|
|
Down beat : jazz, blues and beyond.
|
2007
|
1
|
|
Down by law.
|
|
2
|
|
Down by the greenwood side : a dramatic pastoral. : Birtwistle, Harrison.
|
1970
|
1
|
|
Down by the riverside : a South Carolina slave community. : Joyner, Charles.
|
1984
|
1
|
|
Down by the Salley Gardens. : Vaughan Williams, Ralph,
|
1993
|
1
|
|
Down cemetery road with Philip Larkin and John Betjeman
|
|
3
|
|
Down Channel. : McMullan, R. T.
|
1949
|
1
|
|
Down east : a maritime history of Maine. : Paine, Lincoln P.
|
2000
|
1
|
|
Down East : Maine, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia and the Gaspé. : Collier, Sargent F.
|
1953
|
1
|
|
Down east spirituals. : Kimball, Jacob,
|
1949
|
1
|
|
Down Easter captain : Josselyn, Walter Lyman,
|
1967
|
1
|
|
The down easters : American deep-water sailing ships, 1869-1929.
|
|
2
|
|
Down-fall of Anthony.
|
1682
|
1
|
|
Down-fall of Anti-Christ. : Geree, John,
|
1641
|
1
|
|
The down-fall of Anti-Christ: or, The povver of preaching, to pull down popery. : In a briefe treati
|
|
2
|
|
The down-fall of Babylon : or, The ruine of Antichrist : being that mystery of iniquity, which begin : Mingzeis, Alexander.
|
1647
|
1
|
|
The down-fall of Cockburn's meeting-house. : To the tune of, Come sit thee down my Phillis.
|
|
2
|
|
Down fall of the ark.
|
1661
|
1
|
|
The down-fall of the ark. Or, The morning-exercise at an end..
|
|
2
|
|
Down-fall of the Devil, Pope and Pretender
|
1711
|
1
|
|
The down-fall of the vnjust lavvyers, : with the monopolizing officers, who have devoured much of th : Leach, Edmund,
|
1653
|
1
|
|
The down-fall of the vnjust lawyers, with the monopolizing officers, who have devoured much of the w : Leach, Edmund,
|
1652
|
1
|
|
The down-fall of the Whiggs: or, The Duke of Monmouths journey into the north. : To the tune of Hey
|
1682
|
1
|
|
Down from bureaucracy : the ambiguity of privatization and empowerment. : Handler, Joel F.
|
1996
|
1
|
|
Down from equality : black Chicagoans and the public schools, 1920-41. : Homel, Michael W.
|
1984
|
1
|
|
Down highway one : journeys through Vietnam and Cambodia. : Downie, Sue.
|
1993
|
1
|
|
The down-ight [sic] vvooing of honest John & Betty. : To the tune of, Cold and raw. This may be prin : E. W.
|
1688
|
1
|
|
Down-ight vvooing of honest John & Betty : E. W.
|
1688
|
1
|
|
Down in an arbor devoted to Venus.
|
1660?
|
1
|
|
Down in an arbour devouted to Venus.
|
1679
|
1
|
|
Down in the city. : Harrower, Elizabeth.
|
1957
|
1
|
|
Down in the marvellous deep : a book of sea poems. : Windham, Sophie.
|
1994
|
1
|
|
Down in the meadow.
|
1655
|
1
|
|
Down in the valley : Weill, Kurt,
|
1948
|
1
|
|
Down Mailer's way. : Solotaroff, Robert.
|
1974
|
1
|
|
Down-market lending : mortgages and the support scheme in Leeds : Harrison, M. L.
|
1983
|
1
|
|
Down on T Wharf : the Boston fisheries as seen through the photographs of Henry D. Fisher. : German, Andrew W.,
|
1982
|
1
|
|
Down on the farm : the plight of agricultural labour. : League for Industrial Democracy.
|
1955
|
1
|
|
Down Plumpton-park.
|
|
4
|
|
Down Plumpton Parke.
|
1691
|
1
|
|
The down-right country-man; or, The faithful dairy-maid· : utmind [sic] how country lads do boa
|
1696
|
1
|
|
Down-right dealing : Howell, James,
|
1647
|
1
|
|
Down-right dealing, or The despised Protestant speaking plain English : to the Kings most excellent : Howell, James,
|
1647
|
1
|
|
Down-right Dick of the west; or, The plow-mans ramble to London, : to see my Lord-Mayor and the
|
|
2
|
|
Down-right vvooing betwixt Robin and Nancy
|
1686?
|
1
|
|
Down-right wooing betwixt Robin and Nancy
|
1688
|
1
|
|
Down right wooing of country William and his pretty Peggy
|
1680
|
1
|
|
Down right wooing, of, country William and his pritty Peggy
|
1680
|
1
|
|
Down-right wooing of honest John & Betty : E. W.
|
1688
|
1
|
|
Down Second Avenue. : Mphahlele, Ezekiel.
|
1959
|
1
|
|