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The crafty whore or, the mistery and iniquity of bawdy houses laid open, in a dialogue between two subtle bawds, wherein, as in a mirrour, our city-curtesans may see their soul-destroying art, and crafty devices, whereby they insnare and beguile youth, pourtraied to the life, by the pensell of one of their late, (but now penitent) captives, for the benefit of all, but especially the younger sort. Whereunto is added dehortations from lust drawn from the sad and lamentable consequences it produceth.
Bibliographic name/number: Thomason / E.1927[1]; Wing (2nd ed., 1994) / C6780.
Anonymous. EEBO British Library records - unstructured. [18], 112 p. London: Printed for Henry Marsh at the Princes Armes, at the lower end of Chancery-lane, neere the Inner Temple-Gate, in Fleet-street, 1658.
Anonymous. EEBO British Library records - unstructured. [18], 112 p. London: Printed for Henry Marsh at the Princes Armes, at the lower end of Chancery-lane, neere the Inner Temple-Gate, in Fleet-street, 1658.
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