Whatley, Robert, ?-1767
Whatley, Robert d. 1767
VIAF ID: 60507968 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/60507968
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Whatley, Robert ‡d d. 1767
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Whatley, Robert, ‡d -1767
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (16)
Works
Title | Sources |
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The Christian, 1746: | |
The christian : A sermon on the words of King Agrippa to St. Paul, "almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian." Most humbly inscribed to the Lord Bishop of Durham | |
The dernier resort : or, an appeal to the King, in the cause between the Right Honourable Sir Robert Walpole and Mr. Whatley | |
A discourse made to a person in a country parish church : October 1, 1732. doing penance for the sin of fornication. Most humbly recommended to the Consideration of the late Committee, of the honourable House of Commons, of Enquiry into the Abuses of the Ecclesiastical Courts | |
A friendly admonition to gentlemen in the commission of the peace, or, An account of some late extraordinary proceedings of a couple of Westminster justices against a gentleman, for standing the friend of an innocent person committed to the gate-house, on suspicion of felony, for the benefit of the subject, faithfully and truly stated, with large observations thereon, on the duty of a Justice of Peace, on goals, and on the state of the law, in general : with some reflections on our present political and religious disputes, in a humble representation to a noble lord. | |
The immortal-Mortal : or, the age censured for its neglect of futurity. A sermon preach'd at Castor, August 10, 1748. at the triennial visitation of the Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of Lincoln | |
An impartial review of a miscellaneous treatise (lately publish'd) entitled, A friendly admonition to gentlemen in the commission of the peace, wherein what is amiss is rectify'd, and what is right is further enforc'd : in answer to a letter to the author from a reverend divine on occasion of it. | |
A letter to a bencher of the Inner-Temple : from a Student of the same House. Writ in the Year 1713 | |
A letter to the Right Honourable the Lord-Chief-Justice King : on His Lordship's being Design'd a peer | |
A letter to Thomas Burnett, Esq : occasion'd by his to the Earl of Hallifax | |
Self-Entertainment: or, day-thoughts : Being a collection of six months occasional reflections, set down as they occurr'd to the writer's mind | |
A short history of a ten years negociation, between a Prime Minister and a private gentleman |