W. Wilkins
Active Years
Min year: 1714, Max year: 1791, Max count: 41
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Publisher
As Printer
- 1714: A sermon preach'd before the Honourable House of Commons
- 1714: A funeral-Sermon preach'd at Hackney, July 11. 1714. on occasion of the much lamented death of the Reverend Mr. Matthew Henry, late minister of the gospel there. By W. Tong
- 1714: A sermon preach'd before the Honourable House of Commons
- 1714: A funeral-Sermon preach'd at Hackney
- 1714: A funeral-Sermon preach'd at Hackney
- 1714: A funeral-sermon preach'd at Hackney, July 11. 1714. on occasion of the much lamented death of the Reverend Mr. Matthew Henry, late minister of the gospel there. By W. Tong
- 1714: A sermon preach'd at the coronation of King George
- 1714: A sermon preach'd before His Excellency the Lord Lieutenant
- 1714: A sermon preach'
- 1714: A poem on the arrival of the King. Address'd to His Majesty
- 1715: The necessity of impeaching the late ministry
- 1715: The happy crisis
- 1715: The necessity of impeaching the late ministry
- 1715: The necessity of impeaching the late ministry
- 1715: Reasons for laying some restraint on the licentiousness of the pulpit. With a few short reflections on the present state of affairs. In a letter to a member of parliament
- 1715: The necessity of impeaching the late ministry
- 1715: The necessity of impeaching the late ministry
- 1715: The necessity of impeaching the late ministry
- 1716: The cries of the poor prisoners
- 1716: A vindication of the late governor and council of Jamaica
- 1717: Poems and translations
- 1717: The leek. A poem on St David's day
- 1717: The Sultaness: A tragedy. As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane, By His Majesty's servants. By Mr. Johnson
- 1717: An answer to the representation
- 1717: The sultaness
- 1718: A survey of trade
- 1718: A third defense; containing I. A reply to Dr. Snape's and Mr. Mills's new calumnies, in their late book. II. A faithful account of Mr. Rouire's whole conduct; and a Demonstration of the Falsity of his Oath, and other present Declarations; supported by large Extracts out of his own Letters, and by his Ample Testimony to the Truth, written in French by himself, with a Design of publishing it. III. A postscript, in answer to Mr. Armand Dubourdieu's calumnies, cast upon Mr. Pillonniere in his late Book, call'd An Appeal to the English Nation, &c. With a Short Answer to Mr. Rouire's last Reply. By Francis De La Pillonniere. To which are prefix'd, some few remarks upon Dr. Snape's letter before Mr. Mills's book, &c. By the Lord Bishop of Bangor
- 1718: A reply to Dr. Snape's vindication
- 1718: The whole book of Psalms, collected into English metre
- 1718: An answer to the representation
- 1718: A collection of poems on various subjects
- 1718: The leek. A poem on St. David's day
- 1718: An answer to a calumny cast upon the Bishop of Bangor
- 1718: The necessity of believing a future state
- 1719: A sermon preach'd at the funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth Howland
- 1719: Popery against Christianity
- 1719: The scripture-Doctrine of the Trinity
- 1719: The common rights of subjects, defended
- 1719: A letter of thanks from a young clergyman
- 1719: The Prince of Carency
- 1720: An answer to the Reverend Dr. Hare's sermon
- 1720: Peace and loyalty
- 1720: A letter of thanks from a young clergyman
- 1721: The duty of preachers explained and stated
- 1723: The conspiracy
- 1723: The grounds and rule both of interpreting and of trying the interpretations of extraordinary events prescrib'd and establish'd, and particularly applied to a series of such events brought to pass in behalf of the People of these Kingdoms from the Reformation to the Present Time
- 1723: An ode humbly inscribed to the King
- 1725: The nature of truth defin'd, and its definition apply'd to the Holy Scriptures
- 1726: A history of the voyages and travels of Capt. Nathaniel Uring
- 1726: An ode to the Honourable Major-General Wade, on occasion of his disarming the Highlands
- 1726: A discourse of the laws relating to pirates and piracies, and the marine affairs of Great Britain
- 1726: The independent Whig
- 1726: A history of the voyages and travels of Capt. Nathaniel Uring
- 1728: The independent Whig
- 1728: An answer to a calumny
- 1731: A dialogue on beauty
- 1731: A new adventure of Telemachus
- 1732: The history of the antient societies of St. Michael's house and king's hall
- 1733: The report of the committee appointed to inspect and examine the several accompts of the South-Sea Company, laid before the general court of the said company the 16th of June, 1732; And added to The Special Committee for Law-Suits, for the Prosecution of Mr. James Dolliffe, and Captain William Cleland. Made to a General Court held the 9th of May, 1733
- 1734: A dialogue in the manner of plato, on the superiority of the pleasures of the understanding to the pleasures of the senses
- 1735: An enquiry into the morals of the ancients
- 1735: Epistles of Horace imitated
- 1791: Specimen for subscribers
As Bookseller
Sun Oct 01 23:54:29 CDT 2023