ID 2529
Last Name Unknown
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Displaying 476–500 of 1406

Role Title Date
Author The priest and the widow, a tale. 1741
Author The Rhode-Island almanack for the year, 1741. Wherein is contained, the lunations, eclipses, judgment of the weather, courts, spring tides, moveable and immoveable feasts and fasts of the Church of England, time of the sun and moon's rising and setting, and time of high water, & c. Fitted to the meridian of Newport, on Rhode-Island, whose latitude north is 41 gr. 30 m. longitude from London, 72 grs. But may without sensible error, serve from New Found-land to South Carolina. Tides excepted. By Poor Robin. 1741
Author The whole art of war: Or, A military dictionary. Containing an explication of the terms, and an account of the things signified thereby in fortification, gunnery, &c. The method of encamping an army, besieging of towns, &c. With the qualifications necessary to make a general or commander in chief, to a private centinel. Written by an officer who serv'd in all the wars of the Late King William and Queen Anne. 1741
Author A new court register... 1742
Author Remarks upon the account of the conduct of a certain Dutchess. In a letter from a member of the last parliament in the reign of Queen Anne. To a young nobleman. 1742
Author The Ghost of Eustace Budgel Esq. to the Man in Blue. Most humbly Inscrib'd to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales. 1742
Author A Poem on the battle of Dettingen. Inscrib'd to the King. 1743
Author Bekantmachung. Wir Vorsteher und Aeltesten der Reformirten Gemeinen in Pennsylvanien, thun hiemit allen unsern lieben Mitbrüdern zu wissen, dass wir uns den 29 August Monaht, in der Township Heydelberg, in grosser Anzahl versammlet befunden. 1743
Author The axe (once more) laid to the root of the tree. Published for the universal benefit of mankind. And dedicated to the land-holders of the British dominions. By a friend to truth and the Christian religion. 1743
Author The Relative duty of creditors and debtors considered. Shewing, the indispensable obligation debtors are under to make the utmost restitution to their creditors; and proposing some arguments and reasons for the gentleness and compassion of creditors towards in solvent debtors. With some objections answered, and cases relating to this subject stated and cleared, in a sermon preached in the Chappel of the Fleet Prison, Jan. 23. 1742-3. Published by request. 1743
Author A short vindication of the proceedings of the Governors of the General Hospital at Bath, in relation to Mr. Archibald Cleland, Late Surgeon to the said Hospital; wherein The several Facts misrepresented in a Pamphlet, call'd, An Appeal to the Publick, by Mr. Cleland, Are Fairly Stated. To which is prefix'd, A short narrative of the proceedings. By the Governors of the Hospital, who voted for Mr. Cleland's dismission 1744
Author Richard Ward, Esq; gov. Samuel Clarke, Esq; dep. gov. 1744
Author Siris in the Shades: A Dialogue Concerning Tar Water; Between Mr. Benjamin Smith, lately deceased, Dr. Hancock, and Dr. Garth, at their Meeting upon the Banks of the River Styx. 1744
Author The Charter granted by His Majesty King Charles II. To the governor and company of the English colony of Rhode-Island and Providence-Plantations, in New-England in America. 1744
Author The Equity of Parnassus: A Poem. 1744
Author 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. 1744
Translator The works of Sallust, translated into English. With political discourses upon that author. To which is added, a translation of Cicero's four orations against Catiline. 1744
Author Thelamont; or, perfect generosity. A novel. By the editor of Clidanor and Cecilia. Being the second novel of that collection. 1744
Author An address to that honest part of the nation, call'd the lower sort of people; on the subject of popery and the pretender. 1745
Author An Address to that Honest Part of the Nation, Call'd the Lower Sort of People; on the Subject of Popery and the Pretender. The Second Edition. 1745
Author Remarkable cures perform'd by tar-water; collected out of the Gentleman's magazine, &c. 1745
Author Seasonable advice to the inhabitants of Yorkshire. By a Yorkshire-man. 1745
Author The child's new play-thing : being a spelling-book intended to make the Learning to Read, a Diversion instead of a Task. Consisting of Scripture-Histories, Fables, Stories, Moral and Religious Precepts, Proverbs, Songs, Riddles, Dialogues, &c. The Whole adapted to the Capacties of Children, and Divided into Lessons of one, two, three, and four Syllables; with entertaining Pictures to each Story and Fable, And a new-invented Alphabet for Children to play with, and a Preface shewing the Use of it. The Third Edition. To which is added Three Dialogues; 1. Shewing how a little Boy shall make every body love him. 2. How a little Boy shall grow wiser than the rest of his School-fellows. 3. How a little Boy shall become a great Man. Designed for the Use of Schools, or for Children before they go to School. 1745
Author The hampstead congress: or, the happy pair. 1745
Author The layman's sermon. Occasioned by the present rebellion; which was (or ought to have been) preach'd at St. Paul's Cross, on the 1st of October, 1745. 1745

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"Unknown" The Women's Print History Project, 2019, Person ID 2529, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/person/2529. Accessed 2026-02-05.

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