Name Contributor
Description

A person who contributed to a work in some way. Used when no more specific term was supplied.

Persons

Displaying 1151–1175 of 2333

Person Title
Marshall, Elizabeth A sketch of my friend's family, intended to suggest some practical hints on religion and domestic manners. By Mrs. Marshall, author of Henwick tales
Marshall, Elizabeth The life of Mary Mordant. By an American lady. ; [Two lines of verse from Cowper
Marshall, Elizabeth A sketch of my friend's family, intended to suggest some practical hints on religion and domestic manners. By Mrs. Marshall, author of Henwick tales. ; In every work, regard the writer's end
Marshall, Elizabeth The life of Mary Mordant. By Mrs. Marshall. Author of "Sketch of my friend's family," &c. &c
Marshall, Elizabeth A sketch of my friend's family; intended to suggest some practical hints on religion and domestic manners. By Mrs. Marshall, author of Henwick tales. ; [One line of text
Marshall, Elizabeth A sketch of my friend's family, intended to suggest practical hints of religion and domestic manners. By Mrs. Marshall, author of Henwick tales
Marshall, Elizabeth The vicar's garden, or, The Greek medal. [Three lines from Goldsmith] By an American lady
Marshall, Elizabeth A sketch of my friend's family, intended to suggest some practical hints on religion and domestic manners. By Mrs. Marshall, author of Henwick tales
Marshall, Elizabeth The vicar's garden, or The Greek medal. [Two lines from Goldsmith] By an American lady
Marshall, Elizabeth Ellen: a tale--in three parts. By an American lady
Martin, Luther To the people of Maryland. Give me leave to address you upon a subject of the greatest importance to you and your posterity; a subject which essentially concerns the welfare, happiness and grandeur of this state, and therefore worthy of your most deliberate and candid consideration; I mean the expediency of your acceding to the confederacy proposed to you by Congress, and now adopted and ratified by ten of the thirteen states of America.
Martin, Luther To Robert Lemmon, Esq; Virtue and merit, sir, ought to command respect in the lowest station, and without these, office and preferment, far from stamping their possessors with real worth and dignity, only render them more conspicuously contemptible
Martin, Luther To Luther Martin, and Robert Lemmon, Esqrs. [Four lines in Latin from Horace] : Sirs, As great metamorphosis is effected in our own "marvelous days" as was that mystical transformation of a piece of fig-tree-wood
Martin, Luther To the public. That justice, which every person owes to his character, and reputation, on the unspottedness of which his public usefulness is greatly dependant, and with which his peace and satisfaction of mind are intimately connected, superadded to an ardent desire of standing approved to the good and virtuous, the worthy part of the community, has overcome the extreme reluctance, which I naturally have for newspaper controversies, and has induced me to make some remarks on a publication
Martin, Luther To Robert Lemmon, and Luther Martin, Esquires, who have been stimulated, by some evil genius, into a controversy with each other
Martin, Luther An address to Robert Lemmon, Esq: by Luther Martin
Martin, Luther Queries, addressed to Robert Lemmon, Esq
Martin, Rachel Elegies, composed on the decease of the following persons, Rev. Isaac Stelle. Rev. Benjamin Miller. Rev. Reune Runyon. Mary Stelle. Mary Stelle, daughter of Oliver, and Mary, Stelle, with a letter of condolence to Oliver Stelle on the death of his wife. Compiled and published by Oliver Stelle
Mason, Charlotte 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
Mason, John Serious advice to youth. By the Rev. John Mason, A.M. ; And A narrative of the happy boatman
Mason, John The constitution of man. By George Combe, Esq. Essays on decision of character, &c. / By John Foster, Esq. Philosophy of sleep, and Anatomy of drunkenness. / By Robert Macnish, Esq. Influence of literature upon society, &c. / By Madame de Stael. A treatise on self-knowledge. / By John Mason, A.M
Mason, Lowell Juvenile lyre: or Hymns and songs, religious, moral, and cheerful, set to appropriate music. : For the use of primary and common schools
Mason, Mary Sir, Mary Mason and family, being the widow and children of the late Charles Mason, deceased, respectfully wait on you, and solicit your friendly assistance, towards paying their passage to England.
Mason, Susanna Selections from the letters and manuscripts of the late Susanna Mason; with a brief memoir of her life, by her daughter
Mather, Cotton Pascentius. A very brief essay upon the methods of piety. Wherein people in whom the difficulties of the times have caused anxieties, may have a comfortable assurance of being at all times comfortably provided for. Offered unto the inhabitants of Boston, at their lecture 23. d. X m. 1714. By C. Mather, D.D. & F.R.S. ; [One line epigram in Latin