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Colby Quarterly Colby Quarterly Volume 10 Issue 4 December Article 6 December 1973 A Checklist of Eighteenth-Century British Literature Published in A Checklist of Eighteenth-Century British Literature Published in Eighteenth-Century America Eighteenth-Century America Samual J. Rogal Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/cq Recommended Citation Recommended Citation Colby Library Quarterly, series 10, no.4, December 1973, p.231-257 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Colby. It has been accepted for inclusion in Colby Quarterly by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ Colby.

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Colby Quarterly Colby Quarterly

Volume 10 Issue 4 December Article 6

December 1973

A Checklist of Eighteenth-Century British Literature Published in A Checklist of Eighteenth-Century British Literature Published in

Eighteenth-Century America Eighteenth-Century America

Samual J. Rogal

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/cq

Recommended Citation Recommended Citation Colby Library Quarterly, series 10, no.4, December 1973, p.231-257

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Colby. It has been accepted for inclusion in Colby Quarterly by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ Colby.

Colby Library Quarterly 231A CHECKLIST OF EIGHTEENTH-C'ENTURY BRITISH

LITERATURE PUBLISHED, IN EIGHTEENTH­CENTURY AMERIC'A

By SAMUEL J. ROGAL

Certainly one major criterion for determining the culturalinterests of a nation (or, partly in this instance, colony)

during an early period in its history is to examine the literarytastes of its people. In America between 1660 and 1800, suchexamination can be conducted most expeditiously by observingcarefully the titles, as well as the various editions, of the worksby contemporary British writers that were re-issued by Ameri­can printers and booksellers. For, although printing had existedin the American colonies since 1639-when Stephen Day es­tablished his press at Cambridge, Massachusetts-the vast ma­jority of titles available to the eighteenth-century bookbuyingpublic appears to have been authored on the other side of theAtlantic. Essentially, the learned readers of colonial and earlyrepublican America were slow to sever the strong bonds be­tween themselves and their British cultural tradition.

However, these readers do not reveal, through their literarytastes, an indiscriminate willingness to accept any and all workswritten by British poets, dramatists, and prose writers of theRestoration and eighteenth century. Obviously, American print­ers and the booksellers for whom they published possessed anaccurate awareness of what their customers preferred; theyseemed able to take advantage of these often inconsistent pref­erences and to profit financially from them. For example, atwentieth-century bibliophile may easily locate at least thirty­six separate American editions of Alexander Pope's Essay onMan (1733'1 1734) printed between 1747 and 1800, forty-oneeditions of Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (1719) between 1774 and1800, or eighteen editions of Elizabeth Singer Rowe's Friend­ship in Death (1728) issued between 1742 and 1800. Yet, thesame individual would be hard pressed to uncover Americanreprints or editions of Pope's translations of Homer or versionsof his Dunciad; Swift's Tale of a Tub, Battle of the Books, orModest Proposal; Tobias Smollett's Humphrey Clinker; or anyone of Colley Cibber's dramatic works. Further, one can de­termine the existence of at least two American editions of the

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232 Colby Library Quarterlypoems of the illiterate nonentity, Stephen Duck; yet he wouldsearch perhaps in vain for an edition of Dryden's poetry orprose criticisnl published by an American printer or booksellerduring the period 1660-1800.

The following checklist of Restoration and eighteenth-centuryBritish titles bearing eighteenth-century American imprints hastwo primary purposes: (1) to present a broadly representativelisting, but also to identify the most popular British writerspresumably read by eighteenth-century Americans; (2) to iden­tify-as far as possible-the present location of these titles. Inthis latter area, the reader is asked to consult the "Key to theLocations of Collections" found after the final entry; in eachentry, the numeral in parenthesis following the date of publica­tion refers to the same numeral in the "Key." Also, each entrycontains (follo\ving the title) the date of the earliest Britishedition. In all instances, titles are presented not in the languageof the original editions, but as they appeared in American re­prints and editions.

Finally, the list generally excludes hymn or anthem collec­tions, psalters, and theological works-as well as volumes that,presently, come under the heading of "textbooks." Exclusionof titles within these categories does not at all imply a demean­ing of the areas or disciplines they represent; to the contrary,these categories hold an important and even dominant positionwithin the milieu of seventeenth and eighteenth-century Ameri­can culture. However, theological and instructional works reallyrequire separate studies (I have already just completed one forhyn1nals, anthem collections, and psalters), and their inclusioninto this study would only tend to complicate the list and detractfrom the purely "literary" emphasis.

ADDISON, JOSEPH (1672-1719). Cato. A Tragedy. (1713) Boston: Fleet,1750; New York: Gaine, 1753; Boston: Mein and Fleming, 1767( 1); Providence: Southwick and Wheeler, 1779 (44); Worcester,1782 (1); Philadelphia, 1786 (18); Second Worcester Edition.Worcester: Thomas, 1787 ( 1); Boston: Edes, for Thomas andAndrews, 1793 (1)

__---e The Evidences of the Christian Religion (1721). Bos­ton: Bumstead for Larkin, 1795 (1)

AKENSIDE, MARK (1721-1770). The Pleasures of Imagination. (1744)Exeter, New Hampshire, 1794 (1); New York: Wayland andDavis for L. Wayland, 1795 (1)

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Colby Library Quarterly 233BEATTIE, JAMES (1735-1803). The Minstrel: or, The Itinerant Poet, and

Musician. (1771) Philadelphia: Bell, 1784 (18)- . Poems on Severa.l Occasions. (1776) Philadelphia: Bell,

1784; Philadelphia: Dobson, 1787 (1)BERKELEY, GEORGE (1685-1753). An Abstract from Dr. Berkeley's

Treatise on Tar-Water (1744), ed. Cadwallader Colden, New York,1745 (28)

______. A Word to the Wise (1749), 4th ed. Boston: Knee-land, 1750 (1)

BICKERSTAFFE, ISAAC (1735-1812). The Hypocrite: A Comedy. (1769)Boston: Spotswood, 1795

----__. The Life and Adventures of Ambrose Gwinett. (1770)Boston: Russell, 1782; Norwich: Trumbull, 1784 (1); Philadelphia:Bell, 1784 (1); Philadelphia: Cist, 1784 (in German); Hudson,1786 (1); New London: Springer, 1795 (20); Fairhaven, Vermont:Spooner, 1799; Boston: White, 1800 (1)

- . Lionel and Clarissa. (1768) Philadelphia: Woodwardfor Carey, 1794 (1)

----__. Love in a Village. (1763) Philadelphia: Carey, 1794(1)

----__. The Maid of the Mill. (1765) Philadelphia: Spots­wood, 1790

______. The Padlock. A Comic Opera. (1768) Boston: Blake,1795; Boston: Spotswood, 1795 (23)

______. The Romp. Philadelphia: Carey, 1792 (1); SecondPhiladelphia Edition. Philadelphia: Carey, 1793 (1)

______. Thomas and Sally (1761) Philadelphia: Taylor, 1791(23)

BLAIR, HUGH (1718-1800). Essays on Rhetorick (1784) Albany, 1788;Boston: Freeman, 1789 (1); Boston: Thomas and Andrews, 1793(1); Philadelphia, 1793; Boston: Etheridge, for Thomas and An­drews, 1797 (1); Albany: Barber and Southwick, 1798 (1)

______. Letters on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres (1783) Phila-delphia: Aitken, 1784 (1)

______. Lectures on Rhetorick, 2 vols. (1783) New York:Allen, 1793; Second American Edition, 2 vols. Philadelphia: Carey,1793 (1); Volume One. l\1ount Holly, New Jersey, 1800

______. Select Sermons. (1777) Philadelphia: Campbell, 1795(1)

______. Sentimental Beauties, Fourth Edition. Philadelphia:Bailey, for Carey and Lang, 1792 (1)

______. Sermons. (1777) New York: Hodge and Allen andCampbell, 1790 (1); First American Edition, 2 vols. Philadelphia:Spotswood and Carey, Stewart and Company, 1791 (1); SixteenthEdition, vol. 1. Baltimore: Adams for Weems, 1792 (1); 2 vols.Boston: Thomas and Andrews, 1792 (1); Second American Edi­tion, 2 vols. New York: Allen, 1792 (1); Thirteenth Edition, vol.2. Baltimore: Adams for Weems, 1793 (1); vol. 3, being the sameas the fourth volume of the British edition. Philadelphia: Carey,1794; vol. 4. Philadelphia: Campbell, 1794 (1)

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234 Colby Library QuarterlyBLAIR, ROBERT (1699-1746). The Grave. A Poem. (1743) Fourth Edi­

tion. New York: Gaine, 1753 (28); New York: Parker and Wey­man, and Noel, 1753; Seventh Edition. Boston: Boyles for Condy,1772 (1); Philadelphia: Aitken, 1773 (1); Philadelphia: Aitken,1786 (1); Eleventh Edition. Boston: Freeman, 1787 (1); Phila­delphia: Dobson, 1787 (23); Philadelphia: Taylor, 1791 (1); Bos­ton: Hall, 1793 (1); Newburyport: Blunt and Robinson, 1793 (1);Elizabethtown: Kollock, for Davis, 1797 (1)

BURKE, EDMUND (1729-1797). An Appeal from the Old to the NewWhigs. (1791) New York: Childs and Swain, 1791 (1)

_______. A Letter from Mr. Burke, to a Member of the NationalAssembly. (1791) Fourth Edition. New York: Gaine, 1791 (1)

______. A Letter from the Right Honourable Edmund Burketo a Noble Lord. (1796) Philadelphia: Davies, Rices, and Ormond,1796 (1); New York: Allen and Drummond, 1796 (28)

______. A Letter from the Rt. Honourable Edmund Burke to... the Duke of Portland. (1797) Philadelphia: Humphreys, 1797(1)

______. Mr. Burke's Speech on the 1st December 1783. (1784)Philadelphia: Bradford, 1784

· Reflections on the Revolution in France. (1790) Phila­delphia: Humphreys, for Young, Dobson, Carey, and Rice, 1791(1); New York: Gaine, 1791 (1); Philadelphia: Humphreys, forYoung, Dobson, Carey and Rice, 1792 (18)

· Speech of Edmund Burke, Esq., on American Taxation,April 19, 1774. (1775) The Third Edition. New York: Rivington,1775 (28); Philadelphia: Towne, 1775 (23)

__~ . The Speech of Edmund Burke, Esquire, on MovingHis Resolutions. March 22nd 1775. (1775) New York: Rivington,1775 (1); Philadelphia: Towne, 1775

______. Two Letters on the French Revolution. (1791) Phila­delphia: Bioren and Madan, for Cobbett and Ormrod, 1797 (1)

BURNEY, FRANCIS D'ARBLAY (1752-1840). CainilIa , or, a Picture ofYouth. (1796) Vol. 1. Boston: Manning and Loring, for Hall,1797 (1); in Five Volumes. New York: Bull, 1797 (23); FiveVolumes in Three. Philadelphia: Ormrod and Conrad, 1797 (1)

--- . Cecelia, or Memoirs of an Heiress. (1782) Vol. 1.Boston: Greenough for Larkin, 1793 (22); Vol. 2. Boston: Green­ough for Larkin, 1794 (22)

· Evelina (1778) In Two Volumes. Philadelphia: John­son, 1792 (1); Vol. 1. Worcester: Thomas and Thomas, 1796 (1);Vol. 1. Worcester: Thomas and Thomas, for Thonlas, Andrews,and Penniman, 1796 (1); In Two Volumes. New York: Mott forDuyckinck, 1797 (15)

BURNS, ROBERT (1759-1796). Poenls, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect.( 1786) New York: M'Leans, 1788 (1); Philadelphia: Stewart andHyde, 1788 (1); Two Volumes in One. Philadelphia: Patterson andCochran, 1798 (1)

CAREY, HENRY (1687-1743). The Contrivances. (1715) Philadelphia:Steuart, 1762

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Colby Library QuarterlyCENTLIVRE, SUSANNAH (1667-1723). The Basset-Table: A Comedy.

(1706) New York: Gaine, 1761______. A Bold Stroke for a Wife. (1718) Boston: Wests,

______. The Busy Body: A Comedy. (1709) Boston: Wests,1794 (1)

CHAPONE, HESTER MULSO (1727-1801). Letters on the Inlprovement ofthe Mind. (1773) Vol. 1. Boston: Hodge for Green, 1783 (1);Vol. 1. Boston: Hodge for Thonlas, 1783 (1); Fifth Edition.Worcester, 1783 (1); Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1786 (1); In TwoVolumes. New York: Allen, 1793 (1)

CHETWOOD, WILLIAM RUFUS (d. 1766). An Entertaining History of anItalian Slave. Norwich: Trumbull, 1793

___~__. The Remarkable History of Miss Villars. Norwich:Trumbull, 1793 (1); Keene: Sturtevant, 1795 (19); Amherst, NewHampshire: Preston, 1798

______. The Voyages and Adventures of Captain Robert Boyle.Boston: Folsom, 1790; Boston: Folsom, 1792 (1); Greenfield: Dick­man, for Thomas and Andrews and West, 1794 (1); Cooperstown:Phinney, for Spencers and Webb, 1796 (1); Walpole, New Hamp­shire: Carlisle, for Thomas and Thomas, 1799 (1)

COLLINS, WILLIAM (1721-1759). Collins' Ode on the Passions. (1750)New York, 1795

______. Loose Were Her Tresses. From Collins' Ode on thePassions. (1750) New York: Carr, 1796 (1)

______. The Poetical Works of William Collins. (1765) Phila­delphia: Dobson, 1788 (1)

COWPER, WILLIAM (1731-1800). The Diverting History of John Gilpin.(1782) Salem: At the Bible and Heart, 1792 (11); Newburyport:Osborne's Office, Guttemberg's Head, in Market-Square, 1793 (11);Newburyport: Osborne's Press, Market-Square, 1793 (9)

______. The Facetious Story of John Gilpin. (1782) Philadel­phia: Wrigley and Berriman, for Stephens and M'Kenzie, 1794 (27)

______. The History of John Gilpin. (1782) Hanover, NewHampshire: Dunham, 1794

______0 Poems by William Cowper. (1782) Salem: Cushing1792 (1); Salem: Cushing, for West and Larkin, 1792 (1)

______ The Task. (1785) New York, 1787; Philadelphia: Dob­SOD, 1787 (1); Boston: Thomas and Andrews, 1791 (1); Phila­delphia: Dobson, 1795 (1); New York: Durell for Allen, 1796(7); New York: Durell for Magill, 1796 (1); New York: Durellfor Patterson, 1796 (29)

______. Tirocinium. (1785) Philadelphia: Dobson, 1786CUMBERLAND, RICHARD (1732-1811). Box Lobby Challenge. A Comedy.

(1794) Philadelphia, 1795______. Calvary; or the Death of Christ. (1792) Burlington,

New Jersey: Neale and Kammerer, 1795 (1); Boston: Manningand Loring, for Hall, 1796 (1); Philadelphia: Kammerer, 1797

______0 The Carmelite (1784) Philadelphia: Dobson, 1787______. The Fashionable Lover. (1772) New York, 1772; Phila-

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236 Colby Library Quarterlydelphia: Laplain, 1772; Philadelphia: Laplain, 1773 (1); Philadel­phia: Woodhouse, 1773 (22)

_______. First Love: A Comedy. (1795) Philadelphia: Smith,1796 (22)

______. The Jew: or, Benevolent Hebrew. (1794) Boston:Blake, 1795; Boston: Spotswood, 1795; Boston: West, 1795 (1);New York: Canlpbell, 1795 (1); Philadelphia: For Henry, Patrick,Rice, and James Rice of Baltimore, 1795 (1)

__~ . The Natural Son: A Comedy. (1785) Boston: For D.West and J. West, 1794 (1)

______. The West Indian: A Comedy. (1771) Philadelphia,1772 (22); Boston: Apollo Press for D. West and J. West, 1794(1)

DARWIN, ERASMUS (1731-1802). The Botanic Garden. A Poem. (1789)New York: Swords, 1798 (1)

______. A Plan for the Conduct of Female Education. (1797)Philadelphia: Ormrod, 1798 (1)

__~ . Zoonomia; or the Laws of Organic Life. (1794-1796)Vol. 1. New York: Swords, 1796 (1); 2 vols. Philadelphia: Dobson,1797 (1)

DEFOE, DANIEL (1661-1731). An Abstract of the Remarkable Passages.(1704) Fourth Edition. Boston: Rogers and Fowle, for Edwards,1744 (1)

______. Die Wunderbare Lebensbeschreibung des RobinsonCrusoe. (1721) Philadelphia: Cist, 1788 (1); Philadelphia: Cist,1789 (1)

. The Dreadful Visitation. (1722) Germantown, 1763(1); Philadelphia: Miller, 1767 (1)

______. The Dreadful Visitation, in a Short Account. (1722)Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1774 (1)

__________. The Dreadful Visitation of the Plague. 1665. (1722)New Haven, 1773 (28)

______. The Family Instructor. (1715) In Three Parts. Phila­delphia: Franklin, 1740; Philadelphia: Steward and Cochran, 1792(1); New York: Birdsall for Duyckink, 1795 (1); New York:Hurtin and Comnlardinger, for Duyckink, 1795 (1)

______. The History of the Wars of Hz's Late Majesty CharlesXII. (1715,1720) Philadelphia, 1725

______. The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe. (1719)Baltimore: Keating, 1794 (1)

______. The Life and Most Surprising Adventures of RobinsonCrusoe. (1719) Philadelphia, 1776; Philadelphia: Stewart, 1789(1); Philadelphia: Woodhouse, 1791; Boston: Thomas and An­drews, 1794 (1); Wilmington, Delaware: Brynberg, 1796 (1)

__- . Life and Surpri'Sing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe.(1719) Dedham, Massachusetts: Mann, 1800 (10)

______. The Life of Moll Flanders. (1722) Leominster, Mas­sachusetts: Whitcomb, 1800 (1)

__- . The Most Surprising Adventures and Wonderful Lifeof Robinson Crusoe. (1719) Portland: Wait, 1789 (1); Newbury-

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Colby Library Quarterly 237port: Osborne's Office, 1793 (1); Worcester, 1795 (1)

News from the Moon. Containing a Brief Account ofthe Inhabitants. Boston. 1772 (1)

News from the Moon. A Review of the State of theBritish Nation. (1705) Boston, 1721 (28)

Pathetic History of the Plague. (1722) Charlestown:White, 1795 (1)

ReUgious Courtship; Being Historical Discourses.(1722) Philadelphia, 1729; New York: Durell, 1793 (1); Boston:Thomas and Andrews, 1794 (1); New York: Duyckinck, 1794(28); New York: Harrison, 1794 (1); Wilmington, Delaware:Johnson, 1796 (1)

______. A Short Account of the History of the Plague inLondon. (1722) Philadelphia: Johnsons, 1800 (1)

__--'--- . A Short Account of the Plague. (1722) New London:Green, 1793 (1)

_______. A Short Account of the Plague in London in 1665.(1722) Newburyport: Farnsworth, 1798

__...-..- . Travels of Robinson Crusoe. (1719) Worcester: Thom-as, 1786 (1); Second Worcester Edition. Worcester, Massachu­setts: Thomas, for Thomas and Andrews, 1789 (1); Boston: Hall,1790 (22); Boston: White and Can1bridge, 1790 (1); Boston:White and Cambridge, 1791 (37); Windham: Byrne, 1792 (7);Boston: S. Hall, 1794 (1); Third Worcester Edition. Worcester,Massachusetts: Thomas, 1794 (1); Windham, Connecticut: Byrne,1796 (1); Boston: Hall, 1798 (1); First Newport Edition. Newport,Rhode Island: Farnsworth's, 1799 (1)

______. The True Born Englishman. (1700) Philadelphia, 1778(23)

______. The Wonderful Life and Adventures of RobinsonCrusoe. (1719) Hartford, Connecticut: Babcook, 1800 (1)

1 • The Wonderful Life and Most Surprising Adventuresof Robinson Crusoe of York. (1719) New York: Durell, 1793 (10);New York: Rurtin and Commardinger, for Gomez, 1795 (1); NewYork: Hurtin for Duyckinck, 1795 (1); New York: Tiebout, 1800(1)

1 • The Wonderful Life and Surprising Adventures ofRobinson Crusoe. Boston: White and Cambridge, 1792 (1); Phila­delphia: Cist, 1792; Boston: Hall, 1794 (7); Philadelphia: Carey,1794; Philadelphia: M'Culloch, 1800

1 • The Wonderful Life of Robinson Crusoe. (1719) NewYork: Gaine, 1774 (1); New York: Gaine, 1775; New York:Gaine, 1777; Boston: Coveely, 1779 (1); Philadelphia: Cist, 1787(18); Albany: Websters, 1790 (1); Boston: White and Cambridge,1791 (1); Boston: At the Bible and Heart, 1792 (10)

IDoDSLEY, ROBERT (1703-1764). The Art of Preaching, in Imitation ofHorace. (1738) Philadelphia: Franklin, 1739 (38); Philadelphia:Franklin, 1741 (27); Boston: Rogers and Fowle, 1747 (16); Phila­delphia: Steuart, 1762

/-------. The Blind Beggar. (1741) Philadelphia: Bell, 1777

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___~__. A Collection of Poems. By Several Hands. (1748)Boston: Green and Gookin, 1748 (1)

______. The Oeconolny of Human Life. (1751) New York:Parker, 1751; Sixth Edition. Philadelphia: Franklin and Hall, 1751(38); Seventh Edition. Boston: Fowle, 1752 (1); Seventh Edition.Franklin and Hall, 1752; Part the Second. Third Edition. Philadel­phia: Franklin and Hall, 1752 (18); Part the Second. Boston:Fowle, 1753 (1); Philadelphia: Dunlap, 1765 (1); Philadelphia:Stewart, 1766 (43); Burlington, New Jersey: Collins, 1771 (1);Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1772 (1); Part the First. Philadelphia:Aitken, 1781 (13); Part the Second. Philadelphia: Aitken, 1781(13); Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1781 (1); Norwich: Trumbull, 1784(1); Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1786 (1); Philadelphia: James, 1787(1); First Worcester Edition. Worcester: Thomas, 1787 (1); Ben­nington, 1788 (1); First Exeter Edition. Exeter, 1788 (1); NewYork: Gaine, 1790 (1); Philadelphia: James, 1790 (1); FifteenthAmerican Edition. Keene: Griffin, 1791 (1) ; Norwich, Connecticut:Trumbull, 1791 (7); Philadelphia: Woodhouse, 1791; New Haven:Morse, 1792; New York: Gaine, 1792; Norwich: Trumbull, 1792(1); Thirty-Fourth Edition. Windsor: Spooner, 1792 (1); Concord,New Hampshire: Russell, 1793; New Haven: Morse, 1793 (1);New York: Durell, 1793 (1); Salem: Cushing for Carlton, 1793(1); Hudson: Stoddard, 1794 (17); New York: Allen, 1794 (1);New York: Birdsall for Duyckinck, 1794 (22); Philadelphia: John­son, 1794 (22); Bennington: Haswell, 1795 (1); New York:Duyckinck, 1795; New York: Hodge, 1795 (23); Norwich: Trum­bull, 1795 (1); Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1795 (1); Providence:Carter and Wilkinson, 1795 (1); Salem: Cushing, for Cushing andCarlton, 1795 (1); Leominster, Massachusetts: Prentiss, 1797 (1);Wilmington, Delaware: Brynberg, 1797 (1); Litchfield, Connecti­cut: Collier, 1798 (21); Philadelphia: Charless and Ralston, 1800(1)

. The Family Conlpanion. Boston: Fowle, 1751; Ports­mouth: Fowle, 1758

____---. The King and the Miller. (1737) New York: Parker,1750; Boston: Belknap and Hall, for Blake and Clap, 1794 (1)

______. Rhetoric and Poetry. (1738) Boston: Thomas andAndrews, 1796 (1)

______• Select Fables of Aesop. (1761) Philadelphia: Bell,1777 (1); Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1786 (1); Philadelphia: Ste­wart, 1789 (1)

- __. Select Fables of Esop and Other FabuUsts. (1761)Philadelphia: James, 1790 (1)

______. Select Fables. (1761) Philadelphia: Johnson, 1792(1); Philadelphia: Gibbins, 1794

______. The Toy Shop. (1735) New York: Parker, 1750;Exeter: Ranlet, 1793 (1); Providence: Carter and Wilkinson, 1794(6); Troy, New York: Pratt, 1797 (1)

DRYDEN, JOHN (1631-1700). Arunge-Zebe; or, the Great Mogul. (1675)

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Colby Library Quarterly 239New York: Gaine, 1761

______. The Spanish Fryar. (1680) New York: Gaine, 1761DUCK, STEPHEN (1705-1756). Poems on Several Occasions. ( 1730)

Boston: Kneeland and Green, 1732 (1); Philadelphia: Gibbons,1793 (23)

DUDLEY, HENRY BATE (1745-1824). Songs in the Flitch 0/ Bacon.(1779) Philadelphia: Carey, 1794

______. The Woodman, a COlnic Opera. (1791) Philadelphia:Smith, 1794 (1)

D'URFEY, THOMAS (1653-1723). 'Twas with in a Mile 0/ EdinburghTown. (1687) New York: Carr, 1796; Boston: Von Hagen, 1797(19)

FALCONER, WILLIAM (1732-1769). The Shipwreck, a Poem. (1762)Eighth Edition. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1788 (1); Philadelphia:Prichard and Hall, 1788 (1); Baltimore: Pechin, 1796 (12) ; NewYork: Oram, 1800 (1)

FARQUHAR, GEORGE (1678-1707). The Inconstant; or, the Way to WinHim. (1702) New York: Gaine, 1761

______. The Twin Rivals: A Comedy. (1703) New York Gaine,1761

FIELDING, HENRY (1707-1754). The Beauties 0/ Fielding. (1782) Phila­delphia: Carey, 1792 (1)

______. The Fathers; or, the Good Natured Man. (1778) Bos-ton: Spotswood, 1795

______. The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews.(1742) Philadelphia: Spotswood, 1786; Two Volumes. Philadel­phia: Taylor, 1791 (1); Two Volumes. Philadelphia: Woodhouse,1791___. The Relnarkable History of TOln Jones. (1749) Phila­

delphia: Spotswood, 1786; First Worcester Edition. Worcester:Thomas, 1787 (1); Boston: Hall, 1791 (1); Norwich, Connecticut:Bushnell, 1791 (7); Norwich: Trumbull, 1791; Philadelphia:Woodhouse, 1792; Boston: Hall, 1794; Volume One. Philadelphia:Johnson and M'Kenzie, 1794 (1); Third Worcester Edition. Worces­ter, Massachusetts: Thomas, 1794 (1); Volumes II-III. Philadel­phia: Johnson and M'Kenzie, 1795 (1); Boston: Hall, 1795;Abridged. Boston: Hall, 1797 (1); Boston: Hall, 1798 (24); Salem:N. and J. Coverly, 1799 (10); Salem, Massachusetts: At Faust'sHead, Essex Street, 1799 (1); Fourth Worcester Edition. Worcester:Thomas, 1799 (1)

FIELDING, SARAH (1710-1768). The Governess. (1749) Philadelphia:Dobson, 1791 (1)

FOOTE, SAMUEL (1720-1777). The Knights. A Farce. (1754) Boston:Spotswood, 1794

GARRICK, DAVID (1717-1779). The Bon Ton. (1775) Boston: Edes andEtheridge, for Blake and Clap, 1794 (1)

------0 The Irish Widow. (1772) New York: Hodge andShober, 1773; Philadelphia: Dunlap, 1773; Philadelphia: Hum­phreys, 1773; Philadelphia: Macgill, 1773

------. Lilliput. (1757) Philadelphia: Steuart, 1762

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240 Colby Library Quarterly_____. The Lying Valet. (1741) Philadelphia: Bell, 1778 (18);

Boston: Edes and Etheridge, for Blake and Clap, 1794 (1)GAY, JOHN (1685-1732). The Beggar's Opera. (1728) New York: Par­

ker, 1751______. Fables by the Late Mr. Gay. (1750) Philadelphia:

Carey, 1794 (1)GLOVER, RICHARD (1712-1785). The Substance of the Evidence. New

York: Gaine, 1775 (1)GODWIN, WILLIAM (1756-1836). The Enquirer. (1797) Philadelphia:

Bioren for Campbell, 1797 (1)______. Enquiry Concerning Political Justice. (1793) In Two

Volunles. Philadelphia: Bioren and Madan, 1796 (1)______. Memoirs of Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin. (1798)

Philadelphia: Carey, 1799 (1)______. Things As They Are. (1794) Volume One. Philadel­

phia: Rices, 1795 (1)GOLDSMITH, OLIVER (1728-1774). An Abridgement of the History of

England. (1774) Philadelphia: Campbell, 1795 (1)______. The Beauties of Goldsmith. (1782) Philadelphia:

Bailey, 1797 (1)______. The Citizen of the World. (1762) Albany: Barber and

Southwick, for Spencer, 1794 (1)______. The Deserted Village. (1770) Philadelphia: Bradfords,

1771 (1); Philadelphia: Prichard and Poyntell, 1782 (1); SeventhEdition: Springfield, 1783 ( 1); Providence: Wheeler, 1784 (1);Philadelphia: Dobson, 1786 (1); Boston: Belknap and Hall, forBlake, 1793 (1); Hartford: Babcock, 1793; Litchfield, Connecticut:Collier, 1799

______. Dr. Goldsmith's Roman History Abridged. (1772)Philadelphia: Campbell, 1795 (1); Philadelphia: Dobson, 1798 (1)

______. Goldsmith's Poems. (1767) Philadelphia: Maxwell,1800 (1)

-- . The Grecian History. (1774) Two Volumes. Washing-ton, D. C.: Carey, 1800 (1)

------. An History of the Earth. (1774) In Four Volumes.Philadelphia: Carey, 1795 (1)

------. The Miscellaneous Works of Oliver Goldsmith. (1791)Boston: Edes, for Thomas and Andrews, 1793 (1); Philadelphia:Campbell, 1794; Brookfield: Thomas and Waldo, for Thomas andAndrews, 1795 (1)

------. Poen1S by Dr. Goldsmith. (1786) Philadelphia: Taylor,1791 (1)

------. She Stoops to Conquer. (1773) New York: Hodgeand Shober, 1773 (18); Boston: West, 1794 (28)

-----. The Traveller. (1765) Philadelphia, 1768 (1); Phila­delphia: Story, 1786

------. The Vicar of Wakefield. (1766) Boston: Mein andFleeming, 1767; Philadelphia: Mentz, 1772 (1); Philadelphia: Hum­phreys, 1773; Newburyport, 1780 (1); Volume One. Norwich, Con­necticut: Bushnell, 1791 (1) ; In Two Volumes. Philadelphia:

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GRAY, THOMAS (1716-1771). Elegy in a Country Graveyard. (1751)Philadelphia: Dobson, 1787

______. An Elegy Written in a Country Churc.h Yard. (1751)Litchfield, Connecticut: Collier, 1799 (7)

HAWKESWORTH, JOHN (1715-1773). Almoran and Hamet. (1761)Litchfield: Collier, 1789 (1); Philadelphia: Carey, 1795; Philadel­phia, 1798

______. Edgar and Emmeline. (1761) Philadelphia: Steuart,1762

______. A New Voyage Round the World. (1773) First Ameri­can Edition. Two Volumes. New York: Rivington, 1774 (1); Vol­ume One. New York: Aikman, 1774

HOADLY, BENJAMIN (1676-1761). An Enquiry into the Reasons. (1711)Boston: Fleet for Eliot, 1727 (1)

______. The Nature of the Kingdom, or Church, of Christ.(1717) New York: W. Bradford, 1717 (1)

HOADLY, BENJAMIN (1706-1757). The Suspicious Husband. (1747)Philadelphia: Spotswood, 1791 (1)

HOLCROFT, THOMAS (1745-1809). The Deserted Daughter. (1795) Bos­ton: Blake, 1795 (1); Second Boston Edition. Boston: Blake, 1796(1)

_____.. Love's Frailties: A Comedy. (1794) New York: Carey,1794 (1)

______. The Road to Ruin. (1792) New York: Berry andRogers, 1792 (1)

HOME, HENRY. LORD KAMES (1696-1782). The Culture of the Heart.(1761) Albany, 1797

- . Elements of Criticism. (1762) Two Volumes. Boston:Etheridge for White, 1796 (1)

------. A Letter from a Blacksmith, to the Ministers. (1751)Third Edition. New York: Holt, 1764 (1); Philadelphia: Dunlap,1764; Fourth Edition. Philadelphia: Steuart, 1765 (17); The Sev­enth Edition. Newburyport, 1787 (1); New York: Gaine, 1790;Litchfield, Connecticut: Collier, 1800 (1)

------. Six Sketches on the History of Man. (1774) Philadel­phia: Bell and Aitken, 1776 (1)

HOME, JOHN (1722-1808). Alonzo and Ormisinda. (1773) Philadelphia:Bell, 1777 (1)

------. Douglas, a Tragedy. (1757) Philadelphia: Story, 1790(1); Philadelphia: Taylor, 1791 (1)

HUME, DAVID (1711-1776). The History of England. (1762) Two Vol­umes. Philadelphia: Smith for Campbell, 1795 (1); Volumes 111­VI. Philadelphia: Sweitzer for Campbell, 1796 (1)

------. The Life of David Hurne. Philadelphia: Bell, 1778 (1)JENYNS, SOAME (1704-1787). Disquisitions on Several Subjects. (1782)

Philadelphia: Dobson, 1790 (1)

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242 Colby Library Quarterly-- . A Free Inquiry into the Nature of Evil. (1757) Bos-

ton: Folsom, 1795- . Lectures Delivered by Soame Jenyns. New York: Lou-

don and Berry and Rogers, 1791 (1)--__~_. A View of the Internal Evidence of the Christian Re­

ligion. (1776) Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1780 (1); Ninth Edition.Richmond: Dixon and Holt, 1785 (40); Tenth Edition. Richmond:Dixon and Holt, 1787 (1); Ninth Edition. Philadelphia: Crukshank,1788 (1); Sixth Edition. Hartford: Patten, 1789 (1); Stockbridge:Andrews, 1791 (1); Boston: Thomas and Andrews, 1793 (1)

JOHNSON, CHARLES (1679-1748). The Farmhouse. A Comedy. Boston:Spotswood, 1795

JOHNSON, SAMUEL (1709-1784). The Beauties of Johnson. (1781-1782)Philadelphia: Spotswood, 1787 (1)

- . The History of Rasselas. (1759) Philadelphia, 1768(1)

______. Lives of the British Poets. (1779-1781) Abridgement.Philadelphia, 1784 (28)

______. The Prince of Abissinia. (1759) Philadelphia: Baileyand Lang, 1791 (1)

______. The Rambler. (1750-1752) In Four Volumes. NewYork: Campbell, 1800 (28)-re-issue of London edition of 1791

______. Rasselas, Prince of Abissinia. (1759) Greenfield: Dick­man, 1795 (1)

______. Thoughts on the Late Transactions Respecting Falk­land's Islands. (1771) New York: Gaine, 1771 (1)

JONES, DAVID (1663-1724). A Discourse upon the Great Fire of London.Boston: Bromfield, 1760 (1)

JUNIUS. The Letters of Junius. (1770) Philadelphia: Carey, 1791; FirstAmerican Edition. Philadelphia: Prichard and Hall, 1791 (1); Phila­delphia: Campbell, 1795 (1)

KELLY, HUGH (1739-1777). The Romance of an Hour. (1774) Phila­delphia: Bell, 1777 (1); Boston: Spotswood, 1795

____----'-_. The School for Wives. (1774) Sixth Edition. Philadel­phia: Dunlap, 1774 (18)

Ken, Thomas (1637-1711). An Exposition on the Church-Catechisln.(1685) Boston, 1688 (1)

___""""--__. The Retired Christian. (1725) New York: Noel, 1758(1)

KENRICK, WILLIAM (1725-1779). A Rhetorical Grammar of the EnglishLanguage. (1773) Philadelphia, 1784

___---'---__. The Whole Duty of Woman. (1753) Second Edition.Boston: Fowle and Draper, 1761 (1); New London, 1761; Boston:Fowle and Draper, 1762; Fourth Edition. Philadelphia: Hall andSellers, 1768; Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1788 (23); Sixth Edition.Boston: Hall, 1790 (1); Thirteenth Edition. Windsor, Vermont:Spooner, 1792; Eighth Edition. Boston: Hall, 1793 (1); FourteenthEdition. Concord, New Hampshire: Hough, 1793 (1); FourteenthEdition. Danbury: Douglas, 1793 (7); Ninth Edition. Newbury­port: Blunt and Robinson, 1793; Exeter: Steams and Winslow,

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KING, WILLIAM (1650-1729). A Discourse Concerning the Inventionsof Men. Boston, 1712 (1)

LANGHORNE, JOHN (1735-1779). The Fables of Flora. (1771) Philadel­phia: Bell, 1784 (18); New York: Brewer and Lang, 1795 (1)

______. Solyman and Almena. (1762) Wrentham, Massachu-setts: Heaton, 1796 (1); East Windsor, Connecticut: Pratt, 1799(1)

LAW, WILLIAM (1686-1761). Auszuge aus den ChriJten William Laws.Philadelphia: Miller, 1767 (35)

______. Die Grunde und Ursachen. Germantown, 1741 (18)______. Die Nichtigkeit der Welt. Germantown, 1744 (33)______. An Extract from a Treatise. (1726) Philadelphia:

Franklin and Hall, 1760 (1); Philadelphia: Miller, 1766 (1)______. An Extract from a Treatise On the Spirit of Prayer.

(1749-1750) Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1780 (1)___""""--__. An Extract from Mr. Law's Serious Call. (1728) Phila­

delphia: Hall for Dickins, 1793 (1)__""'"""-- . The Grounds and Reasons. (1739) Philadelphia: Brad.

ford, 1741 (1); Boston, 1775_______. An Humble, Earnest, and Affectionate Address. (1761)

Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1786 (1); Hartford: Babcock, 1796 (36)______. Instructions for Ministers. Philadelphia: Tuckniss for

Dickins, 1796 (14)______. The Nature and Design of Christianity. (1731) Phila-

delphia: Bradford, 1744 (18); Germantown, 1756 (1); Ninth Edi­tion. Providence: Carter, 1792 (1)

______. The True Grounds of the Benefits. (1739) Charleston:Markland and M'Iver, 1791 (1)

LEE, NATHANIEL (1653-1692). Nero: A Tragedy. (1675) New York:Gaine, 1761

______. Theodosius. (1680) New York: Gaine, 1761L'EsTRANGE, SIR ROGER (1616-1704). A History of the Life of Aesop.

(1692) Philadelphia, 1798 (22)______. Seneca's Morals, by Way of Abstract. Boston: Bum-

stead, 1800LEWIS, MATTHEW GREGORY (1775-1818). Ambrosio. (1795) Three Vol­

umes in Two. Boston: Thomas and Andrews, 1799 (1)_______. The Castle Spectre. (1798) Boston, 1798 (1); Salem,

Massachusetts: Macanulty, 1799 (1)_______. Crazy Jane. A Favorite Song. Boston: Von Hagen for

Gilfert, 1800______'. The East Indian: A Comedy. New York: Davises for

Caritat, 1800 (1)LILLO, GEORGE (1693-1739) . .The London Merchant. (1731) Boston:

Greenleaf, 1774 (1); PhIladelphia: M'Dougall, 1774; Worcester1783 (1); Second Worcester Edition. Worcester: Thomas, 1788(1); Boston: Belknap and Hall, 1793 (1); Worcester: Thomas,

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_________. The Tragedy 01 George Barnwell. (1731) Amherst,New Hampshire: Coverly, 1795

LOCKE, JOHN (1632-1704). An Abridgement of Mr. Locke's Essay Con­cerning Human Understanding. (1690) Boston: Manning and Lor­ing, 1794 (1)

___"""""""--__. An Essay Concerning the True Original Extent of CivilGovernment. (1690) Boston: Edes and Gill, 1773 (1)

_________. A Letter Concerning Toleration. (1689) Third Edition.Boston: Rogers and Fowle, 1743 (1); Fourth Edition. Wilmington,1764 (1); Fourth Edition. Windsor, 1788 (1); Stockbridge; An­drews, 1790

LYTTLETON, GEORGE, FIRST BARON LYTTLETON (1709-1773). Dialoguesof the Dead. (1760) Worcester: Thomas, Son and Thonlas, forThomas, and Andrews, 1797 (1)

___---. Observations on the Conve.rsion of St. Paul. (1747)Philadelphia: Miller, 1761 (23); Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1785(1); Boston: Manning and Loring, 1800 (1)

LYTTLETON, THOMAS, SECOND BARON LYTTLETON (1744-1779). A Letterto William Pitt. Boston: Mills and Hicks, for Cox and Berry, 1774(3); New York: Rivington, 1774 (28)

___'"""""'-__. Letters of the Late Thomas Lyttleton, Second BaronLyttleton. Philadelphia: Bell, 1782 (38)

MACAULAY, CATHARINE SAWBRIDGE (1731-1791). An Address to thePeople of England. Third Edition. New York, 1775 (23)

___"""""""--__. Observations on the Reflections of the French Revolu­tion, by Edmund Burke. Boston: Thomas and Andrews, 1791 (1)

MACKENZIE, HENRY (1745-1831). An Answer to Paine's Rights of Man.Philadelphia: Cobbett, 1796 (1)

___"""""""--__. Julia de Roubigne, a Sentimental Novel. (1777) InTwo Volumes. Third Edition. Philadelphia: Cist, 1782 (1); TwoVolunles. Philadelphia: Story, 1786; Fifth Edition. Two Volumes.Boston: Bumstead for Larkin, 1793 (1)

______. The Life of William Annesly. Bennington: Haswell,1796 (1)

__---. The Man of Feeling. (1771) Philadelphia: Bell, 1782(1); Philadelphia: Taylor, 1791 (1); The Third American Edition.Litchfield: Collier, 1790 (1); First Worcester Edition. Worcester:Thomas, 1795 (1)

_.._----. The Man of the World. (1773) Three Volumes. Phila­delphia: Bell, 1783 (23); Boston: Manning and Loring, for West,1795 (1); Philadelphia: Hogan for Gibson, 1799 (1)

MACKLIN, CHARLES (1697-1797). Love a la Mode. (1759) Philadelphia:Spotswood, 1790; Philadelphia: Taylor, 1791 (1); New York: Har­rison for Magill, 1793

__----. The True-Born Irishman. (1762) Philadelphia: Spots­wood, 1784 (1); New York: Campbell, 1787; Philadelphia: Dob­son, 1787

MACPHERSON, JAMES (1736-1796). Oscar' and Malvina. Boston, 1796;Charleston, South Carolina: Young, 1796

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Colby Library Quarterly 245______. The Poems of Ossian. (1765) Philadelphia: Lang, 1790

(1)MADAN, MARTIN (1726-1790). An Account of the Triumphant Death of

a Converted Prostitute. Amherst, New Hampshire: Coverly, 1795__----. An Account of the Triumphant Death of F. s. z'n April

1763. Boston: Fowle, 1764 (1); New London, 1765 (1); Salem:Hall, 1770 (11); Boston, 1772; Concord, New Hampshire: Houghfor Mitchel, 1797 (1)

MALLET, DAVID (1705-1765). A Poem Called Edwin and Emma. (1760)Boston, 1764 (1)

MERRY, ROBERT (1755-1798), ed. The B'ritish Album. A Collection ofPoems. (1790) Boston: Belknap and Hall, 1793 (1)

______. The Pains of Memory. (1796) Philadelphia: Thompsonfor Carey, 1796 (1); Boston: Manning and Loring, for West, 1797(1)

MONTAGU, EDWARD WORTLEY (1713-1776). The Life, Travels, and Ad­ventures of Edward Wortley Montagu. Philadelphia: Bell, 1784(24); Two Volumes in One. Boston: Folsom, 1794 (1)

MONTAGU, LADY MARY PIERREPONT WORTLEY (1689-1762). The Addi­tional Volumes to the Letters of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu.Philadelphia: Bell, 1768

______. Letters of the Right Honourable Lady Mary WortleyMontagu. (1763) Fourth Edition. New York, 1766 (1); FourthEdition. Providence: Goddard, 1766 (6)

______. The Poetical Works of the Right Honourable LadyMary Wortley Montagu. (1768) London and Philadelphia, 1769(1)

MOORE, EDWARD (1712-1757). Fables for the Female Sex. (1744) Litch­field, Connecticut: Collier, 1798 (1); Bennington: Haswell, 1800(16)

______. Fables for the Ladies. (1744) Philadelphia: Dobson,1787 (1); Exeter, 1794 (1)

______. The Foundling: A Comedy. (1748) Boston: West andWest, 1794 (1)

______. The Gamester, a Tragedy. (1753) Philadelphia: Story,1790 (1); Philadelphia: Taylor, 1791 (28); Philadelphia: Camp­bell, 1795

MORE, HANNAH (1745-1833). Armine and Elvira. (1782) Boston: Spots­wood, 1795

______. Bear Ye One Another's Burdens. Philadelphia: John­sons, 1800 (1)

______ Betty Brown, the St. Giles's Orange Girl. (1782) Phila­delphia: Johnsons, 1800 (1)

__----. Black Giles the Poacher; with Some Account of aFamily. (1782) Philadelphia: Johnson, 1800 (1)

______'. Black Giles the Poacher; with the History of WidowBrown's Apple Tree. (1782) Philadelphia: Johnsons, 1800 (1)

______. Considerations on Religion. (1791) Boston: Weld andGreenough, 1794 (1)

______. Essays on Various Subjects. (1777) Philadelphia:

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246 Colby Library QuarterlyYoung, Stewart, and M'Culloch, 1786 (1); Chambersburg, Penn­sylvania: Dover and Harper, for Carey, 1796 (1)

--- . An Estimate of the Religion of the Fashionable World.(1791) First American Edition. Philadelphia: Weems and Willis,1793 (1); Fourth Edition. Philadelphia: Young, 1795 (1)

- . The Fortune Teller. (1782) Philadelphia: Johnson,1798 (22)

- . The History of Mr. Fantom. (1782) Philadelphia:Johnson, 1800 (1)

______. The History of Tawny Rachel. (1782) Philadelphia:Johnsons, 1800 (1)

______. The History of Tom White, the PostiUon. (1782)Philadelphia: Johnson, 1798; Philadelphia: Johnsons, 1800 (1)

______. The History of Two Shoemakers. (1782) Part I. Phila-delphia: Johnsons, 1800 (1); Part II. Philadelphia: Johnsons, 1800(1); Part III. Philadelphia: Johnsons, 1800 (1); Part IV. Philadel­phia: Johnsons, 1800 (1)

______. The Inflexible Captive. (1774) Philadelphia: Hum-phreys for Sparhawk, 1774 (1)

______. Moses in the Bulrushes. (1782) Litchfield, Connecti-cut : Collier, 1800

______. Poems by Miss Hannah More. (1785) Philadelphia:Young, Stewart, and M'Culloch, 1785 (23)

______. Sacred Dramas. (1782) Philadelphia: Dobson, 1787(1)

______. Search after Happiness. (1766) Philadelphia, 1773(23); Boston: Edes, 1786 (1); Philadelphia: Humphreys, 1786;Philadelphia: Woodhouse, 1787; Boslton: Edes, 1791; Boston: Fleets,1791; Boston: Edes, 1793 ( 1) ; Catskill: Croswell, 1794 ( 16) ;Salem: Cushing and Carleton, 1795; Boston: Spotswood, 1796 (1);Boston: Spotswood, 1797 (1); Worcester: Thomas, 1797 (1)

________. Search after Happiness, and Armine and Elvira. Phila-delphia; Humphreys, 1774 (1); Second Edition. Philadelphia: Hum­phreys, 1775

________. Sensibility: A Poetical Epistle. (1782) New Haven,1785 (7)

______. The Shepherds of Salisbury Plain. (1782) Part I. Phila­delphia: Johnsons, 1800 (1); Part II. Philadelphia: Johnsons, 1800(1)

______. The Shopkeeper Turned Sailor. (1782) Philadelphia:Johnsons, 1800 (23)

______. Slavery, a Poem. New York: M'Leans, 1788 (2); Phila.delphia: James, 1788 (1)

______. Strictures on the Modern System of Female Education.(1799) In Two Volumes. Charlestown, Massachusetts: Etheridgefor Larkin, 1800 (1); Philadelphia: Budd and Bartram, for Dob­son, 1800 (1)

________. Thoughts on the Importance of the Manners of theGreat. (1788) Eighth Edition. Philadelphia: Johnson, 1795 (1);Fifth Edition. Worcester: Thomas, 1797 (1)

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Colby Library Quarterly 247______. The Two Shoemakers. (1782) Parts I-IV. Philadelphia:

Johnson, 1797 (19)______. The Two Wealthy Farmers. (1782) Part I. Philadel-

phia: Johnsons, 1800 (1); Part II. Philadelphia: Johnsons, 1800(1); Part III. Philadelphia: Johnsons, 1800 (1); Part IV. Philadel­phia: Johnsons, 1800 (1) ; Part V. Philadelphia: Johnsons, 1800(1)

______. The Way to Plenty. Philadelphia: Johnsons, 1800 (1)MURPHY, ARTHUR (1727-1805). The Ciazen. A Farce. (1763) Boston:

&les and Etheridge, for Blake and Clap, 1794 (1)______. The Grecian Daughter. (1772) Philadelphia: Taylor,

1791 (1)______. Know Your Own Mind. A Comedy. (1778) Boston:

Spotswood, 1795_____. The Old Maid. (1761) Philadelphia: Steuart, 1762______. Zenobia. A Tragedy. (1768) Boston: Spotswood, 1794ORTON, JOB (1717-1783). Discourses to the Aged. Boston, 1774______. Letters to a Young Clergyman. Boston: Manning and

Loring, for White, 1794 (1)______. Memoirs of the Rev. Philip Doddridge, D.D. London

and Boston, 1766 (1); Philadelphia: Bell, 1774PARNELL, THOMAS (1679-1718). The Hermit. A Poem. (1722) German­

town, 1756 (1); New Haven, 1784 (28); Boston: Griffith, 1786;Salem, 1793 (27)

______. A Vision. New York: Parker, 1762 (22)PARTRIDGE, JOHN (1644-1715). Monthly Observations. Boston, 1692

(24)POMFRET, JOHN (1667-1702). Poems upon Several Occasions. (1699)

Eleventh Edition. Boston: Fowle, 1751 (1); Twelvth Edition. NewYork: Gaine, 1785 (1); Philadelphia: Hall, 1791 (1); New York:Gaine, 1792; Boston: Etheridge, 1794 (1)

______. The Poetical Works of John Pomfret. (1699) Philadel-phia, 1795

POPE, ALEXANDER (1688-1744). An Essay on Man. (1733-1734) Phila­delphia: Bradford, 1747 (28); Philadelphia: Bradford, 1748; Phila­delphia: Dunlap for Noel, 1760 (38); Providence: McDougall,1776 (34); Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1778 (23); Newbury: Mycallfor Coverly of Boston, 1780 (1); Providence, 1780; Bennington,1785 (42); New York: Gaine, 1786 (1); Boston: Fleets, 1787 (1);Hartford: Patten, 1787 (1); Philadelphia: Dobson, 1787; Philadel­phia: Spotswood, 1788 (1); Philadelphia: Spotswood, 1789; Con­cord, New Hampshire: Hough, 1790 (1); Lansingburgh: Babcockand Hickock, 1790 (1); Worcester: Thomas, 1790 (1); New Lon­don: Greens, 1791; Boston: Folsom, 1792 (1); Philadelphia: Dob­son, 1792 (28); Concord, New Hanlpshire: Hough, 1793; Hart­ford: Babcock, 1793; Boston: Hall, 1794 (19); Exeter, New Hamp­shire: Odiorne, 1794 (1); Greenfield: Dickman, 1795 (30); Keene,New Hampshire: Blake, 1795; Wrentham, Massachusetts: Heaton,1795 (19); Litchfield, Connecticut: Collier and Buck, 1796; NewYork: Tiebout, for Duyckinck and Mesier, 1796 (1); Providence,

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248 Colby Library QuarterlyRhode Island: Carter and Wilkinson, 1796 (1); Worcester: Thom­as, 1796 (1); Fairhaven, Vermont: Spooner, 1797 (41); Worces­ter: Thomas, Son, and Thomas, 1797 (1); Peacham, Vermont:Farley and Goss, 1798 (16); Boston: Hall, 1800 (1); Salem, Mas­sachusetts, J. Cushing for T. C. Cushing, 1800 (11)

- . A Select Collection of Poems. (1717) New London,Connecticut: Springer, 1796 (1)

PRIESTLEY, JOSEPH (1733-1804). An Address to Protestant Dissentersof All Denominations. (1769) Boston: Fleets, 1774 (1); Philadel­phia: Humphreys, 1774 (1); Wilmington, Delaware, 1774

-_- . An Address to the Unitarian Congregation of Phila-delphia. Philadelphia: Gales, 1797 (23)

______. An Appeal to the Serious and Candid. Philadelphia:Bell, 1784 (1); Philadelphia: Dobson, 1794 (1)

______. The Case of Poor Emigrants. Philadelphia: Gales forBirch, 1797 (23)

______. A Comparison of the Institutions. Northumberland,Pennsylvania: Kennedy, 1799 (1)

______. Considerations on the Doctrine of Phlogiston. Phila-delphia: Dobson, 1796 (23)

______. A Continuation of the Letters to the Philosophers.Northumberland-Town: Kennedy, 1794 (1); Salem: Cushing, 1795(1)

______. A Description of a New Chart of History. New Haven:Doolittle, 1792 (1)

____-_. Discourses on the Evidence of Revealed Religion. Sec­ond Edition. Boston: Spotswood, 1795 (1); Philadelphia: Dobson,1796; Philadelphia: Thompson, 1796 (1); Volume Two. Philadel­phia: Dobson, 1797 (1)

___- __. The Doctrine of Phlogiston Established. Northumber­land, Pennsylvania: Kennedy, 1800 (23)

______. Extracts from a Catechism. Boston: Hall, 1798 (1)______. Extracts fronz Dr. Priestley's Catechism. Salem: Hall,

1785 (1); Boston: Hall, 1787 (19); Salem: Cushing, 1793 (1);Salem: Carlton, 1796 (1)

______. A Familiar Illustration. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1794(1)

______. A General View of the Arguments for the Unity ofGod. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1794 (1); New York: Robertson, 1796

______. An History of the Corruptions of Christianity. In TwoVolumes. Boston: Spotswood, 1797 (1)

______. Letters to a Philosophical Unbeliever. Philadelphia:Dobson, 1795 (23)

______. Letters to Mr. Volney. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1797(1)

__--__. Letters to the Inhabitants of Northumberland. Part I.Northumberland, Pennsylvania: Kennedy, 1799 (23); Part II. Nor­thumberland, Pennsylvania: Kennedy, 1799 (1); Philadelphia:Bioren, 1800

__----. Letters to the Jews. New York: Harrison for Gomez,

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Colby Library Quarterly 249

______. Letters to the Philosophers. Boston: Hall, 1793 (1);New York: Loudon and Brower, 1794 (1); Philadelphia: Dobson,1794 (1)

______. Letters to the Right Honourable Edmund Burke. NewYork: Gaine, 1791 (1)

______. Miscellaneous Observations Relating to Education. NewLondon: Springer, for T. C. Green, S. Green, and Trumbull, 1796

__""'""'--- . Observations on the Doctrine of Phlogiston. Philadel-phia: Dobson, 1797 (26)

__""'""'--- . Observations on the Increase of Infidelity. Northumber-land, Pennsylvania: Kennedy, 1795 (1); Third Edition. Philadel­phia: Dobson, 1797 (1)

______. An Outline on the Evidences of Revealed Religion.Philadelphia: Dobson, 1797 (1)

______. Reflexions sur la Doctrine du Phlogistique. Philadel-phia: Moreau de S1. Mery, 1797 (26)

__""'""'--- . Two Sermons. Philadelphia: Dobson, 1794 (1)______. Unitarianism Explained and Defended. Philadelphia:

Thompson, 1796 (1)PRIOR, MATTHEW (1664-1721). The Turtle and Sparrow. (1723) New­

buryport: Osborne, 1793 (1)PYE, HENRY JAMES (1745-1813). The Democrat; or Intrigues and Ad­

ventures of Jean Ie Noir. (1795) In Two Volumes. New York:Rivington, 1795 (1)

______. The Siege of Meaux. A Tragedy. (1794) Philadelphia,1795

RADCLIFFE, ANN WARD (1764-1823). The Castles of Athlin and Dun­bayne. (1789) Philadelphia: Bradford, 1796 (1); Boston: West,1797

______. The Italian. (1797) In Two Volumes. Boston: Ether­idge, 1797; In Two Volumes. Mount Pleasant, New Jersey: Durellfor Magill, 1797 (1); Two Volumes. New York: Greenleaf, 1797;Philadelphia: Carey, 1797; In Two Volumes. Philadelphia: Folwell,for Rices and Campbell, 1797

______. The Mysteries of Udolpho. (1794) In Three Volumes.Boston: Etheridge, for White, Spotswood, Thomas and Andrews,1795 (1); Philadelphia: Rices, 1800 (31)

___-_. The Romance of the Forest. (1791) In Two Volumes.Boston: Etheridge, for Larkin, Spotswood, Thomas and Andrews,1795 (1); Philadelphia: Bradford, 1795 (1)

______. A Sicilian Romance. (1790) Philadelphia: For H. andP. Rice, and for J. Rice, Baltimore, 1795 (1)

RAMSAY, ALLAN (1685-1758). The Gentle Shepherd. (1725) New York:Parker, 1750; Philadelphia: Aitken, 1771; 1788 (1); Philadelphia:Campbell, 1795 (1); Philadelphia: Stewart, 1798 (1)

RICHARDSON, SAMUEL (1689-1761). Clarissa Barlowe. (1748) First Bos­ton Edition. Boston: Hall, 1795; Suffield, Connecticut: Farnsworthsfor Cookes, 1798 (1); Abridged. New Haven, Connecticut: Morse,1800 (1)

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250 Colby Library Quarterly- . The History of Clarissa Harlowe. (1748) Philadelphia:

Spotswood, 1786; Cooperstown: Phinney, 1796- . The History of Miss Clarissa Harlowe. (1748) Phila-

delphia, 1798 (1)______. The History of Pamela. (1740) Philadelphia: Wood-

house, 1792; Philadelphia: Gibbons, 1794 (1); First WorcesterEdition. Worcester: Thomas, 1794 (1); Lansingburgh, New York:Pratt, 1796 (1); New York: Mott and Lyon, for Duyckinck, 1796(1); New York: Tiebout and O'Brien, 1796; Abridged. Boston:Hall, 1797 (1); New York: Kirk for Davis, 1798 (1); New York:Kirk for Judah, 1798; New York: Kirk for Stephens, 1798; NewYork: Kirk for Tiebout, 1798 (1); Fairhaven, Vermont: Spooner,1799 (41); Norristown, Pennsylvania: Sower, 1799 (1)

__----. The History of Sir Charles Grandison. (1754) Phila­delphia: Spotswood, 1786; Tenth Edition. Philadelphia: Carey, Ste­wart and Company, 1790 (1); First Boston Edition. Boston: Hall,1794 (10); Eleventh Edition. Philadelphia: Carey for Folwell, 1794(1); Twelfth Edition. New London: Springer, 1797; Abridged. Suf­field, Connecticut: Farnsworths, 1797; Suffield, Connecticut: Farns­worths for Cokes, 1798 (1)

______. Pamela. (1740) Two Volumes. New York: Parker,1744; Fifth Edition. Boston: Harrison, 1744; Philadelphia: Frank­lin, 1744; Philadelphia: Spotswood, 1786

______. The Paths of Virtue Delineated. (1756) Philadelphia:Woodhouse, 1791 (31)

______. The Paths of Virtue Delineated; or, the History ofClarissa Harlowe. (1756) Cooperstown: Phinney, 1795 (1)

______. The Pleasing History of Pamela. (1740) Boston: Hall,1793 (1)

ROWE, ELIZABETH SINGER (1674-1737). Devout Exercises of the Heart.(1737) Fourth Edition. Boston: Rogers and Fowle, for Blanchard,1742 (1); Boston: Blanchard, 1743; Philadelphia: Franklin, 1745;Lancaster, 1754 (18); Boston: Hall, 1790 (1); Philadelphia: Ait­ken, 1791 (1); Philadelphia: Dobson, 1791 (1); Philadelphia: Hall,1792 (1); Windsor: Spooner for Ralph, 1792 (1); Exeter: Lam­son, 1794 (1); New Haven: Morse, 1794 (1); New York: Tieboutand O'Brien, for Nutter, 1794 (1); New York: Durell, 1795 (1);New York: Tiebout and O'Brien, for Mitchell, 1795; Dedham,Massachusetts: Heatons, 1796 ( 1) ; Northampton, Massachusetts:A. Wright for D. Wright, 1798 (19); Philadelphia: Tuckniss, 1798(1); Hartford, Connecticut: Babcock, 1800 (1)

______. Friendship in Death. ( 1728) Boston: Rogers andFowle, 1747 (1); Boston: Hodge, Green, and Norman, 1782 (1);New York: Hodge, 1786 (1); Boston: Bumstead for Larkin, 1790;Boston: Bumstead, for West and Larkin, 1792 (1); New York:Tiebout and O'Brien, for Duyckinck, 1795 (1); New York: Tieboutand O'Brien, for Gomez, 1795 (1)

______. The History of Joseph. A Poem. (1736) Philadelphia:Franklin, 1739 (38); Boston, 1743; Philadelphia: Hall and Sellers,1767 (1); Hartford: Hudson and Goodwin, 1784 (28); Philadel-

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Colby Library Quarterly 251phia: Crukshank, 1787 (1)

. The History of Joseph and His Brethren. (1736) Phila­delphia: Lawrence, 1773

ROWE, NICHOLAS (1674-1718). Jane Shore: A Tragedy. (1714) NewYork: Gaine, 1761

ROWE, THEOPHILUS. The Life of Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe. (1739) Boston:Rogers and Fowle, 1747 (1)

ST. JOHN, HENRY, VISCOUNT BOLINGBROKE (1678-1751). The Free­holder's Political Catechism. (1733) Boston, 1757 (3); New Lon­don, 1769 (22)

_~ . Letters on the Spirit of Patriotism. (1749) Philadel-phia: Franklin and Hall, 1749 (23); N·ew York: Parker and Wey­man, 1756

SEWARD, ANNA (1742-1809). Louisa, a Poetical Novel. (1784) FifthEdition. New Haven: Morse, 1789 (1)

______. Monody on Major Andre. (1781) New York: Riving­ton, 1781 (8); Philadelphia: Story, 1782 (25); New York: Harrisonand Purdy, for Allen, 1788 (22); Philadelphia: Story, 1788 (1);Philadelphia: Story, 1790 (22); Second New York Edition. NewYork: Allen, 1792 (1); Hanover, New Hampshire: Dunham, 1794(1); Boston: Spotswood and Wayne, 1798 (1)

SHADWELL, THOMAS (1642-1692). Don Juan. Boston: Blake, 1795SHERIDAN, RICHARD BRINSLEY (1751-1816). The Critic: or a Tragedy

Rehearsed. (1781) Philadelphia: Dobson, 1787; Boston: Spotswood,1795

______. The Duenna: A Comic Opera. (1775) Philadelphia:Humphreys, for Nutter in New York, 1779

______. The Governess. (1777) Boston: Spotswood, 1795______. The Real and Genuine School for Scandal. (1780)

Philadelphia: Bell, 1782 (44)______. The School for Scandal. (1780) N,ew York: Gaine,

1786 (1); Philadelphia: Prichard and Hall, 1789 (1); Boston:Belknap and Hall, 1792 (1)

______. Song in the Stranger. Philadelphia: B. Carr, 1797 (43)SHERIDAN, THOMAS (1719-1788). A Complete Dictionary. Fourth Edi­

tion. Philadelphia: Young, 1789 (1); Fifth Edition. Philadelphia:Young, 1789 (1); Sixth Edition, carefully revised by John An­drews. Philadelphia: Young, Mills, and Son, 1796 (1); Sixth Edi­tion. Philadelphia: Young, Mills, and Son, 1796 (1)

______. A Course of Lectures on Elocution. Providence: Car­ter and Wilkinson, 1796 (1)

__-----. A Rhetorical Grammar of the English Language. Phila­delphia: Bell and Bailey, 1783 (1); Third Edition. Philadelphia:Young, 1789 (1)

SMART, CHRISTOPHER (1722-1771). Hymns for the Amusement of Chil­dren. (1772) Philadelphia: Spotswood, 1791 (1)

_____-_. Hymns for the Instruction and Amusement of Chil­dren. (1772) Boston: Spotswood, 1795

SMITH, ADAM (1723-1790). An Inquiry .into the Nature and Causes ofthe Wealth of Nations. (1776) Three Volumes. Philadelphia: Dob-

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252 Colby Library Quarterlyson, 1789 (1); Philadelphia: Dobson, 1796 (1)

SMITH, CHARLOTTE TURNER (1749-1806). D'Arcy. A Novel. Philadel­phia: Carey, 1796 (1)

______. Elegiac Sonnets. (1784) Philadelphia: Dobson, 1787(1); Seventh Edition. Boston: Spotswood, 1795 (1); First Worces­ter Edition. Worcester: Thomas and Andrews, 1795 (1)

_______. Montalbert. A Novel. (1795) Volume One. Carlisle,Pennsylvania: Kline for Carey, 1795 (23); In Two Volumes. Phila­delphia: Snowden and McCorkle, for Carey, 1800 (1)

-- . The ROlnance of the Real Life. (1787) Philadelphia:Carey, 1799 (1)

______. Rural Walks. (1795) Philadelphia: Stephens, 1795 (1)SMOLLETT, TOBIAS GEORGE (1721-1771). The Adventures of Roderick

Random. (1748) Two Volumes. Philadelphia: Carey, 1794 (1)______. The History and Adventures of Peregrine Pickle.

(1751) Leominster, Massachusetts: Prentiss for Thomas, 1798 (1)______. The History of England in Six Volumes. (1757-1758)

Volumes I-II. Philadelphia: Sweitzer for Campbell, 1796 (1);Volumes III-IV. Philadelphia: Sweitzer for Campbell, 1797 (1);Volume V. Philadelphia: Folwell for Campbell, 1798 (1); VolumeVI. Philadelphia: Bioren for Campbell, 1798 (1)

______. The History of the British Empire. (1757-1758) TwoVolumes. Philadelphia: Folwell for Campbell, 1798 (16)

______. A North Britain Extraordinary. Third Edition. Phila­delphia: Dunlap, 1769 (1)

SOUTHERNE, THOMAS ( 1660-1746). Oroonoko, or the Royal Slave.(1696) Boston: Spotswood, 1794

STANHOPE, PHILIP DORMIER, FOURTH EARL OF CHESTERFIELD (1694­1773). The Accomplished Gentleman. Philadephia: Spotswood,1789 (1)

______. Advice to His Son. (1774) Philadelphia: Bradford andHall, 1781 (23); Philadelphia: Dobson, 1786 (1); Philadelphia:Dobson, 1789 (1); Wilmington: Adams, 1789 (23); Philadelphia:Bradford, 1794 (1); Philadelphia : Johnson, 1794 (1)

______. Letters. (1774) Third Edition. Four Volumes. NewYork: Rivington and Gaine, 1775 (27); Volume One. Boston:Boyle and M'Dougall, 1779 (1); Volume Two. Newburyport: My­call, for Boyle and M'Dougall, 1779 (1)

______. Lord Chesterfield's Letters. (1774) Providence, 1779______. The Life of the Late Earl 01 Chesterfield. Philadelphia:

Sparhawk, 1775 (1)______. Principles of Politeness. Philadelphia: Bell 1778 (1);

Philadelphia: Aitken, 1781 (1); Norwich: Trumbull, 1785 (1);Portsmouth: Melcher and Osborne, 1786 (1); New Haven: Morse,1789 (1); Portsmouth: Melcher, 1789; Boston: Folsom for Brewer,1791 (1); Worcester: Thomas and Worcester, 1792 (1); New Lon­don: S. Green for C. Green, 1793 (1); Boston: Belknap and Hall,for Larkin, 1794 (1); Boston, 1794 (1); New York: Campbell, 1795(1); Greenfield, Massachusetts: Dickman, 1796 (1); SecondWorcester Edition. Worcester: Thomas for Goodale, 1798 (1);

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Colby Library Quarterly 253Newburyport: Blunt, 1799 (1); Philadelphia: Carey, 1800 (1)

__"""""'- . Select Letters. Philadelphia: Bell, 1778STEELE, SIR RICHARD (1672-1729). The Crisis. (1714) Philadelphia:

Keimer, 1725 (18)______. The Funeral. (1702) New York: Gaine, 1761STERNE, LAURENCE (1713-1768). The Beauties of Sterne. (1782) Tenth

Edition. Philadelphia: Spotswood, 1789 (1); Philadelphia: Seddon,1790 (1); Philadelphia: Woodhouse, 1791; Eleventh Edition. Bos­ton: Folsom, 1793 (1); Eleventh Edition. Boston: Folsom forBrewer, 1793 (1)

_____-. The Koran. Two Volumes. Philadelphia: Bell, 1778______. Letters from Yorick to Eliza. (1773) Philadelphia:

Dunlap, 1773 (1); Burlington, Neale, 1792 (1); Burlington, NewJersey: Neale, 1792 (1)

______. Letters to Intimate Friends. (1775) Philadelphia: Bell,1778

______. A Senti'mental Journey through France and Italy.(1768) Boston: Mein and Fleeming, 1768 (16); Two Volumes inOne. Philadelphia: Bell, 1770 (1); Philadelphia: Seddon, 1790(1); Philadelphia: Woodhouse, 1791; Norwich: Bushnell and Hub­bard, 1792 (1); First Worcester Edition. Worcester: Thomas, 1793(1); New York: For the Bookseller, 1795 (1); New York: Tieboutand O'Brien, for Smith and Reid, 1795 (43); New York: Reid,1796 (1)

------. The Sermons of Mr. Yorick. (1760) Two Volumes.Philadelphia: Humphreys, 1774 (1)

-- . The Whole Story of the Sorrows of Maria. SecondEdition. Boston, 1793 (1); Salem: Dabney, 1793

______. The Works of Laurence Sterne. (1769) In Five Vol­umes. Philadelphia: Humphreys, 1774 (1); In Six Volumes. Five·Volumes. Philadelphia: Humphreys, 1774 (1)

______. Yorick's Sentimental Journey. (1768) Philadelphia:Bell, 1771

SWIFT, JONATHAN (1667-1745). The Adventures of Captain Gulliver.(1726) Philadelphia: Young and M'Culloch, 1787 (31); Philadel­phia: Young, 1791; New York: Durell, 1793 (1); Boston: Hall,1794 (2); Philadelphia: Young, 1794 (32); Fairhaven, 1796

- . A Discourse of the Contests. (1701) Boston, 1728 (1)------. The Journal of a Gaming Lady of Quality. (1729) New

York: Parker and Weyman, 1758------. A Sermon on the Trinity. (1790) Portland: Titcomb,

1792 (17)______. Three Sermons. (1735) Williamsburg: Parks, 1747

(39)THOMSON, JAMES (1700-1748). The Seasons. (1730) 1764 (1); Phila­

delphia: Bell, 1777 (1); Philadelphia: Prichard and Hall, 1788(1); Philadelphia: Rice, 1788 (1); First American Edition. New­buryport: Mycall, 1790 (1); Philadelphia: Taylor for Campbell,1790 (1); Philadelphia: Woodhouse, 1791; Hartford: Babcock,1792; Newburyport, 1793; Philadelphia: Johnson, 1795 (1); Phila-

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254 Colby Library Quarterlydelphia: Woodward, 1797 (1); Wrentham, Massachusetts: Heaton,1800 (1)

______. Tancred and Sigismunda. (1745) Boston: Spotswood,1794

VANBRUGH, SIR JOHN (1664-1726). The Confederacy. A Comedy. (1705)Philadelphia, 1794

______. The Provoked Husband. (1728) Boston: D. West andJ. West, 1794 (1)

- . The Provoked Wife. (1697) New York: Gaine, 1761WALPOLE, GEORGE, THIRD EARL OF ORFORD (1730-1791). Rise, Cynthia,

Rise. A Favorite Sonnet. Written by the Earl of Orford. Composedby Mr. [James] Hook. Philadelphia: Carr, 1793 (22)

WATTS, ISAAC (1674-1748). The Beauties 0/ the Late Rev. Dr. IsaacWatts. Elizabethtown: Kollock, 1796 (1); Newburyport: Blunt forCarey, 1797 (1)

______. A Comprehensive Abridgement of Dr. Watts's LyricPoems. By Solomon Howe. Northampton, Massachusetts: Wright,1798 (1)

______. Directions for the Better Government. Boston, 1729______. A Discourse on the Way 0/ Instruction. Boston: Rogers

and Fowle, 1748 (1)______. Horae Lyricae. (1706, 1709) Philadelphia: Franklin,

1741; Ninth Edition. Boston: Rogers and Fowle and Blanchard,1748 (1); Tenth Edition. New York: Parker, 1750 (1); Boston:Fowle and Draper, 1762; Tenth Edition. New York: Gaine, 1762(1); Twelfth Edition. Boston: Kneeland for Leverett, 1772 (1);Twelfth Edition. Boston: D. Kneeland for Bowes, 1772 (1); Phila­delphia: Bell, 1777; Philadelphia: Aitken, 1781 (1); Boston: Hall,1790 (1); Boston: Hall for Larkin, 1790 (1); Tenth Edition, cor­rected. New York: Gaine, 1792; Philadelphia: Aitken, 1792 (1);Elizabethtown: Kollock, 1793 (1) Exeter: Ranlet, for Thomasand Andrews, 1795 (1); Windham, Connecticut: Byrne, 1798 (1)

- . The Improvement of the Mind. (1741) Exeter: Lamsonand Odiorne, for West, 1793 (1)

______. Logick. (1725) Sixteenth Edition. Philadelphia: Dob­son, 1789 (1); Second American Edition. Newburyport: Barrett,for Thomas and Andrews, 1796 (1)

______. Miscellaneous Thoughts in Prose and Verse. (1734)First American Edition. Elizabethtown: Kollock, 1796 (1)

______. Reliquiae Juveniles. Miscellaneous Thoughts in Proseand Verse. (1734) First American Edition. Portsmouth: Pierce forBlake, 1796 (1)

WESLEY, CHARLES (1707-1788). An Elegy on the Late Rev. GeorgeWhitefield. (1771) Philadelphia: Johnston and Justice, for Glen­dinning, 1792 (1)

______. An Epistle to the Reverend Mr. George Whitefield.(1755) Baltinlore: Adanls, 1790 (28); Philadelphia: Johnston andJustice, 1793 (1)

______. To the R,everend Mr. George Whitefield. A Poem.(1755) Boston, 1774 (5)

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Colby Library Quarterly 255WESLEY, JOHN (1703-1791). An Extract from the Rev. Mr. John

Wesley's Journals. Volume One. Philadelphia: Tuckniss for Dickins,1795 (1)

______. Primitive Physick. (1747) Twelfth Edition. Philadel-phia: Steuart, 1764 (26); Thirteenth Edition. New York, 1769;Fourteenth Edition. Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1770 (26); Philadel­phia: Crukshank, 1773; Philadelphia: Crukshank, 1788; SixteenthEdition. Trenton, 1788 (1); Philadelphia: Prichard and Hall, forDickins, 1789 (1); Twenty-Second Edition. Philadelphia: Hall forDickins, 1791 (1)

_""""-- . A Short Account of the Life and Death of JohnFletcher. (1786) New York: Durell, 1795 (1)

_____-. Thoughts upon Slavery. (1774) Philadelphia: Cruk-shank, 1774 (1); Philadelphia: Story, 1784; Philadelphia: Hall forDickins, 1792

________. The Works of the Rev. John Wesley. (1771-1774)Volume One. Philadelphia: Steiner, 1783 (1); Volume Three. Phila­delphia: Steiner, 1783 (23)

WEST, GILBERT (1703-1756). A Defense of the Christian Revelation.Boston: Rogers and Fowle, 1749

WILLIAMS, HELEN MARIA (1762-1827). Letters Containing a Sketch ofthe Politics of France. (1794) Philadelphia: For Carey, Young,Dobson, Rices, and Ormond, 1796 (1)

______. Letters Containing a Sketch of the Scenes WhichPassed in France. (1794) Philadelphia: Snowden and M'Corkle,1796 (1)

______. Letters from France. (1790) Volume Two. Boston:Thomas and Andrews, West and Larkin, 1792 (1); Four Volumesin Two. New York: Allen, 1793; Second American Edition. FourVolumes in Two. New York: Allen, 1794 (1)

- . Letters on the French Revolution. (1790) First Ameri-can Edition. Boston: Belknap and Young, 1791 (1)

-""""------. Memoirs of Mons. and Madame Du F. Boston, 1794(1)

. A Residence in France. Elizabethtown, New Jersey:Kollock for Davis, 1798 (1)

WOLCOT, JOHN, (1738-1819). Expostulary Odes. (1789) Philadelphia:Spotswood, 1789

---_--. Hair Powder: A Plaintive Epistle by Peter Pindar.(1795) New York: Smith, 1795 (1)

______. Instructions to a Celebrated Laureat. By Peter Pind'ar,Esq. (1787) The Eighth Edition. New York, 1788 (28)

------. The Lousiad. (1785) Philadelphia: Hunlphreys, 1786(1); Philadelphia: Spotswood, 1789 (1)

------. Peter Pindar's New Gypsy Song. Composed by ThomasWright. Philadelphia: Carr, 1793

------. Pindariana; or Peter's Portfolio. Philadelphia: Bache1794 (1) ,

------. The Poetical Works of Peter Pindar. (1788) Philadel­phia: Spotswood, 1789 (1); Newburyport: Mycall for Boyle, 1790

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256 Colby Library Quarterly(1); Volume Two. Philadelphia: Spotswood and Rice, 1790 (1);Volumes I-II. Philadelphia: Spotswood and Rice, 1792 (1); TwoVolumes. Philadelphia: Spotswood, 1794 (1); Two Volumes: Cin­cinnati: Freeman, 1797

______. Subjects for Painters. (1789) Philadelphia: Spotswood,1790(23)

____--. The Works of Peter Pindar. (1792) In Three Volumes.New York: Wayland, 1793 (17)

WOLLSTONECRAFT, MARY (1759-1797). An Historical and Moral Viewof the French Revolution. (1792) Volumes I-II. Philadelphia: Dob­son, 1795 (1)

______. Letters Written during a Short Residence in Sweden.(1796) Wilmington, Delaware: Wilson and Johnson, 1796 (1)

______. Maria: or, the Wrongs of Woman. (1788) Philadel-phia: Carey, 1799 (1)

______. A Vindicatlon of the Rights of Woman. (1792) Bos-ton: Edes, for Thomas and Andrews, 1792 (1); Philadelphia: Gib­bons, 1792 (1); Philadelphia: Printed for Matthew Carey, 1794(1)

YOUNG, EDWARD (1683-1765). The Complaint; or Night-Thoughts.(1750) Philadelphia: Bell, 1777 (1); Philadelphia: Prichard andHall, 1787 (1); Newburyport: Mycall, 1789 (1); Philadelphia:Taylor, 1791 (1); Philadelphia: Woodhouse, 1791; Philadelphia:Young, 1791 (1); New York: Tiebout for Bell, 1796 (1); NewYork: Tiebout for Reid, 1796 (1); Philadelphia: Woodward forStafford, 1798 (1); Philadelphia: H. and P. Rice, 1800

. Devout Thoughts of the Retired Penitent. Portsmouth:Pierce, 1795

______. The Last Day. (1713) Philadelphia: Dobson, 1786(28); Salenl: Cushing, 1790; Elizabethtown: Kollock for Davis,1797 (1)

. Nocte Cogitata. Charlestown, 1786 (1)______. A Poem on the Day of Jud~ment. (1713) New York:

Parker and Weyman and Noel, 1753______. A Poem on the Last Day. (1713) Sixth Edition. Bos­

ton: Fowle, 1753 (1); Boston: Hall, 1793 (1); Boston: Hall, 1795(1)

______. Resignation. (1761) In Two Parts. Philadelphia: Brad­ford, 1764 (1); Philadelphia : James, 1777 ( 19) ; Philadelphia:Story, 1786; Philadelphia: Johnson, 1791 (4); Worcester: Thomasfor Thonlas, 1795 (1); Worcester, Massachusetts: Thomas, 1799(1)

______. The Revenge: A Tragedy. (1721) New York: Gaine,1761; Boston: West and West, 1794 (1)

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Colby Library Quarterly 257KEY TO THE LOCATIONS OF COLLECTIONS

1. American Antiquarian Society (Worcester, Massachusetts)2. American Philosophical Society (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)3. Boston Athenaeum4. British Museum (London)5. Bostonian Society (Boston, Massachusetts)6. Brown Universiy (Providence, Rhode Island)7. Connecticut Historical Society (Hartford)8. Columbia University (New York)9. Case-Western Reserve Historical Society (Cleveland, Ohio)

10. D'Alte A. Welch (Cleveland, Ohio)11. Essex Institute (Salem, Massachusetts)12. Enoch Pratt Free Library (Baltimore, Maryland)13. Friends Library, Haverford College (Haverford, Pennsylvania)14. Garrett Biblical Institute (Evanston, Illinois)15. Grosvenor Library, Buffalo and Erie County Public Library (Buf-

falo, New York)16. Harvard University17. Henry E. Huntington Library (San Marino, California)18. Historical Society of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia)19. John Carter Brown Library (Providence, Rhode Island)20. Long Island Historical Society (Brooklyn, New York)21. Litchfield Historical Society (Litchfield, Connecticut)22. Library of Congress23. Library Company of Philadelphia24. Massachusetts Historical Society (Boston)25. Maine Historical Society (Portland)26. National Library of Medicine (Bethesda, Maryland)27. New York Historical Society (New York)28. New York Public Library (New York)29. New York State Library (Albany)30. Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association (Deerfield, Massachu-

setts)31. Free Library of Philadelphia32. Princeton University33. Pennsylvania State Library (Harrisburg)34. Rhode Island Historical Society (Providence)35. Schwenkfelder Library (Pennsburg, Pennsylvania)36. University of Chicago37. University of Michigan (Ann Arbor)38. University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia)39. Virginia Historical Society (Richmond)40. Virginia State Library (Richmond)41. Vermont Historical Society (Montpelier)42. University of Vermont (Burlington)43. William L. Clements Library (Ann Arbor, Michigan)44. Yale University

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