England's jests refin'd and improv'd being a choice collection of the merriest jests, smartest repartees, wittiest sayings, and most notable bulls yet extant, with many new ones never before printed to which are added XIII ingenious characters drawn to the life / the whole work compil'd with great care and exactness, and may serve as the witty-man's companion, the busie-man's diversion and the melancholy man's physick and recreation, calculated for the innocent spending of the winter evenings by H.C.

About this Item

Title
England's jests refin'd and improv'd being a choice collection of the merriest jests, smartest repartees, wittiest sayings, and most notable bulls yet extant, with many new ones never before printed to which are added XIII ingenious characters drawn to the life / the whole work compil'd with great care and exactness, and may serve as the witty-man's companion, the busie-man's diversion and the melancholy man's physick and recreation, calculated for the innocent spending of the winter evenings by H.C.
Author
Crouch, Humphrey, fl. 1635-1671.
Publication
London :: Printed for John Harris ...,
1693.
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Subject terms
English wit and humor.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A35190.0001.001
Cite this Item
"England's jests refin'd and improv'd being a choice collection of the merriest jests, smartest repartees, wittiest sayings, and most notable bulls yet extant, with many new ones never before printed to which are added XIII ingenious characters drawn to the life / the whole work compil'd with great care and exactness, and may serve as the witty-man's companion, the busie-man's diversion and the melancholy man's physick and recreation, calculated for the innocent spending of the winter evenings by H.C." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A35190.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 5, 2024.

Pages

3.

A Gentleman of Grays-Inn last Win∣ter desir'd another of the same Inn to lend him Bakers Chronicle for an hour or two: He sent him word▪ That he could not spare it out of his Chamber, but if he pleased to come thither, he might use it all day there. Not long after, the other Gentleman desir'd him to lend him his Bellows: he sent him word, He could not spare them out of his Chamber, but if he pleased to come thither he might use them all day long there.

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