01821nam 2200373 n 450 99639516560331620200824121122.0(CKB)3810000000012130(EEBO)2240887167(UnM)ocm99888111e(UnM)99888111(EXLCZ)99381000000001213019980714d1685 uy engurbn||||a|bb|Poor Tom the taylor his lamentation[electronic resource] Giving an account how he pickt up a miss near the maypole in the Strand, and also how he handed her to the fair. where he treated her very generously, but according to the old proverb, sweet meat must have sower sauce, for while he was safe a snoring in bed she very dexterously picked his pocket, leaving him to pay the reckoning, without ever a penny in his purse, this unforunate disaster may well be a warning to all the taylors in or about London to forsake their old accustomed tricks, setting poor Tom before them as an example. To the tune of, Daniel Cooper[London] Printed for I. Deacon, at the Angel in Guilt-spur-street, without Newgate[1685?]1 sheet ([1] p.) ill. (woodcuts)Date of publication from Wing CD-ROM, 1996.Verse: "Tom the taylor near the strand,".Imperfect: heavily stained.Reproduction of original in the British Library.eebo-0018ThievesPoetryEarly works to 1800Ballads, English17th centuryBroadsidesEngland17th century.rbgenrThievesBallads, EnglishCu-RivESCu-RivESBOOK996395165603316Poor Tom the taylor his lamentation2375596UNISA