22522
|
The ladies dressing-room unlock'd, and her toilette spread. Together, with a fop-dictionary, and a rare and incomparable receipt to make pig, or puppidog-water for the face.
|
Evelyn
, Mary
|
Joseph Wilde (London)
|
1700 |
|
14935
|
The ladies most elegant and convenient pocket book, for the year 1790. Being the Second after Leap Year. Embellished with the fashionable Dresses of the Year 1789, and a beautiful View of the Front of Carlton-House. Containing, Amongst a great Variety of useful, ornamental, and instructive Articles, the following: The necessary Pages for Engagements, Memorandums, and Expences, ruled in a more plain and familiar Manner than any yet adapted for the Use of the Ladies; Tables of all the moveable and immoveable Feasts, Fasts, and Holidays in the Year; Days and Hours for buying, accepting, or transferring Stock, and receiving Dividends; Holidays at the Public Offices; Royal Family of Great Britain; Regal Table; Sovereigns of Europe's Birth Days; Perpetual Diary; Interest Table; Essay on Ceremony; Reflexions on Forethought; on the Advantage of Society; A Lady's Choice in Matrimony; Ode to Sleep; A Nuptual Card; On a Watch; Receipts in Cosmetics and Medicine; The favourite Songs and Country Dances for the Year; New Rates of Coachmen and Watermen; with several useful Particulars, necessary Marketing Tables, &c. Compiled at the Request of several Ladies of Quality.
|
Unknown
,
|
Elizabeth Newbery (London)
|
1790 |
|
15033
|
The ladies most elegant and convenient pocket book, for the year 1793. Being the first after leap year. Embellished with a beautiful representation of Lord Cornwallis's receiving as hostages the two sons of Tippoo Sultaun; and the dresses of the year 1792. Containing, amongst a great variety of useful, ornamental, and instructive articles, the following: ... Compiled at the request of several ladies of quality.
|
Unknown
,
|
Elizabeth Newbery (London)
|
1793 |
|
15058
|
The ladies most elegant and convenient pocket book, for the year 1794. ...
|
Unknown
,
|
Elizabeth Newbery (London)
|
1794 |
|
10518
|
The ladies' school, or, The approach of the holidays. By A young lady.
|
Unknown
, [Woman]
|
James Wallis [19 Paternoster Row] (London)
|
1814 |
New edition |
13950
|
The Lady of Fashion; or, A Summer in the Country and a Winter in London. Containing a Lesson to Young Men of Moderate Circumstances, Not to Suffer Their Vanity to Lead Them Into Becoming the Dupes of Persons in Higher Stations of Life Than Themselves, Exemplified in the History of Frederick Willows, Founded on a Recent Occurrence Which Took Place in the Circle of Fashionable Life.
|
Unknown
,
|
Ann Lemoine (London)
John Roe [Chiswell] (London)
|
1807 |
|
7158
|
The lamentation of Rebecca Downing, condemn'd to be burnt at Heavitree, near Exeter, on Monday, July 29, 1782, for poisoning her master, Richard Jarvis.
|
Downing
, Rebecca
|
|
1782 |
|
112
|
The Landlord's Friend. Intended as a Sequel to Cottage Dialogues
|
Leadbeater
, Mary
|
J. Cumming (London)
|
1813 |
|
6212
|
The lass at the brow of the hill. Tune-Who has e'er been at Baldock, &c.
|
Jones
, Mary
|
|
1785 |
|
6210
|
The lass on the brow of the hill
|
Jones
, Mary
|
s.n. [sine nomine]
|
1776 |
|
11617
|
The Last Autumn at a Favourite Residence. With Other Poems. By a Lady.
|
Lawrence
, Rose D'Aguilar
|
Nathaniel Hailes [168 Piccadilly] (London)
|
1828 |
|
12451
|
The Last Autumn at a Favourite Residence. With Other Poems. By Mrs. Lawrence. Second edition, with many additions.
|
Lawrence
, Rose D'Aguilar
|
Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green (London)
G. and J. Robinson [Liverpool] (Liverpool)
|
1829 |
Second edition, with many additions. |
7309
|
The last dying speech (and last farewell to the world) of Sarah Metyard, and her own Daughter Sarah Morgan Metyard, who were executed July the 19th 1762, at Tyburn, for the barbarous Murder, of two Apprentice Girls.
|
Metyard
, Sarah
|
s.n. [sine nomine]
|
1762 |
|
7157
|
The last dying speech and confession of Rebecca Howard, who was executed this day, August 9, 1797, on the Castle Ditches, for the murder of her male bastard child.
|
Howard
, Rebecca
|
s.n. [sine nomine]
|
1797 |
|
6443
|
The last dying speeches, &c. of those inhuman murderers, Mary Knott, for the murder of a French emigrant nobleman, ... Richard Ludman, for the murder of George Hebner, ... and Eleanor Hughes who were executed this morning. With a copy of a letter sent by Richard Ludman, to his parents, the night before his execution.
|
Knott
, Mary
|
s.n. [sine nomine]
|
1796 |
|
3375
|
The last dying words, speech, and confession of Eliz. Osborne, who was executed on Saturday last the 13th April inst. at Hereford, for the cruel murder of her mother-in-law.
|
Osborne
, Elizabeth
|
|
1750 |
|
10707
|
The last request of Emily. By Mrs. Sherwood.
|
Sherwood
, Mary Martha
|
Thomas Melrose (Berwick)
|
1836 |
|
5742
|
The last speech, confession & dying words of Margaret Neil, who was execute at Stirling on Friday the 19th of Novr. 1784, for the crimes of theft and house-breaking.
|
Neil
, Margaret
|
s.n. [sine nomine]
|
1784 |
|
7507
|
The last speech, confession and dying words of Sarah Cameron, who was execute at Stirling on Friday the 29th of October 1784, and her body given to the doctors to be dissected, for the murder of her own child.
|
Cameron
, Sarah
|
s.n. [sine nomine]
|
1784 |
|
6541
|
The last speech, confession and dying words, of Mary Sanders, a young girl of 18 years of age, who was strangled and burnt at Monmouth the 13th of February, 1779, for the horrid, barbarous and bloody murder of her own lady.
|
Sanders
, Mary
|
s.n. [sine nomine]
|
1779 |
|
170
|
The Latter Days, by Mrs. Sherwood.
|
Sherwood
, Mary Martha
|
Robert Benton Seeley and W. Burnside [Crane Court] (London)
|
1833 |
|
14044
|
The law of bills of exchange, promissory notes, bank-notes and insurances: containing all the statutes, cases at large, arguments, ... The third edition corrected, with the addition of several cases never before printed. By T. Cunningham, Esq; ...
|
Cunningham
, Timothy
|
Elizabeth Watts [m. Lynch in 1768] (Dublin)
|
1766 |
The third edition corrected, with the addition of several cases never before printed. |
15135
|
The law-dictionary: explaining the rise, progress, and present state, of the English law, in theory and practice; defining and interpreting the terms or words of art; and comprising copious information, historical, political, and commercial, of the subjects of our law, trade, and government. Originally compiled by Giles Jacob; and continued by him, and other editors, through ten editions: now greatly enlarged and improved, by many material corrections and additions, from the latest statutes, reports, and other accurate publications; by T. E. Tomlins, of the Inner Temple, Barrister at Law. In two volumes. ...
|
Jacob
, Giles
|
Thomas Norton Longman III (London)
Bedwell Law [13 Ave Maria Lane, 1767-1790, 1794-1795] (London)
Charles Dilly (London)
Thomas Cadell [London] (London)
George, George, and John Robinson (London)
Alexander Strahan [Printers St] (London)
Joseph Johnson (London)
Francis and Charles Rivington (London)
Elizabeth Brooke (London)
Robert Vaughan Brooke [Cateaton Street] (London)
William Lowndes [76 Fleet Street] (London)
Elizabeth Newbery (London)
John Walker II [20 Paternoster Row] (London)
|
1797 |
|
10419
|
The legion cast out, or, The seed of the woman bruising the serpent's head. By the author of Scripture stories, History of Joseph &c. &c.
|
Plumptre
, Helen
|
James Nisbet [Berners Street] (London)
|
1825 |
Second Edition |
4639
|
The lemon, A poem, by Pat. Pindar; in answer to a scandalous libel, entitled The orange; written, (tho' anonymous,) by the Rev. Dr. Bobadil. Canto II.
|
Battier
, Henrietta
|
|
1798 |
|