Robert Greene's third pamphlet exposes Elizabethan con artists' tricks and villainies, featuring a debate between a male and female conny-catcher on their knavish arts.
No reviews yet
Robert Greene's third pamphlet exposes Elizabethan con artists' tricks and villainies, featuring a debate between a male and female conny-catcher on their knavish arts.
will contain mild spoilers
References to prostitution and seduction in cons; some implied sexual encounters in rogue tales.
Descriptions of fights, beatings, and theft-related violence; not graphic but recurring in stories.
Mild Elizabethan oaths and coarse language in dialogues.
Occasional mentions of drinking in taverns as part of con settings.
No LGBTQIA+ representation present.
Brief moralizing references to sin and vice.
No witchcraft or occult themes.
No evidence found in available sources.
Social commentary on crime, poverty, and urban vice in Elizabethan England.
No self-harm or suicide depicted.
Depictions of exploitation, theft, and societal suffering among the poor and victims.
No information found