• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Parnassian bagatelles: being a miscellaneous collection of poetical attempts. To which are added a comic sketch in one act, called The way to get un-married, As performing with universal Applause at the Theatre-Royal, Covent-Garden. And the Village Doctor, or Killing no Cure; a Favourite Burletta, Exhibited at Jones's Royal-Circus, St. George's Fields. By J. C. Cross, Author of the Divertisement, Purse on Benevolent Tar, British Fortitude, the Apparition, Point at Herqui, &c
  • Contributor: Cross, John Cartwright [Author]
  • Published: London: printed by Burton and Co. No. 11, Gate-Street, Lincoln's-Inn-Fields ; published by Bellamy, King-Street, Covent-Garden, 1796
    Online-Ausg.: Farmington Hills, Mich: Cengage Gale, 2009
  • Extent: Online-Ressource ([8],157,[1]p); 8°
  • Language: English
  • Keywords: Ballads, English Early works to 1800
  • Reproduction series: Eighteenth Century Collections Online
  • Type of reproduction: Online-Ausg.
  • Place of reproduction: Farmington Hills, Mich: Cengage Gale, 2009
  • Reproduction note: Electronic reproduction; Available via the World Wide Web
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: A greatly enlarged version of J. C. Cross's 1792 'Parnassian trifles', including some poems from his 'Insolvent debtor' published a year later
    English Short Title Catalog, T68917
    Microopaque only contains "The way to get unmarried" and "The village doctor
    Reproduction of original from British Library
    With a half-title