Hall-Stevenson, John, 1718-1785
Stevenson, John Hall-, 1718-1785
Hall-Stevenson, John
John Hall-Stevenson English country gentleman and writer
VIAF ID: 49216429 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/49216429
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Hall-Stevenson, John
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Hall-Stevenson, John ‡d 1718-1785
- 100 1 _ ‡a Hall-Stevenson, John ‡d 1718-1785
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Hall-Stevenson, John, ‡d 1718-1785
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- 100 0 _ ‡a John Hall-Stevenson ‡c English country gentleman and writer
- 200 _ | ‡a Stevenson ‡b John Hall ‡f 1718-1785
- 100 1 _ ‡a Stevenson, John Hall, ‡d 1718-1785
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (57)
5xx's: Related Names (11)
- 500 0 _ ‡a Eugenius ‡d 1718-1785
- 500 0 _ ‡a Eugenius ‡d 1718-1785 ‡4 pseu ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#pseudonym ‡e Pseudonym
- 500 1 _ ‡a Goldsmith, Oliver ‡d 1728-1774)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Hookham, Thomas Jordan
- 500 1 _ ‡a Joly, Jaspar Robert ‡d 1819-1892
- 500 1 _ ‡a Jordan, Dorothy ‡d 1761-1816
- 500 1 _ ‡a Lespinasse, Julie de ‡d 1732-1776)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Nodier, Charles ‡d 1780-1844)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Raynal, Guillaume-Thomas ‡d 1713-1796)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Sterne, Laurence ‡d 1713-1768
- 500 1 _ ‡a Swift, Jonathan ‡d 1667-1745)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Amusement-Hall; or, An easy introduction to the attainment of useful knowledge, by a Lady | |
Ancient and modern idolatry parallell'd. : Being a comparison between the Israelitish and British women, in stubbornness and proneness to idolatry. Written by a lady, in hopes to convince some of her sex of their error | |
Crazy tales. | |
A discourse on government and religion : calculated for the meridian of the thirtieth of January | |
An essay upon the King's friends : with an account of some discoveries made in Italy, And found in a Virgil, concerning the Tories. To Dr. S-----l J-----n. | |
Evening recreations: a collection of original stories, for the amusement of her young friends. By a Lady | |
Fables for grown gentlemen: or, a fable for every day in the week. | |
Geography and history. Selected by a lady, for the use of her own children | |
History of Miss Indiana Danby. | |
The history of our saviour Jesus Christ, : and his apostles. By a Lady | |
Hymn to Miss Laurence : in the pump-room at Bath. | |
The inamorato: addressed to the author of the electrical eel, by a Lady | |
Letters between an English lady and her friend at Paris. : In which are contained The memoirs of Mrs. Williams. By a lady. In two volumes | |
Lyric consolations : With the speech of Alderman W- delivered in a dream, at the King's Bench Prison the evening of his inauguration. | |
Makarony fables; with The new fable of the bees : In two cantos. Addressed to the Society | |
Moral tales. A Christmas night's entertainment. By Lady. | |
A nosegay and a simile for the reviewers. : A Lyric Epistle | |
Observations on P-l C-Ll's conduct, with regard to R. Catholic bill, &c. : By a lady | |
An ode, : Addressed to his Royal Highness William Duke of Cumberland. By a lady | |
The oeconomy of female life : By a lady | |
Oeuvres choisies de Goldsmith et de Sterne : traduction nouvelle. Le vicaire de Wakefield | |
On the death of King James. By a lady | |
Original poems, : translations, and imitations, From the French, &c. By a lady | |
Orlando and Lavinia : or, the libertine. A novel. In four volumes. By a lady | |
A pastoral cordial, or, an anodyne sermon: preached before Their Graces N. and D. in the country, by an independent teacher of the truth. | |
A pastoral puke : A second sermon preached before the people called Whigs | |
The penitent hermit, or, The fruits of jealousie : being a true and witty relation of a pleasant adventure | |
The peruvian : a comic opera, in three acts. As performed at the Theatre Royal Covent-Garden. By a lady. The music chiefly composed by Mr. Hook | |
The platonic guardian: or, History of an orphan. By a Lady | |
A poem by a lady on seeing His Royal Highness the Prince Regent | |
A poem to Her Grace the Dutchess of Marlborough. Occasion'd by the late glorious victory obtain'd by his Grace the Duke of Marlborough, over the French and Bavarians at Hochstet. Written by a lady | |
[A] poem upon a lady's being offered a purse by one of the late directors of [the] South Sea Company, by a Lady | |
Poems, &c. : written by a lady, in the year 1783 or 1784. An address to the people called Quakers. An address to those in power, in Behalf of Insolvent debtors. Friendship: An Allegory. An Enigma, in French and English | |
Poems on several occasions: containing, I. Fancy and reason, a controversy. II. The Hoop-Petticoat. III. The Misfortune. IV. A Song by Mr. Booth. V. On a Young Lady going into the Jaundice. VI. Old Menalchas and Young Daphne. Vii. On Dreaming of Venus. Viii. To Caelia Mask'd. IX. Icarus; a Fable. The Country Justice. XI. The Faithful Mariner. XII. The Parting; a Pastoral Dialogue. XIII. Song on the Free-Masons. XIV. A Paraphrase on some Verses in the 29th of Genesis. XV. Coelia's Littany. XVI. Upon the Marriage of an Old Man to a Young Woman. XVII. The Rose. XVIII. The lark. By a lady | |
Political romance | |
The precipitate choice : or, the history of Lord Ossory and Miss Rivers. A novel. In two volumes. By a lady | |
The progress of a female mind, : in some interesting enquiries. Containing, I. A Soliloquy. II. A Letter to a Jew, on the Evidences of Revelation. III. A Letter to a Christian Divine on the Gospel System; with some References to a late Free Enquirer. IV. A Remark on the Importance of the Hebrew Language. By a lady | |
Putešestvie Jorika po Francii, ili Zabavnyâ i ostroumnyâ zamečaniâ i živopisnye ottenki nravov i haraktera Francuzskago naroda po Revolûcii. | |
A rebus written by a lady, on the Rev. D---n S----t. With his answer | |
Remarks on Mrs. Muilman's letter to the Right Honourable the Earl of Chesterfield. : In a letter to Mrs. Muilman. By a Lady | |
The school for husbands. : Written by a lady. In two volumes | |
The school for tutors. : Consisting of a series of correspondence chiefly between a young gentleman and his tutor. Written by a lady, since deceased, The Authoress Of Several Former Publications | |
Selections | |
Sentimental journey through France and Italy | |
A serious address to children : and a hymn. To which is added, a sermon, and hymn, by a lady. | |
A sermon, : Preached in his Parish Church By a friend, on February 27, 1778, being the day appointed for a general fast, and written by a lady | |
A song for the independent burgesses of Newcastle by a lady | |
A song on the Blues leaving York. Written by a lady in 1767 | |
Song. Tune, "The dusky night." By a lady | |
The south Briton : a comedy of five acts: as it is performed at the theatre in Smock-Alley, with great applause. Written by a lady | |
Szaktudósító :. | |
Thoughts occasioned by the proceedings on Bristol-Bridge, and the melancholy consequences, on the awful night of Monday last, being the 30th of September. 1793. (By a Lady.) | |
To the ladies of Dublin, : a poem. To which is added, Ierne's Answer to Albion. By a Lady | |
The trinket. : A novel. By a lady | |
The twin sisters : or, the effects of education. A novel; in a series of letters. By a lady | |
Two lyric epistles: one to my cousin Shandy, on his coming to town; and the other to the grown gentlewomen, the Misses of ****. | |
Two lyrick epistles: or; Margery the cook-maid, to the Critical Reviewers. | |
The vale of felicity, : or, sylvan happiness: pourtrayed [sic] in a series of letters, moral and entertaining. By a lady. In two volumes | |
The vision. : Inscribed to Mrs. Woffington. Wrote by a Lady | |
Works | |
The works of John Hall-Stevenson, esq., 1795. | |
The works of Laurence Stern, : A.M. Prebendary of York, and Vicar of Sutton on the Forest, and of Stillington, near York | |
The works of Laurence Sterne, A.M : In five volumes. ; Volume first[-fifth]. | |
Yorick's Sentimental journey : continued |