Titles by Barker, Jane in CHICAGO format
There are 5 titles associated with this person.
Barker,
Jane.
Exilius: or, the banish'd Roman. A new romance. In two parts: written after the manner of Telemachus, for the instruction of some young ladies of quality. By Mrs. Jane Barker.
London:
1712.
Barker,
Jane.
Exilius: or, The banish'd Roman. A new romance. In two parts: written after the manner of Telemachus, for the instruction of some young ladies of quality. By Mrs. Jane Barker.
London:
1715.
Barker,
Jane.
The entertaining novels of Mrs. Jane Barker. In two volumes. I. Exilius; or the banish'd Roman. Written (after the Manner of Telemachus) for the Instruction of some Young Ladies of Quality. II. Clelia and Marcellus; or, The constant Lovers. III. The Reward of Virtue; or, The Adventures of Clarinthia and Lysander. IV. The lucky Escape; or, The Fate of Ismenus. V. Clodius and Scipiana; or, The beautiful Captive. VI. Piso; or, The lewd Courtier. VII. The happy Recluse; or, The Charms of Liberty. VIII. The fair Widow; or, False Friend. IX. The amours of Bosvil and Galesia. The Second Edition.
London:
Arthur Bettesworth,
Edmund Curll [Fleet Street],
1719..
Barker,
Jane.
A patch-Work screen for the ladies; or, Love and virtue recommended: in a collection of instructive novels. Related after a manner intirely new, and interspersed with rural poems, describing the innocence of a country-life. By Mrs. Jane Barker, of Wilsthorp, near Stamford, in Lincolnshire.
London:
Edmund Curll [Strand],
Thomas Payne [Paine],
1723.
Barker,
Jane.
The entertaining novels of Mrs. Jane Barker, of Wilsthorp in Northamptonshire. I. Exilius: or the banish'd Roman. Written for the improvement of some Young Ladies of Quality. II. Clelia and Marcellus: or, The constant Lovers. III. The Reward of Virtue: or, The Adventures of Clarinthia and Lysander. IV. The lucky Escape: or, The Fate of Ismenus. V. Clodius and Scipiana: or, The beautiful Captive. VI. Piso: or, The lewd Courtier. VII. The happy Recluse: or, The Charms of Liberty. VIII. The fair Widow: or, False Friend. IX. The amours of Bosvil and Galesia. The Third Edition.
London:
Edmund Curll [Covent Garden],
Arthur Bettesworth and Charles Hitch,
1736.