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

Persons

Displaying 451–475 of 1538

Person Title
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 Plain-dealing: Or, Separation without schism, and schism without separation. Exemplify'd in the case of Protestant-dissenters and church-men. By Charles Owen. The Second Edition.
Dodd I, Anne The history of the abdication of Victor Amedeus II. late King of Sardinia, with his confinement in the castle of Rivole; shewing the real motives, which induc'd that Prince to resign the Crown in Favour of his Son Charles Emanuel the present King: As also how he came to repent of his Resignation, with the secret Reasons that urg'd him to attempt his Restauration. In a letter from the Marquis de T***** a Piemontois, now at the Court of Poland; To the Count de C in London.
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 An account of the ceremonies observed at the coronation of the kings and queens of England. I. A description of the royal crowns, scepters, &c, II. The Form of the Royal Letters of Summons sent to the Peers and Peeresses to assist at the Coronation. III. The Ceremony of presenting the Regalia to their Majesties in Westminster-Hall, and of the Grand Procession from thence to the Abbey. IV. The Ceremony of the Coronation, as it is performed in the Church, with the King's Oath, and the Homage of the Nobles to his Majesty. V. The Anointing, Crowning, and Inthronizing of a Queen Consort. VI. The Recess and Manner of their Majesties Return to Westminster-Hall. Vii. The Ceremony of the Services done by several Lords of Manors, and of the Champion's entering the Hall, with the Form of his Challenge, and the Heralds Proclaiming the King's Stile, &c. Extracted from several Antient and Modern Histories of the Coronations of the Kings and Queens of England, and from several publick Records, &c.
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, ... By Mr. John Dunton, ... The Second Edition.
Dodd I, Anne Electra, A Tragedy. Translated from the Greek of Sophocles.
Dodd I, Anne The new key to The rehearsal. Presented to his Royal Highness the Prince. Written by his Grace George, late Duke of Buckingham.
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 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 poem, Sacred to the Memory of the Honourable The Lady Aber-ny. Humbly Inscrib'd to the Quality of Great-Britain, &c.
Dodd I, Anne Remarks on the Reverend Mr. Whitefield's journal. Wherein his many inconsistences are pointed out, and his tenets consider'd.
Dodd I, Anne A timely caution; or, good advice to the ladies. By a true Briton. The second edition.
Dodd I, Anne A vindication of the Reverend Dr. Snape and Dr. Sherlock; against Mr. Meadowcourt's attempts, to calumniate and defame those gentlemen in a sermon preach'd at Oxford, Entitled, The sinful Causes, and fatal Effects of the Practice of Calumny and Defamation in Religious Controversy; Exemplify'd and Described. By a member of the antient Society of Free-Masons. With a postscript relating to Dr. Sherlock's complaint against the sermon.
Dodd I, Anne A rational account of the natural weaknesses of women, and of the secret distempers peculiarly incident to them. Plainly discovering their nature, true cause, and best method of cure, so as Women or Maids of the meanest Capacity may perfectly understand, and Cure their own Illnesses: With a clear and very particular Account of Conception and Generation; Also of Barrenness and Miscarriage, directing how to certainly Cure the Former, and absolutely prevent hte Latter. To which are added, Prescriptions in English of admirable and long Experienc'd Medicines, for the Cure of each Private Distemper Women and Maids are subject to, by which they may safely cure themselves, without Trouble, the Advice, or Knowledge of other Person. Shewing Also, The great Danger Women are in from the Slightest Weakness, if let alone, and the Imminent Hazard they run, or becoming incurably Barren, and of losing their lives by following the Advice of Ignorant Persons, Unskillful Widwives, &c. Undeniably proving, That the most difficult Indispositions Women labour under may be easily and quickly remedied, if rightfully managed according to the Method and Medicines herein Faithfully revealed. To whole Illustrated with Various Caese of Persons Cured, Proper Hints, Useful Cautions, Observations and Intractions; the like for General Benefit to the Female Sex, never before published. Necessary to be read by all Women, in order to prevent, as well as Cure, and Weaknesses and Distempers they are lyable to. By a physician. The second edition, with several additions, and amendments.
Dodd I, Anne Mendico-hymen: Or, The beggar's match. A poem. Translated from the Latin.
Dodd I, Anne The praise of banishment, and dispraise of honours: elegantly display'd in two letters from one person of eminence to another; on his arrival in a foreign country, and expulsion from his own. Now first translated from the original.
Dodd I, Anne A new translation of Horace's art of poetry, attempted in rhyme. By Mr. Henry Ames.
Dodd I, Anne The ladies lottery: or, A new scheme for a ten thousand pound fortune. Written by Dean Swift.
Dodd I, Anne The harlot's progress: or, the humours of Drury-Lane. Being the life of the noted Moll Hackabout, in six hudibrastick cantos, with a curious print to each canto, engrav'd from the originals of Mr. Hogarth. I. Her coming to Town in the York Waggon; and being betray'd by an old Baud into the Arms of Colonel Ch-s; with several Comical Dialogues, &c. II. Her being kept by a Jew; with her Intrigues in his House. III. Her living in a Baudy-House in Drury-Lane. A diverting List of the Decorations of her Lodging. Her being detected by Sir Jn G---n, &c. IV. Her Usage at Tothil-Fields Bridewell; and the Humours of the Place. V. Her Sickness and Death. Disputes between two noted Quacks. Her last Will. VI. Her Burial. Characters of the principal Persons who constituted the Funeral Pomp, &c. The Fifth Edition. To which is now first added, a curious Riddle, which Moll learned of the Jew, while in his keeping, and which the learned Col. Ch-s could never answer to her full Satisfaction.
Dodd I, Anne A scheme for proper methods to be taken, should it please God to visit us with the plague. By Sir John Colbatch, A Member of the College of Physicians.
Dodd I, Anne A short account of the Roman Senate, and the manner of their proceedings.
Dodd I, Anne A true and correct list of the Lords spiritual and temporal; as also, lists of the knights, commissioners of shires, citizens and burgesses, of the third and fourth Parliaments of Great Britain, in the four last years of Her late Majesty Queen Anne's reign; ... Together with a list of this present Parliament under His Majesty King George, summoned to meet at Westminster the 17th day of march, 1715.
Dodd I, Anne The necessity of the sanctions of religion to the support of it: in a sermon preach'd at the assizes at Bury, July 28. And printed at the request of the High-sheriff and the grand-juries. By W. Webster, D. D. Rector of Depden in Suffolk
Dodd I, Anne A view of the town: in an epistle to a friend in the country. A satire.