Name Publisher
Description

Indicates the person running the firm for whom the work was printed. This role is included if the firm is female-run.

Persons

Displaying 426–450 of 2340

Person Title
Dodd I, Anne God's incouragement to his people under persecution from their brethren. A sermon delivered at the meeting house in Snow's Fields, Southwark: occasioned by the anniversary of that foundation, on the first of August MDCCXXXV. By Sayer Rudd, M.D.
Dodd I, Anne A letter to the proprietors of the South-Sea Company. With a dedication to George Heathcote, Esq; Member of Parliament for the Borough of Southwark, and Alderman of the City of London. By Richard Coope, one of the late South-Sea directors.
Dodd I, Anne The British philippic: a poem, in Miltonic verse. Occasion'd by the insults of the Spaniards, and the preparations for war.
Dodd I, Anne The remembrancer: being a daily chronicle and yearly journal of the remarkable occurrences in Great Britain, and even throughout Europe, from William the Conqueror to the present year 1735. Including not only the Births, Marriages, Coronations, and Deaths of the Sovereign Princes; But the most considerable Battles and Sieges during the late Wars; with the several Alliances and other Treaties betwixt this and foreign Nations; And all the Grand Conspiracies, Rebellions, Massacres, Executions, Plagues, Fires, &c. that have happen'd during the seven last Centuries.
Dodd I, Anne A letter from Edinburgh to Dr. Sherlock, rectifying the committee's notions of sincerity. Defending the whole of the B. of Bangor's doctrine. And Maintaining That Religion, not a Profession of it, is Religion; That The Gospel, not a Corruption of it, is the Gospel, That Christ, not the Church, is Christ. In which is An Apology for the English Dissenters. With A Word or two relating to Mr Toland. By Gilbert Dalrymple, D.D. The Fourth Edition with a Pref. & P.S. & Notes.
Dodd I, Anne A collection of the occasional papers for the year 1716. With a preface.
Dodd I, Anne A collection of the occasional papers for the year 1717. Vol. II. With a preface; and a table of contents, to both volumes.
Dodd I, Anne The occasional paper. Number I. An essay on bigotry.
Dodd I, Anne The Patrician. To be continu’d weekly. No. I. Being considerations on the peerage. In answer to the Plebeian. By one who is neither a Knight, nor a member of the House of Commons.
Dodd I, Anne An essay on the pride of authors.
Dodd I, Anne The occasional paper. Vol. III. Numb. IV. Containing several letters. Viz. I. To the author of this paper; upon a Remarkable Saying, insisted on by Dr. Biss, in his Sermons on the Beauty of Holiness in the Common-Prayer. II. Remarks upon a passage in Dr. Biss's, and another in Dr. Lupton's sermons, before the Sons of the Clergy; concerning the Authority of the Fathers, in interpreting Scripture: Directed to the Author of this Paper. III. A letter directed to the author of Vulgar prepossessions in favour of th Bishop of Bangor: By a Well-Wisher to the Occasional-Paper. IV. A letter from Mr. De la Pillonniere, to the Author of this Paper; allowing him to publish a Letter of Mr. Cotton Mather of New-England. V. Mr. Cotton Mather's letter to Mr. De la Pillonniere; Printed from the Original.
Dodd I, Anne The oxford Methodists: being an account of some young gentlemen in that city, in derision so called; setting forth their rise and designs. With Some Occasional remarks on A Letter inserted in Fog's Journal of December 9th, 1732, relating to them. In a letter from a Gentleman near Oxford, to his Friend at London. The Third Edition, with very great Alterations and Improvements. To which is prefix'd, A Short Epistle to the Reverend Mr. Whitefield, A. B. of Pembroke-College, Oxon.
Dodd I, Anne Serious thoughts on the weekly news-writers. Humbly addressed to the people of Great Britain.
Dodd I, Anne 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.
Dodd I, Anne The artless muse: being six poetical essays on various subjects. By a person in obscure life. Viz. I. A poem to the memory of John Milton, the British Homer: Occasioned by a Letter, some Time since published, in behalf of his daughter, Mrs. Clark, who then subsisted on the Labour of her poor Son, a Weaver in Spittle-Field: Lamenting, the Ingratitude of his Country to the Manes of that incomparable Bard; and celebrating the Royal Bounty of her Present Majesty, and several of the Nobility and Gentry to that unfortunate Gentlewoman. II. Damon's dispair, a Soliloquy. III. Stephen Duck's Translation from the Threshing floor to the Court. IV. Alexis's Farewel. V. On the mutability of sublunary Things, and their Insufficiency to Happiness. VI. The abandon'd shepherd, a Pastoral Tale.
Dodd I, Anne The compendious history of foolish, wicked, wise and good kings. Viz. Saul, David, Solomon, Jereboam, Rehoboam, Ahaz, &c. Printed by order of the Long Parliament, 1641. The Second Edition.
Dodd I, Anne Some considerations humbly offer'd, relating to the peerage of Great Britain. By a gentleman.
Dodd I, Anne The behaviour of the cl-gy, as well as their traditions, destructive of religion. Or, a succinct history of priestcraft, Throughout all Ages. Containing, A general Introduction of the Institution of all pretended Revelations. - Remarks on Priestcraft amongst the Greeks: The strange Superstition of that learned People, proved to be the Ruin of Athens. - Remarks on Roman Priestcraft, their Augurs, Pontiffs, &c. - An Account of the Bramins, Bonzeés, Talapoins, and other Eastern Priests: with a curious History of the Pharisees and Sadduces among the Jews. - Popish Priestcraft unveil'd, particularly with regard to our own Island. Concluding with The Secret Intrigues of the Gown with all Parties from the Reformation to the Vicars Ap---cy. Dedicated to the Most Worthy Sect of Free-Thinkers.
Dodd I, Anne The occasional paper. Vol. III. Numb. I. of retractations.
Dodd I, Anne 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.
Dodd I, Anne The peaceable layman and military churchman delineated: In an Humble address to the Church and State of Great Britain: but More particularly offer'd to the Consideration of the New Academy of the Oratory; as a Theme of Peace, Eloquence, and Great Actions.
Dodd I, Anne A plain and rational account of the law of the Sabbath; being a defence of a late pamphlet, intitled, The fourth commandment abrogated by the Gospel: or, an answer to Mr. Robert Cornthwaite's farther defence of the seventh-day Sabbath: In which Gen. ii. 2, 3. (called by him the Original Institution,) is more particularly consider'd; and his most material Objections and Criticisms refuted. In a letter to Mr. Cornthwaite. By Caleb Fleming, Author of The Fourth Commandment abrogated by the Gospel.
Dodd I, Anne The faction: a poem on the new Jacobite and Swedish conspiracy.
Dodd I, Anne The occasional paper. Numb. XII. Some remarks on a late pamphlet, entitled, The Church of England the sole encourager of free thinking, &c. With a letter to the author of this paper; fully confuting the chief things insisted on in that pamphlet.
Dodd I, Anne A commentary on Mr Pope's principles of morality, or Essay on man. By Mons. Crousaz, ... in answer to a letter of remarks on his Examen, &c. Containing also I. The letter of remarks to Mons. Crousaz. ... V. Some cursory annotations by the translator.