The praise of the merry month of May in which our royall Prince Charles was born, which grac't that month, and made glad the hearts of all true and free born subjects of England. Come passengers and hear what I shall say, in the praise of the merry month of May for in that month our soveraign Charles was born. Which many years exiled hath liv'd forlorn each creature in this month rejoyce and sing with heart, and cry God preserve the King. The tune is, Prince Charles birth day, or the subjects hearts to cheer.
dc.contributor | Text Creation Partnership, |
dc.coverage.placeName | London |
dc.date.accessioned | 2018-05-25 |
dc.date.accessioned | 2019-11-09T18:55:19Z |
dc.date.available | 2019-11-09T18:55:19Z |
dc.date.created | 1660 |
dc.date.issued | 2009-03 |
dc.identifier | ota:A55627 |
dc.identifier.citation | http://purl.ox.ac.uk/ota/A55627 |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12024/A55627 |
dc.description.abstract | Verse - "Now welcome in thou sweetest month of May,". Imprint from Wing. Stained. Reproduction of the original in the Harvard University Library. |
dc.format.extent | Approx. 6 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 1 1-bit group-IV TIFF page image. |
dc.format.medium | Digital bitstream |
dc.format.mimetype | text/xml |
dc.language | English |
dc.language.iso | eng |
dc.publisher | University of Oxford |
dc.relation.isformatof | https://data.historicaltexts.jisc.ac.uk/view?pubId=eebo-99831007e |
dc.relation.ispartof | EEBO-TCP (Phase 1) |
dc.rights | This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal. The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. |
dc.rights.uri | http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ |
dc.rights.label | PUB |
dc.subject.lcsh | Charles -- II, -- King of England, 1630-1685 -- Poetry -- Early works to 1800. |
dc.subject.lcsh | Ballads, English -- 17th century. |
dc.title | The praise of the merry month of May in which our royall Prince Charles was born, which grac't that month, and made glad the hearts of all true and free born subjects of England. Come passengers and hear what I shall say, in the praise of the merry month of May for in that month our soveraign Charles was born. Which many years exiled hath liv'd forlorn each creature in this month rejoyce and sing with heart, and cry God preserve the King. The tune is, Prince Charles birth day, or the subjects hearts to cheer. |
dc.type | Text |
has.files | yes |
branding | Oxford Text Archive |
files.size | 106641 |
files.count | 4 |
identifier.stc | Wing P3169A |
identifier.stc | ESTC R219544 |
otaterms.date.range | 1600-1699 |
Files for this item
Download all local files for this item (104.14 KB)

- Name
- A55627.epub
- Size
- 13.69 KB
- Format
- Unknown
- Description
- Version of the work for e-book readers in the EPUB format

- Name
- A55627.html
- Size
- 11.93 KB
- Format
- HTML
- Description
- Version of the work for web browsers

- Name
- A55627.samuels.tsv
- Size
- 58.89 KB
- Format
- Unknown
- Description
- Version of the work with linguistic annotation added, in one-word-per-line format, from the SAMUELS project

- Name
- A55627.xml
- Size
- 19.63 KB
- Format
- XML
- Description
- Version of the work in the original source TEI XML file produced from the Text Creation Partnership version