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Firms

Displaying 9651–9675 of 9771

Firm Title
James Woodman The British recluse: or, the secret history of Cleomira, suppos'd dead. A novel. By Mrs. Eliza Haywood, Author of Love in Excess; or, the Fatal Enquiry. The second edition.
Samuel Chapman The British recluse: or, the secret history of Cleomira, suppos'd dead. A novel. By Mrs. Eliza Haywood, Author of Love in Excess; or, the Fatal Enquiry. The second edition.
John Lewis [Bartholomew Close] Letters on spiritual subjects, and Divers Occasions; sent to relations and friends. By one who has tasted that the Lord is gracious.
Mary Luckman The complaint: or, night-thoughts, on life, death, and immortality. To which are added, The Last Day; a Poem: A Glossary: and The Life of the Author.
James Mathews [Matthews] The complaint: or, night-thoughts, on life, death, and immortality. To which are added, The Last Day; a Poem: A Glossary: and The Life of the Author.
Robert Vaughan Brooke [Cheapside] The complaint: or, night-thoughts, on life, death, and immortality. To which are added, The Last Day; a Poem: A Glossary: and The Life of the Author.
William Champante and Benjamin Whitrow The complaint: or, night-thoughts, on life, death, and immortality. To which are added, The Last Day; a Poem: A Glossary: and The Life of the Author.
Philip Oriel Jr. The complaint: or, night-thoughts, on life, death, and immortality. To which are added, The Last Day; a Poem: A Glossary: and The Life of the Author.
Wilkinson and Mountford The complaint: or, night-thoughts, on life, death, and immortality. To which are added, The Last Day; a Poem: A Glossary: and The Life of the Author.
Thomas Cox [Lamb under the Royal Exchange, 1700-1739] A compleat history of Cambridgeshire. Containing, 1. The geographical description of the county in alphabetical order. 2. The ecclesiastical history. 3. The civil history. 4. The natural history. 5. The literary history. 6. The antiquities. 7. A map of the county. 8. A table of the names of all the towns and villages, &c. with the value of the livings, the patrons, incumbents, and gentlemens seats: also a scheme of all the market-towns, &c. their distance from London, and from one another, &c. With a map of the great level of the fens.
James Roberts [Warwick Lane] The Woman's Labour: an epistle to Mr. Stephen Duck; in answer to his late poem, called The thresher's labour. To which are added, the three wise sentences, taken from the first book of Esdras, Ch.III. and IV. By Mary Collier, Now a Washer-Woman, at Petersfield in Hampshire.
John Wilkie An essay upon the effects of camphire and calomel in continual fevers. Illustrated by several cases. To which is added, an occasional observation upon the modern practice of inoculation. And from the whole is deduced an argument in support of the opinion, that the alimentary Canal is the principal Seat of a Fever. By Daniel Lysons, M.D. Physician at Bath, and late Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
William Frederick An essay upon the effects of camphire and calomel in continual fevers. Illustrated by several cases. To which is added, an occasional observation upon the modern practice of inoculation. And from the whole is deduced an argument in support of the opinion, that the alimentary Canal is the principal Seat of a Fever. By Daniel Lysons, M.D. Physician at Bath, and late Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
Sackville Parker An essay upon the effects of camphire and calomel in continual fevers. Illustrated by several cases. To which is added, an occasional observation upon the modern practice of inoculation. And from the whole is deduced an argument in support of the opinion, that the alimentary Canal is the principal Seat of a Fever. By Daniel Lysons, M.D. Physician at Bath, and late Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
Gabriel Harris An essay upon the effects of camphire and calomel in continual fevers. Illustrated by several cases. To which is added, an occasional observation upon the modern practice of inoculation. And from the whole is deduced an argument in support of the opinion, that the alimentary Canal is the principal Seat of a Fever. By Daniel Lysons, M.D. Physician at Bath, and late Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
Clement Chapple [66 Pall Mall] Peter not infallible! Or, a poem, addressed to Peter Pindar, Esq. on reading his Nil admirari, A Late Illiberal Attack on the Bishop of London; Together with Unmanly Abuse of Mrs. Hannah More. Also Lines Occasioned By His Ode to some Robin Red-Breasts in a Country Cathedral. By the author of Gleanings after Thomson, or the village muse, &c. I Too Am A Poet!
Thomas Cadell and William Davies Peter not infallible! Or, a poem, addressed to Peter Pindar, Esq. on reading his Nil admirari, A Late Illiberal Attack on the Bishop of London; Together with Unmanly Abuse of Mrs. Hannah More. Also Lines Occasioned By His Ode to some Robin Red-Breasts in a Country Cathedral. By the author of Gleanings after Thomson, or the village muse, &c. I Too Am A Poet!
Francis and Charles Rivington Peter not infallible! Or, a poem, addressed to Peter Pindar, Esq. on reading his Nil admirari, A Late Illiberal Attack on the Bishop of London; Together with Unmanly Abuse of Mrs. Hannah More. Also Lines Occasioned By His Ode to some Robin Red-Breasts in a Country Cathedral. By the author of Gleanings after Thomson, or the village muse, &c. I Too Am A Poet!
George Whitfield An Account of the Experience of Mrs. H. A. Rogers. Written by herself. With a brief extract from her diary.
Charles Dilly Thomas Crowley's Dissertations on Liberty of Conscience, respecting The Payment of Tythes, and other Pecuniary Legal Assessments. In Four Parts. Together with The Proceedings of the Society of Quakers against him thereon, and his subsequent Letters on That Occasion.
Richardson and Urquhart Thomas Crowley's Dissertations on Liberty of Conscience, respecting The Payment of Tythes, and other Pecuniary Legal Assessments. In Four Parts. Together with The Proceedings of the Society of Quakers against him thereon, and his subsequent Letters on That Occasion.
Elizabeth Brooke The polite philosopher; or, an essay on that art, which makes a man happy in himself, and agreeable to others. The fourth edition.
William Bradford [Senior] A letter from Mrs. Anne Dutton, to the Reverend Mr. G. Whitefield.
Mary Rose Taylor, 1726. A compleat ephemeris for the year of Christ 1726. Exhibiting the daily motions of the sun and moon, and other planets, the daily rising and setting of the sun and moon, the course of the tydes, lunations, length of the days, and eclipses, &c. Calculated and fitted to the latitude of 40 degrees north, and a meridian five hours (75 degrees) west from London, serving Pennsylvania, and the parts adjacent. By Jacob Taylor, to which is added, by another hand, calculations and infallible predictions on the eclipse of the sun, &c. with a brief introduction towards learning the Hebrew and other tongues, with several other useful, informing, and diverting subjects, not to be found in any other almanack in America.
Sarah Read Taylor, 1726. A compleat ephemeris for the year of Christ 1726. Exhibiting the daily motions of the sun and moon, and other planets, the daily rising and setting of the sun and moon, the course of the tydes, lunations, length of the days, and eclipses, &c. Calculated and fitted to the latitude of 40 degrees north, and a meridian five hours (75 degrees) west from London, serving Pennsylvania, and the parts adjacent. By Jacob Taylor, to which is added, by another hand, calculations and infallible predictions on the eclipse of the sun, &c. with a brief introduction towards learning the Hebrew and other tongues, with several other useful, informing, and diverting subjects, not to be found in any other almanack in America.