01748nam 2200433 n 450 99639600590331620200824121153.0(CKB)3810000000013975(EEBO)2240904852(UnM)ocm99891911e(UnM)99891911(EXLCZ)99381000000001397519920317d1650 uy engurbn||||a|bb|The Greeks and Trojans vvarres[electronic resource] Caus'd by that wanton Trojan knight Sir Paris who ravishes Hellen and her to Troy carries the Greeks in revenge (and to fetch her again) a mighty great army do quickly ordain. Imagine you see them besiedging old Troy, which after ten years they at th'last destroy, with a fit allusion, before the conclusion. Tune is, A conscionable caveatLondon, Printed for F. Grove[1650?]1 sheet ([1] p.) ill. (woodcuts)Signed: H.C., i.e. Humphrey Crouch.Date of publication from Wing CD-ROM, 1996.Verse: "Of Greece and Troy I shall you tell.".In two parts, printed side by side.Copy cut and mounted.Reproduction of original in the British Library.eebo-0018Trojan warPoetryEarly works to 1800Ballads, English17th centuryBroadsidesEngland17th century.rbgenrTrojan warBallads, EnglishCrouch Humphreyfl. 1635-1671.1001249Cu-RivESCu-RivESCStRLINCu-RivESBOOK996396005903316The Greeks and Trojans vvarres2320542UNISA