Fun and frolic; or, A comic journal of wit. Being a new collection of humourous jests, bon mots, Irish blunders, whimsical adventures, double entendres, sharp repartees, droll stories, and anecdotes of various well-known facetious characters, who, in a decided oppositon to melancholy, pledged themselves to live in constant emnity to old care, till they effected his dissolution in the stream of their mirth.
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Unknown. Fun and frolic; or, A comic journal of wit. Being a new collection of humourous jests, bon mots, Irish blunders, whimsical adventures, double entendres, sharp repartees, droll stories, and anecdotes of various well-known facetious characters, who, in a decided oppositon to melancholy, pledged themselves to live in constant emnity to old care, till they effected his dissolution in the stream of their mirth.The Women's Print History Project, 2019, title ID 13585, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/title/13585. Accessed 2024-12-03.
Unknown, . Fun and frolic; or, A comic journal of wit. Being a new collection of humourous jests, bon mots, Irish blunders, whimsical adventures, double entendres, sharp repartees, droll stories, and anecdotes of various well-known facetious characters, who, in a decided oppositon to melancholy, pledged themselves to live in constant emnity to old care, till they effected his dissolution in the stream of their mirth. London: T. Hughes [Stationers Court], J. Ker, Ann Kemmish, William Champante and Benjamin Whitrow, Wilmott and Hill, Nathaniel and John Muggeridge, Thomas Smith [Maidstone], 1804.
Unknown , . (1804). Fun and frolic; or, a comic journal of wit. being a new collection of humourous jests, bon mots, irish blunders, whimsical adventures, double entendres, sharp repartees, droll stories, and anecdotes of various well-known facetious characters, who, in a decided oppositon to melancholy, pledged themselves to live in constant emnity to old care, till they effected his dissolution in the stream of their mirth. London: T. Hughes [Stationers Court] J. Ker. Ann Kemmish. William Champante and Benjamin Whitrow. Wilmott and Hill. Nathaniel and John Muggeridge. Thomas Smith [Maidstone]
Unknown, . Fun and frolic; or, A comic journal of wit. Being a new collection of humourous jests, bon mots, Irish blunders, whimsical adventures, double entendres, sharp repartees, droll stories, and anecdotes of various well-known facetious characters, who, in a decided oppositon to melancholy, pledged themselves to live in constant emnity to old care, till they effected his dissolution in the stream of their mirth. London: T. Hughes [Stationers Court], J. Ker, Ann Kemmish, William Champante and Benjamin Whitrow, Wilmott and Hill, Nathaniel and John Muggeridge, Thomas Smith [Maidstone], 1804.
@book{ wphp_13585 author={Unknown,}, year={1804}, title={Fun and frolic; or, A comic journal of wit. Being a new collection of humourous jests, bon mots, Irish blunders, whimsical adventures, double entendres, sharp repartees, droll stories, and anecdotes of various well-known facetious characters, who, in a decided oppositon to melancholy, pledged themselves to live in constant emnity to old care, till they effected his dissolution in the stream of their mirth.}, publisher={T. Hughes [Stationers Court] \& J. Ker \& Ann Kemmish \& William Champante and Benjamin Whitrow \& Wilmott and Hill \& Nathaniel and John Muggeridge \& Thomas Smith [Maidstone] \& }, address={London}, }
Suggestions and Comments for Fun and frolic; or, A comic journal of wit. Being a new collection of humourous jests, bon mots, Irish blunders, whimsical adventures, double entendres, sharp repartees, droll stories, and anecdotes of various well-known facetious characters, who, in a decided oppositon to melancholy, pledged themselves to live in constant emnity to old care, till they effected his dissolution in the stream of their mirth.