The dying speech of Old Tenor : on the 31st of March 1750; being the day appointed for his execution. : With a word of comfort to his disconsolate mourners.

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Green, Joseph, 1706-1780
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: [Boston] : Sold [by Rogers and Fowle] next to the prison in Queen-Street, 1750]
Series:Early American imprints. Evans (1639-1800) ; no. 40538.
Subjects:
Online Access:Evans Digital Edition
Description
Item Description:Verse in two parts; first line: What doleful cries are these that fright my sense.
Attributed to Joseph Green in Sibley's Harvard graduates and in the Magazine of history, volume 24, extra number 94, 1923, which contains a facsimile of the broadside.
At end: Dated in Boston, which has been the chief place of my residence for many years, which I believe will be very sensible of my departure, this thirty-first of March 1750.
The firm of Rogers and Fowle was located at this address for several years, until the partnership dissolved in April 1750.
Text in two columns.
Electronic resource.
Physical Description:1 sheet (1 unnumbered page)
Microform version available in the Readex Early American Imprints series.
Place of Publication:United States -- Massachusetts -- Boston.