Merry Andrew, 1711. An almanack, of the old and new fashion: being the third after bissextile, or leap-year. or, An ephemeris of the last, best, and newest edition. Wherein the reader may find (if he hath more brains than a butterfly) many remarkable things, worthy his observation. Calculated for the meridian of any place in Scotland, where they understand an ape from an apple, and a sucking pig from a hay-stack, and fitted for the noddles of most people's understanding. With a catalogus librorum and ponfonthonsoncausticon befitting the fag-end of an almanack. By Merry Andrew, professor of predictions by star-gazing at Tam-Tallon.

  • Merry Andrew, professor of predictions.
Date:
[1711]
  • Books
  • Online

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About this work

Publication/Creation

Edinburgh : printed by James Watson in Craig's Closs, and sold at his Shop, next door to the Red-Lyon, opposite to the Lucken-Booths, [1711]

Physical description

[16]p. ; 80.

References note

ESTC T172195

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