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Unknown The tryal of several rioters for high-treason; at the Sessions-House in the Old-Bailey, April 4. 1668. Some of whom were afterwards executed. To which is added, the judgment of the judges on that occasion, as reported by my Lord Chief Justice Kelyng.
Unknown Biographium Fæmineum. The Female Worthies: or, Memoirs of the Most Illustrious Ladies, of all Ages and Nations, who have been Eminently distinguished for their Magnanimity, Learning, Genius, Virtue, Piety, and other excellent Endowments, conspicuous in all the various Stations and Relations of Life, public and private. Containing (exclusive of Foreigners) The Lives of above Fourscore British Ladies, who have shone with a peculiar Lustre, and given the noblest Proofs of the most exalted Genius, and superior Worth. Collected from History, and the most approved Biographers, and brought down to the present Time. In Two Volumes.
Unknown The presentment of the Grand-Jury for the county of Middlesex, to His Majesty's Court of King's-Bench, at Westminster, against the infidels and sodomites, and impious books.
Unknown The scriptures and the Athanasians compared in their accounts of God the Father and of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Unknown An essay to prove women have no souls. Compos'd of several arguments publish'd by S. Clarke, D. D. Rector of St. James's Westminster.
Unknown An essay for a review of the Book of common prayer. To which is added, a specimen thereof. Submitted to the Consideration of those in Authority. Attempted by an impartial hand.
Unknown King John: a poem. In answer to the Lilliputian Queen, a poem address'd to the Chester ladies. With a dedication to the ladies of Chester.
Unknown Mendico-hymen: Or, The beggar's match. A poem. Translated from the Latin.
Unknown The trial of Mrs. Branch, and her daughter, for the murder of Jane Buttersworth, before the Hon. Mr. Justice Chapple, at Somerset assizes, March 31, 1740. With a Preface, Containing an exact Account, taken from the Persons who saw the Lights in Hemington Church-Yard, the Night before the Corpse was taken up, and the true Motives for taking up the Corpse. To which are added, true copies of some very material informations, taken before Joseph Houlton, and Robert Smith, Esqrs. Justices of the Peace. With a just account of the prisoners behaviour at their trial; at, and after Sentence; and at the Place of Execution. and at the place of execution. The Second Edition.
Unknown The case between the proprietors of news-papers, and the subscribing coffee-men, fairly stated. Being remarks on their case lately publish'd. Wherein The False Pretences, Wild Project, and Groundless Complaints of that Insolent Set of Men, are duly Examined, properly Exposed, and thoroughly Consuted; And their Calumny of Abuses and Impositions justly Retorted. With a proposal for remedying the flagrant, scandalous, and growing impositions of the coffee-men upon the publick.
Unknown The rights of the subject in electing their own representatives: Containing a compleat history of Parliament; proving their dignity and antiquity from the Saxon, and other eminent historians; and shewing the necessity of the frequency of Parliament, the freedom of elections, and the fatal consequences which have attended those princes who have invaded either. With seasonable instructions to the electors how to conduct themselves in the choice of their representatives: the qualifications requisite for gentlemen to be chosen into so great a trust, and the necessity of freedom of speech in the House of Commons.
Unknown The modern poet. A rapsody. The Second Edition.
Unknown An account of the tryal of Salley Salisbury, at the Sessions-House in the Old Bailey on Wednesday the 24th of April, 1723.
Unknown The weight of blood being the case of Major John Oneby for the murder of William Gower, Esq; in a letter to a member of Parliament.
Unknown Female piety and virtue. A poem.
Unknown Pet.-Mrs Bennet, &c. against Lord Alva's interlocutor. Mr Sinclair, clerk. D. Hutcheson, agent. Unto the Right Honourable the Lords of Council and Session, the petition of Mrs Ann Maria Bennet of Nassau-Street, London, and John B. Williamson, late of the Theatre-Royal, Edinburgh;
Unknown Seasonable considerations relating to insolvent debtors, drawn from the practice of foreign states, Addressed to the Right Honourable Arthur Onslow, Esq; speaker of the Honourable House of Commons, and one of His Majesty's Most Honourable Privy-Council.
Unknown A full and genuine account of the murder of Mrs. Robinson, by Elton Lewis, On Monday Night, April 21, 1735.
Unknown Remarks on a pamphlet intituled Oculus Britanniæ: an heroi panegyrical poem on the University of Oxford. Occasion'd by the late publishing of a book call'd Terræ-filius. To which is added, modern poetry: a satyr.
Unknown An account of explosions in the atmosphere, or airquakes. Their distinction from true earthquakes. With some observations on the late shocks, near this city, &c. to shew that they were most probably of the former kind.
Unknown The occasional paper. Numb. VII. The nature and obligation of oaths.
Unknown De Courcy: A Tale.
Unknown Reasons for a war, In Order to Establish the Tranquillity and Commerce of Europe.
Unknown A letter to the detector of the pretended falshoods, &c. in The life of Sir Robert Cochran. Containing many curious anecdotes relating to that great minister, never before published.
Unknown The life and character of Jane Shore. Collected from our best historians, chiefly from the writings of Sir Thomas More; Who was her Cotemporary, and Personally knew her. Humbly offer'd to the readers and spectators of her tragedy written by Mr. Rowe. Inscrib'd to Mrs. Oldfield. The Second Edition.