Name ECCO
Online Source https://www.gale.com/primary-sources/eighteenth-century-collections-online
Description

Eighteenth Century Collections Online contains over 180,000 titles (200,000 volumes) and more than 32 million pages, making ECCO the premier and irreplaceable resource for eighteenth-century research. 

Citation

Eighteenth Century Collections Online. Gale, www.gale.com/primary-sources/eighteenth-century-collections-online.

Titles 4624
Firms 2
View Source Firms

Titles

Displaying 3826–3850 of 4624

ID Title Author Firms (City) Date Edition
22338 The masqueraders; or fatal curiosity: being the secret history of a late amour. Part II. Haywood , Eliza
James Roberts [Warwick Lane] (London)
1725
7062 The massacre: taken from the French. A tragedy, of three acts, in prose. By Mrs. Inchbald. Inchbald , Elizabeth
George, George, John and James Robinson (London)
1792
4797 The medley: consisting of thirty-one essays, on various subjects. Presented by the author to one of the governesses of the Lying-In Hospital, in Newcastle. To be printed for the benefit of that charity. Gomeldon , Jane
1766
25783 The memoirs and history of Prince Titi. Done from the French, by a person of quality. de Saint-Hyacinthe , Thémiseul
Anne Dodd I (London)
1736
5591 The memoirs of Mrs. Lætitia Pilkington, wife to the Rev. Mr. Matt. Pilkington. Written by Herself. Wherein are occasionally interspersed, all her poems, with anecdotes of several eminent persons, living and dead. In three volumes. Pilkington , Laetitia
1776
24286 The memoirs of Mrs. Lætitia Pilkington, wife to the Rev. Mr. Matth. Pilkington. Written by herself. Wherein are occasionally interspersed, all her poems, with anecdotes of several eminent persons, living and dead. In two volumes. Pilkington , Laetitia
1748
3341 The memoirs of Mrs. Sophia Baddeley, late of Drury Lane Theatre. By Mrs. Elizabeth Steele. In six volumes. Steele , Elizabeth
1787
23947 The memorial presented to the Port, by the Count de Castellane, the King of France's ambassador at Constantinople, the 10th day of February, 1746. With remarks. Castellane , Michel-Ange
Mary Cooper [8 Paternoster Row] (London)
1746
23808 The mercenary lover: or, the unfortunate heiresses. Being a true secret history of a city amour. By the author of Reflections on the various effects of love. The third edition. To which is added, the padlock: or, no guard without virtue. A novel. Haywood , Eliza
N. Dobb (London)
1728 The third edition.
23707 The mercenary lover: or, the unfortunate heiresses. Being a true, secret history of a city amour, in a certain island adjacent to the kingdom of Utopia. Written by the author of Memoirs of the said island. Translated into English. Haywood , Eliza
N. Dobb (London)
1726
2420 The mercer, or fatal extravagance: being a true narrative of the life of Mr. Wm. Dennis. Mercer, in Cheapside, London. The Occurrences herein related, are well worthy the Observation of the Reader, and proper to be Regarded, by every Mechanick in Great Britain. Written by Mrs. Charke, Author of the Life of Henry Dumont, Esq; And Miss Charlotte Evelyn, &c. &c. Charke , Charlotte
Mrs. Bailey (London)
1755
4451 The messiah revealed to a Jewess; or, the merciful dealings of God with Hannah Nonmus, Born at Frankfort, in Germany, of Jewish Parents, and Brought up in Jewish Prejudices; but Divine Providence Brought her to England, and Divine Grace Drew her to Christ. Revised by William Cooper. Nonmus , Hannah
Thomas Chapman [151 Fleet Street] (London)
1798
14009 The Messiah. Attempted from the German of Mr. Klopstock. To which is prefix'd his introduction on divine poetry. Klopstock , Friedrich Gottlieb
Elizabeth Watts [m. Lynch in 1768] (Dublin)
Ann Leathley (Dublin)
Peter Wilson [Dame St, 1748–66] (Dublin)
John Exshaw I [Dame Street] (Dublin)
Henry Saunders [Castle Street] (Dublin)
Hulton Bradley (Dublin)
Timothy Dyton [Dame Street] (Dublin)
James Potts (Dublin)
Samuel Watson [Dame Street] (Dublin)
1764
23083 The metamorphoses of the town: or, a view of the present fashions. A tale. After the manner of Fontaine. Thomas , Elizabeth
1732
21949 The metamorphoses of the town: or, a view of the present fashions. A tale. After the manner of Fontaine. The third edition. To which is added, The Journal of a modern lady. By Dean Swift. Thomas , Elizabeth
Swift , Jonathan
John Wilford (London)
1731 The third edition
24451 The metamorphoses of the town: or, a view of the present fashions. By the late celebrated Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, who has so often obliged the town, under the name of Corinna. To which are added, I. The female metamorphosis; or, Ladies transformed into China-Cups. II. The Journal of a Modern Lady. III. The Furniture of a Woman's Mind. IV. An Inventory of a Lady's Dressing-Room. The fourth edition. Thomas , Elizabeth
John Wilford (London)
1743 The fourth edition
15676 The Metamorphosis of the Town; or, a View of the Present Fashions. A Tale: After the Manner of Fontaine. Thomas , Elizabeth
John Wilford (London)
1730
15679 The Metamorphosis of the Town; or, a View of the Present Fashions. A Tale: After the Manner of Fontaine. Thomas , Elizabeth
1732
15675 The Metamorphosis of the Town; or, a View of the Present Fashions. A Tale: After the Manner of Fontaine. The Second Edition. To which is added, The Journal of a Modern Lady. In a Letter to a Person of Quality. By Dr. Swift. Thomas , Elizabeth
Swift , Jonathan
John Wilford (London)
1730 The Second Edition.
15678 The Metamorphosis of the Town; or, a View of the Present Fashions. A Tale: After the Manner of Fontaine. The Third Edition. To which is added, The Journal of a Modern Lady. By Dean Swift. Thomas , Elizabeth
Swift , Jonathan
John Wilford (London)
1731 The Third Edition.
15680 The Metamorphosis of the Town; or, a View of the Present Fashions. By the late celebrated Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, Who has so often obliged the Town, under the Name of Corinna. To which are added, I. The Female Metamorphosis; or, Ladies transformed into China-Cups. II. The Journal of a Modern Lady. III. The Furniture of a Woman's Mind. IV. An Inventory of a Lady's Dressing-Room. The Fourth Edition. Thomas , Elizabeth
John Wilford (London)
1743 The Fourth Edition.
2834 The midnight cry, "behold, the bridegroom comes!" or, an order from God to get your lamps lighted, Otherwise you must go into Darkness, where there will be weeping, wailing, and gnashing of Teeth. This is my experience, Dorothy Gott. Gott , Dorothy
1788
8281 The Midnight Hour; or, War of Wits. A Farce, in two acts. Translated from the French. "Ruse Contre Ruse; ou, La Guerre Ouverte." Represented seventy successive nights at Paris. And now performing with universal applause. Patrick Wogan [23 Old Bridge] (Dublin)
James Moore [Dublin] (Dublin)
Harriet Colbert [136 Capel Street] (Dublin)
William Watson I (Dublin)
Richard Moncrieffe [16 Capel Street] (Dublin)
William McKenzie [Dame Street] (Dublin)
Robert Marchbank [Dame Street] (Dublin)
George Perrin [10 Castle Street] (Dublin)
George Burnet [Abbey Street] (Dublin)
Thomas Wilkinson (I) (Dublin)
William Wilson [6 Dame Street] [1763–66; 1768–95] (Dublin)
William Gilbert [26 South Great George's Street] (Dublin)
William Sleater I [North Strand] (Dublin)
Patrick Byrne I [College Green] (Dublin)
Richard Lewis [Capel Street] (Dublin)
Bernard Dornin [College Green] (Dublin)
Hannah Chamberlaine (Dublin)
William Porter [Skinner Row] (Dublin)
Peter Cooney [Dublin] (Dublin)
John Halpen (also Halpin) [Henry Street] (Dublin)
William Colles [17 New Buildings, Dame Street] (Dublin)
Luke White [Dame Street] (Dublin)
John Jones [Grafton Street] (Dublin)
1787
10698 The Midnight Hour; or, War of Wits. A Farce. In Two Acts. Translated from the French, "Ruse Contre Ruse; ou, La Guerre Ouverte." Represented Seventy Successive Nights at Paris; and Now in Rehearsal, at the Theatre-Royal, Covent-Garden. Damaniant , Antoine-Jean
Henry Delahoy Symonds [Paternoster Row] (London)
1787
12804 The Midnight Hour. A Comedy, in three acts. From the French of M. Damaniant, called Guerre Ouverte; ou, Ruse Contreruse. As it is now performing at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden. Translated by Mrs. Inchbald. Damaniant , Antoine-Jean
George, George, John and James Robinson (London)
1787