Titles by Benjamin Dod [Dodd] in CHICAGO format
There are 17 titles associated with this firm.
Rowe,
Elizabeth S.
The history of Joseph. A poem. In ten books. By the author of Friendship in death. The Second Edition.
London:
Benjamin Dod [Dodd],
1738.
Rowe,
Elizabeth S.
Friendship in death: in twenty letters from the dead to the living. To which are added, letters moral and entertaining, in prose and verse. In three parts. By Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe.
London:
Henry Lintot,
1741.
Rowe,
Elizabeth S.
The history of Joseph. A poem. In ten books. By Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe, author of Friendship in Death, &c. The third edition.
London:
Benjamin Dod [Dodd],
1741.
Rowe,
Elizabeth S.
The miscellaneous works, in prose and verse, of Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe: Published by her Order, By Mr. Theophilus Rowe. To which are added, Poems on several occasions, by Mr. Thomas Rowe. And to the Whole is prefixed, An Account of the Lives and Writings of the Authors. In two volumes. The third edition, corrected. To which is now first added, The history of Joseph, a Poem in Ten Books.
London:
Henry Lintot,
1750.
Justice,
Elizabeth.
Amelia, or, the Distress'd Wife: A History Founded on Real Circumstances. By a Private Gentlewoman.
London:
1751.
Thomas,
John.
A sermon preached before the House of Lords in the abby-church of Westminster, on Friday, February 6th, 1756. being the day appointed to be observed as a general fast, on occasion of the late dreadful earthquake. By John Lord Bishop of Lincoln.
London:
1756.
Unknown,
.
A modest apology for the conduct of a certain admiral in the Mediterranean. Being an essay towards silencing the clamorous tongue of slander, 'till facts can be ascertained by substantial and circumstantial Evidence.
London:
Mary Cooper,
Benjamin Dod [Dodd],
1756.
E.,
T..
Christ only exalted: from Exekiel xxi. 26, 27. It is the spirit of Christ, that taketh of things of his, and sheweth them unto us.
London:
1760.
Coles,
Elisha.
A dictionary, English-Latin, and Latin-English; containing all things necessary for the translating of either language into the other. To which end many things that were erroneous, are rectified, many superfluities retrenched, and very many defects supplied. And all suited to the meanest capacities, in a plainer method than heretofore; being for ease reduced into an alphabetical order, and explained in the mother tongue. And towards the compleating the English part (which hath been long desired) here are added thousands of words, phrases, proverbs, proper names, and many other useful things mentioned in the preface to the work. The seventeenth edition, with large additions. By Elisha Coles, late of Magdalen-College, Oxon.
London:
Allington Wilde II,
Thomas Osborne II,
James Bonwicke II,
Edward Ballard,
John Worrall,
John and Thomas Pote,
John Fuller [Cheapside],
Benjamin Barker,
Charles Bathurst [Cross Keys],
Henry Woodfall II,
Thomas Waller,
John Beecroft,
John Rivington I,
Benjamin Dod [Dodd],
John Hinton [St. Paul's Churchyard],
William Strahan,
Robert Baldwin I,
Lacey Hawes,
William Clarke,
Robert Collins,
Robert Horsfield,
William Johnston [Ludgate Street],
Thomas Caslon,
Stanley Crowder,
Thomas Longman II,
Paul Stevens,
George Keith,
Bedwell Law [Ave Maria Lane, unspecified number],
Thomas Field,
Edward Dilly,
Ann and Charles Corbett,
John Wilkie,
Catherine and Richard Ware,
Zachariah Stuart,
George Kearsley [Ludgate Street],
James Waugh,
John Coote,
Thomas Lowndes [Fleet Street],
George Knapp,
Anne Shuckburgh,
Jane Hinxman,
Mary Richardson,
Benjamin Collins,
1764.
Montagu,
Mary W.
Letters of the Right Honourable Lady M-y W-y M-e: written during her travels in Europe, Asia, and Africa, to Persons of Distinction, Men of Letters, &c. in different Parts of Europe. Which contain, among other curious Relations, accounts of the policy and manners of the Turks, drawn from sources that have been inaccessible To other Travellers. In four volumes.
London:
Benjamin Dod [Dodd],
T. Reily,
1771.
Montagu,
Mary W.
Letters of the Right Honourable Lady M-y W-y M-e: written, during her travels in Europe, Asia, and Africa, to persons of distinction, men of letters, &c. in different parts of Europe. Which contain, among other curious relations, accounts of the policy and manners of the Turks, drawn from sources that have been inaccessible to other travellers. In four volumes.
London:
Benjamin Dod [Dodd],
T. Reily,
1776.