Name Bookseller
Description The firm from which the work can be purchased. Indicated by the phrase “sold by” in the imprint.

Firms

Displaying 4551–4575 of 9421

Firm Title
Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown The Memoirs of Mrs. Mary Ann Radcliffe: in Familiar Letters to Her Female Friend
James Wallis [19 Paternoster Row] The Secret Oath: or Blood-Stained Dagger, a Romance.
Clement Chapple [66 Pall Mall] The Secret Oath: or Blood-Stained Dagger, a Romance.
Thomas Dean [Newgate Street] The Secret Oath: or Blood-Stained Dagger, a Romance.
John Dingle The Secret Oath: or Blood-Stained Dagger, a Romance.
Thomas Gibbons The Secret Oath: or Blood-Stained Dagger, a Romance.
Thomas Richards The Secret Oath: or Blood-Stained Dagger, a Romance.
Clarke and Co. The Secret Oath: or Blood-Stained Dagger, a Romance.
Harrod and Turner The Secret Oath: or Blood-Stained Dagger, a Romance.
John Raw The Chaplet. Poems, partly original and partly selected from the most approved authors; Embellished with two elegant Engravings, from Designs by R. K. Porter, Esq.
Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme The Chaplet. Poems, partly original and partly selected from the most approved authors; Embellished with two elegant Engravings, from Designs by R. K. Porter, Esq.
Ann Vernor and Thomas Hood [Poultry] The Chaplet. Poems, partly original and partly selected from the most approved authors; Embellished with two elegant Engravings, from Designs by R. K. Porter, Esq.
Thomas Hookham and James Carpenter [New Bond Street] Virginius and Virginia; a poem, in six parts. From the Roman history. By Mrs. Gunning. Dedicated to supreme fashion; but not by permission.
Thomas Hookham and James Carpenter [Old Bond Street] Virginius and Virginia; a poem, in six parts. From the Roman history. By Mrs. Gunning. Dedicated to supreme fashion; but not by permission.
Thomas Hookham and James Carpenter [New Bond Street] A narrative of the sufferings of Louise Francoise de Houssay, de Bannes, who served in the army as a volunteer, from 1792, to July 21, 1795; when she was made a prisoner at Quiberon, with her examination at Vannes, from whence she made her escape, the day before that which was appointed for her execution. Translated from the manuscript of the author.
Thomas and John Egerton The following medicines have some years been in the first estimation for the cure of the several disorders for which they are recommended: they are the result of many years study of that great botanist Sir John Hill, D.M. and Member of the Imperial Academy; whose knowledge of British plants could only be equalled by his assiduity in selecting from them such as appear best calculated for the cure of those diseases to which the British constitutions are most subject: he had the Happiness in his Lifetime to find his Labours crowned with Success; and since his decease, his executrix (who alone prepares these medicines from his original receipts) has received the flattering sanction of public approbation by an increasing demand. A spurious Sort having got abroad and the Difficulty and Delays of Advertisements in Public News Papers, oblige her in Justice to herself and the Public, to take this Method of informing them, that none are genuine, but what are sold at her house, in Curzon-Street, May-Fair, opposite Queen-Street, and by her appointment at the following places. Mr. Joliff, St. James's-Street; Mr. Newberry, No. 45, St. Paul's Church-Yard; Mr. Baldwin, Pater-Noster-Row; Mr. Dicey, Bow Church-Yard; Mr. Wray, Birchin-Lane; Mr. Price, Mess. Stallard and Co. and Mr. Wedderurn and Co. Leadenhall-Street; Mr. Jackson, Fleet-Market; Mr. Bailey, Perfumer, Cockspur-Street; Mr. Robertson, Oxford-Street, opposite Angyle-Street; and Mess. T. and J. Egerton, Military Library, Charing-Cross. N.B. Each Bottle of the Honey has a Label signed with her own Hand, and at the Bottom of all, H. Hill, in red Ink.
Thomas and John Egerton The History of Tobit; a Poem: With Other Poems, on Various Subjects. By Jane Timbury.
John Exshaw I [Cork Hill] The antient and present state of the county and city of Cork, in four books. I. Containing, the antient names of the territories and inhabitants, with the civil and ecclesiastical division thereof, II. The topography of the county and city of Cork, III. The civil history of the county, IV. The natural history of the same. The whole illustrated by remarks on the baronies, parishes, towns, villages, seats, mountains, rivers, medicinal waters, fossils, animals and vegetables ; together with a new hydrographical description of the sea coasts. To which are added, curious notes and observations, relating to the erecting and improvement of several arts and manufactures, either neglected or ill prosecuted in this county. Embellished with new and correct maps of the county and city; perspective views of the chief towns, and other copper-plates. Published with the approbation of the Physico-Historical Society. By Charles Smith.
Edward and John Exshaw The antient and present state of the county and city of Waterford: Being a natural, civil, ecclesiastical, historical, and topographical description thereof. Illustrated by remarks made on the baronies, parishes, towns, villages, mountains, rivers, medicinal waters, fossils, animals and vegetables; with some hints relating to agriculture and other useful improvements. With several notes and observations. Together with new and correct maps of the city and county; and embellished with perspective views of the city of Waterford, and of the towns of Lismore and Dungarvan. Published with the approbation of the Physico-Historical Society. By Charles Smith.
John Hatchard and Son [187 Piccadilly] Immediate, Not Gradual, Abolition: or an Inquiry into the Shortest, Safest, and most Effectual Means of Getting Rid of West Indian Slavery
Leonard Benton Seeley and Sons Immediate, Not Gradual, Abolition: or an Inquiry into the Shortest, Safest, and most Effectual Means of Getting Rid of West Indian Slavery
W. Simpkin and R. Marshall Immediate, Not Gradual, Abolition: or an Inquiry into the Shortest, Safest, and most Effectual Means of Getting Rid of West Indian Slavery
Thomas Hamilton, William Adams, and Co. Immediate, Not Gradual, Abolition: or an Inquiry into the Shortest, Safest, and most Effectual Means of Getting Rid of West Indian Slavery
John and Arthur Arch [Cornhill] Immediate, Not Gradual, Abolition: or an Inquiry into the Shortest, Safest, and most Effectual Means of Getting Rid of West Indian Slavery
William Darton Jun. [40 Holborn] Immediate, Not Gradual, Abolition: or an Inquiry into the Shortest, Safest, and most Effectual Means of Getting Rid of West Indian Slavery