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

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Displaying 426–450 of 2426

Person Title
Dodd I, Anne The patrician. To be continu'd weekly. Numb. II. Being considerations on the peerage continu'd, &c. In answer to The Plebeian. By one who is neither a knight, nor a member of the House of Commons.
Dodd I, Anne Three letters, relating to the South-Sea Company and the Bank. The first written in March 1719-20. The second in April 1720. The third in Septem. 1720. now first publish'd. By James Milner ... The second edition.
Dodd I, Anne A defence of the two letters to Mr. Tong, Mr. Smith, Mr. Robinson, & Mr. Reynolds, against Mr. Fancourt's Enthusiasm retorted. By Thomas Morgan.
Dodd I, Anne The third volume of the Examiners: beginning on Friday the 2d of January, 1712, and ending on Monday the 11th of May, 1713.
Dodd I, Anne The Dunciad. An heroic poem. In three books. The Second Edition.
Dodd I, Anne An essay on Christ's fear of death: or, an Appeal to the Equity and Common Sense of Mankind, From the Judgment of the Independent Church at Nottingham.
Dodd I, Anne Belphegor. Or The marriage of the Devil. A burlesque poem.
Dodd I, Anne The Lord Mohun's vindication.
Dodd I, Anne A Dissertation on national churches: Or, The happy influences of society in its improved state, as modell'd by the Christian institutes.
Dodd I, Anne The fatigues of a great man, or, the plague of serving one's country. A satire.
Dodd I, Anne The art of governing. Shewing, I. The several sorts of governments at this time establish'd in Europe; from which is taken the best Kind of Government for a Free People, as that of England, &c. II. Of the abuse of government, by publick ministers, in respect to liberty, &c. on the Maxim in Law, The King can do no Wrong; with the Character of a Modern Statesman, and the great Lord Bacon's Advice to a Courtier. III. Of freedom and slavery, as to Government; manifesting, that by the extraordinary Use, or the Non-Use of National Laws, and general Corruptions, they may be much the same Thing. IV. Of the Parliament of England, and the Frequency of British Parliaments; proving the latter not only the Fundamental Right of this Nation, but that Liberty is grounded upon, and cannot Subsist without it. The Second Edition.
Dodd I, Anne A summary view of ecclesiastical jurisdiction, especially that branch of it which relates to the proving wills, and granting administrations. Shewing How those Sacred Records may be better preserved, and all Business relating to the same, more properly executed, than under the present Regulation. Writ for the perusal of Sir N-----l C------n, And humbly submitted to the Consideration of the whole Legislature.
Dodd I, Anne The art of governing. Shewing, I. The several sorts of governments at this time establish'd in Europe; from which is taken the best Kind of Government for a Free People, as that of England, &c. II. Of the abuse of governments, by publick ministers, in respect to liberty, &c. on the Maxim in Law, The King can do no Wrong; with the Character of a Modern Statesman, and the great Lord Bacon's Advice to a Courtier. III. Of freedom and slavery, as to Government; manifesting, that by the extraordinary Use, or the Non-Use of National Laws, and general Corruptions, they may be much the same Thing. IV. Of the Parliament of England, and the Frequency of British Parliaments; proving the latter not only the Fundamental Right of this Nation, but that Liberty is grounded upon, and cannot Subsist without it.
Dodd I, Anne The woman's advocate: or, the baudy batchelor out in his calculation: being the genuine answer paragraph by paragraph, to The Batchelor's estimate. Plainly proving that Marriage is to a Man of Sense and OEconomy, both a Happiner and less Chargeable State, than a Single Life. Written for the honour of the good wives, and pretty girls of old England.
Dodd I, Anne The nature of contracts consider'd, as they Relate to the Third and Fourth Subscriptions, taken in by the South Sea Company. In a Letter to a Friend. With a postscript, concerning the Meeting at Salters-Hall, the 18th instant. By a Tradesman of the City, whose Name is not to be found in any of the Subscriptions.
Dodd I, Anne A compendious treatise on the contents, virtues, and uses of cold and hot mineral springs in general: particularly the celebrated waters of Scarborough. With Observations on their Quality, and proper Directions in drinking them. The Whole consisting of what is chiefly Useful in the Works of the most celebrated Authors who have wrote on this Subject; with Practical Observations. By John Atkins, surgeon. To which are annexed, the opinions of Sir John Floyer and Dr. Baynard. on the great use and effect of bathing in the sea.
Dodd I, Anne A sermon preach'd at St. Paul's Covent-Garden, on the First of August, 1725. Being the most happy inauguration of his Sacred Majesty King George. By Gilbert Burnet.
Dodd I, Anne A letter from Mrs. Jane Jones, alias Jenny Diver, in Drury-Lane, to Mrs. Arabella B---wl---s, Near Wine-Office Court, Fleetstreet. Interspers'd With Reflections, Humorous and Moral, Pious and Political.
Dodd I, Anne A brief narrative of the unhappy affair, which happened at the city of Tours in France, to the Lord Viscount Dunkeron; only son to the Right Honourable the Earl of Shelburne in the kingdom of Ireland. Mr. Kinnersly, brother to the lady of Sir John Frederick Bart; Mr. Hamilton, nephew to Colonel Hamilton, the late Duke Hamilton's second in Hyde-Park. And, Mr. Stuart, another Scotch gentleman: touching the killing of one Mauripate, an Italian gamester, in the said city, upon the twentieth day of November last, N.S. being the anniversary of the feast of St. Andrew, the tutelar patron of Scotland. Wherein, that unfortunate transaction is set in a true and impartial light. To which is added, some account of the instances made by the Earl Waldegrave to the French court, and his Majesty's most gracious interposition in behalf of the said gentlemen his subjects.
Dodd I, Anne Christian liberty asserted: In Opposition to Protestant Popery. In a letter to Mr. Thomas Bradbury. By a Dissenting Lay-Man.
Dodd I, Anne The Honysuckle. A curious collection of poems upon several occasions. Consisting chiefly of originals; and interspers'd with translations from the best Greek and Latin authors. Particularly containing, a poem to mira on the loss of her lap-dog. To a lady on her recovery from a fit of sickness. Verses address'd to Mr. P-lt-y. A roundelay after spencer's manner. An epigram to the V- B-ke, on the writings of the Cr-t-n. verses design'd for musick. A pastoral. The alternative, an ode. The joys of wine, from Anacreon. Catullus his ode on kisses. The patriot, an ode-to Mr. Howe. The second edition. To which is added, the duel: a poem. Humbly inscrib'd to the Honourable W- P- Esq;
Dodd I, Anne A collection of the occasional papers for the year 1718. Vol. III. With a preface; and a table of contents.
Dodd I, Anne A visit to the South-Sea Company and the Bank. In a letter to a friend, concerning the late proposals for the payment of the nation's debts. The second edition. To which is added, a second letter, occasion'd by what has past since, in relation to the South-Sea Company's bargain.
Dodd I, Anne A third letter to the reverend the ministers of the Calvinistical Baptist Board: occasioned by their uncharitable, as well as false insinuations, concerning the author's application to the Quakers, and his Attempts of Conformity to The National Church. In which likewise are to be found, his reasons for making a tour to Paris, and his leaving The Congregation at Devonshire Square after his return. By Sayer Rudd, M.D.
Dodd I, Anne Panegyrical essays upon the prayer Lord, pity the people; the only words of William I. Prince of Orange, The Founder of the Government of United Provinces, at his sudden and violent death, 10th July 1584. Transform'd into the order they are now in, anno 1714, upon his Majesty's accession to the Crown. The Second Edition.