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The Hangmans joy, or The traytors sorrow. Being a very merry dialogue, between the hang-man, and the haltermaker. Together with some verses, found in the rolls of the pretended High Court of Justice. With an epitaph on those traytors, that murthered the king. Delightful and pleasant, with witty expressions, and if rightly understood.
Bibliographic name/number: Thomason / E.1842[2]; Wing (2nd ed.) / H649. Anonymous.
EEBO British Library records - unstructured.
16 p. London:
Printed for John Andrews, at the white-Lyon neer Py-Corner, 1660.