Popular literature -- Great Britain -- History and criticismSee also what's at your library, or elsewhere.
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Filed under: Popular literature -- Great Britain -- History and criticism Licensing Entertainment: The Elevation of Novel Reading in Britain, 1684-1750 (Berkeley: University of California Press, c1998), by William Beatty Warner (frame-dependent HTML with commentary at UC Press) Home Economics: Domestic Fraud in Victorian England (Columbus, OH: Ohio State University Press, c2008), by Rebecca Stern (PDF at Ohio State) Dickens, Reade, and Collins, Sensation Novelists: A Study in the Conditions and Theories of Novel Writing in Victorian England (New York: Columbia University Press, 1919), by Walter Clarke Phillips
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Filed under: Popular literature -- Great Britain -- PeriodicalsFiled under: Street literature -- Great Britain
Filed under: Almanacs -- Great Britain
Filed under: Almanacs -- Great Britain -- 17th century The Protestant almanack : for the year from the incarnation of Jesus Christ, 1680, [from] our deliverance from popery by Queen Eliz. 121, being the bissextile or leap-year : wherein the bloody aspects, fatal oppositions, and pernicious conjunctions 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; to which is now added 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 two degrees above all reason, right, and religion; above kings, canons, councils, conscience, and every thing therein called God, 2 Thes. 2. : and may without sensible error, indifferently serve the whole papacy (Printed for the Company of Stationers, 1680), by William Winstanley (page images at HathiTrust) Bowker, 1680 : an almanack for the year of our Lord God, 1680, being bissextile or leap-year : containing the motions of the sun, moon, planets, and fixed stars, the aspects of the planets and inclination of the air : the time of high-water at London Bridge every day in the year: and also in 55 other ports and havens about England : with a brief chronology in a new mode; and divers other necessary things pertinent to the compleating of a diary or day-book, suitable to all mens occasions : hereunto is added a continuation of the brief view of astronomy, and the refutation of the Copernican opinion concerning the earths motion : calculated properly for the meridian of London, and may generally serve the two famous islands of Great Britain and Ireland (Printed by Tho. James for the Company of Stationers, 1680), by James Bowker (page images at HathiTrust) Calendarium astrologicum, or, An almanac for the year of our Lord God 1680 : it being the bissextile, or leap-year : wherein is briefly comprehended, the general state of the year, with the sign each day therein; eclipses, full sea, terms and their returns, sun rising, &c. : also rules for physic and husbandry, with sundry other useful observations : unto which is added, a description of the most eminent roads in England from town to town, and the certain time of any mart or fair, happening in any of them. (Printed at London, by A. Godbid and J. Playford, for the Company of Stationers, 1680), by Thomas Trigge (page images at HathiTrust) Ephēmeris, or, A diary, astronomical, and astrological, for the year of our Lord, 1680 : it being bissextile, or leap-year : with praedictions and experiments sydereal (Printed by J[ohn]. D[arby]. for the Company of Stationers, 1680), by John Gadbury (page images at HathiTrust) Angelus Britannicus : an ephemeris for the year of our redemption 1680, being the bissextile or leap-year, and from the creation of the world, 5629 : amplified with astrological observations from the sun's ingress into Aries, and the other cardinal points; ... calculated for the meridian of London, where the pole artick is elevated above the horizon 51. degr. 32 min. but may indifferently serve for England, Scotland, and Ireland (Printed by E. Horton, for the Company of Stationers, 1680), by John Tanner (page images at HathiTrust) Nuncius cœlestis, or, The starry messenger for the year of our redemption 1680 : and from the creation, according to sacred writ 5629, being the bissextile or leap-year : wherein is contained, (1) astronomical and meteorological observations, (2) astrological predictions of the state of the year, deduced according to art, from the solar ingresses, eclipses, various configurations, aspects and conjunctions of the planets, (3) the rising and setting of the sun and moon: also her southing : together with many useful rules and tables pertinent for such a work : accomodated to the meridian of London, which lies in the latitude of 51 deg. 32 min. north, but may indifferently serve (without sensible errour) for any other part of Great Britain (Printed by G. Grover for the Company of Stationers, 1680), by Henry Coley (page images at HathiTrust) News from the stars, or, An ephemeris for the year 1680 : with astrological judgments upon the several eclipses, positions, and configurations of heaven happening therein : being the bissextile, or leap-year: and from the creation of the world, 5629 years : wherein you have a perfect and brief account of the most material matters and things intended by the heavens to be manifested in the world in the same year (Printed by N. Thompson for the Company of Stationers, 1680), by William Andrews (page images at HathiTrust) 1680. A yea and nay almanack for the people call'd by the men of the world Quakers : containing many needfull and necessary observationsfrom the first day of the first month, till the last day of the twelfth month : being the bissextile or leaping year : calculated properly for the meridian of the Bull and Mouth within Aldersgate, and may indifferently serve for any other meeting-house what or wheresoever. (Printed for the Company of Stationers, 1680), by William Winstanley (page images at HathiTrust) Ekklēsialogia, being, An almanack for the year of our Blessed Saviour's incarnation, 1680 : and from the creation of the world, according to Holy Writ, and the best of ecclesiastical history, 5629, it being bissextile, or leap-year : introductively proving (from Origanus) the age of the world by scripture, with a continuation of the church history, &c. to the year of Christ 700 : as also the rising and setting of the sun, monthly observations, with a general judgement on the year, from the quarterly ingress, with two nativities of two children born of one mother, and both died of convulsion fits : with other things : calculated and referred to the meridian of London (Printed by J[ohn]. D[arby]. for the Company of Stationers, 1680), by John Partridge (page images at HathiTrust) Merlini anglici ephemeris, or, Astrological judgments for the year 1680 (Printed by J. Macock for the Company of the Stationers, 1680), by William Lilly (page images at HathiTrust) Prognostication for the year of our Lord God 1680 (Printed for the Company of Stationers, 1680), by William Winstanley (page images at HathiTrust) Filed under: Almanacs -- Great Britain -- KendalFiled under: Almanacs -- Great Britain -- WestmorelandFiled under: Almanacs, English -- Great Britain The mining manual and almanack for 1851 : being a yearly compendium of information on general science, with tabular and other statistical details relating to mining interests (Simpkin, Marshall and Co., 1851), by Henry English (page images at HathiTrust) Morton's annual compendium to the almanacks, for 1853. (J. Morton, 1852) (page images at HathiTrust) The People's almanack for the year of our Lord 1835, being the third after bissextiel or leap year. (J. Cleave, 1834) (page images at HathiTrust) The court and city register, for the year 1765 : containing, I. New and correct lists of both houses of parliament ; II. The court register ; III. Lists of the army, navy, and all public offices, hospitals, &c. (For John Rivington, J. Jolliffe, J. Hinton, L. Hawes, W. Clark & R. Collins, R. Baldwin & M. Richardson, G. Hawkins & E. Reeves, P. Stevens & T. Calson, C. Rivington, E. & C. Dilly, J. Robson, J. Walter ;, 1765) (page images at HathiTrust)
Filed under: Almanacs, English -- Great Britain -- 19th centuryFiled under: Almanacs, English -- England
Filed under: Almanacs, English -- England -- 18th centuryFiled under: Almanacs, English -- England -- London England Day by Day: A Guide to Efficiency, and Prophetic Calendar for 1904 (London: Methuen, 1903), by E. V. Lucas and Charles L. Graves, illust. by George Morrow The Comic Almanack, Volume 2: An Ephemeris in Jest and Earnest, Containing Merry Tales, Humerous Poetry, Quips, and Oddities, by William Makepeace Thackeray, Gilbert Abbott À Beckett, Henry Mayhew, Horace Mayhew, and Albert Smith, illust. by George Cruikshank (Gutenberg ebook) The Comic Almanack, Volume 1: An Ephemeris in Jest and Earnest, Containing Merry Tales, Humerous Poetry, Quips, and Oddities, by William Makepeace Thackeray, Gilbert Abbott À Beckett, Henry Mayhew, Horace Mayhew, and Albert Smith, illust. by George Cruikshank (Gutenberg ebook) Filed under: Almanacs, English -- Scotland
Filed under: Almanacs, English -- Scotland -- 17th century A new prognostication, for the year of our redemption, 1678, being the second after bissextile, or leap year. Most curiously and artificially calculated, for all north-Brittain, but more especially (and even according to every typographer's very bound duty) for the latitude and meridian of our most famous city of Bon-Accord. Which stands upon a pleasant lone, whose gallant dykes, are Dee and Done. / by A. R. A.M. an expert mathematician. (Printed in Aberdeen : by John Forbes, printer to the town and colledges, 1678), by mathematician A. R. (HTML at EEBO TCP) Filed under: Almanacs -- England
Filed under: Almanacs -- England -- 18th centuryFiled under: Almanacs -- England -- 19th century The Royal Crystal Palace almanack for 1857. (Arthur Hall, Virtue, & Co., 1857), by Virtue Hall (page images at HathiTrust) County remembrancer, for the year 1812 (Lewes : Sussex Press : Printed and published by J. Baxter, [1811], 1811), by Catherine Wood, Sussex Press, and John Baxter (Firm) (page images at HathiTrust) Filed under: Almanacs -- England -- Early works to 1800Filed under: Almanacs -- ScotlandFiled under: Broadsides -- Great Britain
Filed under: Broadsides -- Great Britain -- 17th centuryFiled under: Chapbooks -- Great BritainFiled under: Popular literature -- EnglandFiled under: Popular literature -- Scotland The Collected Writings of Dougal Graham, "Skellat" Bellman of Glasgow, Vol. 2 of 2, by Dougal Graham, ed. by George Mac Gregor (Gutenberg ebook) John Cheap, the Chapman's Library. Vol. 2: Religious and Scriptural: The Scottish Chap Literature of Last Century, Classified, by Dougal Graham (Gutenberg ebook) John Cheap, the Chapman's Library. Vol. 1: Comic and Humorous: The Scottish Chap Literature of Last Century, Classified, by Dougal Graham (Gutenberg ebook) The Collected Writings of Dougal Graham, "Skellat" Bellman of Glasgow, Vol. 1 of 2, by Dougal Graham, ed. by George Mac Gregor (Gutenberg ebook)
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