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 1676–1700 of 2340

Person Title
Newbery, Elizabeth The Looking-Glass for the Mind; or, Intellectual Mirror. Being an Elegant Collection of the Most Delightful Little Stories and Interesting Tales, Chiefly Translated from that Much Admired Work, L'Ami des Enfans. With Seventy-Four Cuts, Designed and Engraved on Wood by I. Bewick.
Newbery, Elizabeth The history of Tom Jones, a foundling. Abridged from the works of Henry Fielding, Esq.
Newbery, Elizabeth The Canary Bird: A Moral Fiction. Interspersed with poetry. By the author of The Sparrow, Keeper's Travels, The Crested Wren, &c
Newbery, Elizabeth Adventures of Musul: or the three gifts: with other tales.
Newbery, Elizabeth The causes of the great number of deaths amongst adults and children, in putrid, scarlet fevers, and ulcerated sore throats, explained; with more successful modes of treating those alarming disorders; as practised at the St. Mary-le-bone infirmary. By William Rowley, M.D. Member of the University of Oxford, the Royal College of Physicians in London, &c. and physician to the St. Mary-le-bone infirmary.
Newbery, Elizabeth The Cries of London, as they are daily exhibited in the streets; with an epigram in verse, adapted to each. Embellished with sixty-two elegant cuts. To which is added, a description of the metropolis in verse.
Newbery, Elizabeth A treatise on female, nervous, hysterical, hypochondriacal, bilious, convulsive diseases; apoplexy and palsy; with thoughts on madness, suicide, &c. in which the principal disorders are explained from anatomical facts, and the treatment formed on several new principles. By William Rowley, M. D. Member of the University of Oxford, the Royal College of Physicians in London, &c.
Newbery, Elizabeth The Curiosities of London and Westminster described: In four volumes. Embellished with elegant Copper-Plates. Volume III. Containing a Description of St Paul's Cathedral, Black Friars Bridge, British Museum, The Temple, Temple Bar, St Bartholomew's Hospital, Northumberland House, Charing Cross, Lincoln's Inn.
Newbery, Elizabeth Three instructive tales for little folk: Simple and careful, Industry and sloth, and The cousins. By C. P -.
Newbery, Elizabeth The ladder to learning, step the first: being a collection of select fables, consisting of words of only one syllable, intended as an easy introduction to the useful art of reading.
Newbery, Elizabeth The Little Wanderers; or The Surprising History and Miraculous Adventures of Two Pretty Orphans. Embellished with cuts.
Newbery, Elizabeth Newbery's Familiar Letter Writer: Containing a Variety of Useful Letters, Calculated for the Most Common Occurrences, and Adapted to the Capacities of Young People,
Newbery, Elizabeth An archaeological epistle to the Reverend and Worshipful Jeremiah Milles, D. D. Dean of Exeter, President of the Society of Antiquaries, and editor of a superb edition of the poems of Thomas Rowley, priest. To which is annexed a glossary, extracted from that of the learned dean.
Newbery, Elizabeth The Entertaining Traveller; Giving a Brief Account of the Voyages and Travels of Master Tommy Columbus, in search of the Island of Wisdom; with a description of that island; as also of the Rock of Curiosity, the Court of Ambition, the Field of Luxury, and the Desert of Famine.
Newbery, Elizabeth Obedience rewarded, and prejudice conquered; or, the history of Mortimer Lascells. Written for the instruction and amusement of young people. By Mrs. Pilkington.
Newbery, Elizabeth Select fables of Æsop and others, with instructive applications.
Newbery, Elizabeth The Royal guide; or, An easy introduction to reading English: embellished with a great variety of cuts. Most humbly inscribed to His Royal Highness Prince Edward.
Newbery, Elizabeth Tales for youth; in thirty poems: To which are annexed, historical remarks and moral applications in prose. By the author of "choice emblems for the improvement of youth," &c. Ornamented with cuts, Neatly Designed And Engraved ON Wood, by I. Bewick
Newbery, Elizabeth Jeu des fautes que les enfans & les jeunes gens commettent le plus ordinairement contre la bonne éducation et contre la politesse. Par M. l'abbé Gaultier.
Newbery, Elizabeth Lord Chesterfield's Maxims; or, A New Plan of Education, on the Principles of Virtue and Politeness. In which is conveyed, such instruction as cannot fail to form the Man of Honour, the Man of Virtue, and the Accomplished Gentleman. Being the substance of the Earl of Chesterfield's Letters, to his Son, Philip Stanhope, Esq; A new edition.
Newbery, Elizabeth Poems, Moral, Elegant and Pathetic: viz. Essay on Man, by Pope; the Monk of La Trappe, by Jerningham; the Grave, by Blair; an Elegy in a country Churchyard, by Gray; the Hermit of Warkworth, by Percy; and Original Sonnets, by Helen Maria Williams.
Newbery, Elizabeth Two letters to Dr. William Hunter, Physician Extraordinary to the Queen, Professor of Anatomy in the Royal Academy, and Fellow of the Royal and Antiquarian Societies, on the dangerous tendency of medical vanity; occasioned by the death of a noble lady. With a remarkable cure of a Cancerous womb, &c. &c. The second edition.
Newbery, Elizabeth Juvenile Rambles through the Paths of Nature; in which many parts of the wonderful works of the creation are brought forward, and made familiar to the capacity of every little miss and master, who wishes to become wise and good. Embellished with cuts.
Newbery, Elizabeth Elmina; or, The Flower that Never Fades. A tale for young people.
Newbery, Elizabeth Important medical improvements for the contemplation of the faculty, the use of families, and the universal benefit of mankind. Just published ... The rational and improved practice, of physic, by William Rowley, M.D.