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 1326–1350 of 1584

Person Title
Nutt, Elizabeth A letter from a parishioner of St. Clement Danes, To the Right Reverend Father in God Edmund, Lord Bishop of London, Occasion'd by His Lordship's causing the Picture, over the Altar, to be taken down. With Some Observations on the Use and Abuse of Church Paintings in General, and of that Picture in Particular.
Nutt, Elizabeth A learned dissertation on dumpling; Its dignity, antiquity, and excellence. With a word upon pudding. And many other useful discoveries, of great benefit to the publick. The Fourth Edition.
Nutt, Elizabeth Aesop at St James's. By Isaac Freeman, Esq;
Nutt, Elizabeth A catalogue of the libraries of Peter Baudoin, Esq; and the Reverend Mr. Brown, (both lately deceased) containing Near Ten Thousand Volumes in all Languages, Arts and Sciences; And will be sold very Cheap on Wednesday the 7th of this Instant May 1735; and continue selling daily till all are sold, By Olive Payne, Bookseller, At Horace's Head in Round-Court, opposite York-Buildings in the Strand. Catalogues to be had, with the Prices printed, at One Shilling each, of Mrs. Nutt at the Royal-Exchange; Mrs. Dodd at the Peacock without Temple-Bar; Mr. Chrichley's, Charing-Cross; and at the Place of Sale: Where may be had the full Value for any Library or Parcel of Books in any Language or Faculty. N. B. The Books in general are in good Condion, many bound in the best Manner, and several printed by the most famous, eminent Printers.
Nutt, Elizabeth Memoirs of the life and times, of Sir Thomas Deveil, Knight, one of His Majesty's justices of the peace, For the Counties of Middlesex, Essex, Surry and Hertfordshire, the City and Liberty of Westminster, the Tower of London, and the Liberties thereof, &c.
Nutt, Elizabeth Remarks on the Reverend Mr. Whitefield's journal. Wherein his many inconsistences are pointed out, and his tenets consider'd. The whole shewing the Dangerous Tendency of his Doctrine. Address'd to the Religious Societies.
Nutt, Elizabeth The historical Register, containing an impartial relation of all transactions, Foreign and Domestick. With a chronological diary of all The remarkable Occurrences, viz. Births, Marriages, Deaths, Removals, Promotions, &c. that happen'd in this Year: Together with the Characters and Parentage of Persons deceased, of eminent Rank. Volume XV. For the year 1730.
Nutt, Elizabeth A vindication of Mr. Ward, from the aspersions and reflections cast upon him by Doctor Turner's late letter to Doctor Jurin. In which the honesty, integrity, charity, candour and generosity of those worthy gentlemen call'd licensed physicians, is impartially examin'd and set forth. Also antimonial and mercurial medicines clear'd from the dangerous qualities they are charged with, and the use of them recommended as very prevalent in many obstinate and deplorable distempers and diseases incident to human bodies. Humbly inscribed to the Lord Chief Baron Reynolds. By Eugenius Philalethes.
Nutt, Elizabeth The rake of taste. A poem, dedicated to Alexander Pope, Esq.
Nutt, Elizabeth A hymn to the chair: or, lucubrations, serious and comical, on the use of chairs, Benches, Forms, Joint-Stools, Three-Legged Stools, and Ducking-Stools. The Hint taken from the Craftsman of the 6th Instant, and improv'd for the Benefit of those who sit on Chairs of Ease, and those who sit upon Thorns and Nettles. - In a particular manner is handled with all due Reverence and Respect, The Chair of St-e. The Chair of the House of Commons. The L-d Ma-'s Chair. The tottering Charitable Corporation Chair. The Bench of Justices Chair. The East-India Chair. The South-Sea Chair. The Greenland Chair. The Mechanick Chairs. The Sedan Chair. The Easy Chair. The Maundering Chair. The Fornicating Chair. The Cambridge Chair. Several Imaginary Chairs. The Couch Chair. The Duke of Venus' Chair. Corporation Chairs. Trading Justices Chair. Dr. Busby's Chair. To which are added The Beauties and Advantages of other necessary Utensils to rest the Bum upon, and ease the Mind, the Body, and the Breeches.
Nutt, Elizabeth The protestant monastery: or, a complaint against the brutality of the present age. Particularly the pertness and insolence of our youth to aged persons. With a Caution to People in Years, how they give the Staff out of their own Hands, and leave themselves at the Mercy of others. Concluding with a proposal for erecting a Protestant monastery, where persons of small fortunes may end their day in plenty, ease, and credit, without burthening their Relations, or accepting Publick Charities. By Andrew Moreton, Esq; Author of Every-Body's Business is No-Body's Business.
Nutt, Elizabeth The Historical register, containing an impartial relation of all transactions, foreign and domestick. With a chronological diary of all the remarkable occurrences, viz. births, marriages, deaths, removals, promotions, &c. that happen'd in this year: together with the characters and parentage of persons deceased, of eminent rank. Volume XII. For the year 1727.
Nutt, Elizabeth Of stage tyrants. An epistle to the Right Honourable Philip Earl of Chesterfield. Occasion'd by the Honest Yorkshire-Man being rejected at Drury-Lane Play-House, and since Acted at other Theatres with Universal Applause. By Mr. Carey.
Nutt, Elizabeth An address to that honest part of the nation, call'd the lower sort of people; on the subject of popery and the pretender.
Nutt, Elizabeth The speech of Marius to the people of Rome. Translated into blank verse from the Latin of Salust. With an Introductory Essay, Comparing the Manners of the Romans, About the time of the Jugurthine War, with those of our own Country for some time past, and at present, concluding with the reason of the Undertaking.
Nutt, Elizabeth A learned dissertation on dumpling; its dignity, antiquity, and excellence. With a word upon pudding. And Many other Useful Dicoveries, of great Benefit to the Publick. To which is added, Namby pamby; a panegyric on the new versification address'd to A- P- Esq; the Sixth Edition.
Nutt, Elizabeth The Historical Register, containing an impartial relation of all transactions, ... With a chronological diary ... Number LXXIII. Being the first for the year 1734. To be continu'd every quarter.
Nutt, Elizabeth The eunuch, or, The Darby Captain, a farce, As it is Acted by his Majesty's Servants at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane.
Nutt, Elizabeth Reasons offer'd against pushing for the repeal of the Corporation and Test Acts: Together with Some queries Upon that important Affair. As also, a few words of advice to the pushing dissenters: occasion'd by a certain paper dispersed at a late general meeting, intitled, Reasons for pushing, &c. By a Protestant dissenter, a friend to truth, peace, and liberty.
Nutt, Elizabeth A Serious address to the electors of Great Britain. In which the conduct and designs both of the court and country parties are impartially represented and considered: and such gentlemen pointed out, as are most deserving of the favour of the electors, in the approaching choice of their representatives.
Nutt, Elizabeth An Address to that Honest Part of the Nation, Call'd the Lower Sort of People; on the Subject of Popery and the Pretender. The Second Edition.
Nutt, Elizabeth A poem on nature: in imitation of Lucretius. To which is added, A description of the fotus in the womb, in a letter to the late Duke of Buckinghamshire, on his Dutchess being declar'd Pregnant. By the late Bevill Higgons, Esq;
Nutt, Elizabeth Judging for ourselves: or, free-thinking, the great duty of religion. Display'd in two lectures, deliver'd at Plaisterers-Hall. By P. Annet, with a serious poem, address'd to the Reverend Mr. Whitfield.
Nutt, Elizabeth A description of the windward passage, and Gulf of Florida, with the course of the British trading-ships to, and from the island of Jamaica. Also An account of the Trade-Winds, and of the variable Winds and Currents on the Coasts thereabouts, at different Seasons of the Year. Illustrated with a chart of the Coast of Florida, and of the Islands of Bahama, Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica, and the adjacent smaller Islands, Shoals, Rocks, and other remarkable Things in the Course of the Navigation in the West-Indies. Whereby is demonstrated, The Precariousness of those Voyages to the West-India Merchants, and the Impossibility of their Homeward-Bound Ships keeping clear of the Spanish Guarda Costa's The Whole very necessary for the Information of such as never were in those Parts of the World. To which are added, some proposals for the better securing of the British trade and navigation to and from the West-Indies. Note, at the End of this Treatise is a General Index of the names, with a Description of the Situations of all the Islands, &c. which are contained in the annexed Chart, distinguished by numerical References to each other. Likewise an Alphabetical Catalogue of the same Names alone, with the like numerical References, the Uses of which are mention'd at the End of the Whole.
Nutt, Elizabeth Remarkable cures perform'd by tar-water; collected out of the Gentleman's magazine, &c.