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 2361

Person Title
Dodd I, Anne The apparition; or, the sham-wedding. A comedy: as it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane, by Her Majesty's servants. By a gentleman of Christ-Church College in Oxford.
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. The second edition.
Dodd I, Anne An examination of Mr Pope's Essay on man. Translated from the French of M. Crousaz, Member of the Royal Academies of Sciences at Paris and Bourdeaux; and Professor of Philosophy and Mathematics at Lausanne.
Dodd I, Anne A letter from the people to Caleb D'Anvers Esq;
Dodd I, Anne Jonah: a poem. The second edition.
Dodd I, Anne Wednesday club-law: or, the injustice, dishonour and ill policy of breaking into parliamentary contracts for publick debts.
Dodd I, Anne The miser, a poem: from the first satire of the first book of Horace. Inscrib’d to Horatio Walpole, Esquire
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 parson hunter. A poem.
Dodd I, Anne The Seventh-day-man, in the vanity of his Jemish Sabbath, and presumption contempt of Gospel rest: Together with the Sabbath-Day-error, of so general and long continuance, even down to this present: offered to consideration. And the Lord's Day justified, as the true Christian Sabbath, visible in, and to be rested on according to commandment. With a prayer for the Lord's Day.
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 the 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.
Dodd I, Anne The nature of man a poem, in three books. By Sir Richard Blackmore, Knt. M.D. Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians
Dodd I, Anne Chickens feed capons: or A dissertation on the pertness of our youth in general, especially those trained up at tea-tables; with The true picture of a petit maitre, and a modern fine lady; some hints on abuses in education; not forgetting the insolence and scorn with which the generality of young persons treat their elders and betters. Also a very remarkable tragical case, which may serve as a warning to persons in years, how they give the staff out of their own hands, and leave themselves to the mercy of others. Written by a friend of the person injured. The Third Edition. With a preface in vindication of the author.
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 A Collection of the occasional papers for the year 1716. With a preface.
Dodd I, Anne The ladies tales: exemplified in the vertues and vices of the quality, with reflections.
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 examiners for the year 1711. To which is prefix'd, A letter to the Examiner.
Dodd I, Anne Verses address'd to the imitator of the first satire of the second book of Horace. By a lady. The fifth edition corrected.
Dodd I, Anne Serious thoughts on the weekly news-writers. Humbly addressed to the people of Great Britain.
Dodd I, Anne The Interests of the Protestant dissenters considered.
Dodd I, Anne The third and last volume of posthumous works, written by Mr. Samuel Butler, Author of Hudibras. Part written in the Time of the usurpation, and the rest in the Reign of King Charles II. To which is added, The coffin for the good old cause. Publish'd just before the restoration. By Sir Samuel Luke. The Third Edition, Corrected.
Dodd I, Anne The finish'd rake; or, Gallantry in Perfection. Being the genuine and entertaining adventures, of a young gentleman of fortune. Faithfully extracted from memoirs written with his own Hand, and design'd by him to be publish'd, as is believed, had he not been prevented by Death. The whole being interspers'd with several Curious, Whimfical, and Uncommon incidents; particularly his intrigue with a fine coquette milliner, near one of our most noted Inns of Court, whilst he was a student.
Dodd I, Anne The fatal consequences of ministerial influence: or, the difference between royal power and ministerial power, truly stated. A political essay, Occasioned by The Petition presented last Session of Parliament by Six Noble Peers of Scotland; and Addressed to the Noble, the Ancient, and the Rich Families of Great Britain: With an appendix, Containing Copies of those Accounts of Illegal Practices at the last Election of P----s, which some N---le and others were ready to have given, and are still ready to give, upon Oath, if required.
Dodd I, Anne The fatigues of a great man: or, the plague of serving one's country. A satyre.