\ IT it. '1 k£S>‘^\ Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2019 with funding from Wellcome Library https://archive.org/details/b31359681_0006 . . . ■ . . Dictionary of Anonymous and Pseudonymous English Literature Dictionary OF Anonymous and Pseudonymous English Literature (SAMUEL HALKETT AND JOHN LAING) NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION Dr JAMES KENNEDY LIBRARIAN, NEW COLLEGE, EDINBURGH W. A. SMITH and A. F. JOHNSON PRINTED BOOKS DEPARTMENT, BRITISH MUSEUM VOLUME SIX OLIVER AND BOYD EDINBURGH: TWEEDDALE COURT LONDON: 33 PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C. l932 IH f?I>. 4J HISTORICAL I M £ DIC A L j /Q R PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY OLIVER AND BOYD LTD , EDINBURGH PREFATORY NOTE The supplement has been brought to as great a state of perfection as the leisure of the editors has allowed, and publishers and editors desire to return thanks to all those who have so kindly assisted with material. First to the many correspondents who have sent information on individual books, frequently from family sources and therefore particularly valuable, because otherwise inaccessible. Secondly to those who have helped in a more comprehensive fashion, and among these in particular to the Rev. Charles R. Gillett for materials from the M‘Alpin Collection, the catalogue of which, now complete, is a mine of information for the period with which it deals; to Mr John Grant, bookseller, of Edinburgh, for many notes of MS. attributions on copies which have passed through his stock; to Mr Thomas Warburton of Manchester, Messrs G. Harding of Great Russell Street, London, and Dr Offor, Librarian of Leeds University. Finally the editors desire to thank their colleagues in the Department of Printed Books for a large amount of correction which has been obtained during the preparation of the new edition of the British Museum Catalogue. Where all have helped, it is invidious to particularise, but they feel under special obligation to Messrs A. G. Macfarlane, H. Sellers, C. B. Oldman, and F. C. Francis, and latterly to Mr F. D. Cooper for many corrections on Americana. W. A. SMITH A. F. JOHNSON WITH a view to the issuing of further supplements to this important book of reference the Publishers would be grateful if Authors, Publishers, Librarians and others interested in Anonymous books, would send full particulars of the errors land omissions they encounter, and also of new books as they are issued, in order that the Dictionary may be kept as up-to-date as possible. Communications to OLIVER & Boyd Ltd., Tweeddale Court, Edinburgh, will be duly acknowledged. A Dictionary of the Anonymous and Pseudonymous Literature of Great Britain T T. H. BURN [Thomas Harris Burn] ; in memoriam. [By George E. L. Cotton, Bishop of Calcutta.] 8vo. \Camb. Univ. Lib.] N.P. [1864] TABELLA cibaria; the bill of fare: a Latin poem, implicitly translated and fully explained in copious and interesting notes relating to the pleasures of gastronomy, and the mysterious art of cookery. [By the Abbe Ange-Denis Macquin.] 4to. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] London, 1820 TABITHA Smallways, schoolgirl. By Raymond Jacberns [Miss M. Selby Ashe]. 8vo. Pp. 310. London, 1912 TABLE (the) and the turner ; or, which of the two is possessed? Containing remarks on the pamphlets of Messrs Close, Dibdin, Godfrey, “A physician,” etc. etc. ; with certain proposed tests, whereby to ascertain, if possible, whether table-turning and table-talking is or is not diabolical. By an anxious enquirer after truth [David Baxter Langley]. i2mo. Pp. 28. [Bodl.] London, 1854 TABLE (a) collected of the yeares of our Lorde God, and of the yeares of the Kynges of Englande, from the fyrst yeare of William the Conquerour, shewyng how the yeares of our Lorde God, and the yeres of the Kynges of England concurre and agree together. . . . [By William Rastell.] 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] Londini, 1561 TABLE for determining the apparent time from observed altitudes of the sun or a star. [By Sir Thomas M. Brisbane, Bart.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [Cambray] 1818 TABLE (a) of a decimal system of account. [By Harry Borradaile.] 4to. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1853 TABLE (a) of dates for the use of genealogists and antiquaries. [By Thomas Moule.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1820 TABLE (a) of redemption shewing at one view in what time the principal and interest of any debt from 3 to 6 per % may be discharged by any fund producing yearly from 3^ to 12 per %, with remarks relating to our publick debts. By T. W. [T. Watkins]. Fol. [IV.] London, 1717 TABLE (a) of the circles arising from the division of a unit, or any other whole number, by all the integers from 1 to 1024 ; being all the pure decimal quotients that can arise from this source. [By Henry Goodwyn, a brewer in West Smithfield.] 8vo. Pp. v. 118. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1823 TABLE (a) of the gold coins of the kings of England. By B. W. [Browne Willis], Esq., a member of the Society of Antiquaries. Fol. [Nichols’ Lit. Anec. ii. 35.] 1733 TABLE (the) of the Lord. By the author of The Listener, Christ our example, etc. [Caroline Fry]. 8vo. London,1837 TABLE (the) of the road : 2 parts. [By Edward Adderley Stopford, Archdeacon of Meath.] 8vo. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. vi. col. 632.] London, 1853-56 TABLE of the unity of religion in the school of Nazareth. . . . [By T. Martin.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1846 TABLE (the) talker ; or, brief essays on society and literature. [By Wm. Johnstone.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.\ London, 1840 TABLE turning and table talking considered with reference to some pamphlets published by N. S. Godfrey and Edward Gillson. By a Member of the University of Cambridge [Rev. William John Edge]. i2mo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 205.] Cheltenham, 1853 TABLES and chairs ; a practical guide to economical furnishing. By the author of How to dress on £1$ a year [Millicent Whiteside Cook]. 8vo. Pp. 153. London [1876] TABLES calculated to facilitate business in the tin trade. [By Richard Wellington.] 8vo. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn.] Marazion, 1836 TABLES for the four Evangelists, containing: I. The harmony of the Gospels, and their general contents. II. The order and number of Christ’s recorded appearances after his resurrection. III. The several passages of the Evangelists, as stated in the harmony. IV. A state of our Lord’s discourses, according to the order of time. V. A state of our Lord’s parables, according to the order of time. VI. A state of our Lord’s miracles, according to the order of time. VII. A view of the places where our Lord sojourned. . . . [By Adam Gib.] 8vo. Pp. 31. Edinburgh, 1770 The second edition was published with the author’s name. TABLES for the Holy Alliance, rhymes on the road, etc. etc. By Thomas Brown, the younger, secretary to the Poco-curante Society, and author of The Fudge - family and The Twopenny post-bag [Thomas Moore]. New edition. 8vo. Pp. ix. 200. London,1823 TABLES of ancient coins, weights and measures, explain’d and exemplify’d in several dissertations. [By John Arbuthnot, M.D.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 2, p. 64.] London, 1727 TABLES of the aberration, annual variation, solar and lunar nutation, in N.P.D. for 40 principal fixed stars for every day of the year 1825, as made use of in the computation of the Greenwich standard catalogue. [By John Pond, F.R.S. Fol. Pp. 122, 6. N.p. [^.1830] TABLES of the increase or decrease of gold and silver in bars. [By- Seyfang.] i2mo. Walworth, 1819 TABLET (the) of Cebes ; or, a picture of human life : a poem, copied from the Greek of Cebes the Theban. By a gentleman of Oxford [T. Powis of St John’s College]. 4to. Pp. 23. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Oxford, 1759 TABLET (the) or moderation of Charles the First martyr ; with an alarum to the subjects of England. [By John Arnway, D.D.] 8 vo. Pp. 124. [Bodl.] 1649 Address to the King signed : A. A. TABLET (the) ; or, picture of real life ... in a select set of essays, serious and jocose, upon the most interesting subjects . . . [By Peter Shaw.] 8vo. Pp. xx. 371. [Brit. Mus.] London,1762 First issued in 1750 as “The reflector, representing human affairs ...” q.v. These are the same sheets, with a new title-page. TABLE-TALK ; or, selections from the Ana: containing extracts from the different collections of Ana, French, English, Italian, and German, with bibliographical notices. [By George Moir.] 8vo. Pp. x. 326. [Constable’s Miscellany, vol. x.] Edinburgh, 1827 TABOR’S teachings ; or, the veil lifted : a glimpse of Christ’s glory and intercourse with his people for ever. By the author of Heaven our home, etc. [William Branks, minister in Tor- phichen]. 8vo. Pp. x. 271. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1865 TABULA numerorum quadratorum decies millium ... A table of ten thousand square numbers. . . . [By John Pell.] Fol. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1672 TABULAE linguarum ; tables of nouns and verbs. ... By H. C. [Henry Clarke]. i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 10, p. 427.] Manchester, 1793 TABULAR (a) series of decimal quotients for all the proper vulgar fractions, of which, when in their lowest terms, neither the numerator nor the denominator is greater than 1000. [By Henry Goodwyn.] 8vo. Pp. v. 153. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1823 TACITUS and Bracciolini; the Annals forged in the XVth century. [By John Wilson Ross.] 8vo. [Lib. Journ. iv. 24.] London, 1878 TACTICAL notes. By X. Y. Z., author of The Officer's vade mecum [Capt. Ronald Martin], i2mo. Pp. 176. London, 1915 TACTICAL talks and tramps. By Sextus [William Charles Christie]. For Officers and N.C.O.’s of the Special Reserve and Territorial Force. 8vo. Pp. 80. [Brit. Musi] London, [1911] TACTOMETRIA ; or, the geometry of regulars. By J. W. [J. Wybard]. 8vo. [Queen's Coll. Cat. i. 637.] London, 1650 TAFFI’S masterpiece . . . Being the Muscipula Oxoniensis [of Edward Holdsworth], translated into burlesque verse by a Cantab. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1709 Other translations were entitled “ Muscipula . . .” and “The Mouse-trap . . .” TAGHCONIC ; or, letters and legends about our summer home. By Godfrey Greylock [Joseph Edward Adams Smith]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1852 TAHTAR (the) tribes. [By John Kitto, D.D.] i2mo. [G. C. Boase.] London,1848 TAILOR (the) of Gloucester. By Beatrix Potter [Beatrix Heelis]. i6mo. Pp. 85. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1903 TAILOR (the) of Vitre. [A novel.] By May Wynne [Mabel Wynne Knowles]. 8vo. Pp. 320. London, 1908 TAILS and Ballids. By Barney Bradey [William Theodore Parkes, journalist]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland^] Dublin, 1865 TAILS with a twist. The verses by “Belgian Hare” [Lord Alfred Bruce Douglas]; the pictures by E. T. Reed. Obi. 8vo. Pp. 72. [Brit. Mus.] London [1898] TAINT (the) of the City. By Charles Eddy [Charles E. Rose]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1903 TAINTED gold. [A novel.] By Paul Trent [Edward Platt]. 8vo. Pp. 304. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1918 TAKE heed of both extreams ; or, plain and useful cautions against Popery and Presbytery. [By Luke de Beaulieu.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol 4, p. 52.] London,1675 TAKE one at night. By Keble Howard [John Keble Bell]. 8vo. Pp. 246. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1919 TAKE your choice ! Representation and respect; imposition and contempt. Annual Parliaments and liberty, long Parliaments and slavery. [By Major John Cartwright.] 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1776 TAKEN at his word. By Tom Cobbleigh [Walter Raymond]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1897 TAKEN at the flood ; a novel. By the author of Lady Audley's secret, etc. etc. [Mary Elizabeth Braddon]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1874 TAKEN by force ; a novel. By Kilsyth Stelliers [Wellbourne Summers]. 8vo. Aberdeen, 1895 TAKEN by the enemy. By Oliver Optic [William Taylor Adams]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Boston, 1890 TAKEN upon trust. By the author of Reco7mnended to mercy [Mrs M. C. Houstoun]. Second edition. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1863 TAKING (the) of Jerusalem in the first Crusade. [A poem which obtained the Chancellor’s Medal for English verse. By William C. Kinglake.] 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Cambridge, 1832 TAKING (the) of Newcastle, etc. etc. [Edited by John Trotter Brockets] i2mo. [IV.] Newcastle, 1825 A reprint of “ A particular relation of the taking of Newcastle,” etc., published at London in 1644. The preface signed: J. T. B. TAKING (the) of Tiverton, with the castle, church and fort by Sir Th. Fairfax on the Lords-day last Octob. 19, 1645 ; also f^e several defeats given to Goring by his Excellency, etc. [By John Rush worth ?] 4to. [IV. ; Brit. Mus.] London, 1645 TAKING (the) of Winchester by the Parliaments forces ; as also the sur- rend’ring up of the Castle. [A poem.] By I. W. [John Ward]. 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 59, p. 321.] London, 1642 TAKINGS ; or, the life of a Collegian : a poem. [By Thomas Gaspey.] Illustrated by Richard Dagley. 8vo. [Edin. Univ. Lib.] London, 1821 TALBOT and Vernon ; a novel. [By John L. MacConnel.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1850 TALBURY (the) girls. ... [A novel.] By Clara Vance [Mrs Mary Denis, n£e Andrews]. 8vo. Pp. 359. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] London [1886] TALE (the). By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski]. 4to. Pp. 34. London, private print, 1919 TALE (a) for the Pharisees. By the author of Dives a?id Lazarus [William Gilbert]. 8vo. London, 1859 TALE (a) in a tub, or a tub lecture as it was delivered by My-heele Mendsoale an inspired Brownist ; and a most upright translator: in a meeting house neere Bedlam, the one and twentieth of December, last, 1641. Written by J. T. [John Taylor, the water-poet]. 4to. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 49.] London, 1641 TALE (the) of a Casualty clearing- station. By a Royal Field-leach [Col. F. A. Symons, R.A.M.C.]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1917 TALE (the) of a modern genius ; or, the miseries of Parnassus: in a series of letters. [By John Fitzgerald Pennie.] i2mo. 3 vols. [Mayo’s Bibl. Dors. p. 163.] London, 1827 The dedication signed : Sylvaticus. TALE (the) of a nettle. Written by a person of quality [Jonathan Swift]. Fol. S. sh. [Camb. Hist, of Eng. Lit.\ Cambridge, 1710 TALE (a) of a tub ; written for the universal improvement of mankind : to which is added, An account of a battel between the antient and modern books in St James’s Library. [By Jonathan Swift.] The third edition corrected. 8vo. [Arber’s Term. Cat. iii. 693.] London, 1704 TALE (a) of adventure. By an officer of the United States Army [Sergeant -Atkins]. i2mo. [A?ner. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1871 TALE (a) of an old castle. [A novel.] By W. Heimburg [Bertha Behrens] ; translated from the German. . . . i2mo. Pp. 185. [Cushing’s lnit. a?id Pseud.] New York, 1889 TALE (the) of Archais ; a romance in verse. By a Gentleman of the University of Cambridge [Aleister Crowley]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 89. [Crowley’s Works, 1905.] London, 1898 TALE (a) of encumbered estates. By Celticus [Andrew Claiborne]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Supp.] 1851 TALE (a) of intemperance. By an Observer [Cyril Pearl]. 8vo. Boston, 1839 TALE (a) of Lexington ; a national comedy, founded on the opening of the Revolution. [By Samuel B. H. Judah.] i2mo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] New York, 1823 TALE (a) of Lulworth . . . drawn up from letters. . . . [By William Henry Chamberlaine.] 8vo. Pp. 27. [Brit. Musk] Bath, 1888 TALE (the) of Mr Tubbs ; a story of a knight without armour. By J. E. Buckrose [Mrs Falconer Jameson], 8vo. Pp. 299. [Brit. Musk] London, 1918 TALE (the) of the Butterhorn ; a poem. By Matthew Meek [Richard Ramsay]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Irelandk] Belfast, 1811 TALE (a) of the fifteen. By C. E. M. [Constance E. Miller]. 8vo. Pp. 79. London [1883] TALE (the) of the four white swans. By Fiona Macleod [William Sharp]. 8vo. Pp. 96. Portland, Maine, 1907 TALE (a) of the Great Mutiny. By Vedette [Rev. William Henry Fitchett]. TALE (a) of the Pyrenees (Ramuncho). By Pierre Loti [Captain M. J. Viaud, of the French Navy] ; translated from the French. 8vo. London, 1923 TALE (a) of the Revolution, and other sketches. By the author of Peter Parley's tales [S. G. Goodrich]. i2mo. [Brit. Musk] Philadelphia, 1845 TALE (the) of the Serpent. By Sundowner [Herbert Tichborne]. 8vo. Pp. x. 282. London, 1902 TALE (the) of the swallow; from the German of H. v. B. [Maria Hedwig von Buelow ?]. 8vo. [Brit. Musk] 1884 TALE (a) of the times. By the author of A gossip's story [Mrs Jane West]. Dedicated by permission to Mrs Carter. Third edition. i2mo. 3 vols. London,1803 TALE (a) of the war of 1870. . . . [By Thomas Gregory Smith.] i2mo. [Brit. Musk] London [1871] TALE (a) of the Western Counties. By George Budock [Sydney Hodges, artist]. 8 vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] London [c. 1870] TALE (a) of three bonnets. [In verse. By Allan Ramsay.] 8vo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Musk] N.P. 1722 TALE (a) of Tucuman, with digressions, English and American. [A poem.] By Junius Redivivus [William Brydges Adams]. i2mo. [Brit. Musk] London, 1831 TALE (a) of two nations. By “ Coin ” [William Hope Harvey]. 8vo. Pp. 302. Chicago, 1895 TALE-BEARER (the). [A tale.] By Mark Allerton [William Ernest Cameron]. 8vo. Pp. 112. [Brit. Musk] London, 1924 TALENT in tatters ; or, some vicissitudes in the life of an English boy. By Hope Wraythe [Miss Edith Hawtrey]. With 8 full-page illustrations. 8vo. Pp. 256. London, 1878 TALENTS improved; or, the philanthropist. By the author of The miseries of human life [Rev. James Beresford]. i2mo. [Allibone’s Diet.] London [e. 1810] Attributed also to Harriet Corp. TALENTS (the) of Edmund Kean delineated. [By John W. Cole, dramatist.] 8vo. Pp. 19. [Brit. Musk] London, 1817 TALENTS (the) run mad ; or, eighteen hundred and sixteen: a satirical poem, in three dialogues, with notes. By the author of All the talents [Eaton Stannard Barrett]. 8vo. Pp. 70. TALEOFATUBODON (the); or, the naturalist and the British Association. By the author of John justijied [Col. Charles William Grant]. Obi. 4to. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 502.] Bath, 1875 TALES. By a Barrister [Frederick Liardet, M.A.]. 8vo. [.Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1844 TALES. By the author of Amy Herbert [Elizabeth M. Sewell]. 8vo. 10 vols. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1858-62 TALES about animals. By Peter Parley [Samuel G. Goodrich]. Tenth edition. i6mo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1847 TALES about shipwrecks and disasters at sea. By Peter Parley [George Mogridge]. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London,1847 TALES about temperaments. By John Oliver Hobbes [Mrs Reginald W. Craigie, nee Pearl T. Richards]. 8vo. Pp. 166. London, 1902 TALES about the United States of America, geographical, political, and historical ; with comparative view of other countries. By Peter Parley [George Mogridge]. Third edition. i2mo. Pp. x. 285. London, 1838 TALES about Wales ; with a catechism of Welsh history. [By Mrs Eliza C. Campbell]; edited by Captain Basil Hall. i2mo. [Cardiff Free Lib.] London,1837 TALES and adventures by sea and land ; translated from the French of Fouque [by James Burns, publisher]. 8vo. London, 1847 TALES and adventures for the young. By the author of Home and its duties, etc. [Mrs J. Werner Laurie]. i2mo. [Brit. Afus.] London [1869] TALES and illustrations, chiefly intended for young persons. By Charlotte Elizabeth [Mrs Tonna]. Fourth edition. i2mo. 3 vols. Dublin, 1844 TALES and legends. By the authors of The odd volume, etc. [the Misses Corbett]. 8vo. 3 vols. Edinburgh, 1828 TALES and legends of the English lakes and mountains. . . . Compiled by Lorenzo Tuvar [Wilson Armitstead]. 8vo. [Boase’s Afod. Eng. Biog. i. col. 83.] London [1852] TALES and sketches. By a cosmopolite [James Lawson]. i2mo. [Brit. Afus.] New York, 1830 TALES and sketches. By a country schoolmaster [William Leggett]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1829 TALES and sketches [of Findhorn and the Divie district]. By Jacob Ruddi- man, A.M., of Marischal College, Aberdeen [William Hay]. 8vo. Pp. 304. [P. J. Anderson’s Aberd. Univ. Bibl. p. 448.] Edinburgh, 1828 TALES and sketches ... By the author of Hope Leslie [Miss Catherine Maria Sedgwick]. i2mo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1842 A second series was published in 1844. TALES and sketches of Christian life in different lands and ages. [By Mrs Elizabeth Charles.] 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1850 TALES and sketches of Scottish life. [By George Jacque, U.P. minister, Auchterarder.] [R. Inglis.] 1849 TALES and souvenirs of a residence in Europe. By a lady of Virginia [Mrs William Cabell Rives]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1842 TALES and traditions of Tenby. [Compiled by George Philip W. Scott.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 160. [Brit. Afus.] Tenby, 1858 TALES by the O’Hara family ; containing Crohoore of the bill-hook, The Fetches, and John Doe. [By John Banim.] i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1825 TALES explanatory of the Sacraments. [By Emily C. Agnew.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Atat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1846 TALES for children. [By Mrs Gertrude Parsons, nee Hext.] i2mo. [Boaseand Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. ii. 426.] London, n.d. TALES for Sunday scholars. By the author of Clary's confirmation [F. E. Reade]. i6mo. London [1878] TALES for the amusement of young- persons. [By John Corry.] i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 12, p. 256.] London, 1802 TALES for the marines ... By Harry Gringo [Henry Augustus Wise]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Boston, 1855 TALES for Toby. By Ascott Robert Hope [Ascott Robert Hope Moncrieff]. 8vo. London, 1900 TALES for youth ; in thirty poems: to which are annexed, historical remarks and moral applications in prose. By the author of Choice emblems for the improvement of youth [John Huddle- stone Wynne, printer]. Ornamented with cuts, neatly designed and engraved on wood, by Bewick. i2mo. Pp. x. 158. London, 1794 Preface signed : J. H. W. A 2 TALES from a mother-of-pearl basket. By Anatole France [Anatole France Thibault]; translated from the French. 8vo. Pp. 247. New York, 1896 TALES from American history. By the author of America?! popular lessons [Eliza Robbins]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1834 TALES from London life. By Veritas [Alice A. Pitman]. 8vo. London [1890] TALES from Switzerland. [By Mrs A. Yosy.] 8vo. [.Bodl.\ London, 1822 TALES from the Bristol Mirror, 1842. [By Richard Smith.] 8vo. Pp. 246. [Hyett and Bazeley’s Gloucest. Lit. iii.] Bristol, 1842 TALES from the diary of a Sister of Mercy [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. London, 1866 TALES from the Odyssey, for boys and girls. By Materfamilias [Mrs C. M. Bell]. 8vo. [Lib. Journ. v. 188.] New York, 1880 TALES from the Rabbins and the Koran. [By Alex. Hay Japp, LL.D.] 8vo. London, 1892 TALES from the Western Moors. By Geoffrey Mortimer [Walter M. Gal- lichan]. 8vo. Pp. 294. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1897 TALES from twelve tongues ; translated by a British Museum librarian [Henry B. Wilson]. 8vo. Pp. 302. [Brit. Mus.] London [1883] TALES in rhyme, and minor pieces in the Scottish dialect. [By Robert Lochore, shoemaker.] 8vo. [Rogers’ Mod. Scot. Minstrels, iv. 91.] Glasgow, 1815 TALES in rhyme, for boys. By Old Humphrey [George Mogridge]. i2mo. Pp. 105. London [1851] TALES in rhyme, for girls. By Old Humphrey [George Mogridge]. i2mo. Pp. 108. London [1851] TALES in verse for the amusement of leisure hours. [By Thomas Hamilton, 6th Earl of Haddington ?] [D. N. B. vol. 24, p. 212.] [c. 1720] TALES of a briefless barrister. [By William Pitt Scargill.] i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1829 TALES of a cruel country. By Gerald Cumberland [Fred C. Kenyon]. 8vo. Pp- 336- London, 1919 TALES of a London parish, etc. By the author of Tales of Kirkbeck, etc. [Henrietta L. Farrer]. Edited by the Rev. W. J. E. Bennett. 8vo. Pp. x. 321. London, 1851 TALES of a parrot, done into English from a Persian manuscript intitled Tooti Nameh. By a teacher of the Persic, Arabic . . . and English languages [Rev. Benjamin Gerrans]. 8vo. Pp. xvi. 188. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1792 TALES of a pilgrim. By the author of A summer ramble i?i the North Highlands [Alexander Sutherland, Lieutenant]. 8vo. Pp. 394. Edinburgh, 1827 TALES of a tar, with characteristic anecdotes. By one of the authors of The naval sketch book [William Nugent Glascock]. i2mo. London, 1830 TALES of a terrace. By Heber K. Daniels [-Farquhar Palliser], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1895 ?] TALES of a traveller. By Geoffrey Crayon, Gentn. [Washington Irving]. Illustrated with original designs. 8vo. Pp. 456. London, 1850 TALES of a voyager to the Arctic Ocean. [By Robert Pierce Gillies.] i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1826 A second series was published in 1829. TALES of an antiquary ; chiefly illustrative of the manners, traditions, and remarkable localities of ancient London. [By Richard Thomson.] i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1828 TALES of an Indian camp. [By James Athearn Jones.] i2mo. 3 vols. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] London, 1820 TALES of Ardennes. By Derwent Conway [Henry David Inglis], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1825 TALES of Chinatown. By Sax Rohmer [Arthur Sarsfield Ward]. 8vo. Pp 322. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1922 TALES of college life. By Cuthbert Bede, B.A., author of Verdant Gree?i, etc. [Edward Bradley]. 8vo. Pp. 115. London, 1856 TALES of Dunstable Weir. By Zack [Miss Gwendoline Keats]. 8vo. Pp. 307. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1901 TALES of fault and feeling. By the author of Zeal and experience [Mrs Busk]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1825 TALES of hearsay. By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski]. 8vo. Pp. 288. London, 1925 TALES of humour, gallantry, and romance, selected and translated from the Italian [by John Yonge Ackerman]. 8vo. [Jaggard’s/^^.] London, 1824 The translator’s name is also given as -Southern. [Brit. Mus.] TALES of Ireland. By the author of Traits and stories of the Irish peasantry [William Carleton]. 8vo. [S. J. Brown’s Ireland in Jictioni] London,1834 TALES of Irish life, illustrative of the manners, customs, and condition of the people ; with designs by George Cruikshank. [By Michael James Whitty.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Bodl.] London, 1824 TALES of Kirkbeck ; or, the parish in the Fells. (First series.) By the author of Lives of certain Fathers of the Church in the fourth century, etc. [Henrietta Louisa Farrer]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 270. London, 1848 TALES of magic and meaning. By Alfred Crowquill [Alfred Henry Forrester]. 8vo. \Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1856 TALES of many climes ; in verse, with notes. By C. C. V. G. [Mrs Dawson Wetherelt], i2mo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Irelandi] Dublin, 1832 TALES of many lands. By the author of 7ales of the great and brave [Margaret Fraser Tytler]. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1839 TALES of martyr times. By the author of The Spanish brothers [Deborah Alcock], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1872 TALES of military life. By the author of The military sketch book [William Maginn, LL.D.]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1829 TALES of my country. By the author of Early recollections [Selina Bunbury]. 8vo. [.Brit. Afus.] Dublin, 1833 TALES of my father. [Reminiscences.] By A. M. F. [Alicia Maria Falls]. 8vo. Pp. x. 269. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1902 TALES of my grandmother [relating to Ayrshire]. [By Archibald Crawfurd.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Paterson’s Poets of Ayrshire, p. 334.] Edinburgh, 1825 TALES of my landlord, collected and arranged by Jedediah Cleishbotham, schoolmaster and parish-clerk of Gan- dercleuch [Sir Walter Scott]. [Vol. I. Black Dwarf. Vols. II. III. IV. Old Mortality.] Third edition. i2mo. 4 vols. Edinburgh, 1817 -Second series, collected and arranged by Jedediah Cleishbotham, schoolmaster and parish-clerk of Gan- dercleugh [Sir Walter Scott]. [Containing The Heart of Mid-lothian.] i2mo. 4 vols. Edinburgh, 1818 -Third series, collected and arranged by Jedediah Cleishbotham, schoolmaster and parish-clerk of Gander- cleugh [Sir Walter Scott]. [Containing The Bride of Lammermoor, and A Legend of Montrose.] i2mo. 4 vols. Edinburgh, 1819 -Fourth and last series, collected and arranged by Jedediah Cleishbotham, schoolmaster and parish-clerk of Gan- dercleugh [Sir Walter Scott]. [Containing Count Robert of Paris, and Castle Dangerous.] 8vo. 4 vols. Edinburgh, 1832 TALES of my neighbourhood. By the author of The collegians [Gerald Griffin]. i2mo. 3 vols. London,1835 TALES of my time. By the author of Blue-Stocking Hall [W. P. Scargill]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1829 Ascribed also to Mrs J. C. Loudon. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] TALES of other days ; with illustrations by George Cruikshank. By J. Y. A. [John Yonge Ackerman]. 8vo. [Olphar Hamst, p. 186.] London, 1830 TALES of passion: Lord Lovel’s daughter. The Bohemian. Second love. By the author of Gilbert Earle [Francis Barry Boyle St Leger]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1829 TALES of Peter Parley [Samuel Griswold Goodrich] about America and Australia. i2mo. London, 1827 TALES of Peter Parley [Samuel Griswold Goodrich] about Europe, Asia, Africa, America, and Oceania. Seventh edition. i2mo. [Allibone’s Diet.] London, 1828 TALES of real life. By an Officer’s widow, author of Miscellaneous poems [Mrs Elizabeth Pilfold]. 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Sotners. i. 408.] Bath [1859] TALES of sea and land. By the author of Peter Parley's tales [Samuel Griswold Goodrich]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Philadelphia, 1846 TALES of secret Egypt. By Sax Rohmer [Arthur Sarsfield Ward]. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1918 TALES of superstition and chivalry. [Verse. By Anne Bannerman.] 8vo. Pp. 144. [D.N.B. vol. 3, p. 139.] London,1802 TALES of terror. By Dick Donovan [Joyce E. Preston Muddock]. 8vo. Pp. 328. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1899 TALES of terror ; with an introductory dialogue. [By Matthew Gregory Lewis.] Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 154. London, 1808 TALES of the Braganza ; or, reminiscences of a voyage. By the author of The magician priest of Avignon, etc. [T. H. Usborne]. Second edition. i2mo. Pp. iv. 240. London, 1852 TALES of the century ; or, sketches of the romance of history between the years 1746 and 1846. By John Sobieski and Charles Edward Stuart [John Hay Allan and Charles Stuart Hay Allan]. i2mo. Edinburgh, 1847 TALES of the coast guard. By Lieutenant Warneford, R.N. [Sir William Howard Russell ?]. 8vo. Pp. 230. [Allibone’s Diet.] London, 1856 TALES of the Colonies ; or, adventures of an Emigrant [in Tasmania ; by Charles Rowcroft, Colonial Magistrate]. 8vo. 3 vols. \Brit. Mus.] London,1843 TALES of the Cordelier metamorphosed, as narrated in a manuscript from the Borromeo Collection and in the Cordelier Cheval of M. Piron, with translations. [By George Hibbert.] 8vo. Pp. 54. [IV.; Martin’s Cat.] London, 1821 Etchings by Robert Cruickshank. TALES of the Crusaders. By the author of Waverley, etc. [Sir Walter Scott, Bart.]. [Vols. I., II., The Betrothed; Vols. III., IV., The Talisman.] 8vo. 4 vols. Edinburgh, 1825 TALES of the dead ; principally translated from the French. [By Mrs Utterson.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 248. [Bodl.\ London, 1813 TALES of the devil, from the original gibberish of Professor Lumpwitz, S. U.S. and C.A.C. in the University of Snor- ingberg [Henry William Bunbury]. 4to. Pp. 56. [Bodl.'] Bury St Edmunds, 1801 TALES of the early ages. By the author of Brambletye House, etc. [Horace Smith]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1832 TALES of the Empire, told round the camp-fire. By Reginald Wray [W. B. Home-Gall]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1901 TALES of the factories [in verse]. By the authoress of Ellen Fitzarthur [Catherine Bowles, later Mrs Southey]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1833 TALES of the fairys ; translated from the French [of M. C. La Mothe]. i2mo. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 123.] London, 1699 TALES of the first French Revolution ; collected by the author of Emilia Wyndham [Mrs Anne Marsh]. 8vo. Pp. 284. London, 1849 •These tales are : “ Professional visits of le Docteur Noir,” “ Sealed orders,” “ Limo- elan,” and “The soldier’s fortune”; and formvol. xxxi. of The Parlour Library. TALES (the) of the Genii; or, the delightful lessons of Horam, the son of Asmar : faithfully translated from the Persian manuscript, and compared with the French and Spanish editions, published at Paris and Madrid, by Sir Charles Morell, formerly ambassador from the British settlements in India to the Great Mogul [but really by Rev. James Ridley]. 8vo. [Nichols’ Lit. Anec. ii. 382 ; Mon. Rev. xxxi. 478.] London, 1764 TALES of the good woman. By a doubtful gentleman [James Kirke Paulding], i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ New York, 1836 TALES of the great and brave. [By Margaret Fraser Tytler.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 328. [Bodl.\ London, 1838 TALES of the Great St Bernard. [By George Croly, LL.D.] Second edition. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1829 TALES of the Hermitage . . . [By Mrs Mary Pilkington.] i2mo. Pp. 228. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1798 TALES of the Hoy ; interspersed with song, ode, and dialogue. By Peter Pindar, Esq. [John Wolcott, M.D.]. [Part I.] 4to. Pp. iv. 64. London [1798] TALES of the manor. By the author of The private history of the Court of E?igland, etc. [Mrs S. Green]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Biog. Diet. 1816 ; Brit. Crit. xxxiii. 95.] London, 1809 TALES of the martyrs; or, sketches from Church history. [By Annie Field Elsdale.] Second edition. i2mo. [Lib. Jour?i. iv. 137.] London, 1844 TALES of the moor. By Josias Homely [John Bradford] ; containing Reginald Arnolf, Tom Stirlington, etc. i2mo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1841 TALES of the moors ; or, rainy days in Ross-shire. By the author of Selwyn i?i search of a daughter [Caroline Bowles, afterwards Mrs Southey]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1828 TALES of the Munster festivals, containing, Card drawing ; the Half Sir ; and Suil Dhuv, the coiner. By the author of Holland-tide, or Irish popular tales [Gerald Griffin]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1827 TALES of the North Riding. By Stephen Yorke [Miss Mary Linskill]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1871 TALES of the North-west ; or, sketches of Indian life and character. By a resident beyond the frontier [William Joseph Snelling]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and PseudT] Boston, 1830 TALES of the peerage and the peasantry. [By Mrs Arabella Sullivan.] i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1831 TALES of the schoolroom. By the editor of The partmg gift [Agnes Strickland]. i2mo. Pp. vii. 188. [Brit. Mus.] London [c. 1835] Dedication signed: Z. TALES of the slave squadron. By Lt. Warneford [Sir William Howard Russell ?]. 8vo. [Allibone’s Diet.] London [i860] TALES of the Solway. By a Gallovidian [J. Aitken]. 8vo. [Mitchell and Cash’s Scot. Topogi] 8vo. Dumfries, 1873 TALES of the South of France. [By Miss Frances Mary Peard.] 8vo. London [c. i860] TALES of the stumps. By “Tivoli” Horace William Bleackley]. 8vo. Brit. A/us.] London, 1901 TALES of the sun. By Lucas Cleeve [Mrs Howard Kingscote, nee Adelina G. I. Wolff.] 8vo. London [c. 1890] TALES of the trains ; being some chapters of railroad romance. By Tilbury Tramp, Queen’s Messenger [Charles Lever]. i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 33, p. 139.] London, 1857 TALES of the tripod. By Pertinax Particular [Tobias Watkins]. 8vo. Baltimore, 1821 TALES of the turf; and rank outsiders. [Poems.] By Hyder Ali [Robert L. Cary, jun.]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Chicago, 1891 TALES of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries ; from the French of M. Le Grand. [Translated by John Williamson.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Gent. Mag. lxxi. ii. 957 ; Mon. Rev. lxxvi. 59.] London, 1786 Reprinted in 1790 under the title of “ Norman tales.” TALES of the wars of our times. By the author of Recollections of the Peninsula, etc. [Col. Joseph Moyle Sherer]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 478.] London, 1829 TALES of the West. By the author of Letters fro?n the East [John Carne]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London,1828 TALES of the wild and the wonderful. [By George Borrow?] 8vo. Pp. x. 356. [Borrow’s Works, ed. Clement Shorter, 1924.] London, 1825 TALES of the woods and fields ; a second series of The two old ?nen's tales. [By Mrs Anne Marsh.] i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1836 TALES of travel West of the Mississippi. By Solomon Bell [William Joseph Snelling]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Boston, 1831 TALES of travels in the’north of Europe, including Brook’s Travels in Lapland, Conway’s Travels in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark, and Granville’s Travels in Russia and Poland. By Solomon Bell [William Joseph Snelling]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and, Pseud.] Boston, 1831 TALES of two countries [viz. Russia and Italy]. By Maxim Gorky [Aleksyei Maksimovitch Pyeshkov]. 8vo. Pp. 250. London, 1914 TALES of two people. By Anthony Hope [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. 8vo. London, 1908 TALES of unrest. By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski]. 8vo. Pp. 292. London, 1898 TALES of woman. [Edited by Frederick Shoberl. Containing The wife. Helen. The Russian daughter. The mother.] i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1828 TALES of yore. [A collection of prose translations from French and German ; by William Taylor.] 8vo. 3 vols. [D. N. B. vol. 55, p. 476]. London, 1910 TALES old and new. By the author of On the edge of the storm, etc. [Margaret Roberts]. 8vo. Pp. 307. London,1872 TALES on the Beatitudes. By the author of Clary's Confirmation, etc. [Miss Frances E. Reade]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1878 TALES, traditions, and antiquities of Leith, with notices of its trade, commerce, etc. [By William Hutchison.] Revised edition, brought down to the year 1865. 8vo. Pp. iv. 380. Leith, 1865 The first edition, published in 1853, has the author’s name. TALES translated [by Alexander Dow] from the Persian of Inatulla of Delhi. 8vo. 2 vols. [B. N. B. vol. 15, p. 383.] London, 1768 TALISMAN (the), a drama ; a tale of the eleventh century. By the authoress of St Bernardine and Poems by L.— three series [Catherine Swanwick]. 8vo. [Olphar Hamst, p. 73.] London, 1864 TALISMAN (the) for 1828 (1829, 1830). [Preface signed: Francis Herbert, i.e. William Cullen Bryant.] 121110. 3 vols. [Foley’s Amer. Authors.] New York, 1827-29 TALISMAN (the) ; from the Russian of Alexander Pushkin [by George Borrow], with other pieces. 8vo. [Wise’s Bibl. of Borrow!] St Petersburg, 1835 TALK kindly, but avoid argument. . . . [By Charles King Whipple]. 8vo. London, 1873 TALK (a) on religion. By C. H. W. [Charles H. Waterhouse]. 8vo. Vienna [1892] TALKING (the) horse ; and other tales. By F. Anstey [Thomas Anstey Guthrie]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1894 TALKS about the [Civil] War. By Uncle Jesse [C. E. Babb]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseudi] Cincinnati, 1875 TALKS on David Livingstone. [Introduction signed: T. R. W. L., i.e. Theodore R. W. Lunt]. 4to. Pp. 31. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1920 TALKS with boys and girls ; or, wisdom better than gold. By a layman [Benjamin Barton Comegys]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Snpp?\ Philadelphia, 1878 TALKS with the bairns, about the bairns. By Ruth Elliott [Lillie Peck]. i2mo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Mus.] London [1882] TALKS with the Professor. By the Listener [Walter Grierson]. 8vo. Pp. 189. [Brit. Mus.] London [1930] No. 7 of the Outline Library. TALKS with Uncle Morris; or, the friend of my boyhood. By Old Humphrey [George Mogridge]. Svo. Pp. 64. [Brit. Mus.] London [1881] TALL (the) man of Winton and his wife. ... By Over Forty [Nathan Green]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Nashville, Tennessee, 1872 TALL (a) ship. By “ Bartimeus ” [Lewis Anselm da Costa Ricci]. Svo. London, 1918 TALL (the) villa ; a novel. By Lucas Malet [Mrs Mary St Leger Harrison, nie Kingsley]. 8vo. Pp. 254. London,1920 TALLAHASSEE (a) girl. [A novel. By Maurice Thompson.] i6mo. [Foley’s Amer. Authors.] Boston, 1882 TALLEYRAND ; a spectacular play in three acts. By Laurence Pritchard Mrs Cecil Campbell]. 8vo. Pp. 77. Brit. Mus.] Bristol [1924] TALPA; or, the chronicles of a clay farm : an agricultural fragment. By C. W. H. [Chandos Wren Hoskyns]. 8vo. [Birm. Cent. Lib.] London, 1852 TALVI’S [Mrs Therese Albertine Luise Robinson’s] History of the colonization of America ; edited by William Hazlitt, Esq. barrister-at-law. i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1851 TAMBURLAINE the Greate ; who, from the state of a shepheard in Scythia, by his rare and wonderfull conquests, became a most puissant and mighty monarque. [By Christopher Marlowe.] 4to. B. L. No pagination. [Dyce Cat.] London, 1605 -With his impassionate furie, for the death of his lady and loue faire Zenocrate : his forme of exhortation and discipline to his three sonnes, and the manner of his owne death. The second part. [By Christopher Marlowe.] 4to. B. L. No pagination. London, 1606 TAMERLANE and other poems. By a Bostonian [Edgar Allen Poe]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. a?id Pseud, i. 38.] Boston, 1827 TAMING (the) of Tamzin. [A story for juveniles.] By Esme Stuart [Amelie Claire Leroy]. 8vo. Pp. 253. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1920 TAMMER’S duel. [A story.] By E. Heron [Kate O’Brien and Hesketh Pritchard]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 215. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1898 TAMWORTH (the) reading room ; letters to The Times on an address delivered by Sir Robert Peel, Bart., on the establishment of a reading room at Tamworth. By Catholicus [John Henry Newman, D.D.]. Svo. [Brit. Mus.] * London, 1841 TANCRED, a tale ; and other poems. By the author of Conrad, a tragedy Alfred Bunn]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 102. Green’s Bibl. Somers, ii. 502.] London, 1819 TANCRED the hero; and other fairy tales. By Margaret Ormiston [M. O. Curie]. 8vo. Pp. 92. [Border Mag. 1923, p. 47.] London, 1920 TANGLED destinies. [A novel.] By Dick Donovan [Joyce Emerson Preston Muddock]. 8 vo. London, 1908 TANGLED (the) skein. [A novel.] By Baroness Orczy [Mrs Montagu Barstow]. 8vo. Pp. 332. London, 1907 TANGLED (a) tale. By Lewis Carroll [Rev. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson]. Svo. London, 1885 TANGLED talk ; an essayist’s holiday. By T. Talker [William Brighty Rands]. 8vo. [Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. iii. 34.] London, 1864 TANGLED threads. [A novel.] By Esme Stuart [Miss Amelie Claire Leroy]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Who's Who i?i Lit.] London, 1897 TANGLED trinities. By Daniel Wood- roffe [Mrs Mary Woods]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1901 TANGLED up in Beulah Land. [A novel.] By J. P. Mowbray [Andrew C. Wheelen], 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1902 TANGLEDOM ; enigmas, problems, riddles,and transformations. By Nillor [Charles R. Ballard]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1904 TANGLES and corners in Kezzie Driscoll’s life. By “ Fleeta” [Kate W. Hamilton]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1883 TANGLES unravelled. By Flora M‘Flimsey [Evelyn Kimball Johnson]. 8vo. New York, 1890 TANIA’S peril; or, the edge of an abyss ; a Russian story. By Henry Greville [Madame Alice Marie Celeste Fleury Durand]. Svo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1891 TANNER (the) boy [viz. Ulysses Grant], and how he became a Lieutenant- General. By Major Penniman [Charles Wheeler Denison]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Boston, 1864 TANNHAUSER; or, the battle of the bards : a poem. By Neville Temple [Hon. Julian Charles Henry Fane] and Edward Trevor [Edward Robert Bulwer-LyttonJ. 8vo. Pp. 117. [Olphar Hamst, p. 124.] London, 1861 TANTALUS. [Anovel.] By the author of The adventures of John Johns [Frederic Carrel]. 8vo. Pp. 260. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1913 TANTE Claire. By the author of Rob Lindsay and his school [William Mac- Gillivray, W.S.]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1906 TANTRA of the great liberation [Maha nirvanatantra] ; a translation from the Sanskrit with introduction and commentary. By Arthur Avalon [Sir John G. Woodroffe, of Calcutta]. 8vo. \Amer. Journ. of Theology, Oct. 1910, p. 441.] London, 1913 TAORMINA, and other poems. [By Helen Lowe.] 8vo. Pp. 197. London, 1864 TARANTULA (the) ; or, the dance of fools : a satirical work. . . . By the author of The rising sun, etc. [Eaton Stannard Barrett]. 8vo. 2 vols. [D. N. B. vol. 3, p. 281.] London, 1809 Ascribed also to Edward Dubois. TARBUCKET ; or, the humble petition of the Bethel Union Society in the year 1820. By Capsicum [Rev. George Charles Smith]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseudi] London, 1820 TARDY George. [By George Henry Boker.] 4to. [Foley’s Amer. authors.] New York, private print, 1865 TARES ; a simple history. By Ricus [Whatelev William Ingall]. 4to. Pp. 23. [Brit. Musi] Deal, 1924 TARIES on tour through the Lake District. By J. A. [John Armstrong, printer]. 8vo. [Sinton’s Bibl. of Hawick] Hawick [1810?] TARQUIN the Proud [a tragedy] and other poems. [By Samuel Prout Hill.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1843 TARTAN VILLE ; the idyll of anorthern village. Bv Catter Thun [Rev Hugh Mackenzie Campbell]. 8vo Pp. 162. [Anderson’s Aberd. Univ. Bibl. p. 500.] Brechin, 1891 TASSO. [A poetical drama.] By Rose Neil [Miss Isabella Harwood]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud ] London, 1879 TASSO and Leonora ; the commentaries of Ser Pantaleone degli Gambacorti, Gentleman Usher to the august Madama Leonora D’Este. By the author of Mary Powell [Anne Manning, later Mrs Rathbone]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1856 TASTE ; an epistle to a young critic. [By John Armstrong, M.D.] 4to. [D. Al. B. vol. 2, p. 95.] London,1753 TASTE: an essay . . . [from the French of Charles Rollin]. 8vo. Pp. 54. [Manch. Free Lib.] London, 1732 TASTE (a) of the everlasting feast presented in a briefe contemplation of the great that shall be in heaven at the marriage supper of the Lambe ; prepared by E. L. [Edward Lane], minister of the gospell. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London [1670 ?] TASTE (the) of the town ; or, a guide to all publick diversions. Viz. I. Of musick, operas, and plays. ... II. Of poetry, sacred and profane. . . . III. Of dancing, religious and dramatical. . . . IV. Of the mimes, pantomimes and choruses of the antients. . . . V. Of audiences, at our theatrical representations. ... VI Of masquerades ; ecclesiastical, political, civil and military. . . . VII. Of the athletic sports of the antients. . . . [By James Ralph.] 8vo. Pp. xxiv. 237. [D.N.B. vol. 47, p. 221.] London, 1731 The epistle dedicatory is signed: A. Primcock. This work appeared first in 1728 with the title “ The touchstone, or historical essays ...” q.v. TATONG, the little slave ; a story of Korea. By Cousin Annie [Annie Maria Barnes]. 8vo. [A?ner. Cat.] Richmond, Va., 1899 TATTERS. By Beulah [Fanny D. Bates]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1892 TATTINE. By Ruth Ogden [Mrs Frances Otis Ide]. 8vo. [Amer.Cat.] New York, 1899 TAUNTON of to-day; things which a stranger wants to know about the town. ... [By Reginald Barnicott.] 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, iii. 310.] Taunton. 1895 TAVERN anecdotes, and reminiscences of the origin of signs, clubs, coffeehouses, streets, city companies, wards, etc. ; intended as a lounge-book for Londoners and their country cousins. By one of the old school [William West, bookseller]. 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 60, p. 346.] London [1825] Wrongly attributed to Colin Mackenzie. TAVERN (the) of the three virtues; translated from the original of Saint- Juirs[z'.£. Rene Delorme]. Illustrated. 4to. Pp. xxx. 155. [Brit. Mus.] London [1896] TAVISTOCKE (the) Naboth proved Nabal ; an answer to a narrative by Tho. Larkham in the name of the church of Tavistocke in Devon. By F[rancis] G[lanville], D[ig.] P[ol- wheele], W[alt.] G[odbear], N[ic.] W[atts], W[illiam] H[ore], etc. 4to. [IV. ; Davidson’s Bibl. Devon, p. 51.] London, 1658 TAXATIO papalis ; being an account of the tax-books of the united Church and court of modern Rome, or of the Taxae cancellarise apostolicse,and Taxae sacrae poenitentiariae apostolicae. By Emancipatus [Rev. Joseph Mendham]. 8vo. [Mendham Collection Cat. p. 202.] London,1825 The second edition, 1836, bears the author’s name. TAXATION. By an irresponsible taxpayer [the Hon. Mrs Caroline Norton]. 8vo. Pp. 34. Private print [c. 1840] TAXATION, 1891-1892. . . . A history. ^By Hubert Haer.] 8vo. Pp. 173. Brit. Mus.\ London, 1892 TAXATION in Ceylon. [By A. M. and John Ferguson.] 8vo. [Bond. Lib. Cat.\ Colombo, 1890 TAXATION no tyranny; an answer to the resolutions and address of the American Congress. [By Samuel Johnson, LL.D.] Fourth edition. 8vo. Pp. 91. London, 1774 In collected works (London, 1792), vol. viii. TAXES (the) ; a dramatick entertainment. [By Phanuel Bacon.] 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 2, p. 371.] London, 1757 TAXIDERMIC and other notes. By a collector [G. H. Hawtayne]. i2mo. [Col. Inst. Lib.] Georgetown, Demerara, 1884 TAXIDERMY ; or, the art of collecting, preparing and mounting objects of natural history. [By T. E. Bow- dich.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1820 TAYLORS physicke has purged the divel; or, the divell has got a squirt, and the simple, seame-rent, threadbare Taylor translates it into railing poetry, and is now soundly cudgelled for it. By Voluntas Ambulatoria [Henry Walker ?]. 4to. [Christie- Miller Cat.] [London] 1641 A satire upon John Taylor, the water-poet. TEA and Toddy. By Leo Ross [David Anderson Moxey, M.D., Elocutionist]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1878 TEA cultivation in Ceylon ; pruning and kindred subjects. By “Rustic” [Edward Hamlin]. Second edition, revised. 8vo. [Calc. Imp. Lib.] Colombo, 1905 TEACHER’S (the) harvest. By the Teacher [Mrs E. N. Horton]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Supp.] Boston, 1852 TEACHERS (the) of the world unvailed ; wherein the ground of their ministry is manifested, both in doctrine and practice, to be out of the light which cometh from Christ, in the witchcraft deceiving the people. . . . Declared against by G. F. . . . [By George Fox.] 4to. Pp. 30. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 650.] London,1656 TEACHER’S (the) prayer on the morning of the confirmation of her pupils. [By Emily Mann.] i2mo. London [1852] TEACHING the catechism ... By the editor of The sower [Francis H. Drinkwater]. 8vo. Pp. 123. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 TEACHING (the) of the “Scotch sermons” exhibited and examined. By a layman [Robert Gossip, late of the Daily Review]. 8vo. Pp. 52. Edinburgh, 1881 TEACHINGS (the) of flowers, historical and legendary. . . . [By Mrs- Paterson, nee Carruthers.] 8vo. Belfast, N.D. Contemporary attestation. TEACHINGS of the ages. By A. C. Traveller [Mrs H. K. W. Clark]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Supp.] San Francisco, 1874 TEACHINGS of the Christmas tree, for children, young and old ; translated from the German [by Charles Chorley, newspaper editor]. 8vo. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. p. 1009.] Truro, 1876 TEACHINGS of the Master. By a disciple [Samuel Halbeart Turner]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1868 TEARES of Ireland ; wherein is lively presented, as in a map, a list of the unheard cruelties and perfidious Jreacheries of bloud-thirsty Jesuits and the Popish faction. [Preface by James Cranford.] [D.N.B. vol. 13, p. 16.] 1642 TEARES (the) of the beloved; or, the lamentation of Saint John, concerning the death and passion of Christ Jesus our Saviour. By J. M. "Jervis (or Gervase) Markham]. 4to. IV. ; Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1600 TEARES (the) of the Muses. By Ed. Sp. [Edmund Spenser]. 4to. No pagination. London, 1591 Followed by “Virgils Gnat. Long since dedicated to the most noble and excellent Lord ; the Earle of Leicester, late deceased,” having no separate title-page. TEARFUL (a) victory ; a story for children. By Darley Dale [Miss Francesca M. Steele]. 8vo. Pp. 128. London [1880] TEARS for the death of Alexander Earle of Dunfermeling. [By John Lyon.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] Edinburgh, 1622 TEARS (the) of a grateful people ; a Hebrew dirge and hymn, chaunted in the Great Synagogue, St James’s PL, Aldgate, on the day of the funeral of King George III. . . . By Hyman Hurwitz, of Highgate : translated by a friend [Samuel Taylor Coleridge]. 8vo. Pp. 13. [Ashley Lib.] London [1820] TEARS (the) of Alnwick ; a pastoral elegy, in memory of the late Duchess of Northumberland. By a student of the Middle Temple [Henry Lucas]. 4to. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit. ; Mon. Rev. Ivi. 68.] London, 1777 TEARS (the) of genius ; occasioned by the death of Dr [Oliver] Goldsmith. By Courtney Melmoth [Samuel Jack- son Pratt]. 4to. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1774 TEARS of Granta ; a satire addressed to Undergraduates in the University of Cambridge. By an Undergraduate [T. U. Stoney]. 4to. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books.] Cambridge, 1812 TEARS (the) of Jerusalem ; or, some short remarks on the dilapidated state of many of our country churches. . . . By S. T. B., a Graduate of Balliol College, Oxford [John Noble Shipton, rector of Othery]. 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, ii. 124.] Bristol, 1820 TEARS (the) of St Margaret; also, odes of condolence to the high and mighty musical directors, on their downfall. ... By Peter Pindar, Esq. [John Wolcott, M.D.]. 4to. Pp. vi. 47. [D. At. B. vol. 62, p. 293.] London, 1792 TEARS (the) of the Indians . . . written in Spanish by Casaus and made English by J. P. [John Phillips]. 8vo. Pp. 134. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 1314.] London, 1656 TEARS (the) of Yorkshire for the loss of the Marquis of Rockingham. . . . [By Dr Edward Miller.] 8vo. Pp. 30. [D. N. B. vol. 37, p. 406.] Doncaster [1782] TEA-TABLE rhymes. By Leicester Romayne [M. P. Guimaraens]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1905 TE XNH-IIOAIMOrAMIA ; or, the marriage of armes and art July 12, 1651 : being an accompt of the act at Oxon. to a friend. By R. W. [Robert Whitehall]. 4to. No pagination. London, 1651 “ Rob. Whitehall of Merton coll, supposed to be the author.”—MS. note by Wood. TECHNETHYRAMBEIA ; or, a poem on Paddy Murphey, under-porter of T[rinity] C[ollege], Dublin. [By Rev. William Dunkin, D.D.] ; translated from the original Latin by J. Cowper. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Dublin, 1730 TECHNIQUE (the) of the love affair. By a gentlewoman [Doris Langley Moore]. . . . 8vo. Pp. ix. 227. [Brit. Mus.] London [1928] TECUMSEH of the Shawanoes; a tale of the War of 1812. By Col. H. R. Gordon [Edward Sylvester Ellis]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1898 TECUMSEH ; or, the warrior of the West: a poem in four cantos. . . . By an English officer [Major John Richardson]. i2mo. Pp. viii. 135. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1828 TED Frisco, the tattooed man. [By Robert Andrew Scott Macfie.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Liverpool, 1898 TEDDY and Carrots ; two merchants of Newspaper Row. By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. i2mo. Pp. 225. Boston, 1896 TEDDY Ashton’s [C. Allen Clarke’s] Lancashire readings and recitations. 8vo. 3 parts. [Brit. Mus.] Blackpool, 1921-24 TEDDY B. and Teddy G., the Roosevelt bears. By Paul Piper [Seymour Eaton]. 4to. [Amer. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1907 TEDDY’S button. By the author of Eric's good news [Miss Amy Le Feuvre]. 8 vo. Pp. 119. London, 1895 TEDDY’S ship. [A tale.] By A. B. Romney [A. Beatrice Rambaut]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1899 TEETOTALISM (number two). By J. M. [James Maltman, M.A.] ; a book opposing Teetotalism, but advocating the spread of pure Christianity against the curse of drunkenness. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1901 TEKEL ; or, Cora Glencoe. By Brag- anza [H. A. Bragg]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1870 TEKEL; thou art weighed in the scales and found wanting ; or, the national religion of England brought to the test of Holy Scripture and found everywhere defective and erroneous. By Puto [Henry Bate, surgeon]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1872 TEKMHPIA fxerpLKa ; symptoms of rhyme, original and translated. [By Rev. Peter Hall, M.A.]. 4to. Pp. 69. London, 1824 “25 copies printed. Presented by the author to the Bodleian Library. Peter Hall. July 8th. 1826.”—MS. note by Hall in the Bodleian copy. TELEMACHUS ; a masque. [By George Graham]: set to music by Phil. Hayes, Bac. Mus. 4to. Pp. 14. [Bod/.] London, 1764 TELESCOPE (the) ; or, moral views for children. [By Margaret Roberts.] i2mo. [Gen/. Mag. lxxxv. i. 81.] London, 1805 TELL mamma. [A tale.] By the author of A trap to catch a sunbeam [Mrs Mackarness, nee Matilda Anne Planche]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1874 TELL me a story. By Ennis Graham [Mrs Mary Molesworth]. 8vo. Pp. 196. London, 1875 Dedication signed : A. V. G. M. TELL your wife. By Clara Vance Mrs M. Andrews Denison]. 8vo. Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] New York, 1885 TELL-TALE (the) ; or, home secrets told by old travellers. By H. Trusta Mrs Elizabeth Stuart Phelps]. i2mo. 'Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1853 TELL-TALE (the) ; or, sketches of domestic life in the United States. By H. Trusta [Mrs E. S. Phelps] and Grace Greenwood [Sara Jane Lippin- cott, nee Clarke]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1852] TE'AOS (to) kclI to epyov. The highest end and chiefest work of a Christian set forth in two plain discourses, concerning the glory of God and our own salvation. By J. W. [Joseph Waite, minister at Sprowton, Suffolk]. 8vo. Pp. 8, 116. London, 1668 TEMPERANCE (a) lecture. [In verse.] By a village curate [Rev. William Glenn, B.A. T.C.D.]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland] Dublin, 1877 TEMPERANCE rhymes. [By the Rev. William Gaskell.] 8vo. Pp. 79. [Axon’s Gaskell Bibl.] London, 1839 TEMPERANCE sermons in St Paul’s Cathedral, Metropolitan Tabernacle. . . . Reprinted from the Temperance Record. . . . [By H. J. Ellison and J. P. Chown.] Fol. [Brit. Mus.] London [1870] TEMPERANCE (the) Shorter Catechism and confession of faith, with unabridged notes. By the author of The Sabbath on the rock, etc. [Robert Wilson]. 8vo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Mus.] Glasgow, 1877 TEMPERATE (a) discussion of the causes which have led to the present high price of bread ; addressed to the plain sense of the people. [By Charles Long, M.P., Secretary to the Treasury.] Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 45. [IV.] London, 1800 TEMPERATE (a) ward-word, to the turbulent and seditious Watch-word of Sir Francis Flastinges, knight, who indevoreth to slander the whole Catho- lique cause, and all professors thereof, both at home and abrode. . . . By N. D. [Nicolas Doleman, alias Father Robert Parsons], qto. Pp. 129. [Jones’ Peck, p. 54.] [Antwerp] 1599 TEMPEST (the); an opera: taken from Shakespear : as it is performed at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane, the songs from Shakespear, Dryden, etc., the music composed by Mr Smith. [By David Garrick.] 8vo. London,1756 TEMPEST-TOSSED; the story of Seejungfer. By the author of Mademoiselle Mori [Miss Margaret Roberts]. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1884 TEMPLAR (the) Knights. [By Alexander Walker.] 8vo. [Robertson’s Aberd. Bibl.] Aberdeen, 1887 TEMPLARIA; papers relative to the history, privileges, and possessions of the Scotish Knights Templars, and their successors the Knights of St John of Jerusalem. [Collected by James Maidment.] 4to. 4 parts. [W.\ Martin’s Cat.] [Edinburgh] 1828 TEMPLARS (the); an historical novel. [By Peter Leicester.] i2mo. 3 vols. London,1830 TEMPLE Bar the city Golgotha; a narrative of the historical occurrences of a criminal character associated with the present Bar. By a member of the Inner Temple [James Holbert Wilson]. 4to. Pp. 68. [N. and Q., April 1870, p. 359.] London, 1853 TEMPLE (the) knock’d down ; or, R-1 action. By Peter Pindar [John Wolcot, M.D.], 8vo. Pp. 27. London [1814] TEMPLE Melodies ; a collection of about two hundred popular tunes adapted to nearly five hundred favorite hymns, selected with special reference to public, social, and private worship. [By Darius E. Jones.] 4to. Pp. 224. New York, 1856 TEMPLE (the) of corruption ; a poem. [By W. Churchill.] 4to. Pp. 23. [.Bodl.] London, 1770 TEMPLE (the) of dullness ; with the humours of Signor Capochio, and Signora Dorinna : a comic opera of two acts, as it is perform’d at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane ; the music by Mr Arne. [Attributed to Colley Cibber.] 4to. London, 1745 TEMPLE (the) of fame ; a poem, inscrib’d to Mr Congreve. [By Thomas Yalden, D.D.] 8vo. [Edward Solly, in the Bibliographer, vol. 4, p. 93.] London, 1709 TEMPLE (the) of fame, and other poems. By Ganymede [John Arthur Coupland]. 8vo. Pp. 87. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1891 TEMPLE (the) of fire. By Lewis Ramsden [Dr W. Lisle Dowding]. Pp. 360. London, 1905 TEMPLE (the) of Flora. [By Robert John Thornton, M.D.] 4to. [Jackson’s Bibl. of Botany.] London, 1812 TEMPLE (the) of health ; a poetic vision ; occasioned by the universal joy expressed on His Majesty’s most happy recovery. By a lady [Grace Arthur]. 4to. Pp. 12. London, 1789 TEMPLE (the) of Melekartha. [By Isaac Taylor.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 2583.] London, 1831 TEMPLE (the) of truth ; or, the best system of reason, philosophy, virtue, and morals, analytically arranged. [By Charles Edward De Coetlogon.] Second edition. 8vo. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] London, 1807 TEMPLE (the) of Venus; a gentle satire on the times. By the author of The Meretriciad [Edward Thompson]. 4to. 2 parts. {D. N. B. vol. 56, p. 209.] London, 1863 TEMPLE-OGE (the) ballad. By Philanthropos [Richard Pockrick]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] Rathfarnham, 1730 TEMPLES (the) of the Orient, and their message in the light of Holy Scripture, Dante’s Vision, and Bunyan’s Allegory. [By Mrs Elizabeth Anna Gordon.] 8vo. {Brit. Mas.] London,1902 TEMPLE-STUDENT (the) ; an epistle to a friend, who had requested the author’s opinion of some verses. [By George Keate.] 4to. Pp. 27. {Gent. Mag. Sept. 1797, p. 796.] London, 1765 TEMPORA mutantur; or, the great change from 73 to 93, in the travels of [Gilbert Burnet] a professor of theology at Glasgow from the primitive and episcopal loyalty through Italy, Geneva, etc. to the deposing doctrine under Papistico - phanatico - prelatico colours at Salisbury. [By Charles Leslie.] 4to. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1694 TEMPORAL (the) government of the Pope’s state. [By Thomas Denham.] 8vo. Pp. 268. [A. and Q. 25 th Feb. i860, p. 137.] London, 1788 TEMPORAL (the) interest of North America; showing the causes and cure of the many distractions, wants, poverty, and ill-will to each other, which we are exposed to. . . . By a lover of his country [Joseph Morgan]. 8vo. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. ii. 58.] Philadelphia, 1733 TEMPORAL power ; a study in supremacy. By Marie Corelli [Caroline Cody]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 587. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1902 TEMPTATION ; a novel. By Leigh Cliffe [George Jones]. i2mo. 3 vols. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1823 TEMPTATION (the) of Phillip Carr. [A novel.] By May Wynne [Mabel Wynne Knowles]. 8vo. Pp. 312. London, 1906 TEMPTATION ; or, a wife’s perils. [By Mrs M. A. Gascoigne.] i2mo. 3 vols. {Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1839 TEN acres enough ; a practical experience, showing how a very small farm may . . . keep a very large family. [By Edmund Morris.] i2mo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] New York, 1864 TEN books of Homer’s Iliades, translated out of French by A. H. [Arthur Hall]. 4to. {Christie-Miller Cat.] London, 1581 TEN centuries of European progress. By Aquarius [Lowis d’Aguilar Jackson]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1891 TEN chapters in the life of John Hancock ; now first published since 1789. ^By Stephen Higginson.] 8vo. Pp. 68. Sabin’s Dictionary.] New York, 1857 TEN days at Monte Carlo, at the Bank’s expense. By V. B. [Victor Bethell]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1898 TEN days in Paris ; or, notes of a short tour from Manchester in May and June 1854. By Crux [John Harland]. Pp. iv. 98. Manchester, 1854 TEN dollars enough ; keeping house well on ten dollars a week. . . . By Catherine Owen [Mrs Helen Nitsch]. 8vo. {Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1887 TEN hints addressed to wise men, concerning the dispute which ended . . . in the dismission of Mr [Francis James] Jackson, the British Minister to the United States. [By John Lowell, LL.D.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ [Boston, 1809] TEN lectures on the Martyrs. By P. Allard ; authorised translation by Luigi Cappadelta [Charles Louis Dessonlavy]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1907 TEN letters introductory to College residence. By a Tutor. [Signed: C. D. i.e. Charles Daman, M.A.] 8vo. [Bodl.] Oxford, private print, 1848 X LETTERS on the Catholics. See Letters on the subject of the Catholics, etc. TEN letters on the Church and Church establishments. . . . By an Anglo- Canadian [Rev. Adam Townley, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 80. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.\ Toronto, 1839 TEN (the) pleasures of marriage. . . . Written by A. Marsh, Typogr. [By Aphra Behn ?] 8vo. London, 1682 The second part is entitled, “ The confession of the new married couple. . . .” See an edition reprinted in London, 1922. TEN quaeres upon the ten new com- mandements of the General Council of the Officers of the Armies, Dec. 22, 1659. [By William Prynne.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.\ [London, 1660] TEN sonnets. [By] W. E. A. A. [William Edward Armitage Axon]. 8vo. [Manchester, private print] 1887 TEN thousand a-year. [By Samuel Warren.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Courtney’s Secrets, p. 90.] Edinburgh, 1841 TEN thousand miles against five thousand ; or, what is the best gauge for the new Indian railways? [By A. W. Forde.] 8vo. [Calc. Imp. Lib.\ Bombay, 1870 TEN thousand miles on a bicycle. By Karl Kron [Lyman Hotchkiss Bagg]. 8vo. Pp. cvii. 799. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] New York, 1887 TEN (the) times one record. [By Rev. E. E. Hale.] 4to. Boston, 1893-5 TEN to seventeen ; a boarding-house diary. By Ingraham Lovell [Mrs Josephine D. D. Bacon]. 8vo. [.Amer. Cat.] New York, 1908 TEN (the) ton cutter. By Harry Castle- mon [Charles Austin Fosdick], 121110. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1898 TEN years in a lunatic asylum. By Mabel Etchell [Charlotte Phillips]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 368. [Bad/.] London [1868] TEN years in Anglican orders. By “Viator” [Rev. Johannes Godfrey F. Raupert]. 8vo. London, 1898 TEN years in London. ... By the old Bushman [Horace William Wheelwright]. 8vo. [Reform Club Cat. p. 415.] London, 1865 TEN years in Sweden ; being a description of the landscape, climate, domestic life, forests, mines, agriculture, field sports, and fauna of Scandinavia. By “An old Bushman,” author of Bush wanderings in Australia:, etc. [Horace William Wheelwright]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1865 TEN years of imperialism in France [1851-1861]; impressions of a “Flaneur” [C. B. Derosne]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1863 Ascribed also to General Eber. TENANT (the) of the Grange. [A novel.] By Morice Gerard [Rev. John Jessop Teague]. 8vo. Pp. 362. London, 1903 TENANT (the) of Wildfell Hall. By Acton Bell [Ann Bronte]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1848 TENANTS (the) and landlords versus the Free Traders. By Powdavie [Peter Robert Drummond, bookseller]. 8vo. [Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. i col. 922.] Perth, 1850 TENANTS (the) of Johnson’s Court; and other tales. By Janet Armytage [Katharine Janet Armytage Axon]. 8vo. London, 1891 TENDER and true ; a colonial tale. By the author of Clara Morison [Catherine Ellen Spence]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1856 TENDER and true ; poems of love. Selected by the editor of Ouiet hours, etc. [M. W. T. i.e. M. W. Tileston]. i6mo. Pp. xi. 180. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1882 TENDER (the) passion. [A novel.] By M. E. Francis [Mrs Francis Blundell, nee Mary E. Sweetman]. 8vo. Pp. 320. London, 1910 TENDER (a) salutation of perfect love unto the elect of God. . . . [Signed : E. B. i.e. Edward Burrough, Society of Friends.] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 365.] London, 1661 TENDRILS. By Reuben [Rev. Robert Stephen Hawker, M.A., vicar of Mor- wenstowe]. i2mo. Pp. viii. 86. [Brit. Mus.] Cheltenham, 1821 TENDRILS in verse. By one who hath tasted that the Lord is gracious [Ebenezer Palmer, the publisher]. 8vo. Pp. 270. London, 1856 The third edition, 1880, gives the author’s name. TENETS (the) of the Buckinghamshire Anabaptists. [By-Penn, of Cold Aston.] 8vo. Pp. 31. London, 1723 TENNESSEAN (a) abroad; or, letters from Europe, Africa, and Asia, 1851- 52. [By Randal W. IVPGavock.] 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseudi] New York, 1853 TENNESSEE (a) judge ; a novel. By the Arkansaw traveller [Opie P. Read]. 8vo. Pp. 325. Chicago, 1893 TENNYSON I AN A; notes bibliographical and critical on Early poems of Alfred & C. Tennyson. Opinions of contemporary writers. In Memor- iam ; various readings, with parallel passages in Shakespeare’s Sonnets. Various readings in later poems (1842- 1865). Patriotic and minor poems. Allusions to Scripture and to classic authors. The Tennyson portraits. Bibliographical list of Tennyson’s volumes and of his contributions to periodical publications. [Preface signed : R. H. S. i.e. R. H. Shepperd.] 8vo. Pp. xii. 170. London, 1866 TENNYSON’S fairies, and other stories. By Joaquim Miller [Cincinnatus Hiner Miller]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.\ Boston, 1889 TENOR (the) and the boy. [A novel.] By Sarah Grand [Frances Clarke, later Mrs Haldane M‘Fall]. 8vo. Pp. 264. London, 1899 TENTAMEN novum; proving that Timothy and Titus were diocesan rulers of Ephesus and Crete, by an argument drawn from the time of S. Paul’s beseeching Timothy to abide at Ephesus, and leaving Titus at Crete, as it is briefly demonstrated in the annals of Paul, wrote by the most learned prelate Dr Pearson, late Lord Bish. of Chester, with an answer to J. O.’s [Owen’s] Plea for scripture- ordination. By T. G. [T. Gripps] E. A. P. 8vo. Pp. 198. London, 1696 TENTAMEN ; or, an essay towards the history of Whittington, some time Lord Mayor of London. By Vicesi- mus Blenkinsop, LL.D., F.R.S.A.S.S., etc. [Theodore Edward Hook]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 76. [D. N. B. vol. 27, p. 274.] London, 1820 A satire on Alderman Wood and Queen Caroline, rigidly suppressed. TENTAMEN theologicum ; or, an attempt to assist the young clergyman in the choice of a subject for his sermon on any Sunday throughout the year. By E. D. [Rev. Edward Davison]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.\ Durham, 1850 TENTH (the) commandment. By Gladys Dudley Hamilton [Marguerite L. Glentworth]. 8vo. Boston, 1902 TENTH (the) epistle of the first book of Horace imitated. [By Edward Burnaby Greene.] 4to. [Gent. Mag. lviii. 276 ; Mon. Rev. xv. 653.] 1756 TENTH (the) Muse lately sprung up in America; or, severall poems, compiled with great variety of wit and learning. . . . [By Mrs Anne Brad- street, nee Dudley.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1650 The second edition, which appeared at Boston in New England, was the first book by a woman printed in the United States : its title begins, “ Several poems compiled with great variety. . . .” See above. TENTH (the) note of the Church examined, viz. Holiness of life. [By Thomas Tenison, D.D., Vicar of S. Martin’s in the Field.] 4to. Pp. 16. [Jones’ Peck, p. 438.] London, 1687 TENTS (the) of Kedar. By the author of The Valley of Baca [Kathleen Mary Smith]. 8vo. London, 1886 TENURE (the) of kings and magistrates ; proving, that it is lawfull, and hath been held so through all ages, for any, who have the power, to call to account a tyrant, or wicked king, and after due conviction, to depose, and put him to death ; if the ordinary magistrate have neglected, or deny’d to doe it. . . . Published now the second time, with some additions. . . . The author J. M. [John Milton]. 4to. Pp. 60. [Masson’s Life of Milton, iv. 64, 5, nofe.\ London, 1650 The first edition was published in 1649. TEONE ; or, the magic maid : a poem. By Rusco [Mary Ann Smith]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Milwaukee, 1862 TERCENTENARY (the) of Corydon ; a bucolic drama in three acts. By Novus Homo [William John Court- hope, of New College, Oxford]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 29. [R. Inglis.] Oxford, 1864 TERENCE in English. By R. B. [Rev. Richard Bernard of Epworth.] 4to. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, ii. 166.] London, 1598 Later editions in 1607, 1614, 1641. TERENCE’S comedys, translated into English [with the Latin on the opposite page], with critical and explanatory notes : to which is prefixed a dissertation on the life and writings of Terence, containing an enquiry into the rise and progress of dramatic poetry in Greece and Rome, with remarks on the comic measure. [By Thomas Cooke.] i2mo. 3 vols. [IV.] London, 1734 B VOL. VI. TERENTIUS; the Andrian, a comedy: attempted in English metre. [By Sir Henry Charles Englefield, Bart.] 8vo. [W. ; Martin’s Cat.] London, 1814 TERIBUS ; the ballad of Hornshole and the fight of 1514 ; adapted to the ancient air [by R. S. Craig, advocate]. 4to. [Sinton’s Bibl. of Hawick.] Hawick [c. 1896] TERMES (les) de la Ley ; or, certaine difficult and obscure words and terms of the common lawes. [By John or Wm. Rastell.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1629 TERMINAL synchronism of Daniel’s two principal periods, two thousand three hundred days, and a time, times, and the dividing of time. By the author of Daniel's great period of two thousand three hundred days dis- covered [Rev. Richard Hastings Graves, Dean of Ardagh]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1858 TERMS of communion agreed upon by the Scots Methodists, but generally known by the specious denomination of the Presbytery of Relief; their own explanation of said terms, with remarks upon both : in a letter from a Presbyterian to his friend in Aberdeen. [By Thomas Bennett, minister of the Antiburgher church, Ceres, Fife.] The third edition, with the addition of the 9th, 10th, and nth deductions, and the footnote upon deduction 5th. i2mo. Pp. 24. [Struthers’ History of the Relief Church (1843), P- 571-] Edinburgh, 1779 TERMS (on) of communion: I. The boundaries of the Church. By the Rev. C. K. P. [Charles Kegan Paul]. 8vo. Pp. 26. Cambridge, 1861 No. V. of Tracts for priests and people. TERMS (the) of ministerial and Christian communion imposed on the Church of Scotland by a prevailing party in the General Assembly, in opposition to the great bulk both of office-bearers and private Christians. . . . With an appendix relating to the new pamphlet [by Rev. John Hyndman] call’d, A just view of the constitution of the Church of Scotland, etc. [By John Maclaurin, minister at Glasgow.] 8vo. Pp. xii. 140. [Struthers’ History of the Relief Church, p. 558.] Glasgow, 1753 TERRA Australis cognita ; or, voyages to the Terra Australis or Southern hemisphere, during the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. [Based in part on the French work of Charles de Brosses, by John Callander, advocate.] 8vo. 3 vols. [D. N. B. vol. 8, p. 255.] Edinburgh, 1766-78 TERRA pacis ; a true testification of the spirituall lande of peace, which is the spirituall lande of promyse. . . . Set-foorth by H. N. [Hendrik Niclas]. Translated out of Base-almayne. 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] [Amsterdam? 1575] TERRACE (the) of Mon Desir. By Afterem [Harold Williams, [Lib. Journ. xiii. 230.] [c. 1 TERR.7E-FILIUS ; or, the secret history of the University of Oxford, in several essays : to which are added, Remarks upon a late book, entitled, University education, by R. Newton, D.D., Principal of Hart-Hall. [By Nicholas Amhurst.] i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1726 This work appeared originally in fifty numbers, the first of which is dated January II, 1721. and the last July 6. of the same year. It was an ancient custom at Oxford, in the public acts, for some person, who was called Terrae Filius, to mount the Rostrum, and divert a large crowd from all parts, with a merry oration, interspersed with secret history, raillery and sarcasm, as the occasions of the times supplied him with matter. Amhurst was expelled from St John’s College, Oxford, probably for his whig principles, hinc illce lachrymce; he made it his business to satirize the University.—See Ralph’s Case of authors. Georg< M.D.]. TERROR - FILIUS ; to be continued daily during the Eucaenia at Oxford in honour of the Peace, Tuesday, July 5 to Friday, July 8. [By George Colman. 4to. Four numbers.] [D.N.B. vol. 11, p. 391.] Oxford, 1763 TERRIBLE (a) family. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 190. London [1893] TERRIBLE (the) mysteries of the Ku- Klux-Klan. By Scalpel, M.D. [Edward H. Dixon]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. a?id Pseud.] New York, 1868 TERRIBLE (a) out-cry against the loytering, exalted prelates. ... By Mr Prinne [or rather by Henry Walker, called the Ironmonger]. 4to. Pp. 6. [Brit. Mus.] 1641 TERRIBLE (the) stormy wind and tempest, Nov. 27, 1703 ; considered, improved, and collected, to be held in everlasting remembrance ; to which is added, Fair warning to a careless world. By the author of The infallible way to contentment [Abednego Seller]. 4to. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 693.] London, 1705 TERRIBLE tractoration. See Poetical (a) petition . . . TERROR (the) of the road. [A novel.] By Vivian Grey [Elliott E. Mills]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1906 TERRY Hogan ; an eclogue, lately discovered in the Library of the Propaganda at Rome, and now first translated from the Irish. . . . [By Walter Savage Landor?] i2mo. Pp. 35. [Brit Mus.] London, 1836 TESSA Treleven. [A novel.] By Morice Gerard [John Jessop Teague]. 8vo. [Bond. Lib. Cat.\ London, 1922 TEST (a) case, elucidating who are Christ’s and who are Anti-christ’s. . . . [Signed: W. D. F. i.e. William D. Forsyth.] 8vo. Pp. 78. [Brit. Mus.] Littleborough, 1905 TEST (the) of filial duty ; in a series of letters between Miss Emilia Leonard and Miss Charlotte Arlington. [By Sarah Scott.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Brydges’ Cens. Lit. iv. 292 ; Mon. Rev. xlvi. 165.] 1772 TEST (the) of true godliness ; a sermon preached at the funeral of Philip Harris, late of Alston, in the county of Devon, Esquire, August 10, 1681. By J. Q., minister of the Gospel [John Quick]. 4to. [Davidson’s Bibl. Devon. p. 167.] London, 1682 TEST (the) of truth. [By Mary Jane Graham.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1831 TESTAMENTARY counsels. ... By a retired solicitor ; carefully revised by a member of the American Bar [Simon Greenleaf]. 8vo. Troy, New York, 1845 TESTAMENTARY (the) duty of the parliament of Scotland, with a view to the treaty of union now on foot, and considerably advanced betwixt the two kingdoms. [By Thomas Spence.] 4to. 1707 TESTIMONIE (the) of a true fayth ; conteyned in a shorte catechisme, necessary to all families, for the more knowledge of God, and better bryng- yng vp of chyldren in his fayth and feare : gathered and written for the benefite of Gods well disposed children, by C. S. preacher [Christoph. Shutte]. 8vo. No pagination. B. L. [Bod/.] London, 1577 TESTIMONIE (a) of antiquitie, shewing the auncient fayth in the Church of England touching the sacrament of the body and bloude of the Lord here publikely preached. . . [By Matthew Parker.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 43, p. 263.] London [1567 ?] Also reprinted in 1675 as “A Testimony. . .” TESTIMONIE (a) of the true Church of God confirmed as well by the doctrine as lives of sundry holy men, both patriarkes, and prophetes, and also by the Apostles and their true successours. . . . Translated out of the French by William Phiston. [By Simon de Voyon.] 4to. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London [c. 1580] TESTIMONIES of different authors, respecting the colossal statue of Ceres, placed in the vestibule of the Public Library at Cambridge, July the first, 1803 ; with a short account of its removal from Eleusis, November 22, 1801. [By Edward Daniel Clarke, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. 25. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Cambridge, 1803 TESTIMONIES (the) of Irenseus, Justin Martyr, Tertullian, Novatianus, Theo- philus, Origen, (who lived in the two first centuries after Christ was born, or thereabouts;) as also, of Arnobius, Lactantius, Eusebius, Hilary, and Brightman ; concerning that one God, and the persons of the Holy Trinity : together with observations on the same. [By John Biddle.] 8vo. Pp. 86. [Wallace’s Antitrin. Biog.] London [c. 1650] TESTIMONIES (the) of several citizens of Fickleborough, in the kingdom of Fairy-land, concerning the life and character of Robert Hush [Sir Robert Walpole], commonly called, Bob : to which are prefixed, some memoirs of the life of Charity Hush, the grandfather, and of Oliver Hush, the father of the said Bob. [By William Wag- staffe, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. 23. London, 1713 TESTIMONIES to the genius and memory of Sir Joshua Reynolds. By the author of Imperfect hints towards a new edition of Shakspeare [Samuel Felton]. 4to. [Nichols’ Lit. A?iec. ix. 135.] London, 1792 TESTIMONIES with respect to the extent of the death of Christ, as a sacrifice for sin. Compiled by a Sabbath- School teacher [William Cuninghame, of Lainshaw]. 8vo. Pp. 24. Glasgow, 1822 TESTIMONY (the) borne by the Coran to the Jewish and Christian Scriptures. [Preface signed : W. M. i.e. Sir William Muir, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. xiv. 127. Allahabad, i860 TESTIMONY (the) of facts concerning the continuation of miracles in the Church. [By R. B. Lusk—the publisher.] 8vo. Pp. 70. [Brit. Mus.] Greenock, 1832 Signed : R. B. L. TESTIMONY (the) of sceptics to the truth of Christianity; with the evidence of pagan historians, and the confirmation of fulfilled prophecy. By the author of Heroines of our time [Joseph Johnson]. 8vo. London, 1861 TESTIMONY (the) of Scripture in support of the unity and supremacy of God. [By Rev.-Harrison, Unitarian.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Kendal, 1816 TESTIMONY (a) of the appearance of God. . . . With some reasons why Margaret Hambleton doth deny the Presbyterians of Scotland. [Signed : A. P. i.e. Alexander Parker.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.\ N.P. [1658?] TESTIMONY (the) of “the Christ”; being notes of lectures by F. E. R. [F. E. Raven]. 8vo. London, 1903 TESTIMONY (the) of the Lord concerning London, witnessed in truth and faithfulnesse, to the consciences of all people, that they may return to the Lord. . . . [Signed : E. B. i.e. Edward Burrough.] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books.\ London, 1657 TESTIMONY (the) of the spirit of prophecy concerning the true Church at this day ; set forth in three parts, at three several times, under the title of Peace and truth, or, the mystery of God laid open, in a discourse upon the fourth and fifth chapters of the Revelation. . . . [By Walter Garrett.] 8vo. [Bodl.] London, 1706-7 TESTIMONY (a) to the true light that lightens every man that cometh into the world. [By] W. B. [W. Bennit]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] [London] 1688 TESTIMONY to the truth ; or, the autobiography of an atheist. [By Alexander Harris.] 8vo. Pp. xvi. 312. London, 1848 The fourth edition, with the title a little varied, has the author’s name. TESTING (the) of Olive Vaughan. By Christian Lys [Percy John Brebner]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1909 TESTING (the) of the torment. ... By Elsie Jeanette Oxenham [Elsie Jeanette Dunkerley]. 8vo. Pp. 213. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1925 TEXAN (the) rifle-hunter ; field sports on the prairie. By “The Ranger” [Capt.-Flack]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] London, 1866 TEXAS, and its late military occupation and evacuation. By an officer of the Army [Captain Edwin D. Phillips]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1862 TEXAS (a) blue bonnet. [A tale.] By Emilia Elliott [Caroline Emilia Jacobs]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1910 TEXAS (the) Revolution. ... By Probus [David Lee Child]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Washington, 1843 TEXTES of Scripture, chayning the holy Chronicle vntyll the sunne lost his lyght, and the Sonne brake the Serpentes head; dying, rising, and ascending. [The Address to the Christian reader signed: H. B. i.e. Hugh Broughton.] 4to. No pagination. B. L. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1591 TEXTS for the times. By Ascott R. Hope [Ascott Robert Hope Moncrieft]. Second edition. i2mo. Pp. 232. Edinburgh, 1872 TEXTS misquoted and misapplied. By R. C. L. B. [Robert Casper Lee Bevan]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1879 TEXTS of Holy Scripture compared together, relating to the true and real deity of the Son and Holy Ghost. [By John Walrond of Ottery.] 8vo. Pp. 43. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] London, 1720 TEXTS of Scripture suggested to the serious consideration of those who deny the efficacy of the two holy Sacraments, Baptism and the Lord’s Supper. ... By J. H. A. [John Horrocks Ainsworth]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Sparke’s Bibl. Bolt. p. 2.] Bolton, 1848 TEXTS which Papists cite out of the Bible, for the proof of their doctrine concerning the obscurity of the Holy Scriptures, examined. [By Edward Fowler, D.D.] 4to. [Mendham Collection Cat. p. 112.] London, 1688 TEXTUARY (the) and Ritualist; or, Biblical and Liturgical repertory : intended as a help to students of the Bible, and a guide to members of the Church. By a clergyman [Rev. Joseph White Niblock, D.D.]. i2mo. [IV.] London, 1835 11 Nos. No more published. THACKERAY (the) country. By Lewis Melville [Lewis Samuel Benjamin]. 8vo. Pp. 236. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1905 THACKERAY the humourist and the man of letters ; the story of his life, including a selection from his characteristic speeches, now for the first time gathered together. By Theodore Taylor, Esq., Membre de la societe des gens de lettres [John Camden Hotten]. With photograph from life by Ernest Edwards, B.A., and original illustrations. 8vo. Pp. vii. 223. London, 1864 Really by W. Moy Thomas. [N. and Q. 9th Jan. 1915.] THACKERAYANA ; notes and anecdotes, illustrated ... by William Makepeace Thackeray. . . . [Compiled by Joseph Grego.] 8vo. Pp. xx. 492. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1875 THAIS ; the monk’s temptation. By Anatole France [Jacques Anatole Thibault] ; translated by A. H. Hall. 8vo. Pp. 179. London, 1917 THALATTA ; a book for the seaside. [Edited by Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Samuel Longfellow.] i2mo. [Foley’s Amer. Authors.] Boston, 1853 THALATTA ! or, the great commoner ; a political romance. [By John Skelton.] 8vo. London, 1862 The Prefatory note signed : S. THALIA’S banquet, furnished with an hundred and odde dishes of newly devised epigrammes. . . . By H. P. [Henry Peacham, M.A.]. i2mo. [Christie-Miller Cat.] London, 1620 THAMA. [A novel.] By Onoto Wat- anna [Mrs Winifred Eaton Babcock]. 8vo. London, 1910 THAMES (the) angler. By A. W. S. [Arthur W. Smith] and M. W. H. [M. W. Hallett]. i2mo. Pp. 62. [West- wood and Satchell’s Bibl. Pise.] London, 1846 THAMES rights and Thames wrongs. By John Bickerdyke [Charles Henry Cooke], 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1900 THAMUTA; the spirit of death; and other poems. [By Mary Grace Cooper.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1837 THANKS (the) of an honest clergyman for Mr Paul’s speech at Tybourn, July the 13th, 1716. [By Arthur Ashley Sykes.] Third edition. 8vo. [Disney’s Memoir of Sykes, p. xii.] London, 1716 The Speech was written by Lawrence Howell. THANKSGIVING; and other poems. By Agatha [Bessie Lawrence]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] New York, 1880 THANKSGIVING (a) sermon preached at Christ’s Church before the Lords Justices and Council. By W. L. [W. Lightburn], D.D. 4to. Pp. 24. [Dix and Dugan’s Dubl. Books.] Dublin, 1661 THAT artful vicar. [A novel.] By the author of The Member for Paris [Eustace Clare Grenville Murray]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1879 THAT child. By the author of The A telier duLys [Miss Margaret Roberts]. 8vo. Pp. 237. London, 1885 VOL. VI. THAT gay deceiver. [A novel.] By Albert Ross [Linn Boyd Porter]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York [e. 1890] THAT girl of mine. [By Maurice Francis Egan.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Philadelphia, 1877 THAT husband of mine. By Clara Vance [Mrs Mary Andrews Denison]. i2mo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1885 THAT imp. [A novel.] By John Strange Winter [Mrs Arthur Stannard, nee Henrietta E. V. Palmer]. i2mo. London, 1887 THAT imp Marcella. [A tale.] By Raymond Jacberns [Miss M. Selby Ashe]. 8vo. Pp. 316. Edinburgh, 1907 THAT is to say-. [A novel.] By “Rita” [Mrs W. Desmond Humphreys, nee Eliza M. J. Gollan], 8vo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1910 THAT little girl; a novel. By Curtis Yorke [Mrs W. S. Richmond Lee]. 8vo. Pp. 275. London, 1901 THAT lover of mine. [By Maurice Francis Egan.] 8vo. Philadelphia, 1877 THAT Mrs Smith. [A novel.] By John Strange Winter [Mrs Arthur Stannard, nee Henrietta E. V. Palmer]. i2mo. London, 1893 THAT other person. By Averil Beaumont [Mrs Margaret Hunt]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] London, 1887 THAT the Bishops in England may and ought to vote in cases of blood : written upon occasion of the Earl of Stafford’s case. By a learned pen [Thomas Barlow, Bishop of Lincoln]. With some answers to the objections. . . . Fol. Pp. 16. [Manch. Free Lib.] London, 1680 Another edition, also anonymous (8vo), was published in the same year under the title, The rights of the Bishops to judge in capital cases in Parliament, cleared. . . .” [Brit. Mus.] THAT troublesome dog. [A story.] By Raymond Jacberns [Miss M. Selby Ashe]. 8vo. Pp. 306. London, 1911 “ THAT very Mab.” [A novel. By Miss May Kendall and Andrew Lang.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1885 THAT which hath wings ; a novel of the day. By Richard Dehan [Clotilde Graves]. 8vo. Pp. 492. London, 1918 THAT which seems best is worst ; ex- prest in a paraphrastical transcript of Juvenal’s tenth satyre: together with the tragicall narration of Virginia’s death, interserted by W. B. [William Basse or William Barkstead]. i2mo. [W. ; Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] Imprinted by Felix Kingston, 1617 B 2 THAT wife of mine. By the author of That husband of mine [Mrs Mary Andrews Denison]. 8vo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1880] THATCHER’S (the) wife; or, an account of Mary Camps. By the author of The retrospect [Richard Marks]. Fifth edition. i2mo. Pp. 54. [.Brit. Mus.] London, 1820 THAT’S it ; or, plain teaching. By the author of The reason why, General science [Robert Kemp Philp]. . . . Illustrated by more than one thousand wood engravings. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 370. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. ii. 494.] London, i860 Published in twelve monthly parts. THAUMATURGIA; or, elucidations of the marvellous. By an Oxonian [Samuel Reynolds Hole]. i2mo. 1835 THAUMATURGUS. [A poem.] By Ryrie Bjolla Padring [Patrick Vincent FitzPatrick]. 8vo. Pp. 137. London, 1828 THEALMA and Clearchus ; a pastoral history in smooth and easie verse : written long since by John Chalkhill, Esq., an acquaintant of Edmund Spencer. [Edited by Isaac Walton.] 8vo. London, 1683 THEATRE (the); to be continu’d every Tuesday and Saturday. By Sir John Edgar [Sir Richard Steele]. Fol. [IV.] London, 1720 The first number is dated Saturday, Jan. 2 ; and the last and 27th number, Tuesday, Mar. 29. to Sat. April 2, 1720. THEATRE (the) and the Church ; or, Gospel truth to be realised. [By Rev. George Edis Webster.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Woodbridge, 1845 THEATRE (the) of Catholiqve and Protestant religion, divided into twelue bookes ; wherein the zealous Catholike may plainelie see, the manifest truth, perspicuitie, euident foundations and demonstrations of the Catholique religion. . . . Written by I. C. student in diuinitie [John Colleton]. 8vo. Pp. 664. [Bodl.] 1620 THEATRE (the) of the Greeks, containing, in a compendious form, a great body of information relative to the rise, progress, and exhibition of the drama ; together with an account of dramatic writers from Thespis to Menander: to which is added, a chronology and an appendix, containing critical remarks, by Porson, Elmsley, and others. [By Philip Wentworth Buckham.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Cambridge, 1825 THEATRE (the) of the Greeks ; or, the history, literature, and criticism of the Grecian drama; with an original treatise [by Rev. J. Tate, of Richmond, Yorkshire] on the principal tragic and comic metres. Second edition. [By John William Donaldson.] 8vo. Pp. x. 489. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Cambridge, 1827 THEATRE (the) of the present war in North America. By A. Y * * * [Arthur Young], Esq. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1758 THEATRES (the); a poetical dissection. By Sir Nicholas Nipclose, Baronet. [Wrongly attributed to David Garrick.] Second edition. 4to. Pp. viii. 80. London, 1772 THEATRIC (the) tourist ; being a genuine collection of correct views, with brief and historical accounts of all the principal provincial theatres in the United Kingdom. [By James Winston.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1805 THEATRICAL anecdotes. By Jacob Harwood [Herman D. J. von Schevi- chaven]. i2mo. [N. and Q. 4th Dec. 1920.] London, 1882 THEATRICAL (the) candidates ; a musical prelude. [By David Garrick.] [D. N. B. vol. 21, p. 23.] London, 1775 THEATRICAL entertainments consistent with society, morality, and religion ; in a letter to the author of “The stage the high road to hell”: shewing that writers arguments to be fallacious, his principles enthusiastic, and his authorities (particularly from the ancients) misconstrued and perverted : with a counter-dedication to the Rev. Dr Madan. [By H. Flitcroft.] 8vo. Pp. 32. London, 1768 THEATRICAL portraits epigramma- tically delineated ; wherein the merit and demerit of most of our stage heroes and heroines are excellently painted by some of the best masters ; inscribed to the performers of both theatres. By A. Macaroni [- Taylor]. 4to. [Watt, s.v. Theatrej N. and Q. 14th Dec. 1861, p. 473.] London, 1774 THEATRICAL records ; or, an account of English dramatic authors, and their works. [By Robert Dodsley.] i2mo. Pp. 135, 30. London, 1756 THEATRICAL (the) Review ; or, new companion to the play-house : containing a critical and historical account of every tragedy, comedy, opera, farce, etc., exhibited at the theatres during the last season. ... By a society of gentlemen independent of managerial influence. [By John Potter.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 2641.] London, 1772 Originally published in a newspaper. THEATRICAL tears ; a poem occasioned by Familiar Epistles to Frederick J-s [Jones],Esq. [Signed: R. N. O. i.e. Robert N. Owenson.] i2mo. Pp. 47. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Irelaitdi] Dublin, 1804 THEATRICAL (the) world and the Lord’s Day. [By John Gritton.] 8vo. London, 1882 THEATRICALS ; an interlude; and other sketches. By the author of Miss Molly [Beatrice May Butt]. 8vo. Pp. 384. Edinburgh, 1896 THEAURAUJOHN High-Priest to the Jewes, his disputive challenge to the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and the whole Hirarch. of Roms clargical Priests. [By T. Tany.] 8vo. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 864.] London, 1652 THEBAID (the) of Statius ; translated into English verse, with notes and observations, and a dissertation upon the whole, by way of preface. [By William L. Lewis.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Manch. Free Lib.] Oxford, 1767 THEEVES, theeves ; or, a relation of Sir Iohn Gell’s gathering up the rents of the lords and gentlemen of Darby- shire, in gathering up the rents of the lords and gentlemen of that county by pretended authority from the two houses of parliament. [By Peter Heylin, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 9. [Bodl.\ 1643 THEIR happiest Christmas. [A novel.] By Edna Lyall [Ada Ellen Bayly]. i2mo. London, 1890 THEIR high adventure. [A novel.] By John Oxenham [William Arthur Dunkerley]. 8vo. Pp. 254. London, 1921 THEIR marriage. [A novel.] By Curtis Yorke [Mrs W. S. Richmond Lee]. 8vo. Pp. 316. London, 1908 THEIR marriage bond. By Albert Ross [Linn Boyd Porter]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York [1895] THEIR only son at war ; a drama. By Hugh Bancam [Hugh D. MacNab]. 8vo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Musi] Riverbank, Ont., 1917 THEIR Oxford year. By Barbara Burke [Oona Howard Ball.] 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1909 THELGE. [A tale. By H. M. L. Lanark.] 8vo. Pp. 99. London, 1901 THELMA ; a society novel. By Marie Corelli [Miss Caroline Mackay, afterwards Cody]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1887 THELYPHTHORA ; or, a treatise on female ruin, in its causes, effects, consequences, prevention and remedy, considered on the basis of the divine law : under the following heads, viz. marriage, whoredom, and fornication, adultery, polygamy, divorce. . . . [By Rev. Martin Madan.] 8vo. 2 vols. [D. N. B. vol. 35, p. 290.] London, 1780 THEMES and translations. By John W. Montclair [John William Weide- meyer]. 8vo. [Cushing’s l?iit. and Pseudi] New York, 1867 THEMIS; a satire. [By William Peach.] 8vo. [Crockford’s Cler. Directory i] London, 1852 THEMISTOCLES ; a satire on modern marriage. [By John Moncreifif, author of Appiusi] 4to. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1759 THEMISTOCLES, the lover of his country ; a tragedy, as it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Lincoln’s-Inn- Fields. [By Samuel Madden, D.D.] Third edition. 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1729 THEODORA; an oratorio. [By Thomas Morell, in three parts, and in verse.] Set to music by Mr Handel. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1750 THEODORA; and other stories. By Elizabeth Olmis [Annie Elizabeth Loomis]. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1897 THEODORA; or, the Spanish daughter: a tragedy [in five acts, and in verse. By Sophia Lady Burrell]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1800 THEODORE Hook ; a sketch, from the Quarterly Review. [By John Gibson Lockhart.] i2mo. [Wi] London, 1852 THEODORE ; or, the gamester’s progress : a poetic tale. [By Richard Scrafton Sharpe.] i2mo. Pp. 120. London, 1799 THEODOSIUS ; or, a solemn admonition to Protestant-dissenters, on the proposed repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts : in which are considered the political and religious characters of Dr P-[Priestley], Dr Price, Mr Fox, Judge-, Mr Sheridan, Mr B-, Mr Sawbridge, Mrs F-, etc. [By the Rev. Philip Withers.] 8vo. Pp. 68. London, 1790 THEOGNIS ; a laugh in the cavern of evil. By Catius Junior [Elizabeth R. Torrey]. 8vo. Boston, 1856 THEOGNIS restitutus ; the personal history of the poet Theognis deduced from an analysis of his existing fragments : a hundred of these fragments translated or paraphrased in English metre are arranged in their proper biographical order with an accompanying commentary; with a preface in which the suggestion of Mr Clinton, as to the true date of the poet’s birth (viz. in Olymp. 59) is confirmed by internal evidence. [By John Hookham Frere.] 4to. Pp. 117. \Brit. Mus.] Malta, 1842 THEOLOGIA mystica ; or, the mystic divinitie of the aeternal invisibles, viz. the archetypous globe, or the original globe. ... By a Person of Qualitie, J. P. [John Pordage], M.D. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1683 THEOLOGIA mystica ; two discourses concerning divine communications to souls duly disposed. I. The antiquity, tradition, and succession of mystical divinity among the Gentiles. ... II. Of the guidance of the Spirit of God : the doctrine of the H. Scriptures, of the Catholick Church, and of the Church of England in particular, upon a discourse of Sr. Matthew Hale concerning it. [By Edward Stephens.] 8vo. Pp. 14, 78. [Walton’s Biog. of Wm. Law, p. 637.] London, 1697 Part II. has a separate title, and pagination [pp. 40]. THEOLOGICAL (a) dialogue ; containing a defence and justification of Dr John Owen from the forty-two errors charged upon him by Mr Richard Baxter. [By Isaac Chauncy.] 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 10, p. 171.] London, 1684 THEOLOGICAL (a) discourse on the Lamb of God and His enemies. [Signed : R. H. i.e. Richard Harvey.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1590 THEOLOGICAL (the) influence of the Blessed Virgin on the Apostolical school. By Christianus [Willis Probyn Nevins]. 8vo. London, 1888 THEOLOGICAL (the) Leaf; an occasional paper, consisting of tracts and extracts connected with the Oxford controversy. [By Richard Walker, B.D.] Nos. 2. 3. 4. 8vo. Pp. 8, 16. [Bodl.\ [Oxford, 1842] THEOLOGICAL mysteries ; or, Genesis analyzed : being an attempt to show the necessity for a revision and retranslation of the Old Testament. By Zetetes [Thomas Ryan], Worthing. 8vo. Pp. 19. London, 1864 THEOLOGICAL repository; consisting of original essays, hints, queries, etc., calculated to promote religious knowledge. [Edited by Dr Joseph Priestley.] 8vo. 6 vols. [W.j Lowndes' Brit. Lib.] London, 1773-88 THEOLOGICAL (a) survey of the human understanding ; intended as an antidote against modern deism. [By Robert Applegarth.] 8vo. Pp. 276. Salisbury, 1776 THEOLOGICAL (a) systeme upon that presvpposition, that men were before Adam. The first part. [By Isaac Peyrerius.] 8vo. London, 1655 Part of a work entitled “ Men before Adam,” q.v. THEOLOGICAL thoughts on God, the creation, fall and redemption of man ; and on God’s dealings with man from the creation to the final consummation of all things. [By William Smith, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. 394. [Biog. Diet. 1816 ; Brit. Crit. xxxiii. 389.] London, 1808 THEOLOGICAL (the) trilemma. . . . By Clericus [Rev. J. H. Pettingell]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1878 THEOLOGICALL rules, to gvide vs in the vnderstanding and practice of holy Scriptures: two centuries: drawne partly out of Scriptures themselves : partly out of ecclesiastical writers old and new. Also ZEnigmata sacra, holy riddles ; or misticall cases and secrets of diuinitie, with their resolutions. Four centuries: the vnfolding whereof layeth open that truth that con- cerneth saluation. By T. W. preacher of the Word [Thomas Walkington]. 8vo. Pp. 6, 125. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 2814.] London, 1615 “ZEnigmata sacra” has a separate title and pagination. THEOLOGICO-PHILOSOPHICAL (a) dissertation concerning worms in all parts of human bodies. [By William Ramesay, M.D.] 8vo. London, 1727 THEOLOGY (the) and philosophy in Cicero’s Somnium Scipionis, explained; or, a brief attempt to demonstrate, that the Newtonian system is perfectly agreeable to the notions of the wisest ancients : and that mathematical principles are the only sure ones. [By George Horne, D.D., Bishop of Norwich.] 8vo. Pp. 105. London, 1751 THEOLOGY (the) of linguistics. By A. B. C. [Rev. Alonzo Bowen Chapin, D.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Mercersburg, 1853 THEOLOGY of nature and revelation. By an amateur theologian [O. Hutchinson]. i2n\o. Pp. 55. [Eddy’s Uni- versalismin America, ii. 588.] New York, 1885 THEOLOGY (the) of the Old Testament ; or, a Biblical sketch of the religious opinions of the ancient Hebrews ... By George L. Bauer. [Translated from the German by Philip Harwood.] 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1838 THEONOMIA ; or, divine laws. . . . Addressed to the Evangelical Churches of the Christian world. [Signed : J. B. i.e. John Byers.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Afus.] Manchester, 1883 THEOPHANIA; or, a scriptural view of the manifestation of the Logos, or pre-existent Messiah: as contradistinguished from angelic personation of the Deity, with which it has been erroneously confounded. ... By Twinrock Elmlicht, Esq. [Thomas Peter Mitchell]. i2mo. Pp. xxiv. 620. London, 1857 THEOPHANIA ; or, severall modern histories represented by way of romance : and politickly discours’d upon. By an English person of quality [Sir W. Sales]. 4to. [N. and Q. Jan. 1852, p. 88.] London, 1655 THEOPHILA; or, loves sacrifice : a divine poem, written by E. B. Esq. [Edward Benlowes]. Several parts thereof set to fit airesiby Mr J. Jenkins. Fol. Pp. 46, 268. [D.N.B. vol. 4, p. 226.] London, 1652 THEOPHILUS and Philander; a dialogue containing remarks on the Rev. Mr M‘Dowell’s Second Letter to the supposed author of The Catholic Christian. [By Rev. John Cameron, M.A., Dunluce.] i2mo. Pp. 38. [.D. N. B. vol. 8, p. 297.] Belfast, 1772 THEOPHILUS to Gaius ; an epistle: shewing the inexpediency of forms, and reasons for the use of free and unprescribed prayer, in the Protestant dissenting Churches: occasioned by an introductory letter, in the Specimen of a liturgy, etc. [By Caleb Fleming.] 8vo. Pp. 31. [Bodl.] London, 1753 Signed : Theophilus. THEOPOLIS Americana ; an essay on the Golden Street of the Holy City ... In a sermon to the General Assembly of the Massachusett-Pro- vince in New-England. 7 d. 9 m. 1709. [By Cotton Mather, D.D.] i2mo. Pp. 51. [Bodl.\ Boston, 1710 THEOPOLIS ; or, the City of God, New Jerusalem, in opposition to the city of the nations, Great Babylon : being a coment upon Revelation, chaps, xx., xxi., in which the mystery of the two states, worlds, and Kingdoms, Christ’s and Antichrist’s . . . are particularly unfolded. . . . [By Henry D’Anvers.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 14, p. 39 ; Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. i. 97]. London, 1672 Other issues of the same year have slight variations in the title. THEORETICAL astronomy examined and exposed. By “ Common Sense ” [William Carpenter]. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London [1864] THEORISTS (the) ; a satire. By the author of Afedico - Afastix [Ralph Schomberg, M.D.]. 4to. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 509.] Bath, 1774 THEORY (the) and construction of Hadley’s quadrant demonstrated, and also all the necessary directions given for adjusting the glasses and using it for taking the altitudes of the sun, moon and stars, for finding the latitude at sea. Illustrated by copper plate figures. . . . [By G. Wright.] 8vo. Pp. 28. [IV.] London [c. 1795] THEORY and practice of chirurgical pharmacy; comprehending a complete dispensatory for the use of surgeons. . . . [By Robert Dossie.] 8vo. [Camb. U?iiv. Lib.] London, 1761 THEORY (the) and practice of gardening ; wherein is fully handled all that relates to fine gardens, commonly called pleasure-gardens, as parterres, groves, bowling-greens, etc. . . . Done from the French original [of Antoine Joseph Dezallier D’Argenville] printed at Paris, anno 1709. By John James of Greenwich. 4to. Pp. 10, 218. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1712 THEORY of agency ; or, an essay on the nature, source, and extent of moral freedom, . . . [By John Perkins.] 8vo. Pp. 43. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. iv. 291.] Boston, 1771 THEORY (the) of agreeable sensations in which after the laws observed by nature in the distribution of pleasure are discovered, the principles of natural theology and moral philosophy are established. . . . Translated from the French [of Louis Jean Levesque de Pouilly]. i2mo. Pp. 266. [Qufrard; Afon. Rev. ii. 66.] [London] 1749 THEORY (the) of chess ; a treatise in which the principles and maxims . . . are explained. [By Peter Pratt.] 8vo. [ Van der Linde i. 404.] London, 1799 THEORY (the) of dreams ; in which an inquiry is made into the powers and faculties of the human mind, as they are illustrated in the most remarkable dreams recorded in sacred and profane history. [By Robert Gray, Bishop of Bristol, or Dr J. Ferrier.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1808 THEORY (the) of evidence. [By Henry, Earl Bathurst.] 8vo. \European Mag. xxvi. 159; Mon. Rev. xxv. 151.] London, 1761 THEORY (the) of human progression, and natural probability of a reign of justice. [By Patrick Edward Dove.] 8vo. London, 1850 THEORY (the) of money in connection with some of the prominent doctrines of political economy. By a Scotch banker [George Drummond Charles, teller, Royal Bank, Glasgow]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1868 THEORY (the) of teaching. ... By a teacher [Mrs Anna Cabot Lowell, nee Jackson]. 8vo. [Appleton’s Cycl. of Amer. Biog.] Boston, 1841 THEORY (the) of the consecration of the most holy Eucharist, as exhibited in the Liturgies of the Church of England, and the Episcopal Church of Scotland. . . . By H. H. [Rev. Henry Humble]. 8vo. Pp. 19. [New Coll. Lib.\ Edinburgh, 1873 THEORY of the Exchanges ; the Bank Charter Act of 1844 5 the abuse of the metallic principle to depreciation. [By Henry Roy, M.D.] 8vo. London, 1864 THEORY (the) of the foreign exchanges. [By Viscount George Joachim Goschen.] 8vo. London, 1861 Later editions bear the author’s name. THEORY of the rights of authors ; translated from the French [of Antoine Augustin Renouard] by L. S. C. [Luther Stearns Cushing]. 8vo. Boston, 1839 THEORY (the) of the syphon plainly and methodically illustrated ; containing, besides the chief properties of the instrument, some new remarks on its use in accounting for reciprocating springs. [By William Cockin.] 8vo. [Gent. Mag. June 1801, p. 576; Mon. Rev. lxvi. 180.] London, 1781 THEORY (the) of vision, or visual language, shewing the immediate presence and providence of a Deity, vindicated and 'explained. By the author of Alciphron, or, the minute philosopher [George Berkeley, D.D., Bishop of Cloyne]. 8vo. Pp. 64. [Berkeley’s Works, ed. Fraser, i. 369.] London, 1733 THEORY (the), or rationale of ideas, in a letter to a friend. [By Archibald Campbell.] 8vo. Pp. 27. London, 1727 Signed: A. (B.) C. and addressed to S. J. S. B. THEOSEBIA, or the Churches advocate; endeavouring the promotion of loyalty to our king, and fidelity to the Episcopal Church. . . . [By Sir Roger L’Estrange.] 4to. Pp. 26. London, 1683 THEOSOPHY and the higher life ; or, spiritual dynamics and the divine and miraculous man. By G. W. [George Wyld, M.D.]. 8vo. London, 1880 0EOSIIAArXNI29EI'S ; or, the yernings of Christs bowels towards his languishing friends. By S. M. [Samuel Moore]. 4to. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 709.] London, 1648 THERAPEUTICS ; or, a new practice of physic. [By Thomas Marryat,] Fourth edition. 4to. [Brit. Musi] Shrewsbury, 1775 The title of the sixth edition reads : “ The art of healing ; or, a new practise of physic ...” 1777. Later editions have the author’s name. THERE being no Gospel for Tithes, how did they become Law ? or, an examination of the title-deeds of the English Church as by Law established, by a plain man [William Cobbett]. Introduced by George Pitt. 8vo. Pp. 112. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books. Supp. p. 273.] Croydon, 1876 A reprint of Cobbett’s “ Legacy to Parsons.” THERE is wisdom in silence. [By James Gregory, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. 2. Edinburgh, 1810 THEREBY. [A novel.] ByFayrMadoc [Miss-Maddock]. 8vo. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1883 THERESE ; or, the orphan of Geneva : a tale of great interest. By the author of Fatherless Fanny [Clara Reeve]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1844 ?] THERIAD (the): an heroi-comic poem with notes. [By Thomas Rodd.] 8vo. [Nichols’ Lit. Illust. viii. 680.] [London, 1790] Utopia: penned for Timothy Tiger, Lemuel Leo, and Barachias Bruin, at the sign of the Foaming Boar, Wolf-Street, the North-East corner of Savage-Square. THERMOPYLAE; or, repulsed invasion : a tragic drama, in three acts [and in verse. Enlarged from R. Glover’s Leonidas by J. P. Roberdean]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1850] THESAURUS ecclesiasticus provinci- alis ; or, a survey of the diocese of Exeter. . . . [By the Rev. William Jones.] 4to. Pp. iv. 116. Exeter, 1782 THESAURUS incantatus ; the enchanted treasure, or the spagyric quest of Beroaldus Cosmopolita. [By Arthur Machen.] 8vo. Pp. 64. [Arthur Mac hen : a bibliography i] London [1888] THESAURUS medicaminum; a new collection of medical prescriptions, distributed into twelve classes, and accompanied by pharmaceutical and practical remarks. . . . The second edition, with an appendix and other additions. By a member of the London College of Physicians [Richard Pearson, M.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 412. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit. ; Mon. Rev. xviii. 106.] London, 1794 THESPIS ; or, a critical examination into the merits of all the principal performers belonging to Drury-Lane Theatre. [By Hugh Kelly.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1766 THETFORD Chalybeate Spa ; a poem. By a parishioner of St Peter’s [George Bloomfield]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Cambridge, 1820 THETIS and Peleus ; or, the chain of roses : a mythological love story told in one act. By the authors of The Princesses in the tower, etc. [Frank Talfourd and others]. i2mo. Pp. 21. [Brit. Mus.] London [c. 1851] THEY must needs go, that the Devil drives ; or, a whip for traytors. . . . [By Peter Chambers.] 8vo. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 563.] London, 1652 THEY who question. [By Miss Sarah Macnaughton.] 8vo. Pp. 349. London, 1914 THIBAW’S Queen. By Henry Fielding [Henry Fielding Hall]. 8vo. Pp. 302. London, 1899 THICK and thin seeding, or a new and scientific method of seeding grain. To which is added a description of a certain remedy for hop blight and all plant vermin. By Sigma [Samuel Newington]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1856 THIMBLE (the); an heroi-comical poem, in four cantos. By a gentleman of Oxford [W. Hawkins ?]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1744 THING (the) which is right. [A novel.] By Lewis Ramsden [A. Lisle Dowding]. 8vo. Pp. 94. London, 1917 THINGS after death ; three chapters-on the intermediate state, with thoughts on family burying places, and hints for epitaphs in country churchyards. [By John Miller, late Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford.] 8vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1848 THINGS as they are. [A political pamphlet. By John Percival, second Earl of Egmont.] 8vo. 2 parts. [D. N. B. vol. 44, p. 370.] London, 1758-61 Attributed also to Owen Ruffhead. THINGS divine and supernatural conceived by analogy with things natural and human. By the author of The procedure, extent and limits of human understanding [Peter Browne, D.D., Bishop of Corke and Rosse]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1733 THINGS generally. By Max Adler Charles Heber Clark]. 8vo. Pp. 180. Who's Who in Lit.] London [1902] THINGS in general; being delineations of persons, places, scenes, circumstances, situations, and occurrences, in the Metropolis and other parts of Britain; with an autobiographical sketch, in limine, and a notice touching Edinburgh. By Laurence Longshank, gent. [Robert Mudie]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 294. [Anderson’s Aberd. Univ. Bibl. p. 444-] London, 1824 THINGS more excellent. By “Steward” [Isabella A. Baird]. 8vo. London, 1904 THINGS new and old ; for the glory of God and everlasting benefit of all who read and understand them; or, old revelations and prophecies. . . . By a descendant of one of the early Puritan Governors [Albert Welles]. 8vo. Pp. 261. Portland, Maine, 1845 THINGS newandold in religion,science, and literature. [By John Duns, D.D., and Mrs Margaret Duns.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 364. London, 1857 THINGS new and old, (relative to life ; being sermons on different subjects. By T. H. [Thomas Hughes]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1871] THINGS (the) of a child. [An autobiographical sketch.] By M. E. Francis [Mrs Francis Blundell, nee Margaret E. Sweetman]. 8vo. Pp. 335. London, 1918 THINGS old and new ; being a sequel to The chronicles of Waltham. By the author of The subaltern [Rev. George Robert Gleig]. Second edition. 8vo. Pp. iv. 196. London, 1845 THINGS seen in Egypt. By Clive Holland [Charles J. Hankinson]. i2mo. Pp. 254. [ Who’s Who in Lit.\ London, 1907 THINGS seen in Japan. By Clive Holland [Charles J. Hankinson]. 8vo. Pp. 252. [Who's Who in Lit.\ London, 1906 THINGS seen in Normandy and Brittany. By Clive Holland [Charles J. Hankinson]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1924 THINGS set in a proper light. ... By an orthodox clergyman of Massachusetts [Rev. Jacob Norton]. 8vo. Boston, 1814 THINGS set in a proper light; an answer to a noble author’s misrepresentations of “Things as they are.” [By John Perceval, Earl of Egmont.] 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat. Supp.] London, 1758 THINGS that are Caesar’s rendered unto Caesar, and things that are God’s rendered unto God. By . . . M. W. [Morgan Watkins], 4to. Pp. 30. [Brit. Mus.] [London] 1666 THINGS that cannot be shaken. [By A. B. Wyness.] 8vo. [Robertson’s Abend. Bibl.\ Aberdeen, 1890 THINGS that have happened. [A novel.] By Dorothea Gerard [Madame Longarde De Longarde]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1899 THINGS that have wings. [By George Mogridge.] i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1851] THINGS that I doubt; dedicated to the authors of Essays & reviews, by a doubting disciple [Rev. John Henry Blunt]. 4to. Pp. 8. Oxford [e. i860] THINGS (the) that women do. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 320. London, 1912 THINGS to be thought of. [By Miss Henrietta Wilson.] i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 62, p. 100.] Edinburgh, 1853 THINGS worth knowing about horses. By Harry Hieover [Charles Bindley]. 8vo. Pp. 266. [Brit. Mus.] London,1859 THINK before you speak ; or, the three wishes; from the French of Mme. de Beaumont, by the author of The peacock at home [Mrs Catherine Ann Dorset, nee Turner]. 8vo. London, 1809 THINK on these things. [By John Abercrombie, M.D.] i2mo. Pp. 36. Edinburgh, 1839 Republished in Essays and Tracts with the author’s name. THINKING (the) few. [A satirical poem, against the Arians. By Rev. Robert Magill.] 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Belfast, 1828 THINKS-I-TO-MYSELF; a serio- ludicro, tragico-comico tale, written by Thinks-I-to-myself, who? [Edward Nares, D.D.] ; to which is added, a preface concerning the author. . . . Ninth edition : embellished with a portrait of the author Thinking-to- himself. i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1816 THIRD (a) and fourth part of Pegasus ; taught by Bankes his ghost to dance in the Dorick moode, to the tune of Lachrymse. In two letters from Oxford, July 1. 1648. [By Thomas Pierce of Magdalen College.] 4to. Pp. 6. [Bodl.] 1648 Letters signed: Basilius Philomusus. Author's name in the handwriting of Wood. THIRD (the) and last part of the Address to the free-men and freeholders of the nation. [By Edward Bohun.] 4to. Pp. xxii. 138. [Bodl.] London, 1683 Ascribed also to Sir Roger L’Estrange. THIRD (the) and last part of the magistracy and government ofEngland vindicated ; with reasons for a general act of indemnity, etc. [By Sir Bartholomew Shower.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Bodl.] [London, 1689?] THIRD (the) book of history ; containing ancient history in connection with ancient geography. ... By the author of Peter Parley's Tales [Samuel Griswold Goodrich.] The third edition. i2mo. Boston, 1836 THIRD Catholicke letter in answer to the arguing part of Dr Stillingfleet’s second letter to Mr G[odden]. By J. S. [John Sergeant]. 4to. [Jones’ Peck, i. 129.] London, 1687 THIRD (a) check to antinomianism ; in a letter to [Richard Hill] the author of Pietas (Jxoniensis. By the Vindicator of Mr Wesley’s Minutes [John Fletcher]. i2mo. [Gent. Mag. lvi. 29 ; Mon. Rev. xlvii. 160.] Bristol, 1772 THIRD (a) collection of trios, duets, single songs and rotas, selected from the authentic MSS. of the author of Tumi fair Clora, etc. [Henry Haring- ton, M.D.]. Fol. [Green’s Bill. Somers. i. 248.] Bath, 1800 THIRD (a) conversation, between John, a Baptist, and Ebenezer, a Seceder, on the faith of the Gospel; in which the point of difference between them is clearly stated, and the mistakes of the second conversation [by Rev. Archibald M‘Lean] corrected. By the author of the first conversation [Thomas M‘Crie, D.D.]. i2mo. Pp. 76. [Life of Dr M'Crie by his son, p. 39.] Edinburgh, 1799 Written by Dr M'Crie in concert with the Rev. George Whytock, Dalkeith. THIRD (a) crack about the Kirk; or, questions for the times, answered by modern reformers. [By Norman M‘Leod, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [New Coll. Lib.] Glasgow, n.d. THIRD (a) defense of an argument made use of in a letter to Mr Dodwel to prove the immateriality and immortality of the soul. . . . [By Samuel Clarke, D.D.] 8vo. London, 1708 See also “A second defense . . .” THIRD (the) Estate. [A story of the French Revolution.] By Marjorie Bowen [Miss Gabrielle Vere Campbell]. 8vo. Pp. 374. London, 1917 THIRD (the) Hampden agitation. [By Arthur P. Stanley, D.D. On the agitation against R. D. Hampden, Bishop of Hereford.] Pp. 8. London, 1847 THIRD (a) leaf omitted out of the Record report; or, some remarks upon the evidence given by the principal witnesses adverse to the Record Commission ; contained in a third letter addressed to a member of Parliament. By John Bruce, F.S.A.] 8vo. Pp. 20. Bodl.\ London, 1837 THIRD (a) letter concerning toleration; in defense of the argument of the letter concerning toleration, briefly consider’d and answer’d. [By Jonas Proast.] 4to. Pp. 79. [.Bodl.\ Oxford, 1691 THIRD (a) letter from a gentleman in the country, to his friends in London, upon the subject of the penal laws and tests. [By William Penn?] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Frie?ids' Books, ii. 304.] London, 1687 THIRD (a) letter for toleration, to the author [Jonas Proast] of the Third letter concerning toleration. [By John Locke.] 4to. Pp. 350. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.\ London, 1692 Signed : Philanthropus. THIRD (a) letter to a clergyman in the country, in defence of what was said in the two former, about the entry of the Parliament-writ in the journals of Convocation, and the insertion of a certain clause in the archiepiscopal mandate. [By Dr Francis Atterbury.] 4to. Pp. 22. [Brit. Musi] London, 1702 THIRD (a) letter to a person of quality, being a vindication of the former, in answer to a late pamphlet intituled A discourse of use of images &c. [By Edward Pelling.] 4to. Pp. 34. [Jones’ Peck, ii. 428.] London, 1687 THIRD (a) letter to F. Lewis Sabran, Jesuit ; wherein the defence of his challenge concerning invocation of saints, is examined and confuted. [By Edward Gee.] 4to. Pp. 14. [Jones’ Peck, ii. 411.] London, 1688 THIRD (a) letter to Lord John Russell, containing some remarks on the ministerial speeches delivered during the late sugar debates ; with an appendix, containing copies of the despatches of Sir C. Grey and Lord Harris. By Jacob Omnium [Matthew James Higgins]. 8vo. Pp. 41. London, 1848 THIRD (a) letter to the author of the Confessional, containing remarks on the three last chapters of that book. [By Gloucester Ridley.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1768 THIRD (a) letter to the editor of the Edinburgh Weekly Journal, from Malachi Malagrowther, Esq. [Sir Walter Scott, Bart.] on the proposed change of currency, and other late alterations, as they affect, or are intended to affect, the kingdom of Scotland. 8vo. Pp. 39. Edinburgh, 1836 THIRD (a) letter to the inhabitants of Whitby ; being the conclusion of the whole matter. By a friend of the people [John Watkins]. i2mo. Pp. 36. [Smale’s Whitby Authors.] Whitby, 1836 THIRD (a) letter to the people of England on liberty, taxes, and the application of public money. [By John Shebbeare, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. 60. [W.] London, 1756 THIRD letter to the Rev. W. Palmer ... on Auricular Confession, and the absolute necessity thereof; also the nullity of the Church of England’s ordinations, notes, etc. . . . ByVerax, a Catholic layman [M. D. Talbot]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1841 THIRD (a) letter to the Right Honour* able Edmund Burke, Esq., on the subject of the evidence contained in the reports of the select committee of the House of Commons ; with an introductory preface. [By Captain Joseph Price.] 8vo. Pp. 52, 95. London, 1782 ; reprinted 1783 THIRD (the) Napoleon ; an ode to Alfred Tennyson, Esq. [By Robert Story.] 8vo. Pp. 1 r. [Brit. Musi] London, 1854 THIRD (the) note of the Church examined, viz. Duration. [By John Williams, D.D. Bishop of Chichester.] 4to. Pp. 16. [Jones’ Peck, p. 437.] London, 1687 THIRD (the) part of a treatise, intituled : Of three conversions of England: con- teyninge, an examen of the calendar or catalogue of protestant saints, martyrs and confessors, diuised by John Fox, and prefixed before his volume of Acts and monuments ; with a paralell or comparison thereof to the Catholike Roman calendar, and saints therein conteyned. . . . By N. D. [Nicolas Doleman, alias Robert Parsons]. 8vo. 1604 THIRD (the) part of Advice to the painter, concerning the great Turk, Count Teckley, and the forces against them ; the French, the Spaniards, the Dutch, and the English. [By Andrew Marvell.] Fol. Pp. 2. London,1684 More probably by Henry Savile. See the note to “Advice to a painter” in the Supplement. THIRD (the) part of Naked truth; or, some serious considerations, that are of high concern to the ruling clergy of England, Scotland, or any other Protestant nation. . . . [By Edmund Hickeringill.] Fol. Pp. 44. [D.N.B. vol. 26, p. 348.] London, 1681 See supra, “The naked truth.” THIRD (the) part of No protestant plot: with observations on the proceedings upon the bill of indictment against the E. of Shaftesbury: and a brief account of the case of the Earl of Argyle. [By Robert Ferguson.] 4to. Pp. iv. 151. [D. N. B. vol. 18, p. 351.] London, 1682 The first and second parts have been attributed to the Earl of Shaftesbury. THIRD (a) part of the Caveat against the Whiggs, in a short historical account of their transactions since the Revolution. [By Charles Hornby.] 8vo. Pp. 108. [Bodl.] London, 1712 THIRD (the) part of the New Athenians no noble Bereans ; being an answer to the Athe?iian Mercury of the 14th of the 4th month, called June, in behalf of the people called Quakers. [By William Penn.] Fol. Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, ii. 308.’ London, 1692 THIRD remarks upon an Essay [by John Locke] concerning the human understanding. . . . [By Thomas Burnet, M.A.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 7, p. 408.] London, 1699 THIRD (a) reply to the Edinburgh Review, by the author of a Reply to the calumnies of that Review against Oxford [Edward Copleston, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 16. Oxford, 1811 THIRD (a) synopsis; containing some of the chief arguments for popular election from the sacred Epistles. . . . [By Rev. James Hill, M.A., of Kirk- patrick-Durham.] i2mo. Pp. 32. Edinburgh, 1734 THIRD (the) tour of Dr Syntax ; in search of a wife : a poem. [By William Combe.] 8vo. Pp. 279. [D. N. B. vol. 11, p. 430.] London, 1821 THIRDE (the) and last part of Conny- catching. With the newly devised knauish art of foole-taking. The like cosenages and villenies neuer before discouered. By R. G. [Robert Greene]. 4to. No pagination. B. L. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1592 THIRTEEN essays on the policy of manufacturing in the country. [By Matthew Carey.] 8vo. Pp. 30. [Sabin’s Diet. iii. 342.] Philadelphia, 1830 THIRTEEN letters on our social condition, addressed to the editor of the Sheffield Couranl. [By Thomas Arnold, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 37. [Brit. Mus.] Sheffield, 1832 THIRTEEN months in the rebel army, 1861-62. By an impressed New Yorker [William G. Stevenson]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1862 THIRTEENTH (the) chapter to the Romans, vindicated from the abusive senses put upon it. Written by a curate of Salop, and directed to the clergy of that county, and the neighbouring ones of North Wales; to whom the author wisheth patience, moderation, and a good understanding for half an hour. [By William Fleet- wood, Bishop of Ely.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1710 THIRTEENTH (the) note of the Church examined, viz.: the confession of adversaries. [By Richard Kidder, M.A., Rector of S. Martin’s, Outwich.] 4to. Pp. 24. [Jones’ Peck, p. 439.] London, 1687 THIRTY (the) days. By Hubert Wales [William Piggott]. 8vo. Pp. 311. [Brit. Mush] London, 1915 THIRTY letters on the trade of Bristol ; the causes of its decline, and means of its revival. By a Burgess [J. B. Kington]. 8vo. Pp. 346. [Hyett and Bazeley’s Gloucest. Lit.] Bristol, 1834 THIRTY letters on various subjects. [By William Jackson, of Exeter.] The second edition corrected and improved. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1784 The third edition, London, 1795, has the author’s name. THIRTY years ; being poems new and old. By the author of Joh?i Halifax, gentleman, etc. [Dinah Maria Mulock]. 8vo. London, 1880 THIRTY years of foreign policy ; a history of the secretaryships of the Earl of Aberdeen and Viscount Palmerston. By the author of The Right Hon. B. Disraeli, M.P. a literary a?id political biography [Thomas Mac- knight], 8vo. Pp. xi. 440. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog.] London, 1855 THIRTY years’ view; or, a history of the working of the American Government for thirty years, from 1820 to 1850 ; chiefly taken from the Congress Debates, the private papers of General Jackson, and the speeches of Ex- Senator Benton. . . . By a Senator of thirty years [Thomas Hart Benton]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mas.] New York, 1857 THIRTY-SIX hints to Sportsmen. [By Albany Savile.] i2mo. Okehampton [1825] THIRTY-SIX morning prayers. . . . [By Lady Chambers, wife of Sir Robert Chambers, Chief Justice of Bengal.] 4to. London, 1821 THIRTY-SIX plain maxims on the way to live and die in peace ; from the pastor of St Paul’s, Haggerstone [Rev. William Stone] to his flock. i2mo. S. sh. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] London, 1864 THIRTY-SIX short, plain sermons. By a London suburban minister [Rev. G. Hunt Jackson]. 8vo. London, 1871 THIRTY-SIX years of seafaring life. By an old Quarter-Master [John Bechervaise]. 8vo. [Brit. Mush] Portsea, 1839 $30,000 (the) bequest, and other stories. By Mark Twain [Samuel P. Clemens]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 521. London, 1906 THIRTY-TWO years in a House of Mercy. By H. N. [Harriet Nokes], 8vo. Pp. 96. London, 1895 THIS gallant Caualiero Dicke Bowyer, newly acted. [By William Wayer.] 8vo. No pagination. [Bodl.\ London, 1605 The running title is : The histone of the triall of Cheualry. THIS indenture witnesseth. By Averil Beaumont [Mrs Margaret Hunt], 8vo. 3 vols. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] London,1875 THIS is an encouragement to all the women’s meetings in the world. By G. F. [George Fox]. 8vo. Pp. 96. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books.\ N.P. 1676 THIS is the myrrour or glasse of healthe, necessary and nedefull for every person to loke in, that will kepe theyr bodye free from the sycknesse of the pestylence, and it sheweth howe the pianettes do reygne in euery houre of the day and night, with the natures and exposicions of the XII. sygnes. . . . [By Thomas Moulton.] 8vo. No pagination. B. L. [Bodl.\ London [1539 ?] Other editions have different titles : “ This is the glasse of helthe . . “ Thys is the myrrour . . .” One edition of the same year is not anonymous. THIS is to all officers and souldiers of the armies in England, Scotland, and Ireland ; and to all magistrates, and them in authority in these nations, and the dominions thereunto appertaining for them to read. [By George Fox.] 4to. Pp. 8. London, 1657 Signed : G. F. THIS is to the clergy who are the men that goes about to settle religion, as they say, according to the Church of England. . . . [Signed: M. F. i.e. Margaret Fell, later Mrs Fox.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books.] London, 1660 THIS man’s dominion : a story of self- will. By Deas Cromarty [Mrs Rob. A. Watson, nee Sophia Anne Fletcher]. 8vo. London, 1894 THIS son of Vulcan ; a novel. By the authors of Ready-money Mortiboy, etc. [Walter Besant and James Rice]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1876 Preface signed : W. B. [and] J. R. THIS troublesome world. [A novel.] By the authors of The Medici?ie Lady [Elizabeth Thomas Meade, and another]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1893 THIS work-a-day world. By Holme Lee, author of Sylvan Holt's daughter [Harriet Parr]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1875 THISTLE (the) ; a dispassionate examine of the prejudice of Englishmen in general to the Scotch nation ; and particularly of a late arrogant insult offered to all Scotchmen, by a modern English journalist. In a letter to the author of Old England of Dec. 27, 1746. [By William Murray, Lord Mansfield.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1747 THISTLEDOWN. [Verses.] By E. S. G. S. [E. S. G. Saunders]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] 1866 THISTLEDOWN; or, the black witches of the Wild West: a collection of anecdotes of the West country. By Anonymous [Arthur George Pain]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Bridgwater, 1909 THISTLES of Mount Cedar. By Ursula Tannerforst [Emily Tilghman]. 8vo. [A?ner. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1905 THO. Mori vita et exitus ; or, the history of Sir Thomas More, sometime Lord High Chancellor. Collected out of several authors by J. H. [John Hod- desdon]. 8vo. Pp. 150. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1652 THOMAS k Kempis, canon regular of St Augustine’s Order, his sermons on the Incarnation and passion of Christ ; translated out of Latin [by Miles Pinkney, alias Carre]. i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 9, p. 178.] Paris, 1653 THOMAS against Bennet. . . . [By Rev. Daniel Mayo, M.A.] 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 37, p. 171.] London, 1702 THOMAS and Sally; or, the sailor’s return : a musical entertainment, as it is performed at the Theatre-Royal in Covent-Garden. [By Isaac Bicker- staffe.] The music composed by Doctor Arne. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1761 THOMAS Chalmers, the man ; his times and work. [By Andrew James Symington.] 8vo. [Lib. Jour?i. iii. 380.] Ardrossan, 1878 THOMAS Curry, the pious keelman ; an authentic narrative. [By C. N. Wason.] 8vo. Pp. 28. Newcastle, 1822 THOMAS de Quincey ; his life and writings ; with unpublished correspondence. By H. A. Page [Alex. Hay Japp, LL.D.]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Lib. Journ. iii. 380.] London, 1877 THOMAS Gainsborough ; a record of his life and works. ... By N. d’Anvers [Mrs Nancy R. E. M. Bell, nee Meugens]. 8vo. Pp. 150. [Birm. Cent. Lib.] New York [1897] THOMAS Grant first Bishop of Southwark. By Grace Ramsay, author of A woman's trials, etc. [Kathleen O’Meara]. With two portraits. 8vo. Pp. vi. 491. London, 1874 THOMAS of Reading; or, the sixe worthy yeomen of the west. Now the sixth time corrected and enlarged by T. D. [Thomas Deloney]. 4to. B. L. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London,1632 THOMAS Whythorne, an unknown Elizabethan composer. By Peter Warlock [Philip Heseltine]. 8vo. Pp. 11. [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] THOMASINA; a biography. By the author of Dorothy, etc. [Margaret Agnes Colville, later Mrs Paul]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1875 THOMSON the Great kild ; or, a perfect narrative of the totall routing of the Levellers neere Wellingborough. . . . [Signed : J. R. i.e. John Rushworth.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1649 THOREAU ; his life and aims. By H. A. Page [Alexander Hay Japp]. 8vo. [Lib. Journ. vi. 190.] Boston, 1877 THORN (a) in her heart. [A novel.] By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. Pp. 247. New York [1889] THORN (the) in the nest. By Martha Farquharson [Martha Finlay]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1880 THORNBERRY Abbey, a tale of the Established Church. [By Gertrude Parsons, nee Hext.] 8vo. Pp. 169. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. ii. 425.] London, 1846 THORNCLIFFE Hall ; or, why Joel Milford changed his opinion of boys whom he once called “goody-goody fellows.” By Francis Forrester [Daniel Wise, D.D.j. 8vo. New York, 1891 THORNEY Hall; a story of an old family. By Holme Lee, author of Maude Talbot [Harriet Parr]. 8vo. [Lit. Year Booh.] London, 1855 THORN-FALCON hill; a poem. [By Henry Waugh.] 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, iii. 317.] Taunton, 1859 THORNIAD (the) ; a familiar epistle. 'By Thomas Crofton Croker.] 8vo. O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Cork, 1876 THORN ICROFT’S model. By Averil Beaumont, author of Magdalen Wyn- yard [Mrs A. W. Hunt]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.]. [London] 1873 THORNS and orange-blossoms ; a novel. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. New York, 1884 THORNTON Abbey. [By John Satch- ell.] i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1806 The second edition, 1814, is not anonymous. THORN-TREE (the) ; being a history of thorn worship,' of the twelve tribes of Israel, but more especially of the lost tribes and House of David. By Theta, a lineal descendant of the hereditary standard-bearers of Normandy and England, “the Knights of the Swan” [William Thorn]. 8vo. [Olphar Hamst.] London, 1863 THORNY (a) path. By Hesba Stretton, author of Jessica’s first prayer, etc. [Sarah Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 160. London [1879] THORPE Regis. By the author of The rose garden, etc. [Frances Mary Peard]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1874 THOR’S Town and John o’ Groat’s, in fact and fiction. [By William Campbell.] 4to. Pp. 66. Thurso, 1902 THOSE boys. [A tale.] By Faye Huntington [Mrs Isabella H. Foster]. 8vo. Pp. 64. London [1895] THOSE children. [A novel.] By Curtis Yorke [Mrs W. S. Richmond Lee]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 308. London, 1896 THOSE difficult years. [A novel.] By Faith Baldwin [Faith Baldwin Cuth- rell]. 8vo. Pp. 349. [Amer. Cat.] Boston [1925] THOSE good Normans. [A series of sketches, translated from the French.] By “ Gyp” [Gabrielle S. M. de Mira- beau, Comtesse de Martel]. 8vo. Pp. 286. Chicago, 1896 THOSE midsummer fairies. ByBaynton Foster [Theodora C. Elmslie]. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1896 THOSE pretty St George girls. By one of the set [Mrs Pierre Lorillard], 8vo. [Lib. Journ. xiv. 59.] Philadelphia, 1883 THOSE Westerton girls. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. hi. London, 1891 THOTH ; a romance. By the author of Toxar [Joseph Shield Nicholson, LL.D., Professor in Edinburgh University]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 THOU art the man; a novel. By the author of Lady Audley’s secret [Mary Elizabeth Braddon, later Mrs Maxwell]. 8vo. London, 1894 THOU shalt not. [A novel.] By Albert Ross [Linn Boyd Porter]. 8vo. Pp. 366. [Brit. Mus.\ New York, 1889 THOU shalt not steal ; the school for ingratitude. ... A comedy in five acts. [By —-— Fisher.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1798J THOUGHT breezes. . . . [Aperiodical]; edited by O’Leah [William Heald]. 4to. London, 1898 THOUGHT echoes. [Poems. By Rev. Timothy J. O’Mahony, D.D., D.C.L.] 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Irelandi] Dublin, 1891 THOUGHTFUL hours. By H. L. L., author (in part) of Hynms ft'om the land of Luther [Jane L. Borthwick]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 200. [Brit. Mus.] London,1867 THOUGHTLESS (a) seven. By the author of Probable so?is [Amy Le Feuvre]. 8vo. Pp. 96. New York, 1897 THOUGHTLESS (the) ward. By a lady [Miss Ferguss, of Bugden, Huntingdonshire]. i2mo. [Gent. Mag. xciv. 1. 224 ; Mon. Rev. lvii. 319.] London, 1777 THOUGHTLY (the) ones; a novel. By Zack [Miss Gwendoline Keats]. 8vo. London, 1903 THOUGHT-READER’S (a) thoughts ; being the impressions and confessions of Stuart Cumberland [Charles Garner, of Oxford]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 326. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1888 THOUGHTS about promoting the interest of Christ’s Universal Church. [By Rev. Edward Stephens, of Chering- ton.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London [c. 1700] THOUGHTS about the city of St Louis ; her commerce and manufactures, railroads. . . . [By John Hogan.] 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] St Louis, 1854 THOUGHTS among flowers. [By John Kitto, D.D.] i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 31, p. 234.] London [1843] THOUGHTS and aphorisms from the works of George Sand [Madame A. L. A. Dudevant]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1911 THOUGHTS and characters ; selections from the writings of the author of The Schonberg-Cotta family [Mrs Elizabeth Charles]. 8vo. Pp. 503. [Brit. Mus.] London [1884] The title of an earlier edition (1877) begins : “ Selections . . THOUGHTS and feelings. By Arthur Brooke [John Chalk Claris, editor of the Kent Herald\. i2mo. [Gent. Mag. March 1866, p. 439.] London, 1820 THOUGHTS and hints for conservative electors. [By John Miller, M.A., Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford.] 8vo. Pp. 14. London, 1837 THOUGHTS and memories in verse. By G. C. B. [George Clement Boase, minister in Brighton]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 192. [Brit. Mus.\ Brighton, 1876 THOUGHTS and opinions of a statesman [Wilhelm von Humboldt], in a selected series of letters. [Translated by Catherine M. A. Couper and edited by Sir Arthur Helps.] i2mo. Pp. 166. London, 1849 THOUGHTS and recollections by one of the last century [William Stewart Rose]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 237. [Brit. Musi] London, 1825 THOUGHTS and stories on tobacco for American lads ; or, Uncle Toby’s antitobacco advice to his nephew. ... By Simeon Toby [George Trask]. i2mo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Boston, 1852 THOUGHTS and suggestions submitted to the consideration of the Society of Friends. By H. B. [Henry Bewley]. i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 118.] Dublin, private print, 1859 THOUGHTS at seventy-nine. By the author of Thoughts on devotion, etc. [John Sheppard]. 8vo. Pp. xx. 200. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, iii. 242.] London, 1865 Dedication signed : J. S. THOUGHTS by the way. [By W. N. Nash.] 32mo. [Brit. Mus.] Birmingham [1835 ?] THOUGHTS by the wayside. By the authoress of Things old and new [Lucy Emra, later Mrs Croggon]. 8vo. Pp. iv. in. [Brit. Mus.\ Canterbury, 1836 THOUGHTS concerning education. By one of the working classes [Henry Brittain]. 8vo. Birmingham [1870] THOUGHTS concerning the Bank, with some facts relating to such establishments in other countries : respectfully submitted to the Honourable the General Assembly of Pennsylvania. By one of their Constituents [Tench Coxe]. 8vo. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. vii. 18.] Philadelphia, 1786 THOUGHTS concerning the origin of power. [By John Wesley.] i2mo. Pp. 12. [.Bodl'.] Bristol, 1772 THOUGHTS (the) concerning toleration vindicated and enforc’d, in answer to the 12 and 13 pages of a scurrilous pamphlet [by James Ramsay], en- tituled Toleration’s fence removed, etc. [By Sir Archibald Sinclair.] 4to. Pp. 12. N.p. 1703 THOUGHTS during sickness. By the author of The doctri?ie of the cross and Devotions for the sick-room [Robert Brett]. 8vo. Pp. xvi. 132. [Camb. Univ. Libi\ Oxford, 1853 Dedication signed : R. B. THOUGHTS for a Convention; a memorandum on the state of Ireland. By A. E. [George W. Russell]. 8vo. Pp. 31. Dublin, 1917 THOUGHTS for Christmas. [Signed: J. E. M. i.e. Julia Elizabeth Marshall.] 8vo. N.p. [1895] T H O U G H T S for the age. By the author^ of Amy Herbert [Elizabeth Missing Sewell]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 348. London, 1870 THOUGHTS for the day. [By Dorothy Anne Thrupp.] i2mo. London, 1836 THOUGHTS for the holy week for young children. By the author of Amy Herbert [Elizabeth Missing Sewell]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 97. London, 1857 THOUGHTS for the New Year ; the Rector’s offering. [By Rev. Gilbert H. Sayres.] 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictio?iary.] Jamaica, 1850 THOUGHTS for the people. ... [By Gerrit Smith.] 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary i\ Peterboro, New York, 1865 THOUGHTS for the thoughtful. By Old Humphrey [George Mogridge]. Third edition. i2mo. Pp. viii. 280. London, n.d. THOUGHTS from a girl’s life. [By Miss L. F. M. Phillips.] 8vo. Oxford, 1870 THOUGHTS from the inner circle. [Poems. By John Alfred Langford, LL.D., H. Latham and W. H.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Birmingham, 1857 THOUGHTS in idle hours ; poems by M. G. C. [Maria Gertrude Cooper]. 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers.] Bath, 1870 THOUGHTS in past years. By the author of The cathedral [Isaac Williams]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1838 THOUGHTS in rhyme. By an East Anglian [Charles Feist]. [Al. and Q. 2nd Oct. 1858, p. 278.] 1825 THOUGHTS in the cloister and the crowd. [By Arthur Helps.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1835 First book written by Sir Arthur Helps. THOUGHTS in the night ; a poem written in Auvergne. By a Wanderer [Robert Mackenzie Beverley, LL.B.]. 8vo. [.Brit. Mus.\ London, 1852 THOUGHTS in verse. By E. B. [E. Bibby]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London,1873 THOUGHTS in verse. By M. W. J. M. [Miss M. W. J. Matthews]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 104. [Dobell’s Private Prints, p. 114.] Private print, i860 THOUGHTS in verse for communion seasons. [By Rev. John Roberts.] i2mo. Pp. 32. Edinburgh, 1867 THOUGHTS in verse, on private prayer and publick worship. [By Rev. James Ford, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 56. [Dobell’s Private Prints, p. 178.] N.P., private print, 1867 THOUGHTS occasioned by the proceedings on Bristol bridge, and the melancholy consequences, on the awful night of Monday, 30th September, 1793. By a lady [Miss Jane Cave, later Mrs Winscom]. 8vo. Pp. 7. [Hyett and Bazeley’s Bibl. of Gloucest. Lit. iii. 88.] Bristol, 1793 THOUGHTS (the) of a country gentleman upon the reading of Dr Sache- verell’s Tryal, in a letter to a friend. By George Smalridge, D.D.] 8vo. Brit. Musi] London, 1710 THOUGHTS (the) of a dying man ; a faithful report of matters uttered by many in the last minutes of their lives. . . . [By Cotton Mather.] i2mo. Pp. 47. [G. Brinley’s A?nerican Library.] Boston, 1697 THOUGHTS of a layman concerning patronage and presentations. [By Andrew Crosbie, advocate.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 52. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1769 THOUGHTS of a Lincolnshire freeholder on the late address of Sir Gilbert Heathcote, of Normanton- Park, in the county of Rutland, Baronet, to the freeholders of the county of Lincoln. [By Samuel Partridge, M.A.] The fourth edition. 8vo. Pp. 45. [Bodli] Boston and Spilsby [1796] THOUGHTS (the) of a member of the Lower House, in relation to a project for restraining and limiting the power of the Crown in the future creation of Peers. [By Sir Robert Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford.] The second edition. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1719 See the note to “ Some reflections upon a pamphlet . . .” THOUGHTS of a physician, being the second series of Evening thoughts. [By Joseph Bullar, M.D.] i2mo. Pp. iv. 176. London, 1868 THOUGHTS of a private person, about the justice of the gentlemens undertaking at York, Nov. 1688. [By Thomas Osborne, Earl of Danby, later Duke of Leeds.] 4to. [London] 1689 THOUGHTS of a Queen. By Carmen Sylva [Elizabeth, Queen of Roumania]. 8vo. Pp. 116. London, 1901 THOUGHTS of a Tory author concerning the press. [Ascribed to Joseph Addison.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man., art. Press.] London, 1712 THOUGHTS (the) of a traveller upon our American disputes. [Signed: Viator, i.e. Sir William Draper.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 28. [Edin. Univ. Lib.] London, 1774 THOUGHTS (the) of an honest Tory, upon the present proceedings of that Darty. In a letter to a friend in town. By Benjamin Hoadly.] 8vo. Pp. 14. Brit. Musi] London, 1710 THOUGHTS of an old man of independent mind, though dependent fortune, on the high price of corn. [By Alexander Dalrymple.] 8vo. [European Mag. xlii. 422 ; M071. Rev. xxxiv. 214.] London, 1800 THOUGHTS (the) of God. By the author of Morning and night watches, etc. [John Ross Macduff, D.D.]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 144. London, 1863 THOUGHTS of great musicians ; from the German of La Mara [Marie Lipsias]. 8vo. Pp. 71. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1896 THOUGHTS of Patricius. [By R. Geoghegan.] 8vo. Dublin, 1785 THOUGHTS of peace for the Christian sufferer : a selection of short passages from Scripture. [By Emma Parr.] i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1840 THOUGHTS of present concernment for the relief of the poor in a scarcity of corn. ... By a member of the Incorporated Society [David Stephens]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Manchester Free Lib. p. 688.] Dublin, 1746 THOUGHTS of sunshine in sorrow. . . . [By Ellen St John Hunt.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1862 THOUGHTS on a continuation of the Book of Common Prayer used in the Church of England. By a lay member of that Church [John Stow]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] London, 1850-56 THOUGHTS on a parliamentary reform. [By Soame Jenyns.] The second edition. 8vo. Pp. 26. [Bodli] London, 1784 In Jenyns’ collected works, vol. ii. THOUGHTS on a pebble; or, a first lesson in geology. [By Gideon Algernon Mantell.] i2mo. [Brit. Mush] London, 1836 THOUGHTS on affectation, addressed chiefly to young people. [By Althea Fanshawe.] 8vo. Pp. xvi. 296. [Brit. Mus.\ 1805 THOUGHTS on art, and notes on the Exhibition of the Royal Scottish Academy of 1868. By Veri Vindex [Sir George Reid and John F. White], 8vo. Edinburgh, 1868 THOUGHTS on books and reading. [By Josh Bevan Braithwaite.] i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends* Books, Supp. p. 67.] London, 1855 THOUGHTS on Calvinism; a poem. [By Thomas Taylor.] i2mo. [.Bodl.] Northampton, 1831 THOUGHTS on Church matters in the diocese of Oxford. [By Joseph Henry Wilson.] 8vo. London, 1858 THOUGHTS on civil liberty, on licentiousness, and faction. By the author of Essays on the characteristics, etc. [John Brown, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 167. [Bodl.] Newcastle upon Tyne, 1765 THOUGHTS on Clubs. By a country cook [J. George Luff]. 8vo. Hawick, 1899 THOUGHTS on cruelty to animals: with anecdotes on the subject. [By Luke Howard, of Plaistow.] 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 982.] London, 1821 THOUGHTS on deceit. [By William Pettman.] 8vo. Pp. 40. [Bodl.] Margate, 1806 THOUGHTS on defence, from a Canadian point of view. ... By a Canadian [William Foster Coffin]. 8vo. Pp. 55. [Brit. Mus.] Montreal, 1870 THOUGHTS on duelling, and the Christian character ; in four letters . . . suggested by three “ affairs of honour” which have occurred in modern days between certain British senators. By Gabriel Sticking- plaister [Rev. Richard Warner]. 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 494.] Bath, 1840 THOUGHTS on East-India affairs, most humbly submitted at this critical conjuncture, to the consideration of the Legislature and the proprietors of East-India stock. By a quondum servant of the company John Zeph- aniah Holwell]. 8vo. Pp. 4, 60. London, 1784 THOUGHTS on ecclesiastical establishments, particularly the Established Church of Scotland. By a layman [John Gibson, W.S.]. 8vo. Pp. 4, 80. [.Edin. Univ. Lib.] Edinburgh, 1832 THOUGHTS on education. By the author of Britain’s Remembrancer [James Burgh]. 8vo. Pp. 80. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1747 THOUGHTS on elocution. [By John Martin.] i2mo. Pp. 36. [Bodl.] London,1798 THOUGHTS on equal representation. [By Francis Bassett, Lord De Dunstan- ville.] 8vo. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. i. 112.] London, 1783 THOUGHTS on executive justice, with respect to our criminal laws, particularly on the circuits. . . . With an appendix, occasioned by a charge given by Baron Perryn] to the Grand Jury for the County of Surrey. By a sincere well-wisher to the public [Martin Madan]. The second edition. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1785 THOUGHTS on finance and Colonies. By Publius [Samuel B. Williams]. 8vo. London, 1846 THOUGHTS on general gravitation, and views thence arising as to the state of the universe. [By Alexander Wilson, M.A.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 62, p. 75.] London, 1777 THOUGHTS on government; applicable to the present state of the American Colonies : in a letter from a gentleman [John Adams] to his friend [George Wythe, of Virginia]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. v. 216.] Philadelphia, 1776 THOUGHTS on habit and discipline. 'By Joseph John Gurney.] 8vo. ^Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 893.] London, 1844 The third edition, published in 1845, has the author’s name. THOUGHTS on hunting ; in a series of familiar letters to a friend. [By Peter Beckford.] 4to. Pp. 334. [Bodl.] Sarum, 1781 THOUGHTS on intervention. By a citizen of Pennsylvania [William Bradford Reed]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1852 THOUGHTS on Jeremy Bentham ; or, the principle of utility considered in connection with ethical philosophy and criminal jurisprudence. By a member of the Manchester Athenaeum [J. P. Culverwell]. 8vo. Pp. 51. London,1843 THOUGHTS on labor, capital, currency. By a citizen of Maryland [H. Mankin]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Baltimore, 1864 THOUGHTS on laughter. By a Chancery barrister [Basil Montague], i2mo. Pp. 68. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1830 THOUGHTS on life, present and future ; ten sermons. By D. S. [Rev. David Swan]. 121110. London, 1872 THOUGHTS on life-science. By Benjamin Place [Edward Thring]. 8vo. [Ltd. Journ. ii. 307.] London, 1869 THOUGHTS on man in his relation to God and to external nature ; with minor poems. [By John Montgomery, minister of the Free Church, Innerleithen, Peebles.] 8vo. Pp. 168. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1852 THOUGHTS on many things. By Francis T. Gompertz. [Edited by J. A. i.e. John Andrews, of Wadham College.] 8vo. Pp. 164. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1904 THOUGHTS on martial law, and on the proceedings of general courts- martial. [By Sir Richard Joseph Sullivan.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1779 THOUGHTS on medical reform. By a retired practitioner [John Allen]. 8vo. Pp. ii. 32. [W.\ London, 1833 THOUGHTS on men and things; a series of essays. By Angelina Gush- ington [Charles W. Radcliffe-Cooke]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] London, 1868 THOUGHTS on mixt communion ; in a letter [signed : Aristobulus, i.e. Janies Turner]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ Coventry, 1773 THOUGHTS on modern politics; a poem upon the Slave trade. [By Rev. Neil Douglas, Dundee.] 8vo. Pp. 248. [D.N.B. vol. 15, p. 344-] London, 1793 THOUGHTS on money, circulation and paper currency. [By Patrick Murray, 5th Lord Elibank.] 8vo. Pp. 33. Edinburgh, 1768 Author’s name in the hand-writing of Dr David Laing. THOUGHTS on mortality, occasioned by the death of-. [By Rev.- Davidson.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Newcastle, 1789 THOUGHTS on Mr [Charles Janies] Fox’s secession for six months. . . . [By Rev. Charles Edward Stewart, Rector of Reed, in Suffolk.] 8vo. [Bond. Lib. Cat. Supp.] London, 1798 THOUGHTS on national defence. [Signed: W. B. i.e. Rear-Admiral William Bowles.] 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1848 THOUGHTS on national insanity. [By Joseph Towers, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. 40. [Gent. Mag. Ixxiii. 1. 355 ; Mon. Rev. xxiii. 94.] London, 1797 THOUGHTS on nature and religion; or, an apology for the right of private judgment maintained by Michael Ser- vetus in his answer to John Calvin. ^By Patrick Blair, M.D., Cork.] 8vo. Edin. Univ. Lib.] n.p. 1774 THOUGHTS on old age; good words from many minds. By Hesba Stretton [Sarah Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 128. London,1906 THOUGHTS on Orkney and Zetland, their antiquities and capabilities of improvement ; with hints towards the formation of a local society for the investigation and promotion of these objects ; to which are annexed extracts from curious manuscripts, together with useful lists. [By Alexander Grant Groat.] 8vo. Pp. 47. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, private print, 1831 THOUGHTS on our acquisitions in the East Indies ; particularly respecting Bengal. [By George Johnstone, M.P., Governor of Florida.] 8vo. [European Mag. xlii. 422.] London, 1771 THOUGHTS on our Articles of religion, with respect to their proposed utility to the State. [By Christopher Wyvill.] 4to. [John Jebb’s Works, iii. 1 ; Mon. Rev. xlv. 239.] London, 1771 THOUGHTS on Parliamentary reform. [By Soame Jenyns.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1784 THOUGHTS on preaching. [By Sidney Hall Fleming.] 8vo. Pp. 19. [Brit. Mus.] Bedford [1872] THOUGHTS on preaching the gospel to the heathen, and on the cause of the want of success. By a missionary Anthony Hammond]. i2mo. Pp. 36. Brit. Mus.] Bedale, 1842 THOUGHTS on public trusts. [By William Dawson.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1805 THOUGHTS on religion and other subjects, by Monsieur [Blaise] Pascal ; translated from the French [by Basil Rennet]. 8vo. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 389.] London, 1704 THOUGHTS on religious subjects. [By Neil Smith.] 8vo. [Robertson’s Aberd. Bib!.] London, 1867 THOUGHTS on Sandeman’s Letters on Hervey’s Thero?i and Aspasio. By an old woman [Mrs Anne Dutton]. 8vo. Pp. 54. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. ii. 216.] London, 1761 THOUGHTS on some points in our system of judicial procedure. By a lawyer [Frederick Hallard]. 8vo. Pp. 53. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1858 THOUGHTS on some questions of the day. [By George Dudley Ryder.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1869 THOUGHTS on spiritual ethnology. By Ignotus [John Tindall Harris]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends'1 Books, Supp. p. 179.] London, 1874 THOUGHTS on subjects connected with India. By an Officer of the Madras Engineers [Captain Samuel Best]. 8vo. Pp. 35. Private print, 1839 THOUGHTS on taxation. . . . By a commissioner of taxes [Francis New- bery], 8vo. [Brit. Mus. ; Mon. Rev. xxvii. 459.] London, 1798 THOUGHTS on taxation, and a new system of funding, by which the land holder and stock holder, being equally secured, would run the same fortune, and the latter escape the dangerous envy of being considered as a kind of foreigner, unconcerned in the calamities of the country. . . . [By G. P. Tovvry.] A new edition, with additions. 8 vo. Pp. 14. London, 1785 The author’s answer to a letter from a noble Earl, signed : G. P. T * * * THOUGHTS on the Aberdeen case [of Professor W. Robertson Smith]. By a pre-disruption elder [Benjamin Bell, surgeon]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1880 THOUGHTS on the abolition of the slave trade, and civilization of Africa ; with remarks on the African Institution, and an examination of the report of their committee, recommending a general registry of slaves in the British West India islands. [By Joseph Marryatt.] 8vo. Pp. vii. 235. [.Bodl.] London, 1816 THOUGHTS on the advancement of academical education in England. [By James Yates.] 8vo. [Royal Institution Cat.] London, 1826 The second edition, 1827, bears the author’s name. THOUGHTS on the best modes of carrying into effect the system of economy recommended in His Majesty’s proclamation. [By James Deacon Hume.] 8vo. Pp. xvi. 46. London, 1801 THOUGHTS on the Book of Common Prayer, used in the Church of England, by a lay member of that Church, compiler of a Biblical catechism, a metrical version of the Bible Psalms, etc. [John Stow]. 8vo. Pp. 272. [Bodl.] London, 1850 THOUGHTS on the building and opening of a district church at Summer- town, near Oxford. [Signed : J. B. i.e. Rev. John Badcock.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1832 THOUGHTS on the calls and invitations of the Gospel. Republished from the Missionary Magazine, with some additions, by the author. To which is now added, a reply to some animadversions. [By Rev. Archibald Maclean, Baptist minister, Edinburgh.] 8vo. Pp. 43. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl.] Edinburgh [1797] THOUGHTS on the cameos and intaglios of antiquity, suggested by a sight and survey of the Blenheim collection. By a lover of the fine arts [Vaughan Thomas, B.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 68. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1847 The first title-page begins Addressed to His Grace, etc. Thoughts etc. THOUGHTS on the Canticles. By M. E. H. [M. E. Holland]. 8vo. [Aberd. Pub. Lib.] Aberdeen, 1884 THOUGHTS on the case of the local preachers in the Methodist Connexion. By an old local preacher [Vicary Purdy], 8vo. Pp. 20. [Bril. Musi] Bristol, 1820 THOUGHTS on the cause of the present discontents. [By Edmund Burke.] 8vo. Pp. 79. London, printed ; Dublin, reprinted, 1770 In collected works, London 1852, vol. iii. THOUGHTS on the causes and consequences of the present high price of provisions. [By-Soame Jenyns.] 8vo. Pp. 27. [M‘Culloch’s Lit. Pol. Econ. p. 193.] Dublin, 1768 In collected works, vol. ii. THOUGHTS on the causes of the present failures. [By William Roscoe.] 8 vo. London, 1793 THOUGHTS on the condition and prospects of popular education in the United States. By a citizen of Pennsylvania [Frederick Adolphus Packard, LL.D.]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1836 THOUGHTS on the constitutional power and right of the crown, in the bestowal of places and pensions ; humbly submitted to the attention of the people of England in general, and electors of members of parliament in particular. . . . [By Francis Webb.] 8vo. [Murch’s Dissenters, p. 327 ; Mon. Rev. xlvi. 450 ; Gent. Mag. lxxxv. ii. 563.] London, 1772 THOUGHTS on the currency. . . . By an old merchant [Hon. John Nesmith]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.\ Lowell, i860 THOUGHTS on the currency, with suggestions for placing it on a new and permanent basis. By a resident in Sunderland [William Anderson]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] Bishopwearmouth, 1847 THOUGHTS on the death of Mr Woodmason’s children, destroyed by fire, 18th Jan. 1782. [By Peregrine Branwhite.] i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 6, p. 229.] London, 1782 THOUGHTS on the dismission of officers, civil or military for their conduct in parliament. [By James Adair.] 8vo. [Gent. Mag. Aug. 1798, p. 720; Almon’s Biog. Anec. i. 83 ; Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1765 THOUGHTS on the duty of a good citizen, with regard to war and invasion ; in a letter from a citizen to his friend. [By Jonas Hanway.] 8vo. London [1756] THOUGHTS on the English government ; addressed to the quiet good sense of the people of England. Letter I. [By John Reeves.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1795 Letters 2, 3, and 4 by the same author were published in 1799. THOUGHTS on the Epistle to the Romans, for laymen. By one of them [Samuel Welman]. 8vo. Pp. 112. London, 1917 THOUGHTS on “the excitement” [relating to Free-masonry] in reply to a letter to the Hon. Edward Everett first published in the National ./Egis and Massachusetts Yeoman. [By the Rev. George Allen.] 8vo. [W. ; [Brit. Mus.] Worcester [Mass.] 1833 THOUGHTS on the extreme misery of the Irish poor. . . . An humble attempt to promote industry and prevent vice. [By Hugh Josiah Hansard.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1784] THOUGHTS on the farther improvement of aerostation ; with a description of machine now constructed. [By Samuel Hoole.] 8vo. [Book Prices Current, 1922.] London, 1785 THOUGHTS on the first rainbow, in connection with certain geological facts. By William Bateman Byng.] 8vo. IV.] London, 1852 THOUGHTS on the Gospel of Jesus Christ the Son of God [according to Matthew]. By a lay member of the Church of England [John Stow]. 8vo. Pp. 813. [Cushing’s I nit. and Pseud.] THOUGHTS on the great circumspection necessary in licensing public alehouses ; submitted to the consideration of the gentlemen acting in the commission of the peace throughout England. By a justice of the peace [John Disney, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 16. London, 1776 THOUGHTS on the Holy Spirit and his work. By the author of Thoughts upon thought [John G. Hewlett]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1845 THOUGHTS on the importance of religion. [By W. Allen.] i2mo. Pp. 11. [Brit. Mus.] Swansea, 1808 THOUGHTS on the importance of the manners of the great to general society. [By Hannah More.] Eighth edition. i2mo. Pp. 142. [Gent. Mag. lviii. 339.] London, 1790 THOUGHTS on the increasing wealth and national economy of the United States. By Observator [Samuel Blodget]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, ii. 107.] Washington, 1801 THOUGHTS on the late transactions respecting Falkland’s islands. [By Samuel Johnson, LL.D.] The second edition. 8vo. Pp. 75. London, 1771 In collected works, London 1792, vol. viii. THOUGHTS on the letter of Buonaparte [to King George III., Dec. 1799] on the pacific principles and last speech of Mr Fox. By a Suffolk freeholder [Rev. Charles Edward Stewart]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1800 THOUGHTS on the life and times of David. By C. H. M. [Charles H. Mackintosh]. i2mo. [c. i860] THOUGHTS on the Litany. By a naval officer’s orphan daughter [S. M. Heaton]. Edited by the Rev. George Heaton, M.A. of Catherine Hall, Cambridge. . . . i2mo. Pp. viii. 220. London, 1840 Signed : S. M. H. THOUGHTS on the mental functions ; being an attempt to treat metaphysics as a branch of the physiology of the nervous system. [By John James Waterston.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1843 Afterwards included in collected works, with the author’s name, edited by Dr John Scott Haldane. THOUGHTS onthemiseryofanumerous class of females; particularly addressed to those of their own sex, whom God has entrusted with affluence ; for which they must shortly give account. [By Rev. John Walker, Dublin.] i2mo. Dublin, 1793 THOUGHTS on the national defence. [By Charles Gordon-Lennox, Duke of Richmond.] 8vo. Pp. ii. 141. THOUGHTS on the naval strength of the British Empire. [By Sir John Sinclair.] Part II. Bvo. London, 1782 The author’s name appears on the title- page of Part I. [Mon. Rev. lxvi. 4^9* 1 THOUGHTS on the new and old principles of political obedience. [By George Holford.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1793 THOUGHTS on the origin and nature of government ; occasioned by the late disputes between Great Britain and her American colonies. [By Allan Ramsay, Junr., son of the poet.] 8vo. Pp. 64. London, 1769 THOUGHTS on the plan for a Magdalen House for repentant prostitutes. ... [By Jonas Han way.] 4to. Pp. 59. [Brit. Musi] London, 1758 THOUGHTS on the popular opinions of eternal punishment, being synonymous with eternal torment. . . . [By Thomas Conolly Cowan.] i2mo. Pp. 64. London, 1844 THOUGHTS on the preliminary Articles of Peace. By a Kentish clergyman [Rev. Edward Hankin]. 8vo. Pp. 32. London, 1801 THOUGHTS on the present commercial distress, and on the means to prevent its recurrence. By a merchant Richard Blanshard]. 8vo. Pp. 23. Brit. Musi] London, 1826 THOUGHTS on the present crisis, in a letter from a constituent to his representative [William Peter, M.A., barrister]. 8vo. London, 1815 THOUGHTS on the present crisis of our domestic affairs. By another lawyer [George Chalmers]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1807 THOUGHTS on the present depressed state of the agricultural interest of this kingdom, and on the rapid increase of the poor-rates ; with observations on Mr Curwen’s plan for bettering the condition of the poor. [By Robert Fellowes, D.D.] 8vo. [Editi. Univ. Libi] London, 1817 Subscribed : A Magistrate. THOUGHTS on the present position of the Established Churches in England and Scotland, particularly the latter, and how far in some minor matters legislation may be desirable ; a letter addressed to the “Right Hon. E. S. Gordon, M.P. . . .” By an Episcopalian landowner in five Northern parishes [Andrew Steuart, of Auchlunkart]. 8vo. Pp. 68. Edinburgh, 1875 THOUGHTS on the present prices of provisions, their cause-s and remedies. By an independent gentleman [John Symmons]. 8vo. [Hd] London, 1880 THOUGHTS on the present Rebellion, addressed to all thinking and honest Irishmen. By Eumenes [John Walker]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] Dublin, 1798 THOUGHTS on the present state and prospect of legal discontent. [By Robert Hill Sandys.] 8vo. 9 nos. [Brit. Musi] London, 1853 THOUGHTS on the present state of affairs. [By Gideon Duncan.] 8vo. Pp. 22. N.P. [c. 1800] Contemporary attestation of authorship. THOUGHTS on the present state of affairs with America, and the means of conciliation. [By William Pulteney, Earl of Bath.] 8vo. Pp. 100. [Bodli] London, 1778 THOUGHTS on the present state of the college of Dublin ; addressed to the gentlemen of the University. [By J. Forsageth, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 82. [Bodli] Dublin, 1782 Attributed also to Arthur Browne. [ Camb. Univ. Lib.] THOUGHTS on the present system of academic education at the University of Cambridge. By Eubulus [Samuel Butler, D.D., of Shrewsbury]. 8vo. [Camb. Hist, of Eng. Lit. vol. 14, p. 594.] London,1822 THOUGHTS on the principles of civil government, and their foundation in the law of nature. By S. N. [Thomas Elrington, D.O.]. 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 17, p. 333.] Dublin, 1793 THOUGHTS on the privileges and power of juries, suggested by the case of James Robertson and Walter Berry, printer and bookseller, Edinburgh. [By James Anderson, LL.D.] 8vo. [Wi] Edinburgh, 1793 This pamphlet is signed “Mercator,” and is reprinted from The Bee. THOUGHTS on the probable influence of the French Revolution on Great Britain. [By Sir Samuel Romilly.] 8vo. [D. N.B. vol. 49, p. 189.] London,1790 THOUGHTS on the properties and formation of the different kinds of air ; with remarks on vegetation, pyrophori, heat, caustic salts, mercury, and on the different theories upon air. [By Robert Harrington.] 8vo. [Mon. Rev. lxxiv. 449.] London, 1785 THOUGHTS on the proposed annexation of Texas to the United States. . . . [Preface signed: T. S. i.e. Theodore Sedgwick.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.\ New York, 1844 THOUGHTS on the proposed change of currency, and other late alterations, as they affect, or are intended to affect, the kingdom of Scotland. [By Sir Walter Scott, Bart.] 8vo. Pp. 60. Edinburgh, 1826 The first of three letters addressed to the Editor of the Edinburgh Weekly Journal, and signed : Malachi Malagrowther. THOUGHTS on the proposed dissolution of the Cambridge Camden Society, suggested for the consideration of the members. By a member of this Committee [Philip Freeman, M.A.]. 8vo. Pp. 27. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books.] London, 1845 THOUGHTS on the propriety of fixing Easter term. [By Sir Giles Rooke, M.A., Judge of Common Pleas.] 8vo. {D. N. B. vol. 49, p. 208.] London, 1792 THOUGHTS on the prospect of a regicide peace, in a series of letters. [By Edmund Burke.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 131. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1796 THOUGHTS on the Protestant ascendency in Ireland ; with an appendix. [By James Mason.J 8vo. London, 1805 THOUGHTS on the providence of God. [By John Shore, 1st Baron Teign- mouth.] 8vo. {Bodl.\ London, 1834 THOUGHTS on the question of the East suggested by a tour in Turkey, Syria and Egypt. . . . [By George Dawson Darner, M.P.] London, 1840 Contemporary attestation. THOUGHTS on the riots at Birmingham. By a Welch freeholder [David Jones of Llandovery]. 8vo. Pp. 29. London, 1791 Attributed also to George Rous. THOUGHTS on the rise and decline of the polite arts. [By Henry Constantine Jennings.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.\ London [1798] THOUGHTS on the Sabbath. [By Arthur Knox.] 8vo. Aberdeen, 1882 THOUGHTS on the Scriptural expectations of the Christian Church. By Basilicus [Rev. Lewis Way]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 106. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] London, 1828 THOUGHTS on the “Seven last words on the Cross.” By the author of Chronicles of the Schonberg-Cottafamily [Elizabeth Rundle, later Mrs Arthur P. Charles]. i2mo. London, 1887 THOUGHTS on the several regulations necessary to the appointment of an Advocate - General, &c. [By- Mawhood.] 4to. {IV.] London, 1775 THOUGHTS on the singing of psalms and anthems in Churches. [By Rev. William White, D.D.] 8vo. Philadelphia, 1808 THOUGHTS on the singing of unauthorised hymns in public worship . . . submitted to the consideration of the archbishops and bishops. ... By one of their brethren [Richard Mant, D.D.]. 8vo. London, 1835 THOUGHTS on the slavery of the negroes. [By Joseph Woods.] 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friendd Books, ii. 955.] London, 1784 THOUGHTS on the state and prospects of Conservatism. . . . By R. S. O. [R. S. Orsler]. 8vo. Pp. 16. Manchester, 1837 THOUGHTS on the state of the American Indians. ... By a citizen of the United States [Silas Wood]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. a7id Pseud.] New York, 1794 THOUGHTS on the state of the country. [By Peter Stuart.] 8vo. Pp. 173. {Manch. Free Lib. p. 696.] London, 1812 THOUGHTS on the State-Church question. By a Protestant Nonconformist [Edward Ash, M.D.]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] London, 1861 THOUGHTS on the study of natural history. [ByJamesLawsonDrummond, M.D.] 8vo. London, 1820 THOUGHTS on the study of prophecy . . . With a few words on the twenty- fourth chapter of St Matthew’s Gospel. By a barrister [Peter Frederick O’Malley, Q.C.]. i2mo. London,1849 THOUGHTS on the sufferings of Christ. [By W. Giles.] 8vo. Pp. 76. [Whitley’s Baft. Bibl.] 1810 THOUGHTS on the theory and practice of the French constitution. By an Englishman [Francis Bassett, Lord De Dunstanville]. 8vo. {D. N. B. vol. 3, p. 377.] London, 1794 THOUGHTS on the times ; a poem, with notes. By Leonidas [Harry Wood Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 24. Merthyr, i860 THOUGHTS on the times, but chiefly on the profligacy of our women, and its causes ; addressed to every parent— husband—and modest woman in the three kingdoms. [By Philip Thick- nesse.] 8vo. Pp. v. 200. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, ii. 512.] London, 1779 Attributed also to Francis Foster. THOUGHTS on the war, and on European policy. [By Samuel Lobb.] 8vo. Calcutta, 1870 THOUGHTS on trade and a publick spirit. . . . [By Thomas Baston.] 8vo. Pp. 212. \Manch. Free Lib. p. 730.] London, 1716 THOUGHTS on trial by jury in civil causes ; with a view to a reform of the administration of justice in Scotland. In a series of [xv] letters. [By James Grahame.] 8vo. Pp. 70. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1806 THOUGHTS respecting the origin of treasonable conspiracies and rebellious insurrections. . . . [By John Potter.] 8vo. London, 1803 Writer’s own declaration of authorship. THOUGHTS suggested by Lord Lauderdale’s Observations upon the Edmburgh Review. [By Henry Brougham, Lord Brougham.] 8vo. Pp. 93. [Thomas’s Bibl. List, p. 6.] London, 1805 THOUGHTS upon a new coinage of silver ... as it relates to an alteration in the division of the pound Troy. [By Magens Dorrien Magens.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 104. [Manch. Free Lib. p.441.] London, 1798 THOUGHTS upon liberty. By an Englishman [Rev. John Wesley]. i2mo. Pp. 24. [Osborn’s Method. Lit. p. 46.] Bristol, 1772 THOUGHTS upon our present situation, with remarks upon the policy of a war with France. [By Sir George Dallas.] 8vo. [D. N.B. vol. 13, p. 396.] London,1793 THOUGHTS upon religion. By Blaise Pascal; translated from the French [by Basil Kennett, D.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1704 THOUGHTS upon the aristocracy of England. By Isaac Tomkins, Gent. [Henry Brougham, Lord Brougham and Vaux]. Sixth edition. 8vo. Pp. 23. [Quarterly Review, liii. 540.] London, 1835 THOUGHTS upon the Catholic question, by an Irish Roman Catholic [Anthony Richard Blake]. 8vo. Pp. 85. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1828 THOUGHTS upon the four last things : death ; judgment ; heaven ; hell: a poem in four parts. [By 1 Joseph Trapp, D.D.] Fol. 4 parts. [Bodl.] London, 1734-35 THOUGHTS upon the political situation of the United States of America, in which that of Massachusetts is more particularly considered. ... By a native of Boston [Jonathan Jackson, or George R. Minot, or James Sullivan]. 8vo. Pp. 209. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. THOUGHTS upon the present condition of the stage and upon the construction of a new theatre. [By Frederick Howard, Earl of Carlisle.] 8vo. [Gent. Mag. xcv. ii. 370.] London, 1808 THOUGHTS upon the present contest between the Administration and the British Colonies in America, addressed to the merchants. . . . [By William Smith, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 46. London, 1775 THOUGHTS upon thought; for young men. In three parts. [By John G. Hewlett.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1843 THOUGHTS, verses, and songs. By Claribel [Mrs Charles Barnard, n/e Caroline Arlington]. 8vo. Pp. 314. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Lreland, p. 16.] Edinburgh, 1877 THOUGHTS versified. By C. [Anna Caroline Steele]. Pp. 86. [Brit. Musi] Braintree, Mass., i860 THOUSAND (a) and one notable nativities; the astrologer’s “Who’s Who.” Compiled by the sub-editor of Modem Astrology [Alfred H. Barley]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 116. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1911 THOUSAND (a) golden thoughts. . . . By the author of Language of the eye [J. Turnley]. First series. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, i860 THOUSAND (a) lines : now first offered to the world we live in. [By Martin Farquhar Tupper.] i2mo. Pp. 60. [Wi London, 1845 THOUSAND (a) notable things on various subjects, disclosed from the secrets of nature and art. . . . [By Thomas Lupton.] i2mo. Pp. 262. London,1793 The first edition, 1660, and other editions were not anonymous. 1000 quaint cuts from books of other days, including amusing illustrations from children’s story books. . . . [By Andrew W. Tuer.] 4to. Pp. 170. [Brit. Mus.] London [1886] Signed : A. W. T. THOUSANDTH (the) and second night. By Frank Heller [Gunnar Serner]; translated ... by Edwin Bjorkman. 8vo. Pp. 333. [Brit. Mus.] New York [1925] T H READ (the) of gold. By the author of The house of quiet [Arthur Christopher Benson]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] THREAD (the) of proof. [A novel.] By Headon Hill [Frank Edward Grainger], 8vo. Pp. 330. \Brit. Mus.\ London, 1912 THREADS and patches on political economy. By Honestas [John George Muir]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 161. London, 1901 THREATENING letter from Douglas [Andrew Reed] the self-acknowledged author of No fiction, to Lefevre [Francis Barnett]. With Lefevre’s reply. Second edition. 4to. [W. ; Brit. Musi] London, 1822 THREE All-Saints summers, and other teachings of nature. [By Bishop Wm. W. How.] 8vo. London [1861] THREE amateur scouts. [A tale.] By Raymond Jacberns [Miss M. Selby Ashe]. 8vo. Pp. 300. London, 1910 THREE autumn days in Perthshire. [By James Brebner.] i2mo. [Mitchell and Cash’s Scot. Topogi] Dundee, 1874 THREE (the) barriers : notes on Mr Darwin’s Origin of species. [By Gilbert Rorison.] 8vo. Pp. 180. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh and London, 1861 Preface signed : G. R. THREE bears and Gwen ; a story for children. By May Wynne [Mabel Wynne Knowles]. 8vo. Pp. 224. London [1920] THREE books of occult philosophy, written by Henricus Cornelius Agrippa, of Nettesheim : translated out of the Latin by J. F. [John French, M.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 583. [D. N. B. vol. 20, p. 252 ; Ferguson’s Bibl. Chem. i. 293.] London, 1651 The translation is wrongly attributed to John Freake. THREE (the) C.’s; a co-operative triologue [in verse]. ... By E. V. N. [Edward Vansittart Neale]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Manchester, 1888 THREE (the) C.’s ; the city surveyor of works, the civic arms. By a citizen [of Bath, i.e. Robert Edward Myhill Peach]. 8vo. Bath, 1888 THREE (the) Caesars; sketches by Timon [H. Willats]. 8vo. London,1869 THREE (the) chancellors ; or, sketches of the lives of William of Wykeham, William of Waynflete, and Sir Thomas More. [Three biographies first published independently. By Augusta Theodosia Drane.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, i860 THREE Christmas eves. By Mignon [Mrs Baseley]. 8vo. Manchester, 1902 THREE comedies, translated from the Spanish [by Henry, Lord Holland]. 8vo. [W.; Brit. Musi] London, 1807 THREE considerations proposed to Mr William Pen, concerning the validity and security of his new Magna Charta for liberty of conscience, by a Baptist [Thomas Comber, D. D.]. 4to. [Smith’s Bibl. Anti-Quak. pp. 25, 135.] N.P. 1688 In the Memoirs of the life and writings of Dr Comber, by his great-grandson, it is stated (append, p. 427) that one of the MSS. found among his papers has the title, “Three considerations addressed to W. P. concerning the security of his new Magna Charta for liberty of conscience.” THREE courses and a desert; comprising three sets of tales, West country, Irish, and legal ; and a melange. [By William Clarke.] With 50 illustrations by George Cruikshank. Fourth edition. 8vo. Pp. 432. [Brit Musi] London,1850 THREE (the) Cruikshanks ; a bibliographical catalogue, describing more than 300 works . . . illustrated by Isaac, George, and Robert Cruikshank. By Frederick Marchmont [Hugh Arthur Torriano]. The introduction by Julian Moore. 8vo. London, 1897 THREE (the) daughters of night ; a novel. By Derek Vane [Mrs B. Eaton- Back]. 8vo. Pp. 226. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1897 THREE days at Killarney, with other poems. [By Rev. Charles Hoyle, Overton, Wilts.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1828 THREE (the) days of Wensleydale. By the Wensleydale poet [William G. M. J. Barker]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Sufifii] London, 1854 THREE (the) death-cries of a perishing Church. From The Nottingha7n Review, with additions and corrections. [By William Howitt.] i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friend's Books, i. 102.] Nottingham, 1835 THREE dialogues; 1. On the nature of religion, 2. Church and State, 3. Ritualism, from Cambridge. . . . [By John Frederick Mortlock.] 8vo. Pp. 15. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Booksi] [London] 1868 THREE dialogues between a dean and a curate on the amusements of clergymen and Christians in general. By Edward Stillingfleet [William Gilpin]. 8vo. Pp. 224. [Jessel’s Bibl. of flaying cards, p. no.] London, 1796 The correct title begins “ On the amusements of clergymen ... ”, q.v. in the Supplement. THREE dialogues concerning liberty. [By Jackson Barwis.] 8vo. Pp. 116. London, 1771 A fourth dialogue concerning liberty has the author’s name. THREE discourses : 1. On the use of books. 2. On the result and effects of study. 3. On the elements of literary taste ; delivered at the anniversary meetings of the Library Society at Chichester, Jan. 1800, 1801, 1802. By the President [Thomas Sanden, M.D.]. 8vo. 3 parts. [TV. and Q. 1st April 1865, p. 269.] London, 1802 The three discourses were published separately in the years in which they were delivered. THREE discourses on certain symbols used in [Catholic Apostolic] worship ; being a practical explanation of their meaning and advantage. [By George E. Boase.] 8vo. Pp. 48. [Boase’s Cat. of Cath. Afost. Works, p. 6.] Dundee, 1855 Third edition in 1892. THREE discourses on eternity, and the importance and advantages of looking at eternal things. [By James Orton.] i2mo. [ W. ; Brit. Mus.] London [c. 1830] THREE discourses on miracles and miraculous power. [By John Bate Cardale, solicitor.] 8vo. [Kirk’s Suff.\ London, 1856 THREE discourses ; one, a defence of private judgment ; the second, against the authority of the magistrate over conscience ; the third, some considerations concerning the re-uniting of Protestants. The two first translated from the Latin, the third from the French, of Dr Samuel Werenfels, professor of divinity in the University of Bale, in Switzerland. . . . By Phile- leutherus Cantabrigiensis [Thomas Herne]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1718 THREE dissertations ; 1. On the divinity of our Saviour ; 2. On the Atonement ; 3. On the personality and divinity of the Holy Ghost. By John Isherwood [or rather Rev. Thomas Bancroft, M.A.]. 8vo. Pp. 223. [Sparke’s Bibl. Bolt. p. 17.] Oxford, private print, 1835 THREE dissertations; one on the characters of Augustus, Horace, and Agrippa ... by the Abbe de Vertot . . . another on the gallery of Verres, by the Abbe Fraguier ... a third on the nature, origin, and use of masks in theatrical representations among the ancients, by Mr Boindin. . . . [Translated and edited by George Turnbull, LL.D.] 4to. Pp. xv. 122. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1740 THREE dramas. By the authoress of St Bernardme, and other poems Catherine Swanwick]. 8vo. Pp. 208. Ulphar Hamst.] London, 1866 THREE (the) Elizabeths. [By Agnes M. Stewart.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Anon.] Baltimore {c. i860] THREE epochs in the life of a woman. ... By a clergyman’s wife [Mrs E. A. Hart, nde Fanny Wheeler] ; dramatised. . . . 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] Manchester, 1881 THREE essays. 1. Essay on the new project for a land mint. ... 2. A second essay concerning the land mint. 3. A scheme proposing a true touchstone for the due trial of a proper Union betwixt Scotland and England, etc. By the author of The Character of the true fublick spirit [Andrew Brown, M.D., Dolphinton.] 8vo. {Edi?i. Univ. Lib.] Edinburgh, 1706 THREE essays concerning church government, viz. I. An impartial inquiry into the order and government settled by Christ and his apostles in the Church. II. An inquiry into the divine right of Presbytery. III. The Phoenix : or, prelacy revived from the ashes of its funeral, and established upon the same principles and arguments which are made use of against it, by the author of The funeral of prelacy. [By Simon Couper, curate at Dunfermline.] 4to. Edinburgh, 1704 THREE essays on important subjects, read at Thearne, in the parish of Beith, at the close of three successive exhibitions of cattle, in 1827, 1828, and 1829. By a cultivator of the ground [Andrew Aitken]. 8vo. Pp. 40. {New Coll. Lib.] Beith, 1830 THREE (the) essentials. [A novel.] By Dorothea Gerard [Madame Lon garde de Longarde]. 8vo. Pp. 314. London, 1904 THREE experiments of living: within the means ; up to the means ; beyond the means. [By Mrs Hannah F. Lee.] A new English edition. 8vo. {W. ; Brit. Mus.] London, 1848 THREE (the) Fenian brothers ; or, some scenes in Irish life. By an Irishman [John Hamilton, of St Ernans]. i2mo. London, 1866 THREE (the) frights and the three beauties ; with the story of Bobinette : sketches of girls’ lives. By Sarah Tytler [Henrietta Keddie], 8vo. Pp. 194. London [1881] THREE for a penny; or, hints for advertisers. By sundry witty persons [rather, by Thomas W. H. Crosland]. 8vo. Pp. 64. [.Brit. Mus.] London, 1905 THREE (the) fountains ; a faery epic of Euboea; with other verses. By the author of The afterglow [George S. Cautley]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1869 THREE (the) friends. ... By Maria [Maria D. Weston]. 8vo. Boston, 1849 THREE general epistles to be read in all the congregations of the righteous, who are gathered out of the house of Adam in the fall, into the house of Christ that never fell, to be read amongst them. By G. F. [George Fox]. 4to. Pp. 22. 1664 THREE generations of a godly house ; memorials of the Treacher family. [Signed: A. H. i.e. Arthur Hall.] 8vo. Pp. 52. \Brit. Musi] London, 1896 THREE generations; the study of a middle-class Scottish family. By Sarah Tytler [Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. London, 1911 THREE gifts and other poems. By Keith St John [Mrs Katharine St John Noyes Guion]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Newhaven, Conn., 1905 THREE girls. [A novel.] By John Strange Winter [Mrs Arthur Stannard, nee Henrietta E. V. Palmer]. i2mo. London, 1892 THREE (the) graces ; a novel. By the Duchess [Mrs Margaret Argles, later Mrs Hungerford]. 8vo. Pp. 304. Philadelphia, 1895 THREE (the) grand queries resolved ; shewing the great iniquity and injustice in any one prince, that attempts by war ... to be sole lord paramont . . . over all other kings, free princes and states. By a gentleman learned in divinity, law and history [John Brydall]. 4to. [Lincoln’s Inn Lib.] London, 1707 THREE (the) homes. By Nellie Graham [Mrs Annie Dunning, ?ice Ketchum]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1863 THREE (the) homes ; a tale for fathers and sons. By F. T. L. Hope [Faintly Trust the Larger Hope, i.e. Frederick William Farrar, D.D., Dean of Canterbury]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 389. [The Academy, Oct. 1896, p. 239.] London,1873 THREE hours after marriage ; a comedy, as it is acted at the Theatre Royal. [By John Gay.] 8vo. London, 1717 The “Advertisement” concludes in these words :—“ I must farther own the assistance I have receiv’d in this piece from two of my friends; who, tho’ they will not allow me the honour of having their names join’d with mine, cannot deprive me of the pleasure of making this acknowledgment.”— J ohn Gay. (The friends alluded to are Pope and Arbuthnot.) THREE (the) houses : the house of prayer ; the house appointed for all living ; the house not made with hands. [By Mrs H. Potter.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Ipswich, 1843 THREE hundred and fifty portions of the Book of Psalms selected from various versions, with a collection of 600 hymns, adapted for public worship. By the Rev. Josiah Pratt.] i2mo. Lowndes’ Brit. Lib. p. 433.] London, 1829 THREE in Norway. By two of them [James A. Lees and Walter J. Clutter- buck]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. xii. 307. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1887 THREE Irish glossaries. Carmac’s glossary codex A. (from a manuscript in the library of the Royal Irish Academy), O’Davoren’s glossary (from a manuscript in the library of the British Museum), and a glossary to the Calendar of Oingus the Culdee (from a manuscript in the library of Trinity College, Dublin). With a preface and index by W. S. [Whitley Stokes]. 8vo. Pp. lxxx. 168. [Brit. Musi] London, 1862 THREE (the) judgments. By A. H. B. [Alfred H. Burton]. 8vo. London [1894] THREE kingdoms made one, by entring covenant with one God. . . . By E. W. [Ezekiah (or Hezekiah) Woodward]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1643 THREE (the) kingdomes healing- plaister ; or, the solemne covenant of reformation and defence explained: wherein is shewed the authority, antiquity, and use of an holy covenant: the occasions moving to it, and the ends in doing it, the necessity of it at this time, for diverse reasons herein expressed . . . By G. S. Gent. [George Smith]. 4to. [Gerould’s Sources of Eng. Lit. 1530.] London, 1643 THREE (the) ladies of London. By R. W. See “ A right excellent and famous comedy called . . .” THREE letters addressed to the editor of the Quarterly Review, in which is demonstrated the genuineness of the three heavenly witnesses, i John v. 7. By Ben David [John Jones, LL.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 70. [Gent. Mag. April 1827, p. 372.] London, 1825 THREE letters addressed to the readers of Paine’s Age of Reason. By one of the people called Christians [Jeremiah Waring]. 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, ii. 216]. London, 1797 THREE letters addressed to the Right Hon. Lord Viscount Melbourne and the Right Hon. Sir Robert Peel, Bart, on the present state of parties, urging the necessity of union, and suggesting the means by which it is attainable. By a conservative Whig [Thomas Wallace], 8vo. Pp. ii. 124. London, 1835 THREE letters between a clergyman [Rev. John Young, D.D., Hawick] and a layman [Wm. Nicol, merchant at Selkirk] concerning the Testimony [of the Associate Synod], and the obligation of the Covenants upon posterity. [Edited by W. Nicol.] i2mo. Pp. 45. Edinburgh, 1799 THREE letters concerning systematic taste, exemplified, in the Centaur not fabulous : Laicus’s letter of 7th June 1755, London Evening Post, and the Bishop of London’s second volume of discourses. [By Caleb Fleming.] 8vo. Pp. 58. [Bodli] London, 1755 THREE letters concerning the present state of Italy; being a supplement to Dr Burnets letters. [By Gilbert Burnet.] 8vo. [New Coll. Lib. p. 129.] N.P. 1688 THREE letters concerning the state of Italy ; being a supplement to Dr [Gilbert] Burnet’s Letters. [By Burnet, from material supplied by H. Sydney and Dr Hutton.] i2mo. [Clarke and Foxcroft’s Life of Burnet.] London, 1688 THREE letters, containing remarks on some of the numberless errors and defects in Dugdales Baronage: and occasionally in some other authors. By Charles Hornby.] 8vo. Pp. 250. 'Gent. Mag. June 1810, p. 507 ; Aug. 1810, p. 188.] London, 1738 THREE letters, declaring the strange odd proceedings of Protestant divines when they write against Catholicks. . . . By J. V. C. [John Vincent Cane]. 12mo. [Brit. Musi] N.P. 1671 THREE letters from a London merchant to a country friend on the late monetary crisis. [By William Ellis.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1866 THREE letters of credit ; and other stories. By “Kim Bilir” [A. H. Scaife]. 8vo. [Lib. of Col. Inst. 1905.] Victoria [B.C.] 1894 THREE letters on military education, addressed to the editor of The Tunes. By Jacob Omnium [M. J. Higgins]. 8vo. Pp. 19. London, 1855 THREE letters on the policy of England towards the Porte and Mohammed Ali. [By Sir J. Gardner Wilkinson.] 8vo. Pp. 63. [Wi] London, 1840 THREE letters relating to the Navy, Gibraltar, and Portmahon, wrote in the year 1747 and 1748, but now first published; being very applicable to the present time. [By James Lind, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. xxii. 138. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1757 THREE letters tending to demonstrate how the security of this nation . . . lys in the abolition of the present penal laws and tests. . . . [By William Penn.] 4to. Pp. 27. [Brit. Musi] London, 1688 THREE letters to Dr Clarke, from a clergyman of the Church of England ; concerning his Scripture-doctrine of the Trinity : with the Doctor’s replies. Published by the author of the said Three letters [John Jackson]. 8vo. Pp. 33. [New Coll. Lib. p. 180.] London, 1714 THREE letters to Dr Price, containing remarks on his Observations on the nature of civil liberty, the principles of government, and the justice and policy of the war with America. By a member of Lincoln’s Inn, F.R.S., F.S.A. [James Lind]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1776 THREE letters to Lord Brougham, on the execution in Upper Canada, of . . . Lount and Matthews. By a British subject [Sir Francis B. Head, Bart.]. 8vo. [Cushing’s I?iit. and Pseud.] London, 1838 THREE letters to Lord Viscount Howe. With remarks on the attack at Bunker’s Hill. The second edition ; to which is added a comparative view of the conduct of Lord Cornwallis and General Howe. [By Israel Mauduit.] 8vo. Pp. 48. [D. N. B. vol. 37, p. 83.] London, 1781 THREE letters to the author of the Confessional. [By Gloucester Ridley, LL.B., and Archbishop Seeker.] 8vo. 3 parts. London, 1768 “ If instead of reading only the Confessional they (the petitioning clergy) would read together with it Dr Ridley’s answers, wherein he was assisted by our late most worthy and most able metropolitan (Seeker) they would see the sophistry of the arguments detected,” etc.—Bp. Newton’s Memoirs. See Gent. Mag. Nov. 1774, and Jan- 1775 in which they are stated to be almost entirely written by Archbishop Seeker. THREE letters to the editor of the Cornhill Magazine on public school education. By Paterfamilias [Matthew James Higgins]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1861 THREE letters to the Hebrew nation. By the author of The Christian, a poem [Charles Crawford]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1817 THREE letters to the members of the present parliament, with a discourse on kings and ministers of state ; to which is prefixed a letter to Sir John Philipps Bart, occasioned by his recess from parliament. [By Caleb D’Anvers, i.e. Nicholas Amhurst.] 8vo. Pp. 54. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1747 THREE letters written in Spain to D. Francisco Riguelme commanding the third division of the Gallician army. [By Walter Savage Landor.] 8vo. Pp. 31. [Wise and Wheeler’s Bibl. of Landor.] London, 1809 THREE little kittens. By Comus [Robt. M. Ballantyne]. 4to. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] London, 1857 THREE little spades. ByAmyLothrop [Anna BartlettWarner]. i2mo. [.Amer.. Cat.] New York [1868 ?] THREE martyrs of the nineteenth century [Dr Livingstone, General Gordon, and Bishop Pattison]. By the author of The Schonberg-Cotta Family [Mrs Elizabeth Charles]. 8vo. London, 1885 THREE men ; a novel. By Maxim Gorky [Aleksyei Maksimovitch Pyeshkov]; translated by Charles Horne. 8vo. London, 1902 THREE men and Troddles. By R. Andom [Alfred N. Barrett]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1916 THREE men of mark. [A novel.] By Sarah Tytler [Miss Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 334. London, 1901 THREE millions ; or, the way of the world. By Oliver Optic [William Taylor Adams]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Boston, 1891 THREE (the) monks! ! ! From the French [of Madame-Guenard] by H. J. Sarrett. i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London [1803] THREE months among the moose; a “Winter’s tale” of the northern wilds of Canada. By a military chaplain [Rev. Joshua Fraser]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. a?id Pseud.] Montreal, 1881 THREE months from home ; notes of a tour. By C. M. [Charles Mackenzie, bookseller in Edinburgh]. i2mo. Pp. 43. Greenock, private print, 1873 THREE months in Egypt; written for the children. By L. L. A. [Mrs L. L. Adams], author of A ride on horseback through the Holy Land. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.) Boston, 1877 THREE months’ rest at Pau, in the winter and spring of 1859. By John Altrayd Wittitterly [Elizabeth T. Carne]. 8vo. Pp. 267. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. i. 60.] London, i860 THREE more letters on the subject of the Catholics, to my brother Abraham, who lives in the country. By Peter Plymley [Sydney Smith]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1807 THREE new songs, entituled, I. The artillery recruiting, or a new song in praise of that brave and useful body of men. II. The allies triumph. III. Pride and passion. By W. D. [W. Duncan]. i2mo. Pp. 12. [J. Maid- ment.] Dundee, 1794 THREE nights in Perthshire ; with a description of the festival of a “ Scotch Hairst Kirn ” : comprising legendary ballads, etc. In a letter from Percy Yorke, Jr. to J. Twiss, Esq. [By Thomas Atkinson, Junior, bookseller.] i2mo. Pp. 66. [Letterfrom the author accompanying the presetitation copy to Sir Egerton Brydges, Bart.] Glasgow, private print, 1821 THREE northern romances, Siegfried, Lohengrin, Undine ; old tales retold by Norley Chester [Emily Underdown] and Richard Wilson. i6mo. Pp. 191. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1925 THREE of them. [A novel.] By Maxim Gorky [Aleksyei Maksimovitch Pyeshkov]; translated from the Russian by A. Linden. 8vo. Pp. 391. London,1905 THREE of us. By Thekla [Mrs Caroline Atherton Mason, ne'e Briggs]. 8vo. [Lib. Journ. v. 222.] Boston, 1880 THREE (the) Oxonians ; a novel. By Frank Usher [F. U. Waite, of Balliol College, Oxford]. 8vo. 3 vols. London,1873 THREE (the) partes of commentaries, containing the whole and perfect discourse of the ciuill warres of Fraunce —. With an addition of the cruell murther of the Admirall Chastilion, and diuers other nobles, committed the 24 daye of August Anno 1572. Translated out of. Latine [of Petrus Ramus] into Englishe by Thomas Tymme, minister. 4to. [U7.; Lowndes5 Bibl. Man.] London, 1574 The work has been by some attributed to Jean de Serres, and by others to Francois Hotman. THREE people. [A tale.] By Pansy [Mrs Alden, n/e Isabella Macdonald]. 8vo. Pp. 308. London, 1901 THREE plays . . . Selindra, Pandora, Ormasdes. [By Sir William Killi- grew]. i2mo. London, 1665 First edition. Later editions, with additional plays, bear the author’s name. THREE poems, Mahanaim ; or, strivings with a Saviour ; containing a dialogue betwixt Jesus and an afflicted soul ; Peniel, or, the combatant triumphing, expressing comfort under clouds, and the triumph consummat, or the state of glory. By an experienced admirer of sanctified afflictions [John Wilson, Episcopalian]. 4to. [Brit. A/ns.] 1706 Attributed also to James Webster. THREE poems of St Paul’s cathedral : viz. the ruins ; the rebuilding; the choire. [By James Wright]. Fob Pp. 12. [D.N.B. vol. 63, p. 107.] London, 1697 THREE political letters to a noble Lord, concerning liberty and the constitution. . . . [By Thomas Gordon, of Kirkcudbright.] 8vo. [Brit. Mi/s.] London, 1721 THREE praiers, one for the morning, another for the evening ; the third for a sick-man : whereunto is annexed, a godlie letter to a sicke-friend ; and a comfortable speech of a preacher, vpon his death bed. [By Henry Smith.] 8vo. Pp. 30. [Bodl.] London, 1591 THREE (the) questions: What am I? Whence came I ? Whither do I go ? [By Wm. Haig Miller, banker.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 119. [Cushing’s Anon. p. 672.] London, 1843 TH REE rascals. By Raymond Jacberns [Miss M. Selby Ashe]. 8vo. IJp. 216. London, 1903 THREE R-1 bloods ; or, a lame R-1, a darling commander, and a love-sick admiral: a poem. By Peter Pindar, Jun., author of the R-1 lover [John Agg]. Seventh edition. 8vo. Pp. 27. London, 1812 THREE scouts. By Paul Creyton [John Townsend Trowbridge]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1907 THREE seasonable quaeres, proposed to all those cities, counties, and boroughs, whose respective citizens, knights and burgesses have been forcibly excluded, uniustly eiected, and disabled to sit in the Commons house, by those now acting at Westminster. [By William Prynne.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1660 THREE sermons. By a layman [George Hardinge]. 8vo. London, 1813 THREE short discourses on the duty of parents, the Holy Scriptures and the Sabbath. [By John Charles worth ?] i2mo. [ W.; Brit. Mus.] Newark, 1787 THREE (the) sisters ; a story translated [by Sir Wm. Domville] from the German. 121110. Pp. 70. [Brit. Mus.] London, private print, 1842 THREE sixteenth-century sketches [of William of Orange, Admiral Coligny, and the Regent Murray]. By Sarah Brook [Caroline Emelia Stephen]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1884 THREE speeches against continuing the army, &c. as they were spoken in the Plouse of Commons the last session of parliament ; to which are added, the reasons given by the Lords, who protested against the bill for punishing mutiny and desertion. The first is by W-S-, Esq. [William Sheppen], The second is by E- J-j Esq. [E. Jeffrys]. The third is by Sir T-H-, Bart. [Sir Thomas Hanmore]. Svo. Pp. 46. London, 1718 THREE speeches unspoken in the last session of parliament, and reserved to the second thoughts of this next. [By John Humfrey.] 4to. Pp. 12. London,1703 A fourth speech is added at the end. THREE stories and a play. By John Oliver Hobbes [Mrs Reginald Walpole Craigie, nee Pearl M. T. Richards]. Svo. London, 1901 THREE sunsets, and other poems. By Lewis Carroll [Rev. Charles L. Dodgson]. 4to. London, 1898 A reprint of poems from Phantasmagoria, Sylvie and Bruno, The Jabberwock Magazine, with two fresh poems. THREE tales for an idle hour. By the author of The sunbeam [Cecilia Anne Jones]. 8vo. [Brit. A/us.] London, 1867 Signed : C. A. T. THREE (the) times and a half, and the seven times [mentioned in the Book of Daniel], By the author of Essays on the Church [Robert B. Seeley], 8vo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1881 THREE times three. [A tale.] By Mrs George Archibald [Anna Campbell, later Mrs George Archibald Palmer], 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Chicago, 1899 THREE times ithree ; a story for young people. By “Pansy” [Mrs Isabella (Macdonald) Alden], 4to. Chicago, 1897 THREE to one ; a comedy, in three acts. [By John Lettsom Elliot.] 8vo. Pp. 83. [Athen. Lib.] '[London] 1850 THREE tracts of the great medicine of philosophers for humane and metalline bodies. . . . All written in Latin by Eirenseus Philalethes Cosmopolita [George Starkey]; translated into English. . . . 8vo. 3 parts. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1694 THREE tracts on the corn-trade and corn-laws : viz. 1. A short essay on the corn-trade and corn-laws, containing, a general relation of the present method of carrying on the corn-trade. ... 2. Considerations on the laws relating to the importation and exportation of corn. ... 3. A collection of papers relative to the price, exportation, and importation of corn. . . . [By Charles Smith, a miller.] 8vo. [M‘Culloch’s Lit. Pol. Econ. p. 68.] London, 1766 THREE tracts respecting the conversion and instruction of the free Indians, and negroe slaves in the colonies ; addressed to the venerable Society for propagation of the Gospel in foreign parts. [By William Knox.] 8vo. Pp. 41. [Bodl.] N.P. [1768] THREE (the) travellers ; a tale [in verse. By Rev. Walter Chamberlaine, M.A., T.C.D.]. i2mo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.} i2mo. Dublin, 1733 THREE treatises: the first concerning art ; the second concerning music, painting, and poetry ; the third concerning happiness. By J. H. [James Harris]. 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.} London, 1744 THREE (the) voices of God on the unfermented wine question. By the author of The Sabbath on the Rock [Robert Wilson, Glasgow]. 8vo. Pp. 128. [Brit. Mus.} London, 1875 THREE (the) vows ; and other romances at Chatsworth. . . . [By Peter George Patmore.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.} London, 1845 Another issue has the title “ Chatsworth ; or, the romance of a week.” VOL. VI. THREE (the) wakings; with hymns and songs. By the author of The voice of Christian life i?i song, etc. [Mrs Elizabeth Charles]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 194. [Brit. Mus.} London, 1859 THREE weddings. [By Margaret Agnes Colville, later Mrs-Paul.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Anon. p. 672.] London, 1870 THREE weeks after marriage ; a comedy, in two acts, as performed at the Theatre-Royal in Covent-Garden. [By Arthur Murphy.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dramh} London, 1776 Originally produced and published under the title : “What we must all come to.” THREE (the) wishes. [By Mrs Mary E. Gellie.] i2mo. [Lib. four?i. iii. 379.] London, 1878 THREE wives. By the author of Margaret and her bridesmaids, etc. ’Mrs Anne Marsh]. 8vo. 3 vols. Brit. Mush} London, 1868 THREE years adventures of a minor in England, Africa, the West Indies, South Carolina, and Georgia. By William Butterworth [Henry Schroe- der], engraver. 8vo. [L>. N. B. vol. 50, p. 441.] Leeds, 1822 THREE years among the working- classes of the United States during the war. By the author of The autobiography of a beggar - boy [James Dawson Burns]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.} London, 1865 THREE years in Europe ; being extracts from letters sent from Europe. By a Hindu [Rames Chandra Dattaj. Second edition. 8vo. Calcutta, 1873 The third edition, 1890, bears the author’s name. THREE years in field-hospitals of the Army of the Potomac. By Mrs H. [Mrs Anna M. Holstein, ne'e Ellis]. 8vo. Pp. 131. [Brit. Mus.} Philadelphia, 1867 THREE years in the Pacific ; containing notices of Brazil, Chile, Bolivia, Peru, etc., 1831-34. By an officer of the U.S. Navy [Wm. S. W. Ruschen- berger]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Afus.} London, 1835 THREE years’ practical experience of a settler in New South Wales ; extracts from letters, 1834-1837. [By James Waugh.] i2mo. [Sydney Lib. ii. 167.] Sydney, 1838 D THREE years’ travels from Moscow over-land to China, through Ustigia, Siriania, Permia, Libiria, Daowr, Great Tartary, etc., to Peking ; containing an exact and particular description of the extent and limits of those countries, and the customs of the barbarous inhabitants. . . . Written by his Excellency E. Ysbrants Ides [Evert Ides], Ambassador from the Czar of Muscovy to the Emperor of China. . . . To which is annexed an accurate description of China, done originally by a Chinese author [Dionysius Kao]. . . . 4to. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 480.] London, 1705 THREE years with the Duke ; or, Wellington in private life. By an ex-Aide-de-Camp [Lord William Pitt Lennox]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1853 THREE-CORNERED essays. By a middle-aged Englishman [Rev. Frederick Arnold]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1886 THREE-FOLD (a) discourse between three neighbours, Algate, Bishopsgate, and John Heyden, the late cobler of Hounsditch, a professed Brownist. . . . [By John Taylor, the Water-poet.] 4to. London, 1642 THREEFOLD (the) path to peace. By Xena [Janet R. Rees]. i2mo. London, 1904 THREE’S company. By May Wynne [Mabel Wynne Knowles]. 8vo. Glasgow [1917] 0PHNPAH ; or, Englands passing-bell. [By Thomas Gilbert.] 4to. [Wood’s Athen. Oxon. iv. 407.] London, 1679 THRENODIES, sketches, and other verses. By the author of Thysia [Morton Luce]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1910 THRESHOLD (the) of Atrides. ’Poems.] By George F. Preston John Byrne Leicester Warren, third Baron de Tabley]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] London, 1861 THRESHOLDS. [A novel.] By Faith Baldwin [Faith Baldwin Cuthrell]. 8vo. Pp. 284. [Brit. Musi] London [1926] THRIE (the) tales of the priests of Peblis ; containing many notabill examples and sentences. [Attributed by Pinkerton to David Steill, and by Sibbald to Rolland.] 4to. B. L. Edinburgh, 1603 THRIFT ; or, hints for cottage housekeeping. By the author of A trap to catch a sunbeatn [Mrs Henry S. Mackarness]. i2mo. Pp. 32. London [1855] THRILLING (a) balloon voyage. By Ranger [Luther L. Holden]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Boston, 1870 THRILLING incidents of the Wars of the United States, comprising the most striking and remarkable events of the Revolution, the French War, the Tripolitan War, etc. By the author of The Army a?id Navy of the United States [Jacob K. Neff]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Philadelphia, 1848 THRO’ love and war. [A novel.] By Violet Fane [Mary Montgomerie, later Mrs Singleton, afterwards Lady Currie]. 8vo. 5 vols. London, 1886 THROUGH a Dartmoor window. By Beatrice Chase [Olive Katherine Parr]. 8vo. Pp. 284. [Lit. Who’s Who.] London, 1915 THROUGH a needle’s eye. [A tale of English village - life.] By Hesba Stretton [Sarah Smith]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1870 THROUGH Airedale, from Goole to Malham. By Johnnie Gray [Harry Speight]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1891 THROUGH Algeria. By the author of Life in Tuscany [Mabel Sharman Crawford]. 8vo. Pp. 362. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1863 Life in Tuscany (1859) is not anonymous. THROUGH Connemara in a governess cart. By the authors of Aji Irish cousin, etc. [Edith GEone Somerville and Violet Martin]. 8vo. Pp. 200. [S. J. Brown’s Ireland in Fictioni] London,1893 THROUGH Egypt to Palestine. [By M. E. Beck.] i2mo. [Birm. Ref. Libi] Birmingham, 1873 Another edition, published in the same year, gives the author’s name. THROUGH fire to fortune. [A novel.] By Mrs Alexander [Mrs Alexander Hector, ne'e Annie French]. 8vo. Pp. 316. [Brit. Musi] London, 1903 THROUGH flood and flame. [A novel. By Sabine Baring-Gould.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1868 THROUGH green glasses. [A novel.] By F. M. Allen [Edmund Downey]. 8vo. Pp. 236. [Brit. Musi] London, 1888 THROUGH my spectacles. By “Pro- avia” [Kate Hope]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1878 THROUGH night to light. By Norman Stuart [Mrs Bartle Teeling, ne'e- Lane-Clarke]. London [c. 1890] THROUGH patience. ByFaye Hunting- ton [Mrs Isabella H. Foster]. i2mo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseudi] Philadelphia, 1869 THROUGH rifted clouds ; a novel. By Annabel Gray [Mrs Annie Cox]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Lit. Year Book.'] London, 1891 THROUGH rough waters. [A tale.] By the author of The rose garden, Unawares, etc. [Miss Frances Mary Peard]. 8vo. London, 1878 THROUGH storm and stress. . . . By Mardale [Richard H. Holme]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1902 THROUGH the ages ; a psychological romance. By the author of The honeymoon [the Duke de Medina Pomar]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1876 THROUGH the crucible. By Claud Heathcote [James Harwood Panting]. 8vo. [Lit. Who's Who.] London,1898 THROUGH the eye to the heart; or, eye-teaching in the Sunday-school. By Collene Fisk [Rev. Wilbar Fisk Crofts, B.D.]. 8vo. [Lib. Journ. xiv. 59.] New York, 1873-8 THROUGH the flood; the story of an out-of-the-way place. By Esme Stuart [Amelie Claire Leroy]. 8vo. Pp. 292. London, 1892 THROUGH the goal of ill. [By R. J. Alfred.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 347. [Brit. Musi] London [1888] THROUGH the land of the Aztecs ; or, life and travel in Mexico. By a Gringo [Arthur St Hill]. 8vo. London, 1892 THROUGH the looking-glass; and what Alice found there. By Lewis Carroll [Rev. Charles L. Dodgson]. 8vo. [Williams’ Bibl. of L. Ci] London, 1872 THROUGH the mill; or, rambles in Texas. By Rux [Captain Hyacinthe Daly Devereux]. 8vo. London, 1892 THROUGH the ranks to a commission. [By Lieut. John Edward Acland- Troyte.] 8vo. [Lib. Jour?i. vi. 190.] London,1881 THROUGH the red-litten windows; and the old river house : stories. By Theodor Hertz-Garten [Mrs-de Mattos]. i2mo. Pp. 191. [Who's Who ill Lit.] London, 1892 THROUGH the rough-wind ; a story of the collieries. By Crona Temple [Miss Corfield]. 8vo. London, 1880 THROUGH the shadows. By the author of Sydney Grey [Miss Annie Keary]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London,1859 THROUGH the turf-smoke; the love, lore, and laughter of Old Ireland. By Mac [Seumas MacManus]. 8vo. London, 1899 THROUGH to-day. [By M. Elliott.] 8 vo. London, 1892 THROUGH veldt and forest; an African story. By Harry Collingwood [William J. C. Lancaster]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1913 THROUGH winding ways. By Henry Hayes [Ellen Warner Olney, later Mrs Kirk]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] Philadelphia, 1880 THROUGHOUT the year; poems old and new. By Guy Roslyn [Joshua Hatton]. 121110. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1886 THROW (a) for a throne ; or, the Prince unmasked. By Chancery Lane, Esq. [James Edwin Wilson]. 8vo. [Lib. Journ. v. 54.] London, 1872 THROWN on her own resources ; or, what girls can do. By Jenny June Mrs Jane Cunningham Croly]. 8vo. Cushing’s lnit. and Pseudi] New York, 1891 THROWN on the world. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. i2mo. New York, 1887 THROWN together ; a story. By the author of Misunderstood [Florence Montgomery]. Second edition. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1872 “THRUST out”; an old legend. By the author of Drifted and sifted,, etc. [Jessie Maclaren]. 8vo. Pp. 336. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh [1873] THULE; or, vertues historic. (Book I.) By F. R. [Francis Rous]. 4to. [W. ; Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1598 On Malone’s copy in the Bodleian, the author’s name is printed at length. THUMP’S client. By Charles D. Knight [Mrs R. L. Gilbert]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseudi] New York, 1880 THUNDER (the) bird. By B. M. Bower [Mrs Bertha Muzzy Sinclair]. 8vo. Pp. 317. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1919 THUNDER from heaven against the back-sliders and apostates of the times. By W. A. [William Aspin- wall]. 8vo. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, ii. 109.] London, 1655 THUNDER from the throne of God against the temples of idols. [By Samuel Chidley.] 4to. Pp. 36. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, ii. 6.] [London]1652 THUNDERBOLT (the). [A novel.] By George Colmore [Mrs Baillie Weaver]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1919 THUNDERER (the) ; a romance of Napoleon and Josephine. By E. Barrington [Mrs L. Adams Beck]. 8vo. Pp. 317. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 THURID ; and other poems. By G. E. O. [George Edmund Otis]. Svo. [Cushing’s lnit. a?id Pseud?] Boston, 1874 THURLSTON tales. By the author of Tales of a voyager to the Arctic ocea7i Robert Pierce Gillies]. i2mo. 3 vols. Brit. Mus.] London, 1835 THURSO and its neighbourhood. [By D. Coghill.] 8vo. Pp. 88. [Mowat’s Bibl. of Caithness, p. 51.] Thurso, 1898 THURTELL’S crime. [A novel.] By Dick Donovan [Joyce E. P. Muddock]. 8vo. Pp. 320. London, 1906 THWARTED ; or, ducks’ eggs in a hen’s nest : a village story. By the author of Misimderstood [Florence Montgomery]. Svo. Pp. viii. 255. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1874 THY Kingdom come. [By Julia A. Mathews.] 8vo. Edinburgh [1868] THY name is truth. [A novel.] By Sydney Starr [Miss Fanny Gallaher]. Svo. 3 vols. [S. J. Brown’s lrela7id ui Fiction.\ Dublin, 1884 THY neighbor’s wife. By Albert Ross [Linn Boyd Porter]. 8vo. Pp. 316. New York, 1893 THYRA Varrick. [A novel.] By Luke Sharp [Robert Barr]. London, 189— THYSIA ; an elegy in forty-five sonnets. [By Morton Luce.] Third edition. i2mo. [Brit. Mush] London, 1910 TIB. [A novel.] By George Douglas [Mrs George Ferme, of Haddington, nee Douglas]. 8vo. Pp. 319. Edinburgh, 1892 TIBER (the) and the Thames ; their associations past and present. [By Edward C. Bruce.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Philadelphia [1876] TICKLER (the). [A satirical publication ; seven numbers. By Paul Hiffer- nan, M.D.] 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 26, p. 366.] Dublin, 1748 TICONDEROGA once more. By B. F. D. [Benjamin Franklin Da Costa, D.D.]. Svo. [Cushing’s lnit. a7id Pseud.] New York, 1870 TIDE (the) of fortune. [A Cromwellian romance.] By Morice Gerard [Rev. John Jessup Teague]. 8vo. Pp. 282. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1916 TIDE (the) of the Moaning Bar. [A tale. By Mrs Frances Hodgson Burnett.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1879] TIDEWAY (the). [A novel.] By Austin Clare [Miss M. W. James]. 8vo. Pp. 388. London, 1903 TIDEWAY (the). [Fifteen short stories.] By John Ayscough [Monsignor Francis Bickerstaffe-Drew]. 8vo. Pp. 320. London, 1918 TIDINGS from the East, as promulgated by Daniel the Prophet, 2390 years ago. [By James Wallis.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [London? 1857] TIECK’S “Lover of Nature,” a tale: translated ... by John Smith [Henry Swasey M‘Kean]. 8vo. Cambridge, Mass., 1833 TIGER (the) and the insect. By the author of Helen's babies [John Habber- ton]. 8vo. London, 1902 TIGER-SLAYER (the) ; a tale of the Indian desert. By Gustave Aimard [Olivier Gloux] ; translated from the French by Sir F. C. L. Wraxall. Svo. London [1874] TILBURY Nogo ; or, passages in the life of an unsuccessful man. By the author of Digby Grand [George John Whyte Melville]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1854 TIM. [A story. By Howard Overing Sturgis.] 8vo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1891 TIM and Tip. ... By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. Boston, 1890 TIM Bobbin resurrected. By Teddy Ashton [Charles Allen Clarke]. 8vo. Pp. 48. [ Who's Who in Lit.] Blackpool, 1911 TIM Bobbin’s [John Collier’s] Lancashire dialect and poems, rendered intelligible to general readers by a literal interpretation, and the obsolete words explained by quotations from the most early of the English authors. 8vo. [W.] London, 1828 TIM Bobbin’s adventures with the Irishman . . . By M. R. L. [M. R. Lahee]. 8vo. Pp. 55. [At. and Q. Feb. 1869, p. 168.] Manchester, i860 TIM (the) Bunker papers ; or, Yankee farming. By Timothy Bunker, Esq. [Rev. William Clift]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] New York, 1868 TIM Harrison. By Nellie Grahame [Mrs Annie Dunning, nee Ketchum]. 12mo. [Cushing’s lnit. a77d Pseud. | Philadelphia, 1864 TIME ; an elegy. By a student of Marischal College [Robert Alves, M.A.]. 8vo. [Abend. Quatercent. Studies, No. 19, p. 340.] Aberdeen, 1766 TIME and faith; an inquiry into the data of ecclesiastical history. [By William Edward Hickson.] 8vo. 2 vols. [D. N. B. vol. 26, p. 362.] London, 1857 TIME and the things of time. [By Moses Birnie.] 8vo. [Robertson’s Aberd. Bibl.] Aberdeen [c. 1850] TIME and truth reconciling the moral and religious world to Shakespeare ; the greatest poet and dramatist, the greatest moral-philosopher and philanthropist, that ever lived in the tide of times. . . . [By B. S. Naylor.] i2mo. Pp. xii. 232. [Bod/.] London, 1854 TIME (the) bargain ; or, Tourmalin’s time-cheques. By F. Anstey [Thomas Anstey Guthrie]. 8vo. Bristol, 1905 TIME bargains tried by the rules of equity, and principles of the civil law. [By Sir David Dalrymple.] 8vo. Pp. 36. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, printed ; Edinburgh, reprinted, N.D. TIME (the) for the publication of banns. [By John Griffiths, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [1867] TIME (the) of Christ’s second coming identified with the Day of Judgment. ... By the author of Millenarian- ism indefensible [Alexander Gardner]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Paisley, 1833 TIME (the) of the end, and other poems. [By Mrs Eddis.] i2mo. London [1851] TIME (the) serving Proteus and ambidexter divine uncased to the world ; containing the letters of Mr John Dury . . . the first to Joseph Hall, late bishop of Exeter, the second to William Lawd, late Archbishop of Canterbury. . . . [By William Prynne.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1650 TIME, the avenger. By the author of Emilia Wyndham, etc. [Mrs Anne Marsh, nee Caldwell]. 8vo. 3 vols. [D.N.B. vol. 36, p. 219.] London, 1851 TIME (a) to weep ; or, the reasonableness and necessity of continuing the observation of the xxx day of January in Scotland, as well as England, as a day of solemn humiliation and publick sorrow : a sermon preached in the country. By one of the suffering clergy of the Church of Scotland [William Milne or Mylne]. 8vo. Pp. 35. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1720 TIME will tell. [A temperance tale.] By N. J. N. [Mrs A. G. Wilson]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Glasgow, 1868 VOL. VI. TIME-HONOURED Lancaster; historic notes on the ancient borough of Lancaster ... By Cross Fleury [R. E. K. Rigbye]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 612. [Brit. Musi] Lancaster, 1891 TIMELY seeking of God urged. By the pastor at Malden [Joseph Emerson]. 8vo. Boston, 1837 TIMES (the) ; a drama. By John Daly [John Besemeres, merchant in Calcutta]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] London, 1853 TIMES (the) ; a poem. [By Charles Churchill.] 4to. [Wi] London, 1764 TIMES (the): a poem. By an American [Benjamin Church, M.D.]. 4to. Pp. 16. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. vol. 4, p. 67.] [Boston, 1765] TIMES (the) anatomiz’d in severall characters. By T. F. [Thomas Forde]. i2mo. [W.j Lowndes' Bibl. Man.] London, 1647 Wrongly attributed to Thomas Fuller. TIMES and days ; essays in romance and history. By the author of Auto da fe [John H. Balfour Browne]. 8vo. London, 1898 TIMES and places ; or, our history. . . . [By Isaac L. Mocatta.] 8vo. London, 1872 TIMES (the) and the teaching of Jesus the Christ ; by the author of The Great Law [W. Williamson]. 8vo. Pp. 453. London, 1912 TIMES (the) on the American War ; an historical study. By L. S. [Sir Leslie Stephen]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1865 TIMES (the) ; or, the flag of truce. By the white Republican [Hiram Fuller]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Richmond, 1863 TIMES (the); or, the prophecy; a poem. [By George Daniel.] 4to. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.; Brit. Crit. xxxviii. 633.] London, 1811 TIMES (the); or, views of society: a poem, with notes ; to which is added an appendix, containing various scenes from four plays, written for Drury Lane Theatre, but ultimately withdrawn . . . [By John Barber.] 8vo. Pp. 207. London, 1819 TIMES, places, and persons of the Holie Scriptures ; otherwise entituled, The general view of the Holy Scriptures. By Thomas Hayne, M.A.] 4to. D.N.B. vol. 25, p. 300.] London, 1607 D 2 TIME’S treasure ; or, devout thoughts for every day of the year expressed in verse. [By William Penney, Lord Kinloch.] 8vo. Pp. 283. Edinburgh, 1862 The second edition, 1863, has the author’s name. TIME’S tunefull Tabor; being divers diary notes ; selected from the original MS. of Master Camden Crookedstaff [Edwin Roffe] by his trusty friend E. Roffe. 4to. London, 1862 12 copies, privately printed. TIMMY Top-boots. By H. N. W. B. [Mrs Harriet Newall (Woods) Baker], 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.'] Boston, 1870 TIMOLEON ; a tragedy. [By Benjamin Martin or Martyn.] 8vo. London, 1730 The second edition has the author’s name. TIMON in love : or, the innocent theft: a comedy, taken from Thimon Misanthrope of the Sieur de Lisle ; as it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury- Lane, by his Majesty’s servants. [By John Kelly.] 8vo. Pp. 55. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1733 TIMON of Athens ; published with three copperplates. [By Charles Lamb.] i2mo. Pp. 36. [Ashley Library.] London, 1807 Several of Lamb’s Tales from Shakespear were issued separately without the author’s name. TIMOTHY and Philatheus ; in which the principles and projects of a late whimsical book [by Matthew Tindal] entitled “The Rights of the Christian Church,” etc., are fairly stated and answered in their kind. ... By a layman [William Oldisworth]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1709-10 TIMOTHY’S guest ; a story for anybody. By Kate Douglas Wiggin [Mrs George C. Riggs]. 8vo. Pp. 206. London, 1892 TIM’S sacrifice. By Mignon [Mrs Baseley]. 8vo. Manchester, 1902 TIM’S sister ; or, a word in season. By Mrs Madeline Leslie [Mrs Harriet Newall Baker]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Boston [1863] TIM’S troubles ; or, timid and true. By M. A. Pauli [Mrs John Ripley]. 8vo. Pp. 456. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1898 TIN (the) duties. [By Sir Charles Lemon, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [Cushing’s Anon. p. 674.] London, 1833 TIN (the) trumpet ; or, heads and tales for the wise and waggish ; to which are added, poetical selections by the late Paul Chatfield, M.D. Edited by Jefferson Saunders, Esq. [Written chiefly by Horace and James Smith.] 121110. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1836 TINNED meats, fish, and fruits ; and how to use them. By the author of Supper dishes for people with small means [Emily de Vere Mathew]. 8vo. Pp. 50. [Brit. Mus.] Ipswich [1887] TINNEVELLY (the) missions. [By George E. L. Cotton, D.D. Reprint from the Calcutta Review.] 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Calcutta, 1864 TINTED (the) Venus; a farcical romance. By F. Anstey [Thomas Anstey Guthrie], author of Vice versa. 8vo. London, 1896 TINTINALOGIA ; or, the art of ringing improved. By T. W. [Thomas White]. i2mo. [W. and Q. March 1854, p. 241.] 1668 TINY houses and their builders. By one of the authors of Poems written for a child [Mrs Fanny Hart], 8vo. London, 1876 TIP Lewis and his lamp. [A story.] By Pansy [Mrs Isabella (Macdonald) Alden]. 8vo. Pp. 256. London [1891] TIP-CAT. [A tale.] By the author of Miss Toosey’s mission [Evelyn Whitaker]. New edition. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1891 TIPLING (the) philosophers ; a lyrick poem : to which is subjoin’d, a short abstract of their lives and most memorable actions. [By Edward Ward.] 8vo. Pp. 40. London, 1710 TIPTOE. By Katherine Williams [Mrs Laura A. Buck]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1871 T I P T R E E Hall farm, Essex. . . . [Signed: R. R. i.e. R. Rolton.] 8vo. [Biit. Mus.] London [1853] TIPTREE races ; a comic running poem. By C. C. [Charles Clark], Great Tot- ham, Essex. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Maldon, 1833 TIRED Church members. By Amy Lothrop [Anna Bartlett Warner]. 8vo. Pp. 112. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1881 TIROCINIUM : or, an elementary Latin reading book, adapted to The child's Latin primer, for the use of preparatory and accidence schools. [By Benjamin Hall Kennedy, D.D.] i2mo. Pp. vi. 96. London, 1848 New edition with the author’s name, London, 1855. JTIS all a farce; a farce. [By John Till Allingham.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1800 ’TIS an old tale, and often told. [By Isabel Goldsmid.] i2mo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot] London, 1839 ’TIS merry when Gossips meet. [By Samuel Rowlands.] 4to. No pagination. [Pollard atid Redgrave.] London, 1609 Running title, “A crew of kind gossips.” Other editions were entitled, “Well met gossips . . .” and “A whole crew of kind gossips.” 5TIS well it’s no worse: a comedy; as it is performed at the Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane,Joy His Majesty’s servants. [By Isaac Bickerstaffe ; altered from Calderon’s El Esco?idido y la Tapadai] 8vo. Pp. ix. 104. [Brit. Musi] London, 1770 TIT for tat; a comedy in three acts : performed at the Theatres Royall Hay-market, Drury-Lane, and Covent- Garden, printed under the inspection of James Wrighton, prompter, exactly agreeable to the representation. [By George Colman, the elder.] 8vo. Pp. 49. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1788 TIT for tat ; for juvenile minds ; with large additions of prose and verse for more mature intellects, in advocacy of peace principles. [By John Harris.] 121110. Pp. 140. London, 1853 See below for an earlier edition entitled “ Tit for tat; original poems . . .” TIT for tat; or, a purge for a pill. . . . By Dick Retort [William Cobbett]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1796 TIT for tat ; original poems for juvenile minds. By Q. in the corner [John Harris]. 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 99.] London, 1830 TITAN’S Letter to Milo. [By Albert Williams.] 8vo. [IV.] London, N.D. TITCOMB’S letters to young people, single and married. Timothy Tit- comb Esquire [Josiah Gilbert Holland]. Twelfth edition. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1859 TITHES, and the Church which owns them. By Justitia [Charles Joseph Weld-Blundell]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1894 TITHES indefensible ; or, observations on the origin and effects of tithes, addressed to country gentlemen. [By Thomas Thompson.] 8vo. Pp. 118. [Bodli] York, 1792 TITHING (a) table ; or, a table of tithes and oblations, according to the ecclesiastical laws and ordinances established in the Church of England. By W. C. [Bishop Carleton]. 4to. Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 2687.] London, 1662 TITLE (the) of a thorough settlement examined ; in answer to Dr [William] Sherlock’s Case of the allegiance due to sovereign powers, &c. With an appendix in answer to Dr Sherlock’s Vindication. [By Dr Robert Jenkin, Master of St John’s College, Cambridge.] 4to. Pp. 6, 80. [Brit. Musi] London, 1691 TITLE (the) of kings proved to be jure divino; and also that our royall Soveraign King Charles the Second is the right and lawfull heir to the crown of England, and that the life of his father, Charles the First, was taken away unjustly, contrary to the common- law, statute-law, and all other lawes of England. ... By W. P. [William Prynne]. Esq. 4to. [Cat. of the Lond. Inst.] London, 1660 TITLE (the) of the family of Shams- ud-Dowlah to the throne of Oude considered. [By General J. Briggs.] 8vo. [Calc. Imp. Lib.] London, 1839 TITLES of honour. (Barons by tenure : Barons by writ.) [Extracted from a manuscript of Sir Thomas Saint George (1686), by Sir C. G. Young.] 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, private print, 1864, 60 TITULAR (the) barony of Clavering; its origin in . . . the Norman house of Clavering authenticated . . . from the public records. [Introduction signed : G. B. M. i.e. George Blacker Morgan.] Fol. Pp. vi. 44. [Brit. Musi] London, private print, 1891 TITUS before Jerusalem; and other poems. [By Frances A. Garland.] i2mo. [Shum’s Bath Books, p. 85.] Bath [1852] TITUS Lucretius Carus, the Epicurean philosopher, his six books De Natura Rerum done into English verse with notes. [By Thomas Creech.] 8vo. Pp. 222, 46. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1682 TITUS Vespasian; a tragedy. [By John Cleland.] 8vo. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1755 Though not mentioned on the title-page, this tragedy is followed, with continuous pagination, by “ The ladies subscription ; a dramatic performance; designed for an introduction to a dance.” TIVERTON (the) woolcomber’s defence. By one unconcerned, but a friend to liberty [Rev. William Daddo, A.M.]. 4to. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. i. 102.] London, 1750 TIVOLI. [A novel.] By E. M. Lauderdale [Mrs G. M. Moore]. 8vo. Pp. 278. [S. J. Brown’s Ireland in Fictioni] Cork, 1886 TO-: I said to you a few months ago : See “Letter on Irish affairs.” TO a lady on her passion for old china. [A poem. By John Gay.] 4to. Pp. 5. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1725 TO a nun confess’d. [A novel.] By Irene Osgood [Mrs Robert Harborough Sherard]. 8vo. London, 1906 TO a young gentleman in love. [By Matthew Prior.] Fol, S. sh. [Ashley Library.] [London] 1702 TO all kings, princes, rulers, governours, bishops and clergy, that profess Christianity in Christendom ; being a distinction between the laws, commandments and ordinances of the higher powers, for the punishment of evil doers, and for the praise of them that do well. . . . By G. F. [George Fox]. 4to. Pp. 27. London, 1685 TO all magistrates, teachers, schoolmasters, and people in Christendome, who teach your children the way of the heathen, out of their books, in naming the dayes, and months, and times, and observing your feasts, as followeth. . . . [By George Fox.] 4to. Pp. 8. London, 1660 Signed : G. F. TO all people in all Christendom concerning perfect love, pure wisdome and the holy faith, and who they are that banisheth them, and who they are that entertains them; andhowChristendome hath not received this love and this faith to edifie and build them. . . . [By George Fox.] 4to. Pp. 8. N.P., N.D. Signed : G. F. TO all people upon the face of the earth. [Signed : John, i.e. John Perrot.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 45, p. 27. ] London, 1661 TO all that professe Christianity, are these following particulars. Concerning their name of Christians. Loving enemies. The worship in spirit. Gospel-fellow-ship. Their many heads and baptismes. Their many Churches. Their disagreeing about Scriptures interpretation. By G. F. [George Fox], 4to. Pp. 8. London, 1661 TO all the faithful brethren born of the immortal seed of the father of life, and sent forth in the great commission, and power of the king of eternal glory, to gather his elect from the winds of the earth, forth of all nations and kindreds where they are scattered ; this to you is the word of God. [By William Dewsbury.] 4to. Pp. 8. London, 1661 Signed : W. D., and dated from York Castle. TO all the nations under the whole heavens ; and to all those who have ministered the letter, and yet are ignorant, and. haue kept others in the ignorance both of the letter and spirit also : from those people who are despitefully called Quakers, who tremble at the word of God in their hearts. . . . G. F. [George Fox]. 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 660.] London, 1660 TO all the Royallists that suffered for His Majesty [Charles I.] ; and to all the rest of the good people of England. The humble Apologie of the English Catholicks. [By Roger Palmer, Earl of Castlemaine.] i2mo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] 1666 Wrongly attributed to Dr R. Pugh. TO all the that loue Goddes worde vnfaynedly L. R. wysheth grace. [By William Roy and Jerome Barlowe.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] Wesell, 1546 TO all who smoke ! A few words in defence of tobacco: or, a plea for the pipe. By “ Cavendish ” [Samuel Bevan], 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 262.] London, 1857 TO, at, and from Berlin. By R. F. H. [Rosa F. Hill]. 8vo. Pp. 155. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1871 TO be or not to be. [A novel.] By Mrs Alexander [Mrs Alexander Hector, nee Annie French]. 8vo. London, 1890 TO David Garrick, Esq. ; the petition of [the letter] I.; in behalf of herself and her sisters. [By John Hill, M.D.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Anon. p. 674.] London, 1759 TO farmers ; a short account of the cause of the disease in corn, called by farmers, the blight, the mildew, and the rust. By the Right Hon. Sir Joseph Banks, Bart., K.B. Re-edited with marginal annotations ... by an agriculturist, F.R.S. and F.S.A. [Sir Thomas Hanmer, Bart.]. 8vo. [W.] London, 1807 TO H.R.H. Prince Edward of Wales ; a poem. By H. W. F. [Henry Francis Wilson]. 8vo. London, 1888 TO Her Most Excellent Maiestie Henrietta Maria, Queen of Great Britain, Dr L’s [George Leyburn’s] apologie. 4to. No title-page. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.'] [Douay, 1660] TO Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, with the tragedy of Cato. Nov. 1714. To Sir Godfrey Kneller, on his picture of the King. [By Joseph Addison.] Fol. Pp. 9. {Ashley Library.] London, 1716 TO him that hath. [A novel.] By Ralph Connor [Charles W. Gordon, D.D.]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London,1922 TO his own master ; a novel. By Alan St Aubyn [Miss Frances Marshall]. 8 vo. London, 1898 TO husbands, fathers, and brothers, especially those of the labouring classes ; being a warning against prevailing delusions. ... By a brother ^George Clement Boase]. 8vo. Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. i. 28.] Edinburgh, 1848 TO Lady Horatia Waldegrave on the death of the Duke of Ancaster. [Verses. By Horace Walpole.] 4to. Pp. 3. [Brit. Mus.\ [Strawberry Hill, 1779] TO London for the Jubilee [of Queen Victoria]. By Kit [Mrs Katherine B. Coleman]. 8vo. Pp. 154. Toronto, 1897 TO London then and now. 1837, 1897, etc. By Carl Sartor [Charles Taylor]. 8vo. Pp. 87. [Brit. Musi] Partick, 1898 TO love and to be loved. By the author of Vve been thinking [A. S. Roe]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Ipswich, 1855 TO meet the day throughout the Christian year. [By Andrew K. H. Boyd, D.D.] 8vo. London, 1889 TO Mr E. L. on his Majesties dissolving the late parliament at Oxford, March 28, 1681. [By White Kennett, D.D.] [Bodl.\ 1681 A broadside. TO Mr Gray, on his Ode. [Verse. By David Garrick.] 4to. Pp. 2. [Brit. Mus.\ [Strawberry Hill, 1757] TO my Lady Morton on New-years-day, 1650; at the Louver in Paris. [By Edmund Waller.] Fol. S. sh. [Bodli] London, 1661 TO my louynge brethren that is troublyd abowt the popishe aparell, two short and comfortable epistels. [By Anthony Gilby.] i2mo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] [London, 1566] TO Parliament. The humble remonstrance of the Company of Stationers. [By Henry Parker.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1643 TO Poland in war time ; a journey into the East. By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski]. 8vo. Private print, 1919 TO right the wrong. [A novel.] By Edna Lyall [Ada Ellen Bayly]. 8vo. London, 1894 TO Rome—or the Bible? A reply to Cardinal Bourne. [By Charles A. Salmond, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 32. London, 1918 TO set her free. [A novel.] By G. M. Robins [Mrs Louis Baillie-Reynolds]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1895 TO Sions lovers ; being a golden egge, to avoid infection ; or, a short step into the doctrine of laying on of hands. . . . [Signed : S. J. i.e. Sarah Jones.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1644 TO Sir Godfrey Kneller at his country seat. [A poem. By Thomas Tickell.] Fol. Pp. 3. [Brit. Musi] London, 1722 TO step aside is human. [A novel.] By Alan Saint Aubyn [Miss Frances Marshall]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 296. [Brit. Musi] London, 1896 TO the agriculturists of North Northumberland ; letter second. By J. S. Donaldson, Esq. [J. S. Darling, W.S.]. 8vo. Berwick, 1836 TO the author [-Shepherd of Bath chapel] of Infant Bap tis?n : dated 1773* [By Mary Gillam.] 8vo. Pp. 4. [Bodli] 1777 TO the beloved and chosen of God in the seed elected, particularly in London and elsewhere, who have seen the day of Christ, and received the message of peace and reconciliation in these last dayes of his glorious appearance. [By Edward Burrough.] 4to. Pp. 8. London, 1660 Signed: E. B. TO the bitter end; a novel. By the author of Lady Audley’s secret, etc. [Mary Elizabeth Braddon, later Mrs John Maxwell]. 8vo. London, 1872 TO the citizens of the United States ; review of the address of the Free Trade Convention. [By Matthew Carey.] 8vo. [Sabin’s Diet. iii. 342.] [183 0 TO the constituent members of Trinity Chapel. . . . [By John Murray.] 8vo. [Robertson’s Aberd. Bibl.] [Aberdeen, 1824J TO the electors of Great Britain ; serious reflections on a dissolution of Parliament. By an elector [Isaac Preston]. 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1784 TO the great and learned among Christians ; the petition of poor Christians . . . with questions . . . to Joseph Priestley. [By Thomas Witherby.] 8vo. \Lond. Lib. Cat. Slippy London, 1793 TO the healing of the sea ; a novel. By Francis H. Hardy [Edward James Cattell]. 8vo. Pp. 301. London, 1900 TO the high and honourable Parliament of England now assembled at Westminster, the humble petitions, serious suggestions, and dutifull expostulations of some moderate and loyall gentlemen, yeomen, and freeholders of the Eastern Association, &c. [By Rev. Nathaniel Ward.] 4to. Pp. 31. [W. and Q. 23rd March 1867, p. 237.] 1648 TO the Hundred of Blything. [An address on the subject of the Poor- Law assessment. By J. Jermyn?] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [Southwold? 1821 ?] TO the inhabitants of Berry Pomeroy. [By Rev. W. B. Cosens, vicar of Berry Pomeroy.] [Davidson’s Bibl. Devon, p. 108.] 1852 TO the Lord Provost of Glasgow, the two following -letters are respectfully addressed, on the subject of the organ, which, in the month of August last, was introduced into St Andrews Church, Glasgow; to which are added, Remarks on the Rev. James Begg’s Treatise on the use of organs. [By Alexander Fleming, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 81. Glasgow, 1808 TO the Lords of the British Parnassus ; a protest [in verse : signed J. H. D.]. By the author of Albion’s fall [John H. Davies]. 8vo. London, 1885 TO the magistrates, the military, and the yeomanry of Ireland. [By Sir Richard Musgrave, Bart., M.P. for Lismore.] 8 vo. [IV.] Dublin, 1798 Signed : Camillus. TO the majesty of the people, the Christian-political mouse-trap ! or the world reformed by order, truth and good humour, &c. [By P. Labelliere.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1789 TO the memory of a lady lately deceased [Mrs Lyttelton, wife to George Lyttelton, Esq., one of the Lords of the Treasury] ; a monody. [By George, Lord Lyttelton.] Fob Pp. 15. London, 1747 TO the memory of the most renowned Du-Vall ; a pindarick ode. By the author of Hudibras [Samuel Butler]. 4to. Pp. 13. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1671 TO the most illustrious, John, Earle of Lauderdale, &c. His Majesties High Commissioner for the kingdom of Scotland, His Grace, a congratulatory welcome of an heart-well-wishing quill : Hecatombe. [By Mungo Murray.] Fol. S. sh. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] N.P., N.D. Signed: M. M. TO the musicioners, the harpers, the minstrels, the singers, the dancers, the persecutors ; from one who loved dancing and musick as his life . . . [Humphry Smith]. 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] • London, 1658 TO the no less vertuous than engenious Mrs Mary More ; upon her sending Sir Thomas More’s picture (of her own drawing) to the Long Gallery at the public schools in Oxon. R. W. [R. Whithall, of Merton College]. Fol. S. sh. n.p. 1674 Author’s name in the Bodleian copy in the handwriting of Wood. TO the parliament of the Commonwealth of England ; fifty nine particulars laid down for the regulating things, and the taking away of oppressing laws, and oppressors, and to ease the oppressed. By G. F. [George Fox]. 4to. Pp. 23. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 658.] London, 1659 TO the patrons of ecclesiastical livings. [By Browne Willis, LL.D.] 4to. Pp. 8. N.P., N.D. TO the present authority or heads of the nation of England ; this among others in my testimony. . . . [Signed W. S. i.e. William Smith, of Besthorp.] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books.] London,1664 TO the Proprietors of East India stock. [A letter, signed: Detector, i.e. Nathaniel Brassey Halhed.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus?[ London, 1783 TO the Protector and Parliament of England. [By George Fox.] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 656.] London, 1659 TO the right high and mightie prince, lames by the grace of God, King of great Britannie, France, and Irelande. . . . An humble supplication for toleration and libertie to enioy and observe the ordinances of Christ Iesvs. . . . [By Henry Jacob.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgravel] n.p. 1609 TO the Right Honourable James Earl of Perth, Lord Drummond, and Stob- Hall, &c. Lord High Chancellor of his Majesties most ancient kingdom of Scotland ; the congratulatory welcome of an obliged quill. [By Mungo Murray.] Fol. S. sh. N.P., N.D. Signed : M. M. TO the Right Honourable Mr Harley on his first appearing in publick, after the wound given him by Guiscard. [By Joseph Trapp.] Fol. S. sh. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.'] London, 1711 Another edition in the same year bears the author’s name. TO the Right Reverend the Ld. Bishop of Carlisle ; containing a third vindication of Edward the Third; letter III. [By Thomas Rymer.] 8vo. London, 1706 TO the Right Reverend the Ld. Bishop of Carlisle ; containing an historical deduction of the alliances between France and Scotland: whereby the pretended old league with Charlemagne is disprov’d : and the true old league is produced and asserted. To which is added, a notable piece of church- history from her Majesty’s archives ; never before publish’d ; letter II. [By Thomas Rymer.] 8vo. London, N.D. TO the Rockies and beyond ; a summer on the Union Pacific Railroad and its branches. By Alter Ego [Robert E. Strahorn]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Omaha, 1879 TO the saints in Sion, a song of praise ; together with some short hints, especially in the 2nd part, by way of prophecy, concerning the judgments of God upon the world for their sins, by famine, by the sword, by pestilence, and by fire from heaven : written at Carlisle in Cumberland, about 50 years ago, and now published by consent of the writer. T. S. [Thomas Story]. 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 61 ; ii. 637.] London, 1740 TO the Society of the Beaux Esprits ; a Pindarik poem. By the author of the late Satyr against woman [Robert Gould]. 4to. Pp. 27. [Brit. Musi] London, 1687 TO the Society of the people called Quakers. [By John Payne.] Fol. [Smith’s Anti-Quak. p. 353.] N.p. 1793 TO the sons of Gregffydh of Rhys ap Tewdwr, Prince of S. Wales ; a Pindaric ode by [J. Staunton] the author of St Nicholas Hill. 4to. Pp. 41. [Dobell’s Private Prints, p. 171.] N.p. 1869 TO the suffering seed of royalty, wheresoever tribulated upon the face of the whole earth ; the salutation of your brother under the oppressive yoak of bonds, in Rome-prison of mad-men. John [John Perrot]. 4to. [D.-N.B. vol. 45, p. 27.] London, 1661 TO the third generation. By Hope Daring [Miss Anna Johnson]. 8vo. New York, 1901 TO the Wh[ig]s Nineteen queries, a fair and full answer, by an honest Torie ; purely for the publick good of his country. [By Francis Atterbury.] i2mo. Pp. 16. London, 1710 TO thee Charls Stuart King of England, am I moved of the Lord to write ; and to thee it is the visitation of his love, through him whose travel hath been for thee, that thy soul may be saved in the day of the Lord, therefore hear that thy soul may live, and thy dayes be prolonged in the house of thy pilgrimage. [By George Bishop.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Smith’s Cat. of Friei'ids' Books.] N.P. [1660] The second half to “C. S. K. ” signed: J. P. TO those who suffer ; a few points in theosophical teachings. By Aimee Blech [Lionel Dalsace]. Translated from the French by Fred. Roth well. 8vo. Pp. 95. [Brit. Musi] London, 1908 TO trisect any given angle. [Signed : W. H. i.e. Wilfrid Hampson.] 4to. 4 parts. [Brit. Musi] [1912-13] TOAST (the) ; an heroick poem in four books, written originally in Latin, by Frederick Scheffer: now done into English, and illustrated with notes and observations, by Peregrine O’Donald, Esq. [By William King, LL.D., Principal of St Mary Hall, Oxford.] 4to. Pp. 232. [Martin’s Cat.] Dublin printed ; London reprinted, 1736 TOBACCO (the) problem. By Meta Lander [Mrs Margaret Woods Lawrence]. 8vo. [Cushing’s 7nit. and Pseud.] Boston, 1886 TOBACCO (the) question ; physiologically . . . and statistically considered : reprinted from the Dublin University Magazine. [By Wm. Edward Armitage Axon.] 8vo. Pp. 13. [Brit. Musi] Manchester [1871] Signed : Pacificus. TOBACCONIST (the); a comedy of two acts altered from Ben Johnson : acted at the Theatres Royal in the Haymarket and Edinburgh. [By Francis Gentleman.] 8vo. Pp. 4, 50. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1771 TOBY ; his experiences and opinions. By Ascott R. Hope [Ascott Robert Hope Moncrieff]. 8vo. Pp. 151. London, 1892 TOBY Tyler ; or, ten weeks with a circus. By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. sq. i2mo. New York, 1882 TOCSIN (the); with several minor poems. By a member of the Honourable Society of Lincoln’s Inn [Daniel Cabanel]. 4to. [Gent. Mag. lxxxv. 1, 144 ; Brit. Crit. xxxix. 191.] 1811 TO-DAY; a satire. By Ernestus [Bertie Ambrosse]. 8vo. London, 1818 TO-DAY and yesterday ; a satire. [By Sir Henry Lytton Bulwer.] 4to. Pp. 29. [Martin’s Cat.] Chiswick, 1824 TO-DAY in Ireland. [By Eyre Evans Crow.] i2mo. 3 vols. [Carnb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1825 TO-DAY, to-morrow, and for ever. By Kirkby Burton [Nellie Robinson]. 8vo. London, 1892 TODDLE Island ; being the diary of Lord Botsford. [A novel. By James Dennis Hird.] 8vo. Pp. 406. [Brit. Musi] London, 1894 TODDLES’S Highland tour ; being the strange adventures of Richard Toddles and Tom Stepwell during their journey in Scotland. [By Edmund Routledge.] i2mo. London, 1864 TOILE (a) for two-legged foxes ; wherein their noisome properties, their hunting and vnkenelling, with the duties of the principall hunters and guardians of the spirituall vineyard is liuely discouered, for the comfort of all her Highnesse trustie and truehearted subjects, and their encouragement against all Popish practises. By J. B. [J. Baxter], Preacher of the word of God. 8vo. London, i6co TOILERS in London. By John Law [Miss-Harkness]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1889 TOINETTE ; a tale of Southern life. By Henry Churton [Albion W. Tourgee]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Diit. and Pseud,.] New York, 1874 TOINETTE, and other stories. By Barbara Yichton [Lydia Farrington Krause]. 8vo. Pp. 137. New York, 1897 TOKEN (a) for the children of New England; or, some examples of children in whom the fear of God was remarkably budding. . . . [By Cotton Mather.] i2mo. Pp. 36. [G. Brinley’s Amer. Lib.] Boston, 1700 TOKEN (a) for youth ; containing several advices and directions to children and youth. ... By J. J. [James Jane way]. 121110. [Brit. Musi] London, 1709 TOKEN (a) of Christian love ; or, the fourth gift of Theophilus Philanthropos, student in Physick [Robert Poole, M.D.]. The second edition, greatly enlarg’d. 8vo. Pp. viii. 34. [D.N.B. vol. 46, p. 103.] London, 1740 TOLANDO-PSEUDOLOGO- MASTIX; or, a curry-comb for a lying coxcomb ; being an answer to a later piece of Mr Toland’s, called Hypatia. [By John King, D.D., prebend of York.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 31, p. 141.] London, 1721 T—L—ND’S invitation to Dismal to dine with the Calves-head club ; imitated from Horace, Epist. 5. Lib. 1. By Jonathan Swift.] Fol. S. sh. Camb. Hist, of Eng. Lit.] N.P. [1712] Dismal is Daniel Finch, Earl of Nottingham, who was nicknamed the Dismal Orator. TOLD by the taffrail. By Sundowner [Herbert Tichborne]. 8vo. London, 1901 TOLD by two. By Marie St Felix [Mrs Jerome Morley Lynch]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Chicago, 1901 TOLD in “Tatt’s.” By Nathaniel Gubbins [Edward Spencer]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1903 TOLD in the twilight ; or, short stories for long evenings. By Sidney Daryl [Douglas Straight]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London,1867 TOLD on the Pagoda ; tales of Burmah. By Mimosa [Mrs M. Chan-Foon]. 8vo. Pp. 136. [Who’s Who in Lit.) London,1895 TOLERATION Act explained; an answer to a legal argument on the Toleration Act, shewing that the court of quarter sessions have a judicial function as to the administration of oaths to persons offering themselves for qualification as Protestant dissenting ministers. By a barrister of the Temple [George Wharton Marriott, B.C.L.]. 8vo. Pp. 39. [Bodl. ; Bibliographer, vol. 5.] London, 1812 TOLERATION and liberty of conscience considered and proved impractible, impossible, and, even in the opinion of dissenters, sinful and unlawful. Attributed to Dr John Nalson.] 4to. Lincoln’s Inn Lib,] London, 1685 TOLERATION defended ; or, the letter from a gentleman [James Ramsay] to a member of parliament concerning toleration considered ; with some observes on Mr Meldrum’s sermon. [By George Brown, Episcopal Minister.] 4to. Pp. 24. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.\ Edinburgh, 1703 TOLERATION disapprov’d and condemn’d by the authority and convincing reasons of I. That wise and learned King James and his Privy-Councill. Anno Reg. 2do. II. The Honourable Commons assembled in this present parliament in their votes &c. Feb. 25. 1662. III. The Presbyterian ministers in the City of London met at Sion- Colledge Decemb. 18. 1645. IV. Twenty eminent divines. . . . [By William Assheton, D.D., of Brasen- Nose College.] 4to. Pp. 78. [Bodl.\ Oxford, 1670 TOLERATION discuss’d ; in two dialogues. I. Betwixt a conformist, and a non-conformist ; laying open the impiety, and danger of a general liberty. II. Betwixt a presbyterian, and an independent; concluding, upon an impartial examination of their respective practises, and opinions, in favour of the independent. [By Sir Roger L’Estrange.] 8vo. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibli\ London, 1670 TOLERATION (a) in Scotland no breach of the Union. [By William Strahan, LL.D.] 4to. Pp. 8. London, 1712 TOLERATION not to be abused ; or, a serious question soberly debated, and resolved upon presbyterian principles : viz. Whether it be adviseable, especially for the presbyterians, either in conscience or prudence, to take advantage from his Majesties late declaration, to deny or rebate their communion with our parochial congregations, and to gather themselves into distinct and separate churches ? By one that loves truth and peace [Francis Fullwood, D.D.]. 4to. Pp. 35. [Orme’s Life of Baxter, li. 263.] London, 1672 TOLLERATION sent down from heaven to preach ; or, godly religious meetings, and true gospell preachers, praying and preaching, in other places then parish churches and chappels, justified by the highest powers ; and signally owned by testimonies from heaven, ought not to be condemned or forbiden, but rather allowed and tollerated by men upon earth. . . . Written in Glocestershire the begining of the 10th month, 1665. By R. F. [Richard Farnworth]. 4to. Pp. 37. 1665 TOLERATION with its principal objections fully confuted ; or, an answer to a book entitled, Sions groans for her distressed. ... By H. S. [Henry Savage], D.D., chapl. to His Majesty. 4to. Pp. 81. London, 1663 TOLERATION'S fence removed, the Thoughts [by Sir A. Sinclair] concerning the present state of affairs in so far as they respect a toleration considered, and exposed. Plain dealing with the presbyterians as it is not found, so not to be expected from prelatical pamphleteers ; or, a vindication of a Letter from a gentleman to a member of parliament concerning toleration from all the cavils that have been advanced against it, and the wilfull mistakes about it. [By James Ramsay.] 4to. Pp. 36. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.\ Edinburgh, 1703 TOLL (the) bar. By J. E. Buckrose [Mrs Falconer Jameson]. 8vo. Pp. 318. London, 1907 TOLONDRON; speeches to John Bowie, about his edition of Don Quixote: together with some account of Spanish literature. [By Joseph Baretti.] 8vo. [Gent. Mag. lviii. ii. 1029.] London, 1786 TOLTEC (the) cup ; a romance. ... By Nym Crinkle [Andrew C. Wheeler]. 121110. New York, 1890 TOM Brown at Oxford. By the author of Tom Brown's school days [Thomas Hughes, Q.C.]. 8vo. 3 vols. Cambridge, 1861 TOM Benton’s luck. By F. Benton Williams [Herbert Elliott Hamblen]. 8vo. New York, 1898 TOM Brown’s school days. By an old boy [Thomas Hughes]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. viii. 420. Cambridge, 1857 TOM Chips. By Ouno [T. M. Ashworth and another]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lmt. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1875 TOM Cladpole’s journey to Lunnun, shewing the many difficulties he met with, and how he got safe home at last, told by himself, and written in pure Sussex doggerel by his Uncle Tim ; second edition, to which is added, Tom Cladpole’s return, and a portrait of Tom in his travelling costume. [By Richard Tower.] i2mo. Pp. 38. [H7.] Hailsham [1844?] TOM Crib’s Memorial to Congress ; with a preface, notes, and appendix. By one of the Fancy [Thomas Moore]. Second edition. 8vo. Pp. xxxi. 88. London, 1819 TOM Cringle’s letters on practical subjects, suggested by experiences in Bombay. [By William Walker.] 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] Bombay, 1863 TOM Cringle’s log. [A novel.] [By Michael Scott.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Paris, 1836 TOM Dawson ; a novel. By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 392. London, 1910 TOM Double return’d out of the country; or, the true picture of a modern Whig, set forth in a second dialogue between Mr Whiglove and Mr Double, at the Rummer tavern in Queen-Street. [By Charles Davenant, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. 64. [Arber’s Term. Cat. iii. 693.] London, 1702 TOM Essence; or, the modish wife: a comedy, as it is acted at the Dukes Theatre. [By Thomas Rawlins.] 4to. Pp. 67. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1677 TOM Fox; or, the revelations of a detective. [By John Bennett.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, i860 TOM Genuflex; or, “life’s little day.” [A novel.] By Aunt Cherry [Mrs Jane Rowland]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 213. Whitland, 1901 TOM Knight ; or, true honour from God only. By the author of The wreck of the Va?iguard [Harriet Carson]. 8vo. London [1877] TOM Loseley ; boy. By “Cuthbert” [Rev. John Edwin Copus]. 8vo. New York, 1906 TOM Moody’s tales ; edited [or rather wholly written] by Mark Lemon. 8vo. [Brit. Mush] London, 1864 TOM of Bedlam’s answer to his brother [Benjamin] Hoadly, St Peter’s Poor parson, near the Exchange of principles. . . . [By Rev. Luke Milbourne.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1709 TOM of Bedlam’s short answer to his Cozen Tom W—1st—n, occasioned by his late discourses on the miracles of our Saviour. [By Thomas Woolston himself.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 62, p. 437.] London, 1728 TOM Pippin’s wedding ; a novel. By the author of The fight at Dame Eurofids school [Henry William Pullen]. 8vo. Pp. 392. London [1871] TOM Punsibi’s letter to Dean Swift. [By Thomas Sheridan, D.D.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [Dublin?] 1727 TOM Raw, the Griffin ; a burlesque poem, in twelve cantos : illustrated by twenty-five engravings descriptive of the adventures of a cadet in the East India Company’s service, from the period of his quitting England to his obtaining a staff situation in India. By a civilian and an officer on the Bengal establishment [Sir Charles D’Oyly]. 8vo. [Gent. Mag. Nov. 1845, P- 531-] London, 1828 TOM Sawyer abroad ; Tom Sawyer, detective ; and other stories. By Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens]. 8vo. Pp. 410. New York, 1896 TOM Tel-troths message and his pens complaint ; a worke not unpleasant to be read nor unprofitable to be followed. Written by Jo. La. [John Lane], gent. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1600 TOM Thumb ; a tragedy, as it is acted at the theatre in the Hay-market. [By Henry Fielding.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1730 The title of a later edition (17 31) begins : “ The tragedy of tragedies . . .” TOM Tit ; his sayings and doings. . . . By Ismay Thorn [Edith Caroline Pollock]. 8vo. Pp. 176. [Brit. Mus'.* London [1884’ TOM Treddlehoyle’s peep at t’Man- chester Art Treasures Exhebishon e 1857. [By J. Rogers.] 121110. [N. andQ. Feb. 1869, p. 169.] Leeds, 1857 TOM, unlimited ; a story for children. By Martin Leach Warborough[Charles Blairfindie Grant Allen]. 8vo. [Courtney’s Secrets, p. 106.] London, 1897 TOM Winstone. By Martha James [Martha Claire Douglas]. 8vo. Boston, 1902 TOMASO’S fortune ; and other stories. By Henry Seton Merriman [Hugh Stowell Scott]. 8vo. Pp. 306. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1904 TOMB (the) of Alexander reviewed ; in eight letters to a friend. By Hera- clides [Edward Daniel Clarke]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Bseud.] London,1806 TOMBES (the), monuments, and sepulchral inscriptions lately visible in St Paul’s Cathedral and St Faith’s under it, completely rendred in Latin and English, with several historical discourses on sundry persons intombed therein : a work never yet performed by any author old or new. By P. F. [Payne Fisher], student in antiquities. . . . 4to. [ Uficott.] London [1684] Another edition reads “compiled by Major P. Fisher, student in antiquities,” etc. TOMBO-CH1QUI ; or, the American savage : a dramatic entertainment, in three acts. [By John Cleland.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.\ London,1758 TOM-BOY (a) ; or, playing with fire. By Arrah Leigh [Mrs H. C. Hoffmann]. 8vo. Pp. 171. New York [1889] TOMMIAD (the) ; a biographical fancy, written about the year 1842 [in verse. By George James Finch-Hatton, Earl of Winchelsea and Nottingham]. 8vo. Pp. 56. [Brit. Mus.\ London, private print, 1882 TOMMIEBEG (the) shootings ; or, a moor in Scotland. By Thomas Jeans [Rev. Sir James Cameron Lees, D.D.]. 8vo. Edinburgh, i860 TOMMY and Millie. By Fleeta [Kate W. Hamilton]. 8vo. [Cushing’s I?iit. and Pseud.\ Philadelphia, 1891 TOMMY Atkins of the Ramchunders. By “Nunquam” [Robert Blatchford]. 8vo. Pp. 284. London [1895] TOMMY Big-eyes. By the author of Betsy Lee, etc. [Thomas Edward Brown]. 8vo. Douglas [1896] TO-MORROW? A novel. By Victoria Cross [Miss Vivien Cory]. 8vo. Pp. 308. London, 1910 TOM’S wife, and how he managed her. [By George D. Tallman.] 8vo. New York, 1877 TON and antiquity ; a comedy, in two acts. [Dedication signed: T. S. i.e. Thomas Streatfield.] 8vo. Pp. 41. [Brit. Mus.\ Oxford [1798] TONGUE (the) ; or, essays on the uses and abuses of speech. . . . By the author of The duty of children to their parents [R. Wright]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.J Wisbech [1805?] TONGVE-COMBAT (a), lately happening betweene two English souldiers in the tilt-boat at Grauesend, the one going to serue the King of Spaine, the other to serue the States Generali of the Vnited Provinces ; wherein the cause, course, and continuance of those warres, is debated, and declared. [By Thomas Scott.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1623 Ascribed also to Henry Hexham. [Brit. Mus.'] TO-NIGHT at eight; comedies and comediettas. By A. X. [Fannie Aymar Mathews]. 8vo. Chicago, 1889 TONS of money ; a farce in three acts. By Will Evans and Valentine [Arthur Valentine Peachey]. 8vo. Pp. 85. [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] TONY and his harp. By H. N. W. B. [Mrs Harriet Newell (Woods) Baker]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnii. and Pseud.] Boston, 1870 TONY and Puss ; translated from the French of P. J. Stahl [Pierre Jules Hetzel]. 4to. London, 1870 TONY Butler. [A novel. By Charles James Lever,] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1865 Originally published in Blackwood's Magazine. TONY Lumpkin in town ; a farce. . . . [By John O’Keeffe, dramatist.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1778 TONY’S Chums ; a tale of a summer holiday. By May Wynne [Mabel Wynne Knowles]. 8vo. London [1915] TOO clever by half; or, the Harro- ways. By the Mofussilite [John Lang]. 8vo. [Af. and Q. Oct. 1869, P- 373-1 1853 TOO late repented. By Mrs Forrester [Mrs-Bridges]. 8vo. Pp. 295. Philadelphia, 1895 TOO much alone ; a novel. By F. G. Trafford [Mrs Charlotte E. L. Riddell, nfe Cowan]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. A/its.] London, i860 TOO soon ; a study of a girl’s heart. By the author of Patty, etc. [Katherine S. Macquoid]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1873 TOOTPIED gearing ; a practical handbook. ... By a Foreman Pattern Maker [Joseph Gregory Hornor]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 208. [Brit. Mus.] 1892 Preface signed : J. H. TOPICKS in the laws of England ; containing media, apt for argument, and resolution of law cases : also an exposition of severall words, not touched by former glossaries. [By John Clayton, of the Inner Temple.] 8vo. Pp. 16, 138. [Bodl.] London, 1646 Dedication signed : J. C. TOPO ; a tale about English children in Italy. By G. E. Brunefille [Lady Colin Campbell, nee Gertrude Elizabeth Blood], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1878 TOPOGRAPH ; or, pedestrian’s companion to the byeways within nine miles of Devonport and Plymouth, favourite walks of N. T. C. [Noel Thomas Carrington]. i2mo. Devonport, 1833 TOPOGRAPHER (the) ; containing a variety of original articles, illustrative of the local history and antiquities of England, particularly on the history and description of ancient and eminent seats and stiles of architecture. . . . [By Sir Sam. E. Brydges and the Rev. Stebbing Shaw.] 8vo. 5 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1789-1821 TOPOGRAPHER (the) ; numb. 1. for March 1821. [Edited by Sir T. Phillips.] 8vo. [IV.] [Middle Hill], private print, 1821 TOPOGRAPHICAL (a) account of Tattershall, in the county of Lincoln ; collected from the best authorities. [By G. Weir. The second edition.] 8vo. Pp. 23. Horncastle, 1813 TOPOGRAPHICAL (a) and historical account of Hayling Island, Hants. [By Richard Scott.] 4to. [J. P. Anderson’s Brit. Topography.] Havant, 1826 TOPOGRAPHICAL (a) and historical account of Linlithgowshire. By the late John Penny. [Really by George Chalmers.] i2mo. Pp. xi. 223. Edinburgh, 1831 Copied, almost verbatim, from Chalmers' Caledonia, and published as the work of Penny by J. Maidment, who added a preface and appendix. TOPOGRAPHICAL (a) and historical account of the city and county of Norwich, its antiquities and modern improvements. . . . [By John Stacy.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Norwich, 1819 TOPOGRAPHICAL (a) and historical description of the County of Suffolk. . . . [By John Kirby.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Woodbridge, 1829 Other editions have the author’s name and the title “The Suffolk traveller.” TOPOGRAPHICAL (a) description of the State of Ohio, Indiana Territory, and Louisiana. By a late officer in the U.S. Army [Jervase Cutler]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseudi] Boston, 1812 TOPOGRAPHICAL (the) dictionary of England and Wales. [By Thomas Dugdale.] 8vo. Nos. 1-4. [Corns and Sparke’s Bibl. of Unf. Books, p. 74.] London [i860] This is really “ Dugdale’s England and Wales delineated : edited by C. L. Blanchard,” but with different title-pages. TOPOGRAPHICAL (a) history, and description of Bawtry and Thorne, with the villages adjacent. By W. P. [William Peck]. 4to. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] Doncaster, 1813 TOPOGRAPHICAL (a) history of Stonyhurst and Mytton. ... By an old Antiquarian [Peter Armstrong Whittle]. 8vo. [Sparke’s Bibl. Bolt. p. 148.] ' Preston, 1821-37 TOPOGRAPHICAL memoranda of the ward of Farringdon without. By an antiquary [-Underhill]. 4to. London [1850 ?] TOPOGRAPHICAL (a), statistical, and historical account of the borough of Preston . . . including a correct copy of the charter granted in the reign of Charles II. . . . By Marmaduke Tulket [Peter A. Whittle]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Sparke’s Bibl.'Bolt. p. 148.] Preston, 1821-37 TOPOGRAPHY (the) of all the known vineyards, containing a description of the kind and quality of their products and a classification. . . . [An abridged translation of “Topographie de tous les vignolles connus,” by Andre Jullien.] i2mo. Pp. xvi. 248. [Brit. Mus.] London,1824 TOPSAIL-SHEET blocks; or, the naval foundling. By “The old sailor”: author of Tough yarns, etc. [Matthew Henry Barker]. i2mo. 3 vols. London,1838 TOPSY turvy; with anecdotes and observations illustrative of leading characters in the present government of France. By the editor of Salmagundi [Rev. George Huddesford, M.A.]. 8vo. Pp. 56. London, 1793 TOR (the) hill. By the author of Brani- bletye House, etc. [Horace Smith]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Green’s Bibl. Soniers. iii. 320.] London, 1826 TORIES’ (the) “Refuge for the destitute,” or political advertiser . . . and The House of reform that Jack built [in verse. By William Hone ?]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] London [1832] For the first edition, see “The house of reform that Jack built . . .” TORIO-WHIGGO-MACHIA ; or, the battle of the Whigs and Tories : a political satire, in four cantos. [By Benjamin Cole.] 4to. London, 1806 TORMENTOR (the). [A novel.] By Benjamin Swift [William Romaine Paterson]. 8vo. Pp. 296. [Brit. Mush] London, 1906 TORN (a) leaf from a lost life. [A poem. By J. Smith.] 8vo. Birmingham, 1864 TORN sails. [A novel.] By Allen Raine [Mrs Beynon Puddicombe, nee Anne Adaliza Evans]. 8vo. London, 1900 TORQUATO Tasso, his Jerusalem delivered, Englished in octaves by Hugh Bent [George Atty]. i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1856 TORQUAY. By John Presland [Gladys Skelton]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 190. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1920 TORRINGTON Hall; being an account of two days, in the autumn of the year 1844, passed at that magnificent and philosophically conducted establishment for the insane. By Arthur Wallbridge, author of Jest and earnest, etc. [A. W. Lunn]. 8vo. Pp. x. 135. [Bodli] London, 1845 TORY (a) plot; a story of the attempt to kill General Washington in 1776. By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 227. New York [1898] TORY (the) Quaker; or, Aminadab’s new vision in the fields, after a cup of the creature. [By Edward Ward.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Smith’s Anti-Quak. p. 442.] London, 1717 TOTALL (the) and finall demands already made by, and to be expected from, the agitators and army ; vpon the concession whereof they will rest fully satisfied. . . . [By William Prynne.] 4to. Pp. 8. London, 1647 TOTALL (the) svmme ; or, no danger of damnation vnto Roman Catholiques for any errour in faith : nor any hope of saluation for any sectary vvhatso- euer that doth knowingly oppose the doctrine of the Roman Church. This is proued by the confessions, and sayings of M. William Chillingvvorth his booke. [By John Floyd, S. J.] 4to. Pp. 104. [Oliver’s Collections; Sommervogel’s Dictionnairei] [St Omer] 1639 TOT’S tales. By Cue [A. Leonard Summers]. 8vo. Pp. 30. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1917 TOTTIE’S trial. By “Kay Spen” [Henry Courtney Selous]. 8vo. London, 1872 TOUCH (the) of sorrow. [A novel.] By Edith Hamlet [Hon. Mrs Alfred Lyttleton]. 8vo. Pp. 323. [Brit. Musi] London, 1896 TOUCHING the subject of supremacy in causes ecclesiastical ; diatriba qusedam Oxoniensis cujusdam : tending to peace and setling, by shewing how the powers civil and ecclesiastical may act in their own sphseres without incroachment on one another. [By John Geree, M.A.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Bo dll] 164 7 VOL. VI. TOUCHSTONE (the), exhibiting Uni- versalism and Restorationism as they are, moral contraries. By a consistent Restorationist [Adin Ballou]. i2mo. Pp. 32. Providence, R.I., 1837 TOUCHSTONE (a) for a communicant. . . . By E. F. [Edward Fisher]. i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 19, p. 56.] London, 1647 TOUCH-STONE (a) for physick, directing by evident marks and characters to such medicines, as without purgers, vomiters, bleedings, issues, minerals, or any other disturbers of nature, may be securely trusted for cure in all ex- treamities. . . . [By William Walwyn.] i2mo. Pp. no. [Wi] London, 1667 “To the Reader” signed : W. W. TOUCHSTONE (the) of peril; a tale of the Indian Mutiny. By D. H. Thomas [R. E. Forest]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Calc. Imp. Lib.] London, 1886 TOUCH-STONE (the) of the new religion; or, sixty assertions of Protestants try’d by their own rule of Scripture alone, and condemn’d by clear and express texts of their own Bible. [By Matthew Killison, D.D., re-edited by Richard Challoner, Bishop of Debra.] i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 30, p. 345.] London,1748 TOUCHSTONE (the) of the Reformed Gospel ; wherein sundry chief heads and tenents of the Protestant doctrine . . . are briefly refuted. . . . [By Matthew Kellison]. i2mo. Pp. 140, 92. [D.N.B. vol. 30, p. 345.] St Omers, 1652 TOUCHSTONE (a) ; or, a perfect tryal by the scriptures, of all priests, bishops and ministers who have called themselves the ministers of the gospel, whose time and day hath been in the last ages past, or rather in the night of apostacy ; unto which is annexed, Women’s speaking justified. [By Margaret Fell, afterwards Fox.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1667 Signed : M. F. TOUCH-STONE (the); or, historical, critical, political, philosophical, and theological essays on the reigning diversions of the town : designed for the improvement of all authors, spectators, and actors of operas, plays, and masquerades. . . . By a person of some taste and quality [James Ralph]. With a preface, giving some account of the author and the work. i2mo. London, 1728 The epistle dedicatory is signed: A. Primcock, pseud, of J. Ralph. E TOUCHSTONE, [i.e. —- Herring] to the people of the United States on the Choice of a President. 8vo. New York, 1812 TOUCH-STONE (a) to try whether we be Christians in name onely, or Christians in deed ; or, the character of a true believer. By R. Y. [Richard Younge] of Roxwell, in Essex. 4to. [Brit. Mus.[ London, 1648 TOUCH-STONE (a); whereby the Protestant religion, as it stands at this day in England may be tryed : that in the light of Christ, people of all sorts may see the degeneration, and great apostacy, which these last dayes and perillous times have produced. ... By a friend to all that love pure religion, and follow after righteousness [John Collins]. 4to. Pp. 9, 18. [Bodl.] London, 1660 Signed: J. C. TOUGH yarns; a series of naval tales and sketches to please all hands, from the swabs in the shoulders down to the swabs in the head. By the old sailor, author of Greenwich Hospital, etc. [Matthew Henry Barker]. Illustrated by George Cruikshank. 8vo. Pp. 35 r. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1835 TOUN’S (the) Great Bible ; or, a brief account of the gift of Gilbert Hervie . . . of Aberdein to the Gild Brethren’s Hospital. [By John Philip Edmond.] 8vo. Pp. 10. Aberdeen, 1885 Signed : J. P. E. TOUR (a) around New York. By Felix Oldboy [Rev. John Flavel Mines]. 8vo. Harper, 1893 TOUR (a) in Brazil, and on the River Plate ; with notes on sheep-farming. By T. D. [T. Dillon]. 8vo. [Birm. Free Libi\ 1867 TOUR (a) in Connaught; comprising sketches of Clonmacnoise, Joyce country, and Achill. By the author of Sketches in Ireland [Rev. Caesar Otway]. i2mo. [Anderson’s Brit. Topog.\ Dublin, 1839 Wrongly attributed to Thomas Newte. This work was afterwards expanded, with another title, “ Prospects and observations on a tour . . .” TOUR (a) in England and Scotland, in 1785. By an English gentleman [William Thomson, LL.D.]. 8vo. Pp. x. 367. [D.N.B. vol. 56, p. 275.] TOUR in England, Ireland, and France, in the years 1828 & 1829; with remarks on the manners and customs of the inhabitants, and anecdotes of distinguished public characters : in a series of letters. By a German prince [Hermann Ludwig Heinrich, Prinz von Piickler-Muskau]. Translated by Sarah Austin. 8vo. 4 vols. London, 1832 Vols. III. and IV. have the following title : Tour in Germany, Holland and England, in the years 1826, 1827, & 1828, etc. This work is, strictly speaking, -not anonymous, as the translator in his preface states that rumour has generally ascribed it to Prince Piickler-Muskau. It is a translation of a part only of the original Briefe tines Verstorbenen. TOUR (a) in France and Italy, made by an English gentleman [J. Clenchy], 1675. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1676 TOUR (a) in France during 1802. [By Mrs Frances Elizabeth King.] i2mo. Pp. 91. [Bril. Mus.] London, 1804 TOUR (a) in Germany, and some of the Southern provinces of the Austrian empire, in the years 1820, 1821, 1822. [By John Russell.] 121110. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1824 A new edition, published at Edinburgh in 1828, has the author’s name. TOUR in Holland in the year 1819 [with some notes of a second tour in 1822-23. By Lady-Murray?]. 121110. [Brit. Mus.] London [1825 ?] TOUR (a) in Ireland in 1813 and 1814 ; with an appendix, written in 1816, on another visit to that Island. By an Englishman [John Gough]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin [1817] TOUR (a) in Ireland in 1775 ; with a map, and a view of the salmon-leap at Ballyshannon. [By Richard Twiss.] 8vo. Pp. 204. [Bodl.] London, 1776 TOUR (a) in pursuit of ideas ; being a picturesque view of all the Yarmouth Public-houses : a poem. By Dr Sigma [David Service]. 8vo. Pp. 27. Yarmouth, 1822 TOUR (a) in quest of genealogy, through several parts of Wales, Somersetshire, and Wiltshire, in a series of letters to a friend in Dublin ; interspersed with a description of Stourhead and Stonehenge ; together with various anecdotes, and curious fragments from a manuscript collection ascribed to Shakespeare. By a barrister [Richard Fenton], 8vo. Pp. iv. 338. [D.N.B. vol. 18, p. 327 ; Gent. Mag. xci. ii. 644.] TOUR (a) in 1787, from London, to the Western Highlands of Scotland ; including excursions to the lakes of Westmoreland and Cumberland, with minute descriptions of the principal seats, castles, ruins, &c. throughout the tour. [By Rev. Stebbing Shaw, Rector of Hartshorne.] i2mo. Pp. ix. 303. [Gent. Mag. lxxiii. i. 10 ; lviii. ii. 805 ; Mon. Rev. lxxix. 537.] London, 1787 TOUR (a) in Tartan-Land. By Cuth- bert Bede, author of Gleizcreggan ; or, a Highland home in Cantire, etc. [Edward Bradley], 8vo. Pp. xv. 430. London, 1863 TOUR (a) in Teesdale ; including Rokeby and its environs. [By Richard Garland.] Second edition. i2mo. Pp. 96. [Boyne’s Yorkshire Lib. p. 188-9.] York, 1813 TOUR (a) in the Isle of Wight, in the autumn of 1820. [By the Countess of Blessington.] i2mo. Pp. 84. [Martin’s Cat.\ London, 1822 TOUR (a) in Wales, and through several counties of England, including both the Universities, performed in the summer of 1805. [By William F. Mavor, LL.D.] 8vo. [Z?. N. B. vol. 37, p. 109.] London, 1806 TOUR (a) in Wales, 1773. [By Thomas Pennant.] 8vo. Dublin, 1779 Other editions bear the author’s name. TOUR (a) in Zealand, in 1802 ; with an historical sketch of the Battle of Copenhagen. [By Andreas Anderson.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1805 TOUR (the) of a Cathedral organist. [Signed: J. E. R. i.e. John Elliott Richardson, of Salisbury.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.\ London, 1870 TOUR of a German artist [Johann David Passavant] in England. [Translated by Lady Elizabeth Eastlake.] 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1836 TOUR (a) of Asia ; the most popular modern voyages and travels. . . . By T. Clark [John Galt]. Second edition. i2mo. Pp. vi. 402. {D.N.B. vol. 20, p. 390; Brit. Mus.] London [1820?] TOUR (the) of Dr Prosody, in search of the antique and picturesque, through Scotland, the Hebrides, the Orkney and Shetland Isles. [By William Combe.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1821 TOUR (the) of Doctor Syntax, in search of the picturesque ; a poem. [By William Combe.] 8vo. Pp. iii. 275. [London, 1812] TOUR (the) of His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales through British America and the United States. By a British Canadian [Henry James Morgan]. 8vo. Montreal, i860 TOUR (the) of Holland, Dutch Brabant, the Austrian Netherlands and part of France ; in which is included a description of Paris. . . . [By Harry Peck- ham.] 8vo. London, 1772 Later editions have the author’s name and the title, “A tour through Holland . . .” TOUR (the) of the Don ; a series of extempore sketches made during a pedestrian ramble along the bank of that river, and its principal tributaries : originally published in the Sheffield Mercury, during the year 1836. [By John Holland, of Sheffield.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Boyne’s Yorkshire Lib. p. 108.] London,1837 TOUR (the) of Valentine. [By Rev. Joseph Holden Pott, M.A.] 8vo. [Nichols’ Lit. Anec. ix. 73 ; Mon. Rev. lxxv. 315.] London, 1786 TOUR (a) on the banks of the Thames, from London to Oxford in 1829, by a pedestrian [A. Walton, or R. Walton]. i2mo. London, 1834 TOUR (a) on the prairies. By the author of The sketch-book [Washington Irving]. 8vo. New York, 1835 TOUR (a) round the world. By an ex-Lord Provost of Glasgow [Sir John Ure]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] Glasgow, 1885 TOUR (a) through Ireland; in several entertaining letters. . . . By two English gentlemen [-Chetwood]. 8vo. Pp. 246. London, 1748 TOUR through Ireland in 1779. [By Philip Luckombe.] i2mo. {N.azzdQ. 10th April 1858, p. 308.] 1780 TOUR through Ireland, particularly the interior & least known parts: containing an accurate view of the parties, politics, and improvements in the different Provinces ; . . . By the Rev. James Hall, A.M. [William Thomson, LL.D.]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1813 TOUR (a) through Normandy, described in a letter to a friend. [By Andrew Coltee Ducarel, D.C.L.] 4to. {D. N. B. vol. 16, p. 85.] London, 1754 TOUR (a) through part of Belgium and the Rhenish provinces. [By John Henry Manners, Duke of Rutland.] 4to. Pp. 131. {Bodl.] London, 1822 TOUR (a) through part of France, containing a description of Paris, Cherbourg, and Ermenonville ; with a rhapsody, composed at the tomb of Rousseau : in a series of letters. [By Right Hon. John Charles Villiers/ 8vo. Pp. viii. 323. [Biog. Diet. 1816.’ London,1789 TOUR (a) through part of Virginia in the summer of 1808 ; also some account of the Azores. [By J. Caldwell] 8vo. Pp. 63. [Rich’s Bibl. Amer. ii. 51.] Belfast, 1810 TOUR through parts of England, Scotland and Wales in 1778 ; in a series of letters. [By Richard Joseph Suli- van.] [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1780 The second edition bears the author’s name. TOUR through parts of the United States and Canada. By a British subject [-Beaufoy]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 141. [Rich’s Bibl. A?ner.] London, 1828 TOUR (a) through the Island of Riigen, in the Baltic, 1805. ... By a temporary inhabitant [Johann Jakob Griimbke]. 8vo. Pp. 64. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.]* London, 1807 TOUR (a) through the Isle of Thanet, and some other parts of East Kent, including a particular description of the churches in that extensive district, and copies of monumental inscriptions, etc. [By Zachariah Cozens.] 4to. Pp. 507. [Smith’s Bibl. Cant. p. 315 ; Uficott, i. 437.] London, 1793 TOUR (a) through the Land of the West [United States]. . . . [By N. Smith.] 8vo. [Birm. Ref. Lib.] 1894 TOUR (a) through the South of England, Wales, and part of Ireland, made during the summer of 1791. [By Edward Daniel Clarke, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. xxx. 403. [Mayo’s Bibl. Dors. p. 9.] London, 1793 TOUR (a) through the upper provinces of Hindostan ; comprising a period between the years 1804 and 1814: with remarks and authentic anecdotes : to which is annexed, a guide up the river Ganges, with a map from the source to the mouth. By A. D. [Mrs A. Deare]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1823 TOUR (a) thro’ the whole island of Great Britain, divided into circuits or journies: giving a particular and diverting account of whatever is curious and worth observation. . . . By a gentleman [Daniel Defoe]. 8vo. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe.] London, 1724 Vol. II. I724; Vol. III. 1727. Continued by William Richardson. TOUR (a) through Upper and Lower Canada. By a citizen of the United States [Rev. John Cosens Ogden]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.\ Litchfield, 1799 TOUR (a) to Cheltenham Spa; or, Gloucestershire display’d : containing an account of Cheltenham, its mineral water, public walks, amusements, environs, etc. . . . [By Simeon Moreau.] i2mo. Pp. 173. [Brit. Mus.] Bath, 1783 TOUR to La Vendee in 1835, interspersed with novel and interesting remarks addressed to the judgement, not the prejudices of mankind. [By Alex. Marjoribanks.] i2mo. 1836 An edition of 1837 bears the author’s name and the title, “Tour from modern Athens . . TOUR (a) to the caves in the environs of Ingleborough and Settle, in the West Riding of Yorkshire. . . in a letter to a friend. [By Rev. John Hutton, vicar of Burton in Kendal.] The second edition, with large additions. 8 vo. Pp. 100. [Boyne’s Yorkshire Lib. p. 125.] London, 1781 TOUR (a) to the Rhine, with antiquarian and other notices. [By William George Meredith.] 8vo. Pp. 106. [Martin’s Cat.] London, 1825 TOUR (a) to the sepulchres of Etruria. By Prosper E. Biardot [Miss Elizabeth Caroline Gray]. 8vo. [M. L. Solon’s Ceramic literature, p. 30.] [1840 ?] The second edition, 1841, has the author’s name. TOUR (a) twenty years ago. By “ Umbra” [Charles Cavendish Clifford, M.P.]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] London, 1863 TOURIST’S (the) assistant ; a popular guide to watering places in England and Wales, with a railway key to the Paris exhibition. By Frank Foster, author of Number one; or, the way of the world, etc. [Daniel Puseley]. First annual issue. 8vo. Pp. 234. London, 1867 TOURIST’S (the) companion for Penzance and its neighbourhood. [By John H. Hancock.] i2mo. Pp. 24. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn.] Penzance, 1869 TOURIST’S (the) guide ; being a concise history and description of Ripon, Studley Royal, Fountains Abbey, Markenfield, Brimham Rocks, Hack- fall, and Newby Hall. [By John Richard Walbran.] i2mo. Pp. 106. [Boyne’s Yorkshire Lib. p. 138.] Ripon, 1837 A third edition appeared in 1841, under the title of “ The Harrogate visitor’s pictorial pocket guide to Ripon, Studley, &c.” In 1844, a similar pictorial guide was published, with the author’s name. TOURIST’S (a) guide to Lucknow. . . . By one of the beleaguered garrison [Edward H. Hilton]. Fifth edition. 8vo. [Calc. Imp. Lib.] Lucknow, 1905 TOURIST’S guide to Penzance, St Michael’s Mount, Land’s End. . . . By J. H. H. [John H. Hancock]. i2mo. [Bril. Mus.] Penzance [1875] A later edition of the “New guide to Penzance . . .” TOURMALIN’S time cheques; a farcical extravaganza. By F. Anstey [Thomas Anstey Guthrie]. 8vo. Pp. ii. 172. [Bril. Mus.] Bristol [1891] TOURNAMENT (the); a poem. [By Rev. Luke Aylmer Conolly, B.A., T.C.D.] i2mo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland!] Belfast, 1832 TOURNAY; or, Alaster of Kempen- cairn. By the author of I he fire-eater [James Wilson]. i2mo. Pp. 471. London, 1824 TOURNEY (the) of the thirty-six ; an idyll of the King. [A mock-heroic poem on the election of the first Town Council of Cheltenham. By James Batten Winterbotham.] 8vo. Pp. 4. [Hyett and Bazeley’s Gloucest. Lit.] [Cheltenham] 1876 TOWARDS a new architecture. By Le Corbusier [Charles Edouard Jeanneret]. Translated ... by Frederick Etchells. 8vo. Pp. 289. [Brit. Mus!] London, 1927 TOWARDS democracy. [By Edward Carpenter, M.A.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Manchester, 1883 TOWARDS the sunset; teachings after thirty years. By the author of Recreations of a country parson [Andrew K. H. Boyd, D.D.]. 8vo. [D.N.B. First Supp. vol. 1, p. 245.] London, 1883 TOWARDS Utopia; being speculations in social evolution. By a Free Lance [Frank Hill Perry Coste]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 252. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1894 VOL. VI. T O W E R (the). By “ Watchman ” [Warwick Draper]. 8vo. Pp. 144. London, 1918 A later edition (1919) has the author’s name and a different title, “ The new Britain.” TOWER- (the) bridge: an imperial question. By “Aquarius’’ [Lowis d’Aguilar Jackson]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus!] London, 1878 TOWER (the) menagerie ; natural history of animals in that establishment. [By Edward Turner Bennett.] 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 4, p. 241.] London, 1829 TOWER (the) of Pereemont, and Marianne. By George Sand [Madame A. L. A. Dudevant]. Translated. 8vo. London, 1881 TOWER (the) of Taddeo. [A novel.] By “Ouida” [Louise de la Ramee], 8vo. Pp. 288. London, 1899 TOWER (the) of the Hawk ; some passages in the history of the House of Hapsburg. By the author of Chillon [Miss Jane Louisa Willyams]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 484. [Brit. Mus.] London,1871 TOWER (the) of the Mirrors ; and other essays on the spirit of places. By Vernon Lee [Violet Paget]. 8vo. Pp. 254. London, 1914 TOWN and country. [By Lord Francis Egerton, afterwards Earl of Ellesmere.] 8vo. Pp. 16. London, private print, 1836 TOWN and country sketches. ByAndrew Halliday [Andrew Halliday Duff]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud!] London,1866 TOWN and forest. By the author of Mary Powell [Anne Manning, later Mrs Rathbone]. i2mo. Pp. iv. 286. [Brit. Mus.] London, i860 TOWN (a) eclogue. [By Rev. George William Auriol Hay Drummond.] 8vo. Pp. 33. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1804 TOWN fashions ; or, modern manners delineated, a satirical dialogue ; with James and Mary, a rural tale. [By Hector Macneill.] i2mo. [Rogers’ Mod. Scot. Minst. i. 79.] Edinburgh, 1810 TOWN (a) in its truest glory ; a discourse wherein the state of all our towns is considered. [By Cotton Mather.] i2mo. Pp. 58. [G. Brinley’s Arner. Lib.] Boston, 1712 TOWN (the) lady and the country lass. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 316. London, 1900 E 2 TOWN life. By the author of Liverpool life and Rambles in the Lake district [Hugh Shimmin, journalist]. 8vo. [jBrit. Mus.] Liverpool, 1858 TOWN mice in the country ; a story of holiday adventure. By M. E. Francis [Mrs Mary E. Blundell, nee Sweetman]. 8vo. Pp. 160. London, 1894 TOWN (the) on the hill. [A novel.] By Mrs George Norman [Mrs George Blount]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] TOWN (a) romance. By Carl Swerdna [Catherine March]. [Brit. Mush] London [1890 ?] TOWN Talk, the Fish Pool, the Plebeian, the Old Whig, the Spinster, etc. By the author of The Tatler, Spectator, and Guardian [Joseph Addison]; with notes and illustrations. i2mo. [T.C.D.Lib.] Dublin, 1790 TOWNS and types. By Mark Allerton [William Ernest Cameron, LL.B.]. 8vo. London, 1905 TOWNSMAN’S (the) farm. By “Home Counties” [John W. Robertson Scott]. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 304. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1908 TOWNSHIP (the) of Birkenhead. [By P. Sulley.] 8vo. Pp. 352. [Brit. Mus.] [Birkenhead, 1893] TOXAR ; a novel. By the author of Thoth [Prof. John Shield Nicholson, LL.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1892 TOXIN; a sketch. By “O uida” [Louise de la Ramee]. 8vo. Pp. 184. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1895 TOXOPHILUS; the schole of shoot- inge conteyned in two bookes; to all gentlemen and yomen of Englande, pleasaunte for theyr pastyme to rede and profitable for theyr use to folow, both in war and peace. [By Roger Ascham.] 4to. B. L. Londini, 1545 TRACED and tracked ; or, memories of a city detective. By James M‘Govan [William C. Honeyman]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1884 TRACINGS of men and things. By Trevelyan Turnham, Esq. [James Flamank]. 8vo. Pp. 265. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] London, 1854 TRACK (the) of a storm. By Owen Hall [James Davis, B.A., dramatist]. 8vo. Pp. 288. London, 1895 TRACKED and taken; detective sketches. By Dick Donovan [Joyce E. P. Muddock]. 8vo. Pp. 205. London, 1890 TRACKED down; a novel. By Headon Hill [Francis E. Grainger]. 8vo. London, 1902 TRACKED to doom; the story of a mystery and its unravelling. By Dick Donovan [Joyce E. P. Muddock]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 250. London, 1892 TRACKS we tread. [A novel.] By G. B. Lancaster [Miss Edith Lyttleton]. 8vo. Pp. 310. London, 1907 TRACT (a) against the high rate of usurie; presented to the High Court of Parliament, a.d. 1623. [By Sir Thomas Culpeper, Kt.] 4to. M‘Culloch’s Lit. of Pol. Econ. p. 249.] London,1623 TRACT (a) concerning schisme and schismatiques ; wherein, is briefly discovered the originall causes of all schisme. Written by a learned and judicious divine. Together, with certain animadversions upon some passages thereof. [By John Hales.] 4to. Pp- 33- [-£*• A. B. vol. 24, p. 32.] Oxford, 1642 TRACTentitledTrue and faithful relation of a worthy discourse, between Colonel John Hampden and Colonel Oliver Cromwell; preceded by an explanatory preface. [By George Nugent Temple Grenville, Lord Nugent.] 4to. Pp. viii. 61. London, 1847 A work of fiction purporting to be written by Dr William Spurstowe, but really written by Lord Nugent. TRACT (a) for all time; the Christian or true constitution of man, versus the pernicious fallacies of Mr Combe and other materialistic writers. By Stephen Seedair [Phineas Deseret]. 8vo. Pp. 24. Edinburgh, 1856 TRACT (a) for soldiers. By the author of The faithful promiser, etc. [John Ross Macduff, D.D.]. i2mo. Edinburgh, 1853 TRACT (a) for the times. [By William Penney, Lord Kinloch.] 8vo. Pp. 31. Edinburgh, 1866 TRACT for the times. By a Minister of the Gospel [William L. Roy]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] Brooklyn, 1875 TRACT (a) for the times ; how to keep a horse for less than one shilling a day, and two horses at the expense of one, under the old plan : being hints upon feeding. By F. D. P. [Frederick De Porquet]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1852 TRACT (a) for the times. Is endless punishment true or false? Dialogues between a Calvinist, Arminian, Baxter- ian and Berean. [By John Oakeshott.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Brighton [1848] TRACT (a) on the novel county-rates. Exeter, &c. [By William Holmes.] 8vo. [Davidson’s Bibl. Devon, p. 28.] Exeter, 1800 TRACT (a) upon the dispensing power. [By Daniel Defoe.] 4to. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe.] London, 1687 TRACT (a) upon tomb-stones; or, suggestions for the consideration of persons intending to set up that kind of monument to the memory of deceased friends. By a member of the Lichfield Society for the encouragement of ecclesiastical architecture [Rev. Francis Edward Paget]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 23. London, 1853 TRACTE (a) containing the artes of curious paintinge, caruinge, & build- inge ; written first in Italian by Jo. Paul Lomatius [Lomazzo], painter of Milan, and englished by R. H. [Richard Haydocke], student inPhysik. Fol. [Quaritch’s Cat.] Oxford, 1598 Of the seven books forming the original, only five are contained in this translation. TRACTS and essays ... By Mr Slender [Philip Freneau]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Inii. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1788 TRACTS by Warburton, and a War- burtonian [Richard Hurd]; not admitted into the collections of their respective works. [Edited by Samuel Parr, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. ii. 281. London, 1789 TRACTS [ix] for the Church in 1856. [By Henry Drummond and Nicholas Armstrong.] 8vo. Pp. 121. London, 1856-58 TRACTS for the last days. [By Henry Drummond, M.P.] Vol. I. 8vo. Pp. 400. London, 1844 No more published. The volume consists of 24 tracts, each having a separate title. TRACTS for the present crisis ; first and second series. [By Sir Arthur Hallam Elton.] 8vo. \Brit. Musi] Bristol [1855-56] TRACTS for the times on political subjects. [By Rev. Samuel Nicholson Kingdon, B.D.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1865] Four tracts, each 16 pages. TRACTS for the use of the poor. By Daniel Merdant [Rev. Robert A. Mayow]. 8vo. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn.] 1800 TRACTS on business ... By a citizen of the United States [David Fosdick]. 8vo. New York, 1838 TRACTS on Christian Socialism. [Nos. 1, 3, 7 and 8 by John F. Denison Maurice.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1850] TRACTS on Irish agricultural interests. [By William Hanley.] 4to. TRACTS on practical agriculture and gardening; in which the advantage of imitating the garden culture in the field is fully proved by a seven years course of experiments. ... To which is added, a complete chronological catalogue of English authors on agriculture, gardening, &c. By a country gentleman [Richard Weston]. 8vo. London, 1769 The second edition (1773), enlarged, gives the author’s name. TRACTS on sundry topics of political economy. [By Oliver Putnam.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 156. [Sabin’s Dictionaryi] Boston, 1834 TRACTS on the Church of England. No. 1. The Liturgy. [By Rev. Wm. N. Kingdon, B.D.] 8vo. London [c. i860] No more published. TRACTS on the relative duties of married persons, parents, and servants. By a country clergyman [Edward Berens, Archdeacon of Berks]. i2mo. Oxford, 1820 Each of the tracts has a separate title and pagination. TRACTS relative to botany, translated from different languages. [By C. D. E. Koenig.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1805 TRACTS, written in the years 1823 & 1828. By C. L. Esq. [Chandos Leigh, first Lord Leigh]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 247. \Bodli] Warwick, private print, 1832 TRADE (the) and navigation of Great Britain considered ; shewing that the surest way for a nation to increase in riches is to prevent the importation of such foreign commodities as may be rais’d at home. . . . [By Joshua Gee.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London,1730 TRADE (the) of the future; a hint to the merchants and traders of London . . . and merchants and traders of every class. ... By [Thomas Dick] a citizen of Edinburgh . . . 8vo. London,1850 TRADE prefer’d before religion, and Christ made to give place to Mammon ; reprehended in a sermon relating to the Plantations. . . By the author of The Negroes Advocate [Morgan Godwin]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1685 TRADE (the) to India critically and calmly considered and prov’d to be destructive to the general trade of Great Britain . . . [By Daniel Defoe. ] gvo. [Camb. Hist, of Eng. Lit.] TRADE (the) with France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal, considered; with some observations on the treaty of commerce between Great Britain and France. [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Musi] London, 1713 TRADER Carson. By John Barnett [John Reginald Stagg]. 8vo. Pp. 303. [Brit. Musi] London, 1914 TRADER’S (the) pocket record. . . . By an accountant [Samuel W. Flint]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1886 TRADES (the) increase. [Signed : J. R. i.e. John Roberts.] 4to. Pp. 56. London, 1615 TRADESMAN’S (the) guide to bookkeeping. By a practical man [J. Stuart, journalist]. 8vo. Pp. 59* [Brit. Mus.] London [1896] TRADESMAN’S (the) jewel; or, a safe, easie, speedy, and effectual means for the incredible advancement of trade, and multiplication of riches. [By W. Potter.] 4to. [M‘Culloch’s Lit. of Pol. Econ. p. 159.] London, 1659 TRADESMEN versus salesmen . . . [Signed : S. A. B. i.e. S. A. Bunning.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1881 TRADIDI vobis ; or, the traditionary conveyance of faith cleer’d, in the rational way, against the exceptions of a learned opponent [T. White]. By J. B. [John Belson], Esq. i2mo. [Wi] London, 1662 Published without the author’s consent by S. W., who states in his Epistle to the Reader, that it is an answer to Rushworth’s Dialogues [by T. White]. TRADING; finishing the story of “The house in town,” etc. By the author of The wide wide world, etc. [Susan Warner]. 8vo. Pp. 203—414. London, 1872 TRADITION. By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski.] 8vo. Private print, 1919 TRADITION is no rule now to Christians, either of faith or practice ; being an answer to Dr Brett’s Treatise of tradition. By S. W. [Samuel Walker], A.B. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1721 TRADITIONAL nursery songs of England. By Felix Summerley [Sir Henry Cole]. i2mo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] London, 1846 TRADITIONALL memoyres on the raigne of King James. [By Francis Osborne.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1658 TRADITIONS etc. respecting Sir William Wallace, collected chiefly from publications of a recent date [by Major-General Yuille]. 8vo. Pp. 32. [Bill. Wallasiana, p. 19.] Edinburgh, 1856 TRADITIONS of London, historical and legendary. By “Waters” [William H. C. Russell]. 8vo. London, 1859 TRADITIONS of Palestine ; or, scenes in the Holy Land in the days of Christ. By a Wayfarer [Moses H. Sargent]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1863 TRADITIONS (the) of the Christian Fathers the standard for interpretation of Holy Scripture ; a sermon. . . . By a Presbyter of the diocese [Rev. Charles Jobson Lyon]. 8vo. N.P. 1838 TRADITIONS (the) of the Jews; or, the doctrines and expositions contained in the Talmud and other Rabbinical writings ; with a preliminary preface, or an inquiry into the origin, progress, authority, and usefulness of those traditions . . . [by Rev. John Peter Stehelin, F.R.S.]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Horne’s Introduction, v. 455.] London,1742 Translated from the High Dutch of Dr John Andrew Eisenmenger, professor of Oriental languages in the University of Heidelberg: the preface by Rev. J. P. Stehelin. [ W.] TRAFALGAR ; or, the sailors play. [By William Perry, M.D., of Hillingdon. [N. and Q. 20th December 1856, p. 499.’ Uxbridge, 1807 TRAGE-COMEDY, acted by the late ministry; or, an answer to a scandalous pamphlet, entituPd, A defence of the king. [By John Asgill.] 8vo. Pp. 22. [Bodli] London, n.d. TRAGEDIE (the) of Alceste and Eliza; as it is found in Italian, in La croce racquistata : collected, and translated into English, in the same verse, and number, by Fr. Br. Gent. [Francesco Bracciolini], at the request of the right vertuous lady, the Lady Anne Wingfield. . . . 8vo. No pagination. [Bodli] London, 1638 TRAGEDIE (the) of Antonie. [By Robert Gamier.] Doone into English by the Countess of Pembroke. 8vo. No pagination. London, 1595 TRAGEDIE (the) of Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt [in five acts, and in verse]. By T. M. [Thomas May]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1639 TRAGEDIE (the) of King Richard the second, as it hath beene publikely acted by . . . the Lorde Chamberlaine his servants. [By William Shakespeare.] 4to. London, 1597 TRAGEDIE (the) of Mariam, the fair queene of Jewry; written by that learned, vertuous, and truly noble ladie, E. C. [Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland]. 4to. No pagination. [Brit. Musi] London, 1613 Attributed also to Lady Elizabeth Carew. [Baker’s Biog. Dr ami] TRAGEDIE (the) of Solimon and Perseda ; wherein is laide open, loues constancie, fortunes inconstancie, and deaths triumphs. [By Thomas Kyd.] 4to. No pagination. [Baker’s Biog. Drami] London, 1599 TRAGEDIE (the) of Tancred and Gismund. Compiled by the gentlemen of the Inner Temple. . . . Newly revived and polished ... by R. W. [Robert Wilmot]. 4to. [Greg’s English Plays.] London, 1591 TRAGEDIES and comedies collected into one volume. . . . [By John Marston.] 8vo. London, 1633 Later issues of the same year bear the author’s name. TRAGEDY (a) in marble. [A tale.] By Adam Lilburn [Lillias Wasser- man]. 8vo. Pp. 251. [Brit. Musi] London,1898 Title-page of her “ Road of life.” TRAGEDY (a) in the Imperial Harem at Constantinople. . . . By Leila- Hanoum [Madame Adrienne Piazzi] ; translated from the French with notes by R. E. Colston. 8vo. Pp. v. 299. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1883 TRAGEDY (the) of a throne. By Hildegard Ebenthal [Princess Catherine Radziwill]. 8vo. London, 1917 TRAGEDY (the) of Antigone the Theban Princesse [in five acts, and in verse]. Written by T. M. [Thomas May]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1631 TRAGEDY (the) of Christopher Loue at Tower-hill. By the ingenious author of Iter boreale [Robert Wild, D.D.]. 4to. Pp. 8. [Bodli] London, 1660 TRAGEDY (the) of Chrononhotontho- logus; being the most tragical tragedy that ever was tragediz’d by any company of tragedians. Written by Benjamin Bounce, Esq.1' [Henry Carey]. i2mo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Musi]. Dublin, 1773 TRAGEDY (the) of Count Alarcos. By the author of Vivian Grey [Benjamin Disraeli, later Lord Beaconsfield]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 108. [Brit. Musi] London, 1839 Dedication signed: A TRAGEDY (a) of errors. [A dramatic poem. By Mary Lowell Putnam.] 8vo. Pp. 249. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1862 TRAGEDY (the) of Gray-Beard; or, the brandy botle of Kinkegolaw. . . . [By Alexander Pennecuik.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1700 TRAGEDY (the) of Hoffman ; or, a reuenge for a father, as it hath bin diuers times acted with great applause, at the Phenix in Druery-lane. [By Henry Chettle.] 4to. No pagination. London, 1631 “ This tragedy was written by Henry Chettle, a very voluminous dramaticke author, having written at least as many plays as Shakspeare, either solely or with the assistance of other men. See the titles of 38 of his pieces in my Shakspeare, vol. I. P. II. p. 308 & seq. The tragedy of Hoffman was first acted in Jany 1602-3. Of all his dramas this only, and Patient Grissel and The blind beggar of Bethnal Green remain. In the former he was assisted by Thos. Dekker and Wm. Haugh- ton, in the latter by John Day. Chettle was a stationer. Since this was written I have observed that he likewise wrote the Second Part of Robert Earl of Huntingdon, in conjunction with Anthony Mundy, and the Valiant Welchman in conjunction with Drayton and Haughton: both which are extant.”—MS. note by Malone. TRAGEDY (the) of Judas Iscariot ; a modern drama in a prologue and five acts. By Gregorio d’Arci [F. Tavani]. 8vo. Pp. 72. [Brit. Mus. Amersham [1926’ TRAGEDY (the) of Julia Agrippina, Empresse of Rome. By T. M. Esq. Thomas May]. i2mo. No pagination. Baker’s Biog. Drarni] London, 1639 TRAGEDY (the) of King Lear, as lately published, vindicated. [By Charles Jennins or Jennens.] 8vo. Pp. 42. [Wilson’s Shaksperiana, 62.] N.P. [1772] No title-page. TRAGEDY (the) of King Richard the third ; containing his treacherous plots against his brother Clarence. ... As it hath bene lately acted by the . . . Lord Chamberlaine his servants. ^By William Shakespeare.] 4to. Brit. Musi] London, 1597 TRAGEDY (the) of King Saul ; written by a deceas’d person of honour, and now made publick at the request of several men of quality who have highly approv’ of it. [By Joseph Trapp.] 4to. Pp. 67. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 336.] London, 1703 The author’s name appears in the i2mo. edition published in 1739- TRAGEDY (the) of Mustapha. [By Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke.] 4to. [Bod/.] London, 1609 “ This is the first edition. It was printed without the author’s knowledge. There is a second in folio, printed in 1633.” —M [alone]. TRAGEDY (the) of Nero newly written. 4to. London, 1633 Wrongly attributed to Matthew Gwinne, who wrote a Latin play with that title. TRAGEDY (the) of pardon. Diane. [Two plays.] By the author of Borgia [Michael Field, i.e. K. H. Bradley and E. E. Cooper]. 8vo. Pp. 251. [Brit. Mas.] London, 1911 TRAGEDY of success. [By Mary Lowell Putnam.] 8vo. Pp. 191. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] Boston, 1862 TRAGEDY (the) of that famous Roman oratour Marcus Tullius Cicero. [By Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke.] 4to. No pagination. [Bodl.] London, 1651 TRAGEDY (the) of the Great Emerald. [A novel.] By Weatherby Chesney [Charles J. Cutcliffe Hyne]. 8vo. Pp. 316. London, 1904 TRAGEDY (the) of Thierry King of France, and his brother Theodoret ; as it was diuerse times acted at the Blacke-Friers by the Kings Majesties seruants. [By Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher.] 4to. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1621 TRAGEDY (the) of tragedies ; or, the life and death of Tom Thumb the great: as it is acted at the theatre in the Hay-Market, with the annotations of H. Scriblerus Secundus. [By Henry Fielding.] The third edition. 8vo. Pp. 6, 54. London, 1737 The title of an earlier edition (1730) is : “ Tom Thumb, a tragedy . . TRAGEDY (the) of Wild River Valley. By Martha Farquharson [Martha Finlay]. 8vo. Pp. 231. New York [1893] TRAGIC (a) contract. [A novel.] By Mount Houmas [Mrs Gill]. 8vo. London, 1903 TRAGIC dramas from Scottish history. Heselrig. Wallace. (Second edition.) James the First of Scotland. [By Robert Buchanan, M.A., professor of logic in the University of Glasgow.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 233. Edinburgh, 1859 Another edition (with additional dramas) appeared in 1868, in two volumes, with the title, “ Tragic dramas from history with legendary and other poems,” and with the author’s name. TRAGIC (a) honeymoon. By Alan St Aubyn [Frances Marshall]. 8vo. London,1902 TRAGIC (the) Mary ; a tragedy in five acts [in prose and verse]. By Michael Field [Miss Katherine H. Bradley and Miss Edith Emma Cooper]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 261. [Brit. Mas.] London,1890 TRAGIC (the) Muse ; a poem addressed to Mrs Siddons. [Dedication signed: W. R. i.e. William Russell, LL.D.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1783 TRAGIC romances. By Fiona Macleod [William Sharp]. 8vo. London, 1903 TRAGICAL (the) history of two English louers, 1563, written by Ber. Gar. [Bernard Garter]. 8vo. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] [London] 1565 TRAGICALL (a) historie of the troubles and civile warres of the Lowe Countries, otherwise called Flanders ; by-Theophile : translated out of French into Englishe by T. S. [Thomas Stocker]. 4to. B. L. [Christie- Miller Cat.] London, N.D. TRAGI CALL (the) history of D. Faustus; as it hath bene acted by the . . . Earl of Nottingham his seruants. Written by Ch. Marl. [Christopher Marlowe]. 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 36, p. 183.] London,1604 The edition of 1609 has the title : “The tragicall history of the horrible life and death of Doctor Faustus.” TRAGI-COMICALL (a) history of our times under the borrowed names of Lisander and Calista. [Translated by William Duncombe from the French of Vital d’Audiguier.] Fol. London,1627 Wrongly attributed to G. de Costa. TRAGIDIE (the) of Ferrex and Porrex, set forth without addition or alteration but altogether as the same was shewed on stage before the Queenes Maiestie, about nine yeares past, viz. the xviij. day of Ianuarie, 1561. By the gentlemen of the Inner Temple. [By Thomas Norton.] 8vo. B. L. No pagination. London, N.D. The two last acts by Thomas Sackville, Lord Buckhurst. TRAIL (the) of adventure. By Ben Bolt [Rev. Ottwell Binns]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1923 TRAIL (the) of fear. By Anthony Armstrong [George Anthony Armstrong Willis]. 8vo. Pp. 310. [Brit. Musi] Philadelphia [1927] The English edition bears the title “Jimmy Rezaire.” TRAIL (the) of the barbarians ; being “ L’outrage des barbares.” By Pierre Loti [M. Julien Viaud, Captain in the French Navy]. Translated by Ford Max Hueffer. 8vo. Pp. 30. London, 1918 TRAIL (the) of the Sandhill stag. By E. Seton-Thompson [Ernest Thompson Seton]. i2mo. Pp. 94. London, 1899 TRAIL (the) of the serpent. [A novel.] By the author of Lady Audley’s secret [Mary E. Braddon, later Mrs John Maxwell]. 8vo. London, 1892 TRAIL i(the) of the white mule. [A novel.] By B. M. Bowen [Bertha M. Sinclair]. 8vo. London, 1923 TRAIL-HUNTER (the) ; a tale of the Far West. By Gustave Aimard [Olivier Gloux]. Translated from the French by Sir Frederick C. Lascelles Wraxall. 8vo. London [1879] TRAINING in tracking. By Gilcraft [F. Gidney and George Moore]. 8vo. Pp. 190. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 TRAITOR (the) to him = self, or mans heart his greatest enemy; a moral interlude in heroic verse, representing, the earless, hardned, returning, despairing, renewed heart; with inter- maskes of interpretation at the close of each several act: as it was acted by the boys of a publick school at a breaking up, and published as it may be useful, on like occasion. [By William Johns.] 4to. Pp. 43. [.Bodl.] Oxford, 1678 TRAITOR’S (a) escape ; a story of the attempt to seize Benedict Arnold after he had fled to New York. By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. Pp. 234. New York [1898] TRAITOR’S (a) wooing. [A novel.] By Headon Hill [Francis E. Grainger]. 8vo. Pp. 304. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1909 TRAITS and anecdotes of animals. By William White Cooper.] 8vo. Brit. Mus.] London, 1861 Another edition of “ Zoological notes and anecdotes.” TRAITS and scenes of Scottish life, and pictures of scenes and character. [By William Bennet.] Second edition. 8vo. 3 vols. [Mitchell and Cash’s Scot. Topog.] London, 1832 TRAITS and stories of the Irish peasantry; second series. [By William Carleton.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1833 TRAITS and trials of early life. By L. E. L. author of The improvisatrice, etc. [Letitia Elizabeth Landon, later TRAITS of American humour, by native authors ; edited and adapted by the author of Sain Slick, etc. [Thomas Chandler Haliburton]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1852 TRAITS of character, pursuits, manners, etc., manifested by the inhabitants of the North-eastern States. By Uncle Daniel [Anson Wrifford]. 8vo. Portland, Maine, 1837 TRAITS of character ; twenty-five years’ literary and personal recollections. By a contemporary [Miss Eliza Rennie]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Courtney’s Secrets, p. 65.] London, i860 TRAITS of private life. By L. A. [Louisa Anthony]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 364. [A7, and Q. Feb. 1869, p. 169.] London, 1844 TRAITS of the aborigines of America ; a poem. [By Mrs Lydia Sigourney, ne'e Huntley.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Cambridge [Mass.] 1822 TRAITS of the Tea Party; being a memoir of G. R. T. Hewes, one of the last of its survivors : with a history of that transaction, reminiscences of the massacre, and the siege, and other stories of old times. By a Bostonian [Benjamin Bussey Thatcher], i2mo. Pp. 265. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 38.] New York, 1835 TRAITS of travel ; or, tales of men and cities. By the author of High-ways and by-ways [Thomas C. Grattan]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1829 TRAMP (a) abroad. By Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1880 TRAMPING with tramps; studies and sketches of vagabond life. By Josiah Flynt [Josiah Flynt Willard]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1899 TRANCE (a) ; or, newes from hell, brought fresh to towne. By Mer- curius Acheronticus [James Howell]. 4to. Pp. 19. [Bodl.] London, 1649 TRANSACTIONEER (the) ; with some of his philosophical fancies, in two dialogues. [By William King, LL.D.] [Gent. Mag. xlvi. 465.] 17°° TRANSACTIONS in India, from the commencement of the French war in seventeen hundred and fifty-six, to the conclusion of the late peace, in seventeen hundred and eighty-three. . . . ^By John Moir?] 8vo. Pp. 505. Catalogue of Authors, 1788.] London, 1786 TRANSACTIONS of the Loggerville Literary Society. [By William Sandys, F.S.A.] 8vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] TRANSALPINE memoirs ; or, anecdotes and observations, shewing the actual state of Italy and the Italians. By an English Catholic [John Richard Digby Beste]. i2mo. 2vols. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, ii. 525.] Bath, 1826 TRANSATLANTIC rambles ; or, twelve months’ travel in the United States, Cuba, and the Brazils. By a Rugbsean [-Dixon]. i2mo. London, 1851 TRANSATLANTIC sketches. By Porte-plume [W. M. Harding]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.\ New York, 1870 TRANSCENDENT and multiplied rebellion and treason, discovered by the laws of the land. [By Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 28, p. 388.] London, 1645 TRANSCENDENTAL magic; its doctrine and ritual. By Eliphas Levi [the Abbe Alphonse Louis Constant] ; translated by A. E. Waite. 8vo. [F. L. Gardner’s Rosicrucian Books, p. 43.] London, 1896 TRANSCRIPT (the) ; also the memorial, and other poems. [By William Ball.] i2mo. Pp. viii. 288. Private print [1853] An edition of 1855 gives the author’s name. TRANSCRIPT pieces. By Reynard [Frank Foxcroft]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] 8vo. North Adams, Mass., 1856 TRANSFORMATION (a) in bookkeeping. “Cantab’s” [W. P. Hollis’s] loose-leaf system of accounts. 8vo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Musi] Cambridge [1917] TRANSFORMATIONS. By Max Adeler [Charles Heber Clark]. . . . 8vo. Pp. vi. 122. [Brit. Musi] London [1883] TRANSFORMED. By Faye Hunting- ton [Mrs Isabella H. Foster]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Boston, 1886 TRANSFORMED Hinduism. By the author of God the beautiful [Emil P. Berg]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1908 TRANSIENT (the) and permanent in religion. [Ten essays edited by W. C. B. i.e. William Copeland Bowie.] 8vo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Musi] London, 1908 TRANSITION. [A novel.] By the author of A superfluous woman [Emma Frances Brooke]. 8vo. Pp. 330. [Bond. TRANSITION (the) between the Christian and Millennial dispensations. a.d. 1848 proved to be a.m. 6000 ! [By Louis Albert du Puget.] 8vo. Pp. 46. [Bodli] London, 1852 Signed : L. A. du P. TRANSITION (the); the Bible and science : can the veiled or allegoric portions of our Scriptures be interpreted by modern science ? By “ Rejected” [C. Inglis, M.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 54. London, 1892 TRANSITION of Masonry. By Kru- Cha [Charles Henry Kruse]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Petersburg, Va., 1910 TRANSLATION from the Italian of Fortiguerri of the first canto of Ricciardetto ; with an introduction concerning the principal romantic, burlesque and mock heroic poets. [Translated by Sylvester Douglas, Lord Glenbervie.] i2mo. London, private print, 1821 Reprinted with the translator’s name in 1822. TRANSLATION (a) of a charter granted to the city of Exeter by K. Charles I. By a citizen of Exeter [William Holmes]. 4to. Pp. xii. 78. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] [Exeter] 1785 TRANSLATION of a comparative vocabulary, of the Chinese, Corean, and Japanese languages. . . . By Philo-Sinensis [Walter Henry Med- hurst]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Batavia, 1835 TRANSLATION of a fragment of the eighteenth book of Polybius, found in the Monastery of Ste Laure on Mount Athos, by the Count D’. [D’Antraigues, —but rather written by him], 8vo. London, 1806 A satire on the King of Prussia for his conduct after the Battle of Austerlitz. TRANSLATION of a passage in a late pamphlet of Mallet du Pan, intitled “ Correspondance politique.” [By Francis Maseres.J 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 36, p. 409.] London, 1796 * TRANSLATION (the) of bishops. [By Samuel Roffey Maitland, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1834 TRANSLATION (a) of chapters 273 and 287 of the Consolato del Mare, relating to Prize Law. [By Sir Christopher Robinson, Admiralty Lawyer.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 49, p. 5.] TRANSLATION (a) of Dante ; Arnaldo, Gaddo, and other unacknowledged poems of Lord Byron. By Odoardo Volpi [Edward W. Shannon, Irish journalist]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Irelandi] London, 1836 TRANSLATION of divers parts of the Holy Scriptures, chiefly from Dr Mill’s printed Greek copy, with notes and maps. [By-Mortimer.] 8vo. [Leslie’s Cat. 1843.] London, 1761 TRANSLATION (a) of the fifth Canto of Dante’s Inferno, and of the entire scene and narrative of Hugolino. [Signed: H. C. J. i.e. Henry Constantine Jennings.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [Taunton? 1798] TRANSLATION of the first seven books of Homer’s Odyssey [by Charles Lloyd]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Birmingham, 1810 TRANSLATION (a) of the Latin epistle in the Dreamer. [By William King, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 28. [Bodl.] London, 1754 TRANSLATION of the letters of a Hindoo Rajah. By [Miss] Elizabeth Hamilton [who really wrote them]. Fifth edition. i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1811 TRANSLATION (a) of the New Testament from the original Greek, humbly attempted by Nathaniel Scarlett, assisted by men of piety and literature, with notes. [Revised by William Vidler.] i2mo. [Whitley’s Baft. Bibl.] London, 1798 TRANSLATION (a) of the passages from Greek, Latin, Italian, and French writers, quoted in the prefaces and notes to the Pursuits of literature ; a poem, in four dialogues. To which is prefixed, a prefatory epistle, intended as a general vindication of the Pursuits of literature, from various remarks which have been made upon that work. By the translator [Thomas James Mathias]. 8vo. Pp. lxxv. 104. London, 1798 TRANSLATION (a) of the several charters &c. granted by Edward IV., Henry VII, James I and Charles II to the citizens of Canterbury ; also a list of the bailiffs and mayors, from the year 780 to the present period. By a citizen [Alderman Cyprian Rondeau Bunce]. 8vo. [W.] Canterbury, 1791 TRANSLATION (a) of the twenty- fourth book of the Iliad of Homer. 'By Charles Lloyd, poet.] 8vo. Pp. 35. TRANSLATIONS. By C. C. [Charles Chorley, newspaper editor]. 8vo. Pp. 31. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn.] Truro, 1866 TRANSLATIONS and imitations, and a few other verses. [By John Cam Hobhouse, Lord Broughton.] 8vo. Private print [1856] TRANSLATIONS and poems. [By Sir Edward Hall Alderson.] i2mo. Pp. 42. [Wi] London, 1846 Not published. TRANSLATION S and sketches of biography. ... By a lady [Louisa Minshull]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1839 TRANSLATIONS chiefly from the Greek anthology, with tales and miscellaneous poems. [By Robert Bland, and J. H. Merivale.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1806 TRANSLATIONS chiefly from the Italian of Petrarch and Metastasio. By******* M.A., Fellow of New College [Thomas Le Mesurier, B.D.]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 127. [Bodl.] Oxford, 1795 TRANSLATIONS (found in a commonplace book). [By Maurice Baring]. Edited by S. C. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1916 TRANSLATIONS from Camoens, and other poets, with original poetry. By the author of Modern Greece and the Restoration of the works of art to Italy [Felicia Hemans]. 8vo. Pp. 95. Oxford, 1818 TRANSLATIONS from the German, in prose and verse. [By Ellis Cornelia Knight.] i2mo. Pp. 112. [Martin’s Cat.] Windsor, 1812 TRANSLATIONS from the Norse [of Henrik Ibsen and Petter Dass]. By a B. S. S. [Andrew Johnston]. i2mo. Gloucester, private print [c. 1877] Presentation copy from the author. TRANSLATIONS, imitations, etc., etc. By the author of Ireland, a satire [Rose Lambart Price]. i2mo. Pp. 8, 179. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. ii. 527.] London, 1824 TRANSLATIONS inverse. Mr Pope’s Messiah, Mr Philips’s Splendid shilling in Latin; the eighth Isthmian of Pindar in English. [By Thomas Tyr- whitt.] 4to. Pp. 21. [Dyce Cat. ii. 379.] Oxford, 1752 TRANSLATIONS into English verse from the [Welsh] poems of Davyth ap Gwilym. By “ Maelog ” [Arthur James Johnes]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] TRANSLATIONS into Latin and Greek verse, from Milton, Shakespeare, Burns, George Eliot, Gray, Tennyson, Wordsworth, Goethe, Shelley, etc. [By Hugh Andrew Johnstone Munro.] 4to. 1884 Reprinted in 1906 with the author’s name. TRANSLATIONS into verse from comedies of Moliere and Casimir Delavigne ; preceded by a cursory view of French dramatic literature. To which are added original poems. ... By E. F. [Edward Fitzgerald]. i2mo. Pp. iv. 103. [Ashley Library.] Paris, 1829 TRANSLATIONS of German poems, extracted from the musical publications of the author of the German Erato [B. Beresford]. 8vo. \_Brit. Musi] Berlin, 1801 TRANSLATIONS of the Oxford and Cambridge Latin prize poems ; second series. [By Nicholas Lee Forre.] i2mo. Oxford, 1833 TRANSLATIONS of two passages of the Iliad, and of a fragment of Kal- linos. [By Edward Craven Hawtrey.] 4to. Pp. iv. 15. [Dobell’s Priv. Prints, p. 181.] N.P. 1843 TRANSNATURAL philosophy, or metaphysicks ; demonstrating the essences and operations of all beings whatever, which gives the principles to all other sciences. ... By J. S. [John Sergeant]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1700 TRANSPORT (a) voyage to the Mauritius and back, touching at the Cape of Good Hope and St Helena. By the author of Paddiana, etc. [Dr Adam Blenkinsop]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 303. [Mendelssohn’s South African Bibl. i. 1377.] London, 1851 TRANSPROSER (the) rehears’d ; or, the fifth act of [Dryden] Mr Bayes’s play : being a postscript to the Animadversions on the preface to Bishop Bramhall’s Vindication, &c., shewing what grounds there are of fears and jealousies of Popery. [By Richard Leigh, of Queen’s College, Oxford.] 8vo. Pp. 149. Oxford, 1673 TRANSUBSTANTIATION a peculiar article of the Roman Catholick faith, which was never own’d by the ancient Church or any of the reform’d Churches, in answer to a late discourse call’d, Reasons for abrogating the test. [By Thomas Goodwin.] 4to. Pp. 48. [Queen's Coll. Lib. p. 241.] TRANSUBSTANTIATION contrary to Scripture ; or, the Protestant’s answer to the Seeker’s request. [By Robert Nelson.] 4to. Pp. 24. [Jones’ Peck, ii. 364.] London, 1688 TRANSUBSTANTIATION defended and prov’d from Scripture, in answer to the first part of a treatise [by John Tillotson], intitled, A discourse against transubstantiation. [By John Gother.] 4to. Pp. xxii. 64. [Jones’ Peck, ii. 389.] London, 1687 TRANSUBSTANTIATIONnodoctrine of the primitive Fathers ; being a defence of the Dublin letter herein, against the Papist misrepresented and represented, part 2, cap. 3. [By John Patrick, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 72. [Jones’ Peck, i. 108.] London, 1687 TRANSVAAL (the) Boers ; a historical sketch. By Africanus [Sir Malcolm Cotter Cariston]. 8vo. Pp. xv. 158. [Brit. ALus.] London, 1899 TRANSVAAL (the) in 1876; notes made by a resident in the Republic previous to the annexation; with extracts from the diary of the Hon. William Napier. ... By D. M. D. [Sir Drummond Miles Dunbar]. 8vo. Pp. 74. [Mendelssohn’s South African Bibl. i. 493.] Grahamstown, 1881 TRAP (the). [A novel.] By Dick Donovan [Joyce Emerson Preston Muddock]. 8vo. Pp. 320. London, 1911 TRAP (a) to catch a sunbeam. By the author of Old Jolliffe, etc. [Mrs Mackarness nee Matilda Anne Planche]. i2mo. London, 1859 TRAPPER’S (the) daughter ; a story of the Rocky Mountains. By Gustave Aimard [Olivier Gloux ; translated from the French by Sir F. C. L. Wraxall]. 8vo. London [1878] TRAPPERS (the) of Arkansas ; a narrative. ... By Gustave Aimard [Olivier Gloux]. 8vo. London, 1876 TRASH, dedicated without respect to James Halse, Esq., M.P. [By Winthrop Mackworth Praed.] i2mo. Pp. iv. 31. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. i. 204.] Penzance, 1833 TRAULUS ; the first part: in a dialogue between Tom and Robin. [By Jonathan Swift.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Camb. Hist, of Eng. Liti\ Dublin, 1730 TRAVAILES (the) of an Englishman ; containing his sundrie calamities in- dured by the space of twentie and odd yeres in his absence from his native countrie. ... By I. H. [Job Hortop]. 4to. [Christie-Miller Cat.\ TRAVAILES (the) of the three English brothers, Sir Thomas Sir Anthony Mr Robert Shirley ; an historical play : as it is now play’d by her maiesties seruants. [By John Day.] 4to. No pagination. London, 1607 “ The authors, John Day, William Rowley, and George Wilkins, according to Kirkman.” —MS. note by Malone in the Bodleian copy. TRAVAIGLED (the) pylgrime, bringing newes from all partes of the worlde. ... [By Stephen Bateman.] 4to. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1569 An allegorical romance, in verse. TRAVEL pictures. By Israfel [Miss -Hudson]. London, 1904 TRAVELLER (a) returns ; a play in one act. By Clemence Dane [Winifred Ashton]. 8vo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] TRAVELLERS (the) ; a tale, designed for young people. By the author of Redwood [Catherine Maria Sedgwick]. i2mo. Pp. 202. [Bodl.\ London, 1825 TRAVELLER’S (the) breviat ; or, an historicall description of the most famous kingdomes in the world [being part of Le relationi universali by Giovanni Botero]. Translated into English [by Robert Johnson]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1601 Later editions, with variant titles: “The world, or an historical description . . “An historicall description . . .”, “Relations of the most famous kingdoms and commonweales thorough the world . . .” bear the author’s name. TRAVELLER’S (the) classical guide through France. . . . By J. B. Richard [J. M. V. Audin]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Paris, 1844 TRAVELLER’S (a) diary. [By Daniel Puseley.] 8vo. London, 1854 TRAVELLER’S (the) dream, and other poems. By Henrietta, authoress of Poetical pieces on religion and nature [Henrietta Nethercott]. i2mo. Pp. 192. Dublin, 1858 TRAVELLER’S (the) guide in Switzerland ; being a complete picture of that interesting country, describing every object of curiosity, and containing sketches of the manners, society and customs of its respective cantons. . . . By Henry Coxe, Esq. author of The picture of Italy [John Millard]. i2mo. f W] London, 1816 TRAVELLER’S (the) guide ; or, a topographical description of Scotland and of the islands belonging to it : with maps and illustrations. [By Rev. Joseph Robertson.] 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] Edinburgh, 1798 Many editions followed, enlarged and improved, with varying titles. TRAVELLER’S (the) guide to Madeira and the West Indies ; being a hieroglyphic representation of appearances and incidents during a voyage out and homewards, in a series of engravings. ... To which are added Occasional notes, etc. By a young traveller [George Miller, jun., bookseller]. 8vo. Pp. 120. [Couper’s Millers of Haddington, p. 265.] Haddington [1800?] TRAVELLER’S (the) handbook to Copenhagen and its environs. By Anglicanus [Robert Stephenson Ellis]. 8vo. [Edin. Univ. Lib.] London, 1853 TRAVELLERS in,search of truth. By the author of The antidote to the miseries of human life, etc. [Harriet Corp]. i2mo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London,1849 TRAVELLERS’ tales retold. By Theta [Julia Hyde]. i2mo. London, i860 TRAVELLING anecdotes through various parts of Europe. [By James Douglas.] 8vo. [Gent. Mag. Dec. 1819, p. 564.] Rochester, 1782 TRAVELLING (the) companions ; a story in scenes, reprinted from Punch. By F. Anstey [Thomas Anstey Guthrie]. 4to. London, 1892 TRAVELLING (the) menagerie. . . . By Charles Camden [Richard Rowe, journalist]. 8vo. London, 1873 TRAVELLING notes in France, Italy and Switzerland of an invalid in search of health. [By John Strang, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. xix. 266. Glasgow, 1863 Appeared originally in the Glasgow Herald. TRAVELLING sketches in Egypt and Sinai, including a visit to Mount Horeb . . . translated, corrected and abridged from the French of A. Dumas, by a Bible student [William Cooke Taylor]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1839 Signed : W. C. T. TRAVELS. By “Umbra” [Charles Cavendish Clifford] ; being a tour in Iceland twenty years ago. . . . 8vo. Pp. vi. 278. Edinburgh, 1865 TRAVELS (the) and adventures of Edward Brown, formerly a merchant in London ; containing his observations on France and Italy, his voyage to the Levant, his account of the Isle of Malta, etc., etc. [By John Campbell, LL.D.] 8vo. [Brit. Musk] London,1739 TRAVELS (the) and adventures of James Massey [Jacques Masse] ; translated from the French [of S. Tyssot de Patot, by S. Whatley]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1733 The French original is attributed also to Pierre Bayle. Another edition of the translation appeared in 1823. TRAVELS and adventures of John Ledyard. [By Jared Sparks.] 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] London, 1834 TRAVELS and adventures of little Baron Trump and his wonderful dog Bulger. By Irwin Longman [Ingersoll Lock- wood]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1890 TRAVELS (the) and adventures of Mademoiselle de Richelieu. . . . Done into English ... by the translator of the Memoirs and adventures of the Marques of Bretagne a?id Duke of Harcourt [- Erskine. A novel]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musk] London, 1744 TRAVELS (the) and observations of Hareach, the wandering Jew; comprehending a view of the most distinguished events in the history of mankind since the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus. . . . Second edition, revised and improved, with many valuable additions. By the Rev. T. Clark, author of A tour of Europe [John Galt]. i2mo. Pp. xviii. 424. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, N.D. Preface dated Chelsea ; September, 1820. TRAVELS (the) and surprising adventures of Baron Munchausen. . . . [By Rudolph Eric Raspe.] 8vo. London, 1859 [1858] For the titles of other editions, see the note in Vol. I. p. 177- TRAVELS and tales in verse. [By John Charles Bristow.] 8vo. Pp. xix. 474. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1841 TRAVELS and trials of a Dominie. By “Amuena” [Alexander Malcolm, teacher in Bower]. 8vo. London, 1874 TRAVELS at home, and voyages by the fire-side ; for the instruction and entertainment of young persons. [By Charles Lloyd, LL.D.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Mon. Rev. lxxiii. 437.] London, 1814 TRAVELS, by sea and land, of Alethitheras [Laughton Osborn]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] New York, 1868 TRAVELS for the heart, written in France. By Courtney Melmoth Samuel Jackson Pratt]. 8vo. 2 vols. Brit. Musk] London, 1777 TRAVELS from Paris through Switzerland and Italy in 1801-02 ; with sketches of manners and characters. By a native of Pennsylvania [Joseph Sansom]. 8vo. Pp. 280. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1808 This work appeared in 1805 under a different title—“ Letters from Europe, during a tour through Switzerland and Italy.” TRAVELS from the Cape of Good Hope into the interior parts of Africa, including many interesting anecdotes. . . . Translated from the French of Monsieur [Francois Le] Vaillant [by Elizabeth Holme]. Second edition. 8vo. 2 vols. [Manch. Free Lib.] London, 1791 TRAVELS in Algiers, Spain, etc. ; with a faithful . . . account of the Algerines, etc. [By Mrs Sophia Barnard.] 8vo. [Brit. Musk] London [1820] TRAVELS in America. By the exbarber to His Majesty the King of Great Britain [Asa Greene]. 8vo. [Cushing’s I?iit. a?idPseud.] New York, 1833 TRAVELS in America ; observations on life and manners in the Free and Slave States. By an Englishman [John Benwell]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] London, 1853 TRAVELS in Australasia. By Wan- danian [R. A. Dyott]. 8vo. [Birm. Cent. Lib.] London, 1912 TRAVELS in Europe, Asia, and Africa ; describing characters, customs, manners, laws, and productions of nature and art ; containing various remarks on the political and commercial interests of Great Britain. . . . [By William Thomson.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 56, p. 275.] London, 1782 TRAVELS in France, during the years 1814-15 ; comprising a residence at Paris during the stay of the allied armies, and at Aix, at the period of the landing of Bonaparte. [By Sir Archibald Alison, Bart., and Patrick Fraser Tytler.] Second edition, corrected and enlarged. 8vo. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1816 The first edition was published in 1815. TRAVELS in Great Britain. [By John Henry Manners, fifth Duke of Rutland : with engravings from drawings by the Duchess of Rutland.] 8vo. 3 vols. \Brit. Mus.] London, private print, 1805 See also “ Three years travels . . TRAVELS in North America. . . . [By George Philips.] i2mo. \Brit. Musi] Dublin, 1824 TRAVELS in North America in the years 1780, 1781 and 1782; by the Marquis De Chastellux: translated from the French by an English Gentleman [J. Kent]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] London, 1787 TRAVELS in Phrenologasto. By Gio. Battista Balscopo ; translated from the Italian. [Written by John Trotter, jun.] 8vo. \Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1829 Attributed also to Alexander Trotter. TRAVELS in Portugal. By John Latouche [Oswald John Frederick Crawfurd, H.B.M. Consul at Oporto, who wrote also in the New Quarterly Magazine under the name of John Dangerfield]. With illustrations by the Right Hon. T. Sotheron Estcourt. 8vo. Pp. xii. 354. [Lib. Journ. iii. 76 ; Athenceum, May 26, 1877, p. 672.] London [1875] TRAVELS in Scotland. By J. G. Kohl; translated from the German ; with notes by the translator [John Kesson]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1844 TRAVELS in Scotland, by an unusual route ; with a trip to the Hebrides : containing hints for improvements in agriculture and commerce. ... By the Rev. James Hall, A.M. [William Thomson, LL.D.]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1807 TRAVELS in the Pyrenees, including Andorra and the coast from Barcelona to Carcassonne. By Odysseus [V. C. Scott O’Connor]. 8vo. \_Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1913 TRAVELS in the Western Hebrides, from 1782 to 1790. By the Rev. George Lane Buchanan, A.M., missionary minister to the Isles from the Church of Scotland. [By William Thomson, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. 251. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit. ; Mon. Rev. xii. 154-] London, 1793 TRAVELS in town. By the author of Random recollections of the Lords and Commons, etc. [James Grant]. i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1839 VOL. VI. TRAVELS into Norway, Denmark, and Sweden. By Andrew Swinton [Rev. William Thomson, LL.D.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 56, p. 275.] London, 1792 TRAVELS into several remote nations of the world, in four parts. By Lemuel Gulliver, first a surgeon, and then a captain of several ships. [By Jonathan Swift, D.D.] Second edition. To which are prefixed, several copies of verses explanatory and commendatory ; never before printed. 8vo. 3 vols. \Camb. Hist, of Eng. Lit.] London, 1727 TRAVELS of Ali Bey [Domingo Badia y Leblich] in Morocco, Tripoli, Cyprus, Egypt, Arabia, Syria, and Turkey, between the years 1803 and 1807. Written by himself, and illustrated by maps and numerous plates. 4to. 2 vols. London, 1816 TRAVELS of an Irish gentleman in search of a religion ; with notes and illustrations by the editor of Captain Rock’s memoirs [Thomas Moore]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1833 See, a “ Reply to the travels . . .” [by Bp. John W. Kaye] ; and “Second travels of an Irish gentleman . . .” [by Joseph Blanco White]. TRAVELS (the) of Cyllenius. [A poem. By Charles Dickinson.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1796 The title of an edition, also anonymous, issued in 1820, is “ Cyllenius : a poem.” TRAVELS (the) of Edward Brown, Esq., formerly a merchant in London : containing his observations on France and Italy ; his voyage to the Levant ; his account of the Island of Malta ; his remarks in his journies through the Lower and Upper Egypt. . . . [By John Campbell, LL.D.] i2mo. 2 vols. [N. and Q. 1923, p. 356.] London, 1753 The first edition appeared in 1739, with the title “ Travels and adventures of Edward Brown . . .” q.v. TRAVELS (the) of ex-barber Fribbleton. [By Asa Greene.] 8vo. [Cushing’s /nit. and Pseud.] New York, 1835 TRAVELS of Lady Hester Stanhope, forming the completion of her Memoirs, narrated by her Physician [Dr Charles Lewis Meryon]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1845 TRAVELS of my night-cap ; or, reveries in rhyme : with scenes at the Congress of Verona. By the author of My notebook [Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges]. i2mo. London, 1825 F TRAVELS (the) of Persiles and Sigis- munda ; a Northern history : wherein, amongst the variable fortunes of the Prince of Thule, and this Princesse of Frisland, are interlaced many witty discourses, morall, politicall, and delightfull; the first copie, beeing written in Spanish [by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra], translated afterward into French ; and now last into English. 4to. Pp. 399. [Quaritch’s Cat.] London, 1619 Epistle dedicatory signed: M. L. TRAVELS (the) of Sylvester Tramper in Africa. [By George Walker, bookseller in London.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1813 TRAVELS (the) of the imagination ; a true journey from Newcastle to London, in a stage-coach: with observations upon the metropolis. By J. M. [Rev. James Murray]. i2mo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1783 TRAVELS of the late Duke du Chatelet in Portugal, with notes by J. F. Bour- doing. [By -- Cormartin, one of the Vendean chiefs.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1809 TRAVELS (the) of Theodore Ducas in various countries in Europe at the revival of letters and art ; edited [or rather written] by Charles Mills. Part the first: Italy. 8vo. 2 vols. [D.N.B. vol. 37, p. 444.] London, 1822 No more published. TRAVELS over the most interesting parts of the globe, to discover the source of moral motion ; communicated to lead mankind through the conviction of the senses to intellectual existence, and an enlightened state of nature. [By John Stewart.] i2mo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London [1792 ?] The second volume has the title “ The apocalypse of nature . . .” TRAVELS through Denmark and some parts of Germany [by M. De la Combe de Vrigny] by way of Journal in the retinue of the English envoy [J. Vernon] in 1702 ; done into English from the French original. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1707 TRAVELS through parts of the United States and Canada. By a British subject [-Beaufoy, brother of Henry], 8vo. Pp. 141. [Rich’s Bibl. Amer. p. 203.] London, 1828 TRAVELS through Sicily and the Lipari Islands, in the month of December, 1824. By a naval officer [Capt. Edward Boid]. Illustrated with views and costumes from drawings made on the spot, and on stone by L. Haghe. 8vo. Pp. xvi. 367. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1827 TRAVELS through Spain and part of Portugal, with commercial, statistical, and geographical details. [By the Rev.-Whittington.] i2mo. 2 vols. [fF.] London, 1808 TRAVELS through the interior parts of America. By an Officer [Thomas Anburey, Captain in the 29th Infantry Regiment]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Sunderland Lib.] London, 1789 TRAVELS with Dr Leichhardt in Australia. By the author of Hortus Tasmaniensis . . . [Daniel Bunce]. 8vo. [Sydney Lib. Cat.] Melbourne, 1859 TRAVESTY (a) without a pun! Hamlet revamped, modernized and set to music. By the author of Romeo and Juliet [Charles Carroll Soule ?]. 8vo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Mus.] St Louis, 1880 TRAYTOR (the) ; a tragedy, as it is acted at the New Theatre in Little Lincolns - Inn - Fields ; reviv’d, with several alterations. [By Christopher Bullock.] 8vo. London, 1718 This tragedy was originally written by Anthony Rivers, a Jesuit, and was published by James Shirley, with alterations and improvements, in 1635. TRAYTORS (the) perspective-glass; or, sundry examples of Gods just judgments executed upon many eminent regicides, who were either fomentors of the late bloody wars against the King, or had a hand in his death. . . . Faithfully delineated by J. T. [John Taylor], gent. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London,1662 TRAYTORS (the) unvailed ; or, a brief and true account of that horrrid (sic) and bloody designe intended by those rebellious people, known by the names of anabaptists and Fifth monarchy [men] being upon Sunday the 14th of April 1661 in Newgate on purpose to oppose his Majesties person and laws. 'By Thomas Ellis.] 4to. Pp. 7. Whitley’s Bajt. Bibl. i. 83.] [London] 1661 TRE (the) Giuli ; translated from the Italian of G. B. Casti: with a memoir of the author, and some account of his other works [by Captain Montagu Montagu, R.N.]. 8vo. London, 1826 TREACHEROUS (a) woman. ByArrah Leigh [Mrs H. C. Hoffman]. 8vo. New York, 1885 TREACHERY. [By Mrs Martin Lucas.] i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1848 TREACHERY no crime; or, the system of courts exemplified in the life . . . of General Dumourier, etc. [By Charles Pigott.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1793 TREASON. ... By T. [William Henry Trenwith]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1866 TREASON detected, in an answer to that traiterous and malicious libel entitled English advice to the freeholders of England [by Francis Atterbury, D.D. By Daniel Defoe]. 8vo. [Camb. Hist, of Eng. Lit.\ London, 1715 TREASURE. [A novel.] By W. Dane Bank [William Henry Williamson]. 8vo. Pp. 360. \_Brit. Musi] London, 1915 TREASURE (the) of Christopher. [A novel.] By Ben Bolt [Rev. Otwell Binns]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.\ London, 1922 TREASURE (the) of Euonymus, con- teyninge the wonderfull hid secretes of nature touchinge the most apte formes to prepare and destyl medicines, for the conservation of helth. . . . [By Conrad Gesner]: translated . . . out of Latin by Peter Morwyng. . . . 4to. B. L. [Brit. Musi] London [1559] TREASURE (the) of heaven ; a romance of riches. By Marie Corelli [Caroline Cody]. 8vo. Pp. ix. 564. [Brit. Musi] London, 1906 TREASURE (the) of pearls ; or, romance of adventures in California. By Gustave Aimard [Olivier Glouxj. i2mo. London [1884] TREASURE of tempest. By Shann Malory [R. J. K. Russell], 8vo. London, 1919 TREASURE of Thule. By B. D. Steward [Frank Sidgwick]. 8vo. London,1912 TREASURE (the) of vowed chastity in secular persons; also the Widdowes glasse [by Leonardus Lepsius] ; translated [from Latin] into English by I. W. [William Wright, S.J., D.D.]. i2mo. [D. N.B. vol. 63, p. 135.] [St Omer?] 1621 TREASURE trove. . . . Collected by John o’ London [Wilfred Whitten]. 8vo. Pp. 187. [Brit. Musi] London [1925] TREASURE-BOOK (the) of consolation for all in sorrow and suffering. By Benjamin Orme [Alexander Hay Japp]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1880 TREASURE-BOOK (the) of devotional reading. By Benjamin Orme [Alexander Hay Japp]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1866 TREASURE-FINDERS (the) ; a boy’s adventure in Nicaragua. By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. New York, 1890 TREASURE-TOWN (the); a story of Malta. By Cousin Virginia [Virginia Wales Johnson]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Chicago, 1892 TREASURES of darkness. [A collection of poems.] By E. L. [Emma Lewis]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Philadelphia, 1854 TREASURIE of auncient and moderne times. [By Thomas Milles.] Fol. 2 vols. [W.; Bliss’s Cat.] 1613-19 TREASURY (the) of languages ; a rudimentary dictionary of universal philology. [By James Bonwick.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 301. London, 18^3 TREASURY (a) of pleasure books for young people. [Edited by Joseph Cundall.] 8vo. [W.j Brit. Musi] London, 1856 Signed : J. C. TREASURY (a) of theological knowledge ; wherein Christianity and the divine authority of the Scriptures are proved, and the most plausible objections considered. [By Morgan Williams.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibli] Garm, 1791 TREASURY (the) of wit ; being a methodical selection of about twelve hundred, the best, apophthegms and jests from books in several languages. ... By H. Bennet, M.A. [John Pinkerton]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Gent. Mag. xcvi. i. 471.] London, 1786 TREATISE (a) concerning the broken succession of the Crown of England. 'By Robert Parsons.] 8vo. Pp. 167. Brit. Musi] 1655 TREATISE (a) concerning the causes of the present corruptions of Christians, and the remedies thereof. In two parts. [Translated from the French of Jean Frederic Ostervald, by Charles Mutel.] The second edition corrected. 8vo. Pp. 10, 468. London, 1702 TREATISE (a) concerning the Church ; wherein it is shewed . . . that the Church of Rome ... is the only true Church of Christ. Written in Latin by ... J. Gordon Huntley . . . and translated into English by J. L. William Wright, D.D., S.J.]. 8vo. Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] [St Omer] 1614 TREATISE (a) concerning the defence of the honour of the right high, mightie and noble princesse Marie Queene of Scotland, and Dowager of France ; with a declaration, as wel of her right, title and interest to the succession of the croune of England. . . . Made by Morgan Philippes, bachelar of diuinitie [John Leslie, bishop of Ross]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ Leodii, 1571 TREATISE (a) concerning the dignities, titles, offices, pre-eminences, and yearly revenues, which have been granted to the several kings of England, after the Conquest, for the honour and maintenance of the princes, their eldest sons ; with sundry particulars relating thereto. [By Duncan Forbes, Lord President of the Court of Session.] 4to. Pp. viii. 58. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.\ London, 1737 TREATISE (a) concerning the division . . . See below, “Treatise (a) concernynge . . .” TREATISE (a) concerning the fulnesse of Christ. [By Henry Jeanes.] 4to. Pp. 396. Oxford, 1656 TREATISE (a) concerning the manner of fallowing of ground, raising of grass- seeds, and training of lint and hemp, for the increase and improvement of the linnen-manufactories in Scotland. . . . [By William Macintosh, M.A., of Borlum.] 8vo. Pp. 173. [Aberd. Quatercent. Studies, No. 19, p. 336.] Edinburgh, 1724 Wrongly attributed to Richard Bradley. TREATISE (a) concerning the militia, in four sections. 1. Of the militia in general. 2. Of the Roman militia. 3. The proper plan of a militia for this country. 4. Observations upon this plan. By C. S. [Charles Sackville, 2nd Duke of Dorset]. 8vo. [Park’s Walpole, iv. 281; Mon. Rev. vi. 90.] 1752 TREATISE (a) concerning the origin and progress of fees ; or, the constitution and transmission of heritable rights : being a supplement to Spotis- wood’s Introduction to the knowledge of the stile of writs. [By James Mackenzie.] 8vo. Pp. xii. 276. [.D. Laing] Edinburgh, 1734 TREATISE (a) concerning the payment of tythes and oblations in London. By B. W. [Brian Walton] D.D. 8vo. [R. Thomson’s Chronicles of London Bridge, p. 297.] 1641 TREATISE (a) concerning the peace of the Church. [By Philip Freher.] 4to. Pp. 82. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1646 TREATISE (a) concerning the regulation of the coyn of England, and how the East India trade may be preserved and encreased. By R. C. [Roger Cook]. 4to. Pp. 44. [Quaritch’s Cat.] London, 1696 TREATISE (a) concerning the right use of the Fathers, in decision of the controversies that are at this day in religion. Written in French by John Daille. [Preface signed: T. S. i.e. Thomas Smith, the translator.] 8vo. Pp. 195. [Brit. Musi] London, 1651 TREATISE (a) concerning the sanctifying of the Lord’s day ; and particularly the right improvement of a Communion Sabbath : wherein the morality of the Sabbath, and its strict observation under the New Testament dispensation, is maintained. . . . By a minister of the Church of Scotland [Rev. John Willison, Dundee]. 8vo. Pp. 520. Edinburgh, 1716 Other editions have varying titles. TREATISE (a) concerning the use and abuse of the marriage bed ; shewing I. The nature of matrimony, its sacred original, and the true meaning of its institution. II. The gross abuse of matrimonial chastity. ... III. The diabolical practice of attempting to prevent childbearing by physical preparations. IV. The fatal consequences of clandestine or forced marriages, thro’ the persuasion, interest, or influence of parents and relations. . . . V. Of unequal matches, as to the disproportion of age. . . . VI. How married persons may be guilty of conjugal lewdness. . . . [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 406. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe, 200.] London, 1727 TREATISE (a) concerning trespasses vi & armis ; wherein the nature of trespass is clearly explicated, and the gist of the action stated, and by whom such actions may be brought, and against whom and how to be laid. . . . By the author of Lex customaria [Samuel Carter]. 8vo. London, 1704 TREATISE (a) concernynge the division betwene the spiritualtie and temporaltie. [By Christopher Saint-Germain.] 8vo. [Christie-Miller Cat.] London [c. 1532] TREATISE (a) containing the aequity of an humble supplication which is to be exhibited vnto hir gracious Maiestie and this high court of parliament in the behalfe of the countrey of Wales, that some order may be taken for the preaching of the Gospell among those people. . . . [By John Penry.] 8vo. Pp. 63. [Bodl.; Dexter’s Cong. Bibl. 123.] Oxford, 1587 TREATISE (a) containing the description and use of a new and curious quadrant, made by J. Rowley for taking altitudes and for solving various mathematical problems. By T. W. [T. Woodford]. 4to. [H7.] London, 1756 TREATISE (a) how, by the Word of God, Christian mens almose ought to be distributed. [By Martin Bucer, translated by John Poynet, Bishop of Rochester.] 8vo. Pp. 29. [Pollard and Redgrave.] N.P. [c. 1566] Herbert (p. 1753) quotes it from Maun- sell’s Catalogue. TREATISE (a) in confutation of the Latin service practised, and, by the order of the Trent Council, continued in the Church of Rome. [By Daniel Whitby.] 4to. Pp. 118. [Jones5 Peck, ii. 329.] London, 1687 TREATISE (a) in defence of the celibacy of priests. By C. E. [Edward Coffin, alias Hatton, S.J.]. i2mo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] St Omer, 1619 TREATISE (a) of Baptism; wherein that of believers, and that of infants, is examined by the Scriptures ; with the history of both out of antiquity : making it appear that Infants-Baptism was not practised for near three hundred years. ... By H. D. [Henry D5Anvers]. 8vo. London, 1673 The second edition (1674), with large additions, gives the author’s name. TREATISE (a) of blazing starres in generall, as well supernaturall as naturall ; to what countries or people soeuer they appeare in the spacious world. [Translated by Abraham Fleming from the Latin of Friedrich Nause, Bishop of Vienna.] 4to. No pagination. B. L. [Ames5 Tyfiogr. Antiq. ed. Herbert, ii. 1196.] London, 1618 TREATISE (a) of Christian religion ; or, the whole bodie and substance of Diuinitie. By T. C. [Thomas Cartwright]. Second edition, edited by W. B. [William Bradshaw]. 4to. \Camb. Univ. Lib.\ London, 1616 TREATISE (a) of civil power in ecclesiastical causes ; shewing that it is not lawfull for any power on earth to compell in matters of religion. The author, J. M. [John Milton]. i2mo. Pp. 83. [Masson’s Life of Miltoni] London,1659 TREATISE (a) of communion under both kinds ; faithfully rendered from the French and dedicated to Thomas Lord Petre. [By Jacques Benign e Bossuet; translated by John Davis.] 4to. Pp. vi. 116. [Jones’ Peck, p. 350.] London,1687 TREATISE (ane) of conscience, quhairin divers secrects concerning that subject are discovered, as may appeare in the table following. By A. H; [Alexander Hume]. 8vo. [Christie-Miller Cat.] Edinbvrgh, 1594 TREATISE (a) of divine worship ; tending to prove, that the ceremonies imposed upon the ministers of the Gospel in England, in present con- troversie, are in their use unlawful. [By William Bradshaw.] With a preface, containing an account of the antiquity, occasion, and grounds of non-conformity . . . and also, a postscript in defence of a book entituled, Thomas against Bennet, being a reply to Mr Bennet’s answer thereto. 8vo. Pp. xxii. 40. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1703 The “Treatise,” the only part by Bradshaw7, w7as first printed in 1604. The “ Preface ” and “ Postscript ” were written probably by D. M., who signs the latter. TREATISE (a) of dreams and visions ; wherein the causes, nature, and uses of nocturnal representations, both of good and evil angels, are theosophi- cally unfolded. ... By Philotheos Physiologus [Thomas Tryon, M.D.]. J2mo. [Brit. Plus.] [London, 1695 ?] TREATISE (a) of ecclesiasticall and politike power ; shewing, the Church is a monarchicall gouernment, ordained to a supernaturall and spiritual end, tempered with an aristocraticall order, (which is the best of all and most comformable to nature) by the great Pastor of soules Iesus Christ. Faithfully translated out of the Latin originall [of Edmundus Richerius]. . . . 4to. No pagination. [London] 1612 Address to the Prince signed : A. TREATISE (a) of election and reprobation ; in vindication of the universal grace and love of God to mankind. By B. L. [Benjamin Lindley]. 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, ii. 124.] London,1700 TREATISE of equity. [By Henry Ballow.] Fol. [Brit. Musi] London, 1737 Later editions were enlarged, and issued in 2 vols. 8vo. TREATISE (a) of eternal nature with her seven essential forms. ... By J. P. [John Pordage], M.D. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1681 Forms the second part of the author’s “ Theologia mystica.” F 2 VOL. VI. TREATISE (a) of faith; wherein is briefly and plainely shewed a direct way by which every man may resolve and settle his mind in all doubts, questions, and controversies concerning matters of faith. [By John Fisher, S.J.] 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.\ N.P. 1614 TREATISE (a) of fornication ; shewing what the sin is, how to flee it, motives and directions to shun it: upon 1 Cor. vi. xviii.; also a penitentiary sermon upon John viii. 11. By W. B. [William Barlow, rector of Chalgrove, Oxford] M.A. 8vo. Pp. no. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] London, 1690 TREATISE (a) of God’s government, and of the justice of his present dispensations in this world ; by Salvian : translated from the Latin by R. T. [R. Tesdale], Presbyter of the Church of England. . . . 8vo. London, 1700 TREATISE (the) of heavenly philosophic. By T. P. [Thomas Palfreyman]. 4to. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 1765.] London, 1578 TREATISE (a) of human nature ; being an attempt to introduce the experimental method of reasoning into moral subjects. [By David Hume.] 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1739-40 TREATISE (a) of humane reason. [By Martin Clifford, Master of the Charter House, London.] i2mo. Pp. 91. \D.N.B. vol. ii. p. 69.] London, 1675 The author’s name is given in the edition issued in 1691. TREATISE (a) of humilitie. Published by E. D., parson sequestered. [Adapted from Alonso Rodriguez.] i2mo. Pp. 241. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1654 TREATISE (a) of infallibility, shewing that the Church of Rome’s claim to that high privilege is without foundation in Scripture, antiquity, or reason ; in answer to a paper on that subject sent by a Popish missionary: with some animadversions on a book [by Robert Manning], entituled, The shortest way to end disputes about religion. By a presbyter of the suffering [Episcopal] Church of Scotland [William Harper], 8vo. Edinburgh, 1752 Contemporary attestation of authorship. TREATISE (a) of jealousie ; or, means to preserve peace in marriage : highly necessary to be considered by all persons before they enter into the state of matrimony, as well as such as are already married. [By Antoine de Courtin.] Translated from the French. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1684 TREATISE (a) of magistracy, shewing the magistrate hath beene, and for ever is to be the cheife officer in the Church, out of the Church, and over the Church. . . . [The Epistle dedicatory is signed : M. P. i.e. Mary Pope.] 4to. Pp. 156. \Bodl.] N.P. 1647 TREATISE (a) of marriage, with a defence of the 32 Article of religion of the Church of England, viz. Bishops, priests, and deacons are not commanded by God’s law, either to vow the state of single life, or to abstain from marriage. . . . [The epistles dedicatory are both signed : T. H. i.e. Thomas Hodges.] 8vo. London, 1673 TREATISE (a) of mental prayer, in which is briefly declared the manner how to exercise the inward actes of vertues ; by Fr. Ant. de Molina, Carthusian. Whereunto is adioyned a very profitable Treatise of exhortation to spirituall profit, written by Fr. Francis Arias, of the Society of Jesus : togeather with a Dialogue of attrition and contrition. All translated out of Spanish into English by a Father of the Society of Jesus [John Sweetnam, alias Nicholson]. i2mo. Pp. 365. [Oliver’s Collections; Somtnervogel.] [St Omer] 1617 TREATISE (a) of monarchic, containing two parts : 1. Concerning monarchy in generall. 2. Concerning this particular monarchy. . . . Done by an earnest desirer of his countries peace [Philip Hunton]. 4to. [Jones’ Peck, i. 9.] London, 1643 Attributed also to R. Eyre. TREATISE (a) of nature and grace ; to which is added, the author’s idea of providence. . . . By the author of The search after truth [Nicholas Malebranche] ; translated from the last edition [by Richard Sault]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1695 TREATISE (a) of oaths, containing several weighty reasons why the people called Quakers refuse to swear. [By William Penn and Richard Richardson.] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends1 Books.\ N.P. 1675 TREATISE (a) of one hundred and thirteene diseases of the eyes, and eye-liddes ; the second time published, with some profitable additions by Richard Banister. . . . [By Jacques Guillemeau.] i2mo. [Surgeon-General’s Cat.] London, 1622 TREATISE of painting. By Leonardo Da Vinci ; translated [by John Senex]. 8vo. London, 1721 TREATISE (a) of paradise and the principal contents thereof. . . . [By John Salkeld.] 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit. ; Queen’s Coll. Cat. p. 433.] London, 1617 TREATISE (a) of patience ; written by Father Francis Arias, of the Society of Jesus, in his second parte of the Imitation of Christ our Lord ; translated into English. [Epistle signed : T. M. i.e. Sir Tobias Matthew.] i2mo. Pp. 225. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] N.P. 1650 TREATISE (a) of perspective; or, the art of representing all manner of objects as they appear to the eye in all situations. . . . Written originally in French by Bernard Lamy, priest of the Oratory, and faithfully translated into English by an officer of His Majesties Ordnance. [Dedication signed: A. F. i.e. A. Forbes.] 8vo. Pp. (161) 174. London, 1702 TREATISE (a) of power, essential and mechanical: wherein the original, and that part of religion which now is natural, is stated. By J. H. [John Hutchinson], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1732 TREATISE (a) of prayer and meditation, compiled by the Rev. Fr. Peter of Alcantara ; translated out of Spanish by R. R. [Richard Rowlands, alias Verstegan], ’ i2mo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] Antwerp [e. 1575] TREATISE (a) of prayer, and of the fruits and manner of prayer ; by the Rd. Father John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester; translated into English by R. A. B. [Bartholomew Alban Roe, O.S.B.]. i2mo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] Paris, 1640 TREATISE (a) of prayer; two quaeries resolved touching formes of prayer, and six quaeries relating specially to the Lords Prayer. . . . [By Hezekiah Woodward.] 4to. London, 1656 See note at end of his Law-Power, 1656. TREATISE (a) of repentance and of fasting, especially of the Lent fast. [By Symon Patrick, D.D., Bishop of Ely.] i2mo. [Darling's Cyclop. Bibl.] London, 1686 TREATISE (a) of ruling elders and deacons, in which these things which belong to the understanding of their office and duty are clearly and shortly set down. By a minister of the Church of Scotland [James Guthrie, of Stirling]. i6mo. Pp. 79. [Scott’s Fasti.] Edinburgh, 1699 TREATISE (a) of sacramentel covenanting with Christ. By M. M. [John Rawlett]. i2mo. London, 1667 The fifth edition, 1692, has the author’s name. TREATISE (the) of St Catherine of Genoa on Purgatory, newly translated by J. M. A. [Rev. John Marks Ashley, B.C.L.]. 8vo. London, 1878 TREATISE (a) of self deniall. [By John Downame, B.D.] 4to. London, 1646 TREATISE (a) of specters or straunge sights, visions, and apparitions appearing sensibly vnto men ; wherein is delivered the nature of spirites, angels, and divels, as also of witches, sorcerers, enchanters, and such like. [By Peter de Loier; translated by Zachary Jones.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1605 TREATISE (a) of taxes & contributions ; shewing the nature and measures of crown-lands, assessments, customs, poll-moneys, lotteries, benevolence, penalties, monopolies, offices, tythes, raising of coins, harth-money, excise, &c. . . . [By Sir William Petty.] 4to. Pp. 75. [M‘Culloch’s Lit. of Pol. Econ. p. 318.] London, 1662 TREATISE (a) of the celibacy of the clergy, wherein its rise and progress are historically considered. [By Rev. Henry Wharton.] 4to. Pp. iv. 168. [Jones’ Peck, ii. 334.] London, 1688 TREATISE (a) of the Church ; in which is proued M. Iohn White his Way to the true Church, to be indeed no way at all to any Church, true or false : by demonstrating, that his visible company of protestants, is but a chymaera of his owne braine. . . . Written by W. G. [William Wright, S.J.], Pro- fessour in Diuinity: in manner of dialogue. 4to. [Dodd’s Ch. Hist. ii. 136.] [St Omer] 1616 TREATISE (a) of the Churche ; con- teininge a true discourse to knowe the true Church by, and to discerne it from the Romish Church and all other false assemblies. . . . [By Bertrand De Loque.] Translated out of French into English by T. W. [Thomas Wilcox]. 8vo. Pp. 384. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1581 An edition of 1582 has a slightly different title ; see Watt’s Bibl. Brit. TREATISE (a) of the civil power of ecclesiasticals, and of suspension from the Lords Supper. [By Thomas Edwards, M. A.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 17> p. 128.] London, 1642 TREATISE (a) of the cohabitacyon of the faithfull with the unfaithfull ; whereunto is added a sermon. . . . [By Heinrich Bullinger.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] [Zurich, 1555] TREATISE (a) of the confession of sinne, and chiefly as it is made unto the priests and ministers of the Gospel; together with the power of the keys, and of absolution. [By Thomas Ailsbury.] 4to. [Dexter’s Congregationalism, 1753.] London, 1657 TREATISE (a) of the felicitie of the life to come, vnsavorie to the obstinate, alluring to such as are gone astray, and to the faithfull, full of consolation. By A. H. [Alexander Hume]. 8vo. [Christie-Miller Cat.] Edinburgh, 1594 TREATISE (a) of the first principles of laws in general ; of their nature and design, and of the interpretation of them: translated out of French: being a proper introduction to the New institute of the imperial or civil law, with notes, &c. lately published. [By Thomas Wood, D.C.L.] 8vo. Pp. 144. [.Bodl.] London, 1705 TREATISE (a) of the future restoration of the Jews and Israelites to their own land ; with some account of the goodness of the country, and their happy condition there, till they shall be invaded by the Turks. . . . [By Samuel Collett.] 8vo. Pp. 87. [Brit. Musi] London, 1747 Other copies differ slightly in the title. TREATISE (a) of the groundes of the old and newe religion ; devided into two parts, whereunto is added an appendix, containing a briefe confutation of William Crashaw his first Tome of Romish forgeries and falsifications. [By Edward Mayhew.] 4to. [Dodd’s Ch. Hist. ii. 401.] 1608 The address from the printer to the reader is signed : Your poore Catholike countri- man, Thom R. TREATISE (a) of the Holy Communion. By Dr Henry Compton.] i2mo. Leslie’s Cat. 1843.] 1677 TREATISE (a) of the Holy Sacrifice of the altar called the Masse ; in which, by the Word of God, and testimonies of the Apostles and primitive Church, it is proved that our Saviour Jesus Christ did institute the Masse, and the Apostles did celebrate the same. Translated out of Latin [of Antonio Possevino] into English [by Thomas Butler, LL.D.]. 8vo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet. i. 366.] Antwerp, 1570 TREATISE (a) of the imitation of the holy youth of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ: translated from the French original of Mr Charles Gobinet ... by W. A. M. [Bishop William Maire], C.A.D.A. i2mo. Pp. 126. [Gillow’s Bibl. Did.] London, 1758 TREATISE (a) of the Iudge of controversies ; written in Latin by ~ the R. Father Martinus Becanus of the Society of Jesus, professour in diuinity, and englished by W. W. Gent [William Wright, S. J.]. 8vo. [Dodd’s Ch. Hist. iii. 114.] [St Omer] 1619 TREATISE (a) of the just interest of the kings of England, in their bill disposing power, and the validity of grants made to their subjects ; written at the request of a person of honour in the year 1657, by a person learned in the laws [Sir Matthew Hale? Published by Blackerby Fairfax]. i2mo. [Wi] London, 1703 TREATISE (a) of the law of debtor and creditor in Scotland ; showing the course of diligence against the person and estate of the debtor before and after bankruptcy, and the conditions of his right to personal freedom. . . . By a Member of the Faculty of Advocates [Alexander Macallan]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 214. Edinburgh, 1837 TREATISE (a) of the Lords Supper, in two sermons. [By Henry Smith.] 8 vo. [Bodl.] London, 1591 Each sermon has a separate pagination. TREATISE (a) of the love of God ; written in French by B. Francis de Sales. . . . Translated into English by Miles Car [really Pinkney], priest of the English College of Doway. 18th edition. 8vo. Pp. 790. [Gillow’s [Bibl. Did.] Doway, 1630 TREATISE (a) of the ministery of the Church of England ; wherein is handled this question, whether it be [better?] to be separated from or joyned vnto ; which is discussed in two letters, the one written for it [by Arthur Hildersam], the other against it [by Francis Johnson]. . . . 4to. Pp. 141. B. L. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1595?] TREATISE (a) of the nature and vse of things indifferent; tendinge to prove that the ceremonies in present controversy amongst the ministers of the gospell in the realme of England, are neither in nature or vse indifferent. [By William Bradshaw.] 8vo. Pp. 30. 1605 TREATISE (a) of the nature of Catholick faith and heresie, with -reflexion upon the nullitie of the English Protestand Church and Clergy. By N. N. [Peter Talbot, Archbishop of Dublin]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Rouen, 1657 TREATISE (a) of the nature of God. [By Thomas Morton.] 8vo. Pp. 239. [Bodl.] London, 1599 TREATISE (a) of the perpetuall visi- bilitie, and succession of the true Church in all ages. [By George Abbot, Archbishop of Canterbury.] 4to. Pp. 116. [Simms’ Bibl. Staff. p. 2.] [London] 1624 TREATISE (a) of the plague ; being an instruction how one ought to act, in relation, I. To apparel and lodging. II. To diet. III. To antidotes or preservatives. IV. To such medicines, as are necessary to be made use of. ... By Eugenius Philalethes, Jun. [Robert Samber]. 8vo. London, 1721 TREATISE (a) of the principall grounds and maximes of the lawes of this kingdome ; very usefull and commodious for all studients, and such others as desire the knowledge, and understanding of the lawes : written by that most excellent, and learned expositor of the law, W. N. [William Noy] of Lincolns-Inn, Esquire. 4to. Pp. 130. London, 1641 TREATISE (a) of the Real Presence, in answer to [Charles Leslie] the author of “ The case stated,” in which ’tis clearly shewed we have both Scripture and Fathers on our side, and consequently something besides “an unintelligible Jargon of Metaphysicks,” p. 150 ; the second part. By the author of The gentlemaji instructed [William Darrell, S.J.]. i2mo. Pp. 400. [Oliver’s Collections; Sommervogel.\ London, 1721 TREATISE (a) of the revenue and false money of the Romans. [By-De Chassipol.] To which is annexed a dissertation upon the manner of distinguishing antique medals from counterfeit ones. [By Guillaume Beauvis.’ 8vo. Pp. xxxii. 227. ' [Brit. Musi London, 1741 TREATISE (a) of the souls union with Christ. . . . By J. L. [John Lougher, minister at Beaconsthorpe, Norfolk]. 8vo. London, 1680 TREATISE (a) of the sufferings and victory of Christ, in the work of our redemption ; declaring by the Scriptures these two questions : that Christ suffered for vs the wrath of God, which we may welL terme the paynes of hell, or hellish sorrowes. That Christ after his death on the crosse, went not into hell in his soule. Con- trarie to certaine errours in these points publiklie preached in London : anon 1597. [Signed : H. I. i.e. Henry Jacob.] 8vo. Pp. 174. N.P. 1598 TREATISE (a) of the three evils of the last times: I. The sword; II. The pestilence; III. The famine, and of their natural and moral causes. [By John Hildrop, D.D.] 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.\ London, 1711 TREATISE (a) of the three-fold state of man, wherein is handled: 1. His created holiness. 2. His sinfulness since the fall. 3. His renewed holiness in his regeneration. [By Rev. Thomas Morton.] 8vo. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.\ London, 1596 TREATISE (a) of the two sacraments of the Gospell ; Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord: divided into two parts. The first treating of the doctrine and nature of the sacraments in generall, and of these two in speciall; together with the circumstances attending them. The second containing the manner of our due preparation to the receiving of the Supper of the Lord . . . The third edition. By D. R. B. of divin. minister of the Gospel [Daniel Rogers]. 4to. Pp. 360. [D.N.B. vol. 49, p. 118.] London, 1636 TREATISE (a) of the vanity of childish- baptisme ; wherein the deficiency of the baptisme of the Church of England is considered in five particulars thereof. ... By A. R. [Andrew Ritor]. 4to. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. i. 12.] London, 1642 TREATISE (a) of three conversions of England from Paganisme to Christian religion ; the first under the Apostles, in the first age after Christ: the second under Pope Eleutherius and K. Lucius, in the second age : the third, under Pope Gregory the Great, and K. Ethel- bert in the sixth age. . . . By N. D. author of the Ward-word [Robert Parsons]. 8vo. [Jones’ Peck, i. 15°*] TREATISE (a) of traditions ; part I. Where it is proved, that we have evidence sufficient from tradition ; I. That the Scriptures are the Word of God. II. That the Church of England owns the true canon of the books of the Old Testament. III. That the copies of the Scripture have not been corrupted. IV. That the Romanists have no such evidence for their traditions. V. That the testimony of the present Church of Rome can be no sure evidence of Apostolical tradition. VI. What traditions may securely be relyed upon, and what not. [By Daniel Whitby.] 4to. London, 1688 -. Part II. Shewing the novelty of the pretended traditions of the Church of Rome. . . . [By Daniel Whitby.] 4to. [Jones’ Peck, ii. 323.] London, 1689 TREATISE (a) of Transubstantiation. By Roger Hesketh, D.D.] 4to. Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.'] London, 1688 TREATISE (a) of vnion of the two realmes of England and Scotland. By I. H. [Sir John Haywarde, D.C.L.]. 4to. Pp. 58. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1604 TREATISE (a) of vse and custome. [By Meric Casaubon.] 4to. Pp. 186. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1638 TREATISE (a) of weights and measures ; in which the antient and modern weights and measures of several nations are accurately compared, especially those of Scotland and England. [By William Young.] i2mo. Aberdeen, 1762 TREATISE (a) of wool, and the manufacture of it; in a letter to a friend occasion’d upon a discourse concerning the great abatements of rents, and low value of lands : wherein is shewed how their worth and value may be advanced by the improvement of the manufacture and price of our English wool. . . . [By George Clarke.] 4to. Pp. 31. [Bodl.] London, 1685 An earlier edition (1677) bears the title “ A treatise of wool and cattel, in a letter >1 • • • TREATISE (a) on agriculture. [By Adam Dickson.] 8vo. \Camb. Univ. Lib.\ London, 1762 TREATISE (a) on agriculture. ... By a practical farmer [John Armstrong]. 8vo. Albany, New York, 1819 An edition of 1845 bears the author’s name. TREATISE (a) on air ; containing new experiments and thoughts on combustion ; being a full investigation of M. Lavoisier’s system. . . . By Richard Bewley, M.D. [Robert Harrington, M.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 215. [Mon. Rev. vi. 435 ; xiv. 462.] London, 1791 TREATISE (a) on captures in war. By Richard Lee, Esq. Second edition; corrected : with additional notes [by Thomas Hartwell Horne]. 8vo. London, 1803 From a list of his works in the handwriting of the editor. TREATISE (a) on Church government. By a neighbour [Ebenezer Chaplin]. 8vo. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. vol. 4, p. 354.] Boston, 1773 TREATISE (a) on Civil government. ... By Sevrup Semaj [James Purves]. i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 47, p. 51.] Edinburgh, 1791 TREATISE (a) on devotion to the sacred heart of our Saviour J. C. [Compiled by Robert Beeston, S.J.] i2mo. Pp. 53. [Oliver’s Collections; Sommervogel.] n.p. 17 ii TREATISE (a) on equity jurisprudence. By Platt Potter [John Willard]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Suftfti] New York, 1875 TREATISE (a) on field diversions. By a Gentleman of Suffolk [-Symonds] a staunch sportsman; showing the nature of dogs, etc. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Norwich, private print, 1776 TREATISE on finance, under which the general interests of the British Empire are illustrated, comprising a project for their improvement. . . . [By David Laurie.] 8vo. Pp. 1268. Glasgow, 1815 TREATISE (a) on happiness. [By James Flamank.] 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1832 TREATISE (a) on heresy, as cognizable by the spiritual courts ; and an examination of the statute 9th and 10th William III. C. 32. entitled, An Act for the more effectual suppressing of blasphemy and profaneness, in denying by writing, printing, teaching, or advised speaking, the divine original of the Scriptures, or the doctrine of the Holy Trinity. By a barrister at law [Sir Benjamin Hobhouse, Bart.]. 8vo. Pp. 146. [Biog. Diet. 1816 ; Mon. Rev. xi. 206.] London, 1792 TREATISE (a) on justification. . . . By the Rev. Mr Thomas Dutton [or rather by Anne Dutton]. 8vo. Pp. 185. [Brit. Mus.] Glasgow, 1778 TREATISE (a) on mercury, shewing the danger of taking it crude for all manner of disorders, after the present fashion, from its nature, its manner of operating in the human body and facts, with some remarks on the Antient physician’s legacy [of Thomas Dover]. [By Henry Bradley.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 52. [IV.] London, 1733 TREATISE (a) on military finance ; containing the pay, subsistence, deductions, and arrears of the forces on the British and Irish establishments ; and all the allowances in camp, garrison and quarters, &c. With an enquiry into the method of cloathing and recruiting the army ; and an extract from the report of the Commissioners of public accounts, relating to the office of the Paymaster General. [By John Williamson.] i2mo. [Gent. Mag. lxxi. ii. 957 ; Mon. Rev. lxviii. 362.] London, 1782 TREATISE (a) on naval discipline ; with an explanation of the important advantages which naval and military discipline might derive from the science of phrenology : to which are added, phrenological deductions from the cerebral developement of J-h H-e [Joseph Hume] Esq. [By Capt., afterwards Sir John Ross.] 8vo. London, 1825 TREATISE (a) on pasturage, in two parts. [By Anthony Macmillan.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1790 TREATISE (a) on penance. By George Douley [William Warford, or Warne- ford]. i2mo. [Oliver’s Collectionsi] St Omer, 1633 TREATISE (a) on R. J. Campbell’s sermon preached on “Anthropomorphism,” or “ Man made in the image of God.” [Signed : W. D. F. i.e. William D. Forsyth.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Littleborough [1908] TREATISE (a) on rents. By a late Lord Chief Baron [Sir Jeffrey Gilbert]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [London] 1758 TREATISE (a) on signals. . . . [By Rev. James Ramsay, M.A.] 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London [1784] TREATISE (a) on skating. ... By a gentleman [Lieut. Robert Jones]. 8vo. Pp. 64. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1775] A reissue of the edition of 1772, which bears the author’s name. TREATISE (a) on soap-making ; containing, an account of the alkaline materials ; tests for discovering the presence of an alkali, &c. ; with full directions for manufacturing yellow, pure, white, and perfumed hard soap. ... By a manufacturer [John Carmichael]. i2mo. Pp. xxii. 132. Edinburgh, 1807 TREATISE (a) on swimming, as taught in the Military College of Berlin. By an Officer of the Coldstream Guards [Charles William Short]. 8vo. [Thomas’s Swimming, p. 239.] London, 1846 TREATISE (a) on tennis. By a member of the Tennis Club [Robert Lukin]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 120. [Brit. Musi] London, 1822 TREATISE (a) on the application of certain terms and epithets to Jesus Christ. [By Paul Cardale.] 8vo. Pp. 74. [Brit. Musi] London, 1774 TREATISE (a) on the arts, manufactures, manners and institutions of the Greek and Romans. [By Thomas Dudley Fosbrooke, M.A., Rev. Dionysius Lardner, LL.D., and Samuel Astley Dunham, LL.D.] i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1833 Lardner’s Cab. Cyclopaedia. TREATISE (a) on the authorship of Ecclesiastes. [By Rev. David Johnston, D.D., Professor in Aberdeen University.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1880 TREATISE (a) on the beneficial effects of cold and warm bathing ; with an appendix, containing a description of the baths erected at Portobello, near Edinburgh. [By John Millar, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. 62. Edinburgh, 1807 TREATISE (a) on the breeding, training, and management of horses, with practical remarks & observations on farriery, etc. ; to which is prefixed the natural history of horses in general, and the antiquity of horse-racing in England ; together with an appendix containing the whole law relating to horses. By an old sportsman, etc. [William Flint]. i2mo. [ W.; Bril. Musi] Hull, 1815 Signed : W. F. TREATISE (a) on the choice, buying and general management of live stock. ... By the author of 1 he complete grazier [Thomas Hartwell Horne]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1807 TREATISE (a) on the choice of religion ; written in Latin by the R. Father L. Lessius, of the Society of Jesus, and translated into English [by William Wright, S.J.]. 8vo. [Oliver’s Collections ; Soimnervogeli] St Omer, 1619 TREATISE (a) on the coco-nut tree. . . , By a Fellow of the Linnaean and Horticultural Societies [J. W. Bennett]. 8vo. [A7, and Q. Feb. 1869, p. 168.] London, 1831 TREATISE (a) on the Court of Exchequer ; in which the revenues of the crown, the manner of receiving and accounting for the several branches of them, the duty of the several officers employed in the collection and receipt, the nature of the processes for the recovery of debts due to the crown, are clearly explained. ... By a late Lord Chief Baron of that court [Sir Jeffrey Gilbert]. 8vo. Pp. xvi. 343. [D.N.B. vol. 21, p. 326.] In the Savoy, 1758 TREATISE (a) on the culture of wheat, recommending a system of management founded upon the successful experience of the author. By a practical farmer [John Claudius Loudon]. 8 vo. London, 1812 TREATISE (a) on the dental art. By J. C. F. Maury [Auguste Tillet]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1842 TREATISE (a) on the different degrees of the Christian priesthood ; translated from the Latin [of H. Saravia by A. W. Street]. i2mo. [Bril. Mus.\ Oxford, 1840 Signed : A. W. S. TREATISE (a) on the faith and hope of the Gospel; in two parts. [By Benjamin Ingham.] i2mo. Pp. viii. 183. [Private print] 1770 Later editions bear the author’s name. TREATISE (a) on the game of cribbage ; shewing the laws and rules of the game, as now played at St James’s, Bath, and Newmarket. . . . By Anthony Pasquin, Esq. [John Williams]. 8vo. Pp. 96. [Biog. Diet. 1816 ; Mon. Rev. viii. 468.] London, 1792 TREATISE (a) on the hair and teeth. . . . By a surgeon [B. Abrahams]. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] New Hampton, New Hampshire, 1849 TREATISE (a) on the improvements made in the art of criticism, collected out of the writings of a celebrated hypercritic. By Philocriticus Canta- brigiensis [John Jackson]. 8vo. Pp. 58. [Sutton’s Life of Jackson, p. 184.] London,1748 TREATISE (a) on the indefinite and infinite powers of credit, circulation of money, and industry. [By-Gar- bett.] 8vo. \Brit. Musi] London, 1784 TREATISE (a) on the manner of raising forest trees, &c. In a letter from the Right Honourable, the Earl of- [Thomas Hamilton, Earl of Haddington] to his grandson ; to which are added, two memoirs: the one on preserving and repairing forests ; the other on the culture of forests, both translated from the French of M. de Buffon of the Royal Academy at Paris. i2mo. Pp. 129. \J3rit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1761 TREATISE (a) on the manufacture . . . of freigus. ... By a practical chemist [John Stephen]. 8vo. Philadelphia, i860 TREATISE (a) on the method of living well ; a translation [by Thomas Everard, or Everett, S.J.]. i2mo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] St Omer, 1620 TREATISE (a) on the modes and subjects of baptism. . . . [By Samuel Hebden.] 8vo. Pp. 60. London, 1742 TREATISE (a) on the nature and causes of doubt, in religious questions ; (with a particular reference to Christianity) : with an appendix, on some common difficulties : lists of books, etc. [By David Bristow Baker, M.A., of St John’s College, Cambridge.] i2mo. London, 1831 TREATISE (a) on the nature and constitution of the Christian Church ; wherein are set forth the forms of its government, the extent of its powers, and the limits of our obedience. By a layman [William Stevens], 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.j Mon. Rev. xlviii. 419-] London, 1773 TREATISE (a) on the nature and virtues of the Buxton waters ; with a preliminary account of the external and internal use of natural and artificial warm waters among the ancients. By a physician [Alexander Hunter, M.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 68. London, 1761 The third edition, 1773, has the author’s name. TREATISE (a) on the nature, uses, and effects of the Harrogate mineral waters. By a member of the Royal College of Surgeons [John Thomson, formerly Mayor of Ripon]. i2mo. Pp. 93. [Boyne’s Yorkshire Lib. p. 138.] [Ripon, 1841] Appended to the third edition of The Tourist's guide, by John Richard Walbran, published at Ripon in 1841, under the title of The Harrogate visitor s pictorial pocket guide to Ripon, Studley, &c. TREATISE (a) on the office, functions, and dignity of Surrogates ; with some remarks on the projected reform of ecclesiastical courts. [By Thomas Marsden of Durham.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 24. [Brit. Musi] London, 1836 TREATISE (a) on the origin, progressive improvement, and present state, of the silk manufacture. [By George Richardson Porter.] 8vo. Pp. xv. 339. London, 1831 Lardner’s Cab. Cyclop. TREATISE (a) on the parallactic angle, extracted from a letter to the late Earl of Macclesfield on that subject; to which is added an appendix, containing a compleat set of solar and lunar tables. . . . [The Dedication is signed : S. C. i.e. the Hon. Spencer Cowper, Dean of Durham.] 4to. Pp. viii. 31. London, 1766 The appendix has a separate pagination [viii. 331- TREATISE (a) on the passions, so far as they regard the stage; with a critical enquiry into the theatrical merit of Mr G-k, Mr Q-n, and Mr B-y [Garrick, Quin, and. Barry]. The first considered in the part of Lear, the two last opposed in Othello. [By Samuel Foote.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1747] TREATISE (a) on the patriarchal system of society ... in America. By an inhabitant of Florida [Z. Kingsley]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.\ 1833 TREATISE (a) on the pleadings in suits in the Court of Chancery by English bill; in two books. [By John Freeman Mitford, 1st Lord Redesdale.] 8vo. Pp. 128. London, 1780 TREATISE (a) on the police and crimes of the Metropolis. . . . By the editor of The Cabinet lawyer [John Wade, LL.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1829 TREATISE (a) on the police of the metropolis, explaining the various crimes and misdemeanors which at present are felt as a pressure upon the community ; and suggesting remedies for their prevention. By a magistrate [Patrick Colquhoun, LL.D.]. 8vo. London, 1796 The edition of 1800 has the author’s name. TREATISE (a) on the powers and duties of Juries, and on the Criminal Laws of England. By William Mavor [Sir Richard Phillips]. i2mo. [Bibliographer, vol. 4, p. 168.] London, 1811 TREATISE (a) on the principles and practice of the action of ejectment. . . . By Philo Ruggles [John Adams, of the Middle Temple]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] New York, 1821 TREATISE (a) on the principles, practice, and history of commerce. By John R. MacCulloch.] 8vo. Brit. Mus.] London, 1831 Library of Useful Knowledge. TREATISE on the progress of literature, and its effects on society ; including a sketch of the progress of English and Scottish literature. [By Robert Thomson.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1834 TREATISE (a) on the progressive improvement and present state of the manufactures in metal. [By John Holland.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1831-34 TREATISE (a) on the proper condition for all horses. By Harry Hieover [Charles Bindley]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1852 TREATISE (a) on the religious observation of the Lord’s-day, according to the express words of the fourth commandment. [By Dr Samuel Wright.] Second edition. . . . 8vo. London, 1724 TREATISE (a) on the right of Manors, as deduced from the most ancient and best authorities. . . . [Preface signed: J. S. i.e. J. Searle.] 8vo. London, 1817 TREATISE (a) on the safety and maintenance of states by the means of fortresses ; written originally in French, by M. Maigret, Ingineer in Chief, and Knight of the Royal and Military Order of St Louis [and translated by John Heath]. 8vo. London, 1747 TREATISE (a) on the second sight, dreams and apparitions, with several instances sufficiently attested ; and an appendix of others equally authentic ; the whole illustrated with letters to and from the author on the subject of his treatise. . . . By Theophilus Insulanus [Rev. Donald M‘Leod, of Hamer, in Skye]. i2mo. Pp. xxvi. 192. [Boswell’s Tour to the Hebrides.] Edinburgh, 1763 TREATISE (a) on the seven stages of man’s life, the aged, and word union. By Philomath [Joseph Jenkins]. i2mo. Pp. 28. [Brit. Musi] Penzance, 1865 TREATISE (a) on the solar creation and universal deluge of the earth, by which is illustrated many of the most curious points in natural philosophy. By a native of Manchester [John Lowe, jun.]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 361. [Manch. Free Lib.] London [c. 1790] TREATISE (a) on the subjection of Princes to God and the Church. [By Michael Walpole, S.J.] 4to. [Oliver’s Collections ; Sommervogeli] St Omer, 1608 TREATISE (a) on the theory and practice of seamanship ; containing general rules for manoeuvring vessels, with a moveable figure of a ship, so planned that the sails, rudder, and hull may be made to perform the manoeuvres according to the rule laid down. . . . By’an officer in the service of the India Company [Richard Hall Gower]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London,1793 TREATISE (a) on the third commandment, self-denial, and marriage. By Philomath [Joseph Jenkins]. i2mo. Pp. 28. [Brit. Musi] Penzance [1864] TREATISE (a) on the vanity of Childish- Baptisme, wherein the deficiency of the Baptisme of the Church of England is considered in five particulars thereof; and wherein also is proved that baptizing is dipping and dipping baptizing. By A. R. [Andrew Ritor]. 4to. Pp. iv. 32. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl.] London, 1642 TREATISE (a) on the virtues and efficacy of a crust of bread, eat early in a morning fasting. . . . [By N. Robinson.] The fifth edition. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1767 TREATISE (a) on theonomy. Book I. By Robert Blake [Robert Hely Thompson]. 8vo. London [1907] TREATISE (a) on trade ; or, the antiquity and honour of commerce, shewing how trade was esteemed by the Egyptians, Jews, Greeks, and Romans, and on what footing of worship it stands with us ; addressed to the country-gentlemen of England. [By-Perry of Penshurst, Kent.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 64. [IV.] London, 1750 TREATISE (a) on virtue and vice [by -Ridgway]. 8vo. Private print, 1783 TREATISE on wheel carriages, showing their present defects ; with a plan and description of a new constructed waggon, which will effectually preserve and improve the public roads, and be more useful, cheap, and handy to the proprietor. [By .Samuel Bourn.] 8vo. 3 parts. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London,1768 TREATISE (a) paraenetical, wherein is shewed the way to resist the Castilian King [Philip II.]. By a pilgrim Spaniard [Jose Teixeira]. 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1598 For a later edition, 1625, see “The Spanish pilgrim . . .” TREATISE (a) partly theological, and partly political, containing some few discourses, to prove that the liberty of philosophizing (that is making use of natural reason) may be allow’d without any prejudice to piety, or to the peace of any common-wealth ; and that the loss of public peace and religion it self must necessarily follow, where such a liberty of reasoning is taken away. Translated out of Latin [of Benedict de Spinoza]. 8vo. Pp. 452. [Ai. and Q. 28th Feb. 1863, p. 168.] London, 1689 TREATISE (a) shewing how useful, safe, reasonable and beneficial the inrolling and registring of all conveyances of lands may be to the inhabitants of this kingdom. By a person of great learning and judgment [Sir Matthew Hale]. 4to. [Wood’s Athen. Oxon. iii. 1096.] London, 1694 TREATISE (a) tending to mitigation towards Catholicke - subiectes in England; wherein is declared, that it is not impossible for subiects of different religion, (especially Catho- lickes and Protestantes) to liue to- geather in dutifull obedience and subiection, under the gouernment of his Maiesty of Great Britany : against the seditious wrytings of Thomas Morton minister, & some others. . . . By P. R. [Robert Parsons]. 8vo. Pp. 556. [Oliver’s Collections; Som- mervogel’s Dictionnairei] 1607 TREATISE (a) touching the East- Indian trade ; or, a discourse (turned out of French into English) concerning the establishment of a French company for the commerce of the East-Indies. [By Fran£ois Char- pentier.] 4to. Pp. 62. [Bodli] London, 1664 TREATISE (a) upon coal-mines; or, an attempt to explain their general marks of indication, acknowledg’d and probable: together with particular instances of their public utility : objections to the mode of their discovery, and to their manufacture, obviated, &c. [By William Sharp, vicar of Long Burton.] 8vo. Pp. 105. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1769 TREATISE (a) upon gout, in which the primitive cause of that disease and likewise of gravel is clearly ascertained; and an easy method recommended, by which both may be with certainty prevented, or radically cured. [By Murray Forbes.] 8vo. [Mon. Rev. lxxvi. 220 ; xiii. 233.] London, 1786 TREATISE (a) upon the culture of peach trees ; translated from the French [of De Combes]. 8vo. London, 1768 TREATISE (a) upon the modes ; or, a farewell to French kicks. [By John Harris, D.D., Bishop of Llandaff.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 64. [Bod/.] London, 1715 Attributed also to John Robinson, Bishop of Bristol. [Brit. A/us.] TREATISE (a) wherein is declared the sufficiencie of English medicines for cure of all diseases, cured with medicines ; whereunto is added a collection of medicines growing (for the most part) within our English climat, approoved and experimented against the jaundice, dropsie, stone, falling sicknesse, pestilence. [By Timothy Bright, M.D. ?] i2mo. Pp. 127. [W.] London, 1615 The dedication to Lord Zouch is subscribed : T. B. TREATISE (a) wherein is demonstrated, I. That the East-India trade is the most national of all foreign trades. II. That the clamors, aspersions, and objections made against the present East-India Company, are sinister, selfish, or groundless. III. That since the discovery of the East- Indies, the dominion of the sea depends much upon the wane or increase of that trade, and consequently the security of the liberty, property, and protestant religion of this kingdom. IV. That the trade of the East-Indies cannot be carried on to national advantage in any other way than by a general joynt-stock. V. That the East-India trade is more profitable and necessary to the kingdom of England, than to any other kingdom or nation in Europe. By •biXoTrarpis [Sir Josiah Child]. 4to. Pp. 43. [M‘Culloch’s Lit. of Pol. Econ. p. 99.] London, 1681 TREATISE (a) whirein is manifestlie proved that reformation and those that sincerely favour the same are unjustly charged to be enemies unto his Majestie and the state : written both for the clearing of those that stande in that cause, and the stopping of the sclanderous mouthes of all the enemies thereof. [By John Penry]. 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 44, p. 348.] [Edinburgh?] 1590 This pamphlet was preceded by a similarly anonymous “Humble (an) motion with submission . . .” TREATISE (a) written by an author of the communion of the Church of Rome touching transubstantiation ; wherein is made appear, that according to the principles of that Church, this doctrine cannot be an article of faith. [From the French of Louis Dufour, abbe de Longuerne. Published by Abp. Thomas Tenison.] 4to. Pp. 73- London, 1687 TREATISES concerning regeneration. 1. Of repentance ; 2. Of the diet of the soule ; shewing, the one, how it ought to be sought after, and may be attained vnto : the other, how it being gotten, is to be preserued and continued. [By Thomas Morton.] 8vo. Pp. 119. [Bod/.] London, 1613 TREATISES on poetry, modern romance, and rhetoric, contributed to the E ncyclopcedia Britannica. [By George Moir.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1839 TREATISES on printing and typefounding. By T. C. H. [Thomas Curson Hansard]; from the seventh edition of the Encycloficedia Britannica. 8vo. Pp. vii. 235. Edinburgh, 1841 TREATMENT (the) of our domestic dogs.. By “ Magenta” [Captain Maurice Hartland Mahon]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1868 TREATY (a) of pacification; or, conditions of peace between God and man. By H. I. [Henry Isaacson]. i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 29, p. 61.] London, 1645 TREATYSE (a) cocernynge diuers of the constitucyons prouynciale and legan- tines. [By Christopher Saint German?] 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Musi] London [1535?] TREATYSE (a) shewing and declaring the pryde and abuse of women now a dayes. By Charles Bansley. [Edited by John Payne Collier.] 8vo. Pp. 15. [IV.] [London, 1841] Reprinted from an unique copy. TRECAN Farm. [A tale, by Rev. Jonathan Lett Stackhouse.] i2mo. Pp. 47. [Cushing’s Anon.] London [1865] TREE (the) of knowledge. [A novel.] By G. M. Robins [Mrs Louis Baillie Reynolds]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1889 TREE (a) planted by the rivers of water; or, an essay upon the . . . improvements which baptized Christians are to make of their sacred Baptism. . . . [By Cotton Mather.] 8vo. Pp. ii. 70. [Whitley’s Ba.pt. Bibl. i. 139.] Boston, 1704 TREE stories. By Mary Muller [Lenore E. Mulcts]. 8vo. Chicago, 1904 TREES and their nature ; or, the bud and its attributes : in a series of letters to his sons, by A. H. [Alexander Harvey, M.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1856 TREES and their uses. [By Harriet Bickersteth, later Mrs Cook.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 TREFOIL; verses by three [A., E. i.e. Miss E. Synge, and F. i.e. Frances Mary Synge, later Mrs Owen]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1868 TREMAINE ; or, the man of refinement. [By Robert Plumer Ward.] Second edition. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1825 TREMENDA; the dreadful sound with which the wicked are to be thunderstruck ; in a sermon. . . . [By Cotton Mather.] i2mo. Pp. 41. [C. Brinley’s Amer. Lib.] Boston, 1721 TREMLETT diamonds. [A novel.] By Alan St Aubyn [Frances Marshall]. 8vo. Pp. 328. London, 1906 TRENT (the) Sunday School manual; or, questions ... on the collects. . . . [By Rev. William Henry Turner.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1840 TREPAN (the) ; or, virtue rewarded: an opera. [Probably by John Maxwell, a blind man.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] York, 1739 TREVELYAN. By the author of A marriage in high life [Lady Caroline Lucy Scott]. Second edition. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1834 TREVLYN Hold ; or, Squire Trevlyn’s heir. By the author of East Lynne, etc. [Mrs Henry Wood, nee Ellen Price]. 8vo. 3 vols. [D. N. B. vol. 62, p. 356.] London, 1864 TREW (the) report of the dysputacyon had & begonne in the convocaycyon hows at london among the clargye there assembled the xviii daye of October in the yeare of our lord m.d.liiii. [By John Philpot, Archdeacon of Winchester.] i2mo. [Mas- kell’s Selected centuries of books, p. 98.] Imprinted at Basil by Alexander Edmonds, TREWE (a) and feythfull hystorie of the redoubtable Prynce Radapanthus. [A pretended reprint from a unique copy printed by Wynkin de Worde ; but the reputed author is John Adey Repton.] i2mo. [Ge?it. Mag. Jan. 1861, p. 109.] London, 1820 TRIAL (the) and life of Eugene Aram ; several of his letters and poems ; and his plan and specimens of an Anglo- Celtic lexicon : with copious notes and illustrations, and an engraved facsimile of the handwriting of this very ingenious but ill-fated scholar. [By Michael Fryer, of Reeth.] 8vo. Pp. 126. Richmond, 1842 TRIAL and triumph ; a coronation ode. . . . By Robert Blake [Robert Hely Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 32. London, 1902 TRIAL and triumph; a novel. . . . [By -M‘Gauran.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Cushing’s Anon.] London, 1854 TRIAL (the) ; Calvin and Hopkins, versus the Bible and common sense. By a lover of the truth [Charles Prentiss]. 8vo. [Allibone’s Diet.] Boston, 1819 TRIAL (the) ; more links of the Daisy chain. By the author of The heir of Redclyffe [Charlotte Mary Yonge]. 8vo. London and Cambridge, T864 TRIAL (the) of a student at the college of Clutha ; in the kingdom of Oceana. [By William Thom, minister of Govan.] 8vo. Pp. 76. Glasgow, 1768 Reprinted among “ The works of the Rev. William Thom . . Glasgow, 1799. i2mo. TRIAL (the) of Abraham ; a dramatic poem. [By Rev. E. Farrer.] 8vo. Pp. vii. 68. [W.j Brit. Mus.] Stamford, 1790 TRIAL (the) of Arminian Methodism ; together with a vindication of the good old Church-of-England doctrines. . . . By the author of Free Grace [William Howell]. i2mo. Pp. 32. Leeds, 1798 TRIAL (the) of Elizabeth Fenning for murder ; with an investigation of the mysterious case, and full particulars by Dr J. Watkins [William Hone]. [Nattali and Bond’s Cat., Feb. 1858.] 1815 TRIAL (the) of Farmer Carter’s dog Porter, for murder ; taken down verbatim et literatim in short-hand, and now published by authority, from the corrected manuscript of Counsellor Clear-point, barrister at law. N.B. This is the only true and authentic copy ; and all others are spurious. [By Edward Long.] 8vo. [Gent. Mag. May 1813, p. 490.] TRIAL (the) of Frederick Kendall, for setting fire to Sydney College, Cambridge; published from notes taken in court by a member of the University [Edward Smedley, M.A.]. 8vo. Pp. 18. [Bowes’ Camb. Books.] Cambridge, 1813 TRIAL (the) of man; an allegorical romance. [By Charles Edward Lawrence.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 319. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1902 TRIAL (the) of Mr Whitefield’s spirit ; in some remarks upon his fourth journal, publish’d when he staid in England on account of the embargo. [By Rev. Samuel Weller, minister of Maidstone.] 8vo. Pp. 55. [Smith’s Bibl. Cant, j Gent. Mag. Nov. 1740, p. 576.] London, 1740 TRIAL (the) of republicanism ; or, a series of political papers, proving the injurious and debasing consequences of republican government, and written constitutions : with an introductory address to the Hon. Thomas Erskine, Esq. By Peter Porcupine [William Cobbett]. 8vo. Pp. 63. London, 1801 TRIAL (the) of Selim the Persian [George Lord Lyttelton], for divers high crimes and misdemeanours. [By Edward Moore, the dramatist.] 4to. Pp. 24. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland^ London,1748 TRIAL of the Duchess of Kingston [Elizabeth Hervey]. Edited by Lewis Melville [Lewis S. Benjamin]. 8vo. Pp. x. 328. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1928 TRIAL (the) of the ladies, Hide Park, May Day; or, the Yellow books partner. [Signed : W. B. i.e. William Blake, of Highgate.] 4to. Pp. 46. [Brit. Mus.] 1656 TRIAL (the) of the most notable lawsuit of ancient or modern times; the Incorporated Scientific Era Protection Society v. Paul Christman and others, in the Court of Common Reason. . . . Issue : Did Christ rise from the dead? . . . [An allegory, by Robert Roberts.] 8vo. Pp. xii. 282. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1882 TRIAL of the Rev. James Kidd. . . . [By John Davidson.] 8vo. [Robertson’s Aberd. Bibl.] Aberdeen, 1831 TRIAL (the) of the Unitarians, for a libel on the Christian religion. [By George Wilkins.] 8vo. Pp. 313. [Aberdeen Pub. Lib.] London, 1830 TRIAL (the) of the witnesses of the resurrection of Jesus. [By Thomas Sherlock, D.D.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1800 An earlier edition has the title “ The tryal . . See below. VOL. VI. TRIAL (the) of tractarianism by the divine rule “ Beware of false prophets. . . . Ye shall know them by their fruits.” By Cornelius [Charles Henry Corbett]. i2mo. [W.] London, 1851 TRI ALL (the) of a black-pudding; or, the unlawfulness of eating blood proved by Scripture, before the Law, under the Law, and after the Law. By a well- wisher to ancient truth [Thomas Barlow, D.D., bishop of Lincoln?]. 4to. London, 1652 TRIALL (the) of Lieut. Collonell John Lilburne, by an extraordinary or special Commission, of Oyear and Terminer at the Guild-Hall of London, the 24. 25. 26. of Octob. 1649. • • • Published by Theodorus Verax [Clement Walker]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] Southwark [1649] TRIALL (a) of subscription, by way of a preface vnto certaine subscribers ; and, reasons for lesse rigour against non-subscribers : both modestly written ; that neither should offend. [By William Bradshaw.] 8vo. Pp. 10, 28. [D.N.B. vol. 6, p. 182.] [Middleburgh] 1599 TRIALL (the) of Tabacco; wherein his worth is most worthily expressed, as in the name, nature, and qualitie of the sayd hearb; his speciall use in all physicke, with the true and right use of taking it. . . . By E. G. [Edmund Gardner], Gent, and Practicioner in Physicke. 4to. [Bragge’s Booksaboict Tobacco, p. 7.] London, 1610 TRIALL (the) of the Protestant private Spirit; wherein their doctrine, making the sayd Spirit the sole ground and meenes of their beliefe, is confuted. . . . Written by J. S. [John Spencer] of the Society of Jesus. 4to. Pp. 392. [De Backer.] [St Omer] 1630 TRIALOGUS ; a conference betwixt Mr Con, Mr Pro, and Mr Indifferent concerning the Union : to be continued weekly. [By George Mackenzie, Earl of Cromarty.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 35, p. 147]. 1706 TRIALS ; a tale. By the author of The favourite of nature, etc. [M. A. Kelty]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1824 TRIALS (the) of a village priest. By Ruth Buck [Mrs Joseph Lamb], 8vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London [1862] TRIALS (the) of life. By the author of De Lisle [Mrs Elizabeth C. Grey]. Second edition. i2mo. 3 vols. London,1829 G TRIALS (the) of Margaret Lyndsay. By the author of Lights and shadows of Scottish life [Professor John Wilson]. 8vo. Edinburgh and London, 1823 TRI ANA; or, a threefold romanza of Mariana, Paduana, Sabina. [By Thomas Fuller.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1654 TRIANGLE (the). . . . By Investigator [Samuel Wheeler]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1832 TRIANGULAR (a) canon logarith- micall ; or, a table of artificiall sines, tangents, and the complements arithmetical! of sines supplying the use of secants, to radius 100,000,000 and to every degree and minute of the quadrant. [By Richard Norwood, teacher of mathematics.] 4to. 2 parts. [W. j Brit. Mus.] [1665?] TRIANGULAR (the) society; leaves from the life of a Portland family. [By Elizabeth Chase Akers.] i2mo. [Foley’s Amer. Authors.] Portland, Maine, 1886 TRIBE (the) of Levi ; a poem. [By John Tutchin.] 4to. [Bod/.] London, 1691 TRIBES on my frontier; an Indian naturalist’s foreign policy. By Eha [Edward Hamilton Aitken]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1881 TRIBULATIONS (the) of a Princess. By the author of The martyrdom of an Empress [Margaret Cunliffe Owen]. 8vo. London, 1901 TRIBUNAL (the) of the Terror ; a study of Paris in 1793-1795 : from the French of G. Lenotre [Louis L. T. Gosselin’ by Frederick Lees. 8vo. [Amer. Cat. Philadelphia, 1910 TRIBUNE (the). [By Patrick Delany, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 84. Printed at Dublin ; London reprinted, 1729 Consists of xii. numbers. TRIBUTE (the) ; a collection of pieces in prose and verse. [By Joseph O’Leary, journalist.] 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Cork, 1833 TRIBUTE (the); a panegyrical poem dedicated to the Honorable the Lady Ann Coke, of Holkham Hall. By Philo [-Maitland]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 28. [Bodl.] Norwich, N.D. Address to the reader dated 1832. TRIBUTE (the) of a humble muse to an unfortunate captive Queen, the widow of a murdered King. By W. T. F*** G * * * *, Esq. [W. T> Fitzgerald]. 4to. [Mon. Rev. x. 457 ; xiii. 238.] London,1793 TRIBUTE to Caesar, how paid by the best Christians, and to what purpose ; with some remarks on the late vigorous expedition against Canada. . . . By Philalethes [Thomas Maule]. 4to. Pp. 29. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl.] [Philadelphia, 1712?] TRIBUTE to O’Connell. By a Catholic priest of the house of Leinster. [By the Hon. Arthur Philip Perceval, B.C.L.] 8vo. Pp. 11. [Bodl.] Dublin, 1844 TRIBUTE (a) to the life and character of Jonas Checkering. By one who knew him well [Richard Green Parker]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Boston, 1854 TRIBUTE (a) to the memory of Dr Chalmers. By a former pupil [James M£Cosh, D.D., Principal of Princeton College]. 8vo. Pp. 8. [I). Laing.] Brechin, 1847 Signed : J. M. TRIBUTE (a) to the memory of William Cowper, author of the Task and other poems, occasioned by the perusal of his works, and the memoirs of his life, by Hayley. [By John Talwyn She- well.] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 82 ; ii. 567.] Ipswich, 1808 Another edition in octavo, was published in the same year, with the author’s initials, I. T. S. TRIBUTE (a) to the memory of William Grover, of Stanstead, in Essex, who died the nth of 10th month, 1825. By A. F. G. [Atkinson F. Gibson]. 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 95.] Warwick, 1826 TRIBUTE (a) to the principles, virtues, habits, and public usefulness of the Irish and Scotch early settlers of Pennsylvania. Byadescendant[George Chambers, LL.D.]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Chambersburg, 1856 TRIBUTES of affection ; with the Slave, and other poems. By a lady, and her brother [Elizabeth Sophia Tomlins ; published by her brother, Sir Thomas Edlyne Tomlins]. i2mo. [Gent. Mag. xcviii. ii. 471 ; Mon. Rev. xxiv. 214.] London, 1797 TRICK (a) to catch the old-one; as it hath beene lately acted, by the children of Paules. [By Thomas Middleton.] 4to. No pagination. [Baker’s Biog. Drami] London, 1608 Another issue has the title :—A tricke to catch the old-one : as it hath beene often in action, both at Paules, and the Black- Fryers : presented before his Maiestie on New-yeares night last. Composde by 1'. M. [Thomas Middleton]. London, 1608 TRICK, trial, and triumph; a Scottish clerical detective story. By Andrew Cheviot [Rev. James Hiram Watson]. 8vo. Pp. 128. [Scott’s Fasti (sec. ed.), ii. 15.] Glasgow, 1891 TRICK upon trick ; or, the vintner in the suds. [A farce] in Jwo acts. [By Joseph Yarrow.] i2mo. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1786 TRI-COLORED sketches in Paris, during the years 1851 to 1853. By Dick Tinto [Frank Bott Goodrich]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. andPseud.\ New York, 1855 TRICOTRIN, the story of a waif and stray. By Ouida, author of Strathmore, etc. [Louise de La Ramee]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1S69 TRIDENT (the) and the net. By the author of The martyrdom of an Empress [Margaret Cunliffe Owen]. 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1905 TRIDENT (the); or, the national policy of naval celebration : describing a hieronauticon, or naval temple, with its appendages ; proposing a periodical celebration of naval games, and, on occasion of victories of the first magnitude the granting of triumphs. ... By a private gentleman [Major John Cartwright]. 4to. Pp. xvi. 208. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1802 TRIED and true; a tale. By Alton Clyde [Mrs Arnold Jeffreys], i2mo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1868 TRIFLER (the); a new periodical miscellany by Timothy Touchstone of Saint Peter’s College, Westminster. [By R. Oliphant and J. H. Allan, of Trinity College Cambridge ; Hon. W. Aston and Sir W. E. Taunton, students of Christ Church, Oxford, all of whom were under the age of 20.] 8vo. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1788 TRIFLER (the); or, a ramble among the wilds of fancy, the works of nature, and the manners of men. [By Henry Man.] i2mo. 4 vols. London, 1776-77 TRIFLES from my portfolio; or, recollections of twenty-nine years’ military service. By a staff surgeon [Walter Henry]. 8vo. 2 vols. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. i. 1433.] Quebec, 1839 Republished with the author’s name in two volumes, 8vo, London, 1843, with the title “ Events of a military life ; being recollections after service in the Peninsular war, invasion of France, the East Indies, St Helena, Canada and elsewhere.” TRIFLES in poesy. By W. T. M. [Walter Thomas Meyler]. i2mo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland!] Dublin, 1840 TRIFLES in verse. [By Henry, Lord Lyttelton.] 8vo. Pp. 52. [W. ; Martin’s Cat.] London, 1803 TRIFLING (a) mistake in Lord Erskine’s recent preface, corrected in a letter to his Lordship. By the author of the Defence of the people [Sir John C. Hobhouse]. 8vo. [H6y Brit. Mus.] London, 1819 TRIMESTER (a) in France and Swisser- land ; or, a three months’ journey in the months of July, August, September, and October, 1820, from Calais to Basle, through Lyons ; and from Basle to Paris, through Strasburg and Reims. By an Oxonian [Rev. Stephen Weston, B.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 88. [Lowndes’Bibl. Man. p. 2882.] London, 1821 TRIMMED (the) lamp ; and other stories of the Four Million. By O. Henry [William Sydney Porter]. 8vo. Chicago, 1907 TRIMMER (the); or, some necessary cautions, concerning the union of the kingdoms of Scotland and England ; with an answer to some of the chief objections against an incorporating union. [By Sir John Spotswood.] 4to. Edinburgh, 1706 TRIMMING (the) of Thomas Nashe Gentleman, by the high-tituled patron Don Richardo de Medico Campo, Barber Chirurgion to Trinitie Colledge in Cambridge. [By Richard Lichfield, pseud, of Gabriel Harvey.] 4to. Pp. 53. London, 1597 TRIMSHARP’S account of himself. [By Harvey A. Fuller.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1873 TRINCULO’S trip to the jubilee. [By Edward Thompson.] 4to. [Newsam’s Poets of Yorkshire!] Moran, 1769 TRINITARIAN (the) controversy reviewed ; or, a defence of the Appeal to the common sense of all Christian people, &c. Wherein every particular advanced by the Reverend Dr M'Donnell in his Sincere Christian’s answer to the Appeal, is distinctly considered. ... By the author of the Appeal [William Hopkins]. 8vo. [.Brit\ Mus.] London, 1760 TRINITARIAN (the) investigator ; or, an examination intothe origin, amongst Christians, and Scripture proofs, of the doctrine of the Trinity, &c. A dispassionate inquiry, whether certain opinions held by the Society of Friends, are the peculiar doctrines of Christianity, or whether they are not heathenish, absurd, unscriptural, anti- christian, and derogatory of God, addressed to John Wilkinson, Josiah Forster, Joseph John Gurney, & William Allen, acknowledged by that Society to be “ true ministers of Christ, and inwardly moved to the work by the Holy Ghost.” [By Joseph Shipton.] 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 99 ; ii. 573.] Birmingham [1830] Signed : An unlearned layman. TRINITARIAN (the)scheme of religion, concerning Almighty God and mankind, considered both before and after the (pretended) Fall; with notes. [By Stephen Nye.] 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 41, p. 282.] London, 1692 TRINITY (the); a nineteenth century Passion-Play. The Son; or, victory of love. [By Karl Pearson, Cambridge.] 8vo. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books.] 1882 TRINITY Church case. . . . By Presbyter [Rev. John Morgan]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1856 TRINITY [College] Foot Beagles; a song by H. S. G. [Gladstone]. 8'vo. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books.] Cambridge, 1898 TRINITY (the) or Christ—Charity and Shilok, showing Jesus and His seed. . . . [Signed: W. D. F. i.e. W. D. Forsyth.] 8vo. Pp. 103. [Brit. Musi Littleborough [190L TRINITY (the), the Christ’s, and the Antichrists ; thoughts on 1 John. [By Richard Govett.] i2mo. London, 1874 TRIOLETS. By M. B. [Maurice Baring]. Second series. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Chaundy’s Bibl. of M. B.] [Private print, 1893] TRIP (a) down the Thames ; from Oxford to Windsor. By a Loch- keeper [J. Sadler]. 8vo. Sonning, 1877 TRIP (the) of the “ Porgie” ; or, tacking up the Hudson. By Bricktop [George G. Smith]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1874 * TRIP round the world . . . Europe. By the author of Home and its duties, etc. [Mrs J. Werner Laurie]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1869] TRIP (a) through London ; containing observations on men and things ; , to Avhich is added, a brief and merry character of Ireland. By a Berkshire gentleman [Erasmus Jones]. . . . 8vo. London,1728 TRIP (a) to Calais ; a medley maritime sketch: being the poetical, prosaical production of Timothy Timbertoe, Esq. Samuel Foote], dedicated to a Duchess of Kingston]. 8vo. Pp. 60. [Manch. Free Lib.] London, 1775 TRIP (a) to Holland, containing sketches of characters ; together with cursory observations on the manners and customs of the Dutch. [By Andrew Becket.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Biog. Diet. 1816 ; Mo?i. Rev. lxxiv. 67 ; lxxv. 138.] London,1786 TRIP (a) to Jamaica; with a true character of the people and island. By the author of Sofs Paradise [Edward Ward]. Fol. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1698 TRIP (a) to London ; or, the humours of a Berwick smack: interspersed with topographical notices. [By R. Jameson, or Jamieson, advocate.] i2mo. Pp. x. 241. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1815 TRIP (a) to Maoriland. By Pakeha Maori [John Robin]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1907 TRIP (a) to Margate. By Paul Pry, Esq. [William Heath]. Oblong 4to. [Jaggard’s Index.] London [1825] TRIP (a) to Mexico ; or, recollections of a ten months’ ramble in 1849-50. . . . By a barrister [Alex. C. Forbes]. 8vo. London, 1851 TRIP (a) to New-England; with a character of the country and people, both English and Indians. [By Edward Ward.] Fol. Pp. 16. [Camb. Hist, of Amer. Lit. i. 379.] London, 1699 TRIP (a) to Norway in 1873. By Sixty- one [Rev. George Henry Hely Hutchinson]. 8vo. London, 1874 TRIP (a) to Paris in July and August 1792. [By Richard Twiss.] 8vo. Pp. 131. [Mon. Rev. x. 65.] London [1792 or 3] TRIP (the) to Portsmouth ; a comic sketch of one act, with songs. [By George Alexander Stevens.] 8vo. Pp. 51. [D.N.B. vol. 54, p. 230.] London [1773] TRIP (a) to Rome in 1869. By C. M. [Charles Mackenzie, bookseller]. i2mo. Pp. 87. Edinburgh, private print, 1869 TRIP (a) to Scotland ; as it is acted at the Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane. [By William Whitehead.] 8vo. Pp. 40. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1770 TRIP (a) to Shetland. By a Scotsman [David Dakers Black]. 8vo. Pp. 49. Edinburgh, 1872 Signed : T. G. TRIP (a) to Taymouth, performed during the late Royal Visit, Sept. 1842. [By Dr Thomas Gillespie.] i2mo. {Brit. Mus.] Cupar, 1843 TRIP (a) to the English Lakes in May, 1864. By a Gourmet [Francis Mew- burn, Junr.]. 8vo. Pp. 74. [Dobell’s Priv. Prints, p. 122.] N.P. [1865] TRIP (the) to the Great Exhibition of Barnabas Blandydash and family. By Uncle Joseph [Joseph Banks], 8vo. London, 1851 TRIPARTITE division of Tithes. [By John Allen, M.D., Dulwich College.] 8vo. London, 1833 TRIPLE (the)cord; or, a treatise proving the truth of the Roman religion, by Sacred Scriptures, taken in the literall sense; expounded by ancient Fathers, interpreted by Piotestant writers : with a discouery of sundry subtile sleights vsed by Protestants, for euading the force of strongest arguments, taken from cleerest texts of the foresaid Scriptures. [By Laurence Anderton.] 4to. Pp. 801. [Gillow’s Bibl. Dict.\ [St Omer] 1634 The Epistle dedicatory is signed : N. N. TRIPLET (the) ; Church, state, and vassalage. “ Triajuncta in uno.” [By Judah Lee Bliss.] 8vo. Boston, 1872 TRIPLETS for the truth’s sake. By B. B. [Bernard Barton]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus. ] London, 1842 TRIPLICI nodo, triplex cuneus ; or, an apologie for the Oath of Allegiance against the two breves of Pope Paulus Quintus, and the late letter of Cardinal Bellarmine to G. Blackwel the Arch- Priest. [By King James I.] 4to. {Brit. Mus.\ London, 1607 TRIPLICITY. [An essay. By Thomas Lance, of Birkenhead.] 8vo. 2 vols. Liverpool, 1840 TRIPPINGS in author-land. By Fanny Forrester [Emily C. Chubbuck, later Mrsjudson]. i2mo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.\ New York, 1846 TRIPPINGS (the) of Tom Pepper; an autobiography. By Harry Franco [Charles F. Briggs]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] New York, 1844 VOL. VI. TRISTIA; or, the sorrows of Peter: elegies to the King, Lords Grenville, Petty, Erskine, the Bishop of London, Messrs Fox, Sheridan, &c. &c. By P. Pindar, Esq. [John Wolcott, M.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 169. London, 1806 TRISTRAM and Iseult. [By Rev. Frederick Millard.] 8vo. Pp. 35. {Brit. Musi] London, private print, 1870 TRISTRAM of Blent; an episode in the history of an ancient house. By Anthony Hope [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. 8vo. London, 1901 TRITHEISM charged upon Dr Sherlock’s new notion of the Trinity, and the charge made good, in an answer to the Defense of the said notion against the Animadversions upon Dr Sherlock’s book, entituled, A vindication of the doctrine of the holy and ever blessed Trinity, &c. By a divine of the Church of England [Robert South, D.D.]. 4to. {D.N.B. vol. 53, p. 277.] London, 1695 TRIUMPH (the) of acquaintance over friendship ; an essay for the times. By a lady [Mrs Hayley]. i2mo. Pp. 87. {European Mag. xxix. 183; xxxii. 359.] London, 1796 TRIUMPH (the) of benevolence; a poem, occasioned by the national design of erecting a monument to John Howard, Esq. A new edition, corrected and enlarged ; to which are added, stanzas on the death of Jonas Hanway, Esq. [By Samuel Jackson Pratt.] 4to. Pp. 30. [Nichols’ Lit. Anec. ix. 7.] London, 1786 TRIUMPH (the) of Christianity ; or, the life of Cl. FI. Julian, the apostate : with remarks contain’d in the resolution of several queries : to which is added, reflections upon a pamphlet, call’d, Seasonable remarks on the fall of the Emperor Julian ; and on part of a late pernicious book, entituled, A short account of the life of Julian, &c. [By John Dowell, M.A., of Christ’s College, Cambridge.] 8vo. Pp. 237. [Arber’s Term Cat.] London, 1683 TRIUMPH (the) of Count Ostermann. [A novel.] By Graham Hope [Miss Jessie Hope]. 8vo. London, 1903 TRIUMPH (the) of fashion ; a vision. [By Henry James Pye.] 4to. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1771 TRIUMPH (the) of friendship; an historical poem. [By William Golden.] 4to. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1791 G 2 TRIUMPH (the) of Isis; a poem: occasioned by [William Mason’s] Isis, an elegy. [By Thomas Warton.] Third edition. 4to. Pp. 16. [Coleridge’s Worthies of Yorkshire, p. 403.] London, 1750 TRIUMPH (the) of love; and other stories. By Mimosa [Miss M. Chan- Foon]. 8vo. London [c. 1900] TRIUMPH (the) of music ; with other poems. By the blind bard of Cicestria [Francis Champion]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.\ Chichester, 1841 TRIUMPH (the) of the Orwell ; with a dedicatory sonnet, and prefatory stanzas. [By Bernard Barton.] 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 196.] Woodbridge [1817] TRIUMPH (the) of time and truth ; an oratorio ... set to music by Mr Handel. [By Cardinal B. Pamfili; translated by T. Morell.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1758 TRIUMPH (the) of truth ; being an account of the trial of Mr E. Elwall [written by himself] for heresy and blasphemy, at Stafford Assizes, before Judge Denton ; to which are added extracts from William Penn’s Sandy foundation shaken, and a few additional illustrations. By the author of An Appeal to the serious and candid professors of Christianity, etc. [Joseph Priestley]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1776 TRIUMPH (the) of truth ; or, the Protestant truth vindicated and established by arguments fairly drawn from the Word of God. [By Rev. J. Chapman, Vicar of Likley.] 8vo. Pp. 35. Leeds, 1784 TRIUMPH (the) over Midian. By A. L. O. E., author of The Shepherd of Bethlehem, etc. [Charlotte Maria Tucker]. 8vo. Pp. 280. London,1867 TRIUMPHS of ancient architecture ; Greece and Rome. [Signed : W. H. D. A. i.e. William H. Davenport Adams.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1866 TRIUMPHS (the) of Europe in the campaigns of 1812, 1813, 1814, commemorated by a series of twelve views from original drawings in the collection of the Emperor of Russia, to which is prefixed a concise history of those important events. [By Thomas Hartwell Horne.] Fol. [W; Brit. Mus.] London, 1814 TRIUMPHS (the) of Fabian Field, criminologist. By Dick Donovan [Joyce Emerson Preston Muddock]. 8vo. Pp. 308. London, 1912 TRIUMPHS (the) of faith. [By John Bonar.] i2mo. Pp. 364. [W. and Q. 1913, 2, 350.] London, 1766 TRIUMPHS (the) of folly. By the author of The Diaboliad [William Combe]. 4to. London, 1777 TRIUMPHS (the)of London; performed on Monday, October 29, 1683, for the entertainment of . . . Sir Henry Tulse, Knight, Lord Mayor of the City of London : containing a description of the whole solemnity. . . . [By Thomas Jordan.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1683 An edition of 1678 is not anonymous. TRIUMPHS of modern architecture ; a description of some of the celebrated edifices of modern Europe. [Preface signed W. D. A. i.e. William Davenport Adams.] i2mo. Pp. 128. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1886 TRIUMPHS (the) of perseverance and enterprise ; recorded as examples for the young. [By Thomas Cooper.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 280. London [1856] TRIUMPHS (the) of religion ; a sacred poem, in four parts. [By Harriett Cope.] i2mo. Pp. 121. [Mon. Rev. lxvi. 320; Brit. Crit. xxxviii. 519.] London, 1811 TRIUMPHS (the) of Rome over despised, Protestancie: [By George Hall, Bishop of Chester.] 4to. Pp. 2, 148. [D. N. B. vol. 24, p. 65.] London, 1655 The address “ to the victorious Roman Catholique knight, that foyld the vicar, and won the lady" is signed: Your truly Catholique wel-wilier, faithfull will-bee vicar of Non-such. TRIUMPHS of superstition ; an elegy. By a student of Harvard University Thaddeus Mason Harris, D.D.]. 8vo. Evans’ Amer. Bibl. vol. 8, p. 38.] Boston, 1790 TRIUMPHS of the press; a poem. [By John Smith.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1837 TRIUMPHS (the) of the Prince d’Amour ; a masque presented by his Highnesse at his pallace in the Middle Temple, the 24th of Februarie 1635. [By Sir William D’Avenant.] 4to. Pp. 2, 16. [Bodl.] London, 1635 Address to every reader signed : W. D. “Will. D’Avenant the author.’’—WOOD. TRIUMPHS (the) of time; the previsions of Lady Evelyn ; with the conclusion. By the author of Two old men’s tales, etc. [Mrs Anne Marsh Caldwell]. 8vo. Pp. 348. [D.N.B. vol. 36, p. 219.] London, 1849 TRIUMPHS (the) ouer death; or, a consolatorie epistle, for afflicted minds, in the affects of dying friends : first written for the consolation of one ; but nowe published for the generall good of all, by R. S., the authour of 5. Peters complaint, and Moeonice his other hymnes [Robert Southwell, S.J.]. 4to. No pagination. London, 1596 TRIUMVIRADE (the); or, broad- bottomry ; a panegyri-satiri-serio-comi- dramatical poem. By Porcupinus Pelagius [Macnamara Morgan]. 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 39, p. 23.] London [1743] TRIUMVIRATE (the); or, a letter in verse from Palaemon to Celia, from Bath. [By Leonard Welsted.] Fol. [D. N.B. vol. 60, p. 241.] London, 1718 TRIUMVIRATE (the); or, the authentic memoirs of A. B. and C. [By Richard Griffith.] J2mo. 2 vols. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.\ London, 1765 TRIUMVIRI ; or, the genius, spirit and deportment of three men, Mr Ric. Resburg, Mr John Pawson, and Mr G. Kendall, in their late writings against the free grace of God in the redemption of the word. [By John Goodwin, D.D.] 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 22, p. 147.] London, 1658 TRIUNE (the) ; or, the new religion. [By Edward Webster.] 8vo. Pp. 60. London, 1867 TRIVIAL poems, and triolets ; written in obedience to Mrs Tomkin’s commands, by Patrick Carey, 20th Aug. 1651. [Edited by Sir Walter Scott.] 4to. [IV.] London, 1820 TRIVIAL (the) round ; a confirmation story for girls. By Alan St Aubyn [Frances Marshall]. 8vo. London [1902] TROADES Englished. By S. P. Samuel Pordage]. 8vo. Pp. 74. D. N. B. vol. 46, p. 151.] London, 1660 TRODDEN down strength by the God of strength ; or, Mrs Drake revived : shewing her remarkable . . . case . . . with the manner how the Lord revealed Himself unto her. . . . Related by . . . Hart On-hi [John Hart, D.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1647 TRODDLES and us and others. By R. Andom [Alfred Wilson Barrett]. 8vo. London, 1901 TRODDLES’ Farm. By R. Andom [Alfred Wilson Barrett]. 8vo. Pp. 316. London, 1911 TRODDLES in the trenches. By R. Andom [Alfred Wilson Barrett]. 8vo. Pp. 160. London, 1919 TRODDLES — not to mention ourselves. By R. Andom [Alfred Wilson Barrett]. 8vo. Pp. 320. London, 1914 TROJAN (the) horse of the Presbyteriall government unbowelled; wherein is contained, I. The power of the Presbyterian government. II. The persons in whom this power is placed. III. The exercise of the Presbyterian power in Scotland, and the lawes there imposed on the peoples necks. [By Henry Parker, of Lincoln’s Inn.] 4to. Pp. 22. [D.N.B. vol. 43, p. 241.] 1646 TROLLOPE’S dilemma ; a story of a Cambridge Quad. By Alan St Aubyn [Mrs Frances Marshall]. i2mo. Bristol, 1889 TROLLOPIAD (the) ; or, a travelling gentleman in America: a satirical poem by Nil Admirari, Esq. [Rev. Frederick William Shelton, LL.D.]. i2mo. Pp. 28, 151. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1837 TROOPER Peter Halket of Mashona- land. By Ralph Iron [Olive Schreiner, later Mrs Cronwright]. 8vo. Pp. 133. London, 1897 TROPICAL flowers for Charlotte. By F. H. A. [Francis Harcourt Anton]. 8vo. London, 1825 TROTH (the) ; a play in one act. By Rutherford Mayn [Samuel Waddell]. 8vo. Pp. 14. [S. J. Brown’s Books on Ireland.] Dublin, 1909 TROTTY’S book ; the story of a little boy. By the author of Gates ajar [Miss Elizabeth Stuart Phelps]. i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1872] TROUBADOUR (the); catalogue of pictures, and historical sketches. By L. E. L. author of The improvisatrice [Letitia Elizabeth Landon, afterwards Mrs M‘Lean]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 326. London, 1825 TROUBLED (a) heart and how it was comforted at last. [By Charles Warren Stoddard.] i6mo. [Foley’s Amer. Authors.] 1885 TROUBLED waters. [A novel.] By Headon Hill [Francis Edward Grainger]. 8vo. Pp. 288. London, 1909 TROUBLES (the) in Jamaica; a condensed statement of facts. [By the Rev. Henry Richard.] 8vo. Pp. 12. London, 1866 TROUBLES (the) of a shovel hat; and other stories. By Max Baring [Charles Messent]. 8vo. London, 1901 TROUBLES (the) of an unlucky boy ; a novel. By John Strange Winter [Mrs Arthur Stannard, nee Henrietta E. V. Palmer]. 8vo. Pp. 118. London, 1897 TROUBLESOME (the) and hard adventures in love ; lively setting Aforth the feavers, the dangers and the jealousies of lovers, and the labyrinths and wildernesses of fears and hopes through which they dayly passe. . . . Written in Spanish by that excellent and famous gentleman, Michael Cervantes, and exactly translated into English by R. C. [Robert Codrington], Gent. 4to. 139 leaves, unpaged. [W.] London, 1652 The Epistle dedicatory is signed : R. C. Not by Cervantes. TROUBLESOME (a) girl; a novel. By the author of Molly Bawn [Mrs Argles, later Hungerford, nee Margaret W. Hamilton]. 8vo. Pp. 189. London, 1889 TROUBLESOME (the) life and raigne of King Henry the Third ; wherein five distempers and maladies are set forth. Viz. 1. By the Pope and churchmens extortions. 2. By the places of best trust bestowed upon unworthy members. 3. By patents and monopolies for private favourites. 4. By needlesse expences and pawning of jewels. 5. By factious Lords and ambitious peeres. . . . [By Sir Robert Cotton.] 4to. London, 1642 A reprint of “ A short view of the long life and raigne,” etc. TROUBLESOME (a) pair. [A novel.] By Leslie Keith [Miss Grace Leslie Keith Johnstone]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1894 TROWEL (the) and the cross ; and other stories. By Conrad de Bolanden [Joseph E. Bischoff], Translated from the German. 8vo. [Lib. Journ. iv. 99.] New York, 1878 TROY town. By Q. [Sir Arthur T. Quiller-Couch]. 8vo. London, 1895 TRUANT (the) five. [A tale.] By Raymond Jacberns [Miss M. Selby Ashe]. 8vo. London, 1907 TRUCE (the) in the East and its aftermath ; being the sequel to The reshaping of the Far East. By B. L. Putnam Weale [Bertram Lenox Simpson]. 8vo. Pp. 644. London,1907 TRUCKLEBOROUGH Hall; a novel. [By William Pitt Scargill.] 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1827 TRUE (a) account and confutation of the doctrine of the Sabellians. [By Daniel Whitby, D.D.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1716 TRUE (a) account and declaration of the horrid conspiracy against the late king, his present Majesty, and the government; as it was order’d to be published by his late Majesty. [By Thomas Sprat, D.D., Bishop of Rochester.] The second edition. Fol. Pp. 167. [Brit. Mus.] In the Savoy, 1685 TRUE (a) account of the author of a book entituled EU&v EdsiXi^ [sic], or the Pourtraiture of His Sacred Majesty in His solitudes and sufferings ; with an answer to all objections made by Dr Hollingsworth and others, in defence of the said book. [By Anthony Walker.] 4to. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1692 TRUE (a) account of the behaviour and conduct of Archibald Stewart, Esq. ; late Lord Provost of Edinburgh ; in a letter to a friend. [By David Hume.] 8vo. Pp. 51. London, 1748 TRUE (a) account of the design and advantages of the South-Sea trade ; with answers to all the objections raised against it ; a list of the commodities proper for that trade, and the progress of the subscription towards the South-Sea Company. By the author of the Review [Daniel Defoe]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1711 TRUE (a) account of the life and writings of Thomas Burnett, Esq. [By George Sewell, M.D.] 8vo. [ W.] London, 1715 A satirical account of Sir Thomas Burnet, one of the Justices of the Court of Common Pleas, and youngest son of Bishop Burnet. TRUE (a) account of the present state of Trinity College in Cambridge, under the oppressive government of their master Richard Bentley, late D.D. [By Conyers Middleton, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 43. [Rawlinson’s English Topographer, p. 20.] London, 1719 TRUE (a) account of the proceedings at Perth; the debates in the secret council there : with the reasons and causes of the suddain finishing and breaking up of the rebellion. Written by a rebel [John, Master of Sinclair]. 8vo. Pp. 76. London, 1716 See Preface (p. viii.) to Memoirs of the insurrection in Scotland in 1715* By John, Master of Sinclair. . . . With notes by Sir Walter Scott, Bart. Edinburgh, 1858. TRUE (a) account of the regulation and management of the foundation bursaries of the United College, St Andrews. . . . By a bursar of the College [Charles Roger]. 8vo. St Andrews, 1843 TRUE (a) account of the sensible, thankful and holy state of God’s people ; and of his speaking to them both in the Old and New Covenant. By the servant of Christ, G. F. [George Fox]. 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 686.] 1686 TRUE (a) account of the tryals, examinations, confessions, condemnations and executions of divers witches at Salem in New-England, for their bewitching of sundry people and cattel to death. . . . [Signed: C. M. i.e. Cotton Mather.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] London [1693] TRUE (a) account of this present biasing- star; presenting it self to the view of the world, this August. 1682. with sundry considerable remarks and observations thereupon. [By Christopher Nesse.] Fol. S. sh. [Bodl.\ London, 1682 Signed: C. N. See also “ A full and true account of the late blazing star. . . .” TRUE (the) alarm ! An essay shewing the pernicious influence of houses of industry on the political interests of this country. [By R. Alderson.] 8vo. London, 1787 TRUE (a) and admirable historie of a mayden of Confolens, in the Prouince of Poictiers, that for the space of three yeeres and more hath liued and yet doth, without receiuing either meate or drinke. . . . [Translated from the French of N. Coeffeteau, by Anthony Munday.] 8vo. \Brit. Musi] London, 1603 Signed: A. M. TRUE (the) and ancient manner of reading Hebrew without points, and the art of the Hebrew versification. [By John Robertson, M.D.] 8vo. London, 1747 TRUE (the) and briefe relation of the great victory obtained by Sir Ralph Hopton, neare Bodmin, in the county of Cornwall, Ianuary 19. Ann. Dom. 1642. [By Peter Heylin, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 37-42. \Bodl.\ 1642 Complete in itself; but the pagination shows it to be only a part of a larger work. TRUE (a) and certaine relation of a strange birth borne at Stone-house. [Signed: Th. B. i.e. Bedford Thomas.] 4to. {Pollard and Redgravei\ TRUE and correct tables of time, calculated for the old stile for 784 years, viz. from A.D. 1300 to 2083, both inclusive ; and for the new stile, from its commencement, viz. 1582 to 2083, inclusive, being 501 years. By R. T. [Robert Tailfer], half-pay officer. 8vo. \Camb. Univ. Lib.\ [London, 1736] TRUE (the) and eternal divinity of the Great Founder of the Christian dispensation. . . . [By Thomas Fawcett.] i2mo. Pp. 68. Manchester, 1813 TRUE (a) and exact account of Sadler’s well, or the new mineral water lately found out at Islington ; treating of its nature and virtues. ... By T. G. [Thomas Guidott], doctor of Physick. 4to. {Brit. Mus.\ London, 1684 TRUE (a) and exact history of the succession of the Crown of England; collected out of records, and the best historians: written for the information of such as have been deluded and seduced by the pamphlet [by Lord Somers], called The brief history of the succession, &c. pretended to have been written for the satisfaction of the Earl of H. [By Robert Brady, M.D.] Fol. Pp. 46. London, 1681 TRUE (a) and exact relation of the strange finding out of Moses his tombe, in a valley neere unto Mount Nebo in Palestina; with divers remarkable occurrences that happened thereupon, and the severall judgements of many learned men concerning the same. . . . [By Thomas Chaloner.] 8vo. Pp. 39. [Wood’s Athen. Oxon. iii. 531.] London, 1657 “ This book, at its first appearance, made a great noise, and pusled the presbyterian Rabbies for a time : at length the author thereof being known, and his story found to be a meer sham, the book became ridiculous, and was put to posterior uses.” —Ant. a Wood, Athen. Oxon., ed. Bliss, iii. 533- Ascribed also to Joseph Georgirenes, Archbishop of Samos. \_Douce Cat.~\ TRUE and exact relation of two Catholics who suffered for their religion at the Summer Assizes held at Lancaster in the year 1628. [By Cornelius Murphy, S.J.?] 8vo. Pp. 68. [Sommervogel’s Dictionnairei\ London,1737 TRUE (a) and faithful account of what was observed in ten years travells into the principal places of Europe, Asia, Africa and America ; written in several letters . . . by R. F. [Richard Flecknoe], Esq. i2mo. 92 leaves. TRUE (a) and faithful narrative of the unjust and illegal sufferings and oppressions of many Christians . . . under, and by several of his Majesties Justices of peace, and others, who are no officers, but informers, in the county of Devon, since the ioth of May, 1670, from a pretended zeal, to put the laws against conventicles in execution. . . . [By John Hicks, minister at Kings- bridge.] 4to. [Davidson’s Bibl. Devo?i. p. 96.] N.P. 1671 Somers’ Collection of Tracts, 2d. ed. vol. vii. pp. 586-615. TRUE (a) and ful relation of the officers and armies forcible seising of divers eminent members of the Commons House, Decemb. 6. & 7. 1648 ; as also, a true copy of a letter lately written by an agent for the army in Paris, dated 28 of Novemb. 1648. to a member of the said House. . . . [By William Prynne.] 4to. Pp. 15. London, 1648 TRUE (the) and genuine account of the life and actions of the late Jonathan Wild . . . taken from his own mouth. By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 40. Brit Mt/s.] London, 1725 TRUE (a) and genuine history of the last two wars against France and Spain. . . . See “ Military (the) memoirs of Captain George Carle- ton . . .” TRUE (a) and impartial account of the life of the Most Reverend Father in God, Dr James Sharp, Arch-bishop of St Andrews, Primate of all Scotland, and Privy-Counsellor to his Most Sacred Majesty King Charles II. . . . [By David Simson.] 8vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] 1723 TRUE (a) and impartial account of the parliamentary conduct of Sir T. D. Acland, Bart. By a freeholder of the county of Devon [Rev. John Pike Jones, of North Bovey]. 8vo. [Davidson’s Bibl. Devon, p. 135.] Exeter, 1819 TRUE (a) and impartial account of the present differences between the Master and Fellows of Trinity College [Cambridge. By John Paris]. 8vo. Pp. 36. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books l\ London, 1711 TRUE (a) and impartial history of the most material occurrences in the kingdom of Ireland during the two last years, with the present state of both armies. . . . Written by an eyewitness to the most remarkable' passages [George Warter Story]. 4to. [Arber’s Term Cat. ii. 624.] London, 1691 Part 11. gives the author’s name. TRUE (a) and impartial narrative of some illegal and arbitrary proceedings by certain Justices of the Peace against Non-conformists in and near the town of Bedford. . . . [By John Bunyan ?] 4to. 1670 TRUE (a) and impartial narrative of the most material debates and passages in the late Parliament. ... By a member of that Parliament [Slingsby Bethel]. 4to. London, 1659 Reprinted in the Somers Tracts, vol. 4. TRUE (a) and impartiall relation of the battaile betwixt, his Majesties army and that of the rebells, neare Newbury in Berk-shire, Sept. 20. 1643 ; with the severall actions of the kings army since his Majesties removing it from before Gloucester: sent in a letter from the army to a noble Lord. [By Lord George Digby.] 4to. Pp. 9. [Bodl.\ 1643 “This was writt by my Lord George Digby.”—MS. note by Bishop Barlow in the Bodleian copy. TRUE (a) and impartial state of the Province of Pennsylvania ; containing an exact account of the nature of its government, the power of the proprietaries, and their governors. . . . [By Benjamin Franklin.] 8vo. Pp. 173, 34- [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. vol. 3, p. 224.] Philadelphia, 1759 TRUE (a) and lively representation of Popery, shewing that Popery is only new modelled Paganism, and perfectly destructive of the great ends and purposes of God in the Gospel. [By Thankful Owen, M.A.] 4to. Pp. 82. [Jones’ Peek, i. 251.] London, 1679 Wrongly ascribed to Henry Hallywell, Cf. D.N.B. vol. 42, p. 454. TRUE (a) and particular history of earthquakes. . . . Translated from the original Spanish [by Henry Johnson]. ... By Philolethus [Pedro Lozano]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.J London, 1748 TRUE (a) and perfect narrative of the strange and unexpected finding the crucifix & gold-chain of that pious prince, St Edward the King and Confessor, which was found after 620 years interment: and presented to his most sacred Majesty, King James the Second. By Charles Taylour, Gent. [Henry Keepe]. 4to. Pp. 34. [Bodl.J London, 1688 TRUE (the) and real violations of property ; offered to consideration in some expostulatory queries, concerning the criminal and mischievous nature of those unjust practices, whereby just possessions, rights, or dues, are injuriously invaded, detained, or diminished. [By John Graile, A.M.] 8vo. Pp. 28, 160. [Bodli] London, 1683 TRUE (a) and strange discourse of the travailes of two English Pilgrimes . . . in . . . Ierusalem, Gaza, Grand Cayro, Alexandria, and other places. [By Henry Timberlake.] 4to. B. L. [Christie-Miller Cat.\ London, 1608 An earlier edition was issued in 1603 ; a later edition, in 1631, has a different title: “ A relation of the travells of two English pilgrimes . . .” TRUE (the) and the false infallibility of the Popes : a controversial reply to Dr Schulte, by Joseph Fessler, Bishop. Translated from [the German of] the third edition [by A. Saint John]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1875 TRUE (a) answer to Dr Sacheverell’s sermon before the Lord Mayor, Nov. 5. 1709; in a letter to one of the Aldermen. [By White Kennett, D.D.] 8vo. London, 1709 TRUE as steel. [A tale.] By Marion Harland [Mrs Mary Virginia Terhune, nee Hawes]. 8vo. London, 1891 TRUE (the) Briton. [By Philip, Duke of Wharton.] 8vo. 2 vols. [fF.J London, 1723-4 This Paper consists of seventy-four numbers. TRUE (the) Briton ; a letter addressed to Sir Samuel Fludyer, Bt., Lord Mayor [by James Churchill]. 8vo. London, 1762 TRUE (the) cause of depreciation traced to the state of our silver currency. [By A. W. Rutherford.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1819 ?] TRUE (the) character of a Church of England man. [By Samuel Gras- come.] 4to. London [c. 1700] TRUE (the) character of a churchman, shewing the false pretences to that name. [By Richard West, D.D.’ 4to. Pp. 7. [Bodl.] [1705; No title-page. TRUE (the) character of a noble generall ; seen and allowed by the Earl of Essex. [By William Cooke.] 4to. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 429.] London, 1644 TRUE (the) character of a rigid Presbyter; with a narrative of the dangerous designes of the English and Scotch Covenanters, as they have tended to the rouine of our Church and kingdom: also, the articles of their dogmatical faith, and the inconsistency thereof with monarchy. [By Marchamont Nedham.] To which is added, a Short history of the English rebellion: compiled in verse, by Marchamont Nedham and formerly extant, in his Mercurius Pragmaticus. 4to. Pp. 94. London, 1661 The “ Short history ” has a separate title ; but the pagination is continuous. The address to the reader is signed: Mercurius Pragmaticus. A MS. note by Wood states that Nedham “published this merely to curry favour at the king’s restauration, wn he had lost his credit so much, y* he was many times in danger of his life.” TRUE (the) character of an honest man ; particularly with relation to the publick affairs : dedicated to his Grace the Duke of Marlborough. [By Sir Thomas Burnet.] 8vo. Pp. 32. [Bodl.] London, 1712 Dedication signed : Timon. TRUE (the) character of John the Baptist. ... By an impartial hand [Rev. William Ashdowne, Unitarian minister]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1757 TRUE (a) character of Mr Pope, and his writings ; in a letter to a friend. [By John Dennis and Charles Gildon.] 8vo. Pp. 18. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 1920; Dyce Cat. ii. 189 ] London, 1716 TRUE Christian love ; to bee sung with any of the common tunes of the Psalmes. [By David Dickson.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Glasgow, 1634 The earliest work printed in Glasgow. TRUE (the) Christian religion againe discovered ; after the long and darke night of apostacy ; which hath overshadowed the whole world ; and the profession and practice thereof for many ages ; witnessed unto by the Scriptures, &c. [By Edward Bur- rough.] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends1 Books, i. 35.] London, 1658 TRUE Christian religion ; containing the universal theology of the New [Jerusalem] Church, which was foretold by the Lord in Daniel, Chap. vii. 5, 13, 14, and in the Apocalypse, Chap, xxi., 1, 2: by Emanuel Swedenborg, servant of the Lord Jesus Christ. Translated from the original Latin [by Rev. John Clowes]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. vol. 8, p. 360.] Philadelphia, 1789-92 TRUE (the) Christians distinguished from such as go under the name of Christians ; with a short epistle concerning the Holy Scriptures of truth : as also concerning Christ the offering ; and such as are chosen in Christ, and liaue their names written in the book of life before the foundation of the world. By G. F. [George Fox]. 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 688.] London,1689 TRUE (the) chronicle historie of Thomas Lord Cromwell. By W. S. [Wentworth Smith ?]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1602 The D. N. B. does not accept the attribution. TRUE (the) Church of Christ shewed by concurrent testimonies of Scripture and primitive tradition; in answer to a book [by Charles Leslie] entitled The case stated between the Church of Rome and the Church of England. In three parts. . . . [By Edward Ha warden.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1714-15 TRUE (a) Churchman’s reasons for repealing the Corporation and Test Acts. . . . [By Benjamin Hoadly, D.D. ?] 8vo. London, 1732 TRUE (a) collection of the writings of the author of the True-born Englishman [Daniel Defoe]. Corrected by himself. 8vo. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe i] London, 1703 TRUE (a) confession of the faith which wee, falsely called Brownists, doo hold. [By Henry Ainsworth.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] [Amsterdam?] 1596 TRUE (the) consoler. . . . ByW. C. W. [William Chalmers Whitcomb]. 8vo. Boston, 1861 TRUE (the) copies of some letters occasioned by the demand for dilapidations in the archiepiscopal see of Canterbury. [By Archdeacon Thomas Tenison.] 4to. [fF.y Upcotti] 1716 TRUE (a) copy of a letter written by N. Machiavell in defence of himself. . . . Translated [by Henry Neville]. 4to. [Arber’s Term Cat.] London, 1691 TRUE (a) daughter of Hartenstein; from the German of E. Vely [Emma Simon], 8vo. New York, 1892 TRUE (a) declaration of our innocency, who in scorn are called Quakers, and how we are clear (if we have justice) from the penalties of the late Act made against seditious meetings, and conventicles, as exprest in the preamble and reason of the said Act, &c. Also several reasons, and proofs by the Common-Prayer-Book, and the Holy Scriptures directed to in it, that our meetings, and the manner of them, are according to the Scriptures of truth, and therefore allowed by the liturgy of the Church of England, &c. By J. S. [John Stubbs]. 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, ii. 641.] 1670 TRUE (the) defece of peace, wherin is declaredde the cause of all warres now a dayes, and how they maye be pacified, called before the Pollecye of warre devysed & lately recognised by Theodore Basille [Thomas Becon]. i2mo. B. L. [IV.] London, 1543 Reprinted in his works under the title of “The policy of war.” TRUE (a) description of the pot- companion poet, who is the founder of all the base and libellous pamphlets lately spread abroad; also, a character of the swilbole cook. [Two characters from the Microcosmographie of John Earle.] 4to. [Murphy’s Character Books f] London, 1642 TRUE (a) description out of the word of God of the visible church. [By Henry Barrow.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] n.p. [c. 1610] TRVE (a) discourse historical!, of the succeeding governours in the Netherlands, and the ciuill warres there begun in the yeere 1565 ; with the memorable seruices of our honourable English generals, captaines and souldiers, especially vnder Sir Iohn Norice knight, there performed from the yeere 1577. vntill the yeere 1589. and afterwards in Portugale, France, Britaine and Ireland vntill the yeere 1598. Translated and collected by T. C. [Thomas Churchyard] Esquire, and Ric. Ro. [Richard Robinson] out of the reue- rend E. M. [Emanuel Meteranus] of Antwerp, his fifteene bookes Historiae Belgicae. . . . 4to. Pp. 154. B. L. London, 1602 Epistle dedicatorie signed : T. C. TRUE (a) discourse of the two infamous upstart prophets, Richard Farn’ham weaver of White-chappell, and John Bull weaver of Saint Butolphs Algate, now prisoners, the one in Newgate, and the other in Bridewell : with their examinations and opinions taken from their owne mouthes April 16. Anno. 1636: as also of Margaret Tennis now prisoner in Old Bridewell, with the hereticall opinions held by her, at the same time examined. Written by T. H. [Thomas Heywood]. 4to. Pp. 19. London, 1636 Reprinted by J. Caulfield, 1795* TRUE (the) dissenter ; or, the cause of those that are for gathered Churches ; being a right state thereof, proposed and settled upon its proper foundations : in opposition to all compliance that is sinful, but in order to that obedience which is lawful, and conducive to the healing of the nation : occasion’d by some late writings, and especially by a book entituled, The cause of their mix’d Churches against (or The axe laid to the root of) separation. [By Stephen Lobb.] 8vo. Pp. 142. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.\ j 1685 TRUE (the) doctrine of the New Testament concerning Jesus Christ, considered ; wherein the misrepresentations that have been made of it, upon the Arian hypothesis, and upon all Trinitarian and Athanasian principles, are exposed ; and the honour of our Saviour’s divine character and mission is maintained. . . . [By Paul Cardale, Unitarian minister at Evesham.] The second edition, corrected and enlarged. 8vo. Pp. iii. 428. London, 1771 TRUE (the) dyfiferes between ye regall power and the ecclesiasticall power. [By Edward Fox, Bishop of Hereford.] Translated out of latyn by Henry lord Stafiforde. i2mo. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London [1548] TRUE (the) effigies of the most eminent painters and other famous artists, that have flourished in Europe, curiously engraven on copper plates ; together with an account of the time when they lived, the most remarkable passages of their lives, and most considerable works. [By Sebastiano Resta.] Fol. IV. j Brit. Mus.\ Antwerp, 1694 The plates of Belgians only. TRUE (the) English government, and mis-government of the four last kings, with the ill consequences thereof, briefly noted in two little tracts. By Edward Stephens.] 4to. Pp. 8. Bodl.] London, 1689 TRUE (the) Englishman’s miscellany, in two parts : Part I. The false guardians outwitted ; a ballad opera, containing twenty one airs : with a prologue and preface, giving some account of the author, and his reasons for this publication. Part II. Containing a collection of dismal songs, pleasant satires, bitter encomiums, terrible poems, epigrams, epitaphs, &c. Never before published. By W. G. [William Goodall]. 8vo. [London] 1740 TRUE (a) estimate of the light of inspiration and the light of human learning, before and since the apostolic age ; submitted to the candidates for Holy Orders, &c. [By C. E. de Coetlogon.] 4to. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.; Mon. Rev. lxxix. 560.] 1788 TRUE (a) exemplary and remarkable history of the Earl of Tirone. By an eye witnesse [Thomas Gainsford]. 4to. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 854.] London, 1619 TRUE faith. By an Indian Theist [Kesavachandra Sena]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Calcutta, 1879 TRUE (the) faith. By Herman Hein- fetter, author of Rules for ascertaining the sense conveyed in ancient Greek manuscripts, etc. [Frederick Parker]. i2mo. Pp. 20. London, 1862 TRUE (the) faith of the Gospel of peace contended for against the secret opposition of John Bunyan; or, an answer to his book called Some Gospel truths opened. By E. B. [Edward Burrough]. 8vo. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. i. 64.] London, 1656 TRUE (the) foundations of natural and reveal’d religion asserted ; being a reply to the Supplement to the Treatise [by Waterland] entitul’d, The nature, obligation, &c. of the Christian sacraments. [By Arthur Ashley Sykes.] 8vo. Pp. 96. [Disney’s Memoir of Sykes, p. xviii.] London, 1730 TRUE (the), genuine, Tory-address ; to which is added, an explanation of some hard terms now in use : for the information of all such as read, or subscribe, addresses. [By Benjamin Hoadly.] Fol. Pp. 2. [London] 1710 TRUE genuine Tory-address, and the true genuine Whig-address, set one against another: to which is added a farther explanation of some hard terms now in use, for the information of all such as read, or subscribe addresses : being an answer to a late scandalous paper, falsly call’d The true genuine Tory-address, &c. [By Joseph Trapp, D.D.] Fol. Pp. 12. [D. N. B. vol. 57, p. 156.] London, 1710 TRUE (the) good old cause rightly stated, and the false uncaved. [By William Prynne.] 4to. [IV. j Brit. Mus.\ [London, 1659] TRUE greatness; or, tributary stanzas to the glorious memory of Lord Viscount Nelson. . . . [By T. San- som.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1806 TRUE (the) Grecian bend; a story in verse. By Larrie Leigh [L. T. Warner]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1868 TRUE (the) grounds and reasons of the Christian religion, in opposition to the false ones. . . . [By Rev. Thomas Jeffery, dissenting minister.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1725 TRUE (the) grounds of ecclesiasticall regiment set forth in a breife dissertation ; maintaining the kings spirituall supremacie against the pretended independence of the prelates &c. : together -with some passages touching the ecclesiasticall power of parliaments, the use of synods, and the power of ex- communication. [By Henry Parker.] 4to. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 47.] London, 1641 TRUE (the) grounds of the expectation of the Messiah, in two letters; the one printed in the London Journal, April the 1st, 1727; the other in vindication of it: being a reply to the answer published at the end of a late Letter to Dr Rogers. By Philalethes [Arthur Ashley Sykes], 8vo. Pp. 68. [Disney’s Memoir of Sykes, p. xvii.; Green’s Bibl. Somers, iii. 214.] London, 1727 TRUE (the) guide; or, a short treatise wherein is shewed how the weakest Christian may be able to discerne the true way of the Spirit of God. By a Lover of the Truth, R. H. [Richard Hollingworth]. 8vo. [Whitley’s Baft. Bibl. i. 24.] London, 1646 TRUE heart’s trials. By Reginald Tierney [Thomas O’Neill Russell]. 8vo. Dublin, 1910 TRUE (the) heir of Ballymore. [A novel.] By an Ulster Scot [Rev. Henry Henderson, Presbyterian minister in Holywood, Co. Down]. 8vo. Pp. 80. [S. J. Brown’s Ireland in Fiction.] Belfast, 1859 TRUE heroism. ... By A. L. O. E. [Miss Charlotte M. Tucker]. i2mo. Edinburgh, 1854 TRUE (a) historical! discourse of Muley Hamet’s rising to the three kingdomes of Moruecos, Fez, and Sus; the dis- yunion of the three kingdomes, by ciuill warre. . . . By R. C. [R. Cottington]. 4to. Pp. 74. London,1609 TRUE (a) history of a late short administration. [By Charles Lloyd.] 8vo. Pp. 22. [Almon’s Biog. A?iec. ii. no.] London, 1766 TRUE (the) history of a little ragamuffin. By the author of A night in a work house [James Greenwood. Nos. 1-7]. 8 vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London [1866] No more published. TRUE (the) history of Joshua Davidson. [By Mrs E. Lynn Linton.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 279. [Brit. Musi] London, 1872 TRUE (the) history of the Jacobites, of vEgypt, Lybia, Nubia, &c. their ori- gine, religion, ceremonies, laws, and customs ; whereby you may see how they differ from the Jacobites of Great Britain: translated by a person of quality [Sir Edward Sadleir] from the Latin of Josephus Abudernus, a man of integrity, and born in Cairo in Higypt. 4to. Pp. 10, 32. London, 1692 TRUE (a) history of the military government of the Citie of Gloucester to the removall of Col. Edward Massey to the command of the Western Forces. [By John Corbet]. . . . 4to. Pp. 140. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 545.] London, 1645 TRUE (a) history of the several designs and conspiracies against His Majesties . . . person and government . . . from 1688 till 1697. ... By R. K. [Rev. Richard Kingston, D.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1698 TRUE (the) idea of Jansenisme, both historick and dogmatick. By T. G. [Theophilus Gale]. 8vo. Pp. 30, 166. London, 1669 TRUE (the) impartial history and wars of the Kingdom of Ireland. . . . The second edition, with additions. [Dedication signed: J. S. i.e. James Shirley.] i2mo. Pp. 192. [Brit. Musi] London,1692 TRUE (a) impartiall narration concerning the Armies preservation of the King [Charles I. By George Joyce]. 4to. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 515.] London, 1647 TRUE (a) information to the nation from the people called Quakers. ... By J. C. [John Crook?]. 4to. Pp. 14. [Brit. Musi] [London] 1664 TRUE (the) institution of sisterhood ; or, a message and its messengers. By L. N. R. [Mrs Ellen Ranyard]. 8vo. Pp. 32. London [1862] TRUE (the) interest of America impartially stated, in certain strictures on a pamphlet [by Thomas Paine] intitled “Common Sense.5’ By an American [Rev. Charles Inglis]. 8vo. Pp. 71. [Evans5 Amer. Bibl. vol. 5, p. 240.] Philadelphia, 1776 TRUE (the) interest of families ; or, directions how parents may be happy in their children, and children in their parents : to which is annexed a discourse about the right way of improving our time. By a divine of the Church of England [Rev. James Kirkwood, rector of Astwick, in Bedfordshire]. With a preface by A. Horneck, D.D. 8vo. Pp. 18, 224. London, 1692 TRUE (the) interest of the United States, and particularly of Pennsylvania, considered, with respect to the advantages resulting from a State paper currency. ... By an American [William Barton]. 4to. Pp. 43. [Evans5 A?ner. Bibl. vol. 7, p. 6.] Philadelphia, 1786 TRUE (the) interests of the European powers and the Emperor of Brazil, in reference to the existing affairs of Portugal. By a friend of truth and peace [William Walton]. 8vo. [W.j Brit. Mus.] London, 1829 With autograph letter from the author. TRUE judgement ; or, the spiritual man judging all things, but he himself judged of no man ; to them who are growing up into discerning and judgement : and to them, who cannot endure sound judgement. [By George Fox.] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 33.] London, 1654 TRUE (the) la we of free monarchies ; or, the reciprock and mutuall dutie betwixt a free king, and his naturall subjects. [By James VI. of Scotland.] i2mo. No pagination. At London, according to the copie printed at Edinburgh, 1603 The advertisement to the reader is signed : $iXoirarpis. The first edition was published at Edinburgh in 1598. TRUE liberty. [By William Alexander, bookseller.] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, Supp. p. 4.] York, N.D. TRUE (the) liberty and dominion of conscience vindicated, from the usurpations & abuses of opinion, and persuasion. [By John Nalson, LL.D. prebendary of Ely.] 8vo. Pp. 142. [Whitley’s Baft. Bibl. i. 108.] In the Savoy, 1677 TRUE (a) light of alchemy; containing a correct edition of “ The marrow of alchymy;” the errors of a late tract called “A short discourse of the quintessence of Philosophers.” . . . [By Sir George Ripley.] i2mo. London, 1709 TRUE love at last. [By Mrs Mary S. L. Fisher.] i2mo. London, N.D. TRUE love versus fashion. . . . By the author of Nothing to wear [William Allen Butler]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1859] TRUE Magdalen. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. New York, 1888 TRUE (the) meaning of Rom. 13. 7, stated, in a sermon preached in the city of Chester. By a now persecuted clergyman [Thomas Parry]. 4to. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] N.P. 1751 TRUE (the) meaning of the System of nature; translated from the French of [Claude Arien] Helvetius [by Daniel Isaac Eaton], with notes. i2mo. Pp. 145. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] Edinburgh, 1799 An edition issued at London in 1811 has a slightly different title : “ The true sense and meaning . . .” TRUE (a) method, 1. For raising of souldiers ; 2. For bringing those seamen that are in the land into the navy ; 3. For the increase of seamen, &c. [By Peter Rowe.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1703 TRUE (a), modest, and just defence of the Petition for Reformation exhibited to the King’s Majestie: containing an answer to the Confutation. . . . [By John Sprint, D.D.] 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 53, p. 430.] London, 1618 TRUE (the) mother Church ; or, a short practical discourse upon Acts ii. [41 42] concerning the first Church at Jerusalem. [By Rev. Samuel Johnson.] 8vo. Pp. 20. [Bodl.] London, 1688 TRUE (the) narration of the entertainment of His Royall Maiestie, from the time of His departure from Eden- brough, till his receiving in London.. .. By T. M. [Thomas Middleton]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1603 TRUE (a) narrative of an unfortunate elopement [viz. that of Mrs R. Simes]; in a series of letters. By * * * S-, Esq. [Thomas Simes]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1780 TRUE (a) narrative of the controversy concerning the doctrine of the Trinity ; being a reply to Dr Berriman’s Historical account; wherein the partiality and mis-representations of that author are fully shewn. By the author of the Reply to Dr Water- land’s Defenses [Rev. John Jackson, of Rossington]. 4to. Pp. 112. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1725 TRUE (a) narrative of the late design of the Papists to charge their horrid Plot upon the Protestants. . . . [By Captain John Bury.] 4to. Pp. 12. [Dix and Dugan’s Dubl. Books.] Dublin, 1679 TRUE (a) narrative of the proceedings of the Presbytery of Kirkcudbright against one of their number; and that to the sentence of deposition; to which is added the grievances. [By Rev. John MacMillan, Balmaghie.] 4to. [Scott’s Fasti, second edition.] 1704 TRUE (a) narrative of the sufferings and relief of a young girle ; strangely molested, by evil spirits and their instruments, in the West: collected from authentic testimonies there-anent. . . . [By Francis Grant, of Cullen, one of the Lords of Session.] 8vo. Pp. xlvi. 21. Edinburgh, 1698 TRUE (a) narrative of what pass’d at the examination of the Marquis De Guiscard, at the cock-pit, the 8th of March, 17J-J- ; his stabbing Mr Harley, and other precedent and subsequent facts, relating to the life of the said Guiscard. [Revised by Jonathan Swift, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 43. [Camb. Hist, of Eng. Lit.] London, 1711 TRUE (the) nature and cause of the tail of comets ; elucidated. . . . By an enquirer [John Perkins]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] Boston, 1772 TRUE news of the good new world shortly to come. . . . [By William Sherwm.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] N.p. [c. 1675] TRUE (the) non-conformist in answere to the Modest and free conference [by Gilbert Burnet] betwixt a conformist and a non-conformist, about the present distempers of Scotland. By a lover of truth [Robert M‘Ward] and published by its order. 8vo. [ Wodrow.] 1671 TRUE (the) notion of imputed righteousness, and our justification thereby ; being a supply of what is lacking in the late book of that most learned person Bishop Stillingfleet, which is a discourse for reconciling the dissenting parties in London.... By the Reverend M. S. a country minister [Matthew Smith], 8vo. Pp. 14, 222. London, 1700 A presentation copy to Ralph Thoresby, who has given the author’s name. TRUE of heart. [A novel.] By Kay Spen [Henry Courtney Selous, artist]. 8vo. Pp. 310. London [1891] TRUE (the), pathetic history of poor Match. By Holme Lee, author of Legends from fairy land, etc. [Harriet Parr]. With four illustrations. 8vo. Pp. viii. 219. London, 1863 TRUE patriotism; an apostrophe inspired by the public loss experienced in the death of Sir J. T. Long. [By Robert Sadler.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1795 TRUE patriotism; or, poverty ennobled by virtue: a .drama [in five acts, prose and verse. By George Holford, M.P.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Louth, 1799 Attributed to T. Robinson in Gent. Mag. Sept. 1799, p. 748. TRUE (the) patriot’s book. By Orme Agnus [John C. Higginbotham]. 8vo. Pp. 168. London, 1915 TRUE peace. . . . See “A wise and moderate discourse. . . .” TRUE (the) penitent instructed. [By Jeremy Taylor.] i2mo. [Leslie’s Cat. 1843 (415).] 1697 TRUE (the) picture of a modern Whig, set forth in a dialogue between Mr Whiglove & Mr Double, two under- spur-leathers to the late ministry. [By Charles Davenant, LL.D.] Seventh edition. 8vo. Pp. 96. [Bodi.] London, 1705 TRUE (the) picture of an ancient Tory; a dialogue between a vassal, a Tory, and Freeman, a Whig. [By Charles Davenant, LL.D.] 8vo. London, 1702 TRUE (the) picture of Quakerism ; in a summary view of the blasphemies, heresies and treasonable practices of the Quakers of old, taken from their most noted and approv’d writers. By a lover of truth [Zachary Grey, LL.D.]. 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.j Ge?it. Mag. vi. 295.] 1736 TRUE piety; or, the day well spent. . . . By a Roman Catholic clergyman of Baltimore [Rev. J. B. David]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Baltimore, 1809 TRUE (the) plan of a living temple ; or, man considered in his proper relation to the ordinary occupations and pursuits of life. By the author of The morning and eve?iing sacrifice, etc. [Thomas Wright]. i2mo. 3 vols. Edinburgh and London, 1830 TRUE (the) portraiture of the kings of England ; drawn from their titles, successions, raigns and ends: or, a short and exact historical description of every king with the right they have had to the crown, and the manner of their wearing of it especially from William the Conqueror. . . . To which is added the Political Catechism. [Address “to the reader” signed: H. P. i.e. Henry Parker, of Lincoln’s Inn.] 4to. Pp. 63. London, 1688 TRUE (the) Presbyterian without disguise ; or, a character of a Presbyterians wayes and actions. [By Sir John Denham. Inverse.] 4to. Pp. 6. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1661 An edition of 1680 gives the author’s name. TRUE (the) priesthood of the Holy Jerusalem vindicated, and the false shepherds exposed ; in a letter to a friend. [By Joseph Noel Paton, senior, a Swedenborgian.] i2mo. Pp. 39. [Beveridge’s Dunferm. Bibl.] Dunfermline, 1846 TRUE (the) principles of Roman Catholics. [Preface signed : Philalbion i.e. Simon Lucas.] i2mo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Dict.\ Newport, Isle of Wight, 1796 TRUE (the) principles of the English Reformation, being the substance of a lecture (occasioned by a discussion between the Catholick Church and the Church of England) delivered in Canon-Street chapel, Louth. By the author of NotiticE ludce, etc. [R. S. Bayley], 8vo. Pp. 46. London, 1835 TRUE (a) protestant bridle ; or, some cursory remarks upon a sermon [by William Stephens, rector of Sutton in Surrey] preached before the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the city of London at S. Mary le Bow, 30 Jan. 1693. in a letter to Sir P. D. [By Thomas Rogers.] 4to. [Wood’s A then. Oxon. iv. 401.] London, 1694 TRUE (the) protestants appeal to the city and countrey. [By Dr John Nalson.] Fol. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1681 TRUE (a) reformation and perfect restitution, argued by Sylvanus and Hymenaeus, wherein the true Church of Christ is briefly discovered. ... By J. G. [John Graunt, of Bucklersbury], a friend to the truth and Church of God. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London,1643 TRUE (a) reformer. [By Lieut.-Col. Francis Rawdon Chesney, R.A.] 8vo. 3 vols. Edinburgh and London, 1873 Originally published in Blackwood's Magazine. TRUE (a) relation and journall of the manner of the arrivall and magnificent entertainment given to Prince Charles at Madrid. [By George Villiers, first Duke of Buckingham.] 4to. [W. ; Bliss’ Cat.] London, 1623 TRUE (a) relation of disbanding the Supernumerary Forces amounting to twenty thousand Horse and Foot, and taking off free-quarter from the subject. [By John Rush worth, secretary to the Parliamentary Army.] 4to. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 596.] London, 1648 TRUE relation of disbanding the supernumerary forces in several counties to the great ease of the Kingdom. . . . [By Gilbert Mabbot.] 4to. Pp. 8. London, 1647 TRUE (a) relation of England’s happi- nesse, under the raigne of Queene Elizabeth ; and the miserable estate of Papists under the Pope’s tyranny. By M. S. [Matthew Sutcliffe]. 8vo. Brit. Mus.] [London] 1629 TRUE relation of sundry conferences had betweene certaine Protestand Doctours (Francis White, Daniel Featly) and a Iesuite called M. Fisher [whose real name was John Piercy] . . . with defences of the same. . . . By A. C. 4to. Pp. 86. [Brit. Mus.] N.P. 1626 TRUE (a) relation of that memorable parliament, which wrought wonders, begun at Westminster, 1386, in the tenth yeare of the reign of King Richard the Second ; whereunto is added an abstract of those memorablematters, before and since the said king’s reign, done by parliaments : together with the character of the said amiable, but unhappy king, and a briefe story of his life and lamentable death. [By Thomas Fannant.] 4to. [Brit. Mus. ; Scott’s ed. of Somers’ Tracts, iv. 174- 190.] 1641 TRUE (a) relation of the apparition of one Mrs Veal, the next day after her death, to one Mrs Bargrave at Canterbury, the 8th of September. 1705, which apparition recommends the perusal of Drelincourt’s Book of consolations against the fear of death. [By Daniel Defoe.] 4to. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe i] London, 1705 TRUE (a) relation of the ceremonies of the creating of the Knights of the Hon. Order of the Bath, 18th and 19th April, 1661 ; with a perfect list of their names. [By Philemon Stephens.] 4to. London, 1661 TRUE (a) relation of the conversion and baptism of Isuf the Turkish chaous, named Richard Christophilus, on Jan. 30, 1658 in Covent Garden. [By Thomas White.] i2mo. London, 1658 Contemporary attestation. TRUE (a) relation of the faction begun at Wisbich, by Fa. Edmonds, alias Weston, a Iesuite, 1595. and continued since by Fa. Walley, alias Garnet, the Prouinciall of the Iesuits in England, and by Fa. Parsons in Rome, with their adherents ; against vs the secular priests their brethren and fellow prisoners, that disliked of nouelties, and thought it dishonourable to theauncient ecclesiasticall discipline of the Catho- licke Church, that secular priests should be gouerned by Iesuits. [By Christopher Bagshaw.] 4to. Pp. 97. [Brit. Musi] 1601 Reprinted in T. G. Law’s Conflict between Jesuits and Seculars. TRUE (a) relation of the last sicknes and death of Cardinal Bellarmine, who died in Rome the seaventeenth day of September, 1621. By C. E. [Edward Coffin] of the Society of Jesus. i2mo. [Oliver’s Collections.] 1622 TRUE (a) relation of the late battell fought in New England between the English and the salvages: with the present state of things there. [By Philip Vincent.] 8vo. [Camb. Hist, of Amer. Lit. i. 379.] London, 1637 An edition of 1638 has a slightly different title ; see Christie-Miller Cat. TRUE (a) relation of the passages of God’s providence in a voyage for Ireland . . . wherein every day’s work is set down faithfully. By H. P. [Rev. Hugh Peters, M.A.], an eyewitness thereof. 4to. [D.N.B.vol. 45, p. 76.] London, 1642 TRUE (a) relation of the proceedings against John Ogilvie, a Jesuit, executed at Glasgow, the last of Februarie, anno 1615. [By Archbishop John Spottis- wood.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1615 TRUE (a) relation of the several facts and circumstances of the intended riot and tumult on Queen Elizabeth’s birthday; gathered from authentick accounts : and published for the information of all true lovers of our constitution in Church and State. [By Jonathan Swift.] 8vo. Pp. 16. London, 1711 Attributed also to Mrs Mary de la Rivibre Manley. [Brit. Musi] TRUE (a) relation of the storming Bristoll and the taking the town, castle, forts ... by Sir Thomas Fairfax’s army . . . nth September 1645. . . . [By Thomas Rainsborough, Colonel.] 4to. Pp. 24. [Hyett and Bazeley’s Lit. of Gloucesti] London,1645 TRUE (a) relation of the travels and perilous adventures of Matthew Dudgeon, gentleman ; wherein is truly set down the manner of his taking, the long time of his slavery in Algiers, and means of his delivery : written by himself [really invented by Alfred Henry Huth], and now for the first time printed. 8vo. London, 1894 TRUE relation of what hath been transacted in behalf of those of the reformed religion, during the treaty of peace at Reswick; with an account of the present persecution in France. By P. G. D. [Peter Gaily de Gaujac]. 4to. [Mendham Coll. Cat. p. 118.] London,1698 TRUE (a) relation of what past betweene the fleet of his Highnes the Prince of Wales [Charles II.] and that under the command of the Earle of Warwick. [By Sir William Batten.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] 1648 TRUE (a) relation or collection of the most remarkable dearths and famines since the coming of William the Conquerour to Michaelmas, 1745. • • • [By William Penkethman ?] 4to. London, 1748 TRUE religion. By W. E. H. [Rev. William Edward Heygate]. i2mo. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn '. 8vo. Pp. 12. Truro [1848^ TRUE religion explained and defended against ye archenemies thereof in these times, in six bookes. [By Hugo de Groat.] . . . i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1632 TRUE (a) report of the late apprehension and imprisonment of John Nicols, minister at Roan [Rouen], and his confession and answers, made in the time of his durance there. . . . [By Robert Parsons or Persons, S.J.] i2mo. Pp. 34. [De Backer.] Rhemes, 1583 TRUE (a) report of the private colloquy between Mr Smith, alias Norrice, and M. Walker, held in the presence of two worthy knights, and of a few other gentlemen, some Protestants ; with a briefe confutation of the false and adulterated summe which M. Walker, Pastour of S. John Euangelist, in Watling-Streete, hath divulged of the same. [By Sylvester Norris, S.J.] 4to. Pp. 63. [Sommervogel’s Diction- nairei] [London] 1624 TRUE (a) reporte of the death and matyrdome of M. [Edmund] Campion, Jesuite and Prieste, and M. [Rodulph] Sherwin and M. [Alexander] Bryan, Priestes, at Tiborne, the first of December 1581 ; observed and written by a Catholike priest [Robert Parsons] which was present thereat ; whereunto is annexid certayne verses made by sundriepersons. 8vo. [IV. ; Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] [Douai, 1582] This tract was written in answer to one by Ant. Munday, entitled, “A discoverie of Edmund Campion, and his confederates.” TRUE (a) reporte of the late discoveries, and possession, taken in the right of the Crowne of Englande of the Newfound Landes, by that valiaunt and worthye gentleman, Sir Humfrey Gilbert, Knight ; wherein is also breefly sette downe her Highnesse lawfull tytle thereunto, &c. [Dedication signed: G. P. i.e. Sir George Peckham.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1583 TRUE (a) representation of Presbyterian government ; wherein a short and clear account is given of the principles of them that owne it, the common objections against it answered, and some other things opened that concern it in the present circumstances. The second edition, corrected and much enlarged. By a friend to that interest [Gilbert Rule, D.D.]. 4to. Pp. 19. [Dexter’s Congr. Bibl. 2378.] Edinburgh, 1690 The Address to the reader is signed : G. R. TRUE (a) representation of the absurd and mischievous principles of the sect, commonly known by the name of Muggletonians. [By John Williams, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 30. [Smith’s Anti- Quak. p. 327.] London, 1694 TRUE (a) representation of the proceedings of the Kingdome of Scotland; since the late pacification: by the Estates of the Kingdome: against mistakings in the late Declaration, 1640. [By William Kerr.] [D.N.B. vol. 31, p. 65.] N.p. 1640 TRUE (a) representation of the rise, progresse, and state of the present divisions of the Church of Scotland [between Resolutioners and Protesters. By James Wood, Professor at St Andrews]. 4to. Pp. 48. London, 1657 TRUE (the) riches ; a present of glorious and immense riches plainly and freely tendered. . . . [By Cotton Mather.] 8vo. Pp. 31. [G. Brinley’s American Library.] Boston, 1724 TRUE riches ; or, wealth without wings. By the author of Ten nights i?i a bar room [Timothy Shay Arthur]. 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Musi] London [1881] TRUE (the) Scripture doctrine of the most holy and undivided Trinity, continued and vindicated from the misrepresentations of Dr Clarke; in answer to his Reply. By the author of the Scripture-Doctrine published and recommended by Robert Nelson, Esq. [By James Knight, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 308. [D.N.B. vol. 51, p. 16.] London, 1715 The authorship is by no means certain ; it has also been attributed to Daniel Scott, LL.D. TRUE (the) Scripture doctrine regarding Baptism, in six letters to a candid Anti-psedo baptist; being a full answer to Dr Gill’s Baptism a divine commandment to be observed. By Candidus [Henry Mayo]. 8vo. Pp. 72. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. i. 185.] London, 1766 TRUE (the) secret history of the lives and reigns of all the Kings and Queens of England from William the First . . . to the end of the reign of . . . Queen Anne. By a person of honour [Lord Somers]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Canib. Univ. Libi] London, 1725 TRUE (the) sentiments of America; contained in a collection of letters sent from the House of Representatives of the province of Massachusetts Bay, to several persons of high rank in this kingdom ; together with certain papers relating to a supposed libel on the governor of that province, and a dissertation on the canon and feudal law. [By Thomas Hollis.] 8vo. Pp. 158. [Rich’s Bibl. Amer. i. 164.] London,1768 TRUE (the) settlement of a Christians faith, after shaking assaults, by its own evidence ; and by the internal sealing work of the Spirit ; pointed at, in some special enquiries thereon, in a letter to a friend : with some serious reflections on the present times we are in, and these great vicissitudes of Providence, which have been in the publick state of Britain in this last age, in a II. letter. By a minister of the Gospel [Robert Fleming]. 8vo. Pp. 208. [D. N. B. vol. 19, p. 285.] 1692 TRUE (a), short, impartial relation, con- tainingthe substance of the proceedings at the assize held. . . 12th and 13th . . . August 1664 at Hertford . . . chiefly . . . against nine prisoners called Quakers. ... By W. S. [William Smith, of Besthorp]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1664] TRUE, sincere, and modest defence of English Catholiques that suffer for their faith both at home and abroad, against a false, seditious and slaunder- ous libel [by Lord Burghley] intituled, The execution of justice in England. 'By William Allen, Cardinal.] 8vo. D. N. B. vol. 1, p. 321.] [Ingolstadt, 1584] TRUE (the) Sonship of Christ investigated ; and his person, dignity and offices explained and confirmed from the Sacred Scriptures. By a clergyman [William Dalgleish, D.D., of Peebles]. i2mo. Pp. 198. [New Coll. Lib.] London, 1776 TRUE (the) speeches of Thomas White- bread, Provincial of the Jesuits in England, William Harcourt, pretended Rector of London, John Fenwick, Procurator for the Jesuits in England, John Gavan, and Anthony Turner, all Jesuits and priests ; before their execution at Tyburn, June the 20th MDCLXXIX. . . . [By David Clarkson.] Fol. Pp. 24. London, 1679 TRUE (the) spirit of the Methodists, and their allies, (whether other enthusiasts, Papists, Deists, Quakers, or Atheists) fully laid open ; in an answer to six of the seven pamphlets (Mr Law’s being reserv’d to be consider’d by itself) ; lately publish’d against Dr Trapp’s sermons upon being righteous over-much. . . . [By Joseph Trapp, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 98. [D.N.B. vol. 57, p. 157.] London, 1740 TRUE (the) state of Gospel truth establish’d upon the free election of God in Christ ; the agreement, yet difference between Law and Gospel, so that the Gospel cannot be stiled Law. The inconditionateness of the Gospel salvation, the procedure of the Day of Judgment, in the way of a conciliatory discourse upon Mr [Daniel] Williams his concessions. By T. B. [Thomas Beverley]. 8vo. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 399.] London, 1704 TRUE (the) state of the case. . . . [By Robert Dick, D.D.] [Scott’s Fasti, i. 39.] Edinburgh, 1763 TRUE (a) state of the case concerning the election of a Provost of Queen’s- College in Oxford. [By Francis Thompson, B.D.] 4to. Pp. 32. [Bodl.] Oxford, 1704 Most of the materials for this pamphlet were collected by Dr Thomas Crosthwait. TRUE state of the proceedings in the Parliament of Great Britain and the Province of Massachusetts Bay relative to the giving and granting the money to that province. [By Arthur Lee, of Virginia, from material supplied by Benjamin Franklin.] Fol. Pp. 24. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] London, 1774 TRUE (the) state of the process against Mr Ebenezer Erskine minister of the Gospel at Stirling ; setting forth the proceedings of the Synod of Perth and Stirling against him, and the Act of the late Assembly concerning him, and some other ministers adhering to his protest: together with a preface and appendix, . . . [By Ebenezer Erskine.] 8vo. Pp. 80. [M‘Kerrow’s History of the Secession Church (ed. 1841), p. 818.] Edinburgh, 1733 TRUE (the) state of Trinity College [Cambridge], in a letter to a residing Fellow of that Society ; wherein the trifling impertinencies, malicious aspersions, and bold falshoods of Dr Bentley are answer’d. . . . [By John Paris, D.D., and Samuel White, B.D.] 8vo. Pp. 88. [Bartholomew’s Ca?nb. Books.] London, 1710 TRUE (a) statement of the circumstances which led to the late change of administration. By Scaevola [John Allen], 8vo. London, 1807 TRUE stories of cottagers; the drunkard’s boy ; the cottage in the lane, etc. [By Edward Monro, M.A.] i2mo. [Bodl.] London, 1849 Each story has a separate title and pagination. TRUE (a) story, and the recent carnival of crime. By Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens]. Illustrated. i6mo. [Brit. A/us.] Boston, 1877 TRUE (the) story of Lord and Lady Byron, in answer to Mrs Beecher Stowe. By Outis [John Lucas Tupper]. 8vo. London, 1869 TRUE (the) story of Madam Eccles. By a licensed victualler [-Jennings]. 8vo. Cambridge, 1885 TRUE (the) subject to the rebell; or, the hurt of sedition, how greivous it is to a commonwealth. Written by Sir John Cheeke, Knight (Tutor and Privy-Counceilour to King Edward the Sixt) 1549 : whereunto is newly added by way of preface a briefe discourse of those times, as they may relate to the present, with the author’s life [by G. Langbaine]. 4to. [ W.\ Oxford, 1641 TRUE (a) subjects wish ; for the happy successe of our royall army preparing to resist the factious rebellion of those insolent Covenanters (against the sacred Maiesty, of our gracious and loving King Charles) in Scotland. [By Martin Parker.] Fol. S. sh. 2 parts. B. L. London, N.D. Signed : M. P. TRUE (the) testimonie of a faithfull subject ; containing severell exhortations to all estates to continue them in their due obedience. . . . [Signed R. V. i.e. Richard Venner.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1605] TRUE (a) testimony from the people of God ; (who by the world are called Quakers) of the doctrines of the prophets, Christ, and the apostles, which is witnessed unto, by them who are now raised up by the same power, and quickened by the same Spirit and blood of the everlasting Covenant, which brought again our Lord Jesus from the dead. . . . By M. F. [Margaret Fell]. 4to. Pp. 28. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books.] London, 1660 TRUE (the) text of the Holy Scriptures. By Herman Heinfetter, author of Rules for ascertaining the sense conveyed in ancient Greek manuscripts, etc. [Frederick Parker]. Second edition. i2mo. Pp. 30. London, 1861 TRUE (the) theory of rent, in opposition to Mr Ricardo and others. ... By the author of the Catechism on the Corn Laws [Thomas Perronet Thompson]. Fourth edition. 8vo. Pp. 32. London, 1829 TRUE (the) theory of the earth, and philosophy of the predicted end ; a solution of some of the great problems of science, and sacred prophecy, on the testimony of the two witnesses, the book of nature and the Word of God ; ... By Research [J. Wood Beilby, Frankston, Victoria]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 229. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Edinburgh, 1869 TRUE Tilda. By “ Q.” [Sir Arthur T. Quiller-Couch]. 8vo. London, 1909 TRUE (the) time of keeping St Matthias’s - day in leap years, shewn in a familiar conference between a church-man and a dissenter ; wherein is inserted Dr Wallis’s letter to Bp. Fell written on that subject. [By Robert Watts, LL.B.] 8vo. [Bod/.] Oxford, 1711 TRUE to her trust ; or, womanly past question. [By Miss Dora Havers, later Mrs Boulger.] With illustrative initial devices by F. W. Waddy. 8vo. 3 vols. [Title page of Pretty Miss Bellew.] London, 1874 An edition appeared in New York under the pseudonym : Theo Gift. TRUE to him for ever. By F. W. R. [Miss Frannie W. Rankin]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] New York, 1874 TRUE to his colours. By Harry Castle- mon [Charles A. Fosdick]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Blit, and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1889 TRUE to life ; a simple story. By a sketcher from nature [Mary Stanley]. 8vo. London, 1873 TRUE to trust ; or, the story of a portrait. [By Rev. John Rutherford Shortland.] 8vo. Pp. 344. London [1874] TRUE (the) translation of the Holy Scriptures. By Herman Heinfetter, author of Rules for ascertaining the sense conveyed in ancient Greek manuscripts, etc. [Frederick Parker]. i2mo. Pp. 55. London, 1861 TRUE (the) vine. By the author of The Schonberg-Cotta family [Mrs Elizabeth Charles, nee Elizabeth Rundle]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1885 TRUE (the) way to vertue and happinesse; intreating especially of constancie in publick calamities and priuate afflictions. [Translated by Andrew Court from Guillaume Du Vair’s “ De la Constance . . .”] 4to. Pp. 165. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1623, 1622 Books 2 and 3 have separate title-pages, dated 1622. H 2 TRUE-BLEU Presbyterian loyalty; or, the Christian loyalty of Presbyterians, in Britain and Ireland, in all changes of government, since the Reformation, asserted: more particularly, of the Presbyterians in Ulster, since their first plantation there: when King James the First came to possess the crown of England. . . . [By William Tisdal, D.D., vicar of Belfast.] 4to. Pp. 31. Dublin, 1709 The title is taken from the Reply by John M‘Bride, and must be regarded as ironical, since Dr Tisdall was a violent opponent of the Presbyterians. The work has been ascribed (see Wodrow’s Correspondence, i. 412) to Mr Campbell, probably Dr William Campbell, minister of Armagh, who wrote a Vindication of the character and principles of the Presbyterians of Ireland. Dr Reid, however, in his History of the Presbyterian Church of Ireland (iii. 127, 128, 166, 167), ascribes it unhesitatingly to Dr Tisdall. TRUE-BLUE ; a musical entertainment [in verse] ; altered from the Press- gang [of Henry Carey] . . . and the story of J. Gilpin [by Wm. Cowper]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1787 TRUE-BORN (the) Englishman; a satyr. [By Daniel Defoe.] 410. 1701 TRUMP (the) card. [A novel.] By Derek Vane [Mrs B. Eaton-Back]. 8vo. Pp. 287. \Brit. Mus.] London [1925] TRUMPET (the) of fame ; or, Sir F. Drakes and Sir J. Hawkins Farewell. By H. B. [Henry Roberts]. 4to. Pp. 12. [W. : Lowndes’ Bibl. Alan.] London, 1595 TRUMPET (the) of the Lord sounded, and his sword drawn, and the separation made between the precious and the vile ; and the vineyard of the Lord dressed by his own husbandmen, and the dead trees cut down, and all the mystery of witchcraft discovered in all professions : by them who have come thorow great tribulation, whose garments have been washed in the blood of the Lamb, who are accounted as the off-scowring of all things for Christs sake, scornfully called by the world Quakers. [By George Fox.] 4to. Pp. 17. London, 1654 One of what may be called the blasts of the trumpet is signed : G. F. TRUMPINGTON Church. [By A. C. Moule.] 8vo. Pp. 7. [Brit. Mus.] Cambridge, 1923 “TRUMP’S” [i.e. William Brisbane Dick’s] new card games. Hearts, Boodle, Newmarket, Five or Nine, Domino Whist, Cayenne Whist, Solo and Heart Jackpot. i6mo. Pp. 38. [Jessel’s Bibl. of Playing Cards, p. 71.] New York, 1886 TRUST (the). [A tale.] By E. J. B. [Mrs E. J. Burbury]. i2mo. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1849 TRU ST (a) betrayed ; a novel. By John Tipton [Henry Godefroi]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1889 TRUST for trust. [A novel.] By A. J. Barrowcliffe [A. J. Albert Mott], 8vo. 3 vols. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1859 TRUST her not. [A novel.] By Helena Gullifer [Helen F. Hetherington]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Bril. Mus.] London, 1881 TRUST in God ; or, Jenny’s trials. By Cousin Kate [Catherine Douglas Bell]. i2mo. London, 1871 TRUST me. By N. D’Anvers [Mrs Nancy Bell, nee Meugens]. 8vo. London, 1882 TRUSTEE (the). By the author of the tragedy of The Provost of Bruges, etc. George William Lovell]. i2mo. 3 vols. Brit. Mus.] London, 1841 TRUSTWORTHINESS (the) of the Earl Street Committee examined and disproved. . . . [By James M. M‘Culloch, D.D., Greenock.] 8vo. Pp. 28. Edinburgh, 1828 TRUTH. ... By T. [William Henry Trenwith]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1873 TRUTH ; a gift for scribblers ; with additions and amendments. [Inverse ; signed: W. J. S. i.e. William Joseph Snelling.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1831 TRUTH ; a novel. By the author of Nothing [William Pitt Scargill]. 121110. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1827 TRUTH ; a path to justice and reconciliation. By Verax [Francis Bonnet]. 8vo. Pp. 293. [Brit. Mus.] London [1926] TRUTH (the) about an author. [By Arnold Bennett.] 8vo. Pp. 269. [Calc. Imp. Lib.] Westminster, 1903 Chapters in autobiography, reprinted from The Academy. TRUTH about China and Japan. By Putnam Weale [Bertram Lenox Simpson]. 8vo. Pp. 156. London, 1921 TRUTH (the) about Clement Ker . . . told by his second cousin Geoffrey Ker . . . edited [or rather written, as a novel] by George Fleming [Julia Constance Fletcher]. 8vo. Pp. 311. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1888 TRUTH (the) about Ireland. By an English Liberal [Allen Upward]. 8vo. London, 1884 TRUTH (the) about the Bar and about the Solicitors. . . . By Innes Lincoln, Esq. [Louis de Souza]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] London [1884] TRUTH (the) about the Land League. [By Hugh Oakeley Arnold-Forster.] 8vo. [D.N.B. Second Supp. vol. 1, p. 62.] London, 1881 TRUTH (the) about the stage. By Corin [-Lind]. 8vo. London, 1885 TRUTH (the) about the Tsar and the present state of Russia. By Carl Joubert [Adolphus Waldorf Carl Grot- tey]. Fourth edition. 8vo. Pp. 265. London, 1905 TRUTH (the) and certainty of the Protestant faith ; with a short and plain account of the doctrine of the Romish Church. . . . [By Robert Fleming, minister at Rotterdam.] i2mo. Pp. 6, 55. [D.N.B. vol. 19, p. 285.] [Rotterdam] 1678 TRUTH and error ; a calm examination of the doctrines of the Church of Rome for all who are sincere in the search after truth. By an octogenarian [Mrs Tyndall, of Oxford]. 8vo. Pp. 211. xxxii. Oxford, 1870 TRUTH and error in religious belief; an exposition of the Nicene Creed [with the text]. ... By George Frederick Newmarch [G. F. Newman]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Cirencester, 1878 TRUTH and falshood ; a tale [in verse. By Rev. Thomas Francklin]. Fol. Pp. 6. [D.N.B. vol. 20, p. 183.] London, 1755 The subject of the verses is the Duchess of Bedford. TRUTH and fancy ; tales legendary, historic, and descriptive. By Mary Jane Windle [Mary Jane M‘Lane]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Blit, and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1850 TRUTH and innocence vindicated ; in a survey of a discourse [by Samuel Parker]concerningecclesiasticalpolity; and the authority of the civil magistrate over the consciences of subjects in matters of religion. [By John Owen, D.D.] 8vo. [Bodli] London, 1669 TRUTH and its triumph ; or, the story of Jewish twins. By Aunt Friendly [Mrs Sarah S. Baker, ne'e Tuthill]. 8vo. London, 1882 TRUTH and trust. [A tale.] ByW. C. [William Chambers]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1848 TRUTH (the) as it is in Jesus defined in the constitution and order of the Ecclesia of immersed Believers. . . . [By David Brown.] Third edition. 8vo. London [1870] TRUTH (the) come out at last ; a true history of the Wild Methodist [Isaac Abrams] . . . written by himself. 8vo. [Cushing’s Blit, and Pseudi] Philadelphia, 1831 TRUTH (the) ; comprising an inquiry if a man is justified in proving the truth of his religious tenets. By W. M. R. [W. M. Russell]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1852] TRUTH Dexter. [A novel.] By Sidney M‘Call [Mrs Mary M‘Neil Fenollosa]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1906 TRUTH further cleared from mistakes ; being two chapters out of the book entitled “ Primitive Christianity revived.” . . . [Signed : W. P. i.e. William Penn.] i2mo. Pp. 48. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends'Booksi] Dublin, 1698 TRUTH, if you can find it; or, a character of the present M[inistr]y and P[arliamen]t: in a letter to a member of the March Club. [By Sir Thomas Burnet.] 8vo. Pp. 37. [Brit. Musi] London, 1712 TRUTH it’s manifest; or, a short and true relation of divers main passages of things (in some whereof the Scots are particularly concerned) from the very first beginning of these unhappy troubles to this day. [By David Buchanan.] Pp. 142. London, 1645 “The author of the present vol. was, I believe, David Buchanan, who in 1644, republished Knox’s History of the Reformation in Scotland—and was the author of various other works.”—MS. note by Dr David Laing. TRUTH (the) of revelation demonstrated by an appeal to existing monuments, sculptures, gems, coins, and medals. By a Fellow of several learned Societies [John Murray]. i2mo. Pp. xviii. 276. London, 1831 The author’s name appears on the title- page of the second edition, published in 1840. TRUTH (the) of Spiritualism. By “ Rita ” [Mrs W. Desmond Humphreys, nee Eliza M. J. Gollan]. 8vo. London, 1919 TRUTH (the) of the Christian religion vindicated from the objections of unbelievers ; particularly of John James Rousseau: in a series of dissertations. By the editors of the Christian's Magazine. [By William Dodd, LL.D.] 8vo. [Gent. Mag. xlvii. 421.] 1766 TRUTH (the) respecting Italy and Piedmont; diplomatic revelations. By a secret agent of Count Cavour [J. A. Curletti]. Translated from the French. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 TRUTH soberly defended. [By Isaac Marlow.] . . . With a postscript in answer ... to a paper called An Answer to a brief discourse concerning singing. By H. K. [Hanserd Knollys]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1692 The first tract is not anonymous. TRUTH : the mysteries of Christianity radically developed, and discovered to be physically true. . . . From the French [of-Bebescourt]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1772 TRUTH triumphant. By T. B. [Timothy Brown, P.P. of Castle Lyon, Co. Cork]. 4to. Cork, 1745 TRUTH unlocked; in gleaningsand illustrations from the Scripture originals. By a pioneer witness [William Bennoch, later Bennet]. 8vo. Pp. 454. [Corrie’s Glencaim, p. 198.] Edinburgh, 1875 TRUTH (the) unvailed, &c. in behalf of the Church of England, and at the importunity of one that calls loudly on Mr. Standish for particular instances of such (amongst her profess’d sons) as have ventured upon innovations in her doctrine ; taking occasion from his sermon preach’d before his Majesty, and ordered to be published by royal authority. By a person of quality [Arthur Annesley, Earl of Anglesey]. 4to. Pp. 20-39. [D. N. B. vol. 2, p. 3.] 1667 TRUTH vindicated ; being an appeal to the light of Christ within, and to the testimony of Holy Scripture : by way of answer to a pamphlet, entitled, “Extracts from periodical works on the controversy amongst the Society of Friends.”’ [By Henry Martin.] i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 221.] London, 1835 TRUTH vindicated; or, a detection of the aspersions and scandals cast upon Sir Rob. Clayton and Sir Geo. Treby, justices ; and Slingsby Bethel and Henry Cornish sheriffs of the city of London, in a paper published in the name of Dr Francis Hawkins minister of the Tower entit. The confession of Edw. Fitzharris, Esq. ; &c. [By Sir George Treby.] 4to. [Wood’s Athen. Oxon. iv. 500.] London, 1681 TRUTH will out ; or, a discovery of some untruths smoothly told by Dr Ieremy Taylor in his Disswasive from Popery : with an answer to such arguments as deserve answer. By his friendly adversary E. W. [Edward Worsley]. 4to. Pp. 217, 4. [Jones’ TRUTH will out; the foul charges of the Tories against the editor of the “Aurora” repelled. [By Benjamin Franklin Bache.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Philadelphia, 1798 TRUTH without prejudice. [By Miss Wyndham, afterwards Mrs Alfred Montgomery.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1842 TRUTHS (the) and errors of liberal Christianity, and of the national conference of 1870. By A Delegate [Rev. Henry Clay Badger]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Supp.] Cambridge, Mass., 1870 TRUTHS and fancies from fairy land; or, fairy stories with a purpose. [Preface signed: W. H. D. A. i.e. W. H. Davenport Adams.] 8vo. Pp. 128. London [1867] TRUTHS and their reception, considered in their relation to homoeopathy; to which are added various essays on the principles and statistics of homoeopathic practice. [By Marmaduke B. Sampson.] Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 251. [Manch. Free Lib. p. 620.] London, 1849 TRUTHS and untruths respecting a restored Apostolate. By a clergyman [Rev. Robert Norton, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1876 TRUTHS defence; or, the pretended examination by John Alexander of Leith, of the principles of those (called Quakers) falsly termed by him Jesuitico-Quakerism, re-examined and confuted, together with some animadversions on the dedication of his book to Sir Robert Clayton, then Mayor of London. By G. K. [George Keith]. 8vo. Pp. 254. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends? Books, ii. 22.] London, 1682 TRUTHS for all people. [By Alexander Jarvie.] 8vo. London, 1882 TRUTHS for the day of life and the hour of death. By the author of God is love [James Grant]. 8vo. London, 1864 TRUTHS illustrated by great authors ; a dictionary of nearly four thousand aids to reflection, quotations of maxims, metaphors, counsels, cautions, aphorisms, proverbs, &c. &c., in prose and verse : compiled from Shakespeare, and other great writers, from the earliest ages to the present. [By William White, publisher.] i2mo. London, 1852 TRUTH’S triumphs in the eternal power over the darke inventions of fallen man. G. F. [George Fox]. 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 666.] TRUTH’S triumph over Trent; or, the great gulfe betweene Sion and Babylon : that is, the vnreconcileable opposition betweene the apostolicke Church of Christ, and the apostate synagogue of Antichrist, in the maine and fundamentall doctrine of Justification, for which the Church of England Christs spouse, hath justly, through Gods mercie, for these manie yeares, according to Christs voyce, separated her selfe from Babylon, with whom from henceforth she must hold no communion. By H. B. [Henry Burton] rector of S. Mathews, Friday-Street. 4to. Pp. 373. London, 1629 TRUTHS victory against heresie ; all sorts comprehended under these ten mentioned: Papists, Familists, Arrians, Arminians, Anabaptists, Separatists, Antinomists, Monarchists, Millenarists, Independents. By J. G. [John Grant]. 4to. Pp. 73. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. i. 19.] London, 1645 TRUTHS victory over error; or, an abridgement of the chief controversies in religion, which, since the apostles days to this time, have been, and are in agitation, between those of the orthodox faith, and all adversaries whatsoever ; a list of whose names are set down after the epistle to the reader. . . . [By David Dickson, Professor of Divinity in the University of Edinburgh.] i2mo. Pp. 371. Edinburgh, 1684 Really an unacknowledged translation, by George Sinclar (who signs his name at the end of the dedication to the municipal authorities in Edinburgh), of Dickson’s academical lectures in Latin. The plagiarism was soon discovered and set forth in the couplet— No error in this book whatever do I see, Except that G. S. stands where D.D. ought to be. In 1752, Robert Wodrow published an edition bearing the name of the author, with a memoir. [Zb N. B., vol. 15, p. 42.] TRUTHTELLERS (the). [A novel.] By John Strange Winter [Mrs Arthur Stannard, nee Henrietta E. V. Palmer]. 8vo. Pp. 282. London, 1896 TRUTH-TRIUMPHANT; in a dialogue between a Papist and a Quaker : wherein (I suppose) is made manifest, that Quaking is the off-spring of Popery : at the least, the Papist and the Quaker, are [patres vterini] both of one venter. [By Charles Stanley, Earl of Derby.] 4to. Pp. 45-58. London, 1671 TRUYTE (the) of redempcyon. [By Richard Whitford.] 4to. [Copinger’s Bibl. o?i Predestination.] London, 1514 TRY; a book for boys. By “Old Jonathan” [David Alfred Doudney, D.D.]. i2mo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1857 TRY and try again ; being an outline of the lives of two youths who became clergymen of the Church of England. By “Old Jonathan” [David Alfred Doudney, D.D.]. 8vo. London, 1864 TRYAL (the) and examination of a late libel, intituled, A new test of the Church of Englands loyalty; with some reflections upon the additional libel, intituled, An instance of the Church of Englands loyalty. [By Samuel Johnson.] 4to. [Jones’ Peck. i. 66.] [1687 ?] No title-page. TRYAL (the) of dramatic genius; a poem : to which are added, a collection of miscellaneous pieces. By the same author [William Heard]. 8vo. [/. Maidment.] London [1770] Heard’s father kept the Philobiblian Library in Piccadilly, and was prompter of the theatre at China Hall. TRYAL (the) of the Roman Catholics, on a Special Commission directed to Lord Chief Justice Reason, Lord Chief Baron Interest, and Mr Justice Clemency, Wednesday, August 5th, 1761. . . . [By Henry Brooke.] 8vo. Pp. 310. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] Dublin, 1762 TRYAL (the) of the time-killers; a comedy of five acts. [By Phanuel Bacon.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1757 TRYAL (the) of the witnesses of the resurrection of Jesus. [By Thomas Sherlock.] 8vo. Pp. no. London,1729 See above, “ The trial of the witnesses . . .” TRYAL (the) of William Whiston, clerk ; for defaming and denying the Holy Trinity, before the Lord Chief Justice Reason : to which is subjoined, a new catechism for the fine ladies : also a specimen of a new version of the Psalms. By Mr Pope, etc. [By Thomas Gordon.] The third edition. 8vo. Pp. 67. [Nichols’ Lit. Anec. i. 710.] London, 1740 The first edition appeared in 1734- TRYAL (the) of witchcraft ; or, witchcraft arraign’d and condemned: in some answers to a few questions anent witches and witchcraft : wherein is shewed, how to know if one be a witch, as also when one is bewitched ; with some observations upon the witches mark, their compact with the devil, the white witches &c. [By John Bell.] i2mo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] N.P., N.D. TRYALL (a) of private devotions ; or, a diall for the houres of prayer. By H. B. [Henry Burton], rector of St Mathevves, Friday-Street. 4to. Pp. ioo. [D. N. B. vol. 8, p. 7.] London, 1628 A criticism of John Cosin’s “ Booke of private devotions.” TRYALS per pais ; or, the law concerning juries by nisi-prius, &c. methodically composed for the publick good, in the 16th year of the reign of our Soveraigne Lord Charls the Second, King of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, &c. By S. E. [Giles Duncombe] of the Inner-Temple Esquire. i2mo. Pp. 22, 238. London, 1665 This work has been erroneously ascribed to Sampson Ever. The letters S. E. are the final letters of Duncombe’s names. TRYING to be useful. By Mrs Madeline Leslie [Harriet Newell Baker]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1871 TRYPHENA in love. By Tom Cobb- leigh [Walter Raymond]. 8vo. Pp. 172. New York, 1895 TSAR’S (the) coronation, as seen by “ De Monte Alto,” resident in Moscow [Aylmer Maude]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1896 TUCK-NET (the) split. By Pindar [Rev. William Woodis Harvey, M.A.]. i2mo. London, 1824 TUCK-UP songs. By Ellis Walton [Mrs F. Percy Cotton]. 8vo. Pp. 123. [Brit. Musi] London, 1895 TUDOR queens and princesses. By Sarah Tytler [Henrietta Keddie]. Svo. Pp. 418. London, 1896 TUDORS & Stuarts. By a descendant of the Plantagenet [Frances Mary English]. Vol. I.—Tudors. i2mo. London, 1858 TUFLONGBO’S journey in search of ogres ; with some account of his early life, and how his shoes got worn out. By Holme Lee, author of Lege?ids from fairy la?id, etc. [Harriet Parr]. With six illustrations by H. Sanderson. 8vo. Pp. vii. 240. London, 1862 TUILERIES (the). [In verse.] By the author of Miscellaneous poems [J. M. Richardson]. i2mo. Pp. 61. [Brit. TUILERIES (the); a tale. By the author of Hungarian tales, etc. [Mrs Catherine Frances Gore]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1831 TULLIUS de Amicicia, in English ; here after ensueth a goodly treatyse of amyte or frendshyp, composed in latyn by the most eloquente Romayne, Marcus Tullius Cicero, and lately translatyd in to Englyshe [by J. Tipcroft, Earl of Worcester]. Fol. [Wi] [London, 1530?] A reprint from the edition, published with the De Senectute by Caxton in 1481. TULLY’S three books of Offices in English ; with notes explaining the method and meaning of the author. [Dedicatory epistle signed : T. C. i.e. Thomas Cockman.] Svo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1699 TUMBLE-DOWN Dick; or, Phaeton in the suds: a dramatick entertainment of walking, in serious and foolish characters, interlarded with burlesque, grotesque, comick interludes ... invented by Monsieur Sans Esprit. . . . [By Henry Fielding.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1744 The dedication is signed : Pasquin. TUMBLEDOWN farm; a novel. By Alan Muir [Rev. Hayes Robinson], Svo. 2 vols. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1889 TUNBRIDGE (the) miscellany. [By Sir Charles Hanbury Williams.] 8vo. 2 pts. [Smith’s Bibl. Cant. p. 320.] London,1713 TUNBRIDGE (the) Wells guide ; or, an account of the ancient and present state of that .place. . . . [By J. Sprange.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Tunbridge Wells, 1780 TUNBRIDGE-WALKS ; or, the Yeoman of Kent ; a comedy : as it is acted at the Theatre Royal by her Majesty’s servants. By the authour of the Humour o’ the age [Thomas Baker]. 4to. Pp. 12, 64. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1703 TUNBRIDGE-WELLS ; or, a days courtship: a comedy, as it is acted at the Dukes-Theatre. Written by a person of quality. [Attributed to Thomas Rawlins, and by Wood, doubtfully, to Sir Charles Sedley.] 4to. Pp. 42. London, 1678 TUNBRIDGIALE ; a poem: being a description of Tunbridge, in a letter to a friend at London. By the author of My time, O ye muses [John Byrom]. 4to. [Smith’s Bibl. Cant. p. 320.] TUNER (the). [By Paul Hiffernan.] 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.; Mon. Rev. Feb. 1754.] London, 1754, 1755 The work consists of five letters, each with a separate title and pagination. It is supposed that no more was published. TUNNEL (the) of Triibau ; a tale of the trains. By Tilbury Tramp [Charles James Lever]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London,1845 TURF (the). By Nimrod [Charles James Apperley]. With illustrations. New edition. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1851 First published in the Quarterly Review. See also “ The Chace, the Turf, and the Road.” TURF (the); a treatise on racing and steeple-chasing. By “ Rapier ” [Alfred E. T. Watson]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1898 TURF characters ; the officials, and the subalterns. By Martingale, author of Sporting scenes, etc. [-White]. 8vo. Pp. xvi. 128. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.\ London, 1851 TURF tales. By Nathaniel Gubbins [Edward Spencer Mott]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1902] TURKEY ; being sketches from life. By the Roving Englishman [Eustace Clare Grenville Murray]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1877 TURKEY in agony. By Pierre Loti [Captain M. Julian Viaud, of the French Navy]: translated from the French by B. Sands. 8vo. Pp. 202. London, 1913 TURKEY in Europe. By Odysseus [Sir Charles Norton Edgecumbe Eliot]. 8vo. Pp. 480. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1900 TURKISH (the) and Pan-Turkish ideal. By Tekin Alp [Albert Cohen]. Fol. Pp. 48. [Brit. Mus.] London [1917] TURKISH (the) atrocities. [Verse. By Joseph Plimsoll.] 8vo. Pp. 14. [Brit. Mus.] Plymouth [1876?] TURKISH (the) Empire ; embracing the religion, manners and customs of the people. [Translated from the German of Alfred de Besse ;] with a memoir of the reigning sultan ... by E. J. Morris. Second edition. i2mo. Pp. 216. [Brit. Mus.] Philadelphia, 1855 TURKISH (a) tale ; in five cantos. [By George Grey, of Southwick, father-in-law of the first Earl Grey.] i2mo. London, 1770 TURKISH (the) tales; or, how the revenge of the perfidious empress of Persia was baffled. [By Shaikh-zadah ; translated from the French version of F. Petis de la Croix.] 8vo. Pp. 149. [Brit. Musi] Bombay, 1889 TURKO ; or, the little dark boy in Dame Europa’s school. By the author of John justified [Colonel Charles William Grant]. 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 535.] Bath, 1877 TURN (the) of the road ; a play. . . . By Rutherford Mayne [Samuel Waddell]. 8vo. Pp. 71. [S. J. Brown’s Books on Ireland.] Dublin, 1907 TURNED adrift ; an adventurous voyage. By Harry Collingwood [William J. C. Lancaster]. 8vo. Pp. 296. London, 1913 TURNING out ; or, St S-’s in an uproar ; containing particulars of the death and resurrection of the heaven- born ministers; or, the pilots that weathered the storm: a poem. By Peter Pindar, Jun. author of the Royal Bloods, and Royal Lover [John Agg]. 8vo. Pp. 24. London, 1812 TURNING (the) wheel ; a story of the Charn Hall inheritance. By Dick Donovan [Joyce Emerson Preston Muddock]. 8vo. Pp. 318. London, 1912 TURNUS and Drances ; being an attempt to shew, who the twm real persons were, that Virgil intended to represent under those two characters. [By William Beare.] 8vo. Pp. 30. Oxford, 1750 “ Given by the author, William Beare, M.A. of C.C.C.”—MS. note in the Bodleian copy. TURTLE (the) dove ; a tale [in verse] from the French of M. De Florian [by Stephen Weston, B.D.J. 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 60, p. 373.] Caen, 1789 TURTLE (the) dove (an emblem of the new creature), under the absence and presence of her only choise. . . . By a lover of the celestiall muses [John Fullarton, of Careltoun]. i2mo. Edinburgh [1664] TURNER’S (the) manual ; a translation of the work of [L. E.] Bergeron [Z. G. J. Salivet]. 4to. [Latent Ojfice Lib.] London, 1877 TUSCAN studies and sketches. By Leader Scott [Mrs Lucy E. Baxter, nJe Barnes]. 8vo. Pp. 329. TUTAMEN evangelicum ; or, a defence of Scripture-Ordination, against the exceptions of T. G. [Thomas Gipps] in a book intituled, Tentamen novum, proving, that ordination by Presbyters is valid ; Timothy and Titus were no diocesan rulers ; the Presbyters of Ephesus were the apostles successors in the government of that Church, and not Timothy; the First Epistle to Timothy was written before the meeting at Miletus ; the ancient Waldenses had no diocesan Bishops, &c. By the author of the Plea for Scrip lure-Ordination [James Owen]. 8vo. Pp. 30, 190. London,1697 Preface signed : J. O. TUTOR (the) of truth. By the author of the Pupil of pleasure, etc. [Samuel Jackson Pratt]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Green’s Bid/. Somers, i. 417; D.N.B. vol. 46, p. 296.] London, 1779 TUTOR (a) to astronomy and geography; or, the use of the Copernican spheres. ... By Joseph Moxon [or rather by William Blaeu]. 4to. Pp. 184. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1665 A different work from “ A Tutor to astronomic and geographic . . .” by J. Moxon. London, 1659. TUTOR’S (the) assistant ; or, comic figures of arithmetic, slightly altered and elucidated from a Walking-game, by Alfred Crowquill [Alfred Henry Forrester]. i2mo. London, 1843 TUTOR’S (the) ward; a novel. By the author of Wayfaring sketches, etc. "Felicia M. F. Skene]. 8vo. 3 vols. Nat. Lib. of Scot.'] London, 1851 TWA (the) cuckolds [by A. Steel]; and the Pint quey, or thrawart Maggy [by R. Gall]: two tales in the Scottish dialect. i2mo. [ W.j Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1796 TWA (the) frien’s ; or, the ghost o’ Coffer Ha*; a poem : and Francisco, or the man of brass: also Holy Tammie’s prayer. [By David Waters.] Second edition. 8vo. [Sinton’s Bibl. of Hawick.] Hawick, 1895 TWA (the) Miss Dawsons. [A tale.] By the author of The bairns [Miss Margaret Murray Robertson]. 8vo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Musi] London, 1880 TWAI N’S [Samuel Langhorne Clemens’] pleasure trip on the Continent; the complete work previously issued under the title of “The Innocents abroad” and “The new Pilgrim’s progress.” 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1871] ’TWAS in dhroll Donegal. [Tales ] By “Mac” [James MacManus]. 8vo. Pp. 176. London, 1897 TWEED and Don ; recollections and reflections of an angler for the last fifty years. [By James Locke.] 8vo. [Mitchell and Cash’s Scot. Topogi] Edinburgh, i860 TWEEDS teares of joy, to Charles Great Brittains King. [By George Lauder.] 4to. Pp. 8. [D.N.B. vol. 32, p. 195.] N.P. [1641] No title-page. ’TWEEN thou and me. By Elfin Hall [Mrs E. C. Perry]. 4to. [Kirk’s Suppi] Albany, N.Y., 1879 TWELFTH (the) note of the Church examined, viz. The light of prophecy. [By William Clagett, D.D., Preacher to the Society of Gray’s Inn.] 4to. Pp. 23. [Jones’ Peck, p. 439-] London, 1687 TWELVE days in the saddle ; a journey on horse-back in New England, during the autumn of 1883. ... By Medicus Daniel Denison Slade, M.D.]. 8vo. Lib. Journ. ix. 94.] Boston, 1884 TWELVE generall arguments, proving that the ceremonies imposed upon the ministers of the gospell in England, by our prelates, are unlawfull; and therefore that the ministers of the gospell, for the bare and sole omission of them in church service, are most unjustlie charged of disloyaltie to his Majestie. [By William Bradshaw.] i2mo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] N.P. 1605 TWELVE hundred questions on the history of the Church of England, with some answer hints. [By Canon E. H. Knowles.] 8vo. London, 1888 TWELVE keys to auction bridge play. By Pachabo [A. E. Whitelaw]. 8vo. Pp. 184. [Brit. Musi] London [1921] TWELVE letters on the evidences of the Christian religion. By an enquirer [W. Cunninghame]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Serampore, 1802 First printed in the Oriental Star. TWELVE maxims on swimming. By the author of The cigar [William Clarke]. i2mo. Pp. 30. [Thomas on Swimming, p. 242.] London, 1833 Preface signed : C. TWELVE months in a Curatorship. By one who has tried it [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson]. 8vo. [S. H. Williams’ Bibl. of Dodgson.] [Oxford, private print] 1884 See also “ Three years . . .” TWELVE months in the British legion. By an officer of the Ninth regiment [Charles William Thompson, Major- General]. i2mo. Pp. viii. 273, xxx. [Brit. Musi] London, 1835 TWELVE (a) months’ tour in Brazil and the River Plate ; with notes on sheepfarming. By L. D. [L. Dillon]. 8vo. Pp. ioo. [Brit. Musi] Manchester, 1867 TWELVE moral maxims of my Uncle Newbury. [By George Mogridge.] Second edition. i2mo. Pp. 72. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1832 TWELVE (the) nights. [By Baron Karl von Miltie.] 121110. Pp. xv. 404. London, 1831 TWELVE (the) obelisks at Rome. [By John H. Parker.] Second edition, revised. 8vo. Pp. 64. Oxford, 1879 TWELVE o’clock ; a Christmas story. By the author of Grandmothers money, etc. [Frederick William Robinson]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1861 TWELVE (the) pagan principles; or, opinions, for which Thomas Hicks hath published the Quaker to be no Christian, seriously considered, and presented to Mr N. L., citizen of London. By W. L., a lover of every man whose conversation is honest [William Loddington]. 8vo. Pp. 40. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, ii. 127; Wilson’s Hist, of Biss. Ch. iii. 392.] N.P. 1764 TWELVE queries of publick concernment, humbly submitted to the serious consideration of the Great Councell of the Kingdom. By a cordiall well- wisher to its proceedings [William Prynne]. 4to. Pp. 4. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1647 TWELVE rambles in London. By Amicus Patriae [William Burt]. 8vo. London, 1810 XII. Resolves concerning the disposall of the person of the King in a sharpe reproofe to a Rejoynder to three pamphlets, published in defence of Mr Chaloners Speech (called, A speech without doores, and said to be defended without reason) under pretence of the Parliaments honour. [By Thomas Chaloner.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 9, p. 460.] London, 1646 TWELVE sermons [in the Catholic Apostolic Church] at Gordon Square [London. By Rev. John G. Francis, M.A.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1868 TWELVE sermons, preached to a country congregation. [By Alexander Dallas, M.A.] i2mo. Pp. vii. 231. Oxford, 1827 TWELVE simple addresses to a communicants’ class. By E. M. H. [E. M. Halcombe]. 8vo. Pp. 108. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford [1895] TWELVE tales for the young. [By Mrs Gertrude Parsons, nee Hext.] i2mo. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. ii. 426.] London [i860] Of these tales, “ The old dripping pan ” was written by Daniel Parsons ; and “Too late for school,” by Miss A. M. Bridges. TWELVE trifles, cheerful and tearful. By Theophila North [Dorothea Hollins]. 8vo. Pp. 264. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1904 TWELVE years ago ; a tale. By the authoress of Letters to my unknow?i friends [Sydney Warburton]. i2mo. London, 1851 TWELVE years’ military adventure in three quarters of the globe; or, memoirs of an officer who served in the armies of his Majesty and of the East India Company, between the years 1802 and 1814. . . . [By Major John Blakiston, Madras Engineers.] 8vo. 2 vols. [See his Twenty years in retirement.] London, 1829 TWENTIETH (a) century boy. By Gladys Dudley Hamilton [Marguerite L. Glentworth]. 8vo. Boston, 1901 TWENTIETH (the) century Church and Club. [A story.] By Don De Neroh [Edwin Horen]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Chicago, 1900 TWENTIETH (the) Epistle of Horace to his book, modernized [in parody] by the author of Female conductt [Thomas Marriott]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1759 TWENTY cases of conscience propounded to the bishops, or others, who are called fathers in God; for them to answer; that the blind may not be turned out of the way, nor the people perish for lack of knowledge. ... By J. C. [John Crook]. 4to. Pp. 8. London [1667] TWENTY charges against the Methodists answered by the Word of God, for their encouragement, and conviction of their enemies. [By Rev. John Barnes, of Pembroke.] i2mo. Pp. 22. Carmarthen, 1764 TWENTY minutes late. By “Pansy” [Mrs Isabella (Macdonald) Alden]. 8vo. Pp. 374. Boston, 1893 TWENTY sermons upon social duties and their opposite vices. By the author of The life of David [Patrick Delany, D.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1750 TWENTY (the) styles of architecture, illustrated by plates. ... By the editor of the Hundred greatest men [W. Wood]. 8vo. London, 1881 TWENTY years ; - a ballad : poetry by the late T. H. B. [Thomas Haynes Bayly], adapted by Mrs T. H. B. to the music of L. van Beethoven. Fol. [Green’s Bibl. So77iers.] London [i860] TWENTY years ago; a book of anecdote, illustrating literary life in London. By F. M. Allen [Edmund Downey]. 8vo. \Brit. Mus.\ London, 1905 TWENTY years ago. From the journal of a girl in her teens [Beatrice Wal- ford]; edited by the author of John Halifax, Gentleman [Dinah Maria Mulock]. 8vo. Pp. v. 277. London, 1871 TWENTY years in California ; incidents in the life of a stage-driver [James S. M‘Cue]. 8vo. San Francisco, 1875 TWENTY years’ reminiscences of the Lews. By Sixty-one [Rev. George Henry Hely Hutchinson, vicar of Westport, Wiltshire]. 8vo. London, 1871 TWENTY years’ residence among the people of Turkey. By a Consul’s daughter and wife [Mrs Fanny Blunt, 7iee Sanderson]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. a7td Pseud.\ London, 1878 TWENTY-EIGHT miscellaneous sermons. By a clergyman of the Church of England [Rev. Andrew Macdonald]. 8vo. London, 1788 The fourth edition, 1793, has the author’s name. XXVIII prayers. By a prisoner of hope [Georgina Elizabeth Russell]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Leamington, private print [1857] TWENTY-EIGHT propositions, by which the doctrine of the Trinity is endeavoured to be explained. . . . [By Edward Fowler, D.D.] 4to. London, 1693 Reissued in 1694, with a different title : “ Certain propositions by which the doctrine of the H. Trinity is . . . explain’d . . .” TWENTY-EIGHT years in India. [By Charles James O’Donnell, Indian Civil Service.] 8vo. London, 1902 TWENTY-FIVE sermons upon several subjects. . . . By Orthodoxus [Thomas Coney, D.D.]. 8vo. London, 1730-50 TWENTY-FIFE years’ history of St George’s-in-the-West Parish Church, Aberdeen, 1879-1904. [By James Smith.] 8 vo. Aberdeen, 1904 TWENTY-FIVE years’ soldiering in South Africa ; a personal narrative. By a Colonial Officer [Captain Harry Vernon Woon]. 8vo. [Mendelssohn’s Soicth African Bibl.\ London, 1909 XXIV (the) cases concerning things indifferent in religious worship considered; or, the resolver better resolved by his own principles; and nonconformists more confirmed: also the grand case touching ministers conformity, with the double supplement thereunto annexed, briefly discussed. [By Edward Bagshaw.] 4to. Pp. 64. London, 1663 The second part of the “ The great question concerning things indifferent in religious worship, briefly stated, &c.” The third part has the author’s name. TWENTY-FOUR reasons for dissenting from the Church of England. [By Thomas Binney ?] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus. ] n.p.[i835 ?] TWENTY-NINTH (the) of May; rare doings at the Restoration. By Ephraim Hardcastle, author of Wine and wal- 7iuts [William Henry Pyne]. Second edition. i2mo. 2 vols. [.Bodl.] London,1825 TWENTY-ONE discourses upon the Augsburg Confession. [By Count Nicholas Lewis Zinzendorf.] Translated by F. Okeley. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1753 TWENTY-ONE golden rules to depress agriculture, etc. By a Pennsylvanian [Matthew Carey]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary .] Philadelphia, 1824 TWENTY-SIX and one; and other stories. By Maxim Gorky [Aleksyei Maksimovitch Pyeshkov]. From the Russian. i2mo. New York, 1902 XXVI letters on religious subjects, with hymns. [By Rev. John Newton.] i2mo. 1774 TWENTY-SIX men and a girl. [Four short tales, translated from the Russian.] By Maxim Gorky [Aleksyei Maksimovitch Pyeshkov], 8vo. Pp. 214. London, 1902 TWENTY-THREE years in a House of Mercy. By H. N. [Harriet Nokes]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1886 TWICE lost ; a novel. By the author of Queen Isabel, etc. [Menella Bute Smedley]. 8vo. Pp. 323. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1863 TWICE rescued ; or, the story of little Tino. By Nellie Cornwall [Nellie Sloggett]. 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Mus.] London [1888] TWICKENHAM (the) hotch-potch, for the use of the Rev. Dr Swift, Alexander Pope, Esq.; and company: being a sequel to the Beggar’s opera, etc. . . . Written by Caleb D’Anvers [Nicholas Amhurst]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 54. London, 1728 “ This work will be continued. The end of the first part.” TWIDDLEDETWIT; a fairy tale. By Martha Farquharson [Martha Farquharson Finley]. 8vo. New York, 1898 TWIGS for nests ; or, notes on nursery nurture. By the author of the Expositions of the Cartoons of Raphael [Richard Henry Smith]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1866 TWILIGHT; a novel. By Frank Danby [Mrs Julia Frankau]. 8vo. Pp. 334. London, 1916 TWILIGHT ; a poem. By a student at law [Frederick Knight]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.\ New York, 1813 TWILIGHT and candle-shade. [Verses.] By Exul [Richard Le Gallienne]. 8vo. Pp. ix. 163. London, 1888 Inscribed copy. TWILIGHT and dawn. By the author of Four messengers, etc. [Emily Marion Harris]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1873 TWILIGHT hours ; a legacy of verse. By Sadie [Miss Sarah Williams]. 8vo. London, 1869 TWILIGHT people. [Verse.] By Seumas O’Sullivan [James Starkey]. 8 vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Dublin, 1905 TWILIGHT shadows, and other poems. By R. M. E. A. [Robert M. Ashe, and Emily Ashe]. 8vo. London, 1886 TWILIGHT thoughts; stories for children and child-lovers. [By Mary S. Claude.] i2mo. London, 1853 TWIN cousins. By Sophie May [Rebecca Sophia Clarke]. 8vo. Boston, 1884 TWIN (the) Dianas; or, virtue sad: a novel. By Roof Roofer [Rufus Randell]. 8vo. Pp. 181. London, 1896 TWIN (the) sisters; or, the advantages of religion. [By Mrs Elizabeth Sand- ham.] i2mo. [Biog. Diet. 1816] 1809 TWIN (the) soul ; or, the strange experiences of Mr Rameses : a psychological and realistic romance. [By Charles Mackay, LL.D.] 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1887 TWIN-BROTHERS (the) ; or, a new book of discipline for infidels and old offenders, in prose and verse. [By-Graham.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1787 TWINKLE and wrinkle; or, more helps over hard places for boys. By Lynde Palmer [Mrs Mary Louise Peebles, nee Parmlee]. 8vo. New York, 1891 TWISTY’S album. By Archie Fell [Miss Mary J. Capron]. 8vo. Boston, 1885 TWISTY’S trials. By Archie Fell [Miss Mary J. Capron]. 8vo. Boston, 1885 TWISTY’S tumbles. By Archie Fell [Miss Mary J. Capron]. i2mo. Boston, 1885 ’TWIXT land and sea ; tales. By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski]. 8vo. Pp. 272. London, 1912 ’TWIXT love and hate. [A novel.] By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. London [1895] ’TWIXT promise and vow ; and other stories. By Ruth Elliott [Lillie Peck]. 8vo. Pp. 141. \Brit. Mus.] London [1886] ’TWIXT shade and shine. [A novel.] By Annabel Gray [Mrs-Cox]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1883 ’TWIXT smile and tear. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. New York, 1887 ’TWIXT town and country; a book of suburban gardening. By Roma White [Blanche Oram, later Mrs Winder]. 8vo. Pp. 284. London, 1900 ’TWIXT wife and fatherland ; a novel. [By Miss Lili Kuper.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1875 ’TWIXT wood and sea ; a novel. By Elizabeth Godfrey [Jessie Bedford]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1892 TWO addresses to the Freeholders of Westmorland. [By William Wordsworth.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Kendal, 1819 Signed : A Freeholder. TWO and a-half. By “Fleeta” [Kate W. Hamilton]. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1891 TWO and two; or, French and English. By the author of Dethro?ied, etc. [Mary Seamer, later Mrs Seymour]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1887 TWO apologetical odes, and an elegy. [By-Courtney.] 8vo. [ IV.] 1808 Not published. TWO appeals to the leaders of Spiritualism in England and America. By a disciple of Allan Kardec [G. Parisi]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Florence and Trieste, 1871-73 TWO (the) babies; a sketch of everyday life. By a mother [Mrs Harriet Miller Davidson]. i2mo. Pp. 17. London, 1859 Signed: H. D. TWO bad blue eyes. [A novel.] By “ Rita’5 [Mrs W. Desmond Humphreys, nde Eliza M. J. Gollan]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1884 TWO (the) banners and the old battle ; or, the Established & Free Churches as they are. By a Highlandman [Hugh M‘Intosh, M.A.]. Third edition (25th thousand). 8vo. Pp. 72. Edinburgh, N.D. TWO (the) bars; a tale of rescue. [By Mary Kennion]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1882] TWO Biddicut boys, and their adventures with a wonderful trick-dog. By Paul Creyton [John Townsend Trowbridge]. 8vo. New York, 1898 TWO black pearls ; a novel. By Marie Connor [Mrs Robert Leighton]. 8vo. London, 1886 TWO blizzards ; and other helps over hard places. By Lynde Palmer [Mrs Mary Louise Peebles, nee Parmlee]. 8vo. New York, 1891 TWO books in defence of the Bishops voting in Capital Cases in Parliament ; the first, The Honours of the Lords Spiritual asserted, etc. ; the other, The Rights of the Bishops to judge in Capital Cases in Parliament cleared : being a full answer [by Thomas Hunt, lawyer] to two books recently published . . . endeavouring to shew the contrary. The second edition. Fol. [Arber’s Term Cat.] London, 1680 TWO (the) books of Francis Bacon; Of the proficience and advancement of learning, divine and human. [Edited by Thomas Markby.] i2mo. W.\ London, 1852 Preface signed : T. M., King’s College. TWO (the) brides ; a tale. By Laval [Rev. Bernard O’Reilly]. 8vo. New York, 1879 TWO (the) brothers. [A poem, by Rev. Edward Henry Bickersteth, bishop of Exeter.] 8vo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Musi] London, 1845 TWO (the) brothers. By the author of The discipline of life, etc. [Lady Emily Ponsonby]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1858 TWO (the) brothers; or, the family that lived in the first society. [Translated from the German of Mathilde Raven.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1850 TWO (the) carnations. [A novel.] By Marjorie Bowen [Miss Gabrielle Vere Campbell]. 8vo. Pp. 288. London, 1913 TWO catechisms for the instruction of young persons. [By Bishop John TWO (the) Catherines ; or, which is the heroine ? [A novel. By Mrs Mary Anne Hardy, nee MacDowell.] 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1862 TWO centuries of St Pauls Church Yard; una cum indice expurgatorio in Bibliotheca Parliamenti, sive qui librorum prostant venales in vico vulgo vocato Little Brittain: done into English for the benefit of the Assembly of Divines and the two Universities. [By Sir John Berken- head.] 8vo. [Cat. of the Lond. Jnsti] [c. 1650] TWO charges as they were delivered by T. E. [Thomas Edgar] Justice of the peace for the county of Suffolke . . . wherein appears the necessity of government, and of steps and degrees in it, and the duty . . . not to desert the present government. 4to. [W.j Brit. Musi] London, 1650 TWO charity sermons at Madron and Penzance for the public dispensary. [By Rev. Henry Tonkin Coulson.] 8vo. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn.] Penzance, 1826 TWO Christmas stories : Sam Franklin’s saving-bank ; A miserable Christmas and a happy new year. By Hesba Stretton, author of Lost Gip, etc. [Sarah Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 68. London, 1876 TWO (the) comings of Christ. [By William Ferguson, LL.D., of Kin- mundy.] 8vo. London, 1857 TWO Compton boys. By C. Auton [Augustus Hoppin]. 8vo. Boston, 1885 TWO conferences, one betwixt a papist and a Jew, the other betwixt a protes- tant and a Jew; in two letters from a merchant in London to his correspondent in Amsterdam. [By Richard Mayo.] i2mo. [Wilson’s Hist, of Diss. Ch.; Mon. Rev. xi. 314.] London, 1699 Ascribed also to John Jacob. [Mendham Collection Cat. p. 162.] See also “Two disputations concerning the Messiah. . . .” TWO copies of verses on the meeting of King Charles the First and his Queen Henrietta Maria, in the Valley of Kineton, below Edge-Hill, in Warwickshire, July 13, 1643. [Edited by William Hamper.] 4to. [IV.j Martin’s Cat.] Birmingham, 1822 TWO (the) cousins ; a moral story, for the use of young persons. By the author of The blind child [Mrs Pinchard]. 8vo. [ W.j Brit. Musi]. TWO crowns. By Eglanton Thorne [Emily Charlton]. 8vo. Pp. 298. London,1885 TWO daughters of the race. [A novel.] By W. Heimburg [Martha Behrens]; translated from the German by Mrs D. M. Lowry. 8vo. Pp. 329. New York, 1889 TWO days and a night in the wilderness. By Thomas Twayblade [Archibald Gillies] and Dryas Octopetala [Alexander Copland]. 8vo. [Robertson’s Aberd. Bibl.] Aberdeen, 1878 TWO days in Cadenabbia. [By Constance, Lady Battersea.] 8vo. {Camb. Univ. Libi\ London, 1876 TWO delightful novels ; or, the unlucky fair one : being the amours of Mili- strate and Prazimone. . . . Translated from the French [of-Le Maire] by a person of quality. i2mo. Pp. 258. {Brit. Mus.] {c. 1710] TWO dialogues ; containing a comparative view of the lives, characters, and writings, of Philip, the late Earl of Chesterfield, and Dr Samuel Johnson. [By William Hayley.] 8vo. Pp. xxiv. 240. {Gent. Mag. lxxxi. ii. 448 ; Mo?i. Rev. lxxvii. 457.] London, 1787 TWO dialogues in English, between a doctour of divinity, and a student in the laws of England, of the grounds of the said laws and of conscience. [By C. Saint Germain.] Newly revised and reprinted. 8vo. B. L. {W. ; Brit. Mus.] London, 1668 Originally published in Latin. In 1531 appeared “ The fyrste dyalogue . . .” Many editions followed with varying titles. TWO discourses at Albury on certain errors. [By John Bate Cardale, solicitor.] 8vo. {D.N.B. vol. 9, p. 36.] London, i860 TWO discourses concerning the adoration of our B. Saviour in the H. Eucharist ; the first: Animadversions upon the alterations of the rubrick in the communion-service, in the Common-prayer-book of the Church of England : the second : The Catholicks defence for their adoration of our Lord, as believed really and substantially present in the holy sacrament of the Eucharist. [By Abraham Wood- head.] 4to. [Jones’ Peck, ii. 355.] Oxford, 1687 TWO discourses concerning the affairs of Scotland ; written in the year 1698. [By Andrew Fletcher, of Salton.] 8vo. Pp. 50, 54. [M‘Culloch’s Lit. of Pol. Econ. p. 296.] Edinburgh, 1698 VOL. VI. TWO discourses delivered at the public meetings of the Royal Academy of Sciences and Belles Lettres at Berlin, in the years 1785 and 1786 ; I. On the population of states in general, and that of the Prussian dominions in particular. II. On the true riches of states and nations, the balance of commerce and that of power. By the Baron de Hertzberg, minister of State and member of the Academy : translated from the French [by Joseph Towers, LL.D.]. 8vo. {Gent. Mag. lxxiii. i. 355 ; Mon. Rev. lxxvi. 42.] London, 1786 TWO discourses for the furtherance of Christian piety and devotion ; the former asserting the necessity and reasonableness of a positive worship, and particularly of the Christian : the later considering the common hinder- ances of devotion, and the divine worship, with their respective remedies. By the author of the Method of private devotion [Edward Wetenhall, D.D.]. i2mo. Pp. 18, 379. [Arber’s Term Cat. i. 531.] London, 1671 Each discourse has a separate title-page ; but the pagination is continuous. TWO discourses; of purgatory, and prayers for the dead. [By William Wake, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 71. {Brit. Mus.\ London, 1687 TWO discourses on the creation of all things by Jesus Christ; and on the resurrection of the dead. [By Robert Tyrwhitt, M.A., of Jesus College, Cambridge.] Third edition. 8vo. [Dyer’s Life of Robert Robinson, p. 112.] Cambridge, 1787 TWO discourses: I. Concerning the different wits of men; II. Of the mysterie of vintners. [By Walter Charleton, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. 230. London, 1669 Later editions have the author’s name. TWO discourses : the first concerning the spirit of Martin Luther, and the original of the Reformation: the second, concerning the celibacy of the clergy. [By Abraham Woodhead.] 4to. [Jones’ Peck, i. 196.] Oxford, 1687 The two discourses are separately paged, and have also separate titles. TWO discourses wherein it is prov’d that the Church of England blesseth and offereth the Eucharistick elements; with a preface, shewing in what sense she allows praying for the saints departed : and that mixt wine is not contrary to any of her rubricks. [By George Smith.] 8vo. 1732 I TWO disputations concerning the Messiah, one between a papist and a Jew, the other between a protestant and a Jew ; contained in two letters from a merchant in Amsterdam. [By Richard Mayo.] 8vo. [Mon. Rev. xi. 314.] 1754 Another edition of “Two conferences . . .” q.v. TWO dissertations concerning sense, and the imagination ; with an essay on consciousness. [By Zachary Mayne.] 8vo. Pp. 231. London, 1728 TWO dissertations on the subject of Carausius, Emperour of Britain, together with that of his supposed wife and son A 3d ; also of him and his successor Allectus ; illustrated with three copper plates, of hitherto unpublished coins : to which is added A letter to the Reverend Dr S—k—y [Stukeley] on the first volume of his extraordinary medallick History of Carausius, observing the many mistakes, unwarrantable assertions, and amazing productions therein. [By John Kennedy.] 4to. London, N.D. A general title to “A dissertation . . “ Further observations . . .”, and “A letter to the Reverend Dr S—k—y . . .” TWO dithyrambic odes. [By John Pinkerton.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1782 TWO elegies, consecrated to the never dying memorie of the most worthily admyred, most hartily loued, and generally bewayled Prince ; Henry Prince of Wales. [By Christopher Brooke and William Browne.] 4to. [Christie-Miller Cat.] London, 1613 TWO (the) Elsies. By Martha Far- quharson [Martha Finley]. 8vo. New York, 1885 TWO enquiries into the meaning of demoniacks in the New Testament. By T. P. A. P. O. A. B. I. T. C. O. S. [Arthur Ashley Sykes, D.D.]. 8vo. London, 1737 The initials on the title stand for “ The Precentor and Prebendary of A lton Porealis zn the Church of Salisbury.” TWO epistles out of Wales, and other poems. [By William Roscoe.] 8vo. Pp. 42. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1808 TWO epistles to Mr Pope, concerning the authors of the age. [By Edward Young, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. 44. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1730 TWO essays [on suicide, and on the immortality of the soul. By David Hume]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1777 TWO essays ; life, law, and literature. By T. E. Court [Wm. George Thomas Barter]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Suppi] London, 1863 TWO essays on the ballance of Europe : the first by [De la Mothe Fenelon] the late Archbishop of Cambray . . . translated into English ; the second by the translator of the first essay [William Grant, advocate, Edinburgh]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1720 TWO essays on the Remnant. By John Eglinton [William Kirkpatrick Magee]. 8vo. [S. J. Brown’s Books 071 Ireland.] Dublin, 1894 TWO fair women. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. New York, 1888 TWO (the) families ; an episode in the history of Chapelton. By the author of Rose Douglas [Mrs Sarah R. White- head]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1852 TWO (the) fathers; an unpublished original Spanish work. By Adadus Calpe [anagram of A[ntonio] D. de Pascual] ; translated into the English language by the author, and Henry Edgar. i2mo. 3 vols. [IV.] New York, 1852 The title is headed “ He who taketh the sword shall perish by the sword.” TWO first books of Lucretius, De rerum natura, translated into blank verse [by Sir J. S. Trelawny and Sir Robert Porrett Collier], 8vo. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. i. 80.] Devonport, 1842 TWO friends. By the author of The patience of hope [Dora Green well], i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1862 TWO gallant sons of Devon ; a tale of the days of Queen Bess. By Harry Collingwood [William J. C. Lancaster]. 8vo. Pp. 364. London, 1912 TWO general epistles to the flock of God, where-ever they are dispersed on the face of the earth, who are separated from the world to bear testimony for the Lord God [by Mrs Margaret Fox, nee Fell] ; also Pure consolation proclaimed from the spirit of life to the faithful followers of the Lamb, etc. [by J. Park]. 4to. [IV. j Brit. Musi] London,1664 Signed : M. F. TWO (the) generals. [Two poems. By Edward Fitzgerald.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London [1869 ?] TWO gentlemen in Touraine. By Richard Sudbury [Charles Gibson]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1906 TWO ghost-tales ; poems. By G. W. A. [G. W. Allen]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Suppi] Nottingham, 1870 TWO girls. [A story.] By Susan Coolidge [Sarah Chauncey Woolsey]. 8vo. Boston, 1900 TWO grammatical essays: first on a barbarism in the English language, in a letter to Dr S-; second on the usefulness and necessity of grammatical knowledge in order to a right interpretation of the Scriptures. [By William Salisbury, B.D.] 8vo. [Mon. Rev. xl. 84, and Index.'] London, 1768 TWO gray tourists. By Philemon Perch [Robert Malcolm Johnston]. i2mo. * Baltimore, 1885 TWO (the) great mysteries of Christian religion, the ineffable Trinity [and] the wonderful Incarnation, explicated to the satisfaction of mans own naturall reason, and according to the grounds of philosophy. By G. G. G. [Godfrey Goodman, Bishop of Gloucester]. 4to. [Camb. Univ. Lib.\ London, 1653 TWO great questions considered, I. What is the obligation of parliaments to the addresses or petitions of the people, and what the duty of the addressers? II. Whether the obligation of the covenant or other national engagements, is concern’d in the treaty of union ? Being a sixth essay at removing national prejudices against the union. [By Daniel Defoe.] 4to. Pp. 31. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe.] [Edinburgh] 1707 TWO (the) great questions consider’d. I. What the French king will do with respect to the Spanish monarchy. II. What measures the English ought to take. [By Daniel Defoe.] 4to. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe.] London,1700 TWO (the) great questions further considered ; with some reply to the Remarks. By the author [Daniel Defoe]. 4to. Pp. 20. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe.] London, 1700 TWO (the) guardians ; or, home in this world. By the author of Henrietta's wish, etc. [Charlotte M. Yonge]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 430. London, 1852 TWO heroes. [A novel.] By Zandile [Miss Frances Ellen Colenso, daughter of Bishop Colenso]. 8vo. London, 1873 TWO homes [of the Fox family, Wode- house Place and Glendurgan]. By a grandson [Elton Fox]. 8vo. Pp. 102. [Brit. Mus.] Plymouth, private print, 1925 TWO homes ; a tale. By the author of Amy Grant [C. B. Doggett]. 8vo. Pp. 146. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1856 Wrongly attributed to Miss Hopton. TWO (the) homes ; or, earning and spending. By Mrs Madeline Leslie [Harriet Newell Baker]. 8vo. [Brit. Mush] Boston, 1863 TWO homilies concerning the meanes how to resolue the controversies of this time. [By Philippe de Mornay, seigneur Du Plessis.] Translated out of French. i2mo. Pp. 142. [Madan’s Oxf. Books, i. 82.] Oxford, 1612 In the same year, later, another issue appeared, differing only in the title-page, which bears the author’s name. TWO humorous novels, viz. I. A diverting dialogue between Scipio and Berganza, two dogs belonging to the city of . . . Valladolid. ... II. The comical history of Riconata and Cortadillo. Both written by the celebrated author of Don Quixote [Miguel de Cervantes] and now first translated [by Robert Goadby]. . . . Second edition. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] 1741 The first edition has the translator’s name. 201 Bowery songster. By Tony Pastor [Harlan Halsey]. New York, 1867 TWO hundred and twenty six “choice” original hymns. . . . [By-Thomson.] 8vo. 1776 TWO hundred queries moderately propounded concerning the doctrine of the revolution of humane souls. . . . [By Francis M. van Helmont.] 8vo. Pp. 166. London, 1684 TWO husbands ; a novel. By John Strange Winter [Mrs Arthur Stannard, ne'e Henrietta E. V. Palmer]. 8vo. Pp. 118. London, 1898 TWO introductory lectures on the study of the early Fathers, delivered in the University of Cambridge by the Rev. J. J. Blunt, B.D., Margaret Professor of Divinity ; second edition, with a brief memoir of the author, and table of lectures delivered during his professorship [by William Selwyn]. 8vo. [IV.] Cambridge, 1856 The Memoir is signed : W. S. TWO journeys to Jerusalem, containing first, a strange and true account of the travels of two English pilgrims some years since, and what admirable accidents befel them in their journey to Jerusalem, Grand Cairo, Alexandria, &c. By H. T. [Henry Timberlake]. Secondly, the travels of fourteen Englishmen in 1669. from Scanderoon to Tripoly, Joppa, Ramah, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Jericho, the river Jordan, the lake of Sodom and Gomorrah, and back again to Aleppo. By T. B. ... To which is added, a relation of the Great Council of the Jews assembled in the plains of Agayday in Hungaria in 1650. to examine the Scriptures concerning Christ. By S. B. [Brett] an Englishman there present. . . . [By Richard or Robert Burton i.e. Nathaniel Crouch.] i2mo. Pp. 232. London, 1683 TWO (the) kinds of truth ; a test of all theories. By T. E. S. T. [W. T. B. Martin]. 8vo. London, 1890 TWO kisses. . . . By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. New York, 1885 TWO knights errant. By Barbara Yechton [Miss Lyda Farrington Krause]. 8vo. New York, 1894 TWO lads and a lass, and other stories. By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs G. E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 122. London, 1896 TWO (the) Lady Lascelles. [A novel.] By Sarah Tytler [Miss Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. Pp. 334. London, 1908 TWO lady tramps abroad; a year’s travel in India, Greece, Turkey, Switzerland, England, Scotland, etc. By two American ladies [Mrs- Straiton and-]. 8vo. Private print, U.S.A., 1881 TWO Lancashire lovers ; or, the excellent history of Philocles and Doriclea. By Musmus Palatinus [Richard Brath- wait]. 8vo. Pp. 268. [W. ; Lowndes’ Bibl. Alan.] London, 1640 TWO (the) last dialogues, treating of the Kingdome of God within us and without us, and of his special providence through Christ over his Church from the beginning to the end of all things. . . . [By Henry More.] [D. N. B. vol. 38, p. 422.] London, 1668 TWO (the) laws, and the necessity of their distinction for the sake of freedom and self-government: in three parts. [By J. J. Brown.] i2mo. Pp. 100. Glasgow, 1871 TWO lectures read before the Essay Society of Exeter College, Oxford. I. On the supernatural beings of the Middle Ages. II. On the origin of the Romance literature of the XII and XIII centuries. . . . [By Richard John King.] 8vo. [Dobell’s Private Prints.] Private print, 1840 TWO letters, addressed to a noble Lord, on the manufactures, agriculture, and apparent prosperity of Scotland ; with a few strictures on the speculations, morals, and manners, of the nineteenth century. [By-M£Neil.] 8vo. Pp. 55. Edinburgh, 1804 The letters are signed : Anti-speculator. TWO letters, addressed to the Right Rev. prelates, who a second time rejected the Dissenters’ bill. [By Ebenezer Radcliff.] 8vo. Pp. 108. TWO letters concerning the present Union [betweenScotland andEngland], from a Peer in Scotland [E. C. i.e. George Mackenzie, Earl of Cromarty] . to E. W. [the Earl of Wemyss]. 4to. Pp. 28. [Brit. Musi] [Edinburgh] 1706 TWO letters containing a further justification of the Church of England, against dissenters ; the first, by one of the reverend commissioners for the review of the Liturgy, at the Savoy, 1661 [Thomas Pierce, D.D.] : the second by Dr Laurence Womock Archdeacon of Suffolk, author of the Verdict upon Melius inquirendum. 8vo. Pp. 89. London, 1682 TWO letters, describing a method of increasing the quantity of circulating money upon a new and solid principle. 'By Ambrose Weston.] 8vo. 2 parts. Brit. Musi] Private print, 1799 TWO letters from a deist [Nicholas Stevens, A.M.] to his friend, concerning the truth and propagation of deism, in opposition to Christianity. With remarks [by Samuel Wesley, M.A.]. 4to. Pp. vi. 37. [Bodli] London, 1730 TWO letters from Satan to Buonaparte. By Henry Whitfield, M.A.] 8vo. Upcott and Shoberl’s Biog. Diet., p. 383.] London, 1803 II letters in defence of the British and Foreign Bible Society, addressed to a friend in the country. [By David Brown, bookseller.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1826 Each letter has a separate title and pagination, and is signed : Amicus. TWO letters in verse. [By Rev. John Fisher, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 47. London, 1821 TWO letters of advice ; (1) For the susception of holy orders. (2) For studies theological, especially such as are rational. . . . [Epistle dedicatory signed: H. D. i.e. Henry Dodwell, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 356. [Dix and Dugan’s Dublin Books.] Dublin, 1672 TWO letters on Scottish affairs, from Edward Bradwardine Waverley Esq. [John Wilson Croker] to Malachi Malagrowther, Esq. [Sir Walter Scott, Bart.]. 8vo. Pp. 63. London and Edinburgh, 1826 TWO letters on the subject of the Catholics, to my brother Abraham, who lives in the country. By Peter Plymley [Sydney Smith]. 8vo. TWO letters on the subject of the present vacancy in the Professorship of Oriental languages. [By Thomas Brown.] 8vo. Pp. 31, 7. [New Coll. Lib. p. 116.] Edinburgh, 1813 The Letters are signed : E. P. TWO letters, one from John Audland a Quaker, to William Prynne; the other, William Prynnes answer. By the author of Hudibras [Samuel Butler]. Fol. Pp. 22. London, 1672 TWO letters ; the first containing some remarks on the meeting held 5th Nov. 1809 to celebrate the acquittal of Mrs Hardy, J. H. Tooke, Thelwall and others, in November 1794. . . . The second containing a short comparative sketch of our practical constitution in ancient times and the present. . . . By a freeholder of Cornwall [Francis Gregor, M.P.]. 8vo. Pp. 57. [Boase and Courtney's Bibl. Corn.] London, 1810 TWO letters, to a British merchant, a short time before the expected meeting of the new parliament in 1796 ; and suggesting the necessity and facility of providing for the public exigencies, without any augmentation of debt, or accumulation of burdens. [By John Bowles.] The second edition. 8vo. Pp. 84. [Bod/.] London, 1796 TWO letters to a clergyman in the country, concerning the choice of members, and the execution of the parliament writ, for the ensuing Convocation. [By Francis Atterbury, D.D.] 4to. [Bod/.] London, 1701 TWO letters to a clergyman of the Reformed Dutch Church, on the question whether a man may lawfully marry his deceased wife’s sister. By Clericus [Rev. Alexander Gunn, D.D.]. 8vo. New York, 1827 TWO letters to a gentleman attempting to subvert the doctrine of the Arians. [By-Hanley.] 8vo. Pp. 88. [Brit. Musi] London, 1751 TWO letters to the Earl of Dorset concerning the Ecclesiastical Commission of King James II. [By Thomas Spratt, D.D., Bishop of Rochester.] i2mo. Pp. 36. [D. N. B. vol. 53, p. 421.] London, 1711 TWO letters to the Rev. Dr Chalmers, on his proposal for increasing the number of churches in Glasgow. By an observer [James A. Haldane]. 8vo. Pp. 38. [New Co//. Lib. p. 163.] Glasgow, 1818 TWO letters to the Reverend Dr Kennicott, vindicating the Jews from the charge of corrupting Deut. xxvii. 4 ; the first of which was published in the Library for July 1761 : the second is now first published, being an answer to Dr Kennicott’s remarks, in the Library for August, 1761 ; and a farther illustration of the argument. [By Robert Findlay, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 34. London, 1762 Letters signed : Philalethes. TWO letters to the Rev. Dr Thomas M‘Crie, and the Rev. Mr Andrew Thomson, on the parody of Scripture, lately published in Blackwood’s Ediri- burgh Magazine. By Calvinus [James Grahame, advocate]. 8vo. Pp. 30. Edinburgh, 1817 Of these letters of Calvinus, there were in all, five, besides a postscript. Their titles are “Another letter . . “Two more letters . . .”, and “Postscript to the letters of Calvinus.” TWO letters to the Rev. Francis Law, occasioned by his late Address to the Protestants of Salmerbury, Preston. [Signed: A Catholic i.e. Richard Norris, S.J.] 8vo. [Sommervogel’s Dictionnairei] Preston, 1835 TWO letters to the Right Honourable the Lord Viscount Townshend ; shewing the seditious tendency of several late pamphlets ; more particularly of, A review of the Lutheran principles, by Tho. Brett, LL. D. Rector of Betteshanger in Kent, and of A letter to the author of the Lutheran Church, from a country school-boy. By a presbyter of the Church of England [Robert Watts, LL.B., St John’s Coll., Oxford]. 8vo. Pp. 40. London, 1714 Signed : R. W. TWO letters, written by a minister of the gospel to a gentleman, concerning Professor Campbell’s divinity: letter I. Wherein his scheme concerning the origine, or primary source of moral virtue, contained in his answer to the author of the Fable of the bees, is shewed to be irrational, and antiscrip- tural ; letter II. Wherein his discourse, proving that the Apostles were no enthusiasts, is considered : and the poisonous nature of enthusiasm, together with his mistakes of it, are detected. [By James Hog.] 8vo. Pp. 63. Edinburgh, 1731 TWO letters written to [Samuel Hill] the author of a pamphlet entituled, Solomon and Abiathar ; or, the case of the deprived bishops and clergy discussed. [By Samuel Grascome.] 4to. Pp. 43. [Green’s Bibl. So?ners. ii. 480.] London, 1692 I 2 VOL. VI. TWO (the) lights. By the author of Struggles for life[ William Leask, D.D.]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1856 TWO little B’s. [A tale.] By Maud Carew [Miss Florence M. King]. 8vo. Pp. 162. London, 1906 TWO little cousins. [A tale]. By Alice Hepburn [Mary Elizabeth Chevallier Boutell]. i2mo. Pp. 159. London,1876 TWO little crusoes and three little monkeys. [A tale.] ByA. B. Romney [Miss A. Beatrice Rambaut]. 8vo. Pp. 126. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1912] TWO little travellers . . . By Ray Cunningham [Mrs Frances Browne Arthur]. 8vo. London, 1902 TWO little wooden shoes ; a sketch. By Ouida, author of Chandos, etc. [Louise de la Ramee]. 8vo. Pp. 322. London, 1874 TWO lives. [In verse]. By Reginald Hainault [G. Keyes]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ [Clapton, 1890] TWO love stories; an Anglo-Spanish romance. By “ Waters” [William Russell]. 8 vo. London, 1861 Subscribed : Antony Shandy. TWO loves ; a novel. By Curtis Yorke [Mrs W. S. Richmond Lee] and E. M. Davy. 8vo. London, 1904 TWO lyric epistles ; one to my cousin Shandy, on his coming to town ; and the other to the grown gentlewomen, the Misses of* * * * [By John Hall- Stevenson.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 54, p. 239.] London, 1760 TWO (the) magistracies ; or, the first blast of the seventh trumpet: an address to the Old Light Seceders. [By J. G. Clendinning, shepherd in Eskdale.] 8vo. Pp. 57. Edinburgh, 1847 TWO marriages. By the author of John Halifax, Gentleman, etc. [Dinah Maria Mulock]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1867 TWO men and a governess. [A novel.] By Olivia Ramsay [Laetitia Selwyn Oliver]. 8vo. London, 1911 TWO men o’ Mendip. By Tom Cob- bleigh [Walter Raymond]. 8vo. London, 1899 TWO (the) mentors ; a modern story. By the author of The old English baron [Clara Reeve]. The third edition. i2mo. Pp. 386. [Nichols’ Lit. Anec. viii. 138.] London, 1803 TWO (the) misers ; a musical farce : as it is performed at the Theatre Royal in Covent-Garden. By the author of Midas, and The Golden Pippin [Kane O’Hara]. 8vo. Pp. 32. London, 1775 Taken from Les deux avares of Fenouillot TWO mistakes. [Two stories.] By Sydney Christian [Miss Maria L. Lord]. 8vo. Pp. 187. [Brit. Musi] London, 1895 TWO modern little princes, and other stories. By Margaret Sidney [Mrs Harriet M. Lothrop]. 8vo. Boston, 1886 TWO months abroad ; or, a trip to England, France, Baden, Prussia, and Belgium in 1843. By a railroad director of Massachusetts [Elias Hasket Derby]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1844 TWO months in Italy; or, passages from the diary of a Sexagenarian [Henry C. Beloe]. 8vo. Pp. 124. [Dobell’s Private Prints, p. 2117.] Liverpool, 1872 TWO months in Palestine ; or, a guide to a rapid journey to the chief places of interest in the Holy Land. By the author of Two months in Spain [James Monteith]. 8vo. Pp. 238. London, 1871 TWO months in Spain. . . . [By James Monteith.] 8vo. London, 1869 TWO moods of a man ; with other papers and short studies. By Violet Fane [Mary Montgomerie, later Lady Currie]. 8vo. Pp. 274. London,1901 TWO more letters (being the fourth and the last), to the Rev. Dr Thomas M‘Crie, and the Rev. Mr Andrew Thomson, on the parody of Scripture, lately published in Blackwoods Edinburgh Magazine; including a brief view of ministerial character and duty. By Calvinus [James Grahame, advocate]. 8vo. Pp. 29. Edinburgh, 1817 TWO mothers of one. By Roof Roofer [Rufus Randell]. 8vo. London, 1895 TWO (the) Mr Clarks. (From the Witness of 12th April 1843.) [By Hugh Miller.] i2mo. Pp. 18. Edinburgh, 1843 Reprinted in 1870 in a volume entitled Leading articles on various subjects. By Hugh Miller. TWO (the) Napoleons; a lecture delivered at Dawlish [Devonshire] by “ Iconoclast ” [J. S. Harding]. 8vo. Exeter, 1861 TWO (the) Nellies. [A story.] By H. N. R. [Elizabeth Lyon Millar]. 8vo. Pp. 30. Edinburgh [1880] TWO new sermons, preached in Oxford, fitted for these times ; the one of diuine mysteries : the other of church- schismes, by the vnity of orthodox professors. By J. D. [John Doughty]. [D.N.B. vol. 15, p. 258.] TWO north-country maids ; an everyday story. By Mabel Wetheral [Mabel Hodgson]. 8vo. London, 1887 TWO novels; in letters. By the authors of Henry and Frances [Richard and Elizabeth Griffith]. i2mo. 4 vols. London, 1769 TWO odes. [By George Colman, the elder, and Robert Lloyd, in parody of the odes of William Mason and Thomas Gray.] 4to. Pp. 23. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1760 TWO odes, from the Latin of the celebrated Rapin ; imitated in English Pindaricks, by a gentleman of Cambridge [Francis Bragge]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1710 TWO odes of Horace, relating to the cival wars of Rome, and against covetous rich men. Translated into English [by Richard Fanshaw]. 8vo. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.\ London, 1664 TWO offenders. By “Ouida” [Louise de la Ramee]. 8vo. Pp. 265. Philadelphia, 1897 TWO old men’s tales; The deformed, and the Admiral’s daughter. [By Mrs Anne Marsh.] Second edition. i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1834 TWO on an island; an episode. By Curtis Yorke [Mrs W. S. Richmond Lee]. 8vo. Pp. 102. London, 1892 TWO orations of the Emperor Julian ; one to the Sovereign sun, and the other to the Mother of the Gods: translated [by Thomas Taylor, the Platonist]. 8vo. Pp. lxviii. 204. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1793 TWO orphans. [A story taken from Les deux orphelins of E. Philippe and P. E. Piestre, by Henry Llewellyn Williams.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London,1878 TWO papers; a theatrical critique, and an essay (being No. 999 of the Pretender) on sonnet writing, and sonnet- writers in general, including a sonnet on myself, attributed to the editor of the Ex-m-n-r, preceded by proofs of their authenticity, founded upon the authority of internal evidence. [By John Poole.] 8vo. Pp. xi. 24. [Athen. Cat. p. 486.] London, 1819 TWO papers of proposals concerning the discipline and ceremonies of the Church of England, presented to His Majesty by Rev. ministers of the Presbyterian Perswasion. [Drawn up by Richard Baxter.] 4to. Pp. 46. London, 1661 TWO papers on some of the popular discontents. By T. B. Temple [Thomas Banister]. 8vo. London, 1849 TWO (the) parties in the Church brought to the test; or, moderatism and evangelism contrasted. [By Rev. David Carment.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [New Coll. Lib. p. 152.] Edinburgh, 1843 TWO penny-worth of truth for a penny ; or, a true state of facts; with an apology for Tom Bull [William Jones of Nay- land] in a letter to Brother John. [By Ann Jebb.] Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 16. [IV.'] London, 1793 Signed : W. Bull. TWO petitions presented to the supreame authority of the nation, from thousands of the Lords, owners, and commoners of Lincolneshire; against the old court-levellers, or propriety-destroyers, the prerogative undertakers. [By John Lilburne.] 4to. Pp. 10. [Bodl.] London, 1650 TWO plaies: The city match; a comedy ; and The amorous warre ; a tragy-comedy [each in five acts and in verse]. Both long since written by J. M. [Jasper Mayne] of Christ Church in Oxon. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1658 TWO plain letters to the people of England, exhorting them to a more . . . earnest use of the excellent prayers of our Church. By a Lay Churchman [John David Hay Hill]. 12mo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1834 TWO (the) prisoners of Lyons ; or, the duplicate keys: a melodrama. . . . Altered from the French of Benjamin [Benjamin Antier], Saint Amant [Jean Amand Lacoste], and Paulyanthe [Alexandre Chapponier]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1824 TWO (the) prophets. ... By Zion Ward [John Ward]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Birmingham, 1847 TWO public letters in reply to Brookes’ Farmer. [Signed: Rusticus, i.e. Charles O’Conor, M.R.I.A.] 8vo. Dublin, 1749 TWO questions of present importance briefly stated and argued, viz. Whether ’tis reasonable in point of policy ; and Whether ’tis consistent with the safety and welfare of the Establish’d Church, to set the Dissenters free from all legal incapacity to serve the present government. In a letter to a Member of Parliament. [By William Harris, D.D., Presbyterian minister in London.] 8vo. Pp. 24. London, 1717 TWO questions, previous'to Dr. Middleton’s Free enquiry, impartially considered: viz. What are the grounds upon which the credibility of miracles, in general, is founded? and Upon what grounds the miracles of the Gospel, in particular, are credible? To which is added, A dissertation upon Mark xvi. 17, 18. These signs shall follow them that believe, &c. [By Arthur Ashley Sykes.] 8vo. Pp. 129. London,1750 -Part II. In which the evidence for the miracles of the primitive Church is fully examined into ; and the miracles of the Gospel are shewn to have sure marks of credibility. [By Arthur Ashley Sykes, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. ix. 5, 209. [Disney’s Memoir of Sykes, p. xxiii.] London, 1752 TWO (the) Rebellions ; or, treason unmasked. By a Virginian [Angus W. Macdonald]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.\ Richmond, Va. 1865 TWO (the) rectors. [By George Wilkins, D.D.] i2mo. Pp. xvi. 458. London,1824 TWO (the) rubies; a novel. By the author of Recommended to mercy [Mrs Margaret C. Houstoun]. 8vo. 3 vols. [.Bi'it. Mus.] London, 1868 TWO (the) runaways. By Claud Heathcote [James Harwood Panting]. 8vo. London, 1907 TWO schemes of a Trinity considered, and the Divine Unity asserted : four discourses on Philippians ii. 5-11. . . . [By Nathaniel Lardner, D.D.] 8vo. | Brit. Musk] London, 1784 TWO (the) schools. From the Table of the unity of religions. [By T. Martin.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1848 TWO seasonable discourses concerning the present parliament. [By Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1 st Earl of Shaftesbury.] 4to. Pp. 10. \Bodl.] Oxford, 1675 TWO secrets ; and, A man of his word. [Tales.] By Hesba Stretton [Miss Sarah Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 127. London [1897] TWO sermons, etc. I. On the national jubilee; II. On the thanksgiving and poems on the majesty of the Godhead. [By Rev. S. Barker, A.M.] 4to. Pp. 63. [IV. j Martin’s Cat.] [Yarmouth] 1815 TWO sermons formerly preach’d in the cathedral-church of Worcester. By a late prebendary of the said church [Miles Stapylton, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 73. London, 1736 TWO sermons on the relative and social duties. [By Joseph Morrison.] 8vo. [Robertson’s Aberd. Bibl.] Aberdeen, 1845 TWO sermons on the third [chapter] of the Lamentations, preached at Han- well in the first yeere of His Majesties reigne, 1602 : the one by I. D. [John Dod], the other by R. C. [Robert Cleaver]. 4to. Pp. 71. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1610 TWO sermons preached by the author of a book entitled The life of God in the soul of man [Henry Scougal, D.D.]. 8vo. [Robertson’s Aberd. Bibl.] [Aberdeen, 1691] TWO sermons preached on a fast day during the late war with France. [By Francis Blackburne, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 11,28. [Bodl.] London, 1778 TWO sermons, preached to a congregation of black slaves, at the parish church of S. P. in the province of Maryland. By an American pastor Thomas Bacon], i2mo. Pp. 79. Sabin’s Diet.] London, 1749 TWO sermons; the first addressed to seamen ; the second to British West- India slaves. [By James Mackittrick Adair, M.D.] : to which are subjoined Remarks on female infidelity, and a plan of Platonic matrimony, by F. G. 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] 1791 TWO sketches of France, Belgium, and Spa, in two tours, during the summers of 1771 and 1816; with a portrait of Napoleon’s guide at Waterloo. By the author of Letters from Paris, in 1802-3 [Stephen Weston, F.R.S.]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 176. London, 1817 TWO small Crusoes. [A story.] By A. B. Romney [A. Beatrice Rambaut]. 8vo. London, 1901 TWO (the) Sosias. ... [A satire on Dr Mead.] By T. Byfield, M.D. [John Woodward, M.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1719 TWO speeches made in the House of Peers, on Monday, 19 Dec. 1642. [By Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 28, p. 388.] n.p. [1643] TWO speeches made in the House of Peers; the one, November 20, 1675 : the other in November 1678. By a Protestant peer of the realm of England [Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury]. 4to. Pp. 15. Hague, 1680 TWO speeches of a late Lord Chancellor [Charles Yorke, Earl of Hard- wicke]. Printed from an authentic copy. 8vo. Pp. 64. London, 1770 TWO (the) spheres of truth, with relation to present-day theories. ... By T. E. S. T. [W. T. B. Martin]. 8vo. Pp. 377. London, 1892 TWO spheres ; or, mind versus instinct. By T. E. S. T. [W. T. B. Martin]. Revised and enlarged. 8vo. Pp. vii. 518. London, 1894 TWO stories of the seen and the unseen: The open door ; Old Lady Mary. [By Mrs Margaret Oliphant.] 8vo. Pp. 212. Edinburgh, 1885 A later edition, 1912, gives the name of the authoress. TWO summers in Norway. By the author of The angler in Ireland [William Bilton]. i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1840 TWO supplementary letters (being the 5th and 6th of a series) on the circulating medium of the British Isles. . . . [By Rev. Francis John Hext, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 40. [.Brit. Musi] Truro, 1840 Signed : Y. Z. TWO tales (Geoffrey the Mesmerist ; Dollie, a psychological romance) told by a sensitive. By Brooke Anstruther [Mary Helen Cameron]. 121110. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1888 TWO tales translated out of Ariosto: the one in dispraise of men, the other in disgrace of women ; with certaine other Italian stanzas and proverbes. By R. T. [Robert Tofte] gentleman. 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London,1597 TWO tellings to Pet. [Ecclesiological notes taken in Wales and Yorkshire.] By “Unda” [Rev. Thomas Muir]. 4to. PP- 33- .... [Edinburgh, private print, 1877] 2010 A.D. [A novel.] By the author of The adventures of John Johns [Frederick Carrel]. 8vo. Pp. 254. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1914 TWO tracts shewing that Americans, born before the independence, are by the laws of England, not aliens; first, a discussion, &c.; second, a reply, &c. By a barrister [John Reeves, M.A.]. 8vo. Pp. 100. [Rich’s Bill. Amer., ii. 72.] 1814 TWO tramps ... By the author of Probable sons [Amy Le Feuvre]. 8vo. London,1900 TWO treatises concerning regeneration : 1. Of repentance. 2. Of the diet of the soule. . . . [By Thomas Morton, D.D., Bishop.] i2mo. Pp. 121, 119. [Watt’s Bill. Brit.] London, 1613 TWO treatises of government; in the former, the false principles and foundation of Sir Robert Filmer, and his followers, are detected and overthrown: the latter is an essay concerning the true original, extent, and end of civil- government. [By John Locke.] 8vo. Pp. 338. [Camb. Hist, of Eng. Lit.] London, 1694 TWO treatises; the first, proving both by history & record that the bishops are a fundamental & essential part of our English parliament: the second, that they may be judges in capital cases. [By Laurence Womock, D.D.] Fol. London, 1680 TWO troubadours. [A romance.] By Esme Stuart [Miss Amelie Claire Le Roy]. 8vo. Pp. 310. London, 1912 TWO true ; a story of to-day. [By Mrs Metta Victoria Victor.] i2mo. [Kirk’s Supp.] New York, 1868 TWO useful cases resolved. I. Whether a certainty of being in a state of salvation be attainable? II. What is the rule by which this certainty is to be attained? [By Richard Blechynder, prebendary of Peterborough.] 4to. Pp. 32. [BodL] London, 1685 TWO very godly and comfortable letters, written ouer into England ; the one to a godly and zealous lady : wherin the Annabaptists errour is confuted : and the sinne against the Holye Ghoste plainly declared; the other an answer to a godly merchants letter : written for his comfort, being greeued with the heauye burden of sinne : wherin is declared the true confession of sinne. Written by T. C. [Thomas Cartwright]. 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 9, p. 229.] London, 1589 TWO (the) vocations ; or, the sisters of mercy at home. A tale. By the author of Tales and sketches of Christian life in different lands and ages [Mrs A. P. Charles, nee Elizabeth Rundle]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1853 TWO voyages, and what came of them. [By Rev. Edward N. Hoare, M.A.] 8vo. London, 1877 TWO ways of becoming a hunter. By Harry Castlemon [Charles Austin Fosdick]. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1894 TWO ways of looking at it. By Austin Clare [Miss W. M. James]. 8vo. London, 1885 TWO ways of love. [A novel.] By “Iota” [Mrs Katharine Mannington Caffyn]. 8vo. London, 1913 TWO (the) weddings; or, holy and unholy matrimony. By S. W. [Miss S. Warren]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1872] TWO wise men and all the rest fooles; or, a comicall morall, censuring the follies of the age, as it hath beene diverse times acted. [By George Chapman.] 4to. Pp. 104. [Baker’s Biog. Dram. ] 1619 TWO (the) wizards, and other songs. By Richard Honeywood [Claud Lovat Fraser]. i6mo. [Millard’s Bibl. of Fraser.] 1913 TWO (the) wolves in lambs’ skins ; or, Old Ely’s sorrowful lamentation over his two sons. . . . The second edition. By poor old Tom of Bedlam [Rev. Luke Milbourne]. 8vo. Pp. 62. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1716 TWO women and a man ; a society sketch of to-day. By Ellam Fenwicke Allan [Mrs Edith Charlton Anne]. 8vo. Pp. 231. [Brit. Mus.] London [1897] TWO women, or one? By Sidney Luska [Henry Harland]. 8vo. London, 1890 TWO words of counsel and one of comfort. [By William Combe.] [Gent. Mag. May 1852, p. 467.] 1795 TWO (the) worlds, the natural and the spiritual. By Thomas Brevior [Thomas Shorter]. 8vo. [Boase’s Mod. Brit. Biog. vol. 6, col. 554]. London, 1864 TWO Wyoming girls. By Carl Louis Kingsbury [Mrs Caroline Louise Marshall]. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1899 TWO years after and onwards ; or, the approaching war amongst the powers of Europe and other future events described as foretold in Scripture prophecy. By the author of The corning struggle [David Pae]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 192. London, 1864 TWO years before the mast; a personal narrative of life at sea. [By Richard Henry Dana, Junr.] 8vo. Pp. 124. London, 1841 Reprint of the original American edition. Preface signed : R. H. D. Jr. TWO years’ captivity in German East Africa ; being the personal experiences of Surgeon E. C. H. [Ernest Charles Holtom]. 8vo. Pp. 239. [Brit. Mus.' London [1919 TWO years in Ava; from May 1824, to May 1826. By an officer on the Staff of the Quarter-Master-General’s department [Capt. Thomas Abercrombie Trant]. 8vo. [Gent. Mag. April 1832, p. 371.] London, 1827 TWO (a) years’ journal in New York, and part of its Territories in America. By C. W. [Rev. Charles Wooley]. 8vo. [Book Prices Current, 1921.] London,1701 TWO years of Church [of England] progress. By the author of The Church cause and the Church party [Alex. J. Beresford Hope]. 8vo. Pp. 27. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 TWOFOLD vindication of the Archbishop of Canterbury [Tillotson], and of the author of the History of religion. [By Sir Robert Howard.] 8vo. [Leslie’s Cat. 1843.] 1696 TYBORNE, and “Who went thither in the days of Queen Elizabeth” ; a sketch, by the authoress of Eastern hospitals [Miss Frances Magdalen Taylor]. 8vo. [Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. vi. col. 666.] London, 1859 TYNDALL and materialism ; Gladstone and the Vatican Decrees : two epistles in verse. By J. K. C. [Rev. James Casey, Catholic priest in Sligo]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Dublin, 1875 TYPES (the), and a selection from the writings in verse and prose of a lady recently and suddenly deceased. [By Lucy Croggan.] i2mo. Pp. viii. 195. London, 1836 TYPES and antitypes of our Lord Jesus Christ. [By Miss A. E. Gimingham, Weston-super-Mare.] Obi. 4to. Pp. 29, with 29 plates. London [1884] TYPES of the Turf; anecdotes and incidents from the course and the stable. By “ Rapier ” [Alfred E. T. Watson]. 8vo. Pp. 115. London, 1883 TYPE-WRITER (the) girl. By Olive Pratt Reyner [Charles Blairfindie Grant Allen]. 8vo. Pp. 261. [Courtney’s Secrets, p. 106.] London, 1897 TYPHON ; or, the Gyants war with the Gods : a mock poem, in five cantos. [Translated from the French of Scarron by John Phillips?]. 8vo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1665 TYPHON ; or, the wars between the Gods and the Giants: a burlesque poem in imitation of . . . Mons. Scarron. [The dedication is signed B. M. i.e. Bernard Mandeville.] 4to. Pp. 47. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1704 TYPHOON (the) ; and other stories. By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski]. 8vo. Pp. 310. London,1903 TYRANNICALL - GOVERNMENT anatomized ; or, a discourse concerning evil-councellors : being the life and death of John the Baptist: and presented to the Kings most excellent Majesty by the author. [A translation of George Buchanan’s Baptistes, probably by John Milton.] 4to. Pp. 34. [Peck’s Memoirs of Milton, p. 265.] London, 1642 TYRANNICIDE proved lawful, from the practice and writings of Jews, heathens, and Christians ; a discourse, delivered in the mines at Symsbury, in the colony of Connecticut, to the loyalists confined there by order of the Congress, on September 19, 1781. By Simeon Baxter, a licentiate in divinity, and voluntary chaplain to those prisoners in the apartment called Orcus [Rev. Samuel Peters]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 31. Printed in America ; London ; reprinted, 1782 “ I believe this squib is by the Rev. Samuel Peters.”—MS. note in the Bodleian copy. TYRANNUS ; or, the mode; in a discourse of sumptuary lawes. [By John Evelyn.] 8vo. Pp. 30. London, 1661 The address “To him that reades ” signed: I. E. “ This, which is corrected throughout, by the author (Mr Evelyn) with his own hand, for a second edition . . .”—MS. note on the Mason copy in the Bodleian. TYRANNY and hypocrisy detected ; or, a further discovery of the tyrannical- government, popish-principles, and vile practices of the now-leading quakers. [By William Mucklow.] 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 39 ; ii. 190.] London, 1673 TYRANNY and popery lording it over the consciences, lives, liberties, and estates both of king and people. [By Roger L’Estrange.] 4to. Pp. 94. London, 1678 The second edition, 1681, has the author’s name. TYRANNY (the) of custom; revised and enlarged. The bagman’s vision, etc. Addressed to commercial travellers. By “One of us” [John Martin]. Second edition. i2mo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, iii. 387.] Wellington, 1866 TYRANNY (the) of faith ; a story of Courland. By Carl Joubert[A. W. C. Grottey]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London,1806 TYRANNY (the) of modern Nonconformity compared with Papal supremacy. By a victim of Nonconformist persecution [Rev. Brewin Grant]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1874 TYRANNY (the) of Popery, as seen in Italy by an eye-witness [Rev. Charles Cameron, M.A., Oxford]. 8vo. London, 1853 TYROL (the) and its people. By Clive Holland [Charles J. Hankinson]. 8vo. Pp. 342. London, 1909 TYROLESE (the) patriots of 1809. [By Mrs Harriet Diana Thompson, nee Calvert.] 8vo. London, 1859 TYRRELL ; a tragic play in five acts. [By Kenneth Menzies and Edward Tait.] 8vo. [Inglis’ Dramatic writers of Scotla?id.~\ Edinburgh, 1841 TYTLER’S History of Scotland examined ; a review. [By Patrick Fraser, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. 246. Edinburgh, 1848 Appeared first in the North British Review. U. E. (the) ; a tale of Upper Canada. [Verse. By William Kirby, F.R.C.S.] 8vo. Pp. 180. \_Brit. Musi] Niagara, 1859 UGANDA. By Philo-Africanus [Robert Needham Cust, LL.D.]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.]. Woking, 1892 UGBROOKE park; a poem. [By Rev. Joseph Reeve.] 4to. [Davidson’s Bibl. Devon, p. 128.] London, 1776 A second edition, Exeter, 1794, has the author’s name. UGLINESS and its uses ; a lecture . . . By Jak Wonder [Peter K. Ferguson]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] New York, 1852 UGLY (the) man. [A novel.] By F. M. Allen [Edmund Downey]. 8vo. London [c. 1900] UGO Bassi ; a tale of the Italian Revolution. [Verse.] By Speranza [Lady Francesca Speranza Wilde]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1857 ULAD of the dreams. By Fiona Macleod [William Sharp]. 8vo. London, 1904 ULGHAM ; its story: printed in aid of the funds for rebuilding Ulgham church. [By William Woodman, of Morpeth.] 4to. Pp. 40. Newcastle, 1861 ULLSMERE; a poem. [By John Charles Bristow.] 8vo. Pp. xv. 271. London,1835 Included in his “ Collected poems.” ULM and Trafalgar. [A poem. By George Canning, Prime Minister.] 4to. Pp. 10. [Brit. Mus.] London,1806 ULSTER. [By John James Clancy.] 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.\ Dublin, 1886 ULSTER (the) Synod ; a satirical poem. [By Rev. William Heron.] 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of lrela?id.] Belfast, 1817 ULTIMATE (the) generalization ; an effort in the philosophy of science. [By John Lord Peck.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1876 ULTIMATE (the) remedy for Ireland. [By Rowley Lascelles.] 8vo. [Gent. Mag. April 1831, p. 345.] London, 1831 ULTRAMONTAN ISM versus education in Ireland; the case of Father O’Keeffe, P.P., shortly stated. By Scrutator [W. R. Aucketill]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1875 ULTRA-PROTESTANT developments at Liverpool ; an old warning to evangelicals repeated. By a Liverpool layman [Dan. Radford]. 8vo. Pp. 36. [Bod/.] Liverpool, 1856 ULTRA-UNIVERSALISM, and its natural affinities. By Paul [Arthur Granger]. i2mo. Pp. 51. [Eddy’s Universalism in America, ii. 535.] Hartford [U.S.A.] 1839 ULUG Beg ; an epic poem, comic in intention . . . By Autolycus, a snapper- up of unconsidered trifles [Leonard Bacon]. 8vo. Pp. 292. [A?ner. Cat.] New York, 1923 ULYSSES Homer; or, a discovery of the true author of the Iliad and Odyssey. By Constantine Koliades, Professor in the Ionian University [Jean Baptiste Le Chevalier; translated by the Rev. P. Fraser]. 8vo. Pp. xxiv. 67. [IV.] London, 1829 Abridged from J. B. Le Chevalier’s Voyage dans la Troade, 3 vols. 8vo., Paris, 1802. ULYSSES, or De Rougemont of Troy. By A. H. M. [A. H. Milne]. 8vo. London, 1899 ULYSSES upon Aiax; written by Misodiaboles to his friend Philaretes. By Sir John Harington.] i2mo. IV.j Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1596 UMBRELLAS to mend. By Margaret Vandergrift [Margaret Thomson Janvier]. 8vo. Boston, 1906 UNANIMITY ; a poem : most respectfully inscribed to that truly patriotic nobleman the Duke of Leinster. [By John Macaulay.] 4to. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.; Mon. Rev. lxii. 319.] London,1780 UNANSWERABLE (an) conviction of the impostures of Popery, and deceits of the Papal agents ; with a necessary caution to all sincere and conscientious Christians to beware of them : recommended to all the clergy of England, especially of such parishes, as have any of these deceivers or deceived in them. [By Edward Stephens, of Cherington.] 4to. Pp. 4. [Bodl.] London, 1706 UNANSWERED (an) question, and other stories. By “ Alien ” [Mrs L. A. Baker]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1906 UNA’S revenge ; a story of real life in the nineteenth century. By Melville Gray [Miss Ethel Granger]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1887 UNAUTHORISED (an) appeal to Irish Catholics. [By Rev. Robert R. Suffield.] New York, 1864 Information from the author. UNAWARES ; a story of an old French town. By the author of One year [Frances Mary Peard]. 8vo. Pp. 295. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1870 UNBELEEVERS (the) preparing for Christ. By T. H. [Thomas Hooker]. 4to. [Bodl.] London, 1638 UNBISHOPING (the) of Timothy and Titus ; or, a briefe elaborate discourse, prooving Timothy to be no bishop (much lesse any sole, or diocsesan bishop) of Ephesus, nor Titus of Crete ; and that the power of ordination, or imposition of hands, belongs lure divino to presbyters, as well as to bishops, ... By a well-wisher to God’s truth and people [William Prynne]. 4to. Pp. 173, 5. N.P. 1636 UNCANNY tales. By Ennis Graham [Mrs Mary Louise Molesworth]. 8vo. Pp. 228. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1896 UNCASING (the) of heresie ; or, the anatomie of Protestancie. Written and composed by O. A. [Oliver Almond, Catholic priest]. 8vo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] [Louvain ?] 1623 UNCENSORED celebrities. By E. T. Raymond [Edward Raymond Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 244. [Manchester Guardiaii, 4.4.28.] London, 1918 UNCERTAINTIES (the) of travel; a plain statement by a certain traveller [George Amory Bethune, M.D.]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.; Kirk’s Supp.] Boston, 1880 UNCERTAINTY (the) of the art of physick ; together with an account of the innumerable abuses practised by the professors of that art: clearly manifested by a particular relation of the beginning and progress thereof. . . . Written in Italian by the famous [Lionardo di] Capoa, and made English by J. L. [J. Lancaster], Gent. 8vo. [Arber’s Term Cat. ii. 49 and 645.] London,1683 UNCERTAINTY (the) of the signs of death, and the danger of precipitate interments and dissections, demonstrated. I. From the known laws of the animal oeconomy. II. From the structure of the parts of the human body. And III. From a great variety of amusing and well-attested instances of persons who have return’d to life in their coffins, in their graves, under the hands of the surgeons, and after they had remain’d apparently dead for a considerable time in the water. . . . Illustrated with copper plates. [By Jean Jacques Bruhier-D’Ablaincourt.] 8vo. Pp. 6, 219. [Al. and Q. Oct. 1868, p. 287 ; Douce Cat.'] London, 1746 UNCHANGING (the) East. By Luke Sharp [Robert Barr]. 8vo. {Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1900 UNCHARITABLENESS (the) of modern charity . . . By Phileleutherus Trinitoniensis [Rev. George Legh, LL.D., Vicar of Halifax, Yorkshire]. i2mo. London, 1732 UNCHARTED (the) island. By Skelton Kuppord [J. Adams]. 8vo. Pp. 350. London, 1899 UNCLAIMED (the) daughter; a mystery of our own day. Edited by C. G. H. [Mrs C. G. Hamilton], author of The curate of Linwood, etc. Second edition. 8vo. Pp. xv. 175. Bath [1853] UNCLE . . . (Mon oncle et mon cure) ; translated from the French of Jean de La Brete [Mile. A. Cherbonnel] and edited by J. Berwick. 8vo. Pp. 284. [Brit. Musi] London [1892] UNCLE and aunt. By Susan Coolidge [Sarah C. Woolsey.] 12010. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1902 UNCLE Anthony. By Capt. Carnes [M. J. Cummings]. i2mo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Boston, 1873 UNCLE Armstrong; a narrative. By Lord B******m, author of Masters and workmen, etc. [probably Lord Belfast]. i2mo. 3 vols. London,1866 UNCLE Bob’s niece ; a novel. By Leslie Keith [Miss Grace Leslie Keith Johnstone]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1888 UNCLE Charles ; a novel. By John Strange Winter [Mrs Henrietta E. V. Stannard, nee Palmer]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 323. London, 1902 UNCLE Clive ; a tale. By C. A. M. W. [Rev. Charles Wooley]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1865 UNCLE Crotty’s relations. [A novel.] By Herbert Glyn [Henry Alford Pettitt], 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1863 UNCLE Downie’s home. By Glance Gaylord [Warren Ives Bradley]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseudi] Boston, 1866 UNCLE Dudley’s odd hours ; Western sketches. [By Morris C. Russell.] 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Lake City, Minn. 1904 UNCLE Frank’s pleasant pages for the fireside. [By Francis Channing Woodworth.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1857 UNCLE George’s stories. [By Rev. Increase Niles Tarbox.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseudi] Boston, 1808 UNCLE Horace; a novel. By the author of Sketches of Irish character, etc. [Anna Maria Hall]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1837 UNCLE Jem’s Stella ; a story for girls. By the author of The two Dorothys [Mary E. Martin.] 8vo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Musi] London, 1896 UNCLE John ; or, is it too much trouble ? By Mary Orme [Mary Neal Sergeant Gore, later Mrs Nichols,’ M.D.]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseudi] New York, 1855 UNCLE John’s letters . . . rocks and sands . . . happiness . . . [By James White.] 8vo. Southampton [1889] UNCLE Josh’s trunkful of fun. [By William B. Dick.] 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1875 UNCLE (the) of an angel; and other stories. By Ivory Black [Thomas Allibone Janvier]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1891 UNCLE Paul’s stories for boys and girls. By Samuel Burnham, junr.] 8vo. Cushing’s Init. and Pseudi] Boston, 1865 UNCLE Peregrine’s heiress ; a novel. By Ann of Swansea, author of Guilty or not guilty, etc. [Anne Hatton]. i2mo. 5 vols. [Brit. Musi] London,1828 UNCLE Philip’s conversations . . . about the habits and mechanical employments of inferior animals. [By Francis Lister Hawks.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1834 UNCLE Piper of Piper’s Hill: an Australian novel. By Tasma [Jessie Huybers, later Mrs Fraser, then Madame Auguste Couvrier]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 348. London, 1889 UNCLE Ralph ; a tale. By the author of Dorothy [Margaret Agnes Colville, later Mrs Paul]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1858 UNCLE Reg’s school-days. By himself [Page Woodcock]. 8vo. Pp. 134. London, 1912 UNCLE Remus ; his songs and his sayings : the folk-lore of the old plantations. [By Joel Chandler Harris.] 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] New York, 1880 UNCLE Steve’s locker. [A novel.] By “Brenda” [Mrs Castle Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 352. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1888 UNCLE Timothy Faber; or, the new minister: a story for the old and young. By a Sabbath-school superintendent [Alex. S. Arnold]. i2mo. Pp. 228. [Eddy’s U?iiversalism in Ajnerica, ii. 573.] Boston, 1868 UNCOLLEGIATE (the) clergyman’s lamentation [over the reading of the Act regarding Captain John Porteous. By Rev. John Glen, minister of Haddo’s Hole Kirk, Edinburgh]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1737 UNCOMFORTABLE (an) term. By Raymond Jacberns [Miss M. Selby Ashe]. 8vo. Pp. 408. London, 1911 UNCONDITIONAL election, and its dependent doctrines disproved ; being an abridgement of Whitby on the Five Points. [By Rev. William Jenkins Rees, M.A.] 8vo. [Upcott and Shoberl’s Biog. Diet. p. 289.] London, 1810 UNCONFESSED. [A novel.] By Maxwell Gray [Miss Mary Gleed Tuttiett]. 8vo. Pp. 352. London, 1910 UNCREATED (the) man. By Austin Fryers [William Edward Clery]. 8vo. Pp. 312. London, 1912 UNCROWNED (an) king. By Agnes Marchbank [Mrs-Marshall]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] Paisley, 1904 UNCROWNED (the) king ; a romance of high politics. By Sydney C. Grier [Miss Hilda Gregg]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] Edinburgh, 1896 UNCUT (an) diamond ; and other stories. By Raymond Jacberns [Miss M. Selby Ashe]. 8vo. Pp. 168. London, 1895 UNDECEIVED ; Roman or Anglican ? A story of English ritualism. By the author of A voice from the sea [Lillie Peck]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1877 UNDECEIVING (the) of the people in the point of tithes ; wherein is shewed, I. That never any clergy in the Church of God hath been, or is maintained with lesse charge to the subject, then the established clergy of the Church of England. II. That there is no subject, in the realme of England, who giveth any thing of his own, towards the maintenance of his parish-minister, but his Easter-offering. III. That the change of tithes into stipends, will bring greater trouble to the clergy, then is yet considered ; and far lesse profit to the country, then is now pretended. By Ph. Treleinie Gent. [Peter Heylin]. 8vo. Pp. 28. London, 1651 UNDER a charm; a novel: from the German of E. Werner [Elisabeth Buerstenbinder], by Christina Tyrrell. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1877 UNDER a cloud. By one who knows what shadows are [Mrs Sawers Mitchell]. 8vo. Pp. x. 434. Edinburgh, private print, 1867 UNDER a cloud. [A novel.] By the author of The Atelier du Lys, etc. [Miss Margaret Roberts]. 8vo. Pp. 281. [Brit. Mus.] London [1889] UNDER a kingly mask. By Lewis Ramsden [Dr A. L. Dowding]. 8vo. London [c. 1900] UNDER a shadow. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte Braeme]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1887 UNDER cliff; a tale. By the author of The Chorister brothers [Mrs Mary Charlotte Julia Leith]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 235. London, 1890 UNDER cross and crescent; poems. By Violet Fane [Lady Currie, nee Mary Montgomerie]. 4to. London, 1896 UNDER false colours. By G. G. Kilburne [Miss Sarah Doudney]. 8vo. London, 1888 UNDER fate’s wheel; a story of mystery, love, and bicycle. By Lawrence L. Lynch [Mrs Emma Murdoch van Deventer]. 8vo. Pp. 336. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1903 UNDER fire ; or, the cruise of the Destroyer. By “ M. Quad” [Charles B. Lewis]. 8vo. New York, 1886 UNDER foot ; a novel. By Alton Clyde [Mrs Arnold Jeffreys]. 8vo. [Who’s Who hi Lit.] London, 1870 UNDER God’s sky ; the story of a cleft in Marland. By Deas Cromarty [Elizabeth Sophia Fletcher, later Mrs Robert A. Watson]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 376. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1895 UNDER guiding stars. By Dorothy Prescott [Miss Agnes Blake Poor]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.'] New York, 1905 UNDER love’s rule. [A novel.] By the author of Lady Audley's secret [Mary E. Braddon, later Mrs John Maxwell], 8vo. London, 1897 UNDER mother’s wing. [Stories for children.] By L. C. [Lucy Clifford]. 4to. Pp. 32. [Brit. Musi] [1885] UNDER seal of confession. By Averil Beaumont, author of Thornicroffs model [Mrs Margaret A. W. Hunt]. 8 vo. 3 vols. [Aat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1874 UNDER (the) side of things. By Lilian Bell [Mrs A. H. Bogue]. 8vo. London, 1897 UNDER strange stars. [A story.] By Ray Cunningham [b ranees Browne Arthur]. 8vo. Stirling [1897] UNDER temptation. By the author of Ursula's love story, etc. [Mrs Gertrude Parsons, nee Hext]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1878 UNDER the arches ; a tale of the Ragged Schools. By S. B. H. [Mrs Sarah B. Hancock]. 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 243.] Bath, 1871 UNDER the ban (Le Maudit) ; a tale of the nineteenth century, translated from the French of M. l’Abbe * * * [Jean H. Michon]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1864 UNDER the cherry tree. [A novel.] By Peter Traill [Guy Morton]. 8vo. Pp. 219. London, 1926 UNDER the Chilian flag ; a tale of the War between Chili and Peru, 1879-1881. By Harry Collingwood [William J. C. Lancaster]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1908 UNDER the Chilterns ; a story of English village life. By Rosemary [Margaret Watson]. 8vo. London, 1895 UNDER the dog-star. [A story for the young.] By Mary Vandergrift [Mary Thomson Janvier]. 8vo. New York, 1881 UNDER the dog-star; a tale of the Borders. By Austin Clare [Miss M. W. James]. 8vo. Pp. 377. [Who's Who in Lit.] London [1895] UNDER the ensign of the Rising Sun ; a story of the Russo-Japanese War. By Harry Collingwood [William J. C. Lancaster]. 8vo. Pp. 348. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1917 UNDER the greenwood tree; a rural painting of the Dutch school. By the author of Desperate remedies [Thomas Hardy]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1872 UNDER the grey olives. [A novel.] By Marian Keith [Mary Esther Miller MacGregor], 8vo. Pp. 176. [Publishers' Weekly, 3. 9. 27]. New York, 1927 UNDER the Hermes, and other stories. By Richard Dehan [Clotilde Inez Mary Graves]. 8vo. Pp. 341. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1917 UNDER the Huguenot cross; a tale of Old Sea Point. By Telkin Kerr [W. Angus Kingon], 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Cape Town, 1904 UNDER the iron flail. [A novel.] By John Oxenham [William Arthur Dun- kerley]. 8vo. Pp. 400. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1902 UNDER the liberty tree ; a story of the Boston massacre. By James Otis 4to. Pp. 115. Boston, 1896 [James Otis Kaler], [ Who's Who in Lit. UNDER the limes. [A novel.] By the author of Christina North, etc. [E. M. Archer i.e. Eleanor Taylor]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Camb. Univ. Libi] London, 1874 UNDER the Meteor Flag ; the log of a Midshipman. By Harry Collingwood [William J. C. Lancaster]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1887 UNDER the microscope ; or, “Thou shalt call me my father.” [A tale. By Miss Emily S. Elliot.] 8vo. Pp. hi. [Brit. Musi] London, 1861 UNDER the old roof. By Hesba Stretton [Sarah Smith]. i2mo. Pp. 93. London [1882] UNDER the olive ; poems. [By Mrs Annie Fields.] i2mo. Boston, 1881 UNDER the Red Star. [A novel.] By Morice Gerard [Rev. John Jessop Teague]. 8vo. Pp. 286. [Who's Who in Lit.] Edinburgh, 1910 UNDER the rose ; a novel. By F. Anstey [Thomas Anstey Guthrie]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London,1894 UNDER the rowan tree ; and other stories. By Alan Saint Aubyn [Miss Frances Marshall]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1898 UNDER the shield ; a tale. By M. E. Winchester [Margaret E. Whatham]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1883 UNDER the skylights. By Stanton Page [Henry B. Fuller]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1901 UNDER the Southern cross; a tale of the New World. By the author of The Spanish brothers [Deborah Alcock]. 8vo. London, 1873 UNDER the spell. By the author of Grandmother's money, etc. [Frederick William Robinson]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1861 UNDER the thatch. [A novel.] By Allen Raine [Mrs Anne Adaliza Puddi- combe, nee Evans]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 346. London,1910 UNDER the tide. By Barry Lyndon George Lowell Austin, M.D.]. 8vo. Kirk’s Supp.\ Boston, 1870 UNDER the upas tree ; a romance of Scotland in the sixteenth century. By Cyril Grey [A. Balfour Symington], author of The lost earldom, etc. 8vo. Pp. 256. London, 1915 Presentation copy from the author, with autograph. UNDER two flags; a story of the household and the desert. By Ouida, author of Strath?nore, etc. [Louise de La Ramee]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1867 Originally written for a military periodical. UNDER Western eyes. By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeni- owski]. 8vo. London, 1911 UNDER Westminster Bridge ; a tale of the London dynamiters and unemployed. By J. M. Burton [Joseph Barton Mason]. 8vo. Pp. 100. [Brit. Ilf us.] London [1888] UNDER-CURRENTS. [A novel.] By the author of Phyllis, etc. [Mrs Margaret Argles, later Hungerford]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London,1888 UNDERCURRENTS of [English] Church life in the eighteenth century. By [Jane Frances Mary Carter] the author of Nicholas Ferrar, etc. 8vo. Pp. xvi. 222. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1899 UNDERCURRENTS overlooked. By the author of Flemish hiteriors, etc. [Mrs William Pitt Byrne, nee Julia Clara Busk]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, i860 UNDERGRADUATE (the); a sketch. By Ross George Dering [Frederick Henry Balfour]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1891 UNDERGRADUATE (the); or, College life in five phases ; a satire. By B.A., Cantab [Gavin F. James]. 8vo. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books.] Cambridge [1885] UNDER G R A D U AT E subscription ; extracts from a collection of papers published in Oxford in 1772 on the subject of subscription to the xxxix Articles, required from young persons at their matriculation. With a preface by the Editor [Vaughan Thomas, B.D.]. To which is added, the debate in the House of Commons upon Sir William Meredith’s motion on the same subject, Feb. 1773. Svo. Pp. xix. 44. [Bodli] Oxford, 1835 Editor’s' name in the handwriting of Dr Bliss. UNDERGRADUATES’ (the) guide to unseen translations from Latin and Greek literature. [By Rev. Thomas Allen Blyth, B.A.] 8vo.. Oxford, 1881 UNDERGROUND Jerusalem; discoveries on the hill of Ophel, 1909-11. By H. V. [L. Hugues Vincent]. . . . Translated from the French. . . . Svo. Pp. xvii. 42. [Brit. Musi] London, 1911 UNDERGROUND Russia ; revolutionary profiles and sketches. By Stepniak [Sergie Michaelovitch Kravchinsky]. 8vo. London, 1883 UNDERNEATH the bough ; a book of verses. By Michael Field [Katharine Harris Bradley and Edith Emma Cooper]. 8vo. Pp. 135. [Brit. Musi] London,1893 UNDERTONES of the nineteenth century ; a prelude and a prophecy. [By Mrs Edward Trotter.] Svo. Pp. 105. London, 1905 The second edition, 1916, has the author’s name. UNDETERMIN’D (the) clergyman’s journey on the first Sabbath of September to-Well, which was at that time impregnate with salutary particles. [By Rev. Robert Kinloch, M.A. of New Kirk, Edinburgh.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1737 UNDINE; a romance. [By F. H. C. de La Motte Fouque.] Translated from the German by G. Soane. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1818 UNDISCOVERED crimes. By “Waters” [William Russell]. Svo. London, 1862 UNEQUAL (the) match ; a tale [in verse]. By the author of The curious maid [Matthew Prior]. Fol. [Brit. Musi] London, 1737 UNEQUAL (the) match ; or, the life of Mary of Anjou : an historical novel [translated from the French of Jean de la Chapelle, by Ferrand Spence]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1681 UNERRABLE (an) Church or none; being a rejoynder to The Unerring unerrable Church against Dr Andrew Sails repley entituled The Catholic Apostolic Church of England. Written by J. S. [Ignatius Brown] and dedicated to the most illustrious Prince James Duke of Ormond, &c. 8vo. Pp. 342. [Brit. Mus.] [Douai] 1678 UNERRING(the)and unerrable church ; or, an answer to a sermon preached by Mr A. Sail. . . . Written by J. S. Ignatius Brown, S.J.]. 8vo. Pp. 310. Sommervogelj Brit. Mus.\ 1675 UNEXPECTED (the). [A novel.] By Rowland Grey [Miss Lilian Rowland Brown]. 8vo. Pp. 250. [Who’s Who in Lit.\ London, 1902 UNFORTUNATE (the) Court favourites of England, exemplified in some remarks upon the lives, actions, and fall of divers who have been favourites. ... By R. B. [Richard Burton, i.e. Nathaniel Crouch]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi\ London, 1696 UNFORTUNATE (the) Politique ; first written in French by C. N. [Nicolas Caussin, S.J.], Englished by G. P. i2mo. Pp. 230. [Madan’s Oxford Books, i. 205.] Oxford, 1638 A translation of the fourth book of the author’s Cour Sainte. UNFORTUNATE (the) shepherd; a pastoral. [By John Tutchin.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.) London, 1685 UNFOULDYNG (the) of sundry vntruths and absurde propositions, latelye propounded by one I. B. a greate fauourer of the horrible heresie of the Libertines. [By Thomas Wil- cocks.] 8vo. No pagination. B. L. [.Bodl.] London, 1581 UNFOUNDED attacks on British officers in “An absent-minded war,” by a British Officer ; a refutation. By XXX and LIX [Colonel J. E. Goodwyn]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1901 UNFULFILLED prophecy respecting Eastern nations, especially the Turks, the Russians, and the Jews. [By A. Macleod.] i2mo. London, 1841 UNGROWN-UPS (the). [A novel.] By “Rita” [Mrs W. Desmond Humphreys, nee Eliza M. J. Gollan], 8vo. Pp. 382. [Who’s Who in Lit.\ London, 1923 UNHAPPY (an) game at Scotch and English ; or, a full answer from England to the papers of Scotland : wherein their Scotch mists and their fogs, their sayings and gain-sayings, their juglings, their windings and turnings. . . . [By John Lilburne.] 4to. Pp. 26. Edinburgh, 1646 UNHAPPY (the) history of Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia. By Marie Hay [Madame de Hindenburg]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1910 UNHAPPY (the) princesses; containing, first, the secret history of Queen Anne Bullen, mother to Queen Elizabeth of renowned memory : with an impartial account of the first loves of Henry VIII. to that lady. . . . Secondly, the history of the Lady Jane Grey, who was proclaimed Queen of England. . . . Adorn’d with pictures. By R. B. [Richard, or Robert Burton, i.e. Nathaniel Crouch]. i2mo. Pp. 159. London, 1710 UNHOLY matrimony. [A novel.] By John Le Breton [Miss M. Harte-Potts, and T. Murray Ford]. 8vo. Pp. 336. [Brit. Musi\ London, 1899 UNINTERRUPTED (the) succession of bishops, proved not necessary to the ministerial office. . . . [By Rev. John Platts.] 8vo. London, 1718 U N I O politico - poetico - joco - seria ; written in the latter end of the year 1703 : and afterwards, as occasion offered, very much enlarged, in severall paragraphs. By the author of Tripa- triarchicon [Andrew Symson]. 4to. Pp. 32. Edinburgh, 1706 The two concluding lines give the author’s initials :—“ And if you ask the author’s name, here ’tis, A. S. Philophilus, Philo- patris.” UNIOMACHIA, or the battle at the Union ; an Homeric fragment, lately given to the world by Habbakukius Dunderheadius [Thomas Jackson], and now rendered into the English tongue by Jedediah Puzzlepate [John Douglas Giles]. 8vo. Pp. 8. [F. Madan.] Oxford, 1833 UNION and no union ; being an enquiry into the grievances of the Scots and how far they are right or wrong, who alledge that the Union is dissolved. [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Lee’s Defoe, 150.] London, 1713 UNION (the); cease your funning. [An answer to a pamphlet by Edward Cooke entitled Arguments for and against an Union between Great Britain and Ireland considered. By the Rt. Hon./Charles Kendal Bushe.] Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 45. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1798 The title of an edition of 1799 begins “ Cease your funning . . .” UNION Liturgy; containing forms of prayer for the public services of religion, and also for family worship and private devotion. [By James Thomson, M.D., a Baptist.] 8vo. Pp. 280. London, 1837 UNION necessary to security; addressed to the loyal inhabitants of Ireland. By an independent observer [Archibald Redfoord]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1800 UNION (the) of Christ and the Church ; in a shadow. By R. C. [Ralph Cud- worth]. 4to. Pp. 35. London, 1642 UNION (the) of Church and State . . . with a glance at confiscation. By a layman [C. N. Cumberlege Ware]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1869 UNION (the) of the British North American Provinces considered. By Obiter Dictum [James Anderson, F.R.S.E., Canadian journalist]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Suff.] Montreal, 1859 UNION of the Old Light Seceders with the Established Church ; a review of the proceedings of the Synod of Merse and Teviotdale, as reported in the Kelso Chronicle for October, 1834. [By Adam Thomson, D.D., Coldstream.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1834 UNION [between Ireland and England] or not ? By an Orangeman [Harding Giffard]. 8vo. Dublin, 1799 UNION (the); or, select Scots and English poems. [Mainly by Thomas Warton.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 59, p. 432.] London, 1753 Signed : A Gentleman from Aberdeen. UNION pursued; in a letter to Mr Baxter, concerning his late book of National churches. . . . That the Presbyterians and Independants, that have united within themselves, may both be united also with the Church of England. By a lover of him, and follower of peace [John Humfrey]. 4to. Pp. 38. [Bodl.] London, 1691 UNION with the Free Church ; observations upon the pamphlet of the Rev. Matthew Murray. . . . [By Thomas M‘Crie.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1849 UNI ON-PROVERB (the); viz. If Skiddaw has a cap, Scruffell wots full well of that: setting forth, I. The necessity of uniting. II. The good consequences of uniting. III. The happy union of England and Scotland, in case of a foreign invasion. [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe, 105.] London, N.D. UNIQUE traditions, chiefly connected with the West and the South of Scotland. [By J. G. Barbour; preface signed J. G. B—b—r.] 8vo. Pp. xiv. 198. Edinburgh, 1833 UNITARIANISM, old and new, exemplified ... in three letters [the first and third by “An old Unitarian,” i.e. Thomas Sanden ; the second by William Johnson Fox, M.P.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Chichester, 1817 UNITARIANISM the doctrine of the Bible. By a Unitarian layman [H. J. Huidekoper]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Pittsburg, Penn., 1843 UNITARIANISM tried by Scripture and experience; a compilation of treatises and testimonies in support of Trinitarian doctrine and evangelical principles. ... By a layman [John Edmonds Stock]. 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 310.] London, 1840 UNITARIANISM unscriptural. [By Henry Morris, of Magdalen Hall, Oxford.] No. 1. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1837 No more published. UNITARIAN’S (the) appeal. [By Lant Carpenter.] A new edition, with the texts quoted at length. 121110. [Brit. Mus.] Bristol, 1817 UNITE or fall. [By Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle.] Fifth edition. i2mo. Pp. 23. [Bodl.] London, 1798 UNITED (the) States and England. By an American [Duff Green]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Diet.] London, 1842 UNITED (the) States and England ; being a reply to the criticism on Inchi- quin’s Letters contained in the Quarterly Review for January 1814. [By James Kirke Paulding]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1815 UNITED (the) States of North America as they are. By Karl Postl [later Charles Seafield]. 8vo. [Camb. Hist, of Amer. Lit. i. 484.] London, 1827 UNITED (the) States Review and Literary Gazette. [Edited by William Cullen Bryant.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Foley’s Amer. Authors.] Boston, 1826-27 UNITED (the) States Sanitary Commission ; a sketch of its purpose and work. [By Miss Katharine Prescott Wormeley.] i2mo. [Cushing’s Anonl] New York, 1863 “UNITED we stand, divided we fall.” By Juba [Rev. Benjamin Allen]. 8vo. New York, 1812 UNITY and its restoration. By a presbyter of the diocese of Illinois [Hugh Miller Thompson, D.D.]. 8vo. New York, i860 UNITY and Trinity; a dissertation establishing that doctrine against the Anti-Trinitarians. [By James Anderson, D.D., minister in London.] London [1720?] UNITY (the) of God not inconsistent with the divinity of Christ ; being remarks on the passages in Dr Water- land’s Vindication, &c. relating to the unity of God and to the object of worship. [By Joseph Hallett.] 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.; Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] London, 1720 Ascribed also to Hubert Stogdon. UNITY (the) of men ; or, life and death realities ; a reply to Luther Leo, by Anthropos [George Storrs]. i2mo. Pp. 122. [Cushing’s Anon.\ Philadelphia, 1850 UNITY (the) of medicine ; its corruptions and divisions as by law established in England and Wales ; with their causes, effects, and remedy. By a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons [Frederick Davies]. 8vo. Pp. x. 154. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1858 UNITY of priesthood necessary to the unity of communion in a Church : with some reflections on the Oxford manuscript, and the preface annexed: also a collection of canons, part of the said manuscript, faithfully translated into English from the original, but concealed by Mr Hody, and his prefacer. [By Nathaniel Bisbie.] 4to. Pp. 72. London, 1692 This work has been assigned to Mr Webster : but it is ascribed to Bisbie by Rawlinson, in his MS. continuation of the Athenae. See also Lathbury’s Nonjurors, P- 137. UNITY our duty ; in twelve considerations humbly presented to the godly, reverend, and learned ^brethren of the Presbyterian judgement . . . about church government. . . . By I. P. [John Price]. 4to. Pp. 9. London, 1645 UNIVERSAL and saving grace, asserted and demonstrated; or, a Scriptural refutation of the doctrines of absolute and unconditional predestination, in letters to the proprietors of the Gospel Magazine. Letter the first, in which are noticed, chiefly, some of the arguments, inconsistencies, and contradictions, contained in a treatise on the subject, by the late A. Toplady, A.B., vicar of Hembury, Devon. [By Thomas Scantlebury.] i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 84 ; ii. 541.] Sheffield, 1813 UNIVERSAL angler; or, that art improved in all its parts, especially in fly-fishing: the whole interspersed with many curious and uncommon observations. i2mo. [Smith’s Bibl. Ang.] London, 1766 “This book is copied from Bowlker’s Art of Angling, printed at Worcester, with some few additions taken from Walton, Cotton and Hawkins.”—Wm. White. UNIVERSAL beauty; a philosophical poem, in six books. [By Henry Brooke.] Fol. [Gent. Mag. v. 55.] London, 1735 UNIVERSAL (the) chronologist, from the creation to 1825. By Henry Boyle [William Henry Ireland]. 8vo. London, 1826 UNIVERSAL (the) Church; an essay on nature, as the universal basis of truth, perfection, and salvation, and their universality, etc. [By John Crook.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1807 UNIVERSAL (the) Church ; its faith, doctrine, and constitution. [By John Burley Waring, architect.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1866 UNIVERSAL (the) Church of nature ; being a synopsis of The Universal Church. ... By the author of the original pamphlet [John Crook]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1836 UNIVERSAL commerce ; or, the commerce of all the mercantile cities and towns of the world. ... By the editor of Mortimer’s Commercial dic- tionary\fNW\\2cm. D ickinson, of London]. 8vo. [Edin. Univ. Lib.] London, 1818 UNIVERSAL damnation and salvation clearly proved by the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament. . . . [By Rev. John Tyler.] 8vo. [Eddy’s Universalism in America, ii. 492.] Boston, 1798 An edition published in 1815, at Norwich [Conn.] has a different title: “ The law and the gospel clearly demonstrated in six sermons.” UNIVERSAL (the) doom; or, the state of mortality: humbly presented to the Right Reverend Father in God Thomas Tanner, D.D. Lord Bishop of St Asaph. [By W. Howard.] 4to. Pp. 12. [Bodl.] London, 1733 UNIVERSAL (the) gardener and botanist. ... By-Mawe [John Abercrombie]. 4to. [Rivers’ Lit. Memoirs, i. 1.] London, 1778 UNIVERSAL geography; or, a description of all the parts of the world on a new plan. ... By M. Malte-Brun. [Translated and edited by Henry Dewar, M.D.] 8vo. 10 vols. Edinburgh, 1822-33 UNIVERSAL (the) historical biblio- theque ; or, an account of the most considerable books, printed in all languages in the month[s] of January [February and March] 1686: wherein a short description is given of the design and scope of almost every book: and of the quality of the author, if known. [By G. Wells, and J. D. de la Crose.] 4to. [W.] London, 1687 UNIVERSAL history on Scriptural principles. [By Mary Bowley, afterwards Peters.] Second edition. 8vo. 5 vols. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1844-50 UNIVERSAL (an) history of Christian martyrdom . . . originally composed by John Fox . . . and now entirely rewritten by the Rev. J. Milner, M.A. Francis William Blagdon]. 8vo. Brit. Mus.] London, 1807 UNIVERSAL (the) passion. See “The love of fame . . .” UNIVERSAL (the) passion ; a comedy, as it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane by His Majesty’s servants. [By James Miller.] 8vo.l [Biog. Dra?n.'] London, 1737 UNIVERSAL (the) prayer. By the author of the Essay on 7nan [Alexander Pope]. Fol. Pp. 7. London, 1738 UNIVERSAL restitution, a Scripture doctrine; this proved in several letters wrote on the nature and extent of Christ’s kingdom: wherein the scripture passages, falsly alledged in proof of the eternity of hell torments, are truly translated and explained. [By Rev. Sir James Stonhouse, M.D.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 54, p. 418.] London,1762 UNIVERSAL restitution farther defended ; being a supplement to the book intitled Universal restitution a Scripture doctrine. . . . [By Rev. Sir James Stonhouse, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. 148. [D. N. B. vol. 54, p. 418.] Bristol, 1768 UNIVERSAL restitution vindicated against the Calvinists ; in five dialogues. . . . [By Rev. Sir James Stonhouse, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. 176. [D.N.B. vol. 54, p. 418.] Bristol, 1773 UNIVERSAL (the) revival of religion; a few words to Christian ministers, and others. By M. Justitia [John Frearson]. i2mo. Pp. 26. London [1858] UNIVERSAL (the) Spectator. [By Daniel Defoe.] No. 1. 4to. [Lee’s Defoe, 246.] 1728 UNIVERSAL (the) Spectator, by Henry Stonecastle, of Northumberland, Esq. [Probably by John Kelly, the dramatic writer.] i2mo. 4 vols. [Athen. Cat.] London,1756 UNIVERSALISM as related to the Church and the State. By [Clement Wise] the author of Darkness and dawn j or, the peaceful birth of a new age. 8vo. Pp. xi. 478. Bristol, 1892 UNIVERSALISM false and un- scriptural ; an essay on the duration and intensity of future punishment. [By Archibald Alexander, D.D.] i2mo. Pp. 104. [Eddy’s Universalism i?i America.] Philadelphia [1851] UNIVERSALIST’S assistant; or, an examination of the principal objections commonly urged against Universalism. By a believer [Darius Forbes]. i2mo. Pp. 234. [Eddy’s Universalism in America, ii. 548.] Boston, 1846 UNIVERSALIST’S (the) book of reference ; containing all the principal facts and arguments, and Scripture texts pro and con, on the great controversy between Limitarians and Universalists. . . . [By R. E. Guild.] i2mo. Pp. 381. [Eddy’s Universalism in America.] Boston, 1844 UNIVERSE (the); a poem. By the Rev. C. R. Maturin [in reality by Rev. James Wills, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 112. [N. and Q. 5th Ser. iii. pp. 20, 172, 240, 280, 340.] London, 1821 UNIVERSITIES (the) and the Church of England. By a Cambridge man [Charles Hardwick, B.D.]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Cambridge, 1854 UNIVERSITIES (the) and the Scientific Corps [of the British Army]. By a Staff Officer [Francis Duncan] and an Oxford Tutor [Francis J. Jayne]. 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1872 UNIVERSITIES’ Mission to Central Africa ; the A B C of the U. M. C. A. Compiled by M. E. W. [M. E. Woodward]. 8 vo. London, 1899 UNIVERSITIES of Scotland Bill; remarks on the condition, necessities, and claims of the Universities of Scotland ; with an appendix. By a graduate [Sir John Rose Cormack, M.D.]. 8vo. Pp. xvi. 72. [.Brit. Musi] London, 1858 UNIVERSITY (the) commission ; or, Lord John Russell’s post bag of April 27, 1850; the first instalment. [By William Sewell, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. vii. 35. Oxford, 1850 Three other “ Instalments ” followed, in the same year. UNIVERSITY education for English Catholics ; a letter to the Very Rev. Dr Newman. By an English Catholic Layman [Sir Peter le Page Renouf.] 8vo. [D. N. B. 3rd Supp. iii. 295.] London,1864 U NIVERSITY (the) Library, Cambridge. [By Charles Sayle.] 8vo. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books i] Cambridge, 1895 UNIVERSITY of Aberdeen ; description of the armorial bearings, portraits, and busts in the Mitchell Hall and portrait gallery, Marischal College. By E. A. [Ellinor Arnott]. 8vo. Aberdeen, 1896 UNIVERSITY (the) of Brecknock. By Veritas [Joseph Hughes, D.D., Bishop of St Asaph]. 8vo. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. i. 1575.] 1856 UNIVERSITY (the) of Cambridge vindicated from the imputation of disloyalty it lies under on the account of not addressing: as also from the malicious and foul aspersions of Dr B - - - - ly, late Master of Trinity College ; and of a certain officer, and pretended reformer in the said University. Written by the author [Styan Thirlby, M.A.]. 8vo. Pp. 35. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1710 UNIVERSITY (the) of Dublin in its relation to the several religious communions. [By Humphrey Lloyd.] 8vo. Pp. 31. [Brit. illus.'] Dublin, 1868 UNIVERSITY of London : statements of fact as to Charter. [Signed: W. T. i.e. William Tooke, junior.] 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 57, p. 51.] London, 1835 UNIVERSITY Olympians; or, sketches of academic dignitaries. By A. P. [Arthur Ponsford Baker]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Cambridge, 1918 [printed in 1914] U NI VERSITY (the) question considered. By a graduate [Rev. Dr John M‘Caul]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Montreal, 1845 UNIVERSITY tests and their abolition, considered in a letter to Sir John Duke Coleridge. . . . [By John Place.] 8vo. London [1870] UNIVERSITY tests; observations upon the Bill of the Solicitor-General, and upon the counter-proposal of Lord Carnarvon. By the Principal of St Mary Hall, Oxford [Drummond Percy Chase]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Oxford, 1869 UNJUST (an) plea confuted, and Melchisedec and Christ’s order vindicated against Antichristianism ; in answer to a book called “Moses and Aaron, or the ministers right and the magistrates duty,” given forth byDaniel Pointed, a false minister in Kent. . . . By a witness of the way of truth, G. W. [George Whitehead]. 4to. Pp. 28. [Smith’s A?iti-Quak. p. 368.] London, 1659 UNKIND (the) word and other stories. By the author of John Halifax, gentleman, etc. [Dinah Maria Mulock, later Mrs Craik]. 8vo. Pp. 305. London, N.D. UNKINDE (the) desertor of loyall men and true frinds. [By E. S. i.e. Nicholas French, titular Bishop of Ferns.] 8vo. Pp. 246 [misprinted 446], 8. [Brit. Mus.] 1676 Of this work, seven copies only are known to exist. The Bodleian copy has the author’s autograph, and memoranda of donation to Sir Christopher French, his brother. UNKNOWN (the) and unknowable God; or, the critic criticised. By a Bucolic John Poole Sandlands]. 8vo. Pp. 91. Brit. Musi] London [1903] UNKNOWN (an) country. By the author of John Halifax, ge?itleman [Mrs Craik, nee Dinah M. Mulock]. 8vo. London, 1887 UNKNOWN (the) Eros, and other odes. [By Coventry K. D. Patmore.] 8vo. [Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. vi. col. 364.] London, 1877 Later editions give the author’s name. UNKNOWN (the) God. By B. L. Putnam Weale [Bertram Lenox Simpson]. 8vo. Pp. 492. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1911 UNKNOWN Hampshire. By Clive Holland [Charles James Hankinson]. 8vo. Pp. xv. 260. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1926 UNKNOWN (the) power behind the Irish Nationalist party. [By F. O. Trench, Baron Ashtown.] 8vo. Pp. 208. [Brit. Musi] London, 1907 UNKNOWN (an) river; or, an etcher’s voyage of discovery. [By Philip Gilbert Hamerton.] 8vo. London,1874 UNKNOWN (the) road ; an everyday story. By Curtis Yorke [Mrs W. S. Richmond Lee, nte Jex-Long]. 8vo. Pp. 284. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1920 UNLAWFUL (the) and unholy alliance between Church and State. [By the Rev. Archibald A. Currie, minister in Abercorn.] i2mo. London, 1870 UNLAVVFVLNES (the) and danger of limited Prelacie; or, perpetvall presi- densie in the Chvrch briefly discovered. [By Alexander Henderson, Moderator of the General Assembly, A.M.] 4to. Pp. 23. [Brit. Musi] n.p. 1641 UNLAWFULNESS (the) of bonds of resignation; first written in the year 1684, for the satisfaction of a private gentleman, and now made publick for the good of others. [By John Wills, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 30. [Bodl.] London, 1696 UNLAWFULNESS (the) of marriage with a deceased wife’s sister. [By John Bate Cardale, solicitor.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1859 UNLAWFULNESSE (the) of subjects taking up armes against their so- veraigne, in what case soever; together with an answer to all objections scattered in their severall bookes. By Dudley Digges.] 4to. Pp. 170. Bodl.] 1643 UNLUCKY; a fragment of a girl’s life. By Caroline Austin [Mrs- Whitway]. 8vo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Musi] London, 1891 UNLUCKY (the) citizen experimentally described in the various misfortunes of an unlucky Londoner, calculated for the meridian of this city but may serve by way of advice to all the cominalty of England. . . . [By Francis Kirkman.] 8vo. Pp. 317. London,1673 The work has an engraved title “The unlucky citizen by F. K.” UNMARRIED (the) woman. By Eliza Chester [Miss Harriet Eliza Paine]. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1892 UNMASKED. [A novel.] By Annabel Gray [Mrs Cox]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1884 UNMASKED at last. [A novel.] By Headon Hill [Francis E. Grainger], Svo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1906 UNMASKING of the masse priest. By C. A. [John Lewis]. 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1624 A reissue of Melchizedechs anti-type (1624 also) which bore the author’s name. UNMASKING (the) of the politique atheist. By J. H. [John Hull], Batcheler of Divinitie. 8vo. [Bliss’ Cat.] London, 1602 UNNATURAL bondage. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Law, later Mrs Braeme]. Svo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1887 UNNATURAL natural history notes. By H. M. L. [Hill Mussenden Leathes]. 8vo. Pp. 139. [Brit. Musi] London,1884 See also “ Rough notes . . .” UNPARALLEL’D reasons for abollish- ing Episcopacy. 1. It will assure his Majesties authority royall. 2. Increase his revenue. 3. Settle a good union in his Majesties owne kingdomes, and between them and other reformed Churches. 4. Cause a good understanding betweene his Majesty and his people. By N. F., Esquire [Nathaniel Fiennes]. 4to. Pp. 8. [Bodl.] London,1642 UNPARALLEL’D varieties; or, the matchless actions and passions of mankind. . . . Imbelished with pictures. By R. B. [Richard Burton]. i2mo. Pp. 231. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1683 “ The contents of this volume were pillaged from Wanley’s Wonders of the little world.” —MS. note by Douce. UNPOSTED letters concerning life and literature. By John o’ London [Wilfred Whitten]. 8vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London [1924] UNPREACHED (the) Gospel. By the author of The study of the Bible [Henry Dunn]. 8vo. London [1863] Reprinted extract from the author’s “ Destiny of the human race.” UNPRETENTIOUS rhymes. By H. G. L. [Hugh Graham Lang]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Lewes, 1915 UNPROFESSIONAL tales. By Normyx [Norman Douglas]. 8vo. London, 1901 First edition, withdrawn by the author. UNPROTECTED females in Norway; or, the pleasantest way of travelling there, passing through Denmark and Sweden : with Scandinavian sketches from nature. [By Miss Emily Lowe.] Svo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1857 UNPROTECTED females in Sicily, Calabria, and the top of Mount ^Etna. [By Miss Emily Lowe.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1859 UNPROTECTED (the); or, facts in dressmaking life. By a dressmaker [Mary Guignard. Edited, with an introduction, by Rev. W. Landels]. Svo. [W.; Brit. Mus.] London, 1857 UNPUBLISHED writings of Eliphas Levi [Louis Alphonse Constant]. The paradoxes of the Highest Science ; translated from the French MSS. by a student of occultism. 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1883 Publications of the Theosophical Society. UNRAVELLED convictions ; or, my road to faith. [By Lady Amabel Cowper, afterwards Kerr.] 8vo. Pp. 128. Liverpool, private print, 1876 Published afterwards, still anonymously, by Burns & Oates, London, 1878. UNREAD (an) letter. [A novel.] By “Alien” [Mrs L. A. Baker]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1909 UNREALITY; a novel. By Bartimeus [Lewis Anselm Da Costa Ricci]. 8vo. Pp. 320. London, 1920 UNREASONABLENESS (the) and impiety of Popery ; in» a second letter written upon the discovery of the late plot. [By Gilbert Burnet, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 36. [Clarke and Foxcroft’s Life of Burnet, Appendix.] London, 1678 UNREASONABLENESS (the) of separation ; the second part : or, a further impartial account of the history, nature, and pleas of the present separation from the communion of the Church of England. Begun by Edw. Stilling- fleet D.D. Dean of St Pauls ; continued from 1640 to 1681 : with special remarks on the life and actions of Mr Richard Baxter. [By Thomas Long, B.D.] 8vo. Pp. 167. [Bodl.] London, 1682 UNREASONABLENESS (the) of the Romanists, requiring our communion with the present Romish Church ; or, a discourse drawn from the perplexity and uncertainty of the principles, and from the contradictions betwixt the prayers and doctrine of the present Romish Church ; to prove that ’tis unreasonable to require us to joyn in communion with it. [By William Squire.] 8vo. Pp. 205. [Bodl.] London, 1670 UNREASONABLENESSE (the) of atheism made manifest: a discourse written at the command of a person of honour. [By Sir Charles Wolseley.] i2mo. Pp. 197. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1669 A second edition, in the same year, bears the author’s name. UNREASONABLENESSE (the) of the separation ; made apparant by an examination of Mr [Francis] Johnsons pretended Reasons, published an. 1608. Whereby hee laboureth to justifie his schisme. . . . [By William Bradshaw.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 6, p. 184.] London, 1614 UNREQUITED (an) loyalty. [Anovel.] By Marie Hay [Madame de Hinden- burg]. 8vo. [Lit. Who's Who.] London, 1901 UNRIVALLED (the) adventures of that great aeronaut and glum Peter Wilkins. ... By T. Trueman [Robert Paltock. Abridged]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1802] UNSATISFACTORY (an) lover. By “The Duchess” [Mrs Hungerford, formerly Mrs Argles, nee Margaret Hamilton]. 8vo. Pp. 210. [Who's Who in Lit.] Philadelphia, 1896 UNSEEN (the) barrier. [A story.] By Mark Allerton [William Ernest Cameron]. 8vo. Pp. 112. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 UNSEEN (the) barrier. [A novel.] By Morice Gerard [Rev. John Jessop Teague]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1911 UNSEEN (the) hand. [A novel.] By Laurence L. Lynch [Mrs Emma M. van Deventer]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1902 UNSEEN (the) hand. ... By Ruth Vernon [Stopford J. Ram]. 8vo. Cincinnati, 1863 UNSEEN horizons. [Poems.] By Frederick Arthur [Col. Frederick Arthur H. Lambert]. 8vo. [Lit. Who’s Who.] London, 1915 UNSEEN (the) universe; or, physical speculations on a future state. [By Professors Peter Guthrie Tait, and Balfour Stewart.] 8vo. Pp. xvi. 212. London, 1875 Published subsequently with the authors’ names. UNSEEN (the) world ; communications with it, real or imaginary, including apparitions, warnings, haunted places, prophecies, aerial visions, astrology, &c. [By John Mason Neale, D.D.] 8vo. London, 1847 UNSENTIMENTAL (an) journey through Cornwall. By the author of John Halifax, gentleman [Mrs Craik, nee Dinah M. Mulock]. 4to. London, 1884 UNSEX’D (the) females ; a poem, addressed to the author of the Pursuits of literature. [By Richard Polwhele.] 8vo. Pp. 37. [Boase and Courtney’s Bibl. Corn. ii. 509.] London, 1798 UNSPEAKABLE (the) gift; or, the story of Benjamin and Ruth. By E. W. [E. Wheeler]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 124. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1897 UNSPEAKABLE (the); or, the life and adventures of a stammerer. [By James Malcolm Rymer.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1855] UNSPOKEN (the) word. [A novel] By Morice Gerard [Rev. John Jessop Teague]. 8vo. Pp. 286. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1910 UNSTUDIED songs, devoid of art. By Willow [William Porter, timber merchant], Old Meldrum. 8vo. Pp. 122. [Robertson’s Aberd. Bibl.] [Aberdeen] private print, 1880 UNTAUGHT (the) muse ; poems and songs. By a working man [Henry Syme]. Svo. [Beveridge’s Dunferm. Bibl.\ Dunfermline, 1849 UNTIL my Lord’s return ; a romance of a river town. By Admiral Bona- ventura Hinton [Valentine Durrant]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1892 UNTIL the day-break. By Birch Arnold [Alice Elinor Bartlett], 8vo. Philadelphia, 1877 “UNTIL the shadows flee away”; a tale. [By Jessie M‘Laren.] 8vo. [JVat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1869 UNTIMELY (an) birth, called Answers to the Queries. . . . [By Patrick Lindsay, M.P., Provost of Edinburgh.] Svo. Edinburgh, 1737 UNTO death. By “Fleur de Lys” [Edith S. Floyer]. 8vo. Pp. 357. [Brit. Musi] London, 1891 UNTO the desired haven, and other poems. [By Mrs Hobart Seymour.] 8vo. New York, 1880 UNTO the end. [A tale.] By Pansy [Mrs Alden, nee Isabella Macdonald]. 8vo. Pp. 324. [Who’s Who in Lit.\ London, 1902 UNTO the perfect day ; a homely story. By “Eona” [Miss-Finniswood]. 8vo. Darlington, 1880 UNTO this generation ; ten essays with prayers and hymns. [Preface signed : W. C. B. i.e. William Copeland Bowie.] 8vo. Pp. 264. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1914 UNTOLD (the) half; a novel. By Alien [Mrs L. A. Baker]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1900 UNTRAVELLED Berkshire. By L. S. [Miss L. Salmon, afterwards Grant]. 8vo. London, 1909 UNVEILING (the) of the everlasting gospel ; with the scripture philosophy of happiness, holiness and scriptural power, specially addressed to the ministers and Church of God at the present crisis. [By Ebenezer Cornwall] i2mo. London, 1848 UNWELCOME (the) guest ; a story for girls. By Esme Stuart [Miss Amelie Claire Leroy]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1886 UNWORTHY (the) pact. By Dorothea Gerard [Madame Longarde de Lon- garde]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1913 UP against it in Uganda. By Langa Langa [Harry B. H. Hodge]. 8vo. Pp. 244. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1922 UP and down the house. By Amy Lothrop [Anna Bartlett Warner]. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1892 UP and down the Nile. By Oliver Optic [William Taylor Adams]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1894 UP and war them a’ Willie ; a letter of congratulation to the Burgher-hero William Smith ; upon the glory of his late atchievement in routing the whole body of Antiburghers. [By Adam Gib.] 8vo. Pp. 15. [New Coll. Lib.] Edinburgh, 1766 UP Broadway, and its sequel; a life story. By Eleanor Kirk [Mrs Eleanor Ames]. i2mo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1870 “ UP for the season,” and other songs of society. By C. C. R. [C. C. Rhys] ; being a second edition of Minora Car- mina. Svo. Pp. viii. 319. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 UP north ; or, lost and found in Russia and the Arctic wastes. ... By Janet Gordon [Mrs Janet Hardy, ne'e Walker], 8vo. [Scott’s Fasti, second edition, ii. 20.] London, 1878 UP the ladder ; or, striving and thriving. By Mrs Madeline Leslie [Harriet Newhall Baker]. 8vo. Boston, 1870 UP, the Rebels. By George A. Birmingham [Rev. James Owen Hannay], author of Spanish gold. Svo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1919 UP the river ; or, yachting on the Mississippi. By Oliver Optic [William Taylor Adams]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1881 UP the Thames ; sketches by S. C. P. [S. C. Pennefather]. Obi. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1874] UP to fifteen; a tale for boys. By the author of Only me [Miss Matilda Mary Pollard]. i2mo. Pp. 154. [Brit. Mus.] London [1875] UP-BYE ballads. By Will Carew [Ernest Milligan]. i2mo. Belfast, 1907 UPHILL (the) climb. [A novel] By B. M. Bower [Bertram M. Sinclair]. Svo. London, 1923 UPHOLSTERER (the), or what news? A farce, in two acts, as it is performed at the Theatre Royal, in Drury-Lane. By the author of The appre?itice [Arthur Murphy]. 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1753 UPLAND (the) tarn; a village idyll. [By John E. H. Thomson, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 168. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1881 UPON a cast. By Charlotte Dunning [Charlotte Dunning Wood]. 8vo. New York, 1885 UPON Mr Bobards yew-men of the guards to the Physick Garden ; to the tune of the counter-scuffle. [By Edm. Gey ton.] Fol. S. sh. [Bodli] N.P. [1662] “ By G. E. [i.e.] Edm. Geyton Esq ; Bedle of Arts. Oxon.”—MS. note by Wood. UPON nothing ; a poem. By a person of honour [John Wilmot, 2d Earl Rochester]. Fol. S. sh. N.P., N.D. A different work from “ An Essay on nothing.” See above. UPON the death of Mr Anthony Austin, younger son to Sir James Austin, Knight. By W. A. [William Austin]. 4to. [Hazlitti] [London] 1677 UPON the most hopefull and ever- flourishing sprouts of valour, the indefatigable centrys of the Physick- Garden. [By John Drope, M.A.] Fol. S. sh. [Bod/.] Printed 1664 “Joh. Drope M. of A. Fellow of Magd. Coll, the author.”—MS. note by Wood. UPON the pleurality of personages in the “ Elohim.” ... By an examining advocate [Edmund Baker]. 8vo. Pp. 44. [Brit. Musi] London, 1867 UPON the rise and progress of criticism ; knowledge of the world, or good company : a dialogue, printed from the MSS. of J. H. [James Harris] of S. [Salisbury], 8vo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Musi] Private print, 1752 UPON the tree tops. By Oliver Thorne Miller [Mrs Harriet Mann Miller]. 8vo. Pp. 245. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1897 UPPER (the) ten thousand ; sketches of American society. By a New Yorker [Charles Astor Bristed]. Reprinted from Fraser's Magazine. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1852 Signed : Frank Manhattan. UPPINGHAM by the sea; a narrative of the year at Borth. By J. H. S. [John Henry Skrine]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1878 UPS and downs ; a story of Australian life. By Rolf Boldrewood [Thomas Alexander Browne]. i2mo. [Lib. of Col. Inst. Supp. i. 687.] London, 1878 Republished in 1890 as “The Squatter’s dream.” UPS and downs of a public school. By a Wykehamist [Frederick Gale, solicitor]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1856 UPS and downs of Ally Sloper ; some humiliating confessions. [By Charles Henry Ross.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1882 T'SFOS (to) ayiov ; or, an exercise upon the creation; written in the express words of the sacred text, as an attempt to show the beauty and sublimity of Holy Scripture. [By Francis Peck.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1717 UP-TO-DATE (an) parson ; and other stories. By Harry Lindsay [Harry Lindsay Hudson]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 234. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1899 UP-TO-DATE superstitions in common use, in every-day life. By Manas [Emma D. Mills]. 8vo. New York, 1895 UPTON (the) letters. By T. B. [Arthur C. Benson]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1905 UPWARDS and downwards, and other stories. By A. L. O. E., author of The silver casket, etc. [Charlotte Maria Tucker]. 8vo. Pp. 120. London, 1873 URAICECHT na Gaedhilge ; a grammar of the Gaelic language. [By William Halliday.] i2mo. Pp. xv. 201. Dublin, 1808 The Introduction is signed: E. O’C. i.e. Edmond O’Connell. URANIA. [A poem. By Samuel Mac Arthur.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh [1758] URBAN Grandier, and other poems. By Louis Brand [Louisa Bigg]. 8vo. Pp. 88. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, Supp. p. 58.] London, 1872 URBANE and his friends. By Cousin Susan [Mrs Elizabeth (Payson) Prentiss]. i2mo. New York, 1874 URIEL, and other poems. [By T. J. de Powis.] 8vo. Pp. 169. [Reform Club Cat.] London, 1857 URIEL ; or, the chapel of the angels. By the author of Lady Glastonbury's boudoir, etc. [Augusta Theodosia Drane]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 268. [Brit. Musi] London, 1884 URIM and Thummim ; or, the apostolical doctrines of light and perfection maintained : against the opposite plea of Samuel Grevill (a pretended minister of the gospel) in his ungospellike discourse against a book, intituled, A testimony of the light within, anciently writ by Alexander Parker. By W. P. [William Penn]. 4to. 1674 USE URSULA ; a tale of country life. By the author of Amy Herbert, etc. [Elizabeth M. Sewell]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1858 URSULA’S beginnings. [A tale.] By Howe Benning [Mary H. Henry]. 8vo. Pp. 256. {Brit. Musi] London [1884] URSULA’S fortune. [A story.] By Esme Stuart [Miss Amelie Claire Leroy], 8vo. [ Who's Who in Liti] London,1886 URSULA’S love story. [By Mrs Gertrude Parsons.] 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1869 US three. By E. A. B. D. [E. A. Bland]. 8vo. Pp. 190. {Brit. Mus.] London [1885] USAGE (the) of holding Parliaments and of preparing and passing bills of supply, in Ireland, stated from record. [By John Lodge.] 8vo. Dublin, 1770 To which is added, Annotations, together with an address to His Excellency George Lord Viscount Townshend, lord lieutenant general and general governor of Ireland. By C. Lucas, M.D. one of the representatives of the city of Dublin, in Parlement. Dublin : reprinted I77°« 8vo. Pp. 76. USE and abuse ; a tale. By the author of Wayfaring sketches amongst the Greeks a?id Turks . . . By a seven years resident in Greece [Felicia M. F. Skene]. i2mo. London, 1849 USE (the) and abuse of Parliaments, in two historical discourses. [Published and edited by James Ralph, architect. The first discourse was written by Algernon Sidney, the remaining portion of the work by Lord Polwarth, afterwards Earl of Macclesfield.] 8vo. 2 vols, {W.\ London, 1744 USE (the) of catechisms further considered ; with a more full account of God’s ambassadors, of saving faith, and of the faith of devils : in a letter to a friend. [By Rev. John Glas.] i2mo. Pp. 47. Edinburgh, 1737 See also the earlier print on “ The usefulness of catechisms. . . .” USE (the) of daily publick prayers, in three positions. [By Meric Casaubon.] 4to. Pp. 28. {Bodl.\ London, 1641 USE (the) of reason recovered, by the data in Christianity: whereby we know the state we are in : that there are Elahim : what they have done for us : the state they offer us : the terms upon which they offer it : so we have evidence to reason upon, and may make a reasonable choice. By J. H. [John Hutchinson]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.\ London, 1736 USE (the) of sunshine ; a Christmas narrative. By S. M. [Menella Bute Smedley], authoress of The story of a family, etc. 8vo. {Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1852 USE (the) of the hand camera; with remarks upon larger apparatus. . . . By Clive Holland [Charles J. Hankin- son]. 8vo. Pp. xx. 198. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1898 USE (the) of the Lord’s Prayer vindicated and asserted against the objections of innovators and enthusiasts ; from the French of Mons. D’Espagne [by Archibald Campbell, Scottish bishop]. i2mo. Pp. 48. Edinburgh, 1688 USEFUL and important questions concerning Jesus the Son of God. .. . [By Isaac Watts, D.D.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Anon.] London, 1746 USEFUL and ornamental planting. [By Mrs Jane C. Loudon, nee Webb.] 8vo. London, 1832 USEFUL hints to the agricultural faction. . . . [By Rev. William Atkinson.] 8vo. Bradford, 1815 USEFUL miscellanies; or, serious reflections, respecting men’s duty to God, and one towards another: with advices civil and religious, tending to regulate their conduct in the various occurrences of human life. Published for general service, by a well-wisher to all mankind [William Dover], 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 59, 542.] London, 1739 USEFUL revelations of science and disinterested persons on promiscuous dancing. [By Rev. L. X. Fernando.] i6mo. Pp. 16. {Brit. Mus.] Madras, 1897 USEFUL suggestions favourable to the comfort of the labouring people. . . . [By George Chalmers.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1795 USEFUL transactions in philosophy, and other sorts of learning, for the months of January and February i7of, to be continu’d monthly, as they sell. [By William King, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. 63. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 650.] London [1709] There were six numbers in all. USEFULNESS (the) of catechisms considered, in a letter to a friend. [By Rev. John Glas.] i2mo. Pp. 34. Edinburgh, 1736 See also a later print, “ The use of Catechisms. . . .” USQUE adeo ; or, what may be said for the Ionian people : being letters addressed to Lord John Russell, Earl Grey, Sir J. Pakington, and Sir H. Ward. ... By an Ionian (G. D. P.) [G. D. Papanicolas]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1853 USURER (the) ; or, the departed not defunct: a comedy, in five acts. [By John Radcliffe Robins.] 8vo. London,1833 USURER’S (the) daughter. By a contributor to Blackwood’s Magazine William Pitt Scargill]. i2mo. 3 vols. Bril. Mus.\ London, 1832 USURPATIONS (the) of France upon the trade of the woollen manufacture of England briefly hinted at; being the effects of thirty years observations, by which that king hath been enabled to wage war with so great a part of Europe. By W. C. [William Carter, clothier]. 4to. [ W. j Brit. Musi] London,1695 USURY explain’d; or, conscience quieted in the case of putting out mony at interest. By Philopenes [Jo. Huddleston, alias Dormer, S.J.]. 8vo. Pp. 8, 116. [Bodl.] London, 169! UTAH and its people. By a Gentile [Dyer Daniel Lum]. 8vo. \Brit. Musi] New York, 1882 UTI (the) possidetis, and Status quo : a political satire. [By James Sayers.] 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1807 UTILISATION (the) of the Church Establishment; a letter ... by the author of The Pilgrim and the shrine [Edward Maitland]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Ramsgate, 1870 UTILITY (the) of agricultural knowledge to the sons of landed proprietors of Great Britain. ... By a Scottish farmer and land-agent [John Claudius Loudon]. London, 1809 UTOPIA found ; being an apology for Irish absentees, addressed to a friend in Connaught. By an absentee, residing in Bath [Rev. Edward Mangin]. 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 334.] Bath, 1813 UTOPIA; written in Latin by Sir Thomas More, Chancellor of England : translated in English [by Gilbert Burnet, Bishop of Salisbury]. 8vo. Pp. xxii. 206. [IV.] London, 1685 UTRUM horum ; Rome or Geneva ; never a barrel better herring. [By John Gadbury.] 1668 UTRUM horum? The government or the country? [By Dennis O’Brien.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1796] V.C. (the) for valour; a novel. By Dick Donovan [Joyce E» P. Muddock]. 8vo. London, 1898 VACATION (a) excursion from Massachusetts Bay to Paget Sound. By O. R. [Olive Rand]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Manchester, New Hampshire, 1884 VACATION labors. By C. E. H. G. [Charles E. H. Gestrin]. 8vo. Montpelier, Vermont, 1879 VACATION rambles. [By James Augustus Atkinson.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Manchester [1864] VACATION trifles. By W. G. [William Gregory]. 8vo. Bath, 1880 (?) VACATION verses. By two undergraduates [T. A. Bagge and G. R. Pardoe]. 8vo. [Birm. Cent. Lib.] Birmingham, 1910 VACCINATION and small-pox. By “Abdiel” [William Thomas Wiseman]. 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1882 VADE mecum ; a manuall of essayes, morrall, theologicall : inter - woven with moderne obseruations, historicall, politicall. [By Daniel Tuvill.] i2mo. Pp. 6, 246. [Bodl.] London, 1629 To the reader, signed : Thine Anonym. Musophil. VADE mecum ; goe with mee, deare pietie and rare charitie. By Otho Casmanne, preacher at Stoade. Translated out of Latine, by H. T. [Henry Tripp, M.A.], minister. 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 57, pp. 2, 34.] London, 1606 VADE-MECUM (the); or, A B C guide to Denmark, Sweden, and Norway. By Elohta Ttenrub [Athole Burnett]. 8vo. London, 1875 VADE mecum ; or, the Fresher’s ABC. By J. D. M. [John Dunning Macleod], and G. R. D. [Graham Richards Daw- barn]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Cambridge, 1919 VADE-MECUM to Hatton; a poem. [By James Crossley.] 8vo. Private print, 1867 VAGABOND and victor. By “ Fleeta” [Kate W. Hamilton]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1880 VAGABOND life in Mexico. By Gabriel Feny [Louis de Bellemare]. 8vo. [Brit. Mils.] London, 1856 VAGABOND (a) lover; a novel. By “Rita” [Eliza M. J. Gollan, later Mrs Booth, then Mrs W. Desmond Hamphreys]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1889 VAGABOND’S (a) note-book. By “Kuklos” [W. Fitzwater Wray]. 8vo. Pp. 232. [Brit. Musi] London, 1908 VAGABUNDULI libellus; the Sea calls [and] Stella maris. [By John Addington Symonds.] i2mo. [Book prices current, 1922.] N.P., N.D. Only a few copies privately printed. VAGAMUNDS ; or, the attache in Spain. [By John Esaias Warren.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1851 VAGARIES. By Puck Munthe [Axel Munthe]. 8vo. Pp. xiii. 308. [Brit. Musi] London, 1893 VAGARIES in verse. By the author of An essay on light reading [Rev. Edward Mangin]. 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 335.] London, 1835 VAGARIES (the) of a pen, in prose and verse. By Versatilius [Alexander Watt]. i2mo. London, 1874 VAGRANT viator ; Erin - go - Bragh. [Verse.] By Verbosoperegrinubiquitos [Thomas Newton], 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1885 VAGRANT (a) wife. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James ]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1885 VAGROM verses. By John Paul [Charles Henry Webb]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Boston, 1888 VAIL (the) family; or, doing good. By Theodelinda [Mrs Charles E. Kelsey]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] Philadelphia, 1862 VAIN boastings of Frenchmen, the same in 1386 as in 1798 ; being an account of the threatened invasion of England by the French the 10th year of King Richard II : extracted from ancient chronicles. [By Craven Ord.] 8vo. Pp. 15. [Bodli] London, 1798 VAIN (a) thing. [A novel] By Guy Thorne [Cyril A. E. Ranger-Gull]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1907 VAIN worship and worshipers detected. . . . [Epistle signed J. H. i.e. John Humphrey?] 8vo. London, 1675 VALAZY (the) family, and other narratives. By “ Waters ” [William Russell]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1870] VALDARNO ; or, the ordeal of art worship. [By Thomas Gordon Hake, M.D.] 8vo. [Courtney’s Secrets, p. 99.] London, 1842 A later edition of “Vates; or, the philosophy of madness.” VALE (the) of Apperley, and other poems. [By William Greenwood.] 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Libi] Malton, 1822 VALE (the) of Chamouni ; a poem. By the author of Rome [John Chaloner, Captain in H.M. 36th Regt.]. 8vo. [N. and Q. 5th March 1864, p. 204.] 1822 VALE (the) of Glamorgan ; scenes and tales among the Welsh. [By Charles Redwood.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1839 VALE (the) of Trent; a poem. [By John Moore Stone.] i2mo. Birmingham, 1801 VALENTINE ; a story of ideals. By Curtis Yorke [Mrs S. Richmond Lee]. 8vo. Pp. 304. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1909 VALENTINE Duval; an autobiography of the last century. . . . [By Anne Manning.] 8vo. London, i860 VALENTINE’S day ; a musical drama, in two acts : as it is performed at the Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane. [By William Heard.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.j Mon. Rev. liv. 341.] London, 1776 VALERIA; a story of Venice. [By Eleanor Lloyd.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1879 VALERIE Aylmer. [A novel.] By Christian Reid [Frances Fisher, later Mrs James M. Tiernan]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud.] New York, 1877 VALERIE; or, half a truth. By “The Duchess” [Mrs Maggie Argles]. 8vo. Pp. 220. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] New York, 1888 VALERIE’S fate; and other stories. By Mrs Alexander [Mrs Alexander Hector, nle Annie French]. i2mo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1885 VALERIUS ; a Roman story. [By John Gibson Lockhart.] 8vo. 3 vols. Edinburgh, 1821 VALETE, Fratres. [Verses] ; dedicated to his fellow-students by the author of Dulce Cor [Samuel R. Crockett]. 4to. [D.N.B. 1912-21.] Private print, 1886 VALETTA; a novel. By the author of Denton Hall [-Cross]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1851 VALIANT (the) knight; or, the legend of St Peregrine. [By Charles Cotton.] 8vo. {D.N.B. vol. 12, p. 301.] London, 1663 VALIANT (the) Welshman ; or, the true chronicle history of the life and valiant deedes of Caradoc the Great, King of Cambria, now called Wales : as it hath beene sundry times acted by the Prince of Wales his seruants. Written by R. A. Gent. [Robert Armin]. 4to. No pagination. {Brit. Mus.\ London, 1615 VALIDITY (the) of baptism adminis- tred by dissenting ministers, and the unreasonableness of refusing burial to children so baptiz’d; first offer’d to the consideration of a dissenting congregation, at two publick baptisms, on the occasion of that new notion, denying all such to be Christians, who have been baptiz’d by persons not epis- copally ordain’d. . . . By a Presbyter of the Church of Christ [Ferdinand Shaw]. 8vo. Pp. 22. [Cresswell’s Prbiting in Nottinghamshire.] Nottingham, 1713 Ascribed also to James Peirce. VALIDITY (the) of the orders of the Church of England made out against the objections of the Papists, in several letters to a gentleman of Norwich, that desired satisfaction therein. [By Dr Humphry Prideaux.] 4to. {Queen's Coll. Lid.] London, 1688 VALLEY (the) of a hundred fires. By the author of Margaret and her bridesmaids, etc. [Mrs Julia C. Stretton]. 8vo. 3 vols. {D.N.B. vol. 36, p. 219.] London, i860 Mistakenly attributed to Mrs Anne Marsh-Caldwell and to Henrietta Keddie. VALLEY (a) of diamonds. By Crona Temple [Miss Corfield]. 8vo. London, 1883 VALLEY (the) of the Rea. By V. author of IX. poems, etc. [Mrs Archer Clive]. i2mo. London, 1851 VALLEY (the) of Sapphires. [A novel.] By Mayne Lindsay [Mrs Clarke]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London,1899 VALLEY (a) of shadows. [A novel.] By George Colmore [Gertrude Dunn, afterwards Baillie-Weaver]. 8vo. 2 vols. {Brit. Musi] London, 1892 VALLEY (the) of the squinting windows. By Brinsley Macnamara [A. E. Weldon]. 8vo. Pp. 296. {Brit. Musi] London [1928] VALLIS Vale; and other poems. By the author of The Juvenile poetical 7Jioralist [Elizabeth Tuck]. 8vo. {Brit. Musi] London, 1823 VALOUROUS (a) and perillous sea- fight ; fought with three Turkish ships, pirats or men of warre on the coast of Cornwall (or westerne part of England) by the good ship named the Elizabeth of Plimmouth, she being of the burthen of 200 tuns, which fight was bravely fought, on Wednesday the 17 of June last past, 1640. [By John Taylor.] 4to. [Davidson’s Bibl. Devon, p. 61.] London, 1640 VALPERGA ; or, the life and adventures of Castruccio, prince of Lucca. By the author of Frankenstein [Mrs Mary W. Shelley]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Courtney’s Secrets, p. 60.] London, 1823 VALUE (the) of a child ; or, motives to the good education of children : in a letter to a daughter. [By John Taylor, Dissenting teacher.] i2mo. [Chalmers’ Biog. Diet.; Mon. Rev. v. 461.] 1751 VAMPIRE (the) ; a tragedy [in five acts]. By St John Dorset [Rev. Hugo John Balfour]. 8vo. {Brit. Musi] London, 1821 Attributed also to Geo. Stephens. VAMPIRES ; Mademoiselle Reseda. [Two stories.] By Julien Gordon [Mrs Julia Grinnell Cruger]. 8vo. Pp. 299. {Camb. Univ. Libi] London, 1891 VAMPYRE (the): a tale. By the Right Honourable Lord Byron. [Really by John William Polidori.] 8vo. {Dyce Cat. ii. 385.] London, 1819 VAN Diemen’s Land ; comprehending a variety of statistical and other information likely to be interesting to the emigrant. [By Henry Melville.] i2mo. {Sydney Lib. Cat.] Hobart Town, 1833 VAN Patten. [A novel.] By B. M. Bower [Bertha Muzzy Sinclair]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 289. {Brit. Musi] Boston, 1926 VAN Suyden sapphires. By Charles Carey [Charles Carey Waddell]. 8vo. {Amer. Cat.] New York, 1905 VANDA. [A tale.] By Esme Stuart [Miss Amelie Claire Leroy]. 8vo. {Who’s Who in Liti] London, 1881 VANDELEUR ; or, animal magnetism : a novel. [By Madame Pisani.] i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1836 VANESSA. [By Mrs Margaret Agnes Paul, nde Colville.] The second edition. 8vo. 2 vols. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1878 VANISHED (the) Empire. By B. L. Putnam Weale [Bertram Lenox Simpson]. 8vo. Pp. ix. 379. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1926 VANISHED (a) lady. [A novel.] By Sarah Tytler [Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. [ Who's Who i?i Lit.] London, 1908 VANISHED (the) moor. By John Trevena [Ernest George Henham]. 8vo. Pp. 256. London, 1923 VANISHED (the) pomps of yesterday ; being some random reminiscences of a British diplomat [Lord Frederick Spencer Hamilton]. 8vo. {Camb. Univ. Lib.’] London, 1919 VANISHING Aberdeen. [By Dr Alexander Cruickshank.] 4to. [Mitchell and Cash’s Scot. Top. i. 24.] Aberdeen, 1894 VANITAS ; polite stories. By Vernon Lee [Violet Paget]. Pp. vi. 276. {Brit. Musi] London, 1892 VANITIE (the) of self-boasters ; or, the prodigious madnesse of tyrannizing Sauls, mis-leading Doegs (or any others whatsoever) which peremptorily goe on, and atheistically glory in their shame and mischiefe. In a sermon preached at the funerall of John Hamnet, Gent, late of the parish of Maldon in Surrey. By E. H. minister of the same, and late Fellow of Merton Colledge in Oxford [Edward Hinton]. 4to. Pp. 52. {Bodl.] London, 1643 VANITY (the) box. [A novel.] By Alice Stuyvesant [Mrs C. N. Williamson]. 8vo. [Amer: Cat.] New York, 1911 VANITY Church. [By J. M. Whitelaw?] 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1861 VANITY Fair album; a show of sovereigns, statesmen, etc. : with biographical and critical notices. By “Jehu Junior” [Thomas Gibson Bowles]. Fol. 1862-89 VANITY Fair cartoons ; a series of fifty-one coloured portrait cartoons of princes, statesmen, and leading men of the day. ... By “ Spy ” [- Leslie], with biographical and critical notices by “Jehu Junior” [Thomas Gibson Bowles]. Fol. London, 1894 VANITY (the) of honour, wealth, and pleasure ; with the indispensable duty of amendment of life. By J. H. [Joseph Halsey, M.A.]. i2mo. [Arber’s Term. Cat.] London, 1678 VANITY (the) of humane inventions; in an exercitation on the ceremonies. [By John Willson, minister of Backford, Cheshire.] i2mo. [Cooke’s Bibl. Centr.] 1666 VANITY (the) of scoffing ; or, a letter to a witty gentleman, evidently shewing the great weakness and unreasonableness of scoffing at the Christian’s faith, on account of its supposed uncertainty : together with the madness of the scoffers unchristian choice. [By Clement Ellis, M.A., rector of Kirkby, Nottinghamshire.] 4to. Pp. 38. {Bodl. ; Wood’s Athen. Oxon. iv. 517.] London, 1674 Ascribed to John Fell, Bishop of Oxford. [ W.; Brit. Mus.] VANITY (the) of the creature. By the author of The whole duty of mart [Richard Altestree, D.D.]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1684 VANITY (the) of the life of man ; represented in the seven several stages thereof, from his birth to his death : with pictures and poems exposing the follies of every age : to which is added, several other poems upon divers subjects and occasions. By R. B. [Richard or Robert Burton, i.e. Nathaniel Crouch]. i2mo. Pp. 30. London, 1688 VANITY ! the confessions of a Court modiste. By “Rita” [Eliza M. J. Gollan, later Mrs Booth, then Mrs W. Desmond Humphreys]. 8vo. {Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1901 VANITY verses. [By Nathaniel Morton Safford.] 8vo. ^Cushing’s Anon.] New York, 1877 VANQUISHED ; a novel. By Mollie Myrtle [Agnes Leonard, later Mrs Hill]. 8vo. New York, 1866 VARIETIE (the); a comoedy, lately presented by his Majesties servants at the Black-Friers. [By William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle.] i2mo. Pp. 87. {Bodl.] London, 1649 VARIETIES. By a wanderer [Arthur Moberley, formerly of St Petersburg]. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1849 VARIETIES in verse. By Sigma [John Begg Shaw, M.A., barrister]. 121110. London, 1879 VARIETIES of literature, from foreign literary journals and original MSS. now first published. [By William Tooke.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Nichols’ Lit. Anec. ix. 159.] London, 1795 VARIETIES of Whist. By Aquarius [Lowis d’Aguilar Jackson]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1888 VARIETY; a collection of essays: written in the year 1787. [By Humphrey Repton]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 297. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1788 Attributed also to Ann Seward. VARIETY; a comedy, in five acts: as it is performed at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. [By Richard Griffith]. 8vo. Pp. 71. [Baker’s Biog. Drami] London, 1782 VARIETY: a tale, for married people. [By William Whitehead.] 4to. Pp. 24. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.\ London, 1776 VARIOUS accounts of the great convulsion at Axmouth in Devonshire, etc. [Edited by J. H. Hallett.] 8vo. [Davidson’s Bibl. Devon, p. 118.] Exeter, 1840 VARIOUS ironic and serious discourses on the subject of physick. . . . [By Dennis De Coetlogon.] 8vo. 7 parts. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1749 Various tracts published separately, with a comprehensive title prefixed. VARIOUS (the) lives of Marcus Igoe. By Brinsley Macnamara [A. E. Weldon]. 8vo. Pp. 282. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1929 VARIOUS prospects of mankind, nature and providence. [By Robert Wallace, D.D.] 8vo. [M‘Culloch’s Lit. of Pol. Econ. p. 257.] London, 1761 VARNISHANDO; a serio-comic poem: addressed to collectors of paintings. By an admirer of the arts [Francis Duckinfield Astley]. 8vo. [Biog. Diet. 1816; Brit. Crit. xxxiii. 632.] Manchester, 1809 Attributed also to George Charles Vernon, 4th Baron Vernon. [Brit. Mus.] ’VARSITY Bloods. By “Growler” [B. B. Watson], 8vo. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books.] Cambridge, 1900 ’VARSITY verses, light blue and dark. By H. D. C. [Harry Debron Catling]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Cambridge, 1901 ’VARSITY versicles. By W. H. [William Charles Hennessy]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Dublin, 1879 VASCONSELOS; a romance of the New World. By Frank Cooper [William Gilmore Simms, LL.D.]. 8vo. [Foley’s Amer. Authors.] New York, 1885 VASHTI Savage. [A novel.] By Sarah Tytler [Miss Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London,1897 VAST (the) expense of ignorance to the Queen’s subjects. By the oldest School Inspector [Joseph Bentley]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1870] VASTY (the) deep ; a strange story of to-day. By Stuart C. Cumberland [Charles Garner, of Oxford]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 VATES : or, the philosophy of madness; being an account of the life, actions, passions, and principles of a tragic writer. [By Thomas Gordon Hake, M.D.] 4to. [Courtney’s Secrets, p. 99.] London, 1840 Title afterwards changed to “Valdarno; or the ordeal of art worship.” VATICAN (the) Council; eight months at Rome during the Vatican Council: impressions of a contemporary. By Pomponio Leto [Cardinal Vitelles- chi]. Translated from the original. 8vo. Pp. xx. 340. London, 1876 Although the above work was prepared for the press, and edited by the Marchese Vitelleschi, there is no doubt that the real author was the Cardinal who was present at the Council, and kept a journal of the proceedings. See The Church Quarterly Review, July, 1876. VATICANISM ; or, papal floundering and blundering. [By A. Polhausen.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] Manchester [1875?] VATICANISM unmasked; or, Romanism in the United States. By a puritan of the nineteenth century [Rev. Joseph Warren Alden]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Supp.] Cambridgeport, Mass., 1877 VATICINIUM votivum ; or, Palaemon’s prophetick prayer: lately presented privately to His now Majestie in a Latin poem, and here published in English. . . . [By George Wither.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 62, p. 264.] Trajecti [1649] VAUCENZA; or, the dangers of credulity. [A novel. By Mrs Mary Robinson, ne'e Darby.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 49, p. 32.] London, 1792 VAUDEVILLES and other things. By Bunny [Carl Emil Schultze]. 8vo. New York, 1900 VAURIEN; or, sketches of the times; exhibiting views of the philosophies, religions, politics, literature, and manners of the age. [By I. Disraeli.] i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1797 VAUXHALL (the) affray; or, the Macaronies defeated ; being a compilation of all the letters, squibs, etc., on both sides of that dispute. [By Rev. H. Bate Dudley.] 8vo. [Dobell’s Cat.] London, 1773 VAYENNE. [A novel.] By Christian Lys [Percy John Brebner]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1908 VEGETABLE life; an illustrated natural history reader. By N. D’Anvers [Nancy R. E. Bell, ne'e Meugens]. 8vo. London [1883] VEGETABLE physiology. Parti. [By John Lindley.] Second edition. 8vo. [Brit, Mus.] London, 1827 Library of Useful Knowledge. No more published. VEGETABLE substances used for the food of man. [By Dr Edwin Lan- kester.] i2mo. 2 vols. [W.] London, 1846 VEIL (the) of glamour. [A novel.] By Clive Arden [Lily Clive Nutt]. 8vo. Pp. 356. [Publishers' Weekly, 28th Aug. 1926.] London, 1926 VEIL (a) of gossamer; being some reflections. By Roland Saint-Clair [Roland Sinclair Watson]. 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1916 VEIL (the) withdrawn ; or, apostacy the result of hypocrisy. . . . [By John Williams, of Bury.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1831 VEILED (the) figure, and other poems. [By Dorothy Hollins.] 8vo. London, 1895 VEILED (the) lady. [A novel.] By Hatherly Sealis [Charles Freeman Foster]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1905 VEILED (the) lady. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs James]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1909 VEILED (the) lady; a romance. By May Wynne [Mabel Wynne Knowles and Draycott M. Dell]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 286. [Brit. Mus.] London [1918] VEILED (the) man. [A historical romance.] By Owen Rhoscomyl [Owen Vaughan]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1898 VELASQUEZ ; his life and work. [By P. G. Konody.] Fol. [Birin. Ref. Lib.] London, 1903 VELINA; a poetical fragment. [By AndrewMacdonald.] 8vo. [Chalmers’ Notesj Mon. Rev. lxvii. 470.] London, 1782 VELITATIONES polemics; or, polemicall short discussions of certain particular and select questions. By I. D. Phil-Iren-Alethius [John Doughtie, Fellow of Merton]. 8vo. Pp. 335. [Wood’s Athen. Oxon. iii. 977.] London,1651 VELLA Vernell ; or, an amazing marriage. By Hattie Hateful [Mrs Sumner Hayden]. 8vo. New York, 1887 VELOCIPEDE (the); its past, its Bresent, and its future. By J. F. B. [oseph Firth Bottomley]. 8vo. Pp. 108. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, Supp. p. 64.] London, 1896 VELVET (the) cushion. [By Rev. John W. Cunningham, Vicar of Harrow.’ 8vo. Pp. 68. [D.N.B. vol. 13, p. 314.’ London, 1814 Frequently reprinted. A counter publication is A new covering to the Velvet cushion ” [by John Styles]. VELVET (the) glove. [A novel.] By Henry Seton Merriman [Hugh Stowell Scott]. 8vo. Pp. 125. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1901 VENDALO (the) lost property office. By the author of Copsley annals, etc. [Emily S. Elliott]. 8vo. [Bodl.] London, 1870 VENERABLE (the) Bede expurgated, expounded, and exposed. By the Prig [Thomas Longueville]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1886 VENETIA. By the author of Vivian Grey and Henrietta Temple [Benjamin Disraeli, Lord Beaconsfield]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1837 Dedication to Lord Lyndhurst signed: A. VENETIAN (the) bracelet, The lost Pleiad, A history of the lyre, andlother poems. By L. E. L., author of the Improvisatrice, The Troubadour, and The golden violet [Letitia Elizabeth Landon]. 8vo. London, 1829 VENETIANS (the); a novel. By the author of Lady Audley's secret, etc., [Mary Elizabeth Braddon, later Mrs John Maxwell]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1892 VENETIA’S lovers; an uneventful story. By Leslie Keith, author of Surrender, etc. [Grace Leslie Keith Johnston]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1884 VENGEANCE (the) of Fionn ; poems. By Austin Clare [Miss W. M. James]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.] Dublin, 1917 VENGEANCE (the) of Friedrich Bahl. [A novel.] By Prudens Futuri [Nelly Davidson]. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Mus.] Antwerp, 1925 VENI, vidi, vici ; the triumphs of Oliver Cromwell : written originally in Latine [by Payne Fisher], and faithfully done into English heroicall verse by T. M. [Thomas Manly or Manley]. 4to. Pp. 93. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 860.] London, 1652 VENICE; a poem written for the Chancellor’s medal. By T. E. H. [Thomas Edwards Hankinson, M.A.]. 8 vo. Pp. 19. Cambridge, 1826 VENICE under the yoke of France and of Austria; with memoirs of the courts, governments, & people of Italy; presenting a faithful picture of her present condition, and including original anecdotes of the Buonaparte family. By a lady of rank [Catherine Hyde, Marchioness Broglio Solari]. . . . 8vo. 2 vols. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1824 VENTA, and other poems. By the author of Pericula urbis [Rev. William Moore, rector of Appleton]. 8vo. Pp- 3, r33- [Crockford’s Clerical Directory.] London, 1882 VENUS and Cupid; or, a trip from Mount Olympus to London. ... By the author of The fight at Dame Europats school [Henry William Pullen]. 8vo. Pp. 314. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1896 VENUS in the cloister; or, the nun in her smock. [Translated by Robert Samber from the French of l’Abbe Barrin, i.e. l’Abbe Duprat.] 8vo. [Straus’ The Unspeakable Curllj Barbier.] London, 1724 VENUS of Cadiz. By Richard Fisguill [Richard H. Wilson]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1905 VERA. By the author of Elizabeth and her Germa?i garden [Mary Beauchamp, later Countess Russell]. 8vo. Pp. 365. [Brit. Musk] London, 1921 VERA. By the author of The hotel die Petit St fean [Charlotte Louisa Hawkins Dempster]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 289. London, 1871 VERA in poppyland. By Vera [Mrs A. Berlyn]. 8vo. London, 1892 VERBA Verbi Dei ; the words of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, harmonized by the author of Charles Lowder [Miss Maria French]. 8vo. Pp. 200. London, 1894 VERBALIST (the) ; a manual devoted to brief discussions of the right and the wrong use of words. . . . By Alfred Ayres [Thomas Embley Osmun], 8vo. Pp. 220. [Brit. Musk] New York, 1882 VERBEIA; or, Wharfdale : a poem, descriptive and didactic : with historical remarks. [By Thomas Maude.] 4to. [Mon. Rev. lxix. 167.] 1783 The edition of 1782 mentioned in Upcott, p. 1410, is not anonymous. VERDICT (the) of you all. By Henry ' Wade [Henry Lancelot Aubrey- Fletcher]. 8vo. Pp. 254. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1926 VOL. VI. VERDICT (the) upon the dissenters plea, occasioned by their Melius inquirendum [by Vincent Alsop]; to which is added, a letter from Geneva to the Assembly of Divines. . . . [By Lawrence Womock, D.D., Bishop of St David’s.] 8vo. Pp. 281,45. [Bodlk] London, 1681 VERDICTS [on the poets of the times— Moore, Lamb, Scott, Rogers, Hood, Shelley, &c. By James Thomas Fields]. 8vo. London, 1852 VERITAS evangelica ; or, the Gospel- truth asserted in sixteen useful questions, which, being seriously searched into, will open the way to find out assuredly the true and saving faith of Christ. . . . Written by T. K. [Thomas Kemeys, Romish priest]. 4to. Pp. no. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] London,1687 VERITAS in semente; being a moderate discourse concerning the principles and practices of the Quakers: written long since (as they then appeared to the author) in a Middle Way between them and the followers of orthodox truth, that the well-meaning among them might come over to it. . . . [By John Humphrey.] 8vo. Pp. 284. [Smith’s Anti-Quak. p. 241.] London, 1705 VERITIES in verses ; combining Mottoes and motives, Brotherhood, fellowship and acting together, New Covenant ordinances and order. [By Robert A. Macfie, of Dreghorn.] Second edition, to which are added Jubilee and other rhymings. 8vo. 4 parts. London, 1888 Presentation copy. VERMONTERS unmasked. ... By a citizen of the United States [Charles Phelps]. 8vo. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. vol. 6, p. 182.] New York, 1782 VERNAL (the) walk; a poem. [By Ebenezer Elliott.] 8vo. [Watkins’ Life of Elliottj Mon. Rev. xxxv. 109.] London, 1801 VERNER Galbraith’s wife. [A novel.] By Derek Vane [Mrs Eaton Back]. 8vo. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1894 VERNON-IAD (the); done into English from the original Greek of Homer, lately found at Constantinople. [By Henry Fielding. A satire on Edward Admiral Vernon.] 4to. [Brit. Musk] London, 1741 VERONICA ; a novel. By the author of Aunt Margarets trouble [Frances Eleanor Trollope]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musk] London, 1870 L VERS de societe, and parody. By H. A. Page [Alexander Hay Japp]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1883 VERS de societe ; historical fragments, sonnets, etc. [By M. Joseph Denison, M.P.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Martin’s Cat.'] London, 1849 VERSAILLES; and other poems. [By Colonel William Read.] 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Belfast, 1821 VERSATILE verses on the ’Varsity, etc. By two Bachelors [H. D. Catling and A. W. Burke Peel]. 8vo. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Boobs, p. 256.] Cambridge, 1896 VERSE. By C. C. [Charles Chorley, journalist]. 8vo. [F. Boase’s Mod. E?ig. Blog. i. 614.] Truro, 1867 VERSE. By H. W. P. [Henry Webster Parker]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1862 VERSE translations from the German, including Burger’s Lenore, Schiller’s Song of the Bell, and other poems. [By William Wbewell, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 87. \D. N. B. vol. 60, p. 462.] London, 1847 VERSES. [By J. R. Finlay.] 8vo. Pp. 41. Private print, 1874 “Nearly all the following pieces were written more than twenty years ago.— J. R. F.” VERSES. [By Sir Ambrose Hardinge Giffard, LL.D., Chief Justice of Ceylon.] 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Colombo, 1822 VERSES. [By Sir William Cusack Smith, Bart.] 8vo. [D.N.B.vol. 53, p. 156.] Dublin, private print, 1830 VERSES. By A. C. Q. W. [Mrs Ann C. (Quincey) Waterston]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] Boston, 1863 VERSES [chiefly hymns]. By a country curate [Rev. John William Hewett, M.A.]. i2mo. Pp. 172. [Julian’s Diet, of Hymnologyi] London, 1859 VERSES. By A. G. [Alfred Gurney]. 8vo. Private print, 1868 VERSES. By A. J. G. D. [Anna Julia Grant Duff"]. 8vo. Pp. 47. [Brit. Mus.] [Edinburgh, private print] 1882 VERSES. By a Maynooth student [Eugene Higgins]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Irela?id.] Dublin [1885 ?] VERSES. By E. D. W. [Elizabeth DickinsonWest [later Mrs E. Dowden]. 12mo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Dublin, 1876 A second series appeared in 1883. VERSES. By “ Euoe ” [Trevor Mansell]. 8vo. Pp. 20. Abergavenny [1896] VERSES. By H. H. [Mrs Helen Maria Jackson, nee Hunt]. i2mo. Boston, 1874 VERSES. By J. G. [Mrs Jane Gurney, nee Birkbeck]. 8vo. Private print, 1890 VERSES. By L. M. L. [Lady- Lushington]. Maidstone, 1880 VERSES. By M. T. [M. Tennant]. 8vo. Pp. 192. Glasgow, private print, 1866 VERSES. By Susan Coolidge [Sarah Chauncey Woolsey]. i2mo. Boston, 1880 VERSES. By two children [Elaine and Dora Goodale]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.] New York, 1878 VERSES addressed to Lady Brydges, in memory of her son Edward William George Brydges. [By Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Wi] Lee Priory, private print, 1816 VERSES addressed to Sir G. O. Paul on the improvement of County prisons. [By James Dallaway.] 4to. [Gloucester Pub. Lib.] Gloucester, 1785 VERSES addressed to [Alexander Pope] the imitator of the first satire of the second book of Horace. By a lady [Lady Mary Wortley Montagu]. Fob [Brit. Musi] London [1733] VERSES addressed to the ladies of Stockton. [By Joseph Ritson.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] [Newcastle? 1780?] VERSES and opinions. By Matthew Browne [William Brighty Rands]. 8vo. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. iii. 34.] London, 1866 VERSES and re-verses. By n [Wilfrid Meynell]. 8vo. Pp. 48. Cambridge, 1912 VERSES and translations. By C. S. C. [Charles Stuart Calverley]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 203. Cambridge, 1862 VERSES at random. By “Thistle” [M. C. Anderson]. 8vo. Paisley [c. 1900] VERSES, chiefly devotional. By Martha W[hewell, later Mrs Statter]. Now collected and arranged by a sorrowing sister [Ann Whewell, later Mrs Newton]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 138. [Bowes’ Cat. of Camb. Books.] Cambridge, 1863 A short note is added, signed “ W. W.” [William Whewell, D.D.]. VERSES, edited by M[ilitia] M[ea] Multiplex] [William Tooke, solicitor]. 8vo. Pp. 31. [D.N.B.wol. 57, p. 51.] London, private print, i860 Verses relating to Tooke’s family, etc., by various persons, chiefly himself. VERSES for children. [By Jane Bragg.] i2mo. Pp. 31. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' books, i. 312.] Carlisle, 1862 VERSES for holy seasons; with questions for examination. By C. F. H. [C. F. Alexander]. Edited by Walter Farquhar Hook, D.D., vicar of Leeds. 8vo. Pp. xi. 232. London, 1846 VERSES for penitents. [By John Henry Newman, D.D.] i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 40, p. 349.] Private print, i860 VERSES for the people. By a rhymer [Thomas Bell, of Fifeshire]. i2mo. Glasgow, 1844 VERSES for the Sundays and holidays of the Christian year. [By Esther Wigglesworth.] i2mo. London, 1863 VERSES from a mother’s corner. By Mrs George Archibald [Anna Campbell, later Mrs George Archibald Palmer]. 8vo. Boston, 1889 VERSES from Japan. [By George William Thomson. Reprinted from the Japan Weekly Mail.] 8vo. Pp. 59. [.Brit. Mus.] London, 1878 VERSES humbly addressed to Sir Thomas Hanmer on his edition of Shakspeares works. By a gentleman of Oxford [William Collins]. Fol. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 2314.] London, 1743 VERSES in memory of Dunbar Collegiate Church. [By George Miller, bookseller.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 40. [Couper’s Millers of Haddington.] Edinburgh, 1819 Afterwards included in “St Baldred of the Bars” (1824). VERSES, miscellaneous and grave. By Fred. H. [Frederick Holland]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1881 VERSES, mostly written in India. By G. H. T. [George Herbert Trevor]. 8vo. London, 1878 VERSES occasioned by reading some strictures on Barclay’s Apology. [By Joseph Beck.] 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of FriendsJ Books, i. 73.] 1785 VERSES occasioned by seeing the Palace and Park of Dalkeith anno MDCCXXXII. [By S. Boyse.] Humbly inscribed to his Grace the Duke of Buccleugh. 8 vo. Pp. 14. Edinburgh, 1732 VERSES of a collegian. [By Edwin J. Gerstle.] 8vo. [Lib. Journ. xiv. 59.] New York, 1885 VERSES of other days; printed for friends. [By Abraham Hayward, barrister.] i2mo. N.P., 1847 Presentation copy from the author. Later issue in 1878. VERSES of six generations [mostly by Rev. John Mason Neale, D.D.]; edited by M. S. L. 8vo. Bristol, 1907 VERSES on Dr Mayhew’s book of Observations on the character and conduct of the Society for the propagation of the Gospel in foreign parts; with notes. ... By a gentleman of Rhode-Island Colony [John Aplin, lawyer]. 8vo. Pp. 19. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl.] Providence, New England, 1763 VERSES on Her Majesty’s birthday, May 19, 1784. [By Anthony Freston (formerly Brettingham), M.A.] 4to. Pp. 18. [Bowes’ Cat. of Camb. Books, p. 491.] London, 1784 VERSES on religious subjects [including translations of Latin Hymns. By John Henry Newman, D.D.]. i2mo. Pp. 141. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1853 VERSES on Sir Joshua Reynolds’s painted window at New College, Oxford. [By Thomas Warton.] 4to. [Gent. Mag. lii. 342.] 1782 VERSES on the celestial sphere. By O. H. [Holt Okes]. 4to. Pp. 14. [Brit. Mus.] London [1910] VERSES on the death of Dr Samuel Johnson. [By Thomas Percy, LL.D., Fellow of St John’s College, Oxford, nephew of the Bishop of Dromore.] 4to. Pp. 16. [Gent. Mag. May 1808, p. 470.] London, 1785 VERSES on the sonship of Christ. . . . [By Rev. John Stevens.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1812 Another edition, with fuller title (“Verses on the sonship and pre-existence of Jesus Christ. . . .”) and otherwise enlarged, appeared in 1846. VERSES on various occasions. [By John Henry Newman, D.D., Cardinal.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 40, p. 349.] London, 1868 VERSES, sacred and miscellaneous. By Harriet [Harriet White, of Cashel]. [Olphar Ha?nst, p. 5.] 1853 VERSES, sacred and profane. By Seumas O’Sullivan [James Starkey]. i2mo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ire- land.] Dublin, 1908 VERSES spoken at the Encaena. By Mr Smith, Demy of Magdalen College, Oxford [Rev. Walter Birch, B.D.]. 8vo. Oxford, 1810 VERSES spoken to the King, Queen, and Dutchesse of Yorke in St John’s library in Oxford. [By Thomas Laurence.] 4to. Pp. 2. [Bodl.] N.P., N.D. “ These verses were spoken by Thom. Laurence a gent. com. of St John Coll— Afterwards Fellow of Univ. coll.”—MS. note by Wood. VERSES to a lady of quality. . . . [By John Lockman.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1741 VERSES to order. By A. G. [Alfred Denis Godley]. 8vo. Pp. 69. London, 1892 A new and enlarged edition, 1904, gives the author’s name. VERSES to the memory of a brother. [By William Laurence Brown, D.D. Principal of Marischal College, Aberdeen.] 8vo. Pp. 15* [D. Laingi] N.P. [1784] VERSES to the memory of Garrick; spoken as a monody at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane [by Richard Brinsley Sheridan]. Second edition. 4to. [QuaritcPs Cat.'] London, 1779 VERSES to the memory of Lord Nelson, and in commemoration of the glorious victory obtained . . . 21st Oct. 1805. [By Thomas Crichton.] i2mo. \Brit. Mus.] Paisley, 1805 VERSES to the Right Rev. Father in God, Edward, Lord Bishop of Durham ; with an essay towards restoring the original texts of Scripture and reconciling the Hebrew and Septuagint, by the Oriental languages, Fathers, &c. [By John Mawer, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 27. [Davies’ Mem. of the York Press, p. 182.] London, 1731 VERSES; with imitations and translations. By A. M. W. [Mrs Ann M. Wood]. London, 1842 VERSES written in the portico of the Temple of Liberty at iWoburn Abbey. . . . [Introduction signed : J. H. W. i.e. Jeremiah H. Wififen.] 4to. Pp. 39. [Brit. Mus.] London, private print, 1836 VERSES written in Westminster Abbey, after the funeral of the Right Hon. Charles I James Fox, October 10, 1806. [By Samuel Rogers.] 4to. \Brit. Mus.] London [1806] VERSES written on several occasions, between the years 1712 and 1721. [By Sir Thomas Burnet.] 4to. London,1777 VERSICLES from the portfolio of [Robert Rockliff] a Sexagenarian. . . . i6mo. [Brit. Musi] Liverpool, 1862 VERSIFICATION (a) of President Washington’sexcellent farewell address to the citizens of the United States. By a gentleman of Portsmouth, N.H. [Jonathan Mitchell Sewall]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. a7id Pseud.] Portsmouth, N.H., 1798 VERSION (a) of the Psalms of David, attempted to be closely accommodated to the text of Scripture ; and adapted, by variety of measure, to all the music used in the versions of Sternhold and Hopkins, and of Brady and Tate. By a lay-member of the Church of England [John Stow, of Greenwich]. i2mo. Pp. xix. 7, 704. [Brit. Mus.] London,1809 VERSION (a) of the Psalms; with a comprehensive selection of hymns, chosen from the best authors. [By C. Bassano.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Leamington, 1826 VERSUS inopes rerum, nugaeque canorae; commonly call’d Poems on several occasions. [By Soame Jenyns.] 8vo. Pp. xii. 106. [Brit. Musi] London [1730?] VERTUES due; or, a true modell of the life of . . . Katharine Howard, late Countess of Nottingham, deceased. By T. P. [Thomas Powell, attorney]. 8vo. London, 1603 Reprinted by the Roxburghe Club, 1881. VERTUES encomium ; or, the image of honour. [By Richard Niccolls.] 4to. London, 1614 Reprinted in the Harleian Miscellany, vol. 10. VERTUMNUS ; an epistle [in verse] to Mr Jacob Bobart. By the author of The apparitio?i [Abel Evans]. 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit. Oxford, 1713 VERTUOUS (the), holy, Christian life and death of the late Lady Lettice, Vicountess Falkland, with some additional. [By John Duncon.] i2mo. [W.j Brit. Musi] London, 1653 VERTUOUS (the) wife is the glory of her husband; or, a good woman in her proper colours. . . . By L. P. [Lawrence Price ?] a well-wisher to all good women. 8vo. Pp. 21. [Brit. Musi] London, 1667 VERULAMIANA; or, opinions on men, manners, literature, politics, and theology, by Francis Bacon, Baron of Verulam, &c. &c. To which is prefixed a life of the author, by the editor [P. L. Courtier]. i2mo. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Ma?i. p. 97.] London, 1803 VERY (a) brief memoir of dear H. B. By her brother [Edward W. Barlow, M.A.]. i2mo. Woburn [1840] VERY genteel. [A novel.] By the author of Mrs Jernhighanis journal, etc. [Mrs Hart, nee Fanny Wheeler]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Musi] London, 1880 VERY (a) godly and learned exposition, vpon the whole Booke of Psalmes ; wherein is contained the diuision and sense of euery Psalme : as also manifold, necessary and sound doctrines, gathered out of the same, all seruing for the great furtherance and instruction of euery Christian reader. . . . By Thomas Wilcocks.] 4to. Pp. 600. Bodli] London, 1591 Epistle dedicatory signed : T. W. VERY (a) plain state of the case ; or, the Royalty Theatre versus the Theatres Royal. . . . [By George Colman.] 8vo. London, 1787 VERY (a) rough diamond. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.\ London, 1905 VERY (the) short memory of Mr Joseph Scorer, and other seaside experiences. By John Oxenham [William Arthur Dunkerley]. i2mo. Pp. 184. {Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1903 VERY (a) simple story. . . . [By Florence Montgomery.] 4to. {Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Sleaford, 1867 VERY (a) woman. [By Menella Bute Smedley.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.\ London,1846 VERY (a) young couple. By the author of Mrs Jerningham's journal [Mrs Hart, nee Fanny Wheeler]. 8vo. {Camb. Univ. Lib.\ London [1874] VESPERS (the) of Palermo ; a tragedy. By F. B. [Felicia Browne, later Mrs Hemans]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1823 VESPERTILIA, and other verses. By Graham R. Tomson [Mrs Rosamund M. Watson]. 8vo. Chicago, 1895 VESPERTINA. By A. H. B., commoner of St John’s College, Oxford A. H. Baldwin]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 118. F. Madan.\ Oxford, 1853 VESTA. By Mrs Hester Benedict [Mrs T. P. Dickinson]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseudi] Philadelphia, 1872 VESTIGES of civilization ; or, the aetiology of history, religious, aestheti- cal, political, and philosophical. [By Robert Henry Shannon, or James O’Connell.] 8vo. New York, 1851 VESTIGES of the natural history of creation. [By Robert Chambers, LL.D.] Eleventh edition ; illustrated by numerous engravings on wood. 8vo. Pp. iv. 286, lxiv. London, 1840 In reply to numerous criticisms, the author published, anonymously also, “ Explanations ; a sequel . . (1845.) See also “An expository outline . . .” VOL. VI. VESTIGIA. [A novel depicting Italian life at Leghorn.] By George Fleming [Julia Constance Fletcher]. i2mo. 2 vols. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1884 VETERAN (the); or, matrimonial felicities. [A novel. By Edward Harley.] 8vo. 3 vols. {Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1819 VETERANS (the) of Chelsea Hospital. By the author of The subaltern [George Robert Gleig]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1842 VETERES vindicati, in an expostu- latory letter to Mr Sclater of Putney, upon his Consensus Veterum &c.; wherein the absurdity of his method, the weakness of his reasons are shewn, his false aspersions upon the Church of England are wiped off, and her faith concerning the Eucharist proved to be that of the primitive Church : together with animadversions on Dean Boileau’s French translation of, and remarks upon Bertram. [By Edward Gee.] 4to. {D. N. B. vol. 21, p. 107.] London,1687 VETERINARY (the) surgeon ; or, farriery taught on a new and easy plan. By John Hinds [John Badcock, or John Bell]. London, 1827 VETO (the) church ; or, what is nonintrusion. [By Robert Lee, D.D.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1844 VIA dolorosa ; being the Catholic devotion of the stations ; prepared as a special office for the use of English people, with reference to the sins, the responsibilities, and the portents of these times ; translated and arranged by the author of From Oxford to Rome, etc. [E. F. S. Harris]. 8vo. London, 1848 Preface signed : E. F. S. H. VIA Hudson’s Bay. By Stuart Cumberland [Charles Garner, of Oxford]. 8vo. [London, 1905] VIA lucis ; a novel. ... By Kassandra Vivaria [Miss Magda Sindici, later Mrs Heinemann]. 8vo. Pp. 480. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1898 VIA (the) media ; or, Anglican orthodoxy. By a member of the Oxford Convocation [John Hippisley]. 8vo. Pp. 53. London, 1838 VIA, veritas, vita ; discursive notes on preaching and on some types of the Christian life. By a Presbyter [Rev. Peter Barclay, M.A.]. 8vo. Pp. 94. London, 1881 Published in 1882, with the author’s name, with the title—“The Way, the Truth, and the Life.” L 2 VIAGGIANA ; or, detached remarks on the buildings, pictures, statues, inscriptions, &c. of ancient and modern Rome. [By Stephen Weston.] i2mo. Pp. iv. 181. [Dyce Cat. ii. 417.] London [1776] VIATOR, a poem ; or, a journey from London to Scarborough, by the way of York : with notes historical and topographical. [By Thomas Maude.] 4to. Pp. 40, xix. [Boyne’s Yorkshire Lib. p. 128.] London, 1782 VIATOR Christianus ; or, the Christian traveller; by Thomas of Kempis. Translated from the original Latin . . . [by Miles Pinkney, alias Thomas Carre]. 8vo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] Paris, 1653 VIC ; the autobiography of a Pomeranian dog ; a true story. [By A. C. Fryer.] 8vo. Pp. 92. [Brit. Mus.] Manchester, 1880 VICAR (the) of Charles ; a poem in commemoration of Plymouth’s great preacher [Robert Hawker] in a preceding age. . . . [By Joseph Plimsoll.] 8vo. Pp. 38. [Brit. Mus.] Plymouth, 1868 VICAR (the) of Wakefield; a tale, supposed to be written by himself. [By Oliver Goldsmith.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Bookprices current^ 1922.] Salisbury, 1766 First edition ; many later editions bear the author’s name. VICAR’S (the) atonement. By Claud Heathcote [James Harwood Panting]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1900 VICAR’S (the) trio ; a story. ... By Esme Stuart [Miss Amelie Claire Leroy]. 8vo. Pp. 274. [Who's Who in Lit.] London [1890] VICAR’S (the) will and codicil. [By William Cooper, of Kirby Wisk.] 8vo. Newcastle, private print, 1824 A reprint of “ The will of a certain northern vicar” (London, 1765). Ascribed also to Rev. John Ellison. VICE triumphant; or, the world run mad : a satyre. [By Robert Cockburn.] 8vo. Pp. 15. Edinburgh, 1719 VICE versa; or, a lesson to fathers. By F. Anstey [F. Anstey Guthrie]. New and revised edition. 8vo. Pp. vi. 371. London, 1883 VICEROY (the) ; a poem addressed to the Earl of Halifax. [By John Langhorne, D.D.] 4to. Pp. xi. 11. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1762 VICEROY (the) of Catalonia ; or, the double cuckhold. [By Gabarel de Bremond.] Made English by James Morgan, Gent. i2mo. Pp. 155. London,1678 VICES in virtues ; and other vagaries. By the author of The life of a prig Thomas Longueville]. 8vo. Pp. 104. Brit. Mus.] London, 1913 VICISSITUDES (the) of Bessie Fairfax. By Holme Lee, author of Basil Godfrey's caprice, etc. [Harriet Parr]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1874 VICISSITUDES (the) of commerce ; a tale of the cotton trade. [By Thomas Greenhalgh.] i2mo. 2 vols. London,1852 Mistakenly attributed to Thomas Hall. This work was revised and reissued, with the author’s name (Liverpool, 1854), as “ Lancashire life; or, the vicissitudes of commerce ...” VICISSITUDES (the) of Darley. Part I. Philip Colborne’s love matters. By Hans Kiste [John Box]. 8vo. Pp. 88. [Brit. Mus.] London [1890 ?] VICISSITUDES of life ; exemplified in the interesting memoirs of a young lady, in a series of letters. [By Jane West.] i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1815 VICISSITUDES (the) of life ; or, the balloon : a Canterbury tale for young persons. [By Mrs Cumming.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Canterbury, 1845 VICTIM (the); a tragedy [in five acts and in verse]. Written by Mr [Charles] Johnson [on the basis of Jean Racine’s Jphigenie]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1714 VICTIM (the) of fancy. By a lady, author of The conquests of the heart [Elizabeth Sophia Tomlins]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Mon. Rev. xxvii. 331 ; Ixxvi. 446.] London, 1787 VICTIM (a) of the Falk Laws ; the adventures of a German priest in prison and in exile, told by the victim [Frederick Mills Raymond Barker, of Oriel College]. 8vo. London, 1879 VICTIMS. [A novel.] By Theo Gift [Dorothea Hamilton Havers, later Mrs Boulger]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1887 VICTOR Pelham’s love-story. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1911 VICTORIA. By “Grapho” [James Alonzo Adams]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Chicago, 1901 VICTORIA ; or, the heiress of Castle Cliffe. By May Carleton [May Agnes Fleming]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] New York [1864?] VICTORIA Bess ; or, the ups and downs of a doll’s life. By Brenda [Mrs Castle Smith]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1880?] VICTORIA Britannia; plan for celebrating the reign of Queen Victoria by the inauguration of political changes in the British constitution. By Hollis True [T. C. Chegwidden]. i2mo. New York, 1879 VICTORIA (the) Cross ; how it was won, how it was lost, and how it came back again. By Morice Gerard [Rev. John Jessop Teague]. 8vo. Pp. 156. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1892 VICTORIA, Queen of England; her girlhood and womanhood. By Grace Greenwood [Mrs Sara Jane Lippincott]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1884 VICTORIA, the British Eldorado; or, Melbourne in 1869: showing the advantages of that Colony as a field for emigration. By a Colonist of twenty years5 standing [C. R. Carter]. i2mo. [Lib. of Col. Inst. i. 127.] London, 1870 VICTORIAD (the); or, the New World : an epic and illustrative lay ... of the Victorian era. By an old looker-on of change [Edmund Carrington], 8vo. [Kirk’s Supp. i. 297.] London, 1861 VICTORIAISM ; or, a re-organization of the people : moral, social, economical, and political: suggested as a remedy for the present distress : respectfully addressed to the Right Hon. Sir Robert Peel, Bart. [By William C. Coward.] 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1843 Signed : W. C. C. VICTORIAN novelists. By Lewis Melville [Lewis Samuel Benjamin], 8vo. Pp. 334. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1906 VICTORIES (the) of the British armies; with anecdotes illustrative of modern warfare. By the author of Stories of Waterloo, etc. [William Hamilton Maxwell, rector of Ballagh, Connaught]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1839 VICTORIES (the) of Wellington and the British armies. By the author of Stories Waterloo, etc. [William Hamilton Maxwell]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1852 VICTORIOUS (the) stroke for old England; all preachers make all hearers one man against her enemies and down Jericho, etc. [By John Henley.] Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 54. [Brit. Musi] London, 1748 VICTORIOUS (a) union. By Oliver Optic [William T. Adams]. 8vo. Pp. 361. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1893 VICTORS (the). By Luke Sharp [Robert Barr]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1902 VICTORY ; an island tale. By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski]. 8vo. Pp. 424. London, 1915 VICTORY (the); and other stories. By A. L. O. E., author of Fairy Frisket, etc. [Charlotte Maria Tucker]. 8vo. Pp. 64. London, 1875 VICTORY (the) murders. By Foster Johns [Gilbert Seldes]. i2mo. Pp. 304. [New York Evening Post, Lit. Rev. 9th April 1927.] New York, 1927 VICTORY (the) of suffering; a prize poem, recited in RugbySchool, June 10, 1842. [By John Conington.] 8vo. Pp. 11. [Brit. Musi] Rugby, 1842 VICTORY (the) of the vanquished; a tale of the first century. By the author of Chronicles of the Schonberg- Cotta family, etc. [Mrs Elizabeth Charles, nee Rundle]. 8vo. Pp. 458. London, 1871 VICTORY (the) that overcometh. By H. A. D. [Helen A. Dallas]. 8vo. London, 1901 VICTORY! Victory! [By Amelia M. Hull.] 8vo. [Brit. Micsi] London, 1864 “ VICTORY (the) won55; a brief memorial of the last days of G. R. [By Miss Catherine Marsh.] Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 84. [Brit. Musi] London, 1855 Preface signed: W. M. i.e. William Marsh. VIDA ; study of a girl. By Amy Duns- muir [Amy M. Oliphant, later Smith]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1880 VIENNA. Noe art can cure this hart; wherein is storied ye valorous achievements ... of St Paris of Vienna, and the . . . Faire Vienna. By M. M. [Mathew Mainwaringe]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London [1650] Wrongly attributed to Richard Mynshull. VIERA ; a romance ’twixt the real and the ideal. By Rob. Appleton [Roman I. Zubof]. 8vo. New York, 1890 VIEW (a) of a printed book [by Henry Parker] intituled Observations upon His Majesties late answers and expresses. [By Sir John Spelman.] 4to. Pp. 45. [Bodli] Oxford, 1642 Author’s name in the handwriting of Barlow. VIEW (a) of an ecclesiastick in his socks and buskins ; or, a just reprimand given to Mr [Vincent] Alsop for his foppish, pedantick, detractive and petulant way of writing. [By Robert Ferguson]. 4to. [Brit. A/us.] London, 1698 VIEW (a) of antient history ; including the progress of literature and the fine arts. By William Rutherford, D.D. master of the academy at Uxbridge. [In reality by John Logan, minister of Leith.] 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1788-93 VIEW (a) of antiquity. See “ APXAIOZ- KOIIIA.” VIEW (a) of certain wonderful effects of late dayes come to passe, and now newly conferred with the presignifications of the comete . . . which appered . . . the X day of Novem . . . 1577. Written by T. T. [Thomas Twyne?]. 4to. B. L. [Brit. Musi] London, 1578 VIEW (a) of Christianity, containing a short account of religion from the creation to the end of the 4th cent. ; with the complete duty of a Christian : laid down in two catechisms. [By Thomas Deacon.] 8vo. [Lathbury’s Nonjuror si] 1747 The second edition, 1748, has the title : “ A view of Christianity, succinctly and fully laid down in two catechisms.” VIEW (a) of Fraunce. [By Sir Robert Dallington.] 4to. No pagination. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1604 VIEW (a) of French literature during the eighteenth century. [By Baron Brugiere de Barante.] Translated. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1814 VIEW (a) of life in its several passions. [By James Fortescue, D.D.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1749 VIEW (a) of Lord Bolingbroke’s philosophy, compleat, in four letters to a friend ; in which his whole system of infidelity and naturalism is exposed and confuted : with the apology prefixed. [By William Warburton, D.D.] The third edition. i2mo. Pp. xlviii. 335. [Bod/.] London, 1756 V I E W (a) of many errors and some gross absurdities in the old translation of the Psalms in English metre ; as also in som other translations lately published : shewing how the Psalms ought to be translated, to be acceptable and edifying. ... By W. B. [William Barton], M.A. and minister of the Gospel. 4to. Pp. 6, 18. London, 1654 VIEW (a) of real grievances, with remedies proposed for redressing them; humbly submitted to the consideration of the legislature. [By-Powell.] 8 vo. [Queen's Coll. Lib. j Mon. Rev. xlviii. 19.] London, 1772 VIEW (a) of society and manners in France, Switzerland, and Germany ; with anecdotes relating to some eminent characters. By a gentleman who resided several years in those countries [John Moore, M.D.]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1779 VIEW (a) of some exceptions which have beene made by a Romanist to the Lord Viscount Falkland’s Discourse of the infallibilitie of the Church of Rome. Submitted to the censure of all sober Christians ; together with the Discourse it selfe of infallibilitie prefixt to it. [By Henry Hammond, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 4, 204. Oxford, 1646 VIEW (a) of Stourton Gardens with strictures on a late abusive Ode upon the same subject ; -somewhat, it is said, in imitation of Horace, Book II, Ode 13. [By Rev. John Chapman/ 8vo. Pp. 11. [IV.; Upcotti] [c. 1810 VIEW (a) of the advantages of inland navigations ; with a plan of a navigable canal intended for a communication between the ports of Liverpool and Hull. . . . [By R. Whitworth.] 8vo. Pp. 40. [Manch. Free Lib.] London, 1765 VIEW of the agriculture of Oxfordshire, drawn up for the Board of Agriculture and internal improvement. By the secretary to the Board [Rev. Arthur Young]. 8vo. [IV.] London, 1809 VIEW (a) of the art of colonization. . . . By Edward Gibbon Wakefield.] 8vo. D. N. B. vol. 58, p. 450.] London, 1849 VIEW (a) of the British Empire, more especially Scotland ; with some proposals for the improvement of that country, the extension of its fisheries, and the relief of the people. [By John Knox, bookseller.] 8vo. London, 1784 The author’s name appears in the third edition, 1785. VIEW (a) of the Christian religion. By one of the people [William Godson]. 8vo. Pp. 37. [Brit. Musi] Liverpool [1864 ?] Preface signed : W. G. VIEW of the conduct of the English clergy, as relates to civil affairs. [By Sir Edmund Thomas.] 8vo. [Leslie’s Cat. 1843 (414)-] 1737 VIEW (a) of the controversy between Great-Britain and her colonies; including a mode of determining their present disputes, finally and effectually; and of preventing all future contentions : in a letter to the author of A full vindication of the measures of the Congress, from the calumnies of their enemies. By A. W. Farmer, author of Free thoughts, etc. [Dr Samuel Seabury, Bishop of Connecticut]. 8vo. Pp. 90. \Bodli\ New-York, printed : London reprinted, 1775 VIEW (a) of the Court of St Germain, 1690 to 1695 ; with an account of the entertainment Protestants meet with there. [By John Macky.] 4to. Pp. 32. \Times Lit. Supp. 28th June 1928.] London, 1696 VIEW (a) of the Dissertation upon the Epistles of Phalaris, Themistocles, &c. lately publish’d by the Reverend Dr Bentley ; also of the examination of that Dissertation by the Honourable Mr Boyle : in order to the manifesting of the incertitude of heathen chron- ology. [By Rev. John Milner, B.D.] 8vo. Pp. 87. [Bartholomew’s Bibl. of Bentley, p. 31.] London, 1698 VIEW (a) of the Edinburgh Reviewj pointing out the spirit and tendency of that paper. [By Edward Johnston, minister at Moffat.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1756 VIEW (a) of the elections of bishops in the primitive Church; wherein is shewed, what were the several shares of the bishops, inferior clergy and people in these elections : as also, of the Emperors, after they became Christians : and the nature of the Church, its unity and government are likewise explained. By a presbyter of the [Episcopal] Church of Scotland [James Dundass]. 8vo. Pp. 242. Edinburgh, 1728 VIEW (a) of the English acquisitions in Guinea and the East Indies ; with an account of the religion, government, wars, strange customs, etc. . . . By R. B. [Richard Burton, alias Nathaniel Crouch]. i2mo. \Brit. Mus.\ London, 1686 VIEW (a) of the English Constitution ; a translation of Montesquieu’s sixth chapter of the eleventh book of L)Esprit des loix. [By Baron Francis Maseres.] 8vo. [Z>. N. B. vol. 36, p. 409.] London, 1781 VIEW of the evidence for proving that the present Earl of Galloway is the lineal heir male and lawful representative of Sir William Stuart of Jedworth, so frequently mentioned in history from the year 1385 to the year 1429. [Drawn up by Rev. E. Williams, his lordship’s chaplain.] 4to. [ W.\ 1796 VIEW (a) of the gold coin and coinage of England from Henry the Third to the present time, with copper plates. [By Thomas Snelling.] Fol. Pp. iv. 36. [W.] London, 1763 VIEW (a) of the heresy of Aerius ; consisting of the following articles. . . . [By Rev. John Glas.] 8vo. Pp. 59. [Glas’ Works, 1782.] Edinburgh, 1745 VIEW (a) of the internal evidence of the Christian religion. [By Soame Jenyns.] 8vo. \D.N.B. vol. 29, p. 333.] London, 1776 VIEW (a) of the internal policy of Great Britain. [By Robert Wallace, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. xxiii. 288. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1764 VIEW (a) of the Iewish religion ; containing the manner of life, rites, ceremonies and customes of the Iewish nation throughout the world at this present time : together with the articles of their faith, as now received. Faithfully collected by A. R. [Alexander Ross]. 8vo. Pp. 427. [Lowndes’ Brit. Lib. p. 1253.] London, 1656 VIEW (a) of the Lancashire dialect, by way of dialogue ; to which is added, a glossary of all the Lancashire words and phrases therein used. By T. Bobbin, Opp’n Speyker o’ th’ Dialect 'John Collier, of Milnrow]. i2mo. Wi] Manchester [1746] VIEW (a) of the life of King David ; wherein are observations on divers historical passages therein recited. [By W. Skilton, horologist, i.e. Peter Annett?] 8vo. Pp. 38. \JBrit. Musi London [1768’ VIEW (a) of the naval force of Great Britain ; in which its present state, growth, and conversion of timber: construction of ships, docks and harbours ; regulations of officers and men in each department, are considered and compared with other European powers. . . . By an officer of rank [Sir John Borlase Warren]. 8vo. Pp. 203, 74. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.j Mon. Rev. vi. 221.] London, 1791 VIEW (a) of the necessitarian or best scheme ; freed from the objections of M. Crousaz, in his examination of Mr Pope’s Essay on Man. [By William Dudgeon.] 8vo. Pp. 25. London, 1739 VIEW (a) of the new directorie, and a vindication of the ancient liturgie of the Church of England ; in answer to the reasons pretended in the ordinance and preface, for the abolishing the one, and establishing the other. [By Henry Hammond, D.D.] The third edition. 4to. Pp. 120. Oxford, 1646 Wrongly assigned to Henry Jeanes. First edition, 1645. An edition, said to be the third, with some variations was printed at Oxford, by the same printer [Henry Hall], in the same year, with a different pagination. VIEW (a) of the political state of Scotland at Michaelmas 1811 ; comprehending the rolls of the freeholders, an abstract of the setts or constitutions of the royal burghs, and a state of the votes at the last elections throughout Scotland : to which is prefixed an account of the forms of procedure at elections to parliament from the counties and burghs of Scotland. [By James Bridges, W.S.] 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] Edinburgh, 1812 VIEW (a) of the political state of Scotland at the late general election; containing, an introductory treatise on the election laws, lists of the peers, and the procedure at their late election, with the effect of their protests, the rolls of the freeholders of Scotland, an abstract of the sets of the Royal boroughs, and the names of their delegates, &c. &c. . . . [By Alexander Mackenzie.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1790 VIEW (a) of the present state and future prospects of the free trade and colonization of India. [By John Crawfurd.] 8vo. [M‘Culloch’s Lit. of Pol. Econ. p. no.] London, 1829 VIEW of the present state of affairs in the kingdom of Ireland ; in three discourses, viz. I. A list of the absentees of Ireland. [By Thomas Prior.] . . . 8vo. [Bril. Musi] London, 1730 VIEW (a) of the present state of Ireland ; with an account of the origin ... of the disturbances in that country. . . . By an Observer [Denis O’Bryen]. 8vo. London, 1797 VIEW (a) of the present state of the Dutch settlements in the East Indies. By a person long resident in India 'Philippe Firmin, M.D.]. 8vo. Christie-Miller Cat.] 1780 VIEW (a) of the principal courts of the Isle of Man. [By James Clarke.] 8vo. Liverpool, 1817 VIEW (a) of the real danger of the Protestant succession. [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 46. London, 1714 VIEW of the real power of the Pope, and of the power of the priesthood over the laity ; with an account how they use it. [By Thomas Hawkins.] 8vo. Pp. 520. [Leslie’s Cat. 1841.] London,1733 Ascribed also to T. Hart, T. Haddon and T. Hutchinson. VIEW (a) of the reign of Henry the III. ; shewing the danger of the subjects’ arrogancy, the methods of great men’s rise and fallings, the wrong the King and his subjects suffer from evil counsellors. . . . [BySir Robert Cotton.] 4to. [Arber’s Term Cat. i. 543.] London, 1682 See also “A short view of the reign of King Henry III. . . .” VIEW (a) of the relative situation of Great Britain and the United States of America. By a merchant [Henry M. Bird]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Diet '. London,1794 VIEW (a) of the relative situations of Mr Pitt and Mr Addington, previous to, and on the night of, Mr Patten’s motion. By a member of parliament [Robert Plumer Ward]. Second edition. 8vo. [Pellew’s Life of Sid- mouthy ii. 146 ; Mon. Rev. xliii. 328.] London, 1804 VIEW (a) of the rise, progress, and present state of the tea-trade in Europe. [By Robert Wissett.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1801] VIEW of the Romish hydra and monster, traison against the Lord’s Anointed ; condemned by David, 1 Sam. 26, and nowe confuted in seven sermons, to perswade obedience to princes, concord among ourselves, and a general reformation and repentance in all states. [By Laurence Humphrey.] i2mo. B.L. [Wood’s Athen. Oxon.] Oxford, 1588 VIEW (a) of the Scots rebellion ; with some inquiry into what we have to fear, from the rebels ? and what is the properest method to take with them ? [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 40. [Lee’s Defoe, 171.] London, 1715 VIEW (a) of the Scripture revelations concerning a future state ; laid before his parishioners by a country pastor [Richard Whately]. i2mo. Pp. 322. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bill.] London, 1829 VIEW (a) of the several schemes with respect to America, and their comparative merit in promoting the interest and dignity of Great Britain. [By Capel Lofft.] 8vo. Pp. 55. [Rich’s Bibl. Amer. i. 468.] 1776 VIEW (a) of the silver coin and coinage of England, from the Norman Conquest to the present time ; considered with regard to type, legend, sorts, rarity, weight,finenessandvalue. [ByThomas Snelling.] 4to. [IV. ; Brit. Musk] London, 1762 VIEW (a) of the soul, in several tracts. The first, being a discourse of the nature and faculties, the effects and operations, the immortality and happiness of the soul of man. The second, a cordial against sorrow, or a treatise against immoderate care for a man’s own posterity, and grief for the loss of children. The third consists of several epistles to the Reverend John Tillotson, D. D. and Dean of Canterbury, tending to the further illustration of the former arguments concerning the soul of man, and the proof of a particular providence over it. By a person of quality [R. Saunders]. Fol. [Lowndes’ Brit. Lib. p. 804.] London, 1682 VIEW (a) of the stage. By-Wilkes [Samuel Derrick]. 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 14, p. 399.] London, 1759 VIEW (a) of the state of religion in the diocese of St David’s about the beginning of the eighteenth century; with some account of the causes of its decay, together with considerations of the reasonableness of augmenting the revenues of impropriate Churches. By E. S. [Erasmus Saunders] D.D. 8vo. Pp. 128. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bill.] London, 1721 VIEW (a) of the times, their principles and practices, in the Rehearsals. By Philalethes [Charles Leslie]. Fol. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] 1708-9 Second edition in 6 vols. i2mo. London, 1750. VIEW (a) of the Treaty of Commerce with France, signed at Versailles, Sept. 20 [rather, 26] 1786, by Mr Eden. [By Dennis O’Bryen]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 127. [Brit. Musk] London, 1787 VIEW of the Valley of the Mississippi. By R. B. [Robert Baird]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Philadelphia, 1834 VIEW (a) of the whole controversy between the Representer and the Answerer, with an answer to the Representer’s last reply ; in which are laid open some of the methods by which Protestants are misrepresented by Papists. [By William Clagett, D.D., preacher to Gray’s Inn.] 4to. Pp. 123. [Bodlk] London, 1687 VIEWS and interviews on journalism. By Carlfried [Charles F. Wingate]. 8vo. New York, 1875 VIEWS and opinions. By Matthew Browne [William Brighty Rands]. 8vo. Pp. xviii. 294. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1866 VIEWS and reviews in American literature, history, and fiction. By the author of The Yemassee, etc. [William Gilmore Simms]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1845 VIEWS in London. By an amateur [Hon. Elizabeth Susan Abbot, afterwards Baroness Colchester]. Sketched from a window in the Palais de la Verite : and extracts from an album. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Chiswick, 1833 VIEWS in Orkney, and on the North- Eastern Coast of Scotland, taken in 1805 and etched in 1807. [By Elizabeth Leveson Gower, Duchess of Sutherland.] Fol. Pp. 27. [Martin’s Cat.] [1807?] VIEWS of Canada and the colonists, embracing the experience of a residence ; views of the present state, progress and prospects of the colony ; with detailed and practical information for intending emigrants. By a four years’ resident [James Bryce Brown]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Edinburgh, 1844 VIEWS (the) of Christopher. [By Elkin Mathews.] 8vo. London, 1904 VIEWS of Inverness and district. [By Alexander I. M‘Connochie.] 8vo. Aberdeen, 1906 VIEWS of ports and harbours, watering places, fishing villages, and other picturesque objects on the English coast. Engraved by W. and E. Finden. [With a descriptive letterpress by W. A. C. i.e. William Andrew Chatto.] 4to. [Universal Cat. of Books on art, i. 275.] London, 1838 VIEWS of society and manners in America ; in a series of letters from that country to a friend in England, during the years 1818, 1819, and 1820. Byan Englishwoman [Frances Wright], 8vo. Pp. x. 523. [Rich’s Bibl. Amer. ii. 130.] London, 1821 VIEWS of the American press on the Philippines ; edited by T. Bruce [Thomas Bruce Esty]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1899 VIEWS of the Holy Trinity, doctrinal and experimental. [By Mrs- Fludd, of Charleston, South Carolina.] i2mo. Pp. 197. Charleston, 1853 VIEWS of the seats of noblemen and gentlemen in England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland; from drawings by J. P. Neale. [With letterpress descriptions by Thomas Moule.] 6 vols. [ Wk] London, 1818-23 Second Series. 5 vols. London, 1824-9. VIEWS on slavery. By an American [Edward Habich]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1855 VIGIL (the) of Venus, and other poems. By “ Q ” [Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 137. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1912 VIGILEMUS et oremus. By E. W. B. [Rev. Edward Waller Barker]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1876 VIGILIUS, or the awakener, making a brief essay to rebuke first the natural sleep . . . and then the moral sleep. . . . [By Cotton Mather, D.D.] 8vo. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. vol. 1, p. 276.] Boston, 1719 VIGNETTE stories. By “Rita” [Eliza M. J. Gollan, later Mrs Von Booth, then Mrs W. Desmond Humphreys]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1896 VIGOR ; a novel. By Walter Barrett, clerk [Joseph A. Scoville]. i2mo. [Sabin’s Diet.] New York, 1864 VIKING (the). By M. R. [Margaret Richmond Cartmell]. 8vo. London,1879 VILLA (the) of the peacock, and other stories. By Richard Dehan [Clotilde Graves]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1921 VILLA Rubein ; a novel. By John Sinjohn [John Galsworthy]. 8vo. Pp. 262. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1900 VILLAGE belles; a tale of English country life. By the author of Mary Powell [Anne Manning, later Mrs Rathbone]. New edition, revised. 8vo. Pp. iv. 348. London, i860 VILLAGE (the) blacksmith. [A novel.] By Darley Dale [Francesca M. Steele]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1892 VILLAGE (the) carol singers; a musical juvenile drama, in two acts. . . . [Signed H. F. i.e. Henry Formby.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1852 VILLAGE (the) Church. [A poem.] By the author of The phylactery [Rev. Arthur Bononi Evans, D.D.]. 8vo. London, 1843 VILLAGE (a) commune. By “ Ouida ” [Louise De La Ramee]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1881 VILLAGE (a) contest. By Marian Thorne [Miss Ida T. Thurston]. 8vo. [A mer. Cat.] Boston, 1899 VILLAGE conversations ; or, the vicar’s fire-side. [By Sarah Renou.] Dedicated to Mrs Hannah More. i2mo. Pp. xvii. 227. London, 1815 Dedication is signed : S. R. VILLAGE (the) convict. By C. H. White [Heman W. Chaplin]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1884 VILLAGE (the) curate ; a poem. [By James Hurdis, D.D.] 8vo. [Courtney’s Secrets, p. 119.] Bishopstone, 1797 Printed at the author’s private press. VILLAGE (a) drama. By V. Schallen- berger [Mrs Vesta S. Simmons]. 8vo. Pp. 199. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1896 VILLAGE (the) lesson book ; for the use of schools. By Martin Doyle, author of Hints to small farmers, etc. [Rev. William Hickey]. i2mo. Pp. 116. London, 1855 VILLAGE (the) life ; a poem. [By J. H. Stoddart, LL.D.] 8vo. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. vi. col. 627.] Glasgow, 1879 VILLAGE memoirs; in a series of letters between a clergyman and his family in the country, and his son in town. [By Joseph Cradock.] i2mo. [Cradock’s Mem. i. xix. ; Mon. Rev. lii. 139.] London, 1775 VILLAGE missionaries ; or, every one to his work. [By Miss Emily Steele Elliot.] 8vo. London, 1866-72 VILLAGE (the) nurse. By the author of Margaret Whyte [Mrs Lucy L. Cameron]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1824 VILLAGE (the) on the cliff. By the author of The story of Elizabeth [Anne Isabella Thackeray, later Mrs R. Ritchie]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1867 VILLAGE (the) pastor. By one of the authors of Body and soul [George Wilkins, D.D.]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1825 VILLAGE (the) pastor. By the author of The retrospect, Ocean, etc., formerly a Lieutenant in the Royal Navy, and now a minister in the Established Church [Richard Marks]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1827 VILLAGE (the) patriarch; a poem [with notes and an appendix. By Ebenezer Elliott]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1829 VILLAGE politics, addressed to all mechanics, journeymen, and day- labourers in Great Britain. By Will Chip, a country carpenter [Hannah More]. Fifth edition. i2mo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, ii. 235.] Bath, 1793 VILLAGE (the) poorhouse. By a country curate [Rev. James White]. i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 61, p. 51.] London, 1832 VILLAGE reminiscences. By an old maid [Mrs Monkland]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1834 VILLAGE scenes; a poem: in two parts. [By James Cargill Guthrie.] i2mo. Edinburgh and London, 1850 VILLAGE (the) school ; a collection of entertaining histories for . . . children. [Preface signed : M. P. i.e. Dorothy Kilner.] New edition. i2mo. Pp. 88. [Brit. Mus.] 1828 VILLAGE (the) school; a poem. By Moralisto, poet “lariat” of Carthage [J. M. Dill]. 8vo. [Lib. Jour 11. vi. 16.] Cincinnati, 1885 VILLAGE sermons. By a country clergyman [Edward Berens, Archdeacon of Berks]. i2mo. Pp. viii. 202. Oxford, 1820 VILLAGE sermons. By a Northamptonshire rector [Granville Hamilton Forbes]. With a preface on the inspiration of Holy Scripture. 8vo. Pp. xliv. 321. London and Cambridge, 1863 VILLAGE sketches; or, hints to pedestrians : reprinted from the Doncaster Gazette, 1849-50. [By C. W. Hatfield.] i2mo. Pp. 350. [Boyne’s Yorkshire Lib. p. 108.] Doncaster, N.D. VILLAGE society; a sketch. [By John Coakley Lettsom, M.D.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1800 VILLAGE tales. By Oliver Oakwood [Stacy Gardner Potts]. 8vo. Trenton, 1827 VILLAGE verses. By Guy Roslyn [Joseph Hatton]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ i2mo. London, 1876 VILLAGE virtues; a dramatic satire: in two parts. [By Matthew Gregory Lewis.] 4to. Pp. 45. [Ah. and Q. 8th June 1861, p. 458.] London, 1796 VILLAGE (the) watch-tower. [A tale.] By Kate Douglas Wiggin [Mrs George C. Riggs]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.\ London,1895 VILLAGE (the) wedding; or, the faithful country maid: a pastoral entertainment of music, as it is performed at the Theatre-Royal at Richmond. [By James Dance.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.j Mon. Rev. xxxvii. 152.] 1767 VILLAGERS (the). By Billy Burgundy [Oliver V. Limerick]. i2mo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1904 VILLAINY (the) of stock-jobbers detected, and the causes of the late run upon the bank and bankers discovered and considered. [By Daniel Defoe.] 4to. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe, 19.] London, 1701 VILLANIES discouered by lanthorne and candle-light, and the helpe of a new cryer called O per se O; being an addition to the belman’s second night- walke, and a laying open to the world of those abuses, which the bel-man (because he went i’ the darke) could not see, with canting songs neuer before printed. [By Thomas Dekker.] 4to. No pagination. B. L. London, 1616 VILLETTE. By Currer Bell, author of Jane Eyre, etc. [Charlotte Bronte]. 8vo. 3 vols* London, 1853 VINCENT Trill, of the detective service. By Dick Donovan [Joyce E. P. Mud- dock]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London,1899 VINCIGLIATA and Maiano. By Leader Scott [Mrs Lucy E. Baxter, ne'e Barnes]. 4to. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] Florence, 1891 VINDICATION (a) and defence of Mr George Meldrum’s Sermon, preached May 16, 1703, against the reflections and censure of [John Sage] the author of the Examination of some things in the sermon, and [George Brown] the author of Toleration defended. [By George Meldrum, minister at Edinburgh.] 4to. Pp. 30. Edinburgh, 1703 VINDICATION (a) of a book, intituled, A brief account of many of the prosecutions of the people call’d Quakers, &c. ; lately presented to the members of both Houses of Parliament: shewing the fallacy and injustice of the calculations and remarks in a late book call’d An examination, &c. ... To which are added, remarks on the poor vicar’s Plea. With Bishop Burnet’s description of the ecclesiastical courts. [By Joseph Besse.] 8vo. Pp. 138. [Smith’s Cat. of Frietids’ Books, i. 254.] London, 1737 Six other parts followed, dated 1739- 1742. See Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books. VINDICATION (a) of a discourse concerning the unreasonableness of a new separation, on account of the oaths [by Edward Stillingfleet], from the exceptions made against it in a tract called, A brief answer to a late discourse, &c. [By John Williams, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 40. London, 1691 Ascribed by some to Stillingfleet. VINDICATION (a) of a discourse entitled the Principles of the Cyprianic age, with regard to episcopal power and jurisdiction; being a reply to Gilbert Rule’s Cyprianic bishop examin’d and found not to be diocesan. . . . [By Bishop John Sage.] 4to. [D.N. B. vol. 50, p. 115.] London, 1701 VINDICATION (the) of a late pamphlet (entituled, Obedience and submission to the present government, demonstrated from Bp. Overal’s Convocation-book) from the false glosses, and illusive interpretations of a pretended answer [by Thomas Wagstaffe]. By the author of the first pamphlet [Zachary Taylor, M.A.]. 4to. Pp. 36. [Cat. Loud. hist. ii. 34.J London, 1691 VINDICATION (a) of a late pamphlet, intituled, The case of the Hanover troops considered; with some further observations upon those troops: being a sequel to the said pamphlet. [By Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield, and Edmund Waller.] 8vo. Pp. 60. [D. N. B. vol. 54, p. 28.] London, 1743 VINDICATION (a) of a printed letter addressed to the Calvinistic Baptists of the Western Association on the subject of doxologies. . . . [By Job David.] 8vo. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. vol. ii.] Trowbridge, 1789 VINDICATION (a) of an Essay concerning critical and curious learning ; in which are contained some short reflections on the controversie betwixt Sir William Temple and Mr Wotton, and that betwixt Dr Bentley and Mr Boyl. In answer to an Oxford pamphlet. By the author of that essay [Thomas Rymer]. 8vo. Pp. 49. [Bartholomew’s Bibl. of Dr Bentley, p. 30.] London, 1698 VINDICATION (a) of an undertaking of certain gentlemen, in order to the suppressing of debauchery, and profaneness. [By Edward Fowler, D.D., Bishop of Gloucester.] 4to. Pp. 16. \BodL] London, 1692 VINDICATION (a) of Bishop Colenso. By the author of The eclipse of faith [Henry Rogers]. 8vo. Pp. 105. [Brit. Mus.\ Edinburgh, 1863 Signed : Vindex. VINDICATION (a) of Bishop Taylor, from the injurious misrepresentation of him by the author of the Letter to the clergy of the Church of England in the county of Northumberland; with a few remarks upon some other passages in that letter. [By Thomas Sharp, D.D., Archdeacon of Northumberland.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [Smith’s Bibl. Anti- Quak. pp. 39, 392.] 1733 VINDICATION (a) of commerce and the arts ; proving that they are the source of the greatness ... of a state: being an examination of Mr [-] Bell’s Dissertation upon populousness. . . . [By William Temple of Trowbridge.] 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1758 VINDICATION (a) of Demosthenes from the charge of corruption: in a letter to a friend. [By William Mel- moth, junr.] 8vo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, i. 348.] London [1770] VINDICATION (a) of Dr [Henry] Hammonds Addresse . . . from the exceptions of Eutactus Philodemius, in two particulars; concerning the power supposed in the Jew over his owne freedome, [and] the no-power over a mans own life. . . . [By Henry Hammond himself.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1649 This evoked “An answer to the Vindication of Dr Hamond against the exceptions of Eutactus Philodemius. . . .” VINDICATION (a) of Dr Sherlock Dean of St Paul’s, in answer to Mr Nathaniel Taylor’s late treatise, entituled, Dr Sherlock’s Case of Church communion, and his letter to Anonymous, consider’d, &c. ; together with a reply to his vindication of the dissenters from the charge of schism. [By Benjamin Hoadley, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 72. London,1702 VINDICATION (a) of Doctor Tail [Traill], from the charge of heresy ; being a defence of a sermon entitled, The happiness of dead clergymen, &c. By the Reverend Doctor Tail [William Thom, minister at Govan]. 8vo. Glasgow, 1770 VINDICATION (the) of Dr Troy refuted. By S. N. [Thomas Elrington, D.D., Bishop of Ferns]. 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 17, p. 333.] Dublin, 1804 VINDICATION of Edmund Burke’s Reflections on the Revolution in France, in answer to all his opponents. [By Edmund Burke.] 8vo. Pp. 147. London, 1791 VINDICATION (a) of Exeter School, by its master, J. L. [John Lempriere, D.D.]. 8vo. [Davidson’s Bibl. Devon. p. 29.] Exeter, 1818 VINDICATION (a) of free grace, in opposition to an Arminian position of Mr J. Goodwin. ... By S. L. [Samuel Lane]. 4to. Pp. 72. [Copinger’s Bibl. on Predestination.] London, 1645 VINDICATION (a) of Freemasonry from charges in the Edinburgh News. By several Freemasons [chiefly William Hunter]. i2mo. Edinburgh [1858] VINDICATION (a) of Friends. . . . By an Irish lady [Mrs J. R. Greer]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud.\ Philadelphia, 1852 VINDICATION (a) of General Richard Smith, Chairman of the select Committee of the House of Commons, as to his competency to preside over . . . an investigation into the best mode of providing the investment for the East India Company’s . . . ships. . . . [By Captain Joseph Price.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1783 VIN DI CAT IO N (a) of God’s sovereignty, the doctrines of election, reprobation, and original sin ; from a late pamphlet intituled, Free and impartial thoughts on the sovereignty of God, &c. By W. B. [Richard Finch]. 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 610.] London,1745 Afterwards formed part of a volume entitled “Tracts,—By Richard Finch.” VINDICATION (a) of his Excellency the Lord C-1 from the charge of favouring none but Tories, high-churchmen and Jacobites. By the Reverend DrS-1 [Jonathan Swift, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 27. London, 1730 VINDICATION (a) of His Majesties government and judicatures, in Scotland ; from some aspersions thrown on them by scandalous pamphlets, and news-books : and especially, with relation to the late Earl of Argyle’s process. [By Sir George Mackenzie.] 4to. Pp. 29. Printed at Edinburgh : re-printed at London,1683 VINDICATION (a) of His Majesty [King Charles I.] and the Army from a paper by M. Reymes, as also the grounds of the Armies guarding His Majesties person. [By George Joyce.] 4to. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, ii. 526.] London, 1647 VINDICATION of informers of the breaches of the laws against prophane- ness and immorality; asserting and proving the lawfulness and necessity of informing : shewing that all sober Christians, and good neighbours, are called in duty to joyn therein. . . . [By Francis Grant, Lord Cullen.] 4to. Edinburgh, 1701 VINDICATION (a) of Isaac Bickerstaff Esq. ; against what is objected to him by Mr Partridge, in his Almanack for the present year 1709. By the said Isaac Bickerstaff Esq. [Jonathan Swift, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 8. London, 1709 VINDICATION (a) of King Charles the Martyr, proving that His Majesty was the author of EIKDN BA2IAIKH ; against a memorandum, said to be written by the Earl of Anglesey : and against the exceptions of Dr Walker, and others. [By Thomas Wagstaffe, A.M.] 8vo. Pp. 46. [Wood.] London, 1693 A second edition appeared in 1697, with a preface containing a refutation of a passage in Bayle’s Dictionary relating to the controversy ; and a third, in 1711, with large additions, and some original letters of Charles I. VINDICATION (a) of lawful authority ; against some principles lately advanc’d to undermine the same ; or, a confutation of Hobbism in politicks, as it is reviv’d by some modern doctors ; wherein Dr Broughton’s Grand apos- tacy is consider’d; and his notion concerning the divine right of power is set in its true light ; according to the Holy Scriptures, and the testimony of the primitive Church. [By George Smith.] 8vo. Pp. 80. [IV.j Brit. Mus.\ [London] 1718 VINDICATION (the) of liturgies, lately published by Dr Falkner, proved no vindication of the lawfulness, usefulness and antiquity of set-forms of publick ministerial prayer, to be generally used by, or imposed on all ministers ; and consequently an answer to a book, intituled, A reasonable account why some pious nonconformists judge it sinful, for them to perform their ministered acts in by [sic] the prescribed forms of others. ... By the author of the Reasonable account, and supplement to it [John Collinges, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 30, iv. 258, 3. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1681 VINDICATION (a) of mankind, or freewill asserted in answer to a philosophical inquiry concerning human liberty [by Anthony Collins] ; to which is added an Examination of Mr Lock’s scheme of freedom. [By S. Lowe ?] 8vo. [IV.j Brit. Mus.] London, 1717 VINDICATION (a) of marriage, as solemnized by Presbyterians, in the North of Ireland. ... By a minister of the Gospel [John Macbride]. 4to. Pp. 71. [D.N.B. vol. 34, p. 427.] 1702 VINDICATION (a) of Mr Foster’s Account of the late Earl of Kilmarnock. [By Richard Finch.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1746 VINDICATION (a) of Mr George Buchanan, in two parts. Part I. Vindicating him from the vile aspersion cast on him by Camden, that he repented, when dying, of what he wrote against Mary Queen of Scots. . . . Part II. Vindicating him from the horrible ingratitude he is charged with to Q. Mary, in extolling her so high in his dedication of his paraphrase of the Psalms, and there after writing so bitterly against her in the Detection and History. . . . [By John Love.] 8vo. [Chalmers’ Life of Ruddiman, p. 224.] Edinburgh, 1749 VINDICATION (a)ofMr James Colmar, Bachelor of physick and Fellow of Exeter College in Oxford ; from the calumnies of three late pamphlets. 1. A paper publish’d by Dr Bury, 1659. 2. The account examin’d. 3. The case of Exeter College related and vindicated. . . . [By Tames Harrington.] 4to. Pp. 4, 43. [D.N.B. vol. 24, p. 436.] London, 1691 VINDICATION (a) of Mr [William] Nation’s sermon ; in a letter to Mr P. C. [By Micaiah Towgood.] To which is annex’d a letter from Mr Nation to the author, in vindication of himself with respect to his orthodoxy. . . . 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1732 VINDICATION (a) of Mr Pope’s Essay on man, from the misrepresentations of Mr de Crousaz, professor of philosophy and mathematicks in the university of Lausanne. By the author of The divine legation of Moses de?nonstratedj in six letters. [By William Warburton, D.D.] i2mo. Pp. 118. London, 1740 There is added A seventh letter, which finishes the Vindication, with a separate title-page, and having the author’s name. VINDICATION (a) of Mr Robert Keith, and of his young grand nephew Alexander Keith, from the unfriendly representations of Mr Alexander Keith junior of Ravelstone, one of the underclerks in the Court of Session. [By William Douglas.] 8vo. Pp. 22. ' n.p. [1750] “A few copies of this tract were printed for private circulation, in the year 1750, by Bishop Keith, author of the History of the affairs of Church and State in Scotland.” —MS. note by Dr David Laing. VINDICATION (a) of my Lord Bishop of Worcester’s [George Morley’s] letter touching Mr Baxter from the animadversions of D. E. [Edward Bagshaw]. [By Sir Henry Yelverton.] 4to. Pp. 14. \Bodli\ London, 1662 VINDICATION (a) of my Lord Shaftesbury on the subject of ridicule, being remarks upon [John Brown’s] “Essays on the characteristics.” [By Charles Bulkley.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.; Mon. Rev. v. 285 ; vii. 41.] London, 1751 VINDICATION (a) of natural society; or, a view of the miseries and evils arising to mankind from every species of artificial society ; in a letter to Lord * * * *. By a late noble writer [Edmund Burke, imitating the style of Lord Bolingbroke]. 8vo. Pp. 106. [Bodl.] London, 1756 VINDICATION (a) of oaths and swearing in weighty cases, as lawful and useful under the Gospel. By J. C. [John Cheyney], and approved by Mr Richard Baxter. The second edition. 4to. Pp. 38. [D. N. B. vol. 10, p. 224.] London, 1680 VINDICATION (a) of Plain-dealing, from the base and malicious aspersions of two country curates, contained in a little scurrilous pamphlet, entitled, Plain-dealing proved to be plain-lying. By Rev. Charles Owen, D.D.] 8vo. W.; Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1716 VINDICATION (a) of Presbyterian ordination; from Scripture and antiquity, the judgment of the Reformed Churches, andparticularly of the Church of England: with a brief reflection upon the arguments offered by Mr Cautrell of Derby against it. [By Rev. John Hartley, of Ashby-de-la- Zouch.] 8vo. Pp. 72. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] Nottingham, 1714 This was followed by “A defence of the Vindication ” : see above. VINDICATION (a) of Protestant charity, in answer to some passages in Mr E[dward] M[eredith]’s Remarks on a late conference. [By James Harrington.] 4to. [Jones’ Peck, i. 140.] Oxford, 1688 The above is printed with “ Some reflexions upon a treatise called Pietas Romana et Parisiensis, &c.,” q.v. VINDICATION (a) of Protestant principles. By Phileleutherus Anglicanus [John William Donaldson, D.D., headmaster of King Edward’s School, Bury St Edmunds]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1847 VINDICATION (a) of Psalme 105, 15 (Touch not mine Anointed, and doe my Prophets no harme) from some false glosses lately obtruded on it by Royalists, proving that this divine inhibition was given to Kings, not Subjects ; to restraine them from injuring . . . Gods servants. . . . [By William Prynne.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. Afus.\ [London] 1642 VINDICATION (a) of Robert Barclay’s Apology for the principles of the people call’d Quakers, against the attempts of William Notcutt in a late pamphlet, entituled, “An impartial review of Robert Barclay’s pretended ‘Apology.’ ” In a letter to a friend at Ipswich, by H. B. [Henton Brown]. 8vo. Pp. 120. [Smith’s Anti-Quak. p. 342.] London,1732 VINDICATION (a) of St Gregorie his dialogues ; in which the great St Gregory is proved the author of that work. [By James Mumford, S.J.] 4to. Pp. 20. [De Backer.] London, 1660 VINDICATION of St Ignatius of Loyola from fanaticism. [By William Darrell, or Darell, S.J.] 4to. [Oliver’s Collections; Sommervogel’s Diction- naire.] London, 1688 VINDICATION (a) of scriptural Uni- tarianism, and some other primitive Christian doctrines, in reply to Vindex’s Examination of an appeal to the Society of Friends. By Verax [Thomas Foster]. 8vo. Pp. 324. [Mon. Rev. lxiii. 442.] London, 1810 VINDICATION (a) of Sir Robert King’s designs and actions in relation to the late and present Lord Kingston. [By Tobias Pullen, D.D., bishop of Dro- more.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 47, p. 22.] [Dublin] 1699 VINDICATION (a) of Sir William Lewis [Governor of Portsmouth] from one part of his particular charge by an undeniable evidence of ancient date. [By Wm. Prynne.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] 1647 VINDICATION (a) of some among our selves against the false principles of Dr Sherlock ; in a letter to the Doctor, occasioned by the sermon which he preached at the Temple-Church, on the 29th of May, 1692 : in which letter are also contained reflexions on some other of the Doctor’s sermons, published since he took the oath. [By George Hickes, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 51. [D. N. B. vol. 26, p. 354.] London, 1692 VINDICATION (a) of some passages in a Discourse concerning communion with God, from the exceptions of William Sherlock, rector of St George Buttolph-Lane. By the author of the said Discourse [John Owen, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 237. [Bodli] London, 1674 VOL. VI. VINDICATION (a) of some truths contained in the Scriptures, by the exercise of reason only. [By Joseph Lancaster.] i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 78.] London, 1801 VINDICATION (a) of Strictures on the origin of moral evil. . . . [By William Parry.] 8vo. [Brit. Mas.] London, 1808 VINDICATION (a) of that prudent . . . Knight Sir Henry Vane from the lies and calumnies of Mr Richard Baxter. By a true friend and servant of the Commonwealth of England [Henry Stubbe]. 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 58, p. 129.] London, 1659 VINDICATION (a) of the account of the double doctrine of the ancients ; in answer to a Critical enquiry into the practices of the antient philosophers. [By Arthur Ashley Sykes, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 38. [Disney’s Memoir of Sykes, p. xxii.] London, 1747 VINDICATION of the Address made by the Episcopal clergy to the General Assembly of the Presbyterians anno M.DC.XC.il., from the sinistruous and false constructions put upon it by the enemies of that order; but more especially of that particular address, given in by Mr Robert Irving minister of Towie, and Mr John Forbes minister of Kincardine; in name of, and by commission from, their brethren, the ministers of the synod of Aberdeen : they being expressly reflected upon, and named by [James Hadow] the author of the Remarks upon the case of the Episcopal clergy. [By Robert Irving.] 4to. Pp. 40. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] 1704 VINDICATION (a) of the Address to the inhabitants of the British Settlements, on the slavery of the negroes in America. By a Pennsylvanian [Benjamin Rush]. 8vo. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. vol. 4, p. 391.] Philadelphia, 1773 VINDICATION (a) of the Answer to some late papers concerning the unity and authority of the Catholick Church, and the reformation of the Church of England. [By Edward Stillingfleet, D.D.] 4to. [Jones’ Peck, i. 16.] London, 1687 VINDICATION (a) of the Answer to the Humble remonstrance, from the uniust imputations of frivolousnesse and falsehood ; wherein the cause of liturgy and episcopacy is further debated, by the same Smectymnuus [Stephen Marshall, Edmund Calamy, Thomas Young, Matthew Newcomen and William Spurstowe]. 4to. 1641 M VINDICATION (a) of the Answer to the Popish address presented to the ministers of the Church of England ; in reply to a pamphlet abusively intituled, A clear proof of the certainty and usefulness of the Protestant rule of faith, etc. [By John Williams, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 41. [Jones’ Peck, ii. 316.] London,1688 VINDICATION (a) of the Apamean medal ; and of the inscription NftE ; together with an illustration of another coin struck at the same place, in honour of the Emperor Severus. By the author of the Analysis of ancient mythology [Jacob Bryant]. 4to. [Wi] London, 1775 VINDICATION (a) of the Apostles from a very false imputation laid on them in several English pamphlets, viz., that they refused constant, and held only occasional communion with one another, and with one another’s Churches. [By Rev. William Wall, vicar of Shoreham, in Kent.] 4to. London, 1705 VINDICATION (a) of the authenticity of the narratives contained in the first two chapters of the Gospels of St Matthew & St Luke ; being an investigation of objections urged by the Unitarian editors of the improved version of the New Testament: with an appendix, containing strictures on the variations between the first and fourth editions of that work. By a layman [John Be van]. 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends1 Books, i. 91.] London, 1822 VINDICATION (a) of the authority of Christian princes over ecclesiastical synods from the exceptions made against it by Mr [Samuel] Hill. [By Dr John Turner.] 8vo. London, 1701 Attributed also to Archbishop Wake. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] VINDICATION (a) of the Bishop of Condom’s Exposition of the doctrine of the Catholic Church ; in answer to a book [by W. Wake] entituled, An exposition of the doctrine of the Church of England, etc. : with a letter from the said Bishop. [By Henry Joseph Johnston, O.S.B.] 4to. Pp. 122. [Jones’i. 113.] London, 1686 VINDICATION (a) of the Bishop of Durham [Thomas Morton, D.D.] from the vile and scandalous calumnies of a libell intituled the Downfall of hierarcbie. . . . [By Thomas Morton himself.] 4to. London, 1641 VINDICATION (a) of the Bishop of LandafiPs sermon. By a son of truth and decency [Rev. Charles Inglis]. 8vo. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. vol. 4, p. 136.' New York, 1768 VINDICATION (a) of [Gilbert Burnet] the Bishop of Salisbury and Passive Obedience ; with some remarks upon a speech which goes under his Lordship’s name ; and a Postscript, in answer to a book, just publish’d, en- titul’d, Some considerations humbly offer’d to the Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of Salisbury [by Edmund Curll]. . . . [By Gilbert Burnet, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 16. N.P. 1710 VINDICATION, (a) of the Brief discourse concerning the Notes of the Church ; in answer to a late pamphlet, entituled, The use and great moment of the Notes of the Church, as delivered by Cardinal Bellarmin, De Notis Ecclesiae. justified. [By William Sherlock.] 4to. [Jones’ Peck.] London, 1687 VINDICATION (a) of the British colonies, against the aspersions of the Halifax gentleman, in his letter to a Rhode-Island friend. [By James Otis.] 8vo. Pp. 32. Boston, 1765 Reprinted with author’s name, 1769. VINDICATION of the calendar tables and rules annexed to the Act for regulating the commencement of the year, and correcting the calendar, against the objections made to it, with respect to the time appointed for the celebration of Easter-day ; to which is added a more full account of that Act: written whilst it was depending in the House of Commons. [By Peter Daval.] 4to. [Nichol’s Lit. Anec. ii. 372 ; Mon. Rev. xxiv. 468.] 1761 VINDICATION of the captors of Major Andre. [Signed “Curator,”/.!?. Egbert Benson.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1817 VINDICATION (a) of the Case of indifferent things, used in the worship of God; in answer to a book, intituled, The case of indifferent things used in the worship of God, examined, stated on the behalf of the dissenters, and calmly argued. [By John Williams, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 57. [Brit. Musi] London, 1684 VINDICATION of the Case of the Hanover forces in the pay of Great Britain . . . with some further observations. [By Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield, and E. Waller.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1743 VINDICATION (a) of the Character of a Popish successor; in a reply to two pretended answers to it. By the author of the Character [John Phillips]. Fol. Pp. 15. [Bodl.] London, 1681 Attributed also to Elkanah Settle. VINDICATION of the character of the late Right Hon. William Pitt, from the calumnies against him contained in the fifth article of the Edinburgh Review for April, 1810. [By James Walker.] 8vo. [N. and Q. 28th June 1862.] Edinburgh, 1810 VINDICATION (a) of the Christian religion and Reformation, against the attempts of a late letter pretending to show that all religions have a like plea. . . . [By William King, archbishop of Dublin.] ato. \Brit. Musi] N.P. 1688 VINDICATION (a) of the Church and clergy of England, from some late reproaches rudely and unjustly cast upon them. [By White Kennett, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 120. [Bodl.]. London, 1709 VINDICATION (a) of the Church and clergy of England from the misrepresentations of the Edinburgh Review. By a beneficed clergyman [Henry Soames, M.A., Dean of St Paul’s]. 8 vo. [Crockford’s Clerical Directory.] London, 1823 VINDICATION (a) of the Church of England from the aspersions of a late libel, intituled, Priestcraft in perfection, &c.; wherein the controverted clause of the Church’s power in the xxth Article is shewn to be of equal authority with all the rest of the Articles. . . . By a priest of the church of England [Hilkiah Bedford]. 8vo. London, 1710 VINDICATION (a) of the Church of England from the foul aspersions of schism and heresie unjustly cast upon her by the Church of Rome. [By Michael Altham.] 4to. 2 parts. [Jones’ Peck, i. 168.] London, 1687 VINDICATION (a) of the Church of England, in answer to Mr Pierce’s Vindication of the dissenters ; wherein abundance of historical mistakes are rectified ; several groundless calumnies thrown upon the most worthy and deserving prelates of our Church, refuted : and many Fathers of the most primitive ages of Christianity clear’d from misrepresentations. In two parts. By a presbyter of the Church of England [Zachary Grey, LL.D., vicar of St Peter’s and Giles’, Cambridge], 8vo. [.Bodl.] London, 1720 VINDICATION (a) of the Church of Scotland ; being an answer to a paper, intituled, Some questions concerning episcopal and presbyterial government in Scotland: wherein the latter is vindicated from the arguments and calumnies of that author; and the former is made appear to be a stranger in that nation. By a minister of the Church of Scotland, as it is now established by law [Gilbert Rule]. 4to. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1691 VINDICATION (a) of the “ Clanronald of Glengary” against the attacks made upon them in the Inverness Journal and some recent printed performances; with remarks as to the descent of the family who style themselves “ of Clanronald.” [By John Riddell.] 8vo. Pp. 97, xxx. Edinburgh, 1821 VINDICATION (a) of the clergy, from the contempt imposed upon them by [John Eachard] the author of The grounds and occasions of the contempt of the clergy and religion. 8vo. Pp. 135. London, 1686 The attribution to John Bramhall, Bishop of Derry, by Wood seems to be a mistake, as Bramhall died in 1663. VINDICATION (a) of the commands and doctrine of Christ Jesus and of his people in their faithful obedience to him against all swearers and swearing whatsoever. ... By a lover of righteousness and truth . . . W. B. [William Bayly]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.\ [London, 1663] VINDICATION (a) of the conforming clergy from the unjust aspersions of heresie, &c. ; in answer to some part of M. Jenkyn’s funeral sermon upon Dr Seaman : with short reflexions on some passages in a sermon preached by Mr J. s. upon 2 Cor. 5, 20 : in a letter to a friend. [By Robert Grove, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 74. [Bodl.] London, 1676 VINDICATION (a) of the convention lately concluded between Great Britain and Russia, in six letters ; addressed to -[By Charles Jenkinson, Earl of Liverpool.] 8vo. Pp. 124. London, 1801 VINDICATION (a) of the Convocation and the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, in answer to the Englishman’s Defence of the C-s [Commons] : in a letter ... By the editor of Aristides [Dr Patrick Delany], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1714 Signed : Philalethes. VINDICATION (a) of the deprived Bishops, asserting their spiritual rights against a lay-deprivation, against the charge of schism, as managed by the late editors of an anonymous Baroccian MS. In two parts. . . . [By Henry Dodwell, Senior.] 4to. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, ii. 487.] London, 1692 This was followed, in 1695, by a “ Defence of the Vindication ...” See above. VINDICATION (a) of the divine attributes ; in some remarks on his Grace [W. King] the Archbishop of Dublin’s sermon, intituled, Divine predestination and foreknowledg consistent with the freedom of man’s will. [By John Edwards, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 38. London, 1710 VINDICATION (a) of the divine authority and inspiration of the Old and New Testament; in answer to a Treatise [by Jean Le Clerc] lately translated [by John Locke] out of French, entituled, “Five letters concerning the inspiration of the Holy Scriptures.” [By William Lowth, B.D.] The second edition. 8vo. [Arber’s Terni Cat. iii. 148.] London, 1699 VINDICATION (a) of the divine perfections, illustrating the glory of God in them, by reason and revelation; methodically digested into several heads. By a person of honour [James Dalrymple, 1st Viscount of Stair]. 8vo. [I). N. B. vol. 13, p. 415.] London,1695 The preface is signed: W. Bates, J. Howe, the editors. VINDICATION (a) of the doctrine contained in Pope Benedict XII. his Bull, and in the General Councill of Florence, under Eugenius the III. concerning the state of departed souls. In answer to a certain Letter. . . . By S. W. [John Sergeant], a Roman Catholick. i2mo. Pp. 202. [Gillow’s Bibl. Dict.\ Paris, 1659 VINDICATION (a) of the doctrine of grace, from the charge of anti- nomianism ; contained in a letter to a minister of the gospel [Ralph Erskine], [Signed : I. H. i.e. James Hog.] 8vo. Pp. 24. Edinburgh, 1718 VINDICATION (a) of the doctrine of the Catholic Church concerning the Eucharist. [By-Gilbert.] i2mo. London, 1800 VINDICATION (a) of the doctrine of the Divine person and eternal Son- ship of Christ. [By James Waters.] 8vo. London, 1733 VINDICATION (a) of the doctrine of the Trinity from the exceptions of a late pamphlet entituled An essay on spirit &c. By a divine of the Church of England [Thomas Randolph, D.D.]. Part I. 8vo. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] Oxford, 1753 Part II. was also published in 1753, and part III. in 1754- The name of the author is given in the Appendix, which also appeared in 1754* VINDICATION of the drama, the stage, and public morals. [By Joseph Parkes.] 8vo. Birmingham, 1826 VINDICATION (a) of the ecclesiastical part of Sir James Dalrymple’s Historical collections ; in answer to a late pamphlet [by John Gillane], intituled, The life of the Reverend Mr John Sage, &c. : wherein some things are added towards the clearing the ancient government of the Church of Scotland from the mistakes of a late author : together with a defence of what Sir James hath advanced concerning the opinion of the Scottish historians in relation to King Robert the Second’s marriage with Elizabeth Muir, in answer to Mr John Sage his criticism on that subject in his introduction to Hawthornden’s works. [By Sir James Dalrymple, Bart., of Borthwick.] 8vo. Pp. 73. [D. Laing.] Edinburgh, 1714 VINDICATION (a) of “The end of religious controversy” from the exceptions of the RR. Dr Burgess, bishop of St Davids, and the Rev. Richard Grier, A.M. By the Rev. J. M. [John Milner], D.D., F.S.A. 8vo. Pp. 359. [Brit. Musi] London, 1822 VINDICATION (a) of the Enquiry into charitable abuses, with an exposure of the misrepresentations ... in the Quarterly Review . . . [By Henry Bellenden Kerr.] 8vo. Pp. 129. [Manch. Free Lib.] London, 1819 VINDICATION (a) of the facts in the Free Enquirer’s [Mr M-y’s] Letter, and the misrepresentations in the Reply thereto [by A. Nimmo] considered. ... By A. M. [Rev. Alexander Murray]. 8vo. Newcastle, 1767 VINDICATION (a) of the Faithful rebuke to a false report against the rude cavils of the pretended Defence. [By Vincent Alsop.] 8vo. Pp. 152. London, 1698 The Report and Defence were written by Stephen Lobb. VINDICATION (a) of the Faults on both sides, from the reflections of the Medley, the Specimen-maker, and a pamphlet [by Joseph Trapp] entituled, Most faults on one side ; with a dissertation on the nature and use of money and paper-credit in trade. . . . By the author of the Faults on both sides [Richard Harley]. 8vo. Pp. 43. London, 1710 “ Faults on both sides ” has been ascribed to Defoe, and to Clements, secretary to the Earl of Peterborough, as well as to Harley. —Note in Nat. Lib. of Scot. Cat. VINDICATION (a) of the freedom & lawfulness of the late General Assembly begun at St Andrews, and continued at Dundee ; in answer to the reasons alledged against the same in the Protestation and Declinatore given in at St Andrews, and in another paper contrived since. . . . [By James Wood, Professor at St Andrews.] 4to. Pp. 49. [D. Laing.] London, 1652 VINDICATION (a) of the friendly conference between a minister and a parishioner of his, inclining unto Quakerism, from the exceptions of Thomas Ellwood, in his pretended Answer to the said conference. By the same author [Edward Fowler, D.D.]. 8vo. [Smith’s Bibl. Anti-Quak. p. 21.] London, 1678 The authorship is doubtful. VINDICATION (a) of the Fundamental charter of presbytery [by John Sage] from the exceptions of [John Anderson] the contry-man in his letter to [R. Calder] a curate. ... By a true son of the afflicted Church of Scotland [John Gillan]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1713 VINDICATION (a) of the government, doctrine, and worship, of the Church of England, established in the reign of Queen Elizabeth ; against the injurious reflections of Mr Neale, in his late History of the Puritans : together with a detection of many false quotations and mistakes in that performance. [By Zachary Grey, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 362. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1733 Wrongly ascribed to Isaac Madox. VINDICATION of the Hindoos from the aspersions of the Rev. Claudius Buchanan, M.A. ; with a refutation of the arguments exhibited in his Memoir on the expediency of an ecclesiastical establishment for British India, and the ultimate civilization of the natives by their conversion to Christianity. . . . By a Bengal officer [Major John Scott- War in g]. 8vo. Pp. 171. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1808 Wrongly ascribed to Charles Stewart. VOL. VI. VINDICATION (a) of the Historiographer of the University of Oxford, and his works, from the reproaches of the Lord Bishop of Salisbury [Gilbert Burnet] in his Letter to [Lloyd] the Lord Bishop of Coventry and Litchfield, concerning a book lately published, called, A specimen of some errors and defects in the History of the reformation of the Church of England, by Anthony Harmer [i.e. Henry Wharton]. Written by, E. D. To which is added the Historiographer’s Answer to certain animadversions made in the before-mentioned History of the reformation, to that part of Historia & antiquitates universitatis Oxon, which treats of the divorce of Queen Catherine from King Henry the Eighth. [By Dr Thomas Wood, of New College, Oxford.] 4to. Pp. 30. [Wood’s A then. Oxon. i. cxiv. note.] London, 1693 Wrongly ascribed to James Harington. [ Upcott, p. 1089.] VINDICATION (a) of the history of the Gunpowder-treason, and of the proceedings and matters relating thereunto, from the exceptions which have been made against it, and more especially of late years by the author of the Catholic apology, and others. To which is added, a parallel betwixt that, and the present Popish plot. [By John Williams, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 95. [.Bodl.] London, 1681 Ascribed also to Gilbert Burnet, D.D. [Mendham Collection Cat. p. 51.] VINDICATION of the history of the Septuagintfrom the misrepresentations of the learned Scaliger, Dupin, Dr Hody, Dr Prideaux, and other modern criticks. [By Charles Hayes.] 8vo. Pp. v. 176. [D.N.B. vol. 25, p. 289.] London, 1736 Wrongly attributed to Sir Richard Ellis, Bart. VINDICATION (a) of the honour and justice of Parliament against a most scandalous libel entitled the Speech of John A-Esq. [By Daniel Defoe.] Pp. 36. [Lee’s Defoe, p. 209.] London [1721] VINDICATION of the honour of God ; in a Scriptural refutation of the doctrines of eternal misery, and universal salvation. . . . [By George Clarke.] 8vo. Pp. 284. London, 1782 VINDICATION (a) of the honour of King Charles I. against the prodigious calumnies of the regicide, Ludlow, publisht in what he calls A letter from Major-General Ludlow, to Sir E. S. [By Edmund Elys.] 8vo. Pp. 14. [Bodl.] 1691 Author’s name in the handwriting of Wood. M 2 VINDICATION (a) of the imprisoned and secluded members of the House of Commons, from the aspersions cast upon them, and the maiority of the House, in a paper lately printed and published: entituled, An humble answer to the generall councel of the officers of the army under his Excellency Thomas Lord Fairfax, to the demands of the Honourable Commons of England in parliament assembled ; concerning the late securing or secluding some members thereof. [By William Prynne.] 4to. Pp. 34. London, 1649 VINDICATION of the Irish nation, and particularly its Catholic inhabitants, from the calumnies of libellers. By Julius Vindex [Dennis Taafe]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Dublin, 1802 VINDICATION (a) of the Kings Letter concerning the regulation of preachers. [By Robert Seppius.] 4to. London, 1664 VINDICATION (a) of the King’s sovereign rights ; together with a justification of his royal exercise thereof, in all causes, and over all persons ecclesiastical (as well as by consequence) over all ecclesiastical bodies corporate, and cathedrals : more particularly applyed to the King’s Free Chappel and Church of Sarum, upon occasion of the Dean of Sarum’s Narrative and Collections. . . . [By Thomas Pierce, Dean of Salisbury]. Fol. Pp. 44. [Bodl.] London, 1683 VINDICATION (a) of the late Archbishop Sancroft, and of his brethren the rest of the depriv’d bishops, from the reflections of Mr Marshal in his Defence of our constitution in Church and State ; particularly with regard to their refusing to publish an abhorrence of the Prince of Orange’s invasion, their meeting at Guild-Hall, and their endeavours for a regency. In a letter to a friend. [By Hilkiah Bedford.] 8 vo. London, 1717 VINDICATION (a) of the late House of Commons, in rejecting the Bill for confirming the eighth and ninth articles of the treaty of navigation and commerce between England and France. By a citizen [John Egleton]. 8vo. [ IV.; Brit. Mus.] London, 1714 VINDICATION (a) of [Lord King] the learned and honourable author of The history of the Apostles Creed, from the false sentiment, which Mr Simson has injuriously imputed to him. [By James Hadow, D.D.] 8vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1731 VINDICATION (a) of the Letter out of the North concerning Bp. Lake’s declaration of his dying in the belief of passive obedience, &c. [By W. Eyre.] 4to. London, 1690 VINDICATION (a) of the licensed chapels in Scotland ; being an answer to the objections exhibited against them, in a Letter addressed to the Reverend Mr Grant at Edinburgh. By Philanthropos [G. Blaikie]. 8vo. Pp. 46. Edinburgh, 1749 Wrongly ascribed to James Grant. VINDICATION (a) of the literal sense of three miracles of Christ: I. His turning water into wine; II. His whipping the buyers and sellers out of the Temple ; III. His exorcising the devils out of two men ; against the objections of Thos. Woolston. [By Benjamin Andrews Atkinson.] 8vo. \Trin. Coll. Dub. Lib. p. 145.] London, 1729 VINDICATION (a) of the literary character of the late Professor Porson, from the animadversions of the Right Reverend Thomas Burgess, D.D. F.R.S. F.A.S. P.R.S.L. Lord Bishop of Salisbury, in various publications on 1 John v. 7. By Crito Cantabrigiensis [Thomas Turton, D.D.]. 8vo. [N. a?id Q. 28th April i860, p. 332.] Cambridge, 1827 VINDICATION (a) of the Lord Bishop of Ely’s visitatorial jurisdiction over Trinity-College in general, and over the Master thereof [Bentley] in particular. [By John Colbatch, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 44. [Bodl.] London, 1732 VINDICATION (a) of the ministers and ruling elders of the Church of Scotland who have taken the Abjuration [Oath] ; wherein it is made evident, that they are not thereby engaged in their stations to oblige the successor when he comes to the crown, to join in communion with the Church of England. . . . [By Alexander Lauder, minister at Mordentoun.] 4to. [Scott’s Fasti, new edition, vol. 2, p. 57.] Edinburgh, 1712 VINDICATION of the ministers of the Church of Scotland, who have prayed for the Queen by name, notwithstanding the order in Council on that subject. By a presbyterian [Thomas M‘Crie, D.D.]. The second edition. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1820 Ascribed also to Andrew Thomson, D.D. VINDICATION (a) of the ministers of the Gospel, in and about London, from the unjust aspersions cast upon their former actings for the Parliament, as if they had promoted the bringing of the King to capital punishment. [Drawn up by Cornelius Burgess, D.D., though signed by other ministers.] 4to. [Reid’s Hist, of Western Divines, i. 80.] London, 1648 VINDICATION (a) of the Miscellanea Analytica; in answer to a late pamphlet entitled Observations, &c. [By John Wilson, M.A., St Peter’s College, Cambridge.] 8vo. Pp. 22. Cambridge, 1709 VINDICATION (a) of the Modern history of Hindostan, from the gross misrepresentations, and illiberal strictures of the Edinburgh ireviewers, by the author [Thomas Maurice]. 8vo. Pp. 88. London, 1805 VINDICATION (a) of the New theory of the earth from the exceptions of Mr Keill and others; with an historical preface of the occasions of the discoveries therein contained : and some corrections and additions. [By William Whiston.] 8vo. Pp. 10, 52. London, 1698 VINDICATION (a) of the Nine Reasons of the House of Commons against the votes of Bishops in Parliament; or, a reply to the Answers made to the said Reasons in defence of such votes. [By Cornelius Burgess, D.D.] 4to. [Madan’s Oxford Books, ii. 157 ; D.N.B. vol. 7, p. 303.] London, 1641 Another edition of “ An humble examination of a printed abstract of the answers &c.,” q.v. VINDICATION (a) of the Oath of Allegiance, in answer to a paper dis- perst by Samuel Eaton, pretending to prove the Oath of Allegiance voyd and non-obliging. By the author of the Exercitation concerning usurped powers [Edward Gee]. 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 21, p. 104.] N.p. 1650 Attributed also to Richard Hollinworth. [Cat. London Institution, ii. 30.] VINDICATION (a) of the Observations on the rapid decline of the clerical credit and character. By the author [Rev. Thomas Hunter, vicar of Wavor- ham, in Cheshire]. 8vo. London, 1782 VINDICATION (a) of the opposition to the late intended bill for the relief of Roman Catholics in Scotland; in which an address to the people on that subject, by the Reverend Dr Campbell, Principal of Marischal College, Aberdeen, is particularly considered. [By John Erskine, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 53. Edinburgh, 1780 VINDICATION (a) of the ordinations of the Church of England; in which it is demonstrated that all the essentials of ordination, according to the practice of the primitive and Greek Churches, are still retained in our Church : in answer to a paper written by one of the Church of Rome to prove the nullity of our Orders; and given to a person of quality. [By Gilbert Burnet, D.D.] The second edition. 4to. Pp. xxviii. 94. London, 1688 The first edition, 1677, has the author’s name on the title-page. VINDICATION (a) of the orthodox clergy, in answer to two scurrilous libels, pretending to be vindications of the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, but scandalously reflecting upon his grace, and our most orthodox clergy. [By Wm. Taswell, D.D.] 8vo. London, 1720 VINDICATION (a) of the orthodoxe Protestant doctrine against the innovations of Dr Drayton and Mr Parker. [By John Tendring.] 4to. Pp. 77. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, ii. 194.] London, 1657 VINDICATION of the outbreak at Eton. [By Jeremiah Milles, M.A., barrister.] 8vo. Pp. 18. 1795 VINDICATION (a) of the Oxford Reply to two discourses [by Abraham Woodhead] there printed 1687; concerning the adoration of our blessed Saviour in the Eucharist, from the exceptions made to it in the second appendix [by Obadiah Walker] to a compendious discourse on the Eucharist [by Abraham Woodhead], published from the same press. [By Henry Aldrich, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 91. [Jones’ Peck, p. 359.] N.P., N.D. VINDICATION (a) of the penalty of death for the crime of murder. [By Edmund Holmes.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1850 ?] VINDICATION (a) of the people of God, called Quakers ; directed unto Roger Boyle, called Earl of Orrery, Charles Coote, called Earl of Moun- trath, Theophilus Jones, called Sir Theophilus Jones; being an answer to a book, dedicated to them, by one George Pressick of Dublin. . . . By E. B. [Edward Burrough]. 4to. Pp. 24. London, N.D. VINDICATION (a) of the practice of England in putting out money to use. [By John Dormer, alias Huddleston, S.J.]. 8vo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Dicti\ London,1699 VINDICATION (a) of the Presbyterian ministers in the North of Ireland; subscribers and non-subscribers : from many gross and groundless aspersions cast upon them, in a late scandalous libel, entituled, An account of the mind of the Synod at Belfast 1721, in a short reply to Mr Dugud’s remarks upon their declaration. By a sincere lover of truth and peace [James Kirkpatrick]. Published and recommended by Victor Ferguson, M.D. 8vo. Pp. 82. [Witherow’s Presb. i?i Ireland, i. 227.] Belfast, 1721 VINDICATION (a) of the primitive Church, and diocesan episcopacy; in answer to Mr Baxter’s Church history of bishops, and the councils abridged : as also to some part of his Treatise of episcopacy. [By Henry Maurice, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 64, 567. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.\ Orme’s Life of Baxter, ii. 383.] London, 1682 VINDICATION (a) of the principles of the author of the answer to the compiler of the Nubes Testium from the charge of popery ; in answer to a late pretended letter from a dissenter to the divines of the Church of England. [By Rev. Edward Gee, rector of St Benedict, Paul’s Wharf, London.] 4to. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] London,1688 VINDICATION (a) of the privilege of the people, in respect of the right of free discussion; with a retrospect to various proceedings relative to the violation of that right. [By George Chalmers.] 8vo. Pp. 80. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1796 VINDICATION (a) of the proceedings against the six members of E[dmund] Hall, Oxford. By a gentleman of the University [William Browne]. 8vo. Pp. 20. [Bodl.\ London, 1768 VINDICATION (a) of the proceedings of his Majesties ecclesiastical commissioners against [Hen. Compton] the Bishop of London, and the Fellows of Magdalen College. [By Henry Care.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1688 VINDICATION (a) of the proceedings of some members of the Lower House of the last Convocation, with relation to the archbishop’s prorogation of it upon the eighth of May; in a letter to the publisher of the Late narrative of the proceedings of that House about adjournments. [By Charles Trimnell, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Bodl.\ [London] 1702 VINDICATION (a) of the proceedings of the Edinburgh Bible Society, relative to the Apocrypha, against the aspersions of the “Eclectic Review”; in a letter to the members of the com- mitee of the parent institution. [By Alexander Haldane.] 8vo. PP- 35- [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1825 VINDICATION (a) of the proceedings of the late Parliament of England, An. Dom. 1689 ; being the first in the reign of their present Majesties King William and Queen Mary. [By John, Lord Somers.] 4to. Pp. 25. [D.N.B. vol. 53, p. 222.] London, 1690 VINDICATION (a) of the proceedings of the University of Oxford, against the allegations of an act of the council of the city of Oxford, dated Sept. 6. 1703. By a private hand [Thomas Wood, D.C.L.]. 4to. Pp. 7. [Bodl.\ No title-page. VINDICATION (a) of the Protestant doctrine concerning Justification, and of its preachers and professors, from the unjust charge of Antinomianism ; in a letter from a minister in the city, to a minister in the countrey. [By Robert Traill, M.A.] 4to. Pp. 42. [Aberdeen Libi\ London, 1692 VINDICATION (a) of the Protestant Reformation; containing I. A brief account of the origin of Popery. II. Presumptions against. III. A refutation of its main doctrinal errors. IV. A display of the unscriptural idolatrous worship of the Romish Church. . . . [By Samuel Bourne, minister in Birmingham.] i2mo. Pp. 10, 202. London, 1746 VINDICATION (a) of the real Reformation-principles of the Church of Scotland concerning separation, &c.; in which the Essay on separation is vindicated, and the arguments of the Reverend Mr Wilson, for separation from this Established Church, in his Defence, are considered. ... By the author of the Essay on separation [John Currie]. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 8, 360. [New Coll. Lib.\ Edinburgh, 1740 Address to the reader signed : J. C. VINDICATION (a) of the realm, and Church of England, from the charge of perjury, rebellion, & schism, unjustly laid upon them by the non-jurors: and the rebellion and schism shewn to lie at their own doors. [By William Wake.] 8vo. Pp. 68. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibli] London, 1716 VINDICATION (a) of the Reasonableness of Christianity, &c. from Mr Edwards’s Reflections. [By John Locke.] 8vo. Pp. 40. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1695 VINDICATION (a) of the Reasons and . Defence, &c. Part I. Being a reply to the first part of No sufficient reason [by Nathaniel Spinckes] for restoring some prayers and directions of King Edward VI.’s first liturgy. By the author of Reasons and Defence [Jeremy Collier]. 8vo. London, 1718 -. Part II. Being a reply to the second part of No sufficient reason for restoring some prayers and directions of King Edward VPs first liturgy. By the author of the Reasons and Defence [Jeremy Collier]. 8vo. London, 1719 VINDICATION (a) of the religious and civil principles of the Irish Catholics ; in a letter to . . . the Marquis Wellesley. By J. K. L. [James Warren Doyle, Romish Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin]. Third edition. 8 vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.'] Dublin, 1823 This was followed by a Defence of his Vindication, after it had drawn forth “ Observations ” [from Dr Samuel O’Sullivan] and a statement of the “ Case of the Church of Ireland ” [by Dr William Phelan]. VINDICATION (a) of the Remarks on the Bishop of Derry’s [William King’s] Discourse about human inventions, from what is objected against them in the admonition annext to the second edition of that Discourse. By the author of the Remarks [Joseph Boyse]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1695 VINDICATION (a), of the Remarks upon Mr Cha. Leslie’s First Dialogue on the Socinian controversy. [By Thomas Emlyn.] 4to. Pp. 8. [1708?] No title-page. VINDICATION (a) of the reverend Dr Henry Sacheverell from the false, scandalous and malicious aspersions cast upon him in a late infamous pamphlet entitled The modern fanatick [by Rev. William Bisset]. . . . In a dialogue between a Tory and a Wh—g. [By William King, LL.D., with the co-operation of Charles Lambe, M.A., and Dr Sacheverell.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 99. [F. Madan, in the Bibliographer, vol. 4, p. 108.] London [1710] VINDICATION (a) of the Rev. Mr Wesley’s last minutes ; occasioned by a circular, printed letter, inviting principal persons, both clergy and laity, as well of the dissenters as of the established Church, who disapprove of those minutes, to oppose them in a body, as a dreadful heresy. ... In five letters, to the Hon. and Rev. author [Walter Shirley] of the Circular letter. By a lover of quietness and liberty of conscience [John William Fletcher]. i2mo. Pp. 98. [Gent. Mag. lvi. 29.] Bristol, 1771 Letters signed : J. F. VINDICATION (a) of the Review; or, the exceptions formerly made against Mr Horn’s Catechisme, set free from his late allegations, and maintained not to be mistakes. By J. H. [Joseph Hacon], parson of Massingham, p. Norf. 8vo. [Camb. U?iiv. Lib.] Cambridge, 1662 VINDICATION (a) of the Right Rev. Dr Stillingfleet, Mr [Richard] Baxter, Mr Humfrey, and Mr Clark, against Dr Chauncey’s late book. . . . [By John Humfrey.] 4to. London, 1700 VINDICATION (a) of the Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of Exeter [Dr Blackall], occasioned by Mr Benjamin Hoadly’s reflections on his Lordship’s two sermons Of government, preached in St Dunstan’s church, March 8, 1704, and before her Majesty, March 8, 1708. [By William Oldisworth.] 8vo. Pp. 87. [Bodl.] London, 1709 VINDICATION (a) of the Right Reverend the Ld. Bishop of Norwich, from the undeserved reflections of the Reverend Mr John Johnson, in his book entituled The unbloody sacrifice and altar unvailed and supported ... in a letter to the Reverend Mr Johnson. By a Christian [John Lewis, D.D., Vicar of Margate]. 8vo. Pp. 23. [Bodl.] London, N.D. VINDICATION (a) of the Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of Winchester, against the malicious aspersions of those who uncharitably ascribe the book, intituled, A plain account of the nature and end of the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper, to his Lordship. By the author of the Proposal for the revival of Christianity [Philip Skelton, B.A., rector of Fintona, Ireland]. 8vo. Pp. 71. [D.N.B. vol. 52, p. 332.] Dublin printed : London, reprinted, 1736 An ironical production. VINDICATION (a) of the rights of brutes. [By Thomas Taylor, the Platonist.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1792 VINDICATION (a) of the rights of men, in a letter to the Right Honourable Edmund Burke ; occasioned by his Reflections on the Revolution in France. [By Mary Wollstonecraft.] 8 vo. [IV.] London, 179° VINDICATION (a) of the Roman Catholicks of the English nation, from some aspersions lately cast upon them ; in a letter from a Protestant gentleman in the country, to a citizen of London. [By R. Caron.] 4to. [Bibliotheca Grenvilliana, i. 117.] London, 1660 VINDICATION (a) of the royal martyr King Charles I. from the Irish massacre in the year 1641, cast upon him in the “ Life of Richard Baxter,55 wrote by himself, and since in the “Abridgement55 by Edmund Calamy ; being a case of present concern : in a letter to a member of the House of Commons. [By Rev. Thomas Carte.] Second edition. [Cat. of the Lond. Inst.] 1704 VINDICATION (a) of the Scottish Covenanters ; consisting of a review of the first series of the “Tales of my landlord,55 extracted from the Christian Instructor for 1817. [By Thomas M‘Crie, D.D.] With an appendix, containing various extracts, illustrative of the principles and character of the Reformers. i2mo. Glasgow, 1824 VINDICATION (a) of the Scottish Presbyterians & Covenanters, against the aspersions of the author of “Tales of my landlord.55 By a member of the Scottish bar [James Grahame]. 8vo. Pp. 32. Glasgow, 1817 VINDICATION (a) of the scripture doctrine of original sin from Mr Taylor’s Free and candid examination of it. [By Rev. David Jennings, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 130. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] London, 1740 VINDICATION (a) of the sentence of the Synod of Relief in the case of the organ; and an answer to the misrepresentations of the Rev. William Anderson in his “ Chapter of organ history.55 By a member of Synod [Rev. Alexander Harvey]. 8vo. Pp. 44. Glasgow, 1829 VINDICATION (a) of the Short history of the Corporation and Test Acts. [By Capel Lofft.] 8vo. Pp. 35. [Bodl.] London, 1790 VINDICATION of the speeches of Thomas Dromgole, M.D. [By John Lanigan, D.D.] 8vo. Dublin, 1814 VINDICATION of the subject’s right to deliberate and vote at County meetings. [By W. Peters.] 8vo. 1817 VINDICATION (a) of the Surey demoniack as no impostor : or, a reply to a certain pamphlet publish’d by Mr Zach. Taylor, called The Surey impostor : with a further clearing and confirming of the truth as to Richard Dugdale’s case and cure. By T. J. [Thomas Jolly] one of the ministers who attended upon that affair from first to last. . . . 4to. Pp. 32. [Bodl.] London, 1698 VINDICATION (a) of the Test-Act; or, the right of Protestant Dissenters to be admitted into all civil offices, fully and impartially consider’d. By a member of the House of Commons [Thomas Sherlock, D.D.]. 8vo. London, 1736 VINDICATION (a) of the Theory of Mahometanism unveiled, against the strictures of a writer in No. XIII. of the British Critic, and Quarterly Theological Review ; in a letter to the Rev. Hugh James Rose, B.D., Christian Advocate in the University of Cambridge. [By the Rev. Charles Forster, author of the work.] 8vo. [W.j Martin’s Cat.] [London] 1830 VINDICATION (a) of Thomas Jefferson. . . . By Grotius [De Witt Clinton]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] New York, 1800 VINDICATION (a) of the Treatise of monarchy, containing an answer to Dr Femes reply ; also a more full discovery of three maine points : 1. The ordinance of God in supremacie. 2. The nature and kinds of limitation. 3. The causes and meanes of limitation in governments. Done by the authour of the former treatise [Philip Hunton]. 4to. London, 1644 VINDICATION (a) of the truth of Christian religion, against the objections of all modern opposers : written in French by the Reverend and learned Dr Jacques Abbadie; rendered into English by H. L. [Henry Lussan], of New Colledg, Oxford. 8vo. [Arber’s Term Cat. ii. 491.] London, 1698 This translation was denounced by the author as incorrect, and thus misrepresenting his views. VINDICATION (a) of the twenty third Article of the Church of England, from a late exposition, ascribed to my Lord [Gilbert Burnet], Bishop of Sarum. [By William Thornton, Principal of Hart-PI all.] 4to. Pp. 26. [Bodl.] London, 1702 Ascribed also to Bernard de Mandeville, and to Robert Burscough. VINDICATION (a) of the worship of the Lord Jesus Christ, on the Unitarian principles ; in answer to what is said on that head by Mr Jos. Boyse, in his Vindication of the Deity of Jesus Christ. [By Thomas Emlyn.] 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 17, p. 359.] N.P. 1705 VINDICATION (a) of their Majesties authority to fill the sees of the deprived bishops ; in a letter out of the country, occasioned by Dr B-[BeveridgeJ’s refusal of the bishoprick of Bath and Wells. [By Edward Stillingfleet, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 27. London, 1691 VINDICATION (a) of those who take the oath of allegiance to his present Majestie from perjurie, injustice, and disloyaltie, charged upon them but such as are against it ; wherein is evidently shewed that the common good of a nation is what is primarily and principally respected in an oath, and therefore when the oath is inconsistent with that, the persons who have taken it, are absolved from it ; in proving of which the case of Maud and King Stephen is particularly consider’d ; in a letter to a non-juror. [By Thomas Hearne.] 8vo. [IV.] 1731 Preface to the Reader by-Bilstone, M.A., of All Souls. VINDICIAE Academiarum ; containing, some briefe animadversions upon Mr Webster’s book, stiled, The examination of academies ; together with an appendix concerning what M. Hobbs, and M. Dell have published on this argument. [By Seth Ward, D.D., Bishop of Salisbury.] 4to. Pp. 65. [Wood’s A then. Oxon. iv. 249.] Oxford, 1654 The tract is signed: H. D., the final letters of the author’s names. The prefatory epistle is signed: N. S., John Wilkins [finals] of Wadham College, afterwards Bishop of Chester; this addition has also been wrongly assigned to Nathaniel Stephens. VINDICIAE Anti-Baxterianae; or, some animadversions on a book, entituled Reliquiae Baxterianae, or the life of Mr Richard Baxter. [By Samuel Young.] i2mo. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 74.] London,1698 VINDICIAE Biblicae ; a series of notices and elucidations of passages in the Old and New Testament, which have been the subject of attack and misrepresentation by deistical writers. [By David Walther.] 8vo. [Lowndes’ Brit. Lib. p. 314.] London, 1832 VINDICI/E Britannicas ; being strictures on a late pamphlet by Gilbert Wakefield, A.B. late Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge, intitled, The spirit of Christianity compared with the spirit of the times in Great Britain. By an undergraduate [William Penn, descendant of the Quaker]. 8vo. Pp. 66. [Geitt. Mag. June 1863, p. 800 ; Mon. Rev. xv. 225.] 1794 VINDICIAE Calvinisticae ; or, some impartial reflections on the Dean of Londonderry’s Considerations, and Mr Chancellor King’s Answer thereto, in which he no less unjustly'than impertinently reflects on the Protestant dissenters : in a letter to a friend. By W. B., D.D. [Joseph Boyse]. 4to. [Jones’ Peck, i. 155.] Dublin, 1688 Published among Boyse’s Works, ii. 45. VINDICIAE Carolina; or, a defence of ’Eikwv BcmtlXikt], the portraicture of his sacred Majesty in his solitudes and sufferings: in reply to a book intituled ,'EaKovoK\a Books, i. 816.] London, 1847 WELSH (the) cottage. [By Mary Martha Butt, later Mrs Sherwood]. i2mo. {Brit. Musi] London, 1820 WELSH legends, in humorous English verse. By Edward Johns [R. J. Edwards]. 8vo. Pp. 51. {Brit. Musi] Aberystwyth, 1899 WELSH (the) looking-glass; or, thoughts on the state of religion in North Wales. By a person who travelled through that country at the close of the year 1811 [Rev. Thomas Jones, rector of Great Creaton]. 8vo. {Brit. Musi] London, 1812 WELSH (the) magistracy. By “ Adfyfr” [T. J. Hughes]. 8vo. {Brit. Musi] Cardiff [1888] WELSH (the) peasant boy ; a novel. . . . By the author of The Maid of Avofi [Mrs Peck]. i2mo. 3 vols. {Brit. Musi] London, 1808 WELSH (a) singer. [A novel]. By Allen Raine [Mrs Beynon Puddi- combe, nee Anne Adaliza Evans]. 8vo. {Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1897 WELSH sketches, chiefly ecclesiastical, to the close of the twelfth century. By the author of Proposals for Christian union [Ernest Silvanus Appleyard]. Second edition. i2mo. Pp. viii. 160. {Brit. Musi] London, 1852 Advertisement signed : E. S. A. The first edition appeared in 1851. -Second series, 1852. Pp. viii. 153. -Third series, 1853. Pp. viii. 192. WELSH (the) witch ; a tale of rough places. By Allen Raine [Mrs Beynon Puddicombe, nee Anne Adaliza Evans]. Fifth edition. 8vo. Pp. 440. {Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1904 WEN HAM water - works ; statements by W. P. P. [Willard P. Phillips]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 223.] Salem, Mass., 1867 WENSLEYDALE ; or rural contemplation : a poem. [By Thomas Maude.] The third edition. 4to. Pp. xii. 13-54. {Gent. Mag. lxix. 163.] London, 1780 The fourth edition (1816) has the author’s name. WEPT (the) of Wish-Ton-Wish ; a tale. By the author of The Pioneers, etc. [James Fenimore Cooper]. New edition. 8vo. 2 vols. [Allibone’s Diet.] Philadelphia, 1836 WE’RE all low people then ; and other tales. By the author of Caleb Stukely [Samuel Phillips, LL.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 255. {Brit. Musi] London, 1854 Reprinted from Blackwood's Magazine. WERNERIA; or short characters of earths : with notes according to the improvements of Klaproth, Vauquelin and Hauy. By Terrae Filius [Rev. Stephen Weston, B.D.]. i2mo. 2 parts. [Manch. Free Lib.] London, 1805-06 WERTER to Charlotte ; a poem. [By Edward Taylor, of Tipperary.] 4to. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] London, 1784 Founded on Goethe’s novel, The sorrows of Werther. WESLEYAN local preachers. [By William D. Lawson.] 8vo. Newcastle, 1874 WESLEYAN Methodism as it respects the temperance question, agreeably to the writings of the Rev. John Wesley, A.M. . . . Compiled by a leader of the Methodist Society [Francis Carne], i2mo. Pp. 12. Falmouth [1839] WESLEYAN Methodism in Scotland. [By H. W. Holland.] Pp. 12. [Bodl.] Leeds, 1864 WESLEYAN (the) Methodist Sunday hymn-book ; edited by W. H. R. [William Harris Rule]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 246.] London, 1851 WESLEYAN takings; or, centenary sketches of ministerial character. By Rev. Joseph Beaumont [Rev. James Everett]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 715.] London, 1841-51 WESLEYANS (the) vindicated from the calumnies contained in “The Church of England compared with Wesleyan Methodism,” in a dialogue between a Churchman and a Methodist. [By Rev. Thomas Jackson.] 8vo. London, 1837 WESSEX ; painted by Walter Tyndale, described by Clive Holland [Charles J. Hankinson]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.\ London, 1906 WEST (the) Briton; a collection of poems on various subjects. [By Thomas O’Grady.] 4to. Dublin, 1800 WEST coast ballads and other pieces. By J. C. A. [J. Carfine Alston]. 8vo. Glasgow, 1889 WEST (the) country farmer (Number 2), consisting of three parts : I. The landlord’s answer to his tenant’s complaint. ... II. The farmer’s reply, in which the errors of his brethren are excused. ... III. A postscript to the farmers themselves, exhorting them to put a due value on their persons and professions. . . . [By Francis Squire.] 8vo. [Bodl.j Green’s Bibl. Somers, ii. 399.] Taunton, N.D. The Farmer signs himself: Ofellus ; the Landlord: X. Y. Z. For No. 1, see below “The West-Country farmer . . .” WEST India eclogues. [By Edward Rushton.] 4to. [Mon. Rev. lxxvii. 283.] London, 1787 WEST (the) India question practically considered. [By Sir Robert J. W. Horton, M.A., M.P.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1826 WEST (the) India sketch-book. [By Trelawney Wentworth.] 8vo. 2 vols. London,1834 WEST (the) Indian; a comedy, as it is performed at the Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane. By the author of The Brothers [Richard Cumberland]. 8vo. Pp. 102. [Baker’s Biog. Dram?] London, 1771 WEST Indian yarns. By “X. Beke” [G. H. Hawtayne]. 8vo. Pp. 137. [Brit. Mus.\ Demerara, 1884 WEST (the) Indians defended. By a gentleman [Edward Samuel Byam]. 8vo. Bath, 1811 Signed at end : Edward White. WEST of Indian life. By Nivedita Margaret Elizabeth Noble]. 8vo. Brit. Mus.\ London, 1904 WEST Point colors. By Amy Lothrop [Anna Bartlett Warner]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.\ Chicago, 1904 WEST Somerset ballads. [By John Barwick Hodge.] 4to. Pp. 32. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London [1895] WEST Ward rhymes ; and other verses. By “ The Member for the West Ward ” [W. J. Townsend Collins]. 8vo. Pp. ii. 80. [Brit. Musi] Newport, 1898 WEST-COUNTRY (the) farmer; or, a fair representation of the decay of trade, and badness of the times : in a letter of complaint from a tenant in the country, to his landlord in London. [By Francis Squire.] i2mo. Pp. 50. [Bodl.\ Taunton, N.D. The preface is signed : Ofellus. For a continuation, see above “The West country farmer . . .” WESTERN Australia. By “The Vagabond” [Julian Thomas]. 8vo. [Lib. of Col. Inst., Supp. i. 35.] Melbourne, 1896 WESTERN Australia; with some account of the settlement of Austra- lind. [By Alfred Gill.] i2mo. London, 1842 WESTERN (the) mail; being a selection of letters made from the bag taken from the Western Mail when it was robbed by George-in 17—. [By Annabella Plumptre.] i2mo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit?] N.P. 1801 WESTERN (the) martyrology; or, bloody assizes : containing the lives, trials, and dying speeches of all those eminent Protestants that suffer’d in the West of England, and elsewhere, from the year 1678, to this time : together with the life and death of George L. Jeffreys : the fifth edition : to which is now added, to make it compleat, an account of the barbarous whippings of several persons in the West: also the trial and case of Mr John Tutchin (the author of the Observator). . . . [By Thomas Pitts.] 8vo. Pp. 14? 279* \Mendham Collection Cat.] London, 1705 WESTERN (the) wanderings of a Typo. [By John S. Robb.] 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 289.] Philadelphia, 1846 WESTERN (a) wildflower. [A novel.] By Katharine Lee [Katharine Lee Jenner]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1882 WESTMINSTER Abbey; a poem. [By John Dart.] 8vo. Pp. 3, 64. [Dyce Cat.] London, 1721 WESTMINSTER Abbey ; or, the days of the Reformation. By the author of Whitefriars, etc. [Miss Emma Robinson]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1854 WESTMINSTER Abbey; with other occasional poems, and a free translation of the Oedipus Tyrannus of Sophocles. By the author of Indian a?itiquities [Thomas Maurice]. 8vo. London, 1813 A previous edition (1784) of Westminster Abbey bears the author’s name. WESTMINSTER chimes, and other poems. By Maxwell Gray [Mary Gleed Tuttiett]. 8vo. [jBrit. Musi] London, 1890 WESTMINSTER Fayre, newly proclaimed. A satire on the Westminster Assembly of divines. [By John Taylor, the water poet.] 4to. Pp. 8. [London] 1647 WESTMINSTER Hall ; or, anecdotes and reminiscences of the bar, the bench, and the woolsack. [Compiled by Henry and Thomas Roscoe.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 2880.] London, 1825 WESTMORLAND (the) dialect, in three familiar dialogues ; in which an attempt is made to illustrate the provincial idiom. By A. W. [Ann Walker]. i2mo. Pp. 95, 12. [.Bodl.] Kendal, 1790 Ascribed also to H. Wheeler. WESTWARD Ho ! ... By the author of The Dutchman's fireside [James Kirke Paulding]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Kirk’s Suppi] New York, 1833 WET (the) blanket ; or Edith’s bright autumn. By the author of The Dalrympies [Sibella Jones]. 8vo. \Brit. Musi] London [1872] WET days. [Poems.] By a farmer [John Affleck Bridges]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 218. [Brit. Musi] London, 1879 WET days at Edgewood. By Ik Marvel Donald Grant Mitchell, LL.D.]. 8vo. Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 184.] New York, 1888 WEYMOUTH (the) guide; exhibiting the ancient and present state of Weymouth and Melcombe Regis, with a description of Lulworth Castle, the Island of Portland and other places worthy the attention of Strangers. . . . By Peter Delamotte.] 8vo. Pp. 96. Mayo’s Bibl. Dors. p. 253.] London,1785 WHALE (the) and its captors. By Major Marble [Rev. Henry T. Cheever]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 183.] New York, 1849 WHARNCLIFFE ; a play, in three acts : time occupied, one day. [By James Hobson Aveling, M.D.] i2mo. Pp. 36. London, 1854 WHAT a boy! Problems concerning him. By Julia A. Willis [Julia A. Kempshall]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 308.] Philadelphia, 1874 WHAT a life ! An autobiography. By E. V. L. and G. M. [Edward Verrall Lucas and George Morrow]. 8vo. Pp. 126. [Brit. Musi] London, 1911 WHAT a woman will do ; a society drama. By Lucas Cleeve [Mrs Howard Kingscote, nee Adelina G. I. Wolff]. 8vo. Pp. 316. [Who's Who i?i Lit.] London, 1899 WHAT aileth thee? By the author of The melody of the Twenty-third Psalm [Anna Bartlett Warner]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Suppi] London, 1881 WHAT am I? Where am I? What ought I to do ? How am I to become qualified and disposed to do what I ought? By the author of Outlines of social econo7ny, etc. [William Ellis]. 8vo. Pp. 66. [Bodli] London, 1852 WHAT an old myth may teach. By Leslie Keith [Grace Leslie Keith Johnston], author of A simple maiden. 8vo. Pp. 139. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London,1878 WHAT, and how of the eternal worker : the work and the plan ? [By Emanuel Swedenborg.] 8vo. Private print, 1862 WHAT? and who says it? An exposition of the statement that the Established Church “destroys more souls than it saves,” by T. Chalmers ... in a letter. . . . Edited by John Search [Rev. Thomas Binney]. Second edition. \Brit. Mus.] Worcester [1838 ?] WHAT are the causes of prolonged depression in trade? By a Scotch banker [George Drummond Charles], 8vo. London, 1879 WHAT are the English Roman Catholics to do? The question considered in a letter to Lord Edward Howard. By Anglo-Catholicus [Lord John Manners]. 8vo. [Bodl.] London, 1841 WHAT came to me in the silence. By A. E. S. [Annie E. Stapley]. 8vo. Pp. 100. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1899 WHAT can’t be cured must be endured ; or Christian patience and forbearance in practice. [By Anna Letitia Waring.] 8vo. [Brit. A/us.] London, 1854 Signed : A. L. W. WHAT do you go to Church for? A question to Christian men and women. By S. W. [Miss S. Warren]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1869] WHAT does it profit a man ? University education and the memorialists. By the son of a Catholic country squire [Roger William Bede Vaughan, R. C. archbishop of Sydney]. 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 58, p. 178.] London, 1865 WHAT Dolly and Robbie did. By “Fleeta” [Kate W. Hamilton]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1891 WHAT dreams may come. By Frank Lin [Mrs Gertrude Franklin Atherton]. 8vo. Chicago, 1888 A later edition (1889) bears the author’s name. WHAT election and reprobation is, clearly discovered, and the ignorance of such who hold election and reprobation of persons, manifested. By G. F. [George Fox]. 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 679.] 1679 WHAT Emmet means in 1915. By A. Newman [Herbert Moore Pirn]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] Dublin, 1915 Tracts for the times, published by the Irish Publicity League, No. 1. WHAT Fide remembers. By Faye Huntington [Mrs Isabella H. Foster]. 8vo. [Cushing’s /nit. and Pseud. i. 134.] New York, 1884 WHAT gold cannot buy ; a novel. By Mrs Alexander [Mrs Alexander Hector, nie Annie French]. 8vo. Pp. 304. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1896 WHAT happened after the battle of Dorking ; or the victory of Tunbridge Wells. [By Charles John Stone, barrister.] 8vo. London [1871] WHAT have the Whigs done ? . . . By Caleb Wilkins [George Sheppard]. [Cushing’s /tnt. a?id Pseud, i. 307.] Newark, 1838 WHAT have thirty years of Church revival done? [By Rev. John Henry Blunt.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1861 Reprinted from The Ecclesiastic. WHAT I know about Ben Eccles. By Abraham Page, Esq. [John Saunders Holt]. [Cushing’s lmt. and Pseud. i. 223.] Philadelphia, 1869 WHAT I think of South Africa, its people and its politics. By Stuart Cumberland [Charles Garner, of Oxford]. 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1896 WHAT if the Swedes should come? With some thoughts about keeping the army on foot, whether they come or not. [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 38. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe, 160.] London, 1717 WHAT is a Christian ? By A. L. O. E., authoress of The Claremont tales, etc. [Charlotte M. Tucker]. 8vo. Pp. 208. Edinburgh, N.D. WHAT is a pound? A letter on the new currency measures. [By John Taylor, publisher.] 8vo. London, 1844 WHAT is baptism? By a clergyman of the diocese of Exeter [Rev. George Ferris Whidborne]. 8vo. London, 1835 WHAT is baptism? Is it a fiction? Considered by a no-party man [Henry Hayes]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Holloway, 1859 WHAT is free trade ? By Emile Walter, a worker [Alexander Delmar]. 8vo. [Lib. fourn. vi. 322.] New York, 1867 WHAT is good English? and other essays. By Rafiford Pyke [Harry Thurston Peck]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1899 WHAT is good iron ; and how is it to be got ? [By R. H. Cheney.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 The second edition (1862) bears the author’s name. “WHAT is he?” By the author of Vivian Grey [The Rt. Hon. Benjamin Disraeli]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [D. N. B. vol. 15, p. 101.] London, 1833 WHAT is law? What are personal rights under law ? and what are personal obligations? By “Legalis” [J. P. Philpott]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Nashville, Tenn., 1887 WHAT is man ? And other essays. By Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens]. 8vo. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1919 WHAT is meant by Apostolical Succession ? A question answered by a clergyman of the Scottish Episcopal Church [Rev. John Gabriel Ryde, M.A., of Aberdeen]. 8vo. Pp. 67. Aberdeen, 1856 WHAT is mesmerism ? And what its concomitants, clairvoyance and necromancy? [By Francis Sitwell.] Second edition enlarged. i2mo. Pp. 32. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 WHAT is occultism? A philosophical and critical study. By Papus [Gerard Encausse]. Translated [from the French] by Fred Rothwell. 8vo. Pp. 101. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1913 WHAT is our situation, and what are our prospects ? By an American [Joseph Hopkinson]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 13.] Philadelphia, 1799 WHAT is she? A comedy, in five acts [and in prose. By Charlotte Smith]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1799 WHAT is the Church of Christ ? [By George Hill.] i2mo. N.P. 1843 WHAT is the duty of Seceders in reference to Union with the Free Church ? By a working man [Thomas Robertson, elder in Clola]. 8vo. Pp. 16. Edinburgh, 1851 WHAT is the Municipal Mortgages Act ? The question answered in a letter to the ratepayers of Birmingham. [By George James Johnson.] 8vo. Birmingham, 1867 WHAT is the truth? [By A. Fellowes.] 8vo. Pp. xvi. 160. Tunbridge Wells, 1892 Signed : A. F. WHAT is the War about ? [By William Edward Armitage Axon.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Manchester, 1877 WHAT is truth? By “Africanus” [H. G. Soames]. 8vo. Pp. 28. [Mendelssohn’s South'Afr. Bibl. i. 335.] Johannesburg [1902] WHAT is truth ? A consideration of the doubts as to the efficacy of prayer, raised by evolutionists, materialists, and others. By “Nemo” [Leonard William Thrupp]. 8vo. Pp. xiii. 265. London, 1890 WHAT is wine ? An interesting dialogue on wines. ... By F. and I. [- Forster and-Ingle]. 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] London [1856] WHAT is worship? A second question on Churchgoing. By S. W. [Miss S. Warren]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1870] WHAT it feels like. By A. Newman [Herbert Moore Pirn]. 8vo. [Bond. Lib. Cat.] Dublin, 1915 Tracts for the times, published by the Irish Publicity League, No. 8. WHAT Katy did ; a story. By Susan Coolidge [Sarah Chauncey Woolsey]. i2mo. Pp. viii. 238. [Lit. Year Book.] London, [1873] WHAT Katy did next. [A story for the young.] By Susan Coolidge [Sarah Chauncey Woolsey]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Lit. Year Book.] Boston, 1886 WHAT killed Mr Drummond, the lead or lancet ? By an old army surgeon [Samuel Dickson], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1843 WHAT lay beneath ; a story of the Queensland Bush. By “Coo—ee” [William Sylvester Walker], 8vo. Pp. 301. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1909 • WHAT lies beneath. [A novel.] By Benjamin Swift [William Romaine Paterson]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1917 WHAT made you join the English Church ? [By Rev. William Macdonald Meredith, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 20. Edinburgh, 1885 WHAT may be effected by union ; a fragment of mission history. [By Rev. G. Pearce.] 8vo. Calcutta, 1870 Signed : G. P. WHAT may I learn? or, sketches of school-girls. By Cousin Kate [Catherine Douglas Bell]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 15 7.] Edinburgh, 1849 WHAT men call love ; a story of South Africa in the days of Cetewayo. By Lucas Cleeve [Mrs Howard Kingscote, nee Adelina G. I. Wolff]. 8vo. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1901 WHAT men like in women. By the author of How to be happy though married [Rev. Edward John Hardy, M.A.]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1906 WHAT might have been ; a true story. By the author of English hearts and English hands, etc. [Catherine M. Marsh]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 127. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1881 WHAT might have been : the story of a social war. Anonymous. [By Ernest Brahmah.] 8vo. Pp. 380. [.Bookman, Jan. 1923, p. 184.] London, 1907 Published afterwards under the title “ The Secret of the League,” with the author’s name. WHAT next? or the peers and the third time of asking. [By Sir Henry Rich.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1837 WHAT one can do with a chafing-dish ; a guide for amateur cooks. By H. L. S. [H. L. Sawtelle]. New edition. 8vo. Pp. 150. [Brit. Mus.] New York [1899] WHAT one work of mercy can I do this Lent? A letter to a friend. [By Henry Edward Manning.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1847 WHAT ought she to do ? [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 306. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1904 WHAT ought the Church and people of Scotland to do now? By a Seceder [Rev. William White, minister of Knox’s Free Church, Haddington], Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 28. [New Coll. Lib.] Edinburgh, 1840 WHAT ought the diocese to do? Considerations addressed to [episcopal] Churchmen of the diocese of New York. By a layman [Orlando Meads]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [New York] 1845 WHAT ought the General Assembly to do at the present crisis? [By Thomas M‘Crie, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 58. Edinburgh, 1833 WHAT peace to the wicked? or, an expostulatorie answer to a derisorie question, lately made concerning peace. By a free-man, though a prisoner [George Wither]. The author spares his name ; not, that he dares not to let you know it ; but, that he cares not. 4to. Pp. 6. [D. N. B. vol. 62, p. 264.] N.P. 1646 WHAT saith the Scriptures about witchcraft? [By Caroline Pearse.] i2mo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] Launceston [1865] Signed: C. P. WHAT Scotch fowk think. Brethren in the Keel-howes ; or, questionings as to Christian doctrine and Plymouthism. [By James Moir Porteous, D.D.] Fourth edition. 8vo. Pp. 204. London, 1874 The sixth edition, entitled “ Brethren in the Keel-howes . . .” bears the author’s name. WHAT set him right; with other chapters to help. . . . [By Andrew K. H. Boyd, D.D.] 8vo. [D.N.B. First Supp. vol. i. p. 245.] London, 1885 WHAT shall be done with Cardinal Wiseman? An inquiry. By an English journalist [William Charles Mark Kent]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1850 WHAT shall be the end of these things ? An inquiry regarding the probable issues of the Scottish Free Church controversy. By the author of Considerations for the conscientious [Rev. James W. Taylor, of Flisk], i2mo. Pp. 117. [New Coll. Lib.] Perth, 1844 WHAT shall I do with my money? By Old Chatty Cheerful [William Martin]. i2mo. [Cushing’s Init. a7id Pseud. i. 210.] London [1863] WHAT shall we do at Delphi? An Englishman’s [Edmund Wheeler’s] letter to the humanitarians. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 92.] London 1857 WHAT shall we do to-night? or, social amusements. By Leger D. Mayne [W. B. Dick, S. A. Frost, and W. Taylor], [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 186.] New York, 1873 WHAT she came through. By Sarah Tytler, author of Citoyen?ie Jacqueline, etc. [Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1877 “ WHAT she could.” By the author of The wide wide world [Susan Warner]. 8vo. Pp. 259. [Allibone’s Diet.] London, 1870 WHAT the bird said to Bertha. By Laura Caxton [Lizzie B. Comins]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. a?id Pseud. i. 53.] Boston, 1888 WHAT the Book of Job teaches ; compiled largely from Prof. S. R. Driver and A. B. Davidson . . . by K. S. M. [Rev. Kenneth S. Macdonald, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 4. [Brit. Musi] Calcutta, 1898 WHAT the boy thought. Thoughts wise and otherwise ; a social satire. By Little Jim [James S. Little]. Second edition. i2mo. Pp. 58. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1884 WHAT the Gospels teach on the Divinity and humanity of Jesus Christ. By a layman [Thomas Crowther Brown, of Further Barton, Cirencester]. 8vo. Pp. xv. 91. London, 1877 WHAT the old tell me ! A reverie. [By Rev. Frederick W. B. Bouverie.j 8vo. Aberdeen [1865 ?] WHAT the people ought to do, in choosing their representatives at the general election, after the passing of the Reform Bill. By Junius Redivivus [William Bridges Adams]. 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 1, p. 109.] London, 1832 WHAT the seven did ; oi* the doings of the Wordsworth Club. By Margaret Sidney [Mrs Harriet Mulford Lathrop]. 8vo. Pp. 405. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1882 WHAT they couldn’t; a home story. By “Pansy5’ [Mrs Isabella Alden, nee Macdonald]. 8vo. Pp. 424. [Lit. Year Book.] Boston, 1895 WHAT think ye of Christ? By a Farmer [William Mill]. 8vo. Pp. 52. Wick, 1878 WHAT think ye of the Congress now? or an enquiry how far the Americans are bound to abide by and execute the decisions of the late Congress. [By Thomas Bradbury Chandler.] 8vo. Pp. 52. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. v. 109.] New York, 1775 There is added, “A Plan of a proposed union between Great Britain and the Colonies of New-Hampshire, Massachusetts-Bay, etc.” WHAT to do, and how to do it, when an election comes. By the oldest School Inspector [Joseph Bentley]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 214.] London, 1868 WHAT was the Fall? Or a brief statement of the doctrine of divines on the First and the Second Death ; with observations. . . . [By Edward White, Congregational minister.] 8vo. London, 1845 WHAT we must all come to ; a comedy in two acts, as it was intended to be acted at the Theatre-Royal in Covent- Garden. [By Arthur Murphy.] 8vo. Pp. 52. [Baker’s Biog. Drain '.] London, 1764 Afterwards produced as “Three weeks after marriage.” WHAT will be the practical effects of the Reform Bill? [By Montague Gore.] 8vo. London, 1831 WHAT will come of it? By E. W. B. [Miss E. W. Barnes]. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1877 WHAT will he do with it ? By Pisistratus Caxton, author of My novel, etc. [Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton]. 8vo. 4 vols. [IV.] Edinburgh, 1859 WHAT will he say ? By Ojos Morenos 'Mrs Josephine Russell Clay]. 8vo. Lib. Journ. iii. 168.] Philadelphia, 1873 WHAT will the Lords do? [By Sir Henry Rich.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1831 WHAT woman wills. [A novel.] By Lucas Cleeve [Mrs Howard Kingscote, nee Adelina G. I. Wolff]. 8vo. Pp. 314. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1908 WHEAT and tares; a tale. [By Sir Henry Stewart Cunningham, K.S.I.E.] i2mo. Pp. 411. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1861 WHEAT in the ear. [A tale.] By “Alien” [Mrs L. A. Baker]. 8vo. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1898 WHEEL (the) of fortune ; or, the dignity of labour. By Madeline Leslie [Harriett N. Baker]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Boston [1866] WHEEL (the) of God. [A novel.] By George Egerton [Mrs Egerton Clair- monte, nee Dunn]. 8vo. Pp. 322. [Brit. Musi] London, 1898 WHEELS within wheels. [A novel.] By Huan Mee [-and- Mansfield, two brothers]. 8vo. London, 1901 WHEN Auntie Lil took charge. By May Wynne [May Wynne Knowles]. 8vo. Pp. 223. [Brit. Musi] Glasgow [1915] WHEN Grandmamma was fourteen. By Marion Harland [Mrs Mary Virginia Terhune, nee Hawes]. 8vo. [Lit. Year Book.] Boston, 1905 WHEN hearts are young; an idyll. By Deas Cromarty [Mrs Robert L. Watson, nee Elizabeth Sophia Fletcher]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London,1896 WHEN I was a little girl ; stories for children by the author of St Olave's [Miss Eliza Tabor]. Illustrated by L. Frolich. 8vo. Pp. vi. 2, 249. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1871 WHEN I was young. ... By Charles Camden [Richard Rowe]. 8vo. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. iii. 326.] London, 1872 WHEN Israel Putnam served the King. ... By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 220.] Boston, 1888 WHEN it was dark; the story of a great conspiracy. By Guy Thorne [Cyril A. E. Ranger-Gull]. 8vo. Pp. 436. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1903 WHEN it was light; a reply to When it was dark. By a well-known author [Andrew Lang]. 8vo. Pp. 208. London, 1906 WHEN knighthood was in flower ; or, the love-story of Charles Brandon and Mary Tudor. By Edwin Caskoden [Charles Major]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1898 WHEN Santiago fell ; or, the war adventures of two chums. By Captain Ralph Bonehill [Edward Stratemeyer]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1899 WHEN terror ruled. [A novel.] By May Wynne [May Wynne Knowles]. 8vo. Pp. 252. [Brit. Musi] London, 1907 WHEN the bour-tree blooms. [A tale.] By Leslie Keith [Grace Leslie Keith Johnston]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Mus.] London [1894] WHEN the devil drives. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 304. [ Who’s Who i?i Lit.'] London, 1910 WHEN the eagle flies seawards. [By Patrick Vaux and Lionel Gaxley.] 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1907 WHEN the Great War came. By “Navarcus” [Patrick Vaux and another], 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London,1908 The above is a slightly different edition of “ The World’s awakening.” ‘‘‘WHEN the King comes to his own.15 A pastoral play. . . . [By Frances J. Armour.] 8vo. Pp. 19. Waterloo [1903] WHEN the snow comes down. [A tale of the winter sports.] By W. L. S. [Rev. William L. Stephen, M.A., of Dumbarton]. 8vo. Pp. 243. London [1915] WHEN the swallows come again. [A story.] By M. F. W. [M. F. Wilson]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1891] WHEN the trumpet is calling ; and other poems. By Clarice Laurence [Miss C. L. Hancock]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1919 WHEN the wicked man. [A novel.] By Guy Thorne [Cyril A. E. Ranger- Gull]. 8vo. Pp. 317. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1916 WHEN the world reeled. [A novel.] By Guy Thorne [Cyril A. E. Ranger- Gull]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1924 WHEN Washington served the King. ... By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 220.] New York, 1905 WHEN wheat is green. By Joseph Wilton [Beatrice Chambers]. 8vo. London, 1895 WHENCE comest thou? The Devil and Satan ; a critical examination of all the texts in which the words Diabolos and Satan are found in Holy Scripture. By Omega [Thomas Walter Good]. 8vo. Pp. 103. [Brit. Musi] London, 1877 WHERE are the dead? And will any suffer eternal torment ? A debate between Antipas, F[idei] D[efensor] . . . and the Rev. Eli Clarke . . . and the Rev. F. D. Thomson. [By James Martin, publisher.] 8vo. Pp. 63. London, 1885 WHERE are the dead? or, spiritualism explained. ... By Fritz [Frederic A. Binney,-solicitor]. Third edition. Pp. viii. 228. London, 1875 WHERE billows roll ; a tale of the Welsh Coast. By Allen Raine [Mrs Beynon Puddicombe, nee Anne A. Evans]. 8vo. Pp. 360. [ Who’s Who in Liti] London, 1909 WHERE did King Oswald die? A summary (by A[skew] R[oberts]) of the arguments in favour of Oswestry [by Howel William Lloyd,f M.A.] and Winwick [by O. Cockayne]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Shrewsbury, 1879 WHERE ghosts walk ; the haunts of familiar characters in history and literature. By Marion Harland [Mary Virginia Hawes, later Mrs Terhune]. 8vo. Pp. x. 292. [ Who’s Who hi Lit.] London, 1913 WHERE highways cross. By a son of the soil [Joseph Smith Fletcher]. 8vo. New York, 1895 WHERE honor leads. By Lynde Palmer [Mrs Mary Louise Peebles, ne'e Parm- lee]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud. i. 224.] New York, 1894 WHERE honour sits. By Reginald Wray [W. B. Home-Gall]. Svo. [ Who’s Who i?i Lit.] London, 1906 WHERE is your husband? [A novel.] By George Frost [Mrs Octavius Eddi- son]. Svo. Pp. 188. [Brit. AIus.] London, 1901 WHERE men only dare to go ; or, the story of a boy Company, C.S.A. By an Ex-boy [R. W. Figg]. 8vo. Richmond, Va., 1885 WHERE ought the new cemetery to be placed? In the Meadows? or in the King’s Park? [By Patrick Neill, printer.] 8vo. Pp. 7. Edinburgh, 1832 Signed : A Citizen. From a MS. note in the Brit. Mus. copy in Lord Henry Cockburn’s handwriting. WHERE Pharaoh dreams. By Irene Osgood [Irene Harvey, later Mrs Robert Harborough Sherard]. Svo. London,1908 WHERE science and religion meet. By William Scott Palmer [M. E. Dowson]. Svo. Pp. 287. [Brit. Musi] London [1919] WHERE shall I worship when I am saved? In verse. By F. W. [Frances Wilson]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1879 WHERE shall we go ? A guide to watering-places in Great Britain. By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope Mon- crieff]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Liti] London,1892 WHERE Socialism failed. An actual experiment. . . . With illustrations and a map. [On William Lane’s experiment at New Australia and Cosine in Paraguay.] By Stewart Grahame [Graeme Douglas Williams]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 266. [Brit. Musi] London, 1912 WHERE the battle was fought. [A novel.] By Charles Egbert Cradock [Mary Noailles Murfree]. 8vo. Pp. 423. [Brit. Mus.] Boston [1885] WHERE the forest murmurs. By Fiona Macleod [William Sharp]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1907 WHERE the wind sits. By the author of Honoria’s patchwork [Mercedes Macandrew]. 8vo. Pp. 308. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1907 WHERE there’s a will there’s a way. [By Rosina Anne Doyle Wheeler, later Lady Lytton Bulwer]. 8vo. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. ii. 554.] N.P. 1871 WHERE to go abroad. By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope Moncrieff]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1893 WHERE to spend a half-holiday ; one hundred and eighty walks around Bradford. By Johnnie Gray [Harry Speight]. 8vo. Pp. 188. [Brit. Mus.] Bradford, 1890 WHERE to spend a holiday. [By Louisa M. Hubbard.] 8vo. Pp. 64. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1887 Signed : L. M. H. WHERE truth lies. By Jane Wardle [Oliver Madox Hueffer]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1909 WHERE was Protestantism before Luther ? With an appendix. By a layman [James Creighton M‘Clellan]. i2mo. Pp. 52. York, 1852 WHERE will it end ? A view of slavery in the United States, in its aggressions and results. . . . [By Edmund Quincy.] 8vo. Providence, 1863 WHETHER Christian faith maye be kepte secret in the heart, without confession therof openly to the worlde as occasion shal serue ; also what hurt cometh by the that hath receiued the gospell, to be preset at masse vnto the simple and vnlearned. [By Robert Horne.] 8vo. No pagination. [D.N.B. vol. 27, p. 361.] From Roane [M. Wood, London] 1553 Wrongly ascribed to John Hooper. VOL VI. WHETHER the parliament be not in law dissolved by the death of the Princess of Orange ? And how the subjects ought, and are to behave themselves in relation to those papers emitted since by the stile and title of Acts ? With a brief account of the government of England ; in a letter to a country gentleman, as an answer to his second question. [By Robert Ferguson.] 4to. Pp. 59. No title-page. Letter dated April 24, 1695. WHETHER the preserving the Protestant Religion was the motive unto or the end that was designed in the late Revolution ? In a letter [by Robert Ferguson, “ the Plotter”] to a country gentleman. 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 18, p. 353.] N.P. 1695 WHETSTONE (the) of witte, whiche is the second parte of arithmetike; containyng the extraction of rootes. . . . [By Robert Record.] 4to. London, 1557 Record’s name is given in the text of the dedication. WHICH ? [A novel.] By Edith Nowell [Mrs Hubert Barclay]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1908 WHICH is? or, the unknown God. By an unknown man [A. H. Pilkington]. 8vo. London, 1909 WHICH is the lunatic? A farce in one Act. By Henry Francis [William Henry Francis Basevi]. 8vo. Pp. 21. Allahabad, 1904 WHICH loved him best ? A novel. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. Pp. 342. [Amer. Cat] New York [1897] WHICH party breaks the law and resists God’s ordinance? [By Alexander Murray Dunlop.] 8vo. Pp. 4. [New Coll. Lib.] Edinburgh, n.d. WHICH party still breaks the law ? [By Alexander Murray Dunlop.] 8vo. Pp 8. [New Coll. Lib.] Edinburgh, N.D. WHICH shall it be? [A novel.] By Mrs Alexander [Mrs Alexander Hector, ne'e Annie French]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1876 WHICH sister? A story. By Sydney Mostyn [William Clark Russell]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1873 WHICH temple ye are. By A. H. W. (Canada) [A. H. Wigmore]. 8vo. London, 1913 P WHICH wins, love or money? By the author of Whitefriars, etc. [Emma Robinson]. 8vo. Pp. 262. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 WHIFFS from a short briar. By Max Baring [Charles Messent]. 8vo. Pp. 124. [Brit. Mus.] London [1896] “WHIG claims on national confidence” examined. . . . [By John Ramsay.] 8vo. Aberdeen, 1835 WHIG (the) Club ; or a sketch of the manners of the age. .. . By the author of The Jockey Clubs [Charles Pigott]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1794 WHIG (the) Featheration ; or fireside legislation in Council: an original melodrama, in two acts, with songs. By Demos [James Woods]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] Mullingar, 1893 WHIG government; or two years’ retrospect. [By Sir Henry Rich.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1832 WHIGS (the) and the Dissenters ; a letter to Edward Baines, Esq., M.P. [By John Middleton Hare.] 8vo. Pp. 23. London [1839] Signed : J. M. H. WHIG’S (a) apology for his consistency ; in a letter from a member of parliament to his friend in the borough of ***** [By Robert Adair.] 8vo. Pp. 198. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1795 WHIGS turn’d Tories, and Hanoverian- Tories, from their avow’d principles, prov’d Whigs ; or, each side in the other mistaken. Being a plain proof, that each party deny that charge which the other bring against them: and that neither side will disown those Drinciples, which the other profess. By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 4, 40. 'Wilson’s Life of Defoe, 145-] London,1713 WHIGS (the) unmask’d; being the secret history of the Calf’s-Head-Club : shewing the rise and progress of that infamous society since the grand rebellion : containing all the treasonable songs and ballads, sung as anthems by those saints, at their king-killing anniversaries : much enlarg’d and improv’d . . . Adorn’d with cuts suitable to every particular design : to which are added, Several characters by Sir John Denham and other valuable authors. ... By Mr Butler, author of Hudibras. [By Edward Ward.] The eighth edition, with large additions. 8vo. Pp. 14, vi. 224. London, 1713 WHIGS (the) unmask’d ; or, the history of the Calf’s-Head-Club farther expos’d ; in a full account of the rise and progress of that impious society, since their horrid rebellion in forty-one: with all the treasonable ballads, sung by the villanous Whigs, as anthems, on the xxxth of January : much enlarg’d, . . . [By Edward Ward.] The ninth edition. 8vo. Pp. 14, vi. 224. London,1714 WHIM (a) and its consequences. [By George Payne Rainsford James.] i2mo. [Brit. Mzzs.] London, 1847 WHIMS. [Tales.] By “Wanderer,” author of Fair Dianas, etc. [Elim H. D’Avigdor]. 8vo. Pp. 305. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 WHIMSICAL (the) bachelor; or, married at last. A comedy in two acts. Written by a novice who has never beheld the interior of the greenroom [Henry Victor]. 8vo. Pp. 43. [Brit. Mus.] Penzance [1865] WHIMSICAL rhymes. By Edmund Evans [Charles Henry Ross]. 8vo. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. vi. 498.] London,1881 WHIP (the) hand ; a comedy for husbands. By Keble Howard [John Keble Bell]. 8vo. Pp. 307. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1906 WHIPPER (the) whipt; being a reply upon a scandalous pamphlet, called the Whip : abusing that excellent work of Cornelius Burges, Dr in divinity, one of the Assembly of divines, entituled, The fire of the sanctuary newly discovered. [By Francis Quarles.] 4to. Pp. 2, 44. [D. N. B. vol. 47, p. 94.] N.P. 1644 WHIRL (a) asunder. By Frank Lin [Mrs Gertrude Franklin Atherton]. 8vo. Pp. 192. [Anier. Cat.] New York [1896] WHIRLIGIG (the). [A novel.] By Mayne Lindsay [Mrs Clarke]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London,1901 WHIRLIGIG (the) of time. [A political satire, by Sir R. K. Douglas ; reprinted from Blackwood’s Magazine.] 8vo. Pp. 32. Edinburgh, 1885 WHIRLIGIG (the) papers. By Herman Grimbosh [Charles Mackay, LL.D.]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 121.] London, 1855 WHIRLIGIGS. [A novel.] By O. Henry [William Sydney Porter]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1910 WHIRL-WIND (the) of the Lord gone forth as a fiery flying roule, with an alarm sounded against the inhabitants of the North-countrey; being a forewarning to all the rulers in England, of the mighty and terrible day of the Lord which shall overtake the wicked : but especially and in particular, to the persecuting rulers, priests, and people, in the county of Westmorland. . . . C. T. [Christopher Taylor]. 4to. Pp. 17. [Bodli] London, 1656 First printed in 1655. WHIRLWIND (the) sown and reaped. [A story.] By Saladin [William Stewart Ross]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London [1884] WHISKERS (the) whisk’d; or, a fare- wel sermon prepared to be preach’d in Turners-Hall in Phillpot-Lane, by the Irreverend J-J-[Joseph Jacob], doctor of enthusiasm. [By John Tutchin, author of the Observator.] 4to. Pp. 26. \Bodl.\ London, 1703 WHISPER (a) to a newly-married pair; from a widowed wife [Margaret Graves Derenzy]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Wellington, Salop, 1824 WHISPERER (the); or tales and speculations. By Gabriel Silvertongue [James Montgomery]. i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 38, p. 318.] London, 1798 Containing 24 Nos., the first dated May 28, 1795 ; the last, Nov. 5, 1795. The copy in the British Museum contains the following note by Archdeacon Wrang- ham : “ There is only one other copy, it is believed, of this work in existence, and that is in the author’s hands. He has sedulously destroyed the remaining few which ever got into circulation.” WHISPERING (the) unseen ; or be ye doers of the Word. By A. L. O. E. Miss Charlotte M. Tucker]. 8vo. Brit. Musi] London, 1881 WHISPERINGS from life’s shore; a bright shell for children. By S. W. L. [Mrs S. W. Landor]. 8vo. Boston, 1849 WHISPERS ; a novel. By George Colmore [Mrs Baillie Weaver]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1914 WHISPERS from dreamland. By Nellie Graham [Mrs Annie Dunning, nee Ketchum]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 119.] New York, 1861 WHIST ; a poem, in twelve cantos. [By Alexander Thomson.] 8vo. Pp. 194. London, 1791 From the title-page of his Paradise of taste. WHIST developments ; American leads, and the unblocking game. By “Cavendish” [Henry Jones]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1894 WHIST for all players. . . . By Captain Rawdon Crawley [George Frederick Pardon]. A new edition, revised by his son, Rawdon Crawley, Bart., of Queen’s Crawley, Hants [Charles Frederick Pardon]. 32010. Pp. 37. [F. Jessel’s Bibl. of Playing Cards.] London,1889 WHIST in diagrams; a supplement to American Whist Illustrated. . . . By G. W. P. [George William Pettes]. 8vo. Pp. 290. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1891 WHIST, or bumblepuppy? Thirteen lectures addressed to children. By Pembridge [John Petch Hewby]. i2mo. [Reform Club Cat. p. 601.] London, 1880 WHIST (the) player; the laws and practice of short whist explained and illustrated. By B . . . [Lieut.-Col. -Blyth]. Second edition. 4to. London,1858 WHIST (the) table ; a treasury of notes on the royal game. By “ Cavendish ” [Henry Jones], C. Mossop, A. E. Ewald, Charles Hervey, and other distinguished players. The whole edited by “Portland” [James Hogg]. 8vo. Pp. 472. [F. Jessel’s Bibl. of Playing Cards, p. 129.] London, 1894 WHIST universal ; an analysis of the game as improved by the introduction of American leads, and adapted to all methods of play. By G. W. P. [George William Pettes]. 8vo. Pp. xiii. 258. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1887 WHIST; which card to lead. By Cam Waller Lewis, M.D.]. 32010. Pp. 11. F. Jessel’s Bibl. of Playing Cards.] London, 1865 The second edition (1865) reads : “Whist; what to lead.” WHIST, with and without perception ; illustrated by means of Endhands from actual play. By B. W. D. and “Cavendish” [Henry Jones]. i2mo. Pp. xv. 71. [Brit. Musi] London, 1889 WHISTLE-BINKIE ; or the piper of the party. [By William Miller.] Second edition. i2mo. 2 vols. Glasgow, 1839 The first edition (1832) runs: “Whistle- Binkie, or a collection of comic and sentimental songs. . . .” WHISTLER ; or, the manly boy. By Walter Aimwell [William Simonds]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 8.] New York, 1885 WHIST-SCORES, and card-table talk. By Rudolph H. Rheinhardt [George Hempl]. 8vo. Baltimore, 1887 WHIST-WHITTLINGS, and forty fully annotated games. By Five of Clubs [Richard Anthony Proctor]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1885 WHITBY (the) spy. [A series of thirty periodical essays. By William Watkins.] i2mo. Pp. vi. 246. [Smales’ Whitby Authors.] Whitby, 1784 WHITE (the) Africans. [Inverse.] By Pardio [John Nott Pyke-Nott, B.A.]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 86. London, 1879 WHITE and black; a story of the Southern [United] States. [By Caroline Ashurst Biggs.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 WHITE and black lies ; or, truth better than falsehood. By Mrs Madeline Leslie [Harriet Newells Baker]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. aiid Pseud. i. 181.] Boston [1864] WHITE and black magic ; or, practical instructions for students of occultism. By F. H. [Franz Hartmann]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 149. Boston, 1885 WHITE and blue ; sketches of military life. [By Mrs Julia Clara Byrne, nee Busk. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 WHITE (the) bear’s den ; a tale. . . . By A. L. O. E. [Charlotte M. Tucker]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1884 WHITE (the) beaver. By Harry Castle- mon [Charles Austin Fosdick]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1899 WHITE (the) Chapel ; a story. By Esme Stuart [Amelie Claire Leroy]. 8vo. Pp. 211. [Brit. Mus.] London [1881] WHITE (the) charger that cost me two hundred pounds; lost me seventy thousand pounds ; drove me from society; eventually deprived me of my friends : and finally compelled me to quit the service. By the author of The horse guards, etc. [Lieut.-Col. Richard Hort]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1850 WHITE (the) chateau : a tragedy. [By Thomas M‘Nicoll, editor of the British Quarterly Review.] 8vo. Pp. 68. [7?. Lnglis.] London, 1852 WHITE (the) comrade. By Katherine Hale [Amelia Warnock Garvin]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1915 WHITE (the) cottage. [A novel.] By “Zack” [Miss Gwendoline Keats]. 8vo. Pp. 270. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1901 WHITE (the) cottage; a tale. [By Arthur Mower.] i2mo. Pp. 344. [Nodes Ambrosiance, iv. 306.] Edinburgh, 1817 WHITE (the) countess. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1907 WHITE (the) feather. By Tasma [Madame Couvreux, ne'e Jessie Huy- bers]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1892 WHITE fire. By JohnOxenham[William Arthur Dunkerley]. 8vo. Pp. 350. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1908 WHITE (the) hand (Baylaya Kuka); a narrative. By Carl Joubert [Adolphus Waldorf Carl Grottey]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1906 WHITE (the) hands of justice. [A novel.] By Ben Bolt [Rev. Ottwell Binns], 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London,1922 WHITE heat. [A novel.] By Pan [Leslie Beresford]. 8vo. [Who’s Who i?i Lit.] London, 1915 WHITE heather. [Three Irish tales.] By “Aroon” [Mrs K. E. O’Connell]. 8vo. [S. J. Brown’s Ireland in Fiction.] Dublin, 1903 WHITE knights. [A tract on purity.] By Beatrice Chase [Olive Katharine Parr], and [two poems by] John Oxen- ham [William Arthur Dunkerley]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1917] WHITE (the) lady; a legend of Artagh; in verse. By T. W. B. [Thomas Wentworth Beaumont]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] London, 1827 WHITE magic. [By Henry Fothergill Chorley]. [Cushing’s Anon.] London [c. 1850] WHITE (the) month. By the author of The Rose garden [Frances'Mary Peard]. 8vo. [Ca?nb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1880 WHITE (the) nun ; or, the Black Bog of Dromore: a novel, by a young gentleman of note [Charles Richard Sumner, scholar at Eton, later bishop of Winchester]. 8vo. [Harcourt’s Eton Bibl. p. 23.] London, 1809 WHITE poppies; a novel. By May Kendall [Leonora Blanche, Mrs Andrew Lang]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 232. London,1893 WHITE rose and red; a love-story. [In verse.] By the author of St Abe [Robert Williams Buchanan]. 8vo. Pp. 243. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1873 WHITE (the) scalper ; a story of the Texan war. By Gustave Aimard [Ollivier Gloux]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1861] WHITE (the) slave ; and the Russian prince. By the author of Revelations of Russia [Charles Frederick Henning- sen]. Second edition. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1846 WHITE (the) slave ; or memoirs of a fugitive. [By Richard Hildreth.] 8vo. Pp. 408. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1852 WHITE (the) stone. By Anatole France [Jacques Anatole Thibault] ; translated by Charles E. Roche. 8vo. Pp. 240. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1910 WHITE (a) umbrella ; and other stories. By the author of Soul Shapes [Alice Dew-Smith]. 8vo. London, 1895 WHITE webs ; a romance of Sussex. By Theo Douglas [Mrs H. D. Everett]. 8vo. Pp. 308. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1912 WHITE (the) wife ; with other stories, supernatural, romantic and legendary. Collected and illustrated by Cuthbert Bede [Edward Bradley], author of Verdant Green, etc. 8vo. Pp. vii. 252. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1865 WHITE (a) witch. [Anovel.] By Theo Douglas [Mrs H. D. Everett]. 8vo. Pp. 340. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1908 WHITE (the) wolf, and other fireside tales. By “ Q ” [Sir Arthur T. Quiller- Couch]. 8vo. Pp. v. 368. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1902 WHITEFRIARS ; or, the days of Charles the Second: an historical romance. [By Emma Robinson.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1844 WHITEHALL (the) Evening Post. [Commenced and edited by Daniel Defoe; published every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday: he continued to write in it occasionally until June, 1720.] 2 leaves. Sm. 4to. [Lee’s Defoe, 189.] 18 Sep. 1718 to June, 1720 WHITEHALL ; or, the days of Charles I. : an historical romance. By the author of Whitefriars [Emma Robinson]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London,1845 Wrongly ascribed to Joseph Robinson. WHITEHALL ; or, the days of George IV. [By William Maginn, LL.D.] 8vo. [Dub. Univ. Mag. xxiii. 86.] London [1827] A parody on a work by Horace Smith. WHITHER? A novel. By M. E. Francis [Mary E. Sweetman, later Mrs Francis Blundell]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1902 WHITHER drifting? By the author of The light of thy truth [Edward John Adams]. 8vo. Pp. 96. [Brit. Mus.] London [1914] WHITTIER with the children. By Margaret Sidney [Mrs Lothrop, ne'e Harriet Mulford Stone]. 8vo. Pp. 59. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 267.] Boston, 1893 WHITTINGTON and his cat; the “Royal” grand Christmas pantomime for 1881-82. Written by R. L. West- land [Robert W. Lowe]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 38. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1881 WHITTLINGS from the West ; with some account of Butternut Castle. By Abel Log [Charles Butler Greatrex, rector of Stanton-upon-Hine]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 442. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1854 WHO are the happy? A poem on the Christian beatitudes ; with other poems on sacred subjects. [By Rev. William Hamilton Drummond, D.D.] 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of lrela?idi] Dublin, 1818 “ WHO breaks—pays.” (Italian proverb.) By the author of Cousm Stella [Henrietta Camilla Campbell, later Mrs Jenkin]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1861 WHO did it ? [A novel.] By Headon Hill [Frank E. Grainger]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1912 WHO fares best, the Christian, or the man of the world ? Or, the advantage of a life of real piety to a life of fashionable dissipation. By a marine officer [Major-General Andrew Burn]. 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London,1789 WHO goes there ? By the author of Aunt Sarah and the War [Wilfrid Meynell]. 8vo. Pp. 94. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1916 Third impression of “ Halt! who goes there ? ” WHO goes there ? or, men and events. By Sentinel [William Henry Bogart]. [Cushing’s /nit. and Pseud, i. 265.] New York, 1866 WHO is responsible for the War? By Scrutator [Rev. Malcolm MacColl, M.A., D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 154. [Brit. Musi] London, 1871 WHO is she? A mystery of Mayfair. By the author of The Honeymoon [the Duke de Medina Pomar]. Second edition. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London,1878 WHO is the author? or, a letter to the Rev. R. Frost, A.M., containing an examination into the authenticity of a letter bearing his name, addressed to the Warden and Fellows of the Collegiate Church, Manchester. By Verax [T. Hutchinson]. 8vo. Pp. 16. Manchester, 1836 P 2 VOL. VI. WHO is the legitimate King of Portugal ? A Portuguese question, submitted to impartial men by a Portuguese residing in London [Paolo Midosi]. Translated from the Portuguese. 8vo. \Brit. Afus.] [London, 1828] WHO is the real enemy of Germany? [Translated from the German of Onno Klopp]. 8vo. London, 1868 WHO is to be Speaker [in the House of Commons]. [By Sir Henry Rich.] 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1835 WHO is to have it? A novel. By the author of The Netherwoods of Otter- fool [Mrs J. C. Bateman]. 8vo. Pp. 434. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1859 WHO lived there ? By the author of Afy Neighbour Nellie, etc. [George Dalziel]. 8vo. Pp. 144. [Brit. Afus. London [1887 WHO ought to win ? Oom Paul or Queen Victoria? By S. Randolph [Thomas B. O’Connor]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Chicago, 1900 WHO poisoned Hetty Duncan? and other detective stories. By Dick Donovan [Joyce E. P. Muddock]. 8vo. Pp. 313. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1890 WHO saved the ship? By “Jak” [Annie Bowles Williams]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Suff.\ New York, 1887 WHO sent thee to baptize? or, “A Clergyman’s Christian baptism ” not the baptism of Christ. [By John Bellows, printer.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1872 A reply to a pamphlet entitled “ Christian Baptism, a reply to a pamphlet issued by the Society of Friends. By a Clergyman.” WHO shall rule: Briton or Norman? By Cynicus [Martin Anderson]. 8vo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Afus.] Tayport, 1911 WHO told it to me ? By Margaret Sidney [Mrs Harriet M. Lothrop]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud. i. 267.] Boston, 1884 WHO was Caxton ? William Caxton, merchant, ambassador, historian, author, translator, and printer. A monograph by R. H. B. [Rowland Hill Blades]. 8vo. London, 1877 Presentation copy from the author. WHO was Lady Thurne ? [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1905 WHO wrote Cavendish’s Life of Wolsey ? [By Joseph Hunter, of Bath.] 4to. Pp. 56. [Bodl.] London, 1814 WHO wrote Shakespeare? [By M. L. Horr.] 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] [Denver, 1885] Signed : Multum in parvo. WHO wrote the Waverley novels ? Being an investigation into certain mysterious circumstances attending their production, and an inquiry into the literary aid which Sir Walter Scott may have received from other persons. [By William John Fitzpatrick.] 8vo. Pp. 88. [Brit. Afus.; Boase’s Afod. Eng. Biog. v. 307.] London, 1856 The Introduction is signed : W. J. F. A second edition, revised, was issued later in the same year. WHO’D be an author ? With the answer. By Frank Foster [Daniel Puseley]- 8vo. Pp. vi. 264. [D.N.B. vol. 47, p. 53.] London, n.d. WHOLE (the) art of husbandry ; or the way of managing and improving of land ... to which is added the Country-man’s Kalendar. By J. M. John Mortimer] Esq., F.R.S. 8vo. Brit. Afus.] London, 1707 WHOLE Book of Psalms, as they are now sung in churches, with the singing notes of time and tune set to every syllable, made plain and easie to the understanding of all that can read, etc. “ Never before done in England.” By T. M. [Thomas May]. 8vo. [W.] N.P. 1688 WHOLE (a) crew of kind gossips, all met to be merry. [By Samuel Rowlands.] 4to. No pagination. London,1609 Address “To the maids of London,” signed : S. R. For other editions see “A crew of kind London gossips, . . .” “ ’Tis merry when gossips meet . . .” and “ Well met, gossip. . . .” WHOLE (the) doctrine of the Sabbath as set forth in the Holy Scriptures, in the writings of the Fathers, and by the most eminent Reformers and orthodox modern divines. ... By J. W. [John Wauchope]. 8vo. Pp. 60. Edinburgh, 1851 WHOLE (the) duty of a Christian, and a guide to perfection ; with directions to parents in the Christian education of their children. By M. P. [Michael Benedict Pembridge, O.S.B.]. 8vo. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet. v. 254.] n.p. 1775 WHOLE (the) duty of a Christian . . . being a faithful abstract of the Trent Catechism. [By Sylvester Jenks, D.D.] i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 29, p. 316.] London, 1707 WHOLE (the) duty of a Christian ; by way of question and answer ; exactly pursuant to the method of the Whole duty of man, and designed for the use of the charity schools, lately erected in and about London. [By Robert Nelson.] i2mo. Pp. 93,3. [D.N.B. vol. 40, p. 212.] London, 1705 WHOLE (the) duty of a Christian ; or, the character of a true believer. . . . Second impression . . . inlarged. By R. Y. [Richard Young, or Younge] of Rexwell in Essex. 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1653 WHOLE (the) duty of man consider’d, under its three principal and general divisions, namely, the duties we owe to God, ourselves, and neighbours ; faithfully extracted from that excellent book so entitled, and published for the benefit of the poorer sort. By a gentleman [Browne Willis, LL.D.]. i2mo. Pp. x. 52. \D. N. B. vol. 62, p. 17.] London, 1717 Regarding the authorship, see the note appended to “ The Art of contentment.” Though this work proved so welcome to many readers that more than thirty editions were issued, it was perceived by the more thoughtful to deal to such an extent with externalities that the inner life of man received too little regard. The first attempt to remedy this defect was not made till 1693, when another anonymous writer issued “ The Whole Duty of man, Part II., teaching a Christian . . . how to prepare himself for an happy death. . . .” Even this, however, failed to supply what was lacking, and thus made little impression on the public mind : and a longer interval elapsed before better light and leading were supplied. In 1704, however, there appeared a shorter and more acceptable treatise, entitled “ The Whole Duty of man, by way of question and answer, exactly pursuant to the Whole Duty of man ...” [by Robert Nelson] ; many editions were issued, including some with the author’s name. A summary of the original “Whole Duty” was prepared [by Dr Browne Willis] and sent forth in 1717 as “ The Whole Duty of man consider’d ” : see above. Next followed, in 1729, a similarly unambitious work, “The Whole Duty of man, laid down in a familiar way, for the use of all, but especially the meanest reader . . .” In 1744, still another anonymous writer published “The New Whole Duty of man, containing the faith as well as practice of a Christian . . . with devotions proper for several occasions; also an help to reading the Scriptures.” Public appreciation of this work was proved by the constant demand for reprints, which have numbered more than forty. As the original “Whole Duty of man,” however, continued its hold on the mind of many well-disposed persons, even after the revival of religion during the eighteenth century, another work was required, presenting a full outline of Evangelical theology to supply the long-felt want: this was provided in 1763 by Henry Venn of Huddersfield in a volume bearing the significant title, “ The Complete Duty of man.” Later editions, revised and improved, have numbered nearly twenty. [See the Bibliographer, vol. ii. pp. 24, 73, and 124.] The very first form of “ The Whole Duty of man ” had a fuller title : see “ The Practice of Christian graces . . .” WHOLE (the) Duty of man, laid down in a plain and familiar way. . . . [By Richard Allestree, D.D.] i2mo. London,1669 The title of the first edition of this popular work (issued in 1658) begins thus : “ The Practice of Christian graces ; or the whole duty of man. . . .” Regarding the authorship, see the note to “The Art of Contentment. . . .” See also N. and Q. March 1920. WHOLE (the) duty of mourning, and the great concern of preparing ourselves for death, practically considered : written, some years since, by the author of The Whole Duty of man [Dr Richard Allestree], and now published. . . . i2mo. \Brit. Mus.] [London, 1695] WHOLE (the) duty of receiving worthily the blessed Sacrament, laid down in six days of preparation ; consisting of prayers, meditations, and soliloquies before it, and after the Lord’s Supper. By the author of The Whole Duty of Man [Richard Allestree, D.D.]. i2mo. London, 1696 Regarding the authorship, see the note appended to “ The Art of Contentment.” WHOLE (the) duty of woman. By a lady [rather by William Kenrick, LL.D.]. Written at the desire of a noble lord. 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 31, p. 17.] London, 1753 Another edition, “ with considerable improvements,” was published at Boston, Mass., in 1807. WHOLE (the) Psalter, translated into English metre [by Matthew Parker, Archbishop of Canterbury], which contayneth an hundreth and fifty Psalmes. The first Quinquagene. 4to. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London [1557] WHOLE (the) question of ecclesiastical establishments stated and considered. [By Rev. William Lowrie, of Lander.] i2mo. [Cushing’s Anon.] Edinburgh, 1833 WHOLE (the) truth. Address to the freemen of New England, Nov. 1, 1808. By Hancock [Jonathan Russell]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud’., ii. 72.] Boston, 1808 See also “ Essex Junta exposed . . .” WHOLE (the) truth and nothing but the truth about the social evil in Edinburgh, showing fuller and deeper investigations. [By James Glass Bertram, journalist.] 8vo. Pp. 56. Edinburgh, 1868 WHOLE (the) truth, and nothing but the truth ; or a dialogue (regarding the Irish elections] between Irish Tom, and Jack, and English Will. [By Jonas Han way.] 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Dublin, 1761 Signed : Thomas Trueman. WHOLSOME advices from the Blessed Virgin, to her indiscreet worshippers. Written by one of the Roman communion [Adam Widenfelt] and done out of the French into English, by a gentleman of the Church of England [James Taylor] ; with a preface shewing the motives to the translation. 4to. Pp. xvi. 20. [Jones’ Peck, i. 102 ; ii. 421.] London, 1687 WHOLSOME severity reconciled with Christian liberty ; or, the true resolution of a present controversie concerning liberty of conscience : here you have the question stated, the middle way betwixt popish tyrannie and schis- matizing liberty approved, and also confirmed from Scripture, and the testimonies of divines, yea of whole Churches : the chiefe arguments and exceptions used in The bloudy tenent, The compassionate Samaritane, M. S. to A. S. &c. examined. . . . [By George Gillespie.] 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 21, p. 360.] London, 1645 WHOM shall we hang ? The Sebastopol enquiry. [By Sir Peter Benson Maxwell.] 8vo. [Scotsman, Jan. 14, 1856.] London, 1855 WHOM tofollow—Gladstone or Beacons- field : in two parts. [Part I. by George Smith, C.I.E., LL.D. ; Part II. by Sir George Adam Smith, D.D., LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. 132. Edinburgh, 1879 WHO’S afraid? A farce of one act: with songs. [By Sir Richard Paul Jodrell, M.D.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Drami] London, 1787 WHOSE poems? [By E. D. Girdle- stone.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1850 WHOSO breaketh an hedge. [A novel.] By “Iota” [Mrs Mannington Caffyn]. [Lit. Year Book.\ 8vo. London, 1909 WHY am I a Presbyterian ? By a mother [Mrs N. W. Campbell]. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1852 WHY are not hydropathic establishments more successful ? By A. M. [Alexander Munro, M.D., of Cluny- Hill Hydropathic, Forres]. 8vo. Pp. 48. Dunfermline [1881] WHY are you a churchman ? A plain question answered in a dialogue between Mr Fitz Adam and John Oakley. [By Thomas Drewitt, of Chedder.] i2mo. [Mon. Rev. xxxii. 314.] London, 1800 WHY Church is better than chapel or meeting. By M. E. S. [Mary E. Simpson]. 8vo. London, 1863 WHY Dissenters are not . . . guilty of Schism . . . [By Charles Owen, D.D.] 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 42, p. 401.] London, 1717 WHY do men starve? By Iconoclast [Charles Bradlaugh]. 8vo. No title- page. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1867] WHY do not women swim? A voice from many waters. [By Susan Rugeley Powers.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [Olphar Hamst’s Swimming.] London [1859] WHY do you object to vaccination ? [By Caroline Pearse.] 8vo. Pp. 8. Launceston [c. 1865] WHY do you take strong drink? . . . By the author of Bound by fetters, etc. [Emily Foster]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Manchester, 1887 WHY don’t you say your prayers ? A few words addressed to those who never pray. [By Julia Elizabeth Marshall.] 8vo. London [1895] WHY emigrate ? The cultivation of our own lands is the sure source of general employment for our population. . . . [By H. B. Gaskin.] 8vo. London, 1819 WHY freedom matters. By Norman Angell [Ralph Norman Angell Lane]. 8vo. Pp. 60. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1916 WHY [General Charles G.] Gordon perished [at Khartoum]; or the political and military causes which led to the Sudan disasters. By a War correspondent . . . [Alexander Macdonald]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 318. London, 1896 WHY have you become a Paedobaptist ? A dialogue between Hezekiah Hastie, a Baptist, and Simon Searche, a Paedobaptist ... By John Bull [Rev. Benjamin Parsons, Congregationalist]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Stroud, 1835 WHY how now, Gossip [Alexander] Pope? Or the sweet-singing bird of Parnassus taken out of its pretty cage to be roasted. . . . [By John Henley.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] London, 1743 WHY I am a conservative. By an elector [Henry Llewellyn Williams]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1885] WHY Pm single. [A novel.] By Albert Ross [Linn Boyd Porter]. 8vo. Pp. 360. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1892 WHY is history read so little? By a student of history [Edward Denham]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Suppi] New Bedford, 1876 “WHY Johnny didn’t interfere.” An answer to “ The fight at Dame Europa’s school.” [By Frank Chancellor.] i2mo. Pp. ii. [F. Madan.] London, 1871 Signed: Johnny. WHY not ? Eight queries made to the Parliament from the people of England in 1649. [By James Frese?] Folio. S. sh. [Brit. Mils.] London, 1649 WHY one should join the Theosophical Society. [By Bertram Keightley.] 8vo. London [1890 ?] Signed : B. K. WHY Paul Ferroll killed his wife. By the author of Paul Ferroll [Mrs Caroline Clive, nee Wigley]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, i860 WHY Pennsylvania should become one of the Confederate States of America. By a native of Pennsylvania [George MacHenry], 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 201.] London, 1862 WHY she left him. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [ Who's Who in Lit.\ London, 1914 WHY should the Chinese go? By Kwang Ching Ling [Alexander Del- mar]. 8vo. [Lib. Journ. iv. 457.] San Francisco, 1878 WHY should we oppose the licensing clauses ? [By A. S. Cook.] [Robertson’s Aberd. Bibli] [Aberdeen, 1890?] WHY should you secede? Containing observations on spiritual independence and non-intrusion in reference to secession. [By George Munro, advocate.] 8vo. Pp. 31. Edinburgh, 1843 WHY, sir, it’s better and better ... By E. C. [Edward Crowley]. 8vo. Southampton [1865] WHY the Liberals are leaving the League ; a letter to Sir B. Heywood. Bya Manchester Liberal [John Heugh]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Manchester [1857] WHY the martyrs of Manchester died. By A. Newman [Herbert Moore Pim]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] Dublin, 1915 Tracts for the times, published by the Irish Publicity League, No. 9. WHY we live. By Summerdale [Alexander Young]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, ii. 141.] Chicago, 1880 WHYCHCOTTE of St John’s ; or, the court, the camp, the quarter-deck, and the cloister. [By Erskine Neale.] i2mo. 2 vols. [W. and Q. 3rd Feb. 1855, p. 91.] London, 1833 WHY’S ? (the) and the How’s ? or, a good enquiry : a sermon [on Matt. ii. 3] preach’d before their Majesties in their chappel at St James’s the 2d. Sunday of Advent, December 6th. 1685. By J. D. of the Society of Jesus [John Dormer]. Published by his Majesties command. 4to. Pp. 34. [Brit. Musi] London, 1687 WHYTE dyed black ; or a discouery of many most foule blemishes, impostures, and deceiptes, which D. Whyte haith practysed in his book entituled The way to the true Church. Writen by T. W. P. [Thomas Worthington, Priest]; and dedicated to the Vniuersity of Cambridge. 4to. Pp. 18, 183. [Bodli] n.p. 1615 WICKED (the) plots, and perfidious practises of the Spaniards, against the 17. provinces of the Netherlands, before they took up armes ; being gathered out of severall Dutch writers, by a lover of truth, and an unfained hater of oppression and tyrannie, the bane of commonwealths. [By Thomas Scot, B.D.] No pagination. 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] n.p., n.d. Printed at the end of Scot’s Second part of Spanish practises, under the title of “An adioynder of sundry other particular wicked plots and cruell, inhumane, perfidious ; yea, unnatural practises of the Spaniards.” Signed: S. O. WICKEDEST (the) woman in New York. By John Paul [Charles Henry Webb]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York [c. 1900] WICKER (the) workwoman; a chronicle of our own times. By Anatole France [Jacques Anatole Thibault] ; translated from the French. 8vo. Pp. 274. [Brit. Musi] London, 1910 WICKHAM wakened; or, the Quaker’s madrigall in rime dogrell. [By Martin Llewellyn.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Smith’s Bibl. Anti-Quak. p. 275.] N.p. 1672 WICLIF; an historical drama. [By Charles E. Sayle.] 8vo. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books, p. 269.] Oxford, 1887 WIDDOWES (the) teares ; a comedie. Written by Geor. Chap. [George Chapman]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1612 WIDE awake. By Martha James [Martha Claire MacGowan Doyle]. 8vo. [Amer. Cati] Boston, 1902 WIDE of the mark. By the author of Recommended to mercy [Mrs Matilda Charlotte Houstoun]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1871 WIDE (the), wide world. By Elizabeth Wetherell [Susan Warner]. Complete edition. 8vo. Pp. 446. [Allibone’s Dict.\ London [1877] WIDER (a) world. By Crona Temple [Miss-Corfield]. 8vo. London, 1885 WIDOW (the) and her daughter. By the authors of The wide, wide world [Susan and Anna Bartlett Warner]. i2mo. [Allibone’s Diet.] London, 1864 WIDOW (the) Bedott papers. [By Mrs Frances M. Whitcher.] 8vo. Pp. 228. New York, 1893 WIDOW (the) bewitch’d ; a comedy, as it is acted at the Theatre in Goodmans- Fields. [By John Mottley.] 8vo. Pp. 64. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1730 WIDOW Guthrie ; a novel. By Philemon Perch [Robert Malcolm Johnston]. 8 vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 228.] New York, 1890 WIDOW Magoogin. [A novel.] By John J. J. [John J. Jennings], 8vo. New York, 1900 WIDOW O’Callaghan’s boys. By Gulielma Zollinger [William Zachary Gladwin]. 8vo. [A?ner. Cat.] Chicago, 1905 WIDOW (the) of Malabar ; a tragedy, in three acts. [By Miss Mariana Starke]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 47. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1791 WIDOW (the) of the city of Na'in ; and other poems. By an under-graduate of the University of Cambridge [Thomas Dale]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1819 Inscribed copy in the British Museum. WIDOW (the) of the wood. [By Benjamin Victor.] i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 58, p. 302.] London, 1755 A reprint was issued at Glasgow in 1769. The work was so offensive to the family of Sir William Wolseley, that they destroyed every copy they could secure. WIDOW Wakefull’s mission ; or glean- ing’s in mil-dewed and blighted fields. [By Catherine Grant.] 8vo. [P. J. Anderson’s Inverness Bill. p. 126.] London, N.D. WIDOW Wiley. [A novel.] By Brown Linnet [Miss Ella Tomlinson]. 8vo. London, 1911 WIDOW (the) Wyse. [By Mrs Helen Mar Bean.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Anon.] Boston, 1884 WIDOWHOOD (the) of Gabrielle Grant. By Eglanton Thorne [Emily Charlton]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1903 WIDOW’S (the) cottage ; a poem . . . By the author of The beauties of Walde?i [Mrs Hannah Carnes]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Cambridge, 1840 WIDOW’S (the) jewels ; in two stories. By a lady [Hannah Maynard Pickard]. London, 1831 WIDOW’S (the) lodgings; a novel. By John Ballantyne.] i2mo. 2 vols. Cat. of the Philos. Inst. Edin., p. 336.] Edinburgh, 1813 WIDOW’S (the) mite ; or, questions of the greatest moment, humbly offered for reviving true piety and religion in the life and power thereof. [By John Warden.] i2mo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1721 WIDOW’S (a) reminiscences of the siege of Lucknow. [By Mrs Katherine Mary Bartrum.] i2mo. London, 1858 WIDOW’S (the) tale : and other poems. By the author of Ellen Fitzarthur [Caroline Bowles, later Mrs Southey]. i2mo. Pp. 222. [D.N.B. vol. 53, p. 282.] London, 1822 WIDOW’S (the) vow ; a farce, in two acts, as it is acted at the Theatre Royal, Hay-Market. [By Elizabeth Inchbald, nee Simpson.] 8vo. Pp. 35. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1786 WIELAND ; or, the transformation. By C. B. B. [Charles Brockden Brown]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 23.] New York, 1798 WIFE (the). By Mira, one of the authors of The female spectator, and Epistles for ladies [Eliza Haywood]. i2mo. Pp. 282. [Brit. Musi] London, 1756 WIFE and woman ; from the German of L. Haidheim [Mrs Luise Ahlborn, nee Jager]. 8vo. [Holzmann and Bohatta’s Deuts. Pseud-Lexikoni] New York, 1891 WIFE (the) and woman’s reward. [By Hon. Mrs Caroline E. S. Norton.] i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1835 WIFE (the) hunter, and Flora Hunter ; tales by the Moriarty family : edited by Denis Ignatius Moriarty, Esq. [By John O’Brien Grant.] i2mo. 3 vols. [Bodli] London, 1838 WIFE (a) in name only. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1886 WIFE (a) not ready made, but bespoken by Dicus the batchelor, and made up for him by his fellow shepheard Tity- rus : in four pastorall eclogues. [By Robert Aylett.] The second edition ; wherein are some things added but nothing amended. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London,1653 Signed : R. A. WIFE (a), now a widdowe. [By Sir Thomas Overbury.] 8vo. No pagination. [.Bodl.] London, 1614 WIFE (the) of Leon, and other poems. By two sisters of the West [Mrs Catharine Ann Warfield, nee Ware, and Mrs Eleanor Percy Lee, nee Ware]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud. i. 288.] New York, 1844 WIFE (a) well manag’d; a farce [in one act, and in prose. By Susanna Carrol, later Mrs Centlivre]. i2mo. [Baker’s Biog. Dra?ni] London, 1715 WIFE-CHASE (the) ; a monitory poem. [By Joshua Jenour.] 8vo. London [1780 ?] WIFE-LENDING ; how to preserve the poor. ... By Walter James [James Dennis Hird]. 8vo. Pp. no. [Brit. Musi] London, 1894 WIFE’S (the) domain. [A domestic manual.] By Philomalos [James Whitehead, M.D.] Second edition. 8vo. Pp. vii. 162. [Manch. Free Lib.] Manchester, 1874 Presentation copy from the author. WIFE’S (a) secret. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. i2mo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1885 WIFE’S (a) story, and other tales. By the author of Caste, etc. [Emily Jolly]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1875 WIFE’S (the) temptation, a tale of Belgravia. By the authoress of The sister of charity, etc. [Mrs Annie E. Challice]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London,1859 WIFE’S (the) trials ; a novel. [By Emma Jane Worboise.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1855 WIG (the) and the Jimmy ; or, a leaf in the political history of New York. By John J. Davenport.] 8vo. Cushing’s A non.] New York, 1869 WIGWAM (the) and the cabin. By the author of The Yemassee, etc. [William Gilmore Simms]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1845 WIGWAM (the) and the war-path. . . . By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope Moncrieff]. 8vo. Pp. 392. [Brit. Musi] London, 1892 WILBERFORCE’S doctrine of the Eucharist refuted. By Theophilus Secundus [Rev. Stephen Jenner, M.A.]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1854 WILD animal play for children. . . . By Ernest Seton-Thompson [Ernest Thompson Seton]. 8vo. Pp. 80. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1900 WILD animal ways. By Ernest Seton- Thompson [Ernest Thompson Seton]. 8 vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] New York, 1916 WILD animals at home. By Ernest Seton-Thompson [Ernest Thompson Seton]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1913 WILD animals I have known. ... By E. Seton-Thompson [Ernest Thompson Seton]. 8vo. Pp. 360. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1898 WILD (the) beast fighter. [By Plenry Llewellyn Williams.] 8vo. London,1890 WILD (a) beauty. [A novel.] By Dick Donovan [Joyce E. Preston Muddock]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1909 WILD (a) bouquet. By Leon Claire [Edwin C. Barnes]. Syracuse, N.Y., 1874 WILD (the) brier; or, lays by an untaught minstrel. By E. N. L. [Elizabeth N. Lockerby]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 159.] Charlottetown, 1866 WILD (the) flora of Lampeter and neighbourhood. By a lover of flowers [Rev. J. Eli Evans]. 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] N.P. 1910 WILD (the) flower of Ravensworth. By the author of John and 1, etc. [Matilda Betham Edwards]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1866 WILD flowers from the wayside. [Poems.] By Thomasine [Olivia Knight]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of 1relandi] Dublin, 1883 WILD (the) flowers of Dover and its neighbourhood. . . . [By Frederick Apthorp Paley.] i2mo. Pp. xii. 76. [Brit. Musi] London [1850 ?] WILD flowers of South Australia. By F. E. D. [Miss F. E. De Mole]. 4to. Adelaide, 1861 WILD flowers of the West. By an old prairie hen [Catherine Nichols]. 8vo. Chicago, 1874 WILD flowers of Wisconsin. [Poems.] By Porte Crayon [Bernard Isaac Durward]. 8vo. [Lib. Journ. vi. 16.] New York, 1872 WILD (the) garland ; or, prose and poetry connected with English wild flowers : intended as an embellishment to the study of botany. By the author of The life of Linnceus, in a series of letters [Miss S. Waring]. i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friejids1 Books, ii. 859.] London, 1827 WILD (the) heart. [A novel.] By M. E. Francis [Mrs Francis Blundell, nee Mary Evans Sweetman]. 8vo. Pp. 330. [Who's Who in Lit.] London,1910 WILD honey from various thyme. [Poems.] By Michael Field [Mrs Katherine H. Bradley, and Edith Emma Cooper]. 8vo. Pp. 208. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1908 WILD (the) Irish boy. ... By the author of Mojitorio [Rev. Charles Robert Maturin]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1808 WILD life in a southern County. By the author of The gamekeeper at home [Richard Jefferies]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1879 WILD Mike and his victim. By the author of Misunderstood [Florence Montgomery]. 8vo. Pp. 146. London,1875 WILD notes from the backwoods. . . . By R. A. P. [Rhoda Ann Paige, later Mrs Falkner]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] Cobourg, 1850 WILD oats ; from the French of H. Greville [Madame Alice Durand]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1889 WILD olive ; by the author of The inner shrine [Basil King]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London [1910] WILD roses. ... By Cousin Sue [Susan A. Wright]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 276.] Philadelphia, 1868 WILD roses. [Poems.] By Ellis Walton [Mrs F. Percy Cotton]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1894 WILD (the) Ruthvens; a home story. By Curtis Yorke [Mrs W. S. Richmond Lee, ne'e Jex-Long]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1900 WILD shrubs of Alabama; or, rhapsodies of restless hours. By the minstrel maiden of Mobile [Julia Mildred Harriss]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 195.] New York, 1852 WILD sports in Ireland, with rod, gun, and camera. By John Bickerdyke [Charles Henry Cooke]. 8vo. London, 1897 WILD sports of the West ; with legendary tales, and local sketches. By the author of Stories of Waterloo [Capt. William Hamilton Maxwell]. 8vo. 2 vols. [D. A7. B. vol. 37, p. 138!] London, 1832 WILD thyme gathered on the mountains of Israel. [Poems.] By C. S. [Charles Sabine]. Third edition. i2mo. Pp. 191. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1857 WILD Western scenes ; a narrative of adventures. ... By a squatter [John B. Jones]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 273.] Philadelphia, 1869 WILD wheat; a Dorset romance. By M. E. Francis [Mrs Francis Blundell, nee Mary Evans Sweetman]. 8vo. Pp. 300. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1905 WILD wooing ; a novel. By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1893 WILDERNESS (the). [A novel.] By Lucas Cleeve [Mrs Howard Kingscote, ne'e Adeline G. I. Wolff]. 8vo. Pp. 306. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London,1906 WILDERNESS (the) and its lessons. . . . By F. E. R. [F. E. Raven]. 8vo. Pp. 137. London, 1898 WILDERNESS (the) cure. By Vandyke Brown [Marc Cook]. 8vo. New York, 1881 WILDERNESS (the); or, Braddock’s times : a tale of the West. By Solomon Secondsight [James M‘Henry, M.D.]. 8vo. [D. N.B. vol. 35, p. 108.] New York, 1823 Wrongly assigned to Thomas Berkeley Greaves. WILDFLOWER. By the author of The house of Elmore [Frederick William Robinson]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1857 WILD-FOWL and sea-fowl of Great Britain. By “A son of the marshes” [Denham Jordan]. Edited by J. A. Owen. [Brit. Mus.] 8vo. Pp. 326. London, 1895 WILDMOOR. By Edith Lee [Florence Burckett], 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 170.] Philadelphia, 1875 WILDS (the) of London. By the Amateur Lambeth Casual [James Greenwood]. 8vo. London, 1866 WILDWOOD’S magazine. [By Fred. E. Pond.] Vol. I., May-Oct. 1888. 8vo. Chicago, 1888 No more published. WILES (the) of Wilhelmina. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1913 WILFRED and his record. By a pioneer [F. Harris]. 8vo. Adelaide, 1887 WILFRED’S widow ; a novel. By the author of Mrs Jerninghamls Journal [Mrs Hart, nle Fanny Wheeler]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1883 WILFUL (a) maid. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1887 WILFUL Ward ; a novel. By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1891 WILFUL (the) ward ; a novel. By the author of the Young doctor, etc. [Jane Vaughan Pinkney]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1853 WILHELM Meister’s apprenticeship ; a novel. From the German of Goethe by Thomas Carlyle]. 8vo. 3 vols. D. N. B. vol. 9, p. 113.] Edinburgh, 1824 WILHELM’S wanderings ; an autobiography. [By William Swift.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1878 WILL. [A novel.] From the French of G. Ohnet [Georges Henot]. 8vo. Pp. 408. [Brit. Musi] London, 1896 WILL Denbigh, nobleman. [By Dinah Maria Mulock, later Mrs Craik.] * i2mo. [Cushing’s Anon.] Boston, 1877 Also ascribed to Mrs Emily Fox. WILL it come? a story. By Leland Searcher [William Wallace Hebbard, M.D.]. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 263.] Hyde Park, Mass., 1870 WILL (the) o’ the Wisps ; or, St John’s Eve in the Forest. [A tale.] By the authoress of The Princess Use [Marie Petersen]. Translated from the German. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1865 WILL (the) of a certain Northern vicar. [By Rev. W. Cooper, rector of Kirkby Wiske.] Second edition, to which is annex’d a codicil. 4to. [N. and Q. 18th March 1882, p. 209.] London, 1765 The above was reprinted as “ The vicar’s will and codicil ” (Newcastle, 1824). Also ascribed to Rev. John Ellison. WILL (the) ; or, the half-brothers: a romance. [By-M‘Gauran.] 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1846 WILL religious equality do good or harm throughout the counties in which Gaelic is more or less spoken ? By a Free Church Elder [Thos. McMicking]. 8vo. Pp. 8. Glasgow [1880?] WILL Romanism prevail in the Church of England ? By an English Churchman [Rev. George Thomas Horn, M.A.]. 4to. Oxford, 1877 WILL Rood’s friendship. [A novel.] By Glance Gaylord [Warren Ives Bradley]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. hi.] Boston, 1868 WILL Shakespeare ; an invention in four acts. By Clemence Dane [Winifred Ashton]. 8vo. [Canib. Univ. Lib.] London, 1921 WILL you be confirmed? A word to the young. By a London curate [William Dalrymple Maclagan, afterwards Archbishop of York]. 8vo. [D.N.B., Second Supp., vol. 2, p. 532.] London [1859] WILL you have your Church repaired? [By Sir Henry Rich, Bart.] 8vo. London,1837 WILL-FORGERS (the). By the Rev. Allan Temple [Rev. Charles Benjamin Tayler, M.A.]. 8vo. London, 1847 WILLIAM and Ellen ; a tale. [By Eaglesfield Smith.] 121110. Pp. 22. [Mon. Rev. xxi. 467 ; xxiii. 108.] London,1796 WILLIAM and Lucy: an opera of two acts : an attempt to suit the style of the Scotch music. [By-Paton.] 8vo. [Baker’s Blog. Dranii] Edinburgh, 1780 WILLIAM and Marion ; a story for children. [By Lady Sarah Savile.] i2mo. London, 1842 WILLIAM and Nanny; a ballad farce, in two acts, as performed at the theatre in Covent Garden. [By Richard Josceline Goodenough.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1779 WILLIAM Barnes, poet and philologist. By Leader Scott [Mrs Lucy E. Baxter]. [ Who's Who in Lit.] 8vo. London, 1887 WILLIAM by the Grace of God. [A novel.] By Marjorie Bowen [Gabrielle Vere Campbell]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 312. [Brit. Musi] London, 1916 WILLIAM Douglas; or, The Scottish exiles : a historical novel. [By Henry Duncan, D.D., of Ruthwell.] i2mo. 3 vols. [Scott’s Fasti.] Edinburgh, 1826 WILLIAM Holman Hunt and his works. [By Frederic George Stephens, art critic.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London,i860 WILLIAM Makepeace Thackeray; a biography. By Lewis Melville [Lewis Samuel Benjamin]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1899 WILLIAM Orleigh. [A novel.] By Esme Hope [Rev. R. M£Kerron, M.A., of Clatt, Aberdeenshire]. 8vo. London, 1890 Also ascribed to George Alexander Selbie. WILLIAM Penn and the Quaker in unity, the Anabaptist mistaken and in enmity; or a brief reply to a sheet sent abroad by Jeremiah Ives, entituled William Penn’s Confutation of a Quaker ; or an answer to a late libel. By William Shewen.] 4to. Pp. 12. Smith’s Anti-Quak. p. 245.] N.P. 1674 WILLIAM Penn and the Quakers either impostors, or apostates, which they please ; proved from their avowed principles, and contrary practices. By Trepidantium Malleus [Samuel Young]. i2mo. Pp. 4, 134. [Smith’s Bibl. Anti-Quak. p. 459.] London, 1696 WILLIAM Robinson Pirie [Principal of Aberdeen University]. In memoriam. [By Penelope E. Pirie.] 8vo. Pp. 165. Private print, Aberdeen, 1888 WILLIAM Shakespeare not an impostor. By an English critic [George Henry Townsend]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 122. [Olphar Hamst, p. 180.] London, 1857 WILLIAM Tell; a tragedy: translated from the German of Schiller by “Tarkari” [Peter Reid, of Aberdeen]. [7?. Inglis.] Aberdeen, 1879 WILLIAM the Silent, and the Nether- land War. By Mary Barrett [Mary O. Nutting]. 8vo. [Lib. Journ. iv. 23.] Boston, 1869 WILLIAM Wyrcestre redivivus; notices of ancient church architecture, in the fifteenth century, particularly in Bristol: with hints for practicable restorations. [By Rev. James Dallaway.] 4to. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] Bristol [1823] WILLIE ; a story of a children’s hospital. By M. Calderford [William Ford Robertson, M.D., Edinburgh], 8vo. Pp. 49. London, 1899 WILLIE Armstrong ; a Scottish drama, in three acts. By a man wise enough to know that amusement, even though somewhat coarse, is at times as salutary as any article in the pharma- copseia [Dr Richard Poole]. 8vo. Pp. 60. Edinburgh, 1843 WILLIE Wabster’s wooing and wedding on the braes of Angus. [By Dorothea Ogilvy, of Clova.] 8vo. Pp. 62. [A. Jeruise.] Montrose, 1868 WILLIE’S first English book : written for young Maoris who can read their own Maori tongue, and who wish to learn the English language. [By William Colenso, F.L.S.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Wellington, N.Z., 1872 WILLING (the) horse; a novel. By Ian Hay [John Hay Beith]. 8vo. Pp. 300. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1921 WILLING (the) run. By Captain Ralph Bonehill [Edward Stratemeyer]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1905 WILLOUGHBY; or reformation: the influence of religious principles. By the author of The Decision, etc. [Grace Kennedy]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1823 WILLOW brook; a sequel to “The little camp on Eagle hill.” By the author of The wide, wide worlds etc. [Susan Warner]. 8vo. [Allibone’s Diet] London, 1874 WILLOWS (the) of Amwell[in Hertfordshire]. By a lady [Elizabeth Barrand]. 8vo. Pp. 74. [Brit. Mus.] Hertford, 1853 WILMINGTONS (the) ; a novel. By the author of Two old men's tales, etc. [Mrs Anne Marsh - Caldwell]. Svo. 3 vols. [D. N. B. vol. 36, p. 219.] London,1850 WILMOT’S child ; a domestic incident. By Atey Nyne [ = 89], student and bachelor [Joseph Parker, D.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1895 WILTON Castle ; its present condition and past history, and some notes on the adjoining bridge. By the vicar of the parish [Henry Wilson Tweed]. 8vo. Pp. 44. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1884 WIN her and take her, or, old fools will be meddling; a comedy, as it is acted at the Theatre-Royall, by their Majesties servants. [By John Smyth, M.A.] 4to. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1691 Ascribed also to C. Underhill [Arbtr, ii. 625.] WINCHESTER, and a few other compositions, in prose and verse. [By Rev. Charles Townsend, rector of Kingston-on-the-sea, near Brighton.] 4to. Pp. 82. [Martin’s Cat.] Winchester, 1835 WINCHESTER (the) converts; or, a full and true discovery of the real usefulness and design of a late right seasonable and religious treatise, entitled, A plain account of the nature and end of the sacrament of the Lords Supper: in three dialogues. [By Thomas Tovey, D.D., Principal of New Inn Hall, Oxford.] 8vo. Pp. 78. [Bodl.] Oxford, 1735 WINCHESTER (the) guide; or, a description of the antiquities and curiosities of that ancient city. [By Thomas Warton, B.D.] A new edition. i2mo. Pp. 115. [D. iV.B. vol. 59, p. 436.] Winton, 1780 For an earlier edition see “A description of the City, College and Cathedral of Winchester . . .” WIND and whirlwind. By Mr Thom White [Charles Wyllys Elliott]. i2mo. [Cushing’s Lnit. and Pseud, i. 307.] New York, 1868 WIND, rain and soil. Poems. By Charman Edwards [Frederick Anthony Edwards]. 8vo. Pp. 51. [Who's Who in Lit.] Enfield, 1924 WINDFALL (the). By Charles Egbert Craddock [Mary Noailles Murfree]. 8vo. Pp. 452. [Who's Who i?i Lit.\ London, 1912 WINDFALLS. [Essays.] By Alpha of the plough [Alfred George Gardiner]. 8vo. Pp. xvi. 270. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1920 WINDFALLS. By the author of Aspects of humanity [Richard Randolph], 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Philadelphia, 1871 WINDFALLS ; some stray leaves gathered by a rolling stone. [A novel.] By Robert Aitken [Robert Aitken Swan]. 8vo. Pp. 310. [Who’s Who m Lit.\ London, 1903 WINDFALLS; two hundred and odd [scraps of blank verse. By W. J. Linton]. i2mo. Pp. 96. [Dobell’s Private Prints, p. no.] Appledore Private Press, N.D. WINDING (the) road. [A novel.] By Elizabeth Godfrey [Jessie Bedford]. 8vo. Pp. 360. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1902 WINDING (the) way ; a novel. By “A Son of the Soil” [Joseph Smith Fletcher]. 8vo. Pp. 309. London, 1890 WINDING-SHEET (a) for England’s ministry, which hath a name to live, but is dead; sent to John Owen, called Dr. in that ministry, and late Vice-Chancellor of Oxford : and is in answer to his printed paper concerning tythes.. . . [By T. Foster, of Norfolk?] 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 626.] N.P., N.D. Signed : “ By a member of the true Church and of that Society, which the world calls Quakers.” WINDOW (a) in Paris. [A novel.] By Marianne Farningham [Marianne Hearne, of Farningham]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 358. [Brit. Musi] London, 1898 WINDS of the dawn. (Some common- senseoccasional papers—for the times.) By John Oxenham [William Arthur Dunkerley]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1919 WINDSOR Castle ; or, the fair maid of Kent: an opera, as performed at the Theatre - Royal, Covent - Garden, in honour of the marriage of their Royal Highnesses the Prince and Princess of Wales. By the author of Hartford- Bridge, etc. [William Pearce]. 8vo. Pp. 40. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1795 WINDSOR walks ; or pedestrian time guide for business or recreation. By “Windsor Bee” [B. R. Bambridge]. i2mo. Pp. 103. [Brit. Musi] WIND-SWEPT (the) wheat; poems. By Madeline Bridges [Madeline A. De Vere]. 8vo. Boston, 1904 WINDY Haugh. ... By Graham Travers [Margaret Todd, M.D.]. 8vo. [Who’s Who i?i Lit.] London, 1898 WINDYGAP. [A novel.] By Theo Douglas [Mrs H. D. Everett]. 8vo. Pp. 216. [Lit. Year Book.] Bristol, 1898 WINE ; a poem : to which is added, Old England’s New Triumph ; or, the Battle of Oudenard: a song. [By John Gray.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1709 WINE and walnuts ; or, after dinner chit-chat. By Ephraim Hardcastle, citizen and dry-salter [William Henry Pyne]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 2015.] London, 1823 WINE (the) merchant; a familiar treatise on the art of making wine. [By William Robert Loftus.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1865 WINE the mocker. By Guy Thorne [Cyril A. E. Ranger-Gull]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1919 WINEFRIDE Jones ; a very ignorant girl. [By Mrs Harriet Diana Thompson, nee Calvert.] 8vo. London, 1854 WINFIELD the lawyer’s son, and how he became a Major-General [Hancock]. By Major Penniman [Charles Wheeler Denison]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 227.] Philadelphia, 1865 WINGED Arrow’s medicine. By Harry Castlemon [Charles Austin Fosdick]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Philadelphia, 1901 WINGED destiny; studies in the spiritual history of the Gael. By Fiona Macleod [William Sharp]. 8vo. Pp. 378. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1904 WINGED (the) victory. [A novel.] By Sarah Grand [Mrs Haldane M‘Fall, nee Frances Elizabeth Clarke]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1916 WINGS and stings; a tale for the young. By A. L. O. E., authoress of the Clarejnont tales, etc. [Charlotte M. Tucker]. 8vo. Pp. 160. London, 1863 WINGS of courage ; and, the cloud- spinner. By George Sand [Madame Amandine L. A. Dudevant] ; translated. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1883 WINIFRED and the stockbroker. By Charles Eddy [Charles E. Rose]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1902 WINIFRED Bertram, and the world she lived in. By the author of Chronicles of the Schonberg - Cotta family, etc. [Mrs Elizabeth Charles, nee Bundle]. 8vo. Pp. 476. WINIFRED Power ; a novel. [By Bella Duffy.] 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1883 WINIFRID, afterwards called Boniface, A.D. 680-755. [A poem. By William Selwyn.] 4to. Pp. 41. Cambridge, 1864 Private information from a friend. WIN KEY’S whims. [By Wells Egels- hem.] London, 1769 WINKLES; a winner. By G. G. [Henry George Harper]. 8vo. Pp. 250. [Brit. Aft/s.] London, 1899 WINNING hazard. [A novel.] By Mrs Alexander [Mrs Alexander Hector, nee Annie French]. Svo. [Who's Who in Lit.\ New York, 1905 WINNING his shoulder straps ; or Bob Anderson at Chetham military school. By Norman Brainerd [Samuel Richard Fuller]. Svo. [Amer. Cat.\ Boston, 1909 WINNING (the) of May. By the author of Dr Edith Romney [Anne Elliot]. Svo. \Brit. Musi] London [1893] WINNING the eagle prize ; or, the pluck of Billy Hazen. By Norman Brainerd [Samuel Richard Fuller]. Svo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1910 WINNIPEG (the) country; or, roughing it with the eclipse party. By a Rochester fellow [Samuel Habbard Scudder], 8vo. Boston, 1886 WINTER amusements ; an ode read at Lady Miller’s assembly, Dec. 3, 1778. [By Christopher Anstey.] 4to. [Bath], 1778 See the note to “ Poetical amusements at a villa near Bath.” WINTER comforts, and how to knit them. [By Miss H. P. Ryder.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Richmond, Yorks [1866] WINTER displayed ; a poem. By an American [Samuel Low]. 8vo. Pp. 40. [cabin’s Dictio?iaryi] New York, 1784 WINTER (a) dreame. [By James Howell.] 4to. Pp. 20. [Bodli] N.P. 1649 Sometimes attributed to George Wither. WINTERevening conversations between a father and his children on the works of God. [By Rev. Alex. Arthur of Dalkeith.] Edinburgh, 1810 WINTER evening entertainments, containing—I. Ten pleasant and delightful relations. II. Fifty ingenious riddles. [By Nathaniel Crouch.] Sixth edition. i2mo. \D. N. B. vol. 8, p. 15.] London, 1737 WINTER (the) evening fireside. . . . By William Giles Dix.] i2mo. Brit. Musi] Boston, 1847 Signed : W. G. D. WINTER evenings at College; a familiar description of the manners, customs, sports, and religious observances of the Ancient Greeks ; with a short account of the state of Modern Greece ; and reflections on the revolutions of empires. By a clergyman [Benjamin Thomas Holcott Cole]. Svo. 2 vols. [Camb. U7iiv. Libi] London, 1829 WINTER (a) evening’s conversation upon the doctrine of original sin, between a minister and three of his neighbours. . . . [By Rev. Samuel Webster.] Svo. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl. iii. 185.] Boston, 1757 WINTER evenings ; or, lucubrations on life and letters. [By Vicesimus Knox, D.D.] i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1788 WINTER (a) in Bath ; or love as it may be, and friendship as it ought to be : a novel. [By Mrs E. G. Bayfield.] i2mo. 4 vols. [Green’s Bibl. Somers. i. 55.] Bath, 1807 The second edition (1808) gives the author’s name. WINTER (a) in Edinburgh; or, the Russian brothers : a novel. By Honoria Scott [Mrs-Frazer]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1822 “ Mrs Frazer, who some years ago published several popular works under the name of Honoria Scott, . . .”—Newspaper cutting (July 1824) in Mr Maidment’s copy. WINTER (a) in the West. By a New Yorker [Charles Fenno Hoffman]. Svo. 2 vols. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 203.] New York, 1835 WINTER (a) journey from Gloucester to Norway. [By John Bellows.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1867 WINTER leaves. [Poems by Rev. John Fairbairn and Professor Charles M‘Dowall.] Svo. [R. Inglis’ Dram. Writers of Scotland, p. 149.] Edinburgh, 1835 WINTER sketches from the saddle. By a Septuagenarian [John Codman]. i2mo. New York, 1888 WINTER (a) story. By the author of The rose garden, etc. [Frances Mary Peard]. 8vo. Pp. 292. [Camb. Univ. Libi] London, 1875 WINTER (a) with Robert Burns ; being annals of his patrons and associates in Edinburgh, 1786-7, and details of his inauguration as poet-laureate of the Can. Kil. [Canongate Kilwinning. By James Marshall, S.S.C.]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1846 WINTER-EVENING (a) conference between neighbours. [By John Goodman, D.D.] Third edition. 8vo. 3 parts. \Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1686 Several editions were issued later, with the author’s name. WINTERING hay. [A novel.] By JohnTrevena [ErnestGeorge Henham]. 8vo. Pp. 518. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1912 WINTER-PIECE (the); a poem written in 1740. [By Joseph Phipps.] Folio. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 66.] London,1763 WINTER’S (a) tale; a romance. [By James Norris Brewer]. 8vo. [L>. N. B. vol. 6, p. 293.] London, 1799 WISDOM ; a poem. [By Edward Wilkinson, M.D.] Fourth edition. 8vo. Pp. 21. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, ii. 933.] London, 1798 WISDOM and policy of the French in the construction of their great offices ; so as best to answer the purposes of extending their trade and commerce and enlarging their foreign settlements. With some observations in relation to the dispute now subsisting between the English and French colonies in America. [By Henry McCulloh.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1755 See also, “A miscellaneous essay . . .” WISDOM for the foolish. By Lambkin Sprinx [Celia Louise Crittenton]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1908 WISDOM from above; or, considerations tending to explain, establish, and promote the Christian life, or that holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord. By a lover of truth, and of the souls of men [Rev. John Mapletoft, M.D.]. i2mo. 2 parts. Pp. 155. [D.N.B. vol. 36, p. 115.] London, 1714-17 WISDOM, intelligence, and science, the true characteristics of Emmanuel Swedenborg. ... By Medicus Can- tabrigiensis [John Spurgin]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 WISDOM (the) of Damaris. [A novel.] By Lucas Malet [Mrs St Leger Harrison, nee Mary Kingsley]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1914 WISDOM (the) of looking backward, to judge the better of one side and t’other by the speeches, writings, actions, and other matters of fact on both sides, for the four years last past. [By White Kennett, D.D.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 31, p. 5.] London, 1715 VOL. VI. WISDOM (the) ofpassion; or the motives of human nature. By Salvarona [Harry G. Waters]. 8vo. [Amer, Cat.] Boston, 1901 WISDOM (the) of the son of David; an exposition of Proverbs i.-ix. [By Rev. Richard Meux Benson.] i2mo. [L>. N. B. Third Supp.] London, i860 WISDOM (the) of the wise ; a comedy, in three acts. By John Oliver Hobbes [Mrs Reginald Walpole Craigie, nee Pearl Teresa Richards]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London [1901] WISDOM on the hire system ; containing full details of the “Insidecom- pleteuar Britannia-ware” prize competition. By E. V. L. [Edward V. Lucas] and C. L. G. [Charles L. Graves]. 4to. Pp. 56. [Brit. Mus.] London,1903 A skit on the tenth edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica. See also “Wisdom while you wait.” WISDOM the first spring of action in the Deity ; a discourse, in which, among other things, the absurdity of God’s being actuated by natural inclinations, and of an unbounded liberty, is shewn. . . . [By Rev. Henry Grove, of Taunton.] 8vo. Pp. iv. no. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1734 The second edition (1742) bears the author’s name. WISDOM triumphant over vain philosophy; or, What is truth? By Zion Ward [John Ward]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 73. [Brit. Mus.] Birmingham [1810] WISDOM versus Satan on the stage of time. By “Elijah the prophet” (not Elijah the Tishbite) [James A. Moncrieff, C.E.]. See Malachi iv. 5-6. 8vo. Pp. viii. 664. [Manch. Free. Lib.] Belfast, 1871 WISDOM while you wait; being a foretaste of the glories of the “ Insidecom- pleteuar Britanniaware.” [By Edward V. Lucas and Charles L. Graves.] 8vo. Pp. 95. London, 1903 Preface signed : E. V. L., C. L. G. WISDOM’S conquest; being an explanation and grammatical translation of the 13th Book of Ovid’s Metamorphoses [by Thomas Hall]. 8vo. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1651 WISDOM’S way; notes of lectures. By F. E. R. [F. E. Raven]. 8vo. Pp. 99. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1900 Q WISE (a) and moderate discourse, concerning Church-affaires ; as it was written, long since, by the famous authour [Francis, Lord Bacon] of those Considerations, which seem to have some reference to this: now published for the common good. 4to. N.P. 1641 Reprinted in 1663 with the title, “True peace : or, a moderate discourse to compose the unsettled consciences and greatest differences in ecclesiastical affaires.” WISE and otherwise. [A tale.] By “Pansy55 [Mrs Isabella Alden, nee Macdonald]. 8vo. Pp. 320. \Brit. Mus.] London [1888] WISE (the) Christian’s study; or, the true way of serving God in a most perfect manner. From the Spanish of Alphonse, by F. M. [John Gregory Mallet, O.S.B.]. i2mo. [Gillow’sBibl. Diet. iv. 399.] Douay, 1680 WISE (the) judgment; being a chapter on the competing models for the Manchester Wellington testimonial. By Gabriel Tinto, Esq. [G. W. Anthony]. 8vo. Pp. 11. [Manch. Free Lib. Cat.] Manchester, 1853 WISE (the) or foolish choice; or the wisdom of choosing Christ, and the folly of choosing the world for our portion : discovered and asserted by Solomon the Wise, in a paraphrase on the Song of Solomon, and an abstract of the book of Solomon called Ecclesiastes. . . . Both done in metre by one of the ministers of the Gospel in Glasgow, I. C. [Rev. James Clark, minister at Innerwick, afterwards at Glasgow]. 8vo. Pp. 62. [R. Inglis5 Dramatic Writers of Scotland, p. 141.] Edinburgh, 1703 WISE sayings ; and stories to explain them. By M. H. [Matilda Horsburgh], author of Dose Lindesay, etc. i2mo. Pp. 192. \Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh [i860] WISE to win. [A tale.] By “Pansy55 [Mrs Isabella Alden, ne'e Macdonald]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London [1894] WISE words and loving deeds : a book of biographies for girls. By E. Conder Gray [Alexander Hay Japp, LL.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 394. [D. N. B., Second Supp., ii. 363.] London, 1880 WISEMAN versus Pascal the younger ; the Church of Rome’s defence against “Cases of conscience,55 with a reply. By Pascal the younger [Pierce Connelly]. 8vo. [New Coll. Lib.] London,1851 WISHES (the) of a free people; a dramatic poem. [By Paul Hiffernan, M.D.] 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] London, 1761 WISTONS ; a story in three parts. By Miles Amber [Mrs Ellen Melicent Sickert, ne'e Cobden]. 8vo. Pp. 282. [Brit. Musi] London, 1902 WIT a sporting in a pleasant grove of new fancies. By H. B. [Henry Bold]. 8vo. [Lowndes5 Bibl. Ma?ii] London, 1657 WIT against reason ; or the Protestant champion, the great, the incomparable Chillingworth, not invulnerable. . . . By H. E. [Edward Hawarden,+ D.D.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 25, p. 186.] Brussels, 1735 WIT and drollery ; jovial poems, never before printed ; by Sir J. M. [Sir John Mennis], Ja. S. [James Smith], Sir W. D. [Sir William Davenant], J. D. [John Donne], and other admirable wits. [Preface signed: J. P. i.e. John Phillips.] 8vo. Pp. 160. [D. N. B. vol. 45, p. 205.] London, 1656 J. D. has been wrongly interpreted as John Dryden and J. P. as John Playford. An edition was issued in 1661 with the preface signed : E. M. (unidentified). WIT (the) and honesty of James Hoskins, etc. consider’d in remarks on their late pamphlet call’d “The Pennsylvania Bubble.55 By the translator of The Pattern of Modesty [Elias Bockett]. 8vo. London, 1726 Also tentatively attributed to Thomas Story against whom “ The Pennsylvania Bubble” was directed. WIT and wisdom from Edgar Saltus. By G. F. Monkshood [W. J. Clarke]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [London ?] 1903 WIT bought ; or the life and adventures of Robert Merry [Samuel G. Goodrich]. i2mo. London, N.D. WIT, humor, and pathos. By Eli Perkins [Melville D. Landon]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 228.] Chicago, 1887 WIT (the) of a woman ; as it now acted at the New Theatre in Little Lincoln’s- Inn-Fields, by Her Majesty’s sworn servants. [By Thomas Walker.] 4to. Pp. 8, 34. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London,1705 WIT revived; or, a new excellent way of divertisement, digested into most ingenious questions and answers. Published under the name of Asdryasdust Tossoffacan [Edmund Gayton]. i2mo. Pp. 72. [Wood’s Athen. Oxon. iii. 756.] London, 1660 WITCH Demonia ; a child’s fairy tale. By Raymond Jacberns [Miss Georgina M. Selby Ash]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1895 WITCH (the) of Malton Hill. [By Mrs Harriet Diana Thompson, nee Calvert.] 8vo. London, 1849 WITCH (a) of the hills ; a novel. By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 203. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 WITCH (the) of the rocks. By M. E. Winchester [M. E. Whatham]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.\ London, 1886 WITCH (the) of the woodlands ; or, the cobler’s new translation. Written by L. P. [Lawrence Price]. 8vo. Pp. 22. B. L. [Bod/.] London, 1655 WITCHCRAFT cast out from the religious seed and Israel of God ; and the black art, or, necromancy, inchant- ments, and witchcraft discovered, with the ground, fruits and effects thereof. . . . Also some things to clear the truth from reproaches, and false accusations, occasioned by D. Bott, and his slander-carriers. [By Richard Farn worth.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1655 Signed : R. F. WITCHCRAFT farther display’d. Containing I. An account of the witchcraft practis’d by Jane Wenham of Walkerne, in Hertfordshire, since her condemnation, upon the bodies of Anne Thorn and Anne Street. ... II. An answer to the most general objections against the being and power of witches. .. . To which are added, the tryals of Florence Newton, a famous Irish witch, at the assizes held at Cork, anno 1661 ; as also of two witches at the assizes held at Bury St Edmonds in Suffolk, anno 1664. [By Francis Bragge, A.B., late of Peterhouse in Cambridge.] 8vo. Pp. 39. London, 1712 Introduction signed : F. B. WITCH-CRAFT proven, arreign’d, and condemn’d in its professors, professions and marks, by diverse pungent and convincing arguments, excerpted forth of the most authentic authors, divine and humane, ancient and modern. ... By a lover of the truth [Rev. John Bell, minister of Gladsmuir]. i2mo. Pp. 16. [J. Ferguson’s Witchcraft Lit. of Scot. p. 25.] Glasgow, 1697 WITCH-FINDER (the). By May Wynne [Mabel Wynne Knowles]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1922 WITCH-FINDER (the); or, the wisdom of our ancestors : a romance. By the author of The Lollards, etc. [Thomas Gaspey]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1824 WITCH-WIFE (the). By Sarah Tytler ^Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. Pp. 280. Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1897 WITENHAM-HILL ; a descriptive poem. By T. P-A.M. [Thomas Pye, A.M.]. 4to. Pp. 26. [Bodl.] London, 1777 Ascribed also to Thomas Pentycross. [Watt’s Bill. Brit.] WITH aimless feet. By M. C. Ramsay [Mary Ramsay Calder]. 8vo. Pp. 272. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1906 WITH airship and submarine ; a tale of adventure. By Harry Collingwood [William Joseph Cosens Lancaster]. 8vo. Pp. 384. [Who’s Who in Lit.] Glasgow, 1907 WITH brains, Sir. [By John Brown, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. 12. N.P., N.D. From the Monthly fournal of Medical Science, for February 1851. Signed : J. B. WITH cords of love ; a tale. By E. Livingston Prescott [Edith Katherine Spicer-Jay]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1904 WITH edged tools. [A novel.] By Henry Seton Merriman [Hugh Stowell Scott]. 8vo. Pp. 386. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1903 WITH General Sheridan in his last campaign. By a staff officer [Lieut.- Colonel Frederick C. Newhall]. 8vo. Pp. 235. Philadelphia, 1866 WITH harp and crown ; a novel. By the authors of Ready-money Mortiboy, etc. [Sir Walter Besant and James Rice]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1875 WITH hooks of steel. By Crona Temple [Miss-Corfield.] 8vo. Pp. 224. London [1887] WITH King James’ Bible as exclusive authority, can the Protestant Christian question the Eucharist? By Consistency [John Thaddeus Foley]. [Amer. Cat.] Marquette, Mich., 1909 WITH Lafayette at Yorktown ; a story of how two boys joined the Continental Army. By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. Pp. 303. [Cushing’s I nit. and Pseud, i. 220.] New York, 1896 WITH my regiment from the Aisne to La Bassee. By “Platoon Commander” [Arthur Frederick Hobart Mills]. 8vo. [Bond. Lib. Cat.] London [1915] WITH Porter in the “Essex”; a story of his famous cruise in Southern waters during the war of 1812. By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. [Cushing’s l?nt. and Pseud, i. 220.] Boston, 1901 WITH rank and file ; or, side-lights on soldier life. By Arthur Amyand [Major Andrew C. P. Haggard]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 261. [jBrit. Mi/s.] London, 1895 WITH rod and line in Colorado waters. By “Bourgeois” [L. B. France]. 8vo. Denver, 1884 WITH Rogers’ Rangers. By Victor St Clair [George Waldo Browne]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1906 WITH signals clear. [A collection of railway stories.] By Ramsay Guthrie [Rev. J. G. Bowran]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1915 WITH swallow’s wings. By Crona Temple [Miss-Corfield]. 8vo. London, 1883 WITH the best intentions. By Marian Harland [Mrs Mary Virginia Terhune, nJe Hawes]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1890 WITH the best intentions ; a story of undergraduate life. By John Bicker- dyke [Charles Henry Cook]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1884 WITH the guns. By F. O. O. [Forward Observation Officer, i.e. C. J. C. Street]. Second edition. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1916 WITH the Harrises seventy years ago. By the author of The Subaltern, etc. [Rev. George R. Gleig, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 499. [Brit. Musi] London, 1889 WITH the procession; a novel. By Stanton Page [Henry B. Fuller]. 8vo. Pp. 336. New York, 1895 WITH the R.N.R. By “Windlass” [John B. Flicks]. 8vo. Pp. 251. [Brit. Musi] London, 1918 WITH the Russians in Manchuria. By Max Baring [Charles Messent]. 8vo. Pp. 222. [Brit. Musi] London, 1905 WITH the tide ; or, a life’s voyage : a story for young people. By Sidney Daryl [Douglas Straight]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1868 WITH the treasure-hunters ; a story of the Florida Cays. ... By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. Pp. 340. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud. i. 220.] Philadelphia, 1903 WITH the trees. By E. M. Hardinge [Maud Going]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1903 WITH the wild flowers, from pussywillow to thistle-down. By E. M. Hardinge [Maud Going]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1901 WITH the woodlanders, and by the tide. By “A son of the marshes” [Denham Jordan]. Edited by J. A. Owen. 8vo. Pp. 305. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1893 % WITH wind and tide; a story of the East Coast. By the author of The Dean's little daughter [Frances Marshall]. 8vo. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1892 WITHIN an hour of London town ; among wild birds and their haunts. By “A son of the marshes” [Denham Jordan], Edited by J. A. Owen. 8 vo. Pp. 314. [Brit. Musi] London, 1892 WITHIN Fort Sumter; or, a view of Major Anderson’s garrison family for one hundred and ten days. By one of the company [Miss A. Fletcher]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 216.] New York, 1861 WITHIN the enemy’s lines. By Oliver Optic [William Taylor Adams]. 8vo. Pp. 349. Boston, 1890 WITHIN the sound of the sea. [A novel.] By the author of Vera, etc. [Charlotte L. H. Dempster.] 8vo. 2 vols. Pp. ix. 395. [Brit. Musi] London, 1879 WITHIN the tides. [Four stories.] By Joseph Conrad [Josef Konrad Korzeniowski]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Musi] London, 1915 WITHIN the vail; and other poems. By C. L. S. [Charitie Lees Smith, later Mrs Julian Bancroft]. i2mo. London,1867 WITHIN the veil; studies in the Epistle to the Hebrews. By the author of Chronicles of the Sckonberg- Cotta family [Mrs Elizabeth Charles nee Rundle]. 8vo. Pp. 104. [Brit. Musi] London [1891] WITHIN, without and over ; or memorials of the earnest life of Henry C. Hall. [By Amanda H. Hall.] [Lib. Journ. iv. 24.] Northampton, Mass., 1878 WITHOUT a friend in the world. By the author of Worth her weight in gold [H. Colson], 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1866 WITHOUT a reference ; a Christmas story. By Brenda [Mrs-Castle Smith, nee-Meyrick]. 8vo. Pp. 266. [Brit. Musi] London, 1882 WITHOUT faith, without God. . . . [By Robert Barclay, the Berean.] 8vo. N.P. 1769 WITHOUT sin ; a novel. By Martin J. Pritchard [Mrs Augustus Moore]. 8vo. Pp. 310. New York, 1896 WITNESS (the) of Assyria ; or, the Bible contrasted with the monuments. By Chilperic Edwards [Edward John Pilcher]. 8vo. Pp. v. 183. [Brit. Musi] London, 1893 WITNESSES (the) in sackcloth ; or a descriptive account of the attack made upon the Reformed Churches of France in the seventeenth century; with a bibliographical and literary appendix, including notices of the subsequent history of the French Protestants. By a descendant of a refugee [Henry Samuel Baynes.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 304. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1852 WITS (the) and beaux of society. By Grace and Philip Wharton, authors of The Queens of society [Mrs Katherine B. and John Cockburn Thomson], 8vo. 2 vols. [Olfihar Hamsti] London [i860] WIT’S bedlam, where is had, whipping cheer to cure the mad. [By John Davies, of Hereford.] 8vo. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1617 WITS common-wealth ; or, a treasury of divine, moral, historical, and poetical admonitions, similies and sentences for the use of schools. [Compiled by John Bodenham.] Newly corrected and enlarged. 8vo. Pp. 270. [Brit. Musi] London, 1722 A reprint. For the original editions (1597 et seq.) see “ Politeuphuia . . .” WITS extraction, conveyed to the ingenious in riddles, observations and morals. By W. B. [William Bagwell], Truth’s servant. i2mo. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1664 WITS, fits, and fancies ; or a generall and serious collection of the sententious speeches, answers, jests, andbehaviours of all sortes of estates, from the throane to the cottage. . . . Newly corrected and augmented. [By Anthony Copley.] 4to. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1614 WITS interpreter ; the English Parnassus ; or, a sure guide to those admirable accomplishments that compleat our English gentry, in the most acceptable qualifications of discourse or writing. . . . The 3d edition with many new additions. By J. C. [John Cot- grave]. 8vo. Pp. 11, 520. [Arber’s Term Cat. i. 532.] London, 1671 WITS labyrinth. By J. S. [James Shirley?]. 4to. London, 1648 WITS led by the nose; or a poets revenge; a tragi-comedy [from William Chamberlaine’s “Love’s Victory”]; acted at the Theatre-Royal. 4to. [Baker’s Biog. Dra?n.\ London, 1677 WITS (the) ; or, sport upon sport: in select pieces of drollery, digested into scenes by way of dialogue. . . . [By Francis Kirkman.] Part I. 8vo. Pp. 186. London, 1662 WITS (the) paraphras’d ; or paraphrase on paraphrase ; in a burlesque on the several late translations of Ovid’s epistles. [By M. Stevenson.] [Arber’s Term Cat. i. 532.] London, 1680 WITS private wealth, stored with choyse commodities to content the minde. [By Nicholas Breton.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgravei] London, 1625 Many editions (1612, 1613, 1615, 1629, 1634) bear the author’s name. WITS theater of the little world. 8vo. Ff. 3, 269, 6. [London] 1599 This used to be ascribed to John Bodenham but is now considered to be by Robert Allott whose name it bears at the dedication. WITT against wisdom ; or a panegyrick upon folly: penned in Latin by Desiderius Erasmus ; rendered into English [by White Kennett, D.D.]. i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 31, p. 2.] Oxford, 1683 WITTY (the) and humorous side of the English poets. By Arthur H. Elliott [William Henry Davenport Adams] ; with a variety of specimens. . . . 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1880 WITTY apophthegms delivered at several times, and upon several occasions, by King James, King Charles, the Marquess of Worcester, Francis, Lord Bacon, and Sir Thomas Moor. Collected and revised [by Thomas Baily, D.D., Subdean of Wells]. 8vo. Pp. 2, 186. [Brit. Mus.] [London]1671 WITTY (a) combat ; or, the female victor: a tragi-comedy, as it was acted by persons of quality in Whitsun- week with great applause. Written by T. P. Gent. [Thomas Porter]. 4to. No pagination. [Bodl.\ London, 1663 WITTY sayings. By John Brighte [J. Duncan]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 39.] London, 1875 WIVES and mistresses. [By Mrs Anne Stevenson, nde Reddie.] 8vo. Edinburgh [1880?] WIZARD (the) Peter; a song of the Solway. [By Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe.] 8vo. Pp. 32. Edinburgh, 1834 WIZARD’S (the) cave. By Eglanton Thorne [Emily Charlton]. 8vo. Pp. 78. [Brit. Mus.] London [1910] WOBURN Park; a fragment in rural rhyme. [By George Castleden.] i2mo. Woburn, 1839 Q2 VOL. VI. WOFULL cry of unjust persecutions, and grievous oppressions of the people of God in England . . . and this may serve for an answer in full to all such who have presented . . . the innocent people in scorn called Quakers. . . . By E. B. [Edward Burrough]. 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books.] London [1657] WOLF (the) ; a novel. By J. E. Buckrose [Mrs Falconer Jameson]. 8vo. Pp. 324. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1908 WOLF (the) at the door. [A novel] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1909 WOLF hunting and wild sport in Brittany. By the author of Paul Pendril, Dartmoor Days, etc. [Rev. Edward W. L. Davies]. 8vo. [Shum’s Bath books, p. 62.] London, 1875 WOLF (the) in the fold ; or a new phase of the perils of Ritualism, and a plain statement of facts in the case of All Saints, Newington. By a parishioner John Waddington, D.D.]. 8vo. Brit. Mus.\ London [1867] WOLF (the) stript of his shepherd’s cloathing ; in answer to a late celebrated book [by James Owen] intituled Moderation a vertue: wherein the designs of the dissenters against the Church, and their behaviour towards her Majesty both in England and Scotland are laid open. By one call’d an Highchurchman [Charles Leslie]. With my service to Dr D’Avenant. 4to. [Smith’s A?iti-Quak. p. 272.] London, 1704 WOLFE (the) of Badenoch ; a historical romance of the fourteenth century. [By Sir Thomas Dick Lauder, of Fountainhall, East Lothian.] i2mo. 3 vols. [D. N. B. vol. 32, p. 598.] Edinburgh, 1827 WOLFE of the Knoll; and other poems. By Virginia Gabriel [Constance Crane, later Mrs Marsh]. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 111.] New York, i860 WOLFVILLE. [Stories of the South West.] By Dan Quin [Alfred H. Lewis]. 8vo. Pp. 337. New York [1897] WOLSEY, the Cardinal, and his times ; courtly, political, and ecclesiastical. By George Howard, Esq. author of Lady Jane Grey, and her times [Lieut. Francis C. Laird, R.N.]. 8vo. London, 1824 WOLSEY’S bell in Sherborne Abbey Church ; some account of it, together with a tabular comparison of the bells at Exeter and Sherborne. . . . [By Edward Harston.] 8vo. Sherborne, 1866 WOMAN ; a poem. [By Eaton Stannard Barrett.] 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Lreland.] London, 1810 Another edition, with additions, in 1818. WOMAN and artist. [A story of London life.] By Max O’Rell [Paul Blouet]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1900 WOMAN and her Saviour in Persia. By a returned missionary [Thomas Laurie, D.D.]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 250.] Boston, 1863 WOMAN and her social position. [By Margaret Milne, or Mylne.] 8vo. London [private print], 1872 WOMAN and Moses. By Lucas Cleeve [Mrs Howard Kingscote, nee Adelina Georgina Isabella Wolff]. 8vo. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1901 WOMAN and the wits ; epigrams on woman, love, and beauty ; collected by G. F. Monkshood [William James Clarke]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 174. [Brit. Musi] London, 1899 WOMAN (a) at the helm. [A novel.] By the author of Dr Edith Romney [Anne Elliot]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Bond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1892 WOMAN beautiful. By “ Mme Qui Vive” [Helen Follett Stevans]. i2mo. Chicago, 1899 WOMAN (the) decides. [A romance.] By “Nomad” [Adele Crafton-Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 339. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London,1910 WOMAN (the) errant ; chapters from the Wonder Book of Barbara, the Commuter’s Wife [Mrs Mabel Osgood Wright]. 8vo. Pp. 388. [Brit. Musk] London,1904 WOMAN (the) hater ; as it hath beene lately acted by the children of Paules. [By Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher.] 4to. No pagination. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1607 This is the first edition. The edition published in 1648 has the name of John Fletcher only. WOMAN ; her glory, her shame, and her God. By Saladin [William Stewart Ross, M.A.]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1894 WOMAN ; her true place and standing. An address by An American clergyman [John S. Davenport]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 16. Edinburgh, 1877 WOMAN (the) I loved, and the woman who loved me. By the author of Agnes Tremorne, etc. [Isabella Blag- den]. 8vo. Pp. 292. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1865 Agnes Tremorne is not anonymous. WOMAN (a) in armor. By H. M. Lewtral [Mary Hartwell, later Mrs Catherwood]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 171.] New York, 1875 WOMAN (a) in it; a sketch of feminine misadventure. By “Rita” [Eliza M. J. Gollan, later Mrs W. Desmond Humphreys]. 8vo. Pp. x. 247. \Lit. Year Book.] London, 1895 WOMAN (the) in the firelight. [A novel.] By Oliver Sandys [Mrs Marguerite Barclay.] 8vo. Pp. 284. London, 1911 WOMAN (a) intervenes ; or, the mistress of the mine. By Luke Sharp [Robert Barr]. 8vo. Pp. 375. [Brit. Mus.] New York [1896] WOMAN (a) of emotions, and other poems. By Rowland Thirlmere [John Walker]. 8vo. Pp. 198. [ Who's Who i?i Lit.'] London, 1901 WOMAN (the) of feeling. [By William Henry Ireland.] i2mo. 4vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1804 Signed “ Paul Persius ” at the end of Vol. IV. WOMAN (a) of fortune ; a novel. By Christian Reid [Mrs Frances C. Tiernan, nee Fisher]. 8vo. Pp. 285. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 249.] New York, 1896 WOMAN (a) of forty ; a monograph. By Esme Stuart [Amelie Claire Leroy]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London,1894 WOMAN (a) of impulse ; a sentimental episode. By Joseph Prague [Andrew Lang Nisbet]. 8vo. Pp. 317. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1912 WOMAN (the) of mystery. By Georges Ohnet [Georges Henot]. Translated from the French by F. Rothwell. 8vo. Pp- 374- [Bond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1911 WOMAN (the) of Samaria. [By Ann Alexander, neeTdkei] i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends* Books, i. 8.] London,1846 WOMAN (a) of Samaria. [A novel.] By Rita [Eliza M. J. Gollan, later Mrs W. Desmond Humphreys]. 8vo. Pp. 338. [Brit. Musi] London, 1900 WOMAN (the) of the world ; a novel. By the authoress of the Diary of a dese?muyee [Mrs Catherine Grace Frances Gore]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1838 WOMAN (the) Ruth. [A novel.] By Curtis Yorke [Mrs W. S. Richmond Lee, nee-Jex-Long]. 8vo. Pp. WOMAN (a) scorned ; a novel. By E. Owens Blackburne, author of The quest of the heir, etc. [Elizabeth Owens Blackburne Casey]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1876 WOMAN ; sketches of the history, genius, disposition, accomplishments, employments, customs, and importance of the fair sex, in all parts of the world. ... By a friend to the sex [Rev. John Adams, M.A.]. i2mo. Pp. 400. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1790 WOMAN (a) snared. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. Pp. 252. [Amer. Cat.] London [1912] WOMAN suffrage ; a refutation and an appeal. By a citizen [Mrs M. S. Wolstenholme]. 8vo. Sydney, N.S.W., 1896 WOMAN (a) ventures. By John Graham [David Graham Phillips]. 8vo. New York, 1902 WOMAN (the) who came between. [A novel.] By Effie Adelaide Rowlands [E. Maria Albanesi]. 8vo. Pp. 251. [Brit. Musi] London, 1920 WOMAN (the) who dared. [A novel.] By Lawrence L. Lynch [Emma M. Murdoch, later Mrs Van Deventer]. 8vo. Pp. 472. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London [1902] WOMAN (the) who didn’t. [A novel.] By Victoria Cross [Miss Vivian Cory]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1898 WOMAN (the) who looked back. By M. Hamilton [Mrs Churchill Luck, nee -Spottiswoode-Ashe]. 8vo. Pp. 296. [Who’s Who i?i Lit.] London, 1914 WOMAN (the) who vowed. By Ellison Harding [Edmund Kelly]. 8vo. London, 1908 Originally published in New York (1907) with the title “ The Demetrian.” WOMAN (the) who wouldn’t. [A novel.] By Lucas Cleeve [Mrs Howard Kings- cote, nee Adelina G. I. Wolff]. 8vo. Pp viii. 225. [Brit. Musi] London,1895 WOMAN (a) with a secret. [A novel.] By Paul Cushing [Roland Alexander Wood-Seys]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1885 WOMAN (the) with the diamonds ; a novel. ... By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 102. [Who’s Who i?i Lit.] London, 1895 WOMAN (the) with two words. [A tale.] By Sarah Tytler [Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 208. [Brit. Musi] WOMAN’S a riddle ; a romantic tale. By Anne of Swansea, author of Conviction, Cesario Rosalba, etc. [Anne Hatton]. i2mo. 4 vols. London, 1824 Also ascribed to Julia Ann Kemble. WOMAN’S (the) advocate. [Edited by T. J. H. i.e. Thomas J. Haslam.] Nos. 1-3. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1874 WOMAN’S (a) aye and nay. [A novel.] By Lucas Cleeve [Mrs Howard Kings- cote, ?iee Adelina G. I. Wolff]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1908 WOMAN’S (the) conquest ; a tragicomedy, as it was acted by the Duke of York’s servants. Written by the Honourable E. H. [Edward Howard]. 4to. [Arber’s Ter?n Cat. i. 532.] London, 1671 WOMAN’S devotion ; a novel. [By Mrs Julia C. Stretton.] 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1855 Wrongly ascribed to Mrs Anne Marsh- Caldwell, and to Henrietta Keddie. WOMAN’S dower; a sketch in black and white. ... By Austin Clare [Miss W. M. James]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1887 WOMAN’S (a) error. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1886 WOMAN’S (a) example, and a nation’s work ; a tribute to Florence Nightingale. [By Fred. Milnes Edge.] i2mo. London, 1864 WOMAN’S (a) love-story. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme], i2mo. [A mer. Cat.] New York, 1887 WOMAN’S (a) poems. [By Mrs Sarah Morgan Piatt, nee Bryan.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 309.] Boston, 1871 WOMAN’S service on the Lord’s Day. [By Emily Bickersteth.] 8vo. London, 1861 WOMAN’S sphere in the world. [By Alexander Ledingham.] 8vo. [1886] WOMAN’S (a) temptation. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. i2mo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1885 WOMAN’S (a) thoughts about women. By the author of John Halifax, Gentleman, etc. [Dinah Maria Mulock, later Mrs Craik]. 8vo. Pp. v. 348. London,1858 WOMAN’S(a)tragedy; or, the detective’s task. [A novel.] By Lawrence L. Lynch [Mrs Emma van Deventer, nee Murdoch]. 8vo. Pp. 324. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1904 WOMAN’S (a) trials. By Grace Ramsay [Kathleen O’Meara]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1867 WOMAN’S (a) vengeance; a novel. By the author of Cecil’s tryst, Lost Sir Massingberd, etc. [James Payn]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1872 WOMAN’S (a) victory ; a novel. By the author of Elsie j a lowland sketch [Agnes C. Maitland]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1876 WOMAN’S (a) face; a romance. By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1890 WOMAN’S heart. [A novel.] By Mrs Alexander [Mrs Alexander Hector, n£e Annie French]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1894 WOMAN’S (a) heart. By Mrs Mark Peabody [Mrs Metta Victoria Victor, nee Fuller]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 226.] New York, 1865 WOMAN’S (the) kingdom ; a love story. By the author of John Halifax, Gentleman, etc. [Dinah Maria Mulock, later Mrs Craik]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1869 WOMAN’S love ; or the triumph of patience : a drama, in five acts. [By Thomas Wade.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] WOMAN’S (the) victory; and other stories. By Maarten Maartens [Josef M. W. van der Poorten-Schwartz]. 8vo. Pp. 364. [Brit. Musi] London, 1906 WOMAN’S (a) war. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. i2mo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1887 WOMAN’S witchcraft; or, the curse of coquetry. By Corinne L’Estrange [Henry Hartshorne, M.D.]. 8vt>. Philadelphia, 1854 WOMEN and their work; wives and daughters of the Old Testament. By Marianne Farningham [Marianne Hearne, of Farningham]. 8vo. Pp. 124. [Brit. Musi] London, 1906 WOMEN as they are ; or, the manners of the day. [By Mrs Catherine Grace Frances Gore.] Second edition. i2mo. 3 vols. [D. A/. B. vol. 22, p. 237.] WOMEN composers. By C. Herman [Otto Ebel]. i2mo. New York, 1902 WOMEN in the East. Les femmes en Orient. Par Mme. la Comtesse Dora d’Istria [The Princess Koltzoff- Massalsky, nte Helena Ghika, daughter of the Prince Alexander Ghika, Exhospodar of Wallachia]. 2 vols. [Athenceum, 3rd August 1861, p. 148.] Zurich and London, 1861 WOMEN must weep. By F. Harold Williams [Rev. F. W. Orde Warde]. 8 vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.\ London, 1890 WOMEN must weep. By Sarah Tytler, author of Jean Keir of Craigneil, etc. [Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1901 WOMEN (the) of India, and what can be done for them. [By Rev. John Murdoch.] 8vo. Madras, 1888 WOMEN (the) of Paris. By the author of Women of London, etc. [Bracebridge Hemyng]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1884] WOMEN (the) of the Gospels, The three wakings, and other verses. By the author of Chronicles of the Schonberg- Cotta family [Mrs Elizabeth Charles, nee Rundle]. New edition, with additions. 8vo. Pp. 276. London, 1868 WOMEN of the last days of old France. By the author of 0?i the edge of the storm, etc. [Margaret Roberts]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 403. [Courtney’s Secrets, p. 68.] London,1872 WOMEN of the Salons, and other French portraits. By S. G. Tallentyre [Beatrice Hall]. 8vo. Pp. 244. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1901 WOMEN (the) of the South. By Mary Forrest [Julia Deane Freeman]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Bseud. i. 104.] New York, i860 WOMEN ; or, pour et contre : a tale. By the author of Bertram, etc. [Charles Robert Maturin]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.\ Edinburgh, 1818 WOMEN types of to-day ; the Venus, the Juno, the Minerva; or modern casts from ancient moulds. By “ Da Libra” [Colonel-Brain]. 8vo. Pp. x. 366. London, 1907 WOMEN who work. By Theo. Gift [Dora Havers, later Mrs Boulger]. 8vo. London, 1874 WOMEN’S conquest of New York. By Ivory Black [Thomas Allibone Janvier]. WOMEN’S degrees. By D. C. H. [Harry D. Catling]. Verses. 8vo. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books, p. 274.] Cambridge, 1897 WOMENS speaking justified, proved and allowed by the Scriptures, all such as speak by the spirit and power of the Lord Jesus, and how women were the first that preached the tidings of the resurrection of Jesus, etc. [By Margaret Fox, nee Fell.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1667 Signed : M. F. WON ! By the author of Jennie of “ The Prince’s” [Mrs Bertha H. Buxton]. 8vo. 3 vols. [D.N.B. vol. 8, p. 105.] London, 1877 WON by waiting. [A novel.] By Edna Lyall [Ada Ellen Bayly]. 8vo. London,1888 WONDER (the) of a kingdome ; dedicated to the Junto at Westminster. . . . [By John Taylor, the water poet.] 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 55, p. 437.] London, 1648 WONDER (the) of Lourdes ; what it is and what it means. By John Oxenham [William Arthur Dunkerley]. 8vo. Pp. 62. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1924 WONDER (the) of the Bishop of Meaux [Bossuet], upon perusal of Dr Bull’s books, consider’d and answer’d. [By Edward Stephens.] 4to. Pp. 12. [D.N.B. vol. 54, p. 171.] London, 1704 WONDER (a) ; or, an honest York- shire-man : a ballad opera, as it is perform’d at the theatres with universal applause. [By Henry Carey.] 8vo. [N. and Q. 18th February i860, p. 126.] London, 1736 WONDER (the); or propositions for a safe and well-grounded peace: proposed by a Parliament-man [Henry Anderson]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1648 WONDERFUL (the) adventure. [A novel.] By Mrs George Norman Mrs George Blount]. 8vo. Pp. 318. Catholic Who’s Who.\ London, 1914 WONDERFUL (the) adventures of Captain Priest . . . with other legends. By the author of A stray Yankee in Texas [Samuel A. Hammett]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1855 WONDERFUL (the) adventures of Tuflongbo and his elfin company, in their journey with Little Content through the enchanted forest. By Holme Lee, author of Legends from fairy land, etc. [Harriet Parr]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 245. [Brit. Mus.] WONDERFUL (a) book ; or, my experience in three trances. [By William Wilson.] 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Mus.] Toronto, 1895 WONDERFUL cities of the world. By Hazel Shepard [Helen Ainslie Smith]. 4to. London, 1887 WONDERFUL (the) confirmation of the succession of the Kingdom of Christ at 1697, derived from the 42 moons then ending; given by prophecy, etc. [By T. Beverley.] 4to. [.Brit. Musi] [London, 1690?] WONDERFUL (a) cure. See “Home plays for ladies.” WONDERFUL curiosities, rarities, and wonders in England, Scotland, and Ireland. By R. B. [Richard or Robert Burton, i.e. Nathaniel Crouch]. i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 8, p. 15.] London, 1682 WONDERFUL (the) deeds and doings of the little giant Boab, and his talking raven, Tabib. By Irwin Longman [Ingersoll Lockwood]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1891 WONDERFUL (the) drama of Punch and Judy, and their little dog Toby. By Papernose Woodensconce, Esq. [Robert Barnabas Brough] ; with illustrations by “The Owl” [Charles Henry Bennett]. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 309.] London, 1854 WONDERFUL (the) life. By Hesba Stretton, author of Lost Gift, etc. [Sarah Smith]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 251. London, 1875 See the note to “ Alone in London.” WONDERFUL love; being the romantic adventures of Glory West, actress. By “Pan” [Leslie Beresford]. 8 vo. Pp. viii. 342. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1916 WONDERFUL (the) love of God to men; or, heaven opened in earth. [By William Peckitt.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] York, 1794 Peckitt’s name is given only in the text on the last page. WONDERFUL mates. [A tale.] By Brenda [Mrs-Castle Smith, nee -Meyrick]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1900 WONDERFUL (the) narrative ; or, a faithful account of the French profits, their agitations, extasies, and inspirations. ... In a letter to a friend. [By Charles Chauncy, D.D., of Boston.] i2mo. Pp. 130. Glasgow, 1742 WONDERFUL prodigies of judgment and mercy ; discovered in above three hundred memorable histories. . . . Faithfully collected from antient and modern authors, of undoubted authority and credit, and imbellished with divers curious pictures, of several remarkable passages therein. By R. B. author of the History of the wars of England,, etc. [Richard or Robert Burton, i.e. Nathaniel Crouch]. i2mo. Pp. 2, 235. [Bodl.] London, 1682 WONDERFUL (the) travellers . . . containing “A journey into the interior of the earth,” and “Five weeks in a balloon.” By Jules Verne. [Translated from the French by Fred Amadeus Malleson.] 8vo. London [1877] WONDERFUL (the) wapentake. By a “Son of the Soil” [James S. Fletcher]. 8vo. Chicago, 1895 WONDERFUL works ; or, the miracles of Christ. By a clergyman’s daughter [Mrs Ellen Clacy]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 63.] London, 1864 WONDERFULL (a), strange and miraculous, astrologicall prognostication for this yeer of our Lord God, 1591 ; discouering such wonders to happen this yeere, as neuer chaunced since Noes floud: wherein if there be found one lye, the author will loose his credit for euer. By Adam Foule- weather, student in asse-tronomy [Thomas Nash]. 4to. B. L. No pagination. [D.N.B. vol. 40, p. 104." London [1591' A counter attack on Richard Harvey, astrologer and divine, who had attacked Nash, Greene and Lyly, in his “ Theological Discourse of the Lamb of God,” and in his “ Plaine Percevall.” This strife was a re-echo of the Martin Mar-Prelate controversy. WONDERFULL (the) yeare, 1603; wherein is shewed the picture of London, lying sicke of the plague : at the ende of all (like a mery epilogue to a dull play) certain tales are cut out in sundry fashions, of purpose to shorten the Hues of long winter nights, that lye watching in the darke for us. [By Thomas Dekker.] 4to. Pp. 48. B. L. [Corser’s Collectanea Anglo- Poetica, v. 129.] London, N.D. WONDERS in flowers and plants, as seen in Kew Gardens. [By Philip Henry Gosse.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] WONDERS no miracles; or, Mr Valentine Greatrates gift of healing examined, upon occasion of a sad effect of his stroaking, March the 7, 1665 at one Mr Cressets house in Charter-House-Yard: in a letter to a reverend divine living near that place. [By David Lloyd, M.A., Canon of St Asaph.] 4to. [Bodl.j D. N. B.vol. 33, p. 417.] London, 1666 WONDERS of electricity. ... By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope Mon- crieff]. 8vo. Pp. 128. [Brit. Musi] London [1881] WONDERS (the) of God in the wilderness ; or, the lives of the most celebrated saints of the oriental desarts. Collected out of the genuine works of the holy fathers and other ancient ecclesiastical writers. . . . [By Bishop Richard Challoner.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 9, p. 443.] London, 1755 WONDERS of sculpture. . . . Translated from the French of L. Viardot by N. D’Anvers [Mrs Nancy Bell, ne'e Meugens]. 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1872 WONDERS (the) of the heavens displayed, in twenty lectures. By the author of The hundred wonders of the world [ostensibly the Rev. C. C. Clarke, but really Sir Richard Phillips]. 8vo. Pp. xxxv. 315. London, 1821 WONDERS of the ice world. ... By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope M011- crieff]. 8vo. Pp. 128. [Brit. Mus.] London [1884] WONDERS (the) of the vegetable kingdom display’d; in a series of letters. By the author of Selectfemale biography [Mary Roberts]. 8vo. Pp. 5, 243. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends* Books, ii. 500.] London, 1822 WONDERS of the vegetable world. [By William Henry Davenport Adams.] i2mo. Pp. 127. London, 1867 Preface signed : W. H. D. A. WONDERS of the volcano. By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope Moncrieff]. 8vo. Pp. 128. [Brit. Mus.] London [1880] WONDERS of the West. Bya Canadian [James Lynne Alexander]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 49.] Toronto, 1825 WONDERS (the) of to-morrow; and the crown of life : two addresses. [By James Munro Sandham.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Frome Selwood, 1853 WONDROUS strange; a novel. By the author of Mabel, etc. [Mrs Emma Newby, nee Barry]. Second edition. i2mo. 3 vols. [Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog.] London, 1864 WONDROUS (the) tale of Alroy. The rise of Iskander. By the author of Vivia?i Grey, etc. [Benjamin Disraeli]. i2mo. 3 vols. [D.N.B. vol. 15, p. 116.] London, 1833 WONSTON confirmation tracts. [By Alexander Robert Charles Dallas, rector of Wonston, Hants.] i2mo. London, 1840 These tracts are twelve in number, having all the general title as given above. Each tract has, however, an addition, explanatory of the particular aspect in which Confirmation is viewed by the author. WOO-CREEL (the); or, the Bill o’ Bashan: a tale. [By Sir Alexander Boswell.] 4to. Pp. 11. [Brit. Mus.] Auchinleck, 1816 Dedication signed : A. B. WOOD (the) end ; a novel. By J. E. Buckrose [Mrs Falconer Jameson]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1907 WOOD, hay, and stubble. By Fleeta [Kate W. Hamilton]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1886 WOOD Island light; or, Ned Sanford’s refuge. By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. Pp. 246. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 220.] Boston [1895] WOOD notes ; or, Carolina carols : a collection of North Carolina poetry, compiled by La Tenella [Mrs Mary Clarke, nee Bayard]. 8vo. [Kirk’s Suppi] Raleigh, N.C., 1854 WOOD (the) nymph ; a novel. By the author of Ariel, etc. [Thomas Dutton, M.A.]. 8vo. London, 1806 Ariel (1796) bears the author’s name. WOOD-CART (the) ; and other tales from the South of France. By F. M. P. [Frances Mary Peard]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1867 WOODCRAFT. By Nessmuk [George W. Sears]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 203.] New York, 1884 WOODCRAFT ; a story of the South at the close of the Revolution. By Frank Cooper [William Gilmore Simms]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 67.] New York, 1885 WOODEN (the) horse for the rounder, and the horse without a head. ... By Robin Baragwaneth [John Jeffery]. i2mo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud. i. 30.] Penzance, 1824 WOODEN (the) works of Thomas Anonymous [Thomas Childs]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Sumter, So. Carolina, 1904 WOODEN (the) world dissected; in the character of a ship of war : as also, the characters of all the officers, from the captain to the common sailor. . . . By a lover of mathematics [Edward Ward]. The second edition. i2mo. Pp. 86. \Lond. Lib. Cat. Supph] London, 1707 WOODLAND (the) companion ; or a brief description of British trees, with some account of their uses. By the author of Evenings at home [John Aikin, M.D.], i2mo. \Brit. Mus.\ London, 1815 Signed: J. A. WOODLAND, moor, and stream ; being the notes of a naturalist [Denham Jordan] ; edited by J. A. Owen. 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 WOODLEIGH. By the author of One a?id twenty, etc. [Frederick William Robinson]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1859 WOODMAN (the). [A novel.] By Jules de Glouvet [Guernay de Beaure- paire] : translated from the French. 8vo. [Baker’s Guide to Fiction.] New York, 1892 WOOD-NUTS from a fairy hazel bush, cracked for little people. By Jean D’Ensinge [John Marten], 8vo. Pp. viii. 201. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1869 WOODRANGERS’ tales. By Victor St Clair [George Waldo Browne]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Brooklyn, N.Y., 1907 WOODS and wild flowers. ByE. G. L. B. [Edward George Lytton Bulwer, first Lord Lytton]. 8vo. London, 1875 WOOD’S plot discovered by a member of his society ; with his apology to his countrymen. [By Jonathan Swift.] 121110. [Brit. Mush] Dublin, 1724 WOOD-SPIRIT (the); a novel. [By Ernest Charles Jones.] i2mo. 2 vols. London, 1841 WOODSTOCK ; an elegy. [By Hugh Dalrymple.] 4to. [A/, and Q. 1 Ser. ix. 589.] 1761 WOODSTOCK; or, The cavalier: a tale of the year Sixteen hundred and fifty-one. By the author of Waverley, etc. [Sir Walter Scott]. 8vo. 3 vols. Edinburgh, 1826 WOOING ! ! and cooing ! ! or, C-tte and Co-gh ; a poem. By Peter Pindar, Esq. [John Wolcot, M.D.]. Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 27. London [1816] On the contemplated marriage between Princess Charlotte and Prince Leopold. WOOING and warring in the wilderness. By Se De Kay [Charles D. Kirke]. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 79.] New York, i860 WOOING (the) o’t; a novel. By Mrs Alexander [Annie Hector, nee French]. 8vo. 3 vols. London, 1873 WOOING (the) of May. [A novel.] By Alan St Aubyn [Frances Marshall]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 292. [Brit. Mush] London, 1897 WOOING (the) of Webster, and other stories. By A. M. [A. Murdoch]. 8vo. Pp. 290. [Brit. Mush] London [1899] WOOL encouraged without exportation ; or, practical observations on wool and the woollen manufacture. ... By a Wiltshire clothier, F. A. S. [Henry Wansey]. 8vo. [Brit. Mush] London, 1791 WOOLLEN draper’s (a) letter on the French treaty to his friends and fellow tradesmen all over England. [By Lieut. J. Mackenzie.] 8vo. Pp. 48. London,1786 Signed : R. J. Woollen Draper. Dedication in MS. signed by the author. WOOLLEN (a) shroud; or learn to dye : to be given at burials. By C. B. [Clement Barksdale]. i2mo. [Camb. Univ. Libh] London, 1679 WOORE (the) country. [Verses. By Rowland E. Egerton Warburton.] 8vo. Chester, 1834 See the title-pages of subsequent works. WORCESTER dumb-bells; a ballad; to the tune of All in the land of Essex. [By Thomas Warton.] S. sh. [Bodlh] N.P. N.D. WORCESTER gaudy, 1858. By a late fellow [James Thomas Bainbridge Landon, M.A.]. 4to. Pp. 3. N.P., N.D. WORCESTERS apophthegmes; or, witty sayings of Henry, late Marquess of Worcester. By T. B. [Thomas Bayly, D.D.]. 4to. Pp. 114. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 801.] London, 1650 WORCESTERS elegie, and evlogie. By J. T. [John Toy] Mr. of Arts. 4to. No pagination. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.] London, 1638 WORCESTERSHIRE (the) petition to the parliament for the ministry of England defended, by a minister of Christ in that county ; in answer to xvi. queries, printed in a book, called, A brief discovery of the threefold estate of Antichrist: whereunto is added, xvii. counter-queries, and an humble monition to parliament, people and ministers. [By Richard Baxter.] 4to. Pp. 4, 40. [Smith’s Bibl. Anti- Quak. p. 59.] London, 1653 WORD (a) about a new election, that the people of England may see the happy difference between English liberty and French slavery ; and may consider well, before they make the exchange. [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. [Wilson’s Life of Defoe, 122.] 1710 WORD (the) and the life. [Poems. By R. H. Cooke, F.R.C.S.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Private print, 1883 WORD (a) at parting; in a letter to the Rev. Edward Manley; being a sequel to the “ Brief account of the Unitarians”; with a commentary on that writer’s “Creed of Contradictions,” and an answer to his “ Questions proposed to the illuminati.” By the author of An Appeal to Scripture and tradition [Sir Charles A. Elton]. i2mo. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, ii. 386.] London,1825 WORD (a) for inquiry previous to decision in the matter of the present manifestations of, or pretentions to, the gifts of speaking with unknown tongues and prophesying. By one of the congregation of the National Scotch Church [William Harding]. 8vo. Pp. 56. London, 1832 WORD (a) for that section in the Church, who, in the recent struggle, took up what may be called a medium position. [By David Logan, minister of Stenton.] 8vo. Pp. 4. [D. Laing.] Edinburgh [1844] WORD (a) for the Empire. By Rowland Thirlmere [John Walker]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1907 WORD (a) from the Bible ... on behalf of enslaved British subjects. By H. P. [Henry Pownall]. 8vo. London, 1829 WORD (a) in behalf of the king, that he may see who they are that honour all men, and love the brother-hood, that fear God, and honour the king, according as it is written in the Scriptures of truth, see 1 Pet. 2. 17. [By George Fox.] 4to. Pp. 15. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 659.] London, 1660 Signed : G. F. WORD (a) in season ; being a parallel between the intended bloody massacre of the people of the Jews, in the reign of King Ahasuerus; and the hellish powder-plot against the Protestants, in the reign of King James. ... By H. C., a lover of true Protestants [Henry Care]. 4to. Pp. 2, 47. London, 1679 WORD (a) in season ; or, how the corn- grower may yet grow rich, and his labourer happy; addressed to the Stout British Farmer. [By Rev. Samuel Smith, M.A., vicar of Lois-Weedon- by-Weston, Towcester.] 8vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1849 WORD (a) in season to all in authority ; with weighty considerations what persons, practices and things, doth chiefly cause division and contention, rending of kingdoms, and distresse of nations. . . . Published by a lover of truth and the kingdom of peace, J. C. [John Collens]. 4to. Pp. 26. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1660 The Postscript was written by John Anderdon. WORD (a) in season to all sorts of well- minded people in this miserably distracted and distempered nation, plainly manifesting, that the safety and wellbeing of the commonwealth under God dependeth on the fidelity and steadfast adherence of the people to those whom they have chosen, and on their ready compliance with them. . . . [By John Sadler, M.D.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1646 WORD (a) in season to the traders and manufacturers of Great Britain. [By William Combe.] Sixth edition. 8vo. Pp. 22. [D. N.B. vol. 11, p. 433.] London, printed: Edinburgh, reprinted, 1792 Signed : A true-born Englishman. WORD (a) in season to working women. By Austin Clare [Miss W. M. James]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 119. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1889 WORD (the) made flesh; or the true humanity of God in Christ demonstrated from the Scriptures. [By Thomas Carlyle, advocate.] 8vo. Pp. 234. [G. C. Boase.] Edinburgh, 1829 WORD (a) more on the Moderatorship ; in a letter to the Rev. William Cunningham, of Trinity College Church, Edinburgh. By a bystander [James Moncrieff]. 8vo. Pp. 54. Edinburgh, 1837 WORD (a) of caution and of comfort to the middle and lower classes of society ; being a pastor’s advice to his flock in time of trouble. [By Rev. Thomas Frognall Dibdin.] [Olphar Hamst, p. 182.] London, 1831 WORD (a) of comfort; or, a discourse concerning the late lamentable accident of a fall of a roome, at a catholike sermon in the Black-friars at London. By I. R.-P. [John Floyd, priest]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] St Omer, 1623 WORD (a) of comfort to a melancholy country. By Amicus Patriae [Rev. John Wise]. 8vo. Boston, 1721 WORD (a) of friendly admonition to a Jew. [By Joel Abraham Knight.] The second edition. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1796 WORD (the) of God and Anglo-Israelism; an argument founded on Scripture. By C. M. G. [Colonel C. M. Gumm]. 8vo. Bath, 1885 WORD (the) of God the best guide to all persons, at all times, and in all places ; or, a collection of Scripture- texts, plainly shewing such things as are necessary for every Christians knowledg and practice. By the author of The Best companion [William Howell]. 8vo. Pp. 10,213,3. \Bodl.\ Oxford, 1689 WORD (a) of information to them that need it; briefly opening some most weighty passages of God’s dispensations among the sons of men, from the beginning ; and insisting a little upon the state and condition of the nations, wherein they now stand, and particularly of England: . . . By W. T. William Tomlinson]. 4to. Pp. 47. Bodl.] London, 1660 WORD (a) of reproof, and advice to my late fellow-souldiers and officers of the English, Irish and Scotish army ; with some inrhoad made upon the hireling and his mass-house, university, orders, degrees, vestments, poperies, heathenism, etc. With a short catalogue of some of the fighting priests, and for just cause given, have given them a blow in one of their eyes (pickt out of the whores head) which they call, a fountain of religion, but is a sink of iniquity .... By a lover of good men, good laws, good governments and governours, good judges and ministers, as at the beginning: who hates nor fears no man, and is a lover and honourer of all men in the Lord, but cannot give flattering title, or respect the person of any man. E. B. [Edward Billing]. 4to. Pp. 96. [Bodli] London, 1659 WORD (a) of testimony ; or, a corrected account of the evidence adduced by the Trustees of the National Scotch Church in support of their charges against the Rev. Edward Irving, and his defence. [By William Harding.] 8vo. Pp. 86. London, 1832 WORD (the) of the Lord, To his beloved Citty New-Ierusalem, come from God, cloathed with the excellency of the glory of his love ; and is the bride the Lambs wife, with the flowings of the tender compassionate bowels of the Lord Jesus, to all the mourners in Sion. . . . [By William Dewsbury.] (Given forth in York Castle, the 19. of the first moneth, 1663.) 4to. Pp. 7. WORD (the) of the Lord to Sion the new Jerusalem, the bride the Lambs wife, the excellency of all the glory that is amongst the people ; though she be now in deep sufferings, in fulness of time God will* clear the innocency of her children. . . . [By William Dewsbury.] 4to. Pp. 8. London, 1664 Signed : W. D. WORD (a) of warning to his countrymen, regarding the relation existing between the nation and the Church. By an aged Scotsman [David Ker]. 8vo. Pp. 8. Edinburgh, 1882 WORD (a) of wisdom for the witty, addressed to Isaac Tomkins, author of “Thoughts upon the aristocracy of England.” [By John Richards, M.P.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Manch. Free Lib. Cat.] London, 1835 WORD (a) or two about the new Poor Law, addressed to his parishioners by a beneficed clergyman in Buckinghamshire. [By Lord Sidney Godolphin Osborne.] 8vo. \Brit. Musi] London, 1835 Signed : S. G. O. WORD (a) or two in vindication of the University of Oxford and of Magdalen College in particular from the posthumous aspersions of Mr Gibbon. [By James Hurdis, D.D.] 4to. Pp. 44. [Bishopstone, 1797] WORD (a) or two of advice to William Warburton ; a dealer in many words. By a friend [Zachary Grey, LL.D.] ; with an appendix containing a taste of William’s spirit of railing. 8vo. Pp. 26. [Bodli] London, 1746 The Advice is signed : Thy friend in the truth, A. E. See above “ A free and familiar letter.” The letters A. E. are the vowels in Zachery Gr^y. WORD (a) or two on the Liturgy, offered to the younger members of the English Church. ... By A. M. [Alfred Miles]. i2mo. Pp. 72. {Brit. Musi] London, 1837 WORD (a) or two; or, architectural hints, in lines, in two ’parts, addressed to those Royal Academicians who are painters : written prior, as well as subsequent to the day of annual election for their president, 10th December 1805. ... By Fabricia Nunnez, Spinster [Peter Coxe]. 4to. Pp. 49. [Gent. Mag. Dec. 1844, p. 653 ; Feb. 1808, p. 143.] London, 1806 See above, “ Another word or two . . .” WORD (a) or two to the 228 Members [of Parliament] who voted against the second reading of the Jews’ Relief Bill, May 17. [By P. Anchini.] 8vo. WORD (the); the Star out of Jacob. By the author of The golde?i ladder [Anna Bartlett Warner and Susan Warner]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 271. London, 1872 Preface signed : A. W. WORD (a) to a drunkard. [By John Wesley, M.A.] i2mo. Pp. 4. [London, 1780?] WORD (a) to a young governess. By an old one [Katharine Naish]. i2mo. [Green’s Bill. Somers, i. 370.] Bath, i860 WORD (a) to Christ’s ministers at the beginning of the year. [By Rev. Josiah Viney.] i2mo. London [1864] WORD (a) to his parishioners on their duty to the church at the present Tractarian] crisis. By W. S. B. William Simcox Bricknell]. 8vo. Brit. Mus.\ London, 1837 WORD (a) to Mr Madan; or, free thoughts on his late celebrated defence of polygamy ; in a letter to a friend. [By Rev. Henry Moore, Unitarian.] 8vo. [Murch’s Dissenters, p. 512.] N.P. 1781 WORD (a) to Mr [Hugh] Peters, and two words for the Parliament and Kingdom. By a friend to the Parliament, City, and Ministery of it [Rev. Nathaniel Ward]. 4to. Pp. 38. [N. and Q. March 1837, p. 237.] London, 1647 WORD (a) to Mr Wil. Prynn, Esq. ; and two for the parliament and army : reproving the one, and justifying the other in their late proceedings : presented to the consideration of the readers of Mr William Prynn’s last books. [By Henry Marten.] 4to. Pp. 16. [Bodli] London, 1649 WORD (a) to Parmenas, on his “Address to the members of the Baptist Church at Shrewsbury.” By R. D. [Rev. Richard De Courcy, vicar of Shrewsbury]. 8vo. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. i. 202.] Shrewsbury, 1776 WORD (a) to the Hutchinsonians; or, remarks on three extraordinary sermons lately preached before the University of Oxford, by the Rev. Dr Patten, the Rev. Mr Wetherall, and the Rev. Mr Horne. By a member of the University [Benjamin Kennicott, D. D.]. 8vo. Pp. 44. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] London, 1756 WORD (a) to the officers of the Army. [By Thomas Zachary.] 4to. London, 1657 Signed: T. Z. WORD (a) to the public. By the author of Lucretia, Rienzi, etc. [Edward G. E. Lytton Bulwer-Lytton, Lord Lytton]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1847 WORD (a) to the quiet of the land, on the present dissensions in the Church. [By Andrew Coventry Dick, advocate.] 8vo. Pp. 46. Edinburgh, 1838 WORD (a) to the sons of Africa. [By Luke Howard.] 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 92.] London, 1822 WORD (a) to the wavering; or an answer to the Enquiry into the present state of affairs : whether we owe allegiance to the King in these circumstances? &c. [By George Hicks.] With a postscript of subjection to the higher powers by Dr G. B- 'Gilbert Burnet]. 4to. Pp. 10. D.N.B. vol. 26, p. 354; Clarke and Foxcroft’s Life of Burnet, Appendix.] London, 1689 WORD (a) to the wise ; in a letter to a city clergyman, recommended to the consideration of his brethren of the clergy especially those of the younger sort. [By Joseph Rawson, D.D.] 8 vo. [Kennett’s Wisdom, p. no.] London, 1711 WORD (a) to the wise ; or, an exhortation to the Roman Catholic clergy of Ireland. By a member of the Established Church [George Berkeley, Bishop of Cloyne]. 8vo. [Trin. Coll. Dubl. Cat.] Dublin, 1749 WORD (a) to the world answering the darkness thereof concerning the perfect word of God to salvation. [By John Perrot.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] London, 1658 Signed : J. P. WORD (a) upon Deuteronomy. [By Rev. Daniel Edward.] 8vo. Pp. 58. [New Coll. Lib.] Edinburgh, 1878 WORD (the) ; walks from Eden. By the author of The wide, wide world [Susan Warner]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 284. [Allibone’s Diet.] London, 1866 WORD-BOOK of the English tongue. By C. L. D. [Charles Louis Dessou- lavy]. 8 vo. Pp. vii. 216. [Brit. Musi] London, 1917 WORDS and their uses, past and present; a study of the English language. By a Yankee [Richard Grant White]. [Cushing’s Init. ajid Pseud, i. 311.] New York, 1870 WORDS (the) and works of our Blessed Lord and their lessons for daily life. By the author of Brampto?i rectory Mary M. Howard], 8vo. 2 vols. Brit. Musi] London, i860 WORDS by an eye-witness ; the struggle in Natal. By “Linesman” [Captain Maurice Harold Grant]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1901 WORDS for peace. By a layman [Alfred Robert Cooke, journalist]. 8vo. London, 1879 WORDS for the hour. [By Mrs Julia Ward Howe.] i2mo. [Cushing’s Anon.] Boston, 1857 WORDS from a layman’s ministry at Barnard Castle. [By George Brown.] 8vo. London, 1871 WORDS heard in quiet ; searchings out of the Book of the Lord. By E. A. W. [Miss Emily A. Wanton]. i2mo. London, 1870 WORDS made visible ; or grammar and rhetorick accommodated to the lives and manners of men : represented in a country school for the entertainment and edification of the spectators. [By Samuel Shaw.] 8vo. Pp. 6, 187. [Dyce Cat. ii. 295.] London, 1679 WORDS of comfort to persecuted Catholics, written in exile, anno 1607. Letters from a cell in Dublin Castle, and diary of the Bohemian war of 1620. By H. F. [Henry Fitzsimon, S.J.]. 8vo. Pp. 284. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet.] Dublin, 1881 WORDS of counsel ; a mother’s monitory to the daughter. [By Henriette Gislesen]. Translated from the fifth Norwegian edition by John Hazeland. 8vo. Christiania, 1869 WORDS of hope and comfort for those in sorrow. [By Mrs Julias C. Hare.] 8vo. London, 1874 WORDS (the) of Jesus. By the author of The morning and night watches, etc. [John Ross MacDuff, D.D.]. Fourth edition. 8vo. Pp. 127. \Brit. Musi] London, 1854 WORDS of life’s last years ; containing Christian emblems ; metrical prayers and sacred poems, translated from foreign writers. By the author of Thoughts on devotion, etc. [John Sheppard, of Frome.] 8vo. [Olphar Hamst; Green’s Bibl. Somers, iii. 244.] London, 1862 WORDS (the) of the hymnal noted complete ; with scriptural references. [By Thomas Helmore, M.A.] i2mo. Pp. 132, 8. [D.N.B. vol. 25, p. 372.] London [c. 1870] WORDS (the) of the songs, duets, glees, and other compositions in the operatic farce of “Arrived at Portsmouth. . . .” By the author of Hartford Bridge [William Pearce]. 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Drami] London, 1794 WORDS (the) of the songs ... in “The Nunnery,” a comic opera. [By William Pearce.] 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1785 WORDS (the) of the wise, designed for the entertainment and instruction of younger minds. [By John Potter.] i2mo. [European Mag. v. 283.] London, 1768 WORK about the Five Dials. [By the Hon. Alethea Maude Stanley.] \_Lib. Journ. iii. 348 ; iv. 25.] London, 1878 Mistakenly ascribed to George Barnett Smith. WORK among the lost. By the author of Home thoughts for mothers and mothers' meetings [Jane Ellice Hopkins]. i2mo. Pp. 95. London, 1870 WORK and conflict ; or divine life in progress. By the author of The divine life [John Kennedy, D.D., Stepney]. 8vo. London [1858] Another issue gives the author’s name. WORK and warfare. By “Cycla” [Mrs Helen Clacy]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 72.] London, 1858 WORK for a cooper ; being an answer to a libel, written by Thomas Wynne the cooper, the aleman, the quack, and the speaking-Quaker: with a brief account how that dissembling people differ at this day from what at first they were. By one who abundantly pities their ignorance and folly [William Jones, of North Wales]. 4to. [Smith’s Bibl. Anti-Quak. p. 257.] London, 1679 WORK (a) for none but angels & men ; that is, to be able to look into, and to know our selves: or a book shewing what the soule is, subsisting and having its operations without the body ; its more then a perfection or reflection of the sense, or temperature of humours. . . . [Verse. By Sir John Davies.] 4to. Pp. 54. [Bodli] London, 1653 The second elegy of the “ Nosce te ipsum.” WORK of the future for the Society of Friends. [By William Henry Richardson.] 8vo. Pp. 56. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, Supp. p. 22.] London, 1874 WORK (the) of God’s power in man, with something that the spirit of truth leads to practice, and what it leads to deny. . . . By W. S. [William Smith, of Besthorpe]. 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books.] London, 1663 WORK (the) of the sixth day illustrated. [By Frances Walter.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1851 WORKE (a) entytled of ye olde god & the newe, of the olde faythe & the newe, of the olde doctryne and ye newe, an orygynall begynnynge of Idolatrye. [Written originally in German by Judas Nazarei, pseud, of Joachim von Watt, under the title of, “Vom alten und neuen Gott, Glauben und Lere.” Translated from the Latin version of Hartmannus Dulichius, by Wm. Turner, Dean of Wells.] 8vo. B. L. \Brit. Mus.] n.p. 1534 WORKE for a masse-priest. [By Alexander Cooke]. 4to. Pp. 14. \BodL] London, 1617 WORKE, more worke, and a little more worke for a masse-priest. [By Alexander Cooke.] 4to. [Mendham Collection Cat. p. 83.] London, 1630 WORKERS together; or, an endless chain. By “Pansy” [Mrs Isabella Alden, nee Macdonald]. 8vo. Pp. 280. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1887 WORKES (the) of a young wyt, trust up with a fardell of pretie fancies, profitable to young poetes. . . . Done by N. B., gentleman [Nicholas Breton]. 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 6, p. 277.] London [1577] WORKHOUSE (the) boy; containing his letters, with a short account of him. By the author of Friendly advice to parents on the management and education of their children [Mrs Louisa Hoare]. i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, Supp. p. 192.] London [c. 1830] WORKING designs for ten Catholic Churches, containing all dimensions, details, and specifications. ... By an ecclesiastical architect [Charles Sholl]. Folio. Pp. 72. New York, 1869 WORKING (a) man’s refutation of [John] Stuart Mill. [By Johann Georg Eccarius.] 8vo. London, 1869 WORKING of the Tithe Commutation Act. [By the Hon. Arthur Philip Perceval.] 8vo. [Bodl.\ London, 1838 WORKING (a) woman’s life ; an autobiography. By Marianne Farningham [Marianne Hearne, of Farningham]. 8vo. Pp. 282. [Lit. Year Book.] London, 1907 WORKING-MAN’S (the) way in the world : being the autobiography of a journeyman printer. [By Charles Manby Smith.] i2mo. [A7. a?id Q. Feb. 1869, p. 168.] London, n.d. WORKMAN! What of your house? Specially addressed to the working men in small towns and villages. By one who knows [Charles James Wahab]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1867 WORKS for the times ; an appeal for the heathen. ... By a Christian witnesser [J. F. Paysley]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ Dublin, 1867 Signed: J. F. P. WORKS (the) of Anacreon and Sappho, with pieces from ancient authors [Bion, Moschus, Virgil, and Horace], and occasional essays ; illustrated by observations on their lives and writings, explanatory notes from established commentators, and additional remarks by the editor: with the classic and introductory poem. [By Edward Burnaby Greene.] i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 23, p. 63.] London, 1768 Signed : E. B. G. WORKS (the) of Anacreon, Sappho, Bion, Moschus, and Musasus, translated into English. By a gentleman of Cambridge [Rev. Francis Fawkes, M.A.]. i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 18, p. 275.] London, 1760 WORKS (the) of Ben Jonson ; with a memoir of his life and writings. By Barry Cornwall [Bryan Waller Procter]. 8vo. Pp. lvi. 819. [Allibone’s Diet.] London,1838 WORKS (the) of Cheviot Tichburn. [By William Harrison Ainsworth.] 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 1, p. 197.] London, 1825 WORKS (the) of darknesse brought to light and reproved; in answer to divers false doctrines ... of J. Wells concerning the word and the gospel. ... By him that loves the truth as it is in Jesus. . . . F. H. [Francis How- gill]. 4to. Pp. 23. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1659 WORKS (the) of Geoffrey Chaucer, compared with the former editions and many valuable MSS., out of which, three Tales are added which were never before printed ; by John Urry, Student of Christ Church, Oxon, deceased: together with a glossary, by a Student of the same College [Timothy Thomas]. To the whole is prefixed the author’s life, newly written [by-Dart, corrected and enlarged by William Thomas], and a preface, giving an account of this edition [by Timothy Thomas]. Folio. [W.] London, 1721 WORKS (the) of Jacob Boehme. (Translated out of the German—the Epistles.) [By J. E. i.e. John Ellistone. A reprint.] With introduction by a graduate of Glasgow University (F. F.). 4to. Glasgow, 1886 WORKS (the) of Mr John Cleveland, containing his poems, orations, epistles, collected into one volume, with the life of the author. [Edited by J. Lake and S. Drake.] 8vo. [fU.] London, 1687 Epistle Dedicatory signed : J. L., S. D. WORKS (the) of Nobody [William Stevens, F.S.A.]. 8vo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.\ London [1780 ?] WORKS (the) of Peter Pindar, Esq. [John Wolcot, M.D.]. 8vo. 4 vols. [W.\ London, 1794-6 WORKS (the) of Plato [translated and] abridg’d [by Joseph Stennett] ; illustrated by notes by M. Dacier. 8vo. 2 vols. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. i. 137.] London, 1701 WORKS (the) of Salomon Gessner ; translated . . . with some account of his life and writings. [By Mrs Rose Lawrence.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1802 WORKS (the) of Tacitus ; to which are prefixed political discourses upon that author. [By Thomas Gordon, of Kirkcudbright.] Folio. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1728-31 WORKS (the) of the author of Night- Thoughts [Rev. Edward Young, LL.D.], revised and corrected by himself. A new edition. 8vo. London, 1762 Many copies have an engraved frontispiece, containing a miniature and the name of the author. WORKS (the) of the Caledonian bards ; translated from the Galic [by John Clark]. Volume I. 8vo. Pp. 200. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man. p. 347.] Edinburgh, 1778 WORKS (the) of the ever-memorable John Hales of Eton, collected [by Sir David Dalrymple, Lord Hailes]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Lowndes’ Brit. Lib.] Glasgow, 1765 WORKS (the) of the very learned and Reverend Father in God, John Jewell, not long since Bishop of Salisburie, newly set forth with some amendments of divers quotations ; and a brief discourse of his life [by Daniel Featley. The whole edited by Nicholas Fuller]. Folio. 4 parts. [D.N.B. vol. 29, p. 382.] London, 1609 The Dedication was written by John Overal, and the appendix by Bishop Morton. The book was published under the direction of Archbishop Bancroft. WORKS (the) of William Browne; containing Britannia’s Pastorals: with notes and observations by the Rev. W. Thompson, late of Queen’s-College, Oxford. The Shepherd’s Pipe : consisting of Pastorals, the Inner Temple Masque, never published before ; and other poems; with the life of the author [by Thomas Davies, the bookseller]. i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 7, p. 75.] London, 1772 WORKS (the) of William Hogarth (including the Analysis of beauty), elucidated by descriptions, critical, moral, and historical: to which is prefixed some account of his life. By Thomas Clerk. [The engravings by Thomas Clerk. The text by Thomas Hartwell Horne.] 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1821 From a list of Home’s works in the handwriting of the author. WORKS on alchemy and chemistry. [By H. C. Bolton.] 8vo. [Birrn. Cent. Lib.] 8vo. London, 1891 WORLD (the). By a deserter [Rev. Alexander Robert Charles Dallas]. Nos. 1 and 2. 8vo. London, 1838-9 WORLD (the). By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope Moncrieff]. 8vo. Pp. 192. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1908 WORLD (the) alarm’d : a surprizing relation of a new burning island lately raised out of the sea near Tercera ; with ... a brief history of the other ignovomous mountains at this day . . . in the world: in a letter. . . . [By Thomas Forster, F.R.S.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, N.E., 1721 WORLD (the) and a man. [A novel.] By Z. Z. [Louis Zangwill]. 8vo. Pp. 357. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1896 WORLD (the) and Delia. [A novel.] By Curtis Yorke [Mrs W. S. Richmond Lee, nee-Jex-Long]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1907 WORLD (the) as it goes ; a poem. By the author of The Diaboliad [William Combe] ; dedicated to one of the best men in his Majesty’s dominions. . . . The second edition. 4to. Pp. 37. [D.N.B. vol. 11, p. 433.] London,1779 WORLD (the) at auction ; a play. By Michael Field [Katherine Harris Bradley and Edith Emma Cooper]. 4to. Pp. 116. Edinburgh, 1898 WORLD (the) at Westminster; a periodical publication. By Thomas Brown, the younger [Thomas Moore]. i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 38, p. 382.] London, 1816 The work consists of thirty numbers. WORLD (a) between them. By Bertha M. Clay [Charlotte M. Braeme]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1886 WORLD (the) bewitch’d; a dialogue between two astrologers and the author. ... [By EdwardWard.] 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 59, p. 313.] London, 1699 WORLD (the) conquered, or a believer’s victory over the world ; laid open in several sermons on 1 John 5, 4. By R. A. [Richard Alleine]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Green’s Bibl. Somers, ii. 108]. London, 1668 WORLD (the); how to square it. By Harry Hieover [Charles Bindley]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1854 WORLD (the) in the Church. By F. G. Trafford, author of The moors and the fens, etc. [Mrs Charlotte E. L. Riddell]. Second edition. 8vo. 3vols. [D.N.B. Second Supp., vol. 3, p. 193.] London, 1863 WORLD (the) in which I live, and my place in it. By E. S. A. [Miss Letitia Willgoss Stone]. 8vo. London, 1856 Wrongly ascribed to Ernest Silvanus Appleyard. WORLD (a) in white ; and other poems. By Lindon Meadows [Rev. Charles Butler Greatrex]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi London [1889^ WORLD (the) of bewilderment. By John Travers [Mrs G. H. Bell]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Liti\ London, 1913 WORLD (the) of graft. By Josiah Flynt [Josiah Flynt Willard]. 8vo. Chicago, 1898 WORLD (the) of phantoms ; a poem. [By Cornelius Black, M.D.] 8vo. London, 1862 WORLD (the) soul. By Henry Fielding [Henry Fielding-Hall]. 8vo. Pp. xx. 311. [Bond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1913 WORLD (the) to come, as presented in the Epistle of James ; notes of lectures, by F. E. R. [F. E. Raven]. 8vo. Pp. 52. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1902] WORLD (the) to come ; the glories of heaven and the terrors of hell lively described under the similitude of a vision. By G. L. [George Larkin]. 8vo. [Brown’s Life of Bunyan, p. 447.] London, 1711 WORLD (the) unmask’d; or, the philosopher the greatest cheat; in twenty-four dialogues between Crito a philosopher, Philo a lawyer, and Erastus a merchant; in which true virtue is distinguished from what usually bears the name or resemblance of it. . . . Translated from the French [of Marie Huber]. 8vo. [N. and Q. 13th Dec. 1856, p. 476 ; 28th March 1857, p. 256 ; 25th April 1857, p. 334.] London, 1736 Wrongly ascribed to Bernard de Mande- ville. WORLD (a) view of Free Trade, tariff reforms, and the Empire’s duty to mankind. By N. D. H. [Colonel North Dalrymple Hamilton]. 8vo. London, 1905 WORLD (a) without souls. [By the Rev. J. W. Cunningham, A.M., vicar of Harrow.] i2mo. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] London, 1805 WORLDLING’S (the) progress; a biographical fragment. By F. R. B. [F. R. Beecheno]. 8vo. Pp. 72. [Brit. Mush] London [1885] WORLDLY (the) hope. By F. O. O. [Forward Observation Officer, i.e. C. J. C. Street]. 8vo. Pp. 315. [Brit. Musi] London, 1917 WORLD-MENDER (the). [A novel.] By Maxwell Gray [Mary Gleed Tuttiett]. 8vo. Pp. 400. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1916 WORLD’S (the) awakening. By “Navarcus” [Patrick Vaux and another]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1908 A later edition of the same work bears a different title: “When the Great W ar Came.” WORLD’S (the) blackmail; a novel. By Lucas Cleeve [Mrs Howard Kings- cote, nJe Adelina G. I. Wolff]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 312. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1900 WORLD’S (the) epitaph; a poem. [By Thomas Gordon Hake.] 8vo. Pp. vii. 128. [Brit. Musi] London, private print, 1866 WORLD’S (the) great restavration ; or, the calling of the Ievves, and (with them) of all the nations and kingdomes of the earth, to the faith of Christ. Published by William Gouge, B. of D., and preacher of God’s Word in Black- fryers, London. [Written by Henry Finch.] 4to. Pp. 234. [Bod/.] London, 1621 WORLD’S (the) honour detected, and, for the unprofitableness thereof, rejected ; and the honour which comes from God alone, asserted, and reduced to practice ; or, some reasons why the people of God called Quakers do deny the accustomary honour and salutations of the world, consisting in putting off the hat, bowing, titling, bidding good- morrow, good-night, &c. ... By a friend to truth, who is no respecter or regarder of persons, called a Quaker, B. F. [Benjamin Furly]. 4to. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 827.] London, 1663 WORLD’S (the) idol. Plutus ; a comedy written in Greek by Aristophanes. Translated by H. H. B. [Henry Burnell]. 4to. [Wi] London, 1659 WORLD’S (the) laconics; or the best thoughts of the best authors. By Everard Berkeley [Tryon Edwards]. i2mo. Pp. 432. [Brit. Musi] London, 1853 WORLD’S (the) mercy ; and other tales. By Maxwell Gray [Mary Gleed Tuttiett]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1900 WORLD’S (the) mistake in Oliver Cromwell; or, a short political discourse, shewing that Cromwell’s maladministration, (during his four years and nine moneths pretended Protectorship), layed the foundation of our present condition in the decay of trade. [By Slingsby Bethel.] 4to. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man.) London, 1668 WORLD’S (the) people. [Short stories.] By Julien Gordon [Mrs Julia Grinnell Cruger]. 8vo. Pp. 358. [Who’s Who in Lit.\ London, 1905 WORLD’S (the) verdict. By the author of The morals of May Fair, etc. [Mrs Annie Edwardes]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Camb. Univ. Lib.\ London, 1861 WORLD-WIDE (the) want. [By the Rev. George Hunt Jackson.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1866] WORM (the) that ceased to turn. By Gorham Silva [Elizabeth Lawrence]. i2mo. New York, 1895 WORM (the) that God prepared ; a novel. By John Oliver Hobbes [Mrs Walpole Craigie, ne'e Pearl Maria Teresa Richards]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1901 WORME (the) of Lambton. [Edited by Sir Cuthbert Sharp.] 4to. Pp. 15. [Martin’s Cat.] Durham, 1830 WORN-OUT neology; or, brief strictures upon the Oxford Essays and Reviews ; by the author of the Hartley Wintney Tracts [Francis Osbern Giffard]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1861] WORSHIP (the), rites, and ceremonies of the Church of Scotland. . . . [By George W. Sprott, D.D.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1863 WORSHIPFUL (the) Company of Needlemakers of the city of London ; with a list of the court of assistants and livery. [By John Edward Price.] 4to. London, 1874 WORTH and wealth ; or, Jessie Dorr. By Madeline Leslie [Harriet Newells Baker]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1870 WORTH having. By “Pansy” [Mrs Isabella Alden, nee Macdonald]. 8vo. Pp. 250. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1893 WORTH her weight in gold. . . . [By H. Colson]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1863 WORTH (the) of a baby and How Apple-Tree Court was won. By Hesba Stretton, author of Jessica’s first prayer, etc. [Sarah Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 58. London, 1876 See note to “Alone in London.” WORTH while. By Archie Fell [Mary J. Capron]. i2mo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 100.] Boston, 1870 WORTHLESSNESS (the) of Christianity. By a Japanese [Oertse Yvempo], 8vo. London, 1904 WORTHY of His name. By Eglanton Thorne [Emily Charlton]. 8vo. Pp. 192. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1892 WORTLEBANK (the) diary, and some old stories from Kathie Brande’s portfolio. By Holme Lee, author of Sylvan Holt’s daughter, etc. [Harriet Parr]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London,i860 WOUNDED and a prisoner of War. By an exchanged officer [Captain M. V. Hay], 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat., Supp.] Edinburgh, 1916 WRAITH (the) of Olverstone. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 123. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1916 WRANGLING (the) lovers; or, the invisible mistress ; a comedy [in five acts, and in prose. By Edward Ravenscroft]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1677 WRATH (the) of echo, and other pieces in verse. By G. M. [G. Middleton]. i2mo. London, 1876 WREATH (the); an old glee: with numerous songs. [By Richard Scraf- ton Sharpe.] 8vo. London, N.D. WREATH (a) from the wilderness ; being a selection from the metrical arrangements of Accola Montis-Amoeni. [By Robert Barnard.] 8vo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends’ Books, i. 87, 193.] Ironbridge, 1816 Reprinted in 1817, with the author’s name, and with a change in the latter part of the title. WREATH (a) of carols from the Father- land. [By Alice Mannington.] i2mo. Pp. 48. London, 1864 WREATH (the) of fashion ; or, the art of sentimental poetry. [By Richard Tickell.] 4to. Pp. iv. 14. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1778 WREATH (a) of Indian stories. By A.L.O.E., honorary missionary at Amritsar, author of The young pilgrim, etc. [Charlotte M. Tucker]. 8vo. Pp. 211. London, N.D. WREATH (a) of ivy, and Christmas wild flowers : gathered and twined by “Amicitiae.” [By Charles 'Augustus Hulbert.] 8vo. Pp. 34. [Bodl.] Shrewsbury, 1823 A few copies only, printed for presentation. WREATH (the) of lilies ; a tale for the young. By the writer of Infant hymnings [Jane E. Leeson]. i2mo. Pp. 240. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1847 WREATH (a) of smoke. By A. L. 0. E., authoress of The wa?iderer in Africa, etc. [Charlotte M. Tucker]. 8vo. Pp. 191. London [1871] WREATHS of song from a course of divinity. By the author of Wreaths of song from courses of Philosophy [Rev. Timothy J. O’Mahony, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 96. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] London, 1903 WREATHS of song from fields of philosophy. [By Rev. Timothy J. O’Mahony, D.D.] 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland!] Dublin, 1890 WRECK (the) of the circus. ... By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 220.] Boston, 1900 WRECK (the) of the Golden Galleon. [A novel.] By Lucas Malet [Mrs St Leger Harrison, nee Mary Kingsley]. 8 vo. Pp. 214. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1910 WRECK (the) of the “ Grosvenor.” [By W. Clark Russell.] 8vo. [Lib. fourn. iii. 271.] London, 1878 WRECK (the) of the “ Grosvenor,” and other South African poems. [By William Charles Scully.] 8vo. London, 1886 WRECK (the) of the “ Ocean Queen.” By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 220.] Boston, 1907 WRECKED at the outset; a novel. By Theo Gift [Dora Boulger, nee Havers]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1894 WRECKED, but not lost. By Faith Templeton [Harriet Boomer Barber]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 281.] Philadelphia, 1880 WRECKED on a reef; or, twenty months in the Auckland Isles : a true story of shipwreck, adventure, and suffering. [By F. E. Raynal: translated from the French.] 8vo. Pp. xiv. 350. [Collier’s New Zeal. Lit. p. 155.] London, 1885 WRECKED on Spider Island ; or, how Ned Rogers found the treasure. By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. Pp. 276. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 220.] New York [1896] WRECKERS (the). By the author of Smugglers and foresters [Mary Rosa Stuart Kettle]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1857 WREN (the) and eagle in contest; or, a short method with the Unitarian nobility. By Aquae Homo, A.B. [Jotham Waterman]. 8vo. Boston, 1819 WREN (a) in the burning bush, waving the wings of contraction to the congregated clean fowls of the heavens, in the ark of God, Holy Host of the Eternal Power, Salutation. [By John Perrot.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1660 Signed : J. P. WRINKLES ; or, hints to sportsmen and travellers on dress, equipment, and camp life. By the Old Shekarry, author of The forest and the fields etc. [Major Henry Astbury Leverson]. A new edition, fully illustrated. 8vo. Pp. 2, 294. [Brit. Musi] London, 1874 WRIT in water. [A novel.] By Sydney C. Grier [Hilda C. Gregg]. 8vo. Pp. 358. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] Edinburgh, 1913 WRITER (the) ; a series of original essays, moral and amusing. By a gentleman of Massachusetts [Gamaliel Bradford]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1822 WRITER (a) of books. By George Paston [Emily Morse Symonds]. 8vo. Pp. 344. [Brit. Musi] London, 1898 WRITER (a) of fiction. By Clive Holland [Charles J. Hankinson]. 8vo. Pp. 153. [Brit. Musi] London, 1898 WRITER’S (the) and student’s assistant: or, a compendious dictionary, rendering the more common words and phrases in the English language into the more elegant or scholastic. . . . [By John Henry Brady.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1827 WRITER’S (the) and student’s grammar of the English language. [By John Henry Brady.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1838 WRITERS (the) of hymns, ancient and modern, with notes and index, giving the Greek, Latin, and German first lines. [By Rev. Robert M. Moorsom, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 48. Alton, n.d. WRITINGS (the) and character of Lord Byron. [By A. Norton.] 8vo. Boston, 1825 WRITINGS (the) of a person inobscurity, and a native of the Isle of Wight [T. Nutt]. i2mo. [Gilbert and Godwin’s Bibl. Hanton. p. 50.] London,1808 WRITINGS (the) of Solomon ; comprising the Book of Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs, and Psalms lxxii., cxxvii. : translated by F. B. [Francis Barham]. 4to. [F. Shum’s Cat. of Bath Books.] Bath, 1870 WRITTEN in the rain. [A novel.] By John Trevena [Ernest George Hen- ham]. 8vo. Pp. 352. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1910 WRITTEN to order; being some account of the journeyings of an irresponsible egotist. . . . By the author of A day of my life at Eton, etc. [George Nugent Banks]. 8vo. Pp. ii. 366. [Brit. Musi] London, 1885 WRONG (the) end of religion. By “Rita’5 [Mrs W. Desmond Humphreys, nee Eliza M. J. Gollan]. 8vo. Pp. 154- [Brit. Musi] London, 1918 WRONG (the) prescription. [A novel.] By Lanoe Falconer [Miss Mary Elizabeth Hawker]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1893 WRONGS (the) of Africa. [A poem. By William Roscoe.] 4to. 2 parts. [D. N. B. vol. 49, p. 223.] London, 1787-8 WRONGS (the) of Poland; a poem in three cantos : comprising the siege of Vienna, with historical notes. By the author of Parental wisdom [John Antrobus]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1849 WRONGS (the) of the CafFre nation ; a narrative. By “Justus” [Beverley Mackenzie]. With an appendix containing Lord Glenelg’s despatches. [Mendelssohn’s South Africa?i Bibl. i. 121.] 8vo. Pp. 20, 333. London, 1837 Ascribed also to the Rev. John Philip, D.D. WRONGS (the) of woman. By Charlotte Elizabeth [Mrs Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna, previously Mrs Phelan]. i2mo. 4 parts. [D.N.B. vol. 57, p. 34.] London, 1843-4 X. Y. Z. ; a comedy, in two acts. [By George Colman, the younger.] i2mo. [Bakers’ Biog. Dram.] Dublin, 1820 A later (undated, London) edition, bearing Colman’s name, was “ Printed from the acting copy, with remarks, biographical and critical, by D— G. [George Daniel].” XANTIPPE ; or the scolding wife, done from the Conjugium of Erasmus. By W. F. of D. [W. Forbes of Disblair]. 4to. Pp. 27. Edinburgh, 1724 XARIFFA’S poems. [By Mrs Mary Ashby Townsend, ne'e Van Voorhis.] i2mo. Philadelphia, 1870 WCJTHERING Heights and Agnes Grey. By Ellis and Acton Bell [Emily Jane, and Anne Bronte]. A new edition, revised, with a biographical notice of the authors, a selection from their literary remains, and a preface, by Currer Bell [Charlotte Bronte]. i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 6, p. 412.] London, 1850 WYCH Hazel. By the author of The wide, wide world., etc. [Susan Warner]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 422. [Allibone’s Diet.] London, 1876 WYCLIFFE ; his biographers and critics ; republished from the British Quarterly. [By Robert Vaughan, D.D.] 8vo. London, 1858 WYCLIFFE to Wesley; heroes and martyrs of the Church in Britain. [By Gregory J. Robinson.] 8vo. Pp. 8, 248. London,1879 WYLLARD’S weird ; a novel. By the author of Lady Audlefs secret, etc. [Miss M. E. Braddon]. 8vo. 3 vols. London [1885] WYNDHAM (the) family ; a story of modern life. By the author of Mount St Clair[Mrs Harriet Diana Thomson, nee Calvert]. 8vo. 2 vols. London, 1876 WYNDHAM’S loan. [A tale.] By Mignon [Mrs-Baseley]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Manchester, 1902 WYNVILLE ; or clubs and coteries. A novel. By the author of The age of Pitt and Fox [Daniel Owen Madden]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1852 XENIE’S inheritance ; a tale of Russian life. From the French of Henri Greville ^Madame Alice Durand]. i2mo. Amer. Cat.] New York, 1891 XENOPHON’S defence of the Athenian democracy; translated from the Greek : with notes, and an appendix, containing observations on the democratic part of the British government, and the existing constitution of the House of Commons. [By Henry James Pye.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 106. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1794 XENOPHON’S History of the affairs of Greece. By the translator of Thucydides [Rev. William Smith, D.D.]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1770 YACHT (the) sailor; a treatise on practical yachtmanship cruising and racing. By Vanderdecken [William Cooper]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi London, 1862 YACHT (a) voyage to Iceland in 1853. [By Rev. J. E. Cross.] i2mo. London, 1854 YACHTING and rowing. By the Hon. Secretary of the Royal Eastern Yacht Club [Archibald Young]. 8vo. London,1866 YACHTING (a)I cruise in Norway. By the parson and the lawyer [Edward Trustram]. 8vo. London, 1895 YACHTING in Australia. By “The Vagabond” [Julian Thomas]. 8vo. [Lib. of Royal Col. I?ist., Suppl. i. 61.] Melbourne, 1895 YACHTMAN’S (a) holidays or cruising in the West Highlands. By the “Governor” [John Inglis]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 151. London, 1879 YACHTS and yachting. ... By Vanderdecken [William Cooper]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1873 YANKEE (a) among the nullifiers ; an autobiography. By Elnathan Elmwood, Esq. [Asa Greene]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 89.] New York, 1833 YANKEE (a) at the court of King Arthur. By Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1890 YANKEE (the) conscript; or, eighteen months in Dixie, 1861-62. [By George Adams Fisher.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Init and Pseud, i. 311.] Philadelphia, 1864 YANKEE (a) Crusoe. By Allan Eric [Charles W. Willis]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat] Boston, 1900 YANKEE (a) in Canada. [By -Henry David Thoreau.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 311.] Boston, 1866 YANKEE notions; a medley. By Timothy Titterwell, Esq. [Samuel Kettell]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 284.] Boston, 1838 YANKEE (a) steamer on the Atlantic— New York; its hotels, waterworks, and things in general. ... By J. W. Hengiston [Cyrus Redding]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1852-3 YANKO-SEQUOR (the) ; disquisitions upon several things in America. . . . [By Martin Regul Pilon.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 311.] New York, 1874 YARICO to Inkle, an epistle. By the author of an Elegy written among the ruins of an abbey [Edward Jerningham]. 4to. Pp. 19. [Brit. Mus.] London,1766 YARN (the) of a bucko mate; his adventures in two oceans. By F. Benton Williams [Herbert Elliott Hamblen.] 8vo. [Amer. Cat] New York, 1899 YARNS. [In verse.] By a Manchester spinner [John Cameron]. 8vo. [N. and Q. Feb. 1869, p. 168.] Manchester, n.d. YARNS. By an old Tar [James Thomson, senior]. Pp. 76. Cupar-Fife, 1877 YARNS from the Never-Never. By “Sundowner” [Herbert Tichborne]. 8vo. London, 1898 YAXLEY and its neighbourhood; a novel. By the author of Myself and my relatives [Anne J. Robertson]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1865 YE shall be as gods. [A novel.] By Derek Vane [Mrs B. Eaton Back]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1902 YEA (the) and nay stock-jobbers ; or, the ’Change-Alley Quakers anatomized. In a burlesque epistle to a friend at sea. [By Elias Brockets] 8vo. Pp. 32. London, 1720 Signed: Damon. YEA or nay? or, the union question tried and tested. By “a country minister” of the Free Church [- Philip]. 8 vo. Pp. 16. Edinburgh, 1870 YEAR (a) abroad ; stories and sights in France and Italy. By Grace Greenwood [Sarah Jane Clarke], 8vo. Pp. 221. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh [1869] YEAR after year ; a tale. By the author of Paul Ferroll and IX fioems by V. [Mrs Caroline Clive]. Third edition. i2mo. Pp. vii. 365. [Brit. Musi] London, 1858 YEAR (a) and a day. By Guy Thorne [Cyril A. E. Ranger-Gull]. 8vo. Pp. 303. [Brit. Musi] London, 1922 YEAR (a) and a day ; a novel in two volumes by Madame Panache, author of Ma?mers [really Miss Frances Moore, later Mrs Brooke]. 8vo. [Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. ii. 947.] London, 1818 YEAR (a) and a day ; a story of Canadian life. By the author of Christie Red- fern’s troubles, etc. [Margaret Murray Robertson]. 8vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London [1886] YEAR (a) at Poplar Row. By March Ellinwood [Mrs N. Proudfit Burch]. 8vo. New York, 1879 YEAR (the) book of the Holy Souls. By the author of Vera, etc., C. L. H. D. [Charlotte Louisa Hawkins Dempster]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1901 YEAR (the) 1851. [Apoem. By William Steere.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1852 YEAR (a) in Spain. By a young American [Captain Alexander Slidell Mackenzie]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1831 YEAR (a) in Sunday-school; from the journal of an old teacher. [By Mrs Margaret Hosmer.] 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 213.] Philadelphia, 1869 YEAR (a) in Tasmania ; including some months’ residence in the capital; with a descriptive tour through the Island. By the author of Five Years in the Levant [Captain Henry Butler Stoney]. 8vo. Hobart, 1854 YEAR (the) nine ; a tale of the Tyrol. By the author of Mary Powell [Anne Manning, later Mrs Rathbone]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1858 YEAR (the) of liberation ; a journal of the defence of Hamburgh against the French army under Marshal Davoust, in 1813, with sketches of the battles of Lutzen, Bautzen, etc., etc. [By George Croly, LL.D., rector of St Stephen’s, Walbrook.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1832 YEAR (the) of preparation for the Vatican Council; including the original and English of the Encyclical and Syllabus, and of the Papal documents connected with its convocation. [By Herbert Alfred Vaughan, D.D., Cardinal.] 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1869-70 YEAR (a) of wreck ; a true story. By a victim [George Chittenden Benham]. 8 vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 294.] New York, 1880 YEAR (the) ; with other poems. By the author of The fall of the Indian, etc. [Isaac M‘Lellan]. 8vo. Pp. 60. [Cushing’s Anon.] Boston, 1832 YEAR (a) with the birds. By an Oxford tutor [William Warde Fowler]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1886 YEAR (a) with the Everards. A tale. By the author of Little Elsie's Summer at Malvern [Marion Clifford Butler, Baroness Dunboyne]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1874 YEAR (a) worth living. By George F. Harrington [Rev. William Mumford Baker]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 126.] Boston, 1887 YEAR’S (the) mind; Hamworth happenings. By the author of Leaves from a life [Mrs Jane Ellen Panton]. 8vo. Pp. 348. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1913 YEARS of hate. By Guy Thorne [Cyril A. E. Ranger-Gull]. 8vo. Pp. 304. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1921 YEAST ; a problem. [By Charles Kingsley.] Reprinted, with corrections and additions, from Fraser's Magazine. i2mo. Pp. vi. 379. [D.N.B. vol. 31, p. 177.] London, 1851 YELLOW (a) aster. [A novel.] By “Iota” [Mrs Kathleen Mannington Caffyn]. Sixth edition. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1894 YELLOW (the) claw. By Sax Rohmer [Arthur Sarsfield Ward]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London [1915] The Brit. Mus. now gives this author’s surname as Wade. YELLOW (the) fiend. [A novel.] By Mrs Alexander [Mrs Alexander Hector, nee Annie French]. 8vo. Pp. 332. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1902 YELLOW (the) shoe-strings. ... By J. P. [James Pedder, journalist]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 222.] Boston [1850] YELLOW (the) van. [A novel. By the author of No. 5 fohn Street [Richard Whiteing]. 8vo. London, 1903 YELLOW (the) war. By “ O,” author of On the heels of De Wet [Capt. Lionel James]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1905 YELLOWLEAF. By Sacha Gregory [Baroness von Hutten]. 8vo. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London, 1919 YELLOWSTONE letters. By Rube Shuffle, valet [Augustus George Heaton]. 8vo. Washington, D.C., 1906 YEMASSEE (the); a romance of Carolina. ... By the author of Guy Rivers, etc. [William Gilmore Simms]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1835 YEOMAN Fleetwood. [A novel.] By M. E. Francis [Mrs Francis Blundell, nee Mary Evans Sweetman]. 8vo. Pp. 412. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1900 YEOMAN’S (the) [Sir William Cusack Smith’s] second letter to the Right Honourable William Wickham, one of his Majesty’s most honourable privy council, etc., etc., etc. Occasioned by the second edition of an Irish Catholic [Mr Scully]’s advice to his brethren. Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 98. Dublin, 1804 YES and no ; a tale of the day. By the author of Matilda [Constantine Henry Phipps, Marquis of Normanby]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Smales’ Whitby Authors, p. 158.] London, 1828 YES and no ; or glimpses of the great conflict. [By Rev. Dr Henry Robert Reynolds and his brother Sir John Russell Reynolds.] 8vo. 4 vols. [D. N. B. First Supp. iii. 295.] Cambridge, i860 YESTERDAY and to-day in Kruger’s Land; the personal knowledge and experiences of a lady from South Africa. [By M. E. Vaughan-Williams.] 8vo. Pp. 88. London, 1900 YESTERDAY framed in to-day; the story of the Christ, and how to-day received Him. By “Pansy” [Mrs Isabella Alden, nee Macdonald]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1899 YESTERDAY in Ireland. By the author of To-day in Ireland [Eyre Evans Crowe]. i2mo. 3 vols. {D.N.B. vol. 13, p. 238.] London, 1829 YET a course at the Romyshe foxe ; a disclosynge or openynge on the Manne of Sinne, cotayned in the late decla- ratyon of the Popes olde faythe, made by Edmunde Boner, Bysshopp of London ; wherby Wyllyam Tolwyn was then newelye professed at Paules Crosse openlye into Antichristes Romyshe relygyon agayne, by a new solempne othe of obedyence, notwyth- stadinge the othe made to hys prynce afore to the contrarye, etc. Compyled by Johan Harrison [John Bale, Bishop of Ossory]. i6mo. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] Zurich, 1543 YET another plan for the resumption of specie payments, easy and early. By A. P. [A. Penfield]. 8vo. [Cushing’s I nit. and Pseud, i. 221.] Washington, 1869 YETTS (the) o’ Muckart; or the famous picnic and the brilliant barn ball ; in hairst, auchteen hunder an’ seventy one. [By Miss Edith Stevenson.] i2mo. Pp. 54. Edinburgh, private print, 1872 YEWS (the). [A Westmoreland tale.] By the author of How to see the English Lakes [Mrs Bitha Lloyd, nee Fox]. 8vo. Pp. 108. {Brit. Musi] London [1859] Y N S O E R. By Allen Raine [Mrs Beynon Puddicombe, nee Anne Adaliza Evans]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1894 YOKE (the) of the Thorah. [A novel.] By Sidney Luska [Henry Harland]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Lond. Lib. Cat.] London [1888] YOLANDA, the maid of Burgundy. By Edwin Caskoden [Charles Major]. 8vo. {Amer. Cat.] New York, 1905 YOLANDE the Parisienne. By Lucas Cleeve [Mrs Howard Kingscote, ne'e Adelina Georgina Isabella Wolff]. 8vo. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1900 YORICK, and other poems. [By James Warren Ward.] i2mo. Cleveland, Ohio, 1838 YORICK’S Sentimental Journey [by Laurence Sterne] continued. By Eugenius [John Hall - Stevenson]. i2mo. London, 1784 See above, “ A Sentimental Journey. . . .” Hall-Stevenson was a friend of Sterne, and was introduced by Sterne into both “Tristram Shandy,” and the “ Sentimental Journey” under the name of Eugenius. This disgraceful continuation of the “ Sentimental Journey ” was first published in 1769 within a year of Sterne’s death. YORK (the) Congress and Church rites. By the author of The Church cause and the Church party [Alexander James Beresford Hope]. 8vo. {Brit. Musi] London, 1867 YORK (the) musical festival ; a dialogue. [By Rev. William Hett, M.A.] 4to. Pp. 60. London, 1825 YORK-SHIRE (a) dialogue in its pure natural dialect, as it is now commonly spoken in the north parts of Yorkshire ; being a miscellaneous discourse or hotchpotch of several country affaires. [By George Meriton.] 4to. Pp. 18. {Wi] York, 1683 Reprinted with “ The Praise of York-shire ale,” York, 1697, i2mo. YORKSHIREMAN (the); a religious and literary journal. By a Friend [Luke Howard, F.R.S.]. 8vo. 5 vols. {Bodli] Pontefract, 1833-7 YOU and me ; or sketches for both of us. By Hans Patrick Le Connor [Jacob L. Bowman]. 8vo. St Louis, 1867 YOU have heard of them. [By Charles G. Rosenberg.] 8vo. London, 1845 YOUNG America in Germany. By Oliver Optic [William Taylor Adams]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 219.] New York, 1872 YOUNG (the) angler’s guide ; comprising instructions in the arts of flyfishing, bottom-fishing, trolling, etc. ^By John Cheek, who published it.] 8vo. Westwood and Satchell’s Bibl. Pise.] London,1839 YOUNG (the) apprentice’s monitor ; or, the seasonable advice of a friend with respect to his conduct, as well as at his first entrance into . . . his apprenticeship. ... By a person unknown [Henry Dixon, schoolmaster at Bath]. i2mo. Bath, 1747 YOUNG (a) artist’s [Leonard Holme’s] life. [By Alexander D. R. W. Baillie Cochrane, Baron Lamington, M.P.] 8vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1864 YOUNG (the) bandmaster. By Captain Ralph Bonehill [Edward Stratemeyer], 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1900 YOUNG barbarians. By Ian Maclaren [Rev. John Watson, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 518. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1901 YOUNG (the) baronet; a novel. By the author of The Scottish heiress, etc. [Robert Mackenzie Daniel]. i2mo. 3 vols. \Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1846 YOUNG blood. By Ian Hay [John Hay Beith, M.A.]. 8vo. [Bartholomew’s Camb. Books, p. 21.] London, 1905 YOUNG Brown or the law of inheritance. By the author of The member for Paris, etc. [Eustace Clare Grenville Murray]. 8vo. 3 vols. \Brit. Musi] London, 1874 YOUNG (the) chaplain. By his mother [Mrs Marianne C. Johnston, nee Howe]. 8vo. New York, 1876 YOUNG (the) Chevalier; or, a genuine narrative of all that befell that unfortunate adventurer, from his fatal defeat to his final escape. ... By a gentleman who was personally acquainted . . . with many of the actors [Henry Goring?]. Pp. iv. 108. London [1746?] YOUNG (the) churchman’s manual; containing reasons for, and explanations of, the services of morning and evening prayer. By a member of the Church of England [J. A. Thorn- thwaite]. i2mo. \Brit. Musi] London,1837 YOUNG (the) clergyman’s companion, in visiting the sick. [By Rev. Richard Batty.] [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] 1756 YOUNG (the) commander; a novel. By the author of The two midshipmen, etc. [F. Claudius Armstrong]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1856 YOUNG (the) communicants; written for the use of the poor school, Bermondsey, and respectfully dedicated to the Reverend Peter Butler, by the author of Geraldine, a tale of Conscience [Miss E. C. Agnew]. With the approbation of the Right Reverend Dr Griffiths, V.A.L. i2mo. Pp. 116. [Bodl.] London, 1840 YOUNG (the) cottager; a true story. By the author of The dairyman's daughter [Legh Richmond, M.A., rector of Turvey, Bedfordshire]. 321110. Pp. 40. [Brit. Musi] London [1826] YOUNG (the) curate ; or the quicksands of life. [By John Harvey Ashworth, M.A.] 8vo. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. i. 98.] London, 1859 YOUNG (the) days of Admiral Quilliam. [A historical novel of Lord Nelson’s time.] By F. Norreys Connell [Conal O’Connell O’Riordan]. 8vo. [O’Dono- ghue’s Poets of Ireland.] London, 1906 YOUNG days of authors. By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope Moncrieff], 8vo. Pp. 380. [Brit. Musi] London, 1885 YOUNG (the) doctor ; a novel. By the author of Lady Gra?iard’>s nieces [Jane Vaughan Pinkney]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1851 YOUNG (a) dragon. [A tale of moorland life near the English border.] By Sarah Tytler [Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. Pp. 276. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1900 YOUNG (the) dragoon; or, everyday life of a soldier. By one who has served [Major-General Alfred Wilkes Drayson, R.A.]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1870] YOUNG (the) duke. By the author of Vivian Grey [Benjamin Disraeli]. i2mo. 3 vols. [D.N.B. vol. 15, p. 116.] London, 1831 YOUNG Emily. By Ann Jane [Mrs Ann Jane Morgan]. 481110. Pp. 16. [ Wi] London YOUNG Fawcett’s Mabel. By Albert Ross [Linn Boyd Porter]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1896 YOUNG folks’ travels in Asia and Africa. By Rupert Van West [Daniel Clarke Eddy]. 4to. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 292.] Chicago, 1887 YOUNG folks’ travels in Europe. By Rupert Van West [Daniel Clarke Eddy]. 4to. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, i. 292.] Chicago, 1887 YOUNG (the) game-warden. By Harry Castlemon [Charles Austin Fosdick]. 8vo. Pp. 411. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1896 YOUNG heads on old shoulders. By Ascott R. Hope, author of A peck of troubles, etc. [Robert Hope Moncrieff]. 8vo. Pp. 3, 179. [Brit. Musi] London [1879] YOUNG hearts. By J. E. Buckrose [Mrs Falconer Jameson]. 8vo. Pp. 315. [Brit. Musi] London, 1920 YOUNG (the) housekeeper as daughter, wife, and mother ; forming a perfect “young woman’s companion” in all her social relations. . . . Compiled by the editor of The family friend [Robert Kemp Philp]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 376. [D. N. B. vol. 45, p. 226.] London, N.D. YOUNG (the) Huguenots ; or the soldiers of the Cross ; a story of the seventeenth century. By “ Fleur de Lys” [Edith S. Floyer]. i2mo. New York, 1884 Later editions bear the author’s name. YOUNG husbands. [A comedy.] By John Daly [John Besemeres, merchant in Calcutta]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 77.] London, 1852 YOUNG (the) idea; a sketch for “old boys,” by one of them. By the author of Culmshire folk [James Franklin Fuller], 8vo. Pp. 171. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1884 YOUNG (the) knight-errant. By Oliver Optic [William Taylor Adams]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 219.] Boston, 1892 YOUNG (the) lady’s friend; practical advice and instruction to young females. By a lady [Mrs Eliza R. Farrar]. 8vo. London, 1837 YOUNG (the) lady’s geography; containing an accurate description of the several parts of the known world. . . . [By-Demarville.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1765 YOUNG (the) lady’s introduction to natural history. . . . By the editor of the Young Lady's Geography [-Demarville]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1766 YOUNG (the) Lord. By the author of The discipline of life, etc. [Lady Emily Ponsonby]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1856 YOUNG Lord Stranleigh. By Luke Sharp [Robert Barr]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1908 YOUNG (a) man married. [A novel.] By Sydney C. Grier [Hilda C. Gregg]. 8vo. Pp. 348. [Who’s Who in Li/.] London,1909 YOUNG (a) man’s account of his conversion from Calvinism. [By Sylvester YOUNG (a) man’s difficulties with his Bible. By the author of The Christian in the World [Daniel Worcester Faunce]. i2mo. [Kirk’s Supp.\ London, 1877 The first edition (New York, 1876) bears the author’s name. YOUNG (the) man’s fancy; and other tales. By Mrs Forrester [Mrs- Bridges]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1887 YOUNG (the) man’s guide. [By William A. Alcott.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ Boston, 1833 YOUNG (the) man’s guide in the choice of a benefit society ; or, the danger of choosing a bad club, and the advantage of entering a well-regulated friendly society, illustrated : in three dialogues. By a Suffolk clergyman [Samuel Hobson]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1846 YOUNG (the) man’s guide through the wilderness of this world to the Heavenly Canaan. [By Thomas Gouge.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London,1672 YOUNG (a) man’s year. By Anthony Hope [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. 8vo. Pp. 351. [Brit. Musi] London, 1915 YOUNG Master Kirke. By Penn Shirley [Sarah J. Clarke]. i2mo. Pp. 156. [Amer. Cat.] Boston [1895] YOUNG (the) mechanic; a book for boys: containing directions for the use of all kinds of tools, and for the construction of steam engines and mechanical models, including the art of turning in wood and metal. By the author of The lathe and its uses, etc. [Rev. James Lukin]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 346. [Brit. Musi] London, 1871 YOUNG Miss Giddy. [A novel.] By Albert Ross [Linn Boyd Porter]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1893 YOUNG Mistley. [A novel.] By Henry Seton Merriman [Hugh Stowell Scott]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1888 YOUNG (the) mountaineer; or Frank Miller’s lot in life : the story of a Swiss boy. [From the French of Mile. Julie Gouraud, pseud, for Louise d’Aulnan.] By Daryl* Holme [David Herbert]. 8vo. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1870 YOUNG (the) mountaineers ; short stories. By Charles Egbert Craddock [Mary Noailles Murfree]. 8vo. Pp. 262. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1897 YOUNG Mrs Jardine. By the author of John Halifax, gentleman, etc. [Dinah Maria Mulock, later Mrs Craik]. 8vo. YOUNG Mrs Teddy. By Barbara Yechton [Lyda Farrington Krause], 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1901 YOUNG (the) navigators. By Oliver Optic [William Taylor Adams]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 219.] Boston, 1894 YOUNG (the) O’Briens ; being an account of their sojourn in London. By the author of Elizabeth's children and Helen Blackisto?i [Margaret Westrup, later Mrs Sydney Stacey]. 8vo. London, 1906 YOUNG Ofeg’s ditties. By Ola Hans- son, translated from the Swedish by George Egerton [Mrs Mary C. Clairmonte]. 8vo. Pp. 191. [Brit. Musi] London, 1895 YOUNG (a) Oxford maid, in the days of the King and the Parliament. By Sarah Tytler [Henrietta Keddie]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London [1890] YOUNG (the) patriot, and other poems. By J. B., a friend of the Aborigines Protection Society [John Burtt]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] Manchester [1846] YOUNG (the) patroon ; or Christmas in 1690: a tale of New York. By the author of The First of the Knickerbockers [P. Hamilton Myers]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1849 YOUNG (the) people. By one of the old people [Stephen Paget, M.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1906 YOUNG (the) pilgrim ; a tale illustrative of “The Pilgrim’s progress.” By A. L. O. E., author of The Shepherd of Bethlehem, etc. [Charlotte M. Tucker]. 8vo. Pp. 286. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 YOUNG (the) Quaker; a comedy: as it is performed at the Theatre Royal in Smock-Alley, with great applause. [By John O’Keefe.] i2mo. Pp. 36. [Smith’s Bib/. Anti-Quak., pp. 45, 345.] Dublin, 1784 YOUNG (the) rebels ; a story of the Battle of Lexington. By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope Moncrieff]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1878 YOUNG (the) Roscius. By Bisset [W. H. W. Betty]. [Birm. Ref. Lib.] N.P. 1804 YOUNG Sam and Sabina. [A novel.] By the author of Gentleman Ufcott's daughter [Walter Raymond]. 8vo. Pp. 188. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1894 YOUNG Sam ; or, the native American’s own book. By a native American [E. Hutchinson]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 201.] YOUNG (a) savage. By Barbara Yechton [Lyda Farrington Krause]. [Atner. Cat.] Boston, 1899 YOUNG Scarron. [By Thomas Mozeen.] i2mo. [Lowndes’ Bibl. Man., s. v. Scarron.] London, 1751 YOUNG (the) seigneur; or, nationmaking. By Wilfrid Chateauclair [William D. Lighthall]. Pp. vi. 200. [Brit. Mus.] Montreal, 1888 YOUNG Singleton. [A novel.] By Talbot Gwynne [Josepha Heath Gulston]. 2 vols. i2mo. London, 1856 The author’s name is given as Galston in the Brit. Mus. Catalogue. YOUNG (the) sportsman’s complete manual of fowling, fishing, and field sports in general. By Frank Forester [Henry William Herbert]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 104.] London,1852 YOUNG (the) sportsman’s instructor in angling, fowling, hawking, hunting, ordering singing birds, hawks, poultry, coneys, hares and dogs, and how to cure them. By G. M. [Gervase Markham]. 8vo. Pp. 140. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 528.] [London, 1706] YOUNG (the) sportsman’s manual; with some account of the game of the British Islands. By “Craven” [Captain John William Carleton]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1849 YOUNG (the) spy. By “Brum” [J. F. C. Adams]. 8vo. [Cushing’s lnit. a?id Pseud, ii. 20.] New York, 1877 YOUNG (the) squire’s resolve. By Waldo Gray [Luther Winther Caws]. 8vo. London, 1901 YOUNG (the) step-mother; or, a chronicle of mistakes. By the author of The heir of Redclyffe, etc. [Charlotte Mary Yonge], 8vo. Pp. 482. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1861 YOUNG (the) student’s library, containing extracts and abridgements of the most valuable books printed in England. . . . [By John Dunton.] Folio. London, 1682 YOUNG travellers’ tales. ... By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope Moncrieff]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Mus.] London [1895] YOUNG (the) violinist. By Emma von Rhoden [Emmy von Friedrich- Friedrich] ; translated from the twelfth edition of the German. . . . 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Akron, O., 1906 YOUNG (the) widow ; a novel. By the author of the Scotish heiress, etc. [Robert Mackenzie Daniel]. i2mo. YOUNG (the) widow ; or, the history of Cornelia Sedley, in a series of letters. [By William Hayley.] i2mo. 4 vols. [Nichols5 Lit. Anec. ix. 50.] London,1789 YOUNG (a) wife’s trial; or, Ralph Ryder of Brent. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [ Who's Who in Lit.\ London, 1893 YOUNG (the) wild-fowlers. By Harry Castlemon [Charles Austin Fosdick]. i2mo. [Amer. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1885 YOVNGER (the) brother his apologie, or a fathers free power disputed, for the disposition of his lands, or other his fortunes to his sonne, sonnes, or any one of them ; as right reason, the lawes of God and nature, the civil, canon, and municipall laws of this kingdome doe command. [By J. Ap-Robert.] 4to. Pp. 56. [Madan’s Oxf. Books.] Oxford, 1624 [for 1634] Epistle to the reader signed : J. A. Erroneously assigned to J. Allen. YOUNGER (the) sister. [By Anne Da we.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Gent. Mag. xciv. 1. 136.] London, 1770 YOUNGER (a) sister. [A novel.] By the author of The Atelier du Lys, etc. [Margaret Roberts]. 8vo. Pp. 314. [Brit. Musi] London, 1892 YOUNGEST (the) Miss Brown. [A novel.] By Florence Warden [Florence Alice Price, later Mrs George E. James]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1905 YOUNG-LADYISM ; a handbook on the education, accomplishments, duties, dress, and deportment of the upper ten thousand. By Democritus Machi- avel Brown, Esq. [James Macgrigor Allan]. i2mo. London [1859] Title-page of his “The Intellectual Severance of Men and Women.” YOUNGSTERS’ Yarns. By Ascott R. Hope [Robert Hope Moncriefif]. 8vo. Pp. x. 372. [Brit. Musi] London, 1888 YOUR fortune in your name; or Kabalistic astrology. By “ Sepharial ” [Walter Gorn Old]. 8vo. Pp. 96. [Brit. Musi] London, 1910 YOUR life. By the author of My life, by an Ex-Dissenter [George Rawston]. 8 vo. London, 1841 YOURS and mine. By Amy Lothrop [Anna Bartlett Warner]. [Kirk’s Suppli] 8vo. New York, 1889 YOUTH ; a narrative ; and two other stories. By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski]. 8vo. Pp. 384. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1902 YOUTH ; and Gaspar Ruiz. By Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski]. 8vo. Pp. 192. [Brit. Musi] London, 1920 YOUTH (the) and manhood of Cyril Thornton. [By Capt. Thomas Hamilton.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] Edinburgh, 1827 YOUTH (the) and womanhood of Helen Tyrrel. By the author of Brampton Rectory, Compton Merivale, etc. [Mary Matilda Howard]. i2mo. [Gent. Mag. Oct. 1851, p. 406.] London, 1854 YOUTH in twelve centuries ; poems by M. E. B. [Mrs Mary Elizabeth Blake, nee M‘Grath]. 8vo. Boston, 1886 YOUTH, know thy selfe. [A poem. By Richard Turner.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1624 YOUTH (the) of Shakspeare. By the author of Shakspeare a7id his friends [R. Folkestone Williams]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Jaggard’s Shakespeare Bibli] London, 1839 YOUTHFUL pilgrims ; or, memorials of young persons of the Society of Friends. [By Esther Seebohm.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1854 YOUTHFUL (the) prophet, and Israel’s first king. By the author of Mothers in council [Harriet Bickersteth, later Mrs Cook]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1866] YOUTHFUL sprouts of poesy. [By R. Gibson.] i2mo. Pp. 100. Edinburgh [private print], 1897 YOUTH’S (the) business guide; a practical manual for those entering life. By “ Experientia” [John Southward, printer]. i2mo. Pp. 145. London, 1883 YOUTH’S comedy ; or the soul’s tryals and triumph : a dramatick poem, with divers meditations intermixt. . . . By the author of Youth’s tragedy [Thomas Sherman]. 8vo. [Arber’s Term Cat. i. 381.] London, 1680 YOUTH’S friendly monitor ; being a set of directions, prudential, moral, religious, and scientific . . . together with Theophilus, a character worthy of imitation. By the author of Britain’s Remembrancer [James Burgh], i2mo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, 1724 YOUTH’S history of California. By Lucia Norman [Mrs S. M. Heaven]. i2mo. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud. i. 205.] San Francisco, 1867 YOUTH’S (the) miscellany; or, a father’s gift to his children. ... By the author of the Juvenile Olio, etc. [William Fordyce Mavor, LL.D.]. i2mo. Pp. xi. 286. [D. TV. B. vol. 37, p. 108.] London, 1798 A later edition (1814) with the title “A Father’s gift to his children” bears the author’s name. YOUTH’S (the) spelling, pronouncing, and explanatory theological dictionary. ... By E. D. [Emerson Dowson]. 8vo. London, 1818 YOUTH’S tragedy; a poem, drawn up by way of dialogue between youth, the devil, wisdom, time, death, the soul and the Nuncius. By T. S. [Thomas Sherman]. 4to. [Arber’s Term Cat. i. 532.] London, 1671 YULE (the) log, for everybody’s Christmas hearth ; showing where it grew, where it was cut out and brought home, and how it was burnt. By the author of The Chronicles of the Bastile [Louis Alexis Chamerovzow]. i2mo. \Bodl.] London, 1847 YULE-TIDE; faces in the fire. By a clergyman’s wife [Mrs Fanny Hart, nee Wheeler]. i2mo. Pp. 15. Manchester, n.d. ZADKIEL’S almanac for 1851, etc. [By Lieut. Richard James Morrison.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1851 ZADOC, the outcast of Israel; a tale. By Charlotte Elizabeth [Mrs Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna, ne'e Browne]. i2mo. [D. N.B., vol. 57, p. 34.] London, 1825 ZADOK the Israelite. [A poem. By Mrs Ann Wilson.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1837 ZAIDA’S nursery note-book; for the use of mothers. By A. L. O. E., author of Shepherd of Bethlehem, etc. [Charlotte M. Tucker.] 8vo. Pp. 135. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1867 ZAMBRA the detective. [A novel.] By Headon Hill [Frank E. Grainger]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1894 ZANA; or the heiress of Clair Hall. By the author of Fashion and famine [Mrs Ann S. Stephens], i2mo, London, 1854 Fashion and famine is not anonymous. ZANONI. [A novel.] By the author of Flight and Morning [Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer - Lytton, Lord Lytton]. 8vo. 3 vols. [D. N. B. vol. 34, p. 386.] London, 1842 ZARA, and other stories. By the author of Molly Bawn [Mrs Margaret W. Hungerford, nee Hamilton]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.) London, 1890 ZARA, at the Court of Annamaboe, to the African Prince now in England. [By William Dodd, LL.D.] 4to. Pp. 15. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1749 See also “ The African Prince now in England, to Zara . . .” ZARA ; or, the black death : a poem of the sea. By the author of Naufragus M. J. Horne]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 220. Brit. Afus.] London, 1833 ZARAILLA; a novel. By “Beulah” [Fanny D. Bates]. 8vo. Pp. 323. [Cushing’s lnit. and Pseud, i. 35.] New York, 1889 ZAREEFA ; a tale, and other poems. By the author of Cephalus and Procris, etc. [Helen Lowe]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 171. [Eng. Cat.] London, 1844 ZASTROZZI ; a romance. By P. B. S. [Percy Bysshe Shelley]. 8vo. Pp. 252. [Z). N. B. vol. 52, p. 32.] London, 1810 Shelley’s first publication. He was aged sixteen and still at Eton. ZAYDA ; a Spanish tale, in three cantos; and other poems, stanzas,and canzonets. By Oscar [Mrs Leman Grimstone]. i2mo. Pp. ix. 163. [Nat. Lib.of Sc ot.] London, 1820 ZEAL without innovation ; or the present state of religion and morals considered ; with a view to the dispositions and measures required for its improvement. . . . [By James Bean, vicar of Olney.] 8vo. Pp. 392. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1808 ZEALOUS (the) and impartial Protestant ; shewing some great but less heeded dangers of Popery. . . . [By Joseph Glanvill, M.A.] 4to. Pp. 64. [D. N. B. vol. 21, p. 409.] London, 1681 ZEALOUS beleevers are the best subjects to Caesar ; or, an exhortation to all good Christians to pray for their princes. . . . Published by J. F. [John Ferret], 8vo. [Bril. Musi] [Amsterdam] 1643 ZEBULON advised. ... By a minister of the Gospel [Rev. Nathanael Clap]. 8vo. Newport [U.S.A.], 1738 ZELIA in the desert ; from the French [of Mad. Marguerite Daubenton] by a lady. i2mo. 3 vols. [Barbier’s Dictionnairei] London, 1789 ZELIDA ; a tragedy. By the author [Thomas Horde]. 8vo. Pp. 55. \Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1772 ZELINDA. [A poem. By Mrs Eardly Hall.] 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] Brighton [1850 ?] ZELMANE ; or, the Corinthian Queen ; a tragedy. [By William Mountfort.] As it is acted at the New-Theatre in Lincoln’s-Inn-Fields by Her Majesties servants. 4to. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.] London, 1705 ZELOTES and Honestus reconciled; or, an equal check to Pharasaism and An- tinomianism continued : being the first part of the Scripture-scales to weigh the gold of Gospel-truth :—to balance a multitude of opposite Scriptures ;— to prove the Gospel-marriage of free- graceandfree-will: andrestoreprimitive harmony to the Gospel of the day. . . . By a lover of the whole truth as it is in Jesus [John Fletcher]. i2mo. Pp. xxvi. 204. London, 1705 There is a second part, with a half title, occupying from p. 205 to p. 443. ZELUCO; various views of human nature, taken from life and manners, foreign and domestic. [By John Moore, M.D.] 8vo. 2 vols. [D.N.B. vol. 38, p. 364.] London, 1789 ZEMINDARY (the) settlement of Bengal. [By R. H. Hollingbery.] 8vo. 2 vols. Calcutta, 1879 ZENANA (the) ; or a Nuwab’s leisure hours. By the author of Pandurang Hari [William Browne Hockley]. 121110. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1827 ZENITH distances, observed with the mural circle at the Royal Observatory, Cape of Good Hope, and the calculation of the geocentric south polar distances for 1836-7. [By Thomas Maclear, F.R.A.S., Her Majesty’s astronomer at the Cape of Good Hope.] 4to. [IV.] N.P. 1837 ZENOBIA; a tragedy, as it is performed at the Theatre Royal in Drury- Lane. By the author of The Orphan of China [Arthur Murphy]. 8vo. Pp. 82. [Baker’s Biog. Dr ami] London, 1768 ZENOBIA; or the fall of Palmyra: a historical romance: in letters of Lucius M. Piso from Palmyra, to his friend Marcus Curtius at Rome. [By Rev. William Ware.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1844 ZETETIC astronomy ; a description of several experiments which prove that the surface of the sea is a perfect plane, and that the earth is not a globe ! Being the substance of a paper read before the Royal Astronomical Society on the evening of Dec. 8, 1848. By Parallax [Dr Samuel Birley Rowbotham]. i2mo. Pp. 16. [.Bookseller, Jan. 7. 1885.] Birmingham, 1849 ZETETIC astronomy; an experimental enquiry proving the earth to be a plane, and the only world in the universe. By Parallax [Dr Samuel Birley Rowbotham]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1865 ZIEKE Reiziger; or, rambles in Java and the Straits in 1852. By a Bengal Civilian [Charles Walker Kinloch]. 8vo. Teignmouth, 1853 ZIGZAG to Paris, and straight home. [By Francis H. Jessop.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1850 ZIG-ZAGGING amongst Dolomites. By Miss Elizabeth Tuckett.] Folio. Brit. Mus.] London, 1871 Also ascribed to M. and R. W. Dunlop. ZIKE Mouldom; a novel. By Orme Agnus [John C. Higginbotham]. 8vo. [Who’s Who in Liti] London, 1902 ZILLAH ; a tale of the Holy City. By the author of Brambletye House, etc. [Horace Smith], Second edition. 3 vols. i2mo. London, 1828 ZION’S warrior ; or the Christian soldier’s manual in which the duties and occupations of the military life are spiritualised and improved. [By Robert Hawker, D.D.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1802 ZION’S works ; new light on the Bible from the coming of Shiloh, the Spirit of truth, 1828-37 [edited by C. B. Holinsworth, of Birmingham]. [By John Ward.] [Birm. Cent. Lib.] Birmingham, 1899-1904 ZIT and Zoe ; their early experiences. [A novel. By Henry Curwen, journalist.] Originally published in Blackwood's Magazine. 8vo. Pp. 131. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1886 ZOBEIR; or, Turkish misrule. By William St Clair [William Ford, C.I.E.]. 8vo. Pp. 248. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1899 ZODIACAL (the) chess-board. By J. H. S. [Joseph Houghton SpencerJ. Folio. [Brit. Musi] Taunton, 1899 ZODIAKE (the) of life ; written by the godly and zealous poet Marcellus Palingenius Stellatus [Pietro Angelo Manzolli] : newly translated into Englishe verse by Barnabie Googe. B. L. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1565 For previous editions, see “ The firste thre bokes . . .” and “ The firste syxe bokes .. ZOE ; a Sicilian Sayda. [By Lloyd Wharton Bickley.] 8vo. [Cushing’s Anon.] Philadelphia [1830?] ZOE ; an Athenian tale. [By John Campbell Colquhoun, of Killermont.] i2mo. Pp. ix. 115. Edinburgh, 1824 Printed for private circulation. ZOE the dancer. [A novel.] By Ida Wild [Mrs Meynell Pearson]. 8vo. Pp. 302. London, 1911 ZOE’S ‘brand’. . . [By Mrs M. C. Houstoun.] 8vo. 3 vols. London,1864 ZOFLOYA ; or, the Moor: a romance of the fifteenth century. By Charlotte Dacre [Mrs Byrne, better known as Rosa Matilda, author of the Nun of St Omers, Hours of solitude, etc.]. i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1806 ZOHRAB the hostage. By the author of Hajji Baba [James Justinian Morier]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1832 ZONE (the) of fire. [A novel.] By Headon Hill [Frank E. Grainger]. 8vo. Pp. 432. [Whets Who in Lit.] London,1897 ZfiOAOri'A ; or, the history of animals, as they are useful in physick and chirurgery. ... By John Schroder. [Translated by T. B. i.e. T. Bateson.] 8vo. Pp. 159. [Brit. Musi] London, 1659 ZOOLOGICAL notes and anecdotes. By Sestertius Holt [William White Cooper, surgeon-oculist]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1852 ZOOLOGY (the) of Beloochistan and Southern Afghanistan. [By James A. Murray.] 8vo. [Calc. Imp. Lib.] Bombay [1887] ZOPHIEL ; or, the bride of seven. By Maria del Occidente [Maria Brooks]. 8vo. London, 1833 ZORAH ; a love-tale of modern Egypt. By D. T. S. [Elizabeth Batch]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1886 ZORAIDA; a tragedy; as it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane : to which is added a postscript, containing observations on tragedy. [By William Hodson.] 8vo. Pp. 104. [Baker’s Biog. Drami] London, 1780 ZULEKA; being the history of an adventure in the life of an American gentleman. By “R.” [Clinton Ross]. 8vo. Pp. 222. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1897 ZULNEIDA ; a tale of Sicily. By the author of The White cottage [A. Mower]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Nat. Lib. of Scot.] London, 1837 ZULU (the) war ; giving a descriptive account of Isandula, Rorke’s Drift, Saving the colours, Cetywayo and his chiefs in Council, Flogging the troops, the Prince Imperial, Lord Chelmsford’s victories, etc. [In verse.] By a Cape Correspondent [George Walter Boyce]. i2mo. Pp. 30. [Mendelssohn’s South Afr. Bibl. i. 177.] Wells, 1879 SUPPLEMENT An asterisk (*) signifies an addition or correction to an entry which has already appeared in the mai?i part of the Dictionary. A bon chat bon rat, tit for tat; a new and idiomatic course of instruction in the French language. By Chrysos- tome Dagobert [Jean Baptiste Alphonse Led’huy]. Svo. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1855] A. E. Housman ; a list of adversaria, etc. . . . Compiled by A. S. F. G. Andrew S. F. Gow]. Svo. Pp. 11. [Brit. Musi] Cambridge, 1926 A vous, and others. By Veritas [Miss D. Allbeury]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [jBrit. Mus.\ London [1914] ABC (the) of fair trade ; addressed especially to the British workman. By “ S. N.” [Stuart James Nicholson]. 8vo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1905] ABC (the) of the U.M.C.A. [Universities’ Mission to Central Africa]. Prose and pictures for young and old. Compiled by M. E. W. [M. E. Woodward]. Obi. Svo. Pp. 30. [Brit. Musi] London [1899] *A B C (an) or holy alphabet . . . Author’s advertisement signed : E. C. The author’s name is also spelt Cancellar. There were previous editions of this work, under the title “The Alphabet of prayers” in 1565, 1570, 1573, 1576 and 1591. The last was issued under the Initials J. C. ; the others were not anonymous. ABC (the) ; or, the institution of a Christian, etc. [containing the Creed, Lord’s Prayer, Scripture texts, etc., published by William Bedell, Bishop of Kilmore and Ardagh. In English and Irish]. Svo. Pp. 13. [Brit. Alas.] Dublin, 1631 The Irish text is printed with the Irish types presented by Queen Elizabeth to J. O’Kearney, with which he printed his Catechism, 1571. A, B, C, or, thoughts on the principles of Biblical interpretation. . . . [By James Wapshare.] 8vo. 3 parts. [Brit. Mas.] [London, 1867] Signed : J. W., Octogenarius. VOL. VI. ABIMELECH; an oratorio. The music by Mr Arnold. [The words by Christopher Smart.] 4to. Pp. 23. [Brit. Alusi] [London, c. 1768] ABOLITION (the) of the slave trade, peace, and . . . reform, essential to the salvation of England. [By William Ward.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibli] N.P. 1796 ABOUT mending the coyn. [By Thomas Neale, Groom-Porter to their Majesties.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mas.] London, 1695 ABRACADABRA; or, freemasonry secrets revealed. [By Reginald Stuart.] Svo. Pp. 7. [Brit. Mas.] London [1928] Authorship disclosed in the preface to his “ Freemasonry.” ABRAHAM Christian lawmaker. [A tale.] By Prudens Futuri [Nelly Davidson]. 8vo. Pp. 340. [Brit. Musi] Printed in Holland, 1925 ABRIDGEMENT (an) of a discourse on self-dedication, by John Howe. . . . [Edited by J. A. i.e. John Audley.] 8vo. Pp.xv. 73. [Brit.Musi] Cambridge,1785 ABRIDGEMENT (an) of the evidence before the select committee appointed ... to consider the . . . means of preventing bribery, corruption, and intimidation in the election of members to serve in Parliament. With remarks. [By Thomas Martin.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1837 Signed : M. *ABRIDGEMENT (the) or svmmarie of the Scots chronicles . . . The first edition (1612) was not anonymous. [ABRIDGMENT of cases to the end of Henry VI. By Nicholas Statham.] 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 54, p. 112 ; Pollard and Redgravei] [Rouen, 1490] ABRIDGMENT (an) of ecclesiastical history (by J. L. von Mosheim) . . . translated . . . by A. Maclaine . . . and now abridged by a layman [J. Parkinson]. Svo. [Brit. Musi] 1787 S ABRIDGMENT of modern voyages and travels. By T. Clark [John Galt]. i2mo. [Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 118.J London, 1819 ABRIDGMENT (a) of Swedenborg’s work entitled The true Christian religion. . . . [By Rev. John Hyde]. 8 vo. Pp. xviii. 318. [Swedenborg Bibl. p. 577.] London, 1868 Reprinted at Boston in 1869. ABSENTEEISM injurious to Ireland ; a brief argument in answer to an essay or dialogue entitled Absenteeism. [By Thomas Falconer of Lincoln’s Inn.] 8vo. [Falconer’s Letters and Notes on the Texas Santa Fe Expedition (ed. F. W. Hodge), p. 145.] Bath, 1829 ABSTRACT of a Bill for the reformation of the High Court of Chancery. [By Edgar Taylor.] 8vo. [Lhicolris Inn Lib.] London, 1831 ABSTRACT (an) of a treatise concerning the payment of tythes and oblations in London. [By Bryan Walton.] 4to. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1662 ABSTRACT of Colenso on the Pentateuch. ... To which is appended an essay on the nation and country of the Jews. [By William Henry Burr.] 8vo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1871 ABSURDITY (the) of that new devised state-principle (viz.) that in a monarchy the legislative power is communicable to the subject, and is not radically in sovereignty in one, but in more ; in a letter, to a friend. [By John Brydall.] 4to. [Lineolds Inn Lib.] London, 1681 ABUSES discovered whereby the creditors are meerly cheated; the officers of law and gaolers are unjustly inriched; and the poor debter and their families destroyed. [By William Gery?] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1649] Signed : W. G. ABUSES of the laws. By Guy Mitford George Moore, of Warrington]. 8vo. Sutton’s Lancashire Authors.] 1832 ACADEMICAL (the) sportsman ; or, seven wise men of Gotham : burletta in three acts. [By Rev. Robert Burrowes?] [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland, p. 16.] Dublin [1795 ?] A skit on “ The academic sportsman, or a winter’s day : a poem. By Rev. Gerald Fitzgerald ” (i773)- ACCOMPLISH’D (the) maid; a comic opera. . . . [Translated from Goldoni’s La Buona Figlia by Edward Toms.] 8vo. Pp. ii. 59. [Library of Congress, Cat. of Opera Librettos.] London, 1767 *ACCOMPLISHT (the) physitian. . . . The Brit. Mus. attributes this to Gideon Harvey. ACCORDING to Jill. By Nora K. Strange [Mrs E. Gower Stanley]. 8vo. Pp. 252. [Brit. Musi] London, 1926 ACCOUCHEUR (the): a letter to the Rev. Mr Tattershall ... on the evils of man - midwifery. By a student [John Browne]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1859] ACCOUNT (an) from the children of light . . . why we have been kept from joyning to, or worshipping in, those formes at Law, and formes of worships, that have been imposed upon us against our consciences. . . . [By J. N. i.e. James Nayler and R. H. i.e. Richard Hubblethorn.] 8vo. Pp. 55. [Brit. Musi] London, 1660 ACCOUNT (an) of a rich illuminated manuscript, executed for John, Duke of Bedford ... by R. G. [Richard Gough]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1794 ACCOUNT (an) of Barbarossa, the usurper of Algiers ; being the story on which the tragedy [by John Brown, D.D., vicar of Newcastle] is founded, now in rehearsal at Drury Lane. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1755 ACCOUNT (an) of Russia, 1767. [By George, Lord Macartney.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1768 ■^ACCOUNT (an) of some remarkable passages . . . This is not accepted as Defoe’s work by Trent {Camb. Hist, of Eng. Lit., vol. 9) or by Dottin. There is a copy in St Deiniol’s Library, Hawarden, Chester, which has written on it “ by Thomas Woodcock ” in a nearly contemporary handwriting, and this may be taken as more probable. ^ACCOUNT (an) of Switzerland . . . Not by Temple Stanyan but by his brother Abraham. See D. N. B. vol. 54, p. 88. ACCOUNT (an) of the abolishing of duels in France, being extracts out of the edicts of the Kings, the regulations of the Marshals, and the records of the Parliaments in France. [By John Evelyn?] 8vo. Pp. 67. London, 1713 See the note to “ The Laws of honor . . .” ACCOUNT (an) of the Bill lately depending in Parliament, for the better regulating the proceedings of ecclesiastical courts. [By Edmund Gibson, D.D.] Folio. [Camb. U?iiv. Lib.] London [1733 ?] ACCOUNT (an) of the cedar of Libanus, now growing in the garden of Queen Elizabeth’s Palace at Enfield. [By R. Gough.] Fol. [Brit. Musi] [London?] 1788 ACCOUNT (an) of the glacieres, or ice alps in Savoy, in two letters ; one from an English gentleman [Col. William Windham, assisted by R. Price and B. Stillingfleet] . . . the other from P. Martel. . . . 4to. \_Brit. Musi] London, 1744 *ACCOUNT (an) of the growth of knavery . . . For another edition (1679) see “The Parallel ; or, an account of the growth of knavery . . ACCOUNT (an) of the late attempt at mutiny on board the U.S. brig Somers . . . and an original letter to President Tyler on the subject, by a Bostonian [James Lloyd Homer?]. i2mo. Pp. 24. \Brit. Musi] Boston, 1842 Signed : J. L. H. ACCOUNT (an) of the latter days of R. V. Pryor; to which is prefix’d a brief sketch of his life and character. 'By John Scandrett Harford.] i2mo. Brit. Mi/s.] Bristol, 1808 Signed : J. S. H. ACCOUNT (an) of the life and writings of Herman Boerhaave. . . . [By John Burton, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. ix. 226. [Manch. Free. Lib.] London, 1743 ACCOUNT (an) of the life, ministry, and writings of the late Rev. John Fawcett, D.D. . . . [By his son, John Fawcett, of Ewood Hall.] 8vo. [Edin. Univ. Lib.\ London, 1818 ACCOUNT (an) of the new north wing and recent additions to University College, London. [By Prof. Henry Morley.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London [1881] ^ACCOUNT of the remains of a Roman villa . . . Attributed also to G. Tupper. [Leeds Univ. annotated copy of Halkett and Laing.] ACCOUNT (an) of the rescue of five of the family of G. Jackson. [By Major John Leathart.] 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] [e. 1820] ACCOUNT (an) of the seminary that will be opened on Monday the fourth day of August at Epsom in Surrey. [By William Godwin.] 8vo. [F. K. Brown’s Godwin.] London, 1783 ^ACCOUNT (an) of the Societies for Reformation of manners, in England and Ireland . . . By-Yates, barrister of the Temple. See Nicholson’s Letters, i. 191. ACCOUNT (an) of the Spanish settlements in America. ... To which is annexed a succinct account of the climate . . . manufactures, etc., of Old Spain. With a map. [By John Campbell, LL.D.]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] Edinburgh, 1762 ACCOUNT (an) shewing the progress of the Colony of Georgia in America, from its first establishment. [By Benjamin Martyn.] Folio. [Book Prices Current, 1921.] London, 1741 ACCURATE (an) tho’ compendious history of the ancient Parliaments of France. By Count Henri de Boulain- villiers, in fourteen letters [translated from the French by C. Forman]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1754 ACHILLES in petticoats; an opera. By Gay ; with alterations [by George Colman the younger]. 8vo. \Brit. Musi] London, 1774 ACHILLES ; or, Iphigenia in Aulis ; a tragedy [translated from the French of Jean Racine] by Mr [Abel] Boyer. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1700 ACQUITAL (the) or purgation of the moost catholyke Christen Prince, Edwarde the VI. . . . against al suche as blasphemously and traitorously infame hym . . . of heresie or sedicion. [By John Old.] 8vo. \Camb. Univ. Lib.] Waterford, 1555 ACTOR’S (an) notebooks ; being some memories, friendships, criticisms, and experiences of Frank Archer [Frank Bishop Arnold]. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London [1912] ACTS (the) and miracles of the holy, true, Apostolic Catholic Church ; wherein her infallibility is asserted and proved. [Signed: Arthur O’Leary’s Ghost, i.e. S. Sapsford]. i2mo. Pp. iv. 83. [Brit. Musi] London, 1807 ACTUAL state of the question between our Colonial slave proprietors, and the Parliament and abolitionists of this country: illustrated in a series of articles originally published in the Glasgow Free Press newspaper. [By William Bennet]. 8vo. Glasgow, 1836 Private information. ADAM and Eve stript of their furbelows ; or, the fashionable virtues and vices of both sexes expos’d. . . . [By Edward Ward?] The second edition. 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1710] The first edition appeared under the title “ The modern world disrob’d,” q.v. ADAM’S Daughters. Byjohn Carruthers [John Young Thomson Greig]. Svo. Pp. 320. London, 1926 ADDINGTONIAN extinguisher. By an impartial observer [J. Corry]. i2mo. [Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 5.] Macclesfield, 1811 ADDITION (an) to the book [by Elias Hookes], entitled, The spirit of the martyrs revived, it being a short account of some remarkable persecutions in New-England, especially of four faithful martyrs of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, who suffered death at Boston. [By Joseph Bolles.] 4to. Pp. 20. \Book Prices Current, 1921.] [New York] 1758 *ADDITIONAL (an) dialogue of the dead . . . Internal evidence shows that this was not by the author of the Dialogue between Pericles and Cosmo [i.e. George, Lord Lyttleton]. It was probably by John Brown, D.D., Vicar of Newcastle-upon- Tyne. \_D.N.B. vol. 7) p* 11.] ADDITIONAL hymns, compiled for use with “ Hymns for the Christian Church and Home” at Rosslyn Hill Chapel, Hampstead. [By Thomas Sadler.] i2mo. [jBrit. Musi] London, 1876 *ADDITIONS to Common Sense . . . Only partly by Thomas Paine. See the note in the Supplement to “ Large Additions to Common Sense.” ADDRESS (an) delivered in St George’s Hall, Philadelphia, January 21, 1894. By an Evangelist of the Catholic Apostolic Church [John Sidney Davenport]. 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] [1894] ADDRESS (the) of the minority in the Virginia Legislature to the people of that State ; containing a vindication of the constitutionality of the alien and sedition Laws. [By Henry Lee.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [E. G. Swem’s Bibl. of Virginia, pt. ii., p. 84.] [Richmond] 1799 ADDRESS to a medical student. [By William A. Greenhill.] i6mo. Pp. xii. 172. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1843 ADDRESS (an) to a young student, on his entrance into College. By Eumenes [John Walker]. 8vo. Pp. 13. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1798 ^ADDRESS (an) to Baptists of all denominations . . . For Frazer, read Fraser. The author’s full name is Peter Lovett Fraser. ADDRESS (an) to Major-general Tryon, written in consequence of his late expedition into Connecticut. [Signed : Juvenis, i.e. Samuel Bostwick.] 4to. [Magazine of History, Extra No. 9c.] [Hartford?] 1779 ADDRESS to prophetical students in the Church of Rome ; on the revelation of the man of sin and the coming of the Lord. [By William Tarbet.] 8vo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Musi] London, 1856 ADDRESS (an) to the clergy concerning the first article of the Church of England. By a person of a truly scrupulous conscience [Francis Hoffman?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1724 ADDRESS (an) to the Congress of the United States, on the utility and justice of restrictions upon foreign commerce. [Signed: C. B. B. i.e. Charles Brockden Brown.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Philadelphia, 1809 ADDRESS (an) to the females of Great Britain [on the Reform Bill]. By an Englishwoman [Jane Alice Sar- gant?] 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Musi] London, 1832 ADDRESS (an) to the government of the United States on the cession of Louisiana to the French, and on the late breach of treaty by the Spaniards. [By Charles Brockden Brown.] 8vo. Pp. 56. [Brit. Musi] [Philadelphia] 1803 ADDRESS (an) to the House of Commons of Ireland [on the Accommodation Bill]. By a Freeholder [Sir James Caldwell]. Third edition. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] [Dublin?] 1771 ADDRESS (an) to the inhabitants of Fakenham [on the subject of baptism. By Charles Norris]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Fakenham, 1825 Signed: C. N. ADDRESS (an) to the inhabitants of Ireland. By C. L—as, M.D. [C. Lucas]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Dublin, 1753 *ADDRESS to the inhabitants of Loughborough . . . For Frazer, read Fraser. The author’s full name is Peter Lovett Fraser. ADDRESS (an) [in verse] to the inhabitants of Manchester, on theatricals. By a townsman [James Watson]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Manchester [1803] ADDRESS (an) to the inhabitants of Scarborough on the profanation of the Lord’s Day. [By Thomas Hinderwell.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] 1799 Signed : T. H. ADDRESS (an) to the peers of England. [In reference to the proceedings in the House of Lords against Queen Caroline.] By an Englishwoman [Jane Alice Sargant]. 8vo. Pp. 20. [Brit. Musi] London, 1820 ADDRESS (an) to the people of the United States on the policy of maintaining a permanent navy. By an American citizen [Enos Bronson ?]. 4to. [Magazine of History, Extra No. 71.] Philadelphia, 1802 ADDRESS to the working classes of England. By a poor man [R. Detrosier]. 24mo. [Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 5.] London, 1836 ADMINISTRATION (the) of Ireland. By “ I. O.” [Major C. J. C. Street]. 8vo. [Bookman, October 1922, p. 8.] London, 1922 ADMIRAL’S (the) daughter. ... By Margaret Stuart Lane [Margaret Ashworth]. 8vo. Pp. 287. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1921 ADMIRALTY (the). By a flag officer [Sir William Fanshawe Martin]. . . . (Second edition.) 8vo. Pp. 27. [Brit. Mus.\ Portsmouth, 1870 From an inscribed copy. ^ADMONITION (an) to the Parliament holden . . . First edition [i572]- ADMONITION (an) upon the nature, propriety and advantages of confirmation. [By Edward Owen, Rector of Warrington?] i2mo. Pp. 24. [Hawkes’ Lancashire Books, p. 131.] Warrington, 1788 ADMONITIOUN (the) to the Lordis. [A ballad. By Robert Sempill, Baron Sempill.] [Pollard and Redgrave.\ Edinburgh, 1570 ADOPTED ; a farce in one act. By Richard Henry [Richard Butler and Henry Chance Newton]. i2mo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1893] ADVANCED building construction. . . . By the author of Notes on building construction [Percy Gaillemard Llewellyn Smith, Major-General, R.E.]. 8vo. Pp. xv. 239. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1892 ADVANTAGES (the) and disadvantages of the married state. New edition. [By Archibald Courage.] 8vo. [Aberd. Publ. Lib.] Aberdeen, 1852 ADVANTAGES of Russia in the present contest with France ; with a short description of the Cozacks. [By William H. C. C. Bentinck-Scott, 4th Duke of Portland?] 8vo. Pp. 65. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1807 *ADVENT addresses . . . For Willington, read Wellington. ADVENTURE (an). By Elizabeth Morison and Frances Lamont [Anne Moberly and Eleanor Jourdain]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 162. [T. L. S., 19th February 1931.] London, 1911 A later edition (1930) bears the authors’ names. ADVENTURE (an) among the Rosi- crucians. By a student of occultism [Franz Hartmann]. 8vo. Pp. 181. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1887 ADVENTURE (the) of the Lady Ursula: a comedy in four acts. By Anthony Hope [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. 8vo. Pp. 125. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1898 ADVENTURES among the Red Indians. By H. W. G. Hyrst [Sidney Harry Wright]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.) Philadelphia, 1910 ADVENTURES among wild beasts. By H. W. G. Hyrst [Sidney Harry Wright]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1907 ADVENTURES in contentment. By David Grayson [Ray Stannard Baker]. 8vo. Pp. ix. 203. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1907 ADVENTURES in friendship. By David Grayson [Ray Stannard Baker]. 8vo. Pp. 232. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1910 ADVENTURES in the Arctic regions ; romantic incidents and perils of travel. . . . By H. W. G. Hyrst [Sidney Harry Wright]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1909 ADVENTURES of a book agent. By Audrey Allison [Jennie Margerie Bly]. 8vo. Pp. 212. [Publishers’ Weekly, 30th January 1926.] Boston, 1925 ADVENTURES (the) of a hackney coach. [By Dorothy Kilner.] Seventh edition. 8vo. [Courtney’s Secrets, p. 21.] Dublin, 1781 ADVENTURES (the) of Abdalla, son of Hanif, sent by the Sultan of the Indies to make a discovery of the Island of Borico . . . translated into French [but rather wholly written in French] by M. de Sandisson [Jean Paul Bignon] . . . also an account of Rauschen . . . done into English by W. Hatchett. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1729 *ADVENTURES of Bilberry Thurland. For Hooton, read Horton. ADVENTURES (the) of Dick Distich. [By George Daniel.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1912 ^ADVENTURES of half-an-hour . . . For Stephen Bullock, read Christopher Bullock. [D.N.B. vol. 7, p. 253.] ADVENTURES (the) of Harry Rochester ; a tale of the days of Marlborough and Eugene. By Herbert Strang [George Herbert Ely and C. J. L’Estrange]. 8vo. Pp. ix. 418. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1906 ADVENTURES (the) of James Webb, at Claverton, Bath, Cheltenham, etc. By W. M. [Miles Watkin], gent. 8vo. [Shum’s Bath Books, p. 223.] Bath, 1827 ADVENTURES (the) of Louis de Rougement [Henri Louis Grin] as told by himself. 8vo. Pp. xx. 396. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1899 S 2 VOL. VI. ADVENTURES (the) of Philip Quarll, the English Hermit. . . . [Achapbook, abridged from “ The Hermit,” by Peter Longueville.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mi/s.] [1823] See also “The English Hermit,” “The Hermit,” “ Philip Quarll,” and “ The surprising adventures of Philip Quarll.” ADVENTURES (the) of Pomponius, a Roman Knight ; or, the history of our times. [By-Labadie.] Made English from the Rome edition of the French original by Mr Macky. i2mo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mi/s.j Barbier’s Dic- tionnaire.] London, 1726 ADVENTURES (the) of Sir Lyon Bouse, Bart., in America during the Civil War, being extracts from his diary. [By Richard Grant White.] i2mo. [Foley’s Amer. ai/thors.] New York, 1867 ADVENTURES (the) of Telemachus, in blank verse ; from the French of Fenelon . . . by J. Y. [J. Youde]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] [1793 ?] ADVENTURES (the) of Theagenes and Clariclea. Translated from the Greek (of Heliodorus) [by Charles Gildon], i2mo. 2 vols. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 248.] London, 1717 Dedication signed : C. G. ADVENTUROUS (the) voyage ; telling of the deeds of some famous heroes. [By Maurice Kerr.] 8vo. Pp. 93. [Brit. Musi] London [1930] ADVERTISEMENT (an) for a runaway wife. Family fracas. [By William Smith, stationer, of Edinburgh.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [Edinburgh, 1825 ?] ADVERTISEMENT to the Parliament of England, from many grave, learned and pious divines beyond seas, in the year 1572; declaring the many and great errours at that present in the discipline and government of the English Church. . . . [By John Field or Feilde and Thomas Wilcox.] London, 1644 A reprint of “ An Admonition to the Parliament, 1572,” q.v. ADVICE to a friend. [By Symon Patrick.] [D. N. B. vol. 44, p. 47.] London, 1673 Signed : S. P. *ADVICE to a painter . . . More probably by Henry Savile. See H. M. Margoliouth’s Marvell's poems and letters, vol. I, pp. 197, 321, 322. *ADVICE to editors of newspapers. [With a letter signed : Emendator, i.e. Caleb Whitefoord.] The main work is not by Emendator. ADVISE of a sonne, now professing the Religion established in the present Church of England, to his deare mother, yet a Roman Catholike. [By Anthony Hungerford.] [D. N. B. vol. 28, p. 253.] Oxford, 1616 A later (1639) edition bears the author’s name. ADVOCACY (the) of Christ. [By William Kelly of Guernsey.] 8vo. Pp. 28. [Brit. Musi] London [1875] yESOP at court ; or, state fables. [Verse. By Thomas Yalden.] 8vo. Pp. 43. [Brit. Musi] London, 1702 ^ETHIOPIAN (an) historic, written in Greeke by Heliodorus, translated into English by T. V. [Thomas Under- downe]. 4to. [Christie - Miller Cat.] London, 1606 Earlier editions give the author’s name in full. AFFECTIONATE (an) address to Church people and dissenters. By a lay churchman [John David Hay Hill]. 8vo. Pp. 18. [Brit. Musi] London,1834 Signed : J. D. H. H. AFFECTIONATE (the) shepheard. [By Richard Banfield.] 4to. [Pollardand Redgrave i] London, 1594 AFFECTIONS gift to a beloved godchild. By M. H. [Mary Ann Hedge]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Colchester, 1819 AFLOAT in freedom’s cause ; the story of two boys in the War of 1812. By James Otis [James Otis Kaler]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1908 AFRICA pilot. . . . Part I. Third edition. [Advertisement signed: F. J. E. i.e. Sir Frederick J. O. Evans.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1880 AFRICAN lessons. Wolof and English. [By Mrs Hannah Kilham.] i2mo. 3 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, 1823 AFTER confirmation \ a sketch of modern life in Norway. By Margrethe [Bolette Gj0r]. Translated from the Norwegian by Th. Eggen. [Pettersen’s Norsk-Lexikon, p. 11.] Minneapolis, 1900 AFTER-RECKONING (an) with Mr Saltmarsh ; or, an appeal to the impartial and consciencious reader . . . against his last paper, called, An end of one controversy, or an answer or letter to M. Leys large last book. Written by L. M. a student in divinity. [By John Ley.] [B>. N. B. vol. 33, p. 208.] London, 1646 *AGE (the) [a poem, in eight books]. Not by Philip James Bailey. The work referred to in the D. N. B. is a different one. AGIATIS, queen of Sparta, or, the civil wars of the Lacedemonians, in the reigns of the Kings Agis and Leonidas. Translated out of French [of Pierre d’Ortigue de Vaumoriere]. 8vo. [Bar- bier’s Dictionnairei] London, 1686 AGNES Willoughby. ... [A novel. By William Stephens Hayward.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 336. [Brit. Musi] London [1884] AGNUS dei ; the lamb of God. [By Rev. Robert Norton, of Holbeck.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1867 AGREEMENT (an) of the Associated Ministers and Churches of the counties of Cumberland and Westmerland: with something for explication and exhortation annexed. [By Richard Gilpin.] [Calamy’s Nonconf. Mem., Palmer's ed. i. 302.] London, 1656 AGRICULTURAL and administrative reform in Bengal. By a Bengal civilian [A. P. MacDonnell, afterwards Lord MacDonnell]. 8vo. London, 1883 Certification by a friend of the author. AIDS to development; or mental and moral instructions exemplified in conversations between a mother and her children. [By Mary Atkinson Maurice.] l2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London,1829 AIDS to the divine life in a series of practical Christian contemplations. . . . (Originally published by “T. S.” [Thomas Sherman]). i6mo. [Brit. Musi] 1865 AILEY Moore. By Father Baptist [Rev. Richard Baptist O’Brien]. 8vo. Pp. 311. [S. J. Brown’s Ireland in fictioni] Dublin [1856] ■*AIMS and ends . . . The footnote is incorrect. The work there referred to is not the same. AIR (the) patrol; a story of the northwest frontier. By Herbert Strang [George Herbert Ely and C. J. L’Estrange] . . . 8vo. Pp. 442. [Brit. Musi] London, 1913 AIR-BUILT castles ; stories from the Spanish of Fernan Caballero [Cecilia Francisca Josefa Arrom de Ayala]. Translated by Mrs Pauli. 8vo. Pp. 240. [Brit. Musi] London [1887] AIRS, duets, choruses, etc., in the new comedy called A day in Turkey, or the Russian slaves. [By Hannah Cowley.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1791 AIRS, duets, glees, chorusses, etc., in the opera of The lad of the Hills, or Wicklow Gold Mine. [By John O’Keefe.] 8vo. Pp. 40. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1796 AIRS, duets, trios, etc., in the new comic opera, called False Alarms ; or, My cousin. [By James Kenney.] 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Musi] London, 1807 ALARM (an) to the hous-holders and heritors of the City of Edinburgh, in copies of proposals sent off by some in the city for procuring an Act of Parliament to impose a poor-rate thereon. . . . [By John Home.] 8vo. Pp. 28. [Bill. Lmdi] Edinburgh, 1749 ALARUM (an) to England to prevent its destruction by the loss of trade and navigation. ... By W. C. [William Carter, clothier]. Pp. v. 40. [Brit. Musi] London, 1700 The author refers on p. 3 to his work, “ England’s Interest, by the benefit of the woollen manufacture.” This is known to be by William Carter. ALARUM (an) to London; or, the famous London’s blowing up by Londoners. Sounded not to fire their buildings but to quench their burnings. In a letter to Major Generali Browne. By William Beech.] 4to. Pp. 18. Brit. Mus.] London, 1650 Subscribed : Benjamin. A reissue in the same year bears the author’s name. ALARUM (an) to the House of Lords, against their insolent usurpation of the common liberties and rights of this nation. . . . [By Richard Overton.] [D. N. B. vol. 42, p. 386-7.] 1646 ALCINA; an opera, as it is performed at the Theatre Royal in Covent Garden. [Translated from the Alcina delusa da Ruggiero of Antonio Marchi. The music by Haendel.] 8vo. Pp. 48. [Library of Congress, Cat. of Opera Librettos.] London, 1736 ’AAEKTOP. The Cock. (By Bartelemy Aneau.) [Translated by J. Hammon ?] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London,1590 ALEXANDER Pope ; notes towards a bibliography of early editions of his writings. [By C. S. Livingston.] 8vo. Pp. 50. [O’Leary’s Eng. Lit. Hist. p. 157.] Iowa, Cedar Rapids, 1910 ALEXANDER the Great; or, the conquest of Persia : a grand heroic pantomime composed by M. J. D’Egville. [A scenario, by John Philip Kemble.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] London [1795] ALGIERS voyage in a journall, or briefe reportary of all occurrents hapning in the fleet of ships sent out by the King ... as well against the pirates of Algiers, as others : . . . under the command of Sir R. Mansell . . . expressed by one that went along in the voyage (J. B. [i.e. J. Button]). 4to. [Pollard and Redgravei] [London?], 1621 ALL and sundry. [Sketches of contemporary characters.] By E. T. Raymond [Edward Raymond Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 283. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1919 ALL the famous Battels that have bene fought in our age throughout the worlde, as well by sea as lande, set foorth at large liuely described. . . . Collected out of sundry good authors [by John Polman]. [Cockle’s Bibl. of military books, p. 19.] London [1586] ALLAH AH BARRIES C. C. [By Sir James M. Barrie.] 8vo. Pp. 12. [Garland’s Bibl. of Barrie.] Private print, 1893 ALL’S well that ends well; a story of Brittany. By S. G. [Selina Gaye], author of Dickie Winters. 8vo. Pp. 240. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1891 ALMIGHTY gold. By J. J. Connington [Alfred Walter Stewart]. 8vo. Pp. 334. [ Amer. Cat.] London, 1924 ALMOST faultless ; a story of the present day. By the author of A book for governesses [Emily Peart]. 8vo. Edinburgh, 1870 ALPHABET (the) of prayers. [By James Canceller, or Cancellar.] i6mo. [Pollard a?id Redgrave.] London, 1591 Signed: J. C. There were previous editions, in 1565, 1570, 1573 and 1576, none of them anonymous. For a later edition [signed : E. C.] with a different title, see “An ABC or holy alphabet ...” ALPHABET (an) of the holy Proverbs of King Salomon. [By Robert Allen.] 8vo. [Pollard a?id Redgrave.] London, 1596 Signed : R. A., a minister of God’s word. *ALPINE sketches . . . For George Wyndham Bridges read George Wilson Bridges. \_Edin. Univ. Lib.] ALTAR book of the Norwegian evangelical lutheran church with scripture lessons and collects : a translation [by E. G. Lund]. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, p. 16.] Minneapolis, 1915 ALTERNATE (the) sex; the female intellect in man, and the masculine in woman. By Hans Breitmann [Charles Godfrey Leland]. 8vo. \Amer. Cat.] New York, 1904 *ALTHORP (the) picture-gallery . . . The Brit. Mus. gives the author’s name as Jordan. ALVAREDA (the) family ; a novelette. Translated from the Spanish of Fernan Caballero [Cecilia Francisca Josefa Arrom de Ayala] by Viscount Pollington. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1872 ALZIRA ; or, Spanish insult repented ; a tragedy [in verse] written by Aaron Hill [or rather adapted by him from the French of Voltaire]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1760] AMATEUR art ; oil and water colour painting, painting on china, etc. By Henri Clarise [Mrs Henrietta Clarissa Jackson Cosgrove]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Chicago, 1909 AMATEUR’S (the) workshop. By the author of Pattern Making, etc. [Joseph Gregory Horner]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1889 AMATONDA ; a tale from the German of Anton Wall [Christian Lebrecht Heyne. Translated by Henry Crabb Robinson]. i2mo. Pp. xxiii. 288. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1811 AMBROSE McEvoy. [By R. M. Y. G. i.e. Reginald M. Y. Gleadowe.] 4to. Pp. 29. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 “ Contemporary British Artists.” AMBROTOX and Limping Dick. [A novel.] By Oliver Fleming [Ronald and Philip Macdonald]. 8vo. Pp. 315. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1920 AMELIA Mansfield; translated from the French of Madame C * * * * [Sophie R. Cottin]. i2mo. 4 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1803 AMERICA ; being the latest and most accurate description of the New World, containing the original of the inhabitants and the remarkable voyages thither; the conquest of the vast empires of Mexico and Peru, and other large provinces and territories. . . . [Largely based on “ De niewe en onbekende weereld . . . ” by Arnoldus Montanus] ; with maps and plates by John Ogilvie.] Folio. [Book prices current, 1921.] London, 1771 AMERICAN adventure by land and sea ; being remarkable instances of enterprise and fortitude among Americans. [By Epes Sargent.] 8vo. [Foley’s Amer. authorsi] New York, 1841 AMERICAN insects. By Max Vernon [Vernon Lyman Kellogg]. Second edition, revised. 4to. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1908 *AMERICAN memoranda. Preface signed : J. L. AMERICAN (an) poilu. [Letters from the front. By Elmer Stetson Harden.] 8vo. Pp. xii. 244. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1919 The letters are signed : E. AMERICAN (the) register, or general repository of history. [Edited by C. B. B. i.e. Charles Brockden Brown.] 8vo. 7 vols. [Brit. Mus.] Philadelphia, 1807-11 AMERICA’S insular possessions. By Charles Harcourt [Charles Harcourt Ainslie Forbes-Lindsay]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Amer. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1907 AMONG French inns. By Richard Sudbury [Charles Gibson]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1905 AMONG privileged people; a novel from the Afrikaans. By Marie Linde Elise Bosman]. 8vo. Pp. 352. T. Pis Weekly, 2nd April 1927.] London, 1927 AMONG the heather. ... By A. C. Hertford [Adelaide M. Cameron]. New edition. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1891 AMONG the ruins of Pompei. By F. and A. M. [F. and A. Mavrogordato]. i6mo. Pp. 44. [Brit. Musi] [Naples] 1925 AMONG the Shoshones. By Uncle Nick [Elijah Nicholas Wilson]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Salt Lake City, 1910 AMONG the tombs of Colchester. [By Mrs Mary Benham.] 8vo. Pp. 76. [Brit. Mus.] Colchester, 1880 AMOROUS Fiametta ; wherein is sette downe a catalogue of all and singular passions of loue and iealousie. . . . First written in Italian by Master John Boccace . . . and now done into English by B. Giouano del M. Temp. [Bartholomew Young, of the Middle Temple]. . . . 4to. Ff. 123. B. L. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1587 *AMOROUS (the) warre . . . The 1659 edition was “By J. M. St. of Cb. Ch. in Oxon.” AMOURS (the) of Bonne Sforza, Queen of Polonia. [Translated from the French by P. B. i.e. Peter Bellon]. i2mo. Pp. 155. [Brit. Musi] London,1684 Bentley’s “ Modern Novels,” vol. 8. AMPHORA. [Poems. By Aleister Crowley.] 8vo. Pp. 80. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1908 ^ANABAPTISTS (the) groundwork for reformation . . . For I. H., read I. E. ANALECTA. By Roland Saint-Clair [Roland Sinclair Watson]. 8vo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Musi] London [1925] ANALECTIC (the) magazine, containing selections from foreign reviews and magazines. . . . [Edited by Washington Irving.] 8vo. 6 vols. [Foley’s Amer. authors.] Philadelphia, 1813-15 ANALYSIS by a student of prophecy [Robert Mackenzie Beverley] of “Thoughts on the Apocalypse” by B. W. Newton, of Plymouth. 8vo. Pp. 51. [Brit. Mies.] London, 1845 In a bound volume of tracts by Beverley in the British Museum, many bearing his name. The binding bears the title Castor- eana, this being a pun on Beverley’s name from castor — a beaver. ANALYSIS of pnematics and moral philosophy; for the use of students in the College of Edinburgh. [By Adam Ferguson, LL.D., Professor.] 8vo. Pp. 55. Edinburgh, 1766 ANALYSIS of the late correspondence between our Administration and Great Britain and France. . . . [By John Lowell.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1814 ANATOMIE (the) of the Common Prayer-Book, wherein is remonstrated the unlawfulness of it, and that by five several arguments. ... By Dwalphintramis [John Bernard]. [Brit. Musi] 1661 ANATOMIE (the) of abuses. By Philip Stubbes. [The introduction signed : J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London [1870] ANATOMIE (the) of basenesse ; or the foure quarters of a knave. [By John Andrewes.] 4to. [Pollard and Red- grave.] London, 1615 ANATOMIE (an) of the world. . . . See “An anatomy of the world. ...” ANATOMIST (the); or, the sham doctor: a farce. [Adapted from Edward Ravenscroft’s comedy.] 8vo. Pp. 43. [Brit. Musi] London [1762?] *ANATOMY (the) of baseness . . . The correct title is “ The Anatomie of baseness,” and the author is John Andrewes. [Pollard and Redgrave.] ANATOMY (the) of the body of God ; being the supreme revelation of cosmic consciousness. By Frater Achad [C. Stansfeld Jones]. 4to. Pp. xv. 111. [Brit. Musi] Chicago, 1925 *ANATOMY (the) of the heretical Synod . . . Signed: T. L. ANATOMY (an) of the world ; wherein by occasion of the untimely death of Mistris Eliz. Drury the frailty and decay of this whole world is represented. [By John Donne.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1611 There was an edition in 1625 entitled “ An anatomie of the world ...” Editions in 1612 and 1621 were entitled “The First anniversarie. An anatomy of the world ...” q.v. ANCHOR (the) of hope ; or, some of God’s words of hope in the Old Testament. . . . [By John Ross Macduff.] 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] London [i881] ANCHOR (the) of the soul. By the author of The lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1863] Signed : F. B. ANCIENT and modern Malta : a full account of the islands of Malta and Goza, by L. Du Boisgelin. [Translated by Mrs-Lutwyche.] 4to. 2 vols. [Shum’s Bath Books, p. 133.] 1805 ANCIENT (the) and present state of the County of Down : a chorographical description, with natural and civil history. ./. . [By Walter Harris?] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1744 ANCIENT (the) bounds, or liberty of conscience, tenderly stated, modestly asserted, and mildly vindicated. [By Francis Rous.] [M^Alpm Coll. Cat.] London,1645 Attribution by Dr Charles A. Briggs. ANCIENT (the) of dayes is come ; the judgment is set. . . . Written by a lover of peace and truth, J. G. [John Gibson, Quaker]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1657 ANCIENT tales of Hindustan. By A. C. A. [A. C. Albers]. 8vo. Pp. 105. [Brit. Mus.] Calcutta [1923] ANCIENT (the) vessel found in the parish of Tune, Norway. [By Oluf Rygh. Translated by Gerhard Gade ?] 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, p. 18.] Christiania, 1872 ANCILLA’S share; an indictment of sex antagonism. Anonymous. [By Elizabeth Robins.] 8vo. Pp. 313. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 ANECDOTAL reminiscences of distinguished characters. By Leigh Clifife [George Jones]. i2mo. [Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 121.] London, 1830 ANGELA and I. By L. Du G. [L. Du Garde Peach]. 8vo. Pp. 240. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1925 ANGELA goes to school. [A novel.] By May Wynne [Mabel Wynne Knowles]. 8vo. Pp. 253. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1922 ANGLI^E ruina; or, England’s ruine, represented in the barbarous and sacrilegious outrages of the sectaries of this kingdom, committed upon the lives, consciences and estates of all His Maj. loyal subjects. . . . [Containing the Mercurius Rusticus of Bruno Ryves and The Querela Cantabrigiensis of John Bar wick.] [D. N. B. vol. 50, p. 71.] 1647 *ANGLI7E speculum morale . . . For Sir Richard Grahame read. Richard Grahame, Viscount Preston. [Brit. Mus.] For a later edition, see “The Moral State of England . . ANGLO-INDIAN literature. [A collection of specimens. By Sir Edward Buck, Secretary to the Government of India]. 8vo. Pp. 103. Calcutta, private print, 1883 Authorship certified by a friend of the collector. ANGLO-IRISH essays. By John Eglinton [W. K. Magee]. 8vo. Pp. 130. [Boyd’sIreland?s Lit. Renaissajice.] Dublin, 1917 ANGLO-ISRAELISM true, not false ; being an answer to the Rev. Canon C. D. Bell. By Philo-Israel [- Bird, Indian Civil Service]. 8vo. Pp. 16. London, 1882 *ANGLO-MANIACS (the). The author’s name is given in Foley’s Amer. Authors as Mrs Burton Harrison. ANGLO-SCOTUS again; or the lucubrations of a Rev. correspondent of the United Secession and Voluntary Magazines exposed. . . . By Anglo- Scotus [John Lockhart?]. Svo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 1834 ANIMADVERSIONS, upon a paper, entituled, The speech of the late Lord Russell. . . . [By Dr John Nalson.] Folio. [Lincoln's Inn Lib. ] London, 1683 ANIMADVERSIONS upon [the Rev.] Dr [John] Brown’s three essays on the Characteristics [written by the Earl of Shaftesbury]. [By Rev. Robert Andrews, minister in Bridgnorth.] 8vo. [Sparke’s Bibl. Bolt.] Wrongly ascribed to Rev. Robert Colvill, or Colville. ANIMAL magnetism. ... By . . . William Gregory. [Preface signed: M.A. Oxon. i.e. William S. Moses.] Svo. Pp. viii. 252. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1884 ANIMAL magnetism ; a farce. ... By Mrs Inchbald . . . with remarks . . . by D— G. [George Daniel]. i2mo. Pp. 33. [Brit. Mus.] London [1827] ANN and her mother; a story of Scottish manse life. By Olivia Douglas [Ann Buchan]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1922 *ANNALS of a fishing village. Delete with Mrs Jane Owen Visger. The title-page continues, “edited by J. A. Owen.” ANNALS (the) of an Indian family (Cherry). [By Charles Minchin.] Svo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Mus.] Harrogate, private print, 1898, 1908 ANNALS (the) of Europe for the year 1739. [By George Gordon, historian.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1740 The work was continued to include 1743. ANNALS of the parish of Halton. Collected and edited by E. M. [E. Mackreth]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] London [1888] ANNALS of Waverley Abbey Hospital. By Nurse W. [Edith M. Ware]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] Farnham [1916] ANNAN (the) jewel. By Patricia Wentworth [Mrs-Dillon, ne'e D. O. Ellis]. 8vo. Pp. 311. London, 1924 ANNE Grey, a novel, edited by the author of Granby [Thomas Henry Lister]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1834 ANNIE and Pierre, or, “Our Father’s letter : ” a book for the holidays. By K. M. [Kate Maclellan]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] New York [1874] ANNIE ; or, the life of a lady’s maid. . . . [By William Stephens Hayward.] 8vo. Pp. 316. [Brit. Mus.] London [1884] ANNIVERSARIES upon his Panarete. [By Richard Brathwait.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1634 ANNOTATIONS on a sermon preached before the University of Oxford on . . . June 7, 1761, by George Horne, D.D. [By Martin Madan.] 8vo. Pp. 60. [Bibl. Lind.] London, 1762 ANN’S an idiot. A novel. By Pamela Wynne [Winifred Mary Scott]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 408. [Brit. Mus.] London,1923 ANNUAL (the) Register for 1758. [By Edmund Burke. Also for the years 1759-63.] 8vo. [R. Straus’ Robert Dodsley.] London, 1759-64 ANONYMA. . . . [A novel. By William Stephens Hayward.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 327. [Brit. Mus.] London [1884] ANONYMOUS criticism; an essay. By RobertBlake [Robert Hely Thompson]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] London, 1877 ANOTHER ballad, called The libertines lampoone, or the curvets of conscience. ... By the authour of The Geneva ballad [Samuel Butler]. Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [c. 1675] ANOTHER home ; or, hope for the old and poor. By the author of The lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1862] Signed : F. B. ^ANOTHER word or two . . . For Nunnery, read Nunnez. ANSWER (an) or necessary animadversions upon some late impostumate observations invective against his sacred Majesty, bearing the face of the publick, but boldly pen’d and publish’t by a Privado [Richard Burney]. 4to. [Wood’s Athen. Oxon. ii. 885.] London, 1642 ANSWER (an) to a late pamphlet [by Daniel Defoe], entitled, The Experiment, or the shortest way with the Dissenters exemplified. . . . [By Hugh James.] 4to. Pp. 52. [Bibl. Lind.] London, 1707 ANSWER (an) to a Letter of enquiry [signed: T. B. i.e. John Eachard] into the grounds and occasions of the contempt of the clergy. [By John Bram- hall, Archbishop of Armagh.] 8vo. Pp. 91. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1671 ANSWER (an) to a letter to Edward Long Fox, M.D. [Signed : C. T. S. i.e. Samuel Taylor Coleridge.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Ashley Library.] Bristol [1795] ANSWER (an) to a pamphlet entit’led A declaration of the Commons of England . . . expressing their reasons and grounds of passing the late resolutions touching no further addresse . . . to be made to the King. [By Edward Hyde, afterwards Earl of Clarendon.] 4to. Pp. 13. [Brit. Mus.] 1648 ANSWER (an) to a pamphlet entituled considerations on the propriety of requiring a subscription to the articles of faith [by Edmund Law. By Thomas Randolph, Archdeacon of Oxford]. 8vo. Pp. 52. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1774 ANSWER (an) to a Papisticall Byll, cast in the streetes of Northampton, and brought before the Iudges at the last Syses, 1570. [By Thomas Knell.] B. L. [Christie-Miller Cat.] 1570 A ballad. ANSWER (an) to an infamous and trayterous pamphlet, entituled, A Declaration of the Commons of England in Parliament, expressing their reasons and grounds of passing the late resolutions, touching no further addresse or application to be made to the King. [By Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon.] Pp. 166 [for 186]. [Bibl. Lind.] [London, 1648] ANSWER (an) to Dr D ... . y’s [Patrick Delany’s] Fable of the pheasant and the lark. [By Benjamin Swift.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Bibl. Lind.] [Dublin?] 1730 ANSWER (an) to Dr Rotheram’s apology for the Athanasian creed ; in a letter to a friend. [By William Adams, Master of Pembroke College, Oxford.] 8vo. Pp. 70. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1773 ANSWER (an) to M. I. Forbes of Corse, his peaceable warning [i.e. to John Forbes5 “A peaceable warning to the subjects in Scotland.55 This answer is ascribed to David Calderwood.] 4to. [Pollard a,7id Redgrave.] [Holland?] 1638 ANSWER (an) to Mr J. G. [John Goodwin] his xl. queries ... in which answer the undueness of mixt communion is declared. ... By W. A. [William Allen]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1653 ANSWER (an) to several new laws and orders made by the rulers of Boston in New-England. ... By G. F. [George Fox]. 4to. Pp. 7. [Brit. Musi] 1678 ANSWER (an) to the pamphlet call’d The Conduct of the Ministry impartially examined. ... By the author of the Four Letters to the people of England [John Shebbeare, M.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 100. [Brit. Musi] London, 1756 ANSWER (an) to the question, Is any church worth preserving ? By Scrutator [Edward Bennett]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Musi] Chester [1878 ?] ANSWERE (an) in defence of the truth ; again ste the apologie of private masse. [By Thomas Cooper.] [Camb. Univ. Libi] Londini, 1562 ANSWERE (an) to a papystycall exhor- tacyon pretendynge to auovde false doctryne. [By John Bale, Bishop of Ossory.l 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave'. N.P. [1548?' ANSWERE (an) to the Proclamation o the Rebels in the North. . . . See “ An Aunswere . . .” ANSWERS to inquiries in regard to the Catholic Apostolic Church. [By John Sidney Davenport.] i2mo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] [c. i860] ANTHOLOGY (an) of invective and abuse. Compiled ... by Hugh Kingsmill [Hugh Kingsmill Lunn]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 221. [Brit. Musi] London, 1929 ANTHOLOGY (an) of modern verse. Chosen by A. M. [Sir Algernon Methuen]. With an introduction by Robert Lynd. 8vo. Pp. xlv. 240. [Brit. Musi] London, 1921 ANTHONY Fairfax. A novel. [By Margery Hollis.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1885 ^ANTICIPATION, 1778 . . . The D. N. B. queries the ascription to Tickell very strongly. ANTI-CORSICAN (the); a poem inscribed to the volunteers of Great Britain. [By Matthew Rolleston.] 4to. [Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 21.] Exeter, 1805 *ANTIDOTE (an) against lay-preaching .. . Not anonymous. It bears Bewick’s name. ANTIDOTE (an) against melancholy, made up in pills compounded of witty ballads, jovial songs, and merry catches. [By Thomas Ourfey.] 4to. [Christie-Miller Cat.] London, 1661 An edition was published in 1870 by J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier. [Brit. Musi] ANTIDOTE (the): strictures upon two anonymous pamphlets. [By J. Mills.] 8vo. [Bir?n. Ref. Libi] 1820 ANTIQUARY (the); a national drama, founded on the celebrated novel of the same name, by the author of Waverley ... as performed at the Theatre- Royal, Edinburgh. [By Isaac Pocock.’ i2mo. Pp. 66. [D. N. B. vol. 46, p. 4.’ [Edinburgh, 1822’ ANTIQUITY (the) and excellency of globes. . . . [By William Grent?] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1652 *ANTONIOS rewenge. . . For the first part, see “The History of Antonio and Mellida. . . .” ANY man; or, it means me. “Peace, false and true.55 By W. T. P. W. [W. T. P. Wolston]. i6mo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh [1884] APHORISMS(the)of the Mimausa philosophy by Jaimini... . [Edited by J. R. B. i.e. James Robert Ballantyne.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Allahabad, 1851 APHORISMS (the) of the Nyaya philosophy by Gautama. . . . [Edited by J. R. B. i.e. James Robert Ballantyne.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] 1851 APHORISMS (the) of the Sankhya philosophy of Kapila. . . . [Edited by J. R. B. i.e. James Robert Ballantyne.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Allahabad, 1852 APHORISMS of whist. By “Nestor55 [Thomas D. Lowther]. 8vo. Pp. 40. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.] Chicago, 1901 APOCALYPSE (the) of S. John the Divine, represented by figures. . . . [Described by H. O. C. i.e. Henry Octavius Coxe.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1876 Roxburghe Club. APOCRYPHAL (the) gospel of St Peter ; the Greek text of the newly discovered fragment. [Preface signed: H. B. S. i.e. Henry |Barclay Swete.] 8vo. Pp. 14. [Brit. Musi] London, 1892 APOLLO’S cabinet ; or the Muse’s delight: an accurate collection of English and Italian songs, cantatas, and duetts, set to music for the harpsichord, violin, german-flute, etc. . . . [Edited by John Sadler, bookseller, of Liverpool.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Hawkes’ Lancashire Printed Books, p. 37.] Liverpool, 1757 Originally issued (1754) under the title “ The Muses delight.” APOLLO’S feast; or, wit’s entertainment : consisting of pleasant intrigues, delightful stories . . . writ by Jo. Haynes and Mr Pinkeman. . . . Now published by the author of the Pills to purge melancholy (Dr Merry man) [Henry Playford]. i2mo. Pp. 170. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1703 APOLOGIE diffidentis. By W.Compton Leith [Ormonde Maddock Dalton]. 8vo. Pp. 211. London, 1908 APOLOGIA pro vita Ecclesiae Angli- canae; in reply to John Henry Newman, D.D. [By William Josiah Irons?] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] London [1864] APOLOGIE (an) of priuate Masse sediciously spredde abroade in wrtynge without name of the author. . . .” See “A Levvde Apologie of pryuate Masse . . APOLOGIE (the) of the Romane Church, devided into three severall tractes . . . all which are undertaken and proved by testimonies of the learned Pro- testantes themselves. [By Lawrence Anderton, alias John Brerely.] 4to. Pp. 191. [Brit. Mus.] N.P. 1604 Secretly printed. The advertisement is signed : I. Br. See A. J. Hawkes in The Library, Sept. 1926, and C. A. Newdigate in The Library, Dec. 1926. *APOLOGIE (an) or defence of such true Christians . . . By Henry Ainswrorth and Francis Johnson. [D. N. B. 1/192 and Pollard and Redgrave.] APOLOGY for the conduct of Mrs Teresia Constantia Phillips. [Edited by Paul Whitehead.] 3 vols. [D. N. B. vol. 61, p. 105.] 1748 APOLOGY (an) for the life of Mrs Shamela Andrews, in which the many notorious falsehoods and misrepresentations of a book called Pamela [by Samuel Richardson] are exposed. ... By Conny Keyber [Henry Fielding]. 8vo. Pp. xv. 59. [Times Lit. Supp. 4 Dec. 1930.] London, 1741 APOLOGY (an) of T. F. [Thomas Fitzherbert] in defence of himselfe . . . falsely charged with a fayned conspiracy against her Maiesties person. . . . 4to. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] [St Omer] 1602 APOLOGY (the); or, the genuine memories of Madam Maria Manchini, Constabless of Colonna. . . . Written in Spanish by her own hand. [By Gabriel de Bremond.] . . . 8vo. Pp. 160. [Arber’s Term Cat.] London,1679 APOLOGY to the travellers’ club ; or anecdotes of monkeys. [By W. S. Rose.] 8vo. [Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 22.] London, 1825 APOSTAC Y (the). [By William Tarbet.] i2mo. Pp. 12. [Brit. Mus.] [1866?] APOSTLE (the) of the Alps ; a tale. By the author of Moravian life i?i the Black Forest, etc. [Mrs Beatrice Batty, nee Stebbing]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1863 APOSTOLICAL (the) and true opinion concerning the Holy Trinity, revived and asserted ; partly by twelve arguments levyed against the traditional and false opinion about the Godhead of the Holy Spirit. [By John Bidle.] London, 1653 Reprinted in “The Faith of One God,” 1691. APPEAL (the) of five fellows of Saint John’s College to the visitor. . . . [By C. E. C. B. Appleton.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1869 Preface signed : C. E. A. *APPEAL to reason. By H. Halkerstoun, of Rathillet. APPEAL (the) to Rome ; a letter from an English clergyman [Rev.-- Hatherway] to a Roman Catholic friend. . . . 8vo. Pp. 16. London, 1850 *APPEAL (an) to the conscience of a fanatick. [By John Brydall.] [Lincoln's Lnn Lib.j D.N.B. vol. 7, p. 159.] APPEAL (an) to the impartial public by the Society of Christian Independents congregating in Gloucester. [By Epes Sargent.] 8vo. Pp. 39. [Eddy’s Universalism in America, ii. 488.] Boston, 1785 APPEAL (an) to the public on the subject of the framework knitters’ Fund. [By Rev. Robert Hall.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Leicester, 1819 As opposition was raised against his proposal, the author next published (again anonymously), “ A Reply to the principal objections . . q.v. APPEAL (an) to the Scriptures on the ordinance of Baptism ; interpreted with the concessions of learned and judicious writers who espoused infant sprinkling. By the author of the Spiritual Cabinet [Jabez Burns, D.D.]. i2mo. Pp. 24. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibli] London, 1830 An enlarged edition, with the author’s name, was published in 1831. APPEAL (an) to the Society of Friends on the primitive simplicity of their Christian principles and Church discipline. . . . [By Thomas Foster.] 8vo. Pp. 233. [Brit. Musi] London, 1801 APPEALS in criminal cases and amendment of law. [By Charles Nash.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [i860?] Two leaves. APPENDIX to an address to the inhabitants of Loughborough ... on the erection of a Roman Catholic Chapel in that town. By Aristogeiton [Rev. Peter Lovett Fraser]. i2mo. Pp. 12. [Brit. Musi] London, 1824 See “An address to the inhabitants . . .” *APPLES of Eden ; a realism. By the author of Estelle. The entry is incorrect. The title reads : By Estelle ; and the author is not known. APPLESEED Johnny ; a poetic drama of pioneer days. By Donald Thistle [H. Clark Brown]. 8vo. Pp. 54. [.Publishers' Weekly, 28th Jan. 1928.] [Charles City, Iowa] 1927 APPRENTICE’S (the) monitor; or, indentures in verse, shewing what they are bound to do. [Together with] The Golden Rule in verse. [By Hannah More.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] Bath [1795 ?] Signed : Z. APPRENTICESHIP v. Conscription. [By R. C. T. Evans?] Fol. Pp. 13. [Brit. Musi] Herne Bay, 1912 APPROACH to the holy altar; by Bishop Ken. . . . [Edited by J. L. A. i.e. John L. Anderdon.] 8vo. Pp. vii. 148. [Brit. Musi] London, 1852 APRON (the) farmer. By a bird at Bromsgrove [John Crane]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1802] AQUARIAN (the) Gospel of Jesus the Christ ; the philosophic and practical basis of the religion of the aquarian age of the world and of the church universal. Transcribed from the book of God’s remembrances, known as the Akashic records by Levi [Levi H. Dowling]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 260. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1911 ARABIAN (the) trudgman, that is, certaine Arabicke termes, as names of places, titles of honour &c. . . . expounded according to their . . . etymologie. ... By W. B. [William Bedwell]. 4to. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] [London] 1615 A R A B I N I A N A. [By Blencowe Churchill.] 8vo. [Lincoln’s Inn Lib.] London,1843 ARBOR (the) of amorous deuises. By N. B. Gent. [Nicholas Breton]. 4to. [Christie-Miller Cat.] 1597 ARCANA aulica; or Walsingham’s manual of prudential maxims for the states-man and the courtier. [Translated by Edward Walsingham from the Traicte de la cour of Eustache du Refuge.] i2mo. Pp. 153. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1652 See also “ Walsingham’s manual. . .” ARCANE teaching ; or, secret doctrine of the ancient Atlantis, Egypt, Chaldea, and Greece. By Yogi Ramacharaka [William Walker Atkinson]. Second edition. Svo. Pp. 336. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1909 ARCH (the) of Titus. [Verse signed : D. C. W. i.e. D. C. Wrangham ?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] n.p. 1824 ARCHZEOLOGIZE philosophies; or, the ancient doctrine concerning the originals of things. ... By Thomas Burnet. . . . [With a “ Letter to Mr E. Curll ” signed: C. B. i.e. Charles Blount?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1729 ARCHER (the) and the Steppe ; or, the Empires of Scythia : a history of Russia and Tartary. ... By F. R. Grahame [Catherine Laura Johnstone]. i2mo. Pp. 479. [Brit. Musi] London [i860] ARCTIC (the) world ; its plants, animals, and natural phenomena: with a historical sketch of arctic discovery. [By William Henry Davenport Adams.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1876 ARE the late wars of Prussia a fulfilment of prophesy? By H. H. [Henry Hewetson]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1871 ARGAL ; or the silver devil, being the adventures of an evil spirit . . . related by himself. [By George Hadley.] i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London [1793] ARGUMENT (an) for the authority of Holy Scripture ; from the Latin of Socinus ... to which is prefixed a short account of his life. [By Edward Combe.] Svo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1731 ARGUMENT (the) of Mr Peter de la Marteliere . . . made in Parliament . . . for the Rector and University of Paris . . . against the Jesuits. . . . Translated [by George Browne]. . . . 4to. Pp. 71. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1689 The dedication signed : G. B. An edition of 1612 contains the translator’s name. ARGUMENT (an) to prove that the abolishing of Christianity in England may, as things now stand, be attended with some inconveniences. . . . [By Jonathan Swift, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 38. [Brit. Musi] London, 1717 ARGUMENTS against some of the popular errors of whist, with an analysis of some of the leading features of the game. By W. H. C. [W. H. Collins]. i6mo. Pp. 32. [F. Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.\ Whitehaven, 1880 ARGUMENTS and reasons to prove the inconvenience and unlawfulness of taking the New Engagement. [By John Aucher, D.D. ?] 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 2, p. 246.] London, 1650 ARGUMENTS from Scripture for pure diet and living. By I. O. and M. A. [Gideon J. R. Ouseley]. Being a reply to alleged objections to vegetarianism. . . . 8vo. Pp. 12. [Brit. Mus.\ [Paris? 1890] *ARID^E frondes . . . For Siddon, read Siddons. ARIEL, or the life of Shelley. By Andre Maurois [Emile Herzog]. Translated by Ella D’Arcy. 8vo. Pp. viii. 310. [Observer, istFeb. 1931.] London, 1924 ARIOSTO’S satyres, in seven famous discourses. By G. Markham [or, rather Robert Tofte]. 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1608 For a later edition, see the following entry. ARIOSTOS seven planets governing Italie, or his satyrs in seven famous discourses. . . . Newly corrected and augmented. [Translated by Robert Tofte.] 4to. Pp. 100, 24. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1611 ARISTOPHANES at Oxford. O(scar) W(ilde). [A satire on Oscar Wilde.] By Y. T. O. [L. C. M. S. Amery, F. W. Hirst and H. A. A. Cruso]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 85. [Stuart Mason’s Bibl. of Oscar Wilde.] Oxford [1894] ’APKAIOSKOIIIA ; or, a view of antiquity: presented in a short . . . account of some of the fathers . . . who lived within or near the first three hundred years after Christ. ... By J. H. [John Howe], M.A. 8vo. [Brit.Mus.\ London, 1677 ARMADA days ; a dramatic sketch. By N. S. S. [N. S. Shaler ?]. 8vo. Pp. 92. [Brit. Musi] London, 1898 ARMOUR, or the never failing engine. [A poem. By Basil Rennet ?] [R. Straus’ The Unsfeakable Curll, p. 275.] London, 1724 ARMY (the) harmlesse; or, a dis- passionat and sober discussion of the late and present proceedings of the Army under the command of his Excellencie, Sir Thomas Fairfax. [By John Goodwin?] [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 533.] London, 1647 ARNALDO; Gaddo ; and other unacknowledged poems by Lord Byron, and some of his contemporaries ; collected by Odoardo Volpi. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ Dublin, 1836 Spurious. Not by Lord Byron. ARNE ; or, peasant life in Norway : a Norwegian tale by Bjprnstjerne Bjprn- son. Translated from the second edition by a Norwegian [Thomas Krag]. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, p. 28.] Bergen [1861] ARRAIGNMENT (the), conviction and condemnation of the Westminsterian Juncto’s engagement, with a cautionarie exhortation toall honestEnglish spirits, to avoid the danger of perjurie by taking of it. [By William Prynne.] 4to. [Lincoln’s Inn Lib.\ n.p. 1649 ARRIAN’S (the) vindication of himself against Dr Wallis’s Fourth letter on the Trinity. [By William Freke." [M‘Lachlan’s No?iconformistLib. p. 64." 1691 No title-page. ARROL’S engagement. By Charlotte May Kingsley [Thomas W. Hanshew]. 8vo. Pp. 383. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1903 ARS moriendi ex variis sententiis collecta. . . . [Translated from the Latin by William Caxton ? Edited by W. B. i.e. W. Blades.] 4to. B.L. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1868] Only 54 copies printed. ARS punica sive flos linguarum; the art of punning. By the labour and industry of Tom Pun-sibi [Jonathan Swift]. 8vo. [Camb. Hist, of Eng. Lit.] London, 1719 *ARSINOE, Queen of Cyprus. . . . [Translated from Tommaso Stanzani.] [Library of Congress, Cat. of Of era Librettos.] ART (the) and science of change ringing. By William Banister. [Editedby S. B. G. i.e. Samuel B. Goslin.] 8vo. Pp. vii. 179. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1879 *AR’T asleepe, husband ? For Paledonius, read Panedonius. ART crafting in metal for amateurs. By F. Alexander [F. Alexander Chandler]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1909 ART (the) of chymistry : as it is now practised. From the French of P. Thibaut. Translated into English by a fellow of the Royal Society [William Aglionby]. 8vo. [Arber’s Term Cat. i. 187.] London, 1668 A later edition (1674) is “Englished by W. A., Fellow of the Royal Society.” *ART (the) of getting into practice in physic . . . A satire on Dr Richard Mead. For a counter satire, see “ The life and adventures of Don Bilioso de l’Estomac. . . .” *ART (the) of heraldry . . . The 1685 edition is not anonymous. The Brit. Mus. however possesses a 1693 edition in which Blome’s name does not occur, unless indeed this is an imperfect copy, wanting the epistle dedicatory. ART (the) of knowing women ; or, the female sex dissected, in a faithful representation of their virtues and vices. . . . Written in French by the Chevalier Plante - Amour [Francois Bruet] and by him published at the Hague 1729. Now faithfully made English with improvements. 8vo. Pp. iv. 237. [Brit. Mus.; Barbier’s Dictionnaire.] London, 1730 ART (the) of Latin poetry ; founded on the work of C. D. Jani. By [Edward Baines] a Fellow of a College [Christ’s College] in Cambridge. 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.\ Cambridge, 1828 ART (the) of numbring by speaking-rods, vulgarly termed Nepeir’s \i.e. J. Napier, of Merchistoun] bones. . . . Published by W. L. [William Leybourn]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] 1667 *ART (the) of punning . . . For Tom Pun-Sibe, read Tom Pun-Sibi. The correct title, however, is “ Ars punica, sive flos linguarum ...” q.v. *ART (the) of ringing improved . . . For Stedman, read Steadman. ARTAXERXES, an English opera, as it is performed at the Theatre Royal in Covent Garden. [Translated from Metastasio by T. A. Arne.] 8vo. Pp. 31. [Library of Congress, Cat. of Opera Librettos.] London, 1792 ARTEMUS Ward (C. F. Browne) in London. . . . [Edited by E. P. H. i.e. Edward P. Hingston.] 8vo. Pp. 195. [Brit. Mus.] London [1870] ARTICLES originally published in the Biblical Repertory for April, 1834. [By William Stockton Martien.] 8vo. Pp. 35. [Brit. Musi] Princeton, N.J. [1834] ARTIS logical rudimenta. [By Henry Aldrich.] With illustrative observations on each section [by John Hill, B. D.]. Sixth edition. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1850 AS common mortals. [By Mrs Annie Coombs, nee Sheldon.] i2mo. [Kirk’s Suppi] New York, 1886 AS good as a comedy ; or, the Tennesseean’s story. By an editor [William Gilmore Simms]. i2mo. [Foley’s Amer. Authors.] Philadelphia, 1852 AS it was. By H. T. [Mrs Helen Thomas]. 8vo. Pp. 116. [Times Lit. Supp. 29th Jan. 1931.] London,1926 A portrait under a concealed name of her husband, the poet Edward Thomas. AS it was in the beginning : a poem. By Joaquin Miller [Cincinnatus H. Miller], 4to. [Amer. Cat.] San Francisco, 1903 *ASAPH. For Schimmelpeninck, read Schimmel- penninck. *ASCENTS of the soul . . . For Henry Hare, read Hugh Hare. The date of publication was 1665. ASPECTS of biography. By Andre Maurois [Emile Herzog]. Translated . . . by S. C. Roberts. 8vo. Pp. 187. [Observer, 1st Feb. 1931.] Cambridge, 1929 ASPECTS of Jewish life and thought. The letters of Benammi [Mordecai Epstein]. 8vo. Pp. 223. London, 1922 Information from a friend of the author. ASPIRATIONS (the) of Bulgaria. Translated from the Serbian of Bal- kanicus [Stojan M. Protic]. 8vo. Pp. xxvii. 249. [Brit. Musi] London, 1915 ASSEMBLY (the) of God. ... [By C. H. Mackintosh.] New edition, revised. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1874] ASSES (the) complaint against Balaam ; or, the cry of the country against ignorant and scandalous ministers. [By Lewis Griffin.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] London, 1661 ASSIMILATIVE memory; or, how to attend, and never forget. By Alphonse Loisette [Marcus Dwight Larrowe]. 8vo. Pp. 170. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1896 ASSUMPTIONS (the) of the [episcopal] clergy as the only ministers of Christ, calmly refuted in a letter to a friend. By Philagathon [Thomas Finch, of Harlow]. 8vo. Pp. 50. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl.) London, 1837 ASTR^EA, a romance written in French by ... H. d’Urfe. . . . [With a preface signed: J. D. i.e. John Dryden ?] Fol. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi) London, 1657-58 ASTR^EA’S return ; or, the halcyon days of France in the year 2440 : a dream. Translated from the French [of Louis Sebastien Mercier] by Harriot Augusta Freeman. 8vo. Pp. xii. 308. [Brit. Musi) 1797 ASTRONOMICAL essays. By“Catho- licus ” [George Vincent Leahy]. 8vo. Pp. 283. [Amer. Cat.) Brighton, Mass., 1910 ASTRONOMY. [By Sir Benjamin Heath Malkin.] 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Musi) London, 1829 Society for diffusing useful knowledge. ASTRONOMY and geology as taught in the Holy Scriptures. [By William Tarbet.] 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Musi) 1855 AT century’s ebb. [A novel.] By Cyprian Cope [James C. Biddle-Cope, afterwards Baron Cope]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi) London, 1893 AT Mrs Beam’s ; a comedy. By C. K. Munro [Charles W. K. Macmillan]. 8vo. Pp. 72. [Brit. Musi) London [1925] AT the sign of the palm-tree ; a record of some idle hours in sunset land, by Madge Mortimer. Edited [but rather written] by R. L. N. J. [R. L. N. Johnston], Pp. viii. 152. [Brit. Mus.) London, 1899 ATALANTIS ; a story of the sea, in three parts. [By William Gilmore Simms.] 8vo. [Foley’s Amer. Authors.) New York, 1832 ATHANASIAN (the) Creed; suggestions submitted for consideration, by a Lay member of the General Synod [Sir John Napier]. 8vo. [Lincoln’s Inn Lib.) Dublin, 1876 ATHANASIAN (the) Creed weighed in the balance, and found wanting. [By -Hale ?] 8vo. [Birm. Cent. Libi) London, 1858 ATHEISM and anarchy. [By M. Hale.] 8vo. Pp. 10. [Brit. Musi) St Albans [1924] ATHEISM or theism ? Debate between Iconoclast [Charles Bradlaugh], the accredited champion of Atheism, and others, and William Honeyman Gillespie. . . . 8vo. [Brit. Mus.) London, 1869 ATHUALPA, the last of the Incas. By Hugh M‘Nab[Hugh M‘Nab Humphry, barrister]. 8vo. Pp. 87. London, 1923 From an inscribed copy. ATONEMENT (the) made by Christ as the vicarious sacrifice for sin. . . . [By W. F. Pitcairn.] 8vo. Pp. 35. [Brit. Mus.) Edinburgh, 1873 ATTEMPT (an) at an English translation, in terra rima, of the first canto of Dante’s Inferno. (A translation of Claudian’s Epigram on the old man who lived in the territory of Verona. . . .) By a late scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge [Jonathan Hatfield]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi) London, 1832 AUCTION bridge; lessons for the unskilled. By “ Major Terrace” [George Washington Bailey?]. 8vo. Pp. 125. [Amer. Cat.) London, 1928 AUCTION (the) bridge manual. By John Doe [F. R. Roe]. 8vo. Pp. 144. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.] London, 1910 AUDI et alteram partem; or, a few cursory remarks on . . . A Vindication of the Hindoos from the aspersions of the Rev. Claudius Buchanan ... by [Charles Stuart] a Bengal officer. [By Adam Clark, LL.D.] 8vo. 3 parts. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl.) Dunstable, 1814 AUDI (the) filia ; or, a rich cabinett full of spirituall jewells. By Juan De Avila. Translated out of Spanish [by L. T. i.e. Sir Tobias Matthew]. 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.) [St Omer] 1620 AULD Grannie’s advice to witless mithers and their belle daughters, who bring them up to deceive themselves and their lads wi’ their braw dresses. . . . [By William Smith, stationer, of Edinburgh.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi) Edinburgh, 1825 AULD (ane) Prophecie, bot doubte be Merlyne or Thomas of Erceldoune, fundin underyealtar-stane ofye Quenyis College of ye Haly Trinitie besyde Edenburgh, And diligentlie comparit with ye Cronyclis and auld Wrytingis quhilk yairto effeir, be Maister D. Doubleyowe, ane Brither of ye Auncient Fraternitie of ye Antiquaries. [Sir Daniel Wilson, LL.D.]. 4to. 1849 T VOL. VI. AUNSWERE (an) to the Proclamation of the rebels in the North [T. Percy, Earl of Northumberland and C. Nevill, Earl of Westmoreland. By William Seres? In verse.] i2mo. B. L. {Brit. Musi] London, 1569 Signed : W. S. Another edition in the same year runs “An answere . . .” AUSTRALASIA and prison discipline. [By Henry Melville, of Tasmania.] 8vo. {Camb. Univ. Lib.'] London, 1851 AUSTRALASIAN Board of Missions ; report of . . . proceedings. . . . [Edited by E. H. i.e. Ernest Hawkins.] i6mo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1851 AUSTRALIA directory; volume II. . . . Third edition. [Advertisement signed : F. J. E. i.e. Sir Frederick J. O. Evans.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1879 AUSTRALIAN (the) babes in the wood ; a true story told in rhyme for the young. By the author of Little Jessie, etc. [Sarah Maria Fry], i2mo. Pp. 47. London, 1866 AUTARCHY; or, the art of self- government, in a moral essay. . . . By George Burghope.] 8vo. Pp. 158. Brit. Mus.] London, 1691 The Epistle Dedicatory signed: G. B. The second edition, corrected (1713), runs “ ’Aurapxta, or the art of self-government. ..” AUTHENTIC copy of a letter from Mr Pitt to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, containing the restrictions on the intended regency, with His Royal Highness’s answer. [The answer was written by R. B. Sheridan.] 8vo. Pp. 24. {Times Lit. Supp. 28th June 1928.] London, 1799 AUTHENTICK(an) narrative of the late proceedings and cruel execution at Thorn. [By Jean Bion]. . . . 8vo. Pp. xvi. 44. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1725 AUTHOR (an) to be lett ; being a proposal . . . address’d to the . . . Society of the Bathos. By . . . Iscariot Hackney [Alexander Pope?]. No. I. 4to. Pp. 12. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1729 AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL (an) chapter in the life of Jane, Duchess of Gordon. [Edited by J. W. G. i.e. J. Wyllie Guild.] 4to. Pp. viii. 19. {Brit. Mus.] Glasgow, private print, 1864 *AUTOBIOGRAPHY of Jack Ketch. Also attributed to Charles Whitehead. {Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 33.] A’TTOMAXIA ; or, the selfe contradiction of some that contend about Church Government; dialogue-wise digested into a scholasticall discourse between religion, reason, prejudice and partiality. ... By Irenasus Philalethes [Louis Du Moulin ?]. 4to. {Brit. Mus.] • London, 1643 A’TTOd>ONIA ; or, self-murther arraign’d and condemn’d as utterly unlawful by the judgment’of learned heathens, Jews and Christians. [By John Brydall.] 4to. {IJncohis Inn Lib.] London, 1705 AUTUMN Crocus; a play in three acts. By C. L. Anthony [Dodie Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 127. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1931 AVENGING (the) ray. [A novel.] By Seamark [Austin J. Small]. 8vo. Pp. 314. {Brit. Mus.] London [1930] AVERAGE (an) woman. By W. Dane Bank [William Henry Williamson]. 8vo. Pp. 437. {Brit. Musi] London, 1916 AVERAGES ; a story of New York. By Eleanor Stuart [Eleanor Stuart Childs]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 4to. {Brit. Musi] New York, 1899 AWFUL (an) memorial of the state of Francis Spina after he turn’d apostate from the Protestant Church to Popery. [Abridged from Nathaniel Bacon.] i2mo. {D.N.B., vol. 2, p. 365.] Falkirk, 1815 AXEL; a poem. [By Bishop E. Tegner]. Translated from the Swedish by Rowland Muckleston. 8vo. {Brit. Musi] London, 1864 AXEL Ebersen, the graduate of Upsala. [A tale.] By Andre Laurie [Paschal Grousset]. . . . 8vo. Pp. vi. 286. {Brit. Musi] London, 1892 ’ASIPMA {3a with a new title-page. DEPLORABLE (the) state of New- England by reason of a covetous and treacherous governour [Joseph Dudley] and pusillanimous counsellors. . . . [By-Sir Henry Ashhurst.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1708 The “Epistle dedicatory” signed : A. H. DEPOSITION (the); a dramatic piece. [By John Maclaurin, Lord Dreghorn.] 8vo. [R. Inglis’ Dramatic Writers of Scotland, p. 143.] Edinburgh, 1757 A satire on the Rev. J. Home, the author of Douglas. DERWENT’S Horse. [A novel, on the early stages of the South African War.] By Victor Rousseau [Victor Rousseau Emanuel]. 8vo. Pp.viii. 275. [Mendelssohn’s South Afr. Bibl. i. 522.] London, 1901 DESCRIPTION (the) of a plain instrument, that . . . will discover the situation of any vertical plane . . . and how to draw a dyal upon any such plane. ... By A. M. [Adam Martin- dale]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1668 DESCRIPTION (a) of Mr West’s picture of Death on the pale horse. . . . [By John Galt.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1818 DESCRIPTION (a) of Pitcairn’s Island and its inhabitants ; with an authentic account of the mutiny of the ship Bounty, and of the subsequent fortunes of the mutineers. [By John Barrow, F.R.S.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1845 DESCRIPTION (a) of South Carolina ; contain ingmanycuriousand interesting particulars relating to the'civil, natural, and commercial history of that colony. . . . [By Dr-Glen.] 8vo. Pp. viii. no. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] London, 1761 It has been attributed to James Glenn, Governor of South Carolina. DESCRIPTION (a) of the grand signour’s seraglio or Turkish Emperor’s court. By Robert Withers. [Really a translation from the Italian of Ottaviano Bon.] [ Year's Work in English Studies, 1928, p. 192.] London, 1650 *DESCRIPTION (a) of three hundred animals. . . . Attributed also to a Mr Maquin. [N. and Q. June 1926, p. 446.] DESCRIPTIVE (a) and historical account of the Isle of Man, with a view of its society, manners and customs. [By Nathaniel Jefferys.] . . . 8vo. Pp. 200. [Brit. Mus.] Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 1809 Another issue bears the author’s name. DESCRIPTIVE catalogueof the pictures and other works of art at Oulton Park, Cheshire. [Signed : P. de M. G. E. i.e. Sir Philip de Malpas Grey Egerton.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, private print, 1864 DESERT dreams ; a romance of friendship. By Patrick Weston [-Souter]. 4to. London, 1914 DESERTER (the), a new musical drama. [Adapted by C. Dibdin from Le Deserteur of M. J. Sedaine.] . . . 8vo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Mus.]' London [1810 ?] DESIGNED (a) end to the Socinian controversy. . . . By John Smith. [Edited by J. D. i.e. John Disney.] i2mo. Pp. xi. 61. [Brit. Mus.] London,1793 DESIRES ; poems of main things. By John Doe [Victor Sampson, Judge of the Supreme Court of South Africa]. [Bookman's fournal, 1, 1925, p. 172.] London,1924 DESPISED and rejected. By A. T. Fitzroy [Rosa Annatelli]. 8vo. Pp. 350. London, 1918 DESTINY (the) of America; with an appendix, Who are the Japanese ? By the Roadbuilder [William Gordon Mackendrick]. 8vo. Pp. xvi. 269. [Amer. Cat.] Toronto [1921] Many subsequent editions bear the author’s name. • DESTINY (the) of Rome, or the probability of the speedy . . . destruction of the Pope. ... In a letter to a divine of the Church of England from a divine of the Church of the First-born [John Toland]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1718 Signed : X. Z. DESULTORY (a) conversation between two young aristocratic Ceylonese [on British rule. Signed Henry Candidus i.e. Henry White ?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [Colombo] 1853 DESULTORY (a) examination of the reply of the Rev. W. V. Harold to a Catholic Layman’s Rejoinder. By a Catholic Layman [Matthew Carey]. To which is annexed . . . the above reply verbatim. 8vo. Pp. 72. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 339.] Philadelphia, 1822 DESULTORY (the) man. By the author of The Gypsy [George P. R. James]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Eng- Cat., 1801-1836, p. 160.] London, 1836 DETAIL (a) of the facts respecting the late attempt to tune the organ of St Paul’s Chapel. [By Alexander Anderson.] [Robertson’s Aberd. Bibl.\ Aberdeen, 1800 DEVIL (the) of a duke ; or, Trapolin’s vagaries ; a farcial ballad opera. [Altered from The duke and no duke of N. Tate, by R. Drury.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1732 DEVIL (the) turn’d hermit ; or, the Adventures of Astaroth banished from Hell: a satirical romance. . . . Translated from the original French of Mr de M * * * [P. L. Saumery]. . . . Second edition. i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1751 DEVIL’S (the) tower. [A novel.] By Oliver Ainsworth [Sir Henry Sharp]. 8vo. Pp. 306. [.Brit.Mus.] London, 1927 DEVOTIONAL aids for the private use of the clergy. [By James Frederick Secretan Gabb.] i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1653 Signed : J. F. S. G. ^DEVOTIONS. First part . . . The place and date of the first edition are now known to be Paris, 1668. There is a copy in Marsh’s Library, Dublin. DEVOUT (the) Christian’s companion ; or, a compleat manual of devotions, fitted for most of the concerns of human life. . . . Collected from the works of Abp. Tillotson, Bp. Patrick, Bp. Kenn, Bp. Beveridge, Bp. Taylor, Dr Scott, Dr Horneck, Dr Stanhope. . . . [By Rev. Robert Warren.] i2mo. 3 parts. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 204.] London, 1707 The second part, second edition (1733), bears Warren’s name. *DEVOUT (the) companion . . . This is not given in the D. N. B. as stated. Arber, however, Term Cat., has it. *DEVOUT entertainments . . . translated by J. M. Q. . . . For J. M. Q., read J. M. W. VDEVOUT (the) soul . . . For J. H., B. N. read Jos. H. B. N. DEUOUTE (a) man’s purposes ; being zealous and comfortable meditations, to weane a man from this world, and the vanities thereof. [With a dedication signed : E. M. i.e. Edmund Mats, the bookseller for whom the work was printed and possibly the author.] i2mo. Pp. 153. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1597 DEWDROP (the) . . . Poems. By E. G. V. [E. G. Varnham]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 218. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1834 DIABOLUS amans ; a dramatic poem. [By John Davidson.] 8vo. Pp. 143. [T. L. S. 31st Dec. 1930.] Glasgow, 1885 DIALOGUE (a) between a blind man and death. [In verse. By Richard Standfast.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi [1700 ?' DIALOGUE (a) between a Japanese anc a Formosan about some points of the religion of the time. By G. P—m—r [George Psalmanazar—a pseudonym assumed by an adventurer, perhaps a native of Formosa who lived latterly in England]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1707 DIALOGUE (a) between the Devil and Prince Rupert [in verse] written at the Leaguer before Chester upon Prince Rupert’s coming to relieve the said city. . . . Written by E. B. [Ellis Bradshaw]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London [1649] The author’s name, however, appears on page 8. DIALOGUE (a) between the ghost of General [Richard] Montgomery just arrived from the Elysian Fields and an American delegate in a wood near Philadelphia. [By Thomas Paine.] 8vo. Pp. 14. [Sabin’s Dictionaryi] Philadelphia, 1776 There was a private reprint, eighty copies, New York, 1865. DIALOGUE (the) in English betweene a Doctor of Divinitie and a student of the Laws of England : newly corrected and imprinted, with new additions. 'By Christopher Saint - Germain.] Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1598 DIALOGUE (a) on the Christian’s hope, the future destiny of man, and the visible creation. By a working man [J. Manders]. . . . Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 48. [.Brit. Mus.'] London, 1874 Signed : J. M. DIALOGUE (a) on the unity of Christ’s One Holy Catholic Church. By a working man [J. Manders]. 8vo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Musi] London, 1874 Signed : J. M. ^DIAMOND (the) buckled shoe . . . The author is not Quiller-Couch, but the Rev. Otwell Binns. \_Brit. Mus.; Lit. Year Book.] DIAMOND cut diamond ; a comedy in two acts. Translated from the French of Guerre ouverte, ou ruse contre ruse [of A. J. Dumaniant, pseud, of Joseph Andre Bourlain by Lady W. [Lady Eglantine Wallace]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1787 DIAMOND (the) new pointed ; being a supplement to Diamond cut diamond : containing three letters which Mr Jefferys sent to the Earl of Moira . . . with observations thereon. ... By Philo-veritas [Thomas Gilliland]. 8vo. Pp. 30. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1806 *D I ANA of Rosenburgh . . . For Diana of Rosenburgh, read Diana Rosenburgh. The attribution to Miss Corfield is not given in the Brit. Mus. as stated. *DIANNE de Poytiers. Marie Hay is not a pseud., but the maiden name of Madame de Hindenburg. DIARY (the) of a communist schoolboy. Translated from the Russian [of N. Ognyov, i.e. Mikhail Grigor’evich Rozanov] by Alexander Werth. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Afus.\ London, 1928 DIARY (the) of a U-boat Commander. With an introduction and explanatory notes by Etienne [Stephen King- Hall]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1920 DIARY (the) of a young lady of fashion in the year 1764-1765. By Cleone Knox. Edited by her kinsman Alexander Blacker Kerr. [Written by Magdalen King-Hall.] 8vo. Pp. vii. 245. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1925 DIARY (a) of the Great Warr (A Second Diary—A last Diary). By Samuel Pepys, Junior [R. M. Freeman and Robert Augustus Bennett]. With effigies. . . . 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1917-9 *DICK and his cousin. . . . For “ Flecta,” read “ Fleeta.” DICTIONARY (a) of quotations from the British poets. ... By the author of the Peerage and Baronetage charts William Kingdom], i2mo. 3 parts. Brit. Musi] London, 1824 DIELLA, certaine sonnets, adioyned to the amorous poeme of Dom Diego and Gineura: by R. L. Gentleman [Richard Linch?]. i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1596 DIES Irse. [With a verse translation by R. C. Winthrop.] 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Mus.] Cambridge [Mass.] 1892 Signed : W. DIET (a) of Worms ; a metrical fragment from D’Aubigne’s History of the Reformation. [The preface signed: C. S. i.e. Charles Sabine.] i2mo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Musi] London, 1845 DIGITUS Dei ; or, good newes from Holland : sent to the wor11 Iohn Treffry and Iohn Trefusis, Esquires ; as also to all that have shot arrows agaynst Babels Brats, and wish well to Sion wheresouer. [By Hugh Peters.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] Rotterdam, 1631 Signed : H. P. There seems little doubt that H. P. is Hugh Peters. He signs himself “your lo. kinsman, H. P.” John Treffry was Peters’ uncle or grandfather, and Peters is known to have been in Holland in 1631. DILEMMAS ; or questions on important subjects. By T. P. [Sir Thomas Phillipps]. 8vo. Pp. 3. [Brit. Musi] [Middle Hill, 1840?] DING Dong ; or, Sir Pitifull Parliament on his deathbed . . . his last will and testament, with his death, buriall and epitaph. By Mercurius Melancholicus [Marchamont Nedham?]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] [London], 1648 DIOTREPHES his dialogues : wherein it appears beyond all possible evasion, that the doctrine of Gods decrees, and the Articles annexed . . . [Three points] . . . [By Laurence Womock.] [D. N. B. vol. 62, p. 346.] London, 1661 DIPLOMATIC (a) woman. By Huan Mee [-and-Mansfield, two brothers]. 8vo. Pp. 181. London, 1900 DIRECTION (a) for the weaker sort of Christians, shewing in what manner they ought to fit and prepare themselves to the worthy receiving of the Sacrament. . . . By W. B. [William Bradshaw]. To hereunto is adioned a verie profitable treatise of the same argument . . . written by another 'Arthur Hildersam]. i2mo. 2 parts. ‘Brit. Musi] London, 1609 DIRECTIONS for preparing manure from peat ; instructions for foresters. [By Allan Maconochie, Lord Meadow- bank.] 8vo. Pp. 98. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1815 DISCIPLINE in the School of God ; its nature and effect. By J. B. S. [J. B. Stoney]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London [1903] DISCONTENTED (the) lady; a new song. . . . [By T. D’Urfey. With the musical notes.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1685 ?] DISCOURSE (a) against profane swearing . . . Second edition. [By Samuel Wright, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. 32. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1732 DISCOURSE (a) concerning the currencies of the British Plantations in America. . . . [By William Douglass.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1740 Reprinted, London, 1751- *D ISCOVRSE (a) concerning the svccesse of former Parliaments. The author’s name appears on the second C1644) edition. DISCOURSE (a) of an unconverted man’s enmity against God. ... By J. H. [John Howe]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1700 *DISCOURSE (a) of duels . . . For T. C. [Thomas Comber, D.D.], read T. C. [Thomas Comber] D.D. DISCOURSE (a) of natural and reveal’d religion ; in several essays : or, the light of nature a guide to divine truth. By Timothy Nourse.] 8vo. Pp. 363. Arber’s Term Cat. ii. 367, 377.] London, 1691 An edition later in the same year bears the author’s name. DISCOURSE (a) of the judgements of God ; composed for the present times against atheism and prophaneness. [By Thomas Beverly.] [M‘Aipin Coll. Cat.] London, 1668 Dedication signed : T. B. *DISCOURSE (a) of the nature, ends, and difference of the two covenants. . . . Not by William Allen, Vicar of Bridge- water, Somersetshire, but by William Allen, tradesman, of London, writer on baptism, justification and similar subjects, called in the British Museum catalogue, Controversial Writer. It is included in his collected works. ^DISCOURSE (a) of the true and visible markes . . . Translated by Thomas Wilcox. The original edition [1582], which bears Beza’s full name, also bears Wilcox’s initials: T. W. ^DISCOURSE [on 11 Cor. 13/14] . . . Signed : R. N. DISCOVERIES. [Poems. By Siegfried Sassoon.] Private print, 1915 DISCOVERIES of the Day-dawning to the Jewes ; whereby they may know in what state they shall inherit the riches and glory of promise. [By] J. P. [John Perrot]. 4to. Pp. 15. [Brit. Musi] London, 1661 Signed “Johan” in Hebrew characters. ^DISCOVERIES of the French . . . The title continues “By M* * *, formerly a captain in the French navy.” For Captain, read Count. ^DISCOVERY (the) of a new world : or, a description of the South Indies . . . By Joseph Hall, Bishop of Exeter, translated by J. H. i.e. John Healey. [Brit. Musi] DISCOVERY (a) of the unnaturall and traiterous conspiracie of Scottish Papists against God, his Kirk, their native countrie, the Kinges Majesties persone and estate, set downe, as it was confessed and subscrivit be M. George Ker and D. Grahame. . . . [By John Davidson.] 4to. Pp. 32. B. L. [Johnstone and Robertson’s Bibl. Aberd. i. 91.] Edinburgh [1592] DISEASES (the) of pigeons. By Squills Alfred Henry Osman]. 8vo. Pp. 33. Brit. Musi] London, 1924 *DISH (a) of first-fruits. ... By Zi. S. S. S. . For Zi. S. S. S., read Z.: S. S. S. ^DISILLUSION . . . For Johnson, read Jonson. DISINGAG’D (a) survey of the Engagement, in relation to publike obligations. 1. Precedent. 2. Present, in the Oaths of allegiance and supremacy, the Protestation, and Covenant, and under the present juncture of affaires. [By John Durie, or Dury.] 4to. [D.N.B. vol. 16, p. 263.] London, 1650 DISPUTATION between the body and the soul. [Founded upon an old poem in the Auchinleck MS., by T. M. i.e. Sir Theodore Martin. With several cuttings inserted containing other poems by the same author signed E. N., Martinus Scriblerus and I. G.] i2mo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh [private print], 1838 DISRAELI ; a picture of the Victorian age. By Andre Maurois [Emile Herzog]. Translated by Hamish Miles. 8vo. Pp. x. 334. [Observer, 1st Feb. 1931.] London, 1927 DISRAELI; the alien patriot. By E. T. Raymond [Edward Raymond Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 361. [Brit. Musi] London [1925] DISSENTERS recalled to their duties and their interests. ... By a clergyman of the Church of England [Thomas Chamberlain]. i2mo. Pp. 17. [Brit. Musi] London, 1837 DISSERTATION (a) concerning private judgment and authority. By the author of the Short method with the deists [Charles Leslie]. 8vo. Third edition, corrected. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1726 DISSERTATION (a) upon English typographical founders and founderies. By Edward R. Mores. [With an appendix by J. N. i.e. John Nichols.] 8vo. Pp. 100. [Brit. Mus.] [London] private print, 1778 Only eighty copies printed. DISSERTATION (a) upon the sugar of milk. . . . Wrote in French by J. L. Dyvernois. . . . [Translated by D. D’E. i.e. D. d’Escherny.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 32. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1753 DISSOLUTION, 1536-7. Suffered by Brother Ambrose, of Beeleigh Abbey. Compiled by A. E. G. [Alexandra E. E. M. S. von Herder, later Grantham, then Munthe]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 47. [Brit. Musi] London, 1917 DISSOLUTION (the) of the Union. A sober address to all those who have any interest in the welfare, the power, the glory, or the happiness of the United States. . . . By a Citizen of Pennsylvania [Matthew Carey]. Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 36. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 340.] Philadelphia, 1832 Signed : Hamilton. DISTRESSED (the) virgin ; or, the false young man and the constant maid. ... [A ballad. By Martin Parker?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1670?] DITTIES of Dublin, and other things. Penned and pictured by Pater Padus [J. W. Poe]. 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin [1904] DIVAN (a) of the dates. Micah, and other poems. By Swithin Saint Swith- aine [Thomas Meadows]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 178. [Bill. Lind.] London, 1900 DIVERTING (the) history of John Gilpin ! Shewing how he went farther than he intended and came safe home again. [By William Cowper.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] Birmingham [1790?] For other editions, see “ Gilpin’s rig ... ”, “ The journey of John Gilpin ... ”, “The history of John Gilpin ... ”, and “John Gilpin’s journey ...” *D IVERTING (the) works of the famous Miguel de Cervantes . . . Not the work of Cervantes. It is a translation by Edward Ward of the “ Para todos ” of Juan Perez de Montalban. For a reissue (1710) see “A Week’s entertainment at a wedding . . .” DIVINE meditations written by an honourable person. Whereto is ad- joyned a determination of the question, whether men ought to kneele at the receipt of the Holy Communion, and an essay on friendship. [By Sir Isaac Wake.] 8vo. Pp. 162. [Oxf. Bib/. Soc. Proc. 11. ii. 105.] London, 1641 DIVINE observations upon the London- Ministers letter against toleration : By his synodicall, priestbyter - all, nationall, provinciall, classicall . . . Reverend Yongue Martin Mar-Priest, sonne and heir to Old Martin the Metropolitane. . . . [Richard Overton]. [D. N. B. vol. 42, p. 386.] Europe, 1646 DIVINE (the) promises considered, and the duty of Christians to be followers of those who thro’ faith and patience, inherit them ; a funeral discourse [on Heb. vi. 12] occasion’d by the death of Mrs Hannah Williams. [By Thomas Prince.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1746 *DIVINE (the) sacrament . . . Signed : W. M. DIVORCE (the) ; a musical entertainment. . . . [By Lady Dorothea Dubois.] 8vo. Pp. 18. [Library of Congress, Cat. of Opera Librettos.] London, 1771 DIVYSION (the) of the places of the lawe and of the Gospell, gathered owt of the Hooly Scripture by Petrum Artopocum[John Bradford, Prebendary of St Paul’s]. 8vo. B. L. [D. N. B. vol. 6, p. 157.] London, 1584 DOCTOR Caesar Crowl; mind-curer : a novel. By Paul Cushing [Roland Alexander Wood-Seys]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London [1888] DR Esperanto’s [i.e. L. Samenhof’s] International tongue. Preface and complete method. Edited for Englishmen by J. St. 8vo. Pp. 39. [Brit. Mus.] Warsaw, 1888 DOCTOR Knock; a comedy in three acts. By Jules Romain [Louis Fari- goule]. In an English version by H. Granville-Barker. 8vo. Pp. 95. [Brit. Musi] London, 1925 DR Syntax in search of the picturesque. By William Combe.] i6mo. Pp. 282. Brit. Musi] London [c. 1845] DOCTRINE (the) of Christ’s glorious kingdom, or the New Jerusalem State, now shortly approaching, is exceeding comfortable and very advantageous to all faithful Christians. . . . [By William Sherwin.] 4to. Pp. 4. [Brit. Mus.\ [London ?] 1672 No title-page. DOCTRINE (the) of life, with some of its theological applications. [By William B. Greene.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ Boston, 1843 Signed : W. B. G. DOCTRINE (the) of our Lord and his Apostles cleared from the false glosses and misrepresentations of . . . W. Law in his late dialogue between a Methodist and a Churchman. . . . By a hearer of the Apostles [William Cudworth]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1761 DOCTRINE (the) of the Church of England, established by Parliament against disobedience and wilfull rebellion. Published by O. I. for satisfaction of his parishioners of Watton in the County of Hartford. [By William Ingoldsby?] [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 207.] London, 1642 DOCTRINE (the) of the Holy Trinity placed in its due light, by an answer to a late book, entituled, Animadversions upon Dr Sherlock’s Book, &c. Also the doctrine of the incarnation of our Lord asserted and explain’d. [By William Sherlock.] \Brit. Musi] London,1694 DOCUMENTS and proceedings connected with the donation of a free public Library ... by William Brown, Esq.,M.P.,to . . . Liverpool. [Edited by A. H. i.e. Abraham Hume.] 8vo. Pp. 87. [Brit. Mus.] Liverpool, 1858 DOCUMENTS connected with the foundation of the Anglican Bishopric in Jerusalem; and with the protest against Bishop Gobat’s proselytism. [Collected and edited by J. M. Neale.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1853 Signed : J. M. N. DOINGS in London ; or day and night scenes of the frauds, frolics, manners and depravities of the Metropolis. [By George Smeeton.] . . . Seventh edition. 8vo. Pp. iv. 423. [Brit. Musi] [1840?] Preface signed : G. S. DOLLAR Share values ; Malayan Rubber Company prospects critically analysed by the Straits Times. [By A. W. Still.] 8vo. Pp. 119. [Brit. Musi] Singapore [1911] Preface signed : A. W. S. DOLPHIN (the); or, Grand Junction nuisance : proving that seven thousand families in Westminster and its suburbs are supplied with water, in a state, offensive to the sight . . . and destructive to health. [By John Wright.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 104. [Brit. Musi] 1827 DOMESTIC portraiture ; or the successful application of religious principle in the education of a family, exemplified in the memoirs of three of the deceased children of the Rev. Legh Richmond. [By Thomas Fry, M.A., Rector of Emberton.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] 1833 DOMINOES and solitaire. By “Berkeley” [W. H. Peel]. 8vo. Pp. 56. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.] London,1890 One of “ The Club Series.” D O M U S doloris. By W. Compton Leith [Ormonde Maddock Dalton]. 8vo. Pp. 222. London, 1919 DON Caesar de Bazan ; a drama. . . • Translated from the French of Dumanoir and Dennery. . . . With remarks . . . by D. G. [George Daniel]. i2mo. Pp. 45. [Brit. Musi] London [1848] DON Juan. [A novel.] By Azorin [Jose Martinez Ruiz]. Translated from the Spanish by Catherine A. Phillips. 8vo. Pp. 144. [Brit. Musi] London, 1923 *DON Juan Lamberto . . . The D. N. B. says this is undoubtedly by Thomas Flatman. *DON Tarquinio ... By Fr. Rolfe [Fred. Baron Corvo]. Reverse. Corvo is the pseud, and Rolfe the author’s name. *DON Zara del Fogo . . . For another edition in the same year (1656) see “ Wit and Fancy in a maze . . . ” DONNA Julia. Original opera. [By Harald Schmidt.] [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 91.] Christiania [1876] DON’T-KNOW (the) family: a story for everybody. By Noel Hope [Sarah L. Morewood]. With illustrations by the author. 8vo. Pp. 151. [Brit. Musi] London [1904] DONZELLA desterrada; or, the banished virgin. By Gio. Fran. Biondi. Englished by I. H. of Graies Inne, Gent. [James Hayward]. 4to. [Bollard and Redgrave.] London, 1635 DOOM (the) dealer. [A novel.] By R. O. Chipperfield [Isabel Egenton Ostrander]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Musi] London [1925] DOOR (the). [A poem.] By E. H.W. M. [E. H. W. Meyerstein]. 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1911 DORES de Gualdim; a tale of the Portuguese Revolution of 1640. [By John Mason Neale]. 8vo. Pp. 94. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1866] DORMIE one, and other golf stories. By Holworthy Hall [Harold Everett Porter]. 8vo. Pp. xiii. 349. [Brit. Musk] New York, 1917 DOROTHY Dix, her book ; an everyday book for everyday people. [By Mrs Elizabeth Meriwether Gilmer.] 8vo. Pp. 370. [Publishers' Weekly, nth Sept. 1926]. New York, 1926 DOROTHY’S dilemma; a tale of the time of Charles I. . . . By Caroline Austin [Mrs-Whitway]. 8vo. Pp. 192. [Brit. Mus.] London [1886] DOUBLE (the) scoop. [A novel.] By Boyd Cable [Ernest Andrew Ewart]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Mi/s.] London,1924 DOUBTS (the) of Diana. [A novel.] By Evelyn Tempest [Edward W. D. Cuming]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 312. [Brit. Musk] London [1911] DOWN river. [A novel.] By Seamark [Austin J. Small]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Brit. Mus.] London [1929] *DOWN the corridors of time. . . . For Grafton-Smith, read Crafton-Smith. *DOWNAM’S Bulletin. . . . For Downam’s, read Downman’s. DOZEN (a) ballads for the times about Church abuses. [By T. i.e. Martin F. Tupper.] Reprinted . . . from The Daily News. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1854 DRAUGHTS and backgammon. By “Berkeley” [W. H. Peel]. 8vo. Pp. 128. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cardsk] London,1890 One of “ The Club Series.” DRAUGHTSMEN. Edna Clarke Hall, Henry Rushbury, Randolph Schwabe, Leon Underwood. [By Reginald H. Wilenski.] 4to. Pp. 27, pi. 36. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 Signed : R. H. W. DRAWNLINE (the). [A novel.] By E. Shaw Cowley [Elsie Mary Boulton]. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1923 *DREADFULL (the) character of a drunkard . . . The tenth edition (1681) was issued under the name of Andrew Jones, a name Hart makes use of elsewhere. See “ The Dying man’s last sermon ...” DREAM (the) man. [A novel.] By Pamela Wynne [Winifred Mary Scott]. 8vo. Pp. 336. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 DREAM (the) of Ravan ; a mystery. [Preface signed: G. R. S. M. i.e. G. R. S. Mead.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1895 DREAM, trance or vision? ... By Ram’s Horn : C. W. B. [Charles Wesley Brabner]. 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1915 DREAMER (the) and other poems. By Helen Cash [Helen Stocker]. 8vo. Pp. 62. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1918 DREAMING spires ; a novel. By Diana Patrick [Mrs Desemea Newman Wilson]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1924 DRONE (the) ; a play in three acts. By Rutherford Mayne [Samuel Waddell]. 8vo. Pp. 68. Dublin, 1909 DRUM-WAVE (the) island and other verses of the China coast. By B. N. [Bernard Nunn]. 4to. Pp. 58. [Brit. Mus.] Hong Kong, 1904 DRY fish and wet ; tales from a Norwegian seaport by Elias Kraemmer [Anthon Bernhard Nilsen]. [Petter- sen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 95.] London, 1922 DUBLIN (a) ballad. By Dermot O’Byrne [Arnold Bar]. 1918 DUBLIN (the) strike. By A. E. [George William Russell]. 8vo. Dublin [1913] DURHAM Sanctuary. Sanctuarium Dunelmense. . . . [Preface signed : T. C. i.e. Temple Chevallier.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Durham, 1837 Surtees Society publication. DUSTBIN doggerels. By Gulielmus Vulpes [W. H. Fox]. 8vo. Pp. 55. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1926 DUTY (the) and support of believers in life and death ; a funeral sermon [on Gen. xlix. 18] on the death of Mrs M. Smith. . . . [By Timothy Cruso.] 4to. Pp. 27. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1688 Signed : T. C. DYBBUK (the) ; a play in four acts. By S. Ansky [Solomon Rappoport]. Translated from the original Yiddish by H. G. Alsberg and Winifred Katzin. . . . 8vo. Pp. 145. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 DYING (the) speech of Old Tenor, on the 31st of March 1750. [Verse. By Joseph Green.] Fol. S. sh. [Magazine of History^ extra No. 94.] Boston, 1750 D’YOU know this one ? A collection of . . . humorous stories . . . retold by Artemas [Arthur Telford Mason]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 128. [Brit. Mus.] London [1924] E. W. Montagu. An autobiography. [Edited, or rather written, by Y. i.e. E. V. Kenealy.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] 1869 EAGLE (the) and the robin; an apologue, translated from the original of ^Esop. ... By H. G. L. Mag [Horatio Gram, Master of Laws]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1709 EAGLES black and white. The fight for the sea. By Augur [Vladimir Polyakov]. 8vo. Pp. 205. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1929 *EARLE (the) of Pembroke’s speech in the House of Peeres. . . . 1648 By Samuel Butler ? [Brit. Mus.] EARLY English printed books in the University Library, Cambridge. [A catalogue. By C. E. Sayle.] 8vo. 4 vols. [Brit. Mus.] Cambridge, 1900-7 Signed : C. E. S. EARLY (an) news-sheet ; the Russian invasion of Poland in 1563. . . . With an introduction and historical notes, and a full translation into English [by J. C. H. i.e. John Camden Hotten]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1874 EARLY (the) Paris editions of Columbus’s First “Epistola.” Extract from the Centralblatt fur Bibliothekswesen. [By Henri Harrisse.] 8vo. Pp. 6. [Brit. Mus.] Leipzig, 1893 Signed : B. A. V. EARTHOLOGY; humanity characterized by the earth, sun and zodiac : with prognostications from the moon. By Albert Raphael [Albert Raphael Borrill]. 8vo. Pp. 222. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1901 EAST (the) Indian chronologist, where the historical events respecting the East India Company are briefly arranged in succession, from the date of their charter in 1600 to the 4th of June 1801. [By John Hawkesworth.] 4to. Pp. vi. 90. [Brit. Mus.j Bengal Past and Present, xxxii. 155.] Calcutta, 1801 [-02] EASTER Day, and other stories, on the Book of Common Prayer. By K. M. [Kate Maclellan]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] New York [1864 ?] EASTER holidays ; or domestic conversations designed for the instruction ... of young people. [By Althea Fanshawe.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 336. [Brit. Mus.] Bath, 1797 EBB and flow ; the curiosities and marvels of the sea shore. . . . Edited by the editor of Elements of physical science [Robert William Fraser]. New edition. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1865 The edition of i860 bears the author’s name. ECARTE and euchre. By “Berkeley” [W. H. Peel]. Illustrated. 8vo. Pp. 79. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playitig cards.] London, 1890 One of “ The Club Series.” ECCENTRICS in Paradise, and other essays. [By William Inglis Morse.] 8vo. Pp. 94. [Publishers’ Weekly, 1st Jan. 1927.] Boston, 1926 *ECCLESIA Dei . . . For Frew, read Drew. 11 has been wrongly attributed to William John Blew. ECHOES. By two writers [Rudyard Kipling and his sister Beatrice]. i2mo. Pp. vi. 72. [Martindell’s Bibl. of Kiplmg.] Lahore [1884] ECHOES from “The Tin Trumpet,” or heads and tales for the wise and waggish. By Paul Chatfield, M.D. [Horace and James Smith]: compiled byj. Ingram. i2mo. Pp. 128. [Brit. A/us.] Glasgow, 1891 See “The Tin Trumpet.” ECLECTISISM ; an historical dissertation. [By H. F. Corbyn ?] Fol. [Brit. Mus.] Calcutta [1884] ^EDINBURGH’S address to the country. This is now ascribed tentatively to Allan Ramsay. See A. Gibson’s Allan Ramsay, p. 105. EDUCATION in Turkey. [Signed: T. C. T. i.e. Tillman C. Trowbridge.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1872] ^EDWARD Irving and the Catholic Apostolic Church. . . . The Brit. Mus. attributes this to William Tarbet. EFFIGIES Amoris, in English ; or the picture of love unveil’d. [Translated from the Latin of Robert Waring by Phil-icon-erus,^^^. for John Norris.] 8vo. Pp. 126. [D.N.B. vol. 59, p. 386.] London, 1682 The Latin original entitled “Amoris effigies” [1649?] was also anonymous. For another translation, see “The effigies of love.” EGREGIOUS (the) English. By Angus MacNeill [Thomas William Hodgson Crosland]. 8vo. Pp. 200. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1903 EGYPT, Ethiopia, and the Peninsula of Sinai. [A review of “ Letters from Egypt, Ethiopia, and the Peninsula of Sinai,” by R. Lepsius.] Reprinted from the Journal of Sacred Literature. [By Reginald Stuart Poole.] 8vo. Pp. 18. [Brit. Mies.] London, 1854 Signed : R. S. P. EIGHT centuries of reports ; or, eight hundred cases solemnly adjudged in the Exchequer Chamber, or upon writs of error. Publish’d originally in French and Latin by Judge Jenkins. Now carefully translated. . . . Second edition. ... By a Gentleman of the Middle-Temple [Theodore Barlow]. Fol. Pp. x. 341. [Brit. A/us.] [London] 1734 EIGHTEEN of them ; singular stories. By Warwick Simpson [William Pett Ridge]. 8vo. Pp. 250. [Brit. Mus.] London [1894] EIGHTH (the) day. [A poem. By Richard Beling.] The second edition. 4to. Pp. 78. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1661 *EIKf2N tov Qrjpiov . . . Ascribed also to Thomas Delaune. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl.] ELEANOR. [A tale.] By the author of A visit to my birthplace [- Bunbury]. i2mo. [Brit. A/us.] Dublin, 1830 ELECTION (the); an interlude: written some years since. [By D. H. Urquhart?] 8vo. Pp. 21. [Brit. Mus.] N.p. 1784 *ELECTION (the) of aliens . . . This is a republication of three pamphlets, issued in the same year. “ An extract from the case of the electors . . “A letter to the Rev. Dr M.,” and “A second letter to Dr M.” See above. ELECTRIC (the) eel. [A poem. By James Perry.] 4to. [Bibl. Arcana, 1885.] London, 1777 ELECTRICAL Gold Extraction. By W. M. [Walter Mills], 8vo. Pp. 12. [Brit. A/us.] London, 1888 ELEGANT epistles. [By Vicesimus Knox.] 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1790 An improved and enlarged edition appeared in 1807. See also “Models of letters . . .” ELEGIAC lines on C. V. de Bonstetten. [By Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [Geneva, 1832] Signed : S. E. B. VOL. VI. ELEGY (an) in memory of that valiant champion, Sir Robert Grierson of Lag . . . who died Decern. 23rd, 1733. (The sixth edition, corrected and enlarged.) [Probably by William Irving, Schoolmaster of Hoddam.] [F. Miller's Poets of Dumfriesshire, p. 98.] Glasgow, 1757 Other editions are entitled “ Lag’s elegy,” “The Laird of Lag’s elegy,” and “An elegy on Sir Robert Grierson of Lag.” It has been ascribed to two other schoolmasters—John Orr, and William Wilson, schoolmaster at Douglas. ELEGY on Maggy Johnston (John Cowper. — Lucky Wood. — Lucky Spence’s last advice.). [By Allan Ramsay.] Pp. 16. [A. Gibson’s Allan Ramsay, p. 123.] [Edinburgh, 1719] No title-page. The first three appeared in 1718 with a title-page “Elegies on Maggy Johnston, etc.” and with Ramsay’s name. *ELEGY (an) on the death of an amiable young lady . . . To which are prefixed three . . . letters [signed, G. D., A. E. i.e. Hon. Andrew Erskine, and J. B. i.e. James Boswell]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1761 ELEGY (an) on the deplorable and never enough to be lamented death of the illustrious and serene Charles II. [With an epitaph signed P. K. i.e. Patrick Ker.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1685 ELEGY (an) on the late Honorable Titus Hosmer, Esq., one of the Counsellors of the State of Connecticut. [By Joel Barlow.] i6mo. [Evans’ Amer. Bibl.] Hartford [1780] ELEGY (an) to a young lady, in the manner of Ovid. By-[James Hammond]. With an answer by a lady, author of the Verses to the imitator of Horace [Lady Mary Wortley Montagu]. Fol. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1733 ELEGY (an) written at Amwell, in Hert- forshire, MDCCLXViil. [By John Scott.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1769 ELEGY (an) written in an empty Bath Assembly room. [By Richard Owen Cambridge.] 4to. [Straus’ Robert Dodsley.] 1753 ELEMENTA opticas ; nova . . . et compendiosa methodo explicata. [By Thomas Powell, Canon of St David’s.] 8vo. [Wood’s Athen. Oxon. iii. 507.] Londini, 1651 Dedication signed : T. P. In two congratulatory Latin poems prefixed, the author is addressed by the brothers Vaughan as “ Docte Poelle ! ” Y ELEMENTARY (the) principles of tactics, with new observations on the military art. Written in French by Sieur B-[Le Roy de Bosroger] and translated by an officer of the British army. 8vo. {Brit. Musi] London, 1771 ELEMENTS of conveyancing. . . . [By Charles Barton.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1802 ELEMENTS of criticism. [By Henry Home, Lord Karnes.] With the author’s last corrections and additions. First American from the seventh London edition. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1796 ELEMENTS (the) of fortification . . . Translated . . . from the works of the most celebrated authors. . . . [Edited by Stephen Riou ?] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1746 ELEMENTS (the) of French grammar. By Lhomond. Revised and enlarged by A. M. D. G * * * [J. N. Loriquet]. i2mo. Pp. 158. [Brit. Musi] London, 1826 ELEMENTS (the) of geography. . . . [By Alfred Mills.] 8vo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1840] ELEMENTS (the) of geography, astronomy and chronology. [By William Plume ?] i2mo. [Brit. Musi London [1839^ ELEMENTS of Latin Grammar. [By Richard Valpy.] Eighth edition. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1809 ELEMENTS of modern gardening ; or, the art of laying out of pleasure grounds. . . . [By John Trusler?' 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1800 ELEMENTS of mythology ; or, an easy and concise history of the pagan deities. . . . [By Richard Valpy.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1815 ELEUSINIA. By a former member of H. C. S. [Hereford Cathedral School, Arthur Machen]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Danielson’s Bibl. of Mac hen.] Hereford, 1881 11,506 knots in the Sunbeam in 1883. [By Thomas, Earl Brassey.] . . . 8vo. Pp. 56. [Brit. Musi] London, private print, 1884 ELIA ; or Spain fifty years ago. Translated from the Spanish of Fernan Caballero [Cecilia Francisca Josefa Arrom de Ayala]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1868 ELIANA ; being the hitherto uncollected writings of Charles Lamb. [Edited by J. E. B. i.e. J. E. Babron.] 8vo. Pp. 437. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1866 ELI DUKE, Count of Yoeloc ; a tragedy. [By William Caldwell Roscoe, barrister]. 8vo. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. iii. 282.] London, 1846 *ELIM and Maria ; a pastoral tragedy in two acts. By a friend to the oppressed [Thomas Muir, of Hunters- hill, advocate]. 8vo. Pp. 26. [R. Inglis’ Dram. Writers, p. 144.] Glasgow, 1792 ELISE, or Innocencie guilty; a new romance, translated into English [from the French of Jean Pierre Camus] by Jo. Jennings, Gent. Fol. Pp. 150. [Brit. Musi] 1655 ELIUS ; a romance. [Verse. By W. Bilderdijk]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Amsterdam, 1788 ^ELIZABETH’S children . . . For Westrop, read Westrup. ELIZAES memoriall. King James his arrival. And Romes Downefall. [In verse. Signed A. N. i.e. Anthony Nixon?] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1603 ELLAN Vannin. [Poems.] By J. K. Josephine Kermode]. 8vo. Pp. 80. Bibl. cel tic a, 1910] Douglas, Isle of Man, 1911 ELLEN Gray; or unselfishness. [A tract. By Martha Landels.] 24mo. [Brit. Musi] [London?] private print, 1861 Signed: M. L. ELOHIM ; I am that I am. The Lord God Jehovah. ... By L. T. J. [L. T. James]. i6mo. Pp. 47. [Brit. Musi] Bristol, 1930 ELOPE if you must. By E. J. Rath [J. Chauncey Corey Brainerd and Edith Rathbone Jacobs Brainerd]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [.Publishers’ Weekly, 31st July 1926]. New York, 1926 ELOPEMENT (the); or, the deadly struggle. [A novel. By Lionel Bouverie.] 8vo. 3 vols. [F. Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. iii. 328.] London, 1838 *ELSIE. Translated . . . For Wilhelm Heimburg [Martha Behrens], read W. Heimburg [Bertha Behrens]. EMANUEL Swedenborg: a lecture revised and extended. By a Bible Student [Rev. John Hyde]. Seventh edition. 8vo. Pp. viii. 120. [Swedenborg Bibl. p. 670.] London, 1901 The first edition appeared as “ Swedenborg, the man of the age.” EMERITUS-PROFESSOR (the); a sketch of the lastyears of William Swan, LL.D., Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of St Andrews. By J. L. G. [James L. Galbraith, Librarian in Glasgow University]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 68. Private print, Selkirk [1895 ?] Presentation copy from the author. EMPEROR (the) Napoleon / III., and England. [By Viscount L. E. A. de la Guerronniere.] Translated from the French. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1858 EMPIRE anthem. [By Mary Jane Sloan.] 8vo. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] N.P. [1905] Signed: Naols. EMPORIUM (the); a novel of modern society. By Alec Holmes [Lady- Scott]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 363. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1912 ENCHANTED (the) lake of the Fairy Morgana ; from the Orlando Inamorato of Francesco Berni. [Translated by R. A. i.e. Richard Alsop.] 8vo. Pp. vii. 67. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1806 END (the) of a world. By Claude Anet [Jean Schopfer]. Translated by Jeffery E. Jeffery. 8vo. Pp. 268. [Publishers' Weekly, 20th Aug. 1927.] New York, 1927 *END (the) of oppression . . . For F. Spence, read Thomas Spence, bookseller. ENDIMION and Phoebe. ... [By Michael Drayton. Edited by J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.\ London [c. 1870] ENGLAND and Ireland; a counterproposal. By C. B. [Rt. Hon. Charles Booth]. 8vo. Pp. 7- [Brit. Mus.] London, 1886 ENGLAND bought and sold; or, a discovery of a horrid design to destroy the antient liberty of all the free-holders in England. . . . By a late libel en- tituled The certain way to save England. [By Dr John Nalson.] Fol. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1681 ENGLAND’S duty to Israel’s Sons. . . . By a clergyman of the Church of England [Alexander MacCauI]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1849 ^ENGLAND’S faithful reprover . . . For Adlington, read Allington. ENGLAND’S joy. [Verses on the defeat of Irish rebels under the Earl of Tyrone. By Richard Verstegan.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] [1601?] Signed : R. V. ^ENGLISH (the) and India . . . Signed: H. L. ENGLISH (the) ayre. By Peter Warlock [Philip Heseltine]. 8vo. Pp. 142. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1926 ENGLISH (the) bijou almanack for 1836 [etc.] . . . Poetically illustrated by L. E. L. [Letitia Elizabeth Landon]. . . . 4to. [Brit. Mush] London, 1835, et seq. ENGLISH (an) Carmelite ; the life of Catharine Burton. . . . Collected . . . by Father Thomas Hunter. [Edited by H. J. C. i.e. Henry James Coleridge.] 8vo. Pp. xxxii. 282. [Brit. Mush] London, 1876 “ Quarterly Series,” vol. 18. ENGLISH (the) dancing master; or, plaine and easie rules for the dancing of country dances, with the tune to each dance. [With an introduction by J. P. i.e. John Playford.] 4to. [Brit. Mush] London, 1651 The first edition. The second and subsequent editions were published under the title “ The dancing master,” q.v. ENGLISH handwriting. [By Robert Bridges.] With thirty-four facsimile plates, etc. 8vo. [Brit. Mush] Oxford, 1926 Signed : R. B. S. P. E. Tract No. 23. *ENGLISH hexameter translations from Schiller, Gothe, Homer, Callinus and Meleager. Signed : J. F. W. H. i.e. Sir John F. W. Herschel, W. W. i.e. William Whewell, J. C. H. i.e. Julius Charles Hare, and E. C. H. i.e. Edward Craven Hawtrey.] 8vo. Pp. vii. 275. [Brit. Mush] London, 1847 ^ENGLISH (the) Iarre . . . The initials I. W. P. of the translator are now given (Pollard and Redgrave; Brit. Musi) as John Wilson, Priest. ENGLISH Iliads; or, a sea-fight reviewed in a poem, occasioned by the death of a person of honour (Lord Maidstone) slain in the late war between the English and the Dutch. By J. W. [John Warly?]. 4to. Pp. 22. [Brit. Mush] London, 1674 *ENGLISH (the) in India . . . Not by T. H. Ottley, but by W. B. Hockley. Ottley was at one time considered as a possible author of Pandurang Hari but this is now given up. ENGLISH miscellanies; consisting of various pieces of divinity, morals, politicks, philosophy and history. [Dedication signed : J. T. i.e. John Tompson.] 8vo. Pp. 608. [Brit. Mush] Gottingen, 1737 ENGLISH (an) padlock. [A poem. By Matthew Prior.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mush] London, 1705 ENGLISH (the) pilot. Describing the sea-coasts, capes, head-lands, soundings, sands ... in the whole northern navigation. [By John Seller.] Fol. Pp. 78. [Brit. Mush] London, 1770 *ENGLISH Presbyterian eloquence . . . For T. L—, read T. L- ^ENGLISH Puritanisme . . . Editions in 1640 and 1641 were published as Written by William Ames, D.D. ENGLISH-IRISH (an) dictionary, containing upwards of eight thousand English words, with their corresponding explanation in Irish. [By T. Connellan.] i2mo. Pp. vii. 144. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1814 ENGLISHMAN’S (the) choice and true interest in a vigorous prosecution of the war against France, and serving King William and Queen Mary, and acknowledging their right. [By Daniel Defoe.] 4to. {Brit. Mus.] London,1694 ENGLISHMAN’S (an) love letters. [By Thomas W. H. Crosland.] 8vo. Pp. 74. [W. S. Brown’s Life of Crosland.] London, 1901 A parody of “ An Englishman’s love- letters ” by Laurence Housman. *ENQUIRY (an) after happiness . . . Signed : R. L. ENQUIRY (an) into the conduct of Capt. M—n [Savage Mostyn] ; being remarks on the minutes of the Court Martial, and other incidental matters. . . . By a Sea-officer [Admiral Edward Vernon]. 8vo. {D. N. B. vol. 58, p. 271.] London, 1745 ENQUIRY (an) into the danger and consequences of a war with the Dutch. 'By Daniel Defoe?] 8vo. Pp. 40. Brit. Mus.] London, 1712 *ENQUIRY (an) into the late supposed manifestations. For Percival, read Perceval. ENQUIRY (an) into the state of the manufacturing population, and the causes and cures of the evils therein existing. [By William Rathbone Greg.] 8vo. Pp. 40. {Brit. Mus.\ London, 1831 ENQUIRY (an) whether the guilt of the present civil war in America ought to be imputed to Great Britain or America. [By John Roebuck.] {Brit. Mas.] Dublin, 1776 ENTERPRISING (the) burglar. By Hearnden Balfour [Beryl Hearnden and Eva Balfour]. 8vo. Pp. 305. {Amer. Cat.] London [1928] ENTERTAINING (an) dialogue called The toy-shop, exhibiting a true picture of the follies and foibles of men and women. [By Robert Dodsley.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] Belfast, 1827 Earlier editions, 1735> etc. bear the author’s name. ENTERTAINING (the) history of Betsy Bloomer ; or, little stories, made still less. [By Eleanor Congleton.] i2mo. {Sotheby’s Cat. 30th April 1928.] Bastia {e. 1795] ENTERTAINMENT (the) of the high and mighty monarch King Charles I. into his auncient and royall city of Edinburgh,June 15, 1633. [By William Drummond, of Hawthornden ?] 4to. {Pollard and Redgrave.] Edinburgh, 1633 In a copy of Crawford’s History of the University of Edinburgh, which is in the library of Alexander Gardyne, Esq., of Hackney, there is the following MS. note by George Chalmers, the celebrated Scotch antiquary—“1633, June.—Mr John Adamson, Principal of the Ministry ; Mr William Drummond, of Hawthornden ; and Mr Thomas Crawford, Master of the High School devised the pageants and composed the speeches for the reception of Charles I. in Edinburgh.” [R. Inglis, Dramatic Writers of Scotland, p. 141.] ^ENTHRALLED and released . . . For Burstenlinden, mz^Burstenbinder. ENTHUSIASM. By the author of Natural History of Enthusiasm [Isaac Taylor, of Stanford Rivers]. 8vo. {E?ig. Cat.. 1801-1836, p. 188.] London, 1836 ENTHUSIASM explained; or a discourse on the nature, kind and cause of enthusiasm. . . . Extracted from a learned piece of a late eminent writer {i.e. from the enthusiasmus triumphatus of Henry More, written under the pseudonym Philophilus Parresiastes]. 8vo. Pp. 32. {Brit. Musi] London,1739 EOLOPOESIS ; American Rejected Addresses now first published from the original manuscripts. [By Jacob Bigelow.] 8vo. Pp. 240. [Sabin’s Diet.] New York [1855] EONEGUSKI, or, the Cherokee chief; a tale of past wars. By an American [Robert Strange]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Appleton’s Diet, of Amer. Biog.] Washington, 1839 EPIGRAMS and humorous verses. By Rambling Richard [Rowland Eyles Egerton-Warburton]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 74. [J. E. Bailey’s The Warburtons of Arley, p. 23.] London, 1867 EPIGRAMS of Martial Englished [by Henry Killigrew, D.D.] . . . 8vo. Pp. 316. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1693 EPILOGUE (the) to Tamerlane, on the suppression of the rebellion. [By Horace Walpole, Lord Orfordj. Fol. [Straus’ Robert Dodsley.] 1746 EPILOGUE (an) to the praise of Angus. By Seumas O’Sullivan [James Starkey]. 8vo. Pp. 38. [Boyd’s Irelandds Lit. Renais.] Dublin, 1914 EPISCOPACY; what ground is there in Scripture or in history for accounting it an institution of God? By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1874] EPISODES. [Short stories.] By E. Jayne Gilbert [Eliza Margaret J. Humphreys]. Svo. Pp. 284. [Brit. Musi] London [1924] A later edition was issued under the author’s better known pseudonym “ Rita.” *EPISTLE (the) exhortatorye . . . For [London], read [Antwerp ?]. EPISTLE (an) to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales ; occasioned by the state of the nation. By H. Stanhope [William Bond?] Svo. Pp. 15. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, pp. 133, 263.] London, 1720 EPISTLE (an) to the Chevalier ; and a congratulatory poem to Mr Secretary Addison. [By Nicholas Amherst.] [R. Straus5 The Unspeakable Curll, p. 246.] London, 1717 EPISTLE (an) to W— H— [William Hamilton, of Gilbertfield] on the receiving the compliment of a barrel of Loch-Fyne herrings from him, 19th December 1719. [By Allan Ramsay.] Svo. [A. Gibson’s Allan Ramsay, p. 128.] [Edinburgh, 1719] Signed: A. R. EPITAPH on the late deceased, that truely-noble and renowned lady, Elizabeth Cromwel, mother to his Highness the Lo. Protector, etc. [By J. L. i.e. J. Long.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Alusi] London, 1655 EPITHALAMIUM on occasion of the nuptials of the Marquis de Villeneuve- Esclapon-Vence and of the Princesse Jeanne Bonaparte. By W. C. B. W. [W. C. B. Wyse]. 4to. Pp. 15. Eng. and Fr. [Brit. Musi] Plymouth, 1882 EPITHALAMIUM (an) on the marriage of William Faversham and Julie Opp. [By Richard Le Gallienne.] 8vo. [Lingel’s Bibl. of Le Gallietine. Private print, N.D. EPITHALAMIUM (an) upon the marriage of Capt. William Bedloe. I, he, who sung of humble Oates before Now sing a Captain and a man of war. [By Richard Duke.] Fol. S. sh. [D. N. B. vol. 4, p. 117.] [London, 1679] A satire. See also “ Funeral tears upon the death of Captain William Bedloe.” For the reference to Oates, see “ Panegyrick upon Oates.” VOL. VI. EPITOME of Latin prosody, for the use of schools. [By S. Connor.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Derby, 1823 EPITOME (an) of the history of faire Argenis and Polyarchus put in French [from the Latin of John Barclay] by N. Coefifetean ; translated into English [by Judith Man], 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1640 The Latin originals (1622-34) are not anonymous. ERA Victorias Humanae. The era of “ Victoria the humane.” . . . By a German Metaphysician [Johann Lhotsky]. Svo. [Brit. Musi] London, private print, 1847 ERLE Robert’s mice ; a tale in imitation of Chaucer, etc. By M. P. [Matthew Prior] Esq., corrected from the errors of a spurious edition. Fol. Pp. 4. [Brit. Musi] London, 1712 ERNEST Struggles ; or the comic incidents and anxious moments in connection with the life of a station master. By one who endured it [Hubert Simmons]. Svo. [Brit. Ahes. London, 1880 ERRORS (the) of the Church of Rome ; or, a demonstration that the Church and her Councils have erred. . . . [By Daniel Whitby.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1687 Other copies bear the title “ The fallibility of the Roman Church demonstrated,” q.v. ESCAPE. By Jeffery E. Jeffery [Jeffery Eardley Marston]. Svo. Pp. 319. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1922 ESSAY (an) concerning the true original extent and end of civil government. [By John Locke.] Svo. [Brit. Alusi] London, 1694 *ESSAY (an) on happiness . . . Wrongly ascribed to T. Newcomb. The second edition (1772) bears the author’s name (John Duncan). ESSAY on legacies for the Scots Law class (John S. More, Esq., Professor), 19th March i860. [By Francis Deas, LL.B., advocate.] i860 Presentation copy from the author. ESSAY on liberalism ; being an examination of the nature and tendency of the liberal opinions. . . . By the author of Italy and the Italians in the nineteenth century [Andre Vieusseux]. Svo. Pp. xii. 238. [Brit. Alusi] London,1823 *ESSAY (an) on ridicule. Not by William Whitehead. This is a confusion with a poem by Whitehead with the same title and bearing his name. [Brit. A/us.] *ESSAY (an) on tactics. The title continues “ By an adjutant.” Y 2 ESSAY (an) on the character and doctrines of Socrates. [By Robert Eyres Landor.] 4to. [LondonMercury, April 1927.] Oxford, 1802 ESSAY (an) on the constitutional power of Great Britain over the Colonies in America ; with the resolves of the Committee of the Province of Pennsylvania, and their instructions to their representatives in Assembly. [By John Dickinson.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 126. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1774 This was followed by “ A New Essay ...” ESSAY on the dissolution of the Union threatened by the Nullifiers of South Carolina. . . . Second part. Third edition, improved. [By Matthew Carey.] 8vo. Pp. 23-26. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 340.] Philadelphia, 1832 Signed : Hamilton. For the first part, see “ The Dissolution of the Union . . .” *ESSAY (an) on the original genius and writings of Homer . . . 1775. This edition was not anonymous. An earlier edition (1769) with the title “An Essay on the original genius of Homer” was anonymous. The work is an enlarged edition of the first part of “ A comparative view of the antient and present state of the Troade,” which was not anonymous (1767). ESSAY (an) on the pre-existence and divinity of Christ. [By Rev. Samuel Barnard.] i2mo. [Cushing’s Anon.] Boston [1790?] ESSAY (an) on the war and its duration. By A. J. S. [A. J. Smyth]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] n.p. 1916 ESSAY (an) to the pious memory of . . . G. Trosse of . . . Exon ... By J. M. [J. Mortimer?]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] Exon, 1713 ESSAY (an) towards an impartial account of the Holy Trinity and the deity of our Saviour as contained in the Old Testament. [By Edward Wells, D.D.] . . . 8vo. Pp. 46. [Brit. Afus.] London 1712 ESSAY (an) towards real moderation. [By Daniel Defoe.] The second edition. 8vo. Pp. 15. [P. Dottin’s Daniel De Foe.] London, 1716 ESSAY towards the probable solution of this question, whence comes the stork, the turtle, the crane, and the swallows. ... By a person of learning and piety [Rev. Charles Morton, of Charlestown, N.E.]. 8vo. Pp. 50. [Brit. Musi] London, 1703 ESSAY (an) upon improving and adding to the strength of Great Britain and Ireland by fornication. [By Daniel Maclauchlan, minister in Ardna- murchan.] 8vo. [Scott’s Fasti, second edition, vol. 4, p. 106.] [ 1734 ?] The writer was deposed for neglect of duty, immoral conduct, and publishing this pamphlet. ESSAY (an) upon the civil wars of France. . . . By Mr de Voltaire. To which is prefixed a short account of the author, by J. S. D. D. D. S. P. D. [Jonathan Swift, D.D., Dean of St Patrick’s, Dublin], 8vo. Dublin, 1760 *ESSAYES, or morall discourses . . . Not by Thomas Culpeper [Brit. Musi] The author is unknown. ESSAYS in the intervals of business. [By Sir Arthur Helps.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1841 ESSAYS on Jewish life and thought. (The letters of Benammi [Mordecai Epstein]: second series.) 8vo. Pp. 237. London, 1924 Information from a friend of the author. ESSAYS on the subjects of Church establishment, toleration, and the carelessness of the clergy, as productive of grievances and complaints. [By a licentiate of the Church of Scotland [W. S. Charlestown, of Aberlour]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 58. [Bill. Lind.] London, 1831 ESSAYS social and political. By the Rev. Sydney Smith. [With a memoir of the author signed: S. O. B. i.e. Samuel OrchartBeeton.] 8vo. Pp. 548. [Brit. Musi] London [1877] ^ESSENCE (the) of Algernon Sydney’s work ... Not by William Scott, Baron Stowell, but by William Scott, of the Middle Temple. ESSEX (the) champion ; or, the famous history of Sir Billy of Billerecay and his squire Ricardo. [By William Win- stanley.] 4to. Pp. 72. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1690] ESSEX Junta Exposed. The whole truth. By Hancock [Jonathan Russell]. 8vo. [Cushing’s Init. and Pseud, ii. 72 ; Sabin’s Dictionary.] New York, 1809 ESTHER ; a novel. By Francis Snow Compton [Henry Brooks Adams]. [Publishers' Weekly, 7th August 1926.] New York, 1884 ESULE (L’) di Roma; the exile of Rome, a heroic melodrama, in two acts ... as represented at the King’s Theatre. . . . [By Domenico Gilar- doni.] 8vo. Pp. 53. [Brit. Musi] London,1832 In Italian and English. ETHEL Norman’s secret. By Paul Trent [Edward Platt]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1915 ETHICA Lincolniensia. [Quotations, mostly Latin. Collected by Christopher Wordsworth, Bishop of Lincoln.] i6mo. Pp. 40. [Brit Mus.] Lincolniae, 1875 Dedication signed : C. L. ETHNOGRAPHICAL and folklore catechism. [By W. Crooke.] 4to. Pp. 28. [Brit Mus.] Mirzapur [1892] In English, Hindi and Hindustani. ETON letters, 1915-18. By a House Master[H. M. i.e. HughMacnaughten]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 184. [Brit. Must] Eton, 1921 ETON records. [Edited by R. A. Austen Leigh.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 96. [Brit Must] 1903 Signed : R. A. A. L. ETON A. [A poem. By C. L. i.e. Capel Lofft.] 4to. S. sh. [Brit. Mus. Bury [1806’ EUCHARISTIC meditations for choristers. . . . [The preface signed : D. G. i.e. David Greig.] i2mo. [Brit. Must] Oxford, 1872 EUCHRE ; how to play it : with rules, problems, cases, etc., and a chapter on progressive euchre. By the author of Poker: how to play it [Charles Welsh]. 8vo. Pp. 125. [F. Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards, p. 291.] London,1886 EUCHRE; its methods and maxims. By Lieut. Bougher [Charles Frederick Pardon]. Edited by Rawdon Crawley, Bart., of Queen’s Crawley, Hants. 32mo. Pp. 16. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cardst] London, 1889 Rawdon Crawley, Bart., of Queen’s Crawley, Hants, is also a pseud, for C. F. Pardon. See “ Cribbage.” EURHYTHMY ; the art of movement, as inaugurated by Rudolf Steiner. . . . [By D. S. O. i.e. D. S. Osmond, and M. K.] 8vo. Pp. 28. [Brit Must] London, 1924 EUROPE as it ought to be at the end of 1861. [By Hans Ross.] [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 110.] London, i860 EUROPEAN Years ; the letters of an idle man [Hermann Jackson Warner]. Edited by G. E. Woodberry. 8vo. Pp. xii. 373. [Brit. Must] Boston, 1911 EUTHANASIA. [By Annie Besant/ 8vo. [Brit. Must] Edinburgh [1875. EVANGELICAL (the) Alliance the embodiment of the Spirit of Christendom ; addressed to Dr . . . Sievewright, the Moderator of the Free Church. By [Rev. James Wright, Original Seceder] the author of a Letter to Dr Chalmers on the present position of the Free Church, etc. 8vo. Pp. v. 130. Edinburgh, 1847 Signed: “A Free Church Presbyterian.” Information from a friend of the author. EVANGELICAL sermons. By Thomas Adam, Rector of Wintringham. [Edited by J. S. i.e. James, Stillingfleet.] 8vo. Pp. xliv. 377. [Brit. Must] London,1781 EVANGELIUM regni . . . For C— Vitall, read Christopher Vitell. EVENING rest; or, closing thoughts for every day in the Christian year. . . . [The preface signed: T. T. C. i.e. Thomas Thellusson Carter.] i6mo. [Brit Must] London, 1868 EVENING (the) visit. By the author of Margaret Whyte, etc. [Lucy L. Cameron]. i2mo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Must] London, 1824 Signed : L. EVERYBODY’S guide to Parliament, giving the growth, development, and life of the Mother of Parliaments. By “ P. W. W.” [Philip Whitwell Wilson]. i6mo. Pp. 136. [Brit. Must] London [1917] *EVESHAMS (the); a novel. By Edmund White [James Blythe Patton]. Incorrect. Edmund White is the author’s real name, and Patton is a pseud, used by him. EVIDENCE (the) that would have been given by Mr-[John Cazenove], late a Continental merchant, before the Committee of secrecy appointed to inquire into the expediency of renewing the Bank [i.e. Bank of England] charter. 8vo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Must] London, 1832 EVIDENT (the) advantages to Great Britain and its allies from the approaching war : especially in matters of trade. . . . [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 44- [Brit. Must] London, 1727 EVIL (the) that men do; a military story of the period of the Indian Mutiny. By “Artax” [John Lancelot Eden]. 8vo. Pp. 338. [Brit. Must] London, 1926 EVOLUTION (the) of the modern organ, and its control. ... By J. M. B. [John Melvill Boustead]. 8vo. Pp. 47- [Brit. Must] London, 1919 EXACT (an) account of Romish doctrine in the case of conspiracy and rebellion. . . . See “An exact discoverie of Romish doctrine . . . ” *EXACT (an) discoverie of Romish doctrine . . . A later edition (1679) runs “An exact account of Romish doctrine ...” EXAMINATION of a tract on the alteration of the tariff written by Thomas Cooper, M.D. By a Pennsylvanian [Matthew Carey]. To which is annexed the tract of Judge Cooper, verbatim. 8vo. Pp. vii. 36, 27. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 335.] Philadelphia, 1824 EXAMINATION of the Charleston (S. C.) Memorial. [By Matthew Carey.] 8vo. Pp. 29. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 340.] [Philadelphia] N.D. Signed: Jefferson. EXAMINATION (an) ofthe Connecticut claims to lands in Pennsylvania. With an appendix containing extracts and copies taken from original papers. 8vo. Pp. 94, 32. [By William Smith, of Philadelphia.] [Evans’ Amer. Bibl.] Philadelphia, 1774 *EXAMI NATION (an) of the new tariff. For C. Churchill, Cambreleng, read Churchill C. Cambreleng. EXAMINATION of the pretensions of New England to commercial preeminence. [By Matthew Carey.] 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 340.] Philadelphia, 1814 EXAMINATION (an) of the Treaty of Paris, 30th March 1856; with some remarks on the proceedings of the Russian government. ... By Marcus [John Cochrane]. 8vo. {Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1878 ^EXAMINATION (the) of Tilenus . . . Signed : N. N. ■^EXAMPLES of the ornamental heraldry. . . . The Editor’s preface is signed in a monogram : W. S. M. EXCELLENCIE (the) of the mysterie of Christ Jesus. Declared in an exposition or meditation upon the 16. verse of the first epistle of Saint Paul unto Timothie. [By P. M. i.e. P. Muffet?] 8vo. {Brit. Mies.] London, 1590 EXCELLENT (an) and right learned meditacion in two prayers, bewailing the deserued plages of England. [By John Bale, Bishop of Ossory.] 8vo. {Pollardand Redgrave.] London, 1554 EXCELLENT memorables for all mourners. . . . Gathered out of Mr B.’s [Richard Baxter’s] prepared (though not preached) farewel sermon at Kederminster, Aug. 24, 1662, upon . . . John 16, 22. Fol. S. sh. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1691 EXCEPTIONS against Will. Rogers’s Cavills at J. P.’s Complaint, etc., taken out of his sixth part of his Christian- Quaker. [By John Pennington.] 4to. Pp. 14. {Brit. Musi] London, 1682 Signed : J. P. ^EXCURSION (an) from Paris to Fontainebleau. ... : The author’s name is Sir Edward Harrington. John is an error. EXCURSION (an) through Denmark and Sweden to Norway and North Germany. By L. I. G. P. [Louise I. G. Pyne]. Illustrated by photographs. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 113.] Dublin, 1878 EXEMPLA minora: or new English etiquette to be rendered into Latin ; adapted to the rules of the Latin Grammar lately printed at Eton. . . . A new edition revised [by T. M. i.e. Thomas Morell]. i2mo. {Brit. Musi] Eton, 1765 EXEMPLA moralia ; or, a second book of new English examples, to be rendered into Latin. . . . [By T. M. i.e. Thomas Morell.] i2mo. Pp. 273. {Brit. Mus.] Eton, 1762 A third book was published in 1765. EXERCISE (the) of a Christian life. Written in Italian by . . . Jaspar Loarte. . . . Corected by the translator (J. Saucer) [Stephen Brinkley], 8vo. {Brit. Musi] [n.p. 1679?] EXHORTACION (an) to the carienge of Chrystes crosse, wyth a true and brefe confutacion of false and papis- ticall doctryne. [By Miles Coverdale. i6mo. B. L. {Pollard and Redgrave. [London ? 1550 ? EXHORTATION (an) to the taking of the Solemne League and Covenant for reformation and defence of religion, and honour and happinesse of the King, and the peace and safety ,of the three kingdomes of England, Scotland and Ireland. [By Philip Nye.] {D. N. B. vol. 41, p. 281.] London, 1643 There was another edition in the following year. EXPATRIATED (the); a tale of modern Poland. By Leigh Cliffe [George Jones]. i2mo. {Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 121.] 1836 EXPEDIENT (an) to preserve peace and amity among Dissenting brethren. By a Brother in Christ [Stephen Marshall]. [D. N. B. vol. 36, p. 247.] London,1647 *EXPERIENCED (the) butcher . . . For J. Plumptree, read James Plumptre. EXPERIENCES (the) of a lady detective. ... [A novel. By William Stephens Hayward.] 8vo. Pp. 308. [Brit. Mus.] London [1884] *EXPERIMENTALL (an) discouerie of Spanish practises . . . This book declares itself to be translated by T. S. of V. i.e. Thomas Scott of Utrecht, but was really written by him. EXPIATION. By the author of Elizabeth and her German garden [Mary Beauchamp, later Countess von Arnim, then Countess Russell]. 8vo. Pp. 381. [Brit. Mies.] London, 1929 EXPLANATION (an) of the fashion and vse of three and fifty instruments of chirurgery, gathered out of Ambrosius Pareus . . . and done into English by H. C. [Helkiah Crooke]. 4to. Pp. 117. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1634 EXPLANATION (an) of the state of the case of the Edinburgh representation in Parliament. [By Henry Cockburn, Lord Cockburn.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1826 EXPOSITION of the Apostles’ Creed. By Bishop [Thomas] Ken ; from his Practice of divine love. [The introduction signed I. L. A. i.e. John Lavi- court Anderdon.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1852 EXPOSITION (an) of the whole fifth chapter of S. John’s Gospel; also notes on other choice places of Scripture, taken by a reverend divine now with God, and found in his study after his death written with his own hand. . . . [By William Gouge.] [Camb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1630 EXPOSITION (an) uppon the Booke of the Canticles, otherwise called Schelomons Song. Published ... by T, W. [Thomas Wilcox]. 8vo. Pp. 285. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1585 EXPOSURE (an) of the spy-system pursued in Glasgow during the years 1816-20. . . . The whole edited . . . by a Ten-pounder [Peter Mackenzie]. 8vo. 15 Nos. [Brit. Mus.] Glasgow, 1833 EXQUISITE (the) Perdita. [A novel.] By E. Barrington [L. Adams Beck]. 8vo. Pp. v. 372. [Who's Who.] London, 1926 EXTEMPORE to Walter Scott, Esq., of the publication of the new edition of the Bridal of Triermain. . . . [Signed: S. K. C., i.e. Robert Pierce Gillies?] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] [Edinburgh, 1829] EXTRA Turns ; or footlight flashes from a music hall matinee as heard in the stalls. By “Cue” [A. Leonard Summers]. 8vo. Pp. 51. [Brit. Mus.] London [1911] EXTRACT (an) for every day in the year. By B. B. [Sarah Anne Matson]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1850 The second edition, i860, has the author’s name. *EXTRACT from a late ingeniousauthor. For By J. Law, read By William Law, author of A Serious Call. EXTRACT (an) from a treatise on the spirit of prayer ; or, the soul rising out of the vanity of time into the riches of eternity. [By Anthony Benezet.] . . . i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Philadelphia, 1780 *EXTRACT (an) from the case of the electors . . . Followed by “A letter to the Rev. Dr M.” and “A second letter to Dr M.” All three were republished in the same year, also anonymously under the title “ The election of aliens . . .” q.v. EXTRACT (an) from the Spirit of Prayer [by William Law, author of A Serious Call]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1757 *EXTRACT (an) of letters, by Mrs L * * * [Mrs Lefevre. Edited by J. W. i.e. John Wesley]. Bristol, 1769 Subsequent editions (i773, 1792, 1796 and 1808) were not anonymous. EXTRACT (an) of the life of M. de Renty. . . . [Abridged from the French of J. B. de Saint Jure] by the Rev. J. Wesley. . . . Ninth edition. 24mo. Pp. 71. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1830 EXTRACTS from a journal of travels in North America. By Ali Bey [S. L. Knapp]. 8vo. Pp. 124. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1818 EXTRACTS from Juvenilia, or poems by G. Withers. [Edited with notes by Aretephilos, i.e. Alexander Dalrymple.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1785 EXTRACTS from the pilgrimage of St Caroline ; with notes by an Englishwoman [Jane Alice Sargant. A satire, in verse]. 8vo. Pp. 87. [Brit. Mus.] 1821 EXTRACTS from the Register Bill, with notes explanatory. . . . [By Lewis Duval.] 8vo. [Lincoln’s Inn Lib.] London, 1831 EXTRACTS on various subjects,religious and secular, selected and original. [By John Bragg.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 Preface signed : J. B. EXTRAVAGANT (the) sheepherd; a pastoral comedie, written in French by T. Corneille. Englished by T. R. [Thomas Rawlins?] 1654. 4to. Pp. 62. [Brit. Musi] London, 1654 [for 1655] EXTRAVAGANT (the) shepherd. The anti-romance. Or, the history of the shepherd Lysis. Translated [from the French of C. Sorel by J. Davies]. Folio. Pp. 264-96. [Brit. Musi] London, 1653 EX-WIFE. [A novel. By Katherine Ursula Parrott.] 8vo. Pp. 287. [Brit. Musi] London, 1929 EYE (the) in the Museum. By J. J. Connington [Alfred Walter Stewart], 8vo. Pp. 287. [.Amer.Cat.] London,1929 FABLE (a) for critics. [By James Russell Lowell.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1848 FABLE (the) of Jotham to the Borough Hunters. [By Richard Owen Cambridge.] [Straus5 Robert Dodsley.] 1754 FABLES. By G. Washington Hisop [George Thomas Lanigan]. Taken anywhere, anywhere out of the world. 4to. [Foley’s Amer. authors.] New York, 1878 FABLES. By Mrs Teach well [Eleanor, Lady Fenn] ; in which the morals are drawn incidentally in various ways. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1783] The author issued also, in the same year, “ Fables in monosyllables.” FABLES and morals. By Job Crith- annan [Nathan Birch]. 8vo. [Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 144.] London, 1834 *FABLIAUX or tales. ... By M. Le Grand. . . . With a preface and notes [by G. E. i.e. George Ellis]. 4to. Pp. xxxvii. 280. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1796 *FACTS and arguments against the election of General Caro . . . For Caro, read Cass. FACTS and arguments respecting the great utility of an extensive plan of inland navigation in America. By a Friend to National Industry [Turner Carnac]. [Brit. Mus.] 'Philadelphia, 1805 FACTS and fancies. [By Douglas William Jerrold.] 8vo. Pp. 335. [Brit. Musi] London, 1826 FADED leaves. T. G. A. [Thomas Gold Appleton]. 4to. [Foley’s Amer. authors.] Boston, 1872 FAIR (the) parricide ; a tragedy founded on a late melancholy event. [By Edward Crane of Manchester.] 8vo. London, 1752 Founded on the murder committed by Mary Blandy at Henley on Thames. FAIR (the) Quakers ; a poem. [Byjohn Bingley.] Fol. Pp. 12. [Brit. Musi] London, 1713 *FAIRIES (the). . . . This was repudiated by Garrick. [Library of Congress, Cat. of Opera Librettos.] FAITH and conduct; an essay on verifiable religion. [By Percy Gardner.] 8vo. Pp. xiv. 387. [Brit. Musi] London, 1887 FAITH and practice ; or, the necessity of a frequent and worthy reception of the blessed sacrament of the Lord’s supper : a sacred poem. [By William Howard.] 4to. London, 1718 Presentation copy, signed by the author. FAITH triumphant, exemplified in the death of Mrs T. [i.e. Trotter. Signed : J. T. i.e. J. Trotter]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1771 FAITHFUL Bessie. By the author of Dick and his donkey [Mrs C. E. Bowen]. 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Musi] [1867] FAITHFUL memoirs of the life, amours and performances of that justly celebrated . . . actress . . . Mrs Anne Oldfield, interspersed with several other dramatic memoirs. By William Eger- ton, Esq. [Edmund Curll]. 8vo. Pp. 212. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 291.] London, 1731 FAITHFUL (the) servant ; or, the history of Elizabeth Allen. [By Mrs Amelia Bristow.] . . . Second edition. i2mo. Pp. xii. 216. [Brit. Musi] London, 1824 FAITHFUL (a) servant; the journal of what took place in the . . . Temple during the captivity of Louis XVI. . . . By J. B. Clery. . . . Translated from the French [by James F. Cobb]. i6mo. Pp. 127. [Brit. Musi] London [1874] FALCONHURST [in Kent. Signed: G. J. T. i.e. George John Talbot]. 8vo. Pp. 51. [Brit. Mus.] London, private print, 1922 *FALL (the) and redemption of man . . . By E. S. A. The Brit. Mus. now attributes this to Miss Letitia Willgoss Stone. FALL (the) of the clay-pit; a true narrative. By the author of The Lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [i861] Signed : F. B. FALSE dawn. By A1 Carthill [Sir John Perronet Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 224. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1926 FALSEHOOD (the) of Mr William Pryn’s Truth triumphing, in the antiquity of Popish Princes and Parliaments ; to which he attributes a sole sovereigne legislative, coercive power in all matters of religion. . . . [By Henry Robinson.] [.D. N. B. vol. 49, p. 15.] London, 1645 FAMILIAR epistles between W— H— [William Hamilton, of Gilbertfield] and A— R— [Allan Ramsay]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [A. Gibson’s Allan Ramsay, p. 126.] Edinburgh [1719] FAMILY (the) compact. [By Rev. John Rose, rector of St Martin’s Outwich, London.] 8vo. [A. and Q. 9th Aug. 1824, p. 107.] London, 1792 *FAM1LY (a) tour through South Holland . . . Ascribed in the Brit. Mus. to Robert Batty. FAMOSUS defamator; the infamous libeller . . . arraign’d and condemned. ... By Octavius Terminalis [John Brydall] in a letter to Marcus Aemilius. 4to. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1706 FAMOUS (the) and delightful history of the renowned and valiant Prince Amadis of Gaul. . . . The whole now abridged by J. S. Gent. [John Shirley, author of The triumph of wit]. . . . i2mo. Pp. 187. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1702 FANNY. [A poem. By Fitz-Greene Halleck.] 8vo. New York, 1821 The first edition (1819) is not anonymous. FAREWELL to Virianne [John Williams, missionary ; verses by J. C. i.e. John Campbell, D.D., and others]. i2mo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] N.P. 1838 FARMER Ellicot; or, begin and end with God. By the author of Dick and his donkey [Mrs C. E. Bowen]. 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] [1867] FARMER (the) of Chappaqua. By a Greeleyite [Thaddeus Hyatt. Verses]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London [1872] FARMER’S (a) life. With a memoir of the farmer’s sister. By George Bourne . . . [George Sturt]. 8vo. Pp. 208. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1922 ^FARRAGO : containing essays . . . The author is not known. Lowndes’ note is incorrect. The work which has Richard Barton’s name in an acrostic to the reader is the next entry, “ Farrago . . . 1739.” FARTHER (a) defence, etc., being an answer to a reply [by N. Spinckes] to the Vindication of the Reasons and defence for restoring some prayers and directions in King Edward VI.’s first Liturgy. By the author of the Reasojis [Jeremy Collier]. 8vo. [Darling’s Cyclop. Bibl.] London, 1720 FASCICULUS florum ; or a nosegay of flowers, translated out of the gardens of severall poets, and other authors. ... By Lerimos Uthalmus [Thomas Willmer ?]. i2mo. [Pollard and Red- graved] London, 1636 FASCICULUS myrrhae ; or, a briefe treatise of Our Lord and Saviour’s passion. Written by the R. Fa. I. F. of the Society of Jesus [John Falconer]. i2mo. Pp. 130. [Brit. Mus.] [St Omer] 1633 FASHION in language. By I. S. L. [I. S. Lidbury]. 8vo. Pp. 64. [Brit. Mus.] London, private print, 1906 FAST workers ; a comedy farce in three acts. By Roland Oliver [Henry White]. 8vo. Pp. 85. [B. Mantle's American Playwrights of To-day, p. 302.] London [1927] FASTI Ecclesiae Scotianae. New edition. Volume III. A critical examination. [A review of the work by Hew Scott. By John Warwick]. Reprinted from the Kilmarnock Standard. 8vo. Pp. 7. [Brit. Mus.] 1921 Signed: A. FATAL (the) vesper; or, a true . . . relation of that accident, hapning on Sunday . . . the 26 of October last, by the fall of a roome in the Black Friars. . . . [By William Crashaw ?] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1623 Signed : W. C. FATALITY ; a drama. . . . By Caroline Boaden . . . with remarks ... by D— G. [George Daniel]. i2mo. Pp. 28. [Brit. Mus.] London [1830] FATHER Christmas ; our little ones’ budget. Edited by N.D’Anvers [Nancy Bell, nee Meugens]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London,1877 FATHER Jones of Cardiff; a memoir of the Rev. Griffith Arthur Jones, for over thirty years Vicar of S. Mary’s, Cardiff. By two former curates J. W. W. and H. A. C. [John Woollaston Ward and Hector Albert Coe]. . . . 8vo. Pp. xi. 122. [Brit. Mus.] London [1908] FATHER (the) ; or, American Shandy- ism. Written by a citizen of New York [William Dunlap] ; a comedy in five acts. 8 vo. [Foley’s Atner. authors.] New York, 1789 FATHER Paul. [A tale.] By James Cassidy [Mrs E. M. Story]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 326. [Brit. Mas.] London, 1908 FATHER Tyrrell’s modernism: an expository criticism of “ Through Scylla and Charybdis” in an open letter to Mr Athelstan Riley. By Hakluyt Egerton [Arthur Boutwood]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 216. \Brit. Mus.] London,1909 FATHERS (the) counsell; or . . . useful directions for all young persons . . . left in a fatherlesse . . . condition. By W. T. [William Typing?]. i2mo. \Brit. Mus.\ London, 1644 FATHER’S (the) hope ; or, the wanderer returned. By the author of Going Abroad [Nona Bellairs]. i2mo. Pp. 35. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1857 FATHER’S (a) legacie ; with precepts and prayers. [By John Norden.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1625 FAUST ; a poem. [By Arthur M. Forrester.] [Hodgson’s Cat. 28th Jan. 1927.] 1834 FAYTHFULL (a) admonycion of a certen trewe pastor and prophete, sent vnto the germanes. . . . Translated in to Inglyssh [from Luther’s “Warn- ung an seine liebe Deutschen”]. 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] Grenewych [printed abroad], 1554 FEAST (the) of sacrifice, and the feast of remembrance. . . . [By Emily Steele Elliott.] i6mo. Pp. viii. 240. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1864 FEED my lambs ... a selection of the simplest texts . . . explained ... by a mother [Mrs Charles Jones]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] 1852 Signed : C. J. FELICIA to Charlotte ; being letters from a young lady in the country to her friend in town, containing a series of the most interesting events, interspersed with moral reflections, chiefly tending to prove that the seeds of virtue are implanted in the mind of every reasonable being. [By Mary Collyer.] i2mo. Pp. 312. [Bibl. Lind.] London, 1749 FELICITY; a novel. By Katherine Harrington [Mrs Rolf Bennett]. 8vo. Pp. 284. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1919 FEMALE (the) husband ; or, the surprising history of Mrs Mary alias Mrs George Hamilton, who was convicted of having married a young woman of Wells and lived with herasher husband. . . . [By Henry Fielding ?] 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Mus.] 1746 FEMALE (the) phaeton. [By Matthew Prior or the Hon. Simon Harcourt.] Fol. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 255.] London, 1719 FEMALE (the) ; or, modern fine lady : a ballad opera. . . . [By Joseph Dorman?] 8vo. Pp. 51. [Library of Congress, Cat. of Opera Librettos.] London, 1736 FERDINAND; or, the triumphs of filial love. By Father Charles [John Andrew Houban]. i2mo. Pp. v. 208. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, i860 FESTIVAL (the) of St Iago ; a Spanish romance. [By Mrs S. Green.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1810 FEW (a) fragments of fairyology, shewing its connection with natural history. 'By Michael Aislabie Denham.] 8vo. Brit. Mus.] Civ. Dunelm. [Durham] 1859 Signed : M. A. D. FEW (a) ideas; being hints to all would-be Meltonians. [Six humorous coloured plates. By Henry Aiken.] London, 1825 See Schwerdt’s edition of Aiken’s “ Panorama of the progress of Human Life ” (1930), p. 5. FEW (a) odds and ends for cheerful friends ; a Christmas gift [in verse. By J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier]. 4to. [London] private print, 1870 FEW (a) original ideas of a Manchester man [Richard Burn ?] respecting our bad trade and government interference. 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Musi] Manchester [1876] *FEW (a) plain reasons why a Protestant . . . Author’s postscript signed : N. N. FEW (a) popular rhymes, proverbs, and sayings, relating to fairies, witches and gypsies. [By Michael Aislabie Denham.] [Brit. Mus.] Civ. Dunelm. [Durham] 1852 Signed : M. A. D. FEW (a) self-contradictions of the Bible. [By William Henry Burr.] . . . 8vo. Pp. xxi. 43. [Brit. Mus.] London [1866] The title of an edition of i860 reads “ Self contradictions of the Bible.” FEW (a) thoughts. By a member of the bar [Phineas Bacon Wilcox]. 8vo. [Allibone’s Diet.] Columbus, O., 1836 FEW (a) words in answer to two plausible scruples as to receiving the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper. [By Richard Pearson.] i2mo. Pp. 4. \Brit. Mus.] Lowestoft [1835] Signed : R. P. FEW (a) words in reply to the remarks of a Welsh clergyman on What says the Church? By a Welsh Rector [Evan Lloyd of Llangelynin]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] Bangor, 1842 FEW (a) words of advice and consolation to the worshippers of St Lawrence’s, who . . . lament the removal of their . . . pastor [W. B. Cadogan]. In three letters [signed J. N. i.e. John Newton ?] to Christiana. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] Reading, 1812 FEW (a) words of counsel and advice to all the sons and daughters of men. [Signed : A. T. i.e. Anthony Tompkins]. A short testimony . . . unto all young men. [Signed: R. N. i.e. Richard Needham.] 4to. Pp. 6. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1687 FEW (a) words on reform addressed to John Handy-workman, by J. Brain- workman [Joshua Williams]. 8vo. [Lincoln’s ln?i Lib.\ London, 1867 FEW (a) words to the mothers of little children. By the author of A few words to Schoolmistresses [Louisa M. Hubbard]. i6mo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1880 Signed : L. M. H. FIDDLER Matt. By Adam Lilburn [LilliasWasserman]. With illustrations by A. March. 8vo. Pp. viii. 192. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1908 Title-page of her “ Road of Life.” FIERY (a) flying roll; being the last warning piece at the dreadfull Day of Judgement. [By Abiezer Coppe.] 4to. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts, i. 782.] London, 1650 This was followed by “A second fiery flying roule.” Parliament ordered that all copies should be seized and burned. FIFTY New Testament Scripture reasons why one should hesitate to believe in a co-equal, and co-eternal Trinity. . . . By a Unitarian [John William Brown]. 8vo. Pp. 14. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1888 FIFTY-ONE substantial reasons against any modification whatever of theexisting tariff: whereby the consistency and propriety of the opposition of the cotton planters, the tobacco planters, and the merchants to the “ Infernal Bill ” are fully justified. By a Pennsylvanian [Matthew Carey]. 8 vo. Pp. 12. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 340.] Philadelphia, 1824 FIGHT (a) at sea famously fought by the Dolphin of London, against five of the Turkes men of warre and a satty the 12 of January last 1616. [By John Taylor, the water poet.] 4to. London, 1617 This is included in an edition of Taylor’s collected works, supervised by himself. FIJI ; records of private and public life, 1875-1880. [Introduction signed: S. i.e. Arthur, Baron Stanmore.] 8vo. 4 vols. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, private print, 1897-1912 FILLI di Sciro ; or, Phillis of Scyros : an excellent pastorall. Written in Italian by C. Guidubaldo de’ Bonarelli. Translated into English by J. S. [Jonathan Sidnam]. 4to. Pp. 114. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1655 FINAL (the) count. [A novel.] By Sapper [Herman Cyril MacNeill]. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1926 FINAL message preparatory to Christ’s coming. By Recorder [J. Warren Owen]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Birmingham [1925] FINAL (the) sentence. [A novel.] By Michael Maurice [Conrad Arthur Skinner]. 8vo. Pp. 280. [Brit. Musi] London, 1926 FINGER (the) of fate. [A novel.] By Sapper [Herman Cyril MacNeile]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Brit. Musi] London [1930] FIRE from Heaven. Burning the body of one Iohn Hittchell. . . . Written by Iohn Hilliard. . . . With the fearefull burning of the towne of Dorchester vpon friday the 6. of August last 1613 [by John White of Dorchester, the Elder]. 8vo. [F. Rose-Troup’s John White, p. 446.] London, 1613 FIRE of the altar. [Verse. By R. M. Marchant ?] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] London [1894] Signed : W. FIREFLY ; a novel. By Diana Patrick [Mrs Desemea Newman Wilson]. 8vo. Pp. 322. [Publishers’ Weekly, 9th Jan. 1926.] New York, 1926 *FIRESIDE and camp stories. For Allcott, read Alcott. FIRESIDE magic. 100 fascinating conjuring tricks. . . . By Carol Luck [Charles Platt]. 8vo. Pp. 120. [Brit. Musi] London [1930] FIRESIDE poems. By “Pansy” [Ida M. Loder Donisthorpe]. 8vo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Mus.] N.P. [1929] From a copy inscribed by the author. FIRST (the) anniversarie ; an anatomie of the world. (The second anniversarie ; of the progres of the soule.) [By John Donne.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1612 For an earlier edition, see “An anatomy of the world . . FIRST (the) book of Amadis of Gaule ; discoursing the adventures and love of many knightes and ladies, as well of the realme of Great Brittayne, as sundry other countries, etc. [Translated from the French by Anthony Munday.] 4to. B. L. Ff. 201. [Pollard and Redgrave.] [London, 1590?] The second book was also translated by Munday under the pseud, of Lazarus Pyott. See above, “ The second book . . .” FIRST (the) book of Euclid’s Elements with alterations and familiar notes. ... [By Thomas Perronet Thompson.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1830 The first edition of “ Geometry without axioms . . .” FIRST (the) of April: a farce. ... By Caroline Boaden . . . with remarks ... by D— G. [George Daniel]. i2mo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Mus.] London [1829] FIRST (the) parte of [Thomas] Church- yardes chippes. . . . [Edited by J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London [c. 1870] FIRST (the) rung ; an attempt to deal with the poverty problem. [By Alfred Richard Millbourn.] 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1906 FIRST the blade ; a comedy of growth. By Clemence Dane [Winifred Ashton]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1919 FIRST thoughts on the soul; for the poor. [By John Fitzgerald, the younger.] i2mo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, 1830-1 FIRST (the) years of Christianity, and What is the Church? By C. S. [Charles Stanley, Sheffield]. 8vo. Pp. 143. [Brit. Mus.] London [1893] FIRSTE (the) thre bokes of the most christia Poet Marcellus Palingenius [Pietro Angelo Manzolli] called the Zodyake of lyfe ; newly translated out of latin into English by Barnabe Googe. 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1560 In the next year “ The firste syxe bokes ...” were issued. For the complete translation (1565) see “ The Zodiake of life . . .” FISHING ; a translation from the Latin of Naniere. . . . With a brief introduction and . . . notes [by J. H. i.e. Joseph Haslewood]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1809 FISHKE the lame. By Mendele Mocher Seforim [Shalom Yakov Abramovich]. Freely translated from the Yiddish ... by Dr Angelo S. Rappoport. 8vo. Pp.224. [Brit.Musi] London [1929] FIT to govern ! [Short biographies of members of the first labour government in Great Britain. With portraits.] By “Iconoclast” [Mary Agnes Hamilton]. 8vo. Pp. 80. [Brit. Musi] London, 1924 FIVE (the) books of Marcus Manilius . . . done into English verse, with notes [by T. C. i.e. Thomas Creech], 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1697 FIVE counter-theories to the Ridsdale judgment. . . . [By John Tomlinson.] 8vo. Pp. 47. [Brit. Musi] 1877 FIVE godlie sermons. Preached by R. T. [Ralph Tryer?] Bachiler of diuinitie. 8vo. Pp. 309. [Brit. Musi] London,1602 FIVE hundred French and English everyday idioms and idiomatical sentences. Compiled ... by M. W. W. [i.e. M. W. Wedderburn]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] London, 1892 FIVE minutes’ advice on drinking the waters of Leamington. [By J. Beck?] i2mo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] Leamington [1850?] *FIVE (the) orders of the Church . . . For Bromby, read Bromley. FIVE years of Irish freedom. By Pat [Patrick D. Kenny]. 8vo. Pp. 61. London [1927] FIVE years’ penal servitude. By one who has endured it [William Hamilton Thomson, Sheriff - substitute of Inverness-shire.] 8vo. 18 77 From a copy with a note in MS. by Lord Rutherford—“Lord Fraser assured me that this book was written by . . . William Hamilton Thomson, Sheriff-Substitute of Inverness-shire, who was in 1871 convicted in the High Court of Justiciary.” FIVE-AND-THREEPENNY - PIECE (a); or, a dialogue between a Methodist preacher and oneof his hearers. [Verse. By John Cooke, Dissenting minister in Rochdale.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] South wold, 1812 FLEET (the) Annual and Naval Year Book. . . . Compiled by Lionel Yexley [James Woode]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1905 FLEUR de lys ; the story of a crime. By J. G. Sarasin [Geraldine Gordon Salmon]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Amer. Cat.] London [1929] FLIGHT (the) in vain ; showing where true safety lies. By the author of The lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1864] Signed : F. B. FLIGHT (the) of religious piety from Scotland upon the account of [Allan] Ramsay’s lewd books. [By Alexander Pennecuik ?] . . . i2mo. \Brit. Mus. [Edinburgh ? 1736 ? FLIGHT (a) to a finish. By Valentine [Arthur Valentine Peachey]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1929 FLOCK (the) at the fountain. [By Sarah Flower Adams.] i2mo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1845 FLORILEGIUM poeticum. [By George Whittaker.] i8mo. [Eng. Cat., 1801- 1836, p. 209.] London, 1814 FLOWER-GARDEN (the) ; shewing how all flowers are to be ordered, the time of flowering. ... By W. H. [William Hughes]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1671 FLOWERS from foreign fields. By Father Charles [John Andrew Houban]. i6mo. 6 parts. [Brit.Mus.] Dublin, 1857 FLYING (the) courtship ; a novel. By E. J. Rath [J. Chauncey Corey Brainerd and Edith Rathbone Brainerd]. 8vo. Pp. 311. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1929 FGiROHL et Fceroa Reserata, that is a description of the Islands and inhabitants of Fceroe . . . written in Danish by Lucas Debes : Englished by J. S. [John Sterpin]. 8vo. Pp. 406. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1676 FOLIA caduca ; verses to three grandchildren (1880-1893). By J. P. M. [James P. Muirhead]. 8vo. Pp. 44- [Brit. Musk] [1895 ?] *FOLIOUS appearances . . . The author’s name is given in the Brit. Mus. as John Tapling. FOLK song and dance. [By A. H. Fox-Strangways.] . . . 8vo. Pp. 20. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1925] FOLLOWING (the) speech being spoke off hand upon the debates in the House of Commons, you cannot expect in it the exactness of Roman eloquence. . . . [By Sir John Knight.] [M‘Alfin Coll. Cat.] 1694 No title-page. FOOD for the desert; being choice selections from J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby] ... and others. 8vo. Pp. 112. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1877 FOOL’S (the) paradise, and other poems. By Ethna Kavanagh [Sara Spain]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Tnnisfail, a quarterly magazine, No. i.J FOOTMAN’S (the) friendly advice to his brethren of the livery. . . . Also a postscript in answer to Squire Moreton’s pamphlet, intituled, Every body’s business is no body’s. [By Robert Dodsley.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [c. 1725] Signed: R. D. ^FOOTPRINTS (the) of Abbe. . . . For Abbe, read Albe. For Brennar, read Brennan. FOR a blank page. “ Never a palinode.” Q. [Austin Dobson]. 8vo. Pp. 4. [Shay’s Bibl. of Dobson.] Private print, 1913 *FOR another’s fault . . . For Wilhelm Heimburg [Martha Behrens], read W. Heimburg [Bertha Behrens]. FORasmocheas late . . . I translated aboke out of frensshe into Englissh named Recuyel of the histories of Troye . . . therefor I intend to translate the . . . boke of thistories of Jason, etc. [Translated from the French of Raoul Le Fevre by William Caxton.] Fol. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] [Westminster, 1477?] FOR Christ and the world; a new missionary song service. [By J. J. Kilpin Fletcher.] 8vo. Pp. 9. [Brit. Mus.] Jamaica, 1913 FOR her namesake ; an anthology. . . . Edited by Stephen Langton [Daniel S. O’Connor]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 346. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1911 An enlarged edition, 1926, has the title “ By what sweet name ? ” *FOR His name’s sake . . . For R. Anderson, read Sir Robert Anderson. FOR Maurice; five unlikely stories. By Vernon Lee [Violet Paget]. 8vo. Pp. li. 223. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 FOR me alone. By Andre Corthis [Mme. Andree Lecuyes, nee Husson]. Translated by Frederick Taber Cooper. 8vo. Pp. 267. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1921 FOR prevention of the unpardonable sin against the Holy-Ghost; a demonstration that the spirit and works of Christ were the finger of God. [By Richard Baxter.] [Grosart’s Baxter, No. 12, p. 16.] London, 1655 FOR sons of gentlemen. By Kerr Shaw [Ronald Gurner]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 245. [New State small, 23rd Jan. 1932.] London, 1926 FOR the King and Parliament and his Council and Teachers, and to every individual person . . . that have a hand against the innocent people called Quakers ; one visitation and warning more from the Lord to you. [By William Bayly.] [Smith’s Cat. of Friends'1 Books, i. 218.] 1664 Signed at end : W. B. FORBIDDEN fruit. Edited by Vrill [F. A. Perroux]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Calcutta, 1896, etc. FORECAST (a) of the Sun’s eclipse, on 22nd April 1715. By a gentleman in Kelso — On this great eclipse. A poem. By A. R. [Allan Ramsay]. [A. Gibson’s Allati Ramsay, p. 101.] Edinburgh, 1715 FOREFRONT (the). [A novel.] By Andrew Loring [Lorin Andrew Lo- throp]. 8vo. Pp. 329. [Brit. Musi] London, 1908 ^FOREIGNER (the): a tale . . . For Charles W. Connor, read Charles W. Gordon. FOREST of Montalbano. A novel. By the author of Santo Sebastiano [Catherine Cuthbertson]. i2mo. 4 vols. and Q., June 1911, p. 475.] London, 1810 FOREST (the) runner. [A novel.] By S. Carleton [Susan Carleton Jones]. 8vo. Pp. 268. [Brit. Musi] London, 1925 FORETOLD and fulfilled: the Church of Rome a sign of the end. An examination of the Bible prophecy concerning Rome, and the approaching end of this age. [By] “Discipulus” [Basil Stewart]. 8vo. Pp. 94. [Brit. Musi] London, 1926 FORGED in strong fires. [A novel.] By John Ironside [E. M. Tait]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Musi] London, 1912 FORGOTTEN Seigneurs of the Alen^onnais, by ... F. Le Grix W[hite]. 8vo. Pp. ix. 146. [Brit. Musi] Penrith, private print [1880?] FORLORNE (the) traveller, whose first beginning was pleasure and joy. . . . [A ballad, by Richard Climsell?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1635] Signed: R. C. FORMOSA; the life of a beautiful woman. ... [A novel. By William Stephens Hayward.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 310. [Brit. Musi] London [1884] FORSAKEN (the); a tale. By the author of Cains Marius, etc. [Richard Penn Smith]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Foley’s Amer. authors.] Philadelphia, 1831 FORTRESS (the), an historical tale of the Fifteenth Century, from Records of the Channel Islands, etc. [By Amelia W-.] i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1840 At the end of vol. ii. there is a poem reprinted from the Belle Assemblee, in which it was signed : Amelia W-. FORT-ROYAL (the) of Holy Scriptures ; or, a new concordance . . . The second edition. Revised and enlarged by J. H. [John Hart]. . . . i2mo. Pp. 415. [Brit. Musi] London, 1652 FORTUNATE (the) lovers ; an opera. [By J. Howell, of Edinburgh, known as the Polyphonist.] 8vo. [R. Inglis’ Dramatic Writers of Scotland, p. 145.] Edinburgh, 1809 FORTUNE’S football. [An autobiography for children. By Isaac Jenner.] i2mo. Pp. 120. [Brit. Musi] London,1806 FORTUNES (the) of Nigel; or, George Heriot: a historical drama, founded on the celebrated novel of the former title, by the author of Waver ley . . . performed at the Theatre-Royal, Edinburgh. [By Daniel Terry.] 12mo. Pp. 70. [Brit. Musi] [Edinburgh, 1823] FORTUNIO. [A fairy tale. Translated and abridged from the French of Marie Catherine La Mothe, Comtesse d’Aulnoy.] Illustrated by J. W. 4to. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1847 FORTY select poems on several occasions. By the Right Honourable the Earl of . . . [Thomas Hamilton, 7th Earl of Haddington]. i2mo. Pp. 210. [D. N.B. vol. 24, p. 212.] N.P. 1767 *FORTY years ago . . . Signed: F. B. The author is Francis Bourdillon. [Brit. Musi] FOUNDLING (the). By the author of Hymns and scenes of childhood [Jane Euphemia Leeson]. 321110. [Julian’s Diet.] 1850 Signed : J. E. L. *FOUR (the) ages of life . . . For Wetherelt, read Wetherell. FOUR fantastic little stories, a tiny fairy play and some odds and ends. By O. M. S. [Olga M. Somech]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 18. [Brit. Musi] Southport [1914] FOUR grande enquiries. I. Whether this whole nation be a Church. . . . II. Whether by priviledge of infant baptism, all are to be admitted to all Church-Communions_III. Whether there can be any suspension from or excommunication out of their Church. ... IV. Whether infants borne of parents notorious for their ignorance and prophaneness . . . may be admitted to baptism. . . . [By Hezekiah Woodward.] [MlAlfin Coll. Cat.] London, 1656 See the note at the end of his “Law- Power,” 1656. FOUR small copies of verses upon sundry occasions. [By Richard Peers ?] 4to. Pp. 18. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1667 FOURE letters and certaine sonnets. . . . [By Gabriel Harvey. The introduction signed : J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. Pp. 81. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1870] FOURE sermons of Iohn Calvin, upon the Song that King Ezechias made after hee had been sicke .... Translated out of Frenche into English [by A. L. i.e. A. Lock ? ]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1574 FOURFOLD (the) sacrament. [Poems.] By the author of A book of prayers written for use in an Indian college [John Somervell Hoy land]. 8vo. Pp. 124. [Brit. Mus.] Cambridge, 1924 Preface signed : J. S. H. FOURTH (the) book of Artemas [Arthur Telford Mason], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1926] FOURTH (the) centenary of Martin Luther. Luther, an auto-biographical sketch. . . . [By Samuel Lloyd.] i6mo. Pp. 47. [Brit. Mus.] Birmingham [1883] Preface signed : S. L. FOURTH essay on free trade and finance humbly offered to the consideration of the public. By a citizen of Philadelphia [Pelatiah Webster]. 8 vo. Philadelphia, 1780 There were seven in all, 1779-85* FOURTH (a) letter from a friend to the Right Honourable. See “A second (-fourth) letter ...” FOURTH (the) paper, presented by Maior Butler, to the Honourable Committee of Parliament, for the propagation of the Gospel. ... By R. W. [Roger Williams]. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. ii. 652.] London, 1652 *FOXES and firebrands . . . There were two distinct editions of this in 1681, both called second edition. In 1682 there was an edition called “ The second edition: in two parts.” Part 2 was by Robert Ware and the whole was re-edited by him : his preface to part 1 was signed W. R. and to part 2 R. W. For this second part, see “The second part of Foxes and firebrands . . .” In 1689 Robert Ware published a third part “Foxes and firebrands . . . (The third part),” and in this he adopted the pseud. Philirenes used in part 1 by John Nalson who had died in 1686. FRAGMENT of a poem occasioned by a visit to the old mansion of Denton. [By Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Lee Priory, 1814 Signed : S. E. B. ^FRAGMENT (a) of an ancient prophecy . . . For F. Spence, read Thomas Spence, bookseller. FRAGMENTS from the Mediterranean Budget. [Verse. By James Kennedy.’ i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] N.P. [1800?' FRAGMENTS on ethical subjects, by the late George Grote. [Edited by A. B. i.e. Alexander Bain.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1876 FRANC (le) discours. A discourse presented of late to the French King. [From the French of Antoine Arnauld.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] [London ?] 1602 FRANCE, after the revolution of Bonaparte, on the eighth of November 1799. Hastily translated from a French pamphlet [by J. F. Michaud] intituled “ Les adieux a Bonaparte.” 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1800 FRANCE the Empire of civilization. [By Edward Peacock.] 8vo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1873 *FREE (a) and impartial inquiry into the causes of that very great esteem . . . The D. N. B. queries the attribution to John Eachard. *FREE (a) enquiry into the authenticity . . . Signed: C. B. M. FREE Grace exalted, and thence deduced ; evangelical rules for evangelical sufferings: in two discourses made 29. March and 10. May, 1670. [By Henry Stubbe.] [RPAlpin Coll. Cat.] Oxford, 1670 Contemporary MS. attribution, and “ taken from his mouth by the ready pen of Mr Sam. Crispe.” *FREE (a) translation of the preface . . . For Beloc, read Beloe. FREEDOM (the) of the seas. [By Darrell Figgis.] i2mo. [Holling’s Cat., June 1927.] [1918] FREE-HOLDERS (the) grand inquest touching our soveraigne Lord the King and his Parliament. 4to. Pp. 64. [By Sir Robert Filmer.] [D. N. B. vol. 18, p. 441 ; Brit. Mus.] [1647?] Also attributed to Sir Robert Holborne. It was republished in 1679 under Filmer’s name. FRENCH exercises, selected chiefly from Wanostrocht. ... By the In- structer [Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]. i2mo. [Livingston’s Bibl. of Longfellow.] Brunswick, 1830 ^FRENCH (the) gardiner . . . Translator’s dedication signed : J. E. FRENCH (the) kinges declaration and confirmation of the proclamation of Nantes. . . . Faythfullytranslated . . . by J. B. [John Barnes ?]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] 1613 Z FRENCH verbs. [By S. H. Wall.] Third edition. 4to. Pp. 12. [Brit. Musi] Buckhurst Hill, 1925 Signed : S. H. W. FRIEND (the) that loveth at all times. By the author of The brother born for adversity [Robert Hawker]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1804 Signed : R. H. ^FRIENDLY (a) debate between a Conformist and a Nonconformist . . . 1669 An earlier edition [1668] reads “A Friendly debate betwixt two neighbours, the one a Conformist . . .” Symon Patrick’s authorship is upheld by the D. N. B. vol. 44, p. 46, but it is also elsew'here ascribed to Robert Wild [D.N.B. vol. 61, p. 225]. FRIENDLY (the) road ; new adventures in contentment. By David Grayson [Ray Stannard Baker]. [Manly and Rickert’s Contetnp. Amer. Bit.] 1913 FRIENDS and adventures. By “T” of Punch [Joseph Thorp]. 8vo. Pp. 283. [Brit. Musi] London, 1931 FROM Charles Bonaparte to Napoleon II. By the Berkeley men [Edwin Williams and Charles Edwards Lester]. 8vo. [Cushing’s ' lnit. and Pseud, i. 34.] New York, 1853 Previously published (1852) as “The Napoleon dynasty.” FROM Dartmouth to the Dardanelles ; a midshipman’s log. [By Wolston B. C. W. Forester.] Edited by his mother [Elsbeth Lascelles Forester]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 174. [Brit. Musi] London, 1916 FROM different standpoints. By Pansy [Mrs Isabella Alden, nee Macdonald] and Faye Huntington [Mrs Isabella H. Foster]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [1895] FROM Snotty to Sub. By the authors of From Dartmouth to the Dardanelles [Wolston B. C. W. Forester, edited by his mother Elsbeth Lascelles Forester]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 142. [Brit. Musi] London, 1918 FROM the beginning ; or, the story of Mary Jones and her Bible. Collected . . . and re-told by M. E. R. [Mary Emily Ropes]. . . . 8vo. Pp. ix. 156. [Brit. Musi] London [1883] *FROM the Mither Kirk and the Laigh Tollbooth o’ Abirdene these stanes were taen. [A description of the Summer House, Aberdeen. By Alexander Walker.] 8vo. Pp. 7. [Brit. Musi] Aberdeen, 1885 Signed : A. W. FROM two points of view. By Moira O’Neill [Mrs Skrine, nle Nesta HigginsonJ. 8vo. Pp. vi. 304. [S. J. Brown’s Ireland in Fiction.] Edinburgh, 1924 FRUITLESS (the) enquiry; being a collection of several entertaining histories and occurrences, which fell under the observations of a lady in her search after happiness. By the author of the Female-Spectator [Mrs Eliza Haywood]. i2mo. [D.N.B. vol. 25, p. 315.] London, 1747 FRUITS (the) of folly. [A survey of European politics.] By the author of The Pomp of Power [Laurance Lyon]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Brit. Musi] London,1929 FUGITIVE poems. By W. B. N. [W. B. Noel?]. 8vo. Pp. 60. [Brit. Musi] London, 1849 *FULL (a) and true account of a horrid and barbarous revenge by poison . . . The date of publication was 1716. The reference is to the dispute between Edmund Curll and Pope after the publication of a satire on the court called “ Court poems ” (<[.v.) in which Curll had implicated Pope. Pope arranged a meeting between himself and Curll, at which he actually contrived to add an emetic to the latter’s glass of sack. Pope made two further attacks on Curll in the same year, “A further account of the most deplorable condition of Mr Edmund Curl . . .” and “ A strange but true relation how Mr Edmund Curll . . . went into Change Alley,” q.v. And see R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 50, et seq. FULL (a) and true account of the late blazing star, with some probable prog- nosticks upon what may be its effects. [By Christopher Nesse.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1680 Signed: C. N. See also “ATrue account of this present biasing-star . . . 1682 . . *FULNESS (the) of time . . . For Samuel, read Samuels. FUNDAMENTAL (the) principles and rules of modern American whist explained and compiled by a Milwaukee Lady [Kate Whelock]. 8vo. Pp. 22. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards, p. 292.] Chicago, 1887 FUNDAMENTAL (the) truths of Christianity ... By George Keith. [With a preface signed: R. B. i.e. Robert Barclay.] 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, 1688 FUNERAL (the) orations of [J. B.] Bossuet ... at the interment of Henrietta, Duchess of Orleans, and Louis of Bourbon, Prince of Conde. Translated [by Edward Jerningham]. 8vo. Pp. 59. [Brit. Musi] London, 1800 FUNERAL tears upon the death of Captain William Bedloe. [In verse. By Richard Duke.] Fol. S. sh. [.D.N.B. vol. 4, p. 118.] [London, 1680] A satire. See also “An Epithalamium upon the marriage of Capt. William Bedloe.” FUNERALL elegies. [By Robert Allyne.] 4to. [Pollardand Redgrave.] London,1613 FUNERALL (a) sermon, preached at the buriall of the Lady Jane Maitland, daughter to the Right Noble Earl, John Earle of Lauderdail, at Hadington, the 19 of December 1631. By Mr I. M. [John Maitland]. Together with diverse epitaphs . . . 8vo. Pp. 48. [Johnstone and Robertson’s Bill. Aberd. i. 261.] Edinburgh, 1633 *FURMETARY (the) . . . The preface is signed : And per se And FURTHER (a) account of the most deplorable condition of Mr Edmund Curl, Bookseller, since his being poison’d on the 28th of March. To be publish’d weekly. [By Alexander Pope.] London, 1716 See the note to “ A full and true account of a horrid . . . revenge by poison . . .” FURTHER (a) exposure of ... Dr R. Wardlaw, his Meeting-House and his Voluntary Associates, in a letter addressed to him by Anglo-Scotus [John Lockhart?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 1834 FURTHER proposals for the entire reconstruction of the whole law. By an Outsider [Sir John Nodes Dickinson]. 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1871 FURTHER remarks on the currency of the United States. By Publius [James de Peyster Ogden ?]. [H. E. Miller’s Banking Theories in the U.S., p. 233.] New York, 1841 G. H. Q., Montreuil-sur-mer. By G. S. O. [Frank Fox]. 8vo. Pp. 306. [Brit. Musk] London, 1920 GAGG (a) to love’s advocate; or, an assertion of the justice of the Parliament in the execution of Mr Love. By J. H. [John Hinde?] Esq. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1651 GAIN (the) of godliness; a sermon. [By William Mandell.] 8vo. Pp. 15* [Brit. Musi] Thames Ditton [1835] GALANT (the) seamans return from the Indies ; or, the happy meeting of two faithful lovers. [A ballad.] By T. L. Thomas Lanfiere?]. Fol. S. sh. Brit. Musi] [London, 1670?] Another edition in the same (?) year in Black Letter runs : “ The Gallant Seaman’s return ...” GAL IGN AN I’S traveller’s guide through France (Italy, Switzerland), compiled from the works of Coxe [i.e. Henry Coxe, pseud, of John Millard]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] 1819-23 GALLANT (the) ladies ; or, the mutual confidence ; a novel. [By- Poisson.] Translated out of French. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] 1685 GALLANTS. [A novel.] By E. Barrington [Mrs L. Adams Beck]. 8vo. Pp. 308. [Brit. Musi] London, 1927 GALLERY of notable men and women. Compiled and selected by the editor of The treasury of modern biography [Robert Cochrane]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1879 GAMBLE (a) with hearts. By Anthony Carlyle [Mrs Patrick Milton]. 8vo. [ Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1922 ^GAMBLING (the) world ... By “Rouge et Noir.” F. Jessel (Bibl. of playing cards, p. 214) attributes this to Charles William Hecke- thorn. GAME of Cinch and Draw Pedro. By “Trumps” [William Brisbane Dick]. 8vo. Pp. 8. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards, p. 73.] New York, 1891 GAME (the) of solo-sixty. Edited from traditional sources by Junius [Frank A. Hilliard]. 24mo. Pp. 40. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.] Cleveland, 1888 GAME (the) of speculation ; a comedy in three acts and in prose [an adaptation of Balzac’s comedy “Mercadet”] by Slingsby Lawrence [George Henry Lewes]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1851] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 5. GAME (the) of whist. By “Q. P. Index” [William McCrillis Griswold]. 8vo. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.] ■Bangor, Me., 1881 An extra number of The Monograph. GAME (the) of whist. By “Trumps” [William Brisbane Dick]. 8vo. Pp. 31. [Jessel’s Bibl. of f laying cards, p. 72.] London [1870?] GAMEKEEPER’S (the) and game- preserver’s account book and diary. By I. E. B. C. [Irvine E. B. Cox]. 4to. Pp. 134. {Brit. Mus.\ London, 1881 *GAMING-HUMOR (the) . . . Not by Charles Morton, of Charlestown, N.E., but by Charles Morton, rector of Blisland, Cornwall. GARDEN (the) manual; or, practical instruction for the cultivation of all kinds of vegetables, fruits and flowers. ... By the editors . . . of The cottage gardener [George William Johnson and others]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London [1857] GARDEN (the) of Adonis. By A1 Carthill [Sir John Perronet Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 360. {Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1927 ^GARDENERS (the) labyrinth ... By Didymus Mountain. In a later edition (1652) only the initials “ D. M.” appear. GARDENER’S (the) new kalendar, divided according to the twelve months of the year. . . . [By Sir John Hill, M.D.] 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London,1758 GARDENING for the many; being practical monthly directions. ... By contributors to The cottage gardener [George William Johnson and others]. Third edition. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London [1856] GASP ARDS (the) of Pine Croft. [A novel.] By Ralph Connor [Charles William Gordon]. 8vo. Pp. 350. {Brit. Mus.] London [1923] GATHERING (the) storm ; studies in economical and social tendencies. By a Rifleman [Victor Wallace Germains]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 297. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1913 GAY cottage. [A tale.] By Glance Gaylord [Warren Ives Bradley]. i6mo. {Brit. Mus.] Boston [1866] GEBEL Tevi {i.e. the mountain of birds. Essays. By William Tudor]. i2mo. [Foley’s Amer. authors.] Boston, 1829 GEM of the Peak ; or, Matlock Bath and its vicinity. By the author of Excursions to Chatsworth, etc. [William Adam]. i2mo. Pp. 86. {Brit. Mies.] Derby {c. 1850] Other editions have the author’s name. A second part has the title “Gem of the Peak ; containing excursions to Buxton . . .” GEMIXTE pickles. By K. M. S. [Kurt M. Stein]. 8vo. Pp. 94. [.Publishers’ Weekly, 20th Aug. 1927.] Chicago, 1927 GEMS of Lancashire, No. 1 Kelup’s Kersmas Goose. By M. R. L. [M. R. Lahee]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 16. {Brit. Mus.] Manchester [1871] GEMS of promise. ... By Emart Kinsburn [Arthur Preston Hankins]. 8vo. Pp. 280. {Brit. Mus.] London [1926] GENEALOGICAL (a), chronological, historical and geographical atlas ; exhibiting all the Royal Families in Europe, their origin. ... By A. Le Sage [Marin Joseph Emmanuel Auguste Dieudonne de las Casas, Marquis de la Caussade]. Fol. {Brit. Mus.) London, 1801 GENEALOGICAL memoirs of the Browne family of Caverswall and Shredicote, co. Stafford ; Bentley Hall, co. Derby ; Greenford, co. Middlesex ; Withington and Caughley, co. Salop ; also of the Peploe family of Garnstone, co. Hereford. Compiled by G. B. M. 'George Blacker Morgan]. 4to. Brit. Mus.] London, 1888, et seq. GENEALOGY (a) of the ancestors and descendants of George Augustus and Louisa Trumbull of Trumbull Square, Worcester, Mass. [By J. H. Lea.] 8vo. Pp. 46. {Brit. Mus.] Private print, 1886 Signed : J. H. L. GENEALOGY (the) of the family of Gylle or Gill, of Hertfordshire, Essex and Kent. . . . [Edited by G. G. i.e. Gordon W. J. Gyll.] 8vo. 2 parts. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1842-52 Reprinted from Collectanea Topographica. GENERAL accommodations by ad- dresse. [Proposals for an office of general agency, by Adolphus Speed.] 4to. Pp. 15. {Brit. Mus.] [London, 1650] GENERAL (a) and rational grammar, containing the fundamental principles of the art of speaking . . . translated from the French of Messrs de Port- Royal [Antoine Arnauld and C. Lancelot]. 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1753 GENERAL Bramble. ByAndre Maurois [Emile Herzog]. Translated ... by Jules Castier and Ronald Boswell. 8vo. Pp. vi. 188. [Observer, 1st Feb. 1931.] London, 1921 GENERAL Crack. By George R. Preedy [Gabrielle Margaret Vere Long]. 8vo. Pp. xiii. 497. {Baity Mail, 3rd Feb. 1931.] London, 1928 GENERAL (a) description of Nova Scotia. [Attributed variously to T. C. Haliburton and to Walter Bromley.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1823 GENERAL (the) election in the great centres of population. By R. S. S. Robert Scarr Sowler]. 8vo. Pp. 29. 'Brit. Mus.] London, 1869 ^GENERAL (the) fast; a lyric ode . . . This is accepted as Sheridan’s by Mr Walter Sichel in his Sheridan, but it appears to be doubtful. It may be by the same hand as “ The Critic, or a tragedy rehearsed . . .” which according to the D.N.B. on doubtful evidence was by Israel Pottinger. See Mr R. Crompton Rhodes in the T. L. S. 26th August 1926. ^GENERAL (the) post-bag. ... By Humphrey Hedgehog. The Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 225, attributes this to John Gifford. GENERAL regulations for inspection and control of all the prisons. . . . [By Sir George Onesiphorus Paul, Bart.] Gloucester [i79°] GENERAL thoughts on the construction, use and abuse of the great offices. . . . [By Henry M‘Culloh]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1754 GENERALL (a) charge, or impeachment of high-treason, in the name of justice, equity, against the communality of England: as was presented by experienced reason. Anno 1647 . . . Likewise the communalities objections to the said articles. With the answer of experienced reason . . . This penned by L. C., a friend of the in- slaved communality [Laurence Clarkson, or Claxton]. 4to. Pp. 28. [D. N. B. vol. 11, p. 6.] London, 1647 A tract against the parliament. GENEROUS (the) surgeon. [By John Marten?] London, 1710 See the note to “ A new method of curing without internal medicines . . .” GENESIS: an interpretation. [In verse.] By S. H. S. [Samuel Henry Summerscales]. 8vo. Pp. 15- [Bnt. Mus.] Winnipeg [1918] GENEVA (the) ballad, to the tune of 48. [A satire against the Puritans. By Samuel Butler.] Fol. S. sh. [Bnt. Mus.] [London] 1674 GENTLE Jesus. By the author of The Little Lamb [Mrs Charles Jones]. 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] London [1907] GENTLEMAN (the) farmer; or certain observations made by an English gentleman upon the husbandry of Flanders, and the same compared with that of England. . . . By a person of honour in the county of Norfolk [Hon. Roger North]. i2mo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 277.] London,1726 GENTLEMAN (the) from Texas. By Hearnden Balfour [Beryl Hearnden and Eva Balfour]. [New York Times, Book Review, 26th Aug. 1928.] 1927 *GENTLEMAN (a) of Virginia. For Percy John Brebner, read Percy James Brebner. GENTLEMAN’S (the) accomptant : or, an essay to unfold the mystery of accomptes by way of debtor and creditor. . . . Done by a person of honour [Hon. Roger North]. i2mo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 225.] London, 1714 ^GENTLEMAN’S (the) guide in his tour through France . . . A later edition (1867) was issued under the pseud.: Hy. Coxe. GENTLEMEN of the Sea. By Paul Trent [Edward Platt]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1915 ’"GENUINE (a) account of the Ship S[usse]x . . . For J. D—n read J—n D—n. GENUINE (the) copy of a letter written from Constantinople by an English lady who was lately in Turkey. . . . [By Lady Mary Wortley Montagu.] 4to. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1719 GEOGRAPHY of the British colonies and dependencies. . . . [By James Hewitt.] 8vo. 6 Nos. [Bnt. 1/us.] London, i860 Signed : J. H. GEORGE (the) Meredith birthday book. Selected and arranged by D. M. [Mrs Daisy Meredith]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1898] GEORGE the fourth ; a poem. ... By the author of Hours of solitude [Charlotte Dacre]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1822 GEORGIAN poetry, 1911-1912. [Compiled by E. M. i.e. E. H. Marsh.] Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 197- [Brit. Mus.] London, 1913 GEORGICA Virgilii . . . With short English notes. . . . [Edited by H. H. i.e. Henry Hayman?] i6mo. Pp. 71. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1854 *GEORGICS (the) of Bacchicles. Not by F. D. Morice. The translator was William Jackson Brodribb. [Information from Mr C. W. Brodribb, the translator's son.] *GERALDINE: a tale . . . For Eleanor C. Agnew, read Miss E. C. Agnew. Her Christian name is unknown. GERMAN accidence for the use of Rugby School. [By J. W. J. Vecqueray.] i2mo. Pp. 34' [Bnt. Musi] Rugby, 1856 Z 2 GERMAN (the) army from within. By a British Officer [Thomas Burke, of Eltham] who has served in it. 8vo. Pp. 192. [Brit. Mils.] London, 1914 GERMANY in Europe. By Augur [Vladimir Polyakov]. 8vo. Pp. 91. [Amer. Cat.] London [1927] GESU Bambino, and other records. [By M. D. Stenson.] 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Musi] London, 1922 Signed : M. D. S. GHOSTLY visitors . . . By “ Spectre Stricken.55 With an introduction by M.A., Oxon. [William S. Moses]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 128. [Brit. Musi] London, 1882 GIFT (a) for mothers. By the author of Aids to developement [Mary Atkinson Maurice]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1833 Introduction signed : M. GIFT (the) of life ; a romance. By James Cassidy [Mrs E. M. Story]. 8vo. Pp. 414. [Brit. Musi] London, 1897 GILBERT White of Selborne . . . (Private reprint of a proof as revised by the author for the Dictionary of National Biography.) [By Alfred Newton.] 8vo. Pp. 34. [Brit. Musi] Cambridge [1899?] GILBERT’S last summer at Rainford, and what it taught. By Glance Gay- ford [Warren Ives Bradley]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1868 GILPIN’S rig ; or the wedding-day kept: a droll story . . . containing an account of John Gilpin, the bold linen draper of Cheapside, how he went farther and faster than he intended, and came home safe at last. [By William Cowper.] 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Musi] London [1784] Other anonymous editions with varied titles are “The diverting history of John Gilpin . . “The history of John Gilpin . . “John Gilpin’s journey . . and “ The journey of John Gilpin ...” GIN and Bitters. By A. Riposte [Evelyn May Clowes, later Mrs Wiche]. 8vo. Pp. 306. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1931 *GINEVRA . . . For Francis H. H. Terrell, read Francis A. H. Terrell. GIN-SHOP (the); or, a peep into a prison. [By Hannah More.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] Bath [1795] Signed : Z. GIRALDA ... A comic drama . . . Adapted from . . . M. Scribe . . . with remarks . . . by D. G. [George Daniel]. i2mo. Pp. 45. [Brit. Musi] London [1850] GIRL (a) among the anarchists. By Isabel Meredith [Olive and Helen Rossetti]. 8vo. Pp. x. 302. [Ashley Library i] London, 1903 GIRL (the) from up there ; musical comedy in three acts. Words by Hugh Morton [C. M. S. M‘Lellan]. 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Musi] London [1901] GIVE me the willow-garland; or, the maiden’s former fear. ... [A ballad. By Lawrence Price ?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1670?] Signed : L. P. GLADSTONE (the) A.B.C. [By George Stronach.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh [1883] GLANCE (a) at the glories of sacred friendship. By E. B., Esq. [Edward Benlowes?]. [D.N.B. vol. 4, p. 227.] London, 1657 GLASSE (the) of vaine-glorie (of Saint Augustine). [Translated by W. Prid.] i2mo. [Pollard and Redgrave]. London,1585 Signed : W. P. GLEANINGS in Europe. By an American [James Fenimore Cooper]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] Philadelphia, 1837-38 GLEN (the) is mine, and The lifting ; two plays of the Hebrides. By John Brandane [Dr John MacIntyre]. 8vo. Pp. 250. [Smith’s Cat., Glasgow, 1926] London, 1925 *GLIMPSE (a) of Sion’s Glory . . . Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. i. II, and M'Alpin Coll, attribute the whole work to William Kiffin. GLIMPSES of eternity ; a vision. By T. J. C. H. [Thomas J. C. Hutt]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 181. [Brit. Musi] London, 1886 GLOBE notes. By R. H. [Richard Holland]. 8vo. n.p. 1666 The second edition, 1678, bears the author’s name. GLORIES (the) of Jesus ; readings for a month. By the author of The Year of Our Lord [Frederick Harper]. 8vo. Pp. x. 66. [Brit. Musi] London, 1907 GLORIOUS Apollo. [A novel.] By E. Barrington [Mrs L. Adams Beck]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 371. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1926 GLORIOUS glimmerings of the life of love, unity, and pure joy. Written in Rome . . . but conserved . . . until my arrival at Barbados in the year 1662. ... By J(ohn) P[erret]. 4to. Pp. 15. [Brit. Musi] London, 1663 GLORY (the) of Egypt; a romance. By Louis Moresby [Lily Adams Beck]. 8vo. Pp. 281. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1926 *GLORY (the) of women . . . by H. C. Gent. Certainly not by Henry Care who was only six years old in 1652. Possibly by Hugh Crompton. The book is addressed to Mrs Elizabeth Crompton from “your faithful friend and kinsman.” GLORY-CHRISTIAN (the). By an unknown Christian [Albert Ernest Richardson]. 8vo. Pp. 133. [Brit. Mus.] London [1925] GLOWEROWER: Scottish idylls. By Innes Adair [Euphemia A. M. Inglis]. 8vo. Pp. 92. [Brit. Mus.] Haddington, 1924 *GLYGLUMGLEAGH . . . For Thomas Hingston Harvey, read Thomas Kingston Harvey. GO to Joseph; or, “Bow the Knee.” By W. T. P. W. [W. T. P. Wolston]. i2mo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh [1884] *GOD and man : conferences . . . Signed : H. D. L. GOD (the) in the garden ; an August comedy. By Keble Howard [John Keble Bell]. 8vo. Pp. 338. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1904 GOD, no impostor, nor deluder. [By William Prynne.] Pp. 27. [M'Alftin Coll. Cat.] [1629?] No title-page. The second edition in the same year bears the author’s name. GODLY (a) and learned sermon, preached before an honourable audi- torie the 26. day of Februarie. 1580. [By William Fulke.] [Camb. Univ. Lib.] [1580?] GODLY (a) sermon [on Mark xiv. 68, 70] of Peter’s repentance, after he had denyed his Lord and Master. . . . By a godly pastor [John Hart, D.D.]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1663 In the thirteenth edition (1680) the author’s name occurs in the publisher’s advertisement at the end. It was reprinted (1776) under the title “Peter’s repentance ... ”, q-v. GODLY (a) sermon preached in the Court at Greenwich . . . 1552 .. . By B. G. [Bernard Gilpin]. 8vo. Pp. 76. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1581 GOD’S call to unconverted sinners to turn to the Lord . . . The fifth edition with additions ... by T. P. [By Richard Baxter.] 8vo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1663 GOD’S commonwealths, British and American. ... By the Roadbuilder [William Gordon Mackendrick]. 8vo. Pp. xv. 287. [Brit. Mus.] London [1928] GOD’S dark, and other bedtime verses and songs. By John Martin [Morgan Shepard]. i2mo. No pagination. [Publishers' Weekly, 24th Sept. 1927.] New York, 1927 GODS (the) of war. By A. E. [George William Russell]. 4to. Dublin, private print, 1913 GODS trumpet sounding the alarme, summoning all persons speedily to repent and turne to God. . . . [By William Attersoll.] [D.N.B. vol. 2, p. 240.] London, 1632 Bound up and issued next year as one of “Three treatises” bearing the author’s name. GOLDEN (the) boke of Marcus Aurelius Emperour and eloquente oratour. [By Antonio de Guevara.] (Translated oute of Frenche by John Bourchier.) 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1546 GOLDEN (a) chaine or the description of theologie, containing the order of the causes of salvation and damnation . . . Written in Latine and translated by R. H. . . . [By William Perkins.] [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Cambridge, 1597 To the Christian Reader signed : W. P. GOLDEN (the) hills: a story of the Irish famine. By the author of Cedar Creek [Miss E. H. Walshe]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 272. [Brit. Musi] London, 1858 GOLDEN (the) oportunity, and how to improve it; being prize essays. . . . [Edited by J. G. i.e. James Gabb.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1861 GOLDEN thoughts ; a memento of the jumble of the church buildings in South Grove, Highgate, of the Highgate Congregational Church. [Edited by G. C. P. i.e. G. C. Postans]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 79. [Brit. Mus.] Guildford, 1909 GOLDEN Web. By Wilhelmina Stitch [Ruth Collie]. 8vo. Pp. 63. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1928 GONE native ; a tale of the South Seas. By “ Asterisk ”«[R. J. Fletcher]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 303. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 GOOD ! (A proposition on the National Debt.) [By Luke James Hansard/ 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1845. Signed: L. J. H. GOOD counsell to the petitioners for Presbyterian government. . . . [By Katherine Chidley.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1645] Signed : K. C. *GOOD (the) fight of faith . . . For Mrs-Freeland, read Mrs Carrie J. Freeland. GOOD Friday. [A sermon on Luke xxiii. 35. By William Tarbet.] i2mo. Pp. 13. [Brit. Mus.] [1870] GOOD Friday ; a few words to those who neglect it. . . . By the author of The Lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1859] Signed : F. B. GOOD (the) girl. [A novel.] BySeumas O’Sullivan [James Starkey]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Boyd’s Ireland1 s Lit. Renais.] London, 1912 GOOD(a) man? [ByM. K. Malcolmson.] 8vo. Pp. xi. 81. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1918 Originally published (1907) under the title “What think ye of Christ . . .” GOOD references. [A novel.] By E. J. Rath [J. Chauncey C. Brainera and Edith Rathbone Brainerd], 8vo. Pp. vi. 282. [Brit. Afus.] London [1925] GOOD-NATURED (the) lady. [A novel.] By J. E. Buckrose [Mrs Annie Edith Jameson]. 8vo. Pp. 315. [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] GORDON ; a life of faith and duty. By W. J. G. [William John Gordon]. Illustrated by R. Andre. 4to. Pp. 36. [Brit. Afus.] [1:885] GORDON ; a woman’s memories of him . . . [By Elizabeth Surtees- Alnett.] 8vo. Pp. iii. 74. [Brit. Mus.] 1885 Signed : E. S. A. GORGEOUS poetry, 1911-1920. First series. [By J. B. M. i.e. J. B. Morton.] 8vo. Pp. 63. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1920 Parodies. The title would seem to be based on E. H. Marsh’s “Georgian poetry, 1911-1912,” q.v. GOSPEL (the) drama; its symbolism and interpretation. By John Mysticus [George Arthur Gaskell]. 8vo. Pp. ix. 160. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1916 GOSPEL (the) of Philip the Evangelist. Reprinted from Spiritual Truth. [An automatic script. Edited by F. B. B. i.e. Frederick Bligh Bond.] 4to. Pp. 47. [Brit. Mus.] London [1925] GOSSIPS (the) greeting ; or a new dis- couery of such females meeting, wherein is plainely set forth the sundry sorts of those kinds of women, with their seueral humors and conditions. [Verse. By Henry Parrot.] 4to. [Christie-Afiller Cat.] London, 1620 GOUERNAYLE (the) of helthe ; with the medecyne of ye stomache. [Verse. By John Lydgate?] 4to. [Brit. Mus '. [Westminster, 1489 GOVERNOR (the) of Kattowitz. By Graham Seton [Lieut.-Col. Graham Seton Hutchison]. [Times Lit. Supp. 27th Nov. 1930.] London, 1930 GRACE, the power of unity and of gathering. By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1867] GRACES (the); an intermezzo . . . [By Charles Dibdin.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Library of Congress, Cat. of Opera Librettos.] London, 1782 GRAMMAR (a) of the Tahitian dialect of the Polynesian language. [By John Davies, missionary.] i2mo. Pp. 43. [Brit. Afus.] Tahiti, 1823 GRAND (the) Duke’s finances. [A novel.] By Frank Heller [Gunnar Serner]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 351. [Brit. Mus.] London [1925] GRANDMOTHER Martin is murdered. By John Courtney [John Cournos]. 8vo. Pp. 255. [Brit. Mus.] London [1930] GRANITE ; a tragedy. By Clemence Dane [Winifred Ashton]. 8vo. Pp. 75. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1926 GRAVE (the) facts of the housing situation. [Articles reprinted from the Westminster Gazette, signed : M. J. L. i.e. M. J. Landa.] 8vo. Pp. 51. [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] GRAY’S “ Elegy written in a Country Churchyard.” Put into French verse by R. L. S. [Robert Louis Sanderson]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [New Haven, Conn., 1912] GREAT (the) analysis; a plea for a rational world-order. [By William Archer.] With an introduction by Gilbert Murray. 8vo. Pp. xii. 122. London, 1912 A later edition (1931) bears the author’s name. GREAT (the) and wonderful works of God humbly represented, and the just and equal distributions of providence demonstrated : with an appendix concerning St Paul. By an ancient Doctor of Physick [Walter Harris, M.D.]. 8vo. [Brit. Afusi] London, 1727 GREAT (the) day to come. By the author of The Lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1862 Signed : F. B. GREAT (the) delusion ; a study of aircraft in peace and war. By Neon [Mrs Marion W. Acworth]. . . . 8vo. Pp. xxxix. 288. [Times, 18th Feb. 1931.] London, 1927 GREAT English painters. By Francis Downman [Ernest James Oldmeadow]. With thirty-two illustrations. 8vo. Pp. 294. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1908 GREAT (the) gulf. By the author of The Lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London [1859] Signedi: F. B. GREAT (the) literary salons, xvii and xvili centuries ; lectures of the Musee Carnavalet. By . . . Noziere [Fernand Weyl, and others]. . . . Bvo. Pp. 223. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1930 GREAT possessions. [A novel.] By David Grayson [Ray Stannard Baker]. [Manly and Rickert’s Contemp. Amer. Lit.'] 1917 GREAT (the) pyramid ; its construction, symbolism and chronology. By Discipulus [Basil Stewart]. 8vo. Pp. London, 1925 The second edition (1927) hears the author’s name. GREAT (the) Russian bear ... a comedietta. . . . By Thomas Morton . . . with . . . remarks by D— G. [George Daniel]. i2mo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] London [1862] GREAT (the) treaty of peace . . . part whereof was preached at the funeral of Mrs Anne Kyrl. ... By H. S., Minister of the Gospel [Henry Stubbe?]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1677 GREAT (the) world. [A novel.] By a Gentleman with a duster [Harold Begbie]. 8vo. Pp. 32°- [ Amer. Cat.] London, 1925 GREATEST (the) scandals of the present century. ... By a worker (Herbert Ainley [Herbert Ainley Reader].) 4to. [Brit. Musi] London [1923] GREECE in 1824. By the author of War in Greece [Col. Napier]. 8vo. London, 1824 From an inscribed copy. GREEK vocabulary; or, exercises on the declinable parts of speech. [By J. R. M. i.e. John Richardson Major.] i2mo. London, 1833 GREEKS (the) and Trojans warres— Caused by that wanton Trojan Knight Sir Paris, Who ravishes Hellen and her to Troy carries. . . . With a fit allusion, before the conclusion [to Ireland— “ Ireland is our Hellen fair Ravished from us through want of care.” A ballad.] By H. C. [Humfrey Crouch?] Fol. 2 parts. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London [1640 ?] GREENESgroatsworthofwitte. [Edited by J. H. i.e. John Hind?] 4to. B. L. r f>rit Musi London, 1617 GREENES [i.e. Robert Green’s] Newes both from heaven and hell, commended to the presse [or rather written] by B. R. [Barnaby Rich]. [Pollard and Redgrave, p. 270.] London, 1593 GRETNA (the) blacksmith’s story. By the author of Romances of Gretna Green [R. P. Macdougall]. 8vo. Pp. 132. [Brit. Mus.] London [1929] GRETNA Green; a comic opera. . . . [By Charles Stuart.] 8vo. Pp. 22. [Library of Congress, Cat. of Opera Librettos.] Dublin, n.d. *GRETNA-GREEN and its traditions. By Claverhouse. The Bibliotheca Jacksoniana Catalogue gives the author’s name as Miss Fowle Smith. GREVILLE Landon; a novel. By Pier Lisle [John Percy Gordon]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1863 *GRILLION’S Club from its origin . . . The preface, signed: H., is by Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton. *GROANS of the quartern loaf. For Walcot, read Wolcot. GROG time yarns, spun by the merry men of 17 Mess. By Lionel Yexley James Woode]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 157* "Brit. Mus.] London, 1904 GRUB-STREET (the) opera; as it is acted at the theatre in the Hay- Market. By Scriblerus Secundus Henry Fielding]. 8vo. Pp. 56- "Brit. Mus.] London, 1731 GUIDE (a) for passing Advent holily. By J. B. E. Avrillon. Translated . . . and adapted to the use of the English Church [by E. B. P. i.e. Edward Bouverie Pusey]. 8vo. Pp. lxiv. 285. London, 1844 GUIDE (a) for the penitent. [By Brian Duppa. Edited by C. I. B. i.e. Charles Ingham Black?] 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1852 GUIDE to Bergen with a map of the town. [By Viljam Olsvig.] [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 181.] Bergen [1888] GUIDE (a) to Madeira ; containing a short account of Funchall: with instructions to such as repair to that island for health. [By Dr J. Adams ?] Rvn f Frit. Mus. 1 London, 1801 GUIDE (a) to Mahomedan Law. By A.,B.A., LL.B. [Trikamlal Ranchhodlal Desai]. 8vo. Pp. 104. [Brit. Mus.] Bombay, 1902 GUIDE (a) to the city of Perth and its environs, and to the principal tours through the County ; with notes. [By David Morison, the publisher.] 8vo. [D. C. Smith’s Historians of Perth, p. 108.] Perth, 1812 GUIDE (a) to the Indian Penal Code, Act XLV. of i860 . . . in the form of questions and answers. . . . New edition. [Compiled by P. N. V. ue. Vijayaranga Pillai, P.V.] 8vo. Pp. lxvii. 314. [Brit. Mus.] Madras, 1895 GUIDE (a) to the vikingship from Gokstad in the Christiana-museum. . . . [By Ingvald Undset.] [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 182.] Kristiania,i886 GUIDE (a) unto Sion; or certaine positions concerning a true visible Church ; wherein the nature of a true Church is so plainely described, as all men may easily discerne the same from false assemblies. Written by a learned and judicious divine [Henry Ainsworth]. The third edition. i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 1, p. 193.] Amstelredam, 1640 GUILD (a) of cripples. By K. P. [Kineton Parkes.] An article reprinted from the Manchester Evening Chronicle. . . . 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] Hanley, 1903 GULLIVER’S Travels. . . . Edited by a clergyman [J. Lupton]. i6mo. [Brit. Mas.] 1867 Signed : J. L. GUY Mannering; or, the gypsey’s prophecy : a musical drama founded on the celebrated novel of the same name ... as performed at the Theatre - Royal, Edinburgh. [By Daniel Terry.] i2mo. Pp. 60. [D.N.B. vol. 56, p. 84.] [Edinburgh], N.D. GUY’S porridge pot ; a poem in twenty- four books. The first part (Books I-VI.) [A satire on Dr Samuel Parr. By Robert Eyres Landor?] 8vo. [London Mercury, April 1927.] London, 1808 No more published. GWELYGORDD ; or, the child of sin ; a tale of Welsh origin. ... By the author of The Infernal Quixote, etc. [Charles Lucas]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Eng. Cat.] London, 1820 GWILLIANS (the) of Bryn Gwilliam. [A novel. By Susanna C. Venn.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1875 HAILSOME (the) admonitioun. . . . [By Robert Sempill, Baron Sempill.] [Pollard and Redgrave.] 1570 HALF-CENTURY (a) history of the Farmington Avenue Congregational Church organized as the Pearl Street Congregational Church in Hartford, Connecticut, 1851-1901. [By William De Loss Love.] 8vo. Pp. 84. [Brit. Musi] [Hartford, Conn.], 1901 Introduction signed : W. D. L. HALLVARD Halvorsen ; or, the avalanche : a story. . . . By Nellie Cornwall [Nellie Sloggett]. 8vo. Pp. 316. [Brit. Musi] London [1887] HAND (the) of horror. [A tale.] By Owen Fox Jerome [Oscar Jerome Friend]. 8vo. [.Publishers’ Weekly, 13th Aug. 1927.] New York, 1927 HANDBOOK (a) for travellers in Algeria. . . . [By Sir R. L. Playfair.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 239. [Brit. Musi] London, 1874 “ Murray’s Handbooks.” HAND-BOOK for travellers in France. By John Murray, publisher.] i2mo. Brit. Musi] London, 1843 HANDBOOK of bezique. By J. R. W. [James Redding Ware]. 48mo. Pp. 96. [Jessel’s Bibl. of flaying cards, p. 289]. London, 1869 HAND-BOOK (a) of French conversation. By F. Ahn, with . . . additions . . . by . . . Chrysostome Dagobert [J ean Baptiste Alphonse Led’huy]. 12mo. Pp. 122. [Brit. Musi] London, 1857 HAND-BOOK (a) of German conversation. By F. Ahn with additions . . . by . . . Chrysostome Dagobert [Jean B. A. Led’huy]. i2mo. Pp.'i42. [Brit. Musi] London, 1857 HANDBOOK (a) of the Boer War. With general map of South Africa and 18 sketch maps and plans. [By Wyndham Tufnell.] 8vo. London and Aldershot, 1910 From a copy containing a signed letter from the author. HANDBOOK of the Dyce and Forster Collections in the South Kensington Museum, with engravings and facsimiles. [By William Masked.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 105. [Brit. Musi] London [1880] HANDBOOK of whist. By J. R. W. [James Redding Ware]. 481110. Pp. 92. [Jessel’s Bibl. of flaying cards, p. 288.] London, 1866 HANDBOOK (a) of whist and ready reference manual of the modern scientific game. By Major Tenace [George Washington Bailey]. 8vo. Pp. iv. no. [Jessel’s Bibl. of flaying cards.] London, 1885 HAND-BOOK (the) of women’s work. Edited by L. M. H. [Louisa M. Hubbard]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1876 HANDEL’S Oratorio of Solomon. [The words by Thomas Morell.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] London [1840?] HANG pinching ; or, the good fellowes observation. [A ballad. By William Blunden?]. Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London [1636] HANS Breitmann’s barty, and other ballads. By C. G. Leland ; with . . . notes by J. C. H. [John Camden Hotten] and H. L. W. 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, 1869 HAPPY (the) ending ; a play in three acts. By Ian Hay [John Hay Beith]. 8vo. Pp. 83. [Brit. Musi] London [1927] HAPPY (a) exchange. By Herbert B. Thorneley [Osmund Bartle Wordsworth]. 8vo. Pp. 311. [Brit. Musi] [1915] HAPPY (a) husband. ... By Patrick Hannay,Gent.... Towhichisadjoyned The good wife . . . with an exquisite discourse of epitaphs ... by R. B., Gent. [Richard Brathwait]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1628 HAPPY (the) lovers ; or, the beau metamorphos’d : a ballad farce. . . . [By Henry Ward.] 8vo. Pp. 28. [Library of Congress, Cat. of Opera Librettos.] 1736 HAPPY (the) pair ; a new song. [By John Glanvill.] Fol. [D. N. B. vol. 21, p.407.] London [1706?] HAPPY (the) readers. Edited by Herbert Strang [George Herbert Ely and C. J. L’Estrange]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1929, etc.] HAPPY (the) state of believers immediately after death. . . . To which is added Divine Grace Displayed. A poem (by S. A.). By J. W., author of The Evening Conference of Christ and Nicodemus [J. Wakelin?]. 121110. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London [1787 ?] HARD-US’D (the) poet’s complaint: inscribed to the theatric-managers and bibliopolians, of the great, little world. By Scriblerus Tertius [PaulWhitehead]. Fol. [Brit. Musi] London [1760 ?] HARDYKNUTE, a fragment. [Verse. By Elizabeth Lady Wardlaw.] Fol. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1719 HARMONIZED Gregorian tones, for the Psalter. . . . [Edited by W. B. H. i.e. William Beadon Heathcote.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1849 HAROLD’S cross; a romance of common freedom. [A play, in verse. Signed : J. C. N. i.e. John Cheesman Norwood]. 8vo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Musi] [Glasgow, 1927] HARRY [Hapgood; a biographical sketch.] By Neith Boyce [Mrs Hutchins Hapgood]. 8vo. Pp. 144- [Brit. Musi] New York, 1923 HARVEST thoughts. By the author of The Lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1862] Signed: F. B. HATE. By Allen Grant [Arthur Douglas Howden Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1928 HATE (the) of treason ; with a touch of the late treason. By N. B. [Nicholas Breton]. 4to. [Christie-Miller Cat.] 1816 HATTIGE ; or, the amours of the King of Tamaran: a novel. [Translated from the French of Gabriel de Bremond by B. B.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] 1692 HAVE with you to Saffron-Walden ; or, Gabrieli Harvey’s hunt is up. . . . [By Thomas Nash. The introduction signed: J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. Pp. 155. [Brit. Musi] London, 1870 *HAWKSTONE; a tale of and for England . . . Not by Elizabeth Missing Sewell but by William Sewell. See Brit. Mus. ; D.N.B. ; Boase’s Mod. Eng. Biog. HAWKSTONE (the) handbook; an illustrated guide to Hawkstone Park, with a notice of the Hill family. . . . Third edition. [By H. R. H. Southam and R. E. Davies.] 8vo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Musi] Shrewsbury, 1905 Preface signed : H. R. H. S. and R. E. D. HAYDN. By Michel Brenet [Marie Bobillier]. Translated by C. Leonard Leese. . . . 8vo. Pp. xii. 143. [Brit. Musi] London, 1926 HEADS of chemistry. [By John Aiken, M.D.] 8vo. Pp. 76. [Hawkes’ Lancashire Books, 133.] Warrington, 1781 HEART (the) of a slave girl. By Anthony Armstrong [George Anthony Armstrong Willis]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Musi] London, 1922 *HEART (the) of Hindustan. By Edmund White [James Blythe Patton]. Incorrect. Edmund White is the author’s real name, and Patton is a pseud, used by him. HEART’S (the) journey. [Poems. By Siegfried Sassoon.] 8vo. Ff. 28. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1927 HEART’S - EASE (the); poems on sacred subjects. [By S. M. Grainger ?] i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1845 Signed : S. M. G. HEATHER — Hay—Houses — Health ; being a description of land reclamation near the New Forest, and leaves from the life of a land lover. By the author of Garden first in Land Development [William Webb]. 8vo. Pp. 168. [Brit. Musi] Boscombe, 1929 Garden first in Land Development (1919) is not anonymous. HEIRE (the); a comedy . . . Written by T. M. [Thomas May]. 4to. [D.A7.B. vol. 37, p. 144.] 1620 Reprinted in Dodsley’s Old Plays. HELICON Hill ; being a pleasant posy of rather wild flowers gathered at the foothills of Parnassus. . . . By Felix Folio, Gent, of London [William Maas]. i6mo. Pp. 46. [Millard’s Bibl. of Lovat Fraser.] London, 1921 HELL destroyed ! Now first translated from the French of d’Alembert [or rather from EEnfer detruit of Baron d’Holbach], etc. (Part II. A critical dissertation on the torments of Hell . . . Now first translated from the French [i.e. from a french version of the work Of the torments of Hell by Samuel Richardson, Baptist Minister]. i2mo. 2 parts. Pp. 83. \Brit. Afus.] London,1823 HELL in an uproar, occasioned by a scuffle that happened between the lawyers and the physicians, for superiority. [Verse. By Richard Burridge.] Fol. Pp. 16. London, 1700 Authorship revealed in the advt. at the end of his “ The Apostate Prince.” HELPS to worship ; a manual for Holy Communion . . . Compiled by two priests [Charles Boyd and H. G. J. Meara]. i6mo. Pp. vi. 74. [Brit. Afus.] Oxford [1877] HENRIE Cornelius Agrippa, of the Vanitie and Uncertaintie of artes and sciences. Englished by la. San. Gent. [James Sanford]. 4to. B. L. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1569 HEN RY Lamb. [By G. L. K. i.e. George L. Kennedy.] 4to. Pp. 29. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1924 “ Contemporary British Artists.” HENRY of Navarre, Ohio. By Hol- worthy Hall [Harold Everett Porter]. 8vo. Pp. 191. [Brit. Afus.] New York, 1914 HENRY’S first scripture lessons . . . By the author of ffome and its duties [Mrs J. Werner Laurie]. i6mo. [Brit. Afus.] London [1869] HEPTAMERON (the) . . . new translation from the French [by William M. Thomson]. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] [1896] Signed : W. HER privates we. By Private 19022 [Frederic Manning]. 8vo. Pp. 453. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1930 Previously published under the title, “ The middle parts of fortune,” q.v. HERALD (the) of literature ; or, a review of the most considerable publications that will be made in the course of the ensuing winter ; with extracts. [By William Godwin.] 8vo. [F. K. Brown’s Godwin.] London, 1784 HERBERT Tresham ; a tale. ... By J. M. Neale. [With an introduction signed : J. H. i.e. Joseph Haskoll.] 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1870 HERCULES, king of clubs ! A farce . . . By F. F. Cooper . . . with . . . remarks by D. G. [George Daniel]. 12mo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Afus.] London [1871] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 89. HERE beginneth a song of the Lordes Supper. [By Emery Tilney.] [Pollard and Redgrave.] London [1550 ?] Signed : E. T. Wrongly attributed to Edmund Tilney. HERE begyneth a newe treatyse deuyded in thre parties. The fyrst is to know, a have 1 mynde The wretchednes of all mankynde . . . By Miles Hogarde ?] 4to. B. L. Brit. Afus.] [London, 1550?] But Pollard and Redgrave, S. T. C., give no attribution at all. HERE begynneth a lytell Cronycle, translated (out of Frenche) [by Alexander Barclay] and im-printed at the cost and charge of Rycharde Pyn-son . . . [Johnstone and Robertson’s Bibl. Aberd. i. 22.] London [1517 ?] HERE begynneth the castell of laboure. [Translated by Alexander Barclay from Pierre Gringoire’s Le Chateau de labourl] [D.N.B. vol. 3, p. 161.] London [1505] For a later edition see “The castell of labour.” HERE begynneth the Kalendar of Shepherdes. [Translated by Alexander Barclay?] Fol. [Johnstone and Robertson’s Bibl. Aberd. i. 9.] London, 1506 The copy in the Grenville collection (Brit. Musi) is the only one known. For an earlier edition see “ The Kalendayr of the shyppars.” HERE ensueth a lytell treatyse named the Tauerne of goostly helthe. [By Alexander Barclay.] i2mo. Pp. 16. [Johnstone and Robertson’s Bibl. Aberd. i. 26.] London, 1522 HERE is a merry jest of the mylner of Abington. [Sometimes ascribed to Andrew Borde.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgravel] London, n.d. Another edition begins, “ A right pleasant historie ...” q.v. *HEREDITARY right exemplified : . . . The full title continues “ ... to his son H—y, upon his late discipline at Westminster.” It was certainly not by Curll himself but is merely put into his mouth. R. Straus (The Unspeakable Curll, p. 289) conjectures that the author may have been Samuel Wesley. HERMIT (the) inVan Dieman’s Land. The Brit. Mus. now attributes this to Henry Savary. HERO (a) from the forge ; a biographical sketch of Elihu Burritt. [By A. S. Dyer.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1877] HEROINE (the) musqueteer ; or, the female warriour : a true history . . . of pleasant adventures in the cam- paignes of 1676 and 1677* Translated out of French [of the Sieur de Prechac]. 8vo. Pp. 270. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1700 HEROINES of the faith. [By Frank MundelL] 8vo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Mus.'] > [1928] The first edition bears the author’s name. HEZEKIAH’S return of praise . . . For Litleton, read Littleton. HIDDEN joy ; points of meditation on the life of our Blessed Lord. . . . Compiled by a priest of the Diocese of Birmingham (C. J. B.) [Charles J. Bowen]. 161110. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1869 HIDDEN (the) Kingdom. By Francis Beeding [John Leslie Palmer and Hilary "Aidan St George Saunders]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Amer. Cat.] London [1927] HIDDEN out; a detective story. By Howard Fielding [Charles Witheril Hooke]. i2mo. Pp. 256. [Publishers' Weekly, iSth Feb. 1928.] New York, 1927 HIGH ground; a novel. By Jonathan Brooks [John Calvin Mellett]. 8vo. Pp. 317. [Amer. Cat.] Indianapolis [1928] HILARY Thornton. [A novel.] By Hubert Wales [William Piggott]. Svo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Mus.] London [1909] HILLS (the) of Hell . . . For W. M. Chapman Houston, read Wellesley Desmond Mountjoy Chapman- Huston. HIMATIA-POLEOS ; the triumphs of olde draperie : or, the rich cloathing of England. Performed ... at the enstalment of Sr Thomas Hayes Knight in the high office of Lord Maior of London . . . the 29 day of October, 1614* Devised and written by A. M., Citizen and draper of London [Anthony Munday]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1614 See also “ Metropolis coronata . . •” and “ Sidero-Thriambos . . .” HINDU law in Bombay ; a plea for its codification. [By Framji Rustamji Bhikaji.] 8vo. Pp. 49- [Brit. Mus.] Bombay, 1892 Signed : F. R. V. HINDU music. [By Sir Sourindro Mohun Tagore.] Reprinted from the “ Hindoo Patriot.” Svo. Pp. x. 43. [Brit. Mus.] Calcutta, 1874 HINTS concerning the means of promoting religion in ourselves and others. [By Thomas Richards, curate of St Sepulchre’s, London.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 175°?] HI NTS for the times ; or, modern popery illustrated: being a few deductions drawn from the principles advocated in the Oxford Tracts for the times. By a Clergyman [Rev.-Attwood, of Mytholm Bridge, Holmfirth.] i2mo. Pp. 40. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1837 HINTS 011 popular song writing. [By D. M. Winkler.] 8vo. Pp. 23. [Amer. Cat.] New York [1928] HINTS on the culture of character by . . . G. Croly . . . H. M. Villiers. . . . [Edited by J. H. i.e. James Hogg.] Svo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1855-6 HIS Imperial Highness the Grand Duke Alexis in the United States of America during the winter of 1871-72, [By William W. Tucker.] Svo. Pp. 221. [Brit. Mus.] Cambridge [Mass.] 1872 HISTORICAL (an) account of the antient rights . . . The attribution to Andrew Fletcher, of Saltoun, is repudiated in Macfie’s Bill, of A. Fletcher, p. 22. HISTORICAL (an) outline of the Greek Revolution. An edition in the following year (1826) bears the author’s name. HISTORICAL sketch of and remarks upon Congressional Caucuses for President and Vice-President. [By Matthew Carey.] From The Olive Branch. Svo. Pp. 36* [Sabin s Dictionary, iii. 34°-] The Olive Branch is not anonymous. HISTORICAL sketches of civil liberty ; from the reign of Henry VHth to the accession of the House of Stuart. [By James Brewster.] 8vo. London, 1788 HISTORICAL (an) treatise written by an author of the Communion of the Church of Rome [L. Du Four de Longuerue] touching transubstantia- tion. Wherein is made appear that according to the principles of that Church, this doctrine cannot be an article of Faith. [Translated from the French and edited by W. Wake.] 4t0- [Brit. Mus.] London, 1687 HISTORIE (the) of the Council of Trent. . . . Written in Italian by Pietro Goave [Pietro Sarpi] and faithfully translated into English by Nathaniel Brent. fol. Pp. 825. HISTORIE (the) of the reformation of the Church of Scotland. [Edited by D. B. i.e. David Buchanan.] Fol. \Brit. Mus.] 1644 The title of an edition of 1790 begins: “ The history of the reformation . . HISTORIES or tales of past times told by Mother Goose ; with morals. Written in French by M. Perrault and Englished by G. M. Gent. [Guy Miege?] [Brit. Mus.] London, 1719 This is the eleventh edition of “ The tales of Mother Goose.” HISTORY (the) and antiquities of Colchester. [By P. Morant.] 8vo. Pp. 226. [Brit. Mus.] Colchester, 1789 ^HISTORY (the) and the mystery of Good Friday. Published under the pseudonym : Lewis Carbonell. HISTORY (the) and philosophy of earthquakes, from the remotest to the present times. ... By a member of the Royal Academy of Berlin [John Bevis]. 8vo. Pp. 351. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1757 HISTORY (the) of Agathon. Translated from the German [of Wieland, by John Richardson, of Eworth, Yorkshire]. i2mo. 4 vols. [W. Taylor’s Historic Survey of German Poetry.] London, 1773 *H I STORY (the) of America . . . For Jendidiah read Jedidiah. *H I STORY of England and France . . . A later edition (1861) bears the author’s name. HISTORY (the) of female favourites. . . . Translated from “ Histoire des Favorites,” par Mademoiselle D * * * [-de la Roche-Guilhem]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1772 HISTORY (a) of Hadleigh, Suffolk. [By Hugh Pigot.] 8vo. Hadleigh, 1859 From an inscribed copy. *HISTORY (the) of Miss Clarinda Cath- cart. . . . [By Mrs Jane Marshall.] The Brit. Mus. now corrects this name to Jean Marishall. HISTORY (the) of Mr Fantom. [By Hannah More.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1831 Signed : Z. HISTORY (the) of New Holland. . . . With a particular account of its produce and inhabitants, and a description of Botany Bay. [By George Barrington.] . . . 8vo. Pp. xxiv. 254. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1787 HISTORY (the) of Nourjahad. By the editor of Sidney Bidulfh (Frances Sheridan). [Edited by H. V. M. i.e. H. V. Marrot.] 8vo. Pp. ix. 120. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 ^HISTORY of Prince Titi . . . The title-page really begins : “ Histoire du Prince Titi, A.R. The History of Prince Titi. . . .” The original, published in the same year (1736) as this translation, was also anonymous. For another translation see “ Memoirs and history of Prince Titi.” HISTORY (the) of Rome from the earliest times to the fall of the Empire ; for schools and families. [By Thomas Milner, M.A., F.R.G.S.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1848] ^HISTORY (the) of S. Elizabeth . . . For History, read Historic. ^HISTORY of the Athenian Society ... By L. R. “By L. R.” is a mistake. No indication of authorship appears on the title-page. The Epistle dedicatory is signed : R. L. HISTORY (the) of the Cathedral Church of Hereford. [By Richard Rawlinson.] [Gross’ Sources of Engl. Hist. p. 126.] London, 1717 ^HISTORY of the discovery of America . . . The author was not the Rev. James Steward, but Henry Trumbull (not Turnbull as given in the footnote). The first edition, 1810, was issued as “By a Citizen of Connecticut,” but editions of 1822 and 1836 bear Trumbull’s name. The Rev. James Steward, D.D., has caused much trouble. There was an issue in 1810 which bears this name on the title-page as the author. This was probably the second issue of the first edition, the typography with the exception of the imprint, being identical. But the imprint “Brooklyn (L.I.), Printed by Grant & Wells for J. W. Carew” is fictitious, and as the Rev. James Steward has been found in no work of American Biography, he too may be considered equally fictitious. The whole matter is a bibliographical mystery. See the Bulletin of the Bibliographical Society of America, vol. 4, no. 3, 4, p. 46. HISTORY of the families of Skeet, Somerscales, Widdrington, Wilby, Murray, Blake, Grimshaw, and others. By a connection of the same [Francis John Angus Skeet]. 4to. Pp. 179. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1906 HISTORY of the First International. By Yu. M. Steklov [Ovshy Moiseevich Nakhamkis]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 463. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1928 HISTORY (the) of the French Academy. . . . Written in French by M. Paul Pellison. [Translated by H. S. i.e. Henry Some.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1657 HISTORY (the) of the intrigues and gallantries of Christina, Queen of Sweden and of her court, whilst she was at Rome. [By Christian Gottfried Franckenstein.] Faithfully render’d into English [by Philip Hollingworth]. . . . i2mo. Pp. 328. [Barbier’s Dictionnaire; Brit. Musi] London, 1697 HISTORY of the late war; including sketches of Buonaparte, Nelson and Wellington. For children. [By John Gibson Lockhart.] i2mo. [Brit.Mus.] London, 1832 Preface signed : I. G. L. HISTORY (the) of the life and death of David, with moral reflections ; a translation from the French [of F. T. de Choisy]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 163, 39. [Brit. Musi] London, 1741 HISTORY of the reign of George the Third. . . . With a review of the late war. [By Robert Macfarlane.] 8vo. [.D. N. B. vol. 35, p. 76.] London, 1770 HISTORY (the) of the royal genealogy of Spain . . . [Abridged from Mariana and others] by the translator of Mariana’s History of Spain [Mile, de la Roche-Guilhem ?]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ J72 4 HISTORY (the) of the serail and of the court of the Grand Seigneur. [By Michel Baudier.] Translated by E. G(rimestone). 4to. 2 parts. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1635 ^HISTORY of the war in America. . . . [By Patrick Gordon.] Sabin merely states “ Lowndes attributes the work to P. Gordon.” There does not seem to be any authority for “ Patrick.” ^HISTORY (the) of the workhouse. . . . By A. W. . . Signed : A. W. The initials are not on the title-page. ^HISTORY (the) of Wales . . . For By a lady of the Principality of Wales, read By a lady of the Principality. HOB’S wedding ; a new farce of two acts. [By John Leigh.] Being the sequel of The Country Wake. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1720 HOGS caracter of a projector ; wherein is disciphered the manner and shape of that vermine. [From Machiavel by Thomas Heywood.] . . . 4to. Pp. 6. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1642 HOLI DAY (a) in Scandinavia. [By- Kinross.] 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 207.] Glasgow, 1871 HOLIDAY notes of some days in the land of the Tsar, July 1st to 24th, 1901. [By William H. Macleod.] 4to. N.P., N.D. Presentation copy signed by the author. HOLY Baptism. [By John Sidney Davenport.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [1881] HOLY (the) Catholic Church ; an Anglican essay. By Hakluyt Egerton Arthur Boutwood]. 8vo. Pp. 93. Brit. Mus.] London, 1921 HOLY (the) desires of death: or, a collection of some thoughts of the Fathers of the Church to shew how Christians ought to despise life and to desire death. By the R. F. Lalemant. Englished by T. V. [Thomas Vincent F. Sadler]. . . . i2mo. Pp. 336. [Brit. Mus.] N.P. 1678 HOLY (a) oyl and a sweet perfume : taken out of the Sanctuary of the most sacred scriptures. ... By J. H. [James Harrington]. ... Fol. [Brit. Musk] [London] 1669 The eighth treatise is entitled “ Noah’s Dove,” and bears the date 1645. Prefixed are the portraits of Sir James and of Lady Katherine Harrington, dated 1654. HOLY (an) priesthood and spiritual sacrifices. [By William Tarbet.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit.Mus.] [1870?] *HOME life in Russia . . . For Krystn, read Krystyn. HOME (the) Secretary. [A novel.] By Wilmot Kaye [Edward Platt]. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1910 HOMERIC ballads ; with translations and notes by the late William Maginn. [Edited by J. C. i.e. John Conington?] 8vo. Pp. xii. 299. [Brit. Mus.] London,1850 HOMESPUN. By Wilhelmina Stitch [Ruth Collie]. 8vo. Pp. 63. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1930 HOMILY; Christmas Eve, 1871. (Homily; Christmas 1879.) [By William Tarbet.] 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] 1871-79 HONEST (the) jury ; or, Caleb triumphant. [A ballad, by William Pulteney, afterwards Earl of Bath, upon the acquittal of Nicholas Am- hurst.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1729] HONEY-COMB (the), containing the life of Taulerus, Young’s Poem on resignation, a hymn by Addison. [Edited by W. A. i.e. William Alexander, of York?] 24mo. 3 parts. [Brit. Musi] York, 1831 HONEYMOON dialogues. By James James [Arthur Henry Adams]. 8vo. Pp. 159. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1916 HONORARY (the) whip ; a sporting novel. By Raymond Carew [Frank Victor Hughes-Hallett]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 309. [Brit. Musi] London, 1909 ^HONOUR (the) of the seals . . . According to Ralph Straus (The Unspeakable Curll, p. 305), this was written by Edmund Curll. *HOOP-PETTICOAT (the) . . . Not by J. Durand de Breval, but by Francis Chute. See the note to “The Petticoat . . in the supplement. HOROMETRIA; or, the compleat diallist ; wherein the whole mystery of the art of dialling is plainly taught. . . . By Thomas Stirrup, Philomath. Whereunto is added an appendix . . . by W. L. [William Leybourn], 4to. Pp. 203. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1652 HOROSCOPE (the) ; a quarterly review of astrology and occult science. Edited by Rollo Ireton [Ralph Stirling]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1902-4 *HORSE (the) Guards . . . Bor John Josiah Hort, read Richard Hort. HOUNSLOW-HEATH ; a poem. . . . [By Wetenhall Wilkes.] 4to. Pp. 21. [Brit. Musi] London, 1747 HOUSE (a) divided. By E. M. Jameson [Elaine Anthony Jones]. . . . 8vo. Pp. viii. 312. [Brit. Musi] London, 1905 HOUSE (the) of Dr Edwardes. By Francis Beeding [John Leslie Palmer and Hilary Aidan St George Saunders]. 8vo. Pp. 308. [Amer. Cat.] London [1927] HOUSE (the) of the secret—La Maison des hommes vivants. By Claude Farrere [Charles Bargone]. Authorised translation by Arthur Livingston. 8vo. Pp. 234. [Brit. Musi] London, 1923 HOUSEHOLDERS (the); another story of the Orkneys. By H. C., author of Island notes in wartime [H. Campbell]. 8vo. Pp. 72. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1921 HOUSES, haunts and works of Rubens. ... By F. W. Fairholt. [Edited by J. D. i.e. James DafForne.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1871 HOW and whither a Chrysten man ought to flye the horryble plague of the pestilence ; a sermon . . . translated out of hie Almaine into Englishe [by Miles Coverdale]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1560] HOW sin is strengthened and how it is overcome. [By James Nayler.] 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1660 Signed : J. N. HOW to come to Christ. By the author of Our new life in Christ. Edited by a parish priest [Hon. Charles Leslie Courtenay]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1873 Signed : C. L. C. HOW to get married. By E. Montale [P. Poliakoff]. 8vo. Pp. 41. London, 1921 Acknowledgment by the author. HOW to go racing with pleasure and comfort in England and France. By a member of Tattersalls [W. Shake- shaft]. 8vo. [Brit. Mies.] 1901 HOW to grow and cure your own tobacco. [By W. A. S. Hellyar.] 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Musi] London [1923] HOW to play draughts well. By Chequerist [Rowland Addams Williams]. 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Afus.] London [1894?] HOW to sail a dinghy. ... By Centreboard [C. A. Grant]. 8vo. Pp. 30. [Brit. Afus.] London [1930] HOW to spell correctly. [By Charles Platt.] 8vo. Pp. 92. [Brit. Afus.] London [1925] HOW to study the Bible. . . . [By John Clifford and others. Edited by F. A. A. i.e. F. A. Atkins.] Third edition. 8vo. Pp. v. 69. [Brit. Musi London [1890 HOWLING (the) mob; an indictment of democracy. By a Gentleman with a duster [Harold Begbie]. 8vo. Pp. 126. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1927 HOYLE abridged ; a treatise on backgammon : or, short rules for short memories, with the laws of the game. Adapted either for the head or pocket. By Bob Short, Jun. [Robert Withy], Printed for the benefit of families to prevent wrangling. 24mo. Pp. 24. [Jessel’s Bibl. of flaying cards, p. 303. J London, 1819 HOYLE abridged; a treatise on the game of chess. . . . Selected principally from the stratagem of chess. By Bob Short [Robert Withy]. i6mo. Pp. 24. [JessePs Bibl. of flaying cards, p. 303.] London, 1824 HOYLE abridged; short rules for short memories at the game of whist, with the laws of the game. Adapted either for the head or pocket. By Bob Short [Robert Withy]. Printed forthe benefit of families to prevent scolding. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards, p. 302,] London, 1793 Part II. appeared in the same year. HUDIBRAS [i.e. George Sacheverell] on Calamy’s imprisonment and Wild’s poetry. To the Bishops. Fol. S. sh. [Z>. N. B. vol. 61, p. 224.] [London, 1663] An answer to Robert Wild’s ironical verses of sympathy on Calamy’s imprisonment, and was in turn answered in “ Your servant, Sir, by Ralpho to Hudibras ” and “ Hudibras answered by True de Case.” HUGH Herbert’s inheritance. ... By Caroline Austin [Mrs-Whitway]. 8vo. Pp. 287. [Brit. Musi] London, 1889 HUMAN sacrifice. [By Sir J. E. D. D. Acton ?] 8vo. Pp. 47. [Brit. Mus.] London, private print [1864?] HUMBLE (an) supplicacion unto God, for the restoringe of hys holye woorde, into the Churche of Englande. [By Thomas Becon.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] Strasburgh in Elsas [London] 1544 HUMOROUS and dramatic sketches, monologues, recitations, rhymes and songs. By “ Cue,” author of Extra Turns [A. Leonard Summers]. 8vo. Pp. 55. [Brit. Mus.] London [1912] HUMOR’S looking glasse. [By Samuel Rowlands. The introduction signed : J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1870] HUNDRED (a) points on how to make money. By Pensive [Walter E. Sleight]. 8vo. Pp. 63. [Brit. Mus. Cleethorpes [1929 HUNTED down. By Charles Dickens ; with some account of T. C. Wainewright . . . [by J. C. H. i.e. John Camden Hotten]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1871] I HOPE they won’t mind. [Reminiscences. By Percy Colson.] 8vo. Pp. 270. [ Who's Who.] London, 1930 I REMEMBER ; or, photographs from a home album. ... By the author of Copsley annals [Emily Steele Elliott]. 8vo. Pp. 164. [Brit.Mus.] London, 1870 *IADES. ... For lades, read Iadis. The date of publication was [1888]. IDEA; the shepheard’s garland. . . . [By Michael Drayton. Edited by J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1870] IDYLL (an) on the peace [of Ryswick. By John Oldmixon]. Fol. Pp. 10. [Brit. Musi] London, 1697 IF four walls told ; a village tale in three acts. By Edward Percy [Edward Percy Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 92. [Brit. Musi] London,1922 “I’LL Neville you.” ... [A letter to the Editor of the Gateshead Observer. By Michael Aislabie Denham.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [Durham, 1851] Signed : M. A. D. VOL. VI. HUNTING the fox. By Sabretache [A. S. Barrow]. 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Musi] London [1926] HUNTSMAN’S (the) delight, or the forrester’s pleasure. [A song.] By J. M. [Joseph Martin?]. Fol. S. sh. [Brit.Mus.] [London, 1670 ?] HYDRO-SIDEREON; or, a treatise of ferruginous waters, especially the Ipswich Spaw. . . . [By William Coward ?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1717] Signed : W. C. *HYMN (an) to the Redeemer. . . . For William Godwin, read William Goldwin. HYMNS and poems for very little children. By the Hon. M. E. L. [Hon. Mary Emma Lawrence?]. 8vo. 2 series. [Brit. Musi] London [1871-75] HYMNS for the use of St Paul’s, Oxford. [By Alfred Hackman ?] 24mo. Pp. 250. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1859 HYSTORIE (the) of Hamblet. [Translated from Les histoires tragiques of Francois de Belleforest.] 4to. B. L. [Gollancz’s Sources of Hamlet.] London, 1608 I ILLS (the) of industry; or, Britain’s industrial muddle. . . . By “Hospitaller” Henry H. Spittal]. 8vo. Pp. 15. Brit. Musi] Glasgow, 1927 ILLUSTRATED guide to Abergele and Pensarn. . . . [By E. L. i.e. Egerton Leigh.] (New edition.) 8vo. Pp. vii. 31. [Brit. Musi] Abergele, 1900 ILLU STRATED narrative of the dreadful murders on the Maungatapan Mountain, and track between the Wakamarina River and Nelson . . . New Zealand. [By D. M. Luckie.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Nelson, N.Z., 1866 Signed : D. M. L. ILLUSTRATIONS of baptismal fonts . . . Signed : T. C. ILLUSTRATIONS of manners and expences of antient times in England, in the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries. . . . [By John Nichols.] 4to. [Gross’s Bibl. of municipal history.] London, 1797 2 A ILLUSTRIOUS (the) French lovers; being the true histories of the amours of several French persons of quality. . . . Written originally in French [by Robert Challes] and translated into English by Mrs P. Aubin. i2mo. 2 vols. [Barbier’s Dictionnairei] London, 1739 Second edition; the first was issued in 1727* ILLUSTRIOUS (the) Hugo Grotius of the law of warre and peace, with annotations. [Translated by C. B. i.e. Clement Barksdale.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1654 ILLUSTRIOUS (the) shepherdess. [Translated from the “ Sucessos y Prodigios de Amor" of J. Perez de Montalban by E. P. i.e. Edward Phillips.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1656 IMAGO regia ; the churchman’s religious remembrance of the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the decollation of King Charles the First . . . [Compiled] by D. M. [Douglas Macleane]. 8vo. Pp. 35. [Brit. Musi] London [1899] IMITATIONS and translations from Classics ; with original poems [some signed L. B. i.e. Lord Byron] never before published: collected by John Cam Hobhouse. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1809 IMMANUEL the salvation of Israel. The word of the Lord came unto me the twelfth day of the sixth month, in the year accompted, 1657. Concerning the Iewes and scattered tribes of Israel. . . . Written by ... J. P. [John Perrot]. 4to. Pp. 10. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1658 IMMORTALITY; an essay in discovery. . . . [By] B. H. Streeter . . . the author of Pro Christo et ecclesia [Lily Dougall]. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 380. \_Brit. Mus.] London, 1917 IMPARTIAL history of the life, character, amours, travels and transactions of Mr John Barber, City-printer and Lord Mayor of London. Written by several hands. [Edited by Edmund Curll.] 8vo. [Straus’ Curll.] London,1741 IMPARTIAL (an) representation of the poor cotton spinners in Lancashire. . . . [Signed: W. C. and R. M. i.e. Ralph Mather]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1780 *IMPERFECT (an) pourtraicture . . . The sheets of this edition were published later in the same year with a new title-page, “ Charles the Second, King of Great Britain, France and Ireland ... ”, bearing the author’s name. ^IMPERIAL (an) manifesto. ... By Mahaba. For Mahaba, read Maharba. IMPERIOUS (the) brother. [Translated from the “Sucessos y Prodigios de Amor, novel 3,of J. Perez de Montalban, by E. P. i.e. Edward Phillips.] 8vo. Pp. 84. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1656 ^IMPORTANCE (the) and advantage of Cape Breton . . . This is now ascribed to William Bollan by all authorities. IMPORTANCE (the) of the British plantations in America to this kingdom ; with the state of their trade, and methods for improving it. [By F. Hall.] 8vo. Pp. 114. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1731 Another issue in the same year has the author’s name at the dedication. IMPORTANT questions and other useful information for Protestants of all denominations. [Signed : D. O’C. i.e. Daniel O’Connor, of Cork.] 8vo. Pp. 53. [Brit. Mus.] [Cork, 1877] IMPOSSIBLE (the) island; Corsica: its people and its sport. By “ Snaffle ” [Robert Dunkin]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 224. London, 1923 IMPOSSIBLE (an) thing; a tale. [Translated from La Fontaine by William Congreve. Verse.] 4to. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1720 IMPRESSIONS of Jesus; being an account of how he impressed the friends among whom he grew up. By one of his followers [Buchanan Blake]. 8vo. Pp. 255. [Brit. Mus.] London [1925] IMPUDENT (the) babbler baffled, or the falsety of that assertion utter’d by Bradshaw in Cromwell’s new erected slaughter-house, namely that Charles I. was no hereditary but an elective king . . . detected and confuted. . . . [By John Brydall.] 4to. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1703 IMPRISONMENT (the) and death of King Charles I., related by one of his judges : being extracts from the memoirs of E. Ludlow. [Edited by J. T. H. i.e. J. T. Hornby.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1882 Aungervyle Society, publication No. 10. IMPROPRIETY (the) of open-communion between Baptists and Paedo- baptists in the Lord’s Supper. . . . By N. S. [Joseph Jenkins, of Wrexham]. i2mo. Pp. 16. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. vol. ii. p. 14.] 1786 IN clay and bronze ; a study in personality. By Brinsley Macnamara [A.. E. Weldon]. 8vo. Pp. 262. New York, 1921 Previously published as “ The Irishman. By Oliver Blyth.” IN commemoration of the royal marriage, March 10th, 1863 ; lines to the Prince of Wales. ... [By Albert Hiscock.] i2mo. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1863] Signed: A. H. IN exile. [Verse.] By R. R- [Sir Ronald Ross]. 8vo. Pp. 84. [Brit. Mus.] Liverpool, 1906 A later edition (1931) bears the author’s name. IN Lawrence’s Bodyguard. By Gurney Slade [Stephen Bartlett]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 267. [Brit. AT us.] London, 193° IN memoriam ; Dr Gee. [By Norman Moore.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1912] Signed : N. M. IN memoriam: Isaac Todhunter. Cambridge Review, March 5, 12 and 19 [1884]. [By J. E. B. Mayor.] 8vo. Pp. 60. [.Brit.Mus.] Cambridge, 1884 Signed: J. E. B. M. IN memoriam of the Prince Imperial of France ; four sonnets by a grand nephew of Napoleon the Great [W. C. Bonaparte Wyse]. 4to. Pp. 8. [Bnt. Mus.] Plymouth, 1879 IN memoriam Sir Thomas Lauder Brunton, F.R.S., i844-i9I6. [By D’Arcy Power.] 8vo. Pp. 9- [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1917] Signed: D’A. IN memorie of that lively patterne of true pietie and unstain’d loyaltie, Mrs S. Harris. [An elegy, by Sir George Wharton?] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1649] Signed : W. G. IN pursuit of Dulcinea; a quixotic journey. By Henry Bernard [Henry Baerlein]. With fifteen illustrations by H. C. Brewer. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 250. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1904 IN the foreign legion. By Erwin Rosen [Erwin Carle]. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 285. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1910 IN the honor of ye passion of our lorde ; and the compassyon of our blyssed lady moder of Chryste. [By Alexander Barclay.] i2mo. Pp. 39- [Johnstone and Robertson’s Bibl. Aberd. i. 26]. London, 1522 *IN the land of the Brora . . . For Brora, read Bora. IN this booke is conteyned the names of ye baylifs custos mairs a. sherefs of lodon. [By Richard Arnold.] Fol. [Pollard and Redgrave.] [Antwerp, 1503?] Known as Arnold’s Chronicle. There was another edition, also anonymous, in 1521- IN time of war. [Hymns written and translated by R. M. M. i.e. R. M. Moorsom.] 8vo. Pp. 12. [Brit. Mus.] Winchester [1900?] INCOGNITA; a tale of love and passion. [By William Stephens Hayward.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 312. [Brit. Mus.] London [1884] INCONSISTENT (the) villains. By N. A. Temple Ellis [Neville Aldridge Holdaway]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 284. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1929 INCORPORATE your borough! A letter to the inhabitants of Manchester. By a radical reformer [Richard Cob- den]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] Manchester [1838] No title-page. “INCORRIGIBLE (the)”; or, naughty tricks of a merry school-girl. By O. M. S. [Olga M. Somech]. 8vo. Pp. 48. [Brit.Mus.] Southport, 1915 INCREDIBLE (the) truth. By Roy Devereux [Mrs Devereux Pember]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit.Mus.] London [1930] *INDECORVM . . . Signed : S. E. INDEX (an) list of all printed editions of the English Scriptures down to 1640, in the library of the British and Foreign Bible Society. [By H. F. Moule.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] 1901 Signed: H. F. M. INDEX of places to Dugdale’s Warwickshire. Second edition, by Dr Thomas. [Compiled by Sir Thomas Phillipps ? ] Fol. [Brit.Mus.] [1844?] Dugdale’s Warwickshire, vol. 2. INDEX to Cartularies now or formerly existing since the dissolution of Monasteries. By T. P. [Sir Thomas Phillipps]. i2mo. [Brit.Mus.] [Middle Hill] private print, 1839 INDEX to the Baker manuscripts by four members of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society (J. J. S. [John James Smith?], C. C. B. [Charles Cardale Babington], C. W. G. [Charles Wychffe Goodwin], J. P. [John Power]). 8vo. Pp. viii. 176. [Bnt. Mus.] Cambridge, 1848 INDEX to the genealogies of the Tenants in capite in Domesday Book. By T. P. [Sir Thomas Phillipps]. Fol. 4 parts. {Brit. Mus.\ [Middle Hill, private print, 1838-42] INDEXES to the County Visitations in the Library at Middle Hill, 1840, and to a few others in the Harl. MSS. British Museum, the Bodleian Library, and Queen’s College, Oxford. [By Sir Thomas Phillipps.] Fol. Pp. 56. [Brit. Mus.] [Middle Hill] 1841 Signed : T. P. The second edition (1842) bears the author’s full name. INDIAN card reading; the art of fortune telling by means of ordinary playing cards, explained. ... By an adept [Caxton Hall]. Third edition. 8vo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Mus.] Blackpool [1907] A later edition (1924) bears the author’s name. INDIAN (the) prophet ; or, a review of Babu Keshub Chunder Sen’s lecture “Am I an inspired prophet ? ” ... A lecture delivered at . . . Dacca [by Sitalakanta Chattopadyaya]. 8vo. Pp. 44. [Brit. Mus.] Dacca, 1879 Signed : S. C. ^INDUSTRIAL (the) arts . . . Signed : W. M. INGENIOUS (an) and scientific discourse of witchcraft. [By John Bell, minister at Gladsmuir.] i2mo. [J. Ferguson’s Witchcraft Lit. of Scot. p. 28.] 1705 INGOMAR the barbarian ; a play. . . . By Maria Lovell . . . with remarks . . . by D. G. [George Daniel]. . . . X2mo. Pp. 61. [Brit. Mus.] London [1855] *INNER (the) life ; hymns . . . Not by Miss Phillipps (this is the proper spelling), but by Lucy Fletcher, afterwards Massey. Thoughts from a girl's life (1864) bears the latter’s name. INNER (the) life of the Navy: being an account of the inner social life led by our naval seamen. ... By Lionel Yexley [James Woode]. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 392. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1918 INNKEEPER (the) of Abbeville . . . A drama. ... By E. Fitzball. . . . With . . . remarks by D. G. [George Daniel]. i2mo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] London [1871] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 90. INNOCENCY against envy ; in a brief examination of Francis Bugg’s two invective pamphlets . . . the one styled, The Quakers detected; the other, Battering Rams against New- Rome. ... By G. W. [George White- head], and S. C. [Samuel Cater ?]. 4to. Pp. 18. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1691 INQUIRY into the causes of the present disarrangement of public credit in Great Britain. [By Joseph Smith, Barrister.] 8vo. 1793 MS. note on Messrs Harding’s copy. INQUIRY (an) into the genuineness of a letter dated 3rd February 1613, and signed “ Mary Magdaline Davers.” [EditedbyJ. B. i.e. John Bruce, F. S.A.?] 4to. Pp. 30. London, 1864 Camden Miscellany, vol. 5. INSTITUTIONAL religion. By Hakluyt Egerton [Arthur Boutwood]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] 1914 Modern Oxford Tracts. INSTITUTIONS, essays and maxims, political, moral and divine; divided into four centuries. [By Francis Quarles.] i2mo. Pp. 286. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1695 The first edition (1640) and many others have the title Euchiridion and are not anonymous. A later edition, 1698, with this same title “ Institutions . . .” bears on the title-page “ By the Right Honourable] L. Marquis of H [alifax].” Another anonymous edition was issued in 1698, with the title “ Wisdom’s better than money . . .” q.v. [The Library, September 1928.] INSTRUCTION (an) how to pray and meditate well . . . composed ... by Father I. Balsamo . . . and translated out of French into English by Iohn Heigham [or rather, J. Everard]. 24mo. Pp. 331. [Pollard and Redgrave.] St Omers, 1622 INSTRUCTION made easy; polyglot copy and exercise books for teaching languages. By Chrysostome Dagobert [J. B. A. Led’huy]. 4to. [Brit. Musi London [1858’ INTEREST (the) of England, as it stands with relation to the trade of Ireland, considered ; the arguments against the Bill for prohibiting the exportation of woollen manufactures from Ireland to forreign parts fairly discusst. . . . [By-Clements.] 4to. Pp. 23. [Book prices current, 1921.] London, 1698 INTERESTING (an) historical holiday ramble to Mid Calder. ... By the author of A History of West Calder W. C. Learmonth]. i2mo. Pp. 23. Brit. Mus.] Hamilton [1887] INTRODUCTION (an) to Royal Arch Masonry. By “Essex Master” [George Edward Roebuck]. 8vo. Pp. hi. [Brit. Musi] London, 1931 Signed : G. E. R. Acknowledgment by the author. INTRODUCTION (an) to the history of the revolt of the [American] Colonies. [By George Chalmers.] 8vo. [Book prices current, 1922.] London, 1782 This work was suppressed by the author, who afterwards published a History of the rise and progress of the American Colonies. INTRODUCTION (an) to the love of God (by Saint Augustine). [Translated by R. Fletcher.] 8vo. [Pollard atid Redgrave.] London, 1574 INTRODUCTION (an) to the study of English rhythms, with an essay on the metre of Coleridge’s “ Christabel.” [By H. D. Bateson.] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] [Manchester, 1896] Reprint from the Manchester Quarterly. INTRODUCTORY (a) for to lerne to rede, to pronounce and to speake French trewly ; compyled for the ryghte hyh, excellent and moste vertuous lady, the lady Mary of England, doughter to our mooste gracious souerayne lorde Kynge Henry the eight. [By Giles Dewes.] B. L. 4to. [Quaritchis Cat.] London [c. 1540] INUECTIVE (an) agaynst treason. [A ballad on the accession of Queen Mary. By Thomas Waterstoune.] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1553 Signed: T. W. Misprinted “A ninuective . . .” INVESTIGATION (an) into the affairs of the Delaware and Raritan Canal and Camden and Amboy Railroad Companies in reference to certain charges. By a citizen of Burlington [Henry C. Carey]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 329.] Newark, 1849 ^INVESTIGATOR (the) . . . 1762. For William Whitehead, read Allan Ramsay, the younger. Now accepted in the Brit. Mus. INVOCACYON (an) gloryous named ye psalter of Iesus. [Ascribed to Richard Whitford.] i6mo. [D.N.B. vol. 61, p. 128 ; Pollard and Redgrave^ London, 1529 For other editions, see “ Certaine devout and godly petition ...” (1545) and “The psalter of Jesus . . .” (1618). *1NWARD (the) light. Reprinted from The Inquirer for December 1838. Also attributed to Robert Mackenzie Beverley. In a bound volume with other pamphlets by Beverley in the British Museum. IPHIGENIA in Tauris. Translated from the German of W. von Goethe ... by P. M. E. [Phillos Marion Ellis]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, private print, 1883 VOL VI. IRELAND and Norway. [By H. L. Braekstad.] 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 234.] London, 1884 IRELAND before its connection with England: and Irish land tenures under English rule. [By J. Bellows.] 4to. [Birm. Cent. Lib.] Birmingham [1886] IRELAND in tears; or, a letter to St Andrew’s eldest daughter’s youngest son. By Major Sawney M‘Cleaver [Lionel Cranfield Sackville, Duke of Dorset]. 8vo. [Lineolds Inn Lib.] London,1755 IRISH (the) Massacre ; or, a true narrative of the unparallel’d cruelties exercised in Ireland upon the British Protestants . . . [By Henry Parker.] 4to. [Thomason’s Coll, of Tracts.] [London, 1646] ^IRISHMAN (the) ... By Oliver Blyth. For John Weldon, read A. E. Weldon. It was published in the U.S.A. as by “ Brinsley Macnamara.” IRON (the) ore deposits of Dunderland. [By Hjalmar Sjogren.] [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 234.] Upsala, 1894 IROQUOIS (the) ; or, the bright side of Indian character. By Minnie Myrtle [Mrs Anna C. Miller, nee Johnson]. 8vo. [Allibone’s Diet.] New York, 1855 IRREGULAR verses, suggested by the baptismal oath of the Church of England, and by her utter inability to convert heathen nations to Christianity. By J. F. L. [J. F. Laing?]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1867 IS it good English ? By John O’London [Wilfred Whitten]. i6mo. Pp. 175. [Brit. Musi] London [1924] IS King Oscar II. a constitutional king? [By H. L. Braekstad.] 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 234.] London, 1895 IS Kitchener dead? By Frank Power [Arthur Vectis Freeman]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1926 IS the Comforter come ? and is he gone ? . . . By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1865] IS the New Theology Christian? By Hakluyt Egerton [Arthur Boutwood]. 8vo. Pp. v. 174. [Brit. Musi] London, 1907 *ISAGOGE ad Dei providentiam . . . By T. C. This is Thomas Crane. See D. N. B. ; Arber; Brit. Mus. Case never used any anonymity. ISIS (the) ... [A magazine.] Edited by a lady [E. S. Carlisle]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1832 2 A 2 ISLAND (the) Empire ; or, the scenes of the first exile of the Emperor Napoleon . . . together with a narrative of his residence on the island of Elba . . . By the author of Blondelle [Sir Henry Drummond Wolff]. 8vo. Pp. xv. 324. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1855 ISLAND folk songs. By H. C., author of Island notes in war time [H. Campbell]. 8vo. Pp. 38. [Brit. Mus.\ Kirkwall, 1920 ISLAND notes in war time. By H. C. [H. Campbell. On the Orkneys]. 8vo. Pp. 69. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1918 ISLES of Illusion ; letters from the South Seas. Edited by Bohun Lynch. [By R. J. Fletcher.] 8vo. Pp. xvi. 334. [Brit. Musi] London, 1923 Signed : Asterisk. *ISMENIA and the Prince . . . For Hon. Mrs Stanley, read Hon. Mrs Eliza Stanley. I S O E, and other poems. By Cave Winscom [John Cave]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1871 ISRAEL; with an appendix on the future restoration of God’s ancient people. By Charisos [Robert Grace]. 8vo. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibli] London, 1835 JABBER’S [Jacob Kopelowitz’] new methodic primer . . . for the use of foreign Jews, adults, to enable them to learn the English language. 8vo. Pp. 33. [Brit. Musi] London [1902] *JACK and I in Lotus Land. . . . Frances Little is a pseud, and the author’s real name is Mrs Fannie Macaulay, nee Caldwell. JACK of Clubs; a novel. By John Ironside [E. M. Tait]. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Musi] London, 1931 JAMES. [A novel.] ByW. Dane Bank [William Henry Williamson]. 8vo. Pp. 315. [Brit. Musi] London, 1914 JAMES Vraille : the story of a life. By Jeffery C. Jeffery [Jeffery Charles Marston]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1890 JANET Syme Mackie; reminiscences for the grand-children. By J. B. M. [John Beveridge Mackie]. i6mo. Pp. viii. 109. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1888 “ IT is time to seek the Lord.” [A tract, by Francis Bourdillon.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1859] Signed : F. B. *ITALIAN (the) convert . . . There was an earlier edition (4to) with this title in 1635. For other editions with different titles, see “Newes from Italy of a second Moses . . .” (1608) and “A president to the nobilitie . . .” (1612). ITALIAN (the) sketch book. By an American [Henry Theodore Tucker- man]. 8vo. Pp. 216. [Appleton’s Diet, of Amer. Biogi] Philadelphia, 1835 The second edition (1837) bears the author’s name. ITER boreale ; or, Tyburn in mourning for the loss of a saint [the Earl of Shaftesbury?] ; a new song . . . written by J. D. [J. Dean?]. Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] London, 1682 ITINERARY of Buonaparte, from the period of his residence at Fontainebleau to his establishment on the Island of Elba ; to which is prefixed an account of the Regency at Blois. [Translated from the French of J. B. G. Fabry.] 8vo. Pp. 291-420. [Brit. Musi] London, 1815 A separate issue, with a special title-page of the addition to the second edition of the “Secret Memoirsiof Napoleon Buonaparte ” published anonymously by C. Doris. JAPANESE (a) Don Juan and other poems. ByJohnParis[FrankTrelawny Arthur Ashton-Gwatkin]. 4to. Pp. 126. [Brit. Musi] London [1926] JENNY ; a novel. By Sigrid Undset. [Translated by W. Emme.] 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 239.] London [1920] JESS of the Abbey School. By Elsie Jeanette Oxenham [Elsie Jeanette Dunkerley]. 8vo. Pp. 311. [Brit. Musi] London [1927] JESUS Christ: conferences delivered at Notre Dame in Paris, by Pere Lacordaire, of the Order of St Dominic. Translated from the French ... by a Tertiary of the same order [Henry D. Langdon]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1872 Signed : H. D. L. JESUS Christ the model of the priest. [By G. Frassinetti.] Translated from the Italian by the Rev. J. L. Patterson. i6mo. Pp. 108. [Brit. Musi] London, 1855 JESUS, Maria, Joseph, or, the Devout Pilgrim of the Ever Blessed Virgin Mary, in his holy exercises, affections, and elevations. . . . Published for the benefit of the pious Rosarists by A. C. and T. V., religious monks of the Holy Order of S. Bennet [Arthur Anselm Crowther and Thomas Vincent Faustus Sadler]. i2mo. Pp. 648. [Gillow’s Bibl. Diet. i. 604.] Amsterdam, 1657 JEWEL (the) of death. ... By Huan Mee [-and - Mansfield, two brothers]. 8vo. Pp. 35°* London, 1902 JEWISH fairy tales and fables. By Aunt Naomi [Gertrude Landa]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 169. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1908 JEWISH (the) peril; protocols of the learned Elders of Zion. By S. A. Nilus. [A translation of the Russian adaptation of Maurice Joly’s Dialogue aux enfersi] 8vo. Pp. vi. 95. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1920 JIM Brent. [A novel.] By Sapper [Herman Cyril MacNeile]. 8vo. Pp. 316. [Brit. Mus.] London [1926] JIMMY makes the ’varsity. ... By Jonathan Brooks [John Calvin Mellett]. 8vo. Pp. 283. [Amer. Cat.] Indianapolis [1928] JIMMY Rezaire. By Anthony Armstrong [George Anthony Armstrong Willis]. 8vo. Pp. 255. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 Published in the same year in America with the title “ The Trail of Fear.” JOE Smith and his waxworks. Written by Bill Smith, with the help of Mrs Smith and Mr Saunders ; with pictures by Mr Pitcher. [By W. F. Stanley.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 294. [Brit. Musi] London, 1896 Signed : W. F. S. JOHN Bull and his three partners; “which things are an allegory.” [By R. S. i.e. R. Swiney.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] Cheltenham [1894] JOHN Gilpin. Iter Johannis Gilpini ; carmen Latinum, auctore Roberto Scott. . . . Edited by J. P. M. [James P. Muirhead]. 8vo. Pp. 35. [Brit. Mus.] N.P., private print, 1897 Includes the English text of Cowper. JOHN Hadland’s advice ; or, a warning for all young men that have means. . . . [A ballad, by Richard Climsell]. Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London [c. 1640] Signed: R. C. JOHN Walters ; from The Lieutenant and others, etc. By Sapper [Herman Cyril MacNeile]. 8vo. Pp. 316. [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] JOHN’S looking-glass; or, true and false zeal delineated. . . . By R. D. [Richard de Courcy]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1772 JOHNSON of Lansing. By Hawley Williams [William Heyliger]. 8vo. Pp. 332. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1914 *JOLLY-BOAT (the) or, perils . . . Bor William Russell, read William Howard Russell ? [Allibone’s Diet.] JOSEPH of Arimathaea; a romantic morality in four scenes. By Edward Percy [Edward Percy Smith]. 8vo. Pp. ix. 37. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1920 *JOURNAL (a) kept on a journey. . . . The British Museum ascribes this tentatively to Samuel Evers. JOURNAL of a second expedition into the interior of Africa ... by the late Commander Clapperton. . . . [With an introduction signed: J. B. i.e. Sir John Barrow.] 4to. Pp. xxiii. 355. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1829 JOURNAL (a) of a tour in Italy in the year 1821, with a description of Gibraltar. . . . By an American [Theodore Dwight]. 8vo. Pp. 468. [Appleton’s Diet, of Amer. Biogi] New York, 1824 JOURNAL of a tour through part of the Western Highlands of Scotland in the summer of 1839, by T. H. C. [Chauncy Hare Townsend ?]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Newcastle, 1839 "^JOURNAL of a voyage up the Nile . . . Not by F. L. Hawks. See the preface to the work itself. The author is unknown. JOURNAL of a wanderer; being a residence in India, and six weeks in North America. [By John G. Reilly?] 8vo. Pp. xviii. 250. [Brit. Musi] London, 1844 JOURNAL (a) of visitation to a part of the diocese of Quebec by the Lord Bishop of Montreal. [Edited by E. H. i.e. Ernest Hawkins.] i6mo. Pp. 80. [Brit. Musi] London, 1844 “Church in the Colonies,” No. 2. JOURNALS of the House of Commons, etc. (A general index to . . . vols. 18 to 34. [By Edward Moore of Stock- well.]) Fol. [Brit. Musi] 1742, etc. JOURNEY (a) in candour ; being the . . . chronicle of a springtimepilgrimage into the wilds of Worcester. . . . By Gordon Lee [Gordon Lee Wheeler]. 8vo. Pp. 159. [Brit. Mus.] London [1929] *JOURNEY (a) through England . . . Not by John Macky. [Times Lit. Supp. 28th June 1928.] *JOURNEY through the Austrian Netherlands . . . Not by John Macky. \_Times Lit. Supp. 28th June 1928.] JOURNEY (a) to Jerusalem ; or, a relation of the travels of fourteen Englishmen in . . . 1669 from Scanderoon to Tripoly, Joppa, Ramah, Jerusalem. . . . In a letter from T. B. [R. Burton, 'pseud, i.e. Nathaniel Crouch]. . . . i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1672 Augmented and republished (1683) as, “Two Journeys to Jerusalem,” q.v. JOVIALL (the) broome man ; or, a Kent Street souldiers exact relation of all his travels in every nation. [A ballad, by Richard Climsell?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. \_Brit. Mus.\ London [c. 1640] Signed : R. C. JOY is my name. By Nicholas Fay [Wilkinson Sherren]. 8vo. Pp. 94. [Who's Who in Lit.'] London, 1922 JOY (the) of tears. . . . [In verse. By Sir William Mure.] 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] 1635 JOYCE’S little maid. By Nellie Cornwall [Nellie Sloggett]. 8vo. Pp. 127. [Brit. Musi] London, 1886 JOYFUL (a) new ballad, declaring the happie obtaining of the great Galleazzo. . . . [By Thomas Deloney?] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1588 Signed : T. D. JUBILEE and other rhymings, patriotic and domestic in English and Scotch. By a Lothian Justice, quondam M.P. [Robert A. Macfie, of Dreghorn]. 8vo. Pp. 20. London [1888] From an inscribed presentation copy. JUBILEE (a) jaunt to Norway. By three girls [Violet Crompton-Roberts, Mildred Crompton Roberts, and another girl]. 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 247.] London, 1888 JUDGE (the) ; wherein is shewed how Christ our Lord is to judge the world at the last day. . . . Translated [from Francesco Aria’s “De la Imitacion,” lib.vii.,by G. M. i.e. Sir Toby Matthew]. 8vo. Pp. 233. [Pollard and Redgrave.] [St Omer] 1621 JUDGEMENT (the) of dreames (of Artemidorus Daldianus). [Translated by Robert Wood, of Norfolk.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1606 For a later edition (1644) with initials R. W., see “ The Interpretation of dreames.” ^JUDGMENT on Alexander and Cassar . . . Translated from St Evremond. “ The comparison of Plato and Aristotle ” is not the same work. JUDICIUM, a pageant. . . . [Edited by F. D. i.e. Francis Douce.] 4to. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1822 Roxburghe Club publication. JULIUS Levine ; a novel. By a Gentleman with a duster [Harold Begbie]. 8vo. Pp. 314. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 JURY (a) of the virtuous. [A novel.] By Patrick Hood [Mary Louisa Gordon]. 8vo. Pp. 368. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1907 JUS primogeniti ; or, the dignity, right and priviledge of the first-born ... in a letter to a friend in the country. By B. J. Esq. [John Brydall]. 4to. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1699 JUST (a) and seasonable reprehension of naked breasts and shoulders. Written by a grave and learned papist [Jacques Boileau]. Translated by Edward Cooke, Esquire . . . 8vo. Pp. 150. [Barbier’s Dictionnairej Brit. Mus.] London, 1678 The original “De l’abus des nuditez de gorge” (1675) was also anonymous. Also attributed to De Neuilly, cur^ of Beauvais. JUST (a) character of the Revd. Mr Boyce. Written by Mr R— C— Richard Choppin]. Fol. S. sh. Brit. Mus.] N.P. [ 1728 ?] JUST Peggy. ... By Margaret Stuart Lane [Margaret Ashworth]. 8vo. Pp. 159. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1925 JUST thoughts. [Verse.] By A. M. "Anthony Mildmay], 8vo. Pp. 24. Brit. Mus.] London, private print [1915] JUSTICE (the) and necessity of a war with Holland, in case the Dutch do not come into her Majesty’s measures, stated and examined. [By Daniel Defoe.] 4to. Pp. 36. [Dottin’s De Foej Cambridge Hist, of Eng. Lit. ix. 423.] London, 1712 JUSTIFICATION by faith vindicated in a letter to a friend : with remarks on 1 Timothy v. 17, 18. [By J. Lethem?] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Leith, 1834 MS. attribution in Brit. Mus. copy. JUVENILE (the) gleaner ; or, anecdotes and miscellaneous pieces designed for amusement and instruction. By the author of a Brief historical catechism of the Holy Sctdptures.ifN. A.) [William Alexander, of York]. i2mo. Pp. 220. [Bril. Mus.] York, 1825 JUVENILIA. By A. C. Swinburne [or rather Sir Anthony Coningham Sterling]. 8vo. Pp. 37. [Brit. Mus.] London, private print, 1912 K. Blake’s way. By Margaret Warde [Edith Kellogg Dunton]. 8vo. Pp. 271. [Brit. Musi] London, 1929 KALENDAYR (the) of the shyppars. [Translated by Alexander Barclay?] Fol. [Johnstone and Robertson’s Bibl. Aberd. i. 7.] Parys, 1503 A free translation with additions of Le Compost et Kalendrier des bergiers (1497 edition). Only 3 copies of this translation are known to survive. For another edition, see “ Here begynneth the Kalendar of Shepherdes.” ^KANSAS and its constitution. . . . For Sidney George Fisher, read Charles Edward Fisher. [Cushing’s I nit. and Pseud.; Sabin’s Diet.] *KASIDAH (the) of Haji Abdu ’1-Yazdi. F. B. stands for Frank Baker, one of the pseudonyms which Sir R. F. Burton used. KATE Hamilton. ... [A novel. By William Stephens Hayward.] 8vo. Pp. 332. [Brit. Mits.\ London [1884] *KEEKIAD (the); a poem. . . . For Keekiad, read Keekeiad. KENYA calling. By Nora K. Strange [Mrs E. Gower Stanley]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Musi] London, 1928 KEY notes. [Verse.] By Arbor Leigh [Louisa Sarah Bevington, later Mrs Guggenberger]. 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Musi\ London, 1876 Afterwards republished under her own name. KEY (a) to Hamel’s exercises. . . . Translated by Chrysostome Dagobert [J. B. A. Led’huy]. i2mo. [Brit. Mies.] London, 1856 KEY to the juvenile historian’s genealogical table of the royal families of England. [By Mary Poole Hastings.] 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mies.] Chester, 1834 Signed : M. P. H. KEY to two hundred miscellaneous questions in Questions and answers on .. . the four Georges. By M. P. H. [Mary Poole Hastings]. 8vo. Pp. 41. [Brit. Mies.] Chester, 1835 KEZIAH in search of a friend : a story for schoolgirls. By Noel Hope [Sarah L. Morewood]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 174- [Brit. Musi] London, 1908 KIMONO. By John Paris [Frank Trelawny Arthur Ashton-Gwatkin]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 345. [Brit. Musi] London [1921] KIND (the) hearted creature; or, the prettiest jest that e’er you know. . . . [A song, by Richard Climsell?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1640] Signed : R. C. *KING Robert Bruce . . . In A. W. Robertson’s Aberd. Bibl., quoting an edition (Aberdeen, 1833) he attributes this to David Anderson, author of “ The Scottish Village: a poem ” (Aberdeen, 1808). KINGDOM (the) of darkness ; or, the history of daemons, spectres, witches, etc. By R. B. [Richard Burton, i.e. Nathaniel Crouch]. 8vo. [Bookprices current, 1921.] London, 1695 KINGDOM (the) of Heaven is at hand. By the author of The Gospel of Hope [W. N. Roundy]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 64. [Brit. Musi] Davenport, la., 1927 KINGDOME (the) of God in the soule . . . Composed by ... Fa. Iohn Evangelist. [Translated by B. P. S. i.e. Peter Salvin, O.S.B.] i2mo. Pp. 436. [Brit. Musi] Paris, 1657 KINGFISHER (the) and other poems. By John Doe [Victor Sampson]. 8vo. Pp. 28. [Brit. Musi] London, 1923 KING’S (the) ode, in answer to Peter Pindar, on the subject of his pension. . . . [By John Wolcot.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London [1788] ICIRKBY-STEPHEN Railway. By “Veritas” [John Close]. Dedicated to Mr Chambers. Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [Kirkby-Stephen, 1858] KITCHENER (the) mystery. By Frank Power [Arthur Vectis Freeman]. 8vo. Pp. 98. [Brit. Musi] London, 1926 KNAVES’-ACRE Association. Resolutions adopted at a meeting of placemen . . . Copied by Old Hubert [-Parkinson]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] 1793 KNOWING God. By an unknown Christian [Albert Ernest Richardson]. 8vo. Pp. 128. [Brit. Musi] London [1929] *KOREA, and the ten lost tribes . . . Signed : N. M. LA Vellma’s [David J. Lustig’s] vaudeville budget for magicians, mind- readers and ventriloquists. 8vo. Pp. 96. [Amer. Cat.\ Somerville, Mass., 1921 LABOUR defended against the claims of capital. By a Labourer [Thomas Hodgskin]. i2mo. London, 1825 From an inscribed copy. LABYRINTH. (An improved species of cribbage.) [Rules. By J. F. Knight ?] 4to. Pp. 3. [Brit. Mus.] [Lowcester, 1882] LAD (the) with the loaves ; or, not lost in a crowd. ... By the editor of Kind Words [Benjamin Clarke]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1869 LADENSIUM avroKaraKpLcns, the Canter- burians self-conviction. [By Robert Baillie.] 4to. [Huntington Lib. Checklist.] [Amsterdam] 1640 LADIES (the) dressing-room unlock’d. [A later edition of Mitndus muliebris by John Evelyn.] 4to. Pp. 23. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1700 LADIES (the) parliament. [A satire. By Henry Neville.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1647] See also “ The ladies a second time assembled in Parliament . . .” LADS afoot. By Gordon Lee [Gordon Lee Wheeler]. 8vo. Pp. 128. [Brit. Musi] Guildford [1929] LADS (the) of the Don, Donside Gordon Highlanders, “ D ” Company, Alford, 24th August 1904. [By Peter Adam.] 4to. [Edinb. Univ. Lib.] Aberdeen, 1904 Preface signed : P. A. LADY (the) and her Ayah, an Indian story. By the author of Little Henry and his bearer [Mrs M. M. Sherwood.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1816 *LADY (the) of the decoration. . . . Frances Little is a pseud, and the author’s real name is Mrs Fannie Macaulay, nee Caldwell. LADY Pamela’s pearls. By John Ironside [E. M. Tait]. 8vo. Pp. 311. [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] LADY’S (the) Museum. By the author of The female Quixote [Charlotte Lennox, nee Ramsay]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London [1760-61] LADY’S (a) visit to the Voring-Fos. By M. F. D. [M. F. Dickson]. 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 288.] Dublin, 1870 LAGHU (the) Kaumudi ... by Varadaraja ; with an English version. . . . [The preface signed : R. T. H. G. i.e. Ralph T. H. Griffith.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Benares, 1867 LAG’S elegy . . . See “Elegy (an) in memory of that valiant champion . . .” *LAIRD (the) of Coul’s Ghost . . . This entry from Martin’s Cat. is very incorrect. Mrs Elizabeth Steuart (not Stuart) was only the editor of this 1808 (not 1810) edition. The author was the Rev. William Ogilvie, minister of Inner- wick, whose name in fact appears on the title-page of every edition, as in fact does Mrs Steuart’s on the title-page of the 1808 edition. The work is therefore not anonymous at all. The earlier editions (1751, onwards) were entitled “A copy of several conferences and meetings. . . .” Most subsequent editions were called “ The Laird of Coul’s (or Cool’s) Ghost,” but this 1808 edition by Mrs Steuart was entitled “Narrative of four conferences between the Ghost of Mr Maxwell of Coul and the Rev. Mr Ogilvie. . . .” For further information regarding this interesting chapbook, see “ The Laird of Coul’s Ghost,” by Mr Frank Miller, of Annan, to whom we are indebted for calling our attention to this erroneous entry. LAIRD (the) of Lag’s elegy . . . See “ Elegy (an) in memory of that valiant champion . . .” LAITY in Church Councils ; a speech delivered in the Diocesan Synod of Aberdeen, 1867. [By John Comper.] Revised. 8vo. Pp. 18. [Brit. Mus.] Aberdeen, 1867 LAMENTABLE (the) and true tragedie of M. Arden of Feuersham in Kent, who was most wickedly murdered by the meanes of his disloyall and wanton wife, who for the loue she bare to one Mosbie, hyred two desperate ruffins, Blackwill and Shakbag, to kill him. [By William Shakespeare.] Second edition. 4to. [Jaggard’s Shakespeare Bibl.] London, 1599 LAMENTABLE (the) tragedy of Locrine, the eldest sonne of King Brutus. By W. S. London, 1595 To Wentworth Smith have been unwarrantably ascribed the three plays “Locrine,” “The Puritan,” and “Cromwell.” . . . There is no clue to the authorship. [D.N.B. vol. 53, p. 138.] LAMENTATION (a) in whiche is shewed what ruyne and destruction cometh of seditious rebellyon. [By Sir J. Cheke ?] 4to. B. L. [Brit. Mus.\ Londini, 1536 LAMENTATIONS (the) of Jeremiah paraphras’d. By W. B. [William Brown]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1708 LAND (the) of the midnight sun ; a cruise in Norwegian waters. [By Sir William Christopher Leng.] 8vo. Pp. 29. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 289.] Sheffield, 1886 A later edition (1887) bears the author’s name. LANDLORDS (the) to the tradesmen. [A handbill in favour of the corn laws. By Sir Thomas Phillipp ?] 4to. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] Broadway, 1839 LARACHE ; a tale of the Portuguese church in the sixteenth century. [By John Mason Neale.] 8vo. Pp. 94* [Brit. Musi] London [1861] *L A R G E additions to Common Sense . . . Evans’ Amer. Bibl. says this was a compilation by the publisher and only partly by Thomas Paine. “Additions to Common Sense ” (q.v.) is a revised edition of “ Large Additions. ...” Neither is included in later editions of “ Common Sense ’ and neither is included in “The Writings of Thomas Paine, collected by M. D. Conway, 1894-96.” LARKS Creek. [A story.] By Virgil B. Fairman [Andrew F. Klarmann]. i2mo. Pp. 200. [Publishers' Weekly, 14th January 1928.] New York, 1927 LASLETT (the) affair. By a gentleman with a duster [Harold Begbie]. 8vo. Pp. 317. [Brit. Musi] London, 1928 LASS (the) of the hill. [A song. By Mary Jones.] Fol. S. sh. [Bnt. Musi] [London? 1740?] LAST (the) and great Antichrist. [By John Sidney Davenport.] Pp. 14. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] 1895 LAST (a) appeal to the stockholders of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal on the injustice exercised towards Mr Randall, the contractor for the eastern section. [By Matthew Carey.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 340.] n.p. [1825] LAST (the) check to Antinomianism ; a polemical essay on the twin doctrines of Christian imperfection and a death purgatory. By the author of The Checks [John William Fletcher]. i2mo. Pp. 327. London, 1775 A reply to Sir Richard Hill’s Creed for Arminians and Perfectionists. LAST (the) evening of the year. By the author of The lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1863] Signed : F. B. LAST (the) great naval war ; an historical retrospect. By A. Nelson Seaforth [George Sydenham Clarke, Baron Sydenham]. 8vo. Pp. 20. [Brit. Musi] London, 1891 LAST (the) hour & other plays. By George Graveley [George Graveley Edwards]. 8vo. Pp. 143. [The Carthusian, July 1928.] London, 1928 LAST (the) moments of . . . Geo. IV. . . . his submission to the divine will . . . [Verse. By E— Elliot?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1830] LAST (the) speech, confession, and dying words of Dominus Defunctus, sometime Inquisitor in the city of Juxtamare : faithfully translated from the original. [Written by James Playfair, D.D.] 8vo. Edinburgh, 1809 “Juxtamare ” [juxta mare] is St Andrews. By the Principal of the United College in St Andrews against Principal Hill, of St Mary’s College, who had taken a chief part in initiating a charge of immorality against the writer. LAST (the) visitation, conflicts and death of Mr Thomas Peacock. . . . Published by E. B. [Edward Bag- shaw]. i2mo. Pp. 66. [Brit. Musi] London, 1660 LATE (the) Col. T. G. Montgomerie, R.E. [A biographical sketch. By Sir Henry Yule.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] 1878 Signed: H. Y. *LATE (the) Rev. Thomas Streatfield • • • • For L. E. L., read L. B. L. LATE (the) W. B. D. D. Turnbull, Esq. From The Herald and Genealogist, January 1864, with some corrections. [By J. Walter K. Eyton.] 8vo. Pp. 12. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1864] Only 25 copies printed. LATIN (the) prayers used at St Paul’s School in 1644. . . . [With an advertisement signed J. H. L. i.e. J. H. Lupton.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] 1890 L ATI NHL grammaticse rudimenta ; or, an introduction to the Latin tongue. [A reprint of W. Lilly’s Grammar, with additions.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Londini, 1841 LATTICED windows. By Norah K. Strange [Mrs E. Gower Stanley]. 8vo. Pp. 284. [Brit. Musi] London, 1924 LAUREL (the) ; fugitive poetry of the XIXth century. [Collected by Miss S. Lawrence.] i2mo. \Brit. Mus.\ London,1830 *LAW (the) of Obligations and conditions ... By T. A. of Gray’s Inn, Esq. The attribution to Thomas Ashe has never had the authority of the Brit. Mus. Catalogue and is impossible. The author is not known. LAWS and regulations of Short Whist as adopted by the Washington Club of Paris, with maxims and advice for beginners by A. Trump, Junior [William Pembroke Fetridge]. 8vo. Pp. 112. [JessePs Bibl. of playing cards, p. 87.] Paris, 1880 LAWS (the) of fourhanded bezique adopted by the Portland Club, with a guide to the game. By “Persicus” [Baron George de Reuter]. 8vo. Pp. v. 96. [F. JessePs Bibl. of playing cards, p. 247.] London, 1903 LAWS (the) of honor ; or, an account of the suppression of duels in France extracted out of the King’s Edicts, Regulation of the Marshals, Records of Parliament. [By John Evelyn?] 8vo. Pp. 198. [Levi and Gelli’s Bibl. del Duello, p. 23.] 1685 The attribution is exceedingly doubtful. For other editions, see “An account of the abolishing of duels . . and “The court of honour ...” LAWS (the) of race as connected with slavery. [By Sidney George Fisher.] 8vo. [A. J. Beveridge’s Abraham Lincoln, p. xx.] Philadelphia, i860 LAWYERS (the) : a comedy in three acts. By Slingsby Lawrence [George Henry Lewes]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1855] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. ii. *LAY baptism invalid . . . The fourth edition (1723) bears the author’s name. LAY (a) churchman’s letter to his neighbours upon dissent from the Established Church. [By John David Hay Hill.] i2mo. Pp. 22, 5. [Brit. Mush] Dereham, 1834 Signed: J. D. H. H. LAY (the) of the Lincoln’s Inn Legion. Monday, 10th April 1848. [By Martin Archer Shee]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1848] Signed : M. A. S. LAY (the) of the purple falcon ; a metrical romance, now first printed from the original manuscript, in the possession of the Hon. R. Curzon. End Ci finit li lai du Bon et digne Roi Syr Claudius Pantagruelle. [By R. Curzon, Baron de la Zouche?] 4to. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1847 Only 30 copies printed. LAY (a) of the Queen’s Torpid, 1880. [Signed : R. W. B. i.e. Richard Warwick Bond?] 8vo. Pp. 12. [Brit. Mus.] N.P. 1926 LAY sermons on the theory of Christianity, by a Company of Brethren. No. 1 (and No. 2). The Fidianism of Saint Paul, by Victorius Analysis [Dr Samuel Brown]. London, 1841 From an inscribed copy that belonged to the Dr John Brown family. LAYS (the) of the pious minstrel; selections by J. B. H. [John Bawtree Harvey]. i2mo. Pp. xii. 343. [Brit. Mus.] London [1862] *LAYS on land . . . Bor Macken, read Macker. LAYTON (the) Court Mystery. By “?” [Anthony Berkeley Cox]. 8vo. Pp. 316. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1925 LAZY Laurie; or, the mote and the beam. [Signed : M. E. R. i.e. Mary Emily Ropes.] i6mo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mush] London [1872] LE Sage’s [Marin Joseph Emmanuel Auguste Dieudonne de las Casas, Marquis de la Caussade] historical, genealogical, chronological and geographical atlas ... Fol. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1813 LEADS (the) at whist ; comprising the altered leads suggested by “ Cavendish.” Compiled by R. T. [Rosella Trist]. Revised by N. B. T. [Nicholas Browse Trist]. i6mo. Pp. 15. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards, p. 283.] New Orleans, 1889 LEAFLETS for letters. By the author of Copsley Annals [Mrs Emily Steele Elliott]. 321110. [Brit. Afus.] Brighton [1873] LEAGUE (the) of discontent. By Francis Beeding [John Leslie Palmer and Hilary A. St G. Saunders]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [Brit. Afus.] Boston, 1930 LEAGUES of nations, ancient, mediaeval and modern. By Elizabeth York [Mrs S. V. Bracker]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 337. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1919 LEARN to live ; firstlings by a working man [Robert Kerr, of Kilmarnock]. i2mo. i860 Attestation by a friend of the author. LEARNING to converse. [By George Mogridge.] i8mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1854] LEARNING to feel. [By George Mogridge.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1845] LEAVES from the journal of a subaltern during the Campaign in the Punjaub, Sept. 1848 to March 1849. [By Daniel Augustus Sandford.] 8vo. Pp. ii. 227. [Brit. Mus.j Annual Register, 1849.] Edinburgh, 1849 LEAVES in the wind. [By] Alpha of the plough [Alfred George Gardiner]. . . . 8vo. Pp. xvi. 270. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1918 LEAVES of grass. [By Walt Whitman.] 8vo. Pp. 382. [Brit. Mus.] London [1881] Many other editions, both previous and subsequent, were not anonymous. LECTURE (a)on the Vedanta, embracing the text of the Vedanta Sara (by Sadananda Yogmdra. Delivered by J. R. B. [James Robert Ballantyne]). 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Allahabad, 1850 LECTURES on the revival of religion, by ministers of the Church of Scotland. [Edited by W. H. M. i.e. William Maxwell Hetherington ?] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Glasgow, 1840 LECTURES on the subdivision of knowledge and their mutual relations. . . . [By James Robert Ballantyne.] 8vo. 3 parts. [Brit. Mus.] Calcutta, 1848-49 Preface signed : J. R. B. LECTURES upon the first and second Epistles of Paul to the Thessalonians. ... By ... R. Rollock. [Edited by H. C. i.e. Henry Charteris, and W. A.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1606 LEFT her home. ... [A novel. By William Stephens Hayward.] 8vo. PP- iv. 315. [Brit. Mus.) London [1884] LEGACY (the) of Liberalism. By A1 Carthill [Sir John Perronet Thompson]. 8vo: Pp. v. 168. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 LEGEND (the) of the House of Yonne. [By Richard Grenville, Duke of Buckingham.] 4to. Pp. 83. [Brit. Mus.] [Stowe, private print, 1830] Twenty-five copies only printed. LEITH-HILL; a poem. [By Rev. Peter Cunningham?] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1779 LENT lectures for 1859, illustrating the soundness ... of the Church of England. . . . [By various writers ; preface signed: B. A. i.e. Berkeley Addison?] 8vo. Pp. iv. 146. [Brit. Mus.] London [1859] LENTEN (a) prologue refus’d by the players. [By Thomas Shadwell.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [London ? 1683 ?] LEONARD & Gertrude; a popular story, written originally in German [by J. H. Pestalozzi], translated into French and now attempted in English [by Sir T. Ledgard]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 367. [Brit. Musi] Bath, 1800 LESS eminent Victorians. [Limericks, with woodcuts reproduced from Victorian periodicals.] By R. D. [Randall Davies]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1927 LESSONS for children . . . from two to four years old. [By A. L. Aikin, later Barbauld.] i2mo. 4 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, 1808 LESSONS for middle age ; with some account of various cities and men. By the author of The recreations of a country parson [A. K. H. Boyd]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1868 LESSONS on number, as given in a Pestalozzian school, Cheam, Surrey. [By C. Reiner.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1831 LET us be divorced. [A translation of V. Sardou’s comedy “ Divorqons.”] 8vo. Pp. 67. [Brit. Musi] London [1881] LET us be happy together. [By C. Jefiferys.] The factory girl. [Songs.] 4to. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [London, i860?] LET youth but know ; a plea for reason in education. By Kappa [William Archer]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Musi] London, 1905 LETTER (a) addressed to J. C., Esq. [John Cobbold], containing some observations on his late conduct ... as Lord of the Manor. [By Robert Small ? ] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1816 ^LETTER (a) from a city minister . . . The letter is signed : N. or M. LETTER (a) from a distinguished English Commoner [Edmund Burke] to a Peer of Ireland [Lord Kenmare] on the repeal of a part of the penal laws against the Irish Catholics. 8vo. Pp. viii. 29. [Brit. Musi] London, 1785 Reprinted in 1824. ^LETTER (a) from a Dublin apothe- cary . . . Letter signed : C. L. LETTER (a) from a friend at J—— [Jamaica] to a friend in London, giving an impartial account of the violent proceedings of the Faction in that Island. [By Dr James Smith, of Kingston.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [1747?] LETTER (a) from a gentleman in Ireland to his brother in England, relating to the concerns of Ireland in matters of trade. [By Andrew Marvell.] 4to. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1677 “ This was written by Mr Marvyl, under the notion of a younger brother in Ireland to an elder brother in England ; the reason wras that it might not be thought his writing because he was not willing to disoblige the North Country members, being his friends, they being for that Act.” [An alarum to England.... By W[illiam] C[arter], p. 19.] LETTER (a) from a gentleman to the minister of his parish, occasioned by this minister never bowing at the name of Jesus. . . . [Signed: A. B. i.e. Caleb Parfect ? ] 8vo. \Brit. Afus.] London, 1749 LETTER (a) from a minister, to a person of quality, showing some reasons for his nonconformity. [By Richard Baxter.] Fol. [London? 1679] Signed : A. B. It is clear from internal evidence that this was written by the author of the Nonconformist’s Advocate. LETTER (a) from a P—me S—j—t [Prime Serjeant] to a H—gh P—t [High Priest, i.e. George Stone, primate of Ireland] concerning the present posture of affairs. [Signed: A. M.i.e. Anthony Malone]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 151. \Brit. Mus.] Printed in Scratchland [Dublin] by Thomas Roastum, 1745 ^LETTER (a) from a Protestant gentleman . . . Signed : N. N. ^LETTER (a) from H. G—g, Esq. . . . For H. G—g, read H-G-G. *LETTER (a) from Irenopolis . . . Attributed in Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. to Morgan Edwards. LETTER (a) from the author of Siris [George Berkeley, Bishop of Cloyne] to Thomas Prior, Esq., concerning the usefulness of tar-water in the plague. 8vo. Pp. 20. \Brit. Afus.] Dublin, 1747 See also “A letter to T— P— . . .” LETTER (a) from the D. of D. [Duke of Dorset] to the L—d C—11—r [Lord Chancellor] of Ireland [on the memorial by the Earl of Kildare as to the misappropriation of money voted for barracks]. 8vo. \Brit. Afus.] London, 1753 LETTER (a) from the Reverend Mr ****** [Erasmus Middleton] to A****p)****, Esq., [on walking with God]. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] [Edinburgh] 1772 ^LETTER (a) of a Catholicke man . . . Cancel this entry. It is incorrect and duplicates the previous entry. LETTER (a) of advice to a young poet ; together with a proposal for the encouragement of poetry in this kingdom. [By Jonathan Swift.] 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Musi] Dublin, 1721 Signed : E. F. LETTER of an Italian refugee [Baron Borso di Carminati] on his exile ; addressed to the Countess Dowager of Belmore. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1827 LETTER of Christopher Columbus describing his first voyage to the Western Hemisphere. [Edited by S. L. M. B. i.e. Samuel L. M. Barlow.] 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] New York, 1875 Only 50 copies printed. LETTER (a) of [to] Sir R. H. Inglis . . . on the relative numbers, influence and benevolence [of] Churchmen and Dissenters. Second edition, enlarged. [Signed: Presbyter, i.e. E. Edwards, Curate of Marsden, Yorkshire.] i2mo. Pp. 12. [Brit. Musi] London [1837] LETTER (a) on restrictions and fetters in trade. [By H. H. B. Sawbridge.] 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] 1828 LETTER I., to Lord Viscount Althorp, on the ruinous consequences of an oligarchical system of government. By J. V. [J. Veitch]. 8vo. Pp. 33. [Brit. Musi] London, 1831 LETTER (a) out of Scotland from Mr R. L. S. [Roger L’Estrange] to his friend H. B. in London. Fol. [Brit, Musi] [London] 1681 Signed : R. L. [i.e. Roger L’Estrange]. LETTER (a) sent from a worthy divine [Adoniram Byfield?] to the . . . Lord Maior of . . . London [Sir Richard Gurney]. Being a true relation of the battaile fought betweene his Majesties forces, and . . . the Earle of Essex. ... Fol, S. sh. [Brit. Afus.] London,1642 MS. note by Thomason. LETTER (a) to a friend [giving some account of the life and works of C. Hayes. By E. Y. i.e. Edward Yardley ?]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London [1761 ?] LETTER (a) to a friend in the country, on the late expedition to Canada, with an account of former enterprises, a defence of that design, and the share the late M.rs had in it. [By Jeremiah Dummer.] 8vo. Pp. 22. [Sabin’s Dictionaryj Evans’ Amer. Bibli] London, 1712 LETTER (a) to a friend shewing from Scripture, fathers, and reason how false that State maxim is. Royal authority is originally and radically in the people. [By John Brydall of Lincoln’s Inn.] Fol. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1679 LETTER (a) to a friende, touching Mardochai his age, which helpeth much to holde the trueth. . . . [By Hugh Broughton.] 4to. No pagination. B. L. \Brit. Musi] [London] 1590 LETTER (a) to a gentleman in Edinburgh upon the apology for the Presbyterians in Scotland. [By John Bisset, the Elder.] 8vo. [Robertson’s Abend. Bibl.] [Aberdeen] 1742 The third edition, 1743, bears the author’s name. LETTER (a) to a gentleman in the country, giving an account of the two Insurance offices, the Fire office & Friendly Society. [Signed : N. B. i.e. Nicholas Barbon.] Fol. Pp. 4. [Brit. Musi] London, 1684 ^LETTER (a) to a lady : wherein the canonical authority of St Matthew’s Gospel is defended . . . The Brit. Mus. and D.N.B. both now attribute this definitely to Brandon Gurdon. *LETTER (a) to a member of the Convention of States in Scotland. By a lover of his religion and country. This is the complete title. R. A. Scott Macfie considers this may be by Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun. [Bibl. of A. Fletcher, p. 24.] LETTER (a) to Aaron Robertson, Esq., late Chairman of the Commission for investigating the affairs of the Joint Companies. By a Citizen of Burlington [Henry C. Carey]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 329.] Philadelphia, 1852 LETTER (a) to all the saints on the general duty of love. [By Mrs Anne Dutton.] 8vo. Pp. 52. [Brit. Mus.] 1742 LETTER (a) to Colonel Chesney. . . . By an old brother officer [Colonel William Martin Leake ?]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1824 ^LETTER (a) to General Monck . . . Ascribed also to Roger Matthews. [Brit. Mus.] LETTER (a) to Her Majesty the Queen from a widowed wife [jane Alice Sargant ?]. 8vo. Pp. 7. [Brit. Mus.] [1821] LETTER to his R. H. the Duke of Kent upon the revulsion of trade. . . . [By John Ashton Yates.] 8vo. Pp. 168. Liverpool [1816] LETTER to [the?] Hon. Howell Cobb on currency. [By Peter Scriber.] 8vo. [H. E. Miller’s Banking Theories in the U. S. p. 234.] New York, 1857 LETTER (a) to James S. Hulme, Esq., late Commissioner. By a Citizen of Burlington [Henry C. Carey]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 329.] Philadelphia, 1851 LETTER (a) to Mr C. Goulding upon the Epistles to the seven churches in Asia, Popery, and Catholic emancipation ; in answer to his preface to Mr Huntington’s last sermon. [By Matthew Hutchinson.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1814 Signed : Y. Z. LETTER to Mr Gallatin. ... By “Publicola” [Ferris Pell?]. 8vo. [H. E. Miller’s Banking Theories in the U. S. p. 233.] New York, 1815 LETTER (a) to Sir R. H. Inglis ... on the relative numbers, influence and benevolence of Churchmen and Dissenters. [By Edward Edwards, Perpetual Curate of Marsden, Yorks.] i2mo. Pp. 12. [Brit. Musi] Leeds, 1834 LETTER (a) to Sir Robert Ladbroke, first senior Alderman, and one of the representatives of the City of London ; with an attempt to show the good effects which may reasonably be expected from the confinement of criminals in separate apartments. [By Rev. Samuel Denne.] 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Libi] London, 1771 LETTER (a) to Sir William Stirling Maxwell, Bart. . . . tendering a respectful remonstrance against the royal commissioners reporting to Her Majesty, and publishing abbreviates of royal letters, and other manuscripts, as if new historical materials discovered under the auspices of the Royal Commission. . . . [By Mark Napier.] N.P. 1872 No author’s name given on title or in the book. There is however a portrait with the subscription, Mark Napier, 1872. A copy has been seen with a note on the fly-leaf, by the author : “ Privately printed—only a very few copies with the photo of the author.” LETTER (a) to the Bishop of Sarum [Gilbert Burnet], being an answer to his Lordship’s pastoral letter. From a minister in the countrey [Mr Louth- rope]. 4to. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1690 LETTER to the Emperor of the French on the Eastern question, and the reestablishment of the independence of Poland. [By the Duke de Persigny.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1854 LETTER (a) to the members of the Hon. House of Commons on the Catholic question. [By General Sir James Affleck.] 8vo. 1823 LETTER (a) to the people of Ireland, on the expediency and necessity of the present associations in Ireland in favour of our own manufactures ; with some cursory observations on the effects of a Union. [By Right Hon. Henry Flood.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 19, p. 334.] Dublin, 1779 LETTER (a) to the rector of Fryerning [R. Doyly?] upon his refusing to pay his rates to the Parish assessments. [Signed : C. H. i.e. Charles Hornby.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1732 *LETTER (a) to the Rev. Dr M. [Thomas Morell] . . . Preceded by “An extract from the case of the electors . . .” and followed by “ A second letter to Dr M.” All three were republished in the same year under the title: “ The election of aliens . . q.v. ^LETTER (a) to the Rev. Dr John Martin. . . . By William Allen, F.R.S. [Brit. Mus.] LETTER (a) to the reviewer of the Memoirs of Don Manuel de Godoy, prince of the peace, etc. [By Henry Richard, Lord Holland.] 8vo. [Lincoln’s Inn Lib.] London, 1836 LETTER (a) to the Right Hon. the Lord Viscount Molesworth. By M. B. Drapier [Jonathan Swift]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin [1724] LETTER (a) to the Senate and House of Assembly of the State of New Jersey. By a Citizen of Burlington [Henry C. Carey]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 329.] Burlington, 1851 LETTER (a) to the shop-keepers, tradesmen, farmers and common people of Ireland, concerning the brass halfpence coined by Mr Woods, with a design to have them pass in this kingdom. . . . By M. B., Drapier [Jonathan Swift]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin [1724] LETTERS addressed to the electors of the County of Antrim. By a freeholder [Hugh Boyd]. Published previous to the General Election. i2mo. [D. N. B. vol. 6, p. 92.] Dublin, 1776 LETTERS addressed to the Rev. W. F. Hook ... on the Eucharist, the Mass, and Communion under one species.. .. By Verax, a Catholic layman [M. D. Talbot]. i2mo. Pp. 151. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1840 LETTERS between Emilia and Harriet. [By Maria Susanna Cooper.] 8vo. Pp. 175. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1762 LETTERS by J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby], 1849-1875 ; extracts translated from the French. 8vo. Pp. 120. [Brit. Musi] London [1881] LETTERS from a sister. [Edited by G. C. i.e. George Cooke.] i2mo. Pp. iv. 51. [Brit. Mus.] Doncaster [1841] LETTERS from a veiled politician [Mrs S. K. Bevan, of Birmingham]. 8vo. [Birm. Cent. Lib.] London, 1910 LETTERS from India. Written by J. S. H. [John Somervell Hoyland], 8vo. Pp. 88. [Brit. Mus.] London [1919] LETTERS from literary characters to E. Barton ; edited by F. Danier: with a prefatory notice by E. Barton [Sir William Cusack Smith] of Captain Rock. 8vo. Pp. xxiv. 150. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1824 LETTERS from the Bishop of New Zealand (G. A. Selwyn). [Preface signed G. W. D. i.e. George Washington Doane, Bishop in New Jersey.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [Burlington, N.J.] 1844 LETTERS from the Bishop [of New Zealand] to the Society for the propagation of the Gospel. . . . [Edited by C. B. D. i.e. Charles Browne Dalton.] 8vo. Pp. iv. iii. London, 1844 ^LETTERS from the Irish Highlands . . . 1825. This could not have been by Mrs Henry Wood who was not born until 1814. According to Maria Edgeworth the author was Mrs Blake. ^LETTERS illustrative of Italian scenery . . . The Brit. Mus. ascribes this tentatively to Robert Cotton Money, who wrote the “Journal of a tour in Persia . . .” LETTERS of Celia Thaxter. Edited by A. Fields and R. L. [Rose Lamb], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1895 LETTERS of Ninon de Lenclos to the Marquiss de Sevigne. Translated from the French [of Louis Damours]. i2mo. Pp. xii. 276. [Barbier’s Dictio?i?iaire?± London, 1751 LETTERS of Pontius Pilate written during his governorship of Judaea to his friend Seneca in Rome. Edited [or rather written] by W. P. Crozier. 8vo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1928 LETTERS on currency and banking in Scotland. [By William Smitton.] 8vo. [i879] *LETTERS on spiritual subjects . . . Bor tested, read tasted. LETTERS on the manners of the French, and on the follies and extravagancies of the times : written by an Indian at Paris [rather by the Marquis de L. A. Caraccioli, in French, and translated, with an introduction, by Charles Shillito]. i2mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1790 ^LETTERS on the present state of Newfoundland. . . . The Brit. Mus. now supplies the author’s Christian name, Richard Howley. LETTERS originally addressed to the inhabitants of Cork, in defence of revealed religion, occasioned by the circulation of Mr [Thomas] Paine’s “Age of reason” in that city. [By Thomas Dix Hincks.] Second edition, with . . . additions. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] Cork, 1796 LETTERS to an honourable gentleman, for the encouragement of faith under various trials. [By Mrs Anne Dutton/ i2mo. [Whitley’s Bapt. Bibl. ii. 212.’ London, 1743 Two more volumes were issued later. LETTERS to and from the Countess du Barry, the last mistress of Lewis XV. of France . . . including the history of that favourite. . . . Translated from the French [of M. F. Pidansat de Mairobert]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1779 LETTERS to Monsieur H * * * [Herinch] concerning the most antient gods or kings of Egypt, and the antiquity of the first monarchs of Babylon and China. . . . Translated from the French [of Dominique Reverend]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1734 LETTERS to the Hon. Levi Woodbury, Secretary of the Treasury of the United States. By “Franklin” [Isaac H. Bronson?]. 8vo. [H. E. Miller’s Banking Theories in the U.S. p. 228.] New York, 1837 ^LETTERS to the inhabitants of Wigan . . . Besides Holland and Toulmin, H. Kirkpatrick, Rev. George Wicke and Rev. Lewis Loyd took part in the composition of these letters. See Hawkes’ Lancashire Printed Books, p. 153. LETTERS to the people of New Jersey, on the frauds, extortions and oppressions of the Railroad Monopoly. By a Citizen of Burlington [Henry C. Carey]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 329.] Philadelphia, 1848 LETTERS which passed between Bishop Atterbury and Mr Dean Stanhope on . . . baptism in private. . . . [Edited by R. C. i.e. Caleb Parfect, Rector of Cuxton.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [London] 1758 LETTERS written from Lausanne. Translated from the French [i.e. from the “Caliste” of Madame Saint Hyacinthe de Charrieres]. 12010. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1799 L E T T E R-W R I T E R for ladies_ (Letter - writer for gentlemen.) [By Henry Frith.] 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 An issue of “The complete letter- writer ” (q.v.) in two parts. LEVIATHAN. [Essays.] By William Bolitho [William B. Ryall]. 8vo. Pp. 157. [Publishers' Weekly, 1st Sept. 1928.] London [1923] LEX mercatoria ; or, the merchant’s companion. [By Giles Jacob.] 8vo. [Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll.] London, 1718 LEX terras ; a discussion of the law of England regarding claims of inheritable rights of peerage. By Sir S. E. B. Samuel Egerton Brydges]. 8vo. Brit. Mus.] Geneva, 1831 LIBERAL theology and the ground of faith : essays towards a conservative restatement of apologetic. By Hakluyt Egerton [Arthur Boutwood]. 8vo. Pp. 248. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1908 LIBRARY (the); a poem. [By Thomas Crichton?] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Paisley, 1804 LIBRARY (the) of entertaining knowledge ; The New Zealanders. [By George Lillie Craik.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 424. [Collier’s Lit. of New Zealand, p. 15.] London, 1830 Afterwards published as “The New Zealanders,” q.v. LIBRARY (the) of fiction, or family story-teller; consisting of original tales, essays, and sketches of character. [By Charles Dickens.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Book prices current, 1922.] London, 1836-37 LIFE (the) and adventures of Don Bilioso de L’Estomac ; translated from the original Spanish into French, done from the French into English : with a letter to the College of Physicians. [A satire on Dr John Woodward. By Dr Richard Mead.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1719 For a counter-satire, see “The art of getting into practice in physic ...” LIFE (the) and adventures of Don Pablos the Sharper, an example for vagabonds and a mirror for scamps. By Don Francisco de Quevedo y Villegas. Translated by Francisco Villamiquel y Hardin [Frank Mugglestone]. 8vo. Pp. 220. [Brit. Mus.\ Leicester, 1928 2 B VOL. VI. LIFE and adventures of Timothy Murphy, the benefactor of Schoharie. [By-Sigsby.] 8vo. Pp. 32. {Brit. Mus.] Schoharie, N.Y., 1839 LIFE (the) and death of John Smith. [By Thomas Piggott.] i6mo. Pp. 50. [Whitley’s Baftt. Bibl. i. 7.] 1613 No title-page. Signed; T. P. Only one copy known. LIFE (the) and death of Mr James Sharp, archbishop of St Andrews; with a short digression touching the rise and progress of Mr Andrew Honeyman, Bishop of Orkney. [By Alexander Hamilton, Laird of Kinkell?] i2mo. Pp. 174. 1719 See also “ The life of Mr James Sharp ...” *LIFE and death of Silas Barnstarke . . . For Gulston, read Galston. *LIFE (the) and death of Sir Thomas Moore . . . The initials to the epistle dedicatory, M. C. M. E., stand for Magister Cresacre More Eboracensis. LIFE (the) and doctrine of our Lord Jesus Christ; being a continuous narrative compiled from the four Gospels, all in the words of the Authorised Version, with references thereto. [By C. C. Bartholomew.] 8vo. Pp. 153. {Brit. Mus.] Rotherham [1854] LIFE (the) and letters of John Martin ; with sketches of Thomas Devin Reilly, Father John Kenyon, and other “ young 1 relanders.” By the author of Life of John Mitchel, etc. (P. A. S. [i.e. P. A. Sillard]). 8vo. Pp. xiii. 297. {Brit. Mus.\ Dublin, 1893 LIFE (the) and letters of St Paul. . . . Arranged [by J. S. H. i.e. John Saul Howson], . . . i2mo. Pp. x. 83. {Brit. Mus.] Liverpool [1845] LI FE and nature in the light of evolution. By a Quidnunc [Harford J. Lowe]. 8vo. Pp. 64. {Brit. Mus.] Torquay [1924] Signed : H. J. L. LIFE (the) and perambulation of a mouse. By M. P. [Dorothy Kilner]. 8vo. 2 vols. {Brit. Mus.\ London [1775 ?] M. P. are the initials of her pseudonym, “ Mary Pelham.” LIFE and select writings of . . . Louis Marie Grignon de Montfort. Translated ... by a Secular Priest [Alexander F. J. Cruikshank]. . . . 8vo. Pp. lxxxiv. 482. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1870 LIFE (the) and teaching of Jesus Christ. ... By N. Avancino. [Translated from the German. Edited by H. J. C. i.e. Henry James Coleridge.] 8vo. 2 vols. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1883 “ Quarterly Series,” vols. 41, 42. LIFE (the) and times of Alexander I., Emperor of all the Russias. By C. Joyneville [Catherine Laura Johnstone]. 8vo. 3 vols. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1875 LIFE (the) and works of Alfred Aloysius Horn [Alfred Aloysius Smith] an old visiter. . . . Edited by Ethelreda Lewis. . . . 8vo. 3 vols. {Amer. Cat.] London, 1927-29 LIFE in America ; or, the wigwam and the cabin. [Tales.] By the author of The Yemassee, etc. [William Gilmore Simms]. i2mo. Aberdeen, 1848 *LIFE in Mexico. ... By Madame C-de la B-[Frances Erskine Inglis Calderon de la Barca]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] Republished in 1872 with the author’s name. LIFE (the) in the law of Sir Henry Hawkins, Baron Brampton, as related by him to the writer. By E. [Ernest B. B. Rowlands]. 8vo. Pp. 64. {Brit. Mus.] London [1907 ?] LIFE insurance ; its nature and progress. . . . [By C. B. Norton?] i2mo. {Brit. Mus.] New York, 1852 LIFE, love and light ; practical morality for men and women. [By Alfred William Pollard.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 177. {Who’s Who.] London, 1911 Preface signed : Z. LIFE of Alexander II., Emperor of all the Russias. By the author of Science, art, and literature in Russia, etc. [Catherine Laura Johnstone]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 329. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1883 LIFE (the) of Ali Pacha of Jannina. [Translated from the French of Alphonse de Beauchamp.] . . . 8vo. {Brit. Mus.] London, 1823 LIFE (the) of Anne Catharine Emmerick. By Helen Ram. [Edited by H. J. C. i.e. Henry James Coleridge.] 8vo. Pp. xvi. 231. {Brit. Mies.] London, 1874 “ Quarterly Series,” vol. 10. LIFE (the) of B. Father Ignatius of Loyola. [By P. de Ribadeneira.] Translated out of Spanish ... by W. M. [Michael Walpole]. 8vo. Pp. 358. {Brit. Mus.] N.P. 1616 The author’s name is given in the Epistle Dedicatory. LIFE (the) of . . . Benedict Joseph Labre, who died at Rome . . . 1783. Trans, from the French. Together with an account of several miracles. . . . [By Giuseppe Loreto Marconi.] i2mo. Pp. xxviii. 232. [Hawkes’ Lancashire Books, p. 152.] Wigan, 1786 The original Italian edition, Vita del Servo di Dio B. G. Labre francese scritia dal suo medesimo confessore, in the same year was also anonymous. The French translation was by Maximilian Marie Harel. {Brit. Mus.] LIFE (the) of Dr J. Barwick, translated into English by the editor of the Latin life [Hilkiah Bedford], with notes. . . . [Brit. Mus.] London, 1724 *LIFE (the) of Haydn . . . For Thomas Gardiner, read William Gardiner. \_Brit. Mus.'] LIFE (the) of John Mitchel; with an historical sketch of the ’48 movement in Ireland. By P. A. S. [P. A. Sillard]. 8vo. Pp. xviii. 286. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1889 *LIFE (the) of Lady Warner . . . For the correct title see “The Life of the Lady Warner.” LIFE (the) of Lamenther ; a true history written by herself. In five parts. Containing a just account of the many misfortunes she underwent occasioned by the ill-treatment of an unnatural father. [By Anne Wall.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1771 A letter on p. 94 is signed “ Anne W—.” LIFE (the) of Margaret Mostyn. . . . By . . . Edmund Bedingfield. [Edited by H. J. C. i.e. Henry James Coleridge.] 8vo. Pp. xv. 275. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1878 “Quarterly Series,”vol. 25. LIFE of Mother Margaret Mary Hallahan, foundress of the English Congregation of St' Catherine of Sienna of the third order of St Dominic. By her religious children. [Edited by Augusta Theodosia Drane.] 8vo. Pp. xv. 539. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1869 The second edition (1862) is “Edited by the author of Christian schools and scholars,” and an edition in 1930 bears the editor’s full name. LIFE (the) of Mr James Sharp, from his birth to his instalment in the arch- bishoprick of St Andrews : written in the time of his life; with a short digression touching the rise and progress of Mr Andrew Honyman, Bishop of Orkney : with an appendix, containing an account of some of Mr Sharp’s actions during the time of his being archbishop, and the manner and circumstances of his death, by one of the persons concerned in it. [By Alexander Hamilton, laird of Kinkell?] i2mo. Pp. 174. 1719 Another title is usually prefixed: see “ The life and death of Mr James Sharp...” *LIFE of Robert Rudolf Suffield. . . . For Rev. C. Hargrave, read Rev. Charles Hargrove. [D.N.B. vol. 55, p. 152.] LIFE (the) of Saint Edward, King and Confessor. ... By the Rev. F. Jerome Porter. Revised ... by a priest (C. J. B.) [Charles J. Bowen?]. i6mo. Pp. xii. 114. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1868 LIFE (the) of St Francis de Sales. . . . By Robert Ornsby. . . . [With a preface signed : J. M. C. i.e. John Moore Capes.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1856 LIFE (the) of Saint Monica. . . . [Translated and abridged from the Life by L. E. Bougaud.] By Lady Herbert. 8vo. Pp. viii. 114. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1894 Another translation, by Mrs E. Hazeland, of the full work was published earlier [in 1886], and a new edition in 1892. LIFE of Sir Edward Widdrington, Knt., and Baronet of Cartington, in Northumberland. ... By a Catholic gentleman [Francis John Angus Skeet]. 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit.Musi] London, 1923 LIFE (the) of the blessed Peter Favre . . . From the Italian of Father G. Boero [by Henry James Coleridge]. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 397. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1873 “ Quarterly Series,” vol. 8. *LIFE (the) of the Lady Warner . . . Signed: N. N. *LIFE (the) of the late Hon. Robert Price . . . Now definitely known to be by Edmund Curll. See R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 297. LIFE (the) of the most reverend father in God, John Tillotson, Archbishop of Canterbury, compiled from the minutes of . . . Mr Young . . . Dean of Salisbury. By F. H., M.A. [F. Hutchinson ?] . . . 8vo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 243.] London, 1717 LIFE (the) of the ocean waifs. [Verses.] By Dowie [G. Dowsmith]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1927] LIFE (the) of the reverend Fa. Angel of Joyeuse, Capucin Preacher . . . [by Jacques Brousse]. Together with the lives of Father Bennet, and Father Archangell, of the same Order [by Faustinus Diestensis], Written first in the Frenche tongue, and now translated into Englishe by R. R.,Catholique priest. 8vo. 3 parts. [Pollard and Redgrave.] Douay, 1623 LIFE (the) of the venerable father Claude de la Colombiere. ... By Eugene Seguin. [Edited by H. J. C. i.e. Henry James Coleridge.] 8vo. Pp. xiii. 231. [Brit. Musi] London, 1883 “ Quarterly Series,” vol. 40. *LIFE (the) of Thomas Pain . . . “Oldys is said to have been George Chalmers (1742-1825), then a clerk in the Council of Trade. The President, Lord Hawkesbury, afterwards first Lord Liverpool, is said by Sherwin to have employed him and paid him 5001. for writing it.” [D. N. B. vol. 43, p. 79.] “ This work is usually attributed to Chalmers ; but, in the year 1864, I sold a long letter, written by Chalmers, in which he indignantly denied the statement.” [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 467.] LIFE’S edifice. By X. [H. E. Nightingale]. 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1917 LIGHT and shade ; occasional verses by N. H. M. [N. H. Mason]. 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] [Private print, 1893] LIGHT (a) bondell of livly discourses called Churchyardes charge. . . . [Edited by J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] [c. 1870] LIGHTS and shadows. Tales of Karma and reincarnation. . . . By Aimee Blech [Lionel Dalsace]. Translation by Fred Rothwell. 8vo. Pp. 144. [Brit. Musi] London, 1928 LILLIAN and other poems. By W. M. Praed ; now first collected [by R. W. G. i.e. Rufus W. Griswold]. i2mo. Pp. 290. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1852 LILY (the) of Tiflis ; a sketch from Georgian church history. [By John Mason Neale.] 8vo. Pp. 87. [Brit. Mus.] London [1859] LIMANORA, the island of progress. By Godfrey Sweven [John Macmillan Brown]. 8vo. Pp. ix. 711. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1903 LIMITED (a) horizon. [A tale. By Mrs A. C. de la Condamine.] 8vo. Pp. 143. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1885 *LIMB (the) . . . For XL., read X. L. LIMOUSIN folk. By Jean Nesmy [Henry Surchamp]. Translated by W. M. Daniels. 8vo. Pp. 282. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1930 LINES. [Verses on celebrated men.] —Stanzas [to Wordsworth, by W. R. i.e. Sir William Rough]. i2mo. Pp. 12. [Brit. Mus.] Colombo [c. 1835] Signed : W. R. LINES addressed to Lady Byron. [By Mrs E. Cockle.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Newcastle, 1817 LINES on Genesis. (The Prophet Elijah.) By an Orkneyman [William C. Mainland]. 8vo. Pp. 30,8. [Brit. Musi] Kirkwall [1911] LINES on the death of-[R. B. Sheridan] from the Morning Chronicle of . . . August 5, 1816. [By T. Moore.] . . . Republished, without note or comment. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1816 LINES on the Psalms. By the author of Lines on Genesis [William C. Mainland]. 8vo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Musi] Kirkwall, 1924 LINES to a boy pursuing a butterfly. By a lady [Mrs E. Cockle], 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Newcastle, 1826 LINES written on the birth of the young Prince, son of the Emperor and Empress of the French, March 16, 1856. . . . [By A. Peat.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh [1856] LINNET’S (the) life; twelve poems. [By Anne and Jane Taylor.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1822 LION (the) of Scotland : a tale of 1298 [and other poems. By John Drake]. 8vo. Pp. 240. [Brit. Musi] Glasgow, 1897 LIP (the) of truth. By the author of The Lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1870] Signed : F. B. LIST (a) of the Archdeacons of Canterbury. [By Charles Eveleigh Woodruff.] 4to. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] N.P. 1928 Signed : C. E. W. LIST (a) of the names of the members of the House of Commons. . . . The first centurie. [By Henry Elsynge ?] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1648] Signed : M. El. LISTEN and learn ; a short narrative of a three days’ ramble. By the author of The observing eye [Anne Wright]. i2mo. Pp. 141. [Brit. Musi] London [1856] LITERARY pearls strung at random by R. A. M. [R. A. Mould]. . . . 8vo. Pp. xi. 266. [Brit. Musi] London, 1866 LITHOGRAPHY; or, the art of taking impressions from drawings and writing made on stone. With specimens. . . . Second edition. . . . [By- Bankes ?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1816 LITTLE Alice and her sister. [By Mary Ann Dyson.] i6mo. Pp. 163. [Brit. Musi] 1843 LITTLE (the) book of family prayer. . . . With an introduction on family prayer [signed : W. L. D. i.e. W. L. Dickinson]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1870 LITTLE (a) book on map projection. By Mary Adams [William Garnett]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 108. [Brit. Musi] London, 1914 LITTLE (the) builders and their voyage to Rangi ; a story for children. By R. N. [Philip Alfred Malpas]. . . . i6mo. Pp. 42. [Brit. A fits.] New York [1900] LITTLE (the) Don of Oxford. [A story.] By Nellie Cornwall [Nellie Sloggett]. 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Afus.] London [1902] LITTLE (the) garden of the soul. . . . [Abridged from The garden of the soul of Richard Challoner, Bishop of Debra.] i6mo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1873 LITTLE (the) innocent rescued from the hands of a priest. [Verse. By Benjamin Francis.] 4to. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] London [1798] Signed : John, the Dipper. LITTLE (the) maid, and the gentleman; or, we are seven. [By William Wordsworth.] 32mo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Musi York [1820 ? LITTLE (a) more nonsense. [Limericks. The author, R. D. [Randall Davies. With woodcuts from “ Specimens of early wood engravings” by W. Dodd]. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1923 LITTLE Robinson Crusoe of Paris. Told from the French of Eugenie Foa [Eugenie Rebecca Gradis, nee Rodrigues] by Julia Olcott. . . . 8vo. Pp. 160. [Bill. A/at. Paris.] Philadelphia [1925] LITTLE Tom, the Sailor. 4to. Lambeth, 1917 One of 100 copies privately printed. The dedication and colophon imply that the verses as well as the designs are by William Blake. The verses are really by William Hayley. See his Memoirs, vol. ii. p. 22, Gilchrist’s Life of Blake, Keynes’ Bibliography of Blake, etc. LITTLE Walter; or, a mother’s first lessons on religious subjects. [By Mrs S. Greg.] i8mo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1855 LITTLE (the) white hag. By Francis Beeding [John Leslie Palmer and Hilary Aidan St George Saunders]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Amer. Cat.] Boston [1926] LIVES of Alexander Henderson [by Thomas M‘Crie, D.D.] and James Guthrie [by Rev. Thomas Thomson] ; with specimens of their writings edited by Thomas Thomson]. 8vo. "Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1846 VOL. VI. *LIVES (the) of all the Roman Emperors . . . The D.N.B. (vol. 6, p. 234) accepts this as Brathwait’s, but Pollard and Redgrave (.S’. T. C.) attribute it to Robert Basset. LIVES (the) of Haydn [by G. Carpani] and Mozart [by A. H. F. von Schlichtegroll]; with observations on Metastasio. . . . Translated from the French of M. Henri Beyle, with notes, by the author of the Sacred melodies [William Gardiner]. Second edition. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 496. [Brit. Musi] London, 1818 The title of the first edition begins “ The life of Haydn ...” q.v. LIVES (the) of holy saints, prophets, patriarchs, apostles and others, contained in Holy Scripture. . . . [By John Marbecke.] 4to. Pp. 328. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1681 Preface signed : R. M. Earlier editions (1574 et seq.) bear the author’s name. LIVESTOCK in barracks. By Anthony Armstrong [George Anthony Armstrong Willis]. 8vo. Pp. x. 153. [Brit. Musi] London, 1929 LIVING waters; a Bible text-book. [With a preface signed : J. E. H. i.e. James E. Hawkins.] i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1885] LOGIC for the young . . . selected from the logic of Isaac Watts, by the author of Logic for the million [James William Gilbart]. i2mo. [Brit. Afus.] London,1855 LOLA of the chocolates. By James James [Arthur Henry Adams]. Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 144. [Brit. Mus. London [1920 LONDON (a) girl. [By Harold Begbie.’ 8vo. Pp. xii. 172. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1905 One of “ Tales from the Great City.” ^LONDON, or interesting memorials. ... By Sholto and Reuben Percy. The ascription given is inaccurate. Reuben Percy was Thomas Byerley, and Sholto Percy was Joseph Clinton Robertson, not Robinson. LONDON renovated and England regenerated through justice to Ireland; or, a programme of reform proposed to the new Parliament. By M. O. and I. H. [M. Otway and Iyo Hay] . . . Second edition. . . . 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Musi] London, 1886 LONDON stories, old and new. Written and edited by John O’London [Wilfred Whitten]. i6mo. Pp. 182. [Bnt. Musi] London [1926] 2 B 2 LONDON’S improvement and the builder’s security asserted, by the apparent advantages that will attend their easie charge, in raising such a joint-stock as may assure a re-building of those houses, which shall hereafter be destroyed by . . . fire. [By A. N. i.e. A. Newbold?] Fob [Brit. Mus.] London, 1680 LONDON’S Lord have mercy upom'us ; a true relation of five modern plagues ... in London . . . Written by H. C. [Humfrey Crouch ?]. Fob S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] London [1637] LONDON’S triumph; or, the solemn and magnificent reception of . . . R. Tichburn, Lord Mayor, after his return from taking the oath at Westminster. . . . [By John Bulteeb] 4to. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1656 Signed : J. B. LONDON’S vacation and the countries tearme ; or, a lamentable relation of severall remarkable passages which it hath pleased the Lord to shew on severall persons, both in London, and the country in this present visitation, 1636. ... By H. C. [Humfrey Crouch ?]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London,1637 LONG (the) trail; a story of African adventure. By Herbert Strang [George Herbert Ely and C. J. L’Estrange]. 8vo. Pp. 284. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1919 LONG (the) way round. i[A novel.] By Michael Maurice [Conrad Arthur Skinner]. 8vo. Pp. 285. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1925 LONGEST (the) shadow. By Jeffery E. Jeffery [Jeffery Eardley Marston]. 8vo. Pp. 325. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1927 LONGEVITY ; or, Professor Owen and the Speaker’s commentary. By W. F. H. [William Forbes Hobson?]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1872 *“ LOO K before you leap.” Addresses to the citizens of the Southern States : being a solemn warning against the destructive doctrine of a separation of the Union. By the author of The Olive Branch [Matthew Carey]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 24. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 341.] Philadelphia, 1835 Signed : Hamilton. The Olive Branch is not anonymous. LOOKING (a) glass for the Nullifiers. By Matthew Carey.] 8vo. Pp. 4. Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 341.] N.P. 1832 “ LOOKING unto Jesus ” ; a narrative of a brief race of a young disciple. By her mother [Judith Towers Grant]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] Bath [1852] LOOKING-GLASS (a) for a bad husband ; or, a caveat for a spendthrift. ... [A ballad.] By T. L. [Thomas Lanfiere ?]. Obi. fob S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London [1680?] LOOKING-GLASS (the) for the mind, or intellectual mirror; being stories . . . chiefly translated [by W. D. Cooper] from [Arnaud Berquin’s] “L’Ami des enfants”: a new edition. . . . 121110. Pp. 271. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1792 LOOSE-BOX (the); a sporting mystery. By Raymond Carew [Frank Victor Hughes Hallett]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Brit. Mus.] London [1914] LORD Birkenhead: being an account of ithe life of F. E. Smith, first Earl of Birkenhead. By Ephesian [Carl Eric Bechhofer Roberts]. 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1926 LORD Byron’s Farewell to England; with three other poems, viz. Ode to St Helena, To my daughter, on the morning of her birth, and To the Lily of France. 8vo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Mies.] London, 1816 Purports to be by Lord Byron, but is spurious. LORD Byron’s Pilgrimage ’to the Holy Land; a poem. ... To which is added, The Tempest, a fragment. 8vo. Pp. 72. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1817 Purports to be by Lord Byron, but is spurious. LORD (the) Lieutenant and High Sheriff. [By C. G. Y., Garter, i.e. Sir Charles George Young.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [London] i860 *LORD (the) Mayor of London . . . Signed : T. C. N. LOST (the) Dominion. [An account of British rule in India.] By Ab Carthill [Sir John Perronet Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 351. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1924 *LOST (the) father . . . For Gourand, read Gouraud. Julie Gouraud is a pseud, for Louise d’Aulnan. LOTTIE’S silver burden. [A tale.] . . . By E. R. G. [Evelyn R. Garratt]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1879 LOUNGER (the) ; a periodical paper published at Edinburgh in the years 1785 and 1786. By the authors of The Mirror [Henry Mackenzie and others]. Second edition. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1787 *LOVE and valour . . . For d’Audignier, read d’Audiguier. LOVE conquers all. [A novel.] By A. C. Hertford [Adelaide M. Cameron]. 8vo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Mus.] London [1889] LOVE frolics of a young scamp. By the author of Anonyma [William Stephens Hayward]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 316. [Brit. Mus.] London [1884] LOVE in letters; illustrated in the correspondence of eminent persons, with biographical sketches of the writers. By Allan Grant [James Grant Wilson], 8vo. \Brit. Mus.] New York, 1867 LOVE in the dark; or, the man of business : a comedy as it is acted at the Duke’s Theatre. [By Sir F. Fane.] 4to. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 227.] London, 1676 LOVE intrigues ; or, the history of the amours of Bosvil and Galesia, as related to Lucasia in St Germain’s Garden ; a novel. Written by a young lady [Mrs Jane Barker]. 8vo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 223.] London, 1713 Dedication signed : J. B. Published as “ The amours of Bosvil and Galesia,” with the author’s name on title- page in a collected edition called “ The Entertaining Novels of Mrs Jane Barker ” (second edition, 1719)* LOVE lyrics and valentine verses, for young and old. [By Charles Maurice Davies.] 8vo. \_Brit. Mus.] London [1875] LOVE (the) of Prince Raameses. By Anthony Armstrong [George Anthony Armstrong Willis]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1921 LOVE (the) story of a minor poet. By Stellarius [Alfred Starkey]. 8vo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1907 LOVE-IN-A-MIST ; a comedy in three acts. By Amelia Troubetzkoy and Gilbert Emery [Emery Bemstey Pottle]. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1927 LOVE’S a lottery, and a woman the prize. [By Joseph Harris.] . . . 8vo. Pp. 40. [Lib. of Congress, Cat. of Opera Librettos.] London, 1699 *LOVE’S contrivance . . . Signed : R. M. LOVES fierce desire, and hopes of recovery. ... [A ballad. Signed: L. P. i.e. Laurence Price ?] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1670?] LOVE-TIFF (the). Translated from the stage version of Moliere’s Depit amoureux—1656—as arranged ... by Valville [Frangois Bernard] ... by Frederic Spencer. 8vo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1930 LOYAL (the) martyr vindicated. [A vindication of John Ashton, the Jacobite conspirator, executed Jan. 28, 1690/1. Said to be by Edward Fowler, Bishop of Gloucester.] 4to. Pp. 52. [Liftcolris Inn Lib.] N.P. [1691] Ascribed also to Hon. R. North. LOYAL (the) Nonconformist ; or, an account what he dare swear and what not. [Signed: R. W. i.e. Robert Wild.] Fol. S.sh. [Brit.Mus.] n.p. 1666 LUCAS redivivus ; or, the gospel phy- sitian, prescribing (by way of meditation) divine physic to prevent diseases not yet entered upon the soul. . . . [By John Anthony, M.D.] 4to. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1654 LUCIA’S marriage; or, the lions of Wady-Araba: a story of the Idum- aean desert. [By John Mason Neale.] 8vo. Pp. 102. [Brit. Mus.] London [i860] LUCK and other stories. By Mary Arden [Mrs Violet Middleton Murry]. 8vo. Pp. 255. [Times, 10th April 1931.] London, 1927 LUCKY fool. By L. C. Gould Fleme [Lewis Charles Goldflam]. 8vo. Pp. 328. [Evening Standard, 9th July 1931.] London, 1929 LUCKY Spence’s last advice. [By Allan Ramsay.] 8vo. Pp. 4. [A. Gibson’s Allan Ramsay, p. 119.] [Edinburgh, 1718] Afterwards (1719) included in a collection without a title-page of works many of which bear Allan Ramsay’s name. LUCY in lion land. By Noel Hope [Sarah L. Morewood]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 154. [Brit. Mus.] London 1928] LURE of the past. [A novel.] By Anthony Armstrong [George Anthony Armstrong Willis]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Musi] London, 1920 LURE (the) of Venus ; or, a harlot’s progress: a heroi-comical poem, in six cantos. By Mr Gay [John Durant de Breval]. Founded on Mr Hogarth’s six prints and illustrated with them. 8vo. [D.N.B. vol. 6, p. 290.] London,1733 LUTHER Wing. [A novel.] By Michael Maurice [Conrad Arthur Skinner]. 8vo. Pp. 280. [Brit. Mus.] London [1930] LUX e tenebris ; or, the testimony of consciousness : a theoretic essay. [By Francis Giles, Surgeon, of Stourbridge.] 8vo. Pp. xi. 361. [Brit. Mus.] 1874 LYF (the) of the Mother Teresa of Jesus. . . . Written by herself [or rather by Francesco de Ribera] and now translated . . . out of Spanish by W. M. [Michael Walpole] of the Society of Jesus. 4to. [Brit. Micsl] Antwerp, 1611 LYFE of Saynt Radegunde. [By Henry Bradshaw.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave,,] London [c. 1520] Reprinted by F. Brittain, in 1926. LYNCH law; or, the hunter’s revenge. [A romance.] Translated from the French [of Gustave Aimard] by H. L. Williams. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [i860] LYRIC (a) ode on the birth of . . . the Prince of Wales. . . . [By Mrs Mary Latter.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1763 LYRICS of the Nile. By an Anglo- Egyptian Civil Servant [Charles Robert Ashbee]. 8vo. Pp. 61. London, 1919 Acknowledgment by the author. McARDLE (the) peerage. [A novel.] By Evelyn Tempest [Edward W. D. Cuming]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 306. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1910 MACBETH. ... By William Shakespeare. [With remarks by D. G. i.e. George Daniel.] 8vo. Pp. 63. [Brit. Mus.] London [1864] *MACCULLOCHS (the) of Glastullich. For O. M. R. i.e. O. Murray Rose, read D. M. R. i.e. D. Murray Rose. *MACK-FAUX the mock moralist. [By William Forbes, of Disblair.] This author appears elsewhere in this dictionary as-Forbes, of Disblair. We have not been able to find any evidence that his Christian name was William. MACHIAVIL’S advice to his son. Newly translated out of Italian into English verse [or rather, written] by R. L. Esq. [Roger L’Estrange]. Fol. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1681 MAD (the) cap ; a comedy for the digestion, in three acts : from the German of Kotzebue, byR*****H***** [Robert Hunter]. 8vo. [R. Inglis’ Dramatic Writers 0/ Scotland, p. 145.] Edinburgh, 1800 MAD (the) man’s morice, etc. [By Humphrey Crouch.] Obi. fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1690?] For an earlier edition (1670?) see “The Mad-man’s morrice . . .” The original edition (1640 ?) wras not anonymous. MAD Margrete and little Gumwald ; a Norwegian tale. By Nellie Cornwall [Nellie Sloggett]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 MAD Tom a Bedlams desires of peace ; or, his benedicities for distracted Eng- lands restauration. . . . [Verse. By S F W B, i.e. Sir Francis Wortley, Bart.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1648 *MADAME Gilbert’s Cannibal. . . . For Kitchen, read Kitchin. *MADAM’S ward . . . For By C. C. Andrews, read ByC. Andrews. See Amer. Cat., 1884-90. MADELAINE’S fault; a story of French life: translated [from the French of Pauline Caro] by M. Neale. 8vo. Pp. 183. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1882 *MADELINE ... By Daring Hope. For Daring Hope, read Hope Daring. MADMAN (the) of St James’; a narrative from the journal of a physician. Translated from the German of Philipp Galen [Ernst P. C. Lange] by T. H. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, i860 MAD-MAN’S (the) morrice, or a warning for young men to have a care, how they in love intangled are. ... [A song by Humphrey Crouch.] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1670I?] For a later edition (1690 ?) see “ The Mad man’s morice . . .” The original edition (1640 ?) was not anonymous. MADRAS. [An account of the various woods, indigenous and imported, used in Madras ; with a list of the specimens contained in the Government Central Museum. By Edward Balfour.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [Madras, 1855] MAGIC and Mary Rose. [A novel.] By Faith Baldwin [Faith Baldwin Cuthrell]. 8vo. Pp. 321. [Amer. Cat.' Boston [1924' MAIDS (the) tragedie. [By Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher.] . . . Second impression. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1622 For the first edition, see “The Maides Tragedy.” MAINTENANCE (the) of denominational teaching : a note upon section 7 (1) of the Education Act, 1902. By Hakluyt Egerton [Arthur Boutwood]. 8vo. Pp. 109. [Brit. Musi] London, 1905 MAKESHIFT (the) lover. [A tale.] By Mark Allerton [William Ernest Cameron]. 8vo. Pp. 112. [Brit. Musi] London, 1923 MAKING a shooting. [By Arthur Hepburn Hastie.] 8vo. Pp. 92. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1894 MAKING (the) of a god ; demonstrating the theory of religion as allegorically conveyed in the Bible. By Roland Saint-Clair [Roland Sinclair Watson]. 8vo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Mus.] London [1920] MALVAGNA ; a romance of the nineteenth century. [By Edward Cheney.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] 1835 MALVINA. By Madame C**** [Sophie R. Cottin]. Translated from the French by Miss Gunning : second edition. i2mo. 4 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1810 MAN (a) beset. By John Carruthers [John Young Thomson Greig]. 8vo. Pp. 351. London, 1927 MAN (the) in the car. By Allan Raleigh [Elijah Brown]. 8vo. Pp. 314. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1913 MAN (the) of his time. . . . The story of the life of Napoleon. By J. M. Haswell. . . . [With a preface signed : J. C. H. i.e. John Camden Hotten.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1871] MAN (the) of promise : Lord Rosebery. A critical study. By E. T. Raymond [Edward Raymond Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 263. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1923 MAN (the) of the world ; a comedy in five acts. . . . Written by C— M—, Esq. [Charles Macklin]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1786 MAN (the) of To-morrow, J. Ramsay Macdonald. By Iconoclast [Mary Agnes Hamilton]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1923 See also “ J. Ramsay Macdonald.” MAN (the) who stood alone. By Paul Trent [Edward Platt]. 8vo. Pp. 317. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1926 MAN (the) who was there. By N. A. Temple Ellis [Neville Aldridge Holda- way]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 274. [Brit. Musi] London, 1930 MAN (the) with the club foot. [A novel.] By Douglas Valentine [Valentine Williams]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 311. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1918 MAN (the) without a necktie. By Arbib- Hauser [Erminia Hauser]. Translated by C. B. Jordan. 8vo. Pp. 287. [Brit. Musi] London, 1930 MANCHESTER Church questions plainly stated. [By George Hull Bower, D.D.] 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1850 MANIAC (the) of the Pyrenees ; or, the heroic soldier’s wife : a melodrama in two acts. [By Lieut. John Shipp.] 8vo. Pp. 35. [Brit. Mus.] Brentford, 1829 MANIFESTATION (a) of prayer in formality, and prayer in the spirit of God. [By William Smith, of Besthorp.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1663?] Signed: W. S. MAN’S (a) belief; an essay on the facts of religious knowledge. [By Albert Julius Mott.] 8vo. Pp. 103. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1868 MAN’S (a) man ; a novel. By John Strange Winter [Henrietta E. V. Stannard]. 8vo. Pp. no. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1893 MANTLE (the) of Caesar. By Friedrich Gundolf [Friedrich Gundelfinger]. Translated from the German by Jacob Wittmer Hartmann. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Musi] London [1929] MANUAL (a) for Christians after confirmation. [By Edward Hawkins, D.D.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] [Oxford, 1826] Signed: E. H. MANUAL for self-instruction, comprising in one story all the rules of the French language. By V. S. Z. [V. S. Zorawski], i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1845 MANUAL (a) for the sick and sorrowful. Arranged by E. S. L. [E. S. Lister]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 157. [Brit. Musi] London, 1902 MANUAL (a) of criminal law for police, salt, forest, and other magisterial officers. [By P. V. Srinivasacharya.] 8vo. Pp. 278, 90. [Brit. Musi] Madras, 1899 MANUAL of devotion for Sisters of Mercy. . . . Second edition. [By Thomas Thellusson Carter.] i6mo. 2 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1868 Signed : T. T. C. MANUAL (a) of light drill. . . . [Based on R. B. Hawley’s System of rifle drill. Preface signed : E. T. H. i.e. Edward T. H. Hutton.] 32mo. Pp. 76. [Brit. Musi] Dublin, 1876 MANUAL (a) of prayers for young persons ; or, Bishop Ken’s Winchester manual adapted to general use [by W. H. H. i.e. William Henry Havergal]. i2mo. Pp. vi. 90. [Brit. Musi] London, 1832 MANUAL (a) of surgery. ... By Sir Astley Cooper. . . . Fifth edition. [Reprinted by E. i.e. C. C. Egerton.] i2mo. Pp. ix. 542. [Brit. Musi] Calcutta, 1839 *MANUALL (a) of devout meditations For By H. M., read By a father of the same society. It was edited by I. W. [i.e. J. Wilson]. MANUFACTURE (the) of glazed bricks and glazed sanitary ware. . . . [By H. Ansell.] 8vo. Pp. 75. [Brit. Mies.] London, 1894 MAPS and tables of chronology . . . selected and translated from . . . Koch’s “Tableau des Revolutions de l’Europe.” [By C. T. L. i.e. Charles Thomas Longley, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury.] 4to. [Brit. Mies.] 1831 MARCH (the) of the Red Lions—1867. [Inverse. By William Pengelly.] 8vo. S. sh. [Brit. Mies.] [Dundee? 1867] Signed with his finials : M. Y. MARGARET Coryton. By Leigh Cliffe [George Jones]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Eng. Cat. 1801-1836, p. 121.] London, 1829 MARIE’S home ; or, a glimpse of the past. By Caroline Austin [Mrs - Whitway]. 8vo. Pp. 190. [Brit. Mus.] London [1885] MARK (the) of Cain, a tale of the desert. By “Hermann Boscher, Ph.D.” [Andrew Lang]. 8vo. Pp. 8. Bristol, 1886 Edmund Gosse’s copy has the following note in hisiown handwriting :—“ By Andrew Lang. Only 5 or 6 copies ever printed. Published to secure copyright in the title, on 26th of March, 1886.” The volume for which the title was desired duly appeared “ The Mark of Cain. By Andrew Lang,” pp. 86, as part of Arrow- smith’s Bristol Library. MARKET (the) woman ; a true tale : or, honesty is the best policy. [By Hannah More.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] Bath [1795] Signed : Z. MARQUERAY’S duel. By the author of Jenny Essenden [Agnes Russell Weekes]. 8vo. Pp. 381. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] [1919] MARQUISE (the) de Vaudreuil. [A play. By Jemima Bullock-Webster.] 8vo. Pp. 148. [Brit. Mies.] [c. 1885] MARS ; or, the truth about war. By Alain [E. Chartier]. Translated . . . by Doris Mudie and Elizabeth Hill . . . 8vo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Mies.] London,1930 MARTHA Maria. In memoriam. By her Uncle Eduard [Edward Lockyer]. i6mo. Pp. 82. [Brit. Mus.] Bristol, private print, 1873 Dedication signed : E. L. MARTHA Spreull; being chapters in the life of a single wumman. Edited by Zachary Fleming, writer, with preface by the authoress [but rather written by Henry Johnston, author of The Dawsons of Glenara]. 8vo. Pp. 125. [Title-page of H. Johnston’s Chronicles of Glenbuckie.] Glasgow, 1887 MARTIN Luther; reply to his assailants. [By C. H. Collette.] i2mo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1883 MARTIN of Old London. By Herbert Strang [George Herbert Ely and C. J. L’Estrange]. 8vo. Pp. 158. [Brit. Musi] London, 1925 MARTYR (the) land ; or, tales of the Vaudois. By the author of Sunlight through the mist [Mrs E. Burrows]. 8vo. Pp. 245. [Brit. Musi] London,1856 MARUELOUS (a) hystory intitulede. Beware the cat; conteynyng diuerse wounderfull and incredible matters. [Preface signed : G. B. i.e. Gulielmus Baldwin.] . . . 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London,1570 MARY Aikenhaid; her life, her work and her friends. Giving a history of the foundation of the Irish Sisters of Charity. By S. A. [Sarah Aikinson]. Second edition, revised. 8vo. Pp. x. 572. [Letters of Mary Aikenhaid, 1914, p. xiii.] Dublin, 1882 *MARY Magdalen’s funerall teares . . . An edition in 1609 was signed : S. W. MASONIC Union ; an address to His Grace the Duke of Athol on the subject of an union between the Masons that have lately assembled under His Grace’s sanction and the regular Masons of England. ... By a member of that fraternity [Sir Francis Colombine Daniel]. 8vo. [Memoir of F. C. Daniel, 1826, p. 12.] London, 1804 MASQUERADE (the); a poem. Inscribed toC — T H-D — G — R. By Lemuel Gulliver [Henry Fielding]. 8vo. Pp. 11. [Brit. Musi] London,1728 MASSA triumphans; or, the triumph of the Mass, wherein all the sophistical . . . arguments of Mr de Rodon . . . in his funestuous tract . . . called The funeral of the Mass, are fully . . . answered. . . . [By William Collins.] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1675 Signed : W. C. MAST and acorns. Collected by Old Hubert [-Parkinson]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1794 ?] MASTERDILLO (the); a story of youth. [By F. T. Wawn.] 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Musi] London, 1913 . MATERIALS for a description of Capri. [By George Norman Douglass.] 8vo. 8 parts. Pp. 333. [Brit. Musi] London, Napoli, 1904-15 Signed : N. D. MATILDA; or, the orphans of the Pyrenees. By Father Charles [John Andrew Houban]. i2mo. Pp. 210. [Brit. Afus.] Dublin, i860 MATILDA’S legacy . . . Also a brief sketch of her spiritual career ... by J. M. [J. Mumford]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, [1850] MATTHEW Arnold. By Hugh Kings- mill [Hugh Kingsmill Lunn]. With four portraits. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 282. [Brit. Alusi] London, 1928 MATTIE and the bluebottle. By Lycaon [Vernon Tracy?]. 8vo. Pp. 112. [Brit. Afus.\ London [1924^ MAUDIE and the white cat. [A tale/ By H. C. [H. Campbell]. 8vo. Pp. 42. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1919 MAVIS of Green Hill. [A novel] By Faith Baldwin [Faith Baldwin Cuth- rell]. 8vo. Pp. 272. [Amer. Cat.] Boston [1921] MAXWELL’S first lessons in geography for the young. By the author of Home and its duties [Mrs J. Werner Laurie]. i6mo. [Brit. A/us.] London [1869] *MAY fair. In four cantos. London,1827 Also attributed to Henry Luttrell. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland.] *MEADOW (the) queen . . . For By S. W., read By the author of The Wild Garland. The preface is signed : S. W. MEEKNESS and growth. Colossians, 1. By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1879] MELODY (the) of God, and other papers. By Desmond Mountjoy [Wellesley Desmond Mountjoy Chap- man-Huston]. 8vo. Pp. x. 262. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1923 MEMOIR (a) of Abraham Lincoln. . . . To which is appended an historical sketch on slavery. [By R. B. i.e. Robert Black, M.A.] 8vo. Pp. 126. [Brit. Musi] London, 1861 MEMOIR of Charlotte Elliott . . . By her sister E. B. [Mrs E. Babington]. Slightly abridged. i2mo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] London [1875] MEMOIR of General Sir William Erskine Baker . . . Compiled by two old friends, brother officers and pupils [Sir Henry Yule and Robert Maclagan]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 67. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1882 Signed : H. Y., and R. M. *MEMOIR of H. F. Hallam. For Meine, read Maine. *MEMOIR of J. G. Children . . . Attributed by the Brit. Mus. to Anne Atkins. MEMOIRS (the) and history of Prince Titi. Done from the French [of Hyacinthe Cordonnier de Saint Hya- cinthe] by a person of quality [James Ralph . i2mo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1736 The original “ Histoire du Prince Titi, A.R.” first published in the same year 1736, was also anonymous. For another translation, see “The History of Prince Titi.” MEMOIRS of a banking house. By Sir William Forbes. [Edited by R. C. i.e. Robert Chambers.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, i860 MEMOIRS of a fox-hunting man. [By Siegfried Sassoon.] 8vo. Pp. 395. [Arjiold Bennett in the Evening Standard, nth Oct. 1928.] London, 1928 Later editions (1929, et seqi) bear the author’s name. MEMOIRS of a trait in the character of George III. By Johan Horrins [John Harrison, grandson of John Harrison, chronometer maker], 8vo. Pp. xlviii. 256. [Brit. Musi] London, 1835 MEMOIRS of an Infantry Officer. By the author of Alemoirs of a fox-huntmg man [Siegfried Sassoon]. 8vo. Pp. 334. [Brit. Musi] London, 1930 The author’s name occurs on the cover. MEMOIRS of an unfortunate young nobleman [J. Annesley, calling himself Nephew of Richard, sixth Earl of Anglesey], return’d from a thirteen years slavery in America. i2mo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, 1743 MEMOIRS of Count Tariff, &c. [Written in whole or part by Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 95. [Brit. Musi] London, 1713 MEMOIRS of F******H*** Fanny Hill. By John Cleland]. 8vo. 'Brit. Musi] London, 1784 MEMOIRS of Madame du Barri. Translated ... by ... H. T. Riley [or rather, by W. Maginn ?]. 8vo. 4 vols. [Brit. Musi] London, 1896 MEMOIRS of Madame la marquise de Montespan . . . [By Baron Etienne Leon de la Mothe - Langon ?] 8vo. [Brit. AIus. ] 1829 MEMOIRS of the Court of France ; in two parts ... By Madam L. M. D. [Marie Catherine La Mothe, Comtesse d’Aulnoy], author of The Voyage into Spain. [Translated by P. B.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1692 ^MEMOIRS of the Court of Spain . . . For Done into English [by T. Brown], read Done into English by T. Brown. *MEMOIRS of the late war in Asia . . . An edition in the following year (1789) runs, “ Memoirs of the war in Asia . . MEMOIRS of the life and writings of Alexander Pope, faithfully collected from authentic authors, original manuscripts, and the testimonies of many persons of credit and honour; with critical observations. ... By William Ayre, Esq. [Edmund Curll]. 8vo. 2 vols. [R. Straus5 The Unspeakable Curll, p. 312.] London, 1745 A worthless production. For the earliest suggestion that William Ayre, like William Egerton, was really Curll himself, see “ Remarks on Squire Ayre’s Memoirs ” published almost simultaneously. MEMOIRS of the life and writings of the Right Honourable Lord Byron, with anecdotes of some of his contemporaries. [By John Watkins.] 8vo. Pp. xvi. 428. [Brit. Musi] London, 1822 MEMOIRS of the life of William Wycherley, Esq. [by Charles Gildon] ; with a character of his writings. By George, Lord Lansdowne . . . 8vo. Pp. 42. [Brit. Musi] London, 1718 MEMOIRS of the life, writings, and amours of W. Congreve, Esq., interspersed with miscellaneous essays, etc., written by him. Also some very curious memoirs of Mr Dryden and his family with a character of him by Mr Congreve. Compiled from their respective originals by Charles Wilson, Esq. [John Oldmixon]. 8vo. Pp. xvi. 156. [R. Straus5 The Unspeakable Curll, p. 291.] London, 1730 MEMOIRS (the) of the Marquise de Keroubec, 1781-1858 : being extracts from her diaries . . . [By Henry Baerlein.] 8vo. Pp. 231. London, 1926 Acknowledgment by the author. MEMOIRS of the public life of James Hogg . . . [Edited by A. B. i.e. A. Bruce ?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1798 MEMOIRS of the war in Asia . . . See “ Memoirs of the late war in Asia . . ,55 MEMOIRS of Vidocq, principal agent of the French police till 1827 . . . Written by himself [or rather vol. 1 by E. Morice, vol. 2-4 by L. F. L’Heritier]. Translated from the French [by H. T. R. i.e. William Maginn ?]. 4 vols. [Brit. Mtts.] London, 1828-29 A reprint, 1866, has the title “ Vidocq . . .” MEMORANDUM on Tintagel Castle. [By Thomas Cornish.] Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] Penzance [private print, 1870?] MEMORIAL for P. Williamson . . . against W. Fordyce . . . [By John Maclaurin, Lord Dreghorn.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] [1765] MEMORIAL notices of the Rev. John Davies. [By William Hale Hale.] i2mo. Pp. iv. 76. [Brit. Musi] Worcester, 1858 MEMORIAL of the citizens of Philadelphia to Congress. [By Matthew Carey.] i2mo. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 341.] Philadelphia, 1827 MEMORIAL (a) of the life and services of Major-Gen. W. W. H. Greathed, C.B. . . . Compiled by a friend and brother officer [Sir Henry Yule]. 8vo. Pp. 57. [Brit. Musi] London, 1879 Signed : H. Y. MEMORIAL (a) of Daniel Webster from the city of Boston. [Edited by G. S. H. i.e. George S. Hillard.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1853 MEMORIAL to Congress of the Pennsylvania Society for the Encouragement of American Manufactures. [By Matthew Carey.] 8vo. [Sabin’s Dic- tionary, iii. 341.] Philadelphia, 1820 MEMORIALS for a wife dedicated by her husband [John Hoppus] to their children. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London,1856 ^MEMORIALS of Manchester streets. This was by Richard Wright Procter, and was not anonymous. ^MEMORIALS of the method and manner of proceedings in Parliament An edition of 1658 was issued as By H. S. E. C. P. i.e. Henry Scobell, Esq., Clerk of the Parliament. MEMORIALS of the past. [Poems. By John Henry Newman.] 8vo. Pp.108. [Brit. Musi] Oxford [private print] 1832 Dedication signed : J. H. N. MEMORIALS of the Royal Martyr ; or, a parallel betwixt the Jewes murder of Christ and the English murder of King Charles the First: being a sermon [on Acts ii. 37, 38] preached on the solemnity of His Majestie’s Martyrdom . . . 1669. By T. L. [Thomas Lambert ?] . . . 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1670 MEMORIALS of two sisters [Anne C. M. and Emma L. M. i.e. A. C. and E. L. Maurice]. Edited [or rather written] by the author of Aids to develope7nent, etc.l [Mary Atkinson Maurice]. 8vo. Pp. 308. [Brit. Musi] London, 1833 MENTAL amusement; or, the juvenile moralist. [The preface signed : G. S. i.e. G. Sael.] . . . Second edition. i2mo. Pp. viii. 136. [Brit. Musi] London [1798] MERCHANT shipping laws and remedies ; Colonial law courts.— St Helena. Owners, captains and men. — Petitions to Parliament for enquiry. [By Charles Nash.] 4to. Pp. 12. [Brit. Mus.] N.P. [i860?] MERCHANTS (the) remonstrance ; wherein is set forth the inevitable miseries which may suddenly befall this kingdome by want of trade . . . By J. B. [John Battie] of London, merchant. 4to. Pp. 10. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1644 An edition of 1648 bears the author’s name. MERLINUS anonymus ; an almanack and no almanack ... for the year 1653. . . . By Raphael Desmus [Samuel Sheppard], Philologist. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1653 MERRY Widow Welcome ; or, the treasure hunters : an Early Victorian frolic. By Edward Percy [Edward Percy Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 27. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 MERRY (the) wives of Windsor . . . An introduction and notes are added by the authors of The Dramatic Censor [Francis Gentleman]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] 1773 MERRYLAND displayed; or, plagiarism, ignorance, and impudence, detected : being observations on a pamphlet intituled A new description of Merryland [by Thomas Stretser]. The second edition. 8vo. Pp. viii. vi. Bath, 1741 “ This peculiar production [The new description of Merryland] had an enormous sale, and went to six or seven editions. The Bath imprint was a bluff. Incidentally its success led Curll [the publisher] to issue a whole series of imitations, all more or less pornographic. It also led him to issue an attack on the original piece, no doubt to stimulate the waning interest in it.” [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 308.] This “attack” on Stretser’s pamphlet was also Stretser’s own production. See R. Straus, p. 314. MERUAYLOUS (a) straunge deformed swyne. [A ballad. By John Phillip?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London [1570 ?] Signed : I. P. MESMERISM & hypnotism ; an epitome of all the best works on the hypnotic phases of psychology in the form of question and answer. By an adept [Caxton Hall]. Illustrated. 8vo. Pp. 71. [Brit. Musi] Blackpool, 1900 A later edition (1919) bears the author’s name. MESSIAH (the) [and his Kingdom ; the life, sufferings, death, resurrection, and ascension of the Son of God. By John Lavicount Anderdon]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 831. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1861 MESSIANIC (the) idea. By Chilperic Edwards [Edward John Pilcher]. 8vo. Pp. v. 146. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 METAMORPHOSIS (the) of Ajax. By Sir John Harington. . . . Edited by Peter Warlock [Philip Heseltine] and Jack Lindsay. 8vo. Pp. xxviii. 143. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 METAPHYSICAL (the) basis of “Esoteric Buddhism”; a letter ... By C. C. M. [C. C. Massey?]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 70. [Brit. Mus.] [London ? 1883 ? ] METAPHYSICS and mental philosophy. [Edited by James Robert Ballantyne.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Allahabad, 1852 No. 4 of “ Reprints for the Pandits.” METEOROLOGICAL account of the weather at Madras from June 1, 1787 to May 31, 1788. [By J. Chamier.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] Madras, 1788 *METHOD (a) to prevent, without a register, the running of wool . . . For William Londes rar^Thomas Lowndes. [D. N. B. vol. 34, p. 209 ; Presentation copy in Welbeck Abbey.] MID-DAY prayers for use in St Paul’s Cathedral. [Compiled by Henry Parry Liddon.] i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] 1881 Signed : H. P. L. MIDDLE (the) parts of fortune. Somme & Ancre, 1916. [By Frederic Manning.] 8vo. Pp. 453- [Brit. Mus.] Xc London, 1929 Previously published as “ Her privates we,” q.v. MIDNIGHT musings; being some impressions in verse of a practical idealist. By S. L. L. [S. L. Lloyd]. 8vo. Pp. 95. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1919 MIGHT not right ; or, stories of the discovery and conquest of America. By the author of Our Eastern Empire, etc. [Mrs E. Burrows]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 246. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1858 MILES gloriosus, the Spanish braggadocio. . . . Lately written in French [by Jacques Gaultier. Really translated from Rodomuntadas Castellanas], and newly translated into English . . . by I. W. 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1630 MILK for babes, and meat for strong men. ... By James Nayler. [With a preface signed: M. B. i.e. Mary Booth.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] MILL (the) and its story ; an abduction and a Gretna Green wedding. [Signed : Northerner, i.e. Daniel Scott.] i6mo. {Brit. Musi] N.P. [1898] MIND and manners ; a diary of occasion. (Reprinted from “The New Age.55) [By Acton Reed.] 8vo. Pp. 128. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1918 MINE (a) of affection manifested in 31 proposals offer’d to all the sober and freeborn people within this commonwealth. . . . [By Edward Billing or Edward Burrough.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1659 MINORITIES of one. [Essays.] By Gigadibs [R. E. Crook]. 8vo. Pp. 64. [Brit. Mus.] London [1924] MIRACLES ; a rhapsody. By E. Barton [Sir William Cusack Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 104. [Brit. Mus.] London,1823 *MIRRHA the mother of Adonis. [By William Barksted.] With certain eglogs by L. M. [Lewis Machin]. 8vo. [Pollardand Redgrave.] London, 1607 MIRROR (the) in the dusk. By Brinsley Macnamara [A. E. Weldon]. 8vo. Pp. 251. [Brit. Musi] Dublin, 1921 MIRROR of dreams. By Ganpat [Martin Louis Alan Gompertz]. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Mus.] London [1928] MISCELLANEA Grteca dramatica, in scriptis maxime eruditorum virorum varie dispersa, in unum fasciculum collecta. By a graduate of Cambridge [Philip Wentworth Buckham]. [Brit. Mus.] Cambridge [1825] MISCELLANEA Virgiliana, in scriptis maxime eruditorum virorum varie dispersa in unum fasciculum collecta. By a graduate of Cambridge, editor of the Theatre of the Greeks, etc. [Philip Wentworth Buckham]. [Brit. Musi] Cambridge, 1825 MISCELLANEOUS (a) essay, concerning the courses pursued by Great Britain, in the affairs of her colonies : with some observations on the great importance of our settlements in America and the trade thereof. [By Henry M‘Culloh.] 8vo. Pp. 134. [Brit. Musi] London, 1755 See also “ The wisdom and policy of the French ...” MISCELLANEOUS poems. [By Ellis Cornelia Knight, W. R. Spencer, Samuel Rogers, and others.] 4to. Windsor, private print, 1812 From an inscribed copy in the British Museum. MISCELLANEOUS poems. By several hands, particularly the D— of W—n [Duke of Wharton] . . . Dean S— [Jonathan Swift] . . . Mrs C—r [Mary Chandler] ; publish’d by Mr Ralph. [Other anonymous poems are by Pope, Edward Littleton, Jabez Hughes, and George Jeffreys.] i2mo. Pp. 348. [I. O. Williams in Bill. Soc. Trans., Dec. 1929.] London, 1729 MISCELLANEOUS poems. By several hands ; published by D. Lewis. [The poems, all anonymous, are by John Dyer, David Mallet, Samuel Wesley the younger, Thomas Fitzgerald, David Lewis, and others.] 8vo. Pp. 320. [I. O. Williams in Bibl. Soc. Tra?is. Dec. 1929.] London, 1726 D. Lewis published a second miscellany, with the same title, in 1730. MISCELLANEOUS poems and translations. By several hands ; publish’d by Richard Savage. [Includes an anonymous poem by David Mallet.] 8vo. Pp. 312. [I. O. Williams in Bibl. Soc. Tra?is. Dec. 1929.] London,1726 MISCELLANIES. [By Jonathan Swift.] 8vo. London, 1711 “A manufactured volume made up of such of Swift’s pieces as Curll had already printed, including also the Key to the Taile of a Tub. It must not be confused with Morphew’s Miscellanies in prose and verse issued this month.” [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 215.] See also “ Miscellanies in prose and verse,” London, 1711. MISCELLANIES in prose and verse. By Thomas Chatterton. [Edited by J. B. i.e. John Broughton?] 8vo. Pp. xxxiii. 245. [Brit. Musi] London, 1778 MISCELLANIES upon several subjects, occasionally written. By Joseph Gay [John Durant de Breval]. 8vo. [Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll.] London, 1720 MISCELLANY poems; containing a new translation of Virgills Eclogues, Ovid’s Love Elegies, Odes of Horace, and other authors; with several original poems. By the most eminent hands [John Dryden and others]. 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, 1684 Several of the poems have title-pages dated 1683. MISER (the); a catch by W. P. [Walter Pope], author of The old ma?is wish, and set to musick by Mr Michael Wise. . . . [Arber’s Term Cat. ii. 126.] London, 1685 MISHAP (the); a poem. Written by the late Rev. D. J. S. D. D. D. S. P. D. [Dr Jonathan Swift, D.D., Dean of St Patrick’s, Dublin]. Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [Dublin, c. 1750] MISSING girl; a novel. By Berta Onions [Berta Oliver]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 399. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1930 MISSING (the) partners. ByHenryWade [Henry Lancelot Aubrey - Fletcher]. 8vo. Pp. 310. [Amer. Cat.\ London, 1928 •^MISSIONARIES (the) arts discovered ... (A defence of the missionaries arts ... A plain defence of the Protestant religion . . .) [By- Wake, Minister of Gray’s Inn.] It is most unfortunate that Dr Kennedy did not note the source of this ascription. The three books have been traditionally associated as the work of one author at least since 1689, when Gee noted them in his Catalogue of discourses against Popery, as being by Mr H—, a divine of the Church of England (the origin of the erroneous ascription to George Hicks). We were for long intrigued by this ascription, and even more so when we found (JD.N.Bl) that the young William Wake (afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury) lately returned from Paris, was appointed Minister of Gray’s Inn in 1688, the year in which the Missionaries arts was published. As Wake only held this post until 1696 the ascription has every sign of being nearly contemporary, and may in fact be from an inscribed copy. There would be nothing strange in Wake being the author as he had already been actively engaged in the Romish controversy. At any rate it seems worth noting that Archbishop Wake may have been the author, and if the original source of the ascription is traced we should be glad to hear of it. ^MISSIONARY (a) brotherhood in the Far West . . . Ascribed by the Brit. Mus. to John Hodson Egar. MISSIONS at home; a true narrative by the author of The two old men [Cesar Malan]. Translated from the French. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, N.D. Signed: C. M. MISSIONS to the heathen. [Preface signed: E. H. i.e. Ernest Hawkins.] i6mo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1844-45 “ MISTER 44.” [A novel.] By E. J. Rath [J. Chauncey Corey Brainerd and Edith Rathbone Brainerd]. 8vo. Pp. v. 236. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1917 *MISTERY (the) of iniquity . . . Not by William Allen. Author not known. MISTERY (the) of rhetoric unveil’d and abridg’d. ... By J. H., teacher of geography. [An abridgment of John Smith’s The mysterie of rhetorick unveil'd.] 4t°- [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1646 MISTERY (the) of the person of Christ, God-man unfolded. . . . With an appendix, concerning the divinity . . . of the spirit. [By Francis Millett ? ] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1719 MISTLETOE (the) bough ... a melodrama. ... By C. Somerset. [With remarks by D. G. i.e. George Daniel.] i2mo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Mus.] London [1874] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 100. MISTRESS of ceremonies. [A novel.] By Nora K. Strange [Mrs E. Gower Stanley], 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Mus London [1930' MISTRIS Parliament brought to bed of a monstrous childe of Reformation. With her 7 yeers teeming, bitter pangs. . . . By Mercurius Melancholicus [Marchamont Nedham ?]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1648 MISTRIS Parliament, her gossiping. . . . By Mercurius Melancholicus [Marchamont Nedham ? ]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1648 MISTRIS Parliament presented in her bed after the sore travaile and hard labour which she endured last week, in the birth of her monstrous offspring, the childe of Deformation, the hopefull fruit of her seven years teeming, and a most precious babe of grace. By Mercurius Melancholicus [Marchamont Nedham?]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1648 MIXED (a) grill; a medley in retrospect. By the author of A garden of peace [Frank Frankfort Moore]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 288. London [1930] MODEL (a) for a school for the better education of youth. [By A. B. i.e. Mark Lewis?] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ [London, c. 1675] MODEL (a) wife ; a novel. By G. I. Cervus [William James Roe]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] Philadelphia, 1885 See the note to “ Cut: a story of West Point.” MODERN amours; or, the secret history of the adventures of some persons of the first rank. . . . [By Lydia Grainger.] i2mo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 295.] London, 1733 MODERN Bridge. By “Slam” [E. Chittenden]. With the laws of Bridge, as approved by the Portland and Turf Clubs, by “ Boaz.” 8vo. Pp. x. 157. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards, p. 266.] MODERN (the)pocket Hoyle,containing all the games of skill and chance as played in this country at the present time. Being an authority on all disputed points. By “Trumps” [William Brisbane Dick]. i6mo. Pp. 387. [fessel’s Bibl. of flaying cards. p. 70.] New York, 1868 MODERN whist; with complete rules for playing. . . . Compiled from the latest works by “Cavendish” [Henry Jones] on this subject by “Trumps” [William Brisbane Dick]. 8vo. Pp. 72. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1892 MODEST (a) and true account of the chief points in controversie between the Roman Catholics and the Protestants. ... By N. C. [Cornelius Nary]. i2mo. [Brit. Afus.] Antwerp, 1696 Attributed also to Nicholas Colson. *MODEST (a) defence of public stews . .. Attributed to Bernard de Mandeville as well as to George Ogle. First published 1724, anonymously, except for “ Phil-Porney ” at the dedication. The fourth edition (1740) runs “The natural secret history of both sexes. . . . By Luke Ogle, Esq., ” q.v. MOFFATT’S reprint of Pupil Teachers’ questions, 1874 . . . with answers . . . by E. N. A. G. [Charles Gane ?]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1877] MOGUL (the) tale ; a farce. ... By Mrs Inchbald . . . with remarks . . . by D— G. [George Daniel]. i2mo. Pp. 25. [Brit. Afus.] London [1830] MOLA asinaria. . . . By William Prynne [or rather by Samuel Butler]. . . . Wherein is demonstrated what slavery the nation must subject itself to, by allowing the lawfulness and usurped authority of the pretended Long Parliament now unlawfully and violently held at Westminster. 4to. Pp. 6. [Brit. Mi/s.] 1659 MON Paul ; the private life of a privateer. By A. A. Abbott [Samuel Spewack]. 8vo. Pp. 255. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1928 MONASTERY (the) and the mountain church. ... By the author of Sunlight through the mist [Mrs E. Burrows]. 8vo. Pp. 277. [Brit. Musi] London, 1855 *MONASTICON Anglicanum . . . For John Wright, read James Wright. MONEY and banking ; or, their nature and effects considered : together with a plan for the universal diffusion of their legitimate benefits without their evils. By a citizen of Ohio [William Beck]. i2mo. [H. E. Miller’s Banking Theories in the U.S. p. 228.] Cincinnati, 1839 MONIMICS ; a new game and a new method of explaining money and teaching elementary economics. By Norman Angell [Ralph Norman Angell Lane], 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Afus.] London [1927] Another issue has the title “ The mystery of money . . MONODY (a) on the death of His Royal Highness Frederic-Louis Prince of Wales. [By Richard Rolt.] 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] Dublin, 1751 MONSIEUR Tonson. [By John Taylor.] Embellished with . . . coloured engravings. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [1850?] MONTH (the) of Mary. By St Alphonsus. [Edited by R. A. C. i.e. Robert Astor Coffin.] i6mo. Pp. xii. 260. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1872 MONUMENTA Orcadica ; the Norsemen in the Orkneys and the monuments they have left. . . . By L. Dietrichson. . . . [Translated by Jessie Muir.] 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 335-] Kristiania, 1906 MOON of joy. By Camilla Hope Grace E. Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 286. Amer. Cat.] London, 1927 MOORES (the) baffled; being a discourse concerning Tanger. . . . [By Lancelot Addison, Dean of Lichfield.] 4to. Pp. 27. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1681 The second edition, 1685, has the author’s name and the title “ A discourse of Tangier.” MORE cheap riches, or heavenly aphorismes. . . . Faithfully copied out of the manuscripts of Mr H. C. . . . by N. C. [Nathaniel Church]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1660 *MORE fun for our little friends . . . For By the author of Great Fun, read By Harriet Myrtle, the author, etc. MORE news from Gotham, being a continuation of Gotham in alarm. [By Peter Mackenzie, James Brown, M.D., and others.] 8vo. [R. Inglis’ Dram. Writers of Scotland., p. 146.] Glasgow, 1816 See “ Gotham in alarm.” MORE shires and provinces. By Sabretache [A. S. Barrow]. Illustrated by Lionel Edwards. 4to. Pp. xii. 188. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1928 For the first series, see “Shires and provinces.” MORE songs of the glens of Antrim. By Moira O’Neile [Mrs Skrine, nee Hesta Higginson]. 8vo. Pp. x. 86. [S. J. Brown’s Ireland in Fiction.] Edinburgh, 1921 MORE verse. By F. S. [Frank Sidgwick]. 8 vo. Pp. 63. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1921 See also “ Some verse . . MORE’S millenium ; being the Utopia ... rendered into modern English by Valerian Paget [Harold and Zoe Paget]. 8vo. Pp. xxiii. 258. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1909 MORNING church ; or, two meals better than one. [By Francis Bour- dillon.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [i860] Signed: F. B. MOSAIC (the) workers ; a tale : to which is added The Oreo. By George Sand [Mme. Amandine Dudevant]. Translated ... by E. A. A. [Eliza A. Ashurst]. i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1844 MOSCOW; or, the grandsire: an historical tale. [By Mrs M. Main- waring.] i2mo. 3 vols. London, 1822 From the title-page of her “ The Suttee.” MOSES, the man of God. By the author of Lines o?i the prophet Elijah 'William C. Mainland]. 8vo. Pp. 48. Brit. Mus.] Kirkwall, 1930 MOST (the) delectable history of Clitiphon and Leucippe (of Achilles Tatius). [Translated by William Burton.] 4to. [Pollardand Redgrave.] London, 1597 Signed : W. B. MOST (a) excellent sermon of the Lordes Supper, wherein ... is lively set foorth the matter of the Supper of the Lorde Jesus. . . . Translated out of Frenche into English by I. T. [John Tomkys]. i6mo. B. L. [Pollard and Redgravei] London [1570?] MOST noble truncheon. [Reflections on modern warfare. By J. T. Griffiths.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [1907] *M O S T (a) pleasant description of Benwel Village . . . The Brit. Mus. gives the author’s name as Cuthbert Ellison, not John Ellison. Upcott gives simply Dr Ellison. MOST (the) pleasant history of Bovinian ; being an addition [by L. P. i.e. Laurence Price ?] to that most delight- full history of Crispine and Crispianus [i.e. “The Gentle Craft” by T. Delony. With woodcuts]. . . . 4to. Pp. 11. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1656 It begins with chapter xvi. *MOST sacred and divine science of astrology. . . . The correct title is “ ’AyLaarpoKoyia. Or, the most sacred . . Nor is the book anonymous, the author’s name being at the dedication. MOSUL (the) question. By V. F. M. 'V. F. Minorsky]. 8vo. Pp. 44. Brit. Mus.] Paris, 1926 MOTHER’S (a) care rewarded ; in the correction of those defects, most general in young people, during their education. [By Mary Robson, later Mrs Hughs i2mo. Pp. 108. [Brit. Mus.] London [1824] MOTHER’S Nell. [A story.] By E. R. G. [Evelyn R. Garratt]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1877 MOUNTAIN (the); or, the story of Captain Yevan. By C. K. Munro [Charles W. K. Macmullan]. A symbolic drama. 8vo. Pp. 221. [Brit. Musi] London [1926] MOURNER (the) comforted ; an epistle consolatory ; written by Hugo Grotius to Monsieur Du Maurier the French Embassadour at the Hague. Translated on a sad occasion, by C. B. "Clement Barksdale]. i2mo. Pp. 31. Brit. Musi] London, 1652 MOURNFUL (a) lamentation for the sad and deplorable death of Mr Old Tenor, a native of New England. [By Joseph Green.] Fol. S. sh. [Magazine of History, extra No. 90.] [Boston, 1750] MOUSE (the) trap ; or, the Welsh engagement . . . For the correct title of this book, see “ Muscipula . . MOUSE-TRAP (the); or, the Welshmen’s scuffle with the mice. [A translation of Edward Holdsworth’s Muscipula.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] London,1709 For other translations, see “Muscipula, sive Cambro-Muo-Machia,” and “Taffi’s masterpiece . . MR and Mrs Villiers. [A novel.] By Hubert Wales [William Piggott]. 8vo. Pp. 316. [Brit. Musi] London, 1906 MR Balfour ; a biography. By E. T. Raymond [Edward Raymond Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 227. [Brit. Musi] London, 1920 MR Lloyd George. A biography. . . . By E. T. Raymond [Edward Raymond Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 368. [Brit. Musi] London, 1922 MR Teedles, the “gland” old man. By Thomas Le Breton [T. Murray Ford]. 8vo. Pp. 188. [Brit. Musi] London [1928] MR Thake: his life and letters. By “ Beachcomber,” of the “Daily Express ” [John Bingham Morton]. 8vo. Pp. 285. [T.L.S. 19th Dec. 1929.] London, 1929 2 C VOL. VI. MR Woodhouse’s correspondence. By G. R. and E. S. [G. W. E. Russell and Edith Sichel]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 277. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1903 *MRS Blackett, her story . . . For-Elliott, read Emily Steele Elliott. MRS Britton’s letter touching the Europa troubles. By the author of A fairy tale for the nineteenth century Elizabeth Missing Sewell]. 8vo. 'Brit. Mies.] London, 1871 Signed : Jane Bull. MRS Finch-Brassey ; a novel. By Mrs Andrew Dean [Mrs Cecily Sidgwick]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1893 MRS Gilpin’s return from Edmonton; being the sequel to the Wedding-Day. By Henry Lemoine.] 8vo. Pp. 15. Brit. Mus.] London [1784?] MRS Parliament, her invitation of Mrs London, to a thanksgiving dinner for the . . . victorie, which Mr Horton obtained over Major Powell in Wales. . . . (By Mercurius Melancholicus [Marchamont Nedham?]). 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] [London] 1648 MURDER for profit. By William Bolitho [William B. Ryall]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Publishers' Weekly, 1st Sept. 1928.] London, 1926 MURDER from the grave. By Will Levinrew [William Levine]. 8vo. Pp. 284. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1931 MURDER in the maze. By J. J. Connington [Alfred Walter Stewart]. 8vo. Pp. 287. [Publishers' Weekly, 29th Sept. 1928.] London, 1927 MURTHER will out. [Two letters, relating to the death of the Earl of Essex. By Lawrence Braddon.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1692] Signed : L. B. ^MUS^US : a monody . . . For [By William Mason], read By Mr M— [William Mason]. MU SCIPULAsive Cambro-Muo-Machia. The Mouse-trap, or the Welsh engagement with the mice. [By Edward Holdsworth.] 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1709 In Latin and English. The English translation was not by Holdsworth, and the Latin pirated and full of faults. Another translation (1625) is entitled “ Muscipula, or the mousetrap.” For other translations, see “The Mouse-trap; or the Welshman’s scuffle with the mice” and “Taffi’s masterpiece. . . .” MUSE’S (the) choice ; or, the progress of wit. . . . See “A new collection of MUSES (the) delight ; an accurate collection of English and Italian songs, cantatas, and duetts, set to music for the harpsichord, violin, german-flute, etc. . . . [Edited by John Sadler, bookseller, of Liverpool.] 8vo. [Hawkes’ Lancashire Printed Books, p. 33.] Liverpool, 1754 Reissued, enlarged, in 1757 under the title “Apollo’s Cabinet.” *MY country. . . . The Brit. Mus. now attributes this to Letitia Willgoss Stone. MY days and nights on the battlefield ; a book for boys. By “Carleton” [Charles Carleton Coffin]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Boston, 1864 MY first grief; or, recollections, of a beloved sister. ... By a provincial surgeon [Charles Beckett]. i2mo. Pp. xi. 134. [Brit. Mus.] [1852] MY Lady Andros; a Wharfedaleromance. [By M. L. Dawson.] 8vo. Pp. 14. [Brit. Mus.] Frome [1910?] MY mother. [A poem. By Ann Taylor.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1856] MY young wife and my old umbrella ; a farce in one act, in prose adapted from the French [of] (M. Laurincin) [i.e. Paul Aime Chapelle] by B. Webster. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] 1837 The Acting National Drama, vol. 1. MYRROUR (the) of the Churche. Here followeth a deuout treatyse cdteynyge many goostly medytacyons *1 in- struccions to all maner of people. . . . By Saynt Austyn of Abyndon [or rather by St Edmund, Archbishop of Canterbury. Translated by R. Copland]. 8vo. B. L. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1521 MYSTERIE (the) of the Lord’s Supper. [By Robert Bruce.] 8vo. [Pollardand Redgrave.] London, 1614 MYSTERIES of the old castles of France ; or, secret intrigues of its Kings and Queens, Princes and Princesses, and other great personages of the times. By a Society of Arch Seers, under the direction of A. B. Le Francois [Alexandre Bailly]. Translated by W. T. Haley. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1848 MYSTERY at Lyndon Sands. By J. J. Connington [Alfred Walter Stewart]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Publishers' Weekly, 29th Sept. 1928.] London, 1928 MYSTERY (the) of Belvoir Mansions. [A tale.] By Ben Bolt [Otwell Binns]. 8vo. Pp. 318. [Brit. Mus.] *MYSTERY (the) of godlines ... By I, the meanest labourer. . . . This should read “ By I. C., the meanest labourer ...” Further the author seems to be a Protestant, and to have been licensed by Joseph Caryll, and is therefore very unlikely to have been John Caryl, who was a Catholic. MYSTERY (the) of money and how to explain it. By Norman Angell [Ralph Norman Angell Lane]. 8vo. Pp. 15- [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] Another issue has the title “ Monimics . . .” MYSTERY (the) of the Woman and of the Beast that carrieth her. [By William Tarbet.] 8vo. Pp. 20. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1851 MYSTERY Street. [A novel.] By L. Noel [Leonard Noel Barker]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Mus.] London [1930] MYSTIC (a) on the Prussian throne: Frederick-William II. By Gilbert Stanhope [Miss B. M. Ward]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 343. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1912 NAMES (the) of the Lord Jesus in the Epistles. [By John Nelson Darby.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1879] Signed : J. N. D. NAPOLEON in the other world; a narrative written by himself, and found near his tomb in the Island of St Helena, by Xongo-Tee-Foh-Tchi, mandarin of the third class. [By Baron Antoine Henry de Jomini? Translated from the French.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1827 NAPOLEON of the Looms. By M. E. Francis [Mary E. Blundell]. 8vo. Pp. 254. [Brit. Musi] London [1925] NARRATION (a), briefely contayning the history of the French Massacre especially that horrible one at Paris . . . in the yeare 1572. In the passage of which are handled certaine questions both politike and ethike. . . . [Translated from the Latin of Ambrosius de Bruyn.] 4to. [Pollardand Redgrave.] London, 1618 NARRATIVE of a journey through Norway, Sweden and Denmark. By Derwent Conway [Henry David Inglis]. i2mo. [Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 296.] Edinburgh, 1829 ^NARRATIVE of a three years’ residence . . . Signed : S. M. NARRATIVE (a) of the voyage of the Argonauts in 1880 ; compiled by the bard [William Mitchell Banks] from the most authentic records, illustrated by the photographer [Richard Caton] . . . 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 342.] Edinburgh, 1881 NARROW (the) way and the last judgment delivered in two sermons [on Matt. vii. 14]. ... By G. B. [G. Brian?]. 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1607 Contains only one sermon. *NASBY (the) papers. By Petroleum V. Nasby [David Ross Locke. With a preface signed S. O. B. i.e. Samuel Orchart Beeton]. 8vo. Pp. 124. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1865 NATHAN the wise ; a dramatic poem. . . . From the German : with an introduction on Lessing and the “Nathan.” . . . [By Robert Willis.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] -London, 1868 Signed : R. W., M.D. NATHAN the wise ; dramatic poem from the German of Lessing by the translator of Goethe’s Iphigenia and Burger’s Ellenore [William Taylor, of Norwich]. 8vo. [Baker’s Biog. Dram.; Brit. Mus.] 1805 NATIONAL (the) advocates ; a poem affectionately inscribed to the Honourable Thomas Erskine and Vicary Gibbs, Esquire ; [eulogising their exertions in defence of Hardy, Horne Tooke and others. By William Hayley]. 4to. Pp- 33- [Hayley’s Memoirs, vol. 1, p. 467.] London, 1795 NATIONAL song of thanksgiving for the termination of the war in South Africa. [By Henry Longley.] 8vo. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] London [1902] Signed: H. L. NATION’S (a) manhood ; or, stories of Washington and the American War of Independence. By the author of Sunlight through the mist [Mrs E. Burrows]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 358. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1861 NATURAL (the) history of Oxfordshire. ... By Robert Plot. . . . Second edition, with large additions and . . . a short account of the author [by J. B., M.A., i.e. John Burman]. Fol. Pp. 366. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1705 NATURAL (the) history of the Arbor Vitae, or Tree of Life. [By Thomas Stretzer, Stretser, or Streetser.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] London, 1732 NATURAL (the) secret history of both sexes ; or, a modest defence of public stews ; with an account of the present state of whoring in these kingdoms. By Luke Ogle, Esq. The’fourth edition. [Attributed to Bernard de Mandeville, and also to George Ogle.] 8vo. Pp. xv. 119. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1740 First issued as “A modest defence of public stews ” q.v. (main entry and suppl.). *N AT U R A L L (the) and morall historie . . . For Grimestone, readGrimstone. [Pollard and Redgrave. ] NATURE (the) and design of Christianity ; extracted from a late author. [An abridgment by John Wesley of the first chapter of W. Law’s A practical treatise upon Christian perfection?^ i2mo. Pp. 19. [Brit. Mies.] London,1740 NATURE and grace ; or, some essential differences between the sentiments of the natural and spiritual man. [By William Cudworth ?] . . . 8vo. Pp. 10. [Brit. Mus.] Salop, 1763 NATURE (the) and unity of the Church of Christ. [By John Nelson Darby.] i2mo. [Bril. Mus.] London [1861] NATURE (the) of the present excise, and the consequences of its farther extension, examined; in a letter to a Member of Parliament. [By John Perceval, Second Earl of Egmont.] 8vo. London, 1733 MS. note in a nearly contemporary hand. NAUGHTY Nancy ; a musical comedy. By Oliver Bath [Hardinge Coulburn Giffard, Earl of Halsbury]. 8vo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Mus.] London [1902] NAVAL (a) lieutenant, 1914-1918. By “Etienne” [Stephen King-Hall]. 8vo. Pp. xiv. 260. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1919 NAWORTH. 1643. A new almanacke and prognostication for . . . Durham. By G. Naworth [G. Wharton], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1643 Also published for the year 1644. NEAPOLITAN (the); or, the defender of his mistress. [By-de Germont.] Done out of French by Mr Ferrand Spence. i2mo. Pp. 80. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1683 NECROMANCER (the); or, a tale of the Black Forest. . . . Translated from the German of Lawrence Flammenberg [Carl Friedrich Kahlert] by Peter Teuthold. 8vo. Pp. xv. 232. [Brit. *NEEDWOOD Forest. By F. N. C. Mundy. [With commendatory verses signed : E. D. i.e. Erasmus Darwin.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] Lichfield, 1776 An edition of 1779 has verses signed: E. D. jun. NEMESIS at Raynham Parva. By J. J. Connington [Alfred Walter Stewart]. 8vo. Pp. 286. [Ainer. Cat.] London, 1929 NEOLOGIE; or, the French of our times : being a collection of more than eleven hundred words. ... By Mme. Ve D. G. [Mme. F. C. de la Place Gerardin]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1854 *NEREIDES ; or, sea-eclogues. By William, not John Diaper. [Brit. Mus.] NETTIE and Kate ; or, onward to the heights of life. By F. L. M. [F. L. Morse]. 8vo. Pp. 376. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1882 The original (1881) edition is entitled “ Onward to the heights of life,” q.v. NEW (a) almanack for . . . 1708. . . . By A. C. [Andrew Cumptsy]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1708 NEW (a) argument against Transub- stantiation adapted to the Romish controversy at present reviv’d; in a letter to the author of a book, entitl’d Discourses of religion, between a minister of the Church of England and a country gentleman. . . . To which is added, the Duke of Buckingham’s Conference with Father Fitzgerald, an Irish Jesuit sent by King James the II. to convert His Grace in his sickness, to the Romish religion. [By John Henley.] 8vo. [Lincoln’s Inn Lib.] London, 1755 NEW (the) attractive; containing a short discourse of the magnes or loadstone. . . . By Robert Norman. . . . Newly corrected and amended by M. W. B. [Mr William Borough], 4to. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1585 NEW (a) ballet of the straunge and cruell whippes which the Spanyards had prepared to whippe and torment English men and women. . . . [By Thomas Deloney?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Musi] London, 1588 Signed : T. D. NEW (a) collection of miscellanies in prose and verse. (The Muse’s choice : or, the progress of wit: an elegiac epistle to Major Pack. [By William Bond.] Some remarkable passages in the life of Mr Wycherley. By Mr Dennis.) 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] NEW (a) collection of original poems, on several occasions. ... [A re-issue of “A new miscellany of original poems,” 1701.] 8vo. [I. O. Williams in Bibl. Soc. Trans. Dec. 1929.] London [c. 1720] NEW Covenant ordinances and order ; the Word, sacraments and prayer ; practical reflections in rhyme. [By Robert A. Macfie, of Dreghorn.] 8vo. Pp. 79. London [1887] Presentation copy. NEW (a) critical review of the public buildings . . . London and Westminster. See “A critical review . . .” NEW dialogues of the dead ; in three parts. [By B. Le Bovier de Fontenelle.] Made English by J. D. [John Dryden ?]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1683 “Modern Novels,” vol. 12. NEW England’s prospect. ... By W. Wood. [Preface signed: C. D. i.e. Charles Deane.] 4to. Pp. xxvi. 131. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1865 Publications of the Prince Society, vol. 3. NEW English and German word book. By J. B. Richard [J. M. V. Audin] and Kaub. New edition. i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1878 NEW English-German dialogues. By J. B. Richard [J. M. V. Audin] and Kaub. New edition. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1874 NEW (a) enterlude called Thersytes. [By Nicholas Udall?] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London [1560 ?] NEW (a) exposure of the Reverend Leaders of the Voluntary Church Associations. ... In a letter . . . addressed to them by Anglo-Scotus [John Lockhart ?]. Third edition. . . . 8vo. Pp. 69. [Brit. Musi] Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 1834 NEW (the) fiction ; a protest against sex mania and other papers. By the Philistine (J. A. S. [i.e. J. A. Sterry ?]). 8vo. Pp. vii. 122. London, 1895 Westminster Gazette Library, vol. 3. *NEW Form of Process before the Court of Session . . . The Brit. Mus. ascription is to J ohn Russell, Clerk to the Signet. NEW (a) guide to the English tongue. By Edward Baldwin, Esq. [William Godwin]. [F. K. Brown’s Godwin.] London,1809 NEW (a) letter of notable contents. . . . [By Gabriel Harvey. The introduction signed: J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. Pp. xii. 32. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1870] *NEW light on old truths . . . For By I. O., and M. T. read By I. O., M.T. and M. A., M.T. [G. R. J. Ouseley]. VOL. VI. NEW (a) method of curing without internal medicines, that degree of the venereal disease called gonorrhoea or clap . . . The first edition was issued in 1709 as “by E. N. Surgeon”: the second edition, 1711, as “by G. Warren, Surgeon,” an imposture meant to cause confusion with George Warren, Surgeon in Cambridge. [ Watt, Brit. Mus., Surgeon-General's Lib.] R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, pp. 31, 32, 210, suggests that it may be the work of John Marten, Surgeon, author of “A treatise of all the degrees and symptoms of the venereal disease” (1706, 1708, 1711), who wrote quack medical books for Curll. See “ The charitable surgeon ” and “ The generous surgeon.” NEW (a) miscellany ; being a collection of pieces of poetry from Bath, Tunbridge, Oxford, Epsom and other places, in the year 1725. [Contains a poem attributed to Jabez Earle.] 8vo. Pp. 90. [I. O. Williams in Bibl. Soc. Trails. Dec. 1929.] London [1725] *NEW (a) miscellany of original poems on several occasions. Written by the E. of D. [Earl of Dorset] . . . and several other eminent hands. 8vo. Pp. 341. [I. O. Williams in Bibl. Soc. Trans. Dec. 1929.] London, 1701 There are other anonymous poems in this miscellany, edited by Charles Gilston, by Lady Winchelsea and John Philips. NEW (a) miscellany of original poems, translations and imitations. By the most eminent hands, Mr Prior . . . Lady M. W. M— [Lady Mary Wortley Montague]. . . . [Preface signed: A. H. i.e. Anthony Hammond, who contributed poems.] Svo. Pp. 371. [I. O. Williams in Bibl. Soc. Trans. Dec. 1929.] London, 1720 Second edition, 1740. *NEW (the) ordeal . . . For Charles C. Chesney, read George Tomkins Chesney. NEW (the) parsonage; or, the great importance of a good foundation. By the author of The lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London,i860 Signed : F. B. NEW (a) poem on the ... Society of Journey-men Taylors. . . . By H. N., Bricklayer, one of the brethren [H. Nelson]. Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1725 See also “A poem in the honour of the Antient and loyal Society . . .” NEW poems. By J. Marjoram [Ralph Hale Mottram]. Svo. Pp. viii. 69. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1909 2 C 2 NEW (the) Pope ; or, a true account of the ceremonies ... at Rome . . . for the election of a new Pope. . . . Translated out of. the French by J. D. [John Davies?]. 8vo. Pp. 102. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1677 NEW (the) precept upon precept. . . . By the author of Line ufo?t line [Mrs Favel Lee Mortimer]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 236. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1926 NEW (a) selection from the poems of Lionel Johnson. [Edited by H. V. M. i.e. H. V. Marrot.] 8vo. [Brit. Afus.\ London, 1897 NEW (a) solution of the mystery of Edwin Drood. By Mary Kavanagh [Margaret M. Spain]. 8vo. Pp. 32. [.lnnisfail, a quarterly magazine, No. 1.] London, 1919 NEW songs, and poems, A-la-mode both at court, and theatres now extant. Never before printed. By P. W. Gent. [Thomas DufFett]. 8vo. Pp. 120. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1677 A duplicate, with new engraved title-page, and without the two leaves of dedicatory verses of Duffett’s “New poems, songs, prologues and epilogues ” (1676). *NEW test of the Church of England’s loyalty . . . This was by Defoe. See Camb. Hist, of English Lit. and Dottin’s Defoe. NEW (the) Testament . . . with . . . expositions of Theod. Beza . . . placed in due order by J. C. [John Canne]. Fol. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1642 NEW (a) trial of the ladies. Hide park, May day. . . . [Signed: W. B. i.e. William Blake, of Highgate.] 4to. Pp. 48. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1658 See also “ The trial of the ladies . . “A serious letter sent by a private Christian . . .” and “The Yellow book.” NEW (a) vocabulary of modern Billingsgate phrases, for the use of clergymen and others. . . . By the Rev. Mr A . . . G—b [Adam Gib]. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] Perth, 1782 NEW (a) way in apologetic. [A review of “ Reason and Revelation ” by J. R. Illingworth.] ... By Hakluyt Egerton [Arthur Boutwood]. 8vo. Pp. 56. [Brit. Afus.] London [1907] NEWEL (a), which may turn out to be anything but a jewel. Suggested by J. O. H. [James Orchard Halliwell]. i6mo. [Brit. Afus.] [London] private print, 1865 10 copies only printed. NEW-ENGLAND freemen warned and warmed. Election sermon, 1671. By Rev. J. O. [John Oxenbridge]. i6mo. Pp. 48. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] N.P. 1673 NEW-ENGLAND (a) tale; or, sketches of New-England character and manners. [By Catherine Maria Sedgwick.] 8vo. [Allibone’s Diet.] New York, 1822 *N EWES from Italy of a second Moses . . . For other editions with different titles, see “ A president to the nobilitie . . .” (1612) and “The Italian convert .. .” (1635). NEW-YEARS-GIFT (a) for the Anti- Prerogative - Men; or, a lawyer’s opinion, in defence of His Majesties Power-Royal of granting pardons as he pleases. [By John Brydall.] 4to. [Lincoln's fnn Lib.] London, 1682 NEW-YEAR’S (a) gift ; meditations miscellaneous, holy and humane. By J. H. [Joseph Henshaw], D.D. . . . i2mo. [Brit. Afusl] London, 1704 NEXT (the) chapter ; the war against the moon. By Andre Maurois [Emile Herzog]. 8vo. Pp. 74. [Observer, 1st Feb. 1931.] London [1927] NIGHTFALL. By the author of Afarqueray's duel and Jenny Essendeji "Agnes Russell Weekes]. 8vo. Pp. 336. Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1921 NINE historical letters of the reign of Henry VIII. ; written by Reginald Pole [and others]. . . . Copied from the originals [by John Payne Collier]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, private print, 1871 NINETEEN beautiful years ; or, sketches of a girl’s (Mary E. W. [i.e. Mary E. Willard]) life. Written by her sister [Frances E. Willard]. With an introduction by . . . R. S. Foster. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1864 *NIPOTISMO (il) di Roma . . . W. A., Fellow of the Royal Society, the translator, is William Aglionby. See Arber’s Term Cat. i. 2. The 1669 and 1673 editions are as by W. A., without epithet. NISIDominus. . . Rimes: H. D.C. P. Hilary D. C. Pepler]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 56. Brit. Mus.] Ditchling, 1919 NO song, no supper ; a musical entertainment. By P. Hoare. . . . With . . . remarks by D. G. [George Daniel]. i2mo. Pp. 26. [Brit. Mus.] London [1871] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 89. NO ;—this is the truth : a poem. [By Edward Chicken ?] Fol. Pp. 11. Newcastle-upon-Tyne [1750?] NO Union ! but unite and fall. By Paddy Whack, of Dyott Street, London [John Fitzgibbon, Earl of Clare] ; in a loving letter to his dear mother Sheelah, of Dame Street, Dublin. . . . Second edition. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1799 NOB *NOBLENESSE (the) of the asse . . . 1595- The Christie-Miller attribution to Daniel Heinsius is incorrect, and is a confusion with “ Laus asini ” by Heinsius, first published in 1623. “ The Noblenesse of the asse ” is by Adriano Banchieri. See Brit. Mus.; Pollard and Redgrave. NOBLES (the) ; or, of nobilitye : the original nature, dutyes, right, and Christian institution thereof three bookes. Fyrste eloquentlye writte in Latine by Laurence Humphrey . . . late Englished [by Nicholas Grimald or Grimbald ? . . . 8vo. \D.N.B. vol. 23, p. 250.] London, 1563 NOBODY’S daughter; a play in four acts. By George Paston [Emily Morse Symonds]. 8vo. Pp. 127. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1924 NOMQUA, a Zulu maid. By Noel Hope [Sarah L. Morewood]. . . . 8vo. Pp. vi. 176. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1923 NOLI me tangere ; the young student’s letter to the old lawyer in the country containing several other authenticks to corroborate . . . that royal maxim, The King can do no wrong ; to which is added a post-script consisting of some words of the Royal Martyr. [By John Brydall.] 4to. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1703 NONSENSCORSHIP. . . . Edited by G. P. P. [George Palmer Putnam]. Sundry observations concerning prohibitions, inhibitions, and illegalities. . . . 8vo. Pp. xiii. 181. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1922 NORDENHOLT’S million. By J. J. Connington [Alfred Walter Stewart]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 303. [Publishers' Weekly, 29th Sept. 1928.] London, I923 NORFOLKES furies ; or, a view of Kett’s campe: necessary for the malecontents of our time, for their instruction, or terror ; and profitable for every good subject, to incourage him upon the undoubted hope of the victorie. . . . With a table of the maiors and sherififes of . . . Norwich ... set forth first in Latin by Alexander Neville. Translated into English ... by R. W. Minister at Frettenham in Norfolk [Richard Woods]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1615 NORTH and south ; or, scenes and adventures in Mexico. By Seatsfield [Karl Anton Postl, afterwards Charles Sealsfield]. Translated from the German by J. T. H. [Joel Tyler Headley?]. 8vo. Pp. 118. [Brit. Mus. ; Sabin’s Dictionary]. New York [c. 1845] NORTH American rock writing. ... By Thomas Ewbank. [Edited by H. B. D. i.e. Henry Barton Dawson.] 8vo. Pp. 49. [Brit. Mus.] Morrisania, 1866 NORTH (the) Georgia Gazette and Winter chronicle. [Edited by Edward Sabine.] 4to. London, 1821 Presentation copy from the editor. NORTH Sea Bubbles. [By Sir Robert Grimshaw Dunville.] [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland, p. 497-] Belfast, n.d. NORTHERN (the) Atalantis ; or, York Spy. Displaying the secret intrigues and adventures of the Yorkshire gentry; more particularly the amours of Melissa. ... [By Capt. Bland.] The secondedition, corrected. 8vo. Pp. 73. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 222.] London, 1713 NORTHERN garlands. . . . Edited by ... J. Ritson [and republished by J. H. i.e. Joseph Haslewood]. 8vo. 4 parts. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1810 NORTHERN (the) lights, and other poems. By Violet Jacob [Lady Helena Mariota Carnegie and Mrs Arthur Jacob]. 8vo. Pp. 43- [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 NORWAY ; a few facts from Norwegian history and politics, addressed to the International Council of women by the Norwegian National Council of women. [By Gina Krog.] 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 369.] Christiania, 1905 NORWAY (the) wood carrier or reduction of Norway deals. By the author of the Danish and English Dictionary [Ernst Wolff]. The third edition. 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 369.] London, 1785 NORWEGIAN (a) ramble among the fjords, fjelds, mountains and glaciers. By one of the ramblers [John Bishop Putnam]. 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 369.] New York, 1904 NORWEGIAN (the) sailor ; a sketch of the life of George Noscoe [Jprgen N0st0]. Written by himself. With an introductory note by Thos. Raffles. . . . 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 370.] London, 1850 NOSE (the); a poem, in six stanzas . . . dedicated to all unmarried ladies, who may profit by the example ... of Dorothy Spriggins. [Written and illustrated by Frances Parker, Countess of Morley ?] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] [London] 1831 NOSE-GAY (a) for the House. of Commons ; made up of the stincking flowers of their seven yeares labours. By Mercurius Melancholicus [Marchamont Nedham ?]. 4^°* [Brit. Mus.] London, 1648 NOT in our stars. [A novel.] By Michael Maurice [Conrad Arthur Skinner]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1923 First Novel Library. NOTABLE (a) historye of Nastagio and Traversari. Translated [from the Italian of Boccaccio] by C. T. [Christopher Tye]. 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 57, p. 413.] London, 1569 NOTE book of observations in practical physics. Compiled by C. E. A. [Cyril Ernest Ashford]. 4to. Pp. 54. [Brit. Mus.\ Harrow, 1903 NOTES of a reading on 1. and II. Corinthians. By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1879] NOTES of lectures. [Religious tracts.] By F. E. R. [F. E. Raven]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1891, etc. NOTES of readings and addresses at Newcastle, September 1895. [By J. B. S. i.e. J. B. Stoney, and others.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1895] NOTES on Arlington and its churches. [By Charles E. Powell.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Eastbourne [1931] NOTES on Mr William Fowler of Winterton, and his works. [By Henry William Ball.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] Hull, 1869 Signed : H. W. B. NOTES on so much of the catalogue of the present exhibition of the Royal Academy as relates to the works of the members. [In verse. By Richard James Lane.] 8vo. Pp. 6r. [Brit. Mus.] London [1855] NOTES on the campaign of the Army of Reserve in the Year 1800. By an officer of artillery [John Hambly Humfrey]. 8vo. Pp. 57. [Brit. Mus.] 1827 Preface signed : J. H. H. NOTES on the church of St Nicholas, Rattlesden, Suffolk. With illustrations. Edited by J. R. O. [J. R. Olorenshaw]. Fol. Pp. 12. [Brit. Mus.] Coventry, 1910 NOTESonthefamilyof Spreull; collected and arranged by J. M. S. [J. M. Spreull] and G. J. S. [G. J. Spreull]. 8vo. Pp. 63. [Brit. Musi] Glasgow, 1915 NOTES on the months; a book of “feasts, fasts, saints and sundries.” [By Eliza Gutch.] 8vo. Pp. xi. 428. [Brit. Musi] London, 1866 NOTES on the postscript to a pamphlet entitled “ Observations anatomical and physiological” . . . by A. Monro. . . . [By Mark Akenside.] 8vo. [Edinb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1758 NOTES on the Rye elections. [By Dr-Edwards.] 8vo. [Lincoln’s lun Libi] London, 1830 NOTES on the Scottish family of Playfair. Compiled by A. G. P. [A. G. Playfair]. 8vo. Pp. 44. [Brit. Musi] \ Tunbridge Wells, 1906 NOTES on the state of Virginia ; written [by Thomas Jefferson] in . . . 1781 .. . enlarged in . . . 1782 for the use of a foreigner of distinction. . . . 8vo. Pp. 391, 14. [Brit. Musi] [Paris] 1782 [for 1784] The Brit. Mus. copy has the author’s autograph. An edition (London, 1787) bears the author’s name. NOTES on the tesselated pavement at Woodchester. [By William George.] Reprinted from Bristol Times and Mirror. 8vo. Pp. 4. [Brit. Musi] [Bristol, 1880] NOTES on un-natural history; being a selection of fictions accounting for facts. By the author of Notes on the months [Eliza Gutch]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 152. [Brit. Musi] London, 1868 NOTES on W. Bromfield’s two volumes of chirurgical observations and cases. With an appendix addressed to Doctor Laurence. By D. A. S-, M.D. and Professor of Surgery [D. A. Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 72. [Brit. Musi] London, 1773 NOTICE of tertiary fossils . from Labrador, Maine . . . and remarks on the climate of Canada, in the newer Pliocene or Pleistocene period. [By Sir John William Dawson.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [Montreal? i860?] NOTICE of the botanical writings of the late C. S. Rafinesque. [By Asa Gray.’ 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [New York, 1841 Signed: A. G. Off-print from the American Journal of Science and Art. NOTICE of William Thaddeus Harris, Esq. [By Francis James Child.] i6mo. [Brit. Musi] Pp. 14. Boston, 1855 Signed : F. J. C. The preface is signed : S. G. D. i.e. S. G. Drake. Six copies only printed. NOTITIA historicorum selectorum ; or, animadversions upon the antient . . . historians. Written in French by . . . Francis La Mothe le Vayer ; translated . . . by W. D., B.A. [William Davenant]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1678 NOVANGLUS and Massachusettensis ; or, political essays . . . the former by John Adams . . . the latter by Jonathan Sewell [or rather Daniel Leonard]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1819 *NOVELS (the) of Elizabeth . . . The last (2nd) part, 1681, bears the author’s name. NOVUS annus luni-solaris, sive ratio temporis emendato. A rectified account of time, by a new luni-solar year. [By Robert Wood, LL.D.] 4to. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.\ [1680?] Signed : R. W. *NUG,E. By W. S. Y. For Siddon, read Siddons. NUGiE derelictse quas colligerunt J. M. [James Maidment] et R. P. [Robert Pitcairn]. L. P. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgi, private print, 1832 Eighteen rare tracts relating to the history of Scotland. *NUGAE Scoticae . . . In addition to Maidment and Kinloch, Charles Baxter was editor. [T. G. Stevenson’s Maidment Bibl.] NUN of Heaven. [Poems. By] T. L. P. [T. L. Paton]. 8vo. Pp. 42. [Brit. Mus.\ Richmond, 1928 NUNNS (the) complaint against the Fryars ; being the charge given in to the court of France by the Nunns of St Katherine near Provins. [By Alexandre Varet.]. . . . Now faithfully done into English. 8vo. Pp. 192. [Arber’s Term Cat.] London, 1676 NURSES’ (the) “Enquire within”; a pocket encyclopaedia of diseases, their symptoms, nursing, treatment, and much other valuable information. . . . By C. O. M. [E. M. Clarke]. i6mo. Pp. viii. 166. London [1906] Later editions bear the author’s name. NUTSHELLS. (A Death-day book.) By M. K. M. [M. K. Moore]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 279. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1909 OBSERVATIONS and strictures on the conduct of Mrs Clarke, etc. etc. By a lady [Olivia Wilmot Serres ?]. 4to. Pp. 37. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1809 OBSERVATIONS, moral and political, particularly respecting the necessity of good order ... in our prisons ; occasioned by Fidelio’s letters . . . By J. H. [John Howard?]. 8vo. [Bnt. Mus.] London, 1784 ■^OBSERVATIONS on the amalgamation of the Royal and Indian Artillery. For Col. George Chesney, read Frances Rawdon Chesney. OBSERVATIONS on the expedition of General Buonaparte to the East, and the probability of its success considered; to which is added a brief sketch of the present state of Egypt; an historical account of Alexandria. ... By the editor of the History of Peter III. and Catharine 11. of Russia [W. Tooke]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1798 OBSERVATIONS on the judgements of the High Court in the Rent case by a member of the British Indian Association [John Cochrane]. 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] Calcutta, 1865 OBSERVATIONS on the present state and future prospects of Scandinavia. By a Swede [S. G. Lallerstedt]. 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 381.] Paris, 1856 OBSERVATIONS on the proposition for increasing the means of theological education at the University in Cambridge. [By William Ellery Channing.] 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary i] Cambridge [Mass.] 1815 ■^OBSERVATIONS on the Revised Version of the Bible. . . . For John Harrison, read John Harris. OBSERVATIONS on the scheme for Screw Ships evolutions. [By Sir William Fanshawe Martin.] 8vo. Pp. 20. [Brit. Musi] Valletta, 1863 OBSERVATIONS on the use and abuse of red tape, for the juniors in the Eastern, Western, and American Departments [of the Foreign Office. By T. H. Sanderson]. 8vo. Pp. 14. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1891] OBSERVATIONS upon the lives of Alexander, Caesar, Scipio. Newly Englished. [By Giovanni Botero.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1602 Signed: J. B. B. ^OCCASIONAL papers by the late William Dodd, LL.D. . . . These papers were written almost entirely by Dr Samuel Johnson. Dodd, once a chaplain to George III. and an eloquent and popular preacher, forged the name of his friend and ex-pupil, Lord Chesterfield, on a bond, and although he repaid the money, he was sentenced to be hanged. Strenuous but futile efforts in which Johnson joined were made to get the sentence commuted. For the benefit of Mrs Dodd, Johnson was about to publish these “Occasional papers,” but at her earnest desire the book was suppressed. OCCASIONAL poems, fables and translations from Filicaja and other Italian poets. By C. T. W. [Charlotte Theresa Wheler]. 8vo. Pp. 159. \Brit. Mus.\ Leamington, 1865 OCTAVE (an). By Jeffery E. Jeffery [Jeffery Eardley Marston]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1925 ODE (an) addressed to the author of the Conquered Duchess. In answer to that celebrated performance. [By Sir Charles Hanbury Williams.] Fol. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1746 ODE for the Encoenia at Oxford, July 1810. [By Edward Copleston, Bishop ofLlandaff] 4to. Pp. 4. [Brit. Mush] Oxford [1810] ODE (an), humbly inscribed to the Queen, on the late glorious success of Her Majesty’s Arms. [By Matthew Prior.] [Brit. Mus.] London, 1706 ODE on His Majesty’s recovery. By the author of Sympathy and Humanity [Samuel Jackson Pratt]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1789 ODE to dawn and other poems. By John Doe [Victor Sampson]. 8vo. Pp. 55. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1923 ODE (an) to His Royal Highness [Frederick, Prince of Wales] on his birth-day. [ByRobert Craggs Nugent, Earl Nugent.] Fol. Pp. 7. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1739 ODE (an) to the Honourable H - - - y F - - x [Henry Fox, afterwards Lord Holland], on the marriage of the Du - - - s of M.r [Duchess of Manchester] to H---s---y [Hussey], Esq. [By Sir Charles Hanbury Williams.] Fol. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mush] London, 1746 OEDIPUS; or, the resolver; being a clew that leads to the chiefe secrets and true resolution of amorous, naturall, morall, and politicall problemes. . . . By G. M. [Gervase Markham ?]. i2mo. Pp. 307. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1650 OF mariage and wiving ; an excellent, pleasant and philosophicall controversy between the two famous Tassi now living, the one Hercules the philosopher, the other Torquato the poet. Done into English by R. T., Gentleman [Robert Tofte]. 4to. B. L. [Brit. Mus.) London, 1599 OF smoking ; four poems in praise of tobacco ; an imitation of the style of four modern poets [Pope, Ambrose Philips, Young and Thomson. By Isaac Hawkins Browne]. 8vo. [R. Straus’ The Vnspeakable Curll, p. 305.] London, 1736 *OF the circumference of the earth . . . This is another edition of “Fata mihi totum mea sunt agitanda per orbem,” (1611) also anonymous, q.v. OF the Divinity of Christ. (Of the union of the divine and human nature in the person of Christ.) [Two sermons on John i. 1 and 14 by Richard Taylor, dissenting minister.] 8vo. Pp. 95. [Brit. Mus.] N.P. [1730] OF the eternal felicity of the saints. By R. Bellarmine. Translated into English by A. B. [Thomas Everard or Everett]. i2mo. Pp. 441. [Pollard and Redgrave.] [St Omer] 1638 OF the imitation of Christ. By Thomas h Kempis. [Translated by Frederick Apthorp Paley.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1881 OF the imitation of Christ. ... By Thomas A’Kempis. With an . . . essay on the authorship [signed : F. S. A. i.e. Edmund Waterton]. 8vo. Pp. xxxvi. 256. [Brit. Mush] London, 1883 OF the interchangeable course, or variety of things. [By Robert Ashley.] Fol. [Huntington Lib. Checklist.] London, 1594 *OF the laws of chance ; or, a method of calculation of the hazards of game . . . Mainly translated by Dr John Arbuthnot from the De ratiociniis in ludo aleae by Christiaan Huygens. [Brit. Mus.] *OF the progress of the soule . . . This is part two of “An anatomie of the world ... ”, q.v. OF the visible sacrifice of the Church of God. By Anonymus Eremita [Simon Stock, or in religion, Simon a S. Maria]. 4to. 2 parts. [Brit. Mush] Bruxelles, 1637, 38 OF trade . . . also, of coyn. bullion. . . . By J. P., Esq. [J. Pollexfen?]. To which is annexed, The argument of the late Lord Chief Justice Pollexphen, upon an action of the case, brought by the East India Company. . . . 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mush] London, 1700 / OFFICIA anglicana; or, a manual of daily devotion, for members of the Church of England compiled from the Prayers of Bp. Andrewes, Dr Cosin, and Bp. Wilson. . . . [Compiled by Sir George Prevost.] 321110. Pp. 68. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1847 Preface signed : G. P. OHIO Valley historical series miscellanies. [Edited by R. C. i.e. Robert Clarke ? ] 8vo. 3 parts. [Brit. Mus.] Cincinnati, 1869-71 *’01X02 Kpldivos. . . . Not by Rolleston but by Benjamin Buckler. Information from a descendant of Buckler’s who produced the author’s own copy, with MS. notes, etc. See also “A philosophical dialogue concerning decency ...” OLD (the) and New Testaments ; being the English version of the Polyglott Bible. . . . [Edited by T. C. i.e. Thomas Chevalier.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1819 OLD (Ye) Brum and ye New, from a humorous point of view : a complete history of the town. . . . By Jayhay [John Anderton]. . . . Illustrated. 8vo. Pp. 88. [Birm. Cent. Lib.] Birmingham, 1878-9 OLD Bumble’s art of whist. By F. R. D. [Francis Robert Drew]. 8vo. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.] Malvern, 1870 OLD (the) churches of the Province of Quebec, 1647-1800. [By Pierre Georges Roy.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 323. [Brit. Mus.] Quebec, 1925 *OLD [fox, i.e. John Lauderyou] . . . For By John Wilson, Grocer, of Truro, read By John Williams, Grocer, of Truro. OLD Humphrey’s [George Mogridge’s] walks in London and its neighbourhood. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1843 ?] OLD (the) man ; or, ravings and ram- blings round Conistone. [By Alexander C. Gibson.] i6mo. Pp. vi. 146. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1849 Signed : A. C. G. OLD (the) man’s wish. [A song. By Walter Pope.] Fol. [Brit. Mus.] [1685?] A later edition (1697) entitled “The Wish” bears the author’s name. OLD (the) orthodox foundation of religion ; left for a patterne to a new reformation. Collected long since by Mr Henry Ainsworth . . . and now republished . . . by S. W. [Samuel White, of Polsholt]. 4to. [Edinb. Univ. Lib.] London, 1653 See also “The orthodox foundation of religion.” OLD (the) Testament. By Chilperic Edwards [Edward John Pilcher]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 154. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1913 The Inquirer’s Library, No. 3. OLD (the) year and the new ; a midnight reverie, 1895-96. [By A. D. Phelp.] 8vo. Pp. 3. [Brit. Mies.] [Leyton, 1895] Signed : A. D. P. ON building a church for divine worship ; a discourse. [By J. P. Knight.] 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Musi] London, 1850 ON cholera. By Medicus [Forbes Winslow]. 8vo. [Eng. Cat.. 1801- 1836, p. hi.] 1803 ON common and perfect magic squares. With examples constructed by the author also with his sections of the simple and compound perfect square of the mystic number 666 (1 to 443556). By F. Latoon [William Shaw]. London, 1895 On the authority of the author’s son, Mr Plato E. Shaw. F. Latoon is from the Turkish “Eflatoon,” meaning “ Plato.” ON division among the churches ; a letter to . . . the Earl of Derby. By Medicus Cantabrigiensis [John Spurgin, M.D.]. Second edition. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1858 ON Free Trade. [An address. By Sir Thomas Phillipps.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] Broadway, 1851 Signed: T. P. ON lots. [A letter to the editor of the Secession Magazine, signed : A. G. i.e. Alexander Gardner.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Paisley, 1851 ON notes and note books. [By David B. Muir.] 8vo. Pp. 27. [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] ON persecution and a persecuting temper. Matt. x. 34-36. [A sermon. By G. A. Poole.] 8vo. [Brit. ALies.] [n.p. 1840?] Signed : G. A. P. ON repentance. By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1865] ON symbols in worship. [By Thomas Carlyle, advocate.] 8vo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1853 ON the amusements of clergymen and Christians in general; in three dialogues between a dean and a curate. By Edward Stillingfleet [or rather Rev. William Gilpin]. 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1796 The title does not begin “ Three dialogues . . .” as sometimes quoted. Cf. Gent. Mag. xci. i. 53 ) N. and Q. 18th Dec. 1869, p. 530. ^ tKc. rYvApuv &L 1/5 S&SL Ytt&k Vij k>AH\ \ vO urrxt A Yl f s I A *ON the conduct of the war in the East; the Crimean expedition. . . . By a General Officer. . . . Attributed by the Belgian newspapers to the pen of Prince Napoleon. [By-Tavernier.] 8vo. [Brit. AFus.] London, 1855 ON the immediate and glorious advent of our Lord Jesus Christ. ... By a clergyman, J. A., P. E. [Joseph Amesbury]. i2mo. Pp. 66. \Brit. Mus.\ London, 1849 *ON the landscape architecture of the great painters of Italy . . . For By G. L. M., read G. L. M. Esq. For 1838, read 1828. ON the law of libel: with strictures on the self-styled Constitutional Association. [By Francis Place.] 8vo. Pp. 73. [Brit. AFus.] London, 1823 ON the meeting of three schoolfellows and friends after a separation of forty years. [In verse. By Sir William Norris.] 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. AFus.] [London] private print, 1850 ON the moral state and political union of Sweden and Norway in answer to Mr S. Laing’s statement. [By Magnus Bjornstjerna.] 8vo. [Petter- sen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 401. London, 1840 ON the sixth day. [A novel.] By Giuseppe Bianco [Joseph White]. 8vo. Pp.312. [Brit.AFus.] Indianapolis [1928] ON the Tarshish of the second book of Chronicles. [By William Aloysius Clavering.] 4to. London, 1849 ON the use and abuse of satire. [By Charles Abbot, afterwards Lord Tenterden.] 8vo. [Gent. AFag. Aug. 1839, p. 157.] Oxford, 1786 ON the white horse mentioned in the Apocalypse. . . . From the Latin of Emanuel Swedenborg. [Edited by T. M. G. i.e. Thomas Murray Gorman.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 62. [Brit. AFus.] London, 1871 ON this great eclipse: a poem. By A. R. [Allan Ramsay]. See above, “ A forecast of the sun5s eclipse ...” ONE dreamer who awakes. [A novel.] By E. Shaw Cowley [Elsie Mary Boulton]. 8vo. Pp. 314. [Brit. AFus.] London,1905 ONE good turn. By Valentine [Arthur Valentine Peachey]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. AFus.] London, 1928 ONE (the) hope of all believers, as set forth in the Holy Scriptures. . . . From the German [of C. J. T. Boehm]. By C. P. P. i2mo. Pp. 24. [Brit. AFus.] London, 1856 100 Books to read and enjoy, with reasons for their selection. By . . . “Amicus” [Charles Joseph Palmer]. 8vo. [Brit. AFus.] Ipswich [1922] ONE million of comic anecdotes . . . Collected by Dr Merryman and Hilaire le Gai [Pierre Alexandre Gratet- Duplessis]. 32010. [Brit. AFus.] 1853 A translation. The original French (1848) was by Hilaire le Gai alone. ONE sheet against the Quakers, detecting their errour and mis-practice in refusing to reverence men outwardly. ... By J. C. [John Cheney]. 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. AFus.] London, 1677 1489 Cartas antiquae in the Tower. . . . Index of those which are printed. Second edition. . . . T. P. [Sir Thomas Phillipps]. Fol. Pp. 4. Brit. AFits.] [Middle Hill] private print, 1846 OPEN (the) road to Bethlehem. [Verse. Signed: J. S. i.e. John Sammes.] i6mo. [Brit. AFus.] Reigate [1929] ^OPTICKS ; or, a treatise . . . Preface signed : I. N. OPTIMYSTICA. [Poems. By Eglan- tyne L. Jebb.] 4to. Letchworth, 1925, etc. Only Part I. is anonymous. ORACLE (the); or, a short panegyric [in verse] on Mr Peter Edwards’s . . . Defence of infant sprinkling. By John, of Eton [Benjamin Francis?]. 8vo. Pp. 22. [Brit. AFus.] London [1799?] A satire. ORACLES (the) of the dissenters containing forty-five relations of pretended judgments, prodigies and apparitions in behalf of the Non-Conformists : in opposition to the Establish’d Church. By an impartial hand. Part I. [By John Brydall.] 4to. [Lincoln’s Fnn Lib.] London, 1707 ORATION on the influence of Italian works of imagination on the same class of compositions in England ; delivered in Trinity College Chapel, December 16, 1831. [By Arthur Hallam.] 8vo. [Lincoln’s Fnn Lib.] Cambridge, 1832 ORATION on the influence of the political movements of the last half- century on the literature of the same period ; delivered in Trinity College Hall, Dec. 13, 1842. [By Frederick Waymouth Gibbs.] 8vo. Cambridge, 1843 Ascription by the Librarian of Trinity College, Cambridge. ORATIONNE (ane) in favouris of all thais of the Congregation ... set furth be Master Quintine Kennedy. . . . [Edited by Sir Alexander Boswell.] 4to. Pp. vii. 20. [Brit. AFus.] Edinburgh, 1812 ORDER in the family and in the church. By William Tarbet.] 8vo. Pp. 8. Brit. Mus.] 1862 Signed : A minister of the Catholic Apostolic Church. ORGANIC remains, Kirkdale, near Kirbymoorside. [A letter signed : J. G. i.e. J. Gibson of Stratford. Extracted from The Yorkshire Gazette, March 9, 1822.] 4to. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [York, 1822] ORIGIN (the) and progress of language. [By G. Smith, minister of Trinity Chapel, Poplar.] i6mo. London [1848] ORIGIN (the) of every miracle of the Bible separately considered. By Ben De Monkton [Benjamin Walker]. 4to. No. 1. [Brit. Mus.] Manchester [1876] No more published. ORPHAN’S (the) home. By the author of Hymns and scenes of childhood [Jane Euphemia Leeson]. 32mo. [Julian’s Diet.] 1849 Signed : J. E. L. ORTHODOX (the) foundation of religion long since collected by Henry Ainsworth ; and now divulged by S. W. [Samuel White, of Polsholt]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1641 See also, “ The old orthodox foundation of religion.” *OTHER (the) side of the Herring-pond Tor side of, read side. OUR childhood’s pattern ; being tales based upon incidents in the life of the Holy Child Jesus. [By Cecilia Anne Jones.] i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1870] OUR Eastern Empire; or, stories from the history of British India. By the author of The Martyr land [Mrs E. Burrows]. . . . 8vo. Pp. xii. 236. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1857 OUR fighting sea men. By Lionel Yexley [James Woode]. 8vo. Pp. 345. [Brit. Musi] London [1911] OUR future hope. (A Bible study of the past, present and future of the Israel of God.) By E. E. M. [E. E. Marshall]. 8vo. Pp. v. 18. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 OUR Library. By a Reader [Catherine Cooper Hopley. On the Library of the British Museum]. 4to. Pp. 19. [Brit. Mus.] London [c. 1880] “OUR neighbourhood;” or, sketches in the suburbs of Yedo. By T. A. P. [T. A. Purcell]. 8vo. Pp. 124. [Brit. Mus.] Yokohama, 1874 OUT of school at Eton ; being a collection of poetry and prose writing. By some present Etonians. [Largely the work of George Nathaniel Curzon, Marquis Curzon.] 8vo. [Ronaldshay’s Curzon.] London, 1877 OUTLINE (an) of the Epistle to the Romans. By C. A. C. [C. A. Coates]. 8vo. Pp. 245. [Brit. Mus.] London [1927] OUTLINE (an) of the history of the Botanical Department of University College, London . . . [By Francis Wall Oliver.] 8vo. Pp. 23. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 OUTLINES of a plan for promoting the art of painting in Ireland . . . [By Joseph Cooper Walker.] i2mo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1790 OUTLINES of English grammar ; partly abridged from Mr Hazlitt’s New and improved grammar. By Edward Baldwin, Esq. [William Godwin]. [F. K. Brown’s Godwin.] London, 1810 OUTLINES of geography for junior classes. [By Robert Sullivan, LL.D.] i2mo. Pp. 84. [Brit. Mus.] 1878 OUTLINES of the history of England and Great Britain, B.C. 55 to a.d. 1890. [By J. M. D. Meiklejohn.] 8vo. Pp. 82. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1890 Preface signed: J. M. D. M. OUTPOST (an) wooing. By Norah K. Strange [Mrs E. Gower Stanley]. 8vo. Pp. 250. [Brit. Musi] London [1924] OVID in masquerade ; being a burlesque upon the xiii. book of his Metamorphoses. By Joseph Gay [John Durant de Breval]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1719 *OWD Jem un his five daughters . . . Tor Jem, read Yem. OXFORD and Cambridge miscellany ; poems. [Contains anonymous poems attributed to Matthew Prior, Sir Richard Steele and Edward Fenton.] 8vo. Pp. 400. [I. O. Williams in Bibl. Soc. Trans., Dec. 1929.] London [1707] OXFORD and Flanders. [Poems.] By “ Observer, R.F.C.” [Gordon Alehin]. 8vo. Pp. 40. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1916 OXFORD (the) ars poetica; or, how to write a Newdigate. [By George Murray, of Magdalen Hall, Oxford.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1853 OXFORD (the) Methodists ; being some account of a society of young gentlemen in that city, so denominated. ... In a letter from a gentleman near Oxford [William Law, author of A serious call]. ... 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1733 P. W.’s [Peter Walsh’s] reply to the Person of Quality’s Answer : dedicated to His Grace the Duke of Ormond. 4to. Pp. 151. [Brit. Mus.] Paris, 1654 PACKET (a) of letters which lately passed between . . . and the Rev. Dr Waterland. 8vo. [By William Staunton.] [Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll.] London, 1722 PAGAN Rome . . . Translated from the French [by A. G. i.e. Alexander Gordon?]. i2mo. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1838 PAGE (a) from the life of Brevet- Colonel Peter Nemo . . . extracted by his friend, Timothy Scribbler . . . (By W. S. Y. [William Siddons Young].) 8vo. Pp. 26. [Brit. Mus.] Malvern, private print, 1897 PALACE (the) martyr! [i.e. Lady F. E. R. Hastings]. A satire [in verse]. By the Honourable * * * [i.e. Hon.- Osborn ?]. 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1839 PALACE (the) of silence ; a philosophic tale : translated from the French [of Cadmus the Milesian, i.e. Philippe Auguste de Sainte Foix] by a lady. i2mo. Pp. lix. 215. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1775 PALAOPHRON and Neoterpe. From . . . the German of Goethe, by the translator of Goethe’s Herrmann atid Dorothea [Joseph Charles Mellish]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] 1801 PALESTINE and the British taxpayer. By Israel Cohen.] 8vo. Pp. 12. Brit. Mus.] 1929 PALMS of Elim ... By the author of Morning and night watches [James R. Macduff]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1879 PAMPHLETEERS (the); a satyr. [By Bernard de Mandeville.] Fol. 1703 It is indicated in an advertisement in The Flying Post, 17th June 1703, that it was “by the author of Some Fables after the familiar method of Mr De la Fontaine.” IIANAAE0A n\acrroAo7a. Or, the de- plumation of Mrs Anne Gibbs . . . deplored by ... R. W. [Richard Walden]. (IlaAu'oSia, sive, fama vapu- lans. . . .) 8vo. Pp. 3, 7. [Brit. Mus.] [Oxford?] 1662 PANAMA. ... By Albert Edwards Arthur Bullard]. 8vo. Pp. x. 585. Brit. Musi] New York, 1912 Macmillan’s Travel Series. PANEGYRICK (a) upon Oates. [By Richard Duke.] Fol. S. sh. [D.N.B. vol. 4, p. 117.] [London, 1678?] PANEGYRICALpoem on the horn-book. With a surprising satire upon a very surprising Lord. [By Jonathan Swift?] 8vo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 295.] London, 1733 PANEGYRIQUE (a) humbly addrest to the King’s Most Excellent Majesty : on his auspicious meeting his two houses of Parliament, February the 4th, 5th, 1672/3, and his most gratious speech ... on that occasion. [In verse.] By R. W. [Robert Wild]. Fol. Pp. 6. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1673 PANGS of jealousy ; an Anglo-Spanish drama in the Pyrenees. By Prudens Futuri [Nelly Davidson]. 8vo. Pp. 180. [Brit. Mus.] Antwerp, 1926 PAPER (the) chase. By Hearnden Balfour [Beryl Hearnden and Eva Balfour], 8vo. Pp. 320. [Amer. Cat '. London [1927’ *PAPIST (a) misrepresented, not represented . . . The original edition is dated 1665, a misprint for 1685. An edition in 1686 continues “to which is added a book entituled The doctrines and practices of the Church of Rome truly represented in answer to the aforesaid book. By a Protestant of the Church of England [Edward Stillingfleet].” This was also published independently in the same year. PARACELSUShisarchidoxes; englished and published by J. H. [James Howell?] Oxon. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1661 PARACELSUS his Aurora, & Treasure of the philosophers, as also the Water- stone . . . Englished ... by J. H. [James Howell?] Oxon. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1659 ^PARADISE lost; a poem in two books . . . For two, read ten. PARADISE (the) of delights; or, the B. Virgin’s Garden of Loreto: with briefe discourses upon her divine Letanies. . . . By I. S. of the Society of Jesus [John Sweetnam]. 8vo. Pp. 217. [Brit. Musi] [St Omer] 1620 ^PARADISE (the) of the soule. . . . This translation was not by Francis Walsingham. All authorities (Gillow, De Backer, D.N.B., S.T.C.) are agreed that it was by Thomas Everard or Everett, S.J. PARADISE regain’d . . . a poem. [By John Lawrence, Rector of Yelvertoft.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ 1728 *PARADOXES of state relating to the present government. . . . Not by John Toland, but by Anthony Ashley Cooper, third earl of Shaftesbury. See D. N. B. vol. 12, p. 131. PARAGRAPHS on the subject of judicial reform in Maryland. . . . [Signed: Ina i.e. William Price.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Baltimore, 1846 PARALLEL (the) ; or, an account of the growth of knavery under the pretext of arbitrary government and popery. . . . [By Sir Roger L’Estrange.] Fol. Pp. 12. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1679 With reference to “ An account of the growth of popery ” [by Andrew Marvell], q.v. For an earlier edition, see “ An account of the growth of knavery. ...” PARAPHRASTICALL (a) explication of the prophecie of Habakkuk. [By Dr Stokes.] 4to. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] Oxford, 1646 PARCEL (a) for heaven, and other stories. ... By Jean Nesmy [Henry Surchamp]. . . . Translated by E. M. Walker. 8vo. Pp. 120. [Brit. Mus.] London [1917] PARIS by day and night, a book for the exhibition. By Anglo-Parisian [Walter Francis Lonergan]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 PARIS (the) Estafette ; or, pilferings from the Paris and Dover post-bag. . . . Embellished with portraits and wood- cuts. [By F. Lloyd?] i2mo. Pp. xii. 430. [Brit. Mus.] London [1842] Dedication signed : F. L. PARISH churches turned into conventicles, by serving God therein. . . . By Rich. Hart. 4to. London, 1683 In an answer published later in the same year this is alleged to have been “ pretended to be written by Rich. Hart; but really penn’d by Mr T. A., barrister-at-law. . . . By O. U.” T. A. is unknown. PARLIAMENT (the) arraigned, convicted ; wants nothing but execution. ... By Tom Tyranno-Mastix ; alias Mercurius Melancholicus [Marchamont Nedham?] . . . 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] [London ?] 1648 PARLIAMENTS (the) reformation ; or, a worke for presbyters, elders and deacons. ... By S. H. [Samuel Hartlib], a friend of the Commonwealth. 4to. Pp. 6. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1646 PARLOUR (the) menagerie ; wherein are exhibited the habits, the resources and the mysterious instincts of the . . . animal creation. . . . [Edited by J. H. i.e. John Hogg.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1875 Second edition, 1878. PARNASSUS aboriens : or,some sparkes of poesie. By R. W. Philomus [Richard Walden]. 8vo. Pp. 30. [Brit. Musi] London, 1664 PARSON’S (the) daughter; a tale: for the use of pretty girls with small fortunes. [By Christopher Wyvill.] To which are added Epigrams, and the Court Ballad, by Mr Pope. 8vo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 264.] London, 1717 Signed : C. W. *PARTHENIA sacra . . . For Parthenia, read Partheneia. PARTICULAR (a) account of the last siege of Mastricht. [By William Carr.] [Brit. Mus.] London, 1676 Signed : W. C. There was an earlier edition in the same year : “ A particular account of the present siege # # (jtV* PARTNERSHIP law. [By Edward Westby Nunn.] Second edition. . . . 8vo. Pp. 156. [Brit. Musi] London [1930] PASQUIL’S mistresse ; or, the worthie and unworthie woman. [By Nicholas Breton.] 4to. [Christie-Miller Cat.] 1 1600 *PASSAGES from the autobiography of a “ Man of Kent” . . . Reginald Fitz-Roy Stanley is also a oseudonym, and = John Collyer Knight. 'Brit. Musi] PASSING (the) of Guto, and other poems. By Huw Menai [Huw Menai Williams]. 8vo. Pp. 99. [Brit. Musi] London, 1929 PAST feeling. By the author of The lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [i860] Signed : F. B. PASTOR Sang ; being the Norwegian drama Over Aevne by Bjornstjerne Bjornson. Translated . . . by William Wilson [More Adey]. 8vo. [Petter- sen’s Norsk Lexikon, col. 417.] London, 1893 PASTORAL counsels. . . . By the Rev. John Robertson. . . . Third edition. [With a preface signed A. K. H. B. i.e. Andrew K. H. Boyd.] 8vo. Pp. xxxiii. 327. [Brit. Musi] London, 1867 PASTORAL (a) poem, sacred to the memory of . . . Lord Basil Hamiltoun. By A. P. [Alexander Pennecuik]. 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1701 PASTORALS (the) and other workes of William Basse. [Introduction signed : J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. Pp. iv. 130. [Brit. Afus.] London [1870] PASTOR’S (the) daughter ; a memoir of Susan Amelia W. . . . written by her father. With an introduction by the author of The anxious inquirer [John Angell James]. 32mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1844] Introduction signed : J. A. J. PATCH (the); an heroi-comical poem. [By Francis Hauksbee.] 8vo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 273.] London, 1723 ^PATHWAY (the) to knowledge. . . . W. B. in the text is a mistake repeated from Watt’s Bibl. Brit, and gave rise to the error that the translation was by William Barley who was in fact only the printer. The correct text is “by W. P.” and the British Museum gives this as William Peters, Mathematician ? or William Phillip ? Pollard and Redgrave, S.T.C., say that the Dutch text was by Nicholaus Peters and the English translation by William Philipp. PATIE and Roger ; a pastoral inscribed to Josiah Burchet, Esq., Secretary to the Admiralty. [By Allan Ramsay.] 8vo. Pp. 12. [A. Gibson’s Allan Ramsay, p. 131.] [Edinburgh, 1720] The last stanza of the Inscription in verse on pp. 1-3 ends: “Devoted Allan.” This pastoral subsequently formed the first scene of The Gentle Shepherd. PATIENCE. By Perseverance [William Henry Cremer]. 8vo. Pp. 28. [F. Jessell’s Bibl. of playing cards, p. 58.] London, i860 PATRIARCHAL longevity reattainable. By Parallax [Samuel Birley Row- botham]. Part I. 8vo. \Brit. Musi] London, 1883 See also “Zetetic philosophy.” PATRICIA Brent, spinster. By the author of ? [Herbert George Jenkins]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 312. [Brit. Musk] London, 1918 PATRICIA Pendragon. By E. Ward [Evelyn Everett-Green]. 8vo Pp. 311. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1911 PATRICK, undergraduate. [A novel.] By Anthony Armstrong [George Anthony Armstrong Willis]. Svo. Pp. 224. [Brit. ATus.\ London, 1926 PATRIOT (the); an epistle to . . . Philip Earl of Chesterfield. ... By H. Stanhope [William Bond?]. 8vo. Pp. 8. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 133.] London, 1733 PATRIOT (the) chief: a tragedy. By a Native of Algiers [Peter Markoe]. [Flitcroft’s Outline Studies in Amer. Lit. p. 29.] 1784 PATRIOTISM; an essay towards a constructive theory of politics. By Hakluyt Egerton [Arthur Boutwood]. Svo. Pp. viii. 343. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1905 PAUL and Virginia ; a musical drama. [By James Cobb.] i2mo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Afus.] Dublin, 1817 An earlier edition (Dublin, 1801) bears the author’s name. PAUL & Virginia and The Indian cottage. [Translated from the French of J. H. B. de Saint-Pierre.] 24mo. Pp. 200. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1837 PAUL, the Jew. [A novel.] By the author of By a?i imknowti disciple Cecily Phillimore]. Svo. Pp. 271. Brit. Afus.] London, 1927 PAULINE (the) doctrine of the righteousness of faith, in reply to an article in “The British and Foreign Evangelical Review.” [By John Nelson Darby.] i2mo. [Brit. Afus.] London [1862] Signed: J. N. D. *PAUSANIAS and Aurora . . . For Hon. Mrs Stanley, read Hon. Mrs Eliza Stanley. PAX animse ; a short treatise declaring how necessary the tranquillity ... of the soul ... is. [Here attributed to Saint Peter of Alcantara, but really by Joannes de Bonilla.] From an old English translation [by T. W.] of 1665. . . . 32mo. Pp. 85. [Brit. Afus.] London [1876] PEACE and Dunkirk ; being an excellent new song upon the surrender of Dunkirk to General Hill. [By Jonathan Swift.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1712 PEACE be with you. [By William Tarbet.] i2mo. Pp. 4. [Brit. Afus.] [1870?] PEACE in Europe. By Augur [V. Poliakoff]. 121110. Pp. 96. [Publishers' Weekly, 28th January 1928.’ New York, 1928 PEACH blossom. By Hugo Wast [G. Martinez Zuviria]. Translated ... by Herman and Miriam Hespelt. Svo. Pp. 300. [Brit. Afus.] New York, 1929 PEACE ode written on the conclusion of the Three Years’ War. By R. B. [Robert Bridges]. . . . 4to. [Brit. Afits.] [Oxford] 1902 PEARLS cast before swine, by Edmund Burke. Scraped together by Old Hubert [-Parkinson]. Svo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Afus.] London [1793?] PEBBLES on the shore. Alpha of the plough [Alfred George Gardiner]. Svo. Pp. 254. [Brit. Afusk] London [1916] PEDIGREE of Goddard of Swindon, Clive-Pipard and Purton. [By Sir Thomas Phillipps.] Fol. [Brit. Musi] m [1830?] PEEP (a) into Alfred Crowquill’s [A. H. Forrester’s] folio. 8vo. [Eng. Cat., 1801-1836, p. 146.] London, 1833 *PEEP (a) into the principal seats and gardens in and about Twickenham. . . . Not by Lady Pembroke and not strictly anonymous, since on A 4 verso there occurs ten lines of verse headed “ Lines by Dr Campbell on reading the following journal written by Mrs Hampden Pye ” [ J. Henrietta Pye]. There were two previous editions : 1760, “A short account of the principal seats . . . ” completely anonymous, and 1767, “A short view of the principal seats . . . ” which on A 4 recto contains some verses headed “To Mrs Pye, on her account of Twickenham.” PEEPER (the); being a sequel to The Curious Maid. [By Matthew Prior.] [Brit. Mus.] London, 1721 PEER (the) and the paper girl. By Edward Percy [Edward Percy Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1924] *PEGASUS. . . . The second part is signed: Basilius Philomus. [Brit. Mus.] PEGGIE gets the sack. [A novel.] By Paul Gwynne [Ernest Slater]. 8vo. Pp. 284. [Brit. Mus.] London [1926] PEGGY; a love romance. By Seamark Austin J. Small]. 8vo. Pp. 320. Brit. Mus.] London [1925] PEGGY makes good. By Elsie Jeanette Oxenham [Elsie Jeanette Dunkerley]. 8vo. Pp. 160. [Brit. Musi] London [1927] PENCHANT ; a game of cards for two players. By Jack Smarte [John Smith M‘Tear], 8vo. Pp. 111. [Brit. Musi] London, 1893 PENMARK Abbey; a nautical melodrama in three acts. By W. M. Thackeray [or rather, by Thomas James Thackeray and Pierre Tournemine]. Translated from the original French byH. L. Williams. . . . i2mo. [Brit. Musi] [1884] PENNY packet. [Tracts on phonetic spelling by A. J. E. i.e. Alexander John Ellis.] i6mo. 6 parts. [Brit. Musi] Bath [1849] PENNY reprints. [Edited by A. H. H. i.e. Alsager Hay Hill.] 8vo. No. 1. [Brit. Musi] London, 1872 *PENTAMERON (the) and Pentalogia. The preface to the former is signed : D. Grige, and the dedication to the latter is signed : W. S. L. VOL. VI. PEPPER. [A novel.] By Holworthy Hall [Harold Everett Porter]. 8vo. Pp. 316. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1915 PERCIVAL and I. By Anthony Armstrong [George Anthony Armstrong Willis]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 152. [Brit. Musi] London, 1927 PERFECT (a) little fool; a comedietta in one act. By Edward Percy [Edward Percy Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Musi] London [1930] PERFVMING of tabacco, and the great abvse committed in it; with many other auncient and moderne per- fumings; and the exposition of the chapter of the true odoriferous cane of Dioscorides. Taken out of the new Historie or illustration of plants, written by Matth. de l’Obel, Botano- grapher of the King his most excellent maiesty. Translated out of Latin by I. N. G. [John Nasmith?] 1610. [Jerome E. Brooks.] London, 1611 *PER IPATETIC (the) philosopher. By Q. Not by Quiller-Couch, who was six years old when this was published. This earlier Q is unknown. PERMANENCY (the) of the Apostolic Office, as distinct from that of Bishops, with reasons for believing that it is now revived in the Church. By a presbyter of the Protestant Episcopal Church [John Sidney Davenport]. 8vo. Pp. 61. [Brit. Musi] 1853 PERMANENT (the) settlement im- perelled ; or, Act X. of 1859 in its true colours, by a lover of Justice [John Cochrane]. 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] Calcutta, 1865 PERPETUAL calendar of Cornish saints, with selections of poetry and prose relating to Cornwall. By Sarah L. Enys [Nellie Sloggett]. i6mo. [Brit. Musi] Truro, 1923 PERSIAN Poppy; a one-act play for one woman. By Gilbert Emery [Emery Bernsley Pottle]. 8vo. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1926 PERSONATION ... a comic interlude. ... By Mrs Charles Kemble . . . with remarks . . . by D. G. George Daniel]. i2mo. Pp. 19. Brit. Musi] London [1835] PERSPECTIVE (the); or, Callista dissected : to which are prefixed a lock and key to the late opera of Callista. A poem, by Peter Chamberlen ? ] 4to. Brit. Musi] London, 1731 *PERSWASIVE (a) to peace . . . Not by William Allen, D.D., but William Allen, tradesman of London. See his Works, 1707. 2 D PERTINENT & impertinent; an assortment of verse. [By the author of Nisi Dominns, i.e. Hilary D. C. Pepler.] 8vo. Pp. 69. [Brit. Musi] Ditchling, 1926 PESSIMIST (the); a confession. [A novel.] By A. Newman [Herbert Moore Pirn]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [Brit. Musi] London, 1914 PETER Palette’s [Thomas Onwhyn’s] tales and pictures, in short words, for young folk. 4to. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London [1856] PETER Parley’s [William Tegg’s] tales about Christmas. i2mo. [Allibone’s Diet.] London, 1839 PETER Parley’s [Samuel Griswold Goodrich’s] tales about Great Britain and Ireland. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1834 PETER’S repentance ... a sermon. . . . By a godly pastor [John Hart, D.D.]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] 1776 A reprint. The contemporary editions were published as “A godly sermon of Peter’s repentance ...” q.v. ^PETTICOAT (the); an heroi-comical poem . . . Not by John Durant de Breval, but by his predecessor in this pseudonym Francis Chute. This is one of Edmund Curll the publisher’s scandalous impostures on the public. The title-page bears the words “ By Mr Gay.” The preface is signed Joseph Gay, but many copies were bought under the impression that it was by the author of the much discussed Trivia which had appeared at the beginning of this year. This and its second edition “ The Hoop- Petticoat” were Chute’s only works under this pseudonym. Curll’s subsequent productions under the name of Gay or Joseph Gay were written for him by John Durant de Breval. See R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 78 et seq., p. 133. PEVERIL of the Peak ; a melo-dramatic play, founded on the celebrated romance of the same name, by the author of Waverley . . . performed at the Theatre-Royal, Edinburgh. [By Isaac Pocock.] i2mo. Pp. 55. [D.N.B. vol. 46, p. 4.] [Edinburgh, 1823] PHIL and the farm ; a story of the Orkneys. By H. C. [H. Campbell]. 8vo. Pp. 77. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1920 PHILARGYRIEof great Britayne. [Inverse.] 8vo. B. L. London, 1551 Robert Crowley, whose name occurs in the colophon as the printer of this fable, is now held to have been the author as well. [T.L.S., 3rd December 1931.] f\U PHILIP Quarll. (The adventures of Philip Quarll.) [A chapbook, abridged from The Hermit, by Peter Longue- ville.] i2mo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] 1840 See also “The adventures of Philip Quarll . . .”, “ The English Hermit,” “ The Hermit,” and “ The surprising adventures of Philip Quarll.” PHILOLOGICAL (the) museum. Edited by J. C. H. [Julius Charles Hare]. 8vo. [Brit. Mi/s.] Cambridge, 1832 PHILOPATRIA’S remarks, I. On the dear times and decay of trade. II. On the courts of justice. III. On the revenues of the clergy. [By J. C. Bie.] Translated from the original. 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon.] St Croix, 1771 ^PHILOSOPHICAL (a) dialogue concerning decency. . . . The author of the Dissertation on barley wine (’Oii'os KpLOivos) is now known to be ' Benjamin Buckler. See the note to ’Olvos KpWivos in the Supplement. PHILOSOPHICAL (a) endeavour towards the defence of the being of witches and apparitions ; in a letter to ... R. Hunt, Esq. By a member of the Royal Society [James Glanvil]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1666 Signed : J. G. The title of another edition begins : “ Some philosophical considerations . . .” PHILOSOPHY (the) ofhealthe. ... By T. Southwood Smith. [Edited by G. H. i.e. Miss Georgiana Hill.] Eleventh edition. 8vo. Pp. xiii. 395. [Brit. Musi] London, 1865 PHILOSOPHY (the) of history and other essays. By the author of Prisoners of the Lord [R. F. Norman]. 8vo. Pp. 29. [Brit. Musi] Cardiff, 1925 Reissued in 1928 as part of Word Pictures, which bears the author’s name. PHILOTHEA; or, an introduction to a devout life. By St Francis de Sales ; newly translated ... by R. C. [Richard Challoner?]. i2mo. Pp. 311. [Brit. Musi] London, 1770 PHYLLIS in Bohemia. . . . By L. H. Bickford and Richard Stillman Powell [Ralph Henry Barbour]. 8vo. Pp. 233. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1897 PHYRNE ; a drama, in four acts . . . (originally published in the Italian language). By Democritus, Castel- vecchio [i.e. translated by Democritus, pseud, for Frederick Allan Laidlaw, from the Italian of Riccardo Castel- vecchio, pseud, for Count Giulio Cesare B. L. Pulle]. 8vo. Pp. 78. [Brit. Musi] London, 1900 % (WYV ,n ^ j, cdsi ^ f t*1' . PHYSICK is a jest, a whim, an humour, a fancy, a mere fashion, even full as much as dress or dancing : to which is added, A discourse or letter on the degree of doctor in this profession. [By Dennis de Coetlogon.] 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1739 PICCADILLY (the) murder. By Anthony Berkeley [Anthony Berkeley Cox]. 8vo. Pp. 287. [Brit. Musi] London [1929] PIERCE Penilesse his supplication to the Diuell ... By Tho. Nash. [The introduction signed : J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. Pp. 101. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1870] PIERCES supererogation; or, a new prayse of the old asse . . . [By] Gabriel Harvey. [The introduction signed: J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. Pp. ii. 237. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1870] PIETATIS in parentes disquisitio ; or, the duty of children towards their parents : truly examined and stated. [By John Brydall.] 4to. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1700 *PIL (a) for pork-eaters. . . . The Brit. Mus. attributes this to Alexander Pennecuik. PILGRIM’S (the) progress ; with notes by a Bachelor of Arts of . . . Oxford [John Bradford]. 8vo. London, 1792 Preface signed : I. B. PINDARIC (a) epistle addressed to Lord Buckhorse. ... A new edition. By C. A., Esq. [Christopher Anstey]. 4to. Pp. 67. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1779 PINDARIQUE (a) ode, describing the excellency of true virtue; with reflexions on the Satyr against virtue. [By John Oldham.] qto. Pp. 6. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1679 PIP, Squeak and Wilfred ; their luvly adventures. By Uncle Dick [Bertram John Lamb]. 8vo. Pp. 62. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1921 PIPES (the) of Pan. [A novel.] By Julia Tregenna [F. Britten Austin]. 8vo. Pp. 296. [Ashley Library, vol. 9.] London [1926] 'PISCOPADE (the) : a panegyri-satiri- serio-comical poem. By Porcupinus Pelagius [Macnamara Morgan]. 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 39, p. 23.] London, 1748 PISO’S conspiracy ; a tragedy. [Altered from Nathaniel Lee’s Neroi] 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1676 PLACE (the) and state of the departed. [By Jasper Peck.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] N.P. [1880?] Signed : J. P. PLACE (the) of the damn’d. By J. S. D. D., D.S.P.D. [Jonathan Swift, Dean of St Patrick’s, Dublin. In verse], Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [Dublin] 1731 *PLAIN (a) defence of the Protestant religion . . . See the note to “ The Missionaries arts discovered. . . .” in this supplement. PLAIN (a) guide to peace with God ; for the use of members of the Church of England who have little leisure time. By the author of First steps to faith a7id piety [J. F. Laing]. i6mo. Pp. 29. [Brit. Musi] London, 1876 Signed : J. F. L. PLAIN (the) man’s reply to the Catholick missionaries. [By William Assheton.] 24mo. Pp. 35. [Brit. Musi] London, 1686 PLAIN sailing ; a novel. By a gentleman with a duster [Harold Begbie]. 8vo. Pp. 285. [Brit. Musi] London, 1929 *PLAIN truth ... By Candidus [Charles Inglis]. This entry should be deleted. It is the same book as the following entry and the author was undoubtedly Dr William Smith, of Philadelphia. PLAIN truths about the soul and salvation. By the author of The lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [i860] Signed : F. B. PLAIN words about our Lord’s life ; or, how to follow Christ. By the author of How to come to Christ. Edited by a parish priest [Hon. Charles Leslie Courtenay]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1875 PLAINE (a) description of the Bermudas, now called sommer ilands, with the manner of their discouerie anno 1609. [By Silvester Jourdan.] . . . 4to. B. L. [Brit. Musi] London, 1613 No pagination. The first part is a reprint of S. Jourdan’s “A discovery of the Bermudas. . . .” 1610. PLAINE (a) pathway to heaven; meditations upon the ghospells. . . . By T. Buckland [Edmund Thomas H ill]. 12mo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] [St Omer] 1637 PLANE tales from the skies. By “ Wing Adjutant” [Wilfred Theodore Blake]. 8vo. Pp. 123. [Brit. Musi] 1918 Signed : W. T. B. *PLANTAGANET’S tragicall story. . . . By T. W. Gent. T. W. is Thomas Wincoll, not Weaver [see D.N.B.] nor Whichcot which is a confusion for Wincoll, see Stationers Register i. 318. PLEA (a) for church schools. By Hakluyt Egerton [Arthur Boutwood]. 8vo. Pp. 45. [Brit. Musi] London, 1906 PLEA (a) for the pardoning part of the sovereignty of the Kings of England. [By Fabian Phillipps.] 4to. [.Lincoln's ln?i Lib.] London, 1682 PLEA (a) for the reall-presence; wherein the preface of Syr Humfrey Linde, concerning the booke of Bertram, is examined and censured. Written by I. O. [John Floyd]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 62. [Brit. Mus.] [St Omer] 1624 ^PLEASANT (a) comedie of Faire Em... Mr W. W. Greg considers that there is some plausibility in Fleay’s ascription of Fair Em to Robert Wilson, and that no other attribution is worth consideration. [Fair Em, ed. W. W. Greg, pp. viii., ix.] PLEASANT (a) description of the Fortunate Ilandes, called the Hands of Canaria. . . . Composed by the poore Pilgrime [Thomas Nicols]. 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1583 PLEASANT (a) disport of divers noble personages ; written in Italian by M. J. Bocace ... in his book which is entitled Philocopo and nowe Englished by H. G. [H. Granthum]. 4to. Pp. 58. B. L. [Pollard and Redgrave. [London, 1566?’ For another edition see “ Thirteene most pleasaunt . . PLEASANT (the) land despised. Numbers xiii. xiv. By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. i6mo. Pp. 16. 'Brit. Mus.\ London [1880] PLEASANT (a) new dialogue ; or, the discourse between the serving-man and the husband-man. ... [A ballad, by Richard Climsell?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Musi] London [e. 1635] Signed: R. C. PLOTS (the) of Jesuites (viz. of R. Parsons ... A. Coutzen . . . T. Campanella): how to bring England to the Romane Religion without tumult. Translated out of the original copies. [Compiled by Michael Spark? who published it.] 4to. Pp. 12. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1653 *PLOTTERS (the) doom . . . This cannot have been by Samuel Palmer, who did not join the Church of England, until 25 or 30 years later. There is a copy with an MS. note in a contemporary hand, “ By Mr Conyers of Peterhouse ” and Tobias Conyers may be supposed to have been the author. See MAlpin Coll. Cat. and Gerould’s Sources of Eng. Hist. PLOUGHMAN’S (the) tale ; shewing by the doctrine and lives of the Romish clergie that the Pope is Antichrist. [By Thomas Brampton ?] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1606 POCKET (the) Birkenhead: being selections . . . edited, with an introduction, by Ephesian [Carl Eric Bechhofer Roberts]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 POEM (a) in honour of the birthday of . . . King George. . . . [By Henry Nevil.] Fol. [Brit. Musi] London, 1720 POEM (a) in praise of tea. [By Pierre Antoine Motteux.] Fol. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1712?] An edition entitled “A poem upon tea” (London, 1712) bears the author’s name. POEM (a) in the honour of the antient and loyal Society of the Journey-Men- Taylors. . . . Written by H. N., Brick-layer, one of the brethren [H. Nelson]. Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] Dublin [1726] See also “A new poem on the . . . Society ...” POEM on a tour to North Cape. By A. L. T. [a lady tourist i.e. Lavinia King]. 8vo. [Pettersen’s Norsk Lexikon, p. 427.] Dublin, 1885 POEM (a) on birth. By S. E. B. [Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [Geneva, 1831 ?] POEM (a) on the anniversary of His Majesty’s birthday. . . . [By Henry Nevil.] Fol. [Brit. Musi] London, 1718 POEM (a) on the birthday of . . . King George. . . . [By Henry Nevil.] Fol. [Brit. Musi] London, 1717 POEM (a) to the memory of the famous Archibald Pitcairn, M.D. By a member of the Easy Club in Edinburgh [Allan Ramsay]. 4to. [A. Gibson’s Allan Ramsay, p. 99.] [Edinburgh, 1713] Dedication signed : Gawin Douglass. POEMS. By a Gallowa’ Lass [Miss Madge Black]. Pp. 22. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Dumfries, 1928 POEMS. By George Forester [Sir Granville George Greenwood]. 8vo. Pp. 47. [Brit. Musi] London, 1912 POEMS. By J. S. [James Stirling]. i2mo. Pp. 92. Newcastle, 1829 From an inscribed copy. POEMS. By K. H. D. [K. H. D. Cecil]. 8vo. Pp. xv. 270. [Brit. Musi] London, 1902 POEMS. By W. H. [William Hammond]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1655 POEMS and sonnets of Percy Bysshe Shelley. Edited by Charles Alfred Seymour [Thomas James Wise and Edward Dowden]. 4to. Pp. 74. [Ashley Library.] Philadelphia, private print, 1887 POEMS from the English Bijou Almanack . . . by L. E. L. [Letitia Elizabeth Landon]. . . . 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1835, et seq. POEMS, fugitive pieces and hymns. By F. W. [F. Woodhouse]. i2mo. Pp. 126. [Brit. Mus. ] N.P. private print, 1884 POEMS, occasioned by several circumstances and occurrences in the present grand contest of America for liberty. [By Rev. Wheeler Case.] 8vo. Pp. 41. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] New Haven, 1778 Republished with his name in Revolutionary memories (1852). POEMS on several occasions. [By Thomas Gibbons, D.D.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 36. [Watt’s Bibl. Brit.] London, 1743 POEMS on several occasions. By a lady [Mrs-Letches ?]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] Bristol, 1792 POETICAL miscellanies consisting of original poems and translations. By the best hands. Publish’d by Mr Steele. [Contains anonymous poems by George Jeffreys and others.] 8vo. Pp. 318. [i. O. Williams in Bibl. Soc. Trans. Dec. 1929.] London, 1714 POETICAL (the) works of James Hammond and Lord Hervey, with biographical sketches of the authors signed G.D. i.e. George Dyer ?]. i2mo. Brit. Musi] London, 1818 POETICAL (the) works of John Milton . . with . . . notes on each book of the Paradise Lost [by P. H. i.e. Patrick Hume]. Fol. 5 parts. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1695 POETICAL (the) works of Robert Burns. ... To which is prefixed a sketch of his life [signed : A. C. i.e. Archibald Constable]. 8vo. [ Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1823 POETICAL (the) works of the author of the Heroick epistle to Sir William Chambers [Rev. William Mason]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 127. [Brit. Mus.] London,1805 POETRY (the) and prose of J. H. M. [J. H. Merridew]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Private print, 1841 POETS’ (the) birthday book ; being brief biographies ... of the popular poets of the period. EditedbyClarence Sinclair [Charles Frederick Forsham]. i6mo. Pp. 413. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1907 POKER. By A. B. Lougher [Charles Frederick Pardon]. Edited by Rawdon Crawley, Bart., of Queen’s Crawley, Hants. 32mo. Pp. 28. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.] London, 1889 Rawdon Crawley, Bart., of Queen’s Crawley, Hants, is also a pseud, used by C. F. Pardon. See “Cribbage.” VOL. VI. POKER ; how to play it: a sketch of the great American game, with its laws and rules and some of its amusing incidents. By one of its victims [Charles Welsh]. 8vo. Pp. 109. [F. Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards, p. 290.] London, 1882 POKER ; its laws and practice. By Cyper Redalf [Alfred Percy]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 43. [F. Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards, p. 228.] Allahabad, 1879 POLICIE unueiled; wherein may be learned the order of true policie in kingdomes and common-wealths. . . . Written in Spanish [by Juan de Santa Maria]. . . . Translated into English by J. M. [James Mabbe]. 4to. Pp. 481. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1632 The Epistle Dedicatorie is signed by the author. The title of another issue begins “ Christian policie . . .” POLITICAL poems. [By Nicholas Amherst.] 8vo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll,, p. 256.] London, 1719 A made-up volume by Curll of such of Amherst’s pieces as he had previously printed. POLITICK (the) maid ; or, a dainty new ditty, both pleasant and witty. . . . [By Richard Climsell?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London [c. 1640] Signed : R. C. POLITICS for American farmers ; being a series of tracts exhibiting the blessings of free government, as it is administered in the United States, compared with the boasted stupendous fabric of British Monarchy. . . . [By William Duane.] 8vo. Pp. 96. [Bril. Mus.] Washington City, 1807 POMANDER (the) of prayer. [By Thomas Becon.] Wherein is contained many godly prayers. . . . (The XV. Ooes. The Letanie.) 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Musi] [London] 1558 POMPS and vanities. By a Gentleman with a duster [Harold Begbie]. 8vo. Pp. 153. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 POOL (the) of Shere and other poems. By Stephen Reid Heyman [Lydia Dorothy Parsons]. i6mo. Pp. vii. 76. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1918 POOR Emma. By Evelyn Tempest [Edward W. D. Cuming]. 8vo. Pp. xii. 340. [Brit. Mus.] London [1911] POOR (the) gentleman. [A novel.] By Ian Hay [John Hay Beith]. 8vo. Pp. 312. [Brit. Mus.] London [1928] POPE Alexander’s supremacy and infallibility examin’d. . . . [An attack on the Dunciad. By George Duckett and John Dennis.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1729 2 D 2 POPE (the) in his fury doth answer returne to a lettei ye which to Rome is late come. ... [A ballad. By Stephen Peele.] Fol. S. sli. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1570 Signed: S. P. POPERY and hypocrisy detected and opened from the Holy Scriptures . . . in a sermon upon the occasion of a general fast, kept Decemb. 22, 1680. By the author of The Plotter's Doom, a true son of the Church of England [Tobias Conyers]. London, 1680 There is a copy of The Plotter's Doom with an MS. note in a contemporary hand, “ By Mr Conyers of Peterhouse.” See M'-Alpin Coll. Cat. and Gerould’s Sources of Eng. Hist. POPES (the) canons. (By Theodore Beza.) Translated by T. S. G. [T. Stocker, Gent.]. 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave. ] London, 1584 POPISH (the) damnable plot . . . laid open ... in the breviats of threescore and four letters . . . past between the Pope, Duke of York, Cardinal Norfolk, Cardinal Cibo. . . . [By Ezerel Tonge.] Fol. Pp. 31. {Brit. Musi] London, 1680 POPULAR lectures on commercial law. By George Sharswood. [Edited by S. W. C. i.e. S. W. Crittenden.] 8vo. [Brit. Mtts.] 1856 POPULAR rhymes, proverbs, sayings, etc., peculiar to the Isle of Man and the Manx people. [By Michael Aislabie Denham.] i2mo. [Brit. Mtts.] [Durham, 1850] Signed : M. A. D. POPULAR stories and legends. In two series. By Leo Tolstoy. (Translated by N-[i.e.-Kosnakova], A. C. Fifield and Aylmer Maude.) 8vo. Pp. 158. [Brit. Mtts.] London [1921" PORT Royal and its harbour. . . . [By M. M.—R. P. K. [R. P. Kitson ?]—St L. M.—F. Me. I. R. 8vo. Pp. 56. [Port Royal] 1893 PORTRAITS of the New Century—the first ten years. By E. T. Raymond [Edward Raymond Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 336. [Brit. Musi] London, 1928 PORTRAITS of the Nineties. ... By E. T. Raymond [Edward Raymond Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 319. [Brit. Musi] London, 1921 *PORTRAITURES of persons in public and private life . . . This wras by Richard Dearman. See Barnsley Chronicle, 25th March 1882. *POST-CAPTAIN (the); or, the wooden walls well manned . . . This is by John Davis, of Salisbury. See Athenceum, 9th December 1843, and R. H. Case’s edition (1928). The 4th edition was issued as by the author of “ Edward ” and “A view of Society in France.” These works were by John Moore, M.D. Hence the attribution to Moore. This was presumably deliberate dishonesty on the part of the author. POSTHUMOUS works of the Rev. Thomas Adam, Rector of Wintring- ham. ... To which is prefixed . . . a sketch of his life and character [signed : J. S. i.e. James Stillingfleet]. 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Musi] York, 1786 POSTSCRIPT (a) [signed: J. M., D.D. i.e. John Milner, Bishop of Castabala] to the second edition of the Address to the . . . Bishop of St David’s [T. Burgess] occasioned by his Lordship’s “One word to . . . Dr Milner.” 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1819 See also, “ The end of religious controversy . . .” POSTSCRIPTS. [Papers written for The Post, Houston.] By O. Henry [William Sydney Porter]. . . . 8vo. Pp. xix. 202. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1923 PRACTICAL directions for the construction and fixing of sun-dials.. By W. R. [John Wigham Richardson]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1889 ^PRACTICAL (a) discourse of humility . . . Not by William Allen, D.D., but by WTilliam Allen, tradesman of London. See his Works, 1707. PRACTICAL (a) French course. By Chrysostome Dagobert [J. B. A. Led’huy]. 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1859 PRACTICAL (a) French grammar and book of reference. By Chrysostome Dagobert [J. B. A. Led’huy]. 8vo. [Brit. Mtts.] London, 1859 PRACTICAL (a) guide to the Greek Testament. [By Edward Burton, D.D.] i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1849] Signed : E. B., D.D. PRACTICAL politics; on free land. By R. S. i.e. R. Swiney.] 8vo. Pp. 10. Brit. Musi] Cheltenham [1886] PRACTICAL politics; the great national question or the Home Rule catechism; for the people of Great Britain. [By R. S. i.e. R. Swiney.] 8vo. Pp. 7. [Brit. Musi] Cheltenham, 1894 PRACTICAL (a) programme for working men. [By Edmond Kelly.] 8vo. Pp. xiii. 227. [Brit. Musi] London, 1906 PRACTICE (the) of salivating vindicated ; in answer to Dr Willoughby’s translation of Mons. Chicoyneau’s pamphlet against mercurial salivations. ... By J. C., M.D. [Joseph Cam]. 8vo. \Brit. Musi] London, 1724 PRACTICE register and comments for teacher and student, including a reference to musical terms and a chronological chart of the great composers. By Ernest Haywood.] 8vo. Pp. 31. Brit. Mus.] London [1929] *PRAIRIE Chickens. By Chanticleer. Not by Ralph Nisbet, who wrote a book on Poultry under this pseud, in 1878, but by the writer of verses, G. F. Joy. PRAISE (the) and blame of love, with other verse. [By Robert Kemp, Minister of Blairgowrie and John Wellwood.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 154. [Brit. Mus.] Glasgow, 1882 ^PRAISES (the) of heroes. By T. B. A. The attribution to Thomas Bailey Aldrich is removed in the new edition of the Brit. Mus. Catalogue. It is not mentioned in F. Greenslet’s bibliography (Life of T. B. Aldrich, 1908). Author not known. *PRAYSE (the) of nothing . . . Mr Ralph M. Sargent considers that this was the work of Edward Daunce. See The Library, Dec. 1931. PRAZIMENE ; a romance. [By-Le Maire.] Translated into English by R. B. i2mo. Pp. 258. [Brit. Musi] London, 1707 PREDICTIONS concerning the raising the dead body of Mr T. Ernes . . . who . . . died on the 23rd day of December 1707. . . . [By John Lacy, and others.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London [1708 ?] PREFACE (offered as a solemn warning) for a new edition of M. Renan’s “Life of Jesus.” [By David Walther.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1864 Signed : Mnason. PREPARING for the press, from an ancient MS. De fucorum ordinibus, continued by a modern hand ; a complete history of the Mallardians [i.e. the Warden and fellows of All- Souls College, Oxford ; being a satire by-Bilson and Edward Rowe Mores on B. Buckler’s “ Complete vindication of the Mallard of All-Souls College”]. ... Fol. Pp. iv. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1752 PREPOSITAS his practise, a worke . . . for the better preservation of the health of man. . . . Translated out of Latin into English by L. M. [Leonard Mascall ?]. . . . 4t0- Pp« 11B. L. [Brit. Musi] London, 1588 PRESBYTERIANISM ; a reply to [Dr Steele’s] “The Church and the pulpit.” [By John Nelson Darby." i2mo. London [1868 Signed : J. N. D. ! PRESENCE (the) of the Holy Ghost, and the coming of the Lord . . . the true hope of the Church of God. By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1878] PRESENT (the) state of chyrurgery, with some remarks on the abuses committed ... in a letter [signed: T. D. i.e. Dr Turner?] to C. Bernard [or written by him ?]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1703 *P RESENT (the) state of Great Britain . . . Now ascribed in the Brit. Mus. to John Mitchell, botanist. ^PRESENT (the) state of North America. Not by John Huske, but by his younger brother Ellis Huske. See the D. N. B. and Brit. Mus. Cat. (New ed.) PRESENT (the) state of physick in the Island of Cajamai [i.e. Jamaica]. To the members of the R[oyal] S[ociety]. No. 1. [A satire on Sir Hans Sloane. By William King, LL.D. ?] 4to. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1710?] PRESENT (the) state of the parties in Great Britain ; particularly an enquiry into the state of the dissenters in England and the Presbyterians in Scotland. [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 352. [Brit. Musi] London, 1712 PRESIDENT Joseph Reed of Pennsylvania ; a correspondence between . . . W. B. Reed and J. C. Hamilton. [Preface signed : H. B. D. i.e. Henry Barton Dawson.] 4to. [Brit. Musi] Morrisania, 1867 ^PRESIDENT (a) to the nobilitie . . . For other editions with different titles, see “ Newes from Italy of a second Moses . . .” (1608) and “ The Italian convert . . .” (i635)- PRETTY (the) gentleman ; or, softness of manners vindicated from the false ridicule exhibited, under the character of William Fribble, Esq. [in Garrick’s farce “Miss in her Teens.” By Nathaniel Lancaster]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1747 Dedication signed : Philautus. PRETTY Nannie; or, a dainty new ditty, fit for the contry, town or citty. . . . [By Richard Climsell ?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1640] Signed: R. C. PRETTY sinister. By Francis Seeding [John Leslie Palmer and Hilary Aidan St George Saunders]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Amer. Cat.] London [1929] PRIEST (the) of Isis, and other poems. By Ethna Kavanagh [Sara Spain]. 8vo. Pp. 45. London, 1920 Authorship revealed in No. 1 of Innisfail, a quarterly magazine. PRIESTANITY ; or, a view of the disparity between the apostles and the modern inferior clergy. By the author of The creed of an independent Whig [Conyers Place]. 8vo. [R. Straus* The Unspeakable Curll, p. 265.] London,1720 The creed of an independent Whig has sometimes been attributed (see vol. 1) to Thomas Gordon of Kirkcudbright, on the ground that he was author of the tract called the “ Independent Whig,” joint editor of the periodical of the same name, and author of the Character of an independent Whig. PRIESTHOOD. [By William Tarbet.] i2mo. Pp. 4. [Brit. Mus.] [1870?] PRIESTHOOD (the) of Christ. [By William Kelly, of Guernsey.] 8vo. [Brit. Mas.] [1875] PRIEST’S (the) book of private devotion. Compiled ... by two priests [J. Old- know and Augustine David Crake]. Second edition. i6mo. Pp. xiii. 292. [Brit. Mas.] Oxford, 1877 Preface signed : A. D. C. *PRIEST’S (the) prayer-book . . . For edited by two clergymen, read edited by two clergymen, R. F. L. and J. E. V. PRINCE Dorus ; or, the romance of the nose of which the most striking feature is borrowed fromthe Countess d’Aulnois. ... By the author of Diogenes and his lantern [Tom Taylor]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1850 Lacy’s Acting Edition, vol. 3. PRINCESS Pirlipatine and the nutcracker. By Alexandre Dumas [or rather Dumas* version of the story by E. T. W. Hoffmann]. Translated . . . by O. Eliphaz Keat [P. B. M. Allan]. 4to. Pp. 146. [Brit. Mits.\ London, 1919 In a later edition (1924) entitled “The delectable story of Princess Pirlipatine . . .” the translator signs himself: P. B. M. A. PRINCIPLES (the) and practice of whist. By Lennard Leigh [Charles Harcourt Forbes-Lindsay] and Ernest Bergholt. Including an essay on probabilities by W. H. Whitfeld. 8vo. Pp. xv. 511. [Brit. Mus.] Philadelphia, 1902 PRINCIPLES (the) of assessment; a concise and practical guide to the valuation of property for rating purposes. By a solicitor [J. J. Hitchings]. 8vo. [Lincoln’s Inn Lib.] London [1890] PRISCIANUS embryo et nascens; being a key to the grammar-school . . . [By Anthony Huish.] The fourth edition, with . . . additions. 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] 1670, 69 The preface signed : A. H. The title of the first edition (1660) runs “ Priscianus nascens ; or a key . . .” *PRISON amusements . . . For By Peter Positive, read By Paul Positive. PRISONER (the) and his dream. A ballad. [By Walter White.] i2mo. Pp. 31. [Brit. Mus.] London [1885 ?] Signed : W. W. PRISONER’S (the) advocate ; or, caveat against under sheriffs and their officers ; jayl keepers and their agents. [By Edmund Curll.] 8vo. [R. Straus’ The Uttspeakable Curll, p. 279.] London, 1726 PRISONERS of state. [A novel.] By E. Shaw Cowley [Elsie Mary Boulton]. 8vo. Pp. 310. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1921 PRISONERS of the Lord. ... By a business man [R. F. Norman]. 8vo. Pp. 62. [Brit. Mus.] Cardiff, 1924 Re-issued in 1928 as part of “Word pictures,” which bears the author’s name. PRISONERS (the) of the Temple. . . . By M. C. O’C. Morris. [With a preface by H. J. C. i.e. Henry James Coleridge.] 8vo. Pp. xii. 209. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1874 “Quarterly Series,” vol. n. PRISONERS of war. By A. Boyson Weekes [i.e. Agnes Russell Weekes and a collaborator or collaborators]. 8vo. Pp. 128. [ Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1899 PRISONERS of war in Germany; a personal note. By E. F. O. [Ernest F. Oppe]. 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Mus.] Aldershot, 1919 PRIVATE Dowding ; a plain record of the after-death experiences of a soldier killed in battle. . . . With notes [or rather written] by W. T. P. [W. Tudor Pole]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 108. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1917 PRIVATE journal of a visit to Egypt and Palestine by way of Italy and the Mediterranean. [By Lady Judith Montefiore.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] iLondon, private print, 1836 See above, “Notes from a private journal . . .” PRIVATE (the) papers of a bankrupt bookseller. [By William Young Darling.] 8vo. Pp. 306. Edinburgh, 1931 Information from the publishers. PRIVATE virtue and publick spirit display’d ; in a succinct essay on the character of Capt. Thomas Coram. . . . By Richard Brocklesby, M.D. ?] 8vo. Brit. A/us.] London, 1751 PRIZE sermons on the Sabbath. . . . [The introduction signed: J. G. i.e. John Gritton.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1883 PRO Presbytero Joanne, ac omnibus ejus Regibus & Principibus subordinati [sic]. A Populo Dei in Anglia, vocato Anglice Quakers. For Presbyter John and all his subordinate Kings and Princes. Fkom [sic] the People of God in England, in English called Quakers. H. F[ell]. J. S[tubs]. 4to. Pp. 6. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1660 PROCEEDINGS (the) and transactions of the Bethune Society from November 10th, 1859 to April 20th, 1869. [Edited byj. L. i.e. James Long.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Calcutta, 1870 PROCEEDINGS of the late Railroad Commission. ... By a citizen of Burlington [Henry C. Carey]. 8vo. Pp. 8. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 329.] Philadelphia, 1850 ^PROCEEDINGS (the) of the Vice- chancellor and U niversity of Cambridge against Dr Bentley . . . By Thomas Sherlock. [Brit. Mus.] PROCESSIONADE (the); in panegyri- satiri - serio - comi - baladical versicles. By Porcupinus Pelagius [Macnamara Morgan]. 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 39, p. 23.] London,1745 A satire on William Murray, afterwards Earl of Mansfield. PROFESSION (a) of the Catholic faith, extracted out of the Council of Trent by Pope Pius IV. With the chief grounds of the controverted articles. By way of question and answer. [By Bishop Richard Challoner.] 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 9, p. 442.] London, 1732 Reprinted under the title : “ The grounds of the Catholick doctrine.” PROFESSOR Max Muller on Durga. 'By K. S. MacDonald.] 8vo. Pp. 8. Brit. Mus.] Calcutta [1890] Signed : K. S. M. PROFITABLE (a) adventure to the fortunate, and can be unfortunate to none. Being a proposal for raising one million of money. . . . [By Thomas Neale.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] London, 1693/4 See also “ The best way of disposing . . “ A proposal concerning the coin,” and “A way to make plenty of money . . .” PROFITABLENESS (the) of Scripture. By the author of The lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1862] Signed : F. B. PROGRESS (the) of Catholic work in and around Guildford. [By G. C. Williamson.] i2mo. Pp. 39. [Brit. Musi] Guildford, private print, 1901 Signed : G. C. W. PROGRESS (the) of dulness. By an eminent hand (H. Stanhope [William Bond?]) which will serve for an explanation of the Dunciad. 8vo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 285.] London, 1728 PROGRESS (the) of science, art and literature in Russia. By F. R. Grahame [Catherine Laura Johnstone]. 8vo. Pp. 480. [Brit. Musi] London [1865] PROLOGUE; spoke by one of the young gentlemen who for their improvement and diversion, acted The Orphan, and Cheats of Scapin, the last night of the year 1719. [By Allan Ramsay.] 8vo. Pp. 2. [A. Gibson’s Allan Ramsay, p. 128.] [Edinburgh, 1720] PROPER (a) dyalogue between agentill- man and a husbandman, eche com- planynge to other their miserable calamite through the ambicion of the clergye. [By William Roy.] 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Musi] [Antwerp] 1530 PROPER leads in whist. Compiled by F. H. C. [F. H. Culver]. 8vo. Pp. 8. [F. Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.] Chicago, 1887 PROPER spirit. By the author of Margaret Whyte [Mrs Lucy Lyttelton Cameron]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Wellington, Salop [1830?] PROPHET (the) Elisha. By the author of Lines on the Prophet Elijah [William C. Mainland]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Musi] Kirkwall, 1927 PROPHETE (the) Jonas with an introduced before teachinge to vnderstode him and the right vse also of all the scripture . . . [By W. T. i.e. William Tyndale.] 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Musi] [Antwerp, 1531 ?] PROPOSAL (a) concerning the coin. [By Thomas Neale.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [London? 1696?] Signed : T. N. See also “ The best way of disposing . . “A way to make plenty of money ... ”, and “A profitable adventure ...” PROPOSAL (the) for sending back the nobility and gentry of Ireland, with a vindication of the same. . . . By R. B. [Sir Richard Buckley]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] London, 1690 PROPOSALS for printing’ an English dictionary, in two volumes, in folio. [By Ambrose Philips.] 8vo. [Brit. [c. 1720] PROPOSALS for the reformation of schools & universities, in order to the better education of youth ; humbly offered to the serious consideration of the High Court of Parliament. [By Andrew Fletcher, of Saltoun ?] 4to. [R. A. Scott Macfie’s Bibl. of Fletcher, p. 25.] [Edinburgh?] 1704 PROPOSALS for uniting the English Colonies on the Continent of America so as to enable them to act with force and vigour against their enemies. [By Henry McCulloh.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 38. [Brit. Musi] London, 1757 There is a reference on p. 1 to his previous book, “ The Wisdom and Policy of the French . . .” q.v. PROPOSITIONS and principles of diuinitie . . . disputed in the univer- sitie of Geneva, by certaine students of divinitie . . . under T. Beza and A. Faius, wherein is contained a . . . summarie ... of the common places of divinitie. Translated out of Latine . . . [by John Penry]. . . . 4to. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1591 PROPOSITIONS as to Chancery reform. [By Edgar Taylor.] 8vo. [Lincoln’s Inn Lib.] London, 1830 PROPRIETORS (the) of the Northern Neck; chapters of Culpeper genealogy. [Preface signed: F. H. i.e. Fairfax Harrison.] 8vo. Pp. 178. [Brit. Mus.] Richmond, Va., private print, 1926 PROS and cons ; a magazine for every county. Edited by James Cassidy [Mrs E. M. Story]. 8vo. 3 nos. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1903 PROSPECT (a) from the Congress Gallery during the session begun December 7, 1795. ... By Peter Porcupine [William Cobbett]. Second edition. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Philadelphia, 1796 PROSPECTIVE (a) glasse wherein the child in understanding is enabled to see what the wicked Counsellours did above twenty yeares ago to maintaine the Protestant religion. [By Hezekiah Woodward.] . . . 4to. [Brit. Mus.] n.p. [1644] An addition to “ A good souldier maintaining his militia.” PROSPECTS beyond the Rubicon ; a gratuitous exhibition of the Great Southern War Horse, yclept Nullification, alias Separation, alias Dissolution of the Union. [By Matthew Carey.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Sabin’s Dictionary , iii. 342.] Philadelphia, 1833 Signed : Hamilton. *PROSPEROUS (a) kingdom . . . The Brit. Mus. gives the author’s name as-Meares. ■^PROTECTING (the) system ; nos. 1-9. Signed : Hamilton. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] PROTESTANT orders. “Are clergymen of the English Church rightly ordained?” [By H. P. L. i.e. H. P. Liddon and W. B. i.e. W. Bright.] A reply to this inquiry, by an English catholic. i6mo. [Brit. Musi] Derby, 1872 PROTESTANT songs for troublous times. By B. M. N. [Thomas O. Beeman ?]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1891 PROTESTANT-DISSENTER’S (the) catechism, containing I. A brief history of the Nonconformists. II. The reasons of the dissent from the National Church . . . [By Samuel Palmer, minister at Hackney.] Tenth edition. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1794 First published 1773. The tenth edition contains an advt. of works (by the same author) which includes “ A vindication of the Modern Dissenters” (1790, with Palmer’s name on the title-page). One edition at least of this catechism was issued under the initials : S. P. PROTOCOLS (the) and world revolution ; including a translation and analysis of the Protocols of the meetings of the Zionist men of wisdom [adapted from Maurice Joly’s Dialogue aux enfers and published in a work by S. A. Nilus]. 8vo. Pp. 149. [Brit. Mus.] Boston [1920] PROVERBS; with glossary. By M. L. M. [M. L. Miln ?]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] Arbroath, private print, 1895 PSALMS and hymns as sung in the Parish Church, Rugby. . . . [Compiled by John Moultrie.] 24010. Pp. iv. 140. [Brit. Mus.] Rugby, 1851 Signed : J. M. PSALTER (the) of Jesus, contayninge very devoute and godlie petitions. Newlie imprinted and amplified with enrichement of figures. [Ascribed to Richard Whitford.] [D.N.B. vol. 61, p. 128 ; Bollard and Redgrave.] Do way, 1618 For other editions, see “An invocacyon glorious . . .” (1529) and “ Certaine devout and godly petition . . (1545). PSYCHIC (a) vigil; in three watches. By “X-Rays” [Alexander Bell Filson Young]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 167. [Brit. Mus.] London [1896] PTE-SKA, the white buffalo. [Verse.] By To-ka-ni-ya [Howard Clark Brown]. i2mo. Pp. 136. [Publishers’ Weekly, 26th May 1928.] Charles City, Iowa, 1927 PUBLIC companies tracts. No. 8. Railway management, illustrated by the judgment in “ Hare versus The London and North-Western.” ... By a journalist [Charles Nash]. Second edition. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1861 PUBLIC good ; being an examination into the claim of Virginia to the vacant western territory, and of the right of the United States to the same; to which is added, Proposals for laying off a new state, to be applied as a fund for carrying on the war, or redeeming the National Debt. By the author of Common sense [Thomas Paine]. 8vo. Pp. 38. [Sabin’s Dictionary .] Philadelphia, 1780 An edition of London, 1819, bears Paine’s name. PUBLIC schools and the Great War, 1914-19 : some figures ; with a list of all officers, public school and otherwise, who received orders of knighthood or higher distinctions for their military services. By A. H. H. M. [Alick Henry Herbert Maclean]. 8vo. Pp. 20. [Brit. Mus.] London [1923] PUBLIC villainy exposed; or, a discovery of the different adulterations and poison in bread. By Dr M ****** of Bath. [An extract from The nature of bread, by James Manning.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] Bristol [1800] PULPIT-LUNATICKS (the); or, a mad answer to the mad report made by a Committee of mad priests against Benjamin, Lord Bishop of Bangor. ... Also a mad speech to the Convocation . . . [By John Dunton.] 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1717] QUAKER (the) boy; a tale of the outgoing generation as it appears chronicled in the autobiography of Robert Barclay Dillingham. [By William Dudley Foulke.] 8vo. Pp. 258. [Brit. Mus.] New York, 1910 QUARTER (a) of an hour’s amusement. [Prose and verse.] By W. N. H. [William Nevile Hart]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Reading, 1798 QUARTERBACK Reckless. By Hawley Williams [William Heyliger]. 8vo. Pp. 239. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1912 PUNCTUALITY. [A tract. By William Morgan, B.D. ?] i2mo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] Bradford [1835 ?] PUPPET’S (the) dallying. By Louis Marlow [Louis Wilkinson]. 8vo. Pp. 306. [Millard’s Cat. 16, 1927.] London, 1905 *PURITANE (the) set forth. . . . Attributed to William Chamber layne, Shaftesbury, in Murphy’s Characters. PURPLE (the) pearl. By Anthony Pryde [Agnes Russell Weekes] and Rose K. Weekes. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Who’s Who in Lit.] London, 1923 PURPOSE (the); reflections and digressions. By Hubert Wales [William Piggott]. 8vo. Pp. 255. [Brit. Mus. London [1913' PUSEY (the) memorial ... or, mora rectitude and integrity as exemplified in the character of the late . . . E. B. Pusey. A letter addressed to the Marquis of Salisbury ... by a Nottinghamshire rector [Alfred Hensley ?]. 8vo. Pp. 20. [Brit. Mus.] Market Rasen, 1883 Signed: A. H. PUTNAM’S Homemaker Series. By Olive Green [Myrtle Reed, afterwards MacCullough]. 8vo. [Aitier. Cat.] New York, 1905, etc. *PYGMAIOGERANOMACHIA . . . Not by Lectius. The ascription is due to a confusion with Lectius’ Certaminis Pygmceorum cum gruibus descriptio (1613)- The Pygma'iogeranomachia is not anonymous and is a translation of the Latin Poem of Joseph Addison. Q QUEEN (the) of Sheba. . . . ByS. M.A. [Sister Mary Agnes]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Winnipeg, [1915] QUEENES (the) visiting of the campe at Tilsburie with her entertainment there. [A ballad signed: T. D. i.e. Thomas Deloney ?] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1588 QUEEN’S (the) masque; a satirical sketch [on the ball given by Queen Victoria at Buckingham Palace]. By the author of The Palace martyr 'Hon.-Osborn?]. 8vo. Pp. 16. "Brit. Mus.] London, 1842 QUEEN’S (the) voyage ; or, the follies of Scotland: a satire: with notes. By the Hon^le ***** author of The Palace martyr [Hon.-Osborn?]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] 1842 QUESTION (the). What is an Arminian ? Answered by a lover of free grace [John Wesley]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1770 QUESTIONS and answers on the reigns of the four Georges, deduced principally from Exercises in E?i,glish history. [By Mary Poole Hastings.] i6mo. [Brit. Musi] Chester, 1835 Signed : M. P. H. QUESTIONS (the) between the conformist and non-conformist truly stated and discussed. Dr Falkner, the “friendly debate,” etc., examined and answered. Together with a discourse about separation and some animadversions upon Dr Stillingfleet’s book entituled, “ The unreasonableness of separation” . . . [By G. F. i.e. Giles Firmin.] 4to. [D. N. B. vol. 36, p. 247.] London, 1681 QUIP (a) for an upstart courtier. [By Robert Greene. The introduction signed: J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. Pp. 70. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1870] RACCOLTA (the); or, collection of indulgenced prayers. By Ambrose St John [or rather, translated by him from the work by Telesphorus Galli] . . . Fifth edition. 8vo. Pp. 384. London,1880 The first edition (1857) bears Galli’s name. RAILROAD (the) monopoly. ... By a Citizen of Burlington [Henry C. Carey]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 329.] Philadelphia, 1849 RAILWAY tracts. [Signed : C. S. i.e. Charles Stanley, Sheffield.] 241110. 16 nos. [Brit. Musi] London [1893] RAMBLER (the) papers. By Jeffery C. Jeffery [Jeffery Charles Marston]. 8vo. Pp. 253. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1889 RANDOM recollections of some of my schoolfellows. [By W. G. Fretton.] 8vo. Pp. 4. [Brit. Mus.] [Coventry? private print, i860?] Signed : W. RAOKIN (the) lino-cuts of Malta. (Designed, engraved and printed by Raokin [Harold Frederick Weaver Hawkins]). [Brit. Mus.] Notabile [1929, etc.] RAPALLO, past and present; walks and excursions. By P. I. A. [Phyllis Innocent Alt]. 8vo. Pp. xv. 158. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1904 RA-REE (a) show. To the tune of I am a senseless thing. [A political ballad. By Stephen College.] Obi. fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] 1681 *RASMIN and Ezzelina . . . For A. M. Adie read C. M. Adie. The work is signed : C. M. A. RATIONALIST (the). By Hubert Wales [William Piggott]. 8vo. Pp. 320. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1917 REASON humbly offered by the Governour, assistants, and fellowship of Eastland-Merchants, against the giving of a general liberty ... to export the English woollen manufacture. . . . [By Nathaniel Tenche.] 4to. Pp. 15. [Brit. Mus.] 1689 *REASONS for a modification of the Act of Anne respecting the delivery of books and copyright. Also ascribed to Edward Christian. [Watt’s Bill. Brit.] REASONS for establishing a Marine Insurance Company in Liverpool. [By John Towne Danson.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] 1859 REASONS humbly offer’d why the name of W. Lenthall should be left out of the exception in the Act of Oblivion. [By William Lenthall, himself.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1660] REASONS humbly offered for the liberty of unlicens’d printing; to which is subjoin’d, The just and true character of Edmund Bohun, the licenser of the press : in a letter from a gentleman in the country [signing himself J. M. i.e. Charles Blount], to a member of Parliament. 4to. Pp. 32. [Brit. Musi] London, 1693 REASONS (the) which induced His Majesty to create Sir Thomas Parker ... a peer. [By Joseph Addison?] 4to. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 239.] London, 1716 REASONS why D. Garrick should not appear on the stage ; in a letter to J. Rich, Esq. [By David Garrick?] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1759 Signed: Y. Z. *RECENT recollections of the Anglo- American Church . . . This could not have been by Henry Cas- wall, who was not a layman, and had been resident for many more than five years in 1861. There is a copy in the library of the General Theological Seminary, New York, which was presented by “the author ” to the Rev. David A. Bonnar, upon whose attestation it is there credited to a certain Thomas Ramsay, otherwise unknown. RECOLLECTIONS of an eventful life, chiefly passed in the army. [By Joseph Donaldson, sergeant in the ninety-fourth Scots Brigade.] 8vo. Glasgow, 1824 Republished with its continuations, “ The War in the Peninsula” and “Scenes and Sketches of a soldier’s life in Ireland” in 1856 as “Recollections of the eventful life of a soldier,” and bearing the author’s name. RECOLLECTIONS of the two St Mary Winton Colleges (Winchester College —New College, Oxford). By an old Wykehamist [Edward John George Henry Rich]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 199. [Brit. Mus.] Walsall, 1883 RECORD of the death-bed of C. M. W. [C. M. Walter. By I. Walter]. i2mo. Pp. 33. [Brit. Musi] London [1844] Signed: I. W. RECORDS (the) of love; or weekly amusements for the fair. [Compiled by Henry Carey.] Vol. i. nos. 1-12. 8vo. [T.L. S. 25th Dec. 1930.] London, 1710 RECORDS of Salem Witchcraft, copied from the original documents. [By W. E. Woodward.] 4to. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] 1864 Signed: W. RECORDS of the Council for New England. . . . [Edited by C. D. i.e. Charles Deane.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Cambridge, Mass., 1867 *RECORDS of the ministry of the Rev. E. T. March Phillipps . . . The title continues “ By the author of My life and what shall I do with it.” The introduction is signed : L. *RED-SHANKES (the) sermon . . . For James Low, read James Row. REED (the) of Egypt piercing the hand that leans upon it; or, a demonstration that the arguments of the Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of London [Edmund Gibson]in his second pastoral letter against the Deists, are inconsistent with his principles as Bishop of London, destroy his own local religion, and therefore subvert the cause of the Church of England. Submitted in a discourse deliver’d, at Rumford in the County of Essex, May 2, 1730. By Simon Croxeall, D.D. [John Henley]. 8vo. [Lincolris Inn Lib.] London, 1730 REFLECTIONS on shipboard. By Lord Byron. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1816 A spurious work. Not by Lord Byron. REFLECTIONS on spiritual subjects . . . Translated from the Italian of StAlphonsus. [Preface signed: J. M.C. i.e. John Moore Capes.] i6mo. Pp. xv. 240. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1849 ^REFLECTIONS on the state of parties . . . The date MDCCXLVI is in error for 1776, the reference being to the War of Independence. The second edition, in the same year, but also misdated, bears the author’s name. REFLECTIONS upon Coll. Sidney’s Arcadia ; the old cause, being some observations upon his last paper, given to the sheriffs at his execution. [By Dr John Nalson.] Fol. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1684 REFLECTIONS upon the eloquence of these times ; particularly of the barr and pulpit. [Translated from the French of R. Rapin.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1672 Signed : N. N. ^REFLECTOR (the); representing human affairs . . . The same sheets were reissued in 1762 with a different title-page, and title, “ The Tablet, or picture of real life ...” also anonymous, q.v. REIVER’S (the) penance ; ane ballad of the bishoppricke. [By Robert Surtees of Mainsforth.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] [Edinburgh] 1848 Signed : R. S. of M. RELIC (a) of Dr Johnson [viz. his copy of the works of Bacon. By Roger Ingpen and Charles A. Stonehill]. 8vo. Pp. 10. [Brit. Mus.] London [1929] ^RELIGION (the) of Jesus delineated. . . . [By —— Reynolds.] This was by John Reynolds, of Pembroke College, Oxford. See “ Memoirs of the life of John Reynolds” (3rd ed., 1735), p. 168. RELIQUI/E Britannico-Romanae ; containing figures of Roman antiquities. [By Samuel Lysons.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Gross’ Sources of Engl. Hist. p. 164.] London, 1801-17 REMAINS of the late Rev. Henry Francis Lyte . . . with a prefatory memoir by the editor [A. M. M. H. i.e. Anna Maria Maxwell Hogg]. 121110. Pp. cxii. 292. [Brit. Musi] London,1850 REMARKS on “Christianity and modern progress, by ... A. Raleigh.” . . . [By John Nelson Darby.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1869] Signed : J. N. D. REMARKS on Dr [William] Wake’s want of temper in his writings about Convocation, as also upon Dr Kennet, etc., from their own words. [By George Smallridge, Bishop of Bristol.] Second edition. [Arber’s Term Cat. iii. 318.] London, 1702 Also attributed to Francis Atterbury. REMARKS on light and conscience. [With reference to Dr Wardlaw’s “ Friendly letters.”] By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1867] REMARKS on Squire Ayre’s Memoirs on the life and writings of Mr Pope. In a letter to Edmund Curl, bookseller. [By John Henley, Orator Henley? or John Hill?] 8vo. [R. Straus’ The Unspeakable Curll, p. 312.] London, 1745 Signed : J. H. See “ Memoirs on the life and writings of Mr Pope. . . . By William Ayre, Esq.” REMARKS on “The Church and the world.” By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1874] REMARKS on the practicability of establishing a railroad from Boston to the Connecticut river. [By Nathan Hale.] 8vo. [R. A. Peddie’s Railway Literaturei] Boston, 1827 REMARKS on the present aspect of the Turkish question. By a member of the University of Oxford who visited Constantinople in . . . 1850 and 1851 (W. P. [i.e. William Parry]). 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Musi] London, 1853 REMARKS on the recent ordination at Beverly. By “Another Layman” [Warwick Palfray]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Sabin’s Dictionaryi] Salem, 1824 REMARKS upon the London Gazette relating to the Streights Fleet, and the battle of Landen in Flanders. [By Jeremy Collier.] 4to. 1693 Reprinted in Somers’ Third Collection of Tracts, vol. 3. REMARKS with reference to the Land- Laws of England, on some passages in Mr John Stuart Mill’s “Principles of political economy,” and M. Louis Blanc’s “Letters on England.” [By William Hayes.] 8vo. [Lincoln's Bin Libi] London, 1867 REMEMBER Louvain ! a little book of liberty and war. [A collection of verse. Edited by E. V. L. i.e. E. V. Lucas.] 8vo. Pp. viii. 86. London, 1914 REMEMBRANCES (the) of a Polish exile. [The dedication signed : A. J— i.e. A. A. Jakubowski.] i2mo. Pp. 72. [Brit. Musi] London, 1835 REMEMBRANCES of some methods, orders and proceedings . . . used ... in the House of Lords, extracted out of the journals of that house by H. S. E. C. P. [Henry Scobell, Esq., Clericus Parliamenti]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1657 REMINISCENCES of forty years. By an hereditary High Churchman [James Hicks Smith]. Reprinted with additions from the “ Ecclesiastic.” . . . 8vo. Pp. iv. 51. [Brilioth’s The Anglican Revival, p. 22.] London, 1868 REMINISCENCES of persons and places in Kendal, sixty years ago. By D. K. K. [Henry W. Duncan], 8vo. [Bibliotheca facksoniana, p. 66.] Kendal, 1890 REPLY (a) to Dr [Thomas] Morton’s particular defence of three nocent ceremonies. . . . [By William Ames.] 4to. [Pollard atid Redgrave.] N.P. 1623 See also “A reply to Dr Morton’s generall defence • • • *REPLY (a) to General Joseph Reed’s remarks. . . . Reprinted with Gen. Cadwallader’s name on the title-page in 1846. The real authorship, however, has been attributed to Dr Benjamin Rush. See Sabin’s Dictionary. REPLY to Lord Byron’s Fare thee well. [A poem, signed: C. i.e. Mrs E. Cockle.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Newcastle, 1817 REPLY to the Observations of the Quarterly Review on the autobiography of Admiral the Earl of Dundonald. By Marcus [John Cochrane]. 8vo. [Lincoln's Intt Libi] London, 1861 REPORT of the Juanpur mission in connexion with the Church Missionary Society, 1847-48. [By R. Hawes.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Calcutta, 1848 Signed: R. H. REPOSE, and other verses. By J. Marjoram [Ralph Hale Mottram]. 8vo. Pp. xliii. [Brit. Musi] London, 1907 Contemporary Poets Series. REST (the) cottage. By Adam Lilburn [Lillias Wassermann]. 8vo. Pp. 346. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1923] Title-page of her “ Road of life.” REST days; or, the rambler of the country side. [In verse.] By A. E. P. [A. E. Pearson]. 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Mus.\ Nottingham, 1923 RESURGAM and lyrics. By J. Cave Winscombe [John Cave], 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.\ London [1898] REVELATION (a) of the secret spirit, declaring the most concealed secret of alchymie. Written first in Latine by an unknown author . . . lately translated into English by R. N. E. Gentleman [Robert Napier, Esq., of Edinburgh?]. i6mo. Pp. 80. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1623 REVELATION (a) or charact. [An Anglo-Saxon charm copied from a MS., with notes by M. A. D. i.e. Michael Aislabie Denham.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [Durham, 1854] REV. (the) Mr Gill’s book, call’d Truth defended, examined by scripture and reason. ... By a sufferer for truth [Ebenezer Hewlett]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.\ 1738 R E V E R S I and go bang. By “Berkeley” [W. H. Peel]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 71. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.\ London, 1890 One of “ The Club Series.” REVIEW (a) of an address of the Joint Board of Directors of the Delaware and Raritan Canal and Camden and Amboy Railroad Companies. By a Citizen of Burlington [Henry C. Carey]. 8vo. Pp. 83. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 329.] Philadelphia, 1848 REVIEW (a) of “ Niti-niganduwa ” and the caste-system in Ceylon by W. W. [W. D. S. Vikramasekara]. . . . 8vo. Pp. xix. 38. [Brit. Musi] Colombo, 1885 REVIEW (a) of the affairs of the Austrian Netherlands. [By James Shaw, author of Sketches of the history of the Austrian Netherlands ?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1788 REVIEW of the “Remarks on Dr Channing’s Slavery by a Citizen of Massachusetts.” [By G. F. Simmons.] 8vo. Pp. 48. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 493.] Boston, 1836 See “ Remarks on Dr Channing’s slavery . . REVIEW of the Report of the late Commissioners for investigating the affairs of the Joint Companies. . . . By a Citizen of Burlington [Henry C. Carey]. 8vo. Pp. 78. [Sabin’s Dictionary , iii. 329.] Philadelphia, 1850 REVIEW of the Rev. Dr Channing’s Letter to Jonathan Phillips, Esq., on the slavery question. [By James Trecothick Austin.] i2mo. Pp. 77. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 491.] 1839 REVIEW of three pamphlets lately published by the Rev. W. V. Harold. ... By a Catholic Layman [Matthew Carey]. Second edition, corrected. 8vo. Pp. 40. [Sabin’s Dictionary, iii. 341.] Philadelphia, 1822 REVISION of the Lectionary ; a letter. . . . By J. M. Neale. [With an introductory note signed: J. H. i.e. Joseph Haskoll.] 8vo. Pp. 30. [Brit. Musi] London [1868] REVIVALS (the) of the Latter Day. [By William Tarbet.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] [i860?] RHYMES for Harry and his nursemaid. [Preface signed: A. M. i.e. Maria Arthington.] 8vo. Pp. 36. [Brit. Musi] London [c. 1850] Later editions bear the author’s name. RIALLARO, the archipelago of exiles. By Godfrey Sweven [John Macmillan Brown]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 420. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1901 RIENZI : a tragedy. ... By Mary R. Mitford. [With remarks by D— G. i.e. George Daniel.] i2mo. Pp. 66. [Brit. Musi] London [1871] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 90. RIGHT (a) pleasant historie of the mylner of Abingdon. [Sometimes ascribed to Andrew Borde.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, N.D. Another edition begins “Here is a merry jest . . .” q.v. RIGHT (the) way of learning, pronouncing . . . and writing French . . . Second edition. ... By Chrysostome Dagobert [J. B. A. Led’huy]. i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1855 RIGHTEOUSNESS (the) of God. By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1861] RIGHTS (the) of industry; addressed to the working men of the United Kingdom. By the author of The results of machinery [Charles Knight]. I. Capital and labour. i2mo. Pp. 213- [Brit. Musi] London, 1831 Part of “The Working Man’s Companion.” RIGORDANS (the) ; a play in three acts. By Edward Percy [Edward Percy Smith]. 8vo. Pp. 100. [Brit. Musi] London, 1924 ROAD (a) to Fairyland. By Erica Fay [Marie Charlotte Carmichael Stopes]. 8vo. Pp. 219. [Brit. Musi] London, 1926 ROBBER (the) of the Rhine ; a melodrama. ... By G. Almar. [With remarks by D— G. i.e. George Daniel.] i2mo. Pp. 40. \Brit. A/us.] London [1871] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 87. ROBERT Bridges. [A bibliography of his works. By Iolo A. Williams.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [O’Leary’s Eng. Lit. Hist. p. 149.] London, 1921 Bibliographies of Modern Authors, vol. 8. ROBERT White. [Abiographical sketch, reprinted from the Hawick Advertiser, signed : J. H. i.e. John Hilson.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] [Hawick, 1869] ROCKLITZ (the). By George R. Preedy [Gabrielle Margaret Vere Long]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 362. [Daily A/ail, 3rd Feb. 1931.] London, 1930 RODS and axes. [On government.] By A1 Carthill [Sir John Perronet Thompson]. 8vo. Pp. 309. [Brit. A/us.] Edinburgh, 1928 ROGER Sheringham and the Vane mystery. By Anthony Berkeley [Anthony Berkeley Cox]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 306. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1927 ROGUISH (the) miller; or, nothing got by cheating: a true ballad. [By Hannah More.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. A/us.] Bath [1795?] Signed: Z. ROLL (the) of the house of Lacy; pedigrees, military memoirs and synoptical history of the . . . family of De Lacy . . . and a memoir of the Brownes, Camas. Collected and compiled by De Lacy-Bellingari [Edy Harnett]. Pp. viii. 409. 8vo. [Brit. A/us A] Baltimore, 1928 *ROMAN Catholic morality . . . For Maynooth, read Maynooth College. ROMANCE (the) of Ali. By Eleanor Stuart [Eleanor Stuart Childs]. 8vo. Pp. 333. [Brit. A/us.] New York, 1913 ROMANCE of the Strangford power scheme; a historical narrative. By Maurice Fitzgerald [Thomas M‘Cormac Adair]. 8vo. [Brit. A/us.] Belfast, 1930 ROMANCES of Gretna Green and its runaway marriages. By Lochinvar [Richard P. MacDougall]. Fifth edition. 8vo. Pp. 68. [Brit. A/us.] Newcastle, 1929 Previously published as “ Guide to Gretna Green.” ROME exactly describ’d, as to the present state of it, under Pope Alexandre the seventh ; in two curious discourses. A new relation of Rome, as to the government of the city. . . . English’d by G. Torriano [from the “Relatione di Roma del Almaden”] — A relation of the state of the Court of Rome, made in the year 1661 . . . by ... A. Corraro . . . translated by J. B. Gent. [John Bulteel]. 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, 1664 ROMISH (the) mass and the English Church. By an English presbyter [Rev. Nathaniel Dimock]. 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib A] London, 1874 ROMULUS and Tarquin. First written in Italian by V. Malvezzi and now taught English by [H. C. L. i.e. Henry Carey, Earl of Monmouth]. i2mo. [Brit. A/us.] London, 1637 ROSE Campion’s platonic. By Adam Lilburn [Lillias Wasserman]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 308. [Brit. A/us.] London, 1908 Title-page of her “ Road of life.” ROUGE et noir ; roulette, hazard and faro. By “Berkeley” [W. H. Peel]. 8vo. Pp. 30. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.] [London? 1892?] ROUGH catalogue of a geological collection at Villa Syracusa, Torquay. [By John Edward Lee.] 8vo. [Brit. A/us.] Private print, 1880 Preface signed : J., E. L. ROYAL (the) merchant ; a sermon. [By Robert Wilkinson, D.D., Pastor of St Olave’s, Southwark.] 8vo. [Brit. A/us.] [1700?] ROYAL (the) pastime of cock-fighting ; or, the art of breeding, feeding, fighting and curing cocks of the game. . . . By R. H., a lover of the sport [Robert Howlett]. 8vo. Pp. 92. [Brit. A/us.] London, 1709 “ ROYAL Sussex” (a) hero ; memorials of Lieutenant Anson Lloyd Silvester. . . . Portrait and illustrations. Edited by J. S. [James Silvester]. . . . 8vo. Pp. vii. 137. [Brit. AZusi] London, 1920 ROYALL (the) law, and covenant of God. What and where it is, and who are in it. . . . [By James Nayler.] 4to. Pp. 8. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1655 ROYALL (the) oake; or, a crown’s worth of loyalty for a tester. [A genealogy of the Kings of Scotland. By John Shambothie?] 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1682 RUBBER estate values. Reprinted from the “ Straits Times.” [By A. W. S. i.e. A. W. Still.] 8vo. Pp. vii. 94. [Brit. Mus.] Singapore [1911] RUBRIC (the) as to ornaments ; remarks on its legal operation. By J. M. D. [J. M. Dale]. 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1867 RUDIMENTS of the Latin language. . . . For the use of Charterhouse schools. [By John Russell, D.D.] 8vo. 4 parts. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1813-14 *RULES and customs which by . . . Bor H. S. E., C.P., read H.S.E.C.P. RULES (the) and directions for playing the new garden game of Lawn, or Line Hockey. ... By J. H. M. [J. H. Matthews]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1901] RULES (the) of the Candlewick Ward Club ; with a short review of its history [by William Blades], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1876 RUNNER (the). By Ralph Connor [Charles William Gordon]. 8vo. Pp. 478. [Brit. Mus.] London [1930] RURAL economy; or, essays on the practical parts of husbandry. ... By the author of the Farmer's letters [Arthur Young]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 177a RUSKIN (the) birthday book . . . arranged by M. A. B. [Maud A. Bateman] and G. A. [Grace Allen]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] Orpington, 1883 RYGHT (a) notable sermon. [By Richard Argentine, alias Sexten.] 8vo. [Hunti?igton Lib. Checklisti] Ippeswich, 1548 S SACRED (the) bee, and other poems. By Caroline Nash. [Edited by F. C. i.e. F. Clemence.] i2mo. Pp. 96. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1850 SACRIFICE (the). By Wilmot Kaye [Edward Platt]. 8vo. Pp. 313. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1911 SAFE (a) and sure method of acquiring a practical knowledge of French. By Chrysostome Dagobert [J. B. A. Led’huy]. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1857 SAILING directions for the Baltic sea. . . . By Admiral GustafKlint. [Edited by F. B. i.e. Sir Francis Beaufort.] 8vo. Pp. x. 157. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1854 SAILING directions for the Bristol Channel. [Advertisement signed: F. J. E. i.e. Sir Frederick J. O. Evans.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1879 SAILING directions for the West coasts of France, Spain, and Portugal. . . . [Advertisement signed: F. J. E. i.e. Sir Frederick J. O. Evans.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1881 ST Cyprian Bishop and Martyr . . . of discipline, prayer, patience. . . . Translated by C. B. [Clement Barksdale]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1675 S. John’s Cathedral, Hongkong. Anthem book : compiled by C. F. A. S. [C. F. A. Sangster]. 8vo. Pp. 66. [Brit. Musi] Hongkong, 1892 S. Mary, Lewisham Church Lads Brigade, 1892-1929. [By F. G. Marshall.] 8vo. Pp. 39. [Brit. Musi] London [1930] VOL. VI. ST Patrick; a national tale of the 5th century. By an antiauary [- Rennie]. i2mo. 3vols. [Watt’s Bibl. Briti] Edinburgh, 1819, 18 It has been suggested that the author was James Rennie, of Sorn, Ayrshire, Professor of Natural History at King’s College, London. SALTMARSHreturnedfromthe dead . . . or, the resurrection of James the Apostle. . . . [By Samuel Gorton.] 4to. Pp. 198. [Brit. Musi] London, 1655 The Epistle dedicatory signed : S. G. SALUTEM in Christo ; good men and evill delyght in contraries. ... [A letter concerning the commitment of the Duke of Norfolk to the Tower, dated 13th Oct. 1571, and signed: R. G. i.e. Richard Grafton? It is attributed to William Cecil, Lord Burleigh.] 8vo. B. L. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1571] SALVATION by Jesus Christ. [By J. Backhouse.] i2mo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Musi] Cape Town, 1838 SALVATION : what it is, and, what it is for: a word for the new year. By J. E. H. [James E. Hawkins], i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1875] SANCTIFICATION. [By William Kelly, of Guernsey.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi Ci875 ?! SANITARY and social questions of the day. By an observer [Guy Cadogan Rothery]. 8vo. Pp. 92. [Brit. Musi] London [1897] 2 E SAYONARA — good-bye. By John Paris [Frank Trelawny Arthur Ashton- Gwatkin]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 370. \Brit. Mus.] London [1924] SCALE for changing statute measure of 5?r into the customary of Lancashire, being 7 yards to the perch. [By H. H. Fishwick?] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] Rochdale [1830 ?] SCANDAL. By the biographer of Anacreon [Joshua Smith? Introduction signed: A.]. i2mo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Mus.] Holt, Norfolk, 1827 SCATTERED gems, or weekly meditations ; consisting of gleanings from various authors, with a scripture text and a verse of a hymn attached to each meditation. By a lady [Mary Judith Fellowes]. Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 262. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1853 Signed : M. J. F. .SCELERA aquarum ; or, a supplement to Mr Graunt on the bills of mortality. . . . [By James Harvey?] 4to. Pp. 30. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1701 Signed : J. H., M.D. SCENES and narratives from German history. [By M. A. Donne.] i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1861] "^SCENES and sketches of a soldier’s life in Ireland . . . The attribution given is incorrect. The author was Joseph Donaldson, sergeant in the ninety-fourth Scots Brigade. This is the third of a series of army sketches (see also “ Recollections of an eventful life ” and “The War in the Peninsula”) which were published anonymously, and published posthumously in one volume as “ Recollections of the eventful life of a soldier ” in 1856 with the author’s name. :SCEPTIC (the) and other poems. By Leigh Cliffe [George Jones]. i2mo. [Eng. Cat. 1801-1836, p. 121.] London,1836 SCEPTICAL (the) muse ; or, a paradox on humane understanding: a poem. [By William Dove, of St Catharine’s Hall, Cambridge.] Fol. Pp. 10. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1699 SCHEME (the) of God’s eternal great designe in the world for Christ and his elect Saints, given to him by the father upon the performance of his great work ofmediatorship. . . . [By William Sherwin.] Fol. [Brit. 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Mus.] London, 1856 A reprint from the preface of his “Notes and materials for an adequate biography of . . . W. Law,” which was itself anonymous. SCOPE (the) of the Gospel; being notes of addresses by J. B. S. [J. B. Stoney]. 8vo. Pp. 187. [Brit. Mus.] London [1897] SCOTIA’S noblest son; a concise account of the life and labours of David Livingstone. [By Henry Pickering.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Glasgow [1916] Signed : Hy. P. SCOTISH elegiac verses on the principal nobility and gentry from 1629 to 1729. With . . . notes and an appendix of illustrative papers. [Edited by J. M. i.e. James Maidment.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh, 1842 Only ninety copies printed. *SCOTLAND'S interest . . . 1704. R. A. Scott-Macfie (Bibliography of Andrew Fletcher, p. 23) considers that on internal evidence this cannot be by Fletcher, although the style resembles his. SCOTTISH (a) anthology. By A. H. S. [Annie H. Small]. 8vo. Pp. 66. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1912 No. 3 of the Iona Books. SCOTTISH (the) national dances ; their origin, nature and history. By R. H. C. [Robert Hogg Calder, M.A.]. 8vo. Pp. 21. [Brit. Mus.] Aberdeen, 1928 From an inscribed copy. *SCOURGE (the) of Venus; or, the wanton lady . . . Written by A. H. [Henry Austin. A verse translation of part of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, lib. x.]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1620 The edition of 1614 bears the initials : H. A. SCRIPTURAL (the) faith of the young churchman, shown by the Church’s own teaching. By E. S. A. [Letitia Willgoss Stone]. Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 48. [Brit. Musi] London [1874] SCRIPTURE (the) accounts of the attributes and worship of God . . . By Hopton Haynes. [Edited by R. A. i.e. Richard Aspland.] i2mo. Pp. xii. 272. [.Brit. Mus.] London, 1815 SEARCH the Scriptures. By the author of The lamplighter [Francis Bour- dillon]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London [1867] Signed: F. B. SEASONABLE (a) warning to Protestants ; from the cruelty and treachery of the Parisian Massacre, August the 24th, 1572. [By Vincent Alsop.] 4to. London, 1680 Publisher’s advertisement in Vincent Alsop’s Melius Inquirendum, 1681 ed. SEA-TIGER (the) ; a tale of mediaeval Nestorianism. [By John Mason Neale.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 91. \Brit. Mus.] London [i860] SECESSION resisted. [By Joseph Reed Ingersoll, LL.D.] 8vo. Pp. 38. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] Philadelphia, 1861 See above, “Secession, a folly and a crime.” SECOND (the) booke of the English husbandmen . . . See “ Cheape and good husbandry . . .” SECOND (the) coming of the Lord Jesus Christ. [By Henry Drummond.] i2mo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1829 SECOND (a) holiday for John Gilpin ; or a voyage to Vauxhall. . . . [In verse. By John Oakman.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1785 SECOND (a) (-fourth) letter from a friend to the Right Honourable [Chief Justice W. Whitshed, on his discharging the Grand-Jury that refused to find the bill against J. Harding, the printer of the Draper’s i.e. Dean Swift’s letters. Subscribed N. N. i.e. R. Lindsay?] Fol. [Brit. Mus.] Dublin, 1724-25 The third letter is entitled, “ A third letter from-to the-. *SECOND (a) letter to Dr M. . . . Preceded by “ An extract from the case of the electors . . .” and “ A letter to the Rev. Dr M.” All three were republished in the same year under the title “ The election of aliens . . q.v. SECOND (a) manuduction for Mr Robinson ; or, a confirmation of the former, in an answer to his manumission. [By William Ames.] 4to. Pp. 35. [Brit. Mus.] n.p. 1615 “ A Manuduction for Mr Robinson ” forms the second part of “ The unreasonableness of the separation ...” q.v. It has been wrongly attributed to William Bradshaw, the author of “ The unreasonableness of the separation . . .” SECOND (the) part of Pasquils madcap intituled the fooles-cap. [By Nicholas Breton.] 4to. [Christie- Miller Cat.] London, 1600 Signed : N. B. SECOND (the) representation of the loyal subjects of Albinia [Queen Anne]. ^By William Wagstafife, M.D.] 8vo. D.N.B. vol. 58, p. 436.] London, 1712 See above, “ The representation . . .” SECRET (the) history of Pythagoras. Part I. Translated from the original lately found at Otranto [or rather, written by J. W., M.D. i.e. Samuel Croxall ?]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1721 ^SECRET memoirs of the late Mr Duncan Campbel . . . Not by Defoe. The author is unknown. SECRET (the) of the Cure d’Ars [Jean- Marie-Baptiste Vianney]. By Henri Gheon [—■— Vanglon]. (Translated by F. J. Sheed.) 8vo. Pp. 217. [Lorenz’s Catalogue gene rale; Brit. Mus.] London, 1929 SECRET (the) of the road. By Margaret Stuart Lane [Margaret Ashworth]. 8vo. Pp. 96. [Brit. Musi] London, 1929 SECRET (the) of the Weird Sisters. By Mary Kavanagh [Margaret M. Spain]. 8vo. Pp. 64. [.Innisfail, a quarterly magazine, No. 1.] London [1924] SECRET (the) room. By Anthony Pryde [Agnes Russell Weekes]. 8vo. Pp. 342. [ Who's Who in Lit.] New York, 1929 SECRETES (the) of . . . Alexis of Piemont [Girolamo Ruscelli] con- tainyng excellente remedies against divers diseases, woundes and other accidents. . . . Translated out of Frenche ... by W. Warde. 4to. 4 parts. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1558-69 A later edition (1614-15) begins, “ The secrets . . .” SELECT hymns ; a supplement to Dr Watts’s psalms and hymns for the use of the congregation assembling in the Chapel, Hoxton Academy, London. [By Thomas Wilson.] 2qmo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1807 SELECTED modern English essays. [Chosen by H. S. M. i.e. H. S. Milford.] 8vo. Pp. x. 414. \Brit. Mus.~\ London, 1925 SELECTION (a) of curious and entertaining games at chess, that have been actually played. [By J. Cazenove.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1817 SELECTION (a) of hymns, arranged as a companion to Horne’s Manual of parochial psalmody. [By Frederick Edward Gretton.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1859 Signed : F. E. G. SELECTION (a) of hymns, designed principally for the use of prisoners. By the author of Facts . . . respecting climbing boys [Ann Alexander]. 241110. Pp. 120. [Brit. Mus.] York, 1819 Signed: A. A. SELECTION (a) of hymns for public and private worship. [Compiled by S. M. i.e. Rev. Samuel Martin.] 8vo. Pp. 38. [Brit. Mus.] Falmouth [1824] SELECTION (a) of hymns for the festivals of the Church of England, designed as an appendix to the New version of Psalms. . . . Second edition. . . . Printed . . . for the use of St Marks, Myddelton Square, Pentonville. [By T. M. i.e. Thomas Mortimer.] 241110. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1831 SELECTION (a) of passages from “ Mind ” . . . “ Nature ”... “ Natural Science” . . . bearing on changes and defects in the significance of terms and in the theory and practice of logic. [Compiled by V. W. i.e. the Hon. Victoria A. M. L., Lady Welby Gregory.] 8vo. Pp. ii. 42. [Brit. Mus.] Grantham, 1893 SELECTION (a) of psalms and hymns, chiefly adapted for public worship. [Edited by E. D. and J. A. B. i.e. Edward Davies and J. A. Baxter.] i2mo. Pp. xiii. 240. [Brit. Mus.] Birmingham, 1830 SELECTIONS from Les recherches philosophiques sur les Americains of M. Pauw by Mr W * * * [Daniel Webb]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1789 SELECTIONS from the poems and letters of Bernard Barton. . . . [With a memoir of the author signed : E. F. G. i.e. Edward Fitzgerald.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1849 SELECTIONS from the poems of Charlotte Elliott. . . . With a memoir . . . by E. B. [Mrs E. Babington?]. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London [1873] SELECTIONS from the poetical literature of the West. [Edited by W. D. G. i.e. William D. Gallagher.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] Cincinnati, 1841 SELECTIONS from the versions of the Psalms. . . . [Edited by P. P. G. i.e. Philip Parker Gilbert.] Fifth edition. i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1851 SELF culture ; a course of lessons on developing the physical, unfolding the soul, attaining unto the spiritual. By Levi [Levi H. Dowling]. 8vo. Pp. 92. [Brit. Mus.] Los Angeles, 1912 SENTIMENTAL excursions to Windsor and other places. . . . [By Leonard MacNally]. i2mo. London, 1781 Disclosed in an advt. at the end of his Tristram Shandy (1783). SEPARATION and sedition inseparable, whilst Dissenters and Commons- wealthsmen are permitted to controll in all publick administrations of Church and State : being a farther prosecution of the Dutch toleration. [By-M—n i.e. W. Baron, Chaplain to the Earl of Clarendon.] 4to. Pp. 29. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1703 SEPARATION (the) of mother and child by the law of “ Custody of infants ” considered. [By Sir Thomas Noon Talfourd.] 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1838 SERIES (a) of letters addressed to Sir William Fordyce . . . containing a voyage and journey from England to Smyrna, from thence to Constantinople, and from that place over land to England. Translated from the original into English by the author. To which is prefixed a short answer to Volney’s Contradictions on Ali-Bey’s History and revolt. . . . By S. L. Kooyto7ro\tT?7s [S. Lusignan]. 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1788 See “A history of the revolt of Ali Bey . . .” ^SERIES (a) of letters on the circulating medium . . . The letters are signed : Y. Z. *SERIOUS (a) and friendly address . . . Not by William Allen, Vicar of Bridge- water, but by William Allen, Tradesman of London. See his Worhs, 1707. SERIOUS (a) and seasonable warning unto all people ; occasioned by two . . . epistles to a late book [i.e. the “new impression” of “Quakerism no Christianity”] of John Falldoe’s, subscribed by Richard Baxter, Tho. Manton [and others]. By C. P. [Caleb Pusey]. 4to. Pp. 22. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1675] SERIOUS (a) call to the Quakers inviting them to return to Christianity. [By George Keith.] 4to. S. sh. [Brit. Afus.] London, 170a An edition in the same year bears the author’s name. SERIOUS (a) letter [signed W. B. i.e. William Blake, Housekeeper to the Ladies Charity School, Highgate] sent by a private Christian to the Lady Consideration . . . I May 1655, which she is desired to communicate in Hide Park to the gallants of the times a little after sunset. . . . 4to. Pp. 22. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1655 For a later edition (1656) with a variant title, see “ The Yellow book ; or a serious letter . . .” See also “The Trial of the ladies . . .” and “A new trial of the ladies >> SERMON (a) lately preached on 1 Corinth. 3, 15, by a reverend divine of the Church of England [John Tillotson, Abp. of Canterbury]. 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1673 SERMON (a) [on John i. 1] on the supreme Godhead of Christ. [By Thomas Cooke, LL.D. ?] 8vo. Pp. 19. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1810 SERMON (a) preached at Flitton Bedford at the funeral of Henrie E. of Kent. [By. John Bowie, Bishop.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1615 Signed: I. B. SERMON (a) preach’d before the King and Queen . . . October 24, 1686. By . . . Dom W. M. [William Marsh], Monk of the Holy Order of St Benedict . . . Chaplain in Ordinary to His Majesty. 4to. Pp. 48. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1687 SERMON (a) [on Joel ii. 15-17] preached upon the 30th of January S.V. 1684/5 at Paris. . . . [By William Wake.] 4to. Pp. 46. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1685 The Epistle dedicatory is signed : W. W. SERMONS for children. . . . By J. M. Neale. [Edited by J. H. i.e. Joseph Haskoll.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1867 SERMONS for the Black Letter days.. . . By J. M. Neale. [Edited by J. H. i.e. Joseph Haskoll.] 8vo. Pp. xx. 299. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1868 SERMONS of John Calvin upon the songe that Ezechias made after he had bene sicke ... Translated out of Frenche into English [by A. L. i.e. A. Lock?]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] [1574] See also “Foure sermons . . .” SERMONS on the Song of songs. By J. M. Neale. [Edited by J. H. i.e. Joseph Haskoll.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London [1867] SERMONS preached before His Maiestie. ... By . . . John Preston. [The Epistle to the reader signed: T. G. and T. B. i.e. Thomas Goodwin and Thomas Ball.] 4to. Pp. 150* [Brit. Mus.] London, 1631 SERMONS preached in a Religious House. By . . . J. M. Neale. [Edited by J. H. i.e. Joseph Haskoll.] 8vo. 2 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1869 SERPENT (the) of Devision ; wherein is conteined the true history or mappe of Romes overthrowe . . . [Written or translated by J. Lydgate.] . . . 4to. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1590 SERVANTS of the guns. [Tales.] By Jeffery E. Jeffery [Jeffery Eardley Marston]. 8vo. Pp. 263. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1917 *SETONS (the) . . . For By Olivia Douglas [Ann Buchan], read By O. Douglas [Anna Buchan]. SEVEN gardens and a palace. By E. V. B. [Hon. Mrs Eleanor Vere Boyle]. 8vo. [Who's Who in Lit.] London, 1900 SEVEN (the) sleepers. By Francis Beeding [John Leslie Palmer and Hilary Aidan St George Saunders]. 8vo. Pp. 317. [Amer. Cat.] Boston, 1925 SEVEN summers: an Eton medley. By the editors of the Parachute and Present Etonian [Robert Carr Bosanquet and others]. 8vo. Pp. 189. [M. Baring’s The Puppet Show of Memory?] Eton, 1890 SEVERAL grounds, reasons . . . and propositions offered to the King’s . . . Majesty for the improvement of his revenue. . . . [By George Carew ?] Fol. S.sh. [Brit. Mus.] [1660] Signed : G. C. SEVERAL letters between two ladies ; wherein the lawfulness and unlawfulness of artificial beauty in point of conscience are nicely debated. . . . [By Jeremy Taylor?] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1701 SEVERAL occasions for poems by persons of quality. Edited by R. D. [Randall Davies]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1928 SEVERAL orations of Demosthenes. . . . English’d ... by several hands. . . . [The Second Philippic by K. C. i.e. Knightley Chetwood.] i2mo. Pp. 222. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1702 SEVERAL papers ; some of them given forth by George Fox ; others by Jane Nayler. . . . Gathered together and published by A. P. [Alexander Parker] . . . with ... a few queries propounded to Tho. Ledgard. . . . 4t°* Pp. 40. [Brit. Mus.] N.p. 1654 SEVERAL seats in Parliament to be had gratis; or, the only method of securing the best election : being . . . a letter to a gentleman in Shrewsbury. By Sir Richard Hill.] 8vo. Pp. 7* Brit. Mus.] Bath [1768] Signed: R. H. SHADE (the) of the Balkans ; being a collection of Bulgarian folk-songs and proverbs [compiled by Pencho Rachev Slaveikov] . . . rendered into English (by Henry Bernard [Henry Baerlein]) . . . 8vo. Pp. 328. [Brit. Musi] London, 1904 SHAKESPEARE (the) birthday book. [Selected by M. F. P. D. i.e. Mary F. P. Dunbar.] 8vo. Pp. 277. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1875 SHAKESPEARE (the) problem: a paper for students [ascribing the authorship of “ Pedantius” to Francis Bacon]. By E. A. [Edward George Harman]. 8vo. Pp. 24. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1909 SHAKESPEARE’S chair. [An account of a chair, formerly belonging to Shakespeare, now preserved at Lewes. By Kate Lintott.] i6mo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Afus.] Uckfield [1908] Signed : K. L. *S HAW’S manual . . . For J. Lithiby, read J. Letheby. SHEEN Hall. By W. Dane Bank [William Henry Williamson]. 8vo. Pp. 287. [Brit. Afus.] London [1926] SHEPHEARD’S (the) oracle delivered in an eclogue. [By Francis Quarles.] 4to. [Brit. Afus.] Oxford, 1644 SHEPHERD (the) of Derwent Valley ; a drama. ... By J. Lunn. . . . With . . . remarks by D. G. [George Daniel], i2mo. Pp. 42. [Brit. Afus.] London [1871] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 89. SHEPHERD (the) of Salisbury Plain, etc. [By Hannah More.] i2mo. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1831 Signed : Z. SHEPHERD (a) tale, and other verses. By G. H. F. N. [G. H. F. Norris]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 79. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1914 ^SHETLAND fireside tales . . . The title-page continues . . . By G. S. L. [i.e. George Stewart, of Lerwick]. SHIP (the) of hell. [A play.] By Gil Vicente. English version by A. F. Gerald [Aubrey Fitzgerald Bell]. 4to. Pp. 98. [Brit. Afus.] Watford, 1929 Only 35 copies printed. SHIPWRECKS and tales of the sea. [Edited by W. and R. C. i.e. William and Robert Chambers.] 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] London, i860 SHIRES and provinces. By Sabretache [A. S. Barrow]. Illustrated by Lionel Edwards. 4to. Pp. xiv. 195. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1926 For a second series, see “ More shires and provinces.” SHOOTER’S (the) diary; or, forms for registering game killed during the year. ... By I. E. B. C. [Irvine E. B. Cox], 4to. [Brit. Afus.] London [1866] *SHORT (a) account of the city of Aberdeen. . . . Mitchell and Cash attribute this to both Moir and Robertson. SHORT (a) account of the office of the King’s Remembrancer. [By Sir George Albert Bonner.] 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1928 *SHORT (a) account of the principal seats and gardens . . . See also “A short view of the principal ...” SHORT (a) and private discourse betweene Mr Bolton and one M. S. concerning usury, published by E. B. [Edward Bagshawe]. 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1637 SHORT (a) catechisme ; containing the principles of religion : very profitable for all sorts of people. [By John Ball.] i2mo. [AFAlpin Coll. Cat.] London, 1637 Attribution by Dr Charles A. Briggs. See “A short treatise, contayning all the prin- cipall . . .” SHORT (a) Christian doctrine (the manner how to help a priest to say Masse). . . . Translated into English 'by Richard Gibbons]. 241110. Pp. 72. Pollard and Redgrave.] [St Omer] 1633 SHORT (a) direction for the performance of Cathedrall service. ... By E. L. [Edward Lowe]. 8vo. [Brit. Afus.] Oxford, 1661 SHORT discourses of the late attemptat against His Maiesties person. [By William Alexander, Earl of Stirling.] 8vo. [Pollard and Redgrave.] Edinburgh, 1600 SHORT (a) grammar of the English tongue, with . . . exercises. [By J. M. D. Meiklejohn.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 176. [Brit. Afus.] London, 1890 Preface signed : J. M. D. M. SHORT (a) historical account of the Public Library at Port Elizabeth. . . . [By P. E. Lewin.] 8vo. Pp. 17. [Brit. Afus.] Port Elizabeth, 1906 Signed : P. E. L. *SHORT (a) history of insects . . . For By E. Fenn, read By Eleanor, Lady Fenn. SHORT (a) history of the 3rd Volunteer Battalion of the Devonshire Regiment, 1859 to 1908. ... By a Retired Officer of the 3rd Devon [William Hardinge Hastings]. 8vo. Pp. 51. [Brit. Afus.] 1908 From an inscribed copy. SHORT (a) history, with notes and references, of the ancient and honourable family of Ancketill or Anketell. Compiled by one of its members Augusta Anketell]. 8vo. Pp. 60. Brit. Mus.] Belfast, 1902 SHORT (a) introduction to grammar. Compiled for the instruction of youth. [By David Wedderburn.] i2mo. Pp. 94. [Pollard and Redgrave.] Aberdene, 1637 An earlier edition (1632) bears the author’s name. SHORT (a) life of the Apostle Paul, with a summary of Christian doctrine as unfolded in his epistles : in Sanskrit verse. [By J. M. i.e. John Muir.] With an English version. . . . 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Calcutta, 1850 SHORT (a) manifestation of the main end of outward government. [By William Smith, of Besthorp.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [1664] Signed : W. S. SHORT notes on Isaiah, chap, v.-xii. [By George Montagu, Duke of Manchester.] 8 vo. [Brit. Musi] [London] private print, 1852 Signed : M. SHORT (a) reply to “ Landmarks,:” No. 6, of the S.P.C.K. By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby]. 8vo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Mus.] London [1880] SHORT sermons preached in the chapel of St Mary’s College, Oscott. Collected and edited by the President (J. S. N. [i.e. James Spencer Northcote]). 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1876 SHORT stories of to-day and yesterday. [With introductory notes by Francis Henry Pritchard.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1928 Signed : F. H. P. *SHORT (a) treatise on harmony, containing . . . rules for composing in two, three and four parts. [By J. C. Pepusch.] Dedicated to all lovers of musick, by an admirer of this agreeable science [James Abercorn, seventh Earl of Abercorn, the translator]. Obi. 8vo. London, 1730 SHORT (a) treatise, shewing the causes and remedies of that general disease . . . commonly termed by many the plague of the guts. . . . Published by N. H. of Dorchester in the County of Dorset [Nathaniel Highmore]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 15. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1658 *SHORT (a) view of the principal seats and gardens . . . See also “A short account of the principal For Miss J. H. Pye, read Mrs J. H. Pye. SHOT-GUN (the) and its uses. By “East Sussex” [Frank Bonnett]. 8vo. Pp. xix. 179. London, 1914 Authorship disclosed in his “ Mixed and rough shooting.” SHYPPE (the) of fooles. (By Sebastian Brant.) [Translated by Thomas Watson.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] [London] 1509 Another edition, 1517* *SI mihi! By Egomet. . . . Not by W. T. Shore but by Henry Watson Fowler, author of The King's English. Revealed in an edition published under Fowler’s own name in 1929 with the altered title “ If wishes were horses.” SIBILLAOdaleta; an historical romance, and episode of the wars of Italy, during the 15th century. Translated from the original Italian [of Carlo Varese]. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1852 SIDE issues. [Short stories.] By Jeffery E. Jeffery [Jeffery Eardley Marston]. 8vo. Pp. 256. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1920 *SIDERO-THRIAMBOS . . . For By A. M., read By A. M., citizen and draper of London. SIEGE (t’) o’ Brou’lton. [By J. P. Morris.] [Bibliotheca Jacksoniana, p. 24.] 1867 SIEGE (the) of Mentz ; or, the German heroin : a novel. [Translated by P. B. i.e. Peter Bellon.] i2mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1692 SIGNALS to be made by one man, without flags, haulyards,or any previous preparation, by day or at night, to be understood by all nations : 3rd Oct. 1812. [Signed: R. N. i.e. William Pringle Green.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1812] SIGNOR Topsy - Turvy’s wonderful magic-lantern ; or, the world turned upside down. By the author of My Mother and other verses. [By Ann and Jane Taylor.] i6mo. Pp. 71. [D.N.B.xol. 55, p. 421.] London, 18 n Ann Taylor alone was the author of “ My Mother.” SILENCE in life and forgiveness in death; from the Spanish of Fernan Caballero [Cecilia F. J. Arrom de Ayala] . . . by J. J. Kelly. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1883 SILENCE (the) of Colonel Bramble. By Andre Maurois [Emile Herzog]. Translated from the French [by Thurfrida Wake]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 207. [Observer, 1st Feb. 1931.] London, 1919 SILK (the) stocking murders ... By Anthony Berkeley [Anthony Berkeley Cox]. 8vo. Pp. vii. 276. [Amer.Cat. London [1928 SILVER linings. ByWilhelmina Stitch [Ruth Collie]. 8vo. Pp. 63. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1928 SINS of the tongue, lying and other fraud ; a sermon [on Eph. iv. 25] preached in South Lambeth Chapel. [By C. P. Shepherd?] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [London] 1858 *SIR Humphry Davy’s monument . . . Signed : V. SIR Joseph Wilson Swan, F.R.S. A memoir by M. E. S. and K. R. S. [Mary Edmonds Swan and Kenneth Raydon Swan]. 8vo. Pp. 183. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1929 SIRENICA. By W. Compton Leith [Ormonde Maddock Dalton]. 8vo. Pp. 178. London, 1913 SIX (the) proud walkers. By Francis Seeding [John Leslie Palmer and Hilary Aidan St George Saunders]. 8vo. Pp. 311. [Amer. Cat.] London [1928] SIXTEEN Irish sermons, in an easy and familiar style. ... By J. G. [James O’Gallagher, Bishop of Raphoe]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Dublin, 1736 SIXTH (the) speed. By E. J. Rath [J. Chauncey Corey Brainerd and Edith Rathbone Brainerd]. 8vo. Pp. v. 236. [Brit. Musi] London, 1917 *SKETCH of a plan for settling in Upper Canada . . . The second edition begins “ Sketches of a plan ... ”, q.v. SKETCH of operations in the Benares Sanskrit College. [By James Robert Ballantyne.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] Mirzapore, 1852 Signed : J. R. B. SKETCH (a) of some parts of the county of Carnarvon. By M. L. L. [M. L. Louis?]. i2mo. Pp. 32. [Brit. Musi] Llanrwst, 1837 SKETCH of the history of Scots Law. [By Professor-Mackay.] 8vo. N.P., N.D. Presentation copy from the author. ^SKETCH (a) of the internal condition of the United States . . . For M. Poletika, read Peter Ivanovich Poletika. [Sabin’s Diet.; Brit. Musi] SKETCH (a) of the life of Linnaeus ; in a series of letters: designed for young persons. [By Miss S. Waring.] i2mo. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends1 Books, ii. 860.] London, 1827 SKETCHES of Newport and its vicinity ; with notices respecting the history, settlement, and geography of Rhode Island. . . . [By Sarah S. Cahoone." i2mo. Pp. 213. [Sabin’s Dictionary. New York, 1842 Issued earlier (1840) as “A visit to grandpa . . .”, q.v. SKETCHES of plans for settling in Upper Canada a portion of the unemployed labourers of Great Britain and Ireland. Second edition. ... By a settler [John William Bannister]. 8vo. [Sabin’s Dictionaryi] London, 1822 The first edition begins “ Sketch of a plan . . q.v. SKETCHES of Society and manners in Portugal ; in a series of letters from Arthur William Costigan to his brother. [By Major James Ferrier?] 8vo. 2vols. London [1787] From an inscribed copy. SKIALETHEIA. . . . [By Edward Guilpin. The introduction signed : J. P. C. i.e. John Payne Collier.] 4to. Pp. 56. [Brit. Musi] London [1870] SKITTLES . . . [A novel. By William Stephens Hayward.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 316. [Brit. Musi] London [1884] SKITTLES in Paris ... [A novel. By William Stephens Hayward.] 8vo. Pp. iv. 311. [Brit. Musi] London [1884] SKYSCRAPER Murder. By A. A. Abbott [Samuel Spewack]. 8vo. Pp. 279. [Amer. Cat.] New York, 1928 SLIP-CARRIAGE (the) mystery. (Colonel Gore’s cases, No. 4.) By Lynn Brock [Alister McAllister]. 8vo. Pp. 304. [Brit. Musi] London [1928] * S M A L L (a) handfull of fragrant flowers . . . Pollard and Redgrave, giving the title as “A smale handfull . . attribute this to Nicholas Breton. In any case Nicholas Baxter would seem to be an error for Nathaniel Baxter. SMILING (the) faces, and other stories. By Brinsley Macnamara [A. E. Weldon]. i6mo. Pp. 163. [Brit. Musi] London, 1929 SMOKE in the flame. [A novel.] By “ Iota ” [Mrs Mannington Cafifyn]. 8vo. Pp. 346. [Brit. Musi] London, 1906 ^SOCIAL life and manners in Australia . . . For Massey, read Mass ary. SOILED (the) dove ; a biography of a fast young lady known as “ The Kitten.” [By William Stephens Hayward.] i2mo. Pp. 316. [Brit. Musi] London, 1865 S O L E M N E (a) joviall disputation, theoreticke and practicke; briefly shadowing the Law of Drinking . . . fully discussed according to the Civill Law. Which . . . Blasius Multibibus [Richard Brathwait] . . . hath publicly expounded. . . . Faithfully rendered according to the originall Latine copie. (The smoaking age ; or, the man in the mist: with the life and death of tobacco.) 8vo. 2 parts. [Brit. Mus.] At the sign of RedEyes: Oenoz’FTHO- polis [London] 1617 *SOLO-WHIST . . . There is another edition which continues “. . . a new edition, revised by his son, Rawdon Crawley, Bart., of Queen’s Crawley, Hants.” [Charles Frederick Pardon]. [Jessel’s Bibl. of playing cards.'] SOME account of General Robert Venables ... By L. P. Townsend. [Edited by J. C. i.e. James Crossley.] 4to. Pp. iv. 28. Manchester, 1871 “ Chetham Miscellany,” vol. 4. *SOME account of the life and writings of the late Rev. Thomas Rennell . . . Signed : J. L. SOME account of the third Provincial Synod of Westminster; with the sermons of. . . the Cardinal President. . . . [Compiled by W. R. G. i.e. W. R. Francis Gawthorn ?] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1859 SOME better thing for us. By A. S. L. [Mrs A. S. Jones]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1905 SOME considerations on the reasonableness and necessity of increasing and encouraging the seamen. . . . [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 51* \_Brit. Mus.] London, 1728 SOME considerations upon pluralities, non-residence, and salaries of curates. [By Dr Sherlock, Bishop of Salisbury.] 8vo. [Lincoln's Inn Lib.] London, 1737 *SOME married fellows. . . . For Fenn, read Venn. SOME memoirs of the life of Dr Nathan Alcock, lately deceased. [By Thomas Alcock, his brother, vicar of Runcorn.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1780 The authorship is clear from internal evidence. SOME observations. I. On the antiquity of the present United Brethren, called Moravians ; II. On some of the extracts of their General Synods ; and III. On the doctrine of the Trinity and Person of Christ. [By William Cud- worth.] 8vo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1751 SOME observations on the Rev. R. Williams’ preface to his Lexicon Cornu- Britannicum. [By Louis Lucien Bonaparte.] 4to. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1865] Signed : L. L. B. SOME portions of essays contributed to The Spectator. By Mr Joseph Addison . . . [Edited by J. D. C. i.e. John David Chambers.] 4to. Pp. 46. [Brit. Mus.] Glasgow, 1864 SOME reasons offered by the late ministry in defence of their administration. [By Daniel Defoe.] 8vo. Pp. 78. [P. Dottin’s Daniel De Foe.] London, 1715 SOME reflections on 1928 conferences, and other matters. [By Edgar London.] 8vo. Pp. 11. Bridport [1928] Signed: E. L. SOME sacramentall instructions ; or, an explanation of the principles of religion. . . . By T. B., B.D. [Thomas Bedford], Pastor of M. O. [Martin Outwich]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1649 SOME short and useful reflections upon duelling, which should be in the hands of every person who is liable to receive a challenge or an offence. By a Christian patriot [Joseph Hamilton, of Dublin]. Second edition. i2mo. [Levi and Gelli’s Bibl. del Duello, p. 179.] Dublin, 1823 SOME thoughts concerning the affairs of this session of parliament, 1700. [By Andrew Fletcher, of Saltoun?] 8vo. Pp. 30. [R. A. Scott Macfie’s Bibl. of Fletcher, p. 25.] [Edinburgh ?] 1700 SOME worthy proverbs left behind by Judith Zins-Penninck . . . Translated ... by ... W. C. [William Caton]. 4to. Pp. 10. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1683 SOMETHINGforeverybody. [Religious addresses.] By Charles Lambert [Lambert Gore]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] Portsmouth [1867] SOMETHING written concerning the world’s creed, or what they teach their children to believe ; for a belief of words cannot save the soul, but a belief in the light, Christ Jesus the word of God ... [By William Smith, of Besthorp.] 4^°* Ep- 8. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1660 SONG (the) of the drains. [By] Libra [William Scales]. 8vo. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] London [1874] SONGS from the glens of Antrim. By Moira O’Neill [Mrs Skrine, nee Nesta Higginson]. 8vo. Pp. x. 61. [S. J. Brown’s Ireland in Fiction.] Edinburgh, 1900 SONGS of a crazy poet. By Stephen Reid Heyman [Lydia Dorothy Parsons]. 8vo. Pp. 108. [Brit. Mus.] Oxford, 1929 SONGS of the red rose. By Alpha [Mrs A. Mackereth]. i6mo. Pp. 27. [Brit. Musi] [Manchester] 1915 SONGS of the sailor men. By T. B. D. [William Milbourne James]. 8vo. Pp. 127. [Brit. Mus.] 1916 SONNETS. By the author of Specimens of sonnets from the most celebrated Italian poets, with tra?islations [Charles Strong]. 8vo. Pp. 42. [Brit. Mus.] Torquay, private print, 1829 SONNETS. [By] Zoeme [Alice Wills]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1927] SONNETS (the) of the Lady of the Garden. By Ethna Kavanagh [Sara Spain]. 8vo. [.Innisfail, a quarterly magazine, No. 1.] London [1920] SOULES (the) immortall crowne consisting of seaven glorious graces. . . . Divided into seaven dayes workes. [By Nicholas Breton.] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1605 Dedication signed : Ber. N., Gent. SOULES (the) life ; exercising it selfe in the sweet fields of divine meditation. Written by R. P. [Richard Portman]. i2mo. Pp. 138, 264. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1645 SOUL’S (the) journey. [A sonnet sequence.] By A. F. Gerald [Aubrey Fitzgerald Bell]. 8vo. Pp. 29. [Brit. Mus.] Watford, 1928 SOUL’S (the) looking-glasse lively representing its estate before God. . . . By . . . William Fenner. [Edited by Edm. C. i.e. Edmund Calamy.] 8vo. Pp. 323. [Bint. Mus.] Cambridge, 1640 SOUVENIR of H. M. S. Victoryj specially designed for the Naval Exhibition, 1891. [By L. de Lautour Wells.] Obi. 8vo. Pp. 9. [Brit. Musi] [London] 1891 Signed : L. de L. W. SOUVENIR (a) of sympathy. Compiled by H. S. [Helen Simpson], Banff. With illustrations. 8vo. Pp. 198. [Brit. Musi] Aberdeen, 1900 SOVEREIGNS (the) of England from the Norman Conquest, in rhyme. By J. B. B. [Sir John Bernard Burke]. 8vo. [O’Donoghue’s Poets of Ireland, p. 16.] Dublin, 1876 SOVIET versus Civilization. By Augur Wladimir Polyakov]. 8vo. Pp. 95. \Amer. Cat.] London, 1927 *SPANISH (the) bawd . . . The original “ Tragicomedia de Calisto y Melibea ” was first published in Seville in 1501, and could not therefore have been by J. Perez de Montalban who lived in the next century. The traditional attributions are to Fernando de Rojas, Rodrigo de Cota, and Juan de Mena. In the first edition, and many subsequent ones, the attribution to Fernando de Rojas is contained in an acrostic, “El bachiller fernando de rojas acabo la comedia de calysto y melybea e fue nascido en la puebla de montavan.” SPARROW (the) and the primrose. By Y. S. N. [Mary Dutton]. i6mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1862] SPECIAL studies of cultivated rubber companies, by the editor of the Rubber Investor [W. G. Tarbet]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1908, et seq. SPECIALL (a) remedie against the furious force of lawlesse loue. [By William Averell.] 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1579 Signed: W. A. SPECIMENS of African languages spoken in the colony of Sierra Leone. [By Mrs Hannah Kilham.] i2mo. 3 parts. [Brit. Musi] 1828 SPECIMENS of translation from Horace and other ancient poets ; with some additional poems. By the author of Poetical epistles, etc. [Robert Morehead, D.D.]. 8vo. Pp. 133. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1814 *SPECULUM ecclesiasticum . . . This is signed : Per T. W. SPECULUM nauticum; a looking- glasse for sea-men : first set forth by John Aspley. The sixth edition . . . by H. P. [H. Phillips] and W. L. [William Leybourn]. 4to. [Brit. Musi] 1662 SPEECH (a) against continuing the army, spoken the 4th of December, 1717. By W— S—, Esq. [William Shippen]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1718 SPEECHES and toasts ; how to make and propose them. . . . By the author of the Letter Writer's handbook [Henry Frith]. 8vo. Pp. 136. [Brit. Musi] London [1883] SPEECHES of M. Dupin Aine at the Bar. [By Abraham Hayward.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] [London, 1834] Signed: H. An extract from the Law Magazine, vol. 9. SPINSTER (the). By Hubert Wales AVilliam Piggott]. 8vo. Pp. 319. Brit. Musi] London, 1912 SPINSTER’S (a) tour in France, the states of Genoa, etc., during the year 1827. [By Elizabeth Frost, later Mrs Byron, then Mrs Strutt.] i2mo. Pp. iv. 427. [Brit. Musi] London, 1828 ^SPIRIT (the) of detraction . . . For William Vaughan, read Sir William Vaughan. SPIRIT (the) of our laws. [By Herman Joseph Cohen.] 8vo. Pp. xi. 299. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1906 SPIRIT rapping and spiritual manifestations. [By William Tarbet.] 8vo. Pp. 11. [Brit. Musi] London [1855 ?] Signed: A member of the Catholic Apostolic Church. SPIRITUAL (the) conflict in five treatises . . . See “ The Christian pilgrim in his spirituall conflict . . .” SPIRITUAL manifestations in the present day. [By William Tarbet.] 8vo. Pp. 12. [Brit. Musi] 1855 SPIRITUALISM a sign and prelude of the coming judgments. [By William Tarbet.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [Brit. Musi] [1862] SPLENDID (a) cousin. By Mrs Andrew Dean [Mrs Cecily Sidgwick]. 8vo. Pp. 201. [Brit. Musi] London, 1892 *SPLENDID sins; a letter addressed to . . . the Duke of Wellington [on the observance of Sunday]. By Latimer Redivivus [John Davies, D.D.]. Second edition. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1820 SQUATTERS at Dabchick Lake ; a Western story. By Emart Kinsburn [Arthur Preston Hankins]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Musi] London [1926] SQUATTER’S treasure. . . . By Emart Kinsburn [Arthur Preston Hankins]. 8vo. Pp. 287. [Brit. Musi] London [1929] STAGE struck . . . Adapted from [James Cobb’s] Love in theEastby W. Dimond. i2mo. Pp. 22. [Brit. Musi] London [1853] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 10. STANLEY Spencer. [A monograph. By R. H. Wilenski.] 4to. Pp. 30. PI. 35. [Brit. Musi] London, 1924 Signed : R. H. W. STANZAS to Queen Victoria and other poems. By Sennoia Rubek [John Burke]. 8vo. Pp. 208. [Sabin’s Dictionary.] New York, 1866 Sennoia Rubek is an anagram for Joannes Burke. STANZAS written by an unfortunate schoolmaster [Samuel Lines]. S. sh. [Brit. Musi] [Woodbridge? 1840?] Signed: S. L. STATE (the) and interest of the nation, with respect to His Royal Highness the Duke of York. [By Sir Roger L’Estrange.] 4to. [Lincoln's Inn Libi] London, 1680 STATE (the) remedy for poverty. By a doctor of medicine, author of The elements of social science [George Drysdale]. . . . Second edition. Pp. 14. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1904 STATEMENT of the constitution of the Belfast Academy ; with an account of the history and present state of the system of education pursued in that seminary. [By Reuben John Bryce.] 8vo. Pp. 30. [Brit. Musi] Belfast, 1829 STATION life in New Zealand. By Lady Barker. [Edited by F. N. B. i.e. Sir Frederick Napier Broome.] 8vo. Pp. xi. 238. [Brit. Musi] London, 1870 STATISTICS of Protestant Missionary Societies, 1872-3. [Compiled by W. B. B. i.e. William Binnington Boyce.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, private print, 1874 STELLA Nash. By Ganpat [Martin Louis Alan Gompertz]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 351. [Brit. Musi] Edinburgh, 1924 STEPPING stones; a book for the young. By the author of Village Missionaries [Emily Steele Elliott]. 8vo. Pp. 193. [Brit. Musi] London, 1862 STONE desert. By Hugo Wast [G. Martinez Zuviria]. Translated . . . by Louis Imbert and Jacques Le Clercq. 8vo. Pp. v. 302. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1928 STONE preachers. By the author of The lamplighter [Francis Bourdillon]. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1869] Signed: F. B. STONEPASTURES. By Eleanor Stuart [Eleanor Stuart Childs]. 8vo. Pp. 178. [Brit. Musi] New York, 1895 “STOPS”; or, how to punctuate . . . By Paul Allardyce [George Paul Mac- donell]. [Amer. Cat.] London, 1884 STORIES for workers. By the author of Cofsley annals [Emily Steele Elliott]. 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1873 *STORIES from Church history . . . For Banbury, read Bunbury. STORM-BOUND. [A novel.] By J. G. Sarasin [Geraldine Gordon Salmon]. 8vo. Pp. 288. [Brit. Musi] London [1930] STORY (the) of Aston-on-Trent Church. [Signed: R. L. F. i.e. Robert Lethbridge Farmer.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] N.P. [1930] STORY (the) of Elize Marcel. By Madame J. de Lambert [Jules Rostaing. Translated from the French]. i6mo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1874 STORY (the) of Florence Nightingale. By W. J. W. [W. J. Wintle]. 8vo. Pp. 157. [Brit. Mus.] London [1928] STORY (the) of Hamlet and Horatio. [By Sir Robert Rice, K.C.M.G.] 8vo. Pp. 722. London, 1924 Information received by Mr John Grant from Lady Rice. STORY (the) of his love ; the journal and early correspondence of A. M. Ampere. . . . Edited by Madame H. C. [Henriette Chevreux]. 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1873 STORY (the) of Orford Castle; told briefly by the Chamberlain of the Orford Town Trust [Richard A. Roberts]. 8vo. Pp. 16. [Brit. Mus.] Ipswich [1930] STORY (the) of our British ancestors. By M. C. [M. Cooke]. i2mo. Pp. 85. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1927 STORY (the) of our days ; an Empire birthday book. [By R. M. Leonard.] i2mo. Pp. 255. [Brit. Musi] London [1915] Preface signed : R. M. L. STORY (the) of the Jubilee singers, with their songs. [Compiled by J. B. T. Marsh.] 8vo. [Brit. Musi] London, 1875 Signed : J. B. T. M. STOWE : the gardens of . . . Richard Lord Viscount Cobham. Addressed to Mr Pope. [A poem. By Gilbert West.] Fol. [Gough’s Bibl. Buckingham, p. 43.] London, 1732 There was an 8vo edition in the same year. It has been wrongly ascribed to George Bickham the younger. STRANGE (a) but true relation how Mr Edmund Curll . . . out of an extraordinary desire of lucre went into Change Alley, and was converted from the Christian religion by certain eminent Jews; and how he was circumcised and initiated into their mysteries. [By Alexander Pope.] London [1717] See the note to “ A full and true account of a horrid . . . revenge by poison . . .” STRANGE (the) case of Mary Page. By Frederick Lewis [Frederick Lewis Collins]. 8vo. Pp. 188. [Brit. Musi] London [1916] STRANGE (a) history; a dramatic tale, in eight chapters. By Slingsby Lawrence [George Henry Lewes] and Charles James Mathews. i2mo. [Brit. Musi] London [1853] Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 10. STRANGE (the) inheritance. By Paul Trent [Edward Platt]. 8vo. Pp. 303. [Brit. Musi] London, 1921 STRANGE (the) little girl; a story for children. By V. M. [Philip Alfred Malpas]. . . . 8vo. Pp. 74. [Brit. Musi] Point Loma [1911] STRANGE (the) search. Told from the French of Eugenie Foa [Eugenie Rebecca Gradis, nee Rodrigues] by Amena Pendleton. . . . 8vo. Pp. 202. [Bibl. Nat. Parisi] Philadelphia [ 1929] STRANGE (the) story of Ahrinziman. By A. F. S. [Anita F. Silvani]. 8vo. Pp. iv. 284. [Brit. Musi] London, 1906 STRANGE tales from the Fleet. By “Etienne” [Stephen King-Hall]. 8vo. Pp. 145. [Brit. Musi] London, 1919 STRENGTH (the) of lovers. By Hugo Wast [G. Martinez Zuviria]. Translated by Louis Imbert and Jacques Le Clercq. 8vo. Pp. 315. [Brit. Musi] London, 1930 ^STRICTURES on the abolition of the slave trade . . . Signed : J. S. STRICTURES on the Friendly address [by Myles Cooper] examined, and a refutation of its principles attempted : addressed to the people of America. [By Thomas Bradbury Chandler.] [Evans5 Amer. Bibl.] 8vo. [New York] 1775 STUDENTS (the); or, biography of Grecian philosophers. By the author of Wars of the Jews, etc. [Christian Isobel Johnstone]. i2mo. Pp. 217. [Brit. Musi] London [1827] STUDIES and translations from the Tamil. By P. A. [P. Arunachalam]. 8vo. Pp. 62. [Brit. Musi] Madras, 1898 STUDY (a) of the prologue and epilogue in English literature, from Shakespeare to Dryden. By G. S. B. [George Spencer Bower]. 8vo. Pp. xi. 187. [Brit. Musi] London, 1884 SUBALTERN’S (a) war; being a memoir of the Great War from the point of view of a romantic young man. . . . By Charles Edmonds [Charles Edmonds Carrington], 8vo. Pp. 224. [Brit. Musi] London, 1929 *SUBPOENA (a) from the high Im- periall Court . . . A writer in T.L.S., 31st July 1930, points out that in the 1623 title an acrostic is formed by the initials of each line which, read upwards, gives John Andrewes ; this being John Andrews, of Trinity College, Oxford. The 1623 title starts: “A sub- paena . . SUBSIDIA primaria. I(-III). Steps to Latin : First (-fourth) course : being a . . . companion book to “ The Public School Latin Primer.” By the editor of the “Primer” [Benjamin H. Kennedy]. i2mo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1868-73 SUGGESTED (a) history course for the elementary school. Standards I.-VII. By E. H. Spalding.] 8vo. Pp. 24. Brit. Mus.] New Cross, 1909 Signed: E. H. S. The second edition, 1915, “Suggestions for a history course . . .”, was by E. H. S. and R. H. S., the latter unidentified. SUGGESTIONS for thought to the searchers after truth among theartizans of England. [By Florence Nightingale.] 8vo. 3 vols. [Brit. Mus.] London, i860 2 T T K P H T I 2 M 0 2 ; or, dissatisfaction satisfied: in seventeen sober and serious queries tending to allay the discontents of persons dis-satisfiedabout the late revolution of government. . . . Proposed by J. G. [John Goodwin]. 4to. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1654 SUMMARY (a) of the arguments for the new grammatical arrangement of the Latin verb. . . . [By W. Belcher.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] Canterbury, 1817 *SUMMUS Angliae Seneschallus . . . According to the D.N.B. (vol. 7, p. 160) the author was John Brydall, and in the Brydall Collection in Lincoln’s Inn Library there is a copy to which Brydall has put his name as author. SUNDAY (a) evening’s conversation at Benwell ; or, a pastoral between Cory- don and Thyrsis ; occasioned by a book [by Q. Z. i.e. Cuthbert Ellison] lately published intituled “A Sunday’s trip to Benwell: by a lover of the clergy [-Thirkeld, Curate of Whicham]. Fol. Pp. x. [Brit. Mus.] Newcastle upon Tyne, 1726 SUNLIGHT through shadows. By F. M. S. With a preface by the author of English hearts and English hands [signed C. M. i.e. Miss C. M. Marsh], 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] 1877 ^SUNLIGHT through the mist . . . For Mrs-Burrows, read Mrs E. Burrows. SUPPLICATIONS and prayers for the coming again of the Lord Jesus Christ as the only deliverer. [By W. F. Pitcairn.] i6mo. Pp. 14- [Brit. Mus.] Edinburgh [1875 ?] SUPPLY (a) to a draught of an act or system proposed by the Committee for regulations concerning the law . . . To which is added a short treatise of tithes . . . Published by divers officers and souldiers of the Commonwealth . . . being the second part of their antidote. [By Edward Leach ? ] 4to. [Brit. Mus.] [London] 1653 Subscribed: E. L. T. P. H. W. S. G., etc. SURRENDER (the) of Calais; an historical drama. [By George Colman the younger.] 8vo. [Brit. Mus.] York, 1801 SURSUM corda ; a defence of idealism. [By Edmond Gore Alexander Holmes.] 8vo. Pp. vi. 212. [Brit. Musi] 1898 SURVEY (the) of London . . . Begunne first by . . . John Stowe . . . finished by ... H. D. [Henry Dyson] and others. ... Fol. [Brit. Musi] London, 1633 SWEDEN’S rights and her present Dolitical position. By Anders Svenske Anna Wallenberg]. 8vo. Pp. 118. Pettersen’s Norsk Lexiko?ii] London, 1907 SWISS (the) peasant. By J. Rickie. [Translated by J. Y. i.e. John Yardley?] i2mo. [Brit. Musi] 1856 SYMPHONIES. [In verse.] By E. H. W. M. [E. H. W. Meyerstein]. 8vo. Pp. 79. [Brit. Musi] Oxford, 1915 *TALES of the dead . . . Mrs Utterson was only the translator of this volume. The original was entitled “ Fantasmagoriana, ou recueil d’histoires d’apparitions. . . . Traduit de l’Allemand par un amateur.” This was also anonymous. The compiler was J. B. B. Eyries. [Barbier.] TEACHINGS (the) of Freemasonry. By “Essex Master” [George Edward Roebuck]. 8vo. Pp. 175. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1928 Signed : G. E. R. Acknowledgment by the author. TESTIMONY (a) of antiquity ; shewing the ancient faith of the Church of England, touching the sacrament of the body and blood of the Lord, here publickly preached, and also received in the Saxons time, above seven hundred years ago. [By William Lisle.] 8vo. [Camb. Univ. Lib.] Oxford, 1675 An extract from Lisle’s edition (1623) of Aelfric’s Saxon Treatise. TEXTS (the) examined which Papists cite out of the Bible for the proof of their doctrine of auricular confession. [By Thomas Lynford.] [MlAlfin Coll. Cat.] London, 1688 The author is named in the table of contents. *TEXTS which Papists cite . . . The author, Edward Fowler, is named in the table- of contents. THAT all might see who they were that had a command, and did pay tythes, and who they were that had a law to receive them: and also them that witnessed in spirit and life the law fulfilled, the substance and end of the law, and that priesthood that took tythes . . . [By] G. F. [George Fox]. [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, i. 653.] London, 1657 THREE (the) Kerry pearls. [By Annie Maclnlay-Jamieson.] 8vo. Kingston, Jamaica, N.D. From an inscribed copy. TREATISE of prayer ; two quaeries resolved touching formes of prayer, and six quaeries relating specially to the Lord’s Prayer. [By Hezekiah Woodward.] London, 1656 See the note at the end of his Law-Power, 1656. TREATISE of the confession of sinne, and chiefly as it is made unto the priests and ministers of the Gospel: together with the power of the keys, and of absolution. [By Thomas Ailes- bury.] [D. N. B. vol. 2, p. 278.] London, 1657 TRIUMPHS (the) of steam ; or stories from the lives of Watt, Arkwright and Stephenson. By the author of Might not right, etc. [Mrs E. Burrows]. 8vo. Pp. 263. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1859 *TRUE (a) and impartial narrative of the most material debates . . . The D. N. B. supports the attribution to Bethel. Dr Charles A. Briggs ascribes it to James Harrington [MAlpin Coll. Cat.] TRUE (the) chronicle historie of the whole life and death of Thomas Lord Cromwell . . . written by W. S. 4to. London, 1613 To Wentworth Smith have been unwarrantably ascribed the three plays “ Locrine,” “The Puritan” and “Cromwell.” . . . There is no clue to the authorship. [D.N.B. vol. 53, p. 138.] TRUE (the) news of the good new world shortly to come [Heb. 2, 5] for all such as then shall be found real saints. . . . [By William Sherwin.’ [Brit. Mus.\ N.P. [1675 ?' TWO (the) Americas ; Great Britain and the Holy Alliance. [By William Duane.] Second edition. 8vo. Pp. 40. [Brit. Mus.] Washington, 1824 Signed : W. D. TWO points of great moment, the obligation of humane laws, and the authority of the magistrate about religion discussed ; together with the case which gave occasion to the first point. In opposition to the two authors of the Friendly debate, and of the preface to a late book of Bishop Bramhalls. By J. H. [John Humfrey]. [D. N. B. vol. 28, p. 236.] 1672 The “Obligation of Human laws discussed” appeared separately in the previous year. TWO treatises and an appendix to them concerning infant-baptisme. . . . [By John Tombes.] 8vo. London, Dec. 15, 1646 This is the second edition. The previous impression, dated December 15, 1645, is identical but bears the author’s name. UNTO the questions sent me last night I pray accept of the ensuing answer, under the title of two questions concerning the power of the supream magistrate about religion, and the worship of God: with one about tythes proposed and resolved. [By John Owen.] 4to. Pp. 8. \MlAlpin Coll. Cat.] London, 1659 No title-page. Signed : J. O. UPON the late storm and death of the Protector ensuing the same. [By Edmund Waller.] [D. N. B. vol. 59, p. 127.] London, 1659 VAGABOND’S (a) wallet. By Stephen Reid H eyman [Lydia Dorothy Parsons]. 8vo. Pp. 76. [Brit. Musi] London, 1916 *V A N I T Y (the) of humane inventions . . . This was by the author of Nehushtan, traditionally J ohn Wilson, but more probably Joseph Wilson of Beverley, in Yorkshire. See the note to Nehushtan. VERONIQUE ; a comic opera in three acts. By A. Vanloo and G. Duval. Translated by Lilian Eldee [Mrs Lilian Bertha Duncombe]. 8vo. Pp. 53. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1903 VERSES from the Grand Fleet. By Etienne [Stephen King-Hall]. 8vo. Pp. 45. [Brit. Mies.] London, 1917 One of the Malory Booklets. VERY (a) heroical epistle from my Lord All-Pride to Dol-Common, etc. (Epigram upon my Lord All-Pride). [Satirical verses on the Duke of Buckingham. By Sir Carr Scrope ?] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mies.] [London]1679 VIKING (the) and other poems. By Hugh M‘Nab [Hugh M‘Nab Humphry, barrister]. 8vo. Pp. vi. 115. London, 1906 From an inscribed copy. VINDICATION of that prudent and honourable knight, Sir Henry Vane, from the lyes and calumnies of Mr Richard Baxter, minister of Kidderminster. In a monitory letter to the said Mr Baxter. By a true friend and servant of the Commonwealth of England . . . [Henry Stubbe]. 8vo. [D. N. B. vol. 55, p. 117-] London, 1659 VINDICATION of the Unitarians against a late Reverend author on the Trinity; in a letter: second edition corrected and enlarged. [By William Freke.] [M‘Lachlan’s Nonconf. Lib., p. 64.] London, 1690 VINDICIZE Ecclesise Anglicanas ; or, a Justification of the religion now professed in England. ... By W. T. [Walter Travers]. 4to. [Pollard and Redgrave]. London, 1630 VINDICICE vindiciarum ; or, a further manifestation of M. J. C., his contradictions instanced in Vindiciae clavium. Part 2. By D. C. [Daniel Cawdrey]. 4to. [M^ Alp in Coll. Cat.] London, 1651 The author’s name was on the title-page of Part I. VISION (a) of immortality. By Stephen Reid Heyman [Lydia DorothyParsons]. 8vo. Pp. 77. [Brit. Mies.] Oxford, 1917 VOICE (the) of liberty; or a British Philippic. A poem in Miltonic verse. [Subscribed Britannicus, i.e. Mark Akenside.] Fol. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1738 For another edition in the same year, see “ A British Philippic ...” VOX clamantis ; or an essay for the honour, happiness and prosperity of the English gentry, and the whole nation ; in the promoting religion and vertue, and the peace both of Church and State. By P. A., Gent. [Philip Ayres]. 8vo. Pp. no. [D. N. B. vol. 2, p. 292.] London, 1684 WALTER Graham, statesman; an American romance. By an American Thomas Whitson], 8vo. Pp. 602. Appleton’s Diet, of Amer. Biogi\ Lancaster, Pa., 1891 WAR (the) in the Peninsula. A continuation of the “Recollections of an eventful life,” etc. [By Joseph Donaldson, sergeant in the ninety- fourth Scots Brigade.] 8vo. Glasgow, 1825 The second of a series of three works, “ Recollections, etc.,” “ The war in the Peninsula,” and “ Scenes and sketches of a soldier’s life in Ireland,” which were later (1856) republished in one volume as “ Recollections of the eventful life of a soldier ” and bearing the author’s name. WARS (the) of the Jews [of Josephus] . . . Adapted to young persons . . . [by Christina Jane Johnstone]. i2mo. \Brit. Musi] London, 1832 Preface signed : Aunt Jane. WAY (the) to the peace and settlement of these nations, fully discovered in two letters, delivered to his late Highness the Lord Protector, and one to the present Parliament, wherein the liberty of speaking (which every one desires for himself) is opposed against Antichrist. ... By Peter Cornelius, van Zurick-Zee [Hugh Peters]. 4to. Pp. 30. [D. N. B. vol. 45? P* 77-] London [1659] WEEK’S (a) entertainment at a wedding; containing six surprising and diverting adventures. . . . Written in Spanish by the author of Don Quixot, and now first translated into English. 8vo. Pp. xii. 232. 1710 This is a reissue with a different title-page only of “ The diverting works of the famous Miguel de Cervantes ” (1709) q.v. It is not the work of Cervantes but is a translation by Edward Ward of the “Para todos” of Juan Perez de Montalban. WEEPERS (the); or the bed of snakes broken; wit vitiated and made a pander to wickednesse ; instanced in a pack of knaves. ... By S. S. [Samuel Sheppard]. \D.N.B. vol. 52, p. 63.] London, 1652 WEIRD (the) of the wanderer; being the papyrus records of some incidents in one of the previous lives of Mr Nicholas Crabbe. Here produced by Prospero and Caliban [Frederick William Rolfe]. 8vo. Pp. xxii. 298. [Brit. Musi] London, 1912 WEST (the) of Scotland Arch-Voluntary; or the Rev. Andrew Marshall . . . called to account for his mendacious, dishonest and impertinent lucubrations in the 24th number of the United Secession Magazine. By Anglo-Scotus John Lockhart?]. 8vo. Pp. 26. Brit. Musi] Newcastle, 1835 WHAT saith the Scripture ; an exposition of Bible prophecies, concerning the Covenant people, the latter days, and the second advent. By Discipulus [Basil Stewart]. 8vo. Pp. xv. 287. [Brit. Musi] London, 1922 WHERE freedom falters. By the author of The Pomp of Power [Laurance Lyon]. 8vo. Pp. xxiii. 355. [Brit. Musi] London, 1927 The authorship is, however, disclosed on p. xix. WHERE is the wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the disputer of this world? Hath not God made foolish the wisdome of this world? 1 Cor. i. 20. [By Isaac Pennington.] [Smith’s Cat. of Friends' Books, ii. 342.] 1660 Signed : I. P. No title-page. WHITE (the) blackbird. By Hudson Douglas [Robert Aitken]. 8vo. Pp. viii. 366. [Brit. Musi] Boston, 1912 WHO told you that? The story-teller’s vademecum. Compiled by Quex, of the Evening News [George Herbert Fosdike Nichols]. i6mo. 2 parts. [Brit. Musi] London, 1921, 22 “WHOOPS, Dearie!” By Peter Arno [Curtis Arno Peters]. Pp. 176. [Sat. Review of Lit., 21st May 1927.] New York, 1927 WINCHESTER College Hall windows ; a note by H. C. [Herbert Chitty] and R. G. [Reginald Morier Yorke Gleadowe]. 8vo. Pp. 6, pi. 4. [Brit. Musi] Winchester, 1931 WINCHESTER College notions. By three Beetleites (W. H. L[awson], J. F. R. H[ope], A. H. S. C[ripps]). 8vo. Pp. viii. 161. [Brit. Musi] Winchester, 1901 WISDOME crying out to sinners to returne from their evill wayes. . . . Now published for the generall good. By William Milbourne.] 8vo. Pp. 319. Pollard and Redgrave.] London, 1639 An edition of the previous year, entitled “ Sapientia clamitans : wisdom calling out to sinners ... ”, bears the author’s name. WISDOM’S better than money ; or the whole art of knowledge, and the art to know men ; in four hundred sententious essays, political and moral. Written by a late person of quality [Francis Quarles]. i2mo. Pp. 286. \Brit. Mus.] London, 1698 This is an edition of Quarles’ “Enchiridion” with an altered title. See also “ Institutions, essays and maxims. . . .” WIT and fancy in a maze ; or the incomparable champion of love and beautie ; a mock romance . . . written originally in the British tongue and now made English [or rather written] by a person of much honor [Samuel Holland]. 8vo. Pp. 211. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1656 Another edition in the same year bears the title “Don Zara del Fogo ... ”, and a later edition (1719), “ The Spaniards ; or Don Zara del Fogo. . . .” An edition of 1660 with the title “ Romancio-Mastix ” bears Holland’s name. WITH the R.A.M.C. in Egypt. By “ Sergeant-Major, R.A.M.C.” [Edward Tickner Edwardes]. 8vo. Pp. 315. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1918 WOE (the) of scandal; or, scandal in its general nature and effects ; discours’d, as one strongest argument against impositions in religious things acknowledged to be indifferent. [By Thomas Beverley.] [M‘Alfin Coll. Cat.\ London, 1682 Included in his “ Principles of Protestant Truth and Peace” (1683), with separate register and pagination. WORD (a) in season ; or, motives to peace, accomodation, and unity, ’twixt Presbyterian and Independent Brethren. Drawn from necessity of duty, necessity of expediency, and from the possibility of atchieving. [By William Walwyn.] 8vo. Pp. 8. [D.N.B. vol. 59, p. 285.] London, 1646 YARN (the) of a Yankee privateer. [By Benjamin Frederick Browne]. Edited by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Introduction by Clifford Smyth. 8vo. Pp. 308. [New York Times Book Review, 20th March 1927.] New York, 1926 Originally published serially in the Democratic Review as “ Papers of an old Dartmoor prisoner.” YELLOW (the) book ; or a serious letter [signed W. B. i.e. William Blake, Housekeeper to the Ladies Charity School, Highgate], sent by a private Christian to the Lady Consideration 1st May 1656, which she is desired to communicate in Hide Park to the gallants of the time. . . . 4to. Pp. 21. [Brit. Mus.\ London, 1656 For an earlier edition (1655) with variant title see “A serious letter . . .” See also “The trial of the ladies . . .” and “A new trial of the ladies . . .” YES and No. [By Sir Henry Rich.] 8vo. Pp. 13. [Brit. Mus.\ London,1852 YOUNG (a) autocrat. By Cecil Adair [Evelyn Everett-Green]. 8vo. Pp. 220. London, 1923 YOUNG Jemmy; or the princely Shepherd [i.e. James Fitzroy, Duke of Monmouth]. Being a most pleasant new song. [By Mrs Aphra Behn.] Fol. S. sh. B. L. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1683?] YOUNG (a) traveller’s Journal of a tour in North and South America during the year 1850. With numerous illustrations by the authoress. [By Victoria Stuart Wortley, afterwards Lady Welby-Gregory.] Pp. xi. 260. [Brit. Mus.] London, 1852 The illustrations are signed: V. S. W. YOUR luck’s in your hand. [A palmistry chart. By Eurica Twiss.] Fol. S. sh. [Brit. Mus.] [London, 1917] YOUTH (the) of Jefferson; or, a chronicle of College scrapesat Williamsburg in Virginia, A.D. 1764. [By John Esten Cooke.] i2mo. Pp. 249. [Wegelin’s Bibl. of J. E. Cooke.] New York, 1854 PRINTED BY OLIVER AND BOYD LTD. EDINBURGH