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Displaying 20051–20075 of 22306

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Unknown A criticism on Mahomet and Irene. In a letter to the author.
Unknown Considerations on several proposals for preventing the exportation of wool. With Heads of a scheme for that Purpose: and also Some short Answers to Part of the Remarks on Mr. Webber's Scheme, and the Draper's Pamphlet. By a Member of the late Parliament.
Unknown Queries relating to the reduction of the national redeemable debts, from Four to Three per Cent. per Ann. In a letter to - - Esq;
Unknown Remarkable cures perform'd by tar-water; collected out of the Gentleman's magazine, &c.
Unknown Infants church-membership and baptism, most clearly and fully proved to be God's own ordinance; from plain testimony of the Holy Scripture, &c. And also, the Mode of Baptizing by Dipping or Plunging the Whole Body under Water, is a gross error and innovation, it having no Foundation in the Word of God. In a debate, managed by writing betwixt two friends, viz. One on each side of the Question, at a certain Coffee-House in London.
Unknown The tenets and principles of the Church of Rome; set forth in a short catechism; designed to remove the Prejudices of all Hereticks against her Apolstolical Doctrines and Worship, &c. Being the result of a private conference between a papist and a well dispos'd Heretick, i.e. a protestant of the Church of England, November the first, 1731. With a dedication to the Rev. Mr. Orator Henley (in the Henleyan stle) on account of his late Oration against Father Girard and Miss Cadiere
Unknown Dr. Sherlock's Vindication of the Test Act examin'd, and the false foundations of it exposed. In answer to so much of his book against the Bishop of Bangor, as relates to the Protestant dissenters.
Unknown New discoveries of the dangers of popery.
Unknown Remarks upon the present crisis. Humbly address'd to the knights, citizens and burgesses, to serve in the present Parliament.
Unknown The royal progress: or, a historical view of the journeys, or progresses, which several great princes have made to visit their dominions, and acquaint themselves with their people.
Unknown The harlot's progress: or, the humours of Drury-Lane. In six cantos. Being the tale of the noted Moll Hackabout, in hudibrastick verse, containing her whole life; which is a key to the six prints lately publish'd by Mr. Hogarth . I. Her coming to Town in the York Waggon; her being betray'd by an old Baud into the Arms of Colonel Ch-s; her early Improvement in the Sweets of Fornication; and some Dialogues, Serious and Comical, between a Country Girl in the Waggon, and a Parson. II. Her living with a Jew; some merry Intrigues in the Jew's House; with Satyric̀al Pictures in the Jew's Chamber. III. Her living in a Baudy-House in Drury-Lane; her Extravagance, Company, Baudy-House Equipage, Pictures, and other Drury Decorations; with her being detected by Sir J---n G---n. IV. Her Usage at Tothil-Fields Bridewell; with some merry Adventures of Fops, Pimps, Whores, Bauds, and Panders, who were committed to keep her Company. V. Her Sickness and Death; Disputes between two noted Quacks, Temple-Bar and Bow-Bell Doctors, on the Nature of her Distemper; and her last Will and Testament. VI. Her Burial; the Funeral Pomp of Harlots in Triumph; Six Mutes, Sisters of the Trade; the Parson, a very Wag; the Clerk, a Sly-Boots; and the Undertaker, one of the Family of the Sad Dogs. The Third Edition.
Unknown A short essay on the scurvy: in which the Causes and Cure of that disease Are briefly Stated and Demonstrated. First, Representing the deceivable Forms and Characters under which it disguises it self. Secondly, The various, remote, and principal Causes of it examin'd. Thirdly, The material Causes discover'd. And, Fourthly, The best and most effectual Method of Cure exemplified in exceeding dangerous and contumacious Symptoms. With A Touch on Old Venereal Cases, and some remarks on the Doctrine of Acids and Alkalies.
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 The life of Sir Robert Cochran, prime minister to K. James III. of Scotland.
Unknown Who runs next: or, the Lord B--ke's confession. Found in his closet since his departure for France. Faithfully publish'd from the original by Mr. Dean S-. To which are added, some other papers relating to the Earl of Mortimer, M-w P-r, Esq; and the rest of the late managers.
Unknown A review of the report of the secret committee; digested into alphabetical order, which distinguishes the transactions of the late ministers one from another. And is also an useful and easy index to the report, by exact References to the Pages of both the Folio Edition, and that in Twelves.
Unknown The seventh satyre of Juvenal imitated.
Unknown The life and actions of Caius Julius Cæsar in Ægypt, &c. Collected from the best historians. Illustrating the history of Cæsar and Cleopatra; from whence the plot of Mr. Cibber's new tragedy is taken. Inscrib'd to Mrs. Oldfield, who performs the part of Cleopatra. To which is prefix'd a frontispiece representing Caesar swimming the River Nile to his Gallies, with his Commentaries in his Hand.
Unknown The modern poet. A rapsody. The Second Edition.
Unknown Beelzebub; or, The Quakers bubble, their that within them; apparent in their devilish schism, heresies, blasphemy, denial of the Trinity, of Gospel-ordinances, our Saviour's own institution of baptism and the Lord's Supper ... urged against them in some epistolary intercourses, and laid here before the reader in the same.
Unknown An abstract of the lives of Eteocles and Polynices, the two sons of Oedipus by his mother Jocasta. With a brief account of the famous Theban war, collected from the best authors. Necessary to be perused by those who intend to be spectators of the new tragedy, called the Fatal legacy, and proper to be bound up with the play. To which are added, the arguments of Phænissæ of Euripides, written upon the same subject.
Unknown The sense of the people upon the dispute between the Bishop of Bangor on the one part; and Dr. Snape, the Bishop of Carlisle, and Dr. Kennet on the other.
Unknown An ode, Most Humbly Inscrib'd to His Royal Highness, The Prince of Wales, on his Birth-Day, Saturday, January 20th, 1738-9.
Unknown The sighs of Albion: or the universal mourner. An ode sacred to the memory of ... Caroline, queen-consort of Great-Britain. Inscrib'd to the ... Lord Harvey, ...
Unknown A full and genuine account of the murder of Mrs. Robinson, by Elton Lewis, On Monday Night, April 21, 1735.