The ladies advocate: or, wit and beauty a match for treachery and inconstancy. Containing a series of gallantries, intrigues, and amours, fortunate and sinister; quarrels and reconciliations, between lovers: conjugal plagues and comforts, vexations and endearments; with man remarkable incidents and adventures, the effects of love and jealousy, fidelity and inconstancy. Exhibiting such a surprizing variety of scenes in the amatorial commerce between the two sexes, as, though strictly true, are scarce to be parallelled in the most inventive romance. Digested in the manner of a novel, and interspersed with occasional remarks.

Date:
MDCCXLIX. [1749]
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Publication/Creation

London : printed for C. Long, near St. Paul's, MDCCXLIX. [1749]

Physical description

viii, 304 p. ; 120.

References note

ESTC T72459

Reproduction note

Facsimile. New York, NY Garland Pub., 1974. (The Flowering of the Novel).
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. (Eighteenth century collections online). Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.

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