Poor Robin's jests: or, The compleat jester Being a collection of several jests not heretofore published. Now newly composed and written by that well-known gentleman, Poor Robin, knight of the burnt island, and well-willer to the mathematicks. Together with the true and lively effigies of the said author. Licensed Feb. 2. 1666. Roger L'Estrange.

About this Item

Title
Poor Robin's jests: or, The compleat jester Being a collection of several jests not heretofore published. Now newly composed and written by that well-known gentleman, Poor Robin, knight of the burnt island, and well-willer to the mathematicks. Together with the true and lively effigies of the said author. Licensed Feb. 2. 1666. Roger L'Estrange.
Author
Poor Robin.
Publication
London :: printed for Francis Kirkman and Richard Head,
[1667]
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Subject terms
Wit and humor -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A66707.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Poor Robin's jests: or, The compleat jester Being a collection of several jests not heretofore published. Now newly composed and written by that well-known gentleman, Poor Robin, knight of the burnt island, and well-willer to the mathematicks. Together with the true and lively effigies of the said author. Licensed Feb. 2. 1666. Roger L'Estrange." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A66707.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 18, 2024.

Pages

A deep Question.

ONe having read in the story of the seven Champions, how St. Georg had killed the Dragon, and delivered from death Sa∣bra the fair maid of Egypt, he said he won∣der'd how men could invent such lies: for there never was any Dragon, neither was there ever any St. George; to which ano∣thor reply'd, For St. George or the Dragon, it matter'd not whether there were ever such or no; but the greatest matter was, whether there was a maid.

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