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 351–375 of 1593

Person Title
Dodd I, Anne Taste. An essay. By J. S. D.S.P. The Second Edition.
Dodd I, Anne A letter from a lady to her husband abroad. The Fifth Edition, Corrected.
Dodd I, Anne A collection of the most celebrated prologues spoken at the theatres of Drury-Lane and Lincolns-Inn. By a young lady.
Dodd I, Anne A New-Year's-gift for the directors. With some account of their plot against the two assurances; also a few heads of a new scheme, in a letter to Sir B-n J-n.
Dodd I, Anne Sedition: a poem, Humbly Inscribed to the Right Hon. Sir Robert Walpole, Knight of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, &c.
Dodd I, Anne The sure side: or, God and the Church. A sermon preached on the fifth of November, 1714. in the parish of St. John Wapping. By Thomas Simmons.
Dodd I, Anne Ox- and Bull- or, A funeral sermon for the two beasts That are to be slaughter'd upon Tower-Hill, next session of Parliament, upon these words, but these as natural brute beasts, made to be taken, and destroy'd. 2 Pet. ii. 12. With the serious advice that was given to Ox- and Bull--, to prepare for the Axe; at a time when beasts could speak, and pretended to reason and loyalty. Also, an elegy upon their untimely end, to be sung the same day they are quarter'd. The whole dedicated to that state-butcher, Jack Catch, Esq; By Mr. John Dunton, (author of Neck or Nothing, and the sermon, intituled, the hereditary-bastard) and in his second attempt to reform the pulpit. The third edition.
Dodd I, Anne An ode, Most Humbly Inscrib'd to His Royal Highness, The Prince of Wales, on his Birth-Day, Saturday, January 20th, 1738-9.
Dodd I, Anne The fatigues of a great man, or, the plague of serving one's country. A satyr.
Dodd I, Anne A modest plea for the British distillery. In a letter from a country gentleman, to a member of Parliament.
Dodd I, Anne The desolations of a Popish succession. A Discourse Shewing, I. That Popery would be the certain Ruin of all the valuable Branches of our Secular and Religious Happiness. II. That this compleat Ruin must come with any Branch of a Popish Succession, and gain an everlasting Settlement. III. That no Pretence of Indefeasible Right, allowing it in any tolerable Sense, will by any means vindicate us to pull so great a Ruin upon our selves. Written in Compassion to the disaffected Protestants, that they mayn't dash themselves against the Laws. By a Citizen of Exon.
Dodd I, Anne A view of the town: in an epistle to a friend in the country. A satire.
Dodd I, Anne A critical dissertation on Titus iii. 10,11. Wherein Mr. Foster's notion of heresy is consider'd, and confuted. And the power of the Church to censure hereticks is vindicated. By Tipping Silvester, M. A. Fellow of Pembroke College Oxon, and Lecturer of St. Bartholomew the Great.
Dodd I, Anne The gentle shepherd: a Scots pastoral-comedy. By Allan Ramsay.
Dodd I, Anne The york miscellany: consisting of poems on several occasions. By Stephen Maxwell, of the City of York.
Dodd I, Anne A dialogue between a Protestant and a Quaker. To which is added, a short examination concerning the scandalous custom of wearing white-pouder'd perriwigs by the most modern divines. By Petrus de Laat.
Dodd I, Anne A brief deduction of the original, progress, and immense greatness of the British Woollen Manufacture: with an enquiry whether it be not at present in a very declining condition: The Reasons of its Decay; and the Only Means of its Recovery.
Dodd I, Anne The younger brother: or, the sham marquis. A comedy. As it is acted at the theatre in Lincolns-Inn-Fields. The Second Edition.
Dodd I, Anne A Plain discovery what they would be at, in some seasonable reflections on a late pamphlet, Entitul'd The Protestant dissenters hopes from the present government, freely declar'd; and the grounds that support them offered to the consideration of such as are, or should be, their friends; and of others, who would have their hopes suppress'd, &c. In a letter to the citizen of London, to whom that pamphlet is also inscrib'd.
Dodd I, Anne The right of Kings, and duty of subjects: Proving, that it is not lawful for subjects, upon any ground or pretence whatever, to rebel against their lawful King. To which is added, an extract from Dr. Stanhope's translation of the author's celebrated book of wisdom, toucing the miseries and inconveniencies of a crown'd head. Written in French by the Sieur de Charon, and now done into English.
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 i likewise added.
Dodd I, Anne A defence of the negative of the two questions propos'd by Mr. Reynolds and his people, to Mr. Read. In a letter to the Revd. Mr. Reynolds. By an Impartial inquirer after truth.
Dodd I, Anne A short account of the Roman Senate, and the manner of their proceedings.
Dodd I, Anne A plain discovery what they would be at, in some seasonable relections on a late pamphlet, entitul'd The Protestant dissenters hopes from the present government, freely declar'd; and the Grounds that Support them offered to the Consideration of such as are, or should be, their Friends; and of Others, who would have their Hopes Suppress'd, &c. In a Letter to the Citizen of London, to whom that Pamphlet is also Inscrib'd.
Dodd I, Anne The curious maid, a tale.