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

Displaying 4026–4050 of 4057

ID Title Author Firms (City) Date Edition
25702 Whitby, a poem. Occasioned by Mr. Andrew Long's recovery from the jaundice, by drinking of Whitby spaw-waters. By Samuel Jones, gent Jones , Samuel
Grace White (York)
Thomas Hammond II (York)
1718
25348 Whitby, a poem. Occasioned by Mr. Andrew Long's recovery from the jaundice, by drinking of Whitby spaw-waters. By Samuel Jones, Gent. Jones , Samuel
Thomas Hammond II (York)
1718
25308 Who runs next: or, the Lord B--- ---e's confession. Found in his closet since his departure for France. Faithfully publish'd from the original by Mr. Dean S---- To which are added, some other papers relating to the Earl of Mortimer, M----w P----r, Esq; and the rest of the late managers. Unknown ,
Anne Dodd I (London)
1715
3989 Who's the Dupe? A Farce: as it is acted at the Theatre Royal, in Drury Lane. By Mrs. Cowley. Author of The Runaway, a Comedy, &c. Cowley , Hannah
The United Company of Booksellers (Dublin)
1779
3979 Who's the Dupe? A Farce: As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury Lane. By Mrs. Cowley. The Seventh Edition. Cowley , Hannah
George, George, John and James Robinson (London)
1790 The Seventh Edition.
4003 Who's the Dupe? A Farce: As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury Lane. The Second Edition. By Mrs. Cowley, author of The Runaway, a Comedy. Cowley , Hannah
James Dodsley (London)
Stanley Crowder (London)
Thomas Cadell [London] (London)
Thomas Carnan and Francis Newbery (London)
William Owen (London)
Thomas Longman II (London)
Lockyer Davis [High Holborn] (London)
Thomas Becket [82 Pall Mall] (London)
1779 The Second Edition
3997 Who's the Dupe? A Farce: As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. By Mrs. Cowley, author of The Runaway, a Comedy. Cowley , Hannah
James Dodsley (London)
Stanley Crowder (London)
Thomas Cadell [London] (London)
Thomas Carnan and Francis Newbery (London)
William Owen (London)
Thomas Longman II (London)
Lockyer Davis [High Holborn] (London)
Thomas Becket [82 Pall Mall] (London)
1779
4211 Who's the dupe? A farce: as it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. By Mrs. Cowley, Author of the Runaway, a Comedy. Cowley , Hannah
1779
3967 Who's the dupe? A farce: as it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. By Mrs. Cowley, Author of the Runaway, a Comedy. The third edition. Cowley , Hannah
James Dodsley (London)
Stanley Crowder (London)
Thomas Cadell [London] (London)
Thomas Evans [32 Paternoster Row] (London)
Robert Faulder (London)
Thomas Davies [Russell Street] (London)
Charles Dilly (London)
Richardson and Urquhart (Cornhill)
William Owen (London)
Thomas Longman II (London)
George Kearsley [Fleet Street] (London)
Thomas Becket [82 Pall Mall] (London)
Lockyer Davis [High Holborn] (London)
1780 The third edition.
6719 Wives as they were, and maids as they are, a comedy, in five acts. Performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent-Garden. By Mrs. Inchbald. Inchbald , Elizabeth
Patrick Wogan [20 Old Bridge] (Dublin)
1797
6999 Wives as they were, and maids as they are, a comedy, in five acts. Performed at the Theatre-Royal, Covent-Garden. By Mrs. Inchbald. Inchbald , Elizabeth
1797
6721 Wives as they were, and maids as they are. A comedy, in five acts. Performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent-Garden. Fifth edition. By Mrs. Inchbald. Inchbald , Elizabeth
George, George, and John Robinson (London)
1797 Fifth edition.
6720 Wives as they were, and maids as they are. A comedy, in five acts. Performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent-Garden. Fourth edition. By Mrs. Inchbald. Inchbald , Elizabeth
George, George, and John Robinson (London)
1797 Fourth edition.
6734 Wives as they were, and maids as they are. A comedy, in five acts. Performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent-Garden. Second edition. By Mrs Inchbald. Inchbald , Elizabeth
George, George, and John Robinson (London)
1797 Second edition.
6998 Wives as they were, and maids as they are. A comedy, in five acts. Performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent-Garden. Sixth edition. By Mrs. Inchbald. Inchbald , Elizabeth
George, George, and John Robinson (London)
1797 Sixth edition.
6737 Wives as they were, and maids as they are. A comedy, in five acts. Performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent-Garden. Third edition. By Mrs. Inchbald. Inchbald , Elizabeth
George, George, and John Robinson (London)
1797 Third edition.
2977 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. Parsons , Eliza
Minerva Press, William Lane (London)
1793
2973 Woman as she should be; or, memoirs of Mrs. Menville. A novel. In two volumes. By Mrs. Parsons, author of Errors of Education, Miss Meredith, and Intrigues of a Morning. Parsons , Eliza
1793
15709 Woman not Inferior to Man: or, a short and modest vindication of the natural right of the fair-sex to a perfect equality of power, dignity, and esteem, with the men. By Sophia, a person of quality. , Sophia
John Hawkins (London)
1739
15711 Woman not Inferior to Man: or, a short and modest vindication of the natural right of the fair-sex to a perfect equality of power, dignity, and esteem, with the men. By Sophia, a person of quality. , Sophia
Jacob Robinson [Ludgate St] (London)
1743
15710 Woman not Inferior to Man: or, a short and modest vindication of the natural right of the fair-sex to a perfect equality of power, dignity, and esteem, with the men. By Sophia, a person of quality. The second edition corrected. , Sophia
John Hawkins (London)
1740 The Second edition corrected.
26157 Woman unmask'd, and dissected; a satire Unknown ,
1740
15712 Woman's Superior Excellence over Man: or, A reply to the author of a late treatise, entitled, Man Superior to Woman. In which, the excessive weakness of that Gentleman's answer to Woman not Inferior to Man is exposed; with a plain demonstration of woman's natural right even to superiority over the men in head and heart; proving their minds as much more beautiful than the men's as their bodies are, and that, had they the same advantages of education, they would excel them as much in sense as they do in virtue. The whole interspersed with a variety of mannish characters, which some of the most noted heroes of the present age had the goodness to sit for. By Sophia, a person of quality, author of Woman not Inferior to Man. , Sophia
John Hawkins (London)
1740
15713 Woman's Superior Excellence over Man: or, A reply to the author of a late treatise, entitled, Man Superior to Woman. In which, the excessive weakness of that Gentleman's answer to Woman not Inferior to Man is exposed; with a plain demonstration of woman's natural right even to superiority over the men in head and heart; proving their minds as much more beautiful than the men's as their bodies are, and that, had they the same advantages of education, they would excel them as much in sense as they do in virtue. The whole interspersed with a variety of mannish characters, which some of the most noted heroes of the present age had the goodness to sit for. By Sophia, a person of quality, author of Woman not Inferior to Man. , Sophia
Jacob Robinson [Ludgate St] (London)
1743
5257 Woman's wit; or, a new and elegant amusement for the fair sex; consisting of an original and brilliant assemblage of ingenious witticisms, ... A new edition, revised and corrected throughout, with a number of material alterations and additions. By a lady. Unknown , [Woman]
s.n. [sine nomine]
1780 A new edition, revised and corrected throughout.