Name Publisher
Description The firm that takes on the financial responsibility for the editing, printing, and distribution of the work. Usually indicated by the phrase “printed for” in the imprint. In the event that a work has been self-published, this will be indicated in the Self-Published field.

Firms

Displaying 13301–13325 of 24165

Firm Title
s.n. [sine nomine] An elegy, On the Death of Mr. Andrew Gifford Gwennap. By a lady.
s.n. [sine nomine] Song. Tune, "The dusky night." By a lady.
s.n. [sine nomine] A letter from a minister in the country, to his friend In London.
s.n. [sine nomine] On the Dutchess of Atholl and Lady Wright fishing at Atholl-House. By a lady.
s.n. [sine nomine] A song for the independent burgesses of Newcastle by a lady.
s.n. [sine nomine] Another new election song. By a lady. (Tune, He comes - he comes - the hero comes,- &c.)
s.n. [sine nomine] 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 lettes, &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.
s.n. [sine nomine] Thoughts occasioned by the proceedings on Bristol-Bridge, and the melancholy consequences, on the awful night of Monday last, being the 30th of September. 1793. (By a Lady.)
s.n. [sine nomine] A new song. Tune - True blue: by a lady.
s.n. [sine nomine] An excellent new election song. By a lady.
s.n. [sine nomine] The glorious revolutions of 1782. A heroic poem. In two parts. By a lady.
s.n. [sine nomine] A new song, and a true song: by a lady. To the tune of Nancy Dawson.
s.n. [sine nomine] A new electioneering song, tune, - The dusky night. By a lady.
s.n. [sine nomine] Extract of a letter from a lady in Colchester to her friend in town.
s.n. [sine nomine] A letter from a lady in town to her friend in the country, concerning the choice of a manager for the Edinburgh Theatre-Royal.
s.n. [sine nomine] A squint at Elysium: or, Duke & no duke. A poem. By a lady of Birmingham.
s.n. [sine nomine] The conjurers 1753 When one head has a Cause in hand, A Cause it cannot Understand. Auxilliarys must be good, To make the Matter understood: Three Conjrers sure must find yow Whichone might ever hold in Doubt. Drawn from the life by the Right Honourable the Lady Fa----y K----w
s.n. [sine nomine] Genuine particulars of the life of the celebrated Richard Parker, alias Admiral Parker; found guilty, on tryal, before a court martial held at Greenhith for mutiny and disbobedience of orders. By a lady many years a resident in Moscow,-where she knew Parker intimately; and in whose fate, from an acquired freiendship, and some family alliance, she feels herself particularly interested.
s.n. [sine nomine] The third and last volume of the memoirs of Mrs. Lætitia Pilkington, Written by herself. Wherein are occasionally interspersed, variety of poems: as also the letters of several persons of distinction, with the conclusive part of the life of the inimitable Dean Swift.
s.n. [sine nomine] A collection of exotics, from the island of Antigua. By a lady.
s.n. [sine nomine] The rejoinder; or Attingham triumphant. (By an old maid.)
s.n. [sine nomine] The humble address, of margaret Christian: Widow of the Late, Charles Christian, Coach-maker.
s.n. [sine nomine] The life of Mrs. Margaret Leeson alias peg plunket. Written by herself: in which are given anecdotes and sketches of the lives and bon mots of some of the most celebrated characters in Great-Britain and Ireland, particularly of all the filles des joys and men of pleasure and gallantry, who usually frequented her Citherean temple for these thirty years past. Three volumes complete in one. A new edition with considerable additions.
s.n. [sine nomine] A new catalogue of books, consisting of several thousand volumes, upon the most useful and entertaining subjects, which are lent out, at ten shillings per year, ... By Margaret Yair, ...
s.n. [sine nomine] High treason - committed by Margaret Nicholson. Guilty of the horrid crime of endeavouring to murder his sacred Majesty King George III. on the 2d of August 1786, ... This knife, or poinard, will be kept for a remembrancer of this horrid act.