ID 2529
Last Name Unknown
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Displaying 526–550 of 1344

Role Title Date
Author Ingratitude: An epistle to ------ ------, Esq; Occasion'd by the late sad Catastrophe of a Clergyman at Norwich. By a Young Lady, Daughter of the said Clergyman. Illustrated with various notes. 1754
Author Put money in your purse, or, The golden rule. A conversation-piece, not in painting, but poesy. A satire with notes. 1754
Author A letter to a Member of the Irish Parliament relative to the present state of Ireland. Wherein Many Advantages, are laid down which would arise to the Province of Munster in particular, and to the Kingdom in general, from improving and farther extending the Navigation of the Blackwater River thro' the Counties of Waterford and Corke. 1755
Author 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. 1755
Author The laugher; or, The art of jesting: shewing every man in his humour, from the throne to the cottage; in particular of kings, queens and princes. Of noblemen and ambassadors. Of Gentlemen and Ladies. Of Gallants and Upstarts. Of Soldiers. Of Travellers. Of Politicians. Of Gamesters. Of Popes and Prelates. Of Poets and Musicians. Of Physick and Physicians. Of Lawyers. Of Love and Lovers. Of Husbands and Wives. Of Women. Of Dress. Of Jesters. Of Servants. Of Fools. Of Countrymen and Clowns. Of Thieves. Of Sharpers. Of Beggars. Of drunkards. Of noses, &c. &c. 1755
Author The laugher; or, The art of jesting: shewing every man in his humour, from the throne to the cottage; in particular of kings, queens and princes. Of noblemen and ambassadors. Of Gentlemen and Ladies. Of Gallants and Upstarts. Of Soldiers. Of Travellers. Of Politicians. Of Gamesters. Of Popes and Prelates. Of Poets and Musicians. Of Physick and Physicians. Of Lawyers. Of Love and Lovers. Of Husbands and Wives. Of Women. Of Dress. Of Jesters. Of Servants. Of Fools. Of Countrymen and Clowns. Of Thieves. Of Sharpers. Of Beggars. Of drunkards. Of noses, &c. &c. The Second Edition. 1755
Author A form of prayer, For the use of private families, and Particular persons. Compos'd on Occasion of The late Dreadful Earthquakes, And now Publish'd Pursuant to His Majesty's pious Order, for a General Fast, to be religiously kept on the 6th of February, 1756. To which is added, An Hymn, suitable to the Occasion, for Children to learn by Heart. By a Divine of the Church of England. 1756
Author A Full Account of the Siege of Minorca, by the French, in 1756. With all the Circumstances relating thereto. 1756
Author A modest apology for the conduct of a certain admiral in the Mediterranean. Being an essay towards silencing the clamorous tongue of slander, 'till facts can be ascertained by substantial and circumstantial Evidence. 1756
Author Ben Johnson's last legacy to the sons of wit, mirth, and jollytry; containing complete jests, Riddles, epigrams, epitaphs, acrosticks, anagrams, &c. To which is added, a drunken oration, as it was performed at the Theatre Royal in Covent Garden, by that inimitable Comedian Mr. Shuter, in the character of Mr. Hipsley's Drunken Man. The second edition. 1756
Author Critical Remarks on the Tragedy of Athelstan. With Rules necessary to by observed by all dramatic poets. By the author of the State-farce. 1756
Author Memoirs of the Right Honourable Lady Betty Ireland, with a particular account of her eldest son Roger, Jemmy Gripe, and Fox, the Jugler. 1756
Author The beauties of the English stage: consisting of the most affecting and sentimental passages, soliloquies, similies, descriptions, &c. in the English plays, ancient and modern. Digested under proper heads in alphabetical order, with the names and dates of the plays and their several authors refer'd to. The third edition, in which the errors of the former editions are corrected, and the collection is continued down to the present year. In three volumes. 1756
Author The Levee: A poem. Occasion'd by the Number of Clergy at the Duke of Ne---le's Levee. 1756
Author The State-Farce: A Lyrick. Inscribed to His Grace the Duke of Newcastle. The Second Edition. 1756
Author The State-Farce: A Lyrick. Written at Clermont. And inscribed to His Grace the Duke of Newcastle. 1756
Author A letter to a Member of the Irish Parliament relative to the present state of Ireland. Wherein Many Advantages, are laid down which would arise to the Province of Munster in particular, and to the Kingdom in general, from improving and farther extending the Navigation of the Blackwater River thro' the Counties of Waterford and Corke. The Second Edition. 1756?
Author The Protest 1757
Author Moral and critical reflections on several subjects. Among which (by way of illustration) various characters are occasionally interspersed. By the author of Emily; or, the history of a natural daughter. 1758
Author A genuine narrative of the trial and condemnation of Mary Edmondson, for the murder of Mrs. Susannah Walker, her aunt. At the assizes held at Kingston upon Thames, for the County of Surry, on Saturday, March 31, 1759. Before the honourable Sir Thomas Dennison, Knt. with An Account of her general Behaviour, last Dying Words, and Execution on Monday, April 2, 1759. With animadversions on the whole proceedings. And her effigy curiously engraved on a copper-plate. The second edition. 1759
Author Observations from the law of nature and nations, and the civil law; shewing, That the British Nation have an undoubted Right, during the present War, to seize on all French Property in Neutral Bottoms, and particularly every Thing brought from the French Settlements in America, or carried to them; as likewise, To seize all such Goods carrying to France, that might enable them to carry on the War against Great Britain, or to refuse or delay doing Justice to the British Nation; and shewing, That the Treaty made between England and Holland in 1674, does not intitle the Dutch to any Right to trade to the French Settlements in America. Dedicated To These Ministers, who have protected and enlarged the Commerce of Great Britain, who have made its Fleets Masters of the Sea, and destroyed the Naval Power of France; who have secured to Great Britain the Possession of North America, on which its very Being, as a Maritime Power, depends. 1759
Author Remarks on the reasons offered by Mr. Craner's church, for their separation from the church, lately under the pastoral care of Mr. William Bentley, meeting in Spital-Fields, London: found in their pamphlet, entitiled, A testimony to the truth, &c. Wherein the reasons of separation, there produced, are confuted, and shewn not to be founded on fact, ... In which also is contained some former letters relative to this subject. In a letter to Mr. R-d R-s. By Philalethes. 1759
Author A Christmas-box for masters and misses. Publish'd according to Act of Parliament. 1760
Author A letter from Lady ********* to the celebrated Miss K**** F*****. Concerning their late adventures in St. James's Park. 1760
Author A list of the regiments which compose the present establishment of Ireland. With the officers names, [...] With a general abstract of the forces on this establishment, [...] To which is added, a list of the general and field officers [...] And the succession of colonels [...] to September 1760. 1760

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"Unknown" The Women's Print History Project, 2019, Person ID 2529, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/person/2529. Accessed 2024-05-02.

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