A Book of merry riddles very meet and delightful for youth to try their wits.
About this Item
- Title
- A Book of merry riddles very meet and delightful for youth to try their wits.
- Publication
- London :: Printed by E.C. for J. Wright ...,
- 1672.
- Rights/Permissions
-
To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.
- Subject terms
- Riddles.
- Link to this Item
-
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A28781.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"A Book of merry riddles very meet and delightful for youth to try their wits." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A28781.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 13, 2025.
Pages
Page [unnumbered]
DIVERS PRETTY RIDDLES, With other Dark SENTENCES.
WHat Iudg on the Earth did give the greatest sentence when he did live?
when he pro∣nounced sentence of Con∣demnation against Christ Iesus.
It was Eve and her children, who all died ere she was begotten, for she was neither born nor begotten, but created.
Page [unnumbered]
Cain in slaying of his brother Abel.
Joseph went to séek Christ, whom he found in the Temple, Preaching a∣mongst those of the Synagogue.
What was that God commanded to be done, and was not done, and yet God was well pleased?
The sacrificing of Isaac.
In what place crew the Cock so loud that all men heard it out of doubt.
In the Ark of Noah.
Q. Iudg of me by perfect skill, My youths restored by casting bill.An Eagle.
A Snake.
Page [unnumbered]
Dice.
Beauty.
A Walnut hanging on a trée.
Water turning to jee, and jee a∣gain turning to water.
A dry turse.
Any musick instrument that is of wood.
Page [unnumbered]
The shining of the Sun.
The four wings of a Mill.
When it through the wood doth go it toucheth every thing below?
It is Snow.
Page [unnumbered]
A penny in a ••••kns purse.
What is that most notches hath. within a house made of plate,
The hangers where the Pot-hooks hang upon.
It is a Loadstone, for without it no Pilate were able to guide a Ship in the Ocean Seas.
Page [unnumbered]
A hors-man being on horse-back, who hath four Eyes with those of his horse, and the fifth in his reasonable soul, whereby he is chiefly guided, and is not subject unto death.
'Tis a match at Bowls playd in a Bowling-alley.
Ten mens length, and ten mens strength, and ten men cannot break it.
Page [unnumbered]
A cable rope which ten men can∣not break by force.
It is a dead man, and these four that do carry him to his grave, with Adam our first Parent, who brought death into the world.
It is a feather in a windy day.
Page [unnumbered]
Salt.
Who wears his end about his midle Once in his time? tell me this riddle.
A Thief, whose armes are tied with the halter, wherewith he shall be executed.
It is a cherry, and a cherry-stone:
Yonder it is, and here I have it.
A mans breath, or other living creatures.
It is a preacher instructing others and doth quite contrary to his own doct∣rine, and by that means starveth his own Soul.
Our first parent Eve who had no Mather, and no other Father but God Al∣mighty.
Page [unnumbered]
It is a Gelding.
It is a Mulbery-trée gréen in the summer, and white with snow in the win∣ter, which in Latin is cal'd Morus, which signisteth in Gréek, a fool: it is a trée of this nature, that it will not cast any buds before all other trées have, whereby we certainly know when she begins to bud that the cold and winter is altogether past for that present season.
Page [unnumbered]
It is a Swan, who being near her death sings most swéetly, as Authours do record.
A tennits ball, when two good play∣ers play together.
It is he that cannot sée well with∣out Spectacles and doth carry them about him in a case for fear of breaking them.
Page [unnumbered]
It is a comb, and a louse kil'd up∣on the back of it.
It is ones hand, and his finger that are full of Gold Rings, the middle most except, because a Ring doth not fit that finger.
It was a man whose Sirname was Not.
Dice and Dicers.
Page [unnumbered]
In the bottom of a well.
He that is all lowsie, those licd which he takes he throws them away, and th•••••• that he cannot take he kéeps them still, and yet would fain be rid of them.
It is a good Conscience.
It is an Isicle.
It is a Spider in the midst of his web, or else a thimble.
It is a man that dreams, who in his dream séems to do all these things, and intéed does none of them.
Page [unnumbered]
It is a Walnut upon a Trée.
I Fart, or else Thunder.
Masons, Tylers, and men of such like occupation, carrying ladders upon their shoulders, to build and tile houses.
Sol. Mary and John made great moan, when Christ upon the Crosse was left a∣lone:
It is an Ax.
In me are many shining lights.
It is a burning Candle.
It is the Moon.
Page [unnumbered]
Ingratitude, which monster recei∣veth good turns and payeth Vengeance.
Gardners and Rope-makers.
The grudg of a secret enemy long conceived in mind ere it vs put in execu∣tion
It is a nettle.
A maid milking of a Cow.
It is Hail when it falls.
Page [unnumbered]
The Devil begat sin, and sin pro∣cured good Laws, which are the stayes of all governments.
A lover sent to his love a messenger to put her in mind of her promise as to come unto him, and she sent back this an∣swer unto him.
Tell thy Master in my Name, When trées are turned and wells be dry, And dead with quick, then come I.Meaning at midnight, when firebrands should be turned upwards, the pots should be empty, and the fire raked up with the cold ashes, then she would come.
It is the person that speaketh the word, for he is neither brother nor sister to himself.
Page [unnumbered]
It is a Bée that maketh Honey and Wax.
It is a man; for when he is a child then he doth créep upon hand and féet, but when be is a man, then he standeth strait upon two legs, when he is old & decrepit besides his legs, then he useth a Staff to support his body. This riddle gave Sphinx a Serpent, ts the passengers that went by her den: amp; those that could not resolve it, them she devoured, and so Oepidus at last passing by & having resolv'd the doubt, did rid his Country of this evil incorporate.
It is a womans girdle which she wears about her middle.
Page [unnumbered]
The Sun.
A Bird called Robin Red-brest.
The Nightingale.
A Peacocks tail.
It is a Pillow-bear.
It is Pepper and Salt.
Page [unnumbered]
A button of Copper or Mettal.
A Hearnshow had taken a Frog, and brought in to her young ones in the nest, made upon the top of the house.
A Malt-sack full of Malt where∣with strong drink is brewed.
A bottle made of Glass.
A Parrat in a Cage of Wire.
Page [unnumbered]
A Bell towling to a Sermon.
It is a Jack, and a greasie Miller is the Cook.
It is an Eye,
It is the little finger, that was not, nor is not, nor will it be so great as the rest of the fingers.
It is thrée Mills.
It is a Smith, that makes shooes for Horses.
Page [unnumbered]
Riddle me, riddle me what is this? Two legs sate upon thrée, with one leg in his hand, in came four legs and snatcht away one leg, then upstarts two legs, and flung thrée legs at four legs, and so got one leg again.
A man sitting upon a thrée footed stool, with a leg of Mutton in his hand, a dog came and snatcht it from him, and he flung a thrée footed stool at the dog, and so got the leg of Mutten again.
I have a Meadow and in that Mea∣dow are ten Oaks, under every Oke are ten Coats, and in every Coat are ten S••ws, and every Sow hath ten Pigs, tell me ho•••• many Pigs will be of these.
Ten thousand.