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The right of precedence between physicians and civilians enquir'd into. Written by Dr. Swift
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Queries, whether the South Sea contracts for time, and now depending unperformed, ought to be annulled or not?
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A rationale on cathedral worship or choir-service
A sermon preach'd in the Cathedral Church of Hereford, at the anniversary meeting of the choirs of Worcester, Glocester, and Hereford, Sept. 7. 1720. By Tho. Bisse, D.D. and chancelor of the said Church -
Reasons for adding a clause to the bill for preserving and encouraging the woollen and silk manufactures, &c. to except callicoe manufactured in Great Britain, out of the intended prohibition, humbly offer'd to the Honble. House of Commons
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Reasons humbly offer'd to the Honourable House of Commons against passing a law to oblige the unhappy sufferers (who are charged to be borrowers on the South-Sea Company's loan) to pay to the company any part of the said loan
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A sermon preached before the Incorporated Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts
At their anniversary meeting in the Parish Church of St. Mary le Bow; on Friday the 19th of February, 1719. By Samuel lord bishop of Carlile -
A short discourse concerning pestilential contagion, and the methods to be used to prevent it. By Richard Mead, M.D. fellow of the College of Physicians, and of the Royal Society
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The siege of Damascus
A tragedy. As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. By His Majesty's servants. By John Hughes, Esq -
Tamerlane. A tragedy. Written by N. Rowe, Esq
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A timely appeal to the common sense of the people of Great Britain in general
And of the inhabitants of Buckinghamshire in particular, on the present situation of affairs; with references to the opinions of most of the British and French philosophers of the present century. By J. Penn, Esq. sherff of Buckinghamshire -
The unreasonable and unjust practice of judging and censuring, exposed
In an approbation sermon preach'd at St. Leonard Shoreditch, May the 8th, 1720. By T. Ely rector of Wennington in Essex, and chaplain to the Right Honourable Charles Earl of Suffolk and Bindon, Lord-lieutenant of the said county. Publish'd verbatim at the request of several that heard it -
Sylvia's revenge, or, A satyr against man
In answer to the satyr against woman -
True English advice to the freeholders in L------r S------r. In a letter to a friend. Calculated for the year 1720
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The true origin of the Sabellian and Atbanasian doctrines of the trinity
Or, A demonstration that they were first broach'd by the followers of Simon Magus, in the first century; and reviv'd by the montanists in the second. Drawn from all the original accounts now extant. And humbly recommended to the consideration of the learned Dr. Daniel Waterland. By Will. Whiston, M.A. sometime professor of the mathematicks in the University of Cambridge -
Three poems
Viz. I. Reason, a satire. By the Reverend Mr. Pomfret; (author of the Choice.) Written in the year 1700, occasioned by the Trinitarian-controversy then on foot. II. The female phaeton. By Mr. Harcourt. III. The judgement of Venus. By the same -
An answer to a whimsical pamphlet
call'd, The character of Sir John Edgar, &c. Humbly inscrib'd to Sir Tremendous Longinus. Written by Sir John Edgar's baker, mention'd in the 3d Theatre -
Whig and Tory
A comedy. As it is acted at the theatre in Lincolns-Inn-Fields. By Mr. Griffin -
Great Britain's diary
or, the union-almanack for the year of our Lord 1720 -
The sequel of Henry the Fourth
with the humours of Sir John Falstaffe, and Justice Shallow. As it is acted by His Majesty's Company of comedians, at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. Alter'd from Shakespear, by the late Mr. Betterton -
The true amazons: or, The monarchy of bees
Being a new discovery and improvement of those wonderful creatures. Wherein is experimentally demonstrated, I. That they are all govern'd by a queen. II. The amazing beauty and dignity of her person. III. Her extraordinary authority and power. IV. Their exceeding loyalty and unparallel'd love to their queen. V. Their sex, male and female. VI. The manner of their breeding. VII. Their wars. VIII. Their enemies, with directions plain and easy how to manage them, both in straw-hives and transparent boxes; so that with laying out but four or five pounds, in three or four years, if the summers are kind, you may get thirty or forty pounds per annum. Also how to make the English wine or mead, equal if not superior to the best of other wines By Joseph Warder of Croydon, physician -
An essay upon the education of youth in grammar-schools
In which the vulgar method of teaching is examined, and a new one proposed, for the more easy and speedy training up of youth to the knowledge of the learned languages; together with history, chronology, geography, &c. By John Clarke, master of the Publick Grammar-School in Hull -
The half-pay officers
A comedy: as it is acted by His Majesty's servants -
Loimologia: or, An historical account of the plague in London in 1665
With precautionary directions against the like contagion. By Nath. Hodges, M.D. and Fellow of the College of Physicians, who resided in the city all that time. To which is added, an essay on the different causes of pestilential diseases, and how they become contagious: with remarks on the infection now in France, and the most probable means to prevent its spreading here. By John Quincy, M.D -
Prayers to be used in all cathedral, collegiate, and parochial churches, with in England, Wales, and the town of Berwick upon Tweed, on all Sundays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, during the continuance of our danger from the plague. By His Majesties special command
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Radamistus. An opera
As it is perform'd at the King's Theatre in the Hay-Market, for the Royal Academy of Musick