Volume 1
Dictionary of anonymous and pseudonymous English literature / Samuel Halkett and John Laing.
- Samuel Halkett
- Date:
- 1926-[1962]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Dictionary of anonymous and pseudonymous English literature / Samuel Halkett and John Laing. Source: Wellcome Collection.
42/508 (page 10)
![ACCOMPT (an) current betwixt Scot¬ land and England balanced : together with an essay of a scheme of the pro¬ duct of Scotland. . . . By J. S. [John Spreull], a lover of our Protestant Queen, country and trade. 4to. \Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1705 ACCOMPT (an) of all the proceedings of the Commissioners of both perswa- sions, appointed by his Sacred Majesty, according to letters patents, for the review of the Book of Common Prayer, etc. [By Richard Baxter.] 4to. [Orme’s Life of Baxter.] London, 1661 ACCOMPT (an) of Scotland’s grievances by reason of the D. of Lauderdales ministrie, humbly tenred to hiz Sacred Majesty. [By Sir James Stewart, of Goodtrees ?] Fcap 4to. N.P., N.D. [1672] ACCOUNT (an) and defence of the pro¬ testation made by the Lower-House of Convocation, 30th April 1707, in be¬ half of the Queen’s supremacy. To¬ gether with some reflections on An Account of the proceedings in Convoca¬ tion ; in a course of contumacy, lately published [by Charles Trimnell]. [By Francis Atterbury, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 45. [Arber’s Term Catalogues, iii., p. 681.] London, 1707 ACCOUNT (the) audited and dis¬ counted : or, a vindication of the threefold Diatribee, of 1. Superstition, 2. Will-worship, 3. Christmas festivall. Against Doctor Hammonds manifold Paradiatribees. By D. C. [Daniel Cawdrey], Preacher of the Word at Billing-Magn, in Northamptonshire. 8vo. Pp. 438. [Calamy’s Noncon. Mem., ed. by Palmer, iii., p. 28.] London, 1658 ACCOVNT (an) given to the Parliament by the ministers sent by them to Oxford ; in which you have the most remarkable passages which have fallen out in the six moneths service there ; divers questions concerning the cove¬ nant of grace, justification, etc., are briefly stated. Particularly, there is presented two conferences, in which the ministers, together with the truth, have suffered by reproaches and fals- hoods in print and otherwise. . . . [By Francis Cheynell.] Published by Authority. 4to. Pp. 55. [Bodl.] London, 1647 Author’s name in the Bodleian copy in the handwriting of Wood, and date changed to 1646. Mense Februarii. ACCOUNT (an), historical, political, and statistical, of the United Provinces of Rio de la Plata; with appendix concerning the usurpation of Monte Video. Translated from the Spanish [of Don Ygnacio Nunez]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary, xiii., 475.] London, 1825 ACCOUNT (the) of a Christmas spent at Old Court. By the author of May You Like It [Charles B. Tayler]. Fcap 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1830 ACCOUNT (an) of a conversation con¬ cerning a right regulation of govern¬ ments for the common good of man¬ kind : in a letter to the Marquiss of Montrose, the Earls of Rothes, Rox- burg, and Hadington, from London the 1 st of December, 1703. [By Andrew Fletcher, of Saltoun.] 8vo. Pp. 92. Edinburgh, 1704 There is another edition (London, 1704). Contained also in his Political Works (Glasgow, 1749, p. 259). ACCOUNT (an) of a late conference on the occurrences in America. [By Joshua Steele, planter in Barbadoes.] 8vo. London, 1766 Contemporary attestation of authorship. ACCOUNT (an) of a late rustication from Peterhouse, in the University of Cambridge. [By Robert Hoffer.] 8vo. Pp. 23. [Bowes’ Cat. of Camb. Books, p. 222.] London, 1776 ACCOUNT (an) of a new process in painting. . . . [By Miss-Cleaver.] 8vo. Pp. 174. London, 1821 Contemporary attestation. ACCOUNT (an) of a religious society in Norway, called Saints ; with a few letters written by some of them. Also, some interesting particulars relating to several prisoners on board a Danish ship, who were convinced of the principles of Friends, from the year 1812 to 1814. [By Frederick Smith.] i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books.] London, 1814 ACCOUNT of a Roman temple and other antiquities, near Graham’s Dike in Scotland. [By Rev. William Stukeley, M.D.] 4to. [Watt’s Bibliog. Brit.] [London], 1720. ACCOUNT (an) of a very infectious distemper prevailing in many places. Dumfries, August 21, 1769. [By Ebenezer Gilchrist, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. 26. \Brtt. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1770](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b31359681_0001_0042.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)