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Titles
- A letter to the patentee concerning the medical properties of the fleecy hosiery1
- A tour from Gibraltar to Tangier, Sallee, Mogodore, Santa Cruz, and Tarudant: and thence over Mount Atlas to Morocco ; including a particular account of the royal harem, &c1
- Domestic economy, or, A complete system of English housekeeping: containing the most approved receipts, confirmed by observation and practice, in every reputable English book of cookery now extant : besides a great variety of others which have never before been offered to the public : also a valuable collection, translated from the productions of cooks of eminence who have published in France, with their respective names to each receipt : which, together with the original articles, for the most complete system of housekeeping ever yet exhibited, under the following heads, viz. : roasting, boiling, made-dishes, frying, broiling, potting, fricassees, ragouts, soups, sauces, gravies, hashes, stews, puddings, custards, cakes, tarts, pies, pasties, cheesecakes, jellies, pickling, preserving, and confectionary : to which is prefixed, in order to render it as complete and perfect as possible, an elegant collection of light dishes for supper, adapted for every month in the year : also The complete brewer ... likewise The family physician : being a collection of the most valuable and approved prescriptions by Mead, Sydenham, Tissot, Fothergill, Elliot, Buchan, and others1
- Every man his own physician: being a complete collection of efficacious and approved remedies, for every disease incident to the human body ; with plain instructions for their common use1
- Letters from a father to his son, on various topics, relative to literature and the conduct of life: written in the years 1792 and 17931
- Medical advice to the inhabitants of warm climates, on the domestic treatment of all the diseases incidental therein: with a few useful hints to new settlers, for the preservation of health, and the prevention of sickness1
- Nature's assistant to the restoration of health in a variety of complaints: to which is added, An address to parents, tutors, and schoolmasters, with advice to young men and boys, respecting a destructive habit of a private nature1
- Observations on the emigration of Dr. Joseph Priestly [sic], and on the several addresses delivered to him on his arrival at New-York1
- The art of preventing diseases, and restoring health, founded on rational principles, and adapted to persons of every capacity1
- The pleasures of imagination: a poem, in three books1
- Yellow fever1