A caveat for young men. Or, The bad husband turn'd thrifty. This caveat may serve both for old and yong [sic], for to remember that old age will come; if you these verses do minde and read, I hope hereafter you will take better heed: this song it was set forth and penn'd, to teach bad husbands to amend. Therefore bad husbands mend your lives. And be more kinder to your wives. To the tune of, Hey ho my honey. Wade, John, fl. 1660-1680. 1670-1677? Approx. 6 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 1 1-bit group-IV TIFF page image. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2009-03 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). B06546 Wing W162 Interim Tract Supplement Guide EBB65H[25] Interim Tract Supplement Guide C.20.f.8[54] 99887048 ocm99887048 183253

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Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B06546) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 183253) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books; Tract supplement ; A2:3[25]; A5:2[44]) A caveat for young men. Or, The bad husband turn'd thrifty. This caveat may serve both for old and yong [sic], for to remember that old age will come; if you these verses do minde and read, I hope hereafter you will take better heed: this song it was set forth and penn'd, to teach bad husbands to amend. Therefore bad husbands mend your lives. And be more kinder to your wives. To the tune of, Hey ho my honey. Wade, John, fl. 1660-1680. 1 sheet ([1] p.) : ill. (woodcuts). Printed for W. Thackeray, T. Passinger and W. VVhitw.ood [sic], London, : [between 1670-1677] Signed: By John Wade. Date of publication suggested by Wing. Verse: "All you young ranting blades ..." Reproduction of original in the Harvard University, Houghton Library and the British Library.

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eng Ballads, English -- 17th century. 2008-02 Assigned for keying and markup 2008-05 Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2008-06 Sampled and proofread 2008-06 Text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-09 Batch review (QC) and XML conversion
A Caveat for Young Men. OR, The Bad Husband turn'd Thrifty. This Caveat may ſerve both for Old and yong, For to remember that Old Age will come; If you theſe Verſes do minde and read, I hope hereafter you will take better heed: This Song it was ſet forth and penn'd, To teach Bad Husbands to amend. Therefore bad Husbands mend your lives, And be more kinder to your Wives. To the Tune of, Hey ho my Honey.

ALL you young Ranting Blades, that ſpend your time in vain, Remember that old age, you cannot it refrain: And whilſt that you are young, this Caveat take of me, Be ruled by no tempting tongue, to bring you to poverty. I have been a bad Husband long and have ſpent ſtore of ſilver and gold, Yet now Ile ſave ſomething whilſt I am yong, to keep me when I am old. I had good ſtore of means, and I liv'd moſt gallantly: But yet upon Whores and Queens, I ſpent it by and by: My Hoaſtis ſhe was full of laughter, ſo long as I had money good ſtore; And my Children muſt drink fair water, whilſt I in the Ale-houſe did roar. I have been, &c. My Wife would me intreat, the Ale, houſe to refrain; Then I with anger great, made anſwear ſtraight again: If you begin to ſcold, then I will bang thy coat; What woman her tongue can hold, when a man ſwallows all down his throat I have been, &c. My Children and I muſt ſit, until we ſtarve and pine, Whilſt you your guts full get, of Tobacco, Béer, and Wine. Half that you ſpend in vain, and méerly throw away, Our Family would maintain, and our Houſe-Rent it would pay, I have been a bad Husband long, and have ſpent ſtore of ſilver and gold; Yet now Ile ſave ſomething whilſt I am yong, to keep me when I am old. But yet I'de not be rul'd by theſe words ſhe did ſay, My ſelf I often fool'd, which brought me to decay: I no ſooner had ſold a Cow, but ſtraight to the Ale-houſe I ran; My Hoaſtis unto me would bow, until all my money was gone. I have been, &c. She'd chuck me under the chin, and perhaps would give me a kiſs, As Venus drew Adonis in, my Hoaſtis would never miſs: She'd tell me it was too early, or elſe it was too late, until by the Oyl of Barley, they had gotten my whole eſtate, I have been, &c. Thus day and night I ranted, and no company did refuſe, whilſt my wife and children wanted, I did my ſelf abuſe: I could not ſcarce afford my children clothes to wear; Nor my wife one good word, ſuch was her grievous care. I have been, &c. The more my wife did ſpeak, the worſer I would be, I'de drink till my brains did ake, onely to anger ſhe, So long as I had a penny; i'de never give out for gain; But ſince I have found by many, a Good Fellow's a coſtly name. I have been, &c. At laſt I did perceive, my Eſtate was almoſt gone, Then it was time to leave, and ſome words I thought upon: I went into an Ale-houſe, where all my Coyn I had drown'd; In company with good fellows, I had ſpent an hundred pound, I have been, &c. I then theſe words replied, Hoaſtis, money I have none, A Flagon ſhe me denied, and bid me ſtraight be gone: what, will you not truſt me a Flagon, thoſe words replied I, No, quoth ſhe not a Nogging, if you ſhould ſtarve and dye. I have been, &c. I then went ſighing home, and a vow ſtraightway did make. They ſhould ſit whilſt day of Doom, before one penny of me ſhould take: A new life I will now begin, the Ale-wives ſhall ſit like Elves; They ſhall both Card and Spin, or elſe go hang themſelves. I have been, &c. Now I all men adviſe, this Caveat think upon, Be ruled by your wives, for old age it will come. If they know you have money, the Ale-wives with you will crack, They'l ſuck you as Bees ſuck honey, then hang you behind your back, I have been, &c. Therefore in time be ruled, ſave ſomething whilſt you have it, By no Ale-wives be you fooled, and then repent too late: For when that all is gone, and you have but little ſtock, If to the Ale-wives you make moan, they will you but jear and mock. I have been a bad Husband long, and have ſpent ſtore of ſilver and gold; Yet now Ile ſave ſomething whilſt I am yong, to keep me when I am old. FINIS. By John Wade.

London, Printed, for W. Thackeray, T. Paſſinger and W. VVhitw ood