A nights search· Discovering the nature and condition of all sorts of night-walkers; with their associates. As also, the life and death of many of them. Together with divers fearfull and strange accidents, occasioned by such ill livers. Digested into a poeme by Humphry Mill.
- Title
- A nights search· Discovering the nature and condition of all sorts of night-walkers; with their associates. As also, the life and death of many of them. Together with divers fearfull and strange accidents, occasioned by such ill livers. Digested into a poeme by Humphry Mill.
- Author
- Mill, Humphrey, fl. 1646.
- Publication
- London :: Printed by Richard Bishop for Laurence Blaicklock at the Sugar-loafe next Temple-Barre,
- 1640.
- Rights/Permissions
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- Link to this Item
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https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A07541.0001.001
- Cite this Item
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"A nights search· Discovering the nature and condition of all sorts of night-walkers; with their associates. As also, the life and death of many of them. Together with divers fearfull and strange accidents, occasioned by such ill livers. Digested into a poeme by Humphry Mill." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A07541.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 6, 2024.
Contents
- The Frontispeece explained.
- title page
-
To the Right honourable, ROBERT
Earle of Effex, ViscountHereford, andBouchier, LordFerrers ofChartley, Bouchier, andLovaine. - To the Reader.
- imprimatur
- encomia
- prologue
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A Nights Search.
-
SECTION 1. The character of a modest, wise Poet, with some touches by the way at his opposites; his happy end. -
SECT. 2. Against lascivious Poets and poetry, and of the ill that is occasioned by such meanes. -
SECT. 3. The wanton Poets Funerall. -
SECT. 4. The Pimps complaint, the Bawds reply; he chan∣geth his course, she gets another; their life and death. -
SECT. 5. Of two common whores, how they liv'd and did; and a pimping theise, his life and death. -
SECT. 6. Course salutations betwixt a pennilesse letcher and his where that forsooke him. -
SECT. 7. Of a child found murthered by a whore the mother of it. -
SECT. 8. Of two brave Blades, that would hire a whore betwixt them by the yeare. -
SECT. 9. A fruitlesse dehortation of a friend, to one that was undone by a whore. -
SECT. 10. A fight betwixt two Pimps. -
SECT. 11. A heape of Vassalls pleading for precedencis, and priority one against the other. -
SECT. 12. The Devil's Vmpire; their causes; the feare∣full conclusion. -
SECT. 13. Of an Irish Foot-mans entertainment in a bawdy house; and what miserie followed. -
SECT. 14. Arabble of Cheaters in a two fold plot discovered. -
SECT. 15. Of an outlandish Nunncrie that was a brothel∣house; and how discoverd. -
SECT. 16. Of a Letcher, and how the Devill assum'd the shape of a Malesactresse that had been hang'd; and lay with him. -
SECT. 17. Of a North-countrey mans meeting a trull: and how they were drunk together: his complaint. -
SECT. 18. Of strange policies in a new∣found Bawd. -
SECT. 19. Of a Hackney Hestis; the trade she drove; and how she ended. -
SECT. 20. Of a Childe borne full of the pox: with a Satyre playing his part upon the Father. -
SECT. 20. How a subtile Queane fained herselfe to be with childe by a man of qualitie; of her lying in, and how the plot was found out. -
SECT. 22. How an old Bawd lay in for a young Whore: they are found and punished. -
SECT. 23. Of a strumpet accusing others, and afterwards her selfe: her protestations. -
SECT. 24. Of a teeme of hackney Jades, that use to goe coupled in the night along the street. -
SECT. 25. An enquiry, after a yong man. that was led away with a whore from his master. -
SECT. 26. Of a fight betwixta whore and her Money-lesse guest; and upon what termes they parted. -
SECT. 27. Of the life, death, and funerall of a Gentleman, undone by a brood of vermin. -
SECT. 28. Of an old man, wooing, and marrying of a yong girle; how they disagreed, and how she turn'd a whore. -
SECT. 29. Of a proud, stately Harlot raised by her sin; how she rain'd divers; and of many passages in the prosecution of it. -
SECT. 30. Of the woman dying with griefe; Her Funerall. -
SECT. 31. The shamefull triumph of the Whore, the Prodigall, and the Pimp. -
SECT. 32. How the prodig all was servile to his whore; with the condition of the Pimp. -
SECT. 33. How a Whore drew her sister to lewdnesse; arguments on both sides. -
SECT. 34. The ruine of the bawdy house, with its appurtenances. -
SECT. 35. Of a Countrey Clowne, being cheated with marrying of a whore, &c. -
SECT. 36. The disagreements of his members and faculties. -
SECT. 37. Of a handsome cunning Whore, that had the Pox, and how she deceived her husband; and how she died. -
SECT. 38. Observations from histories, of lascivious per∣sons, but chiefly from the collection ofCornelius Agrippa: abridged now for this purpose. -
SECT. 39. Of a company of Roysters comming to a Stews, and chaffering with the Bawd for the Whores, as men doe for Iades in Smithfield, &c. -
SECT. 40. Of a fearefull Iudgement that happened in the city ofAngers inFrance upon three men;La Fontaine, and two other; how they lay with the Devill, and how they dyed. -
SECT. 41. Of a young man that went to drinke with a whore, and how he was tempted, and gull'd. -
SECT. 42. How he met with her again; of their discourse, and how he pawn'd her for a large reckoning. -
SECT. 43. To a Fidler that was importunate to be entertain'd in a Taverne by two or three Gentlemen. -
SECT. 44. To an impudent whore that came into an Inne, and clipt and kist a man before company. -
SECT. 45. A Parley betweene Nature and Fame, about an insatiable man, and of a modest man, being abused by queanes. -
SECT. 46. Of a mans discontent at his wifes lewdnesse: his travell into the Netherlands: and how his wife was married to another in his ab∣sence; and of his returne, and complaints thereupon. -
SECT. 47. Of a man that fell to decay in the World, through his excesse; and how his wife turn'd Hackney, and he a Pander. -
SECT. 48. Of a black impudent Slut that more a dressing of faire hayre on her head, and black patches on her wrinkled tallow-face; and her reply answered. -
SECT. 49. Of a Band that hired a Maid, and not proving to her expectation, shee accuseth her of theft. -
SECT. 50. The Confession of a theiving Whore, at the time of her Execution. -
SECT. 51. Of a Prodigall Man that run out of all, and how his wife turn'd whore. -
SECT. 52. Of a Whore proving with child, that laid it to many to get money. -
SECT. 53. Of a man that was sick for another mans wife. -
SECT. 54. Of a dunghill whore, and a pander; how they abused a man of worth; and how they suffer'd shame at last. -
SECT. 54. Divers meanes prescribed to cure the sowle disease of lust, suting with all conditions of persons. -
SECT. 56. The supposed railing objections, imprecations of the filthy brood, against the Author, and the Book. -
SECT. 57. The railing Objections of an impious crew, answered. -
SECT. 58. The charge to the Muse, at the entrance into her travels.
-
- encomia