Name Bookseller
Description

 Indicates the person running the firm that sold the work. This role is included if the firm is female-run.

Persons

Displaying 276–300 of 1599

Person Title
Dodd I, Anne The duel: a poem. Inscribed to the Right Honourable W---- P----y, Esq; The Third Edition.
Dodd I, Anne The vocal parts of an entertainment, called the Necromancer or Harlequin Doctor Faustus. As perform'd at the Theatre Royal in Lincoln's-Inn-Fields. To which is prefix'd, a short account of Doctor Faustus; and how he came to be reputed a magician.
Dodd I, Anne All for the better; or, the world turn'd up-side down. Being the history of the head-longs and the long-heads, with several characters of both, in the following six novels, viz. I. The fruitless scandal. II. The dutiful son. III. The Penitent Miser. IV. Chastity Rewarded. V. Avarice Punished. VI. The fantastic ambition. Intermingled with various Discourses and a Candid Examination, and Censure of the management and Conduct of the Directors of the South-Sea Company; with infallible Rules, how those who have been Gainers by it, may preserve their Gains; and how the Losers may infallably and amply retrieve their Losses. To which is added, by way of a postscript: The Woolfe strip'd of his Sheeps Clothing; or, the Fox-Hunter [Uncaied]; being some short Reflections on the Ten Queries propos'd to the Directors of the South-Sea Company by an annonimous member of Parliament.
Dodd I, Anne Observations upon the scheme lately published. Wherein such rules are laid down, as will easily reduce it to practice. By Sir John Colbatch, a member of the College of Physicians.
Dodd I, Anne Remarks upon the Observations on a sermon preach'd before the Corporation of Bristol, and the Lord-Chief-Justice Hardwick; On Sunday, the 16th Day of August, 1735. Being the Day before the Assizes, By A. S. Catcott, LL. B. And printed by Order of the Corporation. With a Continuation of the Evidence, till the Predictions were complete. With a continuation of the evidence, till the predictions were complete.
Dodd I, Anne The antiquity and usefulness of instrumental musick in the service of God. In a sermon preach'd at Isleworth, in the county of Middlesex, on Palm-Sunday, 1738, ... By Richard Coleire, ...
Dodd I, Anne The hereditary-Bastard: or, the royal-intreague of the warming-pan: fully detected, in a sermon upon these words, And a bastard shall dwell in Ashdod, Zech. 9. 6. Being a full answer to the Pretender's late declaration, wherein he affirms he has an indefeasible hereditar right to His Majesty's crown. This sermon was deliver'd (I can't say preach'd) in publick by a lay-man, and is now publish'd as his first essay to reform the pulpit, which (as appears by his Majesty's Directions to our Archbishops and Bishops) has been greatly profan'd by the bitter Invectives and scurrilous Language of some of the Clergy.
Dodd I, Anne The old Whig. Numb. I. and II. On the state of the peerage. With remarks upon The plebeian. The third edition.
Dodd I, Anne A curious little oration, deliver'd by Father Andrew, concerning the present great quarrels that divide the clergy of France. Translated from the fourth edition of the French, by Dan. De F-e.
Dodd I, Anne The life of Sir Robert Cochran, prime minister to K. James III. of Scotland.
Dodd I, Anne Dr. Martin Luther's and Mr. John Calvin's opinion concerning the Trinity, from the original. With several Texts of Scriptures, proving the Lord Jesus Christ to be one and the same God with the Father. With a preface by a divine. The Second Edition.
Dodd I, Anne Mordecai's Memorial: or, There's Nothing done for Him. Being A Satyr upon Some-Body, but I name No-Body: (or, in Plainer English, A Just and Generous Representation of Unrewarded Services, by which the Protestant Succession has been sav'd out of Danger.) Written By an Unknown and Disinterested Clergy-Man, And most humbly Inscrib'd to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, Guardian of these Realms.
Dodd I, Anne The golden age: exemplified in the glorious life and reign of his present Majesty King George, and his numerous issue: or a vision of the future happiness of Great Britain, ... Part I. ... The whole humbly inscrib'd to his ... Majesty by Mr. John Dunton, ... and will be continued monthly ...
Dodd I, Anne A prologue to the town, as it was spoken at the theatre in Little Lincoln's-Inn-Fields. Written by Mr. Welsted. With an epilogue on the same occasion, by Sir Richard Steele.
Dodd I, Anne Queries relating to the reduction of the national redeemable debts, from Four to Three per Cent. per Ann. In a letter to - - Esq;
Dodd I, Anne A true account of the doctrine of Christ, and of the primitive church, with respect to the Eucharist. Occasion'd by a conference with the author, attack'd by a Romish priest, and continu'd by letters. ... Also occasionally shewing the inconsistency of a late sacramentarian piece (call'd, A plain account of the nature and end of the sacrament of the Lord's Supper) ... Between Humphrey Clayton, ... and A. B. ... The second edition, with an additional supplement.
Dodd I, Anne Of legacy-hunting. The fifth satire of the second book of Horace imitated. A dialogue between Sir Walter Raleigh, and Merlin the prophet.
Dodd I, Anne A poem sacred to the immortal memory of Her Most Excellent Majesty, Anne, late Queen of Great-Britain, who Died at her Palace of Kensington the First Day of August, 1714. in the Fiftieth Year of her Age, and the Thirteenth of her Reign. Written by a lady of quality.
Dodd I, Anne The genuine copy of a letter written from Constantinople by an English Lady, who was lately in Turkey, and who is no less distinguish'd by her wit than by her quality; to a Venetian nobleman, one of the prime virtuosi of the age. Translated from the French original, which is likewise added.
Dodd I, Anne Every-Body's business, is no-body's business; or, private abuses, publick grievances: exemplified in the pride, insolence, and exorbitant wages of our women-servants, footmen, &c. With a proposal for amendment of the same; as also for clearing the Streets of those Vermin call'd Shoe-Cleaners, and substituting in their stead many Thousands of Industrious Poor, now ready to starve. With divers other Hints, of great Use to the Publick. Humbly submitted to the Consideration of our Legislature, and the careful perusal of all Masters and Mistresses of Families. By Andrew Moreton, Esq; The Fourth Edition, corrected.
Dodd I, Anne A learned dissertation on dumpling: its dignity, antiquity, and excellence. With a word upon pudding. ... To which is added, Namby pamby: a panegyric on the new versification, address'd to A- P- Esq; The Seventh Edition.
Dodd I, Anne The repeal of the act against occasional conformity, consider'd. In a letter to a Member of the Honourable House of Commons.
Dodd I, Anne The secret history of Pythagoras: part I. Translated from the original copy lately found at Otranto in Italy. By J. W. M.D.
Dodd I, Anne Kostiachou: or, wit triumphant over beauty. A poem. By John Littleton Costeker, gent.
Dodd I, Anne A compleat history of the lives and robberies of the most notorious highway-men, foot-pads, shop-lifts, and cheats, of both sexes, in and about London and Westminster, and all Parts of Great Britain, for above an Hundred Years past, continu'd to the present Time. Wherein their most Secret and Barbarous Murders, Unparalell'd Robberies, Notorious Thefts, and Unheard of Cheats, are set in a true Light, and expos'd to publick View, for the common Benefit of Mankind. To, which is prefix'd, the thieves new canting-dictionary, Explaining the most mysterious Words, New Terms, Significant Phrases, and Proper Idioms, used at this present Time by our Modern Thieves. By Capt. Alex. Smith. The fifth edition, (adorn’d with cuts) with the Addition of near Two Hundred Robberies lately committed. In Two Volumes.