Dix — An Early Eighteenth- Century Broadside on Printing. 403 



who had prepared a Printing Press " to be worked at in the Eyes of the 

 World from a Carriage drawn by six Horses " ; and in the Dublin Weekly 

 Journal of the 10th of August, in the same year, a very brief report occurs of 

 the Corporation of Cutlers, &c,, having had a printing Press on a carriage 

 drawn by six fine mares, and one of the poems printed on it during the 

 procession is given ; and it is one of the two appearing on the broadside 

 mentioned in the foregoing paper, viz. : that beginning : " Hail ! Sacred Art," 

 &c., and ending " And Fust and Coster's name [sic] for ever live," It is stated 

 that as the procession marched along, the poem was printed and dispersed to 

 the populace. 



[59*] 



