Recent (Books Ö*
Something ^bout Them.
" Old and young will alike derive amusement and pleasure from turning
over its delightful pages."—Globe.
Chap-book Chaplets. Adorn’d with suitable
Sculptures by Joseph Crawhall. The many hu^reds of cuU be^e
III.—I know what I know. IV.—Jemmy and Nancy of Yarmouth.
Leadenhall Press, thkk 4to Volume, Twenty-five Shillings.
A REPRODUCTION in facsimile of the crudely printed and
often humorously illustrated pamphlets that were hawked
about the country by the chapmen of a bygone age. ^ok
collectors, antiquarians, and lovers of the quaint and curious
will be charmed with the reproduction in volume form of the
literature that amused the leisure hours of their forefathers.
From first to last the tales are literally crowded with amusing
and characteristic cuts, all hand-coloured. The type, though
purposely thick and coarse, is very legible, while the illustra
tions, charming in their unique humour, will provoke smiles
from the gravest.
" A volume to delight in."—Pall Mall Gazette.
Olde ffrendes wyth newe Faces-. Adorn’d
mmi
T he description appended to “Chapbook Chaplets" applies
equally to “ Olde ffrendes.”
♦ XXU * HéûbéttÇûff ♦ ♦
LOü^roo^K^ s.c.
(5)