In great Suffolk-street near the Hay-market, at a jewelers house, with a red balcony, lives a gentlewoman, : who, by much travelling and many years study, practice, and experience has attained the most rare secrets in the world for beautifying the face, ...
| Format: | eBook |
|---|---|
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
[London :
publisher not identified,
1690?]
|
| Series: | Early English books online.
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
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In great Suffolk-street near the Hay-market, at a jewelers house, with a red balcony, lives a gentlewoman, : who, by much travelling and many years study, practice, and experience has attained the most rare secrets in the world for beautifying the face, ...
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In Surry-street, in the Strand, at the corner-house with a white-balcony and blue-flower pots, liveth a gentlewoman, : who hath a most excellent wash to beautifie the face, which cures all redness, flushings, or pimples. ...
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The gentlewoman that lived in Red-Lyon-Court, is removed to Racket Court, near Fleet-bridge, the third door on the right-hand. : Who hath a most excellent wash to beautifie the face, as many of the greatest quality can testify: its virtue is to take out all manner of wrinckles, freckles, pimples, redness, morphew, sun-burn, yellowness, or any other accident, caused too often by mercurial poysonous washes: ...
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The famous water of talk and pearl, : being the clearest of all waters, and is of that excellent quality for beautifying the face, that in a short time it will turn the brownest complexion to a lovely white ...
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The gentlewoman who lived in Red-Lyon-Court, is now removed to Racket-Court near Fleet-brigge, the third door on the right-hand, who hath a most excellent wash to beautifie the face, : as many of the greatest quality can testify: its virtue is to take out all manner of wrinckles, freckles, pimples, redness, morphew, sunburn, yellowness, or any other accident, caused too often by mercurial poysonous washes ...
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The water of talk, with divers essences and rarities. : There is now made by that famous Italian Pecune, a water of talk, and pearl, the clearest and brightest of all waters; and is of that excellent quality for beautifying the face, that in a short time will turn the brownest complexion to a lovely white ...
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To all gentlemen and ladies. : God the author of all things, to make man in love with his wife, in her state of innocency, he made her smooth, soft, delicate and fair, to intice him to imbrace her; ...
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The accomplish'd ladies delight in preserving, physick, beautifying and cookery. : Containing, I. The art of preserving, and candying fruits and flowers, and the making of all sorts of conserves, syrups, and jellies. II. The physical cabinet, or, Excellent receipts in physick and chirurgery, together with some rare beautifying waters, to adorn and add loveliness to the face and body: and also some new and excellent secrets and experiments in the art of angling. III. the compleat cooks guide, or, Directions for dressing all sorts of flesh, fowl, and fish, both in the English and French mode, with all sauces and sallets; and the making pyes, pasties, tarts, and custards, with the forms and shapes of many of them.
by: Woolley, Hannah, fl. 1670
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Princesses Powder..
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Abdeker, ou, L'art de conserver la beauté ...
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A brief account of those most excellent and famous cathatick and diuretique pills for the cure of the dropsy, scurvy, jaundies, leprosy, kings-evil, and all other formidable diseases whatsoever, that are possible to be cured by purgings, commonly called, pilulae catholicae sive universales, catholick or universal pills : with the names and places of abode of several persons that have been cured by them. Together with confirmation of the same, by several letters form [sic] persons of good reputation and credit, of the miraculous cures they have performed /
by: Holney, John, -1706
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by: Holney, John, -1706
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Cosmeticks : or, the beautifying part of physick. By which all deformities of nature in men and women are corrected, age renewed, youth prolonged, and the least impediment, from a hair to a tooth, fairly amended. With the most absolute physical rarities for all ages. Being familiar remedies, for which every one may be his own apothecary. /
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by: Wecker, Johann Jacob, 1528-1586
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Nothing without God.
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by: Winter, Salvator
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The accomplish'd lady's delight in preserving, physick, beautifying, and cookery : Containing, I. The art of preserving, and candying fruits and flowers, and the making of all sorts of conserves, syrups, and jellies. II. The physical cabinet, or, excellent receipts in physick and chirurgery; together with some rare beautifying waters, to adorn and add loveliness to the face and body: and also some new and excellent secrets and experiments in the art of angling. III. The compleat cooks guide or, directions for dressing all sorts of flesh, fowl and fish, both in the English and French mode, with all sauces and sallets; and the making pyes, pasties, tarts, and custards, with the forms and shapes of many of them.
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The accomplish'd ladies delight in preserving, physick, beautifying, and cookery : Containing I. The art of preserving, and candying fruits and flowers, and the making of all sorts of conserves, syrups, and jellies. II. The physical cabinet, or excellent receipts in physick and chirurgery, together with some rare beautifying waters, to adorn and add lovliness to the face and body: and also some new and excellent secrets and experiments in the art of angling. III. The compleat cooks guide, or, directions for dressing all sorts of flesh, fowl and fish, both in the English and French mode, with all sauces and sallets; and the making pyes, pasties, tarts, and custards, with the forms and shapes of many of them.
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by: Woolley, Hannah, fl. 1670
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The accomplish'd ladies delight in preserving, physick, beautifying, and cookery : Containing, I. The art of preserving, and candying fruits and flowers, and the making of all sorts of conserves, syrups, and jellies. II. The physical cabinet, or excellent receipts in physick and chirurgery, together with some rare beautifying waters, to adorn and add loveliness to the face and body: and also some new and excellent secrets and experiments in the art of angling. III. The compleat cooks guide, or, directions for dressing all sorts of flesh, fowl, and fish, both in the English and French mode, with all sauces and sallets; and the making pyes, pasties, tarts, and custards, with the forms and shapes of many of them.
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Advertisements In Wine-Office-Court, Fleetstreet, at the sign of the Acorn liveth a gentlewoman, who will (by the blesung [sic] of God upon her endeavors) : resolve to her own sex all manner of lawful questions, so far as reason can require or art warrant[.]
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Liqvore da dissenterie a o altri flvssi. : Della spezieria de' Padri di S. Spirito di Fiorenza.
Next door to the still, near the Fleet Gate, : liveth a gentlewoman, who cutteth and curleth gentlemens, gentlewomens, and childrens hair; and selleth a fine pomatum, which is mixt with ingredients of her own making, that if the hair be never so thin, it makes it grow thick; and if short, it makes it grow long: ...
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Romoved from the next door to the still, near the Fleet-gate, to the next door to the golden bell in St. Bride's Lane, Fleet Street; : where liveth a gentlewoman who cutteth and curleth gentlemens, gentlewomens, and childrens hair; and selleth a fine pomatum, which is mixt with ingredients of her own making, that if the hair be never so thin, it makes it grow thick; ...
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Abdeker ; ou, L'art de conserver la beauté.
by: Le Camus, Antoine, 1722-1772
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by: Le Camus, Antoine, 1722-1772
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Pecunes cosmeticks for the face..
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In St. Martins Court in St. Martins-lane; at the sign of the golden heart, up one pair of stairs, liveth a gentlewoman, who, by the long experience ....
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Delightes for ladies : to adorn their persons, tables, closets, and distillatories: with beauties, banquets, perfumes and waters.
by: Plat, Hugh, Sir, 1552-1611?
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by: Plat, Hugh, Sir, 1552-1611?
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Delights for ladies : to adorn their persons, tables, closets and distillatories: with beauties, banquets, perfumes and waters. Read, practice, and censure,
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by: Plat, Hugh, Sir, 1552-1611?
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Delights for ladies : to adorn their persons, tables, closets, and distillatories. With beauties, banquets, perfumes and waters. Read, practice, and censure.
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by: Plat, Hugh, Sir, 1552-1611?
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Delights for ladies : to adorne their persons, tables, closets, and distillatories. With beauties, banquets, perfumes, and waters.
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by: Plat, Hugh, Sir, 1552-1611?
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Delights for ladies : to adorn their persons, tables, closet's and distillatories: with beauties, banquets, perfumes and waters. Read, practise, and censure,
by: Plat, Hugh, Sir, 1552-1611?
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by: Plat, Hugh, Sir, 1552-1611?
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Delights for ladies : to adorne their persons, tables, closets, and distillatories; with beauties, banquets, perfumes, and waters. Reade, practise, and censure.
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A description of rolling carts and waggons, as built by James Sharp, Leadenhall-Street.
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by: Sharp, James, -1783
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Delights for ladies, to adorne their persons, tables, closets, and distillatories; : with beauties, banquets, perfumes, and waters. Reade, practise, and censure..
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