1. The prodigal son converted, or The young-man return'd from his rambles. Wit ne're till now, was cry'd about the street, at the low rate o[f] a poor penny sheet; sharp times will make sharp wits, not fear sharp tongues, 'tis we who money want which suffer wrongs; you can't command a poet with a frown to write new songs: but yours, for a crown: here'
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2. The prodigal son converted, or The young-man return'd from his rambles Wit ne're till now, was cry'd about the street, at the low rate o[f] a poor penny sheet; sharp times will make sharp wits, not fear sharp tongues, 'tis we who money want which suffer wrongs; you can't command a poet with a frown to write new songs: but yours, for a crown: here's
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3. The history of the famous and passionate love, between a fair noble Parisian lady, and a beautiful young singing-man, a chanter in the quire of Notre-Dame in Paris, and a singer in opera's an heroic poem, in two canto's, being in imitation of Virgil's Dido and Aeneas, and shews all the passions of a proud beauty, compell'd by love, to abandon her self to her inferiour : and after enjoyment being f
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