25769
|
The lady's drawing room. Being a faithfull picture of the great world. In which the various humours of both sexes are display'd. Drawn from the life: and Interspers'd with entertaining and affecting Novels.
|
Unknown
,
|
|
1744 |
|
11711
|
The lady's economical assistant, or, The art of cutting out, and making the most useful articles of wearing apparel, without waste : explained by the clearest directions, and numerous engravings, of appropriate and tasteful patterns : designed for domestic use. By a lady.
|
Unknown
, [Woman]
|
John Murray II [Fleet Street] (London)
|
1808 |
|
15835
|
The Lady's Library; or, Parental Monitor: Containing, Dr. Gregory's Father's Legacy to his Daughters, Lady Pennington's Unfortunate Mother's Advice to her Daughters, Marchioness de Lambert's Advice of a Mother to her Daughter, and Moore's Fables for the Female Sex. A New Edition.
|
Pennington
, Sarah
Moore
, Edward
Gregory
, John
de Courcelles
, Anne Thérèse de Marguenat
|
Thomas Wilson and Sons (York)
|
1813 |
A New Edition. |
13443
|
The Lady's Museum. By the author of The Female Quixote.
|
Lennox
, Charlotte
|
John Coote (London)
John Newbery (London)
|
1760 |
|
5236
|
The lady's present to the fair sex: Being an infallible guide for their happy deportment thro' every stage of life. Digested under several important articles hereunder mentioned, viz. Of religion. Of modesty. Of meekness. Of compassion. Of assability. The duty of virgins. Of their deportment towards male sex. Of their friendships and censure. Of vanity, affectation, pride and diversions. Of Wives. Of their household-affairs, family and children. Of widows. The whole extracted from the writings of the politest economists, philosophers, poets and divines.
|
Unknown
,
|
|
1755 |
|
5211
|
The lady's present to the fair sex: shewing, the whole duty of woman. Digested under the following heads: curiosity reflection vanity knowledge ... Written by a lady, at the desire of a noble lord.
|
Unknown
, [Woman]
|
|
1757 |
|
5436
|
The lady's present to the fair sex: shewing, the whole duty of woman. Digested under the following heads: curiosity reflection vanity knowledge Reputation Applause Censure Insinuation Affectation Modesty Chastity Complacence Acquaintance Friendship Elegance Fruganty Employment Virginity Marriage Education Authority Widowhood Religion Written by a lady, at the desire of a noble lord.
|
Unknown
,
|
|
1760 |
|
25354
|
The lady's revenge: or, The Rover Reclaim'd. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre Royal in Covent-Garden.
|
Popple
, William
|
John Brindley (London)
|
1734 |
|
2481
|
The lady’s assistant for regulating and supplying her table, being a complete system of cookery, containing one hundred and fifty select bills of fare, properly disposed for family dinners of five dishes, to two courses of eleven and fifteen; with upwards of fifty bills of fare for suppers, from five dishes to nineteen; and several deserts: including likewise, the fullest and choicest receipts of various kinds, with full directions for preparing them in the most approved manner, from which a continual change may be made, as wanted, in the several bills of fare: published from the manuscript collection of Mrs. Charlotte Mason, a professed housekeeper, who had upwards of thirty years experience in families of the first fashion. The Third Edition.
|
Mason
, Charlotte
|
John Walter [Homer's Head, Charing Cross] (London)
|
1777 |
The Third Edition. |
2489
|
The lady’s assistant for regulating and supplying her table, being a complete system of cookery, containing one hundred and fifty select bills of fare, properly disposed for family dinners of five dishes, to two courses of eleven and fifteen; with upwards of fifty bills of fare for suppers, from five dishes to nineteen; and several deserts: including likewise, the fullest and choicest receipts of various kinds, with full directions for preparing them in the most approved manner, from which a continual change may be made, as wanted, in the several bills of fare: published from the manuscript collection of Mrs. Charlotte Mason, a professed housekeeper, who had upwards of thirty years experience in families of the first fashion. The second edition corrected, and considerably enlarged.
|
Mason
, Charlotte
|
John Walter [Homer's Head, Charing Cross] (London)
|
1775 |
The second edition corrected, and considerably enlarged. |
9069
|
The Lairds of Glenfern;of, Highlanders of the Nineteenth Century. A Tale. In Two Volumes. By Mary Johnston.
|
Johnston
, Mary
|
Minerva Press, A. K. Newman and Co. (London)
|
1816 |
|
507
|
The Lake of Killarney. A Novel, In Three Volumes. By Anna Maria Porter, author of Octavia, Walsh Colville, &c. &c.
|
Porter
, Anna Maria
|
Thomas Norton Longman And Owen Rees (London)
|
1804 |
|
6637
|
The lake of Windermere. A novel. In two volumes. ... By the editor of The letters of Maria.
|
Street
, Miss
|
Minerva Press, William Lane (London)
|
1791 |
|
13310
|
The Lancashire Collier Girl, a true story.
|
More
, Hannah
|
|
1801 |
|
14992
|
The Land Log-Book; a Compilation of Anecdotes and Occurrences Extracted from the Journal Kept by the Author, during a Residence of Several Years in the United States of America. Containing Useful Hints to Those Who Intend to Emigrate to that Country. By Sarah Hoding.
|
Hoding
, Sarah
|
Simpkin, Marshall and Co. (London)
|
1836 |
|
26075
|
The landlords law: or, the law concerning landlords, tenants, and farmers. Viz. 1. Of the nature and origin of tenures. 2. Of Estates, and their several Kinds. 3. Of Copyholds and Copyholders. 4. Of Leases, Covenants, Surrenders, Assignments, &c. 5, and 6. Of the Parties to Leases, wherein is shewn who may lease, who may rent, and what may be leased. 7, and 8. Contain the Obligations and Rights of the Parties, by Virtue of the Lease. 9, and 10. Of the remedies the law gives each party for the recovery of their rights. Necessary for all Landlords, Tenants, Farmers, Stewards, Agents, Sollicitors, and others concerned in the Buying, Selling, and Letting of Estates The sixth edition. To which is added an appendix containing such Acts of. Parliament and proper precedents as relate to these subjects, brought down to this time.
|
Great Britain
,
|
Richard Sare (London)
Daniel Browne I (London)
John Walthoe I (London)
Bernard Lintott (London)
Robert Gosling (London)
William Mears [Temple Bar] (London)
William Taylor (London)
John Osborne I [Lombard St] (London)
Francis Clay (London)
|
1720 |
The Sixth Edition. |
24727
|
The languishing lady's garland containing four excellent new songs. I. The languishing lady: or, The false-hearted lover's unspeakable cruelty. II. An answer to the languishing lady: or, The false hearted lover turn'd loyal. III. The happy pair: or, The loving shepherd and shepherdess. IV. The Bath toast.
|
Unknown
,
|
Sarah Bates (London)
|
1719 |
|
11617
|
The Last Autumn at a Favourite Residence. With Other Poems. By a Lady.
|
Lawrence
, Rose D'Aguilar
|
Nathaniel Hailes [168 Piccadilly] (London)
|
1828 |
|
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 |
|
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 |
|
1119
|
The Last Man. By the author of Frankenstein. In three volumes.
|
Shelley
, Mary Wollstonecraft
|
Henry Colburn [New Burlington Street] (London)
|
1826 |
|
8882
|
The Last Man. By the Author of Frankenstein. In three volumes. Second edition.
|
Shelley
, Mary Wollstonecraft
|
Henry Colburn [New Burlington Street] (London)
|
1826 |
Second edition. |
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 |
|
1605
|
The last war of the beasts. A fable. To serve for the history of the eighteenth century. In two parts. Translated from the original French of the author of Abassaï.
|
Falques
, Marianne-Agnès
|
C.G. Seyffert [Dean's Street] (London)
|
1758 |
|