- Lacks 3 preliminary leaves and the final 4 leaves; engr. title cut to the borderline and dam. (w. loss of image) in lower right corner; partly waterstained; fingersoiled/ duststained; a few sm. rustholes; partly cut short in lower margin affecting catchwords and quire signatures; new endpapers.
= Veldman, Profit and Pleasure p.33ff: "The Nieuwen ieucht spieghel [our title-p. reads "spiegel") is in fact a sequel to Van der Heyden's Jeucht-Spieghel (1610), which consists of 14 prints and letterpress Dutch poems by Zacharias Heyns, most of them warning agains rashness in affairs of the heart. With 232 pages and 49 prints, it is much larger than its forerunner. (...) De Passe was himself involved in the publication, and designed a frontispiece with a depiction of the five senses." Extremely rare. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE CVII.