Coffee-house jests. Refined and enlarged. By the author of the Oxford jests. The fourth edition, with large additions. This may be re-printed, Feb. 25. 1685. R.P.

About this Item

Title
Coffee-house jests. Refined and enlarged. By the author of the Oxford jests. The fourth edition, with large additions. This may be re-printed, Feb. 25. 1685. R.P.
Author
Hickes, William, fl. 1671.
Publication
London :: printed for Hen. Rhodes, next door to the Swan-Tavern, near Bride-Lane in Fleet street,
1686.
Rights/Permissions

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Subject terms
English wit and humor -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A43690.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Coffee-house jests. Refined and enlarged. By the author of the Oxford jests. The fourth edition, with large additions. This may be re-printed, Feb. 25. 1685. R.P." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A43690.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 13, 2024.

Pages

133.

A Fellow in the County of Kent was so very poor, that he could not get Victuals to put into his Head; he began to despair, and took a Rope and went to hang himself; and as he was going to a Tree to do the Execution, he spied where some great Trea∣sure was hid; which he immediately took away, and left the Halter in the place; and a little after the Owner of the Treasure came to take a view of it, as was his daily custom, and finding it to be gone, for very grief he takes the Halter and Hangs him∣self; but I think he deserves to be Hang'd agen, because he Hang'd himself contrary to Law.

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