The Merry-Thought: Or the Glass-Window And Bog-House Miscellany
The Merry-Thought: Or the Glass-Window And Bog-House Miscellany
Thrumbo Pseudonym
The book The Merry-Thought: Or the Glass-Window And Bog-House Miscellany was written by author Thrumbo Pseudonym Here you can read free online of The Merry-Thought: Or the Glass-Window And Bog-House Miscellany book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is The Merry-Thought: Or the Glass-Window And Bog-House Miscellany a good or bad book?
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But if my _Celia_ comes within my Ken; Then I shall be again like other Men. _On another at the same Place. _ My Wife says, Whither do you go? And I return, my dear, I do not know; Then d----n your Blood, says she, to use me thus; And then I call her catterwauling Puss. _Hampton-Court, at the Mitre. _ A Ramp of very noted Name, I need not say, for all Men know her Fame, Lascivious, as the human Race could be, She could not see a Man, but fell in Extasy. _On a dyer’s Sign at Southwark. _ I die t...o live, I live to die, And hope to live eternally. _At the Star at Coventry. _ A poor Woman was ill in a dangerous Case, She lay in, and was just as some other Folks was: By the Lord, cries _She_ then, if my Husband e’er come, Once again with his Will for to tickle my Bum, I’ll storm, and I’ll swear, and I’ll run staring wild; And yet the next Night, the Man got her with Child. S. M. 1708. _By Desire not to insert the Place. _ What care I for Mistress May’ress; She’s little as the Queen of Fairies: Her little Body like my Thumb, Is thicker far than _other some_; Her Conscience yet would stretch so wide; } Either on this, or t’other Side, } That none could tell when they did ride.
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