Whipping-Tom: or, a rod for a proud lady, bundled up in four feeling discourses, Both Serious and Merry. In order to touch The Fair Sex to the Quick. I. Of the foppish mode of taking snuff. II. Of the Expensive Use of Drinking Tea. III. Of their Ridiculous Walking in red Cloaks, like Soldiers. IV. Of their immodest wearing hoop-petticoats. To which is added, a new satyr, for the use of the female voluntiers in Hyde-Park.
- Date:
- 1722
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About this work
Publication/Creation
London : printed for Sam. Briscoe, at the Roll-Savage on Ludgate-Hill; also at the Sun against John's coffee-house in Swithin-Alley, Cornhill, 1722.
Physical description
[2],55,[1]p.,plate ; 80.
Edition
The fourth edition.
References note
ESTC N35737
Reproduction note
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. (Eighteenth century collections online). Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.