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The present state of the tobacco-trade, as the late act affects the London-manufacturers, considered: in a letter to a friend
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A treatise on the currency
in which the principle of uniformity is advocated, and in which all the great bearings of the question are considered -
Reduction of taxation
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Britannicus his pill to cvre malignancy, or, Frenzie now raigning amongst divers English Protestants which will not see the danger that their religion and liberties now lie in
being the whole progresse of the adversaries long and continued plots briefly laid open and discovered : whereby the archest malignant will be either convinced or condemned and the weakest of the well-affected sufficiently strengthened and encouraged with all vigour to proceed with the Parliament in the defence of religion and liberty -
Der König und die Königin
our King and Queen -
Remarks on an appeal to the publick
by Mr. Cleland, against thirteen govenors of the General Hospital at Bath; with respect to their suspending and dismissing him from his Office, as surgeon to the said Hospital, upon the evidence of two notorious prostitutes. And on A Letter to him, (from a Reverend Advocate for the Thirteen Governors) occasioned by his Full Vindication of the said Appeal. To which is ..., Extracts from the ... Seduction, relating to a French Abbee's committing Rapes upon 133 ..., in order to shew the Analogy of the partial Proceedings against Mr. Cleland and the said Abbee -
A letter to the Right Honourable the Earl of Harcourt
With an ode to His Royal Highness George Prince of Wales -
The nature of the Charitable Corporation
and its relation to trade, consider'd. In a letter to a Member of Parliament -
The nature of the Charitable Corporation
and its relation to trade consider'd -
The present state of the tobacco-trade
as the late act affects the London-manufacturers, considered: in a letter to a friend -
The political mirror
By a student of the Inner Temple -
A letter from Don Blas de Lezo
the Spanish Admiral at Carthagene, to Don Thomas Geraldino -
Letters on the present disturbances in Great Britain and her American provinces
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A review of a late treatise
entituled An account of the conduct of the Dowager D-- of M-, &c. In which Many Misrepresentations are detected, several Obscure Passages searched into and explained, and Abundance of False Facts set in their true Light; Especially such as relate to The Reigns of K. William and Q. Mary in a letter to a person of distinction -
A reply to The case of Alexander Murray, Esq
In a Letter to that Honourable Gentleman -
Friendly admonitions to the inhabitants of Great-Britain
in general; and to the clergy of the Church of England, in particular. By Britannicus -
The sly subscription
on the Norfolk monarch, &c. To which is added, the Briton's speech to Sir Politick -
The ruinous condition of the tobacco-trade
and the causes thereof mathematically demonstrated: together with a scheme of redress humbly proposed to the Consideration of every British Senator -
To the worthy householders of Knaresbro'
"Down with the rottenness of the borough for ever!!!" Gentlemen, as you have long been deprived of your right of electing members to represent you in Parliament, and at present are so deprived by the Duke of Devonshire, whose tenants at Bolton, Londesburgh, &c. come, ... at every appointed election ... Come forward, ... and nominate any two men whose conduct you have had reasons to suppose will merit your confidence -
Seasonable reflections, on the dying-words, and deportment, of that great, but unhappy man, Arthur, late Lord Balmerino, who was beheaded, on Tower-Hill, Monday the 18th of August, 1746. In a letter to Mr. Ford, Author of An account of the Behaviour of the late Earl of Kilmarnock, and the above Lord, &c. published by Authority of the Sheriffs
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Britannicus his pill to cure malignancy, or Frenzie, now raigning amongst divers English Protestants, which will not see the danger that their religion and liberties now lie in
being the whole progresse of the adversaries long, and continued plots, briefly laid open, and discovered; whereby the archest malignant will be either convinced, or condemned, and the weakest of the well-affected sufficiently strengthened and encouraged with all vigour to proceed with the Parliament in the defence of religion and liberty. Published by authority -
The sly subscription
on the Norfolk monarch, &c. To which is added, the Briton's speech to Sir Politick