01848nam 2200397Ia 450 99639348190331620200824121647.0(CKB)4940000000115689(EEBO)2240865056(UnM)99899840e(UnM)99899840(EXLCZ)99494000000011568919980327d1675 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|The English fortune-teller[electronic resource] Being a brief direction how to shun all strife, a brief instruction how to chuse a wife; whereby a man may lead a happy life: it shews difference in womens qualities, by colour of their hair, both face and eyes, the tune is, Ragged and torn. &cLondon printed for W[illiam]. Thackeray, T[homas]. Passenger, and W[illiam]. Whitwood[1675?]1 sheet ([1] p.) ill. (woodcuts)Verse - "You young-men that want skill in wooing".Publisher's names from Wing CD-ROM, 1996.Wing CD-ROM, 1996 gives the date, 167-?.Date of publication conjectured by cataloguer.A variant of this edition, line 4 of title begins 'VVhereby'.Filmed copy at Adam Matthew's set Women Advising Women: Part 5: Women's writing and advice, c1450-1720, reel 3, Douce Ballads 1[131], appears to be a variant with the double "v" in "VVhereby"; trimmed, slightly affecting title.Reproduction of original in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, England.eebo-0014Fortune-tellingEarly works to 1800BroadsidesEnglandLondonrbgenrFortune-tellingCu-RivESCu-RivESWaOLNBOOK996393481903316The English fortune-teller2309120UNISA