever yet printed in the English-tongue : wherein is contained nothing alreadie published / collected by A.S. Gent.
About this Item
Title
The Booke of bulls, baited with two centuries of bold jests, and nimble-lies, or, A Combat betweene sence and non-sence, being at strife who shall infuse most myrth into the gentle-reader a treatise in variety of pleasure second to none ever yet printed in the English-tongue : wherein is contained nothing alreadie published / collected by A.S. Gent.
Publication
Imprinted at London :: For Daniel Frere and are to be sold at the Bull in Little-Brittaine,
1636.
Rights/Permissions
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Subject terms
English wit and humor.
Bulls, Colloquial.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A18367.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The Booke of bulls, baited with two centuries of bold jests, and nimble-lies, or, A Combat betweene sence and non-sence, being at strife who shall infuse most myrth into the gentle-reader a treatise in variety of pleasure second to none ever yet printed in the English-tongue : wherein is contained nothing alreadie published / collected by A.S. Gent." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A18367.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 15, 2024.
Pages
descriptionPage 38
Of a House and a Sellar.
A Gentleman who was a
good fellow, sent a man of
his to take him a house in Lon∣don.
After the fellow had wan∣dred
long up and downe, at
length hee red this bill on a
doore, Here is to be let a house
with a Dining roome, a Kit∣chin,
sixteene Chambers, and a
Sellar ready furnisht. Where∣upon
hee ranne to his Master,
and told him that he had found
a House for his turne, with a
Sellar full of good liquor; the
Asse thinking that the word
(furnish••) had not relation to
the whole House, but to the
Sellar onely.
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