01943nam 2200361Ia 450 99638755100331620200824132237.0(CKB)4940000000086265(EEBO)2240915614(OCoLC)ocm45578158e(OCoLC)45578158(EXLCZ)99494000000008626520001215d1667 uy 0engurbn||||a|bb|The Bloody butcher, and the two wicked and cruel bawds[electronic resource] exprest in a woful narrative of one Nathaniel Smith a butcher, who lived in Maypole-Alley near the Strand; his wife having been all day in the market selling of meat, in the evening went with her husband to an alehouse, where they stay'd till ten of the clock. And then went home together, and being in their lodging, demanded of her the money she had taken that day, but she (being great with child and peevish) refused to give it him, he taking his butchers-knife in his hand stabb'd her in the back, whereof she instantly dyed, for which he was apprehended, condemned, and executed at Tyburn, April the 24th. 1667. : As also another relation of a ravisher, who in a bawdy-house (assisted by two women) ravished a girle. : The tune, The bleeding heartLondon, Printed by E. Crowch, for F. Coles, T. Vere, and J. Wright.[1667]1 sheet ([1] p.) illIncludes two engraved illustrations.In verse.Reproduction of original in the Glasgow University Library.eebo-0166MurderEnglandLondonPoetryBallads, English17th centuryBroadsidesEnglandLondon17th century.rbgenrMurderBallads, EnglishEAEEAEBOOK996387551003316The Bloody butcher, and the two wicked and cruel bawds2373437UNISA