Cambridge jokes : from the seventeenth to the twentieth century
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Bibliographic Information
Cambridge jokes : from the seventeenth to the twentieth century
(Cambridge library collection, . Cambridge)
Cambridge University Press, 2009
- : [pbk.]
- Other Title
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The jokes of the Cambridge coffee-houses in the seventeenth century
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Note
"This digitally printed version 2009"--T.p. verso
Reprint. Originally published in 1842 (Cambridge : sold by all the booksellers ; London : Tilt and Bogue). The fresher's don't (Cambridge : Redin & Co., printed, 1913)
"In this volume it is paired which a pamphlet, The fresher's don't, written by 'A Sympathiser (B.A.)', (probably A.J. Story) and first published in the 1890s. This edition was printed in 1913 by Redin & Co."--[front page]
Contents of Works
- The fresher's don't : to the freshers at Cambridge, these remarks and hints are addressed in all courtesy / by A Sympathiser
Description and Table of Contents
Description
James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps (1820-1889) was a Shakespeare scholar, archaeologist and controversialist with wide antiquarian interests. In 1842, while Librarian of Jesus College, Cambridge, he published The Jokes of the Cambridge Coffee-Houses in the Seventeenth Century, which he described as a collection of early anecdotes 'selected from various Jest Books' which 'serve to show the state of this class of literature during that period'. In this volume it is paired with a pamphlet, The Fresher's Don'ts, written by 'A Sympathiser (B. A.)', (probably A. J. Storey) and first published in the 1890s. This edition was printed in 1913 by Redin and Co. of Trinity Street (with advertisements for Redin's and other Cambridge firms' goods and services at the beginning and the end). This light-hearted guide to student etiquette before the cataclysm of the First World War gives insights into a way of life which was about to vanish forever.
Table of Contents
- 1. The jokes of the Cambridge coffee-houses in the seventeenth century James Orchard Halliwell-Phillips
- 2. The fresher's don'ts A. J. Storey.
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