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Tokyo Keizai University Institutional Repository >
Browsing by Author Defoe, Daniel
Showing results 25 to 44 of 46
Issue Date | Title | Author(s) |
1702 | Essays upon several projects: or, Effectual ways for advancing the interest of the nation. | Defoe, Daniel |
1717 | Fair payment to spunge: or, Some considerations on the unreasonableness of refusing to receive back money lent on publick securities. | Defoe, Daniel |
1704 | Giving alms no charity, and employing the poor a grievance to the nation, being an essay upon this great question, whether work-houses, corporations, and houses of correction for employing the poor, as now practis'd in England; or parish-stocks, as propos'd in a late pamphlet,, entitled, A bill for the better relief, imployment and settlement of the poor, &c. | Defoe, Daniel |
1712 | Justification of the Dvtch from several late scandalous reflections: | Defoe, Daniel |
1727 | Parochial tyranny: or, The house-keeper's complaint against the insupportable exactions, and partial assessments of select vestries, &c. | Defoe, Daniel |
1708 | Reflections on the prohibition act: wherein the necessity, usefulness and value of that law, are evinced and demonstrated. | Defoe, Daniel |
1729 | Second thoughts are best: or, A further improvement of a late scheme to prevent street robberies: by which our streets will be so strongly guarded, and so gloriously illuminated, that any part of London will be as safe and pleasant at midnight as at noonday; and burglary totally impracticable: with some thoughts for suppressing robberies in all the publick roads of England, &c. Humbly offered for the good of his country, submitted to the consideration of the Parliament, and dedicated to His Sacred Majesty King George IId. | Defoe, Daniel |
1724 | Some farther account of the original disputes in Ireland, about farthings and halfpence. | Defoe, Daniel |
1713 | Some thoughts upon the subject of commerce with France. | Defoe, Daniel |
1729 | The advantages of peace and commerce; with some remarks on the East-India trade. | Defoe, Daniel |
1706 | The advantages of Scotland by an incorporate union with England, compar'd with these [sic] of a coalition with the Dutch, of league with France. | Defoe, Daniel |
1719 | The anatomy of Exchange-Alley: or, A system of stock-jobbing. | Defoe, Daniel |
1721 | The case of Mr. Law, truly stated. | Defoe, Daniel |
1720 | The chimera: or, The French way of paying national debts, laid open. | Defoe, Daniel |
1720 | The female manufactures complaint: being the humble petition of Dorothy Distaff, Abigail Spinning-Wheel, Eleanor Reel &c. spinsters, to the lady Rebecca Woolpack. | Defoe, Daniel |
1701 | The free=holders plea against stock-jobbing elections of Parliament men. | Defoe, Daniel |
1719 | The just complaint of the poor weavers truly represented, with as much answer as it deserves, to a pamphlet lately written against them entitled The weavers pretences examin'd, &c. | Defoe, Daniel |
1711 | The re-representation: or, A modest search after the great plunderers of the nation: being a brief enquiry into two weighty particulars, necessary at this time to be known, viz. I. Who they are that have plundered the nation. II. Why they are not detected and punished. | Defoe, Daniel |
1706 | The state of the excise after the Union, compared with what it is now. | Defoe, Daniel |
1720 | The trade to India critically and calmly consider'd, and prov'd to be destructive to the general trade of Great Britain, as well as to the woollen and silk manufactures in particular. | Defoe, Daniel |
Showing results 25 to 44 of 46
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