9,378 results filtered with: Early English books online
- Books
- Online
At Mr. Brett's, an apothecary, at the upper-end of Prescot-Street, in Goodmans-Fields, London, liveth a chirurgion, who infallibly cures all sorts of squint, or blear eyes : in a short time, without pain or danger, in either age of infancy, tho' of long continuance.
Brett, Mr.Date: [1700?]- Books
- Online
The great messenger of mortality; or, A dialogue betwixt death and a lady.
Date: [between 1660 and 1700]- Books
- Online
Pond, an almanack for the year of our Lord God 1675 : being the third after bissextile or leap-year and from the world's creation at the spring 5678 years compleat : amplified with many good things both for pleasure and profit and fitted for the meridian of Saffron-Walden in Essex ... and may serve indifferently for any other place of this kingdom.
Pond, Edward, -1629Date: 1675- Books
- Online
An approved medicine against the deserued plague.
Anderson, Anthony, -1593Date: 1593- Books
- Online
A charter granted to the apothecaries of London the 30th of May, 13 Jac. I : translated and printed for the better information of the said apothecaries in their duty to the city of London, the Colledg of Physicians and their own society.
England and Wales.Date: 1695- Books
- Online
Speculum uranicum, or, An almanack and prognostication for the year of our Lord God 1683 : being the third from the bissextile ... : wherein is contained the state of the year, the eclipses, lunations, conjunctions, and aspects of the planets, and meteorological observations, with the rising, southing, and setting of the sun, moon, and fixed stars throughout the whole year ... : calculated ... and referred to the ... city of London ... / by Thomas Fowle.
Fowle, ThomasDate: 1683- Books
- Online
Lillys strange and wonderful prognostication : being a relation of many universal accidents that will come to pass in this year, 1681, according to the significations of the celestial bodies, as well in this our English nation, as in parts beyond the seas : with a sober caution to all by speedy repentance to avert the judgments that are impendent.
Lilly, William, 1602-1681Date: 1681- Books
- Online
To the Kings Most Excellent Majesty: the humble petition of divers hundreds of the Kings poore subjects, afflicted with that grievous infirmitie, called the Kings evill : Of which by his Majesties absence they have no possibility of being cured, wanting all meanes to gaine accesse to his Majesty, by reason of His abode at Oxford.
Date: Febr. 20. Anno Dom. 1643- Books
- Online
Perkins : A new almanack, for the year of our Lord God, 1686. : Being the second after leap-year, and from the Worlds creation according to sacred writ, 5635 years. : Composed, and chiefly referred to the famous city of London; but (without sensible error) may serve for any other place in Great Britain. : Adorned with a compendious chronology of things worth remembrance, since the Creation to this present year; as also the weather, the sun & moons rising & setting, with the high-wayes, &c. and many other useful things, proper for such a work. The like not extant by any other, being of general use for all men. / Made and set forth by F. Perkins.
Perkins, F. (Francis)Date: 1686- Books
- Online
An almanack for the year of our Lord God 1675 : Being the third after bissextile, or leap-year. By M.F. Philomath.
M. F., active 19th centuryDate: [1675]- Books
- Online
A sermon preached at the funeral of ... Mr. Georg Ritschel, late minister of Hexham in Northumberland / by Mr. Major Algood ... ; with an elegie on his death.
Algood, Major, 1641-1696Date: 1684- Books
- Online
Bath memoirs: or, observations in three and forty years practice, at the Bath : what cures have been there wrought, (both by bathing and drinking these waters by God's blessing, on the directions of Robert Peirce, Dr. in physick, and Fellow of the College of Physicians in London, a constant inhabitant in Bath, from the year 1653. to this present year 1697.
Pierce, Robert, 1622-1710Date: 1697- Books
- Online
A good huswifes handmaide for the kitchin : Containing manie principall pointes of cookerie, aswell how to dresse meates, after sundrie the best fashions vsed in England and other countries, with their apt and proper sawces, both for flesh and fish, as also the orderly seruing of the same to the table. Hereunto are annexed, sundrie necessarie conceits for the preseruation of health. Verie meete to be adioned to the good huswifes closet of prouision for her houshold.
Date: 1594- Books
- Online
Currus triumphalis, è terebinthô, or, An account of the many admirable vertues of oleum terebinthinæ : more particularly, of the good effects produced by its application to recent wounds, especially with respect to the hemorrhagies of the veins, and arteries, and the no less pernicious weepings of the nerves, and lymphaducts : wherein also, the common methods, and medicaments, used to restrain hemorrhagies, are examined, and divers of them censured : and lastly, a new way of amputation, and a speedier convenient method of curing stumps, than that commonly practised, is with divers other useful matters recommended to the military chirurgeon, in two letters : the one to his most honoured, James Pearse, Esq, chirurgeon to His Royal Highness the Duke of York, and chirurgeon general to His Majestie's Navy Royal : the other, to Mr. Thomas Hobbs, chirurgeon in London / by James Yonge.
Yonge, James, 1647-1721Date: 1679- Books
- Online
The Protestant almanack for the year from [bracket] the incarnation of Jesus Christ, 1681. our deliverance from popery by Queen Eliz. 122 : Being the first after bissextile or leap-year. Wherein the bloody aspects, fatal oppositions, diabolical conjunctions, and pernicious revolutions of the papacy against the Lord Christ and the Lords anointed are described. With the change of the moon, the rising and setting of the sun, some observable fairs, and the eclipses; together with the moons place in the zodiac, throughout each month of the year. Calculated according to art, for the meridian of Babylon, where the Pope is elevated a hundred and fifty degrees above all reason, right, and religion; above kings, canons,[couneils] conscience, and every thing therein called God, 2 Thes. 2. And may without sensible error, indifferently serve the whole papacy. / By Philoprotest, a well-willer to the mathematicks.
Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698Date: 1681- Books
- Online
Andrewes, 1655 : The caelestial observator, or, An astrological description of those grand catastrophes and superlative actions designed by the heavens to be visible or manifested in the world in the year 1655 / by William Andrews.
Andrews, William, approximately 1635-1713Date: 1655- Books
- Online
Pigot 1661 : an almanack for the year of our Lord God, 1661 ... calculated for the meridian of ... Ludlow in Shropshire / by Francis Pigot.
Pigot, FrancisDate: 1661- Books
- Online
Two famous prophesies and predictions of Mr. William Lilly, the most judicious and learned astrologer of the age : taken from his secret writings, penned by him in 1644 : the former of which, exactly pointing at the times, by foretelling the mischief, danger and misery these, and other Protestant kingdoms, should be exposed to, by the crafty counsels and treacheries of the Romish priests, and by what means their deliverance should be wrought.
Lilly, William, 1602-1681Date: [1688?]- Books
- Online
Smith, 1652 : a new almanack and prognostication for the yeare of our Lord God, MDCLII ... in which is contained the daily motion of the planets ... with an astrological judgement of the eclipses and what effects may be expected from them in England, Scotland & Ireland ... calculated for the meridian of London / by John Smith.
Smith, JohnDate: 1652- Books
- Online
Olympia domata, or, An almanack and prognostication for the year of our Lord, 1662 : being the second after bissextile or leap-year, and from the creation of the world, 5611 : [wherein is conteined the state of the] whole year ... [calculated according to art, and referred] to the horizon of the ancient and renowned borough-town of Stamford ... fitting all the middle counties of England, and without sensible errour the whole nation / by Vincent Wing.
Wing, Vincent, 1619-1668Date: 1662- Books
- Online
By the King : a proclamation for the adiournament [sic] of part of Michaelmas tearme.
England and Wales. Sovereign (1625-1649 : Charles I)Date: 1625- Books
- Online
A briefe discouery of the damages that happen to this realme by disordered and vnlawfull diet : The benefites and commodities that otherwise might ensue. With a perswasion of the people, for a better maintenance to the nauie. Briefly compiled, by Edward Ieninges.
Jeninges, EdwardDate: 1593- Books
- Online
The English physitian enlarged : with three hundred, sixty and nine medicines made of English herbs that were not in any impression until this : being an astrologo-phisical discourse of the vulgar herbs of this nation, containing a compleat method of physick, whereby a man may preserve his body in health, or cure himself, being sick, for three pence charge, with such things only as grow in England, they being most fit for English bodies.
Culpeper, Nicholas, 1616-1654Date: 1683- Books
- Online
The Colledge of Physicians vindicated, and the true state of physick in his nation faithfully represented : in answer to a scandalous pamphlet, entituled, The corner stone, &c. / by Charles Goodall.
Goodall, Charles, 1642-1712Date: 1676- Books
- Online
Natures picture drawn by fancies pencil to the life : being several feigned stories, comical, tragical, tragi-comical, poetical, romanicical, philosophical, historical, and moral : some in verse, some in prose, some mixt, and some by dialogues / written by ... the Duchess of Newcastle.
Newcastle, Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of, 1624?-1674Date: 1671