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An essay upon publick credit : being an enquiry how the publick credit comes to depend upon the change of ministry, or the dissolutions of parliaments; and whether it does so or no : with an argument ... |
[Robert Harley or Daniel Defoe] |
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A letter to a friend : in which is shewn, the inviolable nature of publick securities |
by a lover of his country [i.e. Arthur Ashley Sykes] |
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An essay on the publick debts of this kingdom, wherein the importance of discharging them is considered; the provisions for that purpose by the sinking fund, and the progress therein hitherto made, are stated and explained ... The third edition |
[Sir Nathaniel Gould] |
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A state of the national debt, as it stood December the 24th, 1716, with the payments made towards the discharge of it out of the sinking fund, &c. compared with the debt at Michaelmas, 1725 |
[William Pulteney] |
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A defence of an essay on the publick debts of this kingdom, &c. in answer to a pamphlet, entitled, A state of the national debt, &c. |
by the author of the essay [i.e. Sir Nathaniel Gould] |
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Representation of the House of Commons to His Majesty George II. shewing the state of the national debts in 1716 and 1726 |
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Of public credit |
by David Hume, Esq. from Essays, moral, political, and literary, published in 1752 |
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Account of the national debt, from Blackstone's Commentaries, book I. cap. 8 |
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An appeal to the public, on the subject of the national debt. A new edition with an appendix |
by Richard Price ... |
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Extracts from a tract entitled The challenge, or, Patriotism put to the test, in a letter to the Rev. Dr. Price |
by Jos. Wimpey |
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Note on the sinking fund established by Mr. Pitt, in 1786 |
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Considerations on the annual million bill, and on the real and imaginary properties of a sinking fund |
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An inquiry concerning the rise, progress, redemption, present state, and management, of the national debt of Great Britain and Ireland. The third edition, enlarged |
by Robert Hamilton ... |
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An essay upon publick credit : being an enquiry how the publick credit comes to depend upon the change of ministry, or the dissolutions of parliaments; and whether it does so or no : with an argument ... |
[Robert Harley or Daniel Defoe] |
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A letter to a friend : in which is shewn, the inviolable nature of publick securities |
by a lover of his country [i.e. Arthur Ashley Sykes] |
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An essay on the publick debts of this kingdom, wherein the importance of discharging them is considered; the provisions for that purpose by the sinking fund, and the progress therein hitherto made, are stated and explained ... The third edition |
[Sir Nathaniel Gould] |