Rare Books
Dangerfields dance. : Giving an account of several notorious crimes by him committed viz, He pretended to be a duke, and feigned himself to be Monmouth, with several other pranks: for which he was sentenced to stand in the pillory, to be vvhip'd at the carts arse, and to be sent back to prison
1 of 2
You might also be interested in

An elegy on the late Duke of Monmouth
Rare Books
ESTC R15194 ; In verse ; Caption title;Imprint from colophon ; "This may be printed, R.L.S. July the 16th. 1685." ; Epitaph at end ; Signature: [A]² ; Text begins: "As saylors split on rocks, so restless man,"
133186

A song upon the randizvous on Hounsley-Heath, : With a paralel of the destruction of our English Turks in the west, and the Mahomitans in Hungary: How the Christian army, compos'd of forty thousand men, took New-Hassel, relieved Grand, defeated the Turks army of sixty thousand men in two days time
Rare Books
ESTC R12321 ; Caption title.;Imprint from colophon. ; Below title: "To the tune, Hark, the thundering cannons roar, &c." ; "This may be printed, R.L.S."--above text, below title. ; In verse. ; Text begins: "Our comet or the lazing-star,".
133192

The tragick-comedy of Titus Oates, who sometime went under the notion of the Salamanca doctor who being convicted of perjury and several other crimes, at the Kings-Bench-bar, Westminster, May 16: 1685: had his sentence to stand in the pillory, to be vvhip'd at the carts arse, and to be sent back to prison
Rare Books
ESTC R11672 ; Verse - "Whet all your wits, and antidote your eyes,"
180177