According to Joanna Lipking of the English Dept. of Northwesters University, the author of this poem was Mary Castillion Randolph of Cantenbury, who died ca. 1697. Mrs. Randolph wrote another poem about Anne Kingsmill Finch, countess of Winchelsea, who in turn wrote an epistle to her. Cf. The poems of Anne, Countess of Winchelsea (Chicago, 1903), p. lii and p. 95. and Printed marginal note on p. 3 ("All-Saints Day (96)") refers to the death date of Lady Oxenden, who was the first wife, Elizabeth Chute, of Sir James Oxenden, not the second wife, Arabella Watson, who died in 1735, and whose death date is the basis of the bracketed imprint date in Foxon R110 and ESTC TO43259. Cf. Cokayne, G.E. Complete baronetage, v. 4, p. 99.
Against the duty on wines made from molasses, which will discourage the sugar refining trade in England.
Publisher:
[s.n.]
Subject (Topic):
Distilling industries--England --Early works to 1800, Distilling industries--Taxation--Great Britain, Sugar --Manufacture and refining --England., and Tariff on wine --England.
Catalogue of the valuable building materials of the two wing erections and colonades of Fonthill Mansion, with sundry household furniture, the property of William Beckford, Esq
Description:
No. 2 of 3 works bound together with binder’s title: Fonthill catalogues 1801-7.
Subject (Name):
Beckford, William, 1760-1844 --Art collections --Catalogs., Beckford, William, 1760-1844 --Homes and haunts --England --Wiltshire., and Fonthill Abbey
Subject (Topic):
Art objects --Private collections --Catalogs. and Authors, English --Homes and haunts --England --Wiltshire