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THE
WIFEOF BEIT H,
Reformed and Corredied,
Giving an account of her death, of her jour-
hey to heaven ; hovir, on ihe Road, fhe
fe!l in with Judas, who led her tothe Gate
of Hell, and what converfation fhe had ;
with the Devil, who would not let her in:
alfo, how at laft fhe went to Heaven and
theDifficuhies fhe encountered befo: e fhe ;
got admittance there.
The whole, being an alegorical DIA¬
LOGUE containing nothing but that
which is recorded in Scripture for our
example.
WIFEOF BEIT H,
Reformed and Corredied,
Giving an account of her death, of her jour-
hey to heaven ; hovir, on ihe Road, fhe
fe!l in with Judas, who led her tothe Gate
of Hell, and what converfation fhe had ;
with the Devil, who would not let her in:
alfo, how at laft fhe went to Heaven and
theDifficuhies fhe encountered befo: e fhe ;
got admittance there.
The whole, being an alegorical DIA¬
LOGUE containing nothing but that
which is recorded in Scripture for our
example.
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Chapbooks printed in Scotland > Religion & morality > Wife of Beith > (1) |
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Permanent URL | https://digital.nls.uk/104184587 |
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Description | Over 3,000 chapbooks published in Scotland in the 18th and 19th centuries. Subjects include courtship, humour, occupations, fairs, apparitions, war, politics, crime, executions, Jacobites, transvestites, and freemasonry. Chapbooks are small booklets of 8, 12, 16 and 24 pages, often illustrated with crude woodcuts. Produced cheaply and sold by peddlars on the streets, they formed the staple reading material of the common people, along with broadsides. |
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