01858nam 2200421 n 450 99639284540331620200824121809.0(CKB)4940000000113709(EEBO)2264217558(UnM)ocm99887194e(UnM)99887194(EXLCZ)99494000000011370919980401f16701696 uy engurbn||||a|bb|The London damsels fate by unjust tyrany [sic]: or, The rash lover[electronic resource] Being a relation of a handsome maid that was lately through the tyranny of her parents, forced from her dearest, to one whom she hated, her love for sorrow dyes, she being distracted through grief and envy, first drinks poyson, and then stabs herself, and dyed in great desolation. Tune of Troy town,[London] Printed for P[hilip]. Brooksby at the Golden Ball in West smithfield.[between 1670-1696]1 sheet ([1] p.) ill. (woodcuts)Verse: "All you that unto marriage tend ..."Date, place of publication and publisher's name from Wing.Reproduction of original in the Harvard University, Houghton Library.eebo-0067BroadsidesEnglandLondonEarly works to 1800Man-woman relationshipsEarly works to 1800SuicideEarly works to 1800Parent and child in literatureEarly works to 1800Ballads, English17th centuryBroadsidesMan-woman relationshipsSuicideParent and child in literatureBallads, English,Cu-RivESCu-RivESBOOK996392845403316The London damsels fate by unjust tyrany : or, The rash lover2322064UNISA