Name Political Writing
Description

Appeal, letter, defence, essay, address, summary, supplement, or reflection relating to society, culture, government. 

Titles

Displaying 651–675 of 786

ID Title Author Firms (City) Date Edition
13869 The History of England from the accession of James I to the Elevation of the House of Hanover. By Catharine Macaulay. Edit. II. Macaulay , Catharine
1766 Edit. II.
11754 The History of Mary Prince, a West Indian Slave. Related by Herself. With a Supplement by the Editor. To which is added, The Narrative of Asa-Asa, A Captured African. Prince , Mary
Frederick Westley and A.H. Davis (London)
Waugh and Innes [1826-1836] (Edinburgh)
1831
14234 The History of Mary Prince, a West Indian Slave. Related by Herself. With a Supplement by the Editor. To which is added, The Narrative of Asa-Asa, A Captured African. Second Edition. Prince , Mary
Frederick Westley and A.H. Davis (London)
Waugh and Innes [1826-1836] (Edinburgh)
1831 Second edition.
13814 The History of Mary Prince, a West Indian Slave. Related by Herself. With a Supplement by the Editor. To which is added, The Narrative of Asa-Asa, A Captured African. Third Edition. Prince , Mary
Frederick Westley and A.H. Davis (London)
Waugh and Innes [1826-1836] (Edinburgh)
1831 Third Edition
13734 The History of the Campaign of 1792, between the Armies of France under Generals Dumourier, Valence, &c. and the Allies under the Duke of Brunswick; with an account of what passed in the Thuilleries on the 10th of August Money , John
Elizabeth Harlow [Pall Mall] (London)
1794
25931 The History of the wars of the kings of Israel and Judah. In two parts. Publish'd by order of a Committee of the House of Commons, 1641, at the beginning of the civil-wars of England. Unknown ,
John Baker I [Pater-Noster-Row] (London)
Rebecca Burleigh (London)
Anne Dodd I (London)
1716
7516 The Honourable Mrs. Osborne's, letter, to the Lords of the Admiralty, ... Osborn , Sarah
s.n. [sine nomine]
1757
26175 The important letter relating to the affairs of Great-Britain: with proper remarks on them; and on the Lord Bolingbroke's letter therein contained. From a Gentleman in Town to a friend in North-Britain. Unknown , [Man]
1715
14720 The interest of Great Britain, respecting the French war. By William Fox. Fox , William
1793 The fourth edition, corrected.
14718 The interest of Great Britain, respecting the French war. By William Fox. Author of an Address to the People of Great Britain, on the Propriety of Abstaining from West-India Sugar and Rum. Fox , William
1793 The third edition, corrected.
13609 The interest of Great Britain, respecting the French War. By William Fox. Author of an Address to the people of Great Britain, on the propriety of abstaining from West-India sugar and rum. The second edition. Fox , William
1793 The second edition.
13610 The interest of Great Britain, respecting the French War. By William Fox. The Fifth edition, corrected. Fox , William
1793 The Fifth edition, corrected.
25295 The jurisdiction of the chancery as a court of equity researched. And the traditional obscurity of its commencement cleared. With a short essay on the judicature of the lords in Parliament, upon appeals from courts of equity. The second Edition corrected, to which is added a Table of the Contents. Acherley , Roger
Joel Stevens [Stephens] (London)
1734 The second Edition corrected, to which is added a Table of the Contents.
15683 The Ladies Defence: or, The Bride-Woman's Counsellor Answer'd: a Poem. In a Dialogue between Sir John Brute, Sir William Loveall, Melissa, and a Parson. Chudleigh , Mary Lee
Bernard Lintott (London)
1709
15682 The Ladies Defence: or, The Bride-Woman's Counsellor Answer'd: a Poem. In a Dialogue between Sir John Brute, Sir William Loveall, Melissa, and a Parson. Written by a lady. Chudleigh , Mary Lee
John Deeve (London)
1701
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.
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
25577 The limitation of the peerage, the security of the liberties of the people of England. Unknown ,
James Roberts [Warwick Lane] (London)
Anne Dodd I (London)
1720
25523 The london-Citizen exceedingly injured: or a British inquisition display'd, in an account of the unparallel'd case of a citizen of London, bookseller to the late Queen, who was in a most unjust and arbitrary Manner sent on the 23d of March 1737/8, by one Robert Wightman of Edinburgh, a mere Stranger, to a private madhouse. Containing, I. An Account of the said Citizen's barbarous Treatment in Wright's Private Madhouse on Bethnal-Green for nine Weeks and six Days, and of his rational and patient Behaviour, whilst Chained, Handcuffed, Strait-Wastecoated and Imprisoned in the said Madhouse: Where he probably would have been continued, or died under his Confinement, if he had not most Providentially made his Escape: In which he was taken up by the Constable and Watchmen, being suspected to be a Felon, but was unchain'd and set at liberty by Sir John Barnard the then Lord Mayor. II. As also an Account of the illegal Steps, false Calumnies, wicked Contrivances, bold and desperate Designs of the said Wightman, in order to escape Justice for his Crimes, with some Account of his engaging Dr. Monro the Chairman, and Dr. Guyse, Mr. Crooksbank, J. Oswald, J. Coake, and R. Horton to be Judges of his Blind-Bench, and others as his Accomplices. The whole humbly addressed to the legislature, as plainly shewing the absolute Necessity of regulating Private Madhouses in a more effectual manner than at present. Cruden , Alexander
Anne Dodd I (London)
Anne Dodd II (London)
Thomas Cooper (London)
1739 The Second Edition.
25472 The mob-war: or a detection of the present state of the Brittish nation: but more especially with respect to that wou'd be King (or little Polish Work of Darkness) that threatens us with a speedy invasion. In sixteen letters. Containing such Discoveries (in Church and State) as were never Publish'd before. Subscrib'd to our Reightful and Ever Glorious Sovereign King George, and other Persons of Great Quality, who have distinguish'd themselves either by their Treason or Loyalty. To these Letters is added, A Trip to the Pope, or the Papists Farewell to Great Britain, spoke in the Person of a Roman Catholick. Also, the Neck-Adventure, or the Case and Sufferings of Mr. John Dunton, for early detecting the Secret Steps taken by Oxford and Bolingbroke, to Restore the Pretender. The Whole Pacquet Humbly addres'd to that Truly Noble and most Illustrious Patriot, Holles, Duke of Newcastle. Dunton , John
1715?
25515 The moderator in the present controversy relating to the Peerage Bill. Unknown ,
1719?
22480 The moderator: published for promoting of peace; for reconciling differences between parties; to shew wherein every one misses it, and for uniting the hearts of the people to Her Majesty and government, &c. Unknown ,
Sarah Malthus (London)
Sarah Malthus (London)
1705
26195 The Montgolsier, a first rate of the French Aerial Navy. Unknown ,
Elizabeth Darchery (London)
1783
21162 The moral mirror: or, a Looking-Glass for sots, parasites, gluttons, clowns, praters, time-servers, pretenders, knaves, knights of the post, atheists, zealots, hypocrites, &c. &c. &c. Butler , Samuel
Earle , John
Mathew Carey [122 Market Street] (Philadelphia)
1813
25526 The nature of contracts consider'd, as they relate to the third and fourth subscriptions, taken in by the South Sea Company. In a letter to a friend. With a postscript, concerning the meeting at Salters Hall, the 18th instant. By a tradesman of the city, whose name is not to be found in any of the subscriptions. The second edition, corrected. Unknown , [Man]
James Roberts [Warwick Lane] (London)
John Harrison (Cornhill)
Anne Dodd I (London)
1720 The second edition, corrected.