M. Smith
Active Years
Min year: 1692, Max year: 1790, Max count: 29
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Author
As Publisher
- 1715: Notes and memorandums of the six days, preceeding the death of a late Right Reverend --------. Containing many remarkable passages, with an Inscription design'd for his Monument
- 1715: Notes and memorandums of the six days, preceeding the death of a late Right Reverend --------. Containing many remarkable passages, with an Inscription design'd for his Monument
- 1717: A letter to the Bishop of Ely, upon the occasion of his suppos'd late charge (said to be deliver'd at Cambridge, August 7th, 1716.) as far as relates to what is therein urg'd against frequent communion; and for the (pretended) Episcopal reform'd churches of Transylvania, Great Poland, and Prussia. By Philalethes.
- 1717: A letter to the Bishop of Ely, upon the occasion of his suppos'd late charge (said to be deliver'd at Cambridge, August 7th, 1716.) as far as relates to what is therein urg'd against frequent communion; and for the (pretended) Episcopal Reform'd Churches to Transylvania, Great Poland, and Prussia. By Philalethes
- 1719: The Scotch Presbyterian eloquence
- 1719: The Scotch Presbyterian eloquence
- 1720: The characters and conduct of Sir John Edgar
- 1720: The characters and conduct of Sir John Edgar
- 1720: The characters and conduct of Sir John Edgar
- 1721: An answer to Aristobulus's two letters to Dr. Bennet: or, a vindication of the orthodox and learned clergy of the Church of England, from those scurrilous and scandalous reflections he has cast on them. By a country curate.
- 1722: A legacy to the Church of England
- 1723: The credibility of mysteries
- 1723: Private devotions at the Holy Communion, adapted to the publick office in the liturgy
- 1724: The session of musicians
- 1728: The knight
- 1728: The knight
- 1733: The right of British subjects, to petition and apply to their representatives, asserted and vindicated
- 1733: Reasons against subjecting any other traders of Great Britain to the laws of excise, or excising any other commodities, either of the product or manufacture of this kingdom or any other country, than what are already subject to the present laws
- 1755: Histories, or Tales of passed times. With morals. Written in French by Mr. Perrault, and Englished by R.S. gent
- 1756: The book of lamentations
- 1777: The old serpent's reply to the electrical eel
- 1778: A sapphick epistle
- 1778: An epistle from Mademoiselle D'Eon
- 1780: A lecture on the generation
- 1782: Memoirs of Sir Finical Whimsy and his lady
- 1785: Birth-Day conversation, anticipated
- 1786: The trial between William Fawkener, Esq; (clerk of the Privy-Council) plaintiff, and the Honourable John Townshend, (son of Lord Viscount Townshend) defendant; for criminal conversation with the plaintiff's wife, (late Miss Poyntz;) Before the Honourable Francis Buller, Esq; one of the Judges of His Majesty's Court of King's Bench, in Westminster-Hall, On Wednesday the 12th of July, 1786. with some interesting particulars relative to the duel between the plaintiff and defendant
- 1788: The Festival of wit. or The small talker. Selected by G-K- summer resident at Windsor
- 1789: The royal error
- 1790: Two actions for criminal conversation, with the whole of the evidence; both tried before the Right Hon. Lord Kenyon, In the court of King's-Bench, Westminster-Hall, On Wednesday, June 26, 1790: the first between Henry Cecil, Esq. Member of Parliament, and Presumptive Heir to the Earl of Exeter, plaintiff, and the rev. William Sneyd, defendant, for cohabiting with Mrs. Cecil, In which the Jury gave one thousand pounds damages. The second between Hooker Barttelot, esq. plaintiff, and Samuel Hawker, esq. defendant, for cohabiting with Mrs. Barttelot, In which the jury gave seven hundred pounds damages. Both these interesting Trials were taken in Short-Hand, by a Student of the Inner Temple
As Printer
As Bookseller
- 1719: The Scotch Presbyterian eloquence
- 1733: Excise anatomiz'd
- 1778: A sapphick epistle
- 1780: A lecture on the generation
- 1790: Two actions for criminal conversation, with the whole of the evidence; both tried before the Right Hon. Lord Kenyon, In the court of King's-Bench, Westminster-Hall, On Wednesday, June 26, 1790: the first between Henry Cecil, Esq. Member of Parliament, and Presumptive Heir to the Earl of Exeter, plaintiff, and the rev. William Sneyd, defendant, for cohabiting with Mrs. Cecil, In which the Jury gave one thousand pounds damages. The second between Hooker Barttelot, esq. plaintiff, and Samuel Hawker, esq. defendant, for cohabiting with Mrs. Barttelot, In which the jury gave seven hundred pounds damages. Both these interesting Trials were taken in Short-Hand, by a Student of the Inner Temple
Mon Oct 02 21:04:54 CDT 2023