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 976–1000 of 1585

Person Title
Gurney, Martha The trial of George Gordon, Esquire, commonly called Lord George Gordon. For high treason, at the bar of the Court of King’s Bench, on Monday, February 5th, 1781. The second part. Taken in Short-Hand, by Joseph Gurney.
Gurney, Martha The interest of Great Britain, respecting the French War. By William Fox. The Fifth edition, corrected.
Gurney, Martha An Address to the People of Great Britain, on the propriety of abstaining from West India Sugar and Rum.
Gurney, Martha The triumph of truth, in the testimony of its foes; or proofs of the authenticity of the Bible, Derived from the Evidence of its Opposers, Perverters, and Revilers, Interspersed with Thoughts on Modern Infidelity, And on the Moral, Political and Religious Revolutions of the Present Age; in a series of letters to a disciple of Deism. By Thomas Bingham.
Gurney, Martha An address to the people of Great Britain, on the propriety of abstaining from West India sugar and rum.
Gurney, Martha The duty of abstaining from the use of West India produce, a speech, delivered at Coach-Maker’s-Hall, Jan. 12, 1792.
Gurney, Martha Observations on certain prophecies in the Book of Daniel, and the Revelation of St. John, which relate to the second appearing of our Lord; Shewing That IT IS Highly Probable That The Tremendous Day In Which HE Shall BE Revealed Will Shortly Come. To which are added, some remarks concerning the last antichrist and the killing of the witnesses.
Gurney, Martha The trial of John Horne Tooke, for high treason, at the Sessions House in the Old Bailey, on Monday the seventeenth, Tuesday the eighteenth, Wednesday the nineteenth, Thursday the twentieth, Friday the twenty-first, and Saturday the twenty-second of November. Taken in short-hand by Joseph Gurney.
Gurney, Martha An Address to the People of Great Britain, on the propriety of abstaining from West India Sugar and Rum. The Twenty-fifth Edition.
Hancock, Mrs. British liberty established, and Gallic liberty restored; or, the triumph of freedom. A poem. Occasioned by the grand revolution in France, M,DCC,LXXXIX. With a prospect of the glorious time when true religion and civil liberty shall shed their benign influences over the world. By Maria De Fleury.
Harding, Mrs. Hymns, Partly Collected, and Partly Original, Designed as a Supplement to Dr. Watts's Psalms and Hymns
Harding, Mrs. Hymns, Partly Collected, and Partly Original, Designed as a Supplement to Dr. Watts' Psalms and Hymns. By William Bengo collyer, D. D.
Harlow, Elizabeth Castle of Wolfenbach; a German story. In two volumes. By Mrs. Parsons, author of Errors of education, Miss Meredith. Woman as she should be, Ellen and Julia, etc. Second edition.
Harlow, Elizabeth A trip to Paris, in July and August, 1792
Harlow, Elizabeth Ellen and Julia. A novel in two volumes. By Mrs. Parsons. Author of Errors of Education, Woman as She Should Be, Intrigues of a Morning, and Castle of Wolfenbach.
Harlow, Elizabeth A rational and moral game, or, A method to accustom young people to reflect on the most essential truths of morality and reason on the remarkable events of history, by questioning them on what they would have said or done, had they been in the circumstances of the person mentioned; or, the reason why they approve or disapprove of a maxim or action proposed by the instructor. Translated from the French of the Abbé Gaultier.
Harlow, Elizabeth Bibliotheca Americana; or, A chronological catalogue of the most curious and interesting books, pamphlets, state papers, &c. upon the subject of North and South America, from the earliest period to the present, in print and manuscript; for which research has been made in the British Musaeum, and the most celebrated public and private libraries, reviews, catalogues, &c. : With an introductory discourse on the present state of literature in those countries
Harlow, Elizabeth Massacre of the French King by which the unfortunte Louis XVI (late King of France) suffered on the Scaffold, January 21st, 1793.
Harlow, Elizabeth Woman as she should be; or, memoirs of Mrs. Menville. A novel. In four volumes. By Mrs. Parsons, author of Errors of Education, Miss Meredith, and Intrigues of a Morning.
Harlow, Elizabeth A Complete Course of Geography, by means of instructive games. Invented by the Abbé Gaultier. The second edition, corrected, improved, and divided into two parts. Part I. Containing the game of simple geography, viz. That which teaches the names and situation of the different countries and places of the earth. Section I.-Geographical game of the British Islands. Section II.-Geographical game of Europe. Section III.-Geographical game of Asia, America, and new discovered islands.
Harlow, Elizabeth The History of the Campaign of 1792, between the Armies of France under Generals Dumourier, Valence, &c. and the Allies under the Duke of Brunswick; with an account of what passed in the Thuilleries on the 10th of August
Harlow, Elizabeth Castle of Wolfenbach; a German story. In two volumes. By Mrs. Parsons, author of errors of education, Miss Meredith, woman as she should be, and intrigues of a morning. ...
Hawes, Ann Poems on the Following Subjects Abram and Lot. Manoah and his wife. Naomi and ruth, part i. Life of David-Part 1. Flood of formosa, and fire of cliffden. Vale of Wycombe. Detached pieces, chiefly wrote on particular occasions, and to particular persons. Lucinda. Rosalinda and the Lark The River Jordan. The Nuptial Day. Emma and Melinda, or the Recluses. The Invitation, or the May-Blown Bower. Silvia and her Robbin Red-Breast. The Anticipation. Clapham Common. An Elegy. The Congratulation. Resignation. By William Lane, A poor labouring man, of Flackwell-Heath, High Wycombe, Bucks. Price Two Shillings.
Hawes, Ann Poems. I. Isaac's Meditations. II. The harp on the willow. III. Benevolence. By William Lane, A Poor Labouring Man Of Flackwell Heath, Near High Wycombe, Bucks. Author Of Cliffden, A Poem.
Hawes, Ann Poems on Various Subjects. By William Lane, a poor labouring man of Flackwell Heath, near High Wycombe. Author of "Cliffden," "Isaac's Meditations," etc.