        item: #1 of 4
          id: A41293
      author: Aretino, Pietro, 1492-1556. Puttana errante.
       title: The fifth and last part of the wandring whore a dialogue between Magdalena, a crafty bawd, Julietta, an exquisite whore, Francion, a lascivious gallant, and Gusman a pimping hector : discovering their diabolical practises at the Half-Crown Chuck-Office : with an additional list of the names of the crafty bawds, common whores, wanderers, pick-pockets, night-walkers, decoys, hectors, pimps and trappanners ...
        date: 1661
       words: 5086
      flesch: 66
     summary: Mrs. Treely in Bloomsbury . Marten Mrs. Worster Mrs. Jane , and Mrs. Louse , belonging to Mrs. Treely Hectors , &c. NIcolls in Thames-street , a Spunge Sweetman , a Spaniard Mason , the Lobster Tim. Holly Nich.
    keywords: alias; bess; betty; crafty; english; francion; gusman; jack; jane; julietta; lane; magdalena; mal; mrs; pimp; street; tcp; text; thee; tho; thou; white; whore; wife; ● ●
       cache: A41293.xml
  plain text: A41293.txt

        item: #2 of 4
          id: A43169
      author: Head, Richard, 1637?-1686?
       title: The miss display'd, with all her wheedling arts and circumventions in which historical narration are detected, her selfish contrivances, modest pretences, and subtil stratagems / by the author of the first part of The English rogue.
        date: 1675
       words: 28639
      flesch: 26
     summary: She was now in a peck of troubles , and in such a h at , for she had no leisure to cool her self , that she was almost sweltred ; never was there a sultred fat Hostefs in R●m Alley in Trinity-Tearm , nor Pig-Roaster in Rartholome● Fair , could complain so justly : but what added misery to her vexation , she could not tell to whom 〈◊〉 impart hers and Cornelia's condition ; 't was bootless to think of another Doctor without a Urinal , for she could give no account or signes of the Distemper ; As she was walking in the street , musing with her self , she met with an old acquaintance who was come down too upon some notable design , a Gossip that had with some success practised Physick , and was , to compleat her skill , Mother-Midnight : This Doctress hearing all that Polyandria spake freely said no more then what Frier Bacon's du● servant thought not worth notice to his Master , T●ne is ; intimating , That if her former enjoyments were not repeated and renewed she would absolutely fall into some desperate distemper , which might deprive her of her life . Like a Watch from a Fire-ship she will turn her self to a Caterpillar , and destroys many a hopefull young Gentlemans Health and Estate in the Blossom ; and when she turns Land-Syren● , she proves more dangerous then those in the Ocean ; for , he that falls into her hands runs a threefold hazard of Shipwracking , not onely his Fortune , but Soul and Body to boo● .
    keywords: art; beauty; bed; business; city; cornelia; day; end; english; eyes; face; fair; gentleman; good; hath; house; husband; knight; lady; leave; life; love; manner; miss; money; nature; nay; place; pleasure; polyandria; purpose; self; taking; thing; thought; time; way; woman; young; ● ●
       cache: A43169.xml
  plain text: A43169.txt

        item: #3 of 4
          id: A61777
      author: Aretine, Peter.
       title: Strange nevves from Bartholomew-Fair, or, the wandring-whore discovered her cabinet unlockt, her secrets laid open, vnvailed, and spread abroad in Whore and Bacon-lane, Duck-street and the garrison of Pye-corner. VVith the exact manner of conveighing St. Jameses Bawbyes to St Bartholomews-Fair, for the use of all the noble hectors. Trappans, pimps, dicks merry cullys aud [sic] mad-conceited lads of Great-Bedlam. Also the mad flights, merry-conceits tricks, whimsies and quillets used by the wandring-whore, her bawds, mobs, panders, pads and trulls for the drawing in of young hectors, with the manner of her traffick by morter-pieces, and new invented engines never discovered before. By Peter Aretine.
        date: 1661
       words: 2809
      flesch: 72
     summary: Also the mad flights, merry-conceits tricks, whimsies and quillets used by the wandring-whore, her bawds, mobs, panders, pads and trulls for the drawing in of young hectors, with the manner of her traffick by morter-pieces, and new invented engines never discovered before. Also the mad flights, merry-conceits tricks, whimsies and quillets used by the wandring-whore, her bawds, mobs, panders, pads and trulls for the drawing in of young hectors, with the manner of her traffick by morter-pieces, and new invented engines never discovered before.
    keywords: eebo; fair; hectors; merry; tcp; text; wandring; whore
       cache: A61777.xml
  plain text: A61777.txt

        item: #4 of 4
          id: A87727
      author: Hollar, Wenceslaus, 1607-1677, engraver.
       title: Foole that I was, who had so faire a state ...
        date: 1642
       words: 659
      flesch: 75
     summary: Verse attributed to Thomas Killigrew by Wing. Title from first line of text. F The rate of 455 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the F category of texts with 100 or more defects per 10,000 words.
    keywords: faire; state; text
       cache: A87727.xml
  plain text: A87727.txt

