Thrale history
Their works
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While Mr. Thrale was ill I used to attend the Counting house for him; one day a Story was brought me of a Man that kept an Alehouse—the Crown & Thistle being broke, the Sign had been a Crown & Cushion, but he changed it they told me though his Predecessor had prosper’d quite well too.—the following Epigram came into my head & I wrote it to divert my Master, who made me print it in the publick Advertiser.
What though blest in a Queen that her Station adorns,
Though possess’d of Health, Virtue & Power;
My Crown says the King is all planted with Thorns,
I can hardly be happy an Hour:
Says a sly Wag of Windsor who heard him repine,
Your Majesty must not take this ill;
The old Crown and Cushion’s a good thriving Sign
But you’re prick’d by the Crown & the Thistle.
Verses "The Two Signs" by Hester Lynch Thrale
Hester Thrale wrote in Thraliana and published in Public Advertiser 7 July 1779.
Owner of original | 7 July 1779 |
Linked to | Thraliana by Hester Lynch Thrale; Hester Lynch SALUSBURY |
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