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        Displaying 4,891 digitized works
    
  1. 751

    A dissertation on the rise, union, and power, the progressions, separations, and corruptions, of poetry and music. To which is prefixed, The cure of saul. A sacred ode. Written by Dr. Brown

  2. 752

    A dissertation upon the epistles of Phalariswith an answer to the objections of the Hon. Charles Boyle. By Richard Bentley, D. D. Chaplain in Ordinary and Library-Keeper to His Majesty. To which are added, Dr. Bentley's Dissertation on the epistles of Themistocles, Socrates, Euripides, and others; and the fables of Æsop; as originally printed: With Occasional Remarks on the Whole.

  3. 753

    A DISSERTATION, &c.The galaxy. Consisting of a variety of sacred and other poetry. The whole original and new. By W. Belcher, and others

  4. 754

    Dissertations :English drama.

  5. 755

    Dissertations grammatical and philological. By Peter Walkden Fogg. (N.B. These Dissertations are contained in the second volume of Elementa Anglicana; but are thus printed separately to accommodate such as may wish to peruse them without the rest of the work; particularly to serve as lessons for pupils, to whose hands the Key cannot with propriety be committed.)

  6. 756

    Dissertations moral and critical.In two volumes. On memory and imagination. ... Illustrations on sublimity. By James Beattie, ...

  7. 757

    Dissertations moral and critical.On memory and imagination. On dreaming. The theory of language. On fable and romance. On the attachments of kindred. Illustrations on sublimity. By James Beattie, LL. D. Professor of Moral Philosophy and Logick in the Marischal College and University of Aberdeen; and Member of the Zealand Society of Arts and Sciences.

  8. 758

    Dissertations on the English languagewith notes, historical and critical, to which is added, by way of appendix, an essay on a reformed mode of spelling, with Dr. Franklin's arguments on that subject. By Noah Webster, Jun. Esquire. [Two lines in Latin from Tacitus].

  9. 759

    Dissertations on the rhetoric, prosody, and rhyme of the Persians.

  10. 760

    The Distinctive Character of Enjambement in Homeric VerseTransactions and proceedings of the American Philological Association

  11. 761

    Doctor Syntax's three tours :in search of the picturesque, consolation, and a wife

  12. 762

    The Doctrine of the Caesura, a Philological GhostAmerican journal of philology.

  13. 763

    Dr. Bentley's Dissertations on the epistles of Phalaris,and the fables of Æsop, examin'd: by the Honourable Charles Boyle, Esq;.

  14. 764

    Dr. Blair's Lectures on rhetoric.

  15. 765

    Dr. Guest and Dr. Abbott on English MetreTransactions of the Philological Society

  16. 766

    Dr. Guest on RhythmSaturday review of politics, literature, science and art.

  17. 767

    Dr. Patterson on RhythmPoetry.

  18. 768

    Dr. R. Grey's Memoria technica;or, Method of artificial memory, applied to and exemplified in chronology, history, geography, astronomy. Also, Jewish, Grecian, and Roman coins, weights, measures, &c. To which are subjoined, Lowe's Mnemonics deliniated, in various branches of literature and science.

  19. 769

    The dramatic censoror, critical companion.

  20. 770

    The dramatic element in the popular ballad.

  21. 771

    Dramatic essays,

  22. 772

    Dramatic micellanies [sic]: consisting of critical observations on several plays of Shakspeare: with a review of his principal characters, and those of various eminent writers, as represented by Mr. Garrick, and other celebrated comedians. ... By Thomas Davies, ... In three volumes. ...

  23. 773

    Dramatic micellanies [sic]: consisting of critical observations on several plays of Shakspeare: with a review of his principal characters, and those of various eminent writers, as represented by Mr. Garrick, and other celebrated comedians. ... By Thomas Davies, ... In three volumes. ...

  24. 774

    The dramatick works of John Dryden, Esq; in six volumes

  25. 775

    A drill book for practice of the principles of vocal physiology, and acquiring the art of elocution and oratory

  26. 776

    Drill book in vocal culture and gesture

  27. 777

    Dryden's heroic plays,a study of the origins,

  28. 778

    The Dublin book of Irish verse,1728-1909,

  29. 779

    Dufief's Nature dispayed in her mode of teaching language to man :being a new and infallible method of acquiring languages with unparalled rapidity

  30. 780

    Dufief's Nature displayed in her mode of teaching language to man:being A new and infallible method of acquiring a languages. Adapted to the Spanish.

  31. 781

    The dunciad,variorum. With the prolegomena of Scriblerus.

  32. 782

    The dunciad. An heroic poem. In three books

  33. 783

    Ear and voice training by means of elementary sounds of language.

  34. 784

    The Earliest Forms of Hebrew VerseThe Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society.

  35. 785

    The earliest Swedish works on English pronunciation (before 1750)

  36. 786

    The earls of Derby and the verse writers and poets of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries

  37. 787

    Early Latin ProsodyHarvard studies in classical philology

  38. 788

    Early Latin verse.

  39. 789

    Early reviews of English poets,

  40. 790

    The early romantic drama at the English court ...

  41. 791

    Early Tudor poetry, 1485-1547.

  42. 792

    Early-English Alliterative Poetry: (A.D. 1150 to A.D. 1550)Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United Kingdom.

  43. 793

    An easy English grammarin four parts; being a complete course of etymology, syntax, and analysis, with four hundred exercises,

  44. 794

    An easy English grammar: for the use of schools.In three parts. I. A short and plain explanation of all the parts of speech, and their agreement and government reduced to grammatical rules; the whole illustrated with notes, and parsing examples in which every word is resolved at length. II. Additional remarks and observations on the several particulars of the first part; with rules of competition, or the proper arrangement of words in sentence. III. Exercises of bad English in two parts. The first suited to the particular parts of speech, and the rules of construction.- The second contains a large collection of premiscuous exercises in prose and verse. By a Murray, school master.

  45. 795

    Easy exercises in composition :designed for the use of beginners

  46. 796

    Easy instructions for the general education of children and youth :for usefulness, honor and happiness, in the home school or common school : including all that is requisite for primary books in reading, spelling, English grammar, good manners ... in which is found an American plan for reforming thoroughly the writing & printing of our language, for common use ...

  47. 797

    The easy instructoror, the only method to make the orthography and pronunciation of the English language easy: wherein the general rules of English orthography, &c. are exemplified: By which the qualified and diligent Teacher may in a very short time prepare youth to read an english Author, with propriety and elegance. For the Use of Schools. By John Moscrip, One of the Teachers of the free English Reading School, Berwick-Upon-Tweed.

  48. 798

    An easy introduction of grammar in English. for the understanding of the Latin tongue Compil'd not only for the Ease and Encouragement of Youth, but also for their Moral Improvement; having the Syntaxis Examples gather'd from the Choicest Pieces of the best Authors. To which is added a compendious method of variation, and elegant disposition of Latin. The prosody is in English verse. By Thomas Sheridan, M.A

  49. 799

    An easy introduction to general Knowledge and liberal education; by Mrs. Taylor: for the use of the young ladies, at Strangeways Hall, Manchester

  50. 800

    An easy introduction to the arts and sciencesbeing a short, but comprehensive system of useful and polite learning. Divided into lessons. Illustrated with cuts, and adapted to the use of schools and academies. By R. Turner, jun. LL.D. Late of Magdalen Hall, Oxford: author of an easy introduction to Geography, &c.

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