Poems; Chiefly Moral and Pastoral. By Mary Ann Fairbrother, who most submissively offers them to the public, in the hope of obtaining their benevolent assistance, to enable her to support four fatherless and entirely unprotected children.
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Fairbrother, Mary Ann. Poems; Chiefly Moral and Pastoral. By Mary Ann Fairbrother, who most submissively offers them to the public, in the hope of obtaining their benevolent assistance, to enable her to support four fatherless and entirely unprotected children.The Women's Print History Project, 2019, title ID 9570, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/title/9570. Accessed 2024-12-23.
Fairbrother, Mary Ann. Poems; Chiefly Moral and Pastoral. By Mary Ann Fairbrother, who most submissively offers them to the public, in the hope of obtaining their benevolent assistance, to enable her to support four fatherless and entirely unprotected children. London: John Hatchard [190 Piccadilly], Ann Vernor, Thomas Hood, and Charles Sharpe, 1808.
Fairbrother , M.A. (1808). Poems; chiefly moral and pastoral. by mary ann fairbrother, who most submissively offers them to the public, in the hope of obtaining their benevolent assistance, to enable her to support four fatherless and entirely unprotected children. London: John Hatchard [190 Piccadilly] Ann Vernor, Thomas Hood, and Charles Sharpe.
Fairbrother, Mary A. Poems; Chiefly Moral and Pastoral. By Mary Ann Fairbrother, who most submissively offers them to the public, in the hope of obtaining their benevolent assistance, to enable her to support four fatherless and entirely unprotected children. London: John Hatchard [190 Piccadilly], Ann Vernor, Thomas Hood, and Charles Sharpe, 1808.
@book{ wphp_9570 author={Fairbrother,Mary Ann}, year={1808}, title={Poems; Chiefly Moral and Pastoral. By Mary Ann Fairbrother, who most submissively offers them to the public, in the hope of obtaining their benevolent assistance, to enable her to support four fatherless and entirely unprotected children.}, publisher={John Hatchard [190 Piccadilly] \& Ann Vernor, Thomas Hood, and Charles Sharpe \& }, address={London}, }
Suggestions and Comments for Poems; Chiefly Moral and Pastoral. By Mary Ann Fairbrother, who most submissively offers them to the public, in the hope of obtaining their benevolent assistance, to enable her to support four fatherless and entirely unprotected children.