worn.
Imprint. "CARLISLE: PRINTED BY F. JOLLIE:" and at
the end is " F. Jollie, Printer, Carlisle."'
Number of pages, eight.
The French Cobbler is Pierre Savetier, who was torn from his
cobbler's stall, and made a soldier, but deserted and got to London.
From the allusions in it to the National Convention, and the issues
of assignats this song must have originated between 1792 and 1795.
It is not likely to have been long popular, so that the chap-book is
probably of that date or a little later. The last song is
BEGONE, dull Care,
I prithee, begone from me !
(8) C.
" SEVEN
EXCELLENT SONGS
VIZ:
The Jovial Tars.
The Neglected Tar.
Jack Ratlin.
The Sailor's Song.
Sweet Poll of Plymouth.
The Sailor's Farewell.
The Wandering Sailor."
Woodcut
T | ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS.
Woodcut. A male figure in maccaroni wig of about 1772, hat in
hand, hands a letter to or receives one from, a lady in a sacque with
large hat and fan.
Imprint. "SOLD BY F. JOLLIE, CARLISLE."
Number of pages, eight. Jack Ratlin is by Dibdin.
(9) c.
"AN EXCELLENT
GARLAND
CONTAINING THREE
CHOICE SONGS
1. Westmorland Lass.
2. Roger the Miller.
3. The Highland Man's Sons; in Praise of his Maggy, or
the Bannocks of Barley Meal."
No Woodcut.
Imprint. "CARLISLE.
Printed by F. JOLLIE at the New Printing Office. Scotch Street."
Number of pages, eight.
There is nothing local about the Westmorland Lass.
(10) C.
"THREE EXCELLENT NEW
SONGS
INTITULED
I. The ULSTER TRAGEDY.
II. The SIEGE OE BELLEISLE.
III. The FARMER'S SON/'
Woodcut : four capital W's, arranged within a b >rder thus :
******************
w w i
* *
******* :•: * * * * * * * * * *
Imprint
ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS. 15
Imprint. "CARLISLE.
Printed by F. JOLLIE at the New Printing Office."
Number of pages, eight.
The Ulster Tragedy is a long ballad, giving an account of the loves
of Donald Maguare and an heiress of £500 a year. Donald comes
nigh to be hung for abducting the heiress, but all ends well in the
end. The Siege of Belleisle. is an account of that triumph of the
British arms in 1761, but contains no reference to the fact that the
commander of the expedition was a freeman of Carlisle, Lieutenant
General, afterwards Field Marshal, Studholme Hodgson. The
Farmer's Son, is a doleful tragedy of a lady who loved a farmer's
son, who loved the lady's maid, Sally, whereon the lady murdered
the maid and was sent to gaol, and the farmer's son to Bedlam.
(11) c.
"TWO TRUE AND REMARKABLE
STORIES.
PATIENT fOE
OR THE AWFUL DEATH OF
TIM JENKINS.
THE
POWER OF CONSCIENCE."
Woodcut: — St. George and the Dragon, a different cut to that used
with No. 3.
Imprint. " Carlisle; Printed by F. Jollie and Sons."
Number of pages, eight.
Patient Joe, is a story of a pious Derbyshire collier, who always
considered that everything was for the best. The Power of Conscience
is a tale of a servant, who murdered and robbed his master, rose to
affluence and to be a magistrate, but whose conscience ultimately
compelled him to confess.
(12) C.
"A
GARLAND
CONTAINING THREE EXCELLENT
NEW SONGS
I. The
10 ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS.
I. The Indifferent Lover.
II. Thurot's Defeat.
III. A New Song."
Woodcut. A lady and gentleman at dinner: a servant stands
behind the lady and. a dumb waiter is at her side. Tail piece, a
butterfly.
Imprint. -'Carlisle: Printed by W. HODGSON."
Number of pages, eight. The date of Thurot's defeat is 1760, see
" Hume and Smollett's History of England" vol. XIII. p. 215. It
was made the subject of rejoicing carried to absurdity, and was long
remembered and talked about. Forty-four years after it happened
Lord Nelson wrote of Captain Elliot who defeated Thurot, " His
action with Thurot will stand the test with any of our modern
victories." " Dictionary of National Biography." The regular
troops of Thurot's squadron were sent as prisoners of war to Carlisle.
"Jefferson's History of Carlisle," p. 86.
(13) c.
"THE
H I S T O R Y
OF
BERTHA
A POEM
BY
WILLIAM McVITIE, DUMFRIES.
Attention give, while I unfold
A tragic tale, in times of old."
Woodcut. A spray of foliage.
Imprint. "CARLISLE.
Printed by B. Scott, in the Market Place."
The rest of the title page, if any. is torn off. At the end is " B.
Scott, printer, Carlisle." This chap-book is a long poem about
Grimus, eighty-second king of Scotland, and Bertha, a shepherd's
daughter, and runs to sixteen pages.
(14) c.
" FOUR
NEW SONGS
VIZ: The
ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS. I 7
The Woodpecker.
Bold Robin Hood.
Paper'd up Hair.
Sally's Love for a Sailor."
Woodcut. A bird and tuft of grass.
Imprint. "CARLISLE.
PRINTED BY R. JOHNSTON.
Who has constantly on Sale a large and general Assortment of Religious
Tracts, Histories, Children's Books, etc., etc.''
Number of pages, eight, but the last leaf is gone.
The first song is the well known, " Woodpecker tapping the hollow
beech-tree."
(15) c.
"THE
REFLECTOR
OR
CARLISLE ESSAYIST."
20 numbers printed 1st Feb. 4., 1818.
20 Oct. 28., 1818.
Nos. 1, 7, 8, n, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20.
Imprint. "J. JOLLIE, PRINTER, CARLISLE.
(16) c.
"THE PIONEER."
3 numbers July 1818.
Imprint.
" Carlisle : Printed and Published by R. Johnston, Market Place,
to whose care all communications to the PIONEER (post paid) are
to be addressed."
CARLISLE PRINTERS.
Putting to one side the Reflector and the Pioneer, we have in the
Jackson collection of chap-books, fourteen printed in Carlisle, of
which the earliest, which we have numbered 1, is dated 1770: no
printer's
1 8 ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS.
printer's name is given : ::: the next, No. 2. has the imprint " Carlisle
printed in Scotch Street'* without printer's name or other date, but
internal evidence consigns it to a date about 1775 or 1776. Nos. 3
and 4, both have the imprint " Carlisle, printed and sold in Scotch
Street." Nos. 5, 6. 7. 8, have the name of F. Jollie, on their title
page, either as printer or vendor: No. 9 has ''printed by F. Jollie at
the New Printing Office. Scotch Street'' : No 10 the same, omitting
'• Scotch Street," while No. 11 has the imprint " Carlisle : Printed by
F. Jollie and Sons." There can be no doubt that Nos. 2, 3, and 4,
though without printer's name, came from Francis Jollie's press, or
from the press of some one to whose business he succeeded: and to
the same press we may assign No. 1, with its imprint of " Carlisle :
printed in the year 1770." This Francis Jollie, senior, must have
been a successful man in business, and whatever may have been his
position in 1770, he must have been in possession of capital towards
the end of the eighteenth century, + for in 1794 he printed and pub-
lished '" Hutchinson's History of Cumberland," in two large quarto
volumes : J on October 27th, 1798. he issued the first number of the
well known " Carlisle Journal," the first newspaper published in
Carlisle. The imprint is " Printed and published by Francis Jollie
in Scotch Street. "§ An imprint of a little later date runs "Printed
by Francis Jollie in Scotch Street, and published at his Compting
Office, second door in the lane || opposite the Town Hall.''
Jollie, senior, had three sons, Francis junior, James, and Jeremiah.
In 1819 the names of Francis Jollie junior, and James Jollie, super-
seded that of their father in the imprint of the " Carlisle Journal,"'
and Jeremiah became the Editor. In 1827 Francis Jollie, junior,
died, and the business was carried on by his widow, Margaret Jollie
* It does not appear to have been necessary to give a printer's name until the
passing of 39 Geo. 3. c. 79, s. 27, which imposed a penalty for printing- any
paper or book without the name and abode of printer being printed on it.
fin 17S7 Francis Jollie advertised that he had published "an elegant family
Bible with the Apocrypha, illustrated with notes and annotations, &c, ^to., in
numbers at one shilling each part embellished with an elegant copperplate."
The advertisement did not say whether Jollie printed the Bible : probably not.
X " The numerous woodcuts of Roman Altars and other antiquities, and the
views of Wetheral Priory and Church, at pp . vol i. are by Thomas
Bewick." See Hugo's " Bewick Collector," pp. 31, 32.
§1 should imagine that the heading to the "Carlisle Journal" was Bewick's
wi rk. but have no evidence that it is. He did for Jollie, a Bar-Bill head, of a
ship, for the " Ship Inn," Allonby, kept by Jacob Coulthard; he also did a bush
for the " Bush Hotel," Carlisle, kept by Thomas Wilson, and a cut of " The
Howard Arms," for the Inn of that name at Brampton, kept by Thomas Bell.
See Hugo's " Bewick Collector, Supplement." Thomas Bewick a!- > engraved,
about the year 1S00, a five-pound bank note for the Carlisle and Cumberland
Bank, and a one-guinea note tor the Carlisle Banking Company.
The Crown and Anchor Lane.
and
ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS. 10,
and by James' Jollie, until November 1828, when the name of James
Jollie disappears from the imprints of the paper, and that of Margaret
Jollie appears alone until September 17th, 1831, when the firm
became Margaret Jollie and James Steel. On September 17th, 1836,
James Steel became the sola proprietor, and moved the paper to new
premises in Peascod's Lane. At this time or a little before, the
bookselling and general printing business was separated from the
newspaper, and sold to S. Jefferson, who in 1838 published in the
Scotch Street premises "Jefferson's History of Carlisle," in 1840
" The History of Leath Ward," and 1842 " The History of Allerdale
above Derwent." Whitridge succeeded Jefferson in these premises
and Messrs. Cowards succeeded Whitridge. Whitridge printed a
monthly periodical called " Whitridge's Miscellany," and the Cowards
printed several books of Cumberland Ballads.
It is interesting to have thus traced back the origin of the news-
paper press in Carlisle to a chap-book printer of the last century.
The Jackson collection of chap-books contains three other Carlisle
chap-books : one printed by W. Hodgson, one by B. Scott in the
Market Place, and the other R. Johnson, who we learn from the
imprint to the " Pioneer," was in business in 1818 in the Market
Place. In 1804 B. Scott in the Market Place, printed " Miscellaneous
Poems," by John Stagg, with some trifling Bewick blocks ; see Hugo's
'" Bewick Collector," p. 82. The second edition was printed in 1805,
by W. Borrowdale, in the Market Place, also with Bewick cuts, see
ibid p. 84.
B. Scott was the printer of the " Carlisle Chronicle," a paper which
was established in 1807 by a few gentlemen in opposition to the
" Carlisle Journal," and was advertised to commence under the title
of "The Carlisle Herald;" but as a ruse de guerre, Mr. Jollie im-
mediately issued the prospectus of a Tuesday's paper to be called
"The Cumberland Herald." It was brought out and lived some
twelve or eighteen months. The "Carlisle Chronicle" had a longer
run but expired in 181 1. But "like a Phoenix from its ashes," the
"Carlisle Patriot" arose in 1815 under a different proprietorship.*
B. Scott was the first printer of the " Carlisle Patriot." The imprint
on the first number, which is dated Saturday, June 3, 1815, is
"Carlisle: Printed and published for the proprietors by B. Scott, in
the Market Place, and circulated with the utmost expedition through
this and the neighbouring counties." In 1816 the imprint is "Car-
lisle : Printed and published for the proprietors by B. Scott. A
* See "The Retrospect" by J. S. Lough, printed at Kendal in 1S25. Lough
was a printer apprenticed to A. Soulby of Penrith in 1S03.
letter
20 OX SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS.
letter box at the office in New Bank Lane tor the convenience of
correspondents.*' This does not, I believe, mean that B. Scott had
changed his place of printing, but that though in the Market Place,
its office door was in New Bank Lane." B. Scott continued to print
the " Patriot" until April 28th, 1S32. when Thomas Ramsey became
the printer, " at the Patriot Office, Wilson's Court, Castle Street. f
B. Scott became afterwards Scott and Benson, with offices in English
Street, nearly opposite New Bank Lane. B. Scott's son, Hudson
Scott, was the first printer of the " Carlisle Examiner," in 1857, in
Lowthian's Lane, and in that capacity was summoned to the bar of
the House of Commons in 1858 for breach of privilege, arising out of
the leading article written by Mr. Washington Wilkes, editor oi' the
paper, reflecting upon Mr. Clive, chairman of the Select Committee
on the Hawick and Carlisle Railway. Wilkes was sent to the clock
tower to purge his offence. Later the " Examiner" was printed on
the West Walls in an independent office. Scott and Benson are now
represented by Hudson Scott and Sons, lithographic printers, one of
the greatest industries in Carlisle.
Of W. Hodgson, I have at present no information : the solitary
chap-book by which he is represented contains a song commemorating
the defeat of Thurot in 1760, off the Isle of Man, by Captain Elliot,
who captured Thurot's vessel, the Belleisle, and her two consorts,
Thurot being killed. As the name of Thurot had become terrible to
all the trading sea-ports of Great Britain and Ireland, this song was
probably popular for many years after Thurot's death.
In 1797 W. Thompson of Carlisle, printed an edition of the
Reverend Josiah Relph's Poems, with a Life by Thomas Sanderson,
and a Pastoral Elegy on his death. This was the second edition :
the first was printed in Glasgow, for Mr. Tomlinson in Wigton, in
1747-
J. Mitchell was a printer in Carlisle in 1798, and printed in that
year an edition of Relph's Poems with wood cuts by Thomas Bewick,
and also " Flowers of Poesy," in which he used a Bewick block from
Relph's Poems. Mitchell appears shortly after this to have moved
to Newcastle, where he printed " Sans Souci, or the Melodist which
* The "Carlisle Chronicle " was printed in New Bank Lane. See "The
Retrospect, " ante, in which Lough mentions being engaged on the Chronicle in
New Bank Lane.
fThe " Patriot " used to be printed in New Bank Lane about 1S4S-50, subse-
quently in the Arcade, Lowther Street (near Parcels Post Office), and either
before or after that in Bank Street, where a Tuesday's paper called " Carlisle
Telegram " was started by the Perrings. Subsequently it was printed at Thur-
nam's before removing to its present premises.
banishes
OX SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS. 21
banishes care and sorrow," with four Bewick blocks. See Hugo's
" Bewick Collector," pp. 60, 64. He published other books at New-
castle.
The imprint of the " Reflector" which ran to twenty numbers and
appeared in 1818 is : —
" Printed and published by John Jollie ; Carlisle, to whom all
communications, post paid, are to be addressed."' " The Pioneer,"
also published in 1818, ran only to four numbers. Both these were
periodicals in the nature of imitations of the ''British Essayists";
the second title of the " Reflector" was the "Carlisle Essayist." ;
John Irving Lonsdale, printer, started the " Carlisle Express " in
1861, It was printed up a lane in Scotch Street, opposite the present
Public Markets until 1S70 when it was amalgamated with the
"Examiner" by Messrs. Steel Brothers of the " Carlisle Journal,"
who had bought both. After that the "Express " and "Examiner"
was printed in English Street at the Journal Office.
WHITEHAVEN CHAPBOOKS IN THE
JACKSON COLLECTION.
(1) W.
THE CONSTANT LOVERS
GARLAND
IN FOUR PARTS.
PART I. Shewing how beautiful Nancy of Yarmouth
fell in Love with Jemmy the Sailor.
PART II. How the Father convey'd a Letter to destroy
young Jemmy his Daughter's Sweetheart.
PART III. How the Ghost of young Jemmy the Sailor
appeared to Beautiful Nancy.
* For much of the information about Carlisle printers, and particularly about
the Jollies, 1 am indebted to the kindness of Messrs. Steel Brothers, proprietors
of the " Carlisle Journal." I am also indebted to Mr. Cranston, of the " Carlisle
Patriot," for help.
PART
22 ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS.
PART IV. How the Ghosts of these two unfortunate
Lovers appeared to the Boatswain, and
he being tried, was hanged at the Yard-
arm."'
Woodcut. A male figure seated under a tree, while a female figure
stands by and harangues him.
Imprint. " WHITEHAVEN.
Printed in the Year, MDCCLXXX."
Number of pages, eight.
A long and dismal ballad, the nature of which is well explained in
the title: but its popularity is proved by the number of printers that
included it in their chap-books.
(2) W.
••THE MERRY AND ENTERTAINING
JOKES
OF
GEORGE BUCHANAN
AY HO
Was servant or Teacher to King JAMES VI. as his
private Counsellor, but publicly acted his Fool. The
Whole compiled in three Numbers for the entertainment
of Youth."
In three PARTS.
The Eleventh Edition with Additions.
Woodcut. None, but across title page is an ornamental border,
which occurs on p. 9 of Ann Dunn's edition of Thomas Hickathrift.
Imprint. " Whitehaven ; Printed and Sold by A. COUTTS."
A well known and popular, but coarse story; this copy has a blue
paper cover, and consists of sixteen pages.
(3) W.
"THE PLEASANT AND DELIGHTFUL
HISTORY
OF
LAWRENCE LAZY
CONTAINING His
ON SCnfE LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS. 23
His Birth and slothful Breeding: and also as he grew to
maturity, how he served the School-Master and his Wife,
the Squire's Cook, and Mr. Wheatley the Farmer, which
was accounted by the laws of Lubberland, High Treason ;
And lastly, his Arraignment and Tryal before Sir James
Jobson in the Town-Hall of Never-work, concluding with
happy Deliverance from those Treasons which were laid
to his charge/'
Woodcut. None on title page, but there are two in the text, which
are used in other chap-books bv J. Dunn.
Imprint. "WHITEHAVEN.
Printed for and Sold by J. Dunn."
Number of pages, twenty-four, but the last tu*o leaves are missing.
(4) W.
"A PLEASANT AND DELIGHTFUL
HISTORY
OF
THOMAS HICKATHRIFT: ,
Woodcuts. On the title page an uncouth figure of a giant, round
hat or cap in hand, own hair, loose, and costume of the period of
George II.
The text contains several other rude cuts, which have little to do
with the subject matter, and the whole of the last page is taken up
with a woodcut in three compartments : in one, two figures on
horseback tilt at one another: in the second are two figures, one
standing over the other, who lies upon the ground : in the third two
large dogs or wild beasts charge a gaint, who thrusts a hand down
each of their throats.* The cut on p. 13 is a rude reproduction of a
cut of Crispin and Crispianus, from the " Shoemaker's Glory," a
chap-book whose imprint is "Newcastle: Printed at the Printing
Office in Pilgrim Street."
Imprint. " "WHITEHAVEN
Printed and Sold by J. DUNN."
* This is a copy from the title page of "The Fameous History of the Valiant
London Apprentice " whose imprint is " Newcastle : Printed in this present
year." Ashtonp. 227.
Several
24 ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS.
Several names of owners are written in this copy — "Jonathan
Hartley, Birkenthwaite" — "John Hartley 1803" — "John Hartley,
History" — "John Hartley Book" — "Ann Hartley Book 1813." It
contains twenty-four pages.
(5) W.
"The SLECOND PART of
THOMAS HICKATHRIFT."
Woodcut. The same as on the last page of the first part: other
cuts from the first part are reproduced in the second part equally
apropos of nothing in the text. A rude cut of either Charles II, James
II. or William III, crowned, robed, and vastly bewigged, does duty
for the King of the story, William I. A cut of a sort of ballet dance
of six figures in armour, and brandishing cutlasses represents the
twenty-one ruffians in armour who attacked Hickathrift.
Imprint. There is none, but this second part is clearly from the
same press as the first part with the imprint of J. Dunn. It also
contains twenty-four pages.
The history of Thomas Hickathrift is one of the best known of
chap-book stories; he is said to have lived in the Isle of Ely, in the
time of William the Conqueror. Part I. tells how by his strength
and valour he arose from a poor man's son to be Mr. Hickathrift, and
Part II, how he came to be Sir Thomas Hickathrift, and died of
grief for the loss of his friend Henry None-such, the Tinker. Mr.
Ashton prints Part I. of the " History of Thomas Hickathrift," and
says " This worthy does not seem to have been an absolute myth."''
Cunningham prints both parts. |
(6) W.
"THE
HISTORY
OF THE
KING and COBLER."
This is a chap. book of twenty-four pages, whose first and last
pages are gone; it is part one of the "History of the King and
*" Chap-books of the Eighteenth Century" p. 193. London, Chatto and
Windus, 1SS2.
f "Amusing Prose Chap-books": London, Hamilton, Adams and Co., 1SS9.
Cobler
ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS. 25
Cobler," a well known chap-book story, which is given by both
Ashton (p. 232I and Cunningham ip. 1). There is no imprint, but in
the text are several cuts which appear in the ,; History of Tom
Hickatbrift, including the giant which did duty on the title page for
Tom : it now represents the cobbler going to court. A cut of a ladv
and gentleman in costumes of end of 17th century, represents the
cobbler and his wife Joan. What the cut really represents is a
puzzle at present : above the lady's head are the letters R.M., three
cherubins blow zephyrs upon the gentleman's head from the upper
right corner of the cut. The letters K.M. appear on other wood
blocks used bv the Dunns.
(7) w.
" The SECOND PART of the
HISTORY
OF THE
KING and the COBLER."
Woodcut. The cut of a King which did duty for William I. in the
" History of Tom Hickathrift."
Imprint. "WHITEHAVEN.
Printed and Sold by J. Dunn."
Number of pages, twenty-four.
(8) W.
"A
PLEASANT and DELIGHTFUL
HISTORY
OF
THOMAS HICKATHRIFT."
Woodcuts. A romantic individual playing upon a guitar. This
chap-book has in the text most of the cuts from J. Dunn's " History
of Tom Hickathrift," and contains twenty-four pages.
Imprint. '-WHITEHAVEN
Printed by ANN DUNN, Market Place."
(9) W.
26 ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS.
(9) W.
"THE FAMOUS AND RENOWNED
HISTORY OF
THE MEMORABLE, HUT UNHAPPY HUNTING
OF CHEVY CHACE
NEAR THE
RIVER TWEED IN SCOTLAND
TOGETHER
With the great and mortal Battle fought there between
the lord PIERCY Earl of Northumberland, and his
fifteen hundred English Archers, and Earl DOUGLAS
with twenty hundred Scottish spearmen : in which both
these Earls, with most of their men were slain."
Woodcuts. On title page half length of man in armour and full
bottomed wig ; star on breast and baton in right hand; qu: Marl-
borough: two cuts of modern sport, nameiy a horseman and dogs
chasing a deer, and a gunner with dead hare and a dog : also two or
three cuts from J. Dunn's " Tom Hickathrift," notably the ballet of
six men in armour.
Imprint. •• WHIT EH AY EX.
Printed by AXX DUNN, Market Place.
This is a prose, not a poetical account of the celebrated hunting,
and contains twenty-four pages.
(io) W.
"THE PLEASANT HISTORY OF
JACK HORNER
BEING
A truly instructive, pleasant and delightful entertainment
for youth."
Woodcut. The mysterious lady and gentleman, who in the first
part of the " King and the Cobbler - ' do duty for the cobbler and his
wife Joan.
Imprint. " WHITEHAVEN.
Printed by B. N. DUNN, in the Market Place."
There is a manuscript date in this chap-book " I. Har.lt}-, Birken-
thwaite, January 26, Ann. Domini 1S33."
It
ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-BOOKS. 2J
It is quite clear that J. Dunn, Ann Dunn, and B. N. Dunn,
followed' one another, and probably in the above order, as printers in
Whitehaven, starting in the last century. This chap-book is a
twenty-four.
(n) W. "THE HISTORY OF
JOSEPH
AND HIS
BRETHREN
WITH
JACOB'S JOURNEY INTO EGYPT
AND HIS
DEATH AND FUNERAL."
Woodcut. Two standing figures, one with a staff.
Imprint. "WHITEHAVEN.
Printed and Sold by J. BRISCOE.
Price One Penny."
This is a long doggerel poem, which is printed in Ashton's book,
from a copy with numerous cuts. Briscoe's edition has none but
the one on the title-page, but it has at the end
"THE
SOLILIQUY
OF
ABRAHAM
UPON RECEIVING
THE COMMAND TO SACRIFICE
HIS
SON ISAAC."
With Woodcut. The Roman soldiers at the empty tomb, over
which is an angel.
(12) W. "THE
LIFE and DEATH
OF
MRS. JANE SHORE
CONCUBINE TO
KING EDWARD IV."
Woodcuts
28 ON SOME LOCAL CHAP-ROOKS.
Woodcuts. On title page is a cut representing a yard or a bake-