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Displaying 276–300 of 1599

Person Title
Dodd I, Anne The obligations of an English army to their king, and constitution, in church and state: in a sermon preach'd to several commanders and others of His Majesty's forces, at St. James's Church, Westminster, Octob. 30. 1716. being the Birth-Day of the Prince. By Jonathan Smedley, A.M. Rector of Ringcurrane, and Chaplain to his Majesty's Regiment, Commanded by the Honourable Brigadier Stanwix.
Dodd I, Anne Mendico-hymen: Or, The beggar's match. A poem. Translated from the Latin.
Dodd I, Anne Modern Patriotism, a Poem.
Dodd I, Anne Queen Robin: or the second part of Neck or nothing, detecting the secret reign of the four last years. In a familiar dialogue between Mr. Truman (alias Mr. John Dunton) and his friend, meeting accidentaly at the Proclaiming King George. The whole Discoveries Humbly inscrib'd to his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, and contain the True secret History of the White-Staff, in Answer to that False one, lately publish'd by the Earl of o-ford.
Dodd I, Anne A vindication of plain-dealing, from the base and malicious aspersions of two country curates, contain'd in a little scurrilous pamphlet entitled, Plain-Dealing proved to be plain-lying.
Dodd I, Anne Country common-sense. Containing, Numb I. An Introductory Discourse; with the Duty of some Magistrates. Numb. II. An Essay on Publick Spirit; and the Self-Lover arraigned at the Bar of Common-Sense. Numb. III. The Monstrous Tail of the Sheep of Adell, which kills the Body: An Excellent Emblem of a Self killing Nation. Numb IV. Abstracts from a Pamphlet, entitled, Observations on British Wool, &c. with proper Reflections. Numb V. The Importance of the Wollen Trade to this Nation; that our Domestick bad Oeconomy and Vices, are most ruinous to our Trade, and how. Numb VI. That we may preserve our Trade, if we will use the same Means as our Ancestors took to establish it, and which our Rivals take to get it from us; with an effectual Scheme to stop the Running of Wool, without an Excise. Numb VII. A Defence of our Bishops Seats in Parliament; with their particular Duty there. By a Gentleman of Wales.
Dodd I, Anne God, and all other reasonable beings, happy in proportion to their virtue. Or, an essay upon moral virtue, as its necessary connection with all Rational Happiness. In a letter to the Revd Dr. Clark, Rector of St. James's Westminster, and Chaplain in Ordinary to His Majesty. By a clergyman.
Dodd I, Anne 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.
Dodd I, Anne A scheme for, an effectual method to prevent the exportation of wooll. By Richard Carter, and Peter Ellers. June 20. 1713.
Dodd I, Anne Reflections on the management of some late party-disputes, and the notorious abuse of the words church, Schismatick, fanatick, &c. and upon the present conduct of those called High-Church, Shewing how Destructive it hath been both to Religion and Civil Society. With a postscript to the present jacobites.
Dodd I, Anne A brief enquiry concerning the dignity of the ordinance of the Lord's supper, and the care that all especially magistrates and ministers ought to take to prevent and remove the occasions of its being lessened.
Dodd I, Anne Remarks on the Reverend Mr. Whitefield's journal. Wherein many of his inconsistences [sic] are pointed out, and his tenets consider'd. The Whole shewing the Dangerous Tendency of His Doctrine. Address'd to the Religious Societies.
Dodd I, Anne Bungey: or The false brother, prov'd his own executioner, In a sermon, upon these words, and went and hang'd himselself, Matth. XXVII. 5. In which, the secret vices, lewd principles, and (suppos'd) shameful death of that tool Dr. S-rel (alias Bungey) is set in a new light; and the black charge exhibited against him, offer'd to be attested in any Court of Justice (or even in St. Andrews Pulpit) when ever the Dr. will appoint the time. By Mr. John Dunton. Author of Neck or nothing, and the three late sermons intitled, The hereditary bastard, Ox- and Bull- and King Abigail. The Third Edition.
Dodd I, Anne 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.
Dodd I, Anne The great danger of presumption. A sermon sometime preached in the Abbey of Westminster, upon I Cor. x. 12 . Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall. By the Rev. Mr. John Holdsworth, M.A.
Dodd I, Anne Whitby, a poem. Occasioned by Mr. Andrew Long's recovery from the jaundice, by drinking of Whitby spaw-waters. By Samuel Jones, gent
Dodd I, Anne Memoirs of the maritime affairs of Great Britain, especially in relation to our concerns in the West-Indies. To which is prefix'd, the original letter of the author, to (and by the Command of) the Earl of Oxford, when High Treasurer of England, in relation to the South-Sea Company, and the Trade they were designed to carry on; in which the Consequences of an ill Management in that Respect are fully laid open, and the true Nature of such a Commerce explain'd. By the late John Pullen, Esq; Governor of Bermudas. To which is added, Capt. Pain's Short view of Spanish America: Containing a succinct Deduction of Navigation, from its Original to the Discovery of the New World; and an Account of the Extent, Quality, Riches, and Trade of his Catholick Majesty's Dominions there, in a Method wholly New, and from Authorities never yet known to the Publick.
Dodd I, Anne A letter to a friend, Occasioned by Mr. Chandler's History of persecution. With a Postscript concerning his Answer to Dr. Berriman.
Dodd I, Anne A sermon preach'd at the Cathedral Church of St. Peter in York, Before the Honourable Sir William Thompson, Knight; one of His Majesty's barons of the Exchequer, at the assizes held there March 11, 1734/5. By Richard Mosley, M.A. rector of St. Saviour's in the city, and of Wiggington in the county, of York. Published at the request of the high-sheriff, and the gentlemen of the grand-jury.
Dodd I, Anne The Irresistible Fair, a Poem. Humbly Inscrib'd to that Incomparable, and Celebrated Beauty, Miss F--y Be--l. By J. Dodd, Philomathes.
Dodd I, Anne Mocking is catching, or, a pastoral lamentation for the loss of a man and no man. In the simple stile. By the author of Namby Pamby.
Dodd I, Anne A defence of the late learned Dr. Clarke's notion of natural liberty: in answer to three letters wrote to him by a gentleman at the University of Cambridge, on the side of necessity. Together with some remarks on Mr. Locke's chapter of power. By S. Strutt, of the Inner Temple.
Dodd I, Anne A narrative of the barbarous and unheard of murder of Mr. John Hayes, by Catherine his wife, Thomas Billings, and Thomas Wood, on the 1st of March at night Wherein every minute Circumstance attending that Horrid Affair, and the wonderful Providence of God in the Discovery of the Actors therein, are faithfully and impartially related. Together with the Examinations and Confessions of the said Thomas Billings and Thomas Wood before several of His Majesty's Justices of the Peace. As also the Copy of a fictitious Letter that Catherine Hayes sent, as from her Husband, to his Mother in Worcestershire after his Death; and the Mother's Answer thereto: With some Account of the wicked Life and Conversation of the said Catherine, and likewise of those of Thomas Billings and Thomas Wood. To which are prefix'd, Their true and exact Effigies, drawn from the Life, and curiously engraved on Copper. Published with the Approbation of the Relations and Friends of the said Mr. John Hayes. The Second Edition.
Dodd I, Anne A poem addressed to the Lord and Lady Brudenall, Upon Their Marriage. By Alexander Le-Hunt, M. A. Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, and Chaplain to his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales.
Dodd I, Anne The layman's second letter to the Bishop of Bangor: or, an examination of His Lordship's sermon before the King. And of Dr. Snape's letter to his Lordship.