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Isaiah Warner Pensilvania, 1744. An almanack, or ephemeris of the motions of the sun and moon, the time of their rising and setting, lunations, and eclipses; with the places and aspects of the planets, for the year 1744. With some astronomical dissertations at this time thought highly necessary. By Jacob Taylor.
Cornelia Smith Bradford Pensilvania, 1744. An almanack, or ephemeris of the motions of the sun and moon, the time of their rising and setting, lunations, and eclipses; with the places and aspects of the planets, for the year 1744. With some astronomical dissertations at this time thought highly necessary. By Jacob Taylor.
Isaiah Warner The American almanack for the year of Christian account, 1744. Unto which is numbered, from the Creation By the Oriental and Greek Christians, 7252 By the Jews, Hebrews and Rabbins, 7954 By the late computation of W. W. 5753 Being the bissextile or leap-year. Wherein is contained, the lunations, eclipses, judgement of the weather, and mutual aspects, time of sun's and moon's rising and setting, length of days, seven stars rising, southing and setting, high-water, fairs, courts and observable days, &c. Fitted to the latitude of 40 degrees, and a meridian of five hours west from London, but may, without sensible error, serve all adjacent places, from Newfoundland to South-Carolina. By Titan Leeds, philomat.
Cornelia Smith Bradford The American almanack for the year of Christian account, 1744. Unto which is numbered, from the Creation By the Oriental and Greek Christians, 7252 By the Jews, Hebrews and Rabbins, 7954 By the late computation of W. W. 5753 Being the bissextile or leap-year. Wherein is contained, the lunations, eclipses, judgement of the weather, and mutual aspects, time of sun's and moon's rising and setting, length of days, seven stars rising, southing and setting, high-water, fairs, courts and observable days, &c. Fitted to the latitude of 40 degrees, and a meridian of five hours west from London, but may, without sensible error, serve all adjacent places, from Newfoundland to South-Carolina. By Titan Leeds, philomat.
Isaiah Warner The American almanack, for the year of Christian account 1745, being the next after leap-year. Wherein is contained, the lunations, eclipses, planets-motions and aspects, judgements of the weather, the time of the sun and moon's rising and setting, seven stars rising, southing, and setting, high-water, spring-tides, fairs, courts, meeting and other observable days. Fitted to the latitude of forty degrees north, and a meridian of five hours west from London, but may without much error serve from Newfoundland to South-Carolina. By John Jerman, philomath.
Cornelia Smith Bradford The American almanack, for the year of Christian account 1745, being the next after leap-year. Wherein is contained, the lunations, eclipses, planets-motions and aspects, judgements of the weather, the time of the sun and moon's rising and setting, seven stars rising, southing, and setting, high-water, spring-tides, fairs, courts, meeting and other observable days. Fitted to the latitude of forty degrees north, and a meridian of five hours west from London, but may without much error serve from Newfoundland to South-Carolina. By John Jerman, philomath.
Cornelia Smith Bradford The American almanack, for the year of Christian account 1746; Being the second after leap-year. Wherein is contained, the lunations, eclipses, planets-motions and aspects, judgements of the weather, the time of the sun's and moon's rising and setting, seven stars rising, southing and setting, high-water, spring-tides, fairs, courts, meetings, and other observable days. Fitted to the latitude of forty degrees north, and a meridian of five hours west from London, but may without much error serve from Newfoundland to South-Carolina. By John Jerman, philomath.
Robert Foulis Hardyknute. A fragment of an antient Scots poem.
Sarah Popping [also Poping] Scotch-Loyalty exemplify'd, in the behaviour of the Dean of the faculty, and his brethren, at Edinburgh, in relation to the reception of a medal of the Pretender, presented to them by the Dutchess of Gourdon, with her Grace's, and their several speeches thereupon, as, also, the number of those that were for and against admitting it amongst their rarities.
Benjamin Dod [Dodd] 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.
James Leake I The description of Bath. A poem. Humbly Inscribed To Her Royal Highness the Princess Amelia. By Mrs. Mary Chandler. The Third Edition. To which are added, several poems by the same author.
James Leake I The description of Bath. A poem. Humbly Inscrib'd To Her Royal Highness the Princess Amelia. By Mrs. Mary Chandler. The fifth edition. To which are added, several poems by the same author.
James Leake I The description of Bath, a poem. Humbly Inscrib'd To Her Royal Highness the Princess Amelia. By Mrs. Mary Chandler. The fourth edition. To which are added, several poems by the same author.
James Roberts [Warwick Lane] Love in excess; or The fatal enquiry, a novel. Part the second. By Mrs. Haywood.
James Roberts [Warwick Lane] Love in excess; or The fatal enquiry, a novel.
James Roberts [Warwick Lane] Love in excess, or, The fatal enquiry. A novel. The third and last part. By Mrs. Haywood.
Ann Franklin (nee Smith) A letter to a friend.
Cornelia Smith Bradford Poor Will's almanack, for the year of Christian account, 1748. And from the creation, by scripture, 5757. Being bissextile or leap-year. Wherein is contained, the lunations, eclipses, judgement of the weather according to this climate, planets motions and mutual aspects, the sun's and moon's rising and setting, the seven stars rising, southing and setting, courts, fairs, meetings, high water at Philadelphia, and observable days; with other celestia; phænominas, as by the contents will appear. Calculated from Carline [sic] tables, according to art, and referred to the vertex of the city of Philadelphia, but may without sensible error serve all the provinces adjacent from Newfoundland to South-Carolina. By William Birkett.
Samuel Paterson Poems on several occasions. Written by a young lady.
W. Lewis A true and authentick copy of the last will and testament of Her Grace the illustrious Sarah, late Duchess Dowager of Marlborough with the codicil annex'd . Wherein will appear Proofs of her Publick Spirit and Love of her Country, exemplified in Regard to those Worthy Patriots, the Lords Stair, and Chesterfield, Mr. Pitt, &c. The Whole worthy the Perusal of all True Lovers of their Country, and will transmit with Honour her Name to the latest Posterity. To which is prefix'd, some remarks thereon.
Anne Dodd I The satirist: in imitation of the fourth satire of the first book of Horace.
Elizabeth Nutt [Royal Exchange] The satirist: in imitation of the fourth satire of the first book of Horace.
Allan Ramsay The case of Mrs. Mary Catharine Cadiere, against the Jesuit father John Baptist Girard. In a memorial presented to the Parliament of Aix. Wherein that Jesuit is accused of seducing her, by the abominable Doctrines of Quietilm, into the most criminal excesses of Lewdness, and under an appearance of the highest mystical Devotion, deluding into the same Vices six other Females, who, like her, had put their consciences under his direction. With a preface by the Publisher, Containing a short and plain Account of the Rules of proceeding according to the Laws and Customs of France in Cases of this Nature.
Gavin Hamilton The case of Mrs. Mary Catharine Cadiere, against the Jesuit father John Baptist Girard. In a memorial presented to the Parliament of Aix. Wherein that Jesuit is accused of seducing her, by the abominable Doctrines of Quietilm, into the most criminal excesses of Lewdness, and under an appearance of the highest mystical Devotion, deluding into the same Vices six other Females, who, like her, had put their consciences under his direction. With a preface by the Publisher, Containing a short and plain Account of the Rules of proceeding according to the Laws and Customs of France in Cases of this Nature.
James Roberts [Warwick Lane] A discourse of the plague; wherein Dr. Mead's notions are consider'd and refuted. By George Pye M.D.