Call Number (LC) Title Results
PR3538 .W48 1948 Philosophic words, a study of style and meaning in the Rambler and Dictionary of Samuel Johnson. 1
PR3538 .W48 1968 Philosophic words : a study of style and meaning in the Rambler and Dictionary of Samuel Johnson / 1
PR3538 .W5 1941 The prose style of Samuel Johnson. 1
PR3538 .W5 1963 The prose style of Samuel Johnson / 1
PR3538 .W5 1972 The prose style of Samuel Johnson / 1
PR3539 Poems by Mrs. Anne Killigrew, 1686 Women Writers Project first electronic edition / 1
PR3539.J22 A19 1980 The plays of Samuel Johnson of Cheshire / 1
PR3539.J25 C5 Chrysal; or, The adventures of a guinea / 1
PR3539.J25 C5 1760 Chrysal, or, The Adventures of a guinea / 1
PR3539.J25 H5 1974 The history of Arsaces. 1
PR3539.J25 P5 1974 The pilgrim. 1
PR3539.J25 R4 1763 The reverie, or, A flight to the paradise of fools / 1
PR3539.J25 R4 1763a The reverie. 1
PR3539.J29 P37 1660 The patient royal traveller, or, The wonderful escapes of His Sacred Majesty King Charles the Second from Worcester-Fight and his making a hollow oke his royall pallace ... : to the tune of Chivy Chase, or, God prosper long our noble king / 1
PR3539.J3 E1 1691 Ecclesia reviviscens, a poem, or, A short account of the rise, progress and present state of the new reformation 1
PR3539 .J35 1668 Money is an asse a comedy, as it hath been acted with good applause / 2
PR3539.J35 L68 1646 Love's dialect, or, Poeticall varieties dignified into a miscelanie of various fancies / 1
PR3539.J6 S63 1660 A speech spoken to His Excellency the Lord General Monck at Skinners-Hall on Wednesday, being the 4th. of April 1660 : at which time he was nobly entertained by that honourable company / 2
PR3539.J6 S63 1660a A speech spoken to His Excellency the Lord General Monck. At Skinners-Hall on Wednesday, being the 4th. of April 1660. At which time he was nobly entertained by that honourable company. 1
PR3539.J64 N49 A new love-song, and a true love-song made of a young man and a maiden fair, whose dwelling now is in Northamptonshire, as they one evening late abroad was walking, a young man lay unseen, and heard them talking : to make their complements to seem more sweeter, their words and actions he compos'd in metre : 'twas well they honest prov'd in verity, because Tom-tell-truth chanc'd to be so nigh : to the tune of, Collin and Amarillis. 1