Lawton Gilliver
Active Years
Min year: 1728, Max year: 1747, Max count: 32
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Author
As Publisher
- 1728: Prologue, and epilogue, to The orphan
- 1729: The art of politicks
- 1729: The art of politicks
- 1729: The art of politicks, in imitation of horace's art of poetry
- 1729: A short tract on the subject of immediate dependence upon God in all things
- 1729: An essay on the method of acquiring knowledge in physick. By William Grĉme, M.D
- 1729: Thirty nine sermons on several occasions
- 1729: The dunciad
- 1729: The art of politicks, in imitation of horace's art of poetry
- 1729: The art of politicks
- 1729: The dunciad
- 1729: True Christianity: from the first speaking of children, until they come to the Holy Communion. I. Lessons and Prayers fitted to the Understanding of Little Children. II. The Plain Substance of the Church Catechism, and Prayers, for Children, and the Weakest of Riper Years. III. An Exposition of the Church Catechism, made plain to vulgar Capacities; and Prayers taken out of the Common Prayer, and Explain'd. IV. A plain Exposition of the Orders of Confirmation and the Holy Communion. Also a discourse of confirmation, shewing the divine institution of it, and the Honour due to it. By Thomas Colbatch, a Presbyter of the Church of England.
- 1729: The Dunciad
- 1729: The beau in his counting-room
- 1729: The dunciad
- 1730: An essay on satire, particularly on the Dunciad. By Mr. Walter Harte ... To which is added, A discourse on satires, arraigning persons by name. By Monsieur Boileau
- 1730: Of preaching, hearing, and practising, the word of God
- 1730: Blasphemy as old as the creation
- 1731: The art of politicks
- 1732: A proposal for the improvement of surgery
- 1733: The man of taste
- 1733: The man of taste. Occasion'd by an epistle of Mr. Pope's on that subject. By the Author of the Art of politicks
- 1733: Advice to a lady
- 1733: The man of taste
- 1733: Of verbal criticism
- 1733: The man of taste
- 1733: Observations on the life of Cicero
- 1733: The resurrection of the same body, as asserted and illustrated by St. Paul
- 1733: The man of taste
- 1733: The man of taste
- 1734: An essay on man, being the first book of ethic epistles. To Henry St. John, L. Bolingbroke
- 1734: Thoughts upon the four last things
- 1734: The second satire of the second book of Horace praprhased [sic]
- 1734: An essay on man
- 1734: An essay on man
- 1734: An essay on man
- 1735: The toy-shop. A dramatick satire. By Robert Dodsley
- 1735: The toy-Shop
- 1735: An essay on reason
- 1735: An essay on reason
- 1735: The dunciad
- 1735: Ethic epistles
- 1735: The toy-Shop
- 1735: Of the characters of women
- 1735: An epistle from Mr. Pope, to Dr. Arbuthnot
- 1735: The dunciad
- 1735: An essay on reason
- 1735: The toy-Shop
- 1735: The toy-Shop
- 1735: An epistle from Mr. Pope
- 1735: The foreign address
- 1735: The toy-Shop
- 1736: An essay on reason
- 1739: The nature
- 1740: The true spirit of the Methodists, and their allies, (whether other enthusiasts, papists, deists, Quakers, or atheists) fully laid open
- 1740: The ruins of Rome. A poem
- 1741: Observations on the life of Cicero
- 1747: Dr. Houstoun's memoirs of his own life-time
Tue Dec 05 16:59:12 CST 2023