CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME OF THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND GIVEN IN 1891 BY HENRY WILLIAMS SAGE Cornell University Library Z997 .F73 + Forster collection. A catalogue of the p 3 1924 029 547 100 olin Overs 997 T73 Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029547100 FORSTER COLLECTION. PRINTED BOOKS. SCIENCE AND ART DEPARTMENT OF THE COMMITTEE OF COUNCIL ON EDUCATION,. SOUTH KENSINGTON MUSEUM. FORSTER COLLECTION. A CATALOGUE PRINTED BOOKS BBQUEATHBD BY JOHN FORSTER, ESQ., LL.l). WITH INDEX. LONDON: PRINTED BY BYKE AND S PO TTIS WOO DE, PBINTERS TO THE QUEBN's MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTT. FOB HER MAJESTY'S STATIONBET OFFICE, AND SOLD AT THE SOUTH KENSINGTON MUSEUM . 1888. Price Nine Shillings 12 6 CONTENTS. Page Note --.... vi John Foestee. By Rev. TV. Elwin - vii Catalogue - - - i Index to Catalogue . . - . 547 Errata in Catalogue - - - 710 VI NOTE. This Catalogue describes the printed books (over 18,000 volumes), part of the collection bequeathed to the Department of Science and Art by John Forster Esq., LL.D. Another volume, containing a catalogue of the remainder of the bequest — manuscripts and autograph letters, paintings and other works of art, and modern pamphlets — will appear here- after. Mr. Forster died in 1876, and Mrs. Forster having generously- signified her intention not to avail herself of the power of reservation given to her by her husband's will, the bequest came into the possession of the South Kensington Museum in 1876-7. In the Handbook of the Byce and Forster Collections will be found a popular sketch of both bequests, with descriptions of many of the most remarkable pictures, prints, books, manu- scripts, &e., illustrated by engravings and fac-similes. JOHN FORSTER. In the midst of his many services to literature Professor Henry Morley, in compliance with the request of the authorities of the South Kensington Museum, contributed to the HandbooJc of the Dyce and Forster Collections an excellent summary of Mr. Forster's Life, which, like the sketch of Mr. Dyce's Life by Mr. Forster, was intended for those who desired to learn something beyond general notoriety of the benefactor to whom they owed the bequest. It would be idle to recapitulate facts which are accessible to everyone, but, following the thread of Professor' Morley's narrative, it may not be out of place to prefix to the Catalogue of the Forster Library a brief supplementary account of the formation of its founder's literary tastes, of the habits of his literary life, and of particular traits in his character which may further assist the readers of the books to frame a just conception of the remarkable person who collected them. Forster was born at Newcastle, April 2, 1812, His father was a butcher, as was the father of another Newcastle cele- brity, Akenside, the poet. The town was fortunate in the possession of an admirable Grammar School, and there Forster was educated when the Kev. Edward Moises was head master, and rose to be its foremost scholar. " Mr. Moises," says Alderman Harle, " was very proud of Forster. I remember " in the summer of 1826 as a small boy visiting Mr. Moises " at his house in Jesmond Bank. His whole conversation " turned that summer night, as he sat in his garden, on the " merits of the youth Forster, and the witty speeches of Mr. " Wentworth Beaumont during the long election at Alnwick." Forster was then little more than fourteen. In the ordinary course of things his family, not wealthy, and engaged in trade, would doubtless have chosen for him some mercantile or other local calling, but his singular proficiency in school learning induced his uncle, a bachelor, who had realised an independence, and o 16505. -^ Vm JOHN rORSTER. afterwards met witli reverses, to send him to Cambridge, where he had only to continue building on the supeinor foundation he had alread}' laid in Latin, Greek, and Mathematics, to be secure of scholarships first, and of a fellowship afterv/ards. His re- ceipts from college and university endowments would soon have covered his expenses. But it happened to him, as to most other men who have been distinguished in letters, that contempo- raneously with his school education, he was carrying on an education of his own that had greater attractions for him. While yet a boy at Newcastle he was, says Alderman Harle, " an in- " tense student of Byron and Scott, an enthusiastic antiquary, " and collector of ballad poetry, and was always seen with " a book under his arm." He followed in the usual track of literary aspirants, and endeavoured to imitate what he admired. On May 2, 1828, when he was just turned sixteen, there was performed at the Newcastle Theatre a play of his composition called Charles at Tunbridge ; or, the Cavalier of Wildinghurst. In this piece, which was crude in construc- tion, and could not be otherwise, the influence of the historical part of Scott's novels is manifest throughout, and its merit is what befitted Forster's precocious youth, an assimilation of some of the salient qualities of his model. A little later, October ] 828, he went to Cambridge, being in the middle of his seventeenth year, which was an earlier age than was customary in recent times. But though only not a boy he was there his own master, and free to choose between ancient and modern learning. University competition allows small latitude for divided studies, nor did it suit Forster's ardent temperament, unless under compulsion, to diverge largely from his ruling passion. He quickly made his decision, withdrew from Cambridge the same year he entered, and took up his residence in London. The respective pursuits of Dyce and Forster, old and intimate friends, are well represented by their libraries, which have appro- priately met together in the South Kensington Museum. The choicest books in the collection of Dyce belong to the departments of classic and dramatic literature. He had con- tracted in his boyhood a passion for the theatre. The pro- pensity in his manhood chiefly resolved itself into an leaborate study of the dramatists of the Elizabethan era, and he spent years over the text of those he re-edited. The classics of his youth were not less dear to him. The Latin and Greek JOHN FORSTER. IX he had acquired at the Bigh School in Edinburgh he extended at Oxford ; and to the end of his days he enjoyed the com- panionship of scholars by profession, and remained a delighted reader of ancient authors in their original language. This pri- vilege of following his tastes unrestricted he owed to the posses- sion of an income sufficient for his modest style of living, and which was consequently in its effects equivalent to a fortune. It was a felicity denied to Forster. His uncle's help was not an inheritance, and he was dependent for his future on his pro- fession. With leisure he would probably have reverted at times to the studies in which he had excelled under Moises. But he was compelled by the exigencies of the hour to drop them on leaving Cambridge, and never again had an opportunity to renew them. Forster did not at the outset adopt literature for a calling, which would have appeared to his family too precarious a career for a youth not eighteen. The splendid prizes of the bar, with its attendant oratory, were allurements sufficient to extin juish any bitter regret for the partial abandonment of his literary predilections. He immediately entered the Inner Temple, No- vember 1828, and attended the law lectures of Professor Amos at the London University. In 1830 he took a more decided step and became a pupil in the chambers of Mr. Thomas Chitty, a distinguished special pleader, in whose family that legal emi- nence was hereditary which has been perpetuated, with added lustre,' in the person of his son, Mr. Justice Chitty. Mr. Chitty was accustomed to say to parents who brought pupils to him, " It is useless for them to come to me unless they can eat a peck " of saw-dust every day." Those who judged from appearances would naturally infer that Forster relinquished law for litera- ture because he could not bring himself to eat the daily peck of saw-dust. This was not the case. He not only applied liim- self in real earnest to the task, but displayed a native aptitude for grasping the principles, the precision, and nice distinctions of law. He promised equal excellence in the rhetorical part of his profession. He belonged to a debating society, in common with his friend Whiteside, a fellow-pupil with him at the London University, and afterwards Chief Justice of the Irish Queen's Bench, and Alderman Harle states that Forster " was considered " the better declaimer of the two." In one particular — the zeal with which he would have espoused the interests of his client — he would not have been surpassed by any advocate A 2 X JOHN FORSTER. alive or dead. His master was of opinion that he had a brilliant chance before him, and in vain endeavoured to dissuade him from abandoning the prospect. The multiform details and intricacies of law can only be kept fresh by constant practice. Never- theless, some of the fruits of his short apprenticeship stayed by Forster, and twenty years after he had thrown up the study, Chief Baron Pollock in a discussion at dinner, on a legal topic of the hour, was surprised that he should still be so learned in the law. "Ah," he said, " what a pity you did not follow it." He gave it up because literature had again acquired the as- cendant. In a measure he had continued to keep his pen in exercise. Shortly after his arrival in London from Cambridge he sent, November 182S, a paper, entitled Remarks on two of the Annuals, to the Newcastle Magazine, where it appeared in January 1829. A magazine was set up by the members of the newly established London University, and he' was a frequent contributor to this and various other short-lived publications, of which the contents would have died if the journals had not. All th€se efforts of his immature time are only worth noticing now for the evidence they afford of his literary bias, and for the influence they exercised on his ultimate choice, since his linger- ings on the outskirts of the forbidden land had their share in enticing him back to it. But the circumstance which, more than any other, contributed to this result was his intimacy with Leigh Hunt, whose acquaintance he had made in 1829. " He " was the first man of letters," he said, " I ever knew worthy " to be so called." He was the first, and in the direction he gave to Forster's mind the most potent. " I was only seven- " teen," Forster wrote in his Life of Dickens, " when I derived " from him the tastes which have been the solace of all subse- " quent years." This might seem inconsistent with Forster's passion for reading at school, with his boyish attempts at authorship, and with the literary ambition which had never deserted him up to the day that brought him and Hunt together. The contradiction was only apparent. With riper knowledge he counted his juvenile predilections for nothing, because he had not yet attained to the deeper insight which alone he valued later. In his school days he had no one to direct his English studies. He devoured the popular authors of the period, Scott and Byron, whose works were- mainly of a romantic cast, and of the kind which appeal to uncultured as well as to recondite percep- JOHN FORSTEB. XI tions. Charmed by obvious qualities, he could not enter into nicer beauties, nor form a critical estimate of merits and faults. The older classics of our language were either sealed books to him, or appeared tame in comparison with the briUiant contemporary productions. At this stage o£ his progress he could scarce have lighted on a more opportune guide than Hunt, who was steeped in the older literature, poetic literature especially, and had an acute sense, which was far in advance of his other gifts, for delicacies of thought and expression. He conducted Forster by his habitual talk and vein of sentiment into this new world, familiarised him with its refinements, and taught him to relish subtle graces, and inner deep-seated power more than outward, and sometimes llaunty effects. It was to this that Forster referred when he said that he had " derived his tastes from him," and which he expressed more definitely when he wrote at Leigh Hunt's death in 1859, "he influenced all my modes of literary thought at the " outset of my life." The manner in which Hunt manifested his feeling for the excellencies his keen sensibility discriminated had much to do with the change he helped to bring about in Forster's resolve. Literature was to Hunt enchanted ground, and he spoke of it with a glowing air as of a possession which beatified existence. " There was surely never a man of so sunny a nature," says Forster in his Life of Bichens, "who could draw so much " pleasure from common things, or to whom books were a " world so real, so exhaustless, so delightful." It was not by direct advice, but by the view he laid open of treasures hitherto unsuspected, and of the ennobling pleasure to be derived from them, that he quickened into renewed and larger life the pre- vious germs in Forster's mind. " Very probably Leigh Hunt " led me," he wrote in 1869, " at least confirmed me in adopting " literature as a profession, and but for him I might have been " a popular leader on a circuit, with all its present and pro- " spective rewards. It is better as it is ; at least I am content " as it is." This was the measured language he always used in speaking of the calKng he rejected. The preference he gave to literature did not diminish his respect for legal learning, for astuteness of thought, for forensic skill, and above all for the moral dignity of the bench. There are few undertakings from which men would not shrink if they could foresee at the outset the toU and cares they in- volve. Not many things are more dissimilar than to luxuriate XU JOHN FORSTEH. in the fruits of a glorious literature, lingering over them at ease, and to be a writer by profession, producing daily, without choice of time or subject, matter for others to read. No one had a larger share of imposed tasks than f orster, or had to work his way into notice while weighted with a heavier load of cumbrous employments. His first regular service was narrow in its range, but not uncongenial to him. His school-boy love of plays had not abated, and in 1832 he became dramatic critic to a newly- started liberal newspaper, the True Sun. The frequent atten- dance at theatres did not surfeit him, and when the acting was indifferent, or the piece dull, he would often only leave one house to go to another. His connexion with the stage had an increased interest for him when two of his greatest friends,.. Macready, the foremost actor of his generation, and Sir Edward Lytton, the foremost dramatic author, combined their powers. He had done not a little by his criticism to advance the reputa- tion of Macready, and his familiarity with stage effects rendered him an admirable adviser to Sir Edward Lytton, whose plays he usually read several times over in manuscript, and watched the rehearsals of them, on behalf of their author, at their first bringing out. The delight in theatricals, so exuberant in youth, generally wanes with years. What once appeared to us an- embellished form of reality turns, on longer acquaintance, to a flimsy counterfeit, and it is only rare and signal merit that has any attraction for us then. Thus it happened with Forster. The noted actors of his youth died or retired ; their successors had not for him the same tragic force, or comic piquancy ; his time and thoughts were monopolised by graver occupations, and years before he severed his connexion with newspapers, he had laid aside dramatic criticism, and seldom even went to the play for amusement. Nor did his recollections of the past retain much hold upon him. He rarely reverted in conversation to the theatre of his prime, but when he did it was to dwell with emphatic gusto upon its superiority to the theatre of his later days. When once he was fairly embarked in professional author- ship his engagements rapidly multiplied, and he furnished articles on politics and literature to various newspapers and magazines In 1833 he joined the staff of the Examiner, and for nearly a quarter of a century he was the principal reviewer of books in that influential journal. The spirit he had caught up from Leigh Hunt showed itself now in his sympathy with literature JOHN I'ORSTEB. XUl in all its kinds, in no less sure an appreciation of latent beauties than of popular merits, and in the genuine heartiness of his praise. Alderman Harle has noticed the incongruity between his boyish years, and the tone of authority he assumed in his paper on the two Annuals in 1828. But he was oracular from this very cause, that he was only a lad in his teens. Before youth has learnt enough to know its own ignorance, self-im- ])ortant dogmatism is its favourite idea of the critical office. Forster soon outgrew this juvenile foible. He had barely reached manhood when nothing was more conspicuous in his notices of books than the leanings of justice to the side of generosity. During his long reviewing period he had often to criticise the early productions of writers afterwards celebrated ; and it may be doubted whether he overlooked in a single in- stance the first faint dawn of coming power. However admirable for their purpose, all these productions were in their nature ephemeral. The mass of newspaper com- ments are the judgments of men who keep abreast with a mov- ing world, and deal with it under its passing aspects — comments too limited in their view, and at once too fragmentary, and too bulky for after reading. Not that remarks are wanting worthy both in form and substance to be preserved, but tliey are buried in piles of obsolete matter, never to be disinterred. Forster did not on that account slur over writings which he was aware must almost perish in their birth. Painstaking labour, per- petually renewed, and that yields no distinction to the doer of it is the common lot of man, and his mental constitution has been formed in accordance with his condition. In spite of strong ambition Forster conformed to this healthy appointment. He called upon his mind for its best thoughts, and did not weary of the endeavour to clothe them in the aptest language he could command. And this he would have done from his satisfaction in finished workmanship, and his disgust of bad, apart from his knowledge that if the ablest articles ceased to be read nearly as soon as the feeblest there was a boundless difference in their effect on the public, and on the reputation of the journal in which they appeared. Still, in taking to literature, Forster had no intention of writing solely for oblivion. His master hope was that contem- poraneously with his fleeting labours he might build up a durable memorial in spite of difficulties whicih would have baffled energies less strenuous than his own. The amount of XIV JOHM FORSTER. reading which his book-reviewing involved consumed more of his time than the composition of his articles. His theatrical criticisms broke in upon his evening hours, which were con- stantly spent at the play. These regular engagements did not yield him a sufficient income, and he had to swell his earnings by miscellaneous essays. His lighter employments were nu- merous and unceasing. He read manuscripts for the many acquaintances and friends who already confided in the sound- ness of his judgment. His blended talent and cordiality had drawn around him a large circle of intimates, and as the claims of the heart always preponderated with him over rival interests, no stress of work could induce him to forego the charms of good fellowship. He had a big correspondence, and methodical in everything, he was punctilious not to leave letters unanswered, nor to delay his replies. With all these obstructions to engag- ing in works of a higher reach it was an obstacle the more that his inclination was for political and literary biographies which required elaborate research. His mode of reconciling the con- trarieties that beset him was to cast aside his journalistic duties from Saturday morning to' Tuesday, and devote the interval to productions of greater pith. The process to most men would have been disheartening or impossible, when having hax-dly warmed to their labour of love, the recurrent tasks were back upon them, and they had to avert the mind from its favourite channel and return to the drudgery of the day. But Forster was perfect in this species of self-control. He would go to his writing at any odd moment, and concentrate his whole atten- tion upon it, undisturbed by the distractions which had imme- diately preceded and were presently to follow. This power of living exclusively in the actual moment attended him in his diversions as in his industries. He did not, when busiest, bring a pre-occupied air into his social intercourse, but gave himself up without reserve to the pleasantries and gravities which were born of the occasion. His first extensive work was his Lives of the Statesmen of the Commonwealth, in five volumes, which appeared in Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopedia, the opening volume in 1834, the concluding volume in 1839. Forster, early and late, was an ardent liberal. The stimulus given by the Reform Bill of 1831 to many of the principles maintained by the popular leaders in the struo-cle which culminated in the dethronement of Charles I., and the exaltation of Cromwell, caused the subject at this period to be JOHN F0E8TEB. XV peculiarly attractive to him. He set about it in his wonted fashion. He could not command the leisure to pass his days in the British Museum, and intending that his work should be, as far as possible, exhaustive, he endeavoured to gather the ma- terials for it into his study ; bought every book -relating to it which came in his way to the extent of his means ; and borrow- ing others, employed an amanuensis to copy what he needed from them. A considerable portion of the ground was un- trodden, and the biographies, with their mass of new informa- tion, helped to fill up a serious blank, and were received with much favour. The exploi'er in history advances knowledge, but never gets to the end of it. The next comer starts where his predecessor halted, and leaves him behind. When a quarter of a century had elapsed, Forster desired to renew his investigations ; to avail himself of the facts brought to light by succeeding inquirers ; and to render his work the standing authority for the lives of the statesmen he began his career, as a writer of books, by commemorating. His Sir John Eliot, a Biography, which he published in 1864, was the commencement of the series. The life in the Cabinet Cyclopsedia filled 177 pages, and in its renovated shape, with a larger page, it covered 1343. The plan was too vast for his remnants of time ; he stopped with Eliot, and the rest of the Lives were not recast. He had the lust of completion, and it was a signal merit, but merits uncontrolled run into excess, and the scale on which he worked had here the twofold disadvantage, that the undertaking became too gigantic for him to execute, and if executed, would have been too voluminous for either a busy or a frivolous world to read. The Eliot he designed for a wider public is a book for students alone. On the completion of the Statesmen of the Commonwealth in 1839, Forster gave himself up to periodical writing, and nearly ten years went by before his next book, the Life of Goldsmith, appeared. In the course of the intervening period he had an increasing share in the political articles of the Exaviiner, and concurrently with his weekly contributions to this paper, which were never suspended, he for four years edited the Foreign Quarterly Review ; was for nine months, from February 1846 to October, the Editor of the Daily News, and occasionally wrote essays for the Edinburgh Review, two of which — those on Churchill and Defoe — he afterwards enlarged and repub- lished. Towards the close of this bookless era, he succeeded. XVI JOHN rOESTER. 1847, to the full editorship of the Uxaminei: The augmented income probably released him from the necessity to distribute his time among scattered employments, and the hours snatched from sleep, his newspaper, and his friends were wholly devoted to the Life of Goldsmith. Lukewarm in nothing to which he turned his attention, Forster was an eager politician, and the extent of his historical works, the product of unforced choice, and which have all a strong political cast, is a proof that he did not go to this part of his functions, either in newspaper or books, with a reluctant will. But nobody intimate with him could question that liis primary passion was for literature, nor that there was any set of luminaries to whom he was more attracted, than the cluster of celebrities who were at the zenith of their fame in the second half of the eighteenth century. He had the authors of all generations from whom to choose, and his unhesitating prefer- ence was for Goldsmith. Every page of his book showed his love of his theme, and the result is summed up in the passage with which Macaulay closed bis own sketch of Goldsmith's life. " Goldsmith has been fortunate in his biographers. Within a " few years his life has been written by Mr. Prior, by Mr. " Washington Irving, and by Mr. Forster. The diligence " of Mr. Prior deserves great praise ; the style of Mr. Washing- " ton Irving is always pleasing ; but the highest place must in " justice be assigned to the eminently interesting work of Mr. " Forster." The book was published in one volume in 1848, under the title, Life and Adventures of Oliver Goldsmith. In a second edition, published in 1854, the work had expanded into two volumes, and bore the altered title. Life and Times of Oliver Goldsmith. The change in its bulk and title tells the change of plan. Carlyle thought the life in its original form was Forster's masterpiece, and that in its second, where Goldsmith was encompassed by his " Times," the central figure was too much hidden by its surroundings. For in truth this delightful literary genius was not at all the moving spirit of his times, and the episodes, which had their own independent value, are digressions from his story, and break the thread of the narrative. The fascination of the extraneous details to Forster prevented his seeing that his portrait of Goldsmith by losing its unity lost something of its force. With the tendency to over- do in the second edition of tlie Life, there was another tendency common to. both editions. JOHX FOKSTEK. XVll which was, like the former, the exaggeration of a virtue. Forster clung to the principle lauded by Burke, that, among the groups of which society is composed, we should love the little platoon to which we belong, and consider its interests a trust committed to our charge. He never separated his personal am- bition from the general credit of his profession, but stood up for the lustre of literature in the gross, and in each individual who adopted it. He could scarcely bring himself to recognise that moral meannesses could co-exist with majesty of intellect, or that a man, who was a genius in his books, could out of his line be inferior to ordinary mortals. Characters are seldom all of a piece, but have fibres of many textures and hues. The warmth with which he upheld the glories of his calling, and the reputa- tion of its magnates, was the wholesome instinct of a large and generous nature, but, sometimes pushed too far, it led him to exaggerate merits, to discredit unduly the evidence of defects, and to extenuate, beyond the reasonable allowances of charity, faults which could not be denied. The honest conviction of a liberal spirit is of no avail against stubborn facts. The blots which are real can never be eradicated. They may be effaced or dimmed for a season, but other biographers arise, and they reappear. Before he was twenty Forster had gained the friendship of many men already distinguished or who acquired distinction later. Among the earliest were Talfourd, at whose death in 1854 he said, " he was the oldest friend I had ; " Whiteside, who said at Forster's death, " we had been friends for 47 years ; " Payne Collier, Sheridan Baiowles, Leigh Hunt, Lamb, and Procter. His friendship with Procter, by profession a barrister, and by constitution a poet, was as long-lived as that with Whiteside. Procter was more than twenty years Forster's senior; they fre- quently dined together, and the culture of the elder, deeply im- bued with the imagination and fancy of the Elizabethan di'ama, must have had its share with the conversation of Hunt in assist- ing the unformed tastes of the younger. The charm of Procter's society did not need to be recommended by the reputation he had earned under the pseudonym of Barry Cornwall, so engaging waa the contrast between the strength of his character and the gentleness of his manner, so happy the admixture of playful jocosity and sterling sense, of lettered criticism with shrewd opinions on'every-day events. Each new acquaintance was to Forster the parent of others ; many more bad their origin in his theatrical criticisms and XVm JOHN FOESTEE. reviews of books ; and from 1834 onwards there was scarce a person of eminence in literature that he did not number among his familiar friends^ together with not a few of the foremost men in law, politics, and art. In general his intimacies were not purely social. Lord Brougham said of the Duke of Wellington, " He was " an excellent adviser ; for he was always at the pains to make " himself master of the question, and having mastered it he told " you exactly what he thought. Few people do either." Forster did both ; and what he thought was almost sure to be what was wise. This dispassionate and discerning judgment in counsel, which might not have been expected from the impetuous in- gredients in his composition, was conspicuous before he had got beyond what, to many men, are years of indiscretion. He bestowed his help not less liberally than his counsel. A consider- able portion of the time, which to him was money, was devoted, week by week, to reading the manuscripts of associates or strangers, to writing detailed opinions of them, to negotiating with publishers, to arbitrating in disputes, to assisting the needy in tiding over distress. He did more for some people than they would have been at the trouble to do for themselves, and in his zeal for them frequently volunteered the service they would not have ventured to ask. Hearty to all his friends, his attachment to the inner circle of them was almost romantic ; he was more than kind to their virtues, and usually too blind to their defects to admit that they had any. After he had risen in his profession, and was easy in his cir- cumstances, Forster was accustomed on Saturdays, when the newspaper fatigues of one week were ended, and those of the next had not begun, to receive his friends at dinner. The par- ties were small, the dishes not too numerous, and very choice. He was fastidious in his cookery and his wines. Thackeray said of a host whose entertainments were sumptuous, and wine indifferent, not from parsimony, but because being himself in- capable of distinguishing, his wine merchant had discovered in him a ready dupe, "It is not to be endured that he should " send for his wine to the public-house over the way ; " for Thackeray had a phenomenal delicacy of taste in appraising the qualities of wine, and he suffered proportionably when it crossed the boundary which separated good from bad. Forster's sensi- tive palate was not more tolerant of hosts with public-house cellars, and sometimes, returning homewards, he would convey his rebuke by saying, " Nobody ever tasted a drop of bad wine " in my house," which was not a vaunt but a fact. Some of JOHN FORSTER. XIX the frequenters of his table were treated to their favourite dishes, and it is noticeable as an evidence that the permanent tastes of mankind are not for exceptional delicacies, that in every instance the preference was for something simple. Sir Joseph Paxton had baked shoulder of mutton and onion sauce ; James White, a clergyman much esteemed by the entire circle, who was the author of a tragedy, of Sir Frizzle PumpJcin, and of several little histories, was indulged with apple-pudding. Thackeray, who kept his relish for school-boy luxuries, once suggested the addition of the twopenny three-cornered tarts he called cocked- hats, and they remained for years a frequent and popular dish. Forster himself had a partiality for tripe when knowingly dressed, or fried liver and bacon. On one occasion he had been attended in a severe illness by the noted Scotch surgeon, Eobert Liston, and gave a dinner to celebrate his recovery. Liston, in proud confidence, having the same estimation as Burns of his national dish — "Great Chieftan o' the Puddin race!" — had a haggis brought ready cooked from his house. Nobody tasted it but himself. Fare which pleased everybody was not without its cheering influence on dinners which could not be excelled in social charm. There was no made conversation between men remarkable for genius, or talent, or knowledge, or experience, and who, for the most part, had the ease and freedom of old acquaintanceship. With an audience quick to understand whatever was uttered they spoke from the fulness of their minds, without rivalry, with- out ostentation, and without reserve. Forster, a consummate host, exerted his skill to put his guests on their happiest themes, and while the good fellowship was always uppermost, the obser- vations on men, books, and things were not more sparkling and festive than they were instructive and acute. The men were different from their writings, but under the phase which suited the hours of relaxation and companionship they were not below them. Some were brighter in their talk than in their books, Douglas Jerrold for one, whose poignant but not ill-natured repartees, darted forth with the swiftness of lightning, excelled the studied jests he prepared for the printer. Nothing he pub- lished gives an adequate idea of the brilliancy and fertility of his colloquial wit. All energetic characters have their idiosyncrasies. These singularities, which are the exception, attract greater notice on a superficial and distant view than fundamental and less glaring qualities. With the usual tendency of the majority to generalise, XX JOHN FORSTEE. the peculiarities are assumed to constitute the man. Traits of this description have been published of Forster, and, however separately exact, would mislead if an undue place was assigned to them. Persons of keen sensibility seldom confine it to their affections alone ; their passions are easily roused in many direc- tions, and they speak in language as warm as their feelings. Forster's temper was hasty, and in conjunction with his emo- tional nature there was a physical cause for the efiervescence which ordinary observers did not guess. The strain upon his system, in the many years of unintermittent mental toil, ren- dered his nerves intolerant of ruffles which would have passed unheeded in health. Slight contrarieties were as chafings against inflamed flesh. He would sometimes remark after one of his brief ebullitions, " I knoAV it is wrong, but I cannot " help it," and it was probably as involuntary as the cry extorted by a sudden access of pain, or as the irritation provoked by street sounds, which have driven many an overtaxed brain, as with Carlyle, to the verge of distraction. " I don't think," Forster says in one of his letters, " I mind grave troubles so " much as I am fretted by light ones," and he might have added that when the trouble addressed itseK to faculties of heart and understanding, and not to the morbid sensibilities of frame excessive tension had engendered, his composure and fortitude were complete. Except when his deeper feelings were wounded the eflTect of any vexation was momentary, and if he inflicted pain he left nothing undone to remove the im- pression. His servants stayed long with him, and when they spoke of him did not mention his irascibilities but his kindness ; or if they alluded to them it was to say that his warmth of heart prevailed over all other warmths. His real disposition was stamped on his countenance. The storm clouds which drifted over it left no trace, and the expression, radiant or meditative, had benevolence for its basis. Kindred to his sallies of impatience was his propensity on some occasions to wear a more magisterial air than the circum- stances might require or warrant. He did nothing by halves, and he certainly was not willing that prerogatives v/hich be- longed to any office of his should be lowered or curtailed. But the assumption of authority was not his ordinary temperament. It was only put on for the nonce, and in an instant laid aside. There could not be a less pretentious companion in private life ; none who had more enjoyment in the licensed freedom of in- timacy. His talk to persons of all degrees had an admixture of JOHN FORSTEE. XXI pleasantly, and that of a kind peculiar to himself. Isolated specimens must sound trivial, but it may he permitted to set down a single instance of a style which could not be understood by description. He told his tailor to fine-draw an accidental cut in a coat. The tailor shook his head and replied, " that it " was a difficult job." " Of course it is," said Forster, " or I " should have done it myself" These gay rejoinders were his innate vein; they rose up unsought, and it would not have been in nature that he should wantonly supplement them by the common-place method of stern command. Seven years passed by and Forster had not followed up his Life of Goldsmith by another independent work. He enlarged the first edition of the Life, he wrote biographical essays both for the Edinburgh and the Quarterly Review, and from 1850 to 1855 he had a share in compiling the Household Narrative of Current Eventfi, which formed a monthly supplement to Household Words. The effort of fashioning books of wide research in the gaps of time between the last Examiner and the next was per- haps too wearing and irksome to be prolonged without a pause. But what he preferred, when free to choose, became apparent on his appointment, December 28, 1855, to the Secretaryship of the Lunacy Commission. Editor, or auxiliary, he had been on the staff of the Examiner for 23 years ; he had 20 years more of life before him, and neither for the Exam,iner, or any periodical of any description, did he ever again write a single line. His article on Cromwell, which- appeared in the Edinburgh Review in January 1856, had been dismissed from his desk before the Secretaryship was void. He had hitherto accommodated his habits to his situation ; he did not groan over his tasks, nor droop under them, but directly the opportunity offered he was glad to lay down his burthen. He had always asserted that the faculties required for the successful conduct of a journal were of an inferior order, and though he had scope enough for ability in his own articles, he wished it bestowed on productions which demanded time to mature, and which he fondly hoped that time might spare. From the day he was liberated from journalism he ceased to refer to it. His former share in it, his experiences of it, the persons and incidents connected with it, disappeared from his talk. They belonged to a preparatory act of the drama ; a new act had commenced ; and with the vehemence of purpose proper to him he kept his thoughts for the projects which, from boyhood onwards, had been his dream. XXll JOHN FORSTER. There was one dream in which, when his fatigues were greatest, he never indulged, the dream of repose. His Secre- taryship was an office of full occupation, and of the kind which called for an indefatigable pen. In evening and early morning the same pen was busy in its literary domain. His annual holiday was never spent in recreation, but was seized to push forward the book he had in hand. In November 18G1 Forster from Secretary became Commissioner of Lunacy, which brought with it the obligation to visit in fixed circuits every asylum in the kingdom. He was abundantly zealous in the punctilious discharge of official duties, but the travelling and inspection did not put a stop to his literature. Domestic felicity, onerous business, society, reading, were all insufficient unless he could gratify his abiding desire to be either writing a book, or preparing for one. " Do any man's children," asks Barrow, " so much please " him as these creatures of the brain ? " and in the contempla- tion of Forster's persistent toil it is a relief to reflect that from 1855 the self-imposed part of it was his pride and delight. A second essential change in Forster's life followed close upon his appointment to the Secretaryship. Nine months later, Sep- tember 1856, he married Mrs. Colburn. Those who live outside the pale of a family circle, in constant collision with their feUow- men, have the advantage of a robuster discipline which is better suited to youth than to after years. Forster had learnt all this school could teach him ; he was yearning for the blandishments of domestic life, and it completed his happiness to be put in possession of them at the very period when he was beginning the world again. Oared for in everything, he was released from the need to look after himself and enjoyed the luxury he prized the most in the world, a companionship which interfused itself through all his labours without interrupting them. His connexion, too, with the Lunacy Commission bore precious social fruits. His friend Procter was already one of the Law Commissioners, and among the Medical Commissioners were men of rare worth and attainments who from colleagues soon became chosen intimates. To two, whom he eminently valued, Mr. Wilkes and Mr. Cleaton, he bequeathed memorials of his friendship by his will. Free to choose his subject, Forster returned to the study which attracted him at the outset of his career, the struggle between Charles I. and the Parliament. Hence his volume entitled Debates on the Orand Remonstrance, and that on. the Arrest of the Five Members by Charles I. They were disquisitions on JOHN FORSTER. XXUl isolated points addi-essed to historical inquirers, and not much suited to general readers. A larger task, his Life of EHofc, fol- lowed, and here his labours in this depai-tment ended. For in 1864, the yeai- in which the Eliot was published, the death of Landor brought him back to literaiy biography, and he thence- forward kept to that alone. It was in 1836, when lie was 24, that Forster became acquainted with Landor, who was 61, but in prudence, and knowledge of the ways of the world, the younger shoulders bore the oldest head. A man, in some respects, of great parts, of a kindly disposition, and hearty manners, Landor was often extravagant in his ideas, hyperbolical in expressing, and headstrong in acting on them. Governed, left to his native impulses, by unreflecting self-sufficiency, and an imperious will, nobody had moi-e need of a sagacious friend, and he found it in Forster, who gave much of his time to him, reading his manu- scripts, helping him to bring his writings before the world, correcting the press for him, and by articles on his works bespeaking for them the favour they did not spontaneously command. Landor 's thick-coming fancies could not wait. For several yeai-s there was scai'ce a day in which Forster did not receive a letter from him, and the same post frequently brought two or three. The m-gency was in the seething temperament of the writer. In the autumn of 1805, a twelvemonth after his death, Foi-ster had begun to draw up the life, but the story of Lander's peculiarities sometimes embarrassed him, and he did not finish his fii"st volume till 1867, and the second not till 1869. The two, revised and condensed, make the first volume of the Works and Life of Landor, which Forster published in 1875, and this latest form of the biographj- is the best. The Life of Landor was in its freshness when the death of Dickens, in June 1870, laid upon Foi-ster the obligation to relate the life of that friend with whom, beyond all men, his own had been blended. Foi-ster's constitution had for some time been visibly deteriorating by the slow gradations which were the consequence of working persistently beyond his strength. Incapable of persevering longer in the double toil of discharging his official duties by day, and composing his books when the ordinary day was over, or had not yet begun, he resigned his Lunacy Commissionership in 1872, the year in which the first volume of his Life of Dickens appeared. The resolution to con- centrate upon it his remaining powers did not do away with the impression that he might not hold out to the end. It was under the influence of his bodily decline that he settled the plan of his o 16505. B XXIV JOHN FORSTER. •work, and he had to consider whether he should rely on the materials he possessed or endeavour to collect the subsidiary information which was scattered about the world. His waning condition did not allow him to hesitate. The time required to discover, procure, and sift the letters and reminiscences which others could furnish, was vastly different from that which . was needed to put in order his own ready stores, of which, moreover, he understood the bearings in advance, and of which he could guarantee the truth. And these stores were liberal. "With sharp-sighted views and immense determination of purpose in whatever he undertook, Dickens yet thought it a wise precaution not to dispense with counsel, and he consulted Forster on all occasions, imparted to him all his schemes, and by letter or word of mouth kept him informed of every leading event as it occurred. Here at once was a life, let the crowd of friends contribute in the future what they pleased. The simple avowal that, with some exceptions, he only professed to relate the history which fell within his personal knowledge, or was contained in docu- ments within his keeping, must have sufficed to stop the accusa- tion which was brought against Forster of seeking to represent Dickens as solely an appendage to himself for the purpose of magnifying his own importance. Not foreseeing the charge, he did not prefix to his biography the half-dozen sentences which would have secured him against it. His single fault was that he did not, and could not, conceal that for five and thirty years Dickens had recourse to him as his chief and most trusted friend. On the publication of the last volume of the Life of Dickens in 1874, Forster, broken and tormented with pain, might have been expected to lay down his pen. He chose instead that it should drop from his hand. Habituated to ceaseless activity, rest might possibly have seemed stagnation, and he had one more cherished scheme to execute which, unattempted, would have haunted him reproachfully. For very many years he had been gleaning materials for a Life of Swift, had gathered together new manuscripts, had collated printed texts with old, and had studied not only the literature of the period but the intricacies of Irish and English politics in which the Dean had been a turbulent agent. Nothing remained but to put upon paper the narrative which was ready worked out in his brain, and this was a consummation of too long a breath for his ebbing vitality. He saw the first volume through the press, his sinking frame sustained perhaps by the stimulus of an eager mind pushino- JOHN FOKSTER. XXV forward to the goal, and on reaching a landing place the collapse came with the pause. This final crisis was sudden, and he passed away in an unexpected hour on the morning of February 1, 1876, when he was verging on 64. Dyce on his death-bed, May 1869, consigned a revised copy of his edition of Shakespeare to Forster, that, when the current edition was exhausted, he might superintend a reprint from the manuscript revision. He discharged the commission, which was only a mechanical office, in 1875, the year in which he was engaged upon Swift, and at the request of the authorities of the South Kensington Museum, he, the same year, furnished the sketch of Dyce's Life, which was preiixed to the printed catalogue of his library. The edition of Shakespeare had, with good cause, been dedicated by Dyce to Forster himself, for in the preparation of his first edition, which came out in 1857, Dyce got from Forster the very assistance he required to settle the doubts of his scrupulous mind. The bias which Dyce brought to his study of the Elizabethan drama had been formed in the school of classical erudition. He had an enthusiasm for the ingenuity, amounting to genius, which Bentley and Person had displayed in restoring the true readings where the errors of transcribers had marred the works of ancient authors. He did not care to exhibit his learning in illustrative and explanatory notes, but used his trained ear for metre, his feeling for poetry, his superior sense, his familiarity with the literature and typographical corruptions of the Elizabethan era, to determine the right word in a suspicious or manifestly vitiated line. In his Few Notes on Shakespeare, his Remarks on Mr. J. P- Collier's and Mr. 0. KnigMs Editions, and in his Strictures on Mr. Collier's New Edition, Dyce abundantly proved that he had nothing in common with editors who fancied they were protecting Shake- speare's plays from sacrilegious adulteration by upholding printers' blunders, and were content with forced and paltry meanings, barbarous constructions, and paraphrases which mis- represented the text they were intended to justify. But a pre- ponderance of Scotch caution mingled with his admiration for the feats of Bentley and Person, and when dealing with con- jectural emendations he was constantly kept in a balance between the authority of the old editions and the specious corrections of critics. In the throes of these inquiries he fre- quently came to Forster's rooms in Lincoln's Inn Fields that he mio'ht discuss his perplexities. His perspicuous understanding XXVI JOHN FOBSTER. could not be satisfied by uncertain or merely plausible ex- planations, but when once a conclusive argument was suggested he would say " Thank you," with the air of a man relieved, and pass on. This was the kind of service he received from Forster, and he alludes to it in his preface to the edition of 1857. The longer Dyce laboured on Shakespeare the more his hesitation passed into confidence, and his ultimate decisions bear witness to his delicate faculty for distinguishing between rash and sagacious alterations. In his first edition, an excess of prudence prevailing, he banished to his notes many happy divinations which his judgment had already accepted, that he might transfer to the reader the responsibility of adopting or rejecting them. In his second edition he abandoned this com- promise, and promoted to the text the amendments he believed to be the genuine language of his author. It is to be regretted that he did not more frequently record the grounds of his opinions, for he constantly suppressed his reasons when the simple statement of them in his concise and forcible language would have been a decisive commentary on many a vexed passage in Shakespeai'e. But there never was a writer who gave out less of the learning he had piled up in orderly an-ay in the ample chambers of his memory. His reserve was confined to his books. In conversation he was always ready to com- municate his stores, and the manner of his talk was that of a contemplative scholar who was also a man of the world. Next to some of the masterpieces of ancient and modern literature, and the books which threw light on them, his partiality was for lively anecdotes, and the sayings, doings, and traits of celebrated men. The acutest suffering, hopeless of relief, may for that reason be borne with submission. The uselessness of rebellion begets resignation. A greater triumph than patient endurance is the power to be cheered by the spectacle of enjoyments denied to ourselves. Forster had the quality in a touching degree. Impelled by the contrast he would say, when crippled by fits of anguish, to a friend in health, the tone of his voice accredit- ing his words, " It delights me to see you so active." In the last weeks of his life not all his bodily griefs could keep down his animation on the appointment of Lord Lytton to be Viceroy of India. He instantly set to work to secure a portrait of him by Millais, as the artist who could paint him best, assured that he should not survive to see him return, and he did not live to see him depart. It seemed less his concern that his own JOHN FOBSTER. XXVli star was disappearing below the horizon than that his friend's should be on the ascendant. The event with reason came home to him with singular force. He had early formed a close friendship with the father that went on gathering strength with years. The son was grafted in boyhood into the father's friendship, and the rich gifts and varied acquirements of his manhood appealed to Forster's most cherished sympathies. To these characteristics of Forster's strenuous and tender nature, it should be added, that he was generous in giving. Among the forms o£ his beneficence was a love for making expensive presents to the young, and it gratified him to further their by-pursuits the adornments of existence, by supplying the costly materials of some favourite study. His affection for human extended to animal friends. They were not the mere creatures of convenience or amusement, but had the rank of associates who took a hold on his heart. His voice was not without significance among the outer signs of his disposition. When he was not excited it was soft and musical, and its sweet- ness was especially noticeable in his reading of poetry, which he did admirably, though with a slight inclination to be too emphatic, the usual fault of those who feeling beauties strongly are anxious to convey them to the full. His disposal of his library is a circumstance to be noticed in its bearing on his character. From the outset of his career he was eager to pro- mote the schemes and reputation of contemporary authors. In the measure of his power he was anxious to continue his good offices after his death. Neither he nor Dyce were collectors of bibliographical curiosities from the pride of possession. They bought books for use. Literature had been followed from youth to age by Dyce with the leisurely deliberation of one who was free to live as he pleased ; by Forster with the unrelenting industry imposed by conflicting employments ; and by each alike with the devotion of men who had been drawn to the pursuit by its intrinsic attractions. Their libraries, which were the instruments of their labours, were the slow gleanings of years, got together with pains, and their desire was that after-comers with kindred tastes might have the benefit of the gathered harvest. In averting the dispersion of their accumulated trea- sm-es they doubtless indulged their fondness for them, but chiefly their literary ardour was gratified, as their surviving friends can testify, by the conviction that in the wide public there would always be a succession of heirs who would enter upon the XXVm JOHN FORSTEK. inheritance in the spirit of the original owners. The same principle actuated both bequests, and they will not have missed their end if once in a generation they repeat the service they rendered to Forster and Dyce. W. ELWIN. CATALOGUE. FORSTER BEQUEST. CATALOGUE Of PRINTED BOOKS. A. A. (J.) Funerall elegie on the unfortunate death Edward Grey, Anagrams and F°. 1G44. 1 of that worthy Major luly 2fi. 1644. [and] chronogram. Broadside. ABBADIE (JAQUES). Chemical change in the Eucharist, in fonr letters, shewing the relations of faith to sense, from the French, hy John W. Hamersley. 4°. 1867. 2 ABBOT (GEORGE) Archbishop of Canterbury. Briefe description of the whole world. Wherein is particularly described all the Monarchies, Empires, and Kingdoms of the same, with their Academies . . . Fifth edition. 12°. 1664. 3 Life of Dr. Abbot, reprinted . . . from the Biographia Britannica, with his character by Arthur Onslow ... A desciiption of the Hospital, which he erected and en- dowed iu his native town of Guildford j his will, &c. . . . Lives of his two brothers, Dr. Bobert Abbot, Bishop of Salisbury ; and Sir Morris Abbot, Lord Mayor of Lon- don. (Portraits.) Guildford. 8°. 1777. 4 ABBOTSFORD. Abbotsford and Sir Walter Scott. By the author of " Hawthorndale Village." 12°. 1854. 5 ABBOTT (EDWIN). Concordance to the worlts of Alexander Pope. With an introduction by Edwin A. Abbott, D.D. 8°. 1875. 6 ABBOTT (REV. JACOB). History of Alexander the Great. En- gravings. 12°. 1853. 7 o 16505. 1000.-7/85. m. 23029. *^* Tn aU cases where the place oj publication is not specked, London is implied. The sizes of the books have been determined by measurement of the title-pages. Books rt,ot exceeding 7 incites in height are entered as 12°., above 7 and not exceeding 10 as 8°., above 10 and not exceeding 12 as 4°., and above 12 inches as'P°. ; but it was not found practicable to apply this scale without exceptions, particularly with reference to the older books. I ABBOTT (REV. JACOB)— -rani. History of Alfred the Great. Engrav- ings. 12°. 1853. 8 History of Pyrrhus. Engravings. 12°. 1853. 9 History of William the Conqueror. En- gravings. 12°. 1853. 10 History of Xerxes the Great. Engrav- ings. 12°. 1854. 11 ABBOTT (REV. J.). Philip Musgrave ; or Memoirs of a Church of England Missionary in the North American Colonies. Edited by Eev. J. Abbott. 12°. 1846. (Two copies.) 12 ABBOTT (JOHN STEVENS CABOT). History of Napoleon Bonaparte. With Maps and Illustrations. 2 vol. 8°. London and New Tork. 1855. 13 Life of Marie Antoinette, Queen of France. 12°. 1850. 14 A BECKETT (GILBERT ABBOTT). Comic Blaekstone. With Illustrations by George Cruikshank. 12°. 1846. 15 Comic History of England. With 10 coloured etchings, and 120 woodcuts, by John Leech. 2 vol. 8°. [London] Punch Office, 1847- 4S. 16 Comic History of Korae. Illustrated by John Leech. 8°. [London, 1852.] 17' Quizzlology of the British Drama . . (Frontispiece by Leech.) 12°. 1846. At the end — Scenes Jrom the rejected Comeclies . . . [By A Beckett.] A'BECKETT (SIR WILLIAM). Out of Harness. [Notes on a tour throuoh Switzerland and Italy.] 12°. 1854. 19 ABEKEN (BERNARD RUDOLF). Account of the life and letters of Cicero : translated from the German. Edited by Charles Merivale. 8». 1854. 20 A ABEL (RICHARD). Copie of a letter sent from the roaring boyes in Elizium ; to . . . Alderman Abel and M, Kilvert, the two great projectors for Wine : and to the rest of the warBhipfiiU brotherhood of that patent . . . [Anon. Verses.] 4". n.p. 1641. (Loudon) re- printed, n.d. [1810]. 21 ABELL (MRS. LUCIA ELIZABETH). Recollections of the Emperor Napoleon, during the first three years of his captivity on the Island of St. Helena ... 8°. 1844. 22 ABRANTES (LAURE DE PERMON, DUCHESSE D'). Memoirs of the Duchess D'Abrantfes (Madame Junot). (Portr^ts of the Duke of AhrantJis and the Emperor Napoleon.) 2 vol. 8». 1831. 23 ACADEMIE. Dictionnaire ' de 1' Academic irran9oise, revu . . . par 1' Academic elle-m^me. Cinqiii^me edition. Tome premier, A — K. Second, L— Z. 2 vol. 4". Paris et Londres, 1822. 24 ACADEMY. New Academy of Complements, erected for ladies, gentlewomen, courtiers . . . Stored with . . . complements . . . letters ... songs . . .' Com- piled by L. B. [Lord Buckhurst], Sir C. S. [Sir Charles Sedley],.Sir W. D. [Sir William Davenant] . . . 12°. 1713. 2.5 E. Nares's copy and MS. note. Eev. J. Mit- ford's copy and MS. notes. ACCOMPTANT. Gentleman Accomptant; or, an essay to unfold the mystery of accompts. By way of debtor and creditor, commonly called merchants accompts ... Of banks ; those of Venice and the Turkey company. Of stocks, and stock-jobbing. . . Vocabulary of words, that in the language of accompting take a particular mean- ing .. . 12°. 1714. 26 ACHETA, pseud. U.e., MISS L. M. BUDGEN]. March winds and April showers : being notes and notions on a few created things. 8°. 1854. 27 May flowers ... 8". 185.'!. 28 ACHETA DOMESTICA, pseud. U.e., MISS L. M. BUDGEN]. Episodes of Insect life. (—Second — Third series.) 3 vol. 8°. 1849-51. 29 ACLAND (REV. T.). Popular account of the manners and customs of India , . . 12°. 1847. 30 ADAIR (SIR ROBERT). Historical memoir of a mission to the Court of Vienna in 1 806. With a selection from his despatches ... 8°. 1844. 81 "Negotiations for the Peace of the Dar- danelles, in l§08-9 : with dispatches and official documents . . . 2 vol. 8°. 1845. 32 ADALBERT, PRINCE OF PRUSSIA. Travels, in the South of Europe and in Brazil, with a voyage up the Amazon and the Xingu. Translated by Sir Kobert H. Schomburgk and John Edward Taylor. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 33 ADAMS (CHARLES WARREN), A Spring in the Canterbury Settlement. With engravings. 8°. 1853. 34 ADAMS (MRS. SARAH FLOWER). Vivia Perpetua : a dramatic poem . . . 8°. 1841. 35 Presentation copy. ADAMS (WILLIAM BRIDGES). Roads and rails and their sequences, physical and moral. 8°. 1862. 36 ADDISON (CHARLES GREEN- STREET). History of the Knights Templars, the Temple Church, and the Temple. 4°. 1842. 37 The Temple Church. 8°. 1843. 38 ADDISON (JOSEPH). Works. 4 vol. (in two). L. P. (Por- trait.) 4°. 39 Preface signed by Tho. Tickell, the editor. " John I'orster from his friend Mark Lemon 1849." Works. With notes by Richard Hurd, Bishop of Worcester. New edition. Il- lustrated with engravings. 6 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1854-6. 40 Vol. 1. Poems, Poemata, Dialogues upon Medals, Jlomarks on Italy. 2. Tatler and Spectator. 3. Spectator. 4. Spectator, Guardian, Lover, Present state m -i Y5''"' ^"'^ ""ESCHYLUS. Tragedies. Rc-edited with an English commentary by F. A. Paley. [Gr.] 8". 1855. 50 Tragedies; translated by R. Potter. New edition. 8°. 1809. 51 Seven Tragedies, literally translated into English prose, with notes ... 8°. Oxford, 1829. • 52 Tragedies : literally translated. With . . . notes, and an introduction, by Theodore Alois Buckley. 8". Bohn, 1849. 53 Lyrical dramas, from the Greek; trans- lated into English verse by John Stnart Blackie. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 54 Prometheus and Agamemnon. Trans- lated into English verse, by Henry William Herbert. 8°. Cambridge [U.S.] 1849. 55 Ayanifivuv. Agamemnon . . . emen- davit notas . . . adjecit Carolus Jacobus Blomfield. Editio tertia. 8". 1826. 56 Agamemnon, with notes. By C. C. Felton. [Gr.] 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1847. (Two copies ) 57 No. 1. Presentation copy. Ayafieiivav. Agamemno. Recensuit F. A. Paley. Editio anctior . . . 8». Cantab. 1853. 58 Agamemnon ; translated from the Greek, by William Peter. 12". Phila- delphia, 1852. 59 Agamemnon the King : a tragedy. From the Greek, by William Blew. 8". 1855. 60 XoTicjiopoi. Choephorae. Ex editione Stanleiana. [Gr. and Lat.] 12°. Glas- guse, 1777. 61 Lat. version wanting. Xo7)(/>op. 1852. 71 AGASSIZ (LOUIS JEAN RODOLPHE). Address delivered on the centennial an- - niversary of the birth of Alexander von Humboldt ... 8°. Bo.ston [U.S.] 1869. 72 AND (MRS. ELIZABETH C). A Journey in Brazil. 8". Boston [U.S.] 1868. 73 " John T'orster, Esq._, with the kind regards of Professor Agassiz." AND GOULD (AUGUSTUS ADDISON). Outlines of comparative physiology, touching the structure and development of the races of animals, living and extinct . . . Edited . . . and greatly en- larged, by Thomas Wright, M.D. With 390 illustrations. 8". Bohn, 1851. 74 AGE. Age made happy as well as honourable, by a select number of cautionary rules . . . 8°. 1747. 75 AIKEN (PETER F.). Comparative view of the Constitutions of Great Britain and the United States of America . . . 12°. 1842. 76 AIKIN (JOHN), M.D. Essays on Song-writing ; with a collec- tion of . . . English songs . . . New edition . . . by B. H. Evans. 8°. 1810. 77 Lives of John Selden, and Archbishop Usher ; -mth notices of the principal Eng- lish Men of Letters with whom they were connected. (Portraits.) 8°. 1812. 78 Vocal Poetry, or a select collection of English Songs . . . Essay on song- writing. 8°. 1810. 79 AIKIN (LUCY). Life of Joseph Addison. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1843. 80 Memoirs of the Court of King Charles the first. 2 vol, (Portrait.) 8°. 1833. 81 Memoirs of the Court of King James the first. Third edition. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1823. 82 Memoirs of the Court of Queen Eliza- beth. Fourth edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8». 1819. 83 Book-plate of E. C. Hawtiey. AINSWORTH (ROBERT). Abridgment of Ainsworth's dictionary English and Latin [and Latin and Eng- lish] ... By Thomas Morell, D.D. New edition ... by William Duncan. 8°. Edinburgh, 1839. 84 AINSWORTH (WILLIAM FRANCIS). Travels in the track of the ten thousand Greeks ; being a geographical and descrip- tive account of the expedition of Cyrus and of the retreat of the ten thousand Greeks, as related by Xenopbon. 8°. 1844. 85 AINSWORTH (WILLIAM HARRI- SON). Ballads . . . Illustrated by [Sir] John Gilbert IR.A.']. 12°. 1855. 86 Constable of the Tower an historical romance. Illustrated by [Sir] John Gil- bert [R.A.] 3 vol. 8°. 1861. 87 Crichton. [Romance.] 3 vol. 8°. 1837. 88 [Another Edition.] 8°. Paris, 1837. 89 Flitch of Bacon : or, the Custom of Dunmow. A tale . . . With illustra- tions by [Sir] John Gilbert [E.A.]. 12°. 1854. 90 Lord Mayor of London : or. City life in the last century. 3 vol. 8°. 1862. 91 Miser's Daughter : a tale. With illus- trations by George Cruikshauk. 3 vol. 8°. 1842. '. 92 Eookwood : a romance. Revised . . . by the author. 12°. 1837. 93 " John Forster, Esq". From his attached friend W. H. A." [Another edition.] Revised . . . by the Author. 12°. 1850. 94 Tower of London. A historical ro- mance. Illustrated by George Cruik- shauk. 8°. 1840. 95 " John Forster, Esquire. From his friend The Author." Windsor Castle. An historical romance. New edition. Illustrated by George Cruikshank and Tony Johannot. With designs on wood, by W. Alfred Delamotte. (Portrait.) 8°. 1843. 9C AINSWORTH'S MAGAZINE. Ainsworth's Magazine : a miscellany of romance, general literature, and art. Edited by W. H. Ainsworth. Illustrated by George Cruikshank [and Hahl6t K. Browne.] 7 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1842-5. 97 AIRD, THOMAS. Poetical Works. New edition. 12°. Edinburgh [printed] and London, 1856. 98 AIREY (RICHARD JOSEPH AIREY, BARON). Opening address before the Board of General officers assembled at the Koyal Hospital, Chelsea . . . Summing-up address, and a written memorandum . . . on supplies of camp equipage. 8°. 1856. 99 AITKEN (MARY CARLYLE), aft. MRS. ALEXANDER CARLYLE. Scottish Song a selection of the choicest lyrics of Scotland compiled and arranged, with brief notes, by M. C. Aitken. (Portrait of Allan Kamsay). 12°. London, Glasgow [printed], 1874. 100 AKENSIDE (MARK), M.D. [Half title.] Aldine edition of the British Poets . . . [Title.] Poetical Works of M. Akenside. (Edited, with Life, by Kev. A. Dyce.) (Portrait.) 12°. 1835. 101 [Another Aldine edition.] 12°. 1857. (Portrait.) 102 Poetical Works. With memoir and critical dissertation, by Rev. George Gil- fillan. 8°. Edinburgh, 1857. 103 AKERMAN (JOHN YONGE). Archaeological index to remains of an- tiquity of the Celtic, Romano-British, and Anglo-Saxon periods. 8°. 1847. 104 Introduction to the study of Ancient and Modern Coins. 12°. 1848. 105 Spring-Tide ; or, the Angler and his friends. 12°. 1850. 106 Wiltshire Tales. 12°. 1853. 107 ALBEMARLE (GEORGE THOMAS KEPPEL, 6TH EARL OF). Memoirs of the Marquis of Rockingham and his contemporaries ... 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1852. 108 ALBERONI (CARDINAL GIULIO). Political testament of Card. Julius Alberoni. Exhibiting a general view of the politics and interests of the several 'courts of Europe ... To which is pre- fixed a short account of the Cardinal's life Traii.'ilated from the Italian. 8°. 1753. 109 ALBERT, PRINCE CONSORT OF VICTORIA, QUEEN OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. Principal speeches and addresses. With an introduction, giving some outlines of his character. [Edited by Sir Arthur Helps.] (Portrait.) 8°. 1862. HO ALBERT [aft. PRINCE CONSORT] AND ERNEST [aft. DUKE] PRINCES OF SAXE-COBURG AND GOTH A. Songs and Ballads, written and set to music by their Royal Highnesses . . . Translated from the original German, by G. F. Richardson. The words in English and German. [Part I.] E°. 1840. Ill Pourteen poems iind 42 pm^es of music, and portrait of Priuce Albert. Corrected in MS. by Prince Allrjert. ALBINOVANUS (C. PEDO). Elegiae III, et fragraenta, cum interpre- tatione et notis .Tos. Scaligeri ... 12°. Amstel. [Amsterdam], 1703. 112 ALBUFERA (LOUIS GABRIEL, MARSHAL SUCHET, DUC D'). Memoirs of the War in Spain, from 1808 to 1814. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8». 1829. 113 (SIR JAMES ALEXANDER EDWARD). Life of the Duke of Wellington . . Edited by Sir J. E. Alexander. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1839-40. (Three copies.) 114 In one of these copies, both vol. are dated 1840. ALEXANDER (WILLIAM LINDSAY) D.D. Memoirs of the life and writings of Ralph Wardlaw, D.D. 8°. Edinburgh, 1856. 115 ALFIERI (COUNT VITTORIO). Tragedies, translated from the Italian, by Charles Lloyd. 3 vol. 8°. 1815. 116 ALFORD (HENRY), DEAN OF CANTERBURY. Chapters on the Poets of ancient Greece. 8°. London and Nottingham, 1841. 117 ALIGHIERI (PIETRO). Petri AUegherii super Dantis ipsius genitoris Comoediam Commentarium nunc primum in lucem editum eonsilio et sum- tibus G. J. Bar[onis] Vernon curante Vincentio Nannucci. 8°. Florentiae, 1815. 118 ALISON (ALEXANDER). Philosophy and historj' of Civilisation. 8°. 1860. 119 ALISON (REV. ARCHIBALD). Essays on the nature and principles of Taste. 8°. n.p. n.d. 120 ALISON (SIR ARCHIBALD). Essays, political, historical, and miscel- laneous. 3 vol. ' 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1850. 121 ALL THE YEAR ROUND. All the Year Round. A weekly Journal. Conducted by Charles Dickens. With which is incorporated Household Words, 20 vol. 8°. 1859-68. (Two copies.) 122 New Series. Vol. 1-15. 8°. London, 1869-76. 123 Christmas Numbers of All the Year Kouud. (1859-1867.) 8°. n.d. 124 The writers were Charles Dickens, Hesba Stretton [Hannah SmithJ, G. A. Sala, Adelaide A. Procter, Wilkie Collins, Mrs. Gaskell, Charles Collins, Harriett Parr, H.' P. Chorley, Amelia B. Edwards, John Harwood, John Oxenford, Arthur Looker, Authoress oT " The Valley of a Hundred Kres," Andrew HaUiday, Edmund Yates, Rosa MulhoUand, Henry Spicer, Walter Thornbury, and Mrs. G-ascoyne. ALLEN (CHARLES H.). Visit to Queensland and her Goldfields. 8°. 1870. 125 ALLEN (JOHN). Inquiry into the rise and growth of the royal prerogative in England. New edition, with the author's latest corrections, biogra- phical notices [by Sir J. Gibson Craig, C. B. Fox, Lord Brougham and M. Berenger] , &c. . . . Inquiry into the life and character of King Eadwig. [Edited by B.Thorpe.] 8°. 1649. 126 ALLEN (JOHN) OF LISKEARD. State Churches and the Kingdom of Christ. An essay on the establishment of ministers, forms and services of religion by secular power ; and on its inconsistency with the . . . Christian dispensation. 8°. 1853. 127 ALLEN (JOSEPH). Battles of the British Navy. New edition. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. Bohn, 1852. 128 ALLIBONE (SAMUEL AUSTIN). Critical dictionary of English Literature, and British and American authors, living and deceased, firom the earliest accounts to the middle of the nineteenth century . . . a vol. 8». Philadelphia and London. 1859-72. 129 Letter to Mr. Porster inserted. ALLIES (THOMAS WILLIAM). Journal in France in 1845 and 1848, with Letters from Italy in 1847 . . . 8°. 1849. 130 ALLINGHAM (WILLIAM). The Music Master, a love story. And two series of day and night ^ongs. With nine woodcuts, seven designed by Arthur Hughes, one by D. G. RosSetti, and one by John E. Millais, A.R.A. [now R.A.] 12°. 1855. (Two copies.) 131 Poems. 12°. 1850. 132 " To John Porster, Esci'=. with the author's compliments." [ALLSOP (THOMAS).] Letters, conversations and recollections of S. T. Coleridge. [Anon. Edited by T. A.] 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1836. 133 ALMANACK. Almanack of the Month. A review of everything and everybody. Edited by Gilbert Abbott h Beckett. 2 vol. 12°. 1846. 134 ALMANACKS. Almanacks, for 1 844. 12°. n.d. 135 British Parmers' Almanack. Enp;lishman's and Pamily Almanack. Gardener's Alma- nack. By George "W. Johnson. Lady's and Gentleman's Diary. Designed prin- cipally for Students in mathematics. MTechanics' Almanack and Engineers' Year book. Vox Stellarum ; or, a loyal almanack with astrological observations and a hieroglyphic. By Pranois Moore. MerMnus Liberatus. An Almanack. By John Partridge. ArAas Ouparto?, "White s eoelestial Atlas ; or, an improved Ephe- meris for 1844n also, a complete Almanack. By W. S. B. 'Woolhouse. [ALMON (JOHN).] Anecdotes of the life of William Pitt, Earl of Chatham ; and of the principal events of his time : with his speeches in parliament, from 1736 to 1778. [Anon.] Third edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1793. 136' AMADIS. Traduction libre d'Amadis de Gaule [of books 1-4 by Vasco de Lobeira and of book 5 by F. de Silva] par le Comte de Tress * * [Tressan]. Nouvelle edition, 2 vol, 12°. Amsterdam, 1780. 137 AMALIE, PRINCESS OF SAXONY. Six Dramas illustrative of German life, from the original of the Princess Amalie. 8». 1848. 138 Uninformed Girl— Heir of Soharleneck— Irresolute Man— Captain Pirnewald— Son's Return— Young Lady from the Country. AMATEUR PERFORMANCES. [Volume of acting copies of plays and portions of plays, MS. and printed, per- formed by the company of amateurs headed by Charles Dickens. It contains Merry Wives of Windsor— .Jerrold's Kent Day— Lord Lytton's Not so bad as we Seem and Money^Hugo's Heruani— and Jonson's Alchemist. MS. notes; Stage directions etc. some in Mr. Forstcr's handwriting ; pen and ink sketch of head ; print of Garriok in character ; " Cast " etc.] 8°. 139 AMERICA. American Slavery : a reprint of au article on " Uncle Tom's Cabin," of which a portion was inserted in the 2,06th number of the " Edinburgh Review " ; and of Mr. Sumner's Speech 19 and 20 May, 1856 ... 8°. 1856. 140 Essay upon the government of the English Plantations on the continent of America : with remarks upon the Dis- course on the plantation trade, written by the author of the Essay on ways and means . . . By on American. 12°. 1701. 141 Autograph ot "John Locke." Gallery of illustrious Americans, con- taining the portraits and biographical sketches of twenty-four of the most emi- nent citizens of the American Republic, since the death of Washington. Erom daguerreotypes by Brady — engraved by D'Avignon. C. Edwards Lester — editor. E°. New York, 1850. 142 Contents— General Zachai'y Taylor; John CaldwellCalhouu ; DanielWebster ; Henry- Clay ; John Charles Fremont. Incomplete, oiily Part 1, 2, 3, B and 6. Handbook of American Literature . . . 8°. London and EdiiiburghjD.d. 143 According to " British Museum Catalogue " by M. Foster. According to "Halkett nnd Laing" by JosephGostwick. Homes of Americans Authors ; compris- ing . . . Sketches, ■ by various writers. Illustrated with views of their residences . . . and a fac-simile of the manuscript of each author. 8°. New York, 1853. 144 The authors are Audubon— Pauldmg— Irving ( Portrait ) — B ry ant — Bancroft — Dana— Pi'esiott— Miss Sedgwick— Cooper (Por- trait)'— Bverett' (Portrait) — Emerson —Simms— Longfellow— Hawthorne (Por- trait ) —Webster —Kennedy— Lowell . Homes of American Statesmen : with . . . Sketches, by various writers. Illus- trated with engravings . . . and fac-similes of autograph letters. 8". New York, 1854. 145 [American Pamphlets.] 8". Cam- bridge, Boston [U.S.] 1869-72. 146 Peabody Education Fund;" Proceedings of the Trustees at their annual meeting, 1870 ; with their tribute to the memory of Mr. Peabody. Eulogy pronounced at the funeral of George Peabody, at Peabody, Massachusetts, 8 February, 1870. By Eobert C. Winthrop. Oration on the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrim Fathers at Plymouth. 21 December, 1870. By R. 0. Winthrop. Tribute to "Walter Scott, on the one hun- dredth anniversary ol his birthday, by the Massachusetts Historical Society, August 15, 1871. Boston, privately re- printed from the proceedings of the Society, ^ 1872. Introductory lecture to the course on the early history of Massachusetts, by members of the Massachusetts Historical Society, at the Lowell Institute, Boston. By B. C. Winthrop. AMERICA— con^ [Halt Title on cover.] Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, January 1886, to April, 1866, inclusive. (Portrait" Joaiah Quincy.)" Contents [inter alia]. Origin, organiza- tion, and influence of the towns of New England. Letters ,of the Marquis of Buckingham. Memoir of Josiah Quincy. Tribute to Jared Sparks. [No Title page. Tribute to Henry Hart Milman, D.D., Dean ot St. Paul's London. [From the proceedings of the Massachu- setts Historical Society.] [Halt Title on cover.] George Peabody's Gift for Southern Education. Proceedings of the Trustees. [1867 f] Several of these pamphlets were presenta- tion copies from Robert C. Winthrop. AMHURST (NICHOLAS). Terrae-Eilius ; or, the secret history of the University of Oxford ... To which are added, Remarks upon a late book, en- titled, University Education, by K. New- ton, D.D. . . . Third edition. 12°. 1754. 147 [AMORY (THOMAS).] Life of John Buncle, Esq. ; containing various observations and reflections, made in several parts of the world, and many extraordinary relations. [Anon.] 4 vol. New edition. 12°. 1770. 148 Memoirs : containing the lives of several Ladies of Great Britain. A history of antiquities, productions of nature, and monuments of art. Observations on the Christian religion . . . remarks on the writings of the greatest English DiWues : and a review of the works of the writers called infidels, from Lord Herbert of Cberbury, to Viscount Bolingbroke. With disquisitions and opinions relative to cri- ticism and manners ; and many extraor- dinary actions. In several letters. [Second Title] Memoirs of several Ladies of Great Britain . . . [Anon.] 8°. 1755. 149 [Another edition.] 2 vol. 12°. 1769, 1766. 15 Bookplate ol S. G. Mills. AMOS (ANDREW). Eour lectures on the advantages of a Classical education, as an auxiliary to a commercial education. With a letter to Dr. Whewell upon the subject of his tract "on liberal education." 8°. 1846. (Two copies.) 151 At the end is an appendix— Notes ot the Table-talk of a Combination-room in the last century. Gems of Latin poetry, with translations by various authors ; . . . notes and illus- trations, by A. Amos. 8°. Cambridge and Loudon, 1851. 152 Ruins of time exemplified in Sir Mat- thew Hale's History of the pleas of the Crown. 8°. 1856. ' 153 ANACREON. Anacreon . . . emendatiis . . . auctus . . . Item Anacreontis vita, Tractatus de Lyrica Poesi, &c. . . . Effigies Anacreon- tis, Ducis de Marlborough, Josuae Bar- nesii. Opera . . . Josuae Barnes. Editio tertia. [Gr. and Lat.] 12°. 1734. 154 Anacreon, Sapho, Bion et Mosohus, traduction nouvelle en prose, suivie de la Veilloe des Fetes de Venus, et d'un choix de pieces de differens auteurs. I'ar M. jt * * * c * * [J. J. Moutonnet- Clairfons]. (Plates by Eisen.) 8°. Paphos, Paris, 1773. 155 ANAS. French Anas. 3 vol. 12°. 1805. 156 Selections fiom the French Anas : con- taining remarks of eminent scholars on_ men and books. Together with anecdotes and apophthegms of illustrious persons. Interspersed with pieces of poetry. 2 vol. 12°. Oxford, 1797. 157 [ANDERDON (JOHN LAVICOUNT).] Life of Thomas Ken Bishop of Bath and Wells by a Layman. Two parts. (2 vol.) Second edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1854. 158 ANDERSEN (HANS CHRISTIAN). Christmas greeting to my English friends. 12°. 1847. 159 Danish Fairy legends and tales. Second edition, enlarged. With a memoir of the author [by C. P.] (Portrait.) 12°. 1852. 160 The Improvisatore : or, life in Italy. From the Danish. By Maty Howitt. With life of Andersen). 12°. 1847. 161 i'icture-book without pictures. From the German translation of De la Motte Fouque by Meta Taylor. 8°. 1847. 162 Pictures of Sweden. 8°. 1851. 163 A Poet's Day Dreams. 12". 1853. 164 Eambles in the . . . Hartz Mountains, Saxon Switzerland, &c. From the Danish ... by Charles Beckwith. 8°. 1848. - 165 The Shoes of Fortune and other tales. With four drawings by Otto Speckter, and other illustrations. (Translated by Charles Boner.) 12°. 1847. 166 True story of my life : A sketch. Trans- lated by Mary Howitt. 12°. 1847. 167 ANDERSON (GEORGE AND PETER). Guide to the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, including Orkney and Zetland . . . containing also directions for visit- ing the Lowlands of Scotland . . . Maps, Views . . . Third edition, 12". Edinburgh, 1850, 168 ANDERSON (REV. JAMES STUART MURRAY). History of the Church of England, in the Colonies and foreign dependencies of the British Empire. Vol. I. 8°. Lon- don and Brighton, 1845. 169 ANDERSON (JOHN), D.D. Course of Creation. 8°. 1850. 170 ANDERSON (JOHN). Reminiscences of Thomas Chalmers, D.D. 8°. Edinburgh, 1851. 171 ANDERSSON (CHARLES JOHN). Lake Ngami ; or, explorations and dis- coveries, during four years' wanderings in the wilds of south western Africa. Map and illustrations representing sporting ad- ventures ... 4°. 1856. 172 ANDREWS (ALEXANDER). Eighteenth Century or illustrations of the manners and customs of our Grand- fathers. 8°. 1856. 173 ANDREWS (ETHAN ALLEN) LL. D. . . . Latin-English Lexicon, founded on the larger Latin-German lexicon of Dr. William Freund ; with additions and corrections from the lexicons of Gesner, Facciolati, Scheller, Georges, etc. New edition. 8°. 1852. 174 ANDREWS (STEPHEN PEARL). Discoveries in Chinese or the symbolism of the primitive characters of the Chinese system of writing ... 8°. New York, 1854. 175 ANDRYANE (ALEXANDER). Memoirs of A. Andryane, a prisoner of State, with Count Confalonieri and Silvio Pellico. Translated by Fortunato Prandi. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 176 ANECDOTES. Dictionary of Anecdotes: chiefly his- torical ... 2 vol. 8°. 1809. 177 National anecdotes j interspersed with historical facts ; English proverbial say- ings and maxims, with a collection of toasts and sentiments. In three parts. (Edited by W. M. T.) 8°. 1812. 178 Private anecdotes of foreign Courts by the Author of " Memoirs of the Princesse de Lamballe." [C. Hyde, Marchioness Govion Bi-oglio Solari.] Memoirs ex- tracted from the portefeuille of the Baron de M ; anecdotes of the French Court by the Prefect of the Imperial Palace. 2 vol. 8°. 1827, 179 ANGAS (GEORGE FRENCH). A Kiimble ia Malta and Sicily, in the Autumn of 1841. Illustrated with sketches. 4°. 1842. 180 ANGELO (HENRY). Reminiscences, with Memoirs of his late father and friends ... 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1830. 181 ANGLO-SAXON. The Anglo-Saxon. 2 vol. 8°. 1849-50. 182 ANNA MATILDA, pseud, [i.e., COW- LEY (MRS. HANNAH)]. Poetry of Anna Matilda ... To which are added Eecollections, printed from an original manuscript. Written by General Sir William Waller. 12". 1788. 183 ANNE, QUEEN. Life of Queen Anne . . . With all the transactions of her reign ... 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1721. 184 Memoirs of the four last years of the reign of Queen Anne ... To which is prefix'd a succinct view of the continual struggles of parties, from the Reformation to 1710. 8°. 1742. 185 ANSPACH (LADY ELIZABETH BERKELEY, apt. LADY CRAVEN, AFT. MARGRAVINE OF). Memoirs of the Margravine of Anspach. Written by herself. 2 vol. (Portraits of the Margravine and Margrave.) 8°. 1826. 186 ANSTED (DAVID THOMAS). The Ancient World ; or, picturesque sketches of creation. 8°. 1847. 187 Geology, introductory, descriptive, and practical. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 188 Gold-Seeker's Manual. 12°. 1849. 189 Scenery, Science, and Art; being ex- tracts from the note-book of a geologist and mining engineer. 8°. 1854. 190 [ANSTEY (CHRISTOPHER)]. New Bath Guide : or, Memoirs of the B — r — d family. In a series of poetical epistles. Ninth edition. [Anon.] (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1773. 191 [Another edition.] 12°. (Illustrations.) Bath, 1807. 192 [ANSTEY (JOHN)]. The Pleader's Guide : a didactic poem containing the conduct of a suit at law . ■ for assault and battery By J. J. S(urrebutter). New- edition. 12°. 1803. 193 Fifth edition. fi°. 1808. 194 ANTI-JACOBIN. Poetry of the Anti-Jacobin. Second edition. 12°. 1800. 195 Poetry of the Anti- Jacobin : comprising the celebrated political and satirical poems, parodies, and jeux-d'esprit of George Can- ning, Earl of Carlisle, Marquis Wellesley, J. H. Frere, W. Gifford, W. Pitt, G. Ellis and others. With explanatory notes by Charles Edmonds. Second edition . . . With six etchings by . . . James Gillray. 12°. 1854. 196 ANTISTHENES. Fragmenta. Nunc primum collegit et edidit Aug. Guil. Winckelmann. [Gr.] 8°. Turici, 1842. 197 ANTOMMARCHI (C. FRANCESCO). Last days of Napoleon. Memoirs of the last two years of Napoleon's exile. Forming a sequel to the journals of Dr. O'Meara and Count Las Cases. 2 vol. Second edition. 8°. 1826. • 198 APOLLYN. Romance of " Kynge Apollyn of Thyre." Reproduced in facsimile by Edmund Wil- liam Ashbee, from the unique original, printed by Wynkyn de Worde, 1510, in the library of the Duke of Devonshire. B.L. 8°. For private circulation only, 1870. 199 APOPHTHEGMS. Witty apophthegms delivered . . . by King James, Kmg Charles, Marquess of Worcester, Francis Lord Bacon, and Sir Thomas Moor. Collected and revised. (Frontispiece of portraits.) 12°. 1671. 200 APULEIUS (LUCIUS). Works. Comprising' tTie Metamor- phoses, or Golden Ass, the God of Socrates, the Florida, and his Defence, or a discourse on Magic. A new trans- lation. To which are added, a metrical version of Cupid and Psyche [by H. Gurney], and Mrs. Tighe's Psyche, a poem ... 8°. Bohn,1853. 201 Metamorphoses ; a romance of the second century. 'Translated from the Latin, by Sir George Head. 8°. 1851. 202 ARABIAN NIGHTS. Arabian Nights, translated by Edward Forster [from the French version of A. Galland]. With engravings, from pictures by Robert Smirke, R.A. Second edition. 5 vol. 12°. 1810. 203 Thousand and One Nights, commonly called, in England, the Arabian Nights' Entertainments. A new translation from the ."Vrabic, with copious notes. By Ed- ward William Lane. Illustrated . . . 10 ARABIAN NIGHTS— COM*, from originiil designs by William Harvey. 3 YOl. 8°. 1841. [vol. 2 is dated 1840.] 204 New Arabian Nights' entertainments, selected from the original Oriental MS. by Jos. Von Hammer; and now first trans- lated into English by Rev. George Lamb. 3 vol. Second edition, with six plates. 12°. 1829. 205 ARAGO (DOMINIQUE FRAN9OIS JEAN). Biographies of distinguished seientrfio men. Translated by Admiral W. 11. Smyth, Rev. Baden Powell, and Robert Grant. 8°. 1857. 206 Arago (Autobiography)— BaiUy—Horschol - -^liaplaco — Fourier — Carnot — Malue— Tresnel—T. Young— Watt. Note by [Sir] W. Palrbairn. Historical Eloge of James Watt. Trans- lated from the French with additional notes and an appendix by James Patrick Muirhead. (Portrait.) 8°. London and Edinburgh, 1839. 207 History of my Youth. Translated by Rev. Baden Powell. 12°. 1855. 208 Meteorological Essays ; With an intro- duction by Baron Alexander Von Hum- boldt. Translated under the superinten- dence of Colonel Sabine. 8°. 185S. 209 ARAM (EUGENE). Genuine account of ,the life and trial of Eugene Aram, Schoolmaster, for the mur- der of Daniel Clart, late of Knaresbrough in the Cotmty of York, who was convicted at York A.ssi?!es, AugilSt 3, 1759 . ' . . [By W. Bristow}.. To which are added, the remarkable defence he made on his Trial : his own account of Himself . . . and his plan for a Lexicon, some pieces of Poetry, &c. . . . Second edition. 8°. n.d. ' 210 With cuttings from newspapers and two plates. ARBER (EDWARD). English lleprints. Edited by E. Arber. 30 vol. 12°. 1868-71 and n.d. 211 Addisojt (Joseph) . Criticism on Milton's Paradise Lost. Prom "The Spectator." 1711-12. ASCJIA.M (Uogee). Scholemastcr. Written betweenl563-8. Posthumously published. First edition, 1670; collated with the second edition, 1571. ASCHAM (UoaEB). Toxophllus. 1545. Baooh (Fbancis, Viboouht St. Albans). Harmony of the Essays. Etc. Arranged by Edward Arber. BncKiifOnAM (Geobbe Vilhebs, 2nd Duke or). Eehearsal. Firat acted 7 Dec. 1671. Published [PJuly] 1672. With illustrations from previous plays, etc. Eaele (John, Bishop of Salisbcey). Micro - CoSmographie. EditiO princeps, 162S. With additional chai-acters from the fifth edition of 162(1; and the sixth edition of 1633. ARBER (EDWARD)— COM/. Gascoigne (GeoeSe). 1. Oertayne notes of instruction in English vci'so. 1676. 2, The Steele Glas 1676. 8. The Omn- playnt of Philomeno 157fl. Preceded by George Whetstone's A remembrance of the well imployed lifcv and godly end of G. G. GooGE (Baknabe). Eglogs, Bpytaphes, & Sonettes, 1563. GossoN (Stephen). Sohoole of Abuse. [August P] 1579. And A short Apologie of the Sohoole of Abuse. [November P] 1679. Habington (William). Oastara. The third edition of 1040 ; edited and collated with the earlier ones of 1684, 1635. Howell (James). Instructions for For- reine Travell. 1642. CoUalod with the second edition of 1650. James VI. op Scotland, I. or England. Essayes of a prentise, in the divine art of . Poesie. Edinburgh, 1685. Connterblaste to Tobacco. London, 1604. Latimee (Hugh) Ex-Bishop op Woe- CESTEE. Sermon on the Ploughers. 18 January, 1549. Seven Sermons before Edward VI. on each Friday in Lent, 1049. Levee (Thomas). Sermons. 1650. Ltlt(John). Euphues. The Anatomy of Wit. Editio princeps. 1579. Euphues and his England, Editio princeps. 1680. Collated with early subsequent editions. Milton (John). Areopagitica. [ai No- vember] 1614. Preceded by illustrative documents. MoEE (Sie TnoMis). Utopia. Originally printed in Latin, 1516. Translated into English by Ralph Robinson. His second and revised edition 1658 : preceded by the title and epistle of his first edition, 1561. Nacnion (SiE ROBEET). . Fragmenta Re- galia. Probably written about 1630. Re- printed from the third posthumous edition of 1653. PUTTENHAM (Geoeoe). Arte of English Poesie. [JlnieP] 1689. Revenge. Last light of the Revenge at Sea; under the command of Vice- Admiral Sir Richard Grenvillo, on the 10-llth of September. 1591. Described by Sir Walter Raleigh, November, 1691. Gervusc Mark- ham, 1595. And Jan Huygen Van Lin- sohoten, in Dutclj, 1596; English, 1698; and Latin, 1599. Revelation. Revelation to the Monk of Evesham. 1196. Roy (William). Rede me and be nott wrotlie. For I saye nothingo but trothe. Written by WilUam Roy and Jerome Barlowe, English Observant Franciscan Friars. Printed by John Schott at Strai- burg in 1528. Proper dyaloge betwene a Gentillman and a Husbandman : echo complaynynge to other their miserable catamite tlirongh the ambieion of the clergyc. Together with a compendious olde treatyso : shew- yn^e howe that we ought to have the bcrmture in Englysshe. Written by a Lollard about 1460. Printed by Hans Luft at Marburg, Hesse, in 1630. Selden (John). Table-Talk, 1689. Kidney (Sie PntLip). AiiologicforPoetrie. 1695. ToiiEL (Richaed). Tottol's Miscellany. Songes and Sonettes by Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, Sir Thomas Wyatt, tho elder, Nicholas Grimald and uncertain Au- thors. First edition of 6th Juno ; coUal od with the second edition of 31sl July, 1557. Udall (Nicholas). RoisterDoister. Writ- ten, probably also represented, before 1553. 11 ARBER (EDWARD)— con(. Watson ( Thomas ). Popnis. viz. ; — 'E«oTOfjLira0ia 01' I'liasioiiato Conturio of Love. [158'i.] MtJibrous, sivt^ t'oloRii In obilum, &c. IBIW. EKlogiio uiiuii Iho iloiilli of Sir I''ranci8 WalsiiigUam. 1690. Ten res of faiicy or lovo disdained. Poat- liiiiuousl;^ publishul in int)3. Weddk (Edward). E. W„ cliiof mn.sler ffumior, his tniviulrs. VtW. Wkbbk (Wiiliam). .\ Discourse of Ens- lish roetrii'. 158ti. ARBLAY (FRANCES BURNEY, ait. MADAME D'). niarv and Letters. KditP.d by her niiro. " (1778-1840.) 7 vol. (Portraits.) 8". 1842-6. 212 Now edition. 7 vol. 12". 1854. 213 Kvoliua; or, tho history of a young liidy's entrance into the world. New edi- tion. 8». ISftl. 214 Memoirs of Dr. Buruoy, arranged from his own mnnusoripts, ft-om family papers, and from personal recollections. 3 vol. 8". 1S32. 215 ARBOUVILLE (SOPHIE, COUNTESS D"). Village Doctor. Translated hv Lady Duff Gordon. 12". 1853. ' 216 ARBUTHNOT (JOHN), M.D. Miscellaneons Works. 2 vol. ]2». Glasgow, 17 r.l. 217 Ussav concerning the nature of Ali- iiieiils.'and the choice of them, aecordina; to the different constitutions of human bodies. In which the different effects, advantnijes and disaihantages of animal and vegeliiWe diet are explained. 8°. Dublin. 17:U. 218 Law is a bottomless-pit. Exemplify'd in tlie ease of the I-ord Strutt, John Bull, Nicholas Frog, iuid Lewis Baboon. Who spent all thev haiin a law-suit . . . Third edition." [.\nd] John Bull in his senses : being the second part . . . Third edition. [And] .lohn Bull still in his senses : being the third part . . . r.Vud] Lewis Baboon turned honest and John Bull politician. Being the fourth part . . . PiiblishM . . . by the Autlior of the New Atalanlis. [Anon.] S". 1712. 219 f B.v Swifl and Ai'biilUnot. LAw is a bottomless pit , . . Sixth edition. [And] Seeoud part . . . Fourth edition. [And] Third part . . . Third edition. [And] Fourth part . . . Second edition [? bv Swift and Arbuth- not]. [And] Appendix to John Bull still in his senses . . . Third edition. [bv Arbuthuot]. [And] A complete Kev to Tittw is a bottomlesspit, the Story of the St, Alban's Ghost, imd Prince Mira- bel, &e. Sixth edition, [f by Swift and ArbuthuotO [Anon.] 12". 1712-lS; ARBUTHNOT, (JOHN), M.D.— ro«/. Appendix to John Bull still in liis senses : or. Law is a Bottomless-Pit . . [Anon.] 1712. [And] Complete Key to . . . Law is a bottomless-pit, and the Story of the St. Alban's ghost. Tl-.ird edition. [Anon.] 8". u. p. 1713. 321 AocordinK to"Hnlkott and Laing" llio "Complete Key" and "Story" are by " 'William Wngstaile." Account of the state of learning in the Empire of Lillipnt. Together with the history and character of Bullum [Dr. Bentley] the Emperor's Library-Kee|>er. Faithfully transcribed out of Captain Lemuel Gulliver's general description of the Empire of Lillipnt . . . [Anon] S". 1728. 222 Ascribed to Dr. Arbuthuot. Book-plate of S. Abdy. Si. John's, Camb. ARCH/EOLOGICAL INSTITUTE. Proceedings at the annual meeting of the Archaeological Institute of Great Bri- tain and Ireland, at Winchester, Septem- ber, 1845. 8°. 1846. 223 ARCHBOLD (JOHN FREDERICK). New Statutes relating to Lunacy, com- prising the law relating to pauper lunatics , . . Also the law respecting lunatic asylums . . . with the duties of the Commissioners in lunaey and visiting justices. 8». 1854. 224 ARCTIC. Arctic MiseelUniies. A Souvenir of the late polar search. By the officers and seameu of the Expedition [under the command of Captain Austin, C.B.]. 8". 1852. 225 ARGENS (JEAN BAPTISTE DE B[OYER], MARQUIS D"). Philosophical dissertations on the un- certainty of human knowledge, viz. Of the uncertainty of history. Coneeriiing logick. Concerning the general principles of natural philosophy. Concerning meta- physieks. Concerning judicial astrology. With some remarks on the theology of the Grecian philosophers. To which is added, Maupertuis's dissertation upon Gravity, &e. Translated from the last Fi-ench Edition. 2 vol. (in one). (Por- trait.) 12". 175.'5. 226 ARGUMENTUM. Argumcntuin Anti-Normannicum : or an Argument proving . . . that Wil- liam, Duke of Normandy, made no abso- lute conquest of England by the sword. . . (Frontispiece.') 8"." 16S2. • 227 Accoi"dii»g U) tlio Brit. Mas. (.'at. aud " Hal- kctt aim Laiu^; 'I by Edward Cooke ; ascribed to 'William Atwood " and Jolmson. ; also . Pet.vt " 12 ARGYLL (GEORGE ' DOUGLAS CAMPBELL, 8TH DUKE OF). " Presbytery examined " : An essay . . . on the ecclesiastical history of Scotland since the Keformation. 8°. 1848. 238 "Presbytery Examined" is by the Bight Rev. John Sage, a Bisliop in the Scotch Episcopal Church, who died 1711. ARIOSTO (LODOVICO). Orlando Furioso translated into English verse with notes by William Stewart Rose. 8 Tol. 8°. 1823-31. 229 ARISTOPHANES. Comoediae accedunt perditarum fabu- larum fragmenta. Ex reoognitione et cum annotationibus Guil. Dindorfii. 2 vol. 8°. 1830. 230 Comedies. By T. Mitchell. Vol. 1, 2 (in one). 8". 1820-2. 231 Acharnians ; Knights ; Clouds ; Wasps ; Dioast turned Gentleman. Comedies translated into corresponding English metres, by Benjamin Dann Walsh. 3 vol. Vol. I. 8<>. 1837. 232 No more published. Contains Acharnians, Knights, and Clouds. Acharnians, Knights, Wasps, and Birds : translated into Jlnglish 'pfosg. By a graduate of the University of Ox- ford. 8°. Oxford, 1830. 233 Comoediae duae plutus & Nubes : Cum Soholiis Graecis autiquis, quibus adjioi- untur notae quaedam . . . [Edited by J. Leng aft. Bishop of Norwich. Gr. andLat.] 12°. 1695. 234 [Barpaxo'.] Eanae ex recensione G. Dindorfii. 8°. Lipsiae, 1824. 235 [Eip?j«).] Pax ex recensione G. Din- dorfii. 8". Lipsiae, "1820. 23C \^EKKKT}tria^ov(Tai.'] Ecclesiazusae ex recensione Guil. Dindorfii. 8°. Lipsiae, 1826. 237 ['Ittttcis.] Equites. Ex recensione (i. Dindorfii. 8°. Lipsiae, 1821. 238 [N£(()eA.oi,] Nubes . . . edita auctore Carolo Keisigio. Accedit syntagma cri- ticum cum additamentis et commentatio de vi et usu 'av particulae. 8°. Lipsiae, 1820. 239 N6if>e\oi. Nubes . . . recensuit Im- manuel Bekkerus Accednnt . . . Bentleii . . . aliorumque annotntiones. 8°. 1826. 240 Clouds, with Notes ... by T. Mitchell. 8". 1838. 241 Clouds, "with Notes. Bv C. C. Eeltou. 8°. Cambridge [U.S.], 1841. 242 Presentation copy. Clouds : a comedy . . . Now first intirely translated into English [by James White], with the principal Scholia, and Nofes . . . 12°. 1759. 243 ARISTOPHAN ES— con*. ['Opwflei.] Aves ex recensione G. Dindorfii. 8°. Lipsiae, 1822. 244 'Opcifles. Aves . . . recensuit Im- manuel Bekkerus Acceduut . . . Bentleii . . . aliorumque annotationes. 8°. 1826. 245 Birds translated into English verse with introduction, notes, and appendices by Benjamin Hall Kennedy. 8°. London, Cambridge [printed], 1874. 246 n\ovTos. Plutus . . . recensuit Im- manuel Bekkerus Accedunt . . . Bentleii . . . aliorumque annotationes. 8°. 1827. 247 Pencil notes. The Worlds Idol. I'lutus . . . trans- lated by H. H. B[urnell?]<. Together with his notes, aud a short discourse upon it. 4°. 1659. (Two copies.) 248 No. 1. Roxburghe, Heber, and Mitford copy. ARISTOTLE. Ta ittance, by Richard Williams. Edited from the autograph MS. by P. J. Furnivall. Part 11. Ballads relating chiefly to the reign of Queen Elizabeth. Edited, with introduction and notes to the whole volume, by "W. XI. MorfiU. 3-8. The Eoxburghe Ballads. Vols I. II. III. With short notes by Wm. Chappell. Vol. IV. v. Beginning the second series. Edited, with special introductions and notes, by J. Woodfall Ebsworth. With Ms copies of all the original woodcuts. Supplementary volume. Edited by P. J. Purnivall. 9. Captain Cox, his ballads and books ; or, Robert Laneham's Letter : whearin part of the entertainment untoo the Queens Majesty at Killingworth Castl, in Warwik Sheer in this soomers progress. 1575. is signified. Re-edited, with forewords de- scribing all the accessible books, tales, and ballads, in Captain Cox's list, and the Com- ?laynt of Scotland, 1548-9, by Prederick J. 'urnivall. 10. Love-poems and humoiu'ous ones. Written at the end of a volume of small printed books, A.D. 1614-1619, in the British Mu- seum. Putforthby Prederick J. Purnivall, 11-13. The Bagtord Ballads ; illustrating the last years of the Stuarts. Edited, with introduction and notes, by Joseph Wood- fall Ebsworth. With copies of all the original woodcuts. In two divisions (2 vol.). The Amanda group of Bagford poems, (circa 1668.) Collected and annotated, with special woodcut illustra- tions, by J. Woodfall Ebsworth. 14. Jyl of Breyntfords Testament, by Robert Copland, Boke-prynter, TheWyllof the Deuyll and his last testament, A talk of ten wives on their husbands' Ware, A Balade or two by Chaucer, and other short pieces. Edited by Frederick J. Purnivall. (Presented by the Editor.) Printed for private circulation. Annual reports of the Ballad Society prefixed to some of the volumes. 21 BALLADS. Ballads and metrical tales selected from Percy, Eitson, Evans, Jamieson, Scott, &c. 12". n.d. (1845). 412 BALLANTYNE (ALEXANDER) AND OTHERS AND BALLANTYNE (JOHN), llefutation of the mistatemeuts and calumnies contained in Lockhart's Life of Sir Walter Scott, respecting Messrs. f James and John] Ballantyne. By the trustees and sou of James Ballantyne. Third edition. 8°. 1838. 413 BALLANTYNE (REV. JAMES). Homes and Plomesteads in the land of plenty : a handbook of Victoria as a field for emigration. 8°. Melbourne, 1871. 414 BALLANTYNE (ROBERT MICHAEL). Hudson's Bay ; or every-day life in the Wilds of North America, during six years' residence in the territories of the Hud- son's Bay Company. Illustrations. 8°. Edinburgh, for private circulation, 1848. 415 BALLANTYNE PRESS. [Centenary of Sir Walter Scott] History of the Ballantyne Press and its connection with Sir Walter Scott. 4°. Edinburgh and London, 1871. 416 BALY (WILLIAM) M.D., AND GULL (SIR WILLIAM WITHEY) M.D. Reports on epidemic cholera ... 8°. 1854. 417 BALZAC (HONORe' DE). [No title-page. Monographic de la Presse Parisienne (Bxtrait de I'histoire naturelle du bimane en sooiete.) (Illus- trated.)] pp. 129-a08. 8°. n.p. n.d. 418 Inserted at end— -" Feuilleton da Journal des I)6bats. Monographie de la Presse Siirisienne, par. M. De Balzac." BAMFORD (SAMUEL). Passages in the life of a Radical. 2 vol. 12". 1844. 419 Poems. 12°. Manchester, 1843. 420 Walks in south Lancashire, and on its borders; with letters ... 12°. Blackley, near Manchester, 1844. 421 BANCROFT (GEORGE). History of the United States, from the discovery of the American Continent. Vol. 1-3. Third edition. (Portraits of Captain John Smith, Governor Winthrop BANCROFT (GEORGE)— con<. and Eranklin). 8°. .Boston [IT.S.l. 1838-7-40. 422 Each vol. ha.s a second t.p.— " History of the Colonization ot the United States." Nos. 422-3. Presentation copies to Mr. Forster with inscriptions and autograph letter. History of the American Revolution. 3 vol. 8°. 1852-4. 423 BANFIELD (THOMAS C). Pour lectures on the organization of industry ... 8°. 1845. 424 Second edition. 8°. 1848. 425 Industry of the Rhine. • Series I. Agri- culture : embracing a view of the social condition of the rural population of that district. 12°. 1846. 426 _ Series II. Manufactures : embracing a view of the social condition of the manu- facturing population of that district. 12°. 1848. 427 AND WELD (CHARLES RICHARD). Statistical Companion for 1854. 12°. 1854. 428 BANIM (JOHN). The Smuggler : a tale. By the author of "Tales by the O'HaTa family." 12°. 1849. .... 429 BANKES (RIGHT HON. GEORGE). Story of Corfe Castle, and of many who have lived there . . . various particulars of the Court of Charles the First, at York and Oxford. 8°. 1853. 430 BANKS (JOHN). . . . Review of the political life of Oliver Cromwell. ... By a gentleman of the Middle-Temple. (Portrait.) 8°. 1739. 431 . . . With an appendix . . . Eourth edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 1760. 432 BANKS (SIR JOSEPH). Sir J. Banks and the Royal Society. A popular biography, with an historical introduction and sequel. [Anon.] 12°. 1844. 433 BARANTE (A. BRUGIERE, BARON DE). Histoire des Dues de Bourgogne de la maison de Valois ; avec des remarqnes, par le Baron de Reiffenberg. Sixieme edition. 10 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. Brux- elles, 1835-6. 434 Vol. 1. Philippe-le-hardi. 2. Philippe ; Jean sanspeur. S. Jean. 4-8. Philippe le bon. 7, 8. Charles le tem^raire. 9, 10. Marie de Bourgogne. Melanges historiques et litteraires. 3 vol. 12°. Bru^^lles, 1835. 435 22 BARATARIANA. Baratariana. . A select collection of fugitive political pieces, published during the administration of Lord Townshend iu Ireland [in "Freeman's Journal"]. Second edition. (Portrait and plate.) 12°. Dublin, 1773. 436 "The -writers of this work were Henry Mood, Henry Gvattan, Sir Hercules Langrishe, and Rev. — Simpson, the edi- tor. Hallcett and Laitig. See also "Notes and [Queries. 2nd S. viii., 63,96, 211."* "The letters signed Sindercombe were perhaps \vritteu hy H. Macaulay Boyd." (The authority for this and other information in the Catalof^ue is the new "British Museum Catalogue of printed books.") BARBER (MRS, MARY). Poems on several occasions. 4°. 1734. 437 Preface by Swift. MS. note. BARBER (WILLIAM HENRY), Judgment of the Court of Queen's Bench . . . upon the application of Mr. W. H. Barber for his attorney's certificate. ... 8°. London and Liverpool, 1854. 438 BARCLAY (CAPTAIN ROBERT). Agricultural tour in the United States and Upper Canada ... 8°, Edinburgh and London, 1842. 439 On t.p, — Captain Barclay of TJry ; dedicaT tion signed " B. Barclay— AUardioe." BAREITH (FREDERICA SOPHIA WILHELMINA, PRINCESS ROYAL OF PRUSSIA, MARGRA- VINE OF). Memoirs, Written by Herself. Trans- lated from the original French. 2 vol. 8°. 1812. 440 BARERE DE VIEUZAC (BERTRAND). Memoires, publics par Hippolyte Caruot, et David (d' Angers) ; pr?c6d6s d'une notice historique, par H. Carnot. Vol. I. II. (in one). 8°. Paris, 1842. 441 BARETTI (GIUSEPPE). Dizionario Italiano, ed Inglese prima cdizione Fiorentina riveduta . . . con una grammatica ... 4°. Firenze, 1816. 442 English and Italian dictionary to -which is prefixed a short and new Italian Gram- mar. The first Florentine edition revised. ... 4°. Florence, 1816. 443 BARHAM (FRANCIS). Life and tiroes of John Reuchliu, or Capnion, the father of the German Re- formation, 12°. 1843. 444 BARHAM (RICHARD HARRIS DALTON). Life and Letters of Rev. Richard Harris Barham, author of the Ingoldsby Legends : -\vith a selection from his miscellaneous poems. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1870. 445 Life and remains of Theodore Edward Hook. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 446 New edition. 8°. 1853. 447 BARKER (EDMUND HENRY), I. The Claims of Sir Philip Francis, to the Authorship of Junius's letters, dis- proved : II. Some enquiry into the claims of Charles Lloyd, to the composition of them: III. Observations on the conduct, character, and style of the writings, of Edmund Burke: IV. Extracts from the -svritings of several eminent philologists, on the Laconic and Asiatic, the Attic and Rhodian styles of eloquence. 8°. 1828. 448 MS. notes. Inscription on Title page. Literary Anecdotes and contemporary reminiscences, of Professor Person and others. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 449 Memoir of E.H.B. prefixed. Parriana : or Notices of Rev. Samuel Parr, LL.D. Collected from various sources . . . and in part written by E. H. Barker. 2 vol. 8°. 1828-9. 450 BARKER (WILLIAM BURCK- HARDT). Lares and. Penates : or, Cilicia and its governors ; being a short historical ac- count of that pro-vince . . . -with a de- scription of some household gods of the ancient Cilicians, broken up by them on their conversion to Christianity . . . Edited by William Francis Ainsworth. 8°. 1853. 451 Practical grammai- of the Turkish lan- guage. With dialogues and vocabulary. 12°. 1854. 452 Reading book of the Turkish language, with a grammar and vocabulary ... 8°. London, Hertford [printed], 1854. 453 BARKER (WILLIAM GEORGE MICHAEL JONES). Three Days of Wensleydale ; the valley of the Yore. 8°. 1854. 454 [BARKSDALE (CLEMENT).] Remembrancer of excellent men. Dr. John Reynolds. Mr. Richard Hooker. Dr. William Whitaker. Dr. Andrew Willet. Dr. Daniel Fcatley. Walter Norban[e] Esq. Mr. John Gregory. Bishop Duppa. Archbishop Bramhall. Bishop Taylor. [Anon, but dedication 23 [BARKSDALE (CLEMENT)]-co«f. signed " C.B."] 8°. 1670. (Two copies.) 455 No, 1. MS. notes. Book-plate of Sam. Mer- nman, M.D. No. 2. Book-plate ol Joseph Tasker. [BARKSTEAD (COLONEL JOHN).] White-Hall fayre : or, who buyes good penniworths of Barkstead . . . [Auon. Satire, verse.] 4°. n.p. [London] 1648. 456 BARLOW (WILLIAM) BISHOP OF LINCOLN. Summe and substance of the Con- ference, which, it pleased his Maiestie, tc have with the Bishops, and other of his clergie ... at Hampton Court. Jan- uary 14. 1603. Contracted bv W. Barlow, Deane of Chester ... 4°. 1604. 457 Abp. Laud's copy with his autograph— ""William Land." Dr. Bandinel's bool- plato (as in many others). BARNARD (GEORGE). Handbook of foliage and foreground drawing. Illustrated by numerous ex- amples . , . 12°. 1853. 458 BARNARD (JOHN) D.D. Theologo-IIistoricus, or the true life of . . . Peter Heylyo, D.D. . . . Also an answer to Mr. Baxters false accusations of Dr. Heylyu. (Portrait.) 12°. 1683. 459 BARNARD (REV. MORDAUNT ROGER). Sport in Norway, and where to find it . . . Account of the vegetable produc- tions of the country. . . . List of the Alpine Flora of the Dovre Fjeld and of the Norwegian ferus, &c. 8°. 1864. 460 BARNARD (NICHOLAS) DEAN OF ARDAGH. . . . Penitent death of John Atherton, late Bishop.of Waterford in Ireland. Who was executed at Dublin 5 Dec. 1640. Also the sermon . . . preached at his buriall. Second edition. 12°. 1642. 461 BARNES (REV. WILLIAM). Poems of rural life, in the Dorset dialect. With a dissertation and glossary. Second edition ... 8°. 1848. 462 "John Porster, from his sincere friend "WJlliftm Harness, Nov. 4. 185B." BARNUM (PHINEAS TAYLOR). Life of P. T. Barnum, written by him- self .. . (Portrait.) 12°. 1855. 463" BARON (AUGUSTE ALEXIS FLOREAL). Histoire abrlgde de la Litterature Pran- i;aise depuis son origine jusqu'au xvii« si^cle. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. Bruxelles, 1841. 464 Le Marquis de Sy et M. Poupar ; ct de la litterature de I'exil. Lettres de M. A. Baron et de M. Sylvain Van De Weyer. 8°. 1857. 465 BARON (JOHN) M.D. Life of Edward Jenner, M.D. With illustrations of his doctrines and selections from his correspondence. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1838. 466 BARR (LIEUT. WILLIAM). Journal of a march from Delhi to Pesh3,wur, and from thence to Cabul, with the Mission of Lieut.-Colouel Sir C. M. Wade. Including travels in the Punjab, a visit to the city of Lahore, and a narra- tive of operations in the Khyber Pass, undertaken in 1839. 8°. 1844. 467 BARRETT (EATON STANNARD). Woman : her character and influence. A poem. New edition. With four en- gravings from designs by E. Westall, R.A. 12°. 1841. 468 BARRETT (JOHN) D.D. Essay on the earlier part of the life of Swift. To which are subjoined several pieces ascribed to Swift ; two of his let- ters ; and extracts from his remarks on Bishop Burnet's History. 8°. ] 808. 469 E. Malone's copy. MS. notes. BARRINGTON (ARCHIBALD) M.D. Plain hints for understanding the ge- nealogy and armorial bearings of the Sovereigns of England, with a descrip- tion of the different styles of British architecture, by which the dates of cathe- drals and other buildings may be deter- mined. 12°. 1843. 470 [No title-page. Chronological chart of British Architecture, with the genealogy of the Sovereigns of England, and parallel tables of the most important events in British and general history.] E°. n.d. 471 BARRINGTON (HON. DAINES). Observations on the more ancient sta- tutes from Magna Charta, to the twenty- first of James I. Cap. xxvii. With an appendix, being a proposal for new model- ling the statutes. Fifth edition. 4°. 1796. 472 BARRINGTON (SIR JONAH). Historic Memoirs of Ireland; com- prising secret records of the National 24 BARRINGTON (SIR JONAH)— com(. OonTentioD, the Rebellion, and the Union ; with delineations of the principal charac- ters . . . Illustrated with curious letters aud papers in fac-simile, and numerous original portraits. 2 vol. F". 1833. 473 Historic records and secret memoirs of the Legislative Union between Great Britain and Ireland. New edition. Por- traits. 8°. 1844. 474 Personal Slsetches of His own times. Second edition. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 475 BARRON (WILLIAM). British Winter garden : heing a prac- tical treatise on evergreens ; showing . . . their mode of propagating ... as prac- tised at Elvaston Castle. 12° 1852. 476 BARROW (ISAAC) D.D. Theological Works. 8 vol. (Two por- traits, inserted.) 8°. Oxford, 1830. 477 Vol. 1-3. Sermons. 4. Seiinons; Defence of the Blessed Trinity ; Sermons on the Creed. 6. Sermons on the (Jreed. 6. Ser- mon xxjiv. on the Creed ; Expositions ; &c. 7. Treatise on the Popes Supre- macy, and a discourse concerning the unity of the Church. 8. Opusoula theo- logica, orationes, poematia. Beauties of I. Barrow, selected from all his sermons and devotional writings, with a biographical notice of the Author. By B. S. 8°. 1846. 478 BARROW (SIR JOHN). Auto-biographical memoir of Sir John Barrow, Bart., late of the Admiralty . . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. 479 Life of George Lord Anson, Admiral of the Fleet . . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1839. 480 Life of Eichard Earl Howe, K.G., Ad- miral of the Fleet . . . (Portrait.) 8". 1838. 481 BARROW (JOHN). Life and Correspondence of Admiral Sir William Sidney Smith. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1848. 482 Life, voyages, and exploits of Admiral Sir Francis Drake. With numerous ori- ginal letters from him and the Lord High Admiral . . . (Portrait.) 8''. 1843. 483 Second edition, abridged. (Portrait.) 12°. 1844. 484 Memoirs of the Naval Worthies of Queen Elizabeth's reign ; . . . with brief biographical notices of the respective commanders. Illustrated by autograph letters ... 8°. 1845. 485 Tour on the Continent . . . through northern Germany, Austria, Tyrol, Aus- trian Lombardy, &c. JJJ°. 1863. 486 BARRY (JAMES) R.A. AND OTHERS. Lectures on Painting by the Royal Academicians Barry, Opie, and Fnseli. Edited, with an introduction and notes ... by Ralph N. Wornum. (Portrait of Fuseli.) 8°. Bohn, 1848. 487 BARRY (MICHAEL JOSEPH). Songs of Ireland. Edited by M. ,f. Barry. 12°. Dublin, 1845. 488 BARTER (CHARLES). The Dorp aud the Veld ; or six months in Natal. 8°. 1852. 489 BARTLETT (JOHN RUSSELL). Dictionary of Americanisms. Glossary of words and phrases, colloquially used in the United States. 8°. New York and London, 1849. 490 BARTON (BERNARD). Selections from the poems and letters of B. Barton. Edited by his daughter (Lucy Barton). (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 491 Prefixed is Memoir by E. P. G., i.e. Edward Pitz Gerald. BARWICK (PETER) M.D. Life of John Barwick, D.D. sometime fellow of St. John's College in Cambridge ; and immediately after the Restoration suc- cessively Dean of Durham and St. Paul's. Written in Latin by his brother Dr. Peter Barwick . . . (Translated into English by the editor of the Latin life. With some notes . . . [by Hilkiah Bedford] and a brief account of the author . . . appendix of Letters from Charles I. in his confine- ment, and Charles II. and the Earl of Clarendon in their exile . . . (Portraits of Peter and John Barwick.) 8°. 1724. (Two copies.) 492 No. 1. L. P. Book-plate aud MS. notes of Philip Bliss. 2. Book-plate of Viscount Kirkwall. BASIRE (ISAAC) D.D. Correspondence of I. Basire, Archdeacon of Northumberland and Prebendary of Durham, in the reigns of Charles I. and Charles II. With a memoir of his life By W. N.Darnell. 8°. 1831. 493 BASKERVILLE (ALFRED). Poetry of Germany. Consisting of selections from upwards of seventy of the most celebrated poets, translated into English verse, with the original text on the opposite page, by A. Baskerville. Second impression. 12°. Leipzig, 1854. 494 25 BASS (MICHAEL THOMAS). ~ Street Music in the Metropolis. Cor- respondence and observations on the ex- isting law, and proposed amendments. 8°. 1864. 495 BASSE (WILLIAM). Great Brittaines sunnes-set, bewailed with a shower of teares. [Poem on the death of Henry Prince of Wales.] 12". Oxford, 1613. Facsimiled by W. H. AU- nutt. Oxford, 1872. 496 Inserted— Printed mem", by W. H. AUnutt. BASSOMPIERRE (FRANCOIS DE) MARSHAL OF FRANCE. Memoirs of the embassy of the Marshal De Bassompierre to the Court of England in 1626 : translated. With notes. 8°. 1819. 497 According to "Lowndes" the translation by J. W Nicolas. Croker, the notes by Sir N. H. BASTIAT (FREDERIC). Essays on political economy. Part 1. Capital and interest. 2. That which is seen, and that which is not seen. 3. Go- vernment. What is Money ? 4. The Law. 12°. 1853. 498 Popular fallacies regarding general in- terests ; being a translation of the " So- phismes Economiques." With notes by G. R. Porter. 12''. 1846. 499 [Another edition.] 12°. 1849. 500 BATE (GEORQE) M.D., Elenchus Motuum nuperorum in An- glia : or, a short historical account of the rise and progress of the late troubles in England. In two parts. Written in Latin by Dr. G. B. Motus Compositi : or, the history of the composing the affairs of England by the restauration of K. Charles the second, and the punishment of the regicides : and other principal occurrents to 1669. Written in Latin by Tho. Skinner, M.D. Made English [by A. level] . To which is added a preface . . . (Frontispiece ; and portraits inserted.) 8°. 1685. ' 501 The name on the t. p. is " Bates." BATE (GEORGE)^ , Lives, actions, and execution of the prime actors, and principall contrivers of that horrid murder of . . . King Charles the first . . . With . . . passages in the lives of others, their assistants, who died before they could be brought to justice. 12». 1661. 502 " Lowndes," quotins Ant. * . ■Wood, says " Not written by the physician Bate, but by ■ another far inferior to nun in all [BATHURST (CHARLES).] Lectures read at a Mechanics' Institute in the country. [Anon, but preface signed " C. B."] 12°. 18.54. 503 Extracts from history, lllustrafinK the cha- racter of the people of India— Madness- Shakespeare— In what sort of countries are mankind most prosperous— Effects of the gold discoveries — Origin and early history of the Russians and Turks— Battles of few against many, ancient — Rudiments of general geology— Particular Elays of Shakespeare — Heat and Dew — aw— Eirst notions in Mathematics. BAXTER (REV. JOHN ALEXANDER). Church history of England : from the introduction of Christianity into Britain to the present time. Second edition. 8°. 1849. 504 BAXTER (RICHARD). Abridgment of Mr. Baxter's History of his life and times. With an account of many others of those worthy ministers who were ejected, after the restauration of King Charles the Second . . . And a con- tinuation of their history, till 1691. By Edmund Calamy. 8°. 1702. 505 Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1713. 506 Cathohc Communion defended against both extreams : and unnecessary division confuted ... In five parts : I. The dan- gerous schismatick ; on the three cases about Church-communion. II. Animad- versions on part of Mr. Raphson's book. III. Survey of the unreasonable defender of Dr. Stillingfleet, for separation . IV. Reasons of the authors censured communion with the parish-chiirches. V. The reasons why Dr. J. O.' [John Owen] twelve arguments change not his judg- ment. 4°. 1684. 507 " Por the Reverend Dr. Tenison." MS. on fiy leaf. MS. notes at end by Tenison : From nis library. Full and easie satisfaction which is the true and safe religion ... In four parts . . . 12°. 1674. 508 What we must do to be saved. Edited by Rev. Alexander B. Grosart. 8°. Printed (at Edinburgh) for private circu- lation, 1868. (Two copies.) 509 At the end — Annotated List of the writings of Richard Baxter. By Rev. A. B. Grosart. BAXTER (WILLIAM EDWARD). America and the Americans. 12°. 1855. 510 BAYARD (PIERRE DU TERRAIL, CHEVALIER DE). . . . History of the feats ... of the good knight without fear and without reproach the gentle Lord De Bayard. Set forth in English by Edward Cockburn Kindersley. 8°. 1848. 511 26 BAYEUX TAPESTRY. Under the sanction of the Science and Alt Department of the Committee of Council on Education. The Bayeux Tapestry reproduced in autotype plates. With historic notes by Frank Eede Fowke. 4". Arundel Society, 1875. 512 BAYLE (PETER). Dictionaire historique et critique. Se- conde edition. 3 vol. F°. Eotterdam 1702, 513 Supplement au Dictionaire . . . F°. Geneve, 1722. *513 Prefixed is a portrait and " Histoire de Mr. Bayle et de ses ouvrages." Historical and critical Dictionary, se- lected and abridged from the great work of P. Bayle. With a life of Bayle. 4 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. , 1826. 514 General Dictionary, historical and cri- tical : in which a new and accurate trans- lation of that of Mr. Bayle ... is included ; and interspersed ivith several thousand lives never before published. Th^ whole containing the history of the most illus- trious persons of all ages and nations, particularly those of Great Britain and Ireland . . . By Eev. John Peter Bernard ; Rev. Thomas IBirch ; John Lockman ; and other hands. And the articles relating to Oriental History by George Sale. 10 vol. F". 1734-41. 515 BAYLEY (JOHN). History and antiquities of the Tower of London, with memoirs of royal and dis- tinguished persons . . . Second edition. 8°. 1830. 516 BAYLEY (ROBERT). Life of William [Laud] now Lord Arch- Bishop of Canterbury., examined . . . (Portrait inserted) . [And] Large supple- ment of the Canterburian self-conviction . . . 1641 [And] Postscript for the per- sonate lesuite Lysimachus Nicanor. 4°. 1643. 517 MS. note. BAYLY (ANSELM). Introduction to languages, literary and philosophical ; especially to the English, Latin, Greek, and Hebrew ... In three parts. 8°. 1758. 518 BAYNE (PETER). The Christian life, social and individual. 8°. Edinburgh, 1855. 519 BAZANCOURT (CESAR DE) BARON. Crimean Expedition, to the capture of Sebastopol . . . Translated from the French by Robert Howe Gould. 2 vol. (Portraits of Marshals Saint-Arnaud and Pelissier). 8°. 1856. 520 BEALE (ANNE). Poems. 12°. 1842. 521 Vale of the Towey, or, sketches in South Wales. 8°. 1844. 522 BEAMES (REV. THOMAS). Rookeries of London : past, present, and prospective. 8°. 1850. 523 At end — Public Baths and Wasli-liouses. Suggestions. BEAMISH (NORTH LUDLOW). Discovery of America by the Northmen, in the tenth century, with notices of the early settlements of the Irish in the western hemisphere. 8°. 1841. 524 Uses and application of cavalry in war from the text of [Count J?. W. von] Bis- mark, with practical examples selected from antient and modern history. 8°. 1855. 525 BEAMONT (REV. V^ILLIAM JOHN). Catherine, the Egyptian slave in 1852. 8°. Cambridge, 1855. 526 BEARD (JOHN REILLY) D.D. Life of Toussaint L'Ouverture, the negro patriot of Hayti . . . Engravings. 8°. 1853. 627 BEATTIE (JAMES) LL.D. The Minstrel ; or, the progress of Genius. With some other poems. New edition. (Illustrations.) 12°. 1801. 528 AND OTHERS. Poetical works of Beattie, Blau-, and Falconer. With lives, critical dissertations, and explanatory notes, by Rev. George GilfiUan. 8°. Edinburgh, 1854. 529 BEATTIE (WILLIAM) M.D. Life and letters of Thomas Campbell. Edited by W. Beattie. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 530 BEAUCHAMP (ALPHONSE DE). Authentic narrative of the invasions of France, in 1814 and 1815, comprising a circumstantial detail of the battle of Water- loo. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1816. 531 BEAUCHESNE (ALCIDE DE). Louis XVII. his life— his suffering— his death : the. captivity of the Royal family in the Temple. Translated and edited by W. Hazlitt . . . vignettes autographs and plans. 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 532 BEAUMONT (FRANCIS) AND FLETCHER (JOHN). Fifty Comedies and Tragedies , . . Published by the authors original copies, the songs to each play being added. F". [London, 1679.], 533 Title-page laid down and anparently made up. The date of the imprint [P talten from some other book] is 1678. 27 BEAUMONT (FRANCIS) AND FLETCHER (JOHN)— cont. [Half-titles] . Commendatory poems on Beaumont and Fleteher — King and No King — Scornful! Lady — Humorous Lieu- tenant — ]?aithful Shepherdess — Mad Lover — Loyal Subject — Kule a Wife and have a Wlfe^-Chances — Bloody Brother ; or, lioUo— Wild-Qoose Chase— Wife for a Month — Lovers Progress — Pilgrim^ Love's Pilgrimage ^ Double Marriage — Maid in the Mill — Knight of Malta- Love's Cure : or, the Martial Maid — Women Pleas'd — Night - Walker — Woman's Prize — Island Princess— Noble Gentleman — Two Noble Kinsmen — Tra- gedy of Thierry and Theodoret — Woman- hater — Nice Valour (and Masque at the marriage of Frederick and Elizabeth) — Honest Man's Fortune —Four Plays in one. 30 vol. 8°. n.p. n.d. 534 All bound singly, being portions of the edi- tion by Theobald, Seward, and Sympsoii (1750, in 10 voU MS. mai'ks and MS. notes by Leigh Hunt and Mr. Porster. Works. With an introduction by George Barley. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1839. (Two copies.) 535 Works ; the text formed from a new collation of the early editions. With notes and a biographical memoir by Eev. Alexander Dyoe, 11 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1843-6. 536 The finest scenes, lyrics, and other beauties of those two poets, now first se- lected from the whole of their works . . . With opinion? of distinguished critics, notes . . . and a general introductory preface, by Leigh Hunt. 8°. Bohn, 1855. 537 " To John Forster from his affectionate Wend Leigh Hunt." Bloody Brother. A Tragedy. By B. J. F. 4°. 1639. 538 A King and No King . . . fourth time printed ... 4°. 1639. 539 Knight of the Burning Pestle . . . 4». 1635. 540 Eichard Heber's copj'. Maids Tragedie . . . fifth impression ... 4°. 1641. 541 Philaster or, Love lies a bleeding ... fifth impression. 4°. 1652. 542 "John Yonge Akerman 1830." MS. on Title. Scornful! Lady. A comedy . . . Sixt edition ... 4°. 1651. 543 BECHSTEIN (JOHANN MATTHAEUS) M.D. Cage and Chamber-birds . . . Trans- lated from the German. With consider- able additions . . . compiled from various sources by H. G. Adams. Incorporating the whole of Sweet's British Warblers ; with numerous illustrations. 8°. Bohn, 1853. 544 BECHSTEIN (LUDWIG). Old Story-Teller popular German tales collected by L. Bechstein. One hun- dred illustrations by Richter. 8". 1854. 545 BECKER (WILHELM ADOLPH). Gallus : or Roman Scenes of the time of Augustus ; with notes and excursus illus- trative of the manners and customs of the Romans. Translated from the German, by Frederick Metcalfe. 8°. 1844. 546 BECKET (ANDREW). Shakspeare's himself again ; or the lan- guage of the poet asserted ; being a full but dispassionate examen of the readings and interpretations of the several editors ... 2 vol. 8°. 1815. 547 BECKFORD (WILLIAM). Biographical memoirs of extraordinary painters . . . Second edition. [Anon.] 12°. 1780. 548 Pencil notes. Epitaphs ; some of which have appeared in the Literary Gazette of March and April, 1823. [Anon.] 8°. n.p. n.d. [Privately printed.] 549 "Written by Mr. Beokford Author of ' Vathek.' " MS. note. To " Mr. Editor " is dated " Bath, Oct. 1822." Story of Al Eaoui, a ta.le from the Arabic. (Die Geschiohte von Al Eaoui. Eine Arabische Erzahlung.) (With verses.) [Anon.] [Eng. nud German.] 8°. 1799 550 Vathek : an Arabian tale. With notes . . . 12°. 1849. 551 BECKMANN (JOHANN). History of Inventions, discoveries, and origins. Translated from the German, by William Johnston. Fourth edition, care- fully revised and enlarged by William Francis, and J. W. Griffith. 2 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. Bohn, 1846. 552 BEDDOES (THOMAS) M.D. Hygeia : or essays moral and medical, on the causes affecting . the personal state of our middling and affluent classes. 3 vol. 8°. Bristol, 1802-3. 553 BEDDOES (THOMAS LOVELL). Poems posthumous and collected. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. 1851. 554 Memoir prefixed to Vol. 1 was wi'itten by Thomas Forbes Kelsall (B. "W. Gosse in the Athenaeu-m.) BEDE, THE VENERABLE. Ecclesiastical History of England. Also the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. With illus- trative notes, a map of Anglo-Saxon England, and a general Index. Edited by J. A, Giles. 8°. Bohn, 1847. 555 28 BEDFORD (ARTHUR). Serious remonstrance in behalf of the Christian religion, against the horrid blas- phemies and" impieties which are still used in the English play-houses . . . from almost seven thousand instances, taken out of the plays of the present cen- tury ; and especially of the five last years ... 8°. 1719. 556 BEDFORD (JOHN RUSSELL, FOURTH DUKE OF). Correspondence : selected' from the ori- ginals at Woburn Abbey. With au intro- duction, by Lord John [Earl] Russell. .3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1842-6. 557 BEE. Honey Bee. Reprinted from the " Quar- terly Review." 12°. 1852. 558 BEE (JON) pseud, i.e., .BADCOCK (JOHN). Slang. A Dictionary of the turf, the ring, the chase, the pit, of bon-ton, and the varieties of life . . . with anecdotes . . . 12». 1823. 559 BEECHER (REV. CHARLES). Review of the " Spiritual Manifesta- tions" . . . 12°. 1853. 560 BEECHER (EDWARD), D.D. The tapal Conspiracy exposed ; or, the Romish corporation dangerous to the poHtical liberty and social interests of man. With preface by Rev. James Begg, D.D. 12°. Edinburgh, 1856. 561 BEECHEY (ADMIRAL SIR FREDERICK WILLIAM). Narrative of a Voyage to the Pacific and Beeriug's Str.ait, to co-operate with the Polar Expeditions: performed in H.M.S. Blossom, under the command of Captain F. W. Beechey. In 1825-8 . . . New edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1831. 562 Voyage of discovery towards the North Pole, performed in H.M.S. Dorothea and Trent, under the command of Captain David Buchan, li.N., 1818 ; to which is added, a summary of all the early attempts to reach the Pacific by way of the Pole . . . (With separate Chart.) 8°. 1843. 563 BEEVER (REV. WILLIAM HOLT). Notes on fields and cattle from the diary of an amateur farmer . . . Prize essay on time of entry on farms ... 8°. 1862. 564 BEGBIE (MAJOR PETER JAMES). Supernatural illusions. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1851. 665 BEGGS (THOMAS), Inquiry into the extent and causes of Juvenile .Depravity ... 8°. 1849. 566 BEHN (MRS. APHARA.ORAPHRA). AU the histories and novels . . . With the history of the life and memoirs of Mrs. Behn. By one of the fair sex . . . Letters that pass'd betwixt her and Minheer Van Bruin, a Dutch merchant ; with her character of the country . . . Sixth edition. 8°. 1718. 567 Plays. Third edition. 4 vol. (Por- trait.) 12°. 1724. 568 To Christopher Duke of Albemarle, on his voyage to his government of Jamaica. APindarick. 4°. 1687. 569 Book-plate of Sir Peter Thompson. Fair Jilt . . . Agnes de Castro . . . writ- ten in French by a lady of quality made English by Mrs. Behn. The Lover's Watch . . . (and The Case for the Watch). The Lady's Looking-glass . . . The Lucky Mistake . . . The History of the Nun. . . . second edition. Memoirs on the Court of the King of Bantam. A novel. The Nun . . . The Adventure of the Black Lady . . . [No t. p.] The his- tory of (Oroonoko: or,) the Royal Slave. 12°. 1697-8. .570 The Rover ; or, the Banish't Cavaliers. Second edition. 4°. 1697. 671 4°. 872 Second part of the Rover 1681. BELANEY (ROBERT). Massacre at the Carmes in 1792 . . . 8°. 1855. 573 BELCHER (ADMIRAL SIR EDWARD). Narrative of a voyage round the world, performed in H.M.S. Sulphur, 1836-42. Including details of tne naval operations in China, from Dec. 1840, to Nov. 1841, . . 2 vol. (With three separate charts.) 8°. 1843. 574 Partly by R. B. Hinds.— B.jlf. Cat. Narrative of the voyage of H.M.S. Sama- raug, 1 843-6 ; employed surveying the islands of the eastern Archipelago; ac- companied by a brief vocabulary of the principal languages. . . . With notes on the natural history of the islands, by Arthur Adams. 2 vol. (With three separate charts.) 8°. 1848. 675 BELCHIER (DABRIDGCOURT). [No title page. Hans Beer-Pot, his in- visible comedie of See me, and see me not. . . . 1618.] 4°. 676 29 BELFAST (FREDERICK RICHARD, EARL OF). Poets and Poetry of the XlXth century. A course of lectures. 12°. 18.52. 577 BELGRADE, Visit to Belgrade. Translated (from " Siidsliivische Wanderungen ") by James Whittle. S". 1854. 578 BELIEF. The Restoration of Belief. [By Isaac Taylor.] 8°. Cambridge, 1855. 579 BELL (ACTON) pseud, i.e. ANNE BRONTE. Tenant of Wildfell Hall. 12". 1^4. 580 BELL (SIR CHARLES). The Hand ; its mechanism and vital en- dowments, as evincing design. Fifth edi- tion revised, with woodcuts. [Bridge- water Treatise.] (Portrait.) 8°. 18.12. 581 BELL (CURRER) pseud, i.e. CHAR- LOTTE BRONTE, aft: MRS. A. B. NICHOLLS. Jane Eyre: an Autobiography. Fourth edition. 8°. 1850. 582 The Professor. To which are added the Poems of Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell [i.e. Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Bronte] : now first collected, 12°. 1860. 583 Shirley. A tale. New edition. 8°. 1853. 584 Villette. New edition. 8°. 1855, 585 BELL (CURRER, ELLIS, AND ACTON) pseud, i.e. CHARLOTTE, EMILY, AND ANNE BRONTE. Poems. 12°. 1846. 586 BELL (ELLIS AND ACTON);5«e«d,i,e. EMILY AND ANNE BRONTE. Wuthering Heights and Agues Grey. New edition, with a biographical notice of the authors, a selection from their literary remains, and a preface, by Currer Bell [i.e. Charlotte Bronte]. 8°. 1850. 587 BELL (EVANS). The Task of To-day. 12°. 1851. 588 BELL (JOHN). History of the revolutions in France. [Erasure.] The affairs of France, from 1787 to 1802. By John Bell. (Vol, I.) 8°.' 1831. 589 No more published. BELL (JOHN) Sculptor. Compositions from morning and even ing prayer. 4°. 1844, 590. BELL (PAUL) pseud, i.e. HENRY FOTHERGILL CHORLEY. Rooeabella : a tale of a Woman's life. 2 vol. 8°. n.d, [1859]. 591 BELL (ROBERT). History of Russia, [Anon.] 3 vol. 12°. 1836-8. 592 Life of George Canning. 8°. 1846. 593 Lives of the most eminent literary and scientific men of Great Britain. English poets. 2 vol. (Portrait of Drayton.) 12°. 1839, 594 Vol. 1, Drayton, Crjvvley, Wallor, Milton, S, Butler, 2. Dryden ; Two Centuries of UTinor Poets— TllSii. Sackville, Earl of Dorset, Brown- swerd, Jasper Heywood.AVatson, Fulwell, Stanyhurst, Storer, Churchyard, T. New- ton, Warner, I.eyson, Tuvberville, Sir E. Dyer, Lord Brooke, Wither, W, Browne, Stradling, Hoskyns, Sir John Davies, B. Barnes, Sandsbiiry, Owen, John Davies, Lodge, Overbury, Corbet, Sir John Beau- mont, Hugh Holland, Slater, Brath- waytc, Sandys, Wortley, D. Lloyd, Mennes, Saltonstall, Gomersal, AVlld, Eandolph, Oheveland, Gayton, Birken- head, Payne Pisher, Lovelace, Hatmaii, Matthew Morgan, Blackmore, (Coryat, Nicholea, Barniield, Eoohe, Hayman, J. Lloyd, Llewelin, Weaver, Wyrley, Free- man, Argall, Hutton, Heath, Bold, Speed, Whitehall, Head, Austin, Lote, Vaughan, Beeve, Scudamore, Markland, Thos. Wood Willis, S. Wesley) — Prior, Pope, Young, Akenside. Story-Teller ; or, table-book of popular literature. A Collection of romances, short standard tales, traditions, and poetical legends of all nations . . . Edited by E. Bell. With incidental notes. . . . Vol. I, 4°. 1843. 595 Wayside Pictures through France, Bel- gium, and Holland. 8°. 1849. 596 "To John Porster Esi)". with warmest re- gards from his smcere friend Robert Bell," BELL (WILLIAM ABRAHAM). New Tracks in North America, A journal of travel and adventure whilst engaged in the survey for a Southern raih-oad to the Pacific Ocean during 1867-8. 2 vol, 8°. 1869. 597 BELLAMY (DANIEL) THE ELDER, Love triumphant; or, the Rival God- desses. A pastoral opera. Perform'd on Easter-Monday, by the young ladies of Mrs. Bellamy's school (as their publick breaking-up exercise) . . . (Original poems, and translations . . . 12°. 1722. 598 30 BELLAMY (GEORGE ANNE). Apology for the Life of G. A. Bellamy, late of Covent-Garden Theatre. Written by herself . . . Her original letter to John Calcraft . . . [Edited by A. Biok- nell.] Third edition. 6 vol. 12°. 1785. .599 BELLEW (REV. JOHN CHIPPEN- DALE MONTESQUIEU). Sermons preached in St. Philip's, E-egent Street ; together with two dis- courses delivered on the days of National Thanksgiving, 185.5, 1856. 8°. 1856. 600 Presentation copy. BELLOT (JOSEPH RENe'). Memoirs of Xiieutenant J. R. Bellot. With his Journal of a voyage in the Polar seas, in search of Sir John Franklin. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1855. 601 BELOE (REV. WILLIAM). Anecdotes of Literature and scarce books. 6 vol. 8". 1807-12. 602 Miscellanies : consisting of poems, classical extracts, and oriental apologues. Vol. 1, 2. 12". 1795. 603 The Sexagenarian ; or, the recollec- tions of a literary life. 2 vol. Second edition. [Anon.] 8°. 1818. 604 BEMIS (GEORGE). Report of the case of John W. Webster ; indicted for the murder of George Park- man ... 8». Boston [U. S.] 1 850. 605 BENGER (ELIZABETH OGILVY). Memoirs of John Tobin, author of the Honey-Moon. With a selection from his unpublished vrritings. 8°. 1820. 606 BENJAMIN, RABBI. Travel^ of Rabbi Benjamin, sou of Jonah, of Tudela : [flourished about A.D. 1160] throughEurope, Asia, andAfi'ica; from the ancient Kingdom of Navarre, to the frontiers of China. Translated from the Hebrew ; vfith a dissertation, and notes ... By Rev. B. Gerrans ... 12" 1784. 607 Book-plate of Hon. Frederic North. BENNETT (CHARLES HENRY). Proverbs with Pictures. 4°. 1859. 608 BENNETT (GEORGE JOHN). Pedestrian tour through North Wales. With 20 etchings by A. Clint. 8°. n.d. [? 1838]. 609 BENNETT (JAMES GORDON). Memoirs of J. G. Bennett and his times. By a Journalist. (Portrait.) 8°. New York, 1855. 610 BENNETT (WILLIAM COX). Baby May, and other poems on Infants. 12°. 1859. 611 Baby May, Home poems and ballads. 8°. 1875. 612 Our Glory-Roll, and other National poems. 12°. n.d. [1866.] 613 [No Title-page. Poems. 1848.] 12°. 614 Poems. 12°. 1850. 615 Queen Eleanor's Vengeance. And other poems. 12°. 1857. 616 Songs for Sailors. (Portrait.) 12°. 1872.' 617 Nos. 612-17. Several ot these are Presen- tation copies with inscriptions. The Worn Wedding-Eing, and other poems. 8°. 1861. 618 BENTHAM (JEREMY). Works, now first collected ^ under the superintendence of his executor [Sir] John Bowring. .Parts XIX-XXII. con- taining Memoirs of Bentham, by [Sir] John Bowring; including Autobiogra- phical conversations and correspondence. (General index, and an introduction to the study of Bentham's Works, by J. H. Burton.) 4 vol. 8". Edinburgh, 1842-3. 619 Elements of the art of packing, as ap- plied to special juries, particularly in cases of libel law. 8°. 1821. 620 Book-plate of Prancis Place. Fragment on Government ; being an examination of what is delivered, on the subject of government in general in the introduction to Sir William Blackstone's Commentaries : with a preface, in which is given a critique on the work at large. [Anon.] 8». 1776. 621 Book-plate of Joshua Smith. Second edition. 8°. 1823. 622 Papers relative to codification and pub- lic instruction. Including correspondence with the Russian Emperor, and divers constituted authorities in the American United States. Published by J. Bentham. 8°. 1817. 623 Bookplate ot Prancis Place. MS. notes by -Joseph Parkes. Supplement. 8°. 1817. 624 The Rationale of Eeward. 8°. 1825. 625 "1825 May 12. To Francis Place from Jeremy Bentham." Bookplate of F. Place. Benthamiana ; or, select extracts from the works of Bentham. With an outline of his opinions on the principal subjects discussed in his works. Edited by John Hill Burton. (Portrait.) 8°. Edin- burgh, 1843. 626 31 BENTHAM (JEREMY)— conf. Book of Fallacies : from unfinished papers of J. Bentham. By a friend [Peregrine Bingham]. 8°. 1824. 627 " From Mr. Bentham, July 23 1824." Francis Place's copy. MS. (bv Joseph Parkesf). At end— Political Fallacies. Reprinted from the . . . Westminster Review. [Anon. JBy Walter Colson.] (London), 1825. BENTLEY (JOSEPH). Ancient and modern histoiy of Wor- cestershire . . . Alphabetical List of 1,500 of the nohility, gentry, clergy - . . forming Vol. VII. of Bentley's History, directory, and statistics of Worcestershire. 8°. Birmingham, n.d. 628 BENTLEY (JOSEPH). Education ; as it is, ought to be, and might be. Second edition, enlarged by Part II. 8°. 1849. 629 BENTLEY (RICHARD) D.D. Works. Collected and edited by Rev. Alexander Dyce. Vol. I. II. Disserta- tions upon the Epistles of Phalaris, The- mistocles, Socrates, Euripides, and upon the Fables of JEsop : also, Bpistola ad Joannem Millium. Vol. III. Sermons preached at Boyle's Lecture ; Remarks upon a Discourse of Free-Thinking ; Pro- posals for an edition of the Greek Testa- ment ; etc. 8". 1836, 1838. 630 No more published. MS. notes. Correspondence. (Edited by Christo- pber Wordsworth, D.D.) 2 vol. 8°. 1842. 631 MS. notes. Dr. Bentley's dedication of Horace, translated. 'Xo which is added, a poem in Latin and EngUsh, inscribed to Lord Halifax, written by Dr. Bentley. 12°. n.d. 632 BERANGER (PIERRE JEAN DE). Lyrical poems, selected and translated by William Anderson. With a biogra- phical notice by the translator, revised by the poet. (Portrait.) 12°. Edinburgh, 1847. 633 One hundred Songs, with translations by William Young. 12°. 1847. 634 Two hundred of his lyrical poems, done into Enghsh verse. By William Young. 8°. New-York, 1850. 635 BERESFORD (REV. JAMES). Miseries of Human Life ; or the groans of Samuel Sensitive, and Timothy Testy ; with a few supplementary sighs from Mrs, Testy. In twelve dialogues ; as over- heard by J. B, Ninth edition. 2 vol. 12°. 1807. 636 Vol. II. 3* edition. " B. W. Procter " who pive it to Mr. Forster. BERGERAC (SAVINIEN CYRANO DE). Comical history of the states and empires of the worlds of the Moon and Sun. Written in French. And newly Englished by A. Lovell. 12°. 1687. 637 Book-plate ot Robert Butler. BERINGTON (REV. JOSEPH). History of the reign of Henry the Second, and of Richard and John, his sons ; with the events of the period, from 1154 to 1216. In which the character of Thomas A Becket is vindicated from the attacks of George Lord Lyttelton. 4°. Birmingham and London, 1790. 638 Literary history of the Middle Ages: comprehending an account of the state of learning, from the close of the reign of Augustus, to its revival in the fifteenth century. (Portrait of Chaucer.) 8°. 1846. 639 " With a biographical Notice of the Author by W. Hazlitt." .B. M. Catalogue. BERKELEY (GEORGE) BISHOP OF CLOYNE. Works. To which is added, an account of his life, and several of his letters . . . [Edited by Joseph Stock, D.D.] 2 vol. (Portrait.) 4°. 1784. 640 Memoirs. Second , edition, [ed. by Joseph Stock, D.D.]. (Portrait inserted.) 8°. 1784. 641 [BERKELEY (GEORGE, 1ST EARL OF).] Historical Applications, and occasional meditations upon several subjects . . . Fourth impression. Written by a person of honour. 12°. 1698. 642 " Nov. 16 1697 Given me by the Author the Rt Hon" Earl of Berkley." BERKELEY (HON. GEORGE CHARLES GRANTLEY FITZ- HARDINGE), Reminiscences of a Huntsman. Illus- trations by Leech. 8°. 1854. 643 BERKELEY (GEORGE MONCK). Literary Relics: containing original letters from Charles II., James n., the Queen of Bohemia, Swift, Berkeley, Addi- son, Steele, Congreve, the Duke of Ormond, and Bishop Rundle . . . In- quiry into the life of Dean Swift. 8°. 1789. 644 E. Maloue's copy with his autosraph and MS. notes and ooneotions. Portrait of Thomas Prior inserted. BERLYN (PETER) AND FOWLER (CHARLES) JUN. Crystal Palace: its architectural history and constructive marvels. 8°. 1851. 645 82 BERNARD (JOHN)/ Retrospections of the Stage. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 646 " Editor's Advertisement " signed " W. Baile Bernard." BERTRAM (CHARLES). Ethics from several authors, the words accented to render the English pronuntia- tion ^asy to fdreigners . . . 12°. Copen- hagen, 1751. 647 Autograph of " M. Lort." MS. note as to ttie Author. BERWICK (REV. EDWARD). Lives of Marcus Valerius Messala Corvinus, and Titus Pomponius Atticus ; the latter from the Latin of Cornelius Nepos. ^ With notes and illustrations. To which is added, an account of the families of the five first Caesars. Edin- burgh, 1813. 648 Lives of Caius Asinius Pollio, Marcus Terentius VaiTO, and Cneius Cornelius Gallus ; with notes and illustrations. 8°. 1814. *648 BESSEL (FRIEDRICH WILHELM), Astronomische Untersuchungen. 2 ■vol. (in one). 4°. Kouigsberg, 1841-2. 649 [BEST (HENRY).] Four years in France ; or, Narrative of an English family's residence there during that period ; preceded by some account of the conversion of the author to the Catholic faith [Anon.] 8°. 1826. 650 Italy as it is; or Narrative of an English family's residence for three years in that country. By the author of " Four years in France." 8°. 1828. 651 Personal and Literary Memorials, by the author of " Four Years in France," " Italy as it is," &c. 8°. 1829. 652 BETHUNE (JOHN). Poems ; ivith a sketch of the Author's life, by his brother (A. Bethune). 12°. Loudon, Brislol [printed], 1841. 653 BETTERTON (THOMAS). History of the English Stage, from the Bestauration to the present time. In- cluding the lives ... of the most emi- nent actors and actresses. With instruc- tions for public speaking . . . Cuts. (And — Memoirs of the life of Mrs. Anne Oldfield). 8°. E. Curll, 1741. 654 According to " Lowndes," the " History of the English Stage " is by "Wm. Oldys. Imperfect, vranting the outs, &o. BEVAN (SAMUEL). Sand and Canvas ; a narrative of ad- ventures in Egypt, with a sojourn among the artists in Home. 8°. 1849. 655 BEVERIDGE (WILLIAM) BISHOP OF ST. ASAPH. Private thoughts upon religion . . . with practical resolutions . . . Ninth edition. Adorned with sculptures. 8°. 1719. 656 Book-plate of Eev. Josh. Carter. BEWICK (THOMAS). Cabinet of natural history, containing pretty pictures of birds, animals, fishes, reptiles, serpents and insects. Embel- lished with engravings on wood, by T. Bewick of Newcastle. 12". Alnwick, 1809. 657 Seven distinct little publications with sepa- rate covers and title-pages. General history of Quadrupeds. [By Ralph Beilby.] The figures engraved on wood by T. Bewick. Seventh edition. 8°. Newcastle upon Tync, 1820. 658 Memoir, written by himself. Embellished by numerous wood engravings, designed and engraved by the author for a work on British Fishes, and never before published. 8°. Newcastle on Tyneand London, 1862. 659 "Presented to John Forster Esq. by Jane Bewick [the editor] February 1871." Select Fables ; with cuts, designed and engraved by Thomas and John Bewick, and others, previous to 1784 : together with a memoir; and a descriptive catalogue of the works of Messrs. Bewick. (Portraits of Thomas Bewick.) 8°. Newcastle, 1820. 660 BEZZI (GIOVANNI AUBREY). Readings in Italian prose literature. With biographical sketches. 12°. 1852. 661 bhagavad-g'ita. The Bhagavad-Gita ; or a discourse be- tween Krishna and Arjuna on divine matters. A Sanskrit philosophical poem : translated, with copious notes, an intro- duction on Sanskrit philosophy, and other matter: by J. Cockburn Thomson. 8°. Hertford, 1855. 662 . . . Bhagavad-Gita ; or the sacred lay : a colloquy between Krishna and Arjuna on divine matters. An episode from the Mahabharata . . . New edition of the Sanskrit text, with a ^■ocabulary. By J. Cockburn Thomson. 8". Hertford, 1855. Kfis BIBLE. The Bible annotations . 1611]. 8°. . With most profitable E. Barker, 1610 [at end 664 Title-page to the New Testament wanting. A copy of the Genevan version, known also as the "Breeches" Bible from the word "breeches" being used instead of aprons " in Genesis in. 7. 8:j BIBLE— conf. PreflxBd is— The Booke of Common Prayer, Jvith the Psalter . . . 160!). At the end is— Ihe Booke of Psalmes, collected into English meeter, by Thomas Sternhold, lohn Hopkins . . 1010, " Prayers " at the end imperfci-r. Holy Bible . . . 4». Eyre and Strahan, 1806. C65 Bnglish version of, the Polyglott Bible . . . With . . reference.s to parallel and illustrative passages . . . 12". Bagster, 1826. 666 Preface signed " T. C." I'ictorial Bible . , . illustrated with many hundred wood-cuts .... Original notes. 4 vol. 4°. 1838-9. 667 Holy Bible, containing the Old and New Testaments, and the Apocrypha . . With a . . . commentary and revised version, by T. J. Hussey, D.D. ... 3 vol. S". 1844-.5. 668 Holy Bible . . 12". 1847. 669 The Seven Seals broke open ; or, the Bible of the Reformation reformed. Three volumes, in seven books. Containing the whole of the Old and New Testaments according to the generally received English Protestant versicm, but under an entirely new arrangement in every part. ^\'ith preface, introduction, commentary, indexes, &c. By John Finch. 12°. 1853. 670 Pentateuch or five books of Moses. With notes . . . preceded by an essay on the letter and spirit of Scripture. By Kev. Thomas Wilson. 4°. 1854. 671 Book of Ruth . . . Enriched with coloured borders, selected from illumi- nated MSS. . . . The illuminations arranged and executed under the direction of H. Noel Humphreys. Sm. 4". 1850. 672 Psalter or Psalms of David, in English verse. By a member of the University of Cambridge. 12°. Cambridge, 1860. 673 Presentation cop.y with Latin inscription by the editor, Benjamin Hall Kennedy. . . . Book of Solomon, called Ecclesi- astes ; or, the Preacher, metrically para- phrased, and accompanied with an analysis of the argument ; .being a retranslation of the original Hebrew, according to the in- terpretation of the Rabbinic commentary of Mendelssohn, the criticisms of Preston ... By fJev. Aaron Augustus Morgan. With illustrations by George Thomas. 4». 1856. 674 [The Words of the Preacher son of David king of Jerusalem] (Illuminated by Owen Jones). 4°. [London] 1849. 675 The Good Shunammite ii Kings, Chap. IV . . . (Illuminated by Lewis Gruner). Sm. 4°. 1847. 676 o 16505. BIBLE. NEW TESTAMENT. [Title in MS. Novum Testament Domini nostri lesu Christi vulgata editi. Im- pressus Colouiae Cal. April 152.5]. 3f in. 677 Imperfect. All to Fo. i supplied in manu- script. Novum Testamentum (jraecum, ad fidem Graeoorum soliiin Codicum MSS. nunc primilm expressum, adstipulante Joanne Jacobo Wetstenio : juxta sectiones Jo. Alberti Bengelii divisum . . Accessere . . . emendationes conjecturales ... 2 vol. 12°. 1763. 678 Novum Testamentum Graece. Textum . . . recensuit . . . Jo. Jac. Griesbach. Vol. I. IV. Evangelia complectens. Edi- tio Secunda. 8°. Halae Saxonum [Halle] et Londini, 1796. 679 Novum Testamentum Graece . . . Ke- censuit lectionesque variantes Elzevirio- rumStephani Griesbachii notavit.Coustan- tinus Tisehendorf. 12°. Parisii's, 1842. 680 New Testament . . . Illustrated by a plain explanatory comment, and by authentic views of places mentioned in the sacred text from sketches and photo- graphs taken on the spot. Edited by Edward Churton ; and William Basil Jones [Bp. of St. Davids]. 2 vol. 8°. 1865. 681 New Testament . . . With engravings on wood from designs of Pra Angelico Pieiro Perugino, Francesco Fraucia, Lo- renzo di Credi, Fra Bartolommeo, Titian, Raphael, Gaudenzio Ferrari, Daniel di Volterra, and others. 4°. 1865. 682 '■ To John Toratcr Bsq. With kind regards from Thomas Longman January 2. 1865." New Testament : the authorised English version ; with introduction, and various readings from the three most celebrated manuscripts of the original Greek text. By Constantine Tisehendorf. Tauchuitz edition. Volume 1000. 12°. Leipzig, Tauchnitz, 1869. 683 Presentation copy. Holy Gospels with numerous illustra- tions on wood, engraved under the super- intendence of Mr. Charles Heath. F». 1849. 684 Emphatic New Testament, according to the authorised version, compared with the various readings of the Vatican manu- script. The four Gospels. Edited, with an introductory essay on Greek emphasis, by John Taylor. 8°. 1852. 685 Apocalypse of Saint John. A new translation, metrically arranged, with scripture illustrations (by John H. God- win). 8°. 1856. 686 Miracles of Our Lord. Illuminated by H[enry] N[oel] H[umphreys]. 12°. 1848. 687 34 BIBLE. NEW TESTAMENT— con*. Parables of Our Lord illustrated by John Franklin. E". n.d. 688 Sermon on the Mount. Illuminated by Owen Jones. Sm. 4°. 1844. 689 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL MISCELLANY. Bibliographical Miscellany. Edited by John Petheram. 8°. 1859. (Nos. 1-5, 1853-4). 690 BICKERSTAFF (ISAAC), pseud, i.e. SIR RICHARD STEELE. Lucubrations of !^saac Biokerstaff, Esq. (i.e. the Tatler, No. 1 to No. 271. April 12. 1709 to Jan. 2. 1710). 4 vol. 8°. 1710-11. 691 Book-plate of Sir J. H. Delaval. BIDWELL (CHARLES TOLL.). Isthmus of i'anama, 8°. 1865. 692 BIELFELD (JACOB FRIEDRICH VON) BARON. Letters of Baron Bielfeld, Secretary of Legation to the King of Prussia . . . Containing original anecdotes of the'Prus- sian Court for the last twenty years. Translated from the German, by Mr. Hooper [William Hooper, M.D.]. 4 vol. 12". 1768. 693 BIELFELD (H.). Guide to Painting on glass. 12°. 1855. 694 BIGELOW (JOHN). France and hereditary monarchy. 8°. London, Edinburgh [printed], 1871. 695 BINGLEY (REV. WILLIAM). Biography of celebrated Eoman cha- racters . . . with a brief account of the author's life and writings, and an appendix on Roman literature. Designed for the use of young persons. Engravings. 8". 1824. 696 Bookplate of Joseph Tasker. Musical Biography ; or, memoirs of the lives and writings of the most eminent musical composers and writers, who have flourished in the difierent countries of Europe during the last three centuries. Second edition. [Anon,] 2 vol, 8° 1814. 697 BINNEY (REV. THOMAS). Wellington [sermon enlarged], 8° (1852,) 698 BINNS (EDWARD) M,D. Anatomy of Sleep ; or, the art of pro- curing sound and refreshing slumber at will. 8°. 1842. 699 BIOGRAPHIA. Biographia Britannica : or, the lives of the most eminent persons who have flou- rished in Great Britain and Ireland, from the earliest ages, down to the present times ... in the manner of Bayle's . . . dic- tionary. 7 vol. F". 1747-66. 700 Second edition, with corrections, en- largements, and the addition of new lives : by Andrew Kippis, D.D. . . . Vol. I.- V. (A-E). F". 1778-93. 701 The name also of Rev. Joseph Towers occurs in the t.p, of Vol. Il.-T, BIOGRAPHICAL. A new and general Biographical Dic- tionary ; containing an historical and critical account of the lives and writings of the most eminent persons in every na- tion ; particularly the British and Irish ; from the earliest accounts of time to the present period . . . with a catalogue of their literary productions. New edition. 15 vol. 8°, 1798. 702 New edition, revised and enlarged by Alexander Chalmers. 32 vol. 8°. 1812- 1817. 703 Biographical dictionary of the living authors of Great Britain and Ireland ; comprising literary memoirs and anecdotes of their lives ; and- a chronological register of their publications . . . including no- tices of some foreign writers whose works have been occasionally published in Eng- land. 8°. 1816. 704 According to "Lowndes" A— C by W. Upcott, the rest by P. Shoberl ; but ace, to " Ealkett & Laing*' the book is by John Watkins and P. Shoberl. Inter- leaved with MS. additions. [Biographical Tracts.] 3 vol. 8°. 1712-54 and n.d, 705 Vol. 1, History of Prince Mirabel's infancy, rise, and disgrace : with the sudden pro- motion of Novicius. Also the characters of the old and new favourites of both sexes in the Corat of Britomartia (Por- trait of Ducliess of Marlborough). Secret History of Queen Zarah, [Duchess of Marlborough] from her birth to tlie con- clusion of her reign. Interspersed with characters of her chief favountes. Fourth edition. Eemarks upon the account of the conduct of a certain Dutchess [of Marlborough]. Copies of tfie last Wills of John Duke of Marlborough, (never before pubUshed) and Sarah, his Dutchess. With the codicil annex d. Will of Sarah, late Duchess Dowager of Marlborough : with the codicil, 2. Memoirs of the Ufe of Joseph Addison with a particular account of his writings. E, ^Curll, The dedication is signed " G. Characters and conduct of Sir John Edgai-, [Steele] call'd by himself sole monarch of tho stage in Drury-Lane ; and his three aeputy-Kovernors, In two letters to Sir John Bdgar, [By John Dennis.] Some Memoirs of Matthew Prior; with a copy of his will. E. Curll,' 35 BIOGRAPHICAL,— eoK<. Some passages of the life and death of John Earl of Eoohester, who died a6th July, 1680. Written by his own direction on his death-bed, by Gilbert Uumet, D.D. late Lord Bishop of Sarum. Sixth edition. Narzanes : or, the injur'd Statesman, Con- taining the most important negotiations, and transactions of that great minister, whilst he presided over the affairs of Persia. Royal African : or, memoirs of the young Prince of Annamaboe, Interspers'd throughout with several historical re- marks on the Commerce of the European nations, whose subjects frequent the Coast of Guinea. To which is prefixed a letter from the author in reference to some natural curiosities in Africa. Some memoirs of the life of Job, the son of Solomon the high priest of Boonda in Africa ; who was a slave about two years in Maryland. By Thomas Bluett. S. Memoirs of the Life of Robert "Wilks. Life of B. Wilks. (Portrait.) Authentic Memoirs or, the life and cha- racter of Robert Wilks. To which is added an Elegy (by G. G.) on his death. By Daniel O'Bryan. Memoirs of the Life of Barton Booth ; with his character. To which are added several poetical pieces, written by himself. To which is annexed, the case of Mr. Booth's last illness, and what was observ'd (parti- cularly with regard to the quick-silver found in his intestines) upon opening of his body. Life and character of John Barber ; late Lord-Mayor of London, deceased. Life and history of Henry St. John, \^isc. Bolingbroke. Letter from Mrs. L— tia Pilk— ton [Letitia Pilkingtonl to the celebrated Mrs. T— sia C ^tia Ph ps [Teresia Constantia PhiUips]. BIOGRAPHIE. Biographie Universelle, anoienne et mo- derne, ou histoire, par ordre alphab^tique, de la vie publique et privee de tous les hommes qui se sont fait remarquer par leurs ecrits, leurs actions, leurs talents, leurs vertus ou leurs crimes. Ouvrage entierement neuf, r^dig^ par une Soeiete de gens de lettres et de savants. (And) Supplement. 84 vol. (in 42). 8°. Paris, 1811-57. 706 BIOGRAPHIUM. Biographium Faemineum. The Female Worthies : or, Memoirs of the most illus- trious ladies, of all ages and nations . . . containing (exclusive of foreigners; the lives of above fourscore British Ladies . . . Collected from history . . . and brought down to the present time. 2 vol. 12°. 1766. 707 BIOGRAPHY. Annual Biography and Obituary, for 1817 (— 1824, & 1826). 9 vol. 8». 1817- 2C. ?08 BIRCH (THOMAS) D.D. Life of Henry I'rinoe of Wales, eldest son of James I. Compiled chiefly from his own papers, and other manuscripts . . . 8°. 1760. 709 BIRCH (WILLIAM JOHN). Inquiry into the philosophy and religion of the Bible. 8°. 1856. 710 Inquiry into the philosophy and religion of Shakspere. 12°. 1848. 711 BIRD (GOLDING) M.D. Lectures on electricity and galvanism, in their physiological and therapeutical relations, delivered at the Eoyal College of Physicians, revised and extended. 12°. 1849. 712 [BIRD (ISABELLA) aft. MRS. BISHOP.] Englishwoman in America. [Anon.] 8°. 1856. 713 BIRDS. Anecdotes of Birds ; or short accounts of their habits in a state of nature . . . With figures engraved on wood [? by Bewick]. 12°. 1809. 714 MS. notice of the Wren ab end. BIRKBECK (MISS A. M.) Eural and historical gleanings from Eastern Europe. 12°. 1854. 715 BISHOP (DANIEL). Introduction- to the Study of the Mind : 1849. 716 BISHOPS. Decade of grievances, presented and ap- proved to . . . Parliament, against the hierarchy or government of the Lord Bishops, and their dependant offices, by a multitude of people ... 4°. n.p. 1641. 717 Head line — Sions plea against the Prelacy. Impeachment against the Bishops. Sent up by Serieant Wilde, and delivered at the barre in the Lords house by order of the House of Commons. Whereunto is added, the votes, concerning the Bishops late booke of Canons, in the said House, August 4. 1641. (Portrait of Laud at end.) 4°. 1641. 718 BISSET (ANDREW), History of the Commonwealth of Eng- land from the death of Charles I. to the expulsion of the Long Parliament by Cromwell : being omitted chapters of the history of England. 2 vol. 8°. 1867. 719 c 2 36 BISSET (ANDREW)— con/. Memoirs and papers of" Sir Audie-w Mitchell, envoy extraordinary and minister . plenipotentiary from the Court of Great Britain to the Court of Prussia, from 1756 to 1771. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 18.50. 720 Marginal pencil notes (? by T. Carlyle). BISSET (ROBERT). Life of Edmund Burke. Comprehend- injr an impartial account of his literary and political efforts, and a sketch of the conduct and character of his most eminent associates, coadjutors, and opponents. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1800. 721 BJORNSTJERNA (COUNT M.) Theogony of the Hindoos ; with their systems of philosophy and cosmogony ... 8°. 1844. 722 BLACK (ADAM AND CHARLES) Publishers. Black's picturesque tourist of Ireland. Map, charts, and plans. 12°. Edinburgh, 1854. 723 BLACK ( ) publisher. Black's road aud railway travelling map of England, n.p. n.d. 724 BLACKALL (OFSPRING) BISHOP OF EXETER. Reasons for not replying to a book lately published, entituled Amyutor [by John Toland] . . . 12". 1699. 725 BLACKMORE (SIR RICHARD) M.D. Creation. A philosophical poem, de- monstrating the existence and providence of a God . . . Fourth edition. 12°. 1718. 726 Prince Arthur. An heroick poem . . . E°. 1695. ■ 727 BLACKSTONE (SIR WILLIAM). Abridgment of Blackstone's Commen- taries on the Laws of England . . By Sir J. E. Eardley-Wilmot. New edition, ... by his son, Sir John E. Eardley- Wilmot. 8°. 1853. 728 Blackstone's Commentaries systemati- cally abridged and adapted to the existing state of the law and constitution with great additions by Samuel Warren. 8°. 1855. 729 " The editor of the Examiner from Samuel Warren." Blackstone economized : being a com- pendium of the laws of Englund to the present time. In four books, each book embracing the legal principles and prac- tical information contained in the respec- tive volumes of Blackstone, supplemented by subsequent statutory enactments, im- portant legal decisions, etc. By David xMitchell Aird, Second edition, 8°. 1873. 730 BLACKWALL (ANTHONY), Introduction to the Classics : contain- ing, a short discourse on their excellencies ; and directions how to study thum to ad- vantage : with an essay on the nature and use of those . . . figures which give strength and ornament to writing. Second edition with additions, and index. 12°. London and Derby, 1719- 731 BLACKWELL (THOMAS). Memoirs of the Court of Augustus. Second edition. 3 vol. 4». 1760-3. 732 Vol. III. continued, and completed by John Mills. Imprint and date of Vol. II. Edinburgh 1755. BLACKWOOD (WILLIAM, AND SONS) Publishers. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine. 1857-75. 37 vol. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1857-75. 733 BLAGDEN (ISA). Poems with a memoir (by Alfred Austin). 12°. Edinburgh and London, 1873. 734 BLAGDON (FRANCIS WILLIAM). New dictionary of Classical quotations . . . accompanied by corresponding para- phrases, or translations, from the.works of British poets. 12°. ) 820. 735 BLAINE (DELABERE PRITCHETT). Encyclopsedia of rural sports ; or, a complete account ... of hunting, shoot- ing, fistiing, racing, and other field sports and athletic amusements of the present day. Illustrated by six hundred engra\- ings on wood, by E. Branstou, from drawings by Aiken, T. Laudseer, Dickes, etc. 8°. 1840. 736 BLAIR (REV. JOHN). Chronological and historical tables, from the creation to the present time : with additions and corrections from the most authentic writers ; including the computation of St. Paul, as connecting the period from the Exode to the Temple. [Edited by Sir Henry Ellis.] 8". 1844. 737 BLAIR (ROBERT). [Engraved Title]. The Grave, a poem. Illustrated by twelve etchings executed by Louis Schiavonetti, from the original in- ventions of William Blake. 1808. [Title]. The Grave . . . Illustrated by twelve etchings executed from original designs. To which is added a life of the author. (Portrait of Blake). L.P. 4°. 1813. 738 With biog.sketches of Schiavonetti, aud U. H. Cromefc. 37 BLAKE (WILLIAM). Poetical sketches now first reprinted from the original edition of 1783 edited and prefaced by Richard Ilerne Shepherd. «». 1868. 739 BLAKEY (ROBERT). History of Political Literature from the earliest times. 2 vol. 8°. 1855. 740 BLANC (JEAN JOSEPH LOUIS). Appel aux honnetea gens. Quelqiies pages d'histoire contemporaine. 8". Paris, 1849. 741 Presentation copy with inscription. 1848. Historical Revelations ... 8°. 1858.- 742 History of ten years, 1830-1840. 2 vol. 8°. 1844-5. 743 Revelations historiques en r^ponsc au livre do Lord Nornmnby intitule A Year of Revolution in Paris ... 2 vol. 8°. Bruxelles, 1859. 744 BLANCHARD (SAMUEL LAMAN). Lyric offerings. 12°. 1828. 745 " From L. B." J-.ifo aud literary remains of L. E. L. [Laetitia Elizabeth Landon.] 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1841. 746 Sketches from life : with a memoir of the author, by Sir Edward Bulwer Lyttou . . . Portrait, after a drawing by Daniel Maclise, R.A., and several wood engravings, from designs by George Cruikshank, Kenny Meadows, and Frank Stone [A.R.A.'J 3 vol. 8°. 1846. 74? BLANCHARD (SIDNEY LAMAN). The Ganges and the Seine : Scenes on the banks of both. 2 vol. 8°. London, Norwich [printed], 1862. 748 BLAND (REV. ROBERT). Edwy and Elgiva, and Sir Everard, with other talcs and poems. Second edition. 8°. 1809. 749 Four Slaves of Cythera, u romance . . . 8°. 1809. 750 BLAZE DE BURY (MARIE PAULINE ROSE, BARONESS). Falkeuburg. Eine Erzahlung vom Rhein- landc. 3 vol. 12°. Bremen, 1851. 751 Germania in 1850, its courts, camps, aud people. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1851. 752 Molifere and the French classical drama. 12". 1846. 753 Racine, and the French classical drama. 12°. 1845. 754 BLESSINGTON (MARGUERITE, COUNTESS OF). Gore House, Upper Kensington. Cata- logue of the . . . furniture, porcelain, sculpture in marble, bronzes . . . pictures . . . books . . . the property of the Countess of Blessington . . . which will be sold by auction . . . 1849 ... 4°. n.d. 755 [BLEW (WILLIAM).] Ecolesia Dei: a vision of the church. With a preface, notes, and illustrations. [Anon.] 8°. 1848. 756 BLISS (HENRY). Robespierre : a tragedy. 8°. 1854. 757 BLISS (PHILIP) D.D. Bibliographical Miscellanies, being a selection of curious pieces, in verse and prose [edited by P. B.] 4°. Oxford, 1813. 758 Contents— Storie translated out ol French. Tragicall discourse of the unhappy man's lite. Wood's Life of Churchyard. Chiist- mas carols. Sonnets by Sir P. Sydney. Character of "WiUiam Corvehil], priest. Fairy Poems. [Vol. I.] Catalogue of the . . . collec- tion of engravings, formed by Rev. Philip Bliss . . . topographical prints connected •with Oxford and London, rare English portraits, curious early woodcuts, &c. Also, a few paintings and drawings . . which will be sold by auction . . . 12th of June, 1858 . . . Catalogue of the first portion of the . . . Library, formed by Rev. P. Bliss. .Which will be sold by auction . . . 28th of June, 1858 . . . [Vol. II.] Catalogue of the second and remaining portion of the . . . Library . . . comprising the most extensive and most complete collection of books printed at Oxford ever assembled . . . which will be sold by auction . . . 9th of August . . . Catalogue of . . autograph letters, historical documents, and valuable manu- scripts, collected by Rev. P. Bliss . . . They will be sold by auction . . . 21st August, 1858 ... (2 vol.) L. P. 8°. [1858.] 759 AND BANDINEL (BULKE- LEY) D.D. Historical Papers. Part I. (Presented to the Roxburghe Club by P. B. and B. B.) 4°. 1846. 760 Contents — Castra JRegia, a treatise on the succession to the crown of England ad- dressed to Queen Ehzaheth, liy Eoaer Edwards, in 1568. Novissima Straffordii, some account of the proceediuKs against, and demeanor of, Thomas W tntworth, Earl of Strafford, both before and during his trial, as well as at his execution; written in Latin, in imitation of the style of Taci- tus, by Abraham "Wright, vicar of Oke- ham. Same, translated into English by James Wright, historian of Rutland. 38 BLOOMFIELD (ROBERT), Poems by li. Bloomfield, the farmer's boy. With thirteen illustrations, designed and drawn by T. Sidney Cooper [E.A.], J. Callcott Horsley [R.A.], J. Frederick Tayler, and Thomas Webster, A.K.A. [R.A.] Engraved by Thurston Thomp- son. 8°. 1845. 761 BLORE (THOMAS). History of the Manor, and manor-house, of South Winfield, in Derbyshire. 4°. 1793. 762 BLOSIUS (LUDOVICUS FRANCIS- CUS) i.e. BLOIS (LOUIS FRAN- 9OIS DE). Mirror for Monks. Written by Lewis Blosius. 8°. Printed at Paris, 1676. Reprinted for private circulation, London, 1871. 763 " John Forster from J. D. Coleridge [the editor, now Lord Coleridge] with very kind regards August 1871." BLOUNT (CHARLES). Miscellaneous Works ... To which is prefixed the life of the author, and an account and vindication of his death [by Charles Gildon.] 12". n.p. printed, 1695. (2 copies.) 764 Separate title page to each piece, except the last. On the title to the "Oracles of Reason " — " by Char. Blount, Esq ; Mr. Grildon, and others." KTo. 1: MS. notice of the author. BLOUNT (THOMAS). Boscobel : or the history of his Sacred Majesties most miraculous preservation after the battle of Worcester, 3. Sept. 1651. (Portraits, etc. inserted.) 12°. 1660. 765 Between pp. 18, 19 is inserted "Pinal da^es proceedings of the High Court of Justice concerning the Tryal of the King." 1648. Dr. Bliss's copy. Boscobel : or, the history . . . after the battle of Worcester, 3. Sept. 1651. Introduc'd ' by an exact relation of that battle. 12°. 1660. 766 B. H. Bright's copy. Boscobel ... To which is added, Claua- trum Regale Reseratum : or the King's concealment at Trent. Publish'd by Mrs. Ann Wyhdham. Fifth edition. With a. supplement to the whole. 12°. 1748. 767 Two parts ; title to part 2 dated 174.2. notes. MS. Boscobel . . . Illustrated with a plan of the city of Wcircester ; and n view of Boscobel-House. (TSvo plates inserted.) 12°. [Imprint appears to be pasted over.] 1769. 768 BLOUNT (SIR THOMAS POPE). Essays on several subjects. Third im- pression ; with very large additions. Besides a new essay of Religion. And an index. 12°. 1697. 769 BLUNT (REV. JOHN JAMES). History of the Christian church during the first three centuries. 8°. 1856. 770 BOADEN (JAMES). Inquiry into the authenticity of various pictures and prints, which, from the decease of the poet to our own times, have been offered to the public as por- traits of Shakspeare ... 4°. 1824. 771 Memoirs of Mrs. Inchbald: including her familiar correspondence with the most distinguished persons of her time. To which are added the Massacre, and a Case of Conscience ; now first published . Edited by J. Boaden. (Portrait.) 2 vol. 8°. 1833. 772 Life of Mrs. Jordan ; including original private, correspondence, and numerous anecdotes of her contemporaries. 2 vol. 8°. 1831. 773 Memoirs of the Life of John Philip Kemble, including a history of the Stage from the time of Garrick to the present period. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1825. 774 Memoirs of Mrs. Siddons. Interspersed with anecdotes of authors and actors. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1831. 775 On the Sonnets of Shakespeare iden- tifying the person to whom they are addressed ; and elucidating several points in the poet's history. ^8°. 1837. 776 BOCCACCIO (GIOVANNI). Contes et Nouvelles de Bocace. Tra- duction libre, accommodee an goAt de ce temps, troisieme edition. Dont les figures sont . . . sur les desseins de Romain de Hooge. 2 vol. 12°. Cologne, 1732. 777 Book plate of C. C. W. Bering. II Decameron . . . 12°. Amsterdamo, 1665. 778 " .rohn Kenyon. Eouen Sept'. S. 1838." Decameron, or Ten days' entertainment: translated from the Italian. To which are prefixed, remarks on the life and writings of Boccaccio ; and an advertisement by the Author of old Nick [E. Dubois] . . . 8°. 1820. 779 BOCCIUS (GOTTLIEB). Fish in rivers and streams : a treatise on the production and management of fish in fresh waters, by ai'tificial spawning, breeding and rearing : showing also the 39 BOCCIUS (GOTTLIEB)— con*. cause of the depletion of all rivers and streams. 8°. 1848. 780 Treatise on the management of fresh- water fish, with a view to making them a source of profit to landed proprietors. 8°. 1H41. 781 BODDINGTON (MRS.) Poems. 8°. 1839. 782 BODE (REV. JOHN ERNEST). Ballads from Ilerodotus : with an intro- ductory poem. 8°. 1853. 783 Second edition, with four additional pieces. 8°. 1854. 784 BOECKHIUS (AUGUSTUS). [Half-title.] . . . ^schyli, Sophoclis, Euripidis, num ea, quae supersunt, et genuina omnia sint, et forma primitiva servata, an eorum familiis aliquid debeat ex lis tribui. ... pp. 121-180. 8°. n.p. [? Heidelberg] n.d. [? 1808]. 785 BOETHIUS (ANICIUS MANLIUS TORQUATUS SEVERINUS). Of the consolation of Philosophy. In five books. Made English and illustrated with notes, by Richard Viscount Preston. Second edition. 12». 1712. 786 BOGUE (DAVID). Publisher. Bogue's Guides for Travellers. I. Bel- gium and the Rhine. With maps and plans. 12°. 1852. 787 BOHEMIAN POEMS. Lyra Czecho - Slovanska. Bohemian poems, ancieut and modern, translated from the original Slavonic, with an intro- ductory essay, by A. H. Wratislaw. 12°. 1849. 788 At the end— "Original Poems." The Queen's Court manuscript, with other ancient Bohemian poems, translated from the original Slavonic into English verse. By A. H. Wratislaw. 12°. Cam- bridge, 1852. 789 BOHLEN (DR. PETER VON). Introduction to the Book of Genesis, with a commentary on the opening portion. Erom the German. Edited by James ITeywood. 2 vol. 8°. 1855. 790 BOHN (HENRY GEORGE). Catalogue of Books. 8°. Bohn, 1841. 791 Catalogue of Books. Vol. I. . . . 8°. 1847. '92 BOHN (HENRY GEORGE)-con<. Hand-book of Proverbs. Comprising an entire republication of Ray's collection of English Proverbs, with his additions from foreign languages. And a complete alphabetical index ; in which are introduced large additions, as well of proverbs as of sayings, sentences, maxims, and 'phrases, collected by H. G. Bohn. 8°. Bohn, 1855. 793 BOHN (JAMES). Catalogue of . . . books ... on sale by J. Bohn ... 8°. 1840. 794 BOHOURS OR BOUHOURS (DOMINICK). Ingenious -thoughts of the Fathers of the Church. Collected by Bohours in French. Translated into English. 12°. 1727. 795 BOHRINGER (FRIEDRICH). Die Kirche Christi nnd ihre Zeugen Oder die Kirchengeschiohte in Biograph- ieen. 2 vol. 8°. Zurich, 1842. 796 BOHUN (EDMUND). Address to the free-men and free-holders of the Nation [Anon.] 4°. 1682. 797 Ascribed also to Sir Roger Xj'Estrange. Character of Queen Elizabeth. Or, a full and clear account of her policies, and the methods of her Government both in Church and- State. Her virtues and defects. Together with the characters of her principal Ministers of State . . Collected and faithfully represented by E. Bohun. 8°. 1693. 798 BOILEAU DESPREAUX (NICOLAS). Oeuvres. Avec des" eclaircissemens historiques, donnez par lui-meme. Nou- velle edition . . . enrichie de figures gravees par Bernard Picart. Tome pre- mier. 12°. Amsterdam, 1729. 799 Oeuvres. 2 vol. (in oac). 12°. Paris, 1829-30. 800 BOITARD ( ). Le Jardin des Plantes description et moeurs des Mammif^res de la menagerie et du museum d'histoire naturelle, precede d'une introduction . . . par J. Janin. (Illustrated and with portraits.) 8°. Paris, 1842. 801 BOKER (GEORGE H). Calaynos : a tragedy. Second edition. 8°. Philadelphia, 1848, 802 40 BOLINGBROKE (HENRY ST. JOHN VISCOUNT). Philosophical Works. Published by David Mallet. 5 vol. (Portraits.) 8». 1754-77. 803 Collection of political tracts. By the Author of the Dissertation upon Parties. 8°. 1769. 804 Dissertation upon Parties : in several letters to Caleb D'Anvers. To which is prefixed, the life of the author. Ninth edition. 8°. 1771. 80.5 Letter to Sir William Windham. Some reflections on the present state of the nation. Letter to Mr. Pope. 8°. 1753. 806 Letters, on the spirit of patriotism : on the idea of a patriot king : and on the state of parties at the accession of George the first. [Anon.] 12°. London, 1750. 807 [Another edition.] 8°. 1752. 808 Letters on the studj' and use of History. New edition. 8°. 1770. 809 At the end — Of the true use of retirement and study ; (and) Reflections upon Exile. Remarks on the History of England. Prom the minutes of Humphry Oldcastle. [Given also to N. Amhurst.] (Portrait inserted.) 12°. Dublin, 1752. 810 New edition. 8°. n.d. 811 Lettres Historiques, politiques, philoso- phiques et particulieres, depuis 1710 jus- qu'en 1736, conteuant le secret des nego- ciations de la pais d'Utrecht, beaucoup de details relatifs k I'histoire, h, la philosophic h la litterature, etc. avec des explications ou notes sur ces mati^res et les personnages nomm^s par Bolingbroke ; prec^dees d'un essai historique sur sa vie, du catalogue raisoune de ses ouvrages, d'un choix de ses pensees et d'une • chirographie ou copie figurce de son ecriture . . . (Portrait.) 3 vol. 8°. Paris, 1808. 812 View of Lord Bolingbroke's philosophy . . In which his whole system of in - fidelity and naturalism is exposed and confuted. With the apology prefixed. Third edition. [Anon.] 12°. 1756. 813 BOLTON (HANNAH). Drawing from objects, being an abstract of lessons on linear drawing . . . Chiefly designed for teachers. 8°. 1850. 814 BOMBAY. Bombay Calendar and Almanac for 1856. (2 parts.)" 8°. Bou.bay. n.d. 815 Life in Bombay, and the neighbouring out-stations. With illustrations. 8°. 1852. 816 BONAPARTE (JE'rOME), KING OF WESTPHALIA. Memoirs of the Court of Westphalia under Jerome Bonaparte ; with anecdotes of his favourites, ministers, &c. 8°. 1820. 817 BONAPARTE (NAfOLEON I.) Anecdotes of the Court and family of Napoleon Bonaparte. Translated from the French. Second edition. 8°. 1818. 818 Bonaparte letters and despatches, secret, confidential, and official ; from the origi- nals in his private caV.net. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 819 Confidential correspondence with his brother Joseph, sometime King of Spain. Selected and translated, with explanatory notes, from the " Memoires du Koi Jo- seph." 2 vol. 8°. 1855. 820 Memoirs of the history of Prance dur- ing the reign of Napoleon, dictated by the Enjperor at Saint Helena to the Generals who shared his captivity . . Second edition. Vol. I. II. Dictated to General Gourgaud. III. IV. Dictated to Count De Montholon. Historical Miscellanies. Vol. I-III. Dictated to the Count De Montholon. 7 vol. 8°. 1823-4. 821 Napoleon in the other world. A nar- rative written by himself : and found near his tomb in St. Helena, by Xongo- Tee-Foh-Tchi, Mandarin of the third class. (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1827. 822 Political Aphorisms, moral and philoso- phical thoughts of the Emperor Napoleon. Collected ... by C''. A'=. G. De Lian- court, edited by James Alexander Mann- ing. [Fr. and Eng.] 8°. 1848. 823 BONAPARTE FAMILY. Imperial Family, and great ofiicers of State, Civil and Military, in France. Humbly dedicated to the admirers of the French Revolution, and of liberty and equality ! ! ! F°. 2 leaves, n.d. 824 Napoleon Dynasty. By the Berkeley Men and another. From Charles Bona- parte to Napoleon II., by the Berkeley Men : Louis Napoleon, by F. Greenwood. Illustrated with twenty-two portraits. 8°. n.d. 825 [Another edition.] 8°. New York, 1852. 826 BONAPARTE (NAPOLEON 111.) Political and historical works. Now first collected. With an original memoir of his life, brought down to the promul- gation of the Constitution of 1852; and occasional notes. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1852. 827 41 BONAPARTE CNAPOLEON III.) — cont. Etuiles sur le pass''; et I'avenir de I'Artilleiie. Tome premier. 4". Paris, 1846. 828 Presentatioa copy to W. S. Lander with in- ycnption Des Idees Napoleouiennes ; par Je Prince Sapol^onLouis Bonaparte. 8". 1839. (Two copies.) 829 . . , On the opinions and policy of Napoleon. Translated from the French. 8». 1840. 830 Letters of " An Englishman " on Louis Napoleon, the Empire, and the Coup d']5tat. Reprinted, with large addi- tions, from the Times. 12". 1852. 831 Prince Louis Napoleon Bonaparte his life, captivity and escape from the fortress of Ham. (Portrait.) 8°. 1852. 832 Same work as No. 93G but without name ot author and with another date. BONER (CHARLES). Chamois Hunting in the mountains of Bavaria. With illustrations, by Theodore Horschelt. 8». 1853. 833 New edition. 8°, 1860. 834 Memoirs and Letters of C. Boner. With Letters of Mary Kussell Mitford to him during ten years. Edited by R. M. Kettle. 2 vol. 8°. 1871. 835 BONNARD (CAMILLE). Costumes historiques des XIII°, XIV et XV sidcles, extraits des monuments les plus authentiques de peinture et de sculpture, dessines et graves par P. Mereurj, avec un texte historique et de- scriptif par C. Bonnard. 2 vol. 4°. 1844. 836 BONNECHOSE (EMILE DE). History of France, from the invasion of the Franks under Clovis, to the accession of Louis Philippe. Translated ... by William Robson. 8°. 1853. 837 BONWICKE (AMBROSE). Pattern for young students in the Uni- versity set forth in the life of Mr. Ambrose Bonwicke, sometime scholar of St. John's college in Cambridge. 12°. 1729. 838 " The production ot Ambrose's lather. The preface by Bowyer." Irowndes. BOOK OF THOUGHT. Book of Thought, or observations and passages relating to religion, morals, manners, ;ind characters. Selected from various writers. With an index. 8°. 1842. 839 BOOTH (DAVID). Analytical dictionary of the English language, in which the words are explained in the order of tlieir natural affinity, inde- pendent of alphabetical arrangement ; and the signification of each is traced from its etymology . . . the whole exhibiting . . . the origin, history, and modern usage of the existing vocabulary of the English tongue . . . Introduction, containing anew grammar of the language, and an alpha- hetical index . . Corrected edition, with an appendix on the metaphorical genders of English substantives. 4°. 1836. 840 BOOTH (REV. J.) LL.D. Education and educational institutions considered, with reference to the industrial professions, and the present aspect of society. 8". 1846. 841 BOOTH (JAMES). Problem of the world and the church reconsidered in three letters to >i friend. By a Septuagenarian. Second edition. Revised and edited by J. Booth. 8°. 1873. 842 BOOTH (NATHANIEL). God and the King: or, a dialogue shew- ing, that the King of England, now reigning, doth rightly claim whatsoever is required by the oath of allegiance. Wrote by the special command of James the first . appendix, of, Bishop Saunderson's of the Obligation of-H uman Laws. Now pub- lish'd by N. Booth. 12°. n.d. 843 Separate title-page to— Treatise of the obli- gation of humane laws. By Robert Sander- son, Bishop of Lincoln. 1727. BORROW (GEORGE). Bible in Spain ; or, the journeys, ad- ventures, and imprisonments of an English- man, in an attempt to circulate the Scriptures in the Peninsula. 3 vol. 8°. 1843. 844 Lavengro ; the Scholar — the Gypsy — the Priest. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1851. 845 The Ziucali; or, an account of the Gypsies of Spain. With an original col- lection of their songs and poetry, and a copious dictionary of their language. 2 vol. 8°. 1841. 846 BORUWLASKI (COUNT JOSEPH). Memoirs : containing a sketch of his travels, with an account of his reception at the different Courts of Europe, &c. Written by himself. (Portrait.) 8°. Durham, 1820. 847 "1.2 BOSSUET (JACQUES BENIGNE) BISHOP OF.MEAUX. Oraisons funfibres. 12°. Paris, 1830. 848 Discours sur I'histoire universelle, depuis le commencement du monde jusqu'a I'Empire de Charlemagne. 2 vol. (in one). 12". Paris, 1830. 849 BOSWELL (JAMES). Journal of a tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson, LL.D. Containing some poetical pieces by Dr. Johnson, relative to the tour ... a series of his conversa- tion, literary anecdotes and opinions of men and books : with an authentic account of the distresses and escape of the grand- son of King James II. in 1746. New edition, with introduction and notes, by Robert Carruthers. Illustrated ... 8°. n.d. [1852.] • 850 Letters, addressed to Rev. W. J. Temple. Now first published from the original mss. With introduction and notes. 8°. 1857. 851 Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. In- eluding a Journal of his Tour to the Hebrides. New edition, with ' numerous additions and notes, by John Wilson Croker . . . Two supplementary volumes of Johnsoniana, by Hawkins, Piozzi . . . and others. And notes by various hands. Also, upwards of fifty engraved illustra- tions. 10 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1839. 852 MS. notes by Mr. Forster. New edition. Portraits. 8°. 1848. 853 New edition, elucidated by copious notes, .lud illustrated with numerous portraits, views, and characteristic designs ... 4 vol. 8°. n.d. [1851.] 854 Reprint of the first edition. To which are added Mr. Boswell's corrections and additions, issued in 1792; the variations of the second edition, with some of the author's notes prepared for the third : the whole edited, with uew notes, by Percy Pitzgerald. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1874. 855 " John Eorster Esq Irom P.K" [Another edition.] With notes and biographical illustrations, by Maloue. (Portrait.) 8°. 1827. 856 Bound as the seventh vol. of Ijynam's edition oC the Works of Johnson. BOSWELL (JAMES) SON. Biographical Memoir of Edmond Malone. Not published. 8°. 1814. 867 , BOSWORTH (JOSEPH) D.D. Compendious Anglo-Saxon and Enghsh Dictionary. 8°. 1848. 858 Origin of the English, Germanic and Scandinavian languages, and nations ; with a sketch of their early literature and . . . specimens of Anglo-Saxon, Priesic, Flem- ish, Dutch, German from the Moeso-Goths to the present time, Icelandic, Norwegian, and Swedish ; tracing the progress of these languages, and their connexion with modern English : together with remarks on the oriental origin of alphabetic writ- ing, and its extension to the west. A map of European languages is prefixed, with notes, on the progressive population of Europe from the east, by the IberianSj Pinns, Celts, and Germans, especially referring to the settlement of the Saxons in Britain. 8°. 1848. 859 BOULTER (HUGH) ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH. Letters to several Ministers of State in England . . . containing, an account of the most interesting transactions which passed in Ireland from 1724 to 1738. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. Dublin, 1770. 860 BOURKE (RICHARD SOUTHWELL). St. Petersburg and Moscow : a visit to the Court of the Czar. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 861 BOURNE (H. R. FOX). Memoir of Sir Philip Sidney. 8°. 1862. 862 BOURNELLE ( ). Annotations on the Tatler. Written in French by Monsiem- Bournelle; and translated into English by Walter Wag- staff. Part I (-II.) (2 vol.) 12°. 1710. 863 Dr. R. Parmer's copy, and MS. notes one of which says "The real author was [Wil- liam] Oldisworth." BOURRIENNE ( DE). Life of Napoleon Bonaparte. With notes, now first added, from the dictation of Napoleon, at St. Helena ... a vol. Third edition. (Portraits.) 12°. 1831. 864 BOUTERWEK (FREDERICK). History of Spanish Literature. Trans- lated from the original German, by Thomasina Ross. With additional notes by the translator. (Portrait of Cervantes.) 8°. 1847. 865 BOWDLER (JOHN) JUN. Select pieces in verse and prose. 2 vol. (Portrait) 8°. 1817. 866 Vol. 2 defective. 43 BOWEN (FRANCIS). Critical Essays, on a few subjects con- nected with the history and present con- dition of speculative philosophy. 8". Boston [U.S.] 1842. 867 Lowell Lectures, on the application of metaphysical and ethical science to the evidences of Religion ... 8". Boston [U.S.] 1849. 868 BOWLES (REV. WILLIAM LISLE). Poetical Works. With memoir, critical dissertation, and explanatory notes, by Rev. George GilflUan. 2 vol. 8". Edin- burgh, 1855. 869 Sonnets, and other poems. Eighth edition. To which is added, Hope, an allegorical sketch on recovering slowly from sickness. 12°. London and Bath, 1802. 870 Poems. Vol. 11. 12°. London and Bath, 1803. 871 Two letters to Lord Byron, in answer to his Lordship's Letter to * * * * ****** [i.e. John Murray] on Rev. W. L. Bowles's strictures on the life and writings of Pope 8°. 1821. 872 At the end in MS. "The Bells of Ostend" by Bowles — "The lines quizzed by Lord Byron in 'English Bards and Scotch Beviewers.' " [Pamphlets.] 2 vol. 8°. . London and Bath, 1819-26. ' 873 Vol. 1. Invariable principles ol poetry : in a letter to T. Campbell ; occasioned by some critical observations in his Specimens o£ British poets, particularly relating to Pope. ^ Letters to Lord Byron on a question of poetical criticism. Third edition. The Letter to Mr. Campbell, as far as regards poetical criticism ; and the answer to the writer in the Quarterly Beview, as far as they relate to the same subject. Second editions. Answer to objections, and further illustrations. Pinal appeal to the literary public, relative to Pope, in reply to certain observations of Mr. Eosooe, m his edition of that poet's works. Remarks on Lord Byron's con- versations, as far as they relate to the same subject and the author. Xjessons in criticism to 'William Roscoe, in answer to his letter to Eev. W. L. Bowles on the character and poetry of Pope. Further lessons in criticism to a Quarterly Reviewer. All by Bowles. 2 Eeply to an "Unsentimental sort of critic, the reviewer of " Spence's Anec- dotes" in the Quarterly Review for October 1820. [i.e. Ootavius Gilchrist]. By " One of the family oJ the Bowleses ! ! " Letter to Rev. W. L. Bowles, in answer to " Reply to an unsentimental sort of critic. By O. Gilchrist. Printed at Stamford. Second letter to Rev. W. L. Bowles, in answer to his Second reply to the reviewer oi: Spence's Anecdotes. By O. Gilchrist. Printed at Stamford. BOWLES (REV. WILLIAM LISLE)— cont. Third letter to Rev. W. L. Bowles, con- cerning Pope's moral character. By O. Gilchrist. Printed at Stamford. Vindication of the late editor of Pope's Works, from charges brought against him by a writer in the Quarterly Review, for October 1820 : -mth further observations on "the invariable principles of poetry." Second edition. By Bowles. Letter to**** •••»«* [John Murray], on Rev. "W. L. Bowles' strictures on the hie and writings of Pope. Second edition. By Lord Bpron. Two letters to Lord Byron, in answer to his Lordship's letter to'*** »•»•»» [John Murray]. By Bowles. Letter to Lord Byron, protesting against the immolation of Gray, Cowper, and Camp- bell, at the shrine of Pope. Signed " Pabius." Letter to Rev. W. L. Bowles,'in reply to his letter to Thomas Campbell and to his two letters to Lord Byron ; containing a vindi- cation of their defence of the poetical character of Pope. By Martin M'Dermott. [Pamphlets.] 8°. London, Salisbury, 1818-30. Bath, 874 ' 1. Vindication of Winchester College : in a letter to Henry Brougham. By Bowles. 2. Reply to an "Unsentimental sort of critic." 3. Vindication of the late editor of Pope's Works. 4. Final appeal to the literary public. 6. Lessons in Criticism to William Roscoe. 6. Letters to Lord Byron on a question of poetical criticism. 7. A Voice from St. Peter's and St. Paul's ; being a few plain words on some late accusations against the Church Establish- ment ; particularly in Number 75 of the Edinburgh Review. By a member of the University of Oxford. 8. Ellen Gray ; or, the Dead Maiden's Curse. A poem, by Dr. Archibald Macleod. 9. Thouffhts on the increase of Crimes, the education of the Poor, and the Tfational Schools. By Bowles, n.d. 10. The Plain Bible, and the Protestant Church in England. By Bowles. 11. The Grave of the last Saxon j or, the legend of the curfew. Poem. By Bowles. 12. A Word on Cathedral-Oratorios, and clergy-ma^strates. By Bowles. Nos. 2-6. See No. 873. [BOYD (ANDREW KENNEDY HUTCHINSON) D.D.] Recreations of a country parson. [Anon.] 8°. 1859. 875 BOYES (JOHN FREDERICK). Illustrations of the tragedies of Sopho- cles, from the Greek, Latin, and English poets, with an introductory essay. 8°. Oxford, 1844. 876 44 BOYLE (HON, CHARLES) ait. 4TH EARL OF ORRERY. Dr. Bentley's Dissertations on the epistles of Phalaris, and the fables of iEsop examin'd. Third edition -with some additions, occasioned by a book entituled A View of -the dissertation upon the epistles of Phalaris, &c. 8°. 1699. 877 Besides Bovle— F. Atterbury, G. Smalridge, R. Freind, J. Preind, and A. Alsop were engaged in this book. S.M. Catalogue. Fourth edition 1745. 878 BOYLE (CHARLES JOHN). Far Away ; or, sketches of scenery and society in Mauritius. 8°. 1867. 879 BOYLE (HON. MRS. ELEANOR VERE). A Children's Summer eleven etchings on steel by E. V. B[oyle]. Illustrated in prose and rhyme by M. L. B. and W. M. C. Oblong 4°. 18.'53. 880 Child's Play. Seventeen drawings by E. V. B. 8°. n.d. [1852.] 881 BOYLE (FREDERICK). Camp Notes. Stories of sport and adventure in Asia, Africa, and America. 8°. 1874. 882 BOYLE (CAPTAIN ROBERT). Voyages and adventures of Captain R. Boyle . . . Story of Mrs. Villars . . . history of an Italian captive ; life of Don Pedro Aquilio, &c. . . . Voyage, ship- wreck and miraculous preservation of Richard Castelman. Description of the city of Philadelphia, and the country of Pensylvauia. Third edition. 12". 1735. 883 " A fictitious narrative, written by W. H. Chetwood." Lowndes. "Fictitious narrative, written by Benj. Victor." Allibone. BOYLE (HON. ROBERT). Some considerations touching the stjie of the Holy Scriptures . . Fourth edition. 12°. 1675. 884 BRABAZON (WALLOP). Deep sea and coast fisheries of Ireland, with suggestions for the working of a fishing company. Illustrated by William Cooper . . 8°. Dublin, 1848. 885 BRACE (CHARLES LORING). Home life in Germany. New edition. 8". 1853. 886 Hungary in 1851 : With an experience of the Austrian police. 8°. 1852. 887 BRACKENBURY (GEORGE). Campaign in the Crimea : an historical sketch. Illustrated by fortj- plates, from drawings taken on the spot by William Simpson. 8°. 1855. 888 Second Series. 8°. 1856. 889 BRADBURY (HENRY). Printing : its dawn, day, and destiny. 4°. 18.58. 890 Address delivered at the Royal Institution, 1858. [BRAE (ANDREW EDMUND).] Literary Cookery with reference to matter attributed [by Collier] to Coleridge and Shakespeare . . . ' With a post- script . . . [Anon.] 8°. 1855. 891 BRAITHWAITE (JOSEPH BEVAN). Memoirs of Joseph John Gumey ; with" selections from his journal and corre- spondence. Edited by J. B. Braithwaite. 2 vol. 8°. Norwich and liOndon, 1854. 892 BRAMELD (REV. GEORGE WILLIAM). Practical Sermons. Second series. 8°. 1855. 893 BRAMHALL (JOHN) ARCHBISHOP OF ARMAGH. Works. With a life of the author, and a collection of his letters. [Edited by A.W.H. [?Hadden.] 8°. Oxford, 1842-5. 894 BRAND (REV. JOHN). Observations on the popular antiquities of Great Britain : chiefly illustrating the origin of our vulgar and provincial customs, ceremonies, and superstitions. Arranged, revised, and greatly enlarged, by Sir Henry Ellis. A new edition, with further additions. 3 vol. (Frontispieces.) 8°. Bohn, 1849. 895 BRANDE (WILLIAM THOMAS). Dictionary of Science, Literature, and Art . . Edited by W. T. Brande. Assisted by Joseph Cauvin . . .En- gravings. 8°. 1842. 896 Second edition, with a supplement. 8". 1852. 897 BRANTOME (PIERRE DE BOUR- DEILLE, SEIGNEUR DE). Memoires, contenant les vies des hom- mes illustres et grands capitaines Fran- cois de son temps. (Premiere partie.) (2 vol.) 12°. Levde, 1099. 898 45 BRASBRIDGE (JOSEPH). Fruits of experience ; or, Jfemoir of J. B., [a silversmitli, in Fleet Street] written in his 80"". and 81". years. Second edition. (Portrait.) 8". 1824. 899 BRATHWAIT OR BRAITHWAITE (RICHARD). Drunken Barnaby's four journeys to the north of England. In Latin and English metre . . . With Bessy Bell. Third edition, illustrated with several new copper cuts. [Anon.] 12". 1723. 900 Book-plate of Edward Astle. [Another edition.] Barnahae Itinera- rium, or Barnahee's Journal. With a life of the author, a bibliographical introduc- tion to the Itinerary and a catalogue of his works. Edited from the first edition, by Joseph Haslewood. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1820. 901 English Gentleman ; and English Gen- tlewoman . . . With a ladies love- lecture and a supplement . . . entituled the Turtles Triumph. Third edition. (En- graved title-page). F°. 1641. 902 Exact collection of all the Eoman Emperors from luUius Caesar to y° now reigning Ferdinand the 2d. . . . By R. B. G. [? by R. Brathwait, gent.] 12°. 1636. 903 Ascribed by " Lowndes " to Brathwait. Book-plate of James Walsh. Mercurius Britanicus, or the English Intelligencer. A tragic-comedy, at Paris [Anon.] 4°. u.p. 1641. 904 Mercurius Britannieus . . . [Latin version]. 4°. n.p. n.d. 905 BRAVO OF VENICE. [Half title] The Bravo of Venice : a romance. Translated from the German by M. G. Lewis. 12°. n.p. [London] n.d. 906 BRAY (MRS. ANNA ELIZA). Novels and Romances. (New edition). 10 vol. 8°. 1845-6. 907 Vol. 1. The White Hoods. With a general preface, written by herself. 2. De Poix: or. Sketches of the njanners and customs of the fourteenth centory. .S. The Protestant : tale of the reign of Queen Mary. 4 Pitz of Pitz-Pord. 5. The Talba : or, Moor of Portugal. 6. AVarleigh ; or, the Fatal Oak. 7. Trelawny of Trelawne ; or, the Prophecy. 8. Trials of the Heart. 9 Henry Do Pomeroy : or, the Eve of St. John. Also, the White Rose. 10. Cour- tenay of Walreddon. Life of Thomas Stothard, R.A. With personal reminiscences. With numerous illustrations from his works. (Portrait.) 4°. 1851, 908 BRAYLEY (EDWARD WEDLAKE). Topographical hi.story of Surrey. Assisted by John Britton and E. \V. Brayley, jun. Geological section by Gideon Mantell, LL.D. Vol. I. 8°. Dorking, 1841. 909 BRAZIL, Brazil Correspondence in the cases of the " Prince of Wales " and officers of the " Forte." (Reprinted from the papers laid before Parliament.) With an introduction, telling some truth about Brazil. 8°. 1863. 910 BREEN (HENRY H.). St. Lucia : historical, statistical, and descriptive. 8°. London, 1844.' 911 BREMER (FREDRIKA). Works. From the Swedish. 2 vol. 8°. 184.'). 912 Vol. 1. Strife and Peace. H— Family. Pre- sident's Daughters. Nina. Twins. SoU- tary one. Cionsoler. Ibt^jckbolm Suppers. Hopes. 2. Neighbours. The Home. Bondmiirl. Axel and Anna. Diary. Works. The Neighbours . . . And other tales : Hopes — the Twins — the Soli- tary — the Comforter — a letter about Sup- pers — Tralinnan. Translated by Mary Howitt. Fourth edition . . . (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 18.52. 913 Works. The President's Daughters ; including Nina. Translated by Mary Howitt. 8°. Bohn, 1852. 914 Works. The Home or, life in Sweden. And Strife aud Peace. Translated by Mary Howitt. 8°. Bohn, 1853. 915 Works. X Diary, the H Family, Axel and Anna, and other tales. Trans- lated by Mary Howitt. Fourth edition ... 8°. Bohn, 1853. 916 The Bondmaid. Translated from the Swedish by M. L. Putnam. 12°. Boston (U.S.) 1844. 917 Brothers and Sisters. A tale of domestic life. Translated ... by Mary Howitt. 3 vol. 8°. 1848. 918 Copy corrected in MS. An Easter offering. Translated . . . by Mary Howitt. 12". 1850. 919 Contains— "The Light House" and "Life in the North." Homes of the New World ; Impressions of America. Translated by Mary Howitt. 3 vol. 8°. 1853. 920 Life in Dalecarlia : the parsonage of Mora. Translated by WiUiam Howitt. 12°. 1845. 921 The Midnight Sun ; a pilgrimage. Translated from the unpublished original, by Mary Howitt. 8°. 1849. 922 46 BRENTON (EDWARD PELHAM), R.N. Life and Correspondence of John [Jervis] Earl of St. Vincent. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1838. 923 Naval history of Great Britain, from 1783 to 1836. New . . . edition, illus- trated with portraits, plans, etc. 2 vol. 8°. 1837. 924 [BRETON (NICHOLAS)]. Corua-copiae. Pasquil's night-cap : or, Antidot for the head-ache. [Anon.] 8". 1612. End. Reprinted ... at the Chiswick Press. 1819. 925 [BRETT (ROBERT).] Churchman's guide to faith and piety. A manual of instruction and devotions. Second edition. [Anon. Preface signed " R. B."] 12°. n.d. (1863). 926 BREWER (EBENEZER COBHAM) D.D. 1854. 927 Sound and its phenomena. 12°. BREWER (JAMES NORRIS). Histrionic Topography : or, the birth- places, residences, and funeral monuments of the most distingaished Actors. Illus- trated by engravings, by J. and H. Storer, and by historical and descriptive notices, by J. Norris Brewer. S". 1818. 928 18 plates — some inserted. BREWER (REV. JOHN SHERREN). Letters and papers, foreign and do- mestic, of the reign of Henry VIH. Pre- served in the Public Record Office, the British Museum . . . Arranged and catalogued by J. S. Brewer, under the direction of the Master of the Rolls . . • 4 vol. (in 7). 8°. 1862-72. 929 BREWER (THOMAS). . . . Life and Times of John Carpenter, Town Clerk of London in the reigns of Henry V. and Henry VI. and founder of the City of London School : With an appendix . . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1856. 930 Inserted— City of London School. List of pupils who have proceeded to the Univer- sities. BREWSTER (SIR DAVID). Life of Sir Isaac Newton. (Portrait.) 12°. 1831. 931 Memoirs of the life, writings, and dis- coveries of Sir Isaac Newton. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1855. 932 Second edition. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1860. 933 j:*resentation copy. BREWSTER (SIR DAVID)— eon*. More Worlds than one the creed of the philosopher and the hope of the Christian. 12°. 1854. 934 The Stereoscope, its history, theory, and construction, with its application to the fine and useful arts and to education. With fifty wood engravings. 8°. 1856. 935 BRIFFAULT (F. T.). The Prisoner of Ham : authentic details of the captivity and escape of Prince Napoleon Louis. (Portrait.) 8°. 1846. 936 Presentation copy to Mr. Forster from the Prince. (See also No. 832.) BRIGHT (JOHN) M.P. Speeches on questions of public policy. Edited by James E. Thorold Rogers. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1868. 937 Presentation copy with letter to Mr. Forster. BRIGHTWELL (CECILIA LUCY). Memorials of the life of Amelia Opie, selected and arranged from her letters, diaries, and other manuscripts. (Por- trait.) 8°. Norwich and London, 1854. 938 BRIQUET (MARGUERITE URSULE FORTUNEE). Dictionnaire historique, litteraire et bibliographique des E^angaises, et des etrangferes naturaUs^es en France, connues par leurs ecrits , . . depuis I'etablisse- ment de la monarchic jusqu'^ nos jouis . . . avec le portrait de I'auteur. 8°. Paris, an XII.-1804. 939 BRISSET (MATHURIN JOSEPH). Madame Roland ou les Girondins. 12°. Bruxelles, 1843. 940 BRISTED (JOHN). America and her resources ... 8°. 1818. 941 BRITISH. British Almanac of the Society for the diffusion of useful Knowledge, for 1851 . . . (— 1856). 6 vol. 8°. n.d. 942 Companion to the Almanac ; or. Year- book of general information for 1851 . . . (— 1856). 8°. n.d. H.942 Bound with the almanac. . . . Companion to the [British] Al- manac ; or Year-Book ... for 1828. Third edition. 8°. 1835. (and for 1829-1849 — in all 11 vol.). 943 British Apollo, or, curious amusements for the ingenious. To which are added the most material occurrences foreign and 47 BRITISH— co«<. domestick. Perfonn'd by a Society of gentlemen. Vol. I. F". (1708.) 944 Numb. I. Feb. 13, 1708 to Numb. 117 March 25, 1708 (sie). Numb. 1-12 super- numerary papers. Numb. 1, 2. Quarterly papers. BooK-plate of Purse. MS. at end. British Archseological Association. Archaeological Journal. Published under the direction of the Central iCommittee Vol. I. II. 8". 1845-6. 94.') British Cabinet in 1853. Earl of Aber- deen. Lord John Kussell. Lord Pal- merston. Sir James Graham. Mr. Glad- stone. Earl of Clarendon. Duke of Argyll, &c. (Portrait of the Earl of Aberdeen.) 12°. 1853. 946 Introductory lessons on the British Constitution. [? By Whately.] 12°. 1854. 947 [Half Title.] British Eloquence of the nineteenth century. Literary addresses. Second Series. [Title.] Literary ad- dresses, deliyered at various popular insti- tutions . . .12°. London and Glasgow, 1855. 948 By Sir James Stephen, Lyon Playfair, Su- E. B. Lytton,' R. Cobden, Lord J. Russell, T. B. Macaulay, Lord Brougham, Sir E. Peel, A. J. Scott, Prof. Wilson, T. Camp- bell, Prof. Greenwood, Prof. Masson. Third series. 12°. London and Glas- gow, n.d. 949 By A. H. Layard, Duke of Argyll, Lord Neaves, Bishop Terrot, Mudie Macara, Jiarl of Eglinton, James Moncrieff, An- drew Rutnerfurd, Joseph John Gurney, John Thomson Gordon, Allan ParkPaton, Rev. R. Dawes, Samuel Warren, Sir J. K. Shnttleworth. British Essayists ; with prefaces . . . by Bev. Lionel Thomas Berguer. 45 vol. (Portraits.) 12°. 1823. 950 Vol. 1-B. Tatler. 6-15. Spectator. 16-18. Guardian. 19-22. Rambler. 23-5. Ad- venturer. 26-29. World. 30-32. Oonnois- seur. 83. Idler. 84, 86. Mirror. 36, 37. Lounger. 38-40. Observer. 41. OUa Podrida. 42-44. Winter Evenings. 4B. Microcosm. British Magazine, and monthly register of religious and ecclesiastical information, parochial history, and documents respect- ing the state of the poor, progress of edu- cation, &c. Vol. 33-36. 8°. 1848-9. 951 British Novelists ; with an, essay, and prefaces biographical and critical, by Mrs. Barbauld. New edition. 50 vol. 12°. 1820. 95=^ Vol. 1-8. Clarissa. By S. Richardson. 9- 15. Sir Charles Grandison. By S. Richard- son. 16, 17. Robinson Crusoe. ByD. Do Foe. 18. Joseph Andrews. By H. Pield- inK 19-21. Tom Jones. By H. Fielding. 227 Old English Baron. By Clara Beeve. Castle of Otranto. By Horace Walpole. 23 Pompey the little. By Mr. Coventry. ■ Vicar of Wakefleld. By Dr. Goldsmith. BRITISH— con^ 24, 26. Female Quixote. By Mrs. Lennox. 20. Easselas. By 8. Johnson, ' LL.U. Alraoran and Hamet. By Dr. Hawkes- worth. 27. I/ady Julia MandeviUe. By Frances Brooke. Nature and Art. By Mrs. Inchbald. 28. Simple Story. By Mrs. Inchbald. 29. Man of Feeling. By Henry Mackenzie. Julia de Eoubign6. By H. Mackenzie. 30, 31. Humphry Clinker. By T. Smollett. 32, 33. Spiritual Quixote. By Rev. R. Graves. 34, 36. Zeluco. By Dr. Moore. 36, 37. Old Manor House. By Charlotte Smith. 38, 39. Evelina. By Prances Burney. 40, 41, 42. Cecilia. By Frances Bumey. 43, 44. Romance of the Forest. By Ann Ead- clifEe. 46, 46, 47. Mysteries of TJdolpho. By Ann Radcliffe. 48. H ermsprong. By Robert Bage. 49, 50. Belinda. Modem Griselda. By Maria Edgeworth. [Engraved title]. Complete edition of the Poets of Great Britain. [Title to Vol. II.] Works of the British Poets. With prefaces, biographical and critical, by Eobert Anderson. 13 vol. 8°. Edin- burgh, 1793-1807. 953 MS. notes by S. T. Coleridge, and a few by another hand signed " S. C. H." The vol. are also marked and noted in pencil. Vol. 1. Chaucer, Surrey, Wyatt, Saokville. 2. Spenser, Shakespeare, Davies, Hall. 3. Drayton, Carew, Suckling. 4. Donne, Daniel, Browne, P. Fletcher, G. Fletcher, B. Jonson, Drummond, Crashaw, Dave- nant. 5. Milton, Cowley, Waller, Butler, I Denham. 6. Dryden, Rochester, Eos- common, Otwity,_ Pomfret, Stepney, j Philips, Walsh,' Smith, Duke, King, Sprat, Montague [Earl of]l Halifax. ■ 7. Pamell, Garth, Rowe, Addison, Hughes, Shelfleld, Prior, Congreve, Blackmore, Fenton, Goanville, Yalden. 8. Pope, Gay, Patti- son, Hammond, Savage, Hill, Tickell, Somervile, Broome, Pitt, Blair. 9. Swift, Thorn [p] son, Watts, Hamilton, A.Philips, G. West, ColUns, Dyer, Shenstone, Mallet, Akenside, Harte. 10. Xoung, Gray, R. West, L.yttleton, Moore, Boyce, Thompson, Cawthorne, Churchill, Falconer, Lloyd, Cunningham, Green, Cooper, Goldsmith, P. Whitehead, Brown, Grainger, Smollett, Armstrong. 11. [wanting.] 12. Transla- tions. Pope's Iliad and Odyssey, West's Pindar, Dryden's Virgil, Persius and Juvenal, Pitt's .Slneid, Eowe's Lucan. 13. Cooke's Hesiod ; Fawkes's Theocritus, Anacreon, Biop, Moschus, Sappho, Mu- saeus and ApoUonius Rhodlus ; the Rape of Helen ; Creech's Lucretius ; and Grainger's TibuUus. British Quarterly Review. 1845-56. 21 vol. 8°. 954 ■ Vol. 5 and 6 wanting. British Theatre. Containing the Live.s of the English dramatic poets ; with an account of all their plays. Together with the lives of most of the principal actors, as well as poets. To which is prefixed, A short View of the rise and progress of the English stage. 12°. 1752. 955 Said to be by W. R. Chetwood. British Workman and Friend of the sons of toil. 1861 . . . (Nos. 1-84, 1856- 61). F°. n.p. (London) n.d. 956 Contains illustrations by G. Omikshank, Sir John Gilbert, E.A., etc. 48 BRITTON (JOHN) Authorship of the letters of Junius elucidated . including a hiographioal me- moir of Isaac Barre, M.P. (Portrait of Barre.) 8°. 1848. 957 Memoir of John Aubrey, embracing his auto-biographical sketches, a brief review of his personal and literary merits, and an account of his works ; with extracts from his correspondence, anecdotes of some of his contemporaries, and of the times in which he lived. Published by the Wilt- shire Topographical Society. (Portrait.) 4°. 1845. 958 AND BRAYLEY (EDWARD WEDLAKE). Beauties of England and Wales ; or, delineations ... of each county. Em- bellished with engravings. 28 vol. (in 18). -8°. 1801-15. . 959 Vol. 1. Beds, Berks, Bucks. 2. Cambs, Cheshire, Cornwall. 3. Cumberland, Isle o£ Man, I)erb.yshire. 41. Devonshire, Dor- setshire. 5. Durham, Essex, Glocester- shire. 6. Hampshire, Isle ot Wight, Herefordshire. 7. Herts, Huntingdon- shire. 8. Kent. 9. Lancashire, J,incoln- sliire, Leicestershire. 10-14. Middlesex. 15. Monmouthshire, Norfolk, Northamp- tonshire. 16. Northnmberland, Notts. 17. Oxfordshire, Kutlandshire. 18. Shrop- shire, Somersetshire. 19. StafEordshire, 20. Suffolk, Surrey. 21. Sussex, Worces- tershire, Westmorland. 22. Wiltshire. 2.3. Warwickshire. 24. Torkshire. 2.). Cambria, Anglesea, Caernarvonshire. 26. Denbighshire, Flintshii-e, Montgomery- shire, Merionethshire. 27. Brecknockshire, Caprmarthenshire, Cardiganshire. 28. Glamorganshire, Pembrokeshire, Uadnor- shire.. Besides Mess'". Britton and Brayley the names of the Rev. Joseph Nightingale,- J. Norris Brewer, Rev. J. Evans, Rev. ,h Hodgson, F. C. Laird, Frederic Shoberl, John Bigland, and Thomas Rees, appear on the title-pa^es. BROCKETT (JOHN TROTTER). Glossary of north country words, in use. Eroni an original manuscript, in the Li- brary of John George Lambton. With considerable additions. 8°. Newcastle upon Tyne, 1825. 900 BRODERIP (WILLIAM JOHN). Leaves from the note book of a natu- ralist. 8". 1852. 961 Zoological Recreations. 8°. 1847. 962 BRODHEAD (JOHN ROMEYN). History of the State of New York. First period. 1609-1664. 8°. 1853. 963 BRODIE (GEORGE). History of the British Empire, from the accession of Charles I. to the restoration ; with an introduction, tracing the progress ot society, and of the constitution, fr(nn the feudal times to the opening of the history ; and including particular examia- BRODIE (GEORGE)— eoHf. nation of Mr. Hume's statements relative to the character of the English govern- ment. 4 vol. 8°. Edinburgh, 1822. 964 New edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1866. 965 BRODIE (REV. JAMES). The Rational Creation, an iuquirj- into, the nature and classification of rational creatures, and the government which God exercises over them. 8=*. Edinburgh, 1855. 966 BROGDEN (REV. JAMES). Illustrations of the liturgy and ritual of the united church of England and Ireland : being sermons and discourses, selected from the works of eminent divines who lived during the seventeenth century. 3 vol. -8°. 1842. 967 BROME (RICHARD). Dramatic Works containing fifteen comedies now first collected in three volumes. (Portrait.) 8°. 1873. 968 Lachrymae Musarum : the tears of the Muses ; exprest in elegies ; written by divers persons . . . upon the death of . . . Henry Lord Hastings . . . Collected . . . by E. B[rome]. (Frontispiece and folding leaf.) 8°. 1650. 969 Contains what are considered to be the first published verses by Dryden, then a boy at Westminster School. Dr. Bhss's copy and MS. notes. Also G. Daniel's copy. BROMLEY (SIR GEORGE). Collection of original royal letters, written by King Charles the first and second, King James the second, and the icing and Queen of Bohemia ; with original letters, written by Prince Rupert, Charles Louis Count Palatine, the Duchess of Hanover . . . from 1619, to 1665. Dedi- cated ... to his Majesty, by Sir G. Bromley. Illustrated with engravings . . . and a plate of autographs and seals. (Portraits inserted.) 8°. 1787. 970 BROOK (BENJAMIN). Lives of the Puritans : containing a biographical account of those divines who distinguished themselves in the cause of religious liberty, from the Reformation under Queen Elizabeth, to the act of uniformity, in 1662. 3 vol. 8°. 1813. 971 BROOKE (HENRY). Fool of Quality • or, the history of Henry Earl of Moreland. A new and revised edition, with a biographical pre- face, by Rev. Charles Kingsley. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1859. 972 Brookiaua. [By Charles Henry Wil- son]. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 12". 1804. 973 49 BROOKE (SIR JAMES), RAJAH OF SARAWAK. Private letters, narrating the events of his life, from 1838 to the present time. Edited by John 0. Templer. 3 vol. 8°. 1853. 974 (REV. WILLIAM BROOKFIELD HENRY). Sermons edited by Mrs. Brookfield with a biographical notice by Lord Lyttelton. (Portrait.) 8°. 1875. 975 BROOKS (CHARLES WILLIAM SHIRLEY). The Kussians of the South. 120. 1854 976 " John Forster, Esq' with the Author's best compliments. Jan. 21. 1851." BROOKS (JONATHAN). Antiquity ; or, the wise instructer. Being a collection of the most Taluable admonitions and sentences . . . from . . . christian and heathen writers . . . Second edition. 12°. York, 1773. 977 BROOM (HERBERT). Commentaries on the Common Law, designed as introductory to its study. 8°. 1856. 978 BROSSE (BARON DE). Memoirs of the Baron de Brosse, who was broke on the wheel in the reign of Lewis XIV. . . . with several particulars relating to the wars in those Times . [Romance]. Par(I.(-n.) 8°. 1726. 979' BROUGHAM AND VAUX (HENRY, BARON). Works. 11 vol. 8°. London and Glasgow, 1855-61. 980 Vol. 1. Lives of Philosophers of the time of George III. 2. Lives of Men of letters of the time of George III. 3-5. Historical Sketches of Statesmen, time of George III. 0. Natural Theology, dialogues on Instinct, dissertations on the cells of bees and fossil osteology. 7. Rhetorical and literary dissertations and addresses. 8. Historical and political dissertations. 9. 10. Speeches on social and political subjects, with histo- rical introductions. 11. British ConstitU' tion. Second edition. Contributions to the Edinburgh Review. 3 vol. 8°. London and (ilasgow, 1856. 981 Dialogues on instinct ; with analytical View of the researches on fossil osteology. 12°. 1844. (Two copies.) 982 Historical sketches of Statesmen who flourished in the time of George III. . . . Remarks on party, and appendix. First series. 8°. 1839. 983 New edition. 2 vol. 12°. 1845. 984 Second series. 8°. 1839. 985 o 16505. BROUGHAM AND VAUX (HENRY, BARON)— cont. New edition. 2 vol. 12°. 1845. 986 Third series. To which are added Re- marks on thtf French Revolution. 8°. 1843. 987 New edition. 2 vol. 12". 1845. 988 History of England and Erauce under the house of Lancaster; with an intro- ductory view of the early reformation. [Anon.] 8°. 1852. 989 At the. head of p. 1—" only three copies exist : one at Cannes, one at Brougham, one in London." MS. Lives of men of letters and science who flourished in the time of George III. With portraits. 2 vol. 8°. 1845-6. 990 Political philosophj'. Principles of government. Monarchical government . Eastern Monarchies. European Monar- chies. [Anon.] 8°. 1842. (Two copies.) 991 No. 2. In 2 vol. Part II. Of Aristocracy. Aristocratic Governments. 8". 1843. 992 Part III of Democracy. Mixed Mo- narchy. 8°. 1843. 993 Nos. 991-3 pubUshed by the Society for the diffusion of useful knowledge. Speeches, upon questions relating to public rights, duties, and interests ; with historical introductions, and a critical dis- sertation upon the eloquence of the an- cients. 4 vol. 8°. Edinburgh and Lon- don, 1838. 994 Two discourses of the objects, plea- sures, and advantages, I. of Science : II. of political Science. 12°. 1846. 995 Opinions of Lord Brougham ; on poli- tics, theology, law, science, education, literature, &c. As exhibited in his parlia- mentary and legal speeches, and miscel- laneous writings. (With memoir.) 8°. 1837. 996 Albert Lunel ; or, the Chateau of Lan- guedoc [Novel]. 3 vol. [Anon. Ascribed to Lord Brougham]. 8°. 1844. 997 Vol. 3 wanting. -- — AND ROUTH • seud.) The Flunkey, and the British flunkey- age, being a companion to Burke's Peer- age. 12°. 1848. 1168 BURMESE WAR. Six months at Martaban, during the Burmese War; and an essay on the political causes which led to the establish- ment of British power in India. By an oiEcer in active service on the spot. 8°. n.d, J 169 BURN (LIEUT.-COLONELROBERT), Naval and Military technical dictionary of the French language. In two parts : French — English, and English — French ... 8°. 1852. . 1170 BURN (ROBERT SCOTT). Practical ventilation as applied to pub- lic, domestic, and agricultural structures . . . With remarks on heating, construc- tion of fireplaces, cure of smoky chim- neys ; and an appendix on the ventilation of ships, steamboats, and railway car- riages. 8°. Edinburgh and London, • 1850. 1171 BURNES (LIEUT.-COL. SIR ALEXANDER). Cabool : being a personal narrative of a journey to, and residence in that City, in 1836, 7, and 8. With illustrations. 8°. 1842. 1172 BURNET (GILBERT), BISHOP OF SALISBURY. Continuation of Reflections on Mr. Varillas's History of Heresies. Particu- larly on that which relates to English affairs in his third and fourth tomes. 12°. Amsterdam, 1687. 1173 At the end, without title-page, "A defence of the reflections on the nin'th book of Mr. Varillas's History of Heresies ; being a reply to his answer." History of his own time : with the sup- pressed passages of the first volume, and notes by the Earls of Dartmouth and Hardwicke, and Speaker Onslow, hitherto unpublished . . . Cursory remarks of Swift and other observations. 6 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Oxford, 1823. 1174 Preface signed "M. J. R.," i.e. Martin Jo- seph Bx)uth. History of the Reformation of the Church of England. With the collection of records, and an index. Revised and cor- rected, with additional notes, and a pre- face . . . by Rev. E. Nares, D.D. With a frontispiece, and twenty-two portraits. 4 vol. 8°. n.d. (1830). 1175 Life and Death of Sir Matthew Hale, sometime Lord Chief Justice of His Majesties Court of King's Bench. (Por- trait.) 12°. 1682. (Two copies.) 1176 Life of William Bedell, Bishop of Kil- moi-e. [Anon. J 8°. 1685. (Two copies.; 1177 Lives of Hale, Bedell, and Rochester ; with Fell's Life of Dr. Hammond. 12°. n.d. 1178 Some passages in the life and death of John Earl of Rochester. With a Sermon [on Luke xv. 7] , preached at the fune- ral of the Earl, by Rev. Robert Parsons . . . Account of the life and Avritings of the Earl, by Dr. Samuel Johnson. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1787. 1179 New edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 1805. . , ai80 57 BURNET (JOHN)_ Essay on the education of the Bye with reference to Painting. Illustrated by copper plates and wood cuts. 4°. 1837. 1181 Practical Essays on various branches of the Pine Arts . . . Critical inquiry into the principles and practice of Sir David Wilkie. 8°. 1848. 1182 Progress of a Painter in the nineteenth century : containing conversations and remarks upon Art. 8°. 1854. 1183 Turner and his Works : illustrated with examples from his pictures, and cri- tical remarks on his principles of paint- ing. The memoir by Peter Cunningham. 4°. 1852. 1184 BURNET (THOMAS), LL.D., MAS- TER OF THE CHARTER HOUSE. Theory of the earth: containing an account of the original of the earth, and of all the general changes which it hath already undergone, or is to undergo till the consummation of all things. The two first books concerning the Deluge, and concerning Paradise. Third edition re- view'd by the author. (Portrait.) F°. 1697. 1185 Two last books, concerning the burning of the World, and concerning the new heavens and new earth. F°. 1697. 1186 Nos. 1185-6 in one vol. [BURNET (SIR THOMAS).] Second Tale' of a Tub : or, the history of Robert Powel the Puppet-show man. [Anon.] 12°. 1715. 1187 "A Satire on the Earl of Oxford." Brit. Mus. Catalogue. BURNETT (CHARLES MOUNT- FORD) M.D. Insanity tested by science, and shown to be a disease rarely connected with per- manent organic lesion of the brain. And on that account far more susceptible of cure than has hitherto been supposed. 8». 1848. 1188 BURNS (ROBERT). Poetical Works. 2 vol. (in one). (Portrait and Memoir.) 12°. Pickering, 1830 1189 Works ; with Dr. Carrie's Memoir of the poet, and an essay on his genius and character, by Professor Wilson. Also numerous notes . . . Portraits and land- scape illustrations. 2 vol. 8°. Glas- gow, ■Edinburgh, and London, 1843. ^^^^ Life and Works. Edited by Robert Chambers. 4 vol. 8°. Edinburgh 1851-2. ^'"^ BURNS (ROBERT)— co«f. Poetical works. With Memoir, critical dissertation, and explanatory notes, by Eev. George Gilfillan. 2 vol. 8°. Edin- burgh, 1856. 1192 Poems and Songs. With a life, and a glossary. [Woodcuts by T. Bewick.] 12°. Alnwick, 1828. 1193 Eac-simile . . . Jolly Beggars . . . 4°. Glasgow, 1823. 1194 BURROW (REV. EDWARD B.). Mendip Hills. A descriptive poem. 4°. 1849. 1195 BURSLEM (CAPTAIN ROLLO). Peep into Toorkisthan. a°. 1846. 1196 BURT (REV. JOHN THOMAS). Results of the system of separate con- finement as administered at the Penton- ville Prison. 8°. 1852. 1197 BURTIN (FRAN9OIS-XAVIER DE). Treatise on the knowledge necessary to Amateurs in Pictures. Translated and abridged from the Prench by Robert White. 8°. 1845. 1198 BURTON (EDMUND). Antient characters deduced from classi- cal remains. 8°. 1763. 1199 Book-plate of Jer. Harnian. BURTON (REV. HENRY). The Grand Impostor unmasked, or, a detection of the hypoorisie and impiety of the late Archbishop (so styled) of Canterbury [Laud] ... in ... his funerall sermon. 4°. n.d. [1644]. (Two copies.) 1200 BURTON (JOHN). Opuseula Miscellanea saica. 8°. Oxonii, 1771. Metrico-pro- 1201 BURTON (JOHN HILL). The Book-Hunter, etc. 8°. Edin- burgh and London, 1862. 1202 " John Forster Esq from the' Author." History of Scotland, fi:om the Revolu- tion to the extinction of the last Jacobite insurrection. (1689-1748.) 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 1203 Life and Correspondence of David Hume. From the papers bequeathed by his nephew to the Royal Society of Edin- burgh ... 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1846. 1204 Narratives from Criminal Trials in Scotland. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 1205 Political and Social Economy : its practical applications. 12°. Edinburgh, 1849. 1206 58 BURTON (JOSEPH). Treatise on the importance and utility of Classical Learning. 8". 1831. 1207 BURTON (RICHARD) pseud, i.e. NATHANIEL CROUCH. The English Empire in America : or a prospect of their Majesties dominions in the "West-Indies. Namelj', Newfound- land, New England, New- York ... . Ee- lation of the first discovery of the New World, called America, by the Spaniards . . . Voyages of several Englishmen to divers places therein. Illustrated with maps and pictures. Third edition. By E. B. 12°. 1698. 1208 Historical remarques, and observations of the ancient and present state of Lon- don and Westminster . . . Account of the most remarkable accidents . . . which have happened therein . . . Illustrated with pictures . . . With the arms of the sixty-six companies of London ... 12°. 1681. 1209 History of Charles the Second and James the Second . . . Eelation of the happy revolution, and the accession of their present Majesties King William and Queen Mary, to the throne, Feb. 13. IBS'*. By E. B. (Portrait of King James.) 12°. 1693. 1210 History of the Kingdoms of Scotland and Ireland . . . List of the present Scotch and Irish nobility. Illustrated with above thirty pictures. By E. B. . . . 12°. 1685. 1211 The wars in England, Scotland and Ireland. Or, an impartial account of all the battels, sieges . . . which have happened from the beginning of the reign of Charles I in 1625, to his Majesties happy restauration, 1660. Illustrated with pic- tures . . . 12°. 1681. 1212 "Edmund Verney's Booke at a shillinpr price." MS. onjly-leaf. Fifth edition. 12°. 1684. 1213 BURTON (RICHARD FRANCIS). Falconry in the Valley of the Indus. 8°. 1852. 1214 First Footsteps in East Africa ; or, an exploration of Harar. 8°. 1856. 1215 Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to El-Medinah and Meccah. 3 vol. 8°. 1855. 1216 Preface signed " T. L. W." [the editor]. BURTON (ROBERT). Anatomy of Melancholy, what it is, with all the kinds, causes, symptoines, prognostics, and several cures of it. In three partitions ... By Democritus Junior . . . Satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Sixteenth edition. Printed from the authorized copy of 1651 . . . (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1838. 1217 BURTON (THOMAS). Diary of T.B., Member in the Parlia- ments of Oliver and Eichard Cromwell, from 1656 to 1659 : now first published from the original manuscript. With an introduction, containing an account of the parliament of 1654 ; from the journal of Gnibon Goddard, M.P. also now first printed. Edited and illustrated with notes ... by John Towill Eutt. 4 vol. (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1828. (Three co- pies.) 1218 Pencil notes by T. Carlyle. [BURY (LADY CHARLOTTE SUSAN MARIA).] Diary illustrative of the times of George the fourth, with original letters from Queen Caroline, the P^ncess Charlotte . . . [Anon.] Edited by John Gait. 4 vol. (Portrait of the Princess of Wales.) 8°. 1838-9. 1219 According to "Lowndes," by Lady Charlotte Bury. According to the "Catalogue of the London Library " by that lady and Miss Sheridan. Gait's name as editor appears only to the last two vol. BUSBEQUIUS GISLENIUS). (A U G E R I U S Travels into Turkey : containing the most accurate account of the Turks, and neighbouring nations . . . translated from the Latin. With memoirs of the life of the Author (by Bayle). 12°. 1744. 1220 BUSH (MRS. ANNIE FORBES). Memoirs of the Queens of France. Second edition . . . Containing portrait and memoir of (the Queen of the French). 2 vol. (Portraits.) -8°. 1843. 1221 BUSHBY (HENRY JEFFREYS). narrative. 8°. Widow-burning : 1855. 1222 BUSHELL (THOMAS). Speeches and songs at the present- ment of Mr. Bushells Eock to the Queenes Majesty. Aug. 23. 1636 ... 4°. Ox- ford, 1636. 1223 Bookplate of Thos. JoUey. (JOHN STEVENSON) BUSHNAN M.D. Miss Martineau and her Master [Henry George Atkinson] . 12°. 1851. 1224 BUSHNELL (HORACE) D.D. God in Christ. Three discourses, de- livered at New Haven, Cambridge, and Andover. With a preliminarv disserta- tion on language. 8". 1850. " 1225 59 BUSK (MRS. WILLIAM). Mediaeval Popes, Emperors, Kings, and Crusaders ; or, Germany, Italy and Pales- tine; from 1125 to 1268. 4 toI. 8°. 1854-6. 1226 BUTE (JOHN STUART, 3D EARL OF). Letter to the Earl of B - [ute], relative to the late changes that have happened in the Administration. [Anon.] 4°. 1765. 1227 .BUTLER (REV. ALBAN). Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and other principal Saints ... 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Duhliu, n.d. [1833-6]. 1228 BUTLER (CHARLES). Life of Erasmus : with historical re- marks on the state of literature between the tenth and sixteenth centuries. 8°. 1825. (Two copies.) 1229 Eeminiscences. [Vol. I.] 8°. 1822. 1230 BUTLER (FRANCES ANNE KEMBLE, MRS.). Poems. (Portrait.) 12°. Philadelphia, 1844. 1231 [Another edition.] 12°. Eeprinted from the American edition. 1844. 1232 BUTLER (GEORGE). Principles of Imitative Art : four lectures delivered before the Oxford Art Society ... 8°. 1852. 1233 BUTLER (JOSEPH) BISHOP OF DURHAM. Analogy of Religion, natural and re- vealed to the constitution and course of nature ; to which are added, two brief dis- sertations : on personal identity, and on the nature of virtue ; and fifteen sermons. With a preface by Samuel Halifax, Bishop of Gloucester. New edition, with analy- tical introduotionsj explanatory notes, and an index. By a member of the University of Oxford. (Portrait.) Bohn, 8°. 1852. 1234 BUTLER (SAMUEL) THE POET. Poetical Works. With life, critical dis- sertation, and explanatory notes, by Eev. George Gilfillan. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh, . 1854. (2 copies.) 1235 Genuine Remains [I'.e. posthumous works] in verse and prose. Pubhshed from the original manuscripts . . . with notes by E. Thyer. 2 vol. 8°. 175^9^.^^ Posthumous Works, compleat in one volume . . . being a collection of satires, BUTLER (SAMUEL) THE POET— cont. speeches, and reflections , . . Key to Hudibras by Sir Roger L'Estrange. Si-tth edition, corrected. Adorned with cuts. (Portrait.) 12°. 1754. (2 copies.) 1237 " Out of flfty pieces which this publication contains there are only three which have any claim to be considered as genuine.'* JJowndesM Hudibras. First part . . . Cuts. 12°. 1710. 1238 Second part . . . 12°. 1709. 1239 Third and last part . . . 12'>. 1710. 1240 Hudibras . . . With large annotations, and a preface, by Zaohary Grey . . . New set of cuts (by W. Hogarth). 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Cambridge, 1744. 1241 Book-plate o£ John Mitford, Esq. MS. letter from r. C. Brooke. Hudibras . . . Adorned with cuts. Second edition. 1758. [Second title.] Hudibras. Poeme . . . traduit en vers Fran9ois avec des re- marques & des figures [Eng. and Fr.] 3 vol. 12°. 1757. 1242 The translation into French by John Towne- ley, the " remarques " by P. H. Larcher, and the "figures " by Hogarth. [BUTLER (SAMUEL).] Erewhon or over the range. [Anon.] 8°. 1872. 1243 BUTLER (WILLIAM ARCHER). Lectures on the history of Ancient Philosophy. Edited from the Author's MSS. with notes, by William Hepworth Thompson. 2 vol. 8°. Cambridge, 1856. 1244 BUTT (ISAAC). History of Italy, from the abdication of Napoleon I., with introductory references to that of earlier times. 2 vol. 8°. 1860. 1245 BUTTMANN (PHILIPP CARL). Greek Grammar, translated from the German [" Grieohische Sohul-Grammatik," by E.Everett]. 8°. 1824. 1246 BUXTON (CHARLES). Memoirs of Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton. With selections from his correspondence. Edited by Charles Buxton. (Portrait.) 8°. 1848. 1247 Compiled by C. Buxton in conjunction -with Miss Buzton. Third edition. 12°. 1849. 1248 BYAM (GEORGE). Wild life in the interior of Central America. 12°. 1849. 1249 60 BYEWAYS. Byeways of Two Cities [London and Edinburgh] . By the Author of " the liomance of the Streets." With a prefa- tory notice by the Earl of Shaftesbury. 12°. London, Chilworth [printed], 1873. 1250 [BYRNE (MRS. WM. PITT).] Feudal Castles of France. (Western provinces.) By the author of " Flemish Interiors." Illustrated from the author's sketches. 8°. 1869. 1251 A glance behind the grilles of religious houses in France ; with an insight into the working of the Roman church system as compared with our own. [Anon.] 12°. 18.55. 1252 BYROM (JOHN). Miscellaneous ]?oems . . . Life and notes by the editor. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°.' Leeds, 1814. 1253 BYRON (GEORGE GORDON NOEL BYRON, 6TH BARON). Works including his suppressed poems. Complete in one volume. (The Life of Lord Byron. By J. W. Lake.) (Portrait and fac-simile letter.) 8". Paris, 1827. 1254 Works. Complete in one "Volume. With notes by Thomas Moore . . . (Por- trait.) 8°. 1837. 1255 Poetical Works. New edition. 6 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1855-6. 1256 Dramas. 2 vol. . . . 12°. 1853. 1257 Miscellanies. 2 vol. 12°. 1853. 1258 Tales and Poems .. . 12°. 1853. 1259 Beppo and Don Juan. 2 vol. 12°. 1853. 1260 Childe Harold's Pilgrimage. A romaunt. (Portrait and illustrations.) 8°. 1841. 1261 [Another edition.] (Illustrated.) 8°. 1853. 1262 [Another edition.] 12°. 1853. 1263 Thirty illustrations of Childe Hai'old. The original drawings produced expressly for the Art-Union of Loudon. 1855. (Portrait of Byron.) 8°. n.p. n.d. 1264 English Bards, and Scotch reviewers. A satire. [Anon.] 12°. n.d. [1809.] 1265 Apparently the first edition. Fourth edition. (Portrait of Byron and 30 other Portraits inserted.) 8°. 1811. 1266 BYRON, (GEORGE GORDON NOEL BYRON, 6TH BARON)— core*. [Another copy.] 1267 MP. alterations and corrections in the author's handwriting : one or two of these differ from the text as now printed. On the half-title in MS. "Byron Dec. 31»' 1811. N— d \y. [i.e. Newstead Abbey] B." Underneath are these two lines [from Ovid] also in Byron's handwriting— "Dum relego— scripsisse pudet — quia plu- rima cerno — " Me quoque— qui feci— iudice, digna lini. B. 3v. 20"'. 1812." On back of half-title— "Given me by the author on my birth-day, October 19. 1815. , Leigh Hunt." Pages 2^24 wanting. The Giaour, a fragment of a Turkish tale. [First ed.] 8°. 1813. 1268 Lara, a tale. Fifth edition. 8°. 1815. 1269 Hebrew Melodies. 8°. 1815. 1270 Letter to**** ****** \_i.e. John Murray] on the Rev. W. L. Bowles' stric- tures on the Life and Writings of Pope. 8°. 1821. 1271 Werner, a tragedy. 8°. 1823. 1272 Selections from the writings of Lord Byron. Prose. By a Clergyman. 12°. 1854. 1273 Poetry. 12°. 1854. 1274 BYRONIANA. Opinions of Lord Byron on Men, Man- ners, and Things ; with the Parish Clerk's Album, kept at his burial place, Hucknall Torkard [Notts.] [Edited by J, M. L.] 12°. London, Leicester [printed], 1834. 1275 c. * * * * (MADAME DE). A Winter in Paris ; or Memoirs of Madame de C * * * * : written by her- self. 3 vol. 12°. 1811. 1276 0. (A.). Hymns on the Litanj-. 12°. Oxford and London, 1865. 1277 0. B. 0. AMICUS. Hints on Life ; and how to rise in Society. (Frontispiece by Leech.) 12°. 1845. 1278- 0. (I.). Elegie offered up to the Memory of . . . Mr. Jeremiah Burroughs, Minister of the Word at Giles Cripplegatc, and Stepney. [Signed at end " I, C."] Broad- side. F°. 1646. 1279 61 C. (J. W.). German reformation of the nineteenth century ; or, a sketch of the rise, prepress, and present position of those who have recently separated themselves from the Church of Rome ; with a short notice of the state of Protestantism in Prussia, Austria, Bavaria, and the Prussian Baltic provinces. By the German correspon- dent of "The Continental Echo." [Pre- face signed " J. W. C."] 8°. 1846. 1280 C. (M. S.). Little poems for little people . . Illustrations. 12°. n.d. 1281 CABALA. Cahala, sive scrinia sacra. Mysteries of state and government : in letters of illus- trious persons and great ministers of state ... in the reigns of Henry VIII, Eliza- heth, James, and Charles ... To which is added several choice letters and nego- tiations . . . F°. 1663. 1282 CABINET DES FEES. Le Cabinet des Fees, ou Collection choisie des contes des fees, et autres contes merveilleux, ornes de figures. 41 vol. 12°. Geneve, 1787-9. 1283 Vol 1 contains ' "Liste complete des ouvrages qui composent le cabinet des CAESAR (CAIUS JULIUS). Opera Omnia [ed. H. Homer] . 8°. 1790. 2 vol. 1284 Grammar School Classics. Commen- tarii de Bello Gallico. With notes, by George Long. 12°. 1853. 1285 Commentaries on the Gallic and Civil Wars :" with the supplementary books attributed to Hirtius ; including the Alex- andrian, African, and Spanish wars. Liter- ally translated, (by W. A. M'Devitte and W. S. Bohn) with notes and . . . index. 8°. Bohn, 1851. 1286 CALABRELLA (BARONESS DE). Evenings at Haddon Hall. Edited by the Baroness De Calabrella. With illus- trations, from designs by George Catter- mole. 8°. 1846. 1287 Names ol the authors o£ the tales added in pencil. CALAMY (EDMUND) D.D. Historical account of my own life, with reflections on the times I have lived m {"1671-1731) Kdited and illustrated with notes ... by John TowiU Butt. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1829. 1288 Memoirs of the life of Kev. John Howe. Collected by B. Calamy. 8°. 1724. 1^®^ CALDERON DE LA BARCA (PEDRO). Dramas, tragic, comic, and legendary. Translated from the Spanish, principally in the metre of the original, by Denis Elorence M'Carthy. 2 vol. 12». 185(1. 1290 Six Dramas. Erecly translated by Ed- ward Fitzgerald. 12°." 1853. 1291 Justina ; a play. Translated from the Spanish. By J. H. 8°. 1848. 1292 Life's a Dream : the great theatre of the world. From the Spanish. With an essay on his life and genius by Kichard Chenevix Trench [Abp. of Dublin]. 12°. 1856. 1293 C[ALDERON] DE LA B[ARCA] (MADAME FRANCES). Life in Mexico, during a residence of two years in that Country. With a Pre- face, by Yr. H. Prescott. 8°. 1843. 1294 CALDWELL (JAMES STAMFORD). Results of Reading. 8°. 1843. 1295 CALDWELL (MERRITT). Practical manual of Elocution : em- bracing voice and gesture .... Fourth edition. 8°. Philadelphia, 1846. 1296" CALDWELL. Selections from the family papers pre- served at Caldwell. Part first. 1496- 1853. Part II. 1733-1821. 3 vol. (Portrait of Baron Mure.) 4°. Glasgow, 1854. 1297 Maitland Club Publication. CALENDARS. Calendars of State (and Treasury) Papers preserved in H.M. Public Record office (and elsewhere). Edited under the direction of the Master of the Rolls. 43 vol. 8°. 1856-72. 1298 Colonial Series. 1513-1660. Edited by W. Noel Sainstaury. 3 vol. Domestic Series. Beigns of Edward VI, Mai-y, Elizabeth, 1517-90. Edited by Robert Lemon. 2 vol. Eeigns of Efizabeth 1591-1601 and James i. 1603-1625, with Addenda. Edited by Mary Anne Everett Green. 7 vol. Eeign of Charles I. 1626-1638. Edited by Joim Bruce. 12 vol. Eeign of Charles I. 1638-9. Edited by John Bruce and "William Douglas Hamilton. ivol. Eeign of Charles II. 1660-1. Edited by M. A. E. Gi-een. 1 vol. FoEEiGf-N Series. Eeigns of Edward VI, Mary 154i7-68. Edited by "Vniliam B. Turnbull. 2 vol. Eeign of Elizabeth 1558-65. Edited by Eev. Joseph Stevenson. 7 vol. Eeign of Elizabeth 1666-8. Edited by Allan James Crosby. 1 vol. lEELANB. Eeigns of Henry VXII Edward VI Mary and Elizabeth 1509-1585. Edited by Hans Claude Hamilton. 2 vol. 62 CALENDARS— eorai. Eeign of James I. 1603-6. Edited by Efiv. C. W. Eussell, D.D. and John P. Prender- gast. Vol. I. ScoTLAKD. Reigns of Henry VIII, Ed- ward VI, Mary, Elizabeth; Appendix ; and Mary Queen of Scots during her deten- tion in England— 1509-1603. Edited by Markham John Thorpe. 2 vol. Teeasuet Papers. 1656-7—1701-2. Pre- pared by Joseph Hedington. 2 vol. Calendar of the Carew Manuscripts, preserved in the arohiepiseopal library at Lambeth 1515-1574 (—1603). Edited by J. S. Brewer, and William BuUeu . . . Vol. I.— V. 8°. 1867-71. 1299 Vol V. contains " The Book of Howth." Calendar of letters, despatches and state papers, relating to the negotiations be- tween England and Spain, preserved in the archives at Simanoas and elsewhere. Edited by G. A. Bergenroth ... 8°. 1862-8. Vol. I.— in. 1300 V. I. Henry VII. ld«5-1509. II. Henry VIII. 1509-1625. Supplement to I. and II. I. Queen Katha- rine. Intended marriage of Henry VII. with Queen Juana. Calendar of State papers and manu- scripts, relating to English affairs, existing in the archives and collections of Venice, and in other libraries of Northern Italy. 1202-1554. Edited by Eawdon Brown ... 5 vol. 8°. 1864-1873. 1301 Calendarium Genealogicum. Henry III. and Edward I. Edited by Charles Roberts ... 2 vol. 8°. 1865. 1302 Nos. 1299-1302 also published under (he direction of the Master of the Rolls. CALIDAS. Sacontala ; or, the fatal ring : an Indian drama. Translated from the original Sanscrit and Pracrit [by Sir W. Jones] . 8°. Edinburgh, 1796. 1303 GALLERY ( ) AND WAN (DR.). History of the insurrection in China ; with notices of the Christianity, creed, and proclamations of the insurgents. Trans- lated from the French, with a supple- mentary chapter ... by John Oxenford. With a facsimile of a Chinese map . . . and a portrait of Ti&n-Tfe ... 8°. 1853. 1304 [CALLIERES (FRANCOIS DE).] Histoire poetique de la Guerre nouvelle- ment declarfe entre les Anciens et les Modernes. [Anon.] 12°. Paris, 1688. 1305 Book-plate of John Symmons. CALMET (AUGUSTINE). Phantom World : or, the philosophy of spirits, apparitions, &c. Edited with an introduction and notes by Rev. Henry Christmas. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 1306 [CALTHORPE (LT. GENERAL HON. SOMERSET JOHN GOUGH).] Letters from Head-Quarters ; or, the realities of the War in the Crimea. By an officer on the staff. 2 vol. Portrait of Lord Raglan, and plans. 8°. 1856. 1307 CALTON (ROBERT BELL). Annals and Legends of Calais. With sketches of emigre notabilities, and memoir of Lady Hamilton. 8". 1852. 1308 CALVERT (SIR HARRY). Journals and Correspondence of Sir Harry Calvert, Adjutant-General of the Eorces under the Duke of York. Com- prising the campaigns in Flanders and Holland in 1793-4. With an Appendix, containing his plans for the defence of the country in case of invasion. Edited by his son. Sir Harry Verney. 8°. 1853. 1309 CALVERT (REV. WILLIAM). Pneuma, or the Wandering Soul : .t parable in rhyme and outline. (Illustra- tions by the author.) 8°. 1856. 1310 Wife's Manual, or prayers, thoughts, and songs, on several occasions of a matron's life. 8°. 1854. 1311 CALVES-HEAD CLUB. Secret history of the Calves-head Club, complt [complete]. Or, the Republican unmask'd. Wherein is fully shewn, the religion of the Calves-head heroes, iu their anniversary thanksgiving-songs on the thirtieth of January, by them called an- thems, for the years 1693 . . . 1699, &c. . . . Sixth edition . . . Vindication of . . . Charles I. . . . Written ... by the celebrated Mr. Buttler, author of Hudibras. With a character of a Presby- terian, by Sir John Denham. And the cha- racter of a modern whig . . . [By Edward Ward.] 8°. 1706. 1312 The Whigs Unmask'd : being the secret history of the Calf s-head Club . . . En- larg'd by a genuine account of the plots and conspiracies of the Whiggish faction against the Queen and Ministry . . . Adorn'd with cuts . . . Characters by Sir John Denham . . . Vindication of . . . Charles the first ... By Mr. Butler . . . Eighth edition. 8°. 1713. 1313 CALVIN (JOHN). Letters compiled fi-om the original manuscripts and edited with historical notes by Dr. Jules Bonnet. Vol. I. Translated from the Latin and French languages by David Constable. 8°. 1855. 1314 63 CALVINISM. Hints and Essays, theological and moral, intended briefly to expose the corrupt principles of Calvinism, and briefly to offer other principles better corresponding with reason and Scripture . . . (and — an essay on Pride (and; Meditation on Divine Love.) By a Lay -Man. [John HoUis.] 12°. 1775. 1315 MS. note at the beginning. CAMBRIDGE (RICHARD OWEN). The Soribleriad : an heroic poem . . 12°. 1752. 1316 CAMBRIDGE. Cambridge Classical Examinations. Second edition. 8°. Cambridge, 1826. 1317 Cambridge Essays, contributed by mem- bers of the university. 1855 (-6-7.) (3 vol.) S". n.d. 1318 Statutes of Queen Elizabeth for the university of Cambridge. (12th Elizabeth, A.D. 1570.) Translated ft'om the original Latin statutes ... 8°. 1838. A319 CAMBRO-BRITANNIA. [No title-page. . . . Laudes Cambro- Britanniae. In honorem Georgii Augusti, Principis Walliae, augustissimaeque Con- sortis diei natalis [and] Conamina lyrica in honorem Reverend! . . . clerl Ecclesiae Anglicanae.l [Latin verses.] 8°. ^ 1320 By Myles Davies, and at the end of his " Athenae Britannicae." CAMDEN (WILLIAM). Britannia : or a chorographical descrip- tion of Great Britain and Ireland, together with the adjacent Islands. "Written in Latin by W. Camden, and translated into English, with additions and improvements. Second edition. Revised . . - with large additions, by Edmund Gibson, Bishop of Lincoln. 2 vol. (Portrait.) E°. 1722. 1321 CAMDEN SOCIETY. Publications of the Camden Society. 122 vol. 4°. 1838-1875. 1322 Ancren Riwle. Anoren Riwle ; a treatise on the rules and duties ol Monastic life. Edited and translated by James Morton, B.D. Anecdotes. Anecdotes and traditions, illus- trative ot early EngUsh history and litera- ture derived from MS. sources, lidited by ■William J. Thorns. T!b1p John, Bishop of Ossory. Kynge Johan. A play in two parts. Edited by J. Payne Collier. ., , ^v Bai-Krave, John, D.D. Pope Alexander the sevSith and the College ot Cardinals. With a catalogue of Dr. Bargrave^s mu- seum. Edited by James Craigie Bcbert- loSr (Portrait of Christina. Queen of Sweden.) CAMDEN SOCIETY— co«^ Barons' Wars. Chronicle of William De Ulshanger, of the Barons' wars. The Miracles of Simon De Montfort. Edited by J. O. HalUwell. Bedell. True relation ol the life and death ot 'William Bedell, Bishop of Kilmore. Edited and ampUfled with genealogical and historical chapters by Thomas wliar- ton Jones. Brakelonda, Jocelinus de. Chronica, de re- bus gestis Samsonis abbatis monasterii Sancti Edmundi. Curante Johanne Gage Eiokewode. Bramston. Autobiography of Sir John Bramston, of Skreens, in the hundred of Chelmsford ; now first printed. Camden Miscellany. Vol. 1. Register and chronicle of the Abbey of Aberconway. Chronicle of the rebellion in Lincolnshire, 1470. Bull of Pope Innocent VIII. on the Marriage of Henry VII. with Eliza- beth of York. Journal of the Siege of Eouen, 1691. Letter ot George Fleet- wood, describing the battle of Lutzen and death ot Gustavus Adolphus. Diary of Dr. Edward Lake, chaplain and tutor to the Princesses Mary and Anne, 1677-8. Vol. 2. Account of the expenses of John of Brabant and Henry and Thomas of Lancaster, 1293-3. Household account of the Princess Elizabeth, 1561-2. Be- quest and suite of a true-hearted Eng- lishman, written by William Cholme- ley, 1553. Discovery of the Jesuits' coliege at Clerkenwell in March 1627-8. Trelawny Papers. Autobio- graphy of William Taswell, D.D, Vol 3. Papers relating to proceedings in the County of Kent, 1642-6. Historical poems of the Sixteenth century. B£- lation of abuses committed against the Commonwealth, 1629. Inventory of the wardrobe, plate, &c. of Henry Ktzroy, Duke of Eiohmond and Somer- set ; and an inventory of the ward- robe, &c., of Katharine of Arragon, at Baynard's Castle. Vol. 4. A London Chi-onicle during the reigns of Henry VII. and VIII. Ex- penses of the Judges of assize riding the Western and Oxford circuits, 1696- 1601. Incredulity of St. Thomas, the Scriveners' play at York. Childe of Bristow, a poem by John Lydgate. Sir Edward Lake's interviews with Charles I. Letters of Pope to Atter- bnry when in the Tower of London. Supplementary note to the discovery of the Jesuits college at Clerkenwell in MarcB, 1627-8. Vol. 5. Pive letters of Charles II. Letter of the Council to Sir Thomas Lake, relating to the proceedings of Sir Edward Coke at Oatlands ; and, docu- ments relating to Sir Walter BaJeigh's last voyage. Catalogue; of early Eng- lish miscellanies formerly in the Harleian library. Letters selected from the collection of autographs in the possession of William Tite. Sir Erancis Drake's memorable service done against the Spaniards in 1587. Written by Eobert Leng, gentleman, one of his co-adventurers and fellow- soldiers. Inouiry into the genuineness of a letter dated February 3rd, 1613, and signed " Mary Magdaline Davers." Vol. 6. Life of Mr. William Whitting- ham. Dean of Durham. Earl of Bris- tol's defence of his negotiations in Spain. Journal of Sir Francis Wal- singham from December 1670 to April 1583. 64 CAMDEN SOCIETY^coni. Vol. 7. Two sermons preached by the Boy-Bishop, one at St. Paul's, temp. Henry VIII., the other at Gloucester, temp. Mary, Speech of Sii" Eobert Heath in the case of Alexander Leigh- ton. Notes on the judgment delivered hy Sir George Croke in the case of ship-money. Letters relating; to the mission of Sir Thomas Koe to Gustavus Adolphus 1629-30. Receipts and ex- gensfs in the building of Bodmin hurch 1169 to 14,72. Carew, George, Lord. Letters to Su- Thomas Eoe, ambassador to the court of the great Mogul. 16]ii-1617. Edited by John Mac- lean. Cart-wright, Thomas, Bishop of Chester. Diary commencing at the time of his elevation to that See, August 1686 ; and terminating with the visitation of St. Mary Magdalene College, Oxford, October 1687. Now first printed. Cecil, Sir Robert. Letters to Sir George Carew. Edited by John Maclean. Chamberlain, John . Letters written during the reign of Queen EUzabeth. Edited from the originals by Sarah AVilliams. Chapel Royal. Old Cheque-Book, or book of remembrance, of the Chapel Royal, from 1661 to 17**. Edited by Edward P. Rim- bault. Charles I. Charles I. in 1646. Letters of King Charles I. to Queen Henrietta Maria. Edited by John Bruce. Chronicles. Chronicle of Calais, in the reigns ot Henry VII. and VIII. To the year 1540. Edited by John Gough Nichols. Chronicle of the Grey Friars of London. Edited by John Gough Nichols. Chronicon Petroburgense. Nunc primum typis mandatum, curante Thom4 Staple- ton. Chronicle of Queen Jane, and of two years of Queen Mary, and especially of the rebellion of Sir Thomas Wyat. Written by a resident in the Tower of London. Edited by John Gough Nichols. EngUsh Chronioleof the reigns of Richardll., Henry IV., Henry V., and Henry VI. "Written before the year 1471, with an appendix, containing the 18"> and 19"' years of Richard II. and the parliament at Bury St. Edmund's, 26th Henry VI. And Supplementary additions from the Cotton. MS. chronicle called "Eulogium." Edited by Rev. John Silvester Davies. Civil War. Quarrel between the Earl of Manchester and Olivir Cromwell: an episode of the Enghsh Civil War. Un- published documents relating thereto, collected by the late John Bruce ; with fragments of a historical preface by Mr. Bruce, annotated and completed by David Masson. Debates. Parliamentary debates in 1610. Edited, from the notes of a member of the House of Commons, by Samuel Rawson Gardiner. Debates in the House of Commons in 1625. Edited by S. R. Gardiner. Notes of the debates in the House of Lords, officially taken by Henry Elsing, Clerk of the Parliaments, 1621. Edited by S. R. Gardiner. Dee, Dr. John. Private Diary, and the catalogue ot his library of manuscripts. Edited by J. O. Halliwell. Digby, Sir Kenehn. Journal ot a voyage into the Mediterranean, 1628. Edited by John Bruce. CAMDEN SOCIETY— coMf. Dingley, Thomas. Histoi-y from Marble. Compiled in the reign of Charles II. Printed in photolithography by Vincent Brooks, from the original. With an in- troduction and descriptive table of contents by John Gough Nichols. 2 vol. Ecclesiastical Documents. I. Brief history of the Bishoprick of Somerset from its foundation to the year 1174. II. Charters from the library of Dr. Cox Macro. Now first pubUshed by Rev. Joseph Hunter. Edward IV. Historic of the arrivall of Ed- ward IV. in England and the finall re- coveiye of his kingdonies from Henry VI. A.D. 1471. Edited by John Bruce. Edward V. Grants, etc. from the Crown during the reign of Edward the fifth, from the original docket-book MS. Harl. 433. And two speeches for opening parliament, by John Russell, Bishop of Lincoln, Lord Chancellor. With an historical intro- duction by John Gough Nichols. (Two copies.) Egerton Papere. Collection of public and private documents, chiefly illustrative of the times of Elizabeth and James I. Erom the original Manuscripts, the property of Lord Francis Egerton. Edited by J. Payne Collier. England. A relation, or rather a true ac- count, of the Island of England ; with sundry particulars of the customs of these people, and of the royal revenues under Kini5 Henry the Seventh, about 1600. Translated from the Italian, with notes, by Charlotte Augusta Sneyd. England and Germany. Letters and other documents illustrating the relations be- tween England and Germany at the commencement of the thirty years' war. From the outbreak of the revolution in Bohemia to the election of the Emperor Ferdinand H. Edited by S. E. Gardiner. Second series. From the election of the Emperor Ferdinand II. to the close of the Conferences at Miihlhaiisen. Edited by S. R. Gardiner. Executors Accounts. Account of the ex- ecutors of Richard Bishop of London 1808, and of the executors of Thomas Bishop of Exeter 1810. Edited by W. B. Hale, Archdeacon of London, and Rev. H. T, Ellacombe. Foreigners. List of foreign Protestants, and aliens, resident in England 1618-1688. Edited by Wm. Durrant Cooper. Fortescue Papers. Portescue papers ; con- sisting chiefly of letters relating to state affairs, collected by John Packer, Secre- tary to George Villiers, Duke of Bucking- ham. Edited by S. R. Gardiner. Grey of Wilton, Arthur, Lord. Comment-ary on the services and charges of William Lord Grey of Wilton, K.G. By his son. With a memoir of the author. Edited by Sir Phihp De Malpas Grey Egerton. Guilford. Pylgrymage of Sir Richard Guyl- forde to the Holy Land, 1506. Edited by Sir Henry Ellis. Halkett, Anne, Lady. Autobiography. Edited by John Gough Nichols. Harley, Lady Brilliana. Letters of the Lady B. H., Wife of Sir Eobert Harley, of Brampton Bryan. With introduction and notes by Thomas Taylor Lewis. Hayward, Sir John. Annals of the first four years ot the i-eign of Queen Elizabeth. Edited by John Bruce. Huntingdonshire. Visitation of the coun^ of Huntingdon, under the authority of Wil- liam Camden, Clarenceux King of Arms, by his depnty Nicholas Charles, Lancaster Herald, 1618. Edited by Sir Henry Ellis. 65 CAMDEN SOCIETY— con*. Ireland. Narratives illustrative ol the con- tests in Ireland in 1841 and 1690. Edited by Thomas Orofton Croker. James VI. Correspondence of King James VI. of Scotland with Sir Robert Cecil and others in England, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth ; with an appendix con- taining papers illustrative of transactions between King James and Robert Earl of Essex. Edited by John Bruce. Kemp. Kemps Nine Dales Wonder: per- fonned in a daunee from London to Nor- wich. With an introduction and notes by Rev. Alexander Dyce. Kent. Proceedings,- principally in the county of Kent, in connection with the parliaments called in 1840, and especially with the committee of religion appointed in that year. Edited by Rev. Lambert B. Larking with a preface by John Bruce. (Portrait of Sir Edward Bering.) Knights Hospitallers. Knights Hospitallers in England: being the report of Prior Philip de Thame to the Grand Master Elyan de Villanova for A.D. 1338. Edited b.y Rev. Lambert B. Larking. With an historical introduction by John Mitchell Kemble. Kyteler. Contemporar.v narrative of the proceedings agamst l)ame Alice Kyteler, Srosecuted for Sorcery in 1324, b.v Richard le L^drede, Bishop of Ossory. Edited by Thomas Wright. Leicester, Earl of. Correspondence of Robert Dudley, Earl of Leyeester, during his government of the Low Countries, 1585-6. Edited by John Bruce. Letters of Queen Elizabeth and King James \L of Scotland. Edited by John Bruce. Letters of Queen Margaret of Anjou and Bishop Bcckington and others. Written in the reigns of Henry V. and VI. Edited by Cecil Monro. Letters addressed from London to Sir Joseph Williamson while plenipotentiary at the congress of Cologne 167.3-4. Edited by W. D. Christie. 2 vols. Original Letters of eminent literary men of the 16«^ l?"", and M" centuries: with notes, and. illustrations by Sir Henry Ellis. Levins, Peter. Manipulus Vocabulonim. A dictionary of English and Latin words, arranged in the alphabetical order of the last syllables. First printed 1570; now re-edited by Henry B. Wheatley. London. Chroniques de London, depuis' I'an 44 Hen. III. jusgu'^ Tan 17 Edw. III. Edited, from a MS. in the Cottonian Library, by George James Aungier. London. Do antiquis legibus liber, Cronica Maiorura et Vicecoraitum Londoniarum et quedara, que contii^ebant temporibus illis ab anno MCLXXVIIl" ad annum MCCLXXIV"! cum Appendiee. Nunc priraum typis mandata curante Thoma Stapleton. Ludlow. Churchwardens' accounts of the town of Ludlow, in Shropshire, from 1540 to the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. Edited by Thomas Wright. Machyn, Henry. Diaiy of H. M., Citizen and Merchant-ta.vlor of London, from 1550 to 1563. Edited by J. G. Nichols. At the beginning is a "Note upon Funerals.' Manningham, John. Diary of J. M., of the Middle Temple, and of Bradbourne, Kent, barrister-at-law, 1602-3. Edited by John Bruce, and presented to the Camden Society by William Tite, President of the Society. Westminster, 1868. 16505. CAMDEN SOCIETY— con<. Mapes, Walter. Latin Poems commonly attributed to Walter Mapes, collected and edited by Thomas Wright. Mapes. Dc Nugis Curialium distinotiones qumque. Edited by Thomas Wright. Mary, Queen of Scots. Accounts and papers relating to Mavy Queen of Scots. Edited by Allan J. Crosby, and John Bi*uce. Maydiston, Rioardus. Alliterative poem on the deposition of King Richard II. Ricardi Maydiston de Concordia inter Rio. II, et Civitatem London. Edited by Thomas Wright. Middleham. Documents relating to the foundation and antiquities of the collegiate church of Middleham, in the county of York ; with an historical introduction, and incidental notices of the castle, town, and neighbourhood. By Rev. William Atthill. Milton, John. Original papers illustrative of the life and writings of John Milton, including sixteen letters of State written by him. With an appendix of documents relating to his connection with the Powell family. Collected and edited by W. Douglas Hamilton. Monasteries. Three chapters of letters re- lating to the Suppression of monasteries. Edited from the originals in the British Museum by Thomas Wright, Norden, John. Speculi Britanniae pars : an historical and chorographical descrip- tion of the County of Essex, 1694. Edited by Sir Henry Ellis. Nucius Nicander, of Corcyra. Second book of the Travels. Edited from the original Greek MS., with an English translation, by J. A. Cramer, D.D. Perth, James, Earl of. Letters to his sister, the Countess of Erroll, and other members of his family. Edited by WilUam Jordan. Plurapton Correspondence. Series of Letters, chiefly domestick, written in the reigns of Edward IV. Richard III. Heniy VII. and Henry VIII. Edited by Thomas Stapleton, from Sir Edward Plumpton's book of letters : with notices historical and biographical of the family of Plump- ton, of Plumpton, com. Ebor. Prideaux, Humphrey, Dean of Norwich. Letters to John Ellis sometime under- secretary of State 1674-1732. Edited by Edward Maunde Thompson. Promptorium; Promptorium parvulorum sive olericorum. Lexicon Anglo-Latinum princeps, auotore Fratre Galfrido Gram- matico dicto e predicatoribus Lenne epis- oopi, Northfolciensi, circa 1440. Ohm e prelis Pynsonianis editum, nunc ab integro, commentariohs subjectis, ad fidem codi- cum recensuit Alhertus Way. 3 vol. Rawdon. Life of Marmaduke Rawdon of York, or, Marmaduke Rawdon the second of that name. Edited by Robert Davies. Reformation. Narratives of the days of the Reformation, chiefly from the Manuscripts of John Foxe the Martyrologist ; with two contemporary biographies of Archbishop Cranmer. Edited by J. G. Nichols. Reimes, Philippe de. Romance of Blonde of Oxford andJehan of Dammartin. By P. de R., a trouvftre of the IS"" century. Edited by M. Le Roux de Lincy. Ricart, Robert. The Maire of Bristowe is Kalendar, by R. B., town clerk of Bristol, IS Edward tV. Edited by Lucy Toulmin Smith. Ripon. Notes of the Treaty carried on at Ripen between King Charles I. and the Covenanters of Scotland, 1640, taken by Sir John Borough, Garter King of Arms. Edited by John Bruce. K 66 CAMDEN SOCIETY— conf. Eoe. Military Memoii' ot Colonel John Birch, sometime Governor of Hereford in the ciVil war between Charles I. and the Parliament ; wi'itten by Eoe, his Seoreta,ry ; with an historical and critical commentary, notes, and appendix, by the late Eev. John Webb. Edited by his son Bev. T. W. Webb. Romances. Three early English metrical romances. With an introduction and glossary. Edited by John Bobson. Sous, John. Diary of J. R., incumbent of Santon Downham, Sirffolk, from 1625 to 1642. Edited by Mary Anne Everett Green. Rutland Papers. Original documents illus- trative of the courts and times of Henry VII. and Henry VIII. Selected from the private archives of the Duke of Rutland. By WilUam Jerdan. St. Paul's. Domesday of St. PauVs of 1222 ; or, Registrum de visitatione maneriorum per Robertum Decanum, and other original documents relating to the manors and churches belonging to the Dean and chap- ter of St. Paul's, London in the 12"' and IS^*' centuries. With an introduction, notes, and illustrations, by William Hale Hale, Archdeacon of London. Savile Correspondence. Letters to and from Henry Savile, Envoy at Paris, and Vice- Chamberlain to Charles II. and James II. including letters from his brother George Marquess of Halifax. Edited by William Durrant Cooper. Secret Services. Moneys received and paid for secret services of Charles II. and James II. Prom 30"' March, 1679, to 25* December, 1688. Edited by John Yonge Akerman. Shillingford, John. Letters and Papers of J. S., Mayor of Exeter l«7-60. Edited by Stuwrt A. Moore. Smyth, Richard. Obituary of S. S., Secon- dary of the Poultry Compter, London : being a catalogue of all such persons as he knew in their life : extending from 1627 to 1674. Edited by Sir Henry Ellis. Songs. Political songs of England, from the reign of John to that of Edward II, Edited and translated by Thomas Wright. Spanish Marriage. Bl heoho de los tra- tados del matrimonio pretendido per el Principe de (Jales con la serenissima In- fante de Espana Maria Cetc.]. Narrative of the Spanish Marriage Treaty, edited and translated by S. R. Gardiner. Swinfleld. Roll of the household expenses of Richard De S., Bishop of Hereford, during part of 1289 and 1290. Edited by Rev. John Webb. . Abstract, illusti'ations, glossary, and Index. Symonds, Richard. Diary of the marches of the Royal Army during the great Civil War. Edited by Charles Edward Long. Thornton Romances. Early English metri- cal romances of Perceval, Isumbras, Egla- mour, and Degrevant, selected from manu- scripts at Lincoln una Cambridge. Edited by J. 0. Halliwell. Trevelyan Papers. Trevelyan Papers prior to A.D. 1S58. Edited by J. Payne Collier. Part II. 17- '- ' 1386 CARLYLE (THOMAS)— co»i«. Early Kings of Norway: also an Essay on the portraits of John Knox. 8°. 1875. 1387 French Revolution : a history. 3 vol. Vol. I. The Bastille. II. The Constitu- tion. III. The Guillotine. 8°. 1837. 1388 Book-plate of Le Comte Alfred D'Orsay. MS. notes by Mr. Forster. Second edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1839. 1389 [Another edition.] 2 vol. 8°. 1857. 1390 Heroes, hero-worship, and the heroic in history. Six lectures ... 8°. 1841. 1391 History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, called Frederick the Great. 6 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1858-65. 1392 [Another edition.] 13 vol. 12°. Leipzig, Tauchnitz, 1858-65. 1393 . 8°. 1394 7 vol. [Another edition.] 1869. Latter-Day Pamphlets edited by Thomas Carlyle. 8°. 1850. (Two copies.) 1395 Present Time — Model Pnsons — Downing Street — New Downing Street— Stump- Orator Parliaments — Hudson's Statue — Jesuitism. [Another edition.] 8°. 1858. 1396 Prefixed — " Occasional Discourse on the Nigger Question." Life of Friedrich Schiller. Comprehend- ing an examination of his works. [Anon.] (Portrait.) 8°. 1825. 1397 Second edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 1398 Supplement of 1872 to the Life of Friedrich Schiller ... 8°. 1873. 1399 Life of John Sterling. 8°. 1851. 1400 Oliver Cromwell's Letters and Speeches : with elucidations. (Portrait.) 2 vol. 8°. 1845. liOl Supplement to the first edition. 8°. 1846. 1402 Second edition. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1846. 1403 [Another edition.] 3 vol. 8°. 1857. 1404 Past and Present. 8". 1843. 1405 Sartor Resartus ; the Life and opinions of Herr TenfelsdrSckh. In three books. [Anon.] 8". 1838. 1406 Third edition. 8°. 1849. 1407 Sartor Resartus (1831). Lectures on Heroes (1840). 8°. n.d. 1408 [Another edition.] 8°. 1858. 1409 70 CARLYLE (THOMAS)— eon<. Shooting Niagara: and after? ... 8°. 186?. 1410 Nos. 138S— 1410. Many of these are pre- sentation copies to Mr. Forster with inscriptions. Passages selected from the ■writings of T. Carlyle. With a biographical Memoir. By Thomas Ballantyne. 8°. 1855. 1411 Second edition. 8°. 1870. 1412 CARNARVON (HENRY JOHN GEORGE HERBERT, 3D EARL OF). Portugal and Galicia, with a review of the social and political state of the Basque Provinces. Third edition. 12°. 1848. 1413 CARNE (JOHN). Letters from the East : written during a recent tour through Turkey, Egypt, Arabia, the Holy Land, Syria, and Greece. Third edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1830. 1414 Letters from Switzerland and Italy, during a late tour. By the Author of ' Letters from the East,' and ' Travels in the East.' 8°. 1834. 1415 EecoUections of travels in the Bast; forming a continuation of the Letters from the East. 8». 1830. 1416 CAROVE (F. W.). [German title.] Das Marchen ohne Ende, .... [English title.] The Story without an end. With a vocabulary and notes, by Heinrioh Apel. 12°. 1841. 1417 CARPENTER (F. B.). Six months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln. The story of a picture. 12°. 1867. 1418 Presentation copy to Charles Dickens who gave it to Mr. Forster. CARPENTER (MARY). Juvenile Delinquents, their condition and treatment. 8°. 1853. 1419 Reformatory Schools, for the children of the perishing and dangerous classes, and for juvenile offenders. 8°. 1851. 1420 CARPENTER (WILLIAM). Political letters and pamphlets, pub- lished for the avowed parpose of trying with the Government the question of law — whether all publications containing news or intelligence . . . are liable to the im- position of the stamp duty of fourpence, &c. ; with a full report of the Editor's trial and conviction . . . (Portrait of O'Connell.) 4°. 1830-1. 1421 CARPENTER (WILLIAM BENJA- MIN) M.D. Popular Cyclopaedia of Natural Science Animal Physiology. 8°. 1843. 1422 Use and abuse of Alcoholic liquors, in health and disease. Prize essay. 8°. 1850. 1423 Zoology ; being a systematic account of the general structure, habits, instincts, and uses of the principal families of the animal kingdom ; as well as of the chief forms of fossil remains. 2 vol. 8°. 1847. 1424 CARR (THOMAS SWINBURNE). Manual of Classical Mythology or a companion to the Greek and Latin poets . . . With . . . lexicon-index. 8°. 1846. 1425 CARREL (ARMAND). Histoire de la Centre -Revolution en Angleterre, sous Charles II et Jacques II. (Portrait.) 12°. Bruxelles, 1836. 1426 it the end letter (lithographed) from the author. History of the Counter-Eevolution in England, for the re-establishment of Popery, under Charles II. and James II. By A. Carrel. History of the reign of James II. By C. J. Kox. (Portrait of Carrel.) 8°. 1846. 1427 CARROLL (LEWIS) pseud. i.e. DODGSON (REV. CHARLES LUTWIGE). Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. With forty-two illustrations by John Tenniel. Thirtieth thousand. 8°. Lon- don and New York, 1872. 1428 Through the Looking-Glass, and what Alice found there. With fifty illustra- tions by John Tenniel. 8°. 1872. 1429 CARRUTHERS (ROBERT). Life of Alexander Pope. Including ex- tracts fi-om his correspondence. Second edition . . . Engravings ... 8°. Bohn, 1857. 1430 CARTE (THOMAS). Collection of original letters and papers, concerning the affairs of England, from 1641 to 1660. Found among the Duke of Ormonde's papers. 2 vol. By T. Carte. 8°. 1739. 1431 Book-plate of Lord Wenman. On fly leaf P. Francis." Life of James Duke of Ormond; con- taining an account of the most remarkable affairs of his time, and particularly of Ireland under his government : with an appendix and . . . letters . . . Ne\7 edition ... 6 vol. 8°. Oxford, 1851. 1432 General history of England [to 16543 ... 4 vol. F°. 1747-55. 1433 n CARTER (ELIZABETH). Letters to Mrs. Montagu, between 1755 and 18(10 . . . published from the ongmals m the possession of Rev. Montagu Pennington ... 3 vol. 8". 1817. 14.34 CARTERET (SIR PHILIP). ^ Articles exhibited against Sir Philipp Carteret, Governour of Jersey ... 4" n.p. 164(2?). 1435 CARTOONS. Selections from the Eejected Cartoons ■with descriptive letterpress and critical remarks. 1848. F°. [1848.] 1436 CARTWRIGHT (JAMES J.). Chapters in the history of Yorkshire : being a collection of original letters, papers, and public documents, illustrating the state of that coimty in the reigns of Elizabeth, James I. and Charles I. With introductions, notes and Index, by J. J. Cartwright. 8". Wakefield, 1872. 1437 CARTWRIGHT (WILLIAM). Comedies tragi-comedies, with other poems. The ayres and songs set by Mr. Henry Lawes . . . (Portrait.) 12". Lon- don, 1651. 1438 Sepai-ate title pages to the Lady-Errant — The Royall Slave— The Ordinai-y— The Sledge — and, Poems. [CARTWRIGHT (REV. W,).] Rambles and recollections of a Fly- fisher illustrated. With appendix con- taining ample instructions to the novice, inclusive of fly-making, and a list of really useful flies. By Clericus. 8°. 1854. 1439 According to "Olphar Ilamst" by Cart- wright. CARUS (DR. C. G.). King of Saxony's journey through England and Scotland in 1844. Trans- lated by S. C. Davison. 8°. 1846. 1440 GARY (REV. HENRY). Memoir of Rev. Henry Francis Cary, translator of Dante. With his literary journal and letters. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. 1441 . Memorials of the Great Civil War in England from 1646 to 1652. Edited from original letters in the Bodleian Library of Charles the first . . Archbishop San- croft . . . Oliver Cromwell . . . Major- General Monk . . . by H. Cary. 2 vol. 8». 1842. 1442 Pencil notes by T. Carlyle. CARY (REV. HENRY FRANCIS). Early Trench poets, a series of notices and translations. With an introductory sketch of the history of French poetry, by Rev. Henry Cary. 12». 1846. 1443 Lives of English Poets, from Johnson to Kirke White, designed as a continuation of Johnson's Lives. 12°. 1846. 1444 CARY (THOMAS Q.). Memoir of Thomas Haudasyd Perkins ; containing extracts from his diaries and letters. With an appendix. (Portrait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1856. 1445 [CASS (GENERAL LEWIS).] France, its King, Court, and Govern- ment ; and Three hours at Saint Cloud. By an American. Second edition. (Por- trait of Louis Philippe in 1792.). 8». New York, 1841. 1446 CASTELLANI (AUGUSTO). Gems. Notes and Extracts. Translated from the Italian by M". John Brogden. ... 8°. 1871. 1447 CASTLE BUILDERS. The Castle Builders ; or, the history of William Stephens, of the Isle of Wight Esq ; lately deceased. A political novel, never before published in anj' language. 8°. 1759. 1448 CASTLEHAVEN (JAMES TOUCHET, EARL OF). Memoir's of James Lord Audley Earl of Castlehaven, his engagement and car- riage in the wars of Ireland, from 1642 to 1651. Written by himself. 12°. 1680. 1449 Letter ... to the Earl of Qastlehaven. Being observations . . . upon his Memoirs . . . [By y" Earl of Anglesey. M5.] 12°. 1681. 1450 Nos. 14)4fl-50. From Abp. Tenlson's library. CATALOGUES, SALE. Catalogue of . . . autograph letters . . . including a large number . . . addressed to the late Lady Blessington . . . interest- ing relics, locks of hair ... 8°. [1866.] 1451 Catalogue of . . . autograph letters and papers . . . and a large portion of the original manuscript of Oliver Twist, by Charles Dickens ... 8°. [1870.] 1452 Remaining works of Daniel Maclise, R.A. 8°. [1870.] (Two copies.) 1453 With MS. prices. Autograph Letters, the collection of William Mitchell. 8°. [1849.] (Two copies.) 1454 No. 2. Some MS. prices and names of pur- chasers. 72 GATES (WILLIAM L, R.)- Pocket Date Book, or classified tables of dates of the principal facts, historical, biographical, and scientific, from the beginning of the world to the present time. 8°. 1863. (Two copies.) 1455 Preface signed " B. B. Woodward." CATHCART (LIEUT. - GENERAL HON. SIR GEORGE). Correspondence, relative to his military operations in Kaifraria ... 8°. 1856. 1456 CATHERWOOD (FREDERICK). Views of Ancient Monuments in Central America Chiapas and Tucatan. F". 1844. 1457 CATHOLIC. Catholic Magazine and Eegister. Vol. XI. March to July, 1850 (and August, 1850). 8°. 1850. 1458 Kalendarium Catholicum for the year 1686. 12°. n.p. 1686. 1459 At the end— -Catalogue of the Lords, Knights andGeAtlemen (of the Catholiok Religion) that were slain in the late waiT (and) Names of such Catholioks whose estates wore sold for their pretended dehnqueney (and) Memorable Observations. CATLIN (GEORGE). Letters and notes on the manners, customs, and condition of the North American Indians. Written during eight years' travel amongst the wildest tribes of Indians in North America, in 1832-9. 2 vol. 400 illustrations. 8°. 1841. 1460 CATTERMOLE (REV. RICHARD). Becket, an historical tragedy : the Men of England, an ode : and other poems. [Anon.] 8°. 1332. 1461 Presentation copy. Forty Sermons; with an introductory essay, on the . . . National Church. 8°. 1839. 1462 Great Civil War of Charles I. and the Parliament. With . . . engravings, from drawings by George Cattermole ... 8°. 1841. 1463 . And portraits of Charles I. and Oliver Cromwell, after Vandyke . . . Vol. II. Being Heath's Picturesque An- nual for 1845. 8°. 1845. 1464 CAULFIELD (JAMES). Portraits, memoirs, and characters of remarkable persons, from the llevolution in 1688 to the end of the reign of George II. ... 4 vol. (Portraits.) L. P. 4°. 1819-20. 1465 CAULAINCOURT (ARMAND AUGUSTIN LOUIS DE), DUKE OFVICENZA. Recollections. 2 vol. 8°. 1838. 1466 CAUMONT (JACQUES NOMPAR DE) DUC DE LA FORCE. Memoires authentiques de J. N. de C. Due de la Force Marechal de France, et de ses deux fils Les Marquis de Mont- pouillan et de Castelnaut, suivis de docu- ments eurieux et de Correspondances in- edites de Jeanne d'Albret, Henri III, Henri IV, Catherine de Bourbon, Louis XIII, Marie de Mediois, Cond^, Sully, Villeroy, Fresnes, Pontchartrain, Bouillon, Biron, d'Ornano, Montespan, Matignon, du Plessis-Mornay, Kohan, Schomberg, Ch9,tillon, d'Efliat, Feuquiferes, Richelieu, Servien, des Noyers, Bouthillier . . . Recueillis . . . et precedes d'une intro- duction par Le Marquis de la Grange. 4 vol. (in 2). 8°. Paris, 1843. 1467 CAUNTER (REV. JOHN HOBART). Inquiry into the history and character ofBahab. 8". 1850. 1468 CAUSES. Causes Celebres et interessantes, avec les jugemens qui les ont decidees. Re- cueillies par Mr. Gayot de Pitaval. 13 vol. 12°. A La Haye, 1735-39. 1469 CAUSSIDIERE (MARC). Secret history of the Revolutions of 1848. Memoirs of Citizen Caussidiere, ex-prefect of police, and representative of the people. 2 vol. 8°. 1848, 1470 CAVENDISH (GEORGE). [MS. title-page. Memoirs of Cardinal Wolsey. By Sir tV. Cavendish ; his gentleman-usher. 1641, reprinted 1707 or 1706.] 12°. 1471 UeiiUy by. George Cavendish. See No. 1472. Life of Cardinal Wolsey. By G. Ca- vendish . . . With notes ... by Samuel Weller Siuger. Second edition (Por- traits.) 8°. 1827. 1472 CAVENDISH (SIR HENRY). Sir H. Cavendish's Debates of the Honse of Commons, during the thirteenth parlia- ment of Great Britain, commonly called the um-eported parliament j to which are appended illustrations of the parliamentary history of the reign of George the third . . . drawn up from the original manu- scripts, by J. Wright. Vol. I. May 10, 1768-May 3, 1770. (Vol. II. May 8, 1770- March 27, 1771.) 8°. 1841. 1473 Vol. 1 1, has no title page, and is incomplel*. 73 CAVENDISH (SIR HENRY)-- con*. Government of Canada. Debates of the House of Commons in 1774, on the bill for making more effectual provision for the government of the province of Quebec. Drawn up from the notes of Sir Henry Cavendish ; now first published by J. Wright. With a map of Canada . . . 8". 1839. 1474 CAYLEY (ARTHUR) J UN. Life of Sir Walter Ralegh. 2 vol. (in one). (Portrait.) 4°. 1805. 1475 CECIL (REV. RICHARD). Memoirs of John Bacon, Esq. E.A. With reflections drawn from a review of his moral and religious character. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1801. 1476 CELLARIUS (CHRISTOPHER). Notitia Orbis antiqui, sive Geographia plenior, ab ortu Kerumpublicarum ad Constautinorum tempora orbis terrarum faeiem declarans. C. Cellarius ex vetustis . . . monimentis coUegit, & novis tabulis geographicis . . . illustravit. Alteram banc editionem . . . illustravit L. lo. Con- radus Schwartz ... 2 vol. 4°. Lipsiae, 1773. 1477 CELLIEZ (MLLE. A.). Les Reines d'Angleterre (Portraits). 4°. Paris, 1852. 1478 CELLINI (BENVENUTO). Memoirs of B. Cellini, a Florentine artist ; written by himself. Containing a variety of information respecting the Arts, and the history of the sixteenth century. Third edition . . . with the notes ... of G. P. Carpani, now first translated by Thomas Koscoe. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1823. 1479 [Another edition.] Now first collated with the new text of Giuseppe Molini, and corrected and enlarged from the last Milan edition, with notes and observations of ir. P. Carpani. Translated by Thomas Koscoe. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1847. 1480 CELTIC SOCIETY. . . . The Book of Eights, now for the first time edited, with translation and notes, by John O'Donovan. 8°. Dublin : printed for the Celtic Society, 1847. 1481 Cambrensis Eversus, sen potius historica fides in rebus Hibernicis Giraldo Cam- brensi abrogata ; in quo plerasque justi historici dotes desiderari, plerosque naevos inesse, ostendit Gratianus Lucius, Hiber- nus, qui etiam aliquot res memorabiles Hibernicas vetens et novae memoriae pas- sim e re nata huic operi inseruit. Impress, an. 1662. Edited, with translation and notes, by Kev. Matthew Kelly. Vol. I. 8°. Dublin. Printed for the Celtic So- ciety, 1848. 1482 CERVANTES SAAVEDRA (MIGUEL DE). History of the valorous and witty Kuight-errant Don Quixote of the Mancha. Translated into Enghsh by Thomas Shel- ton . . . Kew cuts, from the French of Coypel. 4 vol. 12°. 1731. 1483 Book-plate o£ Thomas Arthington. [Another translation.] Translated by Charles Jarvis. Illustrated by 24 designs by Cruickshank [«ic] . 2 vol. 12°. 1833. 1484 Prefixed to Vol. I. is a letter from E. John- ston to M'. Porster. [Another edition]. Translated . . . by C. Jarvis . . With 800 illustrations, from designs by Tony Johannot. 3 vol. 8°. 1840. 1485 El Buscapie ; with the illustrative notes of Don Adolfo de Castro. Translated from the Spanish, with a Life of the Author, and some account of his works, by Thomasina Ross. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 1486 The Exemplary Novels : to which are added El Buscapie, or, the Serpent ; and La Tia Fingida, or, the pretended aunt. Translated from the Spanish by Walter K. Kelly. (Portrait of Cervantes.) 8". Bohn, 1855. 1487 ' The Squib ' or Searchfoot : an un- edited little work which M. De Cervantes Saavedra wrote in defence of the first part of the Quijote. Published by Don Adolfo De Castro, at Cadiz, 1847. Translated from the original Spanish by a member of the University of Cambridge. 8°. Cam- bridge, 1849. 1488 Wanderings of Persiles and Sigismunda ; a northern story. [Translated by L. D. S.] (Portrait.) 12". 1854. 1489 CHABOT (CHARLES). Handwriting of Junius professionally investigated. With preface and collateral evidence by Hon. Edward Twislefon. 4°. 1871. 1490 " From the Editor." ^ CHAFFERS (WILLIAM). Keramic Gallery containing several hundred illustrations of rare curious and choice examples of pottery and porcelain from the earliest times to the beginning of the present century. With historical notices and descriptions. 2 vol. 8°. 1872. 1491 CHALMERS (CHARLES). Notes (on Social Economy), Thoughts, and Inquiries (bearing on man's social well-being.) First series. (Plan of a. Model Colony). 8°. 1852. (Two copies.) 1492 74 CHALMERS (GEORGE). Apology for the believers in the Shaks- pcare-papers, which were exhibited in Norfolk-Street. [Anon.] 8°. 1797. 1493 Supplemental Apology for the believers in the Shakspeare-papers : being a reply to Mr. Malone's Answer . . . with a de- dication to George Steevens, and a post- script to T. J. Mathias. 8°. 1799. 1494 Introduction to the History of the revolt of the American Colonies ; being a comprehensive view of its origin, derived from the state papers contained in the public offices of Great Britain. 2 vol. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1845. 1495 Life of Thomas Kuddiman, the keeper ... of the Library belonging to the Faqulty of Advocates at Edinburgh . . . new anecdotes of Buchanan. (Portrait of Euddiman.) 8°. 1794. 1496 " M'. Chalmers begs to present this Life of Euddiman to M'. Whitaker as a mark of his esteem," MS. Book-plate of Euddiman. CHALMERS (THOMAS) D.D. Posthumous Works. Edited by Bev. William Hanna. Vol. 1-6. 8°. Edin- burgh, 1847-9. 1497 Vol. 1-3. Daily Scripture Readings. 4, 5. Sabbath Scripture Readings. 6. Sermons, 1798-1847. On the power wisdom and goodness of God as manifested in the adaptation of external nature to the moral and intel- lectual constitution of Man, With the author's last corrections . . . biographical preface, by Eev. John Gumming, D.D. (Bridgewater Treatise.) 8». Bohn, 1853. 1498 Selection from the Correspondence of T. Chalmers. Edited by Eev. W. Hanna, LL.D. 8°. Edinburgh and Lon- don, 1853. 1499 CHALON (ALFRED EDWARD) R.A., AND OTHERS. Evening Sketches by A. E. Chalon, [R.A.], J. J. Chalon [E.A.], Joshua Cristall, C. E. Leslie [K.A.], J. Partridge, C. Stanfield [R.A.], S. J. Stump, T. Uwins [R.A.]. Lithographed by M. Gauci and Sons. Oblong f*>. Published for the Society, June 1840. 1500 CHALONER (THOMAS). [Tracts.] 4°. 1646-7. 1501 Answer to the Scotch papers. Delivered in the House of Commons concerning the disposall of the Kings person. By Thomas Chaloner. Justification ot a sate and wel-grounded answer to tlie Scottish papers, printed undiT the name ot Master Chaloner his speech. CHALONER. (THOMAS)— eo«/. [No title-page. Answer to a Speech with- out doores : or. Animadversions upon an unsafe and dangerous answer- to the Scotch-Papers, printed under the name of M'". Challener his Speech.] Reply, to an answer to a Speech without doors, &c. Or, a defence of Master Chalo- ner's Speech. By Gr. G. A corrector of the answerer to the Speech out of doores. lustifying the speech of Mas- ter Thomas Chaloner. Edinburgh. [No title-page. The Speech without doores defended without reason. Or, a vindica- tion of the parhaments honour : in a re- joynder to three pamphlets pubUshed in defence of M. Chaloners speech.] Lex Talionis. Or, a declamation against M'. Challener. n.p. CHALYBAUS (HEINRICH MORITZ). Historical Survey of Speculative Philo- sophy from Kant to Hegel . . . Trans- lated from . . . the German by Alfred Tulk. 8°. 1854. 1502 CHAMBERS (ROBERT) LL.D. Select Writings. 7 vol. 8°. Edinburgh. 1847. 1503 Vol. 1 (wanting). 2. Essays familiar and humorous. 3. Essays moral and econo- mic. 4. Essays philosophical, sentimen- tal, and historical sketches. 5. (Sixth edition.) History of the Eehellion of 3745-6. 6. (New edition.) Traditions of Edinburgh. 7, Popular Rhymes of Scot- land (third edition). Original Poems. Ancient Sea-Margins, as memorials of xjhanges in the relative level of sea and laud. 8°. Edinburgh, 1848. 1504 Scottish Ballads ; collected and illus- trated by R. Chambers. 12°. Edin- burgh, 1829. 1505 Scottish Songs ; collected and illustrated by E. Chambers. 2 vol. 12°. Edin- burgh, 1829. 1506 Vestiges of the Natural history of Crea- tion. [Anon.] 8°. 1844. > 1507 MS. notes by M'. Forster. Sixth edition. 8°. 1847. Tenth edition, illustrated. 8°, 1508 1853, 1509 The latest edition (1884) bears the name ot R. Cliambers as its author. Explanations : a Secjuel to " Vestiges of the natural history of Creation." By the author of that work. 8°. 1845. 1510 (THOMAS KING) CHAMBERS D.M. Corpulence; or, excess of fat in the human body : its relations to chemistry and physiology, its bearings on other diseases and the value of human life, and its indications of treatment. With an appendix on emaciation. 12°. 1850. I 1511 CHAMBERS (WILLIAM AND ROBERT). Chambers's Papers for the People. "Vol. I-XII. 8°. EdinlBjrgh, 1850-1. 1512 CHAMIER (CAPTAIN FREDERICK) R.N. Ben Brace, the last of Nelson's Aga- memnons. Fourth edition. 12°. 18.50. 1513 Life of a Sailor. New edition. 12°. 1850. 1514 CHAMISSO (ADELBERT VON). Wonderful history of Peter Schlemihl. Translated by William Howitt. With six illustrations. Original edition. Ger- man and English. 12°. 1843. 1515 [Another edition]. The Shadowless Man . . . 12°. 1845. 1516 CHANDLER (PELEG W.). American Criminal Trials. 2 vol. (Portraits of Wm. Stoughton and John Andr4.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] (and) Lon- don, 1841-4. 1517 CHANNING D.D. (WILLIAM ELLERY) Works. 6 vol. Third edition. (Por- trait.) 8°. Glasgow, 1840-4. 1518 Remarks on the character and writings of John Milton ; occasioned by the pub- lication of his lately-discovered ' Treatise on Christian Doctrine.' 8°. Boston [U.S.] printed, London, reprinted, 1826. 1519 Memoir of William EUery Channing, with extracts from his correspondence and manuscripts. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1848. 1520 Preface signed "W. H. 0." i.e. William Henry Channing. 1521 CHAP BOOKS. [Chap Books, various] . 4°. n.d. Most famous history of the- learned fryer Bacon ; with his penitent death, also, the merry waggeries of his man Miles : and the exploits of Vandermaster, a German, and fryer Bungy, an BngUsh conjurer. (Woodcut.) History of the renowned northern worthy, Johiiny Armstrong, of Westmorland. (Woodcut.) Renowned history of the Seven Champions of Christendom. Illustrated, Eight merry and pleasant Histories; collected by John Bell Newcastle-upon- Tyne. All printed at Penrith, by A. Soulby, except No. 18 ; and without date, except No. 11. Generally 24 pages. 1522 1. Jack the piper ; or friar and boy. Part the first— 2. Part the second.— S. Adven- tures of M'. Bampfylde Moor Carew, king of the beggars (copies of verses at the CHAP BOOKS— con<. end.).— 4. Guy Pawkes and the hon-id conspiracy of the gun powder plot (at the end— anecdote of David Hume).— 5. Life of Admiral Blake.— 6. Two .soldiers ; Uobert Wells and Isaac Clark, (other prose & verse at the end).— 7. Nicolas Pedrosa and his escape from the Inquisition at Madrid, (at the end verses— Ben Baek- stay.).— 8. The absent Man; or, the life and singular eccentricities of George Har- vest, parson and comedian.— Siege of Alicant, and the Husband's Stratagem. — 9. Humorous life of a strolling player. Anecdote of Mr. Spiller, comedian.— 10. Prolicksome courtier, and jovial tinker —11. Tricks of Leper the taylor. In two parts. The taylors funeral. With his Will. 1816.— 12. Lawrence Lazy (at the end "Song" and "Proverbs.").- IS. Seven wise masters of Borne, (at the end — " Song— Tom Bowling ").— 14. Pour Kings, of Canterbury, Colchester, Cornwall, and Cumberland, their Queens and Daughters. —15. Hormona or, the grateful Slave. Wolkmar and his dog, and the Newcastle apothecary (at the end "A wish"). — 16. Leontes & Polixenes ; or, the Winter's Tale (at the end "Violent friendship," and ' Song.")— 17. Adventures of Sir Gawen : and the enchanted castle, (at the end "Song"). — 18. Friburgh castle. n.p. — 19. Adam & Margaret.- 20. The Pish and the ring. Generosity, (at the end — Anec- dote).— 21. Shepherdess of the Alps.— 22. Shepherd of Salisbury Plain.— 23. Life and death of Lady Jane Grey.— (at the end— on the fear of death.)— 24. MoU Planders. (at the end— "Song").— 25. Account of a savage girl, who was caught wild in the woods of Champagne, trans- lated from the Prench. — 26. whimsical love of Thomas Whittle. Whittle's let- ter to M*. Moody, (at end — "Song"). — 27, Ducks and green pease ; or, the New- castle rider. A dramatic piece, (at the end some poems.) — 28. History of Bey- nard. the Fox.— 29. Way to wealth ; or, Poor Bichard's maxims improved. Col- lected by the author, J)\ Benjamin Pranklin, from the Pennsylvanian alma- nac he pubUshed, entitled Poor Bichard. (at end— two other pieces.).— 30. Inter- pretation of dreams & moles. Book of Histories. Newcastle, etc. n.d. (except when otherwise specified). 24 pages each. 1523 1. Douglas and Piercy : or, the Hunting^ at Chevy Chase, in prose and verse. Palkirk, 1815. — 2. Heroic exploits of Sir William Wallace, and King Robert Bruce. Ac- count of Sir John Graham, and Lord John Stewart, of Bute. Palkirk, 1816.— S. King Bobert Brace's garland. Ballad. Or, the history of the oattle of Bannockburn. Brace's address to his army before the engagementi and Account of public trans- actions to the reign of James IV. Palkirk, 1816.-4. Life of Donald Macdonald, a Scotch Highlander. By himself. Falkirk, 1814.-6. Odd history of a Scottish thief. Also a wonderful escape from death, n.p . [StirUng],.— 6. Christ's Kirk on the Green : written by King James the first. Stirling. — 7. Scots piper's queries, or John Palkirks Cariches. Comical and witty jokes. Stirling.— 8. Scots proverbs, by Allan Ramsay. Stirling. — 9. Ancient High- land story, of the Robbers of the forest. . Stirling.— 10. Travellers; or. Prince of China. By Sarah Wilkinson. Emperor and the peasant. An anecdote. New- castle.- 11. Fisherman and the genie ; in- cluding the history of the Prince of the black isles. Newcastle.— 12. Bthelbert's tower; or, Edrio and EmmeUne. By S. Wilkinson. Newcastle.— 13. Mountain 76 CHAP BOOKS— eon<. hermit; or, the history of solitary Simon. Newcastle.— 14. Voyages and adventures of Edward Teach, commonly called £lack Beard, pirate. The two princes. Newcastle. — 15. Sleeping beauty in the wood. Edin- burgh.— 16. lite of Bertholde of Bertag- nona. Stirling. — 17. BUnd beggar of Bethnal Green. Stirling.— 18. History of Portunatus, lives and adventures of Am- pedo and Andolocia, his sous. Stirling.— 19. King and oobler. Stirling.— 20. D'. John Taustus. Also, strange things done by him and Mephostophiles. Stirling. — 21. Parismus, prince of Bohemia. A dventures and travels of Parismenos. Stirling. — 22. Children in the wood. Stirling. — 23. .Life of Robin Hood and Little John. Stirling. 24. Life of M". Jane Shore. Stirling.— 26. History of an inn-keeper in Normandy : Story, of the unhappy consequences of an immoderate attachment to riches. London. 2(). History of Cra/,y Jane, and Young Henry. By Sarah Wilkinson.* Stirling. — 27. Moll Flanders. Edinburgh.-28. Jack and the Giants. Edinburgh. — 29. Tom Stitch the tailoi-. Newcastle. — .30. Lost Daughter. Newcastle.— 31. Ghost of the Laird of Cool (Maxwell) . Newcastle. — 32. History and prophecies of Mother Shipton. Stirling. — 33. Explosion of the Pi-ince, 1752. Advantages of industry. Power of gold. Stirling. — 34. Merry tales of the wise men of Gotham. Stirling.— 36. John Cheap, the Chapman. Stirling.— 36. Wife of Beith, re- vived once more. Moscow [?]. — 37. Thrum- my Cap. Young Whip Stitch, and the Gig demolished (by Mrs. Barbauld). Stirling. -38. Lag's Elegy, or, the Prince of dark- ness' lamentation for his friend, Sir Itobert Grierson, of Lag, who died, 1733. Four- teenth edition. [Verse.] Falkirk, 1814. — 39. Lothian Town. Stirling.— 40. Adven- tm*es of the comedian, Jftmes Spiller, at Epsom. Story of Obadiah Mousetrap. Edinburgh. Book of Histories. Newcastle (except where otherwise stated). n.d. (except where otherwise stated). Almost all 24 oges each. 1 524 1. Adam Bell, Clim of the Clough, and WiUiam of Cloudeslie.— 2. Johnny Arm- strong.— 3. Jack and the Giants. Part 1. —4. Second part.- 6. First part of the history of the King (Henry VIII) and eolDler. — 0. Adventures of Bamfylde Moore Carew. — 7. Second part of Mother Bunch of the west.— 8. Hobinson Crusoe. (Wood- cut on back of Title.)— 9. Dr. John Faustus.' — 10. Blind Beggar of Bethnal-green — 11. Lite of Capt. James Hind, the great robber of England.— 13. Cheats of Swalpo, a notorious pick-pocket : pranks of Jack the clown. — 13. The Long Pack. A Northum- brian tale.— 14. Albert of WerdendorlF. A romance from the Gennan. By Sarah Wilkinson. The danger of pleasures, and the shower.— 15. Shepherdess of the Alps. 16. Jane Shore. — 17. Valentine and Orson. 18. Distressed Lady ; or, Yorkshire Beauty made happy.— 19. Collier's Wedding. A fioem. By iSdward Chicken. — 20. Jokes of Jeorge Buchanan. Number I. — 21. Second part of the exploits of George Buchanan. -22. Negro Servant. — 23. York dialogue between Ned and Harry. . Two new Songs, and the shower. — 24. Solitary family ; or, the Norman hut. By Madame Genlis. — 2.-.. Tom Stitch, the taylor.— 26. Part first of the poetical works of Q^homas Whittell, llio celebrated Northumbrian bard, of tjambo and Wallington, 182.=j. — 27. Ambrose (iwini'it.— 28. History of Fortunatus. Lives :tnd adventures of Ampedo and Andolncin, his sons.— 29. Battle of \\'ater. liK).— 31). John Cheap the comiciil chap- man. Edinburgh.— .'il. Garland o( trials, CHAP BOOKS— con;. in three parts [verse] n.p.— 32. Partridge and Plamsteads fortune book. Significa- tion of moles, and the interpretation of dreams. Whimsical lady. Edinburgh.— 33. Broad Grins ! ! ! Bon mots, puns, Irish bulls, and witticisms. Stirhng.— 34. Pre- dictions of good and evil fortunes. Stirling. 35. Tricks of Leper the Taylor. Edinburgh. — 36. ThrummyCap, etc. [verses]. Stirling. —37. Conversion of Poor Joseph. Con- version of James Covey. Death of a murderer ! Terrors of aguilty conscience ! Letter supposed to be written by liev, M'. Newton, to the Earl of Dartmouth. The alarm, a poem. Falkirk. 1814.-38. Sohloijuy on the soul.- By Thomas Black, Perth. Meditation wrote a little before the Author's death. [Verse.] Stirling. 1810.-39. Franklin's way to wealth, or, Poor Richard's maxims improved. Stirling. 40. Account of the rattle snake. And other serpents of America. Popish Miracles, Stirling. Book of Histories. Newcastle, etc. n.d. (except when other«ise specified). 1525 1. Thomas Hickathrift. Whitehaven. — 2 Second part of Thomas Hickathrift. New- castle.— 3. Marquis of Salus, and Patient Grissel. Newcastle, — 4. Seven Champions of Christendom. Glasgow. — 6. Merry tales of the wise men of Gotham. Collection of jests. Glasgow.- 6. Poor Eobin, the Merry Sadler of Walden. n.p. 1817.-7. Jockey & Maggy's courtship. Paisley. 1815.- 8. Robinson Crusoe. Newcastle. — 9. Sleeping Beauty of the Wood. Newcastle.— 10. Ex- ploits of wise Willie & witty Eppie the ale-wife of Bnchaven. Stirling. — 11. Mother Bunch. Signification of moles, and interpretation of dreams. Newcastle. — 12. Mother Bunch's closet newly broke open. By Poor Tom. Glasgow, 1817.— 13. Second part of Mother Bunch of the west (one hundred and ninety ninth edi- tion). Newcastle. n.d.— 1*. Mother Goose's Fairy Tales; Little Red Riding flood, Blue Beard, Ciiiderilla, Master Cat; or Puss in boots. The Fairy. Glasgow, 1817. — 15. History of Buck-Haven in Fifeshire. By Merry Andrew at Tamtallon. Glasgow, 1817.— 16. The Cherry and the Sloe. Cor- rected and modernized. By J. D. Writ- ten originally by Capt. Alex. Montgomery. First printed in 1597. Kilmarnock, 1817. —17. Scotland's Skaith, or, the history o' Will and Jean. And the Waes o' war ; or, the upshot o' the history o' Will and Jean. By Hector Macneil. Ayr, 1817.— 18. Aloway Kirk; or. Tarn o Shanter. Man was made to mourn. With a sketch of Bums's life, &c. By Robert Burns. Ayr, 1817.— 19. Saturday night a dialogue between Wm. Ready and Robert Wise, at the pay table. Toper's tale, over his jug , of ale. Ayr, 1817.— 20. The dominie depos'd. By Wilham Forbes. Maggy Johnson's Elegy. Glasgow.— 21. The Magdalene ; or an account of Elizabeth Stewart. Stirhng. —22. Passages in the Ufe of Col. James Gardiner, who was slain at the battle of Preston pans in the Rebellion. 1746. By P. Doddridge, D.D. Falkirk, 1814.— 23 Crawford's Tracts. No. 4. Elegy on Sir Robert flrierson, of Lag, who died Decem- ber 23, 17.33. Kilmarnock, 1817.-24. Short stories, tor little folks or, Little tales. Stirhng. CHAPMAN (B.). History of Gustavus Adolphus and the thirty years' war, up to the King's death : with some account of its concliisinn by the Peace of Westphalia 1048. Illustrated with plans of the buttles of L^'ipsig and Liitzeu ... 8". iSJC. 1u2g 77 CHAPMAN (EDWARD J.). Brief description of the characters of Minerals . . . Three plates. 8°. 1844. 1527 CHAPMAN (GEORGE). Bussy D'Ambois : a Tragedio . . . much corrected and amended by the Author, G. C, before his death. 4°. 1657. 1528 Caesar and Pompey : aRoman Tragedj-, dcclariug their warres ... 4°. 1631. 1529 Eoxburffhe copy. Conspiracie, and tragoedy of Charles Duke of Byron, Marshall of France. 4°. 1625. 1530 Separate title-pa^e to " The Tragedie." Roxburghe copy. Eastward Hoe . . . Made by Geo : Chap- man. Ben : lonson. loh : Marston. 4°. 1605. (Two copies.) 1531 Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois. A Tragedie ... i". 1613. 1532 Title pa^e reprint; dedication and actors names in MS. CHAPMAN (JOHN KEMBLE). Court Theatre, and Royal dramatic record ; being a complete history of thea- trical entertainments at the Engfish Court, from the time of King Henry the eighth down to the termination of the series of entertainments before . . . Queen Victoria . . . at Windsor Castle, Christmas, 1848-9. With illustrations on steel, by Finden, from designs by T. Grieve, Telbin, and John Absolon. Edited by J. K. Chapman. F'\ u.p. (London) n.d. 1533 CHAPONE (MRS. HESTER). Letter to a new-married lady. 12°. 1777. 1531 CHARACTERS. Character of a Quaker . First part. 4°. 1672. 1535 Plus Ultra or the second part of the Character of a Quaker . . 4°. 1672. 1536 D'. Bliss's copies. [Characters.] F". 1673-1 Gg3. 1537 Character of a Coffee-House, with the symp- tomes of a town-wit— of a Tory. Of a Bebellion, and what England may expect from one. Or, the designs of dissenters examined. Of a good man, neither Whig nor Tory. Second part [of JastJ. Of an honest man ; whether styled Whig or Tory, I and his opposite, the Knave. Eeflectionsl on some passages in a late pamphlet, called the Character of a Popish Successor, and' considerations thereupon. OJ those two Protestants in masquerade, HeracUtus, and the Observator. Of a modem sham- plotter, n.d. [ ? 1681]. Of a sham-plotter or man-catcher. [Signed E. H.] Of a Jesoit. Of a modern Whig, or an Ala- mode true loyal Protestant. The phana- tick in his colours : being a full and final CHARACTERS— c«t«. character of a M'liig ; in a dialogue be- tween Tory and Tantivy. Of an ignora- mus doctor. Of a leading petitioner. Of a Church-Papist, Reformed Papist, or high-church-man. Characterized in re- flections on his principles and designs. All in one vol. with and without title- pages, and mostly single sheets. 1)'. Bliss s copies. CHARKE (MRS. CHARLOTTE). History of Henry Dumont, and Charlotte Evelyn . . . Critical remarks on comick actors. .Second edition. 13". 1756. 1538 At the end an advertisement "General Register-office, Holbom-Bars." CHARLES I. KING OF ENGLAND (AS PRINCE OF WALES). Relation and Journal], of the arrivall, and magnificent entertainment given to Charles, Prince of Great Britaine, by the King of Spaine in his court at Madrid. 4°. 1623. 1539 Continuation of a former relation . . . 4». 1623. 1540 JoyfuU returne, of Charles, Prince of Great Brittaine, from the Court of Spaine. With a relation of his magnificent enter- tainment in Madrid . . by the King of Spaine . . Translated out of the Spanish copie. His wonderfull dangers on the seas . . . Miraculous delivery, and most happy-safe landing at Portsmouth 5. Oc- tober. . . (Portrait inserted.) 4": 1623. 1541 CHARLES I., KING OF ENGLAND, Appendix to the late Answer, printed by his Majesties command ; or, Animad- versions upon the late Observator, and his seaveu Anti - Monarchicall Assertions. With a Vindication of the King, and some observations upon the Two Houses. 4°. n.p. 1642. 1542. " By Henry Parker." JIS. MS. notes by D'. Bliss. Bibliotheca Eegia, or, the Royal library, containing a coUection of such of the papers of his late Maiesty King Charls, the second monarch of Great Britain, as have escaped the wrack and ruines of these times. Not extent in the Behquiae Caro- linae or the exact collection of Edward Husbands. In two books, the first relating to the concernments of the church. The second, unto those of the civil state. With observations . . . (Portrait of the King and eugraved title-page.) 8°. 1C59. 1543 Separate title-page to each part. The pa- gination of Part II is 205-^i00. Case of the Royal Martyr considered with candour ; or, an answer . . parti- cularly to A letter to a clergyman, relating to his sermon on 30 January . . . Enquiry into the share which Charles I. had in the 78 CHARLES I., KING OF ENGLAND— cent. transactions of the Earl of Glamorgan, &o. . . . [By John Boswell.] 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1758. 1544 [No title-page. Catalogue of the names of so many of those Commissioners as sate and sentenced the late King Charles to death, Saturday the 27. of January, 1648 . . .] 4°. 1545 Charge of the Commons of England, against Charles Stuart, King of England, of High Treason, and other high crimes, exhibited to the High Court of Justice, by John Cook, Solicitor General . . . Satur- day, Ian. 20. 1648. 4°. 1648. 1546 Declaration of the proceedings of the icings Majesty at Carisbrooke Castle, touching the engagement of Sir Charles Lucas and his forces at Colchester, with the Parliaments army. With another dis- covery of a . . . design against the person of the King . . Read in the House of Piers, and their proceedings thereupon . . . The Lord Generalls letter to a great Commander in Colchester, and his answer thereunto, in relation;to the King. (%Vood- cuts on title.) 4°. [Imprint cut down ? 1648.] 1547 EMav fiaaiKiKTi. Pourtraicture of his sacred Majestie in his Solitudes and Suffer- ings. Whereunto are annexed his praiers and apophthegms, &c. (Portrait by Mar- shall.) 12°. n.p. Piinted by W. D. in R.M. anno Dom. 1649. 1548 Ascribed both to the King and D'. Gauden, Bp. of "Worcester. Papers which passed at New-Castle betwixt his sacred Majestie and M' Alex: Henderson : concerning the change of Church-government. 1646. 12''. 1649. 1.549 Elegie on the meekest of Men, the most glorious of Princes, the most constant of martyrs, Charles the I. &c. 4°. n.p. 1649.- 1550 England's Black Tribunal ; containing, Tryal of Charles I. . . . His Majesty's Speech on the Scaffold . . . Loyal Mai-tyr- ology : relation of the sufferings and death of the nobility, gentry, and others, who were inhumanly sacrific'd for their loyalty to Charles I. and 11. With their dying speeches. Historical register of the Lords, Knights, and Gentlemen, who were slain in defence of their King and Country, during the Rebellion, begun in 1641. Loyal Confessors : account of the most eminent sufferers . . . for the cause of His Majesty. Sixth edition. Historical preface. (Portrait of Charles I.) 8». 1737. 1551 Entertainment of Charles King of Great Britaine . . . into . . . Edinburgh, 15 luue, 1633. 4°. Edinburgh, 1633. 1552 MS. list at beginning. CHARLES I., KING OF ENGLAND— cont. Famous Tragedie of King Charles I. Basely butchered by those who are, Omne nefas proni patare pudoris inanes [Five acts] 4°. n.p. 1649. (Two copies.) 1553 Flattering Elegie, upon the death of King Charles : the cleane contrary way. With a parallell ... 4°. n.p. 1649. 1.554 His Maiesties Declaration to all his loving subjects. Of August 12. 1642. 4°. Cambridge, 1642. 1555 His Maiesties Declaration to . . . Scot- land, upon occasion of a printed paper, entitled. Declaration of the Kingdom of Scotland, concerning the present expedi- tion into England, &c. With his message to the Lords of his Privy-Councell of Scotland December 1 642. And the papers presented to his Majesty by the Scotch Committee at Oxford in February last, With his Majesties answers. 4°. Oxford, 1643. 1556 His Majesties finall answer concerning Episoopacie. Delivered in to the Com- missioners of Parliament the first of No- vemb. 1648. . 4°. 1648. 1557 His Maiesties Speech : in Parliament, December 2. 1641, with the love which his Majesty lately hath shown to the city of London, by Knighting five Aldermen . . . and royaUy giving them againe into their hands London-Derrie. 4°. n.p. 1641. 1558 Just defence of the Royal Martyr K. Charles I. from the many false and ma- licious aspersions in Ludlow's memoirs . . . (2 parts.) (Portrait.) 8°. 1699. 1559 King Charles his resolution concerning the govemement of the Church of Eng- land, being contrary to that of Scotland. With a speech spoken by the Lord Car, in the Parliament in Scotland ... 4°. 1641. 1560 King Charles his speech made upon the scaffold at Whitehall Gate, immediately before his execution, on Tuesday the 30. of Jan. 1648. With a relation of the manner of his going to execution. 4". 1649. (Two copies.) 1561 Book-plate of Sir Francis Freeling. Brownists Conventicle : or an Assemble of Brownists, Separatists, and Non-Con- formists, as they met together at a private house to heare a sermon of a brother of theirs neere Algate, being a learned Felt- maker (A. Greene). Contayniug the whole discourse of his exposition .... (Wood- cut on title.) [Imprint cut down.] 4°. 1562 King Charles the first : an historical tragedy. Written in imitation of Shake- spear. [By William Havard.] (Frontis- piece.) 8°. 1737. 1563 79 CHARLES I., KING OF ENGLAND— COttt. Kings Speech to the Commissioners from the Parliament .... Papers of the trans- actions of the Treaty. Jomrnall of some passages of overtures by the Kings Ma- jesty and the Commissioners. Brought . . . from the Isle of Wyght ... 4°. 1648. 1564 Large declaration concerning the late tumults in Scotland, from their first ori- ginalls : together with a particular deduc- tion of the seditions practices of the prime leaders di the Coyenanters : collected out of their owne foule acts and writings. By which it doth plainly appeare, that religion was only pretended by those leaders, but nothing lesse intended by them. By the King. F". 1639. 1565 At the foot of the title-page is this MS. in- scription " Given me by M"^ D': Belkanke- vell Deane of [?] Surhem [stated to have been the compiler] this 10 of May heere at Newcastle, on the way towardes Barwicke anno 1639. Arundell & Smrey." " Drawn up by D'. Balcanqnall." Brit. Mus. Cat. Letters between Col. Robert Hammond, Governor of the Isle of Wight, and the Committee of Lords and Commons at Derby-House . . . relating to Charles I. while he was confined in Carisbrooke- Castle . . . Letter from John Ashbum- ham ... 8°. 1764. 1566 Book-plate of Thomas Barrett of Lee. Narrative of the proceedings of the High Court of Instiee in the tryal of the King in Westminster Hall, on Saturday the 20. and Monday the 22. of this instant January. With the speeches of the King, Lord Presi- dent, and Solicitor General . . . (Portrait of the King.) 4°. Jan. 23. 1648. 1567 Numb. 1. Narrative of the whole pro- ceedings of the High Court of Instiee in the Tryal of the King ... 4°. Jan. 23. 1648. 1568 Numb. 2. Continuation of the Narrative . . 4°. Jan. 25. 1648. 1569 Numb. 3. Continuation of the Narrative . . . With a copy of the sentence of death ... 4°. Jan. 29. 1648. 1570 Ovatio Carohna. Triumph of King Charles, or the triumphant manner and order, of receiving his JIaiesty into his City of London, 25. November, 1641, upon his . . . return from Scotland. With JXaster Recorder's Speech to his Majestie. \nd his Majesties answer. 4°. 1641. 1571 Imperfect. Personall Treaty with his Maiesty, and the two Houses, to be speedily holden, who knowes where- ? - ■ 4°- n-P- 1648. 1572 CHARLES I., KING OF ENGLAND— cont. Royal Martyr : or, the Life and death of Charles I. Third edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1684. 1573 A few pencil notes, by T. Carlyle (?). The Subjects sorrow : or. Lamentations upon the death of Britaines losiah King Charles, . . . put to death by his owne people . . . Expressed in a sermon upon Lam. 4. 20 . . . (ITrontispiece.) 4'>. 1649. 1574 Trials of Charles the first, and of some of the Regicides. With biographies of Bradshaw, Ireton, Harrison, and others : and with notes. 12°. 1832. 1575 True copy of the Journal of the High Court of Justice, for the Tryal of K. Charles I. As it was read in the House of Commons, and attested under the hand of Phelps, clerk to that in&mous court. Taken by J. Nalson, Jan. 4. 1683. With a large introduction. (Frontispiece-view of the Court— and portrait.) F". 1684. (2 copies.) 1576 No. 2. No portrait. Vindication of K. Charles : proving that his Majesty was the author of "Y.iKav PaiTiKiK^. Against a memorandum, said to be written by the Earl of Anglesey. And, against the exceptions of Dr. Walker and others . . . Preface, wherein the assertions in M'. Bayle's dictionary, re- lating to the controversy are confuted. Third edition . . . with original letters of K. Charles . . . never before printed ... 4». 1711. 1577 Defence of the Vindication of K. Charles ; justifying his Title to 'EiKav $airi\ucii. In answer to a late pamphlet intituled Amyn- tor. By the author of the ^'indication. [Thomas Wagstaffe.] 4». 1699. 1578 [Tracts.] 4». 1648-9. 'l579 Charere of the Commons of England, against Cliarls Stuart, King of England, of High Treason exhibited to the High Court of Justice, as it was read to him oy the Clerk in the said Court Saturday, Ian. 20. 1648. Proclamation for tryall of the King, at the Exchange, and in Cheapside. Pro- ceedings of the High Court of Justice against him. Act of the House of Com- mons for further prosecution against the King. Notes taken at the Kings tryall, at "\\''est- minsterHall, Saturday, Janna. 20. 1618. And the charge of high-treason read agamst the Kmg. Speeches made by me King, the Lord President, and the Conncell which exhibited the charge against him. 'Which notes were taken by H. "Walker, who was present at the Tryall that day. King Charls his Tryal : or a perfect narra- tive of the whole proceedings of the High Com-t of Instiee in the tryal of the King in Westminster Hall. Speeches of the King, Lord President, and Solicitor General. Speech of the Lord President before he 80 CHARLES I., KING OF ENGLAND— C07lt. gave sentence, not before published. Kings Speech upon the Scaffold, Tuesday, Jan. 30. "Speech upon the ScatTold" is a separate Tract. King Charls his case : or, an appeal to all rational men, concerning his Tryal. "With an additional opinion concerning the death of King James, the loss of Eochel, and, the blood of Ireland. By John Cook. [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 1580 Certain passages which happened at New- port, in the Isle of Wight, Novemb. 29. 1648. relating to King Charles I. By Colonel Edward Cooke. 1690. Letter to Sir E. S. By Ludlow. 1691. (Du- plicate of tract in No. 1584.) The Plagiary. By S. Butler. 1691. (Dupli- cate of tract in No. 1584.) Defence of the Parliament of 1640, and the people of England, against King Charles I. and his adherents. 1698. Defence of King Charles I. against the re- flections of a letter, intituled, animad- versions on the two last XXX. of Januarj* sermons. 1702. View of the reign of King Charles the first. Wherein the true causes of the Civil War are impartially delineated. In answer to the libels lately publish'd against a sermon by Itfiv. White Kennet, D.D. 1704. [No title page. The Loyal Martyr vindi- cated.] [Tracts.] 4°. & 8°. v.d. 1581 Elegie on the meekest of men Charles I. &c. n.p. 1649. " By Lluellin." MS. on title. Trial oE Charles the first, before the High Court of Justice. Act of the Commons, in Parliament, for crei'ting a high court of justice, for the Trial ; also the journal of the said Court. With additions, by J. Nalson. Oxford, n.d. OHver Cromwell's compact with the devil for seven years, on the day in which he gain'd the battle at Worcester; and on which day, at the expiration of the said iierm, he afterwards died. A true and faithful narrative. As it was related by Col. Lindsey. Letter from Lady Claypole, Cromwell's daughter, to her sister Vis- countess Palconbridge. Minutes from Secretary Thurloe's pocket-book. Claren- don's character of the Usurper, and an account of his death. Third edition. 1738. [at the end — Verses by Cowley soon after the death ot Cromwell]. [Tracts.] 4°. London and Oxford, 1645. 1582 Kings Cabinet opened : or, certain packets of secret letters and papers, written with the Kings own hand, and taken in his cabinet at Nasby-Field, June 14. 1645. By victorious S'. Thomas Fairfax. / Key to the Kings Cabinet; or Animadier- sions upon the three printed speeches, of M' Lisle, M' Tate, a.nd }I' Browne, spoken at a Common-Hall in London, 3. July. 1645. Detecting the malice and falshood of their blasphemous observations made upon the King and Queenes letters. Oxford. [By D'. Thomas Browne.] Observations upon occasion of the publish- ing their Majesties letlois. Oxford. Letter, in which Ihe arguments of the annotator, and three other sjieeches upon their Majestie's Letters published at London, are examined and answered, n.p. CHARLES I., KING OF ENGLAND— cont. [Tracts.] 4°. T.d. 1583 Sermon preached before the Kings Majestie, in the Cathedrall of Durham, 5 May 1639. By Thomas [Moreton] Bishop of Duresme [Durham]. 1639. Berith Anti-Baal, or, Zach. Croftons appear- ance before the prelate-justice of peace, vainly pretending to binde the Covenant and Covenanters to their good behaviour. By way of rejoynder to Doctor John Gauden's vindication of his Analysis, from the exceptions of Zach. Croftons Analepsis. By the author of the Analepsis. 1661. Ecjai family described, or; the character of James I. Charles I. Charles II. James II. With the pedegree of Queen Anne. 1702. Speech of Sir Audley Mervyn, Speaker of the House of Commons in Ireland. De- livered to James Duke of Ormond, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Containing the sum of affairs in Ireland. Printed at Dublin ; reprinted at London, 1662. Bibliotheca politica ; ,or, a discourse by way of dialogue, shewing, that the arraigning and murther of Charles I. can by no means be justified by the proceedings of the Convention- Parliament against James II. upon his abdication. Dialogue the fourteenth, [i" By Tyrrell.] 1702. Several evidences which have not yet ap- peared in the Controversy oonceriiing the author of EtKwi^ Sau-tKticri. By J. Y. of Pli- mouth. 1703. "James Young a chirurgheon." MS. on title. View of the reign of Charles the first. Wherein the true causes of the Civil War are impartially deUneated by strokes borrow'd fiom Lord Clarendon, Sir Philip Warwick, H. L'Bstrange. In answer to the Libels lately publish'd against a ser- mon by Rev. Whito Kennet, D.D. 1704. [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 1584 Solemn Humiliation for the murder of K. Charles I. Remarks on those popular mistakes, concerning popery,' zeal, and the extent of subjection, which had a fatal influence in our Civil Wars. 1686. The Plagiary exposed : or an old answer to a newly revived calumny against the memory of King Charles I. Bemg a reply to a book intitled King Charles's Case, formerly written by John Cook ; and since copied out under the title ot Collonel Ludlow's letter. By Mr. Butler, the author of Hudibras. 1691. Letter from Major General Ludlow to Sir E. S. Comparing the tyranny of the first four years of King Charles the Martyr, with the tyranny of the four veal's reign of the late abdicated King. Occasioned by the reading Doctor Pelling's lewd harangues upon the 30th of January. Amsterdam, 1691. Chai'acterof Charles I. From the declara- tion of M' Alexander Hendei*son, upon his death-bed : with a further defence of the King's holy book. Short remarks upon a vile book, call'd, Ludlow no lyar : with a defence of the King from the Irish Rebellion. By Rich. HoUingworth, D.D. 1692. [No title-page. The Troop of Non-swearing Parsons, or a dialogue.] Jilnd. 1696. Second defence of King Charles I. By way ot reply to an infamous Libel, called, Ludliiw's letter to D'. HoUingworth. (By Richard HoUingworth.) 1692. Imperfect at end. Truth brought to hght : or the gross for- geries of D'. HoUingworth, in his pamphlet 81 CHARLES l„ KING OF ENGLAND— cont, intituled, The character . . . detected. BeiiiK a vindication of M' Henderson and D'. Walker. Proof that !)'. Gauden (not King Charles I.) was the author of Icon Basilice. In a letter from Lieut. General Ludlow to D'. Hollingworth. 1693. King Oharles I. no such saint, martyr, or good Protestant as commonly reputed; but a favourer of Papists, and a cruel and oppressive tyrant. D^ Burnet's (now Bishop of Salisbury) and other reasons against the keening up any longer the observation of a Fast on the 80th of Jan- uary. 1698. Signed"!). J." [Latin Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 158S Regii Sanguinis clamor ad coelum adversus parricidas Anglicanos. [Anon. Written by Ph. de Moulin under the assumed name of Alexander More]. Hagae — (Ilomitum, 1652. Mare Belh Anglicani injustissimd Belgis illati Helena. [?by Stephanus De Bur- mania.] n.p. 1652. Sylloge variorum tractatuutn Anglico qui- dem idiomatc & ab auctoribus Anglis con- acriptorum sed in linguam Latinam trans- latorura ; quibus CaroU Magnae Britan. regis innocentia illustratur et pamcidium iniUura perpetratum apseudo-parlamento & perduelli exercitu declaratur. Accessit responsum ad declamationem M^ Joannes Cooke. Auctore I. V. A. E. n.p. 1649. Beggius (Honorius). De statu Eoclesiae Bri- tannicac hodiemo, liber commentarius. Unacumappcndiceeonim, quaeinSynodo Glasguensi contra Episcopos decreta sunt. Dantisei, 1G47. Scriptum J'arlamenti EeipublicaB Angliae de lis quae ab hac Eepub. cum Potestatibus Poederatai-um Belgii Provinciarum Gene- ralibua, & quibus progressibus acta sunt. Kesponsum parlamenti ad ternas chartulas il D™ Legatis Potestatum generalium Ex- traordinahis, ex occasione pugnae navalis inter Anglorum & Belganim classes con- sertac. Cum illius pugnae narratione. ]?ostrem6 soripta ilia in unum coUata, quae inter Parlamentum Eeipub. Angliae St, jjnuin Adrianum Pauw, cum de pace agerent, ultro citroque reddita sunt. 1652. CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR. Apology, vindicating the Cavaleers from a partiall . . . aspersion ... for making churches prisons and stables . . . 4°. 1643. 1586 Bloody game at Cards. As it was played betwixt the King of Hearts and the rest of his Suite, against the residue of the paeke of cards . . . Shuffled at London . . . n.d. 4". 1587. Eoyalists' Defence : Vindicating the King's proceedings in the late warremade against him . . . [By 0. Dallison.] 4°. n.p. 1648. 1588 Tragedy of the cruell Warre . . . With a prophecy of the overthrow of the popish Cavaliers and the accomplishment of a peaceable accommodation. 4°. n.p. 1643. '^ 1589 [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 1590 Discourse, concerning the power of the Peercs, and Commons of Parliament, in point of judicature. By a learned an- tiquerie. 1640. O 1C505. CHARLES I,, AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. Star-Chamber epitomized: or a dialogue betweene Inquisition and Christopher Cob-web. Wherein they discourse how the olarkes used to exact fees. 16.11. A new fiction, As wee were : the scene White-Hall. Antetruhand (in imagina- tipii), by some of Powles Ferulists under St. ricnbum-Crosse.in away of prognosti- cation. 1626. (ByJ. C.) Personae. Pro- testation. Common-Prayer, [etc.] 1661. " Ja. Croxton." MS. Mappe of Misohiefe, or a dialogue betweene y. and E. concerning the going of Qu. M. mtoV. 1641. Third Speech of Lord George Digby to the House of Commons, concerning Bishops, and the Citie petition. 1640. [No title-page. Narration of the carriage and suooesse of the Enghsh affaires, in the hands of the Commissioners for Scotland.] Depositions and Articles against Thomas Earle of Strafford, Pebr. 16. 1640. [t.p. laid down. No imprint.] Cheap-side Crosse censured and condemned by a letter from the Viceohancellour [Geo. Abbot] of Oxford, in answer to a question propounded by the citizens of London, concerning the Crosse, in 160O, in which yeer it was beautified, also some arguments out of a sermon against the Crosse, by a Minister, sometimes Preacher at Alhallows Lombard street. 10-11. Progges of Egypt, or the Caterpillers of the Commonwealth tmely dissected and laid open. 1641. Petition to the Kings Maiestie, in Scotland, Nov. 18. 1641. Prom the House ot Com- mons. Humbly requesting; that all Popish-priests, Jesuits, and other ill alleeted persons, may instantly be banisht the Kingdome, and not suffered to be in, or neere the Court, at the time of his Majes- ties returne into England. (Portrait?) 1641. [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 1591 Englands troubles anatomized. Wherein is related the rise, cause, beginning, unhappy progresse, of tliis uucivill war. By a Cap- taine, servant to his Majesty. 1644. Dedication signed " J.C." i.e. Cockayne. Englands dust and ashes. Penned at the last siege and surrendry of Newark upon Trent, by Col. Thomas Dymock, his Ma- jesties true servant, n.p. 1048. (Dupli- cate.) [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 1592 Hell broke loose : or, a catalogue of many of the spreading eiTors, heresies and blas- phemies of these times. Third impression. 1646. [No title-page. The Speech without doores defended without reason. Or, a vindica- tion of the Parliaments honour ; in a rejoynder to three pamphlets published in defence of M. Chaloners speech.] Bad. 1646. [No title-page. Answer to a speech without doores.] A corrector of the answerer to tlie speech out of doores. Justifying tiie worthy speech of Master Thomas Chaloner. Edin- burgh. 1646. Westminster Payre, newly proclaimed. Printed in Kings-street, 1647. A word to M'. Peters, and two words tor the parliament and kingdom. Or, an answer to a scandalous pamphlet, entituled, a word for the armie, and two words to the kingdom : subscribed by Hugh Peters. [Attributed to Uov. N. Ward.] 1647. r 82 CHARLES !., AND THE CIVIL WAR ■ — cont. [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 1593 His Majesties message to Parliament, Jan- uary 20. and the petition ol the House of Commons, Jan. 26. His Majesties answer, Jan. 28. Scots Commissioners propositions for Ireland, and the resolution of Parlia- ment therein : with his Majesties answer thereunto. 1641, Two petitions of the Lords and Commons to hisMajestie. Pebr. 2. 16il. His answer; his consent for the Prineesse Maries going to Holland, and her Majestie to accompany her. Her Majesties answer to a message of both Houses. 1641. Petition of Parliament, concerning the Mili- tia, &c. Presented tohis Majestie l^Martii, 1641. "With his answer thereunto. 1641. His Majesties Declaration to Parliament in answer to that presented to him at New- market, March 9. 1641. 1641. Another Declaration from Parliament ; sent to His Majesty, March 23. 1641. 1641. Ordinance from his Majesty, and Parlia- ment: for the ordering of the Militia. Answer of the House of Commons, to the Kings last message, 7 Feb. 1641. In defence of the speech lately spoken by M'. Pym. 1642. His Maiesties answer to the xix, proposi- tions of Parliament. 1642. His Majesties Declaration to all his loving Subjects, of his true intentions in advanc- ing lately to Brainceford. Oxford, 1642. His Maiesties answer, to a printed booke, intituled, A Remonstrance, or the declara- tion of Parliament, 26. May. 1642. In answer to a declaration under his Majesties name, concerning the businesse of Hull. Imprinted at Yorke, reprinted at London, 1642. His Majesties declaration concerning leavies. 1642. [No title-page. True relation of the treaty and ratification of the marriage agreed upon betweene Charles, King of great Britaine, Prance and Ireland, and the Lady Henretta Maria daughter of Prance and sister to the Prench King. (8 May. 1625).] Collection of all the particular papers that passed between His Maiestie, both Houses, and the Committee, concerning the late Treaty. Oxford, 1643. His Maiesties letter, directed to the I'arlia- ment assembled at "Westminster : concern- ing a treaty for peace. Answer sent to his Majesty to Oxford, March 9. 1643. 1643. Kings Cabinet opened. 1645. (Duplicate — See No. 1682.) Kings packet of letters taken by Colonell Kossiter, as they were carrying from New- ark to Belvoyi', on Munday last, Octob. 6. 1645. "With letters from the King to Sir Gurvase Lucas, Governour of Belvoyr from the Lord Byron, and from Oneale (in Ireland) to the King. 1645. Letter fi'om the Kings Coui't at Hampton ; concerning the Commissioners of Parlia- ment, and the Commissioners of the Estates of Scotlands delivering of the propositions to the Bang upon Tuesday last at Hamp- ton-Court. Proceedings of the King thereupon. Message to the estates of Scotland, and the coming into England of the Lord Lanerick, with the treatie and covennnt, to present to his Majesty. 1647. Kings concessions delivered to the Commis- sioners at Newport, and debated there, Septemb. 29. Sent by His Majesty to Parliament, and read there, Ootob, 2. 1648. H;48. CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. Kings answer to the paper delivered in by the Divines attending the Commissioners concerning church-government. 1648, Parliament justified in their late proceedings against Charles Stuart, or a brief discourse concerning the nature and rise of govern- ment, together -with the abuse of it in tyranny, and the peoples reserve. As also an Answer to a certain paper, entituled. The humble advice of tne Lecturers of Banbury, and Brackley. By J: Pidoe, T : Jeanes, W : Shaw. 1648. His Majesties declaration concerning the Treaty : and his dislike of the armies pro- ceedings. Delivered by his Majesty to one of his servants at his departure from the Isle of "Wight. His Majesties reasons fainst the pretended jurisdiction of the igh Court of Justice, n.p. 1648. True narration of the title, government, and cause of the death of Charles Stuart, King of England. 16-^. Numb. 3. Continuation of the narrative. (Duplicate— iS^ee No. 1570.) Certain j)assages which happened at New- port, m the Isle of "Wight, Novemb. 29. 1648. Relating to King Charles I. By Edward Cooke. 1690, [Tracts.] 4«. v.d. 1594 Many wonderful and very remakeable [sic) passages, which hath come to passe within the memorie of man here m this our nation. And also of the manifold deli- verencies we have had by the power of God fTom the devowring sword. 1642. Relation of the fight, between his Majesties army, and the Parliaments Forces, neer Kyneton in the County of "Warwick, 23 October. Sent in a letter to John I^m. "Which letter was signed by Denzell Hollis . . . Charls Pym : who were then present. 1642. Embassage from the Prince of Orange Message from Parliament, to the Spanish Embassador, to make stay of the ships at Dunkerk, which were intended for the supply of the rebels in Ireland. Petition of Parliament, to the King ; concerning Lord Kimbolton, Me Holhs, and the rest that were accused of high treason. Order of the House of Lords for suppressing of the Arch-bishop of Armi.ghs sermon. Articles against Sir Edward Herbert, by the House of Commons. Ordnance from his Majesty, nnd Parliament, for the ordering of the Militia. Names of all the Lieutenants of every County. (Portrait of the King.) 1642. Letter : found in the Old-Change IS. Jan. and directed to Matthew ["Wren] Bishop of Ely. Attachment of Colonel Luiisford at "Windsor, 19. Jan. 1642. Plying away of Lord Digby. Description of the u]3roar which their horsemen made their Com- manders being gone, and taken away from them. Their oath and protestation. 1642. Ordinance or Declaration of Parliament. Por the encouragement of Ad^•enturers to make new subscriptions for townes, cities, and lands in Ireland. 164S. Declaration of Parliament. Shewing the present designe for a cessation of armes, or treaty of peace with the rebels in Ireland. And by what Popish instruments and ministers in their councels at the Court, the said designe is carried on. 1643. Distractions of our times. The Round-heads race. 1643. Englands Alarm to War against the Beast, n.p. 1643. 83 CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. Looldng-glasse for Malignants: or, Gods hand a,gainst God-haters. Oonlaining a relation of examples (since 1640.) of Gods wrath against our malevolent malignants. Collected by John Vicars. 1643. No post from heaven, nor yet from hell: Bm a true relation, and animadversions, written, and sent as an antidote, to all unheheving Brownists and such like in- cendiaries of the State. Proving that his Majestes taxations have not been unusuall, nor his government tyrannioall. Collected by Sir Robert Cotton, and now put to prcsse. By G. A. Oxford, 164S. Letter sent to London from a Spie at Ox- ford, To M. Pym, M. Martin, &c. and to all the worthy members of this holy Rebel- lion. ■Which letter was intercepted and taken prisoner by lohn Taylor, at Lajgh- ton-Uuzzard, on Thursday the SE"- [sie] of August last. And committed to the Presse by the aforesaid Thorny Ailo [ana- gram of John Taylor], n.p. 1643. [Tracts] 4°. v.d. 159.5 Relation of passages, and speeches in the Starre-Ohamber, lune 14. 1637. at the censure of D'. Bastwick, M'. Burton, and M'. Prynne. (Portrait of Prynne inserted) . n.p. 1687. Loyalty's speech to Englands subjects ; perswading them, not- to suffer rebellion. LSeeond title] Loyalty's speech to Eng- land, perswadmg them to a constant unity of religion, for the defence of our dread soveraigne, and native country. 1639. Englands looking in and out. By R. M. [i.e. Sir Ralph Maddison.] (Portrait inserted, of Lord Burleigh.) le-iO. Sir Thomas Rowe his speech at the Councell- table touching Brasse money. July, 1640. pp. 351-8. n.p. 1641. Two letters from SvThomas Rowe, Ambas- sador Extraordinar.y for his jMajesty in Germany. One to the Earle of Holland. The other to M'. Edward "Waller. Con- cerning the Prench Embassadors accusa- tion against him in the House of Peeres. (Portrait, inserted, of "Henry Earle of Holland.") York, 1642. Sir Thomas Roe his speech in Parliament. AVhereinhe sheweth the cause of the decay of coyne and trade in this land, especially of merchants trade, n.p. 1641. M' S'.-John's Speech to the Lords January 7, lew. Concerning Ship-money. (Por- trait inserted), n.p. 1640. Speech of M'. S'- John, his Maiesties Solicitor Generall. At a conference of both houses of pari i anient, 16 10. Concerning Ship-Money . (Portrait of Hampden inserted.) 1611. Master Pimmes speech to the Lords, 12 Aprill, 1641. (Portrait inserted.) 1641. Speech at a Conference with the Lords, January 26. 1641. By occasion of the Petitions from the City of London. By JolmP.ym. (Portrait on Title.) 1641. Propositions presented from the House of Commons to the Lords by Master Pym, at a Conference of both Houses. Concerning the causes and remedies of division betwixt the King and his Subjects. 1642. Letter to the lower house of parliament touching divers grievances and incon- veniences o! the state &c. 1641. Letter found in the Privy Lodgeings at ■Whitehall. 16'H. Lord Paulkland his learned speech in the House of Commons, touching the Judges and the late Lord Keeper. (Portrait in- serted.) 1641, CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. Speech to the House of Commons concerning Episcopacy. .By Viscount Paulkland. 1641, Speech of Lord Paulkland, to the Lords, upon the delivery of the Articles of the Commons : against Lord Pinch. 1641. Speech in parhament by M'. Glyn concern- ing the breaches of the priviledges thereof, by breaking open the chambei-Si trunoks, and studies of the six worthy members of parliament, upon their accusation of high treason by his Maiesty (Portrait inserted). 1641. Sp^oh by M'. Pym, at a conference of both Houses. Discovering the dangers and miseries the three Kingdomes are liable unto, by reason of his Majesties evill counsellors. (Portrait of Vane inserted.) 1642. Ten propositions dehvered by Master Pimme, from the Commons, to the Lords, at a Conference. 1641. Speech by Master Pym, to the Lords con- cerning an Information against Lord Digby. "With his Majesties speech in the House of Commons 4. lanuary 1641. (Portrait of Lord Digby inserted.) 1641. Master Pym his speech in Parliament con- cerning the vote of the House of Commons, for his discharge ujjon the accusation o[ high treason, exhibited against himselfe, and Lord Kimbolton [etc. Jby his Maiesty. (Portrait on title.) 1641. Second speech of the Honourable NiLthanael Fiennes, in the Commons. Touching the subjects liberty against the late Canons, and the new oath. (Portrait inserted.) 1641. Speech in the House of Peeres, by the Earle of Monmouth upon the occasion of the present distractions, and of his Majesties removall from White-hall. 1641. Sir Benjamin Rudyerd his speech, in answer to the Spanish and Prench Embassadors request for our Souldiers at their disband- ing. August, 28. 1641. (Portrait inserted.) 1641. Declaration of the Lords and Commons, for the protecting of all those that obey the orders of Parliament. Also, declaring all those to be enemies to the Commonwealth who seize any persons for obeying the commands of the parliament. (Portrait inserted of " Henry Gray Earle of Stand- ford.") 1642. Declaration of the Lords and Commons, concerning the Earl of Stamford and others his assistants ; whom the King proclaimed traytors for executing the ordinance of the Militia. 1642. (Printed " 1942 " but cor- rected with the pen.) M^ Grimstone, his speech in Parliament : upon the preferring of the Essex Petition, 1642. 1642. M'. Grimston his speech, at the Committee in Guildhall 1641. Concerning the breaches of the priviledges of Parliament ; by breaking open the chambers, of the Lord Kimbolton [etc.]. 1642. Two Speeches by [Henry Rich] Earl of Holland, and lo: Pym, concerning a petition to His Majestic for peace. Spoken in Guildhall. (Porti'ait inserted of the Earl of Holland.) 1642. Sir Arthur Haslerigg, his speech in Parlia- ment whereby he cleareth himselfe of the articles of high treason exhibited against himselfe by his Majesty. 1642. Sir Arthur Haselrig's Will. With a survey of his bfe and death. 1661. Master Strowd his speech in parhament in reply to the articles of high treason against F 2 84 CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. himselfe exhibited by his Majestie, wherein he cleareth himselfe concerning the same. 1642. 1642. Eight speeches spoken in Guild-Hail, Octob* 27. 1642. By the Lo: Wharton, M' Strode, Earl of Pembroke, Earlof HoUandf the Lo : Say. Also a letter from M^ Secretary Nicholas to the Earle of Cum- berland. (Portraits inserted of Lord "Wharton and Viscount Sey and Scale.) 1642. Lord "Whartong speech, to the Petitioners for peace : at Habberdashers-Hall, London. Also the Lord Maiors message to them. 1642. Letter to a doubtfull friend, about the rifling of the twentieth part of his estate, York, 1642. Signed "T. R." Plate inserted—" East prospect of the city of Winchester." Declaration and Resolution of the Countie of Leicester. In answer to his Majesties speech, wherin they expresse their zeal and loyalty to his Majesty, and their un- changeable constancie to maintain the proceedings of Parliament. Protestation of the County of Lincoln, delivered to the Lords, by Lord "Willoughby of Parham. Parliaments charge to all lustices. (Por- trait inserted of Lord Willoughbie. ) n.p. 1642. To the Kings Maiestie. Petition of the Knights, Ministers, gentry, free-holders, of the countie of Leicester. June 18. n.y. s. sh. Relation, of the chiefe occurrences, at, and since the Battell at Newbery, published to vindicate the Earle of Manchester. Penned by Simeon Ash. (Portraits in- serted of the Earl of Manchester and Sir W'". Waller.) 1644. Examination of such particulars in the Solemne League and Covenant, as con- ceme the law : proving it to be destruc- tive of the lawes of England. \^By Bp. Griffith Williams.] Oxford, 164 i. Petition of the inhabitants of Dorset, to his Maiesty at Ragland. With his Majesties Answer. (View of '* Ragland Castle " in- serted.) Oxford, 1645. Relation of His Majesties coming to Shrews- bury and his passage from thence to Chester, with his entetainment there. With L: Grandisons surprizing Nant\vich. (Views of Shrewsbury Castle and Chester inserted.) 1642. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons : to enable Sir Thomas Middleton, Serjeant Major Generall for the sixe counties of North-Wales, to take subscriptions for the raising of Porces, for reducing of the said Counties to their due obedience. (Portrait inserted of Sir T. Middleton.) 1644. Declaration of the Earle of Leven : concern- ing the rising of the Scotish army from the seige of the citv of Hereford. (View in- serted of Hereford.) 1645. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons, whereby Sir George Vane is appointed high SherifEe of the County Palatine of Durham and Sadberge. (View inserted of Durham.) 1645. Call to all the Souldiers of the armie, by the free people of England, Justifying the proceedings of the live regiments. Mani- festing the necessity of the whole armies joyning with them. Discovering the chiefe authors of all our miseries. (Portrait head of Cromwell inserted.) 1647. Independency stript and whipt. Or, Iretona petition, and the royall project, examined CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. and confuted. Character of an indepen- dent. (Portrait of Ireton inserted.) 1648. Declaration of the Lords and Commons, against George Lord Goring, for levving war against the parhament and kinerdom, in taking up arms in Kent and Essex. Also three orders. Order of the Commons, for putting the Militia in the several counties in execution. Order of both Houses, for taking away the Court of Wards. The third, giving power to the Committee of plundred Ministers, to com- mit such Churchwardens as shall counte- nance and set up delinquent ministers to preach. Ordinance of both Houses, for payment of Tvthes. (Portrait inserted of Goring.) 1648. Kings Declaration to all his subjects. (Por- trait of the King inserted.) n.p. 1648. His Maiesties reason why he cannot in con- science consent to abolish the Episcopall Government. Delivered to the Divines at the treaty at Newport. Answer of the Divines. (Portrait of the King inserted.) 1648. [Half Title.] A new Creed. Consisting of XII, Articles for every true Protestant and loyall subject to make profession of n.p. 1648. King Charts his case. By John Cook.. (Portrait of John Cook inserted.) (Dupli- cate— /See No. 1579.) [Tracts.] 4". v.d. 1596 The tell tale spirit : or, the Divell of Derby House. Rendring an exact accompt of the present affayres of the Kingdome es- pecially from Derby House, n.p. 1648. Westminster projects, or the mysterie of Darby House, discovered, n.p. 1648. A shrill cry in the eares of Cavaliers, apos- tateSj and presbyters, for the resolve of XII [queries touching the primitive state of this nation, since the conquest : the late proceedings of the army, the covenant. 1648. Case for the City-Spectacles, n.p. 1648. Paire of spectacles for the Citie. n.p. 1643. Government of the people of England pre- cedent and present the same. [By John Parker.] (Woodcut on title.) 1650. Collonel Grey's portmanteau opened; his letter discovered which is here printed. To deliver, from the dangers of their caballs such as are not acquainted with Scottish methods and mysteries. 1650. [Half Title] Vox Veritatis. n.p. 1650. [No title-page. True excellency of Grod and his testimonies, and our national! lawes, against titular excellency. Or, a letter to Thomas Lord Fairfax, with a com- plaint against tyrannical! Whitchcock the Governour of Winsor. Prom Captain William Bray.] " 1650." MS. TJmversity Queries, in a gentle touch by the by. Cambridge, 1659. Invisible John made visible: or, a grand pimp of tyranny portrayed, in Barkstead's arraignment at the barre, where he stands impeached of high treason as the late tyrant's bum-bayliff within the City of London Tower, &c. Pive queries, to the parliament, occasioned by the preceding Plea for justice. 1659. 1697 [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. Three speeches spoken in Guild-hall, con- cerning his Majesties refusal! of a treaty of peace. Two by Lord Broolc, and one by Sir Henry Vane. Votes of Parliament. 1642. 1642. (Two copies.) 85 CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. Twn speeches spoken at a Common Hall Octob. 27. 164a. By Sir Henry Tane. By Master Marshall. Wherein is shew'd the readynesse ol the Scots to assist the King- dome and Parhament of England. 1643. Speech of Viscount Say and Scale, in Par- liament 1642. Concerning the Bishop of Canterburies [Laud] petition, delivered to Parliament 1642. 1042. Mr. Wallers Speech in the House of Com- mons 1643. Before they proceeded to expell him the House. 1643. Three speeches delivered at a Common-Hall, 28 July, 1643. At the reading of a pro- clamationfrom the King : viz. By Edward Earl of Manchester, concerning the Tower of London. By John Pym ; by way of observation upon the said proclamation. By Henry Martin Colonell, concerning Sir "William Waller. Copy of the proclama- tion. Deposition of M'. Mayo, taken at Bridges in Flanders, luly 20. 1643. con- cerning contributions there made for the assistance of the Papists in England, n.d. Poure speeches delivered in Guild-Hall sixth of October, 1643. At a Common-Hall, upon occasion of desiring the assistance of our brethren of Scotland in this warre. Viz. by Mr. Solicitor, Mr. Edmund Calamy. Mr. Jeremiah Burroughes. Mr. Obadiah Sedgewick. 1646. Relation of the Scots martch from Barwicke to Newcastle, their message to the Gover- nour of Newcastle, their propositions to the Cavaliers, and their severall answers about the surrendring of Newcastle. Re- lation of 11. of the Earle of Warwicks ships appointed to fall upon 7. ships which lay at Newcastle, laden with malignants goods, intended for Holland. By a mes- senger from the Scots Armie. 1644. Relation of the siege at Newark by Lieu- tenant Col. Bury. Articles of agreement betwixt Prince Eupert and Sir lohn Mel- drum, 1644. Five speeches spoken to his Majestic return- ing out of Scotland into England. By the Recorder of Yorke. The Major of Stam- ford. The Major of Huntington. The Lord Major of London. The Recorder of London. Relation after what manner and where his Majestie knighted the Lord Major and the Recorder of London. Dis- cription of what honourable Tryumph his Majestic did ride into the City of London. 1611. Letters which manifest the designe of the late discovered plot. His Majesties letter to the City of, London. I;ord Digbies letter to Sir Bazill Brooke. Other inter- cepted letters, n.p. 1643. His Maiesties letter, to Parliament : con- cerning a treaty for peace. With the an- swer. 1643. Second summons to Newark sent from the committee of both Kingdoms, to the Go- vemour of that to-wn. Governours answer. 1646. Kings letter to the Marquesse of Ormond : and Marquesse of Ormonds letter to Mon- roe. Relating the Kings whole design, concerning all the three Kingdoms. 3646. Orders and instructions from the Privie Councell, for the Commissioners appointed to treat for tlio sui-render of the City of Oxford, to the Parliament. Letters and papers that passed between Sir Thomas Fairfax, and Sir Thomas Glemliam, about the same. 1646. Articles concerning the surrender of Newark to the Commissioners of both Kingdoms. 1646, CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — conl. Letter or declaration of the Commissioners of the Parliament of Scotland, concerning the paper sent to the Marquesse of Ormond in his Majesties name. 1646. Great victory obtained by Colonel Norton and his horse, and Colonell Jones and his footc. against Colonel Eayden, from Bu- sing house, neere Walneborough Mill. ii;m. Relation of the victory obtained by the Par- liaments Forces under the command of Sir Thomas Fairfax. Being two letters, the one written by G. B. a gentleman in the army. The other by Colonell Okey. With a letter of the regaining of Leicester. 1645. Eebells letter to the Pope. Wherein they present unto him their late purchases by the sword in Ireland. 1642, Letters from Sir William Brereton, Sir Thomas Middleton, Sir John Meldrum, of the great victory given them, in raising the siege from before Mountgomery-Caatle. And, how they routed his Majesties Forces, under the commiiud of the Lord Byron. 16 H. Letters to William Lenthall, Speaker ; and to the Committee of both Kingdoms, con- cerning the state of Sir Tho. Fairfax army. Sergeant-Major Generall Skippons speech, to all the officers and souldiers. Letter of Serjeant-Major Skippons. 1645. Lieut : Generall Cromwells letter to W. Lenthall, Speaker ; of the storming and taking Basing- House : with the Marques of Winchester, Sir Rob: Peak [etc.] Order of the Commons, for a day of thanks- giving. 1645. Kings forces totally routed by the Parlia- ments army, under the command of Major Generall Poyntz and Cheshire- forces, on Routon-Heath, within two miles of Ches- ter, Sept. 24. State of the siege at Chester j and a list of the Lords slam and taken prisoners. 1645. Lieut : Generall Cromwells letter to the House of Commons, of all the particulars of taking BristoU ; and the manner of P : Ruperts marching to Oxford. Two orders ; the one, for a day of thanksgiving, and the other, for a collection for a distressed and plundered party in BristoU. 164.'i, Proceedings betwixt Sir Thomas Fairfax, and Prince Rupert. About the dehvery up of BristoU. 1645. Sir Thomas Fairfax letter to Parhament, re- lating the storming and taking of Dart- mouth. 1645. [No title-page. Marquesse of Argyles Speech to the Grand Committee, concerning pro- positions of peace to he sent to his Majesty.] Dated, at end, June 25, 1646. His JIaiesties letter to the Lord Mayor, aldermen, and common-councell of the city of London. 1646. Two letters to W. Lenthal ; Speaker. The one, concerning the great victory at Carditte by the Parhaments Forces under Major General Langhom. The other, concerning Sir Tho : Fairfax's march into Comwal. 1645. Letter from Sir Thomas Fairfax, and the chief commanders in the army. To the Lord Major [etc.] of the city of London. 1647. Messages between Sir Tho. Fairfax, and tho Marquesse of Worcester, govemour of Ragland-Castle, touching surrender there- of. Propositions sent to the Generall from the Marquesse of Worcester, out of Ragland Castle, and his Excellencies re- fusall to treat on them. Names of our 86 CHARLES l„ AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. Commissioners appointed to treate with the enemy, upon tlie propositions sent to them from the Generall. 1M6. Declaration by the Earle of Bath, one of his Majesties Commissioners of Array, to the whole country of Devonshire, with their answer. How the Earle of Bath en- deavoured to put the commission of array in execution, at South- iVloulton, and how his men were driven out of the town by the inhabitants. Battle betweene Prince Ro- bert and the Parliaments Forces at Wor- cester. Septemb. 29. n.y. Two letters, the one, from the Lord Major of the city of London, to Sir Thomas Pair- fax, and his Councell of "Warre. The other from Sir Thomas Pairfax, to the Lord Major. 1647. Eeasons delivered by the Earle of Man- chester : for nuUing the forc'd votes, and against the insolencies of those that forced the Houses. Declaration of the House of Peeres accLuitting themselves. Ordinance of both houses of Parliament, appointing a secret committee for the sending for, and examining of parties and witnesses. 1647. Letter from a gentleman to Henry Martin, a member of the House of Commons, from Worcester 19. Octob. 1643. Who was im- ployed by his Exellence to dehver a letter to the Earle of Dorset, with the votes of Parliament concerning a petition to be delivered to his Majestic. 1642. Two letters from Rotterdam. "Wlierin is dis- covered a designe contrivd by the Lord Digby and other fugitive traytors in those parts, against the parliament of England. 1642. Densell HoUis ; his speech at the delivery of the protestation to the Lords. Narration of the grievances of the Kingdome. 1641. His Majesties letter and declaration to the SherifCes and City of London. Januai'y 17. 1642. Oxford, 1642. Sir Benjamin Rudyerd his speech for pro- positions of peace to be sent to his Majestic : spoken in Parliament. 1642. Speeches by the Earl of Manchester, and lo ; Pym in Guild -Hall, concerning money for the army, and propositions for easing the City. 1642. Speech, by lohn Earle of Bristoll, iri Parlia- ment, concerning an accommodation. 1642. Speech by Sir John Hotham [at Hull] Wherein is manifested the manifold rea- sons why the subject being commanded by the Parliament ; ought not to disobey. With a remarkeable passage concerning the Lord Littleton, Lord Keeper. 1642. Master Bagshaw his speech in Parhament concerning the passing of a bill, for the disarming of the Papists.- 1641. M'. Pym, his speech in Parliament concern- ing the passing of the bill in the Commons, for the present pressing of 15000 men, for Ireland. 1641. Speech by S'. Thomas Wroth, in the Com- mons : u])on his delivery of a petition from the Knights of the county of Somerset. With the petition. 1642. His Maiesties letter to the Lord-Keeper. With his Message to Parliament, in answer to their petition concerning the Militia. 1641. Speech by Sr. Thomas Lunsford, when he was apprehended. Relation, where, when, and how, he was taken ; by John Benham, officer to the House of Commons. 1642. His Blaiesties message to Parliament. Wherein he iissenteth to the bill against Bishops, their votes in Parliament. His CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. answer to the Clothiers petition. Con- currence with both Houses in passing the act for pressing of men, for Ireland. His intentions concerning Church - govern- ment, and the booke of Common prayer. The Lord Keeper's speech to the Com- mons ; and their thankes from both Houses to Ms Majestic for his Message. 1641. Speech in the Commons lanuarie xvii. 1641. By John Browne, Knight of the shire for Dorset. Wherein he layes open, the dangers which are like to fall upon that county, by reason of Digbies escape. Recusants houses that bee furnished with ammunition. 1642. March 17. Master Pyms speech in Parha- ment. Some passages that hagned the ninth of March, between the Kings Ma- jesty, and the Committee of both Houses, when the declaration was delivered. AVhat passed the next day, when his Ma- jesty delivered his answer. 1641. M'. Grimston his speech, at the Committee sitting in Guildhall 6. January 1641. Con- cerning the breaches of the priviledges of Parhament; by breaking open the chambers, studies, and trunks of the Lord Kimbolton [etc.]. 1642. Speech by Master Bagshawe in parliament concerning the triall of the twelve bishops 17 January, 1641. Articles, now in agita- tion objected against them. 1642. Master Meynard his speech at the com- mittee at Guild Hall, London lanuary 6. Concerning the breaches of priviledges of Parliament, 1041. n.p. 1642. Speeches in parliament.by Sir Edward Hales, and Sir William Wroth : concerning a letter sent from his Majestic to the Com- mons. 1641. Master St. John his speech in parliament cracerning the oliarge of treason then ex- hibited to the bishops, formerly accused by the House of Commons, 1641. 1641. Speech in parhament, of William, Lord Say and Seale. Declared against the supremacy of bishops. 1642. Speech at a conference with the Lords. By occasion of the petitions from tlie citie of London [etc.]. By John Pym. Two orders of the House [of Commons]. The one, containing the thankes of the house, to those of Hertfordshire. The other, for pimishing of those who printed a false copie of that petition. 1641. M'. Whites speech in Parliament concern- ing the triall of the xii. bishops, 1641. n.d. Speech : in the Parliament, 4 lanuary, 1641 by M'. Hampden, Burgesse for Bucking- ham. Concerning the accusation of high treason, preferred by Iris Majesty, against himselfe, the Lord Kimbolton [etc.] 1641. Speech in parliament by Denzill Hollis. In answer to the seven articles of high treason, exhibited by his Maiesty against himselfe, M». Pym and the rest. 1641. Master Strowd his speech in parhament in reply to the articles of high treason against himselfe, the Lord Kimbolton [etc.] 1642. Speech in the House of Peeres, by the Earle of Monmouth. Upon the present distrac- tions, and Ins Majesties removall from White-hall. 1641. Sir Phillip Stapleton his speech in Parlia- ment, concerning the accusation of the Lord Digby and Uolonell Lunsford of high treason. 1641. Master Glynn his speech, in Parhament at the committee sitting in Guild-Hall, con- cerning the breaches of the priviledges of parliament, by breaking open the cham- bers of the sixe gentlemen, upon their accusation of high treason 1641. 164" 87 CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. Two speeches In parliament of William, Vicotint Say and Seale, the first upon the bill against bishops power in civill affaires and courts of judicature. The other a declaration of himself touching the Lilurgie, and separalion. 1641. Speech by Sir Nathaniell Coppinger, in Parliament. For the bringing of the Arch-bishop of Canterbury to his long expected tryall. Concerning the expulsion of Piipistg and the correcting of Separa- tists. 1641. Spooeli by Msister I'ym, to the Lords con- cerning an information against the Lord Digby. 1G41. Su])st;inco of a conference at a comraiLtce of botli Houses managed by lohn Pirn, and Oliver Saint-Iohn bis Majesties SoUicitor Generall, on the behalfe of the House of Commons. Concerains? the excluding the thirteene bishops, impeached by the Com- mons, from all votes in Parliament, and , for t he excluding of all the rest , of the bishops, from then- vote in the bill lately sent up to the Lords to take away the bishops votes in parliament, n.p. 1641. Sir Arthur Haslerigg his speech in ParHa- ment. "Whereby, nee cleareth himselfe of the articles of high treason. Kings speech in the House of Lords for the raising of forces to reduce the Irisli rebels to subjection. Letter ycnt by the Lord Chiefe Justices of Ireland to Parliament, concerning their miserable estate in the Coiiiily of Conno; the rebels beingwithin 4 miles of Dublin. Letter from the Major of I'limmenth, discribing the insatiable cruelty of the rebels done to the Protes- tants. 1641. Speech of Master Speaker before his Ma- jestic, and Parliament, after his return from Scotland, upon piissing the bill for tunnage and poundage, also, relating the present distempers of England and Ire- land. 1641. Sir lohn Eliot his speech in Parliament. Desiring an orderlie proceeding in matters of religion. Expressing the misprision and errour, whereby his Majesty is traduced by evill members about him. The great danger oC over- whelming that we were in, by tlie Bishops articles, and their proceed- ings. "With a motion, for laying downe of the grounds, wherein the Arminians and weo differ. 1G41. [No title-page. MJS. Earl of Argyle's speech in the parliament of Scotland being competitor with the Earl of Morton for the chancellorship 13 Sept^ 1641. 1641.] Speech in Parhament. By S^ John "Wray concerning the unlawfulnesso of bishops, and episcopall authoritie. Master Grimston his speech : in Parliament. Concerning troubles abroad, and gree- vances at home. Motion presented to the consideration of the committee of Parliament. Consisting of 18. queres, concernine: the Booke of Com- mon-Prayer. Speech by M'. Pymme. n.p, 1641. Master Pirn his speech in parliament con- cerning the vote of the House of Commons, for his discharge upon the accusation of high treason. 1641. Lord Kimbolton his speech in parliament concerning the articles of high treason exhibited against him. 1641. Sir "William Parkins speech to the House of Commons, concerning church-government, n.p. 1611. . Speech by Lord Lowden. To the Lords, m the upper house of parhament in Seot- CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — coni. land concerning the resLoration of the Electoriall family. 1641, Reasons of tlie House of Commons to stay the Queenes going into Holland : de- livered to I he Lords, at a conference. By John Pyjii. n.p. 1641. Speech by "William Perpoynt, ngainst S"" Robert Berkley, one of the Justices of the Kings Bench, in maintenance of their accusation of high treason. 1641. M''. "Wallers speech in parliament. 1641. M^ Edward Hydes speech at a conference betwe<-'ne both Houses at the transmis- sion of tlic impeachments against the Lord Chiefe Baron Davenport, M"^. Baron Trevor, and M^ Baron "Weston. I6tl, Greeke postscripts of the epistles to Timothy and Titus cleared in parliament. And an occasionall speech touching the bill of Acapitation, or poll-money. By Sir Si- monds D'E'wes. n.p. 1641. Declaration of Colonel Goring to the House of Commons upon his examination con- cerning the late conspiracie against the state and kingdome. n.p. 1641. Answer to the Lord Digbies speech in the House of Commons; to the bill of attain- der of the Earle of Strafford, n.p. Kill. S"^. The. Widdringtous speech at a conference betweene both Houses at iho transmis- sion of the impeachment ugainst Matthew "Wren, Bishop of Ely. 1G41. Mr. Speakers speech, with his iMaiestiea speech to parliament, at the passing of the bill for Tonnage and Poundage, n.p. 1641. M"^. Grimstons speech, in Parliament. lUtl. Lord Digbies speech in the House of Com- mons. To the bill of ;i.ttainder, of the Earle of Strafford, n.p. 1611. Mr. Pymmcs speech in answer to Thomas Lord Strallords defence at the barre. n.p. 1641. Speech of Nathanael Eiennes, in answer to the third speech of Lord George Digby. Concerning Bishops and the citty of Lon- dons petition; both which were made 9 Feb. lei-O. in the House of Commons, n.p. 1641. M'. Speakers speech before the king in par- liament, July 3. 1641. conceniing the pass- ing of 3. bills. Poll-money. Starre-charaber. and High Commission. His Majesties speech to Parliament, at the passing of the two last bills, n.p. 1641. Sir lohn Holland his speech in parliament. Declaring the grievances of this Kingdome, both in Cnurch and Common- wealth, n.p. 1641. Sir Beniamin Rudyerds speech ; concern- ing Bishops Deanes and Chapters. At a committee of the whole house. n.p. 1641 . Speech of M'. John "White, in the Commons Concerning Episcopacy, 1641. Master Pimmes speech to the Lords in Par- liament. 1641. Speeches of S^'. Benjamin Rudyer in parlia- ment, n.p. 1641, Replication of Master Glyn, to the answer of Thomas Earle of Strafford, to the charges against him in parliament by the house of Commons. 1641. Speech of John Pymm. To the Lords, upon the delivery of the articles of the Commons, against "Wilham Laud, Ai-chbishop of Can- terbury, in maintenance of their accusa- tion, of high treason. With the said articles. 1641. Speech of Lord Faulkland, to the Lords, upon the deUvery of the articles of the Commons : against Lord Pinch. 1641. 88 CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. Third speech of Lord George Digby, to the Commons, concerning Bishops, and the Citie petition, n.p. 1640, Speech before the Lords in Ireland, by Cap- taine Audley Mervin March*. 1640, At the impeachment of Sir Hichard Bolton, L. Chancellour ; lohn L. Bishop of Derry . . , of high-treason. By the Commons : with the articles against them. And a schedule of those grievances of that king- dome, which were voted in the Lords house, this 18 Pebruary, 1640. n,p, 1641, Speeches by Sir lohn Wray, to the Com- mons. 1. Against Thomas Earle of Straf- ford, and the Bishop of Canterbury [Laud] , 2, Motion for the taking of an oath to maintaine the religion and vowea estab- lished, 3, Against the oath and canons made by the assembly at the last Convo* cation. 1641. Two speeches, by S', Thomas Wentworth : now Earle of Strafford, in the Parhament at "Westminster, 1G28, The one concerning the liberty of the subject. The other the priviledge of Parliament, n.p. 1641, Two speeches in the Lords, by Viscount Newarke, Concerning the right of Bishops to sit in Parliament, About the lawfulnes and conveniency of their intermeddling in temporall affaires, 1641. Speeches of Lord Digby in parliament, con- cerning grievances, and the trienniall parliament, n.p. 1641. Lord Pinch his speech in the Commons, 21 December, 1641. Hee being then Lord- Keeper. n,p. 1641. M'. Maynards speech in parliament in reply upon the Earle of Straffords answer to his articles at the barre. n.p. 1641. M'. Bagshaw's speech in parliament Feb- ruary 9, 1640. Concerning episcopacy and the London petition. 1641. Sir Thomas Eoe his speech in parliament (DupUcate). 1641. Lord Andevers two speeches : the one con- cerning the pacification the 6'^ of March. The other the Starre-chamber. n.p, 1641. Speech by Denael Hollis concerning Sir Eandol Crew, 1641, M' Grymstons speech in parliament upon the accusation and impeachment of Wil- liam Laud Arch-Bishop of Canterbury, upon liigh treason, n.p. 1641. Speech of Master Plydell : concerning the Church, Pebr. 8. 1641. Speech of 'William Thomas in Parliament May, 1641. The actions of Bishops in par- liam< nt, from 1116. to 1641. 1641, Thomas Pury alderman of Glocester his speech, upon that clause of the bill against episcopacy, the which concernes Deanes [etc], at a committee of the whole House n,p, 1641. Sir John Evelyn his report from the Com- mittee, appointed to consider of the print- ing of the Lord Digbyos speech concerning fte bill of attainder of the Earl of Strat- ford, n.p, 1641. Two speeches spoken at the Councell-table at Oxford. By John Earle of BristoU in favour of the continuation of the present warre. By Edward Earle of Dorset, for a speedy accomodation betwixt his Ma- jestic, and his Parliament. Oxford printed London reprinted, 1642. * New propositions. Propounded by the Earle of Pombrooke. Earle of Northumberland Earle of Essex, And Earle of Holland, To' the Lord Major in the behalfe of all the Commons in England, Numbers of horse that they have under writ. Substance of a letter from Holland, Declaration from CHARLES I., AND THE CIVIL WAR — cont. Parliament, concerning the ordering of the Militia, 1642, Sir lohn Culpeper his speech in Parliament. Concerning the grievances of the church and common-wealth, n.p. 1641. Answer of Sir Edward Herbert, his Majes- ties Attorney Generall, to the impeach- ment exlubited against him by the Com- mons. 1642. Propositions presented from the Commons to the Lords by Master Pym, at a confer- ence of both Houses. Concerning the causes and remedies of division bfftwixt the king and his subjects. 1642. Speech in the Commons, by Sir Benjamin Eiudyard. n.p. 1642. Letter by Captaine 'Wingate, now prisoner in Ludlow, taken by the malignant partie, in the late battaile fought at Worcester setting forth the cruelties towards him with his resolution to die in the Parlia- ments cause. Kings speech at Shrews- bury, to the gentry and commons of Sallop. 1642. Letter from Lord Leicester, to the Earle of Northumberland declaring the true causes of his long stay at Court, and with what earnest desires he continually pressed Ids Majesty to assigne his dispatch, which he denied to grant. Also how His Majesty took away the horses bought by the parlia- ment tor the service of Ireland, and im- ployed them to his owne use. 1642. Two letters from Amsterdam : read in Parliament discovering what courses are there taken for the raising of ammunition to bee sent to the north, n.p. 1642. Lord ■Willoughby of Parham, his letter to an honorable member of parliament. His Majesties letterto Lord Willoughby. Lord Willoughby his answer. Message of the Lords to the Commons upon the said letters. Lord Warwicks letter to the Earle of Hol- land. Declaration of the officers in Essex, to the Earle of Warwick, Lord Lieutenant. Approbation of both Houses concerning the same. n.p. n.d. Declaration of all the passages at the taking of Portsmouth: with the articles agreed upon between the committee and Colonell Goring. 1642. Speech of Denzell Holies. Delivered at the Lords barr. Upon the impeachment of the Earles of North-hampton, Devon-shire, Monmouth, and Dover [etc.], for their contempt in departing from the parliament, and not returning upon summons. 1642. CHARLES I. AND (SCOTLAND). [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. CIVIL WAR 1598 Uugirding of the Scottish Armour : or, an answer to the informations for defensive armes against the Kings Majestic, which were drawn up at Edinburgh, by the Covenanters and pressed upon the people. By John Corbet, Dublin, 1639. His Majesties proclamation in Scotland: with an explanation of the meaning of the oath and covenant. By the Lord Mar- quesse [of Hamilton], 1639. " Explanation " a separate tract. [No title-page. Seaven irrefragable proposi- tions concerning Oaths and Covenants.] Signed " J. E." Epistle congralulatorie of Lysimachus Nicanor to the Covenantors in Scotland, n.p. 1640. " By M'. Corbott." MS. on title. 89 CHARLES I., AND CIVIL WAR (SCOTLAND)— con*. Demands and behaviour of the rebels of Scotland. ICIO. Charge of the Scottish Commissioners against Canterburie and the Licuctcnant of Ire- land. Their demand concerning the sixt article of the Treaty. Parliaments resolu- tion about the proportion of the Scottish charges, and the Scottish Commissioners thankful! acceptance thereof. 1641. Confession of Faith of the Kirk of Scotland ; with the bond or covenant subscribed unto by the whole Kingdome. 1641. Recantation and submission of two ancient Prelates, of Scotland [Alexander Lindsay, Bishop of Dunkell, George G-rahame, Bishop of Orknay] sent to the Generall Assemblie. Act of the Asserablie, con- demning episcopacy, n.p. 1641, Declaration of the resolutions of our brethren in Scotland for the peace and safety of both kingdomes. "Whereby, the reader may observe how the present condition of this kingdome runs paralell with theirs then. God grant us now the hke courage not to betray our King and Parliament. Printed in Scotland, reprinted at London, 1642. Petition of the nobihtie of Scotland, to the Privie Counc«ll. 1642. Two Petitions, by noblemen of Scotland. To the Commissioners for the conaerration of peace betweene the two kingdomes. For pevention [sic') of mis-prisions that might arise by printing his Majesties Letter, to his Privie Counsell of Scotland, concern- ing tlie ParUament of England. [Date obliterated in ink ; in HIS. " January 1643."] Eelation of the late proceedings of the Scottish Army, sent from the Lord Gene- rall Lesley's quarters before Newcastle 8 February 1643. Letter from the Com- mittees of both Kingdomes to the Mayor, Aldermen [etc.] of Newcastle ; and their answer. 1643. Ifum. 7. Extract of letters, dated Edenburgh 14, 16, and 17. of April. 1644. Letter from the Lords at Oxford, to the Privie Coun- sell of Scotland, and the Conservarors [sic] of peace between both kingdomes : and the itnswer thereunto. Letter from the Scottish armie near "York. 16-W. Intelligence from the south borders of Scot- land . Written from Edenburgh, Aprill 24. 1644. Wherein is certified, the retreat of the Oxford Lords, with the Forces of Westmorland and Cumberland back to Carlile. Also that the new lea,vied Forces there are come to Douglas. Kelation of the valiant act of a noble wife, in taking of a Cavalier. 1644. Declaration of Scotland, for information and satisfaction to their brethi-en of England, concerning the present expedition into England. Printed at Edinburgh, reprinted at London, 1644. Extract of letters from Scotland : concern- ing the defeat to the rebels forces under the command of James Ghrame, Earl of Montrosse, at Dundy by the army ol the Parliament of Scotland, under the con- duct of Lieutennnt-Gcnerall Bayhe, and Generall-Major Urry. 1615. Papers presented unto Parliament by the Commissioners of Scotland since May last, 1645. 1645. Vietorie in Scotland obtained over Mont- rosse and the rebels there, by the forces under Lieulenant-Generall David Lesley. List of the chiefe men of note taken pri- soners and kild. Letter from Master Balsame Minister at Berwick concermng the said victory. 164.'). CHARLES I., AND CIVIL WAR (SCOTLAND)— CT««. Papers of the Commissioners of Scotland' given in to Parliament, concerning the propositions of Peace. 1646. Declaration imblished in the Scots army. Declaration and orders from the Estates of Scotland concerning the ICing, and those tliat repaire to him. Heads of other papers from Newcastle, concerning the manner of His Mai'esties entertainment there, and the posture of the said garrison upon his eomming thither. Two victories against the enemy in Scotland. Two of Colkittoths brothers slaine. 1646. Scotch souldiers speech concerning the Kings Coronation-oath. n.p. 1647. Declaration of the Lords and Commons, concerning the papers of the Scots Com- missioners and concerning the proceedings of the said Commissioners in the Isle of Wight. 1647. Answer of the Commissioners of Scotland, to Parliament, upon the new propositions of peace, and the foure bills to be sent to his Majestie. 1647. Declaration of the Generall Assembly of the Church of Scotland, to their brethren of England. 1647. Letter from Edinburgh, concerning the difference of the proceedings of the well- affected in Scotland from the proceedings of the army in England. IfriS. Declaration of the Parliament of Scotland, concerning their resolutions for religion. King and Kingdoms, in pursuance of the ends of the Covenant. Edenburgh, re- printed at London, 1618. Declaration and exhortation of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland to their brethren of England. Declaration of the Assembly concerning especially the unlawfuU ingagement in this warre. Papers of the Committee of Estates, and the answers and representations of the Assembly. 1648. (Two copies.) Letters between the Commissioners of the Parliament of England, and the parlia- ment and committee ol estates of Scotland, from February 10. 16-47. until July 8. 1646. lUtS. Seven propositions from the Parliament of Scotland to the Parliament of England ; concerning the Kings Majesty, and the citizens of London. Brought by Lieutenant Colonell Marshall, and presented to the House of Commons, May 3. 1648. His speech. And the proceedings of both Houses thereupon. Letter from the Lord Generall to the House of Commons, concerning the citizens of London, and their petition. 1648. Peoples eccho to the Parhaments declara- tions, concerning a personall treaty with the King. 1648. Letter from the House of Commons, to the General Assembly of the Church of Scot- land at Edenburgh, containing a narrative of the proceedings of the parliament of England in the work of reformation, and of their endeavors for peace, and for pre- servation of the tinion. 1648. Acknowledgment of publicksina, and breaches of the Covenant, and engagement to all the duties contained therein. Two Acts of the Commission of the fueral Assembly for renewing the Solemn League and Cove- nant. Their advice to Presbyteries for celebrating the Communion. Act of the Committee of Estates for renewing the League and Covenant. Edenburgh printed, reprinted London, 1648. 90 CHARLES I., AND CIVIL WAR (SCOTLAND)— conf. Proceedings of the Commissioners of the Church and Kingdome of Scotland, with his Majestie at the Hague. And the papers interchanged betwixt his Majestie and them. Edinburgh, printed, 1649. Re- printed London, n.d. [Half Title.] Remonstrance of the Assem- blie of Scotland arraigned. 1660. Letters from Scotland relating the proceed- ings of the Army there. Read in Parlia- ment. 16(6)0. Lord Gen. Cromwel's letter : with a narra- tive of the proceedings of the English army in Scotland, and a declaration of the General Assembly, touching the dis- owning their King. 1650. CHARLES I., CIVIL WAR, AND COMMONWEALTH. [Tracts.] 5 vol. v.d. 4°. L^gg Vol 1. A word for the Annie. And two words to the Kingdome. By Hugh Peters. 1617. The army brought to the barre. n.p. 1647. A religious retreat sounded to a religious army. 1647. Case of the Armie truly stated, together with the miscliiefes and dangers that are im- minent, and some suitable remedies. As it was presented by M'. Edmond Bear, and M'. "William Russell ; October 16. 1647. unto Sir Thomas Fairfax. Enclosed in a letter from the agents [of five regi- ments J : also his answer. 1647. Letter concerning the souldiers and their orders about the Commissioners sent fTom the Parliament, to treat with the Kings Majesty. And the souldiers resolutions therin. letter concerning the levying of 91 regiaments of horse and foot in Scot- Lind. List of the Lords, and other Col- lonels of the said regiaments. Declaration of the Committee of Scotland. 1648. Declaration of the General Council of the officers of the Army : agreed upon at Wal- lingtord-house, 27* Ootob. 1669. 1669. Souldiers Accompt or. Tables shemng the personall allowance of pay to all officers and Souldiers belonging to an anny, either foot or horse. Also, to all officers and attendants on a Train of Artillerie. Charge of pay to 40000. foot, and K'OOO. Horse. 1647. " To the Reader " signed T. E. MS. leaf at the beginning, Nov. 1705, and MS. notes. [No title-page. Animadversions animad- verted. Or a reply to the late animadver- sions upon those notes which a late obser- vator pubhshed upon the seven doctrines and positions wluch the King by way of recapitulation layes open so offlensive.] [By Henry Parker.] Belgick Pismire. 1622. [By T. Soot], (Duplicate.) Eeasous which compelled the States of Bo- hemia to reject the Archiduke Ferdinnnd &c. & inforced them to elect a new King. Proposition made uppon the first motion of the cliofic [st'cl of th' Elector Pulatine to be King of Bohemia, by the States of that Kingdome 16 August (1619). Trans- lated out of the frcuch copies. Dort, u.d. To the Commons assembled in Parliament ; an appeal in llie humble claim of justice against Tho. Lord Fairfax, General of tho English Army. By Captain William Bray. On the behalf of himself, and all tho officers and souldiers. 1619. CHARLES I., CIVIL WAR, AND COMMONWEALTH— con?. Speech, of Phillip Herbert, late Earl of Pem- broke. At his admittance (as a member) into the House of Commons, April 16. 1649. Taken verbatim by Michael Oldis- worth. n.p. 1649. In pencil on title " by Samuel Butler." The Beacon flameing or a justification of the firing of the Beacon, by way of ani- madversion upon the book entituled the Beacon's Quenched, subscribed by Col. Pride, &o. [By P. Oheynell.] 1662. " To the Reader " is signed by " Luke Pawne," and others. Reasons against Committees forcing the Parhameuts Ministers to pay fifth parts to sequestred Ministers wives and children. Complaints of Ministers, against the hard dealings of some Committees about fifth parts, and juries. 1664. Signed at the end " R. Williamson." True state of the case of the Common- wealth in reference to the late established fovernment by a Lord Protector, and a 'arlament. 1654. Honest Design : or, the true Common- wealths-man ; offering a word in this juncture of time, in order to a settlement. 1659. [No title-page. A moderate inspection into the corruption of the pratique part of the common Law of England. By Ja. Prese.] Vol. 2. Petition, tendered by M'. (John) Dury, to Gustavus, King of Sweden, 1628. Translated out of French. 1641. Paged 39^9. At the end (p. 45) is "An extract, out of the Nationall Synode, held by the churches of France, at Charenton, in September, 1631." Advice of the Assembly of Divines, now sit- ting at Westminster ; concerning a larger Catechism : presented to Parliament. London printed: Edinburgh re-printed, 1647. Proj)osals of sundr^v divines within this kingdome, concerning the Engagement in- tended to be imposed on them for their subscriptions. 1649. Evaporation of the apple of Palaestine : that is, the sifting of the answeres and rescripts, lately given, in the cause of the restitution of the Palatinate. Briefe de- monstration of the nullities of the clandes- tine dispcsitions, by which, the Electour- ship and the Palatinate hath bcene trans- ferred on the house of Bavaria. Ti^ns- lated out of Latine. 1637. " Epistle Dedicatory " signed " Vol- radus a Trubach." Corruption and deficiency of tho Lawes of England soberly discovered : By John Warr. 1649. Two charges dehvered by T. E., Justice of the Peace for Suttolke. The one at Easter Quarter-sessions, at Ipswich : April 6, 1649. The other upon the first pubhck sil- ting upon the commission of sewers at Woodbridge Sept. 6. 1649. Wlierein ap- peares the necessity of government and the duty and great trust in those in publique imployment not to desert the present government. 1660. Animadversions on a hook, called, a Plea for Non-Soribers. By Bphraim Elcock. 1651. Resolving of conscience, upon this question. Whether upon such a supposition or case, as is now usually made (the King will not discharge his trust but is bent or seduced to subvert religion, laws, and liberties) subjects may take arms and resist? and whether that case be nowf By Henry 91 CHARLES I., CIVIL WAR, AND COMMONWEALTH— coH<. Fei-nM [att. Bii. or Chester], Cambridge printed, Lcinnon reprinted ^{sicjei'i. (i.e.lMi). KuTixSuKao-nis : Might overcoming ri/^ht. Or a oleer anawer to John Goodwin's Might and riglit well met. By John Geree. Kit!). CoUonel Grey's Portmanteau opened; his sealed, mis-diroeted and returned letter discovered by aoopie thereof found among his other papers. I(io0. Speech of M', James Guthrey late minister oE Sterling immediately Ijoiore his execu- tion, June 1. 1661, at JEdinbrough. St'nt Irom Edenburgh, 1661, Vol, .S. Libertie of the subject ; against the pretended power of impositions. By Wil- liam Halcowill. 1641. 141-2 mutilated. Nahash Eedivivus in a letter from the Par- liament of Scotland, directed to W. Len- thal. Speaker. Examined and answered, by John Harrison. 1649. Hunting of the foxes from New-Mai'ket and Triploe-hcatbs to Whitehall, by five small beagles (latecftheArmic.) orthegrandie- deoeivers unmasked. By Uobert Ward, Thomas Watson, Simon Graunt, George Jellis, and William Sawyer, late members of the Army. The Hyrolings reward. Eolation of some difference between M'. William Jenkyns, and some others. All faithfully bid down byE. T. 1652. Sir Henry Hide's Speech on the SoaHold, immediately before his execution before the Exchange, 4 March, 1650. Taken in short-hand, by John Hinde. .1661). [No title-page. Speech and prayer of Dr. John Hewyit. Upon the scaffold on Towev-hill, immediately before his execu- tion, Juno S. 1658.] Und. 1658. Imperfect. Impropriations purchased by the Commis- sioners sitting at Goldsmiths-hall, for compositions with delinquents. Li.st of the names of' such persons from whom they have purchased any revenue for augmentation of the maintenance of preaching ministers. lOlS. The Kingdomes Case : or, the question re- solved. Whether the Kings subjects of this realm of England may or ought to ayd and assist each other, in repressing the persons now assembled together, under the name of the Kings Army. 1643. (2 copies.) Petition by n disaffected party in this Citie of London, intended by tliem to be pre- sented to the House of Commons. 1643. FNo title-page. The Lord Mayors (Thomas Adams) fare-well, from his clllce of Mayoraltie, Wliich was sent to him m a letter by one of those who are called Anabaptists (Dated 20. September 164G).] Petition of the Lord Major [etc.] of the City of London to Parliament. With their an- swer, n.p. [London] 1647. Jlr. rChristopher] Love's Case. Narrative of tiio late dn.ngerous design against the Stale. Speech and Prayer on the scaffold on Towerliil, August 22.1651. Printed by an exact copy, taken m shoro-hand by John Hinde. 1651. Petition ot many inhabitants in and about ilic City ot London. Presented to the Parliament by Sam. Moyor and others, May 12. 1680. Answer ot the Parliament. 1651) CHARLES I., CIVIL WAR, AND COMMONWEALTH— coK(. Vol. 4. The my8tcri(e) of iniquity ; vet working in England,Seotland,and Ireland, for the destruction of religion traly Pro- testant. Discovered especially by tlie hito cessation in Ireland. [By B. Bowles.] 1613. Eeply to a Declaration printed and pub- lished, under his Majesties name, Decem- ber, 8. Intended against an ordinance of Parliament tor assessing. 1613. Numb. 9. The Man in the Moon, discover- ing a world of Knavery under the simue ; both in the parliamenl, the counsell of state, the army, the city and the country. June 6. to June, 13. 1649. pp. 75-82. n.p. n.d. Letter sent to General Monk, to St. Albons 211 January. Ifioo. Signed at end " 11. N." Censure of the Eota upon M' Miltons book, entituled, Tlie ready and easie way to es- tablish a fi-et^ common-wealth. 1666. Signed at end "J. II." [i.e. James Har- rington]. Lawes and ordinances of warre, for the better government of his Maiosties army royall, m the present expedition for the northern parts under the conduct of Thomas Earl of Arundel and Surrey. New- castle, 1639. Propositions of the ambassadours of the Netherlands. Delivered by them in both houses ot thaParhameiit of Englniid, !?. July, 1041.. The translation in English was subseritied W. Borell. John Keode de Eenswoude. Alb. loachimi. 164t. Letter printed at New-Ciistle, July 6, li't7. Sent from the Adjutators of the army under Sir Thomiia I'Viiifiix, unto their fellow-souldiers in the K:uTisons of New- castle and Tinmouth. u.d. Logical demonstration of the lawfulness of subscribing the new engagement. 1650. Three intercepted letters. The one from Charles Stuart, son to the late King (to the Marques of Ormond). The other two from the Lord Digby and Daniel Monro to the Earle [Marques] ot Ormond. Wherein appeares the streit intelligence, and neer conjunction, ns of the late King, so now ot his son with the Irish rebells. 1649. Kings letter to the Blarquesse of Ormonde : and the Marquesse of Ormonds letter to Monroe. 16 10. A hloudy plot, brought to light by Gods providence : wherein was intended, a great insurrection, and rising ot the Papists in this Kingdome, Oetoher 18. 1641. One M"". Beale over-hearing their discourse, here related. Number, and names of some Papists that are committed about the said plot : and why ? Speech by Sir Robert Philips in parUament. n.p. 1641. Vindication of Psalme 105. 16. fi'om some false flosses lately obtruded on it by Eoyalhsts. n.p. 1642. Eevindicaiion of Psalme 105. 15 from some false irlnsses, obtruded upon it by Ana- baptists. Being a reply. (Universitie ot Cambridge) 1643. Plaine English : or, a discourse concerning tlie accommodation, the ai-mie, the asso- eialion. [By B. Bowles.] n.p. 1013. ©piji/cofita. The Churches lamentation for the good man his losse : a sermon lo ]?arliainent, and tlie As.seiiibly of Divines, at the funerall of Jnbn Pyiii. Preached in the Abbev-Chureh of ^^'eslminstcr. By Stephen Marshall. 1641. Lelli>rs from Paris, received 16. Jan. 16iS. LUrccted to sovei-all committees and mem- bers of Parliament, W4B. 92 CHARLES I., CIVIL WAR, AND COMMONWEALTH— cow^ Plain dealing : or, the countrymans doleful complaint and faithful -watchword to the Statesmen of the times, whether in the parliament or army. By Edward Harri- son. 1640. Lawfulnes of obeying the present Govern- ment. [By P. Rous.] 1649. A pack of old Puritans maintaining the un- lawfulness and inexpediency of subscribing the new engagement. With M'^. John Bury's considerations and just reproposals concerning it. 1650. Remonstrance of the Presbyterians, to His Majesties loyal subjects. As it was repre- sented on Wednesday last, to the several congregationsj in the City of London being tbe day appointed for a general fast. 1661. A Word to purpose : or, a Parthian dart shot back to 1642, and from thence to 1669. Now sticks fast in two substantial queries, I. Concerning the legality of the second meeting of some of the Long-Parliament- iMembeis. Also, a fools bolt shot into A\'^aningford House concerning a free slate. Second impression, n.p. 1659. "N'ol. 5. Remonstrance of the state of the kingdom. 1641. Apparently imperfect. Answer without a question : or, the late schismatical petition for a diabolicall tole- ration of severall religions expounded. Being presented to the Juncto at West- minster, Au^st 16. 1646. By Colonel Pride, and Lieutenant Colonel GofEe, and others. Observations upon the mistery of their iniquity; and the Juncto's answer thereto. 1649. Plain English to the parliament and army, and to the rest of the people. By John Redingstone. 1649. Ratio constitutae nuper Reipub. Angliae, Scotiae, & Hibemiae, [etc.] penes Dom. Protectorem & Parlamentum. Ex Anglico in Latinura versa. 1654. Letter read in the House of Commons : sent from Master Sampford, sherifEe of the countie of Somerset, and the Committee there, of their weekly proceedings, in searching the recusants houses. Number of such ammunition as was taken in their houses, and sent to the Castle at Taunton. 16i2. Relation of all the proceedings of the Mar- quesse Hartford, Lord Paulet, and the rest of the cavelleers that were with them in "SVuls. Valiant resolution and beha- viour of the trained-bands and other in- habitants of those parts, for the defence of themselves, the filing and Parliament. What helpe was sent from Bristoll to their ayd. In a letter from the Committee in Suramersetshire to Parliament. 1642. Signed " John Ashe." Justice upon the armie remonstrance. Or a rebuke of that evill spirit that leads thcra in their counsels and actions. By William Sedgwick. 1649. Solemn leai^ue and covenant, for reforma- tion, and defence of religion, the honour :ind happinesse of the King, and the peace :md safely of England, Scotland, and ire- land. Also, two spcciall orders : I. Con- cerning the taking of the league and covenant in all churches and chappcls in London and Westminster. IL Concern- ing divers Lords and others, that are de- sirous to meet at Margarets- Westminstor, and to take the said League. 1643. TTi'.ason discovered : or tlu' impeachment of Daniel ONeale Sergeant Major, one of the commanders in the last expedition against Scotland, and now prisoner in the Gate- house. ]i'i41. CHARLES I., CIVIL WAR, AND COMMONWEALTH— con^ [No title-page. Englands, freedome, soul- diers rights : vindicated against those new tyrants at Windsore, whiwi would destroy both under the pretence of marshall law. Or, the just declaration of William Thomp- son, unjustly imprisoned at Windsore 14. December. 1647. His letter to the Generall [Fairfax]. Petition of the rest of his fellow-prisoners to his Excellency.] Unitie, truth and reason. Presented peti- tion-wise to the Commons House of Par- liament. 1641. Vox Populi, Or Newes from Spayne, which may sen'e to forewarn both England and the United Provinces how farre to trust to Spanish pretences, n.p. 1620. View of the present condition of England, Scotland, and Ireland. Manifested in a declaration of both Houses of Parliament to the Generall Assembly in Scotland. 1642. Corda Anghae : or, the generall expressions of the land : Moving XXV. particulars to the Parliament. That the Church of England may become a glorious Church of God. n.p. 1641. "By Henry Walker.'' 3fS. on title- page. Articles or Charge exhibited in Parliament against Sir Francis Windebanck, Secre- tary of State to his Majesty, whereunto is annexed the letter that he sent to the Lord Chamberlaine, from Callis, Ian : 11. 1640. n.p. 1641. Ramus Olivae ; or, an humble motion for peace : presented to his Maiestie, and the Parliament. Oxford, 1642. Humble request, to the Ministers of both Universities, and to all lawyers in every Inns-a-Court. To consider of the Scrip- tures and points of law herein mentioned, and to give a rational and Christian an- swer, whereby the difference may be com- posed in peace, between the poor men of England and the lords of mannours. By Gerard Winstanley. 1650. Zeal examined : or, a discoiu'se for liberty of Conscience in matters of religion. 1652. CHARLES II., KING OF ENGLAND. Declaration to all his Majesties subjects, for the setling of Church- Government, and his resolution touching the liberty of tender consciences, the signing of infants with the sign of the Cross ; the bowing to the name of Jesus ; the use of the Surplice . . . Also, that no Bishop shall ordain . . . ■without the advice and assistance of the Presbyters .4''. 1 660. 1 600 Eoyal Oake. Or, an historical descrip- tion of the royal progress, wonderful travels, miraculous escapes, and strange accidents of . . Charles the II. . . . By John Danvers. 4". 1660. 1601 [Tracts,] 4'^. etc. London and Cam- bridge. Various dates. 1602 King Charles II. his declaration to all his loving subjects of the Kingdorae of Eng- land. Dated from Breda ^\ Aprill 1660. With his letter ot the same date: to L*^ Gen. Monck. 1660. [No t.p. His Majesties gi-acious speech to Parliament, Febr. 5. 1672. (And) Lord Chancellor's speech. Lord Chancellor's speech, Feb. 4. 1672. Sir Job Charlton's speech. February r>, 1672. Lord Chancel- 93 CHARLES II., KING OF ENGLAND — cont. lor's speech Feb. 5. 1672. M'. Speaker's speech, Feb. 5. 1672. Lord Chiincellor's speech, Feb. 5. 1672.] End. 1672. His Majesties speech with the Lord Clian- cellors, to Parhament, March 1675. 167f . [No t.p. His Majesties letter to his parlia- ment of Scotland, May 23. 1672. Answer o£ the parliament of Scotland. Speech of the Duke of Lauderdaile June 12. 1672. First two mutilated, third imperfect. Character of Charles II"". By Edward Terry. 1660. Character of Charles II. "With a short ac- count of his being po.vson'd. Written by a person of honour. With an introduction exhibiting the diUerent chai^acters given him. By another hand. 1696. Sermon preached before the King at New- market October 8. 1671. By Hon. John North. Cambridge, 1671. Treaty marine between Charles II. and the States General of the United Netherlands concluded at London 1. December 1674. T.p. mutilated at foot. Treaty marine between Charles II. and Lewis XIV. Concluded at St. Germains in Laye, 24 February 167?. 1677. CHARLES V. Correspondence of the Emperor Charles V. and his ambassadors at the Courts of England and France . . . with a con- necting nan-ative and biographical notices of the Emperor, and of some of the most distinguished officers of his army and household ; together with the Emperor's Itinerary from 1519-1551, edited by Wil- liam Bradford. (Portraits.) 8°. 1850. 1603 CHARM. The Charm a book for boys and girls. . . . engravings. 8°. 1853. 1604 CHASLES (VICTOR EUPHEMION PHILARETE). Le-dix huitifeme Siecle en Angleterre. Etudes Politiques. Le comte de Shafts- bury. Sir William Temple. Guillaume III et la Revolution de 1688. Eobert Walpole. Edmond Burke. Franklin — Fielding — Richardson. Orateurs Irian- dais. (Vol. II.) Etudes humoristiques. Les Exceutriques — Les Humoristes — Psalma- nazar — Cruden— Myst&res de Londres au XVIIP siecle, etc. — Daniel De Foe — Le dernier des humoristes (Charles Lamb) (Chesterfield) — Sophie Dorothee — Lady Esther Stanhope. 8°. Paris, 1846. 1605 CHASSEPOL (— DE-l. History of the Grand Visiers, Mahomet, and Aehmet Coprogli, of the three last Grand Signiors . . . Besides parti- culars of the wars of Dalmatia, Transyl- vania, Hungary, Candia, and Poland. Englished by John Evelyn, junior. (Frontispiece). 12°. 1677. 1606 "Epistle dedicatory" signed "De Chasse- pol." CHASSIN (CHARLES LOUIS). La Ilongrie son genie et aa mission etude historique suivie de Jean de llun- yad reoit du X7« siecle. 8°. Paris, 1856. 1006* CHATEAUBRIAND (FRAN9OIS RENE, VICOMTE DE). Beauties of Christianity. Translate,! from the French, by Frederic Shoberl. With a preface and notes, by Rev. Henry Kett. 3 vol. 8°. 1813. 16u7 Historical, political, and moral c>.say on Revolutions, ancient and modern. 8". 1815. 1C08 Last of the Abencerages. Translated . . . by Isabel Hill. 12°. 1850. 160U Memoirs from his birth in 1768, till his return to France in 1800. Written by himself. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. (Two copies.) lOlU Sketches of English literature ; with considerations on the spirit of the times, men, and revolutions. 2 vol. 8°. IS.OU. (Two copies.) 1611 N°. 2. in one vol. Travels in America and Italy. 2 vol. 8°. 1828. 1012 Travels in Greece, Palestine, Egypt, and Barbary, during 1806-7. Translated . . by Frederic Shoberl. 2 vol. 8°. 18U- 12. 1613 CHATHAM (WILLIAM PITT, 1st EARL OF). Correspondence. Edited hy the Execu- tors [W. S. Taylor and Capt. J. II. Pringle] of his sou, John, V,ax\ of Chat- ham . . . 4 vol. 8°. 1838-40. 1614 CHATTERTON (THOMAS). Poetical Works with notices of his life, history of the Rowley Controversy, a selection of his letters, aud notes . . 2 vol. 12°. Cambridge, [L'.S.] 1842. 1615 CHATTO (WILLIAM ANDREW). Facts and speculations on the origin and history of Playing Cards. 8°. 1848. 1616 CHAUCER (GEOFFREY;. Poetical Works. With an essay on his language and versification, and an intro- ductory discourse; together with notes aud a' glossary. By Thomas Tyrwhitt. (Portrait.) 8°. 1843. 1617 The Poems, modernized. (By R- H. Home, W. Wordsworth, T. Powell, Leigh Hunt, R. Bell, E. B. Barrett [aft. Mis. Browning], etc. 12°. 1841. 1018 With hfe by Professor Sohmitz. Canterbury Tales . . . Essay upon his language and versification ; introductory discourse ; and notes. (By Thomas Tyrwhitt). 4 vol. (aud Vol. V. Glossary). (Portrait.) 8°. 1775-8. 1619 94 CHAUCER (GEOFFREY)— con/. [Another edition.] With Memoir and critical dissertation, hy Eev. George Gil- fillan. 3 vol. 8°. Edinhurgh, 1860. 1620 Canterbury Tales, from Chaucer. By John Saunders. 2 vol. 12°. 1845-7. 1621 liiehes of Chaucer : in which his im- purities have been expunged ; his spelling modernised ; his rhythm accentuated, and his obsolete terms explained. Also have been added a few explanatory notes, and a new memoir . . . By Charles Cowden Clarke. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1835. 1622 Selections from the Poetical Works of G. Chaucer: with a concise life of that poet, and remarks illustrative of his genius. By Charles D. Deshler. 8°. 1847. 1623 CHAUCER SOCIETY. Publications of the Chaucer Society. 4 vol. (Portrait.) S". 1868-9 and n.d. 1624 1st Series. I. Six-text print of Canterbury Tales in parallel columns from the foUow- inK MSS : 1. Ellesmere. 2. Hengwrtl54. 3. Cambridge Univ. Libr. Eg. 4. 27. 4. Corpus Christi Coll., Oxford. 5. Petworth. G. Lansdowne 851. Edited by Prederick J. Furnivall. Part I. Prologue and Knight's Tale. (Two copies.) 2nd Series. I. Early English Pronuncia- tion, with especial reference to Shakspere and Chaucer, containing an investigation of the correspondence of writing with speech in England from the Anglosaxon period to the present day, preceded by a systematic notation of all spoken sounds hy means of the ordinary printing types, liicluding a re-arrangement of Prof. P. J. Ciiiid's Memoirs on the lai^uagc of Oliaucer and Gower . . . Part I. On the Pronunciation of the XIV'\ XYI"', XVII"', and XVIII* Centuries. By Alexander J. Ellis. 2nd Series. II. Essays on Chaucer, his ■Words and "Works. P.art I. I. Eljert's Heview of Sandras's Etude Sur Chaucer, consid6r(5 comme imitateur des Trouveres : translated by J. "W. van Rees Hoets and revised by the Author. II. Thirteenth- century Latin treatise on the Chilindre . . . edited, witli a translation, by Edmund Brock . . . 2nd Series. III. Temporary preface to the Six-text edition of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales Part I, attempting to show the true order of the Tales, and the days and stages of the pilgrimage, etc. By P. J. Furni- vall. CHAUDON ( ). Historical and critical memoirs of the Life and writings of M. De Voltaire : with numerous anecdotes . . . relative to the literati of France. Particularly the Life of J. B. Rousseau, as written by Voltnire ; and the history of the famous libellous couplets. From the French. 8". 1786. 1625 CHEDWORTH (JOHN HOWE, BARON). Letters to Rev. Thomas Crompton . . . Jan. 1780, to May, 1795. 4°. London, Norwich (printed), 1828. 1626 " The Editor [Eev. T. Crompton] to' Arthur Aikin Esg"." 3fS. note. Notes upon some of the obscure pass- ages in Shakespeare's plays ; with remarks upon the explanations and amendments of the commentators in the editions of 1785, 1790,1793. (Edited by T. Penrice.) 8°. 1805. 1627 " Privately printed," Zowndes. CHEEVER (GEORGE BARRETT) D.D. Defence of Capital Punishment, by G. B. Cheever, and an Essay on the ground and reason of punishment, with special reference to the penalty of death ; by Tayler Lewis. With an appendix, contain- ing a review of Burleigh on the death penalty. 8°. New York, 1846. 1628 CHEEVER (REV. HENRY T.) Life in the Sandwich Islands . . 8°. 1851. 1629 Life and trials of . . . Nathaniel Cheever, M.D. With an introduction by George B. Cheever. 12». 1851. 1630 CHESNEY (GENERAL FRANCIS RAWDON). Expedition for the Survey of the Rivers Euphrates and Tigris, carried on hy order of the British Government in 1835-7 ; preceded by geographical and historical notices of the regions situated between the rivers Nile and Indus. 4 vol. Maps, Charts, Plates, Wood-cuts. Vol. I. II." (and case). 8°. 1850. 1631 CHESTERFIELD (PHILIP DORMER STANHOPE, 4th EARL OF). Letters ; including numerous letters now first published from the original manuscripts. Edited, with notes, by Lord Mahon [aft. Earl Stanhope]. 4 vol. 1. Letters on education. 2. on education ; and characters. 3. 4. Politic.il and Mis- cellaneous. (Portraits.) 8". 1845. 1632 Vol. V, Completing the former edition in four volumes. Miscellanies. (Portrait) 1853. Advice to his Son, on Men and Manners . . . Selection of De La Eochefoucault's Maxims. 12°. Chiswick, 1826. 1633 Characters of eminent personages of his own time . . . never before published. 12°. (London) 1777. 1634 Second edition. 12° 1777. 1635 [No title-patro. Letter humbly ad- dressed to the Earl of Chesterfield. (For- 95 CHESTERFIELD (PHILIP DORMER STANHOPE, 4Tn EARL OF)— cont. trait of Teresia Constautia Phillips.)] 12°. 1636 Signed "T. C. Mmlman." Curious particulars and genuine anec- dotes respecting the late Lord Chester- field and David Hume, with a. parallel be- tween these celebrated personages, and an impartial character of Lord Chesterfield . . . Vindication of the Christian cause and character, occasioned by a recent re- flection thrown upon them, by the Author of the Apology for the life and writings of David Hume. By a friend to religious aud civilliberty. 12°. Dublin, 1777. 1637 CHESTERTON (GEORGE LAVAL). Kevelations of Prison life ; with an en- quiry into prison discipline and secondary punishments. 2 vol. 8°. 1856. 1638 CHETHAM SOCIETY. Ecmains historical and literary con- nected with the Palatine counties of Lancaster and Chester published by the Chetham Society. 112 vol. and Index vol. 4°. Manchester, 1843-1884. 1639 Abbott, EioitABD. I. Journal. II. Tho Trials at Manchester in 1004. Edited by Et. Eev. Alexander Goss, D.D. Alien, 'William (OAEDiifAL). Defence of Sir 'William Stanley's surrender of De- venter January 29, 1686-7. Edited by Thomas Heywood. Amicia. Tracts written in the controversy respecting the legitimacy of Amioia, daughter of Hugh Cyveliok, Earl of Ches- ter. 1673-1679. By Sir Peter Leycester, and Sir Thomas Mainwaring. Edited, with an introduction, by William Beamont 3 vol. ( Portrait ot Maiuwaring.) Abshetob . Journal of Nicholas Assheton ol Downham, in the County of Lancaster, for part of the year 1617, and part of the year lollnxring. Interspersed with notes from the life of his contemporary, John Bruen ot Bruen Stapelford, in the county ot Chester. Edited by Eev. P. E. Eaiues. BooKEE, Rev. John. History of the an- cient chapel of Birch, in Manchester parish, including a sl;etch of the township of Eusholme. Bookee, Eev. John. History ot the an- cient chapels of Didsbury and Ohorlton, m Manchester parish, including sketches of the townships of Didsbury, Withington, Bumage, Heaton Norris,Eeddish, Levens- hulrae, andOhorlton-cnm-Hardy. (Illus- trations). Beeeetoit, Sik William. Travels m Holland the United Provinces England Scotland and Ireland 1634-5. Edited by Edward Hawkins. Byeom, John. Private and literary re- mains. Edited by liiohard Parkinson, D.D. a vol. (each in two parts). (Por- ^^At'^the end of Vol. II, Part II-The Byrom Pedigrees, with illustrative notes, by Eev. F. E. Eaines. Cdanteies. History of the Chantries within the County Palatine of Lancaster, heinir the reports of the Eoyal Commis- rioZ-s of Henry VIII. Edward VI. and CHETHAM SOCIETY-coMi. Queen Mary. Edited by Eev. P. E. Eaines. 2 vol. CnESTEK. Chester's Triumph in liouor of her Prince aa it was performed upon SI. George's Day 1610. in the foresaid citic. Eeprinted from the original edition ol' 1610, with an introduction and nofea. CnETHAM MS. The D' Farmer Chetham MS. Being a commonplace-book in the Chetham Library, Manchester temp. Elizabeth, James I. and Charles I. con- sisting of verse and prose, mostly hitherto unpublished. Edited, with introduction and notes, by Eev. Alexander B. Grosart. Chetham Miscellanies. Chetham Mis- cellanies. Vol. 1. Papers connected with the afiairs of Milton and his family. Epistolary relics of Lancashire and Che- shire Antiquaries. Calendars of the names ot families which entered their several pedigrees in the suc- cessive heraldic visitations of the county palatine of Lancaster. Fragment, illustrative of Sir W". Dug- dale's visitation of Lancashire. Autobiographical ti-acts of D^. John Dee, Warden of the College of Manchester. Vol. 2. Eights and j urisdiction of the County Palatine of Chester, the Earls Palatine, the Chamberlain, and other olficers. The Scottish Field. (A poem on the battle of Flodden.) Examynatyons towcheynge Coknye More, temp. Henry VIII. in a dispute between the Lords of the Manors of Middleton and Eadclyfle. History of the ancient chapel of Denton, in Manchester parish. Letter from John Bradshawe of Gray's Inn to Sir Peter Legh of Lyme. Vol. 3. South Lancashire dialect. Eentale de Cokersand : being the bur- sar's rent roll of the Abbey of Cokersand forlBOl. Names of all the gentlemen of the best calhnge w*"* in the couniie of Lancaster, 1688. Some instructions givon by AVilliam Booth Esquire upon the purchase of War- rington, 1628. Letter from Sir John Scton, Manchester Names of eight hundred inhabitants of Manchester who took the oath of alle- giance to Charles II., in April 1679. Pole Booke for Manchester May y'^ 22'^ 1690. Vol. 4. Some account of General Robert Vciiables, of Antrohns and Wincham, Cheshire. With the autobiographical me- moranda or diary of his widow, Elizabeth Venables. Forme of confession grounded upon the ancient catholiq.ue and apostolique faith. Composed by the honorable ladie the Lady Bridget Bgerton. 1636. Kalender conteyning the names of all such Gent, and ethers as upon her Maty's pryvye scales have paid there money to Sir Hugh Cholraondley Knyghte collect'" of her Hyghnes loane with*" the Countie of Chester. History of Warrington Friary. Vol. 5. Description of the state, civil and ecclesiastical, of the County of Lancaster, about the year 1690, by some of the clergy of the diocese of Chester. Visitation of the diocese of Chester, by John, archbishop of York, held in the Chapter House of the Collegiate and Parish Church of Manchester, 1590, with the arch- bishop's correspondence with the clergy. Letters on the claims of the College of Arms in Lancashire, in the time of James the flrst ; by Leonard Smethley and Eindle Holme, Deputy heralds. 96 CHETHAM SOCIETY— con/. Easter rolls of 'Whalley in 1652 and 1563. Edited by Eev. P. R. Raines. Vol. 6. Eent roll of Sir John Towneley of Towneley, Knight, lor Burnley, Ighten- hill, etc., in the County Palatine of Lan- caster. 1535-6. Autobiography of M'. Langley of Prest- "wich, seventeenth century. Close catalogue of the Rectors of Prest- wioh, from 1316 to 1632. Edited by Eev. P. R. Raines. CoESEE, Ret. Thomas. Collectanea Anglo- Poetica : or, a bibliographical and descrip- tive catalogue of a portion of a collection of early English poetry [his own], with occasional extracts and remarks biogra- phical and critical. 11 vol. FABiifOTOS. The Parington Papers. Shrie- valty of 'Wilham Pfarington ; 1636 : Docu- meiits relating to the Civil "War : and an appendix, containing a collection of letters taken from the Ffarington correspondence between 16<17 and 1688. Edited by Susan Maria ffarington. PisHwicz, Lt.-Oolonei. Henet. History of the parish of Garstang in the County of Lancaster. 2 vol. History of the Parish of Kirkham, iu the County of Lancaster. Puneeal Ceetieicates. Lancashire funeral certificates. Edited by Thomas "William King. With additions by Rev. P. R. Raines. Gasteell, Peancis, Bisnop op Chebtee. Notitia Cestriensis, or historical notices of the diocese of Chester. Now first printed from the original manuscript, witli notes, by Rev. P. R. Raines. Vol. I. Cheshire. Vol. II. (in three parts). Lancashire. Hetwood, Robebt. Observations and instructions divine and morall in verse. Edited by James Crossley. Inquisitions. Abstracts of Inquisitions post mortem, made by Christopher Towne- ley and Roger Dodsworth. Edited by William Langton. 2 vol. Inventoeies. Inventories of goods in the churches and chapels of Lancashire, taken in 1552. Edited by JohnEglington Bailey. Part I.— Salford Hundred. Jacobites. Jacobite Trials at Manchester in 1694. Prom an unpubUshed Manu- script. Edited by WiUiam Beamont. James, Rev. Eiohaed. Iter Lancas- trense ; Poem, written 1636. B^dited, with note;, and an introductory memoir, by Rev. Thomas Corser. Lancashiee. Three Lancashire documents of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, comprising I. The great De Lacy Inquisition, Peb. 16, 1311. II. Survey o£ 1320-1346. III. Custom Roll and reutal of the manor of Aston-under-Lyne, November 11, 1422. Edited by John Harland. Lancashire Lieutenancy under the Tudors and Stuarts. The civil and military government ol the County, as illustrated by a series of royal and other letters ; orders of the Privy Council, the Lord Lieutenant, and other Authorities, &c. Chiefly derived from the Shuttleworth MSS. Edited by John Harland. 2 vol. Tracts relating to miUtary proceedings in Lancashire during the great Civil War, commencing with llie removal, by parlia- ment, of Janu's Lord Strange, afterwards Earl of Derljy,, from his lieuteuancy of Lancashire, and terminating with his execution at Bolton. Edited and illus- trated by George Orraorod. CHETHAM SOCIETY— con/. Discourse of the Warr in Lancashire. Edited by William Beamont (Portrait of James, 7th Earl of Derby) . Prefixed to a reprint of the original title- page is a view of " Buckshawe in Buxton the house ot Major Edwai-d Robinson, the supposed Author of i he 'Discourse on the Warr in Lanca- shire.* " State of Parties in Lancashire before the Rebellion of 1715 : an inquiry introduc- tory to the pubhcation of certain histori- cal documents relative to this period. By Samuel Hibbert Ware, M.D. [Another title] Lancashire during the Rebellion of 1715. By S. H. Ware, M.D. LiBSASIES. Bibliographical notices of the church libraries at Turton and Gorton, bequeathed by Humphrey Chetham. Idi- ted by Gilbert J. Prench. Lincoln, Eael of. Two " Compoti " of the Lancashire and Cheshire Manors of Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, XXIV. and XXXIII. Edward I. Transcribed and translated by Rev. P. A. Lyons. Manchestee. Collectanea relating to Man- chester and its neighbourhood, at various periods. Compiled by John Harland. 2 vol. Mamecestre : being chapters from the early recorded history of the Baron.v ; the Lordship or Manor ; the vili, borough, or town, of Manchester. Edited by John Harland. 3 vol. Volume of Court Leet records of the manor of Manchester in the sixteenth century. Compiled and edited by John Harland. Continuation of the Court Leet records 1686-1602. Admission register of the Manchester School with some notices of the more dis- tinguished scholars. Edited bv Rev. Jeremiah Pinch Smith. Vol. I. 1730- 1775. Vol. II. 1776-1807. Vol. III. (2 parts.) Prom May 1807 to September 1837. (Portraits, &c.) Maetindale, Adam. Life of Adam Martin- dale, written by Himself. Edited by Eev. Richard Parkinson. MooEE. Moore Rental. Edited by Thomas Heywood. Newcome, Henet. Autobiography of Henry Newcome. Edited by Richard Parkinson D.D. 2 vol. Newcome, Rev. Henet. Diar.v, from September .30, 1601, to September, 29, 1603. Edited by Thomas Heywood. NoERis. Norris Papers, Edited by Thomas Heywood. Penwoetham. Documents relating to the priory of Penwortham, and other posses- sions in Lancashire of the Abbey of Eves- ham. Edited by W. A. Hulton. PoPEET. Catalogue ot the collection of tracts for and against Popery (published in or about the reign of James II.) in llie Blanchester library founded by Humphrey Chetham, in which is incorporated the whole of Peck's list of the tracts in that controversy, with his references. Edited by Thomas Jones. Part I. Part II. To which are added a tabular index to the tracts in both editions of Gibson's Preservative, and a reprint of Dodd's Certamen utriusque Ecclesiae. Potts. TnoAiAt^. Discovery of Witches in the County of Lancaster, reprinted from the original edition of 1013. With an intro- duction and notes, by James Crossley. Eenaud, Peank, M.D. Contributions towards a history of Prestbury in Cheshire 97 CHETHAM SOCIETY— coni. EOBIUBOK, ElCHAED. A Golden Mirrovir. Conteining certaine pithie and figurative visions prognosticating good fortune to England, and all true Engli'^li subjects, with an overthrowe to the enemies. Cer- taine pretie poemes written on the names ol sundrie both noble and worshipful!. Reprinted with an introduction and notes by Jiev. Thomas Corstr. St. Webbueg. Holy lyfe and history of •Saynt ^VerlJurge. Edited by Edward Hawkins. Staslet. Stanley papers. Part I. [Second title] The Earls of Derby and the jverse writers and poets of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, by Thomas Hey- wood. Part 2. Derby household books ; com- prising an account ot the hotisehold regu- lations, and expenses of Edward and Henry, third and fourth Earls of Derby ; together with a diary containing the names of the guests who visited the latter Earl at his houses in Lancashire : by "William Ffarington, the Comptroller. Edited by Rev. F. R. Raines (Portraits). Part 3. Private devotions and miscel- lanies of James sevenih Earl of Derby, K.G. "U'ith a prefatory memoir and an appendix of documents. Edited by Rev. P. R. Raines. 3 vol. (Portraits, etc.) Shuttlewoeth. House and farm accounts of the Shuttleworths of Gawthorpe Hall, in the County of Lancaster, at Smithils and Gawthorpe, from Septemljer 1582 to October 16'21. Edited by John Harland. 4 vol. (View of Gawthorpe and portrait of Shuttleworth.) Visitation. Visitation of Lancashire and a part of Cheshire, made in 1533, by special commission of Thomas Benait, Claren- cieux. Edited by William Langton. Part I. Visitation of the County Palatine of Lancaster, made in the year 1567, by William Flower. Norroy King of Arms. Edited by Rev. E. R. Raines. Visitation of the County Palatine of Lancaster, made in lOiy, by Richard St. George, Norroy King of Arms. Edited by Rev. P. R. Raines. Visitation of the County Palatine of Lancaster, made in 1664-5, by Sir William Dugdale (afterwards Garter) , Norroy King ol Arms. Edited by P. R. Raines. 3 vol. WABEiNGToy. Annals of the Lords _ of WarriAgton for the first five centuries after the Conquest. With historical notices of the place and neighbourhood. By William Beamont. a vol. (Illustra- tions.) Warrington in 1465. As described in a contemporary rent roll of the Legh family. Edited by William Beamont. Whallet. Coucher book or Chartulary of Whalley Abbey. Edited by W. A. Hulton. 4 vol. Wills. Lancashire and Cheshire wills and inventories from the ecclesiastical court, Chester. , .„ ^ t First portion. Edited by Rev. G. J. Piccope. Second portion. Third portion. Wilson, Rev. Thoilas. Miscellanies: being a selection from the poems and correspondence of Eev. Thomas NVilson. With memoirs of his life. By Rev. ± . R. Raines (Portrait.). WoETHINGTON, Jon.v. Diary and Cor- respondence of Dr. John Worthington, Master of Jesus College, Cambridge, Vice- Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, etc. Edited by James Crossley. vol. I. Vol.11. Parti, o 16505. CHETHAM SOCIETY— coni. Index. General Index. Vol. I.— XXX. (byC. S. bimms). At the end— Indexes to Vol. III., VI., VII., XXIII.. XXIV., and XXV. New Series [In progress]. 4". Man- chester, 1S83-5. 1640 1. Vicars of Rochdale. By Rev. Canon Raines. Edited by Henry H. Howorth. Parti. 2. Part II. 3. Lancashire and Cheshire Wills and In- ventories at Chester, with Appendix of abstracts of Wills now lost or destroyed ; transcribed by Rev. G. J. Piccope. EditBd by J. P. Earwaker. 4. Cateohisme or Christian Doctrine by Laurence Vaui, B.D. Reprinted ; with memoir by T. G. Law. CHETWOOD (WILLIAM RUFUS). General history of the Stage, from its origin in Greece down to the present time. With the memoirs of most of the principal performers that hare appeared on the English and Irish Stage, for these last fifty years. With notes . . . also several pieces of poetry, never hefore pub- lished. Collected and digested by "V^'. R. Chetwood. 12°. [1749.] 1641 CHEYNELL (FRANCIS). ChiUingworthi Novissima : or, the sick- ness, heresy, death, and burial of William Chillingworth . . . relation of his appre- hension at Arnndel; discovery of his errors in a brief Catechism, and short ora- tion at the burial of his heretical book. Publish'd 1644; now re-publish'd, with introduction . 8°. 1725. 1642 CHICARD (COUNT) pseud. The Bal Masque. Illustrated by Cham & Henning. 12". 1848. 1643 CHILCOT (REV, WILLIAM). Practical treatise concerning Evil thoughts . . . New edition by (Rev.) Richard Hooper. 12°. 1854. 1644 CHILD (MRS. LYDIA MARIA). Isaac T[atem] Hopper : a true life. (Portrait.) 8°. London, and Boston [U.S.], 1853. 1645 Letters from New York. Second series. 8°. London and New York, 1845. 1646 CHILDE (E. v.). Edward Vernon ; my Cousin's story. 8°. New York, 1848. 1647 CHILDREN. Physical and moral condition of the children and young persons employed in mines and manufactures. Illustrated by extracts from the reports of the Commis- sioners . . . 8». 1843. 1648 G 98 CHILDREN— coni. Portraits of the Children of the No- bility . . . engravings, executed under the superintendence of Charles Heath. From drawings by Alfred' E. Chalou, R.A. . . . With illustrations in verse . . . Edited by Mrs. Fairlie. Third series. E". 1841. 1649 CHINA. China, in a Series of Views, displaying the scenery, architecture, and social habits . . . Drawn ... by Thomas AUom. With . . . notices by Rev. G. N. Wright. Vol. I. 4°. n.d. (1843). 1650 History of China to the present time. Including an account of the rise and pro- gress of the present religious insurrection iu that empire. 8°. 1854. 1651 Rambles of the Emperor Ching Tih in Keang Nan. A Chinese tale. Trans- lated by Tkin Shen. With a preface by James Legge, D.D. 2 vol. 8°. 1843. 1652 CHOLMONDELEY (THOMAS). Tlltima Thule ; or, thoughts suggested by a residence in New Zealand. 8°. 1854. 1653 CHORLEY (KENRY FOTHERGILL). Memorials of M''. Hemans with illustra- tions of her literary character from her private correspondence. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1837. 1654 Modern German Music. Recollections and criticisms. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 1655 A Prodigy. A tale of Music. By the author of " Modern German Music." . . . 3 vol. 8°. 1866. 1656 CHRISTIE (WILLIAM DOUGAL). Memoirs, letters, and speeches of An- thony Ashley Cooper, first Earl of Shaf- tesbury, Lord Chancellor, with other papers illustrating his life. Erom his birth to the Restoration. ' Edited by W. 1). Chris- tie. (Portrait.) 8". 1859. 1657 Life of Anthony Ashley- Cooper, first Earl of Shaftesbury. 1621-1683. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1871. 1658 *' John Eorster Esq. with the author's Mnd regards." Notes on Brazilian questions. 8°. Lon- don and Cambridge. 1865. 1659 CHRISTMAS (REV. HENRY) aft. NOEL-FEARN (HENRY). Cradle of the twin giants, Science and History. 2 vol. 8°, 1849. 16GU CHRISTMAS, Christmas with the Poets : a collection of songs, carols, and descriptive verses, relating to the festival of Christmas, from CHRISTMAS— c««f. the Anglo-Norman period to the present time . . . Tinted illustrations by Birket Foster . . . [Edited by H. V.] 8°. 1851. 1661 Holiday book for Christmas and the New Year : embracing legends, tales, poetry, music, sketches of manners and custom, games and sports, etc. (Selected from the Illustrated London News). F". n.d. 1662 CHRONICLES. . . . Chronicles and Memorials of Great Britain and Ireland during the Middle Ages. Published by the Authority of the . . . Treasury, under the direction of the Master of the Rolls. 133 vol. 8°. 1858- 75.. 1663 Aeingdoh". Chronicon monasterii de Abingdon. Edited by Eev. Joseph Stevenson. Vol. 1. Erom the foundation of the Monastery until the Norman Con- quest. Vol. II. From the Korman Con- quest until the accession of Richard 1. Admiealtt. Black Book of the Admiralty, with an appendix. Edited by Sir Travers Twiss. 3 vol. Albans, St. Annales monasterii S. Albani, a Johanne Amundesham, monacho, ut videtur, consoripti, (1421-1440). Chroni- con rerum f^esbarum in monasttjrio S. Albani, (1422-1431) a quodam auctore ignoto compilatum. Edited by Henry Thomas Riley. 2 vol. Willelmi Rishanger, quondam Monachi S. Albani, et quorundam anonymorum, chronica et annales, regnantibus Henrico tertio et Edwardo primo. Edited by H. T. Riley. A.D. 1269-1307. Johannis de Trokelowe, et Henrici de Blaneforde, Monachorum S. Albani, nec- non quorundam anonymorum. Chronica et Annales. Edited by H. T. Riley. 1259-1296; 1307-1324; 1302-1406. Gesta abbatum monasterii Sancti Albani, a Thoma "U'alsingham ejusdem Ecclesiae praecentore, compilata. Edited by H.T. Riley. Vol.1. 793-1290. Vol.11. 1290-1349. III. 1349-1411. Thomae "Walsingham. quondam Monachi S. Albani, Historia Anghcana. Edited bv H. T. Riley. Vol. I. 127-J-13S1. Vol. II. 1381-1422. Registra quorundam abbatum monas- terii S. Albani, qui saeculo XA''^^. floruere. Vol. I. Registrum abbatiae Johannis "Whethamstede, iterum susceptae, Roberto Blakeney. capellano, qiiondam adscrip- tum. II. Registi-a Johannis "Whetham- stede, Willelmi Albon, et Willelmi Waling- forde, cumappendice, continente quasdam epistolas a Johanne Wliethamstede con- scriptas. Edited by H. T. Riley. Asglo-Saxon. jVngloSason Chronicle, according to the several original Autho- rities. Edited, with a translation, by Benjamin Tliorpe. Vol. 1. Original texts. Vol. 2. Translation. Eacob", Rogee. Opus Teitium. Opus Minus. Compendium philosophiae. Edited by J. S. Brewer. Becket, Thomas. Th6mas Saja Erkibys- kups. Life of Avchbishnp Thomas Becket, in Icftlnndir;, ^vith En^-iisli trans- lation, notes and glossary. Edited by Eirlkr Magniisson. Vol. I. Materials lor the history of Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury. Edited by James Craigie Robertson. \o\. I. 99 CHRONICLES— coKi. Bekyntoit, Thomas. Official coiTespon- dence of Thomas Bekynton, Sccretaiy to Henry VI., and Bishop of Bath and Wells. Edited with an appendix by George Williams, B.B. 2 vol. Benedict. Chronicle of the reigns of Henry II. and Richard I. 1169-1192; known commonly under the name of Benedict of Peterborough. Edited by William Stubbs [aft. Bishop of Chester]. 2 vol. BOECE, Heotok. Bulk of the croniolis of Scotland ; or a metrical version of the his- tory o( Hector Boece; by William Stewart. Edited by William B. TurnbuU. 3 vol. Beut. Brat T Tywysogion; or, the chronicle of the princes. Edited by E,ev. John Williams ab Ithel. Capgrate, John. Chronicle of England. Edited by Eev. Prancis Charles Hinges- ton. Liber de illustribus Henriois. Edited by Eev. F. C. Hingeston., Cotton, Baetholomew de. Historia Anglicana; (449-1298.) Necnon ejusdem Liber de archiepiscopis et episcopis Angliae. Edited by Henry Eichards Luard. DussTAK, St. Jlomorials ot Saint Dunstan Archbishop ol' Canterbury. Edited from various Manuscripts by W. Stubbs [aft. Bp. of Chester]. Dueham. Eegistrum Palatinum Dmiel- mense. Eegister of Eichard de Kellawe, Lord Palatine and Bishop of Durham, 1311-1316. Edited by Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy. 3 vol. Bdwaed the Coheessok, King. Lives of Edward the Confessor. Edited by H. E. Luard. Edward I. Year books of the reign of Edward the first. Years XX-XXII, XXX-XXXIII. Edited and translated by Alfred J. Horwood. 4 vol. England. Chronicon Angliae, ab anno Homini 1328 usque ad annum 1388, auctore monacho quodam Sancti Albani. Edited by Edward Maunde Thompson. De Livere de Eeis de Brittauie e le livere de Eeis de Engleterre. Edited by John Glover. EuLOGiUM. Eulogium {historiarum sive temporis; : Chronicon ab orbe condito usque ad annum M.CCC.LXVI., a monacho quodam Malmesburiensi exara^ turn, Accedunt continuationes duae, quarum una ad annum M.CCCO.XIII., altera ad annum M.CCCC.XO.perduota est. Edited by Prank Scott Haydon. 3 vol. Evesham. Chronicon Abbatiae de Eves- ham, ad annum 1418. Edited by Wilham Dunn Macray. Pranciscans. Monumenta Pranciscana; I. Thomas De Eccleston de adveutu fratrum miuorum in Angliam. H. Adae de Marisco Epistolae. III. Eegistrum fratrum Minorum Londoniae. Edited by J. S. Brewer. GiRAIDCS Cambeensis. Opera. Tol.I- IV. Edited by J. S. Brewer. V-VI. Edited by James P. Dimook. Gioucestee. Historia et cartularium monasterii Sancti Petri Gloucestriae. Edited by William Henry Hart. 3 vol. Grossetebte, Robert, Bp. op Liscoin. Epistolae. Edited by H. E. Luard. Hardt, Sir Tiiouas Dubpos. Descrip- tive catalogue ol materials relating to the history of Great Britain and Ireland, to the end of the reign of Hem-y VII. Vol. 1. Parts I. II. Prom the Eoman period to the Norman invasion. Vol.2. Prom 1M6 to 1200. 3. Prom 1200 to 1827. CHRONICLES— con*. Henry III, King. Eoyal and other his- torical letters illustrative of the reign of Henry III. Selected and edited by Eev. Walter Waddington Shirley. Vol. I. 1216-1235. Vol. II. 1236-1272. Henet IV, King. Eoyal and historical letters during the reign of Henry the fourth, King of England. Edited by Eev. P. C. Hingeston. Vol. I. 1399-1104. Henry V, King. Memorials of Henry the fifth. King ol England. I. Vita Henrici, Eoberto Eedmaimo auctore. 11, Versus rhythmici in laudem Henrici. III. Elm- - hami liber metricus de Hemico. Edited by Charles Augustus Cole. Henet VI, King. Letters and Papers illustrative of the wars of the English in P'rance during the reign of Henry the sixth, King of England. Edited by Efiv. Joseph Stevenson. 3 vol. Henet VII, King. Materials for a history of the reign of Henr.y VII. from original documents preserved in tiie Pubhc Eecord office. Edited by Eev. William Campbell. Historia regis Henrici septimi, a Ber- nardo Andrea Tholosate consoripta. Edited by James Gairdner. HiGDEN, EAipn. Polychronicon ; with the English translations of John Trevisa and of an unknown writer of the fifteenth century. Edited by Churchill Babington. Vol. I. II. III. IV. V. Edited by Eev. Joseph Eawson Lumby. HoYEDEN, EoGEE DE. Chronica. Edited by W. Stubbs Laft. Bp. of Chester]. 4 vol. Hugh, St. Magna vita S. Hugonis episcopi • Lincolniensis. Edited by Eev. James P. Dimock. Htde. Liber monasterii de Hyda; com- prising a chronicle of the affairs ol Eng- land, from the settlement of the Saxons to the reign of King Onut ; and a chartulary of the abbey of Hvde, in Hampshire. 465- 1023. Edited by Edward Edwards. Ireland. Axtnals of Loch C6. A chronicle of Irish affairs from 1014 to 1690. Edited, with a translation, by Wilham M. Hen- nessy. 3 vol. Chronicum Scotorum. A chronicle of Irish affairs, from the earliest times to 1135 ; with a supplement, containing the events from 1141 to 1150; edited, with a translation, by William M. Hennessy. Historic and municipal docimients of Ireland, 1172-1320. Edited by J. T. Gilbert. War of the Gaedhill with the Gaill, or the invasions of Ireland, by the Danes and other horsemen. The original Irish text, edited, with translation and introduction, by James Henthom Todd, D.D. Langtopt, Peter de. Chronicle of Pierre de Langtoft, in Prench verse, from the earhest period to the deatli of Edward I. Edited by Thomas Wright. 2 vol. Lkechdoms. Leechdom.s, worteunning, and starcraft of early England, bemg a col- lection of documents illustrating the his- tory of science in this country before the Noi-man Conquest. Collected and edited by Eev. Oswald Cockayne. 3 vol. At the end of Vol. 3 "Historical Prag- ments." London. Munimenta Gildhallae Londo- niensis; liber albus, liber custumarum, et liber horn. Edited by Henry Thomas Eiley. Vol. I. Liber Albiis compiled 1419. Vol. II. Parts I. II. Liber custu- marum, compiled in the early part of the fourteenth century; with extracts from the Cottonian MS. Claudius, D. II. Vol. III. Liber Albus. Translation of the Anglo-Norman passajiies, with glossaries, appendices, and Index. 4 vol. G 2 100 CHRONICLES— coni. Matthew Paris. Chronicii majora. Edited by H. R. Luard. Vol. I. The creation to 1068. II. 1067 to 1-216. Historia Anglorum, sive Historia Minor. Bjusdem, abbreviatio Chronicorum Ang- liae. Edited by Sir Frederic Madden. Vol. 1. 1067-1189. 11. 1189-1245. III. 124li- 1253. Melsa. Chronica Monasterii de Melsa, a fundatione usque ad annum 1396, auctore Thoma de Burton, Abbate. Accedit conti- nuatio ad annum 1406 a monacho quo- dam ipsius domus.. Edited by Edward A. Bond. 8 vol. Mou ASTEEiES. Annales Monastioi. Vol. 1. De Margan (1086-1232.) De Theokesberia. (1066-1263.) De Burton. (1004-1263.) Vol. II. Monasterii de "Wintonia. (519' 1277.) Monasterii de Waverleia. (1-1291. III. Prioratus de Dunstaplia. (1-1297.', Monasterii de Bermundeseia (1042-1432. IV. Monasterii de Oseneia. (1016-1347.). Cum Chronicon Thomae Wykes (1066- 1289.). Prioratus de 'WiEomia (1-1377). V. Index and Glossary. Edited by H. E. Luard. Neckam, Alexakdee. De naturis rerum libri duo. "With the poem of the same author, De laudibus divinae sapientiae. Edited by Thomas "Wright. Nettee, Thomas. Pasciculi Zizaniorum Johannis Wyclif cum tritico. Ascribed to T. Netter of Walden. Edited by Eev. W. W. Shirley. NOEMANDT. Narratives of the expulsion of theEnglishfrom Normandy, M.ccco.xiix. — M.cccc.L. Edited by Eev. J. Stevenson. NoETHEEN Eegistees. Historical papers and letters from the Northern Registers. Edited by [Rev.] James Raine. OxENEDES, John of. Chronica. Edited by Sir Henry Elhs. OxEOED. Munimenta Academica, or docu- ments illustrative of academical life and studies at Oxford. Part I. Libri Cancel- larii et procuratorum. Part II. Acta Curiae cancellarii et Memoranda ex regis- tris. By Eev. Hemy Anstey. Peoock, Regisald, Bishop oe Chiohes- TEE. The Repressor of overmuch blaming of the Clergy. Edited by Churchill Bab- ington. 3 vol. Poems. Political poems and songs relating to Bnelish history, composed during the period from the accession of Edw. III. to that of Ric. III. Edited by T. Wright. 2 vol. Poets. An^lo-Latin satirical poets and epigrammatists of the twelfth century. Now first collected and edited by Thomas AVi-ight. 2 vol. Ralph ov Cogoeshall. Radulphi de Coggeshall Chronicon Anghcanum, De ex- pugnatione terrae sanctae libellus, Thomas Agnellus de morte et sepultura Henrici re^is Anglijxe .lunioris, Gesta Pulconis filii Warini, Excerpta ex otiis imperialibus Gervasii Tileburiensis. Ex codicibus msnuscriptis edidit J. Stevenson. RiOHAED I. Chronicles and memorials of the reign of Richard I. Vol. I. Itinera- rium peregrinorum et gesta regis Ri- cardi ; auctore, ut videtur, Rlcardo, Cano- nico Sanctae Trinitatis Londoniensis. Vol. II. Bpistolae Cantuarienses, the letters of the Prior and_Convent of Christ Church, Ciniterbury. J!rom 1187 to 119!l. EditedbyW. Stubbs [alt. Bp. of Chester]. RiCHAED HI. Li'lters and Papers illustra- tive of the reigns of Richard III. and Henry VII. Edited by J. Gairdner. 2 vol. CHRONICLES-con«. RiOHAED or ClEENOESTEE. SpCCulum historiale de gestis regum Anghae. Edited by John E. B. Mayor. Vol. I. 447-871. II. 872-1066. Thomas op Elmham. Historia Monasterii S. Augustini Oantuariensis. Edited by Charles Hardwick. Wales. Annales Cambriae. Edited by Rev. J. Williams ab Ithel. Waltee op Covewiey. Historical Collec- tions. Edited by W. Stubbs [aft. Bp. of Chester]. 2 vol. WA0EIN, JOHH DE. Eecucil des Croniques et anchiennes istories de la Grant Bre- taigne, a present nomme Engleterre, par Jehan de Waurin, seigneur du Eorestel. Edited bv William Hardy. 2 vol. From Albina to A.D. 688. From 1399 to 1422. Collection of the Chronicles and ancient histories of Great Britain, now called England, by John De Wavrin, Lord of Forestel. Translated by 'William Hardy. Prom Albina to A.D. 688. William op Malmesbuet. De gestis Pontilicum Anglorum libri quinque. Edited by N. E. S. A. Hamilton. Six old English Chronicles, of which two are now first translated from the monkish Latin originals. Ethelwerd's chronicle. Asser's Life of Alfred. Geof- frey of Monmouth's British History. Gildas. Nenuius. And Richard of Ciren- cester. Edited, with illustrative notes, by J. A. Giles. 8°. Bohn, 1848. 1664 CHRISTIAN. Christian Theism. By the author of "Inquiry concerning the origin of Christianity." 8". 1839. 1665 (JOHN) SAINT, OF CONSTANTI- CHRYSOSTOM PATRIARCH NOPLE. Golden Book of St. John Chrysostom, concerning the education of Children. Translated out of the Greek by J. E. [i.e. John Evelyn]. 12°. 1659. 1666 CHURCH (FLORENCE MARRYAT, MRS, ROSS). Life and letters of Captain Marryat. 2 vol. 8°. IB72. 1667 CHURCH. The church in danger: or a warning voice to Protestants. By Veritas. 8°. London and Aberdeen, 1850. 1668 [Tracts.] 4°. 1640-1. 1669 Grant of the benevolence or contribution to his Majestie, by the clorgie of the pro- vince of Canterburie 1610, Order made to a Select Committee : chosen by thfj whole House of Commons to receive petitions touching Ministers. Considerations touching the better pacifica- tion and edification of the Church of Eng- land, n.p. Speech made to the House of Commons con- cerning Episcopacy. By Mscount Faulke- land. 101 [Ti'aots.] 4". 1C41-'J. CHURCH— 6on«. Thinl s|jr«li of Lord Gooi-go Digby, to the Housi' or (^ouinmiis, coiiceniing Bishops, lluil till' e'ilic pi'lilion, I'Vbi- : 1040. u.p. Lovo of truth and peace. Stn'mon jji-cachcd before the Housf of Commons. Nuvemb. 28. 1040. By lolin Gandcn, U.l). Lord Bishops none of the Lords Bishops, Discourse, wherin is proved that prelOr tioall jurisdiction, is not of divino institu- tion, but forbidden by Christ himselfe; whi'rin also sundi'y notable pasMiii::cs of tlio .\rch-pr(>liito of Canterbury [Tjnud] in his Ink' booko nitituled, A relation of a Conl'LM'i'uce. Ac are by the way met with- all. [Hy ^\'il!u^m Tonne.] n.p. [Tracts.] 4". 1641-4. 1670 Arguments asriunst bowing at tlio name of losus. By a minister of the City of Lon- don [V Henry Burton], n.p. Narration of the hfe of JMr. Henry Burton. Ari'hbishnp fLaud] of Canterbury's Speecli all taithl'ully written hy John Hindc. Grand Impostor nnuiaslvod, or, a detection of the notorious hypocrisie of the late Ai-ohbishop (so styled) of Canterbury, cunningly couched in that written copy, which he read on the soaftold at his execu- tion, n.d. 1671 Appeale of the orlliodnx ministei's of the Cliureb of Englauil : aicaiust Richard Blouuta^ue liishcip ol Norw ieh. To Par- liament. Proceedings a^-:iinst hnii in Bow- Church. Epistle to U. [.«/c'] aiountague himselfe. S\ipplieation ot llio ministers of Scotland usaiust the said Moimtague. Bdenbnrgi. Rai'o pliysieli for the Church sick of an ague, pivseribiu,!:: pliysiek to be l;i^■e•l to the Cluu-oh winch' has bi'cn sicke a loni? time. The interest of England how it consists in nuitvofthe Protestant religion ["To the lU'adcr" is signed "William Coustan- tlne."j Second part. Cnusideviid as it relates to the government of the Church. Moderate Vrosbyter : or, a toi-me of Church- government aecortlm:^" to the "Word of God. Trojan horse of the Presbyteriall Govern- ment unbowclled. n.p. Order of ehoosius' Chnnii-otlieers : with a ileelaratiou ot the calling- of the ministers. Also the Klders, and their office according to the forme of the Presbyterian govern- ment. Ka Blec. and I'le Ka thee : or, a dialogtie; wheivin is showne the indecency, and un- i-easonableuessc of persecntinfr, and afflict- ing tender consciences, for differences in matters ot i-eligion. Especially in Eng- hvnd, Avhei-e no one i-ehgion is long in ftishion. n.p. [Tracts.]. 4". Various dates. 1072 ■Uiuusonuslus. The A-se overladen. To his loving:, and deare niisti-esse, Ehziibeth Qui-cne of England, lii ti. Keasous shewing that there is no need of such a reformalion of the pviblique doc- trine, worship, rites and ceremonies, ciuirch - coverument. discipline. As is iiretcndeii bv ivasons offered to Parlia- ment bv Jlinisters of sundry counties in Einland : By Henry Sava.se. B.D. IIWO. Paequct of ad\iees sent to Shnftshury. l(!7li. (IViplieatet. True Pivtestiuit sivbicct. or, the nature, and riirhts of Sovereisiity discuss'd, and stated. uiso. CHURCH-coiK. Cit t and Bumpkin. In a dialogue over a pot of ale, concerninar matters of religion and government. llJSIi. L'JiJsti-ange no papist nor jcsiiite. Discom'se lictween Philo-L'Estrani^c and Pi-agma- licus. 1681. Dialof.nic betwixt Sam. the ferriman of i>iK*iiel, Will, a waterman of London, and Tom. a bargeman of Oxford. Upon the Kings calling a parliament to meet at Oxford. liiSl . [No title-page. Second discourse betwixt Sam [etc], upon the cnuuu^r of the two last down the river, from ( )xroi-d.] Now it's come. New it's come. Or, a new express arriv'd this afternoon, rn.im Bob the Urst to Bob the second. (Woodcuts entitle), n.d. Considoi-ations moving to a toleration, and liberty ot conscience. "With arguments inducin;,? to a cessation of the penal sta- tutes against Dissenters, upon the account of religion, oeeasionod by an excellent discourse upon that subject, pubhsh'd by the Duke of Buckingham. 1G85. Answer to the D. Buckingham's paper, con- eerniiiii' religion, toleration, and liberty of Conscience. li;Sj. Diseouise concetuingthe Catholick church. AVhcreiii most of the controvSrsies relating to the Church, are stated. Part I. By William Sherlock, D. U. KISS. Letter from (Thomas Sprat) Bishop of Rochester, to the Earl of Dorset and Middlesex, Loril-Chanihcrlain, concerning Ins sitting- in the lati) I'A-clesiastical Com- mission. In the Savoy, Hiss. Form ot iirayer with thanksgiving for the safe delivery of the Queen, and happy birth of the young Prince. 1688. Form ot prayer to be used on Wednesday 5 June beini.' the Fast-Day appointed to implore the blcssim; of Almighty Grod upon their Majesties Forces and success in the war a.iainst th- French Bjng. 1689. Letter concermng Bisliop Lake's late de-, clanition of his dying in the belief of the doctrine of passive onedience, as the dis- tinguisliing character of the Church of England. JOSH. Agreement betwixt the present and the "former .irovcrnmciu : or, a discourse of this raonarcii.v, whether elective or liercditury V also, of abdication. vacanc,v. interregnum, present iiosscssion of the Crown, and the reputation of the Church of England. With an answer to objections against tak- ing the new oath of allegiance. B.v the author of obedience due to the pi-esent King. 16Sti. Apolopry for the suspended Bishops. Vin- dieaiion of the arUlress signed in their favour by the C raud-Jiu-y of the county of Gloucester, liisio. Defence of the profession which John [Lake] Bishop ot Chichester, made upon his death- bed; concei'ning passive obedience, luid the new oaths. Passages of his life. 1690. Xovus reformator v apulans : or, the "Welch Levi te tossed in a blanket. In a dialogue between Hick - - of Colchester, David J - - nes and the ghost of V,'i\. PrjTi. 11 2)1. Account ot the author of a book entitnled EiKui' fiaaiKiKrj. With an answer to all objections made by Dr. Holhngsworth and othei-s. in defence of the said book (by D'. Anthony "Walker-). 169"3. CHURCHILL (^CHARLES). Poems. 2 vol. . . . Third edition. 1766. 8°. 1673 102 CHURCHILL (CHARLES)— eon*. Works, rifth edition. 4 vol. (Vol. IV. containing Sermons on the Lord's Prayer). 8°. 1774. 1674 [Half Title.] Aldiue edition of the British Poets . . . [Title.] Poetical Works with copious notes and a life of the author by W. Tooke. 3 vol. (Por- trait.) JZ". 1844. (Two copies). 1675 No. 1. MS. notes by M'. I'orster. [Half Title.] Aldine edition . . . [Title.] Poetical Works. With a memoir by James L. Hannay and copious notes by W. Tooke. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 12° Bell and Daldy, 1866. 1676 Poetical Works. With Memoir, critical dissertation, and explanatory notes by Eev. George GilfiUan. 8°. Edinburgh, 1855. 1677 . Second edition. 1678 Duellist. A poem 4°. 1764. AND-OTHERS. [Various pieces] . 4°. & 8". 1761-78. 1679 Eiosciad. By the Author. [First ed.] 1761. Churchiliad : or, a few modest questions proposed to the reverend author of the Ilosciad. 1761. Epistle to C. Churchill, Author of the Uos- oiad. EyR. Ucyd. 1761. Bosciad. By 0. Churchill. Seventh edi- tion. With large additions. 1763. MS. note & Book-plate of Sir John CuUum. Names filled in in MS. Churchill dissected. A poem. 1764. . . . Satire inscribed to Esq^ alias, the Devil upon two Sticks (i.e. S. Eoote). (By Humphrey Nettle.) n.p. n.d. Taste. A comedy. By Samuel Eoote. Third edition. 1765. MS. note. Trip to Calais by Samuel Eoote. To which is annexed, the Capuchin ; altered from the Trip to Calais and now published by Mr. Colman. 1778. Eleffy on the death of Kamuel Eoote. By ■ Bbscherecoio. 1778. [At the end— Ode on his Majesty's birthday.] CHURCHILL (COLONEL CHARLES HENRY). Life of Abdel Kader, ex-Sultan of the Arabs of Algeria ; written from his own dictation, and compiled from other au- thentic sources. 8°. 1867. 1680 CIBBER (COLLEY). Dramatic Works. 4 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1760. 1681 Vol. 1. Love's last Shift— Woman's Wit — Love makes a Man — She would and she would not. ' 2. Careless Husband— Eival Fools— Lady's Last Stake— Richard III (alter'd from Shakespear) . 3, Double laallant — Ximeua — Comical Lovers — Non- Juror. 4, Refusal — Provoked Husband — Love in a Riddle- Papal Tyranny. CIBBER (COLLEY)— co««. Apology for the life of M^ C. Gibber, Comedian, and late patentee of the Theatre-Royal. With an historical view of the Stage during his own time. Written by himself. [Pirst ed.] (Portrait.) 4°. 1740. (Two copies.) 1682 N". 1. With portraits, prints, playbills, news- paper cuttings, &C.J Fourth edition. 12°. Dublin, 1740. 1683 Trinity College Dublin prize book, with arms, &c. New edition, with many critical and explanatory notices; by Edmund Bell- chambers. (Portrait.) 8°. 1822. 1684 Letter to M'. Pope, inquiring into the motives that might induce him in his Satyrical Works, to be so frequently fond of Mr. Gibber's name. 8°. 1742. 1685 Another occasional letter to M'. Pope. Wherein the new hero's preferment to his throne, in the Dnneiad, seems not to be accepted. And the author of that poem his more rightful claim to it, is asserted. With an expostulatory address toKev. M'. W.W[arburto]n . .8°. 1744. 1686 [Tracts relating to Gibber, etc.] 12°. 1740, 1747. 1687 The Laureat : or, the right side of CoUey Oibber, Esq; containing, explanations, amendments and observations on An Apology for the life of M'. CoUey Cibber Not written by himself. , Anecdotes of the Laureat. History of .Sisopus the Trage- dian. 1740. Examen of the new comedy, call'd The Suspicious Husband [by Hoadly]. Obser- vations upon our di-amatick poetry and authors. Word of advice to M'. G - - rr - - ck ; and a piece of seci'et history. 1747. CIBBER (THEOPHILUS). T. Gibber, to David Garrick ; with Dis- sertations on theatrical subjects . . . Frontispiece, and curious copper-plates. 8°. 1759. 1688 Dissertations on Theatrical subjects . . . with an Appendix, which contains several matters, relative to the Stage, . . . and in which the Laivs, relative to the Theatres, are considered. 8°. 1756. 1689 CIBBER (THEOPHILUS and COLLEY) Ai(D OTHERS. [Tracts.] 2 vol. 8°. 1729-56. 1690 Vol. 1. [T.] Gibber's Two dissertations on the Theatres. With appendix. The whole containing a general view of the Sta«e. (Frontispiece ; and plate inserted.) n.d. Dissertations on theatrical subjects by M'". [T.] Cibber. With Appendix. (Plate.) 1756. Epistle from T. Cibber, to David Garrick ; to which are prefixed, some occasional verses, petitions, &o. (Frontispiece), n.p. n.d. [London, 1756 ?] 103 CIBBER (THEOPHILUS and COLLEY) AND OTHERS— co;it Vol. 2. Comforts of Matrimony ; exemplified in the memorable case and trial, lately had upon an action brought by Theo s r [Theophilus Oibberl against S , [W. SloperT Esq. Sixth edition. 17.39. Letter from 51'. [CoUey] Gibber, to M'. Pope. iSee N". 1685. J Second edition. 1742. The Egotist: or, Colley upon Gibber. Being his own picture retouch'd, to so plain a likeness, that no one, now, would have the face to own it, but himself. 1743. Letter to Colley Gibber ; on his transforma- tion of King John. 1745. Examen of the new comedy, call'd The Suspicious Husband. [ tour in Italy, and also in part of France and Switzerland . . 8°. 1830. 1756 COBBETT (WILLIAM). Annual Register. Vol. I. (~ XXI). 1802 (—1812). 21vol. 8°. n.d. 1757 In Vol. V the title is changed to "Political Ilegister." Spelling-book, with appropriate lessons in reading, and with a stepping-stone to English grammar. h°. 1831. 1758 TNo title-page. Beauties of Cobbett.] 12°. 1759 [No title-page. Beauties and Abridg- ment, &c.] 12°. 17C0 Nos. 1759-60 imperloct. Good Friday ; or, the Murder of Jesus Christ by the Jews. 12°. 1830. 1761 Life of W. Cobbett, M.P. for Oldham. Written by Himself. Eighth edition. (Portrait inserted.) 12°. n.d. 1762 Imperfect. COBBETT (WILLIAM)— coH(. Rural Rides in the counties of Surrey, Kent, Sussex, Hants, Berks, Oxford, Bucks, Wilts, Somerset, Gloucester, Here- ford, Salop, Worcester, Stafford, Leicester. Hertford, Essex, SuflFulk, Norfolk, Cam- bridge, Huntingdon, Nottingham, Lincoln, York, Lancaster, Durham, and Northum- berland, in 1821-2-3-5-6-9-30, and 32 . . . New edition, with notes, by James Paul Cobbett. (Portrait.) 8°. 1853. 1763 Selections from Cobbett's Political Works : being a complete abridgment of the 100 volumes which comprise the writings of" Porcupine " and the " Weekly Political Register." With notes historical and explanatory. By John M. Cobbett and James P. Cobbett. 6 vol. 8°. n.d. 1764 COBDEN (RICHARD). 1793 and 1853, in three letters. 6". 1853. 1765 COCKAYNE (T. OSWALD). Life of Marshal Turenne. 12°. 1853. 1766 COCKBURN (SIR ALEXANDER JAMES EDMUND) LORD CHIEF JUSTICE OF ENGLAND. Charge to the Grand Jury ... in the case of the Queen against Nelson and Brand . . [Eyre case]. With occa- sional notes. Edited by Frederick Cock- burn. 8°. 1867. 1767 Charge in the case of the Queen against Thomas Castro, otherwise Arthur Orton, otherwise Sir Roger Tichborne . . . Cor- rected by the Lord Chief Justice. 2 vol. 8°. 1874-5, 1768 Reasons for dissenting from the award of the tribunal of arbitration at Geneva. F°. (London) 1872. 1769 No. 1767-9. Presentation copies. COCKBURN (HENRY, LORD). Life of Lord Jeffrey with a selection from his correspondence. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1852. 1770 Memorials of his Time. 8°. Edin- burgh, 1856. (Portrait.) 1771 COCKBURN (WILLIAM), DEAN OF YORK. New system of Geology . . . 8°. 1849. 1772 COCKS (J.) M,D. ' Sea-\Vced collector's guide : contain- ing plain instructions for collecting and preserving, and a list of all the known species and localities in Great Britain. 12°. 1853. 1773 107 CODRINGTON (ROBERT). Life and death, of Robert Earle of Essex, &c. Containing the ■vpars he managed, and the commands he had in Holland, the Palatinate, and in England. 4». 1646. (Two copies.) 1774 Kg. 2 has an engraved title-page by Hole — A moume full cloud, over vaylinge the fa«e of England, for the sorrowfull death of Robert Deuourux Earle of Essex. (Un- derneath, plate of the Monument), n.d. COFFEE. Ale- Wives complaint, against the Cof- fee houses, in a dialogue between a victual- lers wife and a oofiee-mau ... 4°. 1675. 1775 Autograph of " Th"". JoUey." A character of Coffee and coffee-houses. By M. P. 4°. 1661. 1776 Vertues of Coffee. Set forth in the "Works of Lord Bacon his Natural Hist. M'. Parkinson his flerbal, Sir George Sandys his Travails, James Howel ; his Epistles ... 4°. 1663. 1777 " To the Header " signed " N. D." COGHLAN (FRANCIS). Handbook for travellers in Switzerland ; with ... a description of what may be seen at the fashionable German watering places. . . Maps and plans. 12°. 1856. 1778 COIN (COLONEL ROBERT L. DE). History and cultivation of Cotton and Tobacco. 8°. 1864. 1779 COKE (SIR EDWARD). Pirst part of the Institutes of the Laws of England. Or, a Commentary upon Littleton . . . Fourteenth edition . . Notes and references ... by Eranois Hargrave . . . Preface and index to the notes, by Charles Butler . . . Notes of Lord Chief Justice Hale, and Lord Chan- cellor Nottingham. And an analysis of Littleton, written ... in 1658-9 . . . F°. Dublin, 1791. 1780 Three Law tracts : The Compleat Copy- holder ; being a discourse of . . . Manors and copyholds, &c. A reading on 27 Edward the first, called the statute De Einibus levatis. Treatise of Bail and Mainprize. To which ai-e added, the Old Tenures ; also, some notes and additions to Lord Coke's Commentary upon Little- ton .. . By William Hawkins. (Por- trait of Coke.) 8°. 1764. 1781 MS. inscription by James Whiteside. COKE (ROGER). Detection of the Court and State of England during the four last reigns, and the Interregnum. Consisting of private memoirs, &o. . . . Appendix discovering COKE (ROGER)— con;. the present state of the nation. 2 vol. 12°. 1694. 1782 A few leaves mutilated in Vol. I. Fourth edition, continued ... to the death of Queen Anne. 3 vol. 8°. 1719. 1783 COLCHESTER (CHARLES ABBOT, 1st BARON). Diary and CoiTespondence of C. Abbot, Lord Colchester Speaker of the House of Commons 1802-1817. Edited by his son Charles, Lord Colchester. 3 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1861. 1784 COLEMAN (JOHN). Historical Essays. 8°. 1851. 1785 Essay on French Socialism — Memoir of Sir John Denham — Essay on the Ei^ligli revolution, 1610— Memoir of Edmund Wal- ler — Memoir of William Collins. Histori- cal fragments. On the IVench revolution of 1789— on the Merovingian Kings of Erance. MS. Letter from the author (inserted). COLENSO (JOHN WILLIAM) BISHOP OF NATAL. Ten Weeks in Natal. A Journal of a first tour of visitation among the colonists and Zulu Kafirs of Natal. 12°. Cam- bridge, 1855. ' 1786 "From the Author." COLERIDGE (HARTLEY). Biographia Borealis ; or lives of dis- tinguished Northerns. (Portraits.) 8°. London and Leeds, 1833. 1 787 A. Marvell, R. Bentley, Ijovd Fairfax, James, Earl of Derby, Anne Clifford, Countess of Dorset, etc., Ascham, Bishop John Fisher, Eev. W. Mason, Sir E. ArSwright, W. Roscoe, Captain Cook, W. Congreve, D'. Fothergill. *'To John Forster from Leigh Himt with more good wishes than he dares express in so poor a present." New Edition. Edited by his brother (Derwent Coleridge). With the cor- rections of the author, and the marginal observations of S. T. Coleridge. 3 vol. 12°. 1852. 1788 Essays and Marginalia. Edited hy his brother. 2 vol. (Fortrait.) 12°. 18.51. 1780 Poems. With a memoir of his life by his Brother. (Portrait.) 2 vol. 12". 1851. 1790 COLERIDGE (HENRY NELSON). Introduction to the study of the Greek classic poets . . . I'art I. Containing — I. General Introduction. II. Homer. Second edition. 12°. 1834. 1791 108 COLERIDGE (JOHN DUKE, 1st BARON). ['i'amphlets, etc.] 8°. London, etc., 1868-72. 1792 Address delivered at the meeting of tlie Devonshire Association for the advance- ment of science , literature, and art, at Honiton, 28 July, 1868. (Plymouth) n.d. The Freedom of Opinion necessary in an established Church in a free country, n.p. n.d. [187U.] Apparently portion of a magazine ar- ticle [MacmiUan'ii] . Inaugural address delivered to the members of the Philosophical Institution Edin- burgh at tbe opening of the session 1870- 71.- Edinburgh 1871). Presentation copies. Address on Jurisprudence and amendment , of the Law. 1872. Speeches delivered in tbe Court of Queen's Bench, in the case of Sauvin v. Starr and another. 8°. 1809. 1793 Presentation copy. COLERIDGE (SIR JOHN TAYLOR). Memoir of Rev. John Kehle. Fourth edition, ifi. Oxford and London, 1874. 1794 COLERIDGE (SAMUEL TAYLOR). Dramatic "Works. Edited by Derwent Coleridge. New edition. 12°. 1852. 179.5 Poetical Works. 3 vol. 12°. 1840. 1796 Poems. 12°. 1844. 1797 Poems. Edited by Derwent and Sara Coleridge. New edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 18.52. 1798 Aids to Reflection fourth edition with the author's last corrections edited by Henry Nelson Coleridge. 12°, 1839. 1799 Biographia Literaria or biographical sketches of my literary life and opinions second edition prepared for publica- tion in part by the late Henry Nelson Coleridge completed and published by his widow. 2 vol. (in 3). 12°. 1847. 1800 Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit. Edited from the author's MS. by Henry Nelson Coleridge. 12°. 1840. 1801 " From the Editor." " John Kenyon 1841." Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit and some miscellaneous pieces. Edited ... by Henry Nelson Coleridge. [Introduction by Joseph Henry Green]. 12°. 1849. 1802 [Half title.] On the Constitution of Church and State. Third edition. Lay Sermons. Second edition. [Title] On the Constitution of the Church and State according to the idea of each. Lay Ser- mons. I. The Statesman's Manual. If. COLERIDGE (SAMUEL TAYLOR)— cont. " Blessed are ye that sow beside all waters." Edited from the author's corrected copies with notes by Henry Nelson Coleridge. 12°. 1839. 1803 On the constitution of the Church and State, according to the idea of each. Edited from the author's corrected copy, with notes by Henry Nelson Coleridge. Eourth edition. 12°. 1852. 1804 Eall of Eobespierre. An historic drama. 8°. Cambridge, 1794. 1805 At the end "Proposals for publishing by subscription. Imitations from the modern Latin Poets ... by S. T. Coleridge." [Half Title]. The Friend; a literary, moral, and political weekly paper, exclud- ing personal and party politics and the events of the day. Conducted by S. T. Coleri'Jge, of Grasmere, Westmorland. (No. 1. Thursday, June I, 1809— No. 27, Thursday, March 15, 1810.) [Orig. ed.] 8°. (Penrith, 1809-10.) ^ 1806 The Friend : a series of essays to aid in the formation of fixed principles in politics, morals, and religion, with literary amuse- ments interspersed. Third edition : with the author's last corrections and an appen- dix, and with a synoptical table of the eon- tents of the work By H. N. Coleridge. 3 vol. 12°. 1837. 1807 Essays on his own Times forming a second series of the Friend. Edited by his daughter [Sara Coleridge] . 3 vol. 12°. 1850. 1808 " M'. Eorster with M". H. N. Coleridge's kind regards. March 14, 1850." Hints towards the formation of a more comprehensive theory of life. Edited by Seth B. Watson, M.D. 8°. 1848. 1809 Lay Sermons. I. The Statesman's Manual. II. Blessed are ye that sow beside all waters. Edited, with the author's last corrections and notes, by Derwent Coleridge. Third edition. 12". 1852. 1810 Notes on English Divines. Edited by Rev. Derwent Coleridge. 2 vol. 12° 1853. 1811 Notes, theological, political, and miscel- laneous. Edited by liev. Derwent Cole- ridge. 12°. 1853. 1812 Notes and lectures upon Shakespeare and some of the old poets and dramatists with other literary remains. Edited by Mrs. H. N. Coleridjo. 2 vol. 12°. 1849. 1813 Osorio a Tragedy as originally written in 1797 now first printed from a copy recently discovered hy the pubhsher with the variorum readings of "Remorse" and a monograph on the history of the play . . . by the author of " Tennysoniana." 12°. 1873. 1814 109 COLERIDGE (SAMUEL TAYLOR)— cont. Seven lectures on Shakespeare and Milton. By S. T. Coleridge. A list of all the MS. emendations in Mr. Collier's foUo, 1632 ; and an introductory preface by J. Payne Collier. 8°. 1856. 1815 " John Porster Esq. with sincere thanks for many kindnesses." MS. inscription by Collier. Specimens of the Tahle Talk of S. T. Coleridge. [Edited by H. N. Coleridge.] 2 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1835. 1816 1851. 1817 Third edition (Portrait). 12° [No title-page. The Watchman. No. I. Tuesday, March 1, 1796 (—X. Friday, May 13, 1796). Published by the author, S. T. Coleridge.] 8°. Bristol . . . n.d. 1818 Original numbers. No more published. COLERIDGE (SARA) aft. MRS. HENRY NELSON COLERIDGE. Phantasmion, a fairy tale. With an in- troductory preface by Lord Coleridge. 8°. 1874. 1819 Pretty lessons in verse for good children ; with some lessons in Latin in easy rhyme. Fifth edition. 12°. 1853. 1820 Memoir and letters of Sara Coleridge. Edited by her daughter [Edith Coleridge] . 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1873. 1821 COLEY (HENRY). Nuncius Coelestis : or Urania's Mes- senger, exhibiting a brief description and survey of the year 1679 . . Discourse of . . astrology. 12°. n.d. 1822 Imperfect. COLLEGE. College EecoUections. 8° 1825. 1823 COLLIER (JEREMY). Essays upon several Moral subjects. In two parts . . . Fifth edition. 8°. 1703. 1824 Title to Part II dated 1702. Part III. Second edition. 8°. 1707. 1825 Part IV. 8°. 1709. 1826 Short view of the immorality, and profaneness of the English Stage, together with the sense of antiquity upon this argument. 8°. 1698. 1827 Defence of the Short "View . . . being a reply to Mr. Congreve's Amendments, &c. and to the Vindication of the author ofthe Relapse [Vanbrugh]. 8°. 1699. 1828 COLLIER (JEREMY) a>;d TRACTS RELATING TO HIS WORKS. Mr. Collier's Dissuasive from the Play- House . . . occasion'd by the late calamity of the tempest. To which is added, a letter written by another hand ; in answer to some queries . . . relating to the irregu- larities charged upon the Stage. 8°. 1704. 1829 Farther Vindication of the Short View . . . in which the objections of a late book, entituled, A Defence of Plays, are con- sider'd. 8°. 1708. 1830 Defence of the Short View ... 8°. 1705. ' 1831 Second Defence of the Short View . . . being a reply to a book, entituled. The an- cient and modern Stages surveyed, &c. 8°. 1700. 1832 Amendments of M'. Collier's false and imperfect citations, &c. from the Old Batchelour, Double Dealer, Love for Love, Mourning Bride. By the Author of those plays [William Congreve] . 12°. 1698. 1833 Antient and modern Stages survey'd. Or, Mr. Collier's View of the immorality , and profaneness of the English Stage set in a true light. Wherein some of Mr. Collier's mistakes are rectified, and the comparative morality of the English Stage is asserted upon the parallel. [By James Drake, D.D.] 8°. 1699. 1834 Letter to Mr. Congreve on his pretended Amendments, &c. of Mr. Collier's Short View of the immorality and prophaneness of the English Stage. [Anon.] 12°. 1698. 1835 The Stage acquitted. Being a full answer to Mr. ColUer . . . With a vindi- cation of King Charles the Martyr, and the clergy of the Church of England, from the abuses of a scurrilous book, called. The Stage Condemned. To which is added, the character of the animadverter, and the animadversions on Mr. Congreve's answer to Mr. CoUier. 8°. 1699. 1836 [COLLIER (JOHN DYE)]. Life of Abraham Newland, late princi- pal cashier at the Bank of England ; with some account of that . . . establishment . . . Appendix, containing the late cor- respondence of the Chancellor of the Ex- chequer with the Bank, and a list of the statutes passed relative to it . . . Portrait . . . [Anon.] 12°. 1808. 1837 COLLIER (JOHN PAYNE). Book of Roxburghe Ballads, edited by J. P. Collier. 4°. 1847. 1838 Broadside black-letter Ballads, printed in the 16"" and 17"" centuries; chiefly in the possession of J. P. Collier. Illustrated b3' original woodcuts. 4°. Printed (for private circulation) 1868. 1839 110 COLLIER (JOHN PAYNE)— corai. A Few Odds and Ends, for cheerful friends. A Christmas gift. (By J. P.O.) 4°. n.p. Printed for private circulation only, 1870. 1840 History of English Dramatic Poetry to the time of Shakespeare : and annals of the Stage to the Restoration. 3 vol. 8°. 1831. ■ 1841 New facts regarding the life of Shake- speare ... 8°. 1835. 1842 "John Porster Esq. from his friend the Author." New particulars regarding the works of Shakespeare. In a letter to Eev. A. Dyce. 8°. 1836. 1843 Notes and Emendations to the text of Shakespeare's plays, from early manuscript corrections in a copy of the folio, 1632, in the possession of J. P. Collier . . . (Eac- simile) . 8°. Printed for the Shakespeare Society, 1852. 1844 Another edition. 8°. 1853. 1845 Second edition, revised and enlarged. 8°. 1853. 1846 An Old Man's J^iary, forty years ago ; for 1832-3. For strictly private circula- tion. [Anon, but the prefaces signed " J. P. C."] 4 parts (bound in 2 vol.) (Portrait.) 4°. 1871-2. 1847 Poetical Decameron, or ten conversa- tions on English poets and poetry, par- ticularly of the reigns of Elizabeth and James I. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1820. 1848 The Poet's Pilgrimage: an allegorical poem, in four cantos. > 4°. 1825. 1849 " J. Payne Collier to John Forster." Letter from the Author to M'. Forster in- serted. Reply to Mr. N. E. S. A. Hamilton's " Inquiry " into the imputed Shakespeare forgeries. 8". 1860. " 1850 Trilogy. Conversations between three friends on the emendations of Shake- speare's text contained in Mr. Collier's corrected foho, 1632, and employed by recent editors of the poet's works. Printed for private circulation only. Part I. Comedies. Part II. Histories. Part III. Tragedies. 4°. n.d. (1874.) 1851 Twenty-five old Ballads and Songs: from manuscripts in the possession of J. P. Collier, Octogen. A birthday Gift. 4°. Printed for presents only, 11. Jan. 1869. 1852 Reprints. Blue Series. 25 parts bound in 11 vol. 4°. n.p. 1867 and n.d. 1853 ToTTEt's Miscellany. Songes and Son- ettes written by Lorde Henry Haward late Earle of Surrey, and other [Sir T. "W'.vat, Nicholas Gi'imoald and "Uncprtiiin authortj "]. n.p. Apud Hichardum Tottel, 1557. COLLIER (JOHN PAYNE)— com<. P. (T.) i.e. Peoctoe (Thomas). Gorgious gallery of gallant inventions. First framed and fashioned in sundrie formes, by divers worthy workemen of late dayes : and now, joyned together and builded up : by T. P. 1578. S. (E.) Phoenix Nest. Built up with the workes of noble men, woorthy knights, gallant gentlemen. Masters of Arts, and brave sohoUers. Never before this time pubhshed. Set foorth by E. S. 1593. [BODENHAM (JoHs).] Bnglands Helicon. [Anon.] 1600. Davison (Francis). Poetical Eapsody containing diverse soimets, odes, elegies, madrigalls, and other poesies, both in rime, and measured verse, never yet pubhshed. 1602. TiJEBEETiLE (Gboeoe). E^itaphes, e;)i- grams, songs and sonets, with a discourse of the friendly affections of Tymetes to Pyndara his ladie. Newly corrected, with additions, and set out by George Turber- vile. 1567. n.d. Whutstone (Geoege). Eooke of regard, divided into foure parts. The first, the castle of delight. The second, the garden of unthriftinesse. The thirde, the arboui' of Vertue. The fom'th, the ortchard of repentance with divers other discourses being all the invention, collection and translation of George Whetstone. End. 1576. With a duphoate of Part III. A. (E.) Englands Parnassus: or the choysest flowers of our moderne poets, with their poeticall comparisons. Descrip- tions of bewties, rivers, &c. Whereunto are annexed other various discourses. 1600. The editor " E. A." was probably Eobert Allot or Eobert Armin. Chuechyaed (Thomas). Firste parte of Churchyardes chippes, containing twelve severall labours. Devised and pubhshed, only by Thomas Churchyard. 1576. Antidote against Melancholy: made up in pills. Compounded of witty ballads, jovial songs, and merry catches. Printed . . . to be sold in London and Westminster, 1661. Chuechyaud (Thomas). Miserie of Flaunders, calamitie of Fraunce, mis- fortune of Portugall, unquietnes of Ire- lande, troubles of Scotlande, and the blessed state of Englande. 1579. n.d. Chceohtaed (Thomas). Light bonded of hvly discom-ses called Churchyardes Charge, presented as a newe yeres gifte to the Earle of Surrie [verses] . 1580. Paradvse of daynty devises. Conteyning sundry pithy preceptes, learned counsels, and excellent inventions. Devised and written for the most part, by M. Edwardes. London, 1678. Reprint. Brown series. For private circulation only. 4°. 1871. 1854 Nine historical letter's of the reign of Henry VlII : written liy Eeginald Pole, Thomas Cromwell, Michael Throckmorton, and Thomas Starkey. Copied from the ori- ginals. Reprints. Green Series — " Old English Literature." 21 parts bound in 3 vol. 4". n.p. n.d. 1855 Tol. 1. Lamcntacyon of a Christen n^ainst the Citye of London, for some certain greate vyces used therein, n.p. 1548. Ill COLLIER (JOHN PAYNE)— cont. Pasquils Palinodia, and his progrease to the Taverne; where, after the survey of the sellar, you are presented with a pleasant pynte, of poetioall sherry. 1619. Merye enterUide entitled Eespublioa, made 15S3. The partes and names of the plaiers. n.p. n.d. Baesfieli) (Ejohaed) . Lady Peounia, or the praise of money. Also a combat betwixt conscience and covetousnesse. Togither with, the complaint of poetry for the death of liberaUty. Newly cor- rected and inlarged by E. Barnfleld, Graduate in Oxford. 1805. Saitek (Thomas). Mirrhor mete for all mothers, matrones, and maidens, intituled the Jttirrhor of modestie. Dialogue also, betweene Mercurie and Vertue. n.d. Passion of a discontented Minde. 1602. Attributed to Nicholas Breton, but Mr. Collier doubted his authorship, and was incUned to give it to Southwell. Baekbeii,!) (Bichaed). Encomion of Lady Peounia, or, the praise of money. [And] Complaint of poetrie for the death of liberalitie [Anon.] [And] Combat between conscience and covetousnesse in the minde of man [Anon.l [And] Poems : in divers humors [Anon.] 1598. E-. (H.). News from the Levane Seas. Describing the many perrilous events of the most woorthy deserving gentleman Edward Glenliam, Esquire. 1594. Vol.2. HoLLiifD (HuffH). Pancharis: the first boolte. Containing the preparation of the love betweene Owen Tudyr and the Queene. 1603. PlKEETJfS ( Johh) . Newe enterlude of Vice, contcyninge the historye of Horestes. The Players names. The names devised for vi toplaye. 1567. Pirst booke of the preservation of King Henry the VI J. when he was but Earle of Richmond, Grandfather to the Queenes Maiesty : Compiled in english rythmicall Hexameters. 1599. Chueohtaed (Thomas). A wished re- formacion of wicked rebellion. Newly set foorth by T. Chm-chyard. 1698. [and] The tragedie of Shores wife. Much aug- mented. 1593. Dekkee (Thomas). Seven deadly , sinnes of London : drawne in • seven several] coaches through the seven severall gates of the Cittie bringing the Plague with them. Opus septem dierum. 1606. Ceowoh (Htjmfeet).— Loves Court of Con- science, written upon two several occa- sions, with new lessons for lovers Where- unto is annex^'d a Kinde Husband's advice to his Wife. 1637. L. (T.) i.e. LoD&E (Thomas). Life and death of William Long beard, the most famous and witty English traitor, borne in the Citty of London. Accompanied with manye other histories. 1593. Peoctee (Thomas). Triumph of Trueth, manifesting the advnnceme[n]t of Vertue, and the overthrow of Vice. Wherein Youth is admonished to withdrawe his affection from the vain seducements of Prance. Heerunto is added Caesars Triumph, the Gretians Conquest, and the Desert of Dives. Published by T. P. n.p. n.d. Vol. 3. G. (E.) i.e. Geeene (Eobeet). Mirrour of Modestie, wherein appeareth as in a perfect glasse howe the Lorde deli- vereth the innocent from all imminent perils, and plagueth the bloudthirstie hypo- crites with deserved punishments, 1584. COLLIER (JOHN PAYNE)— con*. [Half title]. Life and death of Gamaliel Ratsey, a famous thief of England. Exe- cuted at Bedford the 26 [27] of March last past. 1605. Htjbeaed (W.). Tragicall and lamentable historie of two faythfuU mates: CeyxKynge of Thrachine, and Aloione his wife. Drawen into English meeter. [from Ovid, Meta- morphoses, II. 687]. 1669. n.d. Vehnae or Vennee (Eichaed) . Apology : written by E. Vennar, of Lincolnes Inne abusively called Englands joy. To re- presse the contagious ruptures of the infected multitude. 1614. Paeteidse (Iohn). Worthie hystorie of the IKnight Plasidas, otherwise called Eustas who was martyred for the profes- sion of Jesus Christ. Gathered in English verse by lohn Partridge. 1566. n.d. Reprints. Eed Series — " Illustrations of Early Englisli popular literature." 24 parts bound in 2 vol. 4°. London & n.p. 1863-4. 1856 Vol.-l. Knell (Thomas). Piththy note to Papists all and some that .joy in Pel- tons martirdome. Set foorth by one that knew his hfe, and was with him at the houre of his ileath, which was the viii of August. Anno. 3570. at the west end of Paules Churohe where he set up the Bui. xxiii. of August, n.y. Ktdde (Th.) Trueth of the murthering of lohn Brewen, Goldsmith of London, com- mitted by his owne wife through the pro- vocStion of one John Parker whom she loved : for which fact she was burned, and he hanged in Smithfleld, on Wednesday the 28 of June, 1592. 1592. [No Title page. History of Jacob and his twelve Sonnes]. n.d. [Half title.] Wyll of the Devyll. And last testament, n.d. Metamorphosis cf Tabacco. 1602. E. (W.). Murtherof John Lord Bourgh, Baron of Castell Connell. Committed by Arnold Cosby, the foureteenth of lanuarie. Togeather with the sorrowftdl sighes of a sad soule, uppon his funerall. [And] Manner of the death and execution of Ai-nold Cosbie, for murthering the Lord Boorke, who was executed at Wandsworth townes end on the 27. of Januarie 1591. With certaine verses written by the said Cosby in the time of his imprisonment. 1591. Newe enterlude, drawen out of the hol.r scripture, of godly queene Hester newly made and imprinted, this present yero M.D.LXI. The names of the players. n.d. [Half title.] Herebegynneth the complaynte of them that ben to late maryed. \Vyn- kyn de Worde, n.d. W. (G.) i.e. Whetstone (Geoe&e). Censure of a loyall subject : upon certaine noted speach and behaviours of those fourteene notable Traitors, at the place of their executions, the xx. and xxi. of Sep- tember last past. 1587. Lyrics for old Lutenists in the reigns of Elizabeth and James I. (Words from Musical compositions by Thomas Cam- pion [etc.]) 1863. Two Murthers : the one by Maister Caver- ley [Calverley], a Yorkshire gentleman, practised upon his Wife, and committed uppon his two children, the three and twentie of Aprill 1605. The other, by Mistris Browne, and her servant Peter, upon her husband, who were executed in Lent last past at Bury in Suflolke. 1S05. 1605. 112 COLLIER (JOHN PAYNE)— coHi. Complaint of the churclie, against the bar- barous tiranny executed in Fraunoe upon her poor members, 1602. 1562. Vol. 2. Eeport of the Eoyal Commissioners, and decree of the Star-Chamber, regard- ing Printers and Stationers 26 Ehz. [1684.] Paeht ("William). Discourse of the Travels of sir xinthony Sherley knight, by Sea and over Land, to the Persian Empire with his returne into Christen- dome. 1601. Becke (Edmokd). Brefe Confutacion of this Anabaptistical opinion, that Christ dyd not take hys flesh of the blessed vyrgyn Mary nor any corporal substaunce of her body. Eor the maintenaunce whereof Ihone Bucher, otherwise called Ihone of Kent, most obstinately suffered, and was bui'ned in Smythfyelde, the ii. day of May. 15511. n.d. "Wapull (Geokge). Tyde taryethno Man. A moste pleasant and merry' commody. Foure persons may easily play it. 1576. Adventure of Ei chard Ferris, one of the five ordinarie Messengers of her Maiesties chamber, who departed from Tower "Wharfe on Midsommer day last past, with Andrew Hill and Wilham Thomas, who undertooke in a small wherry boate, to rowe by Sea to the citie of Bristowe [Bristol] and are now safely returned. Published by the sayd Richard Ferris. 1690. " The narrative is drawn up with so much simplicity, that it is very likely to have been the authorship of Perns ; but it may have been written for him, on his information, by James Sargent, who supplied a copy of very ordinary verses at the end " ["a new sonnet "] . Collier. Broadsides of speeches, songs, etc. deli- vered in the presence of General Monck, chiefly in the halls of ijublic com- panies of London, just anterior to the iRestoration. I. (E.l. Look on me, London. I am an honest Englishman, ripping up the bowels of misohiefe, lurking in thy sub-urbsand precincts. " Eicmard Johnson was in all probability the author." Collier. Bas (William) . Sword and'.Buokler : or. Serving-mans defence. 1602. Good speed to Virginia. 1609. The dedication is signed " E. G.," but ]M[r. Collier was of opinion that Sir Walter Ealeigh might have been the author. Copy of a letter, lately written in meeter, by a yonge gentil woman : to her unconstant lover. With an admonition to all yong gentilwomen, and to all other mayds in general to beware of mennes flattery. By Is. W. Newly joyned to a loveletter sent by a bachelor (a most faithfull lover) to an unconstant and faithles mayden (by W. G.) n.d. There is a third contributor who signs his production "E. Witc." Johnson (Eichaed). Pleasant walkes of Moore-Fields. Being the guift of two sis- ters, now beautified, to the continuing fame of this worthy citty. 1607. Clinton, Purser, andArnold to their countrey men wheresoever. Wherein is described by their own hands their unfeigned peni- tence for their offences i)ast : their pa- tience in welcoming their death, and their duetiful minds towardes her Majes- tic, n.d. [P168S.] The first piece is signed " Thomas Wal- ton alias Purser ; " the second " Ar- nold" i the third " Clinton." COLLIER (JOHN PAYNE)— co»«. Eeprints. Yellow Series — " Miscella- neous tracts temp. Eliz. & Jao. I." 17 parts bound in 10 vol. 4°. n.p. n.d. 1857 Geeene (Eobeet). Perimedes the Blacke- Smith. A golden methode, how to use the minde in pleasant and profitable exercise. Heerein are interlaced three merrie and necessarie discourses fit for our time : mth certaine pleasant Histories and tragicall tales . . . 1588. Nashe (Thomas). Strtage Newes, of the intercepting certaine letters and a convoy of verses, as they were going privilie the victuall the Lowe Countries. 1592. Geeene (E.). Quip for an Upstart Cour- tier : or, a quaint dispute between Velvet- breeches and Cloth-breeches. 1692. [GuiLPiN (Edwaei))]. Skialetheia. Or, shadowe of truth in certaine Epigrams and Satyres. [Anon.] 1598. H., G. i.e. Haetet (Gabeiel). Poure letters, and certaine Sonnets : especially touching Eobert Greene, and other parties by him abused. 1592. Nash (Tho.). Pierce Penilesse his suppli- cation to the Divell. 1592. Haevet (G.). New letter of notable con- tents. With a straunge sonet, intituled Gorgon, or the wonderfull yeare. 1693. Haevet (Gabeiel). Pierces Supereroga- tion : or a new prayse of the old asse. 169.3. With Duplicate of Part I. Nash (T.). Have with you to Safflron- Walden : or, Gabriell Harveys hunt is up. Containing a full answere to the eldest Sonne of the halter-maker : or, Nashe his confutation of the sinfull doctor. 1696. EowLANDS (Samuel). Humors Looking Glasse. 1608. Stubbes (Phillip). Anatomie of Abuses : contayning a discoverie, or bnefe Sum- marie, of such notable vices and imper- fections, as now raigne in many Christian Countreyes of the vvorlde, but (especiallie) in a verie famous Ilande called Ailgna, most needefuU to be regarded in Eng- lande. 1588. Haevi!T (G.). Trimming of Thomas Nashe gentleman, by Don Eiohardo de Medico campo [i.e. Elchard Lichfield, or Leech- field, pseud, for Gabriel Harvey.] 1697. Basse (William). Pastorals and other workes. Never before imprinted. Ox- ford, 1668. EowLANBs (Samuel). Good Newes and BadNewes. ByS. E. 1622. True coppie of a discourse written by a gentleman, employed in the late voyage Of Spaine and Portingale. 1689. COLLINGWOOD (CUTHBERT, BARON). Selection from the public and private Correspondence of Vice-Admiral Lord Collingwood : interspersed with memoii-s of his life. By G. L. Newnham Colling- wood. Fourth edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1829. 1858 COLLINS (ARTHUR). Letters and memorials of State, in the reigns of Queen Mary, Queen Eliza- beth, . . . and Oliver's Usurpation. Writ. 113 COLLINS (ARTHUR)— con<. ten aud collected by Sir Henry Sydney, Sir Philip Sydney, and his brother Sir llobert Sydney, Robert, second Earl of Leicester, Philip Viscount Lisle, aud his brother Colonel Algernon Sydney. With letters of other Ministers of State . . . The whole containing the antient state of Ireland . . . The antient government of Wales. The wars between the Spaniards, and the States-General in the Netherlands. Negotiations between the Courts of Eng- land, France, &c. The intriegues of the Courts of Q. Elizabeth, K. James, and K. Charles I. . . . Whereanto is added, genealogical and historical observations : Also Memoirs of the Sydneys, and their noble ancestors . . . and a defence of Kobert Dudley Earl of Leicester, wrote by Sir Philip Sydney ... 2 vol. (Portrait of Sir Philip Sidney.) E°. 1746. 1859 Peerage of England ; genealogical, bio- graphical, and historical. Greatly aug- mented, and continued to the present time, by Sir Egerton Brydges. 9 vol. 8°. 1812. I860 " The copious collections of additions of in- terest and importance, both MS. and printed, made by the Eev. D. T. Powell of Tottenham." MS. note. COLLINS (CHARLES ALLSTON). Cruise upon wheels: the chronicles of some Autumn Wanderings among the deserted post-roads of France. 2 vol. 8°. 1862. 1861 " To John Forster from the Author." New Sentimental Journey. With a frontispiece on steel by the Author. 8°. 1859. 1862 At the Bar. A tale. 2 vol. 8°. 1866. 1863 COLLINS (MORTIMER). Idyls and Rhymes. 8°. Dublin, 1855. 1864 COLLINS (WILLIAM). I'oetical Works. With memoirs of the author; and observations on his genius and writings. By J. Langhorne. 12°. 1765. (Two copies.) 1865 No. 1. Belonged to Isa^tc Eeed, T. Park, and Rev. J. Milford ; and has MS. notes by each of them. No. 2. Eook-plate of Joseph Whatley. New edition. (Portrait inserted.) 12°. 1781. 1866 [Another edition.] With a prefatory essay, by Mrs. Barbauld. (Plates by T. Stothard, EA.) 12°. 1797. 1867 [Another edition.] Collated with the best editions: by Thomas Park. 12°. Sharpe, 1805. 1868 16505. COLLINS (WILLIAM)— coBi. [Another — Aldine— edition.] (Edited by W. Moy Thomas.) (Portrait.) 12°. Bell and Daldy, 1858. 1869 Odes on several descriptive and allegoric subjects. (Portrait inserted.) 8°. A. Millar, 1747. (Two copies.) 1870 No. 1. " The first edition of these exquisite Odes. George Daniel." MS. note on fiy leaf. Pencil notes on margin. COLLINS (WILLIAM WILKIE). Autonina ; or, the Fall of Eome. A romance of the fifth century. New edition. 8°. 1864. 1871 Basil. 8°. 1862. 1872 Hide and Seek ; or, the Mystery of Mary Grice. New edition. 8°. 1861. 1873 After Park. Illustrated edition. 8°. 1862. 1874 Dead Secret. New edition. 8°. 1863. 1875 Queen of Hearts. New edition. 8°. 1862. 1876 Woman in white. New edition. (Por- trait.) 8». 1863. 1877 No Name. New edition. 8°. 1864. 1878 " This collected edition of my works [Nos. 1871-8] is presented with affectionate re- gard to my friend, John Forster. WiUde olhns. Jnne 2nd 1864." Armadale. With twenty illustrations by George H. Thomas. 2 vol. 8°. 1866. 1879 Dedicated to M'. Forster. Dead Secret. New edition. 8°. 1861. 1880 Man and Wife. A novel. 3 vol. 8°. 1870. 1881 Memoirs of the Life of William Collins, Esq., R.A. With selections from his Journals and correspondence. 2 voL (Portrait.) 8°. 1848. 1882 New Magdalen. A novel. 2 vol. 8°. 1873. 1883 Eambles beyond railways ; or, notes in Cornwall taken a-foot. Illustrations by Henry C. Brandling. 8°. 1851. 1884 Woman in white. New edition. (Por- trait.)' 8°. 1861. 1885 Nos. 1880-1, 188S and 1885 presentation copies with inscriptions. Mr. 'W'ray's Cash-box; or, the mask and the mystery. A Christmas sketch. (Frontispiece by [Sir] J.E.Millais [E.A.]) 12°. 1852. 1886 COLLS (JOHN F.) D.D. Utilitarianism unmasked. A Letter to Eev. M. A. Gathercole, on the life, death, and philosophy of Jeremy Bentham. Forming a supplement to the eighth article in No. 158 of the Edinburgh Eeview. 8°. 1844. 1887 H 114 [COLMACHE ( )]. Eeminiscences of Prince Talleyrand ; •with extracts from his mamiseripts, speeches, and political writings. 2 vol. [Anon. Translated from the French of M. Colmache, private secretary to Talleyrand, hy Madame Colmache]. (Portrait.) 8°. 1848. 1888 Revelations of the life of Prince Talley- rand. Edited from the papers of the late M. Colmache . . . Second edition [of No. 1888]. (Portrait.) 8°. 1850. 1889 COLMAN (GEORGE)THEYOUNGER. Broad Grins ; comprising, with new additional tales in verse, those formerly pnhlished under the title of " My Night- gown and Slippers." 12°. 1802. 1890 Presentation copy with inscription. Second edition. 12°. 1804. 1891 COLMAN (HENRY). Agriculture and rural economy of France, Belgium, Holland, and Switzerland ; from personal observation. 8°. 1848. 1892 European life and manners ... 2 vol. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1849. 1893 COLONIES. Bapport sur les Questions Coloniales adresse au Due De Broglie, President de la commission coloniale, a la suite d'un Voyage fait aux Antilles et aux Guyanes pendant les annees 1838 et 1839 par Jules Lechevalier . . Documents et Pieces justificatives Tome I Premiere partie Pieces ecrites et recueillies pendant le Voyage. — Enquetes (Tome II DeuxiSme partie ifitude de I'emancipation dans les Colonies Anglaises depuis I'annee 1833 jusqu'au 3 Decembre 1842.) 2 vol. F°. Paris, 1844, 1843. 1894 COLQUHOUN (JOHN). The Moor and' the Loch : containing practical hints on Highland sports, and notices of the habits of the different crea- tures of game and prey in the mountainous districts of Scotland ; with instructions in river, bum, and loch-fishing. Second edition. 8°. 1841. 1895 Eocks and Eivers ; or. Highland Wan- derings over crag and correi, " flood and fell." 8°. 1849. 1896 COLQUHOUN (J. C). History of Magic, witchcraft, and animal magnetism. 2 vols. 8°. London and Edinburgh, 1851. 1897 COLTON (REV. CALEB CHARLES). Conflagration of Moscow : a poem. Second edition. 8". 1817. 1898 Presentation copy with Inscription. COMBE (GEORGE). Life and Correspondence of Andrew Combe, M.D. (Portrait). 8°. Edin- burgh, 1850. 1899 COMBER (THOMAS) LL.D. Book of instructions, written by Sir Christ' Wandesforde, Lord Deputy of Ire- land . . . and Baron Mowbray and Musters ; to his son and heir, George Wandesforde, in order to the regulating the conduct of his whole life. Vol. I. [Edited by Thomas Comber, LL.D.] Cambridge. 1777. [Title to Vol. II.] Memoirs of the Life and Death of the Lord Deputy Wandes- forde ... by Thomas Comber, LL.D. Vol. 2. Cambridge, 1778. 12°. (Two vol. in one.) 1900 COMBER (REV. THOMAS). Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Thomas Comber, D.D. sometime Dean of Durham . . . Account of his literary correspondence. (Portrait.) 8°. 1799. 1901 COMMINES OR C0M1NES(PHILIPPE DE LA CUTE DE) SEIGNEUR D'ARGENTON. Les Memoires. Sur les principaux faits & gestes de Loys XI. & Charles VIII. son fils, Eois de France . . Le tout reveu & corrige sur I'edition de Denis Sawage. (Portraits). 12°. Eouen, 1610. 1902 Memoirs : containing the histories of Louis XI. and Charles VIII. Kings of France and of Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy. To which is added, the Scan- dalous chronicle; or secret history of Louis XI. by Jean de Troyes. Edited with life and notes, by Andrew E. Scoble. 2 vol. Vol. I. (Portrait of Charles the Bold). 8°. Bohn, 1855. 1903 COMMITTEEMAN. The Committee-mans last Will and testa- ment . . . [Verses]. Broadside. F°. n.p. 1647. 1904 COMMON OBSERVATION. A Common Observation upon these times. [Verses]. Broadside. 4°. n.p. 1645. 1905 COMMON PRAYER. Discourse concerning the lawfulness of worshipping God by the Common-Prayer. Being in answer to a book, entituled, A brief discourse concerning the unlawfulness of the Common-Prayer AVorship . . . Second edition. 4°. 1694. 1906 COMMON THINGS. Summary Account of prizes for common things ofl'ered and awarded by Miss Bur- dett Coutts [Baroness Burdett-Coutts] at the Whitelands Training Institution, 1855-56. 8°. n.d. 1907 Second edition, greatly enlarged. 8". n.d. 1908 115 COMMONS. The Commons Petition of long afflicted England, to the chiefe Chancellor of Heaven . . . Published by C. I. . . . [Verses.] (Portrait inserted of" Nicolaus Lockyerus"). 4°. 1642. 1909 COMTE (ISIDORE AUGUSTE MARIE FRANCOIS XAVIER). Positive Philosophy. Freely translated and condensed by Harriet Martineau. 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 1910 CONDE (J. A.). History of the dominion of the Arabs in Spain. Translated from the Spanish, by Mrs. Jonathan Foster. 1854-5 3 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1911 CONGREVE (RICHARD). Koman Empire of the West. Four lectures ... 8°. 1855. 1912 CONGREVE (WILLIAM). Way of the World, a comedy . . . 4°. 1700. 1913 Book-plate of John "W. G. Gutch. CONNOLLY (THOMAS W. J.). History of the Corps of Royal Sappers and Miners . . . Illustrations. 2 vol. 8°. 1855. 1914 CONOLLY (JOHN) M.D. A Study of Hamlet. 12°. 1863. 1915 " To John ForsterEsq. with aH regards from the Author." Treatment of the insane without me- chanical restraints. 8°. 1856. 1916 CONRAN (MICHAEL). National Music of Ireland, containing the history of the Irish Bards, the national melodies, the harp, and other musical in- struments of Erin. 8°. Dublin, 1846. 1917 CONSCIENCE (HENDRIK). Sketches from Flemish life, in three tales : translated from the Flemish and illustrated . . . from designs by Flemish Artists. 12°. 1846. 1918 Translator's preface signed " N. Tr." [CONSTABLE (ARCHIBALD).] Memoirs of. George Heriot jeweller to James VI with an historical account of the Hospital founded by him at Edinburgh. [Anon.] (Portrait.) 12°. Edinburgh, 1822. 1919 CONSTITUTION. _ Authentic copy of the French Constitu- tion, as revised and amended by the National Assembly, and presented to the King on the third of September, 1791. Translated ... To which are added, its being presented to the King ; a copy of the Kind's letter to the National Assembly, announcing his acceptance ; and the King's taking the oath in presence of the As- sembly. 8°. M.r)CC.CXI. li.e. 1791.] 1920 La Constitution Fran9oise ; pr^sent^e au Roi par I'Assemblee nationale, le 3 Sep- tembrel791. Second edition. 8°. Paris, Londres, 1791. 1921 New Constitution of the Government of Poland, established by the Revolution, 3 May, 1791. Second edition. 8°. 1791. 1922 Plan of the new constitution for tht United States of America, agreed upon in a Convention of the States. With a pre- face by the editor. 8°. 1787. 1923 CONWAY (JAMES). Forays among Salmon and Deer. 8°. 1861. 1924 CONYBEARE (WILLIAM JOHN). Essays Ecclesiastical and Social. Re- printed, with additions, from the Edin- burgh Review. 8°. 1855. 1925 Mormonism : reprinted from the Edin- burgh Review, No. 202 for April 1854. [Anon.] 12°. 1854. 1926 AND HOWSON (JOHN SAUL) DEAN OF CHESTER. Life and Epistles of St. Paul. 2 vol. 4°. 1852. 1927 (MRS. GEORGE CONYNGHAM LENOX-;. Eiier and Helvig; a Danish Legend, 8°. 1863. 1928 COOK (ELIZA). Melaia : and other poems. Third edi- tion, illustrated. (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 1929 COOK (CAPTAIN S. E.) R.N. Sketches in Spain during 1829, 30, 31, and 32. . . . 2 vol. 8°. 1834. 1930 COOKE (GEORGE WINGROVE). Act for the enclosure of Commons in England and Wales : with a treatise on the law of rights of commons, in reference to this act ; and forms as settled by the Commissioners, etc. 8vo. 1846. 1931 H 2 H6 COOKE (GEORGE WINGROVE) — cont. History of Party ; from the rise of the whig and tory factions, in the reign of Charles II. to the passing of the reform bill. 3 vol. 8°. 1836-7. 1932 Memoirs of Lord Bolingbroke. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1836. 1933 COOKE (WILLIAM). Conversation ; a didactic poem . . . Fourth edition .... with poetical portraits of the principal characters of Dr. Johnson's club. 12°. 1815. 1934 MS. inscription by the author on t.p. New edition. 12°. 1822. 1935 Memoirs of Samuel Foote. With a col- lection of his genuine bon-mots, anecdotes, opinions, &c. mostly original. And three of his dramatic pieces, not published in his *orks. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1805. 1936 The three dramatic pieces are — "Second act of the Diversions of the Mornins " — " Trial of Samuel Poote for a libel on Voter Paragraph " ; and " Occasional Pre- lude." MS. note by M'. Forster. COOKESLEY (REV. WILLIAM GIFFORD). Explanatory Index to the Map of an- cient Rome. [With map.] 8°. Eton, 1851. 1937 Presentation copy. COOKSEY (RICHARD). Essay on the life and character of John Lord Somers : also sketches of an essay on the life and character of Philip Earl of Hardwicke . . .4°. Worcester, 1791. (Two copies.) 1938 COOLEY WILLIAM) DES- BOROUGH). Claudius Ptolemy and the Nile or an inquiry into thai geographer's real merits and speculative errors his knowledge of eastern Africa and the authenticity of the Mountains of the Moon. 8°. 1854. 1939 History of maritime and inland dis- covery. [Anon.] 3 vol. 12°. 1830-1. 1940 Inner Africa laid open . . . with the routes to the Muropue and the Cazembe, Moenemoezi, and Lake Nyassa ; the jour- neys of Rev. Dr. Krapf and Rev. J. Reb- mann on the eastern coast, and the dis- coveries of Messrs. Oswell and Livingstone in the heart of the Continent. 8°. 1852. 1941 Negroland of the Arabs examined and explained; or, an inquiry into the early history and geography of central Africa. 8°. 1841. 1942 Journey to Ararat. By Dr. Friedrich Parrot. Map and woodcuts. Translated by W. D. Cooley. 8°. 1845. 1943 COOPER (BRANSBY BLAKE). Life of Sir Astley [Paston] Cooper, interspersed with sketches from his note- books of distinguished contemporary cha- racters. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1843. 1944 COOPER (JAMES FENIMORE). America and the Americans : Notions picked up by a travelling bachelor. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1836. 1945 Borderers ; or, the Wept of Wish-ton- wish: a tale. Revised ... by the Author. 12°. 1849. 1946 The Bravo. A Venetian story. By the author of "The Pilot" . . . Revised ... by the author. 12°. 1851. 1947 Deerslayer : a tale. 12°. 1850. 1948 Headsman ; or, the Abbaye des Vigne- rou. A Tale. By the author of " The Pilot" 12°. 1850. 1949 The Heidenmauer (the heathens' wall) ; or, the Benedictines. By the author ot "The Pilot" . . . 12°. 1836. 1950 Homeward Bound ; or, the Chase : a tale of the Sea. 12°. 1842. 1951 Jack 0' Lantern ; (Le Feu-Follet ;) or, the privateer. 12°. 1845. 1952 Last of the Mohicans ; a narrative of 1757. By the author of "The Pilot" . . . Revised ... by the author. 12°. 1849. 1953 Lionel Lincoln ; or, the leaguer of Boston. Revised ... by the author. 12°. 1837. 1954 Pathfinder ; or, the Inland Sea. By the author of " The Pioneers "... 12°. 1850. 1955 The Pilot ; a Tale of the Sea. By the author of " The Spy "... 12°. 1835. 1956 Pioneers, or the Sources of the Susque- hanna ; a descriptive tale. Revised . . . by the author. 12°. 1849. 1957 The Prairie: a tale. 12°. 1836. 1958 Precaution : a novel. By the author of tlie " Spy " . . . . new edition, revised by the author. 12°. 1850. 1959 Red Rover ; a tale. By the author of " The Spy "... Revised ... by the author. 12°. 1848. I960 The Spy ; a tale of the neutral ground. By the author of " The Pilot." Revised ... by the author. 12°. 1849. 1961 Two Admirals : a tale of the Sea. 12". 1844. 1962 Water Witch; or, the Skimmer of the Seas. A tale. By the author of "The Borderers "... Revised ... by the author. 12°. 1850. 1963 Wyandotte ; or, the hutted knoll. 12°. 1855. 1964 Memorial of J. F. Cooper. (Portrait.) 8°. New Tork, 1852. 1955 117 COOPER (JOHN GILBERT). Life of Socrates, collected from the Memorabilia of Xenophon and the Dia- logues of Plato . . . Second edition. 8°. 1750. 1966 COOPER (THOMAS). The Baron's Yule Feast : a Christmas- rhyme. 12°. 1846. 1967 Life of T. Cooper. Written by himself. Fourth edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1873. 1968 Purgatory of Suicides. A prison-rhyme ' 12». 1845. 1969 COOPER (THOMPSON). New Biographical dictionary: contain- ing concise notices of eminent persons of all ages and countries : and more par- ticularly of distinguished natives of Great Britain and Ireland. 8°. 1873. 1970 COOPER (WILLIAM DURRANT). Glossary of the provincialisms in use in the county of Sussex. Second edition. 8°. 1853. 1971 COPE (SIR ANTHONY). Meditations on twenty Select Psalms, reprinted from the edition of 1547 ; with a biographical preface and notes by William H. Cope. 8°. 1848. 1972 COPENHAGEN. Travellers' Hand-book to Copenhagen and its environs. By Anglicanus. With maps and views. 12°. Copenhagen, 1853. 1973 COPLESTON (EDWARD) BISHOP OF LLANDAFF. nemains with an introduction containing some reminiscences of his life by Kichard Whately Archbishop of Dublin. (Portrait.) 8°. 1854. 1974 (REV. WILLIAM COPLESTON JAMES). Memoir of Edward Copleston, D.D. Bishop of Llandaff. With selections from his diary and correspondence. 8°. 1851. 1975 COOUEREL (ATHANASE). Christianity : its perfect adaptation to the mental, moral, and spiritual nature of man. Translated by Eev. D. Davison. With a, preface ... by the author. 8°. 1847. 1976 CORKRAN (J. FRAZER). Bertha's repentance. A tale. 12°. 1863. 1977 History of the National Constituent Assembly. From May 1848. 2 vol. 8°. 1849. 1978 An Hour ago or time in Dreamland. A mystery [Poem]. 12°. 1858. 1979 CORNER (JULIA). Every Child's History of England. From the earliest period, to the present time. 12°. n.d. 1980 CORNEY (BOLTON). Curiosities of Literature, by I. D'Israeli. Illustrated by" Bolton Corney. Second edition . . . Ideas on controversy ... 8°. 1838. 1981 [Pamphlets]. 8°., etc. London and Greenwich, printed, 1823-1864, and n.p. n.d. *1981 Essay on Landscape Gardening. By [Sir] John Dalrymple. [Edited by B. Corney.] [No titlepage. Hamiltoniail System. Anon.]. [No titlepafce. To the inhabitants of Greenwich and its environs (on the Ha- miltonian System).] [Halt-title] Researches and conjectures on the Bayeux Tapestry. Curiosities of Literature, by I. D'Israeli Illustrated by B. Corney. [No title-page. Pacti relating to William Oldys. ComprisinfT an attempt to vindi- cate him from the Vindication published by I. D'Israeli.] [Half-title] Ideas on Controversy. Researches and conjectures on the Bayeux Tapestry. Second edition. Bayeux Tapestry. [Extracted from the Gentleman's Magazine for June, 1839.] On the new General Biographical Dic- tionary : a specimen of amateur criticism. [Extracted from the Gentleman's Magazine for October, 1839.] (Obituary notice of Vice-Adm. Sir Thomas M. Hardy) . Single leaf. On the Authorship of the "Turkish Spy." [Extracted from the Gentleman's Maga- zine for March, 1841.] [No title page. The Ueform Schoolmaster : a political squib detected]. Single leaf. [Fifty copies printed for private circular tion.] The "Weanling Archaeologist and the Veteran Crombie. [Extracted from the Gentle- man's Magazine for October, 1841.] Single leaf. A Bibliographical Blue-Book. Prom " Notes and Quenes," No. 29:;. [No title pa^e. Comments on the Evidence of Antonio Panizzi Esquire before the select committee of the House of Commons on the British Museum A.D. 1860. ] [Pri- vate impression.] [No title page. Sonnets of "William Shak- spere : a critical disquisition suggested by a recent discovery.] [Private impression.] [No title-page. Argument on the assumed Birthday of Shakspere : reduced to shape A.D. 1864.1 Private impression. " John Porster Esq Prom the Author. Barnes, S."W." [Half title] BibUographic Projects. (Spe- cimen pf a proposed catalogue of the Royal Library preserved in the British Museum) . No title-page. Account of the life and writings of M' James Thomson. [By Patrick Murdoch]. The vol. also includes an advertisement of '* New Curiosities of Literature " and prospectus of " Details on British Biography." 118 CORNHILL. Cornhill Magazine. Vol. 1-32. 1860-75. 8°. 1860-75. 1982 CORNWALL (BARRY) pseud, i.e. BRYAN WALLER PROCTER. Charles Lamt : a Memoir. (Portraits.) 8°. 1866. 1983 Inserted— letters from B. "W. Procter to Mr. Porster (and MS. dedication of the book to him) and " To the Editor ol ." Dramatic Scenes and other poems. 12°. 1819. 1984 " J. F., from his old friend B. C. B. "W. Procter." At the end (in pencil) are three pages of criticism in the handwriting of S. T. Cole- ridge. English Songs, and other small poems. 12°. 1832. 1985 [Another edition]. 12°. 1844. 1986 [Another edition]. 12°. 1856. 1987 Essays and tales in prose. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1853. 1988 Nos. 198B-8 presentation copies with inscrip- tions. The Flood of Thessaly, the Girl of Pro- vence, and other poems. 8°. 1823. 1989 Lucubrations of Humphrey Ravelin, Esq., late Major in the * * Eegiment of Infantry. [Anon.] 8°. 1823. 1990 On fly-leaf in MS. " By Barry Cornwall (B. "W. Procter)." CORNWALLIS (JANE MEAUTYS, LADY). Private Correspondence; 1613-1644. Prom the originals . . . [Edited by Lord Braybrooke.] 8°. 1842. 1991 CORONA. Corona Minervae. Or a Masque pre- sented before Prince Charles bis High- nesse, the Duke of Yorke his brother, and the Lady Mary his sister, the 27"" of Feb- ruary, at the Colledge of the Museum Minervae. 4°. 1635. 1992 Accordhig to "Lowndes," by Sir Francis Ki- naston. CORONATION. Form of the proceeding to the corona- tion of their Majesties, King James the second, and Queen Mary, 23 April, 1685 . . . Broadside. F°. In the Savoy, 1685. 1993 CORONELLI (MARCO V.). Memoires, historiques et geographiques du Koyaume de la Moree, Negrepont, et des places maritimes, jusques i, Thessa- lonique. Eecueillis et euriohis des cartes des pais, et des plans des places, par P. M, Coronelli. Traduit de I'ltalien. 12°. Amsterdam, 1686. 1994 CORTES (HERNANDO). Despatches of H. Cortes, the conqueror of Mexico, addressed to the Emperor Charles V. Trritten during the conquest, and containing a narrative of its events. . Translated into English from the original Spanish, with an introduction and notes, by George Eolsom. 8°. New York and London, 1843. 1995 COSTELLO (DUDLEY). Holidays with Hobgoblins : and talk of strange things. With illustrations by George Cruikshank. 12°. 1861. 1996 Tour through the valley of the Meuse with the .legends of the Walloon Country and the Ardennes. 8°. n.d. [1845]. 1997 COSTELLO (EDWARD). Adventures of a Soldier ; written by himself. Being the memoirs of E. Costello . . . Comprising narratives of the cam- paigns in the Peninsula under the Duke of Welhngton, and the subsequent civil wars in Spain. Second edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 1852. 1998 COSTELLO (LOUISA STUART). Catherine de Medicis ; or, the Queen- Mother. A romance. 12°. 1848. 1999 Falls, lakes, and mountains of North Wales. With illustrations by Thomas and Edward Gilks, from original sketches by D. H. M°Kewan. 8°. 1845. 2000 Jacques Cceur, the French Argonaut, and his times. (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. 2001 Memoirs of Eminent Englishwomen. (Portraits.) 4 vol. 8°. 1844. 2002 Vol. 1. Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury — Arabella Stuart — Catherine Grey — Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke— Penelope, Lady Ilich— Magdalen Herbert— Prances Howard, Duchess of Hichmond. Vol. 2. Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia —Lucy Harrington, Countess of Bedford- Prances Howard, Countess of Somerset — Margaret Elizabeth, Countess of Essex- Christian, Coimtess of Devonshire — Anne Clifford, Countess of Dorset— Mary Eve- lyn — Lady Fanshawe. Vol. 3. Anastasia A'enetia Stanley, Lady Digby— Countess of Desmond— Ehzabeth Cromwell and her daughters— Lucy Hutch- inson— Frances Stuart, Duchess of Bich- raond— Dorothy Sidney, Countess of Sun- derland— EUzabeth Percy, Duchess o! Somerset — Lady Eachel Bussell — Mar- garet, Duchess of Newcastle — Anne, Coun- tess of "Winchelsea- Ivatherine Philips — Jane Lane— Anne KilUgrew— Frances Jen- nings, Duchess ot Tyrconnel— Mary Beale —Anno Clarges, Duchess of Albemarle— Lady Mary Tudor— Anne Hyde, Duchess of York — Anne Scott, Duchess of Mon- mouth— Stella and Vanessa— Susannah Centlivre. Vol. 4. Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough — Lady Mary Wortley Montagu. Tour to and from Venice, by the Vau- dois and the Tyrol. 8°. 1846. 2003 119 COSTLY, Costlie Whore. ... 4°. 1633. 2004 COSTUME. Book of Costume : or, annals of fashion, from the earliest period to the present time. By a lady of rank . . . Engrav- ings ... 8°. 1846. 2005 COTTLE (JOSEPH). Alfred : an heroic poem . . . Fourth edition. 8°. 1850. 2006 " With M'. Cottle's compliments." Early Recollections ; chiefly relating to the late Samuel Taylor Coleridge, during his long residence in Bristol. 2 vol. (Portrait of Coleridge.) 8°. 1837. 2007 Keminiscences of Samuel Taylor 'Cole- ridge and Eobert Southey. (I'ortrait of Coleridge.) 8°. 1847. 2008 COTTON (LIEUT.-COLONEL A.) Public Works in- India : their impor- tance with suggestions for their extension and improvement. Revised Indian edition of March 1854 .. . 8°. Madras, 1854. 2009 COTTON (SERGEANT MAJOR E.) A Voice from Waterloo. A history of the battle . . . new edition . . . with a selection from the Wellington despatches,- geueral orders, and private letters relating to the battle. 12°. Printed for the author, and sold by him at Mont St. Jean, 1847. 2010 [COTTON (NATHANIEL).] Visions in verse . . . New edition. Six plates. [Anon.] 12°. 1798. 2011 No plates. COTTON (SIR ROBERT BRUCE). A Short View of the long life and raigne of Henry the third. King of Eng- land. Presented to King lames. [Anon.] (Portrait inserted of Henry III.) 4°. [London] 1627. 2012 MS. notes. Cottoni Posthuma : Divers choice pieces of . . . Sir R. C, preserved from the in- jury of time ... by J[ames] H[owell]. 12°. 1651. 2013 COTTON. Descriptive and historical account of the Cotton manufacture of Dacca, in Ben- gal. By a former resident of Dacca. 8°. 1851. 2014 COUCH (JONATHAN). Illustrations of instinct deduced from the habits of British animals. 8°. 1847. 2015 COULTER (JOHN) M.D. Adventures in the Pacific ; with obser- vations on the natural productions, man- ners and customs of the natives of the various islands; with remarks on mis- sionaries, British and other residents, etc. 8°. Dublin, 1845. 2016 Adventures on the western coast of South America, and the interior of Cali- fornia : including a narrative of incidents at the Kingsmill Islands. . . . and other islands in the Pacific Ocean ... 2 vol. 8°. 1847. 2017 [COULTON (MISS).] From Hay-time to Hopping. By the Author of " Our Farm of Four Acres." 8°. 1860. 2018 COUNTRY. Country House. Containing the poultry yard ; the piggery ; the ox and the dairy. 12°. n.d. 2019 COURT. Court Etiquette ; a guide to intercourse with royal or titled persons, to drawing rooms . . . the usages of social life, the formal modes of addressing letters . . . the rules of precedence, the composition of dedications, the conduct of public meet- ings . . . 12°. n.d. 2020 Court Secrets : or, the lady's chronicle . . . From 1671, to 1690. Extracted from the letters of Madam De Sevigne, which have been suppressed at Paris. 12". 1727. 2021 COURTENAY (THOMAS PERE- GRINE). Commentaries on the historical plays of Shakspeare. 2 vol. 8°. 1840. 2022 Lives of eminent British Statesmen. (Portrait of Robert Cecil, Earl of Salis- bury.) 12°. 1838. 2023 E. Cecil, Earl ol Salisbmy; T. Osborne, Earl of Danby. Memoirs of the life, works, and corre- spondence of Sir William Temple. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1836. 2024 COURTHOPE (WILLIAM). Memoir of Daniel Chamier, Minister of the Reformed Church ; with notices of his descendants. 8°. 1852. 2025 Preface signed by W. Courthorpe. COUSIN (VICTOR). Cours d'llistoire de la Philosophic Morale au dix-huiti6me Siecle . . . Pre micre partie. ficole sensualiste. Publiee par M. E. Vacherot. 12°. Bruxelles, 1841. _ 2026 Seconde partie. — £cole £cossaise. Pub- liee par MM. Danton et Vacherot. 12°. Bruxelles, 1841. 2027 120 COUSIN (VICTOR)— cont. Conrs de Philosophie. Introduction h, rhistoire de la philosophie. 12°. Brux- elles, 1840. 2028 Cours de Philosophie. Histoire de la philosophie. 3 vol. 12°. Bruxelles, 1840. 2029 Cours de Philosophie . . sur le fon- dement des idees absolues du vrai, du beau et du bien ; publie . . . par Adolphe Gar- nier. 12°. Bruxelles, 1840. 2030 Fragments Philosophiques. 8 vol. 12°. Bruxelles, 1840. 2031 Jfonveaux Pragments Philosophiques. 12°. Bruxelles, 1841. 2032 De la Metaphysique d'Aristote. llap- port sur le concours cuvert par L'Acade- mie des Sciences morales et politiques ; snivi d'un essai de I'introduction du pre- mier et du douzifeme livres de la meta- physique. Troisifeme edition. 12°. Brux- elles, 1840. 2033 Course of the history of Modern Philo- sophy. Translated by 0. W. Wight. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh, 1852. 2034 Lectures on the true, the beautiful, and the good. Increased by an appendix on Prench art. Translated ... by 0. W. Wight. Third edition. 8°. Edinburgh, 1854. 2035 Appendix translated by N. E. S. A Hamilton. Philosophy of the Beautiful. Trans- lated with notes and introduction by Jesse Cato Daniel. 12°. 1848. 2036 COUSTARD DE MASS I ( ). History of Duelling. In two parts. Containing the origin, progress, revolu- tions, and present state of duelling in France and England . . . (Translated from the French.) 12». 1770. 2037 COVENANT. [Covenant Tracts.] 4°. Loudon, Oxford, Bristol, and n.p. 1640-5 and n.d. 2038 Ordinance of i)ar]iament ; with instructions for the taking ol the League and Cove- nant. Exhortation for the taking of the Covenant. League and Covenant, sub- scribed with the names of so many of the members of the House of Commons as have taken it. Declaration of England and Scotland, 20 January, 1643. Declara- tion of the reasons of the Scots coming into this Kingdom, for the assisting their brethren of England. Imperfect. New Oath or Covenant, to be taken by all persons within England and Scotland. Agreed upon at Edinburgh by the Gene- rail Assembly 18 August, 1643. Eoedus pactumq ; solenne pro reformatione ot propugnatioiic roligionis, regis honoro et felicitate, paceque ac incolumitate, Angliae, Scotiae, et fliberniao. Literae a Conventu theologorum in Anglin, et Boclesiae Scoticanso delegatis, ad cc- clesias in Bclgio, Gallia, Helvetia, aliasque reformatas. Letter from the Assembly of Divines in England, and the Commissioners ot the COVENANT— conf. Church of Scotland to the Belgick, French, Helvetian, and other reformed Churches. Translated into English. [No title-page. MS. Touchinge y" matter and substance of y" Covenant in generall it may bee reduced to these 3 heads . . .] 6 leaves. Covenanters Catechisme : or, a brief and familiar analysis and exposition of the Covenant, The plain-meaning Protestant : or, an honest defence of the taking the Covenant. Im- perfect. The Iniquity of the late Solemne League, or Covenant discovered. The Covenant it selfe. The Equity of the Solemne League and Covenant justified, against an infectious and libellous pamphlet : intituled. The iniquity [etc.] Certain observations, upon the new League or Covenant. Copy of the Covenant. View of the Solemn League and Covenant in which, that Covenant is cleared from 24 objections and quaeres made against it. Also moving incouragements to take the Covenant. By T. Mocket. Vow and Covenant appointed by Parliament. To be taken by every man throughout the whole kingdom. With instructions how, and in what manner the said Vow and Covenant shall be taken. Vow and Covenant [etc.l This edition has no instructions. Harmony of our Oathes. Shewing an agree- ment betwixt the oathes of supremacie, allegeance, the freemans oath, protestation and covenant. England's Covenant proved lawfiiU and necessaiy also at this time, both by scripture and reason. By S. C. Preacher at B.P. [? Black Friars]. [No title-page.] 30 Julii 1641. [Resolu- tions touching the Protestation made by the House of Commons.] Single leaf. [No title-page.] 5° Mail. 1641. [Order touching the Preamble and Protestation — Preamble— Protestation.] Single leaf. ludahs loy at the Oath. Layd out in a ser- mon foriEnglands example in embracing the Parliamentary Covenant with readi- nesse and rejoycing. Answere to the Pro- testation Protested. By lohn Geree, Tewkesbury. Vindiciae Voti. Or a Vindication of the true sense of the Nationall Covenant, in a briefe and moderate Answere to the Pro- testation Protested, By lohn Geree, Tewkesbury. Queries of some tender conscienced Chris- tians. About the late Protestation. Queries, concerning the ambiguity thereof. Form of such an interpretation of it, as may lawfully be taken. Covenant for religion. King and Countrey. Made by the Lords and Commons of Scotland. His Ma<'«" entertainment at Hereford, 1 Octeber. With a speech spoken to his Majesty by the Recorder of Here- ford. Eeasors for assisting the Parliament ot England, against the Papists and prelati- call army. By the Generall Assembly ot the Kirke of Scotland. Letter of M', Cotton of Boston, in New England, in answer to eertaino objections made agninst their discipline and orders there. Questions propounded to such as are admitted to the Church-fellowship, and the Covenant it selfe. Considerations tendered to the Prolocutor, and the rest of the .isiombly of Divines, met at Westminster. 121 COVENANT— co»i<. His Majesties declaration, flireoted to all persons in the Christian World. Letter from Ministers of the Church of England, to the Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland. List of the Popish Vicker-Generalls, Jesuites, Priests, and Fryers, in England, and their names and places to them assigned to extinguish the Protestant clergie, and religion. Constitutions and Canons ecclesiasticall ; treated upon by the Archbishops of Canter- bury and York, Presidents of the Convo- cations and agreed upon with the Kings licence in their several! Synods begun at London and York. 1640. Englands Complaint to lesus Christ, against the Bishops Canons. Of the late sinfuU Synod. 4". Propositions of the Kings Commissioners, (presented to the Commissioners of Par- uament, now assembled at Uxbridge) con- cerning the regulating the Church affaires. Letter from a divine of the Assembly con- cerning the TJxbridge Treaty. Disquisitions and considerations represent- ing to the Conscience the unlawfulnesse of the oath, entituled, A solemn league and covenant for Heformation, &c. Imperfect. Anti-Confederacie : or an extract of certain Quaeres, concerning the Solemne League and Covenant. Framed according to those rules of an oath, prescribed by God himselfe. Anti-Covenant, or a Sad Complaint, con- cerning the new Oath or Covenant. Imperfect. [No title-page. 2. Febr. 1643. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons, enjoyning the taking of the late Solemn League and Covenant throughout England and Wales.] Letter to a noble lord at London from a friend at Oxford: upon occasion of the late Covenant taken by both Houses. Imperfect. Also two imperfect sermons. COVENTRY (GEORGE), Critical enquiry regarding the real author of the letters of Junius, proving them to have been written by Viscount Sackville. (Portrait, etc.) 8°. 1825. 2039 COWEN (WILLIAM). Six weeks in Corsica. With fourteen etchings ... 8° 1848. 2040 COWLEY (ABRAHAM). ■Works : consisting of those which were formerly printed, and those which he de- sign'd for the press . . . With the Cutter of Coleman-Street. Ninth edition . . . verses by the Author, never before printed. (Portrait inserted.) F". 1700. 2041 Prefixed is Sprat's "Account of the Life and Writings" of Cowley. Separate title page to " Pindarique Odes." Second and third parts of the Works, the second containing what was written and published by himself in his younger years- now reprinted together. Sixth edition. The third containing his six books of Plants, never before pubhshed m English . . . now made English by several hands. With . . . poems in praise of the Author. (TTrontispieoe.) F". 1689. 2042 COWLEY (ABRAHAM)— con/. Separate title-pa^es to the Second Part (with portrait) ; Pyramus and Thisbe ; Sylva, 1887; Loves Eiddle, 1687: Naufragium Jooulare: Comoedia, 1687; and to the Third Part. Second edition. 1700 (" Dedi- cation" and "To the Header" signed N. Tate) ; and half-title to Cutter of Coleman-Street. The Guardian; a eomedie. Acted be- fore Prince Charls ... 4°. 1650. 2043 Cutter of Coleman-Street. A comedy. [New ed. of the " Guardian."] The Scene London, in the year 1658. 4°. 1663. 2044 Poetical Blossomes. By A. C. [1st edition.] (Portrait.) 4°. 1633. 2045 Tragical! historic of Piramus and Thisbe. Written, by A. C. 4°. 1 633. 2046 COWPER (MARY, COUNTESS). Diary of Mary Countess Cowper, Lad^' of the Bedchamber to the Princess of Wales. 1714-1720. (Portrait.) 8°. 1864. 2047 COWPER (WILLIAM). Works, comprising his poems, corre- spondence, and translations. With a life of the Author by the editor, Kobert Southey. 15 vol. (Portraits and plates.) 12''. 1835-7. 2048 Works : his life, letters, and poems. Now first completed by the introduction of Cowper's private correspondence. Edited by Eev. T. S. Grimshawe. With illustrations. 8°. 1849. 2049 Poetical Works. With life, critical dis- sertation, and explanatory notes, by Kev. George GilfiUan. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh, 1854. (2 copies.) 2050 Poetical Works. Edited by Eev. Robert Aris Willmott. Illustrated by Birket Poster. (Portrait and Notice.) 12°. 1855. 2051 [Another — the Globe — edition.] Edited with notes and biographical introduction by Eev. William Benham. 8°. 1870. 2052 Private Correspondence with several of his most intimate friends. Now first pub- lished from the originals in the possession of his kinsman, John Johnson, LL.D. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1824. 2053 Vol. 2 third edition. COX (EDWARD WILLIAM). The Advocate, his training, practice, rights, and duties. Vol. I. 8°. 1852. 2054 COX(HOMERSHAM). British Commonwealth : or a commen- tary on the institutions and principles of British government. 8°. 1354. 2055 122 cox (ROBERT). Sabtath laws and Sabbath duties consi- dered in relation to their natural and Scriptural' grounds, and to the principles of religious liberty. 8°. 1853. 2056 COXE (REV. WILLIAM). History of the house of Austria . 1218 to 1792. Third edition. 3 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. Bohn, 1847. 2057 History of the House of Austria, from the accession of Francis I. to the Eevolu- tion of 1848. In continuation of the history -written by Archdeacon Coxe. (Compiled by Walter K. Kelly.) To which is added Genesis ; or, details of the late Austrian Eevolution. By an officer of State (Count Hartig.) Translated from the German, (Portrait of Francis Joseph, Emperor of Austria.) 8°. Bohn, 1853. 2058 Memoirs of John Duke of Marlborough, with his original correspondence . . . illus- trated with portraits, maps, and military plans. Second edition. 6 vol. 8°. 1820. 2059 New edition, revised by John Wade. 3 vol. (Portraits.) 8". Bohn, 1847-8. 2060 Atlas to the Memoirs of John Duke of Marlborough [No. 2059] ; containing armorial bearings, fac similes, maps, and military plans. (Plates of arms and fac- similes.) 4°. 1820. 2061 Memoirs of the Administration of Henry Pelham ... 2 vol. (Portraits.) 4". 1829. 2062 Memoirs of the Life and Administra- tion of Sir Eobert Walpole, Earl of Orford. New edition. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1800. 2063 Memoirs of Horatio, Lord Walpole, selected from his correspondence and papers, and connected with the history of the times, from 1678 to 1757. Third edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1820. 2064 Sketches of the lives of Correggio, and Parmegiano. (Portrait of Correggio.) [Anon.] 8". 1823. 2065 Bound by C. Lewis. Book plate o{ Charles Kugge Price. CRABB (GEORGE). Dictionary of general knowledge : com- prising an explanation of words and things connected with literature, art, and science. With a glossary of abbreviations and foreign idioms, etc. Fifth edition ... by Henry Davis. 8°. 1853. 20G6 Technical dictionary ; or, a dictionary explaining the terms used in all arts and sciences. 8°. 1851. 2067 CRABBE (REV. GEORGE). Poetical Works : with his letters and journals, and his life, by his son (Rev. George Crabbe). 8 vol. (Portrait and plates.) 8°. 1834. 2068 According to " Lowndes " edited by "Wright. The Borough : ai poem . . . third edi- tion. 2 vol. 12°. 1810. 2069 CRADOCK (JOSEPH). Literary and miseeUaneons Memoirs. Second edition. 4 vol. [Partly edited by J. B. Nichols.] (Portrait.) 8°. 1826-8. 2070 CRAFTSMAN. The Craftsman. By Caleb D'Anvers [Nicholas Amhurst]. Vol. (I.)— XIV. 12°. 1731-7. 2071 Mo.l. Dated "Monday, December 5, 1726." No. 611. Dated " Saturday, April 17, 1736." "Written by Lord Bolingbroke, "W. Pulteney, and other writers in opposi- tion to Sir Eobert Walpole^s measures." Lowndes. [CRAIG (ISA).] Burns Festival. Prize poem recited at the Crystal Palace. January' 25, 1859. [Anon.] 4°. 1859. 2072 CRAIG (REV. ROBERT). The Man Christ Jesus. 12°. Edin- burgh, 1855. 2073 CRAIK (DINAH MARIA MULOCK AFT. MRS,). The Head of the Family. A novel. By the author of" John Halifax, Gentleman," . . . Sixth edition. 8°. 1861. 2074 John Halifax, Gentleman. By the author of " The Head of the Family " ... 3 vol. 8°. 1856. 2075 CRAIK (GEORGE LILLIE). Bacon ; his writings, and his philosophy. 3 vol. 12°. 1846-7. 2076 Enghsh of Shakespeare illustrated in a philological commentary on his Julius Caesar. 12°. 1857. 2077 Third edition. 8°. 1864. 2078 English Causes Celfebres ; or, reports of remarkable Trials. Edited and illustrated by G. L. Craik. Vol. L 12°. 1840. 2079 Count Koniprsmnrk, 16S2— The Turners, 1664 —Rev. R. Hawkins, II369— Day«. Day,1797 — Pliilip Earl of Pembroke, 1678— The Pcrv.vs, 1081— Artliui' Norkott, 1628— Philin Stiindsflcld, loss. History of British Commerce, from the earliest times. Eeprinted from the Pic- torial History of England. With correc- tions ... 3 vol. 12°. 1844. 2080 Outlines of tlie history of the English Language . . . 12". 1851. 2OSI 123 CRAIK (GEORGE ULL\E)—cont. Third edition. 12°. 1859. 2082 Library of entertaining knowledge. The pursuit of knowledge under difficulties ; illustrated by anecdotes. 2 vol. (in one). [Anon.] (Portraits.) .12°. 1830-1. 2083 New edition. 3 vol. 12°. 1845. 2084 Pursuit of Knowledge under difficulties. Illustrated by female examples . . . 12°. 1847. 208.5 Romance of the Peerage or curiosities of family history. 4 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1848-50. 2086 Sketches of the History of Literature and Learning in England from the Nor- man Conquest to the Accession of Eliza- beth. With specimens of the principal writers. 2 vol. 12°. 1844. 2087 Series second. From the accession of Elizabeth to the Revolution of 1688. 2 vol. 12°. 1845. 2088 Series third. From the Revolution of 16S8 to the present day. 2 vol. 12°. 1845. 2089 Spenser, and his poetry. 3 vol. 12°. 1845. 2090 CRAMP (WILLIAM). Essay on the Authenticity of the four letters of Atticus, included in WoodfaU's edition of Junius. 8°. 1851. 2091 Junius and his works compared with the character and writings of Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield. 8°. 1850. 2092 Fac-simile autograph letters of Junius, Lord Chesterfield, and Mrs. C. DayroUes. Shewing that the wife of Mr. Solomon DayroUes was the amanuensis employed in copying the letters of Junius for the printer. With a postscript to the first essa.y on .Junius and his works. 8°. 1851. 2093 Prospectus of u, new edition of the Letters of Junius . . . Edited by W. Cramp. 8°. 1851. 2094 CRANCOCC (VORTIGERN) pseud. Trifles. 12°. 1772. 2095 CRASHAW (RICHARD). Poetry . . . With some account of the author ; and an introductory address to the reader, by Peregrine Phillips. 12°. 1785. 2096 AND QUARLES (FRANCIS). Poetical Works of R. Crashaw and Quarles' Emblems. With memoirs and critical dissertations, by Rev. George GilfiUan. 8°. Edinburgh, 1857. 2097 [CRAUFURD (QUINTIN).] Essai historique sur le dooteur Swift, et sur son influence dans le gouvernement de la Grande Bretagne, depuis 1710, jusqu'a [CRAUFURD (QUINTIN)]— con*, la mort de la Eeine Anne, en 1714; suivi de notices historiques sur plusieurs per- sonnages d'Angleterre, cel&bres dans les affaires et les lettres. (Portrait.) 4°. Paris, 1808. 2098 " Disoours pr^liminaire " signed " Q. C." [CRAVEN (CHARLES AUDLEY ASSHETON).] Adventures of a gentleman in search of the Church of England. [Anon.] 12°. 1853. 2099 " CRAVEN," i.e. CAPTAIN JOHN WILLIAM CARLETON. Rfecreations in Shooting : with some account of the game of the British Islands. With sixty-two embellishments, engraved on wood by Frederick W. Branston, from original drawings by William Harvey. 8°. 1846. 2100 CRAWFORD (CHARLES). Dissertation on the Phsedon of Plato . . . Observations^ upon tlie writings of that philosopher ... A psychology : or an ab- stract investigation of the nature of the Soul ... 8°. 1773. 2101 CRAWFORD (WILLIAM). Remarks on the late Earl of Chester- field's Letters to his son. 12°. 1776. 2102 CRAWFURD (JOHN). Descriptive Dictionary of the Indian islands and adjacent countries. 8°. 1856. 2103 Grammar and Dictionary of the Malay language, with a preliminary dissertation. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 2104 Journal of an Embassy from the Go- vernor General of India to the Court of Ava. With an appendix, containing a. description of fossil remains, by Professor Buckland and Mr. Clift. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1834. 2105 Jonrcal of an Embassy from the Go- vernor-General of India to the Courts of Siam and Cochin China . . . Second edi- tion. 2 vol. 8°. 1830. 2106 CREASY (SIR EDWARD SHEP- HERD). The Fifteen decisive Battles of the world : from Marathon to Waterloo. Third edition. 8°. 1852. 2107 Invasions and projected invasions of England, from the Saxon times ... 8°. 1852. 2108 Some account of the foundation of Eton College and of the past and present con- dition of the school. 8°. 1848. 2109 Memoirs of eminent Etonians : with Notices of' the early history of Eton Col- lege. 8°. 1850. 2110 124 CREASY rSIR EDWARD SHEP- HERD)— coni. Rise and progress of the English Consti- tution. 12". 1853. 2111 Sixth edition. 8". 1862. 2112 Text-book of the Constitution. Magna Charta, the Petition of Eight, and the Bill of Rights ... 8°. 1848. 2113 CRESSWELL (MRS. FRANCIS). Memoir of Elizabeth Fry. Abridged from the larger Memoir ... 8°. 1856. 2114 CRITICISM. [Tracts]. 8". London and Oxford, v.d. 2115 Criticism on the Elegy written in a country churchyard. Eeing a continuation of Dr. J n's [Johnson] criticism on the poems ot Gray. [Anon. John Young]. 1783. Advice to a young reviewer, with a speci- men of the art. [By Edward Copleston, aft. Bp. of Llandafl]. 1807. The Examiner examined, or logic vindi- cated. By a Graduate [E. Copleston]. 1809. Reply to tlie calumnies of the Edinburgh Eev,iew against Oxford. Containing an account of studies pursued in that Uni- versity. Second edition. [By B. Cople- ston]. 1810. Second repl,y to the Edinburgh Review. [By E. Copleston]. 1810. Third reply. [By E. Copleston]. 1811. Two Letters from Thomas Ealconer, to the Editor of the Gentleman's Magazine, on the articles in the Edinburgh Review relating to the Oxford Strabo. 1811. CROESUS. History of Croesus King of Lydia . . . [Anon, by Walter Anderson, CD.] 12°. Edinburgh, 1755. 2116 CROFT (JOHN). Annotations on plays of Shakespear . . . 8°. York, 1810. 2117 CROKER (JOHN WILSON). Essays on the early period of the French Revolution. Reprinted from ' the Quar- terly Review.' ... 8°. 1857. 2118 History of the Guillotine . . . 12°. 1853. 2119 CROKER (THOMAS CROFTON). Fairy Legends and traditions of the south of Ireland. (The wood engravings after designs by Mr. Brooke, R.H.A., Mr. M'Clise [R.A.], and the Author.) 12». 1834. 2120 Popular Songs of Ireland. Collected and edited, with introductions and notes, by T. C. Croker. 8°. 1839. 2121 CROLY (REV. GEORGE) LL.D. Personal history of George the fourth : vfith anecdotes of distinguished persons of the last fifty years. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1841. 2122 Salathiel. The Immortal. A history. New edition revised. 8°. 1855. 2123 Scenes from Scripture, with other poems. 8°. 1861. 2124 CROMEK (ROBERT HARTLEY). Remains of Nithsdale and Galloway song : with . . . notices relative to the manners and customs of the peasantry. Now first published by R, H. Cromek. 8°. 1810. 2125 " Unfortunately, most of these venerable Remains were composed by Allan Cun- ingham." AUibone. Select Scotish Songs, ancient and mo- dern ; with critical observations and bio- graphical notices, by Robert Burns. Edi- ted by R. H, Cromek. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1810. 2126 CROMWELL (OLIVER) LORD PROTECTOR. Account of a letter written by Oliver Cromwell to Rev. Henry Hich [of Ely Cathedral]. By John Frost. [And] Fac-Simile of the Letter, Jan. 10. [16]43. s. sh. F". 1827. 2127 [Flagellum :] or the life and death birth and burial of 0. Cromwell the late Usurper . . . Enlarged with many addi- tions. [Anon.] (Portrait.) 12°. 1672. 2128 According to the " Catalogue of the Reform Club Library " by J. Heath. Title-page cut at top. [Half-title.] Oliver Cromwell's Letter to a certain eminent Kidnapper. 8°. n.p. n.d. 2129 , Letters to foreign princes and states, for strengthening and preserving the Pro- testant religion and interest. With Ap- pendix. 4°. 1700. 2130 Life of Oliver Cromwell . . . Fifth edition. 8°. Birmingham, 1778. 2131 " Patchwork, chiefly from the book reputed to be Bp. Gibson's. Noble II. 293 (editn. 1787)." MS. note on title-page by T. Carlyle by whom there are one or two other notes. Picture of a new Courtier drawn in a Conference, between, Mr. Timeserver, and Mr. Plain-heart. In which is discovered the practises and hypocrisies of the Usur- per ... In which a Protector . . . may see himself discovered by I. S. . , . 4°. n.p. 1656. 2132 [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 2133 Letter, to be sent to Lieutenant Generall Crumwel from the well-allected Partie in the City. n.p. 1647. 125 CROMWELL (OLIVER) LORD PROTECTOR— con<. Cromwell's Will: with the military direc- tions he gave his Field-olflcers a little before his death. 1648. CromwBls letter to "William Lenthal ; Spea- ker, concerning his last proceedings in Scotland. Letter to the Committee of Estates, representing the great damage England hath received from that King- dom by the late invasion. Committee of estates answer thereunto. Declaration of their proceedings in opposition to the late unlawful engagement against England. 1648. Account of the late Conspiracy against the Protector and this Commonwealth. 166*. Declaration of the Lord Generall and his Councell of officers ; shewing the grounds and reasons for the dissolution of the late Parliament. 1653. Admonition to my Lord Protector and his Council, of their present danger, with the means to secure him and his posterity in the present greatnesse. 1664. Preface signed " J.H." CROMWELL (THOMAS). Literary Florets, poetic and prosaic . . . Second edition. 12°. 1846. 2134 CROSBY (ALPHEUS). Grammar of the Greek language. Part first. A practical grammar of the Attic and common dialects, with the elements of general grammar. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1844. 213.5 CROSBY ( ). [Engraved title.] Crosby's Caledonian Musical Kepository . . . London, n.d. [Title.] Caledonian Musical Ke- pository : a choice selection of esteemed Scottish Songs, adapted for the voice . . . 8°. Edinburgh, 1811. 2136 CROSLAND (CAMILLA TOULMIN, APT. MRS. NEWTON). Diamond Wedding a Doric story, and other poems. 8°. 1871. 2137 Presentation copy with inscription. Memorable "Women the story of their lives. "With eight illustrations by Birket Foster. 12°. 1854. 2138 Toil and Trial : a story of London life .■ . . Iron Role ; and a story of the AVest End. "With a frontispiece by John Leech. 8°. 1849. 2139 CROSTHWAITE (REV. J. C). Modern Hagiology ; an examination of the nature and tendency of some legendary and devotional works lately published under the sanction of Rev. J. H. Newman, Jlev. Dr. Pusey, and Rev. F. Oakeley. 2 vol. 12°. 1846. 2140 [CROWE (MRS. CATHERINE).] Adventures of Susan Hopley; or, cir- cumstantial evidence. [Anon.] 3 Yol. 8°. 1841. 2141 Men and "Women or Manorial Eights. By the Author of the " Adventures of Susan Hopley." 3 vol. 8°. 1843. 2142 CROWE (EYRE EVANS). Charles Delmer. A story of the day. [Anon.] 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 2143 The Greek and the Turk ; or, Powers and Prospects in the Levant. 8°. 1853. 2144 History of France. 3 vol. 12°. 1830-1. 2145 History of France. 5 vol. "Vol. I.-IV. 8°. 1858-66. 2146 History of the reigns of Louis X'VTII. and Charles X. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 2147 CROWE (REV. WILLIAM). Lewesdon Hill considerably enlarged : With other poems. Third edition. 12°. 1804. 2148 CRUCHLEY (G. F.) publisher. Map of . . . North Wales . . . Fleet Street (London), n.d. 2149 CRUDEN (ALEXANDER). Concordance to the Old and New Tes- tament : or a dictionary and alphabetical index to the Bible. In two parts. To which is added, a concordance to the Apo- crypha. With a compendium of the Bible . . . With a sketch of the life and cha- racter of the author, by William Young- man. (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 2150 CRUIKSHANK (GEORGE). The Artist and the Author. A state- ment of facts proving that . . . W. Har- rison Ainsworth is " labouring under a singular delusion" with respect to the origin of "The Miser's Daughter" . . . 8°. pp. 1-16. (1872.) 2151 "With cutting from the Saturday Beview. The Bachelor's own Book. Being the progress of Mr. Lambkin, (Gent.) in the pursuit of pleasure and amusement . . . Designed, etched, and published by George Cruikshank, August 1, 1844. Oblong 12°. 1844. 2152 The Bottle. In eight plates, designed and etched by G. Cruikshank . . . F°. n.d. 2153 G. Cruikshank's Fairy Library. Cin- derella and the glass slipper. Edited and illustrated with ten subjects, designed and etched on steel, by G. Cruikshank. Sm. 4°. n.d. [1854]. 2154 126 CRUIKSHANK (GEORGE)— com*. G. Cruikshank's Fairy Library. Hop- O'my-Thumb and the seven league boots. Edited and illustrated with six etchings by G. Cruikshank. Sm. 4°. n.d. [1854]. 2155 At the end, without title-page— Letter from Hop-O'-My-Thumb to Charles Dickens, Esq. upon "Frauds on the Fairies," " Whole Hogs," &c, n.d. Life of Sir John Falstaff. Illustrated by G. Cruikshank. With a biography of the Knight' from authentic sources by Robert B. Brough. 8°. 1858. 2156 G. Cruikshank's Omnibus. Illustrated with one hundred engravings on steel and wood. Edited by Laman Blanchard. (Portrait.) 8°. 1842. (Two copies). 2157 [No title-page. Illustrations to Sketches by Boz.} 4°. 2158 Vol. of sixteen proofs, with the name of " M'" Charles X)ickens " lettered on the binding. [Engraved title]. G. Cruikshank's Table- Book edited by Gilbert Abbott h, Beckett. [Title] G. Cruikshank's . . . Illustrated by G. Cruikshank. 8°. J.845. 2159 Nos. 2162-5 and 9 presentation copies with autograph inscriptions. CRUSADES. Chronicles of the Crusades, being con- temporary narratives of the Crusade of Kichard Coeur de Lion, by Richard of Devizes and Geoffrey de Vinsauf ; and of the crusade of Saint Louis, by Lord John de Joinville. With illustrative notes and an Index. (Coloured frontispiece.) 8°. Bohn, 1848. 2160 CRYSTAL PALACE. Guides to the Crystal Palace. 3 vol. 12°. Crystal Palace Library; and Lon- don, 1854. 2161 Palace and park. By Samuel Phillips. Illustrated by P. H. Delamotte. Portrait Gallery. By Samuel Phillips. Geology and Inhabitants of the Ancient "World. The animals constructed by B. W. Hawkins. By [Sir] Eiohard Owen. Hand-book to the Courts of Modern Sculpture. By Anna Jameson. Greek Court erected by Owen Jones. By George Scharl. Eoman Court (including the antique Sculptures in the nave) erected by Owen Jones. By George Scharf. Pompeian Court. By George Soliarf. Description ol the Egyptian Court ; erected in the Crystal Palace. By Owen Jones, and Joseph Bonomi. With an historical notice of the Monuments of Egypt, by Samuel Sharpe. Nineveh Court. By [Sir] Austen Henry Layard. Alhambra Court. Erected and described by Owen Jones. Eenaissance Court. By Sir Matthew Digby Wyatt and J. B. Waring. CRYSTAL PALACE— con*. Italian Court. By Sir M. D. Wyatt and J. B. Waring. Byzantine and Eomanesque Court. By Sir M. D. Wyatt and J. B. Waring. Mediaeval Court. By Sir M. D. Wyatt and J. B. Waring. Ten Chief Courts of the Sydenham Palace. 12°. 1854. 2162 CSINK (J.). Complete practical Grammar of the Hungarian language, with exercises, selec- tions from the best authors, and vocabu- laries . . . Historical sketch of Hungarian literature. 8°. 1853. 2163 CULLODEN. Cullodeu Papers : comprising Cor- respondence from 1625 to 1748 ; incinding letters from Lord Lovat . . . with State papers . . . published from the originals in the possession of Duncan George Forbes. Introduction, containing Me- moirs of Duncan Forbes, Lord President of the Court of Session in Scotland. Illustrated by engravings. [Edited by H. R. Duff.] 4°. 1815. 2164 CULLUM (REV. SIR JOHN). History and antiquities of Hawsted, and Hardwick . . . Suffolk. Second edi- tion : With . . . notes by Sir Thomas- Gery CuUnm. (Portrait.) 4°. 1813. 2165 CUMBERLAND (RICHARD). Anecdotes of eminent painters in Spain, during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries ... 2 vol. (in one.) 12°. 1782. 2166 GUMMING (JOHN) D.D. Apocalyptic Sketches ; or, lectures on the Seven Churches of Asia Minor. 8°. 1850. 2167 Foreshadows ; or, lectures on our Lord's miracles, as earnests of the Age to come. 8°. 1851. 2168 Prophetic Studies ; or, lectures on the book of Daniel. 8°. 1850. 2169 Voices of the Night. Tenth thousand, enlarged. 12°. 1852. 2170 Wellington : a Lecture. New edition. 12°. 1853. 2171 CUMMING (ROUALEYN GORDON). Five years of a Hunter's life in . . . South Africa. With notices of the native tribes, and anecdotes of the chase of the lion . . . &c. Illustrations. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 2172 CUNDALL (JOSEPH). Songs Madrigals and Sonnets. A gather- ing of . . . old English poetry. Set in borders of coloured ornaments and vig- nettes. (Selected by J [oseph] C[undall]). Sm. 4°. 1849. 2173 127 CUNNINGHAM (MAJOR GENERAL ALEXANDER). Bhilsa Topes ; or Buddhist Monuments of central India : comprising a brief historical sketch of . . . Buddhism ; -with an account of the opening and examina- tion of the various groups of Topes around Bhilsa. Illustrated with thirty-three plates. 8". 1854. 2174 Ladak . . . with Notices of the sur- rounding countries. (Map in pocket.) 4°. 18.54. 2175 CUNNINGHAM (ALLAN). Works of Eohert Burns [i.e. Life, anon, hy A. Cunningham]. (Portrait.) 12". 1834. 2176 Life of Sir David Wilkie; with his journals, tours, and critical remarks on Works of Art ; and a selection from his correspondence. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1843. 2177 Lives of the most eminent British Painters, Sculptors, and Architects. 6 vol. (Portraits.) 12°. 1829-33. 2178 Maid of Elvar, a poem. 12". 1832. 2179 "To John Porster from his friend the Author." Poems and songs. With an introduction, glossary, and notes hy Peter Cunningham. (Portrait.) 12". 1847. 2180 " John Forster Esq. : from Peter Canning- ham." Songs of Scotland, ancient and modern ; with an introduction and notes . . . and characters of the lyric poets. By A. Cun- ningham. 4 vol. 8". 1825. 2181 CUNNINGHAM (JOSEPH DAVEY). History of the Sikhs, from the origin of the nation to the battles of the Sntlej. With a map. 8°. 1849. 2182 CUNNINGHAM (PETER). Hand- Book of London. Past and pre- sent. New edition. 8". 1850. 2183 London in 1853. 12". n.d. (1853). 2184 Story of Nell G^vyn : and the sayings of Charles the Second. Related and col- lected bv P. Cunningham. 8". 1852. 2185 " To John Forster with y« kind regaxds of Peter Cunningham." Westminster Abbey ; its art, architec- ture, and associations. A Hand-book for Visitors. 12". 1842. 2186 CUNYNGHAME (LT.-GENERAL SIR ARTHUR). An Aide-de-Camp's recollections of service in China, a residence in Hong- CUNYNGHAME (LT.-GENERAL SIR ARTHUR)— cont. Kong, and visits to other islands in the Chinese seas. 8". 1853. 2187 Glimpse at 'the Great Western Republic. 8°. 1851. 2188 CURLIAD. The Curliad. A hypercritic' upon the Dunciad Variorum. With a farther key to the new characters. 12". 1729. 2189 CURLING (JAMES BUNCE). Some account of the ancient corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms. (Portrait of Sir Christopher Hatton.) 8". 1850. 2190 [CURLL (EDMUND).] Atterburyana. Being miscellanies by the late Bishop of Rochester, &c. With a collection of original letters, &c. ... By Philaretus. [Dedication signed " E. Curll."] 12". 1727. 2191 CURRAN (WILLIAM HENRY). Life of John Philpot Curran, late Master of the Rolls in Ireland. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8". Edin- burgh, 1822. 2192 Sketches of the Irish Bar ; with Essays, literary and political. 2 vol. 8". 1855. 2193 CURRIE (WILLIAM WALLACE). Memoir of the life, writings, and coixe- spondence of James Currie, M.D. of Liver- pool. Edited hy W. W. Currie. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8". 1831. 2194 CURRY (JOHN) M.D. Historical and critical review of the Civil Wars in Ireland, from the reign of Q. Elizabeth, to the settlement under King William. With the state of the Irish Catholics, from that settlement to the re- laxation of the Popery laws, in 1778. . . . 2 vol. 8°. 1786. • 2195 "Second edition, eulm'ged and edited hy C. OTonor." Lowndes. CURTIS (GEORGE TICKNOR). History of the . . . constitution of the United States, with notices of its principal framers. 2 vol. Vol. I. 8". 1854. 2196 A treatise on the law of Copyright in books, dramatic and musical compositions, letters and other manuscripts, engravings and sculpture . . in England and America ; with some notices of the history of literary property. 8°. London (and) Bo.?ton [U.S.]. 1847. 2197 CURTIS (GEORGE WILLIAM). Wanderer in SjT-ia. 8°. 1852, 2198 128 CURZON (HON. ROBERT) aft. 14th baron ZOUCHE. Armenia : A year at Erzeroom, aud on the frontiers of Russia, Turkey, and Persia. Map and woodcuts. 8°. 1854. 2199 Visits to Monasteries in the Levant. Woodcuts. 8°. 1849. 2200 CUSTINE (MARQUIS DE), Memoires et Voyages, ou Lettres ecrites a diverses epoques, pendant des courses en Suisse, en Calabre, en Angleterre, et en Ecosse. (2 vol.) 8°. Paris, 1830. 2201 Presentation copy; MS. note. LaRussie in 1839. 4 vol. (in 2). 8°. Paris, 1843. 2202 Eussia. Abridged from the French. 12°. 1854. 2203 A Russian's reply to the Marquis De Custine's "Eussia in 1839." Edited by Henry J. Bradfield. 8°. 1844. 2204 CUTTINGS. [Newspaper and Magazine cuttings.] 29 vol. 8°. Various dates. 2205 Reviews, biographies, leading articles, let- ters, paraf^apns, poetry, art and theatrical criticism, etc. From the Times — Daily News— Daily Telegraph — Morning Star — Examiner— Spectator— Pall Mall Gazette —Saturday Heview— Literary Gazette- Critic — Athenaeum— All the Year Round — Christian Oh.server and other Reviews, American Magazines and Newspapers, etc. MS. Lists of Contents prefixed. CUTTS (JOHN, BARON). Poetical exercises written upon several occasions ... 8°. 1687. 2206 CUVIER (BARON GEORGES). Animal Kingdom, arranged after Its organization, forming a natural history of animals, and an introduction to compara- tive anatomy. Translated and adapted to the present state of science. Mammalia, birds, and reptiles, by Edward Blyth. Fishes and radiata, by Robert Mudie. Molluscous animals, by George Johnston, M.D. Articulated animals, by J. O. Westwood. New edition, with additions by W. B. Carpenter, and J. O. Westwood. Illustrated . . . (Portrait of Cuvier.) 8°. 1849. 2207 Discourse on the revolutions of the sur- face of the globe, and the changes thereby produced in the animal kingdom. ' Trans- lated from the French, with illustrations and glossary. 8°. 1829. 2208 CYCLOPAEDIA. National Cyclopa;dia of useful know- ledge. 12 vol. 8°. C. Knight, 1847-51. 2209 Popular Cyclopaedia of Natural Science. Vegetable Physiology and Botany. 1842. CYCLOPAEDIA— cojif. [Second title.] Popular Cyclopaedia . . . Vegetable Physiology. 8°. 1841. 2210 PubUshed by the Society for the promotion of popular instruction. CYPRIOTS. The Cypriots ; or, a miniature of Europe in the middle of the fifteenth century. By the author of the Minstrel. 2 vol. 12°. 1795. 2211 D. D. (E.). Vindication of the historiographer of the University of Oxford [Anthony k Wood] , and his works, from the reproaches of the. Bishop of Salisbury [G. Burnet] in his letter . . . concerning a book lately pub- lished, called, a specimen of some errors and defects in the History of the Reforma- tion of the Church of England, by Anthony Hurmer. Written by E. D. . . The historiographer's answer to certain ani- madversions made in the . . History of the Reformation, to that part of Historia & Antiquitates TJniversitatis Oxon, which treats of the divorce of Queen Catherine from King Henry the Eighth. 4°. 1693. 2212 "Anthony Hurmer" was Henry Wharton. This pamphlet "is said to be written by D'. [T.] Wood nephew of A. W." Ziowndes. D. (H.). The Spectre F°. 1851. stanzas with illustrations. 2213 D. (J.). . . . History of the . . . Government in England, from the murther of Charles I. to the restauration of Charles 11. With the renowned actions of General Monck. Being the second part of Florns Anglicus, by J. D. [? JohnDauncy]. 12°. 1660. 2214 [DUNBAR] (M. J. M.). Art and Nature under an Italian sky. 8°. Edinburgh and London. 1852. 2215 DABBS (GEORGE H. R.) M.D. Poems (Isle of Wight, 1872). 8°. 2216 Por private circulation only. DACRE (LADY). Eecollections of a Chaperon. Edited by Lady Daore. 12°. 1849. 2217 129 DACRE (LADY)— conf. Tales of the Peerage and the Peasantry. Edited by Lady Daere. 12°. 1849. 2218 Contents— "Winifred, Countess of Niths- dale" — "The Hampshire Cottage" — " Blanche." Nos. 2317-18 said to be written by Lady Daore's daughter, M". Sullivan. DAHLMANN (FRIEDRICH CHRIS- TOPH). History of the English Eevolution. Translated from the German by H. Evans Lloyd. 8°. 1844. 2219 Life of Herodotus drawn out from his book. Translated by 6. V. Cox. 8". 184.";. 2220 DAILY GAZETTEER. Daily Gazetteer. Numb. 1. Monday, June 30. 1735 — Numb. 476. Saturday, January 1. 1737. Numb. 1065. Friday, December 1. 1738. —Numb. 1465. Friday, February 29. 1740. 2 vol. F". 2221 MS. notes. A few numbers are wanting. In Vol. 1 are two numbers of " The Stam- ford Mercury," 1736. DALE (THOMAS) DEAN OF ROCHESTER. Domestic Liturgy, and family chaplain. In two parts : the first part being Church services adapted for domestic use, with prayers for every day of the week, selected exclusively from the Book of Common Prayer : the second part comprising an appropriate sermon for every Sunday in the year. 4°. 1846. 2222 DALLAS (ENEAS SWEETLAND). The Gay Science [Criticism]. 2 vol. 8°. 1866. 2223 Poetics : an essay on poetry. 8°. 1852. 2224 DALLAS (ROBERT CHARLES). Eecollections of the life of Lord Byron, from 1808 to the end of 1814 . . . Ac- count of the circumstances leading to the suppression of Lord' Byron's correspon- dence with the author, and his letters to his mother . . . [Edited by A. E. C. Dallas.] 8". 1824. 2225 DALLING AND BULWER (HENRY LYTTON EARLE BULWER, BARON), An Autumn in Greece ... To which is subjoined, Greece to the close of 1825 ; by a resident with the Greeks, recently arrived. 8°. 1826. 2226 Book-plate of William Harrison. France, social, literary, political. 2 vol. Second edition. 8°. 1834. 2227 Historical Characters : Talleyrand Cob- bett Mackintosh Canning. 2 vol. 8°. 1868. 2228 O 16505. DALLING AND BULWER (HENRY LYTTON EARLE BULWER, BARON)— eore^ Life of Henry John Temple, Viscount Palmerston : with selections from his diaries and correspondence. Vol. I. II. (Portrait.) 8°. 1870. 2229 Nos. 2228-9 presentation copies with in- scriptions. DALRYMPLE (SIR JOHN). Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland. From the dissolution of the last parliament of Charles II. until the sea-battle off La Hogue . . . Second edition. 2 vol. 4°. London and Edinburgh, 1771, 1773. 2230 From the battle off La Hogue till the capture of the . . fleets at Vigo. Vol. II. 4°. Edinburgh, 1788. 2231 No. 2230. Vol. 2 is an " Appendix." DALTON (HENRY G.) M.D. History of British Guiana . . . with an account of its climate, geology, staple products, and natural history. 2 vol. 8°. 1855. 2232 DALYELL (SIR JOHN GRAHAM). Darker Superstitions of Scotland, illus- trated from history and practice. 8°. Edinburgh, 1834. 2233 DAMPIER (REV. WILLIAM JAMES). Memoir of John Carter. [Self-taught Artist.] (Portrait.) 8°. 1850. 2234 DANA (RICHARD HENRY) JUN. Two Years before the Mast. A personal narrative of life at sea. (By E. H. D., Jr.) 8°. 1841. 2235 DANDOLO (EMILIO). Italian Volunteers and Lombard Eifle Brigade, being an authentic narrative . . . of these corps, in 1848-49. Translated [by E. M.] from the edition published at Tiurin in 1 849 . . . Letters and historical documents relating to the late Italian movement of reform. 8°. 1851. 2236 DANGEAU (PHILIPPE DE COUR- CILLON, MARQUIS DE). Memoirs of the Comi of France, from 1684 to 1720, now first translated (by John Davenport) from the diary of the Marquis de Daugeau. With . . . notes. 2 vol. 8°. 1825. 2237 DANIEL (GEORGE). Democritus in Loudon with the mad pranks and comical conceits of Motley and Ivobin Good-fellow. To which are added Notes festivous,, etc. (By G. D,) 12°. 1852. 2238 Modern Dunciad Virgil in London and other Poems. [Anon.] 12°. 1835. , 2239 "To my friend Samuel Carter Hall, the Author. Islington, 12. Aug'. 1835." I 130 DANIEL (GEORGE)— eoKf. Catalogue of the . . . Library of G. Daniel, with his collection of original drawings and engraved portraits of actors and actresses, water-colour drawings . . miscellaneous ohieets . . . pottery and porcelain of Chelsea manufacture, and other examples of art and vertu which will be sold by auction ... 20 July, 1864 8». n.d. (1864). 2240 Priced copy with names of some of the purchasers. DANIEL (SAMUEL). [MS. Title] Certaine small Workes heretofore devulged [sic'] by S. D. . . . and now again by him corrected and augmented. 12°. 1611. 2241 Title to the Comnlaint of Eosamond wanting. One or two leaves mutilated. DANTE ALIGHIERI. Translations. The Comedy. Translated by Patrick Bannerman. 8°. Printed for the Author, Edinburgh, 1850. 2242 The Vision ; or, Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise. Translated by Eev. Henry Prancis Gary. New edition. With the life of Dante, chronological view of his age, additional notes, and index. 8°. 1844. 2243 [Another edition.] 12°. 1844. 2244 [Another edition.] 12°. Bohn, 1847. 2245 Divine Comedy. The Vision of Hell (and the Purgatory — and the Paradise). Translated in the original ternary rhyme by C. B. Oayley. (3 vol.) 12°. 1851-4. 2246 Notes on the translation by C. B. Cayley. 12°. 1855. 2247 Divine Comedy. Translated by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Inferno. (Pur- gatorio. Paradiso). 3 vol. 8°. 1867. 2248 Divine Comedy ; or, the Inferno, Pur- gatory, and Paradise. Rendered into English by Frederick Pollock. With fifty illustrations drawn by George Scharf, jun. Engraved by Dalziel. 8°. '1854. 2249 Dante, translated by Ichabod Charles Wright. Vol. I. Inferno. II. Purgatorio. III. Paradiso. New edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 1845. 2250 Divine Comedy the first part Hell trans- lated in the metre of the original with notes by Thomas Brooksbank. 12°. 1854. 2251 Divine Comedy : the Inferno. A literal prose translation, with the text of the original collated > from the best editions, and explanatory notes. By John A. Carlyle. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 2252 Second edition. (Portrait of Dante.) 8°. 1867. 2253 Presentation copy with in-cription. DANTE ALIGHIERI— eo«<. First ten cantos of the Inferno. Newly translated into English verse. [By T. W. Parsons.] 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1843. 2254 The early life ["La Vita Kuova"]. Together with the original in parallel pages by Joseph Garrow. (Portraits.) 8°. Florence, 1846. 2255 The New Life translated by Charles Eliot Norton. 4°. Boston [U.S.] 1867. 2256 DARWIN (CHARLES). Journal of researches into the natural history and geology of the countries visited during the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle round the World . . . Second edition. 12°. 1845. 2257 Origin of Species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life. Third edi- tion. 8°. 1861. 2258 DASCHKAW (PRINCESS). Memoirs of the Princess Daschkaw, lady of honour to Catherine II. Empress of all the Russias : Written by herself; com- prising letters of the Empress . . . edited from the originals, by Mrs. W. Bradford. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1840. 2259 DAVENANT (CHARLES). Discourses on the publick revenues, and on the trade of England. In two parts . . . by the author of the Essay on Ways and Means. Part I. To which is added, a dis- course upon improving the revenue of the State of Athens. By Xenophon ; and now made English, with notes ; bj- another hand. 8°. 1698. 2260 Separate title-page to the Discourse . . . made English . . . by W. M. 1697. D'AVENANT (SIR WILLIAM). Tragedy of Albovine, King of the Lom- bards. 4°. 1629. ■ " 3261 Cruell Brother. A tragedy . . 4°. 1630. ■ 2262 Love and Honour . . 4°. 1649. 2263 The Man's the Master : a comedy. 4°. In the Savoy. 1669. 2264 Platonick Lovers. Atr.agaocomedy . . . 4°. 1636. 2265 Siege of Rhodes . . 4°, 1656. 2266 Siege of Rhodes : the first and second part ... the first part beiug lately en- larg'd. 4°. 1663. 2267 Unfortunate Lovers : a tragedie . . . 4°. 1643. 2268 [Another edition.] 4°. 1649. 2269 The Witts. A comedie ... 4°. 1636. 2270 131 DAVEY.(JAMES GEORGE) M.D. ContributioQs to Jlental Pathology. With introductory ohservations, contain- ing the past and present state of the insane in Ceylon, etc. 8°. 1850. 2271 Nature, and proximate cause, of Insanity. 8°. ,1853. 2272 Imperfect in "postscript." DAVIDSON (LUCRETIA MARIA). Poetical remains, collected and arranged by her mother [Margaret M. Davidson] : with a biography by Miss Sedgwick. 12°. 1843. 2273 DAVIES (SIR JOHN). Historical tracts ; consisting of 1 . A discovery of the true cause why Ireland was never brought under obedience of the Crown of England. 2. Letter to the Earl of Salisbury on the state of Ireland, in 1607. 3. Letter to the Earl of SaUsbury, in 1610 ; giving an account of the Planta- tion in Ulster. 4. Speech to the Lord- Deputy in 1613, tracing the ancient con- stitution of Ireland . . . Life of the Author [by G. Chalmers.] 8°. Dublin, 1787. 2274 DAVIES (MYLES). . . . Icon Libellorum, or, a critical history of pamphlets ... In particular, of all those from the beginning of the Eeformatiou, to the latter end of Henry the eighth's reign . . By a gentleman of the Inns of Court. Part I. 8°. Printed ... by the booksellers of London and Westminster, 1715. 2275 Athenae Britannicae : or, a critical history of the Oxford and Cambrige writers and writings, with those of the Dissenters and Romanists, as well as other authors and worthies . . . By Myles Davies. PartsII. III. (2 vol.) 8°. 1716. 2276 At the end. Sti'icturae Phidaricae in con- ventus symbolicos . . . Lyric flights in praise of . . . Mug-Houses . . . With another Ode to the Duke of Newcastle, [and] Martii Calendae; sive, Landes Cambro-Britanniae. In honorem Georgii Augusti, Prineipis Walliae, augustissi- maeque Consortis diei natalis. [and]* Conamina lyrica in honorem reverend! admodum cleri ecclesiae Anglicanae. DAVIES (ROBERT). [Tracts collected by R. D. " Rob'. Davies." MS. on t.p.'] F". London, etc., 1660-90. 2277 1. His Majesties' declaration concerning Ec- clesiastical affairs. B.L. 1660. 2. Account of the growth of Popery, and arbitrary government in England. More particularly trom the long prorogation, of November, 1675, ending 15. Eebniary, 1676, till the last meeting of parliament, 16. July 1677. By Andrew Marvel. Amsterdam, n.d. 3. List of Sliips belonging to English mer- chants taken by French privateers, smce DAVIES (ROBERT)— corei!. December, 1673. Also, a brief account tonchmg what applications have been made for redress, at the Council-Board, and with the Committee of Trade, n.p. n.d. The paging continuous from the last tract. 4. [No title-paf^e. Accountof (together with) the writing it self that wus found in the pocket of Lawrence Hill, at the time he and Green were executed, (Friday 21. February 167|.) for the murder of S' Edmond-Berry Godfrey.] Uml. 1679. 5. Discourse of the peerage & jurisdiction of the Lords spiritual in Parliament. Proving that they have no right in claiming any , jurisdictionin- capital macters. 1679. 6. Impartial account of divers remarkable proceedings the last sessions of parhament relating to the horrid Popish plot. 1679. 7. Popish Plot more fully discovered : being a full account of a design of murdering his sacred Majesty. With a brief relation of the horrid equivocation of a Popish priest . lately executed at Dublin. 1879. S. [No title pa^e. List of one unanimous club of voters in his Majesties Long Parliament, dissolved in 78 (and)— votes of the House of Commons concerning the Pensioners.] 9. [No title-page. Answer to a letter written by a member of Parliament in the countrey, upon the occasion of his reading of the Gazette of 11 December, 1679.] 10. Honours of the Lords spiritual asserted : and tneir priviledges to vote in capital cases in parliament maintained by reason and precedents. 1679. 11. Two treatises the first, proving both by history and record that the Bishops are a fundamental & essential part of our Eng- lish parliament : the second, that they may be Judges in capital cases. 1680. 12. Answer to the gentleman's letter to his friend : shewing that Bishops may be judges in causes capital. 1680. ] o. The very beggars petition against Popery : wherein they lamentably complain to king Henry V III. of the clergy. [Anon. By Simon Pish.] Presented to Henry VIIT. 1538. And now printed. 1680. 14. [No title-page. His Majesties speech to Parliament at the opening of the parlif»- ment at Oxford, Monday 21 March, 166f .] 15. His Majesties declaration to all his loving subjects, June 2, 1680. 1680. 16.' [No title-page. Speech lately made by a noble peer of the realm [Shaftsbury. . MS.^ s. sh. Und. 1681.] 17. [No title-page. Heads of the expedient proposed in the Parliament at Oxford, in lieu of the former bill for excluding the Duke of lork.] s. sh. JUnd. 1681. 18. [No title-page. Answers commanded by His Majesty to be given by the Earl of Nottingham L"!. H. Chancellour, upon several addresses presented to his Majesty in council at Hampton-Court, 19 May, 1681.] £iid. 1681. 19. [No title-page. Observations upon a late hbel, called a letter from a person of quality to his friend, concerning the Kings Declaration, &c.] JETid. 1681. "Written by yL-" Halifax." MS. 20. Loyalties Severe Summons to the bar of conscience : or, a seasonable and timely call to the people of England, upon the present juncture of affairs. In two parts. By Robert Hearne. 1681. 21. [No title-page. Brief history of the Suc- cession, collected out of the records, and the most authenticK historians. Written for the satisfaction of the Earl of H. [By Ferguson. 3IS.2 I 2 132 DAVIES (ROBERT)-con<. 22. The great point of Succession discussed. With a full answer to a late pamphlet, intituled, A brief history of succession, &c. 1681. 23. Histor.y of the Succession of the Grown of Enfcland. Written for such as have been deluded by the pamphlet, called The brief history of the Succession, &c. 1681. "By D' Brady." MS. 24. Arguments of the Earl of Danby the second time, at the Court of King's Bench at Westminster, upon his lordship's motion for bail, 29 June, 1682. 1682. 25. Account of the Earl of Danby's argu- ments at the court of Kin^'s-Bench at Westminster, iipon his motion for bail 27 May, 1682. With the judges answers and the earl's replyes. 1682. 26. [No title-page. Remargues upon the new project of association.J Und. 1682. 27 Plea for Succession, in opposition to popular exclusion. With remarques on Coleman, and his letters. 1682. 28. [No title-page. The Lord Mayor's right of electing a sheriff asserted against all pretensions of a popular faction.] End. 1682. 29. Letter from James duke of Ormond, in answer to Arthur earl of Anglesey, his ob- servations upon the earl of Castlehaven's Memoirs concerning the rebellion of Ire- land. With an answer, by the Earl of Anglesey. 1682. Earl of Anglesey's Answer is a separate tract. 30. Account of the proceedings betwixt James duke of Ormond, and Arthur earl of Angle- sey, before the KingandCouncil, and the earls letter of 2 August to His Majesty on that occasion. With aletter of the Bishop of Winchester's to the said earl. 1682. 31. [No title-page. Animadversions upon a Eaper, entituled. The Speech of the late ord Eussel, &c.J Bnd. 1683. 32. [No title-page. Speech of the late Lord Eussel, to the Sheriffs ; with the paper delivered by him to them, at the place of execution, July 21. 1683.] Snd. 1683. S3. Last speech & behaviour of William Lord Uussel, upon the scaffold in Lincolns-lnne- Eields, a little before his execution, Satur- day July 21. 1683. being condemned for high-treason. With the paper delivered by him to the sheriffs. Also the last speeches, behaviour, and prayers of Capt. Thomas Walcot, John Rouse & William Hone, a little before their execution at Tyburn, 20 July 1683. being condemned for high- treason. 1683. M. Narrative. Written by E. Settle. 1683. .85. Remarks upon E. Settle's Narrative. 1683. 36. [No title-pa^e. Letter written to my Lord Russel in Newgate, 20 July, 1683. (By) J. Tillotson.] s. sh. Bnd. 1683. ■87. [No title-page. Account of M' Francis Charlton's surrendring himself to the Bishop of Oxford, also \ he letter sent by the Bishop to Madam Charlton, touching the same; dated 2 August, 1683.] s. sh. Und. 1683. •38. [No title-page. Vindication of the Lord Russel's speech and paper, &c. from the foul imputations of falshood.] s. sh. End. 1683. iiO. Account how the Earl of Essex killed himself in the Tower of London, 13 July 1683. 1683. 40. [No title-page. Benefit of the Ballot : with the nature and use thereof : particu- larly in the republick of Venice.] 41. [No title-page. Some farther matter of fact relating to the administration of alTairs in Scotland, under the Duke of I nuder- dale.] DAVIES (ROBERT)— conr. 42. [No title-page. Declaration of the rebels now in arms in the west of Scotland.] 43. [No title-page. Some particular matter of fact relating to the administration of affairs in Scotland under the Duke of Lau- derdale.] 44. [No title-page. Propositions for insuring nouses from fire.] s. sh. ' 45. [No title-page. Arguments for insuring houses from fire.] s. sh. 46. [No title-page. Breviate of the establish- ment of the ijriendly Society for securjng houses from loss by fire.] s. sh. 47. Proclamationj'for calling out heretors and free-holders to attend the Kings host. Edinburgh, 7 June, 1679. Broadside. Edinburgh, 1679. 48. Catalogue of Pensioners in the Long Par- liament : with their gratuities, rewards and sallaries, bestowed upon themselves out of the ruins of King, and Kingdom. Broadside, n.p, n.d. DAVIES (THOMAS). [MS. Title.] Dramatic Miscellanies : consisting of critical observations on several plays of Shakspeare : with a review of his principal characters, and those of various eminent writers, as re- presented by Mr. Garrick, and other celebrated comedians. With anecdotes of dramatic poets, actors, &c. 3 vol.' 12°. [f 1784]. 2278 Memoirs of the life of David Garrick. Interspersed with characters and anecdotes of his theatrical contemporaries . . . Fourth edition ... 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1784. 2279 Bookplate of Tillard. Miscellaneous and fugitive pieces. Se- cond edition, [of V. 1,2]. [Anon.] 3 vol. S". 1774. (Two copies.) 2280 " These Miscellanies published by Tho.Davies, without Dr. Johnson's concurrence or knowledge, contain many things in which the Doctor had no concern whatever." Lowndes. Some account of the life and -writings of Philip Malssinger. [Anon.] (Portrait inserted.) S". 1779 [date tampered with]. 2281 " M'. Reed from M'. Davies." " A presentation copy from Tom Davies (the author) to Isaac Reed. A scarce work. George Daniel 1887 Canonbury." DAVIES (REV. W. G.). The A, B, C, of thought : Consciousness the standard of truth ; or, peerings into the logic of the future. 12°. 1861. 2282 DAVIS (ANDREW JACKSON). Principles of Nature, her divine revela- tions, and a voice to mankind. By and through A. J. Davis. In three parts. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. 2283 DAVIS (HENRY WINTER). "War of Ormuzd and Ahriman in the nineteenth century. 8°. Baltimore, 1852. 2284 133 DAVIS (SIR JONN FRANCIS). The Chinese : a general description of China and its inhahifaats. New edition, enlarged and revised. 3 vol. and supple- mentary vol. 12°. 1844-5. 2285 Sketches of China, partly during an in- land journey of four months, between Pe- king, Nanking, and Canton ... 2 vol. 8°. 1841. 2286 Vizier All Khan ; or, the Massacre of Benares, a chapter in British Indian his- tory. 8°. 1844. 2287 DAVIS (THOMAS). Poems. Now first collected. With notes and historical illustrations. (Edited hy T. W.) 12°. Dublin, 1846. 2288 DAVY (SIR HUMPHRY). Consolations in Travel, or, the last days of a philosopher. Fifth edition. 1851. Salmonia ; or, days of fly fishing. In a series of conversations. With some ac- count of the habits of fishes belonging to the genus salmo. Fourth edition, with illustrations. 12°. 1851. 12° 2289 2290 DAVY (JOHN) M.D. The Angler and his friend ; or, piscatory colloquies and fishing excursions. 12°. 1855. 2291 DAWBENY (H.). Historie & Policie re-viewed, ui the heroick transactions of Oliver, late Lord Protector . . . declaring his steps to princely perfection ; as they are drawn m lively parallels to the ascents of the great patriarch l\Ioses . . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1659. '^ 2292 DAWES (RICHARD). Miscellanea Critica typis quinquies ex- cusa prodeunt ex recensione et cum notis ahquanto auctioribus Thomae Kidd. Ac- cedunt . . . Dawesii Lusus juveniles: Mil- toni P(aradisi) A(missi) Graecae Meta- phraseos specimen integrum : et excerpta e libello Anglice Scripto, " Tittle-tattle- Mono-ers." Bdltio secunda. 8". 1827. 2293 DAWES (RICHARD), DEAN OF HEREFORD. Suggestive hints towards improved secular instruction, making it bear upon practical life, intended for the use of schoolmasters and teachers in our elemen- tary schools. 8°. n.d. 2294 Second edition. 12°. n.d. 0847). 2295 DAWSON (JAMES HOOPER). Abridged statistical history of Scotland illustrative of its physical, industrial, moral, and social aspects, and civil and religious institutions . . . arranged paro- chially with biographical, historical, and descriptive notices. 8°. Edinburgh, 1853. 2296 DAWSON (WILLIAM), The Atheist, a philosophical poem, re- presenting and confuting the arguments brought m favour of their tenets. 4°. 1723. 2297 DAY (SAMUEL PHILLIPS). Monastic Institutions ; their origin, progress, nature and tendency. 12°. 1855. 2298 DAY. Day, a pastoral ; in three parts, viz. morning, noon, and evening. To which is added, The Stubborn Dame. Thirty- two engravings [by Bewick]. 12°. Aln- wick, n.d. ■ 2299 DE BOW rjAMES DUNWOODY BROWNSON). Statistical view of the United States . . . being a compendium of the seventh census, to which are added the results of every previous census, beginning with 1790 . . . with . . . notes ... 8°. Washington, 1854. 2300 DECKER OR DEKKER (THOMAS). [Half Title]. Gull's Hornbook, re- printed ; with notes of illustration by J. N[ott]. [Title.] GuU's Hornbook. Im- printed at London for K. S. 1609. Bristol: reprinted for J. M. Gutch ; London, 1812. 4°. (The initial letters drawn and out by Edward Bird, and Ebenezer Byfield.) 2301 MS. notes. Book-plate of J. N. Honest Whore ... 4°. 1635. 2302 Whore of Babylon 4°. 1607. 2303 AND WEBSTER (JOHN). West-Ward Hoe ... 4°. 1607. 2304 DEDEKINDUS (FRIDERICK). Grobianus ; or, the Compleat Booby. An ironical poem . . Done into English from the original Latin by Roger Bull. 8°. 1739. 2305 Dedicated to Swift. DEERING OR DERING (SIR EDWARD). Speeches in . . . Parliament. Cou- 'cerning the Archbishop [Laud] ... 4°. 1641. 2306 134 DEERING OR DERING (SIR EDWARD)— con(. Speech. Spoken in Parliament. Con- cerning the lyturgy of the Church of England, and for a Nationall synod. 4°. 1642. 2307 Speeches in matter of religion ... 4°. 1642. 2308 Letter ■written unto Sir Edward Dering. lately put out of the House, and committed unto the Tower, Eeb. 2. 1641 ... 4°. 1641. , 2309 Signed "I. P." [f Pym]. DEFFAND (MARIE DE VICHY CHAMROND, aft. MARQUISE DU). Letters to Horace Walpole, from 1766 to 1780 . . . Letters to Voltaire, from 1759 to 177.5 . . 4 \-ol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1810. 2310 Edited by Miss Mavy Berry who wrote the life and notes. DE FOE (DANIEL). Novels and Miscellaneous Works. With a biographical memoir, lite'rary prefaces to the various pieces, illustrative notes, etc., including all contained in the edition at- tributed to Sir Walier Scott, with con- siderable additions. 20 vol. 12°. Oxford [printed], London, 1840-1. 2311 Vol. 20 includes the Life of De Foe. By G. Chalmers. Works, with a memoir of his hfe and writings. By WilUam Hazlitt. Vol. 1-3. (Portrait.) 8°. 1840-3. 2312 "J. ForsterEsq. With W. Hazlitt's best compts." Novels and Miscellaneous Works. With prefaces and notes, including those attri- buted to Sir Walter Scott. Vol. 1-5. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1854-5. 2313 True collection of the Writings of the author of the True Born English-man. Second edition with adetions. Corrected by himself. (Portrait.) 8°. 1705. 2314 Jure Diviuo : a Satyr. In twelve books. By the author of the True-Born- Englishmaii. (Portrait of De Foe.) 8°. 1706. 2315 "Xhe 8vo. edition is spurious, and full of blunders of every description.'* Zoiondes. Life and strange surprizing adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, mariner : who lived eight and twenty years, all alone in an un-inhabited island on the coast of America, near the mouth of the great river of Oroonoque ; having been east on shore by shipwreck, -wherein all the men perished but himself. With an account how he was at last as strangely deliver'd by pyrates. Written by him- self. [Pirst ed.] 8°. London ; printed DE FOE (DANIEL)— eo™;. for W. Taylor at the Ship in Pater-Nos- tei-Eow. 1719. , 2316 According to Lowndes — ""With an en^av- ing of Eobinson Crusoe, sometimes placed as a Frontispiece" — not in this copy. Book-plate of Hon. Frederic North. Farther Adventures of Robinson Cru- soe ; being the second and last part of his life, and of the strange surprizing accounts of his travels round three parts of the globe. Written by himself. To which is added a map of the world, in which is delineated the voyages of Robin- son Crusoe. 8°. London : printed for W. Taylor at the Ship in Pater-Noster- Eow. 1719. 2317 Book-plate of Charles Hooker. INfemoirs of John Lord Haversham, ■from 1640 to 1710. With his private ob- servations upon the most remarkable occurrences from the beginning of her Majesty's reign, to the day of his death. ... his speeches in Parliament . . . [Anon.] 8°. 1711. 2318 New Journey to the World in the Moon ... . Second edition. [Anon.] 8°. 1741. 2319 Book-plate of "Walter "Wilson. DE GREY (THOMAS • PHILIP, EARL). Characteristics of the Duke of Welling- ton, apart from his military talents. 8°. 1853. • 2320 DE LA BECHE (SIR HENRY THOMAS). Geological Observer. 8°. 1851. 2321 DELAFAYE (THEODORE). Essay on Virgil's celebrated Gates of Sleep . . . Homer's similar Gates, a solution of Virgil's Faho damnati crimine mortis ; and ... a true Key to the ^neis. 8°. 1743. 2322 DE LA GIRONIERE (PAUL P.). Twenty years in the Philippines. Trans- lated from the French. Revised and ex- tended by. the Author. (Portrait.) 8°. n.d. 2323 [Another edition.] Abridged from the original French. By Frederick Hard- man. 12". 1853. 2324 DE LA MOTTE (PHILIP). Choice examples of Art Workmanship selected from the exhibition of ancient and mediaeval art at the Society of Arts. Drawn and engrayed under the superin- tendence of Philip De La Motte. 4°. 1851. 2325 133 DELANY (MARY GRANVILLE, apt. MRS. PENDARVES, aft. MRS.). Autobiography and Correspondence : "with interebtiD*^ reminiscences of King George the third and Queen Charlotte. Edited by Lady Llano^er. 3 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1861. 2326 Second Series. 3 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1862. 2327 [MS. title-page.] Index to the Auto- biography and Correspondence. 8°. 1862. 2328 Letters to Mrs. Frances Hamilton, from 1779 to 1788; comprising many . . . anecdotes of their late Majesties and the Boyal Family . . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1820. 2329 [DELANY (PATRICK) D.D.] Observations upon Lord Orrery's Re- marks on the life and writings of Dr. Jonathan Swift. Containing . . . anec- dotes relating to . . . that great genius, and . . Stella . . . Two original pieces of the same author . . . never before published. [Anon.] 8». 1754. (Three copies.) 2330 Preface .signed " J. E." Book-plates of Ed- ward Cooper and V,', Combes. Reflections upon Polygamy, and the en- couragement given to that practice in the Old Testament. By Phileleutherus Dub- liniensis. Second edition. With a pre- face ... 8°. 1739. 2331 "With t\vo printed cuttings, verses by and relating to Dr. Delany. DE LA RIVE (AUGUSTE). Treatise on electricity, in theory and practice. 3 vol. Vol. 1. II. 8°. 1853-6. 2332 Op t.p. of V. II. Translated for the author by Charles V. "Walker. DELEPIERRE (OCTAVEj. Macaroneana on melanges de littera- ture Macaronique des differents peuples de I'Europe. 8". Brighton and Paris, 1852. 2333 DEMBOROSKI (.Barora CHARLES). Deux ans en Espagne et en Portugal pendant la guerre Civile. 1838-1840. 8°. Paris, 1841. 2334 DEMIDOFF (ANATOLE DE). Travels in southern l!us>i;i, and the Crimea, through Hungary, Wallachia, & Moldavia, during 1837. Illustrated by Raffet. 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 233.: DE MORGAN (AUGUSTUS). Book of Almanacs, with an index of reference, by which the almanac may be found for every year, whether in old DE MORGAN (AUGUSTUS)— cowf. style or new, from any epoch, ancient or modern, up to A.D. 2000. With means of finding the day of any new or full Moon from B.C. 2000 to A.D. 2000. Oblong. 1851. 2336 DEMOSTHENES. Opere trasportate dalla Greca nella favella Italiana e con varie annotazioni, ed osservazioni illustrate dall' Abate Mel- chior Cesarotti. 6 vol. 8°. Venezia, i796. 2337 Translation of select speeches, with notes : by Charles Eann Kennedy. 8°. Cambridge, 1841. 2338 Olynthiac and other public orations Translated, with notes, &c. By C. E. Kennedy. 8°. Bohn, 1852. 2339 Orations on the Crown, and on the Em- bassy. Translated with notes, &c. by C. R. Kennedy. 8°. Bohn, 1855. 2340 Orations against the law of Leptines, Jlidias, Androtion, and Aristocrates. Translated, with notes, &c. by C. R. Ken- nedy. 8°. Bohn, 1856. 2341 Oration on The Crown. With notes, by J. T. Champlin. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1843. 2342 Second edition. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1847 2343 DENHAM (SIR JOHN). Poems and Translations; with the Sophy, a tragedy. Sixth edition. 12°. 1719. 2344 Book plate of Jamr-s Cock, DENINA (^Abate CARLO). Istoria politica e letteraria della Grecia libera. Edizione prima Veueta ... 4 vol. 8°. Venezia, 1784. 2345 yo t.p. to vol. iv. DENISON {Zord ALBERT) aft. 1st BARON LONDESBOROUGH. Wanderings in search of health. 8°. Printed for private circulation, 1849. 2346 " "With Lord Albert Denison's best oompM- « ments." DENNIS (GEORGE), The Cid : a short chronicle, founded on the early poetry of Spain. 12°. 1845. 2347 Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria. 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 2348 DENNIS (JOHN). Select Works, in two volumes : consist- ing of plays, poems, &c. ... 8°. 1721, 1718. 2349 Book-plate of John Lewis Petit. 136 DENNIS (JOHN)— eonf. Miscellaneous Tracts. 2 vol. Vol. I. Advancement and reformation of Modern Poetry. Rinaldo and Armida, a tragedy. An answer to Mr. Collier's Short view of the Stage. 8°. 1727. 2350 Advancement and reformation of Modern Foetry . . . 12°. 1701. 2351 Comical Gallant ; or the amours of Sir John Falstaffe. A comedy . . . Account of the taste in poetry, and the causes of the degeneracy of it. 4°. 1702. 2352 An alteration of the Merry Wives of Windsor. Grounds of Criticism in poetry ... 8°. 1704. 2353 D'. Bliss's copy and MS. notes. Book-plate of "William Thorapsou, 1708.J Letters upon several occasions : written by and between Mr. Dryden, Mr. Wy- cherly, Mr. - - Mr. Congreve, and Mr. Dennis. Published by Mr. Dennis. With a new translation of select letters of Voiture (by Dryden and Dennis). 12°. 1696. 2354 Book-plate and Mg. note of Philip Bliss. Book-plate of Thomas Wentworth, Baron of Eaby, 1698. Original Letters, familiar, moral and critical. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1721. 2355 At the beginning a printed form of receipt signed (MS.) " John Dennis." Usefulness of the Stage . . . occasioned by a late book, written by Jeremy Collier. 8°. 1698. 2356 Portrait of Dennis (by Hogarth) inserted. DENNIS (JOHN). Poems. 12°. Brighton, 1853. 2357 DENNISTOUN (JAMES). Memoirs of the Dukes of ITrbino, illus- trating the arms, arts, and literature of Italy, from 1440' to 1630. 3 vol. (Por- traits.) &". 1851. 2358 Memoirs of Sir Robert Strange, en- graver . . and of his brother-in-law Andrew Lumisden, private secretary to the Stuart Princes ... 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1855. 2359 DENNYS (EDWARD N.). The Alpha, or first principle of the human mind : a philosophical inquiry into the nature of truth. [Anon.] 8°. 1851. 2360 Second edition. 8°. 1S55. 2361 DEPRET (LOUIS). L'AIbum de Karl. 8°. Paris, 1874. 2362 [Title from cover]. Charles Dickens 1812-1870. 8°. Lille, 1874. 2363 Silhouettes de Villes. 8°. Paris, 1874. 2364 Nos. 2362-4. Presentation copies. DE QUINCEY (THOMAS). [Half Title.] Selections grave and gay, from writings published and unpublished. Vol. l.-X. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1853-8, and n.d. 2365 Vol. 1. 2. Autobiographic sketches. 3. 4. Miscellanies : chiefly narrative. Spanish Military Nun; Last Days of Kant; System of the heavens as re- vealed by Lord Eosse's telescopes; Joan of Arc; Casuistry of Roman meals ; Modern superstition ; Murder, considered as one of the line arts; Eevolt of the Tartars ; Dialogues on political economy ; , War ; jinglish Mailcoach. 5. ■ Confessions of an English opium-eater (at end— The I3aughter of Lebanon) . 6. Sketches, critical and biographic. Shelley ; Whiggism in its relations to literature ; Oliver Goldsmith ; Words- worth's poetry ; Keats ; Homer and the Homeridae. 7. Studies on secret records, personal and historic. With other papers. Judas Is- cariot ; Richard Bentley ; Cicero ; Secret Societies; Milton; Appendix. 8. Essays, sceptical and anti-sceptical, on problems neglected or misconceived ; Walking Stewart — Marquess Wellesley — Schlosser's literary history of the eigh- teenth century — Protestantism — Pagan Oracles — Miracles as subjects of testi- mony — Casuistry — Greece under the Romans. 9. n.d. Leaders in Literature with a notice of traditional errors affecting them. Pope ; Theory of Greek tragedy ; Lan- guage; French and Englisu Man- ners ; C. Lamb ; Philosophy of Kero- dotus ; Plato's Republic ; Sortilege and Astrology; Walter Savage Lander. 10. n.d. Classic records reviewed or deci- phered. Caesars; Theban Sphinx; Essenes; Aelius Lamia. [Half Titles]. De Quincey's writings. Vol. 1-7. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1851, 1850. 2366 1. Confessions of an English Opium-eater, and Suspiria de profundis. 2. Biographical essays. Shakspeare ; Pope ; Lamb ; Goethe j Schiller. 3. Miscellaneous essays. On the Knocking at the gate, in Mac- beth ; Miu'der, considered as one of the fine arts; second paper on Murder; Joan of Arc; English Mail-coach; Vision of sudden drath ; Dinner, real and reputed. 4. The Caesars. 6. (Portrait.) Life and Manners; from the Autobiography of an Enghsh Opium- eater. 6, 7. Literary Reminiscences ; Irom the Au- tobiography. Logic of Political Economy. 8°. Edin- burgh and London, 1844. 2367. DE ROS (WILLIAM LENNOX LASCELLES FITZGERALD DE ROS, BARON). Journal of a tour in the Principalities, Crimea, and countries adjacent to the Black yea in ) 835-6. 8°. 1855. 2368 137 DERRICK (SAMUEL). Letters writteu from Leverpoole, Ohester, Corke, the lake of Killarney, Dublin, Tunbridge -Wells, Bath. 2 vol. (in one;. (Portrait.) 12°. 1767. 2369 At the end— Letters describing the lake oi Killarney and Mucruss gardeas. By William Ockenden. DERZHAVIN ( ). Poem on God by Derzhavin the Russian poet. This caligraphic illustration is dedi- cated to all nations, bj' John Craik, Dumfries Academy, 1851. Written by John Craik. Lithographed by Maclure and Maedonald. IT". Glasgow, etc. n.d. 2370 DE VERE (SIR AUBREY). Mary Tudor an historical drama the Lamentation of Ireland and other poems. 12". 1847. 2371 Song of Faith devout exercises and sonnets. 12°. 1842. 2372 DE VERE (AUBREY THOMAS). English Misrule and Irish Misdeeds. Four letters from Ireland ... 8°. 1848. 2373 Picturesque sketches of Greece and Turkey. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 2374 Search after Proserpine, recollections of Greece, and other poems. 12°. Oxford, 1843. 2375 " From the Author." The Waldenses, or the fall of Rora : a lyrical sketch. With other poems. 12°. Oxford, 1842. 2376 " From the Author." DEVERELL (MRS. MARY). Miscellanies in prose and verse . . . chiefly upon moral subjects . . 2 vol. 12°. 1781. 2377 DEVEREUX (HON. WALTER BOURCHIER). Lives and letters of the Devereux, earls of Essex, in the reigns of Elizabeth, James I, and Charles I. 1540-1646. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1853. 2378 DEVEY (JOSEPH). Logic ; or, the science of inference. A sj-stematic view of the principles of evi- dence, and the methods of inference in the various departments of human knowledge. 8°. Bohn, 1854. 2379 DEVLIN (JAMES DACRES). Helps to Hereford history, civil and legendary; in an account of the ancient Cordwainers' company of that City ; (ac- companied with the prospectus of a series of volumes on trade history in general.) The Mordiford dragon; and other sub- jects. 12°. 1848. 2380 Separate title to The Mordiford dragon. Hereford, 1848. DEVON (FREDERICK). Issues of the Exchequer; being a col- lection of payments made out of his Majesty's revenue, from Henry III. to Henry VI. inclusive. With an appendix. Extracted and translated from the original rolls of the ancient Pell office . . By F. Devon. 8°. 1837. 2381 Issues of the Exchequer ; being pay- ments made out of his Majcstj's revenue during the reign of James I. Extracted Irom the original records belonging to the ancient pell ofiBce . By F. Devon. 8°. 1836. 2382 D'EWES (SIR SIMONDS). Autobiography and Correspondence, during the reigns of James I. and Charles I. Edited by James Orchard Halliwell [now J. 0. Halliwell-Phillipps]. 2 vol. (I'or- traits of Sir Thomas Overbury and Fred. King of Bohemia.) i". 1845i- 2383 College Life [Cambridge] in the time of James the first. As illustrated by an unpublished diary of Sir .S. D'Ewes. 8°. 1851. 2384 Conipleat Journal of the Vites, speeches and debates, both of the House of Lords and House of Commons throughout the whole reign of Queen Elizabeth. Collected by . . . Sir S. D'Ewes. Published by Paul Bowes. (Frontispiece). Fo. 1693. 2385 DEWEY (ORVILLE) D.D. Moral views of commerce, society, and politics, in twelve discourses. 8°. 1838. 2386 D'EYNCOURT (CHARLES TEN- NYSON). Eustace ; an elegy [on the author's son Eustace]. 8°. 1851. (2 copies.) 2387 DIAL. The Dial : a magazine for literature, philosophy, and religion. Vol. I. II. [Edited by R.'W. Emerson]. 8°. Boston [U.S.] and London, 1841-2 (1840-2). 2388 According to the Athencsum Margaret Fuller, Jlarchesa Ossoli, edited the Dial. DIALOGUES. Dialogues in the Shades, between General Wolfe, General Montgomery, David Hume, George Grenville, and Charles Townshend. 12°. 1777. 2389 DIARY. Leaves from the Diary o£ an officer of the Guards. [Peninsular War]. 12°. 1854. 2390 138 DIBDIN (CHARLES). Complete History of the English Stage. Introduced by a . . review of the Asiatic, Grecian, Eoman, Spanish, Italian, Portugese [sic], German, French, and other Theatres, and involving biographical tracts and anecdotes . . . concerning . . . authors, composers, painters, actors, singers, and patrons of dramatic produc- tions in all countries ... 5 vol. 8°. n.d. [1795]. 2391 Songs of C. D. chronologically arranged, ■with notes . . . and the music of the best and most popular of the melodies, ■with new piano-forte accompaniments. To ■which is prefixed a memoir of the author, by George Hogarth. (Portrait.) 8°. 1842. 2392 DIBDIN (THOMAS). Eeminiscenees. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1827. 2393 Vicar of Wakefield : a melo-dramatic burletta . . . the music by M' Sander- son .. . 8". 1817. 2394 DIBDIN (THOMAS FROGNALL) D.D. Bibliomania ; or, Book-madness ; con- taining some account of the history, symp- toms, and cure of this fatal disease . . . 8°. 1809. 2395 [Second edition.] Bibliomania ; or Book Madness : a bibliographical romance, in six parts. Illustrated with outs. 8°. 1811. 2396 Library Companion ; or, the young man's guide, and the old man's comfort, in the choice of a library. 8°. 1824. 2397 DICK (WILLIAM ROBERTSON). Inscriptions and devices, in the Beau- champ Tower, Tower of London ; with . . . historical sketch of the building and the prisoners formerly confined therein : Collected ... by W. K. Dick. 4". n.d. (1853). 2398 Plate IX wanting ; XI In duplicate. DICKENS (CHARLES). [Works.] 17 Vol. S". 1847-68. 2399 First cheap issue. There have been a first, second, and third series. Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. "With a frontispiece. From a design by C. B. Leslie, E.A. Engraved by J. Thomp- son. (Two copies.) Life and Adventures of Nicliolas Nickleby. With M frontispiece from a painting by T. Webster, ll.A. Engraved by T. Wil- liams. (Two copies.) No. 3. Title-page dated 1857 and without engraver's name. Old Curiosity Shop. With a frontispiece. From a paiutinn by Geo. Catlormole. Engraved by T. Williams. (Two copies.) DICKENS (CHARLES)— COTif. Barnaby Budge. A tale of the Riots of 'Eighty. With a frontispiece drawn by Hablot Knight Browne, and engraved by W. T. Green. (Two copies.) No. 2. Title-page dated 1867, and without the names of the designer and engraver of the frontispiece. Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzle^wit. With a frontispiece, from a drawing by Frank Stone rA.R.A.] (Two copies.) ■ Adventures of Oliver Twist. With a frontis- piece by George Cruikshank. (Two copies.) No. 2. Title-page dated 1857. American Notes for general circulation. With a frontispiece by C. Staniield, E.A. {Two copies.) Sketches by Boz . . . "With a frontispiece by George Cruikshank. (Two copies.) No. 2. Title-page dated 1854. Christmas Books. CWith a frontispiece by John Leech). (Two copies, one dated 1852, the.other 1868.) Dombey and Son. "With frontispiece by H. K. Browne. (Two copies.) Personal history of David Copperfleld. With frontispiece by H. K. Browne. (Two copies.) Bleak House. With ;i frontispiece by H. K. Browne. Little Dorrit. With frontispiece by Marcus Stone [A.B.A.] Great Expectations. With a frontispiece, from a painting by Marcus Stone [A.E.A.] Tale of Two Cities. With frontispiece by- Marcus Stone [A.B.A.] (Two copies.) Hard Times and Pictures from Italy. "With a frontispiece .by A. B. Houghton^ (Two copies.) TJncommercial Traveller. With a frontis- piece by G. J. Pinwell. New edition. Our Mutual Friend. With frontispiece (by A.B.Houghton). (Two copies.) [Half Titles.] Works. Library edition. 26 vol. (illustrated). 8°. 1858-9 & n.d. (Two copies.) 2400 No. 1. '* Tenth November, 1859. To my dear old friend John Forster [to whom this ed. is dedicated] ■with my affectionate and undying regard. Charles Dickens." MS. inscrvptioti. No. 2. Portrait of Dickens and extra t.p. in Vol. 1. Vol. 1. 2. Pickwick Papers. 3. i. Nicho- las Nickleby. 6. 6. iSlartm Chuzzle^wit. 7. Old Curiosity Shop. 8. Old Curio- sity Shop. Reprinted Pieces [from Bonsehold Words]. 9. 10. Barnaby Eudge. Hard Times. 11. Sketches by Boz. 12. Oliver T^wist. 13. 14. Dombey and Son. 16. 16. David Copperfleld. 17. Pictures from Italy. American Notes. 18. 19. Bleak House. 20. 21. Little Dorrit. 22. Christmas Books. 23. Tale of Two Cities. 24. Great Expectations. 25. 26. Our Mutual Friend. [Works.] [Half Titles.] Charles Dickens edition. 18 vol. (Portrait; and illustrations by Soymour, "Phiz," G. Cruik--hank, Leech, C. Stanfield, 11. A., etc.) 8". 18G7-S&n.d. 2401 Inscribed to Mr. Forster. Posthumous papers of the Pickwick Club. Life and Adventures of Martin Cbuzzle- wit. Adventures of Oliver Twist. Dombey & Sou. Old Curiosity Ship. 139 DICKENS (CHARLES)— eojif. Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickle- by. Personal history of David Copper- field. Christmas Books. Bamaby Eudge. Bleak House. Sketches by Boz. American Notes, and reprinted pieces. (The " American Notes has a " Postscript " dated May 1868.) Tale of Two Cities. Uncommercial Traveller. Little Borrit. Hard Times and Pictures from Italy. Our Mutual I'riend. Great Expectations. Another copy, with the addition of a Child's History of England, but dated 1868-70, & n.d. Bound in 46 vol. or parts. 2402 Pencil notes by Mr. Porster. " Postscript " to " Martin Chuzzlewit." [Works. Illustrated Library Edition.] 30 vol. (Portrait ; and Jllustr3,tions by Cruikshank, H. K. Browne ("Phiz"). G. Cattermole, P. W'alker, A.R.A., Marcus Stone, A.R.A., Sir Edwin LSndseer, R.A., D. Maclise, K.A., C. Stanfield, R.A., P. Stone, A.R.A., 11. Doyle, J. Leech, J. Tenniel, S. L. Pildes, A.K.A., etc.). 8°. 1874-6. 2403 Sketches by Boz. Pickwick Papers. Oliver Twist. ' Old Curiosity Shop and E,eprinted Pieces. (On the t.p. of the first vol., there is the imprint of Philadelphia as well as London.) Barnaby Eudge and Hard Times. Nicholas Nickleby. Martin Chuzzlewit. American Notes and Pictures from Italy. Bombey & Son. David Copperflelii. Little Dorrit. Bleak House. Tale of Two Cities. Great Expectations. Uncommercial Traveller. Otir Mutual Eriend. Christmas Books. ' Christmas Stories from " Household Words " and " All the Tear Eouiid." A Child's History of England. The Mystery of Edwin Drood, and other stones (Master Hum- phrey's Clock— Hunted down— Holiday llomance— George Silverman's Explana- tion.) (Works. Household Edition.) 11 vol. (Portrait ; and Illustrations by " Phiz," J. Mahoney, J. Barnard, V. Barnard, & P. A. Eraser.) 8°. n.d. 2404 Pickwick Papers. Oliver Twist. Bamaby Rudge. Nicholas Nickleby. Martin Chuzzlewit. David Copperfleld. Bleak House. Little Dorrit. Tale of Two Cities. Great Expectations. Our Mutual Priend. Works. Household Edition. Illustrated from drawings by P. 0. C. Darley and John Gilbert. 24 vol. 8°. Neyv York, 1861-3. 2405 Pickwick Papers. Oliver Twist. Old Curio- sity Shop ; and lleprinted Pieces (Lonj; Voyafie — Begging-letter writer— Child's dream of a star— Our English Watermg- nlace— Our l-rench "Watering-Plaee— Bill- sticking— " Births. Mrs. Meek, of a son. Nicholas I\ickli.-l)y. Christmas Books (and — A Chris l;mas Tree). Great Expectations. Barnaby Rudge. David Copperfleld, [Works. Authorized Prench Transla- tion.! 14 vol. 8°. Paris, n.d. (1857) and 1858. 2406 Vols of tha "Biblioth6que des meilleurs remans .Strangers." Prefixed to each vol. is a Preface signed " Char''^?^?'^'^''"^' '"^ Trench and English, dated 1867. Vie ot avcntures do Nicolas Nickleby Koman Anglais traduit aveo laiito- DICKENS (CHARLES)-eo»rf. risation de I'auteur par P. Lorain, 2 vol. Le Maeazin d'AntiCLuitcSs traduit (par Alfred Des Bssarts) sous la direc- tion de P. Lorain. 2 vol. Vie et aven- tures de Martin Chuzzlewit. 2 vol. Bleak-House traduit (par Mme. H. Loreau). 2 vol. La Petite Dorrit traduit (par 'William L. Hughes). 3 vol. (Imperfect— no vol. 1 ; duplicate of vol. 2.) Les Temps DifBciles (2 copies.) Contes de Noel traduits de I'Anglais (par Mile, de Saint-Romain et M. De Goy.) Christmas Books. With illustrations by Sir Edwin Landseer, E.A., Maclise, R.A., Stanfield, R.A., P. Stone, Doyle, Leech, and Tenniel. 8°. 1869. 2407 American Notes for General Circulation. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1842. 2408 Barnaby Rudge. With illustrations by H. K. Browne, G. Cattermole, etc. 8°. 1871. 2409 The Battle of Life. A love story (Illus- trated iby Maclise, Doyle, Stanfield, and Leech). 12°. 1846. (Two copies.) 2410 Bleak House. With illustrations by H. K. Browne. 8°. 1853. (Two copies.) 2411 Bleak House . . . [Corrected proofs.] " 8°. 1853. 2412 A Child's History of England. With a frontispiece [to each vol.] by P. W. Top- ham. Vol.1. England from the ancient times, to the death of King John. 2. England from the reign of Henry the third, to the reign of Richard the third. 3. England from the reign of Henry the seventh to the Revolution of 1688. sq. 1 2°. 1854-5. 2413 The Chimes : a Goblin Story of some bells that rang an old year out and a new year in. (Illustrated by Maclise, Doyle, Leech, and Stanfield.) 12°. 1'845. 2414 [Another edition.] 12°. 1868. 2415 Issued for the public reading. A Christmas Carol. In prose. Being a Ghost Story of Christmas. With illus- trations by John Leech. 12°. 1843. ' 2416 The whole-page illustrations are coloured. [Another edition.] 12°. n.d. Issued for the public reading. 2417 The Cricket on the Hearth. A fairy talc of home. (I llustrated by Maclise, Doj'le, Stanfield, Leech, and Landseer.) 12°. 1846. 2418 [Another edition.] 13°. n.d. Issued for the public reading. 2419 Personal history of David Copperficld. ■\Vitb illustrations by H. K. Browne. ' 8°. 1850. (Two copies.) 2420 Personal history of David Copperfleld. [Corrected proofs.] 8°. 1850. 2431 140 DICKENS (CHARLES)— cOTsf. Dealings with the Firm of Dombey and Son, wholesale, retail and for exportation. (With illnstrations by H. K. Browne.") 8°. 1848. (Two copies.) 2422 Dombey and Son . . [Corrected proofs.] 8°. 1848, 2423 Story of Little Dombey. 12". n.d. 2424 Issued for the public reading. Great Expectations. 3 vol 8°. 1861. 2425 Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi. Edited by " Boz " [i.e. 0. Dickens.] With illus- trations by George Crui.kshank. 2 vol. (Portrait of Grimaldi.) 8°. 1838. 2426 New edition, with notes and additions, revised by Charles Whitehead. (Frontis- piece — coloured portrait.) 12°. 1846. 2427 Hard Times. For These Times. 8°. 1854. 2428 The Haunted Man and the Ghost's Bargain. A Fancy for Christmas-Time. (Illustrations by Tenniel, Stanfield, F. Stone, & Leech.) 12°. 1848. 2429 Little Dorrit. With illustrations by H.K.Browne. 8°. 1857. (Two copies.) 2430 Little Dorrit. . . . [Corrected proofs. Printed slip at beginning.] 8°. 1857. 2431 Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzle- wit. With illustrations by Phiz. 8°. 1844. (Two copies.) 2432 Master Humphrey's Clock. With illus- trations by George Cattermole and Hab- lot Browne. 3 vol. 8°. 1840-41. 2433 Consists of "The Old Cui'iosity Shop," and " Barnaby Rudge." Another copy of vol. I. (and II. in one volume). " ' 2434 No title page to vol. II. Mystery of Edwin Drood. With twelve illustrations by S. L. Fildes [A.K.A.], and a Portrait. 8°. 1870. 2435 Not completed. The upper green covers of the six monthly parts April-September 1870, are bound in. Mystery of JEdwin Drood, and some un- collected Pieces. With iUuatrations. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1870. 2436 Prefixed is "Some Memories of Charles Dickens," by J. T. F. [P Field]. The " ITnoollected Pieces " are— George Silverman's Explanation ; Holiday Eomance ■, Sketches of Young Couples i New Uncommercial Samples. At the end is " Will of Charles Dickens." Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nic- kleby. With illustrations by Phiz. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1839. 2437 Old Curiosity Shop. With illustrations by H. K. Browne, G. Cattermole, D. Mac- lise, B.A., etc. 8°. 1871. 2438 DICKENS (CHARLES)-coni Oliver Twist. 3 vol. (Plates by George Cruikshank.) 8°. 1838. 2439 Adventures of Oliver Twist ; or, the palish boy's progress. With twenty-four illustrations on steel, by George Cruik- shank. A new edition, revised and cor- rected. 8°. 1846. 2440 Our Mutual Friend. With illustrations by Marcus Stone [A.E.A.]. 2 vol. 8°. 1865. (Two copies.) 2441 No. 2. Slip to face p. 1. Pic Nic Papers. By Various Hands. Edited by Charles Dickens. With illus- trations by George Cruikshank, Phiz, &c. 3 vol. 8°. 1841. 2442 " The Lamplighter's Stoiy " in vol. I. is " by the Editor ; " the introduction is also by. Dickens. Posthumous papers of the Pickwick Club. With forty-three illustrations, by K. Seymour and Phiz. 8°. 1837. 2443 New edition, with numerous illustra- tions, by Sam Waller, jr. and Alfred Crowquill, Esq. 8°. Philadelphia, 1838. 2444 Pictures from Italy. The Vignette illustrations on wood, by Samuel Palmer. 12°. 1846. 2445 Sketches by Boz illustrative of every- day life and every-day people. With forty illustrations by George Craikshank. New edition, complete. 8°. I'BSg.. 2446 Contains both Series. First complete edi- tion. [Engraved title.] Second Series. Sketches' by Boz. 1836. [Title.] Sketches by Boz . . . The Second series. Second edition. (Plates by G. Cruik- shank.) 8°. 1837. 2447 Sketches of Young Couples ; with an urgent remonstrance to the gentlemen of England (being bachelors or widowers), on the present alarming crisis. By the Author of " Sketches of Young Gentle- men." With six illustrations by "Phiz." 12°. 1840. 2448 Sketches of Young Gentlemen. Dedi- cated to the young ladies. With six illus- trations by "Phiz." [Anon.] Fifth edition. 12°. 1838. 2449 ,The Strange Gentleman ; a comic bur- Ifitta, in two acts. By " Boz." First per- formed at the St. James's Theatre, on Thursday, September 29, 1836. (Frontis- piece by Phiz.) (Two copies.) 8°. 1837. 2450 Sunday imder three heads. As it is ; as Sabbath Bills would make it ; as it might be made. By Timothy Sparks. (Plates by H. K. B[rowne] and illustrated title-page.) 12°. 1836. 2451 141 DICKENS (CHARLES)— ton*. Tale of Two Cities. With illustrations by H. K. Browne. 8°. 1859. (Two copies.) 2452 Nos. 2408-52. Many ot these works are pre- sentation copies from the author to Mr. Porstcr, with autograph inscriptions. Uncommercial Traveller. 8°. 1861. 2458 Uncommercial Traveller, and additional Christmas Stories. With original illus- trations by S. Eytinge, jr. 12». Boston [U.S.] 1867. 2454 Apparently a. volume of the "Diamond Edition " of Dickens's "Works. Songs, choruses, and concerted pieces, in the operatic burletta of the Village Coquettes. As produced at the Saint James's theatre. The drama and words of the songs by " Boz." The music by John HuUah . . 8°. Whitefriars (London). 1837. 2455 Poor Traveller : Boots at the Holly-Tree Inn: and Mrs. Gamp. 12°. 1869. 2456 Issued for the pubho reading. Catalogue of the . . . modem pictures, water-colour drawings, and objects of art, of Charles Dickens deceased : which . . . will be sold by auction . . . July 9, 1870 ... 4°. [London, 1870.] (Two copies.) 2457 Catalogue . . 8°. [London, 1870.] 2458 With prices. Dialogues from Dickens. Second Series. Dialogues and dramas. Arranged by W. Eliot Fette. 12". Boston and New York [U.S.] 1871. 2459 Charles Dickens. The story of his life. By the Author of the " Life of Thackeray " [John Camden Hotten]. With illustra- tions and facsimiles. 8°. New York, 1870. 2460 Speeches, letters, and sayings of Charles Dickens. To which is added a sketch of the Author by George Augustus Sala,and Dean Stanley's sermon. (Portrait.) 8°. 1870. 2461 Letters of Charles Dickens. Edited by his sister-in-law [Georgina Hogarth] and his eldest daughter [Mary Dickens]. 1833-1870. 3 vol. [First two vol. Second edition.] 8°. 1880-2. 2462 Presented by M". Forster. DICKINSON (ANDREW). My first visit to Europe : or, Sketches of society, scenery, and antiquities in England, Wales, Ireland, Scotland, and France. Third edition. 8°. New York, 1853. 2463 DIDRON (ADOLPHE NAPOLEON). Christian Iconography ; or, the history of Christian Art in the Middle Ages. Translated from the French by E. J. Millington. 2 vol. Vol. I. . . . Illustra- tions. 8°. Bohn, 1851. 2464 DIGBY(LORD GEORGE) aft. EARL OF BRISTOL. Lord George Digbie's Apologie for Himselfe 4°. Oxford, 1642. 2465 Lord George Digbie's Apologie for him- selfe, published 4 lanuary. 1642. 4°. n.p. 1642. 2466 DIGBY (SIR KENELM). Private Memoirs . . . Written by Him- self . . . With an introductory Memoir [by Sir N. Harris Nicolas]. (Portrait.) 8°. 1827. 2467 DIGBY (KENELM HENRY). The Children's Bower; or. What you like. 2 vol. 12°. 1858. 2468 The Lover's Seat. Kathemerina or common things in relation to beauty, virtue, and truth. 2 vol. 12°. 1856. 2469 DILKE (CHARLES WENTWORTH). Papers of a Critic. Selected from the writings of the late C. W. Dilke. With a biographical sketch by his grandson. Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke. 2 vol. 8°. 1875. 2470 Vol. 1. Memoir — Pope's writings — Lady Mary Wortley Montagu— Swiit, &c. Vol. 2. Junius — "Wilkes — Grenville, &c. — Burke. " From Charles "W. Dilke." DILKE (SIR CHARLES WENT- WORTH). Greater Britain : a record of travel in English-speaking Countries during 1866-7. Maps and illustrations. 2 vol. 8°. 1868. 2471 "John Forster Esq. from Charles "Went- worth Dilke." DILWORTH (W. H.) ■ Life of Alexander Pope ; with a view of his writings. And many curious anec- dotes of his noble patrons. As well as of his cotemporary wits, friends, and foes. 12°. 1759. 2472 DIOGENES. Diogenes. [Illustrated comic weekly periodical.] Vol. L 4°. n.d. (1853). 2473 DIOGENES, LAERTIUS. Ilepi fiiav . . . De vitis, dogmatis & apophthegmatis eovum qui in philosophia claruerunt, libri X. . . . Cum annotatio 142 DIOGENES, LAERTIUS— con*. nibus Henr. Stephani. Pythifg. Philoso- pliorum Jragmenta. Cum Latina interpre- tatione. 12°. n.p. Excadebat Henricus Stephanas, 1570. 2474 Autograpli " Petri'Bonifantii." Lives and opinions of eminent philoso- phers. Literally translated by C. D. Yonge. 8°. Bohii, 1853. 2475 DISNEY (JOHN). Museum Disneianum, being a descrip- tion of a collection of various specimens of Ancient Art, in the possession of John Disney . . With engravings, by George Measom. Part IL 4°. 1848. 2476 Introduction signed " John Disney." DISRAELI (BENJAMIN) aft. EARL OF BEACONSFIELD. [Half Title.] Collected edition of tlie Novels and Tales. 10 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1873, 1870, 1871. 2477 Vol. 1. Lothair. 3. Ooningsby. 3. S.ybll. 4. Tancred. 5. Venetia. v 6. Henrietta Temple. . 7. Contarini Fleming, and Uise of Iskander. 8. Alroy, Ision in Heaven. Infernal Marriage. Popanilla. 9. Young .Duke and Count Alarcos. 10. Vivian Grey. Lord George Bentinck : a political Biography. 8°. 1852. 2478 The Eevolutionary Epicli:. 4°. 1834. 2479 Voyage of Captain Popanilla. By the Author of "Vivian Grey." 8°. 1828. 2480 " Corrected copy." MS. Voyage of Captain Popanilla, to the glorious island of Vraibleusia, the wonder- ful city of Hubbabub, and the peaceable island of Blunderland. By the author of " Vivian Grey." A new edition. With illustrations from drawings by Daniel Maclise[R.A.]. 8°. 1829. 2481 Right Honourable Benjamin Disraeli, M.P. A literary and political biography addressed to the new generation. Second edition. [Anon. ? by — Eraueis.] 8°. 1854. 2482 D'ISRAELI (ISAAC). Amenities of literature, consisting of sketches and characters of English litera- ture. '3 vol. 8°. 1841. 2483 Commentaries on the life and reign of Charles the first, King of England. 6 vol. 8°. 1828-31. 2484 Curiosities of Literature. Tenth edition. (Portrait.) 8". 1838. 2485 Fourteenth edition. With a view of the life and writings of the author. By his son [Benjamin Disraeli, Earl of Beacons- field]. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 248C DISRAELI (ISAAC)— conf. Eliot, Hampden, and Pym, or, a reply of " the Author of a book " entitled " Commentaries on the life and, reign of Charles the first," to " the author [Lord Nugent] of a book " entitled " Some . memorials of John Hampden, his party, and his times." 8°. 1832. (Four copies.) 2487 Genius of Juduism. [Anon.] 8°. 1833. 2488 The Literary Character ; or the history of men of genius, drawn from their own feelings and confessions. Fourth edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1828. 2489 Miscellanies of Literature. By the author of " Curiosities of Literature." New edition. Literary Miscellanies. Quarrels of Authors. Calamities of authors. Character of James the first. Literary Character. 8°. 1840. 2490 DISSENTING MINISTER. Struggles for Life; or, the Autobio- graphy of a dissenting minister. . 8°. 1854. 2491 DISSERTATIONS. [College Dissertations. Principally medical. Latin and Hungarian.] 2 vol. 8°. Pesth and Buda, 1841-2, and n.d. 2492 DITSON (GEORGE LEIGHTON), Circassia ; or, a tour to the Caucasus. 8°. London and New York, 1850. 2493 DIX(JOHN). Life of Thomas Chatterton, including his unpublished poems and correspondence. L.P. (Portrait.) 8°. 1837. 2494 MS. Letter by Author. MS. verses. News- -"per cuttl ■" ■ " " Gutch. u. ^^uu^^ u,y a.uviiyji. julo. verses, isews- paper cuttings. Presentation copy to J. M. r-^"'- DIXON (LIEUTENANT-COLONEL CHARLES GEORGE). Sketch of Mairwai-a ; giving a brief account of the origin and habits of the Mairs . . . with descriptions of various works of irrigation in Mairwara and Ajmeer . . . Maps, plans, and views. 4°. 1850. 2495 DIXON (REV. EDMUND SAUL). Ornamental and domestic poultry : their history and management . . . 12°. 1848 2496 DIXON (WILLIAM HEPWORTH). Personal history of Lord Bacon. From unpublished papers. 8°. 1861. 2497 Proof-private. Lord Bacon's Confes- sion : a statement of the facts. 8°. 1861. 2498 Story of Lord Bacon's life. 12°. 1862. 2499 143 DIXON (WILLIAM HEPWORTH)— cont. Robert Blake admiral and general at sea . . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1852. 2500 Kew edition. 8°. 18.J6. 2501 The Holy Land. Dlustrations. 2 toI. 8°. 1865. 2502 John Howard, and the Prison-world of Europe . . . 12". 1849. 2503 John Howard : a memoir. Xew edi- tion. 12°. 1854. 2504 London Prisons : with an account of the more distinguished persons who have been confined in them. To which is added, a description of the chief provincial prisons. 12°. 1850. 2505 Nos. 2503 and 6 presentation copies with inscriptions. William Penn an historical biography. AVith an extra chapter on " the Macaulay Charges." "With a portrait. 8°. 1851. 2505 lis. notes l)y 3Ir. Porster. Second edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 185S!. 2507 New edition, with a new preface in reply to the accusations of Jlr. Macaulay. (Por- trait.) 12°. 1856. 2508 DOBELL (SYDNEY THOMPSON). Balder. Part the first. By the author of "The Roman." Second edition, with prefatory note. 8°. 1854. 2509 England in time of war. [Poems.] 8°. 1856. 2510 The Roman. A dramatic poem. By Sydney Yendys [pseud.'] 8°. 1850. 2511 DOBIE (ROWLAND). History of the united parishes of St. Gile? in the Fields and St. George Blooms- bury . . 8°. 1829. 2512 DOCTORS' COMMONS. Correspondence respecting the admis- sion of literary inquirers to inspect the entry books of ancient wills at Doctors' Commons . . . r°. n.p. n.d. (1859).' 2513 DODD (CHARLES ROGER). Annual Biography: being lives of eminent or remarkable persons, who have died within the year, 1842. 12°. 1843. ■ 2514 Manual of Dignities, privilege, and precedence : including lists of the great public functionaries, from the Revolution to the present time. 12°. 1842. 2515 DODD (GEORGE). Days at the Factories; or, the manu- facturing industry of Great Britain de- scribed, and illustrated by numerous en- gravings . . . Series I — London. 8°. 1843. -51'' No more published. DODD (GEORGE)— con<. Food of Loudon : a sketch ... of the ibod for a community of two millions and a half. 8°. 1856. 2517 Textile manufactures of Great Britain. (British Manufactures. Chemical. — Metals. — British Manufactures.) 6 vol. 12°. 1844-6. 2518 DODD (REV. WILLIAM) LL.D. Reflections on Death. Tenth edition. 12°. 1809. 2519 [Tracts relating to Dr. Dodd.] 8". & 12°. London and SaUsbury, 1777 & n.d. 2520 Historical memoirs of the life and writings of Rev; W. Dodd. From his entrance at Clare-Hall, Cambridge, in 1745, to his fatal exit at Tyburn, June 27, 1777. (Por- trait inserted.) Authentic Memoirs of the life of W. Dodd. Particulars of his trial and execution, and a review of the arguments, for and against his suffering the sentence of the law. Letter from Xady Huntingdon to the un- fortunate convict. ( Portrait inserted.) Serious reflections upon D^ Dodd's trial for forgery : with some observations and remarks upon his case. Genuine account of the behaviour and dying words of "William Dodd. By Rev. John Villetle (Plate inserted— D' Dodd and Joseph Harris at the place of execu- tion). Thoughts of a citizen of London on the con- duet of D' Dodd, in his life and death. "With remarks on the petitions presented in his favour ; the arguments of the Court of Common Coxincil on the occasion con- sidered; with reflexions, on some passages of the Ordinary of Newgate's account of D' Dodd's conversation in Newgate, and going to execution. 1767 [sic]. MS. index to the whole and newspaper cuttings. DODDRIDGE (PHILIP) D.D. Correspondence and Diary . . with notices of masy of his contemporaries ; and a sketch of the ecclesiastical history of the times in which he lived. Edited . . . by . . . John Doddridge Humphreys. 5 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1829-31. 2521 DODINGTON (GEORGE BUBB), BARON MELCOMBE. Diary . . . from March 8, 1749, to Feb- ruary 6, 1761 ; with an Appendix . . . Published from his original manuscripts. By Henry Penruddoeke Wyndham. Fourth edition, 8°. 1823. 2522 DOLBY (EDWIN THOMAS). Sketches in the Baltic. [Lithographs.] 1854. F°. 1854. (Two copies.) 2523 No. 1. Coloured. DOLMAN (CHARLES), publisher. Dolman's Magazine. Vol. 1-8. [Vol. . 5 wanting.] 8°. 1845-8. 2524 Edited by Miles Gerald Keon (editor's name appears on t.p. of v. 3 only). Xew series. Vol. I. Jan.-June, 1849. 8°. 2525 144 DOMESTIC ECONOMY. New system of practical Domestic Economy . . . new edition . . . With estimates of household expenses ... 8°. 1831. 2526 DOMVILLE (SIR WILLIAM). The Sahhath ; or, an examination of the six texts commonly adduced from the New Testament in proof of a Christian Sabbath. By a Layman. 8°. 1849. 2527 The Sabbath or, an inquiry into the supposed obligaticra of the Sabbaths of the Old Testament. 8°. 1855. 2528 DONALDSON (JOHN WILLIAM) D.D. Classical Scholarship and classical learn- ing considered with especial reference to competitive tests and University teaching ... 8°. Cambridge, 1856. 2529 New Cratylus, or contributions towards a more accurate knowledge of the Greek language. 8°. Cambridge and London, 1839. 2580 Theatre. of the Greeks, or the history, literature, and criticism of the Grecian drama; with an original treatise on the principal tragic and comic metres. Second edition. [Anon.] 8°. Cambridge, 1827. 2531 Varronianus : a critical and historical introduction to the philological study of the Latin language. 8». Cambridge, 1844. 2532 DONNE (JOHN), D.D., DEAN OF ST. PAUL'S. Poems. With elegies on the authors death. [First collective edition.] 4°. 1633. 2533 / No portrait Eev. H. Drury's copy. DORAN (JOHN) LL.D. Habits and Men, with remnants of re- cord touching the makers of both. 8°. 1854. 2534 Knights and their Days. 8». 1856. 2535 Lives of the Queens of England of the house of Hanover. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1855. 2536 1. SopMa Dorothea of Zell, wife of George I. Caroline Wilhelraina Dorothea, wife of George TI. 2. Charlotte Sophia, wife of George III. Caroline of Biamswick. Table Traits, with something on them. 8°. 1854. 2537 [DORIS (CHARLES).] Secret memoirs of Napoleon Buonaparte . . . by one who never quitted him for fifteen years, second edition, to which is added an account of the Regency at Blois, and the itinerary of Buonaparte, from the [DORIS (CHARLES).]— co«i. period of his residence at i'ontainebleau, to his establishment on the Island of Elba. [Anon.] 8°. 1815. 2538 The authority tor the .lutliorsMp of this and other anonymous books in the Cata- logue is " Olphar Hamst." DORKING. Handbook of Dorking with illustrations. 8°. Dorking and Loudon, 1855. 2539 DORSET (CHARLES SACKVILLE 6th earl OF). Poetical Works . . . Life of the Author, by Dr. Johnson. Cooke's edition . . . Engravings. 12°. n.d. 2540 DOUBLEDAY (THOMAS). Dioclesian. A dramatic poem. 1829. 12°. 2541 DOUBLEDAY (THOMAS). Financial, monetary and statistical his- tory of England, from the Revolution of 1688 to the present time ... 8°. 1847. 2543 Political Life of Sir Eobert Peel . . . 2 vol. 8°. 1856. 2543 " DOUBLEYOU " pseud, i.e. WILLIAM WILSON. Such is Life. Sketches and poems . . . the cover and frontispiece drawn by Robert Dudley. Second edition. 8°. 1857. 2544 DOUCE (FRANCIS). Illustrations of Shakspeare, and of ancient manners : with dissertations on the clowns and fools of Shakspeare ; on the collection of popular ' tales entitled Gesta Eamanorum ; and on the English Morris dance. The engravings on wood by J ack- son. New edition. 8°. 1839. 2545 DOUGLAS (LIEUT.-GENERAL SIR HOWARD). Third 2546 Treatise on Naval Gunnery, edition. 8°. 1851. DOVE (JOHN). Life of Andrew Marvell . . . with ex- tracts and selections from his- prose and poetical works. 8°. 1832. 2547 DOVER (GEORGE JAMES WEL- BORE AGAR-ELLIS, BARON). Historical inquiries respecting the cha- racter of Edward Hyde, Earl of Claren- don, Lord Chancellor of England. 8°. 1827. 2548 Letters written during 1686, 1687, 1688, and addressed to John"Ellis, Secretary to the Commissioners of his Majesty's revenue in Ireland : comprising many particular 145 DOVER (GEORGE JAMES WEL- BORE AGAR-ELLIS, BARON)— cont. of the Revolution and anecdotes illustra- tive of tlie history and manners of those times. Edited, from the originals, with notes and a preface, hy Lord Dover. 2 vol. (Portrait of Philip Ellis, Bishop of Segni.) 8°. 1831. 2.549 DOWDEN (RICHARD). "Walks after Wild Plowers ; or, the botany of the Bohereens. 12°, 1852. 2550 DOWE (WILLIAM). Junius, Lord Chatham : a biography setting forth the condition of English politics preceding and cotemporary with the revolutionary Junian period, and show- ing that the greatest orator and statesman was also the greatest epistolary writer of his age. 8». New York, 1857. 2551 DOWNES (JOHN). Koscius Anglicanus, or an historical review of the Stage: after it had been suppress'd . . . till the time of King Charles the II.'s restoration in May 1660. Giving an account of its rise again . . . the names of the principal actors and actresses . . . with the names of the most taking plays ; and modern poets. For the space of 46 years . . from 1660, to 1706. 12°. 1708. 2552 DOYLE (SIR FRANCIS HASTINGS). The Duke's [Wellington] Funeral : a poem. Two engravings. 8°. n.d. 2553 DOYLE (MARTIN). Cyclopaedia of practical Husbandry and rural afiairs in general. New edition, en- larged. Engravings. 8°. 1843. 2554 DOYLE (RICHARD). Foreign Tour of Messrs Brown Jones and Robinson being the history of what they saw and did, in Belgium, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy. [Letter-press by Tom Taylor.] 4°. 1854. 2555 Pictures of extra articles and visitors to the Exhibition. Oblong 12°. [1851.] 2556 DRAKE (FRANCIS). Memoir of a Metaphysician. Edited by the author of " Beginning of a new school of metaphysics " ... 8°. 1853. 2557 [DRAKE (JAMES) M.D.] History of the last Parliament, began at Westminster, 10 February, 1700. By the author of The short defence of the last parliament. 12°. 1702. 2558 Book-plate of "Walter "Wilson. " D'. Drake " was y° Authour." MS, on title, o 16505. DRAKE (NATHAN) M.D. Essays, biographical, critical, and his- torical, illustrative of the Tatler, Spec- tator, and Guardian. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1805. 2559 Memorials of Shakspeare ; or, sketches of his character and genius, by various writers now first collected ; with a pre- fatory and concluding essay, and notes, by N. Drake ... 8°. 1828. 2560 Shakspeare and his times : including the biography of the poet ; criticisms on his genius and writings ; a new chrono- logy of his plays ; a disquisition on the object of his sonnets ; and a history of the manners, customs, and amusements, super- stitions, poetry, and elegant literature of his age. 2 vol. (Portrait of S.) 4". 1817. 2561 DRAYSON (LIEUT.-COL. A. W.). Cause, date, and duration of the last glacial epoch of Geology, and the probable antiquity of man. With an investigation and description of a new movement of the earth. 8°. 1873. 2562 Practical Military Surveying and sketch- ing, with the use of the compass and sex- tant, theodolite, mountain barometer, &c. . . 12°. 1861. 2563 DRAYTON (MICHAEL). Poems from the earliest and rarest edi- tions, or from unique copies. Edited by J. Payne Collier. Printed for the Rox- burghe Club. 4°. 1856. 2564 DRESDEN GALLERY. Abrege de la vie des Peintres, dont les tableaux composent la Galerie Elec- torale de Dresde. Avee le detail de tous les tableaux de cette collection . . . 12°. Dresde, 1782. 2565 DREW (BENJAMIN). North-side "View of slavery. The Re- fugee : or the narratives of fugitive slaves in Canada. Related by themselves, with an account of the history and condition of the colored population of Upper Canada. 8°. Boston [U.S.], 1856. 2566 DREW (JOHN). Manual of Astronomy . . . with a famiUar explanation of astronomical in- struments . . . 12°. n.d. (1845.) 2567 DREXELIUS (HIERONYMUS). School of Patience. Written in Latin by H. Drexelius. And faithfully trans- lated into English, by R. S. 12°. 1640. 2568 DRUMANN (W.). Geschichte Roms in seinen Uebergange von der republikanischen zur monareh- ischen Verfassung, oder Pompejus, Caesar, Cicero und ihre Zeitgenossen . . . Vol. 1 -5. 8°. Koeningsberg, 1834-41. 2569 K 146 DRUMMOND (REV. D. T. K.). Memoir of Montague Stanley, A.E.S.A. 8°. Edinburgh & London, 1848. 2570 DRUMMOND (WILLIAM HAMIL- TON) D.D. Ancient Irish Minstrelsy. 8°. Dub- lin, J852. 2571 Life of Michael Servetus ... 8". 1848. 2572 DRURY (ANNA HARRIET). Annesley and other poems. 12°. 1847. DRYDEN (JOHN). Works, now first collected in eighteen Volumes. Illustrated with notes . . . and a life of the author, by Sir Walter Scott. Second edition. (Portrait.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1821. 2574 Comedies, tragedies, and operas. Now first collected together, and corrected from the originals. 2 vol. E". 1701. 2575 "Ex Bibliotheoa Benedict: Angloru S" Laurentij de Dei Custodia." Dramatick Works. 6 vol. (Portraits and Plates.) 12°. 1762-3. 2576 The dedication by 'William Congreve. Book-plate oi Joshua Smitb, Stoke Park. " Beautiful copy in red morocco bound by De Eome, from the Library oi Ealph Ber- nal Esq. 6 vol. £10. 15. 0. George Daniel Canonbury 13"> Peb?. 1865." 31S. note. Poetical Works ; containing original poems, tales, and translations ; with notes by Rev. Joseph Warton ; Kev. John War- ton ; and others. (Portrait and Life by Johnson.) 8°. 1851. 2577 [Another edition.] With illustrations by John Franklin. 12°. 1853. 2578 [Another edition.] With life, critical dissertation, and explanatory notes, by Rev. George GilfiUan. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh, 1857-8. 2579 [Another— The Globe— edition.] Edi- ted with a memoir, revised text, and notes by W. D. Christie. 8°. 1870. 2580 Critical and Miscellaneous Prose Works, now first collected ; with notes and illus- trations ; an account of the life and writings of the Author . . . and a collec- tion of his letters ... By Edmond Malono. 3 vol. (in 4). 8°. 1800. 2581 Selections from the poetry of Dryden including his plays and translations. (By C. B.) [Charles Bathurst]. 12°. 1852. 2582 Annus Mirabilis: the Year of Wonders, 1G6Q an historical poem: containing the progress and various successes of our naval war with Holland, under the conduct of Prince Rupert, and the Duke of Albemarl. And describing the Eire of London. [First ed.] 8°. 1667. 2583 Eables Ancient and Modern ; translated into verse, from Homer, Ovid, Boccace, DRYDEN (JOHN)— con*, and Chaucer : with original poems. [First ed.] F°. 1700. 2584 Book-plate of Eobert Snow. DUBERLY (MRS. HENRY). Journal kept during the Russian War: from the departure of the army from Eng- land in April, 1854, to the fall of Sebas- topol. 8°. 1855. 2585 DUBLIN. Dublin Literary Gazette, or weekly chronicle of criticism, belles lettres, and fine arts. From January 2, to June 26, 1830. [Ed. by Edward Johnston.] 4°. Dublin, 1830. 2586 MS. inscription on fly leaf. ■ [No title page. My Tablets ; or, the Dublin Weekly Gazette. Vol. I, No. 1. Dublin, September, 15th, 1827.] 8°. 2587 "For John Eorster Esq. from one of the Connoisseurs— with best regards." The Connoisseur ; or, Dublin Monthly Gazette. No. I. November. Vol. I. 8°. [Dublin.] 2588 The title of No. 2 (to No. 5) is— The Con- noisseur ; or, the Dublin "Weekly Gazette. Dublin, September, 22nd, 1827. (—October, 13th, 1827.) The weekly issue preceded the monthly. Pasted on the inside end cover is a woodcut of "The lord High Chancellor of Ireland." [DU BOIS (EDWARD).] My Pocket Book ; or, Hints for " A ryghte merrie and conceitede " Tour, in quarto ; to be called " The Stranger in Ireland," in 1805. By a Knight errant. 12°. 1807. 2589 " A quiz on the Travels of Sir John Carr." Lowndes, DU CHAILLU (PAUL BELLONI). Explorations and Adventures in Equa- torial Africa. With accounts of the man- ners and customs of the people, and of the chaceof thegoriUa . . . and other animals. Map and illustrations. 8°. 1861. 2590 [No t.p. Preface. Notice to Second edition. Contents. List of illustrations.] 8°. pp. iii-xviii. [1861.] * 2590 DUCK (ARTHUR) LL.D. Life of Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury . . . written in Latin by Ar. Duck. Now made Enghsh. (Portrait.) 8°. 1699. 2591 DUCK (REV. STEPHEN). Poems on several occasions. With a life of the Author, by Rev. Joseph Spence. Fourth edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 1764. 2592 147 DUCKS. Ducks and green peas ; or, the Newcastle Eider. A farce of one act . . . To which is added, the Newcastle Rider. A tale in rhyme [Illustrated hy Bewick]. 12". Alnwick, 1827. 2.593 According to " Baker " Dtuiks and Peas is by John Lund; according to "Halkett and Laing " JOucka and green peas is by Joshua Booth. DUDLEY (JOHN WILLIAM WARD, EARL OF). Letters to [Edward Copleston] the Bishop of Llaudaff. (Portrait.) 8°. 1840. 2594 DUFFIELD (MRS. WILLIAM). Art of Flower Painting. With twelve illustrations' on wood, engraved hy Dalziel. 12°. 1856. 2595 DUFFY (SIR CHARLES GAVAN). Ballad poetry of Ireland. Edited hy [Sir] C. G. Duffy. Fifth edition. ]2». Duhlin, 1845. 2596 DUFTON (HENRY). Narrative of a journey through Abys- sinia in 1862-3. With an appendix on " The Abyssinian captives question." Second edition. 8». ,1867. 2597 DUGANNE (AUGUSTINE J. H.). Poetical Works. (Portrait.) 8°. Phila- delphia, 1855. 2598 DUGDALE (SIR WILLIAM). Brief Discourse touching the office of Lord Chancellor of England. Written hy John Selden . . . transcribed from a true copy thereof . . . with a true catalogue of Lord Chancellors, and Keepers of the Great Seal of England, from the Norman Conquest, untill this present Tear, 1671. By W. Dugdale. E". 1671. 2599 History of Saint Paul's Cathedral in London, from its foundation . . . With a continuation and additions, including the republication of Sir W. Dugdale's Life from his own manuscript ; by [Sir] Henry Ellis. (Portrait.) F". 1818. 2600 Monasticon Anglicanum : a history of the Abbies and other monasteries, hos- pitals, frieries, and cathedi'al and ooUegiate churches, with their dependencies, in Eng- land and Wales ; also of all such Scotch, Irish, and Ereneh monasteries as were in any manner connected with religious houses in England .... originally pub- lished in Latm by Sir W. Dugdale. A new edition ... By John Caleyf [Sir] Henry Ellis, and Rev. Bulkeley Bandinel. 6 vol. (in 8). E°. 1817-30. 2601 DUHRING (HENRY) M.D. Essays on Human Happiness. 12°. n.d. (1848). 2602 DUKE (REV. EDWARD). Prolusiones Historicae ; or, essays illus- trative of the Halle of Jolm Halle, citizen, and merchant, of Salisbury, in the reigns of Henry VI. and Edward IV. : with notes ...2 vol. Vol.1. 8°. Salisbury, 1837. 2603 No more published. DUKE (GEORGE). Life of Major-General Worge . . . Governor of Senegal . . . with an account of the settlements of Senegal and Goree, 8°. London and Lewes, 1844. 2604 DULWICH. Catalogue of the collection of pictures bequeathed to Dulwioh College, by Sir Erancis Bourgeois. 8°. n.d. 2605 DUMAS (ALEXANDRE). Count of Monte-Cristo. With twenty Illustrations, drawn on wood by M. Valentin 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 2606 Crimes Celebres. 4 vol. 12°. Bruxelles (et Leipzig) 1841. 2607 Tome 1. Les Borciia. 2. La Comtesse de Saint-Geran. Jeanne de Naples. Nisida. 3. LaMarquisedeBrinvilliers. LesCenci. La Marquise de Ganges. and 16"' centuries. Edited by John Henry Blunt. Miscellany. Old English Miscellany con- taining a Bestiary, Kentish sermons. Pro- verbs of Alfred, religious poems of the thirteenth century, fi-om manuscripts. Edited by Eev. E. Morris. Myec. Instructions tor Parish Priests. By John Myrc. Edited by Edward Peacock. Pallabius. Palladius on Husbondrie. Edited from the unique MS. of about 1120 by Rev. Barton Lodge. EARLY ENGLISH TEXT SOCIETY— cont. Part II. Edited by Rev. B.Lodpe. With a rymo index cJiteil b.y S. J. 11. Herrtagc. Paetjjkay. Rctmans of l*arlenay, or of Lusignen : otherwise known as the talc of Melusine : translated from the French of La Coudrette (about 1500-1630). Edited by E«v. W. W. Skeat. PiEKCE THE Ploughjian. Picrcc tho Ploughmans Crede (about 1301')- Tran- scribed and edited . . to which is appended God spede the Plough (about 1500). By Eev. W. W. Skeat. Poems. Political, religious, and love poems. Edited by P. J. Purnivall. Quintessence. Book of quinte essence or Ihe fifth being; that is to say, marl's heaven. Edited by P. J. Purnivall. Eatis eaving. Eatis Eaving, and other moral and religious pieces, in prose and verse. Edited by J. E, Lumby. Eeligious Pieces. Religious pieces in ?rose and verse. Edited from Robert 'liornton's MS. by George G. Perry. Eolle de Hampole. English prose trea- tises of Eiehaid Eolle de. Hampole (who died 134[!). Edited from Eobert Thorn- ton's MS. by G. G. Perry. Scotland. Complaynt of Scotlande wyth ane exortatione to the thre estaits to bo vigilante in the deffens of their public veil. 1549. Appendix of contemporary English tracts, viz. Just declaration of Henry VIII (l642), Exhortacion of James HaiTy- sone, Scottisheman (151-7), Epistle of the Lord Protector Somerset (1548), Epitome of Nicholas Bodrugan alias Adams (1548). Ee-edited by J. A. H. Murray. Parts I. II. Staeke Y. England in the reign of Henry 8. Part I. Starkey's Lite and Letters. With an appendix, giving an extract from Sir William Forrest's Pleasaunt Poesye of Princelie Practise, 1648. Edited by S. J. Herrtage. Staekey. England in the reign of Henry 8. Dialogue between Cardinal Pole and Tho- mas Lupset, lecturer in rhetoric at Oxford. By Thomas Starkey. Edited .by J. M. Cow- per. With an introduction by Rev. J. S. Brewer, which will form Part I. Part II. Stations op Rome. Stacions of Rome in verse ab. 1370, arid in prose ab. 1460-70, and the Pilgrims sea-voyage t. Hen. VI. with Clene maydenhod ab. 1370. Edited by P. J. Purnivall. Thynne. Chaucer. Animadversions uppon the annotacious and corrections of some imperfections of impressiones of Chaucer's workes [sett downe oefore tyme and nowe] reprinted 11598 sett downe by Francis Thynne. Now newly edited by G. H. Kingsley. Thynne. Emblemes and Epigrames. rA.D. 1600, by P. Thynne.] Edited by P. J. Pui'nivall. Thomas oe Eeceldoune. Romance and Prophecies printed from five manuscripts ; with illustrations from the prophetic literature of the 16th and 16th centuries. Edited by J. A. H. Murray. Times' Whistle. Times' Whistle: or a newe daunce of seven Satires and other poems : compiled by R. C. Now first edi- ted from MS. by J. M. Cowper. William oe Paleene. Romance of Wil- liam of Paleme: (otherwise known as Romance of " William and the Werwolf") translated from tho French about 1350 ; Fragment of the alliterative romance of Allsaundcr; translated from the Latin by the same author, about 1340; the former re-edited the latter now first edited by Rev. W. W. Skeat. 154 EARLY ENGLISH TEXT SOCIETY— cont. Wills. The fifty earliest English Wills in the Court of Probate, London. A.D. 1387- 1439 ; with a priest's of M64. Copied and edited from the original registers in Somer- set House b.v 1'. J. Fumivall. Wtclip. English "Worlts hitherto unprinted. Edited hyr. B. Matthew. (Facsimile). EASTLAKE (SIR CHARLES LOCK) P.R.A. Contributions to the literature oE the Kne Arts [Edited by H. Bellenden Ker]. 8°. 1848. 2675 Second Series. With a memoir com- piled by Lady Eastlake. 8°. 1870. 2676 Materials for a history of Oil Painting. 8°. 1847. 2677 EASTLAKE (ELIZABETH (RIGBY) LADY. The Jewess : a tale from the shores of the Baltic. By the author of " Letters from the Baltic." 12°. 1843. 2678 Letters from the shores of the Baltic. Second edition. With twenty etchings. % vol. 8°. 1842. 2679 [Another edition.] 12°. 1844. 2680 Livonian Tales. The Disponent. The Wolves. The Jewess. By the author of " Letters from the Baltic." 12°. 1846. 2681 Music, and the Art of Dress. Two essays reprinted from the ' Quarterly Eeview.' [Anon.] 12°. 1852. 2682 EASTMAN (MRS. MARY H.). American Aboriginal Portfolio. Illus- trated by S. Eastman. 4°. Philadelphia, 1853. 2683 EATON (MRS. CHARLOTTE ANN). Eome, in the nineteenth century ; con- taining a complete account of the ruins of the ancient city, the remains of the middle ages, and the monuments of modern times. With remarks on the fine arts, the museums of sculpture and painting, the manners, customs, and religious cere- monies, of the modern Eomans. Fifth edition . . . Index, and . . . illustrations. 2 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1852. 2684 EBERHARD (A. G.). Hannah and her Chickens. From the German. By James Cochrane. 8°. Edinburgh, 1854. 2685 ECCLESTON (JAMES). Introduction to English Antiquities ; in- tended as a companion to the History of England. 8°. 1847. 2686 ECHARD (LAURENCE) ARCH- DEACON OF STOWE. History of England. From the first . entrance of Julius Caesar and the Komaus, to . . . 1688 .. . Third edition. (Por- trait of Echard.) F». 1720. 2687 EDEN (HON. EMILY). ' Up the Country.' Letters written to her sister from the upper provinces of India. 2 vol. Second edition. 8°. 1866. 2688 EDEN (HON. MISS E.). Portraits of the Princes and People of India. Drawn on the stone by L. Dickinson. F°. 1844. 2689 EDEN (SIR FREDERIC MORTON). State of the Poor : or, an History of the Labouring Classes in England, from the conquest to the present period . . . and the various plans . . . for the relief of the poor : together ivith parochial reports relative to the administration of work- houses, and houses of industry ; the state of friendly societies ; and other public institutions . . . Appendix ; containing . . . the prices of labour, provisions, and other commodities ; an account of the poor in Scotland ... 3 vol. 4°. 1797. 2690 EDGAR (ANDREW). Tusculana : or, notes and reflections, written during Vacation. (2 copies.) 8°. 1852. 2691 EDGEWORTH (MARIA). Tales and novels. 18 vol. (Plates.) 12°. 1832-3. 2692 Vol. 1. Castle Eackrent ; Essay on Irish Bulls ; Essay on Self-Justitlcation. 2. 3. Moral Tales. (Forester— Prussian Vase — Good Aunt — Angehna — Good French Governess — Mademoiselle Panache — Knapsack.) 4. 6. Popular Tales. (Lame Jervas— The Will— Limerick Gloves— Out of Debt out of Danger — Lottery — Eosanna — Miu^d the unlucky-Manufacturers— Contrast- Grateful Negro— To-Morrow.) 6-10. Tales of Fashionable Life. (Ennui— The Dun— Manoeuvring— Al meria- Vivis n — Absentee— Madame de Fleury— Emilie de Ooulanges) and ModeiTi Griselda. 11. 12. Belinda. 13. Leonora, with Letters on several subjects. 14—16. Patronage and Comic Dramas (Love and Law — Hose Thistle, and Shamrock). 17. Harrington and Thoughts on Bores. 18. Ormond. Helen, a tale. 12°. 1850. 2693 Modern Griselda. A tale. Second edi- tion. 12°. 1805. 2694 EDGEWORTH (RICHARD LOVELL). Essays on professional Education. 4°. 1809. 2695 155 EDINBURGH. First number of the Edinburgh Courant [from 14. to 19. EeVx. 1705]. E". Edinburgh : reprinted from the Edinburgh Evening Courant (with " a few words on the early history of that northern press, of which . . . The Courant has so long been the oldest member"). 1850. 2696 Edinburgh Review, a Critical Journal : for Oct. 1802 . . . Jan. 1803. To be continued quarterly. Sixth edition. Vol. I. (— 142. July, 1875 . . . October, 1875). 142 vol. and 4 Index vol. 8°. Edinburgh (and Loudon) 1808-1875. 2697 Edinburgh Tales [by various writers]. Conducted by Mrs. Johnstone. Vol. I. II. III. 8°. Edinburgh, 1845-6. 2698 Remonstrance of the citizens of Eden- burgh to the Convention of the Estates of Scotland concerning the Kings Majestie, and the Kingdome of England. With a declaration touching the Covenant of the Kingdomes, and propositions for peace. 4». March 1. 1648. (? Edenburgh.) 2699 Book-plate of the Duke of Sussex. EDUCATION. Crosby-Hall Lectures on Education. •8°. n.d. 2700 Harmony of Education: designed to assist those engaged in teaching. 12°. 1848. 2701 EDWARD III. King Edward the Third: a historical play. Attributed by Edward Capell to "William Shakespeare, and now proved to be his work by J. Payne Collier. Ee- printed for private circulation only. (With— Preface by J. P.O.) 4». 1874. *- 2702 EDWARDES (MAJOR-GENERAL SIR HERBERT BENJAMIN). A Year on the Punjab frontier, in 1848-9. 2 vol. (Portrait of Sir H. M. Lawrence.) 8°. 1851. 2703 EDWARDS (BRYAN). Historical survey of the French Colony in the island of St. Domingo . . . 4°. 1797. 2704 EDWARDS (CHARLES). Pleasantries about Courts and Lawyers of the State of New York. (Portrait of the Author.) 8°. New York, 1867. 2705 "J.I'.CJohnT'orsteT]. Given to me by C. D. [Charles Dickens].' EDWARDS (EDWARD). Memoirs of Libraries: including handbook of library economy 8°. 1859. a 2 vol. 2706 EDWARDS (EDWARD)— co«<. Statistical view of the principal Public Libraries of Europe and America. Third edition, corrected ; with additional tables and illustrative plans. E". 1849. 2707 EDWARDS (FRANK S.), Campaign in New Mexico with Colonel Doniphan. Map of the route ... 8°. 1848. 2708 EDWARDS (JONATHAN). Selections from the unpublished writ- ings of Jonathan Edwards, of America. Edited from the original MSS., with fac- similes and an introduction, by Rev. Alexander B. Grosart. 8°. Printed for private circulation, (at Edinburgh). 1865. 2709 Essay on the nature of True Virtue. [Anon.] 12°. 1778. 2710 EDWARDS (TENISON). Shall we register Title ? or, the objec- tions to land and title registry stated and answered ... 8°. 1863. 2711 EDWARDS (THOMAS). Antapologia : or, a full answer to the apologeticall narration of Mr. Goodwin, Mr. Nye, Mr. Sympson, Mr. Burroughs, Mr. Bridge, members of the Assembly of Divines ... 4°. 1646. 2712 Pirst and second part of Gangraena : or a . . . discovery of many of the errors . . . of the sectaries of this time . . . Third edition. 4°. 1646. 2713 Third part. Or, a new . . . discovery of the errors ... of the sectaries of these times . . . animadversions on many of the sectaries late pamphlets . . . observations on pamphlets against me and some of my books . . . Justification of . . . these books called Gangraena. 4°. 1646. 2714 From Abp. Tenison's library. EDWARDS (THOMAS). Canons of Criticism, and Glossary, beine a supplement to Mr. Warburton's edition of Shakespear ... By the other gentle- man of Lincoln's Inn, Seventh edition. [Second Title] Canons of Criticism, and Glossary; the trial of the letter T, alias Y, and Sonnets. By Thomas Edwards. 8°. 1765. 2715 EDWARDS (WILLIAM H.). Voyage up the river Amazon, including a residence at Para. 12°. 1847. 2716 EGERTON (WILLIAM). Faithful memoirs of the life . . . of . . Mrs. Anne Oldfield. Interspersed with several other dramatical memoirs (and Appendix). 8°. 1731. 2717 156 ELBA. The Island Empire ; or, the seeues of the first exile of the Emperor Napoleon I. Together with a narrative of his residence on the island of EIha ... by the author of " Blondelle." (Portrait of Napoleon.) 8°. 1855. 2718 ELDON (DR. ABRAHAM) pseud. Continental Traveller's Oracle ; or, maxims for foreign locomotion. By Dr. Abraham. Eldon. Edited hy his nephew. 2 vol. 12°. 1828. (Two copies.) 2719 ELEPHANT. The Elephant, principally viewed in relation to man. New edition, revised by the author [? Sir J. Emerson Teunent] . 12°. 1844. 2720 ELIOT (GEORGE) pseud, i.e. MARY ANN EVANS, aft. MRS. CROSS. Novels. 5 vol. With illustrations. 8°. Edinburgh and London, n.d. 2721 Vol. 1. Adam Bede. 2. Mill on the Picas. 5. Silas Mamer. 4. Scenes of Clerical lite. 6. Pelix Holt. Middlemarch a study of provincial life. 4 Tol. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1871-2. 2722 The Mill on the Floss. 3 vol. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1860. 2723 Romola. New edition. 12». 1869. 2724 Scenes of Clerical Life. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1858. 2725 ELIOT (SAMUEL). The Liberty of Home : a history. With an historical account of the liberty of an- cient nations. 2 vol. 8°. 1849. 2726 Illustrations to the Liberty of Borne. Designed and engraved by C. C. Perkins. 8°. 1849. 2727 ELLENDT (FRIDERICUS). Lexicon Sophoclenm . . . composuit E. EUendt. 2 vol. 8°. Regimontii Prussorum [Konigsberg] 1835. 2728 ELLESMERE (FRANCIS EGERTON, 1st EARL OF). Life and Character of the Duke of Wel- lington . . . 12°. 1852. 2729 Mediterranean Sketches. 8°. 1843. 2730 The Pilgrimage, and other Poems. With illustrations. 4°. 1856. 2731 War in the Crimea. Substance of a discourse delivered to the members of the Worsley literary institution. 12°. 1855. 2732 ELLET (MRS. ELIZABETH F.). Women of the American Bevolution. 2 vol. Third edition. (Portraits.) 8°. New York, 1849. 2733 ELLIOT (FRANCES). Diary of an idle woman in Italy. 2 vol. 8°. 1871. 2734 Old Court life in France. 2 vol. 8°. 1873. 2735 ELLIOT (GILBERT) D.D. DEAN OF BRISTOL. Sermons on some of the subjects of the day, preached at Trinity Church, Maryle- bone. 8°. 1850. 2736 ELLIOT (SIR HENRY M.). Bibliographical index to the Historians of Muhammedan India. 4 vol. Vol. I. General Histories. 8°. Calcutta, 1849. 2737 Appendix to the Arabs in Sind, Vol. Ill, Part I, of the Historians of India. 8°. Cape Town, 1853. 2738 ELLIOT (ROBERT H.). Experiences of a Planter in the jungles of Mysore. Illustrations and map. 2 vol. 8°. 1871. 2739 ELLIOTSON (JOHN) M.D. Human Physiology. With which is in- corporated, much of the elementary part of the Institutiones Physiologicae of J. F. Blumenbach. Wood-cuts. Fifth edition. 8°. 1840. 2740 ELLIOTT (EBENEZER) "THE CORN LAW RHYMER." Kerhonah, the Vernal Walk, Win Hill, and other poems. Vol. III. [of Works] . 12°. 1835. 2741 More verse and prose by the Cornlaw Ehymer. 2 vol. 12°. 1850. 2742 Inserted— verses on Elliott by "Whittier. Splendid Village : Corn Law Rhymes ; and other poems, 12°. 1844. 2743 ELLIOTT (GRACE DALRYMPLE). Journal of my Life during the French Revolution. (Portrait.) 8°. 1859. 2744 ELLIS (CHARLES). Richmond : and other poems. 8°. 1845. 2745 ELLIS (GEORGE). Specimens of early English metrical romances, chiefly written during the early part of the fourteenth century ; to which is prefixed an historical introduction, iu- 157 ELLIS (GEORGE)— con^ tended to illustrate the rise and progress of romantic composition in France and England. Second edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1811. 2746 New edition, reyised by J. O. Halliwell [now Halliwell —Phillipps] . 8°. Bohn, 1848. 2747 Specimens of the early English Poets, to which is prefixed an historical sketch of the rise dnd progress of the English poetry and language. 3 vol. Fourth edition. 8°. 1811. 2748 ELLIS (SIR HENRY). Original letters, illustrative of English history ; including numerous Boyal letters . . . With notes and illustrations by [Sir] H. Ellis. Second edition. 3 vol. (Por- trait of Henry VIII. and Will Somers). S". 1825. 2749 Second series. 4 vol. (Portrait of Queen Elizabeth). 8°. 1827. 2750 Third series. 4 vol. (Portraits.) 8". 1846. 2751 ELLIS (HERCULES). Rhyme Book : (with a Postscript). (Portrait.) 8°. London and Dublin, 1851. 2752 ELLIS (JOSEPH). Meletae. Poems. 8°. 1869. 2753 ELLIS (W.). Principes elementaires d'ficonomie so- ciale a I'usage des ecoles traduits de 1' Anglais par M. C. Terrien aveo une preface du traducteur et une introduction de Barthelemy Saint-Hilaire. 12°. Paris, 1850. 2754 ELLISTON (ROBERT WILLIAM). Copy of a Memorial presented to the Lord Chamberlain, by the committee of management of the Theatre-Royal Drury- Lane.and by the proprietors of the Theatre- Royal Co vent Garden, against the Olympic and Sans Pareil theatres ; with copies of two letters, in reply to the contents of such Memorial . . . by R. W. EUiston (and Appendix). 8°. 1818. 2755 ELLWOOD (THOMAS). History of the life of T. Ellwood . . . Written by his own hand . . . Supplement by J. W. 8°. 1714. 2756 At the end " Answer to some objections of a moderate enquirer" and ''^Accounli of tythes in general " both signed " T. B." ELLY (SANDHAM). Ostentation : or, critical remarks on " Quakerism ; or, the story of My Life " ; by Mrs. Greer . . . Second edition, with an appendix, by Jacob Post. 8°. Dublin, 1853 2757 ELMES (JAMES). Horae Vacivae. A Thought-book of the wise spirits of all ages and all countries . . . Collected ... by J. Elmes. 12". 1851. (Two copies). 2758 Sir Christopher Wren and his times. With illustrative sketches and anecdotes of the most distinguished personages in the seventeenth century. (Portrait.) 8°. 18.52. 27.59 ELOQUENCE. Dialogue concerning the rise and decline of Eloquence among the Romans. Trans- lated from the Latin, by William Melmoth. 12». 1757. 2760 ELPHINSTONE (HON. MOUNT- STUART). History of India. The Hindu and Ma- hometan periods. Third edition. 8». 1849. 2761 ELRINGTON (CHARLES RICHARD) D.D. Life of James Ussher, D.D., Archbishop of Armagh, with an account of his ivrit- ings. (Portrait.) 8». Dublin & London, 1848. 2762 ELSYNGE (HENRY). Ancient method and manner of holding Parliaments in England. Third edition. 12°. 1675. 2763 Book-plate of Morough O'Bryen. ELTON (ROMEO) D.D. Life of Roger Williams, the earliest legislator and true champion for a full and absolute liberty of conscience. 12°. n.d. (1852). 2764 ELWES (ROBERT). A Sketcher's Tour round the world. Illustrations. 8°. 1854. 2765 ELWOOD (MRS. ANNE KATHA- RINE). Memoirs of the Literary Ladies of England, from the commencement of the last century. 2 vol. (Portraits of Mrs. Hemans and Miss Landon.) 8°. 1843. 2766 Vol. 1. Lady M. 'W. Montagu, Lady Mur- ray, Duchess of Somerset, Mrs. Delany, Mrs. E. Carter, Miss Talbot, Mrs. Mon- tagu, Mrs.. Sheridan, Mrs. Ohapone, Mrs, Trimmer, Mrs. Barbauld, Miss Seward, Mrs. Hannah More, Mrs. Charlotte Smith, Mrs. Inchbald. Vol. 2. Mrs. Piozzi, Madame D'Arblay, Mrs. Grant, of La«gan, Mrs. B. Hamilton, Mrs. Mary w. Godwin, Mrs. Eadelifte, Miss Austen, Miss Elizabeth Smith, Mrs. Brunton, Mrs. Hemans, Miss Jane Tay- lor, Miss A. M. Porter, Mrs. Maclean [Miss Landon], Miss Emma Koberts, 158 ELYOT (SIR THOMAS). The Boke named the Goveruour, de- vised by S Thomas Elyot knight. [First ed.] 1G°. B.L. Londini in edibus Tho. Bertheleti, 1531. 2767 MS. notes. EMERSON (RALPH WALDO). Prose Works. New and revised edi- tion. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1870. 2768 " John Forster, Esq. "With grateful remem- brance of El. W. Emerson. Concord, 30 October, 1S09." English Traits. 12°. 1856. 2769 Essays : with preface by Thomas Car- lyle. 12°. 1841. 2770 Essays : first series. Uew edition. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1847. 2771 May-Day and otlier pieces. [Poems.] 8". Boston [U.S.] 1867. 2772 " Souvenir from John Bigelow." Poems. 8°. 1847. 2773 Representative Men. Seven Lectures. 8°. 1850. 2774 Uses of Great Men— Plato— Swedenborg — Montaigne — Shakspeare — Napoleon — Goethe. " John Eorster Esci. with the author's compliments." ENCHIRIDION. Enchiridion sacerdotum, in quo ea quae ad . . . Eucharistiam & . . . Missae officium attinent, facili ac piano quodam traetantur stylo . . . Petri Blomeueunae . . . 12°. Colonia Agrippina, lohannes Dorstius, 1532. 2775 On leaf 165 (misprint for M5) is another title page, n.p. n.d. but the pagination is continuous : on t.p. of " Enchiridion " in MS.— "Petri Le Neve Norroy liber rarissi- mus." ENCYCLOPAEDIA. [Title to Vol. II.] Encyclopaedia Britannica, or Dictionary of arts, sciences, and general literature. Eighth edition. With . . . engravings. 21 vol. 4°. Edinburgh, 1853-60. 2776 [Half titles to Vol. I.] Dissertation . . . By Dugald Stewart. Dissertation . . . By Sir James Mackintosh. With a pre- face by William Whewell, D.D. Disser- tation ... By B. Whately, Archbishop of Dublin. Dissertation "" jpiayfair. Dissertation , Leslie. By John By Sir John [Cover and half-title]. Encyclopaedia Britannica. Eighth edition. Disserta- tion ... By James David Forbes. Vol. I. Part IV. 4°. Edinburgh, 1856. 2777 [General title] Encyclopaedia Metro- pohtana . . . First division. Pure Sciences. The Law of Nations. Diplo- macy. [Title] ■ Principles of the Law of Nations, with practical notes and .sup- plementary essays on the law of blockade ENCYCLOPAEDIA— con^. and on contraband of war. By Archer Poison. To which is added, Diplomacy. By Thomas Hartwell Home. 8°. 1848. 2778 Encyclopaedia Metropolitana ... on a methodical plan projected by Samuel Taylor Colei-idge. Second edition . . . Greek Literature (by Sir Thomas Noon Talfourd ; Charles James Blomfield, Bishop of London ; H. Whitcombe ; E. Pococke ; Kev. J. B. Ottley ; and Kev. Henry Thompson). 8°. 1850. 2779 ENGLAND. Annals of England ; an epitome of Eng- lish history from cotemporary writers, the rolls of parliament, and other public records. Vol. I. II. 12°. Oxford and London, 1855-6. 2780 England, the Civilizer : her history de- veloped in its principles ; with reference to the civilizational history of modern Europe (America inclusive) . . . By a Woman. 8°. London and Manchester, Sheffield (printed) 1848. 2781 Library of Useful Knowledge. History of England under the House of Stuart, including the Commonwealth. 1603- 1688. Part I. James I. — Charles I. Part II. Commonwealth ; Charles II. ; James II. . . . (2 vol.) 8°. 1840. 2782 Parliamentary or constitutional History of England ; from the earliest times, to the restoration of King Charles II. Col- lected from the records, the rolls of Par- liament . . . and connected, throughout, with the history of the times. By several hands. Second edition, in 24 vol. . . . 8°. 1761-3. • 2783 Title of Vol. 23. Parliamentary history of England, from the earUest times, to the dissolution of the Convention Parliament that restored King Charles II. With an Appendix. This vol. is not marked as 2"* ed. Vol. 24— Index, dated 1761. Pictorial history of England : being a history of the people, as well as a history of the kingdom. Illustrated with . . . wood-cuts. 4 vol. 8°. 1838-41. 2784 For the names of the writers, see "Adver- tisement " to Vol. IV. Pictorial history of England during the reign of George the third . . . Illus- trated with . . . woodcuts. By George L. Craik and Charles Mac Earlane, assis- ted by other Contributors. 4 vol. 8°. 1841-4. 2785 History of England during the thirty years' Peace : 1816-1846. By Harriet Martineau. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1849- 50. 2786 Introduction to the History of the Peace. From 1800 to 1815. By Har- riet Martineau. (Portraits.) 8°. 1851. 2787 159 ENGLAND— coHi. Complete chronological iadex to the Pictorial history of England standard edition from the earliest times down to 1815 based on that prepared by H. C. Hamilton (and to Vol. VII. History of the Peace). 8°. London and Edinburgh, 1860. 2788 Complete general Index to the Pictorial history of England ... in seven volumes. 8°. London and Edinburgh, 1860. 2789 Old England : a Pictorial museum of regal, ecclesiastical, baronial, municipal, and popular antiquities. 2 vol. E°. 1845. 2790 True 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 . . . Abstract of the general history of each reign ... 2 vol. 8". 1725. 2791 Book-plate of Frederick Polhill. England and Wales ; or, u, list of all their cities, towns, parishes . . . giving the market towns . . . 12°. n.d. 2792 Lettered outside " Leonard's Gazeteer." ENGLISH. Clarendon Press series. Typical se- lections from the best English authors with introductory notices. 12". Oxford, 1869. 2793 "John Porster Esq. from the Rev"". G. V. Boyle" [the editor]. English Hehcon of the nineteenth cen- tury. Edited by T. K. Hervey. 8°. 1841. 2794 English history for children. 12°. Cam- bridge, 1845. 2795 Annotated edition of the English Poets. By Robert Bell. 24 vol. 12°. 1854-6. 2796 S. Butler. Vol. 1. 2. Chaucer. Vol. 1—6. Cowper. 3 vol. (At the end of Vol. 3. "Se- lections from the works of contemporajv poets," i.e. E. Lloyd, N. Cotton, fl. Brooke, E. Darwin, W. Hayley.) Dryden. 3 vol. B. Jonson. J. Oldham. Poems of Shakespeare. Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey. Minor contemporaneous poets and Thomas Saokville, Lord Buckhursl. J. Thomson. 2 vol. B. Waller. Sir T. Wyatt. Early ballads Illustrative of his- tory traditions and customs. Songs from the Dramatists. English prose, being extracts from the Works of English prose writers, with notes of their lives. 8». 1844. 2797 Lectures on the English Poets. 8°. 1847. 2798 Philosophical Enquiry into the origin and antiquity of the EngUsh Language in which it is clearly proved that it is the immediate gift of heaven to man, and the first spoken on earth. 8°. Dublin, 1843. 2799 ENIGMATIST. The Enigmatist, or rational amusement for an evening; containing 137 Enigmas, 100 Charades, 100 Eebusses and trans- positions, 31 words transposed, 103 Queries and anagrams, &c. (Vignette said to be " by Bewick.") 12". Stockton, n.d. 2800 ENNEMOSER (JOSEPH). History of Magic. Translated from the German by William Howitt . . . Appendix of . . . apparitions, dreams, second sight, somnambulism, predictions, divination, witchcraft, vampires, fairies, table-turning, and spirit-rapping. Selected by Mary Howitt. 2 vol. 8". Bohn, 1854. 2801 ENTOMOLOGIST. Entomologist's Annual for 185C. 12°. 1856. 2802 Preface Signed " H. T. Stainton." EOTVOS (JOSEPH FREIHERRN VON). Der Binflusz der herrschenden Ideen des 19. Jahrhunderts auf den Staat. 8°. Wien, 1851. 2803 "EPHEMERA," i.e. FITZ-GIBBON. (EDWARD) Handbook of angling : teaching fly- fishing, trolling, bottom-fishing, and salmon-fishing; with the natural history of river fish, and the best modes of catch- ing them. i2°. 1847. 2804 EPICTETUS. Discourses : collected and preserved by Arrian, his disciple. In four books. Translated from the Greek. 12". n.p. Printed 1766. 2805 EPIGRAMS. Collection of Epigrams . dissertation on this species Second edition. 2 vol. 12". . . Critical of poetry. 1735-7. 2806 " Probably the work of Oldys." Lowndes. Epigrams, and other short excursions, by a cripple, of long standing. 12". 1869. 2807 EPISCOPACY. Answer of the Divines attending the Commissioners of Parliament, at the treaty at Newport ... To the second paper delivered to them by his Majesty . . . About Episcopall Government ... 4°. 1648. 2808 Triple Episcopacie : or, a three-fold order of Bishops : one of God, another of men, and another of the Divell . . . (Woodcut on title.) 4". 1641. 2809 160 EPITAPHS. Collection of Epitaphs and Inscriptions, ancient and modern . . including many never before printed. 12°. 1802. 2810 Select collection of epitaphs and monu- mental inscriptions, with anecdotes of dis- tinguished and extraordinary persons. 12". Ipswich. (Frontispiece by " Constable.") 1806. 2811 ERASMUS (DESIDERIUS), Epistolarum Libri XXXI. et P. Melanc- thonis libri IV. Quibus adjiciuntur Th. Mori & Lud. Vivis epistolae . . . (Por- trait of Erasmus). E". 1642. 2812 Pilgrimages to Saint Mary of Walsing- ham and Saint Thomas of Canterbury. Newly translated, with the CoUoquy on rash vows, by the same author, and his Characters of Archbishop Warham and Dean Colet, and illustrated with notes, by John Gough Nichols. 8°. Westminster, 1849. 2813 Twenty two select Colloquies pleasantly representing several superstitious levities that were crept into the Church of Eome in his days. Second impression ; with the addition of two Colloquies to the former. By Eo[ger] L'Estrange. (Portrait.) 8°. 1689. 2814 "Wit against Wisdom : or, the Praise of Folly. Made English from the Latin of Erasmus. By an eminent hand. Adorn'd with ... sculptures design'd by . . . Hans HolbeJne. Third edition. 12°. 1722. 2815 ERMAN (ADOLPH). Travels in Siberia : including excursions northwards, down the Obi, to the Polar Circle, and southwards, to the Chinese Frontier. Translated from the German, by WilUam Desborough Cooley. 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 2816 ERMENONVILLE (R. L. GERARDIN VICOMTE D"). Essay on Landscape ; or, on the means of improving and embellishing the country round our habitations. Translated from the French [by Daniel Malthus]. 12°. 1783. 2817 ERSKINE (CAPTAIN JOHN EL- PHINSTONE). Journal of a Cruise among the islands of the western Pacific, including the Fee- jees and others inhabited by the Polynesian negro races, in H.M.S. Havannah. Maps and plates. 8°. 1853. 2818 ERSKINE (THOMAS, 1st BARON). Speeches when at the Bar on subjects connected with the liberty of the press, and aijainst constructive treasons. Col- ERSKINE (THOMAS, 1st BARON)— cont. lected by James Kidgway. Vol. IV. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1810. 2819 Speech for John Home Tooke. Proi .against the Earl of Thanet. Proceedmgs of the friends to the liberty of the Press. Modern Orator. The Speeches of Lord Erskine. 8°. 1846. 2820 ERSKINE (WILLIAM). History of India under the two first Sovereigns of the house of Taimur, Baber andHumayun. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 2821 ESDAILE (JAMES) M.D. Mesmerism in India, and its practical application in surgery and medicine. 12°. 1846. 2822 Natural and mesmeric clairvoyance, with the practical application of Mesme- rism in surgery and medicine. 12°. 1852. 2823 ESPINASSE (FRANCIS). Lancashire Worthies (Portrait of H. Chetham). 8°. London, and Manchester, 1874. 2824 The first Stanley Earl of Derby; Founder of the Manchester Grammar School ; 3. Bradford ; J. Horrocks ; H. Chetham ; first member for Manchester ; J. Stanley, 7"»Barl of Derby; Booth the player; J. Byrom; J. Collier ("Tim Bobbin"); "great" Duke of Bridgewater; J. Kay and J. Hargreaves ; B. Arkwright. Life and times of Franyois-Marie Arouet, calling himself Voltaire. 3 vol. Vol. I. From his birth to his arrival in England : 1694-1726. 8°. 1866. 2835 ESQUIROS (ALPHONSE). Cornwall and its coasts. 8°. 1865. 2826 Dutch at home. Essays from the " Revue des Deux Mondes." Translated and edited by Lascelles Wraxall. 2 vol. 8°. 1861. 2827 English at Home. Translated and edited by L. Wraxall. 2 vol. 8°. 1861. 2828 English at Home. Essays from the " Eevue des deux Mondes." Second series. Translated by L. Wraxall. 8°. 1862. Third Series. Translated by Sir L. Wraxall. 8°. 1863. 2830 Religious life in England. 8°. 1867. 2831 ESSAYS. Manual of Essaj-s, selected from various authors. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. 1809. 2832 " B. W. Procter." 161 ESSAYS AND REVIEWS. Fourth edition. 8°. 1861. 2833 The Writers were-F. Temple, D.D. [Bp. of London! E. Williams, IJ.D., Baden Powell, H. B. Wilson C. W. Goodwin, Marie Pattison, and Benjamin Jowett. ESSEX (ARTHUR CAPEL, 1st EARL OF). Enquiry into, and detection of the barbarous murther of the late Earl of Essex ... 4°. n.p. 1689. 2834 Imperfect. ESSEX (ROBERT DEVEREUX, 3d EARL OF). Eunerall of Robert Earle of Essex and Ewe . . . who dyed at Essex House 14 Septem''. 1646. Erom whence he was honourably conveyed in funerall pomp to Westminster Abby Church . . . (Portrait of Essex and folding plate.) 4°. 1646. 2835 [Another copy.] 2836 At the end— Elegie upon the death of Robert Earle of Essex. Book-plate of Sir M. M. Sylies. Eesolution of the Earl of Essex . . . Speech made by Lord Roberts to his Excellence . . . His setting forward and his passing through the City . . . The wicked purpose of E. Gowrie, to have killed his Excellence . . . The apprehend- ing of Lord Montague . . . (Woodcut portrait on title.) 4°. 1642. 2837 [ESSINGTON (ROBERT WILLIAM).] Legacy of an Etonian. Edited by Robert Nolands, sole executor. [Anon.] 8°. Cambridge, 1846. 2838 ETHEREGE (SIR GEORGE). Comical Revenge ; or. Love in a tub . . . (Frontispiece.) 12°. 1723. (2 copies.) 2839 She wou'd if she cou'd . . . (Frontis- piece.) 12°. 1723. (2 copies.) 2840 Man of Mode ; or. Sir Fopling Flutter . . . (and — Poems.) (Frontispiece.) 12°. 1723. (.2 copies.) 2841 ETON. Musae Etonenses sive carminum Etonae conditorum delectus. Series nova. Tom. I. Fasciculus I. Edidit Ricardus Okes. 8°. Etonae and Cantab. 1856. 2842 EUCLID. Euclid's elements of Geometry, chiefly from the text of Dr. Simson, with explana- tory notes ; with a selection of geometrical exercises fi-om the Senate-house and col- lege examination papers ; to which is pre- fixed an introduction, containing a brief outline of the history of geometry .... By Robert Potts. 8°. Cambridge, 1845. 2843 o 16505. EUGENE OF SAVOY (FRANCIS, PRINCE). Memoirs . . . intermix'd with variety of adventures of gentlemen and officers of the imperial and confederate armies in Hungary, Italy, and the STetherlands, where Prince Eugene commanded. Written by a gentleman who constantly follow'd that Prince. Translated from the French. 2 vol. 12°. 1716. 2844 Memoirs; written by Himself. Trans- lated from the genuine French edition, containing all those passages which have since been suppressed by order of the French Government. By Frederic Shoberl. Portrait. 8°. 1811. 2845 EUPHRANOR. Euphrauor a dialogue on Youth. 12°. 1851. 2846 EURIPIDES. Tragoediae superstites et deperditarum fragmenta ex recensione G. Dindorfii. 2 vol. 8°. Oxon. 1832-3. 2847 Tragoediae . . . Recensuit et brevibus notis instruxit Augustus Seidler. Vol. I. Troades. II. Electra. III. Iphigenia in Tauris. 12°. Lipsiae, 1812-13. 2848 Supplices et Iphigenia in Aulide et in Tauris cum annotationibus Marklandi . . . (Accedunt P. Elmsleii annotatioues in Euripidis Hecubam, Heroulem Furentem et Sophoclis Aiacem.) 2 vol. 8°. Lipsiae, 1822. 2849 AAkjio-tu. Alcestis . . . Emendavit et annotationibus instruxit Jacobus Henricus Monk. Accedit Georgii Buchanani versio metrica. Editio tertia. 8°. Cantab. 1826. 2850 AvSpo/iaxv- Andromache, notis Por- soni . . . illustrata. 8°. Glasguae, 1819. 2851 Bo/cxai. Bacchae . . . Recensuit . . . P. Elmsley. 8°. Oxon. 1821. 2852 [Another edition.] Recensuit G. Her- mannus. 12°. Lipsiae, 1823. 2853 KuKAaf . Cyclops, notis Burneii, Mus- gravii . . illustrata. 8°. Glasguae, 1819. 2854 H\€KTpa. Electra . . . Emendavit et annotationibus . . . instruxit Hastings Robinson.' 8°. Cantab. 1822. 2855 Hecuba, from the text, and with a trans- lation of the notes ... of Porson ; critical and explanatory remarks . . . illustrations of idioms ... a synopsis of metrical sys- tems ; examination questions; and In. dexes. By Rev. J. R. Major. 8°. 1826. 2856 HpaKXeiSoi. Heraclidae, ex recensione Petri Elmsley . . . editio auctior . . . 8°. Lipsiae, 1821. 2857 HpoK\r)s Matvoii^pos. Hercules Furens, notis Hermanni ... 8°. Glasguae, 1820. 2858 162 EURIPIDES— con«. linroKvTos. Hippolytus Coronifer . . . Emendavit et annotationibus instruxit J. H. Monk. Editio tertia. 8°. Cantab. 1821. 2859 Ion recensnit G. Hermannus. 12°. Lip- siae, 1827. 2860 MTjSeio. Medea . . . edidit R. Porson. 8°. Cantab. 1801. 2861 MS. notes on fly-leaJ apparently by Porson. [Another edition.] , . . Eecensuit . . . Petrus Elmsley. 8°. Oxon. 1818. 2862 Pri&as. Rhesus, notis Burneii, Musgrayii . . illustrata. 8». Glaguae, 1819. 2863 Supplices recensuit G. Hermannus. 12°. Lipsiae, 1811. 2864 TpayaiSicu. Tragoediarum interpretatio Latina ex ed. Musgrayii passim reficta. 8°. Oxon. 1821. 2865 Tragedies. Translated by R. Potter. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. Oxford, 1823. 2866 Tragedies. Literally translated or re- vised, with . . . notes, by Theodore Alois Buckley. 2 vol. 8°. Bohn, IS.'iO. 2867 Praelectio in Euripidem recitata in scholis publicis Cantabrigiae 1792 . . . [Anon.] 8°. Cantab. 1828. 2868 EUROPE. Scenes and thoughts in Europe. By an American. 8°. 1847. EUROPEAN. European Magazine and London Re- view ; containing the literature, history, politics, arts, manners, and amusements of the age. By the Philological Society of London, 1782-1825. (Embellished with Portraits.) 87 vol. 8°. (1782)- 182."). 2870 New series. Vol. 1. From Aug. 1825, to January 1826. 8°. n.d. 2871 Tile Contents of this vol. do not correspond with the title. It really is Vol. II (new series (January)— June, 1826). EUSEBIUS PAMPHILUS, BISHOP OF CAESAREA. Ecclesiastical History. Translated from the Greek, by Eov. C. F. Crus^. With notes selected from the edition of Valesius. 8°. Bohn, 1851. 2872 EUSTACE (REV. JOHN CHET- WODE). Classical Tour through Italy. 1802. Third edition. Map of Italy, Plans of Churches, Index, &c. 2 vol. 4°. 1819. 2873 [Another edition.] From the sixth London edition. 2 vol. 8°. Paris, 1837. 2874 Book-plate of M. I. Rhodes. EUSTACE (THOMAS). Adventures of Thomas Eustace, ship- wrecked 18 Jan?. 1809. By u, Clergy- man. (Portrait.) 8°. 1820. 2875 EVANCE (DANIEL). Justa Honoraria : or. Funeral rites in honor to the great memorial of my de- ceased master, Robert Earl of Essex and Ewe ... 4°. n.d. [1646]. 2876 This and other " Essex " tracts D'. Bliss's copies. EVANS (MRS. H. LLOYD). Last "Winter in Algeria. Map. 8°. 1868. 2877 EVANS (SEBASTIAN), Sonnets on the death of the Duke of Wellington. 8°. Cambridge, 1852. 2878 EVANS (THOMAS). Old Ballads, historical and narrative, with some of modem date ; collected from rare copies and MSS. By T. Evans. New edition revised and considerably enlarged ... by his son, E. H. Evans. 4 vol. 8°. 1810. 2879 D'. Bliss's copy with his MS. and printed additions. EVELYN (JOHN). Acetaria. A discourse of Sallets. By J. E. [First ed.] 8°. 1699. 2880 Second edition. 12°. 1706. 2881 Dedication signed in full. Angliae Speculum Morale ; The moral state of England, with the several aspects it beareth to Virtue and Vice. With the Life of Theodatus, and three novels, viz. The Laud-Mariners, Friendship subhmed, The Friendly Eivals. [Anon.] 12°. 1670. 2882 Two title pages, the second dated 1669. Apologie for the Eoyal Party ... By a lover of peace and of his country. With a touch at the pretended plea for the army. 4°. u.p. 1659. (Two copies.) 2883 No. 1. Imprint out oil. Art of graveing, and etching, -wherein is exprest the true way of graveing in copper. AUso the manner & method of that famous CaUot, & M' : Bosse, in their severall ways of etching. 8°. (Lon- don) PuWished by Will"": Faithorne. 1662. 2884 Brief character of the Low-Countries under the States. Being three weeks observation of the vices and vertues of the inhabitants. [Anon.] 12°. 1660. 2885 Character of England, as it was lately presented in ii letter, to a Noble Man of 163 EVELYN (JOHN)— con<. France. With reflections upon Gallus Castratus. Third edition. [Anon.] 12". 1659. 2886 Idittord's MS. notes one of which says " Sup- posed to be written by John Evelyn," and another "This work is given to Tlionjas [9 James] HoweU in Beloe's Anecdotes." Characters or pourtraicts of the present Court of France . . . Written origiually in French. Made English by J. E. 12°. 1668. 2887 Memoirs, illustrative of the life and writings of J. E. Comprising his diary, from 1641 to 1705-6, and a selection of his familiar letters . . . Private corre- spondence between King Charles I. and his Secretary of State, Sir Edward Nicho- las .. . also between Sir Edward Hyde, aftenvards Earl of Clarendon, and Sir Richard Browne . . . The whole ' now first published from the original MSS. 2 vol. Edited by William Bray. Second edition. (Portraits). 4°. 1819. 2888 [Half Title.] Memoirs of John Evelyn. Vol. III. [Title] Literary Remains of John Evelyn . . . Forming a supplement to his Diary and Correspondence. Edited, with notes, by WUliam Upcott. Second edition. 4°. 1834. 2889 Diary and Correspondence . . . New edition [by John Forster] . 4 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1854. 2890 French Gardiner : instructing how to cultivate all sorts of fruit-trees, and herbs for the garden : with directions to dry and conserve them . . . Written originally in French, and now transplanted into English, by John Evelyn. Illustrated with sculp- tures. Whereunto is annexed, the English Vineyard vindicated by John Rose, now Gardiner to his Majesty: with a tract of the making and ordering of wines in France. 12°. 1669. 2891 Fumifugium : or the inconveniencie of the aer and smoak of London dissipated. With some remedies humbly proposed by J. E. to his Majestie, and Parliament. 4°. 1661. 2892 History of the three late famous impos- tors, viz. Padre Ottomano, Mahomed Bei, and Sabatai Sevi . . . the last, the suppos'd Messiah of the Jews, in the year of the true Messiah, 1666. With a brief account of the . . . present War between the Turk and the Venetian. With the cause of the final extirpation, destruction, and exile of the Jews, out, of the empire of Persia. 8°. In the Savoy, 1669. 2893 " Epistle Dedicatory " signed " J. E." History of Religion. A rational ac- count of the true religion. Now first pub- lished . . . Edited, with notes, by Rev. R. M. Evanson. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 2894 EVELYN (JOHN)— COM*. Kalendarium Hortense : or, the Gfird'- ners Almanac, directing what he is to do monthly throughout the year. And what fruits and flowers are in prime. Sixth edition. 12°. 1676. 2895 Tenth edition. (Frontispiece). 12°. 1706. 2896 Laws of Honor : or, an account of the suppression of duels in France . . . [Anon.] 12°. 1685. 2897 Life of [Margaret Blagge, afterwards] M'* Godolphin. Now first published and edited by Samuel [Wilberforce] Bishop of Oxford. (Portrait.) 12°. 1847. 2898 MunduB Muliebris : or, the ladies dres- sing-room unloek'd, and her toilette spread. In burlesque. With the Fop-Dictionai-y compiled for the use of the fair sex. [Anon.] 4°. 1690. 2899 Second edition. To which is added a . . . receipt, to make Pig, or puppidog- water for the face. 4°. 1690. 2900 . . . Another part of the Mystery of Jesuitism ; or the new heresie of the Jesuites, pubUokly maintained at Paris . . . xii December MDCLXI . . . Accord- ing to the copy printed at Paris . . . With the imaginary heresie . . . [Anon.] (Portraits of Loyola, etc.) 12°. 1664. 2901 Navigation and Commerce, their original and progress . . . with special regard to the English nation ... 8°. 1674. 2902 Perfect description of the people and country of Scotland. [Anon.] 12°. 1659. 2903 Philosophical discourse of earth, re- lating to the culture and improvement of it for vegetation, and the propagation of plants, &c., as it was presented to Ihe Royal Society, April 29. 1675. 12°. 1676. 2904 Publick employment and an active life prefer'd to Solitude, and all its appanages ... By J. E. ["Ep. Ded." signed in full.] 12°. 1667. 2905 Sculptura : or the history, and art of Chalcography and engraving in copper . . . Enumeration of the most renowned masters, and their works . . . New man- ner of engraving, or Mezzo Tinto, com- municated by Prince Rupert to the authour. (Engraved title-page and portraits of Evelyn one etched by P. Rupert.) 8°. 1662. 2906 Silva : or, a discourse of Forest-trees, and the propagation of timber in his Majesty's dominions . . . with an his- torical account of the sacredness and use of standing groves . . . Terra : a philo- sophical discourse of earth. With notes, by A. Hunter, M.D. Fifth edition. 2 vol. L 2 164 EVELYN (JOHN)— eoni. (Portrait.) 4". London, Yoi'k [printed] , 1825. 2907 State of France, as it stood in the IX'^- yeer of this present monarch, Lewis XIIII. "Written to a friend hy I. E. [mono- gram]. 8°. 1652. 2908 EVEREST (REV. ROBERT). Journey through the United States and part of Canada. 8°. 1855. 2909 EVERETT (ALEXANDER HILL). Critical and Miscellaneous Essays . . . Poems. 8». Boston [U.S.] 1845. 2910 EVERETT (EDWARD). Orations and Speeches on various oc- casions. Second edition. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1850. 2911 " The editor of the Examiner with the best respects of the author. Cambridge U.S.A. 1 November 1860." • EWBANK (THOMAS). The World a Workshop ; or, the physi- cal relationship of man to the earth. 8°. New York, 1855. 2912 EXAMINER. The Examiner. Numh. 1. August 3. 1710 (— Numh. 52. July 26, 1711). (Vol. II. Numb 1. Decemher 6, 1711— Numh. 47. October 23, 1712). ¥". 2913 By Swift, etc. MS. note by M'. Forster (ex- tract from Swift as to the authorship). "No, 33 in vol. 11. wanting. The Examiner, a Sunday paper, on politics, domestic economy^ and theatricals, for the year 1808 (—1875). [Edited by M'. Forster (who had written in it from 1833) 1847-55.] 71 vol. F". and 4°. 1808-75. 2914 After intermediate changes, the title became "The Examiner. A political, social, and literary review." Vol. 1860-2 in duplicate. EXAMPLES. [No title-page. Examples of abstinence, temperance, and sobriety in meat.s, drinks, apparel, riches, and houshold-furniture. ? By Rev. Samuel Clarke.] F". 2915 " The Table " at the end imperfect. EXCISEMAN. [No title-page. The British Excise- man dismounted. With his character.] [Verses.] 4°. n.p. n.d. 2916 D'. Bliss's copy and MS. note. EXHIBITION OF 1851. Official Catalogue of the Great Exhibi- tion of the works of industry of all nations, 1851. 4°. n.d. 2917 Introduction signed "Eobert Ellis" (the "scientific editor"). The compiler was G.W. Yapp. EXHIBITION OF 1851-coni. Second corrected and improved edition. 4°. n.d. 2918 Third corrected and improved edition, 1 August, 1851. 4°. n.d. 2919 Austrian Section. Official Catalogue ... 4°. n.d. 2920 Catalogue officiel de la Grande Exposi- tion des produits de I'Industrie de toutes les nations, 1851. 4°. n.d. 2921 Amtlicher Catalog der Ausstellung der Industrie-Erzeugnisse aller Volker, 1851. Deutsch bearbeitet von Edward A. Moriarty. 4°. n.d. 2922 Official descriptive and illustrated Catalogue. 3 vol. and supplementary vol. ... 8°. 1851. 2923 Preface signed "Eobert Ellis." The com- piler was 6. W. Yapp. (So also 2917.) [Proof.] Exhibition . . . 1851. Re- ports by the Juries on the subjects in the Thirty Classes into which the Exhibition was divided. Presentation copy. 8°. 1852. 2924 Great Exhibition of doings in London for 1851. [Plates ? by B. Clayton.] Oblong, n.d. [1851]. 2925 Illustrated Exhibitor . . . comprising sketches, by pen and pencil, of the prin- cipal objects in the Great Exhibition . . . 1851. 8°. n.d. (1851). 2926 Lectures on the results of the Great Exhibition of 1851, delivered before the Society of Arts, Manufactures, and Com- merce . . . (Portrait of Prince Albert.) 8°. 1852. 2927 Second Series. 8°. 1853. 2928 Popular Guide to the Great Exhibition . . . With a plan of the Building . . . 4°. n.d. 2929 Recollections of the Great Exhibition 1851. (Plates by J. Absolon, W. Telbin, H. P. Pidgeon, W. Goodall, Michael, C. T. bolby, and Wilson.) F». 1851. 2930 The names of the artists are taken from the "Contents," but they do not tally with the plates. EXHIBITION OF 1862. International Exhibition of 1 862. Illus- trated Catalogue of the Industrial Depart- ment ... 4 vol. 8°. n.p. n.d. 2931 Introductory "concise history" written by J. HolUngshead. Official Catalogue of the Industrial De- partment. Third edition. 4». n.d. (1862). 2932 Official Catalogue of the Fine Art De- partment Corrected. 4°. n.d. (1862). 2933 Medals and Honourable Mentions awarded by the international juries ; with a list of jurors, and the report of the courtcil of chairmen. 8°. 1862. 2934 165 EXISTENCE. The Purpose of Existence, popularly considered, in relation to the origin, development, and destiny of the human mind. 8°. 1850. 2935 EYRE (LIEUT. VINCENT). Military operations at Cabul, which ended in the retreat and destruction of the British Army, January 1842. With a journal of imprisonment in Affghanistan. Second edition. (Edited by E. Eyre). 8°. 1843. 2936 F, F. (P.). Handbook to the National Portrait Gallery, [Dublin.] Second edition. 8°. Dublin, published at the Exhibition Palace, 1872. 2937 FABER (GEORGE STANLEY) B.D. Revival of the French Emperorship an- ticipated from the necessity of prophecy. 12°. 1853. 2938 FABYAN (ROBERT). New Chronicles of England and Prance, iu two parts. Named by himself the Concordance of histories. Reprinted from Pynsou's edition of 1516 . . . Biogra- phical and literary preface, and an index, by [Sir] Henry Ellis. 4°. 1811. 2939 FACCIOLATI (GIACOMO) AND FORCELLINI (EGIDIO). [Half-title.] Universal Latin Lexicon : new edition, in which the appendix of Cog- nolatus has been incorporated ; the Italian significations rendered into English j the work of Tursellinus on the partibles of Latin speech ; Gerrard's Siglarium Roma- num ; and Gesner's etymological index are added ; with appendix, by James Bailey. [Title.] Totius Latinitatis Lexicon . . . edidit . . . Jacobus Bailey. 2 vol. 4°. 1828. 2940 FAIN iBaron). Memoirs of the invasion of Prance by the allied armies, and of the last six months of the reign of Napoleon, includ- ing his abdication. Written at the com- mand of the Emperor. New edition. 8°. 1834. 2941 FAIRBAIRN (SIR THOMAS). Britannia and Conway Tubular Bridges. Truths and Tubes on self-supporting prin- ciples ; a few words in reply to the author [Sir P. B. Head] of ' High-ways and Dry- ways.' 12°. London & Manchester,. 1849. 2942 FAIRBAIRN (SIR WILLIAM). Account of the construction of the Britannia and Conway tubular bridges . . . 8°. 1849. 2943 Application of cast and wrought iron to building purposes. 8°. 1854. 2944 Pourth edition. 8°. 1870. 2945 Iron its history, properties, and pro- cesses of manufacture. Third edition. 8°. Edinburgh, 1869. 2946 Treatise on iron ship building : its history and progress . . . and an inquiry into the present and prospective state of the navy ... 8°. 1865. 2947 Nos. 2943-7 presentation copies. Useful information for engineers . . . with appendices, containing the results of experimental inquiries into the strength of materials, the causes of boiler explosions, etc. 8». 1856. 2948 FAIRFAX, Fairfax Correspondence. Memoirs of the reign of Charles the first. Edited by George Wm. Johnson. 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 2949 "Wit^ M'. Forster's MS. memoranduTca. Title page to Vol. I. wanting. Memorials of the Civil War : compri- sing the correspondence of the Fairfax family with the most distinguished per- sonages engaged in that memorable con- test . . . Edited by Robert Bell. Form- ing the concluding volumes of the Fairfax Correspondence. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1849. 2950 Presentation copy. FAIRFAX (SIR THOMAS ait. THOS. BARON). Short memorials of Thomas Lord Fair- fax. Written by himself. 12°. 1699. 2951 [Tracts relating to Fairfax.] 4°. 164R-9. 2952 Orders by Sir T. Fairfax, for regulating the army, and for the soldiers paying of quarters, and fair behaviour in the coun- treys : with letters to the committees and justices of peace. Declaration of the engagements from Sir T. Fairfax, and the generall Counoel of the Army. For setling of his majesty in his just rights, the Parliament in their Just priviledges, and the subjects in their liberties and freedomes, With papers of 166 FAIRFAX (SIR THOMAS aft. THOS. BARON')— cont. overtures. Also representations of the grievances of the kingdome, and re- medies propounded. And the resohitions ol the army, for the estabUshment of a Peace. (Frontispiece.) ■ Charge or Impeachment, in the name of Sir T. Fairfax, and the army under his command. Against Denzill Hoilis, Sii* Pliilip Stapleton, Sir "William Lewis, Sir John Clotworthy, Sir "William "Waller, Sir Jolin Maynard, Major Gen. Massey, John Glynn, "Walter Long, Col. Edward Harley, and Anthony Nicoll; members of the House of Commons. Two letters from Sir T. Fairfax, one to both Houses of Parhament; giving an accompt of what transactions and pro- ceedings have been bet^i-ixt the Kings Majesty and the army, since his coming into their ciuarters. With some farther proposals in relation to his Majesty, and the speedy settlement of the peace of the kingdom. The other a letter to the Lord Major of the City of London, with some papers of the proceedings of the treaty with the army. . Two letters from Sir T. Fairfax, to the House of Peeres. 'With a letter from the Peeres, giving him thanks for his constant care of the safety of the kingdome, also a Remon- strance of his Excellency aud the Army under his command. "With an ordinance of Parliament, declaring all Votes from 26 July untill 6 August 1647. to be null and voyd. Solemn enga^ment of the Army under the command of Sir T. Fairfax : "With declara- tion of their resolutions, as to disbanding ; and a vindication of their principles and intentions. "With the representations of the dissatisfactions of the army, in relation to the late resolutions for so sudden disband- ing, agi-eed upon, and subscribed by the severall regiments, at the Rendezvous neer New-Market, June 4) and 5. Pre- sented to the Generall, and by him to be presented to the Parliament. "With his letter to the speaker. [No title-pa^e. Remonstrance from Sir T. Fairfax, and the armie under his com- mand. (Kingston upon Thames, August 18. 1647.)] Two letters, the one, from the Lord Major of the City of London in Common-Coun- cell assembled, to Sir T. Fairfax, and his Councell of warre. The other, fr{ftn Sir T. Fairfax, to the Lord Major. Declaration from S^ T. Fairfax, and his Councell of warre. Concerning their pro- ceeding in the proposalls, prepared and agreed on by the Councell of the Armie, to be tendred to the Commissioners of Par- liament. "With the hearts of the said pro- posalls. Some further particular desires, for the removing, and redressing of divers grievances. (Two copies.) "Vindication and answer of the XI. accused members, viz. Denzell Holies [and others] to a pamphlet intituled, A particular charge or impeachment, in the name of Sir T. Fairfax and the army under his command. {2 copies.) Proposals of Lord Fairfax, and the General Councel of officers, in order to a speedy prosecution of justice, and the settlement formerly propounded by them. Answer of the General Councel of officers of the Army, under T. Lord Fairfax. To the demands of the Commons, concerning the late securing, or secluding of some mem- bers thereof. Remonstrance of T. Lord Fairfax, Lord Generall of the Parliaments Forces. And of the Generall Councell of offlcers held at FAIRFAX (SIR THOMAS AFT. THOS. BARON)— coref. S« Albans 16. November, 1648. Presented to the Commons. [At the end.] His Excellencies letter to the House of Commons, presented with the large remonstrance. (Signed) " Tho. Fairfax." Petition from Thomas Lord Fairfax aud the General Councel of offlcers of the Army, to the Commons, concerning the draught of an agreement of the People for a Peace, by .them framed and prepared.. _ With the said agreement and a declaration of his Excellency and the Councel, concerning the same. (2 copies.) Petition of the General Councel of otBcers under the command of T. Lord Fairfax, to the Commons, for the taking away of Free-Quarter, and other burthens of the Common-wealth, and for the relief of Ireland. "With the answer and votes of the Parliament. Also a list of all the officers at the General Councel. To the Lord Fairfax, and his Councell of warre : tho humble addresse of Henry Hammond. Warrant of the Lord General Fairfax to the Marshall Generall of the Army, to put i'n execution the former ordinances and orders of Parliament, and act of Common Coun- cell, concerning the regulating of printing, and dispersing of scandalous pamphlets. [Tracts relating to Fairfax aud his army.] 4°. London, and Cambridge, and n.p. 1646-53 & n.d. 2953 Remonstrance from Sir T. Fairfax, and his Councell of warre, concerning the late discontent and distraction in the army With his declaration of himselfe, and ex- pectation Jfrom the army thereupon, for the future uniting of the army. Representation from Sir T. F., and the Councel of the armie ; concerning their past endeavours, and now finall desires for the putting of .the souldiery into con- stant pay and other things concerning the souldiery. Acknowledgment and congratulation of thousands of young-men and apprentices, in and about the City of London : to Sir T. F. With his letter in reference to the same. Declaration of the armie under Sir T. P., as it was lately presented at Saffron Walden in Essex. Two letters of Sir T. F., sent to Parliament ; with the humble advice of the councel of warre (held at St. Edmonds Bury in Suffolke, Satterday 29. May, 1647.) upon the votes of both houses, sent to the array for their disbanding. Also, the petition of the private souldierie of the aimy to his Excellendie. Copy of the severall grievances of the army under Sir T. F. As it was presented at Saflron-Walden, with an order ol the Generals, to every regiment. [No title-page. Narration, concerning the armies preservation of the king.] Letter from Sir T. F., sent to both houses of parliament June 6. concerning the Kings being brought from Holmby to- wards the army. Solemne engagement of the Ai'my [etc.] [Duplicate, See No. 2952]. Letter from Sir T. F., and the chief com- mandera in the army. To the Lord Major. Declaration from Sir T. P., and the army, to tho parliament, eonoemlDg the rights and liberties of themselves and the kingdome. With some proposals and desires. 167 FAIRFAX (SIR THOMAS aft. THOS. BARON)— con^ Declaration of Sir T. F., and the councell of warre ; disclaiming a pamphlet, entituied, (Heads presented by the army to the Kings Majesty) and another Written paper, ontituled, (articles agreed upon between the king and the army). Pour petitions to Sir T. F.: from the in- habitants of Essex Norfolk and Suffolk County of Buckingham County of Hert- ford. Also a speech to his Excellency at the delivery of the petition for Bucking- ham. Charge delivered in the name of the army under Sir T. ¥., unto the (^ommiBsioners of parliament with the army, atS. Albans, June 14. 1647. and by them sent up to the parliament, against several members of the House of Commons. Also a paper delivered to the said Commissioners from Sir T. P., and the army, of some farther proposals and desires to JParliament. Uemonstrance from Sir T. F., and the army concerning the present state of affairs, in relation to themselves and the Kingdom -, with their desires and resolutions there- upon. Presented to the Commissioners at S. Albans, to be by them represented to the parliament. With a proclamation of the strict discipline of the army. Three letters from Sir T. P., and the officers and soldiers. Two of them to the parlia- ments Commissioners. And the third to the Lord Major, of the farther answer of the army/ concerning the charge against the eleven members. And the grounds of the armies nearer advance to the parlia- ment and city of London. Manifesto from Sir T. F., and the army; concerning the XL members impeached, in the name of themselves, and the kinfj- dome of England. With seven proposi- tions for the present peace, and settlement of the kingdome. Presented, to the Com- missioners at Uxbridge. Cambridge, 1647. Letter from Sir T. P., and a councel of war at Uxbridge, June 29. 1647. To be communicated to parliament and the Lord Major. Of the armies drawing far- ther back from the Clity of London, and the head-quarters that night at Wickam ; in answer to the votes of both Houses. "With a copy of the votes. Letter from Sir T. P., in answer to the petition of the eleven members, and the votes of the House^ for bringing in a particular charge against them. Order, lor appoint- ing a committee of the array to hold a treaty with the Commissioners of parha- ment. Proclamation, forbidding any abuse or obstruction to the levying the Excize 15[6]47. Two letters from Sir T. P., one to parha- ment ; giving an accompt of what trans- actions and proceedings have been betwixt the Kings Majesty and the Army, since his coming into their quarters. The other to the Lord Major with some papers of the proceedings of the treaty with the army. Petition of many thousands of young men, ; and apprentices of the City of London, to parUament. Petition of the wel-affected young men, and apprentises of the City of London to Sir T. P. Congratulatory letter from the agitatora in the army to the said petitioners. Proposalls dehvered to the Earl of Notting- ham, and the rest of the Commissioners of parhament, resichng wdth the army, from Sir T. P. and the Army. Hesolvecl upon at a generall councell of warre held at Reading July 17. 1647. Message sent by the Lord "Wharton to the parliament : and a letter to the Lord Mayor conceraing the militia of London. FAIRFAX (SIR THOMAS ai^t. THOS. BARON)— co?i^ Papers from Sr. T. P., and the armie, de- livered to the Commissioners ol parlia- ment and eitj' at Alisbury, July 23. 1647. Occasioned by a late petition. and engage- ment of some citizens. Copy- of the en- gagement. Proclamation, against the entertaining of cavaliers in the armie. [No title-page. Two letters from Sr. T. P. one to tne Commissioners of the armie, the other to the Lord Major. As it was presented, July 29. 1647.] Dated— Bedford 29. July ; 1647. Declaration of "WilUam Lenthall; Speaker. Shewing the grounds and reasons which moved him to absent himselfe from at- tending the service of the House on Pryday 30 July, 1647. Declaration of Sir T. P., and his councell o£ warre, on behalfe of themselves and the whole armie ; shewing the grounds of their present advance towards the city of London. ■ Declaration from S'". T. P., and his councell of warre. Concerning their proceeding in the proposalls, prepared and agreed on by the councell of the armie, J;o be ten- dred to the Commissioners of parliament. "With the heads of the said proposalls. Address of the agitators of the army to Sir T. P. Presented 14. Angust, on behalf of the kingdom and army. Shewing the un- expectedness of the intrusion of those gentlemen into parliament, who so hitely usurped a parliamentary power when the free parliament was forc'a away : as also the injustice of their sitting therein. Their proposals to his Excellency at Ham- mersmith 5 August ; fdr the prevention of the said gentlemen, and all other illegal members, sitting in the parliament. Remonstrance from Sir T. P., and the armie: concerning their proceedings hitherto in the behalfe of the parliament, kingdome, and themselves : and the evill and trecher- ous dealing they have found from the enemies to their own, and the parliaments and kingdomes peace and freedome. Acknowledgment and congratulation o£ thousands of young-men and apprentices, in and about the City of London : to Sir T. P. "With his letter in reference to the same. Resolution of the agitators of the army, con- cerning the prosecution of their late re- monstrance and protestation against the sitting of the late usurpers of parliar mentary power in the parhament. Rea- sons constraining them so resolutely to adhere to that their protestation. As they were presented to Sir T. F. Septemb. 2, 1647. HSads of proposals, agreed on by Sir T. F„ and the councell of the armie. Tendred to the Commissioners of Parliament resid- ing with the armife, to be by them pre- sented to the parliament. Explanations upon sevei^all particulars therein agreed upon at the generall councell of the army at Putney, Septemb. 16. 1647. Propositions from the adjutators of five regiamente of horse presented to his Ex- ceUency, October 18. and appointed to be presented to the generall councell of the army, at Putney, Octob. 21. 1647. Charge or impeachment in the name of Sir T. P., and the army, against Denzill Holies [etc.] [Duplicate, see 2952]. Declaration of the Lord General! Fairfax, and his generall councell of officers : shewing the grounds of the armies ad- vance towards the City of London. Petition from T. lord Fairfax and the general councel of officers of the army, to the Commons of England, concerning the 168 FAIRFAX (SIR THOMAS aft. THOS. BARON)— con*. drauRbt of an agreement of the people for a secure and present peace, by them framed and prepared. 'With the said a^eement presented, Jan. 20. Declara- tion of his Excellency and the said ooun- cel, concerning the same. Declaration of the Lord Generall and his counoell of officers ; shewing the grounds and reasons for the dissolution of the late parliament. FAIRHOLT (FREDERICK WILLIAM). Costume in England : a history of dress from the earliest period till the close of the eighteenth century . . . Illustrated glossary of terms . . . Engravings . . . hy the author. S". 1846. 2954 Second edition. Illustrated ... 8°. 1860. 2M5 Dictionary of terms in Art. Edited and illustrated by F. W. Fairholt. 8°. n.d. 2956 Miscellanea Graphica : a collection of ancient medieval and renaissance remains ; in the possession of Lord Londesborough. Illustrated by E. W. Fairholt. No. I. n, E°. (1854.) 2957 Tobacco : its history and associations : including an account of the plant and its manufacture ; with its modes of use in all ages and countries. With 100 illustra- tions hy the author. 8°. 1859. 2958 Up the Nile, and home again . . . Illus- trations. 8°. 1862. 2959 FAIRY TALES. Fairy Tales, collected in the Odenwald, by .1. W. Wolf. Edited, with a preface, by Kenneth K. H. Mackenzie. Illustrated by W. Harvey. 12°. 1855. 2960 Uncle Peter's Fairy Tales. The first story, containing the history and adven- tures of Little Mary, Queen of the great island of Brakarakakaka. 12°. 1844. 2961 FALKENER (EDWARD). Description of some important Theatres and other remains in Crete, from a MS. history of Candia hy Oaorio Belli in 1586 . . 8°. 1854. 2962 FALKLAND (HENRY GARY, 3rd VISCOUNT). Mariage Night. 4°. 1664. 2963 FALL OF THE WHIGS. Fall of the Whigs and other poems. 8°. 1852. 2964 FAMILY CLASSICAL LIBRARY. [Translations.] Vol. 1-12 and 16. (Portraits.) 12». 1830-1. 2965 Vol. 1. Orations of Demosthenes. By Thomas Leland, D.D. 2. Demosthenes [continued]. Sallnst. By William Rose. 3, 4. Xenophon. Anabasis, By Edward Spelman. Cyropaedia, By Hon, Maurice FAMILY CLASSICAL LIBRARY— eo«<. Ashly Cooper. 5-7. Herodotus. By Eev. William Beloe. 8, 9. Virgil. Eclogues by "Wrangham ; Georgios by Sotheby, and MneA hv Dryden. 10. Pindar. By E«v. 0. A. Wheelright. Anaoreon. By Thomas Bourne. 11, 12. (Vol. 1. 2.) Tacitus. By Arthur Murphy. 16. Cha- racters of Theophrastus ; illustrated by physiognomical Sketches. Hints on the individual varieties of human nature, and general remarks. (Plates to Theophras- tus). FAMILY LIBRARY. Family Library. 9 [various] vol. 12°. 1829-31. 2966 Nos. 1. 2. History of Napoleon Buonaparte [by J. G. Lockhart]. Engravings [the woodcuts fi-om designs of G. Cruikshank], 11. Life and voyages of C. Columbus. By W. Irving (abridged by the same). (Por- trait.) 14. Lives of British Physicians. (Portraits.) 18. Voyages and discoveries of the companions of Columbus. By W. Irving. 20, 32. Sketches from Venetian History. 2 vol. 22. Lives of Scottish Worthies. By P. P. Tytler. Vol. 1. 24. Life of Sir Isaac Newton. By [Sir] David Brewster (portrait). FANATIC. Fanatiok Blunders : collected from their hooks, sermons, and prayers . . . 8°. 1710. 2967 Imperfect. FANCIES. Fancies of a Whimsical Man. By the author of " Musings of an Invalid." Fourth edition. 8°. New- York, 1852. 2968 FANCOURT (CHARLES ST. JOHN). History of Yucatan from its discovery to the close of the seventeenth century. With a map. 8°. 1854. 2969 FANE (HON. JULIAN HENRY CHARLES). Poems. 12°. 1852. 2970 FANSHAWE (LADY). Memoirs of Lady Fanshawe . . . Written by herself. With extracts from the Correspondence of Sir Richard Fan- shawe. New edition [by Sir N. H. Nicolas]. (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 2971 FANSHAWE (CATHERINE MARIA). Memorials of Miss C. M. Fanshawe. [Poems and Photographs.] Privately printed. 4°. u.p. n.d. (1865). 2972 Introductory note by Eev. W. Harness. Presentation copy from him to M'. Porster. FARADAY (MICHAEL). Subject matter of a course of six lectures on the non-metallic elements . . . arranged . . . from the lecturer's notes ... by J. Scoffern , . . Remarks on the 169 FARADAY (MICHAEL)— con«. quality and tendencies of chemical philo- sophy, on aUotropism, and ozone; with manipulative details relating to the per- formance of experiments indicated by Faraday. 12°. 1853. 2973 FARINI (LUIGI CARLO). The Roman State, from 1815 to 1850. Translated from the Italian by W. E. Gladstone. 4 vol. 8°. 1851-4. 2974 Vol. iv. Translated, under the direction of W. E. Gladstone, by a lady. FARMER (RICHARD) D.D. Bibliotheca Farmeriana. Catalogue of the . . . Library, in print and manuscript,, of Kev"". K. Farmer . . . Also his col- lections of pictures, prints, books of prints, English portraits, &c. Which will be sold by auction, by Mr. Kinn, at his great room, King-Street, Coveut-Garden, on • Monday, May 7, 1798 ... 8". n.p. n.d. 2975 FARMER. Farmer's Friend : a record of recent discoveries, improvements, and practical suggestions in agriculture. 8°. 1847. 2976 FARMER'S LIBRARY. Animal economy. Vol. I. (Ox — Horse). II. (Sheep — Dog — Hog — Poultry— rBees). (Illustrations.) 8°. n.d. 2977 FARQUHAR (MARIA). Biographical Catalogue of the principal Italian Painters, with a table of the con- temporary schools of Italy . . . Edited by Ealph N. Womum. 8°. 1855. 2978 FARR (WILLIAM) M.D. Keport on the mortality of Cholera in England, 1848-49. (By William Farr and others for .George Graham, the Registrar-General.) 8°. 1852. 2979 FAU (DR. JULIEN). Anatomy of the external forms of Man ; intended for the use of Artists . . . Edited with additions by Robert Knox, M.D. With an atlas ... 8°. 1849. 2980 Anatomy. . . Atlas containing 28 draw- ings from nature ; lithographed by M. Leveille. Edited with additions by Robert Knox, M.D. F". 1849. *2980 FAUVEL-GOURAUD (FRANCIS). Phreno-mnemotechny ; or, the Art of Memory . . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 2981 FAWCKNER (CAPT. JAMES). Narrative of travels on the coast of Benin, West Africa. Edited by a friend of the Captain. 8°. 1837. 2982 FEATHERSTONHAUGH (GEORGE WILLIAM). Canoe Voyage up the Minnay Sotor ; with an account of the lead and copper deposits in Wisconsin ; of the gold region in the Cherokee country ... 2 vol. (Two Maps in pocket.) 8°. 1847. 2983 Excursion through the Slave States, from Washington on the Potomac to the frontiers of Mexico ; with . . . geological notices. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 2984 FELICE (G. DE). History of the Protestants of France, from the commencement of the Reforma- tion to the present time. Translated from the second . . . edition, by Philip Edw. Barnes. 8°. 1853. 2985 FELINSKA (EVE). Revelations of Siberia. By a Banished Lady [Eve Felinska] . Edited by Colonel Lach Szyrma. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 2986 FELL (REV. R. C). Passages from the private and official life of Alderman Kelly with extracts from his correspondence. (Portrait.) 12". 1856. 2987 FELLOWES (WILLIAM D.). Historical Sketches of Charles the first, Cromwell, Charles the second, and the principal personages of that period j in- cluding the King's trial and execution : account of the sums exacted by the Com- monwealth from the Royalists, and the names of all those who compounded for their estates ; with other scarce docu- ments. Illustrated by fifty lithographic plates. 4°. London, Paris [printed], 1828. 2988 FELLOWS (SIR CHARLES). Account of discoveries in Lycia, being a journal kept during a second excursion in Asia Minor, 1840. 8°. 1841. 2989 Travels and Researches in Asia Minor, more particularly in the province of Lycia. 8°. 1852. 2990 [No title-page. Sir Charles Fellows's Lycian expedition. Plates by George Scharf, junr. Hullmandel and Walton, Lithographers. With letter-press.] F°. 2991 FELTON (CORNELIUS CONWAY). Familiar letters from Europe. 8". Boston [U.S.] 1865. 2992 "John Forster Esq with the compliments of L^ Agassiz." Greece, ancient and modem. Lectures delivered before the Lowell Institute. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1867. 2993 170 FELTON (CORNELIUS CONWAY)— cont. Greek Reader, for the use of schools ; containing selections in prose and poetry, with English notes and a lexicon. Adapted particularly to the Greek gram- mar of E. A. Sophocles. Second edition. 8°. Hartford [U.S.] 1842. 2994 Memorial of Rev. John Snelling Popkin, D.D. late Eliot professor of Greek litera- ture in Harvard university. Edited by G. C. Eelton. (Portrait.) 8">. Cambridge [U.S.] 1852. 2995 " John Forster Bsg.from his old friend C. C. Felton Cambridge Mass, 30 July 1852." FELTON (HENRY) D.D. Dissertation on reading the Classics, and forming a just style . . ^ Fourth edition. 12°. 1730. " 2096 MS. notes. FEMALE FAVOURITES. History of Eemale Favourites. Of Mary de Padilla . . . Livia . . . Julia Farnesa . . . Agnes Soreau . . and Nantilda. 8°. 1772. 2997 FENELON (FRANCOIS DE SALIGNAC, DE \1a MOTHE) ARCHBISHOP OF CAMBRAY. Les Aventures de Telemaque, fils d'Ulysse. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. Paris, 1830, 1829. 2998 FENTON (ELIJAH). Poetical works. With the life of the author. Cooke's edition. . . 12°. n.d. 2999 FERGUSON (ROBERT). The Northmen in Cumberland and Wpst- moreland. 8°. London and Cariisle, 1856. 3000 Swiss men and Swiss mountains. 12°. 1853. 3001 FERGUSSON (JAMES). Essay on a proposed new system of Fortification : with hints for its application to our national defences. 8°. 1849. 3002 Historical inquiry into the true principles of Beauty in Art, more especially with reference to Architecture. Part the first. 8°. 1849. 3003 Illustrated Handbook of Architecture : being a concise and popular account of the different styles of architecture pre- vailing in all ages and countries. 2 vol. With 850 illustrations on wood. 8°. 1855. 3004 Palaces of Nineveh and Persepolis re- stored : an eshuy on ancient Assyrian and Persian Architecture. 8°. 1851. 3005 FERNE (HENRY) BISHOP OF CHESTER. Resolving of Conscience, upon this ques- tion, whether upon such a supposition or case, as is now usually made (the King will not discharge his trust, but is bent or seduced to subvert religion, laws, and liberties) subjects may take arms and re- sist ? and whether that case be now ? . . . The resistance now made against the higher power is unwarrantable ... 8°. Cambridge, 1642. 3006 FERRAR (JOHN). Cambridge in the Seventeenth Century Part I. Nicholas Ferrar. [Second title] Nicholas F'errar. Two lives by his brother John and by Doctor Jebb. Now first edited with illustrations by J. E. B. Mayor. 12°. Cambridge, 1855. 3007 FERRIAR (JOHN) M.D. Illustrations of Sterne : with other essays and verses. Second edition. 2 vol. (in one). 8". London, Warrington [printed], 1812. 3008 FERRIER (JAMES FREDERICK). Institutes of Metaphysio the theory of knowing and being. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1854. , 3009 Second edition. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 185C. 3010 FERRIER (J. P.). Caravan journeys and wanderings in Persia, Afghanistan, Turkistan, and Beloo- chistan ; with historical notices of the countries lying between Russia and India. Translated from the original unpublished manuscript by Capt. William Jesse. Edi- ted by H. D. Seymour. With original map and woodcuts. 8°. 1856. 3011 FERRIER (SUSAN EDMONSTONE). Destiny; or, the Chief's daughter. By the Author of " Maniage "... Revised by the Author. 12°. 1841. 3012 The Inheritance. By the Author of " Marriage." Revised by the Author. 12°. 1841. 3013 Marriage. By the Author of " The Inheritance "... Revised by the Author. 12°. 1841. 3014 FEUCHTERSLEBEN(ERNESTVON) M,D. Dietetics of the Soul. Edited from the seventh edition. 12°. 1852. 3015 FEUERBACH (ANSELM, RITTER VON). Narratives of remarkable criminal trials. Translated from the German by Lady Duff Gordon. 8°. 1846. 3016 171 FEUERBACH (LUDWIG). Essence of Christianity. Translated from the second German edition, hy Marian Evans. 8°. 1854. 3017 FICHTE (JOHANN GOTTLIEB). Popular Works. Translated from the German, with a memoir of the author, by William Smith. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1848-9. 3018 Vol. 1. Memoir— Vocation oE the Scholar- Nature ol the Scholar- Vocation of Man. 2. Characteristics of the present age— Way towards the blessed life ; or, the doctrine of religion— Outlines of the doctrine of Knowledge. Characteristics of the present age. Translated from the German, by W. Smith. 8°. 1847. 3019 Destination of Man. Translated firom the German, by Mrs. Percy Sinuett. 8°. 1846. 3020 Destination de I'homme. Traduit de I'Allemand par Barchou de Penhoen. Deuxieme Edition. 8°. Paris, 1836. 3021 Nature of 'the Scholar, and its mani- festations. Translated from the German, with a memoir of the author, by W. Smith. 8°. 1845. 3022 FIDDES (RICHARD) D.D. Life of Cardinal Wolsey. With several copper plates. (Portrait of Eiddes.) L.P. E°. 1724. 3023 At the end— "Collections." Su-Mark Sykes's copy. " FIDDLESTICKSANDRUBBISH." Eventful history of M". Eitzroy Slam's trip to Italy. 12». 1847. 3024 FIELAN (A. D.)- Stories, traditionary and romantic, of the two Rebellions in Scotland, in 171.5 and 1745. 8°. 1849. 3025 FIELD (REV. JOHN). Correspondence of John Howard, the philanthropist . . . Memoir and illustrative anecdotes. (Portrait.) 12°. 1855. 3026 Life of John Howard . . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1850. 3027 Prison Discipline ; and the advantages of the separate system of imprisonment, with a detailed account of the dis- cipline now pursued in the new county gaol, at Beading. 2 vol. 8°. London and Reading, 1848. 3028 FIELD (KATE). Pen pbotographs of Charles Dickens's Readings. Taken from life. New and enlarged edition, with illustrations. (Por- trait.J 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1871. 3029 FIELD (REV. WILLIAM). Memoirs of the life, writiugs, and opinions of Rev. Samuel Parr, LL.D. ; with biographical notices of many of his friends, pupils, and contemporaries. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1828. 3030 FIELDING (HENRY). Works. With the life of the Author. 12 vol. 12°. 1775. 3031 Vol. 10 and 11 wanting. Works. With an essay on his life and genius, by Arthur Murphy. New edition [by Alex. Chalmers] . 10 vol. (Portrait.) 8". 1821. 3032 Book-plate of John Mathew Gutch. Works, complete in one volume, with memoir of the Author. By Thomas Eoscoe. Portrait and autograph. 8°. 1840. 3033 Adventures of Joseph Andrews. With illustrations by George Cruikshank. 12°. 1832. 3034 Amelia. 4 vol. [first ed.]. 12°. 1752. 3035 [Another edition.] With illustrations by George Cruikshank. 2 vol. 12°. 1832. 3036 History of Tom Jones, a foundling. With a memoir of the Author by Thomas Roscoe, and illustrations by George Cruik- shank. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1831. 3037 [FIELDING (SARAH).] Adventures of David Simple : containing an account of his travels through the cities of London and Westminster, in the search of a real friend. By a Lady. 2 vol. Second edition. With a preface by Henry Fielding. 12°. 1744. 3038 FIELDING (THEODORE HENRY). The knowledge and restoration of old Paintings : the modes of judging between copies and originals : and a brief life of the principal masters in the different schools of Painting. 12°. 1847. 3039 FIGUIER (LOUIS). The Human Race. Illustrated. 8°. 1872. 3040 Insect World ; being a popular account of the orders of insects, with a description of the habits and economy of some of the most interesting species. Erom the French. Illustrated by 564 woodcuts. By MM. E. Blanchard, Delahaye, after Reaumer, etc. 8°. 1868. 3041 Vegetable World; being a, historv of plants, with their botanical descriptions and pecuhar properties. Illustrated with 446 engravings . . . chiefly drawn from nature by M. Eaguet. 8°. 1867. 3042 " Preface " signed " W. S. 0." 172 FIGUIER (LOUIS)— conf. ■World before the Deluge. Containing twenty-five ideal landscapes of the ancient world, designed by Riou. And 208 figures of animals, plants, and other fossil remains and restorations. Translated from the fourth French edition. 8°. 1865. 3043 FILMER (EDWARD). Defence of Plays : or, the Stage vindi- cated, from several passages in Mr. Collier's Short View, &c. . . . 8°. 1707. 3044 D'. Bliss's copy and MS. note. Unnatural Brother : a tragedy . . . 4°. 1697. 3045 FILMER (SIR ROBERT). Free-holders grand inquest, touching our Sovereign lord the King and his Par- liament. To which are added observations upon forms of government. Together with directions for obedience to Gover- nours in dangerous and doubtful times. Fourth impression. (Portrait of Charles II.) 8". 1684. 3046 Patriarcha ; or the natural power of Kings. 8°. 1680. 3047 FINCH (EDWARD). . . . Charge exhibited in Parliament against Edward Finch vicar of Christs Church in London . . . (Woodcut on title.) 4°. 1641. 3048 FINCH (JOHN, BARON) AND OTHERS. Foure fugitives meeting or, the discourse amongst my Lord Finch, Sir Francis Windebank, Sir lohn Sucklin, and Doctor Koane, as they accidentally met in France, with a detection of their severall pranks in England. [Anon.] (Woodcut on title — Plate with portraits of Finch and Winde- bank inserted.) 4°. n. p. 1641. 3049 FINCH (JOHN). Natural Boundaries of Empires ; aud a new view of Colonization. 12°. 1844. 3050 FINCH (THOMAS). The True Church viewed in contrast with modern High - Churohism. 8°. London and Bishops Stortford, 1841. 3051 FINE ARTS. Fine Arts Quarterly Review. (Edited by B. B. Woodward). Vol. I. II. III. 8°. n.d. (1863-5). 3052 FIN EG AN (J. T.). Attempt to illustrate a few passages in Shakespeare's Works. 8°. Bath and London, 1802. 3053 FINLASON (W. F.). Commentaries upon Martial law . . . with an introduction, containing Com- ments upon the charge of the Lord Chief Justice rCockburn] in the Jamaica case. 8°. 1867. 3054 FIN LAY (GEORGE). History of the Byzantine Empire from 716 to 1057. 8°. Edinburgh and Lou- don, 1853. 3055 History of the Byzantine and Greek Empires from 1057 to 1463. 8° Edin- burgh and London, 1854. 3056 History of Greece from its conquest by the Crusaders to its conquest by the Turks and of the empire of Trebizond 1204-1461. 8°. Edinlmrgh and London, 1851. 3057 FIRST AND LAST. First and Last, a poem intended to illustrate the ways of God to Man. 12". 1860. 3058 FISHER ( ) Publisher. [Engraved title] Fisher's Drawing Room Sorap-Book, 1841. London and Paris, 1840. [Title] Fisher's . . . With poetical illustrations by Mary Howitt. 4". London and Paris, n.d. 3059 [Engraved title] Fisher's Views. Syria . . . London & Paris, 1837. [Title] Syria, the Holy Land, Asia Minor, &c. Illustrated. In a series of views drawn from nature by W. H. Bartlett, William Purser, &c. With descriptions of the ' plates by John Came. Second [sic] 4°. London, Paris, and New York, n.d. 3060 FITCHETT (JOHN). King Alfred a poem edited by Robert Roscoe. 6 vol. (Portrait of Alfred). 8°. 1841-2. 3061 [FITZGERALD (EDWARD).] Polonius . a Collection of wise saws and modern instances. [Anon.] 12°. London, 1852. 3062 MS. notes by M'. Porster. FITZGERALD (PERCY). Autobiography of a small boy. By the author of " School Days at Saxonhurst." 12°. 1869. 3063 , Charles Lamb ; his friends, his haunts, and his books. (Portraits.) Sra. 4°. 1866. 3064 Charles Townshend, Wit and States- man. (Portrait.) 8°. 1866. 3065 A Famous Forgery being the story of " the unfortunate " Doctor Dodd. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1865. 3066 The Kembles an account of the Kemble family, including the lives of Mrs. Siddons, and her brother John Philip 173 FITZGERALD (PERCY)— coni. Kemble. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. n.d. (1871.) 8067 Life of David Garrick; from original family papers, and numerous published and unpublished sources. 2 vol. 8°. 1868. 3068 On toned paper. Life of Laurence Sterne. With illus- trations. 2 vol. 8°. 1864. 3069 Life and Adventures of Alexander Dumas. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1873. 3070 Principles of Comedy and Dramatic effect. 8°. 1870. 3071 Komance of the English Stage. 2 vol. 8». 1874. 3072 School Days at Saxonhurst. By ' one of the Boys.' 12°. Edinburgh, 1867. 3073 "Le Sport" at Baden. A picture of Watering-place life and manners. 8°. 1804. 3074 Story of the Incumbered Estates Court . . 12». 1862. 3075 Several of these are presentation copies with inscriptions. FITZPATRICK (WILLIAM JOHN). Life, times, and cotemporaries of Lord Cloncurry. (Portrait.) 8°. Dublin, 18,55. 3076 FLATMAN (THOMAS). Poems and Songs. Third edition (Portrait.) 8°. 1682. 3077 " Jzaak 'Walton July 3''. 1682 given me, by US, on title '^c, alterations and oon'ectioiis (in the same the author." MS. on title l^age. MS, hand) on several pages. Book- plate of Eev. Herbert H. Hawes, de- scendant of Iz. Walton. Cat. cutting and MS. note by GJeorge Daniel. FLEMING (ROBERT). Rise and fall of Rome Papal. Re- printed from the first edition in 1701, with notes, preface, and a memoir of the author. 12°. 1848. 3078 FLEMING ( ) AND TIBBINS ( ). Grand dictionnaire Eramjais-Anglais et Auglais-Fran9ais . . . Tome IL — ^I'ran9ais- Anglais . . 4°. Paris, 1845. 3079 FLETCHER (ANDREW) OF SAL,- TOUN. Political Works. 12°. Glasgow, 1749. 3080 " To John Forster Esq. from his friend Allan Cunningham." FLETCHER (GEORGE). Studies of Shakespeare in the plays of King John, Cymbeline, Macbeth, As 'you like it. Much Ado about Nothing, Romeo and Juliet ... 8°. 1847. 3081 FLETCHER (JOHN). Elder Brother a comedie . . . [First ed.] 4°. 1637. 3082 [Another edition.] Adapted for modern representation [by John Forster]. J 2°. 184G. (Two copies.) 3083 Prefixed is " Some account of the Writer of the ISlder Brother" by J. F. [John Forster]. Tragcedy of Rollo Duke of Normandy ... 4°. Oxford, 1640. 3084 Rule a Wife and have a Wife. A comoedy . . . [First ed.] 4°. Oxford, 1640. 3085 Book-plate of John Will™. Colo. ANDSHAKSPEARE (WILLIAM). The Two Noble Kinsmen . . . [First ed.] 4°. 1634. 3U8C FLEURY ( ). French Stage and the French People, as illustrated in the memoirs of M. Fleury. Edited by Theodore Hook. 2 vol. 8°. 1841. 3087 Adventures of an Actor : comprising a picture of the French Stage during fifty years. Edited by Theodore Hook. Second edition [of N°. 3087]. 2 vol. 8°. 1842. 3088 FLOOD (HENRY). Original Letters, principally from Lord Charlemont, Edmund Burke, William Pitt, Earl of Chatham . . . to H. Flood. Printed from the correspondence . . . in the possession of the Editor. (Portrait.) 4°. 1820. 3089 The preface is signed " T. K." [P the pub- lisher Thomas fiodd]. A MS. notice in- serted at the heginnins of the volume and signed " John Kankin " says that the book was "puhlished by B«v. Marcus Monck." FLOOD (WARDEN). Memoirs of the life and correspondence of Henry Flood, ;M.P. : containing re- miniscences of the Irish Commons, and an account of the grand national convention of 1783. (Portrait.) 8°. Dublin, 1838. 3090 FLORENCE. Tableaux, statues, bas-reliefs et camees de la Galerie de Florence et du Palais Pitti, dessines par (J. B.) Wicar, et graves sous la direction de C. L. Masquelier ; avec les explications, par Mongez. 4 vol. F°. Paris, 1819. 3091 FLORENCE OF WORCESTER. Chronicle of Florence of Worcester with the two continuations ; comprising annals of English history from the depar- ture of the Romans to the reign of Edward I. Translated from the Latin, with notes and illustrations by Thomas Forester. 8°. Bohn, 1854. 3092 174 FLORUS (LUCIUS ANNAEUS). L. A. F. ex recensione N. Blanckardi. Aocedit . . . Salmasii commentarius. 8°. liUgd. Batav. 1648. [at end 1647.] 3093 FLOWER (BENJAMIN). Proceedings of the House of Lords in the case of Benjamin Flower, printer of the Cambridge Intelligencer, for a sup- posed libel on the Bishop of Llandaff : with . . . animadversions on the writings of the Bishop of Llandaff, Kev. E. Rams- den, and Rev. Robert Hall : by the printer (B. Flower) . . . Argument in the Court of King's Bench, on a motion for an habeas corpus, and a postscript, containing re- marks on the Judgment of that Court, by Henry Clifford. 8°. Cambridge, 1800. 3094 FLUGEL (J. G.). Complete dictionary of the German and English languages. Adapted to the English Student . . . by C. A. Feiling, and A. Heimann. In two parts : Part I. — Enghsh and German. 11. German and English. (2 vol.) 8°, 1841. 3095 FLY LEAVES. Fly Leaves ; or scraps and sketches, literary, bibliographical and miscellaneous . . . 120. 1854. 3096 FOG'S JOURNAL. Select Letters taken from Fog's Weekly Journal. 2 vol. 12°. 1732. 3097 FONBLANQUE (ALBANY) J UN. How we are governed : or, the Crown, the Senate, and the Bench. A handbook of the constitution, government, laws, and power of Great Britain. 12°. 1858. 3098 FONBLANaUE(ALBANY WILLIAM). England under Seven Administrations. 3voL 8°. 1837. 3099 FONBLANQUE (EDWARD BAR- RINGTON DE). Life and Labours of Albany [William] Fonblanque. Edited by his nephew E, B. De Fonblanque. 8°. 1874. 3100 [FONTANEY (A.).j [Half-title]. Voyages et Aventures en Espagne. Premiere livraison. [Title.] Scenes de la vie CastiUane et Andalouse, par Lord Feeling [pseud.]. 8°. Paris, 1835. ' 3101 Presentation copy with inscription. FONTENELLE (BERNARD LE BOVIER DE). Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds. With notes, and a critical account of the author's writings, by Jerome De La Lande. Translated . . . by Elizabeth Gunning. (Portrait of Fontenelle.) 12°. 1803. 3102 FOOT (JESSE). Life of Arthur Murphy. (Portraits.) 4°. 1811. 3103 "Assisted by "W. Combe." JBrit. Mus. Cat. Lives of Andrew Robinson Bowes, and the Countess of Strathmore . . (Portrait of Bowes). 8°. n.d. [1810?]. 3104 FOOTE (SAMUEL). Works. With remarks on each play, and an essay on the . . . author. By Jon Bee [i.e. J. Badcock] . 3 vol. (Por- trait.) 12°. 1830. 3105 Vol. 1. 'Essay — Knights— Taste — English- man in Paris— Englishman returned trom , , ■ Paris— Author. ,!' i , 2. Minor — Liar — Orators— Mayoriof Grarratt — Patron — Commisary. S. Devil upon two Sticks— Lame ■ liovep— Maid of Bath— Nabob— Bankrupt— Coze- ners— Trip to Calais— Capuchin. FOOTMEN. The Justice and the Footmen : being a true and impartial state of the ease of the livery servants intended meeting at Hick- ford's room, in Panton Street, March 10, 1743-4 ... 8°. 1744. 3106 FORBES (DUNCAN) LORD PRESIDENT OF THE COURT OF SESSION. Whole Works. Now first collected. Containing, Letter to a Bishop, concerning some important discoveries in Philosophy and theology. Reflections on the sources of incredulity with regard to religion. Thoughts on religion, natural and re- vealed. 12°. Dublin, 1757. 3107 Book-plate of Eev. James Dunn. FORBES (EDWARD). Literary Papers. Selected from his writings in " The Literary Gazette." [Edited with a memoir by L.R., i.e. Lovell Reeve.] (Portrait.) 12°. 1855. 3108 FORBES (FREDERICK E.) R.N. Dahomey and the Dahomansj being the journals of two missions to the King of Dahomey, and residence at his capital, in 1849 and 1850. 2 vol. (Portrait of the King.) 8°. 1851. 3109 175 FORBES. (FREDERICK E.) R.N. — cont. Five years in China; from 1842 to 1847. With an accovint of the Occupa- tion of the islands of Labuan and Borneo by her Majesty's forces. (Portrait of the Empress of China.) 8°. 1848. 3110 Six months' service in the African blockade, from April to October, 1 848, in command of H.M.S. Bonetta. 8". 1849. 3111 FORBES (JAMES DAVID). Black's guide to the island of Skye accompanied by the geology of the Cu- chuUin hills. By J. D. Forbes. And of Loch Staffin. By Edward Forbes. Map and illustrations. 12°. Edinburgh, 1854. 3112 Tour of Mont Blanc and of Monte Kosa . . . abridged from the author's " Travels in the,Alps of Savoy," &c. 12°. Edinburgh, 1855. 3113 FORBES (SIR JOHN) M.D. Happiness in its relations to work and knowledge . . 12°. London, Chichester [printed], 1850. 3114 Physician's Holiday ; or, a month in Switzerland in the summer of 1848. Map and illustrations. Third edition. 8°. 1852. 3115 FORBES (SIR WILLIAM). Account of the life and writings of James Beattie, LL.D. . . . including many of his letters. New edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1824. 3116 FORD (JAMES). Memoir of Thomas Green, of Ipswich ; with a critique on his writings . . . (Por- trait.) 4°. Ipswich. 1825. (Two copies.) 3117 Preface signed I.F., in MS. " Eev. J. Ford" ; but, according to "Lowndes," by James Ford, M.D. [f B.D.] and privately printed. No. 1. "To John Nichols, Esq" from the guardians and executors under the will of the late Thomas Green, Esq"." FORD (JOHN). Dramatic Works. With notes . . . by W. Gifford. To which are added Fame's Memorial and Verses to the memory' of Ben Jonson. 2 vol. 8°. 1827. 3118 E. V. Utterson's book-plate. Bound by 0. lewis. G. Daniel's copy. New edition, carefully revised, with additions to the text and to the notes by Kev. Alexander Dyce. 3 vol. 8°. 1869. 3119 "To John Porater from his obliged friend A. Dyce." FORD (JOHN)~£on« Ladies Triall . . 1639. ' Tis pitty shee's a whore 4°. 1633. [Ist. ed.] 4°. 3120 [1st ed.] 3121 FOARD i.e. FORD (JOHN) AND DECKER (THOMAS). The Sun's-Darling : a moral masque ... 4°. 1657. 3122 Book-plate of Sir Francis Freeling. FORD (RICHARD). Gatherings from Spain. By the author of the Handbook of Spain ; chiefly se- lected from that work, with much new matter. 12°. 1846. 3123 FORD (SIMON) B.D. . . . The Loyal Subjects indignation, for his Royal Sovereign's decollation ; . . . the substance whereof was delivered in a Sermon preached at AUhaUows Church Northampton . . . Jan. 30. 1660. 4°. 1661. 3124 FOREIGN. Thirty years of Foreign Policy. A his- tory of the Secretaryships of the Earl of Aberdeen and Viscount Palmerston. By the author of " The Right Hon. B. Dis- raeli, M.P., a literary and political bio- graphy." [?— Francis.] 8°. 1855. 3125 Foreign and Colonial Quarterly Review. Vol. I (—III). 8°. 1843-4. 3126 Foreign Quarterly Review. 37 vol. [andMS. Index]. 8°. 1827-1846. 3127 Vol. 29-31 in duplicate. M' Forster was the editor for four year.s. Foreign Review, and Continental Mis- cellany. 5 vol. 8°. 1828-30. 3128 FORESTER (THOMAS). Rambles in Norway . . , With extracts from the Journals of Lieutenant M. S. Biddulph, R.A. . . 12°. 1855. 3129 FORESTS. English Forests and forest trees, his- torical, legendary, and descriptive. With numerous illustrations. 8°. 1853. 3130 FORREST (HENRY J.). A Dream of Reform. 8°. 1848. 3l31 FORSTER (REV. CHARLES). Life of John Jebb, Bishop of Limerick . . . Third edition. 8°. 1851. 3132 The One Primeval Language traced experimentally through ancient inscrip- tions in alphabetic characters of lost powers from the four continents : including the voice of Israel from the rocks of Sinai : and the vestiges of patriarchal tradition from the monuments of Egypt, Etruria, 176 FORSTER (.REV. CHARLES)— conJ. and Southern Arabia. "With illustrative plates, a harmonized table of alphabets, glossaries, andtranslations. 3 parts. (3 vol. and alphabet in case.) 8°. 1851-4. 3133 Six-Preacher Sermons : including the subjects of national education ; the Church of England yiew of Lent duties and ser- vices ; and the life and ministry of Saint I'aul. A course delivered in Cauterbury Cathedral. 8°. 1853. 3134 FORSTER (JAMES WILLIAM) LL.D. The Apocalypse its own interpreter . . . to which is added a short series of disserta- tions on symbolical prophecy, its nature and design. 8°. 1853. 3135 FORSTER (JOHN) the Donor. Arrest of the Five Members by Charles the first. A chapter of English history rewritten. 8°. 1860. (Three copies.) 3136 MS. note by M'. Porster in N». 1. Daniel De Eoe and Charles Churchill (Reprinted with additions from the " Edin- burgh Review," 1845). 12°. 1855. (Three copies.) 3137 N°. 1. Inserted— MS. account (by Charles Knight) ot James De Foe. Debates on the Grand Remonstrance, November and December, 1641. With an introductory essay on English freedom under Plantagenet and Tudor sovereijnis. 8°. 1860. 3138 Edinburgh Review, January, 1856. The Civil Wars and Cromwell, pp. 1-54. 3139 Proof of article by M'. Forster, with MS. marginal corrections ; and with MS. notes by T. Carlyle. pp. SS-i in duplicate. [No title-page. Vol. composed of The first philosophers of Greece^ — Socrates and the sophists of Athens— The dialogues of Plato ; being three articles by Mr. Eorster in the Foreign Quarterly Review, vol. 30-1.] 8°. 3140 Historical and Biographical Essays. 2 vol. Vol. I. Historical. Debates on the Grand Remonstrance, 1641. Planta- genets and Tudors. Civil Wars and Oliver Cromwell. II. Biographical. Daniel De Foe. Sir Richard Steele. Charles Churchill. Samuel Eoote. 8°. 1858. (Three copies.) 3141 No. 3. On t.p. in pencil " Proofs." Life of Charles Dickens. Vol.1. 1812- 1842. Vol. II. 1842-1852. Vol. III. 1852-1870. 3 vol. (Portraits, &o.) 8". 1874,1873,1874. 3142 This copy is made up from different sets. Library edition. 2 vol. Vol. I. 1812- 1847. Vol. II. 1847-1870. 2 vol. 8". 1876. 3143 FORSTER (JOHN) the Donor-cont. [American edition.] 3 vol. 8°. Phila- delphia, 1873-4. 3144 [Tauchnitz edition.] 6 vol. 12°. Leip- zig, 1872-4. 3145 [Danish translation]. By L. Moltke. (Vol. I.) 12°. Copenhagen, 1872. 3146 [ Another Danish translation.] By Ferd. C. Sorensen. (Vol. I.) 12°. Copenhagen, 1872. (Four copies.) 3147 No. 1. MS. inscription from the Translator. [German Translation.] By Friedrich Althaus. 3 vol. 8°. Berlin, 1872-5. 3148 Life of Jonathan Swift. Vol. I. 1667- 1711. (Portrait and Facsimiles.) 8°. 1875. 3149 No more published. [American edition]. 8°. New York, 1876. 3150 " For the Author, from his American Pub- ishers. N. T. Dec. 1876." Life and Adventures of Oliver Gold- smith. A biography : in four books. (Illustrations). 8°. 1848. (Two copies.) 3151 Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. (Two copies.) 3152 The title of this and the subsequent edi- tions is " Life and Times of Oliver Gold- smith." New edition. With forty woodcuts, after designs by C. Stanfield, R.A., D. Maclise, R..A., John Leech, Richard Doyle, and Robert James Hamerton. 8°. 1855. 3153 Fourth edition. With forty woodcuts ... 8°. 1863. 3154 Fifth edition : illustrated. 2 vol. 8°. 1871. (Two copies.) 3155 [Tauchnitz edition.] 2 vol. 12°. Leip- zig, 1873. 3156 "With facsimile of a letter to the author from Charles Dickens, 22 April 1848. Sixth edition. 2 vol. 12°. 1874. 3157 This is really the preceding " Taudinitz " edition. " An edition of five hundred copies was itiven to me for publication in England. ' Addition to Preface by J. F, It does not contain the facsimile. Another copy, but with the date 1875 and in one volume. 3158 [No title page. Vol. composed ot The newspaper literature of America ; and The answer of the American press — being two articles by M'. Forster in the Foreign Quarterly Review. Vol. 30-1.] 8°. 3159 Oliver Cromwell. Daniel De Foe. Sir Richard Steele. Charles Churchill. Samuel Foote. Biographical essays. Third edi- tion. 8°. 1860. 3160 177 FORSTER (JOHN) the Donor— cont. Sir John Eliot : a Biography 1590- 1632. 2 TOl. (Portraits.) 8°. 1864. 3161 Second edition. 2 vol. 8». 1872. 3162 Statesmen of the Commonwealth of England ; with a treatise on the popular progress in English History. 5 vol. (Por- traits.) 12°. 1840. 3163 Vol. 1. Sir John Eliot. T. Wentworth, Earl ot Strafford. 2. J. Pym. J. Hampden. 3. Sir H. Vane the younger. H. Marten. 4. 6, Oliver Cromwell. Treatise on the Popular progress in English history. Being an introduction to the study of the great Civil War in the seventeenth century. 12°. 1840. (Five copies.) 3164 Walter Savage Landor. A Biography. 2 vol. Vol. I. 1775—1821. Vol. II. 1822— 1864. (Portraits.) 8°. 1869. 3165 [American edition.] Walter Savage Landor. A Biography. In eight "books. (Portrait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1869. (Two copies.) 3166 [Title from outer cover] Tablettes Bio- graphiques. Memorial universel des hommes du temps . . . (John Forster). 8°. Paris (Neuilly). 1876-7. 3167 Presented ^y M". Forster. FORSTER (T.). Original Letters of Locke ; Algernon Sidney ; and Anthony Lord Shaftesbury, author of the " Characteristics." With an analytical sketch of the writings and opinions of Locke and other Metaphj'si- cians, hy T. Porster. 8°. 1830. (Two copies.) 3168 Second edition. 8°. Privately printed. 1847. 3169 FORSTER (REV. W.). Life of Welhngton : its lessons to young men. A discourse [on 2 Kings II. 12]. Preached in the Congregational Church, Kentish Town, October 3, 1852. 8°. 1852. 3170 FORSYTH (CAPTAIN JAMES). Highlands of Central India : notes on their forests and wild tribes, natural history, and sports. Map and illustra- tions. 8°. 1871. 3171 FORSYTH (ROBERT). Beauties of Scotland : containing a oleai' and full account of the agriculture, commerce, mines, and manufactures j of the population, cities, towns, villages, &c. of each county. Embelhshed with en- gravings. 5 vol. 8°. Edinburgh, 1805-8. 3172 The dedications are signed by Forsyth. Book-plate of John Curteis. o 16505. FORSYTH (WILLIAM). History of the captivity of Napoleon at St. Helena ; from the letters and journals of the late Lieut.-Gen. Sir Hudson Lowe ... 3 vol. With portrait and map. 8°. 1853. 3173 History of Trial by Jury. 8°. 1852. 3174 Hortensius : or, the advocate. An historical essay. 8°. 1849. 3175 Life of Marcus Tullius Cicero. Third edition. With 20 illustrations. 8°. 1869. 3176 FORTESCUE (SIR JOHN), De Laudibus Legum Angliae. The trans- lation into English published 1775. And the original Latin text. With notes. By A.Amos. 8°. Cambridge, 1825. 3177 FORTNIGHTLY. Fortnightly Review. Edited by George Henry Lewes. 6 vol. 1865-6. F°. 3178 New. Series. Edited by John Morley. 18 vol. 1867-75. F°. 3179 FORTUNE (ROBERT), Journey to the Tea Countries of China . . . with a short notice of the East India Company's tea plantations in the Himalaj'a mountains. Map and illustrations. 8°. 1852. 3180 Three Tears' wanderings in the northern provinces of China, including a visit to the tea, silk, and cotton countries : with an account of the agriculture and horti- culture of the Chinese, new plants, etc. Illustrations. Second edition. 8°. 1847. 3181 FOSBROKE (REV, THOMAS DUDLEY). Berkeley Manuscripts. Abstracts and extracts of Smyth's Lives of the Berkeleys . . . including all the pedigrees ... To which are annexed a History of the castle and parish of Berkeley . . . and bio- graphical anecdotes of D'. Jenner . . . 4". 1821. 3182 Wye tour, or Gilpin on "the Wye," with picturesque* additions, and archaeo- logical illustrations . . . Appendix, con- taining I. Account of Ross. JI. Extracts concerning the Wye, from " the Tour of a German Prince." III. Account of Goodrich Court . . . Fifth edition. 8". Ross, 1839. 3183 Separate title to the " Appendix " with the date 1837. (Portrait of ohn Kyrle.) M 178 FOSCOLO (NlCCOub UGO). Essays on Petrarch. 8°. 1823. 3184 Letters of Ortis [i.e. N. U. F.] : from the original manuscripts published at Milan. Translated from the Italian. Second edition. Portrait. 8». 1818. 3185 Preface by the Translator signed "V. B." FOSS (EDWARD). Judges of England; with sketches of their lives, and miscellaneous notices con- nected with the Courts at Westminster, from the time of the Conquest. (1066- 1864). 9 vol. 8". 1848-64. 3186 FOSTER (ALEXANDER FREDERIC). History of England for schools and families. With numerous illustrations. 8°. 1861. 3187 FOSTER (JAMES) D.D. Discourses on all the principal branches of natural religion and social virtue. 2 vol. 4". 1749-52. 3188 Pope's "modest Poster." Vol. II. 'Witli suitable oQloes of devotion. Book-plate of Will". Pickett. FOSTER (JOHN) D.D. OF ETON. Essay on the different nature of Accent and Quantity with their use and applica- tion in the English, Latin, and Greek Languages . . . Greek elegiac poem of M. Musurus addressed to Leo X. . . . Second edition . . . Containing some ad- ditions from the papers of D''. Taylor and M'. Markland. With a reply to D'. G». [Gaily] second dissertation in answer to the Essay. 8°. Eton, 1763. 3189 FOSTER (JOHN) BAPTIST MINISTER. Contributions, biographical, literary, and philosophical, to the Eclectic Review. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 3190 Lectures delivered at Broadmead Chapel, Bristol. 2 vol. Third edition, with addi- tions. 8°. Bohn, 1853. 3191 Life and Correspondence : edited by J. E. Eyland. With notices of Mr. Foster, as a preacher and a companion, by John Sheppard. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8". Bohn, 1852. 3192 FOSTER (MARGARET E.). Hand-hook of French Literature histori- cal, biographical, and critical. 8°. Lon- don and Edinburgh, n.d. (1854). 3193 FOUCHE (JOSEPH) DUG D' OTRANTO. Authentic memoirs of the public life of M. Fouch^, Duke of Otranto. Comprising various letters addressed to the Emperor FOUCHE (JOSEPH) DUC D' OTRANTO— coM.«. Napoleon, King Joachim, Comte D'Artois, Duke of Wellington, Prince Blucher, Louis XVIII., Count De Blacas, &c. Second edition. 8°. 1818. 3194 FOUQUE (FRIEDRICH HEINRICH CARL, BARON DE LA MOTTE). Magic Ring : a knightly romance. A new translation [dedication signed " Alex- ander Piatt"]. (Frontispiece by J. Tenniel). 12°. 1846. (Two copies.) 3195 Thiodolf the Icelander. From the German. 12°. 1845. 3196 [Half-title] Undine : a miniature romance. Translated from the German, by Rev. Thomas Tracy. 8°. n.p. n.d. 3197 [Another edition.] 12°. n.d. 3198 FOUQUe' (CAROLINE, BARONESS DE LA MOTTE). The physfcian of Marseilles, the Revolu- tionists, etc. Four tales from the German. 12°. 1845. 3199 FOWNES (GEORGE). Chemistry, as exemplifying the wisdom and beneficence of God. Second edition. [Actonian prize essay.] 12°. 1849. 3200 FOX (CHARLES JAMES). History of the early part of the reign of James the Second ; with an introductory chapter . . . (Portrait of Fox.) 4°. 1808. 3201 Speeches in the House of Commons. (Portrait.) 8°. 1848. 3202 FOX (GEORGE). Journal or historical account of the Life . . . of . . G. Fox, who departed this life the 13th of the 11th month, 1690. The first volume. [First ed.] F°. 1694. 3203 FOX (J.). Peep into Paris, being a series of amusing and incidental French anecdotes, with a description of the Parisian theatres, and a comparative view of the French and English actors. By the author of Tancred, &c. (Frontispiece — the Guillotine.) 8°. 1794. 3204 Introduction signed " J. Pox." FOX (SIR STEPHEN). Memoirs of the life of Sir Stephen Fox . . . Wherein are inserted, many curious incidents and passages not mention'd in 179 FOX (SIR STEPHEN)— con*, the great Earl of Clarendon's History . . . Account of his Will . . . memorable transactions relating to his son Charles Fox . . . copy of the Schedule annex'd to his Will . . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1717, Reprinted n.d. [1807]. 3205 FOX (WILLIAM JOHNSON). Memorial edition of collected Works. 12 vol. 8». 1865-8. 3206 Vol. 1. Lectures, sermons, etc., prior to 1824. 2. Christ and Christianifrr. 8. Miscellaneous lectures and sermons ; Twenty sermons on the principles of morality inculcated in the Holy Scriptures. 4. Anti-Com-Law Speeches; and occasional Speeches. 5. Letters on the Corn Laws, by " a Norwich weaver-boy"; Extracts from letters by "Publicola." 6. Miscellaneous essays, political, literary, critical and biographical. 7-12. Efiports of lectures at South-Hace chapel, Pinsbury. Christian Morality. Sermons on the principles of morality inculcated in the Holy Scriptures, and their application to the present condition of society. 12°. 1833. 3207 "J. Forster from W. J. P." Finsbury Lectures. Reports of lectures delivered at the chapel in South Place, Finsbury. 8°. 1835. 3208 Morality of poverty — Aristocratical and political moraUty — Morality of the mer- cantile and middle classes — Military morality— Legal morality— Morality of the press — Clerical morality — Chnrch-Eate Imposition. An Inquiry into the history of opinion cou- cermng death, and the mental state in- duced by its approach — Right and expedi- ency—The Three ideas of Christiamty- Progress and characteristics of ceremony. Illustrated in the service performed, and sermon preached, on occasion orthe Coro- nation of her Majesty Queen Victoria. — What constitutes a samt ? — Moral power — ILecent attempts to stimulate a spirit of fanaticism and persecution in the. church of England— Religious eguahty— Corn-law question considered in its moral bearings — National education. Lectures addressed chiefly to the Work- ing Classes ... 4 vol. 12°. 1845-9. 3209 On the Religious ideas. 8°. 1849. 3210 Presentation copy. Service at Finsbury Chapel, South Place, on Sunday, March 31, 1850 in memory of Peter Alfred Taylor. 8°. n.d. 3211 FOXE (JOHN). Acts and Monuments [Book of Martyrs] : new and complete edition : with prelimi- nary dissertation, by Rev. George Town- send. Edited by Rev. Stephen Reed Cattley. 8 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1841, 1837-39. 3212 FOXTON (FREDERICK J.). Popular Christianity : its transition state, and probable development. 8°. 1849. 3213 FOXTON (THOMAS). Character of a fine gentleman; with reference to religion, learning, and the conduct of life. In which are added, five poems ... All by Mr. Addison. 12°. 1721. 3214 Dedication signed " Thomas Foxton." FRADERSDORFF (J. WILHELM). Copious phraseological English-Greek Lexicon ; founded on a work prepared by J. W. FradersdorfE : revised ... by Thomas Kerchever Arnold, and Henry Browne. 8°. 1856. 3215 FRANCE. Men and Women of France, during the last Century. 3 vol. 8°. 1852. 3216 Ports, arsenals, and dockyards of France. By a traveller. 8°. 1841. 3217 FRANCIS (GEORGE HENRY). Orators of the Age . . . London, 1847. 8°. 3218 FRANCIS (JOHN). Annals, anecdotes and legends : a chronicle of Life Assurance. 8°. 1853. 3219 Chronicles and characters of the Stock Exchange. New edition. 8°. 1855. 3220 History of the Bank of England, its times and traditions. Third edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 3221 History of the English Railway ; its social relations and revelations. 1820- 1845. 2 vol. 8°. 1851. 3222 FRANCIS (J. G.). Notes from a Journal kept in Italy and Sicily, during 1 844-6. With illustrations. 8°. 1847. 3223 FRANK (JOSEPHUS). Praxeos medicae universae praecepta. Partis tertiae volumen secundum . . . continens doctrinam de morbis tubi in- testinalis quam exposuit F. A. B. Puc- helt. 8°. Lipsiae, 1841. 3224 [FRANKLAND, (THOMAS) M.D.] Annals of King James and King Charles the first . . . From the tenth of King James, 1612. to the eighteenth of King Charles, 1642 . . [Anon.] F°. 1681. 3225 M 2 180 FRANKLIN (BENJAMIN) LL.D. Memoirs of the Life and Writings of B. Franklin . . . Written by himself to a late period, and continued to the time of his death by his grandson, William Temple Franklin. Comprising the pri- vate correspondence and public negocia- tions of Dr. Franklin. And his select political, philosophical, and miscellaneous Works . . . Third edition. 6 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1818-19. 3226 Benjamin Franklin : his autobiography ; ■with a narrative of his public life and services. By Eev. H. Hastings Weld. With designs by J. G. Chapman. (Por- trait.) 8°. New York and London, 1849. 3227 [Another edition.] Published verbatim from the original manuscript, by his grandson, William Temple Franklin, edited by Jared Sparks. 8°. 1850. 3228 [Another edition.] Edited from his manuscript, with notes and an Introduc- tion, by John Bigelow. (Portrait.) 8°. Philadelphia, 1868. 3229 Works : consisting of Essays, humorous, moral, and literary ; with his life, written by himself. 32°. n.d. 3230 FRANKLIN (REAR-ADMIRAL SIR JOHN). Narrative of a Journey to the shores of the Polar Sea, in 1819-22 . . . Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1824. 3231 FRANKLIN (JOHN). Tableaux from Crichton a romance by W. Harrison Ainsworth. Designed and etched by J. Franklin. F°. 1837. 3232 FRASER (ALEXANDER CAMP- BELL). Essays in Philosophy. 8°. Edinburgh, 1856. 3233 FRASER (JAMES). History of Nadir Shah . . . the present Emperor of Persia . . . Short history of the Moghol Emperors . . . Catalogue of about two hundred manuscripts in the Persic and other oriental languages, col- lected in the east. Second edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1742. 3234 Book-plate of Joseph Priestley. FRASER (JAMES BAILLIE). Military Memoir of Lieut.-Col. James Skinner . . . commanding a corps of irregular cavalry in the service of the H.B.I.C. With notices of several of the principal personages who distinguished themselves in the Service of the Native Powers in India. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1851. 3235 FRASER (PETER S.). [Half Title.] Complimentary Dinner to Peter S. Fraser, Esq. Edinburgh, 1st May, 1863. [Printed for private circula- tion.] pp. 3-24. 8°. n.p. n.d. 3236 Prefixed are two letters from M'. Traser to M'. Forster. FRASER (JAMES) Publisher. Eraser's Magazine for Town and Country. Vol. XXXVI (— LIII.) 8°. (1847-1856.) 3237 "Derived its name from JSugh Fraser." W. Bates. FREART (ROLAND) SIEUR DE CAM BRAY. An Idea of the perfection of Painting : demonstrated from the principles of Art, and by examples . . . written in French by K. Freart, and rendred English by J. E. [John Evelyn]. 8°. In the Savoy, 1668. 3238 Book-plate of Eichardus Towneley, 1702. FREDERICK II., KING OF PRUSSIA -THE GREAT. Poesies diverses on Oeuvres du philo- Eophe de Sans-Souci. Nouvelle edition ... 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Pozdam, 1760. 3239 MS. note by T. Carlyle to whom this book was a gift from A. 'Weinhagen of Hilde- sheim ; with a copy of the German letter which accompanied it, and a translation of the same, the latter in the handwriting of T. Carlyle. Anecdotes and characteristics of Frede- rick . . . Selected and translated ... By F. A. W. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. n.d. 3240 FREE. Miscellaneous Thoughts of an universal Free-Thinker. 8°. n.d. 3241 Sophisms of Free-Trade and popular political economy examined. By a Bar- rister [Mr. Serjeant, aft. Mr. Justice Byles.] 12». 1849. 3242 Free Trade and its so-called Sophisms : a reply to " Sophisms of free trade ..." 8°. 1850. 3243 FREEMAN (EDWARD AUGUSTUS). Essay on the origin and development of Window Tracery in England ; with nearly four hundred illustrations. 8°. Oxford and London, 1851. 3244 FREEMAN (REV. JOHN). Life of Eev. William Kirby, Rector of Barham. (Portrait.) 8°. 1852. 3245 FREER (MARTHA WALKER) aft. MRS. ROBINSON. Elizabeth De Valois, Queen of Spain, and the Court of Philip II. ... 2 vol. (Portraits of Isabella de Valois and Cathe- rine De Medici). 8°. 1857. 3246 181 FREER (MARTHA WALKER) aft. MRS. ROBINSON— eon<. Life of Jeanne D'AIbret, Queen of Navarre ... 2 vol. (Portrait.) S". 1855. 3247 Life of Marguerite D'AngoulSme, Queen of Navarre, Duchesse d'AIengon and De Berry, sister of Francis I., King of France ... 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1854. 3248 FREIND (JOHN). Account of the Earl of Peterborow's conduct in Spain, chiefly since the raising the siege of Barcelona, 1706 . . . Cam- pagne of Valencia. ... 8°. 1707. 3249 FREMONT (JOHN CHARLES). Narrative of the Exploring Expedition to the llocky Mountains, in 1842, and to Oregon and North California, in 1843-44. Map and illustrations. 8°. 1846. 3250 FRENCH (GEORGE RUSSELL). Royal Descent of Nelson and Wellington from Edward the first, with tables of pedi- gree and genealogical memoirs. 8°. 18^3. 3251 FRENCH (NICHOLAS) R. C. BISHOP OF FERNS. Historical "Works. Now for the first time collected. With an introduction, containing notices ... of the Irish col- leges of Louvain. Vol. I. containing the Bleeding Iphigenia, the settlement and sale of Ireland, letters, &c. 12". Dublin, 1846. 3252 FRENCH. The French Charity : written in French by an English Gentleman, upon occasion of Prince Harcourt's coming into England ; and translated into English by F. S. J. E. 12°. 1655. 32.53 Selections from French Poets of the past and present century, rendered into English verse by E. F. Hodgson. 8°. Calcutta, 1850. 3254 FREND (WILLIAM). [Tracts by and relating to W. Frend.] 8°. London, etc., 1788, 1793 and n.d. 3255 Peace and union recommended to the asso- ciated bodies of Eepublicans and Anti- Republicans. St. Ives, printed for the author. MS. note as to Frend. Address to the Members of the Church of England, and to Protestant Trinitarians in general, exhorting them to turn from the false worship of three persons, to the worship of the one true God. Second edi- tion. Account of the proceedinKS in the University of Cambridge against W. Prend, for pub- lishing a pamphlet, intitled. Peace and Union, &o. Cambridge. • Trial of William Frend for writing and publishing a pamphlet, intitled Peace and Union [etc.] By John Beverley. Cam- bridge. n.d. FRESE (DR. JULIUS). Ergilnzungsband zu alien englischen Ausgaben und zur Schlegel-Tieckschen TJebersetzung von Shakespeare's draraat- ischen Werken. Enthaltend die von J. Payne Collier in einem alten Exemplare der Folio-Ausgabe von 1632 aufgefun- denen und herausgegebenen handschrift- lichen Bemerkungen und Textiinderungen in iibersichtlich vergleichender Zusam- menstellung bearbeifet und iibersetzt von Dr. J. Frese. 8°. Berlin, 1853. 3256 FREYTAG (GUSTAV). Pictures of German life iu the XV"' XVI"- and X VII"> Centuries. Translated by M". (Georgiana) Malcolm. 2 vol. 8°. 1862. 3257 Pictures of German life in the 18"' and 19"' Centuries. Second series. Trans- lated by Mrs. Malcolm. 2 vol. 8°. 1863. 3258 FRISWELL (JAMES HAIN). Familiar Words : an Index verborum or Quotation Handbook, with parallel pas- sages, of phrases which have become im- bedded in our English tongue. 8°. 1865. 3259 Modem Men of Letters honestly criti- cised. 8°. 1870. 3260 Dickens— Mark Lemon— V. Hugo— C. Ueade — Ruskin — Ethics of Ruskin — Browning — A. Trollope — Tennyson — Sala — Lever — Grote — Disraeli — Lord Lyttou — Harrison Ainsworth — Carlyle— Longfellow — Swin- burne — Kingsley- Emerson — T. W. Ro- bertson—About. FROBEL (FREDERICK). Woman's Educational Mission : being an explanation of Frederick Frobel's System of Infant Gardens. 8°. 1855. 3261 " Translator's preface " signed " Elizabeth Countess Krockow Von Wickerode." FROISSART (SIR JOHN). Chronicles of England, France, Spain, and the adjoining countries, from the latter part of the reign of Edward II. to the coronation of Henry IV. Translated from the French editions . . by Thomas Johnes. Life of the Author, Essay on his works, and criticism on his history. 2 vol. 8°. 1839. 3262 New edition, condensed, ivith notes and illustrations. 2 vol. 12". n.d. 3263 Introduction signed " H. P. D." Stories from Froissart.- By Barry St. Leger. 3 vol. 8°. 1832. 3264 FRONTO (JOANNES). Epistolae et dissertationes ecclesiasticae, Calendarium Komanum nongentis annis antiquius, notis et indicibus illustratum, et 182 FRONTO (JOANNES)-co«(. S. Ivonis Episc. Carnotensia vita, cum praefatione Jo. Alberti Fabricii. (Por- trait.) 12°. Hamburgi, 1720. 32^65 FROSSARD (EM I LI EN). rreneh pastor at the seat of war; being Letters written from the East. Translated from the French. 12°. 1856. 3266 FROUDE (JAMES ANTHONY). History of England from the fall of Wolsey to the death of Elizabeth. 6 vol. 8°. 1856-64. 3267 Vol. 6, 6— Second edition. Eeign of Elizabeth. 6 vol. (Por- trait of Elizabeth.) 8°. 1864-70. 3268 Vol. 1, 2— Second edition. Nemesis of Faith. Second edition. 8°. 1849. 3269 FRY (DANBY P.). Lunacy Acts . . With an introductory commentary, notes to the Statutes, in- cluding references to decided cases, and Index. 12°. 1864. 3270 At end— Act to amend the Lunacy Acts in relation to the building of asylums tor pauper lunatics. 28 July 186S. FRY (MRS. ELIZABETH). Memoir of the life of E. Fry, with extracts from her journal and letters. Edited by two of her Daughters (K. F., and R. E. C). 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. 3271 FRYXELL (ANDERS). History of Sweden. Translated from the original. Edited by Mary Howitt. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 3272 FUGITIVE. Asylum for Fugitive Pieces, in prose and verse, not in any other Collection : with several pieces never before published. 8°. 1786. 3273 MS. notes by Horace Walpole. Fugitive Pieces, on various subjects. By several authors. [Dodsley's collec- tion.] 2 vol. 12°. 1761. 3274 FULCHER (GEORGE WILLIAMS). Life of Thomas Gainsborough, R.A. By the late G. W. Fulcher, edited by his son (E. S. Fulcher). 12°. 1856. 3275 FULLER (REV. ANDREW). Principal Works and Eemaius ; with a new memoir of his life by his sou. Rev. A. G. Fuller. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1852. 3276 FULLER (REV. ANDREW)— coni. Memoirs of the late Rev. Samuel Pearce, A.M., Minister of the Gospel in Birming- ham ; with extracts from some of his letters : compiled by A. Fuller. (Por- trait.) 8°. Clipstone, printed, London, etc., 1800. 3277 FULLER (THOMAS) D.D. Church-history of Britain; from the birth of Jesus Christ, untill the year 1648. F°. 1655. [And] History of the University of Cambridge, since the Conquest. F°. n.p. 1655. [And] History of TValtham-Abby in Essex . . F°. 1655. (Plates.) 3278 Ephemeris Parliamentaria ; or a faith- full register of the transactions in Parlia- ment, in the third and fourth years of the reign of . . King Charles . . With the grand mysteries of the Kingdome then in agitation. F°. [Anon.] 1654. 3279 Preface signed " T. P." Historic of the Holy Warre. Third edition. (Frontispiece.) F°. Cambridge, 1647. 3280 The Holy State (and— The Profane State). Third edition. F°. 1652. 3281 History of the Worthies of England (an,d Wales). First printed in 1662. New edition, with . . notes, by John Nichols. 2 vol. (Portrait). 4°. 1811. 3282 Poems and translations in verse : (in- cluding fifty-nine hitherto unpublished epigrams) and his much-wished form of prayer; for the first time collected and edited with introduction and notes by Rev. Alexander B.Grosart. 12°. (Edinburgh.) Printed for private circulation, 1868. (2 copies.) 3283 FULLER WORTHIES. Fuller Worthies Library. Edited by Rev. Alexander B. Grosart. 43 vol. 4°. and 12°. Printed for private circulation (Loudon) 1868-76. 3284 Beaumont (Sir John). Poems. Por tlie first time collected and edited. Brooke (Pulke Greville, Lord). Works in verse and prose complete: for tlie first time collected and edited. 4 vol. Crashaw (Richard). Complete Works. Por the first time collected and collated, and much enlarged with hitherto unprinted and medited poems. 2 vol. 4«. [Another edition.] 2 vol. 12°. Davies (Sir John). Works in verse and Srose, (including hitlierto unpublished rSS.) : for the fli-st time collected and edited. 3 vol. Vol. 1 : Verse. (Vol. 2. 3 Prose.) Donne (John) D.D. Dean of St. Paul's Complete Poems. Por the first time fully coUected and collated and enlarged with hitherto unprinted and ineditett poems 2 vol. 4f. [Another edition.] 2 vol. 12«. 183 FULLER WORTHIES— coKf. Fletcher (Giles) B.D. Poems : tor the first time collectea and edited. Fletcher (Rev. Joseph). Poems: for the first time edited and re-printed. Fletcher (Phineas) B.D. Poems: for the first time collected and edited. 4 vol. Harvey (Christopher). Complete poems. For the first time fully collected and collated. Herbert (Cxeorge). Complete "Works in verse and prose. For the first time fully collected and collated and much enlarged with hitherto unprinted and inedited poems and prose. 3 vol. Vol. 1, 2. Verse. 3. Prose. Marffell (Andrew) M.P. Complete "Works in verse and prose. For the first time fully collected and collated, and consider- ably enlarged with hitherto inedited prose and poems. 4 vol. Vol. 1. Verse. 2, 3, 4. Prose. Sidney (Sir PhiUp). Complete Poems. For the first time collected and collated. 2 vol. Southwell (Robert) S. J. Complete Poems. For the first time fully collected and col- lated and enlarged with hitherto unpnnted and inedited poems. 4"*. [Another edition/) 12°. [No t.p. Fly-Leaves supplementary to Grosart's edition of Father Southwell's Poems (one vol. 1872)]. pp. 1-10 and portrait. M. n.p. n.d." Vaughan (Henry) Sihirist. "ii\'"orks in verse and prose completCj for the first time col- lected and edited. ("With verse-remains of Thomas Vaughan, twin-brother). 4 vol. "Washboume (Thomas) D.D. Poems. Miscellanies. 4 vol. Vol. 1. Poems of Lord Bacon. Poems of Bishop Jeremy Taylor. The "Tempta- cyon," a sacred play, by Bishop Bale. Poems of "William Harbert, of Glamorgan. Poems of Humphrey Gifflord. Poems of D'. "William Loe. a. Andrew's " Anatomie of Baaenesse." Lok's " Sonnets of Christian Passions." &c. Markham's " Teares of the Beloved" and "Marie Magdalen's Teares." 8. Tuke's "Holy Eucharist" (1625). Fraunce's "Countesse of Pembroke's Emanuel" (1591). Norris of Bemerton's complete poems. Viscount Falkland's collected poems. D'. Giles Fletcher's "Licia or poems of Love" (1593) and Lever's " Crucifixe or Holie Passion " and " Queene EUzabeth's Teares." (1607.) 4. Poems of Christopher Brooke; Lord Vaux, Earl of Oxford ; Robert and "Walter, Earls of Essex ; Sir Edward Dyer (verse and prose). Two interludes : Jacke Jugeler and Godly Queene Hester. Lumi- naha — and Supplementary notes and illustrations, FUME (JOSEPH), pseud, i.e. WILLIAM ANDREW CHATTO. Paper : — of Tobacco; treating of the rise, progress, pleasures, and advantages of smoking. With anecdotes of dis- tinguished smokers, mems. on pipes and tobaoco-hoxes, and a tritical essay on snuff. 12°. 1839. 3285 FUN. Fuu and earnest. By the author of "Musings of an Invalid" . . 8°. New- York, 1853. ■■^286 FUSELI (HENRY) R.A. Lectures on Painting, delivered at the Royal Academy, with additional observa- tions and notes. First series. New edition. 4°. 1830. 3287 Second Series. 4°. 1830. 3288 G. G. (D. F,). The Spiritualist : being a short exposi- tion of Psychology based upon material truths, and of the faith to which it leads. 12°. 1857. 3289 GADBURY (JOHN). E^fiepis : or, a diary astronomical and meteorological for 1678 . . with praedic- tions and experiments astrological . . (Portrait inserted.) 12°. 1678. 3290 . . Diary astronomical, astrological, and meteorological for 1679 . "W"ith praedic- tions and experiments sydereai. 12°. 1679. 3291 GALIGNANI, publisher. New Paris Guide . . to which is added a description of the Environs . . 12°. Paris and London, 1845. 3292 GALINDO (MRS. CATHERINE). Letter to M". Siddons: being a circum- stantial detail of M'". Siddons's life for the last seven years ; with several of her Letters. 8°. 1809. 3293 GALLENGA (ANTONIO). Country life in Piedmont. 8°. 1858. 3294 History of Piedmont. 3 vol. 8°. 1855. 3295 GALLOWAY (ROBERT). First step in Chemistry. 8°. London, 1851. 3296 GALT (JOHN). Lawrie Todd ; or, the Settlers in the Woods. Revised . . by the author. 12°. 1849. 3297 Life of Cardinal Wolsey. Third edition, with additional illustrations from Caven dish's Life of Wolsey, and other sources (Portrait of Wolsey.) 8°. 1846. 3298 ' Lives of the Players. 2 vol. 8°. 1831. 3299 Vol. 1. Hart, Bettei'ton, Kynaston, Hayues Wilis, Nell Gwynne, Mountfort, Sandford, M». Barry, M". Oldfield, Savage, M" 184 GALT (JOHN)— conf. Centlivre, Gibber, Dofreet, Booth, Par- quhar, Quin, Ryan, M". "Wofflngton, Weston, Garrick, Foote. 2. Maoklin, Henderson, M". Charke, M". Bellamy, Murphy, King, Holcrott, Cooke, M". Baddeley, Miss Farren, M'». Jordan, liemble, Emery, M". Siddons. Voyages and Travels, in 1809-11 ; con- taining statistical, commercial, and mis- cellaneous observations on Gibraltar, Sardinia, Sicily, Malta, Serigo, and Turkey. 4°. 1812. 3300 George III, his Court, and family. New- edition. [Edited by John Gait.] 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1824. 3301 GALTON (FRANCIS). ' Art of Travel ; or, shifts and contri- vances available in wild countries. Wood- cuts. 8°. 1855. 3302 Narrative of an explorer in tropical South Africa. Coloured maps, plates, and woodcuts. 8°. 1853. 3303 GAMBADO (GEOFFREY) pseud, i.e. HENRY BUNBURY. Academy for grown Horsemen, contain- ing the completest instructions for walking, trotting, cantering, galloping, stumbling, and tumbling . . Copper plates, and . . portrait of the Author. 4°. 1787. 3304 GAOL. Experiences of a Gaol Chaplain ; com- prising recollections of ministerial inter- course with criminals of various classes,, with their confessions. New edition, with new preface, and additions. [Anon. ? Eev. G. E. Gleig.] 12°. 1850. 3305 GARDEN. The Flower Garden. With au essay on the poetry of gardening. Keprinted from the ' Quarterly Keview.' 12°. 1852. 3306 GARDINER (SAMUEL RAWSON). History of England under the Duke of Buckingham and Charles I. 1624-1628. 2 vol. 8°. 1875. 3307 Presentation copy. Prince Charles and the Spanish Mar- riage : 1617-1623. A chapter of English history, founded principally upon un- published documents in this country, and in the archives of Simancas, Venice, and Brussels. 2 vol. 8°. 1869. 3308 Thirty Years' War 1618-1648. With a Map. Second edition. 12°. 1874. 3309 GARDINER (WILLIAM). Sights in Italy, with some account of the present state of Music and the sister arts in thut Country. 8°. n.d, (? 1847). 3310 GARLANDS. Garland of Bells, wherein each rings to its proper tune. 12°. Newcastle, 1815. 3311 [Garlands of New Songs, etc. Collected by W. Garrett, Newcastle.] (Woodcuts.) Newcastle upon Tyne, Glasgow, Stirling and Dumfries. 12°. n.d. [each 8 pages.] 3312 About 100 pieces. One dated 1812. Book of Garlands [songs]. Collected by William Garret, bibliopolo, Newcastle upon Tyne. (Woodcuts.) Edinburgh, Newcastle, Greenock, Ealkirk, Dumfries, Belfast, Stirling, and London. . 12°. n.d. (except a few of 1815). [Each 8 pages.] 3313 About 100 pieces, GARRATT (G.). Marvels and mysteries of Instinct ; or, Curiosities of animal life. 12°. 1856. 3314 [GARRET (WILLIAM)?] Account of the great Flood in the river Tyne, on Saturday morning, Dec. 30, 1815 . . Narrative of the great Flood in the rivers Tyne, Tease, and Wear, &c. on the 1 e"" and l7th Nov. 1771. Account of the erup- tion of Solway Moss. [Anon. ? By Garret or J. Bell.] 8°. Newcastle, 1816. 3315 At the end — Circular from the Secretai-y of "Union Lodge, Gateshead upon Tyne"; and newspaper obituary notice of Tnoma.s Thompson, signed, in MS. " Jn°. Bell." GARRICK (DAVID). Poetical Works. Now first collected into two volumes. With explanatory notes. 12°. 1785. 3316 Private Correspondence with the most celebrated persons of his time ; now first published from the originals, and illustra- ted with notes, and a new biographical memoir of Garrick. Second edition. 2 vol. 4°. 1835. (Two copies.) 3317 The first ed. was edited by James Boaden. MS. I notes [by Theodore E. Hook]. No. 2. Imperfect. Address to the Audience, upon retiring from the Stage . . June 10, 1776. s. sh. n.p. n.d. [Keprint.] 3318 [No t.p. Mr. Garrick's answer to Mr. Macklin's case. pp. 9-20. Mr. Maoklin's last words addressed to Mr. Garrick pp 23-36.] 8°. n.p. (1743.) 3319 [Pamphlets for and against Garrick.] 4°. London and Bath, 1761-85 & n.d. 3320 A Bone for the chroniclers to pick ; or a take-oil scene from behind the curtain. A poem. , TheFribbleriad. [Anon, by David Garrick.l The Interview ; or Jack FalstafE's ghost. A poem. Inscribed to David Garrjok. Sanitaa, daughter of jEsoulapius. To David Garrick, A poem. 185 GARRICK (DAVID)— coK<. Garriok's Looking-glass : or, the aat o£ rising on the stage. A poem. In three cantos. Decorated with dramatic characters. By the Author of • • » • •. ["E. Pratt." Pencil note on title.'] Elegy on the death of David Garrick j By the Author of the Ode to the WarUke genius of Great Britain. Second edition. 8°. n.p. n.d. pp. 33-.39. Second edition, with additions. Funeral euloghim to the Memory of David Gai'Hck. A poem. Meyler CWilliam).— Jlonody on the death of David GaiTick. To which is added, Charity. Poems written tor the vase at Bath-Baston. '" Charity " not added to this copy. Melmoth (Courtney).— Shadows of Shake- speare : a monody occasioned by the death of Mr. GaiTick. Being a prize poem, written for the vase at Batli-Easton. Carey (George Saville).— Tributary eulogium on the death of David Garrick. Poetical E«view, a poem. Being a satirical display of the literal characters of M'. G » rr • ok [Garrick], M'. * Im • n [Col- man], M'. Sh ♦ r • • • n [Sheridan], Genl. B*'*rg***e [Burgoyne], Mr. M • okl * n [Macklin], D'. K • nr • • k [lienrick]. The Canonical dueUist, &c. "With a word to the Critical, London, and Monthly re- viewers. Third edition. Dialogue between the Earl of C d [Chesterfield] and M'. Garrick, in the Elysian shades. [Volume of printed and MS. extracts from newspapers, magazines, &c. relating to Garrick. Portrait and plates.] 4». 3321 [Printed extracts relating to Garrick. Laid down on 58 pages.] 4°. 3322 [Play-biU.] Drm-y-Lane, May 9, 1776, Much Ado about Nothing. Benedick by M'. Garrick (being the last time of his appearing in that character). 3323 GARSTON (EDGAR). Greece revisited and sketches in Lower Egypt in 1840 with thirty-six hours of a campaign in Greece in 1825. 2 vol. 8°. 1842. 3324 GARTH (SIR SAMUEL) M.D. The Dispensary. A poem. In six canto's. Fifth edition. [Anon.] (Frontis- piece.) 8°. 1703. 3325 Engraved portrait of Garth (inserted). On fly leaf the following MS. inscriptions— " E libris Alexandri Pope. Domuu an- tons." " Alexander Pope GuUelmo Warburton morions legavit 174*. Guhelmus War- burton Guliehno Mason dono dedit 1752." "Gulielmus Alderson (oujus patri (ojLiwi/v/iu) Gul". Mason legaverat, ) Alleynio'Bar'. de S' Helens dono dedit. 1815." " D. D. Samueli Rogers A B S' Eelens. 15 Nov. brevfe moriturus." On a separate piece of paper — " Garth's Dis- pensary, Lot 391. Bought May IS'i" : 1856. at Christie & Manson's at the sale of the Library of Samuel Rogers—for £12 15 . . Geoige Daniel. This interesting volume, containing at the end critical notes in the handwritmg of Pope— and throughout the names of the persons meutionea in the GARTH (SIR SAMUEL) U.D.—cont. poem in full; together with a whole- length portrait of Pope, sketched by Hoare ; was first in the possession of Pope, who bequeathed it to Warburton in 17*t. It was left by Warburton to Mason in 175-2, by Mason to Alderaon, by Alderson to his son, by him to Lord St. Helens, who presented it to Mr. Rogers. Canonbury." Attached to the back of the frontispiece is a Receipt for two guineas of " the Mar- quess of Doehester, being the first payment to the subscription, for the translation of Homer's Iliads," signed, in autograph, "A. Pope." On'the fly leaf at the end are MS. notes by Pope, and underneath is a MS. note on Pope's handwriting— signed "W™. Mason." Opposite, attached to the end inner cover is the portrait of "Alexr : Pope aetat ; 52. A.D. 1740 by Hoare of Bath ; " with the follow- ing MS. inscription—" Tim only full-length portrait of Pope. Drawn, without his knowledge, while conversing with M'. AUeu at Prior Park." Sixth edition . . 8". 1706. Blanks filled up in MS. 3326 GASKELL (MRS. ELIZABETH CLEGHORN). Crauford. By the author of "Mary Barton." . . 12°. 1853. 3327 Life of Charlotte Bronte. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1857. 3328 [New edition.] 12°. 1860. 3329 Mary Barton : a, tale of Manchester life. 2 vol. [Anon.] 8°. 1848. 3330 Moorland Cottage. By the author of Mary Barton. With illustrations by Birket Foster. 12°. 18.50. 3331 North and South. By the author of " Mary Barton " . . 2 vol. 8°. 1855. 3332 Ruth. A novel. By the Author of " Mary Barton." 3 vol. 8". 1853. 3333 Sylvia's Lovers. Illustrated edition. 8°. 1863. 3334 GASPARIN (COMTE AGe'nOR DE). Apr^s la Paix considerations sui' le liberalisme et la guerre d'orient. 8°. Paris, 1856. 3335 GASPEY (THOMAS). Life and Times of the good Lord Cob- ham. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 3336 GATAKER (CHARLES). Harmony of Truth : or, St. Paul and St. .Tames reconciled in their heavenly doctrine of justification . . 4°. 1670. 3337 GATAKER (THOMAS). Of the nature and use of Lots . . 4°. 1619. 3338 Defence of certaine passages in a former 186 GATAKER (THOMAS)— cont. treatise concerning . . Lots, against such exceptions and oppositions as have heene made thereunto by Mr. I. B[almford] . . 4°. 1623, 3339 Discours apologetical ; wherein Lilies . . hes in his MerUn or Pasqil for 1654. are clearly laid open . . With an ad- vertisement concerning two allegations in his postscript. And a postscript concern- ing an epistle dedicatorie of J. Gadburie. 4°. 1654. 3340 Antidote against errour, concerning justification. Or, the true notion of justi- fication, and of justifying Faith . . To which is" added, The way of truth and peace . . concerning justification . . By Charles Gataker. 4°. 1670. 3341 The vol. which contains N°'. 3337-41 has a list of contents in the handwriting of Archbishop Tenison. GATESHEAD. Local Collections ; or records of re-: markable events, connected with the borough of Gateshead. 1837-1839. Only sixty copies printed. — To be continued annually. 4°. Gateshead-on-Tvne, 1840. 3342 *' To John Forster Esq. with the kindest regards of his old friend Prancis Bennett. Gateshead 1841." GATTY (REV. ALFRED). The Bell ; its origin, history, and uses. 8°. 1848. 3343 GAUDEN (JOHN) BISHOP OF WORCESTER. . . A just invective against those of the Army, and their abettors, who murthered King Charles I. . . "With some other poetick pieces in Latin, referring to these tragick times . . 4°. 166( ? 2). 3344 GAULTIER (BON) pseud, i.e. SIR THEODORE MARTIN. Book of Ballads. Edited by Bon Gaul- tier. New edition, with several new bal- lads. Illustrated by Alfred Crowquill [i.e. Alfred Henry Forrester], Richard Doyle and John Leech. 12°. n.d. [1845]. ' 3345 The authors of these Ballads were the editor and Professor W. E. Aytoun. GAUTIER (THEOPHILE). "Wanderings in Spain, Engravings. 1853. 3346 GAVARNI psetid. I.e. SULPICE PAUL CHEVALIER. Gavarni in London . sketches of life and character, with illustrative essays by popular writers. Edited by Albert Smith. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 3347 GAY (JOHN). [Title.] "Works of the English Poets. ' With prefaces biographical and critical, by Samuel Johnson. "Vol. 41-2 (in one). [Half title.] Poems of Gay. (Portrait.) 12". 1779. 3348 Book-plate of Rogers Buding. Beggar's Opera. To which is prefixed the overture in score (composed by D'. Pepu[s] ch) : and the musick to each song. 8°. 1771. 3349 Fables. Second edition. 8°. 1728. 3350 Fables illustrated. With an original memoir, introduction, and annotations, by (Rev.) Octavius Freire Owen. With 126 drawings by William Harvey, engraved by the Brothers Dalziel. (Portrait.) 12°. 1854. 3351 Poems on several occasions. 2 vol. (in one). 4°. 1720. 3352 Trivia : or, the art of walking the streets of London. [First ed.] 8°. Ber- nard Lintott, n.d. [? 1715]. 3353 The What d'ye Call it : a tragi-comi- pastoral farce. Second edition. (Frontis- piece.) 8°. Bernard Lintott, n.d. 3354 Achilles dissected : being a compleat key of the political characters in that new ballad opera, written by the late Mr. Gay . . By Mr. Burnet. To which is added, the first Satire of the second book of Horace, imitated in a dialogue between Mr. Pope and the Ordinarj- of Newgate. 8°, 1733. 3355 "The first Satire " is signed " Guthry." [Tracts relating to the Beggar's Opera.] 8°. ■ 1728-1771. 3356 Beggar's Opera [Duplicate of No. 3349]. "This copy belonged to "Waldron, the player. It is marked by him for representation." Portraits, etc. in- serted by G. Daniel. Life of Lavinia Bcswick alias Fenton, alias Polly Peachum. MS. note as to Lavinia Fenton. Memoirs concerning the life and manners of Captain Mackheath. (Frontispiece.) Twickenham Hotch-Potoh, for the use of the Rev. D'. Swift, Alexander Pope, Esq. ; and company. Being a sequel to the Beggar's Opera, &o. "Written by Caleb D'Anvera. (Portraits inserted.) GAY (JOSEPH) pseud, i.e. JOHN DURANT BREVAL, The Confederates : a farce. (Woodcut on title.) 8°. 1717. 3357 " A Satire on a farce written by Pope, Gay and Arbuthnot, entitled Three Sours after Marriage." Lowndes, GAZUL (CLARA). Plays of C, Gazul, a Spanish comedian ; with memoirs of her life. 8°. 1825. 3358 Memoirs signed " Joseph L' Estrange." 187 GEALE (HAMILTON). Notes of a two years' residence in Italy. 8°. Dublin, 1848. 3359 GELL (SIR WILLIAM). Itinerary of Greece : containing one hundred routes . . New edition. 8°. 1827. 3360 Narrative of a journey in the Morea. 8°. 1823. 3.361 GELLIUS (AULUS). Noctium Attioarum libri XX prout supersunt quos . . notis & emendationi- bus illustraveruut Johannes Fredericus et Jacobus Gronovii . . 4°. Lugd. Bat. [Leyden.] 1706. 3362 Auto^aplis and MS. Latin note and in- sonption of " J. Swift " [Dean Swift], to whom this book was given by Erasmus Lewis. Book-plate of ildmund L. Swifle. GENEALOGY. Genealogy of the Eoyal Eamily of Great Britain. [Engraved.] Broadside, n.p. n.d. 3363 [GENEST (REV. JOHN),] Some account of the English stage, from the restoration in 1660 to 1830. [Anon.] 10 vol, 8". Bath and London, 1832. 3364 In Vol. X.— Some account of the Irish Stage, from 1660 to 1774. GENIUS. Early Blossoms of Genius and Virtue ; including maxims of early wisdom, juvenile memoirs, a great variety of examples of the moral virtues, and a selection of moral poesy. Engravings. 12°. 1797. 3365 GENLIS (STEPHANIE - FELICITE DUCREST DE ST. AUBIN, COMTESSE DE). Memoirs of the Countess De Genlis, illustrative of the history of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Written by Herself. 8 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1S25-6. 3366 EeooUections of Felicia L . Con- taining interesting narratives of extraordi- nary facts ; original anecdotes of the Royal family of iFrance ; — of celebrated 'litt[sjc]erary characters, and other dis- tinguished personages. Translated from the Erench. 12°. Dublin, 1808. 3367 GENT (THOMAS). Life of T. Gent, printer, of York; written by himself. [Ed. by Eev. Joseph Hunter.] (Portrait.) 8°. 1832. 3368 " Only 60 copies printed on writing paper. Proof Portrait.^' Poems. A new edition. 8°. 1829. 3369 [GENTLEMAN (FRANCIS).] Dramatic Censor ; or, critical com- panion. [Anon.] 2 vol. 8°. 1770. 3370 GENTLEMAN'S. Gentleman's Magazine, or. Monthly Intelligencer . . By Sylvaius Urban, gent. Vol. I. (— LXXVIII. Being the first of a new series. Part the second.) 103 vol. 8°. n.d. (1731)— 1808. 3371 Part II., 1807 wanting. New Series. Vol. 34 (— 38). 5 vol. 8°. 1850-2. ' 3372 General Index to the first fifty-six volumes of the Gentleman's Magazine . . 1731-1786. Compiled by Samuel Ayscough. 2 vol. . . 8°. 1789. 3373 Selection of curious articles from the Gentleman's Magazine. By John Walker. Third edition. 4 vol. . . 8°. 1814. 3374 Princess Elizabetti's copy and autographs. GENTLEWOMAN. The Gentlewoman. By the author of " Dinners and Dinner Parties." (Frontis- piece.) 8°. 1864. 3375 GEORGE (ANITA). Memoirs of the Queens of Spain, from the conquest of the Goths to the accession of Isabella II. . . Edited, with an intro- duction and notes, by Juha Pardoe. 2 vol. (Portrait of Isabel the Catholic.) 8°. 1850. 3376 GERAMB (MARIE-JOSEPH DE). Pilgrimage to Palestine, Egypt, and Syria. 2 vol. 8°. 1840. 3377 GERARD (ALEXANDER) D.D. Essay on Genius. 8°. London, 1774. 3378 "Warton's copy and MS. notes. GERARD (JULES). Lion Hunting and Sporting life in Algeria. Illustrations, by Gustavo Dore. 12°. 1856. 3379 " Introduction " signed " H. S. E." GERM. [No t. p. Lettered — The Germ. Art and poetry, pp. 1-192. Four plates.] 8°. [1850.] 3380 Only four numbers published (by the Pre- EaphaeUte brethren). GERMAN. German Ballads, Songs, etc. Compris- ing Translatioas from Schiller, Uhland, Burger, Goethe, Korner, Becker, Fouque, Chamisso, etc. 12°. n.d. (Two copies.) 3381 188 GERMAN— cent. Selection from German Prose Writers. With a double translation for the use of students on the Hamiltonian system . . 8°. 1828. 3382 GERMANY. Apostolical Christians and Catholics of Germany. A narrative of the present movement in the Roman Catholic Church. Second edition, revised and corrected by Ileury Smith. With a recommendatory preface by Kev. W. Goode. 12°. 1845. 3383 GERRALD (JOSEPH). [Tracts by and relating to J. Gerrald.] 8°. London and Edinburgh, 1792-5 and n.d. 3384 MS. index and book-plate of Francis Place. Authentic biographical anecdotes of J. Gerrald, a delesate to the British Conven- tion in Scotland from the London Corre- sponding Society, and who is now on his passage to New Holland for havins acted in that capacity j according to the sen- tence of the High Court of Justiciary at Edinburgh, "March 14 1794. Second edi- tion. (Portrait.) Verses inserted. A Convention the only means of savins us from ruin. By J. Gerrald. Third edition. Address of the British Convention, assembled at Edinburgh, November 19, 1793. Trial of J. Gerrald. Edinburgh, March, 1794. Por sedition. Trial of Maurice Margaret, delegate from London, to the British Convention. Be- fore the High Court of Justiciary, at Edin- burgh, 13 and 14 January, 1794, for sedi- tion. (Portrait.) Letter to Henry Dundass, Isic] Secretary of State for the Home Departmeilt. By the London Corresponding Society, united tor the purpose of nbtaimng a reform in par- liament. [Signed "M. Margarot, chair- man of the Committee, etc,"] GERSTAECKER (FREDERICK). Narrative of a Journey round the World, comprising a winter-passage across the Andes to Chili, with a visit to the gold regions of California and Australia, the South Sea islands, Java, &c. 3 vol. 8". 1853. 3385 Wanderings and fortunes of some Ger- man emigrants. Translated by David Black. 8°. 1848. 3386 GESNER (ABRAHAM). New Brunswick ; with notes for emi- grants. Comprehending the early his- tory, an account of the Indians . . 8°. 1847. 3387 GESNERUS (JOHANNES MAT- THIAS). Novus linguae et eruditionis Eomanae Thesaurus post Ro. Stephani et aliorum Duper etiam in Anglia eruditissimorum hominum ouras digestus, locupletatus, emendatus . . a I. M. G. 4 vol. (in two). (Portrait.) ^°. Lipsiae, 1749. 3388 GESSNER (SALOMON). CEuvres. 4 vol.- 8°. Paris, An vii. [1804.] • 3389 Vol. I. wanting. GIBBON (CHARLES). Casquet of Literature : being a selection in poetry and prose from the works of the most admired authors. Edited, with biographical and literary notes, by C. Gibbon. Second series. 2 vol, (Por- traits.) 8°. 1874. 3390 GIBBON (EDWARD). History of the decline and fall of the Roman Empire . . Memoir of the author, by William Youngman. (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 3391 [Another edition.] With variorum notes, including those of Guizot, Wenck, Schreiter, and Hugo. Edited, with further illustrations, from the most recent sources, by an English churchman. 7. vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. Bohn, 1853-5. 3392 [Another edition.] With notes by Dean Milman and M. Guizot. Edited, with additional notes, by William Smith, LL.D. 8 vol. Portrait and maps. 8°. 1854-5. 3393 Miscellaneous Works. With memoirs of his life and writings, composed by him- self : illustrated from his letters, with occasional notes and narrative, by John, Lord Sheffield. New edition. 5 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1814. 3394 Autobiography. Collection of . . Lives . . written by the parties themselves. With brief introductions . . Vol. XIV. XV. Edward Gibbon. [Second title.] Memoirs of . . E. Gibbon, composed by himself . . with occasional notes and narrative by John Lord Sheffield. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1829. 3395 GIBSON (WALTER M.). Prison of Weltevreden ; and a glance at the East Indian Archipelago. Illustrated. 8". New York, 1855. 3396 GIBSON (WILLIAM). History of the attairs of Europe, from the Peace of Utrecht to the conclusion of the Quadruple Alliance. With a Treatise of the religious and civil interests of Europe. 8°. 1725. 3397 GIBSON (WILLIAM SIDNEY). Descriptive and historical notices of some remarkable Northumbrian castles, churches, and antiquities : in a series of visits to the ruined priory of Finchale ; the abbey church of Hexham ; the parish churches of Houghton-le-spring, Morpeth, Bothal, Gvingham.andRyton ; the antient castles of Prudhoe and of Botbal ; tho ruined abbey of Newminster, etc. With 189 GIBSON (WILLIAM SIDNEY)— cont. biographical notices of eminent persons. First series . . embellished with views . . 8°. London and Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 1848. 3398 GIESELER (JOHANN CARL LUD- WIG). Kirchengeschichte der neuesten Zeit. Von 1814 bis auf die Gegenwart. Aus seinem Nachlasse herausgegeben von E. R. Redepenning. 8°. Bonn, 1855. 3399 GIFFARD (EDWARD). Deeds of Naval daring ; or, anecdotes , of the British Navy. 12°. 1852. 3400 Second series. 12°. 1854. 3401 GIFFORD (JOHN). History of the political life of William Pitt ; including some account of the times in which he lived. 6 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1809. 3402 GIFFORD (WILLIAM). Gifford's Baviad and Maeviad : Pasquin V. Faulder : Epistle to Peter Pindar : Author's Memoir of his own life. Byron's English Bards and Scotch Reviewers. 12°. 1827. 3403 Vol. of "Dove's English Classics." GILBART (JAMES WILLIAM). Lectures on the history and principles of Ancient Commerce. (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. 3404 Logic for the Million : a familiar expo- sition of the art of reasoning. By a Fellow of the Royal Society. 8°. 1851. 3405 GILBERT (J. T.). History of the City of Dublin. Vol. I. 8°. Dublin, 1854. 3406 GILCHRIST (ALEXANDER). Life of WiUiam Etty, R.A. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1855. 3407 [GILDON (CHARLES).] A new Rehearsal, or Bays the younger. Containing an examen of the Ambitious Stepmother . . all written by N. Rowe ; also a word or two upon Pope's Rape of the Lock. To which is prefix'd, a preface in vindication of criticism in general, by the late Earl of Shaftsbury. [Anon.] 12°. 1714. 3408 GILES (REV. JOHN ALLEN) D.C.L. Hebrew records : an historical enquiry concerning the age, authorship, and au- thenticity of the old Testament. 8°. Lon- don : printed by the author, at Bampton, Oxfordshire, 1850. 3409 GILES (REV, JOHN ALLEN) D.C.L. — corit. History of the ancient Biitons, from the earliest period to the invasion of the Saxons. Compiled from the original au- thorities. 2 vol. 8°. 1847. _ 3410 Life and Letters of Thomas A Becket, now first gathered from the contemporary historians. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 3411 GILFILLAN (REV. GEORGE). Book of British Poesy, ancient and modern ; being select extracts from our best poets, arranged in chronological order. With an essay on British poetry, by Rev. G. GiltiUan. 12°. Liverpool and Loudon. 1851. 3412 Gallery of Literary Portraits. (Por- traits.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1845. 3413 Lord Jeffrey— Godwin— Hazlitt—H. Hall- Shelley — Dr. Chalmers — Carlyle — De Quincey— J. Postei^-Prcf. ■Wilson— B. Ir- ving and the preachers of the day — Landor — T. Campbell— l/Ord Brougham — Cole- ridKe—Bmerson— Wordsworth— Pollock — Lamb— A. CunniuKliam and the rural poets — E. Elliott — Keats — Macaulay^ Aird— Southey— Lockhai-t. GILLIES (ROBERT PEARSE). Memoirs of a literary veteran ; includ- ing Sketches and anecdotes of the most distinguished literary characters from 1794 to 1849. 3 vol. 8°. 1851. 3414 GILLILAND (THOMAS). The Trap : a moral, philosophical, and satirical work ; delineating the snares in which kings, princes and their subjects have been caught, since the days of A dam . . Second edition. 2 vol. (in one) . 12°. 1809. 3415 GILLMAN (JAMES). Life of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Vol. I. [No more published.] 8°. 1838. 3416 GILLY (WILLIAM O. S,). Narratives of Shipwrecks of the Royal Navy.: between 1793 and 1849 . . With a preface by William Stephen Gilly, D.D. 8°. 1850. 3417 OILMAN (SAMUEL) D.D. Contributions to literature ; descriptive, critical, humorous, biographical, philoso- phical, and poetical. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1856. 3418 GILPIN (REV. WILLIAM). Life of Hugh Latimer, Bishop of Wor- cester. 8°. 1755. 3419 GILPIN (REV. WILLIAM) VICAR OF BOLDRE. Lectures on the Catechism of the Church of England. Fifth edition. 12°. 1799. 3420 190 GIRAFFI ("THE LORD ALEX- ANDER"). Exact historie of the late Revolutions in Naples ; and of their monstrous successes . . Eendred to English by J(ames) H(owell). (Portrait in colours of Jfasia- niello). 12°. 1650. 3421 GIRARD (PERE). The Mother-Tongue : or, methodical instruction in the mother-tongue in schools and families. Translated and adapted from the French. Edited hy Viscount Ebrington. 8°. 1847. (Two copies). 3422 GIRARDIN (EMILE DE). La Joie fait peur. Comedie . . Deuxifeme edition. 8°. Paris. 1854. 3423 GIRARDIN (SAINT-MARC). Cours de litterature Dramatique, ou de I'usage des passions dans le drame. Deux- i&me Edition. Tome premier. 8°. Paris, 1845. 3424 GIRDLESTONE (REV. CHARLES). Christendom, sketched from history in the light of Holy Scripture. 8'". 1870. 3425 Presentation copy. GIRDLESTONE (THOMAS) M.D. Eacts tending to prove that General Lee . . was the author of Junius. (Por- trait of Lee.) 8°. 1813. 3426 MS. notes. GIUSTINIAN (SEBASTIAN). Four years at the Court of Henry VIII. Selection of despatches -written by the Venetian ambassador, S. Giustinian, and addressed to the Signory of Venice, 1515, to 1519. Translated by Eawdon Brown. 2 vol. 8". 1854. 3427 GLADSTONE (JOHN HALL). Michael Faraday. 8°. 1872. 3428 GLADSTONE (RT. HON. WILLIAM EWART). The State in its relations with the Church. Third edition. 8». 1839. 3429 Studies on Homer and the Homeric age. 3 vol. 8°. Oxford, 1858. 3430 Vatican Decrees in their bearing on civil allegiance : a political expostulation, go. 1874. . 3431 Vaticanism : an answer to replies and reproofs. 8°. 1875. 3432 GLANVILL or GLANVIL (REV. JOSEPH). Plus Ultra : or, the progress and ad- vancement of knowledge since the days of Aristotle : In an account of some of the most remarkable late improvements of practical, useful Learning : to encourage philosophical endeavours. Occasioned by a conference with one of the notional way. 8°. 1668. 34.38 Sadducismus Triumphatus : or, a full and plain evidence, concerning Witches and apparitions. In two parts. The first treating of their possibility. The second of their real existence. Fourth edition. The advantages whereof, the reader may understand out of Dr. H. More's account prefixed hereunto. Also, two authentick, but wonderful stories, of certain Swedish witches. Done into English by Dr. Hor- neek. With some account of Mr. Glanvil's life and writings. (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1726. 3434 GLAPTHORNE (HENRY). Tragedy of Albertus Wallenstein, late Duke of Fridland, and generall to the Em- peror Ferdinand the Second . . 4°. 1640. 3435 Lewis Theobald's autograph and MS. con- jectures. The Hollander. A Comedy written 1635 . . 4". 1640. 3436 The Ladies Priviledge . . 4°. 1640. 3437 Wit in a Constable. A comedy written 16^9 . . 4°. 1640. 3438 GLASGOW. Glasgow University Album for 1854. Edited by the Students. 8°. London and Glasgow, n.d. 3439 Preface signed " J. N." GLEIG (REV. GEORGE ROBERT). Campaigns of the British army at Wash- ington and New Orleans, in 1814-15. By the author of "The Subaltern" . . New edition. 12°. 1847. 3440 Chelsea Pensioners, by the author of the Subaltern. (Portrait.) 12°. n.p. n.d. (London, 1840.) 3441 Country Curate. By the author of "The Subaltern." Revised . . by the author. 12°. 1846. 3442 History of the Bible. 2 vol. Second edition. 12°. 1830-1. 3443 The Hussar. By the author of " The Subaltern " . . 12°. n.d. 3444 Leipsic Campaign. 12°. 1852. 3445 Life of Robert, first Lord Clive. 12°. 1848. 3446 191 GLEIG (REV. GEORGE ROBERT)- cont. Life of Major-General Sir Thomas Munro, late governor of Madras. With extracts from his correspondence and private papers. New edition. 2 Vol. (Portrait.) 8». 1831. 3447 New edition, revised and condensed from the larger biography. 12°. 1849. 3448 Life of Sir Walter Scott reprinted with corrections and additions from the Quar- terly Review. 8°. 1871. 3449 Lives of the most eminent British Mili- taiy Commanders. 3 vol. 12°. 1831-2. 3450 Vol. 1. General View of the military systems recognised in England from the earliest periods down to the present time— Sir Walter Manny— Sir Francis Do Vere— Cromwell— Marlborough. Vol. 2. Marlborough (continued)- Earl of Peterborough— Wolfe. 3. Clive— Comwallis— Aberoromby- SirJohn Moore. Sale's Brigade in Afghanistan, with an account of the seizure and defence of Jellalabad. 12°. 1846. 3451 Sermons for the seasons of Advent, Christmas, and the Epiphany. 8°. 1844. 3452 Slsetch of the Military history of Great Britain. 12°. 1845. 3453 Story of the battle of Waterloo. 12°. 1847. 3454 GLEN (JOHN). Theory of the influence exerted by the Mind over the Body in the production and removal of morbid and anomalous conditions of the animal economy. The Bulwer Lytton prize essay. 12°. Edin- burgh and London, 1855. 3455 GLENNY (GEORGE). Hand-book to the Elower Garden and Greenhouse . . with a, calendar of monthly operations . . 8°. 1850. 3456 GLOVER (RICHARD). London : or, the progress of Com- merce. A poem. Second edition. 4°. 1739. 3457 GODFREY (SIR EDMUND-BURY). Blegie on . . Sir Edmund-Bury God- frey . who was found murtherd on Thursday 17 October, 1678. in a ditch on the south-side of Primrose-Hill near Hampstead. [and] Epitaph. Broadside. P°. 1678. 3458 GOD KIN (JAMES). Ireland and her Churches. 8°. 1867. 3459 GODWIN (B.) D.D. Philosophy of Atheism examined and compared with Christianity . . 12°. 1853. 3460 GODWIN (CATHERINE GRACE). Poetical Works. Edited, with a sketch of her life, by A. Cleveland Wigan . . Engravings. (Portrait.) 4°. 1854. I 3461 I GODWIN (FRANCIS) BISHOP OF I HEREFORD. I Berum Anglicarum Henrico VIII. Ed- ! wardo VI, et Maria regnantibus, Aunales. ' [Anon.] (Portraits on title.) 12°. : Haghae-Comit : [the Hague]. 1653. 3462 " The author's name does not appear to this book, but the initial letters of each chapter form Pranciscvs Godwinys auc- tor." Lowndes. Book-plate of lo. Georgius I Burckhard. Annales of England . . Written in Latin. Thus Eiiglished, corrected and inlarged with the author's consent, by Morgan Godwyn. (Portrait of Henry VIII.) E°. 1630. 3463 GODWIN (GEORGE). Buildings and Monuments, modern and mediaeval : being illustrations of the edifices of the nineteenth century, and of some of the architectural works of the middle ages. With numerous engravings. F». 1850. 3464 GODWIN (MARY WOLLSTONE- CRAFT). Defence of the character and conduct of the late M. W. Godwin. . . [Anon,] 12°. 1803. 3465 GODWIN (WILLIAM). Adventures of Caleb Williams ; or. Things as they are. Bevised and cor- rected. With a memoir of the author. 12°. 1849. (Two copies.) 3466 No. 2 has no t.p. Autograph of Godwin inserted. Essay on Sepulchres : or, a proposal for erecting some memorial of the illus- trious dead in all ages on the. spot where their remains have been interred. 12°. 1809. (Two copies.) . 3467 No. 2. MS. note by M'. Eorster. Fleetwood : or, the new man of feeling. Revised . . by the author. 12°. 1832. 3468 History of the Commonwealth of Eng- land. Erom its commencement, to the restoration of Charles the Second. Vol. 1. 2. The Civil War. (and to the death of 192 GODWIN (WILLIAM)— con«. Charles I.) 3. Prom the death of Charles I. to the Protectorate. 4. Oliver, Lord Protector. 4 vol. 8°. 1824-8. (Three copies.) 3469 No. 1. "The author's own copy with MS. corrections by him." — Pencil note. Life of Geoffrey Chaucer . . including memoirs of . . John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster : with sketches of the manners, opinions, arts and literature of England in the fourteenth century. Second edition. 4 vol. (Portrait.) . 8°. 1804. 3470 Lives of Edward and John Philips, nephews and pupils of Milton. Including various particulars of the literary and political history of their times. To which are added. Collections for the life of Mil- ton. By John Auhrey . . The Life of Milton. By Edward Philips . . (Portrait of John Bradshaw.) 4°. London, Wey- bridge [printed], 1815. 3471 Mandeville. A tale of the seventeenth century in England. 3 vol. 8°. Edin- burgh, 1817. 3472 Memoirs of the author of a Vindication of the Rights of Woman [Mary, WoU- stonecraft, Mrs. Godwin.] (Portrait.) 12°. 1798. (Two copies.) 3473 St. Leon : a tale of the sixteenth cen- tury. 12". 1850. 3474 GOETHE (JOHANN WOLFGANG VON). Dramatic Works : comprising Faust, Iphigenia in Tauris, Torquato Tasso, Egmont, translated by Anna Swanwick. And Goetz von Berlichingen, translated by Sir Walter Scott, carefully revised. 8°. Bohn, 1850. 3475. Novels and Tales. Elective Affinities ; Sorrows of Werther ; German Emigrants ; • Good Women ; and a Nonvelette, trans- lated chieflv by R. D. Boylan. 8°. Bohn, 1854. ' 3476 Poems : translated in the original metres. With a sketch of Goethe's life. By Edgar Alfred Bowring. 12<>. 1853. 3477 Auto-biography. Truth and Poetry : from my Life. lEdited by Parke Godwin. Four Parts. 3 vol. 8°. 1847. 3478 [Another edition.] Translated from the German, by John Oxenford. Thirteen books. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1848. 3479 "John Forster Esq. from his friend John Oxenford." Concluding books. Also letters from Switzerland, and Travels in Italy. Translated by Rev. A. J. W. Morrison. 8°. Bohn, 1849. 3480 Campaign in France in 1792. Trans- lated by Robert Faric. 8°. 1849. 3481 Conversations of Goethe with Ecker- mann and Soret. Translated by John Oxenford. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 3482 GOETHE (JOHANN WOLFGANG VON)— coni. Correspondence with a Child [Bettina Arnim]. 2 vol. (in one). (Portraits.) 8°. 1837. 3483 Faust : a dramatic poem. Translated into English prose, with remarks on former translations, and notes, by the translator of Savigny's " Of the vocation of our age for Legislation and Jurisprudence " [Abra- ham Hay ward]. 8°. 1833. 3484 " John Forsi;er Esq. (from the Translator)." At the end— Another copy ol the t.p., a leaf unpaged signed "A. H.," pp. Iix, ix, 257-264, and appendix 265-291. Faust . . Translated into English prose . . by ,A. Hayward. Second edition, to, which is appended an abstract of the con- tinuation, with an account of the story of Faust and the various productions in lite- rature and art founded on it. 8°. 1834. 3485 Fourth edition. 12°. 1847. 348G Faust. A Tragedy. Part the Second. Rendered . . by Archer Gurney. 8°. 1842. 3487 Faust : a tragedy. With copious notes . . by Falck Lebahn. 8°. 1853. 3488 The manager's edition. Faust; a ro- mantic opera . . (in German and English.) The music by Spohr. Now performing at the Prince's Theatre . . 12°. n.d. 3489 Translation of the Hermann and Doro- thea : in the old English measure of Chapman's Homer. By M. Winter. With . . notes. 8°. Dublin, 1849. 3490 Memoirs of Goethe : Written by him- self. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1824. 3491 Opinions on the World, Mankind, Literature, Science, and Art. Translated by Otto Wenckstern. 12°. 1853. 3492 Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship and Travels. (Translated by Thotoas Carlyle) . 3 vol. Vol. I. and II. Apprenticeship. Vol. III. Travels. New edition. 8°. 1839. 3493 " To John Porster Esq. with kind reaards T. Carlyle." 1858. 3494 Wilhelm' Meister's Apprenticeship . . Translated by R. Dillon Boylan. 8°. Bohn, 1855. 3495 Characteristics of Goethe. From the German of Falk, Von Miiller, &c. With notes original and translated, illustrative of German literature. By Sarah Austin. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1833. 3496 AND SCHILLER (JOHANN C. F. VON). Selections from the dramas of Goethe and Schiller, translated, with introductory remarks, by Anna Swanwick. 8°. 1843. (2 copies.) 3497 Iphigenia in Tauris, Torquato Tasso, and the Maid of Orleans. [Another edition.] 2 vol. 8° 193 GOLDONI (CARLO). Memoirs of Goldoui, -written by himself . . Translated . . by John Blaclt. 2 toI. 8°. 1814. 3498 GOLDSMITH (OLIVER). Works. Edited by Peter Cunningham. 4 vol. 8°. 1854. (Two copies.) 3499 Vol. 1. Poetical works. Dramas. Vicar of Wakefield. 2. Enquiry into the present state of polite learning. Citizen of the "World. 3. Bee. Essays. Unacknowledged Essays. Prefaces, Introductions, etc. 4. BioKi-aphies. Reviews. Animated Na^ ture. Cook Lane Ghost. Vida's Game of Chess. Letters. Index. [No t.p. Postscript to Preface. Signed " Peter Cunningham. Kensington, 10th May, 1854." pp. v-xi and Plate of Gold- smith's Monument.] *3499 Complete Works comprising his essa.ys, plays, and poetical works, with a memoir by William Spalding. Illustrated with woodcuts and fae-simiJe of a . . letter of Goldsmith's . . New edition. 8°. n.d. 3500 Miscellaneous Works. Including a variety of pieces now first collected. By [Sir] James Prior. 4 vol. 8°. 1837. 3501 Vol. IV. wanting. Globe edition. Miscellaneous Works with biographical introduction by Professor Masson. 8°. 1869. 3502 Miscellaneous Works. With an account of his life and writings. Stereotyped from the Paris edition, edited by Washington Irving. (Portrait.) 8°. Philadelphia, 1830. 3503 Works. Illustrated. Vicar of Wake- field, select poems, and comedies. With introductions, notes, and a life, by John Francis Waller. (Portrait.) 4°. n.d. 3504 [Half Title] Poems and Plays. With a biographical memoir of the author. 8°. n.p. n.d. 3505 Poetical Works. With remarks, at- tempting to asoert.ain, chiefly from local observation, the actual scene of the Deserted Village ; and illustrative en- gravings by M"'. Alkin [sic'] , from draw- ings taken upon the spot. By Eev. E. H. Newell. 4". 1811. (Two copies.) 3506 Poetical Works. Illustrated by wood engravings from the designs of C. W. Cope, A.R.A. [R.A.], Thomas Creswick, A.R.A [K.A.], J. C. Horsley [R.A.], R. Redgrave, A.R.A. [B.A.],and Erederick Tayler ; members of the Etching Club. With a biographical memoir, and notes on the poems. Edited by Bolton Corney. 8°. 1845. 3507 [Half title] Aldine edition of the British Poets. Poems. [Title] Poetical Works. (Life, by Rev. J. Mitford.) (Portrait.) 12°. 1853. 3508 16.505. GOLDSMITH (OLIVER)- con(. Poetical Works. 12°, Bell and Daldy, n.d. 3509 " For the most part a reprint " of No. 3608. Poetical^Vorks : with a notice of his life and genius, by E. F. Blanchard, and many illustrations, by John Absolon, Birket Foster, James Godwin, and Har- rison Weir. (Complete edition. 8°. 1859. 3510 Beauties of English Poesy. Selected by O. Goldsmith. 2 vol. 12°. 1767. (Two copies.) 3511 The Bee. Being Essays on the most interesting subjects. [Anon.] 8°. 1759. 3512 Citizen of the World ; or letters from a Chinese philosopher, residing in London, to his friends in the East. 2 vol, [Anon.] 12°. 1762. 3513 [Half-title.] Letters from a Citizen of the World. 8°. n.p. n.d. *3513 The Deserted Village, a poem. By D'. Goldsmith [1st ed.] (Vignette on title.) 4°. 1770. 3514 Enquiry into the present state of Polite Learning in Europe. Second edition. 8°. 1774. 3.'jl5 MS. note (inserted) from lirv. J. Ilunter. Essays. 12°. 1765. (2 copies.) 3516 No. 1. " To John Forster from his old & obliged friend Peter Cunningham." No. 2. Autograph & MS. notes of Isaac Keed. Two printed cuttings, one by Goldsmitli. Portrait inserted. Essays, &c. ["Standard Library"]. 8°. n.p. n.d. 3517 Good Natur'd Man : a comedy . . [1st ed.] 8°. 1768. (Two copies.) 3518 History of the Earth, and Animated Nature. 8 vol. 8°. 1774. 3519 [Another edition.] Illustrated with copper plates. With corrections and additions by W. Turton, M.D. New edi- tion. 6 vol. 8°. 1816. 3520 History of England, in a series of letters from a nobleman to his son. [Anon.] 2 vol. 12°. 1764. 3521 " Written by Oliver Goldsmitli, though by some attributed to the Earl of Orrery, and by others to George Lord Lyttelton." Lovmdes. [Another edition.] 2 vol. 12°. 1772. 3522 Life of Richard ["Beau"] Nash, of Bath . [Anon.] (Portrait.) 8°. 1762. (Two copies.) ■ -3523 Retaliation: a poem. Including epi- taphs on the most distinguished wits of this metropolis. New edition . . (Por- trait.) 4°. 1774. 3524 Eighth edition, with large additions . . to which is added, some account of his life . . (Portrait.) 4°. 1777. 3525 N 194 GOLDSMITH (OLIVER)— eon<. Haunch of Venison, a poetical epistle to Lord Clare. With a head of the author, drawn by Henry Bunbury ; and etched by Bretherton. 4°. 1776. 3526 New edition, with considerable addi- tions and corrections, taken from the author's last transcript. With a head . . 4". 1776. 3527 The Traveller, a poem. 4". 1770. (Two Copies.) 3528 The Deserted. Village, a I'oem. [1st ed.] 4°. 1770. (Two copies.) 3529 Nos. 3524-9 in one vol. (George Daniel's with his MS. note). She Stoops to Conquer : or, the Mistakes of a Night. A Comedy . . [1st ed.] 8°. 1773. 3530 The Traveller, or a prospect of Society. A I'oem. Inscribed to the Eev. Mr. Henry Goldsmith. [Isted.] 4°. 1765. 3581 [Another edition.] Illustrated with etchings on steel by Birket Eoster. 8°. B.d. [1856]. 3532 Vicar of Wakefield. With thirty-two illustrations, by William Mulready, R.A. 8». 1843. 3533 [Half Title] Vicar of Wakefield. 8°. n.p. n.d. 3534 AND OTHERS. Poetical Works of Goldsmith, Collins, and T. Warton. With lives, critical dis- sertations, and explanatory notes, by Eev. George Gilfillan. 8°. Edinburgh, 1854. 3535 GOLOVIN (IVAN). Nations of Russia and Turkey and their destiny. Two parts. (2 vol.) 8°. 1854. 3536 Russia under the autocrat, Nicholas the first. 2 vol. (Portrait of Nicholas.) 8°. 1846. 3537 GOLOWIN (CAPTAIN W.). Memoirs of a captivity in Japan, during 1811, 1812, and 1813; with observations on the country and the people. Second edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1824. 3538 GONDON (JULES). De I'otat des choses ii Naples et en Italic lettres a [Sir] Georges Bowyer. 8°. Paris (et) Loudres, 1855. 3539 GOODHUGH (WILLIAM). Motives to the study of Biblical litera- ture . . 1839. 3540 GOODRICH (CHAUNCEY A.) D.D. Select British Eloquence ; embracing the best speeches entire, of the most eminent orators of Great Britain for the last two centuries ; with sketches of their lives, an estimate of their genius, and notes . . 8°. 1852. .■?541 GOODSIR (ROBERT ANSTRU- THER). Arctic Voyage to Baffin's Bay and Lancaster Sound, in search of friends with Sir John Franklin. 8°. 1850. 3542 GORDON (JOHN T.). Eloge on the Duke of Wellington pro- nounced before the Philosophical Institu- tion of Edinburgh. 8». 1852. 3543 GORDON (LOUDOUN HARCOURT). Apology for the conduct of the Gordons ; containing the whole of their correspon- dence, conversation, &c. with Mrs. Lee . . account of their examination at Bow Street, and their trial at Oxford. Eourth edition. 8°. 1804. 3544 GORDON (PATRICK). Short Abridgment of Britane's dis- temper, from 1639 to 1649. (Edited by John Dunn.) 4°. Aberdeen, printed for the Spalding Club, 1844. 3545 GORDON (PRYSE LOCKHART). Personal Memoirs ; or reminiscences of men and manners at home and abroad during the last half century. With oc- casional sketches of the author's life . . 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 3546 [GORDON (THOMAS).] Humourist. Being essays upon several subjects . With a dedication to the Man in the Moon. [Anon.] Fourth edition of Vol. I. Second edition of II. 12°. 1741, 1735. 3547 Book-plate of F. Blackstone. GORE (MRS. CATHERINE GRACE FRANCES). Agathonia. A romance. [Anon.] 12°. 1844. 3548 " From the Author." Cecil : or, the Adventures of a Coxcomb. A novel. [Anon.] 12°. 1845. 3549 The Hamiltons : or, official life in 1830. 12°. 1850. 3550 Historical Traveller : a Series of Nar- ratives, illustrative of the most interesting epochs and places connected with the history of Em-ope . . Second edition. 2 vol. 12". 1833. 3551 The Lord and the Lout. 12°. n.d. 3552 Memoirs of a Peeress, or the days of Fox. New edition. 12°. 1859. 3553 " With M". Gore's comp"." Mrs. Armytage; or, Female Domina- tion. (Portrait.) 12". 1848. (2 copies.) 3554 Mothers and daughters : a novel [Anon.] 12". 1849. 3555 195 GORE (MRS. CATHERINE GRACE FRANCES)— conf. Peers and Parvenus. A novel. New edition. 12". 1859. 3555 " With M". Gore's best comp"." Romances of Real Life. 12". 1859. 3557 "FromC. F. Gore." Soldier of Lyons ; a tale of the Tuileries. IS"- 1841. ,3558 [GORE (MRS.).] Florist's Manual, or, hints for the con- struction of a gay flower-garden ; with directions for preventing the depredations of insects, observations on the treatment and growth of bulbous plants . . and directions for the culture of the Guernsey lily. By the authoress of Botanical Dia- logues . . New edition. Coloured plates. 8°. 1827. 8559 GORGEI (ARTHUR). My Life and acts in Hungary in 1 848 and 1849. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 3560 GORHAM (REV. GEORGE CORNE- LIUS). Gorham v. The Bishop of Exeter. The arguments, with the judgments verbatim . . Bishop of Exeter's rejected Protest. Fourth edition. 12". n.d. (1850). 3561 GORTON (JOHN). General Biographical Dictionary, con- taining a 'summary account of the lives of eminent persons of all nations, previous to the present generation. (With appen- dix ; catalo^e of Works . . relating to biography and literary history ; and a chronological table . with a catalogue of eminent Men . . 2 vol. (in 3.) 8°. 1826-8. 3.562 AND WRIGHT (G. N.). Topographical Dictionary of Great Britain and Ireland . . Maps, drawn and engraved by Sidney Hall (and Appendix). 3 vol. 8°. 1833. 3663 GOSSE (PHILIP HENRY). The Aquarium : an unveiling of the wonders of the deep sea. 8°. 1854. 3564 Birds of Jamaica. By P. H. Gosse ; assisted by Richard Hill. 8°. 1847. 3565 Handbook to the Marine Aquarium : containing practical instructions . . 12°. 1855. 3566 Naturalist's rambles on the Devonshire Coast. 8°. 1853. ^ 3567 Naturalist's sojourn in Jamaica. By P. H. Gosse, assisted by R. Hill. 8». 1851. 3568 Tenby : a Sea-side holiday. 8°. 1856. 3569 GOUGER, (HENRY). Personal Narrative of two years' im- prisonment in Burmah. Blustrations. 8°. 1860. 3570 GOWIE (J.). Map of Culloden Moor and part of the adjacent country on which are laid down the different roads leading to the field of battle fought on the le* April 1746 . . 12°. n.p. [? Inverness], n.d. 3571 GOYDER (DAVID G.). Swedenborg and his Mission. 12°. n.d. (1853). 3572 GRAESER (CHARLES). Poesies de V. Hugo, de Lamartine, de Delavigne, et de Blranger. Anthologie . . par C. Graeser. Seconde edifion. 8°. 1854. 3573 GRAESSE (DR. JOHN GEORGE THEODORE). Guide de I'amateur de Porcelaines et de Poteries ou collection complete des mar- ques de fabriques de porcelaines et de poteries de I'Europe et de I'Asie. 8°. Dresde, 1864. 3574 GRAFTON (RICHARD). [Title-page mutilated.] — William the Gonquerour, endeth wyth . , Queene Eliza- beth. [Anon. Vol. 2.] F°. B.L. n.p. 1568. 3575 Wants the "Table to the second volume." Chronicle ; or, history of England . . Table of the Bailiffs, Sheriffs, and Mayors, of the City of London. From 1189, to 1558, inclusive. 2 vol. 4°. 1809. 3576 GRAHAM (GEORGE FARQUHAR). English ; or, the Art of Composition explained in a series of instructions and examples. 8°. 1842. 3577 Songs of Scotland adapted to their ap- propriate melodies arranged with piano- forte accompaniments by G. F. Graham, T. M. Mudie, J. T. Surenne, H. E. Dib- din, Finlay Dun, &c. Illustrated with . . notices by G. F. Graham. 3 vol. (in one). 8°. Edinburgh, 1848-9. 3578 GRAHAM (SYLVESTER). Lecture to young men on Chastity . . 12°. 1843. 3579 GRANGER (REV. JAMES). Biographical History of England, from Egbert the Great to the Revolution : con- sisting of characters disposed indifferent classes, and adapted to a methodical cata- logue of engraved British heads . . inler- spersed with anecdotes, and memoirs . . With a preface, shewing the utility of a collection of engraved portraits to supply N 2 196 GRANGER (RE\. JAMBS)— cout. the defect, and answer the various pur- poses, of medals. 2 vol. (in 4). (Por- trait.) 4°. 1769. 3580 Bookplate of "loh Campbell Hosp. Line. Soc." Third edition. 4 vol. 8°. 1779. 3581 Interleaved copy illustrated with 2730 por- traits, etc. in 14 folio vol. MS. index vol. Fifth edition. . . 3 vol. 8°. 1824. 3582 Interleaved copy illustrated with 3031 por- traits, etc. (and five tracts) in 17 folio vol. MS. index vol. Letters hetween Rev. J. Granger and many of the most eminent literary men of his time : composing a copious history and illustration of his Biofiraphical His- tory of England. With miscellanies, and notes of tours in France, Holland, and Spain. Edited by J. P. Malcolm . . 8°. 1805. 3583 " Robert Southey, Keswick, 15 June 1836." GRANT (ASAHEL) M.D. The Nestorians ; or, the Lost Tribes : containing evidence of their identity ; their manners, customs, and ceremonies. With sketches of travel in ancient Assyria, Ar- menia, Media, and Mesopotamia ; and illustrations of Scripture prophecy. Se- cond edition. 12". 1843. 3584 GRANT (JAMES). Memoirs of James, Marquis of Mont- rose. With Illustrations. 8°. 1801. 3585 Memoirs and Adventures of Sir John Hepburn. 8°. Edinburgh and London 1851. 3586 Memorials of the Castle of Edinburgh. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1850. 3587 GRANT (JAMES GREGOR). Madonna Pia, and other poems. 2 vol. (Frontispieces by W. Mulready, R.A.) 8°. 1848. 3588 GRANVILLE (AUGUSTUS B02ZI) M.D. Guide to St. Petersburgh : a journal of travels to and from that capital . . 2 vol. Third edition. 8». 1835. 3589 A'ol. 2, Second edition, 1829. Invalid's and visitor's hand-book to the hot springs of Bath. 12°. London and Bath; Wig.m [printed], 1841. 3590 Spas of England, and principal sea- bathing places. Northern Spas. 8". 1841. 3591 Midland and Southern Spas. 8". 1811. .3592 Spas of Germany. P.y the Author of "St. Petersburgh." 2 vol. 8". 1837. 3593 GRATTAN (HENRY). Memoirs of the Life and times of Rt. Hon. Henry Grattan. 5 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1839-46. 3594 GRATTAN (THOMAS COLLEY). Agnes de Mansfelt : a historical tale. 12<>. 1847. 3595 Beaten paths ; and those who trod them. 2 vol. 8°. 1862. 3596 Heiress of Bruges ; a tale. 12°. 1844. 3597 History of the iSTetherlands. 12°. 1830. 3598 Jacqueline of Holland : a historical tale. Revised and corrected by the author. 12°. 1843. 3599 Legends of the Rhine and of the Low Countries. 12°. 1849. 3600 GRAVES (REV. RICHARD). Recollection of some particulars in the life of William Shenstone. In a series of letters from an intimate friend of his [liev. R. Graves] to [William Seward.] 8°. 1788. 3601 This copy belonged to W. Seward, to whom the book is addi'essed, and to Isaac Reed, Rev. J. Mitford, and G. Daniel; and contains autographs, MS. notes (some by Malone), inserted portraits and views, and printed cuttings. Spiritual Quixote, or the summer's ramble of Mr. Geoffry Wildgoose. A comic romance . . Life of the Author. [Anon.] 12°. 1808. 3602 GRAY (MRS. HAMILTON). History of Rome. For young persons. 2 vol. 12°. 1847. 3603 Emperors of Rome from Augustus to Constantine . . 12°. 1850. 3604 GRAY (THOMAS). Poems. To which are prefixed memoirs of his life and writings by [Rev.] W. Mason. (Portrait.) 4°. York, 1775. 3605 Inserted— Photo-lithograph fac-simile of Mason's etching of Gray, and letter from \V. J. Thorns accompanying it. Second edition. 4°. 1775. 3606 " Her Roy.al Highness the Princess Eliza- beth. Por whom respt-ct and love combine. In grateful heart of Caroline." MS. affixed to inside of covei\ Poetical Works. Collated . . by Tho- mas Park. 12°. Sharpe, 1805. 3607 The Candidate. [Verses.] 2 leaves. 4°. n.p. n.d. [Published 1787. Dedi- cated to Earl of Sand [wich]. MS.'] 3608 Elegy written originally in a country church yard. The eighth edition, corrected by the Author. [Anon.] 4". 1753. 3609 197 GRAY (THOMAS)— coiK. [Another edition.] Witli vevsious in the Greek, Latin, Germau, Italian, and French languages. (Edited by John Martin). (Illustrations). 8°. 1839. 3610 [Another edition.] Elegy. (Illumi- nated by Owen Jones). 8°. 1846. 3611 [No title-page. Elegia. The " Elegy " translated into Latin elegiac verses by Lord Chief Justice Sir A. J. E. Coek- burn]. 4°. pp. 1-4. No imprint. 3612 " John Forster Esq. With A. B. C.'s best regards." [Half-title]. Stanzas. [The subject of the first part of the following Stanzas is taken from an uufinished Latin Poem Ve Principiis Cogitandi. The fragments of this beautiful composition are preserved in the Memoirs of the Life and Writings ofMr.Grayl. [Anon.] pp. 1-12. 4°. n.p. n.d. 3613 Princess Elizabeth's copy and autograph. AND BENTLEY (RICHARD). Designs by K. Bentley, for Six Poems by T. Gray. 4°. 1753. 3614 Princess Elizabeth's copy with her auto- graph. Book-plate of J"". Scare. AND MASON (REV. WILLIAM). Correspondence of T. Gray and W. Mason, to which are added some letters addressed by Gray to Eev. James Brown, D.D. With notes and illustrations by Kov. John Mitford. 8°. 1853. 3615 At the end — Additional notes to the corre- spondence (1855). AND OTHERS. Poetical works of Thomas Gray, Tho- mas Parnel), William Collins, Matthew Green, and Thomas Warton. Edited by Kev. i?obert Aris Willmott. Illustrated by Birkct Foster and E. Corbould. 12°. 1854. 3616 GREATLEY (T.). Philosophy in the Ecus ; or, talk on the times. A poem in twelve chapters. 4°. 1851. 3617 GREECE. History of Greece from the earliest times to its final subjection to Rome. Pub- lished under the superintendence of the Society for the diffusion of useful Know- ledge. 8°. 1829. 3618 GREEK. Greek Anthology . . Literally trans- lated into English prose, chiefly by George Burges. To which arc added metrical versions by Bland, Merrivale [sic], and others . . 8°. Bohn, 1852. 3619 Selection of Greek Tragedies, with notes . , by T. D. Woolsey. A'^ol. I. Alcestis GREEK— coBi. of Euripides, and Antigone of Sopho- cles. II. Prometheus of iEsohylus, and Eleotra of Sophocles. 2 vol. 8". Boston [U.S.] 1837. 3620 Separate title-pages : that to ' Alcestis," second ed. ; that to '* Antigone," third ed, IStl; and that to " Prometheus " and to " Electra " the same. GREEKS. Lives of Celebrated Greeks. 12". 1845. 3621 Preface signed by " the Editor " — " A. J. H." GREEKS AND ROMANS. Treatise on the Arts, manufactures, manners, and institutions of the Greeks and Romans. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1833. 3622 GREEKS AND TURKS. Wayfaring Sketches among the Greeks and Turks, and on the shores of the Danube. By a seven years' 'resident in Greece. 8°. 1847. 3623 GREELEY (HORACE). Hints towards reforms, in lectures, ad- dresses, and other writings. 8°. New York, 1850. 3624 GREEN (MRS. MARY ANNE EVERETT). Lives of the Princesses of England, from the Norman Conquest. 6 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1849-55. 3625 1. Caeoilia, Adeliza, Matilda, Constance, and Adela — daughters of William the Concnieror. Gundred, supposed daughter of William the Conqueror. Matilda, daughter of Henry I., Matilda and Mary, daughters of Stephen. Matilda,, Eleanora and Joanna, daughters of Henry II. 2. Joanna, Isabella, and Eleanora, daugh- ters of Kin{j John. Margaret, Beatrice, and Katherme, daughters of Henry III. Eleanora, Joanna, Margaret, Berengaria, and Mary, daughters of Edward I. 3. Ehzabeth and Eleanora daughters of Edward I. Eleanora, and Joanna, daugh- ters of Edward II. Isabella, Joanna, Blanche, Mar.v, and Margaret daughters of Edward III. Blanche and PhiUppa daughters of Henry IV. Mary, Cecilia, and Margaret daughters of Edward IV. i. Anne, Catherine, and Bridget daugh- tei-s of Edward IV. Margaret daughter of Henry VII. Elizabeth daughter of Henry VII. 6. Mary and Catherine, daughters of Henry VII. Elizabeth eldest daughter of James I. G. Elizabeth (concluded). Margaret, Mary, and So- phia, daughters of James I. Mary, Eliza- bath, Anne, Catherine, and Henrietta Anne, daughters of Ch.aries I. GREEN (MATTHEW). The Spleen. An epistle inscribed to his particular friend Mr. C J. [Cuthbert Jackson. 3/S.] [First ed.] 8°. 1737. 3626 MS. note by Peter Cunningham, and by George Daniel. Book-plate of Edward Astle. Second edition. 8°, 1754. 3627 198 [GREEN (THOMAS).] Extracts from the Diary of a Lover of Literature. [Anon.] 4". Ipswicli, 1810. 3628 '■ Not printed for sale." Lowndes. GREENE (EDWARD BURNABY). Critical Essays. 1. Observations on tlie Sublime of Longinus. 2. Influence of Government on the mental faculties. 3. Essay on the fourth book ; 4. On the fifth boolc ; 5. On the close of the sixth boolt of Virf,'il's ^neid. 12°. 1770. 3629 GREENE (ROBERT). Dramatic Works, to which are added his Poems. With some account of the Author, and notes, by Rev. Alexander Dyce. 2 vol. 8°. 1831. 3630 AND PEELE (GEORGE). Dramatic and Poetical Works. With memoirs of the authors and notes by Rev. Alexander Dyce. 8°. 1861. 3631 " John Porster Esq", mth A. Dyce's best regards." GREENWELL (DORA). Poems. 12°. 1848. 3632 Stories that might be true with other poems. 12°. 1850. 3633 GREER (MRS. J. R.). Society of Friends a domestic narrative illustrating the peculiar doctrines held by the disciples of George Fox. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 36.34 GREG (WILLIAM RATHBONE). Creed of Christendom ; its foundations and superstructure. 8°. 1851. 3635 Essays on Political and Social Science, contributed chiefly to the Edinburgh Re- view. 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 3636 GREGG (JOSIAH). Commerce of the Prairies : or the journal of a Santa Fe trader, during eight expeditions across the great western prairies, and a residence of nearly nine years in northern Mexico. Maps and engravings. 2 vol. 8°. New York, 1844. 3637 GREGOROVIUS (FERDINAND). Corsica in its picturesque, social, and historical aspects : the record of a tour in the summer of 1852. Translated from the German by Russell Martiueau. 12°. 1855. 3638 GREGORY (GEORGE) D.D. Life of Thomas Chatterton, with criti- cisms on his genius and writings, and a concise view of the controversy concerning Rowley's Poems. 8°. 1789. 3639 MS. note. On title in pencil " R. Browning." GREGORY (JAMES). Packet of seeds saved by an Old Gardener. Second edition. [Anon.] 8°. 1861. 3640 " Preliminary to the flrst edition " is signed " James Gregory." [GREGORY (JOHN) M.D.] Comparative View of the state and faculties of Man with those of the Animal World. Fourth edition. [Anon.] 12°. 1767. 3641 Mittord's copy and MS. notes. GREGORY (WILLIAM) M.D. Letters to a candid inquirer, on Animal Magnetism. 8°. 1851. 3642 GRENVILLE PAPERS. Grenville Papers : being the Correspon- dence of Richard Grenville Earl Temple, and George Grenville, their friends and contemporaries. Now first published . . Edited, with notes, by William James Smith. 4 vol. 8°. 1852-3. 3643 GRESHAM (SIR THOMAS). Life of Sir T. Gresham, founder of the Royal Exchange. [Anon.] (Portrait.) 12°. 1845. 3644 GRESLEY (REV. WILLIAM). Forest of Arden : a tale illustrative of the English Reformation. 12°. 1841. 3645 GRESSET (JEAN BAPTIST LOUIS). Vert- Vert from the French by Robert Snow. 12°. 1850. 3646 GREY (SIR GEORGE). Polynesian Mythology, and ancient traditional history of the New Zealand race, as furnished by their priests and chiefs. 8°. 1855. 3647 GREY (HENRY GEORGE, 3d EARL). Colonial Policy of Lord John Russell's Administration. 2 vol. Second edition. 8". 1853. 3648 GREY (LADY JANE), Memoir of the life of Lady Jane Grey. Addressed chiefly to young persons. [Anon.] 12°. 1834. 3649 GREY (MRS. MARIA G.) AND SHIRREFF (EMILY). Thoughts on Self-Culture. Addressed to Women. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 3650 Second edition. 8°. 1854. (Two Copies.) 3651 GRIFFIN (FREDERICK). Junius discovered'. 8". Boston [U.S.] 18.54. 3652 199 GRIFFIN (GERALD). Poetical TV orks. 12°. 1843. 3653 Talis Qualis, or. Tales of the Jury Boom. 3 vol. 8°. 1842. 3654 Life of Gerald Griffin. By his Brother (Daniel Griffin). (Portrait.) 12°. 1843. 3655 GRIFFITH (J. W.) M.D. AND HENFREY (ARTHUR). Micrographio Dictionary . . Plates and woodcuts. 8°. 1856. 3656 GRIFFITHS (THOMAS). Chemistry of the Crystal Palace: a popular account of the chemical pi'operties of the chief materials employed iu its construction. 12». 1851. 3657 Chemistry of the four ancient elements fire, air, earth, and water . . 12". 1842. 3658 Chemistry of the four seasons . . an essay, principally concerning natural phenomena admitting of interpretation by chemical science, and illustrating pas- sages of scripture. 8°. 1846. 3659 GRILLPARZER (FRANZ). Sappho a tragedy. Translated by L. C. C. 12°. Edinburgh, 1855. 3660 GRIMBLOT (PAUL). Letters of William III. and Louis XIV. and of their Ministers . . 1697 to 1700. Edited by P. Grimblot. 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 3661 GRIMM (FREDERIC MELCHIOR, BARON DE). Memoires . . tir^s de la Correspondance philosophique et critique, adressee au Due de Saxe Gotha, 1770-1790, par le B. De Grimm, et par Diderot. Formant un tableau piquant de la bonne societe de Paris sous les regues de Louis XV. et Louis XVI. 4 vol. Seoonde edition. (Portrait of Grimm.) 8°. 1814. 3662 Historical and literary memoirs and anecdotes, selected from the Correspon- dence of Baron de Grimm and Diderot with the Duke of Saxe-Gotha . . between 1753 and 1790. Translated from the French. Second edition. 4 vol. 8°. 1815. 3663 GRIMM (JACOB LUDWIG CARL). Weisthiimcr gesammelt von J. Grimm. 3 vol. 8». Gottingen, 1840--2. 3G64 AND (WILHELM). Household Stories collected by the Brothers Grimm. Newly translated. With two hundred and forty illustrations by Edward H. Wehnert. 2 vol. 12°. 1853. 3665 GRIMSTON (SIR HARBOTTLE). M'. Grymstons speech in Parliament upon the accusation and impeachment of William Laud arch-bishop of Canterbury, upon high treason . . (Portrait of Laud inserted.) 4°. n.p. 1641. 3666 GRIMSTON (WILLIAM, VISCOUNT). The Lawyer's Fortune : or, Love in a hollow tree. A Comedy. Written by ****** ****. Kevis'd and compar'd ivith the first edition iu 1705. (Frontispiece, and vignette, on title, of an elephant dancing on a tight rope). 12°. 1736. 3667 The author (who wrote this play when a boy of thirteen at school) destroyed every procurable copy of the original edition, 1705. This is the reprint, by Sarah, Duchess ol Marlborough, to injure Lord Grimston at an election. GRISWOLD (RUFUS WILMOT) D.D. Female Poets of America. 8°. Phila- delphia, 1849. 3668 Poets and Poetry of America. With an historical introduction. (Portraits.) 8°. Philadelphia, 1842. 3669 Prose Writers of America. With a survey of the intellectual history, condi- tiou, and prospects of the country. Por- traits. 8°. 1847. 3670 GROSE (FRANCIS). Provincial Glossary ; with a collection of local proverbs, and popular supersti- tions. New edition. 4°. 1811. 3671 GROSSI (TOMASO). Marco Visconti. From the Italian. 2 vol. (iu one). 12°. 1845. 3672 GROSVENOR (ELIZABETH MARY, COUNTESS) NOW DOWAGER MARCHIONESS OF WESTMIN- STER. Narrative of a Yacht Voyage in the Mediterranean during 1840-1. 2 vol. 8°. 1842. 3673 GROSVENOR (LORD ROBERT) NOW BARON EBURY. Leaves from my .Journal during the Summer of 1851. Second edition. 12". 1854. 3674 GROTE (GEORGE). History of Greece . . 13 vol. 8°. 1846 -56. 3675 Vol. XII— With portrait, maps, and index. Se\en letters on the recent Politics of Switzerland . S». 1847. 3676 200 GROTIUS (HUGO). De Jure Belli et Pads . . aocompunied by an abridged translation by William Whewell, D.D. : with the notes of the Author, Barbeyrac, and others. 3 vol. 8°. Cambridge, 1853. 3677 GROVE (JOSEPH). History of the life and times of Cardinal Wolscy . ". Memoirs of the Emperor Charles V. Henry VIII. and Francis I. . . Secret history of the Cardinal, by George Cavendish . . Collected from antieut records . . with cuts . . Second edition. 4 vol. 8°. 1748. 3678 QROVER (CAPTAIN JOHN). Bokhara Victims. 8'>. 1845. 3679 GROZELIER (NICOLAS). Fables nouvelles. . . 12°. 1760. 3680 GRUB STREET. Memoirs of the Society of Grub-Street (Thursday, Jan. 8, 1730— to Thursday, August 24, 1732.) 2 vol. 12°. 1737. 3681 A selection from the.original numbers. No. 113 wanting ; Nos. 112 & 114 imperfect. " The authors v^ere D'. Uichard Russel, a physician, and D'. John Martyn, the celebi*ated botanist." Lowndes. GRUMBLER (ANTHONY) i.e. DAVID HOFFMAN. Miscellaneous thoughts on Men, Man- ners, and Things. 8°. Baltimore [U.S.] 1837. 3682 GRUNEISEN (CHARLES LEWIS). Memoir of Meyerbeer, with notices, historical and critical, of his operas, the Huguenots . . Compiled from various sources, and edited by C. L. Gruneiseu. 12°. 1848. S'eSS GUARDIAN. [No title-page. The Guardian. Numb. I. to CLXXV. Thursday, March 12. 1713 to October 1. 1713. [By Steele, etc.] Orig. Nos.] F°. 3684 At the end, the "Whig Examiner, Oct. 5. 1710 [by Addison.] (3 copies). Book-plate cif P. C. Crespigny. GUARINI (BATTISTA). II Pastor Fido : the Faithful Shep- heard. With an addition of divers other poems, concluding with a short discourse of the long Civil Warres of Eome. By Sir Richard Fanshawe. (Portrait of Guarini.) [Eng. and Lat.] 8". 1CC4. 3685 Includes a translation of " the fourth book of A^'irgil's iEneis on the Loves of Dido and ilSneas." [Another edition.] (No Portrait.) 8°. 1676. 3686 GUERONNIERE (A. DE LA). . . Napoleon the third : translated by Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Gilliess. 8°. 1853. 3687 GUHL (E.) AND KONER (W.). Life of the (ilreeks and Ilomans, de- scribed from antique monuments. Trans- lated from the third German edition by F. Hueffer. With 543 woodcuts. 8°. 1875. 3688 GUHRAUER (DR. G, E.). Gottfried Wilhelm Freiherr von Leib- nitz. Fine Biographie . . 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 12°. Breslau, n.d. (1842) 3689 GUICCIARDINI (FRANCIS). Maxims. Translated by Emma Martin. With parallel passages from the works of Maohiavelli, Bacon, Pascal, Eochefou- cault, Montesquieu, Burke, Talleyrand, Guizot, and others. (Portrait.) 12°. 1845. 3690 GUILEVILLE (GUILLAUME DE). Ancient poem of G. De Guileville en- titled Le Peleriuage de I'homme compared with the Pilgrim's Progress of John Bun- yan edited from notes collected by the late Nathaniel Hill with illustrations and an Appendix. (Portrait of Bunyan.) 4°. 1858. 3691 GUIZOT (FRANCOIS PIERRE GUIL- LAUME). [Half-title.] Collection des Memoires relatifs a la Revolution d'Angleterre. 26 vol. 8°. Paris, 1823-5. 3692 [Titles.] MiSmoires de Sir Philippe War- wick SUV le rfegne de Charles I", et ee qui s'est pass(5 depuis la mort de Charles !■' .jusqu'a la restauratiou des Stuart. Histoire du Long-Parlemcnt convoqu6 par Charles 1" in 1640; par Thomas May. 2 vol. Memoires de Sir Thomas Herbert, Talet de Chambre de Charles I", snr les deux derniftres ann6es du rc'gne de ce Prince. M^moii-es de Sir John Berkley, sur Ics Nfeociations de Charles I" avec Crom- well et I'ArmiSe Parlemfencaire. M6moires de John Price, chapelain de Monk, sur la Kestauration des Stuart. Memoires de (Denzil) Hollis. (Robert) Huntington. (Thomas) Fairfax. Memoires de Ludlow. 3 vol. McSnioires de Mistrlss Hutchinson. 2 vol. Proc6s de Charles I". Eik6n Basilike ; apologie attribute a Charles I". Me- moires de Charles II, sur sa fuite apres la bataille do Worcester. JMemoires de Lord Clarendon, grand-chan- oelier d'Angleterre sous le r6gne de Charles II. 4 vol. Joui'ual de Lord H enri Clarendon, flls du Oomte de Clarendon ; sur les annfes 1087-80. Histoire de mon Temps, par (Gilbert) Bur- net, Ev6quo de Salisoury. i vol. M(5moires de Sir John Heresby. Memoires du Due de Buckingham (and— E&it de la RiSvolution de 1688, par Le Duo de Buck- ingham.) M6moires de Jacques II. i vol. 201 GUIZOT (FRAN9OIS PIERRE GUIL- LAUME)— C6n<. Cours d'Histoirc Modenie, Histoire generale de la civilisation en Europe, de- puis la chute de I'Empire Romaiu, jusqu'a la Kevolution l"rau9aise. 12°. Bruxelles, 1838. 3693 Cours d'histoire moderne. Histoire de la civilisation en France, depuis la chute de I'Empire Komain jusqu'eu 1789. 5 vol. 12°. Bruxelles, 1839. 3694 Essais sur I'histoire de France ; pour scrvir de complement aux observations sur I'histoire de France, de I'Abh^ de Mably . . Quatrifesne edition, 2 vol. 12°. 'Bruxelles, 1837. 3695 £tudes biographiques sur la revolution d'Angleterre. Parlemeataires. — Cavaliers. — Kepublicains. Niveleurs. 8°. Paris, 1851. 3696 Histoire de la revolution d'Angleterre, depuis I'avfenemeut de Charles 1'^' jusqu'a la restauration de Charles TI. Premiere partie. 2 vol. 8°. Paris, 1826-7. 3697 Histoire de la republique d'Angleterre et de Cromwell (1649-1658.) 2 vol. 8°. Paris, 1854. 3698 Histoire du Protectorat de Bichard Cromwell et du retablissement des Stuart (1658-1660). 2 vol. 8°. Paris, 1856. 3699 Memoires pour servir a I'histoire de mon temps. 8 vol. 8°. Paris, 1858-67. 3700 Vol. v. wanting. Monk. Chute de la republique et retab- lissement de la Monarchic en Angleterre, en 1660 etude historique. Deuxieme Edition. (Portrait of Monk.) 8°. Paris, 1851. 3701 Un proiet de Mariage Royal. 8°. Paris, 1863. 3702 Sir Robert Peel etude d'histoire 'con- temporaine. 8°. Paris, 1856. 3703 Nos. 3696-703. Several of these are presen- tation copies with inscriptions. Comeille and his times. 8°. 1852. 3704 Democracy and its Mission. Translated from the French of Guizot. 12°. 1848. 3705 Democracy in France. January, 1849. 8°. 1849. 3706 On the causes of the success of the English Revolution of 1640-1688. A dis- course. Designed as an introduction to the history of the reign of Charles I. 8°. 1850. 3707 The Fine Arts their nature and relations. Translated with the assistance of the author by [Sir] George Grove. With il- lustrations drawn on wood by George Scharfjun. 8°. 1853- 3708 General history of Civilisation in Europe, from the fall of the Roman Empire till GUIZOT (FRAN90IS PIERRE GUIL- LAUMEj — cont. the French Kevolution. New translation. With a memoir of the Author. 8°. Edinburgh, 3 839. 3709 History of Charles the first and the English Revolution, from the accession of Charles to his execution. Translated by Andrew R. Seoble. New edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 3710 History of Civilization, from the fall of the Roman empire to the French revolu- tion. Translated by William Hazlitt. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1856. 3711 History of Oliver Cromwell and the English Commonwealth, from the execu- tion of Charles the first to the death of Cromwell. Translated by Andrew R. Seoble. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 3712 History of Richard Cromwell and the restoration of Charles 11. Translated by Andrew R. Seoble. 2 vol. 8°. 1856. 3713 History of the English Revolution of 1640 : from the accession of Charles I. to his death. Translated by William Haz- litt. (Portrait of Charles I.) 8°. 1846. 3714 History of the origin of representative government in Europe. Translated by Andrew R. Seoble. 8°. Bohn, 1852. 3715 Lectures on European Civilization. Translated by Priscilla Maria Beckwith. 8°. 1837. 3710 Married life of Rachel Lady Russell. Translated (by John Martin). 8". 1855. 3717 Meditations and Moral Sketches. Translated by John, Marquis of Ormonde. 8S Dublin, 1855. 3718 State of men's souls — Eeliffion in Modern Societies— Catholicism, Protestantism, and Philosophy in Prance. Memoirs of George Monk, Duke of Albemarle. Translated and edited, with additional notes and illustrations, by Hon. J. Stuart Wortlev. (Portrait.) 8°. 1838. " 3719 Pencil-marked copy. Monk : or the fall of the republic and the restoration of the monarchy in Eng- land, in 1660. Translated from the French, by A. R. Seoble. (Portrait.) 8°. 1851. 3720 Shakspeare and his times; 8°. 1852. 3721 Washington. Translated by Henry Reeve. 8". 1840. 3722 GULLIVER (LEMUEL) iVSVi. pseud. Voyage to Locuta; a fragment : with etchings, and notes of illustration . . 12°. 1818. ■ 3723 202 GULLY (ROBERT) AND DENHAM (CAPTAIN). Journals kept during a captivity in China in 1842. Edited by a Barrister. 8°. London and York, 1844. 3724 GUMPACH (JOHANNES VON). Popular inquiry into the Moon's rota- tion on her axis. Diagrams. 8°. 18.56. 3725 GUNNING (HENRY). Reminiscences of the University, town, and county of Cambridge, from the year 1780. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. London and Cambridge, 1854. 3726 " [Edited by Miss M. Beart t]" Srit. Mus. Cat. GUNNISON (LIEUT. J. W.). The Mormons, or, Latter-Day Saints, in tiie Valley of the Great Salt Lake . 8°. Philadelphia, 1852. 3727 GUNPOWDER PLOT. True account of the Gunpowder Plot ; extracted from Dr. Lingard's history of England and Dodd's Church history, in- cluding the notes and documents appended to the latter by Kev. M. A. Tierney. With notes and prefatory remarks by Vindi- cator. 8». 1851. 3728 GURNEY (REV. ARCHER THOMP- SON). King Charles the first, a dramatic poem in five acts. 12°. 1846. 3729 " Prom the Author." GURNEY (REV. JOHN HAMPDEN). Evening Recreations ; or, samples from the lecture room. Edited by J. H. Gurney. . . 8°. 1856. 3730 Historical Sketches ; illustrating some important events and epoches from 1400 to 1546. 12°. 1852. 3731 GURNEY (JOSEPH JOHN). Chalmeriana ; or. Colloquies with Dr. Chalmers. 8°. 1853. 3732 GUSTAVUS VASA. History of Gustavus Vasa, King of Sweden. With extracts from his corre- spondence. [Anon.j (Portrait.) 8°. 1852. 3733 GUTHRIE (GEORGE JAMES). Wounds and injuries of the C'hest , . 8°. 1848. 3734 GUTZLAFF (REV. CHARLES). Life of Taou-Kwang, late Emperor of China : with memoirs of the Court of Peking ; including a sketch of the prin- cipal events in the history of the Chinese empire during the last fifty years. 8°. 1852. 3735 GUYOT (ARNOLD). The Earth and Man : lectures on com- parative physical geography, in its rela- tion to the history of mankind. Trans- lated from the French, by C. C. Eelton. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1849. 3736 GWILT (JOSEPH). Encyclopaedia of Architecture, histo- rical, theoretical, and practical . . engrav- ings on wood by R. Branston, from drawings by John Sebastian Gmlt. 8°. 1842. 3737 GWINETT (AMBROSE). Life . . voyages and adventures of A. Gwinett, formerly well known to the public, as the lame beggar man, who in 1734 . . swept the way between the Mews Gate and Spring Gardens, Chariug-cross . . Written by himself. Second edition, (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1770. 3738 GWYN OR GWYNN (JOHN) R.A. Essay on Design : including proposals for erecting a Public Academy . . for educating the British youth in Drawing, and the several arts depending thereon [Anon, but dedication signed " J. Gwyn"]. 8°. Dublin, 1749. 3739 GWYNNE (TALBOT) pseud. Life and death of Silas Barnstarke. A story of the "seventeenth century. 8°. 1853. 3740 Nanette and her Lovers. 8". 1854. 3741 School for Dreamers : a story of the present day. 8°. 1853. 3742 School for Fathers. An old English story. 8°. 1852. 3743 Young Singleton. 2 vol. 8°. 1856. 3744 H. H. (F.). Life of John Tillotson, Arch-Bishop of Canterbury. Compiled from the minutes of Rev. Mr. Young, Dean of Salisbury. By F. H. [? Francis Hutchinson] . With many curious memoirs communicated by Gilbert [Burnet] Bishop of Sarum. (Por- trait.) 8°. E. Curll, 1717. 3745 At the end— Defence of Archbishop Tillotson and his writings. By Monsiem- Le Clero (and Appendix). MS. notes. 203 H. (J.) i.e. HALL DURHAM. (JOHN) OF Grounds and reasons of Monarchy, considered and exemplified out of the Scottish History. 4°. Edinburgh, 1651. 3746 HABEEB RISK ALLAH. The Thistle and the Cedar of Lebanon. (Portrait.) 8°. 1853. 3747 HACKET (JOHN) BISHOP OF LICHFIELD AND COVENTRY. Scrinia Reserata : A memorial offer'd to the great deservings of John Williams, D.D. . . Archbishop of York . . (Por- trait.) E°. In the Savoy, 1693. 3748 HACKLANDER (F. W.) AND OTHERS. Scenes from the life of a soldier in active service. I. The Austrian Campaign in Piedmont, 1849 : translated from the German of F.W.Haoklander. II. Notice of the Defence of Temeswar. III. The Ciimp of the Ban. [Trans, by the Earl of EUesmere]. 8°. 1850. 3749 HAGEN (G.). Handbuch der Wasserbaukunst. 8°. Konigsberg, 1841. 3750 HAHN-HAHN (IDA, COUNTESS). Ulrich : a tale. Translated from the German. By J. B. S. 2 vol. 12°. 1845. •' 3751 HAILES (SIR DAVID DALRYMPLE, LORD). Memorials and Letters relating to the History of Britain in the reign of James the first. Published from the origmals. Second edition. 8°. Glasgow, 1766. 3752 {n the reigu of Charles the first. S'\ Glasgow, 1766. 3753 HAIN (ADOLF). Gedichte. 8". Edinburgh, 1855. 3754 HAIRBY (JAMES) M.D. Kambles in Normandy. 8°. 1846. 3755 HAKLUYT. Publications of the Hakluyt Society. Vol. 1-54. 8". 1847-76. 3756 Amazons. Expeditions into the valley of the Amazons. 1639, 1B40, 1639. Translated and edited, vnth notes, by Clements E. Markham. Ahdagoya (Pabcdai. D3S . Narrative of the pfocfedings of Pedrarir-s Davila m the OTOvinces of Tierra Firme or CastiUa del Sro and of the discovery of the South Sea and the Coasts of Peru and Nicaragua. Translated and edited with notes and an introduction, by C. B. Markham. HAKLUYT— COM*. AUSTEALIA. Early Voyages to Terra Aus- tralis, now called Australia: a collection of documents, and extracts from early manuscript maps, illustrative of the his- tory of discovery from the beginning of the sixteenth century to the time of Captain Cook. Edited, with an introduc- tion, by R. H. Major. At the end, as a separate pamphlet, is [Half Title] "on the discovery of Australia by the Portuguese in 1601." By E. H. Major (1801). (Prom the Archaeologia, Vol. 38.) Babeaeo (JosArA) and Coktaeiih (Am- EEOGio). Travels to Tana and Persia. Translated from the Italian by "William Thomas, clerk of the Council t-o Edward VI, and by S. A. Boy. And edited, with an introduction, by Lord Stanley of Alderley. Barbosa (Dfaete). Description of the coasts of East Africa and Malabar in the beginning of the sixteenth century. Trans- lated from an early Spanish Manuscript in the Barcelona Library with notes and a preface, by Hon. Henry E. J, Stanley. Benzoni (Gieolamo). History of the New World, by Q. Benzoni of Milan. Shewing his travels in America, from 1641 to 1550; with some particulars of the island of Canary. Now first translated, and edited by Rear- Admiral "W. H. Smyth. (Portrait.) BoNTiEE (Pieeee) and Le Veeeiee ( Jeak). The Canarian, or Book of the conquest and conversion of the Canarians, in 1403, by Messire Jean Ue Bethencourt, K'. Composed by P. Bontier and J, Le Verrier. Translated and edited, with notes and an introduction, by B. H. Major. (Portrait of De Bethencourt). CHAMPLAiir (Samuel). Narrative of a voyage to the "West Indies and Mexico 1699-1602, with maps and illustrations. Translated from the original and unpub- lished manuscript, with a biographical notice and notes by Alice Wilmere. Edited by Norton Shaw. China. Cathay and the way thither; being a Collection of Medieval notices of China, translated and edited by Colonel Henry Yule. Preliminary essay on the inter- course between China and the 'Western nations previous to the discovery of the Cape route. 2 vol. CiATiJO (Buy Gonzalez de). Narrative of the Embassy of Buy Gonzalez de Clavijo to the Court of Timour, at Samar- cand, 1403-6. Translated with notes, pre- face, and Life of Timour Beg, by C. K. Markham. Coats (Captain "W.). Geography of Hudson's Bay : being the remarks of Captain "W. Coats, in many voyages to that locality, between the years 1727 and 1751. Appendix, containing extracts from the log of Capt. Middleton on his voyage for the discovery of the North-west passage, in H.M.S. ''Purnace," in 1741-2. Edited by John Barrow. Columbus (Cheistophee). Select letters, with other original documents, relating to his fom- voyages to the New "World. Translated and edited by E. H. Major. Second edition. COEEEA (Gaspae). Three Voyages of Vasco da Gama, and his viceroyalty. Prom the Lendas da India of G. Correa accompanied by original documents. Translated from the Portuguese, with notes and an intro- duction, by Hon. H. E. J. Stanley. (Por- trait of Vasco da Gama). COETES (Heenan). Fifth letter of H. Cortes to the Emperor Charles V., con. 204 HAKLUYT-."OH(. taininj an account of his expedition to Honduras. Tra-nslated, from the original Spanish by Don Pasoual de Gayangos. DALBOQUEEQtTE (ApoNSO). Commen- taries of the great A. Dalboquerque, Second Viceroy of India. Translated from tlie Portuguese edition of 1774, with notes and an introduction, by "Walter De Gray Birch. (Portrait.) Part I. Deake (Sir Peancis). The World en- compassed by Sir P. Drake, being his next voyage to that to Nombre de Dios. Col- lated with an unpublished Manuscript of Prancis Pletcher, chaplain to the expedi- tion. AVith appendices illustrative of the same voyage, and introduction, by "W". S. "W. Yaux. Ploeida. Discovery and conquest of Terra Florida, b.y Don Perdinando De Soto. "Written by a gentleman of Elvas, employed in all the action, and tr.inslated out of Portuguese, b,y Richard Hakluyt. Reprinted from the edition of 1611. Edited, with notes and an introduction, and a translation of a narrative of the expedition by Luis Hernandez de Biedraa, b,v AV. B. Eye. PEOEisnEB. (Ste JMaetin). Three voyages of M. Probisher, in search of a passage to Cathaia and India b.y the North-west, 1576-S, reprinted from the first edition of Hakluyt's Voyages, with Selections from manuscript documents. By Rear- Admiral Richard Collinson. (Portrait of Pro- bisher.) Galtano (Amoifio). Discoveries of the world, from their first original unto 1555. Corrected, quoted, and published in Eng- land, by Richard Hakluyt, (1601). Now reprinted, with tiie original Portuguese text : and edited by Vice -Admiral Bethune. Guzman (Don Alonzo Enbiquez de). Life and Acts of Don A. Enriquez de Guzman, a knight of Seville, 1518 to 1513. Translated from an original and inedited manuscript in the National Library at Madrid; with notes and an introduction, by C. El. Markham. Hakluyt (Eichaed). Divers Voyages touching the discovery of America and the islands adjacent. Collected and published b.v R. Hakluyt. Edited, with notes and an introduction, by John Winter Jones. Hawkins (Sie Richaed). Observations of Sir R. Hawkins, in his voyage into the Snuth Sea in 1593. Reprinted from the edition of 1622. Edited by C. R. Drink- water Bethune. Hbeeeestein (Bakon Sigismund ton). Notes upon Russia: being a translation of the earliest account of that country, entitled Rei'um Moscoviticarum Com- mentarii. Translated and edited, with notes and an introduction, by R. H. Major. 2 vol. (Portraits.) Hudson (Henet). H. Hudson the Navi- gator. The original documents in which his career is recorded collected, iiartly translated, and annotated, with an intro- duction, by G. fll. Asher. India. India in the fifteenth century. Beinga ColU'i'lion of Narratives of voyages to India, in the Century preceding tlie Portuguese discovery of tie Cape of Good Hope ; from Latin, Persian, Russian, and Italian Sources, now first translated into English. Edited, with nn introduction, by R. H. Major. Japan. Memorials nf the Empire of Japon : in the XVI and XVII Centuries. Edited, with notes, by Thomas Rundall. JOEDANua (Pkiae). Mirabilia Descripta. The Wonders of the east, by Priar Jordanus, of the order of Preachers and HAKLUYT— co»^ Bishop of Columbum in India the greater, (circa 1330). Translated from the Latm original, as published at Paris in 1839. With the addition of a commentary, by Colonel Henry Tule. Leon (Pedeo de Cieza de). Travels, 1532-50, contained in the first part of his chronicle of Peru. Translated and edited, with notes and an introduction, by C. R. Markham. Magellan. Pirst voyage round the world, by Magellan. Translated from the ac- counts of Pigafetta, and other contempo- rary writers. Accompanied by original documents, with notes and an introduc- tion, by Lord Stanley of Aldeiiey. (Por- trait of Magellan.) Matnaeue (TnoiiAS). Sir Prancis Drake his voyage, 1595, together with the Spanish account of Drake's attack on Puerto Rico. Edited, from the original Manuscripts, by W. D. Oooley. Mendoza (Juan Gonzalez de). History of the kingdom of China and the situation thereof. Compiled by the Padre J. G. De Mendoia. And now reprinted from the early translation of R. Parke. Edited by Sir George T. Staunton. With an intro- duction by R. H. Major. 2 vol. MiDDLETON (Sie Heney). Voyage to Bantam and the Maluco islands. Prom the edition of 160(). Annotated and edited by Bolton Coruey. MoEGA (Antonio de). Philippine islands, Moluccas, Siam, Cambodia, Japan, and China, at the close of the sixteenth century. Translated from the Spanish, with notes and a preface, and a letter fi*om Luis A'aez De Torres, describing Ids voyage through the Torres Straits. By Hon. H. E. J. Stanley. (Portrait of Miguel Lopez de Legazpi.) OELJSANS (PlEEEE JOSEPH D'). His- tC'Vy of the two Tartar Conquerors of China, including the two journeys into Tartary of Father Ferdinand Verbiest, in tire suite of the Emperor Kang-Hi : from the French of Pere P. J. D'O. To which is added Father Pereira's journey into Tartary in the suite of the same Emperor, from the Dutch of Nicolaas "Witsen. Ti-anslated and edited by the Earl of Ellesmere. With an introduction by R. H. Major. Pehu. Reports on the discovery of Peru. Translated and edited, with notes and an introduction, by C. R. Markham. Ralegh (Sie Waltee). Discovery of the empire of Guiana, with a relation of the Great and Golden city of Manoa (which the Spaniards call El Dorado), etc. Per- formed in the year 1595, by Sir W. Ralegh. Reprinted from the edition of 1596, with some unpublished documents relative to that countiy. Edited, with notes and a biographical memoir, by Sir Robert H. JSchombui-gk. Rundall (Thomas). Nan-atives of voyages towards the North-west, in search of a passage to Cathay and India. M96 to 1681. With selections from the early re- cords of the East India Company and from MSS. in the British Museum. Russia. Russia at the close of the sixteenth century. Comprising, the treatise " of the RusKi' Common Wealth." by D'. Giles Fletcher I and the Travels of Sir J"erome Horsey, now for the first time printed entire from his own manuscript. Edited by JB. A. Bond. Sal1l-Ibn-Raz1k. History of the Im&ms and Seyyids of 'Oman, from A.D. 661-1856 ; translated from the original Arabic, and edited, with notes, appendices, and an introduction, continuing the history down 205 HAKLUVr—cwU. to 1870, by George Percy Badger. With a Map. Simon (Pedeo). Expedition oI Pedro de Drsua and Lope de Aguirre in search of Bl ^orado and Omagua in 1560-1. Trans- lated from Pray P. Simon's "Sixth his- toncal notice of the Conque.st of Tierra Pirme." By "William BoUaert. With an introduction by C. R. Markham. Spitzbeeoen and Geebnland. Collec- tion of documents on Spitzbergen and Greenland, comprising a translation from P. Martens' voyage to Spitzhergen : a translation from Isaac de la Peyrfire's Histoire du Greenland : and God's power and providence in the preservation of Eight Meniin Greenland nine moneths and twelve dayes. Edited by Adam White. Stade (Hans). Captivity of Hans Stade of Hesse, 1647-155,5, among the wild tribes of Eastern Brazil. Translated by Allaert Tootal, and annotated by Richard 1?. Burton. Steachet (William ) . Historie of Travaile into Virginia Britannia i expressing the cosmographie and comodities of the country, togither with the manners and customes of the people. Gathered and observed as well by those who went first thither as collected by W. Strachey. Now first edited from the original manuscript in the British Museum, by R. H. Major. Vaethbma (Ludovico ei). Travels in Egypt, Syria, Arabia deserta and Arabia felix, in Persia, India, .and Ethiopia, 1503 lo 1508. Translated from the original Italian edition of 1510, with a preface, by J. W. Jones, and edited, with notes and an introduction, by G. P. Badger. With a Map. Veee (Geeeit de).' True description of Three Voyages by the North -East towards Cathay and China, undertaken by the Dutch in 1591, 1595, and 1596. Published at Amsterdam in 1598, and in 1C09 trans- lated into English by William Phillip. Edited by Charles T. Beke. Veee (Gereit de). Three Voyages of WiUiam Barents to the Arctic Regions ( 1504, 1595, and 1690) . Pirst edition edited by C. T. Beke, 1863. Second edition, with an introduction, by Lieutenant Koole- mans Beynen. VESA (Gaecilasso de la). First part of the Royal Commentaries of the Yncas. Translated and edited, with notes and an introduction, by C. R. Markham. 2 vol. Yncas. Narratives of the rites and laws of the Yncas. Translated from the original Spanish Manuscripts, arid edited, with notes and an introduction, by 0. R. Mark- ham. Zeno (Nicol6 and Antonio). Voyages of the Venetian brothers, N. and A. Zeno, to the Northern Seas, in the XlVth century, comprising the latest known accounts of the lost colony of Greenland ; and of the Northmen in America before Columbus. Translated and edited, with notes and an introduction, by R. H. Major. HALBERTSMA (JUSTUS). Lexicon Frisicum. A — Feer . . Edidit . . Tialiiugius Halbertsma. (Portrait.) 8°. (Devcuter) ii.d. (1872). 3757 Presentation copy with inscription. HALBERTSMA (J. HIDDES). Aaateekeningen op het vierde deel van den Spiegel Historiael van Jacop van Maerlant . . [Notes on the IV" tome of HALBERTSMA (J. HIDDES)— cok^. Maerlant's Specukim Historiale a Dutch poem of the Xlllth Century.] 8°. De- venter, 1851. 3758 Letterkundige Naoogst van J. H. li. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. Deventer, 1840, 5. 37r,9 HALBERTSMA (TIALLINGIUS). Specimen literariuia continens priorera partem prosopographise Ari.stophaneae, quam. . . pro gradu doctoratus . . in aca- demia Lugduno— Batava . . submittet T. Halbert.sma . . 1855 . . 8°. Lugduni -Batav. n.d. [1855]. 3760 Presentation copy with inscription. HALE (MRS. SARAH JOSEPHA). Liberia ; or, Mr. Peyton's experiments. Edited by Mrs. S. .T. Hale. 8". London (and) New York, 1854. 37C1 HALEN (DON JUAN VAN). Memoirs of Don J. van Halen ; com- prising the narrative of his imprisonment in the dungeons of the Inquisition at Madrid, and of his escape, his journey -to Russia, his campaign with the army of the Caucasus, &c. Edited . . by the author of " Don Esteban " and " Sandoval." Second edition . . 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 37C2 HALES (JOHN) "THE EVER MEMORABLE." Golden Remains. [First ed.] (En- graved title-page and frontispiece by Hol- lar.) 8°. 1659. 3763 There is another title-page on the reverse of the conclusion of " Mr. Parindons letter " —Choice Sermons . . By M'. John Hales of Eton College, n.d. At 1 ho end of the Sermons— M'. Hales Letters from the Synod of Dort to Sr. Dudley Carlton ; (and) Acta Synodi. Abp. Temson's copy. HALFORD (SIR HENRY). Account of what appeared on opening the coffin of King Charles the first, in the vault of King Henry the eighth in St. George's chapel at Windsor, 1 April, 1813. 4°. 1813. 3764 HALIBURTON (THOMAS CHAND- LER) "SAM SLICK." Americans at home ; or, hyeways, back- woods, and prairies. Edited by the author of "Sam Slick." 3 vol. 8°. 1854. 3765 The Attache; or, Sam Slick in Eng- land. By the author of "The Clock- maker" . . New edition. 8°. IS.'il. 3766 English in America. By the author of "Sam Slick, the Clockmakcr" . . 2 vol. 8°. 1851. 3767 206 MALI BURTON (THOMAS CHAND- LER) "SAM SLICK"— con;. Nature and Human Nature. By the author of " Sam Slick, the Clockmaker." 2 vol. 8". 1855. 3768 The Old Judge ; or. Life in a Colony. By the author of " Sam Slick the Clock- maker" . . 2 vol. 8°. 1849. 3769 Sam Slick's wise saws and modern iu- . stances . . [Anon.] 2 vol. 8". 1853. 3770 Traits of American Humour, by Native Authors. Edited and adapted by the author of "Sam Slick" . . 3 vol. 8°. 1852. 3771 HALIFAX (CHARLES MONTAGUE, EARL OF). Works and Life. Including the His- tory of his Lordship's Times. [Second Title.] Poems . . (Portrait.) 8°. E. Curll, 1715. 3772 At end— "Will of CharleSi Lord Halifax. HALIFAX (GEORGE SAVILLE, MARQUIS OF). Character of Charles the Second : and political, moral and miscellaneous thoughts and reflections. 8°. 1750. (Three copies.) 3773 No. 1. Portrait. Miscellanies historical and philolo- gical : being a curious collection of pri- vate papers found in the study of a noble- man, lately deceas'd. [Anon.] 8°. 1703. (Two copies.) 3774 " Contains Sir John Bowrinpi'K Memoirs of his transactions mtii Cliarles I." Lown- Third edition. 12°. 1717. 3775 At the end— Letter to Charles Cotton ; and Puneral poem to the memory oJ George, Marquiss of Hallifax. HALL (CAPTAIN BASIL) R.N. Fragments of Voyages and Travels : chiefly for the use of young persons. First (—Third) series. 8°. 1840. 3776 Extracts from a Journal written on the coasts of Chili, Peru, and Mexico, in 1820-2. Two parts. 8°. 1840. 3777 Narrative of a voyage to Java, China, and the great Loo-Choo island. With accounts of Sir Murray Maxwell's attack on the Chinese batteries, and of an inter- view with Napoleon Buonaparte, at St. Helena, 8°. 1840. 3778 HALL (EDWARD). Chronicle ; containing the history of England, during the reign of Henry the fourth, and the succeeding monarchs, to the end of the reign of Henry the eighth . . [Edited by Sir Henry Ellis,] 4°. ,1809. 3779 HALL (GEORGE) BISHOP OF CHESTER. Gods appearing for the tribe' of Levi : improved in a Sermon preached at St. Pauls, Nov. 8 . . 4°. 1655. 3780 HALL (JAMES) JUDGE [U.S.A.]. Letters from the West ; containing sketches of scenery, manners, and cus- toms ; and anecdotes connected with the first settlements of the western sections of the United States. 8°. 1828. 3781 HALL (JOSEPH) BISHOP OF NOR- WICH. Ijetter written by a . . divine, to Wil- liam Laud, now L. Bishop of Canter- bury : concerning his inclination to Popery . . [Anon.] 4". n.p. n.d. 3782 MS. note inserted as to authorship. Por- trait of Laud inserted. Meditations and Vows divine and moral : serving for directions in Christian and civil practice : also a speech in parlia- ment, in defence of the canons made in convocation. 12°. 1851. 3783 Satires. With the illustrations of Bev. Thomas Warton. And additional notes by Samuel Weller Singer. (Portrait.) 12°. Chiswick, 1824. 3784 Sermon preach't to his Majesty at the Court of White-hall. Aug. 8. 4°. 1641. 3785 HALL (MARSHALL) M.D. Two-fold Slavery of the United States ; with a project of self-emancipation. With two maps. 12°. 1854. 3786 HALL (MRS. MATTHEW). Queens before the Conquest. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1854. 3787 HALL (REV. ROBERT). Miscellaneous Works and remains, with a memoir of his life, \>y Olinthus Gregory, and a critical estimate of his character and writings, by John Foster. (Portrait.) 8°, Bohn, 1846. 3788 HALL (SAMUEL CARTER). Baronial Halls, and picturesque edifices of England. From drawings by J. D. Harding, G. Cattermole, S. Front, W. Miiller, J. Holland . . Executed in litho- tint, under the superintendence of Mr. Harding. The text by S. C. Hall. Em- bellished ivith numerous engravings on wood. 2 vol. F°. 1848. 3789 Book of British Ballads. Edited by S. C. Hall. (Illustrated.) 8°. 1842. 3790 Date of the illuminated t.p. ISiJi. 207 HALL (SAMUEL CARTER)— con(. Book of Gems. Poets and artists of Great Britain. Edited by S. C. Hall. 8°. 1836. 3791 Modern poets and artists of Great Britain. Edited by S. C. Hall. 8°. 1838. 3792 HALL (MRS. SAMUEL CARTER). The Buccaneer. A tale. Revised by the Author. 12'>. 1840. 3793 Midsummer Eve : a fairy tale of love. 4°. 1848. 3794 The Outlaw : au historical romance. 12°. 1847. 3795 Pilgrimages to English Shrines. With notes and illustrations by E. W. Eairholt. New edition. 8°. 1853. 3796 Prince of the Fair Family. A fairy tale. (Illustrated.) 8°. n.d. 3797 The Whiteboy ; a Story of Ireland, in 1822. 2 vol. 8°. 1845. 3798 HALL (MR. AND MRS. SAMUEL CARTER). Ireland : its sceuery, character, &c. 3 vol. 8°. 1841-3. 3799 A Week at Killamey. 4°. 1843. 3800 HALL (SIDNEY). English Counties. With all the rail- roads accurately laid down . . Also, general maps of Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. [Atlas.] E°. n.d. 3801 HALL (ADMIRAL SIR WILLIAM HUTCHEON). Narrative, of the voyages and services of the Nemesis . . From notes of Com- mander W. H. Hall . . Second edition. S". 1844. 3802 " M' Colbum's revised copy." Nemesis in China, comprising a history of the late war in that country, with an account of the Colony of Hong-Kong. From notes of Captain W. H. Hall. And personal observations by W. D. Bernard. Third edition, with a new introduction. 8°. 1847. 3803 Inserted is an obituary notice of Admiral Sir W. H. Hall from the "Proceedings of the Eoyal Geographical Society," March 1879. HALLAM (HENRY). Constitutional History of England from the accession of Henry VII. to the death of George II. Second edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1829. 3804 Eighth edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1855. 3805 Index imperfect. Introduction to the Literature of Europe, in the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries. 4 vol. 8°. 1837-9. 3806 HALLAM (HENRY)— con*. Fifth edition. 4 vol. 8". 1855. 3807 Literary essays and characters. Se- lected from " Au introduction to the Literature of Europe." 12°. 1852. 3808 View of the state of Europe during the Middle Ages. 3 vol. Third edition. 8°. 1822. 3809 Eleventh edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1855. 3810 HALLER (ALBERT V.). The Moderate Monarchy, or principles of the British Constitution, described in a narrative of the life and maxims of Alfred the Great and his counsellors. From the German of A. V. Haller. To which are added, notes and commentaries on the present state of the British Constitution. By Francis Steinitz. (Portrait of Alfred the Great.) 8°. 1849. 3811 HALSTED (CAROLINE AMELIA). Kichard III. as Duke of Gloucester and King of England. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1844. 3812 HAMBERG (REV. THEODORE). Chinese rebel chief, Huug-siu-tsuen ; and the origin of (he insurrection in China. With an introduction by George Pearse. 12". 1855. 3813 HAMBLETON (JOSEPH). Developement, strengthening, and con- tinued exercise of the Intellectual faculties, through a course of literary, scientific, and religious self-instruction . . 8°. London and Weymouth, 1837. 3814 [HAMBRO (C. J.)] Edda ; or, the Tales of a Grandmother. History of Denmark, first part, from the earliest ages to the death of Canute the Great. Edited by Philojuvenis. [C. J. Hamhro.] 12°. 1847. 3815 HAMERTON (PHILIP GILBERT). Isles Qf Loch Awe and other Poems of my youth. With sixteen illustrations. 12°. 1855. 3816 HAMILTON (ANTHONY, COUNT). Fairy Tales and Romances. Translated from the French by M. Lewis, H. T. Ryde, and C. Kenney. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1849. 3817 Memoirs of Count Grammont. New edition . . Biographical sketch of Count Hamilton, and a translation of the epistle to Count Grammont. Illustrated with portraits. 2 vol. 8°. 1811. 3818 " This edition has nearly 100 pages' of valu- able notes and illustrations from the pen of Sir Walter Scott." Lowndes, 208 HAMILTON (ANTHONY, COUNT) - cont. Memoirs of the Court of Charles the Second, hy Count Graramont, with nume- rous additions and illustrations, as edited by Sir Walter Scott. Also : the personal history of Charles, including the King's own account of his escape and preserva- tion after the battle of Worcester, as dictated to Pepys. And the Boscohel Tracts (by Thomas Blount), or, contem- porary narratives of his Majesty's adven- tures, from the murder of his father to the Restoration. Carefully edited, with addi- tional illustrations. 8°. Bohn, 1846. 3S19 HAMILTON (EMMA, LADY). Memoirs of Lady Hamilton ; with, illus- trative anecdotes of many of her . . friends and . . contemporaries . . Portrait after Eomney. [Anon.] 8°. 1815. 3830 HAMILTON (JAMES) D.D. The Happy Home. Affectionately in- scribed to thfe working people. By the author of "Life in earnest." 12°. 1848. 382] HAMILTON (JOSEPH). Extracts from various works of J. Ha- milton [on Duelling, etc.]. 12°. n.p. [? Dublin] n.d. 3822 The last piece in the vol. is signed " Emilia Eleanor Hamilton " and includes a " Peti- tion " by Cobbett. HAMILTON (NICHOLAS ESTER- HAZY STEPHEN ARMYTAGE). Inquiry into the genuineness of the manuscript corrections in M'. .T. Payne Collier's annotated Shakspere, Folio, 1632 ; and of certain Shaksperian documents likewise published by M''. Collier. (Fac- similes.) 4°. 1860. 3823 HAMILTON (THOMAS). Annals of the Peninsular Campaigns. New edition — revised and augmented by Frederick Hardmau. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1849. 3824 Men and Manners in America. New edition, with portrait of the author, and letters written by him during his journey through the United States. 12". Edin- burgh and London, 1 843. 3825 HAMll,TON (WILLIAM J.). Researches in Asia Minor, Pontus, and Armenia ; with some account of their antiquities and geology. 2 vol. 8". 1842. 3826 HAMLEY (SIR EDWARD BRUCE), The Position on the Alma in seven sketches from the field on the day after the battle. (With letter-press.) Oblong. Edinburgh and London, 1 8.5.5. 3827 HAMPDEN (JOHN) JUN. pseud. The Aristocracy of England : a history for the people. 12°. 1846. 3828 HANBURY (MRS. DAVID). One day in the Life of a Stag, with illustrations by E. R. Smyth. 1847. Obion?. 3829 [HANCARVILLE (PIERRE FRAN- gOIS HUGUES D').] Eecherches sur I'origine, I'esprit et les progrfes des arts de la Gr^ce ; sur leur connexion avec les arts et la religion des plus anciens peuples connus ; sur les monumens antiques de I'lnde, de la Perse, du reste de I'Asie, de I'Europe et de I'Egypte. [Anon.] 2 vol. 4°. 17S5. 3830 Supplement . . Contenant des observations nouvelles, sur I'origine des idees employees dans les anciens emblemes xeligieux ; sur les raisons qui les firent choisir ; sur les suites du Deluge universel ; snr les origines des Scythes, des Chinois, & des Indiens ; sur la religion primitive de ces peuples; sur celle des anciens Perses, &c. 4°; 1785. 3831 HAND. The Hand phrenologically considered : being a glimpse at the relation of the mind with the organisation of the bodj-. 8°. 1848. 3832 HANMER (JOHN, BARON). Sonnets. 8°. 1840. 3833 HANMER (SIR THOMAS). Correspondence of Sir T. Hanmer, Speaker of the House of Commons. With a memoir of his life. To which are added, other relicks of a gentleman's family. Edited by Sir Henry Bunbury. 8°. 1838. 3834 HANNA (REV. WILLIAM) LL.D. Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Thomas Chalmers, D.D. 4 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1849-52. 3835 HAN NAY (JAMES). Biscuits and Grog. Personal reminis- cences and sketches. By Percival Plug, E.N. Edited by J. Hauuay. 12". 1848. 3836 A elaret-cup. Further reminiscences and sketches, of Percival Plug, R.N. 12°. 1848. .3837 Hearts are Trumps. An amphibious storv. Hlustrations by Phiz. 12". 1849. 3838 Satire and Satirists. Six Lectures. 8°. 1854. 3839 Imperfect, wnntini; pp. 145-102, fiOO HAPPY DELIVERANCE. Happy deliveiauce, or, woiideifull pre- servation of foure . . Peeres of this King- dome, and some others. Who should have bcene poysoued at a supper in St Martins Lane neere Charing - Crosse, Tuesday, 11. Ian. 1641. viz. The Earle of Leicester. Earle of Essex. Earle of Holland. Earle of Northumberland. With some others. Whcreunto is an- nexed five articles preferred by the Com- mons against M'. Herbert the Kings At- turney Generall. 4". 1641. 3840 HARCOURT (EDWARD VERNON). Sketch of Madeira ; containing infor- mation for the traveller, or invalid visitor. Maps and views. 8°. 1851. 3841 HARDING (JAMES DUFFIELD). Guide and Companion to the " Lessons on Art." 8°. u.d. 3842 Lessons on Art. Second edition. 8". n.d. 3843 Principles and Practice of Art. With illustrations drawn and engraved by the Author. F". 1845. 3844 HARDINGE (HENRY, Isi VIS- COUNT) AND OTHERS. War in India. Despatches of Viscount Hardinge, governor-general ; Lord Gough, commander-in-chief; Sir Harry Smith, and other documents ; comprising the en- gagements of Moodkee, Ferozeshah, Ali- wal, and Sobraon ; with a map of the country, and seven plans of the positions of the army. Second edition. 8". 1846. (Two copies.) 3845 HARDIVILLER ( — D'). Souvenirs des Highlands Voyage a la suite de Henri V en 1832 Relation, scenes, portraits, paysages et costumes. 4°. Paris, 1835. 3846 HARDMAN (FREDERICK). Peninsular Scenes aud Sketches. By the author of " The Student of Salamanca." 12". Edinburgh aud London, 1846. 3847 HARDWICKE (PHILIP YORKE, 2d EARL OF). Miscellaneous State I'apers. From 1501 to 1726. 2 vol. 4". 1778, 3848 HARDY (FRANCIS). Memoirs of the political and private life of James Caulfield, Earl of Charlemont. (Portrait.) 4». 1810. 3849 HARDY (SIR THOMAS DUFFUS). Memoirs of Henry [Bickersteth] Lord Langdale. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1852. 3850 o 16505, HARDY (SIR THOMAS DUFFUS)— cont. Syllabus (in English) of the documents relating to England and other Kingdoms contained in . . " Eymer's Foedera." By [Sir] T. D. Hardy. Under the direc- tion of the Master of the Rolls . . Vol. I. 1066-1377. Vol. II. 1377-1654. 8°. 1869, 1873. 3851 HARDYNG (JOHN). Chronicle. Containing an account of public transactions from the earliest period of English history to the beginning of the reign of Edward the fourth. [>retrical.] With the continuation by Richard Graf- ton, to the thirty fourth year of Henry the eighth . . Biographical and literary pre- face, and Index, by [Sir] Henry Ellis. 4°. 1812. 3852 HARE (AUGUSTUS JOHN CUTH- BERT). Epitaphs for countr3- churchyards. Collected and arranged by A. J. C. Hare. 12''. Oxford and London, 1850. 3853 HARE (JULIUS CHARLES) ARCH- DEACON OF LEWES. Charges to the clergy of the Arch- deaconry of Lewes in 1843, 1845, 1846 . . With an introduction, explanatorj' of his position in the church with reference to the parties which divide it. 8°. Cam- bridge, 1856. 3854 The Contest with Rome : a charge to the clergy of the Archdeaconry of Lewes . . 1851. With notes, especially in an- swer to D'. Newman's recent lectures. 8°. 1852. 3855 Duty of the Church in times of trial : a charge to the clergy of the Archdeaconry of Lewes . With notes, especially on the controversy touching the manage- ment of schools, and on the Jewish ques- tion. 8°. 1848. 3856 Vindication of Luther against his recent English assailants. Second edition, re- printed and enlarged from the notes to the Mission of the Comforter. 8". 1855. 3857 HARE (JULIUS CHARLES AND AUGUSTUS WILLIAM). Guesses at Truth by Two Brothers : second edition : with large additions. Second series. 12''. 1848. 3858 " To my dear friend, W. S. Landor Ma.v 25 1848 i. C. H." " Given by Landor to me J. F. 1850. Guesses at Truth by Two Brothers. (Portraits.) 12"'. 1866. 3859 HARGRAVE (FRANCIS). Juridical Arguments and collections. 2 vol. (in one). 4°. 1797-9. 3 860 210 MARGRAVES (EDWARD HAM- MOND). Australia and its Gold Fields : a his- torical sketch of the progress of the Aus- tralian colonies, from the earliest times to the present day ; with a particular ac- count of the recent gold discoveries, and observations on the present aspect of the laud question . Notices on the use and working of gold in ancient and modern times ; and an examination of the theories as to the sources of gold. Map and por- trait. 8°. 1855. 3861 HARINGTON (SIR JOHN). Nugae Antiquae : being a miscella- neous collection of original papers in prose and verse. Written in the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI., Mary, Eliza- beth, James I., &c. By Sir J. Harington, and others who lived in those times. With an original plate of the Princess Elizabeth, engraved 1554 . . Appendix, containing a specimen of some lettei's from a Georgian merchant at Bath to his friend in Lon- don. 2 vol. 12°. London and Bath, 1769, 1775. (2 copies.) 3862 Title-page nm tilated in both copies. No. 2. has no portrait. Title-pa^e of Vol. 2 says "Selected from a.uthentic remains, by Henry Harington." Nugae Antiquae . . selected . . by Henry Harington, and newly arranged, with notes, by Thomas Park. Vol. II. 8°. 1804. 3863 HARLE (WILLIAM LOCKEY). A Career in the Commons : or letters to a young member of parliament, on the conduct and principles necessary to con- stitute him an enlightened and efficient re- presentative. 8°. 1850. (Two copies.) 3864 HARMONY. Conversations on Harmon)'. By the Author of " Conversations on Botany." 8°. 1855. 3865 HARNESS (REV. WILLIAM). The First-Born. A drama. [Anon.] 12°. Printed for private circulation, 1844. 3866 Presentation copy to M'. Forster. State of the English Bible . . 12°. 1856. 3867 Welcome and Farewell, a tragedy . . [Anon.] 12°. Loudon, printed. n.d. (1837). (2 copies.) 3868 No. 1. Charles Dickens's copy. HARRINGTON (JAMES). [Title-page wanting. Works.] (Frontis- piece and Portrait.) F°. [? 1737.] 3869 Life of Harrington appears also to be want- ing. Pirst tract— Grounds and reasons of Mon- archy consider'd— by Jolm Hall. HARRIOTT (JOHN). Struggles through life, exemplified in the various travels and adventures in Europe, Asia, Africa, and America, of J. Harriott. To which are added Thoughts on the subject of police, suggestions arising from the abuse of private mad houses, contemplations on death, and the philo- sophy of religion. 3 vol. Third edition. (Portrait inserted.) 12". 1815. 3870 [HARRIS (MISS E. F. S.).] From Oxford to Rome : and how it fared with some who lately made the journey. By a companion traveller. 1 2°. 1847. 3871 Rest in the Church. By the author of " From Oxford to Eorne." 12°. 1848. 3872 Via Dolorosa : being the Catholic de- votion of the Stations ; prepared as » special ofiSce for the use of English people. . . Translated and arranged by the Author of " From Oxford to Bome " . . 12°. 1848. 3873 HARRIS (JAMES). Hermes or a Philosophical Inquiry con- cerning Universal Grammar. Fifth edi- tion. 8°. 1794. 3874 Miscellanies. 3 vol. 8°. 1771-5, 3875 Vol. 1. Hermes.— Third edition. 2. Three Treatises. Concerning Art- Music painting and poeti-y — Happiness. Third edition. 3. Philosophical arrangements. Philological Inquiries in three parts. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1781. 3876 HARRIS (WILLIAM) D.D. Historical and critical account of the lives and writings of James I. and Charles I. and of the lives of xpiiver Cromwell and Charles II. after the manner of Bayle . . New edition, with a life of the Author, a general Index, &c. 5 vol. 8°. 1814. 3877 Vol. T. Also Historical and critical account of Hugh Peters. Book-plate of Et. Hon. George Rose. HARRIS (SIR WILLIAM CORN- WALL! S). Highlands of JEthiopia (described, dur- ing eighteen mouths' residence of a British embassy at the Christian Court of Shoa). 3 vol. 8°. 1844. 3878 [Half Title.] Introduction to the second edition of the Highlands of Ethiopia. 8°. n.p. (1844). 8879 HARRIS ( — ). Recollections of Rifleman Harris, (old 95th.) with anecdotes of his officers and his comrades. Edited by Henry Curling. 8°. 1848. 3880 211 HARRISON (JAMES BOWER). Medical aspects of Death, and . . of the human mind. 12°. 1852. 3881 HARRISON (MAJOR GENERAL JOHN) AND OTHERS. Speeches and prayers of Major General Harison, John Carew, M'. Justice Cooke, Hugh Peters, Tho. Scott, Gregory Clement, Col. Adrian Scroop, Col. John Jones, Col. Daniel Axtell, and Col. Fran. Hacker . . With . . speeches and passages in their imprisonment till they came to the place of execution . . 4°. n.p. 1660. 3882 Princess Elizabeth's copy. MS. note. HARRISON (REV. MATTHEW). Rise, progress, and present structure of the English Language. 8°. 1848. 3883 HARRISON (ROBERT). Colonial Sketches : or, five years in south Australia, with hints to capitalists and emigrants. 12°. London and New- castle-on-Tyne, 1862. 3884 HARSTON (REV. EDWARD). Rhyming chronicle of incidents and feelings. Edited by [Rev.] E. Harston. 12". 18.50. 3885 HARTE (BRET). Poems. 12°. Boston [U.S.] 1871. 3886 HARVARD. Bulletin of the museum of comparative zoology, at Harvard College, Cambridge, Mass. . . Contributions to the Fauna of the Gulf Stream at great depths. (3d Series, 1869.) Echinoderms, by Alexander Agassiz, Theodore Lyman, and L. E. de Pourtales. General report by Louis Agassiz. 8°. Cambridge [U.S.] n.d. (1869). 3887 pp. 253-386. HARVARD MEMORIAL BIO- GRAPHIES. [" Memoirs of those graduates and former undergraduates of Harvard University ■who fell in battle during the recent war, or who died in consequence of services rendered in the contest."] 2 vol. 8°. Cambridge [U.S.] 1866. 3888 Preface signed "Thomas Wentwovth Hig- ginson." HARVEY (MRS. A. J.). Our Cruise in the Claymore, with a visit to Damascus and the Lebanon. 8°. 1861. 3889 [HARVEY (WALLACE).] Chronicles of Saint Mungo : or, anti- quities and traditions of Glasgow. [Anon.] 8". Glasgow, 1S43. 3890 HARVEY (WILLIAM HENRY) M.D. Manual of the British marine Algae : containing . . descriptions of all the known British species of sea-weeds. With plates . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 3891 Sea-side book; being an introduction to the natural history of the British eo.Tsfs. 12°. 1849. 3892 HARWOOD (EDWARD) D.D. View of the various editions of the Greek and Roman Classics, with remarks. Fourth edition . . View of the prices of the early editions of the Classics at the late sale of the Pinelliau library. 12°. 1790. 3893 HARWOOD (PHILIP). German Anti-Supernaturalism. Six lectures on Strauss's " Life of Jesus " . . 8°. 1841. 3894 HASE (HEINRICH). Public and private life of the ancient Greeks. Translated firom the German [by M". Austin]. 12°. 1836. (Two copies.) 3895 HASSALL (ARTHUR HILL) M.D. Food and its adulterations ; comprising the reports of the analytical sanitary com- mission of "The Lancet" 1851 to 1854 inclusive, revised and extended . . en- gravings . . 8°. 1855. 3896 HAUFF (WILHELM). The Caravan, and other tales. From the German. 12°. n.d. 3897 Sepiirate t.p. to "The Portrait of the Emperor. Also in this vol. " Napoleon (From the Italian of Manzoni)." Signed " B.M." rVerses.] . and 3898 Another copy of the Portrait Napoleon . . [HAUGHTON (WILLIAM).] Pleasant comedie called, A Woman will have her will . . [Anon.] 4°. 1631. 3899 The head-hue (almost tteoughout) is "English-men for my money: or, A "Woman [etc.]" P. mutilated. HAVELOCK (MAJOR-GENERAL SIR HENRY). Personal narrative of the marches of the Bengal troops of the army of the Indus in 1838-39. Illustrated with views and plans, by Birevet Major Kershaw. 8°. n.p. [printed in India] n.d. (1839). 3900 No views or plans in this copy, which, has MS. corrections. At the end— Appendix. HAWES (WILLIAM) M.D. Account of the late D'. Goldsmith's illness, so far as relates to the exhibition o 2 212 HAWES (WILLIAM) M.D.—cont. of T)'. James's Powder. An examiuatiou of the Rev. M'. John Wesley's Primitive Physic : and an address to the public on premature death and premature interment. 8". 1780. 3901 Autograph and book-plate of T. JoUey. HAWKINS (SIR JOHN). Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. 8". 1787. 3902 Bookplate of S. Parmer, Nonsuch Park. HAWKINS (LAETITIA-MATILDA). Memoirs, anecdotes, facts, and opinions, collected and preserved by L. M. Hawkins. 2 vol. 8°. 1824. 3903 HAWKINS (SIR RICHARD). Observations of Sir E. Hawkins, kuight, in his voyage into the South Sea. 1593. P". 1622. 3904 HAWORTH (EUPHRASIA FANNY). St. Sylvester's Day, and other poems. With illustrative designs by the author. 8°. 1847. 3905 HAWTHORNE (GEORGE STUART) M.D. Doctrine of the Trinity, a doctrine not of divine origin : and the duty of Christian men in relation thereto. 8°. 1851. 3906 HAWTHORNE (NATHANIEL). Mosses from an old Manse. In two parts. (2 vol.) 12°. 1846. 3907 Passages from the American note-books of N. Hawthorne. 2 vol. 8°. 1868. 3908 The Scarlet Letter : a romance. 8°. 1851. 3909 Twice told tales. 8°. u.d. 3910 Wonder -book for girls and boys. With engravings bj' Baker from designs by Billings. 12°. Boston [U.S.] 1852. 3911 Tanglewood Tales, for girls and boys : being a second wonder-book. With illus- trations. 12°. 1853. 8912 HAXTHAUSEN (BARON AUGUST VON). Russian Empire, its people, institutions, and resources. Translated by Robeit Farie. 2 vol. 8°. 1856. 3913 Transcaucasia. Sketches of the nations and races between the Black Sea and the Caspian. With illustrations by Graeb. (Translated by J. E. T[aylor?].) 8". 1854. " 3914 Tribes of the Caucasus . Schnmyland the Murids. (Translated by J. E. Taylor.) 8». 185,). '3915 HAY (DAVID RAMSAY). Natural principles of Beauty, as de- veloped in the human figure. 8°. Edin- burgh and London, 1852. 3916 HAYDN (JOSEPH). Beatson's political index modernised. The Book of Dignities ; containing rolls of the official personages of the British empire . . from the earliest periods to the present time . . With the sovereigns of l?urope . . the peerage of England and of Great Britain .. 8°. 1851. 3917 Dictionary of Dates, and universal re- ference, relating to all ages and nations with copious details of England, Scotland, and Ireland . . from the earliest accounts to the present time. Seventh edition, with additions and corrections by B. Vincent. 8°. 1855. 3918 HAYDON (BENJAMIN ROBERT). Correspondence and Table talk. With a memoir by his son, Frederic Wordsworth Haydon. With facsimile illustrations from his journals. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1876. 3919 Lectures on Painting and Design : origin of the art — anatomy the basis of drawing — the skeleton — the muscles of man and quadruped — standard figure — composition . — colour — ancients and moderns — invention. With designs drawn by himself on the wood, and engraved by Edward Evans. 8°. 1844. 3920 (Vol. II.) Fuzeli—Wilkie— effect of the societies on taste — a competent tribunal — on fresco — Elgin marbles — Beauty. With designs on the wood by himself. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1846. _ 3921 HAYES (EDWARD), Ballads of Ireland ; collected and edi- ted, by E. Hayes. Fourth edition. 2 vol. 12°. Edinburgh and Fjondon, 1855. 3922 " John Porster Esq. with the best regards of [Sir] 0. GavanDuffy. May 1865." MS. notes by Sir C. G. Dutfy. HAYGARTH (HENRY WILLIAM). Recollections of bush life in Australia, during a residence of eight years in the interior. 12°. 1848. 3923 HAYLEY (WILLIAM). Memoirs of the life and writings of W. Hayley, the friend and biographer of Cowper, written by himself. With ex- tracts from his private correspondence and unpublished poetry. And memoirs of his son Thomas Alphonso Hayley, the young sculptor. Edited by John Johnson, LL.D. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 4°. 1823. 3924 HAYS (MATILDA M.). Helen Stanley, a Tale. 8°. 1846. 3925 213 HAYWARD (ABRAHAM). Art of Dining; or, Gastronomy and gastronomers. [Anon.] 12°. 1852. 3926 Lord Chesterfield : his life, character, and opinions. And George Selwjn : his life and times. 12°. 1854. 3927 HAYWARDE (SIR JOHN). rirst part of the life and raigne of King Henrie the IIII. Extending to the end of the first yeare of his raigne. Written hy I. H. 4°. John Wolfe, 1599. (Two copies). 3928 No. 1. Portrait inserted of Hem'.y IV. MS. notes. Lives of the IIL Normans, Kings of England : William I. William II. Henrie 1. Written by I. H. (Portraits inserted.) 4°. 1613. 3929 HAZLITT (WILLIAM), Characteristics : in the manner of Iloohefoucault's Maxims. Second edition. With introductory remarks by the editor of the " Monthly Kepository." (E.H.Horne.) 12°. 1837. 3930 Characters of Shakspeare's plays. Third edition. Edited by his son. 12°. 1838. (Two copies.) 3931 Conversations of James Northcote, R.A. (Portrait of Northcote.) 8°. 1830. 3932 Criticisms on Art : and sketches of the picture galleries of England. With cata- logues of the principal galleries, now first collected. Edited by his son. 12°. 1843. 3933 Second series. Edited by his son. 12°. 1844. 3934 Eloquence of the British Senate ; hemg a selection of the best speeches of the most distinguished parliamentary speakers, from the beginning of the reign of Charles I. to the present time. With notes . . 2 vol. Second edition. 8°. 1812. 3935 Essays on the principles of human action ; on the systems of Hartley and Hel- votius : and on abstract ideas. 8°. n.d. 393B Lectures on the Dramatic literature of the age of Elizabeth; delivered at the Surrey Institution. Second edition. 8°. 1821. 3937 Third edition. Edited by his son. 12°. 1840. 3938 Lectures on the English Comic Writers. Delivered at the Surry Institution. 8°. 1819. ^^^^ " For the Surry Institution Library, from the Author." Third edition. Edited by his son. 12°. 1841. ^^"^9 Lectures ou the English Poets. Deli- vered at the Surrey Institution. Second edition. 8°. 1819. ^ ^ ^. „ 394^ Third edition. Edited by his bon. 12°. 1841. 3'J42 HAZLITT (WILLIAM)— conf. Letter to William Gifford. 8°, 1819. 3043 Liber Amoris ; or, the New Pygmalion. [Anon.] 8°. 1823. 3944 Life of Napoleon Buonaparte. Second edition, revised by his Son. 4 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1852. 3945 Literary Remains. With a notice of his life, by his son, and thoughts on his genius and writings, by E. L. Bulwer [Lord Lyttou], and Sergeant [Sir T. N.] Tal- fourd. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1836. 3946 New and improved Grammar of the English Tongue . in which . . the dis- coveries of Home Tooke . . are, for the first time incorporated. To which is added, a new guide to the English Tongue . . by Edward Baldwin [i.e. WiUiam Godwin.] 12°. 1810. 3947 Notes of a Journey through Erance and Italy. [Anon.] 8°. 1826. 3948 Plain Speaker : opinions on hooks, men, and things. [Anon.] 2 vol. 8°. 1826. 3949 Select Poets of Great Britain . To which are prefixed. Critical notices of each Au- thor. 8°. 1825. [Reissue.] 3950 Political essays, with sketches of public characters. 8°. 1819. 3951 Round Table : a collection of essays on literature, men, and manners. Third edi- tion. Edited by his Son. 12°. 1841. 3952 " 'Written in conjunction with Leigh Hunt." ■ Lowndes. Sketches and Essays. Now first col- lected by his Son. 12°. 1839. 3953 " With MS. notes by Leigh Hunt." Spirit of the Age : or contemporary portraits. [Anon.] 8°. 1825. 3954 Bentham — Godwin — Coleridge — Irving — Home Tooke — Scott— B.yron — Campbell and Crabbe— Mackintosh— Wordsworth — Malthas — Gifflord — Jeffrey — Brougham and Burdett — Eldon and "Wilberforce — Southey — Moore and Leigh Hunt — EUa [C. Lamb] and Geotlrey Crayon ["W. Irv- ing] (and Sheridan Knowlefi). Table Talk ; or, original essays on men and manners. Second edition. [Anon.] 2 vol. S°. 1824. 3955 Third edition. Edited hy his Son. 2 vol. 12°. 1845-6. 3956 View of the English Stage ; or, a series of dramatic criticisms. 8°. 1818. 3957 Winterslow : essays and characters written there. Collected by his son. 12°. 1850. 3958 HAZLITT (WILLIAM) JUN. Classical Gazetteer : a dictionary of ancient geography. 8". 1851. 3959 214 HAZLITT (WILLIAM CAREW). Eemaiiis of the early popular poetry of England ; collected and edited, with intro- ductions and notes, by W. C. Hazlitt. 8°. 1864. 3960 Presentation copy. HEAD (SIR EDMUND WALKER). Hand-hook of the history of the Spanish and French Schools of Painting. In- tended as a sequel to " Kugler's hand- books of the Italian, German, and Dutch Schools of Painting." 8°. 1848. 3961 HEAD (SIR FRANCIS BOND). Bubbles from the Brunnens of Nassau. By an old man. 8°. 1834. 3962 Defenceless state of Great Britain. 8°. 1850. 3963 The Emigrant. Sixth edition. 12°. 1852. 3964 Faggot of French Sticks . . 8°. 2 Tol. 1852. 3965 Inserted in vol. 2 — Faggot oE French Sticks. By Sir F. Block Head, Bart. Signed "Hookey Walker December 18, 1S51." 3 leaves. Fortnight in Ireland. 8°. 1852. 3966 High-ways and Dry-ways ; or, the Britannia and Conwav tubular bridges . 12°. 1849. ■ 3967 Life of Bruce, the African traveller. (Portrait.) 12°. 1830. 3968 Rough notes taken during some rapid journeys across the Pampas and among the Andes. Fourth edition. 8°. 1846. 3969 Stokers and Pokers : or, the London and North-Western railway, the electric telegraph, and the railway clearing-house . . 12°. 1849. 3970 HEAD (SIR GEORGE). Home. A tour of many days. 3 vol. 8°. 1849. 3971 HEALTH. Best and easiest method of preserving uninterrupted health to extreme old age . . from a manuscript found in the library of an eminent physician . . 12°. 1748. 3972 HEARNE (THOMAS). Impartial Memorials of the life and writings of Thomas Ilearne, M.A. By several hands. (Portrait.) 8°.' 1736. 3973 Letters Addressed to T. Heame. Edited by Frederic Ouvry. 4°. Privately printed, 1874. ^ 3974 Reliquiae Hearnianae : the Remains of T. Hearne, being extracts from his MS. diaries . . collected with a few notes by Philip Bliss. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Oxford, 1857. 3975 HEARTS. Hearts in mortmain, and Cornelia. 8°. 1850. 3976 [HEATH (BENJAMIN).] A Revisal of Shakespear's text, wherein the alterations introduced into it by the more modern editors and critics, are par- ticularly considered. [Anon.] 8°. 1765. 3977 HEATH PRESS. [Half-title.] The Heath Press. Local and private. (No. 1. November, 1862 — No. 12.) 12". (Printed at " The Heath Press," Tadworth.) (1862-3.) 3978 Photograph inserted, believed to be oJ Mr. Hudson. [No title-page. The Heath Press. No. 1. November, 1862.— No. 25. 1867.] 12°. (Printed at "The Heath Press," Tad- worth, and at " The Burgh Heath Press.") (1862-7.) 3979 Presentation copies from " Gr. F. H[udson]." HEATON (CHARLES WILLIAM). Threshold of Chemistry : aii experi- mental introduction to the Science. With numerous illustrations. 8°. 1861. (Two copies.) 3980 HEBER (REGINALD) BISHOP OF CALCUTTA. Narrative of a journey through the upper provinces of India, from Calcutta to Bombay, 1824-5, (with notes upon Ceylon,) an account of a journey to Madras and the southern provinces, 1826, and letters written in India. 2 vol. 12°. 1844. 3981 Poems and translations. 12°. 1812. 3982 Poetical works. (Portrait.) 12°. 1841. 3983 HECKER (ALPHONSUS). Commentatio critica de Anthologia Graeca. 8°. Lugd. Bat. 1843. 3984 HEDDERWICK (JAMES). Lays of Middle Age : and other poems. 12°. Cambridge and Loudon, 1859. 3985 HEDERICUS (BENJAMIN). Graecum Lexicon manuale . . recen- situm . . a T. Morell. Editio nova cui accedit magnus verborum et exemplorum numerus ex schedis Petri Henr. Larcheri. 4°. 1825. 3986 HEEREN (ARNOLD HERMANN LUDWIG). Historical Treatises : the political con- sequences of the Reformation. The rise, progress, and practical influence of po- 215 HEEREN (ARNOLD HERMANN LUDWIG)— co««. litical theories. The rise and growth of the continental interests of Great Britain. Translated from the German. 8". Ox- ford, 1836. 3987 Manuel de I'histoire ancienne, cousi- der^e sous le rapport des constitutions, du commerce et des colonies des divers etats de I'antiquit^. Traduction enti^re- ment refondue et augraentee d'une intro- duction sur I'etude de I'histoire ancienne, par M. Baron. 2 vol. 12". Bruxelles, 1834. 3988 Manuel historique du systfeme politique des :fitats de I'Europe et de leurs colonies, depuis la deeouverte des Deux Indes. Traduit de I'Allemand sur la troisifeme edi- tion, et revu par Baron De Keiffenberg. 3 vol. 12°. Bruxelles, 1834. 3989 HEINE (HEINRICH). Book of Songs. A translation by John B. Wallis. 8°. 18.56. 3990 HELL (XAVIER HOMMAIRE DE). Travels in the Steppes of the Caspian Sea, the Crimea, the Caucasus, &o. With additions ftom various sources. 8°. 1847. 3991 HELLER (HEINRICH ADELBERT), Li Romans des sept Sages nach der Pariser Handschrift herausgegebeu von H. A. Heller. 8°. Tiibingen, 1836. •3992 HELPS (SIR ARTHUR). Claims of Labour. Essay on the duties of the employers to the employed. [Anon.] 12°. 1844. 3993 Second edition. To -which is added, Essay on the means of improving the health and increasing the comfort of the Labouring Classes. 12°. 1845. 3994 Companions of my Solitude. [Anon.] 8°. 1851. 3995 (Fourth edition.) 12°. 1854. (Two copies.) 3996 Conquerors of the New World and their Bondsmen being a narrative of the prin- cipal events which led to negro slavery in the West Indies and America. 2 vol. [Anon.] 8°. 1848, 1852. 3997 Essays written in the intervals of busi- ness. [Anon.] 8°. 1841. 3998 (Second edition.) 12°. 1842. 3999 Friends in Council : a series of readings and discourse thereon. Book the first. [Anou.] 8°. 1847. 4000 — — Book the second. 8°. 1849. 4001 New Series. 2 vol. 8°. 1859. 4002 HELPS (SIR ARTHUR)— con«. King Henry the second. An historical drama. [Anon.] 12°. 1843. 4003 Oulita the Serf. A tragedy. [Anon.] 12°. 1858. 4004 " John Fortil«r Esq : from the Author, with kind regards. Feb. 20. 1858." Spanish Conquest in America and its relation to the history of Slavery and to the government of colonies. Vol. I. II. 8°. 1835. 4005 Thoughts upon Government. 8°. 1872, 4006 HEMANS (MRS. FELICIA DORO- THEA). Forest Sanctuary ; and other Poems. 8°. 1825. 4007 HENDERSON (JOHN). Letters and Poems. With anecdotes of his life, by John Ireland. (Portrait in- serted.) 8°. 1786.' (Two copies.) 4008 ]Sb. 1. Portrait inserted. Book-plate of James Fisher. Autograph ol "G. C. Bedford." HENFREY (HENRY WILLIAM). Numismata Cromwelliana : or, the medallic history of Oliver Cromwell illus- trated by his coins, medals, and seals. Part I. With seven autotype illustrations. 4°. 1873. 4009 Part " I." has been altered in ink into "II," and seven struck out. There is only one plate. HENLEY (REV. JOHN) "ORATOR." [Tracts.] 8°; 1722-30 and n.d. 4010 MS. notes by Henley. Sion in perfect beauty ; or, the heaven of heavens : a Sermon deliver'd in the oratory by Lincoln's-Inn-Pields, Sunday, April 26, 1730. Oratory Transactions. No. I. To be oc- -casionally publish'd. Includes "A narrative" of Henley's Life by M^ "Welstede. Apotheosis. A funeral oration ; sacred to the memory of John Duke of Marlborough. As it was spoken on the day of his inteiT- ment. Cato condemn'd : or, the case and history of Self-Murder argu'd and display'd. Parti- cularly calculated to prevent it in the English nation : occasion'd by a Gentle- man of Gray's-Inn stabbing himself. A theological lecture, deliver'd at the Oratory. The History and advaaitages of Divine Kevelation, with the honour that is due to the Word of God. A sermon preach'd in St. George the Martyr, London, Nov. IB, 1724. Second edition. The impartial Churchman, considering the Discourses on the 30th of January, of the Bishop of Bristol B». CroxaU and D'. Trap. "With readings in the Hebrew noted : and a reflection on a principle of the Bishop of Sarum, and the dispute of Milton and Salmasius, Milboum and Bradbury. 21 G HENLEY (REV. JOHN) "ORATOR " — cont. The Butchers Lecture. Preach'd at New- port-Market, April 6. 1729. No. IV. of Oratory Transactions. Connicts of the death-bed. Sermon preach'd at the Oratory June 22, 1729. The Lord, He is God : or, the Atheist tor- mented, with a particular description of the force and terror of lightening:. Ser- mon. HENNELL (MARY). Outline of the Various Social S3'stems and communities which have heen founded on the principle of co-operation. AVith an introductory essay, by the author of " The Philosophy of necessity " [Charles Bray]. 8°. 1844. 4011 [HENNINGSEN (CHARLES FRED- ERICK).] Eastern Europe and the Emperor Nicholas. By the Author of "Revela- tions of Russia " ; " The White Slave." 3 vol. 8°. 1846. 4013 Revelations of Russia : or the Emperor Nicholas and his Empire, in 1S44. By one who has seen and describes. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 4013 Revelations of Russia in 1846, bj' an English Resident. Third edition [of N". 4013]. 2 vol. 8°. 3846. 4014 HENRY VII. KING OF ENGLAND. Will of king Henry VII. (and — Ap- pendix). 4". 1775. 4015 HENRY OF HUNTINGDON. Chronicle. Comprising the history of England, from the invasion of Julius Caesar to the accession of Henry II. Also, the acts of Stephen, King of Eng- land . . Translated and edited by Thomas Forester. 8°. Bohn, 1853. 4016 HENRY (ROBERT) D.D. History of Great Britain, from the first invasion of it by the Romans under Julins Caesar . . Sixth edition. 12 vol. 8°. 1823. 4017 HEPBURN (SIR JOHN). Epitaphium . . loanuis Hepburni Scoti equitis aurati et exercitus Gallici campi marescalli. [Anon.] [Lat.] Broadside. E". u.p. n.d. 4018 HERAUD (JOHN ABRAHAM). The Descent into Hell. Second edition . . Uriel, a fragment, and three odes. 8". 1835. 4019 HERBERT OF CHERBURY (ED- WARD, BARON). Life and reign of King Henry the eighth. F". 1683. 4020 HERBERT (GEORGE). Poetical Works. With life, critical dissertation, and explanatory notes, by Rev. George Gilfillan. 8°. Edinburgh, 1853. 4021 [Another edition.] Illustrated (by Birket Foster, John Clayton, and H. N. Humphreys.) 8". 1856. 4022 HERBERT (JOHN ROGERS) R.A. Legends of Venice. Illustrated by J. R. Herbert and edited by Thomas Roscoe. 4°. 1840. 4023 HERBERT (^THOMAS). Elegie upon the death of Thomas Earle of Strafford, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Who was beheaded upon Tower-Hill, the 12of Iilay, 1641. 8°. n.p. 1641. 4024 Reply in the defence of Oxford Peti- tion, with declaration of the Academians. Teares for the deca3' of learning, or, the Universities feares : also description of a reverend coachman which preached be- fore a company of Browuists. 4°. 1641. 4025 HERBERT (SIR THOMAS) AND OTHERS. Memoirs of the two last years of the reign of . . Charles I. By Sir Tho. Herbert, Major Huntington, Col. Edw. Coke, and M'. Hen. Eirebrace. With the character of that blessed martyr, by Rev. John Diodati, Alexander Henderson, and the author of the Princely-I'elican. Death- bed repentance of M'. Lenthal, Speaker of the Long-Parliament . . 8°. 1711. 4026 Separate title page to — An Answer . . b.y .John Deodate . . Geneva lij46 ; and to— The Princely Pelican . . 1649. Book-plate of Thomas Barrett of Lee. HERODOTUS. \iTTopiav . . Historiarum Libri IX Gr. & Lat. cum interpretatione Laurentii Vallae . . industria Jacobi Gronovii, cujus aecedunt notae . . Ejusdem narratio de vita Homeri Gr. Lat. interprete Conr. Heresbachio. Accedimt excerpta ex Xenophonte . . de Persicis . . item de ineremento Nili ex Plutarcho . . F". Lugd. Bat., 1715. 4027 H., with a Commentary by Joseph Williams Blakosley [aft. Deaii of Lincoln]. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 4028 ■H. New and literal version from the text of Baehr. With a geographical and general index. By Henry Gary. 8°. Bohn, 1848. 4029 History of IT. New English version, edited with notes and appendices, illustra- ting the history and geography of H., from the most recent sources of informa- tion ; and embodying the chief results, historical and ethnographical, which have 217 HERODOTUS— eo«<. been obtained in the progress of cuneiform and hieroglyphical discovevy. By George Kawlinson. Assisted by Col. Sir Henry liiitrliuson, and Sir J. G. Williinson. With Maps and illustrations. New edi- tion. 4 vol. 8°. 1862. 4030 Maps and plans illustrative of Hero- dotus . . 8°. Oxford, n.d, 4031 Supplement of illustrations to the se- cond book of Herodotus. 8°. Oxford, ISa."). 4032 HEROINAE. Heroinae : or the lives of Arria, Paulina, Lucrecia, Dido, Theutilla, Cypriana, Aretaphila. 12°. 1639. 4033 " Epistle dedicatorie " by *' G. Rivers." HERON (DENIS CAULFIELD). Constitutional history of the University of Dublin. With some _ account of its present condition, and suggestions for improvement. 8". Dublin, 1847. 4034 HERON (SIR ROBERT). . Notes. Second edition. 8°. Grantham and London, 18.51. 4035 HERRING (THOMAS) ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY. Letters to William Duncombe, from 1728 to 1757. With notes and an ap- pendix. 12°. 1777. 4036 HERSCHEL (SIR JOHN FREDERICK yVJLLIAM). Examples of the applications of the Calculus of finite differences. (Part III). 8°. Cambridge, 1820. 4037 Manual of Scientific enquiry ; prepared for the use of Her Majesty's Navy : and adapted for travellers in general. Edited by Sir J. F. W. Herschel. 8°. 1849. 4038 Outlines of Asti'onomy. 8°. 1849. 4039 Preliipinary discourse on the study of Natural ■ Philosophy. New edition. 12°. 1830. 4040 Kesults of Astronomical Observations made during 1834, 5, 6, 7, 8, at the Cape of Good Hope ; being the completion of a telescopic survey of the whole surface of the visible heavens, commenced in 1825. 4°. 1847. .4041 Treatise on astronomy. New edition. 12°. 1833. 4042 HERSHBERGFR (H. R.)- The Horseman. A work on horseman- ship ; containing plain practical rules for riding, and hints to the reader on the selection of horses. To which is annexed a sabre exercise . . With cuts . . 8°. New York, 1 844. 4043 HERTZ (B,). . Catalogue of the . . collection of . Antiquities, formed by B. Hertz, now the property of Joseph Mayer, of I;iverpool, which will be sold bv auction . . 7 Feb- ruary, 1859 . . 8°. "n.d. (1858). 4044 HERTZ (HENRIK). King Rene's Daughter. A Lyric drama. From the IJanish. By .fane Frances Chapman. 12°. 1845. 4045 HERVEY (REV. JAMES). Meditations and Contemplations : cou' taining meditations among the tombs, re- flections on a flower-garden, a descant on creation, contemplations on the night, contemplations on the starry heavens, and a winter-piece. New edition. (Portrait). 8°. Coventry, 1809. 4046 HERVEY (JOHN, BARON), Memoirs of the reign of George II, from his accession to the death of Queen Caroline. Edited . . bj' John Wilson Croker. 2 vol. (Portrait, etc.) 8°. 1848. 4047 Marginal pencil notes b.v T. Carlyle. HERVEY (MARY LEPEL, LADY). Letters. With a memoir, and illustra- tive notes [by J. W. Croker] . 8". 1821. 4048 (JOHN GEORGE HESEKIEL LOUIS). Life of Bismarck, private and political ; with notices of his ancestry. Translated and edited, with an introduction, uotes and Appendices, by Kenneth R. H. Mac- kenzie. Illustrations (including Portrait) . 8°. 1870. 4049 HESIODUS. H. Quae exstant ex recensione Thomae Robinsonii cum eiusdem los. Scaligcri [et aliorum] notis I. G. Graevii lectioui- bus Hesiodeis et D. Heinsii introductione in doctrinam Operum et Dierum. Ao- cesseruut . . U. Ruhnkenii animadver- siones . . curante C. F. Loesnero. 8°. Lipsiae, 1778. 4050 HEWETT (CAPTAIN J. F. NAPIER). European Settlements on the West Coast of Africa ; with remarks on the slave-trade, and the supply of cotton. 8°. 1862. 4051 HEWITT (JOHN). The Tower : its history, armories, and antiquities ; before and since the fire . . essay on English armour . . sketch of the history of gun-founding, and an ac- count of the improvement of hand fire- 218 HEWITT (JOHN)— eo«t arms . . With an historical notice and flescriptiou of the Crown Jewels . . lUus- ' trated with numerous original drawings. 12°. n.d. (1841). 40r)2 HEXAMETERS. English Hexameter translations from Schiller, Gothe, Homer, Callinus, and Meleager. Oblong. 1847. 4053 The initials of the translators are J. F. "W. H. ; W. W.; J. (J. H.; E. C. n.; and J. G. li. ; which probaWy stand for Sir J. P. W. Herschel, W. Whewell, 3. 0. Hare, B. C. Hawtrcy, and J. ,G. Lons- dale. [HEYLIN (PETER) D.D.] Cyprianus Anglicns : or, the history of the life and death of . . William [Laud] . . Archbishop of Canterbury . . Part I. .' . (and J?art II.). [Anon.] T". 1671. 4054 "Wants t.p. at beginning. Epistle dedica- tory signed "Henry Heylyn " (his sou). " Bobert Browning Nov. 24. 1836." Mar- ginal pencil notes by T. Carlyle. Observations on the historic of the reign of King Charles : published by H. L. [Hamon L'Estrange.] . . [Anon.] 8°. 1656. 4055 " Errata " wanting. HEYWOOD (JAMES). Collection of Statutes for the University and the Colleges of Cambridge : including various early documents ; and the letters patent, for the election of two members of parliament for the university and colleges. 8°. 1840. 4056 "Preface" signed "James Heywood." Early Cambridge university and college statutes, in the English language, collected by J. Heywood. (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1855. 4057 Eecommendatioue of the Oxford Uni- versity Commissioners, with selections from their report ; and a history of the University Subscription tests, including notices of the university and collegiate visitations. 8°. 1853. 4058 AND WRIGHT (THOMAS). Ancient Laws of the fifteenth century, for King's College, Cambridge, and for the public school of Eton College. Col- lected by J. Heywood and T. Wright. 8". 1850. " 4059 Cambridge University transactions dur- ing the Puritan controversies of the 16"' and 17th Centuries. Collected by J. Hey- wood; and T. Wright. 2 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1854. 4060 HEYWOOD (THOMAS). [No title-page. Cliallenge for Beautie . . 1636]. 4°. 4061 HEYWOOD (THOMAS)— conl. Eayre Maide of the Exchange : to- gether, -with the merry humours, and pleasant passages of the Cripple of Fan- church . . [Anon.] 4°. 4062 Title pa^e laid down and date mutilated. rwaiKeioi' : or, nine bookes of various History concerninge Women ; inscribed by y'^ names of y' nine muses. F°. 1624. 4063 If you know not me, you know no body. Or, The troubles of Queeue Elizabeth. [Anon.] (Woodcut of Q. Elizabeth on title.) 4°. 1632. 4064 Second part. With the building of the Royall Exchange. And the famous victory of Queene Elizabeth : Anno 1588. [Anon.] (Same woodcut). 4°. [Imprint and date cut off.] 4065 Book-plate of G. Chalmers. First and second parts of King Edward the Fourth. Contayning his merry pas- time with the Tanner of Tamworth, as also ■ his love to faire Mistres Shore . . Likewise the besieging of London by the Bastard Falconbridge^ and the valiant defence of the same by the Lo: Mayor and the Citizens . . [Anon.] Fourth impression. 4°. 1626. 4066 Heber's copy. One leaf made good with MS. Loves Mistresse : or The Queenes Masque . .. Second impression . . 4°. 1640. 4067 Bound in is a portion of a paper cover, showing that this copy came from "Fors- ter's sale 1806." Pleasant comedy, called A Mayden- head . . 4°. 1634. 4068 Title, etc. in MS. "Copied by M' Henderson. J. P. Kfemble]." MS. note on title, Eape of Lucrece. A true Roman tragedy . . Fifth impression. 4». 1638. 4069 Book-plate ol Sir Prancis Preeling. Reader, Here you'l plainly see Indge- ment perverted by these three : a priest, a judge, a patentee [i.e. Abp. Land, Lord Keeper Finch, and Alderman Abel]. (Woodcut on title.) 4°. n.p. 1641. 4070 The Royall King, and the Loyall Sub- ject . . 4°. 1637. 4071 AND ROWLEY (WILLIAM). Fortune by Land and Sea. A Tragi- comedy . . By T. Haywood and W. Rowly. 4°, 1655. 4072 219 HIEOVER (HARRY) pseud. i.e. CHARLES BRINDLEY OR BINDLEY. The Pocket and the Stud : or, practical hints on the management of the Stable. 12°. 1848. 4073 HIFFERNAN (PAUL) M.D. Dramatic Genius. In five books. Se- cond edition. 12°. 1772. 4074 HIGGONS (BEVILL). Historical and critical remarks on Bishop Burnet's History of his own time. Second edition . . Postscript, in answer to the London Journal . 8°. 1727. 4075 Short view of the English history . . to the revolution 1688 . . Second edition. 8°. 1735. 4076 Book-plate of John Darapier. HILDRETH (RICHARD). History of the United States of America, from the discovery of the Continent to the organization of government under the federal constitution. 3 vol. 8°. New York and London, 1850. 4077 Theory of Morals : an inquiry con- cerning" the law of moral distinctions and the variations and contradictions of ethical codes. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1844. 4078 Theory of Politics : an inquiry into the foundations of governments, and the causes and progress of political revolutions. 8°. n.d. 4079 HILDROP (JOHN) D.D. Miscellaneous Works. 2 vol. Con- taining, an essay for the better regulation and improvement of free-thinking. An essay on honour. Free thoughts upon the brute-creation . . Apology for the . . family of the wrongheads. A proposal for revising the ten Commandments. Contempt of the clergy. Life of Simon Shallow. 12°. 1754. 4080 HILL (FREDERIC). Crime : its amount, causes, and reme- dies. 8°. 1853. 4081 [HILL (SIR JOHN) M.D.] History of a woman of quality . . By an impartial hand. 12°. 1751. 4082 The Inspector. [Anon.] 2 vol. 12°. 1753. 4083 MS. notice of Hill. HILL (MICAIAH) AND CORNWALLIS (C. F.). Two prize essays on Juvenile Delin- quency. 8°. 1853. 4084 HILL (REV. PASCOE GRENFELL) R.N. Voyage to the Slave coasts of west and east Africa. ]2°. 1849. 4085 HILL (MRS, P.). Portraits, characters, pursuits, and amusements of the present fashionable world, interspersed with poetic flights of fancy. 12°. u.p. Printed for subscribers only. n.d. 4086 HILL (RICHARD). Diplomatic Correspondence of the Eight Hon. K. Hill, Envoy Extraordinary from the Court of St. James to the Duke of Savoy . . 1703, to 1706 . . illustrative of the . . Spanish Succession ; of the rights and liberties of the Vaudois, guaranteed by England, and of the wars in the Ce- vennes. Piedmont, and Lombardy . . With autographs . . Edited by Eev. W. Black- ley. Two parts (in 2 vol.) 8°. 1845. 4087 HILL (ROBERT GARDINER). History of the entire abolition of me- chanical restraint, iu the treatment of the insane ; and of the . . non-restraint system . . 8°. 1857. 4088 Presentation copy. HILL (S. S.). Travels in Siberio. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 4089 HILLARD (GEORGE STILLMAN). Six months in Italy. 2 vol. 8". 1853. 4090 HILLIER (GEORGE). Narrative of the attempted escapes of Charles the first from Carisbrook Castle, and of his detention in the Isle of Wight, from November, 1647, to the seizure of his person by the army, at Newport, in November, 1648. Including the letters of the King to Colonel Titus . . 8°. 1852. 4091 HIND (CAPTAIN JAMES). Declaration of Captain J. Hind . . Nar- rative . . of all his strange proceedings and travels . . upon his adventuring to the King of Scots at Sterling. With his letter to the said King . . 4°. 1651. 4092 MS. note. HINDS (WILLIAM) M.D. Harmonies of Physical Science iu rela- tion to the higher sentiments ; with obser- vations on the study of Medical science, and the moral and scientific relations of medical life. 8°. 1853. 4093 220 HINRICHS (DR. H. FR. W.). Die Konige. Entwickelungsgeschiolife des Konigthums von den altesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart. 8°. Leipzig, 1852. 4094 HIPPISLEY (J. H.). Chapters on early English literature. 8°. 1837. 4095 HIPPOCRATES. ApoUonii Citrensis . . [et] aliorum Scholia in Hippooratem et Galeunm . . primum Graeee edidit Fridericus Eein- holdus nietz. 2 vol. 8°. Regimontii Prussorum [KonigshergJ . 1834. 4096 HISTORICAL REGISTER. Historical Eegister, containing an im- partial relation of all transactions, foreign and domestic. (With a chronological diary . . ). Vol.1 (—XXIII). For the ■year 17 IC (— 1738). PuhlishM at the cxpence of the Sun Fire-office. 8°. 1717- (? 1738). 4097 "This work, seldom found complete, w&s published b.y the Sun Fire office [1714-38] to save their subscribers the expense of taking in a newspaper." Lowndes. Book- plate of John "Washer of Lincoln's Inn. Historical liegister . . With a chrono- logical diary of the most remarkable events and publick occurrences . . that happen'd from the last day of July, 1714, to the first day of January, 1716 . . With the characters and parentage of persons of eminent rank, who departed this life, during that time. 2 vol. 8°. 1724. 4098 These two vol. were intended as an addition to the Historical Megister which only commences witli 1710. HISTORICAL TRACTS. [Tracts collected and arranged by Lord Macaulay; and bought at his sale]. 14 vol. lettered A to N. 4°. & 8°. 4099 In all over 200 pieces, ranging between 1623 and 1827, but principally relating to a period immediately subsequent to the Re- volution. ^ Vol. A. Observations concerning the regu- lating ot elections for Parliament, found among the Earl of Shaftsbury's papers alter his death. 1689. King William's toleration : being an expla- nation of that liberty of religion, which may be expected from His Majesty's de- claration. With a Bill for comprehension and indulgence, losii. Vox Populi : or, the sense ot the sober lay- men of the church of England, concerning the heads proposed in his Majesties Com- mission to the Convocation. 1690. Concio nd Synodnm [etc.] per Guil.Bovere- giutn. 1689. Sermon preach'd before (lie Convocation ot the Bishops and Clergy of the province of Canterbury at Westminster. Printed in Latin. Bv W. Beveridge. Made English by J. n. 1689. Considerations upon the present state of affairs in England. 1092. HISTORICAL TRACTS— A— era/. Declaration of the confederate Princes and States, against Lewis the fourteenth. King of France. Delivered at Versailles, July 16,1689. Translated out ot Prenoh. 1689. Proposal for a National Bank. B.y Robert MTurray. 1695. Another edition. [1696.] Letter to a friend, coroeming a French in- vasion, to restore the late King James to his throne. 1693. Detestable designs of France expos'd. Or, the true sentiments of the Spanish Nether- landers : representing the injustice of the King of France by his declaration of waj* against his Catholick Majesty, and the justice of the counter-declaration of the M.ni'quess of Gastannaga his Govemour General of the Low- Countries. 1689. Europe's glory : or, peace and plenty to the people thereof. Being a scheam of reason- able terms, for establishing a peace, be- tween the monarch of Great Britain, in- cluding all the confederate Princes, and the French King. By Thomas Houghton. 1695. Plain man's essay for England's prosperity. 1698. Old and modern Whig truW represented. Vindication of the Earl of Kochester, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. And of several other true patriots. 1702. [No title-page. Second letter from a gentle- man in Ireland, to his friend in England : containing a farther account of the degra- dation of Forbes, and the secret conduct of the University of Dublin, in that affair.] B. Swan tripe-club : a satyr, on the High- flyers ; in 1706. 1710. New High-Church turn'd old Presbyterian. 1709. Bishop Atterbury's and Bishop Sroalridge's reasons for not signing the declaration ; lately put forth by the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury, and the other Bishops. With considerations on the Bishop of L 'n's letter to his clergy. 1715. Homerides : or, a letter to M' Pope, occasion'd by his intended translation of Homer. By Sir Iliad Doggi-el. 1715. Letter to M'. B a North-Wiltshire clergy- man, relating to an address from that Archdeaconry to the Queen. Wherein a character is given of the Bishop ot Sarum TBumet]. 1710. Election-dialogue concerning the choice of good members for the next parliament. 1710. D. of M[arlboroug]h's vindication : in answer to a pamphlet, call'd Bouchain. 1711. Memorial of the Church of England. Pro- face, wherein is contain'd the Ufe and death of the author (D'. James Drake), n.p. 1711. ' History of Arlus, Fortmiatus, andOdolphus, ministers of state to the Empress of Grand-Insnla. n.p. 1710. Dialogue of the dead ; between Signer Gli- bertim {^sio) and Coimt Thomaso, in the vales of Acheron. 1715. Letter to the House-of-Commons ; shewing the necessity of impeaching the principal agitators of the late Ministry, 1715. Second letter from n, country Wliig, to his friend in London ; rebiting to the matter of impeachments, &c. 1715. Schism Act explain'd. 1714. Muses fountain clear ; or, the dutiful Oxo- nian's defence of his mother's loyalty to King George, 1717. 221 HISTORICAL TRACTS— B—con<. Letter to Francis Hare, Dean of 'Worcester, occasion'd by his reflections on the Dis- senters. By Daniel Neal. 1720. Short history of the Gin Act. n.d. Historjf of French invasions, from the Re- volution to the present time. 1744. C. ChaiTioter of Richard St le, [Steele] Bsq. By Toby. ( Portrait ol " M'. Toby ") . 1713. [Imperfect], Account of the last distemper and death of Tom. Whigg, Esq ; who departed this life 22 September, 1710. (Frontispiece.) 1710. Judgment of whole kingdoms and nations, concerning the i-ights of Kin^s, and the rights of the people. Third edition. 1710. Mordecai's Memorial : or, there's nothinj^ done for him. 'Written by an unknown clergy-man. 1716. The mug "vindicated : to which is prellx'd, an account of those loyal societies [mug- houses]. 1717. Observations on the consiiiracies of the non- Jurors ; and their spiriting up Assassins and Murtherers : particularly James Shep- herd, lately executed at Tyburn. 'With remarks on his behaviour and last speech. 1718. Answer to Shepheard the Assassine's speech. Account of the treasonable wermon of Edwai'd Bissc, incumbent of St. George's parish, near Bristol. Second edition, 1718. General claim to Allegiance. 'With reflec- tions on the case of James Shepheard, and, how far M' Orme, the Nonjuring Minister was culpable in encouraging him to persist in his wicked principles. 1718. Defence of free-thinking in mathematics. In answer to a pamphlet intituled. Geo- metry no friend to infldelity. Appendix concerning M^ 'Walton's vindication of the principles of fluxions. By the author of The Minute Philosopher (i.e. Bishop Berkeley.] 1735. Defence of the old-stile, or, Julian account of time. 1751. T— t— m [Trentham] and V— d— t [Vande- put]. A collection of the advertisements and hand-bills published during the elec- tion for 'Westminster, begun November 22, 1749. Dublin, 1749. Remarkable Satires. The Causidicade, Triumvirade, Porcupinade, Processionade, 'Piscopade, Scandalizade, and the Pas- quinade. 'With notes variorum. 1760, [Causidicade wanting.] Last Illness and decease of the Duke of York : being a journal of occurrences which took place between 9 June, 1826, and 5 January, 1827. By Major-Gen. Sir Herbert Taylor. 1827. D. Justification of the whole proceedings of King William and Queen Mary, Prince George and Princess Ann, of the conven- tion, army, ministers of state, and others, in this Great Revolution. 1689. A word to the Wavering : or an answer to the Enquiry into the present state of affairs : whether we owe allegiance to the king in th'ese circumstances ? &c. With a postscript of Subjection to the Higher Powers: byD' G. B 1689. ["By D' Hicks." MS. on title.'} Justiflcation of the Prince of Orange's de- scent into England,, and of the kingdoms late recourse to arms. 1689. The case of Allegiance in our present cir- cumstances consider'd. 1689. Resolution of certain queries concerning submission to the present government. By a divine. 1689. HISTORICAL TRACTS— D—co;,/. Considerations humbly offered for taking the oath of allegiance to King William and Queen Mary. 1689. Relation of the actions of the Inniskilling- Men, from their first taking up of arms December, 168S. By Andrew Hamilton, rector of Kilskerrie. 1690. Chuse which you will, liberty or slavery : or the diinger of being again subjected to a Popish prince. 1692. Account of the Sessions of Parliament in Ireland, 1692. 1693. Collection of transactions in Parliament, in 1678, and aftenvards ; in relation to the impeachment of Thomas Earl of Danby. 1695. Enquiry whether it can be for the interest of any sort of people in England, to have the pretended. King James the third ad- vanced to the tlu'one of this kingdom. 1704. Answer to the pretended speech, said to be spoken off-hand in the House of Com- mons, by one of the Members for B 1 [? Bristol]. 1694. [Imperfect.] Sermon preached before the House of Com- mons, at St. Margarets 'Westminster, January 30. 1094. By Peter Birch, D.D. 1694. A birchen rod for D^ Birch : or some anim- adversions upon his Sermon, n.p. 1694. New-year's gift for D'. Birch : or, a mirror, discovering the different opinions of some doctore in relation to the present Govern- ment, as laid down in the following ser- mons, viz. D'. Birch's, D'. Hayley's and M'. Alsop's. 1696. Vindication of the sei-mons of John [Tillot- son] Archbishop of Canterbury, concern- ing the Divinity and Incarnation of our B. Saviour : and of the Bishop of Worcester's sermon on the mystenes of the Christian faith : from tlie exceptions of a book, en- tituled Considerations on the explications of the doctrine of the Trinity. (By J. Williams.) Letter from the Bishop of Sarnm to the author of the 'Vindication. 1695. The master of the Temple as bad a lawyer, as the Dean of Pauls is a divine. In a letter about the law-part of D'. Sherlock's modest examination of the Oxford decree. 1696. Answer to D^ Sherlock's examination of the Oxford decree. 1696. Prefatory discourse to an examination of a late book, entituled an exposition of the thirty nine articles of the Church of Eng- land, by Gilbert, Bishop of Sarnm. 1702. Exorbitant grants of William III. examin'd and question'd. Second edition. 1703. E. Moderation a virtue : or, a vindication of the moderate divines and laitj of the Church of England. Appendix, demon- strating that parish-churches are no con- venticles, particularly for reading tlie second service in the desk. 1683. Memorial of the state of England, ni vindi- cation of the Queen, the Church, and the Administration. 1705. Defence of the Dissenters education in their private academies : in answer to Mr. W y's reflections upon 'em. 1703. [Presbyterian loyalty.] Two letters : one to M"" Palmer, author of the ^'indication of the loyalty, &c. of the dissenters. The other to a tacking member of Parliament. Part I. In answer to M"^ Palmer's Vindi- cation of the dissenters behaviour towards authority. In which there is some ac- count of the Presbyterian plot of making .lames Duke of Monmouth King of Eng- land. 1705. [Title page slightly muti- lated at top.] 222 HISTbRlCAL TRACTS— E—ccm^. Memorial of the Church of BiiglancL. 1706. [" By Defoe." MS. on title!] Case of the Church of England's Memorial fairly stated. 1706. Letter to the Author of the memorial of the state of England. 1705. [" M'. Stephen's of Surry was sentenced to stand in the pillory for writing this pamphlet." JK"*'. note.} [No title-page. Postscript to M''. Higgins's Sermon. 1707.] Eeview of the dangers of the Church occa- sioned by the Memorial of the Church of England. 1705. [No title-pa^e. Picture of a High-Plyer. 1704J P. Sermon preached in the Collegiate Church of Eipon, February 0. 168^. By Thomas Cartwright, D.D. Dean of Eipon. Second edition. 1686. Sermon preached at the fTinei'al of Sir John Chapman, late Lord Mayor of London at St Lawrence's Church, March 27. 1689. By John Scott, D.D. 1689. Discourse concerning the unreasonableness of a new separation, on account of the oaths. With an answer to the history of Passive obedience. 1689. History of passive obedience since the He- formation; Amsterdam, 1689. ["Abrab. Seller." MS. on titled Management of .the present war against Prance oonsider'd. 1690. [Imperfect.] Modern policies, taken from M-achiavel, Borgia [etc.l 1690. [Dedication signed "■W-Blois."] True notion of Passive-Obedience stated. 1690. Unreasonableness of a separation from the new Bishops : or, a treatise out of ecclesi- astical history, shewing that although a Bishop was unjustly deprived, neither he nor the church ever made a separation ; if the successor was not a heretick. Trans- lated out of an ancient Greek Manu- script by Humfrey Hody. 1691. Protestant Mask taken off from the Jesuited Englishman -. being, an answer to a book, entituled. Great Britain's just complaint. 169f. , , , [No title-page. Appeal of Murther contain- ing a relation of the tryal, behaviour, and death" of Mr. "William Anderton, executed June 16. 1693, at Tyburn, for pretended high-treason.] [No title-pa^e. Answer to M'. Collier's defence of his absolution of Sir "William Parkins, at the place of execution. 1696.] [No title-page. Account of the proceedings ' in the House of Commons, in relation to the reooining the clipp'd money, and falling the price of guineas.] Short history of the last Parliament. 1699. ["Bj Sir Richard Blackmore." MS. on title. J The Seaman's opinion ol a standing army in England, in opposition to a fleet at sea. Second edition. 1699. Proper project for Scotland. Being a remedy to cure our fears, and ease our minds, n.p. 1699. Reasons against a war with Prance. 1701. [No title-page. Answer to the Black-list : or, the "vine-tavern Queries. 1701.] Letter to the fienoh King, by a Non-juror. 1701. Answer to M'. Paschal's letter slitting the case of M'. Parkhurst and himself, &c. Being a vindication of the proceedings of the House of Commons against those gentlemen Commissioners for prizes. 1702. H I STOR I C AL TRACTS— F—con<. The Mouse grown a rat : or the Story of the City and Country Mouse newly transpos'd. In a discourse betwixt Bays, Johnson, and Smith. Pifth edition. 1702. Second part. 1703. G. Proposals to the King and Parliament, or large model of a Bank. By M. L(ewis). D.D. 1678. The Revolter. A trage-eomedy acted between the Hind and Panther, and Beligio Laiei, &c. 1687. Reflections upon the occurrences of the last year. Prom 6 Nov. 1688. to 5 Nov. 168ii. Glory and Safety of this nation, under our present King and Queen. 1691. [No title-page. Nevil Payn's Letter, &c.] Enquiry into the Causes of the present dis- asters in England. And who they are that brought the French fleet into the English Channel, described. 1690. The plain ease as it now stands in reference to Subjection to the present Government. 1690. Late proceedings and votes of the Parlia- ment of Scotland ; contained inan address delivered to the King stated and vindi- cated. Glasgow, 1689. At the end, with half title. Address de- liver'd to His Majesty 16. October, 1689. Treatise of Monarchy. 1689. Enquiry into the Causes that have frustrated our expectations from the late' happy revolution : cosider'd [sic] in relation to the present Conspiracy, 1691. . K. Wilham, or K. Lewis. "Wherein is set forth the inevitable necessity these nations lye under, of submitting wholly to one or other of these Kings. "Written out of Cheshire by a gentleman lately arriv'd there from Ireland. 1689. Letter concerning a French invasion, to restore the late King James to his throne. 1692. Second letter concerning the French inva- sion. In which His Majesty's declaration, to all his loving subjects, commanding their, assistance against the P. of Orange is published. 1692. Anatomy of a Jacobitc-tory : in a dialogue between ■W"hig and Tor.y, occasioned by the Act for recognizing King "William and Queen Mai-y. 1690. [No title-page. Remarks upon the London Gazette, relating to the Streights— fleet and the battle of Landcn in Flanders. (Aug. 1693).] [No title-page. Caution against inconsis- tency. Or, the connexion between vniy- ing and swearing ; in relation to the Civil powere.] Pei'swasive to consideration, tender'd to the Ro.yalists, particularly, those of the Church of England. Second edition. 1696. History of the corispii'acy, to assassinate King "William, raise a rebellion, and pro- cure an invasion froin France. "With an accoimt of the last speeches and papers .left by those [conspirators] who havebeen executed. And' a journal of proceedings relating to the plot, to May 30. 1696. 1696. Letter to King "Wilham III. Shewing the original foundation of the English mon- archy. Third edition. 1699. Paradoxes ol State, relating to the proseut juncture of affairs in England and the rest of Europe. 1702. Reasons for addressing his Majesty to invite into England, the Bleotress Dowager and Electoral Prince of Hanover. Reasons for attainting and abjuring the pretended Prince of "Wales. Arguments for making a vigorous war against Prance. 1702. 223 HISTORICAL TRACTS— G—conf. Exorbitant grants of William III. examin'd and question'd. Second edition. 1703. H. Sermon preach'd before the Queen at "White-hall, Si^pt. 17. 1093. By Thomas Mannyngham. 169 1. Sermon preach'd at St. Andrews Holborn, 30 Dec, 1694. On the death of Queen Marj^. By Thomas Mannynffham. Third edition. 1095. Debates and proceedings in Parliament, 1694, and 1695. Upon the inquiry into the late briberies and corrupt practices. 1695. [Imperfect.] IMS. "The Earl of Castlcmain's embassy to Home."] 2 leaves, n.d. Remarks on the proceedings of the Commis- sioners for putting in execution the act past last sessions, for establishing of a Land-bank. 1696. [No title-page. Tryal and condemnation of the trustees of the land-bank at Exeter Exchanee, for murdering the Bank of England at Groc6rs-Hall.] 2 leaves. Letter concerning the credit of the nation : and with relation to the present Bank of England. 1697. Sermon occasioned by the death of Lady Guilford. By Philip Homeck. 1699. Eree-holders plea against stock-jobbing elec- tions of parliament men. 1701. Letter to M''. How, by way of reply to his considerations of thePrcface to an Enquiry into the occasional conformity of Dis- senters. By the author of the Preface and Eu(iuiry. 1701. The new association of those called, mode- rate-church-men, with the modem-whigs and fanaticks, to under-mine the present church and government. Occasion'd by a; late pamphlet, intituled, The danger of priestcraft, &c. "With a supplement, on occasion of the new Scotch Presbyterian Covenant. Second edition. Printed and sold by the booksellers of London and Westminster, 1702. [Page 7 {of supple- ment) imperfect.] Enquiry into the natui-e and obligation of legal rights : with respect to the popular pleas of the late K. James's remaining right to the Crown. Second edition. 1696. Declaration of the sense of the Archbishops and Bishops concerning the irregular and scandalous proceedings of certain clergy- men at the execution of Sir John Ereind and Sir William Parkins. 1690. Funeral oration upon the late King James. Composed from memoirs furnished by Mr. Porter, his great chamberlain, wherein it is own'd that the King reconciled Charles II. to the church of Home ; that he himself designed to destroy the pro- testant religion [etc.] 1702. [No title-page. New declaration of the con- federate princes and states against Lewis XIV.] [No title-page. Comprehension promoted.] Case of Sir Humphry Mackworth, and the Mine-Adventurers, with respect to the irregular proceedings of several Jnstices of the Peace for the county of Glamorgau. 1705. Justification of the dissenters against M'. Bonnet's charge of damnable schisme, 1705. Vindication of the christian behaviour of the dissenters toward the Church of Eng- land. In answer to Mr. Wesley's defence of his letter concerning the dissenters education in their private academies. And to M'. Sacheverers injurious reflections upon them. By Samuel Palmer. 1705. HISTORICAL TRACTS— H—con^. Life and character of John Locke. Written in French, by M''. Le Clerc. And done into Enghsh, by T. F. P. 1706. Sermon preach'd before the Queen at the cathedral church of S. Paul, London, 27 June 1706. By George Stanhope, D.D. Third edition. 1706. I. Fftbruaiy 19. Numb. 19. Relation of the treason, intended against the Prince of Orange, and the whole state of the United Provinces. Declaration by the French King for the restoring of the Marquesse of Hosny to his former offices. Arrivall at Constantinople of the Ambassadors of Sweden, Muscovia, and Polonia. Vision seene by Intien lansen. Elder of the Church at Oosterzee. 1623. Gallienus redivivus, or, Murther will out, &c. Being a ti-ue account of the De-\Vitt- ing of Glencoe, Gaffney, &c. Edinburgh, 1695. The interest of England stated : or a faith- ful account of the aims of all parties now pretending. Treatingof the designements of the Uoman Catholick. The Royalist, [etc.] n.p, 1659. Sir Salomon ; or, the Cautious coxcomb : a comedy. 1671. [By John Caryl.] Sermon preached at the funeral of Rev. Benj. Calamy, D.D. By Wilham Sherlock, D.D. 1686. The Review : or, a representation of the late sufferings and condition of the Dissenters. Written some years since. 1687. [Im- perfect.] Sermon at the funeral of .Sir John Norton. Preach'd in the parish-church of East Tysted in Hantshire. By Thomas Man- nyngham. Rector. 1687. By his Highness William Henry, Prince of Orange. A third declaration, n.p. 1688. [Dated " Sherburn-Castle. the 2Sth day of November. 1688."] Sermon exhorting to Union in religion. Preach'd at Bow-Church, May 20. By E. Young. 1688. Friendly debate between D'. Kingsman, a dissatisfied clergy-man. and Gratianus Trimmer, a neiglibour minister, concerning the late thanksgiving-day; the Prince's desent into England [etc.] With con- siderations on Bishop Sanderson, and D'. Falkner, about monarchy, oaths, &c. 1689. Friendly conference concerning the new oath of allegiance to K. Wilham. and Q. Mary. 1689. History of the Desertion, or an account of all the publick affairs in England, from September 1688. to the twelfth of Pebniary following. With an answer to a piece call'd The Desertion discussed. 1689. Character of a Trimmer. By Sir W. Coven- try. Second edition. 1689. J. Justification of the Prince of Orange's de- scent into England, and of the kingdoms late recourse to arms. Disquisition of what may become the wisdom and justice of the ensuing Convention in their disposal of the Crown. 1689. True interests of the Princes of Europe in the present state of affaii-s. 1689. Considerations touching Succession and Allegiance. 1689. Reflections, on a' pamphlet, entituled a History of passive obedience since the Refoi-mation. 16|g. Letter concerning the disabling clauses lately offered to the House of Commons, for regulating Corporations. 1690. Account of what past on Monday 28. October, 1689 in the House of Commons, and since at Ihf King's-Bench-bar at Westminster. 224 HISTORICAL TRACTS- J— eoH<. in relation to the Earl of Custlemaine, 1690. Speech by Sir Eobert Cotton, before the Privy-Council touching the alteration of coin. 1690. Political Aphorisms : or, the true maxims of Kovernment displayed. By way of chal- lenge to D'', William Sherlock and recom- mended as proper to be read by all pro- testant Jacobites. 1690. Sermon against clipping, preach'd before the Lord Mayor at Guild-hall chappel, Becemb. 16. 1694. By W. Fleetwood. 1694. Enquiry into the causes of the present dis- asters in England. And who they are that brought the French fleet into the English Channel, described. 1690. [MS. note.] [? By Hi. "Welwood.] Examination ot the arguments in D'. Sher- lock's-case of allegiance, and his vindica- tion of it 1091. ["M'. Theoph. Downes, Fellow of Baliol College." JIS. on title.'] Animadversions on a discourse eritituled, God's ways ot disposing of kingdoms. 1691. Vindication of a discourse concerning the unreasonableness of a new separation, on account of the Oaths. ["By D'. Wil- hams." MS. on title.'] 1691. Second letter concerning the French inva- sion [etc.] Second edition. 1692. Poeta Infamis. Dialogue, between Lysander Valentine, and poet Pricket. "With a let- ter to the author of the Marriage-Hater matched [Tom Pricket]. 1692. [The let- ter to Pricket is signed " Charles G n." [? Gildon.] Project of a descent upon France. 1692. King Wilham and Queen Mary Conquerors : a discourse endeavouring to prove that their Majesties have on their side, against the late King, the principal rea- sons that make conquest a good title. 1693. E.ssay concerning the Laws of Nations, and the rights of soveraigns. By Mat. Tin- dall. 1694. K. Apology for the conduct of Charles Macklin, comedian. (Frontispiece.) 1773. The Foxes and Tines; a sermon, n.p. 1776. Life of Colonel Don Francisco. To which is prefixed the efflgy of Colonel Francis Chartres. n.d. Case and Memoirs of Eev. James Haokman, and of his acquaintance with Miss Martha Reay. Thoughts on lunacy and suicide. Letter to Lord Sfandwieh] and Miss Eeay. Appendix. Third edition. (Por- trait ot Hackman.) 1779. Declaration and confession of Robert "VVatt, written by himself, the evening before his execution, for high treason, at Edinburgh, October 15. 1794. (Portrait.) Edinburgh, 1794. [No title-page. MS. heading. Evidence in ' the trial of the Dulte of Cumberland [etc.] pp. 85-1B4. 1770.] [No title-page. The loyal martyr vindi- cati'd. ''By Rev. M'. Gajscoinc." US.'] Calculation on the commencement of the Millennium. Speech in the House of Commons, 1795, respecting the conline- ment of Brothers the prophet, by N. B. Halhed, M.P. Letter written by Brothers. Paper, pointiufj out those parts of Bro- thers's prophecies that have been already fulfilled. (Portrait of Halhed.) 1795. Review of the life and character ot Thomas Seeker, Archbishop ot Canterbury. By HISTORICAL TRACTS -K-cont. Beilby Portens, Bishop of London. Fifth edition. (Portrait.) 1797. Anti-Newtonianl or, a true system of the universe; with diagrams of explanation. 1823. Court and Character of Kiiij; James, written and taken by Sir A. "W. . . [eldon]. Printed, 1650 ; reprinted, 1817. L. Reflections on a Letter to Sir Miles "Wharton, concerning occasional Peers. 1713. The grand mystery laid open : namel.y, by dividing of tlie Protestants to weaken the Hanover Succession, and by defeating the succession to extirpate the Protestant rehgion. Sacredness of Parliamentary securities. 1714. Two letters to Viscount Townshend : shew- ing the seditious tendency of several late pamphlets; more particularly of, a Re- view of the Lutheran principles, by Tho. Brett. 1714. Difference between" the Nonjurors and the present publick assemblies, not a real, but accidental schism. 1716. . Presbyterian priestcraft : being a full ac- count of the proceedings of Dr. Calamy the Moderator in Salters Hall, 14 Novem- ber, 1717. By Joseph Stcdman. 1720. [No title-pages. Memorials of Thomas Hearne's hfe. pp. i— Lix. [And] The Oath of Allegiance vindicated by M' Hearne, now a Nonjuror. Signed "Tho. Hearne," and dated 1700. pp. 1-80.] The Virgin in Eden : or, the state of inno- cency. "With the parable of the Shepherd, Zachariah, and Mary. To which are added, Pamela's letters proved to be im- modest romances. In this treatise are the divine sayings of Queen Mary and Caro- lina. Wrote by the author of Torments after death. Sixth edition. 1741. Attempt towards a natural history of the Hanover Rat. 1744. Apology for the conditct of a lady of quality. 1751. Memorial of His Prussian Majesty, exhibit- ing the conduct of the Courts of Vienna and Dresden. To which is annexed, the original papei-s, found in the cabinet of the King ot Poland. 1756. M. Abridgement and index of the acts of the General Assemblies of the Church of Scotland 1638, to 1706. Edinburgh, 1706. [" The Rev'i. M'-. Bell." MS. on tUle.] The Umpire : or, England the ballance of Europe. Containing a brief account of the evils which have been brought upon this nation, by Members of Parliament taking publick employments upon them. 1706. True pictiu'e of a modern whig reviv'd. Set forth in a third dialogue between Whig- love, and Double. 1707. The Non-Juror. A Comedy. Written bv M'-. Cibber. Fifth edition. 1718. The Servitom- : a poem. Written by a ser- vitour of the University ot Oxford. 1709. Supplement to the Faults on both sides containing the eompleat history of the proceedings of a pai'ty ever since the Re- volution. Which may serve to explain Sir Thomas Double ; and to show how far the ■ late Parliament were right in proceeding r'.gainst D'. Sacheverell. 1710. Letter to Mr. B a North-Wiltshire clergyman, relating to an address from that Archdeaconry to the Queen. Wherein a character is given of the Bishop of Sarum. 1710. Letter from a gentleman at the Court of St. Germains containing a memorial about 225 HISTORICAL TRACTS -M— con*. methods for settinR the Pretender on the throne of Great Britain. Translated from the French copy. Second edition. 1710. Historical preface to Primitive Christianity reviv'd. Appendix containing an account of the author's prosecution at, and banish- ment from Cambridge. By 'William "Whis- ton. 1711. 'At' the end— Proposals for printing by subscription, M'. "Whiston's Collec- tion, entituled, Primitive Christianity reviv'd. English Advice, to the Preeholders of Eng- land, rt-p. mutilated at foot.] Most faults on one side : or, the shallow politicks of the author of a pamphlet, entitul'd Faults on both sides oonsider'd and expos'd. In answer to that pamphlet. Third edition. 1711. The Spectator inspected : or, a letter to the Spectator : from an oflicer of the army in Flanders, touching the use of French i erms, in relations from the army ; occa- sion'd by the Spectator of 8 Sept. 1711. 1711. Grandsire Hambden's Ghost. And Peace, or, No Peace. Two poems. "With a pre- fatory answer, to some late whiggish scurrility. 1712. Predictions for the year, 1712. By Isaac ElclterstafE, Esq ; in a letter to the author of the Oxford Almanack. n.p. 1712. N. Publick spirit of the Tories, manifested in the case of the Irish dean, [Swift] and his man Timothy. 1714. Love in the Suds ; a town eclogue. Being the lamentation of Roscius [Garrickl. "With annotations and appendix. Fifth edition (By "W. Kenrick). 1772. ["Ap- pendix " imperfect.] Letter to David Garrick, occasioned by his having moved the Court of Kind's Bench against the publisher of Love in the Suds. By D'. Kenrick. 1772. Letter to the Eeverenfl Master of Trinity- College in Cambridge, [Bentley] editor of a new Greek and Latin testament, 1721. Prosecution of the author of the Clergy- man's letter to the Bishop of Rochester, n.d. [Running title "Advice from Par- nassus."] Doctor [William] King's [St. Mary-Hall, Oxford] Apology : or, vindication of him- self from the several matters charged on him by the Society of Informers. Oxford, 1755. New book of the Dunciad: oecasion'd by M^ "Warburton's new edition of the Dun- ciad complete. By a Gentleman. 1760. I'anegyrick on King "WilUam III. Occa^ sioned by the happy conclusion of the general pciice, September 20, 1697. [Signed " G. B."] Pancgyrick upon bis Majesties glorious re- turn from the wars, after the conclusion of a general peace. By Joseph Brown. 1697. Sm. f. Albion's Blessing. Poem panegyrical on King "William III. And on his happy return, and the publishing the late glorious peace. By Mr. D'Urfey. 1698. Sm. i". Idyll on the Peace. 1697. Sm. f». [No title-page. Bill for preventing occasional conformity. Proceedings of the House of Commons in relation to the said bill. Lords Journal relating to the Bill.] 1703. Sm. f Tryal of skill between 'Squire "Walsingham and Mother Osborne. An eclogue in imitation of Virgil's Palaemon. To which are added, Horace to Fannius, and an O 16.')05, HISTORICAL TRACTS— N—co«i;. apology for printing a certain nobleman's epistle to Dr. S—w—n. 1734. Sm.f». A lash for the Laureat : or an address by way of satyr ; inscrib'd to M'. Eowe, on occasion of a prologue to the Non-Juror. 1718. Sm. f 0. [Tracts.] 4°. 1690-3. 4100 Historical account of the most remarkable transactions betwixt the Duke of Savoy and the French King : contained in several letters pass'd betwixt them before the rupture. Translated from the original French copies. Account of the passages in the Assembly of the States of Holland and "West-Prieze- land. Concerning the Earl of Portland's exclusion from, or admission into that Assembly. Translated out of Dutch. Justification of the assertion of the Burgo- masters and Senate of Amsterdam, con- cerning the illegality of Monsieur Bon- tingh, Earl of Portland, his sitting in the Assembly of the Lords States of Holland and "West-Friesland. Secret intreagues of the French King's Minis- ters at the Courts of several princes, for the enslaving of Europe. Translated from the original. History of the Royal Congress at the Hague. [Relation] of the canopy and chair of state fire-works triumpmil arches. "With the other preparations made for his Majesty of Great Britain. "With an exact draught of the manner of King William's entry into the Hague, and reception by the States-Gener.il. Translated from the Dutch copy, printed at Leiden. Reprinted in London, 1691. A French conquest neither desirable nor practicable. ["To the King" is signed HITCHCOCK (EDWARD) D.D. Outline of the geology of the globe, and of the United States in particular : with two geological maps, and sketches of characteristic American fossils. 8°. Lon- don, and Boston [U.S.], 1853. 4101 HOARE (PRINCE). Memou-s of Granville Sharp, composed from his own manuscripts . . With observations on M'. Sharp's Biblical Criticisms, by the Bishop [Burgess] of St. David's. (Portrait.) 4°. 1820. 4102 Second edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1828. 4103 HOARE (SIR RICHARD COLT). Classical tour through Italy and Sicily ; tending to illustrate some districts, which have not been described hy M'. Eustace, in his Classical tour. 4°. 1819. 4104 HOBBES (THOMAS) OF MALMES- BURY. English "Works ; now first collected and edited by Sir William Molesworth. II vol. (Portrait, etc.) 8°. 1839-45. 4105 Vol. 1. Elements of philosophy. First sec- tion, oonoeming body, written in Latin by T. H., and translated into Eughsh (Logic —First grounds of Philosophy— Propor- tions ot motions and magnitudes — Physics). 226 HOBBES (THOMAS) OF MALMES- BURY—cont. 2. Philosophical rudiments concerning government and society (Liberty — Do- minion — Eicliglon). 3. Leviathan, or the matter, form, and povrer of a Commonwealth ecclesiastical and civil. 4. Tripos ; in three discourses : human nature, or the fundamental ele- ments of pohcy. De Oorpore politico, or the elements of law. Of liberty and neces- sity. Answer to Bp. Bramhall's book, called " The catching of the Leviathan." Historical narration concerning heresy, and the punishment thereof. Considera- tions upon the reputation, loyalty, man- ners, and rehgion of T. H. Answer to Sir "William Davenant's preface before " Gon- dibert." Letter to Edward Howard. 5. The questions concerning liberty, necessity, and chance, clearly stated and debated be- tween D'. Bramhall, Bishop of Berry, and T. H. 6. Dialogue between a philosopher and a student of the common laws of Eng- land. Behemoth : the history of the causes of the civil war of England. Whole art of Rhetoric. Art of rhetoric. Art of sophistiw. 7. Seven philosophical prob- lems. Decameron Physiologicum. Pro- portion of a straight line to half the arc of a quadrant. Six lessons to the Savilian professors of the Mathematics. ^TiyfLai, or marks of the absurd geometry etc. of D"". "Wallis. Extract of a letter fi-om Henry Stubhe. Three papers presented to the E/oyal Society against D'^. "Wallis. Considerations on the answer of D'. "Wallis. Letters and other pieces. 8. 9. History of the Grecian "War "written b,y Thucydides. Translated by T. H. 10. Iliads and Odysses of Homer. Translated by T. B. "With a preface concerning the virtues of an heroic poem. 11. Index. Opera Philosophica quae Latine scripsit omnia in unum corpus nunc primum col- lecta studio et labore Gulielmi Moles- worth. 5 vol. 8°. 1839-45. 4106 ToJ. 1. T. H. Vita, authore seipso. Vitae Hobbianae Auctarium, authore B. Black- bourne. T. H. Yita, carmine expressa, authore seipso. Elementorum philoso- phiae sectio prima de corpore. 2. Ele- mentorum philosophiae sectio secunda de homine. Sectio tertia, De cive. 3. Levia- than. Sive de materia, forma, et potes- tate civitatis, ecclesiasticae et civihs. 4. Examinatio et emendatio mathematicae hodiemae. Dialogus physicus de natura aens. Problemata physica, propositiones xvi de magnitudine circuli, et duplicatio cubi. De principiis et ratiocinatione geo- metrarum, et de mediis proportionalibus in genere. Quadratura circuli, cubatio sphaerae, duplicatio cubi. 6. Rosetum geometricum, cum censura brevi doc- trinae "Wallisianae de motu. Lux mathe- matica. Principia et problemata aliquot geometrica antehac desperata nunc bre- viter explicata et demonsti-ata. Tractatus - opticus. Objectiones ad Cartesii medita- tiones. Epistolse. Praefatio in Mersenni balUstioam. De Mirabilibus Pecci. His- toria Ecclesiastica. Index. Leviathan . . (Engraved title-page.) F". 1651. 4107 " Robert Southey. Nov. 8. ISS.'i. Loudon." Tripos . . Third edition. 8°. 1684. 4108 "B. W. Procter." [Another edition.] (Portrait.) 8°. 1840. 4109 "To Joseph ParkesBsq. from "W"" Moles- worth." HODASEVICH (CAPTAIN R.). A voice from within the walls of Sebas- topol : a narrative of the campaign in the Crimea, and of the events of the siege. Plans. 8°. 1856. 4110 HODGE (THOMAS). Catechism of Fortification . . 12". 1851. 4111 [HODSON (MARGARET HOLFORD, AFT. MRS.).] "Wallace ; or, the Fight of Falkirk ; a Metrical Romance. [Anon.] 4°. 1809. 4112 HOFFMANNUS (FRIDERICUS). PoeticTim cum Musis colludium : sive lusuum epigrammaticorum centuriae. Editio secunda. 12°. Amst. 1665. 4113 HOFFMEISTER (WERNER) M.D, Travels in Ceylon and continental India ; including Nepal and other parts of the Himalayas, to the borders of Thibet, with some notices of the overland route. Ap- pendices, I. Addressed to Baron Von Humboldt, on the geographical distribu- tion of coniferae on the Himalayan Moun- tains. II. On the vegetation of the Hima- layan Mountains. III. The birds of the Himalayan Mountains. Translated from the German. 8". Edinburgh, 1848. 4114 Preface signed "C. Eitter" and Memoir " D'. A. fioflmeister." HOFFSTETTER (GUST. VON). Military events in Italy, 1848-1849. Translated from the German by the Earl of EUesmere. 8°. 1851. 4115 HOFMANN (AUGUSTUS WILLIAM) LL.D. Chemical Laboratories in course of erection in the Universities of Bonn and Berlin. Report . . 4°. 1866. 4116 Presentation copy. HOGARTH (GEORGE). Memoirs of the opera in Italy, France, Germany, and England. A new edition of the " Musical Drama." 2 vol. (Por- traits of Madame Mara and M«. Crouch ) 12°. 1851. 4117 HOGG (CERVANTES) pseud, i.e. EATON STANNARD BARRETT. The Rising Sun, a serio-comic satiric romance. 2 vol. 12°. 1807. 4118 ^m°T>*^f''i.^'"^ ('" ^o*** <»»'' Queries) to T. P. Lathy. 227 HOGG (REV. DAVID). Life of Allan Cunningham, with selec- tions from his works and correspondence. (Portrait.) 8°. Dumfries, 1875. 4119 Life and times of Rev. John Wight- man, D.D., (1762-1847) late Minister of Kirkmahoe. 8°. 1873. 4120 HOGG (JABEZ). _ The Microscope : its history, construc- tion, and applications. Being a familiar introduction to the use of the instrument and the study of microscopical science . . Engravings. 8". 1854. 4121 HOGG (JAMES) THE " ETTRICK SHEPHERD." Altrive Tales : collected among the peasantry of Scotland, and from foreign iidveuturers. By the Ettrick Shepherd. "With illustrations by George Cruikshank. (Portrait.) 12°. 1832. 4122 Jacobite relics of Scotland ; being the Songs, airs, and legends of the adherents to the House of Stuart. Collected and illustrated by J. Hogg. Reprinted from the original edition. (Portrait of Prince Charles Edward Stuart.) 8°. Paisley, 1874.- 4123 Second series. 8°. Paisley, 1874. 4124 The Long Pack. A Northumbrian tale, an hundred years old. [Anon.] 8". Newcastle, 1817. 4125 HOGG (JOHN) M.D. London as it is ; being a series of ob- servations on the health, habits, and amusements of the people. 8°. 1837. 4126 HOGG (THOMAS JEFFERSON). Life of Percy Bysshe Shelley. 4 vol. (Vol. 1 & 2.) (Portrait.) 8°. 1858. 412y Two hundred and nine days; or, the journal of a traveller on the continent. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1827. 4128 "B.W.Procter." HOGHTON. Speech made to Kinge James, at his comeinge to Hoghton Tower, by two con- ceaved to be the Houshold Gods. July, 1617. Broadside, f". Chorley, 1838. 4129 Notes of the Diet, at Hoghton, at the King's coming there, 1617. Broadside, f. Chorley, 1844. 4130 HOLBEIN (HANS). L' Alphabet de la Mort entoure de bor- dures du xvi'' si^cle et sulvi d'anciens poSmes fran9ais sur le sujet des trois mors et des trois vis publies d'aprfee les manu- scrits par Anatole de Montaiglon. 8°. Paris, 1856. 4131 HOLBEIN (HANS)-co«<. Portraits of illustrious personages of the Court of Henry VIII. Engraved in imita- tion of the original drawings of H. Holbein, in the collection of his Majesty. With biographical and historical memoirs by Edmund Lodge. Published by John Chamberlaine. (Portraits of Holbein and his wife.) 4°. 1828. 4132 HOLBEIN SOCIETY. Holbein - Society's fac-simile reprints. 12 vol. 4° & oblong. Manchester and London, 1869-76. 4133 JJance of Death. Les simulachres & his- toriees faces de la mort : commonly called " The Dance of Death." Translated and edited by Henry Green. "With a sketch of Holbein s life and works, and some ex- planatory notes. Holbein's Icones Historiarum Veteris Testa- ment!. Photo-lith fac-simile reprint from the Lyons edition of 1647. Edited by Henry Green. Min'our of Maiestie : or the Badges of Honour conceitedly emblazoned. Reprint from M^ Corser's perfect copy. A.D. 1618. Edited by Henry Green, and James Croston. Andreae Alciati Emblematum Pontes qua- tuor; namely an account of the original Collection made at Milan, 1522, and fac- similes of the editions, Augsburp 1,?31, Paris 1634, and Venice 1648. Edited by Henry Green. With a sketch of Alciat's Life and bibhographical observations re- specting the early reprints. Alciati Emblematum Flumen abundans; or, Alciat's emblems in their full stream. Being a reprint of the Lyons edition by Bonhomme, 1661, and of titles, &c., of similar editions, 1548-1651. Edited by Hem-y Green. With an introduction and an alphabetical list of all the Ijatin mottoes. (Portrait.) Grimaldi's Puneral oration, January 19, 1550, for A. Alciati ; in fac-simile. With a translation into English. Edited by Henry Green. Theatre of Women. Designed by Jobst Ammon. Edited by Alfred Aspland. The Pour Evangelists. Arabic and Latin. With woodcuts designed by Antonio Tempesta. Edited by A. Aspland. Triumph of the Emperor Maximilian I. With woodcuts designed by Hans Burg- mair. Edited by A. Aspland. n.p. n.d. Triumphs of the Emperor Maximilian I. By Hans Burgmair. Edited by A. Aspland. Part I. (68 ^pages of plates). Pait II. (69-136A pages of plates). (2 vol.) The Pall of Man. By Albreoht Altdorfer. Edited by A. Aspland. With an intro- duction by William Bell Scott. [HOLBERG (LUDWIG, BARON DE).] Journey to the World under-ground. By Nicholas Klimius. Translated from the original [Latin of Baron de Holberg] . 12°. 1742. 4134 " Trans, by Bev. M. Sumby." Catalogue of the London Library, 1876. HOLCROFT (THOMAS). Memoirs written by himself, and con- tinued to his death, from his diary, notes, and other papers (by William Hazlitt). 3 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1816. 4135 p 2 228 HOLCROFT (THOMAS)— con*. [Another Edition.] 12». 1852. 4136 . - Tale of . . Peter the Long, and of his most honoured dame Blanche Baza Imitated from the original French by T. Holcroft. 12°. 1786. 4137 HOLINSHED (RAPHAEL). Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland. 6 vol. I.-IV. England. V. Scotland. VI. Ireland. 4°. 1807-8. 4138 HOLLAND (GEORGE CALVERT) M.D. Philosophy of animated nature ; or, the laws and action of the Nervous system. 8°. 1848. 4139 Vital Statistics of SheiBeld. 8". Lon- don & Sheflield, 1843. 4140 HOLLAND (SIR HENRY) M.D. Chapters on Mental Physiology . . 8°. 1852. 4141 Medical notes and reflections. Third edition. 8°. 1855. 4142 Kecollections of past life. 8°. 1872. 4143 HOLLANDI (HENRY RICHARD VASSALL, 3rp BARON). Foreign Eeminiscences : edited by his son, Henry Edward Lord Holland. 8°. 1850. 4144 Memoirs of the whig party during my time. Edited by his son . . 2 vol. 8°. 1852-4. 4145 HOLLAND (JOHN). Memorials of Sir Francis Chautrey, E.A. sculptor, in Hallamshire and else- where. 8°. London & HhefBeld, n.d. (1851). 4146 AND EVERETT (JAMES). Memoirs of the life and writings of James Montgomery, inclnding selections from his correspondence, remains in prose and verse, and conversations on various subjects. 7 vol. (Portraits.) 8". 1854-6. 4147 HOLLAND (LADY). Memoir of Eev. Sydney Smith. By his daughter [Saba] Lady Holland. With a selection from his letters, edited by Mrs. Austin. 8°. Printed for private circulation, n.p. n.d. [Preface to the " Letters" dated October 1854.] 4148 [Another (published) edition.] 2 vol. 8". 1855. " 4149 HOLLES (DENZIL, BARON). Memoirs of Denzil Lord Holies, Baron of Ifield in Sussex, from 1641, to 1648. [By John Poland]. (Portrait.) 8°. 1699. 4150 Book-plate of Joseph S mith, HOLLIDAY (REV. FRANCIS). Syntagma Mathesios : containing the resolution of Equations : with a new way of solving cubic and biquadratic equations . . Also the universal method of con- verging series . . prefixed, an essay on the mathematics. 8". 1745. 4151 HOLLINGSWORTH (ALFRED JOHN- STONE). Poetical worts, with the life of the author. [Ed. by Dr. G. Sexton.] Vol. I. (Portrait.) 8°. 1856. 4152 HOLLINGWORTH (RICHARD) D.D. [Tracts by or relating to.] 4° and F". London and Amsterdam, 1691-3. 4153 Defence of King Charles I. occasion'd by the I.ves and scandals of many bad men of this age. [No title-psge. Defence of King Charles the first.J Letter from General [Edmund] Tjudlow to D^. HoUingworth. Defending his former letter to Sir E. S. which compared the tyranny of tlie first four years of King Charles the Martyr, with the tyranny of the four years of the late abdicated King. And vindicating the Parhament which began in iS'ovemb. 1640. Amsterdam. Second defence of King Charles I. By way of reply to an infamous libel, called, Lud- low's letter. True account of the author of a book euti- tuled EiKbiv Y>[siCja(rt\iKij. "With an answer to all objections made by D'. Hcllingsworth and others, in defence of the said book. [Anon]. Defence of K. "Charles the first's book, called EtKWF jSacn-^tKij ; against the assaults of D'. Walker, of Essei. Character of King Charles I. Erom the de- clai*ation of Alexander Henderson, upon his death-bed : with a furtlier defence of the King's holy book. Remarks upon a vile book, call'd Ludlow no l.var : with a defence of the King from the Irish Rebel- lion. Dr. "Walker's account of the author of EtKui/ ^ao-tAiKj; demonstrated to be false, impu- dent, and deceitful. By Thomas Long, B.D. llestitution to the Royal Author or a Vindi- cation of King Charles the Martyr's book ; intituled EtKuf PaatXiioj. HOLLIS (THOMAS AND GEORGE). Monumental effigies of Great Britain, Drawn and etched by T. and G. HoUis. Parts I- VI. F°. 1840-2. 4154 HOLLWAY (JOHN GEORGE). A Month in Norway. 12°. 1853. 4155 HOLMES (EDWARD). Life of Mozart, including his corre- spondence. 8°. 1845. 4156 Ramble among the Musicians of Ger- many, giving some account of the operas of Munich, Dresden, Berlin, &e. "With remarks upon the Church music, singers, performers, and composers . . By a musical Professor. (Second edition.) 8°. 1828. 4157 229 HOLMES (OLIVER WENDELL). Poetical Works. First English edition. 12". 1852. 41.58 Poems. New and enlarged edition. (Portrait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.], 1852. 4159 HOLSTEIN (GENERAL H. L. V. DUCOUDRAY). Memoirs of Simon Bolivar, President Liberator of the republic of Colombia ; and of his principal generals ; comprising a secret history of the Revolution, and the events which preceded it, from 1 807 to the present time. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 4160 HOLT (JOHN). Characters of the Kings and Queens of England, selected from different histories ; with observations . . notes historical. 8°. Dublin, 17S9. 4161 HOLT (JOSEPH). Memoirs of J. Holt, General of the Irish rebels, in 1798, edited from his original manuscript . . by T. Crofton Croker. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1838. 4162 HOLYOAKE (GEORGE JACOB). History of the last trial by Jury for Atheism in England : a fragment of auto- biogi-aphy . . 12°. 1850. 4163 A logic of facts : or plain hints on Keasoning. 12°. 1848. 4164 HOME (DANIEL DUNGLAS). Incidents in my life. 8°. 1863. 4165 HOME TREASURY. Home Treasury. [Edited by Fehx Summerly i.e. Mr. aft. Sir Henry Cole] . 10 vol. (Illustrated.) Sq. 12°. London and Westminster, 1843-6. 4166 Bible events. First series. Illustrated with pictures designed by Hans Holhein. Second series. Illustrated with pictures copied from Raflaelle's Loggie. Chronicle of the Adventures of Jack the Giant Killer, who flourished in the reign of the good King Arthur : with fresh illus- trations. Lively history of Jack and the Beanstalk. The history beiug told by Harriet Jackson and the pictures painted by a young Master, C. W. CCope, E.A.]. Puck's reports to'Oberon, King of Fairies, of some new exploits of the pen and pencil of fancy. [By Charles A. Cole]. Contents- Grumble and Cheery. The Eagle's Ver- dict. T .. J [Another volume]. Contents — Introduc- tion. The Sisters, and Golden Locks. Rosebud, the sleeping beauty m the Wood. New edition. Sir Hornbook ; or, Childe Launoelot s expe- dition. A grammatico-allegorical ballad. New edition. .. -n , j Traditional Nursery Songs of England. "With pictures by eminent modem artists. Second edition, with numerous additions. (Pai-ts I. II.). HOMER. 'IXiaj. Iliad, from the text of Wolf, with English notes and Flaxman's designs. Edited by C. C. Felton. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1837. 4167 Iliad. With notes. By W. G. T. Barter. 8°. 1854. 4168 [Engraved title.] Workes Engl : by T:Hohbes. (Portrait of Hobbes). 1677. [Title.] Iliads and Odysses. Translated . . by T. H. With a large preface . also the life of Homer. Third edition. 1686. [Title.] Odysses. Translated . . by T. H. Third edition. 1686. [Title.] Iliads to which is added Oddyses fsj'c]. Both in English by T. H. 1684. 12°. 4169 Iliad translated by T. S. Brandreth. 2 vol. 12°. 1846. 4170 Iliad, literally translated, with explana- tory notes. By Theodore Alois Buckley. 8°. Bohn, 1851. 4171 Iliads of Homer, Prince of Poets never before in any language truly translated . . Done according to the Greek by George Chapman. New edition, with introduction and notes, by W. Cooke Taylor. With forty engravings on wood, from the com- positions of John Flaxman. 2 vol. 8°. 1843. 4172 Iliad rendered into English blank verse. By Edward Earl of Derby. 2 vol. Third thousand. 8°. 1864. 4173 This copy belonged to " "W. Nanson Lett- som," and has his autograph. Iliad : translated by William Munford. 2 vol. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1846. 4174 Iliad faithfully translated into unrhymed English metre. By F. W. Newman. 8°. 1856. 4175 Iliad. Translated by Alexander Pope. New edition, with illustrative notes, selected from the edition published by Gilbert Wakefield. 3 vol. 8°. 1817. 4176 Iliad, translated by Alexander Pope. With an introduction and notes, by Rev. T. A. Buckley. With Flaxman's designs, and other engravings. 2 vol. (Portrait of Pope.) 8°. 1853. 4177 [Half-title.] Opere dell' Abate Mel- chior Cesarotti. Vol. VI (—IX.) [Title.] La Iliade di Omero. 4 vol. 8°. Pisa, 1802. 4178 Odyssey. Translated by Alexander Pope. New edition, with illustrative notes, selected from the edition published by Gilbert Wakefield. 2 vol. 8°. 1817. 4179 At the end.— Battle of the Frogs and Mice tr. by Pamell, and corrected by Pope ; and Hymn to Ceres tr. by Eev. Richard Hole. Odyssey, translated by Alexander Pope. With notes, by Eev. T. A. Buckley. With Flaxman's designs, and other engravings. 8°. 18.53. '' 4180 230 HOMER— coM(. The Odyssey translated iuto English verse in the Spenserian stanza by Philip Stanhope Worsley. Vol. I. Books I.-XII. II. Books XIII.-XXIV. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1861-2. 4181 Two copies of Vol. I., one of these " From the Author." Homeric Ballads ; with translations and notes by the late Wilham Magiun, LL.D. [Gr. and Eng.] 12°. 1850. 4182 Preface signed "J. 0." HOMMIUS (FESTUS), Specimen controversiarum Belgicarum. Sen Confessio ecdesiarum reformatarum in Belgio, oujus singulis articulis subjuncti sunt articuli discrepantes . . edidit, & collegit, F. Hommius. Addita est . . Harmonia Synodorum Belgicarum. 4". Lugd. Bat. [Leyden]. Ex off. Blzev., 1618. 4183 HONE (WILLIAM). Every-Day Book and Table Book ; or, everlasting calendar of popular amuse- ments, sports, pastimes, ceremonies, man- ners, customs, and events, incident to each of the three hundred and sixty-five days, in past and present times . . Engravings. 3 vol. 8°. 1830. 4184 Sixty curious and authentic narratives and anecdotes respecting extraordinary characters . . [Anon.] New edition. (Frontispiece by G. Cruikshauk.) 12°. 1822. 4185 Lettered — *' Cecil's sixty curious narratives." HONIGBERGER (DR. JOHN MARTIN). Thirty-five years in the East. Ad- ventures, discoveries, experiments, and historical sketches, relating to the Punjab and Cashmere j in connection with medi- cine, botany, pharmacy, &c. Together with an original Materia Medica ; and a medical vocabulary, in four European and five Eastern languages. 2 vol. (in one). Illustrated with engravings, containing portraits . . 8°. 1852. 4186 HOOD (REV. EDWIN PAXTON). The Age and its architects : ten chapters on the English people. In relation to the times. 12". 1850. 4187 William Wordsworth ; a biography. 8°. 1856. 4188 HOOD (ROBIN). Lytell geste of Robin Hode with other . . ballads and songs relating to this celebrated yeoman, to which is prefixed his history and character . . Edited by John Mathew Gutch, and adorned with cuts by F. W. Fairholt. 2 vol. (Por- trait and memoir of Ritson.) 8°. 1847. 4189 HOOD (THOMAS). Hood's Magazine and Comic Miscellany. Vol. I-ni. (Portrait of Hood.) 8°. 1844-5. 4190 Hood's Own : or, Laughter from year to year. Being former runnings of his comic vein, with an infusion of new blood for general circulation. (Portrait.) 8°. 1839. 4191 [Another edition,] (Portrait.) 8°. 1846. 4192 Odes and Addresses to great people. Second edition. [Anon.] 12°. 1825. 4193 "Written in conjunction with J. H. Reynolds." Lowndes. Third edition. 12°. 1826. 4194 Poems. 2 vol. 12°. 1846. 4195 Poems of Wit and Humour. 12°. 1847. 4196 TylneyHall. 12°. 1840. 4197 Whimsicalities, a periodical gathering. With numerous illustrations, from designs by Leech. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 4198 Memorials of Thomas Hood. Collected, arranged, and edited by his daughter, [Frances Freeling Broderip] with a pre- lace and notes by his son. New edition. Illustrated with copies from his own sketches. (Portrait.) 8°. 1869. 4199 HOOD (THOMAS) THE YOUNGER. Pen and pencil pictures. 8°. 1857. 4200 HOOD (SIR W. CHARLES) M.D. Statistics of Insanity ; being a decennial report of Bethlem Hospital, from 1846 to 1855 inclusive. 8°. n.d. 4201 Statistics of insanity ; embracing a report of Bethlem Hospital, fi-om 1846 to 1860, inclusive. 8°. 1862. 4202 HOOK (THEODORE EDWARD). All in the wrong ; or. Births, deaths, and marriages. 12°. 1842. 4203 Gilbert Gurney. 12°. 1850. 4204 Gurney Married. 12°. 1842. 4205 Jack Brag. New edition, revised by the Author. 12°. 1850. 4206 Maxwell. By the Author of " Sayings and Doings." Revised . . by the Author. 12°. 1849. 4207 Parson's Daughter. By the Author of " Sayings and Doings " . . Revised . . by the Author. 12°. 1847. 4208 Sayings and Doings. First Series. [Danvers — Friend of the family — Merton — Martha the gypsy]. 12°. n.p. n.d. 4209 Second Series [Sutherlands — Man of many friends — Doubts and Fears — Passion .and Principle]. 12°. n.p. n.d. 4210 23] HOOK (THEODORE EDWARD) — cont. Third Series : [Cousin "William— Ger- vase Skinner]. (Portrait.) 12». np (London) n.d. (1839.) 42H The Widow, and the Marquess j or, Love and Pride. By the Author of " Gilbert Gurney " . . 12°. 1842. 4212 [HOOKE (NATHANIEL).] Account of the conduct of the Dowager Duchess of Marlborough, from her firstcoming to Court, to the year 1710. In a letter from herself to My Lord — [Anon.] 8°. 1742. (2 copies.) 4213 HOOKER (REV. RICHARD). Works : with an account of his life and death, by Isaac Walton. Arranged by Kev. John Keble. Second edition. 3 vol. 8°. Oxford, 1841. 4214 HOOKER (WILLIAM) M.D. Physician and patient; or, a practical view of the mutual duties, relations and interests of the Medical profession and the Community. Edited by Edward Bentley, M.D. 12°. 1850. 4215 HOOPER (WILLIAM) M.D. Memoirs of the Year 250,0. Translated from the Erench by W. Hooper. 2 vol. 12°. 1772. 4216 HOOPER (LIEUT. WILLIAM HULME) R.N. Ten months among the tents of the Tuski, with incidents of an Arctic boat expedition in search of Sir John Franklin . . Map and illustrations. 8°. 1853. 4217 HOPE (I.) Britanny and the Bible : with remarks on the Erench people and their affairs. 12°. 18.52. , 4218 Britanny and the chase ; with hints on Erench affairs. 12°, 1853. 4219 HOPE (THOMAS). Anastasius ; or. Memoirs of a Greek : written at the close of the eighteenth century. 2 vol. New edition. 12°. 1836. 4220 HOPER OR HOOPER (JOHN) BISHOP OF GLOUCESTER. An oversight, and deliberacion upon the holy Prophete Jonas . . Comprehended in seve[n] sermons. Anno. MD.L. B.L, 5^ in. n.p. n.d. 4221 D'. Bliss's copy and MS. notes one of whioli says " Printed it is said by John Tysdall or Tysdale dwelling in Knight-Rider street, who had also a licence to print it a second time in 1560," HOPKINS (EVAN). Illustrated introduction to the connexion of Geology and Magnetism ; or the prin- ciples of terrestrial physics. With a geo- logical section across the Andes. 8°. (1855.) 4222 HOPKINS (THOMAS). Two . . Sermons . . against the sins of this land in generall, and in par- ticular, against the sins of this City of London. Preached in the City of London. 4°. 1615. 4223 HOPKINSON (SAMUEL). Eeligious and moral reflections, origi- nally intended for the use of his parish- ioners. Second edition. 12°. 1814. 4224 HORATIUS FLACCUS (QUINTUS). Q. H. E. . . opera Dionysii Lambini emendatus . . Quae huic tertiae . . editionl sint addita, epistola ad lectorem . . doeebit. E°. Lutetiae, 1580. 4225 Separate title-page, with date 1678 to the second part. Opera. (Ed. by Michael Maittaire.) 12°. L.P. 1715. 4226 Autographs and MS. notes of " J. Gay " (the poet). Book-plate and MS. letter of Thomas Grenville. Opera. Interpretatione et notis illus- travit Ludovicus Desprez . . in usum Del- phini . . Acoessere vita Horatii, cum Daeerii notis ; ejusdem chronologia Hora- tiana, et prsefatio. De Satyra Eomana. Editio nona. 8°. 1734. 4227 Autograph and MS. notes of "Will Shen- stone (the poet). Book-plate of John "Wightwick. Q. H. E. Editio nova, a Joanne Livie recognita. 12°., 1799. 4228 Q. H. Elaccus. (Portrait.) 3^ in. Pickering, 1820. 4229 MS. note by M*". Forster to whom this book was a present from his tutor Eev. Edward Moises, 1825. Opera omnia. Kecognovit . . Guil. Dillenburger. Editio altera. 8°. Bonnae, 1848. 4230 Works illustrated chiefly from the re- mains of ancient art. (The drawings from the Antique by G. Scharf ; the ornaments by Owen Jones.) With a life by Rev. Henry Hart Milman. 8°. 1849. 4231 Opera omnia. With a commentary by Rev. Arthur John Macleane. 8°. 1853. 4232 Opera cum novo commentario ad mo- dum Joannis Bond [by J. F. Duebner. With engraved vignettes from designs by E. Barrias.] (Vie d'Horace [par A. Noel des Vergers] .) 5^ in. Parisiis ex typographia Eirminorum Didot, 1855. 4233 Carmina. Carefully revised from the most recent texts. 12°. 1850. 4234 232 HORATIUS FLACCUS (QUINTUS)— cont. De Arte Poetiea liber. Carefully revised from the most recent texts. 12°. 1850. 4235 Poems consisting of Odes, Satyres, and Epistles, rendred in English verse by several persons. . [Edited by A. Brome.]' (Engraved title page with portrait of Horace — Portrait of Alex. Brome.) 8°. 1666. 4236 Odes, Satyrs, and Epistles. Done into EngUsh by M'. Creech. Third edition. (Portrait of Creech.) 12°. 1711. 4237 Fifth edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 1720. 4238 Poetical Translation of the Works, with the original text, and critical notes . . By Philip Francis, D.D. A new edition, with additional notes, by Edward Du Bois. 4 vol. 12°. 1807. (Two copies.) 4239 Works. Translated literally into English prose, by C. Smart. New edition, revised, with . . notes, by T. A. Buckley. 8°. Bohn, 1850. 4240 ' Epodes, Satires, and Epistles. Trans- lated by Eev. Francis Howes. 12°. 1845. 4241 Odes of H. The best of lyrick poets . . Third edition. Selected, translated . . by S'. T[homas] H[awkins]. Lat. andEng. 12°. 1635. 4242 All Horace his Lyrics, or his four books of odes, and his book of epodes Englished [by Barten Holyday]. 12°. 1653. 4243 Odes, Epodes, and Carmen Seculare, in Latin and English ; with a translation of Dr. Ben — ley's [Beutley's] Notes. To which are added Notes upon Notes. In 24 parts complete. By several hands. 12°. 1713. (Three copies.) 4244 These three copies, with differences in the title-pages, are substantially the same, except that N°. 3 has no " Life of Horace.' ' Each of the 24 Parts has its own title-page, with various dates 1713-25. . The "Notes upon Notes; done in the Bentleian stile and manner." are, ac- cording to *' Lowndes," by Oldisworth. "Lowndes" gives 1712 as the date, and, probably, the one of these copies which is without the "Life of Horace" and the general title-page, is of this edition. N". 1. MS. notes by S. Butler. N". 3. MS. notes and translations. Odes, Epodes, and Carmen Seculare in English verse. To which is prefix'd the Life of Horace : written by Suetonius. Translated from D'. Bentlej's Latin edi- tion, by WiUiam Oldisworth. Second edition. ■ 12°. 1719. 4345 Odes, translated by John Scriven. 12°. 1843. 4246 Odes literally translated into English verse. With notes. By Henry George Robinson. [With the Lat. text]. 2 vol. (in 3). 12°. 1844,1846,1855. 4247 HORATIUS FLACCUS (QUINTUS)— coiit. Odes and Epodes, translated literally and rhythmically. By W. Sewell, B.D. 8°. Bohu, 1850. 4248 Odes translated into uurhymed metres, with introductions and notes. By P. W. Newman. 8°. 1853. 4249 Odes and Epodes a metrical translation into Enghsh with introduction and com- mentaries by Lord Lytton. With Latin text. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1869. 4250 "Prom Lord Lytton." New edition. 8°. 1872. 4251 Presentation copy. [No title-page. Satires and Epistles. With notes and excursus, by Thomas Keightley]. 8°. • 4252 HORACE VERNON. Horace Vernon ;' or, Life in the West. 3 vol. 8°. 1838. 4253 [HORNE (GEORGE) BISHOP OF NORWICH.] Letter to Adam Smith. On the life, death, and philosophy of his friend David Hume. By one of the people called Christians. Second edition. 1£°. Oxford, 1777. 4254 New edition . . 12°. 1799. 4255 HORNE (RICHARD HENRY). Ballad Romances. 12°. 1846. 4256 " John Porster Esq", from E. H. H." Exposition of the false medium and barriers excluding Men of Genius from the public. [Anon.] (Portrait of Cardinal Bentivoglio drawn on stone by the author). 8°. 1833. (Two copies.) 4257 History of Napoleon: edited by E. H. Uorne. Blustrated with . . engravings on wood, from designs by Ratfet and Horace Vernet. 2 vol. 8°. 1841. 4258 A New Spirit of the Age. Edited by E. H. Home. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1844. . 4259 Inserted at the commencement of Vol. I is " Introductory comments " {to the 2°"^ edi- tion) by R. H. Home. V.l. Dickens — Lord Ashley [Earl of Shaftesbury] and D^ Southwood Smith — Thomas Ingoldsby-— Landoi-— William and Mary Howitt— I)''. Pusey— G. P. E. James, JI". Gore, Captain Marryat, and M". TroUope— Taltourd— E. M. Milnes and Hartley Coleridge- Sydney Smith, A. ]?onblan(iue, and D. Jer- rold — Wordsworth and Leigh Hunt. V. 2. Tennyson — Macaulay — Hood and Hook — Harriet Martineau and M" Jameson — Sheridan Knowles and Maci*eady — Miss K. B. Ban'ett [M" Browning] and M" Norton— Banim and the Irish novelists- Browning and Marston— Bnlwer — W. H. Ainsworth — M". Shelley and imaginative romance — R. Montgomery — Carlyle — [Sir] H. Taylor and the author of " Pestus LP. J. Bailey]." M". Browning is said to have con- tributed seveiol of the essays. 233 HORNE (RICHARD HENRY)— conf. Orion an epic poem . . 12°. 1843. 4260 " Price one farthing." Poor Artist ; or, Seven eye-sights and one object. [Anon.] 12". IS.'jO. 4261 HORNER (LEONARD). Memoirs and Correspondence of Francis Horner, M.P. Edited by L. Horner. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8». 1843. 4262 [Another — condensed-- edition.] 8°. Edinburgh, 1849. 4263 Second edition, with additions. 2 vol. (Portraits of Horner and Lord Webb Seymour.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] and London, 1853. 4264 HORT (LIEUTENANT-COLONEL). The Guards and the Line. (Illustrated by Alfred Crowquill). Oblong 8°. 1851. 42P5 HOSKINS (S. ELLIOTT) M.D. Charles the Second in the Channel Islands . . 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 4266 HOSKYNS (CHANDOS WREN). Short inquiry into the history of Agri- culture, in ancient, mediaeval, and modern times. 12°. 1849. ' 4267 Talpa : or the chronicles of a Clay Farm. An agricultural fragment. By C. W. H. (Vignettes by George Cruik- shank.) 8°. 1852. 4268 Third edition. 12°. 1854. 4269 HOT-WATER CURE. A Hot- Water Cure, sought out in Ger- many, in the summer of 1844. The journal of a patient. 8°. 1845. 4270 HOTTEN (JOHN CAMDEN). Hand-book to the Topography and Family history of England and Wales : being a descriptive account of twenty thousand . . books . . relating to the history of almost every landed estate and old Engli.sh family in the country, inter- spersed with . . notes. 8°. n.d. 4271 HOUDIN (JEAN EUGENE RO- BERT—). Memoirs of Kobert — Houdin ambassador, author, and conjuror. Written by himself. (Translated by Lascelles Wraxall.) 2 vol. 8°. 1859. 4273 Third edition. 8°. 1860. 4273 The Sharper detected and exposed. 8°. 1863. 4274 HOUGHTON (RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES, 1st BARON). Life, letters, and literary remains of John Keats. Edited by K. M. Milnes. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1848. 4275 HOUGHTON f RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES, 1st BARON)— co»<. Memorials of many scenes. New edition. 12°. 1844. 4276 Memorials of a tour in some parts of Greece : chiefly poetical. 8°. 1834. 4277 Monographs personal and social. With Portraits. b°. 1873. 4278 Suleiman Pasha— A. vcn Hnmhnldt at the Court of Berhn— Cardinal Wiseman— Landor— The Berrys— Harriet Lady Ash- hurton— Sydney Smith— Last days of Heine. Palm Leaves. 12°. 1844. 4279 Poems. 2 vol. (in one). Vol.). Poems of many years. 2. Memorials of a residence on the Continent (and historical poems). 8°. 1838. 4280 Poems, legendary and historical. New edition. 12°. 1844. 4281 Poems of many years. New edition. 12°. 1844. 4282 Poetry for the People, and other poems. 8°. 1840. 4283 N"". 4276, 8, 81, 83 presentation copies with inscriptions. HOUSE OF COMMONS. Nose-gay for the House of Commons. Made up of the stincking flowers of their seven yeares labours, gathered out of the Garden of their New Reformation . . By Mercurius Melancholicns. 4°. n.p. 1648. 4284 HOUSEHOLD WORDS. Household Words. A Weekly Jour- nal. Conducted by Charles Dickens. 19 vol. 8°. 1850-9. (Two copies.) 4285 Household narrative of current events (for the year 1850) ( — 55.) being a monthly supplement to Household Words . . 6 vol. 8°. 1850-5. (Two copies.) 4286 No. 2 in 3 vol. Christmas Stories from the House- hold Words (1850-185S) . . [By Charles Dickens and others] . 8°. n.d. 428" HOUSMAN (ROBERT FLETCHER). Collection of English Sonnets. 8°- 1835. 4288 HOUSTOUN (DR. JAMES). Memoirs of his own life-time . . col- lected from the author's original manu- scripts, and publish'd bj' Jacob Bickerstaff. 8°. 1747. 4289 HOVEDEN (ROGER DE). Annals. Comprising the history of Eng- land and of other countries of Europe from A.D. 732 to 1201. Translated from 234 HOVEDEN (ROGER DE)—cont. the Latin with notes and illustrations by Henry T. Eiley. 2 vol. Vol 1. A.D. 732 to 1180. 2. 1181 to 1201. 8°. Bohu, 1853. 4290 HOWARD (HON. CHARLES) aft. 10TH DUKE OF NORFOLK. Historical Anecdotes of some of the Howard Eamily. 8°. 1769. 4291 Thoughts, essays, and maxims, chiefly religious and poHtical. 12°. 1768. 4292 Book-plate (?D'.. Disney's). [HOWARD (HON. EDWARD).] ''' Caroloiades, or, the Rebellion of forty one . . a heroick poem. [Anou.] 8°. 1689. 4293 HOWARD (HENRY) R.A. Course of lectures on Painting, de- livered at the Eoyal Academy . . Edited, with a memoir . . by Frank Howard. 8°. 1848. 4294 [HOWARD (JAMES).] Evils of England, social and economi- cal. By a London Physician. 12". 1848. 4295 [HOWARD (LADY).] Josiah, by the author of Gideon. 12°. 1842. 4296 HOWARD (LEONARD) D.D. Collection of Letters . . of many princes, great personages and statesmen. Together, with some curious and scarce tracts . . religious, political, and moral. By L. Howard. Vol. I. 4°. 1753. 4297 Book-plate of James Rowles. HOWDEN (P.). Treatise on the epidemic now raging among Cattle . . with the evils likely to result therefrom to the human species ; and shewing the only remedy for the evil. 12°. 1845. 4298 HOWE (SAMUEL G.) M.D. [No title-page. Report, ou " Training and teaching Idiots." n.p. [U.S.] n.d. (1850).] 8°. 4299 HOWEL OR HOWELL (JAMES). Character of Englaud . . in a letter, to a noble man of France. With reflections [if practicable] . . [Anon.] Third edi- tion. 1659. 4300 Brief character of the Low-Countries under the States. Being three weeks ob- servation of the . . inhabitants. [Anon.] 1660. 4301 HOWEL OR HOWELL (JAMES) — cont. Perfect description, of the people and country of Scotland. [Anon.] 1659. 4302 'N'". 4300-2 one vol. (ii in.) . . Discourse concerning the precedency of Kings : wherin the reasons and argu- ments of the three greatest monarks of Christendom who claim a several right therunto, are faithfully collected, and renderd . . Treatise of Ambassadors, &c. (Portraits of the author and Charles H.) F°. 1664. 4303 . . Dodona's Grove, or the vocall forest. Second part. (Frontispiece.) 12°. 1650. 4304 Epistolae Ho-Elianae : familiar letters domestick and foreign . . Ninth edi- tion. (Engraved title with portrait.) 8°. 1726. 4305 Instruments of a King : or, a short dis- course of the Sword. The Scepter. The Crowne. [Signed at end.] 4°. 1648. 4306 Lexicon tetraglotton, an English- French-Italian- Spanish dictionary choicest proverbs in all the said toungs . . and the English translated into the other three . . familiar letters and verses run- ning all in proverbs, with a particular tome of the Brittishor old Cambrian sayed- sawes and adages . . Lastly . . five cen- turies of new sayings . . (Frontispiece.) F°. 1660. 4307 Lustra Ludovici, or the life of . . Lewis XIII. (and of his Cardinall de Richelieu) . . F°. 1646. 4308 Princess Elizabeth's copy with her auto- graph. Kuptialls of Peleus and Thetis. Con- sisting of a mask and a comedy, or the the [«'c] great royall ball, acted lately In Paris six times by the King in person , . [Anon.] 4°. 1654. 4309 Nuptials of Peleus and Thetis. A new Italian comedy, whence the preceding Mask was extracted ; made English by a nearer adherence to the original, then to the French translation. [Ep. Ded. signed by Howel.] 4°, 1654. 4310 N»'. 4809-10 in one vol. Some sober inspections made into the carriage and consults of the late Long- Parliament . . By J. H. 8°. 1656. 4311 Anonymous book-plate, by W. H. Toms, 1762. Twelve several treatises, of the late re- volutions in these three kingdomes . . (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1661. 431c 235 HOWEL OR HOWELL (JAMES) — cont. The Vision : or a Dialog between the Soul and the Bodie. Fancied in a Morn- ing-Dream. 12<'. 1651. 4313 Several ol these works by Howell were D'. Bliss's copies and have MS. notes by him. HOWITT (ANNA MARY) afterw. MRS. WATTS. Art-Student in Munich. 1850. 2 vol. 8°. 4314 HOWITT (MARY). Ballads and other poems. (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. 4315 Pictorial Calendar of the seasons ex- hibiting . . country life for every month in the year and embodying the whole of Aikin's Calendar of Nature. Edited by M. Howitt . . Engravings on wood. 8°. Bohn, 1854. 4316 HOWITT (RICHARD). Impressions of Australia Felix, during four years' residence in that colony ; notes of a voyage round the world ; Australian poems, &c. 12°. 1845. 4317 HOWITT (WILLIAM). German Experiences : addressed to the English ; both stayers at home, and goers abroad. 12°. 1844. 4318 The Hall and the Hamlet ; or, scenes and characters of country life. 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 4319 Homes and Haunts of the most eminent British Poets. The illustrations by W. and G. Measom. 2 vol. 8°. 1847. 4320 Life and adventures of Jack of the Mill . . a fireside story . . illustrations on wood by G. S. Sargent. 2 vol. [Vol. 2 wanting]. 12°. 1844. 4321 Popular history of Priestcraft in all ages and nations. Seventh edition. 8°. 1845. Rural and domestic life of Germany : with characteristic sketches of its cities and scenery . . Illustrations by G. F. Sargent. 6°. 1842. 4323 Visits to remarkable places : old halls, battle fields, and scenes illustrative of striking passages in history and poetry : chiefly in the counties of Durham and Northumberland. Second series. Wood- cuts from drawings . . by Carmichael, Kichardsons, and Taylor. 8°. 1842. 4324 Marginal pencil notes — ? some by T. Carlyle. Year-book of the Country ; or, the field, the forest, and the fireside. With illustrations from designs by Birket Foster. 8°. 1850. 4325 HOWITT (WILLIAM AND MARY). Literature and Romance of Northern Europe : constituting a complete history of the literature of Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Iceland . . 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 4326 Stories of English and Foreign life. With twenty engravings. 8°. Bohn, IS.'iS. 4327 HOWLEGLAS. Howleglas. Edited by Frederic Ouvry. 4°. Privately printed, 1867. 4328 HOWSON (JOHN SAUL) D.D. DEAN OF CHESTER). Sunday evening. Twelve short sermons for family reading. 12°. 1849. 4329 HUBER (VICTOR AIME). English Universities. From the German. Abridged translation, edited by Francis W. Newman. 2 vol. (in 3). (Portraits.) 8°. 1843. 4330 HUBERT (REV. H. S. M.). England in the days of Wiclif. 8°. London and Thetford, 1849. (Two copies.) 4331 HUC (EVARISTE REGIS). Recollections of a Journey through Tartary, Thibet, and China, during 1 844-6 . Condensed translation by Mrs. Percy Sinnett. 12°. 1852. 4332 Chinese Empire . . 2 vol. 8°. 1855. 4333 HUDSON (REV. CHARLES) AND KENNEDY (EDWARD SHIR- LEY). Where there's a will there's a way • an ascent of Mont Blanc by a new route and without guides. 8°. 1856. 4334 HUGHES (T. M.). The Ocean Flower ; a poem. Preceded by an historical and descriptive account of the island of Madeira, a summary of the discoveries and chivalrous history of Portugal and an essay on Portuguese lite- rature. 12°. 1845. ' 4335 HUGHES (REV. THOMAS SMART.) Essay on the political system of Europe ; its connection with the government of Great Britain, and the general policy of the European states. With a memoir and portrait. 8°. 1855. 4336 Travels in Sicily, Greece, and Albania. Engravings of maps scenery plans &c. 2 vol. 4°. 1820. 4337 Second edition. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1830. 4338 236 HUGHES (WILLIAM). Australian Colonies : their origin and present condition. 12°. 1852. 4339 HUGO (VICTOR. MARIE). Oeuvres. Drames. 8°. Paris, 1833, 5. 4340 Lucr6ce Borgia. Ti'oisifeme Edition. Marie Tudor. Angelo, tyrau de Padoue. Cromwell, drame. 2 vol. (in one) . 12°. Bruxelles, 1830. 4341 Excursions along the banks of the Rhine. 8». 1843. 4342 Hernani; or, the honour of a Castiliau. A tragedy, from the French of V. Hugo. 8". ] 830. 4343 Hunchback of l^otre-Dame. Translated expressly for this edition [Bentley's Standard Novels] ; with a sketch of the life and writings of the Author; by Frederic Shoberl. New edition, revised. 12°. 1849. 4344 Le Roi s'Amuse, drame. 8°. Paris, 1832. 4345 [Another edition]. 12°. Bruxelles, 1832. 4346 Litterature et philosophic melees. 1819-1834. 2 vol. (in one). 12o. Bruxelles, 1834. 4347 Lucrfece Borgia, drame. 12°. Bruxelles, 1833. 4348 Melanges. Claude Gneux. — Le dernier jour d'un condamne. Fragment sur la peine de mort. 12°. Bruxelles, 1835. 4349 Napoleon the little. 8°. 1852. 4350 Notre-Dame de Paris. Neuvieme edi- tion. [Anon.] 3 vol. (in one). 12°. Bruxelles, 1832. 4351 Poesies. 3| in. Bruxelles, 1828. 4352 HUISH (ROBERT). Memoirs of George the fourth . . with sketches of all the celebrated men who were his friends and companions as a prince, and his ministers and counsellors as amonarch. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1830. 4353 " W. S. Landor 1846." . HUMAN NATURE. Human Nature. A philosophical expo- sition of the divine institution of reward and punishment, which obtains in the physical, intellectual, and moral constitu- tions of Man ; with an introductory essay. To which is added, a series of ethical observations, written during the perusal of Eev. James Martineau's recent work, entitled, " Endeavours after the Christian Life." 8°. 1844. 4354 HUMBOLDT (BARON FRIEDRICH HEINRICH ALEXANDER VON). Aspects of Nature, in different lands and different climates; with scientific elucidations. Translated by M". Sabine. 2 vol. 12°. 1849.. 4355 Cosmos : a sketch of a physical descrip- tion of the Universe. Translated from the German, by E. C. Otte (B. H. Paul, and W. S. Dallas). 5 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1848-9, 1871-2. 4350 [Another translation.] Translated under the superintendence of Major- General [Sir] Edward Sabine, E.A. Vol. 2, 3 (in two parts) and 4 (Part I). 8°. 1848-58. 4357 Fourth edition. Vol. L II. 12°. 1849. 4358 Personal narrative of travels to the equinoctial regions of America, during the Years 1799-1804. By A. Von Humboldt and Aime Bonpland. Written in French by A. Von Humboldt. Translated and edited by Thomasiua Ross. 3 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1852-3. 4359 Views of Nature : or contemplations on the sublime phenomena of Creation ; with scientific illustrations. Translated from the German by B. C. Otte, and Henry G. Bohn. With a frontispiece from a sketch " by the author, a, f ac-simile of his handwriting, and a comprehensive index. 8°. Bohn, 1850. 4360 HUMBOLDT (BARON CARL WIL- HELM VON). Letters to a Lady. From the German. With an introduction by C. [Henry] Stebbing. 12°. 1849. 4361 Sphere and duties of Government. Translated from the German, by Joseph Coulthard, jun. 8°. 1854. 4362 HUME (REV. ABRAHAM) LL.D. Learned Societies and printing clubs of the Lnited Kingdom : being an account of their respective origin, history, objects, and constitution . . 8°. 1847. ' 4363 HUME (DAVID). History of England, from the invasion of Julius Caesar to the accession of Henry Vn. . . Vol. I. n. 4°. 1762. 4364 From the accession of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688. In six vol. New edition. Vol. Ill -VI. 4°. 1764-3-2. 4365 MS. notes at the end of Vol. TI. New edition, with the author's last cor- rections and improvements . . Short ac- count of his life, written by himself. 8 vol. 8°. 1823. 4366 In Vol 1. " Historical chart " by W. Play, fair. 287 HUME (DAVID)— con*. Life of D. Hume. Written by himself. [VVith] Letter from Adam Smith to William Strahan [relating to Hume]. (Portrait inserted.) 12°. 1777. (Two copies).. 4307 N°. 2. Book-plate of Sir Gregory Pase (Brown). Supplement to the Life. Containing genuine anecdotes, and a circumstantial account of his death and funeral . . Copy of his Will. [Anon.J 12°. 1777. 4368 New edition, 12°. 1789. 4369 Private Correspondence -with several distinguished persons, between 1761 and 1776 . . 4°. 1820. 4370 Essays on suicide, and the immortality of the soul, ascribed to D. Hume, never before published. With remarks, intended as an antidote to the poison contained in these performances by the editor (M.). . . Two letters on suicide, from Kosseau's [sic] Eloisa. 12°. 1783. 4371 Letters of eminent persons addressed to D. Hume. From the papers bequeathed by his nephe-w to the Eoyal Society of Edinburgh. [Edited by John Hill Burton] . 8". Edinburgh and London, 1849. 4372 HUMPHREYS (EDWARD RUPERT) LL.D. Manual of Political Science, for the use of schools, and more especially of candi- dates for the Civil Service. . . 12°. 1855. 4373 HUMPHREYS (HENRY NOEL). Coin collector's manual, or guide to the numismatic student in the formation of a cabinet of coins : comprising an . . account of . . coinage, from the earliest period to the fall of the Roman empire ; with some account of the coinages of modern Europe, more especially of Great Britain. With . . illustrations . . 2 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1853. 4'374 Illuminated illustrations of Froissart. Selected from the MS. in the British Museum. 8°. 1844. 4375 Origin and progress of the art of Writing : a connected narrative of the development of the arc, its primeval phases in Egypt, China, Mexico, etc. ; its middle state in the cuueatic systems of Nineveh and Persepolis, to its introduction to Europe through the medium of the Hebrew, Phoenician, and Greek systems, and its subsequent progress to the present day. . . Specimens of the writing of all ages, and facsimiles from autograph letters. . . 8°. 1853. 437c A Record of the Bkick Prince . . Pas- sages in his life . . embellished with HUMPHREYS (HENRY NOEL)— co«<. miniatures and borderings selected from illuminated MSS., referring to events con- nected with English history. 8". 1849. 4377 Ten Centuries of Art. Its progress in Europe from the ix"" to the xix"" century. \yith a glance at the artistic works of clas- sical antiquity, and concluding considera- tions on the probable influence of the Great Exhibition, and on the present state and future prospects of art in Great Britain. 4°. 1352. 4378 HUMPHREYS (R.). Memoirs of J. Decastro, Comedian . . Anecdotes of . . D'. Johnson, Garrick, Foote, Wilson, Charles Bannister, J. Palmer, C. Dibdin, sen., Earl of Barrymore, E. B. Sheridan, G. F. Cooke, J. P. Kemble, &c. . . Analysis of the life of Philip Astley . . History of the Eoyal Circus, now the Surrey Theatre ; and an historical skejch of Sadler's Wells. Likewise, scarce thea- trical advertisements, from Garrick's first attempt in Goodman's-Fields ; his last moments. Old Grimaldi's dream, &o. . . Edited by R. Humphreys. (Portrait of De Castro). 12°. 1824. 4379 HUNDERTPFUND (LIBERTAT). Art of Painting restored to its simplest and surest principles. Translated from the German. Illustrated with coloured plates. 8°. 1849. 4380 HUNGARY. Sketches of the Hungarian emigration into Turkey. By a Honved. (Translated by Bayle St. John.) 12°. 1853. 4381 Addresses of the Hungarian Diet of 1861, to the Emperor of Austria, with the Imperial rescript . . Translated, with notes . . By J. Home Payne. 8°. 1862. (Three copies.) 4383 Two of these copies on thick paper. HUNT (FREDERICK KNIGHT). The Fourth Estate : contributions to- wards a history of Newspapers, and of the liberty of the press. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 4383 The Rhine its scenery and historical and legendary associations. 8°. 1845. 4384 HUNT (JAMES). Manual of the philosophy of Voice and Speech, especially in relation to the English language and the art of public speaking. 8°. 1859. 4385 HUNT (JAMES HENRY LEIGH). Poetical Works. 8°. 1832. 4386 "The Author to liis dear friend, John Porster, gratefully." 238 HUNT (JAMES HENRY LEIGH)— cont. [Another edition.] Containing many pieces now first collected. 12°. 1844. 4387 "To John Forster from his affectionate friend Leigh Hunt." [Another edition]. Now finally col- lected, revised by himself, and edited by his son, Thornton Hunt. With illustra- tions by (B. H.) Corbould. 12°. 1860. 4388 Autobiography ; with reminiscences of friends and contemporaries. 3 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1850. 4389 New edition, revised by the Author ; with further revision, and an introduction, by his eldest Son. Portrait. 8°. 1860. 4390 Book for a Corner ; or Selections in prose and verse from authors the best suited to that mode of enjoyment : with comments on each, and a general intro- duction . . engravings, from designs by F. W. Hulme and J. Franklin. 2 vol. 12°. 1849. , 4391 Captain Sword and Captain Pen. A poem. With some remarks on war and military statesmen. (Illustrations.) 12°. 1835. 4392 "To John Forster, from his affectionate friend Leigh Hunt." Third edition. With a new preface . . 12°. 1849. (Two copies.) 4393 No. 1. " John Forster Esq. The first copy by the Author's particular reciuest. " Christianism : or belief and unbelief reconciled ; being exercises and medita- tions. 8°. (London.) Not for sale : only seventy-five copies printed, n.d. (? 1832.) (Four copies.) 4394 Preface by [M'. Forster, the editor]. There are some slight variations in these copies. [? Two editions]. Correspondence. Edited by his eldest Son (Thornton Hunt). With a Portrait. 2 vol. 8°. 1862. 4395 Critical Essays on the performers of the London Theatres, including general obser- vations on the practise and genius of the Stage. By the author of the theatrical criticisms in the weekly paper called The News. (Portrait.) 12°. 1807. 4396 Illustrated with plates (inserted). MS. note by George Daniel to whom this copy belonged. Imagination and Fancy ; or selections from the English poets, illustrative of those first requisites of their Art ; with markings of the best passages, critical notices of the writers, and an essay in answer to the question " What is Poetry ?" 8". 1844. 4397 The Indicator, and the Companion; a. Miscellany for the fields and the fire-side. 2 vol. 8". 1834. 4398 HUNT (JAMES HENRY LEIGH)— cont. [Another edition.] In two parts. 8°- 1840. 4899 Jar of Honey from Mount Hybla. Illustrated by Richard Doyle. 8°. 1848. 4400 J'uvenilia; or, a collection of poems- Written between the ages of twelve and sixteen. (Portrait.) 8°. 1802. 4401 Leigh Hunt's London Journal . . 2 vol. (in one). F°. 1834-5. 4402 Title of Tol. II— Leigh Hunt's London Journal and the Printing Machine. Lord Byron and some of his contem- poraries ; with recollections of the author's life, and of his visit to Italy. Second edi- tion. 2 vol. (Portraits.^ 8°. 1828. (Two copies.) 4403 No. 1. " Leigh Hunt wishes he had made a present of this book to John Forster." MS. on Title. Men, Women, and Books ; a selection of sketches, essays, and critical memoirs, from his uncollected prose writings. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. 4404 The Months descriptive of the successive beauties of the Year. 12°. 1821. 4405 Old Court Suburb; or, memorials of Kensington, regal, critical, and anecdotical. 2 vol. 8°. 1855. 4406 "To John Forster, from Ms aflectionate friend the Author." One Hundred romances of real life ; selected and annotated by L. Hunt. Com- prising remarkable historical and domestic facts, illustrative of human nature. 8°. 1843. 4407 Headings for Eailways ; or, anecdotes and other short stories . . collected in the course of his own reading. 12°. n.d. (? 1850). 4408 Keligion of the heart. A manual of faith and duty. 12°. 1853. 4409 This is "Christianism" [No. 4394] enlarged and finished. L. K. The Seer ; or, common-places refreshed. In two parts. 8°. 1840-1. 4410 Sir Ralph Esher : or, Memoirs of a gentleman of the court of Charles the second, including those of his friend Sir Philip Heme. With a preface. 12°. 1850. 4411 Stories from the Italian poets : with lives of the writers. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 4412 "To John Forster with kindest love and ! from L. H." Stories in verse : now first collected. With illustrations. 12°. 1855. 4413 " To John Forster from his affectionate friend Leigh Hunt." 239 HUNT (JAMES HENRY LEIGH) — cont, Table-Talk. To which are added imaginary conversations of Pope and Swift. 8°. 1851. 4414 Tale for a chimney corner, and other essays. From the " Indicator," 1819-1821. Edited (with introduction and notes) by Edmund Oilier. (Portrait and monu- ment.) 12°. n.d. (1869). 441.5 "John Porster, Esq. In memory of Leigh Hunt." The Town ; its memorable characters and events. St. Paul's to St. James's. Illustrations. (Engraved by C. Thurston Thompson, from drawings by J. W. Archer and C. T. Thompson.) 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 4416 Wit and Humour, selected from the English poets ; with an illustrative essay, and critical comments. 8°. 1846. 4417 HUNT (ROBERT). Elementary Physics, an introduction to the study of natural philosophy. New edition, with corrections. 8". Bohn,1855. 4418 Hunt's Hand-book to the official cata- logues : an explanatory guide to the natural productions and manufactures of the Great Exhibition of the industry of all nations, 1851. Edited by R. Hunt. 2 vol. 12°. n.d. 4419 Panthea, the spiiit of Nature. 8°. 1849. 4420 Poetry of Science, or studies of the phy- sical phenomena of nature. 8°. 1848. 4421 Besearches on Light : an examination of all the phenomena connected with the chemical and molecular changes produced by the influence of the solar rays ; em- bracing all the known photographic pro- cesses, and new discoveries in the art. 8°. 1844. 4422 HUNT (ROBERT M.). Life of Sir Hugh Palliser, admiral . . 8°. (Portrait.) 1844. 4423 HUNTER (ALEXANDER) M.D. Georgical Essays. 4 vol. 8°. York, 1803. 4424 HUNTER (HENRY) D.D. Sacred Biography. Or the history of the Patriarchs . . 4th edition. 6 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1792. 4425 Vol 2-5 of various dates and editions. Title of Vol. 6— Saxjred Biography : being a sequel to the history of the Patriarchs . . containing the history of Deborah, Ruth, and Hannah, 1792. HUNTER (REV. JOSEPH). Collections concerning the church or congregation of Protestant Separatists formed at Scrooby in north Nottingham- shire, in the time of King James I. : the founders of New-Plymouth, the parent- colony of New-England. 8°. 1854. 4426 Disquisition on . . Shakespeare's Tem- pest, in a letter to Benjamin Heywood Bright. 8°. [Privately printed ?] 1839. 4427 Letter inserted from B. H. Bright to Eev. D'. Bandinel, New illustrations of the life, studies, and writings of Shakespeare . . 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1845. 4428 Who wrote Cavendish's Life of Wolsey ? [Anon.] (Portraits.) 4°. 1814. 4429 MS. notes. [HUNTER (SUSAN) ai-t. MRS. STIRLING]. Eannj' Hervey ; or, the Mother's choice. [Anon.] 2 vol. 8°. 1849. 4430 HURD (RICHARD) BISHOP OF WORCESTER. Moral and political Dialogues ; with letters on Chivalry and Romance. 3 vol. Third edition. (Portrait ? of Ralph Allen.) 12°. 1765. 4431 Sixth edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1788. 4432 HURLBUT (WILLIAM HENRY). Pictures of Cuba. 12°. 1855. 4433 HURSTHOUSE (CHARLES) JUN. Account of the Settlement of New Ply- mouth, in New Zealand, from persona observation . Plan and views. 8°. 1849. 4434 HUSBAND OR HUSBANDS (ED- WARD). Printer. Exact collection of all remonstrances, declarations, votes, orders, ordinances, proclamations, petitions, messages, an- swers, and other remarkable passages betweene the Kings Majesty, and his High Court of parliament beginning at his return from Scotland, December 1641, and con- tinued untill March 21, 1643 . . with a table . . (Eroutispiece.) 4°. 1643. 4435 Collection of all the publicke orders ordinances and declarations of both Houses of Parliament, from 9 March 1642 until! December 1646 . . Severall of his Ma- jesties proclamations and other papers printed at Oxford . . Table . . (and — Appendix). (Frontispiece.) E°. 1646. 4436 240 HUSSEIN ALI KHAN. History of Hydur Naik . . Nawaub of the Kamatic Balaghaut : -written "by Meer Hussein Ali Khan Kirmani. Translated from an original Persian manuscript . . by Colonel W. Miles. 8°. 1842. 4437 HUTCHINGS (JAMES M.). Scenes of -wonder and curiosity in Cali- fornia. Illustrated. 8°. 1865. 4438 HUTCHINSON (T. J.). Narrative of the Niger, Tsbadda, and Biuue exploration : including a report on the position and prospects of trade up those rivers, -with remarks on the malaria and fevers of western Africa. 12". 1855. 4439 HUTTON (WILLIAM). Life of W. Hutton, Stationer, of Bir- mingham; and the history of his family. Written by himself. With some extracts from his other -works. (Portrait.) 12". 1841. 4440 HYPERIDES. r Aoyoi p. Orations for Lycophron and for Euxeuippus ; no-w first printed in fac- simile -with a short account of the dis- covery of the original manuscript at western Thebes in Upper Egypt in 1847, by Joseph Arden. The text edited with notes . . by Rev. Churchill Babington. F". Cambridge, 1853. 4441 I. IBN-KHALLIKAN, . . Biographical Dictionary translated from the Arabic by B" MacGuckin de Slane. Vol.1. 4». Paris and London, 1842. 4442 " No copies for sale in London. Distributed amonK Subscribers only." Pencil note on fitln-pa-ffe, IHNE (W.). Eescarches into the history of the Koman Constitution with ah appendix upon the Eoman Knights. [Ti-anslated by Eraneis Haywood] . 8". 1853. *4442 ILLUMINATED. Illuminated Magazine. Edited by Dou- glas Jorrold. Vol.1. (Illustrated by Leech, etc.) E°. (London), n.d. 4443 IMMERMANN (KARL). Munchausen. Eine Geschichtc in Ara- beskeii. 1 vol. (in two). 12°. Dussel- dorf, 1841. 4444 IMRAY (KEITH) M.D. Cyclopeedia of popular Medicine, in- tended for domestic use ; with numerous illustrations . , with a plain description of the medicines in common use . . com- plete treatise on diet, and directions for the treatment of fractures of the limbs, illustrated by plates. 8°. 1842. 4445 INCHBALD (MRS. ELIZABETH). Nature and Art. 12°. 1849. 4446 [Another — " Standard Library " — edi- tion]. 8°. u.p. n.d. 4447 A Simple Story. 12". 1849. 4448 [Another — " Standard Library " — edi- tion]. 8". n.p. n.d. 4449 INDIA. Observations on India. By- a Resident there many years. 8°. 1853. 4450 INGLEBY (CLEMENT MANSFIELD). Complete -view of the Shakspere contro- versy, concerning the authenticity and genuineness of manuscript matter affect- ing the works and biography of Shakspere, published by M'. J. Payne Collier . . 8°. 1861. 4451 Pacsimile of " Hamlet, Act I. Scene 4. Page 278. column I " bears this MS. note " This leaf is to be found in only a very " few early issued copies : having been " suppressed in consequence of an iajunc- *' ticn from the Court of Chancery." Shakspeare fabrications, or, the MS. Notes of the Perkins folio shown to be of recent origin. With an appendix on the authorship of the Ireland forgeries. 12". 1859. 4452 Shakespeare Hermeneutics, or the Still Lion, being an essay towards the restora- tion of Shakespeare's text. 4°. Loudon, Birmingham [printed], 1875. 4453 INGLEFIELD (VICE ADMIRAL SIR EDWARD AUGUSTUS). Summer search for Sir John Franklin ; with a peep into the Polar Basin. With short notices, by Professor Dickie, on the botany, and by D'. Sutherland, on the meteorology and geology; and a new chart of the Arctic Sea. 8°. 1853. 4454 INGLIS (HENRY DAVID). Spain in 1830. 2 vol. 8". 1831. 4455 INGOLDSBY (THOMAS) pseud, i.e. REV. RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM. Ingoldsby Legends ; or, Mirth and Mar- vels. Edited, with notes . . by R, H. Dalton Barbara. 2 vol. (Portrait and 241 INGOLDSBY (THOMAS) pseud, i.e. REV. RICHARD HARRIS BAR. HAM — coiit. Illustrations by Cruikshauk, Leech, etc.) 8°. 1870. 44.56 Some Account of Aly C^ousin Nichuhis. (Froutispicee by Leech). 12°. 1846. 4457 At end— The Trance . . INKERMAN. Russian account of the battle of Inker- man. From the German. 8°. 185C. 44.58 Prefatory remarks by the Translator si'rncd " B." INVALID. Solace of an Invalid. Fourth edition. 12". 1838. 4459 IRELAND (ALEXANDER). lyist of the Writings of William Hazlitt and Leigh Hunt, chronologically arranged ; with notes . and a selection of opinions preceded by a review of, and extracts from, Barry Cornwall's " Memorials of (!harles Lamb ;" with a few words on Wil- liam Hazlitt and his writings, and a chro- nological list of the works of Charles Lamb. 8". 1868. 4160 | Presentation copy. [Xo t. p. William Hazlitt and Leigh Hunt. Kepriuted, with additions, from ' the Manchester Examiner and Times, of I May 7th, 1868. Auou.] pp. 1-12. 12". i End. Manchester (printed). *4460 ! IRELAND (JOHN). ! Hogarth illustrated from his own manu- \ scripts ; compiled and arranged from the originals by J. Ireland. Third edition. .3 vol. (Portraits of Hogarth and Ire- I laud). 8°. 1812. 4-161 [ IRELAND (SAMUEL). | Investigation of M'. Malone's claim to the character of scholar, or critic, being an examination of bis Inquiry into the authen- ticity of the Shakspeare manuscripts, &c. 8». n.d. 4462 Miscellaneous papers .and legal instru- ments under the hand and seal of William Shakspeare: including the tragedy of King Lear, and a small fragment of Hamlet, from the original MSS. in the possession of S. Ireland. 8°. 1796. 44G3 IRELAND (WILLIAM HENRY). Authentic account of the Shaksperian manuscripts, &c. 8°. 1796. 4464 Confessions. Containing the p.articulars of his fabrication of the Shakspeare ma- nuscripts; together with anecdotes and opinions (hitherto unpublished) of many distinguished persons . . 8°. 1805. 4465 Southey's book-plate and binding, o 16505. IRELAND (WILLIAM W.). Studies of a Wandering Observer. 8". 18C7. 4466 IRELAND, Ireland. Political tracts of Menenius, 1848. Second edition. 8». DuWin, 1849. 4467 Irish tourist's illustrated handbook for visitors to Ireland. Maps. 8°. 1852. 4468 Keview of the principal facts connected with . . the recent state prosecutions in Ireland : including an examination . . of the Judgment of the House of Lords. By a Barrister. 8". 1845. 4469 Sketches of Ireland sixty years ago (Portrait of Tiger Koche), 12°. Dublin, 1847. 4470 Preface signed " W." Transactions of the central relief com- mittee of the Society of Friends during the Famine in Ireland, in 1846 and 1847 8". Dublin, 1852. 4471 [Tracts relating to Ireland, 1641-1701. Upwards of 400 pieces.] 14 vol. 4". & F". fjondon, DubHn, etc. 4472 Vol. 1. Irish Uebellion : or, an history of thi' be??inninKS and first proijresse of the gene- ral! rebellion raised within Ireland, "li October, 11! 14. Bv Sir John Temple. Biscoverie ■ of a late intended plot by Ihe Papists, to subdue the Protestants. Eeing a discourse betweene William O Conner a. priest, and Anne 1-Iussey an Irish genlle- woraan. n.p. l(!tl. Irelands complaint against Sir Geor;i:o Hat- ' cliffe. Delivered in Parliament l>y Cap- taine Audley Mer^^n. AVherein is de- clared thf {grievances of that kingdome, occasioned by him, and the Earle of Straf- ford. Depositions and Articles exhibited against him in Parliament. HUl. Speech b.y Captaine Audley Mervin to the Upper house of Parliament in Ireland, March 4. KilO. Articles (of high ti-ea-son) against Sir Richard Bolton Lord Chan- cellor, John Bishop of 1 )errie. Sir Gerard Lowther, Lord Chit-fe Justice of the Com- mon-Pleas, and Sir George lladcliffe. Re- monstrance of the Parliament. n.p. 1841. Captaine Audley Marvin's speech ; in the Upper house : 24 May, 1G41. Concerning the judicature of Parliament, mil. Sixteene queres propounded by the parlia- ment of Ireland to the Judges of the said kingdome. Speech by Captaine Audley Morvin, to the House of Commons, cnii- ceming their pi-iviledges, and grievances. n.p. 1841. [No title page. Proclamation, by the Lords lustices and Councell [Ireland]. Con- spiracie by Irish Papists.] s. sh. 1041. Cons])iraey by the Papists in Ireland, dis- covered at Dubhn and proclaimed there Octob. 23. IGU. Letter written with the kings owne hand, and sent from Eden- burgh Oclob. 18. 1611. 14[sJi!]ei. Letter from the Lord Chiefe Justices and Privie Councelloursin Ireland, to the Lords in parliament in England, W. Oetob. 1641. With a discoverie of the plot. 1641. [At the end in MS. "Fab[ian] : Phillips."] Q 242 IRELAND- VOL. \.—conL Relation of the plot discovered in Ireland, !ind rising of the Papists there, declared by a letter from one of the aldermen in Dublin. Proclamation there for the sup- pression of the rebells. Dublin printed. Reprinted. n.p. 1641. [Letter signed "W. B. ;" no proclamation.] Relation of the proceedings of the rebellious Papists. Related in a letter, and dated at Dublin, October, 27. Ifi41. and read in par- liament here, Novemb. 5, 1641. London, 1641. [At the end, in MS.. "rab[ian] : Phillips."! Eelation of the plot of the Papists in Ire- land. By my Lord Keeper in the house of Commons November 1. 16n. 1641. Declaration of the cruelties exercised by the Popish rebells in the province of Ulster since October 23. 1641. By Daniel Har- court. Commission granted to him by the Kings N[s«c]ajesty. n.d. Petition of the Protestant inhabitants of part of the province of Ulster concerning Bishops. 1641. Declaration of parliament, concerning tJie affairs of Ireland. Arguments to promote the work of subscription, according to the propositions lately published, for recovery of the Kingdom of Ireland. 1641. Relation, of a battell fought by Lord Moore, against the rebels ni Ireland. 164-1. "Wild-fire plot found out in Ireland : shew- ing how the rebels would have consumed Dublin with wild-fire. Letters, from two marchants in Ireland (Joseph "Wat- son and H. L.) concerning the plots. 6[sic]641. Irelands complaint, and Englands pitie; being a relation jDf the care, and love, ex- pressed by Parliament, towards the poore Protestants in Ireland : Orders of the said house, for the raising, of forces and monyes, to suppresse those rebellious Papists in Ireland. 1641. Skirmish betweene Sir Thomas Moore of the Protestant party, and Maqueres the Gene- rall 0? the rebels, 2. Decemb. 1641. Mur- ther committed by 7 soldiers on the body of M'. Atkins. IQU. Rebells letter to the Pope. Wherein they present unto him their late purchases by the sword in Ireland. 1642. Vox Hibernia3 or rather the voyce of the* Lord from Ireland : sermon preached in Saint Peters church Westminster, before Lords of the Parliament, on the h\st pub- like fast day, 22. December. 1641. By lames Usher Bishop of Armagh. 1642. Letter from Dermond Mac Connox-, one of tiio chiefetaines of the Irish rebels, unto tlie King of Spaine, for aide against the English, and Protestants. Letter from Lisbon, concerning the execution of 4. noblemen, 4. gentlemen, and 3. bishops, and one of the Inquisition. All Iraytors against the King of Portugal, lohn 1\'. and to make up the 13"^ the Bishop of Lamego found guilty in a great treason. 1642. Sir, Peniamin Rudyard his speech in Par- liament. Concerning the treatie with the Scottish commissioners, about the Irish alTuirH. Also the removeall of the Pajtists from Court, and all Poiusli oflicers, from severall jdaces of imploymcni M'ithin this Kingdouie. 1641. Abstract of the rebellion, and massacre of the Protestants, in Ireland, in 1641. li;sit. 2. Depositions concerning the traiterons in- teiilion of the rebels in Ireland. AVilh cxtr!ic-t of a letter from Rome, 4. Jan. 1641. 1642. Lord Osmonds overthrow, which was the chief commander to the rebells. With a comet or blazing starre, which appeared IRELAND—VOL. IL— con/. in the north part of Ireland 28. December. 1612. Distressed condition the English are in, in [Ireland]. Commission granted by Luke Birne to execute mai-shall law upon all the Protestants. 1642. Ti-ue relation of the proceedings in Ireland. 16^12. Relation of the chiefe passages in Ireland, since the first rising of the rebels dated 14. lanuary, 1641. Letter of the rebels to Lady Oflalia., mother to Lord Digby, to deliver up her castle of Geshel . With her answer. 1642. Relation, of the crueltie and massacres of the English Protestants in Ireland, 1641. In the province of Ulster, and other of the provinces there, by the Irish rebellious traytors. 1642. Protestation of the rebels in Ireland, and how they were beaten at the castle of Baltimore. Relation of a great battell betweene Captaine Nuse, and Tead-Rast the great rebel and how Captaine Nuse is going to relieve the castle of Baltimore. 1642. Relation of the miseralb[s«c]le estate Ire- land now standeth in. Great distresse of the Protestants. The preparation for Ire- land, by assent of Parliament. Tlie great comfort that they daily receive by the valour of Sir Simon Harcourt. 1642. Newes from Ireland In a letter received la^nuary 24. 1641. With a confirmation of another letter; by the relating the late exploits of the English Foi'ces there. 1642. [First letter signed " Richard John- son " ; second " S. G. J Relieving of Tredagh, by Captaine Thomas Steutevile. Sir Phelome O Neal's com- mission, for the establishing of Colonell Richard Plunket Lieutenant General! of Lempster, and Ulster, n.p. 1643. Last intelligence from Ireland. Received February the first. 1641. 1642. [First part of this tract signed " Richard Jolmson."] Dublin lanuary 28. True and perfect oc- currance of the present state of Dublin. And of every sevei-all passage betweene the Protestants and the rebells there. 1642. Protestants wonderment, or, a strange and unheard of oraison put up by the Papists, found in the pocket of Captain lames Rauley, a rebell in Ireland. 1642. Relation of a battell, wherein 18000 of the rebells were slaine by the English and Scots, expressed in a letter. Leinstcr, February l.S. 1641. 16-42. Letter from the Earle of Forth, to Robert Earle of Essex, His excellencies answer. Petition of the well-affected nobility and gentry of Ireland, who have suffered "under the rebels there. 1643. Relation of the present estate and condition of Ireland. Battels and overthrows lately given to the rebels. Proclamation, de- claring the njimea of the chief persons that are in rebellion. 1642. [At end — Letter to Sir Robert King. Signed "Ad. Loftus."] True state and condition of Ireland, sent to the House of Commons from (heir com- mittee there. Relation of the victory the Protestants, lately had against the rebels. Let ter fi-om Sir John Chicester. 1642. Relation touching the present state of Ire- land. Collected by a committee of the house of Commons. Examination of Hu- bert Petit, taken 19. February, 1611. [Im- print cut down. 1641 or 2?] M'. Pym, his speech in parliament conceni- ing the passing of the bill in the Com- mons, for the present pressine: of 16000 243 IRELAND— VOL, W.—cont. men, to bo immedialoly transported for Ireland. 1641. Letter from Sir Thomas Lucas, one of the commandera of our army in Ireland. Wliereiu is a relation of two great over- throwes which was Riven to the rebels by the English and Scottish Forces. The one before Tredarth, The other gi-eat victorie wns obtained by the linglish and Scots under the command of the Earle of Dun^arvin and Generall Leslej', in the province ot Corke. 16-11. Propositions b.y Parliament, lor the reduc- ing of Ireland. And the votes thereupon, presented unto tlie Kings Majestie. With his Majesties answer :ind assent. 1G41. Proclamation from the Hebels. Marching of 80000 rcliels into Monster. Siege of Kingsale, and Bandon-bridgt'. Sldrmishes with the rebels neere Dublin. Two over- throws of the rebels, by the Soots and the English, the one at London Dcrry, the other at Newry. livtl. Letter sent by order ot parliament, to the sherifCe of every shire. Order ot Parlia- ment ; foncerning such persons as are ap- pointed for the gathering ot such sums of money in London, as is intended for the reducing of the rebels in Ireland. 101-3. New plot discovered against our kingdome [Ireland] by tlie Danes. Letter from the Hage in Holland concerning a difference between the old Prince of Orange, and the high and mighty States. 18-12. Remonstrance of divers remarkeable pas- sages concerning the church and kmg- dome of Ireland, presented by Henry Jones D.D. to the House of Commons in England. 16-12. Letter from the Councell in Ireland, to the Parliament in England. Names of those Lords who have adventured all their estates, for the defence of the protestant religion in Ireland. 1641. Newes out of Ireland concerning the warlike affaires in the province of Leinster. 1642. Great advantages of prosecuting the Irish wars. By joyning the forces of the voluntai-y imdertakers, unto the supplies to be sent over by the State. 1642. That great Expedition tor Ireland by way of underwriting proposed, by Parliament, and assented unto by his Majesty is heere vindicated. 1642. Last ti*ue intelligence from Ireland. Dated in Dublin, 16 March. 1642. March 22. Relation of Irish occurrences, from 12. Pebr. to 8. March. Shewing what overthrowes was given to the rebells, and what good suocesse the Protestant party had, with a relation of the late reliefe of Trohedagh. 1642. The Propositions made by the oitie ot London, for the raising of a Million of Mony, for the subduing of the rebels in Ireland, weighed, and considered of, by divers gentlemen here in towne, and approved of, y the House of Commons, and presented unto the Lords for their concurrence, and to ioyn in an humble petition to his Majesty for his consent thereunto. Twenty members of the Commons having already subscribed for 20000iE. 1642. Letter from Corke. March 18. 1641. Also another letter from Athlone Castle. March 21. Both relating their prosperous proceedings and ha,ppy sucoesse of the English and Protestant Forces against the rebels in Ireland. 1642. Siege of Drogheda in Ireland, with a thank- full remembrance for its wondertull de- livery. By Nicholas Bernard, Deane of Ardagh. 1612. [Imperfect.] IRELAND— VOL, U.—cont. Letter from Dublin. By Sir John Temple. Relating the manner of taking the Castle of Carrick-Maine by Sir Simon Harcourt, and some English under his command : witli the manner of his hurt and death. 1642. Letter from Lieutenant Haward. Dated at Duncannon Fort. 1642. March, 31. Great defeat given to the rebells in Ireland, by Master George Courtne\', Governor of the castle ot Limbrick. Re- lation of the taking of Corke by the rebells. 1042. Continuation of the tryumphant and co- [ur.-i]gious proceeding's of the Protestant army in Ireland. Also the manner how the rebels consecrated Kilda[re] church. With an order from the House of Com- mons, unto shrielfes of each county. Ii:f2. [Title page cut down. Woodcut.] 3. April (i. Relating what hapncd to Captain Weldon and Captain Aston after their passage from Bristol to the foi-t of Dun- cannon in the mouth of the river of Water- ford. Letter from the Malor of ^^'aterford to Captain AsLnn in excuse of his rebel- lious designes, with Captain Astons ri-|>ly. 1642. (3 copies.) [Second coiDy is dated at the top April 2. and the imprint dilfers.] Letter from Sir W. Saintliger Lord Presi- dent of Munstcr, to the Lord Lieutenant ot Ireland. 1642. True intelligence from Ireland. Dated from Dublin the second of April. 1642. Letter from Chester : dated .second of Aprill, 1642. In which is related, the taking of Carreggmayne-Castle, from the rebels, where Sir Simon Harcott was slaine. Als(,, Sergent Major Berry, is mortally wounded. [Imprint cut down.] Letter from Dubhn, by an officer of the regiment, commanded b,y Colonell Munke. Relating all the passages of the English forces in those parts against the rebels. Also relieving of divers castles, and the bringing in of the heads of Lord Dun- boynes brother, Colonell Berne, and Colonell Butler. 1642. Death of S"". Simon Harcot. Relation from Deane Barnard concerning remarkable particulars of Gods merc>' towards our forces in the county of Louth, and the taking in of Ardee and Dundalke. Newes from Bristow of the returne of ships from Ireland. 1642. Letter from Rodger Buttock Dublin. Shew- ing, how 400. foot, and 100 horse sent from Dublin, under the command of Sir Charles Coot marched towards Ardee, defeating the whole army. Also, how they slew 1100. men at Dundalk. 16-12. Certilicate from Lord Moor and Sir Henry Titchborne, shewing the certainty of the cleering of the harbour, and country, twenty miles about Tredagh, with the taking of Bewly and Stameene castles, from the rebels. 1642. Letter from Dublin. Relation of the happie proceedings of the Scotch-men in Ire&nd against the rebells. Votes and resolutions of Parliament, conceiming the Kings late message. Order from Parliament, con- cerning church-government. 1642. Letter ot the Earle of Cork, to the State at Dublin ; wherein is shewed the cruelty the rebels have lately used to twenty ot Lord Barrimoores men at Coole. How Lord Barrimoore burned and spoiled their countrey, and killed all the rebels hee ■ could light upon. Taking of Roohfords Castle. Another defeat wherein 240 rebels were killed. Taking of Barnehely Castle. 1642. 244 IRELAND— VOL. -cont. Propositions made by the City of London, for the msing of a million of mony [etc.] Petition of Sir Edward Bering, to the house of Commons. 1642. Timely advice, or, motives to incite all men of abihty to subscribe to the propositions for Ireland. 1642. Fidelity, obedience, and valour of the English-nation, declared, by way of paci- fication of his Majesty, and desire of a re-union between his Majesty and the parliament. Also, that the present forces now ready to bicker here in England may be turn'd to revenge the loss of the Pro- testants blood in Ireland, shed by those taarbai'ous Irish rebels. "Wi'itlen by Walter Meredith. 1G42. Petition of the Committees for Ireland to his Majestic; witli his Majesties answer thereunto. Oxford, 1G42. Victorious proceedings of the Protestants iu thQ Neweries, and in the north parts of Ireland, from 11. April!, to this present. 1G42. Likewise, letter from Ireland, to a gentleman in London. 1642. Captaine Yamer's relation of the battaile fought at Kihiish 15. Aprill, by my Lord of Qrmond, who overthrew Lord Mount- gar ret 's^ai'my. Relation of the proceed- ings of our army, Aprill, 1642. 1642. Great overthrow ^iveri to the Irish rebels. Also [shewing] in what estate that king- dome now stands. 1642. Eolation of the expedition of tho Earl of Ormond, and Sir Charles Coote, into the counties of Kildaro, Queens County, King's County, and the county of Catherlagh. Order by the House of Commons, for the relief of those voluntiers that do, or shall serve in the Irish waiTC. 1642. Relation of divers great defeats given against the rebels of Ireland. By the Earle of Ormond. 1643. Proceedings of the Protestant ai*my in Ire- land. Beiu}? a letter, from Thomas Bichard niarchant in Dublin wherein is related, a victoiV obtained by the English. Also how 3.500 Scots and English, are lately landed in Ireland. 1643. Meeting of 6 or 700 abbots, monks, fryars and priests, in the west of Ireland. Another meeting at "West meath, for the plotting of the confusion of the Pro- testants. Their plot against Dublin. Great overthrow to 600 English iieare Tredath. Overthrows given to the rebels by Sir Charles Cootc. How Sir Henry Titehboume slew 1000 of the rebels. 1642. Diurnall [8 to 19 April] of every dayes par- ticular. Declaring the acts of tlie Lord of Ormond, Sir Charles Coote, and Sir Homy Tichboiirne. Penned hy Master Thomas Haukins in Dublin. 1642. Relation, how, and in what manner God hath fought his own cause miraculously, manifesting his power by delivering tlie Protestants. Also, tho names of the ohiefe commanders & ofticers in this late expe- dition undy the Proteslants army, under Sir Charles Yavjisour, to twenty foure thousand of the rebels, under the command of O Sulivan IJeare, and Maclmrta Ruh, besieging Bi-audon-bvidge. HH'Z. S''. John tlothams protection of Hull dis- covering a plot conspired by Eeekot a papist ill Yorkshire and Fulckes to admit some Lords into Hull. Letter from Thomas Pridcaux concerning a proclamation lately proclaimed in (Ireland. Roniarkaltle pas- sages at the stiige of Ayrcs, a city upon the border of Spain. Order from Parliament. Hi 4*:. 4. Earle of Ormonds proseedings in Ireland. ]\I;inuer of the enemies besieging Bandon- bridge. 1642. Treasonable intents of the Irish rebels, to crown Sir Philome ONeale King of Ire- land. Taking and demolishing of Lord Barramoore's house, Castle Lyon, by the three arch rebels Lord Roach, [etc.] Allarme at Bandonbridge, by Macharta Rhe, and 10000 rebels, how they were re- pulsed. 1642. Relation of all such occurrences as have happened in the counties of Donegall, London-Derry, Tyrone, and Permanagh in the north of Ireland, since the beginning of this rebellion there, in October last. By Lienetenant Gollonell Audcley Mervyn, 4 lune, 1642. n.d. June S. l(i±3. Relation of the proceedings of the Scots and English forces in the north of Ireland. 1642. June l.j. 1642. InteUigence from Ii'eland. Relating many passages of consequence betweene the Protestants and the rebels. Order of the House of Peeres. 1642. Relation of many passages of great conse- quence very joyfull and delectable to all tiiie hearted Protestants. 1642. Relation of such passages and proceedings of the ai-my of Dublin, as have happened since the death of Sir Charles Coote to this present. Proclamation by the Lord lustices and Councell. 1642. Ncwcs from Southampton being a relation of the taking oC two Dunkirk ships with powder and DuUets, bound for the relicfe of the rebels in Ireland. Also two bal- tailes fought at Abavelly in Pitince, be- tweene the Duke of Gnise and Don Lom- boyle. General to the Spanish King. Wlierein the Prenoh gave the Spaniard a mighty overthrow whereby their inten- tion for the reliefe for Ireland hath beene pauch liindered. 1642. IRELAND-VOL. W/.—cont. Lust newes from Ireland. Also the view and considei'ation of some Scotch forces sent over for the supply of Ireland, List oE the (ield-olBcers cliosen and appointed for the Irish expedition, by the Committee at Guild-hall London. 1642. List of the old and new regiments of horse and foot, under the command of Robert Sidney Earle of Leicester, LordLiu [szc]- tenant of Ireland. Jun, 15. n.y. Relation of the accurrances [sic] done by the Enghsh lliis numeth last past to this ' present. M'l-iltcn by AV. B. of Dubhn. Uld-Baily fLondon] IClii. Jiily 12. 1612. Newes from Ireland, iel;i(ing how Captiunc Vangh^n put to the sword 300. armed rebels, and how the Earle of Castlc-ha^ en, Sir Hen : Elmar, Sir i?Jich : "White, and liis 2. sons are imprisoned as traytors in Dublin castle. With 2. letters from Yorke, dated Julii 8. 1643. Relating how the King hath beslcdged Hull, and how Sir John >fotham hath drowned the country thereabout. 16i2. Victory [by] Sir Robert and Sir "William Stuart against tlie rebells, under com- mand of SirPhileniO Neale. Castell of Knosklinsh taken by the Scots. 1642. Letter from \'iscount Gormanstou unto Sir Plielim 6 Neale found in Sir Phclim 6 Nealc's cloak-bag, when on 16. lune 164(2. thesoid Sir Phclim and the rest of the rebells gathered from Tirone [etc.], and also some out of the English Palo were defeated by Sir "William Stewart, and Sir Robert Stewart. Sir Robert Stewarts letter to Sir lohii Borlase, one of the Lords lustices. 1642. Arrivall of the Bishop of St. Davids, at Miiiehead, who fled upon his con- viction, and is now brought' in a bark from Dublin. Relation of three defeats given to Sir Philcm O Neale, with the taking of his trnnke, with the erownc in it. 16i2. "Victorious battclLbetwcen the Protestants and rebels, at Kihiish. Letter from the Eaile of Oinnond and Ossory, to Sir Itobert Poyni'/., shewing the true estate of Ireland at this present. Order of Parliament, whereby Oaptaine Bun-ell [etc.] are ap- pointed Commiss;u'ies, to inroU and value the horse and armes to be raised according to the propositions. 1642. Taking of Mountjoy in the County of Ty- rone, by Collonell Clotworthy. Also what was done by the remainder of his regiment at Antrim in Iiis absence. 1642. Proceedings of our army in Ireland, since the tenth of Juno to this pi-esent flnly 1642, Petition of the Parliament there assembled. 1642. August 3 : Relation of such passages and pi-QCcedings of the army of Dublin, as hath happened from the seventh of luly to this present. 1642. Skiiinish 29lune last, betwixt the English party, and the rebels in Munster, Rela- tion of three defeats given to the rebels. 1642. Intelligence from Munster. Extracted out of letters from M^ Tristram Whitcombe Soveraigne of Kinsale. Newly written by M"-. I. P. 1642. Relation of all the passages, and overthrowes given to the rebels, from 1 luneuntill 10 July, 1(11-2. In a letter from Oaptaine lohn Gower. 1642. luly, thirteenth, 1642. Relation of actions of a late Expedition, undertaken in the north of Ireland, by the Enghsh and Scottish Porces ; 1G42. 1612. July 18. 1642. Diurnall of all the proceed- ings of the English and Scotch armies 246 IRELAND— VOL. IV.—coh^. in Ireland, from 14 Junelo this present. Sent over from Master Godwin. '\642. August, 17. 1(U3. E-clation from Belfast mentioning some late successe against ilie Rebels, by Colonell Clotwortby, about Mountjoy. Letter of the deputy-lieu- tenants of Devonshire, to the gentlemen of Cornwall. 1G42. July 28. Iftta. Bad news from Ireland. Whereiinto is added, the manner of listing souldicrs under the JEarl of Essex. 164-2. Uelation from Viscount Conwwy, of the pro- ceedings of the jEnglish army in Ulster, from seventeenth June to this present. 1642. 1642. Letter from Doc Cnstle Irel;\n(l, from an Irish rebell, to Itiinkerke. Lcajrue which the captaines of London-Derry have en- tred into, for the keeping thereof, and the County adjoyning. 16i3. Remonstrance of the b(';i:innings and pro- ceedings' of the rebellion in the County of Cavan from 23. October, l{}41.untill lij.June, 1642. Acts and Conclusions of thsit con- gregation of the Romish clergy, met in Kilkenny May ]642. concerning the present state of the warre in Ireland. Written by Henry loues, D.D. 1042. An admiration Ijy way of ans^^'e^ to the peti- tion of the rebells in Ireland. To all true hearted Protestants, wh^ the rebells in Ireland should petition to his Majesty to transport themselves into England to ayd and assist him. Petition to the Kings Maiesty by the rebells in Ireland. 1642. Three victorious battels, obtained hy Lord Moore, Lord Inchquid, and Colonell Vavasor, necve Trim and Dungarvan. Another victory obtained by Lord Moore against the rebels, n.p. (London) 1642. Apprehension of three most notorious rebels in Ireland. The manner of their exami- nation. Also news from York, M'ith his Majesties propositions to the Lords there. 1642. Victorious batteJl at Munstor, beginning 26. August 1642. and continued. Siege of Ardroore castle ; description of the battell of Liscarroll. 1642. Exceeding joyful! newes from Ireland. Wherein is declared what townes of note, the English have taken from the rebells in seizes since the last Eorces went over. Relation, by what meanes the castle of Limrick was taken by Captain Bartlet, a Scotchman. 1642. His Majesties Message to the House of Commons : concerning an Order matte by them for the borrowing of 100(100£ of the Adventurers money for Ireland. Answer of the House of Commons. 1612. Another edition. [Diilcrciit type & imprint.] 1642. Relation of Gods providence in Muuster. In delivering thein frora the hands of their enemies ; and giving tliem a great victory. ir42. Pnssagcs of the late proceedings in Ireland. 1612. CommisKlon under the gi'cat scale of Ireland for disarniing all Papists in and about Dublin. 1612. Relation of overthrows given to the rebells, by Colonell Crayford, Colonell Gibson ; aiid (';iptain Greams. Sept. 20. 1642. Rclatioii of the passages of Gods providence in a voyngi', for Ireland. Wherein every tember 16J2. 161'2. [Two loa\'es impurfect.] Two letters from L. Forbes frimi Iicland declaring the wofull misery of that king dome. His successefuU endcvours against the rebels. 1612, IRELAND— VOL. \y.—co7it. Relation of a victory by the Protestants in Munster. In a letter from Lieutenant Colonell Broket, Governour of Kinsale Septemb. 29. 1(342. Order of Parliament, for raising 1000. dragoneers in London. 1642. Act of State, made by the Lords Justices and Counoell of Ireland, for the observa- tion of 23 October ycerly, to be a day of thanks-giving, for the discovery of the conspiracy of the Papists. Dublin, printed ; London re-printed. 1042. Orders establisht in the Popish generall assembly, held at Kilkenny. 1643. Victory obtained against the rebels, very lately by Colonell Muncke. 1642. [No title-page. The Levites lamentation.] n.p. n.d. [\o title-page. Account of the most re- markable passages of the Irish Massacre, 1642.] n.p. n.d. Looking-gla.ss for England, Being an ab- stract of the bloody massacre iu Ireland, by the instigation of the Jesuites, priests and friars, 1642. Also apology in the behalf of tlie Pi-otestants in the valleys of Piedmont ; with a narrative of the bar- barons butcheries perpetrated on them by the Popish party April 1655. 1667. 5. Three letters from Rome to some of the principall actors of the rebellion in Ire- land, Dated 4. lanuai-y. 1642. Dublin, 1642. Brave valour and policie of warre by Lord Jones, and Lord Dihonoy, who fougnt the gi-eatest battel!, with the rebels ; and gave them the greatest overthrow, ns the like hath not been in Ireland, this hundred yeers and more. 1642. Relation of the present estate of Ireland, as it now stands under the present per- secution of the Papists. Also, their car- riage towards Dublin, and their burning of Armath. 1642. Relation of a victory obtained against the rebels in the north of Ireland : by Sir Will: Stewart. 1643. Irelands tragical tyrannic : sent over in two letters, by a speeh[szc]lesse damzell, which landed at Miniard 18 Jan. 1612. Wherein is .shown, what cruelty hath pos- sest the Irish rebels hearts, and how bar- barously they have dealt with her. Also, how the wolves destroyed M'. Thomas Adams, his wife and children. 1642. Victory obtained against the grand army of the rebels, Peb. 7. 1612. at RoscoUeth, ncerc Longford. 1643. Present condition of [Ireland], and the late great victory, which God hath given to the poorc Protestants there. 1643. Relation of the present estat^^. of Ireland : in a letter from blaster Peters Dublin, Also their Uight from thence upon the comming of Captaine PoliaM, and some Scotch regiments ugainst them ; with the losse of the t-owiie. By R. p. 1612. O Neale and ColoncH Brunslow, chicfe of the rebells in Ireland ; their apprehension at Grohoyno Munster ; with the battell then fought. Tiiking of a ship upon the coasts of Barbary, bound with letters of commendations to the King of Spaine. 1612. li'alsehood and porfldiousncsse of [the Irish rebels], in the taking of iJclliurbet. In a letter by Alderman Cillard of Dublin. 1642. [No title-page. Articles by the rebells, the Lords, and the rest of the Generall As- sembly of that part of Ireland (now in i-cbi-Uion) met at Kilkenny, 1642.] £nd, 1613. 247 IRELAND— VOL. M.—cont. '■^"'O, ISfei's r™™ Ireland: shewing the battailes and victories obtained on the rebels there. I(il3. Victory obtained by the Miirqiiesse ot Or- mond over Generall Preston and a great body of the rebels, lets. Letter to 'William Lentliall, Spfakc-r, from the Major of Bristol! and others inti- mating the tree benevolence of Bristol], for the relief of the Protestants in Ireland. 1613. Letter ; sent by Robert Lord Monro, out of Ireland, to the Committee lor the Irish atfan-s in England. Relation of a great victory he obtained, and of his taking the Earl of Antrim, about whom was found papers, which discovered a plot against the Protestants in all his Majesties domi- nions, tlieir plot being set down by con- sent of the Queens Maiestie. n.p. (Lou- don) 1613. Irelands E-tciso, by the Lords Instices, and Councell there. leUj. Extract of letters lately received, which were perused by the committee for Irish- affaires at Grocers Hall. Reliiling the most remarkable passages of the English and Scotch armie ni Ulster. 1013. Declaration of the Commons; concerning the rise and progrcsse of the grand rebel- lion in Ireland. Multitudeof examinations whereby it may appear who were, and are the promoters of that rebellion. Letters and papers of the Earl of Antriins inter- cepted. Letters ot mart, granted by Lord Mohun. Another from the rebolls in Ire- land, who term themselves, the Supreme Councel for the Catholique-Oanse. 16B. Extract of letters from Ireland, intimating their present state. Reasons given at Dublin against a cessation of arnies with the rebels, and the oath made by the rebels at their supreame Counsell at Kil- kenny. I'alshood of a scandalous pam- phlet, intituled. An apologie marie by an English officer of quality for leaving the Irish wars. Letters from Dublin, shewing the Popes Nuntio to be -with the rebels now at Kilkenny. Letter from Lord In- siquin out of Munster. Relation ot the good service of Sir Frederick Hammilton since the RebelUon begun. 16'13. Proclamation concerning a cessation of arms. Agreed on at Siggings-town, in Kil- dare, 15 September, 19*'* yeer of His Majes- ties raign, between James Marquesse of Or- monde, in the name of our soveraign Lord Charles, and Donogh Viscount Muskerry [ete.J, authorised by his Majesties Roman Catholique subjects, to treat with the said Marquesse for a cessation of arras. Instrument touching the paymenl; of .30800je. Dublin, printed; London, re- printed. 16*3. Grounds and motives inducing his Majesty to agree to a cessation of armes for one whole yearo with the Roman Catholikes ot Ireland. Articles of cessation, and a proclamation thereupon. Instrument touching the manner of payment 30*8U0£. Opinion of nobility and officers in Ireland touchiii'-^ the said cessation. Oxford, ]til3. Relation of the most sad condition of Ire- land, since the cessation, in a letter from Dublin. 16*3. Addition to the rchition ot some passages about the Eii'^lish-lrisli array, i)efore they came to the siege at Naniptwich. Wherein are set downe the occurrences at Ha- warden Castle. 1613. Mercurius Hibemicus : or, a discourse of the late insurrection in Ireland, also touching those auxiliaries which arc trans- IRELAND— VOL. M.—eoni. ported tiience to serve jn the present waiTe. Bristol], 1644. Irelands lamentation for the late destructive ccssiition, or, a trap to catch Protestants. Written by Lieutenant Colonell Chidly Coote. 164-1. Irelands misery since the late cessation : in a letter from Dublin. 1641. Irelands ingratitude to the parliament of England. Or, a remonslrance of Colonell Crawfords, shewing the Jeu[sic]itioall plots against the Parliament. 1613. Propositions ot the agents tor the Protestants in Ireland (residing at Oxford,) presented to his Majesty 18 Aprill 1641. In pur- suance of the petition of the Protestant subjects in Ireland. 1IU4. Plot anil progressc of the Irish Rebellion. Miicliavilian jiolicic of the Earle of .Stra- ford. Sir George llatclifle and others. Shewing what countenance that rebellion hath had {igainst the Protestants of Eng- land. 1G41-, Declaration of the lords, and gentry, of Lemster, and Munster, of their intentions towards the English and Scottish Pro- testants, inhabiting iii that, kingdome, with a most pernitions oath which tliey would have them lake. Order of the late Lords Justices of Ireland and Counsell of Ireland, inhibiting the taking the solemn league and covenant. Proclamation by them. X,etter written by the Parliament to commanders and othcers requiring obedience to the said proclamation, with the oath agreed upon lately at Dublin, against the taking of the solemn league and covenant, n.p. KUl. False and scandalous remon.strance of the rebclls ot Ireland, delivered to his Majesties Commissioners at Trim, 17. March) 1612. to be presented to his Majesty. Answer, on the behal(f) of the Protestants. Nar- ration ot the passages concerning the peti- tion of the Protestants, presented to His Majesty at Oxford 18. April, 1611. (Im- print cut down. 1611. ) Propositions of the Irish Rebells (by the name of the Roman Catholiques of Ire- land) presented to his Majestie in pur- suance of their remonstrance ot grievances, and annexed to the said remonstrance. 1611. Remonstrance of the cruelties and murders committed by the Irish rebels against the Protestants both before and since the ces- sation, collected by Thomas Morley. 1611. Declaration by the rebells in Ireland, against the English and Scotish Protestants, in- habitants within that Kingdome. Ti-ai- terous oath and protestation lately con- trived by the confederate rebells in a Councell at Kilkeney, against the Parha- ment of England, and Protestants. Procla- mation (by the said Couneell) tor arming of Catholikes. "Watertord, printed ; Lon- don, reprinted, 1611. Manifestation to the Parliament in England, sent from Lord Inchequin, Lord Broghill [etc.] ; containing the reasons of their now opposing the Cessation with the Irish rebels. Declaration of His Majesties Pro- testant subjects in Munster, shewing the many perfidious dealings ot triers [etc.] to beti'ay the castles, and their murthering many Protestants contrary to the late treaty. 1614. Letter from Lord Inehiquin and other the Commanders in Munster, to His Majestie expressing the causes and reasons of their not holding the Cessation any longer with the rebels. Other letters from Lo. Inehi- quin to friends here in England. 1614. 248 IRELAND— VOL, V.—conL Eelation. of the expedilion ol Lord Monroe, Major-generall of all tim Prolfstant Forces in Ulster. "With their niurclies anrt ski[sec]inishes with the rebels. Declara- tions, and oath, whereby they bind thciii- selres utterly to mine and destroy the Protestants. Letter from Lord Dif^by, His Majesties Secretary intercepted. Kidl. Polt [sic] discovered in Ireland and pre- vented. Defeat to the rebels cominp; into ScolUind, by the Earle of Argile. IG 1 1. (;, Two letters concerning the Kings corre- spondence with the Irish rebels. The first by Digbj^ in the Kings name to the Irish Commissioners. The second from Lord ^luskery one of those Commissioners in answer. Also a full state of the Irish negotiation at Oxford now treated. 1645. State of the Irish aiTairs, for Parliament ; from the committee of adventurers in London for lands in Ireland. 1645. Relation of the snccesse at Sliggo against the rebels performed by Sir Charles Coot. Letters coneeming tbe estate of that King- (lunic and of the Kingdome of England. ](lt.5. The Ii-isb Cabinet : or His Majesties secret papei-s lor eslabhshing the Papall clergy in Ireland taken in the carriages of the Aichbishop of Tnam, slain in the fight at Sliggo. Helations of the victories ob- tained by the Parliaments Porces in the same kingdom. 1645. Letters intercepted by Colonel Milton, neer Ruthyn in Wales, concerning Irish Porces to be brought into England. Letter sent out of Ireland concerning the Earl of Glamorgan. 1645. Eiirl of Glamorgans negotiations and colour- able commitment iu Ireland demonstrated : or the Irish plot for bringing t«n thousand men and arms into England. Discovered in letters taken in a packefc-boat at Pad- stow. 1645. Triall of Connor Lord Macguire. Sir Philome Oneales Commission, the Popes Eull to the confedei-ate Catholikes in Ireland [etc.] Ey the Kings Sergeant at law, and Ser- p:e;int Roll. William Prynne; and M. Nudigate. 1645. [At end, without t. p., Papers which the L. Macquire [_sic1 curried in his hand to execul ion]. A few collections for Irelands Souldicrs. 1616. Fis'ht at Black-Water : where almost 5tiO(J. Protestants are put to the sword by tbe rebels. Declaration concerning the arc h- bisliop of Yorke and others, that deserted the King, and how Major-Generall Mitton hath taken from Lord Byron two dcmi- culverins. 1646. Rrbitione della battagliu seguita irk Catho- lici Hibernesi, et heretici puritani inUlto- nia Pi-ovincia d' Hibernia il di cinque di C|iuu;no 1646 [Black- Water tight], lloiiia et Fiienze, Hil6. Humble inslrnctinns for the setling of ;;iurisons in Ireland. 1646. Lossu of Bunratty in Munster, and llos- comon in Connauglit. Where the rebi'ls put to the sword, Sir Charles Coot his brother [etc.] Also, letters from (he officers ol the Scottish army. IC-Ui. Articles of peace agreed uiion between liinies Marques of Orniond, on bt'linlle of His Majest.v ; and Donogli \'iscnunt Mus- I< I 'ly. and others appointed by his i\f;i.ii's- ties Iloman Oathohque subjci'tN. Dublin, 1646. Lust urtieli's of pcHCO u.sireed upon :w. lul.v, J6Hi. between James M":vrqui'N nf Ormond on behalf of his l\l!i.iesty :ind Dono^^i Viscount Mitskery. and olhors. Ibiblin, imprinted; London, reprinted, 161(1. IRELAND—VOL. VI.-co7i^ Letter from Kinsale, with an attestation of the olficers of the Parliaments army in Munslcr, in vindication of Lord Inchiquin, Lord President of that province. Letter from Colonel AVilliaui Jephson, rclatin^- the present state of Ireland. 1616. Two strong garrisons taken fi'om the rebels : Maiiborough Port, and the Ca-stle of Ath- lone. A thousand proteslants at the mercy of the rebels besides the losse of Lord Dillon [etc.] Pemonslrauce of the Protestant clergy in Ireland, and the for- tifying of Dublin by tbe Marquesse of Oniiond. 1646. Of the Marquesse of Ormouds coming in to the Parliament : Major Genei-all Willoufjh- by, and two Kjiights come over to us. Manner of taking of Mariborough Port, and the castle of Athlone. 161:6. Discourse and complaints betwixt the Prencb-nian and the Irish -man; dc(jlaring, that tbe King was the onely cause of tlu- waiTes in Ireland, to be brouglit over into i;n;rland; and that tlie Queen was the onely occasion of the recruits and monies levied, to be transported over from Prance. Nan-ation of the sad successc that hath followed His Majesties armies. Account of the victories [of] the army of the Par- liament. ii'40. Lord Digbyes letter. Lord Inchiquins an- swer, with other passages of the overtures concerning the whole designe in Ireland, the plot of the rebells diseoiered : ajid preparations for the comraing in of the Mai'quisse of Ormoiid to the Parliament. 1G4G. Passagi'y of the Treaty between the Mar- quesse of Ormond and the Purliaments Commissioners at Dublin. IjCtters from Newcastle, to the Marquesse of Ormond, whiles the English Commissioners were treating. Treaty between the Scots and the Marquesse of Ormonds Commissioners in the noi-th of Ireland. 164-6. Routing a great anny of the rebels, under General Roe-0-Neal and Lord Digby bv Lord Inchiquin. Conquering of a I'lo'- vince which were possessed by the KtlK-ls. Prince Ruperts advancing towards Ire- land, with an'army from Prance. 1646. Overthrow given to the rebels, by tbe Porces of Ulster, under Col. Conwav, and Lieut. Col. O eonally. Also, their snrpi-izmg of all the magazine and provisions, that were prepared for Generall Preston, and Owen Macharts armies at the siege against Dul)- lin. Lord Inchiquins taking tbe field with 5600. horse and foot. Raising of the siege at Diiblin. 1616. Tlic Kings manifesto to Ireland. Under- taken and pubhshed by the Marquesse of Clanrickard. Assuring them of the Kin.us hand, the Queen and I'riucc of Wales their engagements, and the ussuvance of the Crown of Praneo for performance thereof. And that the Marquesse of Or- mond shall observe (during the Kings want of freedomc) such commands from the Queene and Prince of Wales, as shall be signified unto him by Lord Digbj^; unci not obey what is commanded by his Ma- iesty in any restruint. Also for the calling a free Parliament, procuring nets of obli- vion, :ind other desires of the Cathohekes of that Kingdome. January 10. 1616. u.p, 1617. Tueatio between lames iMurquesof Ormond, Lord Licuti'uant of Ireland; and Sir Thomas Wliui'lon [etc.] Commissioners authorised by the raibament of England. Coulmi^;sionel■s instructions eonccrniu?' Lord Ormond; Instructions eimcerninK the Protestunts of Ireland, and composi- tions of delinquents. Dublin, 1616. 249 IRELAND— VOL. VI. -cont. Gallant prooecilinKS of lliu Englisll Fon'us in the north cif Ireland, and their taking two garrisons from Ihe. rcl)ils. Lord lu- ihiquins teikins the Add, lyjainst the MarquosseotOriiiond, andarcnioiislranco of the rultois in Ireland, concerning the King or England, lun. 1. Bellnm I[,ybernicale ; or, Ireland's warro astrologicatly demonstrated. Ignorance of .lolin Booker discovered. And the Author further vindicated, from his, and Master Lilly's aspersions. By Capt. Geo : Wharton, Student in Astronomy, n.p. 1047. Lord Fitz-geu'alds letter intercepted : dis- coverinjv a plot to kill all the Protestants, V)y ilie army of the rebels in Ireland. l()d.7. Two victories obtained in Ireland, by the rroteslant party, against the rebels : by CoUonell Mae-Adams, and his regiment neer Biirgley Castle. By the said CoUonel near Bonrattey. By lohn Brown, n.p. I(il7. The Hypocrites unmaslving : or discovery of the grosse hypocrisy of the officers and agitators in the army, concerning their pretended forwardnesse, and reall syncere desires to relieve Ireland, with the ob- struction whereof they falsely charge some of the 11 impeached members. By a letter of the agitators to Lieutenant Generajl Cruuiwell March 30. 1(;17 : iind t^olonell Robert Hammond his unreason- able proposilions \a the Parliament; and oljservations concerning Sir Hardresse ^V'aller, and Lord Lisle. 1017. Victory by Lord Inchiqueen against the rebels ; at C.apogh-Qlieen. Which gari- son is taken from the rebels. Sad newes from Dublin : where the rebels with Pres- l(tn, have taken the castle of Catcrlagb. Their further dcsigncs against Dublm. 1647. Taking in of the castle of Dromanuagh, the castle of Cappoquin, and the castle of Dnngarvan, by the Parliaments Forces under Lord Tnehicjuin. 1047. Two letters from Lord Inchiqueen, luito the Speaker. Concerning two victories ob- tained over the rebels in Ireland. Order from the House, that letters of thanks sliould be returned unto Lord Inchiqueen. 1047. Ordinance of Parliament. Bor securing of all those that shall advance 2(i0.n00£ for file service of England and Ireland. 11147. Victorie against the rebels neere Trim, May 24, 11! t7. by Col. Penwioks forces. Great successe of the English that marched out of Dublin, from the IMar- qneHS(! ot Ormond against the rebels. 10 (•7. Believing of Dublin, by the regiments be- longing lo Sir lohn Clotworthy [etc.] li;47. Letter by a moderate cavallier to an Inde- pendent in Ihe now marching army. 1047. Articles of agreement made at Dublin, 18 June, 1047. Between James Marq ; of Or- moud i and Arthur Annesley [etcj Com- missioners from the Parliament of Eng- land Dublin, 10-17. fAnothcr edition.] Dublin, 1617. Ecprin- tcd, 1652. Letter from Lieutenant Colonel Knight in Munster, setting forth the extraordmary wants of the soldiery ; and the c;u-riage of the army since Lord Lislo's coming thence, ir.p. 1017. Remonstrance seuing forth the sad condi- i tiou of the army under Lord Iiichcqume. IRELAND-VOL. VW.—cont. Yiiidication of Lord Inchequin and other officers of that army from a pamphlet, stiled A letter from Lieut. Col. Knight. 1647. Plot against the Protestants, discovered to have taken the castle at Dublin, and murthered the Commissioners of Parlia- ment. Declaration by tho Councell of the Cathohcks at Kilkenny. Victories by Lord Inchequin in Munster. Defeat of the rebels under Owen Roe O Neale. 1647. More victor.yo« by Lord luchiquine. Lord President of Munster. 1647. I'iglit at Balrnd-deiry : where Sir Henry Titchburno was shot. Garrison of Trim relieved. 1617. Victory over the rebels by CoIoncU Jone-s at Lynceyes Knock ncero Trim, August S. Dublin, 1047. Victory against the rebels at Dungons-Hill, August 8. 1047. By tho forces under Colonel Michael Jones. 1647. Propositions sent by the Irish Parliament at Kilkenny, to the Commissioners at Dublin. 1017. Relation of I,ord Lisle's departure from his command in Ireland. Hi47. Ordinance of Parliament, for the reliefe of the distressed Protestants come out of Ireland. 1017. Three victories against tho rebels. By Lord Inchequin. By Sir Charles Coote. By Major Generall Jones. Also papers con- cerning the remonstrance of Lord Inche- qiiins ollicers. ]647. Letter to William Lnithal, Speaker: con- cerniiw the late successful proceedings of Lord Inchiquine. 1647. Victorious proceedings of Lord Inchiquin, Lord President ot Munster, against the rebels there. 1647. News from Dublin. Relating how Colonell Jones Governour of the city, with his forces, fell upon the rebells, [and] beat tho whole anny. 1647. Victory by Lord Inchequin, neere English- mans-hill. 1017. Victoi-y by the forces under Lord Inchiquine in Mimstcr, against the rebels under Lord Taaff, JVTovemb. 13. 1647. Order ot the Commons in Parliament, i;or publique thanks for the same. 1647. Narrative ot the battell of Knooknones, 13 November, betwixt tho Parhaments forces under Lord Inchiquin: and the Irish rebells under Lord Taail. 1647. Two letters ot Lord Digby to Lord Taaff ; shewing Lord Digbies aetiveness, to up- hold a party among the rebels for the King, against the Parliaments forces. 1647. Victorious proceedings of the Protestant armie in Ireland, under Maj. Gen. lones, in his late expedition against the Irish rebels, 1M7. ii.d. Articles exhibited to the House of Com- mons, against Lord Inchiquine Lord president of Munster, subscribed by Lord jBroghill and Sir Arthur Loftus. With answer. Subscribed by Rich. Gething Secretary to the Lord President. 1647. 8. Deelai-ation of the Lord Lieutenant Gene- ral of Ireland, for setling the Protestant i-eligion, maintaining his Majesties just rights, and the priviledges of Parliament. Cork printed, London re-printed, 1648. Papers of propositions, orders, oath, acts, and proceedings of the confederate catho- liques assembled at Kilkenny. [Imprint mutilated] Dated at end, 12 : March 1647. First two leaves mutilated at bottom. 250 IRELAND— VOL. VIII.— coh^. Victory by the Brittisli l<'orc('s. ITow they gave the rebels battell neerc Black Wsitcr, putting all of them to the sword. BeatiriK of the Popes Nuiitio out of Ireland. 1(J'17. Papers presented to the Parliament, against Lord Inchequin Lord Prfsidciit of Munster, sent from Captain Crowther. Lord Inchequins Declaration. Declaration by commanders, late of the army com- manded by Lord Inchequin. HUS. Declaration and protestation of Lord Inclii- quin, and all the ofiicers under his com- mand, that they will maintaine the honour of the Kin;^, and the priviledge and free- domt^ of Parliament. n.p. ItitS. Desires and propositions of Lord Incheqnin in Ireland, to the Parliament of England ; with his declaration conce.rnin,ff Charles, King of gi'eat Brittain, and his resolution to defend his Grown and dignity, and to oppose the Popish party in Ireland, who have now declared for the King of Spaine. Great fi^ht, and Lord Inchiquins taking of divers strong holils ol' the rebels. Pro- ceedings of the Royahsts at Bristol. 1648. Decl^-ration and ingagement of the Pro- testant army in Mounster. Under Lord Inchiquin. Cork printed, London re- printed, iri4S. Two Letters from Corke. n.p. 1648. Satisfaction concerning the affaires of Ire- land ; as tbey relate to the Marquesse of Ormonds ti-ansactions, with Lord Inchi- quin. n.p. 1648. Proceedings of the army undrr the com- mand of Col. Michael lones m their last advance from Dublin; with the taking of the castles and forts of Ballysouan [etc.] 1648. Blarquessc of Ormonds proclamation con- cei'ning the peace concluded with the Irish rebells, by the Kings command, at the Generall Assembly at Kilkenney ; speech by Sir Richard Blake, Speaker of the Assembly at Kilkenney. Speech by the Marquesse of Ormond. 1610. Marquesse of Ormond's declaration, pro- claiming Charles the second. King of Enirland. With his summons to Colonel Jones for the surrender of Dublin, and the answer of Colonell Jones. Articles of agreement between the Marquesse, and the Irish. Representation of Ulster con- cerning the Sectarian army in England, &c. 1649. Letters from Lord Ormonde to Culonell Michael Jones. Colonell Jones his answer. Dublin, 1640. Eight necr Dublin, between tlie Princes forces commanded by the Marquesse of Ormond, and the Pai'liaments Forces under Col. Jones. Terrible newes from the noi'th of England, and another great army raising in Scotland. (Woodcut por- trait.) 1649. Three intercepted letters. One from Charles Stuart, son to the late King. Two from Lord Digby and Daniel Monro to the Earle of Ormond . 1(U^. Transactions of Colonel George Monk with Owen-Roe-mac-Arl-0-Neal ; Voles and resolutions of tiie Parliament thereupon. 1649. Declaration of the Brittish in the north of Ireland. Queres of Colonel Monke, and the answers of the Brittish to the Querns, n.p. 1649. Eight MTid victory by Sir Charles Coot, Lord rrt'suK'nt of Connaught, ngainst the Brinish forces of Liig^^an : with some regiments of Irish and Highlanders, and Irish, under Major GeneniU George Monro. Twenty garrisons in the Provost of Con- ( IRELAND-VOL. WWl—cont. nauglit, now possest by Sir Charles Coot, for tlie Parliament of England. ]6t9. Condition of Dublin ; with the maimer of the siege, and how it is straitened, By the Marquesse of Ormond, L. Inchequin, &c. 1649. Two great fights neer Dublin, between the Princes army commanded liy the Mar- quesse of Ormond, and Lord Inchiquin; and the Parliaments Forces commanded by Colonell Jones. Colonell Jones his proclamation. How 1300. are ineamped iigainst the city, the stonning at Kildare. Propositions from the Irish army to the Parliament of England. 1649. Fight at Dublin, between the ^Marquesse of Ormond, and Col. Jones ; and the uniting of the Irish amiies against the Parliament. ( \\'oodcut on title.) 1649. Complaint of the Boutefeu, scorched in his owne kindlings : in two letters of the ministers of the Presbytery at Can-ick- Eergus, to the Lord of Ardes, now in re- bellion in Ulster, against the Common- Wealth of England : with bis answer to the first of those letters . 1649, Petition of the ofiicers now engaged for Ireland : to the Commons. Orders of Parliament in answer. 1649. [No title-page. Cnpies of sevcrall letters taken in Ireland by the Lord Lieutenant.] Correspondence between the Marquesse of Ormond & Prince Rupert in 1649. Lieut : Genei-al Jones's letter to theCouncel of State, of a victory [by] the Forces, in Dublin under his command, against the Earl of Ormond's and Lord Inchlquin's Forces before that city. Xarrative of Captain Otway. 1649. Marquesse of Ormond's letter to his Majestic, concerning the late light betwixt the Forces under his command, and the gar- rison of Dublin, n.p. 1649. Jlarquesse of Ormonds letter to Charls II. Wherein is related the manner of Oollonel Jones sallying out of DubUn, Aug. 2. 1649. State of his army at this present before Dublin, which is beseiged. Taking of the Castles of Ballishannon and Athy, Avig. 8. His Majesties answer, n.p. 1619. Improvement of mercy : or a short treatise, shewing how our rulers and all Avell- affectedto the present Government should make a right use of the late victory in Ireland. August 2. 1G49. By John Canne. 1C49. Relation of the transactions between Sir Charls Coot, and Oweu-Roe-0-Neal ; as it , was reported to the Parliament from the Councel of State. Votes of the House thereupon. 1649. New propositions from the King of Scotland to the Parliament of that Kingdom. Another fight in Ireland, the particulai-s thereof, and the routing of Generall Oneal's army by the Lorn of Ards, the raising of the siege at London-Derry and the iiillying of the Marq. of Ormond's forces, and advancing -witnin 13 miles of Dublin. 16^19. Declaration by the Lord Lieutenant of Ire- land [Cromwell]. Concerning his resolu- tions for the i}eace and safety of Ireland, and the free injoyment of the rights of the people. Dublin, printed ; London, re- printed, 1049. Fight in Ii-eland, 29. August, 1649. between the Marq. of Ormonds forces, and the Lord Govcrnour Cromwels, upon his Lordships ad^-ance from Dublin. Cromwels letter to the Parliament of England, and his de- claration and resolution touching Ireland. 1619. 251 IRELAND-VOL. VIII.-.m;*/. At t In- ,'iid— Older bv tlir Coimnoiis for a (iiiy of pnl.liiinc thjinks^M\ iiiir. Vii?ht MOfT l)n.;;lioii!ili. U. Soplcnibcr. ItJi'.t lM-tM.i-ii tlic I'om's i-oninmiuUtl hv llio Miinjiu'sM- of OnnomI, Lonl liu-hitniiii. I.onl *Mi\t:niour Citiniwill. ami IMnjor (•■('iirr.ill hiloii. Milifi.ofOii lomls lottor hi I'niu'c I'liiulcs. coiiconiin',' Ins \ iclor-y. L-v,'IUm-s ilcrlanUiun fur ii nrw i'lirlin- iiK'nt. with tlio sondiuK of a Icttor lo nil the pirrisons in tlndiLml. !([«>. Fipht. lit the t:ikm:rof l)r. Jlfirohos !uul pi>iocoihn,i::s of Iho iivniio in Irohnul, fnnn tlio t.-ikini; of Di-ophodn. 'rakiiiirol Killonoarriok |rti'.]. Tiikinjr of AVox lonl, and the annyos mlvanco to Kusm-. Lotlor fi-oni llio Allnrno^v of Iivltuid ron- oorniiig the taking; oi ^^ oxtoi-d by stornic. I mo. TakiM'j: of Wovfci-d. Knjniiconiont bi-iwi-ou ColoiioU 3lonioo inid Coloiioll OConollv. 1(1 til. Xnmb. I. l-ottoi"s oomTruin^jf the ufl'ini-os of tho arniios in KiiKlmul and Irohnul. taiJi. Xnmb. 2. Rohition of the pnu'oodin.irb ol the arin\ m Irohuid with tho rendition ot Ivi-;^ and other iCTvrisons, sinco tho takoniu: ot Wexfoi'd. HiH>. pp. 11-16. >'nnib. ti. Et^httioii of the firojiroxse and hapv>y proceodinijcs of the army of tho t'ommon-woalth of Enffhmd toward the reduoinK ol livhuid, nnder the command of tho Lord Lievitemmt, pp. MKjO. Sml. IG^Mi. Xinnb. U. Rohition of the rethictJou of tho !:;i^'atost part of Mnnstor, to tlie olxnlienee itf tho Oonunon-wt'abh of En^hmd. Ke- monslnuioe and n-sobitions of the l*i'o- tostant army of ^Mnnster. now in Oorko. pp, 101- 1 lis. JUiid. tG-m. Letter from tho Lord Lientenaiit of Ii-e- htnd. to William Lenthall, Speaker, eon- oerninir the taking: in and sun-endrinj; of Enistory [etc.] lOMt. Two U'tters fnnu M'iUiani ]»asil. AtttMuey Genonil of Irehiiid, of a jriwit victory ebiained by the Viirhamonts Foii,>es, on tho pining of Lisneinn"\y. Takiiii; of Piiinei"ce; and snn*i'ndor ot Carriekforirns upon iirtudos. liitt'. Two letters fivm Sn- CharU-s Ootite, ivlatnii; the ivndition vf rariokrorirns. to Sir Charles Coote. Defeato of the Soottish and Irish foifes iu the north of Lvhnid. nnder tho oounnajid of Loxil Ai*ds, Lonl Claneboys and Moni-o. HioO. 0, Ri'hitionof Jlr. InsliooCtHtk's iiassjt^' by Sea from WoxlVnil to Kinsailo. and of the iCiTHl siorm, and dan>ror \\c with olhei-s wt-n' in. with their liehvonnioe. aecoi"ding ;us It was ivvealed to him in a divani. Al.sii M. Deedato ^^itlv other witnct^es (in (.!ono\alO o]>inion ooneerninic dreams, '2d edition, n.d. Letter fivui the Loitl Lientenant [Cnmi- \\*ell] of Iivhuid i-ehitiiijc the kvhhI sne- IRELAND -VOL. \X.—coiif. eossi's (Jod hath I;iloIv ii'ivon to the Pa p- lianirnt Foroos Ihon'. liilii. JiOtters from Iii'laml of tlie p>od snoooss of tho l*arliameut loroi's lliero. ( »ne from ('ol. llowsoii Kovornonr of Dnhhn. \\ heroni wore inol.isoil the summons and other passa^os botween hitn and the (;o\onu)iir of liallisanim. Two other lotloi-s fi-om AViUiam lla.sil. iiiii). [cut ilown.] I Not. p. Relation of (he prosont oslat<' of Ireland : byk'lloi-s. M'ith a trnoaeeompt. Of^nirrisons taken in. ami roooxorod since rhristmas, in tlio romity of KiUIaro. Itv the Lord Leinleii.inl Croniwol. Dublin. ll.Jhn'L'h] IJnti. London, 1650. Letter from (he Lord Lioutonant oflroland i-olalinj: llio smooossos |of| tho I'arlia- nionls Foroos Ihore. With tho surrendor ol Kilkenny. liiJO. Leitor from thoKiniCof Sools. to the :\lar- qno>s of Ormond : conoorniii!; his a-rroo- mcntwith llio Soots: and his eommand to the ^Maiuuoss for tuiblislnnu; tho siinie lo ll\e Irish. Xarrativo fmm rorlu.ual. lonohinj; rnnco Uuporl's desipne, to iiavo lirod tho raiiiamonts shippinp; ami a liirhl iK'tweon J'nnee Rn|H'rt and (.J.ii : IJlaijne's men. Hi50. Beelanition of the Irish arniie in Ulster: soiit to the ijarlament in a h'tter from William ]!a>HI. ic.'iii. At tho end— Rrlalion of tho overthrow or tho Irish nnnio in Ulster. History of the ehiof matlors of tho Irish Wnrres. List of nil the violorios obtaineil by the Lonl Oenerall t'loiiiwell and the I'arlianioiits Fonrs. From J AiilcusI Uilii to'Jii July bioO. liir>(). Letter I' rem S'. Lewis l\\ vo to ihe Mai-qnis of New-t^!isHe i^iveinj; his Lontslii|i an aceount of tho KiiiRs alTaii-es in lirlaiul. sinee Scptem. Hits, until .Inne IimII. M'llh letters mentioned by S'. Lewis 1>\m> as rolatin,:; to tho husinesso he tivals of from 111. the 1 -li). July 1050. llairue, 1050. Deehu-ntion and pi-oclamntion of (he Dopnty- (Tonenil of IrelaJid (H. li-eton) eonecrniii^ the visitation ot tho iih\"?ne, Cork, printed, 1050; n-printed, London, n.d. Fi-ooivdinirs of the Pi-esbytery iu Antrim npiinst Jame^ Kor, & Jei-eniy O Qnoon two of their fellow-ministers, tor tlieir ru[A'i(']fnsinp to reado that ii*casonablc Representation, wliii-h was by the Pit-s- bytery then at Belfast, eon\maiidtjd to bo i"cad pnbliquely by all ministei-s, iu Pebr. Jjettev fttmi AVilliam Bnsill concerning a Victory obtained by the Parliaments Foives ajrainst the rebels in Meleek Is- land, -2:1 tV'tober, HwO. Onler of iSirlia- uient for a pnhlitpie thauksjriving. nao. L^o t.p. The Irish Aloi-enry, monethly ooni- nn^nieatinif all true intolliironee witliin tho IX^miniou of Iivland. Fnini 'i:* Jan- uary, to 'J5. February. I K)n/. Coivk. printtHl, ivprinted Ltindon, H»50. Deelanition of the Lonl Lieutenant of lii'- land in answer to dcchirntions ;vnd acts framed by the Irish Popish pi-elates and eloi-iry in a Couveuticlo at Clouinao-Noise. Corko printed, nn^'intod Ltmdon, l(;">a. Fiirlit : lH'l\\een, the Lonl Deputies Foroos, and tho Farl of t^istlohaven's. ^lajor (loncntl Jlasse^^ advanee into IJrniit Island, asfiiinst the Ix>rd Cxononds Foroos. ^lajor C[.v'r]oneral .Montj^oniory's ad- va\ice westwanl. 1051. Sad No[ws from] IixMaiid. How the Lord hath boon pleased to from the i-elu'ls. With iho maimer of the light. Taking of the Castle iu tho Wean\ 'i^inj? of tho 252 IRELAND— VOL. IX. cont. Fort at Limbrick Bridge. Certifyed by a letter from Lord Deputy Iretoii. IfiSl. T.p. and first leaf mutilated. Letter rrom the Lord Doputy-Gencral (Ire- ton) ol Ireland concerning the rendition of the city of Limeriek. 1651. Cheif ail'airs of Ireland truly eominunicated.. For a check and reproof to all such as ■walk "Westminste,r-Hall, onely to spread false wonders of the loryes, and landing? of forrein forces in Ireland. 1651. Letters from Ireland read in Parliament 6 Julv, 1652. Concerning the allairs there. 1633. . Act for the setting of Ireland. London, printed, reprinted Dublin, 1652. [No t.p. Returns of the surveys from Ire- land. Names of the provinces, counties, and IjiuTonies, in which each mans lot doth lye, and how many ncres belongeth to that barrony.] pp. l-i, 3-2t. .Vppendix to the Legacie of Husbandry. With an interi'ogatorie, relating more particularly to the husbandry, and naturall history of Ireland. 1652. 11). Threui Hybemici : or, Ireland sym- pathising with England and Scotland, in a sad lamentation for loss of their Josiah. Represented in a sermon at Christ-church in Dublin upon the death of the Lord Protector. By D'. Harrison. 1039. A word to the Army, touching their sin and dutie. By William Allen. 1660. Declaration of the army in Ireland. De- claring their resolutions for a free parlia- ment. Letter concerning the present transactions there. Dublin Feb. 18. 1659. Dublin, printed, re-printed London, 1659. Declaration of the General Convention, of Ireland, with the late proceedings there. 1660. Reply to the Answer of Lieutenant General Ludlow ; or his Answer to the officers at Dublin, examined. By B. W. 1660. Irelands fidelity to the Parliament of Eng- land. In answer to a paper, intituled The humble petition of the officers and soldiers in the Fort of Dungannon. 1660. Answer to a scandalous letter by Peter Welsh. Intituled a letter desiring a just and merciful regard of the Roman Catho- ■ licks of Ireland. By the Earl of Orrery. Dublin printed, reprinted London, 1662. Panegyriek on the return of James Duke of Ormond, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. By F[rancis] S[ynge]. Dublin, n.d. [1662]. Treatise of taxes & contributions. Shewing the nature and measures of Crown-lands, assessements, customs, poll-moneys, lot- teries, benevolence, penalties, monopolies, offices, tythes, raising of coins, harth-money, excize, &c. With discourses and digres- sions concerning warres, the church, universities, rents & purchases, usury & exchange, banks & Lombards, registries for conveyances, beggars, ensuranee, ex- portation of money [and] wool, free-ports, coins, housing, liberty of conscience, &c. The same being frequently applied to the present state and affairs of Ireland. 1662. Speech of Sir Audley Mervyn Speaker of the House of Commons in Ireland. De- livered to .lames Duke of Ormond, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, 1.3 February, 1662. Containing the sum of affairs in Ireland ; but more especially, the interest of ad- venturers and souldiers. Dublin, 1663. Conspii'aeie of such impenitent triiylors as intended a new rebellion in Ireland. "With a lisi' of the prisoners, and the particular manner of soiling Dubliii-enstle by Lud- low, and his accomphcos. ■ 1663. IRELAND.— VOL. X.— eon/. Count Hanlan's downfall, or a true account of the killing that arch traytor and tory Redmon 6 Hanlan : by Art 6 Hanlan, one of his own party, 25. April, 1681. Dublin, 1681. Letter from a gentleman in Ireland upon occasion of a pamphlet entituled a Vindiear tion of the present government of Ireland under Richard Earl of Tyrconnel. Dub- lin, 1688. [No t.p. Declaration of Francis Briber, which he publickly made before th* Bishop of Waterford, in the cathedral-church of Waterford, June 17, 1688. Containing the reasons for his renouncing the Roman Catholic, and embracing the Protestant religion.] End. 1688. [No t.p. Memorandums concerning the present times.] JUnd. Dublin, 1689. State of the Papist and Protestant proprie- ties in Ii-eland, in 1641, and how the pro- prieties stand this present year 1689. List of the present nobility of Ireland Protes- tant and Papist. 1689. [Dedication signed "J. C."] Relation of the persecutions, robberies, and losses, sustained by the Protestants of Killmare. Also, their happy escape into England. 1689. True representation how matters were carried on all along in Ireland by the late King James, in favom' of the Irish papists there : from his accession to the crown, to 10 April, 1089. 1689. Ireland's Lamentation : being a short ac- count of the scituation, nature, constitu- tion and product of Ireland. Relation of the most material transactions, revolu- tions, and miserable suflerings of the Protestants there, from the death of Chai-les the second, to the latter end of April, 1689. Letter dated Dublin. May 7. with an account of affairs to that time. 1689. Account of all the secret consults, negotia- tions, stratagems, & intriegues of the Romish party in D-eland, from 1660, to 1689. For the settlement of Popery in that Kingdom. 1690. 11. Apology for the Protestants of Ireland. In a nairative of the late revolutions in that Kingdom, and an aeeount of the present state thereof. 1689. Account of the whole proceedincs of the Parliament in Ireland, beginning March 25, 1689, and ending 29 June. 1689. [Not perfect.] Journal of the proceedings of the Parlia- ment in Ireland. With the establishment of their forces there. 1689. [No t.p. Character of an Irish-man.] End. n.p. 1689. ■ Answer of a Protestant gentleman in Ire- land, to a late letter from N.N. Upon a Jale discourse between them concerning the present posture of that countrev. 1689. Condition of the Protestants in Ireland. Being an account of the barbarous pro- ceedings of the natives against the Eng- lish. 1689. .Vphoriams i-elathig to the Kingdom of Ireland. 10S9. List of the Lords, who sate in the pretended Parliament at Dublin ; 7 May, Iftso. List of the House of Commons. Catalogue of the titles of all acts passed in the said pretended session. 1689. War, iind its elteets, laid out to the life : bciu- a seasonable advice to our Protestant brethren, now ready to go against the Irish rebels. By Philopolites. losa. 253 I R ELAND -VOL. X\.—cu7if. The interest of England in the presci-valion of Ireland. By G. P. 1689.' Indictment and arraignment of John Price with 101 other Protestants, at Wicklow. Letter sent to and read by the judges in tlie court, for a loane tor the Popish armies subsistance. Account of the seiz- ing and condemnation of Sir Thomas Southwell [etc.] at Gallaway. Sir Lau- rence Parsons U'tc] at BiiT and Mary- borough. 1B89. The mantle thrown off: or, the Irish-man dissected. 168!). [Signed at end— " H. B."] Mephibosheth and Ziba : or, the Appeal of the Pi'otestants of Ii-elaud to the King, concerning the settlement of that King- dom. By the author of The mantle thi'0\vni oH. 1089. Short view of the methods made use of in Ireland for the subversion and destruction of the Protestant religion and interest in that Kingdom, from the beginning of the reign of the late King James to this time. 1089. Act for keeping and celebrating the twenty t bird of October as n u anniversary thanks- giving in Ireland. With a form of Divine .Service. [Imprint cut down ? 1689.] Sermon [on Psalm 103. 13.] preach'*! to the Protestants of Ireland, in and about the city of London, at St. Maiy le Bow in Cheapside, Oetob. 2S. 1689. being the day appointed for an anniversary thanksgiving foi the deliverance of the Protestants of that Kingdom, fi-om the massacre and re- bellion begun by tlie Irish Papists, 23 October, 1()41. By the Archbishop of Tuam. 1689. Letter from Duke Schomberge's Camp, L'lving an account of the condition of the English and Irish army. And a true ae- enuut of all the Papists in Ireland. From the Camp at Dundalke, Xiwember 4. li;S9. lii'-O. The A])parition; or, the genius of Ireland: c(mi|il:iining of her present misery, and imp'ni-inir speedy relief from England. ' By Eilm. Arwakcr. [Verses.] 1689. Cbanu'.ter of the Protestants of Ireland. 1689. Vinilieation of the Protestants of Ireland : with reflections on a late pamphlet, in- tituled. The character of the Protestants of Ireland, &c. 1089. [No t.p. Second apology for the Protestants of ii-elauil. by the author of the First.] JTml. 16110. Signed at end—" G. P." 12. History of the Northern affairs of Ireland : from the late K. James acees.sion to the crown, to the Siege of Londonderry. 16.%. Reflections on [I he last] Pamphlet. Dublin, lii'jl. \ccouut of the present slate of Ireland, giv- ing a full relation of the now establishment made by the late King James. Account of what money, arms, and number of officers arrived there from Prance : state of Derrv and Enniskilling. and other affairs i-elatiug to that kingdom, parti- cularly of the proceedings of then- Parlia- ment thei-e. 10S9. At the end -Letter from Colonel (G.) Walker, givinp a full account of the treachery of the late Go\ornour of Londonderry. Account of the most material passages in Ireland since December _a088. With a particular relation of the I'orces of I^n- donderry. Description aud map of Lon- donderry. 1689. True account of the siege of London-Deny. By the Reverend 11'. George Walker, late IRELAND— VOL. XII.— com/. Govemour of Derry. 1089. [Plan of London-Deny.] Second edition. 1689. [No t.p. Observations upon Mr. Walkers account of the Siege of London-Derry. Remarks on the actions there done.] End. 1689. AjioloL'y for the failures eliarg'd on the Reverend !Mr. George Walker's printed accoitiit of the late Siege of Derrv. n.p. 1689. Vindication of the True Account of the Sieire of DciTy. By :>Ir. George Walkei". 1689. Vindication of Rev. ifr. Alexander Osbom in reference to the alfairs of the north of Ii"eland : in which some mistakes concern- ing him (in the printed account of the Siege of Derry [etc.]) are rectified. Brief relation of those affairs so far a-s M^ Osboni, and other jS'. 0. ministei's in I lie north, were concern'd in 'em. Written by J. Boyse. 1690. Reflections on a paper, pretending to iie an apology for the failures charged on M"". Walker's Account of the Siege of Loudon- Uerry. 1089. XaiTative of the Siege of London-Derry, By John Mackenzie, Chaplain. 1690. M^ John Mackenzyea Nan-ativo or the Siege of Londou-DeiTy a false libel : in defence of Dr. George Walker. 1690. D'. Walker's invisible champion foyl'd : or, an appendix to the late Nari'ati\e of the Siege of Derry. By John Mackenzie. 1690. 13. .Tom-nalof the affairs in Ireland since His Majesties arrival in that Kingdom. liil'O. Itemarkable occurrences which happened to some English gentlemen commonly known by the name of tlie prisonei-s of Gallwav, in 1689, and 1090. Corke, 1691. Relation of the actions of the Inniskilling- men, from their first taking up of arms in December, 10S8. By Andrew Hamilton, Rector of Kilskerrie. 1690. Farther aocount of the actions of the Innis- killing-meu. By Capt. William M''Car- miok. 1691. Account of the ti*ansa«tions of the late King James in Ireland. 1090. List of names of the nobility, gently and commonalty of England and Ireland, who are all by an Act of a pretended Parlia- ment assembled in Dnbhn, 7 Ma^, 1689. before the late King James, attamted of hich treason. With .several of the Acts of the said Parliament. 1090. Address given in to the late King James, by the titular Archbishop of Dublin : from the general meeting of the Romish Bishops and clergy of Ireland. 1090. Sermon [on 2 Cliron. 28. 9] preach'd to tin Protestants of Ireland in the city of Lon- don, at St. Helens, Oetob. 23. 1C90. By Richard, Bishop of KilUila. 1091 . Tillare Hibemicum : being an account of all the Provinces [etc.] which have been reduc'd by his Majesties arms since his first landing in Ireland : Journal of the Siege of Lymcrick. Siege and surrender of Cork and Kin-saJe. By W. Griffyth. [Date of imprint cut down, probably 1690 or 1091.] Remarks on the affairs and trade of Eng- hind and Ireland. 1691. [Ep. Ded. signed "W. H."] Case of the Irish Protestants ; in relation to recognising, or swearing allegiance to,anci praying I'iir King William and Queen Maiy, slated and resolved. 1691. 254 IRELAND— VOL. X\\\.~cont. King David's ease apply'd to King James and King "William ; in a Sermon [on Hsalm iv. 2, 3, 4.] pveach'd at Clirist- Church, Dublin, November, 1691. By .John Stearne. Dublin, 1091. New- Years gift for the iate Eapparues. A satyr. [Verse.] 1691. 11. Diary ol the Siege and Surrender ol Lymevick : with the Articles. Dublin, 1692. Civil Articles of Lymeriok. Dublin, 1692. Military Articles of Lymerick. Dublin, 1092. Journal of the victorious progress of their Majesties Torces under the conmnand of Gen. Ginckle, this summer in Ireland. Capitulation and .Surrender ol Limerick. 1691. British Muse; or i>ranny expos'd. A Satyr, occasion'd by the fulsome and lying poems and elegies, written on the death of King' James. Poem on the generous articles of Limerick and Galway. n.d. [" Supposed to have been written by Tutehin." MS. underneath,*' Poem."'\ Case of the thirteen Dutch regiments, which are still in arrear of pay for their Service in the late war. 2 leaves, n.p. n.d. (1709). Case of the three French regiments of foot, .s.sh. n.p. n.d. Case of inhabitants of Ireland, that sub- sisted the army there for 1090, and 1691. s.sh. n.p. n.d. Proposal for sending back the nobility and gentry of Ireland. With a Vindication of the same. 1C90. [Signed at end " R. B." See next pamphlet.] S^ St. John Brodrick's Vindication of him- self, from the aspersions east on him, in a pamphlet written by Sir Rich. Buckley, entituled. Proposal [etc.]. n.p. 1690. Animadversions on the Proposal. 1690. His Excellency Viscount Sydney, his speech to Parliament, 3 November. "With the Lord Chancellors Speech, s.sh. Bud. Dublin printed, London, reprinted, 1692. Account of the sessions of parliament in Ire- land, 1092. 1693. Animadversions on the Defence of the answer to a Paper, intituled. The Case of the dissenting Protestants of Ireland, in reference to a bill of indulgence, from the exceptions made against it. Answer to A peaceable and friendly addi-ess to the Non-Conformists. Written upon their desiring an Act of Tolei-ation without the Sacramental Test. n.p. ["Dublin or Bel- fast." MS.} 1097. ["Supposed by Rev. a. M=Bride, Minister of Belfast." MS.'] Try,al and conviction of Patrick Hurly. Appendix : answer to a Libel intituled Patrick Hurly's Vindication. Dublin, 1701. ["Appendix" separate tract, with its own t.p.l Accoutrt of the proceedings in relation to Capt. Kidd. London, 1701. [Contains nothing but " The publisher to the reader. '] IRRIGATOR. Scientific Irrigator. 8°. Edinburgh, 1828. 4473 IRVING (B. A.). Theory and practice of Caste ; being an inquiry into the effects of C.nste on the iu- stitHtious and probable destinies of the Ant^lo-Tndian Empire. ,S°. 185.3. 4474 IRVING (JOSEPH). Annals of our time : a diurnal of events . . from the accession of Qneen Victoria, June 20, 1837. New edition . . brought down to the Peace of Versailles, February 28, 1871. 8°. London and New York, 1871. 4475 IRVING (WASHINGTON). Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada. From the MSS. of Fray Antonio Agapida. . . Legends of the conquest of Spain. 2 vol. 8". 1850. 4476 History of New- York, from the begin- ning of the world to the eud-of the Dutch dynasty . By Diedrich Knickerbocker Ipseiid.'] (Vignette by G. Cruikshank). 8°. 1824. 4477 [Another — " Standard Library " — edi- tion.] 8°. n.p. n.d. 4478 Life of George Washington. Vol. 1, 2, 3. (Portrait.) 8°. 1855-6. 4479 Life of Mahomet. (Portrait.) 8". 1850. 4480 Live.s of the Successors of Mahomet. 8". 1850. 4481 Lives of Mahomet and his Successors. 2 vol. 8°. 18.50. 4482 Life and Poetical remains of Margaret M[iller] Davidson. J2"'. 1843. 4483 Oliver Goldsmith: a biographj'. 12° 1849. (Two copies.) 4484 [Another edition.] 8°. 1850. 4485 Sketch Book. 8°. 1850. 4486 Tales of the Alhambra. Kevised and corrected by the author. 12°. 1850. 4487 Tales of a Traveller. By Geoffrey Crayon [pseurf.] 8°. 1848. 4488 [Another edition.] 8°. 1850. 4489 Tour on the Prairies. 8°. 1850. 4490 ISAACSON (HENRY). Life and death of Lancelot Andrewes, Bishop of Winchester . . brief view of the plantation and increase of the Christian religion in Great Britain, with the abuses crept into it, and the reformation of them ; together with the original dedication, and dissertation ou chronology, by the same author. The whole edited . . with a memoir of the author . . by Bev. Stephen Isaacson. (Portrait of Bp. Andrewes.) 8°. 1829. 4491 ISIS. T^TOs us la-iif. Hymnus in Isim. Ah L. Kossio repertum primum . . anuotavit Hermannus Sauppius. 4°. Turici, 1842. 4492 ISOCRATES. Orationes septem et Epistolse . . ver- sionem novam, notasque ex Uieronymo 255 ISOC RATES— cow^ Wolfio potissimum dcsumptas adjunxit Gill. Battie. [Gr. et Lat.] 8". Cantiib! 1729. 4493 Orationes qualuordecim. Vaiias lec- tiones . . adjunxit Gul. Battie [Gr. et Lat.] n.d. 8". 4494 ITALY. Letturs from Italy and Vienna. 12°. Cambridge, 18.52. 449.') IVIMEY (JOSEPH), John Milton : his life and times, reli- gious and political opinions : with an ap- pendix, containing animadversions upon D'. Johnson's life of Milton, &e. (Por- trait.) &». 18.33. 4496 [JABET (GEORGE).] Notes on Noses. [Anon.] 12". 1852. 4497 The Poet.s' pleasaunce : or. Garden of all sorts of pleasant flowers, which our j>leasant poets have, in past time, for pas- time, planted. By Edeu Warwick [pseud.} 8°. 1847. 4498 JACK. Story of .Tack and the Giants. Illus- traied with 35 drawings by Richard Doyle. Engiaved by G. and E. Dalziel. 4". 1851. 4499 JACKSON (JOHN). Strictures upon the merits of Young Roscius [Master Betty]. Third edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1804. 4500 JACKSON (JOHN) BISHOP OF LONDON. The Witness of the Spirit : Sermons . . 12". 18.54. 4501 " From the Author.*' JACKSON (THOMAS). Life of John Goodwin . . Vicar of Saint Stephen's Coleman Street, London . . with a review of several public trans- actions in Great Britain, during the Civil Wars and the luter-regnum. (Portrait.) 8°, 1822. 4502 JACKSON (WILLIAM). Observations on the present state of Music, in London. 8°. 1791. 4503 Thirty letters on various subjects. Two vol. (in one). [Anou.] 12". 1783. 4504 Third edition. 6°. 1795. 4505 JACOB (GILES). Historical account of the' lives and writings of the most emini'ut English Poets . . adorned with cuts. Second edi- tion. 8°. E. Curll, 1733. 450G The Mirrour : or lettcrf . . on the present times. Shewing the great im- provement of wit, poetry and learning . . Leiial conviction of M'. Alexander Pope of duluess and scandal, in the high court of Parnassus. [Anon.] 8°. 1733. 4507 " Ex dono authoris Giles Jacob." Poetical Register : or, the liies and characters of all the English Poets. AVith an account of their writings. Adorned with curious sculptures . (By G. J.) 2 vol. 8". 1723. 4508 JACOB (WILLIAM). Travels in the south of Spain, in letters written 1809 and 1810. (With appendix). 4". ISU. 4509 JACOBITE. [Tracts.] 4". 1682-97. 4510 Ilo>al Pavourite clear'd: with an admoui- ticn to tlie Roman Calholii-ks. And an .address to James, Duke of York. [Ep. Ded. signed '• J. G."] Account of the pretended Prince of "Wales, and other grievances, that occasioned the nobilities Inviting, and the Prince of Or:nigc's coming fnto England. Account of the murther of the Earl of Essex, n.p. Advantages of the present settlement, and great danger of a relapse. Vindication of the parliamentary proceed- ings against James 11. Instances of de- posing evil Princes. Character of a Jacobite. King James's letter to his Privy-Counsellors . With reflections upon it, and the pretended Prince of Wales. Answer to K. James's last declaration. Enquiry into legal rights : with respect to the popular pleas of K. James's remaining right to the Cro^vn. Answer to King James's Declaration. To all his pretended subjects. View of the Court of St. Germain, from 1690 to {)5. With an account of the entertain- ment Protest[a]nts meet with there. King James's Manifesto answer'd. Account of the behaviour of the Earl of Kilmarnock, after his sentence, and on the dav of his execution. By James Poster. With Appendix. 1746. Anniversary thanksgiving sermon on Psalm is. IG, for the victory at CuIloden.April 16, 174S. With an abridgement of the history of that unnatural rebellion. Appendix : containing the wanderings of Charles, the Pretender's son, for five months after his defeat. View of the most remarkable providences of God, in delivering this 256 JACOBITE— eoMif. Kingdom from popery nnd tyranny, with- in two hundred years last past. 1776. Dedication signed " Isaac Toms " and "advertisement" dated "Hadleigh," [Tracts.] 4". 1690-C. 4. 'ill Jacohite principles vindicated. Re-printed, IfiQS. King Janies'.s letter to his Privy-Counsellors. Enquir.v into the canscs of the present dis- asters in England. Argument proving, that the abrogation ol King .Tames by the people of England from the regal throne, and the promotion o[ the Prince of Orange, one of the royal famil.y, to the throne of the Kingdom in his stead, was according to the constitution of the English government. Ey Samuel Johnson. Letter concerning a French invasion, to restore King James to his throne. Second letter concerning the French inva- .sion. In which His Majesty's Declaration, to all his loving subjects, commanding their assistance against the P. of Orange and his adherents, is published. Remarks upon the present confederacy, and late Revolution in England, &c. Xovil Payn's letter, and some other letters that concern the subject of his letter. Willi notes on them. In order to N. P's tryal. Edinburgh, printed, London reprinted, 1693. [No title-page. AVIiether the Parliament be not in law dissolved by the death of the Princess of Orange ? "With a brief account of the Government of England.] [No title-page. "Whether the preserving ' the Protestant religion was the motive unto, or the end, that was designed in the lato Revolution.] King James's reasons for signing Sir George Barclay's Commission. I Xo title-page. The French Kings new Declaration translated from the original at Paris. Being his publiek manifesto, in vindication of liimself, and the late King James, from being priv.v to the late in- tended assassination of King "William.] Tragedy, called the Popish Plot, reviv'd : detecting the secret league between King James and the French King ; the Popisli conspiracy to murder King "William ; and the wicked contrivance for adulterating the coin of this Kingdom. The Case of an oath of abjuration considered: and the vote of the House of Commons vindicated, [Tracts.] v.d. 8°. 4512 Memoirs relating to the restoration of James I. of Scotland. 171(1. Dialogue between King James and the Prince ot Conty. ll»7. Doctrine of ]inssive obedirnco, nnd non- resistance stated. Second edition. 1710. Most faults on one side : or, the sh.iUow politicks of the author of a pamphlet, en- titnl'd Faults on both sides consider'd and oxpos'd. 1710. Dissuasion from Jacobitism. Second edi- tion. 1713. Second part. 1713. Dialogue between the French Knig, atul the late King James, at St. (Jermaiiis en Layc : occasiou'd b.v the si.s-'ning of tlie Peace. 1U1I7. Llmiierfect.] Church of Engl.and-Man's reasons for taking the oaths to (ving George. 17:2:1. JACOBITE— coHi!. Account ot the Swedish and Jaoobite Plot. Postscript, relating to the Post-boy of Saturday, Feb. 23. 1717. The good old cause, further discuss'd. 1710. [Xo title-page. A hue and cry after the al)du!ated B of E- who has lately withdrawn himself from justice. 1091.] JACOBS (FRIEDRICH). Hellas. "Vortriige iiber Heimath, Gesch- iehte, LiteraUiv und Kunst der Hellenen. Au-s (lent handschriftlichen Nachlasz des "Vcrfasser.s von K. P. Vi''ilstemanu. 8". Berlin, 1853. 4513 Hellas or, the home, histor}-, litera- ture, and art of the Greeks. Translated from the German by John Oxenford. 1 i". 1855. 4514 Presentation copy from the Translator, JACOX (FRANCIS). Aspects of Authorship : or, Book marlcs and book makers. 8°. 1872. 4515 i87n. 4516 Shakspeare divor.sions . . 8°. JAGOR (P.). Travels in the Philippines. Illustrations and map. 8". 1875. -1517 JAMES I. KING OF ENGLAND. BacrtXiKov Arapot/ or His Maiesties iustrue- tious to his dearest sonne, Henrie the Prince. 12°. 1603. 4518 Message of James I. to the Earl of Somerset in the case of Sir Thomas Ovor- hury. Communicated to the Society of Antiquaries by James More Molyueux. Together with a review of the c\idence respecting King James's conduct in fliat case, in a letter addressed to the Secretary, by James Spedding. 4°. 1866. (Frotii the Archaeologia, Vol. 41.) 4519 The Prince's Cabala : or Mysteries of State. "Written hy King James the first, and some noblemen in his reign, and in Queen Elizabeth's. With Socrates's dis- course to a Prince, on Kingly Govern- ment. Translated from the Greek. [Se- cond Title] The Cabala . . viz. Table- talk of James I. . . Instructions to an English Prince . . by James I. Advice of Lord "Verulam, to James I., for choos- ing Pri\'y Councillors . . Memorial presented to Queen Elizabeth, bj' Lord linrleigh, against her ?\Iajesty's leing en- grossed by any particular fiivonrite. " The dangers incident to the place of a Secre- tary of Slate ; by the Ear] of Salisbury. Ad\iee of Isoerales to Demonicus a noble- man. His discourse to a prince . . 12°. 1715. 4.'j2(i Truth brought to light : or, the history of the first 14 years of King James I. In four parts . [Anon.] (Emblematical 257 JAMES I., KING OF ENGLAND— cont. title and portrait of Sir T. Overbury.) 8". 1692. 4521 Court and Times of James the first ; illustrated by authentic and confidential letters . . Edited, with introduction and notes by the author of " Memoirs of Sophia Dorothea [E. Folkestone Williams]." 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 4522 JAMES AND CHARLES, KINGS OF ENGLAND. Secret history of .Tames I. and Charles I. . . By the author of the secret his- tory of Charles II. and James II. 12°. n.p. 1690. 4523 Secret history of the reif;us of Charles II. and James II. 12°. n.p. 1690. 4524 JAMES (GEORGE PAYNE RAINS- FORD). Adra, or the Peruvians ; the Ruined City ; &e. [Poem.s]. 8°. 1829. 4525 Darnley ; or, the Field of the Cloth of gold. 12°. 1849. 4526 Pc L'Orme. By the author of" Riche- lieu " . . Revised . . by the author. 12°. 1837. 4527 Ifight of the Fiddlers : u, serio-comic verity. Illustrated by H. K. Browne. 12°. 1849. 4528 Henry Masterton ; or, the Adventures of a Young Cavalier. By the Author of " Caraley " . . Revised . . by the author. 12°. 1837. 4529 History of Chivahry. 12°. 1830. 4530 History of the life of Richard Coeur-De- Lion King of England. 4 vol. 8°. 1841-9. 4531 New edition. 2 vol. (Portraits). 8°. Bohn, 1854. 4532 Life of Henry the fourth, King of France and HiLvarre. 3 vol. (Portrait). 8". 1847. 4583 Life and times of Louis the four- teenth. New edition. 2 vol. (Porh'aits). 8°. Bohn, 1851. 4534 Man at Arms ; or, Henri de Cerons ; a romance. Third edition. (Portrait.) 8". 1844. 4535 Memoirs of great Commanders. 3 vol. 8°. 1832. 4536 Vol. 1. Henry V., John Plantagenet, Dulco ol Bedford, Gonzalves de Cordoba, Dnko o£ Alva. 2. Cromwell, Monk, Turenne, Cond^. 3. Marlborough, Prince Eugene, Earl oi Peter- borough, Marquis of Granby, Wolfe. Phihp Augustus; or, the brothers iu arms. Revised . . by the author. 12°. 1850. 4.537 Richelieu, a tale of France. (Portrait.) 12°. n.p. n.d. (Loudon, 1839.) 4538 16505. JAMES (HENRY), Lectures and Miscellanies. 8°. New- York, 1852. 4539 JAMES (JOHN) D.D. Christian Watchfulness, in the prospect of sickness, mourning, and death. New edition. 8". 1843. 4540 JAMES (WILLIAM BOSVILLE). Wine duties considered financially and socially. Being a reply to Sir J. E. Ten- nent, on " Wine : its taxation and uses." 8°. 1855. 4541 JAMESON (MRS. ANNA). Beauties of the Courl of Charles II. A series of portraits, illustrating the diaries of Pepys, Evelyn, Clarendon . . With memoirs . . by M". Jameson. The Portraits from copies made . . by M'. Murphy . . F°. 1833. 4542 Pi'oofs on India paper. Second edition. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1838. 4543 Commonplace Book of thoughts me- mories, and fancies, original and selected Part I. Ethics and Character. Part II. — Literature and Art. With illustrations and etchings. 8°. 1854. 4544 Communion of Labour : a second lecture on the social employments of Women. 12°. 1856. 4545 Companion to the most celebrated Pri- vate Galleries of Art in London. Con- taining accurate catalogues . . each preceded by an ... introduction, with a prefatory essay on art, artists, collections, and connoisseurs. Gallery of the Queen. Bridgewater Gallery. Sutherland Gallery. Grosvenor Gallery. Collection of the Marquess of Laiisdowne. Collection of Sir Robert Peel. Collection of Mr. Rogers. 8°. 1844. 4546 Handbook to the Public Galleries of Art in and near London. With catalogues of the pictures, accompanied by . . notices . . in two parts. Part I. Introduction. National Gallery. Windsor Castle. II. Hampton Court. Uulwich Gallery. Barry's pictures. Soane's Museum. (2 vol.) 8°. 1842. 4547 Legends of the Madonna, as represented in the fine arts . . Illustrated by draw- ings and woodcuts. 8°. 1852. 4548 Memoirs of celebrated Female Sove- reigns. 2 vol. 8°. 1831. 4549 Vol. 1. Semiramis, Cleopatra, Zenobia, Joanna I. and II. of Naples, Isabella of Castile, Mary, Queen of Soots, Elizabeth. 2. Christina, Anne, Maria Theresa, Cathe- rine II. Memoirs of the early Italian Painters, and of the progress of painting in Italy. From Cimabne to Bassano. 2 vol. 12°. 1845. 4550 258 JAMESON (MRS. ANNA)— coni. Memoirs of the Loves of the Poets. Biographical sketches of women celebrated in ancient and modern Poetry. By the authoress of the " Diary of an Ennuyee." Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1831. 4551 Memoirs and essays ilUistratiTe of Art, Literature, and Social Morals. 8°. 1846. 4552 House of Titian— Adelaide Kemble and the lyrical di-ama — Xanthian Marbles — w. AUston—" Woman's Mission," and woman's position— Relative social position of mothers and governesses. Sacred and Legendary Art. 2 vol. 8". 1848. 4553 Vol. 1. Legends or the Angels and Arch- angels, Evangelists, Apostles, doctors of the Church, and Mary Magdalene. 2. Legends of the Patron Saints and Virgin patronesses, G-reek and Latin Martyrs, early Bishops, Hermits, and "Warrior Saints of Christendom. Legends of the Monastic Orders, as re- presented in the fine arts. Forming the second series of Sacred and legendary art. 8°. 1860. 4554 Sisters of Charity Catholic and Pro- testant, abroad and at home. 12°. 1855. 4555 Sketches in Canada, and rambles among the Bed men. New edition. 12°. 1852. 4556 Visits and Sketches at home and abroad with Tales and Miscellanies now first col- lected and a new edition of the Diary of an Ennuyee. 4 vol. 8°. 1834. 4557 AND EASTLAKE (LADY). History of Our Lord as exemplified in works of Art : with that of His typos ; St. John the Baptist ; and other persons of the Old and New Testament. Com- menced hy the late Mi-s. Jameson. Con- tinned and completed by Lady Eastlake. 2 vol. 8". 1864. 4558 JAMI. Salaraan and Absal. An allegory. Translated from the Persian of Jami. (Frontispiece.) 8°. London, Bungay (printed), 1856. 4559 J^ml was the wi-iter's poetic name : real name Niiruddin Abdurrahman. JAMIESON (REV. ROBERT). Manners and trials of the primitive Christians. Second edition. 12°. Edin- burgh, 1841. ■ 4560 JANIN (JULES), American in Paris : or Heath's Pic- turesque Annual for 1843. Illustrated hy engravings, from designs by Eugene Lami. 8". 1843, 4561 American in Paris during the Summer, being a companion to the " Winter in JANIN (JULES)-con«. Paris " ; or Heath's Picturesque Annual for 1844. Illustrated by engravings, from designs by Eugene Lami. 8°. 1844. 4562 Le mois de Mai a Londres et I'Exposi- tion de 1851. (Portrait.) 8°. Londres (et) Paris, 1851. 4563 JAPIKS (GYSBERT), Frisian poet, 1603-1666. Hulde aan G. J. bewezen, in de Sint Martini Kerk te Bolsward, op den 7 Julii 1 823. Met de daarhij behooreude Stukken . . 2 vol. (in one). (Portrait of Japiks (or Jacobs.)). 8°. Bolsward and Leeu- warden, 1824, 7. 4564 On t.p. of V. 2 " Hulde aan G. J., door .1. Hiddes Halbertsma." JAQUEMET (F. H,). Compendium of Chronology : contain- ing the most important dates of general history . . from the creation of the world to the end of 1 854. Edited by Rev. John Alcorn. 8". 1855. 4565 JARDINE (DAVID). Criminal Trials. 2 vol. (in one). [Anon.] 12°. 1832-5. 4566 " Introduction " to vol. I. and " Preface " to vol. II. signed—" David Jardine." Edited by 4567 Treatise on Equivocation D. Jardine. 12°. 1851. JARVES (JAMES JACKSON). Art-hints. Architecture, sculpture, and painting. 8°. 1855. 4568 History of the Hawaiian or Sandwich Islands . 12°. 1843. 4569 Scenes and scenery in the Sandwich Islands, and a trip through central America . . 1837-42. Map and plates. 8°. 1844. 4570 JAUFRY, Jaufry the knight and the fair Brunis- sende. A tale of the times of King Arthur. Translated from the French version of Mary Lafon by Alfred Elwes. Illustrated with twenty engravings by G. Dore. 8°. 1856. 4571 JAY (REV. WILLIAM). Autobiography ; with reminiscences of some distinguished contemporaries, selec- tions from his correspondence, etc. Edited by George Bedford, and John Angell James. (Portrait.) 8°. 1854. 4572 JEAFFRESON (JOHN CORDY). Novels and Novelists, from EHzabeth to Victoria. 2 vol. (Portraits of Fielding and Dickens.) 8°, 1858. 4573 •259 JEBB (SAMUEL). De vita et rebus gestis . . Mariae Scotorum Eeginae, Franciae Dotariae, fomus primus . . recensuit S. Jebb. [Second titlej De vita et rebus gestis . . Mariae . . quae scriptis tradidere autores sedeeim, in duo volumina distri- buta . . a S. J. . . 2 vol. (in one). F". 1725. 4574 Vol. 1. TraitiS de la succession des femmes aux Rouvernemens, &c. par D. Chambre. De titulo et jure Mariae, quo reffni Angliue successionem sibi justfe vendicat, libellus, &o. operft Jo. Leslaei, episc. Uoffen. De rebus gestis Scotorum, reg- nanto Maria autore eodeui Jo. Leslaeo. Detectio Mariae studio Geo. Buchanani, Histoire trogiciue de Marie. Maria Stuarta innocens ^ caede Dar[n]leiana ; vindice Ob. Barnestapolio. L' innocence de Marie. 2. Vita Mariae scriptore Geo. Conaeo. L 'Histoire de Marie ; par Nicolas Oausin. De Mariae vita et morte, opera Pamiani Stradae. Sumraariuui rationura, quibus Cancellarius Angliae et Prolocutor Puckeringius Elizabethae Keginao persua- serunt occidendam esse Mai-iam. Oper^ Romoaldi. Martyre de la royne d* Escosse, par Ad. Blackwood. Historia do lo suc- cedido en Escocia y Inglaterra, en quarenta y quatro annos que bivio Maria Estuarda, escrita por Antonio de Herrera, &c. Ex- trait des Memoires de Michel de Oastelnau. Extrait des additions aux Memoires de M. de CiLsteluau, par M'. de Laboureui*, con- tenant aussi tout ce que le Sieur de Bi-an- t6me a ecrit de la reyne d'Escosse. La Mort de la royne d'Escosse, &c. Oraison funebre de la royne d'Escosse sur le sub- ject de celle prononc^e par Mens, de Bourges. Not quite perfect at the beginning of V. 2. Life of Kobert [Dudley] Earl of Leices- ter . . [Anon.] (Portrait.) 8°. 1727. 4575 " Generally attributed to D'. Sara. Jebb." Lowndes. JEFFREY (FRANCIS, LORD). Conti-ibutious to the Edinburgh Eeview. 4 vol. 8°. 1844. 4576 [Another edition.] Complete in one volume. (Portrait.) 8°. 1853. 4577 Jonathan Swift, D.D. 12°. 1853. 4578 Samuel Richardson. 12°. 1853. 4579 JELF (WILLIAM EDWARD). A Grammar of the Greek Language, chiefly from the German of Raphael Kiihner. Syntax. 8°. Oxford, 1842. 4580 JENKINS (DAVID). Jenkinsius Redivivas : or the Works of . . Judge Jenkins, whilst a prisoner in the Tower, and Newgate, by command of the rebellious-Loug-Parliament . . (Portrait.) 12°. 1681. 4581 [Tracts.] 4°. n.p. 1647 and n.d. (1647). 4582 [Not.p. LexTerrae. End. 1647.] JENKINS (DAVID)— eo«<. Eemonstranoe to Parliament, 21. February, 1617. [No t.p. Another copy, or edition of Lex Terrae.] Discourse touching the inconveniencies of a long continued parliament. [No t.p. Vindication of Judge Jenkins pri- soner in the Tower, 2!) of Aprill, 1647.] JENNINGS (RICHARD). Natural elements of Political Economy. 8°. 1855. 4583 JENYNS (SOAME). Poetical Works. Collated . . by Thomas Park. 12°. Sharpe, 1807. 4584 , Miscellaneous Piece?, in verse and prose. Third edition. [Anon.] 8». 1770. 4.185 JEPHSON (ROBERT). Bragauza. A tragedy . Second edi- tion. 8°. 1775. 4586 Law of Lombardy ; a tragedy . . 8°. 1779. 4587 Julia ; or, the Italian Lover. A tra- gedy . . Second edition. 8°. 1787. 4588 Count of Narbonne, a tragedy . . Second edition. 8°. 1787. 4589 JERDAN (WILLIAM). Autobiography, with his literary, poli- tical, and social reminiscences and cor- respondence during the last fifty years. 4 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1852-3. 4590 JERMYN (JAMES). Book of English Epithets, literal and figurative, with elementary remarks . . 8°. 1849. 4591 At end — Prospectus and specimen of an English Gradus, and Dictionary of Ideas . . by J. Jermyn. 1848. JERNINGHAM (EDWARD). Poems. 2 vol. 8°. 1786. 4592 JERRMANN (EDWARD). Pictures from St. Petersburg. Trans- lated from the German by Frederick Hard- man. 12°. 1852. 4593 JERROLD (DOUGLAS WILLIAM). [Half Title.] Writings of Donglas Jerrold. Collected edition . . 8 vol. 8°. 1851-4. 4594 [Titles.] St. Giles and St. James. Men of Character. Mrs. Caudle's Curtain Lec- tures, Story of a Feather, and the Sick Giant and the Doctor Dwarf. Cakes and Ale. Punch's letters to his Son, Punch's complete letter writer, and Sketches of the English. A man made of Money, and the Chronicles of Clovemook. Comedies. Comedies and Dramas. R 2 260 JERROLD (DOUGLAS WILLIAM)— cont. Cakes and Ale. 2 vol. (Illustrated by G. Cruikshank.) 12°. 1842. 4595 Chrouieles of Clovernook ; with some account of the Hermit of BellyfuUe. 12°. 1846. 4596 At the end five "Essays." A Man made of Money. With twelve illustrations on &teel hy John Leech. 8°. 1849. 4597 Nell Gwynne ; or, the Prologue. A comedy . . 8°. 1833. 4598 The Wedding Gown. A comedy . . 8°. 1834. 4599 The Housekeeper ; or, the White Eosc. A comedy . . 8°. 1833. 4600 N"". 4597-600. Presentation copies. Beau Nash; the King of Bath. A comedy . . 8°. 1834. 4601 The Golden Calf; a comedy . . 8° n.d. 4602 Punch's complete letter writer. With 50 illustrations by Kenuy Meadows. 12°. 1845. 4603 Punch's Letters to his Son. Corrected and edited, from the MSS. in the Alsa- tian Library. With twenty -four illustra- tions by Keuney Meadows. 12°. 1843. 4604 Douglas Jerrold'fi Shilling Magazine. Vol. I (— VH). (Illustrations bv Leech.) 12°. 1845-8. " 4605 Time Works 'V^'onders : a comedy . . 12°. 1845. 4606 "To Albany Fonblanque, from the Author." JERROLD (WILLIAM BLAN- CH ARD). A Brage-Beaker with the Swedes : or, notes from the North in 1852. Illustrated from sketches by the author. 8°. 1854. 4607 Imperial Paris ; including new scenes for old visitors. 12°. 1855. 4608 Story of the Legion of Honour. 12°. 1855. 4C09 JERVIS (CAPTAIN JERVIS-WHITE). Our Engines of War, and how we got to make them. 8°. 1859. 4610 Rifle-musket : a practical treatise on the Enfield-Pritchett rifle . . 8"- 1854. 4611 JERVIS (LADY JERVIS WHITE). Painting and celebrated Painters, an- cient and modern ; including historical and critical notices of the schools of Italy, Spain, France, Germany, and the Nether- lands. Edited by Lady J. W. Jervis. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 4612 JERVIS (REV. JOHN JERVIS- WHITE). . . Five discourses on subjects contained in the Book of Genesis. 8°. 1845. 4613 . . Genesis elucidated. A new Trans- lation, from the Hebrew . . with notes. 8°. 1852. 4614 JERVIS (SWYNFEN). Dying Girl, and other poems. 8°. 1849. 4615 Presentation copy. JERVIS (CAPTAIN WHYTE-). Ionian Islands during the present Cen- tnry. 8°. 1863. 4616 JESSE (EDWARD). Anecdotes of Dogs. With illustrations. 4°. 1846. 4617 Scenes and tales of Country life ; with recollections of natural history. With woodcuts. 8°. 1844. 4618 Summer's Day at Hampton Court, being a guide to the palace and gardens ; with an illustrative catalogue of the pictures . . 12°. 1839. 4619 JESSE (JOHN HENEAGE). Literary and Historical Memorials of London. 2 vol. (Plan.) 8°. 1847. 4620 London and its celebrities. A second series of Literary and historical memo- rials of London. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 4621 Memoirs of the Court of England dur- ing the reign of the Stuarts, including the Protectorate. New edition. 3 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1855. 4622 Memoirs of the Pretenders and their Adherents. (Portraits.) 2 vol. 8°. 1845. 4623 JESUS. Jesus the Messiah. 8°. 1872. 4624 JEWSBURY (GERALDINE END- SOR). Sorrows of Gentility. 2 vol. 8°. 1856. 4625 Dedicated to M'. Forster. Zoe. The history of two lives. 3 vol. 8°. 1845. 4626 JOBSON (D. WEMYSS). History of the French Revolution. Second e'dition. 8°. 1847. 4627 JOCELIN. Monastic and Social life in the 12"'. cen- tury, as exemplitied in the Chronicles of 261 JOCELIN— c(»i<. iTocelin of Brakelond, monk of St. Ed- miindsbury, from 1173 to 1202. Trans- lated, with notes, introduction, &c. by T. E. Tomlius, from the original Latin, as printed by the Camden Society, under the superintendence of John Gage Kokewode. 8".' 1844. 4628 The groundwork of Carlyle's Past and Present," JOCKEY CLUB. Answer to three scurrilous pamphli;ts, entitled the Jockey Club. By a member of the Jockey Club. Second edition. 8°. u.d. 4629 JOHNES (ARTHUR JAMES). Philological proofs of the original unity and recent origin of the human race. Derived from a comparison of the lan- guages of Asia, Europe, Africa, and America. Being an inquiry how far I ho differences in the languages of the globe are referrible to causes now in operation. 8°. 1843. 4630 JOHNS (MAJOR) AND NICOLAS (LIEUTENANT P. H,). Calendar of Victory : being a record of British valour and conquest by sea and land, on every day in the year. Projected and commenced by Major Johns. Con- tinued and completed by Lieut. P. H. Nicolas. 8°. 1855. 4631 JOHNSON (ABRAHAM) pseud. Lucina sine concubitu . . Second edi- tion. 8°. 1750. 4632 JOHNSON (CAPTAIN CHARLES). Vol. I. General history of the Pyrates, from their first rise and settlement in the Island of Providence, to the present time. With the remarkable actions and adven- tures of the two female pyrates Mary Bead and Anne Bonny . . Short abstract of the . . law, in relation, to pyracy. Fourth edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1726. 4633 Book-plate of Samuel Blackwell. Vol. II. History of the Pyrates . . inter- mix'd with a description of Maictionary of Geography, descriptive, physical, statistical, and historical, forming a complete general gazetteer of the World. 8°. 1850. 4658 Physical Atlas of Natural phenomena. Reduced from the edition in imperial folio. . . 4°. Edinburgh and London, 1850. 4659 F°. Edin- 4660 New and enlarged edition, burgh and London, 1856. JOHNSTON (CHARLES). Travels in southern Abyssinia, through the country of Adal lo the kingdom of Shoa. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 4661 JOHNSTON (GEORGE) M.D. Introduction to Conchology ; or, ele- ments of the natural history of Molluscous animals. 8°. 1850. 4662 JOHNSTON (JAMES F. W.). Chemistry of common life. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1856, 5. 4663 Notes on north America agricultural, economical, and social. 2 vol. 8°. Edin- burgh and London, 1851. 4664 [JOHNSTON (WILLIAM).] Table Talker or brief essays on Society and Literature. [Anon.] 2 vol. 12°. 1840. 4665 JOHNSTON (WILLIAM). England as it is, political, social, and industrial, in the middle of the nineteenth century. 2 vol. 8°. 1851. 4666 [JOHNSTONE, JOHNSTON, OR JOHNSON (CHARLES).] Chrysal : or, the Adventures of a, Guinea . . B3' an Adept. Third edition. 4 vol. (in 2). 12°. 1767. 4667 JOHNSTONE (JOHN) M.D. Memoirs of the life and writings of Samuel Parr, LL.D. 2 vol (Portrait.) 8°. 1829. 4668 JOMINI (HENRI, GENERAL BARON DE). Political and military history of the campaign of Waterloo translated from. the French by S. V. Benet. 8°. New- York, 1853. 4669 JONES (DAVID). Secret history of White-Hall, from the restoration of Charles II. down to the ab- dication of K. James. Writ . . hy late Secretary-interpreter to the Marquiss of Louvois . . Published fi'om the original papers. In two parts. By D. Jones. Second edition. (2 vol.) 12°. London, 1717. 4670 On the title-page of Part II. is added— "With the tragical history of the Stuarts, from 1668 to the death of Queen Anne. JONES (ERNEST). The Battle-day : and other poems. 8°. 1855. 4671 The Emperor's Vigil, and the Waves and the War. 12°. 1856. 4673 JONES (GEORGE) R.A. Sn- Francis Chautrey, R.A. Recollec- tions of his life, practice, and opinions. 3°. 1849. 4673 JONES (GEORGE). History of ancient America, anterior to the time of Columbus ; proving the identity of the Aborigines with the Tyrians and Israelites ; and the introduction of Chris- tianity into the western hemisphere by St. Thomas. Tyrian iEra. (Vol. I.) (Portrait.) 8°. London and New- York, 1843. 4674 Tecumseh and the Prophet of the West, an historical Israel-Indian tragedy . . historical notes ; original letters, &o. Life 263 JONES (GEORGE)— co»<. and history of General Harrison, late President of the United States . original letters, &c. First oration upon . . Shakspeare. S". n.d. 4675 Separate Titles. That to Tecumseh etc. dated 1844. That to the " Oration " fourth edition. JONES, PETER. Peter Jones. An autobiography. Stage the first. [Anon.] 8°. 1848. 4676 [JONES (SARAH L.).] Life in the South ; from the commeuee- ment of the War. By a blockaded British subject. Being a social history of those who took part in the battles, from a per- sonal acquaintance with them in their own homes. From the spring of 1860 to August 1862. [Anon.] 2 vol. 8°. 1863. 4077 Introduction signed S. L. J. [JONES (THOMAS).] Uriel, and other poems. [Anon.] Vol. I. 12°. 1857. 4678 Book-plate of Thomas Jones. Poems by the author of Uriel. Second edition. 12°. 1858. 4679 JONES (THOMAS RYMER). Natural history of Animals ; being the substance of three courses of lectures . . Illustrations. Vol. I. II. 8°. 1845-52. 4680 JONES (THOMAS WHARTON). Wisdom and Beneficence of the Almighty as displayed in the sense of Vision. (Ac- tonian Prize-Treatise for 1851.) 12°. 1851. 4681 JONES, TOM. History of Tom Jones the foundling, in his married state. Second edition . . 12". 1750. 4682 JONES (WALTER WHITMORE-). Poems. 12°. 1856. 4683 JONES (SIR WILLIAM). Works. With the life of the author, by Lord Teignmouth. 13 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1807. 4684 " To, Robert Southey Esq'. A trifling token or respect & gratitude from a sincere, and obliged Friend." [J. Neville White, brother of H. Kirke White.] MS. note by Southey, and his Book-plate. Proposals for re-printing by subscription a Dictionary of the Arabick, Persian, and Turkish languages, compiled and first published by Meninski . . revised and cor- rected by W. Jones . . With an Enghsh translation and index . 2 leaves. F°. 1770. 4685 JONES (REV. WILLIAM) OF NAY- LAND). Book of Nature ; or, the true sense of things explained and made easy to the capacities of children. Thirteenth edition. 8°. 1827. 4686 JONES (WILLIAM BASIL) BISHOP OF ST. DAVIDS. Vestiges of the Gael in Gwynedd. 8". London and Tenby, 1851. 4687 AND FREEMAN (EDWARD AUGUSTUS). History and antiquities of Saint David's. 4». London and Tenby, 1856. 4688 JONSON (BENJAMIN) "BEN." Workes. 2 vol. F°. 1616,1640. 4689 Vol. 1. Engraved title page (laid on) but no portrait. 2. Title-page laid on. Most of the pieces have separate title-pa^es, and many of them distinct pagination. " Presented to John Forster Esq. by S. C. Hall." Works. With notes . . and a bio- graphical memoir, by W. Gifford. 9 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1816. 4690 Porti-aits of Jonson, Gifford, &c., and plates inserted. [Another edition.] With notes, critical and explanatory, and a biographical me- moir by William Gifford. Edited by L'. Col. Francis Cunningham. 3 vol. 8°. 1870. 4691 [Another edition.] With notes . . and a biographical memoir by W. Gifford. With introduction and appendices by Lieut.-Col. F. Cunningham. 9 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1875. 4692 " John Porster from a friend of four and forty years. 1875." [Another edition.] With a memoir of his life and writings by Barry Cornwall [Bryan Waller Procter] . (Portrait.) 8°. 1838. 4693 MS. notes by M'. Forster. At the end— Memoirs of Ben Jonson. By William Gifford. Bell's edition. Every Man in his Humour. A comedy. With alterations and addi- tions, by D. Garrick . . New edition. (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1777. 4694 Interleaved copy with MS. cast, stage direc- tions, &c. Imperfect. [Another edition.] With remarks . . by D G. [George Daniel] . . a de- scription of the costume . . Engraving, by White, from a drawing . . by B. Cruik- shank. 12°. n.d. 4695 Interleaved copy for representation, with MS. stage directions, &c. by M'. Porster. The New lime. Or, The light heart. Acomoedy . . [First edition.] 8°. 1631. 4696 E. Heber's copy & MS. note— "N.B. 98 is always wanting." 264 JORTIN (JOHN) D.D. Life of Erasmus. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 4°. 1758-60. 4697 Mi.scellaneous Observations upon Au- thors, iiucient and modern. [Anon.] 2 vol. 8°. 1731-2. 4698 Mittord's copy and MS. notes, one of which says "This copy has the names of the Authors, and many valuable notes and corrections." JOSEPHINE [MARIE JOSEPH ROSE TASCHER DE LA PAGERIE] EMPRESS OF THE FRENCH. Memoirs of the Empress Josephine, with anecdotes of the Courts of Navarre and Malmaison [Anon. ? By Madame du Crest.] Second edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1829. (Two copies.) 4699 No. 2. Preface and contents of Vol. I. im- perfect. JOURNAL. Journal of Design and jUanufactures with . patterns inserted and . en- gravings. Vol. I ( — VI). March- August, 1849 ( — September, 1851 — h^ebruary, 1852). 8°. 1849-52. 4700 Journal' of Sacred Literature. Edited by John Kitto, D.D. Vol. I-IV. 8". 1848-9. 4701 JOY (HENRY H.) Peremptory Challenge of Jurors. With the judgment of the Queen's Bench in the Queen v. Gray. 8°. Dublin, 1844. 4702 JOYCE (ARTHUR J.). Last glimpses of Convocation, shewing the latest incidents and results of synodieal action in the Church of England. 12°. 1853. 4703 JUDKIN (REV. THOMAS JAMES). By-gone Moods ; or, hues of fancy and feeling, from the spring to the autumn of life. With illustrations. [Poems.] 8°. 1856. • 470 J JUKES (JOSEPH BEETE). lOKcursious in and about NeNvfoundland 1839-40. 2 vol. 8". 1842. 4705 Narrative of the surveying voyage of H.M.S. Fly . in Torres Strait, New Guinea, and other islands of the eastern Archipelago, 1842-6; with an exciu'siou into . . .iava . 2 vol. 8°. 1847. 4706 "JUNIUS." .Junius. 2 vol. 12". London : printed fnr Henry Sampson Woodfall, in Pater Noster Row. n.d. 4707 This edition has the title-pages enf;r.'l^'od, table of rnn(cnts, and index. There is no si^n pf the date having been erased from tlio tille-pufi;os {vco " Lowndes "). "JUNIUS"— con(. Letters of Junius. With notes and illustrations . by Robert Heron. 2 vol. 8°. 1801. 4707 "To John Forster Esq. from William J. Thorns." Junius : including letters by the same writer, under other signatures, (now first collected.) To which are added, his con- fidential correspondence with Wilkes, and his private letters addressed to H. S. Wood- fall. With preliminary essay [by J. Mason Good, JI.D.] notes, fac-simile.s, &c. 3 vol. Second edition. 8". 1814. 4709 [Another edition.] New and enlarged edition, with new evidence as to the author- ship, and an analysis by the late Sir Harris Nicolas. By John Wade. Vol. 1. Containingthe entire work as originally published, « ith illustrative notes. 2, Con- taining the private and miscellaneous letters, and a new essay on the authorship. 8°. Bohn, 1850. 4710 JUSTINIANUS (FLAVIUS ANICIUS) IMPERATOR. Institutes ; with English introduction, translation, and notes, by Thomas CoUett Sandars. 8". 1853. 4711 JUSTINUS. Justin, Cornelius Nepos, and Eutroplus, literally translated, with notes By Rev. John Selby Watson. 8°. Bohn, 1853. 4712 JUSTMAN (MRS.). Life of M™. Justman. [Anon.] 2 vol. 12". 1782. 4713 JUVENALIS (DECIUS JUNIUS). Satirae XVI . . recensitsE . . a G. A, Ruperti. 2 vol. 8". Lipsiae, 1801. 4714 AND PERSIUS FLACCUS (AULUS). New and literal translation j with notes . . New edition. By Rev. M. Madan. 2 vol. (in one). 8". Oxford, 1807. 4715 Satires of Juvenal, Persius, Sulpicia, and Lueilius, literally translated into English prose, with notes, chronological tables, arguments, &c. By Rev. Lewis Evans . . Metrical version of Juvenal and Persius, by William Gilford. 8". Bohn, 18.52. 4716 265 K. K. CR.) ie- KINGSTON (R,). Apophthegmata Ciiriosa : or, reflec- tions, sentences, and maxims cautions instructions and rules, for tlic conduct of human life . . extracted from the most celebrated authors . . li". 1709. 4717 " By Kingston " MS. note. KALI DAS A. Sakoontala ; or, the lost ring ; an Indian drama, translated into English prose and \erse from the Sanskrit of Kalidasa : b.y Jlonier 'Williams. Third edition. 8". Hertford, 1856. \_See also No. 1303.] 4718 KALISCH (DR. MARCUS). Historical and critical Commentary on the Old Testament, with a new translation . . Exodus. Hebrew and English. 8°. 1855. 4719 English edition. 8". 1855. 4720 KAMENSKI (BANTISCH). Age of Peter the great. With notes and a preface by Ivan Golovin. 8°. 1851. 4721 KAMES (HENRY HOME, LORD). Elements of Criticism. Eifth edition. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh, 1774. 4722 [Another edition.] Abridged ... by A. Jamieson. 12". 1823. 4723 KANE (SIR ROBERT) M.D. Industrial Eesources of Ireland. 8". Dublin, 1844. 4724 Second edition. 8". Dublin, 1845. 4725 KARR (ALPHONSE). Tour round mj- Garden. Translated from the French. Kevised and edited by Rev. J. G. Wood. Illustrations by Wil- liam Harvey. 8". 1855. 4726 KAUSLER (EDUARD). Denkmaler Altuiederlandischer Sprache und Litteratur. Naoh ungedruckten Quellen herausgegeben von B. K. Vol. I. [Second title] fieimchronik von . Plan- dern, nach einer Altniederliindischcn Hand- schrift mit Anmerkungen zum ersten Mai herausgegeben von E. K. 8". TUbiugen, 1840. •1''27 KAVANAGH (JULIA). Woman in France during the eighteenth eentury. 2 vol. Portraits. 8°. 1850. 4728 KAVANAGH (JULIA)— con*. Women of Christianity, exemplary for acts of piety and charit}-. (Portraits of M. G. Agnesi, lio^ii Govona, and Eliza- beth Fry.) 8". 1852. 4739 KAVANAGH (MORGAN). Discovery of the science of Languages ; in which are shown the real nature of the parts of Speech, the meanings which all words carry in themselves, as their own definitions ; and the origin of words, letters, figures, etc. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 4730 KAY (JOSEPH). Education of the Poor in England and Europe. 8°. 1846. 4731 Social condition and education of (he People in England and Europe ; shewing the results of the primary schools, and of the division of landed property, in foreign countries. 2 vol. I. Peasant proprietors. II. Education of the people. 8°. 1850. 4732 KAYAT (ASSAAD Y.). Voice from Lebanon, with the life and travels of A. Y. Kavat. (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. " 4733 KAYE (SIR JOHN WILLIAM). Administration of the East India Com- pany; a history of Indian progress. 8°. 1853. ' 4734 History of the War in Afghanistan. From the unpublished letters and journals of political and military officers employed in Afghanistan 2 vol. 8°. 1851. 4735 Life and Correspondence of Charles, Lord Metcalfe, late Governor-General of Indiji . . 2 vol. 8". 1854. 4736 Life and Correspondence of Henry St. George Tucker, late Accountant-General of Bengal, and Chairman of the East India Company. 8". 1854. 4737 KEATE (GEORGE). Poetical Works. 2 vol. 12°, 1781. (Portrait.) 4738 KEATING (E. H.). Historical Centuries, from the Christian era to the present time : shewing at one view the rise, progress, and decline of the various empires of Europe, Asia, and Africa. Accompanied by descriptive columns of the principal . . events in each century. F°. 1846. 4739 KEATINGE (COLONEL MAURICE). Travels through France and Spain to Morocco. Comprising a narrative of the author's residence in that Empire. With an account of the British Embassy to the Court of Morocco under George Payne . . Second Journey through France in 1814. Plates. 4°. 1817. 4740 9,66 KEATS (JOHN). Poetical Works (Portrait). 12". 1841. Marked copy. New edition. 12". 1846. 4741 4742 [Another edition.] With a memoir by Richard Monckton Milnes [Lord Hough- ton] . Illustrated by 1 20 designs, original and from the antique, drawn on wood by George Scharf, jun. (Portrait.) S". 18.M. 4743 [Half-title]. Poetical Works. 8°. n.p. n.d. [London]. 4744 Endymion : a poetic romance. [First edition.] 8°. 1818. 4745 Lamia, Isabella, The eve of St. Agnes, and other poems. [lirst edition.] 12°. 1820. (Three copies.) 4746 N°. 1. " B. "W. Procter E.iq". with y author's best regards." 3IS, on t.p. Marked copy. Another version of " Hyperion ." (Edi- ted by K. M. Milnes) [Lord Houghton]. 4". n.p. n.d. 4747 *■ From the editor." Privately printed. KEESE (JOHN). Poets of America : illustrated by one of her painters. Edited by J. Keese. 8°. New York, 1840. 4748 Volume second of the series. Third edition. 8°-. New York, 1842. 4749 Presentation copy to Charles Dickens. KEIGHTLEY (THOMAS). Account of the Life, opinions, and writings of John Milton. With an intro- duction to Paradise Lost. 8°. 185.5. 4750 1859. 4751 [Another edition.] 8°. Fairy Mythology, illustrative of the romance and superstition of various countries. New edition, revised and greatly enlarged. (Frontispiece by George Cruikshank). 8°. Bohu, 18.'50. 4752 History of England. 2 vol. Third edition. 8°. 1845. 4753 Vol.11. Second edition, 1812. Mythology of ancient Greece and Italy. Second edition. 8». 1838. 4754 Notes on the Bucolics and Georgics of Virgil ; with excursus, terms of husbandry, and a Flora Virgiliana. 8°. 1846. 4755 Outlines of History. 12°. 1830. 4756 Secret Societies of the Middle Ages. With illustrations. New edition. [Anon.] 12°. 1848. *4756 KEITH (GEORG£), Keasons for renouncing Quakerish!, and entring into communion with the Cliurch of England . . 8". 1700. 4757 KEITH (SIR ROBERT MURRAY). Memoirs and Correspondence (official and familiar) of Sir R. M. Keith, Envoy . . at the Courts of Dresden, Copenhagen, and Vienna, from 1769 10 1792. With a Memoir of Queen Carolina Matilda of Denmark, and an account of the Kevolu- tion there in 1772. Edited by Mrs. Gilles- pie Smyth. 2 vol. (Portraits of the Queen of Denmark and Sir R. M. Keith.) 8°. 1849. (Two copies.) 4758 KELLER (FRANZ). Amazon and Madeira rivers sketches and descriptions from the note-book of an explorer. With 68 illustrations on wood. F°. 1874. 4759 KELLY (HUGH). Works. To which is prefixed the life of the author. (Portrait.) 4°. 1778. 4760 KELLY (MICHAEL). Reminiscences of M. Kelly, of the King's Theatre, and Theatre Royal Drury Lane, including nearly half a century; with original anecdotes of many distinguished persons . . [? ed. by T. E. Hook.] 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1826. 4761 KELLY (WALTER KEATING). Curiosities of Indo-European tradition and folk-lore. 8°. 1863. 4762 History of Russia . . Compiled from the most autlientic somces, including the works of Karamsin, Tooke, and Segur. 2 vol. (Portraits of Catherine & Nicho- las.) 8°. Bohn, 1864-5. 4763 History of the year 1 848. 12°. 1849. 4764 Syria and the Holy Land, their scenery and their people. Incidents of travel, .See. From the best and most recent authorities. Illustrations. 8°. 1844. 4765 KELLY (WILLIAM). Excursion to California over the Prairie, Rocky Mountains, and great Sierra Nevada. With a stroll through the diggings and ranches of that country. 2 vol. 8°. 1851. 4766 Life in Victoria or Victoria in 1853, and Victoria in 1858 . . 2 vol. 8°. 1859. 4767 KELSALL (CHARLES). Phantasm of an University : with pro- legomena. (Plates.) 4°. 1814. 4768 KEMBLE (FRANCES ANNE) aft. MRS. BUTLER. Christmas Tree and other tales. Ad- apted from the German. 12°. 1856. 4769 267 KEMBLE (JOHN MITCHELL). Saxons in England. A history of the English Commonwealth till the period of the Norman Connuest. 2 vol. 8°. 1849. 4770 State Papers and correspondence illus- trative of the social and political state of Europe I'roui the revolution to the acces- sion of the House of Hanover. Edited, with historical iutroduction, biographical memoirs, and notes, by J. M. Kemble. 8°. 1857. 4771 KEMP (T. LINDLEY) M.D. Natural History of Creation. 12°. 18.52. 4772 Indications of Instinct. A Sequel to " The Natural History of Creation." 12°. 1852. 477.3 Phasis ot Matter ; being an outline of the discoveries and applications of modern chemistry. 2 vol. 8". 18.55. 4774 KEMP (WILLIAM). Kemps nine daies wonder. Performed in a daunce from London to Norwich . . Written by himselfe . . 4°. 1600. 4775 Fac-simile reproduction ; superintended by Edmund W. Ashbee. For private cir- culation only. KEMPE (REV, JOHN EDWARD). Job. A course of Lectures . . 1855. 12°. 1855. 477G KEN (THOMAS) BISHOP OF BATH AND WELLS. Exposition of the' Apostles' Creed. TTrom his " Practice of divine love." 12°. 1852. 4777 . " Introduction " signed " I. L. A." Practice of Divine Love revised : being an exposition of the Church-Catechism . . Directions for Prayer. (Portrait.) 12°. 1718. 4778 MS. prjvyers at beginning and end. KENDALL (GEORGE WILKINS). Narrative of the Texan Santa Fe Ex- pedition. Comprising a description of a tour through Texas, and across the great Southwestern prairies, the Camanche and Caygiia hunting-grounds . . Illustrations and map. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 4779 KENEALY (EDWARD VAUGHAN), Brallaghan, or the Deipnosophists. 12°. 1845. 4780 Goethe : a new Pantomine. 12°. 1850. 4781 MS. note by M'. Forster. KENNAWAY (REV. CHARLES EDWARD). Law of Duty : or the deeds and diffi- culties ot the great Duke [of Wellington] . . 12°. 185.3. 4.782 KENNEDY (C. M.). Influence of Christianity upon Inter- national Law. Hulsean prize essay in the University of Cambridge, for 1854. 8°. Cambridge, 1856. 4783 KENNEDY (JAMES). Ethnological and Philological Essays. I. Probable origin of the American In- dians. II. Question of the supposed lost Tribes of Israel (and appendices ; on the six days of the Creation ; on the chrono- logy of the World). III. Ancient lan- guages of France and Spain. 8°. 1855. 4784 Modern Poets and poetry of Spain. 8°. 1852. 4785 [KENNEDY (WILLIAM).] Mv early days. Second edition. [Anon.] 12°. " Edinburgh, 1828. 4786 An Only Son ; a narrative by the author of " My early days." 12°. 1831. 4787 KENNEDY (WILLIAM). Texas . . 2 vol. 8°. 1841. 4788 KENNEDY (WILLIAM). Short narrative of the second voyage of the Prince Albert, in search of Sir John Franklin. Illustrations, andMap by Arrowsmith. 8°. 1853. 4789 KENNET (WHITE) BISHOP OF PETERBOROUGH. Complete history of England : with the lives of all the kings and queens thereof . . to the death of William III. . . Illustrated with notes . . and the effigies of the kings and queens . . Second edition. 3 vol. F». 1719. 4790 Vol. 1. History of Britain to William the Conqueror. By John Milton. From the Conquest to the end of Edward III. By Samuel Daniel. Eeigns of Eichard II. Henry IV, V, and VI. All new writ in M'. Daniers method. Seign of Edward IV. By John Habington. Lives of Edward V. and Eichard III. By Sir The. Moore. Translated from the Latin original. Life of Eichard III. By George Buck. Liteof King Henry VII. By Francis Lord Bacon. Vol.2. History of Henry VIII. By Edward Lord Herbert of Cherbury. Life of Edward VI. By Sir John Hay ward. Lite of Queen Mary. Written in Latin by Francis Godwin, Bishop of Hereford, newly translated into English by J. H. History of Queon Elizabeth. "Written by ■William Cambden; newly done into English. Annals of James I. By the said M'. Cambden. History of James I. By Arthur "Wilson. Vol. 3. History and Life of Charles I. Charles II. James. II. King William and Queen Mary. William 111. AH new writ by a learned and impartial hand [i.e. Kennet]. The Wisdom 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. [Anon.] 8°. 1715. 4791 268 KENNY (CHARLES). Manual of Chess : containing the ele- mentary principles of the game ; illustra- ted with numerous diagrams, recent games, and original problems. 12°. 1847. 4792 KENRICK (JOHN). Ancient Egypt under the Pharaohs. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 4793 Phoenicia. With maps and illustrative plates. 8°. 1855; 4794 KENRICK (WILLIAM) LL.D. Eeview of Doctor Johnson's new edi- tion of Shakespeare : in which the ignor- ance, or inattention, of that editor is ex- posed, and the poet defended from the persecution of his commentators. 8°. 1765. 4795 KENT ("WILLIAM CHARLES MARK); Charles Dickens as a Reader. 8°. 1872. 4796 Dedicated to M'. Torster. Footprints on the Road. 8°. 1864. 4797 The Gladstone Government being Cabi- net pictures. By a Templar. 8°. 1869. 4798 Poems. New edition. 8°. 1870. 4799 KENYON (JOHN). A Day at Tlvoli : with other verses. 8". 1849. , 4800 Poems : for the most part occasional. 8°. 1838. 4801 Rhymed Plea for Tolerance. In two dialogues. With a prefatory dialogue. Second edition. 8°. 1839. (Three copies.) 4802 N°'. 4800-2.— Presentation copies with in- scriptions. KEON (MILES GERALD). Life and times of the Roman patrician Alexis, to which is annexed, an account of the Mission founded in Kentish Town, by Rev. Hardinge Ivers . . 8°. 1847. 4803 KEPPEL (ADMIRAL HON. SIR HENRY). Expedition to Borneo of H.M.S. Dido for the suppression of piracy : with ex- tracts from the journals of James Brooke, Esq. of Sariiwak . . Third edition. With an additional chapter, comprising recent intelligence, by Walter K. Kelly. 2 vol. (Portrait of the Rajah Muda Hassim.) 8°. 1847. 4804 [No title-page. Visit to Borneo. Vol. I. and 1 -4 of Vol, II.] 8°. *4804 The suppressed or cancelled matter of N°. ■iSOfl. Visit to the Indian Archipelago, in H.M.S. Mseander. With portions of the private journal of Sir James Brooke. Il- lustrations by Oswald W. Brierley. 2 vol. (Chart.) 8°. 1853. 4805 KEPPEL (HON. AND REV. THOMAS). Life of Augustus Viscount Keppel, Admiral of the White, and first Lord of the Admiralty in 1782-3. 2 vol. (Por- trait,) 8°. 1842. (Two copies.) 4806 KERNER (JUSTINUS). Secrcss of Prevorst being revelations concerning the iuner-life of man, and the inter-diffusion of a world of spirits in the one we inhabit. Communicated by J. Kerner. Prom the German, by Mrs. Crowe. 12°. 1845. 4807 Presentation copy from the Translator. KERR (J.), Review of Public Instruction in the Bengal Presidency, from 1835 to 1851. Parts I. II. 8°. 1853. 4808 KEY (THOMAS HEWITT) AND DONALDSON (JOHN WILLIAM) D.D. Controversy about the Varronianus. [Five pamphlets.] Printed for private circulation. 12°. 1845. 4809 KHANIKOFF (M.). Bokhara ; its Amir and its People. Translated from the Russian. By the Baron Clement A. De Bode. (Portrait of the Amir.) 8°. 1845. 4810 KIDD (JOHN) M.D. Adaptation of external nature to the physical condition of man : principally with reference to the supply of his wants and the exercise of his intellectual facul- ties. (Sixth edition.) (Bridgewater Treatise.) 8°. Bohn, 1852. 4811 KIDD (REV. ROBERT BOYD), Delineation of the primary principles of Eeasonlug. 8°. 1856. 4812 KIDDER (DANIEL P.) D.D. Sketches of residence and travels in Brazil . . 2 vol. Illustrations. 8°. 1845. 4813 KILLARNEY. Description of the Lakes of Killarney . . 12". 1849. 4814 KILLIGREW rHENRY) D.D. Sermons preached partly before his Majesty at White-Hall. And partly before Anne Dutchess of York, at the Chappel at St. James. 4°. 1685. 4815 269 KILLIGREW (THOMAS). Comedies, and Tragedies. (Portrait.) F°. 16G4. 481C "An unusally clean and genuine copy of an uncommon book ; with good impression of the portrait by Faithorne." MS. note [by U'. Bliss] . Ponrverly Baron Bolland's copy. The Prisoners and Claraeillii. Two tragae-comedies . . 12". 1611. 4817 KILLIGREW (SIR WILLIAM). Three Plajes . . viz. Selindra. Pan- dora. Ormasdes. 8". 1665. 4818 KILVERT (F.). Pinacothecae Historicae specimen ; sive illustrinm quorundam ingenia, mores, fortuuae, ad inscriptionum formam ex- pressae. Pars secunda. 12°. 1850. 4819 MS. notes by W. S. Landor. KING (HENRY) D.D. Two Sermons preached at White-hall in Lent, March 3. 1625. and Februarie 20. 1C2G. 4". 1627. 4820 KING (JOHN). Memoir of . . Sir John King, knight. Written by his father in 1677, and now first printed. With illustrative notes. [Secouil title] . . Narrative of the life and death of Sir John King . With the text and conclusion of D'. Cradock's sermon preached at his burial. And also of two epitaphes . . 1677. (Portrait.) 8°. 1855. 4821 Preface signed " George Henry Sawtell." KING (JOSIAH). Mr. Blount's oracles of reason, examined and answered . . against Deism and Atheism. 12°. Exon., 1698. 4822 " Jos. Trapp 1724." KING (COL. J. ANTHONY). Twenty-four years in the Argentine Republic i embracing the Author's per- sonal adventures, with the civil and mili- tary history of the country,and an account of its political condition, before and during the administration of Governor Rosas ; his course of policy .. 8°. 1846. 4823 KING (J. W.). Characters and incidents; or, jouniey- inffs through England and Wales. 12°. 1 850. 4824 KING (PETER, 7Tn LORD). Life of John Locke, with extracts from his correspondence, journals, and common- place books. New edition. With con- KING, (PETER, 7th LORD)— cont. siderable additions. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 4825 At the end of Vol. 2 " Notes of domestic and forein affairs, during the last years of the reign of George I. and the early part of the reign of George II." (by Peter, 1" Lord King). KING (CAPTAIN PH, P.) AND OTHERS. Narrative of the surveying voyages of H.M.S. Adventure and Beagle, between 1826 and 1836, describing their examina- tion of the southern shores of South America, and the Beagle's circumnaviga- tion of the Globe. 3 vol. And Appendix to vol. 2. (Eight separate maps and charts.) 8°. 1839. 4826 By King, Kobert Pitz-Eoy and Charles Darwin. KING (RICHARD) M.D. Franklin Expedition from first to last. 8°. 1855. 4827 KING (WILLIAM) LL.D. Original Works. Now first collected : with historical notes, and memoirs of the author. [Edited by John Nichols.] 3 vol. 8°. 1776. 4828 Poetical Works. With the life of the author by Samuel Johnson. 2 vol. (in one). (Portrait.) 12°. Bell, 1807. 4829 Art of Cookery, in imitation of Horace's Art of Poetry. With some letters to D'. Lister, and others : occasion'd principally by the title of a book publish'd by the doctor, being the works of Apicius Coelius, concerning the Soups and Sauces of the Antients . . To which is added, Horace's Art of Poetry, in Latin. By the Author of the Journey to London . . 8°. n.d. 4830 Art of Love : in imitation of Ovid de Arte Amandi. With a preface containing the life of Ovid. 8°. n.d. 4831 KING (WILLIAM) LL.D., Principal of St. Mary Hall, Oxford. The Dreamer. [Anon.] 8°. 1754. (Two copies.) 4832 No. 1. Frontispiece. No. 2. Rev. D'. Bliss's copy and MS. note. Pohtical and Literary Anecdotes of his own Times. 8°. 1818. 4833 Second edition. 8°. 1819. 4834 The Toast. An heroick poem in four books, written originally in Latin, by Frederick ScheflFer : now done into Eng- lish, and illustrated with notes and obser- vations, by Peregrine ODonald Esq. [i.e. W.King]. 4°. Dublin, printed. London, reprinted 1747. 4835 MS. notes and key. "The gift of the Author." 3IS. on fly leaf. "Dawson Tm'ner 1846." 270 [KINGDOM (WILLIAM).] Diutionary of Quotations from the Bi-itish poets. In three parts (in one vol.) Part the iirst. Shakspeaie. I'art the second. Blank verse. Part the third. Rhyme. Second edition. [Anon.] 8°. 1835. 4836 [KINGLAKE (ALEXANDER WIL- LIAM).] Eothen. [Eastern Travel.] Fourth edition. [Anon.] 8°. 1845. 4837 Fifth edition. 8°. 1847. 4838 New edition. 12». 1851. 4839 KINGLAKE (ARTHUR). Letter to Lord Portmau, with some par- ticulars respecting the Wellington Monu- ment, in Somersetshire . . 8°. Printed for private circulation. Taunton, u.d. [? 1853].. 4840 KINGSLEY (REV. CHARLES). Alexandria and her Schools. Four Lectures . . With a preface. 8°. Cam- bridjje, 1854. 4841 Alton Locke, tailor and poel. An autobiography. [Anon. J 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 4842 Third edition. 8°. 1852. 4843 Glaucus ; or, the Wonders of the Shore. 12°. Cambridge, 1855. 4844 "Prom the author." The Heroes ; or, Greek fairy tales for my children. With eight illustrations by the author. 8°. Cambridge, 1856. 4845 Hypatia : or, new foes with an old face. . . 2 vol. 8». 1 853. 4846 The Saint's Tragedy ; or, the true story of Elizabeth of Hungary, Landgravine of Thuringia, Saint of the Romish Calendar. With a preface by Professor Maurice. 12°. 1848. 4847 Sermons on National subjects. Second series. 12°. London and Glasgow, 1854. 4848 Water-Babies : a fairy tale for a land- baby. With two illustrations by [Sir] J. Noel Paton, R.S.A. 8°. London and Cambridge, 1863. 4849 Westward Ho 1 or, the voyages and ad- ventures of Sir Amyas Leigh, knight, of Burrough, in the county of Devon, in the reign of . . Queen Elizabeth. Rendered into modern English by C. Kingsley. (3 vol.) 8°. Cambridge, 1855. 4850 *' From the author." Yeast : a problem. Reprinted . . from Eraser's Magazine. [Anon.] 8°. 1851. 4851 AND NEWMAN (JOHN HENRY) CARDINAL. M'. Kingsley and D'. Newman : a Cor- respondence on the question whether D'. Newman teaches that Truth is no virtue ? 8°. 1864. 4852 " What, then, does D'. Newman mean ?" A reply to a pamphlet lately published by D'. Newman. Second edition. 8°. Lon- don and Cambridge, 1864. 4853 KINGTON (J. B.). Battle of Nibley Green: from the MSS. of a Templar ; with a preface, notes, and other poems, by J. B. Kington. 12°. 1847. 4854 KIP (WILLIAM INGRAHAM) D.D., MISSIONARY BISHOP OF CALI- FORNIA. Christmas holydays in Rome. Edited by Rev. W. Sewell. 12°. 1847. 4855 KIRBY (MARY AND ELIZABETH). Stones from the classics. Adapted for thej'oung. 12°. 1854. 4850 KIRBY (REV. WILLIAM). On the Power, Wisdom, and Goodness of God, as manifested in the creation of auimals, and in their history, habits, and instincts. (Bridgewater Treatise). New edition, edited, with notes, by Thomas Rymer Jones. 2 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1 852. 4857 AND SPENCE (WILLIAM). Introduction to Entomology ; or, ele- ments of the natural history of insects : comprising an account of noxious and useful insects . . With plates. Sixth edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1843. 4858 KIRK (JOHN FOSTER). History of Charles the bold, Duke of Burgundy. With portraits. 3 vol. 8°. 1863-8. 4859 KIRKLAND (MRS. CAROLINE M.). Forest Life. By the Author of "A new home." [Mrs. Mary Clavers — pseud.^ 2 vol. 12°. 1842. 48G0 Spenser and the Faery Queen. 3°. 1847. 4861 See also Clavars. KIRKWALL (GEORGE WILLIAM HAMILTON FITZ MAURICE, VISCOUNT) AFT. 3d. earl OF ORKNEY. Four years in the Ionian Islands. Their political and social condition. With a history of the British Protectorate. Edited by Viscount Kirkwall. 2 vol. 8°. 1864. 4862 271 KIT-CAT CLUB. Memoirs of the celebrated Tersous com- posing the Kit-Cat Club ; with a prefatory account of the origin of the Association [" attributed to James Caulfield." Lomi- des] illustrated with forty-eight portraits, from the original paintings by Sir Godfrey Kellner. L. P. F". 1821. 4863 KITCHEN. (School for good living; or, a literary and historical essay on the European Kitchen . . 12°. 1814. 4864 KITCHINER (WILLIAM) M.D. Traveller's Oracle ; or, maxims for loco- motion : containing precepts for promoting the pleasures and hints for preserving the health of travellers. With seven songs . . Third edition. 12". 1828. 4865 Horse and Carriage Oracle : or, rules for purchasing and keeping, or jobbing horses and carriages : accurate estimates of every expense occasioned thereby, and an easy plan for ascertaining every coach fare. By John Jervis, an old coachman. The whole revised by W. Kitchiner. Third edition. 12". 1828. *486o Vol. 2 of N°. 4805. KITTO (JOHN) D.D. Bible history of the Holy Land. Wood- cuts. Second edition. 8°. 1850. 4866 Lost Senses. Series I. — Deafness. 12°. 1845. 4867 Series II.— Blindness. 12°. 1845. 4868 Physical Geography of the Holy Land. From " the Pictorial History of Palestine." 12°. 1848. 4869 Pictorial life of our Saviour . . 4°. 1847. 4870 Pictorial Sunday-Book. F°. 1845. 4871 Scripture Lands ; described in a series of historical, geographical, and topogra- phical sketches. And illustrated by a complete biblical atlas . . 8°. Bohn, 1850. 4872 KLAPKA (GENERAL GEORGE). Memoirs of the war of independence in Hungary. 2 vol. (Portraits of Kossuth andKlapka.) 8°. 1850. 4873 On the title-page of Vol. II— Translated by Otto Wenckstern. War in the East. From 1853 till July 1855 . . Translated . . by Lt.-Col. A. Mednyanszky. 8°. 1855. 4874 KLAPROTH (JULIUS VON). Travels in the Caucasus and Georgia, performed in 1807 and 1808, by command of the Russian Government. Translated from the German by F. Shoberi. 4°. 1814. 4876 KLENCKE (PROFESSOR H.). Alexander Von Humboldt : a biogra- phical monument. Translated from the German, by Juliette Bauer. (Portrait). 8°. 1852. 4876 KLOPSTOCK (FRIEDRICH GOTT- LIEB). Klopstock and his friends. A series of familiar letters, written between 1750 and 1803. Translated from the German with a biographical introduction, by Miss Ben- ger, 8". 1814. 4877 Odes from 1747 to 1780 translated from the German by WilhamNind. 12°. 1848. 4878 KLOSE (CHARLES LOUIS). Memoirs of Prince Charles Stuart, (Count of Albany), commonly called the Young Pretender ; with notices of the Kebelliou in 1745. 2 vol. (Portrait). 8°. 1845. 4879 Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 4880 KNAPP (SAMUEL LORENZO). Biographical sketches of eminent lawyers, statesmen, and men of letters. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1821. (Two copies). 4881 ;Xo. 1. " Robert Southey, from Pi'ofessor Ticknor. Oct. 26. 1822." KNELL (PAUL). Israel and England paralelled, in a ser- mon preached before the society of Grayes- Inne, Aprill 16. 1648. 4°. 1648. (Two copies.) 4882 KNIGHT (CHARLES). Capital and Labour ; including the re- sults of Machinery. 12°. 1845. 4883 Cyclopaedia of London. 1851. 8°. n.d. (1851). 4884 English Cj'clopaedia. A new dictionary of Universal Knowledge. Conducted by C. Ifnight. 22 vol. 4°. 1854-61. 4885 Biography vol. Arts and Sciences 8 vol. Geography 4 vol. Natural History 4 vol. Excur-sion Companion. Excursions from London. 1851. 8°. n.d. (1851). 4886 Half- hours with the best Authors. Selected and arranged, with short biogra- phical and critical notices, by C. Knight. Illustrated with portraits. 4 vol. 8°. n.d. [1847-8]. 4887 Knowledge is Power : a view of the pro- ductive forces of modern society, and the results of labour, capital, and skill. Wood- cuts. 12°. 1855. 4888 London. Edited by C. Knight. 6 vol. 8°. (London) 1841-4. 4889 272 KNIGHT (CHARLES)— cojj^ Old Printer and the Modern Press. 12°. 1S54. 4890 Once upon a Time. 2 vol. 12°. 18.')4. (Two copies.) 4891 Pictorial Half-Hours : or, Miscellanies of Art, with illustrative descriptions. (Edited hy C. Knight). 4 vol. (i" 2). 4°. n.d. 4892 Popular History of England : an illus- trated history of society and government from the earliest period to our own times . . appendix of Annals, 1849-61. 8 vol. 8°. 1856-62. 4893 Studies of Shalcspere : forming a com- panion volume to every edition of the text. (Portraits.) 8°. 1849. (Two copies.) 4894 Studies and illustrations of the writings of Shakspere, and of his life and times. 3 vol. Vol. 1. William Shakspere, a Bio- graphy. 8°. 1850. 4895 N"". 4888, 91, 93-.5 presentation copies with inscriptions. Volume of Varieties. By the editor of the Weekly Volume. 12°. 1841. 4896 William Caxton, the first English printer : a biography. (Portrait.) 12°. 1844. 4897 William Shakspere ; a biography. 8°. n.p. (London) 1843. 4898 KNIGHT (HENRY GALLY). Hannibal in Bithynia. A dramatic poem. Third edition. 12°. 1839. 4899 KNIGHT (SAMUEL) D.a Life of D'. John Colet, Dean of S. Paul's in the reigns of Henry VII. and Henry VIII. and founder of S. Paul's School : with an appendix containing some account of the Masters and more eminent scholars of that foundation . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1724. 4900 Life of Erasmus, more particularly that part of it, which he spent in England ; wlierein an account is given of his learned friends, and the state of religion and learn- ing at that time in both our Universities. With an appendix . . (Portrait.) 8°. Cambridge, 1726. 4901 KNIGHTHOOD. . . Historical account of all the Orders of Knighthood at present existing in Europe . . Dissertation upon the ancient and present state of those ecinestrian in- stitutions, and prefatory discourse on the origin of Knighthood in general, the whole interspersed with illustrations and explana- KNIGHTHOOD— eon*. tory notes. By an ofBcer of the Chancery of the . . Order of Saint Joachim. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. n.d. [1802]. 4902 "Tills work, printed at Hamburgh, goes " under the nauie of J. P. Ruhl, but was " written by Sir Levett Hanson." Lowndes. IJolm's cd. KNIGHTON (LADY). Memoirs of Sir William Knighton, Keeper of the Privy Purse durins; the Eeign of George the Fourth. Including his correspondence . . 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1838. 4903 KNOWLER (WILLIAM) LL.D. Earl of Strafford's letters and dispatches, with an essay towards his life by Sir George Kadoliffe . . By W. Knowler. 2 vol. (Portraits.) F°. 1739. (Two copies). 4904 No. 2. Without t.p., etc. With M'. Forster's MS. memorandums. Dedication and appendix [only] . *4904 With M'. Forster's JIS. memorandums. KNOWLES (JAMES). Orthoepy and Elocution ; or, the first part of a philosophical and practical grammar of the English language . . in which, also, the principles of elocution, are . developed . . 12°. Glasgow, 1829. 49U5 " From the author to John ForsterEsq." Pronouncing and explanatory dictionary of the English language . . vocabulary of Greek, Latin, and Scripture proper names . . 8°. 1835. 490C KNOWLES (JAMES SHERIDAN). Dramatic Works. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1841-3. 4907 [Another edition]. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1856. 4908 Elocutionist, a collection of pieces in prose and verse, peculiarly adapted to dis- play the art of reading . . preceded by an introduction, in .which an attempt is made to simplify Walker's system . . Seventh edition. 12°. Belfast, 1831. 4909 " To John Forster from his friend Paddy Knowles." 'The Gospel attributed to Matthew, is the record of the whole original apostle- hood. 12". 1855. 4910 The Idol demolished by its own priest, an answer to Cardinal Wiseman's lectures on Transubstautiation. 12°. Edinburgh, 1851. 4911 Presentation copy. 273 KNOWLES (JAMES SHERIDAN) — coiU. The Jlagdiilen, and other tiiles. 12". 1832. ^gj2 Dedicated to M'. Forster. The Rock of Eome ; or, the arch heresv 8». 1849. 40 i3 Virginias : a tragedy . . Sixth edi- tion. 8°. 1823. 4914 Cains Gracchus : a tragedy . . %"■ Glasgow, 1823. 4915 William Tell : a play . . 8°. n.d. (182.'i). 4916 The Beggar's Daughter of Bethnal Green. A comedy. 8°. 1828. 4917 Alfred the Great ; or, the Patriot King. An historical play. 8". 1831. 4918 Hunchback. A play . 8°. 1832. 4919 " For John Forster from his over head and ears indebted friend J. S. Knowles." MS. markings. N»'. 4914-lii. one vol. William Tell : u, play . . 8». n d. (1825). 4920 " To \V. C. Maoready Esq. with the author and publisher's compts." Maeready's acting copy. Interleaved with MS. stage directions, &o. KNOWLES (JOHN). Life and Writings of Henry Fuseli, E. A. The former written, and the latter edited by J. Knowles. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1831. 4921 KNOX (ALEXANDER) M.D. Irish Watering Places, their climate, scenery, and accommodations ; including analyses of the principal mineral springs, by D'. E. Kane, and remarks on the various forms of disease to which they are adapted ; together with directions for the regimen of invalids, and observations on . . diseases . . 8°. Dublin, 1845. 4922 KNOX (A. E.). Game Birds and wild fowl ; their friends and their foes. 8°. 1850. 4923 # Ornithological rambles in Sussex ; with a systematic catalogue of the birds of that county . . 8°. 1849. 4924 KNOX (CAPTAIN CHARLES). The Ark and the Deluge, with some remarks upon the civilization of that period. 12°. 1852. 4925 KNOX (HON. MRS. OCTAVIUS NEWRY). Sonnets and other poems. 8°. [Pri- vately printed] 1 872. 4926 KNOX (ROBERT) M.D. Great Artists and great Anatomists; a biographical and philosophical study. 8°. 1852. 4927 o 16505. KNOX (ROBERT) M.D.—cont. Manual of Artistic Anatomy, for the use of sculptors, painters, and amateurs. 8". 1852. 4928 EacesofMeu: a fragment. 8°. 1850. 4929 KCENIG (GUSTAV). Life of Luther, in forty-eight historical engravings. AVith explanations by Arch- deacon Hare : continued by Susanna Winkworth. 8°. 1855. 4930 KOHL (JOHN GEORGE). Austria. Vienna, Prague, Hungary, Bohemia, and the Danube; Galicia, Styria, Moravia, Bukovina, and the military frontier. 8°. 1843. 4931 Ireland, Scotland, and Enghmd. 8". 1844. 4932 Kitchi-Gami. Wanderings round Lake Superior. (Translated by Lascelles Wraxall.) 8°. 1860. 4933 Popular history of the discovery of America, from Columbus to Franklin. Translated from the German by Major E. R. Noel. 2 vol. 8°. 1862. 4934 Eussia . . 8°. 1842. 4935 Russia and the Russians, in 1842. 2 vol. 8°. 1842-3. 4936 KOHLRAUSCH (FREDERICK). History of Germany ; from the earliest period to the present time. Translated by James D. Haas. 8°. 1844. 4937 KOLLER (DR. W. H.). Faust papers containing critical and historical remarks on Faust and its trans- lations, with some observations upon Goethe. 12°. 1835. 4938 KOLLIKER (ALBERTUS). Observationes de prima Insectorum genesi adjeota articulatorum evolutionis cum vertebratorum comparatione. Dis- sertatio inauguralis . Tabulae. 4°. Turici, 1842. 4939 KORAN. Selections from the Kur-an, commonly called, in England, the Koran ; with an interwoven commentary; translated from the Arabic . . illustrated by notes, chiefly from Sale's edition . . introduction, taken from Sale's preliminary discourse, with corrections and additions : by Ed- ward William Lane. 8°. 1843. 4940 KORNER (THEODOR). Selection from the poems and dramatic Works. By the Translator of the " Nibel- ungeu-Treasure " [i.e. Miss Phillips, aft. Madame de Pontes. Olphar Uamst.']. 8°. 1850. 4941 274 KOSSUTH (LOUIS). Select Speeches. Condensed and abridged, with Kossuth's ;expres5 sanc- tion, by Brancis W. Newman. 8". 1853. 4942 KOTZEBUE (AUGUSTUS VON). Historical, literary, and political anec- dotes, and miscellanies. Erom the Ger- man. 3 vol. (in two). 12°. 1807. 4943 KRAITSIR (CHARLES) M.D. Glossology : being a treatise on the nature of language and on the language of nature. 8°. New York, 1852. 4944 KRASINSKI (COUNT VALERIAN). Historical sketch of the . . reformation in Poland, and of the influence which the Scriptural doctrines have exercised on that country . . 2 vol. 8°. 1838-40. 4945 Lectures on the religious history of the Slavonic nations. 8°. Edinburgh and Loudon, 1869 [«e, but ? 1849]. 4946 Sketch of the religious history of the Slavonic nations. Being a second edition of his lectures . . 12". Edinburgh, 1851. 4947 Monachologia : or. Handbook of the natural history of monks : arranged according to the Linnaean system. By a naturaUst. 8°. Edinburgh, 1852. 4948 Montenegro, and the Slavonians of Turlcey. 12». 1853. 4949 KRUMMACHER (FREDERIC ADOL- PHUS). Parables translated from the seventh German edition. With forty illustrations drawn by J. K. Clayton ; engraved by the Brothers Dalziel. (Portrait.) 12». 1854. 4950 KUGLER (DR. FRANZ). Hand-book of the history of Painting, from the age of Constantino the Great to the present time. Translated from the German by a lady. In 2 parts. Part I. — The Italian Schools of Painting. Edited, with notes, hy [Sir] C. L. East- lake, E.A. 8°. 1842. 4951 Part II. German, Flemish, and Dutch Schools of Painting. Translated from the German by a lady. Edited, with notes, by Sir Edmund Head. 8°. 1846. 4952 Schools of Painting in Italy. Trans- lated from the German by a lady. Edited, with notes, by Sir Charles L. Eastlake, P.K. A. With . . illustrations, drawn on wood, by George Soharf, jun., from the works of the old masters mentioned in this book, engraved by John Thompson KUGLER (DR. FRANZ)— cent. and Samuel WilUams. Second edition [of No. 4951], 2 Parts. (2 vol.) 8°. 1851. 4953 Handbook of Painting. The Italian Schools . . Third edition [of No. 4951] . . 2 Parts. (2 vol.) 8<>. 1855. 4954 KUHNER (DR. RAPHAEL). Grammar of the Greek language . . Translated from the German by B. B. Edwards, and S. H. Taylor. 8°. Lon- don, Andover U.S. [printed], 1844. 4955 L. (E.). Visit to the Antipodes : with some re- miniscences of a sojourn in Australia. By a Squatter. 12°. 1846. 4956 Preface signed " E. L." L. (T.). The Scourge : in Vindication of the Church of England (Nos. 1-43, 1717) . . Danger of the Church-establishment of England, from the insolence of Protestant Dissenters . . Anatomy of the heretical synod of dissenters at Salters Hall. (Frontispiece— Portraits of the Stuarts.) 8°. 1720. 4957 According to MS. on title-page, by T. Les- ley ; according to " Lowndes " and " Watt " by Thomas Lewis. LABARTE (JULES). Handbook of the Arts of the Middle Ages and Eenaissance as applied to the decoration of furniture, arms, jewels, &c. Translated from the French. With notes, ^ &c. Copiously illustrated. 8°. 1855. 4958 LABAUME (EUGENE). History of the invasion of Russia by Napoleon Bonaparte. From the French. 12°. 1844. 4959 LABBE (PHILIPPUS). Eruditae Pronuntiationis Catholioi In- dices . . Ab Edwardo Leedes olim re- cogniti & ancti ; & nunc iterum . . re- censiti. 12°. 1806. 4960 LABORDE (LEON DE). Commentaire g^ographique sur I'Esode et les Nomhres. (Maps.) F°. Paris et Leipzig, 1841. 4961 275 LACAITA (SIR JAMES PHILIP). Selections from the best Italian writers for the use of Students of the Italian lan- guage. 8». 1855. 4962 LAC KINGTON (JAMES). Confessions of J. Lackington, late book- seller, at the temple of the muses . Two letters on the bad consequences of having daughters educated at boardinf;-sehools. 12°. 1804. 49G,3 LACONICS, Laconics : or, new maxims of state and conversation. Relating to the affairs and manners of the present times. In three parts. 8°. 1701. 4964 Pencil notes. On title page—" Chr. Anstey." LACORDAIRE (PERE). Jesus Christ. Conferences delivered at Notre Dame in Paris. Translated from the French . . 8°. 1869. 4965 LACROIX (PAUL). The Arts in the Middle Ages, and at the period of the Renaissance. Illustrated with chromolithographic prints by JJ. Kel- lerhoven, nnd engravings on wood. 8°. 1870. 4966 The XVIII"" Century its institutions, customs, and costumes. France, 1700- 1789. Illustrated with chromolithographs and wood engravings, after Watteau . . 8°. 1876. 4967 Manners, customs, and dress during the Middle Ages, and during the Renais- sance period. Illustrated with 15 chromo- lithographic prints by F. Kellerhoven, and upwards of 400 engravings on wood. 8°. 18V4. 4968 jMilitarj- and religious life in the Middle Ages and at the period of the Renaissance. Illustrated with fourteen chromolitho- graphic prints by F. Kellerhoven, Regamey, * and Ij. AUard and upwards of 400 engrav- ings on wood. 8°. 1874. 4969 LADIES. Ladies' Companion at home and abroad. Edited bj Mrs. Loudon. Vol. I. (II, III). (Coloured illustrations by Leech.) 4°. 1850(-1). 4970 LA FONTAINE (JEAN DE). Les Amours de Psyche. 12°. Paris, 1836. 4971 Contes et nouvelles en vers. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. Paris, 1830. 4973 Fables. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. Paris, 1830. 4973 CEuvres diverses. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. Paris, 1830. 4974 LA FONTAINE (JEAN DE)—co7it. Theatre. 12°. Paris, 1831. 4975 Fables. Now first translated from the French ; by Robert Thomson. 4 vol. (in two). 8°. Paris, 1806. 4976 Fables. Illustrated by .1. J. Grandville. Translated from the French, by Elizur Wright, jr. 8°. Boston [U.S.]. 1841. 4977 LAGNY (GERMAIN DE). The Knout and the Russians ; or the Muscovite empire, the Czar, and his people. Translated from the French by John Bridgeman. 8°. 1854. 4978 LAING (SAMUEL). Journal of a residence in Norway during 1834-6; made with a view to enquire into the moral and political economy of that country, and the condition of its inhabi- tants. New edition. 12°. 1851. 4979 Notes of a traveller, on the social and political state of France, Prussia, Switzer- land, Italy, and other parts of Europe, during the present century. First series. 8°. 1854. 4980 Observations on the social and political state of the European People in 1848 and 1849 ; being the second series of the notes ofatraveUer. 8°. 1850. 4981 Observations on the social and political state of Denmark, and the Duchies of Sleswick andHolstein, in 1851 ; being the third series of the notes of a traveller . . 8°. 1852. 4982 LAING (SETON). Great City frauds of Cole, Davidson, & Gordon, fully exposed. 8°. n.d. (1856). 4983 LAIRD (E. K.). Rambles of a Globe Trotter in Austra- lasia, Japan, China, Java, India, and Cashmere. 2 vol. Map and illustrations. 8°. 1875. 4984 LAIRD OF LOGAN. Laird of Logan : or, anecdotes and tales illustrative of the wit and humour of Scotland. 12". Glasgow, 1841. 4985 The first- edition (1835) was projected and edited by John Donald Carrick, who was also the principal contributor. LAKE (COLONEL ATWELL). Kars and our captivity in Russia : with letters from Gen. Sir W. F. "Williams Major Teesdale ; and Captain Thompson. (Portrait of Williams.) 8". 1856. 4986 LALLERSTEDT (G.). La Scandinavie ses craintes et ses esper- ances. 8°. Paris, 1856. 4987 S 2 276 LALLY-TOLENDAL (COMTE DE). Le Comte de Strafford : traffedie . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1795. 4988 Essai siir la Vie de T. Wentworth, Comte de Strafford , . . ainsi que sur I'histolre generale d'Angleterre, d'Ecosse, et d'Irlande, a cette epoque. 8". 1795. 4989 LALOR (JOHN). Money and Morals : a book for the times. 8°. 1852. 4990 LALOUEL (H.). Los Orateiirs dc la Grandc-Brctagne, depuis le rJ^gne de Charles I"' jusqu'a nos jours. Precedes d'une lettre de M. De Cormenin. 2 vol. (in one). 8". Paris, 1841. 4991 LAMARTINE (ALPHONSE DE), Biographical Sketch, Poetical Medita- tions, and Poetical and religious har- monies, translated hy Rev. William I'ull- ing. With interesting facts from his ■"J'hrce months in Power." (Portrait.) 8". 1849. 4992 France and England: a vision of the future. Translated from the French. 12''. 1848. 4993 Genevieve ; or, the history of a servant girl. Translated from the French, by A. R. Scoble. 8°. 1850. 4994 Heroic Women of the French Revolu- tion. Translated from the French. 12°. 1848. 4995 History of the Constituent Assembly. (1789.) A^ol. I. 8°. 1854. 4996 History of the French Revolution of 1848. Translated from the French. (Por- traits.) 8°. Bohn, 1849. 4997 History of the Girondists ; or, personal memoirs of the patriots of the French X'e- volntion. From unpublished sources. .3 vol. Translated by H.T.Ryde. (With a biographical sketch of the author.) (Por- traits.) 8°. Bohn, 1847-8. 4998 Memoirs of celebrated characters. .T vol. 8°. 1854-6. 4999 Vol. 1. Nelson— Holciso— Columbus— Palissy — Hoostam — Cicero, 2. Socrates — Jacquard — Joan of Arc — Cromwell — Homer — Guttonberg — Fene- lon. 3. W. Tell — Madame do SOvifiiib — Mil- ton— Antar—Bossuet. Poetic Meditations. Translated by William North. 12°. 1848. 5000 Polity of reason, or, the rationale of Go vcrnment. Translated from the French . Second edition. 12°. 1848. 5001 Prefixed is a memoir of Lamartine by De Cormenin. LAMARTINE (ALPHONSE DE) — cont. Raphael ; or, pages of the book of life at twenty. Translated . . 8°. 1849. 5002 Three Mouths in power : a history and vindication of my political conduct during the late revolution in France. Translated by H. J. Ryde. 8". 1848. 5003 Wellington and Waterloo. Reprinted from the " History cf the restoration of Monarchy in France." 8°. 1852. 5004 [LAMB (ANNE RICHELIEU) aft. DRYDEN.] Can Woman regenerate Society? [Anon.] 12°. 1844.' 5005 [LAMB (LADY CAROLINE).] Glenarvon. Third edition. 3 vol. (in one). [Anon.] 12°. 1816. 5000 LAMB (CHARLES). Works. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. 1818. 5007 V. 1. Poems (some by his sister). Sonnet.s. Blank verse. John "Woodvil — tragedy. The "Witch, dramatic sketch. Curious fragments. Eosamund Gray. Eecollec- tions of Christ's Hospital. 2. Essays. Letters. M'. H , farce. New edition. (Two portraits — one inserted.) 8°. 1840. 5008 Poeras—Rosamund Gray, &c. — Elia — Tales from Shakspeare— Adventures of "Ulysses — M". Leicester's School. New edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1859. 5009 Letters — Pinal Memorials — Essays — Uosa- mund Gray, etc. — Poems — Album verses ; witli a few othei-s {including The "Wife's Trial). Works-poetical and dramatic tales essays and criticisms edited with biographical introduction and notes by Charles Kent. Popular Centenary edition. (Portrait.) 12°. n.d. [?1875]. 5010 Life, letters and writings. Edited, with notes and illustrations, by Percy Fitzgerald. . 6 vol. (andduphcateof Vol. L) (Portrait.) 8°. 1876. 5011 Poetical Works. New edition. 12°. 1836. 5012 [Another edition.] 8°. 1840. 5013 Letters, with a sketch of his life by [Sir] Thomas Noon Talfourd. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1837. 5014 New edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 1849. 5015 Album Verses, with a few others. 8°. 1830. 5016 Elia. [Essays.] First series. New edition. [Anon.] 8°. 1835. 5017 Essays of Elia. First series. 8°. 1840. 5018 Second series. 8°. 1840. 5019 277 LAMB (CHARLES)— eoH<. Last Essays of Elia. Being a Sequel to Essays publishedunder that name. TAnon 1 8°. 1833. 5020 " To John Forster Esci' a le^'acv rrom Elia." MS. on title-page, Eliana. 8°. 1867. r>02l John 'VVoodvil a tragedy. To which are added, Fragments of Burton, the author of the Anatomy of Melancholy. 12°. 1802. 5022 " John Forster Esq. witli 0. Lamb's respects." Rosamund Gray, Essays, &c. 8°. 1840. 5023 Satan in Search of a Wife.; with the whole process of his courtship and mar- riage, and who danced at the wedding. By an Eye Witness. 12". 1831. 5024 Specimens of English Dramatic Poets, who lived about the time of Shakspeare. With notes. New edition. 2 vol. 12°. 1835. .5025 Another edition. 2 vol. 12°. 1844. 5026 New edition, including the extracts from the Garrick Plays. 8°. Bohn, 1854. 5027 LAMB (CHARLES 'AND MARY ANNE). Tales from Shakspere. New edition. To which arc now added, scenes illastrating each tale. 2 vol. 12°. 1844. 5028 " Advertisement " signed " C. K." i.e. Charles Knight. LAMB (CHARLES) AND OTHERS. [Volume lettered " Tag Eag and Bob- tail."] 8°. 5029 [No t.p.J. The Wife's Trial; or, the in- truding widow. A dramatic poein, founded on M'. Crabbe's tale of the " Con- ftdant." By 0. Lamb. pp. 765-81 of [ ] Magazine, 1828, v. 21. [Xo t.p.] Six articles from the " Iteflector " by C. Lamb. Two of these each with a MS. alteration, and two imperfect. Letter to a friend of Robert Burns: occa- sioned by an intended republication of the account of the life of Burns, by D'. Currie. By Vi. 'Wordsworth. 181C. " Blessed are ye that sow beside all waters ! " A Lay Sermon. By S. T. Coleridge. 1817. The Statesman's Manual; or the Bible the best guide to political skill and foresight : a lay sermon with an- appendix. By S. T. Coleridge. 1816. " Charles Lamb from S. T. Coleridge "— MS. on t:p. Appendix imperfect. MS. alterations, etc. LAMB (MARY [ANNE] AND CHARLES). Poems, Letters, and Remains . now first collected, with reminiscences and notes. By W[illiam] Carew Hazlitt. With por- trait, and numerous facsimiles and illustra- tions of their favourite haunts in London and the Suburbs. 8°, 1874, 5030 LAMBE (DR. JOHN). Briefe description of the notorious life of J. Lambe otherwise called Doctor Lambe. Together with his ignominious death. S". Amsterdam, 1628. Reprinted (London) u.d. 5031 Inserted is a print— "Death of K. James I." LAMPING (CLEMENS). The French in Algiers. I. The soldier of the foreign legion (by Clemens Lamp- ing). II. The prisoners of Abd-el-Kader (by M. de France). Translated from the German and Frcnchby Lady Duff Gordon, 12°. 1845. 5032 LANCASHIRE. Illustrated Itinerary of the County of Lancsister. 8°. 1842. 5033 Apparently by D'. W. C. Taylor and M'. Bedding. LAND. The Land we live in. A piclorial and literary sketch-book of the British Empire. Vol. I-IV. 8°. u.d. 5034 LANDER (RICHARD AND JOHN). Journal of an expedition to explore the . . Niger ; with a narrative of a voyage down that river . . 3 vol. Engravings and maps. 12°. 1832. 5035 LANDON (LAETITIA ELIZABETH) AFTER. MRS. MACLEAN — " L. E. L." Golden Violet, with its tales of romance and chivalry: and other poems. By L. E. L. 12°. Philadelphia, 1827. 5036 Improvisatrice ; and other poems. By L. E. L. With embellishments. Third edition. 8°. 1824. 5037 Romance and Reality. By L. E. L. 3 vol. (in one). 8°. 1831. 5038 [Another edition.] With a memoir of the Author. 12°. 1848. 5039 Troubadour ; Catalogue of Pictures, and Historical Sketches. By L. E. L. 8°. 1825. 5040 Venetian Bracelet, the lost Pleiad, a history of the lyre, and other poems- By L. E. L. 8°. 1829. 5041 jN'"'. 6037, 40-1 presentation copies to M'. Forster with inscriptions. Vow of the Peacock, and other poems; By L. E. L. (Portrait.) 8°. 1835. 5042 The Zenana and jNIinor Poems of L. E. L. With a memoir by Emma Roberts. (Por- trait.) 8". LondonandParis, n.d. [1839]. 5043 LANDON (REV, WHITTINGTON H.). Ten sermons, preached in the parish church of Tavistock. 8°. 1835, 5044 278 LANDOR (REV. ROBERT EYRES). Count Arezzi, a tragedy . . [Anon.] 8°. 1824. 5045 MS. marlcs and alterations. Earl of Brecon. A tragedy . . Faith's Fraud. A tragedy . The Ferryman. A drama . . 8°. 1841. 5046 Essay on . . Socrates [Anon.] 4°. Oxford, 1802. 5047 Guy's porridge pot; with the dun cow roasted whole : an epic poem, in twenty- five books. Part I . . Second edition. [Anon.] 8". London, Oxford [printed] , 1809. 5048 Impartial observations on the Prize Essay and the one published. [Anon.] 8°. Oxford, 1802. 5049 Signea " Academicus." pp. 3-7. The Impious Feast : a, poem . . 8°. 1828. 5030 Presentation copy. MS. alterations. LANDOR (WALTER SAVAGE). Works. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. (Two copies.) 5051 Works and Life (Edited by John Forster). 8 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1876. 5052 Vol. I. Life bj- J. P. 2. First series of Imaginary Conversations and Examina- tion of Shakespeare for deer-stealing. 8. Second series of Imaginary Conversa- tions — Conversations of sovereigns and statesmen — and Five Dialogues of Boccaccio and Petrarca. 4. Imaginary Conversation.^ of Literary men (First series). 6. Third series of Imaginary Conversations (continued). Fourth series of Imaginary Conversations, Letters of Pericles and Aspasia, and minor prose pieces. 6. Fifth series of Imaginary Con- versations — Miscellaneous Conversations. 7. Gebir, Acts and Scenes, and Hellenics. 8. Miscellaneous Poems, and Criticisms on Theocritus, Catullus, and Petrarch. Antony and Gotavins. Scenes for the Study. 12°. 1856. 505.3 Citation and examination of William Shakspeare . . before Sir Thomas Luey touching deer-steahng 19"' September 1582 now first published from original papers . . Conference of Edmund Spenser with the Earl of Essex touching the state of Ireland 1595. [Anon.] 8°. 1834. (Two copies.) 5054 Count Julian: a tragedy. [Anon.] 12°. 1812. 5055 Dry Sticks, fagoted by W. S. Landor. 8°. Edinburgh, 1858. 5056 Fra Uupcrt the last part of a trilogy. The first being Andrea of Hungary, the second Giovanna of Naples. 8°. 1840. (Three copies.) 5057 Gebir . . 8°. 1798. fl(i58 Another copy. [MS. notes.] 5059 Bound lip with this copy are I. Portion of a vol. ot Poems pp. (15-111. 11. "Scenes lor the Study " pp. 3-6S, 64. Proul' sheets. LANDOR (WALTER SAVAGE) — cont. Second edition. 12°. Oxford, 1803. 5060 Gebir, Count Julian, and other poems. 8°. 1831. 5061 Hellenics. Enlarged and completed. 12°. 1847. 5062 Hellenics ; comprising heroic Idyls, &c. New edition. S°. Edinburgh, 1859. 5063 Heroic Idyls, with additional poems. 8°. 1863. ■ 5064 Idyllia heroica decern libmm phaleu- ciorum unum . . edit Savagius Landor. Accedit quaestiuncula cur poetae Latinl reeentiores minus legantur. 8°. Pisis, 1820. (Two copies.) 5065 [No title-page. High and low life in Italy, exhibited in letters and memoirs collected by the late J. J. Pidcock Kaikes, Esq. ; and now first published by his nephew, Sir Rodney liaikes, with several material additions.] [In ix numbers.] 8". c.p. n.d. (Two copies.) 5066 Contributed to a periodical edited by Lei,a;h Hunt. N°. 1. MS. corrections and addi- tions. "Dec. ISHT."— Pencil note bij Mr. Forster. N-°. 2. The numbers not all per- fect. At end — a printed cutting — Letter on " Language and orthography " by W. S. Landor. Imaginary Conversations of Literary men and Statesmen. Second edition (of Vol. I. & II.) 3 vol. 8°. 1826-8. (Two copies.) 5067 Second Series. 2 voh 8°. 1829. (Two copies.) 5068 In each Series MS. corrections, additions, and insertion.s by the author ; and in one vol. a letter from him to M'. Forster. In Vol. 1 of the fu-st series "Southey and Person " from " BUckwood." Imaginary conversations of Greeks and Romans. 8°. 1853. 5069 fLast fruit off an old tree. 8°. 1853. (Two copies.) 5070 Letters of a Conservative : in which arc shown the only means of saving what is left of the English Church . . 8°. 1836. 5071 Literary Hours ; by various friends. [Anon. Landor and others. Ed. by Joseph Ablett.] (Portrait of Landor, " corrected from D'Orsay's.") 8°. n.p. (Liverpool, printed.) 1837. 5072 MS. notes and additions, some by BI"". Forster. Moral Epistle dedicated to Earl Stan- hope. 8°. 1795. ,'-,07o The Pent amerou (or Interviews of Boc-- eaccio, and Petrarca . . shewing how they discoursed upon that famous theologiau, Dante Alighieri . . ) and fcutalogia (or Five Dramatic Scenes). 8°. 1837. 5074 In the dedication of the "Pentnlogia" to Southcy, opposite "you [SoutheyJ and 279 LANDOR (WALTER SAVAGE) _ cont. two others will read these dramatic scraps with pleasiire " is, in MS.—" Forater is one w. S. Landor." Pericles and Aspiisia. 2 vol. (in ouc") 8". 1836. 5075 Poemata et Inscriptioues uovis auxit Savagius Laudor. 12". 1847. (Three copies.) 5076 Poems. [English and Latin.] 8". 1795. (Two copies.) 5077 N". 1. "F' 'Wrangham 1834." "W. S. Landor." Poems from the Arabic and Persian ; with notes by the author of Gebir. 4°. Warwick, 1800. 5078 Poetry by the author of Gebir. 8°. London, Warwick [printed], 1802. (Two copies.) 5079 N"". 6054, B8, fll, 65, 72, li, 75, 7S-0 presenta- tion copies to Hiy. I'orster. Poetry by the author of Gebir : and u. postscript to that poem, with reniarks on some critics. 8". Warwick, u.d, 5080 Advertisement I. II. & pp. 65-111. A Satire on .Satirists, and admonition to detractors. 8°. 1836. (Two copies.) 5081 Terry Hogan, an eclogue; lately dis- covered in the library of the Propaganda at Rome, and now first translated from the Irish. Thereunto is subjoined a disserta- tion by the editor, Phelim Octavius Quarle. [Anon.] 8°. 1836. 5082 [Tracts.] 8°. London, etc. 1809, etc. 5083 1. Three Letters, -wi'itten in Spain. I. On the means of supplying an adejinate force of Cavalr.v. II. View ot jjarties in Eng- land, their errors, and designs. III. Oiu? conduct at Ferrol, at Buenos-Ayres, and at Ointra. [Anon.] London, Sath [printed], 1809. 2. Popery : British and Foreign. 1861. . Letters of an American, on Russia and Eevolution. Edited by W. S. Landor. 185i. Proof sheets. Title taken from head- hne, that on the t.p. being mutilated. 4. [No t.p. Stiiteuienl of occurrences at Llanbedr.] End. Printed, Bath, n.d. [Ueviews and notices of bis Works and Life.] 5084 1. Blackwood's Mas;azinp. April 1813. "Ima- ginary conversation, between M'. AV. S. Landor and the Editor." pp. 618-63G. 2. Review art. April, 18«i. "Laudor's Col- lected "Writings— New imaginary Con- versations." pp. 186-511. 3. Review art. Dec. 1848. "The Works of W. S.' Landor." pp. 6.'3-77. At end in pencil "J. R. Lowell." 4. Review art. "Life and opinions of W. S. Landor." pp. 171-206. MS. notes. 5. Atlanticltlonthly, April— -Tunc, 18G6. pp. .■>86-396 ; 639-652 ; 688-706. LANDOR (WALTER SAVAGE) — cont. Selections from the Writings of W. .S. Landor, Edited by George Stillman Hil- lard. (Portrait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1856. 5085 Simonidea. [Anon.] 12°. Bath [printed], London, n.d. ["l^reface" dated " Bath, Feb. 14, 1806."] *S085 " From the old Librar.y, at Tachbrooke. Given by the Misses Landor to the South Kensington JIaseum, to be added to tho Works of their uncle, W. S. Landor." [LANDOR (-WALTER SAVAGE)?] Bath Subscription Ball and other Poems. [Anon.j 8°. 1843. 5086 Pencil note on t.p. by 31' Forster. LANE (EDWARD WILLIAM). Library of entertaining knowledge. Account of the Manners and Customs of the ilodern Egyptians, written in Egypt during 1833-5, partly from notes . . 2 vol. (in one). 12". 1837. 5087 [Another edition.] Keprinted from the third edition, containing large additions and improvements. 3 vol. 12". 1846. 5088 Arabian tales and anecdotes : being a selection fi'om the notes to the new trans- lation of ' The thousand and one nights.' 12". 1845. 5089 LANE (RICHARD JAMES) A.R.A. Life at the Water Cnre or a Month at Malvern a diary. lUtistrations. To which is added the sequel. 8". 1846. 5090 " John Forster Esq. with R. J. Lane's best regards." Life at the Water Cure. Facts and fancies noted down during a month at Malvern a diai-y with illustrations . . Ap- pendix consisting of selections from hydropathic authors and a reprint of Con- fessions of a Water-patient by Sir Edward BulwerLytton. Newedition. 8". 1851. 5091 A Month at Malvem, under the Water Cure. With the sequel, etc. Third edition. Keconsidered — rewritten. 8°. 1855. 5092 Spirits and Water. 12°. 1855. 5093 LANG (JOHN DUNMORE) D.D. Cooksland in North-eastern Australia ; the future Cotton-field of Great Britain : its characteristics and capabilities for European colonization. With a disquisi- tion on the . . Aborigines. 8°. 1847. 5094 Freedom and independence for the Golden Lands of Australia ; the right of the Colonies, and the interest of Britain and of the World. 8°. 185L'. 5095 280 LANG (JOHN DUNMORE) D.D. — cont. Historical and statistical accouut of New South Wales : including a visit to the Gold Regions, and a description of the mines . . Third edition . . 'J, vol. 8°. 1852. 5096 PhiUipsland ; or the country hitherto designated Port Phillip . . as a highly eligible field for emigration. 8°. 1847. 5097 LANGBAINE (GERARD). Account of the English Dramatick Poets. Or, some observations and re- marks on the lives and writings, of all those that have publish'd either comedies, tragedies, tragi-comedies, pastorals, mas- ques, interludes, farces, or opera's in the English Tongue. 8°. Oxford, 1691. 5098 Lives and characters of the English Dramatick Poets. Also an exact account of all the plays that were ever yet printed in the English tongue . . with remarks First begun by Mr. Langbain, im- prov'd and continued down to this time, by a careful hand [Charles Gildon.] 8°. n.d. (1698 or 9). 5099 On t.p, " Southey " in MS. LANGDALE (HON. CHARLES). Memoirs of Mrs. Pitzherbert ; with an account of her marriage with the Prince of Wales, afterwards George the Fourth. (Portrait.) S". 1856. 5100 LANGDON (WILLIAM B.). Ten thousand things relating to China and the Chinese . . with a synopsis of the Chinese Collection (Portrait of the Emperor of China). 8°. 1842. 5101 LANGFORD (JOHN ALFRED). The Drama of a Life : and Aspiranda. 12°. London and Birmingham, 1852. 5102 The Lamp of Life. [Verses. Anon.] 12°. London, Birmingham [printed], 1856. 5103 Religion and Education in relation to the People. 12°. 1852. 5104 LANGHORNE (JOHN) D.D, Poetical Works. Collated with the best editions : by Thomas Park. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. 1806. 5105 Correspondence of Thoodosius and Constantia ; and the History of Solyman audAlmeua. 12°. 1826. 5106 Letters supposed to have passed be- tween M. Do St. Evromoud and Mr. Waller. Now first collected . . 12". 1770. 5107 Mitibrd's copy and MS. notes. " This book was written by John Liingliorne— see his Life," LANGON {Baron). Evenings with Prince Cambacer&s, second consul . .2 vol. (Portraits of Napoleon and Cambaceres.) 8°. 1837. 5108 LANGSDORFF (G. H. VON). Voyages and travels in various parts of the World, during 1803-7. Engravings. (Portrait.) 4°. 1813. 5109 LANGTOFT (PETER). [Half-title.] Works of Thomas Heame . . (London) 1810 . . [Title.] Peter Langtoft's Chronicle, (as illustrated ani3 improv'd by Robert of Brunne) from the death of Cadwalader to the end of K. Edward the first's reign. Transorib'd . . from a MS. in the Inner-Temple library by Thomas Hearne. To which are added . . Roll concerning Glastonbury Abbey . . Account of the hospital of St. Mary Mag- dalen near Scroby in Nottinghamshire, by John Slacke. Two Tracts . . the first relating to Conquest in Somersetshire, the second concerning Stone-henge. 2 vol. 8°. Oxford, 1725. [Reprint of 1810.] 5110 LANMAN (CHARLES). Adventures in the Wilds of North America. Edited by Charles Richard Weld. 12°. 1854. 5111 Private life of Daniel Webster. 8°. 1853. 5112 LANSDOWNE (GEORGE GRAN- VILLE, BARON). Genuine Works in verse and prose. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1736. (Two copies.) 5113 LANZI (ABATE LUIGI). History of Painting in Italy . . trans- lated from the Italian. By Thomas Roscoe. New edition. 8 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. Bohn, 1847. 5114 LAPPENBERG (DR. J. M.). History of England under the Anglo- Saxon Kings, translated from the German, by Benjamin Thorpe. With additions and corrections by the author and the translator. 2 vol. 8°. 1845. 5115 LARDNER (DIONYSIUS) D.C.L. Electric Telegraph popularised. With one hundred illustrations. From " The Museum of Science aud Art." 8°. 1855. 5116 Cabinet C'yelopaedia. Conducted by D. Lardncr . . Natural Philosophy. Manual of electricity, magnetism, and meteorology. By D. Lardner. 2 vol. 12°. 1841-4. 5117 Vol. II. edited and completed by Charles V. Walker, 281 LARDNER (DIONYSIUS) D.CL. — cotit. Hand book of Natural Philosophy aud Astronomy. First course. Mechauics — hydrostatics — hydraulics — pneumatics — sound— optics. Illustrations. 8». 1851. 5118 Second course. Heat — common electri- city — magnetism ■ — voltaic electricity. Illustrations. 8°. 1852. 5119 Railway economy : a treatise on the new art of transport . . With an exposi- tion of the practical results of the railways in operation in the United Kingdom, on the Continent, and in America. 8°. 1850. 5120 Steam Engine, steam navigation, roads, and railways, explained and illustrated. Eighth edition. Illustrations. 8°. 1851. 5121 AND OTHERS. Great Exhibition, and London in 1851. Ilcviewed by Dr. Lardner, &c. 8°. 1852. 5122 D'. Lardner's Essays this vol. contains a discourse by Baron C. Dupin at the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers, and reviews published in the " Journal ties DcSbats" by Michel Chevalier, John Lemoinne, and Hector Berlioz. LA ROCHEFOUCAULT (FRANCOIS VI. DUG DE). Maxims, and moral reflections. New edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 1802. 5123 Maxims and Moral Reflections. With a biographical preface. New edition. (Portrait.) 12". 1819. 5124 Moral Maxims. Translated from the Frenoli. With notes. 12°. 1749. 5125 Moral Reflections, sentences, and max- ims. Newly translated from the French. With an introduction and notes. 12°. 1850. 5126 LARPENT (FRANCIS SEYMOUR). Private Journal of Judge-Advocate Larpent, attached to the head-quarters of Lord Wellington during the Peninsular War, from 1812 to its close. Edited by Sir George Larpent. Third edition. 8". 1854. 5127 LARPENT (SIR GEORGE). Turkey; its history and progress: from the journals and correspondence of Sir James Porter, fifteen years ambassador at Constantinople ; continued to the present time, with a memoir of Sir J. Porter, by his grandson, Sir G. Larpent. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1854. 5128 (ROBERT GORDON) LAS CASAS OR CASES (EMAN- UEL AUGUSTUS DIEUDONNE, MARQUIS DE). Journal of the private life and conversa- tions of the Emperor Napoleon at Saint Helena. New edition. 4 vol. . . (Plates.) 8°. 1825. 5129 _ Memoirs of the life, exile, and conversa- tions, of the Emperor Napoleon. New edition. (Portrait.; 4 vol. 12°. 1836. 5130 Memoirs, communicated by himself. Comprising a letter from Count de las Casas at St. Helena to Lucien Bonaparte, giving a faithful account of the voyage of Napoleon to St. Helena, his residence, manner of living, and treatment on that Island. Also a letter to Lord Bathurst. Second edition. 8°. 1818. 5131 LATHAM M.D. The English Language. Third edition. 8°. London, 1850. 5132 Ethnology of the British colonies and dependencies. 12°. 1851. 5133 Ethnology of the British Islands. 12°. 1852. 5134 Ethnology of Europe. 12°. 1853. 5135 Man and his Migrations. 12°. 1851. 5136 Native Races of the Russian Empire. Coloured Map . . and other iUustratious. 8°. 1854. 5137 Natural history of the varieties of Man. 8°- 1850. 5138 LATHBURY (REV. THOMAS). Memorials of Ernest the pious, first Duke of Saxe-Gotha, and the lineal ancestor of . . Prince Albert : with his- torical notices of Frederick, John, and John Frederick, Electors of Saxony, the chief promoters of the Reformation in Germany. 12°. 1843. 5139 LATIMER (HUGH) BISHOP OF WORCESTER. Sermons . . illustrated with notes . Memoir of the Bishop ; by John Watkins. 2 vol. Vol. I. (Portrait.) 8°. 1824. 5140 LATIN. [Tracts.] 4°. & 8°. v.d. 5141 Isaac! Vossii De Sibyllinis aliisque quae Christi natalem praecessere Oraculis. Ejusdem responsio ad objectiones nuperae Criticae Sacrae. Oion. e theatro Shcl- doniano, 1679. Concio synodica ad Cleruin Anglicianura, cs provincifl; praesertim Cantuariensi, in Aede Paulinl Londinensi habita 1661. Per Thomam Pierce, S. T. D. 1661. Celeusma, sen Clamor, ad theolosos hierar- chiae Anglicanae. Per quem permoven- tur, ad sociandcis vires, cum tVatribus 282 LATIN— con<. abeuntibus ab eis in disciplina, ut sese opponant Symmystis de suo grege, qui Eeformationem lu dootrina, subvertere, saltern corrumpere satagunt Pelagianismo, Socinianisrao, & Papismo. Duplex elen- chus, unus en-orum de Novatorum fab- rica : alter puriorum doctrinarum Eccle- siae Anglicanae. Turn refelluutur, duo putidi Literatores, qui in fidelem Christi servum, Guil. Jenchinum, inveoti sunt [etc.] 1679. LAUD (WILLIAM) ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY. Works. Vol. I. Sermons. III. Devo- tions, Diary, and History. VI. Part 1. Miscellaneous papers. — Letters. Part 2. Letters. — Notes on Bellarmine. VII. Letters [Edited by Rev. W. Scott]. 8". Oxford, 1847-60. 5142 Vols, of "Library of jinKlo-Catbolic Theo- logy," but the set incomplete. Duplicate of Tol. VII. Book-plate of Uev. P. L. Col- vile. Autobiography. Collected from his Kcmains. 12". Oxford, 1839. 5143 Presentation copy to Eev. J. B. Morris. MS. inscription by the Editor. Sermons. Eeprinted verbatim from the last edition, in 1651. Edited by Rev. J. W. Hatherell. 8°. London & Oxford, Stroud [printed], 1829. 5144 . Letter sent -with Manuscripts to the University of Oxford . . Answer which the Universitie sent him . . 4°. u.p. 1641. 5145- Letter 28. June 1641. unto the Univer- sitie of Oxford : specifying, his willing- nesse to resigne his chancellor-ship . . 4°. n.p. 1641. 5146 Sermon preached before his Maiesty, 19 lune, at Wansted. 1621. 4°. 1621. 5147 On the title-pa^G by " D Laud Deano of Glocester." Speech delivered in the Starr-Chamber, xiv lune, 1637. At the censure, of lohu Bastwiek, Henry Burton, & William Prinn ; concerning pretended innovations in the Church. 4°. 1637. (Two copies.) 5148 No. 1. L. P. " Eoger Twysden 1637." MS. on title. Dedication in both copies. Archbishop of Canterbury's Speech: or his fuuerall sermon, preacht by himself on the scaffold on Tower-Hill, Friday 10. January, 1644 . . also, the prayers which he used at the same time . . All faithfully written by John Hiude . . (Portrait of Laud inserted). 4". 1644. (Three- copies.) 5149 No. 1. i\ t the end in MS. '■ To M''. W, Laud, Jrom Jos: Hall; t'onccruing his unsettlc- nes in Religion" (imperfect). No. 2. MS. at beginning ; portrail. LAUD (WILLIAM) ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY— co«<. Articles exhibited in Parliament against William Archbishop of Canterbury, 1640. 4°. n.p. 1640. 5150 D', BandineVs book-plate (and in many other Laud tracts). Articles of the Commons, in mainte- nance of tlieir accusation, against W. Laud archbishop of Canterbury', whereby he stands charged with high treason. Also, further articles of impeachment by the Commons, against the said Archbishop, of high treason . . 4°. 1643. 5151 The Bishops Potion, or, a dialogue be- tweeue the Bishop of Canterbury, and his phisitian . . (woodcut on title.) 4°. u.p. 1641. 5152 . . The Canterburians self -conviction. Or an evident demonstration of the avowed Arminianisme, Poperie, and tyrannie of that faction . With a post-script to the personate Jesuite Lysimachus Nicanor . . [By Robert Baillie, B.D.] 4". n.p. 1640. 5153 Canterburie pilgrimage : in the testi- mony of an accused conscience for the bloud of Mr. Burton. Mr. Prynne. and Doctor Bastwicke. . . wherein is laid open, the reallity of the Scottish nation with the kingdome of England. (Wood- cut on title.) 4°. 1641. 5154 Canterburies dreame : in which the apparition of Cardiuall Wolsey did pre- sent himselfe unto him . . the third night after my Lord of Strafford had taken his fare-well to the world. (Woodcut on title.) 4°. n.p. 1641. 5155 Canterburys Will. With a serious Con- ference betweene his scrivener and him. Also a loving admonition to his brethren the Bishops. (Woodcut of Laud on title.) 4°. n.p. 1641. 5156 Dialogue betweene Sacke and Six. (Woodcut on title.) 4". n.p. 1641. 5157 Een vast ende bondigh Antwoort op Willem Lauds Aerts-bisschop van Cantel- berghs. Oratie ofte Lyck-Predicatie, Ge- daen by hem-selven op Towerhil, den 10 Januarii oude stijl, 1645. wesende Vry- dach . . 4". Neerlandts, 1645. 5158 Prefixed is a portrait of King Charles, with scenes from his lite, and vei-ses in Dutch beneath, and another ol Laud. Elegie on Willi:im Lord Arch-Bishop of Canterbury . . 4". n.p. 1644. 5159 I'p, 8-9 mutilated. Lambeth E:iire, wherein you have all the Bishops trinkets set to sale. (Wood- cut on title.) 4°. u.p. 1641. 5160 Lambeth Eaire's ended . . (Woodcut on title.) 4". n.p. 1641. 51G1 Mercuries Message . . Letter sent to AV. Laud late Archbishop of Cauterburv, 283 LAUD (WILLIAM) ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY— coraJ. now prisoner in the Tower [verses.] (Woodcut portrait on title.) 4°. n.p. 1641. 5162 Answer to the . . pamphlet, entituled Mercuries Message . . [Verses.] (Por- trait on back of title.) 4°. [Title cut down at bottom (1641).] 5163 Mercuries Message defended, against tlie . . cavils of Thomas Herbert a ridicu- lous ballad-maker . . By the author of the said Mercuries Message. (Woodcut on title.) 4°. [Title cut down at bot- tom.] 5164 Newes from Rome. Or a relation of the Pope and his Patentees pilgrimage into Hell, with their entertainment, and the Popes returne backe againe to Rome. With an elegiacall confabulation betweene Death and Honour . . (Woodcut.) 4°. n.p. 1641. 5165 At end " T. B." Ordinance of . . Parhament. That all the temporall livings, dignities, and eccle- siastical! promotions belonging unto Wil- liam [Laud] Lord Archbishoppe of Can- terbury be forthwith sequestered . . and that he shall be suspended . . (Portrait of Laud.) 4°. 1643. 5166 Petition to parliament, by the Arch- P,ifhop of Canterbury. Wherein the said Areh-Bishop desires that he may not be transported beyond the seas into new Eng- land with Master Peters . (Woodcut portrait on title.) 4°. 1643. (Two copies.) ^^^' Read and Wonder A Warre betweene . . the Pope and the Divell. With his Holinesse Will made before his death in the field . . 4°. n.p. 1641. 5168 Reasonable motion in the behalfe of such of the Clergie, as are now questioned in Parliament for their places. With the Conference betwixt . . William Arch, bishop of Canterbm-y and Thomas late Earle of Strafford. [Verses.] (Woodcut portraits on title.) 4°. n.p. 1641. 5169 Recantation of the prelate of Canter- bury • being his last advice to his brethren the Bishops of England . . (Portrait.) 4°. 1641. 5170 " The : Baker Coll : Jo : Socius ejectus." Recitall of the unreasonable proceed- iu by the Popish French faction. Satyre against Seperatists, or, the convic- tion of Chamber-preachers, and other Chismatickes. By A. C. Briefe relation of the Death and Sufferings of the L. archbishop of Canterbury. Ox- ford, 1644. [Another copy of No. 5172.] Archbishop of Canterbury's Speech : or his funerall Sermon. [Duplicate of No, 5149]. [Tracts.] 4°. H.p. IG41. .5177 Rome for Canterbury [Duplicate of N° 5174]. A Lordly Prelate. Being, diverse experi- mentail receits how to recover a Bishop if he were lost. (Portrait on title.) Romes ABC, being a short perambulation or rather articular accusation of a late tyranuicall oppressonr. "With a petition to the Archbishop of Canterbury, now prisoner in the Tower. (Portrait on title.) Recitall of the unreasonable proceedings of D''. Laud, u'^nlnsr T. "W. minister of tlic "Word of Goii. A^^iih liis ab.surd answer to the samt'. London. (2 co|iies.) The Archbisho]>s crueltie, made knownc in a true story of one M'". Edward Rood, who was niinistiu- at Saint Helens in Abingdon, and dismissed of his raeanes and ministery by him. By Giles Guller. DihL'0\ory of the notorious proceedings of W, Laud, Archbishdp ol Canterbury, in LAUD (WILLIAM) ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY— COM*. bringing innovations into the church, and raising up troubles in the state. Con- fessed by John Browne a jjrisonerin the' Gatehouse. London [date imperfect, but 1641]. AND STRAFFORD (THOMAS WENTWORTH, EARL OF). Charge of the Scottish Commissioners against Canterburie and the Lieutenant of Ireland. 'Their demand concerning the sixt article of the Treaty. The Parlia- ments resolution about the proportion of the Scottisli charges, and the Scottish Commissioners acceptance thereof. 4°. 1641. 5178 The discontented Conference betwixt the two great Associates, "William Arch- bishop of Canterbury, and Thomas late Earle of Strafford. [Verses.] 4". n.p. 1641. 5179 LAUDER (WILLIAM). Essay on Milton's use and imitation of the moderns, in his Paradise Lost. 8°. 1750. 5180 LAVALETTE (ANTOINE MARIE CHAMANS, COUNT DE). Memoirs. "Written by himself. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1831. 5181 Biographical sketch prefixed signed " Cuvil- lier Pleury." LAW (ISABELLA). Winter "Weavings : poems. Dedicated in all affection to Adelaide A. Procter. 12°. 1863. 5182 " John Porster Esq", with best regards from A. A. P." [Procter]. LAW (REV. WILLIAM). Serious Call to a devout & holy life, adapted to the state and condition of all orders of Christians. Seventeenth edition . . Account of the author, and three letters to a friend, not before published in any of his -works. Also, two letters from Clergy- men in the Established Church, strongly recommending the Serious Call . . His character, by Edward Gibbon, and a hst of aU his "Works. 12°. 1814. 5183 LAW. Law Magazine ; or quarterly review of Jurisprudence. February, 1836 — No- vember, 1813. Vol. XV-XXX. [Edited by Abraham Hayward and others.] 8°. 1836-43. 5184 Vol. XXI wanting. Vol. I-XXIV. New Series. Vol. XXXII-LV of the old Series. 8°. 1844-56. .^,l85 285 LAW— COM/. Law Magazine and Law Eeview, or, Quarterly Journal of Jurisprudence. May to August, 1856. Volume I. 185G. 8°. 1856. 518(5 Law Heview, and Quarterly Journal of British and IToreigu Jurisprudence. Vol. I-IV. Nov. 1844— Aug. 1846. 8". 1845-6. 5187 [Law Tracts.] 4°. and F". 1641-94. [From the library of Joseph Parkes.] 5188 Reading of Eobert Brook, Serleant of the law, and Uecorder of London, upon the .Stat, of Magna Charta, chap. 16. 1641. Argument to prove that each subject hath a y)ropriety in his goods. Shewing also the extent of the Kings prerogative in imposi- tions upon the goods of merchants ex- ported and imported. With a remonstrance presented to the Kin^s Majesty, by the House of Commons, in the parliament holden 1610. By a late learned judge of this kingdome. 1641. M'. St. Jolins speech, or argument in Parlia- ment ; shewing whether a man may be a judge, and a witnesse in the same cause. By way of preface, 1 shall return a dis- tinction between a doubtfuU and a scrupulous conscience, n.p. 1641 . Englands safety in the laws supremacy. 1659. Ca«e of the purchasers of publick lands, fee- farms, &c. stated: or a plea for such purchasers enjoying their purchased estates, and for the payment of publick faith debts. 1C60. Abstract of all the statute-laws of this king- dom now in force, made against Jesuites, seminary priests, and popish recusants. 1675. [No title-page. M'. Percivall Brnnskell's Case.] Catalogue of the names of all his Majesties Justices of the peace in commission in the several Counties throughout England and Wales, according to the late alterations. Names of all those formerly in commis- sion, now left out. Carefully collected by S.N. 1680. Power and privilege of Juries asserted. Published for the information of Hei-a- clytus ridens, and the doting Ubservator 1681. [No title-page. Ignoramus vindicated, in a dialogue between prejudice and indif- ference. (Touching juries.)] Bnd. 1681. City of Londons rejoinder, to Mr. Attorney General's replication in the Quo Warranto brought by him against their Chai-ter. Wherein they plead, that by prescrip- tii[sic]on they have aright, to appoint, alter, and change the Markets. To regu- late Markets, and to ascertain tolls and prisages. They also plead, that upon serious consideration had of the late damnable Popish-Plot the Common Council agreed to the petition incerted in Mr. Attorney- General's said Ueplication. 1682. Forfeitures of Londons Chai-lcr, or an im- partial account of the several seisures of the City Charter, with the means and methods that were used for the recovery of the same, with the causes by which it came forfeited, as likewise the imprison- ments, deposing, and fining the Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and Sheriffs, since the. reign of King Henry the Third to this present year, 1682. 1682. LAW — emit. Eelief of Apprentices wronged by their masters. How by our law it may effectually be given and oblaiii'd. 1887. [No litlo-page. Enquiry into the measures of submission to the supream authority.] Short account of the authorities in law, upon which judgement was given in Sir Edw. Hales his case. Written by Sir Edw. Herbert, Chief Justice of the Com- mon Pleas, in vindication of himself. [Date cut down.] Essay concerning the laws of Nations, and the rights of Soveraigns. With an account of what was said at the Council-Board by the_ Civilians upon the question, whether their Majesties subjects taken at sea acting by the late King's Commission, might not be looked on as Pirates ? AVitli reflections upon the arguments of Sir T. P. and Dr. 01. By Mat. Tindall. 1694. [No title-page. Considerations concerning Common fields and Inclosures.] LAWRANCE (HANNAH). History of Woman in England, and her influence on societj- and literature, from the earliest period. Vol. I. To the year 1200. (Portrait of Queen Editha.) 8°. 1843. (Two copies.) 5189 LAWRENCE (FREDERICK). Life of Henry Fielding ; with notices oC his writings, his times, and his contempo- raries. 8". 1855. 5190 LAWSON (CAPTAIN J. A.). Wanderings in the interior of New Guinea. Frontispiece [wanting] and Map. 8°. 1875. 5191 Said to be " a fictitious work." 1-AWSON (WILLIAM JOHN), History of Banking j with a compre- hensive account of the origin, rise, and progress, of the Banks of England, Ire- land, and Scotland. (Portrait of A. New- land.) 8°. 1850. 5192 LAYARD (SIR AUSTEN HENRY). Discoveries in the ruins of Nineveh and Babylon ; with travels in Armenia, Kurdis- tan, and the Desert: being the result of a second expedition undertaken for the Trustees of the British Museum. Maps, plans, and illustrations. 8°. 1853. 5193 "John Forster 'Esq^. f^ the Author." Nineveh and its remains ; with an ac- count of a visit to the Ohaldcean Christians of Kurdistan, and the Yezidis, or devil- worshippers ; and an enquiry into the manners and arts of the ancient Assyrians. 2 vol. 8°. 1849. 5194 Monuments of Nineveh. From drawings made on the spot by [Sir] A. H. Layard. Illustrated in one hundred plates [102 in portfolio]. F". 1849. 5195 286 LAYARD (SIR AUSTEN HENRY)- co?tt. Second Series of the Monuments of Nineveh ; including bas-reliefs from the palace of Sennacherib and bronzes from the ruins of Niniroud. From drawings made on the spot, during a second expedi- tion to Assyria. 71 plates. J?". 1853. 5196 Popular account of discoveries at Nineveh. Abridged from his larger work. Woodcuts. 8°. 1851. 5197 LEADER. The Leader. Vol. I, from itfarch 30, to December 28, 1850 (— Vol. VII, from January 1, to December 31. 1856). 7 vol. 3?°. n.d. (1850-6.) 5198 LEAKE (WILLIAM MARTIN). Researches in Greece. 4°. 1814. 5199 LEAR (EDWARD). Book of Nonsense. By Derry Down Derry. New edition. Oblong, n.d. 5200 Journals of a Landscape Painter in Albania, &c. 8''. 1851. 5201 Journals of a Landscape Painter in Southern Calabria, &c. 8°. 1852. 5202 LEATHAM (WILLIAM HENRY). Lectures . . on the Human Form, Imitative Sounds, life and character of Cromwell, life and character of Cortes, five of our poets (Wordsworth, Montgomery, Campbell, Southey, Moore), Macaulay's Works, history of Wakefield. 8°. 1 845. 5203 Poems. A Traveller's Thoughts. The Victim. Sandal in the olden time. Henrie Clifforde and Margaret Percy. Siege of Granada. Emilia Monteiro. Strafford. A tragedy. Oliver Cromivell. A drama. 12". London & Wakefield, 1843. 6204 Each poem has a separate title-page, with the dates 1841, 2, 3. Tales of English life, and Miscellanies. 2 vol. 12°. 1858. 5205 LEATHERLAND (JOHN A.). Essays and Poems, with a brief auto- biographical memoir. 8°.. London, Lei- cester, Kettering, 1862. 5206 LECKIE (GOULD FRANCIS). Historical Survey of the Foreign affairs of Great Britain, with a view to explain the causes of the disasters of the late and present wars. 8°. 1808. (Two parts.) 5207 LECKY(WILLIAM EDWARD HART- POLE). History of the rise and influence of the spirit of Eationalism in Europe. Fourth edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1870. 5208 LECTURES. Afternoon lectures on Literature and Art. Delivered in the theatre of the Mu- seum of Industry, Dublin, April and May, 1864. Second Series. 12°. 1864. 5209 Opening address by Joseph Napier — Our Architecture by Samuel Ferguson- Charles Lamb and Charles Dickens by Percy Fitzgerald — Native Literature of India by Captain Meadows Taylor — Ger- man Literature byD^Anster — Victor Hugo as a Poet by Bishop Alexander— Chaucer, by John O'Hagan. Lectures delivered before the Dublin Young Men's Christian Association . . 1862. (Portrait of Whiteside.) 8°. Dub- lin, 1863. .5210 Goldsmith by [Ld. Ch. Justice] James "Whiteside— History by Bishop Ktzgerald —Music by Professor Stewart— Lives of the Saints by D'. Salmon— Burke by Joseph Napier— Revolution in America by Professor Cairnes— Light by D'. Robin- son-Habits, by Archbishop Whately. [Another volume.] 1864. (Porh'ait of Archbishop Trench.) 8°. Dublin, 1865. 5211 Notes on Ancient Syria by Lord Duilerin— CleanUness : Prudence : Industry, by [Ld. Ob. Justice]: James Whiteside— The Chri.st of Scripture and the Christ of Modem Theorists by Rev. D'. Fairbairn — Gnsta- vus Adolphus by the Archbishop of Dublin (Trench)— Ireland, by SirW. R. "W. Wilde — Present tendency of Religious Thought by Rev. James M'Cosh, LL.D. — Coloniza- tion and Colonial Govei'nment, by Pro- fessor Cairnes— Apocryphal Gospels, by Bishop Alexander. Lectures delivered before the Young Men's Christian Association . . 1847-8 . . 13". 1848. 5212 Natural history of creation by D'. Lankester — Social organization by J. Harris, D.D. Art of Printing by Rev. J. T. Brown— Mohammedanism by Rev. W. Arthui' — Acquisition of Knowledge by Rev. J. Beau- mont— Geological evidences of the exist- ence of the Deity by T. Archer, D.D.— Mythology of the Greeks by Rev. John Aldis— Free church of the Canton de Vaud, Switzerland, by Baptist Noel — Truths peouhar to Christianity, by Stovel — Moral influence of the commercial spirit of the day, by ;Fisk — Mysteriousness of Chris- tianity, by Prest— The Age we live in, by Gumming. [Lectures on Education delivered at the Royal Institution of Great Britain.] 8°. n.p. n.d. .5213 [Half Titles.] Influence of the History of Science upon intellectual education. By William Whewell, D.D. Observations on Mental Education. By Professor Faraday. Importance of the study of Language. By Robert Gordon Latham, M.D. Importance of the study of Chemistry. Bv Charles G. B. Daubeny, M.D. 28'7 LECTURES— con*. Importance of the study of Physios. By Professor Tyndall. Importance of the study of Physiology. By [Sir] James Paget. Importance of the study ol economic Science. By W. B. Hodgson, LL.D. Lectures to Ladies on practical subjects. 8°. Cambridge, 1855. 5214 Han of a Female College for the help of the rich and the poor, by Maurice— The Col- lege and the Hospital, by Mauiice— The Country Parish, by Kingslcy— Overwork, distress and anxiety, as causes of disease amongst the Poor, by G. Johnson, 51.1).— Dispensaries and allied Institutions, by B. H. Sieveking, M.D.— District Visiting, by Rev. J. LI. Davies — Influence of occu- pation on health, by D'. Chambers— Law as it affects the poor, by [Sir] Eitzjames Stephen— "Bvery-day work of Ladies, by Archdeacon Allen— Teaching by "Words, by Archbishop Trench — Sanitary Law, by Tom Taylor— workhouse Visiting, by Eev. J. S. Brewer. Postscript. LEDIARD (THOMAS). Life of John, Duke of JIarlborougli ; illustrated with maps . . letters and papers . . 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1736. 5215 LEE (MRS. HANNAH F.). Historical sketches of the old Painters. By the Author of " Three Experiments of Living." 12°. Boston [U.S.] 1838. 5216 Life and times of Martin Luther. By tlie author of " Three experiments of Living." . . . 12°. Glasgow, 1840. 5217 LEE (HOLME) pseud, i.e. HARRIET PARR. Gilbert Massenger. 8°. 1855. 5218 Thorney Hall : a story of an old family. 8°. 1855. 5219 LEE (ROBERT). The last days of Alexander, and the first days of Nicholas, (Emperors of Russia) 8". 1854. 5220 LEE (SOPHIA AND HARRIET). Canterbury Tales. Eevised . . Harriet Lee. 2 vol. 12°. 1837-8. • ty 5221 LEE (WILLIAM). Daniel Defoe : his life, and recently discovered AA'ritings : extending from 1716 to 1729. 3 vol. (Portraits.) 8".- 1869. 5222 LEECH (JOHN). Pictures of life and character from the collection of Mr. Punch. Oblong. 1854. 5223 Second Series. Oblong. 1857. 5224 LEECH (JOHN)— con<. Portraits of children of the Mobility- Drawn from nature. "With memoirs and characteristic sketclies by the Author of " The Comic English Grammar," etc. [Percival Leigh] . .F°. 1841. 5225 The Rising Generation a series of twelve drawings on stone [coloured]. From his original designs in the gallery of Mr. Punch. F°. n.d. 5226 Nos. 522.3-0. Presentation copies with in- scriptions. LEEDS. National Exhibition of Works of Art, at Leeds, 1868. Official Catalogue . . 12°. Leeds, 1868. 5227 LEEMANS (CONRADUS). Animadversiones in Musei Antiquarii Lugduno-B.itavi insoriptiones Graecas et Latinas, a L. J. P. Janssen, editas. Addi- tur tabula. 4°. Lugd. Batav. 1842. 5228 LEFANU (ALICIA). Memoirs of the life and writings of M''. Frances Sheridan mother of R. B. Sheri- dan . . with remarks upon a late Life of R. B. Sheridan ; also criticisms and se- lections from the Works of Mrs. Sheridan ; and biographical anecdotes of her family and contempora]'ies. Portrait. 8°. 1824. 5229 LEFEVRE (SIR GEORGE) M.D. Apology for _the nerves : or, their in- fluence and importance in health and dis- ease. 8°. IS44. 5230 LEGAL, ETC. [Tracts.] F°. v.d. 5231 The true Countess of Banbury's case, relat- ing to her marriage, rightly stated. 1096. [No title-page. Lady Dacres her case.1 s. sh. [? 1681.] Relation of the proceedings nt Charter- House, upon occasion of King James II. his presenting a Papist to be admitted into that Hospital. 1689. Proceedings at the sessions of the peace held at Hicks-Hall, for the county of Middle- sex, Decemb. 6. 1681. With his Majesties two orders, and Sir "William Smith's speech to the Grand Jury, concerning putting the laws in execution against Popish recusants and conventicles : with his discourse upon the statute concerning the power of the Justices of the peace to impannel Juries. 1682. Lord Chief Baron Atkyns's speech to Sir William Ashurst, Lord-Mayor elect at the time of his being sworn in their Majesties Court of Exchequer, Monday SO October, 1693. 1693. The Pai-allel : or, the new specious Asso- ciation an old rebellious covenant. Closing with a disparity between a true patriot, and a factious associator. 1682. Relation de ce qui s'est pass(S a La Haye au mois de Fevrier 1638. Les Pestins, come- dies, bals, courses de bague & auti'es mag- nificences faites au mariage de Monsieur De Brederode, et de Madamoyselle De Sohns. A La Haye, 1638. 288 LE GRAND D'AUSSY (PIERRE JEAN BAPTISTE). Fabliaux or Tales, abridged from French manuscripts of the xiith and xiiith cen- turies by M. Le Grand, selected and trans- lated into English verse, by G. L. "Way. With a preface, notes, and appendix, by G. Ellis. New edition, corrected. .3 vol. 8". London, Weybridge [printed], 181.5. 5232 " Woodcuts by Bewick." Lowndes. Book- plate of Sir Wm. Grace. LEIBNITZ (GODFREY WILLIAM VON). Lettres et opuscules inedits precedes d'une introduction par A. Foucher de Ca- reil . . (Portrait inserted). 8°. Paris, 1854. 5233 A refutation recently discovered of Spinoza. With prefatory remarks and introduction by the Count A. Foucher de Careil. Translated . . by Rev. Octavius Freire Owen. 12°. Ediubargli, 1855. 5234 System of Theology. Translated, with an introduction and notes, by Charles William Russell, D.D. 8°. 1850. 5235. LEICHHARDT (DR. LUDWIG). Journal of an overland expedition in Australia, from Moreton Bay to Port Essington . . during 1844-5. 8". 1847. 5236 Map. By J. Arrowsmith. *5236 LEIGH (EDWARD). England described : or the several coun- ties and shires thereof briefly handled . . 8°. 1659. 5237 LEIGH (EDWARD AND HENRY). . . Observations concerning all the Koman and Greek Emperors. The first eighteen by E. Leigh . the others added by his son H. Leigh. Also certain choice French proverbs . . Englished added by E. Leigh. Third edition. 8°. 1670. 5238 LEIGH (CHANDOS 1st LORD). Poems, now first collected. 12°. 1839. 5239 Supplementary Verses. 12°. Warwick, 1841. 5240 Walks in the Covmtry. 12°. 1844. 5241 LEIGH (PERCIVAL). Comic English Grammar ; a new and facetious introduction to the English tongue, by the Author of " The Comic Latin Grammar " . . Illustrations by J. Leech. New edition. 12°. 1851. 5242 LEIGH ( ). Leigh's new pocket Road-book of Eng- land and Wales : containing an account of all the direct, cross, and rail roads ; a description of every principal town and remarkable place . . Pleasure tours . . with a . . list of mail-coach routes. Seventh edition. 12°. n.d. 5243 Another copy [or edition. Title-page wanting.] 5244 Leigh's new pocket Road-book of Ire- land . . containing an account of all the . . roads ; with a description of every re- markable place . . illustrated with a map of Ireland, a table of the relative distances between the principal towns, a guide to the curiosities of Dublin, and a map of the Lakes of Killarney. 12°. 1827. 5245 Compiled by C. C. Hamilton (v. "Introduc- tion"). Leigh's new pocket Road-book of Scot- land, containing an account of all the . . roads ; with a description of every re- markable place ■ . Pleasure tours . . illustrated with a panorama of the remark- able objects in Edinburgh and a map of Scotland. 12°. 1829. 5246 LEMON (MARK). Prose and Verse. (Frontispiece by John Leech.) 12°. 1852. 5247 Up and down the London Streets. 8°. 1867. 5248 LEMPRIERE (JOHN) D.D. Classical dictionary; containing a copious account of all the proper names mentioned in ancient Authors : with the value of coins, weights, and measures, used among the Greeks and Romans ; and a chrono - logical table. Tenth edition. 8°. 1818. 5249 L'ENCLOS (ANNE or NINON DE). Memoirs : with her letters to Mons'. De St. Evremond, and to the Marquis de Sevigne. Collected and translated from the French, by a Lady. 2 vol. 12°. 1776. 5250 LENNARD (DACRE BARRETT). Tales from Moliere's plays. 8°. 1859. 5251 [LENNOX (CHARLOTTE RAMSAY, MRS.).] Female Quixote : or, the adventures of Arabella. 2 vol. (in one). [Anon]. 12°. Dublin, 1752. 5252 LENOX (JAMES STUART, 4th DUKE OF). The Duke of Lenox his Speech in Par- liament, in Scotland, Octob. 28. 1641. Concerning the Kings returne into Eng- land. And a certaine affront which was given to himselfe, and the Marquisse Hamilton . . 4°. 1641. 5253 289 LEON (EDWIN DE). Askaros Kassis the Copt. A romauce of modern Egypt. S°. 1870. 5254 LEONE (ABBATE). The Jesuit Conspiracj. The secret plan of the Order. Detected and revealed by the Abhate Leone. With a preface by Victor Considfrant. Translated . . from the authentic French edition. 8°. 1848. 5255 LEPSIUS (DR. RICHAf?D). Discoveries in Egypt, Ethiopia, and the peninsula of Sinai, 1842-5, during the mission sent out by Frederick William 1\. of Prussia. Edited, with notes, by Kenneth R. H. Mackenzie. 8°. 1852. 6256 LE QUESNE (CHARLES). Constitutional History of Jersey. 8°. 1856. 5257 Ireland and the Channel Islands ; or, a remedy for Ireland. 8°. 1848. 5258 LEROY (CHARLES GEORGES). InlelUgence and perfectibility of Ani- mals from a philosophic point of view. With a few letters on Man. 8". 1870. 5259 LE SAGE (ALAIN Re'ne'). OEuvres ehoisies. 12". Paris, 1830. 5260 Adventures of Gil Bias of Santillane- Translated from the French, by T. Smol- lett. 3 vol. (in one). (Portraits of Smol- lett and Le Sage.) 12». 1823. 5261 [Another edition.] Illustrated by Jean Gigoux. 2 vol. 8°. 1836. 5262 Gil Bias di Santillano. Tradotta dal Francese dal Dottore J'ietro Crocchi Nuova edizione. 3 vol. 120. 1809. 5263 LESLIE (REV. CHARLES). Short and easie method with the Deists. Wherein the truth of the Christian religion is demonstrated . . [Anon.] 12". 1698. 5264 View of the times, their principles and practices : in the first (second, third, and fourth) volume of the Rehearsals. By Philalethes. F°. 1708-9. 5265 LESLIE (CHARLES ROBERT) R.A. Autobiographical Recollections. Edited, •with a prefatory essay on Leslie as an artist, and selections from his correspon- dence. By Tom Taylor. 2 vol. With Portrait. 8°. 1860. 5266 Hand-book for Young Painters. With jUustrations. 8°. 1855. 5267 o 16505. LESLIE (CHARLES ROBERT) R.A. — cont. ^ Memoirs of the life of John Constable, RA. Composed chiefly of his letters. Second edition. (Portrait.) 4°. 1845. 5268 AND TAYLOR (TOM). Life and times of Sir Joshua Reynolds : with notices of some of his Cotemporaries. Commenced by C. K. Leslie. Continued and concluded by Tom Taylor. 2 vol. Portraits and illustrations. 8°. 1865. 5269 Presentation copy to M'. Porster. LESLIE (HENRIE). Sermon preached before his Maiesty at TViudsore, 19. luly. 1625. 4°. Oxford, 1625. 5270 LESLIE (SIR JOHN). Tracts, Historical and Philosophical, relative to the important discussions . . between the members of the University and the presbytery of Edinburgh, respect- ing the election of M'. (John) Leslie to the professorship of Mathematics in that University. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh, 1806. 5271 These Tracts are by Dugaltl Stewart; D'. Inglis ; Thomas Brown, M.D. ; John Plny- fair: "W". L. Brown, & anonymous writers. " William Hamilton, M.A." " 1807." LESSING (GOTTHOLD EPHRAIM) AND OTHERS. Fables and Parables from the Germau of Lessing, Herder, Gellert, Meissner, &c. 12°. n.d. 6272 LESTER (REV. JOHN W.). Orations. 12°. 1851. 5273 L'ESTRANGE (SIR ROGER). Modest plea both for the Caveat, and the author of it. With some notes upon Mr. James Howell, and his sober inspec- tions. Second impression. 12°. 1661. 5274 D'. Bliss's copy & MS. note. The Observator. [Anon.] 19 Num- bers. 1681-1685. s. sh. F". 5275 All with the title of " The Observator " but apparently the three earliest numbers do not belong to the same set as the rest. [Tracts by or relating to.] 4°. 1680-3. 5276 L'Estrange's case in a civil dialogue between Zekiel and Ephraim. Free-born Subject : or, the Englishmans birthright : asserted against all tyrannical usurpations either in Church or State, Second edition. Lestrange's Narrative of the Plot. Further discovery of the plot : dedicated to D'. Titus Gates. Second edition. Notes upon Stephen College. Grounded principally upon his own declarations and confessions. Second edition, T 290 L'ESTRANGE (SIR ROGER)— eonf. Short Answer to a whole Utter of Libellers. Memento- Treating, of Seditions : with historical reflections upon the series of our late troubles. Second edition. The accompt clear'd : in answer to a Libel, intituled, a true account from Chichester, concerning the death of Habin the in- Eormer, &c.. L'Estrange his Appeal submitted to the Kings Majesty and Parliament. LETI (GREGORIO). La Vie d'Olivier Cromwel . . 2 vol. (in one). (Portrait.) 12°. Amsterdam, 1746. 5277 Book-plate of Sir W. A. Cunynghame. Suite du tome premier. 12°. Amsterdam, 1746. *5277 Paged on from tome I. LETTERS. Eccentric and humorous letters of eminent men and women, remarkable for wit and brilliancy of imagination in their correspondence. Selected by Joseph Taylor. (Portrait of Frederick the Great.) 12°. 1824. (Two copies.) 5278 Familiar Letters . . by the Wits of the last and present age . . From their originals. With their effigies curiously engraved by the best masters. 2 vol. Sixth edition. 12°. 1724. 5279 Vol. II. . . With the best of Voituve'a letters, translated by Dryden and T. Brown. Also the Semains of T. Brown. 1718. French letters [of the President de Montesquieu and others. Translated]. 12°. 1814. 5280 The Friends ; or, original Letters of a person deceased ... 2 vol. 12°. Lon- don and York, 1773. 5281 Letter from a noble in the Shades, to all the Gay Brights at Wh te's. Broadside. F°. n.d. 5282 Letter from No Body in the City, to No Body in the countrey. 4°. 1679. 5283 D'. Bhss's copy and MS. note. Letters, by several eminent persons deceased. Including the correspondence of John Hughes (Author of the Siege of Damascus) and several of his friends, published from the originals : with notes . . Vol. 1, 2. 12°. 1772. 6284- Letters from the living to the living, relating to the present transactions both publick and private. With their answers . . Written by several hands. [? By r. Brown.] 8°, 1703. 5285 Letters of consolation, and advice from a father to his daughter on the death of her sister. Second edition. 12°. 1805. 5286 LETTERS— cont Letters to my unknown friends. By a Lady. 12°. 1846. 5287 Select collection of original Letters ; written by the most eminent persons . . from the reign of Henry the Eighth, to the present time. 2 vol. 12°. 1755. 5288 LETTERS AND ESSAYS. Letters and Essays, on several subjects . . in prose and verse. To John Dryden ; Geo. Granvill; Walter Moile; Mr. Con- greve, and Mr. Denis . . By several gentlemen and ladies. [Dedication signed " Charles Gildon."] 12°. 1696, 5289 LEVER (CHARLES JAMES). Arthur O'Leary : his wanderings and ponderings in many lands. Edited by his friend, Harry Lorrequer, and illustrated by George Cruikshank. New edition. 8°. 1845. 5290 Barrington. With illustrations by Phiz. [Hablot K. Browne.] 8°, 1863. 5291 Confessions of Con. Cregan : the Irish Gil Bias, With illustrations , , by Hab- lot K. Brown. [Anon.] 2 vol, 8°. n.d. 5292 The Daltons or three roads in life. With illustrations by Phiz. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 5293 Davenport Dunn a man of our day. With illustrations by "Phiz." 8°. 1859, 5294 Dodd family Abroad. With illustra- tions by Phiz. 8°. 1854. 5295 The Knight of Gwyune ; a tale of the time of the Uniou. With illustrations by "Phiz." 8°. 1847. 5296 Luttrell of Arran. With illustrations by "Phiz." 8°. 1865. 5297 Martins of Cro' Martin. With illustra- tions by " Phiz," 8°. 1856. 5298 The O'Donoghue ; a tale of Ireland fifty years ago. With illustrations by H. K. Browne, 8°, Dublin, 1845, 5299 Boland Cashel, With illustrations by Phiz, 8°. 1850. 5300 St. Patrick's Eve. Illustrated by Phiz. 12°. 1845, 5301 LEVI (LEONE). Commercial Law, its principles and administration ; or, the mercantile law of Great Britain compared with the codes and laws of co&merce of the following mercantile countries : Anhalt . . Wur- temburg. And the Institutes of Justinian. Vol. I.— Part II, Vol, II,— Part I. Vol. II. (3 vol.) F°. 1851-2, 6302 Law of Nature and Nations as affected by Divine Law. 8°. 1855. 5303 291 LEWES (GEORGE HENRY). Biographical history of Philosophy. Series I. — Ancient Philosophy. 2 vol. 12°. 1845. 5304 Scries II. — From Bacon to the present day. 2 vol. 12". 18ro t.p. Reasons of L's sending his letter to M''. Prin, humbly presented to the com- mittee of examinations.] [No t.p. lonahs cry out of the whales belly : or, certaine epistles writ by I. L. unto Lieu. Geuerall Cromwell, and M^ John Goodwin : complaining of the tyranny of the Houses of Lords and Commons at Westminster] . [No t.p. Epistle by J. L. unto Mr. Justice Roll : declaring the illegall dealing of himself, and M'. Justice Bac^u with him, in reference to his habeas corpus]. Speech in the House of Commons. By Sir John Maynard, wherein he hath stated the case of J. L. Copie of a petition to the House of Commons in the behalfe 6f J. L., with the answer. Englands weeping spectacle : or, the sad condition of J. L. [No t.p. The lawcs funerall, or, an epistle by J. L. giving a relation of his defence, before the judges of the Kings Bench, 8. May 1648. against both the illegal com- mitments of him by the House of Lords, and the House of Commons] . [No t.p. To the representors of the people, in Parhament assembled. Sad representa- tion of the uncertain and dangerous con- dition of the common-wealth: by the presenters and approvers of the lai^e peti- tion of 11. September, 161S]. Second part of Englands new-chaines dis- covered : or a sad representation of the uncertain and dangerous condition of thn common-wealth. By severall wol-affected persons inhabiting the City of London [etc.] Vol. III. Triall.of J. L. at the Guild-Hall of London, 24, 2o, 26. Octob. 1649. Peird and taken in sliort hand. Appendix. Pub- lished by Theodorus Yai-ax. Southwai-k. Second part of the triall. [No t.p. First dayes proceedings, at the tryal.] [No t.p. Certaine observations upon the tryall.] At the cud— John Lilburn. 16i0. 294 LILBURNE (JOHN)— VOL. lU.—cont. Manifestation from J. L., "William Wahvyn, Thomas Prince, and Richarcl Overton (now prisoiiers in the Tower of London) and others, commonly (thouffli imjustly) styled Levellers. Intended for their full vindication from the many aspersions cast upon them. Englands lamentable Slaveric. "Which slaverie, with the remedie may be easily observed. By the scope of a letter, written to L. now unjustlie imprisoned in Newgate. [No t.p. J. L's plea in law. Penned by a true and faithful lover of the fundamental laws and liberties of the free people of EnKland.l At the end—" John Lilburn, gentleman. June 28. 16S3." Discourse betwixt J. L. and Hugh Peter. [No t.p. Agreement of the free people of England. By I. L., "WilMam Walwyn, Thomas Prince, and Eichard Overton 1649.J Autograph of " Jo Lilborne," p. 1. [No t.p. The Juglers discovered. Duplicate. See vol. I.] [No t.p. The resolved mans resolution, to maintain with the last drop of his heart blood, his oivill liberties and freedomes. Epistle, by J. L, Aprill 1647.] The liberties of the people of England re- vived, asserted, and vindicated. Or, an epistle written 8 June 1649, by J. L. (arbitrary and aristocratical prisoner in the Tower of London) to "WilliamLenthall Speaker. Piotm-e of the Councel of State, held forth to the free people of England by J. L., Thomas Prince, and Richard Overton. Or, a narrative of the late proceedings against them. "With their examinations at Darby House, 28. of March last. Outcry of the young men and apprentices of London : or, an inquisition after the lost fnndamentall lawes and liberties of Eng- land. Directed (August 29. 1619.) in an epistle to the private souldiery of the Army. Signed b.y Charles Collins, Anthony Bristlebolt [etc.] "Vol. IV, [No t.p. Preparative to an hue and cry after Sir Arthur Haslerig, for attempt- ing to murder J. L. now prisoner in the Tower. As also for his felonious robbing the said J. L. All which the said J. L. hath evinced in his following epistle of 18 August 1649, to his uncle George Lilburn.] Impeachment of high treason. [Duplicate of No. 5336.] Strength out of weaknesse. Or the linall and absolute plea of J. L., against the present ruling power siting at "Westminster. [Im- perfectj The engagement vindicated and explained, or the reasons upon which J. L. tooke the engagement. [No t.p. Just reproof to Haberdashers- Hall : or, an epistle writ by J. L., July 30. 1651. to four of the Commissioners at Haberdashers Hall wherein is set forth their unjust dealing in severall cases ; with the relations of the said J. Lillturn, and tlieir captiving tlicir understandings to the tyrannical will of Sir Arthur Hasle- rigge]. [No t.p. Case of the tenants of the manner of Epworth in the Isle of Axholm in the county of Lincoln. Stated by J. L. To prevent the mis-intorma.tions of John Gibbons, and the drainers]. Uemonstrance of J. Lilburn : concerning the lawes, liberties [etc.] of the free-born people of England; in relation to the LILBURNE (JOHN)— VOL. IW.—cont. sentence ' denounced against him for banishment. Published by a well-wisher to J. L. [No t.p. The prisoner's most mournful cry against the present oppression and ty- ranny that is exercised upon him. Or, an epistle by J. LUburn prisoner in New- gate, July 1. 1653. unto John Fowke Lord Maior.] [No t.p. Declaration of J. L., against the unjust sentence of his banishment by the late Parliament of England ; in an epistle from his house in Bridges in Flanders May M. 1653 to the Lord General Crom- well. Appendix dn*ected from J. L., to his excellency and his officers, occasioned by his present imprisonment in Newgate ; and some groundless scandals cast upon him, upon the delivery of his third address dated Newgate 20 June 1653.] [No t.p. Letter to I. L. now prisoner in the Tower.] [No t.p. To the representative body of England assembled in Parliament. The humble petition of I. L. a free man of England.] [No title-page. A jury-man's Judgement upon the case of J. L.J Malice detected, in printing certain infor- mations and examinations Concerning J.L. Informations and examinations taken con- cerning I. L., shewing his apostacy to the party of Charles Stuart. Second Letter from J. Lilburn : to John Powke, Lord Major. Second Address to the Lord Generall Crom- well, and the Oouncell of State. Being, the humble petition of J. L. Broadside. E°. J. Lilb. tryed and cast : or, his case and craft discovered. Letter, from J. L. to a friend. England's miserie, ■ and remedie. Letter from an Utter-Barrister concerning L^. imprisonment in Newgate, Sept. 1645. (and Appendix). Appendix, dated 1653, is signed *^John Lilburne " and is " by the penner of tlie foregoing address." [Tracts by or relating to J. L.] 4°. London & n.p. 1646-9 & n.d. .5338 Remonstrance of many thousand citizens. [Duplicate. See No. 5337, "Vol. 1.] Liberty vindicated against slavery. [Dupli- cate. See 6337, "\'ol. 1.] At the end [without t.p.] Letter by a prisoner, to a member of the House of Commons, to give further eridence to the premises]. The just mans justification. Duplicate. &eN". 53.37, Vol. 1.] At the end (continuation) Petition of L, ; and Articles against Col. E. King, lonahs cry [Duplicate. See N". 5337, v. 2.] At the end— Letter to Coll. Henry Martin. Oppressed mans oppressions declared [Du- plicate. Sre N». B337, Vol. 1.] Vox Plebis [Dnphcatc. See "N°. 5337, vol. Recantation of J. L., prisoner in tho Tower. Opening, all the Machinations of the In- dependent partic ; their practises and judgements. "Wilih tho reasons of his revolts from that party. Plaine truth without feare or flattery : or a true discovery of the unlawfulnesse of the Presbyterian Government. The end of estabhshing the mihtia of London in such hands as it is now put into by the new 295 LILBURNE (JOHN)-coMf. ordinance. Vindication of Sir Thomas Fairfax. With the moanes that must be used to obtaine reliefe against tlie said tyrannous usurpers. By 1. L. [No t.p. Out-oryes of oppressed Commons. Directed to all the rational] and under- standing men in Enpjland, and Wales. From J. L. prerogative prisoner in the Tower of London, and Richard Overton, prcrogativc.'prisoner, in the infamous gaole of Newgate. Febr. 1647.] No t.p. Tryall of I. L. at the Guild-Hall of London 24. Octob. 1649.] [Tracts.] 4°. n.p. 1648-9. 5339 Relations and observations, upon the Par- liament, begun 1640. II. bookes : 1. Mys- tery of the two lunto's, Presbyterian and Independent. 2. History of Independency, &c. Appendix, touching the proceedings of the Independent faction in Scotland. " To my dread Sovovajgne " is signed "Theoiih. Verax"; "To Sir Thomas Fairfax" is signed "Theodorus Verax." Anarchia Anglicana : or, the history of In- dependency. Second part. By Theodorus Verax. (Plate — Royall Oake of Brit- tayne.) LILLO (GEORGE). Dramatic Works with memoirs of the Author by Thomas Davies. Second edi- tion. 2 vol. 12». 1810. 5340 Vol I.— Lillo's Life— Silvia— George Barn- ■well—Scanderbeg— Christian Hero. II. Fatal Curiosity— Marina— Blmenck— Bri- tannia and Batavia — Arden of Fever- sham. LILLY (JOHN). Sixe Court Comedies. Often presented and acted before Queene Elizabeth . . 12°. IC32. 5341 MS. notes by George Daniel, one of which says " With the autographs of Walter Moyle an author & a Boofc collector, and of W". Chetwood the dramatic historian." The Comedies are Endimion— Campaspe- Sapho and Phao— Gallathea — Mydas— Mother Bombie; each with its o\vn title page, except Endimion. LILLY (WILLIAM). Astrologicall prediction of the occur- rances in England, part of the yeers 1648. 1649. 1650 . . 4°. 1648. 5342 The bloody Almanack : or, an astro- logicall prediction of the most remark- afble] accidents which shall happen to the King, Parliament an[d] City, as also in Scotland and Ireland, this yeer 1649 [A.non.] (Woodcut on title.) 4". (Lon- don) 1649. 5343 Title a little cut down. History of his life and times, from 1602, to 1681. Written by himself in the 66"' year of his age, to his worthy friend Elias Ashmole . . Containing . . I. Account of D'. Forman, D'. Napier, D'. Booker, T>'. Dee, Kelly, and all other astrologers and conjurors; his cotemporaries, unfolding the mysteries of the Black Art, viz. incan- tations, raising of spirits, &c. II. Tryal of Isaac Antrobus, parson of Egremond . . LILLY (WILLIAM)— c««<. for baptizing a cock by the name of Peter . . III. Discovery of several private trans- actions relating to Oliver Cromwell's man- agement, daring the time of the Civil Wars ; more especially that grand secret, who the person was that out off King Charles's head. IV. M'. Lilly's examina- tion before the Parliament concerning the Fire of London ; with some memorable occurrences that happened after the re- stauration of King Charles II. 12°. 1715. 5344 Advertisement prefixed says " The notes and the continuation to the time of his [Lilly's] death, wero the performance of M^ Ashmole." Monarchy or no monarchy in England. Grobner his prophecy concerning Charles son of Charles . . The northern lyon . . and chicken of the eagle discovered who they are . . English, Latin, Saxon, Seotish and Welch prophecies concerning Eng- land, and Europe. Passages upon the life and death of King Charles, ^nigmati- call types of the future state and condition of England . . (Plates.) 4°. 1651. 5345 A peculiar Prognostication . . whether, or no, his Majestie shall suffer death this present yeere 1649 . . 4". n.p. 1649. 5346 LIMERICK. Civil and military Articles of Limerick, exactly printed from the letters patents . . Eeprinted from a copy published by Au- thority 1692. 8°. 1729. 5347 LINDLEY (JOHN) AND PAXTON (SIR JOSEPH). Paxton's Flower Garden. 3 vol. 4". 1850-3. 5348 LINDSAY (ALEXANDER WILLIAM CRAWFORD, LORD) aftbkw. 8iH EARL OF CRAWFORD AND BALCARRES. Letters on Egypt, Bdom, and the Holy Land. 2 vol. 8°. 1838. 5349 " From the Author." Fourth edition. 8°. n.d. (1847). 5350 Lives of the Lindsays ; or, a memoir of the houses of Crawford and Baloarres. To which are added, extracts from the official correspondence of Alexander sixth Earl of Balcarres, during the Maroon War; together with personal narratives by his brothers, Hon. Robert, Colin, James, John, and Hugh Lindsay ; and by his Sister, Lady Anne Barnard. 3 vol. 8". 1849. 5351 Progressioltt by Antagonism : n theory, involving considerations touching the pre- sent position, duties, and destiny of Great Britain. 8°. 1846. 5352 Sketches of the history of Christian Art. 3 vol. 8". 1847. 5353 296 LINDSAY (SIR COUTTS), Edward the Black I'rinoe. A tragedy. 12°. 1846. 5354 LINGARD (JOHN) D.D. History of England, from the first In- vasion hy the Komans. Eourth edition. 13 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1837-9. 5355 History of England, from the first in- vasion by the Eomans to the accession of William and Mary in 1688. Fifth edition. 10 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 5356 Sixth edition. 10 vol. 8°. 1854-5. 5357 Vol. 7 wanting. AND JOHN ALLEN. [Volume lettered Allen and Lingard's Controversy.] 8°. London & n.p. 1826-7. 5358 [Bdmburgli Review.! June 1826. Art. IV. History oi England. By John Lingard. Vol. Vil and VIII. 1823. pp. 9^165. Vindication of certain passages in the fourth and fifth volumes of the History of Eng- land. By J. Lingard. Fifth edition. Reply lo D'. Lingard's Vindication : in a letter to Francis Jelfray (sic~\ from John Allen. Second edition. [No title-page. D'. Lingard's Postscript in answer to D'. Allen's reply, pp. 113-120. Dated (at end) 7 March 1827.] [No title-page. D'. Allen's Postscript, pp. 93-95.] LINTON (MRS. ELIZA LYNN). Witch Stories. Collected by E. L. Lin- ton. 8°. 1861. 5359 LINTON (WILLIAM). Ancient and modern Colours, from the earliest periods to the present time : with their chemical and artistical properties. 8». 1852. 5360 Scenery of Greece and its Islands, illus- trated by fifty views . . with a map of the country. 4°. 1856. 5361 [LINTON (W.).] Plaint of Freedom. [Anon, verse.] 4". Newcastle-upon-Tyne (printed), 1852. (Two copies.) 5362 LISLE (MAJOR JAMES GEORGE SEMPLE), Life of Major .T. G. S. Lisle . . Written by himself (Portrait.) 8°. 1799. 5363 Second edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1800. 5364 Book-plate of John Ardon. LISTER (JOSEPH). Autobiography of J. Lister, of Bradford in Yorkshire . . Contemporary account of the defence of Bradford and capture of Leeds by the Parliamentarians in 1642. Edited by Thomas Wrighf. 8°, 1842. 5365 LISTER (THOMAS HENRY). Granby; a novel. (Portrait.) 12°. n.p. n.d. 5366 Life and Administration of Edward, first Earl of Clarendon ; with original corre- spondence, and authentic papers never before published. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1838-7. 5367 LITERARY. Question concerning Literary Property, determined by the Court of Kings Bench 20 April, 1769, in the cause between Andrew Millar and Eobert Taylor . . 4°. 1773. 5368 Preface signed " [Sir] James Burrow." LITERATURE. Importance of Literature to men of business ; a series of Addresses delivered at various popular institutions. Revised . by the authors. 12°. 1852. 5369 The authors are— G. C. VerplancK, Sir J. F. W. Hcrschel. Benjamin Disraeli [Earl of Beaconsfield], Lord John Manners, Hon. G. S, Smythe, Sir T. N. Talfourd, Professor John Phillips, Earl of CarHsle, Archbishop Whatelv, Charles Knight, [Sir] Archibald Alison, Lord MahoiL [Earl Stanhope], Professor J. P. Nichol, Duke of Argyll, Sir David Brewster, H. Glassford Bell. LITTLETON (SIR THOMAS). Littleton's Tenures, in English. [Edited byH. Eoscoe]. 8°. 1825. 5370 " James Whiteside Gray's Inn August 1829." Pencil notes. LITTON (REV. EDWARD ARTHUR). Church of Christ, in its idea, attributes, and Ministry : with a particular reference to the controversy on the subject between Ilomanists and Protestants. 8°. 1851. 5371 LITURGY. [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 5372 Considerations touching the Liturgy of the Church of England. By John Gauden, Bishop of Exeter. 1661. Acoompt of the proceedings of the Commis- sioners of both perswasions, appointed by his Majesty for the review of the Book of Common Prayer, &c. 1661. Imperfect— one leaf wanting. [No title-page. To the Archbishop and Bishops and their Assistants,commissioned by his Majesty, to treat about the altei-a- tion of tlio Book of Common Prayer. (And) The papers that passed between the Commissioners appointed by his Ma- jestic for the alteration of the Common Prayer, &c.] Imperfect. Petition for peace : with the Reformation of the Liturgy. As it was presented lo the Bishops, by the Divines appointed by his Majesties Commission to treat with them about the alteration of it. 1661. Smcctymuuiis Redivivus. Being an answer to a Book, intituled an humble remon- strance in which the original of Liturgy [and] Episcopacy is discussed and queries 297 LITURGY— c»n(. propounded concerning both. Composed by nvo learned and orthodox divines. Fifth edition. IBBl. "To the Eeader" is sipied "Tho. Manton." Parallel of the Liturgy, with the Mass-Book, the Breviary, the Ceremonial, and other Eomish Eitiials. By Eobert Bayly, n.p. 1061. The Ceremony-Monger, his character. With remarks upon the New-Star-Chamber, or late course of the Court of Kin^s-Bonch of the nature of a libel. And hinting at some mathematical untruths and escapes in the Common-Prayer-Book ; And what Bishops, were, are, and should be; and, concerning Ordination. By E. Hickorin- gill. vm. Letter relating to the present Convocation at Westminster. 1090. Vindication of the two Letters concerning alterations in the Liturgy; in answer to Vox Oleri. By a London Presbyter. 1690. Remarks from the CountiT : upon the two letters relating to the Convocation and alterations in the Liturgy. I68/5. Vindication of a late Pamphlet, (enlitulod, obedience and submission to the present Government, demonstrated from Bp. Ovcral's Convocation-book) from a pre- tended answer. By the author of the lirst pamphlet. 1891. LIVES. Autobiography. Collection of . . Lives . . written by the parties themselves. With brief introductions, and compendious sequels, carrying on the narrative to the death of each writer. Vol. VIII. Lord Herbert and Prince Eugene. [Second Titles.] Life of Edward Lord Herbert of Cherbury. W^ritten by Himself. (Por- trait.) Memoirs of Prince Eugene of Kavoy ; Written by Himself. 12°. 1829. 6373 The date on the title of " Prince Eugene " is 1827. Lives of celebrated Greeks. 12'>. 1845. 5374 Lives of celebrated Romans. 12°. 1846. 5375 Nos. 5374-5. Prefaces signed A. J. H. Lives of Englishmen in past days. Volume Second. I. Walton. Sir H. Wotton. Sir R. Fanshaw. Earl of Derby. Lord (JoUingwood. Sir T. S. RaiBes. Viscount Exmouth. George Herbert ir. Donne. Bishop Ken. Bishop San- derson. (Portrait of Walton.) 12°. n.d. 5376 Lives of eminent British statesmen. 12°. 1831. 5377 Sir T. More (by Sir James Mackintosh) ; Wolsey; Cranmer; AV. Cecil, Lord Bur- leigh. ' Lives of the most eminent foreign statesmen. .0 vol. 12". 1382 [for 1832] -1838. 5378 Vol. 1. Cardinal Amboise, Ximenes, Leo X, Cardinal Oranvellc and Maurice of Saxony, LIVES-co/i'. Barneveldt, Sully, Duke of Lerma, Duke of ONyimo, Lorenzo de' Medici. 2. Cardinal de Eichelieu, Count Oxensticrri, Graspar Count Olivarez, Cardinal Mazarin, 3. Cardinal De Ketz, Colbert, John De Wilt, Marquis de Louvois. 4,. Loujs de Haro, Cardinal Dubois, Cardinal Alberoni, Duke of Ripperda. .■;. Cardinal De rieury. Count Zinzendorf, Marquis of Pombal, Count of Florida Blanca, Duke of (Jhoiseul, Necker. Lives of remarkable youth, of both sexes. (Portraits of the Princess Vic- toria, etcO 12°. 1830. 5379 Edward VI, Lady Jane (Jrey, Pascal, Can- diac de Montcalm, Volney Beckncr, Ad- mirable Cri'-hton, Mozart, Angela de la Moriniere, Sir Thomas Lawrence. Lives and characters of the most illus- trious persons British and Foreign. Who died in the year 1712. viz. Duke of Hamil- ton, Duke of Leeds, Earl of Godolphin, Earl of Renelaugh, Earl Rivers, Lord MohuD, Lieut. General Wood, Arthur Manwariug, Itichard Cromwell, the Dau- phin, Duke de Vendosme, Mareschal dc Catinat . . Also some eircum.stanccs re- lating to the duel between Duke Hamilton, and Lord Mohun . . 8°. 1714. 6380 "Generally attributed to John Le Neve." JjOwndes. [No title-page. Mahomet, Galileo, Kepler, Sir Isaac Newtou (" substantially a translation from that in the ' Biographic Universelle' by M. Biot"), Cardinal Wol- sey, CaxtOQ, Coke, Admiral Blake, Wren, Adam Smith, Carsten Niebuhr.] 8°. 5381 "Writers— J. A. Eoobuek— J. B. D. Bethune — D"". Howard Elphinstone — M". A. E. Thomson Stephenson— E. P. Burke— J. Gorton— H. B. Ker—W. Draper — M". Austin. [Lives.] 8°. and 12°. 1719-59. 5382 History of the life and actions of Gustavus Vasa deliverer of his country. 17.39. Life of Coriolanus the Ilomau General. 1749. Memoirs of the Life and glorious actions of Frederick III. King of Prussia. In which is included a concise History of the glorious atchieveraents of Prince Ferdi- nand of Brunswick against the French in Westphalia. Appendix, containing a succinct account of the person, the way of living, and the Court of the Kinfj of Prussia. TrarLslated from a cuncms Manuscript in French, found in the cabi- net of Field Marshal Keith. By W. &d- mon. (Portrait.) Nottingham, 1759. History of Tliamas Kouli Kan, Sophi of Persia. Translated from tho French. 1740. Imperfect. Life of Madam de Mainlenon. Traublatcd from the French. 1753. Life and Character of the Lady Jane Gi-ay. Second edition. E. Curll, 1719. [Lives.] 8°. 1733-G. 5383 Book-plntc of Eogers Ruding. Life of Robert Price ; one of the Justices of his Majesty's Coiiit of Common-Pleas, (and Appendix and Will). (Portrait.) 1734. Dedication signed " B. C"[urll]. 298 LIVES— COM*. Some private passages of the life of Sir Tho- mas Pengelly, late Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer. "Written by a Lady. B. Curll, 1733. Life of George, Lord Carpenter {and Will). (Portrait.) B. Curll, 1736. Life of that eminent Comedian Bobert ■Wilks. (Portrait.) B. Curll, 173S. Life of M'. John Gav (and Postscript.) (Portrait.) B. Curll, 1733. [Lives.] 8°. [London], n.d. [Portions of the " Standard Library."] .'5384 Memoirs of the life of Colonel Hutchinson, Governor of Nottingham castle and town. By Iris "Widow Lucy. Prom the original manuscript 'oy liev. Julius Hutchinson. Lite of Mrs. Hutchinson. "Written by herself. A fragment. Lives of Donne, "Wotton, Hooker, Herbert, and Sanderson. "Written by Izaak "Walton. Illustrated by numerous Biographical Notices. Life ol Petrarch. Collected from " M6moires pour la Vie do Petrarch," by Mrs. (Su- sanna) Dobson. Illustrated by numerous original notes. Robin Hood : a Collection of all the ancient poems, songs, and ballads now extant, relative to that celebrated Enghsh outlaw : to which are prefixed historical anecdotes of his life. (By Joseph Ritson.) [Lives, etc.]. 8°. v.d. 5385 Life of Sir Isaac Newton. "With an account of his writings. 172S. Life of Sh Rob'. Cochran, prime-minister to King James III. of Scotland. 1731. [No title-page. Daniel de Poe.l Apparently one of " Chambers's Tracts. Historical Memoirs of the hfe of D'. Samuel Clarke. Including memoirs of several of D'. Clarke's friends. By ■William:"Whiston. 1730. MS. marginal notes. New Tale of a Tub. 1790. [Lives, etc.] 12°. v.d. 5386 Life and adventures of Maj'. Alexander Ramkins, a Highland-of&cer, now in prison at Avignon. 1720. Character of a "Whig, under several denomi- nations. The reverse, or the character of a true English-man. 1700. D'. Radcliffle's Life, and Letters. With his "Will. E. Curll, 1716. Churchill's Annals : being a compleat view of the Duke of Marlbrough's life, and glo- rious actions, both in the field and cabinet. Second edition. 1714. Memoirs of the Chevaher de St. George: with some private passages of the life of James II. Never before publish'd. 1712. Neck or Nothing : in a letter to Lord being a Suj)plement to the short history of the Parliament. Also the new scheme which the English and Scotch Jacobites have concerted for bringing in the Pre- tender, popery and slavery. With the true character or secret history of the pre- sent Ministiy. Written by John Duke of . [Plrfarlborough.] 1713. [Lives, etc.] 8°. v.d. 5387 Life of Ambrose Gwinott, the lame beggar man, who in 1734 swept the way between the Mews gate and Spring Gardens, Char- ing Cross. Containing ari account of his being hanged at Deal, for the supposed murder of M'. CoUins. His surprizing recovery ; his voyages, and being taken by the Spaniards, amongst whom he met LIVES— coB<. with the supposed niurdered M'. Collins [etc.] Written by himself. Second edi- tion. 1770. Account of the Mfe, trial and execution of James BoUand, late officer to the Sheriff of Middlesex, who was executed at Tyburn, March 18, 1772, for forgery. With a frontispiece. Second edition. 1772. Life of the celebrated Jeminy Twitcher [4th Earl of Sandwich], n.d. Memoirs of that celebrated comedian, and very singular genius Thomas Weston. 1776. The Vauxhall Affray ; or, the Macaronies defeated: being a compilation of all the letters, squibs, &c. on both sides of that dispute. With an introductory dedi- cation to Hon. Tho. Lyttloton. 177S. LIVINGSTONE (DAVID). Last Journals, in Central Africa, from 1865 to his death. Continued by a Narra- tive of his last moments and sufferings, obtained from his faithful servants Chuma and Susi, by (Rev.) Horace 'W"aller. 2 vol. "With portrait, maps, and illustra- tions. 8». 1874. 5388 LIVIUS PATAVINUS (TITUS). Historiarum ab urbe condita Ubri qui supersunt omnes, ex reoensione Aru. Drakenborchii. Accedunt uotae integrae ex editionibus J. B. L. Crevierii. 4 vol. 8°. Oxon., 1825. 5389 History of Rome. The first eight books. Literally translated, with notes and illustrations, by D. Spillan. 8°. Bobn, 1849. Books nine to twenty-six. Literally translated . . by D. Spillan and Cyrus Edmonds. 8°. 1849. Books Twenty-seven to Thirty-sis. Literally translated . . by Cyrus Edmonds. 8°. 1850. Books Thirty-seven to the end, with the epitomes and fragments of the lost books. Literally translated by "Wil- liam A. M'Devitte. 8°. 1850. 5390 Maps and plans illustrative of Livy . . 8°. Oxford, n.d. 5391 LLOYD (DAVID), Memoires of . those . . personages, that suffered by death, sequestration, deci- mation, or otherwise, for the Protestant religion, and the great principle thereof, allegiance to their Soveraigne, in our late intestine wars, from 1637 to 1660, and from thence continued to 1666. With the life and martyrdom of king Charles I. (Frontispiece.) P". 1668. 5392 State -Worthies. Or, the states-men and favourites of England since the Reforma- tion . . during the reigns of Henry "V"1II. Edward VI. Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth, King James, Charles I. Second edition, ■with additions. (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1670. 5393 299 LLOYD (LEWIS). Field Sports of the north of Europe j comprised in a personal narrative of a re- sidence in Sweden andNorway, in 1827-28. Second edition, with additions. 2 vol. 8". 1831. 5394 LOCH (SIR HENRY BROUGHAM). Personal narrative of occurrences during Lord Elgin's second embassy to China, I860. (Portrait.) 8°. 18Ci). 5395 LOCKE (JOHN). Works. 3 vol. Third edition. (Por- trait and monumental tablet.) F°. 1727. 6396 Vol. 1. Essay concerning Human Under- standing. Letter to Edward [Stillingfleet] Bishop of "VVoroester, conoeming some passages relating to ^551X2/ Q/lf«mfflii Un- derstanding in a discourse of his Lord- ship's. Eeply to;the Bishop of 'Worcester's Answer; Eoply to the Bishop oC "Worces- ter's answer to Second Letter. 2. Considerations of the consequences of the lowering of interest, and raising the value of money. Observations on a paper, en- titled, For encouraging the coining silver money in England. Further observations conoeming raising the Value of Money. Two .treatises of Government. Letters oon- cei'ning Toleration. Keasonableness of Christianity. Vindications of the Reason- ableness of Christianity. 3. Thoughts concerning Education. Para- phrase and Notes on the Epistles to the Galatians, I. and II. Corinthians, Romans, and Ephesians. Posthumous "Works. Letters. Philosophical "Works. "With a prelimi- nary discourse and notes, by J. A. St. John. The conduct of the understanding. Essay on the Human understanding. Examina- tion of Malebranche's opinion of seeing all things in God ; with remarks upon some of M'. Norris's books. Elements of natural philosophy. Some thoughts concerning reading and study for a gentleman. 8". 1843. 5397 "Works. Vol. I. II. Philosophical "Works. With a preliminary essay and notes, by J. A. St. John. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1854. 5398 Essay concerning Humane Understand- ing. In four books. The fifth edition, wilh lai-ge additions. E°. 1706. 5399 The poet Gray's copy, with his autograph— "B Libris.Tho : Gray July 20, 1737"— and that of his uncle " "Will . Antrobus." Also of " W. Nanson Lettsom— Dec'. 1859." A few marginal notes in pencil & ink, MS. additions to the " En-ata," &c. Sixth edition. 1710. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 5400 Essay concerning the true original ex- tent and end of Civil Government. With notes, by Bev. Thomas Elrington. Second edition. 8°. Dublin, 1798. 5401 LOCKER (FREDERICK): London Lyrics. With an illustration by George Cruikshank. 12°. 1857. 5402 Lyra elegantiarum, a collection of some of the best specimens of vers de soci^te and vers d'occasion in the English language by deceased authors. Edited by F. Looker. 12°. 1867. 5403 New and revised edition. 12". 1867. 5404 [LOCKHART (GEORGE).] Memoirs concerning the affairs of Scot- land, from Queen Anne's accession to the throne, to the commencement of the Union . . 1707. Account of the origine and pro- gress of the design'd invasion from France, March, 1708. Reflections on the ancient state of Scotland . . [Anon.] Third edi- tion. Appendix. 8°. 1714. 5405 Key to the Memoirs ... 8°. 1714. '*5405 LOCKHART (JOHN GIBSON). Ancient Spanish Ballads ; historical and romantic. Translated by J. G. Lock- hart. Fourth edition. 12°. 1853. 5406 [Another edition.] With numerous illustrations from drawings by [Sir] Wil- liam Allan, K.A. . . . The borders and ornamental vignettes by Owen Jones. New edition. 4». 1856. 5407 The Ballantyne-humbug handled . . By the Author of Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott. 8°. Edinburgh, 1839. 5408 Life of Robert Burns. 8°. Edinburgh & London, 1828. 5409 Memoirs of the life of Sir Walter Scott. Second edition. 10 vol. (Frontispieces and "Vignettes.) 12°. Edinburgh & Lon- don, 1839. 5410 Life of Sir Walter Scott, abridged from the larger work by J. G. Lockhart. With a prefatory Letter by James R. Hope Scott. (Portrait.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1871. 5411 Theodore Hook : a Sketch. Edition third. [Anon.] 12°. 1852. 5412 [LOCKMAN (JOHN).] Entertaining Instructor : in French and English. Being a collection of ju- dicious sayings, smart repartees, short stories, &c. Extracted from the most celebrated French authors, and particu- larly the books in Ana. By the Author of the History of England by question and answer . . 12°. 1765. 5413 Book-plate of T. Raggett. LOCKYER (STEWART). St. Bartholomew's Day, a Summer's tale, 1572. And other poems. 12°. 1856. 5414 300 LODGE (EDMUND). Illustrations of British history, bio- graph)', and manners, in the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary, Elizabeth, & James I, exhibited in a series of original papers, selected from the MSS. of the families of Howard, Talbot, and Cecil ; containing . . a great part of the corre- spondence of Elizabeth and her Ministers with George, sixth Earl of Shrewsbury, during the fifteen years in which Mary, Queen of Scots, remained in his custody. With notes and observations by Edmund lodge. Second edition. 3 vol. (Por- trait of Lodge and plates of autographs.) 8". 1838. 5415 Life of Sir Julius Caesar . . with Me- moirs of his family and descendants. Illustrated by seventeen portraits . . and other engravings. To which is added, Nunierus Infaustus, an historical work, by Charles Caesar. [Anon.] 4°. 1810. .5416 [Second edition.] 4°. 1827. .''417 This edition has the name of the author on the title-pa^e, is illu.strated by " eighteen portraits "and has the portrait of Sir Julius Caesar as frontispiece. The portrait of Elizabeth Aberdein at p. 76, is wanting in both editions. Peerage of the British Empire as at pre- sent existing . . With the arms of the peers to which is added the Baronetage. Twenty-seventh edition. 8". 1858. 5418 Portraits of illustrious personages of Great Britain. Engraved from authentic pictures . . With biographical and his- torical memoirs . . by E. Lodge. 12 vol. (in 6). 4°. L. P. (Proofs on India paper). 1823-34. 5419 [Another edition.] 8 vol. (Portrait of Lodge.) 8°. Bohn, 1849-50. 5420 LOGIC. Critical Eemarks on [Aldrich's] Artis Logicse Eudimenta, with some considera- tions as to the further improvement of the Science. By a former student of Christ Church. 8°. Oxford, 1850. 5421 Preface signed " 0. B." LOLME (JEAN LOUIS DE). Constitution of England ; or, an account of the English Government : in which it is compared both with the republican form of government and the other monarchies in Europe. New edition, with life and notes, by John Macgregor. 8". Bohn, 1853. 5422 LOMENIE (LOUIS DE). Beaumarchais and his times. Sketches of Erench society in the eighteenth century from unpublished documents. Translated by Henry S. Edwards. 4 vol. 8". 1856. 5423 LONDON (WILLIAM). Catalogue of the most vendible books in England, orderly and alphabetically digested ; under the heads of Divinity, Historj- . . With Hebrew, Greek, and Latin Books, for schools and scholars. The like work never yet performed by anj-. 4°. 1658. 5424 Epistle dedicatory signed " W". London," who was, according to " lowndes," a book- seller and publisher at Newcastle-upon Tyne. At the end is a "Supplement." MS. note by "E. Harwood." LONDON. London. King Charles his Augusta, or City Eoyal. Of the founders, the names, and oldest honours of that City . . Written at first in heroicall Latin verse . . and now translated into English couplets, with annotations. (Portrait of the King.) 4". 1648. 5425 London Anecdotes. Anecdotes of Popular Authors. Pictures and Painters. Anecdotes of the Electric Telegraph. Inventors and Discoverers. 2 vol. 12°. n.d. 5426 London Catalogue of Books, published in Great Britain. With their sizes, prices and publishers' names. From 1814 to 1846. 8°. 1846. 5427 Bibliotheca Londinensis : a classified index to the literature of Great Britain during thirty years. Arranged from and serving as a key to the London Catalogue of Books, 1814-46 . . 8". 1848. 5428 Answer to a scandalous pamphlet, in- tuled, A character of a London Diurnall. 4°. 1645. 5429 [No title-page. The Oxford character of the London Diurnall examined and answered]. 4°. End. 1645. 5430 London Gazette. 58 numbers 1674- 1702. Single and double sheets. F°. 5431 Catalogue of the London.' Library, 12, St. James's Square. Second ^edition. By John George Cochrane. 8°. 1847. 5432 Vol. IL 8°. 1852. 5433 Supplement to the Second Volume . . 8°. 1856. 5434 [No title-page. List of books added to the London Library during the year ending 30thof April, 1861.] 8°. 5435 [No title-page. Report of the Com- mittee of the London Library . .] 1859. 8°. 5436 At the end is a List of books admitted during the year. [No title-page. Report of the Com- mittee ot the London Librarv . . I860.] 8°. " 5437 At the end is a List of hooks added during the year. 301 LONDON— era/. Catalogue of the London Library . . With preface . . and classified index of subjects. Fourth edition. By Robert Harrison. 8°. Sold at the Library, 12 St. James's Square, London, 1875. 5438 London Magazine. January 1820 to December 1824. 10 toI. 8°. 1820-4. 5439 London Magazine. January to June, 1820— January to June, 1822. Vol. I-V. 8°. 1820-2. 5440 London Quarterly Review. Vol. I. (—VI.) 1853-6. 6 vol. 8°. 5441 Paire of spectacles for the citie. 4°. n.p. 1648. 5442 Case for the City-spectacles. 4°. n.p. 1648. 5443 Petition of the gentlewomen, and tradesmens-wives in and about the City of London. Delivered, to the House of Commons, 4"' February, 1641 . The answer which the Assembly sent to them by M'. Pym . . The prophesie of old SybiUa. 4°. Grub Street, 1642. 4°. 5444 Remonstrance of the Shee-Citizens of London. And of . . other the free-borne women of England. Shewing their de- sires for the attaining of a free trade, for the Kings speedie coming to London . . 4°. n.p. 1647. 5445 Universal madnesse : or, a new merry letany. Composed for the City of London . . [verses]. 4°. 1647. 5446 [TVacts.] 4°. 1643-8. 5447 Cunning plot to divide and destroy, the Parliament and the City ot London. Made knowne (at a Common Hall) by the Earle of Nortliumberland, Master Soliioiter, and Sir Henry Vane. 1643. Six speeches spolcen in the Guild-Hall, London. Aprill 9 VM. By Earle oJ "War- wick, IBir Henrv Vane, Eai-le ol Essex, Earle, 6f Pembroke, CoUonell Holhs, and Mastei&ecorder. 1644. Petition of the Lord Major, Aldermen, and Commons of the City of London to Parlia- ment June 27. IMS. n.d. [Tracts.] 4°. 1 643-S and n.d. 5448 [No title-page. Declaration of the treasons practised and attempted by Francis inirookemorton, late ol London, against the Queenes Maiestie and the Eealme.] Act and declaration of the Common Coimcel of the City of London, touching the la,te Insurrection : with an order of Parlia- ment, for a piibliqne thanksgiving, for the great mercy of God in delivering the City 5f London from the late horrid outrage and tumult. 164S. „ , , „ i At the end— Master Marshals Speech, spoken at Guild-hall, London, Octob. 27. 1643. Two Speeches spoken at a Common Hall Octob. 27. 1643. By Sir Henry Vane. By Master Marehall. Wherein is shew d the readvnesse'.ot the Scots to assist the King- donio ana Parliament of England. 16*). LONDON— coH(. Itoraonstrans redivivus ; or an accompt of the remonstrance and petition, formerly presented by divers citizens of London, to the view of many ; and since honoured by the late conspirators, to he placed under their title of Extreame ill Designcs, with the Kemonsti-ance it sclfe. 1643. Petition, and remonstrance of divese citizens of London and inhabitants of Southwarke, to Parliament, upon occasion of their former petition for peace, n.p. 1643. Instructions and propositions drawne up by divers well affected persons in the City of London. Containing incouragements to all good men, to subscribe for the raising of an army of ten thousand men, as addi- tional! forces to the army raised by par- liament, under the command of Bobert Earle of Essex. 1643. LONDONDERRY (ROBERT STEW- ART, 2d marquess OF). Memoirs and Correspondence of Vis- count Castlereagh, second Marquess of Londonderrj'. Edited by his brother, Charles Vane, Marquess of Londonderry. 4 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1848-9. 5449 Vol. 1. Irish RcbeUion. 2. Arrangements for a Union. 3. Completion of tbe lefiis- lative Union. 4. Concessions to Catholics and Dissenters : Emmett's insurrection. Correspondence, Despatches, and other papers, of Viscount Castlereagh. Edited by Charles William Vane, Marquess of Londonderry. Third Series. Military and Diplomatic. 4 vol. 8°. 1853. 5450 LONDONDERRY (CHARLES WIL- LIAM VANE, 3d MARQUESS OF). Narrative of the war in Germany and France, in 1813 and 1814. Second edition. 4°. 1830. 5451 Steam Voyage to Constantinople, by the Rhine and the Danube, in 1840-1, and to Portugal, Spain, &c., in 1 839 . . Corre- spondence with Prince Metternich, Lords Ponsonby, Palmerston, &c. 2 vol. (Por- traits of Prince Metternich, and Sultan Abdul Mehjid.) 8°. 1842. 5452 Story of the Peninsular War. New edition, revised, ■with considerable addi- tions. (Portraits.) 12°. 1848. 5453 LONG (C. E.). Royal descents : a genealogical list of the several persons entitled to quarter the arms of the Eoyal Houses of England. 4°. 1845. 5454 LONG (GEORGE). Tbe Conduct of Life, a series of essays . . 8°. 1845. 5455 Inquiry concerning Religion. 8°. 1855. 5456 France and its Revolutions : a pictorial history. 1789-1848. 8°. 1850. 5457 302 Long (George)— con<. Library of Useful Knowledge. Geo- graphy of America and the West Indies. (Edited by G. Long.) 8°. 1841. 5458 Two discourses delivered in the Middle Temple Hall. "With an outline of the Course [of Lectures on General Juris- prudence and the Eoman Law]. 8°. 1847. 5459 LONG (ROGER). Music Speech, spoken at the Public Commencement in Cambridge, July the 6'^17]4. Third edition. [Lat., followed by English satiric verses.] 8°. n.d. 5460 LONG ENGAGEMENTS. .Long Engagements ; a tale of the Affghan Eebellion. 8°. 1846. 5461 LONGFELLOW (HENRY WADS- WORTH). Poems. Illustrated with upwards of one hundred engravings on wood, from designs by Jane E. Benham, Birket Foster, etc. 8°. 1852. 5462 Poetical Works. New edition, illus- trated with upwards of one hundred de- signs, drawn by John Gilbert, engraved by the Brothers Dal^el. (Portrait.) 8°. 1856. 5463 Aftermath. 12°. 1873. 5464 Ballads and other poems. 8°. 1843. 5465 The Divine Tragedy. 12°. 1872. 5466 Evangeline, a tale of Acadie. Second edition. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1848. 5467 •' John Porster Esq. Prom Ms friend the author. November 16. 1847." Golden Legend. 12°. 1851. 5468 " John Forster Bsq. from the author." [Another edition] . 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1852. 5469 [Another edition.] Illustrated with fifty engravings on wood, from designs by Birket Foster and Jane B. Hay. 8°. 1854. 5470 Hyperion : a romance. Illustrated with nearly 100 engravings on wood, from drawings by Birket Foster. 8°. 1853. 5471 Kavanagh ; a tale. 12°. Boston [U.S.] 1849. 5472 " John Porster from his friend the Author. May 21. 1849." Outre-Mer : or, a pilgrimage to the old World. By an American. 2 vol. 8°. 1835. 5473 John Porster Esq. with the best regards ol the Author. October IS. 1842." Song of Hiawatha. 12°. 1855. 5474 Spanish Student. A Play, in three acts. 8°. 1843. 5475 LONGFELLOW (HENRY WADS- WORTH)— eoni. Voices of the Night. 8°. Cambridge [U.S.] 1839. 5476 [Another edition.] 8°. 1843. 5477 [Another edition.] With illustrations by a Lady (Mrs. Lees). F°. 1850. 5478 AND OTHERS. Poems on Slavery, by Longfellow, Whittier, Southey, H. B. Stowe, &c. 12°. 1853. 5479 LONGINUS (DIONYSIUS). Quffi supersunt Graece et Latine. Denuo recensuit animajdversionihus Toupii Euhn- keuii . . instruxit Benjamin Weiske. 8°. Oxon. 1820. ' 5480 On the Sublime : translated from the Greek. With notes and observations, and an account of the life, writings, and cha- racter of the author. [?By W. Smith, D.D.] 12°. n.p. 1751. 5481 LONGMAN (WILLIAM). Lecture on Switzerland. (Printed for private circulation.) July 1857. 8°. 5482 Lectures on the history of England delivered at Chorleywood: Lecture first (January 5, 1859) from the earliest times to the death of King John. With a map . . n.d. Lecture the Second (January 4, 1860) comprising an account of the feudal system and of the origin of the laws and govern- ment of England. 1860. Lecture third comprising the reign of Henry the third (1216 to 1272) . . 8°. 1861. 5483 L[ONGMAN] (W[ILLIAM]) AND T. (H.). Journal of Six Weeks' Adventures in Switzerland, Piedmont, and on the Italian Lakes. June, July, August, 1856. 8°. 1856. 5484 LONSDALE (HENRY) M.D. Worthies of Cumberland. 4 vol. 8°. 1867-73. 5485 Vol. 1. John Christian Curwen (Portrait.) "William Blamire. 2. Sir James R. G. Grraham (Portraits). 3. The Howards. Eev. K.Matthews. John Rooke. Captain Joseph Huddart. (Por- traits) . 4. "W. Wordsworth. Susanna Blamire. T. Tiokell. Jane C: Blamire. The loshes of "Woodside. Dr. T. Addison. Hugh LeePattinson (Portraits). LOOSE LEAVES. Loose leaves of my Scrap book. By the Author of " Dashwood's Letters." [? — Copland.] [Privately printed] 8°. 1833. 5486 303 LORDAN (C. L.). Colloquies, desultory, but chiefly upon poetry and poets ; between an elder, en- thusiastic, and an apostle of the Law. 8°. London and Eomsey, 1844. 5487 " To Professor Wilson " is signed " C. L. Lordan." LORIMER (JAMES). Political progress not necessarily demo- cratic : or relative equality the true foun- dation of liberty. 8°. 1857. 5488 LOUDON (CHARLES) M.D. Solution du probl&me de la population et de la subsistance . . 8°. Paris, 1842. 5489 LOUDON (JOHN CLAUDIUS). Arboretum et Pruticetum Britannicum ; or, the Trees and Shrubs of Britain . . pictorially and botanicaUy delineated, and scientifically and popularly described; with their propagation, culture, manage- ment, and uses in the arts, in useful and ornamental plantations, and in landscape- gardening; preceded by a historical and geographical outline of the trees and shrubs of temperate climates throughout the world. 8 vol : 4 of letterpress, illus- trated by above 2500 engravings ; and 4 of octavo and quarto plates. 8°. and 4". 1838. 5490 Encyclopaedia of Gardening . . en- gravings on wood, by Branston. New edition, by M". Loudon. 8°. 1850 5491 Self-instruction for young Gardeners, foresters, bailiffs, land-stewards, and farmers; in arithmetic and book-keeping, geometry, mensuration, and practical trigonometry, mechanics, hydrostatics, and hydraulics, land-surveying, levelling, plan- ning, and mapping, architectural drawing, and isometrical projection and perspective : with examples, showing their application to horticultural and agricultural purposes. With a memoir of the author. Engravings. (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 5492 LOUDON (IVIRS. JANE WEBB). Botany for Ladies ; or, a popular intro- duction to the natural system of plants, according to the classification of De CandoUe. 12°. 1842. 6493 LOUIS XIII," KING OF FRANCE. Letter from the King of France to the King of England. Wherein is expressed, his sollicitation for the Kings security in his Kingdomes. His affection to his sister the Queene. Concerning the proceedings of Parhament. A relation of the Queene Mother. Touching the fugitive delin- quents (as the Lord Pinch and others) who fled into Prance. Concerning his LOUIS XIII., KING OF FRANCE— cont. resolution about the Irish affaires. (Wood- cut of the (wo kings at the end.) 4°. Paris printed, London reprinted, 1641. 5494 LOUIS XVIII, KING OF FRANCE. Private Memoirs of the Court of Louis XVni, by a Lady. 2 vol. 8". 1830. (Two copies.) 5495 LOVAT (SIMON ERASER, 13th BARON). The whole proceedings in the House of Peers, upon the impeachment exhibited . . against Simon Lord Lovat, for high trea- son . . F". 1747. 5496 LOVER (SAMUEL). Rory O'More : a National romance. Revised . . by the Author. 12". 1849. 5497 Songs and Ballads. 12°. 1839. 5498 " To Jolin Porster Esn"=. with the Author's comp'*." LOVETT (WILLIAM). Elementary anatomy and physiology . . With Lessons on diet, intoxicating drinks, tobacco, and disease. Ten coloured plates. 8°. 1851. 5499 LOW (REV. .ALEXANDER). Scottish Heroes, in the days of Wallace and Bruce. 2 vol. 8°. 1856. 5500 LOW (HUGH). Sarawak ; its inhabitants and produc- tions : being notes during a residence in that country with H. H. the Kajah Brooke. 8°. 1848. 5501 LOW (SAMPSON). British Catalogue of books published from October 1837 to December 1852 . . Vol. I. — General Alphabet. 8°. 1853. 5502 LOW (SAMPSON) JUNIOR. Charities of London . . 12°. 1850. 5503 LOWELL (JAMES RUSSELL). Conversations on some of the old Poets. 12°. 1845. 5504 Chaucer— The old Dramatists. . . A Pable for Critics ; or . . a glance at a few of our literary progenies (BC". Malaprop's word) from the tub of Dio- genes ; that is a series of jokes by a wonderful quiz. [Anon.] 8°. Broad- way (New York) 1848. 5505 Poems. 12°. 1844. 5506 S04 LOWELL OFFERING. Mind amongst the Spindles : a Selection from the Lowell offering, a Miscellany wholly composed by the factory girls of an American City. With an introduc- tion, by the EngUsh editor [? C. Knight]. 12». 1844. 5507 LOWENSTERN (ISIDORE). Les iEtats-TJnis et la Havane .souvenirs d'un voyageur. 8°. Paris and Leipsick, 1842. 5508 LOWER (MARK ANTONY). Chronicle of Battel Abbey, from 1066 to 1176. Now first translated, with notes, and an abstract of the subsequent history of the estabhshment. 8°. 1851. 5509 LOWRY (J. W.). , Table Atlas . . Index. 4°. n.d. 5510 LOWTH (ROBERT) BISHOP OF LONDON. Life of William of Wykeham, Bishop of Winchester . Second edition corrected. 8°. 1759. 5511 MS. notes. Short introduction to English Grammar : with critical notes [Anon.] 8°. 1762. 5512 LUCAN (MARCUS ANNAEUS). Pharsalia literally translated into English prose, with copious notes. By H. T. Kiley. 8". Bohn, 1853. 5513 LUCAS (RICHARD COCKLE). Kemarks on the Parthenon : being the result of studies and inquiries connected with the production of two models of that building . . Review of the statements and opinions of the principal writers on the subject . . 8°. Salisbury, 1845. 5514 LUCAS (SAMUEL). Charters of the old English colonies in America. With introduction and notes . , ". 1850. 5515 History as a condition of social pro- gress. A lecture . . 12°. 1853. 5516 Secularia ; or, surveys on the mainstream of History. 8°. 1862. 5517 LUCIANUS. Works from the Greek, by Thomas Francklin. 3 vol. (Vignette portrait of Luciau.) 4". 1780. 5518 Dialogues from the Greek. (Trans- lated by John Carr.) 8°. 1773. 5519 LUCRETIUS CARUS (TITUS). Essay on the first book of T. Lucretius Carus De Eerum Natura. Interpreted and made English verse by J. Evelyn. 8°. 1656. 5520 On the Nature of things. A philosophi- cal poem . . Literally translated into Eng- lish prose by Eev. John Selby Watson. To which is adjoined the Poetical version of John Mason Good. 8". Bohn, 1851. 5521 LUDLOW (EDMUND). Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow, Esq ; Lieutenant General of the Horse, Com- mander in chief of the Forces in Ireland, one of the Council of State, and a Member of the Parliament which began on Novem- ber 3, 1640. 2 vol. 8°. Switzerland, Vivay, 1698. (Two copies.) 5522 N". 1. Princess Elizabeth's copy with her Autoj3n*aph. N». 2. In one vol. with Portrait. Third and last part. With . . original papers . . 8". Switzerland, Vevay, 1699. 5523 Second edition. 8°. 1720. 5524 Index imperfect. Three Tracts published at Amsterdam, in 1691 and 1692, under the name of Let- ters of General Ludlow to Sir Edward Seymour, and other persons, comparing the oppressive Government of Charles I. in the first four years of his reign with that of the four years of the reign of King J'ames II. and vindicating the conduct of the Parliament that began in November, 1640. 4°. 1812. 5525 Pretaoe by Francis Maseres. LUKE (JOHN) B.D. Sermon preached before the Company of the Levant Merchants at S'. Olav's Hart-street London, Thursday Decemb. 15, 1664. 4°. 1664. 5526 Dr. Bhss's copy and MS. note. [LUKE (MRS. S.).] The Female Jesuit ; or, the spy in the family. A true narrative of recent in- trigues in a Protestant household. Third thousand. [Anon.] (Portrait of "Marie.") 8". 1851. 5527 LUMLEY (WILLIAM GOLDEN). Act for the further amendment of the laws relating to the poor in England, with the other statutes affecting the Poor Law passed in the parliament of 1 844. With notes . . and the Statutes 8 & 9 Vict. cc. 10,117 . . Third edition. 8°. 1846. 5528 LUNACY. Familiar views of lunacy and lunatic life : with hints on the personal care and management of those who are afflicted with temporary or permanent derangement. 30 5 LUNACY— con*. By the late medical superintendent of an asylum for the insane. 12°. 1850. 5529 [Lunatic Asylums.] 8°. 1870. 5530 SuKgestions and instructions in reference to (1.) Sites: (2.) Construction and arrange- ment of buildings : (3.) plans: of lunatic asylums, issued by the Commissioners in Lunacy. Practical suggestions, in reference to sewer- age, drainage, and water supply of lunatic asylums, issued by the Commissioners in Lunacy. By [Sir] Eobert Eawlinson. [Extracts and cuttings from " Lancaster Guardian," " PaU Mall Gazette," etc.] *5530 LUNN (HENRY C). Musings of a Musician : a series of popular sketches, illustrative of musical matters and musical people. 8°. 1846. 5531 LUSHINQTON (HENRY). A Great country's little Wars ; or, Eng- land, AfFghanistan, and Siude ; being a sketch, with reference to their morality and pohcy, of recent transactions on the north-western frontier of India. 8°. 1844. 5532 The Itahan War, 1848-9, and the last Italian poet (Giuseppe Giusti). Three essays. With a biographical preface by George Stovln Venables. 8°. Cambridge, 1859. 5533 LUSHINGTON (HENRY AND FRANKLIN). La Nation Boutiquiere and other poems chiefly political by H. Lushington, with a preface. Points of War by E. Lushington. 12". Cambridge, 1S55. 5534 LUTHER (MARTIN). Geistliche Lieder. Neue Ausgabe. (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 5535 Letters to Women. Collected by Dr. K. Zimmermann. Translated by Mrs. Mal- colm. 8°. 1865. 5536 Memoires de Luther, eorits par lui-meme. Traduit et mis en ordre par M. Michelet. 2 vol. 12°. Bruxelles, 1837. 5537 Life of Luther. Written by himself. Collected and arranged by M. Michelet. Translated by William Hazlitt. (Portrait.) 8°. 1846. 5538 Table Talk or Familiar Discourse. Translated by William Hazlitt. 8°. 1848. 5539 LUXBOROUGH (HENRIETTA ST. JOHN, LADY). Letters to William Shenstone. 8°. 1775. 5540 o 16506. LYELL (SIR CHARLES). Geological evidences of the Antiquity of Man with remarks on theories of the origin of species by variation. Woodcuts. 8°. 1863. 5541 Travels in North America; with Geo- logical observations on the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia. 2 vol. 8°. 1845. 5542 Second Visit to the United States of North America. 2 vol. 8°. 1849. 5543 LYNAM (REV. ROBERT). History of the Roman Emperors, from Augustus to the death of Marcus Anto- ninus. Edited bj- Rev. John T. White. 2 vol. (Portrait of Lynam.) 8°. 1850. 5544 LYNCH (PATRICK). Pentaglot Preceptor; or elementary institutes of the English, Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and Irish, languages. Vol. I. Containing a complete grammar of the English tongue . . 12°. Carriek, 1796. 5545 LYNCH (THOMAS TOKE). Essays on some of the forms of Litera- 5546 ture. 12° 1353. Memorials of Theophilus Trinal, student. Second edition. 12°. 1853. 5547 LYNCH (W. F.), Narrative of the United States' Expedi- tion to the river Jordan and the Dead Sea. Maps and illustrations. 8°. 1849. 5548 LYNDSAY (SIR DAVID). Poetical Works. A new edition . . With a life of the Author ; prefatory dis- sertations; and an appropriate, glossary. By George Chalmers. 3 vol. 8°. 1806. 5549 LYONS (J. C). Science of Phrenology, as applicable to education, friendship, love, courtship, and matrimony, etc. With illustrations. 8°. 1846. 5550 LYRA. Lyra Apostolica. Second edition. 12°. Derby, 1837. 5551 The Authors— a. J. W. Bowden ; p. Ricliard Hurrell Froude ; y- John Keble ; fi. John Henry Newman ; e. R. I. "^^ilberforce ; ^. Isaac Williams. LYRICS, A Score of Lyrics. 1849. 12°. Cambridge, 5552 306 LYTTELTON (GEORGE, 1st BARON). Works . . now first collected together : ■with some other pieces, neyer before printed. Published by George Edirard Ayscough. (Portrait.) 4°. 1774. 5553 Poetical Works with additions . . Ac- count of his life. (Portrait and illustra- tions.) 8°. 1801. 5554 Memoirs and correspondence from 1734 to 1773. Compiled and edited by Robert Phillimore. 2 vol. 8°. 1845. 5555 LYTTELTON (THOMAS, 2ni> BARON). Letters of the late Lord Lyttelton. 2 vol. Eighth edition of Vol. 1. Third edition of 2. 12°. 1793,2. 5556 "These letters are generally considered spurious, but they were undoubtedly wi-itten by Lord Lyttelton, though pro- bably tampered with by AV. Combe, who published them from his Lordship's manuscripts." Lowndes. According to Halkett and Laing by Combe. LYTTON (EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON BULWER- LYTTON, BARON). Complete Prose Works. Now first col- lected. 12 vol. (Frontispieces.) 12°. 1840-1. 5557 " To John Porster Escl". these volumes are presented — in token of the author's grati- tude for warm friendship, and of his appreciation of genius. Eeby. 26. 1841." Vol. 1. Historical Homances. Hienzi, the last of the Roman Tribunes. 2. Last days of Pompeii. 3. Novels, tales, and Essays. Pelham; or, the adventures of a gentle- man. 4. The Disowned. 5. Devereux. 6. Paul Oliflord. 7. Eugene Aram. 8. Ernest Maltravers. 9. Ahce, or tha Mysteries ; (SecLuel to Ernest Maltravers). 10. Godolphin ; and Pilgrims of the Rhine. 11. Pilgrims of the Rhine ; and the Student. A series of papers. Revised and with additions. 12. Student; and England and the English, , Works. 9 Vol. (Frontispieces and vignettes.) 12°. 1840. 5558 Presentation copies with inscriptions (except "Godolphin"). Rienzi. Ernest Maltravers. AHce. Godol- phin. Pilgrims of the Rhine. Student. England and the BngUsh. Paul OMord. Eugene Aram. Last Days of Pompeii. (Standard edition of Novels and Romances.) 20 vol. (Frontispieces.) 8°. 1848-54. 5569 Rienzi, 1818. Another copy, 1853. Paul Clifford. Pelham, 1849. Another copy, 1863. Eugene Aram. Last of the Barons, 18B0. Another copy, 1863. Last Days of Pompeii, 1850. Another copy, 185a. Go- dolphin (2 copies). Pilgrims of the Rhine (2 copies). Night and Morning. Ernest Maltravers. Part I. Part II. (Alice). 2 vol. (2 copies). Disowned (2 copies). Devereux (2 copies). Zanoni (2 copies) . Leila ; or, the Siege of Granada. And Calderon, the courtier (2 copies). Harold, the last of the Saxon Kings (2 copies). Lucretia (2 copies). The Caxtons. New edition. (2 copies). "My No\el," by Pisistratus Caxton. JSew edi- tion. 2 vol. LYTTON (EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON BULWER- LYTTON, BARON)— coKi. [Half Titles] . Novels. Library edi- tion. 43 vol. 12°. Edinburgh and London, 1859-C6. 5560 Contents the same as N°. B569 wifti the addition of "What will he do with it f By Pisistratus Caxton. 4 vol. (and) A Sti-ange Story. 2 vol. [Works.] (Knehworth edition.) (14 vol.) 8°. 1873-6. [Incomplete.] 5561 Eugene Aram. n.d. (autographs inserted). Night and Morning. Athens its rise and fall. The Caxtons. The Student and Asmodeus at large. Schiller (poems and ballads) and Horace (Odes and Epodes) translated. Pamphlets and sketches (Present Crisis, 1834 — Confessions of a Water Patient— Letters to John Bull- Life and Writings of Paul Louis Courier — Life of Schiller — Causes of Horace's popu- larity — ArtinPiction). Caxtoniana. The Coming Race. Kenelm Chillingly his adventures and opinions. (Portrait). The Parisians, .2 vol. Quarterly Essays (Portrait — Reign of Terror; Goldsmith; Charles Lamb and some of his com- panions ; Grab's Works ; Sir Thomas Browne; Pitt and Pox; P.ym versus Falkland ; Influence of love upon litera- ture and real fife.) England and the English. Poetical and dramatic Works. 5 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1852-4. 5562 Vol.1. Narrative poems, New Timon, &c. 2. King Arthur. 3. King Arthur. Corn- flowers. Earlier poems. 4. Duchess de la Vallifere. Lady of Lyons ; or, Love and Pride. Richelieu; or, the Conspiracy. 5. Money. Not so Bad as we Seem ; or, many sides to a character. Dramatic Works. Now first collected. To which are added, Three odes on the death of Elizabeth ; CromweU ; and the Death of Nelson. 8°. 1841. 5563 Poems. New edition, revised. 8°. 1865. 5564 Miscellaneous Prose Works. 3 vol. 8°. 1868. 5565 Speeches now first collected with some of his political writings hitherto unpub- lished and a prefatory Memoir by his Son. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1874. 5566 Athens its rise and fall with views of the literature, philosophy, and social life of the Athenian people. 2 vol. 8°. 1837. 5567 [No title-page. The Caxtons — a family picture. Blackwood's Edinburgh Maga- zine, 1848-9.] 8°. 5568 The Caxtons a family picture. New edition. 8°. Edinburgh and London. 1853. 5569 Caxtoniana : a series of essays on life, literature, and manners. 2 vol. 8". Edin- burgh and London, 1863. 5570 The Coming Race. [Anon.] 8°. Edin- burgh and Loudon, 1871. 5571 307 LYTTON (EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON BULWER- LYTTON, BARON)— coni. Confessions of a Water-patient . . 12". 1845. 5572 Devereux. 12". 1841. 5573 The Disowned. 12°. n.p. n.d. (Lon- don, 1835). 5574 Eugene Aram . a tale. By the Author ofPelham".. 12°. 1846. 5575 At the end— Eugene Aram ; a tragedy. Eva, a true story, of light and darlcness ; the ill-omened marriage, and other tales and poems. 12°. 1842. 5576 Falkland. By the author of " Pclhani " . . 8°. 1834. 5577 Ismael ; an Oriental tale, with other poems, hy Edward George Lytton Bulwer. Second edition. 12°. 1821. 6578 King Arthur [Poem.] Second edition. 8°. 1849. 5579 Revised edition (Illustrated). 8°. 1870. 5580 " To J. Forster, Esq. Prom the author with kindest regards. Last Days of Pompeii. By the author of'Pelham".. 12°. 1849. 5581 Last of the Barons hy the author of " Rienzi." 3 vol. 8°. 1843. 5582. Lost Tales of Miletus. [Anon.] 8°. (London). n.d. (Strictly private — only twelve copies printed.) [Rough proof.] 5583 At the beginning a sheet of MS. alterations. A few pencil marks on the margins. Lost Tales of Miletus. 8°. 1866. 5584 Lucretia or the Children of Night. By the author of" Rienzi." 3 vol. 8°. 1846. 6585 Money: a comedy . . By the author of " The Lady of Lyons " . . 8°. n.p. n.d. [1840 ?] 5586 MS. alterations in M'. Porster's handwriting. (New edition.) 8°. 1848. 5587 Dedicated to M'. Forster. NewTimon. [Anon.] 8°. 1846. 5588 " M'. Forster. From one who in witnessing Kltely's jealousy, grew jealous of Kitely." New Timon. A Romance of London. Third edition. [Anon.] 8°. 1846. 6S89 New Timon. A Poetical Romance. Fourth edition. Corrected. [Anon.] 8°. 1846. 5590 Paul Clifford. By the author of " Pel- ham" . . 12°. 1838. 5591 i'elham ; or the Adventures of a Gen- tleman. 2 vol. (in one). (Portrait.) 12°. n.p. n.d. (London, 1835). 5592 LYTTON (EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON BULWER- LYTTON, BARON)— coni. The Rightful Heir. A drama in five acts. By the author of " Richelieu " As first performed at the Lyceum Theatre, October 3rd, 1868. 8°. 1868. 6593 St. Stephen's, a Poem originally pub- lished in " I31ackwood's Magazine." [Anon.] 12°. Edinburgh and London, 1860. (Two copies). 5594 No. 1. Presentation copy to M^ Forster with inscription. The Siamese Twins. A satirical tale of the times. With other poems. By the author of " Pelham," &c. (Plates.) 8°. 1831. 5595 Weeds and Wildflowers by E. G. L. B[ulwer]. 8°. Not published. Paris, 1826. 5596 " To J. Forster Esq. from his friend the author as a slight testimony of regard. 1833." LYTTON (EDWARD ROBERT LYTTON BULWER - LYTTON, EARL OF). Chronicles and Characters. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1868. 5597 Clytemnestra, the Earl's Return, the Artist, and other Poems. By Owen Mere- dith Ipseud.} 8°. 1855. 5598 ^Half-title.] Poetical Works, Vol. I. ir. [Title.] Fables in Song. 2 vol. 12°. 1876. 5599 Fables Lyriques traduites de 1' Anglais et precedees d'une introduction par Odysse- Barot. 8°. Paris, 1875. 5600 Julian Fane. A Memoir. With a por- trait. 8°. 1871. 5601 Second edition. 8°. 1872. 5602 Lucile. By Owen Meredith. 8°. 1860. (Two copies.) 5603 New edition. 12°. 1867. 5604 Orval, or the fool of time ; and other imitations and paraphrases. 12°. 1869. (Two copies.) 5605 The Ring of Amasis. From the papers of a German physician. Edited by Owen Meredith. 2 vol. 8°. 1863. 5606 Serbski Pesme ; or. National Songs of Servia. By Owen Meredith. 12°. 1861. 5607 The Wanderer. By Owen Meredith. 8°. 1859. " 5608 Dedicated to M'. Forster. u 2 308 M. M * * * (MADAME). Madame Kecamier : with a sketch of the history of society in France. 1862. 5609 M. (H. E.). Dies Consecrati : or, a new Christian Year with the old poets . . (By H. E. M.) 12°. Chohham, 1855. .^610 M. (I. E.). Confessions of an Etonian. 8°. 1846. 5611 M. (J.). News from Hell, Rome, and the Innes of Court . . (Woodcut on title.) 4°. n.p. 1642. 5612 "This tract has been attributed to John Miltou." Lowndes. M. i.e. MENELLA BUTE (S.) SMEDLEY. Lays and Ballads from English history etc. New edition. 12". n.d. 5613 [MABERLY (JOSEPH).] The Print Collector an introduction to the knowledge necessary for forming a collection of ancient prints. Containing suggestions as to the mode of commencing collector, the selection of specimens, the prices and care of prints. Also notices of the marks of proprietorship used hy col- lectors, remarks on the ancient and modern practice of the art and a catalogue raisonue of books on engravings and prints. [Anon.] 4». 1844. 5614 MABINOGION. The Mabinogion, from the Llyfr Coch o Hergest [red book of Hergest] and other ancient Welsh manuscripts : with an English translation and notes, by Lady Charlotte Guest [now Lady Charlotte Sohreiber.] Parts I. II. VII. 8». Lon- don and Llandovery, 1838-9, 1849. 5615 MABLY (GABRIEL BONNOT, ABBE DE). Observations on the Greeks. Erom the Erench. Second edition. 12°, Lynn, 1776. 5616 MACAULAY (THOMAS BABING- TON, BARON). Biographical Essays. Erederio the Great — Bunyan— Goldsmith. Johnson — Bar6rc. 12°. Leipzig, Tauchnitz, 1857. 5617 MACAULAY (THOMAS BABING- TON, BARON)— con<. Biographies contributed to the Encyclo- paedia Britannica. With notes of his connection with Edinburgh, and extracts from his Letters and Speeches. 12°. Edinburgh, 1860. 5618 Atterbury, Bunyan, Goldsmith, .Johnson Pitt. " Preface " and " Notes " by Adam Black. Critical and Historical Essays, contri- buted to the Edinburgh Review. 3 vol. 8°. 1843. 5619 New edition (complete in one volume) . (Portrait.) 8°. 1850. 5620 New edition. 3 vol. 12°. 1853. 5621 [Another edition.] 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 5622 History of England il'om the accession of James the Second. Tenth edition. 5 vol. 8°. 1854-61. 5623 Tenth edition only of Vol. I, II. Vol. V. edited by Lady Trevelyan. " Sent to me by T. B. M." MS. by Mr. iForster in vol. I. [Another edition.] 8 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1858-62. 6624 Vol. VIII, 1862, edited by Lady Trevelyan. With a memoir of Lord Macaulay, by [H. H. Milman] the Dean of St. Paul's. Samuel Johnson, LL.D. 12°. 1856. 5625 Lays of Ancient Rome. With illustra- tions, original and from the antique, drawn on wood by George Scharf, jun. 4°. 1847. 5626 Miscellaneous writings. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1860. 6627 Preface signed " T. P. E." [Another edition.] 8°. 1865. 6628 William Pitt, [Francis] Atterbury. 12°. Leipzig, I860. 5629 [Reprinted reviews forming a vol. of the " Traveller's Library."] 12°. 1851-5. 5630 Frederic the great— Lord Clive. [Reprinted reviews forming a vol. of the "Traveller's Librarj'."] 12°. 1851-6. 5631 Lord Bacon— "William Pitt, Earl of Chat- ham — Hallam's Constitutional History — Kanke's History of the Popes— Gladstone on Church and State. [Reprinted reviews forming a vol. of the " Traveller's Library."] 12°. 1852-3. 5632 Life and writings of Addison — Horace Walpole — Lord Byron— Comic Dramatists of the Restoration. Speeches, parliamentary and miscel- laneous. 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 5633 Speeches. Corrected by himself. 8°. 1864. 6634 309 MACAULAY (THOMAS BABING- TON, BARON)— con<. Speeches on Parliamentary Reform, in 1831 and 1832. Corrected by himself. 12°. 1854. 5635 MACCALL (WILLIAM). Elements of Individualism. A series of lectures. 8°. 1847. 5636 M'CARTHY (DENIS FLORENCE). Ballads, poems, and lyrics, original and translated. 12°. Dublin, 1850. 5637 Poets and dramatists of Ireland. With an introduction on the early religion and literature of the Irish people. By D. F. M'Carthy. Vol. I. 12°. Dublin, 1846. 5638 MO CAUL (ALEXANDER) D.D. Examination of Bp. Colenso's difficulties ■with regard to the Pentateuch ; and some reasons for believing in its authenticity and divine origin. 8°. 1863. 5639 M'CRIE (THOMAS) D.D. Works. New edition. Edited bj' his son. Part I. Life of John Knox. 8°. Edinburgh and Loudon, n.d. 5640 MC CULLOCH (JOHN RAMSAY). Catalogue of Books, the property of the author of the Commercial Dictionary [J. li. M'Culloch]. (Portrait.) 8°. [Not published.] 1856. 5641 Dictionary, geographical, statistical, and historical, of the various coimtries, places, and principal natural objects in the -world. Illustrated with maps. New edition re- vised, with a supplement. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 5642 Literature of Political Economy : o, classified catalogue of select publications in the different departments of that science, with historical, critical, and biographical notices. 8°. 1845. 5643 London in 1850-1. From the geo- graphical dictionary of J. E. M^Culloch. 12°. 1851. 5644 Russia and Turkey. From the Geo- graphical Dictionary . . 12°. 1854. MACDONALD (ALEXANDER). Letters to King James the Sixth from the Queen, Prince Henry, Prince Charles, the Princess Elizabeth and her husband Frederick King of Bohemia, and from their son Priiiee Frederick Henry. From the originals in the Library of the Faculty of Advocates. [Edited by Alexander Macdonald.] 4°. Edinburgh, 1835. 5646 Maitlaiid Club publicatiou. Facsimiles of the Letters at end. MACDONALD (GEORGE). Within and Without: u, dramatic poem 8°. 1855. 5647 MAC FARLANE (CHARLES). , Cabinet History of England; being an abridgment, by the author, of the chapters entitled " Civil and military history " in " The Pictorial history of England," with a continuation to the present time. 26 vol. 12°. 1845-7. 5648 Camp of Refuge. ["Old England Novelet." Anon.] 2 vol. 12°. 1844. 5649 Catacombs of Rome. Illustrations. 12°. 1852. 5650 Dutch in the Medway. By the Author of ' The Camp of Refuge.' 12°. 1845. 5651 French Revolution. 4 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1844-5. 5652 History of British India. 8". 1852. 5653 Kismet ; or, the doom of Turkey. 12". 1853. 5654 Legend of Reading Abbey. By the Author of ' The Camp of Refuge.' 12°. 1845. 5655 Life of Marlborough . . 12°. 1852. 5656 Our Indian Empire ; its history and present state, from the earliest settlement of the British in Hindostan, to the close of 1843. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1844. 5657 Popular Customs, sports, and recollec- tions of the south of Italy. 12°. 1846. 5658 Romance of Travel. The East. 2 vol. 12°. 1846. 5659 Turkey and its destiny : the result of journeys made in 1847 and 1848. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 5660 M'GAURAN (EDWARD). Memoirs of Major E. M'Gauran . . an ensign in General Loudon's Austrian regi- ment of foot ; volunteer with Admiral Elphinstone on board the Russian squad- ron, on his expedition against the Turks ; Cadet in the Bast-India Company's forces ; ilajor in the service of Portugal ; and a lieutenant in the British army in America In a series of Letters in three [sic] volumes, written by himself. 2 vol. 8°. 1780. 5661 M'GEE (THOMAS D'ARCY). Gallery of Irish Writers. Irish Writers of the seventeenth century. 12°. Dublin, 1846. 5662 310 MACGILLIVRAY (WILLIAM). History of British Birds, indigenous and migratory . . Illustrated hy nume- rous engravings . . Vol. IV. V. 8°. 1852. 5663 MACGREGOR (JOHN). History of the British Empire, from the accession of James the first . . Review of the progress of England from the Saxon period to .. 1603. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 5664 MACHIAVELLI (NICCOLO). Tutte I'opere. Con una prefazione di Giuseppe Baretti. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 4°. 1772. 5665 Discourses upon the first decade of T. Livius translated out of the Italian ; With marginall animadversions . . By E(dward) D(acres). 12°. 1636. 5666 Machivael's [s»e] discourses upon the first decade of T. Livius, translated out of the Italian. To which is added, his Prince. With some marginal animadversions . . By E.D. (Edward Dacres). 12''. 1663. 5667 After the "Prince" is "The Life of Cas- truccio Castracani of Lucca " ; and " A relation of the course talten by Duke Valentine in the murdering of Vitellozzo Vitelli Oliverotto of Fermo " — both by M. History of Elorence, -and of the affairs of Italy, from the earliest times to the death of Lorenzo the magnificent ; to- gether with the Prince. And various his- torical tracts. A new translation. (Por- trait.) 8". Bohn, 1847. 5668 MACHINERY. Working-Man's companion. The results of machinery, namely, cheap production and increased employment exhihited . . Eourth edition. 12°. 1831. 5669 MACILWAIN (GEORGE). Memoirs of John Abernethy . . 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1853. 5670 M'INTOSH (CHARLES). Book of the Garden. 2 vol. burgh and I'jondon, 1853-5. 8°. Ediu- 5671 Vol. 1. Structural with 1073 illustrations. 2. Cultural with 27l» illustrations. MACKAY (ALEXANDER). Western World ; or. Travels in the United States in 1846-47 . . imliuling a chapter ou California. With a new map of tile Uniteil Status . . and a map of California. 3 vol. 8". 184;i. 5672 MACKAY (CHARLES) LL.D. Egeria, or the Spirit of Nature ; and other poems. (Portrait.) 12°. 1850. 5673 " From the Author." Lump of Gold : and other Poems. 12°. 1856. .5674 Scenery and Poetry of the English Lakes. A summer ramble. Illustrations from original sketches . . 8°. 1846. 5675 MACKAY (ROBERT WILLIAM). Progress of the Intellect as exemplified in the religious development of the Greeks and Hebrews. 2 vol. 3°. 1850. 5676 Sketch of the rise and progress of Christianity. 8°. 1854. 5677 M'KENNEY (THOMAS L.). Memoirs, official and personal ; with sketches of travels among the northern and southern Indians . . [Title to vol. 2.] Origin, history, character, and the wrongs and rights of the Indians . . 2 vol. (in one). (Portraits.) 8°. New York, 1846. 5678 MACKENZIE (D. L.). Practical dictionary of English Syno- nyms, alphabetically arranged. 12°. 1854. 5679 MACKENZIE (SIR GEORGE). Essays upon several moral subjects . . Account of his life and writings. 8°. 1713. 5680 MACKENZI-E (REV. JOHN). Mackenzie's Memorials of the siege of Berry including his narrative and its vin- dication. With an introduction and notes, by W. D. Killen, D.D. 4°. Belfast, 1861. 5681 MACKENZIE (KENNETH R. H.). Marvellous adventures and rare conceits of Master Tyll Owlglass. Ne^Iy collected, chronicled and set forth, in our English tongue, by K. p. H. Mackenzie . . Devices, by Alfred Crowquill. 8°. 1860. 5682 MACKENZIE (R. SHELTON). Life of Charles Dickens. With personal recollections and anecdotes; — Letters by ' Boz,' never before published ; — and un- collected papers in prose and verse. With portrait and autograph. 8°. Philadelphia, u.d. (1870). 5683 MACKINTOSH (SIR JAMES). Miscellaneous Works. 3 vol. 8°. 1846. 5684 311 MACKINTOSH (SIR JAMES)— conf. [Auother edition.] Complete in one volume. (Portrait.) 8°. 1851. 5685 New edition. (Edited by E. J. Mackin- tosh). 3 vol. 12°. 1854. 5686 History of England from the earliest times to the final establishment of the re- formation. New edition, revised by E. J. Mackintosh. 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 5687 History of the Kevolution in England in 1688. Comprising a view of the reign of James II. from his accession, to the enter- prise of the Prince of Orange, by Sir J. Mackintosh. And completed to the settle- ment of the crown, by the Editor . . Notice of the life, writings, and speeches of Sir J. Mackintosh. (Bust portrait.) 4°. 1834. 5688 Life of Sir Thomas More. (Portrait.) 12°. 1844. 5689 Vindicise GallicEe. Defence of the French Kevolution and its English ad- mirers, against the accusations of Edmund Burke ; including some strictures on the late production of Mons. de Calonne. Third edition, with additions. S°. 1791. 5690 Fourth edition, with additions. 8°. 1792. 5691 Book-plate of "Pi-anois Place 10 Charing Cross." Memoirs of the life, of Sir J. Mackintosh. Edited by his son, Kobert James Mack- intosh. Second edition. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1836. 5692 WALLACE (WILLIAM) AND BELL (ROBERT). History oflEngland [to the death of Geo. n.]. 10 vol. 12°. 1830-40. 5693 MACKLIN (CHARLES). Jlemoirs of C. Maeklin comedian, with the dramatic characters, manners, anec- dotes, &c. of the age in which he lived : forming an history of the stage during almost the whole of the last century. And a chronological list of all the parts played by him. (Portrait.) 8°. 1804. (Two copies.) 5694 No. 1. Book-plate o£ "fl'iUiam Tooke. MACKNIGHT (THOMAS). History of the life and times of Ed- mund Burke. 3 vol. 8°. 1858-60. 5695 [MACKY (JOHN).] Journey through England. In familiar letters from a oclitloman here, to his friend abroad. [Anon.] 8°. 1714. 5696 MACKY (JOHN)— enn^ Memoirs of the Secret Services of J. Macky ; during the reigns of William, Anne, and George I. Including, also, the true secret history of the rise, promotions, &c. of the English and Scots nobility ; o65cers, civil, military, naval, and other persons of distinction, from the Kevolution. In their respective Characters at large; drawn up by M'. Macky, pursuant to the direction of Princess Sophia. Published from his original manuscript ; as attested by his son Spring Macky. (With ap- pendix of original papers). 8°. 1733. 5697 " Written by M'. Davis an officer in the Customs." MS. on f.p. after "Eevolu- tion." Marginal MS. notes by Swift transcribed by Ritson. Autograph and MS. notes by Kitson. Book-plates of John Treadway, Isleworth, and Thomas JoUey. MACLEOD (DONALD). Life of Sir Walter Scott. 8°. 1853. 5698 " Suppressed." MACLEOD (REV. NORMAN). The Earnest Student ; being ilemorials of John Mackintosh. 12°. Edinburgh, 1854. 5699 MACLISE (DANIEL) R.A. Gallery of illustrious literary characters (1830-1838) drawn by D. Maclise, and accompanied by notices chiefly by William Maginn, LL.D. (Eepnblished from " Era- ser's Magazine.") Edited by WilUam Bates. With a preface, and copious notes . . 4°. n.d. 5700 Shakspeare's Seven ages, etched by E. Goodall, after original designs by D. Maclise. Oblong. Art-Union of London, 1850. 5701 Eight plates (large) with lesS of letter-press in portfolio. Another copy [but plates smaller in size]. 5702 Story of the Norman Conquest. Oblong. Art-Union of London. 1866. 5703 Catalogue of the remaining Works of . . B. Maclise, E.A. . . ■ which will be sold by auction . . June 24, 1870 . . 8°. [London, 1870.] (Two copies.) 5704 With prices and newspaper cuttings. MACLURE (ANDREW). Obsequies of the Duke of Wellington, 17"' November, 1852. Drawn and on stone by A. Maclure. (Portrait.) F». n.d. 5705 MAC MAHON (THORNTON). Casket of Irish Pearls. A selection of prose and verse from the best Irish writers. Edited by T. ilac Mahon. 12°. Dublin, 1846. 5706 312 [MACMICHAEL (WILLIAM).] Lives of British Physicians. [Anon.] (Portraits.) 12°. 1830. 5707 Linaore—Caiua— Harvey— Browne — Syden- ham— EadolHEe— Mead— Huiham—Pringle —Fothergill—Heberden—CuUen— Hunter — Warren — BailKe — Jenner — Parry — Gooch. Some of these lives said to' he by D'. Bisset Hawkins. [MAC MULLEN (JOHN).] Camp and Barrack - Room ; or, the British Army as it is. By a late Staff Sergeant of the 13'" Light Infantry. 8°. 1846. 5708 MACNAUGHT (REV. JOHN). Doctrine of Inspiration : being an in- quiry concerning the infallibility, inspira- tion, and authority of holy writ. 8°. 1856. 5709 MAC NEVIN (THOMAS). History of the Volunteers of 1782. Fourth edition. 12°. Dublin, 1845. 5710 MACPHAIL (MYLES), Publisher. Macphail's Edinburgh ecclesiastical journal, and literary review. ' Vol. I — ■ Vin. 8°. Edinburgh, 1846-50. 5711 MACPHERSON (ROBERT). Vatican Setilptures, selected, and ar- ranged in the order in which they are found in the galleries. 12°. 1863. 5712 MACREADY (CATHERINE FRAN- CES BIRCH). Cowl and Cap ; or, the rival Churches : and minor poems. 12°. 1865. 5713 Devotional Lays. 12°. 1868. 5714 Leaves from the Olive Mount. Poems. 12°. 1860. (Two copies.) 5715 N"'. 67IS, 16. Presentation copies. MACREADY (MAJOR EDWARD NEVIL). Sketch of Suwarow, and his last cam- paign. With observations on Mr. Alison's opinion of the Archduke Charles as a military critic, and a few objections to cej-tain military statements in Mr. Alison's History of Europe. (Edited by an officer of rank.) 8°. 1851. 5716 [No title-page. Sporting Scenes in India. Magazine Articles — probably the « New Monthly." Anon.] 8°. 5717 MACREADY (WILLIAM CHARLES). Macready's Eeminiscenoes and selec- tions from his Diaries and Letters. Edited by Sir Frederick Pollock. 2 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1875. 5718 Presentation copy from M", Macready lo M'. Forster. MACREADY (WILLIAM CHARLES) — cant. [Printed copy of S. T. Coleridge's Wallensteiu marked in MS. for acting by W. C. Macready. Cut up and laid down on 18 folio sides.] *5718 MACVICAR (JOHN G.) D.D. Philosophy of the Beautiful. With illus- trations (by Samuel Edmonston). 8°, Edinburgh, 1855. 5719 MADDEN (D. OWEN). Age of Pitt and Fox. By the Author of " Ireland and its Rulers." 3 vol. Vol. L 8°. 1846. 57.20 Ireland and its Rulers : since 1829. Part the third. 8°. 1844. 5721 " Ascribed also to John Wigsins." Malkett and Laing. MADDEN (SIR FREDERIC). Observations on an Autograph of Shak- spere, and the orthography of his name . . 8°. 1838. (Reprinted from the Archaeologia . . with some corrections). 5722 MADDEN (RICHARD ROBERT). Life and Martyrdom of Savonarola, illus- trative of the history of Church and State connexion. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1853. 5723 Literary life and correspondence of the Countess of Blessington. 3 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1855. 5724 Shrines and Sepulchres of the old and new world : records of pilgrimages in many lands, and researches connected with the history of places remarkable for me- morials of the dead, or monuments of a sacred character ; including notices of the funeral customs of the principal nations, ancient and modern. 2 vol, 8°. 1851. 5725 United Irishmen ; their lives and times. With numerous original portraits. Third series. 3 vol. (Portrait of author). 8°. Dublin, 1846. 5726 MADDEN (SAMUEL) D.D. Reflections and resolutions proper for the gentlemen of Ireland, as to their con- duct for the service of their country, as landlords . . as members of Parliament. [Anon.] Dublin, printed 1738, reprinted 1816. 8°. (Two copies.) 5727 These two copies are not identical (see Preface sisned" R. E. M.") N". 1. "The gift of Thomas Pleasants, [at whose ex- pense this reprint was made] to Rob'. Lannigan Esq"." MADLER (DR. J. H.). Populare Astronomic. 8°. Berlin, 1841. 5728 313 MADOX (THOMAS). History and Antiquities of the Exche- quer of the Kings of England . . to the end of the reign of Edward II. . . Copy of the ancient dialogue concerning the Exchequer, generally ascribed to Gervasius Tilburiensis. Dissertation concerning the most ancient great roll of the Exchequer . . Second edition. Index. 2 vol. 4°. 1769. 5729 MAERUANT (JACOB VAN), Spiegel Historiael of Kijmkronik van J. van M. Vierde deel. (Edited by D. J. and J. Van Lennep.) 8°. Amsterdam, 1849. 5730 MAGNA CHARTA. History and defence of Magna Charta. Containing a copy of the original charter, with an English translation . . introduc- tory discourse, containing a short account of the rise and progress of national free- dom . . the liberties confirmed by the Bill of rights . . essay on parliaments . . 8°. 1769. 5731 MAGOON (E. L.) D.D. Living Orators in America. (Portraits.) 8°. New York, 1849. 5732 Webster — Everett — Clay — Calhoun — Mc Duffie— Cass— Benton— Preston— Oorwin. Orators of the American Revolution. (Portraits.) 8°. New York, 1848. 5733 MAGUIRE (JOHN FRANCIS). Industrial Movement in Ireland, as illustrated by the National Exhibition of 1852. 8°. Cork, 1853. 5734 [MAHONY (FRANCIS SYLVESTER)] Father Prout. Facts & Figures from Italy. By Don Jeremy Savonarola . . addressed during the last two winters to Charles Dickens, being an appendix to his "Pictures" (with " Notice " by Charles Dickens ; and some account of Don Jeremy himself, and of a very famous cotemporary. By an " Eminent Hand.") 8°. 1847. 5735 MAIN (ALEXANDER). Life and Conversations of D'. Samuel Johnson (founded chiefly upon Boswell). With a preface by George Henry Lewes. 8°. 1874. ■ ^'^® MAIN (DAVID M.), Treasury of English Sonnets edited from the original sources with notes and illus- trations. 8°, Manchester, 1880. 5737 [MAINWARING (JOHN).] Memoirs of the life of George Frederic Handel . . Catalogue of his works and observations upon them. [Anon.] (Por- trait.) 8°. 1760. 5738 MAITLAND (CHARLES) M.D. Church in the Catacombs : a descrip- tion of the primitive Church of Rome ; illustrated by its sepulchral remains. 8°. 1846. 5730 MAITLAND (CAPTAIN FRED. L.). Narrative of the surrender of Buonaparte and of his residence on board H.M.S. Bellerophon ; with a detail of the principal events that occurred in that ship, between 24 May and 8 August, 1815. Second edition. 8". 1826. 5740 [MAITLAND (MRS. JULIA CHAR- LOTTE).] Letters from Madras, 1836-9. By a lady. 8°. 1843. 5741 [Another edition.] 12°. 1846. 5742 MAITLAND (SAMUEL ROFFEY) D.D. Chatterton : an essay. 8°. 1857. 5743 MALAN (REV. SOLOMON CAESAR). Aphorisms on Drawing. 8°. 1856. 5744 MALCOLM (JAMES PELLER), Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman Invasion to 1700 ; including the origin of British so- ciety, customs and manners, with a general sketch of the state of religion, superstition, dresses, and amusements of the citizens of London, during that period . . Illustra- tions of the changes in our language, liter- ary customs, and gradual improvement in style and versification, and various par- ticulars concerning public and private libraries. Engravings. Second edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1811. 5745 " Eobert Southey. London 1820." Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London during the eighteenth century ; including the charities, depravities, dresses, and amusements, of the citizens of London, during that period, with a review of the state of Society in 1807 . . Sketch of the domestic architecture, and of the various improvements in the Metropolis. Engrav- ings. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1810. 5746 " Robert Southey. London 1820." 314 MALCOLM (MAJOR-GENERAL SIR JOHN). Sketches of Persia. 12°. 1845. .6747 MALEBRANCHE (NICOLAS). Treatise of MoraKty. Written in French by F. Malbranch [s«c] . . and translated into English, by James Shipton. 8°. 1699. 5748 lyiALHERBE (FRAN9OIS DE). Poesies. 12°. Paris, 1829. 5749 MALINCONTRI (FILIPPO). Filippo Malincontri ; or Student-life in Venetia. Au autobiography. Edited by Girolamo Volpe. Translated . . by C. B. Cayley. 2 vol. , 8°. 1861. 5750 [MALKIN (A. T.)] Historical Parallels. [Anon.] 3 vol. 12°. 1846. 5751 MALKIN (BENJAMIN HEATH). Classical Disquisitions and Curiosities, critical and historical. 8°. 1825. 5752 MALLET [_orig. name MALLOCH] (DAVID). Life of Francis Bacon, Lord Chancellor ofEngland. 8°. 1740. 575.3 Mustapha. A tragedy . . 8°. 1739. 5754 MALLET DU PAN (JACQUES). Memoirs and Correspondence, illustra- tive of the history of the French Revolu- tion. Collected and arranged by A. Sayous. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 5755 MALMESBURY (JAMES HARRIS, 1st earl OF). Diaries and Correspondence, containing an account of his missions at the court of Madrid, to Frederick the Great, Catherine the Second, and at the Hague ; and of his special missions to Berlin, Brunswick, and the French Eepublic. Fidited by his grandson, the third Earl. Second edi- tion. 4 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1845. 5756 MALONE (EDMOND). Inquiry into the authenticity of certain miscellaneous papers aud legal instru- ments, published Dec. 24, 1795, and attributed to Shakspeare, Queen Eliza- beth, and Henry, Earl of Southampton : illustrated by fac-similes of the genuine hand-writing of that noblcmau, and of her Jliijcsty ; a new fac-simile of the hand- writing of Shiikspearo . . 8°. 179C. 5757 MALONE (EDMOND)— co»<. Letter to Eev. Richard Farmer, D.D. ; relative to the edition of Shakspeare, published in 1790, and some late Criti- cisms on that "Work. Second edition. 8°. 1792. 5758 Leaf 39 at end a caucel. Essence of Malone, or, the " Beauties " of that fascinating writer, extracted from his immortal work . . entitled, " Some Account of the life and Writings of Johu Dryden ! ! " (Portrait of Malone inser- ted.) 8°. 1800. 5759 Signed " Mimitius Pelix." Second edition. 8°. 1800. 5760 Another Essence of Malone, or, the " Beauties " of Shakspeare's Editor. 8°. 1801. (Two copies.) . 5761 Second Part. 8°. 1801. 5762 N". 67B9-62. All ascribed by "Lowndes" to George Hardinge. MALORY (SIR THOMAS). La Mort d' Arthur. The most, ancient aud famous history of the renowned Prince Arthur, and the Knights of the Round Table. [Edited by Joseph Hasle- wood.] 3 vol. 12°. 1816. 5763 D^ Bliss's book-plate aud MS. note. Dupli- cate set of proof prints and a curious cancel. MAMMALIA. Sketches in natural history. History of the Mammalia . . With numerous illus- trations. 6 vol. (in 3.) 12°. 1849. 5 764 [MAMMATT (E.).] History . . of Ashby-de-la-Zouch ; with excursions in the neighbourhood. [Anon.] 12°. Ashby and London, 1852. 5765 MANBY (CHARLES W.). Manual of Music : containing the ele- mentary principles of the science, with an introduction to harmony aud thorough bass, etc. 12°. 1847. 5766 MANCHESTER. Catalogue of the Art Treasures of the United Kingdom. Collected at. Man- chester in 1857. [Provisional.] 8°. n.p. n.d. (London, 1857.) 5767 Handbook to the gallery of British paintings in the Art Treasures Exhibi- tion .' . originally published in " The Manchester Guardiau." 8°. 1857. 5768 MANDEVILE (SIR JOHN). Voyages and Travels of Sir J. Mandc- vile : Wherein is set down the way to the 315 MANDEVILE (SIR JOHN)— cont. Holy Land, and to Hierusalem : as also to the lands of the great Caan, and of Pres- tor John ; to India, and divers other countries . . 4°. 1704. 5769 [9MANFIELD (CHARLES).] Interesting collection of curious anec- dotes, scarce pieces, and genuine letters : in which some obscure, but important, historical facts are cleared up . . By a gentleman, formerly of Brazen-Nose Col- lege, Oxford. 8°. 1790. .5770 MANQAN (JAMES CLARENCE). Anthologia Germanica. German An- thology : a series of translations from . . German poets. 2 vol. Vol. II. 12°, Dublin, 1845. 5771 MANGIN (REV. EDWARD). Essay on Light Heading . . 12°. 1808. 5772 [No t.-p. The Inspector. No. I. Saturday, October 22 — No. V. Saturday, November 19, 1825. Anon.] 8°. Bath. (Two copies.) 5773 No more published. Letter to Thomas Moore, on the sub- ject of Sheridan's " School for Scandal." By the Author of " An Essay on Light- Keading," &c. 8°. Bath, 1826. 5774 " M'. E. Montgomery with the writer's best Miscellaneous Essays. 8°. 1851. 5775 MANHATTAN (FRANK) pseud. The Upper Ten Thousand : sketches of American society. By a New Yorker. Kepriuted from Eraser's Magazine. 12°. 1852. 5776 MANLEY (MARY DE LA RIVIERE). Adventures of Bivella; or, the historj- of the author of the Atalantis. With secret memoirs and characters of several considerable persons her cotemporaries . . Done into English from the French. [Anon.] 8°. 1714. 5777 MS. key at end. Memoirs of the life of Mrs. Manley. (Author of the Atalantis.) . . Gompleat Icev Third edition. 8°. E. Curll, 1717. ■' 5778 Fourth edition (?). 8°. 1742 (?). 5779 Memoirs of Europe, towards the close of the eighth century. Written by Eginardus, secretary and favourite to Charlemagne ; and done into Enghsh by the translator of the new Atalantis. 8°. 1710. 5780 Power of Love . . 8°. 1720. 5781 MANLY (JOHN Q.). Pulpit estimate of Wellington : de- livered in Egham-hill Chapel, October 24, 1852. 8°. 1852. 5782 MANN (HORACE). Massachusetts system of Common Schools ; being an enlarged and revised edition of the tenth annual report of the first Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1849. 5783 Letter (inserted) from Geo. T. Ourtis to M'. Porster. Report of an Educational tour in Germany, and parts of Great Britain and Ireland, being part of the seventh annual report of H. Mann, Secretary of the Board of Education, Mass., U.S., 1844 ; with preface and notes, by W. B. Hodgson. 12°, London and Liverpool, 1846. 5784 MANN (ROBERT JAMES) M.D. Guide to the knowledge of Life . . 12°. n.d. 5785 Lessons in General Knowledge ; an elementary reading book, intended to serve as . . introduction to the principles of Natural Science. 12°. 1856. 5786 MANNING (ANNE). Colloquies of Edward Osborne, citizen and clothworker, of London. As reported by y" authour of ' Mary Powell.' 8°. n.d. 5787 Household of Sir Tho". More. Libellus a Margareta More, quindeeim annos nata, Chelseiae inceptus. [Anon.] 8°. n.d. [1851]. 5788 Old Chelsea Bun-house. A tale of the last century. By the Author of ' Mary Powell.' 8°. 1855. 5789 MANNING (JAMES ALEXANDER). Lives of the Speakers of the House of Commons. 8°. 1850. 5790 MANSTEIN (GENERAL CHRISTO- PHER HERMANN V.). Contemporary Memoirs of Russia, 1 727- 1744. First edited in English by David Hume, aud now re-edited . . by a Hert- fordshire Incumbent. [Rev. J. W. Blakesley f] 8°. 1856. 5791 MANT (RICHARD) BP. OF DOWN AND CONNOR. Poems. 12°. Oxford, 1806. 5792 316 MANTELL (GIDEON ALGERNON) LL.D. Medals of Creation ; or, first lessons in Geolog}', and in the study of organic re- mains. 2 vol. 12°. 1844. 5793 Vol. 1. Fossil vegetables, infusoria, zoo- phytes, echinodenns, mollusca. 2. Fossil cephalopoda, Crustacea, tinsects, fishes, reptiles, birds, mammalia, Notes of geological excursions. Petrifactions and their teachings ; or, a hand-book to the gallery of organic re- mains of the British Museum . . Illustra- tions. 8". Bohn, 1851. 5794 Thoughts on Animalcules ; or, a gliippse of the invisible world revealed by the microscope. 8". 1846. ' 5795 Thoughts on a Pebble, or, a first lesson in Geology. By the author of "The Wonders of Geology." Eighth edition ; with thirty-two illustrations. (Portrait.) 12°. 1849. 5796 Wonders of Geology ; or, a familiar ex- position of geological phenomena. 2 vol. Sixth edition. 8°. 1848. 5797 MANUAL OF LIFE. Practical Wisdom; or, the Manual of Life. The Counsels of eminent men to their children. Comprising those of Sir W. Baleigh, Lord Burleigh, Sir H. Sidney, Earl of Strafford, Francis Osborn, Sir Matthew Hale, Earl of Bedford, W. Penn, and B. Eranklin. With the Lives of the Authors. (Page of Portraits.) 12°. 1824. 5798 MANUSCRIPT MEMORIALS. Manuscript Memorials. [Papers from periodicals, etc.] 8°. 1831. 5799 MANZONI (ALESSANDRO). The Betrothed. From the Italian. 12°. 1846. 5800 MAPH/tUS (VEGIUS). Canto added by Maphaeus to Virgil's twelve books of jEneas, from the origmal bombastic, done into English Hudibrastic ; with notes, [by John Ellis] aul Latin text . . 12°. 1758. ' 5801 MARC-ANTOINE. Eeminaeana, on la langue et I'esprit des femmes ; recueil des ruses, bous-mots . . du beau sexe ; suivi d'une notice sur les plus illustres Fran^aises. (Frontispiece.) 12°. Paris, An ix.-l 801. 5802 MARCEL (C). Language as a means of mental culture and international communication ; or manual of the teacher and the learnur of languages. 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 5803 MARCET (MRS. JANE). Conversations on Language, for Children. 12°. 1844. 5804 MAROHMONT PAPERS. Selection from thelpapers of the Earls of Marchmont, in the possession of Sir George Henry Eose [the editor] . Illus- trative of events from 1685 to 1750. 3 vol. 8°. 1831. 5S05 MARGARET OF VALOIS, QUEEN OF NAVARRE. Heptameron. Translated from the French. With a memoir of the Author. By Walter K. Kelly. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1855. 5806 MARIOTTI (L.) pseud, i.e. ANTONIO GALLENGA. Blackgown Papers. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 5807 Historical memoir of Fr^ Dolcino and his times ; being an account of a general struggle for ecclesiastical reform, and of an anti-heretical crusade in Italy, in the early part of the fourteenth Century. 8°. 1853. 5808 Italy in 1848. 8°. 1851. 5809 Italy, past and present. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 5810 Italy, past and present. 2 vol. 8°. 1848. [Another edition of 5810.] 5811 Scenes from Italian life. 8°. 1850. 5812 MARKHAM (CLEMENTS ROBERT). Life of the great Lord Fairfax Com- mander-in-chief of the army of the Parlia- ment of England. With portrait . . 8°. 1870. 5813 MARLBOROUGH (SARAH JEN- NINGS, DUCHESS OF). Private correspondence, illustrative of the Court aud Times of Queen Anne ; with her sketches and opinions of her contem- poraries and the select correspondence of her husband, John, Duke of Marlborough. Second edition. [Ed. by Mrs. A. T. Thomson.] 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1838. 5814 MARLBOROUGH (JOHN CHURCH- ILL, 1st duke OF). Letters and Dispatches, from 1702 to 1712. Edited by General Sir George Murray. 5 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 5815 Manifesto of K. John the second . . with a satyr upon Koyalty, writ by liing nil MARLBOROUGH (JOHN CHURCH- ILL, 1st duke OF).—co}it. John the second . . The whole printed by the special order of King John ; and in- scrib'd to . . John Duke of Marlborough. 8". Sold in Pater-noster-Kow . . n.d. 5816 " A key to tho Manifesto " with which tho book opens, is signed " John Dunton [f by whom the whole book was written "]. [Tracts relating to.] Various sizes. London and n.p. 1710-12. 5817 E«aaons why a certain great G — -1 [Marl- borough] has not yet reoeiv'd the thanks of either ot the two Hoiises of P nt ; short enquiry into those eminent services which make it necessary in some oast St^^n's opinion, why he should receive them, with conjectures on the cause of our late disapointments in Spain. In a letter to the Mayor of St. Albans. Oliver's pocket looking-glass, new fram'd and clean'd, to give a clear view of the great modern Colossus, begun by K. ; carry'd on by K. J ; augmented by K. W-— ; and now finish'd, in order to be thrown down in the glorioijs R of Q.A^ . Sennon preach'd before tho Duke of Marl- borough, at Avenes Le See, September 9. 1711, being the day of thanksgiving for passing the Lines, and taking Bouchain. By Francis Hare, D.D. [aft. Bp. ot Chi- chester]. Bouchain : in a dialogue between the late Medley and Examiner. T). of M b's Vindication : in answer to a pamphlet lately publish'd, call'd Bou- chain. Duke ot M h's Vindication. In answer to a Pamphlet falsely so called. Representation of the loyal subjects ot Albinia. Euflnus : or an historical essay on the favourite-ministry under Theodosius the great and his son Arcadius. Version of part of Claudian's Euflnus. Xo Queen: or. No General. Argument, proving the necessity Her Majesty was in to displace the D ot M borough. A Roman Story. Ancient precedents for modern facts. Story of the St. Alb[alns Ghost, or the ap- parition of Mother Haggy. {.See Nos. 220- History of Prince Mirabel's infancy, rise and disgrace: with the sudden promotion of Novicius. Characters of the old and new favourites of both sexes in the Court of Britomartia. [No title-page. Fate of M. Manlius Oapito- lin'us ; translated from approved His- torians.] 2 leaves. [No title-page. The very case, or the story of John thebutler.] s. sh. The Englishman's thanks to the Duke of Jlarlborough. 3 leaves. [Tracts relating to.] 4°. 5818 [Xo t.p. Reasons why the Duke ol Marl- borough cannot lay down bis commands Signed "H.S."J Snd. 1710. [No t.p. Reasons for a total change of a certain Mfinistry] and the dissolution of the P[arliament]. With a word to the Bank of England.] n.d. MARLOWE OR MARLOW (CHRIS- TOPHER). Works with notes and some account of his life and writings by Eev. Alexander Dyce. 3 vol. 8°. 1850. 5819 "' John Forster, [to whom the edition is dedicafced] from Ales'. Dyce." Pencil marginal notes and markings. New edition. 8°. 1858. 5820 " To John Forster Esq", with A. Dyce's best regards." Works. Including Ids translations. Edited, with notes and introduction, by Lt. Col. Francis Cunningham. 8°. 1870. 5821 AND CHAPMAN (GEORGE). Hero and Leander. A poem. New edition ; with a critical preface [by S. W. Singer.] 12°. Chiswick, 1821. 5822 MARMONTEL (JEAN FRANQOIS). CEavres completes. Edition revue & corrigce par I'auteur. 17 vol. (Portrait.) 12». Paris, 1787. 5823 Nouveaux Contes Moraux. 4 vol. (in 2.) (Portrait.) 12°. Paris, An 9. (1801). 5824 CEuvres posthumes. Imprim^es sur le manuscrit autographe de I'auteur. Me- moires, 4 vol. Il6genceduDuc d'Orleans 2 vol. liOgique. Metaphysique. Morale. Grammaire. Melanges. (11 vol.) 12°. Paris, An XIII.— 1804-1806. 5825 MARRYAT (FRANK S.). Borneo and the Indian Archipelago. With drawings of costume and scenery. 8°. 1848. 5826 MARRYAT(CAPTAIN FREDERICK). Childi-en of the New Eorest. 2 vol., 12°. n.d. 5827 Dog Fiend; or, Snarleyj-ow. By the Author of "Peter Simple" . . 12°. 1847. 5828 Frank Mildmay: or, the Naval Officer. (Portrait.) 12°. n.p. n.d. (London, 1836.) 5829 Jacob Faithful. By the Author of " Peter Simple " . . 12°. 1850. 5830 Japhet, in search of a father. By the Author of" Peter Simple" . . 12°. 1850. 5831 The lung's Own. By the Author of " Peter Simple ".. 12°. 1851. 5832 The Little Savage. In two parts. First edition. (2 vol.) 12°. 1848-9. 5833 M'. Midshipman Easy. By the Author of " Peter Simple " . . 12°. 1850. 5834 318 MARRYAT (CAPTAIN FREDERICK) — cont. Newton Forster ; or, the Merchant Service. ^ By the Author of " Peter Simple" . . 12°. 1838. 5835 OllaPodrida. 12°. 1S49. 5836 Pacha of many tales. By the Author of " Peter Simple." 12°. 1849. 5837 Peroival Keene. (Portrait.) 12°. 1849. 5838 Peter Simple. By the Author of " New- ton Eo[r]ster" .. 12°. 1850. 5839 Phantom Ship. 12°. 1847. 5840 Poacher. By the Author of " Peter Simple." 12°. 1846. , , 5841 Poor Jack. With illustrations by Clark- son Stanfield, E.A. 8°. 1840. 5842 Privateer's-Man one hundred years ago. 2 vol. 12°. 1846. 5843 Kattljn, the Reefer. Edited by the Author of "Peter Simple." 12°. 1850. 5844 Travels and adventures of Monsieur Violet. In California, Sonora and Western Texas. 12°., 1849. 5845 MARRYAT (JOSEPH). Collections towards a history of Pottery and Porcelain, in the 15"', IB"", 17"=, and 18"' centuries : with a description of the manufacture, a glossary, and a list of monograms. Illustrated with coloured plates and woodcuts. 8°. 1850. 5846 History of Pottery and Porcelain, me- diseval and modern. Second edition . . with coloured plates and numerous wood- cuts. 8°. 1857. 5847 MARSDEN (REV. J. B.). History of Christian churches and sects from the earliest Ages of Christianity. 2 vol. 8°. 1856. 5848 [MARSH (CHARLES).] Clubs of London ; with anecdotes of their members, sketches of character, and conversations. [Anon.] 2 vol. 8°. 1832. 5849 MARSH AFT. MARSH-CALDWELL (MRS. ANNE). Emilia Wyndham. By the Author of " Two Old Men's Tales " . . 12°. 1848. 5850 Evelyn Marston. By the author of " Emilia Wyndham " . . 3 vol.. 8°. 1856. 5851 Mount Sorel ; or, the Heiress of the De Veres. By the author of the " Two Old Men's Tales." 2 vol. 8°. 1845. 5852 MARSH APT. MARSH-CALDWELL (MRS. ANNE)— COM*. Protestant Eeformation in France ; or, History of the Hugonots. By the Author of "Father Darcy" . . 2 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1847. 5853 Tales of the first French Eevolution. Collected by the Author of " Emilia Wynd- ham" . 12°. 1849. 5854 B.y Alfred De Vif?ny, Edward Oubliac, and an anonymous 'Writer, The Triumphs of time. The Previsions of Ladv Evelyn ; with the conclusion. By the author of " Two Old Men's Tales " . . 12°. 1849. 5855 Two Old Men's Tales. The Deformed, and the Admiral's Daughter. [Anon.] 12°. 1844. 5856 Tales of Woods and Fields. • A Second Series of " The Two Old Men's Tales." By the Author of "Mount Sorel" . . 12°. Belfast, 1346. ' 5857 MARSHALL (FREDERICK). Population, and trade in France in 1861- 62. 8°. 1862. 5858 MARSHALL (STEPHEN). Letter to a friend of his in the City, for the vindication of himself and his ministry, against that . . aspersion cast upon him by Malignants . . In which letter the accu- sation is answered. And, the lawfulnesse of the Parliaments taking up defensive arms is . . demonstrated . . 4°. 1643. 5859 MARSHAM (SIR JOHN). Diatriba chronologica. 4°. 1649. 5860 Book-plate ol (Di-.) Edward Burton. D'. Bliss's copy & MS. note. MARSLAND (GEORGE). Eegeneration ; or Divine and Human Nature. A poem . . 8°. 1850. 5861 MARSTON (JOHN). Tragedies and Comedies collected into one Volume. Viz. Antonio and Mellida. Antonio's Eevenge. Tragedie of Sopho- nisba. What you will. The Fawne. Dutch Courtezan. [Anon.] 12°. 1633. 5862 This copy has no second title or dedication. Each Play, except the first, has a separate title-page. MARSTON (J. WESTLAND). Gerald ; a dramatic, poem : and, other poems. 12°. 1842. 5803 Presentation copy with inscription. 319 MARTEL (A. DE). :fitude sur I'afiaire de la Machine In- female du 3 nivose an ix. 8°. Taris, 1870. 5554 Presentation copy. Type.s Eevolutionuaires. Etude sur Fouche et sur Lo Communisme dans la pratique en 1793. 8°. Paris, 1873. 5865 MARTEL (CHARLES). Principles of Colouring in Painting. 12". 185.5. 5866 MARTEN (HENRY). Coll : Henry Marten's familiar letters to his lady of delight : Also her kinde returnes. With his rivall R. Pettingalls heroicall Epistles. Published by Edm : Gayton . . With an answer to that letter intituled, A copy of H. Marten's letter in Justification of the Murther of King Charles. 4». Oxford, 1663. 5867 Said to have been christened " Harry." MARTIALIS (M. VALERIUS). Martialis. 12°. End. Venetiis in aedi- bus Aldi . . 1517. 5868 MARTIN (CHARLES). Civil Costume of England, from the Conquest to the present time. Drawn from tapestries, monumental effigies, illu- minated manuscripts, portraits, &c. By C. Martin. Etched by Leopold Martin. A". 1842. 5869 MARTIN (F. P, B.). Memoir on the Equinoctial Storms of March — April, 1850 ; an inquiry into the extent to which , the rotatory theory may be apphed. 8°. 1853. 5870 MARTIN (GEORGE ANNE) M.D. " Undercliff" of the Isle of Wight ; its climate, history, and natural productions. 8°. 1849. 5871 MARTIN (THOMAS). Character of Lord Bacon : his life and works. (Portrait.) 12°. 1835. 5872 MARTIN (W. C. L.). History of the Dog . . 12°. 1845. 5873 History of the Horse . . Appendix on the diseases of the horse, by W. Youatt. 12°. 1845. 5874 MARTINEAU (HARRIET). The Billow and the Kock. A tale. 12°. l84G. 5875 MARTINEAU (HARRIET)— coni. Biographical Sketches. 8°. 1869. 5870 C0BfeK VISCOUNT). History of the principal transactions of the Irish parliament, 1634 to 1666 ; con- taining proceedings of the Lords and Com- mons, during the administration of the Earl of Strafford, and the Duke of Or- mond : narrative of his grace's Hfe col- lected from the papers of Sir Robert Southwell . . Preliminary discourse on the ancient parliaments of that [Irish] Kingdom. 2 vol. 8°. 1792. 6325 MOURAVIEFF (A. N.). History of the Church of Russia. Trans- lated by Rev. R. W. Blackmore. 8°. Oxford, 1842. 6326 MOWATT (ANNA CORA). Autobiography of an Actress ; or, eight years on the Stage. (Portrait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1854. 6327 MOXON (EDWARD). Christmas. A poem. 12°. 1829. 6328 MOYLE (WALTER) Works ; none of which were ever be- fore publish'd. (Edited by Thomas Ser- geant.) 2vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1726. 6329 Whole Works ; that were published by himself . . Account of his life and writ- ings, by Anthony Hammond. 8°. 1727. 6330 Dedication signed " E. C." i.e. E. Curll. 339 MUDFORD (WILLIAM). Historical account of the campaign in the Netherlands, in 1815, under the Duke of Wellington, and Marshal Bluoher, com- prising the battles of Ligny, Quatre Bras, and Waterloo ; -with a narrative of the political events . . down to the surrender of Paris, and the departure of Bonaparte for St. Helena . . Plates. . . from draw- ings made on the spot, hy James Rouse. Plan of the battles, and a map . . 4°. 1817. 6331 Prontispiece—" Portraits of the General Otficers," engraved t.p. and two other plates "drawn & etch'd by G. Oruik- sbank." Life of Eichard Cumberland . . With an occasional literary inquiry into the age in which he lived, and the contemporaries with whom he flourished. (Portrait.) 8". 1812. 6332 Book-plate of Charles Dodd. [MUDIE (C. E.).] Stray Leaves [poems] by C. B. M[udie]. 12". 1872. 6333 MUDIE (JAMES). Historical and critical account of a grand series of National Medals. Published under the direction of J. Mudie . . Em- bellished with outlines of the entire series. 4°. 1820. ■ 6334 [MUDIE (ROBERT).] Modern Athens [Edinburgh] : a dis- section and demonstration of men and things in the Scotch Capital. By a Modern Greek. Second edition. 8°. 1825. 6335 MUFFLING (FRIEDRICH CARL FERDINAND, BARON VON). Narrative of my missions' to Constanti- nople and vSt. Petersburg, in 1829 and 1830. Translated by David Jardine. 12". 1855. 6336 MUIRHEAD (JAMES PATRICK). Origin and progress of the mechanical inventions of James Watt illustrated by his correspondence with his friends and the specifications of his patents. 3 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1854. 6337 MULLER (J.). Principles of physics and meteorology- Illustrated . . 8°. 1847. 6338 MULLER (KARL OTTFRIED). Ancient Art and its remains ; or a manual of the Archaeology of Art. New edition — with numerous additions by F. G. Welcker. Translated from the Ger- man by John Leitch. 8°. 1850. 6339 MULLER (KARL OTTFRIED)— con*. History of the Literature of ancient Greece. Vol. I. Published under the superintendence of the Society for the diffusion of useful Knowledge. [Trans- lated by Sir G. C. Lewis.] 8°. 1840. 6340 Introduction to a scientific system of Mythology. Translated from the German. By John Leitch. 8". 1844. 6341 MULLER (F. MAX). Suggestions for the assistance of officers in learning the languages of the seat of war in the East. With an ethnological map, drawn by Augustus Petermann. 8°. 1854. 6342 . Languages of the seat of War in the East. With a survey of the three families of language, Semitic, Arian, and Turanian. Second edition, with an appendix on the Missionary Alphabet, and an ethnogra- phical map . . 8°. 1855. 6343 MULLIGAN (JOHN). Exposition of the Grammatical structure of the EngUsh language . . 8°. 1852. 6344 MUNDEN ( ). Memoirs of Joseph Shepherd Munden, comedian. By his Son. (Portrait.) 8°. 1844. 6345 MUNDY (CAPTAIN RODNEY). Narrative of events in Borneo and Celebes, down to the occupation of La- buan: fi:om the Journals of James Brooke, Rajah of Sarawak, and Governor of La- buan. Narrative of the operations of H.M.S. Iris. With plates, maps, charts, and woodcuts. 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 6346 MUNK (EDWARD). Metres of the Greeks and Romans. A. manual Translated from the German. By Charles Beck and C. C. Felton. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1844. 6347 MUNTER (DR.). Narrative of the conversion and death of Count Struensee, formerly Prime Minis- ter of Denmark. Tianslated from the German in 1774 by Rev. M'. Wendeborn. With an introduction and notes, by Thomas Rennell. Third edition. 8°. 1826. 6348 MURCHISON (SIR RODERICK IMPEY). Siluria. History of the oldest known rocks containing organic remains, with a brief sketch of the distribution of Gold over the earth. 8°. 1854. 6349 340 MURE (WILLIAM). Critical history of the language and literature of antient Greece. Vol. I — IV. 8°. 1850-3. ' 6350 MURPHY (ARTHUR). Essay on the life and genius of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. 8°. 1820. 6351 Life of David Garrick. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1801. 6352 MURRAY (HON. AMELIA). Remarks on education in 1847. 12°. 1847. 6353 MURRAY (CAPTAIN A.). Memoir of the naval life and services of Admiral Sir Philip C. H. C. Durham. 8°. 1846. 6354 MURRAY (HON. GUSTUS). Prairie-Bird. 12". CHARLES AU- 1845. 6355 Travels in North America, including a summer residence with the Pawnee tribe of Indians . . and a visit to Cuba and the Azore islands. Third edition revised . . 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 6356 MURRAY (EUSTACE CLARE GREN- VILLE). Doine ; or, the National songs and legends of Koumania. 8°. 1854. 6357 Embassies and Foreign Courts. A his- tory of diplpmacy. T5y " The Roving Englishman." 8°. 1855. 6338 Presentation copy with inscription signed "E.E." Pictures from the Battle Fields. By " The Roving Englishman." Illustrations. 8°. 1855. 6359 Roving Englishman. Reprinted from " Household Words." 8°. 1854. 6360 Roving Englishman in Turkey. Sketches from life. Reprinted inpartfrom " House- hold Words." 12°. 1855. 6361 MURRAY (HENRY). Art of Painting and drawing in coloured Crayons ; being a course of instruction for the execution of portraiture and landscape. 12°. 1856. 6362 MURRAY (JOHN). Wellington : the place and day of his birth ascertained and demonstrated. Se- cond edition. 8°. Dublin, 1852. 6363 MURRAY (JOHN) publisher. Murray's Handbooks for Travellers. 8°. v.d. 6364 Belgium and the Rhine. Travelling map. 1852. MURRAY (JOHN) publisher— cont. The Continent. Index map. Fourth edition. 1843. Part II. Eighteenth edition. New maps and plans. 1874. Devon and Cornwall. Third edition. Maps. 1858. France. Maps. 1843. Greece. New edition. Map of Greece, and plans. 1854. Preface signed "G. P. B " [?Bowen]. Ireland. Maps. 1864. Central Italy, including the Papal States, Eome, and the cities of Etruria. Map. 1843. Northern Italy. Map. 1842. Soutliern Italy. By Octavian Blewitt. (Map). 1863. Portugal. Map. 1S55. Hand-book lor travellers in Spain, and readers at home. "With notices on Spanish History. Maps. By Richard Pord. 3 parts (2 vol.) 1845. Travel-talk : a collection of dialogues and vocabularies intended to serve as inter- preter to travellers in Germany, Prance, or Italy. [English, German, Prench, and Italian'.] By the editor of the Handbooks for Germany, Prance, and Switzerland. 1847. Turkey. Maps, and plans. Third edition. 1854. North "Wales. Map. 1861. "Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, and Somersetshire. (Map.) 1856. MUSAEUS (JOHN CHARLES AU- GUSTUS). Select popular tales from the German of Musaeus. With six wood engravmgs, after the German. 12°. 1845. 6365 AND OTHERS. Translations from the German by Thomas Carlyle. Musaeus, Tieek,liichter. (1827.) 8°. 1858. 6360 MUSCUTT (EDWARD). History of Church laws in England, from A.D. 602, to 1850. 8° 1851. 6367 MUSEUM. Museum Criticum ; or, Cambridge clas- sical researches. 2 vol. (in one). 8', Cambridge, 1826. 6368 Museum of Science and Art. Edited by Dionysius Lardner, D.C.L. Illustrated by engravings on wood. 12 vol. (in 6). 8°. 1854-6. 6369 MUSGRAVE (REV. GEORGE M.)^ Pilgrimage into Dauphine ; comprising a visit to the monastery of the Grande Chartreuse j with anecdotes . . from twenty departments of France. 2 vol. 8°. 1857. 6370 Ramble through Normandy . . 8". 1855, 6371 341 MUSGRAVE (SAMUEL). Two dissertations. I. Graoian Mytho- logy. II. Examination of Sir Isaac New- ton's objections to the chronology of the Olympiads. 8°. 1782. 6372 Mitford's cop.y and MS. notes one of which says " edited by T. Tyrwhitt." MUSSELL (FRANCIS). The Prisoners observation by way of complaint. [Verses] (Woodcut.) s. sh. F". n.p. 1645. 6373 At back— Dio Martis 24, Februarii. 1845. Order of Parliament, for the taking away of the Court of Wards and Liveries, &o. MUSTON (REV. DR. ALEXIS). The Israel of the Alps : a history of the persecutions of the Waldenses. Translated from the French, by WiUiam Hazlitt. Engravings. 8°. 1852. 6374 MUTTERINGS. Mutterings and Musings of an Invalid. 8». New-York, 1851. 6375 MYSTERY. The Mystery of God finished; or, the times of the restitution of all things. 3 vol. 8°. Glasgow, 1850. 6376 N. NALSON (JOHN) LL.D. Impartial collection of the great affairs of State, from the beginning of the Scotch rebellion in 1639. to the murther of King Charles I. . . 2 vol. (Frontispiece.) F°. 1682-3. (2 copies.) 6377 NAPIER (ADMIRAL SIR CHARLES). War in Syria. 2 vol. 8°. 1842. 6378 NAPIER (LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR CHARLES JAMES). Defects, civil and military, or the Indian Government. Edited by Lieutenant- General Sir W. F. P. Napier. 8°. 1853. 6379 Lights and Shades of MiUtary Life. Edited by Lieutenant-General Sir Charles J.Napier. Second edition. 8°. 1850. 6380 " The first portion is the production of Count de Vigny. The contents of the second are taken from a pubhcation by M'. Blz6ar Blaze." Preface. NAPIER (LT.-COLONEL ELERS). Excursions along the Shores of the Mediterranean. 2 vol. 8°. 1842. 6381 Reminiscences of Syria, and fragments of a journal and letters from the Holy Land. 2 vol. 8°. 1843. 6382 Scenes and Sports in foreign lands. Illustrated with a series of drawings talcen from nature. 2 vol. 8°. 1840. 6383 Wild Sports in Europe, Asia, and Africa. Illustrated by drawings taken from nature. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 6384 NAPIER (FRANCIS, 9th BARON). Notes on Modern Painting at Naples. 12°. 1855. 6385 NAPIER (CAPTAIN HENRY ED- WARD). Florentine History, from the earliest authentic records to the accession of Fer- dinand the third, Grand Duke of Tuscany. 6 vol. 8°. 1846-7. 6386 NAPIER (MACVEY). Lord Bacon and Sir Walter Ealeigh. 8°. Cambridge, 1853. 6387 NAPIER (MARK). Memoirs of the Marquis of Montrose. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1856. 6388 Inserted in vol. 2 — Letter to Professor Mac- vey Napier, being a reply to " Observations on a Note regarding Professor Napier in M'. Mark Napier's Life of Napier of Mer- chiston." By Mark Napier. Edinburgh, NAPIER (LT,-GEN. sir WILLIAM FRANCIS PATRICK). English battles and sieges in the Penin- sula. Extracted from his ' Peninsula War.' (Portrait.) 8°. 1855. 6389 [Half Title] Major General W. Napier' and Colonel Gurwood. 8». n.d. (1845). *6389 NAPLES. Notes on Naples and its environs ; and on the road to it from Rome. By a tra- veller. 8°. n.d. (1838). 6390 Saggio storico sulla Eivoluzione di Napoli. Seconda edizioue con aggiunte dell' autore. 8". Milano, 1806. ' 6391 At the end, with half-title, "Frammenti di Lettere dirette a Vincenzio Eusso." NARES (EDWARD) D.D. Memoirs of the Life and Administration of William Cecil, Lord Burghley . . with extracts from his private and official cor- respondence, and other papers, now first published from the originals. 3 vol. (Por- traits.) 4°. 1828-31. 6392 342 NARES (REV. ROBERT). Glossary ; or, collection of words, phrases, names, and allusions to customs, proverbs, &c. which have been thought to require illustration, in the works of Eng- lish authors, particularly Shakespeare, and his contemporaries. 8°. Stralsund, Leip- sic [printed], 1825. 6393 NATHAN BEN SADDl, pseud, i.e. ROBERT DODSLEY. Chronicle of the Kings of England. Written in the manner of the ancient Jewish Historians. By Nathan Ben Saddi, a priest of the Jews. (And) Second book of the Chronicle . . from the reign of Queen Elizabeth unto the present time. Written . . 8°. 1740-1. (Two copies.) 6394 No. 1. Portraits of the Sovereigns. Book- plate of Jeremiah Hill. NATIONAL. . . Catalogue of the pictures in the National Gallery : with biographical notices of the painters. Foreign Schools. By Ralph Nicholson Wornum . . Fifty- second edition. 8°. 1869. 6395 Presentation copy from Sir W. Boxall, E.A. with note from him to M^ Porster. Fifty-eighth edition. 8°. 1871. 6396 National Review. "Vol. I— XVIII. 8°. 1855-1864. 6397 NAUDEUS (GABRIEL). Instructions concerning erecting of a Library. Now interpreted by lo. Evelyn. 12°. 1661. 6398 NAUNTON (SIR ROBERT). Fragmenta Regalia. Memoirs of Eli- zabeth, her Court and favourites. New edition, with notes, and memoir of the author . . (Portraits.) 8°. 1824. 6399 • Memoirs of Sir R. Naunton . . with some of his posthumous writings, from manuscripts in his own hand, never before published [By James Caulfield] . (Por- trait.) L.P. F°. 1814. 6400 NAVY. Gloria Britannioa ; or, the boast of the Brittish seas. Containing, a true account of the Royal Navy of England, shewing, where each ship was built . . With every man's pay .. 4°. 1689. 6401 NEAL (DANIEL), History of the Puritans ; or, Protestant nonconformists; from the reformation in 1517 to the revolution in 1688 . . new edition : reprinted from the text of D'. Toulmin's edition, with his life of the Author and account of his writings. Re- vised . . 5 vol. 8°. 1822. 6402 NEAL (DANIEL)— con*. Illustration of Mr. Daniel Neal's history of the Puritans, in the article of Peter Smart, prebendary of Durham, prosecuted for preaching a vile sermon, in the cathe- dral there, July 27. 1628 . . [Anon. By Christopher Hunter.] 8°. Durham, 1736. 6403 NEALE (EDWARD VANSITTART). Feasts and fasts : an essay on the rise, progress, and present state of the laws relating to Sundays and other holidays, and days of fasting ; with notices of the origin of those days, and of the sittings and vacations of the Courts. 12°. 1845. 6404 NEALE (REV. ERSKINE). Life-Book of a Labourer ; or, the Curate . . Second edition. 12°. 1850. 6405 Summer and winter of the Soul. 12°. 1852. 6406 The riches that bring no sorrow. 12°. 1852. 6407 NEANDER (AUGUSTUS). General history of the Christian reUgiou and church : translated from the German by Joseph Torrey. New edition, carefully revised, by Rev. A. J. W. Morrison. 8 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1850-74. 6408 The name of M*". Morrison only occurs on tlie title-pages of the first two vols. History of the planting and training of the Christian Church by the apostles. With the author's final additions. Also, his Antignostikus;; or. Spirit of Tertullian. Translated from the German by J. E. Ryland. 2 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1864, 1851. 6409 Life of Jesus Christ in its historical connexion and historical development. Translated from the fourth German eiii- tion, by John M'Clintock and Charles E. Blumenthal. 8°. Bohn, 1851. 6410 NECK (GERARD VAN). Reflections . . on the Will of G. Van Neck. In which his character is attemp- ted. 8°. 1750. 6411 NECROLOGY. Annual Necrology for 1797-8 Vol. I. 8°. 1800. 6412 NEDHAM OR NEEDHAM (MARCH- AMONT). Interest will not lie. Or, a view of- England's true interest . . in refutation of a treasonable pamphlet, entituled. The interest of England stated. Wherein the author pretends to discover a way, how to satisiie all parties . . by calling in the son of the late King. Against whom it is 343 NEDHAM OR NEEDHAM (MARCH- AMONT—cont. here prored, that it is really the interest of every party (except only the Papist) to keep him out . . 4"". 1659. 6413 Short history of the English Kebellion. Compiled in verse, by M. Nedham ; and formerly extant, in his weekly Mercurius Pragmaticus. 4°. 1661. " 6414 NEEDLER (HENRY). Works. Consisting of original poems, translations, essays, and letters. Puh- lish'd by M'. (William) Duncombe. Se- cond edition. 12». 1728. 6415 NEIL (ROSS). Plays. The Cid. The King and the Angel. Duke for a day ; or, the Tailor of Brussels. 8°. 1874. 6416 NEIL (SAMUEL). Elements of Ehetoric ; a manual of the laws of taste, including the theory and practice of Composition. 8°. 1854. 6417 NEILSON (WILLIAM). Mesmerism in its relation to health and disease and the present state of medicine. 12°. Edinburgh, 1855. 6418 NEISON (F. G. P.). Contributious to Vital Statistics : being a developement of the rate of mortality and the laws of sickness . . showing the instability of Friendly Societies . . In- quiry into the influence of locality on health. 4°. 1845. 6419 NELSON (VICE ADMIRAL HORA- TIO, VISCOUNT). Dispatches and Letters, with notes by Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas . . 7 vol. (Portrait, &c.) 8". 1844-6. 6420 NELSON (ROBERT). Address to persons of quality and es- tate . . Appendix of some original and valuable papers. (Portrait.) 8°. 1715. 6421 NETHERCLIFT (FREDERICK GEORGE). Autograph Souvenir, a collection of autograph letters, interesting documents, &o., executed in facsimile, by F. G. Netherclift, with transcriptions and occa- sional translations, by Kichard Sims. 1" Series. E". n.d. (1865). 6422 Hand-book to Autographs . . With a biographical index, &c. by Richard Sims. 8°. n.d. (1862). 6423 NETTLESHIP (JOHN T.). Essays on Robert Browning's poetry. 12°. 1868. 6*24 [NEVILE (HENRY).] Plato liedivivus : or, a dialogue con- cerning Government. Wherein by obser- vations drawn from other kingdoms and states . . an endeavour is used to dis- cover the present politick distemper of our own, with the causes, and remedies. Second edition. [Anon.] 8°. 1681. 6425 MS. note. Book-plate of S'. Francis Fust. NEVILE (THOMAS). Imitations of Horace. [Lat. and Bng.] 8°. 1758. 6426 Book-plate of W™. Bennet. Imitations of Juvenal and Persius. 8°. 1769. 6427 NEW. New Monthly Magazine and Universal Register. Vol. I— XIV. (Portraits.) 8°. 1814-20. 6428 New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal. Vol. 1-74; 95-110. 90 vol. 8°. 1821-45; 1852-7. 64?,9 Duplicate of v. 26. New Quarterly Review, and digest of current literature, British, American, French and German. 1852-5. 4 vol. 8°. 6430 NEWCASTLE (MARGARET LUCAS, DUCHESS OF). Orations of divers sorts, accommodated to divers places. Written by . . the Lady Marchioness of Newcastle. (Frontispiece with portrait.) F°. 1662. 6431 Second portrait inserted. Presentation copy with inscription. Poems, and Fancies. F°. 1653. 6432 Autograph of Eobert Southey ; and book- plate of liev. Jonathan Boucher. No portrait. NEWCASTLE (WILLIAM CAVEN- DISH, 1st DUKE OF). The Country Captaine, and the Varietie, Two Comedies, written by a person of honor . 12°. 1649. 6433 Plate inserted of (?) the Duke and Duchess of Newcastle. NEWCASTLE. Catalogue of 1848 of the Library of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, with a Supplement. 8°. Newcastle, 1858. 6434 [Newcastle Reprints.] 16 vol. (Wood- cuts by Bewick ; portraits, cuttings, and MS. lists of Contents.) 8°. Newcastle, 1817-57. 6435 Vol. 1. Typography. Hints on the propriety of establisliing a typographical society in Newcastle upon Tyne (by J. T. B[rockett]). Memoir on the origin of printing. By Ealph Willett. Observa- tions on the origin of nrinting by B. 344 NEWCASTLE— cont [6435] "Willett. Biographical Memoirs of "William Ged; including a particular account of his progress in the art of Block Printing. Essay on the origin of printing. Trans- lated from the French of M. De la Kerna, Santander (byT. H.). 2. Typography. Memoir on the origin of printing. By Ralph "Willett. Essay on Stereotype printing. By Thomas Hodg- son. 3. History. Chorographia ; or, a Survey of Newcastle upon Tyne. (By W". G. [? ray. | ) (Eeprint of Tract of 1649.) Account of the great Floods in the rivers Tyne, Tees, Wear, Eden, &c. In 1771 and 1815. Ac- count of the irruption of Solway Moss. Siege of Newcastle by "William Lithgow. (Reprint of Tract of 1645.) 4. History. His Maiesties Passing through the Scots armie, &c. (Reprint of tract of 1641.) Battle of Ploddon Field. [Re- print of B.L. tract, n.d.] Taking of New- castle, &c. (Eeprint of tract of 1644.) Letters of Rev. John Brand, to Mr. Ralph Beilby, of Newcastle. The Scots martch from Barwick to Newcastle. (Re- 5rint of tract of 1644.) Letter of Rev. ohn Brand to M'. John Airey of New- castle, E. Biography. Life and death of Lancelot Andrewes late Bishop of Winchester. (Eeprint of tract of 1650.) Short view of the long Hfe and raigne of Henry the third, King of England. Presented to King James. (Eeprint of tract of 1627.) Eemembrance of the honors due to the life and death of Eobert Earle of Salisbury. (Reprint of tract of 1612.) Memoirs of Sir "Walter Blaokett, of Wallington : with a pedigree of the Calverleys, and the Blacketts. ByJohn Straker. 6. Biography. Memoirs of Marmaduke Tunstall and George Allan, with notices of the works of Thomas Bewick, by G. T. Fox. Life of Ambrose Barnes alderman of Newcastle (by M. R.). Memoir of Thomas Bewick, with a descriptive cata- logue of the works of Messrs. Bewick. Obituaries of James Losh, John Bruce, Eobert Hopper "Williamson, and Rev. Eobert "Wasney. Biographical sketch of Joshua Marshman, B.D.. of Serampore. EecoUections of Ann Fenwick. 7. Biography. Obituary of Charles Newby "Wawn (by J. F.). Obituary-resolutions of the committee of the Newcastle Bible Society. Biographical Sketch of John Trotter Brookett (by J. F[enwick ?]. Biographical sketches of Joshua Marsh- man, D.D. Biographical notice of "Wil- liam Carey. D.D. of Serampore, by Hon. and Rev. William Herbert. Memoir of Eev. John Farrer (by Eev. John Farrer) . Obituary notice of William Anthony Hails (by John Fenwick). Obituary notice of E,ev. John Mack of Seramnore (Hiy J. C. Marshman). Memoir of John Trotter Brockett (by John Fenwick), 8. Numismatic. Episcopal coins of Durham, and monastic coins of Eeading. By Ben- jamin Bartlett. New edition, with notes and illustrations, by J. T. Brockett. Essay on the means of distinguishing antique, from counterfeit coins and medals. Translated from the French of M. Beau- vais ; with notes and illustrations, by J. T. Brockett. Seleota numismata aiirea Imperatorum Eomanorum. Ex museo J. T. Brockett. Eeport of proceedings for Treasure Trove in the Barony of Wark. 9. Poetry. Cheviot : a poetical frapnient. By E. W[hartonf"l. The Cripplu's Peti- tion. Marringe of the Cocjuet and the Alwine. Ele)?y to the memory of the Princess Charlotte of Wales. By William Garret. Lines to Lady Byron. Reply to NEWCASTLE— coiif. [64S5] Lord Byron's " Fare thee well." Elegy to the memory of the Princess Charlotte of Wales. By Mrs. Cockle. Verses on the death of Princess Charlotte. Collected by VVilliam Garret. Elegy on the death of George the third. By Mrs. Cockle. Ad- dress delivered in the Loyal Northum- brian Social Society; 1821, [verses]. By W. G. Thompson. Tersps written at the house of Mr. Henderson, at Longleeford, near Cheviot, during the winter of 1817. The Vicars Will, and Codicil. (Reprint of tract of 1765.) Lines on the death of Lord Byron. By W. G. Thompson. Poetical address at the anniversary meet- ing of the Bums' Club of Newcastle, 1824, by W. G. Thompson. Poetical address at tie anniversary meeting of (he Burns' Club of Newcastle, 1825. By W. 6. Thompson. Lines to a Boy pursuing a butterfly. Epistle to Prospero [Bolivar] by Jos6 Maria de Pando. Translated into English by H. S. 10. Poetry. The Tynemouth Nur, by Robert White. The Collier's Weddins, by Edward Chicken. New edition (and —ode by Eev. Mr. Chicken, Chaplain of the Monmouth, on her beating the Fou- droyant, 1768.) Cowper's E^se Bushes (by D' Eaffles). Elegy to the memory of the Princess Charlotte. By Mrs. Cockle. Second edition. Bums' Club lines, en- titled "The Birth of Burns, a vision." (Prom the Tyne Mercury of Feb. 2. 1830.) Single leaf. Imperii caput et Rerum pul- cherrima Roma. Carmen Latinum, apud Scholam Novocastrenseni nureo nuraismate donatum (by Edward Hnssey Adamson) 1831. Lay of the ReedwaterMinstrel,by Ro- bert Roxby. Jtiveniha quaedam carmina auctore Alexandre Ehind Webster. Elegy on the death of George the third, by Mrs. Cockle. Second edition. Lines addressed to Lady Byron, by Mrs. Cockle. Second edition. Reply to Lord Byron's "Fare thee well," by Mrs. Cockle. Second edi- tion. The Last Interview [^^^th Ferguson the poet.] By Wm. Gill Thompson, 1842. Single leaf. Lines, suggested by the death of Lord CoUing- wood, by Rev. W. N. Darnell. To the memory of Grace Horsley Darling. By W. G. Thompson, 1842. Single leaf. The Sailor's Daughter; a monody on the death of Grace Darling. By Mrs. C. Baron Wilson. Printed at the Northern Adver- tiser ofiice. Single leaf. Graee Darling, by Wilham Wordsworth. Two leaves. Gathering ode of the Fenwyke of North- umberland (by William Richardson). Chasing Cupid, by R. W. Single leaf. 11. Angling. The Angler's progress : a poem (by H. B.). Tyne Fisher's Farewell to his favourite stream oil the approach of winter (by W. G. T.). Pleasure and "Utility of Angling; ^aper read to the Waltonian club of ^Newcastle, 1824, by William Andrew Mitchell. The Fisher's Garland tor 1821. ( 1845.) (By R. E[oxby] ; W. G. T. ; W. G. ; T. D. ; E. N. ; and W. A. C.) . The Auld Fisher's in- vitation to his friend, (by R. R[oxby]). 12. Various. Catalogue of books and tracts, printed at the private press of George Allan. Conchological tables compiled princimlly for the use of shell collec- tors. Bibiiotheca Lusitana ; or Catalogue of books and tracts relating to Por- tugal : forming pai't of the Library of John Adamson (fasciculus primus-sixtus). Lusitania illustrata : notices on Portugal. Literary department. Part I. Selection of Sonnets, "with biographical sketches of the Authors, by John Adamson. Com- parison of the great English and French Revolutions, by William Bainbridge. 345 NEWCASTLE— eo«<. [6435] 13. Various. Lusitania illustrata. Literaiy department. Part II. Minstrelsy. By J. Auamson. Sonnets : by J. Adamson. Sonnet to the Duke of Devonshire, on having the portrait of M" Arkwright en- graved. (By J. A.[dam8on?].) Ooituaiy notice of John Adamson (by E. H. A [damson]). Essay on the cultivation of taste. 'By Eev. Wm. Enfield LL.D. Account of the monument and tablet erected to Archibald Iteed. Account of the statue of Charles II, formerly on Tyne Bridge, Newcastle, with the pasquinade [said to be by ,John Eotheram, M.D.] on its removal to the Exchange, and the reply. Sermon, preached by Jiev. W" Turner, in Hanover Square Chapel, New- castle, 1887, on the death of Jaije, wife of Robert 'Wallace, (and— Lines on the fore- going, by W. G. T.). Presentation of the Scarborough Piers testimonial to William Henry Bvockett. Gateshead, 1846. Hyl- ton Ohaplets. Notice of a tract entitled the Procession at the Northumberland assizes. Gateshead, 1852. (Signed "L.") ■ 14. J. Fenwick, etc. Substance of the speech of John Fenwick at a meeting of Protestant Dissenters of Newcastle, 1826, to take into consideration the propriety of obtaining a new place of sepulture. Obituary of C. N. Wawn. Memorial and Letter of the Baptist (3huroh, Newcastle, to the Senate of Hamburgh, and the King of Denmark, in favour of their persecuted brethren in Hamburgh and Copenhagen. Efiview of Sidney Gibson's history of the Monastery of Tvnemouth, from the Newcastle Guardian, 1846. Review of David Doug- las's History of the Baptist Churches in the North of England, from 1648 to 1845 (from the Newcastle Guardian, 1846). Re- view of Adamson's "Lusitania illustrata. Part II.," reprinted from the Newcastle Guardian, 1846. Review of the narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American slave : written by himself ; re- printed from the Newcastle Guardian J 846. Dialogue between the North and South Tyne Rivers, (by Martha Helen Davidson and Rev. (D',) Geo. Sheplgrd). The Foundation stone : a Hymn, by Stephen Lushington, D.C.L. Letters be- tween James EUis, and [Sir] Walter Scott [on " Border Minstrelsy "J. Genea- logy of the family of RadcLvfle, of Dilston ; compiled by James ElUs. Treasure Trove in Northumberland (edited by John Fenwick). 16. J. Fenwick, etc. Slogans of the north of England. By Michael Aislabie Denham. Observations on martial mottos. By W. Hylton Longstaffle. Procession at the Northumberland Assizes. Inscription on a tablet [to Edward Fenwick] in the Abbey Church of Hexham. Notice of Longstaffe's Richmond, extracted from the Gateshead Observer, 1862. Protest of certain Lords against the bill of attainder of Sir John Fenwick. Sketch of the ship-boy Ufe of John Fenwick. Obits of members of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle, noticed in the reports of the committee of the Society between 1844- 16 Various. The Snow shroud : or the lost bairn o'Biddleston Edge (hy R. C. CFoxe]). Ballads from the Portugueze translated and vcrsifled by J. A. [? Adam- son] and R. 0. C[oxe]. Lenore. From tiie German of Btirger (by W.H. C.fharl- tonl). Christmas Carol tor 1847 (by B. Hodges). The Martyr's child. Derwent Bank, [verses.] Siege of Malta : a frag- ment of the history of the order of St. John of Jerusalem. By a knight of the renovated order [D' Glover]. Life of Mrs. Dorothy Lawson, of St. Anthonys, near Newcastle, (by William Palmes or Palmer • NEWCASTLE— co«<. [C43.'i] edited by G. Bouchier Richardson). Songe made in Edwarde the fourthe his tyme of ye Battele of Hexliammc, 1464. Memorial of the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle, to the Town Council, relative to the restoration of the Norman Keep of the Castle of that town. Banquet of the Society of Antiquaries (from the New- castle Journal, 1848). Society of Anti- quaries, and the Castle of Newcastle (from the Newcastle ,lournal, 1845). Outlines of five Lectures on Castellated architec- ture. By Eev. J. C. Bruce. NEW ZEALAND. Hand-book for New Zealand . . com- piled for the use of intending colonists. By a late magistrate of the colony . . 12°. 1848. 6436 NEWELL (REV. ROBERT HASELL). The Zoology of the English Poets, cor- rected by the writings of modem naturalists. 12°. 1845. 6437 [NEWMAN (EDWARD).] Letters of Eusticus on the Natural History of Godalming . 8°. 1849. 6438 NEWMAN (FRANCIS WILLIAM). Catholic Union : essays towards a Church of the future, as the organization _of philanthropy. 8°. 1854. 6439 History of the Hebrew Monarchy from the administration of Samuel to the Babylonish Captivity [Anon.] 8°. 1847. 6440 Second edition. 8°. 1853. 6441 Lectures on Political Economy. 8°. 1851. 6442 Phases of Faith ; or, passages from the history of my creed. 8°. 1850. 6443 Regal Eome : an introduction to Eoman History. 8°. 1852. 6444 " From the Author." The Soul, her sorrows and her aspira- tions : an essay towards the natural history of the sou], as the true basis of theology. 8°. 1849. 6445 6446 Second edition. 8°. 1849. [NEWMAN (JEREMIAH WHIT- AKER).] Lounger's common-place book : or miscellaneous collections in history, criti- cisms, biographj', poetry, and romance [Anon.] 2 vol. &•>. 1838. 6447 NEWMAN (JOHN HENRY) CARDI- NAL. Apologia pro vita sua : being a reply to a pamphlet entitled " What, then, does D'. Newman mean?" [bj' C. Kingsley]. 8°. 1864. 6448 346 NEWMAN (JOHN HENRY) CARDI- NAL— coHf. Discussions and arguments on various subjects. 8". 1872. 6449 How to accomplish it — Patristical idea of Antichrist — Holy Scripture in its relation to the Catholic creed — Tamwortti Reading Eioom — Who's to blame P — Internal argu- ment for Christianity. Historical SItetelies. Rise and progress of Universities. Northmen and Normans in England and Ireland. Medieval Oxford. Convocation of Canterbury. 8°. 1872. 6450 Historical Sketches. Cbuvch of the Fathers. St. Chrysostom. Theodoret. Mission of St. Benedict. Benedictine Schools. 8°. 1873. 6451 Parochial sermons. 3 vol. 8». 1835-6. 6452 Vol. I. Second edition. NEWMAN (W. A.) DEAN OF CAPE TOWN. Biographical Memoir of John Montagu. "With a sketch of public affairs connected with the Cape of Good Hope, during his administration as Colonial Secretary, 1843 to 1853. (Portrait). 8°. London and Cape Town, 1855. 6453 NEWS-SHEETS. [Various News-sheets] lp79-1741.' Single sheets (except two). 6454 Enghsh Intelligencer. Num. 1. 16Y9. Mer- curius Anglious. Numb. 6. 1679. (2 copies) 2 leaves. Weekly Discovery of the Mystery of Iniquity. Numb. 10. 1681, Impartial Protestant Mercury. Numb. 17, 1681. Loyal Protestant. Numb. 19 & 48, 1682. Conventicle-Courant. Numb. 21. 1682. Orange Gazette. Numb. 9. 168f, London Mercury. Numb. 12. 1689. Post Boy. Numb. 251. 1696. Post Man, Numb. 1000. 1702. Country Journal N". 120. 1728. Daily Gazetteer. Numb, 1739. 1741. S leaves. NEWTON (SIR ISAAC). Thirteen Letters to John Covel, CD. Vice-Chancellor [of Cambridge] . (Edited by Dawson Turner.) 8°. Norwich, 1848. 6455 Privately printed. "Prom his old friend the Editor.'' Universal Arithmetick : or, a treatise of arithmetical composition and resolution. Written in Latin by Sir I. Newton. Trans- lated by the late M'. Ralphsou ; and re- vised and corrected by Mr. Cunn. To which is added, a treatise upon the measures of Ratios, by James Maguire. The whole illustrated and explained, in a series of notes, by Rev. Theaker Wilder, D.D. 8°. 1769. 6456 Commentaries on the Principia of Sir I.Newton, respecting, his theory that the forces of the gravitation of the planets are inversely as the squares of their mean NEWTON (SIR ISAAC)— eoK<. distances frorii the sun . . By the author of " A new theory of gravitation," &c. 8°. 1846. 6457 NIBELUNGENLIED. Fall of the Nibelungers, otherwise the book of Kriemhild : a translation of the Nibelunge N6t or Nibelungenlied. By William Nanson Lettsom. 8°. 1850. 6458 NICCOLINI (GIOVANNI BATTISTA). Arnold of Brescia, a tragedy : trans- lated by Theodosia Garrow. 8°. 1846. 6459 NICHOL (JOHN PRINGLE). Architecture of the Heavens. (Illus- trated). 8°. 1850. 6460 Ninth edition. Illustrated. 8°. 1851. 6461 Memorials from Ben Rhydding : con- cerning the place, its people, its cures. [Anon.] 8°. 1852. 6462 Planet Neptune . . 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1848. 6463 Stellar Universe : views of its arrange- ments, motions, and evolutions. 12°. Edin- burgh and London, 1848. 6464 Thoughts on some important points relating to the System of the World. 8°. Edinburgh and Loudon, 1848. 6465 NICHOLLS (SIR GEORGE). History of the English Poor Law, in connexion with the legislation and other circumstances affecting the condition of the people. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 646G NICHOLLS (JOHN). Recollections and reflections, personal and political, as connected with public affairs, during the reign of George III. Second edition. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1822. 6467 Book-plate of Charles Dodd. NICHOLS (JOHN). Biographical anecdotes of William Hogarth ; with a Catalogue of his Works chronologically arranged ; and occasionnl remarks. [Anon. Adv. signed " J. N."] Second edition. 8°. 1782. 6468 "Sir Edwm Landseer E.A. with T. H. Hills' kind regards. March 23 1869." Anecdotes of William Hogarth, written by Himself : with essays on his life and genius, and criticisms on his works, selected from Walpole, Gilpin, J. Ireland, Lamb, Phillips, and others . . Catalogue of his prints ; account of their variations, and principal copies ; lists of paintings, draw- ings, &c. (Edited by J. B.Nichols). 8°. 1833. 6469 347 NICHOLS (JOHN)— coni. | Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century ; comprizing biographical memoirs of William Bowyer, printer, and many of his learned friends ; an incidental view of the progress and advancement of literature ' in this kingdom during the last century ; and biographical anecdotes of . . eminent ! writers and ingenious artists ; with Index 9 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1812-15. 6470 ! Select collection of Poems : with notes, biographical and historical. (Portraits.^ ' 8 vol. 12°. 1780-1. 6471 New title-page to the four last vols. (I— IT) with the date 1781. AND NICHOLS (JOHN BOW- YER). Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century. Consisting of authentic memoirs and original letters of eminent persons ; and intended as a sequel to the Literary Anecdotes. 7 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1817-48. 6472 NICHOLSON (ASENATH). Ireland's welcome to the stranger : or, excursions through Ireland, in 1844 and 1845, for the purpose of personally in- vestigating the condition of the poor. 8°. 1847. 6473 Lights and Shades of Ireland. In three parts. Part I. Early History. Part II. Saints, Kings, and Poets, of the early Ages. Part III. The Eamine of 1847-9. 8°. 1850. 6474 NICOLAS (SIR NICHOLAS HARRIS). Chronology of History, containing tables, calculations, and statements, indispensable for ascertaining the dates of historical events, and of public and private docu- ments, from the earliest periods to the present time. 12°. 1833. 6475 History of the Eoyal Navy, from the earliest times to the wars of the French revolution. Vol. 1 and 2 [No more pub- lished], 8'. 1847. 6476 Letter to the Duke of Wellington, _ on the propriety and legality of creating Peers for life : with precedents [Anon.] Printed for private circulation. 8°. 1830. 6477 Book-plate of C. P. Gwilt. Second edition. 8°. [Published]. 1830. 6478 Memoirs of the life and times of Sir Christopher Batton, Vice-Chamberlain and Lord Chancellor to Queen Elizabeth. Including his correspondence with the Queen . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. 6479 Memoirs and remains of Lady Jane Grey. (Portrait.) New edition. L.P. 8°. 1831. ®'*^° New edition. 8°. 1832. 6481 NICOLAS (SIR NICHOLAS HARRIS) — rfnit. Observations on the clauses containing grants of precedency in patents of Peer- age : with remarks on the statute 31 Henry VIII. for placing the Lords. 8°. (London, printed.) n.d. 6482 Pp. ccii— ocxlvi. Privy purse expenses of Elizabeth of York : Wardrobe accounts of Edward the fourth. Memoir of Elizabeth of York, and notes. 8°. 1830. 6483 Privy Purse expences of King Henry the eighth, from November 1529 to De- cember 1532 : with . . notes. 8°. 1827. 0484 Synopsis of the peerage of England ; exhibiting . . the date of creation, descent, and present state of every title of peerage which has existed in this country since the conquest. 2 vol. 12°. 1825. 6485 Historic peerage of England . . Being a new edition of the ' Synopsis of the peerage of England,' by Sir H. Nicolas. Bevised . . by William Courthope. 8°. 1857. 6486 [Pamphlets.] 8°. 1830-1. 6487 Observations on the state of historical lite- rature, and on the Society of Antiquaries, and other institutions for its advancement in England ; with remarks on Record oflBces, and on the proceedings of the E-e- cord Commission. Book-plate of Joseph Gwilt. Remarks in reply to a pamphlet by [Sir] N. H. Nicolas and entitled Observations on the state of historical literature," etc. By Francis [aft. Sir Prancis] Palgrave. Ejefutation of M''. Palgrave's " Remarks in reply to ' Observations on the state of His- torical Literature ' ". Additional facts ■ relative to the Record Commission, and Record Offices. fTwo copies.) NICOLAY (REV. C. G.). Oregon Territory : a geographical and physical account of that country and its inhabitants ; with outlines of its history and discovery. 12°. 1846. 6488 NICOLINI (G. B.). History of the Jesuits . . (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1854. 6489 History of the Pontificate of Pius the ninth ; including a narrative of the political movements in Italy during the last five years. 12°. Edinburgh, 1851. 6490 NICOLL (ROBERT). Poems. Second edition : with numerous additions, and a memoir of the author. 12°. Edinburgh, 1842. 6491 Poems and Lyrics. With a Memoir of the Author. Eourth edition. 12°. Glas- gow, etc., 1852. 6492 348 NICOLSON (WILLIAM) ARCH- BISHOP OF CASHELL. Letters . . to and from W. N. succes- sively Bishop of Carlisle and of Deny and Archbishop of Cashell ; including the Correspondence of several eminent pre- lates, from 1683 to 1726-7 inclusive . . Illustrated with literary and historical anecdotes, hy John Nichols. 2 vol. Vol. I. 8°. 1809. 6493 NIEBUHR (BARTHOLD GEORG). Lectures on ancient Ethnography and Geography, comprising Greece and her colonies, Epirus, Macedonia, lUyricum, Italy, Gaul, Spain, Britain, the north of Africa, etc. Translated from the German edition of D'. Isler, by C. Leonhard Schmitz ; with additions and corrections from his own MS. Notes. 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 6494 Lectures on ancient History, from the earliest times to the taking of Alexandria by Octavianus. Comprising the history of the Asiatic nations, the Egyptians, Greeks, Macedonians and Carthaginians. Translated from the German edition of D'. Marcus Niehuhr, by D'. Leonhard Schmitz, with additions and corrections from his own MS. notes. 3 vol. 8°. 1852. 6495 Epitome of Niebuhr's hi.=tory of Rome, with chronological tables and appendix. By [Sir] Travers Twiss. 8°. Oxford, 1836. 6496 Part IL 8°. Oxford, 1837. 6497 Life and Letters, and selections from his minor writings. Edited and trans- lated by Susanna "Winkworth. With essays on his character and influence by the Chevaher Bunsen, and Professors Brandis and Loebell. Second edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1853. 6498 NIEMCEWICZ (JULIAN URSYN). Notes of My captivity in Russia, in 1794, 1795, and 1796. Translated by Alexander Laski. 12". Edinburgh, 1844. 6499 NILE. Nile Notes. By a Traveller. [George William Curtis]. 8°. 1851. 6500 NIMROD ■pseud.i.e. CHARLES JAMES APPERLEY. The Chace. With numerous illustra- tions. New edition. 12°. 1851. 6501 The Road. With numerous illustra- tions. New edition. 12°. 1851. 6502 The Turf. With numerous illustra- tions. New edition. 12°. 1851. 6503 NIMSHI. Nimshi. Adventures of a Man to obtain a solution of Scriptural Geology, to gauge the vast ages of planetary concretion, and to open Bab Allah — The Gate of God. 2 vol. 8°. 1845. 6504 NIND (WILLIAM). German Lyrist; or. Metrical versions from the principal German lyric poets. ByW. N[ind]. 8°. Cambridge, 1856. 6505 Klopstook— Schiller— Goethe— Biirfier — De la Motte Pouqufi — Kttmer — Uhland— Shenkendorf— Freiligrath— Gelbel. NINEVEH. Buried city of the east : Nineveh. Il- lustrations. 8°. n.d. (1851.) 6506 NOBLE (REV. MARK). Biographical history of England, from the Revolution to the end of George Fs reign ; being a continuation of Rev. J. Granger's Work . . the materials being supplied by the manuscripts left by M'. Granger, and the collections of the editor. Rev. M. Noble. 3 vol. 8°. 1806. (Two copies.) 6507 Lives of the English Regicides, and other Commissioners of the pretended High Court of Justice, appointed to sit in Judgment upon . Charles the first. 2 vol. 8°. 1748. 6508 Memoirs of the Protectorate-house of Cromwell . with an Appendix : and en- gravings. 2 vol. (Portrait of Noble.) 8°. Birmingham, 1784. 6509 Title of Vol. II. Memoirs of several persons and families, who, by females are allied to, or descended from, the Protectorate- house of Cromwell . . catalogue of such persons who were raised to honors or great employments by the Cromwells ; with the Lives of man,vof them. (I'or- traits.) Second edition. Vol. II. mingham, 1787. Bir- 6510 NOLAN (CAPTAIN L. E.). Cavalry ; its history and tactics. 8°, 1853. NONCONFORMIST. 6511 [Tracts.] 8°. v.d. 6512 Non-Conformists plea for peace impleaded : in answer to several late writings of Mr. Baxter and others, pretending to shew reasons tor the sinfulness of Conformity. 1680. Reasons for the law, now depending in Par- liament, to prevent the further growth of Schism. 1714. Dialogue between a new Courtier and u. country gentleman, n.p. 1712. Church of England Man's Memorial ; or, the history of comprehension and tolera- tion. 1718. 349 NONCONFORMIST— eon/. Examination ol the Scheme of Churoh- Power, laid down in the Codex Juris Eccle- siastlci Anglicani, &o. Second edition. 1735. NORMAN (B. M.). Rambles in Yuoatau ; or, Notes of travel through the peninsula, including a visit to the remarkable ruins . . illustrations. 8°. New York, 1843. (IVo copies.) 6513 NORRIS (REV. JOHN). Collection of Miscellanies : consisting of poems, essays, discourses and letters. . . Fifth edition . . 8°. 1710. 6514 Sixth edition. 12°. 1717. 6515 Essay towards the theory of the ideal or intelligible World. Two parts (2 vol.) . . 8°. 1701-4. 6516 "Robert Southey. Lymington. 3 Jany. 1831." NORRIS (MARIA). Life and times of Madame de Stael. (Portrait.) 8°. 1853. 6517 [NORTH (DUDLEY, 4th BARON).] Narrative of some passages in or relat- ing to the Long Parliament. By a person of honor. 12°. 1670. 6518 NORTH (HON. ROGER). Lives of Francis North, Baron Guilford, Lord Keeper of the Great Seal, under Charles II. and James II. Sir Dudley North, Commissioner of the Customs, and afterwards of the Treasury, to Charles II. And of Hon. and Kev. D'. John North, Master of Trinity College, Cambridge . . New edition. With notes . . [By Henry Eoscoe.] 3 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1826. 6519 NORTH (W.). City of the Jugglers ; or, free-trade in Souls. A romance of the ' ' Golden " Age. With four . . etchings, by F. H. T. Bellew. 8°. 1850. 6520 NORTH. Characteristics of Men of Genius; a series of hiographical, historical, and critical Essays, selected, chiefly from the North American Beview. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 6521 All from the " N.A.E." except three which are from the "Dial." Preface signed " John Ohwman." North British Review. 1844-56. Vol. 1—25. 8°. Edinburgh, 1844-56. 6522 [No title-page. The North Briton. Number I. Saturday, June 5, 1762— Saturday, December 3, 1763. (And) an NORTH— COT!/. extraordinary North Briton. Thursday, May 12, 1763. (And) a North Briton, Number the last. May 21, 1763.] F°. 6523 This copy contains N°. 45." NORTH AND SOUTH. North and South. By the White Re- publican of "Fraser's Magazine." 8°. 1863. 6524 NORTHCOTE (JAMES) R.A. Life of Titian : with anecdotes of the distinguished persons of his time. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 6525 " Really compiled by "W". Hazlitt." Lowndes. Memoirs of Sir Joshua Reynolds, late President of the Royal Academy. Com- prising original anecdotes of many dis- tinguished persons, his contemporaries ; and a brief analysis of his discourses . . Varieties on Art. (Portraits.) 4°. 1813- 15. (With a supplement.) (Two copies.) 6526 Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1819. 6527 NORTHUMBERLAND HOUSE- HOLD BOOK. Regulations and establishment of the Household of Henry Algernon Percy, fifth Earl of Northumberland, at his castles of Wresill and Lekinfield in York- shire. Began 1512. (Edited by Thomas Percy, Bishop of Dromore.) 8°. 1827. 6528 NORTHUP (SOLOMON). Twelve years a Slave. Narrative of S. Northup, a citizen of New York, kid- napped in Washington City in 1841, and rescued in 1853, from a cotton plantation near the Red River, in Louisiana. 8°. London, and Auburn [U.S.], 1853. 6529 NORTHWICK (JOHN RUSHOUT, 2d BARON). Catalogue of the first portion of the Northwick collection of Coins and Medals, comprising the Greek series which . . will be sold by auction . . 5 December, 1859. . . 8°. n.d. 6530 Catalogue of the second portion . . com- prising the Roman series which . . will be sold by auction . . 26 March, 1860. . . 8°. n.d. 6531 NORTON (HON. MRS. CAROLINE ELIZABETH SARAH) aft. LADY STIRLING-MAXWELL. The Child of the Islands. A poem. (Frontispiece hy D. Maclise, R.A.) 8° 1845. 6532 350 NORTON (HON. MRS. CAROLINE ELIZABETH SARAH) aft. LADY STIRLING-MAXWELL— c«»i. Tales and Sketches, in prose and verse. 12°. 1850. 6533 [Pamphlets.] 8°. 1855. 6534 Letter to the Queen on Lord Chancellor Cranworth's marriage and divorce bill. Remarks upon the law of marriage and divorce; suggested by the Hon. M". Norton's letter to the Queen. [? by — Waddington.] NORTON (CHARLES ELIOT). Catalogue of the plates of Turner's Liber Studiorum. With an introduction and notes. With heliotype facsimiles of three etchings. [Anon.] F". Cambridge [U.S.] 1874. 6535 List of the drawings, engi'avings, and etchings by Turner, and from his designs, shown in connection with M"^. Norton's lectures on Turner and his work, at the Parker Memorial Hall, Boston April 23 — May 5, 1874 . . 8". University Press, Cambridge [U.S.] 1874. 6536 Extract and facsimile from a letter by Mr. Eusldn, 1868. Notes of travel and study in Italy. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1860. 6537 Sir Jamsetjee Jeej'eebhoy. Prom the North American Review for July, 1851. [Anon.] 8°. Cambridge [U.S.] 1851. 6538 N"". 6537-8. Presentation copies. NORTON (JOHN BRUCE). Memories of Merton. Second edition. 8°. Madras, 1865. 6539 NORWAY. Norway and its Scenery. Comprising the journal of a tour by Edward Price, with considerable additions. And a road- book for tourists, with hints to anglers and sportsmen. Edited and compiled by Thomas Forester. 8°. Bohn, 1853. 6540 NOTES AND QUERIES. Notes and Queries : a medium of inter- communication for literary men, artists, antiquaries, genealogists, etc. Novem- ber, 1849— May, 1850 (—July — Decem- ber, 1875). First ( — fifth series, and part of sixth). 52 vol. 4°. 1849—1875. 6541 The Title was changed to — Notes and Queries : a medium of intercommunica- tion for literary men, general readers, etc. Index [to First, second and fourth series.] 3 vol. 4». *6541 NOTT (J. C.) M.D. AND GLIDDON (GEORGE R.). Types of Mankind: or, ethnological re- .searches, based upon the ancient moau- NOTT (J. C.) M.D. AND GLIDDON (GEORGE R.)—cont. ments, paintings, sculptures, and crania of races, and upon their natural, geogra- phical, philological, and biblical history : illustrated by selections ftom the inedited papers of Samuel George Morton, M.D., and by additional contributions from Prof. L. Agassiz ; W. Usher, M.D. ; and Prof. H. S. Patterson, M.D. (Portrait of Mor- ton.) 8°. Philadelphia, 1 854. 6542 " NOVALIS " (FRIEDRICH VON HAR- DENBERG). Henry of Ofterdingen : a romance. From the German. 8°. Cambridge [U.S.], 1842. 6543 Prefixed is "A life of the Author." NUGENT (GEORGE GRENVILLE, BARON). Lands, Classical and Sacred. 2 vol. 12°. 1846. 6544 Portugal. A poem. In two parts. Second edition. 8°. 1812. 6545 . . Relation of a worthy Discourse be- tween Colonel John Hampden and Colonel Oliver Cromwell. Preceded by an ex- planatory preface [by I/ord Nugent] . 4°. 1847. 6546 " The annexed Tract purports to be written by Uev. D^ Spurstowe '* [but really .by Lord Nugent]. Fr^ace. Some Memorials of John Hampden, his party, and his times. 2 vol. (Portraits.) S". 1832. 6547 Third edition revised with a memoir of the writer. (Portraits.) 8°. 1854. (Two copies.) 6548 This third edition was revised &the memoir added by M'. Forster. [Another copy without t.p. ? Edition.] 6549 With M". Forster's MS. Memorandimis. Pp. 67-76 wanting. AND (ANNE LUCY, LADY). Legends of the library at Lilies. By the Lord and Lady there. 2 vol. 8°. 1837, 1832. 6550 NUMAN (CORNELIUS STAR). Diatribe Academica in Nicolai Machia- velli opuBculum del Principe inscriptum. 8°. Trajecti ad Ehenum [Utrecht], 1833. 6551 351 O. GATES (TITUS) D.D. Display of tyranny : or remarks, upon the illegal and arbitrary proceedings, in the Courts of Westminster, and Guild- hall London. Prom 1678. To . . 1688 . . First part. [Anon.] 12°. 1689. 6552 Ek«c'|8o. 1642. 6732 [Tracts relating to Parliament.] 4°. London and n.p. 1628-41. 6738 His Maiesties Jdeclaration of the causes which moved him to dissolve the last parliament. 1628. His Majesties declaration of the causes which moved him to dissolve the last parliament. 1640. [No title-page. By the King. His Majesty's account of the Scotch paciiication, &c.] Priviledges and practice of Parliaments in England. Collected out of the common lawes of this land. n.p. 1641. Prerofrative of parliaments in Enprland. Proved in a dialogue. By Sir Walter Eal^igh. n.p. 1640. Manner of holding Parliaments in England. Oertaine ancient customs of this King- dome. Prerogative and power of parlia- ments. Order and forme of the placing and sitting of the Kings Majesty and Pceres in the Upper House. Order and coursii of passing bills in parhament. Order, of proceeding to parliament, of King Charles, 13 April 1640. (Frontispiece- portrait of the King.) n.p. 1641. Discourse, concerning the power of parlia- ment, in point of judica1:ure. n.p. 1640. Eemonstrance to his Maiesty, against the tax of Ship-money, n.p. 1641, Case of Shipmony briefly discoursed, n.p. 1640. Speech or Declaration of M*". St. John, now his Maiesties' Solicitor Glenerall. Deli- vered at a conference of parlament, 1640. Concei-ning Ship-mon'ey. 1641. Petitions of D. Bastwicke. M. Burton. M. Prynne and of Nath. "Wickins, servant to Mr. Prynne. To parliament. Petitions of friends of Mr. Prynne, and the acknow-' ledgementprescrib'd to be made by Calvin Bruen, apd the rest, in the Cathedrall of Chester, and Tlown-Hall thereof, for visit- ing Mr. Prynne. n.p. 1641. Speech or Declaration of JohnPymm, to the Lords, upon the deliver,y of the Articles of the Commons, against William Laud, archbishop of (.lanterbury in mainten- ance of their accusation of High Treason. With the said Articles. 1641. Depositions and Articles against Thomas Earlc of Strafford Febr. 16. 1640.' n.p. 1640. Charge oi the Scottish Commissioners against Canterburie and the Lieutenant of Ire- land. Their demand concerning the sixt article of the Treaty. The Parlia- ments resolution about the proportion of the Scottish charges, and the Scottish Commissioners thankiull acceptance thereof. 1641. Third speech of Lord George Digby, to the House of Commons, concerning Bishops, and the Citie petition, 9. Febr : 1640. n.p. 1,610. Speech of Hon. Nathanael Fiennes in answer to the third speech of Lord George Digby 9 Feb. 1640. in the House of Com- mons, n.p. 1641. PARLIAMENT— cora'f. [Tracts relating to Parliament.] 4°'. London and n.p. 1641-52. 673* Diurnall occurrences of everjv dayes pro- ceeding in Parliament sines the beginning thereof, being Tuesday 20 January, which ended 10 March. 1628. 1641. To the Lords and Commons. Petition of Clergie of the church of England. Five motions with reasons concerning Deanes and Chapters, n.p. 1641. Petition and Remonstrance presented unto Parliament concerning the transportation of Leather, n.p. 1641. Vox populi, expressed in XVIII. motions to this present Parliament, for reforming the- Church of England.' Most taken out of Irenseus Philadelphns, and others. n.p» 1641. To Parliament, Petition of the University of Oxford, in behalfe of Episcopacy and Cathedrals, n.p. 1641. Protestation made by the Parliament 3 May, 1641. n.p. 1641. Petition of the Lords and Commons to the King, for leave to' remove the magazine at Hull to the Tower of London : and also to take off the reprieve of the six condemned priests now m New-gate. His Majesties answer. 1642. Petition or Declaration to bS presented to his Majestic -, by all his subjects. Shewing the great danger and inconveniences that will happen both to the King and King- dome, if either his Majestie or his people desert the High Court of Parliament. 1642. Proceedings in the late treaty of peace. With severall letters of his Majesty to the Queen, and of Prince Eupert to the Barle of Northampton. Declaration of the Loris and Commons. 1643. Two Ordinances of the Lords and Commons, one for the constant recruiting, main- taining, and regulating; of the forces of the seven associated counties, under the com- mand of Edward Earle of Manchester. The other, for the regulating the Uni- versity of Cambridge, and for removing of scandalous ministers in the seven asso- ciated counties. 164,1. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons ; with instructions for the taking of the League and Covenant in England, and Wales. Exhortation for the taking ot the Covenant. League and Covenant, subscribed with the names of so many of the members of the House of Commons as have taken it. [London 1643.] Ordinance of the Lords and Commons. For the calling of an Assembly of Divines : to- be con.'iulted mth by the Parliament, for the settling of the government and lyturgy of the Church of England. Names of all the Ministers and others appointed for the same. 164.3. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons. Names of the knights and gentlemen entrusted in every pounty to bring up a speedy account of the weekely assessment, and to returne the names of all such per- sons as refuse to pay. Insti-uctions for the said gentlemen. 1643. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons, for the better observation of the Lords Dav- 1644. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons, for giving power to all the classicall Presby- teries to ordaine Ministers. 1645. [No title-page. 20 Febr. 26 Febr. 1646. Eesolutions of the Lords and Commons concerning the choice and election of paroohiall and oongregationall elders.] 361 PARLIAMENT— con<. Dirpctions of the Lords and Commons. After advice had with the Assembly of Divines, for the electitij^ and chnosin^ of ruling- eldfM-s in all the coiifrregations, and in the classical! Msembhes for London and West- minster, and the severall counties of the Kinpdom ; for the speedy selling of the Prosbyteriall-Govei-nment. 1645. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons. Rules and directions concerning suspen- tion from the sacrament of the Lords Supper in cases of ignorance and scandall. Ai'ames of such ministers and others that are appointed triers and judges of the ability of elders in the twelve classes within the province of London. 1646. (Three copies.) Ordinances of the Lords and Commons. Por the speedy establishing of the Pres- byterian government. 1046. [Only the Title-page.] Declaration of the Commons, against all such persons as shall take upon them to preach or expound the Scriptures in any church or chappel, except they be ordained either here or in some other reformed church. 1646. Propositions of the Lords and Commons. Por a safe and well grounded peace. Sent to his Majestie at Newcastle, by the Earle of Pembroke and Montgomery. 1646. (Two copies.) Ordinance of the Lords and Commons : for the present setling of the Presbyteriall government in the Church of England. 16'W. (Three copies.) Declaration from Prince Eupert and Prince Maurice, directed to both Houses of Par- liament, with their intentions. 30. June. 1646. 1646. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons : for the ordination of ministers by the classicall presbyters. 1646. (Two copies.) Ordinance of the Lords and Commons, for ke«ping of . scandalous persons from the sacrament of the Lords supper, the en- abling of congregations for the choyoe of elders, and supplying of defects in former ordinances and directions ot Parliament concerning church-government. 1646. Declaration of the Lords and Commons con- cerning the Excise. 1646. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons. Con- cerning errors, heresies, and blasphemies. Setting a part a day of publike humiliation. 1646. Warning to the Parliament of England. Discovery of the ends and designes of the Popish partie both abroad, and at home in an oration made to the generall as- sembly of the French clergy in Paris, by Jaques du Perron Bishop of Angolesme, and Grand Almosner to the Queen of England. Translated out of a manuscript copy. 1647. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons. For the true payment of tithes and other duties. 1647. Three Ordinances of the Lords and Com- mons. First for keeping in godly Ministers placed in livings by authority, of Parlia- ment. Second concernmg the sale of Bishops lands. Third for the reliefe ot Chester. 1647. Ordinance ot the Lords and Commons. Inabling the Militia of London to punish such as doe not repaire to their Colours. As also giving power to the Militia to elect a Major Generall. 1647. Ordinances of the Lords and Commons: for the disbanding of all Supe.rnumerary Forces under the command of Sir Thomas Fairfax: and that no officer or souldier after 15 January 1647. shall have any free PARLIAMENT— eon<. quarter. Also their accompts to be speedily audited. 1647. Declaration of Parliament, expressing the grounds ot their late proceedinsts, and of setling the present Government in the way of a Free State. 1648. Declaration of the Commonji, exprnissing their reasons for the adnulling and va- cating of these ensuing vote>. 1648. Transactions by the Lords and Commons : concerning the King, the priviledges of Parliament, the liberties ot the Siibject, reformation in religion, regulating of Courts, and matters of warre and peace. Declaration, and votef, concerning his Majesty. 1648. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons : for the setling the Militia. 1648. [No titlepage. To the Commons. Petition of persons inhabiting the City of London. Westminster, the borough of Southwark. Humble desires of the said petitioners tor the Houses resolution thereon, before they proceed with the personall Treaty.] [1648.] List of 48 Members ot Parliament seized on by thearmy, Decemb. 6,7. And the carrj'- ing some of them to a place called Hell, and others to Wallingtord House. Charge of the generall Councell of the army against DenziU HoUis, Commis^al•y Cop- ley, Major Gen. Massey, and Major Gen. Brown. Further demands ot the general! Councell of the army; and twenty new proposalls to the Generall. 1648. Declaration of the Lords and Commons : for, the suppressing of all tumultuous assemblies, under pretence of framing and presenting petitions to the Parliament. 1648. Ordinance of the Lords and Commons, for the punishing of blasphemies and heresies. 1648. A new Parliament, or representative for the perpetual peace and quiet ot this nation^ and of other parts in the enjoyment of their just rights and liberties. With other tliiugs in order to the prevention ot rn- lawful exacting from the people of this nation millions of money. By W. L. {i.e. William Leach). 1651. Publique Faith's mourners : or, the sad breathings forth of many poore creditors (in and about London) to their debtors the Members of Parliament ; bewa.yliiig the sad regard hitherto had of tliese ensuing acts and ordinances, n.p. 1662. Declaration ot the Parliament ot the Com- monwealth of England, relating to th& affairs between this Commonwealth and the States General of the United Provinces ot the Low Countreys. And the answer of the Parhament to three papers from the ambassador extraordinary ot the States General, upon occasion of the late fight between the Fleets. Narrative of the late- engagement between the English and Holland Fleet. Collection of the pro- ceedings in the Treaty between the Lord Pauw, ambassador extraordinary from the States General, and the Parliament. 1652. [Tracts relating to Parliament.] 4°. London, & n.p. 1641-99. 6735 Parliaments Plea : or XX. reasons for the union of the parliament & army. n.p. 1669. Plot to divide and destroy, the Parhament and the City of London. Made knowne by the Earle ot Northumberland, Master Solliciter, and Sir Henry Vane. 1643. Order and course of passing of bills in Parliament, n.p. 1641. 362 PARLIAMENT— con^ Loyalty of the last Lons Parliament : or, a letter to an Englisbi Gentleman at Florence [.Signed at end " 'I'. B."]. - 16S1. Short history of the last Parliament. 1699. TNo title-page. Collection of the debates and proceedings in Parliament, in 169i, & 1695. Upon the Inquiry into the late briberies and corrupt practices, &c.} Cautions offered to the consideration of those who are to' chuse members to serve in the ensuing Parliament. 1695. Answer to this quodhbetical question Whe- ther the Bishops make a fundamental, and essential part of the English Parlia- ment. 1661. Historical account of some thiiigs relating to the nature of the Bhghsh Government and the conceptions which our fore-fathers had of it. Inferences thence made for the satisfaction of those who scruple the oath of allegiance to King "William and Queen Mary. 1690. Impartial Enquiry into the Causes of the ^ present fears and dangers of the Govern- ment, being a discourse between a Lord Lieutenant, and one of his deputies, sum- moned to hold a Lieutenancy, for raising the Militia. 1692. Advantages of the present settlement, and the great danger of a relapse. 1689. Case of the allegiance due to Soveraign powers. With a more particular respect to the oathi lately enjoyned, of allewiance to K. William and Q. Mary. By William Sherlock. Sixth edition. 1691. Answer to D'. Sherlock's Case of Allegiance to Sovereign. Powers, in defence of the case of allegiance to a King in possession. 1691. [No title-page. Inquiry into the remark- able instances of history and ^parliament records, used by the author of the un- reasonableness of a new 'separation on account of the oaths.] [Tracts relating to Parliament.] 4". 1701-2. 6736 [Xo t.p. List of one unanimous club of members of the late Parliament, Nov. 11. 1701. that met at the "Vine-tavern in Long- acre.] pp. 1-4. n.p. JEnd. 1701. Letter, from a Member of the ParUament of Scotland, to his electors containing his reasons, for withdrawing from that as- sembly. n.p. 1702. PARLIAMENTARY DOCUMENTS. ["Various parliamentary papers, reports, returns, treaties, acts, correspondence, statistics, &c.] F°. & 8». v.d. 6737 Affghanistan Military operations. 1843. Arts and their connexion with Manufac- factures. 1S36. Bethlehem Hospital. 1852, Borneo treaty. 1849. British Museum. 184,6-66. Ceylon. 18B1. Children's Employment Commission. 1842-3. China. 1840. Cholera. 1855. Civil Service Commissioners. 1856-65. Coal Mines Accidents. Report of South Shields Committee. 1843. [Bound up with parliamentary papers.] Copyright Act. 1842. Copyright (Canada). 1872. Dramatic Literature. Ib32. Edmunds case. 1865. Education Estimates. 1855-6. Epypt and Candia. Report by Sir John Bowring. 1840. Emigration (and Colonial Land) Commis- sioners. 1842. PARLIAMENTARY DOCUMENTS — cont. Euphrates Expedition. 1837. Factories. 1819. Pine Arts. 1845. Eoreign Countries (statistical tables), n.d. Greek Government. 1860. Historical Manuscripts Commission. 1870. India, Statistical papers, n.d. Ireland, Census of 1841 and 1851. 1843, 1866. Lunatic Asylums, n.d. National Education. 1844-50. Queen-'s Colleges. 1860-1. Ital,y. 1859-60. Judicial Statistics,. 1857-63. Libraries, public. 1849. Lodging Houses. Report by Capt. William Hay. London. Metropolitan Sanitary Commis- sion. 1847-8. Metropolis Water Supply. 1851. Lunacy and Lunatics. England and Scot- land. 1844-75. [Under this head are included various bound copies of acts relating to lunacy, lunatics, and lunatic asylums ; and Indexes. One of these was B. W. Procter's copy, & has his autograph & MS. notes.] Malta, 1839. Marriage Law Commission. 1848. National Gtallery. 1850-60. National Land Company, n.d. Nova Scotia, Halifax. 1853. Oxford University Commission Report. 1852. Pensions. 1840-54. Pentonville prison. Pleading, Courts of law. n.d. Poor Laws. 1834. 1819. [Under this head are included bound copies of J. F. Archbold's editions of Acts relating to the poor [etc.] 1849]. Post Office, Stmday labour. 1850. Prisons. 1844-8. Punjab Administration, 1849-55. Railway accidents, 1855. Records, Public. 1800, 18J0-72. Registrar-G'eneral of Births, Deaths, and Marriages. 184S, 1856. Rome, afflairs of. 1849. Royal Academy Commission. 1863. Saint Albans bribery Commission. 1852. Salaries. 1844^62. Savings, Investments for. 1850. Science and Art Estimates. 1856 Sebastopol, Ai-my before. 1855. Slave Trade. 1839. Shrewsbury Peerage. 1857. Surrey Lunatic Asylum, Snape case. 1857. S"witzerland, Commerce & Manufactures. By Sir John Bowring. 1836. Syria, Commercial statistics. By Sir John Bowring. 1840. Townley (G. "V.) case. 1864. Tuam Workhouse Chaplaincy. 1849. Yictoria Constitution. Melbourne. 1854. Education. Melbourne. Wales, Education. 1847. Woods, Forests, and Land revenues. 1848. PARNELL (THOMAS) ARCHDEA- CON OF CLOGHER. Poems , . published by M'. Pope. "With the Life of Zoilus : and his Kemarks on Homer's Battle of the Frogs and Mice. New edition . . Life of D"". Pariiell, written by D'. Goldsmith. 8°. 1770. 6738 Poetical works. Containing those pub- lished by Pope, together -witb his pos- thumous pieces. "With the life of the Author. Cooke's edition . . Engravings 363 PARNELL (THOMAS) ARCHDEA- CON OF CLOGHER— esHf. rSecond Title.] Poetical Works. Con- taining his Anacreontics . . 12°. (1796.) 6739 Portion of the " Life " wanting. Poetical Works (Aldine Edition of the British Poets). (Portrait and Memoir.) 12°. 1852. 6740 PARR (RICHARD) D.D. Life of . . James Usher, Archbishop of Armagh . . With a collection of . . letters between the .said Lord Primate and most of the eminentest persons for piety and learning in his time . . Collected and published . . by E. Parr . . (Portrait.) i'°. 1686. 6741 Book-plate of John Stiu'ges. MS. notes. PARR (SAMUEL) LL.D, Aphorisms, opinions, and reflections of D'. Parr. With a sketch of his Life. (Portrait.) 12°. 1826. 6742 " Sketch " signed "E. B. H." Bibliotheca Parriana. Catalogue of the library of S. Parr. (Portrait.) 8°. 1827. 6743 Compiled by "M'. Bohn, Jun." [H. G. Bohn.] Preface signed " John LjTies." PARRY (CHARLES HENRY). Jlemoir of Kev. Joshua Pariy, Noncon- formist Minister of Cirencester. With some original essays and correspondence. Edited by Sir John E. Eardley-Wilmot. (Portrait.) 8°. 1872. 6744 Parliaments and councils of England, chronologically arranged, from the reign of William, I. to the revolution in 1688 . . 8°. 1839. 6745 Dedication signed " Charles Henry Parry." PARRY (REAR-ADMIRAL SIR WIL- LIAM EDWARD). Journals of . . voyages for the dis- covery of a north-west passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific, in 1819-25, in H.M.S. Heda, Griper and Fury, under the orders of Capt. W. E. Parry, Com- mander of the Expedition. 6 vol. (in 3.) With plates. 12°. 1828-9. (Vol. VI— Narrative of an attempt to reach the North Pole, in boats fitted for the purpose, and attached to H.M.S. Hecla, in 1827-, under the command of Capt. W. E. Parry.) 6746 PARSONS (MRS.). Mount St. Lawrence. By the Author of "Mary, the Star of the Sea." 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 6747 PARSONS (ROBERT). Leicester's Common-wealth . . By Robert Parsons Jesuite, Wliereunlo is added Leicesters-Ghost. (Portrait.) 12°. 1641. 6748 According to "Lowndes," erroneously as- cribed to Parsons. [Another edition, but anon, and without the " Ghost " and portrait.] 12°. n.p. 1641. 6749 Perfect picture of a Favourite : or. Secret Memoirs of Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester . . Written during his life, and now publish'd from an old manuscript : With a preface by James Drake. Tlurd edition. 8°. 1711. 6750 "Eeprint of JLeicester's Commonwealth." Lowndes, PARSONS (THOMAS WILLIAM). Poems. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1854. 6751 PARSONS (USHER). Life of Sir William Pepperrell, Bart., the only native of New England who was created a Baronet during its connexion with the mother coimtry. 8°. liOndon, and Boston [U.S.] 1856. 6752 PARTON (JAMES). Life of Horace Greeley, Editor of the New York Tribune. (Portrait.) 8°. New York, 1855. 6753 PARTRIDGE (JOHN). Annus Mirabilis or strange and wonder- ful predictions and observations gathered out of Mr. J. ^Partridge's Almanack 1688. With some remarks also, out of his Alma- nack 1687 . . 4°. 1689. 6754 PASCAL (BLAISE). Pensees, precedees de sa vie par M°" Perier, sa soeur, suivies d'un choix des Pensees de (Pierre) Nicole, et de son traite de la paix avec les hommes. (Portrait.) 8°. Paris, 1847. 6755 " Louisa Stuart CostelW, Tours Jan. 1850." Les Provinciales, ou Lettres de Louis Montalte. 3 vol. (in one.) 12°. Paris, 1829. 6756 Miscellaneous writings ; consisting of letters, essays, conversations, and miscel- laneous thoughts . . Newly translated &om the French edition -of P. Faugfere. With introduction, and notes, by George Pearce. 8°. 1849. 6757 Provincial Letters, containing an expo- sure of the reasoning and morals of the Jesuits. Originally published under the » Name of Louis De Montalte. Translated from the French . . View of the history of the Jesuits, and the late BuU for the re- vival of the Order in Europe. 8°. 1816. 6758 364 PASCAL (BLAISE)— coni. I'rovmcial letters r with an " Essay on Pascal . ." by M. Villeraain. Newly translated from the French, with Memoir, notes, and appendix. By George Pearce. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 6759 Thoughts on religion, and other sub- jects. Translated into English by Basil Kennet, D.D. New edition. 12°. 1836. 6760 Thoughts on religion, and evidences of Christianity . . from the French edition of P. Faugfere. With introduction, notes, etc., by George Pearce. 8». 1850. 6761 PASQUIN (ANTHONY) pseud, i.e. JOHN WILLIAMS. Poems. Second edition. 2 vol. 12°. n.d. ■ 6762 Book-plate of B. C. Cocker. PATERCULUS (M. VELLEIUS). Quae supersunt ex Historiae Eomanae libris duobus . . Recensuit . . Friderieus Kritzius. 8°. Lipsiae, 1840. 6763 PATMORE (COVENTRY KEARSEY DIGHTON). The Angel in the House. The Betrothal. [Anon.] 12°. 1854. (Two copies.) 6764 One of these copies has two title-pa^es, the second having upon it — "By C. K. Digh- , ton " ; and three cancels— 17, 177, 191.1 [Half Title] The Angel in the House. Book II. [Title] The Espousals. [Anon.] 12°. 1856! ■ 6765 Faithful for Ever. 12°. 1860. 6766 Poems. 12°. 1844. 6767 N™. 6766-7 presentation copies with inscrip- tions. Tamerton Church-Tower and other Poems. 12°. 1853. 6768 PATMORE (P. GEORGE). My Friends and Acquaintance : being memorials, mind-portraits, and personal recollections of deceased celebrities of the nineteenth century : with selections from their unpubUshed letters. 3 vol. 8°. 1854. 6769 Vol. 1. Lamb, Campbell, Countess of Bles- sington, B. Plumer Ward. 2. Ward (continued), Horace and James Smith, Hazlitt. 3. Hazlitt {oontinwed) , L. Blanohard, Richard Brinsley Sheridan and Thomas Sheridan. PATON (ANDREW ARCHIBALD). The Goth and the Hun ; or, Transyl- vania, Debreczin, Pesth, and Vienna, in 1850. 8°. 1851. 6770 PATON (ANDREW ARCHIBALD)— cont. Highlands and Islands of the Adiriatic, including Dalmatia, Croatia, and the Southern provinces of the Austrian Em- pire. 2 vol. Illustrations. 8°. 1849. 6771 Modem Syrians ; or, native society in Damascus, Aleppo, and the Mountains of the Druses, from notes made in those parts during 1841-2-3. J5y an Oriental Student. 8°. 1844. 6772 PATON (SIR JOSEPH NOEL). Compositions from Shelley's Prome- theus Unbound. Oblong. 1844. 6773 PATRICIAN. The Patrician. Edited bj' John Burke. Vol. I— IV. 8°. 1846-7. 6774 PATTISON (REV. MARK). Isaac Casaubon 15.'59-1614. 8°. 1875. 6775 PAULI (DR. REINHOLD). Life of King Alfred. Translation re- vised by the author. Edited by Thomas Wright. 8°. 1852. " 6776 PAUW (JOANNES CORNELIUS DE). Selections from M. Pauw, with additions by Daniel Webb. [On America, etc.] S". Bath, 1795. 6777 PAXTON D.D. (PROFESSOR GEORGE) Illustrations of Scripture, from the geo- graphy, natural history, and manners and customs of the east. Third edition, re- vised and greatly enlarged by Eev. Eobert Jamieson. Vol. I. Manners and Cus- toms. 12°. Edinburgh, 1841. 6778 PAYNE ( ). Payne's Panorama of the Rhine . Engraved from original drawings, in sixty views, on twenty steel plates. Oblong. n.d. 6779 PEACHAM (HENRY). Worth of a penny, or, a caution to keep money. With the causes of the scarcity and misery of the want thereof . . As also how to save it . And also what honest courses men in want may take to live. Now newly reprinted . . With a catalogue of the Bills of Mortality, from 1642 to 1669. 4°. 1669. 6780 D'. Bliss's copy & MS. note. 365 PEACOCK (GEORGE) D.D. Examples of the applications of the differential and integral Calculus. 8°. Cambridge, 1820. 6781 Life of Thomas Young, M.D., F.R.S. (Portrait.) 8". 185.5. 6782 PEACOCK (THOMAS LOVE). Headlong Hall. Nightmare Abbey. Jlaid Marian. Crotchet Castle. With corrections, and a preface, by the author. [Anon.] 12°. 1837. (Two copies). 6783 Gl'Xngannati. The Deceived : a comedy performed at Siena in 1531 [translated, etc. by T. L. Peacock] : and Aelia Laelia Crispis (an attempt to solve the aenigma). 12°. 1862. 6784 PEAKE (RICHARD BRINSLEY). Memoirs of the Colman family, includ- ing their correspondence . . 2 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1841. 6785 PEARCE (ROBERT ROUIERE). Memoirs and correspondence of Rich- ard Marquess Wellesley . . 3 vol. (Por- trait.) 8". 1846. 6786 PEARSON (CHARLES H.). Early and Middle Ages of England. 8°. 1861. 6787 PECK (REV. FRANCIS). Desiderata Curiosa : Or, a collection of divers scarce and curious pieceB (relating chiefly to matters of English history) . . containing upwards of one hundred and sixty choice tracts, memoirs, letters, wills, «pitaphs, &c. . . illustrated with ample notes . . Cuts. (Portrait, inserted.) F°. 1732. 6788 (Two 6789 PEEL (EDMUND). Poetical Works. 12°. 1856 copies.) An Ancient City and other poems. By a native of Surrey. 12°. 1873. (Two copies.) 6790 Campaigns of the British army in Por- tugal, Spain, andFi'ance, 1808-1814. A sketch. 12°. Cambridge, 1874. 6791 Conquerors of Lahore, an ode. With other odes and sonnets. By the Author of " The Christian Pilgrim." 8°. 1846. 6792 The Fair Island; a poem . . 12°. 1851. (Two copies.) 6793 Judas MaccabsBUS. An heroic poem . . 12°. London and Cambridge, 1864. (Two copies.) 6794 Judge not, a poem, on Christian charity. 8°. 1834. 6795 PEEL (EDMUND)— con«. Salem Redeemed ; or, the Year of Jubilee; a lyrical drama . . 12°. 1853. 679C N»». 8790, 6 dedicated to M'. Porster ; 6791, 4-5 presentation copies. PEEL (SIR LAWRENCE). Sketch of the life and character of Sir Robert Peel. 8°. 1860. 6797 PEEL (SIR ROBERT). Speeches, delivered in the House of Commons. With a general explanatory index, and a brief chronological summary of the various subjects on which the speeches were delivered. 4 vol. 1810 (—1850). 8°. 1853. 6798 Opinions expressed in parliament and in public. Second edition. With a bio- graphical memoir. (Portrait.) 8°. 1850. 6799 Memoirs of Sir R. Peel. Published by the trustees of his papers. Lord Mahon (now Earl Stanhope), and Edward [Vis- count] Cardwell. Part I., Roman Catho- lic Question, 1828-9. 8°. 1866. 6800 Sir Robert Peel, and his era : being a synoptical view of the chief events and measures of his life and time. 8°. 1843. 6801 PEELE (GEORGE). Works : collected and edited, with some account of his life and writings, by Rev. Alexander Dyce. Second edition with additions. 3 vol. [Vol. 3. ' Supple- ment.] 8°. 1829, 1839. 6S02 PELLEW (GEORGE) D.D. Life and correspondence of Henry Ad- dington, first Viscount Sidmouth. 3 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1847. 6803 PELTIER (JOHN). Trial of John Peltier, for a Libel against Napoleon Buonaparte, first consul of the French Republic, at the Court of King's-Bench, Middlesex, 21 February, 1803 . . The defence re vised by M'. [aft. Sir James] Mackintosh. 8°. 1803. 6804 "D'. Parr from James Mackintosh." D'. Parr's book-label. Morning Post. Tuesday, February 22, 1803. 2 leaves. [Contains the report of " The King v. Peltier."] *6S04 PEMBER (EDWARD HENRY). Maid of Messene and other poems. 12°. 1855. 6805 PEMBERTON (CHARLES REECE). Life and Literary Remains : with re- marks on his character and genius, by VV. J. Fox. Edited by John Fowler. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1843. 6806 866 PEMBERTON (H.). Observations on Poetry, especially the epic : occasioned by the late poem upon Leonldas. 12°. 1738. 6807 PEMBERTON (T. EDGAR). Dickens's London; or, London in the Works of Charles Dickens. 8°. (Lon- don) 1876. 6808 PEMBROKE (WILLIAM HERBERT, 3d earl OF) AND RUDYARD (SIR BENJAMIN). Poems. Written in the time of James I. and Charles I. Second edition. 12°. 1817. 6809 PEN AND INK. Pen and ink sketches of poets, preach- ers, and politicians. [By John Dix, or Eoss.] (Portrait of Coleridge.) 8°. 1846. 6810 PENN (GRANVILLE). Memorials of the professional life and times of Sir William Penn, Admiral and General of the fleet, during the interreg- num . . From 1644 to 1670. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1833. 6811 "Robert Southey. Keswick. 26 June. 1833." PENN (RICHARD). Maxims and hints for an Angler ; and miseries of fishing. To ■which are added maxims and hints for a chess player, by B. Penn. With wood-cuts. New edition, enlarged. 12°. 1839. 6812 PENNANT (THOMAS). Literary Life of T. Pennant (and Ap - pendix). By Himself. (Portrait.) 4°. 1793. 6813 PENNY, CYCLOP/EDIA. Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. 27 Tol. P°. 1833-43. 6814 Supplement. 2 vol. P°. 1845-6. *6814 [PENROSE (JOHN).] Happy Ignorance : or. Church and State. A religious adventure. With notes by the editors. [Anon.] 12°. 1847. 681S [PENROSE (THOMAS).] Sketch of the lives and writings of Dante and Petrarch. With some account of Italian and Latin Literature iu the fourteenth century. [Anon.] 12°. 1790. 6816 PENTALOGIA. ireyTa\07iB, slve Tragoediarum Gra;- carum delectus : cum adnotatione Johan- nis Burton. Bditio altera. Cui observa- tiones . . adjecit Thomas Burgess. 2 vol. 8°. Oxonii, 1779. 6817. Vol. 1. Sophocles : CEdipus Tyrannus, CEdi- pus Coloneus, and Antigone. 2. Buripides : Phoenissae— Esohylus : Sevea against Thebes. PEOPLE. The People's Journal. Edited by John Saunders. Vol. I.-III. 8°. 1846-7. 6818 PEPOLI (CARLO). Prose e Versi. 2 vol. (in one.) (Por- trait.) 12°. 1837. 6819 PEPPER (CAPTAIN), pseuof Petei's with a windmill on his head.) Tr.vall and condemnation of John Cooke, Sollioitor to the High-court of Injuatipe, and Hugh Peters, for theu- high-treasons, «S;c. At the Sessions-house in the Old-haily 13. October, 1860. (Plate, inserted, of Peters and Thurloe, and the deputation from the States Generall.) Speeches and praters of some of the late King's Judges, viz.. Major General Harison [etcj Hugh Peters [etc.] 1660. 'With speeches and passages in their imprison- ment till they came to the place of execu- tion. (Two portraits of Peters, prefixed, also, inserted, of Carew, Clement, and Axtell.) n.p. The Assembly-man; "Written in the year 1647. (Frontispiece.) lOOJ. PETRARCA (FRANCESCO). Sonnets, and odes translated from the Italian ; with the original text, and some account of his life. 8°. 1777. 6854 Odes. Translated into English verse by Captain U. G. Macgi-egor. 12°. 1851. 6855 Privately printed. One hundred sonnets translated after the Italian with notes and a Ijfe of Petrarch by Susan WoUastoti. Second gclition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1855. 685B PETRIE (GEORGE). Ecclesiastical Architecture of Ireland anterior to the Anglo-Norman invasion ; comprising an essay on the origin and uses of the Round Towers of Ireland . . Second edition. 4°. Dublin, 1845. 6857 PETRONIUS ARBITER (TITUS), Satyrical Works . Life and character, written by Mons. St. Evremont ; and a key to the Satyr, by a person of quality. Made English by Mr. Wilson . . and several others, and adorn'd with cuts. To 16505. PETRONIUS ARBITER (TITUS)- cont. which is added The charms of Liberty ; a poem, by the late Duke of D— — ■ [? Dorset]. 8". 1708. 6858 Works, in prose and verse. Translated from the original Latin, by Mr. [.John] Addison . Life of Petronius, done from the Latin : and a character of his writings by St. Evremont. 12". 17.36. 6^89 PETTIGREW (REV. AUGUSTUS FREDERICK). Sermon preached September 36, 1852, on the demise of the Duke of Wellington. At the Episcopal chapel, Brompton. 8°. 1852. 6860 PETTIGREW (THOMAS JOSEPH). Memoirs of the life of Vice-Admiral Yisoomit Nelson, K.B. 2 vol. (Portraitsi.) 8°. 1849. 6861 Superstitions connected with the history and practice of Medicine and Surgery. 8°. 1844. 6862 PEYRAT (N.). Pastors in the Wilderness ; a history of the Huguenots from the revocatipn of the edict of Nantes to the 4eath of Louis XIV. 3 vol. 8°. 1852. 6863 PEYTON (SIR EDWARD). Divine Catastrophe of the kingly family of the house of Stuarts : or, a short his- tory of the rise, reign, and mine thereof . . 12°. 1652. 6864 Autograph and book-plate of Eev. William Cole. MS. notes. PEZRON (PAUL). Antiquities of Nations, more particu- larly of the Celtae or Gauls : containing a great variety of . . discoveries . Sketch of the life of the author. 12°. n.d. 6865 PFEIFFER (IDA). Visit to the Holy Land, Egypt, and Italy. Translated from the German by H. W. Dulcken. Engravings. 8°. 1852. 6866 Visit to Iceland and the Scandinavian North. Translated from the German Notes and eight tinted engravings Essay on Icelandic Poetry, Irom tlje French of M. Bergmann ; a translation of the Ice- landic poem the Voluspa; and a brief sketch of Icelandic history. 8°. 1852. 6867 A Woman's Journey round the World, from Vienna to Brazil, GhiH, Tahiti, China, Hindostan, Persia, and Asia Minor. An unabridged translation from the German. Tinted engravings. 8°. n.d. 6868 A A 370 PFEIFFtR (IDA)— COM*. Lady's Voyage round the World : a selected translation from the German. By Mrs. Percy Sinnett. 12°. 1851. 6869 PFIZER (GUSTAVUS). Published by the Society for the pro- motion of popular instruction. Life of Luther, with notices and extracts of his popular writings ; translated from the German by T. S. Williams. With an introductory essay, by [Isaac Taylor]. 8". 1840. 6870 PHILIPPSOHN (DR. LUDWIG). Development of ■ the religious idea in Judaism, Christianity and Mahomedanism, considered in twelve lectui'es on the his- tory and purport of Judaism . . Trans- lated from the German, with notes, by Anna Maria Goldsmid. 8°. 1855. 6871 PHILIPS (AMBROSE). Life of John Williams, L*" Keeper of the Great Seal, Bishop of Lincoln, and Arch- bishop of York . . With an appendix . . account of his benefactions to St. John's College in Cambridge. Second edition. 8°. Cambridge, 1703. 6872 PHILIPS (JOHN). Poems attempted in the style of Milton. With a new account of his life and writ- ings. (Portrait.) 12°. 1762. 6873 Mitford's copy and MS. notes. Two addi- tional copies o£ the portrait, and at the end (from a different edition) additional verses. [Another edition.] 12°. 1776. 6874 PHILLIMORE (JOHN GEORGE). History of England dui-ing the reign of George the third. Vol. I. [No more published.] 8°. 1863. 6875 Letter on the article entitled " Robert Phillimore's Lyttelton," in the Quarterly Review, June, 1846, to J. W. Croker. 8°. 1846. 6876 Principles and maxims of Jurisprudence. 8°. 1856. 6877 PHILLIPPS (JAMES ORCHARD HALLIWELL-). Character of Sir John Falstaff, as originally exhibited by Shakespeare in the two parts of King Henry IV". 12°. 1841. 6878 Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words, obsolete phrases, proverbs, and ancient customs, from the fourteenth Century. 2 vol. Second edition. 8°. 1850. 6879 PHILLIPPS (JAMES ORCHARD HALLIWELL-)— eo«<. A few remarks on the emendation. "Who smothers her with Painting," in the play of Cymbeline. Discovered by Mr. Collier, in a corrected copy of the second edition of Shakespeare. 8°. 1852. 6880 Letters of the Kings of England, now first collected from the originals .. Edited, with an historical introduction and notes, by J. O. Halliwell [aft. Halliwell-Phillipps] . (Portraits.) 2 .vol. 8°. 1846. (Two copies.) 6881 Life of William Shakespeare. Including many particulars respecting the poet and his family never before published. (Bust portrait.) 8°. 1848. ' 6882 Nursery Rhymes of England, collected chiefly from oral tradition. Edited by J. 0. Halliwell. Third edition, with illus- trations' [by W. B. Scott]. 12°. 1844. 6883 Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales : a sequel to the Nursery Rhymes of England. 12°. 1849. 6884 PHILLIPPS (SAMUEL MARCH). State Trials ; or, a collection of the most interesting trials, prior to the revo- lution of 1688, reviewed and illustrated by S. M. Phillipps. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. 1826. 6885 Vol. 1. Sir Nicholas Throckmorton. Duke of Norfolk. Earls of Essex and South- ampton. Sir Walter Raleigh. Peacham, OweniWilhams, audPine. Earl of Strat- ford. Harrison, regicide. Cook, regicide. Sir H. Vane. Messenger and others. Stayley. Lord Stafford. 2. Lord Russell. Algernon Sydney. Hamp- den, Sir Tliomas Armstrong. lady Alicia Lisle. Elizabeth Uaunt. Cornish. Lord Delaraere. The Seven Bishops. Appendix. Court (if the Lord High Steward. PHILLIPS (CHARLES). Specimens of Irish Eloquence, now first arranged and collected, with biographical notices, and a preface. Illustrated by portraits. 8". 1819. 6886 PHILLIPS (CHARLES PALMER). Law of Copyright in works of literature and art and in the application of designs. With the statutes relating thereto. 8°. 1863. 6887 Law concerning idiots, lunatics, and persons of unsound mind. 8°. 1858. (Two copies). 6888 PHILLIPS (EDWARD). Mysteries of Love and Eloquence, or, the arts of wooing and complementing . . Third edition. 8°. 1685. 6889 Preface signed E. P. The new World of Words : or, a uni- versal English Dictionary containing the proper significations and derivations of all 371 PHILLIPS (EDWARD)-coH/. words from other lani(uages . . Definitions of all those terms that condu(>e to the uijderstanclinff of any of the arts or sci- ences . . interpretations of proper names . . Sum of all the most remarkable mytho- logy and history, deduced from the names of persons eminent in either ; and likewise the geographical descriptions of the chief countries and cities in the world, especially of these three nations. Collected and published byE[dward] P[hillips]. Fifth edition . V". IC9C. 6890 Theatrum Poetarum Anglicanorum. Containing the names and characters of all the English Poets, from the reign of Henry III. to the close of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. First puMished in 167.'), and now enlarged . . [by Sir S. Kgerton Biydges]. 8". 1799. 0891 PHILLIPS (HENRY). Flora Historica : cr the three seasons of the British Parterre historically and botanieally treated ; with observations on planting . . Methods of cultivating bul- bous and other plants . . 2 vol. 8°. 182>1. 6892 Sylva Florifera ; the Shrubbery his- torically and botanieally treated ; with observations on the formation of orna- mental plantations, and picturesque scenerj'. 2 vol. (iu one). 8". 182.3. 0893 [PHILLIPS (JOHN).] Don Juan Lamberto ; or, a commical history of the late Times, 'fhe first part. [Anon.] (Frontispiece.) 4°. 38. Jt, 1601. 6894 Second and last part. By Mon- telion Knight of the Oracle &c. (Frontis- piece.) 4°. B. L. 1661. 689.') [Another edition] Don Juan Lamberto Wherein the subtil contrivances . . of the late notorious rebels . . are jovially discovered . . In two parts. Bj' Montelion . . Third edition corrected. (Frontispiece.) 4°. B. L. 1665. 6896 Uindley's copy, aft. Bliss's. " This copy was lent by M'' Bindley to Godwin for his " Lives of Edw. and John Phillips," and was the only cop.y he had seen or heard of." MS, note (by Bliss). (Also attri- buted to T. Flatman.) PHILLIPS (JOHN) PROFESSOR. Guide to Geolog}'. Fourth edition. 12°. 1854. 0897 Rivers, mountains, and sea-coast of Yorkshire. With essays on the climate, scenery, and ancient inhabitants of the county. Plates. S". 1853. 689,8 PHILLIPS (SIR THOMAS). Life of James Davies, a village school- master. (Portrait). 12°. 1850. 6899 PHILLIPS (SIR THOMAS)— con<. Wales : the language, social condition, moral character, and religious opinions of the people, considered in their relation to education: with some account of the pro- vision made for education in other parts of the kingdom. 8°. 1849. 6900 PHILO JUDAEUS. Works, translated from the Greek, by C. D. Yonge. 4 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1854-5. 6901 PHILOSOPHERS. Lives of the Ancient Philosophers . . Extracted from Diogenes Laertius, Cau- sabou [s/c], Menagius, Stanley, Gassendus, Charleton . . Appendix containing the lives of several later philosophers not confined to particular sects ; taken froni Eunapius. Account of the women philosophers, written originally in Latin by JEg. MenagiuB to Jladam Dacier. Introduction representing the state of learning and pliilosopli__v in the eastern part of the world, before it flourished in Greece. Illustrated with several cutts. 8°. 1702. 6902 PHILOSTRATUS (FLAVIUS). Life of ApoUonius of Tyana, translated from the Greek. With notes and illus- trations, by liev. Edward Berwick. fi°. 1809. 0903 PHILPOTTS (HENRY) BISHOP OF EXETER. Correspondence between the Bishop of Exeter [Philpotts] and Right Hon. T. B. Macaulay, in .January, 1849, on certain statements respecting the Church of Eng- land, in the first chapter of his History of England. 8°. 1860. 6904 PHIPPS (HON. EDMUND). Memoirs of the political and literary Life of Robert Plumer Ward. With selec- tions from his correspondence, diaries, and unpublished literary remains. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1850. 6905 PHOENIX. Phoenix Library: a series of original and reprinted works, bearing on the reno- vation and progress of Society in religion, morality and science. Selected by J. M. Morgan. vol. 8°. 1850. 6906 Hevolt of the Bees. Fourth edition. Effects of Civilisation on the people in Eu- ropean States. Originally printed in 1805. By Charles Hall, M.D. Utopia ! or, the Happy Eepublic. A philo- sophical romance. Written in Latin by Sir Thomas More. Translated into English by Gilbert Burnet, Bishop of Samm. Christian Commonwealth. By John Minter Morgan. To which is added. An inquiry respecting private property, and the autho- rity and perpetuity of the apostolic insti- tntlon of a community of goods. A A 2 372 PHOENIX— corn!. Extracts tor Schools and families in aid of moral and religious training. Selected by J. M, Morgan. Letters on Early education, By [Henry] Pestalozzi. Translated from the Gterman manuscript. With a memoir of Pesta- lozzi. PHRENOLOGICAL. Transactions of the Phrenological So- ciety, instituted 22Fel3ruary 1820. With five engravings. 8°. Edinburgh, 1824. 6907 PHRENOLOGY. Phrenology, pyschology, and pneuma- tology ; or, the importance of training the whole being. By an introviser. 8°. 1853. 6908 PHYSICIAN. Life of a travelling physician [Sir George William Lefevre] . . including twenty years' wanderings through the greater part of Europe. 3 vol. 8°. 1843. 6909 PICHLER (CAROLINE). Quentin Matsys or the Blacksmith. , From the German. 12". n.d. 6910 [Engraved title] Wallenstein and the Swedes in Prague. From the German. [Title] The Swedes in Prague, or, the Signal rocket ; a romance of the Thirty Years' War. Translated . . by James D. Haas. 12». 1845. 6911 PICHOT (AMEDEE). Histoire de Charles-Edouard, dernier Prince de la maison de Stuart ; preoed^e d'une histoire de la rivalite de I'Angleterre et de I'^ficosse. Quatrifeme edition. 2 vol, 8°. Paris, 1845-6. 6912 PICKERING (CHARLES) M.D. Races of Man ; and their geographical distribution. New edition. 'To which is prefixed, an analytical synopsis of the natural history of man. By John Charles Hall, M.D. (Illustrations.) 8°. Bohn, 1850. 6913 PICKMERE (JOHN RICHARD). Being, analytically described in its chief respects ; and principal truths, in the order of this analysis, fully stated : with a detail of man's spiritual nature and chief relations. 4". Published for the author, 1854. 6914 PICTORIAL. Pictorial Gallery of Arts. Useful Arts. Vol. II. Fine Arts. 2 vol. F". Charles Knight and Co. n.d. 6915 Vol. II. published by Charles Cox, and dated 1847. PICTORIAL— ooM<. Pictorial Museum of Animated Nature. (With five thousand woodcuts). Vol. I. Mammalia. Birds. Vol. II. Birds. Rep- tiles. Mollusca. Insects. F". n.d. 6916 PIERCE (GILBERT A.) AND WHEELER (WILLIAM A.). Dickens Dictionary. A Key to the characters and principal incidents iu the tales of C. Dickens. By G. A. Pierce with additions by W. A. Wheeler. Illustrated. (Portrait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1872. 6917 PIERS PLOUGHMAN. Vision [ascribed to William Langland] and Creed of Piers Ploughman. Edited, from a contemporary manuscript, with a historical introduction, notes, and a glos- sary, by Thomas Wright. 2 vol. Second and revised edition. 12°. 1856. 0918 PIGNORIUS (LAURENTIUS). Mensa Isiaca, qua sacrorum apud Mgjp- tios ratio & simulacra subjectis tabulis aeneis simul exhibentur & explicantur. Aecessit ejusdem authoris de Magna Deum matre discursus, & sigillorum, gemmarum, amuletorum aliquot, figurae & earundem ex Kirchero Chifletioque interpretatio. Neo non Jaeobi Philippi Tomasini Manns .^nea & de vita rebusque Piguorii dis- sertatio. 4°. Amstel. 1669. 6919 PILKINGTON (JOHN CARTERET). Real Story of J. 0. Pilkington. Written by Himself. (Portrait of M''", Pilkington.) 4°. 1760. 6920 PILKINGTON (REV. MATTHEW). General dictionary of Painters . . from . . Cimabue, in 1250, to the present time. With an introduction . . by Allan Cun- ningham. New edition, corrected and revised, by R. A. Davenport. (Portrait of Reynolds.) 8°. 1852. 6921 PILLANS (JAMES). Contributions to the cause of education. 8°. 1856. 6922 PILPAY. The Anvaf — I Snhaili ; or, the Lights of Canopus ; being the Persian version of the Fables of Pilpay ; or, the book " Kalilah and Damnah," rendered into Persian by Kusain Vii'iz U'L-Kd.shifi : literally translated into prose and verse, by Edward B. Eastwiok. 8". Hertford, 1854. 6923 PINARD (O.). L'Histoire a I'audieuce 1840-8. 8°. Paris, 1848. 6924 373 PINDARUS. Olympia, Pythia, Nemeti, Istbmia. Cum interpretatione Lutina . [Ed. bj- W. Bowyer.] 8". 1755. 6025 Ciirmiua. Cum lectionis varietate et iidnotatiouibus. Accedunt interpretatio Latina . . necnon G. Hermanui dissertatio- ncs Pindarica; . . a Clir. Gottl. Heyiio. Nova cditio. . . 3 vol. 8°. 1824. 6926 To aru^ofjieva, Epiniciau oi'tiiurapbal odes, in four books ; with the fraf,'meiits of his lost compositions : revised and explained by John William Donaldson. 8°. Lon- don and Cambridge, 1841. 6927 Carmiua ad fideni textu.s Bockhiani pars sccuuda continens Odas Pythias notas quasdam Anglico scriptas adjccit Gulielmus Gifford Cookesley. Editio secunda. 8°. Etonse, 17[s!c]53 [1853]. 6928 Odes, translated from the Greek, with notes and illustrations, by G, West, and H. J. Pye . . Dissertation on the Olym- pic Games, by Gilbert West. 2 vol. 12°. 1807. 6929 The odes, literallj' translated into Eng- lish prose. By Dawson W. Turner . . Metrical version, by Abraham Moore. 8°. Bohn, 1852. 6930 PINE (JOHN). Feb. 24, 1730-31. Proposals for En- graving by subscription, on copjjer- plates, the works of Horace . . as the specimen annex'd . . 12°. n.p. n.d. 6931 PINKERTON (JOHN). Literary Correspondence. Now first printed from the originals in the posses- sion of Dawson Turner. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1830. 6932 " Robert Southey, London, Dec 1830." PIOZZI (MRS. HESTER LYNCH) previously MRS, THRALE. Autobiography letters and literai-y re- mains edited with notes and an introduc- tory account of her life and writings by A. Hayward. 2 vol. Second edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1861. 6933 Anecdotes of the late Samuel Johnson, LL.D. during the last twenty years of his Life. Second edition. 8°. 1786. 6934 Bookplate of Walter Wilson. [Another edition.] 12°. 1856. 6936 Observations and reflections made in the course of a journey through Prance, Italy, and Germany. 2 vol. 8°. 1789. 6936 Piozziana ; or, EccoUections of the late M". Piozzi, witli remarks. By a friend. [Edited by E«v. E. Mangiu.] S». 1833. 6937 PLAIN DEALER. Plain Dealer : being select Essays on several curious subjects, relating to friend- ship . . Publish'd originally in 1724. And now first collected into two volumes. 8°. 1730. 6938 "Written l).v Aaron Hill and William Bond." Loiorules. PLANCHE (JOSEPH ROBINSON). History of British Costume, from the earliest period to the close of the eighteenth century. Illustrations. New edition. 12°. 1847. 6939 PLATO. Platonis quae extant Graece ad editio- nem Henrici Stephaui accurate cxpressa cum Marsilii Ficiui interpretatione. Prae- mittitur L. III. Lacrtii de Vita et dogm. Plat, cum notitia literaria. Accedit varie- tas lectionis. 12 vol. 8". Biponti [Deux- ponts, or Zweybruckcn] . 1781-7. 6940 What is lettered as vol. " XII." is " Dialo- fforum Platonis ai'gumenta exposita et illustrata, a Diet. Tiedemanu." Biponti, 1786. Bev. H. Drury's copy. Plato's Apology of Socrates, Crito, and Phaedo, from the text of Bekker, with the Latin version of- Ficinus ; and notes by Charles Stuart Stanford. 8°. Dublin, 1834. 6941 Gorgias, chiefly according to StaH- baum's text; with notes, by Theodore D. Woolsey. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1842. 6942 Phaedrus. Eecensuit Carolus Badham. 8°. 1851. 6943 Protagoras. Greek text revised, with an analysis and English notes. By Wil- liam Wayte. 8°. Cambridge, 1854. . 6944 [Half title] Prolegomena ad Platoilis Parmenidem. Libri quattuor. 8°. n.p. n.d. 6945 Works. A new and literal version, chiefly from the text of Stallbaum. Vol. I-V. 8°. Bohn, 1848-72. 6946 1. Apology of Socrates, Crito, Phaedo, Gorgias, FrotaKoras, Pliaedms, Theae- tetus, Eiitliyphron, and Lysis. By Henry Caiy. 2. Republic, Timaeus and Critias. By Henry Davis. 3. Meno, Buthydenms, Sophist, Statesman, Cratylus, Pai-menides, BaJiquet. 4. Pliilelius, Charmides, Laches Henexenus, Hippias Major, Hippias Mi* nor, Ion, Fii-st Alcibiades, Second Alci.- biades, Thetiges, Eivals, Hipparchus, Mi- nos, GUtopho, Epistles. 6. The Laws. By George Burge& The Dialc^es translated into English with Analyses and introductions by B [en- jamin] Jowett, [Master of Balhol, Ox- ford.] 4 vol. 8". Oxford, 1871. 6947 Works abridg'd : with an account of his life, philosophy, morals, and politicks. With a translation of his choicest dia- logues . . 2 vol. Illustrated with notes. 374 PLATO— cent. By M. Dacier. Translated from the French . . Second edition. 12°. 1720, 19. 6948 Platone in Italia traduzione dal Greco da Vincenzo Cuoco. 3 vol. 8°. Milauo, 1806. 6949 PLAUTUS (T. MACCIUS). Quae supersunt Comoediae cum com- mentario ex Tariorum notis . . ex recen- sione loh. T'rederici Gronovii . . cum praefatione lo. Aup;usti- Brnesti. Pars prima ( — altera). (2 vol.) 8°. Lipsiae, 1760. 6950 Rudens, ut est hahita apud Westmonas- terienses, 1798. 8°. n.d. 6951 Interleaved copy with MS. notes. Trinummus textu Eitscheliano . . bre- vibns notulis instructo. 8°. 1853. 6952 Miles Gloriosus. Textu ad editionem Ritschelianam exacto . . 8°. 1853. 69.'53 Comedies literally translated into Eng- lish prose, with notes, by Henry Thomas Riley. 2 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1852. 6954 Comedies, Amphitryon, Epidicus, and Rudens, made English : with critical re- marks upon each play.. By Laurence Eohard. Second edition! 12». 1716. 6955 PLAYS. Bell's British Theatre consisting of the most esteemed English plays (and Supple- ment of farces). 25 vol. (Plates.) 8°. 1780-4. 6956 1. Tragedies. Zara, by A. Hill. Hamlet Shakespeare. Jane Snore, Eowe. Siege of Damascus, Hughes. Distressed Mother, A. Phillips. 2. Comedies. Provolt'dWife, Vanbrugh. Every Man in his humour, B. Jonson. lieaiTx Stratagem, Farquhar. Old Batchelor, Congi'eve. Committee, Sir Ki. Howard. 3. Tragedies. Earl of Essex, H. Jones. Tamerlane, Howe. Mourning Bride, Congreve. Fair Penitent, Howe. Cato, Addison. 4. Comedies. Rule a wife, etc., Beaumont and Fletcher. The Wonder, Jl^\ Centlivre. Conscious Lovers, Steele. Recruiting officer, Farquhar. Suspicious Husband, Hoadly. 5. [Wanting.] 6. Comedies. Taming the Shrew, Shake- speare. Miser, Fielding. Provok'd Hus- band, Vanbrugh and Gibber. Two Gentle- men of Verona, Shakespeare. She wou'd, &c. Cibber. 7. Tragedies. Royal Con- vert, Rowc. Alexander the Great, N. Lee. Maliomet, Miller. Theodosius, N. Lee. Lady Jane Gray, Rowe. 8. Come- dies. Midsummer Night's Di'eam, Shake- speai'e. Love's Labour Lost, Shaki^eare. Comedy of Errors, Shakespeare. Tender Husband, Steele. Busy Body, M". Cent- livre. 9. (Operas.) Beggar's Opera, Gay. Achilles, Gay. Polly, Gay. Tempest, Shakespeare. Comus, Milton. 10. Trage- dies. Merope, A. Hill. Barbarossa, Rev. D'. Bi'own. Alzira, A. Hill. Phaedra and H ippolitus. Smith. Measure for Measure, Shakespeare. 11. Comedies. Refusal, Cibber. Way of the World, Congrove. Amphitryon, altered from Dryden, by Hawkesworth. Drummer, Addison, Re- lapse, Vanbrugh. 12 [wanting]. 13. PLAYS— 6956 C07it. Comedies. Inconstant, Parquhar. Double Dealer, Congreve. Foundling, Moore. Spanish Fryar, Dryden. Double Gallant, Cibber. 14. Tragedies. Albion Queens Banks. Anna Bullen, Banks. Mariamne, Fenton. Ximena, Cibber. Brothers, D''. Young. 16. Comedies. Constant Couple Farqubar. Sir Harry Wildair, Farqubar Confederacy, Vanbrugh. Rehearsal, Duke of Buckingham. Chances, Duke of Buck- ingham. 16. Tragedies. Electra. Trans- lated from Sophocles; with notes by Theobald. Ambitious Step-Mother, Eowc. Edward the Black Prince, W. Shirley. Busiris, King of Egypt, E. Young. Bury- dice. Mallet. 17. Comedies. Twm Rivals, Farquhar. Country wife, Wycherley. Fair Quaker of Deal, Shadwell. Alchymist, Ben Jonson. Love's last shift, C. Johnson [hut, as on separate title, by Cibber], 18. Tragedies. Sophonisba, Thomson. Phil- aster, altered from Beaumont and Fletcher. Virginia, Crisp. Gustavus Vasa, H. Brooke. Dlysses, Rowe. 19. Comedies. Volpone, altered from Ben Jonson. Coun- try Lasses, C. Johnson. Mistake, Van- brugh. Gamesters, as altered from Shirley. Lad.v's Laiit Stake, Cibber. 20 [wanting]. 21. Operas. Maid of the Mill, Bickerstsfl. Love in a Village, Bickerstaff. Jovial Crew, from Beaumont and Fletcher. AccomiJlished Maid, from the Italian of Goldoni. Lionel and Clarissa, Bickerstaff. 22 [wanting]. 23. Supplement, consisting of the most esteemed Farces and Enter- tainments. Vol. II. Mayor of Garratt, Foote. Reprisal, Smollett. Devil to pay, Coffey. Lymg Valet, Garrick. Virgin un- mask d. Fielding. Lyar, Foote, Cunning Man. Musical entertainment. From the Devin de Village of Rousseau. By D'. C. Bumey. Old Maid, Murphy. Thomas and Sally, Bickerstaff. Chrononhoton- thologos, fl. Carey. Neck or Nothing, Garrick. Lotter.y, Fielding. Musical Lady, G. Coleman. Midas : burletta, Kane O'Hara. 24. Vol. III. Citizen, Murphy. Toy-shop, R. Dodsley. Golden Pippin O'Hara. Englishman in Paris, Foote. Englishman returri'd from Paris, Foote. Intriguing Chambermaid, Fielding. Polly Honeycombe, Coleman. Brave Irishman, T. Sheridan. Author, Foote. The King and the Miller of Mansfield, R. Dodsley. Padlock, Bickerstaff. Catharine and Petruchio, Garrick (altered from Shake- speare). Register-office, J. Reed. Cymon : altered from Garrick. 26. Vol. IV. The Twins. Altered from Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors, by Woods. Deserter, C. Dibdin. Commissary, Foote. Edgar and Emmeline, Hawkesworth. Rival Can- didates, Bat*. Three weeks Jitter mar- riage, Murphy. Bou Ton, Garrick. Co- mus : Masque. Altered from Milton. Orators, Foote. All the World's a stage, Jaekman. Contrivances, H. Carey. Flora, Cibber. Spirit of Contradiction, by a gentleman of Cambridge. Patron, Foote (and ^ Bucks, Have at y= all: or, the picture of a play-house. By Garrick). British Theatre; or, a collection of Plays, which arc noted at the Theatres Royal, Drury Lane, Covent Garden, and Haymarket. Printed . . from the prompt books. With biographical and critical remarks, by M". Inchbald. 25 vol. (Plates.) 12°. 1808. 6957 Vol. I. Comedy of Errors. Romeo and JuUet. Hamlet. King John. King Richai-d III. 2. King Henry IV. Mer- chant of Venice. King Henry V. Much ado about nothing. 3. As you hke it. Merry Wives of Windsor. King Henry VIII. Measure for Measure. Winter's 375 PLAYS— 6957 coiit. Tale. 4. King Lear. Cymbeline. Mac- beth. Julius Caesiir. Anton.v iind Cleo- patra. 5. Coriolanus. Uthello. 'i'l'mpest. Twelttl\ JMiicht [all] by Shakespeare. Every man in his Hutuour, B. .Jonson. 6. Rule a wife and have a wife, Beaumont and Fletcher. Chances, Beaumont and I'letcher. New way to pay old debts, Massinger. Alexander the Great, N. Lee. All for Love, Uryden. 7. Lsabella, Southern. Oroonoko, Southern. Distressed Mother, A. Philips. Zai-a, A. Hill. Gustavus Vasa, H. Brooke. 8. Constant Couple. Inconstant. Recruitinir officer. Beaux Stratagem, [^11] by Varquhar. Cato, Addison. 9. Provoked wife, Yanbrugh. Provoked Husband, Vanbrngh and Gibber. Love makes a Man. She Wou'd and She ■nou'd not. Careless Husband. [All] by Cibber. 10. Tamerlane. 1 air Penitent. Jane Shore. Lady Jane Grey. [All] by Rowe. Siege of Damascus, Hughes. 11. Busy Body, M". Centlivre. Wonder, M". Centlivre. George Barnwell, Lillo. Fatal Curiosity, Lillo. Bold Stroke for a Wife, M". Centlivre. 12. Orphan, Otway. Ycnice preserved, Otway. Conscious Lovers, Steele. Revenge, Young. Beggar's Opera, Gay. 13. Love for Love, Congreve. Mourning Bride, Congreve. Mahomet, Miller. Tancred and Sigismunda,Thomson, Suspicious Husband, Hoadly. 14. Man of the World, Macklin. Foundling, Moore. Gamester, Moore. Roman Father, White- head. Edward the Black Prince, W. Shirley. 16. Barbarossa, Rev. D'. Brown. Way to Keep him. All in the wrong. Grecian Daughter. Know your own Mind. [All] by Murphy. 16. Counti-y Girl, Gar- rick, altered from Wyclierley's " Country Wife." Jealous Wife, Colman. Clandestine Marriage, Colman and Garriok. Coiuitess of Sahsbury, Hartson. Douglas, Home. 17. Goodnatured Man, Goldsmith. She Stoops to Conquer, Goldsmith. Love in a Village, Maid of the Mill, Lionel and Clarissa. [All] by Bickerstatf. 18. Brothers. W^t Indian. Jew. First Love. AVheel of Fortune. [All] by Cumberland. 1!). Earl of Warwick, Fran[e]klin. Rivals, Sheridan. Duenna, Sheridan. Belle's Stratagem, M". Cowley. Bold stroke for a husband, M". Cowley. 20. Dramatist, F. Reynolds. Count of Narbonne, Jephson. Inkle and Tarico. Battle of Hexham. Surrender of Calais. 21. Motintaineers. Iron Chest. Heir at Law. John Bull. Poor Gentleman. [AUJ by Colman the younger. 22. Castle of Andalusia. Fontainbleau. Wild Oats. [All] by O'Keefte. Heiress, Burgoyne. Earl of Essex, H. Jones. 23. Such thmgs are. Everyone has his fault. Wives as they were, and Maids as they are. Lo vers' Vows. To marry, or not to marry. [All] by M". Inchbald. 2*; Road to Rum, Holcroft. Deserted Daughter, Holcroft. Stranger, translated from the German of Kotzebue by Benjamin Thompson. Do Monfort, Joanna BaiUie. Point of Honour, Kemble. 25. Way to get married. Cure for the Heart :icl)e. Speed the Plough. School of Reform. [All] by Morton. Honey Moon, Tobin. MS. note in Vol. I. as to Miss O'Neil's performances. [Half title] English Comedy : a collec- tiou of the most celebrated dramas, since the commencement of the reformation of the Stage by Sir Richard Steele and CoUey Cibber. [Engraved title] Enghsh Comedy. 6 vol. 12°. 1810. 6958 Vol. 1. Provoked Husband, Vanbrugh and Cibber. Jealous Wife, Colman. West PLAYS— 6958 cont. Indian, Cumberland. 2. Rivals, Sheridan. Way to Keep him, Murphy. Fugitive, . Richardson. 3. Chapter of Accidents, Miss Lee. Clandestine ilarriage, Colman and Garrick. All in the wrong, Mui-phy. 4. Heiress, Burgoyne. She stoops to Conquer, Goldsmith. Discovery, M". Sheridan. S.Belle'a Stratagem, M". Cowley. Know your own mind, Mui-phy. Conscious Lovers, Steele. 6. Man of the World, Macklin. Miser, Fielding. Brothers, Cumberland. Five old plays, illustrating the early progress of the English Drama. Edited by J. Payne Collier. Printed tor the Roxbiirghe club. i". 1851. 6959 Introduction. Conflict of Conscience, 1581. Rare Triumphs of Love and Fortune, 1589. Three Ladies of London, 1684. Three Lords and Three Ladies of London, 1590. Iviiack to Know a Knave, 151)4. Also contains a hst of the Roxburghe Club; and a catalogue of the Books presented to and printed by the Club. J 850. [Half title.] Four plays or Moral Representations in one. 8°. n.p. n.d. 6960 " Vol. X." pp. 482-565 of some series or col- lection. London Stage ; a collection of the most reputed tragedies, comedies, operas, melo- dramas, farces, and interludes . . 4 vol. (Frontispieces of theatrical portraits ; and vignettes). 8°. n.d. 6961 Vol. X. Pizarro, altered from Kotzebue by Sheridan. I'adlock, Bickerstaff. Miser. Fielding. Hypocrite, Bickerstaff. Duenna, Sheridan. Castle Spectre, Lewis. All the World's a stage, Jackman. High Life below Stairs, Townley. Wheel of Fortune, Cumberland. She stoops to conquer. Goldsmith. Maid of the Mill, Bickerstaff, Clandestine Marriage, Colman and Crar- rick. Jane Shore, Rowe. Deserter, Dibdin. Citizen, Murphy. Love in a Village, Bickerstaff. Road to Ruin, Hol- croft. Beggar's Opera, Gay. Country Girl, altered from Wycherley, Garrick. Honest Thieves, Knight. Three Weeks after Marriage, Murpby. Gfamester, Moore. Soldier's Daughter, Cherry. The Jew, Cumberland. Lionel and Clarissa, Bickerstatf. Mayor of GJarratt, Foote. Midnight Hour, M". Inchbald. Way to Keep him, Murphy. Douglas, Home. Such things are, M""". Inchbald. Devil to lay, Coffey. Lying Valet, Garrick. West _.ndian, Cumberland. Revenge, Young. Rule a Wife, etc. altered from Beaumont and Fletcher by Ga,rrick. Who's the Dupe?, M". Cowley. Midas, O'Hara. Deaf and Dumb, Holcroft. Inconstant. Farquhar. Recruiting Officer, Farquhar, Man of the World, Macklin. Jealous Wife, Colman. Critic, Sheridan. Rivals. Sheridan. Alexander the Great, Lee. Adopted Child, Birch. Quaker, 0. Dibdin. Bold stroke for a Wife, M". Centlivre. Z. Belle's Stratagem, M". Cowley. Cato, Addison. Provoked Husband, Vanbi-ugh and (Jibber. George Barnwell, Lillo. Tale of Mystery, Holcroft. Farm House, J. P. Kemble. Venice Preserved, Otway, Dragon of Wantley, Carey. Liar, Foote. The Wonder : a woman keeps a Secret ! M". Centlivre. Isabella, Southern. All in the Wrong, Murphy. Rosina, M". Brooke. Wedding Day, M". Inchbald. New Way to pay old Debts, Massinger, pa. In 376 PLAYS— 6961 com. Pair Penitent, Eowe. Child of Nature, M". Inohbald. Polly Honeycombe, Col- man the elder. Brothers, Cumberland. Every one has his Fault, M". Inohbald. Trip to Scarborough, Sheridan. Know yoiir own Mind, Murphy. Comus, altei-ed from Milton. The Doctor and the Apo- theoslry, Cobb. Beaux Stratugem, Far- auhar. Barbarossa, John Broira. Lo- oiska, J. P. Kemble. Mock Doctor, Fielding. Suspicious Husband, Hoadly. Haunted Tower, Cobb. Busy Body, M". Centlivre. Tom Thumb, altered from Fielding, by O'Hata. Tobacconist, altered from B(in Jonson, by Gentleman. Good- Natufed Man, Goldsmith. OrooUoko, Southern. Lord of the Manor, altered from Burgoyne, by C: Dibdin, jun. Fortune's Frolic, Allingham. Cross Pur- poses, O'Bpieh. Chapter of Accidents, Miss Lee. Which is the Man? M". Cowley. Arden of Feversham, Lillo. Con- scious Lovers, Steele,. Follies of a Day, Holcroft. Miss in Her Teens, Garrick. Constant Couple, Farquhar. . Duke of Milan, Massifiger. Wives as they were, and Maids as they are, M™. Inchbald. Fashionable Lover, Cumberland. Orphan of China, Murphy. 3. Heiress, Burgoyne. JEarl of Warwick, Francklill. Monsieur Tonson, MoncrieU. The Deuce is in hira, Colman. First Love, Cumberland. De- serted Daughter, Holcroft. Love for Love; Congreve. GUstavus Vasa, Brooke, Deaf Lover, Pilon. Irish Widow, Garrick. Bold Stroke for a Husband, M". Cowley. Con- federacy, Vanbmgh. Fatal Curiosity, Lillo. Chrononhotonthologos, Cal:ey. She Would and She would not, Cibber; Count of Narbonne, Jephson. First Floori Cobb. Virgin Unmasked, Fielding. Provoked Wife, Vanbrugh. Roman Father, White- head. Love makes a Man, Cibber. Siege of Damascus, Hughes. Cymon, Garrick. Bon Ton, Garrick. Foundling, Moore. Stranger, B. Thompson. Tamerlane, Howe, iiovers' Vows, altered from Kotzebue by M""". Inchbald. Richard Coeur De Lion, altered from Sedaino by Burgoyne. Two Strings to your bow, Jephson. Ways and Means, Colman. Hero and Leander, Jack- man. Mysterious Husband, Cumberland. He Would be a soldier, Pilon. Guardian, Garrick. » Sultan, Bickerstaff. Better Late than Never, Andrews. Giovanni in London, Moncrieff. Recruitiug Sergeant, Bickerstaff. Every Man in his Humour, altered from Ben Jonson, by Garrick. Earl of Essex, H. Jones. All for Love, Dryden. Grecian Daughter, Murphy. Careless Husband, Cibber. Love a la Mode, Macklin. Maid of the Oaks, Bur- goyne. Tender Husband, Steele. Orphan, Otway. Lovers' Quarrels, altered from "the Mistake" of Vanbrugh by T. King. Two Misers, O'Hara. Lady Jane Grey, Rowe. 4. Chances, altered from Beau- mont and t'^letcher, by Garrick. Tancred and Sigismunda, Thomson. Honey-Moon, Tobin. Apprentice, Murph.v. Tailors [anon.] Woodman, Bate Dudley. Edward, the Black Prince, W. Shirley. Waterman, C. Dibdin. Romp, Bickerstalfe. Braganza, Jephson. Mogul Tale (M". Ihchbald). Appearance is against them (M'-. Inch- bald). Abroad and at Home, llolni;iii. Double Dealer, Congreve. Maliomet, iMiller. Carmelite, Cumberland. Way of the World, Congreve. The Panel, altcird from Bickerstaff's " Tis well it's no worse " by J. P. Kemble. Thomas and Sally (Bickerstaff). Duplicity, Holcroft. Bash- ful Man, Moncriell. School for Wives, Kelly. Castle of Sorrento, Henry Heart- well.' Contrivances, Carey. Law of Lom- bardy, Jephson. Clicats of Scapin, Otway. Miller of MansQeld, Dodsloy. False Im- pressions, Cumberland, Zara, A. Hill. PLAYS— 6961 cont. He's much to blame, Hclci'oft. Curfew, Tobin. What next?, T. Dibdin. The Purse, Cross. Farmer's Wife, C. Dibdin jun. My Spouse and 1, C. Dibdin, jun. Paul and Virginia, Cohti. Siege of Bel- grade, Cbbb. Distrest Mother, A. Philips. Animal Magnetism, M''\ Inohbald. Re- gister Office, Reed. School for Scandal, Sheridan. Meroh&ilt of Bruges; or. Beg- gar's Bush, altered from Beaumoht and Fletcher, by Douglas Kinnaird. Village Lawyer, [Anon.l. No Song, No Supper, Hoare. Votaiy of Wealth, Holman. School tor Arrogance, Holcroft. Seduc- tion, Holcroft. Mourning Bride, Con- greve. Scape-Goat, Poole. Spoiled Child [Anon]. Returned "Killedi" Planch6. Turnpike Gate, T. Knight. New British Theatre : a selection of original Dramas, with critical remarks by the editor, John Gait. Second edition. 4 vol. 8°. 1834. 6962 Vol. 1. The Witness, tragedy. Watch- house, farce. Intrigues of a day, comedy. Prophetess, trjigedy. Masquerade, comedy. Theodoi'a, tragedy (by M". M'Taggart). Word of Honor, comedy. Bandit, opera. Forgery, drama. Genii, masque by Andrew Becket. 2. Sulieman, tragedy. ManoBuvringi comedy. Villario, play (by the author , of "Theodora"). Family Politics, comedy. Thermopylae ; or repulsed invasion, tragic drama. Sail- ors' return, farce. The Last Act^ farce. Way to win her, comedy. Mermaid, inter- lude. 3. Sorceress, tragedy. Search after perfection, comedy (by the author of * Villario " and " Theodora " ) . Gonzanga, drama. Gondolier : or, a night in Venice, opera. Spaniards ; or the expulsion of the Moors, heroic drama. Love, honor, and interest, comedy. OiTDheus, opera. Apostate ; or, Atlantis destroyed, tragedy. Father and Son, or Family Frailties, comedy. 4. Selim and Zuleika, tragedy. Woman's Will, comedy. Hortensia, ti-a- fedy. Apollo's choice, or the Contest of the -onides, musical burletta. He must be married; or the Miser ontmtted, opera- tical piece. Fair Crusader, opera. Hector, tragic cento. Savoyard, opera. Sixteen and sixty, musical farce ; by the author of "TheGondoher." At first this work was evidently issued as the " Rejected Theatre." Old English Plays ; being a selection from the early dramatic writers. 6 vol. 8°. 1814-15. 6963 Vol. 1. Doctor Faustus, by Marlowe. Lust's Dominion, Marlowe. Mother Bombie, Lyly; Midas, Lylyi 2. Endymion, Lyly. Antonio and Mellida, Marston. What you Will, Marston. Para- sitaster, Marston. 3. Wonder of a Kingdom, Dekker. Old Portunatus, Dekker. Bussy D'Ambois, Chapman. Monsieur d'Olive, Chapman. ■1. May Day, Chapman. Spanish Gips.y, Middleton and Rowley. Clmngeling, Mid- dleton and Rowley. More Dissemblers besides Women, Middlaton. .■). Women beware Women, Middleton. Trick to catch the old one, Middleton. New wonder, a Woman never vext, Row- ley. Appius and Virginia, Webster. n. Tliracian Wonder, Webster and Rowley. English Travellel'i Heywood. Royal King and Loyal subject, Heywood. Challenge for beauty, Heywood. (Parsons's) Minor Theatre : being a collection of the most approved fiirces, 377 PLAYS— coB^ operas, and comeclies . With some ac- count of the respectivp, authors. 7 vol. (Portraits & plates.) 12°. 1794. 6964 Vol. 1. Guardian, by Garrick. Minor, I'oote. Citizen, Murphy. Hieh Life be- low stairs, Garrick \^sid'}. Upholsterer, Murphy. 2. Knights, by Footn. Desert Island, Mur- pliy. Miss in her teens, Garrick. Flora ; or. Hob in the Well, compressed by Hip- Iilsley from the Country Wake of DogRet. The Oouce is in him, G. Cnleman. 3. Contrivances, H. Carey, Irish Widriw, Garrick. Lyar, Foote. Mock 1/octor, Fielding. Lying Valet, Garrick. 4. Commissaiy, Foote. Lame Lover, Footo*. Taste, Foote. Edgar and Emmeline, llawkcsworth. Author, Foote. ^1. Mayor of Garratt, Fnglishman in Paris, Englishman retum'd from Paris, Orators, Patron— [all] by Foote. 6. IJevil upon two sticks, Foote. Maid of I he Oaks, Burgoyne. D^ Last m his chariot, translated from Mohere's Malade fmaffinairet by Bickerstalle, and new scenes by Foote. Maid of Bath, Foote. The Tailors, Anon. 7. Bankrupt, Foote. Cymon, Garrick. Trip to Calais, Cozeners, Capuchin, Nabob- Call] by Foote. Six old plays, on which Shakspeare founded his Measure for Measure. Comedy of Errors. Taming the shrew. King John. K. Henry IV. and IC. Henry V. King Lear. [Advertisement signed " J. Nichols."] 2 vol. 8°. 1779. 6965 Vol. 1. Promos and Cassandra by "Whet- stones. Menaechmi by Plautus, in Eng- lish, by W. Vf. Taming of a shrew. Troublesome leign of K John. Part I. (by W. 8h.) •!. Troublesome reign of K John (Part II.). Famous victories of llf-niy the fifth. True Chronicle History of King Leir, and his three daughters, eionoriu, Rajjan, and Cordelia. tComedics, &c.] 8°. Various dates. 6966 Fiilslart's Wedding. Being a Sequel to the Srcond part of the play of king Henry the fourth. Written in imitation of Shake- speare, by M'. Kenrick. 1760. Good Xatur'd Man. New edition. 0. Gold- smilh. 1768. Jealous Wife> Second edition-. G. Oolman. 1781. Mayor of Garratt. Second edition. S. Foote> 1789. The MaOTici or, the Maid of Pateiseau. Melo-dramatic romance. Second edition. 1815. The Maid and the Magpye ; or. Which is the thief? musical entertainment. Freely translated, with alterations, from the French [of MM. Caimiez and D'Aubigny], by S. J. Arnold. The mnsic composed nnd selected by H. Smart. 1816. [ComedieB.] 8°. Various dates. 6967 Lyar. Foote. 176*. Man of Business. G. Colman. 1774. School for Wives [Anon. Hugh Kelly]- (Frontispiece by De Loutherbourg.) 1774. South Briton. By a Lady. 1774. Country Girl (altered from Wycherley). [Anon. D. Gan-ickJ 1768. Gamesters alter'd from Shirley [Anon. D. Garrick]. 1758. PLAYS— conf. The Duel. Play. [Anon. William O'Brien.] 1772. The Dupe. By the author of the Discovery [M". F. Sheridan]. 1764. Perplexities [T. Hull]. 1787. Indiscreet Lover. Second edition. Abra- ham Portal, 1768. [Dramas. Mostly Original Editions.] 36 vol. 8°. and 12°. Various dates. 6968 Vol. I. Hungarian Daughter. Dramatic Poem. George Stephens. 1''<^H. Pestus. Poem. [Anom Philip James Bailey.] 18.30. Ion. Tragedy. To which are added a few sonnets. Second edition. T. N. Talfourd. Printed for private circula- tion, not published, n.d. " To John Fors- ter Esq. With the Author's heartiest II. Borgia. Tragedy. Henry T. Worley. 18*3. John of Hapsburg. Tragedy. Richard Lewis. 1848. Mothers and Daughters. Comedy. Robert Bell. 184.3. Patrician's daughter. Tragedy. Second edition. J.'WestlandMarston. 1842. Pre- sentation copy with inscription. Francesca di Faenza. Tragedy. Lord Beaumont. 1843. the Lone Hut; or, a legend of Mont Blanc. Drama. George Raymond. 1842. Gertrude's Cherries : or, Waterloo in 1835. Comedy. D. Jerroldi 1842. Punch's Pantomime ; or, Harleauin King John and Magna Charta. By the "Writers of "Punch." Punch office, n.d. [V 1842 or 3]. m. Andrea of Hungaryi and Giovanna of NaplBSi Walter Savage Landor. 1839. Marked copy with a few MS. alterations. Fra Rupert the last part of a trilogy. W. S. Landor. 18*0. Ethelstani or, the Battle of Brunanburh. Dramatic Chronicle. George Darley. 1841. Presentation copy. Nina Sforza. Tragedy. R,ichard Zouch S. Troughton. 1840. Presentation copy. [Half Title.] Cromwell, n.p.n.d. "TJn- pubhshed : this is the only copy in ex- istence. The rest were cancelled." MS. note by Mr Forster. Inserted is a MS. variation of the end of the play. Money. Comed.v. By the author of " The Lady of Lyons." [Lord Lytton.] 1840. IV. To Marry or not to Marry. Comedy. Second edition. M'". Inchbald. 1806. Fall of Robespierre. Historic drania. S. T. Coleridge. Cambridge, 1794. Masque. James, Sheridan Snowies. 1832. To John Forster Es.q. from his affectionate pupil in masquihg J. S. Knowles." Ber- tram; or, the castle of St. Aldobrand. Tragedy. Rev. R. C. [C. R.] Maturin. 1816. Glencoe, or, the Fate of the Mac- dpnalds. ^^ragedy. Second edition. [Sir] T. N. Talfourd. 18*0. Presentation copy. Alasco. Tragedy. Excluded from stage, by the authoxity of the Lord Cham- berlain. Martin Archer [aft. Sir. M. A.] Shee [P.R.A.]. 1824. Crohoore of the bill-hook ; or, Crohoore - na • Bilhoge. Dramatized from the first series of the Tales by the O'Hara Family, by "William And*eW Mitchell. Newcastle- on -Tyne. 1828. Presentation copy. CatiUne ; or, the Roman Conspiracy. Historical drama. Printed for private circulation. John Edmund RMide. 1839. Presentation copy. Drama of a Life. J. E. Reade. Bath (printed) 1840. At the end— Poems, and Translations from Gogthe. MS. in- scription. Aristodemus. Tragedy. Edin- burgh, 18.38. "Wallace. Historical Tra- gedy. 1837. Caius Marius, the Plebeian Consul. Historical Tra^dy. Thomas Doubleday. Newcastle (printed) 1836. V. Legend of Florence. Play. Second edition. Leigh Hunt. 1840. [No title 378 PLAYS— 6968 C07it. Siige. Cosmo De' Bledici; R. H. Home/] eath of Marlowe. Tragedy. R. H. Home. 1837. Thomus a Becket. Dra- matic chronicle. G. Barley. 1840. Love. Play. J. S. Knowles. 1840. Glencoe. Tragedy. T. N. Taltourd. Not published, n.d. [1839]. Beggar of Bethiial Green. Comedy. Altered from the Beggar's Daughter of Bethnal Green. J. S. Knowles. 1834. Presentation copy. The Wife: a tale of Mantua. Play. J. S. Knowles. 1833. Presentation copy. Love-chase. Comedy. Second edition. J. S. Knowles. 1837. VI. Athelwold. Tragedy. William Smith. London and Edinburgh, 1842. Earl of Leicester. Tragedy. Samuel Heath. 1843. Robber's Cave ; or, Pour-horned Moon. In imitation and after the manner of Shakspeare. Drama. At the end — a Fi-agraent. Launcelot of the Lake. Tra- gedy. C. J. BiethmuUer. 1843. The CondiS's Wife. Historical drama. Thomas Smibert. 1843. Theresa : the Maid of the Tyrol. Tragedy. William Lewis Thomas. 1843. . Marguerite. Tragedy. By the author of " The Shepherd's Well." 1844. Marion : or the Page. Play. 1844. VII. Ion, Tragedy. Eourth edition [and] Sonnets. T. JV.Talfourd. 1837. Presen- tation copy. Athenian Captive. Tragedy. Second edition. T. N. Talfourd. 1838. Glencoe. [Anon. Talfourd.] 1840. Pre- sentation copy. Woman's Wit or. Love's Disguises. Play. J. S. Knowles. 1838. Love-chase. Comedy, J. S. Knowles, 1837. The Daughter. Play. J. S. Knowles. 1837. John of Procida ; or the Bridals of Messina. Tragedy. J, S, Knowles. 1840. VIII. Julian. Tragedy. Third edition. Mary Russell Mitford. 1823. Countess of Essex. Tragedy, 1834. Siege of Ant- werp. Historical Play. William Ken- nedy. 1838. Caius Marius, the Plebeian Consul. Historical Tragedy. Thomas Doubleday. 1836. Athenian Captive. Tragedy. T. N. Talfourd. 1838. Pre- sentation cop.v. Legend of Florence. Play. Leigh Hunt. 1840, John of Pro- cida. J. S. Knowles. 1840. Ion. Tra- gedy. T. N. Talfourd. Por private circu- lation, n.d. [1835], IX. Gisippus. Play. Gerald Griffin, 1842. Athelwold. Tragedy. W. Smith. 1842. Patrician's Daughter. Tragedy, Marston. 1841, marked for representation, MS. ad- ditions in M^ Porster's handwriting. The Drama, and "Old Drui*^." Reprinted from " The Monthly Magazine " for March, 1842. n.d. Plighted Troth ; or, a woman her own rival. Dramatic tale, [By G. Barley.] 1842, Socrates, Tragedy, I'raueis Barham, 1842. Marriage. Comedy, Robert Bell. 1842. Rose of Arragon. Play. J. S. Knowles, 1842. Nina Sforza. Second edition. R. Z. S, Troughton, 1811. X. Bthelstan. Dramatic Chronicle, G, Darley. ISU. Richelieu; or, the Con- spiracy. Play, To which are added. Historical odes on the Last Days of Eliza- beth; Cromwell's Bream; the Death of Nelson. By the author of the " Lady of Lyons" [Edward, Lord Lytton], 1839, Fiesco, or the Conspiracy of Genoa, Tra- gedy, Translated from the German of Pricdrich von Schiller, 1841, Ion. Tra- ged,y, 'ralfourd. For private circulation, n.d.' [1835]. MS, alterations and inser- tions : MS, notes by M' Forster. Pre- sentation copy. Gregory VII. Tragedy. R. H. Home, 1840. Presentation copy. MS. notes by M'. I'orstor. XI. Prisoner of War. Comedy, D, JeiTold. 1842, Bubbles of the Day, Comedy, D, PLAYS— 6968 cont. Jerrold, 1842. Marriage. Comedy. R. Bell. 1842. Presentation copy. Old Maids. Coraed.y. J. S. Knowles. 1841. Lords of Ellingham. Drama. Henry Spioer, 1839. Lost and Won. Play. [Anon. H. Spicer.] 1841. Martinuzzi. Tragedy. Abridged from his dramatic poem, the Hungarian Daughter. G. Stephens, 1841, XII. Athanase. Dramatic poem. Edwin P. Roberts, n.d. [1847], Lucretia. Tra- gedy. Translated from the play of Pon- sard. 1848. The League's Convert. Tragedy. Henry W. Pearson. 1847. Hunchback. Play. New edition. J. S. Knowles, 1847. Catherine of Cloves, and Hemani, Tragedies. Translated from the French of Alexandre Bumas, and Victor Hugo, hy Lord Francis Leveson Gower. 1832. [No " Hernani."] XIII. Catspaw. Comedy. B. JeiTold, 1850. Retired from Business. Comedy. B. Jerrold. 1851. Garcia : or, The Noble Error. Tragedy. P. G. Tomlins. 1849. Pre- sentation copyl Philip the Second, Ti'agedy. N, T, Moile. [i.e. Henry Bliss.] 1849. Note from " the Author " inserted. The Witch- Wife : a tale of Malkin Tower. Drama. H. Spicer. (Frontispiece.) 1849. Oliver Crom- well. Brama. W. H. Leatham. London and Wakefield, 1843. Spanish Rake. Comedy. Robert St. Clair Jones. 1850. Alcestis, the original strong - minded woman. Classical Burlesque of Euripides, By the Author of the Travesties of "Macbeth," and the " Merchant of Venice " [Francis Talfourd.] Oxford, 1850. Merchant of Venice travestie. Burlesque. By the Author of " Macbeth Travestie " [F, Talfourd.] Oxford, 1849. My Friend Ski-hi; or, the Magic Crystal. Founded upon an extraordinary event in the history of China. By the Author of " Judge Jeffreys." [H. Spicer.] 1851. XIV. Railway Results ; or, the Gauge de- liverance. Bramatic sketch. Sir Fortu- natus Bwarris, 1845. Time Works Won- ders. Comedy. B. Jerrold. 1845. [Half- title] Corner of the street. Farce. Feudal Times ; or, the Court of James the third, Scottish historical Play. By the Author of "The Earl of Gowrie" [Rev. James White.] 1847. Presentation copy. The Azamoglan. Tragedy. Founded on an incident in the Greek Revolution. 1845. The Squire's daughter. Ti-agedy. Andrew Park. 1846. [Half-Title.] Constance, Tragedy. Francis Talfourd. n,d. Pre- sentation copy. Iphigenia in Aulis : tra- gedy, from the Greek of Euripides, Adapted to the modern stage by John William Oaloraft. With original music, composed by Richard M. Levey. Third edition. Dubhn, 1847, XV. Ivan III or, a day and night in Russia, Dramatic sketch. John Bell, sculptor, 1856, A Heart of Gold. Brama. B. Jer- rold. 1854. The prohibited Comedy. Richelieu in Love; or, the Youth of Charles I. Historical Comedy. By the Author of " Whitefriars " [Miss Ro- binson,] 1852, [German title.] Ber Nette als Onkel. Lustspiel von F. v. Schiller. Zum iibersetfeen in das Bnglische von Charles Biokens,jiin. [English title.] The Nephew as Uncle. Comedy. Arranged for translation into English with notes and a copious vocabulary by Charles Bickens, ]un. Leipzig. 1864. The Evil Genius. Original comedy. Bayle Ber- nai'd. n.d. (P 1866.) Presentation copy : note from the Author inserted. Duchess Eleanour, Tragedy, By the Author of " Old Love and New Fortune" [H. P. C. i.c. H. P. Chorley]. n.d. (1854). Timoleon, Ti-agedy. Robert W. Jameson, Edin- 379 PLAYS— 6968 cont. burgh, 1852. Jiiigeiiia Uarnot ; or, Etpu- tiition's Slru^'gle. (Jripimil play. lS.i5. Videna; or, Uie Mntlier's Tni,Ked.y. Le- gend of Early Britain. John A. Hcraud. 1854. The iSccrotary. Flay. J. S. Kiiowks. 1843. [Dedicated to M'. Forster.] Alce.s- ti.s. Lyrical play, adapted from tie Greek of Euripides, and the French of Hyx>polite Lucas. By H. Spieer. 1865. XVI. Barber Baron. Drama. Haymond. With Kemarks, by D.-G. [G. Daniel] [etc.] n.d. AiTair of honour. Farce. WiUiam Leman Rede. With Remarks by D.-G. lele.] n.d. Our Village, or, tiie Lost Sliip. Domestic burlctta. Leman Rede. With Kemarks by D.-G. [etc.] n.d. 31aiden Aunt, Comedy. Richard Brins- ley Knowles. 1845. Macbeth Travestie. Burlesqtie. [Anon. F. Taltourd,] Second edition. 0x101x1,1848. Lords of EUingham. Drama. H. Spieer. 1848. Wreck Ashore. Drama. Jonn Baldwin Buckstone. With the cast of characters. Engraving, by Kennedy [sic] Meadows, n.d. [1834.] Armand; or, the Peer and the Peasant. Play. Anna Cora Mowatt. 1849. Robin Hood. Original play. E. St. Clnir Jones. 18ks. [Half title] Claudius. Tale. First part. (Manchester, printed), n.d. XVII. Martelli. Tragedy. 1843. Gawyim Honor. Tragedy. By the Author of "Waldenberg," " Jubal," etc. n.d. Shcp- hcTd's Well. Play. 184-3. Brothers. Play. London and Manchester. 1843. Blind Wife ; or, the Student of Bonn. Tragic Romance. Thomas Powell. 18'43. XVIII. Mysterious Mother. Tragedy. [Anon. Horace Walpole.] Dublin, 1791. School' for Wives. Comedy. [Anon. Hugh Kelly.] 1774. NinaSforza. R. Z. S. Troughton. Second edition. 1841. Fame -, or, the Real and the Ideal. Origi- nal Play. Henry Oshorn. 1850. The Protector at Houghall ; or, the lily and the rose. Original drama. James Brays- hay. London and Durham, n.d. (1851) . Judas Isoariot. Miracle Pla.y. With other poems. R. H. Home. 1848. St. Ethel- Lerht. Historical Tragedy. Alfred Havi- land. London and Bridgwater. 1849. Ida De Galis. A tragedy of Powys Castle. Rev. R. W. Morgan. 1861. Alphonso Barbo, or the punishment of death. Tra- gedy. Charles F. EUerman. 1850. XIX. Andrea of Hungary, and Giovanna of Naples. W. S. Landor. n.d. MS. altera- tions and additions, some by Mr. Forster. Fra Rupert. W. S. Landor. 1840. Earl of Brecon. Tragedy. Faith's Fraud. Tragedy. Ferryman. Drama. [Ail three by] Robert Landor. 1841. XX. Shakespeare night, in aid of the funds lor tile purchase and preservation of Shakespeare's house. Tuesday, December seventh, 1847, at the Royal Itahan Opera, Coveut Garden, n.d. (1847). IfsiUan Captain. Drama. 1847. Napoleon. His- torical drama. 1842. Family Affairs. Comedy. 1848. Cromwell. Drama. Alfred Bate Richards. 1847. All's a Delusion. Comedy. 1847. Griselda : or. Love and i'atieiice. Play. John W. Atkins. 1840. Athelstan. Tragedy. Life and Death, an allegory, and other poems. Edmund H. While, guard, Great Western . Railway. 1847. XXI Revolt of Flanders. Historical Tra- gedy. By the Author of the " prohibited " Comedy, "Richelieu in Love" [Miss Ro- binson.] 1818. (Running title "Philip of Arleveldt ; or, the Revolt of Flanders.") ThcJustiza: ataleof Arragon. Play. G. J. Bennett. 1848. Gregory VII. Tragedy. Third edition. R. H . Home. 1849. Pha- raoh. Dramatic poem. Rev. Samuel Spink. 1848. The Martyr. Tragedy. PLAYS— 6968 coiit. Hon. M". Erskine Norton. 1348. Adrian. Tragedy. IS 18. XXII. Passing Clouds, a tale of Florence. Play. 1854. Pyi-ficmon. Tragedy. John Henry Keane. 1853. White Chateau. Tra- gedy. 1852. Sesostris ; or, the Priest and the King. Tragedy. C. H. Williams. 1853. Michele Oromhello or the Fatal Secret. Tragedy. George Powell Thomas, liondon and Calcutta. 1852. The Assassin or the Rival Lovers. Traged,y. George Powell Thomas. London and Calcutta, 1852. The Yogi's Daughter. Tragedy. JoJin Baker Hopkins. 1854. Chah ; or, the Yankee and Nigger at the Exhibition. A reading farce. 1853. Boadicea'B His- tory. Dramatic Chronicle. Henry W. Pearson. Cape Town, 1865. Hanno. Tra- gedy. 1853. Head Quarters ; or. Manners in the East. Drama. By a hght-bob. 1853. Successful Candidate. Comedy. R. KempPhilp. n.d. Weight of a Crown. Tragedy. By Fen'agus. 1862. Merchant of Bruges ; or Beggar's Bush. [Beaumont and Fletcher.] With considerable altera- tions and additions. By Hon. Douglas Kinnaird. [Date mutilated.] Adelaide ; or th6 Emigrants. Tragedy. R. L. Sheil. Dublin, 1814. XXIII. Lady of Lyons ; or. Love and Pride, Play, by tlie Author of "Eugene Aram" [Lord Lytton]. 1849. The Templar. Play. Angiolo R. Slous. 1850. Tragedy of Count Alarcos. By the Author of " Vivian Grey " [Benjamin Disraeli, aft. Earl of Beacons- lield.J 1839. Richard the First. "Roman- tick play. George Wightwick. Plymouth (printed). 1848. Philip of France and Marie de M6ranie. Tragedy. J. W. Mars- ton. 1850. Old Love and New Fortune. Play. By the Author of " Conti " [H. F. C. i.e. H.F. Chorley] 1850. Presentation copy. Trevanion ; or, the False Position. Play. J. Westland Marston and Bayle Bernard (1849) . Passing Cloud. Romantic drama. ]3. Bernard, n.d. (1860). Presentation copy. Desultory Thoughts, on the National Drama. By an old playgoer. 1850. XXIV. Not so bad as we seem ; or Many sides to a character. Comedy. As first performed at Devonshire House. 1851. At the end — "David Fallen is dead! "or, a key to the Play. An after-scene, by way of an. Epilogue. By Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton. Pencil drawing of two of the characters. Printed Notice inserted. M'. Nightingale's Diary. Farce. 1851. [Bv Mark Lemon and C. Dickens]. The Noble Heart. Tragedy. G. H. Lewes. 1850. Nina Sforza. R. Z. S. Troughton. Second edition, with the adaptation for the stage. 1841. Marked copy for represen- tation, MS. stage directions, &c. Rent Day. Drama. Third edition. D. Jerrold. 1834. MS. stage directions. Three to one. Comedy. [By John Lettsom Elliot.] 1850. Five to Two. Comedy. By the Author of "Three to one." 1851. Strathmore. Tragic play. .J. W. Marston. 1849. Henry the Second. Tragedy. (3eorge Wight- wick. London and Plymouth. 1851- Judas Iscariot. Miracle play. With other Poems. R. H. Home. 1848. Two MS. in- sertions. XXV. Earl of Gowrie. Tragedy. Rev. James White. 1845. King of tie Com- mons. Drama. By the Author of "The Earl of Gowrie " [Rev. J. White.] 1846. Jeffreys ; or, the Wife's Vengeance. Play. H. Spieer. 1840. Belisarius. Tragedy. WiUiam E. Scott. 1846. Baron Fitzar- dern. Tragedy. 1845. Ignez de Castro, Tragedy. By the Author of " Rural Son- nets." (Portrait.) 1846. Bianca Cap- pello. Tragedy. Henry P. Home. Staines, 1846. 380 PLAYS— 6968 cont. XXVI. Scenes li'om the rejected Comedies. Punch Office, ISM. [The authors parodied are Sheridan Knowles, Douglas Jerrold, Serjeant Talfourd, J. R. Planchd, E. fitz- Ball, D. Houcicanlt, LeiRh Hunt, G. A. A'Bccket, Mark Lemon, and Lord Lytton.l Phihp. Tragedy. ByAlflert. Translated by Charles Orlando Childe. 18«. Love and Jealousy. Tragedy for the Million. 1844; Launcelot of the Lake. Tragedy. C. J. EietlimuUer. 1843. Mothers and Daughters. Comedy. Second edition; with an explanatory preface. Robert Bell. 184*. Iphigema in Tauris. From the German o£ Goethe, b.y G. Ij. Hartwig. Berlin, 1841. The Eobljer's Cave. Drama, in isjitation and after the manner of Shakspeare. 1843. At the end— A Frag- ment. Eiichelieu in Love. With a pre- face explanatory. [By Miss Bobinson.] 1844. The Court at Ravenna. Comedy. By the Author of " The Robber's Cave." 1844. XXVII. [Hall Title] The Parvenu ; or, Lost and Won. Comedy. Family Altairs. Comedy. 1846. Look before you Leap ; or, Wooings and Weddings. Comedy. George W. Lorell. n.d. (1846). The World's slippery turns; or, mind how you Wed! Play. John Whitsed. 1845. The King's Friend, Play. Robert Suli- vaui 1845. Love's Trial. Play. 1846. Lord of Burghley. Play. 1845. Pro- metheus chained of ^schylusj translated into Buglish verse by Revi G. C. SWayne, oxford, 1846. The Borgias; or, Italy in the fifteenth Century. Historical drama. 1845. XXVIII. Banished Lord. Tragedy. 1842. Edric the Saxon. Tragedy. 1845. " What does ' Hamlet ' mean? Lecture. Thomas Wade. Jersey, n.d. Fashionable Life, or ■A Season at Cheltenham. Play. Acchi- bald Murray. Glasgow, 1846. Imitative version of Sophocles' Tragedy Aiitigone ; with its Melo-dramatic dialogue and choruses, as written and adajited to the music of D'. Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy. By W. Bartholomew, n.d. Old Heads & Young Hearts. Comedy. Second edition. Dion Bouclcault. n.d* " The Amldel. Tragedy. 1845. The Secretary. Play. J. S. Knowles. 1843. Scenes from the Rejected Comedies. By some of the competitors for the prize of £500, offered by M''. B. Webster for the beat original comedy. Punch Office, 1844. (Duplicate.) See vol. 26. True at Last. Tragedy. T. Powell. 1844. Presentation copy. XXIX. Love's Martyrdom. Play. John Saunders [unpublished: for private cir- culation only.— JftS.] 1864. Presenta- tion copy. Love's Martyrdom. Play. J. Saunders. 1865; MS. letter from the author inserted. Anne Blake. Play. Westland Mar.ston. 1862. Passing Clouds, a tale of Florence. Playi 1^4. Wal- deok or the Siege of Leyden. Historical Play. Aiiglolo R, Slous. 1852. Marriage in May Fair ; or, the Comedy of Real Life. P. Gecrse Patmore. For Private circulation. 185». Tragedy of Count Alarcos. By the Author of ^ Vivian Grey " [B. Disraeli, aft. Earl of Beaconsfleld.] 1839. Follies of Fashion. Comedy. Earl ofGlengall. 1830. XXX. [Half title] The Parvenu ; or. Lost and Won. Comedy. Oliver Cromwell, the Protector. Historical Tragedy. By the Author lof " Griselda." 1848. John Savlle of Haysted. Tragedy. By the Author of " Feudal Times " [Rev. James Wliite]. 1847. The Heart and the World. Play. Westland Marston. 184'?. Temper. Comedy. Robert Bell. 1847. Ignez de Castro. Second edition, (Portrait.) 1846. PLAYS— 6968 cont. TheHoratil. Tragedy. 1846. Madeline. Tragedy. Richard Bedingfleld. 1847. XXXL Rudolf of Varosnay; Tragedy. I. A. BJackwell. 1841. De Valenoourt. Tra- gedy. William Henry Hosklns and Horatio Huntley Hosklns. 1842. Brian, the Probationer : or, the Red Hand. Tragedy. Isabel Hill. Memoir of the Authoress, by Benson Barle Hill. 1842. Astolfo, Dramatic romance. 1842. Be- gulus, the noblest Roman of thom all. Tragedy. Jaoob Jones. 1841. Record of the Pyramids. Drama. J. B.Reade. 1842. At the end — Miscellaneous Poems. Pre- sentation copy. XXXII. Aristodemus. Tragedy. Edin- burgh, 1838. Three leaves of MS. at the end* Ifiez di Castro. Historical drama. Jonathan S. Skelton. 1841. [No title page. Deserted Daughter. Comedy. Thomas Holcroft.] [No title-page. He's much to Blame. Comedy. T. HolcroftJ [No title-page. Duplicity. Comedy. T. Holcroft.] [No title-page. School for Arrogance. Comedy. T.Holoroft.] [No title-page. Seduction. Comedy. T. Holcroft.] Legend of Florence. Play. Leigh Hunt. 1840. Spartacus, or the Roman Gladiator. Tragedy. Jacob Jones. 1837. At the end — Miscellaneous Poems. Antonio Foscarini. Historical drama. 1836. Fra Rupert. W. S. Lan- dor. 1840. XXXIIL Gregory VII. Tragedy. R. H. Hornei 1840. Presentation copy. Facing t.p. are verses headed " O, Grave, So nar- row! " and prefixed is "Essay on Tragic Influence." Love. Play. J. S. Knowles. 1840. Maid of Mariendorpt. Play. J. S. Knowles. 1838. John of Proclda. J. S. Knowles. 1840. Presentation copy. Mary Stuart. Historical tragedy. James Haynes. 1840. Money. Comedy. By the Author of "The Lady of Lyons" [Ed^rard, LordLytton]. 1840. MS. slip. XXXIT. Sea-Captain, or, the Birthright. Drama. By the Author of "The Lady of Lyons" [Edward, Lord Lytton]. 1839. [Half title] Master Clarke. Play. T. J. Serle (1840). Provost of Bruges. Tragedy. [ByG. W.Lovell.] 1836. Blanche of Na- varre. Play. G. P. R. James. 1839. Inserted is a note from the Author to W. S. Lander. Charles the First. Historical tragedy. Mary Russell Mitford. 1834. Countess of Essex. Tragedy. 1834. Siege of Ant- werp. Historical play. William Ken- nedy. 1838. XXXV. Duchess de la VaI116re. Play. Third edition. By the Author of " Eugene Aram" [iBdward, Lord Lytton]. 1886. Richelieu; or, the conspiracy. Play. To which are added, Historical Odes. 35y the Author of the " Lady of Lyons " [Lord Lytton] . 1839. Presentation copy. Strailoi'd. Historical tragedy. Robert Browning. 1837. Presentation copy. Thomas A. Becket. Dramatic Chronicle. George Darley. 1840. Presentation cop.y. Lady of Lyons. By the Author of " Eugene Aram " [Lord LyttonJ. 1838. XXXVI. Honesty. Drama. H, Spicer. 1842. Bride of Messina. Tragedy with choruses. Schiller. iTransIated by A. Lodge. 1841. Banished Lord. Tragedy. 1842. Mothers and Daughters. Comedy. Robert Bell. 1843. Patrician's Daughter. Tragedy. Second edition. J, W. Marston, 18*2. [Farces.] 12". Dublin, v.d. 6969 High life Below Stairs. [Anon. Rev. James Townley.] 1766. The Citi- zen. Ai'thur Murphy. 1763. A peep be- hind the Curtain, or, the New Rehearsal, [Anon. D. Garric]. kl767. 381 PLAYS— con<. [Farces, etc.] 12", v.d. 6970 ?!"!,*°,P'''y ' or.tho wives metamorphosed. Ballad farce. C. Coffey. Bight fllustra- tions by R. Seymour, and remarks by W. T. Moncrieil. 1831. Mayor ot Garratt. ». I'oote. lUustriited with designs from B. Seymour. 1831. Brighton ! ! comic sketch, (Illustrated by Kobert Oruik- shank.) 1830.4 [Plays.] 16 Vol. 8°. Various dates. [Withtke Autojfraph of the Princess Eliza- beth (Landgravine of Hesse Hoinburg) daughter of K. George III. in each Volume,] 6971 Vol, I, Merope. Tragedy. Aaron Hill. 1749. Tragedy of Zara. Second edition. A. Hill. 173B. Tragedy of Sophonisba. James Thomson. 17'W. Coriolanus. Tragedy. James Thomson. 1749. Chris- tian Hero. Tragedy. Second edition. George Lillo. 1785. Muslapha. Tragedy. David Mallet. 1739. II. Eoman Pather, Tragedy. Second edi- tion. W. Whitehead. 1760. Edward the Black Prince ; or, the Battle of Poic- tiers. Historical tragedy. Attempted after the manner of Shakespear. wil- Uam Shirlew, 1760. Foundling. Comedy. Edward Moore. 1748. Suspicious Hus- band. Comedy. Second edition. Dr. Hoadly. 1747. Chrononhotonthologos. Third Edition [Anon. Henry Carey] 1743. Love the cause and cure of grief, or the Innocent Murderer. Tragedy. Thomas Cooke. 1744. III. Eugenia. Traged.v. Philip Francis. 1762. Irene. Tragedy. Samuel John- son. 1749. Gil Bias. Comedy. Edward Moore. 1751. Elfrida. Dramatic poem. Written on the model of the ancient Greek tragedy. Third edition. Kev, William Mason. 1752. Castle of Indolence. Alle- gorical poem. Written in imitation of Spenser, Second edition, James Thom- son. 1748. IV. Creiisa, Queen of Athens. Traged.v. W. Whitehead. 1764. 'Virginia. Tra^ gedy, [Anon. H. Crisp.] 1754. Boadicia. Tragedy, Eichard Glover, 1763. The Brothers, Tragedy. Edward Young. 1763, Gamester, Tragedy, Third edi- tion. Edward Moore, 1763, V. Earl of Essex. Tragedy. Henry Jones. 1753. Constantine. Tragedy. Philip Francis, 1764. Philoclea, Tragedy. M", Namara Morgan. 1764. Barbarossa. Tragedy, (Anon, D'. John Brown.) 1765. The Fairies. Opera. Taken from a Mid- summer Night's Dream, by Shakespear. The songs from Shakespear, Milton, etc. Music composed by M' Smith. Second edition. [Anon. Garrick.] 1766. VI. Douglas. Tragedy. [Anon. John Home.] 1767. Athelstan. Tragedy. [Anon. D', John Brown.] 1756, Athel- wold. Tragedy, Aaron Hill. Scander- beg. Tragedy. WiUiam Havard. 1733. The Universal Passion. Comedy, [Anon. Rev. James Miller,] 1737, VII. Gamesters. Comedy. Alter'd from Shirley. [Anon. Garrick.] 1768. Guai- dian. Comedy. [Anon. Garrick.] 1769. Agis. Tragedy. ' [Anon. John Home.] 1768. Cleone, Tragedy. Robert Dods- ley, 1768. At the end— Melpomene. Orphan of Cliina. Tragedy. A Murphy. 1769. At the end— letter to Voltaire from the -Author. VIII. Caractacus. Dramatic poem. Writ- ten on the model of the ancient Greek tragedy. By the Author of Elfrida. [Rev. W. Mason.] Second edition. 1769. Siege of Aciuileia. Tragedy. [Anon. Home.] 1760. PLAYS— 6971 cont. Desert Island. Dramatic poem. [Anon. Murphy.] 171)0. Way to keep him. Comedy. Murphy, 1780. Hecuba. Tra- gedy. [Anon. D'.Delap.] 1762. Plorizel and Perdita ; or the Winter's Tale, Dra- matic pastoral. Altered from Skakespear, By Garrick. 1762. School for Lovers. Comed.y. W. Whitehead. 1762. IX. The Discovery. Comedy. Written by the Editor of Miss Sidney Bidulph. [Mrs. Frances Sheridan.] 1763. The Dupe. Comedy. By the A uthor of the Discovery. 1764'. Platonic Wife. Comedy, By a Lady, [Mrs. Griffith.] 1785. Double Mis- take. Comedy. [Anon. Mrs. Griffith.] 17(j(j. Clandestine Marriage. Comedy. Colman and Garrick. 1786. X. Alzira. Tragedy. A. Hill. 1736. Timon in Love : or, tlie innocent theft. Comedy, Taken from Thimon Mishanthrope of the Sieur De Lisle, [Anon. John Kelly.] 1733. Timoleon. Tragedy. Second edi- tion. Benjamin Martyn. 1780. The Briton, Tragedy, Ambrose Philips. 1732. [No t.p. Battle of the Sexes. [Poem.] Preface signed " Tho. Cooke "]. XI. Elvira. Triipedy. Mallet, 1763. Ma- homet tlie Impostor. Tragedy. Rev. .lames Miller. 1741. Earl of Warwick. • Tragedy. [Anon. D' Thomas Francklin.] 1766. Earl of Warwick ; or, the King and Subject. Tragedy. [Anon. Paul Hiffer- nan.] 1767. Countess of Salisbury. Tra- gedy. Hall Hartson. 1767. Zenobia. Tragf dy. By the Author of the Oi'plian of China. [Murphy]. 1708. XII. False Delicacy, Comedy. Hugh Kelly. 1768. Deformity. Essay. Third edition. WiUiam Hay. 1755. English Merchant. Comedy. Colman. 1787. Widow'dWite, Comedy. Kem-ick, 1767. XIII. Cyrus, Tragedy, Hoole, 1768. Fatal Discovery. Tragedy. [Anon. Home] 1769. Ziiigis. Tragedy. Alexander Dow. 1769. Timanthes. Tragedy. Hoole, 1770. Almida. Tragedy. By a lady. [M" Celesia]. 1771. XIV. Edward and Eleonora. Tragedy. James Thomson. 1739. Alzuma. Tragedy. Mui-phy. 1773. Alonzo. Tragedy. [Anon, Home,] 1773. Grecian Daughter. Tra- fedy. [Anon. Murphy] 1772. Gustavus 'asa, the dehverer of his Countr.y, Tra- gedy. Second edition. Henry Brooke. 1763. XV. School for Rakes. Comedy. [Anon. M" Griffith] 1769. The Brothers. Comedy [Anon. Cumberland.] 1770. The Sister Comedy, M" Lennox. 1769. Jealous Wife. Comedy, Colman 1761. XVL Matilda. Ti'agedy. By the Author of the Earl of Warwick [D'. Francklin] 1776. Braganza. Tragedy. Jephson. 1775. Rivals. Comedy, X^non, Sheridan.] [First edition] 1776, [No t.p. School for Wives. Comedy. Hugh Kelly. 1774]. Prologue, etc. mutilated. [No t.p, Sethona, Tragedy, Dow, 1774,] Pro- logue, etc. mutilated, [Collection of Plays.] 12 vol. 8°. Various dates. 6972 Vol. I. Philaster. Tragedy. Beaumont and Fletcher. With alterations. 1763. Sum- mer's Tale. Musical comedy. [Anon. R. Cumberland] 1765. Maid of the Mill. Comic opera. Music compiled, and words written by the Author of Love in a Village. [Isaac BickerstafQ. 1765. [" Taken from Richardson's Pamela." Ba/cer.'] Elvira. Tragedy. D. Mallet. 17B3. Jealous wife. Comed.y. Second edition. G. Colman. 1761. Love ill a village. Comic opera. [Anon. I. Bickerstaff]. 1763. 382: PLAYS— 6972 cont. II. Coraus Masijue. (Now adapted to the Stage) as alter'd from Milton's Masque. Music composed by Hen. Lawes. 1780. High Life below stairs. Farce. Third edition. [Anon. Townley.] 1759. Enp;- lishman in Paris. Comedy. Foote. 1753, EnRlishman return'd from Paris. Parce. Foote. 175G. Guardian. Comedy. [Anon. Garrick.] 1759. Midas. English huv- letta. [Anon. O'Hara.] 1706. English- man in l?ourdeaux. Comedy. Written in Prench, by Pavart. Translated by an English lady. 1764. Love at first sight. Ballad Parce. [Anon. Thomas King] 1768. Minor. Comedy. Pourth edition. Poote. 17fiO. III. All in the* Wrong. Comedy. Murphy. 1761. Double Mistalte. Comedy. [Anon. M" Griflilh]. 1766. The Discovery. Comedy. Written by the editor o[ Miss Sidney Bidulph. [Mrs P. Sheridan.] 170.?. Mahomet the Impostor. Tragedy, llev. .Tames Miller. 1765. [Completed by D'. -Tohn Hoadly.] Clandestine Marriage. Comedy. Colman and Garrick. 176!j. IV. Douglas. Tragedy. [Anon; Home.l 1759. Athelstan. Tragedy. [Anon. Brown.] 1756. Agis. Ti-agedy. [Anon. Home.] 1768. Cleone. Tragedy. Dodsley. 1758. [At the end — Melpomene.] Lethe. Dra- matic Satire : with the additional cha- racter of Lord Chalkstone. Pifth edition. Garrick. 17.57. The Apprentice. Parce. Murphy. 1736. The Author. Comedy. Poote. 1757. The Uout. Parce. [Anon. D'. John Hill.] 1768. V. Virginia. Tragedy. [Anon. H. Crisp] 1754. Barbarossa. Tragedy. [Anon. Brown.] 1766. Appius. TrageSy. [Anon, John Moncreiti.] 1766. Creusa, Queen of Athens. Tragedy. W. Whitehead. 1754. Orphan of China. Tr;igedy. Translated from the Prench of M. de Voltaire. 1750. Philoclea. Tragedy. M'=Namara Morgan. 1764. VI. Wheel of Portune. Comedy. Pourth edition. Cumberland. 1795. Man of the World. Comedy. C. Macklin. 1793. The Pugitive. Comedy. Joseph Uichard- son. 1792. Belle's Stratagem. Comedy. Second edition. M". Cowley. 1787. Box- Lobby Challenge. Comedy. R. Cum- berland, n.d. Impostors. Comedy. U. Cumberland. 1789. VII. Miser. Comedy. Taken from Plautus and Mohere. Second edition. H. Pield- ing. 1744. Every man in his Humour. Comedy. Ben Jonson. With alterations and additions. 1752.. Tragedy of Zara. Second edition. A. Hill. 1736. Eugenia. Tragedy. P. Praneis. 1762. Art and Nature. Comedy. [Anon. Miller.] 1738. Oliver Cromwell. Historical play. George Smith Green [watchmaker at Oxford], To ^vhich is prelix'd an extract or journal of the rise and progress of Oliver Cromwell (Portrait ol Cromwell). 1762. VIII. Suspicious Husband. Comedy. Second edition. D'. Hoadly. 1747. The Refusal i or, the Ladies Philosophy. Comedy. C. Cibber. 1722. Beggar's Opera. Gay. Pifth edition ; to which is prcfix'd the ouverture in score : and the musick to each song. 1742. Non-Juror. Comedy. Cibber. 1713. Man of Taste, Comedy. Second edition, [Anon, Miller,] 1735, IX. Eomeo and Juliet, a tragedy, revis'd and alter'd from Shakespear, by Theo- philua Cibber. To which is added, a. serio-comic apology, for part of the life of T. C, Comedian. Written by Himself. Interspersed with memoirs and anecdotes, relating to stage-management, theatrical revolutions, &c. n.d. Merope. Tragedy. Second edition, corrected. With an addi- PLAYS— 6972 cont. lional new scene. A. Hill. 1760. Dis- tress'd Wife. Comedy. Second edition. Gay. 1760. Roman Pather. Tragedy. W. Whitehead. 1760. King Charles the first. Historical tragedy. Written in imitation of Shakespear. [Anon. W, Havard.] 1737. I'oundling. Comedy Second edition. E. Moore. 1748. X. The Parricide : or, Innocbnce in distress. Tragedy. W. Shirl«y. 1739. Tancred and Sigismunda. Tragedy. James Thomson. 1745. Caesar in j^Egypt. Tragedy. Cibber. 1726. Spartan Dame. Tragedy. Third edition. Southerne. 1719. Pall of Saguutum. Tragedy. Prowde. 1727. XI. Palse delicacy. Comedy. Hugh Kelly. 1768. Perplexities. Comedy. [Anon. Thomas Hull.] 1767. Lionel and Clarissa. Comic opera. [Anon. Bickerstaff.] 1748. Hypocrite. Comedy. Taken from Mohere .and Cibber, by the Author of the altera- tions of the Plain-Dealer. [Bickerstail.] 1769. Padlock. Comic Opera. Second edition. I. Bickerstaff. 1768. Absent Man. Parce. [Anon. BickerstatT.] 1708. XII. School for feakes. Comedy. [Anon. M" Griffith.] 1769. West Indian. Comedy. Second edition. By the Author of the Brothers. [Cumberland.] 1771. Almida. Tragedy. By a lady. [Mrs. Celesia.] 1771. Tom Jones. Comic opera. Joseph Reed. 1769. Zobeide. Tragedy. Second edition. Cradock. 1772. Grecian Daughter, Tragedy. [Anon. Murphy.] 1772. [Collection of Plays.] 3 vol. 8°. v.d. 6973 Vol. I. Ever.yone has his fault. Comedy. Seventh edition. M>'. Inchbald, 1805. Lovers' Vows. Play. Prom the Gei-man of Kotzebue. M'-. Inchbald. Pifth edi- tion. 1805. Man and Wife; or, the Shakespeare Jubilee. Comedy. G. "Col- man. 1770. Garrick's Vagary: or, Eng- land inin mad. With particulars of the Stratford Jubilee. 1769. Who's WTio? or, the double imposture. Parce. John Poole. 1815. M.P. or ihe Blue-Stocking, Comic opera. Thomas Moore, Music composed and selected by the author. Overture by M'. Horn. 1811. Sprigs of laurel. Comic opera. J. O'Keeffe. New edition. 1796. Palse alarms ; or, My Cousin. Comic opera. James Kenney. 1807, The Soldier's Return; or, What can Beauty do? Comic opera. [By T. E. Hook.] Overture and music entirely new, composed by M'. [James] Hook. 1806, Jovial Crew : or, the Merry Beggars. Comic opera. Now edition. 1774. [Altered from R. Brome.] One O'clock ! or, the Knight and the Wood Daemon. Grand musical romance. M. G. Lewis. Music by M. P. King and 'Si. Kelly, n.d. (1811). 11. Pasquin. A dramatick Satire on the Times : being the rehearsal of two plavs, ^■IZ. a comedy call'd, the Election ; and a tragedy call'd, the Life and death of Common-Sense. H. Pieldin^. 1736. Cleone. Tragedy. Pourth edition. R. Dodsley. (Frontispiece.) 1771. [At the end— Melpomene,] Maid of Bath. Comedy. [Anon. Poote] 1778. To Marry, or not to Marry. Comedy. M". Inchbald. 1805. The Author. Comedy. Poote. 1767. [Imperfect.] The Minor. Comedy. Sixth edition. Poote. 1764. Every Blan in his Humour. Comedy. B. Jonson. With alterations and addi- tions. 1752. Romeo and Juliet. Travesty. 1812. The Tailors ; a tragedy for warm weather, 1778, Oxonian in Town. Comedy. G, Colman. 1770. Tckeli ; or the Siege of Montgatz, Melo-drame. 383 PLAYS— 0973 cont. ?;,.?■ ^S*- ^"S'" ''y 'If- Hook. senr. I 1806. lliigantino : or, the Bravo of ' ^C'nlce. Melo-drama. JI. «. Lewis. ' Music by D'. Busby. 1805. III. Adelaide : or the Emigrants. Tragedy. Shell. Dublin, 18W. Such things are. I Play. Thirteenth edition. M". Inch- bald. 1805. Poor Gentleman. Comedy. New edition. 6. Colman the younger. 1806. The Wanderer ; or, the Rights of HospitaUty. Drama. Altered from the German of A. von Kotzebue, by Charles Kemble. 1S08. Percy. Tragedj-. Fourth edition. Hannah More. 1788. „ Remorse. Tragedy. S. T. Coleridge. ISl". Pamil.y Legend. Tragedy. Joanna Baillie. Edin- burgh, 1810. Bellamira; or, the Pall of Tunis. Tragedy. Second edition. Shell. 1818. Hint to Husbands. Comedy. Cum- berland. 1806. [Collection of Acting Plays.] 10 vol. 8°. and 12°. Various dates. 6974 Vol. I. Beggar's Opera. Gay. 1837. Mayor of Garratt. Poote. 1837. Surrender of Calais, play. Colman. Remarks by M,". Inehbald. (Prontispiece). n.d. Iron Chest ; play. Colman. Remarks by M". Inehbald. (Prontispiece.) 1821. II. Cruel Kindness. Romantic play. Catherine Crowe. 1853. Masks and Paces. Comedy. Tom Taylor and Charles Reade. 1854. The King's Rival. Drama. T. Taylor and C. Reade. 1854. Two Loves and a Life. Drama. T. Taylor and C. Reade. 1854. Ask no Questions. Bur- letta. Charles Selby. n.d. Tobacconist. Parce; altered from Ben Jonsou, by Prancis Gentleman. "With remarks. By W. Oxberry. 1821. Lost and Won. Drama. Mark Lemon, n.d. III. Bridal. Tragedy. Adapted for re- presentation (with three original Scenes, written by James Sheridan Knowles) from the Maid's Tragedy, of Beaumont and Pletcher. n.d. " To John Porster, Esq. from rhis friend W. C. Macready." The Sti-ange G entleman ; a comic burletta, in two acts. By " Boz " [C. Dickens]. Pirst performed at the St. James's theatre, on Thursday, September 29, 18!?«. (Prontis- Eiece by "Phiz"). 1837. The Yeoman's 'aughter, a domestic Di*ama. T. J. Serle. n.d. Woman's Paith. Drama. William Bayle Bernard. 1835. Lucille. Drama. W. B. Bernard. The music composed by J. H. TuUe.v ; with two songs written and composed by S. Lover. 1836. The Country Squire. Comedy. Charles Dance. Dedi- cation to WiUiam Farren and original biographical sketch of M•■^ Glover, n.d. (?1837). Irish Lion. Paroe. John Bald- win Buckstone. n.d. Court Beauties : a dramatic sketch. J. R. Planch6. 1835. Rory O'More. Comic drama founded on the romance of that title. Samuel Lover. n.d. Miser's Daughter. Drama. J. G. Millingen, M.D. 1836. Two Figaros. Musical Comedy. J. R. Vlanchd. Dedica- tion to Madame Vestris ; and original biographical sketch of John Listen, n.d. French Refugee. Burletta. Mrs. S. C. Hall. 1837. IV. Richard the third. Shakespeare. I Marked copy.] n.d. King Hen^ IV. Part I. Shakspeare. n.d. King Henry V. Shakspeare. n.d. Much Ado About Nothing. Shakspeare. Portrait of Miss Chester, in the chai'acter of Beatrice, by Wageman. n.d. All's Well that ends Well. Shakspeare, n.d. Alchymist. Comedy. As altered from Ben Jonson. 1791. [Half-title] Historia Histrionica rEeprint] (Second copy): fHalf-titlel Ralph Royster Doyster [by N. Udall]. [Reprint] (Second copy). 1 PLAYS— 6974 cont. V. Schoolfellows, Comedy. Douglas Jorrold. n.d. (? 1835). Hazard of the Die. Tragic drama. Douglas Jerrold. n.d. (H835). Perils of Pippins: or, the Man who ■ could'nt help it.' Drama. Douglas Jer- rold. n.d. Sylvester Daggerwood : inter- lude. Colman. Memoir [and portrait] of the Author, n.d. The Steward; or. Fashion and Peehng. Comedy. By the author of the Lottery Ticket. n.d. Brutus ! or, the Fall of Tarquin. Histori- cal tragedy. John Howard Payne. Por- trait of Kean. [MS. stage directions, &e.] Gamester. Tragedy. Edward Moore, n.d. Venice preserved. Ti-agedy. T. Otway. n.d. Every one has his fault. Comedy. M". Inehbald. n.d. A Mid- summer-Nights dream. Shakspeare. n.d. VI. AVaverley Dramas. Containing George Heriot — Ivanhoe — Battle of Bolhwell Bridge— Pirate — and Peveril of the Peak. Edinburgh, 1823. Stage Ef!ecti or, the principles which command dramatic suc- cess in the theatre. By Edward Mayhew. 1840. VII. Every Man in his humour. Ben Jonson. n.d. New way to pay old debts. Massinger. Portrait of Miss Smithson, in the character of Margaret, [after] Wage- man, n.d. Love, Law, and Physic. Farce. James Kenney. 1826. n.d. Beg- gar's Opera. Gay. n.d. Secrets worth knowing. Comedy. Thomas Morton, n.d. Bold Stroke lor a Wife. Comedy. M'-. Centlivi-e. 1826. The Serf: tragedy altered from the German (play of " Isidor and Olga ") of Raupach, and adapted to the English stage, by R. Talbot, n.d. Youthful Queen: a Comedy by Charles Shannon. n.d. Provoked Husband. Vanbrugh and Cibber. Comedy, n.d. School for Scandal. Comedy. Sheridan. n.d. Cato. Tragedy. Addison. 1824. Maid of Honour. IVagi-comedy. Massinger. Portrait of Keeley, in the Character of Signer SylU, [after] Wageman. n.d. VIII. Man of the World ; Comedy. Charles Macklin, n.d. The Widow. Farce. J. T. AUingham. n.d. Hut of the Red Mountain; or. Thirty Years of a Gamester's Life. Drama. H. M. ^lilner. n.d. Lo Zin^aro ! Melo-dramatic opera. H. R. Addison, n.d. Frank Fox Phipps, Esq. Farce. C. Selby. n.d. Suil Dhur the Coiner. Melo-dramalic romance. T'. Dibdin. n.d. Devil's Elixir; or, the Shadowless Man. Music:il Romance. E. Fitz-Ball. The music by G. H. Rodwell. n.d. Mason of Buda. Opera. J. R. Planche. n.d. Scapegrace. Petite comedy, n.d. A Maiden's Fame ! or, a legend of Lisbon! Drama. W. B. Bernard, n.d. White Milliner. Comedv. D. Jerrold. n.d. IX. All at Coventry : or. Love and Laugh. Musical Farce. W. T. Moncriefl. n.d. Three Deej) ; or. All on the Wing. Farce (partly derived from the French). With some music by M'. Watson. By Joseph Lunn. 1826. Pilot. Nautical burletta. E. Fitz-Ball. Portrait of T. P. Cooke, in the Character of Long Tom Coffin [after] Wageman. n.d. (1828). Jack Sheppard ; or, the House-breaker of the last century. Romantic drama (dramatised from Har- rison Ainsworth's novel.) By Thomas Greenwood, n.d. Green-Eyed Monster. Comedy. J. R. Planche. n.d. "Master's Rival ; " or, a day at Boulogne. Farce. R. B. Peake. n.d. Heart of Mid-Lothian. Melo-dramatic Romance. T. Dibdin. n.d. Tom and JeiTy ; or. Life in London, Operatic extravaganza. W. T. Moncrieff, Second edition, n.d. A Day well spent. Farce. John Oxenford. 1837. Mabel's Curse! Musical Drama. M". S. C. Hall, n.d. Cavalier. Drama. Charles White- 384 PLAYS— 6974 cont. head. n.a. AMaicten's Fiune! Drama. W. B. Bernard, n.d, Ohildrep in the Wood. Opera. [Thoinsa] Morton, Printed for the curious. 1794, Snakspeare's Early Days, Historical play. C. A. Somerset, ntd, X. Rule a. Wife and have a wife. Comedy. Beaumont and Fletcher, n.d. Hoad to ruin. Comedy. TUoMas Hol- orott, n.d. Wheel of Bortune. Comedy. Cumberland, n.d. Wife's Stratagem; or. More frightened than hurt. Comedy altered from Shirley's Gamester, hy John Poole. 1827. Olympic Kevels : or Prome- theus and Pandora. Burletta. The heads taken from [Oolman's] Tale of " The Sun poker," By Ji R Planoh^ and Charles Dance. 1834, Oberon. Opera, J. R. Planoh(5 (Portrait of Weber). 1826. Thomas A Beoket. Historical play. D. Jerrold. n.d. Painter of Ghent. Play. D. Jerrold. n.d. Doves in a Cage. Comedy. D. Jerrold. n.d. Town and Country. Comedy. T. Morton, n.d. Rivals.^ Sheri- dan, n.d. Riches ; or, the Wife and Brother: play (founded on Massinger's City Madam) by Sir James Bland Burges, n.d. [No. (i974. Nearly all these plays have remarks principally^ by D. G. i.e. George Daniel, descriptionsof costume, etc. Also frontispieces, portraits, etc., engraved by Bonner, P, Cruikshank, Egan (and etched), Pindlay, Pry, ICirchner, Orrin Smith, Walker, Welch, White, and Woolnoth, after designs and drawings by R. Cruik- shank, I. R, Cruikshank, Egan, Sey- moxir and Wageman. Many of the plays were published by Cumberland and Duncombe & Co. A few were presentation copies.] [Plays, various.] 8°. v.d. 6975 Mirandola. Tragedy. Third edition. Barry Cornwall [i.e. B. W. Procter.] 1821. Adelaide. Tragedy. Richard Shell. Se- cond edition. 1816. Irishwoman, Comedy. Lady Clarke. 1819. [Plays, old.] 30 vol. [Bookplate of J. H. R. Chichester.] 4». v.d. 6976 Vol. I. Abra-Mule. Tragedy. [Anon. Joseph Trapp.] 17Q4. Adventures of Five Hours. Tragi-oomady. Pourth edi- tion. Sir Samuel Tuke, 1704. Amintas. Paistoral. Made English out of Italian from the Aminta of Tasso, by Mr. Old- mixon. 1698. A mphitryon ; or, the two Sosia's. Comedy. Dr.vaen. Musiok of the songs. Compoa'd by Mr. Henry Pur- cel. 1691. [Separate title to the songs, 1690.] Atheist : or the second pai-t of the SouldiersPcrtune. Otway. 1684. Aureng- zebo, Traged.Y. Dryden. 1694, Assig- nation. Tbii-d edition. Dryden. 1692. iEsop. Comedy. Third edition, with the addition of a second part. By the author of The Relapse. [Vanbrugh.] 1702. II. Alarbaa, Dramatick opera. 1709. Am- boyna. Tragedy. Dryden. 1673. As you And it. Comedy. [Anon. Charles 'Boyle, Bai'l of Orrery.] 1603 [error for 1703.] Achilles; or, Iphigenia in Aulis. Tragedy. Boyer. 1700. Aicibiades. Tra- gedy. Otway. 1687. All for Love. Tra- gedy. Written in imitation of Shake- speare's style. Dryden. 1878. All Mis- taken, or the Mad Couple. Comedy. Hon. James Howard. 1072. Ambitious step- mother. Tragedy. Eowc. 170[ ] [last figure of the date altered in ink to " o "— perhaps from " 2."] III. Amorous Bigotte : with tlie second part of Tegue QDivelly. Comedy. Thomas PLAYS— 6976 cont. Shad*ell. 1690. Albion and Albanius. Opera. Dryden, 1691. Ambitious States- man. Crowne. 1679. Arsinoe, Queen of Cyprus. Opera, after the Italian manner : all snng, [Anon. P. Motteiu!.] 1705. Artful Husband. Comedy. Third edi- tion. W. Taverner. n.d. Banditti. Play. D'Urfey, 1686. Altemira. Tra- gedy. Roger [Boyle] late Earl of Orrery. Revis'd by Hon. Charles Boyle. 1702. IV. Beaux Stratagem. Comedy. Parquhar. n.d. Belphegor. Tragi-Comedy. John Wilson. 1691, Biter. Comedy. Rowe. 1705. Bloody Brother; or, Rollo. Tra- gedy. Beaumont and Fletcher. , 1718. Boadicea Queen of Brittain. Ti'agedy. Ohaj'les Hopkins. 1697, British En- chanters. 'Tragedy. [Anon. George Granville, Lord Lansdowne.] 1706. Bru- tus of Alba. Tragedy. Tate. 1678. Bussy D'Ambois. Tragedy. Newly revised by Mr. D'Urfey. 1691. ["A revival of Chap- man's play, with some improvement on the character of Tamyra." Iialter.~\ V. Oleomcnes, the Spartan Heroe. Tragedy. Bidden. [And] Life of Cleomenes. 1692. Confederacy. Comedy. By the Author of the Relapse, [Vanhrugh,] 1706. Comical Lovers. Comedy, [anon. Colley Cjbber.] n.d. [1707.] Comical Revenge. Etherege. 169T. Oirde. Tragedy. Second edition. Charles D'Avenant. 1685. Conquest of China by the Tartax's. Tragedy. Settle. 1676. Constant Couple, or, a Trip to the Jubilee. Comedy. Fourth edition. With a new scene and a new prologue, Par- quhar. 1704. Constantino the Great. Tragedy. N. Lee. 1684. VI. Camilla. Opera. Owen Swiney. 1708. Cheats. Comedy. Fourth edition. John Wilson. 1693. Careless Husband. Co- medy. Cibber. 1705. Cinna's Conspiraey. Tragedy. 1713. City-Ramble : or, a play- house Wedding. Comedy. [Anon. Settle.] n.d. [nil.] City Pohtiques. Comedy, Crown. 1688. Cambyses, King of Per- sia. Tragedy. Third impression. Settle. 1675. Citizen turn'd Gentleman. Comedy. Edward Ravenscroft. 1672. VII. (Almanzor and Almahlde, Or) Thel Conquest of Granada by the Spaniards : 1 in two parts. Dryden. Second edition. 1 1678. Preceded by — of Heroick plays- Essay. At end of second part — Essay on the dramatique poetry of the last age. Caesar Borgia. Tragedy. N. Lee. 1680. History and fall of Cams Marina. Tra- gedy. Otway. 1703. Counterfeits. Co- medy. 1679. Cato. Tragedy. Addison. 171S, Country-Wife. Comedy. Wycher- ley, [Date cut oft,] VIII. Chances. Comedy. Duke of Buck- ingham. 1692. Diatrest Mother. Tra- gedy. A. Philips. 1712. Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus Vespasian. Two parts. Crowne. 1703. Double-dealer. Comedy. Congreve. Second edition. 1706- Don Carlos, Prince of Spain. Tragedy. Otway. Pifth edition. 1704, Double Gallant. Comedy. Cibber. Second edition, n.d. [1707,] Duke of Guise. Tragedy. Dry- den and Lee, 1683. Don Sebastian, King of Portugal. Tragedy. Dryden. 1690. IX. Edgar, or the EpgUsh Monarch. Tro- gedy. T. Rymer. 1878, King Edward the third, with the fall of Mortimer Earl of March. Historical play. 1891. Dedi- cation signed " Will. Monntfort." Elfrid. Tragedy. To which is added tlie Walking Statue. Foppe. A. Hill. n.d. [1710.] Emperor of the i\loon. Farce. ]\Irs. Behn. Second edition. 1688. Empress of Mo- rocco. Tragedy. Seltle. Iii7;i. Epsom- Wells. Comedy. T. Shadwell. 1678. I'iN'ening's Love, or the Mock-Astrologer. Dryden. 1071. English Princess, or, the 385 PLAYS— 6976 cont. death of Richard the III. Tragedy. [Anon. Caryl.] 1667. English Mouuaieur. Comedy. Hon. J. Howard. 1C74. X. Pair Penitent. Tragedy. Eowe. 1703. Pairy-Queen. Opera. LProm "Midsum- mer Night's Dream."] 1692. Palse Friend. Comedy. [Anon. Vanbrugh.] 1702. Fate "t Capua. Tragedy. Southerne. 1700. Pine Lad.v's airs. Comedy. By the Au- thor of the Yeoman of Kent [Thomas Bakerl. n.d. [1709.] Force of Friend- ship. Tragedy. [And] Farce call'd Love in n, chest. Charles Johnson. 1710. Friend- ship in Fashion. Comedy. Otway. 1678. Funeral: or. Grief A-la-mode. Comedy. Steele. 1702. XI. Pair Example. Comedy. E. Estcourt. 1706. Female Prelate : being the history of Pope Joan. Tragedy. By a person of quality. [Settle.] 1689. Fatal Marriage. Play. T. Southenie. lOBt Gamester. Comedy. [Anon. S. Centlivrc] 1705. Generous Conqueror. Tragedy. Bevill Higgons. 1702. Generous Husband. Co- medy. C. Johnson, n.d. Governour of Cyprus. Tragedy. Oldmixon. 1703. The Grove. Opera. Oldmixon. 1700. XII. Hecuba. Tragedy. [Anon. H. AA'est. Translation from Euripides.] 1726. He- roick Love. Tragedy. Lord Lansdowne. 1698. Humorists. Comedy. T. Shad- well. 1691. Humorous Lieutenant. Tragi-comedy. Beaumont & Fletcher. 1717. Humours of the army. Comedy. C. Shadwel. 1713. Ibrahim, the thir- teenth Emperour of the Turks. Tragedy. M". Mary Pix. 1690. The Inconstant. Comedy. Parquhar. 1702. Henry the Second ; with the death of Rosamond. Tragedy. [Anon. John Bancroft.] 1693. XIII. Injur'd Love. Tragedy. N. Tate. 1707. Injur'd Love. Comedy, n.d. [1711.] Innocent Usurper ; or, the death of the Lady .lane Gray. Tragedy. J. Banks. 1694 Iphigenia. Tragedy. J. Dennis. 1700. Island-Princess, reviv'd with alter- ations. N. Tate. 1687. Italian Hus- band. Tragedy. E. Ravenscroft. 1698. Kind Keeper. Comedy. Dryden. 1680.. Julius Caesar. Tragedy. Shakespeare, n.d. XIV. A King and no King. Beaumont and Fletcher. 1676. Jew of Venice. Comedy [altered from Shakespeare's Merclmnt of Venice by Lord Lansdowne] 1701. Irene. Tragedy. C. Goring-. 1708. Tragedy of the Lady Jane Gray. Rowe. 1716. Tra- gedy of Jane Shore. Rowe. n.d. Jovial Crew : or, the Merry Beggars. Comedy. Likewise all the songs, and a key to the Beggars Cant. R. Brome. 1708. Judg- ment of Paris. Masque. Congreve. 1701. Indian Emperor: or, the Conquest of Mexico by the Spaniards. Dryden. 1709, X v. Lady's Last Stake. Comedy. Cibber. n.d. [1708]. History of King Lear. Re- viv'd with alterations [an alteration of Shakespeare's Lear]. N. Tate. 1681 Love at first sight. Comedy. D. Crau- furd. n.d. [1701]. Love for Love Comedy. Congreve. Foiurth edition. 170-t. Love's Victim. Tragedy. [Anon. C. Gil- don.J 1701. Lover's Luck. Comedy, 'r.'Dilke. 1696. Love makes a man. Comedy. Cibber. 1701. Love for Money. Comedy. Durfey. 1696. XVI. Liberty Asserted. Tragedy. J. Den, nis. 1704. L ove TriumB bagt. Tragi- comedy. DrycIennBgi Love s Cure, Comedy. Beaumont and Fletcher. 1718. Lawyer's Fortune. Comedy. Second edition. [Anon. Viscount Grimston.] n.d. Libertine. Tragedy. T. Shadwell, 1692. London Cuckolds. Comedy. Ra- venscroft. 1697. Love's last shift. Co medy. Cibber. 17Ui!. Love's a Jest. Co- medy. Motteux. 1696. o 16505. PLAYS— 6976 cont. XVII. Love betray'd. Comedy. By the author of The Ladies Visiting-day [Charles Bumaby]. 1703. Ladies Visiting-day. Comedy. Second edition. [Anon. C. Bumaby.] 1708. Lucius Junius BriUus. Tragedy. N. Lee. 1081. Loyal Gene- ral. Tragedy. Tate. 1680. Love and a Bottle. Comedy. Parquhar. 1699. Love's Triumph. Opera. Motteux. 1708. Lying Lover. Comedy. Steele. 1701. Love and Revenge. Ti-agedy. Settle. 1675. XVIII. Love in a VTood, 'or, St. James's Park. Comedy. AVycherley. 1672. Island Queens : or, the death of Mary, Queen of Scotland. Tragedy. Prohibited the stage. Banks. 1684. The Man's the Master. Comedy. Sir William D'Avenant. 1669. Mulberry-garden. Comedy. Sir Charles Sidley. 1675. Maids Ti-agedy. Beaumont and Fletcher. 1686. Mangoni, king of the Timbusians. Tragedy. Sir Thomas Moore. 1718. [MS. slip.] The Muzze muzzled [relates to the last]. 1719. Mac- beth. Tragedy. "With all the alterations [etc.]. [" fiy S'. Will". Davenant." MS. on t.p.l 1674. Comedy called the Miser. T. Shadwell. 1691. XIX. The Man's bewitched. Comedy. S. Cent-Livre. n.d. The Mistake. Comedy. By the author of The Provok'd Wife, &c. [Vanbrugh.] 1706. Mar-Plot; or, the second part of the Busie-body. Comed.v. Centhvre. 1711. Marrinf'e. a-humod e. Comedy. Dryden. ~I68^. Tragedv of Nero. Lee. 1675. QSdipus. Tragedy. Dryden and Lee. Second edition. 16,^:^. Old Batchelor. Comedy. Congreve. Seventh edition. 1707. Oroonoko. Tra- ged.y. Southerne. 1690. XX. Orphan. Tragedy. Otway. Vim. Perplex'd Lovers. Comedy. Cent-livre. 1712. Phaedra and Hippolitus. Tragedy. B. Smith. n.d. Philaster. Comedy. Beaumont and Fletcher. 1687. Plot and no Plot. Comedy. Dennis, n.d. Plain- Dealer. Comedy. Wycherley. Sixth edition. 1709. The Play is the Plot. Comedy. J. D. Breval. 1718. Provok'd Wife. Comedy. By the author of The Relapse [Vanbrugh.] 1698. XXI. Princess of Parma. Tragedy. Henry Smith. 1699. Perfldious Brother. Tra- gedy. Lewis Theobald. 1715. Perjur'd Husband. Tragedy. Susanna Carroll (aft. Centlivre). 1700. Persian Princess. Tragedy. Theobald. 1717. Piso's Con- spiracy. Tragedy. 1676. Psyche. Tra- gedy. T. Shadwell. 1675. Pyrrhus King of Epirus. Tragedy. Charles Hopkins. 1695. Princess of Cleve. Lee. 1689. XXII. Rosamond. Opera. [Anon. Joseph Addison.] 1707. Rule a Wife [etc.] Beau- mont and Fletcher. 1717. Recruiting Officer. Comedy. Parquhar. n,d. Rival. Ladies. Tragi-Comedy. Driden. TBTST Rape. Tragedy. [Anon. D'. Brady.] 1692. Revengeful Queen. Tragedy. William PhiUps. 1698. Royal Shepherdess. Tragi- Comedy. T. Shadwell [date cut off]. Rival Kings. Tragaedy. John Eankes. 1677. XXIII. Royal Convert. Tragedy. Rowe. 1708. The Reformation. Comedy [As- scribed to— ArrowsmithJ 1678. Retorm'd Wife. Comedy. [Anon. Charles Bumaby.] 1700. Rehearsal. Duke of Buckingham. Seventh edition. 1701. Relapse. Comedy. By the author of the Provok'd Wife [Van- brugh]. 1698. Rinaldo and Armida. Tragedy. Dennis. 1699. Rival Pools. Comedy. Cibber. n.d. [1709]. Rival Queens. Lee. 1684. XXIV. Sir Anthony Love. Comedy. South- erne. 1691. The Sacrifice. Tragedy. Sir Francis Fane. Second edition. 1687. Scaramouch a philosopher. Harlequin a BB 386 PLAYS— 6976 cont. aohool-boy [etc.]. Comedy after the Italian manner. Uavenscroft. 1677. She wou'd if she cou'd. Comedy. Etherege. 1671. Sicilian Usurper. Tragedy. [Pro- hihited.] Tate. 1691. [Nothing more than an alteration of Hiohard II. Baker.'} Siege of Babylon. Samuel Pordage. 1678. Siege of Hhcdes : first and second part. Sir W. U'Avenant. 1663. St. Cecily. Christian Tragedy. E. M. 1666. XXV. Sir Harry Wildair. Comedy. Par- quhar. 1701. Scornful Lady. Comedy. Beaumont and Fletcher. Tenth edition, n.d. Scowrers. Comedy. T. Shadwell. 1691. Sophonisba. Tragedy. Lee. 1685. Stolen Heiress. Comedy. [Anon. M". Centlivre] n.d. [1703]. Secret-Love. Dryden. 1679. Solon. Tragi-Comedy. With tlie masque of Orpheus and Euri- dice. Captain Martin Bladen. 1705. Sir Salomon. Comedy. [Attributed to John Caryll. Baker.'] 1671. XXVI. State of Innocence, and Pall of Man. Opera in heroick verse. Dryden. 1692. Su' Courtly Nice. Comedy. Croivn. 1703. Tragedy of King Saul. 1703. S' Martin Mar-all. Comedy. [Anon. Dryden.l 1668. Souldiers Portunc. Comedy. Ot- •way. Third edition. 1695. Spanish Pryar. Dryden. Second edition. 1686. Spjinish wives. Parce. M". Mary Pix. 1696. Squire of Alsatin. Comedy. T. Shadwell. 1688. XXVli. Theodosius. Tragedy. Lee. 1684. Thyestes. Tragedy. Crown. [Date out down, but 1681.] Titus and Berenice. Tragedy. Vi^ith a farce called the Cheats of Scapin.' Otway. 1701. Troilus and Cres- sida. Tragedy. [And] Preface. Dryden. 1696. True widow. Comedy. T. Shad- vrell. 1679. Tyranniclc Love. Tragedy. Dryden. Second edition. 1672. Temple of Love. Pastoral Opei-a. English'dfrom the Italian. All sung to the same mu- sick. By Signior J. Saggione. "Written by Motteux. History of Timon of Athens, the Man-hater. Made into a play. T. Shadwell. 1678. XXVIII. Tamerlane. Tragedy. Howe. Second edition. 1703. Tartufle. Comedy. Writtpn in Prench by Moliere, and ren- der'd into English, byM[atthew] Med- bourne. 1707. Tempest. Comedy. [Altered from Shakespeare by Di-yden and DavenantJ 1701. Tender Husband. Comedy. Steele. 1705, Tunbridge-Walks. Comedy. [Thomas Baker.] 1703. Ulys- ses. Tragedy. Bowe. 170G. Unhappy Favourite : or the lHarl of Essex. Tragedy. Banks. [The dat(;, except the first ligiire " 1," has been inked over and stands as "1693"; but, aco. to " Baker," there was only one ed., in 1682.] Usurper. Tragedy. Hon. Edward Howard. 1668. XXIX. Valentinian. Tragedy. As 'tis alter'd [from Beaumont and Pletcher] by the late Earl of Rochester. Preface con- cerning the author. By one of his friends [Mr. Wolsley.] 1685. Venice preserv'i). Tragedy. Otway. 1704. A very good Wife. Comedy. George Powell. 1693. Virtuoso. Comedy. T. Shadwell. Volunteers. Comedy. T. Shadwell. Vertue betray 'd : or, Anna BuUen. gedy. John Banks. 1682. Villain, gedy. Thomas Porter. 1694. XXX. Way of the World. Comedy. _... grevc. Second edition. 1706. wild Gal- lant. Comedy. Dryden. 1684. Wit of a Woman. [Anon. T. Walker.l 1705. Woman is a Kiddie. Comedy. Christo- pher Bullock. 1717. Vittoria Corombona.. Tragedy. John Webster. 1072. Xerxes. Tragedy. Cibber. 1699. Womens Con- guest. Tragi-Comedy. E. H. {i.e. Edward Howard.] 1671. Zelmane. Tragedy. ["Left unfinished by M'. M 1" 1704. Tra- Tra- Con- PLAYS— 6976 cont. (?Mountfort). Ep. Bed.'] 1705. Wants epilogue. [Plays, Old.] 12°. Various dates. 6977 The Drummer; or, the Haunted-House. Comedy. Third edition. With a preface by Sir Richard Steele. [Anon. J. Addi- son]. 1722. [Book-phite of Col. William Hanmer, 1739.] Limberham. Comedy. Dryden. 1735. Sir Courtly Nice. Comedy. Crown. 1735. State of Innocence, and Pall of Man. Opera. Dryden. 1735. [Plays, Old. Reprints : principally in " The old English Drama."] 12°. (Lon- don) n.d. 6978 [Half-titles.] Historia Histrioliiea : an his- torical account of the English stage. In a dialogue of Plays and Players. Printed, 1699. [Said to be by James WrightJ Ralph Eoyster Doyster [Nicholas UdallJ. Comedie : intytuled Gammer Gurlons Nedle. Made by Mr S. [John Still] Master of Art. 1575. Prefixed, Prospectus of a series of old plays, under the title of the Old English Drama. Vol pone; or, the Pox. Comedy. Acted in 1605. Ben Jonson. Englishmen for my money ; or, a Woman will have her Will. Comedy. Acted in 1698. William Haughton. Doctor Paustus. Tragedy. Christopher Marlow. Pirst printed 1604. Reprinted 1830. [Plays, Old. Eeprints.] 8°. Various dates. 6979 Second Maiden's Tragedy. Now first printed from the original MS. in the Lansdown collection. 1824. Dido, Queen of Carthage. Tragedy. C. Marlowe and T. Nash. 1825. Atheists Tragedy ; or, the Honest Man's Revenge. Cyril Tourneur. Printed 1611, re-printed 1794. [Plays, Old. Reprints.] 8°. n.p. n.d. 6980 [No t.p. A woman kill'd with kindness. Thomas Heywood.J [Halt-titleT Jew of Malta. Marlowe.] [Not. p. WhiteDevil : or, Vittoria Corombona. Webster.] [Half- title] Edward II. Marlowe. These four plays apparently belong to some edition of '• Old Plays." [Plays, various. W. C. Macready's Acting copies.] 8°. and 13". 6981 To marry or not To marry. Comedy. M" Inchhald. Remai'ks by the Author, n.d. MS. stage directions, &c. School for Scandal. Sheridim. Remarks by D.-G. [G. Daniel] [etc.] n.d. Marked for re- presentation. MS. slip inserted. Pro- voked husband. Comedy. Vanbrugh and Cibber. Remarks by D.-G. [etc.] n.d. Marked for representation. Imperfect. The Stranger. Drama. Translated from the German of Kotzebue, by Benjamin Thompson. Remarks by D.-G. [etc.] n.d. Imperfect, ends in IV. 2. Venice Preserved. Ti"agedy. Otway. Remarks by W. Oxberry. (Portrait of Miss O'Neill asBelvidera). 1820. The Bridal. Tragedy. Adapted for representation (with three origmal scenes, written by J. S. Knowles) from the Maid's Tragedy, of Beaumont and Pletcher. With remarks [etc.] n.d. Marked for representation. Preface by Macready, [Plays, various. W. C. Macready's Acting copies.] 8°. 6982 Fatal Dowry. Tragedy. Massinger. Altered and adapted for representation, as per- formed at the Theatre-Royal, Drury-Lane 387 PLAYS— 6982 cord. January 6, 1835. n.d. Macreaily'snutogvaph. Interleaved copy; with MS', stage direc- tions, &c. but apparently not complete. To Marry, or not to Marry. Comedy. Second edition. M" Inchbald. 1805. "Prompt book Theatre Boyal Hay Market." Inter- leaved \vith MS. stage directions, &c. King of the Commons. Drama. By the author of " The Earl of Gowrie " [Rev. .1. White]. Second edition. 184U. Macread,v's autograph. MS. stage directions, etc. King of the Commons : drama. By the author of " The Earl of Gowrie." IstO. " To M". Maoready from the author. Hi May 1S46." Maoready's autographs. MS. cast, stage directions, etc. [Plays, various.] 8°. v.d. C983 Douglas. Tragedy. [Anon. John Home.] Edinburgh, 1757. [No title-page. Agis. Tragedy. John Home.] Siege of Aqui- leia. Tragedy. [Anon, J. Home.] 1760. The Discovery. Comedy. Second edi- tion. By the Editor of Miss Sidney Bidulph [M". P. Sheridan.] 1763. Jealous Wife. Comedy. Second edition. Colman. 1701. . [Plays, various.] 12°. 6984 Road to Ruin. Comedy. T. Holcroft. Re- marks Viy M" Inchbald. (Portrait and Prontispleco.) n.d. (? 1806). Cureforthe heart-ache. Comedy. T. Morton. Re- marks by M'-\ Inchbald. (Frontispiece.) n.d. (1800). Miser. Comedy. Henry Fielding. Remarks by W: Oxberry. (Portrait of Farren as " Lovegold.") 1821. [Plays, etc., various.] 12°. 6985 Duchess of Main. Ti-agedy. Webster. Re- constructed tor stage representation, by R. H. Home. (Portrait of Isabella Glyn.) London and New York, n.d. (Pl«50.) Prefixed "Memoir of Miss Glyn," by J. A. B. [P Heraud]. Orion an epic poem. Fourth edition. B. H. Home. 1843. [No title page. Memoir of Thomas Lovell Beddoes.] pp. v-cxxxiv of " Vol. I." De Montort. Tragedy. Joanna BaiUie. Re- marks byM". Inchbald. (Frontispiece.) n.d. [1816.] [Plays, Dramatic pamphlets, etc.] 8°., etc. v.d. 6986 Nine years of an Actor's life. Robert Dyer. London and Plymouth, 1833. First annual jubilee oration upon Shakspeare, de- livered at Stratford-upon-Avon, April 23rd, 1836. Before the Royal Shakspearian club. George .Tones. 1836. Present position of the dramatic poet in England. John A. Heraud. 1841. Presentation copy to Macready. Life' of Van Amburgh : the brute-tainer. With anecdotes of his extra- • ordinary pupil, Ephraim Watts, n.d. Constant Couple. Comedy. Farquhar. (Frontispiece.) 1777. Modern Antiques. J. O'lCeefte. 1800. Victorine ; or, ' 1 11 sleep on it." Drama. J. B. Buckstone. 1834. Songs, chorusses, and concerted pieces in the operatic Burletta of The Village Coquettes. Drama and words of the songs by " Boz " [C. Dickens]. Music by John HuUah. 1837. fPlavs, etc.] 8°., etc. Dublin, v.d. '- ' 6987 All Vows kept. Comedy. [Anon. Captain Downes.] 1733. Artful Husband. Comedy. William Taverner. 1720. Beggar s Opera. J Gay. 1728. Graftanio-Mastix ; or, a collection of curious poems on the Censor. Containing, Censoriad. Defence. Threno- dia. Last Will. Variae Lectiones, excerp- tae ex operibus nugatoriis Bentleii Iheo- PLAYS— 6987 cont. b[aldi] & Welstedii. Life of Mart. Gul- liver. 1730. [No titlepage. Julius Caesar.] Mithridates. King of Pontus. Tragedy. N. Lee. 1726, [Plays, etc.] 8°., etc. v.d. 6988 Remarks on Rowe's tragedy of the Lady Jane Gray, and all his other plays. With observations upon Smith's Phaedra and Hippolytus. Phihps's Distress'd Mother. Addison's Cato. Pope's Rape of the Lock, &c, Prefatory discourse m defence of Criticism in general. Collected from the works of the late Earl of Shaftsbury. Second edition. [Anon. Charles Gildon.] 1715. [And-no t.p. A New Reahearsal, or Bays the younger.] Chronicle history of Perkin Warbeck. Tragedy. (Portrait.) 1714. Historical Register for the yeai' 1736. As it is acted a.t the new Theatre in the Hay-Marliet. [And] Eurydioe hiss'd, or a word to the wise. Both written by the author of Pasq u in . To those are prefixed a long dedication to the publick, and apreface to that dedication. [Henry Fielding.] n.d. [1737]. Mistakes; or, the Happy Resent- ment. Comedy. By the late Lord » • * » [Hyde and Cornbury.] 1758. La Pie Voleuse. Narrative of The Magpie ; or the maid of Palaiseau. Being the history of The Maid and the Magpie. Preface, and curious anecdotes. 1815. Maid and the Magpie ; or, which is the Thief ? A pathetic tale (coloured illustrations) . n.d. The Magpie; or, the Maid of Palaiseau. Melo-dramatic Romance. Second edition. 1815. Maid and the Magpye ; or, which is the thief ? Musical entertainment. Trans- lated, with alterations, from the French, by S. J. Arnold. Mustek composed and selected by H. Smart. 1815. [Plays, etc.] 12°. 6989 [No t.p. Lovers* Vows. M'"'. Inchbald.] Alteration from Kotzehue's " ClUld qf Love." Oxford Sausage ; or. Select poetical pieces, written by the celebrated wits of the University of Oxford. [Edited liy Thos. Warton, D.D.] New edition. Cuts. Oxford. 1804. West Indian. Comedy. R. Cumberland. Remarks by M". Inch- bald. n.d. [French Plays.] 5 vol. 8°. and 12°. Paris, v.d. and n.d. 6990 Vol. I. Le P^re Turlututu, comedie-vaude- ville. Dubois-Davesnes. Gamin de Paris, comedie-vaudeviUe. Bayard et E. Vander- burch. Je Serai ComiSdien, com6die. Charles Desnoyer. Juliette, drame. Albert, F. Labrousse et A. Brot. Les Quatre Ages du Palais-Royal, histoire dromatique. Thtoulon. Le Diable Ambassadeur. Pro- logue. Mistriss Siddons, com^die-yaude- viile. De Leuven et Lherie. Le pauvre Jacques, oom^die-vaudeville. Cogniard tv&res. Le P6ro Goriot, drame-vaudeville. Th^aulon, Al. de Comberousse et Jaime. Lady Melvil, com^die m616e de chant. De Saint-Georges et de Leuven. Le Th6atre et La Cuisine, vaudeville-drame-bouffon- nerie. Paul de Kock. Moli6re an dix- neuvifeme si^cle, com6die. F. De La Boullaye. Le Barbier de Seville, comedie. Beaumarchais. La Mfere Coiipable, drame. Beaumarchais. Hamlet, trag^die. J. F. Ducis. Othello, trag6die. J. F. Duels, fin Mariage sous Louis XV., comedie. A Dumas. Le Mart a la Gampagne, comedie. Bayard et Jules De Poilly. Le Proscrit, drame. F. Souli6 et T. Dehay. Kean, comedie m616e de chant. A. Dumas. Lord Surrey, drame. E. Fillion et L. Jousserandot. Le Barbier du Roi d'Ara- fon, drame. Pontan, Dupeuty et Ader. )on Juan de Marana. Mystfire. A. B B 2 388 PLAYS— 6990 co7it. Dumas. Napoleon Bonaparte, di-ame. A. Dumas. LeKain a Draguignan, com6die m616e de chant. De "Forges et P. Vermond. Coraeille et Botrou, com^die. De la Boul- laye et Corraon. L'Honneur dans le Crime, drame. Maillan. '^Antony, drame. A. Dumas. Cromwell et Charles l"'^, drame pr6c6d6 de Un dernier jour de popu- larity, prologue. 0. Delanoue. Charles VII chez ses grands vassaux. Trag6die. A. Dumas. Georgette, com6die-vaudeville. Varin, Desvergers, et Laurencin. E-ed- fauntlet, drame pr6c6d6 d'un prologue. '. Poucher et Alboize. Louise Bernard, drame. A. Dumas. L'Ouvrier, drame. P. Souh6. Teresa, drame. A. Dumas. Le Comte Julien. Drame a grand spectacle. P. Duhomme et E, Sauvage, Jane Grey, trag^die. A. Soumet et Madame G. Dalteuheym. La main droite et la main gauche, drame. L. Gozlan. Vautrin, drame. De Balzac. Mademoiselle de Belle-Isle, drame. A.Dumas. L'Ecole des journahstes, com6die. Madame E. De Girardin. II. Catherine Howard, drame. A. Dumas. Catherine de M6dicis, drame. Paul de Guerville. Diana de Chivri, drame. P. Souli6. Don C6sar de Bazan, drame m616 de chant. Dumanoir et Dennery. Marie- , Jeanne, drame. Dennery ot Mallian. Eiichard Savage, drame. Desnoyer et E. Latoat. La Vie d'un Comedian, com6die. C. Desnoyer et E. Labat. Nicolas Niekle- by, drame. P.- Dinaux et G. Lemoine. Le March6 de Londres, drame, pr6c6d6 de Les Ouvriers de la Cit6, prologue. A. Dennery. Lady Seymour, drame. C. Duveyrier. La dame de Saint-Tropez, drame. Anieet-Bourgeois et Dennery. La PamiUe Poisson, com^die. Samson. Chapelle et Boileau, anecdote. P. Duhomme. La Derni6re Nuit d' Andre ' Ch^nier, monologue. A. Goy. Christine a Fontaiuebleau, drame. P.Souli6. Ang&le, drame, A. Dumas. Madame Pavart, Com6die m616e de chant. Xavier et Mas- son. Le Mari de la veuve, comedie. A. Dumas et * * *. Tom PoiifP. A-propos, m616 de couplets., Nain Connu. New- gate, ou les Voleiirs de Londres, drame. Sauvage. Halifax, comedie m616e de chant, avec un prologue. A. Dumas. Le Gamin de Londres, comedie-"\'audeville. Th6auIon et J. Gabriel. La Revolution Pranpaisft. P. Labrousse et Mallian. Les Petits Metiers de Paris, vaudeville. Lubize et L. Dngard. Lorenzino, drame. A. Dumas. Le Laird de Dumbiky. comedie. A. Dumas. Les Grands et les Petits, comedie. Harel. Tin Secret de Pamille, drame-vaudeville. Michel-Mas- son, Alboise, et L. Bourdereau. Les Bohemiens de Paris, di-ame. A. D'Ennery et Grange. Paul Jones, drame. A. Dumas., Le Pils d'une grande dame, drame-vaudeville. Du Mersan et J. Ga- briel. L'Alchimiate, drame. A. Dumas. Beaumarchais, drame historique. R. Bauchery et L. Coi*diez. Many of the pieces in A'ol. I. & II. are from *' Le Magasin Theatral." III. Dix ans de la vie d'une femme, dramo. Scribe et Terrier. Richard Darlington. Drame pr6c6de de La Maison du Docteur, prologue. MM. Dinaux. Les Deux Anglais, comedie. Merville. NouvoUe edition. Les Comediens, comedie. Nou- velle edition. C. Delavigne. Les Horaces, tragedie. P. Corneille. (London) n.rt. (1841.) Henri III. et sa Cour; drame historique, A.Dumas. Troisieme edition. Luort>oe Borgia, drame. Nouvelle edition. V.Hugo. (Plates). IV. Histoire du Theatre en Prance P. Regnier. pp. 333.1-76. Ir^ne ou Le Magnetisms, com6die-vaudeville. Scribe PLAYS— 6990 cont. et Lockroy. Don Gusman. com6die. A. Decourcelle. La Poudre-Coton. Revue de I'annee 1846, m6iee de couplets. Dumanoir et Clairville. Clarisse Har- lowe, drame m6ie de chant. MM. Dumanoir, Clairville et Guillard. Le Doeteur Noir, drame. Anicet-Boui'geois et Dumanoir. Gentil-Bernard, comedie, mfeiee de couplets. Dumanoir et Clair- ville. Echec et Mat, drame. O. Peuillet et P. Bocage. Charlotte, drame precede de La Pin d'un Roman prologue. E. Souvestre et E. Bourgeois. V. Robert Bruce, opera, A. Roger et G. Vaez. Musique de Rossini, Le Mariage Porce, comedie. MoHere. 1788. La Clcserie des GenGts, dramef precede d'un prologue. P. Soulie. Les Mystferes du Camaval, drame. Anicet-Bourgeois et M. Masson. Marie ou I'Inondation, drame. Anicet-Bourgeois et Praneis-Comu. Gibby la comemuse, operarcomique. De Leuven et Brunswick. Le Barbier de Seville, opera comique. [Ital. and.Pr.] Nearly all the pieces in these five vol. were produced between 1825-47. [French Plays]. Various places, dates and sizes. 6991 [Half-title.] Le Cid, tragedie. (1636.) Virginie, tragedie. Latour (De Saint- Tbars). Bruxelles, 1845. Don Juan, comedie. n.p. n.d. pp. 636-706. [Half- title.] Ph6dre, tragedie. Racine. 1675. Phedre, itrag6die. Racine. "With notes, by A. Gombert. 1839. Hamlet, Prince de Danemark. (Shakspeare's Hamlet]Prince of Denmark). Drame, par A. Dumas et P. Meuriee. (Paris) n.d. (?1S47). Made- moiselle de La Seigliere, comedie. Jules Sandeau. Deuxi6me edition. Paris,1852. Valeria, drame. A. Maquet et J. Lacroix. Troisieme editioa. Paris, 1851. The pieces in this vol. were probably collected and bound together, on the occasion of a visit from Madame Rachel to London. [French Plays. Madame Rachel's Performances.] S°. 6992 Cinna,ouLa Ciemence d'Auguste ; tragedie. P. Corneille. With notes by A. Gombert. 1838. Andromaque, tragedie. Racine, n.d. (?184i.). lies Horaces, ti'a^edie. P. Corneille. n.d. (? 1841). Bajazet, tragedie. Racine, n.d. (? 1841). Marie Stuart, tragedie. P. Lebrun. n.d. (P 1841). The last four plays have MS. marginal notes by Mr. Porster. [French Plays.] 8^ Paris, n.d. 6993 Mademoiselle Dangeville, comedie, mftlee de chant, De Villeneuve et De Livry. La Pille de Dominique, comedie- vaudeville. De Villeneu^'e et Charles. Les Enfans de Troupe, comedie mftlee de clmnt. Bayard et Bi6ville. At the end is a play- bill of the "Prench Plays, St. James's Theatre," Monday, Juno 20. Le Pauvro Jacques, comedie-vaudeville. Cogniard freres. At the end is a bill of the " French Plays, St. James's Theatre," Priday, June 10. Le Gamin de Paris, comedie- vaudeville. Bayard et E. A''anderburch. [French 1834-9. Plays]. IS''. Bruxelles, 6994 Oeuvrcs du Comte Alfred de Vigny, Chatter- ton. Bertrand et Raton, comedie. Eugene Scribe. Rliy Bias, dramo. Victor Hugo. [Foreign plays and operas.] 12°. "Various dates. G995 Le TartuCfi', comedie. Mohere. Notes, by A. Gombert. rlSIU. Ariane, tms-edie. 889 PLAYS— 6995 cont. Cornoil]e. Notes by A. Goinbert. 1842. The Vestal : a grand opera. In German and English, n.d. The Huguenots ; a grand opera. Scribe. German version with English ti*anslation. Music by G. Meyerbeer. Biographical sketch of the composer, and critical remarks on the openi. n.d. Ipliigenia in Tauris : tragic opera. German and English, n.d. Jliigic Flute: opera. Schikoneder. Ger- man and English. n.d. Ber FreischutK : romantic opera. P. Kind. German and English. (Fifth edition.) n.d. Don Juan : cx)mic opera. German and English, n.d. Marriaf^e of Figaro, opera. German and English, n.d. PLEADING. Summary Treatise of Headiug. 8°. 1802. 6996 " J. Chitty sen'." jl/.S'. on cover. PLINIUS (CAIUS SECUNDUS). Natural History. Translated, with copious notes and illustratious by John Bostock, M.D., and H. T. Riley, (with general index.) 6 vol. 8°. Bohn, 18.'-,5-7. 6997 PLINIUS (CAIUS CAECILIUS SE- CUNDUS). EpiBtolarum libri X. Panegyricus Traiano Principi dictus. De viris illus- trib. iu re mLlitari, & in administraada rep. Suctonii Tranquilli do Claris grani- maticis, & rhetoribus. lulii Obsequentis prortigiorum liber . . 12". End. Veue- tiis in aedib. Aldi . . 1518. 6998 PLUMPTRE (ANNE). Narrative of it residence in Ireland during the summer of 1814, and that of 1815. Engravings. (Portrait.) 4". 1817. 6999 PLUNKET (WILLIAM) CONYNG- HAM, 1st BARON). Speeches at the Bar and in the Senate. Edited, with a memoir and historical notices, by John Cashel Hoey. 8°. Dublin, 1856. 7000 PLUNKETT (HON. EDWARD) R.N., AFT. 16TII BARON DUNSANY. Past and future of the British Navy. 8°. 1846. 7001 PLUTARCHUS. On the delay of the Deity in the punish- ment of the Wicked. With notes, by H. B. Hackett. 8". Andover [tJ.S.] 1844. 7002 Lives of the nohle Grecians and Ro- mans, compared together . . Translated out of Greek into French, by James Amiot. With the lives of Hannibal and Scipio African; translated out of Latin into French,- hy Charles de 1 Esr PLUTARCHUS— con(. cluse and out of French into English, by Sir Thomas North . . Lives of Epamin- ondas, Philip of Macedon, Dionysius the elder, Augustus Ciesar, Plutarch, and Seueea : with the lives of nine other excellent chieftains of war : collected out of JEmylius l>robus, by ■ S. G. S. and Englished by the aforesaid translator . . Lives of twenty selected eminent persons of ancient and latter times ; translated out of the work of . . Andrew Thevet . . Notes . . In this edition are further added, the lives of several eminent per- sons, translated out of Andrew Thevet. F°. Cambridge, 1676. 7003 Separate title-pages to Prosopographia by Andrew Thevet (and) Select Lives col- lected out of A. Thevet. There is an engraved title page— Lon- don 1676. Lives, translated from the Greek. With notes . . from Dacier , , Life of Plutarch, by Drydeu. [Revised by Samuel Dyer.] 6 vol. 8°. Tonson, 1758. 7004 Lives, translated from the original Greek ; with notes . . and a new life of Plutarch. By John Langhorne, and Wil- liam Langhorne. Ninth edition. 6 vol. 8°. 1805. 7005 Lives. Translation called Dryden's. Corrected from the Greek and revised by A. H. Clough. 5 vol. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1872. 7006 Civil Wars of Rome : select Lives translated from Plutarch, with notes. By George Long. Scries I. ( — V.) (5 vol.) 12°. 1844-8. 7007 POCOCK (ROBERT). Memorials of the family of Tufton, Earls of Thanet 1800. 8°. iravesend, 7008 POE (EDGAR ALLAN). Poetical Works with a notice of his life and genius by James Hannay. With twenty illustrations by E. H. Wehnert, James Godwin, F. W. Hulme, and Harri- son Weir. 12°. 1853. 7009 POEMS. [Poems,various. Original editions. F°. Various Dates.] 7010 "Woodstock Park. [By Wilham Harison. 1706. Princess Ehzabeth's copy with her autograph. Ode. On the late glorious Success of Her Majestys Ajms. "Written in imitation of SpencCr's stile. [Anon. M. Prior.] 1706. Earl Robert's Mice. In limitation of Chaucer, &c. by M w P r, Esq. [Matthew Prior.J 1712. Hymenaeus. 1707. , ^ . ,, [No title-pa«e.] Monsieur Boileau s Epistle to his gardiner.] Bnd. 1712. Poem, to the Lord Privy-Seal, on the pros- pect of Peace. Thomas Tickell. Third edition. 1713; 390 POEMS— 7010 emit. Rural Sports. luscribedtoM'. Pope. John Gay. 1713. Ode to the Creator of the "World. Ocoasicn'd by the fragments of Orpheus. [John Hughes.] 1713. ■Windsor Porest. A.Pope. 1713. [Half-title.] M'. Pope's Odo on St. Cecilia's Day. [Title]. Ode tor Musiclt. 1713. On the late Queen's death, and his Ma- jesty's Accession to tlic throne. Edward ifoung. 1714. Letter to M^ Addison, on the King's Accos- sion to the Tlirone. Eusden. 1714. Epistle to Charles Lord Hahfax. Philips. 1714. Letter to a Lady, occasion'd by the arrival of the Princess of "Wales. Pourth edition. 1714. Imitation of tlie ninth ode of the fourth book of Horace. 1715. Imitation of the prophecy of Nereus. Prom Horace Book I. Ode XV. 1715. . To the Duke of Argyle, upon his arrival at Court after tlie defeat of the Northern Eebellion, March 6th, 1715. 1716. To the Princess of Wales, with the tragedy otCato. Nov. 1714. To Sir Godfrey Kneller, on his picture of the King. [Addison.] 171(i. Ode for the New Year 1716. N. Rowe. 1716. Ode on the Birth -day of the Prince of Wales. T'o the Princess. To the Earl of Clare, on his being created Duke of Newcastle. Amintor and the Nightingale. "Welsted. 1716. Poem to the memory of Thomas late Mar- quiss of "Wharton. 1716. Letter to the Knight of tlie sable shield. 1716. The Leek. Poem on St David's Day. N. Griffith. 1717. "Walk from St. James's to Convent-Garden, the back-way. through the Mouse. In imitation of M"". Gay's Journey to Exeter. 1717. Epistle to James Craggs : Secretary at War: at Hampton-Court. Philips, 1717. Paltcmon to Cajlia, at Bath ; or, the Trium- vii-ate. [Anon. "Welsted.] 1717. Verses at the last Publick Commencement at Cambridge. Written and spoken by M'. Ensden. 1714. The Pan. Gay. 1714. The Vision. Croxall. 1715. Claremont. Address'd to the Earl of Clare. [Anon. Garth.] 1716. Poem on the marriage of the Duke of New- castle to Lady Henrietta Godolphin. Eusden. 1717. Poem to Her Royal Highness on the birth of the Prince. Eusden. 1718. Ode. Occasioned by Earl Stanhope's Voy- age to Prance. Tickell. 1718. The Tickler Tickell'd : being an epistle to the author of the incomparable Ode, call'd, a voyage to France, &c. 1718. Letter to M"" Tickell, occasioned by the death of Joseph Addison. E. "Xoung. Second edition. 1718. Ode for the Birth-Day, !is it was sung before his Majesty. L. Eusden. 1720. Ode inscribed to the Earl of Sunderland at Vrindsor. 1720. The Conversation. A tale. 1720. Colin's Mistakes. "Written in imitation of Spenser's style. 1731. News from Hell : or, a Match for the Direc- tors i a Satire. Cnamberlen. 1721, Verses to Lord Carteret, principal Secretary of State. Sewell. 1721. [No title-page. Ballad, account of a terrible fray that happen'd lately at Squire 's in Berry Street. (To the tune ot Chivy-Chase.)]. B. L. n. p. n.d. Single leaf. POEMS— conf. [Poems, various. Mostly original edi- tions]. 4°. "Various dates. 7011 The Dispensary. [Anon. Sir Samuel-Garth.] 1699. Blank names filled in in MS. The "Wish. D' ["Walter] Pope, 1697. Essay on translated Verse. By the Earl of Eos- comon. Second edition. 1686. Miscel- lanies over Claret. Being a collection of poems, translations, &c. to be continued monthly from the Eose-Tavem with- out Temple-Bar. Numb. I. (—IV.). 1697-8. [No title-page. To M' Thomas Murray, on a celebrated picture drawn by him, representing George Granville, Henry St John, and Thomas Cook, Es- quires.] 2 leaves. A Kit-Kat C b [club] describ'd. 1706. [No t.p. Adver- tisement. Subscribed Jacob [Tonson]. Single leaf. [As to his reported expulsion from the Kit Cat Club.] Table of all the ■ accuratie remarks and new discoveries in M'. Addison's Book of Travels. Printed for the Company of Long-Bow-String- Makers, 1706. Essay on the opera's after the Italian manner, which are about to be establish'd on the Enghsh Stage: with some reflections on the damage which they may bring to the Pubhck. By M'. Dennis. 1706. Verdicts of the learned concerning "Virgil and Homer's heroic poems. 1697. The Triumph, or "War- riours ("Welcome : a poem on the glorious successes of the last year. With the Ode lor new-year's Day. 1705. Tate. 1705. Paction display'd. 1704. Second Part. 1704. Faction display'd. Answer'd para- graph by paraj!?^ph. 1704. Moderation display'd. By the Author of Faction dis- play'd. 1704. Secondlpart. Represented in the Chui'ch of England's Ghost, n.p. 1705. Moderation Vindicated, in an an- swer paragraph by paragraph, to a late new poem intituled. Moderation dis- play'd. 1706. The English Martial. Wherein he hath given a diverting idea of the men and things of both ages in select Epigrams. Together with his Life, and manner of turning Poet. To be continued monthly. This for January 169|. 169-2. [Poems, various. Original editions.] 8°. "Various dates. 701a Poems on several occasions : With Valenti- nian; a tragedy. [And] Advice to a painter. Eai-1 of Rochester. 1710. (Sepa- rate title to Valentinian. 1709.) Cato IWajor of Old Age. Sir John Denham. 1710. The Forgiving Husband [etc.], by the author of the London-spy. n.d. [No title-page. Poem on the taking St. Mary's.] Duel of the Stags. Sir Robert Howard. Epistle to the Author, by Dry- den. 1709. Milton's subhmity asserted : in a poem. Occasion'd by a late celebrated piece, entituled. Cyder, a Poem ; in blank verse, by Philo-Milton. 1709. Bleinheim, a Poem. [J. Phihps.] 1709. Letter from Ita^, to Lord Hahtax. Addi- son. 1701. Mourning muse of Alexis. Pastoral, Lamenting the death of Queen Mary. Congreve, 1696. [And] Despair- ing Lover. 1709. History ot Insipids, a Lampoon, by the Lord Roch — r. Farewell. 1680. [And] Marvil's Ghost. Ayloff. 1709. The Walkii^ Statue : or, the Devil in the Wine-Cellar. Farce, n.p. 1709. Faction display'd. 1709. The Kit-Cats. The Pic- ture. The Coquet Beauty, by the Marquis ot Normanby. 1709. Wine. Old Eng- land's new Triumph: or, the Battle of Audenard. A song. 1709. Ode on the Inoai-nation. The True state of Mortality. By T. R. 1709. Temple of Fame. 1709. The Circus: or British Olympicks. A Satyi- on the Ring in Hide-Park. 1709. Baucis and Philemon : Poem on the ever- lamented loss of the two Yew-Trees, in the 391 POEMS— 7013 emit. parish of Chilthome. With 31". Harris's earnest petition : and an admirable Recipe. By the author of The Tale of a Tub. [Swift.] Ode upot [sic] Solitude: by the Earl of Boscommon. 171U. The Commoner. 1710. The Campaign : a Poem, to the Duke of Marlborough. Addi- son. 1710. The Upstart. A l5:ityr. 1710. The Swan'Tripe-Club : a Satyr, on the High-Flyers ; in 1703. 1710. Love given over : or, a Satyr against AVom:m. With Sylvia's Revenge, or, a Satyr against man, in answer to the Satyr against A\"oman. Amended by the Author. 1710. The Long Vacation : a Satyr, address'd to all disconsolate traders. 1709. The York- shire-Racers. In a letter fi-om H S ton, to his friend T P n. n.d. Poems on the death of Queen Mary. 1710. Pastorals. Philips. 1710. [Poems, etc. Various.] 12". Various dates. 7013 Book-plate and MS. notes of Horatio [Horace] Walpole. Mitford's copy and MS. notes. Essay on Man. Pope. Enlarged and im- proved by the Author. >"otcs by William Warburton. (At the end— The Universal Prayer.) 1745. Essay on Criticism. Pope. Notes by Warburton. 1749. The Rhap- sody. JUeing a display of the wit and humour of past times. Compiled from the curious remains of the principal poets and lieaui esprits who were eminent for either. 1750. Modins Saliiun. A collec- tion of such pieces of humour as prevail'd at Oxford in the time of M'. Anthony .\ Wood. CoUected by himself, and pub- lish'd from his original manuscript. Ox- ford, 1751. The nut cracker. Containing jests, epigrams, epitaphs, &c. Collected fi'om the most sprightly \Vits of the present age. Published by Ferdinando Foot. 1761. [Poems, Various,] 4°. Various dates. 7014 Klfgy written originally in a Country Church Yard. Eighth edition. Corrected by the Author [T. Gray]. 175.3. Tbe 'Traveller, or a prospect of Society. A Poem. Inscribed to the Rev. M'. Henry Goldsmith. By OUver Goldsmith, M.B. 17i;o. [First ed.] London : or, the pro- gress of Commerce. Glover. Second edition. 1739. Art of Preserving health TAnon. D'. John Armstrong.] 1741. Let- ter to the Earl of B [ute], relative to the late changes that have happened in the administration. [Prose]. 1765. The DueDist. Churchill. Second edition. 1761. [Poems, Various.] 8°. & 12». Various dates. "015 Poems on several occasions. Beattie. Edin- burgh, 1776. John Pinkerton's book-plate. Poetical Works, of John Dyer. (Portrait inserted). 1765. The Grave. Blair. 17S-2. John Pinkerton's Autograph and MS. collation. Tragedy of Cleopatra. Samuel Daniel. Glasgow, 1751. Art of PoUticks, in imitation of Horace's Art of Poetry. [Rev. James Bramston]. 1729. fPoems, Various.] 8°. Various dates. 7016 Elijah's 3Iantle, being verses occasioned by the death of William Pitt. With a pre- fatory address. Sixth edition. 1807. [Said to be by James Sayer the Carica- turist : has been ascribed to G. Caiming. Preface signed " J. B."] All the Talents ; a satirical poem. To which is added a pastoral epilogue. By Polypus. Sixteenth edition. Frontispiece. 1807. [Ascribed POEMS— 701C cotU. to W. Comte ; also to E. S. Barrett.] All the Blocks 1 or, an antidote to ' All the Talents.' A Satirical poem. ByFlagellum. (at end— Elijah's ila'ntle parodied). 1807. Hints to .1. Nollekens, R.A. on his model- ling a bust of Lord Grrenvil]le. [Verses]. (Frontispiece). IsOS. The Talents run .Alad; or. Eighteen hundred and sixteen. A satirical poem. With notes. By the Author of ' All the Talents.' ISIO. [Poems, Various.] 8°. Various dates. 7017 [Half-title.] Iliad of Homer. Translated by Pope. n.p. n.d. Poems of William Shakespeare. LSI". [Half-title.] Schil- ler's Tragedies ; Tlie Piccolomini ; and the Death of Wallenstein. Translated from the German, by S. T. (JJoleridge. With an introductory Historical Sketch. n.p. n.d. Poetical Works of John Milton. 1S40. [Half-title.] Poetical Works of Thomas Gray. With a Biograptiical memoir of the Author, n.p. n.d. Poetical Works of William CoIUns. With a bio- graphical memoir of the Author, n.p. n.d. [Half-title.] Poetical Works of John Keats. n.p. n.d. Bells and Pomegran- ates. So. I. — Pippa Passes. Browning. 1841. [Poems. By Dryden, Pope, and others.] F"., etc. 1660-97. 7018 Astraea Redux. Poem on the happy re- storation and retm*n of Charles the Se- cond. John Driden. 1660. Britannia Rediviva : poem on the birth of the Prince. Dryden. 1688. Absalom and Achitophel. [Anon. Dryden.] 1681. Names added in MS. Second Part. [Anon. Tate & Dryden.] 1682. Of the Characters of AVomen ; an Epistle to a Lady. Pope. 173o. Essay on Man. In Epistles to a Friend. Jspistle I. (—III.) Corrected by the Author. [Anon. Pope.] n.d. Each Epistle separate, with its own title page. Verses on the death of Doctor Swift, Written by Himself : ^ov. 1731. Second edition. 17.39. The Female Reign : an ode, alluding to Horace, B. -1. od. 14. Attempted in the style of Pindar. Occasion'd by the wonderful successes of the arms of Her Majesty and Her Allies. With a letter to a gentleman in the Uni- versity. Samuel Cobb. 1709. Manners : a satire. Whitehead, n.p. n.d ■ Faithful copy of the Verses, lately fastned upon the pulpit in St. Paul's choir. To the Architect upon his happy invention of a pulpit on wheels, for the use of St. Raid's Choir. n.p. n.d. Single leaf. Poem addrest to the Earl of Portland, on his return from his embassy in France. Old- miion. 1698. Essay on Poetry. Second edition. Earl of Mulgrave. (With a Latin rendering by J. N.) 1691. Poem on the late promotion of several eminent persons in Church and State. N. Tate. 1694. Nassau : poem occasion'd by the Peace. Thomas Barker. 1698. Epistle to Cha-rles Montague, Chancellour of the Exchequer, upon the (General Peace. 1698. Augustus Britamiicus : Poem upon the conclusion of the Peace of Europe, at Rijswick in Holland, 20. September, 1697. J.Phillips. 1697. On the death of Charles II. Pindarique ode. (and, to James II.) Thomas Flatman. 1685. The Mausoleum Sacied to the memory of (Jueen Anne. Theobald. 1714. Funeral Poem on the death of M'. Richard Baxter. Tutchin. 1692. Ode on the death of M' Pelham. Third edition. [Garrick.] 1754. Con- solatory Poem to John Lord Cutis, upon the death of his Lady. X. Tate. 1698. Poem to the memory of M'. Timothy 392 POEMS— coHf. Cruso, late rainibter of the Gospel ; who departed this hte Novemb. 26. 1697. J. S. 1697. [Poems, Oollcctiou of.] 2 vol. 8°. Various dates. 7019 Vol. I. Protestant Popery : or, the Convo- cation. [N. Amhurst.] (Porti'ait of Hoadly, Bishop of Bangor.) B. Ourll, 1718. Epistle from a Student at Oxford, to the Chevalier. Occasioned by his re- moval over the Alps, and the discovei'y of the Swedish Conspiracy. B. Curll, 1717. Congratulatory epistle to Joseph Addison ; occasioned by his being made one of His Majesty's principal Secretaries of State. B. Curll, 1717. view of the Duke of Marl- borough's JBattles, painted by Leguerre, in his Grace's house at St James's. B. Curll, 1717. The Protestant Session. [N. Am- hurst.] E. Curll, 1719. Epistle from the Princess Sobieski to the Ohevaher De St. George. N. Amhurst. B. Curll, 1719. Poem oh the death of Addison. Edward Cobden. 1720. Epistle to Thomas Barl of Hading- ton, on the death of Addison. James Arbuckle. 1719. Poems on several occa- sions. [George] Sewell. 1719. II. Bapc of the Lock. Pope. Fifth edition corrected. (Plates.) 1718. Key to the [Eape of the] Lock. By Bsdras Bamivelt, apoth. Third edition, t-^-ud] Commenda- tory copies of verses, by the most eminent political "Wits of the age. 1718. Essay on Criticism. Pope. Sixth edition, corrected. 1719. Ode for Mustek on St. Cecilia's Day. Pope. Third edition. 1719. AVindsor- JForest. Pope. Eourth edition. (And— Messiah [by Pope]. (And) To Mr. Pope on his "Windsor-Eorest. By Er. Knapp.) 1720. Temple of Fame : a vision. Pope. Second edition. 171B. Bloisa to Abelai'd. Pope. Second edition. (And Verses to the memory of an unfortunate lady [by Pope]. Florelio. Pastoral. Lamenting the death of the Marquis of Blandford. Fenton. Upon the death of her husband. M™. Elizabeth Singer. Ballad, by Gay. llichy and Sandy, pastoral on the death of Addison. Allan Bamsay. Explanation of Richy and Sandy. Burchet. To Allan Bamsey, on his Richy and Sandy. Bur- chet.) 1720. [Poems relating to K. William and Q. Mary.] ]?°. Various dates. 7020 Congratulatory Poem on the Prince ot Orange his coming into England. T. S. 1689. Ode upon the Expedition of the Prince of Orange, now King of England. Vfho landed Novemb. B. 1b88. 1689. To the King, an ode on his Majesty's arrival in Holland, 1698. Prior. 1696. Poem presented to King William the third, upon his preservation from that barbarous Jacobitish conspiracy to assassinate his Royal person, February 1695. R. B. 1696. Gratulatio Academiaj Cactitabri- giensis de reditu regis Gulielmi III. post pacem & libertatem Europae feliciter restitutam 1697. [Gr. Hebr. and Lat.] Oantabrigia;, n.d. To the King, on his peaceable reluni, and magnificent entr.y into London. E. IN'.P. 1697. Poem upon the conclusion of the Peace of Europe, and his Majesty's happy return, Haestncl James. 1698. Poem to the King, upon the conclusion of the Peace. Matt. Morgan. 1698. [Half-title.] 'i'o the King, upon his Majesties happy return. E. W;illcr, n.d. Poems on the death of Queen Mary. J. Bawson and Robert Smith [Engl, acid Lat.] WXi. Albiana. Poem to llio memory of Mary, Queen of England. Dove. 1695. Epicedmm, or; a Funeral Elegy on the death of our late Gracious POEMS— conf. Sovereign. S. 0. 1696. Elegy on the Death of the Queen. C. D. Rector of K. in S. 1696. The Procession. A Poem on Her Majesties Funeral. By a Gentleman of the Army [Steele]. 1095. [Orig. ed.] In memory of Mary Queen of Great-Britain, France, and Ireland. John Phillips. 1695. Poem, occasion'd by the death of her late Majesty. 1695. Elegies on the Queen and Ai-chbishop [Tillotson, of Canterbury]. Samuel Wesley. 1695. [Poems, Oratorios, otc. Mostly original editions.] 4°. Various dates. 7021 Hymn to the Pillory [Anon. De Foe]. 1703. Tunbridgiale ; being a description of Tun- bridge. By the Author ot My time O ye Muses, &c. [Dr. John Byrom.] 1726. Hecuba. A tragedy. 1726. [Translation from Euripides, attributed to Richard West.] Hurlothrumbo : or, the super- natural. By Samuel Johnson, from Cheshire. 1729. Rape of Proserpine : as it is acted. Written by Mr. Theobald. Set to Musick by Mr. Galliard. 1727. Perseus and Andromeda. As it is per- formed. Copper-plates [by W. H. i.e. William Hogarth.] Fifth edition ; to which is added, the Sailor's Ballad. 1731. [" Probably the production of Lewis Theo- bald." Baker.i Panegyric on Dean Swift. In answer to a libel on Dr. Delany, and a certain great lord. 1730. Epistle to M'. Pope, on reading his translations of the Iliad and Odyssy of Homer. Ex- amples of the variety of Sound inverse. Short character of Virgil and Homer. Epistle to a young poet, concerning M'. Pope : also, the condition of a good poet. 1731. Advice to the Poets. To which is preflx'd, an epistle dedicatory to the few great spirits of Great Britain. By Mr. [Aaron] Hill. 1731. Of Good-Nature. 1732. ITlysses. An Opera. Musick com- pos'd by John Christopher Smith, Junior. The words by Mr. Humphreys. [Words only.] 1733. Esther, an Oratorio: or, Sacred drama. Musick formerly composed by M'. Handel. Additional words by M'. Hum- phreys. Third edition. [W^ords only.] 1733. Deborah. An oi-atorio : or Sacred Drama. Musick compos'd by M^ Handel. Words by Mr. Humphreys. [Words only.] 1733. Athalia. Oratorio : or Sacred drama. As perform'd at the Theatre in Oxford. Musick compos'd by Mr. Handel. Drama by M'. Humphreys. [Words only.] 1733. Apollo and Daphne, an Opera. 1734. Magnanimity. With the characters of some of the greatest men of the age. Robert Moncrieff, 1735. Isidora to Casimir : an Epistle. 1735. Alex- ander's Feast; or, the Power of Slusick. Ode. Dryden. Set to Musick by M^ Handel [words only]. 1736. David's lamentation over Saul and Jonathan. .John Lockman. Set to Music by M'. Boyce. [Words only ? perfect.] 1736. [Poems and Plays.] dates. 8°. Various 7022 Younger Brother : or, the Sham Marquis. Comedy. 1519. Caesar in Egypt. 'Tra- gedy. Gibber. 1725. Windsor Talcs mth some Court Intrigues : a genuine history, n.d. [Dedication signed " S. L."] Poems on several Subjects : written by Stephen Duck, lately a ^oor thresher in a barn in the county of AVilts, at the waaes of four shilhngs and sixpence per week : which were publickly read in the drawing- room at Windsor Castle, on Friday the 11* September 1780, to Her Majesty. Seventh edition, corrected. Some account of the life of the Author. (Portrait.) 393 POEMS— co7it. 1730. RApe of the Lock. Hei-oi-comical poem. Second edition. 1714. Hurloth- rumbo : or, the Super-natural. Samuel Johnson. 1729. [Poetical miscellanies. Anon.] 4°. Various dates. 7023 Satyr afiainst Vertuc. 1679. l"T>y Olrt- liam : formerly usher of Croydon School now at Ky^te." MS. on t.p.'] Gideon's Fleece : or, the Sieur de Frisk. Heroick poem. Written on the cursory perusal of ■A late Book, call'd the Conclave of Physi- cians. 1684. School of Politicks : or, the Humoui-s of a Coffee-house. Second edi- tion. 1691. Dffineids, or the noble laboui-s of the great Dean of Notre-Dame in Paris, for the erecting in his guire a throne for his glorj;, and the eclipsing the pride of an imperious, usurping chanter. Heroique poem. (By John Crowne.) 10S12. ["Partly imitated from Boileau's Lutrin. Lowndes.1 New Athenian Comedy, containing the Politicks of that most learned Society. 1693. [Ep. Ded. siu'ned " E. S." i.e. Elkanah Settle.] Mis- cellanies over claret. Numb. I. (— II.) 1697. (Another copy see N». 7011.) , Msap at Richmond, recovered of his late illness. 1'oem in Bm'lesque. 1698. English Martial. 169|. (Another copy see X". 7011.) Corinna ; or. Humane Frailty. With an answer to the B. of E 's Satyr against man. 1699. A step to Oxford : or, a mad Essay on the Reverend M'. Tho. Creech's hauging himself, (as 'tis said) for Love. 17110. Folly of love. A new SatjT against "Woman. Together with the Bachelors lettany. Foiu-th edition. 1700. Chto: a Poem on the force of Eloquence. 1700. [No title-page. Prologue, sent to 31'. Eow[.e], to his new play, call'd. The Fair Penitent.] Golden Age from the fourth eclogue of Virgil, &c. 1703. [No titlc-piiL'o. Song for new-years Day, 1703. Set by 'SI' Eccles. Words bj- M' Tate.] End. 1703. [Poetical Xovels and other Poems]. F". "Various dates. 7024 The entries within square brackets have no title-pages and are single leaves, or broad- sides. JlisceUanious Poetical Novels or Tales. Adom'd with sculptures. 1705. Second Collection. 1705. Kentish 3Ien. A Satyr. Occasion'd by the late Treat at Mercers Hall, and the publication of then- live several eingies. 1701. Bill and Answer, lietmit Jack Catch plaintiff, and Shngsby Bethel, and al. detendents, of the year, litsi. 1686. [Signed •' J. B."] [Sta,tes- Man's almanack : being an excellent new Ballad, in which, the qualities of ea«h month are oonsider'd ; whereby it appears, thS,t a Parliament cannot meet in any of the old months: with a proposal for mending the Kalendar, humbly offered to the packers of the next ParUament. End. September the 1". From the Imperial Camp before Belgrade.] [Religious Re- liques, or, the sale at the Savoy; upon the Jesnita breaking up their school and chappel]. [Partridge's Advice to the Pro- testants of England.] [Pedigree of Po- pery; or. the Genealogie of Antichrist.] 1688. [The Audience.J [The Converts.] [Epistle to M' Dryden.] [Father Peter's pohcy discovered; :or, the P - - - - of Wales prov'd a P - - - - Perkin.] [Bal- lad [to the Prince of Orange]. To the tune of Couragio]. [The Eestaui-ation ; or : a change for the better. Being a paper of verses in memory of the Citizens ot Lon- don's gratitude, in chusing Sir Wilham POEMS— cunt. Pritchard, Sir John Fleet, Sir Francis Child, and Gilbert Heathcot, Esq., for their members to serve in Parhament]. 1702. [Humble Petitions of his Majesties truly loyal Protestant subjects, by some called Presbyterians, for a blessed Refor- mation.] (2 copiesj [Last will and testa- ment of Anthony King of Poland]. 1682. __. Dialogiie between the cities of London and Paris, in relation to the pre- sent posture ot affairs, rendred into verse. "Written by a person who has no mony to pay Taxes in case of a war. 1701. Ode to the Honourable H[enr]y FMx, on the marriage of the DuKiliesJs of Mfan- cheste]rtoH[ul8[se]y,Bsq. 1746. [Upon the happy agreement between King and Parliament : and the Spanish Priests^one- fire, March 8. 1072.] 1673. [Country- mans complaint, and advice to the King.] 1681. [Prologue spoken by 3Irs. Brace- girdle, at the Entertainment of Love for Love.] TJzziahandJotham. 1690. Poetical Reflections on a late Poem enfitnled Absa- lom and Achitophel. [By G. Villiers, Duke of Buekinghamt] 16S2. Absalom Senior ; or, Achitophel transpros'd. 1682. Modem Rehgion and ancient Loyalty : a Dia- logue. 1699. The Mushroom ; or, a Satyr against libelling Tories and prelatical Tantivies : in answer to a Satyr against Sedition called the Meddal. By the Author of Absalom and Achitophel. And here answered by the Author of the Black Nonconformist. 1682. ["Epistle to the Tories and Tantivies " signed " E. H."] State Dunces. Inscribed to M'. Pope. [By Paul Whitehead.] 1733. Part II. 173:!. Sacred Poem of the glory and happi- ness of Heaven. By J. S. (and) The Re- view. 1689. London : a poem, in imita- tion of the third Satire of J uvenaJ. [Anon. Glover.] Third edition. 1738. Luzara. Pindarique ode, on Prince Eugenius of Savoy : and his late A'ictory over the French and Spaniards, in Italy. 17U2. [Dedication signed " J. H,"] [Poetical Satires, etc.] 8°. Various dates. 7025 Proud Squire reformed ; account of one 'Squire Howard, hving near the town of Cham, in Somersetshire [verses. Chap- book with woodcuts], n.d. 4 leaves. Oxford Sermon [by Sev. Joseph E— tty] versified. By Jacob Gingle. 1720. A Tale ot Two Tubs; or, the B rs in Querpo. 1749. Songs, Chorusses, &c. which are introduced in the new enter- tainment of the Jubilee, at the Theatre- Royal, in Drury Lane, 1776. [Satires.] 4°. "S'arious date>. 7026 Satyr against Hypocrites. [Anon. John Philhps.] 1674. Poet's complaint of his muse ; or, a Satyr against lihells. Thomas ' Otway. 1680. [No title-page. To that most lamentable and most incorrigible scribler Bavins.] n.p. End. Printed for the Coffee-houses, 1688. 4 p. Poems on Affairs of State : from the time of Oliver Cromwell, to the abdication of K. James the Second. "W^ritten by the greatest wits of the age, viz. Duke of Buckingham, Earl of Eochester, Lord Bu[ckhur]st, Sir John Denham, Andrew MaryeU, Milton, Dryden, Sprat, Waller, Ayloffe, &c. "With some Miscellany Poems by the same . . S". n.p. 1697. State Poems ; continued from the time of 0. Crom"wel, to this present j-ear 1697. "Written by . Lord Kochester, Lord 394 POEMS— cont. D 1, Lord V n, Hon. M'. M ue, Sir F. S d, Miltou, Prior, Stepney, AylofEe, &o. With several poems in praise of Oliver Cromwel, in Latin and English, by South, Locke, Sir W. G n. Crew, Busby, &c. Also some Miscellany poems by the Same . . 8°. n.p. 1 697. 7027 One vol. Poems by eminent ladies. Particularly M". Barber, M'». Behn, Miss Carter, Lady (^Ihudleigh, M". Cookburn, M". Grierson, M'". Jones, M". Killigrew, M™. Leapor, M". Madan, M". Masters, Lady M. W. Montague, M". Monk, Dutchess of New- castle, M". K. Philips, M". Pilkington, M". Rowe, Lady Winchelsea. 2 vol. 12". 1755. 7028 Original poems and translations. By . . E. Godolphin, Sir Samuel Garth, N. Rowe, M. Prior, A. Manwairing, Pope, Hughes, &c. To which is added, jEscula- pius ; or, the Hospital of Fools : a dia- logue, after the manner of Lucian. By William Walsh. Second edition. (Por- trait of Walsh, inserted.) 8°. 1719. 7029 Sepiirale title to "The Salisbury Ballad By D'. Walter Pope." 1713; and half- title to "Aesculapius." [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 7030 Short history of the English Rebellion. Compiled in verse, by Marchamont Ned- ham ; and formerly extant, in hia weekly Mercurius Pragmaticus. 1680. Solomon's Songparaphras'd: apindariokpoem. 1681. [No title-page. Tom Tell-Troth : or, a dialogue between the devil and the Pope, about carrying on the plot.] New nar- rative of the Popish plot. To the tune of Packiugtori's , pound, n.p. n.d. Inscrip- tion intended to be set up tor the E— 1 of Rfochestelr, when by the happy eilects of his ministry, the chappel of St. Stephen's is become a chappel to the Jesuites. n.p. n.d. [1685 MS:\ (Two copies.) At the end. Translation of the L — d H — s speech, now E. of R r. to the King of Poland, 1677. Tribe of Levi. A poem. 1691. POETAE. PoetaeLyrici Griieci. Edidit Theodorus Bergk. 8°. Lipsiae, 1843. 7031 POETIC. Treasury of Poetic Gems. 12°. Ediu- burgh. n.d. 7032 POETRY. Poetry of the Year. Passages from the Poets descriptive of the seasons. With twenty-two coloured illustrations from drawings by eminent artists. 8°. 1853. '033 Poetry past and present. A collection for cvery-day reading and amusement. By the editor of " Cliurch Poetry," and " Days and Seasons." 12°. 1849, 7034 POLAND. Fall of Poland in 1794: an historical tragic drama . . By a Patriot. 8°. 1855. 7035 History of Poland. 12". 1831. 7036 POLITICAL. Political dictionary . . both constitu- tional and legal ; and embracing . . sta- tistical departments of finance and com- merce. 2 vol. 12°. 1845-6. 7037 [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. [Joseph Parkes's copy.] 7038 Treatise of politictue power ; and of the true obedience which Subjects owe to Kings, and other civill governours. By John Ponnet, D.D. and pubhshed 1566. n.p. Reprinted 1642. Injunctions given by the Queenes Majestic. 1559. Tlie first yeere of the raigne of Queene Elizabeth. B.L. n.p. n.d. Articles to be enquired of in the visitatio, in the first yeere of the raign of our Sove- raign Ladie Bhzabeth. 1569. B.L. 1600. [Half-title. 1 Queene Elizabeths speech to her last Parliament (30. November 1601, at 'Whitehall.) n.p. n.d. The Pisher catched in his owne net. (Con- ference between D' White Deane of Carleil, and D'. Featly, with M'. Fisher and M^ Sweet, lesuites.) n.p. 1623. Robert Earle of Essex his ghost, sent from Elizian : to the nobility [etc/] of Eng- land, [by Thomas Scott.] Printed m Paradise, 1624. A Post-Script, or, a second part of Robert Earle of Essex liis ghost. Printed in Paradise, 1643 [sic]. Declaration of the true causes ^vhich moved his Majestie to assemble, and after in- foreed him to dissolve the two last meet- ings in Parliament. 1626, His Majesties Declaration of the causes which moved him to dissolve the last parliament. 1628. [No title-page. Model of a, demooraticall government.] [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. [Book-plate of John Ord.] 7039 Conference desired by the Lords and had by a committee of both Houses, concern- ing the rights and privileges of the sub- jects. Discoursed by Sir Dudley Digges. Sir Edward Littleton. Master Selden. Sir Edward Cooke. With the objections by Sir Robert Heath, and the answers. S°. Apr. 1628. XMi. Libertie of the subject : against the preten- ded power of impositions. Maintained by an argument in pai'liaineut. An". 7°. Jacobi regis. By William Hakewil. \m\. Treatise of taxes and contributions. Shew- ing the nature and measures of Crown- lands excise, &c. With discourses and digressions concerning: warrs liberty of conscience, &c. The same being fre- quently applied to the state and affairs of Ireland, and is now thought seasonable for the present affairs of England. [Anon. Sir W. Petty.] 1679. 7040 Christian Moderator : Third part. Or, the oath of abjuration arraign'd. 1653, [Signed, at end, " Will. Birchley."] Non-Conformist's plea for uniformity. Being the judgment of fourscore and four ministers of the County Palatine of Lancaster, 1674. [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 395 POLITICAL- co«<. Pacquet of advices and animadversions, sent frnm London to (he men of Shattsbury. [By Marchamont Ncdham.] l(i7C. Conlormisl's sncond plea for the Noncon- formists. ]0Si2. Third and fourth of the Controversial let- ters: or the Krand controversie concern- ing the pretended temporal authority of Popes. Uetweei\ two EnRlisli gentlemen, the one of the church of England, the other of the church of Rome. 1673. Seventh and eighth of the controversial lettei-s. 1073. [No title-page. Addenda,: the Noncon- formists vindicated from the foul charge of the death of Kin? Charles the first, &c. pp. 73-87.] Appeal of all the Non-Conformists in Eng- land to God, and all the protestants of Europe, in order to manifest their sin- cerity in point of obedience to Grod and the King. To which is added a reply to the author of the lively picture of Lewis du Moulin, By Dr. Lewis du Moulin. 1681. "Reply" liiis a separate 1. p. datedl080. New oath of allegiance justified, from the original constitution of the English Monarchy. 1689. Discourse concerning the unreasonableness of a new separation, on account of the oaths. "With an Answer to the History of passive obedience, so far as relates to them. 1689. Letter which was sent to the author of The doctrine of passive obedience and Jure Divine disproved, &c. Answered and re- futed. 1689. [Signed at end " A. A."J Address of the Presbyterians, t)resented to the King by M''. Hurst. Witii his Majes- ties Answer, n.p. 1687. Kedarminster-stuff. A new piece of print ; or, a remnant of Mr. Baxter's Piae Frawdes unravelled. Being an appendix to Non- conformists plea for peace, impleaded. By J. B. Worcestershire. [Title-page mutilated at the foot.] Reasons against the repealing the Acts of Parliament conceraing the Test. n.p. 1687. Answer to the Bishop of Oxford's reasons for abrogating the Teat, impos'd on all Members of Paorliament. 1678. Octob. 30. 1688. [Signed at end, " Dra. Locnil."] [No title-page. Reflections on his Ma- jesty's proclamation 12 February 168? for a toleration in Scotland [? by^Bp. Burnet.] with the Proclamation.] [No title-page. Letter, containing some rellections on his Majesties Declaration for Liberty of Conscience. Dated i april, 1687.] [No ti lie-page. Answer to M'. Henry Payne's letter, concerning his Majesty's Declaration of Indulgence, writ to the author of the letter to a dissenter. Signed at end "T.T."] [Xo title-page. Earle of Melfort's letter to the Presbyterian-Ministers in Scotland, writ in his Majesty's name upon their address.] [No title-page. Answer to a paper entitled, A now lest of the Church of England's loyalty.] [No title-page. Apology for the Church of England, with relation to the spirit of persecution; for which she is accused.] (Two copies.) [No title-page. Letter, by Mijn Heer Fagel, Pensioner of Holland, giving an account of the Prince and Princess of Orange's Thoughts concerning the repeal of the Test, and the penal laws. 1688.] POLITICAL— con^ Remarks on a Sermon by The. Gipps, rec- tor of Bury wherein tlie dissenters are fully vindicated against his unjust accusa- tions. By J. 0. (James Owen) minister of the Gospel at Oswestry. 1697. [No title-page. To the King. pp. I— XIL] [No title-page. Queries which deseiTe no consideration answer'd only to satisfie the ridiculous enquiries of the trifling P r that made 'em publick. ] [No title-page. The Catdiolic liepresenter. Chap. VI f— XVI.) pp. 41 (— 88.) 1686.] [No title-page. Three Letters. I. From a Jesuit at Liege, to a Jesuit at Fribourg giving an account of the happy progress of religion in England. (1688.) II. From Father Petre, Jesuit, almoner to the King of England, to Father la Chese, con- fessour to the most Christian King, touching the present afiairs of England. Translated from the French. III. An- swer of Father la Chese. (1688.) .] [No title-page. Queries concerning hberty of conscience, directed to William Penn and Henry Care.] [No title-page. The King's Power in eccle- siastical matters truly stated.] [Tracts.] 8°. v.d. 7041 Lord Beilhaven's speech in the Scotch par- liament, 2 November, on the subject- matter of an union betwixt the two king- doms of Scotland and England. 1706. n.p. Articles of the Treaty of Union agreed on by the Commissioners of both kingdoms, 22 July 1706. Printed at Edinburgh, re- printed at London, n.d. Life of Sir Rob*. Cochran, Prime-minister to James III. of Scotland. 17S4. Nan'ative of the several passages of the Young Chevalier, from the battle of CuUo- den to his embarkation for France. 1750. (Two copies.) Accoimt of the behaviour of the late Earl of Kilmarnock. By James Foster. 1746. Nonjurors separation from the Pubhc As- semblys of the Church of England ex- amin'd, and prov'd to be sclusmatical. By Tho. Bennet, D.D. Second edition. 1716. Vindication of the Realm, and Church of England, from the charge of perjury, re- belfion and schism, unjustly laid upon them by the Non-Jurora. 1716. Preservative against the principles and pi*actices of the Nonjurors both in Church and State. By Benjamin [Hoadly], Bishop of Bangor. Second edition. 1716. [Tracts.] 8°. v.d. 7042 True picture of a modern Whig. 1701. Remarks upon the Bank of England occa- sion'd by the present discourse concerning the intended prolongation of the Bank. 1707. Bishop of Exeter's [Ofspring Blackall] answer to M"". Hoadly's letter. 1709. [No. t.p. List both of the late Parliament and that summoned to meet November 25 1710. 1711.] Report of the Commissioners for taking the publick accounts of the kingdom, n.p. 1711. Remarks on the Barrier Treaty, between Her Majesty and the States-General. By ihe author of The Conduct of the Allies [Swift]. Second edition. 1712. English Advice, to the freeholders of Eng- land, n.p. 1714. 896 POLITICAL— con*. Collation of white and 'black lists or, view of those gentlemen who have given their votes in parliament for and against the Protestant religiort and succession. Second edition. 1716. [Tracts.] 4°., etc. v.d. 7043 Presbyterians not guilty of the unjust charge of being concern'd in the murther of Kmg Charles I. With a vindication of moderate churchmen and dissenters. 1710. A healing question propounded and resolved, upon occasion of the late pubhque and seasonable call to humiliation. By Henry Vane, Knight. 1656. [Imper- fect.] Tr.val ol Sir Henry Vane 1662. Together with what he intended to have spoken the day of his sentence, for arrest of .iudgment and his Bill of exceptions. "With other occasional speeches, &c. Also his speech and prayer, &c. on the Scaffold, n.p. 1662. [Imperfect.] Informations and examinations taken con- cerning Lieutenant Colonell John Lilburn, shewing his apostacy to the party of Charles Stuart. 1663. [Signed "John Staplehill." Mutilated.] Proclamation (Scotland), against the own- ing of the late King James, and command- ing piiblick prayers to be made for King "William and Queen Mary. Edinburgh April 13. 1689. 1689. s. sh. F". Account of the proclaiming of. the King (WiUiam) and Queen (Mary). 1689. s. sh. P". Necessary directions for daily prayer, morn- ing and evening. 1690. s. sh. P". [Tracts.] 4°. & 8°. v.d. 7044 The Crisis : or, a discourse representing the just causes of the late happy B^volution : and tlie several settlements of the crowns of England and Scotland on her Majesty. "With some seasonable* remarks on the danger of a Popish Successor, By Sir Richard Steele. 1714. Pubhck spirit of the "Whigs : set forth in their generous encouragement of the author of the Crisis : with some observa- tions on that treatise. [By Swift as- sisted by Lord Bolingbroke.] 1714. The Englishman (Numb. 57) : being the close of the paper so called. With an epistle concerning the whiggs, tories, and new converts. By Sir Richard Steele. 1714. Jack the courtier's answer to Dick the Eng- lishman's close of the paper so call'd. As also to the familiar epistle sent him to Windsor: With a congratulatory address to the author R S[teele] Esq; upon the late success of his first compliment in St, Stephen's chapel, at the choice of SirT H re [Hanmer] forsp[eake]r. 1714. M'. Steele's Apology for himself and his writings ; occasioned by his expulsion from the House of Commons. 1714. The Wolf stript of his shepherd's cloathing. In answer to a late celebrated book in- tituled Moderation a vertue ; wherein the designs of the Dissenters against the Chui'ch : and their behaviour towards her Majesty both in England and Scotland are laid open. With the case of occasional conformity considered. By one call'd an high-churoh-man. With my service to Dr. D'Avenant. Sold by the Booksellers of London and Westminster, 1704. The Appendix. Numb. I— lA^ n.p. (1703). POLITICAL-conL Numb. 93. Bill entituled, an act for pre- venting occasional conformity, as it passed the House of Commons, 7"' December, 1703. (1703.) Single leaf. F«. [No title-page. Civil Comprehension, &c. In a letter to a friend, from one who wishes the general good of England, and particularly well to the Establish'd Church. Sold by the Booksellers of .Lon- don and Westminster, 1705.] Signed N.N. [No title-page. Dissenters address of thanks to the Bishops, for casting out thi- Bill against occasional conformity. 1704.] [No title-page. The Lord's People, com- monly miscall'd Quakers, their friendly advice to the Observator, February 6th. 1704. Concerning his Remarks on the Dissenters address to the Creatures, known by the name of Bishops. 1704.] [No title-page. Speech of a noble peer upon the reading of the Bill for prevent- ing occasional conformity. 1704.] [No title-page. The C ner's, in answer to the P r's Sp ch.j [No title-page. Speech for the Bill against occasional conformity.] [By Sir John Packington.] [Tracts.] 8°. v.d. 7045 Essay upon Rewards and Punishments, ac- cording to the practice of the present times. With a scheme for immortalizing the glorious actions of a certain great man, much more effectually than can be done by any triumphal arch. n.d. The New-Comers : or, the chaa-acters of John the Carter, Sandy Long-Bib, Daniel Raven, and Old Will with the Spencer Wig. Character and history of "Will Trimmer and a dialogue between Bob and WiU. Curious particulars of them both. Taken from the Westminster Journal of Sept. 25 (1742 in MS.) n.d. History of the surprizing rise and sudden fall of MasanieUo, the fisherman of Naples. Containing accounts of the whole tumults and insurrections that happened there July 1647. (Portrait.) Oxford, n.d. Respectful observations on a late print, call'd a Memorial ; said to be pubhsh'd by the Baron de Bothmar^in the name of his Electoral Highness of Hanover. 1712. M'. Asg['il]l's congratulatory letter to the B[isho]p of S[aru]m, upon the excellent modem preface just publish'd by his L p. 1713. [Tracts.] 8°. v.d. 7046 Histoiy of Prime Ministers and favourites, in England ; from the conquest down to the present time. 1763. Short history ol that Parliament which com- mitted Sir Robert Walpole to the Tower, expelled him the House of Commons, and approved of the infamous peace of "Utrecht. "Written by Sir Robert Walpole, after- wai'ds Earl of Orford. Second edition. 1763. The Englishman's right : a dialogue between a Barrister at law and a juryman ; plainly setting forth, the antiquity of juries. By the law of England. By Sir John Hawles. 1764. POLITICAL AND HISTORICAL. [Tracts.] 4". and 8". v.d. 7047 Papers delivered by J. Gordon, Earl of Der- wentwater, "V"t. Kenmure, Col. Oxburgh, R. Gasooigne, Rd. M'. Paul, J. Hall, Capt. J. Bruce, John Knox* Letter to the Earl of 397 POLITICAL— eon/. Derwentwater, during his confinement in the Tower. One ol M'. Gascoigne'a the night before his execution. List of the names of all those who sufler'd death on account of the late riiheihon. "With the number of those who died in the prisons of Newgate, Lancaster, and Carlisle. n.d. JT'. Puller's appeal to Parliament, with letters ; relating to Sir .John Benwick, and hunself. By William Puller. 1697. Bishop of Oxford [William Talbot] vindi- cated from the abuse of a speech lately published under His Lordship's Name. 1710. Letter to Mr. Samuel .Johnson, occasioned by a scurrilous pamphlet, intituled. Ani- madversions on Mr. Johnson's answer to .lovian. At the end is reprinted the pre- face before the histoi^y of Edward and Eiohard the Second. Both written by Sir "Robert Howard. WJ2. Letter to Sir Thomas Osborn, upon the read- ing of a book, called. The present interest of England stated. 11)72. [" By the Duke of Buckingham." MS. on litle.2 True Protestant Subject, or, the nature, and rights of Sovereignty discuss'd, and stated. 1680. The late Keepers of the English liberties drawn to the life : in the qualifications of persons by them declar'd capable to serve in parliament. 1680. Seasonable Memorial in some historical notes upon the libei-ties of the presse and pulpit : "With the effects of popular peti- tions, tumults, associations, impostures, and disaffected Common-Councils. [By Sir Roger L'Estrange.] 1680. Summus Anglia: Seneschallus : or, a survey of the Lord High-steward of England, his office, particularly the manner of arraigning a peer indicted of treason, or felony. In a letter to the Lords in the Tower, with resolutions to certain queries made by their Lordships, relating to trayterous and sedi- tious practices. [Signed, at end, " Ed. S."] 1680. Pield ot blond : or, Rebellion blazoned in all" its colours. In a lively representation (grounded upon fact) of the fatal conse- quences of inhability in a prince, exorbi- tant ambition in the nobihty, and licen- tious insolence in the commons. 1681. Mischief of Cabals : or, the faction expos'd. With some considerations for a lasting settlement. 1686. The great Bastard, protector of the little one. Done out of French. Printed at Cologne, 1689. Justice of the parliament, in inflicting of punishments subsequent to oiJences, vin- dicated, and the lawfulness of the present government asserted. Animadversions upon the second vindication of the Magis- tracy and Government of England. 1689. Apology for M'. E. Stafford, with an admo- nition to him. "Wherein the nature of the English Monarchy is explained, [and] the justice'ot the present settlement asserted. By the'author ol the Reflections. 1690. Freedom of elections to Parliament, a fun- damental law and hberty of the EngUsh subject ; and some presidents shewing the power of the House of Commons to inflict punishments on those who have been guitly [sic] of misdemeanours either in elections or returns. 1690. Present condition of Prance, in reference to her revenues. Done out of French. 1692. Enquiry into the causes of the present fears and dangers ot the government. 1693. Account ot M'". Blunts late book, entituled. King WiUiam and Queen Mary con- querors. 1693. POLITICAL— con*. [No title-page. List of one unanimous club of members ot the late parliament, Nov. 11. 1701. that met at the Tine-Tavern in Long-Acre. "Who ought to be opposed in the ensuing elections, by all that intend to save their native country from being made a province of France.] [No title-page. Scheme of the usurpations that have been made by several of our former Princes, upon the rightful heirs to this Crown.] Vox Lachryma). Sermon newly held forth at Weavers-Hall, upon the funeral of the famous T. O, Doctor of Salamancha. By Elephant Smith, claspmaker. Printed at Francfort, 1681 ; reprinted at London, 1682. Letter to a Friend concerning some of D"". Owens principles and practices : with a postscript to the author of the late Eccle- siastical Polity, and an Independent Cate- chism. 1670. Certain conscientious Queries from M"". "nViII. rjenkin. His petition. Letter sent to him and M^ Love witli other ministers. Par- liaments pardon to them all. 1051. POLITICAL AND LEGAL. [Tracts.] F". v.d. 7048 Narrative and discovery of several very re- markable passages relating to the horrid Popish plot : as they tell within the know- ledge of Miles Prance, viz. His deposi- tions concerning the plot in general, and a particular design against the life of his Majesty. The whole proceedings touch- ing the murther of Sir Edmundljury God- frey. Conspiracy to murther the Earl of Shaftsbury. The traiterous intrigues and immoralities of divers Popish priests. (Portrait.) 1679. Englands defence. A treatise concerning invasion. Exhibited in writing to Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester, a little before the Spanish Invasion, 1588. By Thomas Diggs. Account of such stores of war, and other materials as are requisite for the defence of a fort. List of the ships of war and the Land-forces designed by the par- liament against Prance, 1678. List of the present governors of the garisons of Eng- land ; and of all the Lord Lieutenants, and High Sheriffs ot all those counties ad- jacent to the coasts. Lastly, the wages of officers and seamen. Collected by Thomas Adamson, 1673. 1680. Character of a Popish successour, and what England may expect from such a one. [Anon. Elkanah Settle.] 1681. Arraignment and plea of Bdw. Pitz-Harris ; with all the arguments in law, and pro- ceedings of the Court of Kings-Bench thereupon, in Easter term 1681. 1681. Tryal of Henry Baron Delamcre for high- treason, in Westminster-Hall, 14 January, 1685. 1686. [No title-page. Memorial from the EngUsh Protestants, for the Prince and Princess of Orange.] F°. Proceedings and tryal in the case of Wil- liam [Sancroft] Archbishop of Canterbury, and "William fLloyd] Bishop ot St. Asaph [etc.] In the Court of Kings-Bench at Westminster. 1688. (Portraits of the seven Bishops.) 1689. POLITICS. School of Politicks : or, the humour.s of a Coffee-House. A poem. 4". 1690. 7049 398 [POLLEN (JOHN HUNGERFORD),] First proofs of the Universal Cutaloguo of Books on Art compiled for the use of the National Ai-t Library and the Schools of Art in the United Kingdom . . [Edited by J. H. Pollen.] Vol. I.— A to K. II. L to Z. 4°. 1870. 7050 POLLOK (REV. ROBERT), Course of Time : a poem . , Ninth edition. 12°. Edinburgh, 1829. 7051 POMBAL (SEBASTIEN JOSEPH CARVALHO, MARQUIS DE). Anecdotes du Ministere de . . Marquis de Pombal, sous le regne de Joseph I, Roi de Portugal. Nouvelle edition . . 8°. Varsovie, 1784. " 7052 POMPEII. Library of entertaining knowledge. Pompeii. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. 1831-4. 7053 Vol. 2 second edition. Originally published under the superin- tendence of the Society for the diffusion of useful knowledge. Pompeii : its de- struction and re-discovery. Illustrations. New edition. 12°. 1847. 7054 POOLE (REV. GEORGE AYLIFFE). Churches ; their structure, arrangement, and decoration. New edition. 12°. 1846. 7055 POOLE (JOHN). Christmas Festivities : tales, sketches, and characters. With beauties of the modern drama . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 7056 Comic Miscellany for 1845. With a portrait of the author, and an illustration by Phiz [H.K. Browne]. 8°. 1845. ' 7057 Comic Sketch-book, or, sketches and recollections. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1836. 7058 LittlePedlington and thePedlingtonians. 2 vol. 8°. 1839. 7059 POOLE (JOSUA). English Parnassus : or a help to English poesie. Containing a collection of all the rhythming monosyllables, the choicest epithets and phrases. With some general forms upon all occasions, subjects, and themes . . With a short institution to English poesie . . (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1677. (Two copies.) 7060 No. 2. No frontispiece. POOLE (SOPHIA). Englishwoman in Egypt : Letters from Cairo, written during a residence there in 1842, 3, and 4. with E. W. Lane. By his sister. 2 vol. 12°. 1844. 7061 Second series. 12°. 1846. 7062 POOR. " The Poor ye have always with ye." By the autlior of " Fortune-seeking in the Capital." From the French. 12°. 1852. 7063 POOR ROBIN. Poor Robin 1680 an Almanack after a new fashion . . Containing a two-fold Kalendar ; viz. the Julian or English ; and the Roundheads . . with their several Saints-days ; and observations, upon every month . . n.d. [1680]. At the end, with separate t.p. — " Poor Kobin, 1680. A Prognostication for . . 1680 . ." Poor Robin, 1689. An Almanack of the old and new fashion . . Contaming a two-fold Kalendar . . Seven and twentieth impression. 1689. At the end with separate t.p. — "Poor Robin, 1689. Prognostication for . . 1689 . . Cal- culated . . for the meridian of Saffron Walden . ." Poor Robin, 1694. Almanack of the old and new fashion . . Containing a two- fold Kalendar . . Two and thirtieth im- pression. 12°. 1694. 7064 At the end with separate t.p.—" Poor Robin, 160*. A Profsnostioation for . . 1694 . . n.d. One vol. POPE (ALEXANDER). The Works of M'. Alexander Pope. (Portrait.) 4°. 1717. 7065 On fly leaf. " To the E,'. Honorable The Earl of Oxford, from his most obed*. humble serv'. A. Pope." On another fly leaf. " For my dear nephew M' Robert Harley Octo : IS. 1718." On the same fly leaf. "Bought by M'. Lilly the bookseller at the Sale of the library of the Hon. Miss Harley July 1860 : andby me bought of him. George Daniel. Oanonbury. August 6. 1850." Works. In verse and prose. Con- taining the principal notes of Warburton and Warton : illustrations, and remarks, by Johnson, Wakefield, A. Chalmers, and others . . Some original letters, with ad- ditional observations, and memoirs of the life of the author. By Kev.'William Lisle Bowles. 10 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1806. 706G Works. With notes and illustrations by himself and others . . New life of the author, an estimate of his poetical character and writings, and occasional remarks, by William Roscoe. 10 vol. (and Supple- ment). (Portrait.) 8°. 1824-5. 7067 399 POPE (ALEXANDER)— conf. Works. New edition. Including several hundred unpublished letters, and other new materials. Collected iu part by the late John Wilson Croker. With iutro- ductions and notes. By Kev. Whitwell Elwin, and William John Courthope. Vol. I— IV Poetry. Vol. VI— VIII Corre- spondence. IX. X. Prose works. With portraits and other illustrations. 8°. 1871-86. 7068 Injprogress. M'. Courthope followed M'. Elwin in the editorship after five vol. had been issued. Poetical works. Revised and arranged expressly for the use of young people (by W. C. M[aeready]). 12°. Printed for private circulation 1848. (Two copies.) 7069 Poetical Works. Edited by Robert Carruthers. Illustrated by portraits and original designs. 4 vol. Vol. I. Memoir of Pope, with extracts from his corre- spondence. 8°. 1853-4. 7070 Poetical Works. Edited by Robert Carruthers. 2 vol. New edition, revised. With numerous engravings on wood. 8°. Bohn, 1858. 7071 Poetical Works. With memoir, critical dissertation, and explanatory notes, by Rev. George Gilfillau. 2 vol. 8°. Edin- burgh, 1856. 7072 Globe edition. Poetical Works edited with notes and introductory memoir by Adolphus William Ward. 8°. 1869. 7073 Supplement to the works of Alexander , Pope Esq. Containing such poems, letters, &c. as are omitted in the edition published by Rev. D'. Warburtou . . Ivey to the letters. 8". 1757. 7074 Rev. J. Mitford's copy and MS. notes, MS. notes in an older hand. Additions to the' Works of Alexander Pope. Together with many original poems and letters, of cotemporary writers, never before published. 2 vol. 8°. 1776. (Two copies.) 7075 No. 1. Mitford's copy and MS. notes, one of which says " This Work was compiled by W. Cooke ("Conversation" Cooke), and not by G. Steevens." No. 2. Book-plate of Heaton Wilkes. [Title.] Miscellaneous poems and trans- lations. By several hands. Particularly the first book of Statius his Thebais trans- lated. The fable of Vertnmnus and Pomona, from . . Ovid's Metamorphosis. To a young lady -with the works of Voiture. On Silence. To the author of a Poem intitled Successio. The Rape of the Lock, an heroi-comical poem. An ode for Musick on St. Cecilia's Day. Windsor Forest . . An Essay on Criticism. By M"-. Pope. Second edition. 1714. [Second Title] Miscellaneous Poems and Translations. By several hands. 8°. 1712. 7076 POPE (ALEXANDER)— con(. Miscellaneous Poems and Translations, by several hands. Particularly, Windsor Eorest, with the Messiah. Essay on Criticism. Rape of the Lock. Ode on St. Cecilia's Day. A'erses to the memory of a Lady. To M'. Jervas, with Eresnoy's Art of Painting. To a young Lady, with the works of Voiture. Eloisa to Abelard. By M'. Pope. Third edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1720. 7077 Mitford's copy and MS. notes. Vol. 1. contains the compositions of other writers besides Pope. 2. (With two title- pages) consists of the works of D"". King and others. Clarendon Press Series. Satires and Epistles. Edited by Mark Pattison. 12°. Oxford, 1872. 7078 Duneiad, Variorum. With the prole- gomena of Scriblerus. [Anon.] (" Ass and Owl " vignette.) 4°. A. Dod, 1729. 7079 On title " Jonath. Swift. 1729." " Bought at Swift's Auction. Practi. 0. 11. 0." On fly leaf — " Jonath : Swift. Amicissiini autoris donum." [and] " R. Sheridan." Book-plates of Edmund L. Swifte and Rich''. Sheridan. Duneiad, Variorum. With the prole- gomena of Scriblerus. [Anon.] ("Ass and Owl " vignette.) 8°. A. Dob, 1729. 7080 Duneiad. With notes variorum, and the prolegomena of Scriblerus. Written in the year, 1727. [Anon.] (" Owl " frontispiece.) 12". Lawton Gilliver, n.d. [1733]. 7081 New Duneiad : as is [sic'] it was found in the year 1741. With the illustrations of Scriblerus, and Notes Variorum. (Book IV.) 8°. Dublin, 1742. 7082 [Half-title]. Of Taste, an epistle to Richard Earl of BurUugton. [Title.] Epistle to Richard Earl of Burlington. Occasion'd by his publishing Palladio's designs of the Baths, Arches, Theatres, &c. of Ancient Rome! [First ed.] F°. 173J. Of the Use of Riches, an Epistle to Allen Lord Bathurst. Second edition. F°. 1733. [Half-title.] Of the Knowledge and Characters of Men : to Richard Lord Cobham. [Title] Epistle to Richard Lord Vise'. Cobham. [First, ed.] F". 1733. In one vol. 7083 Essay on Man. In epistles to a friend. Epistle I. Corrected by the Author. [Anon.] F°. n.d. ■ Epistle II. [Anon.] F°. n.d. Epistle III. [Anon.] F°. n.d. Epistle IV. [Anon.] F°. n.d. 70S4 MS. at beginning and MS. alterations in all the epistles. In one vol. 400 POPE (ALEXANDER)— co»<. Essai sur THomme. Traduction Fran- QCiise en prose, par M'. S * * * *. Nou- velle edition, avec roriginal Anglois ; ornee de figures en taille-douce. (Portraits of Pope & Charles Frederic, Margrave of Baden.) 4°. Lausanne & Geneve, 1745. 7085 Letters of Mr. Pope, and several eminent persons, from tlie year 1705, to 1711. Vol. I. ( . . from the year 1711, &c. [to 1734]. Vol. 11. n.d.) (2 vol. in one.) 8°. 1735. (Two copies.) 7086 N°. 1. " This Is the genuine ' P. T.' edition." MS. note. Mr. Pope's Literary Correspondence for thirty years; from 1704 to 1734. Being, a collection of letters, which passed between him and several eminent persons. Vol. I— IIL (Portraits.) 8". E. Curll, 1735. (Two copies.) _ 7087 No. 1. Book-plate of C. A. WheelwriKht. Mr. Pope's Literary Correspondence for thirty years, from 1704 to 1734. Being a Collection of Letters, which passed be- tween him and several eminent persons. Third edition (of Vol. I.). Second edi- tion of (Vol. II.— IV). (Portraits.) 12'>. E. Curll, 1735-6. 7088 Mltlord's copy and MS. notes. [Half-title.] Works in prose. [Title.] Letters of A. Pope, and several of his friends. [Title to Vol. II.] Works, in prose. Vol. II. 2 vol. (Portrait.) E". 1737, 1741. (Duplicate of Vol. I.) 7089 Injured by Are. Book-plate of Ed. 'Walls. Collection of Letters, never before printed : written by Alexander Pope ; and other ingenious gentlemen, to Aaron Hill. 12". 1751. 7090 MS. notes. Autograph of " B. Heber." A compleat collection of all the verses, essays, letters and advertisements, which have been occasioned by the publication of three Volumes of Miscellanies, by Pope and Company. To which is added an exact list of the lords, ladies, gentlemen and others, who have been abused in those Volumes. With a large dedication to the author of the Duuciad . . 8°. 1728 7091 Engraved Irontispieoe— Pope on crutches, surmounting a pedestal fonned of books. After " the Dunciad " Zowndes adds " By E. Savage." But ? by Concanen — see M'. Porster's MS. not9. [No title-page. Life of Alexander Pope, Esq.] 12°. 7092 POPERY. [No title-page. Numb. 1. A pacquet of advice from Rome : or, the history of Popery. Begun to be published 3 De- POPERY— eoH<. cember 1678. and thence to be continued.] [? By Dr. Henry Care.] 4°. 7093 Many other numbers in the vol. Date of the last 30 January 16». Heading of No. 2 (and onwards) is "The Weekly pacciuet. ." Supplication of eertaine Masse-priests falsely called Catholikes. Directed to the Kings Maiestie . . and an answer to the libellers reasons . . 4°. 1604. 7094 [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 7095 Pacquet of advices and animadversions, sent from London to the men of Shaftsbury [By M. Nedham.] 1676. Second pEicquet sent to the men of Shafts- bury. [By M. Jv'edham.] 1077. (Two copies.) The Knot unty'd : or, the Association dis- banded. 1682. Ueasonable defence of the Seasonable Dis- course : shewing the necessity of main- taining the established religion in opposi- tion to Popery. [By "W". Lloyd, Bp. of Worcester.] [Title-page, mutilated. 1674.] Dying speeches of several excellent persons, who suffered for their zeal against:Popery, and arbitrary government ; viz. Stephen CoUedg, Lord Bussel, Col. Sidney, Col. Eumbald, Lady Lisle, Alderman Cornish, Capt. 'Walcot. 1689. Seasonable discourse shewing the necessity of maintaining the estabhshed rehgion, in opposition to Popery. Second edition. 1673. ["By "William Lloyd, Bp. of "Worcester. Ascribed also to D'. Pell." Halkett tS: Laing.'l Discovery upon discovery, in defence of Doctor Gates against B. "W's libellous vindication of him, in his Additional Dis- covery ; and in justification of L'Estrange against the same libell. In a letter to Doctor Titus Gates, by Roger L'Estrange. 1080. LEstrange's Narrative of the Plot. 1680. [No title-pa^e. The Reformed Catholique : or, the True Protestant.] [By Sir R. L'Estrange.] [No title-page. Second note of the Church examined, viz. Antiquity, pp. il-56. 1687.J [By Bishop Patrick.] Collection of papers against Popery and arbiti-ary government. "Written by Gr. Burnet, D.D. Printed at Amsterdam, and sold in London, 1689. Alarm to Protestants : or, a short method with a Papist. Being an account of a dispute between Mr. Thomas Willis, a Popish priest and Mr. John Battersby. Prefatory discom*se by a gentleman edu- cated in the Popish superstition proving the danger of Popery. 1714. Vindication of A. Cressener, school -master in Long-Acre, from, the aspersions of A. Pul- ton, Jesuit and school-master in the Savoy ; with some account of his discourse wiili M'. Meredith, 1687. More shams still ; or a further discovery of the designs of the Psppists, to impose upon the nation the belief of their feigned Pro- testant or Presbyterian plot. By Thomas Dangerfeild. 1681. Some queries to Protestants answered. And an exi)lanation of the Roman Catholick's belief in four great points considered. [By Michael Altham.] 1686. The Papist represented, and not misrepre- sented ; being in answer to the Papist misi-epresented and represented. And for a further Vindication of the Catechism truly I'epresenting the doctrine and prac- tices of the Church of Rome. [By John Williams, Bp. of Chichester.] 1687'. 40] POPERY— c«K<. Discourse concerning a Guide in matters of tmOi. with respect, especially, to the Komish pretence of the necessity of snch a one as is infellible. Second edition. LAnon. by Archbishop Tenison.] 1687. " B'. Tenison " in MS. on t.p. Argument of Peter de la Marteliere, advo- cate, made in Parliament 1611. Por the rector and university of Paris, defendants and opponents, against the Jesuits de- mandants. Translated out of the French copy, P L. P. 1689. [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 7096 Lestrange's Narrative of the Plot. 1680. Letter, written upon the discovery of the late Plot. 1678. [Imperfect at end.] Roman-Catholick principles, in reference to God and the King, to shew the connexion between the said principles, and the late Popish plot. 1680. [Signed "M.iB.,"but, accovding to Halkett and Laing^hy James Corker.] Grand designs of the Papists, in the reign of Charles I. And now carried on against his present Majesty. 1678. No Protestant-plot : or the present pre- tended conspii*acy of Protestants against the King and Government, discovered to be a conspiracy of the Papists against the King and his Protestant-subjects. [By the Earl of Shaftesbury.] 1681. Third part of No Protestant Plot: with observations on the proceedings upon the bill of indictment against the E. of Shafts- bury : and a brief account of the case of the Earl of Argyle. [By Eobert Ferguson.] 1682. Discoui-se concerning a Judge of contro- versies in matters of rehgion. Being an answer to some papers asserting the ne- cessity of such a Judge. Address to wavering Protestants. Preface concerning the nature of certainty and infallibility. 1686. Defence of D'. Sherlock's preservative against popery, in reply to a Jesuit's answer. By William Giles. Second edition. 1688. His Majesties Declaration concerning the treasonable conspiracy a^nst his person and government, lately discovered. 1683. Treatise of Traditions. Parti. 1688. [Anon. By Daniel Whitby, D.D.] [Tracts.] F°. 1679-81. 7097 Witch of Endor ; or the Witchcrafts of the Roman Jesebel. Account of the exorcisms or conjurations of the Papists concerning the hallowing of water, salt, bread, candles. By Titus Otes, D.D. (Portrait.) 1679. Increase of Popery in England, since the Reformation made by King Henry VIII. With a faithful extract cut of the most authentick records of the most memorable things referring to the Reformation (and— Postscript) . By Rev. WilUam Dell. 1681. Great pressui'es and grievances of the Pro- testants in France. And their apology to the late ordinances made against them. Gathered and digested by E. E. of Grays- Inn, sometime Under-Secretary to the French King (and— Observations upon the King's two declarations at St. Germains in Laye 2 April, 1666). 1681. Spirit of Popery speaking out of the mouths of phanatical-Protestauts, or the last speeches of Mr. John Kid and Mr. John King, two Presbyterian ministers, who were executed fbr high-treason and rebel- o 16,505. POPERY— con*. lion, at Edinburgh, August W.1679. With animadversions, and the history of the archbishop of St. Andrews his murder. By an orthodox Protestant [George Hickes, D.D.]. 1680. Another t.p. to the " Murder." PORSON (RICHARD). Letters to Mr. Archdeacon Travis, in answer to his defence of the three heavenly witnesses, I John r. 7. 8°. 1790. "7098 Tracts and Miscellaneons Criticisms. Collected and arranged by Ecv. Thomas Kidd. 8°. 1815. 7099 "Imperfect outline of the Life" of Person prefixed. PORTER (ANNA MARIA). Hungarian Brothers. Revised . . by the Author. 12°. 1850. 7100 PORTER (GEORGE RICHARDSON). Progress of the Nation, in its various social and economical relations, from the beginning of the ig"" century to the pre- sent time. Sections V. to VIII. Con- sumption, accumulation, moral progress, colonial and foreign dependencies. 8°. 1843. 7101 PORTER (MRS. GEORGE RICHARD- SON). Rational Arithmetic. New edition . . 12". 1852. 7102 PORTER (JANE). Pastor's Pire-side, a novel. W ith a new introduction, by the Author. 2 vol. 12°. 1849. ■ 7103 Scottish Chiefs, a Romance. Revised . . by the author. 2 vol. 12°. 1850. 7104 Thaddeus of Warsaw. Revised . . by the author. 12°. 1849. 7105 PORTER (SIR ROBERT KER). Narrative of the Campaign in Russia, during 1812. (Portrait of Prince Kou- tousoff). 4°. n.d. [1813 or 14]. 7106 PORTER (MAJOR WHITWORTH). Life in the trenches before Sehastopol. 12°. 1856. 7107 [PORTER (W. O.) M.D.] Sir Edw. Seaward's narrative of his shipwreck and consequent discovery of certain islands in the Caribbean Sea ; with a detail of many . . events in his life, from 1733 to 1749. As written in his own diary [Anon.] Edited by Miss Jane Porter. Third edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1841. 7108 [Another edition.] Abridged from the last edition of the original. 12°. 1852. 7109 C C 40S PORTEUS (BEILBY) BISHOP OF LONDON. Summary of the principal Evidences for the truth and divine origin of the Christian Revelation , . Seventh edition. 12°. 1802. 7110 PORTRAITS. Cabinet Portrait gallery of British Wortties. 12 vol. (Portraits.) 12°. C. Knight, 1846-7. 7111 Old England's Worthies : a Gallery of Portraits, from authentic copies, of the most erninent statesmen, lawyers, warriors, men of letters and science, and artists of our country. Accompanied by . . bio- graphies, with . . woodcuts, and twelve . . illuminated engravings. E°. 1847. 7112 Portrait Gallery of distinguished poets, philosophers, statesmen, divines, painters, architects, physicians, and lawyers, since the revival of art ; with their biographies. Arranged in chronological order. Origi- nally published by the Society for the dif- fusion of Useful Knowledge. 3 vol. 8°. 1853. 7113 [Collection of 810 Portraits, ancient, English, and foreign, engraved, in pen and ink, and India ink, representing royalty — the church — statesmen and professional charactel-s — army and navy — literature — miscellaneous classes.] 8 vol. 8°. 7114 PORTUGAL. Hints to travellers in Portugal . . With an itinerary .. 8». 1852. 7115 POST-BOY. Post-boy rob'd of his mail : or, the pacquet broke open. Consisting of five hundred letters . . with observations upon each letter. Publish'd by a gentleman concern'd in the frolick. 12°. 1692. '" " 7116 Ep. fled, signed "C. G." [Charles Gildon]. " Bookseller's advertisement to the reader" signed " John Dunton," Second Volume . . To which are added several ingenious letters lately sent to the gentlemen concern'd in this frolick . . 12°. 1693. *7116 Ep. Ded. signed " 0. G." POST OFFICE. [No t.p. Sunday labour in the Post Ofiice. Observations on a " Return to an order of the . . House of Commons, dated 18th March 1850 . . " Office of the Sab- bath Alliance, Edinburgh, 1850.] F°. End. Edinburgh, n.d. (1850). [No t.p. Sunday Labour in the Post Office. [Paper issued by] the Metropolitan Committee for promoting the total ces- sation of Sunday labour in the Post Office.] E". (London, 1850). POST OFFICE-cont [No t.p. Cessation of postal labour on the Lord's Day. Remarks upon a return to an order of the House of Commons, dated March 1850 . . By the committee of the Society for promoting the due ob- servance of the Lord's Day.] E°. End. London (1850). 7117 POSTE (BEALE). Britannic Researches. Or new facts and rectifications of ancient British history. 8°. 1853. 7118 POSTULATES. Postulates and Data, 1852. Vol. I. II. 8°. 7119 POTEMKIN (GREGORY ALEXAN- DROWITZ, PRINCE). Memoirs of Prince Potemkin; field- marshal, and commander-in-chief of the Russian army . . comprehending nume- rous original anecdotes of the Russian Court. Translated from the German. Second edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1813. 7120 POTIER ( — ). Potieriana, ou recueil complet des Calembourgs, jeux de mots . . de Potier, acteur des Varietes . . par un habitue de I'avant-scfene. (Coloured frontis- piece.) 12°. Paris, 1814. 7121 POTTER (REV. JOHN PHILIPS). Characteristics of theGreek Philosophers. Socrates and Plato. 12°. 1845. 7122 POTTER ( — DE). Memoirs of Scipio de Ricci, Bishop of Pistoia and Prato, reformer of Catholicism in Tuscany. Edited from the original, by Thomas Roscoe. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1828. 7123 POTTS (ROBERT). Liber Cantabrigiensis, an account of the aids afforded to poor students, the en- couragements offered to diligent students, and the rewards conferred ou successful students, in the University of Cambridge ; to which is prefixed, a collection of maxims, aphorisms, &c. designed for the use of learners. 12°. Cambridge and London, 1855. , 7124 POULTON (G. 8.). New History of England : Civil, political and ecclesiastical. 8°. 1855. 7125 POUQUEVILLE (F. 0. H. L.). Histoire de la r%4n^ration de la Grlce, comprenantle precis des £vfenements depuis 1740 jusqu'en 1824. Avec cartes et portraits. 4 vol. 8°. Paris, 1824. 7126 40S POUQUEVILLE (F. C. H. L.-)—cont. Travels in Greece and Turkey, compre- hending a particular account of the Morea, Albania, &c. A comparison between the ancient and present state of Greece, and an historical and geographical description of the ancient Epirus. Second edition. Engravings. 4°. 1820. 713? POWELL (REV. BADEN). Essays on the spirit of the inductive philosophy, the unity of worlds, and the philosophy of creation. 8". 1855. 7128 History of Natural Philosophy, from the earliest periods to the present time. 12°. 1834. 7129 POWELL (THOMAS). Blind Wife ; or the Student of Bonn. A tragic romance. Second edition. 12°. 1845. 7130 Poems. 12°. 1842. 7131 POWER (MARGUERITE A.). Letters of a Betrothed. [Anon.] 12°. 1858. 7132 Virginia's Hand a poem. 12°. 1860. 7133 Dedicated to M'. Porster. POWER (W. TYRONE). Recollections of a three years' residence in China ; including peregrinations in Spain, Morocco, Egvpt, India, Australia, and New Zealand. 8°. 1853. 7134 Sketches in New Zealand, with pen and pencil. Erom a Journal kept in that country from July 1846, to June 1848. 8°. 1849. 7135 POYNTZ (ALBANY) pseud. ? World of Wonders, with anecdotes and opinions concerning popular superstitious. Edited by A. Poyntz. 8°. 1845. 7136 PRAED (WINTHROP MACK- WORTH). Poetical Works. Now first collected, by RufuB W. Griswold. 8°. New- York, 1844. 7137 PRASCA. Prasca LoupoulofE, a Russian narrative, and other tales. Chiefly translated from the French. 12°. 1845. 7138 PRASLIN (DUCHESSE DE). Lettres. Revues . . Augmentees de commentaires . . avec des notes . . ^dit^es par F. De Porquet. (Portrait, entitled Duchesse de Choiseul-Praslin.) 12°. 1848. 7139 PRATT (ANNE). The Eield, the Garden, and the Wood- land ; or, interesting facts respecting flowers and plants in general. Designed for the young. Third edition. 12°. 1847. 7140 Elowers and their associations. 12°. 1846. 7141 PRAYER. Book of Common Prayer . . With notes. Illuminated : and illustrated with engravings from the works of the great painters. 8°. 1845. 7142 Order of daily service, the litany, and order of the administration of the Holy Communion, with plain-tune, according to the use of the United Church of England and Ireland. 4°. 1843. 7143 Book of Common Prayer, revised for public worship, with selections from the Psalms of David. 12°. 1848. 7144 Preface signed B. T. Order of the administration of the Holy Communion, according to the use of the Church in Scotland. 4°. 1844. 7145 PRENTICE (ARCHIBALD) Historical Sketches and personal recol- lections of Manchester. Intended to illustrate the progress of public opinion from 1792 to 1832. 8°. London and Manchester, 1851. 7146 History of the Anti-Corn-Law League. 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 7"l47 PRESCOTT (WILLIAM HICKLING). Biographical and critical miscellanies. (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 7148 Critical and historical essays. Second edition. 12°. 1850. 7149 History of the Conquest of Mexico, with a preliminary view of the ancient Mexican civilization, and the life of the Conqueror, Hernando Cortes. 3 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1843. 7150 Fifth edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1850. 7151 History of the Conquest of Peru, with a preliminary view of the civilization of the Incas. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1847. 7152 Fourth edition. 3 vol. 8°. 1850. 7153 History of the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, the Catholic, of Spain. Fifth edition. 8 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 7154 History of the reign of Philip the second. King of Spain. Vol. 1, 2. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1855. 7155 oc 2 404 PRESCOTT (WILLIAM HICKLING) — cont. Memoir of the Honoratle Abbot Law- rence, prepared for the National Portrait Gallery . . (Portrait of Lawrence.) 4°. n.p. Printed for private distribution, 1856. 7156 " Prom the Author." PRESS, THE. [TraQts,] 4°. v.d. 7157 Considerations and proposals in order to the regulation of the Press : with instances of treasonous, and seditious pamphlets. By Sir Roger L'Estrange. 1663. Seasonable Memorial, [etc. - Duplicate. See N". 70470 Second edition. [Anon. by Sir Roger L'Estrange] 1680. !l^easons offered for the liberty of unllcens*d printing. Character of Edmund Bohun, the licenser of the press. [Signed J. M.] 1693. Letter shewing, that a restraint on the Press is inconsistent with the Protestant religion, and dangerous to the liberties of the nation. 1698. Letter shewing the necessity of regulating the Press. Oxford, 1699. Reasons against restraining the Pre^s. [By Matthew Tindal.] 1704. PRETENDER. Account of the pretended Prince of Wales, and other grievanses, that occa- sioned the nobilities inviting, and the Prince of Orange's coming into England . . Short account of the murther of the Eail of Essex . . 4°. n.p. 1688. 7158 Full answer to the depositions . . concerning the birth of the pretended Prince of Wales. The intrigue thereof detected . . Map, or Survey . . of St. James's Palace, and the Convent there: describing the place wherein it is suppos'd the true mother was deliver'd . . 8°. n.p. 1711. 7159 Plain proof of the true father and mother of the pretended Prince of Wales, by several letters written by the late Queen in Prance . . Informations of several persons of note. Plainly discover- ing the whole management of that impos- ture. Collected from the originals . . Now published by William Fuller. 8°. 1700. 7160 [Tracts.] 8°. 1696. 7161 Compleat history of the pretended Prince of wales, from his supposed conception by the late abdicated Qeen [sic], to the fatal exit ot his true mother Mrs. Mary Grey. Princess Elizabeth's autograph. Brief discovery of the true mother of the pretended Prince of Wales known by the name of Mary Grey. Further discovery of the late Conspii'aoy against his Majes- ties person, and Government. By Wilham, Fuller. Purther confirmation, that Mary Grey w.is the true mother of the pretended Prince PRETENDER~con<. of Wales. Published by William Puller. To which is added, the author's vindica- tion of himself. M'. William Puller's third Narrative, con- taining new matters of fact, proving the pretended Prince of Wales to be a grand cheat upon the nation. M'. De Labadie's letter to his daughter M". Delabadie, nurse to the pretended Prince of Wales. Reflections upon it. By another hand. n.p. [Traets.l 8°. v.d. 7162 The Pretender's Declaration tum'd into verse by Richardo Mauro. 1708. The hereditary - bastard : or, the royal- intreague of the warming-pan : fully de- tected, in a sennon upon Zech. 9, 6. Being a full answer to the Pretender's late Declaration, wherein he affirms he has an indefeasible hereditary right to His Ma- jesty's Crown. Third edition. 1715. Compleat view of the birth of the Pretender. Abstract of the depositions taken at an extraordinary Council held at Whitehall, S2 October, 1688. Opinion of the Cabinet Council, and the House of Lords, relating to the propos'd enquiry into the said birth. 1744. Autograph of Princess EUzabeth. The Declarations, with the depositions made in Council 22 October, 1688. Con- cerning the birth of the Prince of Wales. n.d. [Tracts.] London. 8°., etc. v.d. 7163 Chevalier de S' George ; an heroi-comick poem. In six canto's. (Prontispiece.) 1718. Answer to all that has ever been said in favour of a Popish Pretender. Abstract of the state of the Protestants of Ireknd, under James 2d. Written by D'. King. 1713. Memorial of Margaret Mortimer, to Parlia- ment. Queries presented to Queen Ann. 1712. History of the pretended Prince of Wales. 1696. (Duplicate see N". 7161.) Reasons against the succession ot the House of Hanover, with Enquiry how far the abdication of King J'ames, supposing it to be legal, ought to affect the person of the Pretender. [By De Poe.] 1713. Letter to the Bishop of Carlisle, concerning one of his predecessors Bishop Merks ; on occasion of a new volume for the Pre- tender, intituled, The hereditary right of the crown of England asserted. Third edition. [Signed " W. K."] 1713. The Revolution and Anti-revolution prin- ciples stated and compar'd, the Constitu- tion explain'd and vindicated, and the i'nstice and necessity of excluding the 'retender, maintain'd agauist the book entituled. Hereditary right of the crown of England asserted. By the Author of the Two Disswasives against Jacobitism. [John Shute, first Vise. Barrington, XS.l 1714. PREVOST D'EXILES (ABBE AN- TOINE FRAN901S). Histoire de Manon Lescaut et du Che- valier Desgrieux. 12°. Paris, 1833. 7164 [Half Title] Collection de Galaup de Chasteuil comprenant tons les chefs- 405 PREVOST D'EXILES (ABBE AN- TOINE FRAN9OIS— con*. d'cEuvre de I'esprit humain . . illustrle par les maitres les plus c^lfebres . . [Title] Histoire de Manon Lescaut . . pree^dee d'une preface par Alexandre Dumas fils. Portraits of Prevost & Dumas & etch- ings by Flameng). 8°. Paris, 1875. 7165 . Manon Lescaut. From the French. Illustrated by Tony Johaunot. 8°. 1841. 7166 PRICHARD M.D. (JAMES COWLES) On the different forms of Insanity, in relation to -Jurisprudence. . . 8°. 1842. 7167 PRIESTLEY (JOSEPH) LL.D. General history of the Christian church, to the fall of the Western Empire. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. Northumberland [U.S.] 1803-4. 7168 Book-plate of W. H. Turner. From the fall of the Western Empire to the present time. 4 vol. 8°. Northumberland [U.S.] 1802-3. 7169 Rudiments of English Grammar . . 12°. 1768. 7170 Memoirs. To the year 1795, written by himself; with some account of his resi- dence in America, and of his last iUuess, extracted from the continuation to his Memoirs, by his eon, Joseph Priestley. Fourth edition. (Portrait.) London and Birmingham, 1833. 7171 MS. pencil notes. PRINSEP (HENRY THOBY). Note on the historical results, deducible from recent discoveries in Afghanistan. 8°. 1844. 7172 Tibet, Tartary and Mongolia; their social and political condition, and the religion of Boodh, as there existing. Compiled from the reports of ancient and modern travellers . . 8°. 1851. 7173 PRIOR (SIR JAMES). Memoir of the life and character of Edmund Burke; with specimens of his poetry and letters, and an estimate of his genius and talents, compared with those of his great contemporaries. Second edition 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8». 1826. 7174 Fifth edition. Kevised by the Author. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1854. 7175 Life of Oliver Goldsmith, from a variety of original sources. 2 vol. (Frontispiece — Goldsmith's monument.) 8°. 1837. 7176 Portion of Preface wanting. PRIOR (MATTHEW). [Half title.] Aldine edition of the British Poets. Poems . . [Title] Poeti- cal Works. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1835. 7177 Poetical Works. With Memoir and critical dissertation, by Kev. George Gil- fiUan. 8°. Edinburgh, 1858. 7178 Poems on several occasions. 12°. 1713. 7179 Includes verses by M". Elizabeth Singer, etc. Fifth edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1733. vol 3. Third edition. To which is prefixed the life of M' Prior, by Samuel Humphreys. Adorned with cuts. 12°. 1733. 7180 At the end — Original Poems by several hands. [Imperfect.] Sixth edition. (Portrait.) 12°. 1741. Vol. II. Fourth edition . . Life of Prior, by Samuel Humphreys. Adorned with cuts. 1742. 7181 At the end— Solomon. Latine redditum per Guil. Dobson (and) Original poems and translations. By several bands. [Another edition.] (Portrait.) 12°. 1754. Vol. II. Fifth edition . . life of Prior, by Samuel Humphreys. Adorned with cuts. 12°. 1767. 7182 Miscellaneous Works. 2 vol. Vol. I. The History of his own time. . . Vol. II. A new collection of poems . . revised by himself, and copied fair for the press by Adrian Drift, his Executor. [Eng. & Lat.] Dublin, 1740, 1739. 12°. 7183 The final editor seems to have been "J. Bancks." Duphcate of Vol. I. with book- plate of Richard Hartwright. AND CHARLES MONTAGUE. EARL OF HALIFAX. The Hind and the Panther transvers'd to the Story of the Cotmtry -Mouse and the City-Mouse. 4°. 1637. 7184 AND JONATHAN SWIFT. Select Poems. 12°. 1853. 7185 Edited by "C. B." [i.e. Charles Bathurst.] PRIVY COUNCIL. Proceedings and Ordinances of the Privy Council of England. Edited by Sir Harris Nicolas . . [Public Records publication] 7 vol. 8°. 1834-7. 7186 From 1386 to 1461 & 1540 to 1542. Autograph of " John Allen." PROCLAMATIONS. Proclamation, by His Majestie [Charles I] , requiring the aid and assistance of all his Subjects on the north-side Trent, and 406 PROCLAMATIONS— core*. within twenty miles southward thereof, for the suppressing of the Eehels, now march- ing against him. Dated — York 12 August, 1642. Broadside. F". York, 1642. 7187 [Volume of Proclamations, Orders and other Papers of Parliament, Petitions, Bills of Mortality, etc.] 'E". London, Oxford, etc. and n.p. 1629-1688 and n.d. 7188 Boob-plate, autograph, and MS. note (as to purchase of the vol.) of Hoti''*'=. Henry !Pox. Two fragments of an old binding. 1. By the King. Proclamation concerning gold-weights. 1632. 2. By the [Lord] Mayor. (Rates and prices for Poultry.) 1633. 3. By the [Lord] Mayor. Rates and prices of Poultry. 1633. 4. By the King. Proclamation concerning Soape and Soape-makers, 1633. 5. Proclamation for the prizes of Poultry, rahbits, butter, candles, charcoale, and fuell of wood. 1633. 6. „ restraining the abusive venting of Tobacco. 1633. 7. „ for setling the manufacture of Soape. 1634. 8. „ for preservation of grounds for making of Saltpeter, and to- command assist- ance to be given to his Majesties Saltpeter-ma- kers. 1634. 9. At the Starre-Chamber. (As to Parthlng tokens.) 1634. 10. By the King. Proclamation concerning the trade of Soape. 1634. 11. Proclamation for the restraint of the multitude, and promis- cuous use of Coaches, about London and "West- minster. 1635. 42. „ for the restraint of the con- sumption of Coyne and Bullion, and the deceit- full making of gold and silver threed. 1635. 13. „ for the prizing of Wines. 1635. 14. „ concerning Parthing To- kens. 1636. 16. „ for the suppressing of swearing and cursing. 1636. 16. „ for the sethng of the Letter office of England and Scotland. 1636. 17. „ to Gonflrme to his subjects their defective estates in their lauds and posses- sion$. 1636. 15. „ for prevention of abuses of Informers, clerkes, and others in their prosecu- tions. 1636. 19. „ prohibiting counterfeit jewels. 1636. 20. „ touching the Plague. 1636 21. „ concerning Kilnes for dry- ing Mault and hops. 1637. for prizing of Wines. 1637. 22. 23. 24. touching Maultstera and Brewers. 1637. [touching] Eocleslnstioal Courts and Ministers. 1637. PROCLAMATIONS— 7188— corai. 25. Proclamation restraining the withdraw- ing his subjects from the Church of England, and giving scandal! in resort- ing to Masses. 1637. 26. „ commanding the repair of Noblemen and others, unto their houses and lands in the northern parts. 1638. 27. „ to inform our subjects of England of seditious practices in Scotland. 1638. 28. „ to restrain the transporting of passengers and pro- visions to New England. 1638. 29. Letters discharging the Generall Assem- bly at Glasgow. 1638. Edinbm-gh. 30. Proclamation. [Imperfect. ■ Touching various grants, hcences, or commissions.] 1639. 31. „ declaring those of Scotland, who have entred, or shall enter this kingdom in a warhke manner, to be rebels and traitours. [Im- perfect.] 32. „ [Imperfect. Touching a false and scandalous paper]. 1639. 33. [Paper.] Prom the Commissioners- of Scotland. 1640. 34. Proclamation. Against hbellous and se- ditious pamphlets, and discourses from Scotland. 1640. 36. „ [Imperfect. Touching Revenue abuses]. 1640. 36. (Ordinance. Absent officers of the armie.) 1640. 37. Proclamatiou. To summon all such as hold of his Majestie by grand sergeanty, [etc.] to do their services against the Scots. 1640. 38. „ Por levying and payment of smp-moneys. 1640. 39. „ Commanding all the Trained Bands and others on this side Trent, to be in readi- nesse to serve his Majestie. York, 1640. London. 40. „ [Touching] Popish Re- cusants. 1640. 41. „ For a generall Past. 1610. 42. „ For a generall Fast. 1641. 43. Preamble with the Protestation made by the House of Commons : and assented unto by the Upper House. 1641. 44. Order by the House of Commons. 1641. 45. Copy of the foure' reasons to diswade the King from his journey into Scotland for fourteene dales. Dehvered by M. Hollis to the Lords at a Conference, 1641. 46. Order by the Commons. 1641. 47. Declaration by Parliament (having sat on the Lord's Day) . 1641. 48. Ordinance of Parliament for a Publike Thanksgiving for the peace between Eng- land and Scotland. 1641. 49. Order by the Lords (performance of Divine Service). 1641. BO. Order by the Committee appointed by the Commons to sit during the reoesse. 1641. 407 PROCLAMATIONS— 7188— coni, 51. Petition to the Commons o£ Aldermen [etc.] and other inhabitants of the citie of London. 1641. 62. Order by the Commons. (Publike Fast.) 1641. 53. Petition to the King and Lords of Bishops. n.d. [1641.] 54. Petition to the Lords, by Sir Thomas Aston, from the county of Chester, con- cerning Episcopacy. 1641. 55. Petition of the Citizens of London to Parliament, wherein is a demonstration of their grievances, with their desires for justice to bee executed upon the Earle of Strafford [etc.] 1641. 56. Petition to the Commons of poore people in and about London. 1642. 57. Proclamation. By the King. For the safety of his Navy, and theKingdome. [t Oxford] [1642.] 58. „ Forbidding the counties of Kent, Surry, Sussex, and Hamp-shire, to raise Forces without his con- sent. [P Oxford] [1642]. 69. „ Forbidding all assessing, collecting, and paying of the twentieth part, and ■ of aU weekly Taxes by colour of orclers or ordi- nances, and all entring into -Protestations and associa- tions against his Majesty. Oxford, 1642. 60. „ On behaUe of Sir Ralph Hop- ton, and his proceedings in Coniewall and Devon. Oxford, 1642. 61. „ For I preventing' the plund- ring [etc.] ofhis subjects, audi for restraining of stragling and idle people from following the Army, likewise for supplying his army with provisions. Ox- ford, 1642. 62. 63. 64, 66. 67. 70. requiring the aid of his sub- jects on the north-side , Trent [etc.] York, 1642. prohibiting the payment and receipt of customes, upon the late pretended ordi- nance of Parliament. Ox- ford, 1642. for removing the Courts, from Westminster to Ox- ford. Oxford, 1643. for clearing Lodgings for the members of both Houses, summoned to assemble in Oxford. Oxford, 1643. touching the Ooui-t of Wards and Liveries. Oxford, 1643. for the security of the posses- sors of DeUnquents lands, in Wilts, his Majesties tenants. Oxford, 1643. commanding all his Majes- ties subjects that have any office, of his guif t or grant, to give their attendance upon his person. Oxford, 1643. prohibiting payuig Taxes, and seizing rents or es- tates, by colour of any orders of Parliament, Ox- for4, 1643. concerning a clause in one of the Articles at Beading, Oxford, 1643. PROCLAMATIONS— 7188— con<. 71. Proclamation touching the adjournment o( part of Trimty Terme. Oxford, 1643. 72. „ for inhibiting oathes, by his Majesties army; likewise commanding the frequent- ing the service of God by the same. Oxford, 1643. 73. ., warning all subjects no longer to be misled by the Houses^ with his Majesties offer of pardon to the Houses. Oxford, 1643. 74. „ forbidding the tendring or taking the late Vow or Covenant, devised by members of both Houses. Oxford, 1643. 75. „ prohibiting trade between London and other parts. Oxford, 1643. 76. „ forbidding his Majesties subjects to assist the rebells, to stop his mes- sengers, or to oner violence to his souldiers. Oxford, 1643. (Two copies.) 77. „ forbidding all tenants or debtors of such who are in rebellion, to pay rents or debts to such persons. Oxford, 1643. 78. „ for a generall Fast. Oxford, 1843. (Two copies.) 79. „ touching the counterfeit great Scale. Oxford, 1643 80. Declaration to repeale Licenses. Ox- ford, 1643. 81. Proclamation commandingaH debts [etc.] owing unto persons m re- beUion to be brought into his Majesties Receipt at Oxford. Oxford, 1643. 82. „ for assembling both Houses at Oxford, upon the inva- sion by the Scots. (Ox- ford, 1643.) , , 83. „ for restraint of swairing and cursing, and better observ- ing of prayer and preach- ingin his Majesties armies, Oxford, [etc.] Oxford, 1644. 84. „ of pardon to 6,lt such as shall retume to their obedience. Oxford, 1645. 85. „ " touching the Excise, Oxford, 1644. 86. (Proposition) that the best way Of rais- ing the S00,000£ for supply is by doubling the excise upon ale and beer. n.d. 87. Proclamation for, the defence of the Kings person, and of this universitie and city, Ox- ford, 1644. 88. „ to prorogue Parliament at Oxford. Oxford (1644.) 89. „ declaring his Majesties re- solution for settling a speedy Peace. Oxford, 1644. 90. „ commanding the use of the Book of Common-Prayer. Oxford, 1645. 91. Order of the Commons. 1645. 92. Oath to be administred unto the garri- son of Oxford. Oxford, 1645. 93. Declaration of the Lords. 1646. 94. (Declaration and Order) by the Lords. 1646. 96. The Kings letter to ParUament at West- minster. Holmby, 6th March. 1646. 408 PROCLAMATIONS— 7188— con*. 96. Petition of inhabitants of Buckingham- shire and Hartford-shire to tlie Commons. (1646.) 97. Manifest of Kent. n.d. 98. (Resolutions of Parliament.) Nov. and Deo. 1646. 1646. 99. Ordinance of Parliament. 1646. 100. Ordinance of Parliament. 1647. 101. Declaration of ParUament. (1647.) 102. Ordinance of Parliament. 1647. 103. Orders by the Commons. 1617. 104. Heads presented by the army to the King's Majestic, 1647. 105. Ordinance of Parliament. 1647. 106. True way to a peace. 1647. 107. True Protestants desires to the Kings Majesty. Or, Propositions tending to a Peace. [Verses.] 1647. 108. Londons new Recorder. [Ending with Chronograms.] 1647. 109. A word in the Kings eare (for Peace) . [Verses.] ("Woodcut of the King.) 1647. 110. Petition of mariners [etc.] of Stepney [etc.] to the Commons. n.d. 111. Tender and declaration of Mariners, Commanders of Ships, Members of the Trinity-house, to the Commissioners of the Navy. 1648. 112. Motives to engage the Sea-men in this honourable cause. 1648. 113. Petition of masters and commanders of Ships to the Commons. (And) Orders by the Commons. (1648.) 114. Petition to the Lord Mayor [etc.] of London of the trained Bands and Auxi- liaries, the young men and apprentices of London and Westminster, Sea Com- manders [etc.]. n.d. 115. In^agement of the Trained bauds and Auxiliaries [etc.]. n.d. 116. New port 1648. Act which his Majesty hath promised to passe, for justifying the proceedings of Parliament in the late "War [etc.]. 117. Petition to Parliament of divers Eng- lishmen. 1648. 118. Letters, from officers of the army in the north to Lord Eairfax. Letter from officers of the army to the presenters of the peti- tion of Sept. 11. 1648. n.p. n.d. 119. Petition to the Commons of inhabitants of "Wilts, and answer of the Speaker. 1648. n.p. n.d. 120. Lord General Fairfax's letter to the Lord Major [etc.] of London. 1648. 121. Protestation of the imprisoned members of the Commons against the force and violence of the army, 1648. n.p. n.d. 122. Declaration of the taking away of Sir "William "Waller, Sir John Clotworthy, Major Grenerall Massie and CoUonel Cop- ley, from the Kings head in the Strand, to St. lameses: with their protestation. n.p. 1648. 123. Declaration of Lord Eairfax, and his Coundel of "War. 1648. 124. Declaration of Parliament. 1648. 126. Relation of the late proceedings in the Isle of "Wight, n.p. 1648. 126. Ingagement of gentlemen of Salop, n.p. n.d. 127. Petition to the Lords and Commons of the schoUers of the Grammar Schooles in and about London, n.p. n.d. (On the back) Receipts for the Plague, n.p. n.d. 128. Challenge, by the divines of the army, to the divines of Sion-CoUedg. n.p. n.d. 1 29. Declaration of Parliament. (1660.) 130. Declaration of Parliament. (1660.) PROCLAMATIONS— 7188— co«<. 131. Proclamation of Charles II as King. (1600.) 1 32. Declaration of the Commons. (1660.) 133. Votes [or Resolutions] of Pariiament. (1660.) 134. Order and Declaration of Parliament. (1660.) 135. Order by Parliament. (1660.) 136. Order and Declaration of Parliament. (1660.) 137. By the King. Proclamation against the rebels in Ireland. 1660. 138. Proclamation for quieting Possessions. 1660. 139. „ Eor a day of Thanks- giving. 1660. 140. „ For recalUng of Commis- sions at Sea. 1660. 141. „ Concerning his Majesties Pardon. 1660. 142. Orders [or Votes] by the Lords. 1660. 143. Orders by ParUament. 1660. 144. Order by the Lords. 1660. 146. By the King. Proclamation concerning Summer Assizes. 1660. 146. Proclamation for publishing a former proclamation (against vitious, debauch'd and prophane persons). 1660. 147. „ For calling in, and sup- pressing of two books written by John Mil- ton. And a third book, byJohnGoodvrin. 1660. 148. „ For restoring and dis- covering his Majesties goods. 1660. M9- .1 Eor the Apprehension of Edmund Ludlow. 1660. 150. „ Declaring the cessation of hostility between his Majesty, and the King of Spain. 1660. 151. „ For the preventing of the exportation of" wools, wool -fells, woollen- yam, fullers - earth, and other scouring earths. 1660. 152. „ For speeding the payment of the arrears of 7O,000£ for assessments. 1660. 163. „ For apprehension of Ed- ward Whalley and "Wil- liam GofEe. 1060. 154. „ For payment of the sub- sidy and aulnage upon woollen clothes and draperies. 1660. 155. ,. For payment of the Ex- cise. 1660. 1=6. „ Eor suppressing disorder- ly meetings, in taverns and tipling-houses, and also forbidding foot- men to wear swords. 1660. 157. „ declaring the confirma- tion of the treaties be- tween England and Portugal. 1660. 168. (Notice and) Declaration by Charles II. that he never was married to any woman but to his wife Queen Catherine [arising out of a report that he had married M". Walters, alias Barlow]. n.p. n.d. [Im- perfect]. [1680 P]. "- 159- Proclamation. By the King (James II). 1688. 160-S. Bills [of Mortality] (London). 1629- 409 PROCTER (ADELAIDE ANNE). The Poems. 12°. Boston [U.S.] 1863. 7189 "John Forster Esq" with A. A. P." kind regards;" and,in M'.T'orster's hajidwriting, " from her death-bed, 1864." Legends and Lyrics. A book of Verses. 12°. 1858. 7190 "John Torster Esq", with kind regards from the writer." Second volume. 12°. 1861. 7191 "John Forster Esq", Irom A. A. P : Dec. 1860." Victoria Regia : a volume of original contributions in poetry and prose. Edited by A. A. Procter. 8°. 1861. 7192 PROCTER (BRYAN WALLER). Effigies Poeticae : or the Portraits of the British Poets illustrated by notes bio- graphical, critical, and poetical [Anon.]. 8°. 1824. (Two copies.) 7193 N". 1. Autograph o£ B. W. Procter (his own copy), and MS. alteration of "Poeticie" into " Poetarum." Life of Edmund Kean. 2 vol. (in one). [Anon]. (Portrait.) 8°. 1835. 7194 See also Cornwall (Barry). PROCTER (RICHARD WRIGHT). Memorials of Manchester streets. 8°. Manchester, 1874. 7195 PROJECTOR. Hogs character of a Projector . . 4". 1642. 7196 PROLOGUES. A Collection and selection of English Prologues and Epilogues. Commencing with Shalsespeare, and concluding with Gan-ick. 4 vol. 8°. 1779. 7197 PROPERTIUS (SEXTUS AURELIUS). Carmina. The elegies with English notes. By Frederick A. Paley. 8°. London & Cambridge, 1853.' 7198 MoTO/SiiSAoj ; or, that book of the Elegies entitled Cyntliia ; translated into English verse : with classical notes [Engl, and Lat.] 8°. 1782. 7199 " The author's own copy " with MS. altera- tions. MS. notes (inserted) . AND OTHERS. . . Propertius . . Petronius Arbiter, and . . Johannes Secundus. Literally translated, and accompanied by poetical versions from various sources. To which are added . . Epistles of Aris- tsenetus. Translated by K. Brinsley Sheridan and M'. Halhed. Edited by Walter K. Kelly. 8°. Bohn, 1854. 7200 PROSE. Common-place book of Prose, consist- ing of an original selection of eloquent and interesting pieces . . (Portrait of D'. Chalmers.) 12°. Edinburgh, 1823. Second Series. With contributions and remarks by the Editor. 12°. Edinburgh, 1825. 7201 PROTESTS. Collection of all the Protests made in the House of Lords, from their original in 1641. To the present year 1745 . . 12°. n.p. 1745. 7202 PROUT (EBENEZER). Memoirs of the life of Rev. John Wil- liams, Missionary to Polynesia. Third thousand. (Portrait.) 8°. 1843. 7203 PRUS (MADAME). Residence in Algeria. 8°. 1852. [Translation.] 7204 PRYNNE (WILLIAM). Breviate of the life of William Laud Arch-bishop of Canterbury : extracted (for the most part) verbatim, out of his owne Diary, and other writings, under his owne hand . . (Frontispiece, Laud's Trial.) F°. 1644. (Two copies.) 7205 N". 1. On t.p. m MS. "D. of Grafton." Bookplate of Lord Henry Fitz Koy. Canterburies Doome. Or the first part of a compleat history of the commitment, charge, tryall, condemnation, execution of William Laud late Arch-bishop of Canter- bury . . Wherein this arch-prelates mani- fold trayterous artifices to usher in Popery by degrees, are cleerly detected, and the ecclesiasticall history of our Church- affaires, during his pontificall domination, faithfully presented to the publike view of the world. (Frontispiece & Portraits.) F». 1646. 7206 Lord Bishops none of the Lords Bishops . . wherin is proved that prelaticall juris- diction, is not of divine institution, but forbidden by Christ himselfe . . wherin also sundry notable passages of the arch- prelate of Canterbury in his late booke, intituled A relation of a Conference, &c. are by the wav met withall. [Anon.] 4°. n.p. 1640. " 7207 At the end— Good coimcel for the present state of England. Players Scourge [Histrio-Mastix], or. Actors Tragaedie . . wherein it is largely evidenced . . that popular stage-playes . . are sinfull . . and that the profession of play-poets, of stage-players, together with . . stage-playes, are unlawfull . . besides sundiy other particulars concnming danc- ing, dicing, health-drinking, &c. . . 4°. 1633. 7208 " Nar. Luttrell ; His Book 1678." 3IS, on fly-leaf. 410 PRYNNE (WILLIAM)— coraf. ,;,^_:^ ;/ PJea, or Protest, made by W.» JPrywje, and by him sent unto .7. M, Kniglit, one of the eleven impeached meinbers. !w^here- in he declares th^ illegality of the Lords . . proceedings against him . . Case of A. B, , . in reference to a pretended im- peachment of treason depending in the House of Peers against him : with an answer to queres framed thereupon : unto which is annexed the answer of A. B. unto the Lords . . Published . . by Lionel Hurbin, 1647. 4°. n.p. 1648. 7209 [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 7210 Memento to the present unparliamentary Imito touching their present intentions and proceediiigs to depose and execute, • Charles Steward, their lawfuU King. 1648. Prynne the member reconciled to Prynne tne barrester. Or An answer to a scanda- lous pamphlet, intituled Prynne against Prynne. 1649. Narrative of what was done, spoken by and between Mr. Prynne, tbe old and newly forcibly late secluded members, the army officers, and those now sitting, both in the Commons lobby, House, and elswherc; 7. and 9. of May : with the true reasons, ends inducing M'^. Prynne (a member of the old Parliament) thus earnestly to Sess for entry, to go and keep in the ouseashe did [etc. J. Published by W. Piynne. n.p. 1669. - , - PUGIN (AUGUSTUS WELBY). Glossary of Ecclesiastical ornament and costume, compiled and illustrated from antient authorities and examples, by A. W. Pugin. With extracts from the works of Durandus . . Dueange, etc. Faithfully translated by Kev. Bernard Smith. 4°. 1844. 7211 PULLEYN (WILLIAM). 'Etymological Compendium, or, portfolio of Origins and inventions ; relating to lan- guage, literature, and government . . Third edition, revised and improved, by Merton A. Thoms. S". 1853. 7212 PULSZKY (FRANCIS). The Tricolor on the Atlas ; or, Algeria and the French conquest. From the Ger- man of D'. (Moritz) Wagner and other sources, by F. Pulszky. 8°. 1854. 7213 PULSZKY (THERESA). Memoirs of a Hungarian lady. With a historical introductioD,.by Francis Pulszky. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 7214 PUNCH. Punch or the London Charivari [after- wards changed to Punch]. Vol. I. ( — LXIX.) (Bound in 34 vol.) 4». [1841] —1875. 7215 Punch's Almanack 1848. Illustrated [in colours] by John Leech and Richard Doyle. 4°. Punch ofBce, n.d. 7216 PUNCH— con*. Punch's Pocket Book for 1843-4, 1847- 8-9-50-1, 1853-4, 1857-8. Illustrations by J. Leeeh, K. Doyle, H. K. Browne, J. TennieL II. vol. 12°. 7217 1843. Only part the second. 1844. Imper- fect. 1853. Part the first slightly imper- fect. PURCHAS (REV. SAMUEL). Purchas his Pilgrim. Microcosmus, or the historic of Man. Relating the Won- ders of his generation, Vanities in his de- generation. Necessity of his regeneration . . 8». 1627. 7218 [PURVEY (JOHN)]. Remonstrance against Romish corrup- tions in the Church, addressed to the people and parliament of England in 1395, 18 Ric. II. Now for the first time pub- lished. [Anon.] Edited by Rev. J. Forshall. 8°. 1851. 7219 PUTNAM (GEORGE PALMER). American Tracts. Notes and Statistics relative to the . . United States of America. Portraits and Map. 8°. 1845. 7220 PYCROFT (REV. JAMES). Course of English reading anecdotes of men of genius 12». . with 1844. 7221 PYE (JOHN). Patronage of British Art, an historical sketch : comprising an account of the rise and progress of art and artists in London, from the beginning of the reigu of George the Second ; together with a history of the Society for the management and distri- bution of the Artists' Fund, from its es- tablishment in 1810, to its incorporation in 1827. Illustrated with notes . . 8°. 1845. 7222 PYM (JOHN). Speech, to the Lords, upon the delivery of the articles of the Commons, against William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, in maintenance of their accusation, where- by he stands charged of High Treason. With a copy of the Articles. 4». 1641. 7228 Pyms Juucto. [Verses.] Broadside. F". Oxford, 1643. 7224 ^11 Q. (Q.) You have heard of them. [Short notices of emiuent men and womeu.] (Portraits of Horace Vernet and Giulia Grisi.) 8°. New York, 1854. 7225 H. Vernet — Cento — Mendelssohn— Lady Bulwer — T. Moore — Grisi— Berlioz.— H. Clay — D'Israeli —Andersen— Lablaohe— G. P. Morris — Lola Montez — Eonooni— Berryer — OxenJord — Catharine Hayes— Haydon— Carlotta Grisi— W. V. Wallace — Soheffer— C. Kean—Janin— Donizetti — Landseer — Bourcicault — Jenny Lind — Bayard Taylor — Balfe — Mark Lemon— Vidooq — 0. Cushman— B. Geibel— Lady Blessington- Gudin— Ijouis Jullien— M". TroUope — Gavami — Leopold Der Meyer — Landor — T. Hood — Guizot — Vivier— Kenny. QUAKERISM. Quakerism; or the story" of my life. By a lady, who for forty years was a member of the Society of Triends. 8°. Dublin, 1851. 7226 QUARITCH (BERNARD). General Catalogue of books, arranged in classes, offered for sale by B. Quaritch. 8°. 1868. 7227 QUARLES (FRANCIS). [Frontispiece] Divine poemes" . . (Lon- don) 1632. [Title] Divine Poems : con- taining The history of Jonah. Ester. Job. Sampson. Sions sonets. [Sions] elegies . . 12°. 1634. 7.228 Separate t/p.^ to Peast ;for 'Wormes \ Pen- telogia ; Hadassa ! lob Militant ; Historie of Samson ; Sions. sonets j Sions elegies ; Alphabet of elegies ; Elegie upon Doctor Wilson ; and Mildreiados— all dated 1684, except Alphabet of elegies which has n.d. QUARLES (JOHN). Fons Lachrymarum ; or a Fountain of Tears : from whence doth flow Englands complaint, Jeremiahs Lamentations para- phras'd, with Divine Meditations ; and an Elegy upon . . Sir Charles Lucas. (Por- trait.) 12°. 1649. 7229 QUARLL (PHILIP). The Hermit : or, the unparallel'd suffer- ings and surprising adventures of Mr. Philip Quarll, an Englishman : who was lately discovered by Mr. Dorrington, a Bristol merchant, upon an uninhabited island in the South-Sea . . With a curious map of the island, and other cuts. [Anon.] 12°. 1751. 7230 Preface signed " P. L." QUARTERLY. Quarterly Educational Magazine, and Record of the Home and Colonial School Society. Vol. I. II. 1848-9. 8°. n.d. (1848-9). 7231 Quarterly Journal of Science, literature, and art. January to June, 1827 ( January to June, 1830). 7 vol. [Edited by Professor Braude.] 8°. 1827-30. 7232 Quarterly Review. February and May, 1809. Vol. I. Sixth edition (—139. July and October, 1875). 139 vol. and 6 Index vol. 8°. 1809-75. 7233 QUATERMAYNE (ROGER). Quatermayns conquest over Canter- huries Court. Or a declaration of pas- sages between him and the archbishop of Canterbury, with other Commissioners of the High Commission Court . . Also his imprisonment . . his appearance before the Lords of the Councell, and his answers to the archhishop and Lord Cottingtoii, concerning Conventicles . . his tryall . . aud a prayer, and thankesgiving, in acknow- ledgement of his deliverance. 4°. 1642. 7234 QUETELET (LAMBERT ADOLPHE JACQUES). Letters . . on the theory of probabili- ties, as applied to the moral and political sciences. Translated from the French by Olinthus Gregory Downes. 8°. 1849. 7235 [QUILLINAN (DORA WORDS- WORTH, MRS.),] Journal of a few months' residence in Portugal, aud glimpses of the south of Spain. [Anon.] 2 vol. 8°. 1847. 7236 QUILLINAN (EDWARD), Poems. With a Memoir by William Johnston. 12°. 1853. 7237 QUINET (EDGAR). Christianity . . fi:om the birth of Christ to the French Revolution. Translated by C. Cocks. 8°. 1846. 7238 Ultramontanism, or the Roman Church and modern society. Translated from the French, third edition . . by C. Cocks 8°. 1845. 7239 QUINTANA (MANUEL JOSe'). Memoirs of Gouzalo Hernandez de Cor- dova, styled the gi-eat captain. Translated from the Spanish, by Joseph Russell. 8°. 1851. 7240 QUINTIUANUS (M. FABIUS). Institutes of oratory : or, education* of an orator. In twelve books. Literally translated with notes. By Rev., John Selby Watson. 2 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1856. 7241 412 QUINTUS SMYRNAEUS. Select translations from the Greek of Q. Smymaeus. By [Rev.] Alexander Dyce. 12°. Oxford, 1821. 7242 QUOTATIONS. Handbook of Familiar Quotations chiefly from English Authors, New edition, with index. 12". 1853. 7243 Dedication signed " I.R.P." R. (E. H.). First-Eruits. K Poems. 12°. 1857. 7244 R. (G.). What is truth ? 8°. 1854. 7245 Some introductory words signed " G. K." R. (J.). Keligio Laici, or a Lay-mans faith, touching the supream head and infallible guide of the Church . . By J. E. a eon- vert of Mr. Bays's. 4°. 1688. 7246 R. (J. F.). Lives of Alfred the great. Sir Thomas More, and John Evelyn. 12°. n.d. 7247 Bach lite signed at the end " J. P. U." R. (W.). A Winding-sheet for the rebels at West- minster. A grave . . for Fairfax and his army. With a whip and a bell, for the Satanicall hyrelings of the Synod . . 4°. n.p. 1648. 7248 R. (W.). [Half title.] Poems, miscellaneous and fugitive . . [Anon.] 12°. 1816. 7249 Presentation copy with inscription signed "W.B." Book-plate of B. N. Hurt. RABBE (ALPHONSE) ahd DUN- CAN (JONATHAN). History of Russia from the foundation of the empire by Rouriok to the close of the Hungarian war. 2 vol. 8°. 1854. 7250 RABELAIS (FRAN9OIS). Oeuvres nouvelle Edition augmentee de plusieurs extraits des chroniques admirables du puissant roi Gargantua ainsi que d'un grand nombre de variantes et de deux chapitres inedits du v' livre . . et aocom- pagnee de notes . . et d'une notice histori- que contenant les documents originaux relatifs a la vie de Rabelai.'i, par L. Jacob. 8°. Paris, 1845. 5251 Works. The first(— the fifth book). Formerly translated by Sir Thomas Ur- quart. And explained by M'. Motteux. Since carefully revised, and compared throughout with Le Du Chat's edition, by M'. Ozell. Who has likewise added . . a translation of the notes . . of Le Du Chat, and others . . New edition . . new set of cuts. 5 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1750. 7252 Romance of Gargantua and Pantagruel, translated from the French, by Sir Thomas Urquhart. Reprinted from the original editions. (Frontispiece bv C. K. Sharpe.) 4°. Edinburgh, 1838. ' 7253 Introductory notice signed " T.M." [».«. [Sir] Theodore Martin]. Works. Translated from the French. By Sir Thomas Urquhart and Motteux ; with explanatory notes, by Duchat, Ozell, and others. New edition, revised, and with additional notes. 2 vol. (Portraits of Rabelais and Urquhart.) 8°, Bohn, 1849. 7254 RABY (RICHARD). Pope Adrian IV. An historical sketch. 8°. 1849. 7255 RACINE (JEAN). Oeuvres completes, nouvelle edition, ornee de figures dessinees par Lebarbier . . (Portrait.) 4 vol. 8°. Paris, I'an IV. —1796. 7256 Theatre complet, precede d'une notice. 12°. Paris, 1844. 7257 RADCLIFFE (MRS. ANNE). Poetical Works. St. Alban's Abbey, a metrical romance ; with other poems. 2 vol. 8°. 1834. 7258 RADCLIFFE (JOHN) M.D. D'. Radcliffe's life, and letters with his will. Fourth edition. 12°. Dublin, 1724. 7259 Autograph of " Jos ; Farington." RADCLIFI^E (JOHN NETTEN). Fiends, Ghosts, and Sprites. Includ- ing an account of the origin and nature of belief in the supernatural, 8°. 1854. 7260 413 RAE (JOHN). Narrative of an expedition to the shores of the Arctic Sea in 1846 and 1847. Maps. 8». 1850. 7261 RAGUSA (MARSHAL MARMONT, DUG DE). Present state of the Turkish Empire. Translated, with notes and observations on the relations of England with Turkey and Russia, and brought down to the present time, by Colonel Sir Prederic Smith. Second edition. 8°. 1854. 7262 RAIKES (THOMAS). Portion of the Journal kept by T. Eaikes, from 1831 to 1847: comprising remini- scences of social and political life in London and Paris during that period. 4 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1856-7. 7263 RAILLERY. Eaillerie a la mode consider'd : or the supercilious detractor. A joco-serious discourse ... To a young gentleman, to shew the odium of this ingentile humour, and to direct him in the best choice of men and books. 12°. 1663. 7264 Dr. Bliss's copy "from the Bridgewater Library." RALEGH, RALEIGH, or RAWLEIGH (SIR WALTER). Works. Now first collected . . lives of the author, by Oldys and Birch. 8 vol. 8°. Oxford, 1829. 7265 Vol. 1. Lives. 2-7. History of the World. 8. Miscellaneous Works. The Cabinet-Council : containing the cheif art of empire, and mysteries of state ; discabineted in . . aphorisms . . and illustrated with the choicest examples . . By Sir W. Ealeigh, published by John Milton. 12°. 165.8. 7266 . . Essayes and observations. Upon the first invention of Shipping. The misery of invasive warre. The Navy royall and sea-service. With ■ his apologie for his voyage to Guiana. 12°. 1650. 7267 Separate title-paKes to the second and third essays, and apologie. History of the World, in five books . . life and tryal of the author. (Frontis- piece and portrait.) E". 1687. 7268 Poems now first collected. With a biographical and critical introduction : by Sir (Samuel) Egerton Brydges. 1813. 4°. Private press of Lee Priory, 1813. 7269 "BobeitSouthey. Keswick. 22 Oct. 1832." AiTaignment and conviction of S' Walter Kawleigh, at the IGngs Bench- Barre at Winchester. 17 November. 16U3 . . Coppied by Sir Tho: Overbury. RALEGH, RALEIGH, oe RAWLEIGH (SIR WALTER)— eoni. (and) Proceedings against Sir W. R., at the Kings Beneh-Barre, in Westminster, 28 October, 1618. With his execution at Westminster, 29 October anno 16. Jacobi Regis. 4°. 1648. 7270 New history of England . . from the establishment of King Egbert . . to the end of the rebellion in 1746. Collected from the most celebrated authors, by Walter Raleigh. 2 vol. 12°. 1756. Only a portion by Sir W. Raleigh. 7271 Book-plate of John Plumptre. AND OTHERS. The Perogative Isic'] of parliaments in England. Proved in a dialogue . . 4°. n.p. 1640. Considerations touching a warre with Spaine. ByErancis [Bacon], Vi[scount]. St. Alban. 4°. n.p. 1629. Choice narrative of Count Gondamor's transactions during his embassy in Eng- land. By Sir Robert Cotton. Exposed to publick light . . By a person of honour. 4°. 1659. 7272 " Epistle dedicatory " signed " John Row- land." One vol. [RALEIGH (CAREW).] Observations upon some particular per- sons and passages, in a book [by William Sanderson] lately made publick ; intituled, a compleat history of the lives and reignes of Mary Queen of Scotland, and of her son lames . . Written by a lover of the truth. 4°. 1656. Answer to a scurrilous pamphlet, in- tituled. Observations . . The libeller without a name . . but the history vindicated by the authour William San- derson. 4°. 1656. 7273 One vol. RAMSAY (ALEXANDER). Samuel Butler, and his Kudibras and other works. 12°. 1846. 7274 RAMSAY (EDWARD BANNERMAN) DEAN OF EDINBURGH. Reminiscences of Scottish life and character. Twentieth edition. (Portrait.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1871. 7275 Presentation copy. RAMSAY (GEORGE). Enquiry into the principles of human happiness and human duty . . 8°. 1843. 7276 414 RAMSAY (WILLIAM). Manual of Roman Antiquities. With numerous illustrations. 8°. 1851. 7277 Tol. of the " Bnoyolopaedia Metropolitana.'' Second edition. RANDELL (JAMES). Views in Norway from original pictures by J. Randell. 1854. Drawn on stone by Bug. Ciceri. !F°. London, Paris, etc. n.d. 7278 RANDOLPH (THOMAS JEFFER- SON). Memoirs, correspondence, and private papers of Thomas Jefferson,. late President of the United States. Edited by T. J. Randolph. 4 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1829. 7279 RANKE (LEOPOLD). Civil "Wars and Monarchy in Trance, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries . . Translated by M. A. Garvey. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 7280 Ecclesiastical and political history of the Popes of Rome during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. . Translated from the German by Sarah Austin. 3 vol. 8°. 1840. 7281 [ Another Translation] . Translated from the last edition of the German, by Walter Keating Kelly. 8°. 1843. 7282 [Another Translation] . Translatedf rom the last German edition. With an intro- ductory essay, by Rev. J. H. Merle D'Aubign^, D.D. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. Glasgow, 1846-7. 7283 [Another Translation]. Translated by E. Poster. 3 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. Bohn, 1847-8. 7284 Ferdinand I. and Maximilian II. of Austria : an essay on the political and religious state of Germany immediately after the Reformation. Translated from the German by Lady Duff Gordon. 12°. 1853. 7285 History of the reformation iu Germany. Second edition. Translated by Sarah Austin. 3 vol. 8°. 1845-7. 7286 History of Servia, and the Servian Revolution . . Translated from the Ger- man, by Mrs. Alexander Kerr. 8°. 1847. 7287 History of Servia, and the Servian Revolution. With a sketch of the insurrec- tion in Bosnia. Translated from the Ger- man by Mrs. Alexander Kerr. To which is added, the Slave provinces of Turkey. Chiefly from the French of CyprienRobert. 8°. Bohn, 1853. 7288 Memoirs of the House of Brandenbtirg, and History of Prussia, during the seven- RANKE (LEOPOLD)— con<. teeiith and eighteenth centuries. Trans- lated from the German by Sir Alex', and Lady Duff Gordon. 3 vol. 8°. 1 849. 7289 Ottoman and Spanish Empires, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Translated from the last edition of the German, by Walter K. Kelly. 8°. 1843. 7290 RANKEN (W. H. L.). Dominion of Australia an account of its foundations. 8». 1874. 7291 RANYARD (ELLEN). God's Message in Low London. Miss- ing Link tract series. Edited by the author of " The Book and its story " [Ellen Ranyard]. 12°. n.d. 7292 RAPHAEL. Raphael's Prophetic Almanac. Being the prophetic Messenger, weather guide, and ephemeris, for 1850 (-3, 1855-6) Coloured hieroglyphic . . 8°. 1850-3,5, 6. 7293 RAPIN (rInE). Of Gardens. Four Books first written in Latine verse by Renatus Bapinus. And now made English by J. E. [John Evelyn]. 8°. 1673. 7294 RAPIN DE THOYRAS (PAUL). Acta Regia ; being the account which Rapin de Thoyras published of the history of England . . grounded upon those records which . . are collected in . . Rymer's Foedera. Containing the letters between the Monarchs of England and foreign princes ; their treaties and negotia- tions of peace, friendship, and commerce ; battles, revolutions . . grants from the crown to the nobility, &c. . . summons's to parhament and convocation; royal mandates . . dispensations for marriages . . pardons ; patents . . F°. n.d. 7295 Dedication signed " Stephen Whatley." RAPP (GENERAL COUNT). Memoirs of General Count Rapp, first Aide-de-Camp to Napoleon. Written by himself, and published by his family. (Portrait.) 8°. 1823. 7296 RASTELL (JOHN). Pastime of People, or, the Chronicles of divers realms ; and most especially of the realm of England. Briefly compiled, and imprinted in Cheapside, by J. Rastell, 1529. Now first reprinted . . with fac- simile wood-outs of the portraits . . [Edited by T. F. Dibdin, D.D.] 4°. 1811. 7297 415 [RATHBONE (MRS. HANNAH MARY).] So much of the Diary of Lady Willoughby as relates to her domestic history, and to the eventful period of the reign of Charles the first. (1635-48.) [Anon.] 4°. 1844. 7298 Some further portions of the Diary of Lady Willoughby . . (1648-63.) 4°. 1848. *7298 RAUCH (REV. FREDERICK A.). Psychology ; or, a view of the human soul ; . including anthropology . . Second edition. 8°. New York, 1841. 7299 RAUMER (KARL VON). Life and System of Pestalozzi. Trans- lated from the German hy J. Tilleard. 8°. 1855. 7300 RAUMER (FRIEDRICH LOUIS GEORGES VON). Contributions to modem history, from the British Museum and the State Paper office. Queen Elizabeth and Mary Queen of Scots. (Portrait of Queen Mary.) 8°. 1836. 7301 History of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, illustrated by original docu- ments. Translated from the German. 2 vol. 8°. 1835. 7302 Italy and the Italians. 2 vol. 8°. 1840. 7303 RAWDON. Kawdon Papers, consisting of letters . . to and from Dr. John Bramhall, Primate of Ireland . . Illustrated with . . notes, by Kev. Edward Berwick. 8°. 1819. (Two copies.) 7304 [RAWSTON (GEORGE).] My Life. By an Ex-Dissenter. 12°. 1841. 7305 Tour Life. By the Author of "My Life." 12». .1841. 7306 RAY (I.) M.D. Treatise on the medical Jurisprudence of Insanity. With an introductory essay by D. Spillan, M.D. 12». ' 1839. 7307 RAYMOND (GEORGE). Chronicles of England : a . metrical history. (Portraits.) 8°. 1842. 7308 Memoirs of Eobert William Elliston comedian. 1774 to 1810. Illustrations bv George Cruikshank. (Portrait.) 8°. 1844. 7309 RAYMOND (GEORGE)— COM*. Concluding Series. Illustrations by "Phiz" [Hablot K. Browne]. 1845. 7310 Life and enterprises of Eobert William Elliston, comedian. Illustrated by George Cruikshank and "Phiz." (Portrait.) 12°. 1857. 7311 RAYNAL (L'ABBE GUILLAUME THOMAS FRAN9OIS). Histoire du Parlement d'Angleterre. 12°. 1749. 7312 REACH (ANGUS B.). Claret and Olives, from the Garonne to the Rhone ; or, notes . . by the way. 8°. 1852. 7313 Clement Lorimer ; or, the book with the iron clasps. A romance. Illustrated by George Cruikshank. 8°. 1849. 7314 Comic Bradshaw : or, bubbles from the boiler. Illustrated by H. G. Hine. 12°. 1848. 7315 London on the Thames ; or, life above and below bridge. With sixty-two illus- trations by Hine, Gavami, and others. 12°. n.d. 7316 Natural history of " Bores." Illustrated by H. G. Hine. 12°. 1847. 7317 Natural history of Humbugs. Illus- trated by A. Henning. 12°. 1847. 7318 Romance of a Mince-Pie . . Illustrations by Phiz. 12°. 1848. 7319 READ (THOMAS BUCHANAN). Poems. Illustrated by Kenny Meadows. 8°. 1852. 7320 READE (CHARLES). Cloister and the Hearth. A tale of the Middle Ages. 4 vol. 8°. 1861. 7321 " John Forster Esq. with the author's kind regards." Eighth Commandment. (Portrait of Auguste Maquet.) 8°. 1860. 7322 Griffith Gaunt ; or. Jealousy. 3 vol. Second edition. 8°. 1866. 7323 Hard Cash. A matter-of-fact romance. New edition. 8°.- 1869. 7324 " It is never too late to mend." A matter of fact romance. 3 vol. 8°. 1856. 7325 , Love me little, love me long. ,New edi- tion. 8°. 1869. 7326 Peg Woffington. A novel. 8°. , 1853- 7327 A Simpleton a story of the day. 3 vol. 8°. 1873. 7328 A Terrible Temptation. A story of the day! 3 vol. 8°. 1871. 7329 416 READE (JOHN EDMUND). Poetical Works. 2 vol. 12°. Presentation copy with inscription. Man in Paradise ; a poem . lyrical poems. 12°. 1856. 1852. 7330 With 7331 Second edition. 12°. 1856. 7332 Prose from the South. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 7333 READING. Good Newes from Redding being an exact relation of the proceedings of the Earl of Essex, since he advanced from Windsore, the true estate of the siege . . 4°. 1643. Letter from a Minister in his Excellence his army, to a brother in London . . Dated . . before Reading, April 18. 1643. 4°. 1643. Signed at end " E. B." Third intelligence from Reading . . April 26. at night. 4°. 1643. 7334 One vol. RECLUS (JEAN JACQUES ELISEE). The Earth a descriptive history of the phenomena of the life of the globe. Trans- lated by the late B. B. Woodward, and edited by Henry Woodward. Continents illustrated by . . Maps . . Sections I. II. 2 vol. 8°. 1871. 7335 REDDING (CYRUS). Illustrated Itinerary of the county of Cornwall. 8°. 1842. 7336 Dedication signed " Cyrus Redding." History and description of modern Wines. Third edition. (Illustrated.) 8°. Bohn, 1851. 7337 REDGRAVE (SAMUEL). [Murray's] Official handbook of church and state ; containing an historical ac- count of the duties and powers of the crown and the legislature — and of the civil, military, judicial, and ecclesiastical autho- rities of tide United Kingdom and Colonies. New edition. 8°. 1855., 7338 REDHEAD (T.-W.). French revolutions ftom 1789 to 1848. 3 vol. 8°. • Edinburgh, 1848-9. 7339 REED (HENRY). Lectures on English literature, from Chaucer to Tennyson. (Portrait.) (And introductory notice by William B. Reed.) 12". Philadelphia, 1855. 7340 REEVE (HENRY). Characteristics of Painters. Second edition. [Verses.] 8". 1842. (2 copies.) 7341 N". 2. Date on t.p. 1847., and different pub- lisher. AND TAYLOR (JOHN ED- WARD). Translations from the German. Prose and verse. 12°. 1842. 7342 Prom Jean Paul— Novalis— Goethe— Uhland — Euoliert- and Miokiewicz (Poli.9h). REEVES (JOHN). History of the English Law, from the time of the Saxons, to the end of the reign of Philip and Mary. Third edition. 4 vol. 8°. 1814. 7343 Vol V. Containing tlie reign of Elizabeth. 1829. REFLECTOR. The Reflector, a quarterly magazine, on subjects of philosophy, politics, aud the liberal arts. Conducted by the editor of the Examiner [Leigh Hunt]. Vol. II. From March to December 1811, inclusive. 8°. 1811. , 7344 Some pages corrected and altered in pencil ; two MS. " Riders." REGICIDES. Indictment, arraignment, tryal, and judgment, of twenty-nine Regicides, the murtherers of King Charles I. . . October, 1660 . . Summary of the . . decrees of those Cabbalists, preparatory to that Hellish fact . . Their speeches . . ac- count of the rise and progress of enthusiasm among us, and in other parts of Europe : with the characters, and answer to the tenets of the several persons executed. (Portrait of Charles I.) 8°. 1724. 7345 Indictment . . of twenty-nine Regicides , . Begun at Hicks's-Hall 9 October, 1660. and continued at the Sessions-House in the Old-Baily until the 19'^ of the same month. 4°. 1739. 7346 [Tracts by and relating to the Regi- cides, etc.]. 4°. v.d. 7347 Speeches and prayers of some of the late King's Judges, viz. Major Gen. Harrison [etcri 1660. Speeches and passages in their imprisonment, till they came to the place of execution, n.p. 1660. (See No. 7S68.J Speeches, discourses, and prayers, of Col. John Barkstead, Col. John Okey, and M'. Miles Corbet ; 19 April, being the day of theirsufflering at Tybmrn. Account of their taking in Holland ; their speeches, dis- courses, and letters, both before, and in the time of their late imprisonment, n.p. 1662. Tryal, of Sir Henry Vane. At the Kings Bench, 'Westminster, 1662. With what he intended to have spokon the day of his sentence, and his Bill of Exceptions, other occasional speeches, &o. His speech and prayer. See. on the Scaffold. n.p. 1662. 417 REGICIDES— cont. Lite and death of Sir Henry Vane. His last exhortation to his children, the day before his death, n.p. 1662. Two treatises: I. Epistle general, to the mystical body oi Christ on earth, the church universal in Babylon. II. Tace of the times : wherein is discovered, the rice, progress©, and issue, of the enmity and contest, between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent. Sea. By Sir Henry Vane. n.p. 1662. At the end— Letter of Sir Heniy Vane, to Ms lady. Mysterie of Magistracy unvailed : or, God's ordinance of magistracy asserted, cleared, and vindicated. 1663. Voice of a cry at midnight : or, an Alarme to Churches & Professors speedily to re- vive their Temple-AVorke, or open wor- ship, before the present prohibition be re- versed, n.p. 1684. Narrative of the apprehending.oommitment, arraignment, condemnation, and execu- tion of John James who suffered at Ti- bume Novemb. 26. 1661. With several occasional passages and speeches. Ac- count of the death of several persons since the execution of John James, known to be active and diligent in that mattor. 1662. [R. Heber's copies.] REGNARD (JEAN-FRANQOIS). Oeuvres, nouvelle Edition . . 4 vol. 8°. Paris, 1790. 7348 Oeuvres completes. 7 vol. (in 2). 12°. Paris, 1830. 7349 REICH EN BACH (KARL, BARON VON). Researches on Magnetism, electricity, heat, light, crystallization, and chemical attraction, in their relations to the vital force. Translated and edited . . with a preface, notes, and appendix, by William Gregory, M.D. Plates and wood-cuts. Parts 1. and II., including the second edi- tion of the first part. 8°. 1850. 7350 REJECTED. Kejected Articles. Second edition. [By P. G. Patmore.] 8°. 1826. 7351 Parodies on Charles Lamb, Cobbett, Horace and James Smith, Hazlitt, Leigh Hunt, Byron, etc. RELIGION. Free thoughts on natural and revealed religion, in reference to various difficulties and objectionahle passages in the old and new Testament ; with extracts from the sacred writings of the Hindoos, etc. By an unlearned inquirer after truth. 8". 1853. '^352 RELIGIOUS. [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 7353 Christianity abused by the Church of llome, and Popery shewed to be a corrup- tion of it. By. J. W, 1679. Letter by D'. (H.) Holden to M'. Graunt, concerning M'. "White's treatise l)e Me- dio animarum statu. Paris, 1G61. o 16505. RELIGIOUS— con/. Letter concerning Invocation of Saints and Adoration of the Cross. By D'. (Thomas) Barlow now Bishop of Lincoln. 1079. The cloak in its colours; or the Presby- terian (s ) unmasked, and proved as danger- ous as Papists to the Church of England. "With a brief answer to their late unsea- sonable Queries, and List of the Pension- ers. 1679. Proposals of sundry Divines within this Kjngdom. Concerning the Engagement, intended to be imposed on. them for their subscriptions. 1689. Obedience to the present King, notwith- standing our oatlis to the former. [By Francis Pullwood, D.D.] 1689. Speech of Henry Earl of Warrington, Lord Belamere, to the Grand Jury at Chester. April 13. 1692. 1602. The Revision revised : or, a Vindication of George [Morley] Bishop of Winton [Win- chester] against a pamphlet, published by L. "W., and entituled, a Revision of D"^. Morley's Judgment in matters of religion. 1684. Origine of Atheism in the Popish and Pro- testant churches shew'n by Uorotheus Siourus, 1684. Made English, and apreface added by E. B. 1684. Discourse about edification : in answer to a question, whether it is lawful for any man to forsake the Communion of the Church of England, and go to the separate Meet- ings, because he can better edifle there ? 1683. Anti-Dodwellisme, two tracts by Hugo Gro- tius : containing a solution of these two questions : whether the Eucharistie may be administred in the absence or want of pastours? whether it be necessary at all times to communicate with the symbols ? made English by Philaretus. 1683. The Established Test, in order to the secu- rity of His Majesties sacred person, and government, and the Protestant rehgiou, against Rome. 1679. [Tracts.] 4°. v.d. 7354 Discoiu'se of God's ways of disposing of Kingdoms. Part I. By ["W. Lloyd] Bishop of S. Asaph. 1691. Utrum Horum ; or, God's "Ways of disposing of Kingdoms : and some clergy-men's ways of disposing of them. 1691. Remarks upon D'. Sherlock's book, intituled. The case of the allegiance due to Soveraign Princes, stated and resolved, &c. Second edition. [By Rev. Samuel Johnson.] 1690. D'. Sherlock's Case of allegiance considered. "With some remarks upon his Vuidication. 1691. Reflexions upon the controversy about the Oath of Allegiance, occaaion'd by the letter in answer to English loyalty. 1682. Vindication of a Discourse concerning the unreasonableness of a new separation, on account of the oaths, from the exceptions made against it in a tract called, A brief answer to a late discourse, &c. 1691. Letter concerning Toleration. 1689. Argument of the letter concerning Tolera- tion, briefly consider'd and answer'd. Oxford, printed at the Theatre, 1690. Ananias and Saphira discover'd. Or, the true intent of a pamphlet called Omnia Oomesta Belo : in a letter by way ol an- swer. 1679. Salt for the leach. In reflections upon re- flections. [By Charles Leslie.] 1712. 418 REMELE (JOHANN NEPOMUK). Analyse ungarischer Classiker gestiitzt auf einfaclie Grundregein der ungarischen Sprache . . naoh der praktischen Methode des Luneau de Boisgermain . . Wien, 8°. 1842. 7355 Lehrbuch der ungarischen Sprache uach einer ueuen leicht faszlichen praktischen Methode . . Wien, 1843. 8°. 7356 Magyar tiszti irasmdd peldakban . . [Second title.] Ungarischer Geschaftsstyl in Beispielen. Bine Anweisung, alle Arten Ton ungarischep amtlichen Aufsatzen auf die leichteste Art zu verstehen, zu verfas- sen, und selbe vom Ungarischen ins Deutsche und zuruck zu iibersetzen . . Wien, 1843. 8°. 7357 RENAN (ERNEST). Life of Jesus . . 8°. 1865. 7358 RENDELL (REV. E. D.). Treatise on the peculiarities of the Bible ; being an exposition of the princi- ples involTCd in some of the most remark- able facts and phenomena recorded in itvelation. 8°. n.d. (1853). 7359 RENGGER (J. R.). Reign of D'. Joseph Gaspard Roderick De Franeia, in Paraguay; being an ac- count of a six years' residence in that republic, from July, 1819 — to May, 1825. By Messrs. Eengger and Longchamps. Translated from the French of J. R. Rengger. 8°. 1827. - 7360 Marginal pencil notes ? by T. Carlyle. RENNIE (JAMES). Bird- Architecture 12°. 1844. New edition. 7361 Bird Miscellanies : illustrative of the habits and the faculties of Birds. 12°. 1847. 7362 Insect Architecture : to which are added, Miscellanies, on the ravages, the preserva- tion for purposes of study, and the classi- fication, of insects. New edition. 2 vol. 12°. 1845. 7363 REPEAL. Repeal prize essays. Essays on the Repeal of the Union, to which the Associa- tion prizes were awarded ; with a sup- plementary essay, recommended by the Judges. 8°. Dublin, 1845. 7364 Prize essays by Michael. Joseph Barry, Alderman Staunton, and Key. J. Godkin. Supplementary essay by George Ramsay. REPENTANCE, Advantages of repentance. A moral tale, attempted in blank verse ; and founded on the anecdotes of a private family in********* giiire. Second edition. 8°. [Imprint cut down.] 7365 RERESBY (SIR JOHN). Travels and memoirs. The former (now first published) exhibiting a view of the governments and society in the principal States and Courts of Europe, during the time of Cromwell's usurpation ; the latter containing anecdotes, and secret history, of the Courts of Charles II. and James II. . . portraits, and views . . 8°. 1813. 7366 RERESBY (TAMWORTH). Miscellany of ingenious thoughts and reflections, in verse and prose . . Cha- racters, pleasant narratives, moral observa- tions, and essays. 4°. 1721. 7367 RESTORATION. [Tracts.] 4°. 1660-1. 7368 Iter Boreale. Attempting sorathing upon the march of the lord General George Monck, from Scotland, to London, the last winter, &c. By a rural pen. [Eobert Wild, D.D.] (Portrait of Monck in- serted.) Letter from General Monck, and the oBBcers under his command, to the Parliament. His Majesties letter to General Monck, to be commmiicated to the officers of the army. His Majesties letter. To the generals of the Navy at Sea. His Majesties Declaration, to be communicated, to all captains, com- manders and seamen belonging to the Pleet. Answer of the Generalls and com- manders at sea to his Majesties letter. Letter of General George Monok's, dated at Leicester 23 Ian. and directed unto M'., Bolle to be communicated unto the rest of the gentry of Devon : occasioned by a late letter from the gentry of Devon. Twe horrid murthers ; one, committed upon Henry, the fourth of France. The other upon his sou in law, Charles the first ol England. By James Parry. Salutation, and greeting unto thee, Charles Stuart, who art now proclaimed King of England. Prom the counoel and nobility of the royal seed, the lyon of the tribe of Judah, the everlasting King of righteous- ness, who reigneth m Gteorge Fox the younger. Fifteen loyal queries for the Kings Majesty, and the three Kingdoms. "With a lash for the quondam jugler of State, W. L. Sp. Mr. R. Sec. and the rest of the travtors who thu-sted after the blood of his Majestic King Charles. By J. Bramstone. Speeches and prayers of some of the late King's Judges, viz. Major General Hari- . son, Oct. 18. John Carew, Oct. 15. M'. Justice Cooke, Hugh Peters, Oct. IG. Tho. Scot, Gregory Clement, Col. Adrian Scroop, Col. John Jones, Oct. 17. Ool. Daniel Axtell, and Coh Fran. Hacker, Oct. 19. 1660. The times of their death. "With 3pceche.s and passages in their imprison- ment till they came to the place of execu- tion. n.p. 419 RETROSPECTIVE. Retrospective Eevievr. Vol. I. ( XIV ) 14 vol. 8°. 1820-6. 7369 Duplicates of vol. 1, 2, i, 7, 11. Retrospective Review, and Historical and Antiquarian Magazine. Edited by Henry Southern, and [Sir] Nicholas Hams Nicolas. Second Series. Vol. I. II. [an published] . 8". 1837-8. *7369 REUMONT (ALFRED DE). The Carafas of Maddaloni : Naples under Spanish dominion. Translated from the German. (Portrait of Massaniello.) 8». Bohn, 1854. 7370 REUSS (EDOUARD). Histoire de la theologie Chretienne an si6cle apostolique. 2 vol. 8°. Stras- bourg, 1852. 7371 REUSS (JEREMIAS DAVID). Alphabetical Register of all the Authors actually living in Great-Britain, Ireland and in the united provinces of North- America, with a catalogue of their publi- cations. From 1770 to 1790. Supple- ment and continuation from 1790 to 1803 . . 4 vol. 8°. Berlin and Stettin, 1804. 7372 Interleaved copy with MS. additions, &c. and printed cuttings. There are also German title-pages. REVERE (LIEUTENANT JOSEPH WARREN;. Tour of duty in California ; including a description of the gold region : and an account of the voyage around Cape Horn ; with notices of Lower California, the Gulf and Pacific Coasts, and the principal events attending the conquest of the Cali- fornias. Edited by Joseph N. Balestier. Map and Plates. 8°. New York, 1849. 7373 REYNARD. Most delectable history of Reynard the Fox, and of his son Reynardine. A revised version of an old romance. 12''. 1844. 7374 Reynard the Fox a renowned Apologue of the middle age, reproduced in rhyme (by Samuel Nay lor). 8°. 1845. 7575 REYNOLDS (FREDERICK). Life and Times. Written by himself. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1827. 7376 REYNOLDS (JOHN). Triumphs of Gods revenge against . . Murther. With his miraculous discoveries, and severe punishment thereof. In thirty REYNOLDS (JOHN))— conf. several tragical histories . . committed in divers countreys beyond the seas . . Fifth and last edition . . Copper plates. F". 1670. 7377 Also, engraved t.p. REYNOLDS (SIR JOSHUA) P.R.A. Literary Works; containing his Dis- courses, papers in the Idler, the journal of a Tour through Flanders and Holland, and also his Commentary on Du Fresnoy's Art of Painting . . 3 vol. To which is prefixed. Some account of the life of the author, by Edmond Malone. Fifth edi- tion, corrected : in which is now included, A memoir . . by Joseph Farington, R.A. (Portrait.) 8°. 1819. 7378 Literary Works . . Memoir of the Author ; with remarks on his professional character, illustrative of his principles and practice. By Henry William Beechey. 2 vol. New and improved edition. (Por- trait.) 8°. Bohn, 1852. 7379 Johnson and Garrick. [Anon.] 8°. 1816. Not published. 7380 REYNOLDS (RICHARD). Letters. With a memoir of his life. By Hannah Mary Rathbone. (Portrait.) 8". 1852. 7381 RHODES (CAPTAIN G.). Personal narrative of a tour of military inspection in various parts of European Turkey, performed, from August to November 1853, in company with the military and scientific Commission, under General Prim, Conte De Reuss . . 8°. 1854. 7382 RIADORE (J. EVANS). [Half Title.] Introductory Lectures [on Surgery]. 8°. (1835). 7383 Title-page wanting. RICARDO (DAVID). Works. With a notice of the life and writings of the Author, by J. R. M'CuUoch. 8°. 1846. 7384 RICH (ANTHONY) JUN. Illustrated companion to the Latin dic- tionary, and Greek lexicon : forming a glossary of all the words representing visible objects connected with 'the arts, manufactures, and eveiy-day life of the Greeks and Romans, with representations of nearly 2000 objects fi'om the antique 8°. 1849. 7385 DD 2 4^0 RICH (ELIHU). Cyclopsedia of Biography : embracing a series of original memoirs of the most distinguished persons of all times. Written for this work by Sir Archibald Alison [etc.] Edited by B. Eich. With nume- rous illustrations. 8°. London and Glas- gow, 1854. 7386 RICHARDSON (CHARLES) LL.D. New dictionary of the English language. 2 vol. 4°. 1836-7. 7387 On the study of Language : an expo- sition of " . . the Diversions of Purley, by John Home Tooke." 12°. 1854. 7388 RICHARDSON (DAVID LESTER). Literary chit-chat with miscellaneous poems and an appendix of prose papers. 8°. 1848. 738.1 RICHARDSON (EDWARD). Monumental effigies of the Temple Church, with an account of their restora- tion, in 1842. E". 1843. 7390 Ancient stone and leaden coffins, en- caustic tiles, etc. recently discovered in the Temple Church. F°. 1845. 7391 RICHARDSON (JAMES). Narrative of a mission to central Africa performed in 1850-1 . . 2 vol. 8°. 1853. 7392 Fietuce signed " Bayle St. John." RICHARDSON (SIR JOHN). Arctic Searching Expedition : a journal of a boat-voyage through Rupert's Land and the Arctic Sea, in search of the dis- covery ships under command of Sir John Eranklin. With an appendix, on the physical geography of north America. 2 vol. 8°. 1851. 7393 RICHARDSON (JONATHAN). Works. Containing I. theory of paint- ing. II. essay on the art of criticism (so far as it relates to painting). III. science of a connoisseur. A new edition, cor- rected, with the additions of an Essay on the knowledge of prints, and cautions to collectors. Ornamented with portraits by Worlidge, &c. of the most eminent painters mentioned . . The whole intended as a Supplement to the Anecdotes [H. Wal- pole's] of painters and engravers. Printed at Strawberry-Hill. [London.] 4°. 1792. 7394 RICHARDSON (JONATHAN) JUN. Eichardsouiana : or, occasional reflec- tions on the moral nature of man . . with several anecdotes interspersed. Vol. I. (Portrait.) 8°. 1776. (Two copies.) 7395 RICHARDSON (JONATHAN) FATHER AND SON. Explanatory Notes and Remarks on Milton's Paradise Lost. With the life of the Author, and a discourse on the Poem. By J. Richardson sen. (Portrait.) 8°. 1734. 7396 RICHARDSON (SAMUEL). Works. With a sketch of his life and writings, by Rev. Edward Mangin. 19 vol . (Portrait.) 8°. 1811. 7397 Clarisse Harlowe par Jules Janin pre- cedee d'un essai sur la vie et les ouvrages de I'auteur S. R. 2 vol. 8°. Paris, 1846. 7398 Collection of . . sentiments, maxims [etc.], contained in . . Pamela, Clarissa, and Sir Charles Grandison . . Two letters from the editor of those works [to cor- respondents — I relating to Sir Charles Grandison] . . 12°. 1755. 7399 Correspondence . . To which are pre- fixed, a biographical .account of that author, and observations on his writings. By Anna Laetitia Barbauld. 6 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1804. (Two copies.) 7400 One hundred and seventy-three Letters written for particular friends, on the most important occasions . . Seventh edition. 12°. n.d. 7401 RICHARDSON (WILLIAM). Essays on some of Shakespeare's dra- matic characters . . Essay on the faults of Shakespeare. Fifth edition. 8°. 1797. 7402 Philosophical analysis and illustration of some of Shakespeare's remarkable cha- racters. Second edition. 12°. 1774. 7403 Poems, chiefly rural. (Portrait in- serted.) 8°. Glasgow, Foulis, 1774. 7404 " F'. Wrangham 1813." RICHTER (JEAN PAUL FRIED- RICH). Flower, fruit and thorn pieces : or the married life, death, and wedding of the advocate of the poor, Firmian Stanislaus Siebeukas. Translated from the German by Edward Henry Noel. 2 vol. 12°. 1845. 7405 Levana ; or the doctrine of education. Translated from the German. 8°. 1848. 7406 Life of J. P. F. Richter compiled from various sources. Together with his auto- biography. Translated from the German 421 RICHTER (JEAN PAUL FRIED- RICH)— con*. LbyM" Eliza Lee]. 2 vol. 12°. Boston [U. S.] 1842. 7407 Seconfl edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 7408 Walt and Vult, or the Twins. Trans- lated from the riegejjahre of Jean Paul. By the author of the '< Life of Jean Paul " [Eliza Lee]. 2 vol. 12°. Boston [U.S.] 1846. 7409 RICKARDS (SIR GEORGE KET- TILBY). Population and Capital ; being a course of lectures delivered before the University of Oxford in 1 8.53-4. 8°. 1854. 7410 RICKMAN (THOMAS CLIO). Life of Thomas Paine. (Portrait.) 8°. 1819. 7411 RICRAFT (JOSIAH). Survey of Bnglands champions and truths faithfuU patriots or a chronologicall recitement of the prineipall proceedings of the most worthy commanders of the pros- perous armies raised for the preservation of religion, the Kings Majesties person . . With a . . narrative of the severall vic- tories . . 1647. [Second title] Civill Warres of England briefly related from His Majesties first setting up his standard 1641. to this present . . Treaty . . Effi- gies and eulogies of the chief commanders, who. . . have fought against the Komish Sicera . . Collected by John Leycester. 8°. 1649. [Reprint, n.d.] 7412 No portraits. RIDDLE (REV. JOSEPH ESMOND). History of the Papacy, to the period of the Reformation. 2 vol. 8°. London, 1854. 7413 RIDGE (BENJAMIN) M.D. Ourselves, our Pood, and our Physic. 12°. 1861. 7414 [RIDLEY (REV. JAMES).] Tales of the Genii . . Faithfully trans- lated from the Persian manuscript . . By Sir Charles Morell . . Cooke's edition . . Engravings. 2 vol." 12°. n.d. 7415 RIETHMULLER (CHRISTOPHER JAMES). Frederick Lucas. A biography. 8°. 1862. 7416 RILEY (HENRY THOMAS). Dictionary of Latin quotations, proverbs, maxims, and mottos, classical and mediae- val, including law terms and phrases. With a selection of Greek quotations. Edited by H. T. Eiley. 8°. Bohn, 1856. 7417 RIMBAULT (EDWARD FRANCIS) LL.D. Bibliotheea Madrigaliana. A bibliogra- phical account of the musical and poetical works published in England during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, under the titles of Madrigals, ballets, ayres, can- zonets, etc. 8°. 1847. 7418 Cathedral Chants of the XVI, XVII and XVIII Centuries edited by E. F. Rimbault. F°. 1844. 7419 Little book of Songs and ballads, gathered from ancient musick books, MS. and printed. 8°. 1851. 7420 RIMER (WILLIAM). Illustrations of Thomson's Castle of Indolence. Art-Union of London. (With leaf of letter-press). Oblong. 1845. [In portfolio.] 7421 RIO (AUGUSTE F.). La Petite Chouannerie ou histoire d'un college Breton sous I'Bmpire. 8". 1842. 7422 RIPA (FATHER). Memoirs, during thirteen years' resi- dence at the court of Peking in the service of the Emperor of China ; with an account of the foundation of the college for the education of young Chinese at Naples. Selected and translated from the Itahan, by Fortunato Prandi. 12°. 1844. 7423 RITCHIE (ARCHIBALD TUCKER). Dynamical theory of the formation of the Earth. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 7424 RITCHIE (LEITCH). British World in the east : a guide . . to India, China, Australia, South Africa [etc.] in the eastern and southern seas. 2 vol. 8°. 1847. 7425 Wearyfoot Common. With six illus- trations by Miss M. E. Dear. 12°. 1855. 7426 [Engraved title.] The Wye, narrative of a pedestrian ramble. 1839. [Title.] The Wye and its associations a pictures- que ramble. 8°. 1841. 7427 RITCHIE (THOMAS EDWARD). Account of \he life and writings of David Hume. 8°. 1807. 7428 Pencil notes. Book-plate ol William Broderip. RITSON (JOSEPH). liOtters . . Memoir of the author by Sir Harris Nicolas. 2 vol. 8°. 1833. 7429 [Tracts.] 8°. v.d. 7430 Remarks, critical and illustrative, on the text and notes of the last edition of Shak- speare [anon.] 1783. Bitson's name added in pencil, 422 RITSON (JOSEPH)— COM*. Familiar adfliess to the curious in English poetry : more particularly to the readers of Shakspeare. By Thersites Literarius. 178*. Bitson's name added in pencil. Quip Modest ; a few words by way of Sup- plement to liemarks on the text and notes of the last edition of Shakspeare; occa- sioned by a republication of that edition, revised and augmented by the editor of Dodsley's old Plays. 1788. Preface signed, "J.Et.," and has the cancelled leaf. Cursory criticisms on the edition of Shak- speare published by Ddmond Malone. [Anon.] 1792. RITTER (DR. HEINRICH). History of Ancient Philosophy. Trans- lated from the German, by Alexander J. W. Morrison. Vol. I-HI. 8°. Ox- ford, 1838-9. 7431 ROADS. Old Roads and New Roads. 12". 1852. 7432 ROANE (DR.). Letter from Ehoan in JFrance by Doctor Roane one of the doctors of the late sicke Commons . . With an eUegy written by his owne hand upon the death and buriall of the said Doctors Commons. (Wood- cut on title.) 4°. n.p. 1641, 7433 A Laud tract. ROBBERDS (J. W.). Memoir of the life and writings of Wil- liam Taylor of Norwich. Containing his correspondence of many years with Robert Southey, and original letters from Sir Walter Scott [etc.] Compiled and edited by J. W. Robberds. 2 toI. (Portrait.) 8°. 1843. 7434 ROBERT OF GLOUCESTER. [Half-title.] Works of Thomas Hearne . . [Title.] Robert of Gloucester's Chronicle. Transcrib'd . . from a MS. in the Harleyan Library by Thomas Hearne. To which is added, besides a Glossary . . a continuation (by the author himself) of this chronicle from a MS. in the Cottonian library. 2 toI. 8". Oxford, 1724. 7435 ROBERTS (GEORGE). History of Lyme-Regis, Dorset . . 8°. Sherborne, 1823. 7436 Life, progresses, and rebellion of James, Duke of Monmouth, to his capture and execution : with a full account of the bloody assize, and copious biographical notices. 2 vol. (Portrait, etc.) 8°. 1844. 7437 [ROBERTS (JOHN).] Answer to M'. Pope's preface to Shakespear . . Being a vindication of the old actors who were the publishers and performers of that author's plays. Whereby the errors of their edition are further accounted for and some memoirs of Shakespear and stage-history of his time are inserted . . By a stroling player. 8°. 1729. 7438 " Containing a very curious account of the old actors of Shakspeare's time— and very G. Daniel." Pencil notes by M'. Forster, ROBERTS (WILLIAM). History of Letter-Writing from the earliest period to the fifth century. 8°. 1843. 7439 Memoirs of the life and correspondence of M". Hannah More. 4 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1834. 7440 ROBERTSON (REV. FREDERICK WILLIAM). Sermons preached at Brighton. First Series. New edition. 8°. 1875. 7441 Second Series. New edition. 8". 1875. 7442 Third Series. New edition. 8°. 1869. 7443 Fourth Series. New edition. 8°. 1869. 7444 Two Lectures on the influence of Poetry . . 8°. Brighton, 1852. 744.'5 Second edition. 8°. Brighton, 1853. 7446 ROBERTSON (JAMES). A few months in America : containing remarks on some of its industrial and commercial interests. 8°. London and Manchester, n.d. [? 1855]. 7447 ROBERTSON (REV. JAMES CRAIGIE). History of the Christian Church to the pontificate of Gregory the Great, A.D. 590 . . 8°. 1854. 7448 ROBERTSON (J. P.) and (W. P.). Letters on Paraguay : comprising an account of a four years' residence in that Republic, under the government of the Dictator Francia. 3 vol. Second edi- tion. (Portrait of Francia.) 8°. 1839. 7449 Title to vol. 3— Pranoia's Reign of Terror, being the continuation oi Letters on Letters on South America ; comprising travels on the banks of the Parana and Rio de la Plata. 3 vol. 8». 1843. 7450 423 ROBERTSON (T.). The whole French language comprised in a series of Lessons. 2 vol. 8°. Paris (and) London, 1853-4. 7451 ROBERTSON (WILLIAM) D.D. Works . . Account of his life and writings, by Dugald Stewart. With por- trait . . 8°. 1831. 7462 History of America. Eleventh edition. In which is included the posthumous volume, containing the history of Vir- ginia, to 1688 ; and of New England, to 1652. 4 vol. 8°. 1808. 7453 History of the reign of the Emperor Charles V. With a view of the progress of society in Europe, from the subversion of the Roman empire, to the beginning of the sixteenth century. 4 vol. Eleventh edition. 8°. 1809. 7454 Historical disquisition concerning the knowledge which the ancients had of India ; and the progress of trade with that country prior to the discovery of the passage to it by the Cape of Good Hope. Appendix, containing observations on the civil policy — Laws and Judicial proceed- ings — Arts — Sciences — and religious in- stitutions, of the Indians. Eifth edition. 8°. 1809. 7455 History of Scotland during the reigns of Queen Mary and James VI. till his accession to the crown of England : with a review of the Scottish history previous to that period ; and an Appendix . . Eighteenth edition . . Account of the life and writings of the Author, by Du- gald Stewart. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8». 1809. 7456 ROBERTSON (WILLIAM). Dictionary of Latin phrases . . for . . students in Latin composition. _ New edition. 8°. 1824. '7457 ROBINS (REV. SANDERSON). Argument for the Eoyal Supremacy. 8°. 1851. 7458 Evidence of Scripture against the claims of the Eoman Church. 8°. 1853. 7459 Whole evidence against the claims of the Eoman Church. 8°. 1855. 7460 ROBINS (WILLIAM). Paddington : past and present. 8°. (London) n.d. (1853). 7461 ROBINSON (EDWARD) D.D. Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea. A Journal of Travels in 1838, by E. Eobinson and E. Smith. Undertaken in reference to biblical geography. Drawn up from the . original diaries, with historical illustrations, by E. Robinson. Maps and plans. 3 vol. 8°. 1841. 7462 ROBINSON (HENRY CRABB). Diary, reminiscences, and correspon- dence. Selected and edited by Thomas Sadler. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1869. 746S ROBINSON (JOHN CHARLES). South Kensington Museum. Italian Sculpture of the Middle Ages and period of the revival of art A descriptive cata- logue . . with additional illustrative notices. 8". 1862. 7464 ROBINSON (ROBERT). Miscellaneous works of E. Robinson, late pastor of the Baptist church and con- gregation of Protestant Dissenters, at Cambridge . . brief memoirs of his life and writings [by George Dyer]. 4 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Harlow, 1807. 7465 B.. Southey's book-plate and binding. ROBSON (WILLIAM). Life of Cardinal Richelieu. Illustra- tions. 12°. 1854. 7466 ROBY (JOHN). Popular traditions of England. First series : Lancashire. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1841. 7467 Legendary and poetical remains. With a sketch of his literary life and character. By his Widow. (Portrait.) 8°. 1854. 7468 ROCHE (ANTONIN). Du Style et de la composition litteraire. 8°. Paris et Londres, 1856. 7469 RODENBERG (JULIUS) pseud. i.e. JULIUS LEVY. Island of the Saiats a pilgrimage through Ireland. (Translated by I^scelles Wraxall.) 8°. 1861. 7470 RODEZ ( BISHOP OF). History of Henry IV. sir-named the great. King of France and Navarre. Second edition. Written originally in French, by the Bishop of Eodez . . made English by J. D. 12". 1692. 7471 ROEBUCK (JOHN ARTHUR). Colonies of England : a plan for the government of some portion of our Colonial possessions. 8°. 1849. 7472 History of the Whig Ministry of 1830, to the passing of the Reform bill. 2 vol. 8°. 1852. 7473 ROFFE (ALFRED, FELIX, akd EDWIN). Leeds [Kent] : our Grandfather's native village. With divers remains gathered in memory of Robert Cabbell 424 ROFFE (ALFRED, FELIX, and EDWIN)— coK<. Roffe engraver. Privately printed. Ko- chester Press. Thirty copies. (Portrait of R. C. Roffe.) 4». Somers Town, 1859. 7474 Presentation copy, ROFFE (EDWIN). [Half Title.] Pancredge. Privately printed. Rochester Press. Sixteen copies. 1865. [Title.] A perambulating Survey, or topographical and historical account of the parish of Saint Pancras . . In three books. 4°. Private Press, Somers Town, 186.5. 7475 Ryghte goodlie lyttle booke of Prisket Pancies set forth for Bibliomaniacs ! Privately printed. Rochester Press. Twelve copies. (Portrait of Susanna Perwich.) 4°. 1861. 7476 Walks in the way of old Weever ! Privately printed. Rochester Press. Six- teen copies. 4°. Somers' Town, 1862. 7477 At the end— Sundry slips of yew . . In- scriptions from churcli-yard tombs, copied by B. Eoffle (and) a Basket of bright berries from the yew trees of Paradise Kathered by E, Koffe. (Portrait of Susanna Perwich.) ROFFE (ROBERT CABBELL). The Grand Master [i.e. John Byrom] . Being some extracts from the short-hand correspondence of R. C. Roffe (Engraver.) with his much valued friend Thomas Moli- neux, of Macclesfield. Edited by Alfred Roffe. Privately printed. Rochester Press. Twenty copies. 4°. 1860. 7478 " My Diary," of " Sixty-three Days : " with " Memorandums of occasional trips into Kent." With notes and illustrations by Alfred, Felix, and Edvrin Roffe. Pri- vately printed. Rochester press. Fifty copies. 4°. 1858. 7479 Presentation copy from Edwin RofEe. ROGERS (CHARLES) LL.D. Modern Scottish Minstrel ; or, the Songs of Scotland of the past half century. With memoirs of the poets, and sketches and specimens in English verse of the most celebrated modern Gaelic Bards. 6 vol. Vol. I-III. (Portraits.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1855-6. 7480 ROGERS (ELIZA). Poems. 12°. 1857. 7481 ROGERS (HENRY). Eclipse of Faith ; or, a visit to a reli- gious Sceptic. [Anon.] 8°. 1852. 7482 Defence of " The Eclipse of Faith,'' by its Author; being a rejoinder to Profes- sor Newman's "Reply." [Anon.] 8°. IS.54. 7483 ROGERS (HENRY)— coM<. Essay on the life and genius of Thomas Fuller, with selections from his writings, 8°. 1856. 7484 Essays, selected from contributions to the Edinburgh Review. 3 vol. 8°. 1850-5. 7485 Vol. 1. Biographical and Critical. Vol. 2. Theological and Political. Vol. 3, Des- cartes— Locke— Sydney Smith's Lectures on Moral Philosophy — History of the English Language — Ultramontane Doubts. New edition. 3 vol. 12*. 1855, 7486 Reason and Faith : their claims and conflicts . . Appendix, containing some additional remarks on the characteristics of Strauss' " Life of Jesus." 12°. 1850. 7487 ROGERS (JOHN). Antipopopriestian ; or, an attempt to liberate and purify Christianity from Popery, Politikirkality, and Priestrule. Popery. 8°. 1839. 7488 Inserted is a letter from the Author, ROGERS (SAMUEL). Ode to Superstition, with some other poems. [Anon.] (Portrait inserted.) 4°. 1786. Pleasures of Memory, a Poem, in two parts. By the author of "An Ode to Superstition, with some other poems." 4°, 1792. 7489 Bound together. "Prom the 'Library of the late Samuel Rogers . , Pirst editions, "With variations . , m the author's hand- writing. Bought at his Sale, May 10, 1856. George Daniel, Canonbury." Book-plate and Autograph of Kogers, Poems. New edition. 12°. 1822. 7490 Poems. 8°. 1839, 7491 Poems, 2. vol. 12°. 1840. 7492 " To John Porster Esq. from his friend the Author June 30 18«," 1840, 7493 Italy. 8°. Recollections. (With a notice by the editor William Sharpe.) 12°. 1859, 7494 AND OTHERS. Poetical works of Rogers, Campbell, J. Montgomery, Lamb, and Kirke White. Complete in one volume. (Portraits.) 8°. Paris, 1829. 7495 Autographs, inserted, of Rogers, Mont- gomery, and Lamb, ROLAND. Song of Roland, as chanted before the battle of Hastings, by the minstrel Taillefer. Translated by the Author of " Emilia Wyndham." [Mrs. Mfirsh-Cald- ' well.] 4°, 1854, 7496 425 ROLLIAD. The Rolliad, iu two parts ; probationary odes for the Laureateship ; and political miscellanies : with criticisms and illustra- tions. Revised . . 8°. Dublin (1796). 7497 Date on the t.p. erased, but on the frontis- piece 1796. " The writers of the EolUad were E. Tickell, Joseph Eichardson, Lord JohnTownsend, General Fitapatriok, M'. Hare, G. Blhs, W. H. Reid, M'. Adair, Rev. Bate Dudley, M'. Brummell, M'. Boscawen, M'. Pearee, the Bishop of Ossory . . and the preface by D^ French Laurence." Jjowndes. ROLLIN (LEDRU). Decline of England. 12". 1850. 2 vol. (in one). 7498 ROLPH (CAPTAIN). Charge of High-Treason : delivered into the House of Lords . . against Cap. Rolph. About the designe to have poisoned or made away the Kings Majesty. And the orders of the House for Captain Eolphs Tryall. (Woodcut of the King at the end.) 4°. 1648. 7499 Book-plate of John Towneley. JoUey's copy. ROME. Dissertation upon the uncertainty of the Roman history during the first five hundred years. In two parts . . Trans- lated from the French. 12°. 1740. 7500 Book-plate of David Grarrick. History of Rome. 2 vol. (in one) . 12°. 1833-5. 7501 Lyrics and legends of Rome : with a prologue and epilogue, by Idea. 8°. 1860. 7502 Roman Candles. [Sketches at Rome. Anon. By Percy Hethrington Fitzgerald.] 8°. 1&61. 7503 Treatise of the revenue and false money of the Romans . . Dissertation upon the manner of distinguishing antique medals from counterfeit ones. Translated from the original printed at Paris 1740. 8°. 1741. 7504 ROMER (MRS.). Pilgrimage to the temples and tombs of Egypt, Nubia, and Palestine, in 184.5-6. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 7505 ROMILLY (SIR SAMUEL). Memoirs, written by himself ; with a selection from his correspondence. Edited by his sons. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1840. 7506 ROPER (WILLIAM). Life of Sir Thomas More. With notes, and an appendix of letiers. New edition, revised and corrected, by S. W. Singer. (Portrait.) 12°. Chiswick, 1822. 7507 ROSALIND. Rosalind and Felicia; or, the Sisters. By the Authoress of " Historical pictures of the Middle ages." 12°. 1854. 7508 ROSCOE (HENRY). Life of William Roscoe. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1833. 75C9 Lives of eminent British Lawyers. 12°. 1830. 7510 Coke, Selden, Hale, Lord Guilford, Lord Jefferies, Lord Somera, Lord Mansfield, Sir J. E. Wilmot, Blackstone, Lord Ash. burton. Lord Thurlow, Sir W. Jones, Lord Erskine, Eomilly. ROSCOE (THOMAS). Lives of the Kings of England, from the Norman Conquest ; with anecdotes of their Courts . . Vol. I. [Second title] The Life of William the Conqueror . . (Por- trait of William the Conqueror.) 8°. 1846. 7511 ROSCOE (WILLIAM). Life of Lorenzo de' Medici, called the Magnificent. Seventh edition, revised by Thomas Roscoe. (Portraits of Lorenzo and Roscoe.) 8°. 1846. 7512 Eighth edition, revised by Thomas Ros- coe. (Portrait of Lorenzo.) 8°. Bohn, 1846. 7513 [Another edition.] With a memoir of the Author. (Edited by William Haz- litt.) (Portrait of Lorenzo.) 8°. Bogue, 1846. 7514 Life and pontificate of Leo the tenth. Fourth edition. Revised by Thomas Ros- coe. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1846. 7515 [Another edition.] 2 vol. (Portraits of Leo X. and W. Roscoe.) 8°. Bogue, 1846. 7516 ROSCOE (WILLIAM CALDWELL). Poems and Essays. Edited, with a pre- fatory memoir, by . . Richard Holt Hut- ton. 2 vol. 8°. 1860. 7517 ROSCOMMON (WENTWORTH DILLON, EARL OF). Works. 12°. Glasgow,. Foulis, 1753. (Two copies.) 75 18 AND OTHERS. Poems by the Earls of Roscomon Isic'] and Dorset ; the Dukes of Devon- shire, and Buckinghamshire . . 12°. 1757. 7519 ROSE (RT. HON. GEORGE). Diaries and Correspondence : contain- ing original letters of the most distin- guished statesmen of his day. Edited by Rev. Levesou Vernon Harcourt. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1860. 7520 426 ROSENTHAL (J.). Theater fiir 'die Jugend [Plays for the young]. 8°. 1850. 7521 ROSINI (GIOVANNI). 11 Conte Ugolino della Gherardesca e I Ghibellini di Pisa romanzo storico. Se- conda edizione. 3 toI, (in one). 12°. Milano, 1843. 7522 Book-plate of T. A. TroUope. ROSS (ALEXANDER). Adventures of the first settlers on the Oregon or Columbia river : being a nar- rative of the expedition fitted out by John Jacob Astor, to establish the " Pacific Fur Company," with an account of some In- dian tribes on the coast of the Pacific. S". 1849. 7523 ROSSEL (L. NATHANIEL). Posthumous Papers. Translated from the French. 8°. 1872. 7524 ROSSETTI (GABRIELE). Disquisitions on the antipapal spirit which produced the Keformation ; its secret influence on the literature of Europe in general, and of Italy in particular. Translated from the Italian by Caroline Ward. 2 vol. 8°. 1834. 7525 ROSSETTI (WILLIAM MICHAEL). Swinburne's Poems and Ballads. A criticism. 12". 1866. 7526 ROST (V. CHRISTIAN FRED.). Greek Grammar for the use of schools. Translated from the German. 8°. 1827. 7527 ROSWALL. Pleasant history of Koswall and LilUan . . 4°. Edinburgh, 1663. 7528 Efiprint (Edinburgh, 1822) edited by D. Laing : intended to have formed a part of ATicient Pojpula/r Poeiry, ROTH (MAJHIAS) M.D. Hand-Book of the movement cure ; a description of the positions, movements, and manipulations, used for preventive and curative purposes, according to the system of Ling and the works of Roth- stein, Neumann, and others. With cases , . engravings. 8°. 1856. 7529 ROTTECK (CHARLES VON) LL.D. General History of the World, from the earliest times until 1831. Ti'anslated from the German, and continued to 1840. 4 vol. 8°. 1842. 7530 ROUNDHEAD. A Puritans set forth in his lively colours : or, K. .James his description or a puritan . . The Roundheads character, with the character of an holy Sister . . 4°. 1642. Twenty lookes over all the Round-heads that ever lived in the world . . (Woodcut head on title.) 4°. n.p. 1643. 7531 One vol. ROUSSEAU (JEAN JACQUES). Les Confessions. 4 vol. (in 2). 12°. Paris, 1838. 7532 Anecdotes of the last twelve years of the life of J. J. Rousseau, originally pub- lished in the Journal de Paris, by Citizen Corancez . . Translated from the French. 12°. 1798. 7533 MS. notes. Remarks on the writings and conduct of J. J. Rousseau [ascribed to H. Fuseli, R.A.]. 12°. 1767. 7534 ROUSSELET (LOUIS). India and its native princes. Travels in Central India and in the Presidencies of Bombay and Bengal,'carefully revised and edited by Lieut.-Col. Buckle. Containing 317 illustrations and 6 Maps. F°. 1875. 7535 ROUTLEDGE, publisher. Eoutledge's American handbook and tourist's guide through the United States . . Map . . 12°. 1854. 7536 ROVIGO (ANNE JEAN MARIE RENE SAVARY, DUG DE). Memoires ecrits de sa main, pour servir a I'histoire de I'Empereur Napoleon. 4 vol. (each vol. in two parts). 8°. Paris et Londres, 1828. 7537 Memoirs i\Tittenby himself : illustrative of the history of the Emperor Napoleon. 4 vol. 8°. 1828. 7538 ROWCROFT (CHARLES). Tales of the Colonies ; or, the adven- tures of an emigrant. Third edition. 12°. 1845. " 7539 ROWLAND (DAVID). Manual of the English constitution . . 8°. 1859. 7540 ROWLEY (WILLIAM). A Match at Midnight. A pleasant comce- die . . Written by W. E. [i.e. William ' Rowley]. 4°. 1633. 7541 ROWLY OR ROWLEY (SAMUEL). When you see me, you know mee. Or the famous chronicle historic of King Henry the eight, with the birth and ver- 427 ROWLY OE ROWLEY (SAMUEL) — cont, tuous life of Edward Prince of Wales . . (Portrait of the King on title.) 4°. 1632. 7542 ROWTON (FREDERIC). Debater : a new theory of the art of speaking ; being a series of complete de- bates, outlines of debates, and questions for discussion ; with references . . 12°. 1846. 7543 ROXBURQHE. Eoxburghe Garland. [Edited by Sir A. Boswell.] 12'>. 1817. 7544. " Privately printed for the Roxburgh Club." MS, pencil note. ROYAL GEORGE. Narrative of the loss of the Koyal George .at Spithead, August, 1782; in- cluding Tracey's attempt to raise her in 1783, also Col. Pasley's operations in re- moving the ship, by gunpowder, in 1839- 40-41. Bound in the wood of the \vreck. Fifth edition. 4i in. Portsea, 1842. 7545 Preface signed " J. S." ROYAL SOCIETY. Transactions of the Koyal Society of Literature. Vol. I. II. III. 4°. 1829, 1834, 1839. 7546 Second Series. Vol. I. 8°. 1843. 7547 ROYLE (J. FORBES) M.D. Culture and commerce of Cotton in India, and elsewhere ; with an account of the experiments made by the East India Company up to the present time. Ap- pendix : papers relating to the great Industrial Exhibition. 8°. 1851. 7548 RUDYERD (SIR BENJAMIN). Memoirs. Containing his speeches and poems . . Letters of his gi-eat-great-grand- son Benjamin Eudyerd, captain in the Coldstream Guards at the battle of Fonte- noy. Edited by James Alexander Man- ning. (Portrait.) 8». 1841. 7549 RUFFHEAD (OWEN). Life of Alexander Pope. Compiled from original manuscripts ; with a critical essay on his writings and genius. 8°. 1769. 7550 RUFFINI (J.). Doctor Antonio a tale by the Author of Lorenzo Benoni. 8°. Paris, 1855. 7551 Lorenzo Benoni or Passages in the life of an Italian. Edited by a friend. [Anon.] 8°. Edinburgh, 1853. 7552 RUGGLE (GEORGE). Ignoramus. Comoedia coram Rege Jaoobo primo . . ab academicis Canta- brigiensibus habita. Editio prioribus om- nibus emendatior. 12°. Westmonasterii [Westminster], 1737. 7553 RUMP, Character of the Bump. 4°. 1 660. 7554 [Engraved title.] Exact collection of y' choicest poems & songs, relating to the late times, & continued by the most eminent Witts, from 1639, to 1661. [Title] Hump : or an exact collection . . (Two parts.) (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1662. 7555 Collection of loyal songs written against the Eump Parliament, between 1639 and 1661 . . With an historical introduction . . 2 vols. 12°. 1731. 7556 " The greater part of the songs and epigrams against the Hump parliament are sup- posed to have been written by Alexander Brome." Lowndes. Book-plate of 'William Holgate. RUMSEY (HENRY WYLDBORE). Essays on State Medicine. 18.'56. 8". 7557 RUPERT (PRINCE). Description of Prince Ruperts malig- nant She-Monkey, a great delinquent . . [Anon.] (Woodcut on title.) 4°. n.p. 1643. 7.558 Exact Relation of the several engage- ments and actions of His Majesties Fleet under the command of Prince Rupert. And of all circumstances concerning this Somers Expedition, 1673 . . [Anon.] 4°. 1673. Just Vindication of the principal oficers of His Majesties Ordnance from the . . aspersions laid upon them in a printed libel, entituled an Exact relation of the several engagements . . [Anon.] 4°. 1674. 7559 "By S'. The: Chichley." MiS. on title. One vol. RUSDEN (G. W.). National education. 8°. Melbourne [Australia] 18.53. 7560 RUSH (RICHARD), United States Minister. Residence at the Court of London. 8° 1833. 7561 RUSHWORTH (JOHN). Historical Collections. 8 vol. F°. 1682, 80, 92, 1701, 1700. 75G3 Portraits of Jus. I., Chas I., an eastern Monarch, Rushworth, and ilarl of Straf- ford, and plate. Book-plates of the Earl 428 RUSHWORTH (JOHN)-co)if. of Aylesford and Sir Orlando Bridgman, 1704!. Marked copy. MS. marginal notes by T. Carlyle. MS. notice of Eushworth in v. 1. Historical Collections of private passages of State. Of weighty matters in lav. Of remarkable proceedings in five Parlia- ments. Beginning 1618 and ending 1629. 1682. Second part. Containing the principal matters which happened from the dis- solution of the Parliament, 10 March, 1628 until the summoning of another Parliament, which met at Westminster, April 13. 1640. With an account of the proceedings of that parliament ; and the transactions and affairs from that time, until the meeting of another parliament, November 3 following. 1680. Third part. Containing the principal matters which happened from the meet- ing of the Parliament, November 3, 1640 to the end of 1644. 'Wherein is a par- ticular account of the Civil War. 1692. Ponrth and last part. Containing the principal matters which happened from the beginning of 1645, to the death of King Charles the first 1648. Wherein is a particular account of the Civil War. 1701. Tr.yal of Thomas ]Jarl of Strafford, upon an impeachment of high treason by the Com- mons begun in Westminster-Hall 22 March 1640. Short account of some other matters of fact transacted in both houses of parliament, precedent, concomitant and subsequent to the Tryal : with some special arguments in law relating to a Bill of attainder.— Second edition. 1700. Two title pages, the second—" Vol. VIII. 1721." RUSKIN (JOHN). Works. 9 vol. 8°. London, KestoD, Orpington, 1871-4. 7563 Vol. 1. Sesame and Lilies. Three lectures. I. Of Kings' Treasuries. II. Of Queens' Gardens. III. Of the Mystery of Life. Hevised and enlarged edition. 2. Munera Pulveris. Six essays on the ele- ments of Political Economy. 3. Aratra Pentelici. Six lectures on the ele- ments of Sculpture. 1870. 4. The Eagle's Nest. Ten Lectures on the relation of Natural Science to Art. 1872. 5. Time and Tide, by Weare and Tyne. Twenty-five Letters to a working man of Sunderland on the laws of work. 6. Crown of Wild Olive. Pour lectures on Industry and War. 7. [Wanting.] 8. Val d'Arno, Ten Lectures on the Tuscan Art directly antecedent to (the Florentine year of Victories. 1873. 9. Queen of the Air : being A study of the Greek myths of cloud and storm. New edition. ' Examples of the Architecture of Venice, selected and drawn to measurement from the edifices. Parts I— III. ]?». 1851. 7564 Subscriber's copy. Prints. l<"ors Clavigera. Letters to the work- men and labourers of Great Britain. Vol. 1-5. 8°. London and Keston (1871)-5. 7565 I'rondes Agrcstcs. Readings in ' Modern I'ainters,' chosen at her pleasure, by the RUSKIN (JOHN)— con*. Author's friend, the younger lady of the Thwaite, Coniston. 12". Orpington, 1875. 7566 Giotto and his works in Padua ; being an explanatory notice of the series of woodcuts executed for the Arundel Society after the frescoes in the Arena Chapel. 8°. Printed for the Arundel Society, 1854. 7567 Pp. 1-96. Lectures on Architecture and Painting, delivered at Edinburgh in November, 1853. With illustrations drawn by the Author. 8°. 1854. 7568 Love's Meinie. Lectures on Greek and English Birds. Lecture III. The Dah- chiclis. 8°. Orpington, 1881. 7569 iSee also 7675.] Modern Painters : their superiority in the art of Landscape Painting to all the ancient masters proved by examples of the true, the beautiful, and the intellectual, from the works of modern artists,, especi- ally from those of J. M. W. Turner, R.A. By a Graduate of Oxford. 8°. 1843. 7570 Modern Painters. 5 vol. 8°. 1846, 1856, 1860. 1851, 7571 Vol. 1. Parts I. and II. Of general princi- ples, and of Truth. Fifth edition, revised by the Author. 2. Part III. Sections 1 and 2. Of the imaginative and theoretic facul- ties. By a Graduate of Oxford. 3. Part IV. Of many things. 4. Part V. Of Mountain beauty. 5. Completing the Work, and containing Parts VI. of Leaf beauty.— VII. Of Cloud beauty. VIII. Of Ideas of relation. 1. Of Invention formal. IX. Of Ideas of relation. 2. Of Invention spiritual. Mornings in Florence : being simple studies of Christian art, for English tra- vellers. I. Santa Croce. II. The Golden Gate. III. Before the Soldan. Three parts [bound in one vol.] 12°. Orping- ton, 1875. 7572 Seven Lamps of Architecture. With illustrations, drawn and etched by the Author. 8°. 1849. 7573 Stones of Venice. Volume the first. The Foundations. Volume the second. The Sea-Stories. Volume the third. The Fall. (3 vol.) With illustrations drawn by the Author. 8°. 1851-3. 7574 [Pamphlets.] 8°. London, etc. v.d. 7575 Notes .on the Construction of Sheepfolds. 1861. Second edition. 1875. Pre-Eaphaelitism. By the Author of " Mo- dern Painters." 1851. Belation between Michael Angelo and Tin- toret. Seventh of the course of Lectures on Sculpture delivered at Oxford, 1870-71. '1872. Love's Meinie. Lectures on Greek and English Birds. Given before the Univer- 4g9 RUSKIN (JOHN)— COB*. sity of Oxiord. Lecture I. The Eobin. Lecture II. The Swallow. 1873. [See cOso 7669.] Notes on some of the principal pictures ex- hibited in the Eoyal Academy; 1875. 1875. [Pamphlets.] 8». v.d. 7576 Notes on some of the principal pictures exhibited in the rooms of the Royal Aca- demy : 1855. By the author of " Modern Painters." 1855. Notes on some of the principal pictures exhibited in the rooms of the Hoyal Aca- demy, and the Society of Painters in Wat«r Colours. No. II.— 1S66. 1856. No. III.— 1857. 1857. Notes on some of the principal pictures exhibited in the rooms of the Ro.val Aca- demy, the old and new Societies of Painters in Water Colours, the Society of British Artists, and the French Exhibition. No. IV.— 1858. 1858. No. v.— 1859. 1859. Notes on the Turner Gallery at Marlborough House. 1856. 1857. RUSSELL (JOHN, 1st EARL). Essay on the history of the English government and constitution, from the reign of Henry VII. to the present time. 8°. 1821. 7577 New edition. 8°. 1865. 7578 " Trom the Author." Essays, and Sketches of life and charac- ter. By a Gentleman who has left his lodgings. 8°. 1820. 7579 Preface signed "Joseph SkiUett " J3se«d. Life of William Lord Russell ; with some account of the times in which he lived. Third edition. 2 vol. (in one). (Portrait.) 8°. 1820. 7580 Fourth edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1853. 7581 Life and times of Charles James Fox. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1859-66. 7582 Vol. 1. 2. presentation copies with inscrip- tions. Memorials and Correepondence of Charles James Fox. Edited hy Lord J. Russell. 4 vol. 8°. 1853-7. 7583 Presentation copies. [RUSSELL (JOHN).] Letters from a young Painter abroad to his friends in England. Adorned with copperplates. [Anon.] 8°. 1748. __ " These letters have been ascribed to Sir J. Seynolds.— MS. note by Douce." Halkett and Laing. RUSSELL (RACHEL, LADY). Letters . . to which is prefixed, an in- troduction, vindicating the character of Lord Russell against Sir John Dalrymple, &c. Second edition. 4°. 1773. 7585 Dedication signed "Thomas Sellwood," Book-plate ot Joseph Jekyll. RUSSELL (RACHEL, LADV)— conf. Letters. 2 vol. (Portraits.") 8°. 1853. 7586 RUSSELL (WILLIAM, LORD). Considerations upon a printed sheet en- tituled the Speech of the late Lord Eussel to the Sheriffs : with the paper delivered by him to them, at the place of execution, July 21. 1688. 4». 1683. Vindication of the Lord Russell's speech and innocence, in a dialogue betwixt Whig and Tory . . 4°. 1683. 7587 One vol. RUSSELL (WILLIAM). Extraordinary Men : their boyhood and early life. Portraits and engravings. 8°. 1853. 7588 RUSSELL (W. CLARK). Book of Authors. A collection of criticisms, ana, m6ts, personal descrip- tions, etc. Wholly referring to English men of letters in every age of English literature. 12°. n.d. 7589 RUSSELL (WILLIAM HOWARD). War [in the Crimea] : from the landing at Gallipoli to the death of Lord Eaglan. 8°. 1855. 7590 RUSSIA. Englishwoman in Russia ; impressions of the society and manners of the Russians at home. By a Lady, ten years resident in that country. Illustrations. 8°. 1855. 7591 Pictorial history of the Russian War 1S54-5-6 with maps, plans, and wood en. gravings. [By George Dodd.] 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1856. 7592 Preface signed " G. D." Visit to the seat of War in the North. Translated from the German by Lascelles Wraxall. 12°. 1854. 7593 RUTHER, pseud. The Haymakers' cantos in terza rima. histories. Twelve 12°. 1854. 7594 RUTHERFURD (LORD). [Sale Catalogues.] 8°. Edinburgh, n.d. 7595 Catalogue of the library of Lord Eutherfurd which will be sold by auction in Edin- burgh, 1865. Catalogue of the silver plate, china, furni- ture, busts, bronzes, pictures, wines, which will be sold by auction in Edinburgh, 1865. [No title-page. List ot the prices at the sale of the library [etc.].] 430 RUTT (JOHN TOWILL). Memorials of the late J. T. Eutt. Printed [at Bristol] for private circulation only. 8°. 1845. 7596 RUXTON (GEORGE FREDERICK). Adyentures in Mexico and the Bocky Mountains. 12". 1847. 7597 Life in the Far West [America] . (With memoir.) 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1849. 7598 RYAN (GEORGE). Lives of our Heroes of the Crimea. 12°. 1855. 7599 RYAN (RICHARD). Poetry and Poets : being a collection of the choicest anecdotes relative to the poets of every age and nation. With specimens of their works and sketches of their biography. Written and compiled by R. Eyan. 3 vol. Illustrated by engravings. 12°. 1826. 7600 Vol. 1. imperfect at the beginning. [RYDER (W. J. D.).] Chronicles of Charter-House. By a Carthusian. 8°. 1847. 7601 Preface signed W. J. D. E. RYMER (THOMAS). Tragedies of the last Age considered and examin'd by the practice of the ancients, and by the common sense of all ages . . 8°. 1678. 7602 S. S. (A. M.). Scenes and Sites in Bible lands. 12°. 1866. 7603 S. (E. O.). Hungary and its Revolutions from the earliest period to the nineteenth century. With a memoir of Louis Kossuth. (Por- trait of Kossuth.) 8°. Bohn, 1854. 7604 S. (G.) i.e. SANDYS (GEORGE). Anglorum Speculum, or the Worthies of England, in Church and State. Alpha- betically digested into the several shires and counties therein contained ; wherein are illustrated the lives and characters of the most eminent persons since the con- quest to this present age. Also an account of the commodities and trade of each S. (G.) i.e. SANDYS (GEORGE)— conf. respective county, and the most flourish- ing cities and towns therein. 8°. 1684. 7605 Preface signed— " G. S." MS. Index. "An abridgment of Puller's 'Worthies,' with a continuation." Lowndes. S. (J.). Poems. Newcastle. 12°. 1829. 7606 S. (M.). Memoir of the Life, writings, and me- chanical inventions of Edmund Cartwright, CD., inventor of the Power Loom. 8°. 1843. 7607 S. (S.) i.e. SARAH SHEPPARD. Characteristics of the genius and writ- ings of L. E. L. [Laetitia EUzabeth Lan- don] .. With illustrations from her works, and from personal recollections. 8°. 1841. 7608 SABINE (GENERAL SIR EDWARD). Observations made at the magnetical and meteorological observatory at Toronto in Canada. Printed by order of her Ma- jesty's Government, under the superinten- dence of Lieut.-Colonel E. Sabine. Vol. I. —1840, 1841, 1842. F°. 1845. 7609 SABINE (LORENZO). Notes on Duels and Duelling . - with a preliminary historical essay. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1855. 7610 SACHEVERELL or SACHEVEREL (HENRY) D.D. [Tracts by or relating to.] 8°. London and Oxford, 1708-11. 7611 Presumptuous sins. Sermon, preach'd before the University of Oxford, at St. Mary's, Sept. 14 1707. Communication of Sin : sermon preach'd at the Assizes at Derby, August 15, 1709. Sermon preach'd before the Lord Mayor at the Oathedral-ohm-ch of St. Paul, 5 No- vember, 1709. Letter to My Lord M , with remarks upon D'. Sa U's Sermon. [Anon.] Reflections on D'. Sacheverel's Sermon, preach'd 6 November, 1709. [Anon.] Answer to D'. Sacheverell's Sermon before the Lord Mayor, Nov. 5. 1709. [Anon.] Sacheverell against Sacheverell ; or, the de- tecter of false brethren prov'd unnatural and base to his relations. In a letter to D'. Henry S., from his uncle B. Sacheverell. The Modern Fanatick. With a large and true account of the life of the famous B'. Sa 1. By William Bisset. Part II. Containing what is necessary to clear all the matters of fact in the first part. Answer to a second scandalous book, that Mr. B 1 is now writmg. Part I. [Anon.] Letter to the Eldest Brother of the collegiate church of St. Katherine [Bisset], in an- swer to his scurrilous pamphlet entitul'd the Modern Panatiok. [Anon.] 431 SACHEVERELL or SACHEVEREL (HENRY) D.D.—cont. Vindication of Dr. H. Sacheverell, from the usporsions ctist upon him in a pamphlet, entitled, the Modern Fanatick. Second edition. [Anon.] " By William KinK, LL.D., assisted by Charles Lambe, M.A. and Dr. Sacheve- rell." Madan, Letter to V. Sacheverel. With a postscript, concerning the late vindication of himj in answer to M'. B t's Modern Phanatick, By an inferior clergyman. The Managers Pro and Con : or, an account of what IS said at Child's and Tom's Coffee- houses for and against D'. Sacheverell. Third edition. [Anon.] Animadversions and reflexions upon a Ser- mon preach'd before the House of Com- mons, by Doctor West, on the 30 of Jan- uary. By Bugenius Philalethes. Proceedings of the Lords and Commons in 1628, Against Roger Manwaring doctor in divinity, [the Sacheverell of those days] for two seditious high-flying sermons. [Tracts relating to]. 4°. 1710. 7612 Eeflections on D' Saohevorell's answer to the articles of impeachment, exhibited against him. Pour letters to a friend in North Britain upon the pubhshingthetryal of D'. Sache- verell. " By Sir Eobert Walpole." Madan. SADLER (SIR RALPH). State papers and letters. Edited by Arthur Clifford. 2 vol. Memoir . . with historical notes hy [Sir] Walter Scott. (Portraits, autographs, &c.) 4°. Edin- burgh, 1809. 7613 SAINSBURY (W. NOEL). Original unpublished papers illustrative of the Life of Sir Peter Paul Rubens, as an artist and a diplomatist. Preserved in H. M. State Paper office. With an appen- dix of docamentB respecting the Arunde- lian Collection; the Earl of Somerset's- Collection ; the great Mantuan Collection; the Duke of Buckingham, Gentilesohi, Gerbier, Honthorst, Le Sueur, Myttens, Torrentius, Vanderdoort, etc. Collected and edited by W. N. Sainsbury. 8°. 1859. 7614 [MS. title. Eeport on the Shaftesbury Papers : and Locke's Constitutions for Carolina.] 8°. (1871.) 7615 [No title-page. Supplementary report on the Shaftesbury papers. 1872.] 8°. (Three copies.) 7616 [No title-page. Second supplementary report on the Shaftesbury Papers. 1873.] 8°. (Three copies.) 7617 N°". 7616-17 are Appendixes to 'Annual re- ports of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Eeoords. ST. GERMANS (EDWARD GRAN- VILLE ELIOT, 3D EARL OF). Papers relating to Lord Eliot's [after- wards Earl of St. Germans] Mission to Spain in the spring of 1835. 8°. 1871. 7618 Privately printed. Presentation copy. SAINT-HILAIRE (EMILE MARCO DE). Napoleon au Conseil d'etat. 2 vol. (in one). 12''. Bruxelles, 1843. 7619 ST. JAMES'S. St. Jamfes's : a satirical poem in six epistles to M'. Crockford. 8°. 1827. 7620 Yearly Chronicle for 1761. Or, a col- lection of . . essays, letters, &c. which appeared in the St. James's Chronicle for that year . . Diary of the most remark- able events. [Collected by H. Baldwin.] 8». 1762. 7621 St. James's Magazine, and Heraldic and Historical Kegister. Edited by J. Bernard Burke. Vol. 1. 2. 8°. 1850. 7622 At the end of Vol. 2. with another t.p.— Heraldic Register 18*9-1850. With an annotated obituary. By J. Bernard Burke. 1850. ST. JOHN (BAYLE). Adventures in the Libyan Desert and the Oasis of Jupiter Ammon. 12°. 1849. 7623 Eive views of the Oasis of Siwah ac- companied by a map of the Libyan Desert. Designed by B. St. John, and drawn on stone by Aumont and Housselin. E°. 1850. 7624 Legends of the Christian East. With fUustrations. 12°. 1856. 7625 The Louvre or, biography of a museum. *rwo plans. 8°. 1855. 7625 Montaigne the essayist. A biography. With illustrations. 2 vol. 8°. 1858. 7G27 Two Years' residence in a Levantine family. 8°. 1850. 7628 j Cheap edition. 12°. 1856. 7629 ST. JOHN (CHARLES). Short sketches of the wild sports and natural history of the Highlands . . 12°. 1846. 7630 ST. JOHN (HON. FERDINAND). Eambles in Germany, France, Italy, and Russia, in search of sport. 8°. 1853. 7631 ST. JOHN (MRS. HORACE). Audubon the Naturalist in the New World. His adventures and discoveries. .12°. 1856. 7632 ST. JOHN (JAMES AUGUSTUS). Egypt and Nubia. With illustrations. 8°. 1845. 7633 432 ST. JOHN (JAMES AUGUSTUS) — cont. History of the manners and customs of ancient Greece. 3 vol. 8°. 1842. 7634 Life of Sir Walter Raleigh. 1552-1618. 3 vol. 8°. 1868. 7635 Lives of celebrated Travellers. 3 vol. 12°. 1831-2. 7636 Tol. 1. 'William de Uubruquis. Marco Polo. Ibn Batuta. Leo Africanus. Pietro della Valle. J. B. Tavemier. P. Bernier. Sir John Chardin. E. Kaempfer. H. Maan- drell. 2. J. P. De Tournefort. D'. Thomas Shaw. P. Hasselquist. Lady "Wortley Montague. Richard Pocooke. John Bell. John Led- fai'd. George Porster. James Bruce. 3. oiias Hanway. A. de Ulloa. Munyo Park. P. S. Pallas. C. Niebuhr. Choiseul- GoutBer. J. L. Purckhardt. Volney. E. D. Clarke. P. Le Vaillant. Belzoni. D. v. Denon. Ref;. Heber. Nemesis of Power : causes and forms of Eevolution. 12". 1854. 7637 Philosophy at (he foot of the Cross. 12°. 1854. 7638 ST. JOHN (PERCY BOLINGBROKE). French Revolution in 1848. The three days of February 1848. (Portraits.) 12°. 1848. 7639 ST. LEGER (REV. WILLIAM N,). . . Sermon, preached in the church of St. Mary Tower, Ipswich, on IS"" Novem- ber, 1852, the day of the burial of the Duke of WeUington. 8". Ipswich, n.d. 7640 ST. LEONARDS (EDWARD BUR- TENSHAW SUGDEN, 1st BA- RON). Handy Book on Property Law in a series of letters. Sixth edition. 8°. Edin- burgh & London, 1858. 7641 ST. LEU (HORTENSE FANNY DE BEAUHARNAIS, DUCHESSE DE).; Memoires sur [H. F. De Beauharnais] Madame La Duchesse de S'.-Leu, ex-Reine de HoUande : suivis des Romances eom- posees et miscs en musique par elle — m6me, et ornes d'un portrait et de douze gravures. Oblong. 1852. 7642 ST. LO (CAPTAIN GEORGE). England's Safety : or, a bridle to the French King. Proposing a sure method for encouraging navigation, and raising qualified seamen for the well manning their Majesties fleet . . and a competent pro- vision for all such as shall be wounded in service against the enemy . . In-sight into the advantages may be made by the herring and other fisheries . . Proposal for the maintenance and education of the male children of all such as shall be kill'd ST. LO (CAPTAIN GEORGE)— com^ in service . . Encouragement for com- manders . . in taking any ship . . Se- cond edition. (Frontispiece.) 4°. 1693. 7643 SAINT PAUL'S. Saint Pauls Potion, prescribed by Doc- tor Commons, being very sicke of a dan- gerous fulnesse . . 4°. n.p. 1C41. 7644 At the end. without title-page. Canterburies Potion [Laudl. SAINT PIERRE (JACGUES-HENRI- BERNARDIN DE). Etudes de la Nature. Nouvelle edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1796. 7645 Nouvelle edition. Aveo dix planches. 5 vol. 8°. Paris, an xii-1804. 7646 ST. PIERRE (J. H. B. DE). COT- TIN (SOPHIA RISTAUD). [Half Title.] Paul and Virginia, (trans- lated by Helen Maria Williams) and the Indian Cottage. By B. St. Pierre. Eliza- beth ; or, the Exiles of Siberia. By Ma- dame Cottin. 8°. n.p. n.d. [" Standard Library."] 7647 SAINT-PRIEST (COUNT ALEXIS DE). History of the Fall of the Jesuits in the eighteenth century. Translated from the French. 12°. 1845. 7648 SAINT SIMON (LOUIS DE ROUVROI, DUO DE). Memoires . . sur le sifecle de Louis XIV et la Regence, publics . . par le Marquis de Saint-Simon. Nouvelle edi- tion. 40 vol. (in 20). (Portraits.) 12°. Paris, 1842. 7649 Memoirs . . Abridged from the French. By Bayle St. John. First series. 2 vol. 8°. 1857. 7650 SAINTE-BEUVE (CHARLES AU- GUSTIN). English Portraits. Selected and trans- lated from the " Causeries du Lundi '' with an introductory chapter on Sainte-Beuve's life and writings. \_Qy W. Eraser Rae.] 8°. 1875. 7651 Mary, Queen of Scots— Lord Chesterfield- Franklin— Gibbon— Cowper—EnglishLile- raturo, by H. Taine — Pope as a poet. SAINTS. The Saints our example. By the author of " Letters on Happiness." 12°. 1852. 7652 SALE (LADY). Journal of the disasters in Affghanis- tan, 1841-2. 8°. l'843. 7C53 433 SALISBURY (ROBERT CECIL, 1st EARL OF), Secret Correspondence of Sir Eobert Cecil with James VI. King of Scotland. Now first published. [Edited by Sir David Dalrymple, Lord Hailes.] 8° Edinburgh, 1766. 7654 John Pinkerton's book-plate. SALLUSTIUS CRISPUS (CAIUS), Opera omnia excusa ad editionem Cortii cum editionibus Havercampi et Gabrielis Antonii oollatam [curS, Henr. Homer]. 8°. ^ 1789. 7655 " Printed on Large Paper in royal 8vo., no small papers were printed." Lowndes. Catillna et Jugurtha. An edition for schools. By Charles Merivale. 8°. Cam- bridge, 1852. 7656 Works . . Translated . . with . . notes ; by John Mair. New edition. 12». Edin- burgh, 1793. 7657 History of the Conspiracy of Catiline and of the Jugurthine War. Translated by Edward Peacock. 8". 1845. 7658 AND OTHERS. Sallust, Elorus and Velleius Paterculus. Literally translated, with copious notes and a general index. By Rev. John Selby Watson. 8°. Bohn, 1852. 7659 SALMASIUS (CLAUDIUS). Ad Johannem Miltouum responsio, opus posthumum. 12°. 1660. 7660 SALMON (NATHANIEL). Critical review of the State Trials . . [1388-1786]. F°. 1735. 7661 SALOMONS (SIR DAVID). Account of the recent persecution of the Jews at Damascus : with reflections thereon; and an appendix . . 8°. 1840. 7662 SALVERTE (EUSEBE). Occult sciences. The philosophy of magic, prodigies and apparent miracles. Erom the Erench. With notes . . by An- thony Todd Thomson, M.D. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 7663 SAMA VEDA. Translation of the Sanhita of the Sama Veda. By Rev. J. Stevenson, D.D. 8°. 1842. 7664 SAMPSON (M. B.). Slavery in the "United States. A letter to Daniel Webster. 8°. 1845. 7665 o 16505. SAND (^GEORGE) pseud. i.e. MADAME AMANTINE LUCILE AURORE DUDEVANT. Works, (edited) by Matilda M. Hays. 6 vol. 12°. 1847. 7666 Vol. 1. The last Aldini. Simon. Translated by Matilda M. Hays. 2. Andr^. Mosaic Masters ; and Fanohette. Tr. by Bliaa A. Ashurst. The Oreo: a tradition of the Austrian rule in Veniee. 3. Mauprat. Tr. by M. M. Hays. 4. Companion of the Tour of France. Tr. by M. M. Hays. 6. Miller ol Angibault. Tr. by Eev. Edmund R. Larken. 6. letters of a Traveller. Tr. by Eliza A. Ashurst. Devil's Pool. Translated by Erancis Geo. Shaw. 12°. 1848. 7667 Letter to M. Regnier, of the Theatre Eran9ais, by G. S., upon her adaptation to the Erench Stage of Shakespeare's "As you like it." Translated by Theodosia Lady Monson. 8°. 1856. 7668 Miller of Angibault. 12°. 1853. 7668 Mosaic Workers ; a tale. The Oreo : a tradition. Translated from the Erench by E. A. A[shurst]. 12°. 1844. 7670 Spiridion. Translated from the Erench. 12°. 1842. 7671 SANDBY (REV. GEORGE) JUN. Mesmerism and its opponents : with a narrative of cases. 12°. 1844. 7672 Second edition. Considerably enlarged, with introductory chapter. 12°. 1848. 7673 SANDERSON (A. R.) M.D. Thoughts and reflections on Sickness and affliction. 12°. 1843. 7674 SANDERSON (WILLIAM). History of the lives and reigns of Mary Queen of Scotland, and of James the sixth. King of Scotland ; and King of Great Britain . . Reconciling several opinions, in testimony of her, and confut- ing others, in vindication of him, against two scandalous authors ; 1. The Court and character of King James. 2. The History of Great Britain . . (Portraits.) F°. 1656. 7675 Separate title page, with date 1665, to the Eeign and death of Eing James. Compleat history of the life and raigne of King Charles from his cradle to his grave. Collected and written by W. S. (Portraits of Sanderson and the King.) E°. 1668. 7676 SANDFORD (SIR DANIEL KEYT). On the rise and progress of Literature 12°. Glasgow, etc. 1847. 7677 434 SANDFORD (REV. JOHN). Parochialia : or, Church, School, and Parish. The Church system, and services, practically considered. 8°. 1845. 7678 SANDYS (CHARLES), Consuetudines Kanciae. History of Gavelkind and other remarkable customs in the County of Kent. 8°. 1851. 7679 [SANDYS (SIR EDWIN).], Europae Speculum. Or, a view or survey of the state of religion in the -westerne parts of the world. Wherein the Romane religion, and the pregnant policies of the Churdh of Rome to support the same, are notably displayed . . [Anon.] 4°. Hagae- Comitis [the Hague]. 1629. 7680 [Another edition.] , 4°. 1637. ,7681 SANDYS (WILLIAM). Christmastide its history, festivities, and carols. 8°. u.d. 7682 SANFORD (JOHN LANGTON). Studies and , illustrations of the Great Rebellion. 8°. 1858. 7683 With M^ Forster's MS. memorandums. SANSKRIT. Specimens of old Indian poetry. Trans- lated from the origihal Sansklit into Eng- lish verse. By Ralph T. H. Griffith. 8°. 1852. 7684 SANTAGNELLO (— ). Dictionary of the peculiarities of the Italian language . . forming a supple- ment to ail other Italian dictionaries. 8°. 1820. 7685 SANTVOORD (GEORGE VAN). Life of Algernon Sidney ; with sketches of some of his contemporaries and extracts from his correspondence and political writings. 8°. New York, 1851. 768B Sketches of the lives and judicial ser- vices of the Chief-Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States. (Portrait of Marshall.) 8°. New York, 1854. 7687 Jay — Uutledge — Ellsworth — Marshall — ' Taney. SARCEY (FRANCISQUE). Paris during the Siege. Translated from the Erench. Map. 8°. 1871. 7688 SARRAZIN (GENERAL). History of the War in Spain and Por- tugal, from 1807 to 1814. Illustrated with a map of Spain and Portugal . . 8°. 1815. 7689 SATIRES. Remarkable Satires. Causidicade, Tri- uravirade, Porcupinade, Processionade, 'Piscopade, Scandalizade,.and Pasquinade, with notes variorum. 8°. 1760. 7690 Withoufc the " Scandalizade." [Satirical Tracts.] 8°. etc. v.d. 7691 Now or never's the time to tell truth : being .Chaucer's ghost reviv'd, from a bad reign to a good one. "With a poem, on a Presbyterian unmask'd. 1710. [No title-page. Mars stript of his armour : or, the army display'd in all its true colours. Containing the characters ol an army in general [etc.] . By a lover of the mathematicks. 1709.] New voyage to the Island of Fools, repre- senting the policy, government, and pre- sent state of the Stultitians. By a noble Venetian. Translated from the Italian. 1718. Journey to London, in 1698. Alter the in- genuous method of that made by Dr. Martin Lyster to Paris, in the same year, &c. Written originally in French, by Monsieur Sortaiere and newly translated into English. Second edition. [By Wil- liam King, LL.D.] 1699. New journey to Paris : together with some secret transactions between the Fr h K g, and an Eng Gentleman. By the Sieur du Baudrier. Translated from the French. 1711. Seasonable reply to a scurrilous pamphlet called an Essay on political lying. By a Citizen of Loudon. 1757. A slap at the barbers. By Barbarossa. London : printed by A. Chabot, Hoxton, for A. Eioss, hair cutter and perruquier, No. 39, Cornhill. n.d. Congratulatory epistle from Barbarossa, of Ball-Alley, Lombard Street, Loudon, un- der the Pole, to Captain Boss of the North Pole. s. sh. n.d. Macalpine, prize hair outter'and perruquier. No. 4i7, Threadneedle Street. [London.], n.d. [Hand-bill or advertisement.] Macalpine & Co. Hair-Cutters and peru- quiers to tbeir Majesties George IV.— Charles X [etc.]. 48, Threadneedle Street. [London] n.d. [Hand-bill.] Plant of health. Taylor's medallion planta- tion Water Cresses, are now in high per- fection on sale at his estabUshment 14), Bishopsgate Street. [London] n.d. [Hand-bill]. Ofiicial account. Bartholomew Fair in- surrection; and the pie-bald poney plot. By the author of The noble lord's bite. Printed by and for William Hone, 1817. Two very singular addresses to the People of England. 1757. [The second is — The loyal Irish address of, the kingdom of Ireland, its ownselti to the Duke of, &o.] The Shaver's new sermon for the fast day BespectfuUy inscribed to the clergy of the Church of England, by Pasquin Shave- block, Esq. shaver extraordinary. 1795. SATURDAY. Saturday Review of politics, literature, science, and art. 40 vol. F°. 1856-75. 7692 SAUERWEIN (G.). Pocket dictionary of the English and Turkish languages. 12°. 1855. 7693 435 [SAUNDERS (FREDERICK).] Salad for the Solitary. By an Epi- cure. 8°. 1853. 7694 " A word preliminary " is signed " F.S." Salad for the Social : By the author of " Salad for the Solitary." 8°. 1856. 7695 SAUNDERS (JOHN). Cabinet pictures of English life. Chau- cer. (Portrait.) 12°.- 1845. 7696 SAVAGE (MARMION W.). Bachelor of the Albany. By the author of " The Falcon family." 8°. 1848. 7697 Clover Cottage . . A novelette. By the author of " The Falcon Family " . . 12°. 1856. 7698 Presentation copy. My Uncle the Curate. A novel. By the author of " The Bachelor of the Al- bany." . . 3 vol. 8°. ] 849. 7699 Reuben Medlicott ; or, the coming man. 3 vol. 8°. 1852. 7700 Woman of Business ; or, the lady and the lawyer. A novel. 3 vol. 8". 1870. 7701 N"'. 7700-1 .dedicated to M'. Forster. SAVAGE (RICHARD). Life of M'. E. Savage. Who was con- demn'd with M"^. James Gregory . . for the murder of M'. James Sinclair, at Robinson's coffee-house at Charing-Cross . . Second edition. [Anon.] 8°. 1728. 7702 SAVAGE (WILLIAM). Dictionary of the art of printing. 8°. 1841. 7703 SAVIGNY (J. B. HENRY) and COR- REARD (ALEXANDER). Narrative of a voyage to Senegal in 1816 ; undertaken by order of the French Government, comprising an account of the shipwreck of the Medusa, the sufferings of the crew, and the various occurrences on board the raft, in the desert of Zaara, at St. Louis, and at the camp of Daccard . . Observations respecting the agriculture of the Western Coast of Africa, from Cape Blanco to the mouth of the Gambia. Illustrated with the notes of M. Bredif, and embellished with a plan of the raft, and a portrait of King Zaide. 8". 1818. 7704 SAXON (ISABELLE). Five years within the Golden Gate. [Western America, etc.] 8°. 1868. "■ 7705 SAY (HORACE). ^fitudes sur I'administration de la ville de Paris et du d^partement de la Seine. 8». Paris, 1846. 7706 SCARGILL (REV. WILLIAM PITT). English Sketch-Book. 12°. 1850. 7707 SCHARF (GEORGE). Recollections of the scenic efieots of Coveut Garden theatre during the season 1838-9 . . [Macready's management] . By G. S. Oblong, n.d. 7708 "Dedication " signed " G. Scharf, jun." SCHEFER (LEOPOLD). Artist's married life ; being that of Albert Diirer. Translated from the German, by M". J. R. Stodart. (Portrait of Durer,.) 12°. 1848. 7709 SCHETKY (JOHN CHRISTIAN) and MANNERS (LORD JOHN JAMES ROBERT). Sketches and Notes of a cruise in Scotch waters on board the Duke of Rutland's yacht Resolution, in the summer of 1848. Lithographedby J. Needham. F°. 1850. 7710 SCHILLER (JOHANN CHRISTOPH FRIEDRICH VON). Works. Historical. History of the Thirty Years War, complete. History of the Revolt of the Netherlands to the con- federacy of the Gueux. Translated from the German by Rev. A. J. W. Morrison. (Portrait.) 8». Bohn, 1846. 7711 Works. Historical and Dramatic. History of the revolt of the Netherlands, continued— -Trials of Counts Egmont and Horn. Wallenstein and Wilhelm Tell, Historical dramas. Translated from the German (by Lieut. E. B. Eastwick, Rev. A. J. \Y. Morrison, Janus Churchill, S. T. Coleridge, G. F. Richardson, and [Sir] Theodore Martin. (Portrait of Wallen- stein.) 8°. Bohn, 1846. 7712 Vol. 2. of N°. 7711. Works. Historical dramas, etc. Don Carlos. Mary Stuart. Maid of Orleans. Bride of Messina. Translated from the German (by R. D. Boylan, Joseph Mellish, Anna Swanwick, and A. Lodge). 8°. Bohn, 1847. 7713 Works. Early dramas and romances. The Robbers, Fiesco, Love and Intrigue, Demetrius, the Ghost-Seer, and the Sport of Destiny. Translated from the German, chiefly by Henry G. Bohn. 8°. Bohn, 1849. 7714 Presentation copy from H. G. Bohn. £ E 2 436 SCHILLER (JOHANN CHRISTOPH FRIEDRICH VON)— co»«. Poems and Ballads. Translated by Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton [ aft. Lord Lytton] . With a brief sketch of Schiller's Life. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1844. 7715 Second edition. London, 1852. Edinburgh and 7716 The Poems complete : including all his early suppressed pieces. Attempted in English by Edgar Alfred Bowring. 12°. 1851. 7717 Minor poems of the second and third periods, with a few of those of earlier date translated for the most part into the same metres with the original by John Herman Merivale. 12°. 1844. 7718 Bride of Messina : a tragedy, with choruses. To which is prefixed an essay on the tragical chorus. Translated by Adam Lodge. Third edition. With other poems. 8°. 1863. 7719 Don Carlos, Infante of Spain ; a drama- tic poem . . translated from the German. By Charles Herbert Cottrell. Second edition. 8°. 1844. 7720 Ghost-Seer ! Prom the German. 2 vol. 12°. 1849. 7721 " Introduction " signed " 0. C." Maid of Orleans, a romantic tragedy. Translated . . (by Henry Thompson). 12°. n.d. (Two copies.) 7732 William Tell . . [Translated by Henry Thompson]. 12". 1845. 7723 Maid of Orleans, and other Poems. Translated . . by E. S. and P. J. Turner. 12°. 1842. 7724 The " otlier poems " are by Schiller, Goethe, Uhland, and Stolberg. Mary Stuart, a Tragedy, from the German. By William Peter. New edi- tion. 12". Philadelphia, 1840. 7725 William Tell, and other poems, from the German of Schiller. By William Peter. New edition. 12°. Philadelphia, 1840. 7726 Correspondence of Schiller with KOrner Comprising sketches and anecdotes of Goethe, the Sohlegels, Wieland, and other contemporaries. With biographical sketches and notes, by Leonard Simpson. 3 vol. (Portrait of Schiller.) 8°. 1849. 7727 SCHIMMER (KARL AUGUST). Sieges of Vienna by the Turks. From the German of K. A. Schimmer, and other sources. [Translated by the Earl of Ellesmere.] 12°. 1847. 7728 SCHINDLER (A). Life of Beethoven, including his cor- respondence with his friends, numerous characteristic traits, and remarks on his Musical Works. Edited by Ignace Mos- cheles. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1841. 7729 Translation of A. Sohindler's Biography, with explanatory notes, characteristics, and letters and Appendix. SCHLEGEL (AUGUST WILHELM VON). Course of lectures on Dramatic art and literature. Translated from the original German by John Black. Second edition. 2 vol. 12°. 1840. 7730 "John Porster Esq. with B. H. Home's compts." Introduction by K. H. H. [Another edition.] Kevised, according to the last German edition, by Eev. A. J. W. Morrison. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1846. 7731 Cours de litt^rature dramatique. Traduit de I'Allemand. 3 vol. (in two). 8°. Paris et GenSve, 1814. 7732 Essais litteraires et historiques. 8°. Bohn, 1842. 7733 SCHLEGEL (CARL WILHELM FRIEDRICH VON). Esthetic and miscellaneous works ; comprising letters on Christian art, an essay on Gothic architecture, remarks on the Komance-poetry of the Middle ages and on Shakspere, on the limits of the beautiful, on the language and wisdom of the Indians. Translated . . by E. J. Millington. 8°. Bohn, 1849. 7734 Lectures on the history of Literature, ancient and modern. From the German. [By J. G. Lockhart.] New edition. 12°. Edinburgh and London, 1841. 7735 New edition. 12°. Edinburgh and London, 1846. 7736 Course of lectures on Modern History ; to which are added, historical essays on the beginning of our history, and on Caesar and Alexander. Translated by Lyndsey Purcell and R. H. Whitelock. 8°. Bohn, 1849. 7737 Philosophy of History . . Translated from the German, with a memoir of the author, by James Baron Robertson. Second edition, revised. (Portrait.) 8°. Bohn, 1846. 7738 Philosophy of Life, and Philosophy of Language . . Translated from the German by Rev. A. J. W. Morrison. 8°. Bohn, 1847. 7739 SCHLEIERMACHER (FRIEDRICH ERNST DANIEL). Introductions to the Dialogues of Plato. Translated from the German by William Dobson. 8°. Cambridge, 1836. 7740 437 SCHLESIER ( — ), Life of William Von Humboldt. Trans- lated and abridged from the German, by- Juliette Bauer. (Portrait.) 8°. 1852. 7741 SCHLESINGER (MAX). Wanderungen durch London. 2 vol. (in one). 8°. Berlin, 1852. 7742 Presentation copy. Saunterings in and about London. English edition by Otto Wenckstern. 8°. 18.53. 7743 Wta in Hungary, 1848-9. Translated by John Edward Taylor. Edited, -with notes and an introduction, by Francis Pulszky. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 7744 SCHLIEMANN (DR. HENRY). Troy and its remains ; a narrative of researches and discoveries made on the site of Dium, and in the Trojan plain. Translated with the author's sanction. Edited by Philip Smith. Map, plans, views, and cuts . . 8°. 1875. 7745 SCHLOSSER (FRIEDRICH CHRIS- TOPH). History of the eighteenth century and of the nineteenth till the overthrow of the Erenoh Empire. With particular reference to mental cultivation and progress. Trans- lated, with a preface and notes, by D. Davison. 8 vol. 8°. 1843-52. 7746 MS. notes by Thomas Carlyle. SCHMID (HERMAN) and STIELER (KARL). Bavarian Highlands and the Salz- kammergut profusely illustrated by G. Gloss . . and others. With an account of the habits and manners of the hunters, poachers, and peasantiy of these districts by H. Schmid andK. Stieler. (Appendix. Geognostic formation of the Bavarian Alps. By D'. Karl Hanshofer). F°. 1874. 7747 SCHMITZ (DR. LEONHARD). History of Greece, from the earliest times to the destruction of Corinth, B.C. 146 ; mainly based upon that of Connop Thirlwall. 8°. 1851. 7748 Manual of Ancient history, from the remotest times to the overthrow of the Western Empire, A.D . 476. With copious chronological tables. 8°. Edinburgh, 1855. 7749 SCHNEIDER (FREDERICK). Danish Grammar . . Short historical description of Copenhagen, and various extracts from Danish Authors. 8°. Copen- hagen, n.d. 7750 SCHCELCHER (VICTOR). Le Gouvernement du deux Decembre, pour faire suite a I'histoire des crimes du deux Decembre. 8". 1853. 7751 SCHOOLMASTER. Papers for the Schoolmaster. Vol. I 1851. Vol. IL— 1852. 8°. n.d. 7752 A schoolmaster's difficulties, abroad and at home. 12". 1853. 7753 SCHOOLS. Extracts from thereports of her Majesty's Inspectors of Schools . . 8°. 1852. 7754 SCHOPENHAUER (JOHANNA HEN- RIETTA TROSIENER, AriEu- WAKDS MADAME). Youthful life, and pictures of travel : being the Autobiography of Madame Schopenhauer. Translated from the German. 2 vol. 12°. 1847. 7755 Preface signed " E. 'W." SCHOUW (JOACHIM FREDERIC). The Earth, plants, and man. Popular pictures of nature. By J. F. Sehouw. And sketches from the mineral kingdom. By Francis Von Kobell. Translated and edited by Arthur Henfrey. 8". Bohn, 1852. 7756 SCHOWART (ANTHONY WILLIAM). Observations historical and genealogical : in which the originals of the Emperor, Kings, Electors, and other the sovereign princes of Europe, with their births, matches, more remarkable actions and deaths . are drawn down to 1690. Written in Latin : and now made English ; wifh enlargements relating to England. 12°. 1693. 77.57 "Translated from the Latin by C. B." Lowndes. SCHREBER (MORITZ) M.D. Illustrated medical in-door Gymnastics or a system of medico-hygienic exercises requiring no mechanical or other aid . . Translated from the third German edition by Henry Skelton. With forty-five wood- cuts. 8°. London and Edinburgh, 1856. 7758 SCHREVELIUS (CORNELIUS). Lexicon Manuale Graeco-Latinum et Latino-Grsecum : studio atque opera Josephi Hill, Johannis Entick, Gulielmi Bowyer, nee non Boberti Watts . . AdjectEe sunt sententise Graeco-Latinae . . Tractatus duo ; alter de resolutione verborum, de articulis alter . . Editio XIX . , accurante Carolo Tayler. 8°. 1817. 7759 438 SCHROEDER (FRANCIS). Shores of the Mediterranean with sketches of travel. Engravings. 2 vol. 8°.' 1846. • 7760 SCHUBERT (DR. FRIEDRICH WIL- HELM). Handhuch der AUgemeinen Staats- kunde von Europa. 5 vol. 8°. Konigs- berg, 1835-42. 7761 SCIENCE AND ART. Science and Art Department of the Committee of Council on Education. Catalogue of the special exhibition of Portrait Miniatures on loan at the South Kensington Museum, June 1865. 8°. L.P. 1865. 7762 At the end " Notices of Artists " [by Samuol Etedgrave who had special charge of the Exhibition]. . . Catalogue of the first special exhibi- tion of National Portraits ending -with the reign of James the Second, on loan to the South Kensington Museum; April ]866. 8°. L.P. n.d. 7763 . . Catalogue of the second special Exhibi- tion of National Portraits commencing ■with the reign of William and Mary and ending with 1800 . . 1867. 8°. L.P. n.d. 7764 . . Catalogue of the third and conclud- ing Exhibition of National Portraits com- mencing with the fortieth year of the reign of George the third and ending with 1867 . . 1868. 8°., L.P. n.d. 7765 Nos. 7768-6, prepared hy E. H. Soden Smith, E. P. Sketomey, Eev. J. Beck and Dr. Althaus. " Introductory notices " by Samuel Redarave who had special charge of the Bxhibitions. . . Numerical list . . of the books, paintings, drawings, engravings, and objects of art, bequeathed to the Science and Art Department . . by Rev. Alexander Dyce. E°. 1869. 7766 . . Dyce Collection. Catalogue of the paintings,miniatures, drawings, engravings, rings, and miscellaneous objects bequeathed byEev. Alexander Dyce. 8°. 1874. 7767 Tlie compilers were Samuel Uedfi-rave George "WiUiam Held, ami Charles C. Black. . . Dyce Collection. Catalogue of the printed books and manuscripts bequeathed by Eev. Alexander Dyce. [Vol. I.] Manu- scripts. Printed books, A to K. [Vol. 2.] Printed books, L to Z. 8°. 1875. 7768 Prepared by John Kesson. Prefixed— "Alex- ander Dyce. A Biographical Sketch." By John Forster. List oE the Bequests and Donations to the Department of Science and Art. South Kensington Museum ; completed, to 31 December 1870. F". 1871. *7768 SCOBELL (HENRY). Collection of Acts and Ordinances of general use, made in the Parliament begun and held at Westminster 3 November, 1640 and since, unto the adjournment of the Parliament begun and holden 17 Sep- tember, 1656. and formerly published . . Being a continuation of that work from the end of M'. Pulton's Collection. In two parts. With Tables . . F». 1658. (Two copies.) ' 7769 Title to the second part dated 1657. [Supplement to and Continuation of Scobell's Collection. With his MS. notes and corrections, and with MS. additions] . E»., etc. 1640-1660. 7770 Book-plate of Nicholas Hardinge, Clerk of the House of Commons. From the Ubrary of Joseph Parkea. This volume consists of about 146 printed and 16 MS. documents, comprising acts, articles of peace, commissions, declarations, in- structions, inventories (St. Paul's), notices, orders, ordinances, proceedings, proclama- tions, resoluti parts. Taylor (John) the Water-pt.et. Works net ineludeil hi the folio Volunn' ot 1630. First— (lltli CollccUon. 5 parts. Watson (Thomas). The 'EKarojuiratfia or Passionate Cent urie of Love. Ileprinted fium the oriiiiniil edition ot (emn) 1681. SPENSER (SOCIETY)— co«<. Wither (George). Miscellaneous Works. First — sixth collection. parts. Juvenilia. Poems eontaiuod in the collections of his Juvenilia which ap- peared in 1020 and 1033. 3 parts. (Portrait.) Britain's Remembrancer (cloljcxxviii.) 2 parts. Exercises upon the first psalrae. Both in prose and verse. Ilalehiiah or, Britans Second Reraem- braucer. (1011.) 2 parts. Hyinues and Songs of the Church. Paralellogrammaton. Preparation to the Psalter. 010. Psalms of David translated into lyrick- verse. 2 parts. Respublica Anglicana or the historic of the Parliament in their late Proceed- ings, wherein the Parliament and Array arc vindicated from the ealiim- nies east upon them in thai libellous Jlistoni of Indepeiidenvy. The au- tlior G : W : [George Witlier]. 1050. The great Assises holden in Parnassus liy Apollo and Wis assessours. [Anon, Ascribed to George Wither.] 1015. Vaticinium votivum : or Palaeraon's prophetick prayer. Lately presented privately to his now Majestic in a Latin poem ; and here published in Eng- lish. Pai-aphrase on Panhis Greb- uerus's propheeie. Elegies on Cliarls the first. Loi'd Capel. Lord Francis Villiers. [Ascribed to G. Witlier.] Traiccti. Anno Caroli Martyris primo. Zepheria, Zepheria reprinted from the original edition of ISOt. Introduction signed " T. C." SPICER (HENRY). Acted Dramas. 8". 1875. 8314 Honesty— Lords of Ellingham— Jeffreys ; or the AVife's Vengeance— Witch- Wife : a tale of Malkin Tower. Dedicated to" J. F." Nijiht- Voices, and other poems ; and the Steward, a drama . . 8". 184-1. 8315 Sights and Sounds : the mj-stery of the day : comprising an entire hi.storj- of tlie American " Spirit " manifestations. 8°. IS.'iS. 8316 F'acts and fantasies : a sequel to Sights and Sounds . . 8°. 1853. 8317 SPIERS (A.). School Dictionary of the Frenclt and English Languages (French-English and English-French) abridged from the au- thor's general French and English dic- tionary . . 8". 1851. 8318 Study of tlie English prose writers, sacred and profane ; or, selections from tlic prose writers of Great Britain and America, from the fourlecnth century to the rcigu of Queen Anne . . 8''. 1852. S3iy SPILSBURY (WILLIAM HOLDEN). Lincoln's Inn its ancient and modern buildings with an account of the library. 12°. 1850. 8320 4C7 SPINOZA (BENEDICT, originally BARUCH DE). Treatise partly theological, and partly political . . to prove that tlie liberty of philosophizing (that is making use of natural reason) may be allowed without any prejudice to piety, or to the peace of any cominouwealth . . Translated from the Latin. K°. 1737. 8321 Eook-platc of Philip, Earl Stanhopf. SPIRA (FRANCIS). Kelation of the fearful estate of Francis Spira, after he turfied apostate from the Protestant church to Popery. Miser.iblc lives and woful deaths, of M'. John Child, who desperately hang'd himself in Brick- Lane, in .Spittle-Fields, London, 1C8-1. And, ilr. Geo. Edwards, late of Stratford in I'.ssex, who wilfully shot himself to death, .Ian. 4. 1704. K. .James the first's prophetical curse upon any of his race that .should apostatise to the Church of Kome. With several examples of God's Judgments on other apostates. With Origen's Lamentation. [Anon.] (Frontis- piece.) 12". 1718. 8322 [Reprint. El. by G. T.] 12". 1793. 8323 At Hie end — A Display of God's mercies. Signed ■' E.T." and dated 1793. The Second Spira : being a fearful ex- ample of an jVtheist, who had apostatized from the Christian religion, and dyed in despair at Westminster, December 8. 1692. . . Also a letter from an Atheist of his acquaintance, with his answer to it . . By J. S. a minister of the Church of Eng- land . . Second edition. 12°. John Dunton, 1G93. 8324 Heber's cop.v. Dr. Bliss's copy & MS. note in which he speaks oC tlic authorship. Trobably a forgery. SPRENGER (A.) M.D. Catalogue of the Arabic, Persian aud Hindu'sta'ny manuscripts, of the Libraries of the King of Oudh . . Vol. 1. Persian and Hindu'sta'ny poetry. 8°. Calcutta 1854. 8325 SPRIGGE (JOSHUA). Anglia rediviva ; Englands recovery : being the History of the . . army under the immediate conduct of S'. Thomas Fairfax . . (Portrait, &c.) F°. 1C47. 832C " Woodcut of the Fairfax arms " not in this copy. SQUIER (E. G.). American archaeological researches, No. I. The Serpent symbol, .nnd the worship of the reciprocal principles of nature in America. 8". Xew York, 1851. 8327 SQUIER— con/. Nicaragua : its people, scenery, monu- ments, and the proposed luleroceanic Canal. JIaps and illustrations. 2 yol- 8°. 1852. 8328 SRI RAHULA. Sella Lihini Sandese. The Sella's Mes- sage by Sri Kahula of Totagamua. The text and translation, with notes and glossarj- for the use of students edited and trans- lated by William Charles Macready [the younger]. 8°. Colombo, 18G5. 8329 Presentation cop.v. STAGE (MAC HELL). Cromwelliana. A chi'ouological detail of events in which Oliver Cromwell was engaged; from 1C42 to his death 1C5S ; with a continuation of other transactions, to the Restoration. F°. L.P. West- minster, 1810. 8330 lUusti-atod with portraits, views, &c. Peni il notes by T. Carlyle. STAEL-HOLSTEIN (ANNE LOUISE GERMAINE NECKER, BARONNE DE). De la Litterature consideree dans ses rapports aveo les institutions sociales. Avec un precis de la vie et des ecrits de I'Autenr. 2 vol. 8°. Paris, 1812. 8331 Scconde edition. 2 vol. 8". 1813. 8332 Memoires sur la vie privee de mon pere [Neckcr]. Suivis des melanges de M. Neckcr. 8". Paris, 1818. 8333 Corinne ; or, Italy. Translated . . by Isabel Hill; with metrical versions of the odes by L. E. Landon; and a memoir of the authores.s. 12°. IH.JO. 8334 Delphine : a novel. Translated from the French. 3 vol. (in 4). 12°. 1814. 8335 Influence of Literature upon Society. Translated . . Second edition Memoir of the Life and Writings of the Author. 2 vol. 8°. 1812. 833C Influence of the Passions upon the happiness of individuals aud of nations. Translated from the French. 8". 1813. 8337 Letters on the writings and character of J. .T. Koasseau. Translated from the French. 8°. 1814. 8338 STAFFORD (RICHARD). Doctrine of the Cross, or the duty of Christian Suffering . . Delivered in a Sermon . 12°. 1697. (J G 2 468 STAFFORD (RICHARD)— co»f. Nature of God's Kingdom and dominion over men, clearly laid open and explained . . In a discourse . . 12°. 1697. Sermon preached on I Chron. 29. 18 . . 12°. 1697. [No title-page. Discourse on the . . future Judgment of God . . ] 12°. [No title-page. Discourse of the misery of Hell and happiness of Heaven . .] 12°. End. 1697. [No title-page. Discourse of God's hearing prayer . .] 12°. £nd, 1697. 8339 One vol. STANDISH ( ), AND NOBLE ( )• Practical hints on planting ornamental Trees, with particular reference to Coni- ferae . . descriptions of the principal other kinds of hardy evergreen trees and shrubs . . instructions on the cultivation of American plants, and on the rhododen- drons . . 12°. 1852. 8340 STAN FIELD (JAMES FIELD). Essay on the study and composition of Biography. 8°. Sunderland, 1813. 8341 STANFORD (EDWARD) publisher. Stanford's new Guide to Paris, and the Paris Exhibition. With two maps, and a view of the Exhibition and Champs EI3'- sees. [Preface signed G. L. B.] 12°. 1855. 8342 STANFORD (JOHN FREDERICK). Rambles and researches in Thuriugian Saxony. 8°. 1842. 8343 STANHOPE (LADY HESTER LUCY). Memoirs, as related by herself in con- versations with her physician ; compris- ing her opinions and anecdotes of some of the most remarkable persons of her time. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 8344 Travels ; forming the completion of her Memoirs. Narrated Ijv her Physician. 3 vol. 8°. 1846. ' 8345 STANHOPE (PHILIP HENRY, 5™ EARL). Addresses delivered at Manchester, Leeds, and Birmingham. (On the progress of Literature and Science. On the studv of History. On the antiquities and Avorks of art at Rome.) 12". 1856. 8346 " The Forty-Five : " by Lord Mahon [aftenv. Earl Stanhope] . Being the narra- tive of the insurrection of 1745, extracted from Lord Mahon's History of England STANHOPE (PHILIP HENRY, 5th EARL)— co«(. . . Letters of Prince Charles Stuart from the Stuart papers . . 12°. 1851. (Two copies.) 8347 Historical Essays. By Lord Mahon Contributed to the Quarterly Review. 8°. 1849. 8348 Joan of Arc — Mary, Queen oC Scots — Letters of Mary, Queen of Scots— Marquis of Montrose— Last Tears ol Frederick the Second— Letters between Mr. Pitt and the Duke of Rutland— French Ecvolution— Latin Inscriptions. History of England comprising the reign of Queen Anne until the Peace of Utrecht 1701-1713. 2 vol. Vol. I. 1700- 1707. Vol. II. 1707-1713. Fourth edi- tion. (Portrait.) 8°. 1872. 8349 History of England from the peace of Utrecht to the peace of Versailles. 17 13-, 1783. 7 vol. 8°. 1836-1854. 8350 Third edition. 7 vol. 8°. 1853-4. 8351 Historj' of the War of the Succession in Spain. Bv Lord Mahon. 8°. 1832. 8352 Joan of Arc. Eeprinted from Lord Mahon's Historical Essays. 12°. 1853. 8353 Miscellanies. Collected and edited by Earl Stanhope. Second series. 8°. 1872. 8354 Italian Memoir bv Lady Mary Wortlev Montagu— Case of Major Andrt— M'. Pitt and Earl Temple— English Friends of the French Hevolution — Pitt and Canning- Pitt at "Walmer Castle — Fox and Canning — Short essays in Archaeology — A'isit at Derby — De Sismondi on history and politics — Ilallam ou English politics— Snperstitions in India — Prince Louis Na- poleon to Sir Robert Peel — Inscription by Lord Macaulay— P. M. A. C. F.— Prince Metternich on German politics — Arabic philosophy in mediaeval Europe — Legends of Charlemagne. Spain under Charles the Second ; or. Extracts from the correspondence of Hon. Alexander Stanhope, British Minister at Madrid. 1G90-1699. From the originals at Chevening. 8°. 1840. 8355 Introductory notice signed " Mahon " [after- wards Ean Stanliope.] Second edition. 8°. 1844. 8356 STANLEY (ARTHUR PENRHYN) DEAN OF WESTMINSTER. Historical Memorials of Canterbury. The landing of Augustine, The murder of Becket, Edward the Black Prince, Becket's Shrine. With illustrations. 8°. 1855. 8357 Lectures on the historv of the Church of Scotland . 8°. 1872". 8358 4fi9 STANLEY CARTHUR PENRHYN) DEAN OF WESTMINSTER — cent. Ijife and Corre^ijondutice of Thomas Arnolfl, D.D., lute Head-Mastur of Rugby School . . Sixth edition. (Portrait.) 8". 1846. 8359 Sinai and Palestine !u connection with their history. Maps and phms. 8°. 1856. 8360 STANLEY (EDWARD) BISHOP OF NORWICH. Addresses and Charges. With a me- moir. By his Son, Arthur Pcnrhyn Stanley. 8". 1851. 8361 Fourth 8362 Familiar history of Birds edition. 12". 1848. STANLEY (THOMAS). History of Philosophy. . Containing those on whom the attribute of wise was conferred. [In eight parts.] (Portraits.) F". 1655. (Two copies.) N". 2. only the lirst three parts. Third and last Volume, in five parts. (Portraits, including one of Stan- ley.) F". 1660. 8363 STANTON (HENRY B.). Sketches of Heibrms and Eeformers, of Great Britain and Ireland. 8°. New York, 1849. 8364 STANYAN (TEMPLE). Grecian History. Vol. I. Containing the space of about 1684 years. Adorn'd ! space with cuts. 8° 1707. 8365 STAPLES (HENRY J.). Elegiac Stanzas suggested by the funeral of Arthur, Duke of Wellington. S". 1852. 8366 STAR-CHAMBER. Star-Chamber epitomized : or a dialogue betweene Inquisition a uewes smeller, and Christopher Cob-web a keeper of the Ke- eords for the star-chamber . . Wherein they discourse how the clarkes used to exact fees . . 4°. n.p. 1641. 8367 Book-plate ot J. T. Brockett. STARK (ADAM), History of the Bishopric of Lincoln, from its commeucement at Sidnacester or Lindisse; — its connection with Lichfield and Leicester ;— -its junction with Dor- chester ;— until the seat of the see was fixed at Lincoln, immediately after the conquest. 8°. n.d. (1852). 8368 Printing : its antecedents, origin, his- tory, and results. Vi". 1855. 8369 STARR (FRANK). The Vi^iou of Midsummer Mornings' Dream. 8°. Norwich, 1854, 8370 STATE, State papers published under the au- thority of his Majesty's Commission. King Henry the Eighth. [Edited by Eobert Lemon.] 11vol. 4°. 1831-52. 8371 Vol. 1. CorrespoudcncD between the Kins and Cardinal "Wolscy, 151M-;i(> ; and be- tween the King and his iVIiuistery, 1630- 47. 2, 3. Correspondence between the govern- ments ol England and Ireland, 1615-38. i. 6, Correspondence relative to Scotland and the Borders, 1618-31. iJ-11. Foreign correspondence, l'173-10t7. Cobbett's complete collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High Treason and other crimes and misdemeanors from the earliest period to the present time. (From 9 Henry II, 1163 to 36 Chas. IL, 1685) vol. I — X. Complete collection of State Trials , . with notes and other illus- trations compiled byT. B. Howell (1680 to 1784) vol. XI— XXI. Complete Collection of State Trials . . continued from 1783 to the present time (1800) ; by Thomas Jones Howell vol. XXII— XXVII. 27 vol. 8». 1809-1820. 8372 STAUNTON (SIR GEORGE THOMAS). Memoirs of the chief incidents of the public life of Sir G. T. Staunton ; one of the King's Commissioners to the Court of Pekin . . 8°. Printed for private circu- lation. (Portrait.) 1856. 8373 Miscellaneous notices relating to Chinaj and our commercial intercourse with that country, including a few translations from the Chinese language. Second edition j enlarged in 1822, and accompanied, in 1850, by introductory observations on the events which have affected onr Chinese commerce during that interval. 8°, 1822- 18.50. ■ 8374 STAUNTON (HOWARD), Chess-Player's Companion : compri- sing a new treatise on odds, and a collec- tion of games contested by the author with various distinguished players . . in- cluding the great French match with St. Anaant . . Selection of , . problems. 8°. Bohn, 1849. 8375 Chess-Player's Handbook. A popular and scientific introduction to the game of Chess, exempUfied in games actually played by the greatest masters, and illustrated by numerous diagrams . . 8". Bohn, 1847. 8376 470 STAUNTON (HOWARD)— co«<. Chess Tournament. A collection of the games played at this celebrated assem- lilage illustrated by copious diagrams, and notes . . 8°. Bohn, 1852. 8377 STEBBINQ (REV. HENRY). History of the Cliristiaii churcb. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. 1833. 8378 Histoi-y of the Ueforraation. one). 12°. 1836. vol. (in 8379 STEELE (SIR RICHARD). Dramatic Works. Containing, the FunSral. Tender Husband. Lj'ing Lover. Conscious Lovers . . Account of his life and writings. (I'ortrait.) 12°. 1701. 8380 Epistolary correspondence ; including his familiar letters to his wife and daugbters ; to which are prefixed, frag- ments of three plays ; two of them un- doubtedly Steele's, the third supposed to be Addison's . . Illustrated with literary and historical anecdotes, by John Nicbols (Portrait.) 2 vol. (in one). 8". 1809. 8381 Account of the State of the Koniau- Catholick religion tbrongbout the world. Written for the use of Pope Innocent XI. by Monsignor Cerri . . Now first trans- lated . . Discourse concerning the statu of religion in England. Written in French, in the time of Charles I. and now first translated. With a large dedication to the present Pope ; giving him a very par- ticular account of the state of religion amongst Protestants . . By Sir E. Steele. 8°. 1715. (Two copies.) 8382 N". 1. Book-plate of Eev. E. Dibben. The dedication is supposed to have been written hy Bishop Hotldly. Lowndes. Christian Hero : an argument pro^■ing that no principles but those of religion are sufficient to make a great mau. 12°. 1776. 8383 Ladies Library. Written by a Lady Published by M'. Steele. 3 vol. (Frontis- piece^.) 12°. 171J. 8384 Steele was " eitlicr the compiler or revised the work of the latly to whom he nllndes, and who is supposed by some to have bfen Lady Mary Wray." Athnucinn, The Lover. To wbich is added, the Reader; by the same author. 8°. 171,5. 8385 STEEPLETON. Steei>letou ; or, High Church and Low Chvirch : being the present tendencies of parties in the church, exhibited in the history of Frank Faithful. By a clergy- man. 12°. 1847. 8380 STEFFENS (HENRY). Adventures on the road to Paris, during the campaigns of 1813-14. Extracted from the autobiography of H. .Steffens. Trans- lated from the German [by JI". Alderson] . 12°. 1848. 8387 STEINBACH (LIEUT.-COLONEL). The Punjaub ; being a brief account of the country of the Sikhs . . Second edi- tion . . including a narrative of the recent campaign of the Sutlege. 8°. 1846. 8388 STEINMETZ (ANDREW). Jesuit in the family. A tale. ■ 8". 1847. 8389 Novitiate ; or the Jesuit iu training : ■ being a year's residence among the Eng- lish Jesuits. A personal narrative. (Por- trait.) Second edition. 8°. 1847. 8390 STENDHAL (COUNT DE) psetid. i.e. MARIE HENRI BEYLE. Home, Naples et Florence, en 1817, ou csquisses sur I'etat actuel de la societc, des moeurs, des arts, de la litterature, etc. de ces villes celebrcs. 8°. Paris [et] Lon- drcs, 1817. , 8391 Home, Naples, and Florence, in 1817 . . [Translation of No. 8391]. 8". 1818. 8392 STEPHANUS (HENRICUS). 07|o-ou/)os . . Thesaurus Graccae Linguae. Editio nova auctior et emcndatior. [Edi- ted by E. II. Barker.] 9 vol. F°. In acdibus Valpianis, 1816-1828. 8393 Labbaeus (Carolus). Glossaria, Giaeco- Latina ot Latino-Graeca. Cum aliisopus- culis. v. In aedibus Valpiauis, 181B-2a. li'Drmms an additional volume. STEPHEN (HENRY JOHN). New commentaries ou the Laws of Eng- land (partly founded ou Blackstone). Second edition. Prepared for 'the press by James Stephen. 4 vol. 8". 1848. 8394 STEPHEN (SIR JAMES). Essays . iu Ecclesiastical Biography. [liepriuted from the Edinburgh Beview.] 2 vol. 8". 1849. . . 8395 Vol. 1. Hildcbraud. St. Francis ot Assist. Founders of Jesuitism. Luther. French Beucdictnics. Port- Royalists. 2. R. Baxfci'. EvauKclical Succession. "W". Wilborforcc. Clapham Sect. Historian of enthusiasm [I. Taylor]. Epilogue. Fourth edition (With Biograpliical no- tice by [Sir] James Fitzjames Stephen.) 8". 1860. 8396 Lectures ou the history of France, 2 vol. 8". 1851. 8397 Third edition, with large additions. '2 vol. 8°. 1857. 8398 471 STEPHEN (JAMES). issertation : exhibiting the pro- gress of metaphysical, ethical, and poli- tical philosophy, since the rr-vival of Let- ters in Europe. 2-4. Elements of the philosophyof thehumanmlnd. o. Philoso- phical Essays. G, 7. Philosophy of the y active moral powei*s of Man. 8-y. Lec- tures on Political Economy. Elements of the philosophy of the Hu- man Mind. Fourth edition. 8°. 1811. 8420 Outlines of moral philosophy . . Second edition. 8°. Edinburgh, 1801. 8421 [Tracts.] 8° Edinburgh, 1805-6. 8422 Short statement of sonje important facts, relative to the late election of a mathe- jnatical professor [Leslie] in tho Univer- sity of Edinburgh. Third edition. Postscript to M'. Stewart's short statement of facts relative to the election of Professor Leslie. With an appendix. Examination of M'. Uugald Stewart's pam- phlet. By one of the Ministers of Edin- burch [y W. L. Browne.] Second edition : with an Appendix. Letter to the Author of the Examination of Professor Stewart's short statement of facts. With an appendix. By John Playfair. STEWART (JAMES). On the'means of facilitating the Transfer of Laud ; . 8°. 1848. 8423 472 STEWART (JOHN). Moral or intellectual last Will and testa- ment of J. Stewart, the traveller, the only raah of nature that ever appeared iu the world. 12°. Priutedfor the author, 1810. 8424 W. Hone's copy with his autograph. STIGANT (WILLIAM). A Vision of Barharossa and other poems. 12°. 1860. 8425 STILES (WILLIAM H.). Austria in 1848-49 : heing a history of the late political movements in Vienna, Milan, Venice, and Prague ; with details of the campaigns of Lomhardy and No- vara ; a full accoimt of the revolution iu Hungary; aud historical sketches of the Austrian Government and the Princes of the Empire. Portraits of the Emperor, Metternich, Kadetzky, Jellacie, and Kos- suth. 2 vol. 8». 18.')2. 8426 STILLINGFLEET (EDWARD) BI- SHOP OF WORCESTER. Bishop of Worcester's answer to Mr. Locke's Letter, concerning some passages relating to his Essay of Humane Under- standing, mentiou'd in the late discourse in Vindication of the Trinity. With a postscript in answer to some reflections made on that treatise in a late Socinian pamphlet. 12°. 1697. 8427 Book-plate of John "Washer of Lincoln's Inn, STIRLING (JAMES). Arion. A Tale . . [verse]. 12°. New- castle. Printed for the author. 1823. 8428 Presentation copy. MS. note. Poems. 12°. Newcastle. Printed for the author. End. 1824. 8429 STOCKHARDT (JULIUS ADOLPH). Principles of Chemistry, illustrated hy simple experiments. Translated from the fifth German edition, hy C. H. Peirce. 8°. Bohu, 1851. 8430 STOCQUELER (JOACHIM HAY^ WARD). Life of Field Marshal the Duke of Wel- lington. 2 vol. Engravings. 8". 1852-3. 8431 Memoirs and Correspondence of Major- Genenil Sir William Nott. Edited . . hy J. H. Stocqueler. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1864. 8432 STODDARD (RICHARD HENRY). Bric-a-Brac Series. Anecdote biogra- phies of Thackeray aud Dickens edited by K. H. Stoddard. 12°. New York, 1874. 8433 STODDART (SIR JOHN), Encyclopaidia Metropolitana . . Second edition. First division. Pure Sciences. Philosophy of Language. (The Philosophy of Language ; comprehending Universal Grammar, or the pure Science of Lan- guage ; and glossology, or the historical relations of languages. Second edition, revised hy the Author, aud edited by Wil- ham Hazlitt.) 8". 1849. 8434 Eneyclopa?dia Metropolitana . . Third Division. History and Biography. In- troductory dissertations. [Second Title.] Introduction to the study of Universal History. Two dissertations : I. on the uses of history as a Study. II. on the separation of the early facts of history from fable. Second edition, rewritten. 8°. 1850. 8435 STOKES (HENRY SEWELL). EhymeB from Cornwall. By the Author of " The Vale of Limherne." 12°. 1871. 8436 Vale of Lanlicrne and other poems. New edition, with additions ; and illustra- tions, drawn on stone by C. Haghe, from designs by J. G. Philp. 8°. 1853, (Two copies.) 8437 N". 2. New t.p. with different publisher and date of 1869. STONE (MRS. ELIZABETH), Chronicles of Fashion, from the time of EHzabeth to the early part of the Nine- teenth Century, iu manners, amusements, banquets, costume, &c. 2 vol. (Por- traits.) 8". 1845. 8438 STORIES. Stories and Sketches for the amusement of leisure moments. 12°. 1846. 8439 STORY (WILLIAM WETMORE). Life and letters of Joseph Story, Asso- ciate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States . . Edited by W. W. Story. .2 vol, (Portrait.) 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1851, 8440 Poems. 12°. Boston [U.S.] 1856. 8441 EobadiRoma. 2 vol. 8°. 1863. 8442 STOW (JOHN). Annales, or Generall Chronicle of England, begun first by Maister John Stow, and after him continued and aug- mented . . unto the eude of this present 473 STOW (JOHN)— con(. yeerc 1614. by Edmoud Howes, gentle- man. F". 161.5, 8443 Appendix or corollary ot the foundations and disoriptions of the three most famous universilicjior Englande, viz. Cambridge, Oxford, and London . . The thirde was collected and written by Syr George Buck . . Ito.yal arms on llie Ijindhi^'. Survey of the cities of London :iud AVestmiuster . . written at first in 1598. Since reprinted and augmented by the author ; and afterwards by A[utliony] JI[unday] H[enry] D[yson] and others. Now lastly . . enlarged: and the Survey and history brought down from 1633 . . to the present time ; by John Strype. Illustrated with maps . . with draughts of . . edifices and monuments. In six books . . Life of the author, by the editor . . Appendix of Tracts . . concerning the City of London. With a perambulation four or five miles round about Loudon, to the parish churches . . Second Appendix . . 2 vol. F°. 1720. 8444 Survey of London, written in 1598. New edition, edited by AVilliam J. Thorns. 8". 1842. 8445 STOWE (MRS. HARRIET ELIZA- BETH BEECHER). Lady Byron vindicated. A history of the Byrou controversy from its beginning in 1816 to the present time. 12". 1870. 8446 Snnny Memories of Foreign Lands. Illustrations. 2 vol. 8". 1854. 8447 Uncle Tom's Cabin j or, life among the lowly. Twentieth thousand. 2 vol. 8". Boston [U.S.] 1852. 8448 [Another edition.] Uncle Tom's Cabin ; or, Xegro life in the Slave States of America. 12". 1852. 8449 [Another edition.] Uncle Tom's Cabin. With a preface by the Author . . 8°. 1852. 8450 [Another edition.] Uncle Tom's Cabin . . With above 150 illustrations, drawn by George Thomas and T. E. Macquoid, and engraved by William Thomas. 8°. 1853. 8451 Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin ; presenting the original facts and documents upon which the story is founded. Together with corroborative statements verifying the truth of the work. 8°. 1853. 8452 Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin . . 8°. n.d. 8453 STOWE. Stowe Catalogue priced and annotated : by Henry Eumsey Forster. 4° '°"' 1848. 8454 STRABO. The Geography. Literally translated, with notes. The first six books by H. C. Hamilton. The remainder by W. Fal- coner. 3 vol. Vol, I. II. 8". Bohn, 1854-56. 8455 STRACHEY (SIR EDWARD). Hebrew politics in the times of Sargou and Sennacherib: an inquiry into the historical meaning and purpose of the prophecies of Isaiah, with some notice of their bearings on the social and political life of England. 8". 1853. 8456 Miracles and Scieuce. 8°. 1854. 8457 Shakespeare's Hamlet : an attempt to find the key to a great moral problem, by methodical analysis of the plaj. 8°. 1848. 8458 STRADA (FAMIANUS). Eloquentia bipartita. Pars prior Pro- Insiones academicas . . exhibet . . ad faeultatem oratoriam, poeticam, histori- camque spectantes : altera paradigmata eloquentiiE brevioris proponit . . excerpta ex decade prima & seeunda historiae de Bello Belgico ejusdem auctoris. 12°. Amste!., 1658. 8459 STRADLING (SIR EDWARD). Stradliug correspondence : a series of letters [addressed to Sir E. S.] wTitten in the reign of Queen Elizabeth ; with notices of the family of Stradling . . Edited by Rev. John Montgomery Traherne. 8°. London and Cardiff, 1840. 8460 MS. notes by M'. Forster. STRAFFORD (THOMAS WENT- WORTH, 1st earl OF). Account of the arraignment, trial & condemnation of Thomas late Earl of Strafford, and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland : before the Parliament at Westminster, 1641. [Anon.] (Portrait.) F". 1679. 8461 [No t.p. . . Trial of Thomas Earl of Strafford. (By John Eushworth.) 1680.] F". 8462 With 31'. Forstet's MS. memorandums. Depositions and articles against Thomas Earle of Strafford, Fehr. 16. 1640. 4°. n.p. 1640. 8403 Interleaved copy with [contemporary] MS. notes, and also at beginning and end. . . Relation, of the answeres and replies ; to the articles exhibited against him by the House of Commons 13 Aprill, 1641. 4». 1647. 8464 Imperfect. Downfall of greatnesse. For the losse of goodnesse. A poem : or, a short survay of Thomas Lord Wentworth, Earle of 474 STRAFFORD (THOMAS WENT- WORTH, 1st earl Of)—conL Strafford , . his history, and Tragedy : who -was . . beheaded on Tower-bill, .May 12. 1641. (Portrait ou title and another inserted.) 4". n.p. 1641. 8465 Earic of Strafford cbaractrized in a letter sent to a ffriend in the Country 1641. 4". 8 leaves. [MS.] 8460 "With a note from Charles Wright (Payne & Foss) to Eev. D'. Bliss 19 Jan. 1843. [l»p. 203-392 ofaLifeof Strafford.] 8^ 84G7 "With M^ Forster'y 3tS. memorandums. [Tracts by and relating to.] 4'\ London & u.p. 1640-7 & n.d. 84G8 From D'. BandincVs Library. 1. Depositions and Articles ajrainst Thomas Earlu of Strafford, Febr. IG. 16-io. 2. Sentence of the CouncelloEAVarre, against Lord Mountnorria, in Ireland 13 Decem- ber, l&io. AVith Lord Mountnorris peti- tion to the Parliament conceraing his injurii_'s by the Lord Deputy deceased. 3. Argument of law, concerning the Bill of Attainder of high-treason of Earle of Strafford. By IP. St. John his Majesties Solicitor General!. '1. Answer to Lord Digbics speech in the House of Commons ; to the bill of attain- der of the Farlc of Sti-afford. ."i. Two speeches made by lohn Pymm ; the one after the articles of the charge against the Earle of Stratford were read. The other, after the articles of the charge against Sir Geoi-ge Eatclilte were read. ti. Conclusion of the Earle of Strafford's de- fence. 7. Annotations upon the Earle of Strafford's conclusion. 8. JP. Pymmcs speech to the Lords on the tryall of Earle of Strafford. y. Replication of :Master Glyn to the generall answer of Earle of Strafford, to the charges exhibited against him in Parhament. 10. Declaration of JobnPym, upon the charge of high treason, against Earle of Strafford. AVith an argument of law by M'. St- John. The "Argument," not found. (^Set- after- wards.) 11. Answer to the Earle of Strafford's oration. 12. Two speeches by S^ Thomas "W'entworth ; now Earle of Strafford, in Parhament 1G28. The one concerning the liberty of the sub- iVct. The other the priviledgc of Parlia- ment. 13. Bill of Attainder, against Earle of Strafford. 11. Earle of Sti-afford cliaracterized in a letter [etc.] 10. M^ Maynards speech Ijeforc Parliament in reply upon the Earle of Stiafford's an- swer. Itj. Lord Digbies speech in the House of Commons, to the bill of attainder^ of the Earle of Strafford. 1 7. M'^. Pymmes speech in answer to Lord Sinifford*s defence at the barre. IS. Argument of law. By M^ St. John. lU. Earle of Strafford's letter to his Maicstie. From the Tower, 20. Earle of Strafford's speech on the Scaffold 12 May, li>ll. STRAFFORD (THOMAS WENT- WORTH, 1st EARL OF)— cont. 21. [No title-page. The two last speeches, of Earle of Strailord. The one in the Tower, the other on the scaffold 1«U.] 32. Relation of the life and death of Earle of Stratford who was beheaded on Tower- hill, 12, May^lGll. ("Woodcut on title.) 23. Relation of the execution of Earle of Straf- ford : M'ith liis speech to the people, on the scaffold. (Woodcut on title.) • 21. Declaration shewing the necessity of the Earle of Strafford's suffering. (Portrait on title.) 25. Relation of the Earle of Stratford's speech on the scaffold. "With his deportment before and at the end of his Execution. 20. Protestation against a speech, pretended to be siroken by Earle of Stnitford, to cer- tain Lords before his cumniing out of the Tower : as also against the letter to his lady in Ireland, with the only true copy of his speech, and the chaise delivered to his son. 27. Description of the passage of Earle of Strafford, over the Styx, with the con- ference betwixt him, Charon, and William Noy. ("Woodcut on title.) 2S. [No title-page. Great satisfaction con- cerning the death of the Earle of Stratford, in a discourse betweene a Scottishman and, a jcsuite.] 2'J. Answeres and replies of Earle of Straf- ford ; to the articles exhibited against him, by the House of Commons 1041. 30. The two last speeches of Earle of Stratford. The one in the Tower, the other on the .scaffold on Towcr-hill, May the 12"'. Itlll. Now revised with some additions, with his i>rivate prayer. (Por- trait on title.) 31. Speech of John Pym ; in the House of Lords, upon the impeachment of Earl of Strafford for High Treason. 1742. [Tracts by and relating to.] 4". Lon- don & n.p. 16 40-1 & n.d. 8469 1. Two Speeches [etc] (>5ceX".SH;.s (12).) 2. Depositions and articles agjiinst Earle of Strafford, Febr. 10. 1040. 3. [No title-page. Further impeachment of Earle of Stnitford.] 4. [No title-page. Mr. Pyms speech[es] [etc.] {See N". 8-108 (o).) o. [No title-page. M'. Mainards speech before both hou>cs iu Parliament, ni re- ply upon the Earle of Stnifford's answer to his articles at the barre.j 0. I No title-page. Conclusion of the Earle of StnilTurds dcfence.J 7. [No title-page. Replicationof M^GIvnto tne generall answer of Eaj-le of Stratford.] 8. [No title-page. Master Pimmes speech to the Lords in Parliament, sitting in "Westminster Hall 12 Aprill. 10 tl.] 9. In answer to the Earle of Straffords ora- tion 13, Aprill, 1041. MS. note. 10. ISillof Attainder, against Earle of Straf- ford. 11. [No title-page. Lord Digbyes speech in the House of Commons, to the bill of at- tainder of the Earle of Strafford.] 12. Answer to Lord Digbies speech. 13. Printed paper cald the Lord Dif-'bies speech to the lull of attainder of the Earle of Strafford. Torne in pcices and blowne away. It. Sir John Evelyn his report from the Committee, apiwinted to cfmsider of the printing of the Lord Digliycs speech. Order for the burning of the said speech. 475 STRAFFORD (THOMAS WENT- WORTH, Isi EARL OF)— coK<. 15. I X,,lilli;-iPii);.'. Kiiilr.|,l S(nirri)id,s letter, lo llii' Kinn-i .MnjoNly, diitu'l from the TnwiT, t. Mii.v, KiH.] 111. I Niilitlc-niiKi'. HinMiiirslicslcllcilcitlie l.iirilsoii tliii liclinlf of llio Karl of Slraf- fonl, sent by llio IVimo. mi. I.i Li. | |{t'i\\Cfii lliiH tf.-ict jiMil tho in'.\l. is a inipo cif MS. wliicli inclllll<-s "Tho luniiltlo poliliini of Tlu'iiioa Into Enrlo iirstraironl." 17. Till' two last spcoclics of Uiirlo of Straf- ford, Lclc.]. IH. Kiu-ln (>r Strnilord I'luinicliTizc'd in a IrtlcM- [clc.]. i:l llisi'nurso shiiwiiiK i" "'lull stiito tlio tlin'« KlnKdouics iiro in at this iircsont. 20. lliM'lanilion .sUcwing llio iiciTssity of tho I'iarit' of Stralliirds suU'criUK. 2\. Diviiio droainor ; or, u sliort tivati.si' dis- I'ovorinp tho Iriio cITrct and |in-\vcr of droaiiHis. Tho drcaiiic of a yoiiiif^ f^ciitlu- iiiHii, imiuediatoly licluio tho iloalli u( the lalo Karlo of SlralTord. 2"J. .\r;;uinont of law cniicurnin;:' tho bill (if attaindcir of Hiirlo of Slrallonl. By M'. St.. John his Mnjostirs Solicitor tU'iU'rall. (GEORGE EDMUND) STRANGE (JOHN). J?il)liotlni'a Stranjfoiiuiii. A Oiitaloguo (irihi> . liliiarj 111' . . J. Stnuifje . foniiindiiMulinj;- . book.s and tracis . . to tho numlior of upwariis of fourscore thousanil . . Digestcil liy Samuel I'atei- soii. And will be .sdld liy auidion, b^' Lcifjli, Sotbeby and Sou, . . (Part I.) on JNIondny, Murob lii, 1801 . . 8". u.d. 8470 rrici'd in MS. STRATHBOGIE. Extraels Croni the I'reshvtery book of Stratblioijic. I631-I6."i4. " (Edited hy John Stn,irt.) 4". Aburdoen, printed for the Spalding Club, 1843. 8471 STRAUSS (DR. DAVID FRIED- RICH). Life 111' Jesus, critically exaniiucd. '1 laiislated from tile fourth German edi- tion [by Miiriau Evaus aftcrw. Mrs. Cross.] 3 vol. 8". 1840. 8472 Old I'uith and the new. .V confession. Authorised transliitiou from the si.Kth edi- tion. l!y Mathildc Blind. 8°. 1873. 8173 STRAWBERRY HILL CATALOGUE. Strawberry Hill, the renowned seat uf Horace \Vai|Hile. Mr. Cieorge Itobins is bonouve . To which are prefix'd, several copies of verses explanatory and commendatory ; never hefore printed. Second edition. 2 vol. (Portrait with verses and Plates.) 8°. 1727. 8555 Vol. 1. "Till' second edition." Vol. II. "The second edition, corrected," [Another edition.] Illustrated with . . wood engravings from designs by Grand- ville. With copious notes, a life of the author and an essay on satirical fiction, by W. C. Taylor, LL.D. 8". n.d. (1840). (Two copies.") 8556 SWIFT (JONATHAN) D.D., DEAN OF ST. PATRICK'S, DUBLIN — conl. New edition, revised for general use. (Illustrations by " Phiz.") 12". 1847. 8557 Voyages de Gulliver. [? Trans, by Abbe Desf ontaines] . Seconde edition. 2 vol. (Plates.) 12°. Paris, 1727. 8558 MS. notes at the beginning and marginal pencil notes by E. Hill, 1807. Travels . . By Capt. Lemuel Gulliver. Vol. m. (Frontispiece.) 8°. 1727. (Two copies.) 8559 Not by Swift. No. 1. Mitford's copy and MS. notes. Memoirs of the Court of Lilliput. Writ- ten by Captain Gulliver. Containing an account of . . transactions of that nation, omitted in the two volumes of bis travels. Published by Lucas Benuet, with a pre- face . . Second edition. 8". 1727. 8560 Not by Swift. Mitford's copy and MS. notes. A^erses on the death of Dr. Swift, D.S.P.D. Occasioned by reading a maxim in Eoche- foulcault . . Written by himself, No- vember 1731. The second edition. 8°. London printed : Dublin : re-printed by George Paulkuer, 1739. 8561 "This was the third and only complete form of the poem, and consisted of 484 lines. Edward Solly." Notes and Queries 14 Nm-. 1885. [Tracts by or relating to Swift, or to his time. Prose and Verse.] 9 vol. 8°. & 12°. Dublin and London, various dates. [Vol. 1 — 6. Bought at Monclv Mason's Sale.] 8562 Vol. X. Conduct of the Allies, and of the late Ministry, in beginning and carrying on the present war [by Swift]. Dublin, re-printed. 1712. Publick spirit of the Whigs ; set forth in their generous encouragement of the author of the Crisis [Steele] : with some obser- vations on that Treatise, Third edition [by Swift]. Dublin, 1714. Right of Precedence between Phisicians and Civilians enquir'd into [by Swift]. Dub- lin, 1720. Letter of advice to a young poet [by Swift]. Dublin, 1721. Signed at end " E.' P." Letter from a clergy-man in Ireland : giving an account of the taking of great numbers of fish, and of many sea-monsters, in the County of Clare. 1721. Signed "Peter Browne." Irish Tales : or, instructive histories for the happy conduct of life. By M". Sarah Butler. To which is prefix'd, a dedication to the Earl of Lincoln, concerning this kind of writing. And an historical pre- face of the learning and politeness of the antient Irish. London, printed; Dublin ve-printcd. 17S5. Dedication signed " Charles Gildon." Short essay on the publick judgments of the Romans. Dublin, 1739. ["'By Ch. Robin- son." ]\IS. on Title-paffeT] Irish Register; or a list of the duchess • dowagers, countesses, widow ladies, maiden 48] SWIFT (JONATHAN) D.D., DEAN OF ST. PATRICK'S, DUBLIN — 8562, A^ol. l.—cont. ladies, widows, and misses of large tor- tunes m England, as register'd by the Dublin Society for the use of their mem- bers. ToRether with the places of their several abodes. Also the charge given by their President, at their last general Assembly. DubUn printed; London, re- printed, 1742. Directions to Servants. By Swift. DuWin, 1746. Essay on increasing the inhabitants and riches of Ireland. By Martinus Scrib- lerus, the younger. 1747. The Antisatyrist. A dialogue. To which is prefixed, a short dissertation on pane- gyric, and satyr. Dublin, 1760. Essay on the criminal judgments before the Roman people. Dublin, 1761. ["Judge Eobinson." MS. on title.'] Last Speech of John Good, vulgarly called. Jack the Giant-queller, who was con- demned in Dublin, 15"» of April, 1749, and executed 17th of May following. 'Wherein is contained, the whole history of Giantism from the Creation. 1751. Friendly Conference between matter and spirit, in the characters of Somebody and Nobody : being a compleat illustration of a treatise, entitled, an essay on spirit. Dublin, 1762. II. Letter (—II. III. IV.) from a gentleman in the country, to his son in the college of Dubhn. Relating to the memoirs of the life and writings of Doctor Swift. As- cribed to the Earl of Orrery. Dublin, 1702-3. ["By Doctor Delauy." Pencil note.] Abstract of M^ Locke's Essay on Human Understanding. By Sir Jeffrey Gilbert. Dublin, printed : London, re-printed, 1752. The Consultation ; or, a Dialogue of the Gods. In the manner of Lucian. Dubhn, 1753. ["By theRev. P. Skelton." Pencil note.] Letter from an old merchant to his son. Dublin, 1763. Candid enquiry why the natives of Ireland, which are in London, are more addicted to vice than the people of any other nation. With .some considerations now to remedy the like evil for the future. 1764. Treatise on the Inland Navigation of the antients and modems. Dublin, 1768. [" q by Chs. Vallancey Esq'." MS. note.] Letter of advice to a young gentleman just entering into the world. Shewing how to raise himself in it.' By an old courtier— his relation, n.p. Printed in 1758. The Pree-Masons Advocate. Or, Palsehood detected. Being a full refutation of a scandalous libel, entitled, a Master- Key to J?ree-SIasonry. With a defence of the Brotherhood and the craft. By Richard Lewis. Dublin, 1760. Essay on perfecting the fine arts in Great Britain and Ireland. DubUn,1767. ["By Rev. Tho. Campbell." MS. note.] Thesis, wrote upon the science of agriculture: with those, the humble author's public as- sertions of possess'd abilities, for changing all sorts of the most spuriously forbidding sour lands (even with, or without tillage) into exceeding milky, mellusive, or other- wise more gregltatively delightful fatten- ing pastures. Together with the Tery same mutaveal alternative, for as favour- ably profitable a metamorphose, and that for advantage to all sorts of coarse, or otherwise defectively degenerated mea- dows, &c. By Abraham Ery. Newry, 1775. o 16.505. SWIFT (JONATHAN) D.D., DEAN OF ST. PATRICK'S, DUBLIN — 8562, Vol. n.—cont. Speech of Henry Elood, in the House of Commons of Great Britain, February 15, 1787, on the commercial Treaty with France. Dubhn, 1787. SYAAErOMENA of the antiquities of Kill- mackumpshaugh,' in the County of Hos- comraon, in which it is clearly proved that Ireland was originally peopled by iEgyp- tians. Written by Doctor Hastier. [John • Whitley Boswell. Cashing.] (Plates.) DubUn, 1790. Some account of the Irish. By the late J. S. 1763. III. The Colcarmen Match : or, the Belly Duel. A poem. n.p. 1730. The inspir'd poet, or an Epistle to the young poets and Authors of the City of JDublin. Insorib'd to the Reverend Dean Swift. Dublm, 1730. Dullness cherish'd, or a Burlesque on the Epistle address'd to the town poets, with additional fnotes. By a Lady of Quality. Dublin, 1730. Art of Beauing; in imitation of Horace's Art of Poetry. Address'd to a certain Lord. By Martinus Gulliverianus. Third edition. London, printed; Dublin re- ?rinted, 1730. ["By James Dalacourt." *encil note.] The TearKettle, a poem. Humbly insorib'd to Miss H It. Dublin, 1730. ["By James Dalacourt." Pencil Tiote.] Abelard to Eloisa, in answer to M'. Pope's fine piece of Eloisa to Abelard. By J— D. [i.e., James Dalacourt.] Dublin, 1730. Letter from Martin Gulliver, to George Faulkner, printer, n.p. 1730. [" James Dalacourt. Pencil note] [Half-title.] Venus reveng'd: or, Cloe triumphant. A poem. n.p. n.d. Mendico-Hymen : seu Tuphlo-Pero-Gamia. Dublinii, 1730. Mendico-Hymen. The Beggar's Match. Translated from the Latin. Dublin, 1730. New Simile for the ladies, with useful anno- tations. Dublin, 1732. Specimen of thought upon the gloomy region: or, Polypnemua evaporated: or, a satiri-tragi-comi-poetick hodge-podge and miscellaneous poem, upon the wooden- man in Essex-street. With interlunary breathings of love from Venus. By John Thomson. Dublin, 1732. The Three Travellers. A tale. Dublin, 1733. Epistle to a Friend. DubUn, 1733. Life and genuine character of the Rev. Dr. S 1. Written by himself. 1733. [De- dication signed " L. M."] "A spurious advance ed. of the poem of 1739." Lane-Poole. Account of a strange and wonderful appari- tion lately seen in Trinity-College, Dub- lin. Or, a Dialogue between a poet and his grandmother's ghost, n.p. 1734. Mezentius on the Rack. n.p. 1734. Proclamation from Parnassus. Being the Substance of a second advertisement lately published in prose, but now turned into metre, and considerably improved by me William Dunkin. n.p. 1734. Libel upon the Dublin dunces. In an epistle to M'. William Dunkin. n.p. 1734. [No title-page. Poem asorib'd to certain anonymous Authors. Signed "Jonathan Swift."] On Poetry : a rapsody. [Anon. By Swift.] London printed ; Dublin re-printed, 1734. H H 482 SWIFT (JONATHAN) D.D., DEAN OF ST. PATRICK'S, DUBLIN — 8562, Vol. 111.— cont. The Pie, and the Mastiff. Two Tales. Fourth edition. Bnblin, 17S6. [No title-page. The Cobler, a tale.] [No title-page. Beauty: or, the art of charming.] [?1M6.J Battle of the Bards : a poem. n.p. 1731. IV. The forty-five wonders of the world : or, an ingenious, merry new bopk of all Fives. Dublin, n.d. ' [Chap-book.] Marriage of Belfagor. "Written originally in Italian by Nicholas Macchiavel. Newly translated from the original by Dublin, 1719. Modest proposal for preventing the children of poor people from being a bm'then to their parents, or the coimtry, and for making them beneficial to the Publick. [Anon, by Swift.] Dublin, 1729. Some reflections upon Marriage. With ad- ditions. Fifth edition. Dublin, 17S0. Th(} Treacherous Confident : or, fortune's Change. A novel. Dublin, 1731. Infallible Scheme to pay the publiok debt of this nation in six months., [Anon, by Swift.] n.p. 1731. Scheme, for making E.[eligio]n and the C[lerg]y useful. [Anon. ? Swift], n.p. 1731. Rules proper to be observed by the Eficeivers employ'd by the nobility and gentry of Ireland. Dublin, 1733. [Dedication signed "W.P."] Letter to the Authors of Divine Analogy [Bp. Browne], and of the Minute Philo- sophers [Bp. Berkeley]. From an old officer. Dublin, 1733. Scheme, to make an Hospital for Incurables, of universal benefit to all his Majesty's sub.iecl-s. To -which is added, a petition of the Footmen in and about Dublin. By Eevd. D'. J. Sfwift]. London, printed; Dublin, re-printed, 1734. SuiTirising Memoirs of the cripple-beggars, Manupedirus and Stumpanympha^ now Supreme King and Queen of the Beggars in Ireland. To which is annex'd, their Courtship. Dublin, 1731. [No title-page. Proposals for raising a standing Army of Wax.] Some proposals for the revival of Christianity, [Anon. ? Swift.] n.p. 1736. Letter from a gentleman in the country. To his son at the University, dissuading him from going into Holy Orders. Dublin, 1737. A Rhapsody; or, dissertation upon Nothing Dublin, 1739. Maxims concefliing Patriotism. By a Lady. Dublin, 1750. Outlines of a plan for promoting the art of Painting in Ireland : with a List of sub- jects for painters, drawn from the roman- tic and penuine histories of Ireland. Dublin, 1790. [Dedication signed J. C.W.] V. Carmen Sacculare, for the year 1700. To the King. Dublin, 1700. The Fingallians exercise or, the Soards match at foot-ball. A poem in three cantoes, by Mat Concanen. Dublin, n.d. The Pleasures of a single life; or, the miseries of matrymony. To which is added, the Pleasures of a country life. By John Dillon, Kt. JEnd. Dublin, n.d. ["The Pleasures of a Country Life" is " The Choice " by Rev. John Pomfret.] The Ladies Choice. Tn answer to the Pleasures of a single Life. n.p. [ Dublin] n.d. SWIFT. (JONATHAN) D.D., DEAN OF ST. PATRICK'S, DUBLIN — 85B2, Vol. Y.—cont. New poem on a cract-pitoher. or broken- mug. By L. "W. [i.e. Laurence 'White.] Dublin, n.d. Poems on several occasions; with a Faroe, call'd the Deceit. By Henry Norris. Dubhn, 1723. Hesperi-neso-graphia : or, a description of the Western Isle. In eight canto's. By W. M[oftkt]. Dublin, VJii. Birth of Manly Virtue, from OalUmachus. [By Swift.] Dublin, 1725. Progress of Musick in Ireland, a poem. Pastoral elegy on the death of a lady's CanaiyTiBrd. Poem on IS}. Pope's Works, written to the same Lady. Second edi- tion. Dublin, 1725. The Counter-Souffle. Whereunto is added, the Irish Entertainment. With an elegy on the Connaught-Pig. Dublin, 1727. The Grub street Cavelcade, or, the hungry poets petition. Dublin, 1727. Apology to the Lady C — r— t [Carteret]. On her inviting Dean S— f— t [Swift] to dinner, n.p. 1730 [Anon. Swift.] Epistle to John Lord Carteret Lord Lieu- tenant of Ireland. [By D'. Delany.] To which is added, an Epistle, upon an Epistle ; being a Christmas-box for Doctor D ny. [Anon. Swift.] Dublin, 1730. Epistle upon an Epistle from a certain Doctor to a certain Great Lord : being a Christmas-Box for D. D[ela]ny. [Anon. Swift.] Dublin, 1730. Answer to the Chi-istmas-box. In defence ofDoeterD— n— y. ByR tB r. [i.e. Rupert Barber]. Dublin, 1729. [1730. MS.-] Libel on D[r.] Dfelany], and a certain great Lord [Carteret] [Anon. Swift], n.p. 1730. Panegyric on the Reverend D n S 1 iDean Swift]. In answer to the libel on )r. D[elanjy, and a certain great L d [Carteret], n.p. 1729-30. To Doctor D - 1 y [Delany], on the libels writ against him. London, printed; Dublin, reprinted, 1730. [Anon. Swift.] The Goddess Envy to iDoctor D— 1— y [De- • lany]. n.p. 1730. The Pheasant and the Lark. A Fable. Dublin, 1730. ["By D' Delany." MS. Note.] Answer to Dr. Drelan]y's Fable of the Pheasant and the lark. n.p. 1730. [Anon. Swift]. Friendly Apology for a certain Justice of Peace; by way of defence of H[ai-tle.]y H[utchinso]n, Esq., By James Blackwell operator tor the feet. n.p. 1730. ["B.v Dean Swift." Pencil note.] Letter from a friend to Miss M y S ^y. n.p. 1730. [" Mary Smedley, daughter of Dean Smedley." MS.] Poem on Dr. C d, and the three rival Sisters. Dubhn, 1730. VI. The Lifly ; a table. In imitation of the Metamorphosis of Ovid. With an epistle dedicatory: in which is contain 'd, an essay upon the Metamorphosis of Ovid. Byxxxxxx xxxx Esq. Dublin, 1726. The Phoenix of Claudian. Translated into Enghsh verse (in Milton's manner.) Being a coUedge exercise, J714. Dublin 1731. The Lady's Dressing-Room. A poem. By xxxxxx xxxxx [Swift.] Second edition. London, printed; Dublin, re- printed, 17.^2. The Gentleman's Study in answer to the Lady's Dressing-Room. London, printed ; Dublin, reprinted, 1732. 485 SWIFT (JONATHAN) D.D.,— 8562, Vol. VI. — cent Chloe surpriz'd : or, the second part of the Lady's Dressing-room. To whicli are added. Thoughts upon reading the Ladv's Dressing-Eoom, and the Gentleman's Study. The former wrote by D n S 1, the latter by Miss W . London, printed ; Dublin, reprinted ; 1732. The Transfiguration. A poem. By M.'. Lau- rence Eichardson. Dublin, 1732. [Half-title.] Belvedere: poem. [No title-page. Tale ot the Pinches.] [No title-page. The Monke.y and the Hounds. A table.] Poem upon Musick. By John 'Waldron Dublin, 1733. [At the end Dedication to S[wif]t; and the Hoop-Peticoat, in Lilli- putian verse.] A^erseson the death of D' S . Occasioned by reading a Maxim in Eochefoulcault. "Written hj Himself, November 17.'J1. London, printed ; Dublin, reprinted, 1739. IMS. notes by M'. Porster.] Curry-comb of truth for a certain Dean : or, the Grub-Street Tribunal. Dublin, 1736. Brush to the Curry-comb of truth, &c. Or, the Drapier. An eclogue in imitation of Virgil's Silenus. Dublin, 1736. Poems upon Several Occasions. By Terence 6Brien. Dubhn, 1736. Poem inscribed to Lord TuUamoore. Occa- sioned by the late Charity. Dublin, 1740. [" By the ' Jler'. Mr. Samuel Shepherd,' so says the MS. index." 3IS, note on title.'] Poem occasioned by a View of Powers-court House. Dublin, 1741. [" By the ' Eev''. "Walt. Chamberlain ' : says the MS. index." MS. note on title.'] The Vernon-iad : done into English, from the original Greek of Homer. Lately found at Constantinople. "With Notes. Book the first. Dublin, 1741. First ode of the first book of Horace. In- scribed to the Earl of Chesterfield. By John Earl of Orrery. Dublin, 1741. Pyrrha. The Pifth ode of the first book of Horace imitated. By John Earl of Or- rery. Dublin, 1742, To M" Cibber, a poem. Dublin, 1742. The Anointment, A poem. Dublin, 1742. The new Dunoiad : as it was found in the year 1741. "With the illustrations of Scrib- lerus, and notes variorum. [Pope.] Dub- 1742. Poem on the glorious victory obtain'd by the King of Great Britain, at the head of the Allies, over the Prench commanded by Marshal Noailles, June ]6, 1743, near Det- tingen. By Kev. Arthm- D'Anvers. Dub- lin, 1743. The Bricklayer's Poem. Presented to the Lord Lieutenant. On his arrival in this Kingdom. Dubjin, 1745. [""Written by Henry Jones." MS. on title.] The Cobler's Poem. To a certain noble peer. Occasioned by the Brick-Layer's Poem. After the manner of Dean Swift. To which is added the Exception. Dublin, 1745. Signed at end " J.B.W." ["Written by James Eyre "Weekes Esq." MS. on title.] The Pate of an Hibernian Muse, a true tale. In an epistle toE — N — Esq; with a postscript, occasioned by the arrival of Philip Earl of Chesterfield, Lord Lieuten- ant ot Ireland. Dublin, n.d. [1745]. VII. Meditation upon a Broom-stick, and somewhat beside ; of the same Author's [Swift]. London, Curll, 1710. [The " Somewhat Beside " consist of Baucis and Philemon ; The humble petition of Frances Harris; To M" Biddy Floyd; and The history of Vanbrugh'a House.] SWIFT (JONATHAN) D.D.,— 8562, Vol. VII.— con^ The Swan Tripe-Club ; a satyr, on the High- Plyers ; in the year 1706. 1710. Given to Swift in Colonel F. Grant's Catalogue. Baucis and Philemon : A poem on the ever- lamented loss of the two Yew-Trees, in the parish ot Chilthome, near the County- town of Somerset. Together with M" Harris's earnest petition : and an admir- able recipe. By the Author of the Tale of a Tub. As also an ode upon solitude : by the Earl of Eoscommon. 1710. The Conduct of the Allies [etc.] Second edition. [Anon. Swift.] 1711. Pifth edition. 1711. Some remarks on the Barrier Treaty, be- tween her Majesty and the States-General. By the Author of the Conduct ot the Allies [Swift]. To which are added, the said Barrier-Treaty, with the two separate articles ; part of the Counter-project ; the sentiments ot Prince Eugene and Count Sinzendorf upon the said Treaty ; and a representation of the English merchants at Bruges. 17T2. Caveat agninst the Whiggs, in a short his- torical view of their Transactions. "Where- in are discovcr'd their.many attempts and contrivances against the establish'd go- vernment both in church and state, since the restoration ot Charles II. Second edi- tion. 1711. Story of the St. Alb — ns ghost, or the Appa- rition of Mother Haggy. Fourth edition. [? By Swift and Arbuthnot.] 1712. Complete Key to Law is a Bottomless-Pit. And the story of the St. Alb— n's ghost. Piftli edition. 1712. [Some names filled in. in MS.] Proposal for correcting, improving and as- certaining the English Tongue ; in a letter to Robert Earl of Oxford and Mortimer. [Signed by Swift.] 1712. Letter from the facetious Doctor Andrew Tripe at Bath to the venerable "Nestor Ironside. To which is added, a prescrip- tion from the Doctor, by way of post- script, exactly suited to his distemper 17 [rest of date cut oil]. Letter of Advice to a young poet ; together with a proposal for the encouragement of Soetry in this kingdom. By J. Swift, lublin, printed ; London, reprinted, 1721. Letter to a young gentleman, lately enter'd into Holy orders. By a Person of Quality. It is certainly known, that the following treatise was writ in Ireland by Rev. D^ Swift. Second edition, 1721. Cadenus [i.e. Decanus] and Vanessa [Miss Tanhonirigh]. A poem. To which is added, a true and faithful Inventory of the goods belonging to D'. S 1, Ticar of Lara Cor; upon lending his house to the Bishop ot , till his own was built. By D'. S 1. Fourth edition. 1726. The " Inventory " by [T.] Sheridan. Lane-Poole. Satire on D'. D[elalny. By D'. Sw— t. To which is added, the Poem which occasion'd it. Dublin printed ; London reprinted. 1730. [Th? Poem "which is added" is An Epistle to his Excellency John, Ld. Carteret.] On Poetry: A Rapsody. [Anon. Swift] Dublin printed ; London re-printed, n.d. The Beasts confession to the Priest, on observing how most men mistake their own talents. By J. S[wift]. Second edition. Dublin printed ; London re-printed, 1733. Directions to Servants. By Swift. Dublin, 1745. Story ot the Injured Lady. Being a true picture of Scotch perfld,y, Irish poverty, H H 2 484 SWIFT (JONATHAN) D,D„ DEAN OF ST. PATRICK'S, DUBLIN — 8562, Vol. Yll.—cont. and English partiality. With letters and poems never before printed. By Swift. 1746. VIZI. Dignity, use and abuse of Glass- bottles. Set forth in a Sermon preach'd to an illustrious assembly, and now pub- lish'd for the use of the inferiour clergy. By the Author of the Tale of a Tub. 1715. [Imperfect.] Ars Pun-ioa, sivo Flos Linguarum : the Art of Pimning ; or, the Elower of Languages ; in seventy-nine rules : for the farther im- provement of conversation and help of memory. By the labour and industry of , Tom Pun-sibi (i.e.) Jonathan Swift. Second edition. Dublin printed, 1719; Loudon, reprinted, n.d. [After " Swift "— iu MS. " &, Sheridan, grandfather of Brinsley."] Proposal for correcting [etc.1 1712. (Second copy.) ["The only thing I ever published with my name." Swift.} The Beasts Confession [etc.]. "Written in 1732. pp. 137-136. n.p., 1743. Reasons humbly offered to the Parliament of Ireland, for repealing the Sacramental Test, in favour of the Catholioks, other- wise called Iloman-Catholicks. tVritten in the style of a Roman Catholick. Lon- don, 1734. Dublin, 1743. [pp. 83-99.] Some reasons against the Bill for settling the tythe of hemp, flax, &c. by a modus, n.p. n.d. "Written in the year 1734. [pp. 103-121.] This and the previous piece are included in Scott's ed, of Swift. Three Sermons : on mutual Subjection. Conscience. The Trinity. By Eev. D' Swift. Dublin, 1746. [pp. 209-262.] Modest defence of a late poem by an un- known author, call'd, the Lady's Dressing- Hoom. "Written in the year 1732. Printed in the year 1743. [pp. 183-206.] [At the end-^Poems on several occasions. (And) Advice to the Freemen of Dublin.] Letter of advice to a young poet : together with a Proposal [etc.]. By J. Swift. Second edition. Dublin printed ; London, reprinted, 1721. Dedication to a great man, concerning dedi- cations. Sixth edition corrected. With a preface. [By Swift. Grant's Catalogue.] 1719. Letter to a Member of Parhament, contain- ing a proposal for bringing in a Bill to revise, amend or repeal certain obsolete statutes, commonly called the Ten Com- mandments. 1738. Letter to a noble lord, in answer to a Letter to a Member of Parliament, for bringing in a Bill [etc.] Shewing that it is not, yet, a proper time to repeal those statutes. ByPhilooles. 1739. Collection of white and black lists or, a view Of those gentlemen who have given their votes in Parliament for aiid against the Protestant Religion, and succession, and the trade and liberties of their country ; ever since the glorious Revolution to the hiippy accession of King George. 1716. IX. Essays divine, moral, and political: viz. Of religion in general. Christianity. Priests. Virtue. Friendship. Government. Parties. Plots. By the Author of the Tale of a Tub, sometime the writer of the Examiner, !ind the original inventor of the Band-box- plot. "With the elligies of the Author. 1714. [Marginal MS. notes by M'. Forster.] lliu' and Cry after Dr. S 1; ccoasion'd by a true and exact copy of part of his own Diury, found in his pocket-book, wherein SWIFT (JONATHAN) D.D., DEAN OF ST. PATRICK'S, DUBLIN — 8562, Vol. lX.—cmt. he has set down a faithful account of himself, and of all that happen'd to him for the last week of his life. Third edition. 1714. At the end— Copy of verses fastn'd to the gate of St. P 's c— h d— r, on the day of the i 1 of a certain D n. Genuine epistle from M[atthelw P[rio]r, at Paris, to J nS — t, at "Windsor. "With a Letter to Sir Patrick Lawles, late the Pretender's Nimcio. By an unknown hand. Pubhsh'd from the original manu- scripts, by Timothy Brocade, late author of the Examiner. 1714. [No title-page.] Ode to the Pretender (and) Mortimer his fall. Notes and Memorandums of the six days, preceeding the death of a late Right Re- verend - - Containing many remarkable passages, with an inscription design'd for his monument. [Ascribed to Arbuthnot. The Bishop meant was Buniet.] 1715. A Key, being observations and explanatory Notes, upon the Travels of Lemuel Gul- liver. By Signer Corohni. 1726. [Im- perfect.] Proposal humbly offer'd to the P 1, for the more effectual preventing the further growth of Popery. "With the description and use of the ecclesiastical thermometer. By D'. S 1., To which is added, the humble petition of the "Weavers and Venders of Gold and Silver lace, embroi- derers, &c. As also two poems, viz. Helter Skelter, or the Hue and Cry after the Attomies upon their riding the Circuit. And the place of the damn'd. Dubhn printed ; London reprinted, 1731. Both the " two poems " are included in Scott's ed. of Swift. New Miscellany in prose and verse. Con- taining, several pieces never before made public. By Rev. D'. Swift, Hon. Holies St. John, and other eminent hands. 1742. Remarks ui)on the account of the conduct of a certain Dutchess. In a letter from a member of the last parliament in the reign of Queen Anne. To a young Noble- man. 1742. Review of a late Treatise, entituled an ac- count of the conduct of the Dowager D— — of M [Marlborough], &c. In which many misrepresentations are de- tected; especially such as relate to the reigns of K. "William and Q. Mary. 1742. [Portrait inserted of George Duke of Marlborough.] Authentic copy of the "Will of Rev. D'- Swift. To wliich is added some explana- tory notes. — Dubhn printed ; Loudon, re- printed, n.d. SWIFTIANA. Swiftiana (with sketch of the life of Swift). [Edited by C. H. "VVilsou]. 2 vol. (Portrait and fac-similes.) 12°. 1804. (Two copies.) 8563 Charter of George II. for erecting and endowing St. Patricks Hospital ; founded liy the Will of Jonathan Swift ; for the reception of ideots, lunaticks and incur- ables. 8". Dublin, 1798. 8564 Defence of Swift ; in answer to certain observations passed on his life and writ- ings, in the 53d number of the Edinburgh Eeview. [Anon. By Rev. Edward Ber- wick.] 8°. 1819. 8565 48S SWl FTIANA— cont. The Flying Island, &o. Being a Key to Gulliver's Voyage to Laputa . . In a third letter to Dean Swift. 8°. 1726. The Brobdingnagians. Being a Key to Gulliver's Voyage to Brobdingnag. In a Second Letter to Dean Swift. 8°. 1726. 8566 Both signed " C. D. M." One vol. Some Memoirs of . . a certain Irish Dean . . In which will be inserted several original letters of the said Dean . . By a lady . . Third edition. 8°. London, printed ; Dublin, reprinted, 1730. 8567 New Tale of an Old Tub ; or, the way to fame. An odd sort of a story. 8°. 1752. 8568- Travels of Mr. John Gulliver, son to Capt. Lemuel Gulliver. Translated from the French, t by J. Loekman. 2 vol. (Frontispiece by Hogarth.) 12°. 1731. 8569 Two Lilliputian Odes . . 12°. 1727. 8570 The Second " Ode : inviting a bookseller to a cofEee-house, where the author was " has a separate t.p. " . . I never saw, or heard or another copy. G. D.[aniel] Canonbury, 1861." [Tracts, various.] 8°. Various dates. 8571 Voyage to 'Cacklo§:allinia : with a descrip- tion o{ the religion, policy, customs and manners, of that country. By Captain Samuel Brunt. (And) a Journey to the Moon. (Frontispiece.) 1727. Lemuel Gulliver's Travels into several re- mote nations of the world. Compendi- ously methodized. 1726. [Title-page and leaf of verses only.] Key, being observations and explanatory noteswipon the travels of Lemuel Gulli- ver.1 By Signer Corolini, a noble Venetian now residing in London. In a letter to Dean Swift. Translated from the Italian original. 1726. The Brobdingnagians [etc.]. 1726. (Two copies.) The Flying Island, &o. [etc.] 1726. The Kingdom of Horses. Being a Key to Gulliver's Voyage to the Houyhnhnms. In a fourth letter to Dean Swift. 1736. [Broadsides, etc., prose and verse, re- lating to Wood's Halfpence. Some by Swift]. Broadsides and s. sh. F°. Dublin. Various dates. 8572 John Lord Carteret Lord Lieutenant, his Speech to Parliament, at Dublin ; 21 Sep- tember, 1726. 1726. The Drapier anatomiz'd : song. New song sung at the club at M' Taplin's the sign of tne Drapier'a Head in Truck-Street. 1724. Second Song, sung at the Club at M'. Tap- lin's. 1725. The Drapier's ballad. 1724-5. Blue-Skin's ballad, n.p. 1724-6. Tom Punsibl's dream. 1724-5. Letter from the Eight Hon. To the Eeverend N. N. (signed 0.0.) n.p. n.d. Second letter from a friend to the Eight Honourable (signed N.N. and dated Jan. 4, 17^5.) n.p, D,d. 2 leaves. SWIFTIANA— 8572— con*. Letter from a friend to the Eight Honour- able (signed N.N.) 1724. This and the previous letter were addressed to Ld. Oh. Justice 'Whitshed. Scott. To his grace the Arcii-Bishop of Dubhn, » Poem. n.d. Ireland's "Warning, being an excellent new song upon Woods's base half-pence, n.d. Excellent new Song upon the late Grand- Jury. 1724. New Poem aserlb'd to the Hon"" the Gentlemen of the late Grand- Jury. n.d. Woods's Confession to the Mobb of the city of Dublin (signed Will. Wood.) 1724. Express from Parnassus, to the Eeverend D'. Jonathan Swift, Dean of St. Patrick's. From the Mount of Parnassus. Novem- ber the lift. n.p. n.d. Letter from Aminadab Firebrass Quaker merchant, to M. B. Drapier. n.d. Serious poem upon William Wood. n.d. [MS. notes by M. W. H.] Apology for M' Wood, &c. 1724. Prometheus, a poem. 1724. Creed for an Irish Commoner. 1724. Letter to William Wood, fi'om a member of that Society of Men, who in derision are call'd Quakers. (Signed Abraham Wood- hater.) n.d. True character of the wooden Monster, arch enemy to Ireland. By no friend to Wil- liam Woods. 1724. Letter to William Woods, Esq ; from his only friend in Ireland. (Signed Hiberni- cus.) 1724. Seasonable Advice ' [to the Grand Jury.] (Dated Nov. 11, 1724.) n.p. n.d. Presentment of the Grand-Jury of the county of the city of Dubhn. l724. Advertisement. (Signed John Molyneux. Dan. Molyneux. Dated Dublin 22 August 1724). Advertisement. (Signed Tho: Handy. Dated Dublin, 29 August, 1724.) To the Citizens (signed M. B.) 1724. To the King's Majesty. Petition of the Lord Mayor, Sheriffs, Commons, and Citizens of the city of DubUn, in Common-council assembled. 1724. Eeport of tbe Committee of Privy Council, in relation to M'. Wood's half-pence and farthings, &c. n.p. n.d. 2 leaves. To the King's Majesty, Address of the Knights, Citizens, andburgesses, in parlia- ment assembled. 1723. Eemarks upon the report of the Committee of Privy-Council, in relation to M'. Woods's half-pence. By Samuel Owen, lock-smith n.p. 1724. Seasonable advice to M. B. Drapier. Occa- sion'd by his letter to Visct. Molesworth (Signed M.M.) n.p. n.d. Another letter to M'. Harding the printer, ujion occasion of the rejiort of the com- mittee of Privy-Council, m relation to M^ Wood's half-pence and farthings, &c. (Signed " Misoxulos."} n.d. Some considerations on the attempts made to pass M^ Wood's brass-money in Ire- land. 1724. 2 leaves. Ireland's case humbly presented to Parlia- ment, by an artificer in metals and a citizen of Dublin, shewing why two hun- dred thousand pounds of light copper half pence should not pass in this kingdom for the gold and silver of the nation. n.p. n.d. 2 leaves. Dublin Aug. 20 1724. This day the Grand- Jm'y [etc.] attended the Dean of St. Patrick's with the following Declaration. Declaration of the Grand Juiy. and the 486 SWI FT(AN A- 8572— con<. rest of the inhabitants of the Libei-ty of the Dean and Chapter of St. Patrick's, Dublin, n.a. !Plying-stationers Declaration. 1724. Excellent new Song upon the declarations of the several corporations of the City of Dublin; against "Woods's half-pence, n.p. n.d. Declaration of the corporation of the But- chers, n.d. Brewers ileclaration. n.d. SWIFT (J.), ALEXANDER POPE, akd OTHERS. Miscellanies in prose and verse. 4 vol. 8". 1728, 7, 32. (Duplicate of vol. III.) 8573 Preface to Vol. I. signed by " Jonath. Swift. Alex. Pope." There is also a Vol. 5 with this title-page- Miscellanies, in prose and verse. Volume the fifth. Which with the other volumes already published in England, compleats this Author's Works. Charles Davis, 1735. [Another edition.] Miscellanies. 4 vol. 12". V. I. n.d. II. III. 1736. IV. 1738. 8574 There is also a Vol. 6 with this title-page- Miscellanies, in prose and verse. The fifth and sixth volumes, WhioU with the other four already printed, the Drapier's Letters, Gulliver's Travels, and three Tatlers, com- pleat this Autlior's Works. Vol. V. 1738. Supplement to D' Swift's a«d M' Pope's Works. Containing I. Miscellanies, by D' Arbuthnot. II. Several pieces, by D' Swift and M' Pope. III. Poems on several occasions. Now first collected into one vol. . . 12". Publin, 1739. 8576 GuUiveriana : or, a fourth volume of Miscellanies. Being a sequel of the three volumes, published by Pope and Swift. To which is added Alexanderiana ; or, a com- parison between the ecclesiastical and poetical Pope . . With an ample preface ; and a critique on the third volume of Miscellanies lately publish'd by those two facetious Writers. (Frontispiece.) 8". 1728. (Two copies.) 8576 N". 1. Library label — Wohum Abbey ; and book-plate of John, Duke of Bedford, 1736. N", 2. Without frontispiece, [Various pieces.] F". and 4°. Various dates. 8577 Life and genuine character of Doctor Swift. Written by himself. F". ,1783. (Two copies.) [Not the genuine one]. On Poetry: a Eapsody. [Anon. Swift.] Dublin, printed; London, re-printed. 1733. Verses on the death of Doctor Swift. Writ- ten by himself : Nov. 1731. 1739. Second edition. 1739. Another copy. [P L.P.] Epistle from Mr. Pope, to Dr. Arbuthnot. 1734. Of the Use of Eiches, an epistle to Allen Lord Bathurst. Pope. 1732. The Impertinent : or, a Visit to the'Court. A Satyr. Pope. Third edition. 1737. Pirst Satire of the Second book of Horace, imitated in dialogue between Alexander Pope ol Twickenham and his learned SWIFT (J,), ALEXANDER POPE, and OTHERS— 8577— eon^. Council [Portesoue]. To which is added, the' Second Satire of the same book. By the same hand. Never before printed. 173't. (2 copies.) Lady's Dressing Room. To which is added, a Poem on cutting down the old thorn at Market Hill. By the Eev. D'. SLwiflt. 1733. Publiok Spirit of the Whigs [etc.]. [Swift] 1714. SWIFT (T.). ■ Almanac for 2000 years, from the com- mencement of the Christian era ; with tables and directions for extending it to anj- other period, past or to come . . list of the Kings and Queens from the Conquest . . 4f in. 1856. 8578 SWINBURNE (ALGERNON CHARLES). George Chapman a Critical Essay. 8°. London [Guildford, printed], 1875. 8579 Poems and Ballads. 12". 1868. (Two copies.) 8580 N". 1. Presentation copy. William Blake. A critical essay. With illustrations from Blake's designs in fac- simile . . Second edition. 8°. 1868. 8581 Notes on poems and reviews. 8°. 1866. Under the Microscope. 8°. 1872. Fleshly School of poetry and other phenomena of the day. By Robert Buchanan. S". 1872. 8583 One vol. SWINBURNE (HENRY). Courts of Europe at the close of the last century. Edited by Charles White. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1841. (Two copies.) 8583 N". 2. MS. notes at the end of Vol. 1. " Re- vised copy for new edition." SWINDEN (REV. TOBIAS). Enquiry into the nature and place of Hell. 8°. 1714. 8584 SWITZERLAND. History of Switzerland. 12°. 1832, 8585 SYBEL (HEINRICH CARL LUDOLF VON). History and literature of the Crusades. From the German. Edited by Lady Duff Gordon. 8°. 1861. 8586 SYLVAN, pseud. Sylvan's pictorial handbook to the English Lakes. With maps by James Wyld. And illustrations from original sketches, by Thomas and Edward Gilks. 12°. 1847, ' 8587 487 SYLVESTER (JOSUAH). Lachrymae Lachyrmaru. Or the spirit of teares, distilled for the un-tymely death of the inoomparablis Prince, Panaretus [Henry, son of K. James I.]. Third edi- tion, with addition of his owne and other Elegies. 4°. n.p. n.d. 8588 Title-page printed in black, and the poem printed on one side only o£ each leaf, the reverses being black, bearing the royal arms, D'. BUss's copy & MS. note. Separate t.p. to Sundry funeral elegies, on the untimely death of Henry ; late, Prince of Wales. Composed by severall authors, n.p. 1613. Separate t.p. to Elegie — & — epistle con- golatorie, against immoderate sorrow for th' immature decease of S'. "William Sidney Knight, n.p, 1613. Parliament of vertues royal : (Sum- moned in France ; hut assembled in Eng- land) for nomination, creation, and con- firmation of . . Prince Panaretus . . Translated and dedicated to his Highnes, by losuah Sylvester. 5|- in. n.p. n.d. 8589 Contents. Panaretus. Bethnlians rescue . . Translated & dedicated to . . Anne Queeiie of Great-Britan. By I. S. 1614. Little Bartas : or brief meditations, on the power . . of God . . Translated; & dedicated to the . . Lady Elizabeth, by I. S. Mioro-Cosmo-Graphia; the little- worlds description : or, the map of man (from Latin Saphiks of . . M'. Hen. Smith) translated. . By I. S. Lachrymae Laxjhrymarum . . Elegiac-epistle consola- torie. ' ■ Each piece after Panaretus has a separate t.p., but the pagination is continuous * throughout the whole vol. Prom Strawberry Hill. MS. note by Ii'. Another copy [containing only Pana- retus] . 8590 MS. notes. Second session of the Parliament of vertues reall . . (From th' originall) transcribed, & inscribed to . . Charles, Prince of Great Britaine, by losuah Syl- vester. 5^ in. n.p. n.d. 8591 Contents. Divine & true tragi-opmedy ; lob • triumphant in his trial! . . Memorials of Mortalitie : wi-itten . , by Piere Mathieu. First centurie. Translated . . By I. a. second centurie. Henrie the great .. King of France . . his trophies and tragedie. "Written by Piere Mathieu. Translated . . by I. S. Each piece has a separate t.p. '(that of "lob" is onthe reverse of the Second Session") but the pagination is con- tinuous throughout the whole vol. From Strawberry Hill. SYMBOLS. Book of Symbols: or a series of essays, illustrative and explanatory of ancient moral precepts. 8». 1844. 8592 SYMES (WILLIAM). Nolnmu's Lilium defamari : or, a vindi- cation of the Common Grammar, so far as it is misrepresented in the first thirty ani- madversions contain'd in M'. .Tohnson's Grammatical Commentaries . . 12°. 1709. 85«3 SYMMONS (CHARLES) D.D. Life of John Milton. 8°. 1806. 8594 SYMMONS (EDW.). Military Sermon . . preached at Shrews- bury, March 3. 1643. to His Majesties Army there under the command of Prince Rupert. 4°. Oxford, 1644. 8595 "From i)^ Barton's books at Oh. Ch. formerly the ReV". Mr. Blakeway's!" HIS. note by Ih'. Bliss. SYMONS (JELINGER COOKSON). School Economy : a practical boolc on the best modes of establishing and teach- ing schools, and of making them thoroughly useful to the working classes by means of moral and industrial training. 12°. 1852. 8596 SYNO^IYMS. Comprehensive dictionary of English Synonymes. 12°. 1833. 8597 SZABAD (EM ERIC). Hungary past and present: embracing its history from the Magyar conquest to the present time. With a sketch of Hungarian literature. S". Edinburgh, 8598 SZEMERE (BARTHOLOMAUS). Graf Lndwig Batthyany, Arthur GSrgei, Ludwig Kossuth. Politische Charakter- skizzen aus dem TJngarischen Ereheits- kriege. Abthl. 1, 3. 8°. Hamburg, 1853. 8599 Two MS. Letters from the Author. T. (C). Chronicles of the Seasons, or, the pro- gress of the year; being a course of daily instruction and amusement, selected from the popular details of the natural history, science, art, antiquities, and biography of our fatherland ; in four bodks. Book the second. Containing April, May, and June. (Book the fourth, containing Oc- tober, November, and December.) (2 vol.) 12°. 1844. 8600 Preface signed " C. T." (ihe editor). 488 T. (G.). Eoger the Canterburian . . or the character of a prelaticall man affecting great heighths. (Portrait of Laud in- serted.) 4». 1642. 8601 TABLE-TALK. Book of Table-talk. Wood-cuts. 3 vol. 12°. 1836. 8602 New edition. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. 1847. 8603 TACHE (J. C). Esquisse sur le Canada cousid^re sous le point de vue economiste . . 8°. Paris, 1855. 8604 TACITUS (C. CORNELIUS). Opera recognoyit . . Gabriel Brotier. Editio nova et auotlor. Curante et im- primente Abrahamo Joanne Valpy. 4 vol. 8°. 1823. 8605 Opera . . edidit Eranoisous Ritter. Vol. I-II. Annales. III. Historiae. IV. Germania Agricola Dialogus . . 8°. Cantabr. & Lond. 1848. 8606 De vita et moribus Cn. lulii Agricolae liber . . Recensuit . , Fr. Carolus Wex. 8°. Brunsvigae, 1852. 8607 De Vita et Moribus Cn. lulii Agricolae liber. Nach kritisch berichtigtem Texte erklart von Er. Carl Wex. 8". Brauns- chweig, 1852. 8608 Germania, with ethnological disserta- tions and notes. By K. G. Latham. 8°. 1851. 8609 Annals and History; Account of the Ancient Germans ; and Life of Agricola. Made English by several hands. With political reflections from Amelot de la Houssay ; and notes of Sir Henry Savile, Eickius . . Second edition, with additions and cuts. 3 vol. 12°. 1716. 8610 " By Dryden and others." Zawndes. Works. The Oxford Translation, re- vised. With notes. Vol. I. The Annals. 8°. Bohn, 1854. 8611 TAGART (EDWARD). Locke's writings and philosophy his- torically considered, and vindicated from the charge of contributing to the scepticism of Hume. 8°. 1855. 8612 TAINSH (EDWARD CAMPBELL). Study of the Works of Alfred Tenny- Bon. 8°. 1868. 8613 TALBOT (HENRY FOX). English Etymologies. 8°. 1847, 8614 [Photography]. 8615 Pencil of Nature 4°. 1844. TALES. Household Tales and traditions of Eng- land, Germany, France, Scotland, &c. 12°, n.d. 8616 Twelve Nights Entertainments or Tales of various lands. 12°. 1845. 8617 TALFOURD (SIR THOMAS NOON). Critical and Miscellaneous Writings. In one volume. 8°. Philadelphia, 1842. 8618 "John Forster Esq. With the kindest re- gards ol T. N. TaUourd." Second American edition. With ad- ditional articles never before published in this country. (Portrait.) 8°. Phila- delphia, 1846. 8619 Tragedies; to which are added a few sonnets and verses. 12°. 1844. 8620 Ion— Athenian Captive— Glencoe. Dramatic Works. Eleventh edition; to which are added, a few sonnets and verses (and appendix — ^notice of D'. Valpy). 12°. 1852. 8621 The Castilian. An. historical tragedy . , [Anon.] 12°. 1853.; 8622 "Not published." MS. ont.p. [Another edition, with author'! name on t.p.] 12°. 1853. 8623 Final Memorials of Charles Lamb ; con- sisting chiefly of his letters not before published, with sketches of some of his companions. 2 vol. 8°. 1848. 8624 New edition. 12°. 1850. 8625 Glencoe ; or, the fate of the Mac- donalds. A tragedy - . Second edition. 8°. 1840. 8626 Ion ; a tragedy . . Fom'th edition ; to which are added Sonnets. 8°. 1837. Athenian Captive. A tragedy . . Se- cond edition. 8°. 1838. 8627 One vol. ■ At the end are three sonnets in MS. " To W. C. Macready Esq. on the birth of his first child ; in recollection of his performance of 'Virginius.' To Charles Dickens Esq. on reading the com- pleted ' Oliver Twist.' 18 February 1839. The memory of the Poets. "Written 1819. Eevised and copied here, Shakespeare's birthday 23 April 1839. T.N .T." Recollections of a first Visit to the Alps, in August and September 1841. 12°. Printed for private circulation, n.d. (Two copies.) 8628 Three Speeches delivered in the House of Commons in favour of p, Measure for TALFOURD (SIR THOMAS NOON) an extension of copyright , . Petitions in favour of the bill, and remarks on the present state of the copyright question. 12°. 1840. (Two copies.) ' 8629 Vacation Rambles and Thoughts ; com- prising the recollections of three Conti- nental tours. In the vacations of 1841- 2-3. a vol. (in one). 8°. 1845. 8630 Second edition. 8°. 1845. 8631 Third edition. 12". 1851. 8632 Supplement to "VaoiitionEamMes," con- sisting of recollections of a Tour through France, to Italy, and homeward by Swit- zerland, in the vacation of 1846. 12°. 1854. (Two copies.) 8633 N». 1. "Not published." MS. on t.p. N<". 8619-20, 22, 24, 26-9, 31-3, presentation copies with inscriptions. TALMA (FRAN9OIS JOSEPH). Memoires de Lekain, precedes de re- flexions sur cet acteur^ et sur I'Art Th^a- tral. 8°. Paris, 1825. 8634 TALVI pseud, i.e. THERESE ALBER- TINE LOUISE VON JACOB apt. MRS. EDWARD ROBINSON. Historical view of the languages and literature of the Slavic nations ; with a sketch of their popular poetry. "With a preface by Edward Kobinson, D.D. 8°. New-York, 1850. 8635 History of the Colonization of America. Edited by William Hazlitt. 2 vol. 8°. 1851. 8636 TAMS (G.) M.D. "Visit to the Portuguese possessions in South-western Africa. Translated from the German, with introduction and annota- tions by H. Evans Lloyd (and Preface by Professor Ritter). 2 vol. 8°. n.d. (1845). 8637 TANNER (JOHN). Angelus Britannicus, an Ephemeris for 1676 . . With astrological observations . . Account of the ecolipses . . 12°. 1676. At the end, with new title-page. Appendix, wherein you have an account.of the four ouarters of the year, of echpses [etc.] 1676, Dated at end—" Amersham in the County of Bucks, August 14, 1875." Angelus Britannicus : ^n Ephemeris for 1678 . . 12°. 1678. Imperfect. Angelus Britannicus : an Ephemeris for 1679 . . 12°. 1679. 8638 One vol. TARVER (J. CH.). Royal phraseological English-French French-English Dictionary . English, French part. Vol. II. . . Partie Fran^aije- Anglaise. 2 vol. 8°. 1845, 1850. 9639 TASSO (TORQUATO). Aminta favola boschereocia (and— Intermedj, (with) Amore Fuggitivo). (Plates.) 12°. Parigi, 1813. 8640 "Prefazione dell' Abate Pierantonio Se. rassi." Godfrey of BuUoigue } or, the recovery of Jerusalem : done into English heroioal verse from the Italian of Tasso, by Ed- ward Fairfax. Seventh edition, reprinted from the original folio of 1600 . . " Glos- sary, and the lives of Tasso and Fairfax. By the editor [? Charles Knight.] 2 vol. 12°. 1844. 8641 Jerusalem delivered, translated in the metre of the original. By Rev. Charles Lesingham Smith. 2 vol. 12°. 1851. 8642 Jernsalem delivered translated by Alex. Cuningham Robertson. With an appen- dix. 8°. Edinburgh and London, 1853. 8643 Jerusalem delivered. Translated into English Spenserian verse, with a life of the Author. By J. H. WifEen. Fifth edition. With twenty-four engravings on wood by Thurston . . 8°. Bohn, 1854. 8644 TATE (THOMAS). Drawing for. Schools : containing ex- positions of the method of teaching draw- ing in schools ; a full explanation of the practice of model drawing after the method of Dupuis, as first practised at the Batter- sea Training College ; the principles and practice of outline and perspective draw- ing ; together with numerous illustrations and drawing exercises. 4°. 1854. 8645 Philosophy of education ; or, the prin- ciples and practice of Teaching . . S°. 1854. 8646 TATLER. Lucubrations of Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq. [Sir Richard Steele]. New edition, with notes. [Second title.] The Tatler, with illustrations and notes . . [by John Ni- chols, and others]. 6 vol. (Portraits and plates.) 8°. 1786. 8647 N°». 59, 67, 230, 258. 1709-10. s. sh. F°. 8648 Pencil notes on two of the numbers, as to Swift's contributions. History, opinions, and lucubrations, of Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq. From the " Tatler," by Steele and Addison. With introduc- tion, notes, and illustrations by H. E. TATLER— coni. Montgomery. Illustrated with a series of photographs. 8°. 1861. 8649 A daily Journal of literature and the stage. !From September to December 1830 (—March 31, 1832). 4 vol. E". 1830-(2). 8650 Title of Vol. II and III. Tatler. A daily paper of literature, flue arts, mu?io, and the stage. Title of (vol. IV.) Tatler.. A journal of literature, fine arts, and public amusements. Edited by Leigh Hunt: his editorship ceased Trith the N". for IS Feb. 18S2. TAVERNER (RICHARD). Garden of wysdome conteynynge plea- saunte floures, that js to saye, propre and quicke sayinges of Prices, Pilosophers [sic] and other sortes of men. Drawen [forth of] good aucthours, by [Eicharde ?] Ta- verner. [Nejwly recognised and aug- mented. 5 in. B.L. Wyllyam Copland for Eycharde Kele. n.d. 8651 Autograph of " G. Tertue." D'. Bliss's copj with his MS. note to the effect that this is probably the second edition. Title-page mutilated; in two books, separate title- page to the second book, TAYLER (REV. CHARLES BEN- JAMIN). Margaret ; or, the Pearl. 12°. 1844. 8652 TAYLER (J. FREDERICK). Portfolio. r°. 1844. [Lithotints.] 8653 TAYLER (JOHN JAMES) D.D. Christian Aspects of faith and duty. Discourses. Second edition. 8°. 1855. 8654 Retrospect of the Keliglous life of Eng- land : or the Church, Puritanism, and free inquiry. 8°. 1845. 8655 TAYLER (WILLIAM). History of the Taxation of England, with an account of the rise and progress of the National Debt. 8°. 1853. 8656 TAYLOR (ALEXANDER) M.D. Comparative enquiry as to the pre- ventive and curative influence of the climate of Pau and of Montpellier Hy^res Nice Rome Pisa Florence Naples Biarritz etc. On health and disease with a de- scription of the watering places of the Pyrenees and of the virtues of their respective mineral sources. New edition. 8°. 1856. 8657 TAYLOR (MRS. ANN). Reciprocal Duties of Parents and Children. Fourth edition. 12°. 1820. 8658 TAYLOR (BAYARD). Eldorado ; or, adventures in' the path of empire : comprising a voyage to California, via Panama ; life in San Francisco and Monterey; pictures of the gold region, and experiences of Mexican travel. Illus- trations by the Author. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 8659 TAYLOR (CATHARINE). Letters from Italy to a younger sister. 2 vol. 8°. 1840-1. 8660 TAYLOR (SIR HENRY). Poetical Works. Vol. I. Philip Van Artevelde. In two parts. 11. Edwin the Fair. Isaac Comnenus. III. A Sicihan Summer. St. Clement's Eve. The Eve of the Conquest, and other Poems. 12°. 1864. 8661 Edwin the Fair. An historical drama. 12°. 1842. (Three copies.) 8662 Edwin the Fair . . and Isaac Comnenus ; a play. Second edition. 12". 1845. 8663 Edwin the Fair . . Isaac Comnenus . . The Eve of the Conquest, and other poems. Third edition. 12°. 1852. 8664 Eve of the Conquest, and other poems. 12°. 1847. 8665 Notes from Books. In four Essays. 8°. 1849. 8666 Poetical Works of "Wordsworth — Words- worth's Sonnets— DeVere's Poems — "Ways of the rich and great. Notes from Life in six Essays. 8°. 1847. 8667 Money — Humility and Independence — Choice in Marriage — "Wisdom — Children — The Life poetic. Fourth edition. 12°. 1854. 8668 Philip Van Artevelde ; a dramatic romance. In two parts. Part I (and II). Second edition (2 vol.) 12°. 1834. 8669 Fourth edition. 12°. 1846. 8670 Sixth edition. 12°. 1852. 8671 St. Clement's Eve. A play. 12°. 1852. 8672 The Statesman. 12°. 1836. 8673 The Virgin Widow. A play. 12°. 1850. (2 copies.) 8674 N°=. 8661, 4, 71-2, 4-preseutation copies with inscriptions. TAYLOR (ISAAC). Loyola : and Jesuitism in its rudiments. (Portrait.) 8°. 1849. 8675 TAYLOR (REV. JAMES). True doctrine of the Holy Eucharist, as instituted in Scripture, and received by the Catholic church in all ages, in refutation of archdeacon Wilberforce's book "The 491 TAYLOR (REV. JAMES)— conf. doctrine of the holy eucharist," and the Popish views of that sacrament, in general. 8°. 1855. 8676 TAYLOR (JANE). Contributions of Q. Q. to a periodical work [Youth's Magazine] : with some pieces not before published. 2 vol. 12°. 1824. 8677 Bssaysiu rhyme, on Morals andManners. Third edition. 12°. 1817. 8678 TAYLOR (JEREMY) BISHOP OF DOWN AND CONNOR. Holy Living and Dying : together with Prayers containing the whole duty of a Christian . . (Portrait.) 12°. 1834. 8679 New edition, carefully revised. (Por- trait.) 8°. Bohn, 1850. 8680 Beauties of J. Taylor. Selected from all his devotional writings and sermons ; with a biographical notice and a critical examination of his genius and style. By B. S. 8°. 1845. 8681 [TAYLOR (JOHN), the Water Poet.] Mercurius Aquaticus ; or, the Water- Poets answer to all that hath or shall be writ by Mercurius Britanicus. [Anon.] 4°. n.p. Printed . . and Number 16, of Mercurius Britanicus, 1643. 8682 Imperfect. TAYLOR (JOHN) FELLOW OF ST. JOHN'S, CAMBRIDGE. Music Speech at the Public Commence- ment in Cambridge, July 6, 1730. To which is added, an ode designed to have been set to Music on that occasion. [Lat. and Engl.] 8°. 1730. 8683 TAYLOR (JOHN). Life and extraordinary history of the Chevalier John Taylor . . Ophthalmiater . . who has been on his travels upwards of thirty years . . containing'the greatest variety of . . adventures . . Written from authentic materials, and published by his Son, John Taylor, oculist. 2 vol. 12°. 1761. 8684 A fabrication (ace. to "Lowndes") pro- duced by Henry Jones. Book-plate of Hugh Rogers. TAYLOR (JOHN). Identity of Junius with a distinguished living character [Sir Philip Francis] esta- blished (and Supplement). [Anon.] (Portrait of Francis.) 8°. 1816. 8685 MS. notes. TAYLOR (JOHN), atjthor OTi' "Mon. SIBTTB TONSON." Eecords of My Life. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1832. 8686 TAYLOR (JOHN). Influence of respect for outward things : in two dialogues. I. In relation to virtue and happiness. II. In relation _to religious profession. [Anon, but preface signed " John Taylor."] 12°. 1843. 8687 TAYLOR (JOHN EDWARD). Michael Angelo, considered as a philo- sophic poet. With translations. Second edition. 8°. 1852. TAYLOR (JOSEPH). Instructive pocket companion : con- taining a great variety of anecdotes, ob- servations, maxims, calculations, and ex- periments . . from the most eminent authors. 12°. 1819. 8689 TAYLOR (REV. J. W.). Memoir of David Maitland MakglU Cfiohton. (Portrait.) 8°. Edinburgh, 1853. ■ 869ff TAYLOR (SERJEANT-MAJOR). Life in the Ranks. 8°. 1843. 8691 TAYLOR (THOMAS). Miscellanies, in pro.se and verse : con- taining the triumph of the wise man over fortune, according to the doctrine of the Stoics and Platonists ; the creed of the Platonic philosopher ; a panegyric on Sy- denham, &c. Second edition, with addi- tions. 12°. 1820. 8692 TAYLOR (TOM). Life of Benjamin Robert Haydon, histo- rical painter, from his autobiography ;and journals. Edited and compiled by 'Tom Taylor. 3 vol. 8°. 1853. 8693 AND READE (CHARLES). The King's Rival. A drama . . 1854. Masks and Faces ; or, before and behind the curtain. A comedy . . 1854. Two Loves and a Life. A drama . . 12°. 1854. 8694 One vol. TAYLOR (W. B. SARSFIELD), Manual of Fresco and encaustic painting containing ample instructions for execut- ing works of these descriptions. With an historical memoir of these arts from the earliest periods. 8°. 1843. 8695 Origin, progress, and present condition of the Fine Arts in Great Britain and Ire- land. 2 vol. 8°. 1841. 8896 492 TAYLOR (WILLIAM COOKE) LL.D. The Bishop. A series of lettei's to a newly-created Prelate. [Anon.] 12°. 1841. 8697 Historical Miscellany : or, illustrations of the most important periods in ancient and modern history ; with a particular account of the British constitution and commerce . . 8°. 1829. 8698 History of Christianity; from its pro- mulgation, to its legal establishment in the Koman Empire. 12''.- 1844. 8699 History of Mohammedanism, and its Sects.. Third edition. 12°. 1851. 8700 Life and times of Sir Robert Peel. (First and second division.) [Anon.] (2 vol.) (Portraits.) 8°. London and Paris, n.d. 8701 Natural history of Society in the bar- barous and civilized state . . 2 vol. 8°. 1840. 8702 Notes of a tour in the manufacturing districts of Lancashire . . Second edition . . 12°. 1842. 8703 Popular history of British India, com- mercial intercourse with China, and the insular possessions of England in the Eastern Seas. 8°. 1842. 8704 Ancient and Modern India. Revised and continued to the present time, by P. J. Mackenna. Second edition. 8°. 1851. 8705 Revolutions, insurrections, and conspi- racies of Europe. 2 vol. 8°. 1843. 8706 TEELING (CHARLES HAMILTON). Personal Narrative of the " Irish Rebel- lion " of 1798. 8». 1828. 8707 TEGG (THOMAS). Tegg's dictionary of Chronology : or, historical and statistical register, from the birth of Christ, to the present time. Fifth edition. 8°. 1854. 8708 TEGNER (ESAIAS) BISHOP OF WEXIO. . . The Erithjof Saga ; a Scandinavian romance. Translated into English in the original metres, by C. W. Heckethorn. 12°. 1856. 8709 TEGOBORSKI (M. L. DE). Commentaries on the productive forces of Russia,. 2 vol.. 8°. 1855-6. 8710 TELEGRAPHS. Post office Telegi'aphs. Office code book being a list of telegraph stations in the United Kingdom. In two parts . . 1872. 4°. n.d. 8711 TELFER (JAMES). Border Ballads, and other Miscellaneous pieces. 12°. Jedburgh, 1824. 8713 TELFORD (SARAH). Miscellaneous poems. With an intro- duction, by Eev, Thomas Ebdou. 8°. Durham, 1848. 8713 TEMPLE (SIR JOHN), Irish Rebellion : or, an history of the . . generall rebellion raised within the Kingdom of Ireland, 23 October, 1641 . . 4°. 1646. 8714 Autograph ol " John Savile " whose initials are stamped on the covers. MS. note as to the binding. TEMPLE (SIR WILLIAM). Works . . Account of the life and writings of the author. 2 vol. (Portrait.) P°. 1720. 8715 Works. Complete. 4 vol. . . Life and character of the author . . New edition 8°. London, Wey bridge [printed], 1814. 8716 Essays. (Portrait.) 2 vol. (in one). 12°. 1821. 8717 Vol. 1. Gardens of Epicurus ; or, gardening in 1686. Health and long life. Heroic virtue. 3. Poetry. Ancient and modern Learning. Thoughts upon reviewing that essay. Excesses of Grief. Different conditions of life and fortune. Heads of an essay on Conversation. Letters written by Sir W. Temple, and other Ministers of State, both at home and abroad. Containing, an account of the most important transactions that pass'd in Christendom from 1665 to 1672. 2 vol. Review'd by Sir W. Temple . . and pub- hshed by Jonathan Swift . . (Portrait) . 8°. 1700. 8718 Book-plate of Charles, Lord Halifax, 1702 ; and of G. H. Gardner, Birfchwaite. Memoirs. Part III. From the Peace concluded 1679. To the time of the Author's retirement 'from publick business. Publish'd by Jonathan Swift. 8°. 1709. .[With appendix.] 8719 " To . . Chai'les Lord Hallifax by . . the publisher." MS. on flyleaf. TEMPLE (NEVILLE) and TREVOR (EDWARD) pseud., i.e., HON. JULIAN HENRY CHARLES FANE AND EDWARD ROBERT LYTTON BULWER-LYTTON, apt. EARL OF LYTTON. Tannhauser ; or, the battle of the bards. A poem. 8°. 1861. (Two copies.) 8720 493 TENISON (LADY LOUISA). Castile and Andalncia. (Illustrated by Lady L. Tenison and Egron Limdgren.) 8°. 1853. 872] TENNEMANN (W. G.). Manual of the History of Philosophy, translated from the German. By Rev. Arthur Johnson. 8". Oxford, 1832. 8722 [New edition.] Revised, enlarged, and continued, by J. R. Morell. 8°. Bohn 1852. 8723 TENNENT (SIR JAMES EMER- SON). Ceylon an account of the Island physi- cal, historical, and topographical . . Illus- strated by maps, plans, and drawings. 2 vol. 8°. 1859. 8724 Christianity in Ceylon ; its introduction and progress under the Portuguese, the Dutch, the British, and American mis- sions : With an historical sketch of the Brahmanical and Buddhist Superstitions. With illustrations. 8°. 1850. 8725 History of Modern Greece, from its conquest by the Romans B.C. 146, to the present time. 2 vol. 8°. 1830. 8726 Letters from the JEgean. 2 vol. 8°. 1829. 8727 Life of a Midshipman, a tale founded on facts : and intended to correct an inju- dicious predilection in boys for the life of a Sailor. [Anon.] 8°. 1829. 8728 Introduction signed " B. N." Picture of Greece in 1825 ; as exhibited in the personal narratives of James Emer- son [Tennent], Count Pecchio, and W. H. Humphreys. Comprising a detailed account of the events of the late cam- paign . . 2 vol. 8°. 1826. 8729 Sketches of the natural history of Cey- lon with narratives and anecdotes . . in- cluding a monograph of the Elephant . . With engravings from original drawings. 8°. 1861. 8730 'Story of the Guns. 8°. 1864. 8731 Treatise on the copyright of designs for printed fabrics ; with considerations on the necessity of its extension : and copious notices of the state of calico printing in Belgium, Germany, and the States of the Prussian Commercial League. 8°. 1841. 8732 AViiic, its use and taxation. An in- quiry into the operation of the wine duties on consumption and revenue. 8°. 18.')5. 8733 Several ot these works presentation copies with inscriptions. TENNYSON (ALFRED, 1st BARON). Poems by Two Brothers. [Anon.] 8°. London and Louth, 1827. 8734 Lord Tennyson's first publication. His brother wag Charles Tennyson, aft. Charles Tennyson Turner. (? L.P.) Poems, chiefly lyrical. 12°. 1830. 8735 Poems. 12°. 1833. 8736 Poems. 2 vol. 12°. 1842. 8737 " John Forster from Alfred Tennyson." Poems. (Medallion portrait and illus- trations.) 8°. 1857. 8738 Poems. Thirteenth edition. 12°. 1860. 8739 Works. 6 vol. (Portrait). 8°. 1872-3. 8740 Vol. 1, 2. Miscellaneous poems. 3. The Princess and other poems. 4. lu Me- moriam and Maud. 6. 6. Idylls of the King. Enoch Arden, etc. 12°. 1864. 8741 Gareth and Lynette etc. 12°. 1872. 8742 " From the Author." Idylls of the King. 12°. 1859. (Two copies). 8743 N°. 2. The title is "The true and the false, li'our Idylls of the King." The vol. is partly revises, corrected. In Memoriam. [Anon.] 12". 1850. 8744 Maud, and other poems. 12°. 1855. 8745 Ode on the death of the Duke of Wel- lington. 8°. 1852, (Two copies.) 8746 New edition. 8°. 1853. 8747 The Princess ; a medley. 12°. 1847. 8748 " John Forster firom A. Tennyson." TTiird edition. 12°. 1850. 8749 [Another edition]. With twenty-six illustrations engraved on wood by Dalziel, Green, Thomas, and E. Williams, from drawings by Daniel Maclise, R.A. 4°. I860. 8750 Paraphrastic Ode on Alfred Tennyson, Poet Laureate. Occasioned , by his thre- nody on the Duke of Wellington. [Signed "p."] 8°. 1852. 8751 TENNYSON (FREDERICK), Days and Hours. 12°. 1854. 8752 TERENTIUS AFER (PUBLIUS). Comoediae sex . . Curavit Arn. Henr. Westerhovius. 2 vol. 4°. Hagae-Comitnm, 1726. 8753 Comoediae sex, ad fidem editionis Wes- terhovianac concinnatae. 12°. 1815. 8754 494 TERENTIUS AFER (PUBLIUS) — cont. Comedies translated into familiar Wank verse. By George Colman. (Frontis- piece and plates.) 4°. 1765. 875.'5 Comedies of Terence and Fatles of Phaedrus. Literally translated into Eng- lish prose, with notes, by Henry Thomas Eiley . . Metrical translation of Phae- drus by Christopher Smart. 8°. Bohn, 18.'53. 875G TERRY (CHARLES). Scenes and Thoughts in Foreign Lands. 12°. 1848. 8757 TESTAMENT. Testament of the twelve patriarchs, the sons of Jacob. Translated out of Greek into Latin by Rob. Grosthead, sometime Bishop of Lincoln : and out of his copy into French and Dutch by others, and now Enghshed . . (Woodcut on title.) 12°. B.L. 1660. 875S THACKERAY (WILLIAM MAKE- PEACE). Works. 22 vol. (Illustrated.) 8°. 1867-9. 8759 Tol. 1. 2. Vanity Pair. A novel without a hero. 3. i. History of Pendennis. His fortunes and misfortunes, Ms friends and his greatest enemy. 6. 6. The Newcomes. Memoirs of a most respectable family. Edited by A. Pen- dennis Bsg". Illustrated by Eichard Doyle. 7. History of Henry Esmond Esq., a colonel in the service of her Majesty Queen Anrie. Written by himself. Jidlted by W. M. Thackeray. With illustrations by George Du Manner. 8. 9. The Virginians. A Tale of tie last century, with illustrations by the Au- thor. 10. 11. Adventures of Philip on his way through the "World ; shewing who robbed him, who helped him, and who passed him by: to which is now prefixed a Shabby genteel story. 12. Paris Sketch Book of Mr. M. A. Tit- marsh ! and the Memoirs of Mr. Oharles J. Tellowplush. With illustrations by the author. 15. Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, Esq., wi-it- ten by himself; with the History of Samuel Titmarsh and the Great Hog- garty Diamond. With illustrations by the author. 14. Irish Sketch Book : and Notes of a journey from Cornhill to Grand Cairo. With illustrations by the author. 16. Book of Snobs ; and Sketches and Travels in London. (And — Character Sketches.) With illustrations by the author. 16. Burlesques— Novels by eminent Hands. Jeames's Diary. Adventures of Major Gahagan. Legend of the Ehine. Rebecca and Eowena. History of the next Prenoh llevolution. Cox's Diary. With illustra- tions by the author, and by Kichard Doyle. THACKERAY (WILLIAM MAKE- PEACE)— 8759— cojif, 17. Christmas Books of Mr. M. A. Titmarsh. M". Perkins's Ball. Our Street. D'. Birch. Kickleburys on the Rhine. Rose and the Ring. W ith illustrations by the author. 18. Ballads and Tales. The " Tales " are — The Ravenswing — M"*. and W". Prank Berry — Dennis Haggarty's Wife. 19. Pour Georges. English Humourists of the eighteenth century (Swift— Oongreve and Addison — Steele— Prior, Gay, and Pope — Hogarth, Smollett, and Pielding— Sterne and Goldsmith) . With portraits. 20. Roundabout Papers. (From the Corn- hill Magazine.) Second Funeral of Na- poleon. With illustrations by the author. 21. Denis Duval : Lovel the Widower : and other Stories. (Bedford-Row conspiracy — Little dinner at Timmins's — Patal Boots.) With illustrations by Frederick Walker [A.R.A.], and the author. 22. Catherine: a story. Little Travels. The Fitz-Boodle Papers. Etc. With illus- trations by the author, and a portrait. The "Etc." are — Critical Reviews: George Cruiksbank. John Leeah's Pictures of Life and Character. The Wolves and the Lamb. Miscellanies : prose and verse. 4 vol. 8°. 1855-6, 1867. 8760 Vol. 1. Ballads. Book of Snobs. Tremen- dous Adventm'es of Major Gaha^an. Fatal Boots. Cox's Diary. 2. Memoirs of Mr. C. J. Tellowplush. Diary of C. Jeames De La Pluche, Esq. Sketches and Travels in London. Novels by eminent hands. Character Sketches. 3. Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, Esq. Legend of the Rhine. Rebecca and Rowena. Little Dinner at Timmins's. Bedford-Row Conspiracy. 4. Fitzboodle papers. Men's Wives. Shabby Genteel Story. History of Samuel Titmarsh and the great Hoggarty Diamond. Book of Snobs. 8°. 1848. 8761 Comic Tales and Sketches edited and illustrated by M. A. Titmarsh [i.e. W. M. Thackeray]. 2 vol. 8°. 1841. 8762 Doctor Birch and his young friends. By M'. M. A. Titmarsh. (With sixteen illustrations by the Author.) 8°. 1849. 8763 English Humourists . . 8°. 1853. 8764 [Another edition.] 12°. 3858. 8765 History of Henry Esmond, Esq. , . Written by Himself. 3 vol. 8°. 1852. 8766 History of Pendennis . . With illus- trations on steel and wood by the Author. 2 vol. 8°. 1849-50. 8767 History of Samuel Titmarsh and the great Hoggarty Diamond. 12°. 1849. 8768 Irish Sketch-Book. By Mr. M. A. Titmarsh. With numerous engravings on wood, drawn by the author. 2 vol. 8°. 1843. 8769 " J. Forster Esq. With the writer's best re- gards." 4m THACKERAY (WILLIAM MAKE- PEACE)— con«. Kickleburys on the Rhine. By M'. M. A. Titmarsh. 8". 1850. (2 copies.) 8770 M». Perkins's Ball. By M. A..Tit- "marsh. (Third edition.) 8°. (1847.) 8771 The Newcomes . . Edited by A. Pen- • dennis Esq". Illustrated by Eichard Doyle. 2 vol. 8°. 1854-5. 8772 Notes of a Journey from Cornhill to Grand Cairo, by way of Lisbon, Athens, Constantinople, and Jerusalem . . By M'. M. A. Titmarsh. 8». 1846. 8773 ' Our Street.'' 1848. By M'. M. A. Titmarsh. 8774 Paris Sketch Book : by Mr. Titmarsh. With numerous designs by the author . . 2 vol. 8°. 1840. 8775 Rebecca and Rowena. A Romance upon Romance by M'. M. A. Titmarsh. With illustrations by Richard Doyle. 8°. 1850. 8776 Rose and the Ring ; or, the History of Prince Giglio and Prince Bulbo. A fire- side pantomime for great and small children. By Mr. M. A. Titmarsh. 8°. 1855. 8777 Second Euneral of Napoleon . . and the Chronicle of the Drum. By M'. M. A. Titmarsh. 12°. 1841. 8778 Vanity Pair . . With illustrations on steel and wood by the author. 8°. 1848. 8779 [Another edition.] 8°. 1853. 8780 The Virginians. A tale of the last century. With illustrations on steel and wood by the Author. 2 vol. 8°. 1858-9. 8781 THACKWELL (EDWARD JOSEPH). Narrative of the Second Seikh War, in 1848-49. With a detailed account of the Battles of Ramnugger . . 8°. 1851. 8782 THALY (COLONEL SIGISMUND). Fortress of Komarom (Comorn), during the war of independence in Hungary in 1848-9. Translated by William Rushton. Plan of the fortress. 8°. 1852. 8783 THANE (JOHN). British Autography. A collection of fac-similies of the hand writing of royal and illustrious personages, with their authentic portraits r 147 1-1725.] 3 vol. (Portrait.) 4°. (1819.) 8784 Book-plate o£ John Hearne. THEATRE. Essay upon the present state of the Theatre in France, England and Italy. With reflections upon dramatic poetry in general, and the characters of the principal authors and performers of those nations . . 12°. 1760. 8785 THEATRICAL. Theatrical Extracts [from Newspapers etc.] Made by Charles Mathews. 2 vol. 4°. 1736-1798. 8786 No title-pages. Title taken from outside lettering. Proceedings at the sixth anniversary festival of the General Theatrical Fund . . April 14, 1851. Charles Dickens in the chair. 8°. 1851. 8787 [Theatrical and dramatic Tracts.] 8°. v.d. 8788 Eepresentation of the impiety and immo- rality of the English Stage, with reasons for putting a stop thereto : and some • questions addrest to those who frequent the Play-houses. 1704. Letter to Henry Woodward, comedian, oo- casion'd by His letter to the Inspector. By Simon Partridge, the facetious cobler of Pall Mall. n.d. State of the case, between the Lord Cham- berlain of his Majesty's Houshold, and Sir Richard Steele, as represented by that Knight. Restated, in vindication of King George, and the Duke of Newcastle. With a true copy of King Charles's patent, to Sir William D'avenant, for erecting a play-house, &e. 1720. Honesty in distress; but reliev'd by no party. A tragedy. [Anon. By Edwar Ward.] 1710.. Art of acting ; an essay ; in which the dra- matic passions are properly defined and described, with applications of the rules peculiar to each, and selected passages for practice. By Aaron Hill. Now first re- vised, and separately published, with an analysis. The Actor's Epitome : a poem, by the above author. Second edi- tion, n.d. (1801). Letter from Henry Woodward, comedian the meanest of all characters; (see In- spector, No. B24) to D'. John Hill, In- spector-General of Great-Britain, the greatest of all characters; (see all the In- spectors.) Second edition. 1753. Lawfulness of the stage, enquired into. By Rev. John Duncan. 1787. Considerations on the past and present state of the stage ; with reference to the late contests at Covent Garden ; plan for a new theatre for the purpose of hearing plays. 1809. Letter to J. P. Kemble, involving strictures on a recent edition of John Eord's Dra- matic Works [by Weber]. Cambridge, 1811. Letter to Richard Heber, containing some observations on the merits of M*". Weber's late edition of Ford's Dramatic Works. 1812. THEOBALD (LEWIS). Shakespeare restored. An attempt de- signed not only to correct M' Pope's most erroneous edition of this poet, but likewise to restore the true reading of Shakespeare 496 THE0BA1-D (LEWIS)— cow/. iu all the editions of his Works hitherto published. Second edition. 4°. 1740. ^ 8789 John Philip KemWe's copy and book-plate. THEOCRITUS. Eeliquiae utroque sermone cum scholiis Graecis et commentariis integris Henrici Stephani, losephi Scaligeri et Isaci Casau- boni ouravit hanc editionem . . lo. lacobus Reiske. 2 vol. (in 3). 4°. Viennae et Lipsiae, 1765-6. 8790 : AND OTHERS. Idylls of Theocritus, Bion, andMoschus, and the War-Songs of Tyrtaeus. Literally translated into English prose, by Eev. J. Banks. With metrical versions by J. M. Chapman. 8°. Bohn, 1853. 8791 THEOLOGIA. Theologia Gerraanica . . Edited by D'. Pfeiffer from the only complete manuscript yet known. Translated iirom the German by Susanna Winkworth. With n preface by Rev. Charles Kingsley, and a letter to the translator by Chevalier Bunsen! 12°. 1854. 8792 THEOPHRASTUS. Opera quae supersunt omnia . . [Second title] Historia Blantarum. Emendavit, cum adnotatione critica edidit Eridericus Wimmer. 8°. Vratislaviae, [Breslau] 1842. 8793 Moral Characters. Translated from the Greek, by Eustace Budgell. Second edi- tion. 12°. 1714. 8794 THICKNESSE (ANN). " Sketches of the lives and writings of the ladies of Erance. Addressed to M'*. EUzabeth Carter. Vol. 1, 2. 12°. 1778, 80. 8795 Book-plate of Percival Lewis. THIERRY (JACQUES NICOLAS AUGUSTIN). Histoire de la conquete de I'Angleterre par Les Normands, de ses causes et de ses suites jusqu'a nos jours, en Angleterre, en Ecosse, en Irlande et sur le Continent. Quatrifeme Edition. 4 vol. (in two). 12°. Bruxelles, 1835.' , 8796 History of the Conquest of England by the Normans . . Translated from the last Paris edition (by Charles C. Hamilton). ,8°. 1841. 8797 History of the Conquest of England by the Normnns ; its causes, and its fouse- quences, in England, Scotland, Ireland, and on the Continent. Translated . . by William Hazlitt. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8". 1847. 8799 THIERRY (JACQUES NICOLAS AUGUSTIN)— con<. Formation and progress of the Tiers :fitat, or Third Estate in France. Trans- lated from the French, by Rev. Francis B. Wells. 2 vol. 8°. 1855. 8799 Narratives of the Merovingian era, or- Scenes of the sixth century. Historical Essays . . Autobiographical preface. Translated from the last Paris edition. 8°. n.d. ' 8800 THIERS (LOUIS ADOLPHE). History of the French Revolution. Translated, with notes and illustrations from the most authentic sources, by Frederick Shoberl. (Plates.) 5 vol.' 8°. 1838. 8801 New edition. 5 vol. (Portraits, &c.) 8°. 1854. 8802 History of the Consulate and the empire of Erance under Napoleon. Forming a sequel to " The History of the French revolution." Translated by D. Forbes Campbell . . (Portrait of Thiers.) 20 vol. (in ten). 8°. 1845-1862. 8803 THIMM (FRANZ L. J.). Literature of Germany, from its earliest period to the present time, historically developed. Edited bv William Henry Earn. 12°. 1844. " 8804 THIRLWALL (CONNOP) BISHOP OF ST, DAVID'S. History of Greece. 8 vol. etc. 12°. 1835, 8805 THISTLETHWAYTE (MRS. F.). Memoirs and Correspondence of D'. Henry Bathurst, Bishop of Norwich. (Portrait.) 8°. 1853. 8806 THOM (ALEXANDER). Inquiry into the nature and course of storms iu the Indian Ocean south of the equator . . with suggestions on the means of avoiding them. 8°. 1845. 8807 THOM (JOHN HAMILTON). St. Paul's Epistles to the Corinthians : an attempt to convey their spirit and significance. 8°. 1851. 8808 THOM (ROBERT W.). Cleon. (A drama. Being part first of Life's Phases). 12°. 1855. 8809 THOM (WILLIAM). Rhymes and recollections of a hand- loom weaver. 12". Loudon, Aberdeen [printed], 1844. 8810 Second edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1845. 8811 497 THOMAS (ALEXANDRE), Une Province sous Louis XIV situa- tion politique et administrative de ia Bourgogno de 1661 a 1715, d'apr&s les manuscrits ut les documents inedits du temps. 8°. Paris, 1849. 8812 THOMAS (F. S.). Hand-book to the Public Records. 8°. 1853. 8813 Historical Notes. 1509-1714. Com- piled by F. S. Thomas. 3 vol. 8°. 18.56 8814 Vol. 1. Comprising Henry VIII. to Eliza- beth. 2. James I. to Anne. 3. Notes relating to Scotland and Ireland ; and lists of treaties with all Countries. THOMPSON (EDWARD P.). Austria. (Fortraitof Ferdinand I.), 8°. 1849. 8815 Lite in Russia : or, the discipline of despotism. 8». 1848. 8816 Note-book of a Naturalist. 8°. 1845. 8817 Passions of Animals. 8°. 1851. 8818 THOMPSON (G. H.). Rhymes. 12°. Buxton, 1862. 8819 THOMPSON (JOE). Life and Adventures of Joe Thompson. A Narrative founded on fact. Written by himself. 2 vol. 12°. Loudon and Bath, 1750. 8820 THOMPSON (LIEUT. COLONEL THOMAS PERRONET). Exercises, political and others . . 6 vol. 12°. 1842. 8821 THOMPSON (WADDY). Recollections of Mexico. York and London, 1846. 8°. New 8822 THOMPSON (WILLIAM). Inquiry into the principles of the dis- tribution of Wealth most conducive to human happiness. New edition by William Pare. 8°. 1850. 8823 THOMPSON (W. H.). Sicily and its Inhabitants. Observa- tions made during a residence in that country, in 1809-10. 4°. 1813. 8824 THOMS (WILLIAM JOHN). Hannah Lightfoot. Queen Charlotte and the Chevalier D'Eon. D'. Wilmot's Polish Princess. Reprinted with some additions, from " Notes and Queries." 8°. 1867. 8825 16.505. THOMS (WILLIAM JOHN)~con<. Three Notelets on Shakespeare, i. Shakespeare in Germany, ii. The Folk- Lore of Shakespeare, iii. Was Shake- speare ever a soldier. 8°. 1865. 8826 N°". 8825-6, presentation copies with inscrip- tions. THOMSON (ALEXANDER). . Second edition. Whist: a Poem 1792. 8827 THOMSON (MRS. ANTHONY TODD). English gentlewoman ; or, hints to young ladies on their entrance into society. [Anon.] 8°. 1846. 8828 English Matron. By the Author of "The English Gentlewoman." 8°. 1846. 8829 Life and times of George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham . 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1860. 8830 Memoirs of the Jacobites of 1715 and 1745. 3 voL (Portraits.) 8°. 1845-6. 8831 Memoirs of Sarah Duchess of Marl- borough, and of the Court of Queen Anne. 2 vol. 8°. 1839. 8832 Memoirs of the life of Sir Walter Ralegh . . (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 8833 Memoirs of [Charlotte Clayton] Vis- countess Sundon, Mistress of the robes to Queen Caroline, consort of George II: including letters from the most celebrated persons of her time . . 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1847. (Two copies.) 8834 Pencil notes [ P by T. Carlyle]. THOMSON (JAMES). Works. 4 vol. (Portrait.) 12°. 1750. 8835 Vol. 1. Seasons. 2. Liberty, Castle of Indolence.and Poems on several occasions, 3. Sophonisba, Agamemnon, and Alfred. 4. Edward and Eleonora, Tancred and Sigismunda, and Coriolanus. Poetical Works. 2 vol. (in one). (Portrait.) 12°. 1830. 8836 Memoir prefixed by Sir N. Harris Nicolas. . Poetical Works . . With a life of the Author by Rev. Patrick Murdoch, D.D., and notes by (James) Nichols. (Portrait.) 12°. 1849. 8837 Poetical Works. With life, critical dissertation, and explanatory notes, by Rev. George Gilfillan. 8°. Edinburgh, 1853. The Seasons. Edited, with notes . . by Anthony Todd Thomson, M.D. 12°. 1847. 8839 II 498 THOMSON (JAMES) D.D. Exposition of the Gospel according to St. Luke, in a series of lectures. (Also, of a portion of the Gospel according to St. Matthew.) 3toI. 8°. Edinburgh, 1849-51. 8840 THOMSON (THOMAS) M.D. History of Chemistry. 2 vol. (Portrait of Black) 12°. 1830-1. 8841 THOMSON (WILLIAM), ARCH- BISHOP OF YORK. Outline of the necessary Laws of Thought ; a treatise on pure and applied Logic. Second edition. 12°. 1849. 8842 THOREAU (HENRY DAVID). A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. 8». Boston [U.S.] 1849. 8843 THORESBY (RALPH). Diary of E. Thoresby, Author of the Topography of Leeds. (1677-1724.) Now first published from the original manuscript, by Eev. Joseph Hunter. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1830. 8844 Letters of eminent meu, iiddressed to R. Thoresby. Now first published from the originals. 2 vol. 8". 1832. 8845 THORNBURY (GEORGE WALTER). Art and Nature at home and abroad. 2 vol. 8°. 1856. 8846 Lays and Legends or Ballads of the New World. 8°. 1851. 8847 Some translations from Schiller &c'. are included. Old Stories re-told. 8°. 1869. Songs of the Cavaliers and Roundheads, Jacobite ballads, &c. With illustrations by H. S.Marks [R. A.]. 8°. 1857. 8849 THORNE (JAMES). Rambles by Rivers. The Duddon ; Mole ; Adur, Arun, and Wey ; Lea ; Dove. With numerous wood-cuts from the drawings of the Author. 12°. 1844. 8850 Avon. 12°. 1845. 8851 Thames. 2 vol. 12°. 1847, 9. 8852 THORNTON (EDWARD). Gazetteer of the territories under the government of the East-India Company aud of the Native'States on the Continent of India. 4 vol. 8°. 1854. 8853 THORNTON (COLONEL THOMAS). Sporting Tour thi'ough various parts of France, in 1802 : including a description of the sporting establishments, mode of hunting, and other field-amusements . . with observations on the arts, sciences, agriculture, husbandry, and commerce : strictures on the customs and manners of the French people ; with a view of the comparative advantages of sporting in France and England . . Account of French wolf-hunting. Illustrated . . by Bryant . . (and apneudix). 2 vol. 4°. 1806. 8854 THORNTON (THOMAS). History of China, from the earliest records to the treaty with Great Britain in 1842. 2 vol. Vol. L 8°. 1844. 8855 THORNTON (WILLIAM THOMAS). Over-Population and its remedy ; or, an inquiry into the extent and causes of the distress prevailing among the labouring classes of the British Islands, and into the means of remedying it, 8°. 1846. 8856 Plea for Peasant Proprietors ; with the outlines of a plan for their establishment in Ireland. 8°. 1848. (Two copies.) 8857 THORPE (BENJAMIN). Analecta Anglo-Saxonica. A selection, in prose and yerse, from Anglo-Saxon Authors of various ages ; with a glossary . . By B. Thorpe. New edition. 8°. 1846. 8858 Northern Mythology, comprising the principal popular traditions and supersti- tions of Scandinavia, North Germany, and the Netherlands. Compiled from original and other sources, by B. Thorpe. 3 vol. 8°. 1851-2. 8859 THORPE (THOMAS). [Sale catalogues.] 6 vol. 8°. 1832-6. 8860 Catalogue of twelve hundred manuscripts. Of Books. Of Autograph con-espondence, signs-manual aud sigjnatures. 01 draw- ings from ancient British seals by Hew- lett, executed for John Oaley with a view to the illustration of early British history. Of drawings and engravings, collected by John Broadley and Richard Heber, with a view to illustrate [English] Counties. Also, a few rare British portraits, chiefly purchased in the Bindley Collection. Of Manuscripts, autograph letters. Of choice Autograph letters. Of Manuscripts. Of Manuscripts, autographs, letters, state documents. 01 Manuscripts, particularly rich in English, Irish and Sootish history. Of Autograph letters. Of Autograph Letters. State Papers. Catalogus librorum mauu- scriptorum Bibhothecse Southwelliana; : among them are the Ormonde Letters and 499 THORPE (THOMAS)— COM*. Papers, constituting the history of the conduct of James Butler, first Duke of Ormond, as Lord Lieutenant ; and of the affairs of Ireland, from the year 1660 to the decease of the Dake, in 1688 . . (Thomas Thorpe's Catalogue of Manu- scripts. Part IV. — For 1834.) 8°. n.p. n.d. (1834). 8861 Many of these letters and papers are in the Forster Collection of MSS. THUCYDIDES. De hello Peloponnesiaco libri octo. Bx recensione Immanuelis Bekkeri. Accedunt scholia Grseca et Dukeri Wassiique anno - tationes. 4 vol. 8°. Oxon. 1821. 8862 Orationes cum animadversionibus et indice Caroli Ludovici Baveri. 12°. Lipsiae, 1759. 8863 Mitford's copy and MS. notes. History of the Peloponnesian War, translated from the Greek . . Three pre- liminary discourses : on the life of Thucy- dides. On his quahfications as an historian. A survey of the history. By William Smith. New edition. 2 vol. (Portrait of the translator, as Dean of Chester). 8°. 1812. 8864 History. Newly translated into English, and illustrated with . . annotations . . new life of Thucydides : mth a Memoir on the state of Greece . . at the com- mencement of the Peloponnesian War. By Kev. S. T. Bloomfield, D.D. 3 vol. 8°. 1829. 8865 History of the Peloponnesian War. New and literal version, from the text of Arnold, collated with Bekker, GoUer, and Poppo. By Kev. Henry Dale. 2 vol. 8°. Bohn, 1848-9. 8866 Maps and plans illustrative of Thucy- dides. 8°. Oxford, n.d. 8867 THURLOE (JOHN). Collection of the State Papers of J. Thurloe ; Secretary, first, to the Council of State, and afterwards to the two Pro- tect ors, Oliver and Bichard Cromwell. Containing authentic memorials of the English affairs from 1638, to the restora- tion of Charles II. . . Including also original letters and papers, communicated by the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Earl of Shelbnrn . . To which is prefixed the life of Thurloe . . By Thomas Birch , . 7 vol. (Portrait.) P". 1742. (2 copies.) 8868 No. 2 wants Vol. VI. and the portrait. Pencil notes by T. Carlyle. Letter to a friend in the country, on the publication ofThurloe's State Papers . . Second edition. 8°. 1742. 8869 " By T. Carte." Pencil note; but, accord- ing to " Lowndes," by John Oampbell, LL.D. TICKNOR (GEORGE). History of Spanish Literature. 3 vol. 8°. 1849. 8870 TIECK (LUDWIG). The Midsummer Night, or Shakespeare and the Fairies. Prom the German. By Mary C. Rumsey. 8». 1854. 8871 Old man of the Mountain, Lovecharm, and Pietro of Abano. Tales from the German. IS". 1831. 8872 TIGHE (RICHARD). Short account of the life and writings of Eev. William Law . . Appendix, which contains specimens of the writings. 8°. 1813. Propositions relating to the glory and extent of the Kingdom of God, under the mediatorial government of- the Lord Jesus Christ ; with testimonies from Scripture, in support of the doctrine contained in the Propositions. 8°. 1813. 8873 One vol. TIGHE (ROBERT RICHARD) ahd DAVIS (JAMES EDWARD). Annals of Windsor, being a History of the Castle and Town ; with some account of Eton and places adjacent. 2 vol. 8". 1858. 8874 TILLEMONT (SEBASTIEN LE NAIN DE). Account of the life of Apollonius Ty- aneus. Translated out of French [by Jeukin] . . observations upon Apollonius. 12°. 1702. 8875 TILLESLEY (RICHARD) D.D. Animadversions upon Seldens History of Tythes . . Before which . . is a Cata- logue of 72. authors, before 1215. Main- taining the lus divinum of' Tythes, or more, to be payd to the priesthood under the (jospell. Second edition . . with an Answer to an unprinted pamphlet against the former. 4°. 1621. 8876 At the end, without title-page, Philologicall passages examined. Separate title-page to the "Answer." Prom Abp. Tenison's library. [TILLOTSON (THOMAS) ARCH- BISHOP OF CANTERBURY.] Discourse against Transuhstantiation. [Anon.] Fourth edition. 4°. 1685. 8877 " By Bp. Tillotsoij." MS. on t.p. TIMBS (JOHN). Curiosities of London : exhibiting the most rare and remarkable objects of in- terest in the Metropolis ; with nearly fifty years' personal recollections. (Portrait.) 12°. 1855. 8878 II 2 500 TIMBS (JOHN)— co»<. Lives of Wits and Humourists. 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1862. 8879 Swift, Steele, Foote, Goldsmith, the Dol- mans, Sheridan, Person, S,ydney Smith, Hook, James and Horace Smith. Things not generally known, familiarly explained . . 12°. 1856. 8880 TIME. Art of employing Time to the greatest advantage, the true source of happiness. 8°. 1822. 8881 Second edition. 8°. 1822.' 8882 TIMES. [No title-page. True account and cha- racter of the times, historically and politi- cally drawne by a Gentleman to give satis- faction to his friend in the countrey.] 4°. 8883 Signed "N.LL." TIMES, THE. Essays from " The Times." Being a selection from the literary papers which have appeared in that journal . . 12°. 1851. 8884 Second Series. 12°. 1854. 8885 Reprint from the Times. The annual summaries for a quarter of a Century. 12°. 1876. 8886 TIMPERLEY (C. H.). Dictionary of Printers and Printing, with the progress of literature, ancient and modern ; bibliographical illustrations, etc. 8°. 1839. 8887 [Re-issue.'J Encyclopaedia of literary and typographical anecdote ; being a chronological digest of the most interest- ing facts illustrative of the history of literature and printing from the earliest period to the present time . . compiled and condensed from Nichols's Literary Anecdotes . . by 0. H. Timperley. Se- cond editjop, to which are added, a con- tinuation to the present time . . and h practical manual of printing. 8°. 1842. TINDAL (NICHOLAS). Guide to Classical learning : or, Poly- metis [by Spence] abridged . . A work absolutely necessary, not only for the right understanding of the Classics, but also for forming in youug minds a true taste for the beauties of poetry, sculpture, and painting. Fifth edition. Illustrated with twenty-eight prints from original antiques . . 12°. 1786. 8889 TISCHENDORFF (CONSTANTINE). Travels in the East. Translated from the German, by W. E. Shucbard. 12°. 1847. 8890 TOCQUEVILLE (ALEXIS CHARLES HENRI CLERET DE). De la democratic en Amerique. Orne d'une carte d' Amerique. 3 vol. (in one). 12°. Bruxelles, 1840. 8891 12°. — Deuxieme partie. Bruxelles, 1840. 2 vol. (in one) . 8892 On the state of Society in France before the revolution of 1789 ; and on the causes which led to that event. Translated by Henry Reeve. 8°. 1856. 8893 TODD (REV. HENRY JOHNj. Some Account of the life and writings of John Milton. (With) an Appendix con- taining an inquiry into the origin of Paradise Lost. 8°. 1826. 8894 Vindication of Thomas Cranmer, Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, and therewith of the Reformation in England, against some of the allegations which have been recently made by Rev. Dr. Lingard, Rev. Dr. Milner, and Charles Butler Esq. Second edition, with notices of Dr. Lin- gard's and Mr. Butler's remarks on the first edition. 12°. 1826,. 8895 TOLAND (JOHNj. Life of John Milton . . With Amyn- toi ; or a defense of Milton's Life. And various notes. [Edited by Thomas Hol- lis.] 8°. Printed 1699, reprinted 1761. 8896 Book plate of "Walter "WilsDu. Vindicius Liberius : or, M. Toland's defence of himself, against the late Lower House of Convocation, and others ; where- in (besides his letters to the prolocutor) certain passages of the book, intitul'd, Christianity nut mysterious, are explain'd, and others corrected : With a full and clear account of the authors principles re- lating to Church and State ; and a justifi- cation of the Whigs and Commonwealths- men . . 12°. 1702. 8897 Book-plate of George Stanhope, Dean of Canterbury. TOLDERVY (WILLIAM). Select Epitaphs. Collected by W. Toldervy. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. 1755. TOLFREY (FREDERICK). Jones's [publisher] Guide -to Norway, and Salmon-fisher's pocket companion. Edited by F. Tolfrey. 12°. 1848. 8899 TOMASINUS (lACOBUS PHILIP- PUS). Illustrium virorum elogia iconibus ex- ornatii. 4°. Patavii [Padua], 1630. 8900 50.1 TOMKINS (SAMUEL). Influence of the Hebrew and Christian revelations on ancient heathen writers. An essay which obtained the Hulsean prize for 1849. 8°. Cambridge, 1850. 8901 TOMLINE (GEORGE), BISHOP OF WINCHESTER. Memoirs of the life of William Pitt. Vol. 1, 2. 4°. 1821. 8902 Second edition. .3 vol. 8°. 182J. 8903 TOMLINS (FREDERIC GUEST), Brief view of the English Brama, from the earliest period to the present time : With suggestions for elevating the pre- sent condition of the art, and of its pro- fessors. 12°. 1840. - 8904 TONE (THEOBALD WOLFE). Memoirs. Written by himself. Com- prising a complete journal of his negotia- tions to procure the aid of the French for the liberation of Ireland. With selections from his Diary whilst agent to the Irish Catholics. Edited by his son William Theobald Wolfe Tone. 2 vol. (Por- trait). 8°. 1827. 8905 TOOKE (THOMAS). History of prices, and of the state of the Circulation, from 1839 to 1847 inclusive : with a general review of the Currency question, and remarks on the operation of the act 7 & 8 Vict. c. 32. . . 8°. 1848. 8906 TOOKE (WILLIAM). Monarchy of France : its rise, pro- gress, and fall. 8°. 1855. 8907 TOOVEY (ALFRED DIXON). Biographical and critical notices of the British Poets of the present century, with specimens of their poetry. 12°. 1848. 8908 TOPFFER (RODOLPHE). Nouvelles Gcnevoises illustrces d'apres les dessins de I'auteur gravures par Best, Leioir, Hotelin et Regnier. 2= edition illustree. 8°. 1849. 8909 TOPHAM (EDWARD). Life of John Blwes [the Miser] ; Mem- ber . . for Berkshire. First published in the . . World . . Fourth edition. (Por- trait). 8°. 1790. 8910 Twelfth edition . . Appendix, entirely new. rPortraitof Topham.) 8°. 1805. 8911 TOPOGRAPHER. Topographer for 1789 ( — 90), contain- ing a variety of original articles, illustra- tive of the local history and antiquities of England : particularly in the history and description of ancient and eminent seats and stiles of Architecture ; in the preser- vation of curious monumental inscrip- tions ; in the genealogies and anecdotes of famous families ; in disquisitions upon remarkable tenures, and in delineations of the face of countries. Engravings. Vol. I. and II. 8°. 1789-90. 8912 " B.V Sir S. E. Brydges and Eev. Stebbing Shaw." Loivndes, TORRENS (WILLIAM TORRENS M'^CULLAGH). Industrial history of Free Nations, con- sidered in relation to their domestic in- stitutions and external policy. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 8913 Vol. 1. The Greeks. Vol. 2. The Dutch. Presentation copy. Memoirs of Richard Lalor Shell. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1855. 8914 Use and study of History . . Second edition. 8°. 1845. 8915 TOUCHARD-LAFOSSE (G.). Histoire de Charles XIV. (Jean Berna- dote) Roi de Sufede et de Norv^ge. 3 vol. (in one). 8°. Paris, 1842-3. 8916 TOURNEFORT (JOSEPH PITTON DE). Relation d'un voyage du Levant, fait par ordre du Roy. Contenant I'histoire ancienne & modernc de plusieurs Isles de 1' Archipel, de Constantinople, des c6tes de la Mer Noire, de I'Armenie, de la Georgie, des frontieres de Perse & de I'Asie Mineure. Avec les plans des villes & des lieux considerables ; le genie, les moeurs, le commerce & la religion des differens peuples qui les babitent ; et I'explication des mcdailles & des monu- mens antiques. Enriohie de descriptions & de figures d'un grand nombre de plantes rares, de divers animaux : et plusieurs ob- servations touchant I'histoire naturelle. 3 vol. 8°. Lyon, 1727. 8917 TOURNEUR (CYRIL). The Revengers Tragsedie . . [Anon.] 4°. 1607. The Atheist's Tragedie : or the honest man's revenge . . 4°. 1612. 8918 Isaac Eeed's copy with his Autograph. " Octavius Gilchrist " on title-page. In- complete. Six leaves in MS. One vol. AND OTHERS. Three Elegies on the most lamented death of Prince Henrie, the first written by Cyril Tourneur. The 502 TOURNEUR AND OTHERS—COB^. second by John Webster. The third by Tho ; Heywood. 4°. 1613. E£u?.h Elegie has its own title page. Bright's copy. Two Elegies, consecrated to the never- dying memorie of . . Henry Prince of Wales. 4°. [Imprint mutilated. 1613.] 8919 Signed at end — " Christopherus Brooke " & " W. B. [?rowne] Inter: Temple :" Bach elegy has its own title page. MS. "Mourning Song" at the end. One vol. TOURVILLE (MARECHAL DE). Memoires du Marechal de Tourrille. 3 vol. 12°. Amsterdam, 1758. 8920 TOWERS (JOSEPH) LL.D. Tracts on political and other subjects published at various times and now first collected together. 3 vol. (Portrait of Towers, and other portraits inserted.) 8°. 1796. 8921 Vol. 1 ■ Vindication of the political princmles of Locke, in answer to the objections of Kev. D'. Tucker. Letter to Jy. Samuel John- son, occasioned by his late political pub- lications : with an appendix, containing some observations on a pamphlet pub- lished by D"". Shebbeare. Observations on Hume's Histoiy of England. 2. Observa- tions on Juries, in trials for Libels : with remarks on the law of libels. Letter to Hev. D'". Nowell, occasioned by his very extraordinary sermon 30th of January, 1772. Exainination into the charges brought against Lord "William Russel and Algernon Sydney, by Sir John Ualrymple. Dialogue between two gentlemen, concern- ing the late application to Parliament, for relief in the matter of subscription to the Articles and Liturgy. Heview of the genuine doctrines of Christianity. Oration at the interment of Rev. Caleb Fleming, D.D. July 29, 1779. 3. Thoughts on the commencement of a new parliament : with an appendiir, containing remarks on the letter of Burke, on the devolution in France. Dialogue on the grounds of the late associations, and the commencement of a war with France. Remarks on the association at the Crown and Anchor, Strand, for presei-ving liberty and property against Republicans and Levellers. Essay on D'. Samuel Johnson. TOWNELEY. I'ublleations of the Surtees Society . . 1836. [Second title]. Towneley Mys- teries. 8°. n.d. (1830). 8922 TOWNLEY (HENRY) and HOLY- OAKE (GEORGE JACOB). iieport of a Public Discussion carried on by II. Townley, and G. J. Holyoake . . on the question — Is there sufficient proof of the existence of a God ; that is, of a Being distinct from nature ? Edited, witli notes and an appendix, by H. Town- ley, and a preface by James Bennett, D.D. 8°. n.d. (1852). 8923 TOWNSEND (JOSEPH PHIPPS). Rambles- and observations in New South Wales . . 8°. 1849. 8924 TOWNSEND (WILLIAM CHARLES). History of the House of Commons, from the Convention Parliament of 1688 -9 to the passing of the Eeform Bill, in 1832. 2 vol. (Plates.) 8°. 1843. 8925 Vol. I. pp. 81-240 wanting. Lives of twelve eminent Judges of the last and present century. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 8926 Modern State Trials. Eevised and illustrated with essays and notes. By W. C. Townsend. 2 vo'l. 8°. 1850. 8927 TOWNSHEND (REV. CHAUNCY HARE). Facts in mesmerism, with reasons for a dispassionate inquiry into it. 8°. 1840. 8928 Second edition. 8°. 1844. 8929 Bookplate of the author. Mesmerism proved true, and the Quar- terly reviewer reviewed. 8°. 1854. 8930 New edition, with a preface. 8°. 1855. 8931 The Reigning Vice : a, satirical essaj' . . [Anon.] 12°. 1827. 8932 "Charles Dickens from bis friend, the Au- thor." Sermons in Sonnets ; with a Text on the new year : and other poems. 12°. 1851. 8933 The Three Gates. In verse. 8°. 1859. 8934 Second edition. (Portrait.) 8°. 1861. (Two copies.) 8935 N°". 8929, 31^5 presentation copies. Religious opinions of the late Rev. C. H. Townshend. Published as directed in his Will, by his literary executor (Charles Dickens). 8°. 1869. 8936 TRACTS. [Miscellaneous Tracts.] [12 vol.] 4°. etc. London, etc. and n.p. v.d. and n.d. 8937 Vol. I. Belgicke Pismire. 1022 (duplicate). [No title-page. Narrative of the harbor, of Rye in the County of Sussex]. Grand concern of England explained; in several proposals offered to the considera- tion of the Parliament. For payment of publick debts. For advancement and en- couragement of ti'ade. For raising the rents ot lands. 1673. Prevention of poverty : or, a discourse of the causes of the decay of trade, fall of lands, and want of money throughout the nation ; with certain expedients for remedying the same. By Richard Haines. 1674. Provision lor the poor ; or, reasons for the erecting ot a working-hospital in every 503 TRACTS— 8937— coni. county to promote the linnen manufac- tory; with maintainanoe for all poor and distressed people. By R. Haines. 1678. Proposals for the imployins of the poor especially in and about tho City of Lon- don. And for the prevention of begging. By T. F[irmin].j 1678. Englands Wants : proposals probably bene- floial for England, offered to the con- sideration of all good patriots in Parlia- ment. By the authour of the present state of England. 1686. Discourses, viz. of the longitude. The tricks of astrological quaoka. Of the depth of the sea. Of tobacco. Of Europe being too full of people. The various opinions' con- cerning the time of keeping the Sabbath. 1088. Discourse of the necessity of encouraging mechaniok industry. 1690. Request to Protestants, to promote religion and trade ; with directions how to do it. 1088. Saint Paul the tont-maker : in a discourse shewing how religion has in all ages been promoted by the industrious mechanick. 1G90. Taxes no charge. Shewing the nature, use, and benefit of taxes in this Kingdom ; and compared with the impositions of foreign states. 1690. IX. Argument proving, that according to the covenant of eternal life revealed in the scriptures, man may be translated from hence into that eternal life, without pass- ing through death . . (By J. Asgill.) 1700. Canterbury Tales, rendred into famihar verse. Written by no Body. 1701. Memorial of the Church of England. Second edition. [Anon, bv James Drake, M.D.] 1706. Useful transactions for the months of May ^etc] 1709. Containing a voyage to the island of Cajaraai in America, n.d. Satire on Sir Hans Sloane's voyage to Jamaica, ascribed to D^ King. Priestcraft in perfection : or, a detection of the fraud of inserting and continuing this clause (The Church hath power to de- cree rites [etc.] ) in the twentieth Article of the Articles of the Church of England. 1710. The Managers pro and con : or, an account of what is said at Child's and Tom's coffee- houses for and against D'. Sacheverell. Second edition. 1710. The Assertion is, that the title of the House of Hanover to the succession of the British Monarchy (on failure of issue of her present Majesty) is a title hereditary, and of divine institution. (By J. Asgill.) 1710. XII. Picture of the Observator drawn to the hfe. (Wood-cut of Tutchin in the pil- lory.) 2 leaves. 1704 T-ch-n [Tutchin] touoh'd to the quick : or, faction's Secretary whipp'd [14 August. 1704. MS.']. 2 leaves. Daniel de Foe and the De%'il at leap-fi'og, being a dialogue which jiass'd between them, as they were recreating themselves at that sport in an eminent tavern in Cheapside. 1706. 2 leaves. Smithfield groans : or, an humble remon- strance to the magistrates of London, concerning the horrid wickedness com- mitted and conniv'd at, in Bartholomew- fairi 1707. 2 leaves. The seven extinguishers, a poem. [Upon y= 7. Bishops, who were ag' Do' Sacheverell. 'MS.']. 1710. MS. names &c. TRACTS— 8&37— cont. Trip to Kensington : or, that town drawn to the life. 1710. 2 leaves. Catalogue of pentioners in the Long Par- liament. With their aevei-al gratuities, rewards, and sallaries, bestowed upon themselves. 1699. 2 leaves. Paul Diack : or, the chat of the Gods at their tea-table. 2 leaves. "Ag'y French. 3. Jan. 170i." MS. Search after knavery, or, a visitation of the bakers. 1693. 2 leaves. Description of Scotland, and its inhabitants. 1705. (Signed B.B.) New socket-money tax, lor the raising of live-hundred-thonsaua'pounds, per an- num, upon all degrees of marriage. 1694. 2 leaves. New Westminster Wedding, being a full relation of the late marriage of J[ohn] P[owell] clerk, to Eliz. .Hook, spinster. Licens'd Octob. 26. 1693. Printed for the inhabitants of Ipswich. 2 leaves. Proposals for printing the Atalanta Fugiens By Michael Majerus. "15januar. 170i." MS. Hoous-Pocus call'd the French king to life again. 1705. 2 leaves. Proceedings at the tiyal of a certain scribling hosier, and True-bom Englishman, com- monly known by the name of Daniel the prophet, alias your hum-servant DeF[oe]. For taking subscriptions to a certaine book called Jure Divine, and now for that he has got the mony, does not publish the said book. 1705. 2 leaves. Book-plate and MS. note of James Bindley. All the pieces (except the first and lifthj in this vol. are without title-pages. IV. Preface to the B p of S— r— m's [Bishop Burnet] Introduction to the third volume of the History of the lie- formation of tlie Church of England. By Gregory Misosarum. 1713. "D'. Swift." Pencil note. Account of a dream at Harwich. In a letter to a member of Parliament about the Camisars. [Signed A. M.] 1708. Speech that was intended to have been spoken by the Terrae-filius. in the theatre at O d [Oxford], July 13. 1713. 1713. MS. notes. Esquire Bickerstaff's predictions for 1708. That P dge [Partridge], the famous astrologer, is to die on the 29th of March, n.p. 1708. Cheshire prophesy with remarks. Second edition, n.d. Vita et colloquia Bichardi Bentleii. Life and conversation of Richard Bentley, de- livered in his own words, for the most part from his own writings. [Lat. and Engl.] 1712. [No title-page. Mr. (Char.) Leslie to the Bishop of Sarum.] (1715.) English Advice to the freeholders of Eng- land, n.p. 1714. MS. note as to this piece being written by Atterbury. V. Enquiry into the causes of the frequent executions at Tyburn : Proposal for some regulations concerning felons in prison. Discourse on transportation. By B. Man- deville, M.D. 1726. Enquiry into the causes of the late increase of robbers, &c. With some proposals for remedying this growing evil. By Henry Fielding. 1761. Life of Mother Gin ; containing a relation of her conduct and politicks. 1730. Pretty Gentleman : or. Softness of manners vindicated from the false ridicule exhi- 504 TRACTS— 8937— coM<. bited under the character of William Fribble, Esq. [Addressed to Garrick.] 1717. Examination of the History of Sir Charles Grandison. 1754. [MS. marginal notes.] Five weeks tour to Paris, Versailles, Marli, &c. With an accurate description of Paris. Fourth edition. 1765. WonderfuU "Wonder of Wonders. By D'. Sw ft. [By T. Sheridan.] With a preface, and notes. Second edition. 1721. Letter to the Craftsman, on the jjame of chess. 1733. Chess analysed by A. D. Philidor. Third edition. 1773. Budget opened. Or, an answer to a pamph- let conoerninK the duties on wine and . tobacco. 1738. Letter of advice, addressed to all merchants in Great Britain, oonc-erning the odious tax on receipts, which took place 2 September, 1783. With an abstract of the act. By Oliver Quid, tobacconist. Tenth edition. 1783. Lettei* from a member ox parliament con- taining, his reasons for beinpr against the late Act for preventing the retail of Spirituous liquors, n.d. Eemarks upon M'. Webber's scheme and the Draper's pamphlet. 1741. Answer to reasons for the taking off the prohibition, and giving leave to the im- portation of Irish cattel. 1677. Letter concerning the disabling clauses lately offered to the House of Commons, for regulating Cnrporatious. 1690. VI. Memoirs and history of Prince Titi. Done from the French [of Hyacinthe Cordonnier, more generally known as Th6miseul de Saint-Hyacinthe] by a per- son of quality. Dodd, 1736. A Satire upon George II, his son Fred. Prince oi Wales, etc. ? Had J. Ralph a hand in it. See " N & 2 " 26 July 1884 {B. Solly). Lettre sur les transactions publiques du regne. d'Elizabeth: contenant plusieurs anecdotes, et quelques r6fl6xions critiques sur M. Rapin relativement dj I'histoire de oe E^gne. Amsterdam, 1786. Letters, never before printed : written by Alexander Pope, and other ingenious gentlemen, to Aaron Hill. 1751. The Dunciad. An heroic poem. In three books. [Anon. Pope.] (Frontispiece.) Dublin, printed, London reprinted for A. Dodd. 1728. History of John Bull. Part III. Publish'd from the manuscripts of Sir Humphry Polesworth, author of the first and second parts. By Nathan Polesworth. [By Arbuthnot, or Swift and Arbuthnot.] 1744. Essay upon the Civil Wars of France, and also upon the Epick poetry of the Euro- pean nations from Homer down to Milton. By Mr. de Voltaire. 1727. Select fables of Boccaline, J5sop, Ac. With reflections. 1704. "VIX. Case of M^ Bartholomew Greenwood submitted to the publick bv himself. In which the many inconsistences of Mr. Wheatley are plainly demonstrated. 1740. Statement of facts, in answer to M". Gim- ning's letter, addi'cssed to the Duke of Argyll. By Captain Essex Eowen. 1791. [Half-title.] Case of Elizabeth Fitz-Maurice, alias Leeson, and the Lord AVillinm Fitz- Maurici'. [Title] . . case of Elizabeth Fitz-Maurice, relating to a marriage- contract. E. Curll, 1733. Jjotter to the Earl of Chesterfield. By M". Teresia Constantia Muilman. 1750. TRACTS— 8937— coni. Letter from Admiral Byng to the Eight Hon. W P [Pitt], dated March 12, 1757, two days before his execution. 1767. (2 copies.) Candid examina'^ion of tlie resolutions and sentence of the Court-Martial on the trial of Admiral Byng. By an old sea ofHcer. 1757. VIII. Book of the chronicle of James, the nephew, with an hymn of thanksgiving^ on his deliverance from the hands of Richeth, his uncle. (And— OUver Crom- well's letter.) 1743. Imperfect at the beginning. Chronicle of William the son of George. With all that passed at the battle of Tournay; the mighty acts of W k [Waldeck] the Prince, and In dsby [! Ingoldsby] the Brigadier. By Dathan the Jew, Second edition. 1745. Several good things for a shilling. A King's Speech. Instructions to members. Col. B s speech on the honour of a king. Discourse on Rebellion. Address to the K . D'. B 1 for the Test-act. L d Sh y against the Test -act. n.d. Several occasional and humorous bubble- letters, written to the Merry Journalists, in the mad year 1720 . . The South- Sea-penitent. 1722. Pair of clean shoes and boots for a dirty baronet, or, an answer to a scandalous pamphlet, intituled. Over Shoes, over boots, by Sir Richard Cox. By a lover of the Clergy [Dr. Z. Grey]. 1722. IX. Buskin and Sock ; being controversial letters between M'. Thomas Sheridan, tragedian, and M'. Theophilus Cibber, comedian ; just published in Dublin. Dublin, printed; London, reprinted 1743. Theatrical correspondence in death. An epistle from M". Oldfleld, in the Shades, to M". Br-ceg-dle [Bracegirdle], upon earth ; containing, a dialogue between the most eminent players in the Shades, upon the late stage desertion. 1748. Case of our present theatrical disputes, fairly stated. In which is contained, a succinct account of the ancient stage ; a comprehensive view of the management of the Italian, Spanish, French and Dutch theatres, with some free remarks upon our own. 1743. Defence of the People : or, full ccnftitation of the pretended facts, advanc'd in a late huge, angry pamphlet; call'd Faction detected. 1744. The Conspirators; or, the case of Catiline, as collected from the best historians, im- partially examin'd. By the author of the Case of Francis, Lord Bacon. Third edi- tion. 1721. Meditations and Soliloquies. Viz. on the Advent. By [Feuelou] Archbishop of Cambray. 1744. Four Letters which passed between a gentle- man and a clergyman, concerning the necessity of an episcopal commission, for the vahd administration of Gospel ordi- nances. 1743. X. English liberty established : or, the most material circumstances relative to John Wilkes Esq ; member of parliament tor thu county of Middlesex. (Portrait.) 1768. ' Variety of surprising experiments, made of two incomparable medicines: Elixir Fe- brifugum Hj.irtis, and Salt of Limons: a-s also of Elixir Renovans. Shewing their virtues. Being the peculiar secrets of the author. Moses Stringer, chymist and physitian. 1707. 505 TRACTS— 8937— eon<. Meditation upon a broom-stick and some- what beside ; ol the same Author's [Swift.] E. Curll, 1710. The " Somewhat beside " consist ot Baucis and Philemon ; Petition of Frances Harris; To Mrs. Biddy Floyd. [No title-page. Abstract of the penal laws af^inst prophaneness and immorality. (And) Specimen ot an agreement for the forming of a society for the reformation of manners.] Batt upon Batt [etc J By [D'. Speed]. Kfth edition. 1706 ISee No. 8298]. Vriest turn'd poet : or, the best way of an- swering D'. Sacheverel's sermon, preached at St. Paul's, Nov. the B"'. 1709. Being his discourse paraphras'd in burlesque rhime. n.d. Complete Key to the Tale of a Tub : with some account ot the Authors, the occasion and design of writing it, and M'. Wotton's remarks examined. Second edition. To which are added the following Miscellanies [etc.] B. Curll, 1713. No " Miscellanies." Letters. Manuscript said to be found in the ruins of Westgate-llouse, called the 4th chapter of the Chronicles of John the Scribe. Timothy Corkscrew's letter to the printer. Letter to Timothy Cork- screw [two ot these are "from the Bristol Gazette."] Printed and sold by J. Salmon, in Stall street [P Bristol], n.d. XI. M'. Asgill's argument for his enlarge- ment answered, n.p. n.d. Remarques upon the new project ot asso- ciation, pp. 1-4. n.p. n.cl. Imperfect. Benefit of the Ballot particularly in the republick of Venice." pp. 1-4. n.p. n.d. The occasional Doctor his examination before a committee of Whigg-priests. n.p. n.d. Plain truth: or, a private discourse betwixt P. & H. pp. B-8. n.ij. n.d. Letter from the Earl of Rochester to My Lord, ot his Majesty's Commission eccle- siastical, n.p. n.d. Present interest of Tangier, pp. 1-4. n.p. n.d. News from Dunkirk-House : or. Clarendon's farewell to England. 1667. n.p. n.d. ■ MS. note in the handwriting ot Philip Bliss, D.C.L. Letter from Heer Va.n Dyckvelt, one of the States deputies in the Army, to.the htates- General. 1678. n.p. n.d. Whitehall, Jan. 17, 187|. Order by his Ma- jesty in Council as to Foreigners. (Popish Recusants.) 167?. True account of what past at the election of knights of the Shire for the county of Bucks. Dated (at end) Buckingham Aug. 30. 1679. pp. 1-4. n.p. n.d. Memorial of the Earl Avaux extraord^ai-y ambassador from the most Christian King, delivered to the States General. End. Given in at the Hague 1681, and reprinted in Lou[sJc]don. Reply to the Duke of Buckingham's letter to the author of a paper, entituled an answer to his Graces discourse concerning religion, pp. 1-4. Find. 1686. Address of Parhament, to the King's Majesty, for Suppressing the Bcbels: with liis Majesty's Answer. 15°, 16° Martn, 1688. End.- 168J. Potitinn ot the Lords for the calling ot a ^l^e Parliament: with his Majesty's answer. Novemb. 1688. TRACTS— 8937— co7ii. His Majesties reasons for with-drawinfr himself from Eocbester. "Writ witb his own hand. Dated at end— Eocbester, Decemb . 22. 1688. n .p. n.d. Pubhclt Grievances of the Nation, adjudged necessary, by the House of Commons, to be redressed, n.p. 1689. Account of the proceedings against Captain Wren, Commander of His Majesties ship the Greenwich. 1689. Declaration of the Prince of Orange, for the better collecting the publick revenue, St. James's 2 January, 168§. 1689. Earl of Sunderland's Letter. Discovering the designs of the Homish party, and others. 1689. Prench King's declaration of war against the cruwn of Spain. Translated out of Prenoh. In the Savoy, 1689. Their Majesties (King William and Queen Mary) Declaration against the French King. Hampton Court, 7 May, 1689. 1689. Great news from Hertford-shire. Engage- ment between Highway-men, and several of the countrey people, near Bamet. 1691. Letter from a member of Parliament giving a short account of the proceedings of the Tackers. Eifth edition. 170B. [No t.p. Election of Sheriffs for London & Middlesex] pp. 3-5. Imperfect, Most of the pieces in this vol. are single sheets. XII. [No t.p. Paul's Church-yard, Libri theolo^cl, politici, historici, nundinis Pauhnis (unit cum Templo) prostant venales. Done into English for the As- sembly of Divines.] n.p. n.d. " Centuria prima (et) Secunda." A new Modell or the Conversion of the in- fidell terras of the law, for the better promoting of mis-understanding accord- ing to common sence. The first centm-y. n.p. 1652. [No title-page. Catalogue of the titles of severall books printed in Cambridge 1669.] Declaration of the true causes which moved his Majestic to assemble, and after inforced him to dissolve the two last meetings in Parliament. 1626. Instructions directed from tjie Kings Majestic, unto all the Bishops of this Kingdome. 1626. Speech in the StaiT-Chamber, 14 lune, 1637. At the censure, of John Bastwick, Henry Burton, & William Prinn; concerning pretended innovations in the church. By William [Laud] Ai'chbishop of Canter- bury. 1637. His Majesties Proclamation in Scotland : with an explanation of the loeaniiig of the oath and covenant. By the Lord Mar- quesse [of Hamilton], his high Commis- sioner. 1639. " Explanation " a separate Tract. The Lord Humes his speech, in the presence of the Kings Majesty, to the Parliament of both Houses assembled .in Scotland, 16 August, 1641. n.p. 1641 . Coppy of the letter sent by the Queenes Majestie concerning the collection of the Recusants mony for the Scottish warre, Apr. 17. 1639. Letter sent by Sir Kenelme Digby and M'. Mountague concerning the contribution. Letter sent by those as- sembled in London, to every shire. Names of the Collectors in each county, And the message sent from the Queenes Majestie to the house of Commons 5. Eebr. 1639. 1641. 506 TRACTS— 8937— con*. Copy of a letter sent from the Ear]e of Hol- land, to ail honourable lord, at the Parha- ment. n.p. 1641. Discovery oi a late intended plot by the Papists to subdue the Protestants. Being a true copie of a discourse between "Wil- liam O Conner a priest, and Anne Hussey an Irish gentlewoman. n.p. 1G41. Helation of the Kings entertainment into Scotland, 13. August. 164il. Also copp.y of a speech which the speaker for Scotland spake to his Majesty, n.p. 1643.. The Frogges of Egypt, or the caterpillers of the Common-Wealth truely dissected and laid open. With the subjects thankeful- ' nesse for their deliverance from that nest of verminej [this last in verse], n.p. 1641. Mappe of Mischiefe, or a dialogue betweene v. and B. concerning the going of Qu. M. into V. n.p. 1641. Vindication of the Vicar of Istleworth [? Isle- worth], Middlesex. I?rom a scandalous pamphlet. "W'hereunto are added certaine impieties and misdemeanours of Gilbert Ba.rrell attorney, the promoter. By ■William Grant, Vicar, n.p. 1641. His Majesties answer to the petition which accompanied the declaration of the House of Commons : presented to him at Hamp- ton-Court, 1 December. 1 641 . 1641. Articles of impeachment, of the Commons. Against Matthew "Wren, now Bishop of Ely, for crimes and misdemeanours com- mitted by him when he was Bishop of Norwich. "With Sir Thomas "Widdrmg- tons speech at a Conference betweene both Houses. n.p. 1641. Earle of Straflords Letter to his Majestie, dated from the Tower, 4. May, 1641. n.p. 1641. Letter sent from the Earle of Strafford, to his lady into Ireland, a little before his death. May 11. 1641. n.p. 1611. Earle of Strafford's Speech on the scitttold before he was beheaded on Tower-hill, 12. May, 1641. 1641. Anatomy of Hi cietera. Or the unfolding of that dangerous oath in the close of the sixth canon. By an Oxfordshire gentle- man. 1641. Newes from Sir John Sucklin being a rela- tion of his conversion from a Papist to a Protestant. Also, what torments he en- dured by those of the Inquisition in Spaine. And how the Lord Lekeux his accuser, was strucken dumbe, hee going to have the sentence of death passe upon him. [London] Printed for M. Rookes, and are to be sold in Grubstreet, 1641. New orders new, agreed upon by a parlia- ment of Round-heads. Confirmed by the brethren of the new Separation assembled at Round-heads-Hall without Cripple- gate. 164iJ. Letter lately sent bjy a Bishop [Joseph Hall Bishop of Norwich] from the Tower, to a private friend [H.S.]. 1642. Also the answer of " H.S.' Meronrius Britanicus ; communioatinf; the affaires of Great Britaine ; for the better information of the people. From Thurs- day 16. Novem.to Thursday 23. Novem. 1643. pp. 97-104. Eemarkeable passages of Gods good provi- dence in the preservation and deliverance of John Harington, Robert Ram, William Sclater, and Serjeant Home, all of Spald- ing In the County of Lincoln, who were taken prisoners by the Cavaliers of Croy- land, and kept there five weeks. But arc now lately rescued by the Parliaments forces, the Town taken with little losse TRACTS— 8937— eoM<. [etc.] Copy of a letter sent by M''. Ram to Croyland. 1648. Round-heads Remembrancer : or, a relation of the great defeat given to the rebels by His Majesties good subjects of Cornwall, under S' Ralph Hopton, May 16. 164.3. n.p. 1643. Letter to a gentleman of Leicester-shire shewing that, all the overtures, which have beene made for peace and accommo- dation have proceeded from his Majesty onely. And, that the unsuccessefulnesse of the late treatie is not to be imputed to His Majesty, but to them [the Houses of Parliament] alone, n.p. 1643. Answer to the Scotch papers. Delivered in the House of Commons in reply to the votes of both Houses, concerning the dis- posall of the Kings person. By Thomas Chaloner. 1646. Papers of the Commissioners of Scotland, given in to Parliament, concerning the propositions of Peace. 1646. ludge lenkins remonstrance to Parliament at Westminster, 21. February, 1647. By David lenkins, prisoner in Newgate, n.p. 1647. Judge Jenkin's Plea delivered in to the Earle of Manchester, and the Speaker of the House of Commons sitting in the Chancery at Westminster. By David lenkins. n.p. 1647. Antidote against an infectious aire. Or a short reply unto the declaration of 11 February, 1647. n.p. 1647. Two petitions of the sequestred clergie of England and Wales. One to the King : the other, to Sir Thomas Fairfax. With the declaration of the Generall thereupon. Also, His Majesties proclamation against intruding into other mens cures, and detaining their "tythes. 1647. A new found Stratagem put upon the in- habitants of Essex. To destroy the army under Sir Thomas Fairfax: manifested, ' in animadversions, upon a clandestine, illegall petition, contrived by a destructive party in London : and by them sent down to the Ministers of Essex to publish to the people, n.p. 1647. Letter to the Earle of Pembrooke concerning the times, and the sad condition both of Prince and People, n.p. 1647. Mercurius Blencticus. Communicating the unparallell'd proceedings at Westminster, the head-quarters, and other places. From Wed. 9. Feb. till Wed. 16. Feb. 1647. pp. 85-92. n.p. n.d. His Majesties Concessions concerning Church-government, and set-forms of LytUi'gy, in answer to two Messages of Pariiament. 1648. Detection of the falshood in a pamphlet intituled, A Message from the Isle of Wight, brought by Major Cromwell ; falsely relating the chief heads of Bishop Usher's sermon, n.p. 1648. Arguments against all accommodation and treaties, betweene the Citie of London, and the ingaged grandees of the parliament & army. n.p. 1848. His Majesties paper containing severall questions propounded to the Commis- sioners divines touching Episcoiiacy. With an answer returned to his Majesty by M'. Mai-shall, M'. Vines, M'. Carill, and M'. Seaman 4. October 1648. [Title-page mutilated— imprint wanting.] The Kings declaration to all his subjects n.p. 1648. Eye-Salve for the City of London : discover- ing the ^reat engagement that lj;es upon them to joyne speedily with the kingdomo 507 TRACTS— 8937~c<»^^ for the restoring of His Majesty, n.p. 1648. Tricks of State ; or, more Westminster pro- jects. Being a further discovery of the mystery of the committee of Grandees at Darby House, n.p. 1648. King Charles vindicated : and the people and armie admonished. Matter of law delivered by the Judges, at the arraigne- ment of the Barle of Essex. 1648. Eiugdomes answer, to the declaration of the House of Commons, Peb. 11. 1647. touching the reasons of their no farther addresses to the King. 1648. First leaf mutilated. Short expedient for agreement & peace. Tendred to Parliament : with an appeale to the Assembly of Divines. By D. J. n.p. 1648. Kings Answer to the paper delivered in by the Divines attending the Commissioners concerning Church-government. [Title page njutilated.] Answer of the Divines attending the Com- missioners of Parliament, at the treaty at Newport. To the second paper delivered to them by his Majesty. About Episcopall Government. 1648. Candle for the blinde Citizens of London, to see by : By a Freeman of the same city. n.p. 1648. Instruments of a King ; or, a short discourse of the Sword. The Scepter. TheCrowne. [Title-page mutilated.] Signed, " Jam. Howell." 1648. British Bell-man. n.p. 1648. Prince Charles his declaration, for satisfac- tion of all his loyall subjects July 31. 1648 . . [Title-page mutUflited.] New Magna Charta : enacted by the re- mainder of the Lords and Commons, now sitting at "Westminster, in empty parlia- ment, under Sir Thomas Fairfax, Lieu- tenant Generall Cromwell, and Prince Ireton his Sonne, and the army under their command, n.p. 1648. Letter from Sir Lewis Dyve : Giving an account of his escape out of the Kings Bench, n.p. 1648. Fatall Blow : or, the fact of Hammond, in offering force unto, and hurting his Ma- jestic : discussed, and reparation pressed, by a suddain dissolution of the tyrannicall power of this present Parliament. 1648. Newes from the North. Concerning the noi-them great storm arose in those parts. With, an exact relation of the late fight. Also, another fight in the west of England, and the suecesse of the forces commanded by Colonel Horton [etc.]. 1648. Mistris Parliament her gossipping. By Mercurius Melancholious. n.p. 1648. Mistris. Parliament brought to bed of a mon- strous childe of Eeformation. By Mer- curius, Melanchohcus. n.p. 1648. Mercurius Publicus, communicating emer- gent occurrences, for the further discovery of that mystery of iniquity the present Parliament at Westminster, n.p. n.d. Mercurius Aulious: againe communicating intelligence from all parts ; especially from Westminster. 1648. [4 numbers] n.p. n.d. Mercurius Melanchohcus; or Newes from Westminster. 1648. [12 numbers] n.p. 1648. Mercurius Bellicus or an allarum to all rebells, communicating intelligence from all parts. Especially from Westminster and the army. 1648. [3 numbers] n.p. n.d. TRACTS— 893 7— cont. Mercurius Pragmaticus, communicating in- telligence from all parts. Especially from Westminster. 1648. [6 numbers] n.p. n.d. Mercurius Elencticus. Communicating the unparallell'd proceedings at Westminster, the head-quarters, and other places. 1648. [Eleven numbers] n.p. n.d. Mercurius Veridlcus, communicating^ intel- Ugence from all parts of Great Britain ; but especially from Westminster-Hall [etc.] 1648. n.p. n.d. Mercurius Urbanicus, or, Newes from Lon- don. Prom May 2. to May 9. 1648. n.p. 1648. The Parliament-Kite or the Tell-tale Bird, communicating intelligence fi-om all parts of the Kingdome 1648. [2 numbers] n.p. 1648. Mercurius Psitacus, the Parrotting Mer- cury. CommunicatiEig the affaires of the Kingdome. From 3. luly, to 17. luly 1648. n.p. 1648. A Trance : or, Newes from Hell, brought fresh to towne by Mercurius Acheronticus- 1649. Mercurius Politicus. Comprising the Summ of aU intelligence in England, Ireland, and Scotland. From July 4. to July 11. 1650. n.p. n.d. Description of the future History of Europe, from 1650 to 1710. Treating principally of the mine of the Popish Hierarchy, the final annihilation of the Turkish Empire [etc.], and the Fifth ^Monarchic. With passages upon every of these, out of that manuscript of Paul Grebner in Trinity- Colledge Library Cambridge. Composed upon the occasion of the young Kings arrival into Scotla.nd. n.p. 1650. This last voL from the Tenison library. [TRAILL (CATHARINE PARR).] Backwoods of Canada : being letters from the wife of an emigrant officer, illustrative of the domestic economy of British America. New edition. [Anon.] 12°. 1846. 89.38 TRANSMUTATION. Transmutation ; or, the Lord and the Lout. By N. or M. 8°. 1854. 8939 TRAPP (JOSEPH) D.D. Praelectiones poetiese . . Oxion. hahitas. 2 vol. (in one) 8°. Oxon, 1711-15. 8940 TRAVEL. The Eeal and the Ideal or illustrations of Travel. 2 vol. 8°. 1840. S941 TRAVELS. [Vol. so lettered.] 8°. v. d. 8942 Pringle (Thomas) . Narrative of a residence in South Africa. New edition. Biographi- cal sketch of the author, by Josiah Conder. 1840. EUis (Eight Hon. Henry). Journal of the proceedings of the late Embassy to China ; comprising a correct narrative of the public transactions of the Embassy, of the voyage to and from China, and of the journey from the mouth of the Pei-Ho, to the return to Canton. New edition. 1840. 508 TRAVELS— conf. Stephens (J. L.) [HaH-title]. Incidents of travel in Egypt, Arabia Petrsea, and tlie Holy Land. n.p. n.d. Stephens (J. L.) [Half-title.] Incidents pt travel in the Russian and Turkish'Empires, and in the Holy Land. n.p. n.d. (? 1838.) Bligh (Lieutenant aft. Admiral William). [Half-title]. Narrative of the Mutiny of the Bounty, on a voyaRe to the South Seas. To which are added some additional particulars, and a relation of the sub- sequent fate of the Mutineers, ahd of the settlement in Pitcairn's Island, n.p. n.d. TRELAWNY (EDWARD JOHN). Adventures of a Younger Son. [Anon.] '12°. 1846. 8943 Kecollections of the last days of Shelley and Byron. (Portrait of Shelley). 8°. 1858. 8944 TREMENHEERE (HUGH SEY- MOUR). Constitution of the United States com- pared -with our own. 8°. 1854. 8945 Notes on public subjects, made during a tour in the XJnited States and in Canada. 8°. 1852. 8946 Political experience of the Ancients, in its bearing upon modern times. 12°. 1852. 8947 TRENCH (REV. FRANCIS). Portrait of Charity. 12°. 1847. 8948 [TRENCH (MRS. RICHARD).] Journal kept during a visit to Germany in 1799, 1800. [Anon.] Edited by the Dean of Westminster [Kiohard Chenevix Trench]. Not puMished. 8°. n.p. n.d. (1861). 8949 " Prom the Editor.'' TRENCH (RICHARD CHENEVIX) ARCHBISHOP OF DUBLIN. English : past and present. Eive lectures. 12°. 1855. 8950 Household book of English Poetry selected and arranged with notes by R. C. Trench. 12°. 1868. 8951 Presentation copy. Poem by M. Ai-nold inserted by M'. Porster. On the Lessons in Proverbs : five Lectures . . 12°. 1853. 8952 On the study of "Words : Lectures . . Sixth edition. 12°. 1855. 8963 TRENT. Catechism of the Council of Trent, translated into English; with notes, by Theodore Alois Buckley. 8°. 1852. 8954 TREVOR (REV. GEORGE). Convocations of the two Provinces, their origin, constitution, and forms of proceed- ing ; with a chapter on their revival. 8°. 1852. 8955 TREVOR. Trevor : or, the new Saint Francis. A tale for the times. 12°. 1847. 8956 TRIALS. [Trials, etc.] [7 vol.] P°., etc. v.d. 8957 Vol. 1. True copy of the Journal of the High Court of Justice, tor the Tryal of K. Charles I. As it was read in the House of Commons. Taken by J. Nalson, LL.D. Jan i. 1683. With a large introduction. 1684. One or two pencil notes by T. Carlyle. Arraignment, tryal and condemnation of Stephen Colledge for high-treason, in con- spiring the death of the King [etc.] At the City of Oxon 17 and 18 August 1681. 1681. Tryal of Spencer Cowper ; John Marson, Ellis Stevens, and William Eogei-s, for the raurther of M" Sarah Stout, at Hertford assizes, July 18. 1699. of which they were acquitted. 1699. Proceedings upon the bill of divorce between the Duke of Norfolke and the Lady Mary Mordant. 1700. 2. Trial of John Donellan, Esq. for the wilful murder of Sir Theodosius Edward Allesley Boughton, Bare. At the assize at War- wick, March SO" 1781. Third edition. 1781. Trial (at large) of James Hill ; otherwise James Hind ; otherwise, James Actzen : for setting fire to the Eope-house, in his Majesty's Dock-yard at Portsmouth. Tried at the assize, at Winchester, March 6, 1777. n.d. Trial of George Gordon, Esquire, commonly called Lord George Gordon. Por high treason, at the bar of the Court of King's Bench, Pebruary 6"' 1781. Second edition. 1781. Second Part. Second edition. 1781. Trial at large of the Hon. George Gordon, commonly called Lord George Gordon, 6"; June, 1787, in his Majesty's Court of King's Bench on two informations for libels; one of which tended to stir up mutiny and dissentions among the con- demned Convicts, and those destined for transportation to Botany Bay; and the other, against the Queen of Prance, the Prenoh Ambassador, the Charge des Affaires and the Ministry of France. Trial of Thomas Wilkin [or ? Wilkins] the Printer of one of the above Libels, n.d. Title-page cut down, 3. Narrative 'of that stupendious tragedie late intended to be acted by the satanical saints of these reforming times. Also, an account of the ti^al and condemnation of Thomas Tonge, George Phillips, Prancis Stubbs, James Hind, John Sailers, and Nathaniel Gibbs. With the confessions, speeches, and prayers of George PhilUps at the place of execution, Decem''. 22. 1662. 4. Narrative of the tryal and condemnation of John Twyn, for printing and dispersing of a treasonable book, with the tryals of Thomas Brewster, bookseller. Simon Dover, printer. Nathan Brooks, book- binder. For printing [etc.] nialitious pam- phlets. At justice-hall in the Old-Bayly London, 20, and 22. Pebraary 166J. 1684. 509 TRIALS— co7i<. 5-7. Trials for High Treason, in Scotland, under a Special Commission, held at StirUng, GflasRow, Dumbarton, Paisley, and Ayr, in 1820. 3 vol. Edinburgh. 182a. TRIMMER (MRS. SARAH). (Economy of Charity ; or, au address to ladies concerning Sunday-schools ; the establishment of schools of industry under female inspection ; and the distribution of voluntary benefactions . . Appendix, containing an account of the Sunday- schools in Old Brentford. 12">. 1787. 8958 [Another edition] . 2 vol. 12<>. 1801. 8959 Book-plate of Thomas Wright. TROLLOPE (ANTHONY). Australia and New Zealand. 2 vol. 8°. 1873. 8960 New South Wales and Queensland. Being a portion of the work entitled " Australia and New Zealand." 12°. 1874. 8961 New Zealand. Being a portion . . 12". 1874. 8962 Victoria and Tasmania. Being a por- tion . . 12°. 1874. 8963 Barciester Towers. New edition. 8°. 1859. 8964 The Bertrams. A novel. Third edition. 8°. 1860. 8965 Can you forgive her ? With illustra- tions. 2 vol. 8°. 1864-5. (Two copies,) 8966 Castle Richmond. A novel. 3 vol. 8°. 1860. 8967 [Title from cover] Catalogue of his Books. 8°. n.p. 1874. 8968 Presentation copy with inscription. Doctor Thorne. A novel. • Third edi- tion. 8°. 1859. 8969 Eustace Diamonds. 3 vol. 8°. 1873. 8970 Reprinted from the Fortnightly Review, Iframley Parsonage. A new edition. 12°. 1873. 8971 Kellys and the O'Kellys. New edition. 8°. 1859. 8972 Macdermots of Ballycloran. New edi- tion. 8°. 1861. 8973 Fourth edition. 8°. 1867. 8974 Miss Mackenzie. 2 vol. 8°. 1865. 8975 North America. 2 vol. 8°. 1 862. 8976 TROLLOPE (ANTHONY)— con*. OrleyFarm. With illustrations by [Sir] J. E. Millais [E.A.] 2 vol. 8°. 1862. 8977 Phineas Finn, the Irish member. With twenty illustrations by [Sir] J. E. Millais, R.A. 2 vol. 8°. 1869. 8978 Phineas itedux. 2 vol. With ilhistra- tions [by Frank Holl, E.A.] engraved on wood. 8°. 1874. 8979 Bachel Ray a novel. 3 vol. 8°. 1863. 8980 Ralph the Heir. With illustrations by F. A. Fraser. New edition. 8°. London and Nsw York, 1872. 8981 Struggles of Brown, Jones, and Robin- son : by one of the firm. Edited by A. Trollope. Reprinted from the " Cornhill Magazine.'' With four illustrations. 8°. 1870. 8982 Tales of all Countries. 8°. 1861. Second series. 8°. 1863. 8984 Tales of All Countries. With a frontis- piece by Marcus Stone [A. R.A.]. 8° 1864. 8985 Three Clerks. A Novel. 8°. 1859. 8986 The Warden. 8". 1855. 8987 The way we live now. With forty il- lustrations. 2 vol. 8°. 1875. 8988 West Indies and the Spanish Main. 8°. 1859. 8989 TROLLOPE (MRS. FRANCES). Life and Adventures of Michael Arm- strong, the factory boy. (Illustrated.) 8°. 1840. 8990 Ti-avels and Travellers. A series of sketches. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 8991 Vicar of Wrexhill. New edition, revised. 12°. 1840. 8992 Widow Barnaby. 12°. 1840. 8993 TROLLOPE (THEODOSIA). Social aspects of the Italian Revolution. . . With a sketch of subsequent events up to the present time. 8°. 1861. 8994 TROLLOPE (THOMAS ADOLPHUS). La Beata. 2 vol. 12°. 1861. 8995 Beppo the conscript. A novel. 2 vol. 8°. 1864. 8996 Decade of Italian Women. 2 vol. (Portraits of Vittoria Colonna and Bianca Cappello.) 8°. 1859. 8997 Vol. 1. St. Catherine of Siena, Caterina Sforza, Vittoria Colonna. 2. TuUia D'Aragona, Olympia Morata, Isa- bella Andreini, Sianca Canpello, Olyiupia Pamfili, Elisabetta Sirani, La Gorilla. 510 TROLLOPE (THOMAS ADOLPHUS) — cont. I'iUppo Strozzi. A history of the last days of the old Italian liberty. (Portrait.) 8°. 1860. 8998 Girlhood of Catherine de' Medici. (Por- trait.) 8°. 1856. 8999 History of the Commonwealth of Flo- rence, from the earliest independence of the Commune to the fall of the Republic in 1531. 4 vol. 8°. 1865. 9000 Impressions of a wanderer in Italy, Switzerland, Erance, and Spain. 8°. 1850. 9001 Lenten Journey in Umbria and the Marches. 8°. 1862. 9002 Miarietta. A novel. 2 vol. 8°. 1862. 9003 Paul the Pope and Paul the Friar. A story of an interdict. (Portrait of Paul the friar.) 8°. 1861. 9004 A Summer in Western France. Edited by Frances TroUope. 2 vol. 8°. 1841. 9005 Tuscany in 1849 and in 1859. 8°„ 1859. 9006 TROOPERS. Discovery of . . Roberies : committed of late by dissolute . . Troopers . . chiefly about the City of London. Since the late disbanding of the army in the North . Description of a bloudy com- bate, fought betweene 9 troopers and 6 butchers . . 4°. 1641. 9007 TROTTER (JOHN BERNARD). Memoirs of the latter years of Charles James Fox. 8°. 1811. 9008 TRUBNER (NICHOLAS). Triibner's Bibliographical guide to Ame- rican literature ; being a Classified list of books . . published in the United States of America during the last forty years. "With an introduction . . 8". 1855. 9009 TRUTHS. Truths illustrated by great Authors. A dictionary of nearly four thousand aids to reflection, quotations of maxims, meta- phors, counsels, cautions, aphorisms, pro- verbs, &c. In prose and verse. Compiled from Shakespeare, and other great Writers. . . 8°. 1852. 9010 TSCHUDI (FRIEDRICH VON). Sketches of Nature in the Alps. From the German. 12°. 1856. 9011 TSCHUDI (DR. J. J. VON). Travels in Peru, 1838-1842, on the coast, in the Sierra, across the Cordilleras and the Andes, into the primeval forests. Translated from the German by Thomasina Ross. 8°. 1847. 9012 TUCKER (ABRAHAM). Light of Nature pursued. Second edi- tion. Account of the life of the author, by Sir H. P. St. John Mildmay. 1 vol. (Portrait,) 8°. 1805, ' 9013 TUCKER (E.). Political fly-sheets . . To which is ap- pended Reports of the Sub-Committee of the Newcastle-on-Tyne Association for watching the War. 8°. 1855. 9014 Eclating to Lord Palmerston— the Russian "War— Mr. Urijuhart, &c. TUCKER (GEORGE). liife of Thomas Jefferson, third Pre- sident of the United States ; with parts of his correspondence never before published, and notices of his opinions on questions of civil government, national policy, and con- stitutional law. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1837. 9015 TUCKER (HENRY ST. GEORGE). Memorials of Indian Government ; being a selection from the papers of H. St. G. Tucker. Edited by [Sir] John William Kaye. 8°. 1853. 9016 TUCKER (JEDEDIAH STEPHENS). Memoirs of Admiral the Earl of St. Vincent. 2 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1844. 9017 TUCKER (JOSIAH), DEAN OF GLOUCESTER. Four tracts, with two Sermons, on poli- tical and commercial subjects. Tract V. Respective "pleas and argu- ments of the mother country, and of the Colonies, distinctly set forth; and the impossibility of a compromise of differ- ences, or a mutual concession of rights, plainly demonstrated. With a prefatory epistle to the plenipotentiaries of the late Congress at Philadelphia. Series of answers to certain popular objections, against separating from the rebellious colonies, and discarding them entirely : being the concluding tract, on the subject of American affairs. Essay on the advantages and disad- vantages which respectively attend France and Great-Britain, with regard to trade. (And — at the end — Three Essays. On the Balance of Trade. Jealousy of Trade. Balance of Power. By David Hume.) 511 TUCKER ( JOSIAH ), DEAN OF GLOUCESTER— eoni. Religious intolerance no part of the general plan either of the Mosaic, or Christian dispensation, proved by Scrip- tural inferences and deductions . . 8°. E. Raikes, Glocester, London, 1774-87. 9018 One vol. TUCKERMAN (FREDERICK GOD- DARD). Poems. 12°. 1863. 9019 TUCKERMAN (HENRY THEO- DORE). Mental Portraits; or. Studies of cha- racter. 8°. 1853. 9020 A month in England. 8°. 1854. 9021 Thoughts on the Poets. 12". New York, 1846. 9022 TUFT-HUNTERS. Natural history of Tuft-Huuters and Toadies. Illustrated by H. G. Hine. 1 2". 1848. 9023 TUKE (SIR SAMUEL). Adventures of Five Hours : a tragi- comedy . . Third impression. 4°. 1671. 9024 TULLOCH (JOHN) D.D. [Half-title.] Burnett Treatise second prize 1854 . . [Title] Theism: the witness of. reason and nature to an all- wise and beneficent Creator. 8°. Edin- burgh & London. 1855. 9025 TULLY (RICHARD). Letters written during a ten years' resi- dence at the Court of Tripoli ; published from the originals in the possession of the family of the late Richard TuUy, the British Consul ; comprising authentic memoirs and anecdotes of the reigning Bashaw . . also, an account of the domes- tic manners of the Moors, Arabs, and Turks. Third edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1819. 9026 TUMULTS. Sketches of Popular Tumults; illustra- tive of the evils of social ignorance. 12°. 1837. 9027 TUNBELLY (TIM.) pseud, i.e. WIL- LIAM ANDREW MITCHELL. Letters of Tim. Tunbelly, gent, free burgess, Newcastle upon Tyne, on the Tyne, the Newcastle Corporation, the Eree- men, the Tolls, &c. . . memoir of his public and private life. Vol. I. (Frontis- piece with Portrait.) 8°. Newcastle upon Tyne. 1823. 9028 TUPPER (MARTIN FARQUHAR). An Author's mind : the Book of title- pages. Edited by M. F. Tupper. 8°. 1841. 9029 Crock of Gold : a tale of covetousness. New edition. (With frontispiece by John Leech). 8°. 1849. 9030 Dirge for Wellington. 8°. 1852. 9031 Geraldine, a sequel to Coleridge's Christahel : with other poems. 8°. 1838. 9032 Heart : a social novel. Etc. 8°. 1844. 9033 A modern Pyramid : to commemorate a septnagint of worthies. 8°. 1839. 9034 The Twins : a domestic novel. Etc. 8°. 1844. 9035 TURBERVIL (,HODG) psetid. Walk Knaves, -walk. Discourse inten- ded to have been spoken at Court. . . 4°. 1659. 9036 " Written by Edmund Gayton, when in'the King's Bencli prison." TVatt, *' Biblio- theca JBritannica." TURKEY. Turkey and Christendom : an historical sketch of the relations between the Otto- man Empire and the States of Europe. Reprinted, with additions, from N°. 1 83 of the " Edinburgh Review." 12°. 1853. 9037 TURLE (JAMES) and TAYLOR (ED- WARD). Singing Book. Art of singing at sight taught by progressive exercises. 12°. n.d. 9038 TURNBULL (REV. ROBERT). Genius of Italy : being sketches of Italian life, literature, and religion. 8°. 1849. 9039 TURNER (DAWSON). Catalogue of the Manuscript library of D. Turner, comprising . . upwards of 40,000 autograph letters, unique copy of Blomeiield's History of Norfolk . . and other illustrated county histories . . missals, etc. which will be sold by auction . . June 6, 1859. (Facsimiles.) 8°. n.d. 9040 TURNER (DAWSON WILLIAM). Heads of an analysis of the history of Greece . . 12°. 1853. 9041 Heads of an analysis of Roman history . . 12°. 1850. 9042 512 TURNER (DAWSON \N.')—cont. Notes on Herodotus, original and selec- ted from the best commentators. Second edition . . 8°. Bohn, 1853. 9043 TURNER (COLONEL JAMES). Speech and deportment of Col. I. Turner at his execution in Leaden-Hall- street January 21. 1663. Who was con- demned for felony and burglary . . 4°. 1663. 9044 TURNER (JOSEPH MALLORD WILLIAM) R.A. Liber Eluviorum ; or, River scenery of France. Depicted in sixty-one line en- gravings from drawings by .T. M. W. Turner. With descriptive letter-press by Leitch Ritchie : and a biographical sketch by Alaric A. Watts. 8". 1853. 9045 TURNER (SHARON). History of England, from the Norman Conquest, to the accession of Edward the first. 4°. 1814. 9046 Inscriptiou on fly-leaf. History of the reign of Henry VIII : comprising the political history of the commencement of the English reforma- tion. 4°. 1826. 9047 History of the reigns of Edward VI, Mary, and Elizabeth. 4°. 1829. 9048 Richard the Third. 1845. A poem. 12°. 9049 TURNER (T.). On copyright in design in art and manu- factures. 8°. 1849. 9050 TURNER (T. HUDSON). Some account of domestic architecture in England, from the Conquest to the end of the thirteenth century. With nume- rous illustrations . . 8°. Oxford, 1851. 9051 TURNERELLI (EDWARD TRACY). My promise. — How I kept it. Peace ! What L have done to promote it. A remi- niscence of the Turco-Russian War. By the Author of " Kazan ".. 8°. 185G. 9052 What I know of the late Emperor Nicholas and his family. 8°. 1855. 9053 TUTCHIN (JOHN), Poems on several occasions. With a pastoral. To which is added, » discourse of life. 12°. 1685. . 9054 TWELLS (DR.) and OTHERS. Lives of D'. Edward Pocook, the cele- brated Orientalist, by D'. Twells ; of D'. Zachary Pearce, Bishop of Rochester, and of D'. Thomas Newton, Bishop of Bristol, by themselves ; and of Rev. Philip Skel- ton, by M'. Burdy. 2 vol. 8°. 1816. 9055 TWINING (HENRY R.). Elements of Picturesque Scenery, or studies of nature made in travel with a view to improvement in Landscape Paint- ing. Volume II. 8°. 1856. " 9056 TWINING (LOUISA). Symbols and Emblems of early and mediaeval Christian Art. 4°. 1 852. 9057 Types and figures of the Bible, illus- trated by the art of the early and middle 4°. 1855. 9058 TWISS (HORACE). Public and private life of [John Scott] Lord Chancellor Bldon, with selections from his Correspondence. 3 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1844. 9059 TWISS (SIR TRAVERS) D.C.L. On certain tests of a thriving population . . 8°. 1845. 9060 Letters Apostolic of Pope Pius IX. considered, with reference to the law of England and the law of Europe. 8°. 1851. 906.1 Oregon question examined, in respect to facts and the law of nations. 8°. 1846. 9062 On the relations of the Duchies of Schles- wig and Holstein to the crown of Denmark and the Germanic Confederation, and on the treaty-engagements of the Great European powers in reference thereto. 8°. 1848. 9063 Two introductory lectures on the science of International Law. 8°. 1856. 9064 View of the progress of political eco- nomy in Europe since the sixteenth cen- tury . . 8°. 1847. 9065 TYERS (THOMAS). Historical Rhapsody on M'. Pope. By the editor of the PoHtical conferences. Second edition. 8°. 1783. 9066 Political Conferences between several great men, in the Iqst and present century. With notes by the editor, T. Tyers. Se- cond edition, with additions. 8". 1781. 9067 513 TYTLER (ALEXANDER FRASER) LORD WOODHOUSELEE. Elements of General History, ancient and modern. . . Table of Chronology, and a comparative view of ancient and modern Geography. Illustrated by Maps. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. Edinburgh, 1803. 9068 TYTLER (PATRICK FRASER). England under the reigns of Edward VI. and Mary, with the contemporary history of Europe, illustrated in a series of original letters never before printed. With historical introductions and biographical and critical notes by P. F. Tytler. (Por- traits.) 2 vol. 8°. 1839. 9069 Life of Sir Walter Ealeigh . . includ- ing . . the most important transactions in the reigns of Elizabeth and James I. ; sketches of Burleigh, Essex, Secretary Cecil, Sidney, Spenser . . Vindication of his character from the attacks of Hume . . portraits . Second edition. 12°. Edinburgh, 1833. 9070 u. UBALDINI (PETRUCCIO). Descrittione del regno di Scotia, et delle isole sue adiacenti . . F". Anversa, 1588. 9071 UEBERWEG (DR. FRIEDRICH). History of Philosophy, from Thales to the present time. Translated from the fourth German edition, by Geo. S. Morris. With additions, by Noah Porter, D.D. Vol. I. History of the ancient and mediaeval philosophy. Vol. II. History of modern philosophy. Second edition. With additions by the translator ; an appendix on English and American philo- sophy by Noah Porter ; and an appendix on Italian philosophy, bv Vincenzo Botta 8°. 1872, 1876. " 9072 ULLMANN (DR. CARL). Gregory of Nazianzum . . A contri- bution to the ecclesiastical history of the fourth century. Translated by G. V. Cox. 12°. 1851. 9073 The worship of Genius, and the dis- tinctive character, or' essence of Chris- tianity. Translated from the German, by Lucy Sanford. 8°. 1846. 9074 o 16505. ULRICI (DR. HERMANN). Shakspeare's Dramatic Art : and his relation to Calderon and Goethe. Trans- lated (by A. J. W. M[orriBon]) from the German. 8°. 1846. 9075 UNDINE. Our Cruise in the Undine : the Journal of an English pair-oar expedition through France, Baden, Rhenish Bavaria, Prussia, and Belgium. By the Captain [Rev. Edmund George Harvey] . The etchings by one of ourselves. 8°. 1854. 9076 UNITED STATES. Addresses and messages of the Presi- dents of the United States, from Wash- ington to Tyler, embracing the executive proclamations, recommendations, protests, and vetoes, from 1789 to 1842, with the declaration of independence and constitu- tion of the United States. Third edition. 8°. New York, 1842. 9077 History of the Western World. Vol.1. II. (in one). The United States. 12°. 1830-2. 9078 Transatlantic Rambles ; or, a record of twelve months' travel in the United States, Cuba, and the Brazils. By a Eugbaeau. 12°. London and Doncaster, 1851. 9079 UNIVERSE. Key of the Universe. 12°. 1866. 9080 UNTON (SIR HENRY). Correspondence of Sir H. Unton, ambas- sador from Queen Elizabeth to Henry IV. King of France, in 1591-2 . . Edited by Rev. Joseph Stevenson. Printed for the Roxburghe Club, 4°. 1847. 9081 UPCOTT (WILLIAM). Original letters, manuscripts, and State papers. Collected by W. Upcott. [Cata- logue.] (Portraits and f ac-similes.) Pri- vately printed. 4°. [London] 1836. 9082 UPTON (REV. JOHN). Critical observations on Stakespeare. 8°. 1746. 9083 The " Bfiverie " not in this copy. " Robt Browning from his-Father." Second edition. 8°. 1748. 9084 URE (ANDREW) M.D. Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures, and Mines . . Illustrated with engravings. Second edition. 8°. 1840. ,9085 Recent improvements in Arts, manufac- tures, and mines : being a supplement to his dictionary. 8°. 1844. *9085 KK 514 URQUHART (DAVID). PDlars of Heretiles ; or, a narrative of travels in Spain and Morocco in 1848. 2 vol. 8°. 1850. 9086 Progress of Bnssia in the west, north, and sonth, by opening the sources of opinion . . 8". 1853. 9087 Spirit of the east. 2 vol. Second edi- tion. 8». 1839. 9088 URQUHART (SIR THOMAS). Tracts. 12''. Edinburgh, 1774. 9089 I. Peculiar Promptuary of Time. II. True Pedigree of the TJrquharts. III. Curious dissertation on the Universal Language. IV. Vindication of the Honour of Soot- land, in the characters of several hundreds of Scotsmen in which is an account of the Admirable Crichton. The contents do not correspond with the title-page. "Edited by David Herd, and not by George Paton, as frequently stated." Lovmdes. But " To the Beader " is signed " G. P." " Reprint of the orig. ed. of 1662, by G. P., i.e. Paton," Brit. Mus. Cat. URQUHART (WILLIAM POLLARD). Life and Times of Francesco Sforza Duke of Milan with a preliminary sketch of the history of Italy. 2 vol. 8°. Edin- burgh and London, 1852. 9090 VAIX ( DU). Morall philosophy of the Stoicks . . Englished by Charles Cotton. (Portrait of Zenon). 12». 1664. 9091 MS. notes. VALENTIA (GEORGE ANNESLEY VISCOUNT), APTERWAKDS 2D EARL OF MOUNTNORRIS. Voyages and Travels to India, Ceylon, the Bed Sea, Abyssinia, and Egypt, in 1802-6. 3 vol. 4". 1809. 9092 VALERY ( ) pseud, i.e. ANTOINE CLAUDE PASQUIN, [Engraved title.] Historical literary and artistical travels in Italy. Paris, 1839. [Title] Historical . . travels in Italy, a complete and methodical guide for travellers and artists. Translated . . by C. E. Clifton, with Index and road-map of Italy. 8». Paris, 1842. 9093 VALLES (CLAUDE DE). Le Theatre d'honneur de plusieurs Princes anciens et modemes. Avec leurs vies & faicts plus memorables, & leurs vrays & naturals portraicts. Conteiant aussi les vies & faicts de tons les Chance- liers & Gardes des seaux de France, de plusieurs hommes illustres, des luriscon- sultes . . qui ont escrit sur le droict Komain : et les faux Dieux, le temps qu'ils ont este, & leurs pourtraicts. Eficueillis . . par C. De Valles. E°. Paris, 1618. 9094 Separate title-pages to the different sec- tions. The portraits are mostly small and in the text. VALOIS (HADRIEN DE). Valesiana on les pensees . . et les poesies Latinos de M. De Valois. Ee- cueUlis par son fils. (Portrait.) 12°. Paris, 1695. 9095 VALPY (ABRAHAM JOHN). [" Delphin " Latin Classics]. 160 vol. 8°. London, " curante et imprimente " Valpy, 1819-30. 9096 Apuleitts. Opera omnia ex editione Ouden- dorpiana cum notis et interpretatione in usum Delphini [and so throughout]. 7 vol. AusoNius. Opera omnia ex editione Bipon- tina. S vol. BoETHluB. De Consolatione philosophiae hbri qujnque ex editione Vulpiana. Caesae. Opera omnia ex editione Oberli- niana. 4 vol, CATTTUiUa. Opera omnia ex editione P. G. Doeringii. 2 vol. OiOEEo. Libri Ehetorici ex editione Jo. Aug. Brnesti. 2 vol. „ Orationes ex editione Jo. Aug. Emesti. S vol. „ Epistolae ad diversos ex editione Jo. Aug. Brnesti. 2 vol. „ Opera Philosophica ex editione Jo. Aug. Emesti. 2 vol. „ [Half -Title]. Eecensus editionum et codicum M. T. Ciceronis, et Clavis Ciceroniana [by Br- nesti]. CliAUDIAinis. Opera omnia ex editione P. Burmanni Secundi. 4 vol. CuETius EiTFtJS. De rebus gestis Alexan- dri Magni hbri superstites ex editione Frid. Schmieder cum supplementis. S vol. DiCTTS Ceetensis. D. Cretensis et Dares Phrygius de hello Trojano ex editione Samuehs Artopoei. Aocedunt Joseph! Iscani de bello Trojano libri sex. BxTTEOPIUS. BreviariumhistoriaeEomanae ex editione Hemici Verheyk. Placcus. M. V. Placci quae extant et Sexti Pompeii Pesti de verborum signifi- catione hbri ix. ex editione Andrese Da^ cerii. 2 vol. Ploeus. Epitome remm Komanarum ex editione J . Fr, Pischeri. 2 vol. Geilius. Noctes Atticie ex editione Jacohi Gronovii. 3 vol. HoBATiua^ Opera Omnia ex editione J, C. Zeunii. i vol. JusTiirrB. Historia© PhiUppicae ex edi- tione Abrahami Gronovii. 2 vol. 515 VALPY (ABRAHAM JOHN)— cont. Jttvbnalis. Opera omnia ex editione E.u- pertiana (Gt. A. Ruperti). 2 vol. Livius. Historiarum libri qui supersunt, ex editione Gt. A. Ruperti cum supplemen- tis, 20 vol. LuoEETius. DoEerumnatnra libri sex ex editione Gilberti Wakefieldi. 3 vol. Maniliub. Astronomicon ex editione Ben- tleiana. 2 vol. Martialis. Epigrammata ex editione Bipontina. 3 vol. Maxihus. Faotorum dictorumque memo- rabilium libri novem ex editione Joannis Kappii. 3 vol. Nepos. Vitae exoellentium Imperatorum ex editione J. Pr. Fisolieri. 2 vol. OviDius. Opera omnia ex editione Bur- manniana. 9 vol. I'ANESTEIOI. Panegyricl veteres ex edi- tionibns Cbr. G. Sonwarzii et Arntzenio- rum. 5 vol. PATEBOtTLUS. Historia Eomana ex editione J. C. H. Krausii. Peesius. Opera omnia ex editione G. L. Koenig. Ph^detjs. Fabulffi iEsopise ex edi- tione J. G. S. Schwabii. PLAtiTUS. Comoedije ex editione J. P. Gronovii. 5 vol. PLiifurs. Naturalis Historise libri XXXVII. ex editione Gabrielis Brotier. 12 vol. PEOPEETitrs. Opera omnia ex editione Ch. Th. Kuinoelis. 2 vol. - Pkudewtius. Opera omnia ex editione Parmensi. 3 vol. Sallustittb. Opera omnia ex editione Gottlieb Oortii. 2 vol. Statius. Opera omnia ex editione Bipon- tina. 4 vol. Suetonius. Opera omnia ex editione Baumgarten-Crusii. 3 vol. Tacitus. Opera omnia ex editione Ober- liniana. 10 vol. Teeektius. Oomoedise sex ex editione "Westerboviana. 4 vol. TiBUiLUB. Opera omnia ex editione I. G. Hnschkii. ViCTOE. Historia Eomana ex editione Th. Cbr. Harlesii. 2 vol. ViEG-IlIUS. Opera omnia ex editione Hey- niana. 9 vol. [VALPY (RICHARD) D.D.] Elements of Greek Grammar ; with notes . . Tenth edition. [Anon.] 8°. 1826. 9097 VANBRUGH (SIR JOHN). Short vindication of the Eelapse and the Provok'd Wife, from immorality and prophaneness. By the Author [Sir J. V.] 12°. 1698. 9098 VANDENHOFF (GEORGE). Art of Elocution, as an essential part of Rhetoric : with instructions in gesture ; and an appendix of . . extracts. 8°. 1855. 9099 VANDERKISTE (R. W.). Notes and Narratives of a six yeai's' mission, principally among the dens of London. Third edition. 12°. 1853. 9100 VANE (SIR HENRY) THE YOUNGER. Two treatises : I. An epistle general, to the mystical hody of Christ on earth, the Church universal in Bahylon. II. The Face of the Times . . n.p. [London] 1662. At tbe end of the second treatise is — Letter of Sir H. Vane, to his lady from the Isle of Soylly, dated, at end, March Y. ^Sfi. Tryal of Sir Henry Vane, at the King's Bench, Westminster, June the 2'' and 6th. 1662. With what he intended to have spoken the day of his sentence, (June 11.) for arrest of Judgment . . and his hill of exceptions. With other occasional speeches, &c. Also his speech and prayer, &c. on the scaffold, n.p. [London] 1662. Life and death of Sir Henry Vane . . His last exhortation to his children, the day before his death. [By G. Sikes.] (Por- trait.) n.p. [London] 1662. 9101 One vol. 4°. VANITY FAIR. [No t.p. Portraits from " Vanity Fair."] F°. [Various Nos. 1869-1871.] 9102 VASARI (GIORGIO). Le Opere. Parte prima contenente por- zione delle vite dei piii eccellenti pittori soultori e architetti. Parte seconda con- tenente il resto delle vite degli artefici, I'appendioe alle note delle medesime, I'in- dice generale e le opere minori dello stesso autore. (2 vol.) (Portrait.) 8°. Firenze, 1832-8. 9103 " .lohn Kenyon." Lives of the most eminent painters, sculptors, and architects : translated from the Italian. With notes and illustrations, chiefly selected from various commentators. By Mrs. Jonathan Foster. 5 vol. (Por- trait.) 8°. Bohn, 1850-2. 9104 Vol. 3 wanting. Life of Giovanni Angelico da Fiesole, translated from the Italian by Giovanni Aubrey Bezzi, with notes and illustrations. 8°. (Chiswick.) Printed for the Arundel Society [London]. 1850. (Two copies.) 9105 VAUGHAN (ROBERT) D.D. Age of great Cities : or, modern societj' viewed in its relation to intelligence, morals, and religion. 8°. 1843. 9106 The Age and Christianity. 8°. 1849. 9107 KK 2 516 VAUGHAN (ROBERT) D.D.—cont. Essays on history, philosophy, and theology [from the British Quarterly Review.] 2 vol. 12°. 1849. 9108 Vol. 1. Pilgrim Fathers. Lord John Russell. Oxford and Evangelical Churchmen. Priesthood of Letters. Characteristics of Dissent. John Poster and Eobert Hall. Travels in Lycia. 2. Oliver Cromwell. Locke and his critics. England and Ire- land. Church and State. The Christian Ministry. German Philosophy and Chris- tian Theology. John De WyclifFe, D.D. A monograph. With some account of the Wycliffe MSS. . . (Portrait,) 8». 1853. 9109 Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell, and the State of Europe during the early part of the reign of Louis XIV. illustrated in letters between Dr. John Pell, resident ambassador with the Swiss Cantons, Sir Samuel Morland, Sir William Lockhart, M'. Secretary Thurloe . . now first published . . . Edited by E. Vaughan. With an introduction on the character of Cromwell, and of his times. 2 vol. (Por- traits of Cromwell & Thurloe.) 8°. 1838. (3 copies.) 9110 No. 3. The date on the title-page is 1839. VAUGHAN (ROBERT ALFRED). Hours with the Mystics a contribution to the history of religious opinion. 2 vol. 12°. 1856. 9111 VAUX (WILLIAM SANDYS WRIGHT). Handbook to the Antiquities in the British Museum : being a description of the remains of Greek, Assyrian, Egyptian, and Etruscan art preserved there. Illus- trations. 8°. 1851. 9112 Nineveh and Persepolis : an historical sketch of ancient Assyria and Persia, with an account of the recent researches in those countries. Fourth edition. 8°. 1855. 9113 VEGETABLES. Vegetable Substances used for the Food of man. 2 vol. 12°. 1846. 9114 VEHSE (DR. E.). Memoirs of the Court, aristocracy, and diplomacy of Austria. Translated from the German by Franz Demmler. 2 vol. 8°. 1856. 9115 VELASCO (PALOMINO).' Account of the lives and works of the most eminent Spanish painters, sculptors and architects ; and where their Several performances are to be seen. Translated from the MusEBum Pictorium of P. Velasco. 12°. 1739. 9116 Boolc-plate of William Franks. VENABLES (REV. R. LISTER). Domestic Scenes in Russia : in a series of letters describing a year's residence in that country, chiefly in the interior. Se- cond edition. 8°. 1856. 9117 VENEDEY (JACOB). Geschichte des deutschen Volkes von den altesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart. Vol. I. Das deutsche Alterthum. Vom ersten Auftreten der Germanen bis zum Untergang der Karolinger. II. Die Ge- schichte der deutschen Kaiser und der Kampf der Papste gegen das Kaiserthum. 8°. Berlin, 1855. 9118 VERA (A.). Inquiry into speculative and experi- mental science, with special reference to Mr. Calderwood and Professor Ferrier's recent publications, and to Hegel's doc- trine. 8°. 1856. 9119 Introduction a la philosophie de Ilegel. 8°. Paris, 1855. 9120 VERDICTS. Verdicts. [Verses]. 8°. 1852. 9121 VERGIL (POLYDORE). Works of the famous antiquary, Poli- dore Virgil. Compendiously English't by John Langley, late Master . of Paul's School, London. Containing the original of all arts, sciences, mysteries, orders, rites, and ceremonies, both ecclesiastical and civil . . 12°. 1663. 9122 VERICOUR (PROFESSOR DE). Historical analysis of Christian Civilisa- tion. 8°. 1850. 9123 VERITAS. True and faithful account of the Is- land of Veritas ; together with the forms of their liturgy ; and a full relation of the religious opinions of the Vcritasians . . 8°. n.d. 9124 VERITY (ROBERT) M.D. Changes produced in the nervous system by civilization, considered according to the evidence of physiology and the philo- sophy of history. Second edition. 8°. 1839. 9125 VERNE (JULES). Five weeks in a Balloon. A voyage of exploration and discovery in central Africa. From the French. With 64 illustrations by Rio'u. 3°. 1870. 9126 517 VERNON (REV. GEORGE). Life of . . Dr. Peter Heylyn, Chaplain to Charles I. 1682. and Charles II. 12» 9127 " Tho : Baker Coll : Jo : Socius ejectus." Jlf5. notes by T. Baker. VERNON (JAMES). Letters illustrative of the reign of William III. from 1696 to 1708. Ad- dressed to the Duke of Shrewsbury, by J. Vernon, Secretary of State . . Edited by G. P. K. James. (Portraits of W. III. & Duke of Shrewsbury.) 3 vol. 8". 1841. (Two copies.) " 9128 VERTOT D'AUBOEUF (RENE AU- BERT DE). Histoiro des Revolutions arrivees dans le gouvernement de la Republique Ro- maine. 4 vol. (in 2). 12". Paris, 1830. 9129 Histoire des Revolutions de SuMe, ou Ton voit les ohangements qui sont arrivfe dans ce royaume au sujet de la religion et du gouvernement. 8 vol. (in one). Paris, 1830. Histoire des revolutions de Portugal. Paris, 1830. 9130 One vol. 12". VESINIER (P.). History of the Commune of Paris, Translated from the ITrench by J. V. Weber. 8°. 1872. 9131 VICARS (JOHN). Dagon demolished : or, . . Examples of Gods severe justice and displeasure against the subscribers of the late en- gagement, against King Charls the se- cond ; and the whole House of Peeres . . Also against some of the Judges of the late King in the High Court of Injustice . . 4°. 1660. 9132 Englands Remembrancer, or, a thank- full acknowledgement of Parliamentary mercies to our English-nation . . [Ver- ses.] 4°. 1641. 9133 Book plate of Sir Mark M. Sj'kes. England's Worthies. Under whom all the civill and bloudy warres since 1642, to 1647, are related. (Portraits.) 8°. 1845. [Reprint.] 9134 God in the Mount. Or, Englands Remembrancer. Being a panegyriok Pi- ramides, erected to the . . honour of Eng- lands God, in . . commemoration of al the miraculous Parliamentarie-Mercies wherein God hath been admirably seen . . in the extreme depth of Englands de- signed destruction, in her years of Jiibile, 1641 and 1642 . . 4°. 1641. 9135 VICARS (JOHN)— conf. A sight of y' Trans-actions of these latter yeares emblemized with engraven plats . . 4". n.d. [? 1646.] 9136 At end—" Collected by John Vicars." VICARS (THOMAS), BACHELOR OF DIVINITY. Pofujiaiofepos the Sword-bearer. Or, the Byshop of Chichester's [Carleton] Armes emblazoned in a Sermon preached at a Synod. By T.V. (Woodcut of the Armes on title.) 4°. 1627. 9137 MS. note as to Vicars. Dedication signed " Thorn : a Vicars." VICTOR (BENJAMIN). History of the Theatres of London and Dublin, from 1730 to the present time . . Annual register of all the plays, &c. performed at the theatres-royal in Lon- don, from 1712. With occasional notes and anecdotes. 2 vol. 12°. 1761. 9138 Book-plate of " M^ Hart Cotton." History of the Theatres of London, from 1760 to the present time. Being a continuation . . 12°. 1771. *9138 Original letters, dramatic pieces, and poems. 3 vol. 8°. 1776. 9139 VIENNA. Journal of a nobleman ; comprising an account of his travels, and a narrative of his residence at Vienna, during the Con- gress. 2 vol. 8°. 1831. 9140 VIEUSSEUX (ANDRE). Library of Useful Knowledge. History of Switzerland, from the irruption of the barbarians to the present time. 8°. 1840. 9141 Napoleon Bonaparte : his sayings and his deeds. 2 vol. 12°. 1846. 9142 VIGERUS (FRANCISCUS). De praecipuis Graecae dictionis Idiotis- mis et Partioulis. Editio decima tertia . . Observationum . . auctarium . .12°. 169.5. 9143 VIGNE (G. T.). Travels in Kashmir, Ladak, Iskardo, the countries adjoining the Mountain- Course of the Indus, and the Himalaya, north of the Pan jab. With map . . and illustrations. Second edition. 2 vol. 8°. 1844. 9144 VIGNY (COUNT ALFRED DE). Cinq-Mars : or a conspiracy under Louis XIII. An historical romance. Trans- lated . . by William Hazlitt. (Portrait.) 8°. 1847. 9145 518 VILLAGE. Village Development, Based on prac- tical principles. Or, the old vicar's advice. 12°. 1854. 9146 VILLALOBOS (FRANCISCO LOPEZ DE). Medical Works of F. L. De Villalobos, the celebrated court physician of Spain, now first translated with commentary and biography. By George Gaskoin. 8°. 1870. 9H7 VILLEMAIN (ABEL FRAN9OIS). Histoire de Cromwell, d'apres les Memoires dii temps et les recueils parle- mentaires. Quatrifeme edition. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. BruxeUes, 1829. 9148 Souvenirs contemporains d'histoire et de litterature. 8°. Paris. 1854. 9149 VINCI (LEONARDO DA). Treatise on Painting : faithfully trans- lated from the original Italian and digested under proper heads, by John Francis Kigaud, E.A. Illustrated . . Life of the author, with a critical account of his works, by John William Brown. ,8°. 1835. 9150 VINES (C). Dictionary Appendix and Orthographer, containing upwards of seven thousand words not found in the dictionary ; com- prising the participles of verbs . . Second edition. 12°. 1854. 9151 VINES (RICHARD). Hearse of Kobert Earle of Essex . . As it was represented in a sermon, preached in the Abbey Church at Westminster, at . . his funerall, Octob. 22. 1646. (Por- trait of Essex.) 4°. 1646. 9152 VINET (ALEXANDER). History of French Literature in the eighteenth century. Translated from the French by Rev. James Bryce. 8°. Edin- burgh, 1854. 9153 VIOLET. Violet ; or, the Danseuse : a portraiture of human passions and character. 2 vol. 8°. 1836. 9154 [Another edition.] 8°. 1844. 9155 VIRGILIUS MARO (PUBLIUS). Bucolica, Georgiea, et Aeneis. Ex cdi- tione Petri Burmanni. 2 vol. F°. Glas- guae, Foulis, 1778. 9156 Bucolica, Georgiea, et JEueis. Virgil ; with English notes . . By Francis Bowen. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1842. 9157 VIRGILIUS MARO (PUBLIUS)— eon*. Works, translated into English verse by Mr. Dryden. New edition, revised and corrected by John Carey. 3 vol. 12°. 1806. 9158 Works, Literally translated into Eng- lish prose, with notes, by Davidson. A new edition, revised, with additional notes, by Theodore Alois Buckley. 8°. Bohn, 1850. 9159 Works, closely rendered into English rhythm, and illustrated from British poets of the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. By Eev. Robert Corbet Singleton. 2 vol. Vol. I. [Eclogues, Georgics, and Books I_IV of ^neid.] 8°. 1855. 9160 First six books of the ^neid rendered into English [blank verse] by J. L. 12°. 1873. 9161 Georgiea. Georgics; with marginal references and copious English notes. By John E. Sheridan. 8°. n.d. (1856). 9162 ■ By 9163 Georgics (in heroic couplets) Rev. E. Cobbold. 8°. 1852. VISCONTI (ENNIO OUIRINO). Oeuvres. Musee Pie-Clementin. 7 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. Milan, 1818-22. 9164 " J. Kenyon. riorence, 1839." (PHILIPPE AURELE) and GUATTANl (JOSEPH). Monumens du Musee Chiaramonti, de- crits et expliques par P. A. Visconti et J. Guattani . . traduit de I'ltalien par A. F. Sergent- Mar9eau. (Portrait of Pio VII.) 8". Milan, 1822. *9164 VLADIMIR. Vladimir and Catherine; or, Keiv in 1861. An historical romance. By a thirty years' resident in Russia. 8°. 1864. 9165 VOLPE (GIROLAMO), Tragedie. 12°. 1857. 9166 VOLTAIRE (FRANCOIS MARIE AROUET DE). ' Dictionnaire Philosophique dans lequel sont r^unis les questions sur I'eneyelopedie, I'opinion en alphabet, les articles insures dans I'eneyelopedie, et plusieurs destines pour le dictionnaire de 1' Academic Fran- gaise, etc. 14 vol. (in 7). 12°. Paris, 1832. 9167 Essai sur les moeurs et I'esprit des Nations, et sur les priucipaux faits de I'histoire, depuis Charlemagne jusqu'a Louis XIII. 10 vol. (in 5). 12°.' Paris, 1829-30. 9168 519 VOLTAIRE (FRANCOIS MARIE AROUET DE)—cont. Histoire de Charles XII, Koi de SuMe. [and] Epitres. [and] La Henriade, poeme, avec les notes, [and] Contes en vers et Satires. 12°. Paris, 1830. 9169 Histoire de I'Empire de Russie sous Pierre-le-Graud. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. Paris, 1840. Histoire du parlement de Paris. 2 vol. (in one). 12°. Paris, 1830. 9170 Bound together in one vol. Letters concerning the English nation. 8°. 1733. 9171 Melanges historiques. 6 vol. (in 3). 12°. Paris, 1830. 9172 La Pucelle d'Orleans, poeme . Ornee de figures gravees par Ponce . . 2 vol. 8°. Paris, An Vn. [1799]. 9173 Romans. 4 vol. (in 2). 12°. Paris, 1829-30. 9174 Siecles de Louis XIV et de Louis XV 6 vol. (in 2). 12°. Paris, n.d. 9175 Theatre. 12 vol. (in 4). 12°. Paris, 1836. 9176 VOSS (JOHANN HEINRICH). Louisa. From the German. By James Cochrane. 8°. Edinburgh, 1852. 9177 w. W. (E.). Life and death of William Lawd, late Archbishop of Canterburie . . By E. W. who was acquainted with his proceedings in Oxford ; was £in eye and eare witnesse of his doings and sayings in his Courts, here at London . . 4°. 1645. 9178 W. (T.). , Plantagenets tragicall story : or, the death of King Edward the fourth : with the unnaturaU voyage of Richard the third, through the red sea of his nephews innocent hloud, to his usurped crowne. Metaphrased by T. W. (Portrait in- serted.) 8°. 1649. 9179 B. Heber's copy. ? By Thos. 'Whitohcot or Weever. See Mitford's MS. note. WAAGEN (DR. GUSTAV FRIED- RICH). Peter Paul Rubens, his life and genius. Translated from the German. By Robert E. Noel. Edited by Mrs. Jameson. 8°. 1840. 9180 WAAGEN (DR. GUSTAV FRIED- RICH)— co»<. Treasures of Art iu Great Britain : being an account of the chief collections of paintings, drawings, sculptures, illumi- nated MSS., &c. [Translated from the German by Lady Eastlake.] 3 vol. 8°. 1854. 9181 WACE (ROBERT). Layamons Brut, or Chronicle of Britain ; a poetical semi-Saxon paraphrase of the Brut ofWaoe. Now first published from the Cottonian manuscripts in the British Museum ; accompanied by a literal trans- lation, notes, and a grammatical glossary. By Sir Frederic Madden. 3 vol. 8°. Published by the Society of Antiquaries, 1847. 9182 WADE (JOHN). British History, chronologically arranged . . from the first invasion by the Romans to the 'accession of Queeu A^ictoria. 8°. 1839. 9183 Imperfect. WADDILOVE (ALFRED) D.C.L. Church Patronage historically, legally, and morally considered. In connection with the offence of Simony. 8°. 1854. 9184 WADDINGTON (GEORGE) DEAN OF DURHAM. History of the Church from the earliest ages to the Reformation . Second edi- tion. 3 vol. 8°. 1835. 9185 WADE (THOMAS). Jew of Arragon ; or, the Hebrew Queen. Tragedy . . 1830. Woman's Love ; or, the Triumph of Patience. Drama . . Third edition. 8°. 1834. 9186 One vol. Mundi et Cordis : De rebus sempiternis et temporariis : Carmina. Poems and Sonnets. 1835. Contention of Death and Love. A Poem. [Anon.] 1837. Helena. A Poem. 1837. Shadow-Seeker. A Poem. 8°. 1837. 9187 One vol. WADE (THOMAS). " What does ' Hamlet ' mean ? " A lec- ture . . 8°. Jersey, printed, n.d. [1840 ?]. 9188 520 WAGNER (DR. FRIEDRICH) and BODENSTEDT (FRIEDRICH). Schamyl : the Sultan, Tvarrior, and pro- phet of the Caucasus. Translated, by Lascelles Wraxall. 12°. 1854. 9189 WAGSTAFFE (WILLIAM) M.D. Miscellaneous Works . . Life, and an account of his writings . . Cuts . . 8°. 1726. 9190 Comment .upon the history of Tom Thumb. [Anon.] 8°. 1711. 9191 " [By D'. WagstafE]." Lowndes, WAHL (O. W.). Land of the Czar. 8°. 1875. 9192 WAIF. The Waif : a collection of poems. Third edition. [Edited by H. W. Long- fellow.] 8°. Cambridge [U.S.] 1845. 9193 WAILLY (ARMAND FRANCOIS LEON DE). Stella and Vanessa. A romance [trans- lated] from the French'. By Lady Duff Gordon. 2 vol. 8°. 18.50. 9194 WAKEFIELD (EDWARD GIBBON). England and America. A comparison of the social and political state of both nations. [Anon.] 2 vol. (in one). 8". 1833. 9195 View of the Art of Colonization, with present reference to the British Empire ; in letters between a statesman and a colonist. Edited by (one of the writers) E. G. Wakefield. 8°. 1849. 9196 WAKEFIELD (EDWARD JERNING- HAM). Adventure in New Zealand, from 1839 to 1844 ; with some account of the begin- ning of the British colonization of the islands. 2 vol, 8°. 1845. 9197 WAKEFIELD (GILBERT). Memoirs of the Life of G. Wakefield. Written by Himself. (Portrait.) 8". 1792. 9198 WALCKENAER (CHARLES ATHA- NASE, BARON). Memoires toucbant la vie et les ecrits de Marie de Kabutin-Chantal Dame de Bour- billy Marquise de Sevigne, durant la Kegence et la Fronde. 8°. Paris, 1842. 9199 WALCOTT (REV. MACKENZIE EDWARD CHARLES). Westminster : Memorials of the city. Saint Peter's college, the parish churches, palaces, streets, and worthies. 8°. West- minster, 1849. 9200 WALDEGRAVE (JAMES 2d EARL). Memoirs from 1 7 54 to 1 758, (Portrait.) 4°. 1821. 9201 WALFORD (EDWARD). Hand-book of the Greek Drama. 12°. 1856. 9202 WALKER (GEORGE). Anglo-Tyrannus, or the idea of a Nor- man monarch, represented in the paralell reignes of Henrie the third and Charles Kings of England. . By G.W. 4». 1650. 9203 Bp. Ded. signed " George Walker." WALKER (GEORGE ALFRED), Gatherings from Grave Yards ; par- ticularly those of London : with a con- cise history of the modes of interment among different nations . . and a detail of dangerous and fatal results produced by the . . custom of inhuming the dead in the midst of the living. 8°. London, Nottingham [printed], 1839. 9204 WALKER fJAMES) and RICHARD- SON (M. A.), Armorial Bearings of the several in- corporated companies of Newcastle upon Tyne, with a brief historical aocuunt of each company ; together with notices of the Corpus Christi, or miracle plays, anciently performed by the trading societies of Newcastle upon Tyne. Also a copions glossary . . 8°. Newcastle, 1824. 9205 WALKER (JOHN) D.D, Attempt towards recovering an account of the numbers and sufferings of the Clergy of the Church of England . . who were sequester'd, harrass'd, &c. in the late times of the grand rebellion : oocasion'd by the ninth chapter . . of D'. Calamy's Abridg- ment of the Life of M'. Baxter . . F°. 1714. 9206 WALKER (REV. JOHN). Letters >vritten by eminent persons in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries : to which are added, Hearne's journeys to Reading, and to Whaddon Hall, the seat of Browne Willis. And lives of eminent men, by John Aubrey. The whole now first published from the originals in the Bodleian Library and Ashmolean Museum, with biographical and literary illustrations [by Rev. John Walker] . 2 vol. (in three). 8°. 1813. 9207 52] WALKER (MARY ADELAIDE). Through Macedonia to the Albanian Lakes. With illustrations by the author. 8». 1864. 9208 WALKER (THOMAS). The Original. Vol. I. 8°. 1835. 9209 At the end (in MS.) extract from the "United Service Journal," Feb. 1836, on the death of M'. Walker. WALKER (WILLIAM SIDNEY). Poetical remains, edited, with a memoir of the author, by Kev. J. Moultrie. 12°. London and Bugby, 1852. 9210 Critical examination of the text of Shakespeare, with remarks on his language and that of his contemporaries, together with notes on his plays and poems. [Edi- ted by W. N. Lettsom.] 3 vol. 12°. 1860. 9211 Shakespeare's Versification and its ap- parent irregularities explained by examples from early and late English writers. [Edited by W. N. Lettsom.] 12°. 1854. 9212 WALKING-STICKS, Hints to the bearers of Walking-sticks and umbrellas. Engravings. Third edi- tion. 8°. 1809. 9213 WALKS. Walks and Talks ; or, Aunt Ida's tales for young persons. By a Lady. With illustrations. 12°. 1850. 9214 WALLACE (PROFESSOR ROBERT). Dissertation on the true Age of the World, in which is determined the Chrono- logy of the period from creation to the Christian era. 8°. 1844. 9215 WALLACE (REV. ROBERT). Antitrinitarian Biography: or sketches of the lives and writings of distinguished Anti- trinitarians ; exhibiting a view of the state of the Unitarian Doctrine and worship in the principal nations of Europe, from the Reformation to the close of the Seventeenth Century . . history of Unitarianism in England during the same period. 3 vol. 8°. 1850. 9216 WALLACE (REV. THOMAS). Portraiture of the late Kev. William Jay, of Bath . . With notes of his conversa- tions . . 12°. 1854. 9217 WALLACE (WILLIAM). History of the life and reign of George the fourth. 3 vol. (in one). 12°. 1831-2. 9218 WALLER (EDMUND). Poems, &o. All the lyrick poems in this booke were set by M'. Henry Lawes . . [First genuine edition] . 8°. 1645. 9219 pp. 93-111. Speeches. Works ; in verse and prose. Published by M'. Fenton. (Portraits.) 12°. 1744. 9220 AND DENHAM (SIR JOHN). Poetical Works. With memoir and critical dissertation, by Eev. George GU- fillan. 8°. Edinburgh, 1857. 9221 WALLER (JOHN FRANCIS). Imperial dictionary of universal Bio- graphy . . By writers of eminence . . Conducted by John Eadie, John Francis Waller, J. P. Nichol, Edwin Lankester, Francis Bowen,United States (and W. J. M. Rankine). J. F. Waller, Editor. 3 vol. (in 5). 8°. London Glasgow and Edin- burgh, n.d. [1857-63]. 9222 WALLER (SIR WILLIAM). Divine meditations upon several occa- sions : with a dayly directory. (Portrait.) 8°. 1680. • 9223 WALLIS (SEVERN TEACKLE). Glimpses of Spain ; or, Notes of an un- finished tour. 8°. New York, 1850. 9224 Spain : her institutions, politics, and public men. A sketch. 8°. 1853. 9225 WALMSLEY (HUGH MULLENEUX). Sketches of Algeria during the Kabyle War. S°. 1858. 9226 WALPOLE (LIEUT. HON. FREDE- RICK) R.N. The Ansayrii, or Assassins, with travels in the further east, in 1850-1. Including a visit to Nineveh. 3 vol. (Portrait.) 8°. 1851. 9227 WALPOLE (HORATIO ok HORACE) AIT. 4th earl OF ORFORD. [Half-title] Castle of Otranto : a Gothic story [" Bentley's Standard Novels"]. 12° n.p. n.d. 9228 Catalogue of Engravers, who have been born, or resided in England ; digested from the MSS. of M'. George Vertue ; to which is added an account of the life and works of the latter. (Portraits.) 8°. 1794. 9229 Catalogue of the Royal and noble Authors of England, with lists of their 522 WALPOLE (HORATIO or HORACE) APT. 4th earl of ORFORD— cont. works. 2 vol. Second edition. 12°. 1759. 9230 Book-plate of T. J. Eawson. Catalogue of the Eoyal and Noble Authors of England, Scotland, and Ire- land ; with lists of their works. Enlarged and continued to the present time, by Thomas Park. 5 vol. (and vol. of Por- traits.) (Portrait of Walpole.) S°. 1806. 9231 D'. Bandinel's oop.y and book plate with MS. Appendix to Vol. II. Fugitive pieces in verse and prose. S"- Printed at Strawberry Hill, 1758, 9232 Presentation copy from the author to The : Gray with Gray's autograph. MS. note by G. Daniel. Letters. Edited by Peter Cunningham. , Now first chronologically arranged. (Por- traits.) 9 vol. 8°. 1857-9. 923,-5 Letters : including numerous letters now first published from the original manuscripts. (1735-1797.) 6 vol. (Por- traits.) 8°. 1840. 9234 Letters to Rev. William Cole, and others; from 1745, te 1782 . . Second edition. 4°. 1824. (2 copies.) 9235 Letters to Sir Horace Mann, his Bri- tannic Majesty's Resident at the Court of Florence, from 1760 to 1785. Now first published from the original MSS. Con- cluding series. 4 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1843-4. 9236 Correspondence of H. Walpole, E. of Orford, and the Rev. William Mason. Now first published from the original MSS. Edited, with notes, by Rev. J. Mitford. 2 vol. 8°. 1851. 9237 Letters to George Montagu. 1736, to 1770 . . 4°. 1818. From 9238 Second title page. "Works of Horatio Wal- pole, Earl of Orford. 6 vol. Vol. VI. Lon- don and Edinburgh. Interleaved copy with MS. additions, and with MS. marginal corrections &c., in the handwriting of Colonel Francis Cunning- ham, &c. Letters to George Montagu, from 1736, to 1770 . . 4°. 1834. (2 copies.) 9239 Letters to the Countess of Ossory, from 1769 to 1797. Now first printed from original MSS. Edited, with notes, by E. Vernon Smith [aft. Lord Lyveden] . 2 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1848." 9240 Memoires of the last ten years of the reign of George the Second. From the original MSS. [Edited by Lord Holland.] 2 vol. (Portraits.) 4". 1822. 9241 WALPOLE (HORATIO ou HORACE) AFT. 4iHj EARL OF ORFORD— cont. [Anothet edition.] Edited . . with pre- face and notes, by Lord Holland. 3 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1846. 9242 Pencil notes by T. Carlyle. Memoirs of the reign of George III. Now first published . . Edited, with notes, by Sir Denis Le Marchant, Bart. 4 vol. (Portraits.) 8°. 1845. _ 9243 Marked copy. Walpoliana. Second edition. [Col- lected by John Pinkerton]. 2 vol. (Por- trait.) 12°. n.d. [1804]. 9244 Prefixed is a "Biographical Sketch." WALPOLE (REV. ROBERT). Memoirs relating to European and Asiatic Turkey, and other countries of the east ; edited from manuscript journals, by R. Walpole. Second edition. 4°. 1818. 9245 Travels in various countries of the east ; being a continuation of Memoirs relating to European and Asiatic Turkey, &c. Edited by Rev. E. Walpole. 4». 1820. *9245 Specimens of scarce translations of the seventeenth Century from the .Latin Poets. To which are added miscellaneous trans- lations from the Greek. Spanish, Italian, &c. By R. Walpole. 12°. 1805. 9246 [WALSH (? ROBERT).] Letter on the genius and dispositions of the French Government, including a view of the taxation of the French Empire. By an American . . Third edition. 8°. Philadelphia, printed. London, repinted \^sic'] 1810. 9247 WALSINGHAM (EDWARD) and OTHERS. Walsingham's Manual, or, prudential maxims for statesmen and courtiers : with Instructions for youth, gentlemen, and noblemen. By Sir Walter Raleigh, Lord Treasurer Burleigh, and Cardinal Ser- monetta. Second edition. 12°. 1728. 9248 Contents— Raleigh's Instructions to his son, and to posterity; Burleigh's advice to his son; Instructions of Cardinal Ser- monetta, to his cousin Petro Gaetano; and, Walsingham's Manual [Ptrapslatiou from the Spanish]. WALSINGHAM (SIR FRANCIS). Anatomizing of honesty, ambition, and fortitude. 12°. 1651. 9249 WALTON (WILLIAM). The Alpaca its naturalization in the British Isles considered as a national 523 2 vol. 9254- WALTON (WILLIAM)— coat, benefit, and as an object of immediate utility to the farmer and manufacturer. 12°. Edinburgh and London, 1844. 9250 WALTON (W. L.). Defence of Jellalabad, by Major Gen. Sir K. H. aale. Drawn on stone by W. L. Walton. (Portrait.) F°. n.d. 9251 WALTON (IZAAK) and COTTON (CHARLES). Complete Angler ; or, contemplative man's recreation : being a discourse on rivers, fish-ponds, fish, and fishing. With the lives of the authors ; and notes . . By Sir John Hawkins. 12°. 1825. 9252 WARBURTON (BARTHOLOMEW GEORGE ELIOT). The Crescent and the Cross ; or, romance and reaUties of Eastern travel. Eleventh edition. 8°. 1855. 9253 Memoirs of Horace Walpole and his contemporaries ; including numerous original letters chiefly from Strawberry HiU. Edited by E. Warburton, " - ' (Portraits.) 8°. 1851. Memoirs of Prince Eupert, and the Cavaliers. Including their private cor- respondence . . (Portraits of Prince Ru- pert, &c.) 3 vol. 8°. 1849. (Two copies.) 9255 Reginald Hastings ; or, a tale of the troubles in 164-. 3 vol. 8°. 1850. 9256 Author's copy with MS. corrections for second edition. [WARBURTON (GEORGE).] Conquest of Canada. By the author of "Hochelaga." 2 vol. (Portraits of Jacques Cartier and General Wolfe.) 8°. 1849. 9257 Hochelaga; or, England in the New World. Edited by Eliot Warburton. 2 vol. 8°. 1846. 9258 Fourth edition. 8°. 1851. 9259 Memoir of Charles Mordaunt Earl of Peterborough and Monmouth : with selections from his correspondence. By the author of "Hochelaga" . . 2vol. 8°. 1853. 9260 WARBURTON (WILLIAM) BISHOP OF GLOUCESTER. Letters from a late eminent prelate rWarburton] to one of his friends TKichard Hurd, Bishop of Worcester]. Second edition. (Portraits of Warburton and Hurd.) 8°. 1809. 9261 "Appendix" contains letters from Charles Torke to Warburton, WARBURTON (WILLIAM) BISHOP OF GLOUCESTER— core*. Miscellaneous translations, in prose and verse, from Roman Poets, orators, and historians. [Anon.] 12°. 1724. 9262 WARD (GEORGE ATKINSON). Journal and letters of Samuel Curwen, Judge of Admiralty, an American refugee in England, from; 1775 to 1784,' compris- ing remarks on the prominent men and measures of that period. To which are added, biographical notices of many American loyalists and other eminent persons. (Portrait.) 8°. London and New York, 1842. 9263 WARD (GEORGE ROBERT MICHAEL). Foundation statutes of Bishop Fox for Corpus Christi College, Oxford, A.D. 1517. Now first translated into BngUsh, with a life of the founder. By G. E. M. Ward. 8°. 1843. 9264 WARD (HARRIET). Five years in Kaffir land ; with sketches of the late war in that country to the con- elusion of peace. Written on the spot. 2 vol. (Portraits of Colonel H. Somerset andSandilla.) 8°. 1848. 9265 WARD (SIR HENRY GEORGE). Mexico. Second edition, with an account of the Mining Companies, and of the political events in that Eepublic, to the present day. 2 vol. 8°. 1829. 9266 WARD (LADY). Six Views of the most important tomis, and mining districts upon the table land of Mexico. Drawn by Mrs. [aft. Lady] H. G. Ward, and engraved by Mr. (John) Pye. With a statistical account of each. Oblong. 1829. (2 copies.) ,9267 WARD (REV. JOHN). Diary of the Rev. J. Ward, Vicar of Stratford - upon - Avon, extending from 1648 to 1679. From the original MSS. in the Library of the Medical Society of London. Arranged by Charles Severn, M.D. . . 8°. 1839. 9268 WARD (MRS,). Recollections of an old soldier : a biographical sketch of the late Colonel Tidy. With anecdotes of his cotem- poraries. 12°. 1849. 9269 WARD (REV. RICHARD). Life of . . D'. Henry More, late fellow of Christ's College in Cambridge . . Divers of his . . letters. (Portrait.) 8°. 1710. 9270 524 WARD (ROBERT PLUMER). Tremaine ; or the Man of refinement. 2 Tol. (in one). (Portrait.) 12». n.p. a.d. (1835). 9371 WARDLAW (RALPH) D.D. Lectures on female prostitution Glasgow. 1842. 9272 WARE (HENRY) JR., D.D. Works (edited by Chandler Bobbins). (Portrait.) 4 vol. 8°. Boston [U.S.] 1846-7. 9273 WARING (ELIJAH). KecoUections and Anecdotes of Edward Williams, the Bard of Glamorgan ; or, lolo Morganwg, B.B.D. (Portrait.) 8°. 1850. 9274 WARMSTRY (THOMAS) D.D. Convocation speech, against images, altars, crosses, the new canons, and the oath, &c. 4°. 1641. 9275 WARNER (REBECCA). Original Letters, from R. Baxter, M. Prior, Lord Bolingbroke, A. Pope, D'. Cheyne, U'. Hartley, D'. S. Johnson, M". Montague, Kev. W. Gilpin, Eev. J. Newton, George Lord Lyttleton, Eev. D'. C. Buchanan, &c. With biographical illustrations. Edited by E. Warner. 8°. Bath [printed] and London, 1817. 9276 WARNER (REV. RICHARD). Literary Recollections. 2 vol. 8°. 1830. 9277 Miscellanies. 2 vol. 8°. Bath & Lon- don, 1819. (Two copies.) 9278 W. 2. Two vol. in one. WARNER (WILLIAM). Albions England. A continued historic of the same kingdome, from the originals of the first inhabitants thereof : With most the chiefe alterations and accidents theare hapuing, unto, and in the happie raigne of . . to a yovmg poet 8635 to a son 6613-14 to the poets 7021 Advocate, Cox 2054 Porsyth 3176 iEgean, 1829 8727 Aelfric, lives of saints 2674 Aelia Laelia Crispis 6784 Aelius Lamia, De Quinoey 23861" Sejanus, hist. 5941 iEneid 2322, 3629, 3686, 5801, 6892, 9168-61 Aenigma, Aelia 6784 Aerial navigation 49 •.aischylus, Boeck 785 JBsculapius, hosp. of fools 7029 •iEsop 630, 877-8, 8937«, 9096 (Phaedrus), 9643 at Richmond 7023 Aesopus the tragedian, 1740 1687 Aesthetic works, Sohlegel 7734 Aethiopis, highlands 3878-9 Aetiology of history 1710 Aetna, Severus, Bembo 7851 Affectionate Shepherd 6829^° Atfghan rebellion, tale 5461 N N A 548 Aflghanistan 2936, 3011, 3451, 4735, 5632, 6179, 6737, 7172, 7663, 7882 Affliction, on 7674 Africa, central 1942, 6S88, 6849, 7392, 9126 east 1216, 1939, 3766 (Barbosa) empires 4739 equatorial 2590 French, 1854 6264 inner, Oooley 1941 interior, 1818 6194 malaria and fevers 4439 natural curiosities 705^ north, (ancient) 6494 Portuguese S637 slave coasts, 1849 4086 south 2172, 5327-8, 6905, 7425, 8609, 8942 south-west, Antlersson 172 sport and adventure 172, 882, 2172 tropical south 3303 west and coast, 2644, 2982, 4051, «89, 7704 African blockade, 1848 3111 wanderings 9868 wars, Caesar 1286 After all, not to create only 9459 After Dark 1874 Aftermath 5464 *Agassiz, Alex, and Louis, Harvard 3887 Louis 6542, 8184 Agathooles 6834-6 Agathonia 3548 *Age of great cities 9106 the, and Christianity 9107 the, and its architects, 1850 4187 we live in, 1848 6212 Agnes de Mansfelt 3595 Grey 587 Agnesi, M. G., lile 4729 Agricola, Tacitus 8606, etc. Agricultural customs, England, 1852 ' 8217 notes, N. America, 1851 4664 tour, U.S. and Canada, 1842 439 Agriculture 2976, 5492, 8562 " « Africa 7704 Chinese 3181 Egypt (ancient) 9498 history 4267 Madeira 6908 Scotland 8172 etc.. Prance, 1802 8864 etc., France, Belgium, Holland, Switzerland 1892 A/^rippa v. Nettesheim, life 6292 Aids to reflection 1799 •Aikin, calendar of nature 4316 *Ainsworth, "W. H. 2161, 3232, 3260, 4269 Air, nature of, Hobbes 4106 *Aird, T., lit. port. 3413 Aix-la-Chapelle, memorials to Congress 6662 mineral springs, &c. 9379 Aimeer, irrigation 2495 •Akenside, and friends 1085 life 694 poems 953^ 6705^, 9586 Al Eaoui 650 Alaraode, Protestant 1537 Aland islands 1111 Albania 999, 4337-8, 6201, 7127, 9208 Albany, Count of, hfe 4879-80 *Albemarle, Anne, duch. of, life 2002^ Geo. Monck, duke of, life 3719-20 •Alberoni, Card., life 6378, 6166 •Albert Lunel 997 Albinia, loyal subjects of 6817 Albions England, Warner 9279 Alhret, Jeanne d*, letters, life 1467, 3247 Album do Karl, D^pret 2362 Album verses, Laiuu 5009, 5016 Aloiati, A., emblems, lite 4133 Alciphron, Moore 6244 Alchoholic liquors 1423 Aldermen, London 1668 profiting by the war, 1660 6718 Aldemey. notice of 2617 Aldgate 296»i, 1502 Aldus, printed by 6868, 6998 Ale and beer, oxci.so 7188^^ Ale-wives against coffee-houses 1776 AlenQon, duchcsse d', life 3248 Aleppo, native society 6772 to Jerusalem, 1697 5953 'Alexander VII., pope Bargrave 1322 Severus, ch. of Rome under 1118 the Great 7, 287-8, 7737, 9096 Alexanderiaua (Pope) 8576 Alexander's feast 7021 -Alexandria and her schools 4841 Alexandrian wars, Caesar 1286 Alexis, Item, patrician, life 4803 »;Alfleri, life 6220 Alfred the Great, Gregory's Pastoral Care Alfred 2674 life 8, 1664, 2626, 3811, 6776, 7247 poems on 2006, 3061 proverbs of Miscellany 2674 Algae, Erit. marine 3891 Algebra 5325* Algeria 877, 6264, 7204, 7213 Kabyle war, 1858 9226 lion hunting, etc. 8379 Algiers 1344, 6692 French in 5032 Alhambra coiurt 2161 the, tales of 4487 Aliens in England, 1618-88 Foreigners 1322 Ah Khan, vizier 2287 AhcB 5657-60 Ahce's adventures 1428 Ahments 218 Alisaunder, romance Alexander and William 2674 •Alison, Sir A. 4656, 6369, 6716, 7386 Aliwal, battle 8845 •All in the wrong 4203 the Blocks ■7016 the Talents 7016 Allan, G., life, private press 6435*' ^^ Jas., Northd. piper, life 8221 Allegiance 4099"' J, 6736, 7354 Allegories 2667, 45.59 •Allen, Card., Deventer 1639 John, Lingard controv. 6358 Allgemeinen Staatskunde 7761 Alliterative homily Holy Maidenhead 2674 poems Alliterative 2674, Gawayne 2674, Joseph 2674, Maydiston 1322 romance William 2674 AUotropism 2973 Alloy, gold 9310-11 Allston, "W., Jameson on 4552 Alma, battle 3827 Almack's in 1829 9697 Almanac, bloody 5343 British 942-3 comic 6989 for 2000 years 8578 gardener's 2896-6 Partridge 6764 Poor Eobin 7064 prophetic 7298 Punch 7216 Tanner 8638 •Almanacs, book of 2336 Alraoran and Hamet, novel 952 Almsgiving 6218 Alnwick books 667, 1193, 2299, 2S93, 9717 Alpaca, the 9250 Alpha, the 2360-1 Alphabet de la mort 4,131 missionai-y 6343 Alphabetic writing 859 Alphabets, table 3133 Alphonso X. and XI. and courts 6220 Alpine club excursions 410 flora, Norway 460 Alps 7747, 8628, 9011 Alroy, novel 2477 Altars, Durham cath., 1629 8095 &c., speech ag., 1641 9276 Altdorfer, A., fallof man 4133 Altniederlandischer dcnkmaler, sprache, etc. 4727 Alton Locke 4842-3 Altrive tales 4122 Alva, Duke of, life .1535 Amateurs, pictiu'c ngg Amazon, river 33, 2716, 4759 Amazons, the, 1639 375(5 Ambassadors, of 4303 Amber "Witch 6020 Amboiso, card,, life 5378 549 A 3036-6 2483 46Y4 610, li)4o 7632 3440, 6661 Amelia Amenities of literature •America, ancient and Americans Audubon Brit, army Brit. North by Buckingham 1080-8 Carolina 7615 central 1249, 1467, 2631, 4570, 8403 by Chateaubriand i612 colonization of 8636 and Columbua 3766 Concord and Merrimack 8843 constitution 76, 9077 copyright 2197 declaration of indeiieudence 9077 democracy 8891-2 discovery of 624, 1208, 3766, 4934 and England, 1774, etc. 8018 (and England) comparison 1)195 English m 3767 Eugl. empire 1208 Engl, plantations 1729 En^lianwoman in 713, B962 equmootial, Humboldt 43B9 and Europe, by Ossoli 6626 far -weat 7598 few months in 7447 Geneva award 1769 geography 6458 Georgia 9059 Gt. "Westeru Eepublic 2188 Harrison (president) 4676 high life, N. York 8091 history 422, 3766, 7453, 9078 impressions of, Bremer 920 industrial, etc. 7447 intellectual hist., etc, 8670 introd. of Ohi-isty. 4674 libraries 2707 life in the south 4677 men and manners 3825 negro slavery 3997 New England 9576, 9679-80 newspapers 8150 north 396, 697, 1067, 1460, 4664, 6356, 8076 (Hudson's Bay) 415 living authors, 1804 7372 phys. geog. 7393 wilds of 0111 North and South 6524 northmen in Zeno 3756 N.W. coast (Russia) 9644 notes in, Bryant 1069 notes and statistics, 1846 7220 old English colonies 6615 orators 5732-3 by Pauw 6777 poems, Moore 6244 poets and poetry 3668-9, 4748-9 presidents' addresses, etc. 9077 Priestley in 7171 prose ^vTiters 3670 railways, 1860 6120 resoiu-ces 941 revolution 6210 slave states 1088, 2984, 6695, 8448-63 south 2017, 4826, 6618, 7450 Spanish, conquest and slaveiy 4006 sport and adventure 862 statesmen 145, 6903 Tecumseh 4675 travels, 1861 9079 trip to, 1860 349 voyages of English to 1208 Western 1740, 7705 ■words and phrases 490, 8091 American, aborig. portfolio 2683 an, letters of, Laudor 6083 archseology 8327 authors 129. 144, 1086 books, 1815-65 9009 church 2038 civil war 1351, 3888 colonies, revolt 1495 criminal trials 1517 discourses, Bushnell 1225 Europe by an [Calvert] 2869 factory girls, Misc. 6507 American — coni. fossils 4101 handbook 7536 humour 3771 Indians 1460, 4784 literature 143 loyalists, &c., biog. 9263 magazine. Dial 2388 mil. journal, Simcoo 8049 north, colonies, 1846 12 note-books, Hawthorne 3908 notes, Dickens, 2399, etc. pamphlets, 1869-72 146 m Paris 4561-2 philosophy 9072 plants 8340 pronune. of English Mlis 2674 republic, poems on man 6937 Eeview, North 6521 revolution 423, 8049, 8188, 8288 women of 2733 slave 6136-", 6529 society, 1862 , 5776 spirit manifestations 8316 tributes 9581 war, North and South 4677 (western) life, Clavers 1740 (See also " United States.") Americanisms 490 Americans at home, Haliburton 3766 Amersham, Bucks, 8638 Amicia, legitimacy 1639 Amicus 1278 Aminta, Tasso 8040 Amintor and Nightingale, poem 7010 Amsterdam, tracts 2277^ 4099', 5625 Amulets 6919 Amusements 4184, 5745-6, 8136, 8438 Amy Herbert 7858 Amyntor, Toland 725, 8890 Ac, particle 239 *Ana, etc. 5413, 6183, 7580 Anabaptists 1599^ *, 18562 Anabasis, Xenophon 2965, 9688-9 *Anacreou, traas. 9531', 2966'", 6244, 6705=° Anacreontics, Parnell 6739 Anagrams 1, 1694, 2800 Analogy of religion 1234 Ananias and Saphira 1679, 7364 Anarchia Anglicana 5339 Anarchy of a limited monarchy 6197 Anastasius 4220 Anatomists, great 4927 Anatomizing of honesty, etc. 9249 Anatomy, ancient 1696 artistic 4923 comparative 2207 and drawing 3920 elementary 5499 for artists 2980 of man 2980 Anatomy of abuses i857 of baseness Miscellanies ", 3284 of melancholy 1217 of wit 211 Anolens et modernes, guerre 1305 Ancren Uiwle 1322 Andagoya, P. de, narrative 3766 Andahicia, illus. 8721 •Andersen, H. C, notice of 7226 Andes 3386, 3969, 4222, 9012 •Anderson, R., Brit, poets 953 Andover, Ld., speeches, 1641 1597"2 discourse at 1225 Andr6, Sand 7666 Andr6, Major, case 8364 Andreini, Isab., life 8997 Andrew of 'Wyntoun, chi'on. 7781 Andrewes, bp., life 4491, 6435* •Anecdotes, etc. 3903, 4408, 4943, 5770, 6161, 8063, 8300-2, 8689 distinguished persons 2811 King (of his own times) 4«33-4 literary, 18"" cent. . 6470, 2 literary and typographical 88BS literature and scarce books 602 London 5745-6, S149 men of genius, otc. 7221, 9312 Seward (16-18"' cent.) , 7866 N N 2 550 Anecdotes— core*. and traditions, Thoma 1322 of E. Watts 6986 Angel in the House 6764-5 "World and other poems 382 Angelioo, Pra 082, 9106 Angelo, M., life 2611 Angels and Archangels, legends 4663 Angler and angling 106, 3291, 2804, 6435", 6640, 6675, 6812, 9252 Anglesey, Earl of 1450, 1577, 2277, », » Marq. of, life 5876 Anglia rediviva, 1647, Sprigge 8326 1699, Dnnster 2633 Angliae chron.. Matt. Paris 1663 de gestis regum, Rd. of Cirencester 1663 speculum morale 2882 Anglican church, Gt. Bebellion 9675 Anglicana historia, Cotton 1663 ■Walsingham Albans 1663 Anglo-Latin poets Poets 1663 Anglo-Norman language London 1663 lit. biog. 9663 Anglorum, hist. Matt. Faris 1663 pontifices Win. of Malmesbury 1663 speculum, 1684 7605 *Anglo-Saxon antiquities 104 authors 8868 chron. 656, 1663 Commonwealth 6679 England 655, 6677 and Eng. diet. 858 flossary 8858 ings 6115 language, Bosworth 869 lit. biog.'! 9662 passion 6&W^ policy, etc. 6679 pronunciation BllJs 2674 times, Lat. oh. 8198 Anglo-Saxons, conv. to Christ^. 9664 Anglo-Tyrannus, 1650 9203 Angoulfeme, Marguerite D', life 3248 Animal economy 2977, 3465 kingdom 1424, 2207-8 life, curiosities 3314 magnetism 1897, 2640, 3642 mechanics 6325>, 6675 physiology 1422, 6325' world and man 3641 Animalcules 5795 Animals, articulate and vertebrate 4939 creation, history, etc. 4857 domestic, humanity to 9705 extinct 2161 habits and instincts 8518 instinct 2016 intelligence, etc. 6269 Levant; &o. 8917 living and extinct 74 menageries 8517 nat. hist. 2207, 4680 passions 8818 Animated nature 3499, 3519-20, 4139, 6930 Annals, England, etc., Hoveden 4290 Q. Eliz., Hayward 1322 of our time, 1837-71 4475 Annamaboe, Prince of, life 705'' ♦Anne, Q. of James I. 8616, 8689 Queen, address to 4099" court and times 6814, 8832 (Crisis) 7044 four last years 8542 life, Jameson 4549 and Marlborough 6817 ministry, 1710 8629 pedigree 1583 poems on 7010, 7018 (as Princess), 1689 4099'' queries to 7163 reign 1783, 2098, 4670, 6697, 8629, 9683 Bootland 6406 son of 6316 successes 7018 vindication of 4099" Whiggish faction against 1813 Wiltsnire clergy 4099"* Annuo! Register, Oobbett 1767 of scient. discovery, 1864 9367 Annuals 1464, 3069, 4661-2 Annus Mirabilis, Dryden 2683 Partridge 6764 1661-2 '(f H. Jessey) 6163-4 Ansayrii (Assassins), 1860-1 9227 Anson, Lord, life 480 Antapologia, Edwards 2712 Antar, life 4999 Ante-Nicaena, Analecta 1116 Anthologia Germanica 6771 Graeca, de 8984 Anthology, French 8673 Greek 3619 Anthropology 7299 Antichrist 6449, 7021 Anti-Corn Law League 2619, 7147, 8217 speeches 3206 Antidote ag. an infectious air, 1647 8937' "' ag. melancholy, Churchyard 1853"' Antignostikus, Neander 6409 Antilles 1894 Antipodes, 1846 4956 Antipopopriestiau 7488 Antiquarian ramble, London 8149 Antiquary, wanderings, Wright 9072 Antique, the, illus. from 4231, 4743, 7385, 8889 Antiquities, Araory 149-50 Archaeologia 8204-5 Asia Minor, Pontus, Armenia 3820 Brit. Mus. 9112 Celtic, etc. 104 eastern 2669 Egypt (ancient) '"nglai ' 2686, 8600, 8912 8167 4044 8662'" 2957 8122 9061 686S 3398 2790 895 8121 7277, 8346 6185 2562, 6641 977 8662' 1 9216 1871 England Glasgow Gr. and Kom. Hertz Killmackumpshaugh Iiondesborough London national, Wright of nations Northumbrian Old England popular, Britain Eichborough, etc. Komaii Antiquity, curious subjects of man or the wise instructor Antisatyrist Antitrinitarian biog. Antonina Anv4r-I Suhaili Aphorisms, etc. 319, 1754, 5744, 6742, 7266, 7776, 8063, 901O Apicius 4830 Apocalypse 686, 3136 Apocalyptic sketches 2167 Apocrypha 668, 2150 Apocryphal gospels 6211 Apollonius Rhodius, trans. 953'^ 6705^ Tyaneus, life 6903, 8875 Apologia, Newman 6448 Apology for lady of quahty, 1761 4099 ' for his life. Gibber 1687 for learning, etc., 1653 9306 for poetry Sidney 211 for the royal party, 1659 28SS of De non temerandis ecclesiis 8299 Apophthegmata 4717 •Apophthegms, Bacon 362 Apostaoy to K. Charles Lilbvrne 5.337* Apostates 8S22-4 Apostlehood, original 4910 Apostles and Christ, eh. 6409 Apostles' creed. Ken 4777 Apostles, legends 4553 Apostoles, triumphos, Spain 8280 Apostolic age, Christ, tneol. 7371 community of goods 6906 Apparitions, etc. 1306, 2801, 3434 Appel aux honnfttes gens, Blanc 741 Appello Caesarem 6323-4 Appendicia et Pertinentiae, Wai'ter 9290 Apperley (" Nimrod ") 6009, 6501-3 Apprentices 2963, 6188 •Apuleius, works 9096 Aquarium S664, 3666 Arabia 1132, 1414, 3766 ( YaHhema), 7462, 8942 9359 551 Avabia—oont. early Christianity 9666 monuments 3133 •Arabian tales^ etc. 660-1, 6089 Arabic biog. diet. 4M2 diet., proposals for 4686 evangelists 4133 philosophy, Europe 8354 and Persian poems 6078 Arabs, domestic manners 9026 in Spain 1911 Negroland 1942 Sind 2738 Aragona, TuUia d', life 8997 Aram,t, journey to 1943 Aratra Pentehci 7663 Arbitrary government, England 2277*, 7095 Arboretnm and Frutioetum Brit. 6490 ♦Arbuthnot, miscellanies 8529, 8576 Archaeologia 4519, 5722, 6719, 8204-6 •Archaeological album, 1846 9661 Ass"., Canterbury 9661 Archaeology, American 8327 essays. Stanhope 8364 of art 6S39 Winchester, 1846 223 Archaic words 6879 Archbishops and bishops Cotton 166S declaration, 1696 logg' Archduke Charles and Alison 5716 Archipelago, eastern 575, 3396, 4706, 4806, 5826 Grecian, 1727 8917 Architects, Brit., lives 2178 lives 9103-4 Spanish 9116 Architectural drawing 6492 works, midd. ages 3464 Architecture, Assyrian and Persian 3005 beauty in 8003 British 470-1 castellated 6436i» cyclopedia 3737 domestic 674«, 9051 ecclesiastical 6857 England 8912 S. Ferguson 6209 Gothic, Schlegel 7734 handbook, Fergusson 3004 etc., Jarves 4568 midd. ages, England 9469 of the Heavens 6460-1 Ruskin 7568 Seven Lamps 7573 Venice 7564 works in 6671 Archy's dream 296', 5175 •Arctic botany, meteorology, geology 4454 discoverer, Simpson 8065 expeditions 356, 3642, 4217, 7261, 7893, 7771 journal Osborn 6617 nat. hist. 8610 regions 261, 5994, 7830, 8061 seas, life in 8196 voyages, 1694-6 yeer 3766 Aroulf, travels 6674 Ardennes, legends 1997 Aretaphila, life *033 Areopagitica 211, 6154-5 Argall, -, notice of 594^ Argentine BepubUc, 1846 4823 Argyle, D. of, poem to, 1716 7010 Earl (aft. Marq.) of, speeches 1597", " E. of, case, 1682 7096 •Argyll. Duke of 946, 949, 5369 •Arfosto, life ^ 6220 Aristocracy and aristocratic governments 992 anecdotes, etc., Burke 1154-7 of England 3828 Arlston, adventures of , 7860 Aristophanea prosopogi'aphia J7bO •Aristotle, knowledge since 3433 Aristotle's ABC Sabees 2674 •Arithmetic 6325S 5492, 6456, 7102 Ark and deluge „„ ^ *926 Arkwright, Sir R., life ^ . 1787-8, 2824 Arlus, Fortunatus and Odolphus, hist. 4099" Armadale 1^'^ Armenia 2199,3684,3826,5193,8917 Armies, Scot, and Engl., 1648 7777 Arminianism 5163, 6324 Arminiana, 1641 1697™ Armorial bearings, Carleton, Bp. of Chichester 9137 cities, towns, and boroughs 9530 city companies, 1681 1209 E. Gibbon 5173 Newcastle companies 9205 noblemen and gentlemen 1162-S peers 1071, 6418 royal, England 6454 sovereigns of England 470 Armory, General 1153 Armour, English 4052 Arms, decoration 4958 taking, ag. the King, 1642 1599^ •Armstrong, Dr. J., poems 953'", 6705^, 7014 •Army agitators and Fairfax 296ff», ^ an, characters of, 1709 7691 Brit., America 3440, 6661 Brit., Portugal, etc. 6791 and Chas. 1. 7188'°' and Chas. II. 7368 and city agitators 267 and City of London, 1647-8 1707, 8937'. « civil wars 2962-3 divines 7188™ Fairfax's 2952-3, 8326 in its true colours, 1709 7691 knavery in, 1649 1599* laws, etc., 1639 1599* and Lilbui-ne 6337'> officers absent, 1640 71883« officers, letters, (1648) 7188™ officers, Prynne 7210 and parliament (1648, 59) 6734-5, 8937 "* parliamentary 3692, 5448 plea for, 1659 2883 provisions, 1642 7188" restraint of swearing, and observing of prayer, &c., 1644 71888" (Scotland), 1648 16991 Scotland, 1650 1698=S-« 1643-8, etc. 1 696-6, 1598», 1599", 6734, 7188™, ™, 121, 8937 • " 1689 4099'! stragglers and idlers, 1642 7188»i terms (French) 4099" vindicated, 1650, Wither 8313 word for, 1647 1692, 6863 Arnim, Bettina 8483 •Arnold, T., hfe and letters 8359 Martineau on 6889 Arrest of the Five Members 3136 Arria, life 4033 Arsenals, Prance 3217 •Art, ancient 2476, 6339, 7816-17, 9570 ancient and modern 1741, 3920 Ansted 190 archajology of 6339 and artists, Jameson 4646 and artists, Londgn 7222 Arundelian, &c. collections 7614 beauty in 3003 books on 7060 British, patronage of 7222 Cliristian 2464, 6353, 7572, 7734, 9057-8 classical 4378 collections 4546, 7614 conversations, etc., Burnet 1183 copyright 6887 criticisms 2177, 3933-4 decorative 6671 design, Gwyn 3739 dictionary, Brande 896-7 dress 2682 England 8600 and ethnology 6542 Europe, ix'" to xix"> cent. 4378 Exhibition, Leeds 5227 and Faust 3485 fine, exhibition, 1863 66S1 galleries, London 4346-7 Gt. Britain, Humphreys 4378 Greek 461.3-14, 9342, 9624 Crreek, Assyrian, etc., Brit. Mus. 9112 hints, Jarves 4568 hist, of our Lord, St. John the Bapt, 4658 552 1233 6209 3842-3 7060 4892 149-60 6369 7663 2215, 8846 9669 3492 3876 4644 6627 3841 7232 1101 Art— co»i. imitative, Butler lectures, Dublin lessons on, Harding library, S. K. Museum miscellanies, C. Knight monuments of, Amory museum of, Lardner and nat. science, Euskin and nature of needlework on, Goethe on, Harris on, Jameson on, Ossoli ornamental, hist, and poetry, " Germ " principles of, Preart principles and practice Quarterly Journal Boman, Cirencester BK)m6 a54i5, ys/D Euskin v. 7563 etc. sacred and legendary 4563-4 schools 1131 (and science) year-book, 1841-56 9699 Scotland and Scottish 7787 student, Munich 4314 ten centuries of 4378 terms 2956 treasures Exhib., Manchester 6767-8 treasures of, Gt. Britain 9181 JTusoan, Euskin 7663 Union, London 1126, 1264, 6701-3, 6146, 7431 varieties, Northcote 6626-7 workmanship 2325 year book for 1866 9367 •Arthur, King 2674 poem, tale 4671, 6662, 79-80 and his Eound Table 6763, 9406 Prince, poem 727 Arthur Arundel 8131 Arthurian localities Arthur 2674 Article, twentieth 8937' ^ Articles, ch. of England, 1703 4099'" Limerick 6347 of peace, Scobell 7770 Eeading, 1643 7188 '» subsc. to 8931 Articulate and vertebrate animals 4939 Articulated animals 2207 Artioulis, de 7769 Artillerie, 1' 828 Artillery pay, 1647 16991 Artist, poor 4261 self taught, Carter ' 2234 Artistic anatomy 4928 Artistical travels, Italy, 1839 9093 Artist's married life (Durer) 7709 Artists and anatomists 4927 fund 7223 (miniature painters) 7762 and NoUekeus 8160 and poets, Gt. Britain 3791-2 Rome 655 Spain 6973 Arts, ancient nations 3830-1 definitions, 1696 6890 dictionaries 2066-7, 3776, 9085 Egypt (ancient) 9308 England, 14"' cent. 3470 Engl, cyclopedia 4886 fine. Burnet 1183 fine, 1845 6737 fine, Ex", of 1861 9338 fine, Florence 3091 fine, Gt. Britain and Ireland 8696 fine, Guizot 8708 fine. Knight 6915 fine, literature of, Eastlake 2675-6 fine. Madonna legends 454S fine, on perfecting, 1767 8562 " " fine, (Eeview) 8063 fine, (Tatler) 8660 France, 1802 8854 Greece 3830-1 Greek and Eoraan 8623, 7385 Indians 74«6 liberal, Eefleotor 7344 and manufactures 6737 Arts — eont, mid. ages and renaissance of the asre, 1783 etc. pict. gallery, Knight and sciences, hist. 16"' cent., Cellini useful, Kniglit Arun, river Arundelian collection Aryan languages *Ascham, R. Asgill, J. Ashantce Ashburton, Lady, sketch Ld. (Dunning), life Ashby-de-la-Zouch Asia, anc. monuments 4958, etc. 2870 6915 1370 1479-80 6915 8850 7614 6343 311, 1787-8 7015, 8937 ' ', " 2644, 81)86 4278 7610 6766 8830 empires 4739 sport and adi'cnture 883 Asia Minor 2989-91, 3060, 3826, 6868, 8917 churches 2167 •Asiatic eloquence 448 nations, ancient 6495 theatre 2391 Asinus onustus, 1642 1673 Askaros Kassis (romance) 5254 Asmodeus at large . 5561 Aspects of nature, Humboldt -4355 Ass overladen, 1642 1672 Assassins (Ansayrii) 9227 Assaying, gold and silver 9310-11 Assemblies, tumultuous, 1648 6734=" Assembly, general, Scotland 1598^ -man, 1647 6853 of divines 1699=, 2038, 2712, 6734, 7889, 8937 ' « Assessing and assessment, 1643 1699*, 6734 Assessment, parochial, 1863 6308 Assessments, arrears, 1660 7188^^^ Assises, Parnassus, "Wither 8313 Assize, Bloody 7437, 9371 expenses, 1596-1601 Camden Misc. ■',1322 of bread 296' Assizes, 1660 71881*= Northumberland 6435 ", is Association, 1683 2277^", 6231, 7095 Crown and Anchor, 1796 8921 Associations, the late, 1796 8921 Assumption of our Lady King Horn 2674 Assyria, history 2670, 9113, 9395 and Assyrians 6194, 6 travels. Grant 3584 Assyrian architecture ' 3006 art, Brit. Mus. 9112 Astley, Philip, life 4379 Astraea Eedux, Dryden, 1660 7018 Astrolabe Chaucer 2674 Astrologers 5344 Astrological obs., predictions, quacks 8638, 6342-3, 8937 ' i Astrology 236, 1832, 23669, .3290-1 Astronomical diary, Gfadbury 3390-1 observations 4041,8180 Astronoraicon, Manilius 9096 Astronomic, populare 6728 Astronomische, Bessel 649 Astronomy 4039, 4042, 4657 (Atlas), 5118, 6325', 6137, 6171, 6460-1, 6W3-6 ancient 1696 and astr. instruments 2667 nautical, terms etc. 9707 and physics, & nat. tbeol. 9399 Asylum for fugitive pieces 3373 At home and abroad, Ossoli 6826 At the Bar 1863 Athalia, oratorio 7021 Atheism 3460, 4163, 4822, 6268, 6709, 7353 Atheist 2297, 4010, 8324 Athenae Brit., Davies 2276 Oxonienses 9807-8 Athenian oracle 2634 people 6661, 7 Athens and Attica 9622-3 rise and fall 6561, 7 revenue 2260 and Rome, nobles and commons 8629 Socrates and the sophists 8110 tale of 6832 Atherton, Bp., death, etc. 461 Athletic amusements 786 A 55S Atlantic to Pacific, N.W. passage 6740 Atlantis, New 301-2, 0202 *AtIas, Alison's hist. 4656 anatomy 2980 astronomy 4037 biblical 4872 England, etc. 3801 life ol Marlborough 2061 Lowry 6510 physical Attacfie, the, Haliburton 4659-00 3766 Attorbury, Bp. 877-8, 1322 {Camden Misc.*) ; 4099', 6618, 6629, 8488, 8937'* Attorburyana Attic and common dialects 2191 21S5 eloquence 448 philosopher in Paris 8274 Atticae noctes, Gellius 8362, 9096 Attisches museum 9471 Atticus, letters to, Cicero 1704 T. Pomponius, life 648 Aubrey, John 958, 3471, 9207 A'udelay, John, poems 6829'* AUdenard, battle tsong) 7012 Audience, the, poem 7024 Audubon, adventures, etc. 7632 'Augustine, landing of 8367 Augustus, court of AuJnage and subsidy, 1660 Aunt Margaret's Trouble 782 7l88i« 326 Aurora Leigh 1033 Ausonius, works 9096 •Austen, Jane, life 2766 •Austin, — , notice of 694 Australasia, Laird 49S4 and prison discip. 6032 Australia 4317, 4966, 6095, B236, 7134 aborigines bush life 6094 892S central 8492 Cooksland 5094 cotton-field 6094 discovery of 3766 early voyages to 3766 (Victoria) emigration to 414 its foundations 7291 gold fields 3386, S861 north-east 5094 south 2651, 3884, 8492, 949S tropical 6172 and New Zealand 8960-3 Australiim backwoods 7849 book, Melbourne 7660 colonies, Hughes 4339 gold fields, geology 9309 poems 4317 Austria 4931, 8426, 8816 and Austrian Lombardy 486 court, aristocracy, diplomacy 9116 emperor (1862) Perd. and MaximiUan house of lit., scient., medical and Metternioh Protestantism in Austrian campaign. Piedmont empire, S. provinces government gov', and princes ?olic6 'rotest. persecutions regiment, Loudon's revolution rule, Venice Authoresses, French Authorities, U. K. and colonies Authority in matters of opinion- Author's mind. Tapper •Authors, anecdotes of best, half hours with book of .„., Brit, and Amencau, Allibone calamities of deceased, Brydges dramatic great, truths ill'', by .Tortin on living (1770-1803J (1816) 4382 7285 2057-8 9483 6876 1280 3749 6771 6095 8426 887 6096 6661 2068 7666. 70 939 7338 5312 9029 7689 129 24S0 1072 776, 2391 9010 'IfiiiS 7372 704 •Authors — C0'}tf. quarrels 2490 royal and noble 9230-1 Authorship, aspects of 4615 Autobiographic sketches, De Quincey 23(55 Autobiographical conversations, Bentham 619 poem, Wordsworth 9630 Autobiography, actress (Mowatt) 6327 Andersen 107 Anspach, Marg. of 180 Arago 206, 8 Barrow 479 Bramston 1332 Brasbridge 899 Brydges 1070 Carleton 1374 A. Carlyle 1379 Chateaubriand 1610 C. Gibber 1682-4 Th. Cibbor 69729 CUnton 1760 Cooper 1968 Dee Chetham Misc. S 1639 Delauy 2326-8 D'Ewes 2383 Digby 2467 Dissent, minister 2491 P. Eugene 5373 ErankUn 3228-30 Margaret Puller 6629 Gibbon 3394-5 GUIord 3403 Goethe 3478-80, 3491 Ly. Halkett 1322 Haydon 8693 Herbert of Cherhury 6373 Holyoake 4163 Home 4165 Houstoun (f) 4289 Hume 4367 Hunt 4389-90 Jay 4.672 Jordan 4690 Langley ChetJiamMisc.', 1639 Laud 5143 Lavalette 6181 Leatherland 5206 Leslie 6266 LUly 6344 Lister 5366 Luther 6637-8 Malincontri 5750 Martindale 1639 Mill 6110 Montbarey 6216 (and Diary), Newcomc 1639 Bp. Newton 9056 O'Keefle 6576 Opium-Eater 2365-6 Orleans, A. M. Louise d' 6231 Ossoli (Puller) 6629 Pacca 6664 Bp. Pearce 9065 Pennant 6813 Peter Jones 4676 Pilkington 6920 Piozzi 8933 Priestle.y 7171 Prussia, Fred., Princess Roy. of 410 F. Eeynolds 7376 Richter 7400-7 Eomer 6002 RomiUy 7606 Mad. Schopenhauer 7765 Segur 7831 of a small boy 3063 Somerville (1741-1814) 8219 Lady H. Stanhope 8341 Sterne 8408 Taswell Camden Misc.', 1322 J. Taylor 8686 Thierry 8800 Tone 8905 Wakefield 9198 Countess of Warwick 6829" Washington 9.30S Bp. Watson 9317 Whiston 9H1 554 B Autobiography— COB^. J. B. While 9427 working man, Somerville 8216 Zschokke 9726 ♦Autographs 64,22-S, 8066, 8784 Ava, embassy to 2105 Average, marine 9707 Avon, river 8851 Axel and Anna 912, 916 Axholme, Isle of 6337* Ayesha 6278 Ayenbite of inwyt Michel 2&J4t •Aytoun, "W. B., ballads 3345 Azores 1107, 6356, 6618 An "^ denotes that the word to which it is preficed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue: reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type ; *' v '' stands for volume. B. Babe Christabel, etc., poems Babees book Babes in the wood Baby May, poem Babylon, Layard 6918-21 2674 9304 611-12 5193 Sowdone of Charlemagne 2674 Babylonia, hist. 9395 Bachelor of the Albany 7697 Bachelor's own book 3162 lettany 7023 Backwoods, Canada 8938 •Bacon, Trancis, Apophthegms 200 character, Martin 5872 Christian paradoxes 6688 on coffee 1777 confession 2498 Henry VII. 4790 letters 6610 life, Campbell Spedding 8295 Dixon 2497-9 Macaulay 5631 Mallet 6763 Montagu 358 Spedding 360 and Macaulay, Spedding 8296 Nov, Organon 6325 passages fr. 3690 philosophy, Lewes 6305 poems Miscellanies 3284 and Raleigh 6387 war with Spain 7271 writings and phily, Craik 2076 Bacon. 3.. R.A., life 1476 Roger (Priar) 1621,1663,682915 Badcock, J., slang diet. 659 Baddeley, M".. life 3299 Baden 3074, 9076 Badges of honour 4133 Baffin's Bay 3542 8610 Bagdat 9369 Bage, Robert, Hermsprong 052'8 Bagford ballads 411 Bahawalpur, hist. 7882 Bail and Mainprize 1781 •Bailey, P. J., Festus 0968' Home on 4269 Bailiffs, self instruction 6492 Baillie, D'. M., life 6707 •Baillie, R. 1880", 6163 Baillv, life 206 Bainbridgo, "W""., Bng, & Fr. revolutions 0435" Baines, Edward, life 398 Bakers, visitation of, 1693 8937' Bal Masque 1643 Balaghaut, Karnatic 4Ki7 Balance of power 9018 Balcanquall, D'. (Belkankevell) 1566 Balcarres, house of Balder Bale, Bp., King John Temptation Balfe, notice Baliol, Martha B., diary Balk, 1846 Balkan, passage of •Ballad of Babe Christabel, etc. Bury (Berry) S'. Gay poetry, Ireland to Prince of Or.inge romances. Home sailor's Salisbury Sir Hornbook Statesman's Almanack ♦Ballads, Ainsworth ancient, Rimbault Scottish versions Bennett border British with burdens Churchyard English (ancient) (early) history Gaul tier German Gt. Britain great frost Herodotus Homeric, Maginn Howitt Ireland Jacobite Longfellow Lover M'Carthy Meredith naval of the new world old and modem and poems, Schiller political Portuguese Prince Albert Robin Bood Roxburghe Scott Scottish 16'*^ and 17"* centuries 5351 2609 1S22 Miscellanies 3284 7225 8084 6179 6195 6918-21 7010 7019^' 2696 7024 4266 7021 7029 4166 7024 86 7420 6829" 612 8712 3790 eS29>3 1853» Percy 6826-8 2796, 6829 6613 3346 3381 6243 6829> 783-4 4182 4815 3922 8349 6465 5498 5637 6050 8847 2879 7715-16 6839-', 9492 6436" 111 4189, 5384 18S8 7798 1506, 9443 1839 1852, 6244, 0829" 6106-7 8759>s, 87601 9462 6408 6599 8112 7418 9126 2377*0 8166 2277", 8937' 1' 5933 2523, 207S-80 8400 67116" 3409 S749 5231 1693" 760, 8468 4269 Bank of Enxland 1837, 3221, 4099^ 6318, 7042 land, 1696 4099'' model of, 1678 4099e National, 1695 4099' Bankes' bay horse 0829^ Banking, hist. 6192 Banks, J., life 2626 Banks, of, 1714 26 of IHng., Ireland, Scotland 6192 Bannister, C, anec. of 4379 Banquets, Eng, 8438 Bantam Middleton 3766 Baptism, infant 1763 Baptist churches 6436 '. •*, 7465i« and songs Spanish Thackeray Whittier •Ballantyne-humbug Ballet beauties Ballet-girl, A. Smith Ballets (ballads), bibl. of Balloon, a, five weeks in Ballot, benefit of S. Smith on Venice Balochistan Baltic •Balzac, Stephen on Bampfylde, poems Bampton, book Ban, the, camp of Banbury, Countess of, case lecturers Bandinel, D'. •Banim, Home on B 555 B Bar, Irish 2193 Barbadoes 1729 Barbaro, Jos., travels 3756 Barbarossa, vision of 8425 Barbary 1013, 0892, 8503 Barbauld, M"., British novelists 952 chap book 1623 on Collins 1867 life 2766 on Richardson 7400 Spectator 8291 •Barber, M"., poems 7023 Barbers, slap at 7691 Barbosa, D., Africa and Malabar 3756 Barbour, John, the Bruce 2671. Barchester Towers 8964 Barclay, Alex., eclogues 8313 Sir G., commission 45] 1 Bards, Irish 1917 Barents, "W., Arctic voyages Veer 3756 ♦Bar6re, life 5817 Barsrave, John, D.D. 1322 Barham, Ingoldsby leg. '145S life and letters 445 My Cousin Nicholas 4457 (Thomas Ingoldsby) , on 4259 *Barl£9tead, Col. J. 1596, 7347 Barlow, J., insanity 8093 Barnabee's journal 900-1 Barnaby Eudge 2399, etc. Barnes, Alderman, life 6435« B., life 594, 9538 Barnet, highwaymen, 1691 8937" Barneveld, John of, life 5378, 6313 Bamfleld R., Aff. Shepherd 6829»» Lady Pecunia 1855' notice of 594 Barometer, mountain 2563 Baronetage 1169, 5418 Baronial halls 3789 Baron's Tule feast 1967 Barons' wars 1322 Barr#, life 957 •Barrett, B. S. 4118, 7016 Barrier treaty. Swift 7042 Barrington, Vise, tract by 7165 Barrington, novel 5291 Barrow Straits 8510 Barry, M"., hfe 3299 •Barry, J., pictures 4547 Barry Lyndon 8759", 8760^ Barrymore, E. of, anecdotes 4379 Barth. Africa 6849 Bartholomew Fair 295', 6293, 7691, 89.37' Barwiclt, John, life 492 •Bas or Basse, W. 1856", 1857 Bases of beUef 6076 Basil, novel 1=72 Basilikon Doron i-mw I Basing house liia Basque provinces 1413 Bas-reliefs, Florence 3091 Bassano.Ducde „,?!^ Bastard, great, 1689 ,„ ^,^, 7047" Bastwick and others 1595, 5148, 5154,^7331^ Bath, Earl of, Devonshire 1597"" ^"'"'boiTete'"'* 192. 870-1, 873^. 3053. S DOCKS, ewj^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ..Ijgj^ j^j3_^^ 6935, 6151, 6777, 6968', 8128, 8820, 9276, 9278 guide. New 1^1-2 handbook, 1841 „bq W,2 letters from ^'^^' ™o PalaemontoCaelia 7010 subscription ball, etc. 5086 Bath-Easton, poems 33^" Baths and wash-houses 5Zd Bathurst, Bp., life =|"6 Ralph, hfe, etc, 9299 BattuponBatt ^^^^'^09 Battel Abbey S^Xo Batthyany, h-^i^}^^"^ ^^^^^ ggsg" 8546-50 4C71 4324. fi3.59 4179 2410 Battle" of the Books -day, etc., poems fields , . of the frogs and mice of life of Nibley Green 4854 Battle— con^. of the sexes, poem 6971'° Battles, ancient, few air. many 503 assaults, &c., 1012-7 8099» British navy 123 England, Eapin 7295 sieges, etc., 1626-60 1212-13 and sieges. Peninsula 6389 of the world, decisive 2107 Baucis and Philemon 7012 Bavaria, Alps 7747 chamois hunting 833-4 highlands 7747 hunters, poachers, peasantry, &c. 7747 and the Palatinate, 1637 1599" Protestantism 1280 Rhenish 9076 Baviad and Maeviad 3403 Bavins, to, 1688 7026 •Baxter, R., and P. Heylyn 459 letters 9276 Piae Praudes 70401" S)em on death of 7018 en on 8395-0 writings of 6512 •Bayeux tapestry 1061, * 1981 •Bayle, Eicon Basilike 1577 life of Busbequius 1220 Bays, the younger 3108, 6988 Beacon's quenched, 1652 1599' Beaconsfield, E. of 2477-82, 5369 Beagle, voyage 2257, 4826 Beale, Mary, life 2002 Beards Bm-de 2674 Beata, La 8995 Beaten paths .3596 Beatson, political index 3917 •Beattie, J., life 3116 poems 6705"», 7015 Beaufort, Sir F., sketch 5876 Beauharnais, H. F. de, memoirs 7642 Beaumarchais and his times 5423 Beaumont, F., life 2626 Sir J., life 594 poems 3284 Rev. Joseph, life 9538 •Beaumont and Fletcher, Mason on 5909 Beauties of English poesy. Goldsmith 3511 nature, poem 8005 Beautiful, the, limits of 7734 ministry of 8088 philosophy of 5719 Beauty in art (architecture) 3003 and the human fig. 3916 on 3921, 9617 prerogative of 7845 Beaver, Capt., life 8191 Beck, Edward (i.e., G. James) 3640 Becke, E., on Anabapt. opiniou 1856- Becker, trans, from 3381 Beckington, bp., letters Letters 1322, Bekynion 1663 •Beddoes, T. L., hfe 6985 •Bede 2674 Bedell, Bp., life 1177-8, 1322 Bedford, Francis E. of, precepts 1141, 6798 John Plantasenet, I), of, life 4536 Lucy, C. of, life 2002 execution at 1855* Bedford row conspiracy 8759"', 8760^ Bedfordshire 9529 •Bee, Goldsmith 3199, 3612 Beering's Strait 662 Bees 980, 2977 revolt of 6906 Beethoven, life 7729 Beggar man (Gwinett), life 3738, 5.387 Beggars cant 6976'* petition ag. Popery 2277'" supp. for 2674 Begging-letter writer, Dickens 2405 Begging, prevention of, 1678 8937' Behemoth 4105 • Behn, Mrs., hfe 2626 poems 7028 Being, aoalytacaUy described 6914 Belfast hooks 3313, 490D, 66?1, 6857 Belford Regis 6175 Belgick I^ismire 1599', 7775, 8937' Belgico hello, de, Strada 8469 B 556 B Belgium agriculture, &c. controversies and England, 1852 handbook, 1862 reformed churches and the Ehine, 1852 synods war, 1815 * Bolfn-ade, camp before * Belief, bases of Belief and unbelief reconciled Believer, a, words of Belinda *Bell, Sir C, Paley 696, 2666, 9076 1892 4183 1586 63641 30385, 4183 787 4183 80S2-3 7024 6076 4394 6043 952, 2692 6676 Bell, H. G., importance of literature J., Brit. Theatre oaoo J. (Newcastle), chap-books 11623 great flood 3315 J. (traveller), life 7636 R., Chaucer 1618 English poets 2796 Fairfax 2950 Hist, of England 669S naval hist. 8261 Bell, the 3343 ♦Bellamy, M"., Ufe 3299 Bellarmine, on 5142 " Bellerophon," Buonaparte 6740 Belles lettres, hist. 1370 Beloochistan, 1866 3011 Bells and Pomegranates lOM Belvoir 169Si= Belzonl, life 7636 Bembo, P., Aetna 7861 Ben Brace 1513 Ehydding 6462 Benares, massacre 2287 Benedict of Peterborough, chron. 1663 Benedictine schools 6451 Benedictines, Prench, on 8395-6 Benefactions, voluntary, on 8968-9 Bengal, instruction 4808 travels, 1876 7635 troops, 1838-9 3900 Tucker 4737 •Benger, Klopstoek 4877 Benham, Bev. W., Cowper 2062 Benin coast 2982 •Bennett, 0. H., ill"' 6286 •Bentham, Jer., hfe, &c. 1887, 3964 Bentinok, Ld. G., life 2478 *Bentley, Ed., and Boyle 877-8, 1105 as BuUum 222 " Horace " 4244-5 life, etc. 1787-8, 2366', 6200, 8937* New Test. 4099» Wotton 9643 E. (son), designs 3614 Benzoni, G., America, 1641-66 3756 BeowuU 2674 Boppo 1260 the conscript 8996 *B(3ranger, poems 3573 Berber, the, tale 6001 *Bergerao, Cyrano de, on 6282 *Berkeley, Bp., free-thinking in mathem. 4099= letters 644 Hon. G., letters 8499 castle, etc. 3182 men [B. "Williams, 0. B. Lester] 826 Berkeleys, lives, pedigrees 8182 Berkley, Sir John, memoires 3692 Sir E., Justice 1697« Berkshire 1060, 1763, 8874, 9629 Berlin 4116, 4278, 6766 Berlioz 8122, 7226 Bermudas 1?29, 9628 Bermundeseia Monasteries 1663 Bornadotte (K. of Sweden), hist. 6052, 8916 Bernardus, de curft rei fam. 2674 Bcrni, lite 6220 Bernier, P., life ^ 7636 Berry, Mary and Agnes 2310, 4278, 6876 Berryer, notice, etc. 7226, 9581 Bertha's repentance 1977 Bcvthelet, printed by 2767 Bertrams 8986 Berwick, Balsamcs loiter 1598'8 to Newcastle, Scots march 1697'. 0435'' Bessy Bell Bestiary BeswicK, Lavinia, life Bethel, S., and Jack Catch Bethlehem hosp. Bethune, trans, by Betrothed letters of a •Betterton, Ufe Betty, Master, on Bewick, John, cuts life works Bewick, Thos., cuts by or asc. to 1193, 2299, life and works Beyle, M. H., Eome, etc. Bmlsa Topes Biarritz *Bible among the people best guide to polit. skill . 900 Miscellany 2674 3356 7024 4201-2, 6737 8623 6800 7132 8299 4600 660, 8214 660 660, 6486" 667-60, 714, 2693, 2800, 5232, 6435, 8314, 9717 660, 6436'' 8391-2 2174 8657 9382 Britanny 4218 and church 310 and the ch. in England 874 concordance, etc. 2160 English, state of 3867 hist, of 3443 hist.. Holy Land 4886 and Homer 2639 infallibility, etc. 6709 lands 7603 peculiarities 7359 its philosophy and religion 710 pictures 4166 and Protestants 6321 reformed 670 Soc, Newcastle 6436' in Spain students, mid. ages 841 6088 types and flg. 9058 ■visit to scenes of 9612 women in 1129 Biblical atlas 4872 criticism 4102-3 cyclopedia 2669 geography literature 74«3 2669, 3540 researches, Palestine, etc. 7462 •Bibliograpliioal Blue-book •1981 books, Libri 6326 ill""., Timperley 8887-8 misc.. Bliss 758 notices, ch. libraries Libraries 1639 projects •1981 scraps, etc. Bibliography, Alciati s emblems 3096 4133 Amer. books 9009 Ana 6183 Brathwait's Itinerary 901 Classics 8893, 6310 Une. poetry hist, of India Corser 1639 2737 madrigals, &c. 7418 Montaigne's works 6210 Pilgrim's Progress 1126 Bibliomania 2396-5 dissenters address to, 1704 7044 '» early, legends 4553 of England Cotton 1683 executors' accounts Jlxeenfors 1322 and Glasgow synod, 1047 1686 grievances ag., 1641 717 •Bishops— co«<. lurisdictiou not divine 1669 lands, sale of, 1617 673#° and Laud 5166, 70, 76, 7fi and Ld. G. Digby 1590, ^597'^ 1669 new, 1691 4099' not to ordain without Prcsb. 1600 petition, 1641 5176, 7188^= potion, Laud 6152 Prayer Book, 1661 6372 ag. Sacheverell, 1710 8937 ' = and seats in Pari. 1597*', i"', "', 2277^ '», ", 67858 seven, trial 6885, 7048 1689 5372 speech ag., 1642 1.597=° suspended, 1690 1672'8 threefold order of, 1641 2809 trial, &c., 1641 1597''-9«, 5176 unlawfulness of Bishopsgate Bishops Stortford book Bismarck, Prince, life Bismark, Count, cavalry Bivouac Black art Forest tales Friars, fall of ho., 1623 letter books, etc. 199, 2767, 8676, 4231, 6261, 6891-6, 7010, 7038, 8099", 8651, 8768 -list, 1701 4099' Prince 4377 Sea 2368, 3914, 6592, 7870, 8917 1697'* 295», 709111 3061 4049 625 5968 6344 316, 318 •Blackall, Bp., and Hoadly Blackett, Sir W., hfe Blackgown papers Blackley book Blacklock, poems •Blaokmore, Sir E., on Congreve hist, of pari. 1699 life poems •Blackstone, comic commentaries hfe Blackwater, the Blagge, Margaret, life •Blair, the Grave 7oi6 poems 629, 953*, 6705=^! Blake, Captain 5967 B., life 2600-1, 5381 •Blake, W. 788, 8150, 3681 Blamires, the, lives 5486 •Blanchard, Samuel Laman 2157, 4638, 6009, 6769 Blanche 2218 Blandiord, Marq.., poem on death of 7019^ 7042 64355 6435= 6807 421 6706*5 16902 4099' 694 963'', 6706** 15 621, 8394, 9 7610 9484 Blasphemies, etc., 1646, 8 Bleak House Bleeding Iphigenia Bleinhemi, poem Blenheim palaee, 1761 •Blessington, Lady BHgh, Admiral, Mutiny Blind "Wife, romance Blindness (lost sense) 'Bliss, H., Cicero •Bliss, PhiUp, Heame Percy soc. "Wilson ilWood MS. notes 2853-4, 6734^ 40 2309, etc., 2411-12 3262 7012 6068 1451, 5724, 6769, 7226 S943 7130 4868 1706 3975 6829" 9547 9607'-8 492, 969, 1073, 1643, 2879, 2916, 80*1, 4221, 4313, 4816, 4832, 6274, 62S3, 6526, 6860, 6780, 6896, 7782, 7826, 8298, 8324, 8588-9, 8696, 8661, 8937", _, , , , „ 9858,9520 Block-books, Sotheby 8247 Blockade, law of 2778 Blois. Eegency at 2538 Blomfleld, Bp., Gk. hterature 2779 sketch 5876 Blood, Thos., life 8099 circulation of 9509 Bloody Assizes 9371 game at cards 1587 •Blount, oracles of reason 4822 Bliicher 3194, 6331, 9,307 Blumenbach, J. F., physiology 2740 Bhiuderland, Disraeli 2480-1 B 558 B Boarding-schools 4963 •Boccaccio, fables, Dryden 2584 life B220 and Petravca, Landor 5052 Boccalini, fables SOS?' ^ Bodenham, John, Belvedere 8313 England's Helicon 1853 Bodenstedt, F., Schamyl 9189 Bodies, ponderable 6847 Bodmin Church Camden Misc. 1, 1322 Bodrugan (or Adams), N., epitome Scotland Body, concerning, Hobbe.s 4106-6 connexion with man 9495 in relation to mind 6238 Boece, Hector, hist. 1663 •Boethius, de cons. phil. 2674, 9096 Bohemia 4931 and Archduke Perd. 1599' and elector 1599' K. and Q., of, letters 970 poems 788-9 Queen of, letters, life 644, 2002 revolution England and Germany 1322 •Bohn, H. G., Addison 40 Gillray 9673 Parr 6743 •Bohun, E., char, of 7167 Wheare 9393 Boiardo, life 6220 *Boileau,ep. to his gardener 7010 imit. of 7023 Boiler explosions 2948 Boisgermain, L. de 7355 Bokhara, 3679, 4810, 6179, 6234, 9601 Bold, — , notice 694 Boleyn, Q. Anne, ballads 411 life 8099Z •Bohngbroke, Vise. 149-60, 706^ 1933, 2071, 2688, 7044, 9276 Bolivar 4160, 6435» BoUand, Jas., life, 1772 6387 John, Osm6 6623 Bolsward 4564 Bolton, Sir 'BA., impeachment 1597'« 'Bombay, book 9659 Court 6837 travels, 1875 7536 Bonaparte, iToseph, correspondence 820 •Bonaparte, Napoleon I., au Oonseil d'6tat 7619 Bellerophon 5740 Elba 2718 Emerson on 2774 fall of 6169 Prance under 8803 history, life, etc. 13, 864, 2538, 2966, 3945, 4268, 7295, 7637-8, 7800, 9307 id^es 829 in 1815 6331 in the other world 822 invasion of Russia 4959 and King of Sweden 6062 last days 198 letters to, Pouch6 3194 libel ag. 6804 et Marie Louise 6042 opinions and policy 830 portrait of the Em- peror 3897-8 reign and abdication 2941 St. Helena 22, 3173, 3778,5129-31,6229 sayings and deeds 9142 second funeral 8769^'', 8778 verses on 3897-8 •Napoleon III., at Ham 936 lite, etc. 3687, 8090, 9477 Napoleon the little 4360 to Peel 8364 Bonavontura, Medit. 2674 Bondmaid 012, 917 Bon-mots, etc. 1062, 1936, 5802, 6040, 7589 Bonomi, J., Crystal Palace 2161 Bonpland, A., travels 4359 Bontier, P., Canadians 3756 Book-Collectors 6068 •Book for a Corner 4391 -hunter 1202 -keeping 5492 -madness 2396-6 marks and makers 4515 of gems (poets and artists) 3791-2 of rights 14S1 Booker, Eev. J., Manchester 1639 Books for schools and scholars, 1658 5424 for young gent, and ladies, 1793 394 old English, Brydges 1072 on all subjects, cat. 6703 publ., 1837-52 5502 scarce, Beloe 602 vendible. 1658 5424 Bookseller, Lackington 4963 Perthes 6846 Bookworms 6068 Boorde, or Borde, A. Borde, Holy Grail 2674 Booth, Barton, life 706', 2824, 3299 H., Earl of Warrington 9287-8 Boots at Holly-tree Inn 2456 Borcette, mineral springs, &c. 9379 Border ballads 87)2 minstrelsy 6435'* Borderers, novel 1946 Bores 2692, 7317 Borgia, etc., policy from 4099' Borneo 3110,4804,5826,6346,6737 Borough, the, poem 2069 Boroughs, Bng. and Wales 9629-30 Boscan,life 6220 Boscobel tracts 765-8, 3819 Bosnia, insurr. 7288 •Bossuet, life 4899 •Boswell, Johnson, Carlyle on 1380' Botany, Arctic 4454 Bohereens 2560 coniferae 4114, 8340 flora historioa 6892 Virgiliana 4765 for ladies 6493 Indian 4186 introd. to, Smith 8146 manual, Balfour 409 Norway 460 polar 4454 sylva florifera (shrubbery) 6893 Eothwell, poem 343 Bottle, the, Cruikshank 2163 Boucicault, notice 7225 " Bounty," mutiny 8942 Bourgogne, Dues de 434 sous Louis XIV. 8812 Bow church 1671, 4099' Bowden, J. W., Lyra 6651 Bowes, A. B,., life 3104 Bowing at the name 1600, 1670 Bowl of mmch, A. Smith 8105 Bowles, Caroline, poems 8249 •Bowles, Rev. W. L., Byron and Pope 1271 poems C134 Bowring, Sir J., and Chas. I. 3774 Bowyer, W., life 6470 Boy-bp., sermons Camden Misc. 7, 1322 Boyce, poems 963'°, 6706=^ Boyer, J. B. de, phil. diss. 226 •Boyle and Bentley oontrov. 1106 Boyle family, memoirs of 1106 lectures 630, 1730-1 B[oyle], Mary Louisa 880 Boi^o and Blackwater 9484 Boy's book of the seasons 6116-19 Boz, sketches by 2399, etc., 2446-7 Bracegirdle and Oldfleld 8937" prologue spoken by 7024 Brackley 1593", 7844? Bradford, J., life 2824 Yorksh. 536,'i Bradshaw, President, lile 1575 speeches 1567, 1679 " Bradshaw," comic 7316 Bradshawe, John, letter Cheiham Misc. 2, 1639 Brahmanical superstition 8725 Brahmans, Dindimus, K. of Alexander 2674 Brain, the 1188, 9474 B 559 B Brakelonda, Joe. de, chron. 1322 Brallaghan, or the Deipnoscphiets 4780 Brambletye House 8132 •Bramhall, Abp., and Hobbes 4105 letters 7304 life 466 Bramston, art of politics 7015 •Brand, Rev. J., letters 6435' Brandenburg, House of 7289 BiTindenburgh, Prince Elector 7776 'Brant6me, Mary Q. of Scots 4574^ Brass money, 1640 1595* *Brathwayte, life 594 *Bravo, story 1047 •Brazil 33, 73, 3766, 4813, 5964, 6868, 9079, 9478 Brazilian questions 1659 Bread, assize of 295? Breda, Chas. II." declaration 1602 Brentford, Brainceford, Braintord, 4111^, 1693', 5337', 8958-9 Brereton, Sir. W., travels 1639 •Breton, N., Passion, etc. 1855' Breton college 7422 Breval, J. D., Confederates 3357 Breviary Horde 2674 Brewers, 1637 7188^ Brewing 6326 •Brewster, Sir D., importance of literature 6369 Briberies, etc., 1694^6 4099\ 6736 Bribery, St. Albans 6737 Brick and marble, mid. ages 8475 Bridges, Brit, and Conway 2942-3, 3967 Bridgewater, D. of, life 2824 gallery 4546 treatises 681, 1498, 4811, 4867, 9399 Bridgwater book 6968" Brighton books 169, 2333, 2367, 6063, 7446-6, 8244-6, 9398 comic sketch 6970 Brindley, C, Hieover 4073 Brinklow, H., Oomplaynt 2674 Bristol, Earl of, Spain Camden Miscf', 1322 Bri8tol,'books, etc. 262-3, 663, 1 818, 2038, 2301, 7696, 8186, Sgs?'" channel 1748 (Bristow) childe of Camden Misc.\ 1322 and Coleridge 2007 mayor of Mcart 1322 1 Gilds 2674 member for (f), 1694 4099"' (Bristowe), row to 1856^ taking of, 1646 1697^-' and Wells, 1642 1599 « = Britain, affairs of, to 1307 6945 ancient, Niebuhr 6494 church hist. 3278 chron., Wace 9182 early inhabitants 9664 fclreat (see also "G'. Britain ") 1321, 1663 Greater 2471 hist., Daniel, Milton, etc. 4790, 6164 hist., to H. 7 6232 hist., Jas. I. and Chas. I.' 3762-3 poetry and poets 7810 Romans in 9673 Saxons in 859 Britain's Remembrancer, 1609-1688 1721 Wither 8313, 968S Britains, the, betwixt the walls Innes 7761 Britane's distemper, 1639^6 3645 Britannia, Camden 1321 Rediviva, Diyden 7018 Britannia's pastorals 6829'" Britannic researches 7118 Britanny 4218-1? •British antlq ., customs, etc. 895 army, America 6661 1846 6708 Portugal, etc., 1808-14 6791 Washington and N. Orleans 3440 art, patronage of 7222 artists, soc. ,„„'SA? authors 129.7M autography „„,,,« BeU-man, 1648 8937 '" biography 700-5, 7-8, 5416, 6122 birds 5«. 6663 churches and people 6077 colonies, ethnology 5133 commerce 2080, 8698 commonwealth 2065 •British— co)i*. constitution convention, Scotland costume eloquence empire Exciseman fishes and foreign literature government ist., ancient chronological 980, 3811, 8698 3384 6939 3541, 3935 964-6, 6034, 6664 2916 9695 9319 2065 7118 9183 GeoHrey of Monmouth 1664 and manners, H. 8.-Jas. 1. 5416 islands, ethnology 5134 labouring classes, distress, 1846 8866 ladies 707 literature, Scottish influence 5934 manufactures 2518 military comm. 34.'i0 Museum 436, •1981, 6794, 6737, 8061, 9112 N. America 2632 orators 3541 paintings, Manchester 6768 physicians 5707 poesy 3412 poetesses, specimens 2668 poets and class, quotations 735 homes and haunts 4320 notices 1341, 9, 7193, 8265, 8008 Park 6705 specimens 1349, 8266, 8908 and Virgil 9160 portraits 3680-2, 6122 Q. Review, essays fr. 9108 society, customs, and manners 5415, 5745 staKe 404 theatre 955, 6956-7, 62 valour and conquest 4631 world in the east 7425 worthies 7111-12 Britomartia, court of 705', 6817 Britons, ancient 3410 Brittaiiie, Reis de Bngland 1663 Broad grins 1890-1 Broadsides 1, 1279, 1707, 18562, 1904-6, 1993, 2277"-«, 3363, 3468, 4018, 4129-30, 5337'', 6721, 4 ; 6732, 7010", 7024, 7187, 7224, 8080, 8616, 8572 Brontes, the 680, 682-7, 3328-0, 6876 Brooke, Christ., poems Misc. *, 3281, 8910 XVances, novelist 952^7 •Brooke, H., poems 2796 Brooke, Lord, life 694 works 3284 •Brooke, Sir James (Rajah) 4804-5, 6501, 6346 Broom-stick, Swift 8937 "'" Broome, poems 963», 6706« Brothers, Ed., prophet 4099'' Brothers;and sisters 918 •Brougham, Ld. 126, 874, 948, 1336, 3413, 3954, 5876, 6675 •Brown, C. B., lite, etc. 2628 •Brown, J., poems, 963'°, 6705" •Brown, T., remains, letters 5279, 85 Brown, Jones, and Robinson 2565, 8982 Browne, H. K., " Phiz," ill". 97, 2399, etc., 4628, 6291, etc., 7057, 7217, 7310-11, 7319, 8115, 8146 •Browne, Sir T., life 6707 Lytton on 5661 •Browne, W., life 594 poems 963', 8919 •Browning, M"., Chaucer 1618 Home on 4259 •Browning, R., on 3260, 4259, 6424 Brownists 295», 1662, 1594'", 4025, 5176 Brownswerd, J., life 594 Bruce, James, life 3968, 7636 John, obituary 6435'' Capt. J., papers 7047' Mich., poems 6706« the Harbour 2674 Bruen, J., life Assheton 1639 Brunskell, P., case of 6188 Brunswick, Ferdinand of, hist. 5382 mission to 5756 New 3387 •Brunton, M"., life 2766 Brut, Wace 9182 y Tywysogion 1663 B 560 B BrutD creation dOSD Brutes, humanity to ' " '9705 "Brydges, Sir S. B., Browne 1028 Milton eiSO-diO peerage 1860 EaleiBh 7269 theat. poet. Angl. 6891 toposraplier 8913 Bubble-letters, 1720 8937» Buccaneer 3793 Buchanan, Claudius, letters, Ac. 9276 G., anecdotes 1496 Euripides 2860 Mary Q. of Scots 4674' Buchanan, Rob., on poetry, &c. 8582 Buckhurst, Lord, Academy 25 poems 2796, 7027 'Buckingham, Geo., 1st D. of, assassination 6829® Engl, under 3307 Portescue papers 1322 life 8099 '\ 8830 Sainsbury 7614 Span, marriage 3308 Buckingham, CI,, 2cl Duke of, on Absalom and Achitophel 7024 letter to Osborn 7047 memoires, etc. 8692 poems 6705^, 7027 Rohearsal 211 on religion, etc. 1672, 89371^ Buckingham, Marquis of, letters 146 Buckingham Palace, gallery 4546 *Buokingham shire, J. Sheffield, D. of, poems 9537, 7519 (as E. of Mulgrave) on poetry 7018 Buckinghamshire 1763, 2638, 2953, 7188^^ 8638, 8937 ^ '' 9529 Buckland, Prof., fossils ' 2105 Bucolics, Virgil 9166-60 Buda tracts 2492 Buddhism 2174 Buddhist monuments 2174 superstition 8725 Budgen, 1. M., insect life, etc. 27-9 Budgett, S., life 290 Buenos Ayres and England, 1809 B083 Building and iron 294-4-5 Buildings and monuments 8464 Bulbous and other plants S659, 6893 Bulgaria, Russians in 6195 Bull, Innocent VIII. Camden Misc. 1, 1322 Bull set up by Pelton, 1670 1856i Bullion, 1635 7188" Bulwer, B. G. L. 5578, 96 Sir Henry L. E. 2226-9 Lady, notice 7225 Bulwer-Lytton, Ld. Lytton 6560-96 --'- 3456 5636-7 3301 Sl« 148 8476 prize essay ■' ■ ' EGo Bunbury, H. AY., head of Goldsmith horsemanship Lt. Col., whist B uncle, John, life of Bungay, book *Bunsen, Niebiihr o^wm theol. Germ. 8792 •Bunyan, John, hfe 5617-18, 8264 pelerinage do I'homme 3691 *Burckhardt, life 7636 Burdett, Sir P., Spirit :of the Age 3964 Burdett-Coutts, Baroness, prizes 1907-8 *Burger, trans. 3381, 6436", 6505, 68« Burgh Heath Press 3979 'Burghley or Btirleigh, Ld,, adyioo to his son 6798, 9243 letters 9670 life 5377, 8392, 9070 memorial to Q. Bliz. 4620 *Burgoyne, General, character of 3320 Burgundy, Charles, D. of, hist. 1903, , S14<' live first, families oE 648 lives, Suetonius 8498 Caesars triumph, Procter 1856^ Cagliostro, Oarlyle on 1380 » » Caimes, Prof., colonization, revolution 6210-11 Cairo, Cornhill to 8759", 8773 letters from 7061-2 Caius, D'., life 6707 Cajamai, voyage to 8937^ Cakes and Ale 4594 Calabria 2201, B202 Calais, annals and legends 1308 chronicle Chronicles 1322 Calamities of authors 2490 •Calamy, E., Baxter's hist., etc. 505, 7845», 9206 Salters' Hall, 1717 4099L Calculations, experiments, &c. 8689 Calculus «37, 6781 Calcutta books 300, 2737, 32B4, 6316, 6968"=^. 8181, 8325 Review, notes on 8181 to Bombay, 1824-6 WSl *Calderon, Lewes 6309 life 6220 and Shakespeare 9075 Calderon, the Courtier 5669 Caleb "Williams S*se Caledonian Musical Repository 2136 Caledonians or Plots 7781 Calembourgs, Potier 71^1 •Calendar, Bombay, 1866 816 Brit. Victory *631 Roman 3265, 8172 S&riT67, 2017, 3250, 3m «3a 4^66. §1 voyage to, Taylor 8669 Caligraphio illustration 2370 CaUmus. trans. 4063 Callot, manner of etching 2884 Calonne, on °°^" Caloric „7" Calverley pedigree bias Yorkshire, murder _ 1866^ Calvert, Gt. H. (?) ("an American ) 2869 •Calvin, W S^'lg Camanche hunting grounds 4779 SSS:A^n^a5r „„ ^»^- Cambrian saws, etc., 1660 *3U/ •Cambridge, Baptist^church g7«i5 66S1 6368 books, 1669 Clarke class, researches college life combination-room talk 151 •Cambridge — oont. commencement, music speeches 5160, 8683 verses, 1714 7010 discussions and changes, 1810-50 9102 education, Whewell 9402 exam, papers 2813 foundation and desc. of 8443 history 8278 Intelligencer 3094 King's, laws 4069 Latin comedy 7563 Liber Cantabrigiensis 7124 members of pari. 4066 music speech, 1714, 80 6460, 8683 Peter-house, Wren 9649 poems, "W". 3, 1697 7020 praelectio in Euripidem 2868 ?rij6 poems 6662 'salm 105 1699' Puritan controversies 4060 queries, 1669 1598 regulating of, 1643 67.34 reminiscences .3726 R. Robinson 2661 St. John's 838, 6872 scholarship, tests, teaching 2629 17"" cent. 3007 statutes 4056-7 students 7124 studies 7820-1 tracts 1602, 2963, 3255 Trinity CoU. 6519, 89371^ and Whiston 4099", 9408 "Worthington 1639 writers and writings 2276 Cambridge (U. S.) 1225, 3887-8 Cambridgeshire, 1763 9529 •Camden, hist, of EUz. & Jos. I. 4790 Cameos, "Florence 3091 Camisars, the, 1708 8937* •Camoens, life 6220 Camp and barrack-room, 1846 6708 notes, Boyle 882 of refuge 6649 of the Ban 3749 Campaign, 1710 7012 Campaigns, Portugal, Spain, France, 1808-14 6791 •Campbell, Ld., life of Bacon, Spedding 8295 Martineau on 6876 •Campbell, T., Bowles and Pope 873 GilflUan on 3413 Hazlitt on 3954 hist, of our own times 8027 Leatham on 5203 life 630 literary address 943 poems 7495 recollections of 6769 Campion, T. (and others), lyrics I856i Can you forgive her ? 8966 Canada 439, 1376, 2909, 4656, 8173, 8604, 8938, 9345 and colonists, 1861 1004 conquest of 9257 copyright 6737 debates in 1774 on 1474 fugitive slaves, etc. 2666 geology 6542 public subjects, 18.52 8946 Toronto observatory 7609 Canal, interoceanic, 1853 8328 Canals of irrigation, Lombardy, &c. 8164 Canarians, the Hontier 3766 Canary island Benzoni 3766 Cancioneros, the, lives 6220 Candia 1606, 2962, 6737 Candidate, Gray 3608 Candle for blind citizens of London, 1648 8937 ' 12 Candles, price, 16SS 7188= Canning, G., Anti-Jacobin 196-6 Elijah's mantle 70I6 Fox, and Pitt 8364 life of 893, 2228 microcosm 6097 Canoe voyage, Minnay Sotor 2933 Canon, sixth, oath in 8937^ Canonicae reliquiae me c 562 C 3320 3783 Canonical duellist, Garrick Canons, Bp. Hall's speech 1640 1641 718, 1696*!, 1697l»5, 9275 Cant, beggars 6976" Canterbury, Archaeological Assoc. 9661 Canterbury, Archbishop of, etc., declaration, 1716 4099'' book 8142 cathedral sermons 3134 Christ Church Richard 1. 1663 clergy, contribution to Ch. I. 1669' cobler of 6638 hist, memoirs 8367 St. Augustine's Thomas 1663 St. Thomas of 2813 Tales 1617-24, 6221, 6829 »*-=, 8937'' wills Wills 1322 New Zealand 34 [See also Laud 5142, etc.) Canute the Great 3816 Cape Horn, voyage round 7373 of Good Hope 4041, 6961, 6453 Town, books 2738, 64B3, 6968"", 8609 •Capcl, Lord, elegy on Wither 8313 Capets, line of 6678 Capgrave, chronicle 1663 Capital, Bastiat 498 and labour 4883 population 7410 Capital cases, jurisdiction of bps. 2277^ ^''-" punishment 1628 Cappello, Bianca, life 8997 Captain Blake 6967 Sword and Captain Pen 4392 Capuchin Friars in England 9623 Carafas of Maddaloni 7370 Caravan, etc., tales 3897 »Cardan (Cardano) , Jer., hfe 6289 Cardiff book 8460 victory, 1645 1597'® Cardinal virtues, Barclay 8313 Cardinals, coll. of Bargrave 1322, 7775 Cards, playing, hist. 1616 Carow, Lord, letters to Uoe 1322 T., poems 953" Carcw manuscripts 1299 Carey, G. S., death of Garrick 3320 W., D.D., life 6136' Caribbean sea 7108-9 •Caricatures 6900, 9666, 967S Carisbrooke castle 1547, 1666, 4091, 6620 Carleton, Bp. 9137 *Carleton, Captain, Craven 2100 Carlisle book 6319 Earl of 196 7th Earl of 6369, 6876 fight near, 1648 7777 Lucy, Counte.ss of, char, of 5946 Merks, Bp. of 7163 prison, 1715 7047' retreat of Oxford lords to 1698'* 1745 6319 "White, dean of 7038 Carlist war, tale of 6129 Carlovingian empire 6678 •Carlyle, T., Emerson 2770 notes by 720, 1218, 1442, 1573, 2131, 3139, 3239, 4047, 4054, 4324, 7360, 7662, 7746, 8330, 8544, 8834, 8868, 8967, 9242, 9412, 9488, 9625 on 3260, 3413, 4269, 0297 Past and Present 4628 Wilhelm Meister 3493 Carmes, the, massacre 573 Carnot, life 206 Carolina Matilda, Q. of Denmark, life 4768 Caroline, Queen of Geo. II. 2536, 4047, 8834 Geo. IV., letters, life 1219,2536 Caroloiades, poem on the Eebellion 4293 Carols, 768, 1661-2, 64361", 6829*, ", 7682 Carpentaria, gulf of 6172 Carpenter George, Lord, lite, will 6383 John, life 930 Carr, Sir J., quiz on 2689 Carriage oracle *4865 Carrick book 6645 Carriers cosmographic 296i' •Carte, T., Thurloe 8869 •Carter, Elizabeth, hfe 2766 poems 7028 John, life 2234 Carteret, Lady, Swift 8668' Lord 7010*", 8629", 8562 ^ ' Carthaginians, history 6496 •Cartwright, E., life 7607 Cartwright, W., life 2626 Carving, book of Babees 2674 • Cary, Key. H. P., life 1441 Casa Guidi windows 1034 Casaubon, Isaac, life 6775 Cases illustrative of Oriental life, etc. 6837 Cashmere 4186, 4984 Caspian sea 3991 songs of people 6843 and Black sea, nations between 3914 Casquet of literature (selections) 3390 Castara, Habington 211 Caste, India 4474 Castile, illustrated 8721 Isabella of, life 4549 Peter, King of, hist. 6065 Castillejo.life 6220 Castle of Indolence 6971', 7421, 8836 Otranto 962, 9228 Eaokrent 2692 Eichmond 8967 •Castlehaven, E. of, memoirs 2277'™ Castlemaine, Earl of 4099 s, i Castlereagh, Viscount, hfe, etc. 1364, 6449 Castles, Edinburgh 3587 feudal, Prance 1261 Newcastle 6-J55'" Northumbrian 3398 Castra Regia, 1668 760 Castruccio Castracani, life 6667 Casuistry 2,365= of Roman meals 2366" Catacombs, Rome 6650, 5739 Catadunastes : might overcoming right, 1649 1699 •• " ♦Catalogues, American books, 1816-66 9009 art books 7050 treasures, Manchester 5767 Athenaeum library 303-5 Bargrave's Museum Bargrave 1322 Bewicks' works 6436" Bliss sale 759 Bohn 791, 2, 4 books on all subjects, 1841 6703 British (books) 1837-62 5502 Cambridge books, 1669 8937'" Chandlers works 78)5 Civil Engineers' hbrary 1709 coins, D. of Northumberland 8190 Comey, Brit, Mus. •1981 Corser's library Corser 16S9 Curll's books 9545 Daniel, sale 2240 Dawson Turner sale (manuscripts) 9040 D'. Dee's MSS Dee 1322 Dickens sale 2457-8 Dulwich 2605 Dyce 7767-8 engraving.?, books on 5614 exhibitions, 1861, 62 2917-23, 2931-3 Parmer sale 2975 galleries cf art 3933, 4546-7 Gore House sale (Blessington) 765 Col. Grant 8662 ^',' Hampton Court pictures 4619 Harleian library Camden Misc. 5, „ , 1322 Hertz 4044 Hogarth 6468-9 Italian sculpture 7461 Leeds Art Eiliibition 6227 Liber studiorum 6635 Libri sale 5326 London antiquities 8122 (books) 5427-8 -, „ ,, I'lirary 6432-8 McCulloch 6641 Maclise sale 5704 materials, hist, of Gt. Britain 1663 miniatures 7702 National Gallery 6396-6 national portraits 7763-5 G 563 'Catalogues— eo«<. Newcastle Lit. and Phil. Soc. 6*34 Northwiok, sale, coins 65.30-1 Parr's library 67-13 Perkins sale (,ss;; Persian and Hindu'sta'ny MSS. 8325 Persic, etc., MSS. 3234 pel itioal economy 66 tS Portugal, books on 6435"^ private press Allan 6435'2 publications, living authors, 1804 7372 Quantoh 7227 Eoy. Scottish Acad. 7784 Rutherfurdsale 7695 St. Paul's chyd. and Temple (books) 8937"2 Scott exhibition 7807 See. o( Antiquaries 8206 Stowe sale 8454 Strange sale 8470 Strawberry Hill sale 8474 Tlwrpe, bookseller 8860 Trollopo 8968 ITpcott 9082 vendible books, 1(;,,R 5424 Catches, Churchyard 1863'-' Catechism, church 7862 church history 9504 Church of Home 7095 Council of Trent 8964 English church hist. 9601 Gilpin 3420 larger, 1647 16992 *Oates, chronologv 9015 Cathay CIdna, Frobishey, Rnndall. Veer 3756 Cathedral-oratorios 874'2 Cathedrals 470, 2601, 6731» Catherine, Thackeray 8769'* de' Medici 1999, 8999 II., Bussia 2!!59, 4.349, .j756 the Egyptian slave 526 •Catholic Ass"., Ireland, 1829 9684 church, controversies, Sherlock 16721-'' communion defended, Baxter 507 confession Chetham Misc. 4, 1639 creed and scripture, Newman 6449 Kepresenter, 1686 7040^^= stations 3873 union, P. W. Newman 64^9 Catholicism, Prance 3718 Tuscany 7123 Oatholicon Anglicum 2674 Catholics, concessions to, Castlereagh 5449 Germany 3383 Irish 2196, 4472, 6567 Oatilina et Jugurtha 76.18-8 Catiline, case of, 1721 8937' Catinat, Marshal de, life 5380 Cato's morals Cursor 2674 Cattle, Beever on 564 epidemic, 1845 4898 Irish, 1677 8937= Catullus 9096 criticism on 6052 Caucasus 2493, 3991 army .3762 and Georgia 4875 Schamyl 9189 tribes 3916 Caudle lectures 4594 "Caulfield, J., Kit-Cat club 4863 Naunton 6400 Cause, Millar and Taylor 6368 •Causes C616bres, English 2079 Causeries du Lundi 7661 Causidioade, satire 7690 Cautions for the Times 9387 Cauvery, river 8163 Cavalier, a, taking of, 1641 1598'* and Puritan songs «291 Carahers apostates, etc., 1618 1696 army 2963" Croyland, 1643 WZV^ memoirs 9255 Popish 1589 propositions to, 1644 1597' o 16505. Cavaliers— coKi. and Eoundheads vindication of "Wells, 1642 Cavalry, hist, and tactics in war Caveat for vagabonds Plea for the, 1661 8132, 88-19 1686 1599^ 6511 525 Awdeley 2674 5274 Cavendish family 7842 •Cavendish, G., life of Wolsey 3298, 3678, 4429 Cavendish, Henry, life 9653 Cawthome, poems 963, 6706« Caxton, book of curtesyo 2674 Charlemagne 2674 life 4897, 6381 Eeynard 682913 Caxtoniana 5661, 70 Caxtons 5669 Caygtia hunting-grounds 4V79 Cecil, B., and James I. James VI. 1322, 7664 letters 1322 sketch of 9070 family papers 6415 Cecil, novel 3649 Cecilia 962 Cecil's narratives 4185 Celebes, 1848 6346 Celt, blunderings on the _ 5935 influence on English literature 6282 Roman, Saxon 9664 Ccltae, antiquities 6865 Celtic antiquities 104 Celts in Europe 869 Celeusma, sen Clamor, etc., 1679 5141 Censor, the, poems on 6987 Censura Literaria 1072 Censure cf a loyal subject. Whetstone 18661 Census, 1841 8279 Ireland 6737 United Stiites 2300 Centlivre, M"., life 2002, 2626, 3299 Centralization 8161 Century of Inventions 9619 Cerebral physiology 9723 Ceremonies 895, 4184 Ceremony, on. Pox 3208 Ceremony-monger, 1689 6372 Ceres, hymn to 4179 Cerito, notice of 7225 Cervantes, life 6220 Cevennes, the, war in 4087 Ceylon 3981, 4114, 6315, 8724, 9092 Christianity 8726 insanity 2271 missions 8725 natural hist. 87.30 pari', paper, 1851 6737 Ceyx, King 1855^ Chalcography, Evelyn 2906 Chaldaean Christians 6194 Chaldee grammar 5890 Chalmers, A., biog. diet. 703 Thos., colloquies -with 3732 correspondence 1499 life, etc. 171, 3413, 3835 pref. to ethics 1012 Chalon, A. B., Children of the nobility 1649 .1. J., sketches 1600 Cham (A. de Noe) 1613 Chamberlain, John, letters 1322 Chamberlen, satire, 1721 7010*i Chambers, 1)'., occupation and health 6214 Chamisso, trans. 3381 Cliamois hunting 833 Champlain, W. Indies and Mexico 3756 Chance, Hobhes 4105 Chancellor, Ld., ofSce and catalogue 2699 and proctors Oa;/oi"dl66S Change for a shilling 6988 'Change, sketches on, 1852 1708 Cliannel Islands 4266, 6258 Chantries 1639 Chantrey, Sir P., life 4] 46, 4673 Chants, cathedral 7419 Chap-books 1521-5, 68292', 7025 Chapel of the Hermits, &e., poems 9463 Royal, Old Cheque Book 1323 O O c 564 C Chapels, dissenters', IS'it 6723 Chaperon, a, recollections of 2217 Chapman, G., Hero and Leander 5822 lite 2B2C Swinburne on 8579 Chapone, M"., life 2766 Character 1084, 4544, 6662, 8100, 0020, 8617 of a line gentleman 3214 of a Popish successor 1537, 7048 of a tnie Englishman, 1700 5386 of E. Bohun 7137 (rue patriot, 1703 2638 sketches 8759'= Characteristics, Carlylo 1380 " ^ Goeihe 3496 Hazlitt 3930 of men of genius 0521 of the present age, Eichte 3018 Shaftesbury 1005, 7877 Characters, anfcient. Burton 1199 Chesterfield 1632, 4 Cleveland 1743-5 distinguished, 1781-1831 8066 Earle 211 extraordinary 4185 greatest men, 1735 7021 of an army, 1709 7691 of Men, Pope 7083 of Women, Pope 7018 Osborn, 1659 6616 Eeresby 7367 Theophrastus 2963i=, 8794 Wotton 9641-2 Charades 2800 Charcoal, price, 1633 7188= Chardin, Sir J., life 7636 Cliarenton, Church synod, 1C31 15(;9» Charges 1767-8, 3854-6, 8301 , 9287-8 Charing Cross, will of 29i)'» Charities, London 5503, 5746 Charity, economy of 8958-9 portrait of 8918 Sisters of 4555 Charke, M"., life 3299 Charlemagne, legends 8354 romances 2674 Chavlemont, E. of, life, letters 3080, 3849 •Charles I., Act promised by, 1648 71SSi" anniversaries of 30 Jan. 8514 apophthegms 200 army, royal, marches of Symonds 1322 army tracts 266-70 arrest of the Pive Members 3136 Ashburnham's narrative, etc. 290, 1566 associations, etc. against 7188=^ astrological prediction 63-13 battles, &c. 1212 benevolence to 1669 bishops 8937'* Sir J. Bowring 3774 Carisbrook 4091 , 6620 character 1683-4, 4026, 4163 church 8937'2 civil war 501. 1463-4, 1586-99, 3469 coflin and tody 8764 commanders, victories, etc. 7412 commissioners divines 8937'* Commonwealth 1699 court and times 81,430,1869,9523 Covenanters liipon 1322 deatli 7040", 70t3 declarations 2038*, 8937' '* decollation (sermon) 3124 defence of 415S, 7188^' design to poison 6620, 7499 disposal of, 16 u; 8937'- dramatic poem 3729 Duke of Lenox 5253 Eilton {see "Eikon"), elegy on 1560, 4, 81 ; Wither 8313 England and Scotland, 1048 2699 episcopacy 2808, 8937'* executioner of 6341 Pairfax ti-acts 2952-3 grand sergcnnty 718 S^" Hammond 15(',(1, 8937>* and Henry III. 9203 H igh Court of Justice 6508 Irish Rebellion 4133, 4 172 ♦Charles I. — cont. and James II., comparison of reigns 5525 judges of 1643, 6853, 7308, 9132 Junto and Prynne 7210 Kent, Surrey, Sussex, and Hants, 1642 7188=8 Key to the King's Cabinet 1582 King and parliament, appeal to 5276 King's cabinet opened 1582 Lake's interview s with Camden M'ise. 4, 1322 letter to parliament, 1646 718895 letters 492, 970, 1322, 1442, 4091, 6734» life, reign, death, etc. 298, 406, 964, llOS, 1212, 1298, 1712-16, 17-19; 2484, 7, 2782, 2949-50, 2988, 3225, 3307, 34«9, 3692, 6-8 j 3710, 3714, 3753, 3877, 4026, 4055, 4523, 4790, 6343, 5392, 5902, 6377, 7298, 7562, 7676, 9301, 9447 Lilburno 5337', 5339 liturgy 8937'* London 1697", i", 5425, 5445, 6713, 8937'* I-onis XIII. 6494 Milton 61.54, 6 ministers, letters, &c. of 1282 murder of 502, 3394, 5867, 7043, 7368 Sir E. Nicholas 2888 Nonconi'ormists 704O obedience to 6588, 7O10' at Oxford 2 17"* century 355 sufferings, Ac. AValker 9206 vindication of, 1699 1838 Clergyman, young, letter to 1753 Clei'gymen, proceedings of, 1690 4099** Clergymen's ways ot disposing of kingdoms 7354 Clerical life, scenes of 2721, 6 ; 8086 Clorkenwell Camden Misc. =, *, 1322, 7845, 9545 Clifford. Hy., and Marg. Percy, poem 6204 Clift, fossils 2103 Climate 2282, 2631, 4922, 6871, 5908, 6898, 8657 Climbing boy's soliloquies 6219 •Clinton, Purser, and Arnold (criminals) \if>6^ Clipped money, recoining 4099^ Clipstone, book 3277 Clito, poem on eloq^uence 7023 Clitopho and Leucippe 7808 •Clive, Lord, Hfe 3446, 50 ; 5630 Cloak in its colours, 1679 7353 Cloister and hearth 7321 •Cloncurry, Lord, life 8076 Clothes, " Habits and men " 2534 Clothiers petition, 1641 1597« Cloud and storm, Gk. myths 7663 beauty 7571 Clouds and sunshine, poem 1324 Clover cottage 7698 Clubs, Kit-Cat 4863 London 5349 members of late parliament, 1701 6736 White's 6282 Clytcmnestra, poem 5598 Coach fares, 1828 "4865 Coaches, Lend, and AVest'., 1033 7188'! Coal mine accidents 6737 Coats, Capt., Hudson's bay 3766 Cobb, S.. poems 7018, 9363 •Cobbett, Ld. Bailing on 2228 parody ou 7331 petition ;is22 state tri.'ils 8372 Cobden, E., Addison's death 7019> . •Cobden. R.. literary address 94S Cobham, Lord, life 3336 Cochin China, embassy lo 2106 Cochran, Sir R., life 5385, 7041 Cook, baptizing a 6341 Lane ghost 3199 Loi-ell's bote 68296 •Cockburu, Ld. Ch. Justice. Gray 3612 Jamaica case .3054 Jlrs., poems 7028 Codi-x juris Ecc. Anglic. 6512 Codiflcation. Bentham 623 Coeur, Jacques, life 2001 •Colloc-houscs 1537, 170S, 1776-6, 7023, 6, 7049 7611, 7702, 8937* Coffins, ancient 7391 Charles I. 3764 Coggeshall, Ralph of Ralph 1663 c 569 Coin, adulterating 4511" alteration of, 1G90 JOaO) clipping 40901 collector's manual ■\91i consumption of, 1635 7l.sS'^ decay of, 1641 1595= Coinages, account of 4374. Coining, silver, Locke 0396 Coins, antique and counterfeit C«6» Cromwell 4009 episcopal, Durham 64358 monastic, Eeadiiig 6435» T). of Northumberland's 8190 jVorthwick coll. 6630-1 Roman Kmperors 6435» study of 108 weignts, measures, ancient 5249 •Coke, life 463t, 6381, 7610 proceedings of Camden Mise.^t 1322 rights of subjects 7039 Cokersand abbey Chefliam Misc. ^, 1639 Cokeye Move Clietham Misc. =, 1639 Colbert, lite 5378 Colchester 1547, 16722", 6711 Cole, Sir Heniy, Home treasury 4168 Cole, Davidson and Gordon, city frauds 4983 Coleman and his letters 2277" •Colenso, Bn., and Pentateuch 5639 •Coleridge, Hartley, Bagehot on 380 Home on 4269 Massingev and Tord 5932 S. T., biog. Borealis 1783 enc. raetropolitiina 2779 GiWillan on 3113 Hazlitt on 3954 Lamb 60-29 life, letters, etc. 133, 2007-8, 3416 Ivrical ballads 9633 MS. notes 953, 1984 Omniana 8263 Schiller 77ia Shakespeare 891 Southe.v's " Wesley " 8260 Wallenstein '6718 Colet, Dean, life, etc. 2813, 4900 Colin's Mistakes, poem 7010" Collectanea Anglo-poetica Corser 1639 Collections, art ^ 4546-7,7614 Jameson on 4546 CoUedge or College, Stephen, trial, etc. 6276, - 7095,89671 •College and hosjntal, Maurice .5214 dissertations, Lat. and Hungarian 2492 female 5214 life, Cambridge, D'JBwos 2381 of Arms and Lancashire Cheilmm Misc. ^ 1039 of the Museum Minervae 1992 work, Morley 6282 •Collier, Jeremy 1011, 2360, 6, 3044, 4099' John, '• Tim Bobbin," life 2824 • J. P., Shakespeare folio 1816, 2655, 3256, 3823, 4461-2, 6880, 7903, 8069, 9428 Collier's « edding, verso 6435'" •Collingwood, Lord, life 6376 linos on death of 6435'" Collin's walk thro' London and Westminster 2647 •Collins, C. A., " All the Year Hound ", ] 24 Wilkie," All the Year Round" 124 William, life, etc. 1785 poems 963, 3535, 3616, 67053= William (painter), life 1882 Colloquies, Edward Osbonie 5787 Erasmus 2813-14 on society, Southey 8266 poetry and poets, Lordan 5487 •Colman family, lives, &c. 678.5, 8879 Colman, G., the elder, character 332013 Cologne Letters 1322, 70471= Colomba, Corsican story 6054 Colombia. Bolivar 4160 Colombo book 8329 Colonial and foreign dependencies 7101 constitutions 61:^8 Land Coram". 67.37 policy 3648 questions (French) 1894 Colonial — cont. sketches (Australia) 3884 state papers 1298 •Colonies, American, revolt 1495 American and England, 177 1 9018 ancient, Hccren 3988 and Britain, Lang 6094, 5, 7 Australian 3861, 4:S39 British, ethnology 6133 Church of England in 169 civil, etc., authorities 733S English, emancipation 1894 government of. Helps 4006 of England, Roebuck 7472 old English, America 6516 orders in Council, etc. 6128 political system, Heeren 3989 tales of the 7639 Colonisation and Colonial Government 6211 and Colonies 6060-1 Australia 6094 British, art of 9196 British, New Zealand 9197 new view of 3050 of America 8636 Colonna, Guido de, Troy 2674 Vittoria, hie 6220, 8997 Colony, life in a 3769 model 1492 Colour, Haydon 8920 Coloui-ing in painting 5866 Colours, ancient and modem 6MI) chemical and artistical 6.3(iO fresco 6063 of good and evil. Bacon 366, 9 Columbus, companions of 2966 hfe, etc. 2966, 3766, 4999 Coluthus, trans. 6705" Combe, Andrew, life 1899 ^ Combe, G., Martineau on 6876 3103, 6556, 7016, 8412 ? 3071 4472= 1638 5989 268 15 7816 5632 5242 16 17 8187 4190, 7057 7058 8762 3939-40 5561, 71 4630 4086 3404, 3088 2080, 8698 6302 Combe, W, Comedy, principles of Comet, Ireland Comic actors, 1766 Almanac Arithmetic Blackstone Bradshaw dramatists, restoration , English grammar HistoTy of England Rome Miscellanies, Jas. Smith Miscellany sketch-book, Poole tales, etc., Thackeray writers, Hazhtt Coming Race Commandei*s. great, lives Commandmentis, revision of Commerce, ancient British codes and laws Egypt, 1844 Evelyn, 1674 2902 PrauiK, 1802 886* Guinea Coast 705= Levant, etc., Toiirnefort 8917 of the prairies 3637 progress of, poem 3457 Scotland 3172 societj^, politics 2386 statistical 7037 Switzerland 6737 treaties, Rapin 7295 Commercial intercourse with China 8704 law 6302 pohcy, 185li 2619 spirit, moral influence 6212 tracts, Tucker 9018 Commissioners, orders, etc., ScobcU 7770 Commissions, ScobcU 7770 at sea, recalling, 1660 7188'" Committee of religion, 1640 Kent 1322 safety, orders, etc., Scobell 7770 Commodus. Church of Rome 1118 •Common Council 2520, 2952S ", 6188", 5448, 7047» fields and inolosures 6188" G .570 C *Coumion—cont. hall, speeches 1597^ =, ^ 51i3 law 978, 15991, 41115 place books ISM, 7201, 8253-6 pray( r 1597*, «, 5372, 7142-4 7188''»,9394i Commoner, 1710, poem 7013 Oommons, enclosure, etc. 1931, 5188" Commons, House of 6713, 1*, 15, 25, 27, 28, 34 Attorney General Herbert 38*) career in 3864 Castlemain, E. of 4099J charge ag. Charles I. 1546 CivilWar 2952-3 clipped money, guineas 40991 corporations, disabling clauses 8937^ declai-ation, 1647 89371^ and elections, 1690 70471= history of 8925 Hollis, etc. 29523, '», 2953", ]6 17 19 impi'isoned members 7188i^i Irish, Hood 3090 Laud 5151,75,76; 7223 Lilbume 63371, ^ 6338 oath of abjuration 45111* occasional conformity bill 4099° Palgrave on 6683 Paschal and Parkhurst, 1702 4099f peti Irion and declaration.1641 8937'2 petition to, 1641 5M4 petitions touching minis- ters, 1640 1669 petitions, orders, &c., 1641-60 7188 Prynne 7210 public grievances, 1689 8937" remonstrance, 1610 5188 sermons before 4099'i, 76Hi=, 7840 speakers 5790 speech, 1694 4099'i Steele's expulsion 7044 Strafford 7562, 8461 , etc. .votes, speeches, etc., D'Ewes 2885 Bp. "VVren 9652 iSec aJso "Parliament") *Commons, poor, supplication Fish 2674 Commonwealth, abuses against, 1629 Camden MiscK 1322 and Low Countries 6734'''* and royalists. 2988 burdens 29521= caterpillars of, 1641 1590^ 89371' conspiracy against, 1664 21 S3 dangerous condition, 1648 53872 history of 719, 2782, 2988, 3469, 3712 orders, &c.. Scobell 7770 Parliament, 1652 6784« political ballads 6829^ statesmen, Forster 3163 Swedish embassy 9445 tracts , 1599, 6164-5 Commonwealth, British, Cox 2056 Christian, Morgan 690S English, Anglo-Saxon 6679 Hobbes 4106 Roman, Merivale 6056 Commune, Paris, 1872 9131 Communion, administi-ation of, Scotland 71.16 celebration of, 1648 1598^'^ Communion of labour 4545 with parish-churches 507 Communisme, 1793 5865 Community of goods 6906 Comorn, fortress S78;i Companies, London 1209, lSO(i- Newcastle 9205 Companion of the Tour of Primcc 7666 Companions of my solitude 399.T Compass 2568, 4637 Competitive tests C32U Complaint of Philomene Gascuigiie 211 of poetry for the death of hberality 18561 of the Church, 1562 (France) 18561 of them that ben to late maryed I8661 the. Young 9709 Compleat Booby 2.'i06 Complete angler it2.)2 Compliments, new academy 25 of the season 7881 Composers, anecdotes, etc. 2391 Composition, aii; of 3577 English 4636 (painting) 3920 theory and practice 6417 Compoti Lincoln 1639 Comprehension and toleration, hi^t., 1718 6512 •Comte, philosophy of the sciences 5306 Con Cregan 6292 Conamina lyrioa, Myles Davies 1320, 2276 Oonohology lOlS, 4662, 64361^ Concordance, Bible 2150 of histories, Fabyan 2939 Pope (i Shakespeare 1727 Condanm6, dernier jour 4349 Cond6, life, etc. 1467, 4636 Condition of a good poet, poem 7021 Condorcet, Morley on 6297 plea for women 6297 Conduct and character, A. Smith 8103 and perseverance. Smiles 8101 manual of 9660 of allies and ministry. Swift 8538, 8662i of life 4717, .5455 of the understanding 6397 studies in, Morley 6301 Cone and cylinder 6325 Confederates, Henry I. to Q. Ehzabeth 9289 Conference of pleasure. Bacon 365 Conferences, Lords and Commons 1695, 1697", 7039 Confession of Faith, Scotland, 1641 1698' Confessions, Ireland 4465 Lackington 4963 of a water-patient 5091, 5561, 72 of a working man 8275 of an inquiring spirit 1801 of an opiumrcater 2365= Eousseau 7532 Confirmation, Hakewill, 1613 7844= Conformity, occasional, 1702-4 .1099°, 7044 sinfulness of, 1680 6512 Congiura del Conte De' Fieschi, 1637 5901 Congregational ministers, 1691 7844^ Congregations, choice of elders, 1646 6734=^ Congress of Vienna 9140 ♦Oongreve, "W., and J. ColUer 1828, 33, 35-8 dedication, Dryden 2576 dram, works 9681 epistle to Vise. Cobham 1690 letters from and to 644, 2354, 5289 life, etc. 1690, 1787, 2626, 8769", 876t, 9548 on Dryden 954,8 poem to 6829' poems 953', 6705«, 7012 Coniferae 4114, 8340 Coningsby 2477 Conjectura cabbalistica, More 6258 Conjugal love and duty, discourse 7845 Conjuring and conjurers J272— 1, 5344 Connoisseur, essays 950 a, early days of 6067 a, science of 7394 Connoisseurs, on, Jameson 4.540 Conny-catching Aivdeley 2674 Conquerors of the New World 3997 Conscience and covetousness, Bai'ufleld I8651 liberty of, 1652 1599= Conservative, a, letters of 5071 Consolation and advice, letters 6286 of, Cai^dan 1364 of philosophy, Boelhius 786, 2071 CoiLsulaiions in travel 2289 Consoler (or Comforter), Bremer 912, 13 Consols, 1789-1847 82'o Conspu'acy, 1691, 1G90 ■mv.V' Consitirators, 1721 8937' executed, 1696 4099s c 571 ♦Constable, H, life 933S John, frontispiece by (f) 2S11 life, letters 5268 Constable of the Tower 87 Constantinople i'mK 5 1 iS, 6 Kyi. 697B, 6336, B695, 8'193, 8917, 9413 •Constitution, British 947, SlJ-t, 980, 2111, 3811, 6422, 7163, 7640, 7677, 8161, 8698 of Church and State 1803-4 of man ■ 8156 lioman *44t2 United States 2196, 9077 "U.S. and England 76, 8945 Victoria 6737 Constitutional history, England 2783, 3804, 6980 law, Jefferson 9015 Constitutions, ancient, Heeren 3988 colonial 6123 and canons ecclesiastical, 164^0 2038=' Consultation, the. 1753 8562^ Contarini Fleming 2477 Contemplations, Capel 1358 Hervey 4046 Contention of death and love, poem 9187 Contes des f^es 1283 et nouvelles 777, 4972 en vers 9169 moraux 5824 Continent, handbook, 1874 6364 journal, 1827 4128 railways, 1860 5120 residence on, poems 4380 Continental interests, Gt. Britain 3987 tours, Talfourd 8630-3 traveller's oracle 2719 Continents, lieclus 7835 Contraband of war 2778 Controversy, ideas on, Corney 1981 Convent, St. James's Palace 7159 [Covent] Garden 7010^ Conventicles, laws against, 1682 6231'' Quatermayne, 1642 7234 Convention, 1689 4093'', i Converging series 4161 Conversation, poem 1934 Temple on 8717 the, 1720, poem 7010=» Conversations, Goethe 3483 imaginary 6053, ,5007- i), 5084 Converts, the, poem 7024 Convict ship. Earl Grey 1029 ConviclsandLd. G.Gordon 8967* Australian 7849 Convocation and Toland 8897 Canons, Bp. Hall 3783 Canterbury, Newman 6450 commission to, 1690 4099" constitutions and canons, 1640 2038" last glimpses of, 1863 4703 letter relating to, 1690 5372 origin, constitution, etc. 8956 sermons 4099", 6141 speech, 1641, Warmsti-y 9276 speech against, 1641 1597i»5 summonses to 7295 synods, 1640 2038» •Cook, Captam, life , ^ 1787 or Cooke, John 1646, 67, 79*. « , 84, 85, 96" ; 3883, 6863, 86 ; 7368 Cooke, Col. E., Charles I. 1680, \mSP G. F., life, etc. 2637, 3299, 4379 •W., additions to Pope 7075 Cookery, ancient 8208 art of. King 4830 •Cooper, Sir A. P., hfe 1944 J. P., life, etc. 144,1965 J. G., poems 953"', 6705« Co ODcration 4011 •Copenhagen books «i7, 1973, 3146-7 court of, Keith 4768 historical 7760 persecution 6485'' Copland, R., ballad ■111" W., printed by 8651 •Conleston, Bp., criticism tracts 2116 letters to 259 1 Copley, A., Pig for fortune 8313 Copper, graving in, 1663 '-SS1 2908 Copyholds, Coke 1781 Copyright lllil, 1380 " '", 2197, 6737, 6887, 8629, 8732, 9060 Coquet and Alwine, verses 6435» Beauty, poem 7012 Corbet, Bp., life 594 Corda AngUse, 1641 1699= Cordilleras 9012 Cordwainers Co., Hereford 2380 Coreworm, Richard, life 0013 Corte Castle 430 Corilla, La, life 8997 Corinium (Cirencester) 1101 Corinna, poem 7023 Corinne 8334 Corinthians, epistles to 6396, 8808 Coriolanus, lite 6383 Cork book 5734 letters from 2369 Conieille and his times 3704 Cornelia, novel 3976 Cornelius Nepos 4712 Corn-law question 2619, 3208, 7147, 8317 Corn law rhymer and rhymes 2741-3, 7815 laws, letters and speeches 3206 Cornflowers, poems 6562 •Cornhill, A. Ross 7691 Comhill to Grand Cairo 8769^ 8773 Cornish, Alderman, trial, etc. 6886, 7095 Cornu-copiae, Breton 926 Cornwall 1365, 1597» 1884, 2826, 6364, 7188«<>, 7336, 8009" 2, 8436, 8937« >^, 9430 •Cornwall, Barry 4460, 4693, 6134, 7888, 7900 'Cornwallis, C. P. 4084, 6833, 8093 Cornwallis, Marquis, life 3450 •Coronation, Queen Victoria 3208 Coronation oath, Charles I. 1698"' Corporations, disabling clauses, 1690 8937= regulation of, 1690 4099' Corpore politico, de, Hobbes 4106 Corpulence 1511 Correa, Gaspar, voyages of V. da Gama 3756 CorrSard, A., voyage to Senegal 7704 Correggio and Parmegiano, lives 2066 Correspondence with a child, Goethe 3483 Corruption and intolerance, poems 6244 Corser, Rev. T., Collectanea Anglo-poetica 1639 Corsica 2040, 3638 •Cortes, H., letter 3756 life, etc. 5203, 7160 Corvehill, W., character 758 Corvinus, M. V. Messala, life 648 Coryat, notice 694 Cosby, Arnold, criminal 1866'- Cosmos, Humboldt 4359 Cossacks, country of 6592 •Costume 836, 2964, 4967, 5826, 69 ; 6829", 39, 74 ; 7211, 84, 7039 of wild olive 7563 Crown, the 153, 700, 1672", 3098, 7338 Crowne, John, Daencids 7023 life 2626 Crowned king Langland 2674 Crowther, C, M.D., lite 1325 Croxall, the vision 7010 Croydon school 7023 Croyland,1643 S937'2 Crucifix, Lever Misc. ', 3284 •Cruden, A., Chasles on 1606 •Cruikshank.G., illustrations by 16, 92, 5, 6, 7 ; 747, 956, 1484, 1996 ; " Dickens " ; 296(1, 3034, 6, 7 ; 4122, 85 ; 4268, 4456, 77 ; 4695, 4752, 6290, 6402, 5987, 9, 91-93 ; 6970, 6331, 7309, 11,14; 7803,8170-8 Thackeray on 8739^ Cruise in the " Claymore " 3889 " Undine " 9076 upon wheels (France) 1861 Crusaders 1226, 8057 •Crusades, hist, and hterature 6079, 8686 Cruso, T., poem to memory of 7018 •Crystal Palace 646, 2072, 3057, 8216, 9281, 3. i Crystallization 7350 Cuba 4433, 6366, 9079 Cube, Hobbes 4106 Cuchullin hills, geology 3112 Cullen, Dr., life 6707 •CuUoden 3671, iiW •Cumberland, E., life 2626, 0332 Cumberland, William, Duke of 8937* Cumberland and Westmoreland 1698", 3000 worthies 6486 •Cumming, J., age we live in 6212 biog. notice of Chalmers 1498 Cuuaxa, battle of, plan 9689 Cuneatic systems 4376 Cuneiform discovery 4030 •Cunningham, A., Cromek 2125 Gilflllm on 3413 life 4119 Pilkington 6921 F., Walpole 9238 J., poems 953'", 67053' P., Green, MS. note 3626 memoir of Turner 1184 Cupar-Fife book 1059 Cupid and Psyche, Apuleius 201 Cura roi famuliaris Semardiis 2674 Curate, the, E. Neale 6105 Curiosities of Literature 1981, *1981, 2485 new *1981, 8200 •Curll, E., publications, etc. 45, 654, 7052, iggo, 3746, 72 ; 4500, 6382, 3, ; 5778, 6330, 7019', 7087-8, 8937', '», 9386, 9507, 45 •Curran, J. P., life 2192 Currency question 8906 •Curiie, D'. James, life, letters 2194 Curse of Kehama 8267 Cursor Mundi 2074 •Curtis, G. T., letter (IMS.) 6783 •Curtis, G. "W., Nile 0500 Curtius Rutus 9090 Curwen, J. C, life 5185 S., journal and letters, 1775-84 9263 Cushman, C., notieo of 7226 Custom roll, Ashton Lancashire 1039 Customs, ancient, Gt. Britain 896, 4184, 0393, 07331!, 0879, 8217 and manners, French, 1S02 ' 3364 popular, Italy 5058 Customs, payment, &c. of, 1642 7188«3 •Cutts, Lord, poem to 7018 •Cyclopaedia, architecture 3737 Bibhcal 2669 biography 7386 English 4885 husbandry and rural 2554 London 4884 medicine 4445 •Cyclopaedia— co«f. Penny 6814 (See also "Encyclopaedia.") Cylinder and cone 6325 Cypriana, life 4033 Cyprianus Anglicus (Laud) 4054 Cyrano de Bergerac 037 Cyropaedia, Xenophon 2965, 9691-2 CjTus, expedition of 85, 9688 Cytezen and Uplondyshnian 6829'^'' Cythera, four slaves of 760 Czar, the, 1854 4978 Court of, 1846 861 Court and people of, 1848 5965 land of, 1875 9192 An" denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should he made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the (Catalogue in small type : " v " stands for volume. D. Dabchicks, Ruskin 7.569 Dacca, cotton manufacture 201 1 Daccard, camp of 7704 Dacres, Lady, case 5231 Daeneids, Crowne 7023 Dagon demolished. Vicars 9132 Dahomey 3109, 8085 Daisy chain 9702 Dalboquerque, A., commentaries 3756 Dalecarlia, hfe in 921 Dalmatia I6O6, 6771, 9480 Dalrymple, Sir David 3762-.3, 7654 •Dalrymple, Sir John •1981, 7685, 8921 Daltons 5293 Damascus 3889, 6772, 7662 Dammartin, Jelian of Xeimes 1322 •Dana, R. H., home, etc. 144 Danby, Earl of 2277«-5, 4099'' Dance frcm London to Norwich 4775 of death 413.3 of seven Satires Times' WTiistJer 2674 Dancing, dicing, drinking, &c., 163.'! 7208 Danes in England 2633 invasions of Ireland Ireland 16R? Dangers to religious liberty, 1856 1122 •Daniel, George, copies and MS. notes 41, 969, 1870, 2281, 2676, 3077, 3118, 3325, 3356, 3524-9, 3601, 3626, 4890, 5341, 0851-2, 7066, 7438, 7489, 8670, 9232, 9295, 9700 •Daniel, Samuel 953, 4790, 7ol5 Daniel, lectures on 2169 Danish authors 7750 expeditious in the Gauls 6678 grammar 7750 legends, tales, traditions 100, 1928, 9720 translations, Porster 3110-7 •Dante, commentaiy, Alighieri 118 life 407, 22+3, 0220, 6816 researches respecting 6003 theologian 5074 translaliun.s, Montgomery 6219 Danube 3623, 4931, 6462, 0195, 9306 Danubian prii:cipalities 2308 Daphnis and Chloe 7808 D'Arblay, Madame 212-15,2766 D'Arbouville, Countess 216 Dardanelles, peace, 1808-9 32 Dares fhrygius Dictys 9096 D 574 D D'Argens Ai'fjens 226 Darling, Grace, lines on eiSS'" Damley, Lord, mnrder 4574 Darnley, fiction 452fi Dartmouth, Ktorming, 1645 Ib'dT^'^ *Dai'win, Charles, " ]3eagle " 4826 Darwin, Era,snius, lite 7855 poems 2796 " Dashwood's Letters," author of 5486 Datchet P [Dochet] 1672V Dates 1455, 3918, 4565 Daubeny, C. G. B., study of chemistry 5213 D"Aubign6, J. H. M. 312-13, 7283 Daughter of Lebanon, De Quincey 2365 Daughters, education of 9603 of Zion 1129 D'Aulnoy or Anois, Countess 321-4 Dauphin, the, 1712, hte 5380 Dauphin^, 1857 6370 »Davenant, C. 7044, 8152 •Davenant, Sir 'Wimam 26, 335, 953, 2626, 4105', 7931, 8788 Davenpoi-t, W., life 2626 Davenport Dunn 5294 Davers, Mary M. Camden Misc. 5, 1322 David Copperfleld 2399-404, 20-1 Simple 3038 David's lamentation over Saul and Jonathan 7021 •Davidson, Margaret M., life, poems 4483 Davies, James, life 6899 Sir John, life, woi-ks 594, 953. 3284 John, life 594 J. LI., district visiting 5214 J. B., annals of "Windsor 8874 Davison F.,hfe 9638 poetical rhapsody 1863 *Davy, Sir H., hfe 6699 *Dawes, Dean, literary address 949 Dawn Island 5877 Day, T., poems 6705'^ Day at Tivoli, etc., poems 4800 dream, Serle 7838 of judgment, Lat. poem, Bedo 2674 Days and hours, poems 8752 D'Azeglio, recollections 346 Dazincourt, JFrench comedian, life 6634 Dead, memorials of the 3167, 5725 Sea, U.S. expedition to 5548 Secret, fiction 1876, 80 Deafness (lost sense) 4867 Deal, execution 5387 Deans and chapters, 1641 1597™, "», 6734 Death, alphabet of 4131 dance of 4133 Dodd on 2519 Harriott on 3870 and honour. Laud 5165 letters of consolation and advice 5286 medical aspects of 3881 mental state at approach 3208 of a fi'iend, Browne on 1024 of Nelson, ode 6968" opinion concerning 3208 poem, Porteus 6705^^ premature 3901 punishment of, 1628 6204 sudden, vision of 2366 l)eath-bcd conflicts, sermon 4010 repentance, Lenthal 4026 Deaths alarum, Bp. Hall's fun. sermon 94.38 Debate between Summer and Winter 295^=^ Debater, Uowton 7643 Debates, parliamentary Debates 1322, 1473-4 6723, 7 Deboi-ah, histor.y 4i25 oratorio 7021 Debreczin, 1850 6770 Debt, imprisonment for 6337 ' ' Debts, public, payment of, 1673 8037 ' ' public faith. 1C60 6188 Decameron 77S-9 physiologicum, Hobbos 4105 De Candolle, botany 6493 Decastro, J., comedian, lite 4379 Decay of England, multitude of sheep Fish 2674 of corn and trade, 1611 1595" Dcci'iabi'C, deux du 77."il ♦Decker or Dekker, T. 185B ' ^ 3122, 5929, 6829 life 2626 Declaration for liberty of conscience 7040^^ of independence, U.S. 9077 of indulgence 7040" Prince of Orange 409!)' Declarations, Charles I. 1595, 8937'' '- 1640-60, Scohell 7770 Decline and fall of the Eoman Empire 3391-3 ot life 6640 Decoration, early Christian 9321 of fui'niture, arms, jewels, &c. 4958 Decoy duck, 1643, Wren 9651 Dedications, on 1753 Dee, D'. 1322 ; Chetham Misc. \ 1639, 5344 Deer, forays among 1924 Deerslayei', fiction 1948 D'Eon, Chevalier 8825 Defence of EngUsh commodities. Swift 8.535 of ignorance 6283 of poetry, Sidney 8043 " Defence of the People," 1744 8937 ' » Defence of the people of England, Milton 6164, 6 Defenceless state of Gt. Britain 396;i Defensio pro populo Anglicano 6156 regia 6156 •De Eoe, Chasles on 1605 ded. to 8028 Devil at leap-frog 8937 ' ^ dumb philosopher 8099 ' ~ history of Arlus (?) 4009 ■■ hymn to the pillory 7021 ■' Jure Divino " 8937 ' " life, etc. 31.37, 41, 60 ; 6222, 385 ; 9668 memorial of eh. of England 4098*= novels, Stephen 8400 reasons ag. the succession, 1713 7163 Robinson Crusoe 952 trial of 8937 " = De Poe, James 3137 De Foix, fiction 907 Deformed, fiction 6856 Deformity, essay 6971 " " Degrevant (romance) Thornton 1322 Deipnosophists, Kenealy 4780 Deism 4822 Deists, method with, Leslie 5264 Deity, the, geological evidences of 5212 De Lacy Inquisition, 1311 Lancashire 1639 Delamere, Lord (E. of Warrington) 7353' "Delany, D'. 7021, 8562 ", 5_ ' M"., life 2766 Delavigne, poetry 3673 Delay of the Deity in the punishment of the wicked 7002 Delhi to Peshawur and Cabul, 1839 467 Delinquency, juvenile 4t)84' Delinquent ministers, 1648 1695*' Delinquents, Catholic, and their estates 1459 compositions with, 164S 1599 ■■ ' Delinquents' lands, Wilts, 10 13 7188=' Deloney, T„ strange histories 6820^ De L'Ormo, fiction 4527 " Delphin " Latin classics ,227, 9096 Delphine, fiction 8835 Deluge, the 1185, 3831, 4925 AVorld belore 3043 Demeanour, book of Liabecs book 2674 Demetrius, etc., poems 847(i Democratic A'istas, AVhitnian 0-J61 Dcmocratical government, model 7038 Democracy 91 13, 3705 America, Do Tocqueville S891-2 France, Guizot 3706 and political progress 518S Domocritus in London 223,S Demon, a, tales of lit^ Demonology 7802 De Montfort, Simon liaroiis* wars, 1322 •Demosthenes, tr. by Leland 2966 De Moulin, Ph, 1585 Denham, Capt, China 3724 •Donhani, Sir J„ Cato IMajor of old age 7012 characters 1312-13 hfe 1785 poems 963, 6705^ 7027, 9221 Denis Duval, fiction 8759" Donknialcr, alto 9342 Altniederlandisoher 4727 D 575 D Denman, Lord, sketch of 587G, 9!52 Denmark IHO, 9602 Carolina Matilda, Q. of, life 4768 history 2622, 3815 Kins? of, memorial to 6135" literature • 432(1 revolution, 1772 4758 social and political 40S2 Struensee 63*8 •Dennis, J., letters, etc., to 6289 on operas 7011 Dennis Hagsarty's wife, fiction 8759" Denon, life 703B Deorum, de natura 1696, 1702 Dependencies, government of 5311 Depravity, juvenile 566, 9639 •De Quincey, T., on 3413, 5876, 6934, 8400 Derangement 5529 Derby, All Hallows 7842 assize sermon 7611 books 731, 5551 Earls of, lives, etc. L'lncashire, Stanley, 1639; 1787, 282 li Homer 4173, 5376 visit to 835-4 Derby House 1560, 96 i 5337 '.=, 8937'.'= Bering, Sir E. Beering, 2306-9 Dernier jour d'un Condamne 4349 Derry, John, Bp. of, impeachment 1597'"* siege of 5681 Derwent Bank, verses 6435'" Devwentwater, E. of, papers, etc. 7047 Descartes 4106, 6258, 7485 Descents, royal 1161 Desert, the, Layard 5193 Desert of Dives, Procter 1855 '. = Deserted village 3506, 14, 29 Desertion, the, 1689 4099' Desiderata Cnriosa, Peck 6788 Design 37.39, 3920-1 copyright 9050 journal of 4700 Designs, copyright 0887, 8732 Desk, second service in 4099= Desmond, Countess of. Earls of 2002, 6667 Despairing lover, poem 7012 Despatches. Castlereagh 5450 Hardinge, etc. 3845 Marlborough 6815 Napoleon 819 Nelson 6420 Strafford 4904 Wellington 9349-60 Wotton 9640 Despotism, Russia 8816 Destiny, Action 3012 Detection of the Court and State of England 1782-3 De Tocqueville Tocqueville 8891-3 Deventer, 1586-7 Mien 1639 De Vere, Sir P., life 3450 *De Vere's poems, H. Taylor on 8666 Devereux, Earls of Essex, lives, etc. 2378 Rob'., E. of Essex 2836-7 Devereux, fiction 6567 Devil and De Foe 8937 '.^ and the Pope 7030 Pierce Penilesse to Nash 1857 will of 411 '.",1866'.' -worshippers 6194 Devil's Pool, novel '667 Devils, Luther's, Milton's, Goethe's .5934 Devis, Miss, Woman's mission 11806 Devonshire Tonge 1322, 16973», 1792, 3567, 6364, 7188»', 7368= Christian, Countess of, hfe 2002 Dukes of 6435'=, 7519. 7842, 7924-5 Earls of 1697'^', 6673 Devotion, offices of Vaster 3188 Devotional lays ,.<„., i^on -iJo Devotions, etc. »i'< ; Stanley 1639, ol42 Dew ^'*'' •D'Ewes, Sir S., speech 1S97» De Wetto Wette 9378 De- Witting of Glencoe, Gaffney, etc. 4099 ' Dialects 462 ; Chetham Misc. M639, 2135; Alliterative, Cursor, Blhs, Michel 2674 Dialogue of the dead, 1715 4099'' gods 8562' ''Dialogues, Engl., Germ., Fr., Ita!. &\ i Lucian 5519 moral and political, Hurd 4431-2 Plato 6940, etc. Diamond necklace, Carlyle 1380 ' '" Wedding, fiction 2137 •Diary, Abbot, Ld. Colchester 1784 Ashmole 298 Bremer 912, 16 Bury, times of Geo. 4 1219 Burton, Cromwell parliaments 1218 Cartwright, Bp., 1686-7 1322 Chronological, 1714, etc. 4097-8 Civil war, Symonds 1322 Clarendon, 1687-90 1720 Colchester, Lord 1784 Collier 1847 Copleston 1975 Courts of Hanover, Vienna, etc. 9625 Cowper, Lady 2047 Dangeau 22;i7 U'Arblay 212-13 Dee, D'. 1322 Derby, Earl of Hlnnley 1639 D'Ewes 2384 Dodington 2622 Doddridge 2521 Ennuyee 4557 Evelyn 2888 Hearne 3975 Holoroft 4136 Invalid, Matthews 5947 Italy, Elliot 2734 Lake, 1677-8 Camden Misc. ', 1322 Laud 5142, 7205 Lover of literature. Green 3628 Maohyn, 1660-63 1322 Maoready 6718 Malmesbury .5756 Manningham, 1602-3 1322 Malvern, Lane 6090-2 Newcome 1639 OlUys 6689 Palmerston 2229 Peninsular war 2.390 Pepys 6821-4 Robinson, E. 7462 Robinson, H. Crabb 7463 Rose 7620 Rous 1322 1761 7821 Sidney, H., times of Chas. 2 8041 Silesian knight, lO* cent. 8071 Slingsby 8092 Thoresby 8844 Tone 8905 Turkish and Greek waters. Carlisle 1377 Venables, Eliz. Chatham. Misc. *, 1639 Ward, Rev. J., 1648-79 9268 Ward, R. Plumer 6906 Washington 8285 Worthington 1639 Yonge, 1604^28 1.322 Diary, Bahol, Martha Bethune 8084 of a late physician 9280 Willoughby, Lady 7298 Youngster's 9717 Diatriba ohronologica, 1649 5860 Diatribe academica, Machiavelli G551 •Dibdin, C, anecdotes 4379 Dice-play, use of 6829^ •Dickens, Charles, All the Year Round 122-4 Amateur players 139 Cruikshank 2155, 8 Depret on 2363 dictionary 6917 Fitzgerald on 6209 Friswell on 3260 Home on 4259 Household Words 4285-7, 9544 letter (facsimile) 3156 life, letters, etc. 3142-8, 5683. 8433 London in works _ 6808 Mahony 5736 Oliver 'I'wist, MS. of Vi2 papers, uncollected 6683 presentation copies to 3868 8932 D 576 D *Dickens, Charles— coai. as a reader 3029, 4796 readlDEs 3029 Talfourd's sonnet to 8827 Theatrical fund 8787 Townshend 8932, 6 will 2436 Dictionnaire philosophique 9107 Dictionary, Ameritiaiiisras 490 Analytical English 840 An^lo-Saxon and En^^Iish 858 antiquities, Greek and Eoman 8167 appendix and orthos,rapher 9151 Arabic, biographical 4442 Arabic, etc., proposals for 4685 archaic and provincial 6879 art terms 2956 arts, manufactures, mines 9085 arts, sciences, and literature 2776 biogi-apliical 700-8, 1970, 3562, 4*12, 6837-9,8168,8203,9222 classical 5249, 8165, etc. classical quotations 735 Corney on new biographical *1981 dates 3918 Dickens 6917 Dutch and Erench 9.571 early English Hume 2674 English 840, 4906, G571, 6890, 7387, 9336, 9620 literature, Allibone 129 and German 3095 Italian 443 Latin 84 ; Levins, 1322, Promptorium, 1322 French 8318, 8639 Turkish 7693 Eop, Evelyn 2899-900 French 21, 69S4 naval and military 1170 authoresses, etc. 939 and Dutch 9371 English 3079, 8318, 8639 gardening 4639 general knowledge 2066 geography 4658, 5642 ancient 3959 Greek and Uoman 8169 German and English 3095 Greek, Tiiesaurus 8393 and English 5330 Eioman antiquities 8167 biography 8168 geogi'aphy 8169 gypsy langn.ipfe, Spain 846 liistorical, etc., liiiyle 513-15 ideas 4.'i91 imperial, Ogilvie 6571 Indian islands, etc. 2103 Italian 768.5 and English 442, 6124 Latin and English 84, 8170-2 phrases 7457 proper names 8172 and Greek quotations, etc. 7417 Malay 2104 micrograpbic 3656 nautical 0707 naval biographical 6560 ornithological 6207 painters, etc. 6670, 6921 political, etc. 7037 pronouncing 4906 printers and printing 7703, SS87-8 quotations 735, 7417, 4836 rhyming English Levins 2674 science, literature, art 896-7 slang 559 synonyms 5679, 8097 technical 2067 technological 6670 (tetraglotton), English— French— Italian — Spanish 4307 topographical, Gt. Britain and Ire- land 3668 of the world, geographical, etc. 6642 Dictys Cretensis 9096 Diderot, Carlylo on 1388' letters 3662-8 Dido, life 4033 Didot, Paris, printed by 4i':i33 Diebitch, Marshal, Balkan 6195 Dies Oonsecratij Manning 5610 Diet and dietaries 218, Horde, Holy Grail 2S74 ; MiB, 5499, 6831 and digestion 6831 . Diet, Hoshton, 1617 4130 Diet, Hungarian, 1861 43S2 Dietetics of the soul 3015 Dicux, la nature des Cicero 1702 Disby, Venetia Stanley, Lady, life 2002 *Oigbv, Ld. Geo., speeches, etc. 1690, 4, .5», 7'", 35 49 C3 67 87 91 93 103 108 119 1599 v4 1669 '6733 >=, 8468-9 ♦Digby, Sir Kenelm Bigi!/ 1322 ; 8937 '' '« Digestive organs and diet 6831 Dighton, 0. K. 6761 Dignities, book of 3917 privilege, and precedence 3515 Dindimus, letters of Alexander 2674 Dingley, Thomas, history from marble 1322 Dining, art of 392R Dinner, on, De Quincey 2366 Diocletian (dram, poem) 2541 Diodati, John, Chas. I. 4026 Diodorus, Gr. hist. 9656 *Diogcnes Lacrtius 6902, 9475 Uionysius the elder, life 7003 Diplomacy 6938, 7611 Diplomatic, papei*s and correspondence 4087 6460, 9327 Diplomatists, Europe 1354-5 Dirt and pictures 6066 Discipline, fiction 1061 Discoui-ses, Bushnell (American) 1225 Martiueau 6888 Mead 6006 Eeynolds, Sir J. 6326, 7378 Discoveries, history of 552 Disease 4636, 4922, 5499, 8657 amongst poor, causes 6214 Diseases, dogs 6240 horse 5874 intestines 322-li Disorderly meetings in taverns, 16G0 7188 ^^ Disowned, fiction 5657 Dispensaries, etc. 5214 Dispensary (poem) 3325-6, 7011 Display of God's mercies, 1793 8323 tyranny. Gates 6552 Disponent, the, fiction 2681 * Disraeli, Benjamin 2436, S260, 3369, 7225 •D'Israeli, Isaac, and Bolton Corney 1981, *1981 Dissent, characteristics of 9108 Dissenters' academies and Wesley 4099'' address to bishops, 1704 7044 behaviour, 1705 4099" and M'. Bennet, 1705 4099'" chapels bill, 1814 6723 and church establislunent 4957 of England, 170S 4099'' concessions to, Castlereagh 5449 conformity, 1701 4099'' designs of 1537, 7044 education, 1703 4099° loyalty of, 1705 1099' Newcastle 6436" reflections on, 1720 4099'' Salters Hall 4967 * statutes a^inst, 1685 1672'° sufferings, &o., 1687 4099' vindicated, 1697 7040^ vindication of, 1710 7043 writers and writings, Davies 2276 ■^Dissenting ministers, etc. lettei-s to 6611 Distress, labouring classes, 1846 S856 District visiting 6214 Divination, Ennemoser 2801 " Divine Catastrophe "—Stuarts 6861 Divine comedy, Dante 2242-54 drama of history and civilisation 8143 dreamer, Strafford 8413921 love, on, Hollis 1315 meditations, W. Waller 9223 Quarles 7229 poems, Quarles 7228 service, on Mirror 2674 performance of, 1641 7188" tragedy, Longfellow 5100 D 577 D 7188'» 7353= 149-50, 1811 Divines, army and the engagement, 168a English, on lives, Dunton Newport, 1G4-8 2808, 89S7' '^ proposals of, IMO 1599' ' Puritan, lives 971 Divinity, ancient and modern, compared 1118 of our Saviour 4099'' practical, paradise of 9716 Divorce bill and law mSi bill of 8937' 1 Bucer on 6154 Milton on 6154 Dix (or Eoss), John 6810 Dj(Sbel-Kumri, journeyings to 6003 Dochet [P Datchet], Sam the ferryman 1672', ' Dockyards, France 8217 Doctor, the, Southey 8258-9 the occasional 8937' '' Doctor Antonio, fiction 7,551 Birch, fiction 8759 ' ", 8763 Thome, (lotion 8969 •Doctors' Commons 7433, 7644 Doctrine, Christian, iVIiltoii 0154, 8 •Dodd, D'. 8066, 4662 George, Russian war 7592 Dodd, certamen utriusque eeelesiae Popery 1639 Dodd family abroad, fiction 5295 •Doddridge, Philip, life 6612 Dodgson, Rev. C. Lutwidge 1428-9 Dodona, Arneth 272 Dodona's Grove, Howell 4304 Dodsley, R., collection of fugitive pieces 3274 Nathan Ben Saddi 6394 poems 6706« Dodwell ( " Anti-Dodwellisme " ) 7353" Dog and dogs 1007, 2977, 4617, 5873, 6240 Fiend, fiction 5828 Dogget, hfe 3299 Dolne, songs, etc., Roumania 6357 Dolcino, Fri, life 6808 Dombey and Son, fiction 2399-403, 2422-4 Domesday, St. Paul's, 1253 St. Paul's 1322 Domestic architecture, England 9061 •Domestic economy, encyclopedia 9317 hturgy 2222 mannei'S, &c., England, middle ages 9668 State Papers 1298 verses 6181 Domesticated animals, humanity to 9705 Dominion, Hobbes 4105 Don Juan 1260 Lamborto 689 1-C Quixote H83-.5, 8 Roderick, Scott 7798-9 •Donaldson, J. W., " Varronianus " 4S09 Doncaster book 8079 Doniphan, Colonel, Mexico campaign 2708 Donizetti, notice of 7225 •Donne, John, D.D., life 6376, 84 Matthew's letters 6946 poems 953, 3284 Doomsday, tokens before Adam Davy 2674 Dorado, el Balegh 3766 Dorchester, bishopric 8368 Dorchester, Dudley Carleton, Ld. Carleton 1371 Dorii, G. 3379, 4571 Dorking book 2539 Dorset, Anne, Countess of, hfe, 1787, 2002 Duke of (?), poem 6868 'Dorset, Earls of 594, 16973=, ™, 1672", 6169-60, 6706«, 7027, 7319 Dorsetshire 402, 1596", 1597«, 6364 Dort, .synod of 3'63 tract 1599" •Douglas, Liidy Marguret, lite 8480 Douglass, Fred., life 6436''' •Dove. — , poem on Q. Mary 7020 Dove, river ^860 •Dover, E. of. impeachment, 1642 1507"' Dovre Fjeld, Flora 460 Downing Street, Carlyle 139o-6 •Doyle, R., illustrations 2403, 7, 10, 14, 18 ; 3153, 3,345 ; 4400, 499 ; 621.3, 7215-17 ; 8759 ' =, «, 8772, Drake, Sir F. 483 ; Camden Misc. =, Viii; Ih-ake ,3756 ; Maynarde 3766 •Drake, James 1010, 1834, 4099', 6750 Drama, British, quizziology 18 English, view of 8904 French classical 763-4 Greek 2631, 9202 lyrical 4552 modern, beauties of, 181 j 7056 musical, England 6062 national, thoughts on 6968*^ and " old Drury " 6968" the, on 7800 passions in 3424 Drama of a life, Langford 6102 Dramatic art and its professors 8904 literature 7730-2 censor 3370 characters, Garrick 3320 criticisms, Hazlitt 3957 effect 3071 entertainments, "Windsor Castle 9326 genius, 11 iffernan 4074 literature 3424, 3937-8, 6737 memoirs, 1731 2717 miscellanies, Davics 227S pieces, Victor 9139 poetry, English, J. P. Collier 1841 and authore, 1747 1687 and authors and performers 8785 of the last age, 1763 6796'' poets, lives, etc. 955, 2278, 6098 productions, Dibdin 2391 record, English Court 1533 scenes and ether poems 1984 time-piece 1050 works. Baker 404 writers. Baker 404 Dramatis personae, Browning 1046 Dramatists, comic, Macaulay 5632 early Spanish 6220 Ireland 5638 old, Lowell 5504 songs from 2790 Draperies, subsidy and aulnage, 1660 7188>=* Draper's pamphlet, the, 1741 8937 ' = Drapier, letters, poems, etc. 8524, etc. ; 8540-1 8572 Drawing academy, Gwyn 3739 and anatomy, Haydon 3920 aphorisms 5744 architectural, soil-instruction 6402 crayon 0362 foreground 458 linear 814 model 0065 from objects 814 outline and perspective 8645 for schools 8645 Drawing room scrap book, 1841 3059 Drawings, catalogues 2240, 5326, 7767, 8860 •Drayton, Michael 694, 963, 6829' Dream after reading Virgil 1690 before Stratford's death 8469*' Harwich 8937 ' * Kind-heart's 6829= of life 6317 of reform 3131 Scipio's, Cicero 1698 Dreamer, the. King 4832 Dreams. Adam Davy's 2674 effect and power, etc. 4472', 8469*1 Ennemoser 2801 Seafleld 7811 'Dresden, Court of 4099', 4758 Dress, art of 2682 as a fine art 6064 history of 2964-5 middle ages and renaissance 4968 Dresses, London 6746-6 Dressing-room 2899-900, 8677 Drinks, intoxicating 5499 •Dnimmond. poems, life, etc. 963, 7974, 9538 Drunken Barnaby's journeys 900-1 Drunkenness, Englauds bane, 1634 971S pathology of 9649 Druses, mountains of 6772 Dry leaves from young Egypt 8067 Dry sticks fa'^oted, Landor 5056 Dryden, Anne R. Lamb 5005 D 578 D Drycleu, John, Alexander's feast 7021 on Congreve 1690 epistle to 7024 epistle to Sir E. Howard 7012 Juvenal and Persius 6705'" Laclirymae musarum 960 letters 2351 letters, etc. to life, etC: Malone on Masson on "Medal" Plutarch poems 953, 69 ; " Eevolter " Tacitus Virgil Virgil, Persius, Juvenal Voiture Busdity of the mind *Dnhlm books, etc. 1752, curiosities executions history lectures letters from National Portrait Gallery proceedings, 1823 St. Ann's, sermon St. Patrick's cathedral hospital theatres, 1730-61 Truck Street University Wood's halfpence ^yoollen manufacturers. Swift •Dubois, Cardinal, life Duchess dowagers, etc., England, 1742 *Duck, Stephen, poems and life Dudevant, Madame Duddon, river Duel, Hamilton and Mohun of the stags, poem Duelling, etc. Duellist, poem, Churchill Duello, Seldeu Duels and duelling France, suppression of Dutferin, Earl of. Ancient Syria DuHy, Sir 0. G., MS. notes Du Fresnoy, art of painting *Duke, Rev. R., poems Duke Rowland and Sir Otucll 335, 591, 7S00, 9348 5769 5934 7024 7004, 6 2796, 6705, 7018, 27 4099 z S610 2965, 6705»H 9158 953'^ 5279 488, 810, 85 i 15981, 1683, 2586-8, 96 ; 6968", 6973' 5245 2277", 8562 " i 3406 5209-11 2369 2937 6652 7845 5914 8564 9138 8540 4034, 4099" 8572 8537 6.578 8562 ' 1 7022 Sand 7666 8850 5380 7012 3822 1678, 7014 7832 7610 2897 6211 *Dulwich Gallery *Dumas, A., life Du Maurier, G. Dumb philosopher, Cronke Dumfries, book and songs Craik, J. Dun, the, fiction Dun cow, poem *Duncan, Jonathan Dunciad author of; dedication to and Cibber modern, Daniel new new book variorum *Duiicombe, W., letters to Needler's works Dundee book, nautical diet. Dundy [? Dundee! 1645 Dunkirk-house, news from, 1067 Dunmow, custom of Dunsany, Lord Dunstan, St., memorials of Dunstaplia, Annales Monastici "Dunfcon, John, Marlboroua;h Neck or Nothing (>) Post-boy Shaftesbury Spira Dupin, Baron C, exhibition •Duppa, Bishop, life ♦Diipuis, model drawing Durcr, Albert, life. etc. 7378 963=, 6705« Charlemagne 2674 4547 3070 8759 ' ' 8099 ' 2 3312, 13, 4119 2370 2692 5048 Babie 7260 7079-82, 8937 " " 7091 1686 2239 7082 4099" 2189 4086 6415 9707 1598'C S937 ' " 90 Plwnkett 7001 1663 Monasteries 1663 681B 5386 7116 7876 8324 5122 456 7709, 9321 "D'Urfcy, T., Albion's blessing 4099 " notice of 2826 Durham, Admiral Sir Philip, life 6364 Durham books 847, 6403, G968i», 8713 cathedral 1583, 6403, 8095-6 coins 6435^ register, 1311-16 Durham 1663 view of 1596" •Durham, county 1595", 1763, 4324 Dutch at home 2827 fables 9589 and French dictionary 9571 industrial history 8913 language 869 in the Medway 5651 poem, IS" century 3768 Republic, rise of 6314 school, jiainting 4962 tract 5158 1:racts (ti'anslations) 4100 voyages, Cat': i.. .and China Veer 3756 Duties of man, Mazzini 6004 Duties, wine and tobacco, 1733 8937 " = Duty, human, Ramsay 7276 Dwarf, Boruwlaski - 847 *Dyce, R«v. A., Akenside 101 Beaumont and Fletcher 536 Bentley 630 bequest 7768-8 catalogues of bequest 7767-8 Collier 1843 Ford 3119 Greene uud Peele 8630-1 Kemps wonder Kemp 1.322 life 7768 Marlowe 5819-20 Middleton 6099 Percy Soc. 6829 Q. Smyrnaeus 7242 Shakespeare 7906-7 Skelton ' 8082 Webster 9330-1 "Dyer, Sir E., life 594 verse and prose Miscellanies *, 3284 Dyer, Rev. John, poems and life 265, 95.3", 670529, 7016 R., actor's Ufe 6986 Dying father's last legacy, Peters 6861 ^irl, etc., poems 4G15 Dynamical theory of the earth 7424 Dyve, Sir Lewis, letter, 1648 8937 ' '^ An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as u heading in the Catalogue ; reference should be made to this heading. The smali. figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type : " V " stands for volume. E. Eadwig, King 126 Eagle's nest, Ruskiu 7563 verdict, story 4166 Earl Robert's mice. Prior 7010 •Barle, Bp., characters 211 Earl's daughter, fiction 7869 retui'n, poem 5.j98 Earls Palatine, Cheshire Chetham Misc. -, 16.39 *Early blossoms of genius and virtue .3365 English literature, Hippisley 4095 Earnest student. Mackintosh 6699 Earth, discourse of, Evel.vn 2904, 7 E 579 , the, dynamical theory of 742-11 history of. Goldsmith 3519-20 and its inhabitants 9621 and man ;i736 new IISS new movement 2562 orieinal and changes and plants and man 1185-6 7766 lieclus 7385 theory of, Burnet 1185 Earthquakes 7845, 9592 East, liritish world in the 7425 Christian, the, legends 7625 countries of the, 1818, 20 9245 languages of seat of war in the, 1854-5 6S42 letters from the, 1830 1414 manners and customs of the 6778 the, pictures from, 1854 1361 romance of travel, 1846 5669 scenes and sights in, 1856 1058 spirit of 9088 thirty-five years in, 1852 4186 travels in 1416, 8890, 9227 war in 3335, 4874, 8060 wonders of Jordanus 3756 East India Company BundallSim, 4734, 7 ; 6661, 8107, 7648, 8164 East Indian Archipelago, 1855 3396 Easter offiTing, fiction 919 rolls, Whalley Chefliam Misc. 5, 1639 Eastern antiquities 2669 learning and philosophy 6902 hfe, 1848 5878 monarchies 991 seas, England in 8704 travel 4837-9, 9253 ♦Eastlake, Lady 2676, 4568, 9181 Sir C. L., Kugler 4961, 3, 4 Bastwick, J. B., Dry leaves 8067 Eburacum (York) 9348 Ebury, Lord Grosvenor 3674 Eccentrics, English, Chasles 1606 Ecclesiui del. Blew 756 Eoclesiastes, first chapter versified 6829" illuminated 675 metrically paraplu^sed, etc. 674 Ecclesiasticae epistolae, etc., Pronto 3266 Ecclesiastical architecture 6857, 7979-80 biography, Stephen 8395-6 causes, civil power in, Milton 6154 commission, 1688 1672" and E. of Rochester 8937'" courts, 1637 7188« essays 1925, 9444 estate, England 9339 history, ancient 4099 ' Doddridge 2621 England, Bede 565 England and Normandy 6603 Eusebius 2872 fourth centJ. 9073 Hobbes 4106 Maurice 6956 Philostorgius 8278 Scotland 228 Socrates 8209 Sozomen 8278 information, 1848-9 951 matt-ers. King's power in 7010™ ornament and costume 7211 polity 7047H 78146 reform, Italy 5808 »Eccleston, Thos. de Franciscans 1663 •Echard,L. fi582-3,6965 Echinoderms ..™ l Eclipse of Paith 7482-3 Eclipses, 1676, etc. 8M8 Eclogues, Barclay »»" Googe fll Wither »587 Economic, essays. Chambers 1503 science, study of 5^13 Economics, Aristotle „ ^. , .^ ?S Eeonomiques sophismes, Bastiat ^^^ Economy of charity ,wl q«w domestic 25li«, 9337 political and social l^«t> o 16606. Economy— co»*. . social, Chalmers 1492 social and schools, Ellis 2754 •Eden, flood 64S5» •Edgar Huntly, fiction 1001 •Edgeworth, Maria, novels 952 Bdiflcatiou, about, 1083 7353" Edifices, 19<'' century 3464 •Edinburgh, address, Carlyle 1380 ' " byeways 1250 Caatle 3687 Chap Books 1523-1 and Charles I. 1562, 1598i 1826, Mudie 6336 entertainment of Charles I. 1552 executions 1699 ' \ 4099 ", 7097 High Court .3384 letters from 1698 ", '*, » and Macaulay 5618 Medical Missionary Society 6014 " Modem Athens " 6335 observatory 8180 panorama, 1829 6246 Philosophical Institution 1792, 3643 Phrenological Society 6907 proclamation, 1679 2277*' Reviewers, Bagehot 380 " Sabbath AlUance " 7117 Scott Exhibition 7807 songs published at 3313 tales 2698 traditions 1603 University 5271, 8422 Edmonton, Merry Devil of 351 sermon at, 1729 7845 Edmunds case 6737 Edom, letters on, Lindsay 5349 •Education, Bentley on 629 Campan on 1329 of children, Chiysostom 1666 classic." 1 151 commercial 161 of daughtei-s 9603 dissenters, 1703 4099« doctrine of, Eichter 7406 early English Baiees 2674 early, Pestalozzi 6906 and educational institutions 8tl England and Europe, Kay 4731-2 Enghsii, German letters 9472 esbimates, 1855-6 6737 German University 6839-40 harmony of 2701 household, Hartineau 6882 in this country, 1847, Niohol 9534 influence of the history of science on 5213 inspectors' reports, 1862 7764 Ireland 6737 lectures on 2700, 6213, 9614 letters on, Chesterfield 1632 a liberal, "Whewell 9402 Locke 6396-V mental 5213 military 6597 Milton, of 6144, 64^5 Murray on, 1847 6353 national 3134, 3208, 6300, 7560 of an orator 7241 Oxford 147 and the people 5104 of the people 6960, 9634 Phillips on v 6900 philosophy of 8646 Pillans on G922 of the poor 874, 4731-2 popular 8501 Privy Council Minutes, 1846-52 8031 professional 2695 progress of, ]84«-9 951 public, 1853 8031 Quarterly Educational Magazine 7231 Schoolmaster, 1852-3 7752-3 Victoria 6737 ■Wales 6787, 6900 D. Williams on 9618 P P E sao E Educational institutions, U.S. 80 i8 mission, womEtu's 3261 tour, Germany, Gt. Britain, and Ireland 6784 Edward tlie Black Prince 8357, 9524 the Confessor, lives 1663 I. 1302, 1663, 3251, 6829*, 8207 II. Adam Davy 2674, 6829«, 9624 * III. 5979,9624 III. and Eichard II„ preface to his- tory of 7047* III. to Richard III., political poems, etc. Poems 1663 IV. Udtvard IV., Vergil, Warkworth 1322 ; 4790, 64361", 6483, 9179 V. Ddward V. 1822, 4790 VI. Ballads 411, 1298, 3267, 3462-3, 4790, 5379, 5393, 9048, 69 Edward Vernon, fiction 1647 'Edwards, Amelia B., All the Year Kound 124 Edwards, B. B. (U.S.) 7816-17 Edwardes, M. Paradyse 1853 Edwards, Roger, Castra regia 760 Edwin Brood, fiction 2403, 35-6 Edwy and Elgiva, poem 749 EfBgies poeticae, Procter 7193 Egeria, etc., poems *Bgerton, Lady Bridget Chetlia 5673 m Misc. 4, 1639 Papers Egerton 1322 Egham hill, chapel 5782 Eglamour, romance Tlwrntm 1322 Bglinton, Earl of, literary address 949 Egotist, Cibher 1690 Bgremond, parson of 6344 Egypt, Abram 6621 adventures in, 1849 656 ancient 4793, 9308 and Candia 6737 Chateaubriand, travels 1613 discoveries in, 1842-3 5266 Edom, Holy Land, 1838 5349-50 Englishwoman in 7061 exodus 6621 1603-8 Tarthema 3766 history of 2670, 7983-5, 9395 Kordofan, etc., 1844 6688 Lower, 1840 3325 Mehemed Ali 6686 modem, romance of 5264 monumental history 6621 monuments 2161, 3133, 3830 and Nubia; 1845 7633 paintings, monuments, &c 9498 peregrination, 1863 7134 pilgrimage to, 1840 3377 place of in history 1117 ruins 6621 6919 and Syria, 1848 9565 temples and tombs, 18 IB 7606 and Thebes, modern 9499 tour, 1830 1414 travels, Stephens 8942 " Up the Nile," 1869 2959 Valentia, 1802 9092 visit to, Pfeiller 6866 writing 4376 Egyptian art, Brit. Mus. 9112 court, Crystal Palace 2161 hieroglyphs, study of 9497 slave, 1852 526 Egyptians, ancient 6495, 9498, 600 modern. Lane 6087-8 original people of Ireland 8562 ' ^ time of the Pharaohs 9497 Eighteen Christian centuries 9421 1848, history of 4764 1853, Cobden 1765 Eighteenth century, Andrews 173 century, France, illustrated 4'967 century, literary anecdotes and history , 6470, 2 and nineteenth c&nturies, history 7746 Eighth Commandment, fiction 7822 Eikon Basihkfe ' 1648, 77-8, 83-4 ; 167221, 3092, 4163 (James 2) ■' 6553-4 Eikonoolastes, Milton 6154-5 Bller and Helvig, legend 1928 Einfiusz der herrsohenden Ideen des 19. Jahr- hunderts auf den Staat 2803 Eisen, plates 155 Ejected ministers, Baxter 605-6 Ekatompathia Watson 211 & 1813 El Buscapi4 Cervantes 148i;-7 El Dorado Balegli S766, 8669 El Medinah, pilgrimage to 1216 ♦Elba, Buonaparte 2538, 2718 Elders, 1645-6 6734 "-is, 25 and their oIDoe, Presbyterian 1671 Eldon, D'. A. {i.e. Thos. Wyse) 2719 *Eldon, Earl of, Ufe, etc. 3954, 8508, 9069 Eleanor's (Queen) vengeance, poem 616 Election, Bucks 8937' " dialogue, 1710 4099'' law 9285 of sheriffs, London 8937' " Sterling (poem) 8406 Elections, freedom of, 1690 7047'5 misdemeanours in, 1690 7047i^ opposition to members at, 1701 7047i^ regulation 4099' stock-jobbing, 1701 4»;i9i' Elective affinities, fiction 347G Elector Palatine and Bohemia 1599' ' Electoral family, restoration of, 1641 1697^° Electro-biology 8097-8 Electro-pathology 8097 Electro-therapeutics 8097 Electric telegraph 3970, .9116, 6426, 95.-,2 Electricity 712, 2332, 5117, 19 ; 5325, 7350, 9552 Elegiac poem, Greek, Musurus 3189 Elegiac, Albinovanus 112 Elegies 1, 969. 1279, 15=0, 4, 81 ; 2533, 2836, S.320. 3t68, 4024, 5159, 6435', '», 7020, 7198-9,7228-9, 7433, Wither 8313, 8688-9, 8919,9360 Elegy in a country churchyard 3809-12, 7014 Elenchus motuum nuperorum in Anglia 601 'Elephant, the 87.30 Eleven impeached members 29623,1", 2963", i",", " Elgin, Earl of, embassy to China 5396 sketch of 5876 Elgin marbles 3921 Elia, essays, Lamb 6007-9, 17-20 Eliana 6021 Efijah's mantle 7016 »Eliot, Sir John 1 397'», 2487, 3161- 3 Lord, mission to Spain 7618 Elixirs, 1707 8937 '. i" Elizabeth, ]?rincess (dau. of Geo. 3), copies and autographs 3374, 606, 613-14, 882 ; 4308, 6522 Elizabeth, Queen, Academy Courtesy 2674 age of, dramatic literature 3937-S articles 70.38 Asinus onustus, 1642 1672i ballads, reign of 411' caricature 6900 chai-acter 798 characters in her reigTi KauntonlW comedies before 33-11 com't, etc. 83, 1859, 6899, 7974 death of, ode 55(13 favourites 4520, 8399 Hatton*s correspondence with iji79 history of 3368, 4790 injunctions 7038 at Kenilworth 411" the Lady, ded». to 8389 last days of, ode 6968'>' letters to K. James Letters 1322 letters of her ministei-s, etc. 1282 life, Jameson 4549 and Mary, Q. of Scots 4W4 ministers of, Bohun 798 and her ministers, and Earl of Shrewsbm-y 6416 navpl worthies of her reign ■183 papers attributed to .5767 parliament,, journal 2385 plays on Heywood 7974, poets and poetry, reign of 1848 E 581 E Elizabeth, Queen— eont. as Princess, household ac- count Camden Mise.',\32Z Raumer 7301 reign of 1298, Egerton, Bay- ward 1322, 1859, 5902, 6029, 8937 '. ", 904S, 70, 279 speech to parliament 7038 Spenser's dedication 8310 statesmen, etc. 5393 statutes, Cambridge 1319 Tears Misc. ', 3284 andher times (letters) 9670 troubles of, Heywood 406i victory, 1588 40()3 Elizabeth of Hungary, Saint's triicedy 4817 of Yorlc Camden Misc. ', 1322, 6483 Elizabeth, or Exiles of Siberia 7617 Elizabethan literature, extracts from 1074 Kllen Gray, poem 874 •Bllesniere, Earl of 3749, 66, 4116, 5954, 7728 'Elliott. B., Carlyle on 1380'. ^ life, letters, &c. 3413, 7815, 93*5 L:nipses, Latin 6672 'Ullis, Alexander J., pronunciation lG-24, 2(i74 Henry, China 8942 John, letters to Prideanx 1.322 ; 2649 •Blliston, E. W., life 7309-11 Wlsworth, Ch. Just. (U.S.), life 7G87 Hlmham, Thomas of Hem-y V., Thomas, 1663 Elocution 1296, 4905, 9, 9099 Elogia illustrinm -virorum 8900 E li lisa to Abelard 7019 ', ', 7077 'Eloqupnce of the Ancients 994 British 948-9, 3541, 3935 Irish 688ci B. Jonson on 8043 Laconic, &c. 448 poem on 7023 Eloquentia bipartita, Strada 8469 Elsfeild, minister of, 1641 7840 Elvaston Castle, evergreens 476 •Blwes, John, life 8910-11 Elwin, Hastings, Shakespeare 7935 Rev. W., Pope 7068, 8400 EI.v, Rev. H. Hich 2127 Elzevir books 4183, 6649 Emaciation, Chambers 1611 Emancipation, English Colonies 1894 Embassies and.foreign courts 6358 Emblems 2097, Thynne 2674, 4183, 90.67 •Emerson, R. W. 144, 2388, 8260, 3413, 6629, 9460 Emery, player, life 3299 Emigrant, adventures, Rowcroft 7539 the. Head 3964 surgeons' bill 6962 Emigrants to Canada, information for 1004 German, Gerstaecker 3386 Nevr Brunswick 3387 Emigration to Australia (Victoria) 414 Commissioners 6737 Port PhiUip 6097 Emilia in England, fiction 6048 Monteiro, poem ■ 5204 Wyndham, Action 5850 Emilie de Coulanges, fiction 2692 Emma, fiction 337 Bmmett, insurrection 5449, 5970 Emperor's Vigil, etc., poems 4672 Emphasis, Greek 685 Empire, art of, Raleigh 7266 first, Prance, Thiers 8803 1', Prance 7422 Romans under the 60.67-8 Empires, Europe, Asia, Africa 4739 natural boundaries 3050 Employers and emplo.yed. Helps 3993-4 responsibilities of 8093 Encaustic painting, manual and history 8695 Bncomion of Lady Pecunia 1866 ' ' •Encyclopaedia. Britannica 2776-7, 5618 chronology 9615 domestic economy 9337 gardening 6491 MetropoStana 5957, 7277, 8434-6 rural sports ' 736 {See also Cyclopaedia.) Endeavours after the Christian Ufe 4SS4, 6888 Endymion 4746 Enfield, W., on taste 6436" Engagement, for subscription by divines, 1689 7363 new, 1660 1699* on divines, 1649 1699'^ vindicated, Lilbunie 5337 ' * Engineers, infoi-malion for 2948 •England, account of, ab. 1600 England 1322 aenigmatical types of, Lilly B345 a.ffairs, 1638-60 8868 1641-60 1481 1688-9 4099' 1692 4099> 1702 40891 Alfgiianistan, and Sinde 5632 ambassador of Chas. V. at court of 1603 and America, comparison 9196 1774, etc. 9018 Anglo-Saxon 5116, 6677 annals 2780, 3092, 3462-3, 4893, 8443 antiquities 1732, 8912 aristoci-aey 3828 as it is, 1861 4660 astrological prediction 6342-3 baronial halls, etc. 3789 beauties of (by counties) 959 and Belgium, Latin tracts 1685 biographical history 3680, 6607 blessed state of, 1679 Churchyard 1853 Bolingbroke on history of 810 character of 2886, 4300 chi'onicles, Baker 406 Camden Soc. ChronicleSp Wriofhesley 1322 Chronicles 1663^ Chronicon Augliae Jihig- land 1663 Chronicon Anglicanum Ralph 1663 Pabyan 2939 Proissart 3262 Florence 3092 Grafton 3575-6 Hall 3779 Henry of Hunt". 4016 Holinshed 4138 metrical 7308 old English 1664 Rastell 7297 Stow 8443 church history 169, 9604 lays of 6317 state of Iteggius 1685 civil wars, Hobbes 4105 and her colonies (American) 9018 comic history of 16 common laws, Hobbes 4105 constitution .379, 2111-13, 6422, 7640, 8161 costume 6869 counties 959, 1729, 6237, 7605 court and state of, to death of Anne 1782-3 danger of being made a province of Prance , 70471' decay of, multitude of sheep Fish 2674 deohne of 7498 described,' counties, 1659 5237 disasters in, 1690 4099 s J documents, Rymer 8851 duchess dowagers, etc., 1742 8662' ^ early education Babees iSli early and middle ages 6787 early popular poetry 3960 in the eastern seas 8704 ecclesiastical estate 9339 ecclesiastical history 665, 6603, 7126 Echard's history, Oldmixon 6683 education 4731-2 18th century 1606, 9367 under Elizabeth and James, Melvil 6029 and the English, Lytton 5567 evils of, 1848 4295 family history 42H financial, monetary, and statistical 2642 pp 2 E 582 E •England — cont, foreign Protestants & aliens, 1618-88 Foreigners 1322 and France, international copyright 1164 negotiations bet-ween 1859 under house of Lancaster 989 and Germany, thirty years' war 1322 government 375, Twysden 1332, 46U* S 6*25 governors of garrisons 7048 istoric lands 1160 history of, Burke, abridgment 1145 Carte, to 1654 1433 Charles I. and II. 2214 for children 1980, 2402-3, 13 ; 2795 Clarke 1732 constitutional 3804, 5980 critical, Oldmixon 6683 desiderata curiosa, Peck 6788 early anecdotes, Slc. Anecdotes 1322 Echard, to 1888 2687, 6583 Florence of "Worcester, to Bdw. I. 3092 Froude, H. 8 and Eliz. 3267-8 Gardiner, 1624-8 3307 George III. 6923-4, 6876 Goldsmith 3521-2 Grafton, to Q. Eliz. 3575-6 Henry of Huntingdon to H. i 4016 Henry VIII. StarTzey 2674 Higgons. to 1688 4076 House of Hanover 9666 Hoveden, 732-1201 Save- den 4290 Hume, to 1688 4364-6 Keightley 4753 Kennet, to death of "W. 3 4790 landmarks of 9424 lays and ballads 5613 letters, Ellis 2749-51 Lingard, to 1688 6356 Longman (lectures) 5153 Macaulay, from Jas. II. 5B23 Macfarlane, to 1847 C648 Mackintosh, etc. to death of G. 2 5687-8, 93 Matthew Paris, 1236-73 6944 Mflrtthew of Westminster, to 1307 6945 Molesworth, 1830-74 6186-7 Oldmixon 6683-5 Palgrave, to acc° of H. I. 6677, 8 popular. Knight, to 1861 4893 popular progress in, Fors- ter 3163-4 Poulton 7126 prior to Norman con- quest Vergil 1322 Raleigh, to 1746 7271 Eapin 7295 for schools and families, Foster 3187 Smollett, Eev. to death of G. 2 8179 Somers tracts 8213 Stanhope, 1701-83 8340-61 Stuarts, Oldmixon 6685 Svrift, abstract 8629 ' ■» Turner, Sharon !)046-8 Warner (Albions Eng- land) 9279 Welwood, 1588-1688 9364-6 White, to 1858 9422 Wood, to death of Oh. I. 0610 house of Hanover, queens of 2636 ♦England — cont, in time of war, poems 2510 industry, science, government, Bab- bage 353 interest of, 1659 4099' introduction of learning 9297 invasion of, defence 1309, 7048 invasions of, Creasy 2108 and Ireland 4472, 8371, 9108 Ireland, Scotland, intelligence in, 1650 8937 ».« journey through, 1714, Macky 6696 journey through, 1814, K. of Saxony 1440 kings of, chronicle 6394, 9510 kings of, letters 8881 kings of, successions and characters 8492 kings and queens of 4161. 4790, 8578 Kohl, 1844 4S32 laws of. Bacon 375 letters, 1823, Soligny 8210 literary ladies 2766 literature and learning, Craik 2087-9 local, history 8912 manners, etc., 14^'' century :i470 maps, roads, railway 724, 8493 middle ages 9667-8 monthin, 1854, Tuckerman 9021 moral state, 1670 2882 music 6706 musical drama 6062 naval history 924, 6476, 8261 navy, 1689 6401 in the New World 9258-9 Norman conquest, Thierry 8796-8 north of, Brathwait 900-1 Northmen and Normans e4.'i0 nursery rhymes and songs 4166, 6829* origin of, Dunstar 2633 parishes, market towns, nobility, &c. 9529 parliaments, Bacon 375 parliaments and councils 6745 parties in (as to Spain) , Landor 5083 and its people. Miller 6114 people of, addresses to, 17.57 7691'^ (" Old World ") pilgrimage to, Lone- fellow 6473 political future of, 1856; 0314 political history, G. Smith 8128 political poems and songs Poems, 1663 and Portugal, 1 660 7 1 88'" liresent affairs. 1679 7039 present affairs, 1688 7040== princesses of, lives 3625 progress of, Macgregor 5661 prophecies 6345 and prophecies of Isaiah, Strachey 8456 queens and courts of 1478, 2636, 8477-8 railways, 1860 5120 recourse to arms, 1689 4099^ reformation 1175,364.5,6154 religion in 704026, 8382 religious life 2831, 8655 revenues and trade, Davenant 2260 revolution 2219, 8142, 79 revolution, 1640 1785, 3692, (i, etc., 3710,14 Roman towns 9529 and Rome, churches, 1673 7040^ and Russia, 1854 7262 Sam Slick in 3766 Saxons in, Kemble 4770 science in, before Norman Conquest Leechdoms lr63 and Scotland, Cromwell 2133 and Scotland, rivalry 6912 shires, cities, towns, rivers, 1690 2633 social condition, Kay 4732 society, etc., 1853 2463 sovereigns of, genealogy and armorial bearings 470-1 and Spain, negotiations between, 1486-1525 1300 spas and sea-bathing places 3.591-2 sports and pastimes 848S E 583 E 4oai)" 4989 8656 *£ngland — cant. state of, 1705 Strafford's time taxation the balance of Europe, 1706 theatre, &c. 8785 topography, family history 4271 towns, etc., LeiRh 5243-4 travels in Brereton 16S9 ; 2201 travels, statistics, scenery, agric. cus- toms 8217 and Turkey, 1854 7262 under Heniy VIII. and Edward VI. Sallads, 411 under Seven Administrations 3099 usurpations of princes 7047™ and "Wales 2792,4271,4824,6243-4, 9529-30 Wiclif's days 4331 window tracery 7979-80 woman in 5189 worthies of 3282, 7112, 7605 England's alarm to war against the beast, 1643 15114 bane, drunkenness, 1634 9713 black tribunal (trial of Charles I., etc.) 1551 champions and truth's patriots, 1649 7412 complaint, Quarles 7229 defence (invasion), Diggs 7048 dust and a«hes (siege of Newark), 1648 1591, 2665 glory in her King and Parliament Zand 5176 Hehcon 1853* .toy (Vennar) 1855".* lamentable slavery, Lilburne 5337 '3 little wars, 1844 6532 looking in and out, 1640 1595' Parnassus, 1600 1853' prosperity, 1698 4099" recourse to arms, 1689 4099) recovery, 1647, Sprigge 8326 Remembrancer, 1641, Vicars 9133, 6 (Spanish invasion, 1688) 8099 safety, 1693 7643 safet^ in the laws supremacy, 1659 5188' troubles anatomized (civil war) 1691 true interest, 1669 6413 wants, 1686 8937 ' ' weeping spectacle, Lilburne 5337 ' ' worthies, 1642-7 8099 ' ^ 9134 Bngleterre, croniques de Waurin 1663 reis de England 1663 *Enghsh accent and quantity 3189 advice to the freeholders, 1714 7042, 4099"°, 8937'* in America 3767 and American constitutions 8945 antiquities, Eccleston 2686 at home 2828-30 authors 336, 2793, 7689 bards, etc. 872, 1266-7, 3103 Border minstrelsy 7994 causes cel6bres 2079 Charlemagne romances Charlemagne 2674 in China, 1840 9715 civilisation, S"" cent. 2626 comic grammar 6242 comic writers, Hazlitt 3939-40 Commonwealth 3712 Anglo-Saxon 6679 composition 3577, 4635 customs, ab. 1500 England 1322 cyclopaedia > cant. Mpimal 2674 origin of 859, 2799, 9362 rise, progress, etc. 2748, 3883 the nrst spoken 2799 voice and speech 4385 and Latin dictionaries 84; X^vi»«1322, Promptorium 1322 ; Caiholicon 2674 law, history 734S life, pictures of, Chaucer 7698 stories, Howitt 4327 literature, critical dictionary, Allibone 129 early, anecdotes, etc. Anecdotes 1322 chapters on 4095 influence of Celt on 6282 lectures on. Reed 7340 outUnes of, Shaw 7989 sketch of, Morley 6284, 7 sketches 408, 1611 and characters 2483 Taine on SainteSeuve 7651 lyrics, Smyth 8186 manners, De Quincey 2365 Martial, epigrams, 1699 7011, 23 matron 8829 melodies, Swain 8516 metrical romances Romances 1322, 2746-7 misrule and Irish misdeeds 2373 modem, Bureaud-Riofrey 1136 monarchy 4099 «, 6196-7 mountebank 295^ nation 859, 9171 Parnassus, 1677 7060 past and present 8950 people, 1850 4187 Plantations, America 141 poesy, art of, 1589 Puftenham 211 beauties of. Goldsmith 3511 help to, Poole 7060 poetical literature, Sorymgeour 7810 poetry, ancient, Percy 6826-8 catalogue Career 1639 discourse of, 1586 Webbe 211 early, Percy Soc. 6829 hist, of, "Warton 9297 and language, rise and progress 2748 and poets, Campbell 1341, 9 E 584 E •English, poetry— COM!!. selection, Trench 89B1 poets, early, Ellis 2748 Henry S to Elizabeth 6891 later, Southey 8267 lectnres, Hazlitt 3941-2 lives, etc. 594, 1444, 4506, 8 ; 6891 16th and 17th centuries Stanley 1639 19th century 677 portraits, Sainte-Beuvo 7651 portraits of, Meadows 6009 premiers 2673 pronunciation 647, 1024, BUis 2674 prophecies 5345 prose writers, selections 8319 railway, history 3222 reading, course of, Fycroft 7221 I'ebellion, history, 1661 6414 of Shakespeare, Craik 2077-8 sketch-book, Scargill 7707 song, early Genesis 2674 songs 77, 9, 1986-7 sonnets, Dyce 2659 stage 6B4i 77-:-5, 2552, 3364, 3967, 7974 statesmen 8128 synonyms 9391 the, sketches of, JeiTold 4594 tongue 3947, 8562', » topography, 1789-90 8912 traits, Emerson 2769 and Tiu-kish dictionary 7693 universities, Huber 4330 verse, Gascoigne 211 who have -wi-itten in French 9381 writers before Chaucer 6284 writers, Chaucer to Dunbar 6285 writing Bllis 2674 Englishman, an, letters of, 1852 831 Englishman's right, 1764 7046 Englishmen and Scotchmen, estimates of 380 Englishwoman in America 713, 5962 in Egypt 7061 Englishwomen, eminent 2002 Engravers, anecdotes of 7394 catalogue of 9229 Engraving and etching, 1662, Evelyn 2884 in copper 2906 mezzotinto 2906 Engravings, catalogues 739, 7767, 8860 and pruits, hooks on 6614 Eniautos terastios, 1661 6163 Enigmas 2800 Ennui, fiction 2692 Enoch Ardan 8741 Enquiry into polite learning 3499, 3516 Ense, "Varnliagen von, Carlylo on 1380' '» Enthusiasm, rise and progress 7345 Enthusiasmus triumphatus. More 6258 Entomology (see also Insects) 2802, 4858 Enzina, Juan de, life 6220 Eothen 4837-9 Ephemeris 3290-1, 8638 Parliamcntaria 3279 Epic poem, burlesque 6048 poetry. Homer to Mill on 8937'* poetry, on, Pcmberton 6807 Epicertium, death of Q. Mary, 1695 7020 *Ejpictetus, manual 326 Epicurean, fiction 6214 l'^pidemic, cattle, 1845 4298 'Epigrams, dissertation on 2806 Epigrams, English TKciermVe 1858 ; Crowley 2674 : Thynne 2674, 2806, 7, 3283, 7011, IS, 7055-6; Bey wood, Kendall SiVi Homer 6705s« Latin 4113, 5808, 6649, 9000 and satires GiulphilH^^j Epigrainmatists, Anglo-Latin Poets 1663 Epilogues and prologues 7197 Epiniu glossary [Epinal 2671 Epiphany sermons 3462 Epirus 64S4, 7127 •Episcopacy asserted, Cooko 6176-' bill against, 1611 1697"' bishops 717-18 and Charles I. 1567, 1695» condemned by General Assembly 15988 defence of, Wren 965' *Episcopacy — cont. original of 5372^ petitions concerning, 1611 6734=', 7188=* prelatical, Milton 6154 speeches coucemins:, 1640-1 1695^=, 1597, '=-', '", 1669 Episcopade, satire 7090 Episcopal government, 1648 1595", 2808, 8937 ' ^ Epistles, Cleveland 1742, l of the Heroines, Ovid 6645 Plato 6946 Pope 7083-4 St. Paul, Locke 6396 ' " Themistooles, &,c., Bentley 9643 Epistolae Franciscans, Grossetesfe 1663 Ho-Eliauae 4305 Isocrates 4493 Melanchthon 6021 More 6021 Plinius 6998 L. Vivos 6021 "Whethamstede Albans l&i'd *Epitaplis 211, 549, Bingley 1322, 'Tnrbervile 1S53, 3458, 3624-5, 3853, 4018, 4«21, 6788, 7013, Epithets 4591, 7060 Epitres, Voltaire 9169 Epworth, Lino. 6337 » ♦ Equality and liberty 6488 Equations 352, 4151 Equestria opuscula, Xenophon 9687 Equinoctial storms, 1860 5870 Equivocation 4567 •Erasmus, life 1229, 4697, 4901 Ercilla, life 6220 " Erebus " and " Terror," search for 8510 Erewhon, fiction 1243 Ernest, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha 111 the pious, Duke of Saxc-Gotha 5159 Ernest Maltravers, fiction 5557-60 Errors, heresies, blasphemies, 1648 673*^' vulgar, 1S43 80938 •Erskine, Lord, life 7510 Erzeroom 2199 Esdras, fifth vision, "Whiston 9411 Esmond, fiction 8769, 60 Espinel, V., life 6220 Espousals, poem 6765 Essay on criticism. Pope 7013, 19 » ^ 76-7 man. Pope 7013, 18, 84-5 Essayists, British 960, 2359, 8294 •Essays, Alison 131 Bacon 211, 302, 66-70 Blount 76U Buckinghamshire, D. of 1093 -4 Cambridge 1318 Carlyle 1380, 5, li Chambers, B.. 1603 Coleridge, H. and b. T. 1789, 18iis Cornwall, Barry 1988 Eha 5008, etc. Emerson 2770-1 Everett 2910 Perriar 3008 Franklin 3230 Gildon (?) 62S;i Goldsmith 3 1-99, 500, 512, 616-17 Hazlitt 3963, 8 Jcrrold 4596 Johnson, E. 4 Charles I. 1561 Cosby 1856'! Dodd and Harris 2530 DuMin 8562 " ' E. of Kilmarnock 461012 Edinburgh 1699 ■• % 4099 K 7097 Hill and Green (Godfrey) 2277 * Leaden-hall street 9044 Monmouth, Duke of 7437 Eeglcides 7347, 68 Russell 2277=^ 7095= Strafford 8465, etc. Turner, 1663 9044 Tyburn 4099=, 8099 » \ 8937 ^ = Vane 9101 E. Watt 4099k "Worcester 8099" ' {See also Trials.) Executors' accounts, 1303, 10 Executors 1322 Exemplary novels, Cervantes 1487 Exercises, pohtical, etc., Thompson 8821 Exeter, Bp. of Executors 1322 book 4822 college, Oxford 6681, 7025 {Betty) dean of 7848 Exchange 4099'' mayor of ShilUngford 1322 •Exhibition, 1851 (Great) 363, 2656, 2930, 4378, 4419, 4S63, 5122, 5987, 7548, 8030, 9338 1862, fine art 6681 Ireland, 1852 5734 Leeds 6227 Manchester art treasures 6767-8 miniatures 7762 Paris 8342, 9676 portraits 7763-5 Scott Centenary 7807 Exhibitor, illustrated, 1851 2926 Exil, litterature de 1' 465 Exile, Bolingbroke on 809 meditations in, O'Brien 6568 Exiles of Siberia, fiction 7647 Exmoor, story of 6030 Exmouth, Viscount, life 5376, 6622 Exodus, book of, Kalisch 4719-20 and Numbers, geographical commentary 4961 Exodus, the, Egypt 6621 Expediency, Fox 3208 Expenses, household, 1831 2526 John of Brabant and othex's, 1292 Camden Misc. \ 1322 Judges of Assize, 1596 Camden Misc.*, 1322 Experience and a courtier Lindsay 2674 Experiments, Earaday's 2973 Exploring expedition (U. S.) 9486-7 Explosions, boiler 2048 Exportation, wools, scouring earths, &c. 4472M, 7188'" Exports and imports, King's prerogative, 1611 6188" Extinct animals 2161 Extraordinary characters 4185 men 7688 Extreme ill designs, 1643 6448 Eye, the, and painting 1181 -salve for the city of London, 1648 Sn37 » ^ Eyrbiggia-Saga 7800 •Hyi'e case, charge 1767 An * denotes that the word to which, it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should he made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type : " v '* stands for volume. Fable for critics, Lowell 5506 Fables, jBsop, etc. 70-1, 8937 " " ; Phaedrus 9096 Bentley on ^sop 630, 877, 9643 Boccahni, etc. 8937 ' <■ Dryden 2584, 6706i» Dutch 9589 for the Holy Alliance 6244 French 3680 Gay 3350-1 German 5272 in song, Lytton 6599-600 La Fontaine 497S, 6, 7 Morley , 6286 Phaedrus 8756, 9096 Pilpay 6923 select, cuts by Bewicks 660 Spanish 97 18 Fabliaux or tales, French 5232 Fabrics of the world, 1671 1729 Face of the times, Vane 7847, 9101 Faces 9617 " Paction detected," 1744 8937 '' 9 Faction display'd, poems, 1704, 9 7011-12 Factories, days at 2516 pari, paper, 1849 6737 Factorum dictorumque memorabiliimi libri Maximus 9096 Factory boy (Michael Armstrong), fiction 8990 girls, American - 5507 Facts and fa«es 9617 fantasies 8317 Faery Queen, the 4861 , 8306-11 Fagel, Holland, letter, 1688 7040*' Faggot of French sticks 3985 Fair, Bartholomew 6293, 7691 », 8937 ' ' Fair Island, poem 6793 sex, privileges of 7846" •Fairbairn, E«v. D'., lecture on Christ 6211 Sir "W., Ai-ago 206 Fairfax, E., Tasso 8641 •Fairfax, Sir T.. aft. Ld. Fairfax, life 1787-8 6813 •Fairfax, Sir T., aft. Ld. Fairfax, and his armv 267, 1582. 1696, 1697"-^, 1599 -^ 1, ^s ; Guiiot 1392; ii»Mrjje6386, 7'^8-9; 6734=" 7188"»-"3, 7248, 8326, 8937 ' '" •Fairholt, F. W., English shrines 3796 Fairies, Ennemoser 2S0I and Shakespeare 8871 ♦Fairy legends and traditions, Ireland 2120 library, Cruikshank 2164-5 mythology 47S2 poems. Bliss 753 tales 321-3, 1283, 1819, 8794, 7; 3817, 4845, 9 ; 6991, 6213, 6286 Faithful and forsaken, dram, noera 8600 for ever, poem ' 6766 shepherd, Guarini 3685-6 Falconbridge, bastard, 1626 4066 Falconer, Thos., Strabo 21I6 W., poems 620, 963™, 6705^ Falconry, valley of the Indus 1214 Palkenburg, fiction 751 Falkirk, chap-books, songs 1S28-6, 3313 •Falkland, Tisoount, poems Misc. ^ 3284 speeches 1696"-i«, 1697"", 1669 Lettice, Viscountess, life, etc. 2621 F 587 F Falkland, Action 5577 'Fall of Jerusalem, poem 6130 of Man, Altdorfer 4133 Nineveh, poem 308 Fallacies, book of, Bentham 627 FalstalT, letters, "White 9118 lite, Cruikshank 2166 Fame's Memorial, poem 3118 Familiar words (quotations) 3259 Families, moral and religions extracts for 6906 •Family history, England and Wales 4271 Famine, Ireland 4t7l, 6474 Famuliaris rei cura Bemardus 2674 Fan, the. Gay 7010 Fanaticism, etc.. Church of Eng'aiid 3208 Faachette, fiction 7666 Fanohuroh, cripple 4062 •Fane, Julian H. C, life 5601-2 Tannhauser 8720 Fanny Hervey, Action 4430 •Fanshawe, i.ady, life 2002 Sir B,., correspondence 2971 life 5376 Pastor fldo 3685-6 •Faraday, D'. Gladstone on 342S mental education 521S Farewell, 1680, poem 7012 Farington, J., life of Reynolds 7378 Farington or Ffarington papers Farington 1639 Farm accounts Shuttleworth 1639 clay 4268-9 •Farmer, E., copy and MS. notes 863 letter to 5758 Farmer, amateur, diary 564 •Farmer's boy, Bloomfleld 761 Farmers, self instruction 5492 Farms, time of entry on, Beever 564 •Farquhar, life, works 2626, 3299, 9881 Farren, Miss, life 3299 W., ded°. to 6974" Farrer, Rev. J., hfe 6435' Farthing tokens 7188', '* half-penny, and penny songs 8221 Fashion, annals, chronicles of 2005, 8438 Fashionable life, tales of 2692 world 4086 Fast Days 1672", 7188"-", >», 78, 7891H and thanksgiving days, &c., sermons 7839-40 Fasts, laws, origin 6104 Fat in the human body _, ^_ 1611 Fatal boots, fiction 8769 ' ", 8760 ". ' vespers, 1623 8099 '. ' Father Peter's policy, verses 7021 " Father's Legacy," Slingsby 8092 Fathers of the Church, thoughts 795 the, hves, Butler 1228 the church of the 6461 Fato, de, Cicero 1^91 " Faults on both sides," 1710-11 4099", 4612 Fauna. Gulf Stream 3887 Tfjiust 347o, 84-9, 4938 Faversham, book 9508 Favourites, female fin in England, history of 7046 late and present reign, Duncon 2638 Fawkes, Anaoreon, etc. 963", 6705«s Theocritus 953" Feast for worms, Quarles 7228 Feasts and fasts, laws, origm olf Feathered favourites. Wolf Featley, D'., life, etc. Feats on the Fiord, tale Feeble-minded, manual Feejees, 1863 Fees, Star-Ohamber P6es, Contes des Felix Holt, fiction •Fell, life of Hammond, etc. Felons in prison, 1725 •Felton, C. C, classical studies Felton's martyrdom, 1570 •Female college, Maurice conduct, on Jesuit Jesuit abroad poets, imerica Quixote, fiction reign, the, 1709, ode 6404 9598 435, 7038 5879, 88 2818 2818 1590, 8367 1283 2721 1178, 7095« 8937 '. * Sears 7816-17 1856 5214 9603 5527 7812 3668 952", 5262 7018 •Female— COM*. sovereigns, Jameson 4549 worthies, lives 707 F(5minaeana 5802 Femmes, succession aux gouvernemens 4574 •Pfinelon, Abp., Advent meditations 8937 '. ' lifo 4999, 7997 Fens, the, philosophy in ,3617 •Fenton, B.. poems 953', 6705«, 7019= Laviiiia, life 3366 Fenwick, Ann, recollections 6435^ Edward, tablet 6435" Sir J. 6435 '", 70472 John 6435', ", " Periwyke of Northumberland 6435'° Ferdinand, Archduke, and Bohemia 1699' I., Austria 7285 II., emperor 903 of Brunswick, Prince 6382 and Isabella, Spain 7164 •Ferguson, poet, last interview with 64.35'** Sir S., architecture 5209 •Feme, Bp. of Chester 1599= Ferns 4«0, 6881, 6260, 8276 Ferozeshah, battle 3846 •Ferrar, N., life 3007 Ferreira, life 6220 •Ferrier, Professor 9119 Ferris, E., adventure of 1856 ' 2 Ferumbras Charlemagne 2674 Festivals, games, &c. 8136 Festus, Sextus P. Flaccus 9096 Festus, poem 383-4,4259, 6968 Feudal system 5483 Ffons, the, Dahomey 8085 Fiction, art in, Lytton 5561 history of 2629 romantic, origin of 9297 satirical, on 8656 •Field, N., Fatal Dowry 5929 life 2626 Field, garden, woodland 7140 sports 736, 5391 Field of blood, 1631 7047'° •Fielding, Henry 962, 1606, 3038, 5190, 8937 ♦ », 8759'", 87641-5 Fields, J. T., Dickens 2436 Fields and cattle 664 Fiends, ghosts, sprites 7260 Fiennos, N., speeches 1696 ^, 1597'^ 8733ii' Fieschi, Conte de' 6901 Fife, eminent men 1059 Fifine at the Fair, poem 1047 Fifteen loyal queries, Bramstone 7368 Fifteenth century book, Ovid 6642 Fifth being, the Quintessence 2674 monarchy 8937 ' '= parts, 1664 1599 ' 1 Fig for fortune Copley 8313 Fight of the Fiddlers, fiction 4528 Figs introduced by A Becket 9290 Figure, standard, Haydon 3920 Figures, origin 4730 Filicaja, hfe 6220 •Filmer, Sir E., monarchy 6197 Finance, statistical, 1845 7037 Financial history of England 2542 •Finch, John, seven seals broke open 670 Lord Keeper, etc. 1595", '«, 1597 ™, ', 4*70, 5494 •Fine Arts, essays on, Burnet 1182 Gt. Britain and Ireland, 1811 8696 C. Knight 6915 literature of, Eastlake 2675-6 parly, paper, 1815 6737 {See also Arts.) Finibus, de (trans.), Cicero 1695 Finibus levatis, de. Coke 1781 Finland, 1856 1111 Finns, population of Europe by 869 Finsbury, South Place chapel 3206, 8, 11 Fire, stanzas on 8015 Fire-arms, hand 4052 Fire insurance 2277 **-' Fire of London 2.'i83 Fire-places 285, 1171 Fireworks, etc., the Hague, 1691 IIOO I. 588 F First editions, imold, M. 277 Bailey, "Pestus" 6968 »i Beaumont & Pletcher 638 Browning 1050, etc. Byron 1265,8 Carlyle 1383, etc. Gibber 1682 Clarendon 1712 Coleridge 1806, 18 Collins 1870 Cowley 2045 De Foe 2316 Dickens 2408, etc. Donne 2633 Dramas 6968 Di-yden 2583-4 Elyot 2767 Fielding 3035 Fletcher 3082, 6, 6 Ford 3120-1 Fox, G. 3203 Gay: 3353 Goldsmith 3514, 18, 29-31, 7014 Green, M. 3626 Guardian 3684 Hales 3763 Home 4260 Jonson 4696 Keats 474B-6 Massinger 5929 Milton 6143, 62 Poems, various 7010-12, 21 Pope 7065, 83 8937 '"(f) Eogers 7489 Selden 7834 Shakespeare 7884 Sheridan, " Eivals " G971V18 Southey 8267 Spenser 8310-11 Steele " Procession " 7020 Swift 8551, etc. Tennyson 8734, etc. Thackeray 8761, etc. Waller 9219 Webster 9333-4 Wordsworth and Coleridge 9683 First-fruits, poems 7244 Fish, Simon 22771= ; Fish 2674 Fish, freshwater, river 780-1, 2804 and sea-monsters 8562 ' i tattle 378 •Fisher, Bp. John, life, works 396, 1787-8, 2674 Jesuit (Piercey and Sweet) 6173, 7038 Payne, life 594 " Fisher catched in his own net," 1623 7038 Fisheries 885, 7643 Fisherman and Zoologist, Buckland 1095 Fisher's Garland, 1821-45 6435" Fishes 659, 2207, 9696 Fishing, bottom 2801 " Clericus " 14S9 company for Ireland 885 enc.yclopaedia 736 excursions, etc., Davy 2291 ny 1439, 2290, 2804 handbook 2804 miseries of 6812 salmonia 2290 Scotland 1895 (See also Angler.) Fishwick, Lt.-Col. H. Fishwiek 1039 Fisk, commercial spirit of the day 5J12 Fitz of Fitz-Ford, fiction 907 Fitz-Boodle papers 8739 " ^, 8760 " ■• ♦Fitzgerald, Bp., on history 5210 Fitzgerald, Percy 856, 6011, 6209, 7603, 8415 Fitzgibbon, E. Upliemera 2801. Fitz-Han-is, E., arraignment, 1681 7018 Fitzherbert, M"., life 5100 Fitz-Maurice, case 8937 " ' Fitzosborne, Sir Thos., letters ■tfrfmoth G028 I'itz-Eoy, Robert Kinff .1826 Flagellum (Cromwell) 2128 Flandern, reimchronik von 4727 Fl anders 1309, Churchy a rd 1 853, 7378, 8057 •Flatman, T., life, etc. 689e,:9538 ode 7018 Flaxman, Homer 4167, 72, 77.. 80 memoirs 8150 Fleet, England and Holland, 1652 6734*5 manning of, 1693 7643 the, interregnum 6811 under Eupert, 1673-4 7669 Fleet, prison 6337 ' ^ Fleetwood, G., letter Camden Misc. i, 1322 Lord 268 Fleetwood, fiction 3468 Flegeljahre, trans. 7409 •Fleming, Eev. C, oration at interment 8921 Flemish artists, ill". 1918 language 859 life, tales 1918 school, painting 4962 * Fletcher, A. (Saltoun), life, etc. 1079 Fletcher, G. Kicssia 8756 Fletcher, G., poems 963*; FletcJier, Misc. ^S28i; (life) 9538 Fletcher, John, life 2626 Fletcher, Joseph, poems Fletcher, P., poems" Fleury, Card, de, life Flies and fly-making Flirt, the, fiction Flitch of Bacon, fiction Flodden Chetham Misc. •Flood, H. Flood of Thessaly, poem Floods, great Florelio, pastoral •Florence, art in, Cellini climate Court of, 1760-86 history in 1817 mornings in, Ruskin Florence Macarthy, fiction Florian and Crescenz, fiction Florida Florida, the, Apuleius Florida Blanca, Count of, life Florist's manual Floriz and Blauncheflur •Floras Anglicus •Flower garden paintins Flower, fruit and thorn pieces Flowers Flowers of history Floyres and Blancheflur Flunkey and flunkeyage Fluxions, principles of Fl3ring Island, &c., Swiftiana Foedera, Eymer Foliage, handbook Folk-lore FoUie's anatomy, 1619 Folly of love, poem praise of •Fonblanque, A., Home on Fens laehrymarum, Quarles Fontainebleau, Buonaparte at Food 2517, 3S96, 6831, 7414, 8277, 9lii Fool of quality, fiction 972 Fools, Island of, 1713 7091 and jesters Fools 7974 order of Courtesy 2674 'Foote, S., life, etc." 1670, 1936, 3103, 41, 60 ; 3299, 4379,8879 •Footmen forbidden to wear swords, 1660 7188151! Foot])rints on the road Fop dictionary •Forbes, Duncan, life Edward, Loch Staffin J. D., Enc. Brit. Foreelliui •Ford, J., life works Ford, Richard, Spain Fordun, John of •Foreign affairs, Gt. Britain, 1808 correspondence, 1473-1647 courts, anecdotes, 1827 idioms lands, scenes and sports lands, scenes and thoughts 3284 963*, 3284 5378 1439 8110 90 ', 1639, 6436* 7798 436, 8562 "^ ' 1989 3316, 64363 70192 1479-80 5668, 6386, 9000 8391-2 7572 6268 315 8756 201 6378 3569 Kitig Horn 2674 7659 2214, 9610 3306, 8450, 3559, 4016, 534S 2595 7405 460, 2550, 71J0-1 5945 King Horn 2674 1168 4099c 8666, 71 3861, 7295 458 4762, 8826 7023 2815 4269 7229 2638 4797 2899-900 2164 3112 2777 2940, 8170-2 2626 5032, 7974, 8788', 10 Murray 6364 7781 5207 8371 179 2066 6383 875 F 589 F T'oreign life, stories 4327 oflBcc, revelations 9476 Protestants and aliens in England Foreigners 1323 reminiscences. Lord Holland 4144 state papers 1298, 1300, 8371 tour, Brown, Jones, and Robinson 2555 travel, Howell 211 wars, dangerous. Cotton 9289 \vriters, works published in England 704 Forest life (U.S.) 4«60 of Ardcn, fiction 3645 sanctuaiy, &c., poems 4007 tales 5880 trees 2907 ♦Forester, fiction 2692 Foresters, self-instruotion for 5492 'Forests, central India ; Peru 3171, 9012 Forgery, Dodd 3066 Forgiving husband, poem 7012 Form, human 5203 Forman, D'., account of 6344 •■Forrest, Sir "W., pleasaunt poesye Starkey 2674 Forrester, A. B. ("Alfred Crowciuill") ill"". 2441, 3315, 6087 FoiTester, C. R. (i.e., " Hal. Willis ") 6009 Pors Clavigera, Ruskin 7665 Porshall, Rev. J., remonstrance 7219 •Forster, G., life 7636 *Forster, John, tlie donor : Agassi z 73 Amsworth 93, 5 Bennett 617, 8342 Browning 1042, etc. Carl.yle 1380, etc. Clarke 1728 ColUns, 1861 ; 1878 etc. Cornwall, Barry 1983 etc., 7888 Cruikshank 2159 Cunningham, A. and V. 2179, 2185 Dickens 24O0 etc. Dyce 2655, 7768 Emerson 2768, etc. Evelyn 2890 Examiner 2914 Felton 2995 Fitzgerald 3075 Fletcher 3083 Foreign Quarterly 3127 Fox 3207 Guizot 3703 Hall 4689 Harness 3866 Houghton 4283 Hunt 4386 etc. Jorrold 4600 Jewsbury 4625 Kean 7893 Knowles 4909 etc. I,amb B020, 2 Landor 5052 etc. Leech 6226 Lemon 39 Longfellow 5467 etc. Lytton 5657 etc. ; 5608 Macaulay 5623 Maclise 6249 Macready 6974 '•* MS. notes, memorandums, etc. 139, 534, 852, Twysdeu, Verney 1322, 1388, 1607, 1675, 19.36, 2402, 2506. 2913, 2949, 3062, 3136, 3467, 4229, 4693, 6 ; 4904, 5072, 86 i 6580, 6139, 6649, mCA\ '■>, ">, 1' ; 6992, 7437, 7683, 7806, 7921, 7935, 8270, 8206, 8306, 8460, 2, 7 ; 8499, 8526, 9412, 9666 Moises 4329 Morley 6293 etc. Motley C312 Norton 6537-8 Nugent „»„„^y* Peel 6790 etc. Procter 5182, 7189 etc., 7888 Itogers, S. „,»J''f^ Russell 7?78 etc. Sava«6 ^^^^'^^^ Shakespeare 7907 Spedding Thorns 8296 * Forster, John, the donor— cont. Thorp 8861 Winthrop 9677 etc. Forster, M». John, books presented by 2462, 3167 Forster, W. E., Macaulay and Penn 1734 *Fortescue papers Fortesoue 1322 Fortification 3002, 4111, 9719 Fortunes of Seattergood family, fiction 8106 "Forty-Five," the 8347 •Foscolo, Ugo, life 6220 'Foster, Jas., D.D., life, etc. 784o"i James, Earl of Kilmarnock 4510, 7041 John, GilflUanon 3413 character, etc. of, R. Hall 3788 Vaughan on 9108 M., American literature 143 Fothergill, D'., lite 1787-8, 5707 •Pouch6, Martel on 5865 FouHs, printed by 7401, 7518, 8010, 8234, 9166 Founders' kin 1161 Foimtain of tears, Quarles 7229 •Fouqu6, Carlyleon 1380 "^ poems 3381, 6505 Four elements 68292= Four Georges 8759 ' " Four Knaves 6829' I'our slaves of Cythei-a 760 Fourier, hfe 208 Fourth Estate, history 4383 Fowke, F. R. Bayeux 512 Fowler, Charles Berlyn 645 'Fox, Bp., statutes and life 9264 Chiles, son of Sir Stephen 3205 Charles James, life, letters 7682-3, 9008 reign of James II. 1427 and Canning 8354 and Pitt 5561, 5720 speeches 3202 G., the y'., and Chas. 2. 7368 Henry, ode to 7024 ♦Foxe, John, narratives Beformation 1322 Foxglove Bells, sonnets 9377 Frk TDolcino, memoir 5808 Fra Rupert, Landor 60B7 Fractions, prose and verse, Carlyle 1380 ' ' Fractures, limbs 4445 Fragmenta aurea. Suckling 8494 regalia, Naunton 211, 6399 Fragments, prose and verse, E. Smith 8123 Framley Parsonage, fiction 8971 'France, agriculture, commerce, 1802 8854 and rural economy, 1848 1892 allied armies. Fain 2941 ambassador of Charles V. at Court of 1603 anecdotes from, 1867 6370 arts, sciences, 1802 8854 before the revolution, reign of Louis XV. 1112 British army, 1808-14 6791 calamity of Churchyard 1853 campaign in, 1792, Goethe 3481 captivity, imprisonment 6123,8919 Catholicism, protestantism, philosophy 3718 celebrated men 9094 chancellors and keepers of the seals 9094 chronicles, Fabyan 2939 chronicles, Froissart 3262-4 churches, national synod, 1631 1599 ' ' civil wars, on 8937 '' ^ civil wars and monarchy, 16 and 17 cent. 7280 civilization in, Guizot 3694 commercial treaty with 1787 8562 ' ' companion of the tour of 7666 Constituent Assembly, 1789 4896 consulate and empire, Thier 8803 coup dY'tat 831, 8090 court of 179, 1328-9, 1446, 2237, 2735, 2887, 6696, 8 cruelties against protestants, Laud B176 daguerreotyped, 1842 6820 democracy, Guizot 8706 descent on, 1692 4099i deserted post-roads 1861 designs of, 1689 4099° 590 F ♦France— COM*. eighteenth century, illustrated 4967 empire, 1852 831 and England, international copyright 1164 and England, Lamartine 4993 English ships and forces against, 1678 7018 feudal castles 1351 foreign authors in, 1801 939 four years in, 1826 650 Francis I. 3678, 6096 gouvernement du deux Decembre 7761 Guizot's letter to teachers 8501 handbook, 1843 0364 and hereditary monarchy, Bigelow 695 Henry IV. 4533, 7471 histoire a I'audience, 1840-8 6921 histoire des id^es litt6raires 6094 history of, Bonnechose 837 Capcflgue, 1223-1483 1356 Crowe 2145-7 Guizot 3695 Michelet 6080, 2 Stephen (lectures) 8397-8 Voltaire, to Louis XIII. 9168 White 9423 hunting, 4c. 8854 imperial [Bonaparte] family and officers of state 834 invasion from, 1696 4099s invasions of, 1814-15 531 and Ireland 4472, 6829» (sonsrs) ; 8905 journal in, 1845, 8 130 journey, 1789 6936 ■journey, 1826 3943 ifing (Louis Philippe), court and go- vernment 1446 adies of, lives, etc. 8795 literati, 1786 1625 Louis XIII. 5494 Louis XIV. 6698 Marie de Mediois 60 1 5, 6697 men, eminent, lives 7997 Merovingian era, Kinigs 1 785, 8800 monarchy 8907 murder of Henry III. and IV., Laud 5176 Napoleon I.'s reign 821 observations in, 1844 2645 old court lite 2735 parhament, 1611 709618 population and trade, 1861-2 6858 protestants and prot. reformation 2985, 6853, 7097 queen, &c. of, libel against, 1787 8957' " queens of 1221 religious houses 1252 republican, 1790-1801 0127 revenues, 1692 7047" and its revolutions 5457 Kicbelieu, tale 4638 river scenery, Turner 9045 royal family. Be Genlis 3.367 school of painting 4613 seduceraents of 1865' * the Seine 748 social, hterary, political, 1834 2227 social and political, 1854 4980 society, before 1789 8893 1862 6609 etc., 1853 2463 south of, Dumas 2612 poetical sketches 381 and Spain, ancient languages 4784 sport 7631,8854 state of, 1662 2903 Switzerland, etc., Shelley 8003 tales of a grandfather 7800 theatre, 4c., 1760 8786 tiers 05 •Freind, R. and J., Boyle on " Phalaris " 877 Sir John, execution, 1696 4099'> •French in Algiers 5032,7313 ambassador and Sir T. Rowe 1.595= anas 153-7 (army) terms, use of 4099" anthology 3573 authoresses 939 benedictines 8?95-6 biogi-aphy (biog. universelle) 706 charity, the, 1655 3353 classical drama 753-4 comedians 6634 conquest [by Louis XIV.] not desirable 4100 constitution, 1791 1920-1 customs and manners, 1802 8854 dictionary 6984, 8639 and Dutch dictionary ^9671 emperorship and prophecy 2939 empire, 1843 8243 and English dictionary 3079, 8318 591 •French — cont. exhibitiftu, pictures, Ruskin 7576 exposition, report, 1848 967G fabliaux or tales 523^ fleet in English channel, 1690 4099 s, i gardener, Evelyn 2891 government and taxation, 1810 9247 history and literature, Villemain 9149 invasion, 1692 4099*, «,' to restore James II. 4511 invasions, history 4099^ king (Louis XIII.) , 1623 4099' (Louis XIV.) 4099', 4100, 4511-12, 7643,8937'" (?) language, Barcley on Ullia 2674 English who have written in 9381 lessons 7451 Eobertsonian method 6217 story translated out of 758 letters 5230 literature 464, .1193, 915S manners, De Quincey 2365 memoirs, Brant6me 89s monasteries 2601 pastor, (Crimean) war 3266 people and affairs, 1852-3 4218-19 poetry and poets 1443 Protestant refugees, hist. 9340 proverbs, Englished 5238 queen of the, 1843 12:21 reformed church, letter to 2038^ republic, mission to 5756 revolution, 1789, Brougham on 987 Carlyle 1380, 88-90 causes of 8893 Coleman on 1785 Oroker 2118 defence of. Mackintosh 5690-1 Elliott Ooui-nal) 2744 English friends. Stanhope 835 i heroic women 4995 Jobson 4627 Lamartine 4995-6, 4998 MacFarlane 5652 Mallet du Pan 5755 Michelet 6083 Mignet (1789-1814) 6101 pari?, histf., Carlyle 1:580 ' '» precursors of, Merivale 6059 Smyth (lectures) 8187 De Sor 8243 Stanhope 8348 tales 5854 Thiers 8801-2 1848, Caussidiere 1470 Lamartine 4997, 500S St. John 7639 next, Thackeray 8759 " i' revolutions, 1787-1848 589, 6467, 7339 school, painting 3961 socialism 1785 society, 18"" century 5423 songs 6654 stage, Potier 7121 stage and people 3087-8 sticks, faggot of 3965 the, against, 1701 8937 » " theatre ^ 2391 verse, chronicle in Langtoft 1663 in Westphalia 6382 woll-hunting 8854 women, celebrated 5802 Prere, J H. 195-6, 6097, 9406-7 Fresco 3921, 6063, 7567, 8695 Fresnel, life 206 Friar Bacon's prophecy 6829'* Pribbleriad, Garrick 3320 Friend, the, Coleridge 1806-7-8 Friendly rivals, fiction 2882 societies, etc. 2690,6419 Friends in council 4000-2 Friends, society of 1735, 36S4, 4471, 7226, 7845 Friends, the (letters), 1773 Friendship (trans.), Cicero essays, 1730 sublimed, fiction 6281 1698 Frieries, Bugdale 601 Friesic language 859 Friezeland, west, assembly 4100 Frisian lexicon 3757 poet 4564 Frisket fancies 7476 Frithjof Saga, Tegner 8709 •FrObel, infant gardens 3261 Frobisher, Sir JI., voyages 3756 Frogs and mice, battle. Homer 4170, 6705'° of Egypt, or the caterpillars of the Com- monwealth, 1641 1590, 8937 ' '^ •tTroissart, illustrations 4375 Frondes Agrestes ("Modern Painters") 7666 Frost, great 6829« •Fronde, B. H., Lyra 5551 Froust, spirit of 6623 Fruit trees, Evelyn 2891 Fruits of experience, Brasbridge 899 Fraticetum 5490 •Fry, Elizabeth, life 211 i, 4729, 6218 Fudge family in Paris 624"* Fudges in England 6244 Fuel, wood, price. 1638 7188=^ •Fugitive pieces, Walpole 9232 verses, Baillie 391 Fuloo filius Warini Balph 1663 Full and easy satisfaction, Baxter 508 •Fuller, Hiram ("'White Republican ") 6524 Fuller, Margaret S. 2388, 6626-9 Fuller, T., life, &o. 7484, 7605 W. 7047^, 7160-1 Fuller's earth, &c., exportation, 1660 ns»'^' Fulwell, — , life 594 Fumifugium 2892 Functionaries, public, lists 2515 Funded bills 8220 Funeral, Earl of Essex 2835-6, 76 Hume 4368-9 Welhngton 5705, 9363 certificates, Lancashire Funeral 1639 customs 5726 discourses, Bossuet 848 elegies, poems, verses 1, 1550,4, SI ; 3320, 3775, 7018, 20 ; 8515, 88 ; 9356 monuments, M^eever 9339 uration for Alciati 4133 Caleb Fleming 8921 James II. 4099'' Marlborough 4010 orderine of Courtesy 2674 sermons 4099', 4574, 70472', 7845,!*-'=, 9162, 9363, 9438 (see also "Sermons") Funei'als, note on Machyn 1322 Fur trade, British N. American 2632 Furnas, the, baths 1107 Furniture, decoration 4958 •Puseli 487, 3921, 4921, 7634, 7891, 8 150 Futawa Alumgeeree 393 An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catolgue in small type : " v " stands for volume. G. •Gadbury, J., epistle dedJ. Gael in Gwynedd Gaelic bards, modern Gagg, a, for the new gospel Gainsborough, T., life Gainsborough book Galaunt, a, treatise of Galen, scholia 2882 1 Galfridus, lexion 3340 4687 7480 6321,4 3275 4646 295 '*, 411 4096 Promptorium 1322 592 G Galioia 1413, 4931 Galileo, life 6381, 6230 Gallants at an ordinary, 1604 6829^ *Gallenga, Antonio Mariotti 5807 Galleries of art, London, etc. 4546-7 picture, England 8933-4 Gallery, National, catalogues, 1869, 71 6395-6 of nature, 1846 6137 Galley slave, Gabriel Lambert 2610 Gallic wars, Caesar 1284-6 *Galloway song and peasantry 2125 Gallus, C. 0., life ♦648 Gallus, E/Oman scenes 646 Galvanism 712, 5325 Galvano, Ant., discoveries Galvano 3756 Gama, Vasco da Correa 3756 Gamaohe, father Cyprien de 9523 Gambia, 1818 6194 Game birds and wild fowl 4923 Game, British Islands 2100 Scotland 1895 Game-law tales 5880 Games, etc. 1662, 8136 Gamp, M"., Dickens 2466 Ganges, the 748 Gangraena, Edwards 2713-14, 6337' ' Gaol chaplain, Neale l^not Gleig) 3306 •Garden and gardening 2891, 3456, 3S69, 4fi39 6348, 5491, 6671, 7140, 8717, 9393 Garden, my, tour round 4726 of Adonis 6166 of Cyrus 1023 of'Vil'isdom 8651 the, Cowley 9368 Gardener, French, Evelyn 2891 old 3640 Gardener's almanac 136, 2896-6 Gardeners, etc., self instruction for 6492 Gardens, of, Eapin 7294 of Epicurus, Temple 8717 Garderobe, K. Edward 8207 Garetli and Lynette 8742 Gargantua and Pantagruel 7251-4 •Garlands - 6436", 6829^ '=, ", », ™, 7544, 7976, 8221 Garonne to Ehone 7313 •Garrick, advice to 1687 T. Gibber to 1688, 90 Every Man in his humour 4694 gift ti-om *9614 Goodman's Fields 4379 Kenriok 4099° letters, catalogue 6173 Lethe, remarks on 1690 hfe, etc. 774, 2278-9, 30'88, 3299, 4379, 6362 as manager, etc. 1690 ode on death of Pelham 7018 pieces by 9585 plays 6027 Pretty gentleman, addressed to 8937 " ^ print of 139 Garrisons of England, governors, 1673 7018 "Garth, Sir S., Ovid, trans. 6647, 67056= poems 953', 6159-60, 670oi', 7010-11, 7029 Gascoigne, G., various works 211 E., papers 7047' Gascoyne, M"., "AH the Year Eound " 124 •Gask'ell, M'=., " AH the Year Bound '' 124 Gassendus, philosophers 6902 Gastrell, Bishop, dioc. of Chester Oastrell 1639 Gastronomy .3926 Gatehouse prisoners, 1641 1599 ' =, 6177 •Gateshead 3315, 6435", 6594, 9664 Gathered together, poems 9667 •Gauden, Bishop 1648, 83-4 ; 1669, 6372 Gaul and Gaula 6494, 6678, 6865 Gaunt, John of, life 3470 •Gavarni, notice of 7225 Gavelkind, etc. 7679 Gawayne, Sir Gawayne 2674 •Gay, 3. 963», 3357, 4226 (MS. notes) j 6383, 67061", ", 7010', », ^, 7019 ' ^ 8629", 8764-5 Gay science (criticism) 2223 Gayton (We) 694, 6867, 9036 Gazetteer, classical 3969 England and Wales 2792, 7976 India 8863 Scotland 3172 world 4658 5052, 58-61 64351 6606, 7225 1447, 6919 Gebir, poem, Landor Ged, W., life Geibel, poems, and notice of Gellert, fables and parables Gems Genders, English 840 Genealogioum, Calendarium. Calendars 1302 Genealogy 470-1, 1150-2, 8, 9, 61 ; 6454, 6436", 6541, 7767, 8092, 8912 General Assemblies, Church of Scotland, 1638- 1706 4099'" Assembly, Scotland, 1638-60 1.5982* etc., 1599 ' =, 20332, 718829 Council, army, 1617 267 orders, Wellington 9350 Generous usurer 2961^ Generydes, romance Generydes 2874 Genesis, book of 790, 4613-14 and Exodus, story of Genesis 2674 Geneva, at-bitration and award 1709 Genevieve, Lamartine 4994 Genevoises, nouvelles 8909 Genii, tales of 7416 •Genius, Gerard on 3378 men of 2489, C521, 7221 men of, and the nublic, Horne 4257 of Italy ■ 9039 of Judaism 2488 worship of 9074 •Gent, the, A. Smith Sill Gentileschi, painter 7614 •Gentleman accomptant 26 Gentleman, fine, character, 1721 3214 and gentlewoman, Brathwait 902 husbandman, 14.50 Roy 211 Gentlemen-at-arms, corps 2189 •Gentlewoman, English 8828 Gentry, landed 1150. 1, 8 seventeenth century 355 Geoffrey Crayon, pseud. 4188-9 de Vinsauf, Crusades 2160 of Monmouth 1664 Geographical description, world, Clarke 1729 names, vocabulary 9336 Geography, America and "W. Indies 5458 ancient 1477, 3959, 6494 and modern 9068 biblical 7462 Canada 8173 chief countries and cities, 1696 6890 classical, W. Smith 8165, etc. cyclopedia 4885 dictionary 1653, 5642 England, etc., 1698 0S90 Greek and Eoman 8169 Herodotus 4029-30,9395-6 mathematical 5325 physical 3736, 5325, 6137, 8218, 9591-2 Holy Land 4869 N. America 7393 Strabo 8455 Geology, America 2981, 4101, 6642 Andes 4223 Ansted is8, 190 antiquity of man, Lyell 5641 Arctic 4454 Asia Minor, Pontus, Armenia 3826 Anstrahangold-flelds 9309 " Beagle," Darwin 2257 Brit. Mus., organic remains 6791 British Guiana 2232 Canada 651,2, 8173 Crystal Palace 2I6I Cuohullin Hills 3112 evidences of the Deity, Archer 5212 excursions, Mantell 5793 fossils 980, 2, 1013, 1124, 2105, 3013, 4101, 5793-1 geognostic formation, Bavai-ian Alps 7717 geological observer, De la Beche 2321 record and Mosaic 8060 glacial epoch 2562 of the globe 4101 guide to, Phillips 6897 Lakes, EngUsh 588I Loch Staffln 3112 and maxnetism 4322 Mantell 5793, etc. maps, etc. 4101, 6881, 8485 G 593 G meiJals of cveation 579S Milner 6187 New South "Wales 8485 new system, Cockburn Nova Scotia ]77-2 5642 old red sandstone 0115 ovganic remains 5793-1, 8485 petrifactions 5784 polar ■1434 rudiments, Bathurst 503 scriptural (1504 and scripture 8147 Siluria 6340 thoughts on a pebble Van Diemen's Land 5790 8485 Geometry, Cambridge papers, etc. 28 13 Euclid 2S-1S history of 28'18 Hobbes 105-6 physico-harmonic 46 practical, Burchett 1130 sell-instruction ."4!>2 treatise on, 1829 5325 and "Wallis, Hobbes 41ii5-li 'George, Prince, proceedings of, 1689 4099^ George I., domestic and foreign affairs 4825 name in Liturgy 6002 oaths to 4512 Oxford loyalty to 4099'' parties at accession 807-8 poems on accession 7010 and pretender 7102 secret services 5697 Sophia Dorothea, consort of 9525 II., reipn 40 17, 4825, 92.tl-2 satire on 8937 ' " III., court and cabinets 1091 family 3301 elegy on death 6435', " ode on birthday H!79 philosophers, statesmen, etc. 980, 3-8, 90 reign 2785,5923-4,0467,6875,9243, 9673 reminiscences of, Delany 2326-9 IT..lettei-s to 6565 life, reign, etc. 1219, 2122. .1353, 4903, 9218 Geoi-ges, first thi-ee, England under 9666 the four 8739'" George Silverman's explanation, Dickens 2403,36 Georgia 1006, .1875, 8917, 9437, 9659 Georgical essays 4424 Georgics, Tirgil 9150, etc. Gerald, dramatic poem, Marston 5863 Geraldine, &c„ poems, Tupper 9032 Geraldinea, Earls of Desmond 6507 Gerbier, painter 7614 •German aiiti-supernaturalism 3894 dramas, Amahe 138 emigrants, Goethe 3476 wanderings 3886 and English dictionary 3095 experiences, Howitt 4318 fables and parables 5272 language, and nation 859, 6217 letters on JSnghsh education, 1854 9472 hfe, Freytag 3257-8 lyrist 6505 music, Chorley 1665 pliilosophy & Christian theology 9108 playwrights. Carlyle 1380 ' ' politics 8864 prose writers, Austin 333 reformation, 19* centui'y 1280 romance, Carlyle 1880 ' « speculative philosophy 1602 tales 545, 4769, 6365, 6665, 9720 theatre 2391 theolc«ia 8792 traditions 9720 translations from 1381, 7342 Germania, Tacitus 8606, etc. Germanic empire, 1834-5 2624 Germans in Europe, Bosworth 859 •Germany, apostolical Christians and Cathoucs S3a3 Brown, Jones, and Robinson in 2555 * GJermany — cont, educational tour, 1844 B784 emperors of 8493 and England, thirty years' war England and GevmaiiyVM'l and German hfe, 1760-1814 334 Germania, in 1850 752 history of 4037, 6045, 9118 home life. 1853 886 hot-water cure, 181 1 4270 journal, 1799 8949 loumey into, Montaigne 6210 life in 3257-8, 4823, 6846 literature 1380' «, », 8190, 5209, 6044, 8804 mediaeval, 1125-1268 1226 music, musicians, opera 1655, 4117. 4167 northern, 1863 486 papacy 9118 Piozzi, 1789 6936 poetry and poets 194. 6771 rambles in, 1810 7998 Reformation 41-1.6139; 7285-6 school of painting 4012. 4952 spas and watering-places 1778, 3593 sport 7631 and king of Sweden, 16.16 6015 ti-aditions and superstitions 8859 university education 68.39-40 visit to, 1810 6179 war, 1813-14 5451 Gertrude, fiction 7860 of N^'yoming, poem 1.313 Gervase of Tilburv Ralph 1668, 5729 •Gesncr, H. Morle.v 6282 " Gest hystoriule '' Colonna 2674 Gesta Romanorum 3 17. 25'13, 2674, 9297 Gesture 1296, 9099 Ghibellini di Pisa 7522 Ghost seer, Schiller 7714, 21 story, Christmas. Dickens 2416-17 Ghosts 7260 Giantism, history of 8362 » ' Giaour 1268 •Gibbon, E., Bagehot on 380 character of "W. Law 51S3 Sainte-Beuve on 7651 Gibraltar, Golt 3300 Gideon'sfleece, poem, 1684 7023 •Gifford, Geo., witches 6829^ Humphrey, poems Misc. ', 3284 ■U'm. 196-6, 3943, 54 Gil Bias 5260-3 •Gilbert, Sir Humphrey Courtesy 2674 Sii- Jeffi-ey, Locke 8562 '. = Gilbert Gurney, fiction 4304 Massenger, fiction 6218 Gilbertini and Thomaso, 1715 4099'' •Gilchi'ist and Bowles 873 Gildas, chronicle 1664 •Gildon, C. 7frl, 40991, 5099, 6289, 7116, 7913, 8562 ' 1 Gilds, early Enghsh Qilds 2074 •Gillies, E. P., " Eliminator " 1077 Gillray, caricatures, life, etc. 196, 9673 •Gilpin, Rev. ^'., letters, &c. 9276 "theWve" 3183 Gin Act 4099'' Mother, 1736 8397 "' = Giotto and works 7667 GhiUdus Cambreiisis 1482, 1663 Girl of Provence, poem 1989 Girls, boarding schools 4963 Girondins, les, Brisset 940 Girondists, histoiy, Lamartine 4998 Girtin, T., views 6121 Giusti, G., Lushiugton on 6533 Glacial epoch and glaciers 2562, 8002 •Gladstone, yf. E., Brit, cabinet, 1863 946 Church and State, Slacaulay 5631 Farini 2974 Gladstone Government, 1869 4798 Glamorgan, E. of, and Charles I. 1544 the bard of 9274 "W. Harbert, poems Misc. i. 3284 Glamorganshire, justices, 1706 4099'' ' GlaBcook, Capt., " Heads of the People " 6069 G 594 a •Glasgow, antiquities and traditions 3890 books, etc. 42, 61, 217, 948-9 ; chap- books 1625, 1735, 2370, eses^", 7015, 7846', 8234 General Assembly, 1638 718S=» songs published at 3312 speeches, Shaftesbury 7880 synod and bishops, 1647 1585 sermon, 1741 7845 university, Baillie 394 Glass, painted (ancient) 9321 painting on 694 Glastonbury Abbey, roll 5110 Glaucus, Kingsley 4844 *Gleig, " Story of Waterloo," Siborne on 8033 (N.B.— In 3305, for Rev. G. R. Gleig read Eev. B. Neale.) Glenarvon, fiction 5006 Glencoe, Gaftney, etc. 4099' Gliddon, G. R. Nott 6543 Glimmerings in the dark, Merrywenther 6069 Globe, circumnavigation of, Kelli^tt 7830 surface of, Cuvier 2208 the, life of 7335 trotter, rambles 4984 Gloria Britannioa (navy), 1689 6401 Glossaria, Gr.-Lat. et Lat.-Gr. 8393 Glossary, abbreviations, foreign idioms 2066 Anglo-Saxon 8858 Brut 9182 Bums 1193 Chaucer 1617, 19 A,. Cunningham 2180 Cuvier 2208 Dahoman S085 Dorset 462 dress 2954-5 ecc^ ornament and costume 7211 T. Edwards 2715 Epinal Spinal 2674 C. Porster 3133 Greek and Roman life 7385 Icelandic Beclcet 1663 Kentish Michel 2674 Latin and Old English Epinai 2674 Ijyndsay, poems 5549 Mass book Mass 2674 Monastic! annates Monasteries 1663 Nares 6393 Newcastle-on-Tyne 9205 north country words 960 Northamptonshii'e 403 Piers Ploughman 6918 pottery and porcelain 5846 provincial, Grose 3671 Robert of Gloucester 7436 romances (early Eng.) RomancesHW, Shakespeare 6393, 7892, 3, 5 ; 7901, 6, IS, 14 Spenser 8308 Sussex 1971 Swinfleld (household expenses, 1289) Swinfleld 1323 Tasso 8641 United States 490 Yankee words and phrases 8091 Glossology 4944, 8434 Gloucester, Duchess of, sketch 6876 Robert of 7435 William Henry, Duke of (son of Q. Anne) 5316 Gloucester, Alderman Pury 1697"' book 9018 Boy-Bishop, sermon Camden Misc. 7, 1322 monastery Gloucester 1663 Gloucestershire, grand jur.y, 1690 1672" rui-al ndes 1763 Glover, M"., biog. sketch 6974' •Glover, Richard, life 204« " London," poem 7014, 24 poems 6705" Glyn, Isabella, memoir 6985 Glynn (or Glyn), J., Fairfax 29323, 29631=-m speeches, 1041-2 1595", 1697", "», 8468-9 Robert, poems 6705" God, a, existence of alone, immediate address to and the king being and attributes of in Christ, Busbnell in the Mount, Vicars message of, in low London 892S 6322 84S 1730 1223 9135 7293 power, wisdom, and goodness, Chalmers 1498 speed the plough Pierce 2674 the mystery of, finished 6376 ways of disposing of kingdoms, 1691 4099J Godavery, river 8153 Godalming, natural history 6438 Goddard, G., Parliament journal, 1654 1218 •Godfrey, Sir B. B. 22;7», 7048 Godfrey of BuUoigne, Tasso 8641, etc. Godkin, Rev. J., repeal essay 7361 Goldly Queen Hester Misc. *, 3284 Godolphm, E , poems 7029 Barl of, life, poems, 1714 6.380, 6100 M"., life 2898 Godolphin, fiction 5657-60 Gods, false, De Valles 9094 household, Cilician 451 the, nature of, Cicero 1096 •Godwin, Bp. Francis, life of Queen Mary 4790 MT". 2766, 3473, 9602-3 W. 3413, 3947, 54 •Goethe, Carlyle on 1380 • ^ " De Quincey on 2366 Emerson on 2774 Goethe's devil 5934 Helena, Carlyle 1380 " ' hexameter translation 4053 Koller on 4938 life, etc. 5308, 7727 Masson on 5934 novelle. Carlyle 1380 " ' poems, etc. (trans.) 3381, 6506, 6968* 7342, 7724 portrait, Carlyle 1380 '' * and Shakespeare 69.34, 9073 the tale, Carlyle 1.380 '■ ' "Wilhelm Meister, Carlyle 1.380 ' °, 1381 Goethe, a new pantomime 4781 Gold, ancient and modern times 3861 assaying 9310-11 Coast, 1824 2644 discoveries, effects 603 distribution of 63i!t fields, Australia 3861, 9.309 Queensland 125 mixture and value 9310-11 region, California 7373, 7990, 8669 Cherokee 2983 New South Wales 5096 -seeker's manual, Ansted 189 and silver thread, 1635 7188'= sources of 386I valuer 9311 weights 71881 Grolden age, satire 332 ass, Apuleius 201-2 book, Chrysostom 1666 colony (Victoria), 1854 9309 " Golden Gate," western America, etc. 7705 Golden lands, A usti'alia 5095 legend, poem 3468-70 locks, tale i.\QQ medley 6168 mu'ror Bobinson 1639 remanis. Hales 3703 •r. ,j yiojet, poems .=i036 •Goldoni, life (3-220 •Goldsmith, De Quincey on 23668 Forster (hfe) 3151-8 Hawes 3901 illness 3901 Irving (life) 4481-S Lytton on 5501 Macaulay (biojr.) 3617-18 Parnell, life of 0738 poems 953i», 6705» Prior (life) 7170 ■Ihaekeraiy on 8739 ' », 876* .Timbs (hfe) S879 Traveller " 7014 Vicar of Wakefield 952!" Whiteside on 6210, 9463 G 595 G Groldsmiths' trade, state of 9310 Gomersal, life 591 Gondibert 4105 Gondomar, Count, embassy, etc. 7272, 7775, 8099' 1 GoiiRora, lite 6220 Gonzalo, Hernandez, lite 7240 Gooch, v., lile 6707 Good, John, last speech, 1749 8662 ' ' Good eouncel for the present scate of England, 1640 5175, 7207 Priday, Cobbett 1761 genius that turned everything into gold 6991 nature, poem 7021 news and bad news Rowlands 1857 old cause, 1710 4512 Shunammite, illuminated 676 speed to Virginia Bas 1856 ' ' wife Courtesy 2674 women, Goethe 3476 •Goodrich Court 3183 Goodwin, C. W., essays 2833 John 1699'^ 4502, 6S37''', 7188"' Googe, B., eglogs, etc. 211 *Gordon, J., papers 7047 ^ J. S., literary address 949 Gordons, the, apology for, 1804 3544 •Gore, M". 4259, 6009 Gore House, Kensington, catalogue 755 Goree, account of 2604 •Gorgei, A. 8599 Gorgious gallery of gallant inventions Proctor 1853 Gorilla, etc. 2690 Goring, Col., 1641-2 1597»s, ™ Geo. Ld. 1695" Gospel, St. Matthew, St. Luke 4910, 5335, 8840 Gospels, Apocryphal, Bp. Alexander 52U Gossip, H. Morley 6288 Gosson, Stephen. School of Abuse 211, 7974 Gostwick, Joseph 143 Goth and Hun, 1860, Baton 6770 Gothic architecture, Schlegcl 7734 pronunciation JElUs 2674 Gothland, 1850 1111 OouBih, Lord, despatches 3845 Gould, A. A. Agassiz 74 Governesses and mothers 4552 Governing classes, Gt. Britain 9466 Government, arbitrary, Burnet 7096^1 as a free state, 1848 67343^ Bastiat on 498 best form of, Lewis 5310 Blaokstone on 621 British, Cox 2055 civil, Locke 6401 of dependencies, Lewis 5311 dialogue concerning, 1681 6425 of England Twysden 1822 origin, Longman 54S3 English, 1681, Nevilo 6425 nature of 6735' Bussell on 7577-8 fears and dangers of, 1692 6736i», 7047 1' forms of, Filmer 3046 French, 1810 9247 Great Britain, Fonblanque 3098 1855, Hughes 4336 Helps on 4006 Hobbes on 4105 influence of, on the mental facul- ties 8629 local 8151 Locke of 6396, 401 monarchical. Brougham 991 nature of, 1648 1693" origin 7212 of the people of England, 1650 1596 philosophy of, Sismondi 8079 present, lawfulness of, 16S9 7047" principles of 991, 6568 rationale of, Lamartine 5001 representative, Guizot 3715 sermons relating to, 1696 4099* A. Sidney on 8037-8 sphere and duties, Humboldt 4362 subjection to, 1690 O 16505. Government — c(mt^ submission to, 1689 4099'' 1691 5372 what is lawful during revolutions of, 1618 293 Governments, aristocratic. Brougham 993 foundations of 4079 holy alliance of, Owen 6652 Governors, obedience to, J?ilmer 8046 Governour, the, Elyot 2767 Govion Broglio Solari, Marchioness 179 Govona, B.osa 4729 Gower, language and pronunciation of 1624 ; MUs 2674 Gradus, English 4S91 Graeme, poems 6705^ GrafEanio-Mastix, poem on the Censor 6987 Grafton, Godfrey, " Heads of the People " 6009 *Grafton, Richard, chronicle 3852 •Graham, Sir James E.. G. 946, 6486 Grahame, G., Bp. of Orkney, 1641 1598" James, poems 9417 Grainger, poems 95S'». 6706* Tibullus 963i», 6705« Grammar, Danish 7750 English, Booth 840 Cobbett 1758 comic 6242 Hazlitt 3947 Knowles 4905 Lowth 294, 6512 Lynch 6545 Priestley 7170 Greek 1246, 2135, 4680, 4965, 6948, 6136, 7527, 8241, 9077 Hungarian 2163, 9341 Italian 443 Latin 7988, 9729 Lily's 7988, 8693 Malay 2101 Mormontel 5825 Milton 6154= Itomaic 8242 Turkish 452-3, 7813 universal 8874-6, 8434 Grammar schools, Lehdon, etc., petition 7188^^7 Grammarians (ancient), celebrated 6998 Grammatica Anglo-Bomana 7988 Hebraea; Cbaldea 5890 Grammatical commentaries, Johnson 8593 institutes. Ash 294 structure, English, Mulligan 6311 Grammont, Count, memoirs 3818, 19 Granada, conquest of 4476 siege of 5204, 6559 Granby, Marguis of, life 4536 Granby, Action 6366 Grand remonstrance, 1641, Porster 3138, 41 sergeanty, 1640 7188" wers, 1677 1606 Grand e-Bretagne, Orateurs 4991 Grandsire Hambden's ghost (poem), 1712 4099" •Granger, Ilev. J., Noble 6507 •Grant, A. H. Seafield 7811 General, campaign, 1864-5 1351 M". (of Laggan), lite 2766 Grantham, book 4035 Grants, etc. from the Crown Bdmard F. 1323 Zapin 7295, 7188» Granvelle, Cardinal, lite 5378 •Granville, George, Ld. Lansdowne, works, etc. 953', 5113, 5289, 6705« •Grattan, H., Baratariana 436 Grave of the last Saxon, poem 874 the, poem 738, 7015 yards, gatlierings from 920* ♦Graves, B«v. E. 962» Gravesend book 7008 tilt-boat 7775 Gravier, Charles, life 6983 Gravitation, planets 6457 (jrravity, Maupertuis 226 •Gray, T., Bowles pamphlets 873 copy and autograph 6399 " Elegy " and criticism on it 2115, 7014, 9711 Lyttoii on 5561 Mathias on 5938 poems 95S>», 4fi55, 6705^ Q Q G 596 G Gray's Inn 296^, 4,010, 4882, 7097 Great assises in Parnassus Wither 8313 Great Britain and America, constitutions 76 Q. Anne's reign 9683 art collections, Waagen 9181 Cliristian religion 4491 civil wars and interregnum 4502 constitution, etc., Fonlalanque 3098 continental interests 3987 defenceless state. Head 3963 educational tour, 1844 6784 fine arts, 1841 8696 foreign affairs, 1808 5207 and France, kings of, peaoe be- tween, 1696 4099" genealogy, royal family 3363 governing classes 9466 government, 1866 4336 Grant Bretaigne, croniques Waurm 1663 history of Henry 4017, Sander- son 7675 and Ireland, history, etc. 1321, Hardy 1663, 2230-1 " Just complaint," 1691 4099' letters of royal and illustrious ladies 9611 literary biography, Wright 9662-3 literature, index to, 1814-46 6428 living authors, 1804 7372 military history 3453 mixed tribes 5935 monumental effigies 4164 observations in, 1844 2645 poets, select 3950 portraits. Lodge 5419-20 position, duties, destiny, 1846 5352 present state, 1760 6205 sun-set, 1613 (poem) Basse 496 topographical dictionary 3563 trade. Tucker 9018 visit to, 1846 6179 Great country's [England] little wars, 1844 6532 Great Expectations, Action 2399-406, 425 Hoggarty Diamond, fiction . 8769 " ", 8760 ' •> western republic, 1861 2188 Greater Britain, Dilke 2471 Greatest men of the age, characters of, 1736 7021 plague of life, fiction 5992 Grebner, Paul, prophecies, etc. 6346, Wither 8313, 8937 ' " Grecia, politica e letteraria, Denina 2845 Grecians & Romans, lives compared 7003 *Greece, ancient, language and hterature 6350 literature, Muller 6340 manners, etc., St. John 7634 poets 117 and modern 2993, 7127 arts of, Hancarville ' 3830-1 at commencement of Pelop". war 8865 and her colonies, Niebuhr 6494-5 evenings in, Moore 6244 first pnilosophers, Socrates and So- phists, Plato 3140 handbook, 1854 6364 history of, Diodorus and Thucydides 9666 Finlay 3057 Grote 3676 Mittord 6177 Schmitz 7748 Stanyan 8366 Thirlwall 8806 Turner (analysis) 9041 White (landmarks) 9425 Xenophon 9690, 2 and its islands, scenery, Linton 6361 itinerary, GeU 3360 modern, history, Pouqueville 7126 Tennent 8726 tale of 8476 Peloponnesian war 4106^862-7 pictorial, descriptive, historical, Words- worth 9624 picture of, 1826, Tennent 8729 recollections of (poem) 2376 researches, 1814, Leake 6199 travels, etc., 1806-46 1414, 1613, 2226, 3324, 4277, 4S37-8, 6830, 7127 and Turkey, 1860, De Vero 2374 under the Eomans, De Quincey 2365' *Greek and Grecian, accent and quanti^ 3189 antiquities 8167 art 9112, 9342, 9624 arts, manufactures, etc. 7385 biography and mythology 8168 Christian poets 1035 classic poets 1791 classics, editions, translations 3893 6310 coins and medals, catalogue 6630 coins, weights, measures 6249 conceptions of social growth 6297 court, Cr.ystal Palace 2161 drama 2631, 9202 elegiac poem, Musurus 3189 emperors, Leigh 5238 emphasis 685 empire, Finlay 3056 -English lexicon 5360, 9657 fairy tales 4846 geography 8169 government, 1860 6737 Graeoa Autnologia, de, Hecker 3984 grammar 1246, 2135, 2994, 4580, 4956, 6948, 6136, 7527, 8241, 9097 Gretians Conquest Procter 18552 Idioms and particles 9143 language, introduction to 518 knowledge of, Donaldson 2630 Thesaurus 8S93 and Latin, lexicon 3986, 7769 . literatm'e, Talfourd 2779 lyrici poetae 7031 metres, Munk 6347 mythology 4754, 6212, 6372 myths, cloud and storm 7663 philosophers and philosophy 226, 1695, 3140, 7122, 809S poems, Cambridge, 1697 7020 proper names 4906 quotations 7417 reader 2994 and Homan, classics 1737 emperors 5238 romances 2629, 7808 syntax 4680 testament 677-80, 8613 theology of philosophers 226 theatre 2391, 2631 tragedies 50, etc., 2847, etc., 8223, etc. tragedy, De Quincey 2365' translations 963, 2965, 6705, 9246 and Turk, 1853, Crowe 2144 vases 6694 verbs loi, 8240 vocabulai'y 6136 waters, 1854, CarUsle 1377 war, Thucydides 4106, 8862-7 writing 4376 *Greeks, ancient, life of, Hase 3895 ancient art, Winckelmann 9570 celebrated 5374 home, history, literature, arts 4513-14 industrial history 8913 life of the, Guhl 3688 manners and customs 6694 observations on the, Mably 56I6 religious development 5676 retreat of the ten thousand 86, 9688 Greeks, etc., ancient, history, manners, etc. 9397 •Greeley, H. life, etc. 6638, 6753 •Green, Mary A. B. Wood 9611 Matthew, poems 266, 953'°, 3616, 6706*' Thos., Ufe 3117 •Greene, Robert G»-ee«el856 '», Oreene, Harvey Greenhouse, handbook . 3453 Greenland Spitzbergen, Zeno 3766, 6219 Greenock, songs published at 3313 Greenwich, pamphlets •1981 Greenwood, Barth., ease of 8937^ "< P., Louis Napoleon 826-6 Professor, literary address 948 •Greer, M"., " Quakerism " 2757 7228 G 597 G ♦Gregory VII. (Hildebrand) XV. John, life, 1670 of Nazianzum Gregory's pastoral care *Grenvill6, George SirR. "Grey, Catherine, life Colonel, 1630 Earl, sketch am 775 455 9073 Alfred 2674 2389, 2470, 86*3 Revenge 211 20U2 1596, 1599 '2 9452 Major Edward, 1644, elegy, etc. 1 Lady Jane, Ballads on 4111 life S649, 5379, 6382, 6480-1 M". Mary, Pretender 7169-63 Greyfriars, chronicle Chromiole 1322 Grey of "Wilton, Lord Grey 1322 Grief, excesses of. Temple 8717 Grierson, M"., poems 7028 Grievances to be redressed, 1689 8937 " " Griffith, Dr., sermon, Milton on 6154' N., poem 7010** Griffith Gaunt, fiction 7328 Griffiths, K,., Monthly Eeview 6227 Grimaldi, funeral oration, 1550 4133 J., life 2426-7 (old) dream 4379 Grimoald, Nicholas Totfe! 211, 1858 ♦Grimston, M'. (aft. Sir H.) speeches, 1641-2 1595»-«, 1597", '^ ", 'l^ 61766 Grisi, Carlotta and Giulia, notices 7226 Grissel, Patient 6829* Grobianus, poem 2305 Grocers' Hall, Bank of England lOgO"" Grosseteste (Grosthead), Bishop Orosseieste 1663, 8768 *Grosvenor (D. of Westminster) galler.y 4546 *Grote, George, Priswell on 3260 •Grotius, life 1143 tracts by 7353" Grounds of contempt of clergy and religion 2668 Groves, saoredness and use 2907 •Grub street 1350, 5444, 8937 ' i* Grumble and Cheery, tale 4166 » " Guardian " 40, 960, 2559, 8294 Guards and the line 4265 *Guarini, life 6220 Gnattani, Joseph Viseonti '9164 Gudin, notice of 7225 GuiSrin, Madame 6193 Guernsey, history of 2617 lily, culture 3559 Guerre entre les anciens et les modei-nes 1305 Guesses at truth 3858-9 Gxxiana, discovery of Balegh 3756 voyage to Maleigh 7267 Guiana, British 2232 •Guicciardini, life 8220 Guide in matters of faith, Tenison 7096" Guide de Colonna Colonna, 2674 Guildford, books 4, 8415, 8579, 9606 hospital 4 Guildhall, Lilburne's trial 6337 ' = 5338 muniments London 1663 (chapel) sermon 4099J speeches, 1641 etc. isgsi^-i, *", 1697i, «, Guilford, Lord (Ld. Keeper), life 6619, 7610 Guillotine, the 2119, 3204 Guilpin, E., Skialetheia OmPpin 1867 Guinea, coast 705 ' * nevf 4706, 6191 Guineas, falling the price of 4099' "Guizot, letter to teachers 8501 notice of 7226 ■WeUington 9366 Gulf and Pacific coasts, 1849 7373 Stream, fauna 3887 •Gulliver, John, travels 8669 Lemuel, travels 222, 8524, etc., 8661-60, 8566, 71 Mart., hfe 6987 Gulliveriana 8678 Gull's hornbook 2301 Gunaikeion, Heywood 4083 Gundred, life 3626 Gun-founding, history 4052 Gunnery, naval 2546 terms etc. 9707 •Gunning, M"., 1791 8937 ' ' •Gunpowder treason 8099 " ^ Guns, the, story of, 1864 •Gurney, J. J., life 8731 literary address 949 memoir of M". Fry 6218 Gurney married, fiction 4205 Qurwood, Colonel, Napier *6389 Wellington 9349-51 •Gustavus Adolphus, history, death etc. Camden Misc. i,',1322; 1526, 1699 '■^ 5211 Guthrey, Jas., speech before execution, 1661 1699 '2 Guttenberg, life 4899 Guy of Warwick, romance Guy 2674 Guy's porridge pot, poem 6048 Guyanes, vcwage fait aux 1894 Guylforde, Sir llichard, pilgrimage, 1508 Ouiiford 1322 Guzman, A. E. de, life &c. Guzman 3766 •Gwinett, Ambrose, life 5387 ♦Gwyn, Nell, hfe, etc. 2185, 3299 Gwynedd, Gael in 4887 Gymnastics, medical indoor 7758 Gypsies, Spain 846 An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should he made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catolgue in small type ; " v " stands for volume. H. H— family, fiction 912, 918 Habeas, corpus, Lilburno 6337 ^ ^ Haben or Hyberdyne, Parson Awdeley iffli Haberdashers' Hall 1596» 6337 ' * Habin, informer, L'Estrange 5276 Habington, John, reign of Edward IV. 4790 W., Castara Habingtom 211 life 9638 Habits, Whately on 6210 Habits and Men, Doran 2534 Hacker, Colonel, execution, 1660 3882, 7368 Hackman, Rev. Jas., case of 4099^ Hackney coachmen, regulation of 7770 Hadassa, poem, Quarles 7228 Haddon Hall, evenings at, tales 1287 Hadleigh, I. Toms (?) 451013 Hagiology, modem, Crosthwaite 2140 Hague, the, marriage festivities 6231 mission to, Malmesbury 5766 proceedings at, 1649 1598"' William III. at 4100 Hails, W. A., obituary 8485 ' ' Haines, E"., tracts, 1674 8937 " ' Hair, locks of, catalogue 1451 Hajji Baba 6276-7 Hakewill, G., confirmation 7844 W., liberty of the subject 1699 » =, 7039 •Hakluyt, E., voyages SaMwyt 3766 •Hale, Sir Matthew^Ooke 1780 life 1176, 7510 manual 5798 pleas of the Crown 163 Haleluiah Wither 831S •Hales, Sir Edward, case 61881= speech, 1641 1697=' Thomas 9381 Half-hours, pictorial 4892 with the best authors 4887 Halhed, N. B., speech, 1795 4099" Halieutics, Badham 378 Q Q H 598 H •Halifax, Charles Montaprae, Marl oi : book-plate, etc. 8718-19 country and city mouse 7184 epistle to 7010 letter to, A.cldison 7012 poem to, Bentley 6S2 poems gSSii, 6169-60, 6706« 7027 (?) George Savile, Marquis of: letters Savile 1323 observations 2277" Halifax, Nova Scotia. 1 85S 67S7 •Hall, Charles, civilisation 6906 John, historial expostulation 6829'^ John (of Durham), monarchy 8746, 3869 J., papers 70471 Joseph, Bishop of Norwich : funeral sermon and verses on 0438 letter 8937"" poems 953 to Laud (MS.) 6149 Eev. Robert 3094, 3413, 6307, 9108 M". S. C, " Heads of the People " 6009 Sidney, maps 311, 3563 -Stevenson, J. 8417 Hall and Hamlet, Hewitt 4319 •Hallam, H. 5631, 6876, 8354 Hallamshire, Chantrey 4146 Halle of John Halle, Sahshury 2603 Halliday, Andrew. " All the Year Hound " 124 Halliwell-Phillipps, J. O. CS78-S4, 7974 Hallowing of water, etc. 7097 Halls, baronial, old 3789, 4324 Halpin 7974 Ham, castle of 832, 936, 9477 Hamburgh 4902, 6435" •Hamilton, Andrew, Inniskilling men 4099'' Duke of, life, 1714 6380 M". B., life 2766 (Emma), Lady Hamilton, life 1.308 Lord (jieneral. 1648 7777 Marquis of, 1639-41 1598^ 6263, 8937'! 'i' N. E. S. A., Colher I860 W., poems, 963' Hamiltonian system '1081,3382 Hamiltons, fiction 3550 Hammersmith 2953^9 Hammond, Anthony, ace. of Moyle 6330 Henry 1178,296216 James, poems 953*, 6706'° Col. Eobert 1666, 8937 ' ^ •Hampden, John, and Cromwell, discourse 6646 D'Israeh 2487 life, memorials 3163, 6547-9 ship-money 8021 speech, 1641 1597™ Hampshire 1768, 4099^, 7188=8 cottage, tale 2218 Hampton Coiirt, conference 457 council 2277" epistle to Ora^gs at 7010'" guide 4619 King's court at, 1647 1593" pictures 4547 •Hand, the. Bell B81 Handbills, London 7691 "Westminster election, 1740 4099*^ Handel commemoration, 1784 6706 life, etc. 6738 oratorios (words) 7021 HanJful of pleasant delights Sohinson 8313 Handley Cross, fiction 8606 Handwriting, Humboldt 4360 "Junius" 1490 Hannah, history 44,25 Hannah and her Chickens, fiction 2686 Hannibal ia Bithynia, dram, poem 4899 Hanover, court and archives 9625 Duchess of, letters 970 elector of, 1712 7045 electress and electoral prince 4099b House of 2.136, 2638, 7163, 8142, 8937 " '», 9666 Eat, 1741i 4099' succession, how to weaken 4099' Hanson, Sir Levett 4902 Hanway, Jonas, life 7686 Happiness, Harris on 3875 human 2602, 7276, 8304 Happiness — cowt, matrimonial 5942 and work and knowledge 3114 •Happy home, the 3821 " Happy Ignorance," Penrose 6815 Harar, exploration of 1215 Harbert, William, poems Misc. ', 3284 •Harcourt, Prince, 1665 3253 Hard Cash, Action 7324 Times, fiction 2399-403, 6, 28 Hardenberg, diplomatist 1354-5 P. von Novalis 6B43, 7342 •Hardinge, George, Malone 6759-62 • Hardwicke, Earl of, life, etc. 1938 Hardwicke, Lord, pieces by 9685 •Hardy, Admiral Sir T. M., obituary •1981" •Hai-e, Praneis, Bp. of Chichester 4099', 5817 Julius C., book given to Lander 3858 hexameter translations 4053 Luther 4930 Sterling, life 8405 Hargreave-s, J., life 2824 Hanson, W"., Woodstock Park 7010' Harleiau library, early English misc. Camden Misc. =, 1322 Harley, Lady Brilliana, letters Harley 1322 Harlow book 7466 Harman, T., " Caveat " Awdeley 'ZSli Harmonies of physical science 4093 •Harmony, introduction to 5766 Harmony of birds 6829' of the Church 6829' of truth, Gataker 3337 of the universe 46 Haro, Louis do, life 6378 Harold, fiction 5659-60 Harp, etc., Ireland 1917 •Harrington, James, censure of the Eola 1599 " * "Oceana" 6653 Harrington, fiction 2^92 •Harris, Alex.. Australian backwoods 7?49 .7., D.D., social organisation 5212 "•Harrison, Edward, plain dealing, 1649 1699 " * John (regicide), lite, trial, death, &c. 1675, 1699 ' s (?) ; 3882, 6863, 6885, 7347, 7368 General W". Henry (U.S.), life 4675 HaiTow, handbook 8163 Harrysone, James, exhortation, 1547 Scotland 2674 Hart (player), life 3299 •Harte, Walter, poems 963', e70.5« Hartley, letters, &c. 9276 system 8936 Hartwell, manor and mansion 8189 Hartz mountains 165 •Harvard, U.S. 2995 •Harvey, Christopher, poems Harvey 8284 Eev. E.G.," Undine " 9076 Gabriel Sarvet/, Was7i.,1857; 6282 W. W., life 5707 Harwich, dream, 1708 8937 ' » "Harwood, E., D'. John Taylor 784,6" John, " All the Year Eound " 124 Miss (? " Eoss Neil ") 6416 Haslcrigg, Sir A., Lilburne 6337 " * speeches, etc. 15963»-si, 1697" Hasselquist, P., life 7636 Hastings, Henry, Lord, elegies on death of 969 Warren, Burke 1145 Hatfield House, Burghley papers 1140 Hatman, — , life 594 Hatton, Sir C, life, letters 6479, 9670 Haunch of Venison, poem 3526-7 Haunted Man and Gfliost's Bargain, story 2429 Havana, 1842 6508 Have with you to Saffron Walden NasJi 1867 Havelok the Dane, lay Haveloh 2674 Haversham, Lord, memoirs 2318 Hawaiian Islands 4569-70 •Hawes, Stephen, Pastime of pleasure fiS29's " Hawk " tribe 1372 Hawkesworth, Almoran and Hamct 952*8 •Hawkins, D'. Bisset, lives of physicians 5707 B. W., extinct animals 2161 Sir John, Johnsoniana 862, 4654 Walton and Cotton 9252 Sir E., voyage, 1.598 Hawkins 8756 Hawkstone, fiction 7366 Hawles, Sir J., juries 7046 H 599 H •Hawthorne, N., home, portrait, &c. 144 Stephen on 8400 Hawtrey, E. C, hexameters 40BS ' tlay, W"., deformity 6^V •Haydon, life 7225, 8693 •Hayes, Catharine, notice 721i5 •Hayley, T. A., Ule 3924 W., poems 2796 Haymakers' histories, poem 7694 Hayman, — , notice 694 Haynes, (player), life 3299 Hayti, Toussaint I'Onverture 627 •Hayward, Sir J., annals Hayward 1322 ^„ Ufe of Edward VI. 4790 •HazUtt, W., Gilfillan on 3413 Holorott 4.135 ^orthcotB 6325 parody on 7351 Patmore 6769 writings, etc. 4460, '4460 Hazlitt, "W. (son) Berinffton 039 British poets 4G49 De Foe 2312 Hazlitt 3931, etc. Montaigne (310 WeUington 0351 HazUtt, W. C, Lamb 6030 •Head, Sir F.B., Fairbairn 2942 — , notice 594 Head of the family, fiction 2074 Headley, poems 6705" Headlong Hall, fiction 6783 Heads, gi-aphic, Woolnoth 9617 of all fashions, Taylor 29B2* of the people 6009 Headsman, fiction 1349 •Health, art of preserving (poem) 264, 7014 Beddoes on 553 and disease, A. Taylor 8667 B. Johnson on 4636 labouring classes 3994 and locality 6419 and long lifo 8717 and occupation 5214 philosophy of 8165 preservation of, 1748 3972 regimen of Borde 2674 vigour, long life, 1683 5996 Health-drinking, 1633, Prynne 7208 •Hearne, K., loyalties severe summons, 1681 2277=° T., iournies 9207 life, etc. 4099' works 6110, 7435 Heart, fiction 3033 •Hearts are trumps, fiction 3838 Heat 5119, 6325, 7350 and dew 503 •Heath, J ., Flagellum 2128 Sir Eobert, speech, etc. Camden Misc^, 1322; 7039 — , notice of 594 Heathen, Christianity among. Brown 1014 writers, admonitions, etc. from 977 and revelation 8901 Heating 1171 Heaven, sacred poem 7024 Heavens, architecture of 6460-1 and earth, new, Burnet 1186 Lord Eosse's telescopes 2365^ •Heber, bishop, life (as traveller) 7636 Eichard, copies 248, 540, 1744, 4066, 4696 (and note) ; 6715, 7347, 8324, 9179 sale cat. (drawings and en- gravings) 8860 Heberden, life 5707 Hebrew grammar 5890 horae Hehraicae 6335 introduction to, 1768 518 melodies 1270 monarchy 6440-1 poems, Cambridge, 1697 7020 poUtics 8466 readings 4010 records, Giles 3409 revelation and heathen writers 8901 writing 4376 Hebrews, religious development 5676 Hebrides, cruise f o, hirds of, Buchanan 1080, 2 Hebrides— cont. tour to, Boswell Hector O'Halloran, fiction Hegel, philosophy Heidenmauer, the, fiction 850, 862, etc. Heimskringla •Heine 1502, 9119-20 1950 8194 Ti • ■ , , ^, 1082, 4278 Heinrieh and Blanca, fiction 1738 Heiress of Bruges, fiction 3697 Hekatompathia Watson 211 and 8313 Helen, fiction 2693 rape of, trans. 853W Stanley, fiction 3925 Helena, poem yi87 St., and Napoleon 22, 821-2, 864 Helicon, England's, 1600 Bodenham 1863 Enghsh, 19"" century 2794 printed at 7773 Hehodorus 7808 •Hell broke loose, 1646 1592 Dante 2242 etc. the descent into, poem 4019 enquiry into 85S4 middle ages legends 9671 news from, 1642 5612 news from, 1649 . 8987 " ^ news from, 1721 7010*i place called, 1648 6734^ Hellas, Jacobs 4513-14 Hellenica 9866 Hellenics, Landor 5052, 62-3 Xenophon 9690, 2 Heloise, life, Lamartine 4999 •Helps, Sir Arthur, Prince Consort 110 Helvetian reformed church, letter to 2038' Helvetius, system of 8936 •Hemans, M"., life, etc. 1651', 2766 Heminge and Condell 7884 •Henderaon, A., and Charles I. 1549, 84 ; 4026, 4133 J. (player), life, etc. 3209, 4068 — , Longleeford 6J359 •Henfrey, A. Griffltli 3656 •Henley, Anthony, Medley 43 Henriade, poem 914)9 Henrietta Maria, Bushell's " JEook " 1223 Capuchin Friars 9523 going to Holland 1693^ 159781 letters, etc. Charles 1. 1322, 8937 " 12 life and death 8099 ' i* Louis XIII. !>4S4 (" Map of Mischief ") 8987 "• ^ marriage 1693", 3702 and Parliament 1593^ Henrietta Temple, fiction 2477 Henries, Henricis, de illustribus Capgrave 1663 •Henry I., life, etc. 3929, 6678 II., reign 638 III., calendarium genealogicum 1302 life and reign Benry III. 1663, 2012, 6435^ 8099' * and Charles I. - 9203 to H. 6, revenue payments 2381 IV., reign Benry IV. 1663, 3928 to V I., reigns English 1322, 4790 to Henry \III., chronicle 3779 v., life, etc. Benry V. 1683, 4-6S6 VI., reign Bdward IV., Vergil 1322 wars in Prance Benry VI. 1663 VII., coui't and times Rutland 1322 Bnglapd under England 1322 life and reign S61-2, Benry VII., Sichard III. 1663, 479U London chronicle Camden Misc.*, 1322 marriage Camden Misc.^, 1322 preservation 1855' ^ state papers, Eng. and Spain 1300 will 4015 to Geo. II., const, history 3804-5 VIII., chronicle history, liowley 7542 court and times Uutland 1322, .3427, 4132 (portraits) declaration, 1642 Scotland 2674 England in reign of 411, Starkey 2674 life and reign 314, 929, 1282, 1854 2275, 3267, 3462-3, 3678, 4020, 4790, 9047 H 600 H Henry YUl.—cont. and his ministers 1282, 8S71 pamphlets, reign of 2275 privy purse expenses 6484 state papers 1298, 8371 statesmen, &c. 539S supplication to Fish 2674 and Wolsey 8371 to Elizabeth, history 3267, 658*, 8814 to James I., history, biography, manners 5415 Henry (Courtmantel) son of Henry II., death, etc. MalphWeS Prince of "Wales 496, 709, 4518, 7977, 8588, etc. i 8919, 9332 Henry III. (Prance) 1467, 6176i» IV. 1467, 4333, 6176M, 7368, 7471, 8502, 8691 v., 1833 3846 Henry de Pomeroy, fiction 907 Dumont and Charlotte Evelyn 1538 Masterton, fiction 4529 of Ofterdingen, fiction 6543 Henslowe, diary Benslowe 7974 •Hepburn, Sir John, life 3586 Heptameron 6806 Heraolitus, character 1637 Heraldry, Burke 1150-3, etc. poem on Courtesy 2674 Scotland {see also Visitations) 7848 Herat, 1848 6179 •Heraud, J. A. 6985-6 Herberstein, Baron S. Von, Russia Berberstein 3766 •Herbert, Sir Edward 169#, 1697'^, 3840, 51881!^ Herbert, George, works, life 3284, 6376, 84 ; 9538 of Oherbury, Lord 149-60, 4790, 5373 (life) 5876 2002 5164 of Lea, Ld., notice of Magdalen, life Thos., ballad-maker Sir Thomas, memoirs Herbs, cultivation, 1669 2891 Herder, trans, from 5272 Hereford, Archdeacon of Crowley 2674 Col. Birch gov', of Roe 1322 Charles I. at 2038«2 civil war Boe 1323 history, etc., Devlin 2380 siege and view of 1596^ tract 2380 Herefordshire, rural rides 1763 Heresies, etc., 1646, 8 6734", «> Varillas's history of 1173 Heresy, Milton 6154, 7 and its punishment, Hobbes 41053 Hergest, red book of 5616 Heriot, George, Ufe, hospital 1919 Hermann and Dorothea 3490 " Hermes " (universal grammar) 3874-6 Hermit of BellyluUe 4598 the, Quarll 7230 Hermits, legends 4563 Hermsprong, fiction 953 Hero and Leander, poem 6833 •Herodotus, analysis, geography, history, &o. 9395-6 ballads fi-om 788-4 life, travels 2330, 9397 notes on, Tnmi>r 9043 philosophy of, De Quincey 2365" translation 3965 Heroes, Greek fairy tales 4846 and hero-worship, Carlyle 1380, 91 Scottish 6600 Heroic plays, essay 6976' poem, concerning, Hobbes 4105W virtue, Temple 8717 women, French revolution 4996 Heroldes, Ovid 0845 Herrera, life 6320 Herriok, life 9638 •Herring and other fisheries, 1693 7645 •Herschel, Sir J. F. W., Baily 396 hexameters 4058 importance of literature 5369 Sir William, life 306 Hertford assizes, trial, 1699 8967 books 403, 463, 663-3 4718, 6923 Hertfordshire 1697=', 1763, 3953", 6791, 7188=", 8987 " " Herzegovina, 1848 9496 •Hesiod, translation 968", 6705=" Hessey, MS. letter 9358 Hewyit, D'. John, speech before execution, 1668 1599 " = •Hexameters, English, 1699 18S5 ' ^ Hexham, battle of, song 6435^" church 3398, 6435'= •Heylin or Heylyn, P., Laud 5173 hfe 469, 9127 Heyne, life of, Carlyle 1380 » ' •Heywood, Jasper, life 694 John, life 2636 proverbs, etc. Heywood 8313 Robert, observations, etc. Heywood 1639 Thomas, elegy 8919 life 2626, 9638 marriage triumph 6839 ^ plays, apology for actors 7974 Hiawatha 5474 Hibernian patriot. Swift 8540-1 Hickeringifl, B., liturgy 6373 Hickes, G. 4099'' (?), 7097, 9645 Hicks's-Hall 5331, 7346 Hide, Sir H., speech before execution, 1650 1699 ' " Hide and seek, fiction 1873 Hieroglyphical discovery, Rawlinson 4030 essays. Young 9714 Hieroglyphs, Eg.vptian, study of. Birch 9497 Higden, Ralph, Polychronicon Higden 1663 Higgins, M. J. Omnium 6697 High Church, turned Presbyterian, 1709 4099'' Churchism, 1841 3061 Commission bill, 1641 1597''' Commission Court, Laud 5174, 7234 Court of Injustice 6853 Justice and Chas. I. 1576, 16932", 6608, 6853, 8957 » ^ life. New York, 1844 8091 Highfiyers, 1704^6 4099 ^ ^ 7012 Highland minstrelsy 6672 sports, 1841 1896 wanderings, 1849 1896 Highlands, Central India, 1871 3171 Ethiopia 3878-9 Scotland, souvenirs des, 1836 3846 sports, natural history, etc. 7630 Highwayman and housebreaker, Simpson 8099 ' ' Highwaymen, Herts, 1691 8937 " " Highways and dryways. Head S967 Hildebrand (Gregory VII.) S24.1, 8395-6 •Hill, Aaron, advice to the poets 7021 art of acting, actor's epitome 8788= letters from Pope, etc. 7090, 8937 ' " plain dealer 6938 poems 963', 6705* - Hill or Hind, Jas., trial, 1777 8967 " " D'. John 8788 ', " Robert, Spence on 8303 Rowland, Viscount, life 8040 Hillard, G. S. 6085, 9338 Himalayas 3180, 4114. 6234, 91*1 •Hind, Capt. James, robber, life, etc. 8099 " - Hind and Panther 4099e, 7184 Hinderson, Sir John, 1642 6713 Hindoos, theogony, sacred writings, etc. 722, 7S52 Hindostan 6234, 6868 Hindostanee, MS. poetry (catalogue) 8836 tales 402 Hints towards a theory of life, Coleridge 1809 Hippolytus, Bunsen 1118-19 Hirelings, church, Milton 6164 reward, 1652 1599 ' s Histoire a raudieiice, 1840-8 6924 poetique de la Guerre, etc. 1306 Historia Histrionica, English stage 296"', 6974*, 6978 Historial expostulation, 1686 6829" Historian's Guide, 160O- 1688 1721 Historians, of, Horsemaji 9393 Scotland 77S1 H 601 H Historic fancies, Smythe 81SI3 lands of England 1160 portraits, Bruce 1057 *Hi8torica,l applications, etc., Berkeley 642 books, Libri catalogvie 6326 centuries, Keating 4739 chart, Playfair 4366 collections, Rushworth 7662 Walter of Coventry Walter 1663 documents. Bliss catalogue 759 essays. Alison 121 Porster 3141, 60 Prescott 7149 Schlegel 7733 Thierry 8800 events, 1686-1760 6806 facts, obscure, 1790 6770 fragments Leechdoms 1663, 1785 Lancashire and Cheshire 1639-40 literature, state of, 1830 6487 manuscripts commission 6737 memoirs of my own time, Wraxall 9647 miscellanies, Bonaparte 821 miscellany, Taylor 8698 narratives (Europe) S661 notes, 1509-1714 8814 observations, Europe, 1698 7767 odes, lytton 6968» papers. Bliss and Bandinel 760 Northern registers Northern 1663 parallels, MaUdn 6751 poems, 16*** century Oamden Misc.^, 1322 register, Tegg 8708 revelations, 1848, Blanc 742 sketches, Gumey (1400-1646) 3731 Landon 5040 Newman 6450-1 studies, Merivale 6069 tables, Blair 737 tracts 5668, 5902, 7047 traveller (Europe) 3651 Histories, of reading, 1685, "Wheare popular English Shakespeare's library 7971 Historiques melanges, Voltaire 9172 History, aetiology of 1710 ancient, Heeren 3988 Niebuhr 6496 Schmitz 7749 Tytler 9068 Yonge 9703 beginning of our, Schlegel 7737 byways of 12th to 16th cent. 8070-1 Carlyleon 1380''," chronology of 6476 and civilisation, divine drama 8143 cradle of 1660 curious subjects 6185 general, Tytler 9068 interpretation of, Maurice 5969 lecture on, Fitzgerald 5210 from marble Dingley 1322 main stream of, Lucas 5517 modem, Arnold 282 Schlegel 7737 Smyth 8188 Tytler 9068 of his own time, Burnet 1174, 5902 Prior 7183 of our own times, 1843 8027 of ten years, 1830-tO 743 outlines of, Keightley 4756 philosophically illustrated, Miller 6113 philosophy of, Bunsen 1121 Schlegel 7738 romance of, 1746-1846 8487 separation of tacts from fable 8435 and social progress 6516 study of 809, S346, 8436, 8915 treasury of, Maunder 6962 uncertainty of 226 universal, Bossuet 849 Michelet 6081 Weber 9324 History— co«<. use ot 809, 8435, 8916 of the Worid, Ealeigh 7265, 8 Histrio-mastix, Prynne 7208 Histrionic topography 928 Hoadly, B., " Suspicious husband " 1687, 90 Bishop 7041-2, 8382, 9409 •Hobbes, T. 256, 1730, 4169 Hobgoblins 1996 Hobhouse, Sir J. C. Broughton 999 Hobson, old 6829' "Hochelaga" 92S8-9 Hocus-pocus call'd the Pr. King to hfe, 1706 8937^3 Hodgson, W. B., economic science 5213 education 5784 Hoffman, David Grumbler 3682 Hoffmann, Carlyle on 1880 " « Hog, animal economy 2977 Hog-faced gentlewoman 295^' •Hogarth, "W., Dennis (portrait) 2866 Hudibras 1241-2 John Ireland 4461 MoU6re 6192 Nichols 6468-9 Perseus and Ai:idromeda 7021 J. T. Smith 8150 Thackeray 8759 ' ", 8764-5 Hogs character of a projector, 1642 7196 •Holbein, Bible events 4166 Erasmus 2815 life and works 4133, 9688 Holbourne, Sir E. (t) 3046 •Holcroft, life 3299 Holdsworth, E., Muscipula 9868 HoUord, Margaret Hbdso»'4112 Hohday romance, Dickens 2408, 36 •Holland, Henry, Earl of, 1641-2 1695^ =», ^, 1597121, 129, 3840, 8937 ' '^ Hugh, hfe 694 Pancharis 1855 ^ '^ Sir John, speech, 1641 16979> Holland, agriculture and rural economy, 1848 1892 assembly of 4100 campaign, 1798-4 1309 embassy, 1615-20 1371 and England, fleets, 1652 6734« Essex's wars 1774 history. Motley 6318 letter from, 1642 1697'2i malignants goods for, 1644 1697' naval war with, 1666 2683 Queen of, Hortense 7642 regicides in 7347^ tours, &c., 1634r-1849 696, Brereton 1639, 3583, 7378, 8002 •Holies or Hollis, Denzil, Lord 1694, 1597^, «>, lU isl, 2962S, », 12, 2953", "=, ", ",3692, 6447, 6729, 673438, 7188« •HoUingworth or HoUingsworth 1684, 1672»i •Hollis, T. 8036, 8898 Holmby, Chas I. 29S3», 7188" •Holstein, 1861 4982 Holy alliance, fables for 6244 of governments, Owen 6652 Holy Grail Joseph 2674 Land, Bible history 4866 illustrated 3060 de expugnatione terrae sanctae MaVph 1668 Mandevile 5769 physical geography 4869 pilgrimage to, 1506 Ouilford 1322 tale of 8186 travels, letters, etc., from 1880 1414, 2602, 4766, 6349-60, 63S2, 6866, 8942 living and dying 8679-80 meidenhad Holy 2674 and profane state. Fuller 3281 Rood legends Boly 2674 war. Fuller 8280 •Holyoake, G. J. Tovinley 8928 •Home, Sedgwick 7822 the (life in Sweden) 912, 16 Homely virtues, "Whiteside on 9453 •Homer and the Bible 2689 character of, poem 7021 fables, Dryden 2684 frogs and mice 6705=^ 6738 H 602 H *Homer — cont. gates of sleep 2322 snomolo^ia, Diiport 2fi39 hexameter translation 4053 and Homeric age, Gladstone 8430 and Homeridae, J)e Quincey 2366^ Homerides, 1715 4099'> hymns and epigrams 6705^^ illustrated by other writers 2639 introduction to, H. N. Coleridge 1791 life 4027, 4999 translations, Hobbes 4105W Pope 953« 4-099'', 6705=5, 7021 verdicts on, poem 7011 Homeric ballads, Maginn 4182 Homes and haunts, British poets 4520 of the new world (America) 920 Homeward Bound, fiction 1951 Homilies and homiletic treatises Solii and — Momilies 2674 Homoeopathy, dogs 6240 Honduras Cortes 3766 *Hone, W., Bartholomew fair 769112 Hone, W., execution, 1683 2277» Honest Design, 1659 1599 ' i Honesty, anatomizing of, 'Walsingham 9249 of this Age, 1611 682911 Hong-Kong 2187, 3803 Honour, essay on, 1754 4030 satire, "Whitehead 9442 ' triumphant Ford 7974 Honthorst, painter 7614 Hood, Eobin 6384, 8274 *Hood, T., notices of 4259, 7225 Hooge, EiOmain de 777 *Hook, T. B., Fleury 3087-8 Garrick, MS. notes 3317 Kelly 4761 life, remains 446-7, 4259, 5412, 8879 •Hooker, life 455, 5384 •Hooper, Rev. F. B. Palmoni 6690 Efiv. Richard, Chilcot 1641 Hop Kilns, 1637 7188=1 Hop-0'my-thumb 2155 •Hope, allegorical sketch, Bowles 870 Hopes, tale, Bremer 912-13 Hopkins, John, life 9538 psalms 664 Hopper, I. T., life 1646 Hopton, Sir Ralph 7188''", 8937 ' 1= •Horace, art of poetry 4830 Bentley's dedication 632 Butler, MS. notes 4244 Gay and Shenstone, copies 4226-7 imitations of 3365, 4099°, 6426, 7010, 15, 18 ; 8138, 8586, 77 Odes and epodes, trans., Lytton 6561 popularity of, Lytton 5561 proposals for engraving 6931 translated, Francis and Pyo 6705^* Horace in London 8138 Horace Vernon, fiction 4253 Horae, Libri catalogue 6326 Horae Hebraicae et Talmudicae 5335 Paulinae 6676 Vacivae, Elmes 2768 Horlook, K. "W. " Scrutator " 7809 Horn, King King Born 2674 •Home, bishop 6026-6 R. H. 161 8, 3930, 6009, 6226, 7730 T. H., diplomacy 2778 •Horner, Francis, life, letters 4262-4 Horrocks, J., life 2824 Horse, the 2977, 5874 and carriage oracle •4865 Horseman, the 4043 Horsemanship 3304, 4013 Horsemen, academy for 3304 Horses, rules for *4S65 selection 4043 Xenophon 9687 Horsey, Sir Jerome, travels Russia 3756 Hortensius, the advocate 3175 Horticulture, Chinese 3181 Loudon 6492 Hoskyns, life 594 Hospital of fools 7029 Hospitals, history of, Dugdale 2601 Hospitals, &c., Vienna 9483 Hotham, Sir John 1697*^, 6713 •Hotten, J. C. 2460 Hottentots 8509 •Houghton, Lord, Keats 4743, 7 notices of 1826, 4259 Thomas, Europe's glory, 1695 4099' Houghton-le-spring church 3898 Houndsditch 2952^ Hours in a library 84O0 •Household account. Princess Elizabeth Cam- den Misc.',\SW, book, E. of Northumberland 6528 books. Earls of Derby Stanley 1639 education, Martineau 5882 expenses, 1289-80 Smnfleld 1822 1831 2526 gods, Cilician 451 of Sir Thos. More 5788 Royal, Bdw. 3. to "VV». and My. 8208 stories, Grimm 3665 Houses of industry, Eden 2690 Housekeeping, encyclopedia 9837 Houssay, A. dela, political reflections 8610 * Hoveden, Roger de, chronica Hoveden 1663 How, Mr., letter to, 1701 iOgg"" S., sufficiency of the spirit's teaching 7844* How to observe, Martineau 5883 we are governed, Eonblanque 3098 •Howard, Edward, Hobbes 4105 E., Heads of the People 6009 family, anecdotes 4291 papers 6415 R., E. of Surrey, poems, etc. 8505 J ohn, life, letters 2503-4, 3026-7 Sir Robert 7012, 47'' Howards, the, lives 5485 •Howe, Admiral Earl, life 481 John, Ld. Chedworth Chedwarth 1626-7 Rev. John, life 1289 •Howel or Howell, J., of coffee 1777 Cotton 2013 foreign travel Howell 211 Giraffl 3421 instruments of a king 8937 ". 12 L'Estrange on 6274 Howell, Thomas (f James) 2886 T. B. and T. J., trials 8372 •Howitt, Mary, Home on 4259 magic 2801 poems 3059 ■William, Heads of the People 6009 Home on 4259 •Howson, dean 1927, 7843 Howth, book of 1299 Hoxton 7691' Hoyland, poems 6705** Hubbabub, city of, Disraeh 2^1 Hubbard, "W., Ceyx and Aleione 1855 '. » Hueknall Torkard, album 1275 Huddart, Capt. J., life 6485 Huddersfleld book 7815 Hudibras 1235, 1238-42 fourth part (Butler's ghost) 2646 ke.v to 1237 Ramsay on 7274 Hudibrastic verse 5801 •Hudson, 6. P., Heath press 3978-9 Henry, career of Hudson .3756 Hudson's Bay 415, Coats 3766 Hudson's statue, Carlyle 1896-6 Hugh, St., life Hugh 1663 •Hughes, John, letters 2620, 6284 poems 958', 6705«, 7010*, 7029 T. M., Spain, 1846 8282 •Hugo, v., on 1082, 8260 poems S67S as poet, Alexander 6209 HuKuenots, history, etc. 1112, 6868, 6863 Hull 1693', 1597*^, 4472. 6734' HuUah, J., Dickens 2465 Hulsean prize essays 354, 4783, 8901 •Human action, principles of 3936 character 1084 figure and beauty S916 form 6203 H 603 H *llu\uiin—ootiL happiness 8301 and duty 7276 nature 4106 physiologj' 2740 progress, survey 286 race, Piguler 3040 revolution in 6661 unity and origin 4630 races, unity of 8184 species, nat. hist. 8119 understanding. Lock© 6396, etc. Humanity to hrules 9705 •Humboldt, A. von, Arago 209 centennial address, Agassiz 72 life, etc. 4278, 4876, 6876 W. Ton, life 7741 thoughts, etc. of a statesman 8093 Humbugs, natural history of 7318 •Hume, Alexander, Britan tongue Hume 2674 David, apology for 6026-6 and Chesterfield 6025-6 dialogues 2389 his statements examined, Brodie 964-5 history, continuation, Smollett 8178 history. Towers on! 8921 Home on his hfe, death, etc. 4254-6 lite, letters, etc. 1204, 1637, 7428 and Locke 8612 Manstein 6791 and Ealeigh 8070 Joseph, Martineau on 6876 Lord, speech, 1841 8937 ' '^ Humiliation, day of, 1646 6734" Humility and Independence, H. Taylor 8667-8 Humorous essays. Chambers 1503 letters 5278 Humors looking glass Rowlands 1857 Humour, American 3771 of past times, 1760 7013 Oxford, A. a, Wood's time 701S poems of. Hood 4196 selections and essay, L. Hunt 4417 Humourist, essays, Gordon 3547 Humourists, English, Chasles 1606 English, Thackeray 8769 '. ", 8764-6 •Humphreys, H. N., illuminations, etc. 672, 687, 4022, 7966 M'., oratorio, words 7021 W. H., Greece, 1825 8729 Humphry Clinker, fiction 952*>, 8178 Hunchback of Notre Dame, fiction 4344 Hungarian Brothers, fiction 710O college dissertations 2492 Diet, 1861 4382 emigration into Turkey 4;i81 grammar 2163, 9341 lady, memoirs 7314 language, etc. 7355-7 literature, sketch of 2163, 8598 poetry 9341 •Hungary, Elizabeth of 4847 and P. Eugene 2844 Gorgei and others 3560, 8699 past and present, 1864 8598 revolution, 1848-49 8426 and its revolutions 7604 son gfinie et sa mission '1606 travels, etc., 1837-61 887, 2335, 4931, 6667 war, 1677 1603 1848-9 4873, 7744, 8783 ♦Hunt, Leigh, Beaumont and^Eletoher (and MS. notes) 631, 637 and Byron 1267 Chaucer 1618 Hazlitt 3952-4 Heads of the People 6009 Home on 4269 A. Ireland 4460, *44eo Landor 5066 Liberal 6324 Masque of anarchy 8003 Sheridan 8013 •Hunt, Lcigh~co»f. monument 4415 parody on 7351 Reflector 7344 Shakespeare (MS. notes) 7914 Spenser (MS. notes) 8307 Tatler 8660 Thornton L., heads of the people 6009 Hunted Down, Dickens 2403 'Hunter, Christopher, Neal 6403 John (Kelso) 1082 Bev. Joseph, MS. letter 3515 W., M.D., life 6707 Hunter in the prairies 6686 Hunter's life, S. Africa 2172 Hunters, Bavarian 7747 and Kshers 8073 Hunting 736, 833, 4219, 4779, 6501, 7809, 8214, 8854, 9687 Hunting of the foxes from Newmarket 1699 ' * Huntingdon, Henry of, chronicle 4016 Lady, letter 2620 mayor of, speech, 1641 1697^ Huntingdonshire, rural rides 1763 visitation, 1613 1322 Huntington, Major, Chas. I. 4026 Bobert, Guizot 3692 Hunton, Philip, monarchy 6196 Huntsman, reminiscences of a 643 Huon of Burdeux Charlemagne 2674 •Hurd, Bishop 40, 9261 Hui*mer, Anthony 2212 Husbandry 2664 ; Palladius 2674 ; 4472', 4765, 6652 •Husbands, Edward, Charles I. 1643 Hussar, fiction 3444 •Hutchinson, Colonel, lite 3692, 6384 Lucy, life, etc. 2002, 3692, 6384 •Hutton, H., Folly's anatomy 6829* — , notice of 694 Huxham, D'., life 6707 Hyde, Edward (Clarendon), speech, 1641 1697*' Hyde, abbey Hyde 1668 Park, satire on the " Ring " 7012 Hydraulics 6118, 325, 492 Hydriotaphia (urn-burial) 1023-4 Hydropathic authors 6091 Hydrostatics 6118, 326, 482 Hydur Naik, history of 4487 Hy6res, climate, etc. 8657 Hygeia, essays, moral and medical 653 Hylton chaplets 64361^ Hymenaeus, 1707, poem 7010 Hymn to Ceres, Homer 4179 the foundation stone, Lushington 6436" to Isis 4492 to the pillory 7021 Hymns, Homer 6706== on the Litany 1277 Luther 6536 and songs of the church, "Wither 8313 Sundays and festivals! (German) 1120 thirteenth century Homilies 261^ to the Virgin and Child Hymns 2674 Hypatia, fiction 4846 Hyperion, poem 4747 romance 5471 Hypocrites, satire against, Phillips 7026 Hypocrisy, religious, sermons 9617 An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type : " v " stands for nolume. Iberians, population of Europe by Ibis, against Ibis ad Caesarem •Ibn Batuta, life 859 6324 7636 604 Ice, sledge excursions 8610 Iceland, literature 4326 summer in, 1868 6668 visit to, 1852 6867 Icelandic language, Boswortli 859 life of Becket BecTcet 1663 poetry and history 6867 pronunciation BlUs 2674 trans, from 8194 Icon libellorum (pamphlets) 227B Icones historiarum veteris testament! 4133 Iconograpliy, Christian 2464 Idea of a patriot king 807-8 Ideal or intelligible -world 6518 Ideas, abstract 3936 dictionary of 4591 obsolete 6559 of relation 7571 Id6es Napol^oniennes 829-30 Identity, personal 1234 Idioms, Greek 2866, 9148 Idiotic, the 2618 Idiots, law 6888 training and teaching 4299 Idler 950, 4644, 6, 51 ; 7378 upon town 8114 Idol demolished by its own priest 4911 Idyll on the peace, 1697 4099" Idyllia heroica 6065 Idylls of the king 874fl, 3 Theocritus, etc. 8791 Idyls, heroic 5063-4 and rhymes 1864 and songs 6682 Ignorance, defence of 6283 social, evils of 9027 lUad 4105 ' 1°, 4167-78 Ilium, site 7745 ♦Illuminated books 672, 5, 6, 87, 9 ; 4875, 7 ; 7142, 796S Illuminators, middle ages 6068 Illusions, supernatural ' 565 lUustrium virorum elogia 8900 lUyricum, lectures on 6494 Images, &c. speech against, 1641 9275 Imaginary conversations. Hunt 4414 landor 6052, 67-9, 84 Imagination and fancy, poet, selections 4397 Imaginative biography 1074 essays 9560 faculties, Huskin 7571 Im^ms and Seyyids of 'OmAn SaUl 3756 Imbecile persons 2618 Imitation, on 8195 Imitations from modern Latin poets 1805 and paraphrases, Lytton 5605 Imitative art 1233 Immortality of the soul 4371, 6268 Impeachment, bishops, 1641 718 Davenport, etc. (Judges) 1597^ Earl of Danby. iOOg* eleven members (Hollis, etc.) 2952*, l», 1^, 2968", ", », ", 7209 Lovat 5496 Bp. Wren 9652 Imperatorum vitae Nepos 9096 Impertinent, the, poem 8677 Impious feast, i)oem 5050 Importance of literature to men of business 5369 Impositions, power of, 1641 1699' ', 7039 Impostors, famous, 1669 2898 Imprisonment for debt, Lilburue 5337 ' ^ separate 1197, 3028 Impropriations, 1648 1699'* Improvisatore, life in Italy 161 Improvisatrice, poem 5037 In a balcony 1043 In memoriam 8740, 4 Incantations 6344 Incarnation, the 4099'', 7012 {poem) Incas, civilization of 7152-3 •Inchbald, M"., life, etc. 772, 952, 2766 Inclosures 5188'' Incredulity and religion 8107 Incumbered estates court 307S Independency, history of 5339, Wither 831S stript and whipt 1695" Independent catechism, 1670 7047 character of, 1648 1595" faction, Scotland, 1648 5339 party, Lilbume 6838-9 India, administration of justice 1145 ancient knowledge of 7455 monuments 8830 and modem 8705 Benares massacre 2287 bird's eye view of 6836 British, history 1362, 2287, 5663, 6109, 8704, 9654 power in 1169 caste 444 central, Buddhist monuments 2174 highlands 3171 travels, 1876 753B civU government 1330 continental, travels, 1848 4114 cotton 2014, 7648 discovery of 1326-7, 3989 English law in 6837 Ganges 748 gazetteer, 1864 8853 government 1362 guide to, 1847 7425 Himalayan provinces, 1819-2B 6234 history 2761, 2821 infanticide, and its suppression 9558 instruction, Bengal 4808 irrigation 8153 journal, Sherwood 8019 Kaye 4734-7 Lahore 8181 land tax 393 letters written in, Heber 3981 Sir John Mandevile 5769 manners and customs, 1847 30 mesmerism in 2822 Lord Metcalfe 6071 modern, civil government 1330 Mofussil courts 6693 Muhammedan 2737-8 native hterature 5209 powers, service of 3235 princes, 1875 7535 natives and native institutions 1330 Nepal, etc. 6836 N.W. frontier 5532 observations on, 1853 4450 passage to FrobisheVy Bundall 3766 people of, character 503 peregrination, 1853 7134 presidencies 1362 princes and people (portraits) 2689 printed in 3900 provinces, 1855 6836 public works 2009 Punjab (see also Punjab) 4186 rambles in, 1875 4984 religion 1362 Seik soldiers 8181 southern, 1826 8981 sporting scenes 5717 statistics 6737 superstitions 8354 trade with 7455 travels, 1503 Varthema 8766 1802 9092 1845 6605 (" Up the Country ") , 1866 2688 tJpper, 1824-B 3981 voyages to, 16th cent. India 3766 war in, 1846 3845 West, 1848 7882 Indian Archipelago 4805, 6826 Papuans 2672 coUeotorat© 2664 cottage, St. Pierre 7647 drama 4718 empire, our b667 government 6379, 9016 605 Indian— coTCi. invalids, sanitaria 6316 islands, etc., dictionary 2103 ocean, storms 8807 poetry, old 7684 tribes, Paoiflo coast 7B23 Indians 3831, 7455, 7734 Indians, American 1460, 3387, 4784, 6678, 6356 Individual varieties of human nature 2965 Individualism 5636 Indies, West 1208 ; Champlain 3756, 3997, 5318, 5458, 6618, 8989 Indo-Tluropean tradition, folk-lore 4762 Induction, of 9400 Inductive philosophy 7128 Indus, the, 1836-8 9809 army of, 1838-9 3900 mountain course, countries adjoining, 1844 9144 valley of, falconry 1214 and Nile, regions between 1631 Industrial history, Greeks, Dutch 8913 professions and education 841 Industry, organization of 424-6 and war. Buskin 7563 Infallibility, 1686 7096 Eoniish 263,7095" Infant baptism 1753 school, 1816 6662 system, Wilderspin 9486 Infanticide, India 9568 Infants, poems on 611 signing of, with the cross 1600 Infernal machine 6864 marriage, fiction 2477 Inferno 2242 etc. Infidelity, 1728 7845 and naturalism (Bolingbroke's) ex- posed 818 Infidels, woAs of, on 149-60 Influence of authority in matters of opinion 5312 government on the mental faculties 3629 literature on society 8331-2, 6 the passions 8337 respect for outward things 8687 Information and petition Crowley 2674 Informers, &o. abuses of, 1635 7188" Ingestre, Viscount, Meliora 6023-4 *Inglis,D'., Leslie tracts 5271 *Ingoldsby legends and then- author 445, 4259, 4456 Inheritance, fiction 3013 Inn Album, poem 1048 Innes, Thos., Scotland 7781 Inniskilling-men, 1690 4099'', «72 ' " Innocent Till., Bull Camden Misc. ', 1322 Inns-a-Court, lawyers. 1660 1699 ' = Inns of Court, news from, 1642 6612 Inquisition, Madrid 3762 Spain, 1641 8937 ' "^ and Christopher Cob-web, Star- chamber 1690 Inquisitions Inquisitions^ Lancashire 1639 Insane, care and treatment of 1916, 4088, 9674 writing of 374 Insanity, Ceylon 2271 cure of 1188 Davey on 2272 Duncan on 2616 influence of religion on 9474 and jurisprudence 7167 and lesion of the brain 1188 madness 503 man's power over himself 8093 medical jurisprudence 1017, 7307 new view of 9474 sleep in, narcotics 9523 statistics 4201-2 Steward on 8418 Inscriptions, anc, one primeval language 3133 churchyard 7477 Greek and Latin, Leyden 6228 illustrious men 4819 Latin 6076, 8348 Macaulay 8354 monumental 2810-11, 8912, 9339 Insect architecture 7363 life 29, 377 world 3041 Insects, depredations of 3569 KolUker 4939 noxious and useful 4868 pictorial museum 6916 preservation and classification 7363 ravages. 7363 (See also Entomology.) Insipids, history of, lampoon 7012 Inspiration, doctrine of 5709 Instauratio magna 361 Instinct, British animals 2015 Brougham on 980, 2 indications of 4773 marvels of 3314 and reason 8098 Instincts, animals 8518 Institutes, Justinian 4711, 5302 laws of England, Coke 1780-1 Instruction, Bengal presidency 4508 practical secular 2294-5 public 623 Instructions, Scobell 7770 Instruments, astronomical 2567 of a king 4306, 8937 ■' "^ Insurance from fire 2277, ^^-'^ Ireland 44721" marine 9707 Insurrection, 1648 5i4g 1746 8347 Intellect, the 397 Intellectual faculties, development 3814 and moral development of the age, 1863 9281 Intellig;6ncer, Swift 8536, 43-5 Interdict, story of 9004 Interest, Bastiat 498 lowering of, Locke 6396 " Interest will not lie," 1659 6413 Interludes 1856 " \ Misc. \ 3284, 6829*^ Intermed], Tasso 8640 Interment, different nations 9204 premature 3991 International, language 5303 , , , law 9064 Interoceanic canal, 1852 8328 Interregnum 1782-3, 4602, 6811 . . (1689) , 1672 Interrogatories, refusing to answer 6337v 1 Interview, the, or Jack Falstafl's ghost, poem Intestines, diseases 3224 quicksilver in 7051' 3 Intoxicating drinks 5499 •Invalid, diary of, Matthews 5947 mutterings and musings of 6375 Invalids, Indian, sanitaria for 6315 Invasion, England, 1588, Diggs 7018 of England, defence, Calvert 1809 Invasions of England 21O8 French, history, 1744 4099I' Invasive war, misery of 7267 Invention (art) 3920 formal and spiritual 7571 Inventions, century of 9gi9 history of 552 Inventories Camden Misc.^, 1322, Iweentories W^ii's 1639 i 1640, 7770' Inventors and discoverers, anecdotes 6426 Inverness (P), map pnbUshed at 3571 Investments for savings ^737 Invisible John LBarkstead] made visible 1696 Invocation of saints 6322 7353 Involuntary prophet, fiction ' 3133 Ionian islands, 1863-4 46I6 4862 Ipswich books 1763, 2811, 3117, 3628! 7640 printed for, 1693 39371 3 quarter sessions, 1649 1669' 2 sermons 1753 7640 •Ireland, J., Henderson ' 4093 Hogarth 6459 S. & W. H., Shakespeare fabrica- •T , , tions, etc. 1493-4,4452,6767 •Ireland, affairs, 1641-1701 Wi . ^1?63 1683,447210 ancient state, and parliaments J * . ,, 1869,6326 anecdotes of men of learning, &c. 9312 anghng 6575 annals, chronicles Ireland 1663 assessments &c. 4472i» 606 'Ireland— COM*. astrological predictions 4472', 5343 authors, 180*. 1816 704, 7372 ballads 2596, 3922 banks 4472W. 6192 battles, sieges, etc., 1611-91 ' 4472 beggars 4472'" blood of, Cook 1579 Boulter (transactions, 1724-38) 860 Bramhall, correspondence 7301 Captain Eock 6253 Carteret's administration 8629'" Catholic Ass»., 1829 9634 Catholics 4472 census, 1841, Bl 6737 and Channel Islands 5258 Charles 1. and 11. 4472 chronicles 1663, 4138 Chroniciim Scotorum Ireland 1663 church in 4472, 9451, 3 and her churches 3459 civil wars 1713, 15, 2195, 4472 Clare CO., fish, &c. 8562"! Clarendon on 1713, 15 coins 44721" comet 44722 Commons, reminiscences 3090 Oonno county 1597™ contests, 1611, 1090 Ireland 1322 contributions, etc. 44721" conversations in, Dunton 2636 Crom^^'ell and Commonwealth 4472^ ^ crown lands 44721" Curran, life 2192 customs, excise 44721" Danes, etc. Ireland 1663 description of, Camden 1321 directory, 1803 9668 distempers, 1641 1697" dreams 4472' Dublin 4099', 4472 Dutch regiments 447214 early saints, kings, poets ecclesiastical architecture 6*74 6S57 education, national 6737 educational tour, Mann 5784 1814-lB 6999 1822 3798 1844-5 6473 5846 9370 1861 7470 Ellis letters, 1686-8 2549 Emmett's insurrection 6970 and England 2274, 4472, 8371, 9108 English in 4472 Essex, Earl of 44722 exhibition, 1862 5734 exportation of money and wool 4472"i fairy legends 2120 and France 4472 famine, 1847-9 6474 fine arts 8562' a. 8696 fish, etc. 8662'! fisheries, 184S 885 fortnight in, 1852 3966 free-ports 44721" Erench invasions, songs 6829=1 funeral monuments 9339 Gacdhill, the, war o£ with the Gaill Ireland 1663 gentlemen of, as landlords, etc. 6727 grievances, 1641 16971" S. C. Hall 8799-800 handbook, 1864 6364 harp and other instruments 1917 hearth-money 44721" historic memoirs, Barrington 473-4 and municipal documents Ireland 1663 historical notes, 1509-1714 8814 songs 68291 tracts. Sir John Davics 2274 and statistical, 1844-9 8183 history 1211, 1332, 1481-2, 166S, 171 3, 1 5 ; 2230-1, 4472, 624'*, 6474, 6602. 8306 horses bought for, and Chas. I. 1697i" housing 44721" on increasing its inhabitants and riches, 1747 8562 ♦! husbandry 4472» 4724-5, 6734 4099'', 4472l» 4472», " 4472'" 4472'"-'* 4472 'Ireland — coni. industrial Inniskilling men Ireton insurance James II. Jesuits "Keen" (South) Kerry pastoral Killarne^ 2369, 3800, 4814, B'245 lamentation of, poem 2371 legendary tales 5972 letter of Ld. Chief Justices, 1641 1697™ letters from, 1818 2373 1862 6884, 8217 liberation by the French 8905 liberty of conscience, 1662 4472™ literary biography 9662-3 Ld. Lieut. 4099», 4472 Lombards 4472'" London, propositions 4472 Londonderry, Walker, etc. 4472'" lotteries 4*72'" Ludlow and Ludlow's memoirs 4472™, 5522 lunatic asylums 6737 maps 3801 massacres 4472 memoir, 1172-1660 6562 minstrelsy, ancient 25'71 mixed tribes 6985 monasteries 2601 monopolies 4472'" music, national 1917 mystery of iniquity, 1643 1699' » national convention 478, 3090 natives of, in London 8662 ' * natural history 4472" nobility and gentry, 1689-90 4472'", '■> and Norman conquest 8796-8 Northmen and Normans 6460 novelists. Home on 4259 O'Neill (E, of Tyrone), etc. 6168 offices 4472'" J), of Ormonde, etc. 1482, 4472, 632B, 6606, 8861 papists and protestants 4472 parliament 8090, 40991, 4472, 6325, 9453,6 (Englahd) 4472 peasant proprietors, 1848 8857 penalties 4472'" peopled by Egyptians 8562'- pilgrimage through, 1861 7470 ploLs and conspiracies 4472 poets, dramatists 6688 poll-moneys 4472'" Pope, the, and popery 4472 and Portugal 4472' post chaise companion, 1808 9568 pressing of men for, 1641 1697", *», 4772= pronunciation of English MUs 2674 Protestant religion, destruction of, 1643 1699 '■> protestants 4772, 7168 Pym, speech 4772" Queen's Bench 6677 colleges 6737 rebellions and rebels, reigns of Chas. I. and II. 1684, 94, 97", ™, 99 ' ■*, 4472, 5176 18, 71881*?, 8714 Cromwell, Ireton, etc. 44728, " 1681-91 227729, 4472 ' 1"-" 1798 478, 5449, 6970, 8707 reforms and reformers, 1849 8364 registries for conveyances 4472™ relief of, Fairfax 2952" remarkable places 5245 rents and pm-chases 4172™ repeal of the union 7364 Eome and Komish clergy 4472 round towers 6666, 6867 and its rulers, 1844 5721 Rupert, Prince 4472 Saxon in, 1851 299 scenery, etc. 2463 Scotland, England 1844 4S32 60*; •Ireland — cont. Scots in 4472 Commissioners and Parliament, 1641 15931 sermons 4172', ">, ", " settlement and sale of 3262 seats and arms of noblemen, etc. 1163 1842-3,54 1699 '5 songs 468, 2121, 6829' and Spain 4472 state of, 1696 5034 1679 70S9 State Papers Calendars 1298 State trials 9456 Stratford 4t72=, 4,989, 8461, etc. and Ormond 6325 stranger in, 1805 2689 subscriptions for towns, etc., I&i3 1594 surveys 4472^ Swift (papers, tracts, etc.) 8624, etc., 8562 tales 6972 taxes, etc., 1662 4472 m tithes, 1062 4472 1" topographical dictionary 3563 tour, 184t 4641 tourist of, 1S54 723 Lord To-\vnshend's administration 436 travels, 1631-6 Brereton 16.39 Tyrconncl 4472'o Union 473-4, 5449, 6970 universities 4099», 4472W unquietnoss, 1579 CMirehyard 1853 usury and exchange 417^"* wars, 1642-51- 1449-60 1641-92 4472 west, 1850-1, etc. 299, 6972, 6619 wild sports 6972 Sir W. Wilde on 6211 "William and Mary 4472'* Wood's halfpence 8524, etc., 8540-1, 8572 Irenaeus, etc. 6784* Ireton, H. 1576, 96« ; 44728, ', 5336, l^'; 8937 " '^ Irish, account of, 1753 8562 ' = address to the Duke of, etc., 1757 7691 affairs and Louis XIII. 6494 bar, (lurran 2193 speech to, Campbell 1337 bards, history 1917 biography 702, etc. brigade in Prance 6666 " bulls " 2692 Catholics 2195, 6667 cattle, prohibition and importation, 1677 8937 "5 colleges, Louvain 3252 diamonds (wit, etc.) 8146 early settlements of, western hemisphere 621 elotiuence 6886 exchepiuer, 1829 9452 history and character, G. Smith 8128-7 learning and politeness, ancient 8562 ^ ' life ("Paddiana") 6666 melodies 6244, 9 misdeeds 2373 nation, military history 6666 nobility, 1685 1211 orators, Chasles 1605 parliament, 1631-66 6326 peasantry, traits and stories 1374 politics, poems. Swift 8629 prose and verse, selection 5706 question, 1844 6305 register. Swift 8662 ' ^ religion and literature 6638 sketch book, Thackeray 8759 » ", 8769 stage, 1660-1774 3364 tales, Swift 8562 'i tourist's handbook, 1862 4168 volunteers, 1782 6710 watering places 4922 writers 6662, 6706 Irishmen, united, lives, etc. 5726 Iron 2944-7 Iron rule, tale 2139 Irrigation, Lombardy, etc. 8164 Mairwara and Ajmeer 2496 Madras provinces 8163 scientific irrigator 4473 •Irving, Edward, hfe, etc. Carlyle 1380 " s, 3U3, 3964, 9608 Washington, Columbus 2966 Goldsmith 3603 Hazlitt on 3951 home, Ac. 144 Isabella, poem 4746 Isabella of Castile, life 4649 Isaiah, prophecies 8456 Iscanus, de bello Trojano Dictys 9096 Isidora to Casimir, poem 7021 Isbardo, travels in, 1844 9144 Island of fools, 1713 7691 of the Saints (Ireland), 1861 7470 of Veritas 9124 Isle of Wight and Charles I. 1693"', =», '^ Isles of Loch Awe, etc., poems 3816 Isleworth or Istleworth Mirror 2674, 8937 " ^ Islington book, 1748 9442 Ismael, etc., poems 5578 •Isocrates, advice and discourse 4620 Isometrical projection 5492 Israel and England, paralelled, sermon 4882 land of 6335 lost tribes 4784 of the Alps, Waldenses 6374 Israel-Indian tragedy, Jones 4675 Israelites and Americans 4674 Isumbras, romance Thornton 1322 It is never too late to mend 7325 Italian account of England England 1322 biographical sketches 661 court. Crystal Palace 2161 dictionar.y, Santagnello 7685 and English dictionary 442, 6124-6 freedom, origin, progress, and fall 8078 grammar 443 lakes, 1858 6484 language, Eobertsonian method 6217 and writers, Baretti on 1737 life, 1850 6812 literature, religion, 1849 9039 hterature 6816, 8059 memoir. Lady M. W. Montagu 8354 operas, on, 1706 7011 philosophy, on 9072 poet, Giusti 5533 poets, stories from 4412 prose 661 reform 2236 republics 8078 revolution, 1861 - 8994 sculpture 7464 sky, art and nature under 2215 theatre 2.391 translations, Demosthenes 2337 Homer 4178 Plato 6949 Warren, Lily and the Bee 9284 translations from 9246 volunteers, 1848-9 2286 war, 1848-9 5533, 6005 women, decade of 8997 writers, selections 4962 •Italy, affairs of. Machiavelli 6668 ancient, Niebuhr 6494 anti-heretical crusade, 14"' rent. 5808 arms, arts, literature, 1440-1630 2358 as it is, 1828 651 classical tours 2873-4, 4104 (south) customs, sports 6668 diary in, 1871 2734 ecclesiastical reform .5808 1817-19, Matthews 6947 1826, Hazlitt 8948 1828, Chateaubriand 1612 Hunt 4403 1830, Cobbett 1766 1839, " Valery " 9093 1840-3, Shelley 7998 1841, Yates 9696 1844-6, Francis 8223 1846, Talfourd 8633 (south) 1846, MacParlane 5668 1848-18, Mariotti 5809 184S, Geale 3359 1860, TroUope 9001 1862, Pfeifter 6866 1863, Hillard 4090 608 r—cont. 18S4, "W. A'Beckett 19 1856, Gondon 3539 1860, Norton 6637 and Prince Eugene 28«i, 7024 facts and figures 6736 French and Spaniards In, 1702 7024 genius of 9039 Goethe, travels 3480 guide for travellers and artists, 1839 9093 handbook, 1842, 63 6364 high and low hfe 6066 history 1246, 9090, 9674 and the Italians, 1840 7303 Italy, poem 7493 journey into, Montaigne 6210 journey through, 1789, Pioazi 6936 letter from, poem, Addison 7012 letters from, 1834 1415 1840-1 8660 18*7 130 1862 4495 life in, Andersen 161 literature 6816, 8069, 9039 and anti-papal spirit 7626 mediaeval, 1125-1268 1226 military events, 1848-9 4116 modern, history 9674 music and the arts 3310 mythology 4754 19* century 8464 north, 1865 8475 painters and painting 2978, 4550, 4613, 4951, 3, 4 parly, paper (1859-60) 6737 Pictures from 2399-403, 2446 political, 1846-61 6190 remarks on, Addison 40-1 residence in, 1848 3359 road-map, 1839 9093 royalty and republicanism, Mazzini 6006 sights in, Gardiner 3310 social and political, Laing 4980 south, 1846 5658 sport 7631 sum'ise in, H. Morley 6296 theatre, &c. 8786 tour in, 1830, Cobbett 1766 travel and study in, Norton 6637 travels, Chateaubriand 1612 1839 9093 trip to, 1847 3024 visit to, 1828, Hunt 4403 a winter in, 1844 9696 " Iter Boreale " 7368 Iter Lancastrense, poem James 1639 Ivories, South Kensington Museum) 6904 Ivy Lane, London, j)rinted 9688 Ixion in heaven, fiction 2477 An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading In the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type : " v " stands fiar volume. J. .lack and the Beanstalk 4166 Brag, fiction 4206 Catch and Slingsby Bethel, verse 7024 of Dover 6829' the Giant-Killer 4166 Jack — cont, the Giant-ciueller, Dublin 8662 " ^ and the Giants 4499 Jugeler, interlude ifisc.*, 3284 O'Lantern, fiction 1962 of the Mill, story 4321 •Jackson, Harriet, " Home Treasury " 4166 Eev. John, Leicester, life 8513 *Jacob, L., Rabelais 7251 Th^rSse von Talvi 8636-6 Jaeob Faithful, fiction 5830 Jacob and his sons 1856 "^ ^ *Jaoohite ballads, Thornbury 8849 character 4510 insurrections, Scotland 1203 Jacobitish conspiracy to assassinate W". 3 7020 secrets, Dunton 2638 songs, airs, legends, Scotland 4123-4 Tory, 1690 40998 trials, Manchester, 1694 Jacobites 1639 Jacobites, English and Scotch, scheme 5386 memoirs, 1715 and 45 8831 Protestant, 1690 4099i Jacobitism, dissuasion from, 1713 4512 *Ja«obs, G. Japiks 4564> Jacquard, hfe 4999 JaecLueline of Holland, hist, tale 3699 Jago, poems 6706^° Jamaica, birds 3666 case, 1867 8064 naturalist in 3568 satire on Sloane's voyage 8937 ' ^ ♦James I., annals 3225, 4790 apophthegms 200 character 1583, 2490, 4099', 7676, 8099 ' 1, 9346-7 comedy at Cambridge 7663 court and times 82, 1859, 4099'', 4523, 7675,7974, 8099 »>, 9346-7 curse of 8322 death 1579, 6031 (print) declaration concerning sports 8099 ^ ^ description of a puritan 7531 at Hoghton 4129-30 intrigues of Court 1869 as James YI. of Scotland James 211, James, Letters 1322, 6646, 7466, 7654 letters from and to (as Jas. VI.) James, Letters 1322, 5646, 7654 letters of ministers, &c. 1282 life, reign, times 406, 848, Bgerton. 1822, 8226, 3762, 3877, 4790, 6039, 7273, 7466, 7676, 9070, 9646 and his ministers, letters, etc. to 9640 and ministers in Scotland 7776 poets and poetry, reign of 1848 revenue payments 2382 state papers 1298 statesmen, etc. 6393 supphcation of mass-priests 7094 to Anne, historical notes 8814 ■works Janus 211, 3877 James I. of Scotland 4612 James II., abrogation of from throne 4611 abdication 1688, 4670, 7163 Barclay's commission 4511 character 1583 and Chas. I., comparison of reigns 1684, 6526 and Charter-house 6231 and Prince of Conty 4512 court of 7366 declarations, etc. 40998, 4510, 11, 704fli«, " French invasion to restore 4099«, i 4611 and French king 4611-12 funeral oration on 4099'' Ireland 4472i»-i3 letters 644, 970, 8041 {time qf) life, reign, etc. 1210, 1427, 1726, 3201, 8692, 4099, 4168, 4610-12, 4670, 4790, 16386, 5688, 6821-4, 7010 and Q. Mary, coronation 1993 ode to 7018 and Prince of Orange 4099, 4510-11 609 James 11.— coni. and parliament 4510, 8937' " picture of, Gates 6553-4 and Presbyterians 7040", i» proclamations 7040", 7188'» Protestant religion 4099'' and Protestants, Ireland 7163 reconciling Chas. II. to Ch. of Home restoration, 1692 right to the Crown 4099'' withdrawing from Rochester 8937' " and Scotland 704i!fl^ ^, 7043 secret service moneys Secret 1332 vindication of, from ass", plot 4511 and William and Mary 6188 as Duke of York 2277", 4B10 James I. to James II., England under 2782 James III. (Scotland) B38B, 7011 James, D'., powder 8901 G. P. E., Home on 4269 Haostrect, poem by 7020 Rev. E., Iter Laucastrense James 1639 James the nephew, chronicle, 1743 8937^ ' •Jameson, M"., 2161, 4259, 6876 • Jamieson, ballads 412 Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy, Sir 6638 Jane [Grey] Queen, chronicle Chronicle 1822 Jane Eyre, fiction 682 • Janin, Jules 801, 7225, 7898 January SO"" and Bp. Burnet 1684 sermons and harangues 1580, 4 Japan 8638, Japan, Morga 3766, 4984 Japhet in search of a father, fiction 5831 Jar of honey from Mt, Hybla 440O Jardin des Plantes 801 Java 3385, 3778, 4706, 4984 •Jay, Oh. Just. (U. S.), life 7687 Mens,, 61og6 on Montaigne 6210 Rev. W., life 9217 Jeames's diary, fiction 8769' ^* • Jebb, Bishop, Ufe 3132 3)'., Ferrar 3007 Jefferson, T. (U. S.), life 7279, 9015 •Jeffrey, Lord, life, etc. 1770,'3413, 3954 Jeffreys, Lord (Judge), Ufe 7510, 9371, 9618 Jehan of Dammartin lieimes 1322 Jellalabad, 1846 8461, 9261 Jenkin, "Will., queries, 1651 7047^ ■Wilham, 1679 6141 •Jenkins, David (Judge), 1647 8937' « Jenkyns, William, 1662 1599' ^ Jenner, D'., life, letters 466, 3182, 5707 •Jennings, Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough. (See Marlborough.) • Jenyna, S., poems 6706™ Jeremiah, lamentations, Quarles 7229 • Jerrold, D., heads of the people 6009 Home on 4269 illuminated magazine 4443 Jersey, Carteret, Giovernor of 1436 history, etc. 2817, 6257-8 printed at 69682s, gigg Jerusalem, Aleppo to, 1697 6958 fall of, poem 6130 Mandevile 6769 recovery of, Tasso 8641-4 St. John of. Order 643516 Jervas, M'., Pope to 7077 Jervis, John, Earl of St. Vincent, life 923 Jervoice, Lady Lucy, fun. sermon, 1641 7840 Jessey, H. (f ), MirabiUs annus 6163-4 Jesters 295'^, 6175, Pools, Gosson 7974 Jests, &c. 6829", 6852, 7018, Tarlton 7974 Jesuit, a, character of 1537 answer to Sherlock 7096 conspiracy and Order 5265 fem^e 5627, 7812 in the family 8389 in training 8390 Lysimachus Nioanor 617, 6163 Pulton, 1687 709613 and Scottishman, discourse, Strafford 8468^ Jesuitism, Oarlyle on 1396-6 founders of ' 8396-6 and Jesuits 2901, 6092 Loyola and 8676 Jesuits, banishment of, requested, 1641 1690 bull 6758 College, Clerkonwell, 1627-8 Camden Misc.\ ^ 1322 EngUsh 8390 Fisher and Sweet 5173, 7038 history 6489, 6768 Ireland 4472 Laud tracts 5153, 73 laws against 6188 letters from, 1688 7040"= and Paris university 7096" provincial letters 6768 St. Stephen's chapel 7030 Savoy 7024 the, Miehelet and Quinet 6087-8 and fall of 7648 •Jesus, bowing to the name of 1600, 70 Lacoruaire 4965 life of 3894, 7368, 7487, 8472 murder of 1761 the Messiah 4624 Jeux de mots, Potier 7121 Jewels, counterfeit, 1636 7188i» Crown 4052 decoration 4958 Jewess, the, fiction 2678, 81 Jewish question, 1848 3856 Jews, chronographical and numerical systems 6690 the, history, Milman 6132 murder of Christ 1761 persecution of, Damascus 7662 supposed Messiah, 1666 2893 Joachim, King, letters to 3194 Joan of Arc, life, etc. 2366-6, 4999, 8363 Kent 1866' 2 Joanna I, and II. of Naples, Ufe 4549 Job, history of, Quarles 7228 lectures on 4776 triumphant, Sylvester 8691 Job, slave in Maryland, life 705' " * JoceUn of Brakelond, chronica JBrakelonda 1322 John, King 638, ia«e;i.322 of Poland 6154 John Bon and Mast Person 6829™ Bull, history of 219-21, 8629' ', 8937' « letters to 6661 the butler, Marlborough 5817"' the carter, 1742 7045 the scribe, ohron. 8937' '^ the second, Marlborough 5816 John Halifax, fiction 2075 •Johnson, G., causes of disease amongst poor 6214 Michael 7988 B.., walks of Moorflelds Johnson 1856' 2 E., grammatical commentaries 8693 S. (Cheshire) 7021-2 •Johnson, D'. S.,BosweU 850, 2-6 ; 5736 British novelists 95'^ Sir T. Browne 1025 Carlyle on Boswell's life 1380'"' T. Davles 2280 Earl of Dorset 2540 Dryden 2677 Gay 3348 Gray's " Elegy " 2116, 9711 and Garrick 7380 Johnsoniana 862, 4654 Kenriok 4795 W. King 4829 letter to. Towers 8921 letters 9276 life, anecdotes, etc. 850, 2-6 ; 3902, 4379. 6617, 18, 25 ; 6736, 6361, 6934-6, 9276 lives of the poets 1444, 67051-* Milton, Ufe, versification 4496, 6705* poems 6706^9 poetical portraits of his club 1934^5 I^ope. ,., 7066 religious life and death 269 Earl of Rochester 1179-80 610 Johnson, D'. S. — cont. " Shakespeare " 4795, 7869, 789*, 7919 Towers on 8931 Johnson, Rev. S., 1690, etc. 4611, 7047 (P), 7364 •Johnston, B., letter to M'. Porster 1484 Joinville, Lord John de Crusades 2160 JoUey, T., copies, autograph, etc. 269, 3901, 5697, 7499 Jonah, history of, Quarles 7228 sermons, Hooper 4221 Jonah's cry, Lilbume 5387 " ^ * Jones, Colonel, victory, 1641 1597 ^^ Geo., B.A., "Waterloo 9307 Henry, Taylor 8684 Inigo, life etc. Jones 7974 Col. John, regicide 8883, 7368 Colonel Michael 4472, 6606 M"., poems 7028 Owen 676, 689, 2161, 8611, 4231, 54U7 Sir W. 300, 1303, 6705«, 7510 (,life) • Jonson, B., and Drummond Jonson 7974 Eastward ho 1531 life 335, 2626 ; Collier 7974 poems 953'', 2796 on poeti'y and eloquence 8043 verses to his memory 8118 Jordan, M"., life 773, 3299 Jordan, the, U.S. expedition to 5548 Jordanus, Priar, Mirabilia Jordarms 3756 Jordi, Mosen, hfe 6220 Jorrocks's Hunt, fiction 8506 Joseph Andrews, fiction 952, 8034 Joseph of Arimathie Joseph 2674 Josiah, history of 4296 •Journals, Ailghanistan, Sale 7653 American military, Simeoe 8049 Assheton, 1617 Assheton 1639 Baillie, 1637-62 394 Crabhe 2068 Curwen, 1775-84 9263 Germany, 1799 (Trench) 8949 Haydon 8693 Earl of Leicester 8039 Livingstone 5388 London to Georgia, "Whitefield 9437 London playgoer 6290 nobleman. Congress of Vienna 9140 Peninsular war, Larpent 6127 Raikes, 1831-47 7263 Sismondi 8079 summer in the country 9536 summer tour, Sewell 7861 Swedish Ambassy, 1653-4 9445-6 Swift to Stella 8529 of travel, Durer 9321 (Governor) "Winthrop 9576 Julian Young 9712 Journey of life 8062 round the world, 1863 8385 through the head of a modem poet. 1750 1690 to the world underground 41S4 Jovian, Johnson's answer to, 1692 7047* Jowctt, B. 2833, 6947 Juana, Queen, and Henry VII. 1300 .Tubilaeum Sixti quiuti, 1689 8080 Judaism 2488, 6871 Judas Iscariot 2365 ^ ^ Maccabaeus, poem 6794 Judge-Advocate, Peninsular war 5127 Judge of religious controversies, 1686 7096 and witness in same cause, one man as 51883 Judge not, poem on Christ, charity 6795 Judges, assize, expenses, 1696-1401 Camden Misc. \ 1322 Charles !.'■ 1545, 6863, 7368, 9132 lives, etc., England 8186, 8926. 9360 United States 7687 and ship-money 8021 speech touching. 1041 1595" Judgment of Hercules, poem 8012 Judgment perverted by three (Laud, etc.) 4070 Judgments, 1661-2 0163-4 Judicial astrology 226 statistics, 1867-63 6737 Juglers discovered, Lilbume 6337 '", " Jugurtha, Sallust 7656, 8 Julia de Boubign6, fiction 982 JuUa Pamesa 2997 Julian, Bungener 1114 Julian account of time, kalendar 4099S 7064 Julian the Apostate, life, etc. 4643 Julien, fiction 2610 Jullien, L., notice of 7225 Jummoo Rajahs 8181 Jung Bahadoor, camp of 6691 *" Junius," authorship, etc. 340, 448, 957, 1490, 2039, 2U91-4, 2470, 2651, 26*3, 53; 3426, 3662, 8685 Junius, Francis (" old student ") 6282 Junot, Madame Ahranths 23 Junto, memento to, Prynne 7210 the two Juntos, Lilburne 5339 "Westminster 1599'^ Jure divine 2315, 7040"' Jure belli et pacis, de 8677 Juridical arguments, etc., Hargrave .3860 Juries, antiquity of 7046 art of packing 620 and justices, 1682 5231 power and privilege, 1681 5188 1654 1599 --i touching, 1681 5188 Towers on (hbel trials) 8921 Juries, Exhibition, reports, etc. 2924, 34 Jurisconsults, Roman law 9094 Jurisprudence, Ld. Coleridge 1792 and insanity 7167 law periodicals 5184-7 lectures. Long 6469 medical, insanity 1017, 7307 principles, etc. 6877 Jurors, challenKe of 4702 Jurors, etc.. Exhibition, 1862 2934 Jury-man's judgment, Lilbume 6337 ' * of inquisition de jure divino. Laud 5176^ trial by 3174 Jury room, tales 3664 Justice upon the army remonstrance, 1649 1599'= Justice and Footmen, the, 1744 3106 Justices and juries, 1682 5231 Parliament's charge to, 1642 1695'° of the Peace, 1680, etc. 6188 Justification, doctrine of 8837, 41 *Justinian, Institutes 5303 •Juvenal, Dryden 953", 6705'» imitation of 6427, 7024 Juvenile delinquency 1419, 20 ; 4084 depravity 566, 9639 memoirs, 1797 3365 Oho 6590 Juvenilia, poems. Hunt 4401 Wither 831S Jyl of Brentford 411 " " An "^ denotes that the word to uliich it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the (catalogue in small type : '* v " stands for volume. K. Kamee, nndl'le Ka thee 1671' Kabul, 181'J 6234 1836-8 {see also Cabul) 9609 Kaempfcr, E., life 7636 Kaffir land and Kaffirs 1786, 8509, 9266 Kaffraria, military operations 1456 611 K KaUt, 18«-3 6933 Kaleiidar, Mayor of Bristol (Bristowe) Sicart 1323 mending the 7024 Poor Robin 7064 Kalendarium Calholicum, IfiSfi l*jn Hortense, Evelyn 2895-8 " Kalilah and Damiiah " t:ii23 Kuloolali G002 Kang-Hi, Emperor Orleans S1SR Kant, la^it days 2365 philosophy of 1503 Karnatio fialaghaut 4437 Kars, 1856 4986 Kashmir, 1819 6231 1844 (see also Cashmere) 9144 Katertelfco, Action 6030 Katharine, Queen, divorce 396 inventory of wardrobe Camden Misc. ^ 1322 state papers 1300 Katmandu, Nepanl, journey to 6591 *Ka.vanagh, tale 6473 *Kay, J.,life 2S24 Kean, C, notice of 7225 E., copy of Shakespeare 7893 letters, etc. (catalogue) 6173 lite 7194 •Keats, lite, letters, etc. 2365, 3413, 437S Keble, Eev. John, life, etc. 1794, 7883 Lyra Apostolica 5551 Keepers of the great seal, catilogue of 2699 seals, France, lives 9094 Keepers (the late) of EngMsh liberties, 1680 70*7' Kellawe, E. de, Bp. of Durham Durham 1663 *Kelly, Alderman, life 2987 astrnlos^er 5344 Kellys and O'Kellys, fiction 8973 Kelso, J. Hunter liiSi *Kemble, AdeLnde, Jameson 45.52 family, lives 3067 Frances Anne, poems 1231-2 J. P., copy and book-plate 8789 letter to 8788 lite, etc. 771, 3067, 3299, 4379 Shakespeare 7918, 20 *Kemp, nine dales wonder Kemp 1322 *Ken, Bisliop, Hfe 158, 6376 Kendal, John Thurston, 1678 7845 •Kendall, T., epigrams 8313 Kenelm Chillingly, Action 5561 Kenilworth (Kilhngworth) 411 »» Kenmure, Viscount, papers 7047^ •Kennedy, B. H., psalter 673 B. S., Mont Blanc 4331 J. P. (U. S.) 144, 9581 •Kennet, Bishop, letter to Bp. of Carlisle 7163 sermons 1680, 3 ; 7842 •Kenny, James, notice of 7225 •Kenriok, D'. .3320,4099" Kensington 4406, 8937 ' ^ •Kent, Cade's rebellion 6610 Consuetudines Kanciae 7679 gavelkind. &o. 7679 Lord Goring 1595" Joan of BedceTBse"^ Kentish dialect Michell 2674 men, satire, 1701 7024 sermons Miscellany 2674 Lee, printed at 1324 Lee priory press 1028, 73 i 7269 Leeds, etc. 7474. 9 manifest 7188" museum, D^ Bargrave's Bargrave 1^12, proceedings in, 1640 Kent 1322 1642- 6 Camden Misc.', 1322 proclamation, Chas. I. 7188=' Eiohborou'-'h, etc. 8121 rural rides 1763 Kent, Dachess of, Martineau on 6876 Kentigern, St., life 7781 Kentish Town, congregational church 3170 mission 4803 •Kenyon, John, copy 778 Kepler, life 6381 •Keppel, Admiral, life 4800 Ker, H. B., lives 6381 Keramic Gallery 1491 Kerhonah, poem 2741 o 16505. 8770 } 7097 KeiTy pastoral 6829" Kesson, John, Dyoe catalogue 7768 Keston, books 7663, etc. Kettering hook 5206 •Key of the universe 9080 Khallikan, Ibn 4442 Khiva, notes on 7ii92 Khyber Pass, 1839 467 Kiokleburys on the Rhine, fiction 8769 ' 8 Kid and King, Presb. miu". executed, 1680 7-. Kidderminster (Kedarminster) stufl 1 Sundays, Ijolidays 6404 the, Plato 694S theatres, 1756 1689 Laws of thought 8842 •Lawson, M". Dorothy, life m^B^^ Lawyers, lives 7510 etc. (U.S.) 2705, 4881 Lay folks mass book 3Iass 2«74 sermons 1803,10; 6029 Lay of the Last Minstrel 7798 Layamons Brut 9182 •Layard, Sir A. H., Crystal Palace 2181 literary address 949 Layman's faith 7246 Lays and ballads fi'om English history 6613 legends 8847 of memory 348 middle age 3985 my home, &c. 9464 ancient liome 5626 Le Clerc, Locke 4099'' Tillotson 3745 Le Neve, John, lives 6380 P., copy 2775 " Le Sport," Baden 3074 Le Sueur, painter 7614 Lea, river 8850 Leach, "W., a new parliament, 1651 673 i Leaders in literature, De CJuincey 2365 Leaf beauiy 7571 League, Anti-Corn-Law 7147. 8217 and covenant, 1643-8 1596=»,1698H 1599 '5, 2038, 6734 11 Leapor, M"., poems 7028 Learned societies 4363 Learning ancient and modem 8717, 9843 improvements of, 1668 3433 introduction of, England 9297 and learned men, apology for, 1653 9305 polite, enquiry into 3499, 3515 and philosophy, Eastern 6902 and working, Maurice 5C55 •Leatham, W. H., notice of 1325 Leather, transportation of, 1641 6734^ Leaves from the Olive Mount 5715 of grass 9460 Lebanon, daughter of, De Quincey 2:<65 thistle and cedar of 37 17 visit to, 1861 3889 voice from, 1847 4738 Lecouvreur, Mile., m^moires 6193 •Lectures, J. Foster 3191 W. J. Fox 3206, 8, 9 Gurney 8780 Mechanics' Institute, Bathurst 60S Whatcly 9390 to the working classes, Fox 8209 Lectures and addresses, E. of Carhsle 1378 miscellanies (U. S.), James 4639 Ledbury and Jack Johnson, novel 8104 Ledyard, John, life and travels 76S6, 8286 •Lee, General and "Junius'' 3426 N., life 2626 Lee, Kent, printed at 1324 Priory press books 1028, 1073, 7269 •Leech, John, illustrations 16-18, 643, 1278, 2139, 2399, etc., 3153, 3346, 4198, 4413, 66-7 ; 4597, 4«05, 4970, 6242, 7; 6989, 7215-17, 8104^ etc., 8117, 8506-7, 90S0, 9489 Thackeray on 8759 ' '^ Leochdoms, early England Leechdoms 1 663 Leeds, Duke of, life, 171 1 6380 •Leeds books 398, 1787, 6227 and Parliamentai'ians 5365 and Thoreaby S844 (Kent) 1 4,141 g 615 Leok book 349 the, poem, 1717 7010 •Lefevre, Sir G. Vf. 6909 'Legal arguments, D. Webster 9327 sketches, Shell 7993 tracts 7018 Legend of Reading Abbey 56r,5 Legendary art iS4S, 53-4, 8 remains, Eoby 7«8 tales, Ireland 6972 Legends of Charlemagne 8354 border, ballads 7994. Christian east 78^5 of the hbrary. Lilies 11550 and lyrics 7190-1 of the Madonna 4548 Shine and Low Countries 8600 Roumanla 6357 songs, etc., Durham 7975 conquest ol Spain 4176 of Venice 4023 Legh rent roll Warrington 1639 Sir Peter, letter to Chetham 3Iisc. ^ 1089 Legion of Honour, story of 4609 Legislature, duties, &o., Eedgrave 7338 Legitimacy of Amicia Amicia 1639 •Leibnitz, life 3089 Leicester, II. Dudley, Earl of, life, letters, etc. 1859, 4575, 6748-60, 7048, 9670 Robert Sydney, 2'' Earl of 1697'=", 1859, 3840, 8039 (t) Leicester, bishopric 8368 book 1275 letter dated at 7368 regaining of, 1645 1597'8 Wigston's Hospital (Jackson) 8613 Leicestershire, declaration, 1642 15853" letter to gentleman of, 1643 8937 " '2 Eural rides 1763 *Leigh, Percival 6226, 6009 Leignton, Alex., case of Camden 3Iisc. ', 1322 Buzzard, 1643 1691" Leila, siege of Granada 5559-60 Leipzig, Campaign 3146 plan of battle of 1626 Lekain, French actor, m^moires 8634 Leho, Hervor, Ac, poems 7793 Lemoinne, .lohn, London 5132 •Lemon, Mark, notices of 8266, 7225 ♦Lennox, Margaret, Countess of, life 8480 M". 9622* Lenore, translation 1137, 6435", 6848 Lent duties and services, sermons 3184 sermons, 1623-8 4820 Lenten journey, Umbria, &c. 9002 Lentball, W. (speaker) I69721-22, ^, 1699 » \ 2133, 2963™. 4026, 6337'' 1- = Leo X., life poem to Leo XL, ejection of Africanus, life •Leon, Luis de, hfe P. de Cieza de, travels "Leonidas," on Leonora, fiction Lepel, Mary, letters, life Lerma, Duke of, life, etc. •Leslie, Charles C. E. Sir Joha Lesley, General John, Bp. of Eosa T., " Scourge " •L'E strange, Hamon, Chas. 1. Sir lloger 5378, 7516-16 3189 6616 7636 6220 Leon 3756 6807 Ilervey 4048 5378, 6166 (f) 7864,8937"* 1600, 2399 2776, 8422 1598"2, i», 7778 4574 4957 1683, 4055 70, 797, 1237, 1672", 2811, 7047», 7095'-», 7167 Letter of advice to a young gentleman, 1768 8502 '2 poet 8662 ' ■ Council to Sir T. Lake Camden Misc. =, 1322 in metre by a gentlewoman 1856 » 2 to a member of the National Assembly 1145 old merchant to his son, 1763 8662 ' 2 Letter office, England and Scotland, 1685 7188>= writer. Punch's complete 4594, 4603 writing, history "139 •Letters, Abbot, Ld. Colchester 1784 a Beeket 3411 Addington, Vise. Sidmouth 680S Addison 40, 44, 644 Alexander and Dindimus Alexander 2674 of an American, Landor 6083 Anne (of Denmark), Q. 6616 Arnold 8369 Ashburnham 1666 Atterbury 8488 autograph 337-9 ; Camden Misc. ', 1323 autograph, catalogues of 1451, 2, 4 ; 6173, 8860 Bacon 360, 73 ; 6610 Baillie 894 Bamford 421 Barbam 445 Baron 465 Barton 491 Basire 4,93 Bp. Bathurst 8806 Baxter 9276 Beattie 3116 Beckington Letters 1322 Duke of Bedford 667 Beethoven 7729 Bentham 619 Bentley 631 Bp. Berkeley 640, 4 Hon. Geo. Berkeley 8499 of a Betrothed 7132 Baron Bielfeld 693 Biron 1467 Blanchard 6769 Blessington S724, 6769 Bohemia, king, queen, and prince of 644, 5640 Bohngbroke 9276 Bonaparte 819-20 Boner 835 Boswell 851 Bouillon 1467 Boulter 860 Bourbon, Cath. do 1467 Bouthillier 1467 Bramhall 89*, 7304 Brand 6435 ' * B. H. Bright (MS.) 4427 Bright, J. (MS.) 937 Eajah Brooke 974 C. B. Brown 2628 Sir U. Browne 2888 Sir T. Browne 1022-3 Brunton 1064 C. Buchanan 9276 Marq. of Buckingham 146 D. of Buckinghamshire 1093-4 Burnhley 6392, 9670 Burke 1145-6, 3089, 7174-5 Barman 298 Buxton 1247-8 Byron 1264, 6251-2 Calvert 1309 Calvin 1314 Campan 1329 Campbell 6769 Canterbury, Christ Church Richard I. 1663 Ld. Capel 1358 Carew Careto 1323 Sir D. Carleton 1371 Queen Caroline, etc. 1219 A. Carrel 1426 M". Carter 1434 Cary 1441 Castlereagh 6449-50 Cathcart 1466 Catherine II. 2259 Sir E. Cecil 1.322, 7654 Chamiierljiin Chamberlain 1322 Channing ' 1520 Ld. Charlemont 3089 Charles I. 492, 970, Charles 1322, 1442 1677, 1682, 2888,4091, 67345 court and times 9523 Charles II. 492, 614, 970, Camden Misc.^, 1322, 6585 Charles V. and ambassadors 1603 Princess Charlotte 1219 616 Letters— eont. Chatham 1614, 80P9 Chatterton 1616, 2494 Ld. Chedworth 1626 Cheyne 9276 Cicero 1W4 Clarendon 492, 2888, 5367 Henry, E. of 1720 Ld. Colchester 1784 Coleridp:e 133 Sara Coleridge 1821 CollinKWOod 1858 W. Collins, K.A. 1882 Columbus 3756 Comber 1901 Congreve 644, 2364, 9548 ol a Conservative, Landor 5071. Constable 5268 Copleston 1976 Lady Comwallis 1991 Cowper 2048, etc. D. Cox 8212 Crabbe 2068 Cromwell 1380, 1401-4, 42 ; 2130, 6585 T. Cromwell 1864 Croplcjy 7878 Culloden 2164 A. Cunningham 4119 Currie 21ii4 G.T.Curtis (MS.) 5783 Curwen 9263 D'Arblay 212-13 D'Effiat 1467 Delany 2326-9 Dennis 2351-6 Des Noyers 1467 D'Ewes 2383 Dickens 2461-2, 3142, 3166, 6683 Diderot 3662-3 Doddridge 2621 D'Ornano 1467 Drake 483 Drapier, Swift 8524, etc. Dryden 2364, 2681 Marq. du DefEand 2310 Du Plessis-Mornay 1467 E. of Dudley 2604 Edgeworth 2692 E. of Eldon 9059 Queen Elizabeth Letters 1822, 6479 and Ministers 5416 reiRn, naval worthies, etc. 485, 8937S Elliott 9315 James Ellis and Scott 6436 » " John Ellis (to) 2549 eminent persons 6472, 9207, 9637 England, Kings of 6SS1 monarchs of, and foreign princes 7295 illustrative of English history 2749-51 6788 Erasmus 2812 Evelyn 2888-90 Eairf»x and his army 2952-3, 7188»8, 120 rairfax correspondence 2949-60 Talstaff 9418 Sir E. Panshawe 2971 Peuqui6res 1467 Pfariiigton Farington 16i9 Eitzosborne 6028 Pog's Journal 3097 IToreign princes 7295 Foscolo 3186 Foster 8192 Fouch6 3194 0. J. Fox 7683 Franklin 3226, etc. Fresnes 1-167 M". Fry 3271 Garrick 8317, 6173 gentleman to his son in the college, Dublin 8562" » Georgian Merchant, Bath 3s62 Gibbon 3394 Gilpin 9276 Goethe 3488 Goldsmith 3499-500 Granger, etc. 3683 Gray 3015 •Letters— ooM*. T. Grenville (MS.) 4226 Grenville correspondence 3643 Baron de Grimm S662-S J. J. Gumey 892 Gustavus Vasa 3733 Marq. of Halifax Savile 1322 T. Hamilton 8825 Hanmer 8834 Harle (to a member of parliament) 8864 Lady B. Harley Satley 1322 Harrison (U. S.) 4675 D'. Hartley 9i76 Gabriel Harvey Harvey 1857 Hatton 6479, 9670 Haydon 3919 Hayley 3924 Hazlitt 6769 Hearne (to) 3974 Hemans 1654 Henderson 4008 Henrietta Maria 1682 Henry 3, 4, 6, 6, reigns of Letters 1322 Henry 1663 Henry 8, reign of 929, 1854 H. 8, Wolsey and ministers 8371 Henry 8, EUz., James and Charles, reigns of 1282 Herring 4036 LadyHervey 4018 Hobbes 4105-6 Horner 4062-4 John Howard 3026 Howell 4305 Hughes, &c. 2620 Humboldt 4361 Hume 1204, 4370, 2 L. Hunt 4395 Inchbald 772 Sev. J. Jackson 8513 James I [. 644, 6585 James VI. (I.) Letters 1322, 7654 Jay 4571 Jeflerson (U. S.) 7279, 9015 Jeffrey 1770 Jenner 466 Jordan 4590 to John Bull 6561 Johnson 4644, 7, 9276 E. Johnston (MS.) 1484 G. Jones 4675 Jordan 778 to joui-nalists, mad year, 1720 S9S7' ' E. Kean, catalogue 6173 Keats 4275 Keith 4758 Kelly 2987 Klopstook j877 Knighton 4903 the Lambs 5007, etc., 6030, 6769, 8624-5 Lancashire antiquaries Clietham Mise.^, 1639 Landor 5066, 5068 (MS.), 6071, 83 Languet S042 Laud 6142 \V. Law 5ij,:3 Lawrence 9519 Leibnitz 5233 Earls of Leicester 1859, 9670 L'Enclos 6260 Leslie 5266 Lutterkundige, Halbertsnm 3769 Lewis 6319 Lihri 6328 Lilburne 63.37-8 htcrary men, 16'M8"' cent. Letters 1822 Locke SlGS-9, 4825, 6896 Londonderry 5452 Lovat 21G4 Luther 6536 Luxborough 6540 Lyttelton 5535-6, 9276 Wacaulay 6618 Macready 6718 Malibran 6062 Mallet du Pan 5765 iMalmesbury 5756 Manlield 677Q 617 'Letters— eoM^ Mar(^ret of Anjou Letters 1322 Duohess of Marlborough 6814 Duke ot Marlborough 2059-GO, 5215, 5814-15 H. Marten and Pettingall 6867 Marvell 6894-5 Mary, Q. of Scots 5898-900, 8348 Rev. W. Mason 3615 Matthew or Mathews 6946 Melanchthon 2812 Ld. Metcalfe 4736 Milton Milton 1322, 6164^-5 Mirabeau 6161-2 General Monk 1442 I.ady M. W. Montagu 6208-9 M". Montague 9276 Montaigne 6210 Montgomery 4147 T. Moore 6266 Hannah More 7440 Henry More 0258, 9270 Sir T. More 2812, 7607 Morgan (to a clergyman) 0367 Mozart 4166 Sir T. Munro 3447 Needier 6415 Nelson 6420 Sir I. Newton 6455 Eev. J. Newton 9276 Nicholas 2888 Bp. Nicolson 6493 Niebuhr 6498 Norris 6514-15 Northern registers Northern 1663 Nott 8432 M". Opie 938 Duke of Ormonde 644, 1431-2,6606, 8861 of Ortis (Foscolo) 3185 Orton (to Dissenting Ministers, &c.) 6611 Osborn, 1659 6616 E. Osburn, 16i8 6620 Palmerstoii 2229 Eev. J. Parry 6744 Pascal 6756, etc. Patmore (to) 6769 Eev. S. Pearoe 3277 D'. John Pell 9110 Pepys 6821-4 T.H.Perkins 1445 Earl of Perth Perth 1322 " Peter Plymley " 8150 E. ot Peterborough 9260 Philologists 7816-17 Bp. Philpotts and Macaulay 6904 Abp. Piers Chetham MUef, 1639 Pilkington 8629' w Piniierton 6932 Pliny 6998 Piozzi 6938 Pitc .3089, 8348 PiMS IX. (Apostolic) 9061 Piumpton Plampton 1322 Pole 1854 Pope and others Camden Misc.*, 1322, 14.30, 7066-8, 74-5, 86-91 ; 8987' ', 9276 " Post-boy " 7116 PrasUn 7139 Prideaux Prideaux 1322 Princes, statesmen, etc. 4297, 7520 Prior 9276 to his son. Punch's 4694, 4604 D'. Eadoliffe 6386, 7259 Sir G. EadoUffe 9412 Regicides V347 fi. Reynolds 7381 (and papers), reigns of Rich. 3 and Hen. 7 Richard 1063 Eiohardsou 7399-401 Eitson 74-29 Robespierre 6307 H. C. Robinson 7463 E. of Rochester (Hyde) 1720 Eoffe 7478 John Rogers (MS.) 7488 Romilly , 7606 G. Rose (to and from) 7620 Eoyal, ElHs 2749-61 and illusti-ious ladies 9611 JjPitprs — cont. Rudyerd 7549 Bp. Eundle 644 Prince Eupert and cavaliers 67S4» 9255 Russell, Rachel, Lady 7585-6 D. of Rutland 8348 D. of Saxe-Gotha ■ 3662-3 St. Evremond and Waller 5107 St. James's Chronicle 7621 E. of St. Vincent 923 Sancroft 1442 Schiller 7727 H. Savile Savile 1332 Sir W. Scott 6435", 7434 S6vign(S 7852-4 1" E. of Shaftesbury 1657, 7874 3'' E. of Shaftesbury 3168, 7878 Sharp, R. (and essays) 7978 Shenstone 8009 Shelley 8000, 1, 8 R. B. Sheridan 6769 T. Sheridan 6769 T. Sheridan and T. Cibber 8937 ' = Shillingford ShUUngford 1322 Siddons 3293 Sidney 1859, S168-9, 7686. 8039, 41 -2 Sir J. Sinclair 8066 to Archdeacon Singleton (S. Smith) 8156 Sismondi 8079 Slingsby 8092 Horace and James Smith 6769, 8137 Sydney Smith 4148-9 Sir T. Smith (secretarj') 9670 Sophia Dorothea 9525-6 S. L. Sotheby (Crystal Palace) 8246 Southey 7434, 8270-1 Alex. Stanhope 8365-6 T. Starkey 1854 Starkey Starhey 2674 State, Sadler 7613 Steele 644, 8381 Sterne 8408, etc. Story (U.S.) 8410 Stradling 8460 , Strafford 4904, 8468" Stuart 8347 Suckling 8494 Countess of Suffolk 8499 Viscountess Sundon (to) 8834 Swift 469, 644 and friends 8625, 8, 9, 32-3, 35, ,36, 44,67 Sydney {see Sidney). Szemere (MS.) 8599 W. Ta.ylor 7134 W. 0. Taylor (to a Prelate) 8697 Sir W. Temple, etc. 8718 Thoresby (to) 8845 Throckmorton 1854 of a traveller. Sand 7660 Tucker 4737 Dawson Turner, catalogue 9040 Sir H. Unton 9081 TJpcott, catalogue 9082 Abp. TJsher 6741 Van de Weyer 465 Sir H. Vane 7347, 9101 Vanhomrigh and Swift 8529" Verney family Vemey 1322 Jas. Vernon 9128 Victor 9139 Vives 2812 Voiture 2354 Charles P. of Wales 6646 Henry P. ot Wales 5646 Horace Walpole and friends 9233, etc., 9254 Lord Walpole 2064 Sir R. Walpole 76 1 2 Walsinghajn 9670 Warburton 926I E. P. Ward 6769, 6906 Jos. Warflon 9616 Washington 9303 Watt 6337, 9318 Eev. J. Waugh 6319 D. Webster fU.S.) 9327 Wellesley 6780 618 'Letters— oont. ■We11inf?ton 9352 Wlfttely 9386 "White, J. B. 9427 Whitty giHT ■Wilberforoe 9481 ■Wilkes 9488 Wilkie 2177 William III. and Louis XIV., etc. 36(51 "Williams, Teesdale, and Thompson 4986 Sir J. "Williamson (to) Letters 1322 Uev. Thos. "Wilson Wilson 1639 "Winthrop 9579-80 AA'odrow 9591-6 "Wolre 9668 "Wcirthington TForthington 16,'i9 "Wotton 9640-2 "Wycherley 2354 C. Yorke 9261 T. Young 9714 Letters and letter-Tcriters 7847 Letters, origin ol 4ff30 Lettres historiques, etc., Bolingbroke 812 politiques, Duveyrier 2652 provinciales, Pascal 6756, etc. Lettsom, "W. N. 4173, 6468, 9311 , 13 Levana, education 7406 Levane Seas, news from 1855 " ' Levant Compan.v, seijnon, 1664 6526 monasteries 2200 the 2144, 8917 Levantine family 7B28-9 Level of sea and land 1 .504 Levellers, liilburne 6337'' = Levelling, self- instruction 6492 Leven, Earl of, declaration, 1645 1595*3 •Lever, C, Friswell on 3260 Lever, Crucifix or Holy Passion Misc. ^ 3:^84 Leviathan, Hobhes 4105-7 Levins, Peter, dictionar,y Levins 1322 and 2674 Levy, Julius Sodenberg 7470 •Lewes, G. H. 3178, 6736 Lewes books S74, 2604 Lewesdon Hill, poem 2148 •Lewis, Erasmus, to Swift 3362 Lewis, M., model of a bank 4099b M. G., Bravo of Venice 906 E,., Eree-masons advocate 8562 ^ ^ Tayler, capital punishment 1628 Thos., " Scourge " 4957 Lex Talionis, Chaloner 1601 Lex terrae, 1647 4683 Lexicon, Anglo-Latinum Fromptonum 1322 EngUsh-Greek, Pradersdortf 3215 Frisicum 3757 Greek, Hederio 3986 Greek-English, Liddell 5330 Greek and Latin, Schrevelius 77;i9 Latin, I'acciolati 2940 Latin-English, Andrews and Preund 174 mental and moral science, terms 8J86 mythology, Carr 1425 plan for, E. Aram 210 Sophocleum 2738 tetraglotton, Howel 4307 Leycester, Sir Peter, tract Amicia 1639 •Leyden Museum, inscriptions 5228 Leyson, life 694 Libel trials 3094, 6577, 6804, 8057 • ^ juries, law 8921 Libels, satire against, Otway, 1680 7036 Liber, albus, oustumarum LonHon 106 i amoris 31 Hi Ca-ntabrigiensis 713 1 cotidianus 83ii7 faraelicus Whiteloclce i;i33 fluviorum, Turner !)ii45 Pluscardensis 77sl studiorum, Turner (Norton) 0533 Lib^ralisme, 1856 .".:! ;5 Liberia, 1854 3701 Liberties of the press and pulpit, L'Estrange 70I7» subject, 1648 6734 Liberty, civil 6331 of conscience and Charles II. 1 COO Ireland 4473 ' 'i, 7039 Liberty of conscience— cowf. queries to Penn and Cai-e 7040 Petty, 1679 7039 1685, 7 16731°, 7040 R. "Williams 2764 and equality 54S8 Hobhes on 4105 ', ^ necessity, chance, Hobbes 4105* notion of, Clarke 1730 of philosophizing 8331 poem 88;i5 of the press, Brskinc 2819 of Rome and ancient nations 2726-7 of the subject, 1628, 41 1597""=, 1599 ' \ 7039, 8468"' Libraries, celebrated British, 1819 1733 church, Lancashire Libraries 1639 Lancashire Libraries 1639 London 6589, 8116I memoirs of, Edwards 2706 monastic, Gt. Britain 6068 publiQ 6737 public and private, 1811 6745 statistics, Edwards 2707 •Library, Bliss catalogue 759 Brit. Mus. handbook 8061 choice of, Dibdin 2397 collection of, Clarke 1726 civil engineers, catalogue J709 companion, Libdin 2397 G. Daniel, catalogue 2240 economy, Edwards 2706 erection of 6398 Farmer, catalogue 2975 Lincoln's Inix 8320 London, catalogue, etc. 6432-8 Newcastle, catalogue 6434 K. of Oudh, cat. of MSS. 8325 Parr, catalogue 6743 Perkins, c;italogue 6833 Pinelli, sale, prices of classics 3893 Soc. of Antiquaries, catalogue 820i; Strange, catalogue 8470 Libyan desert 7033 Licenses, repeal, 1643 7188^° Lichfield, bishopric [8368 Darwin 7855 M. Johnson 7988 Lioia, poems Misc. ', 3284 Lieutenancy, Lancashire, Tudors and Stuarts Lancashire 1639 Lieutenants of counties, 1643 15943 Liesli, Swiss tale 1733 •Life assurance, chronicle 3219 Life-boat, etc.. stations 533.1 Life-book of a labourer 6495 Life, conduct of 4717, 5455 and death, history of. Bacon ' 361 death, immortality, Night-thoughts on , ,. . 9709-10 decline of (5(340 discourse of, Tutchin 9054 eternal, without death 8937 ' ^ and fortune, different conditions of 8717 health, disease 4636 hints on j.ijg knowledge of 5785 lonp 6996, 8717 and manners, De Qumcey 2366 of a midshipman j^7^g in the north, Bremer 919 peerages 6477-8 philosophy of (,273 poetic, H. Taylor 8667-8 in the ranks j;(3in of a sailor ^-^\_i in the South (America), 1863 4, 1679, 2798, 6706« W., Bp. of Worcester 7096, 7354 "W. W., Shakespeare 7904 Lluellin, elegy on Charles I. 1581 Loans, 1788-1847 8220 Lobeira, Vasco de, Amadis 137 Local self-government and centralization 8151 Locality and health 6419 *Loch Awe, Isles of, etc., poems 3816 C(5, annals of Ireland 1663 *Locke, association of ideas 9450 autograph 141 Constitutions for Carolina 7615 and his critics, Vau^han 9108 human understanding, abstract of 8662 '■2 and Hume 8612 life, letters, etc. 3168-9, 4099', 4825- philosophy of, Smart 8094 poems 7027 political principles, vindication of 8921 H. Rogers on 7485-6 and Stillingfleet 8427 *Locker, Arthur, All the Year Hound 124 •Lockhart, J. G., Buonaparte 2966 GilflUan on 3413 Martineau on 5876 Schlegel 7736 life of Scott 413, 1083 Sir W. 9110 *Lockiiian, David's lamentation 7021 Locks of hair, catalogue 1451 Locomotion, maxims for 4S66 Locuta, voyage to 3723 •Lodge, E., Holbein 4132 T., life 694 life of Long beard ioi?s« 1865 ' ^ Lodging houses, report 6737 Loe, poems Misc. i, 3284 Lofft, Capel 1077, 6149 Log of a merchant officer 6074 Log-book, fisherman and zoologist 1095 sailor bo.y's 9436 Logan, poems C705" •Logic 226, 2379, 4105', 6826, 6112, 8842 for the million 3406 of facts 4164 of the future 2282 of political economy 2367 vindicated, Copleston 2115 "Whewell on Mill 9400 Logical treatises, Aristotle 253 Logographio press 8412 LoE, sonnets Misc. ', 8284 Lollard doctrines Widiffe 1322 Lombard insurrection, 1848 6005 rifle brigade, 1848-9 223G Lombards and banks, Ireland 4472 ' i» Lombardy, campaign, 184S-9 8426 irrigation 8164 tour, 1853 486 •wav,170S 4087 Londesborough, Lord Benison 2346 •London, air and smoke, Evelyn 2892 antiquities 8123 apprentices 6337 >' \ ', 7188"*, 8099 >' ' songs and ballads 6829 >' ' architecture and improvements, 1810 5716 art and artists 7222 as it is, 1837 4126 bills of mortali fcy, 1629-32 7188™-' bishop of (1303) Executors 1322 (1728) 7845 business, physiology of 1708 bveways, 1873 1260 cab fares and distances, 18SI 8030 •London— eo«<. candle for blind citizens, 1648 8937 ' " and its celebrities, Jesse 4621 chap books 152S charities 6603, 5746 charters 6188 ^, 6337 ' ' " Christ's Church," 1641 3048 chronicles Camden Misc.*, and London 1322 churches, etc., engravings 6120 citizens and Chas. I. " 1598" citizens, petitions, 1641, 8 1698 =^, 718S» city of, and army, 1647 (verses) 1707 astrological prediction, 1649 5343 and attorney general, 1682 6188" and Charles I. 1658, 71, 97', '», ^ ; 8937'" and charters 5188 ", 5337 ' ' Common Council, 1682 5188 '' Common Hall, 1643, 5 1582, 6447 Cromwell, 1647 2133 employment of poor, 1678 8937 '^ Fairfax ti'aots 2962-3 frauds, 1866 4983 Ireland, propositions for 4472 knavery m, 1649 1699 " » lamentations against, 1646, 8 1855; BrinklowWti letter from No body in the, 1679 5283 litany for, 1647 5446 and Londonderry 1568 Lord Mayors, etc. {see p. 621) majores et vicecomites London 1322 markets, tolls, &o. 6188" mayors, &c. London 1322, 3576 members of Parliament (verses) 7024 muniments London 1663 pair of spectacles for (and case), 1648 6442-S parliament and army, 1648 8937 ''^ petitions & speeches on, 1640-69 1690=, 1696'", 169757, ^^, «», "I 1699 "3, 1669=, 6444, 7; 6733", 673437, 7188", 9373 plot against, 1643 6785 Presb. congregations, 1661 1599" propositions lor easing, 1642 1597« Publique faith's mourners, 1652 6734« and Eichard II. Maydiston 1322 robberies, 1641 9007 sanitary, 1864 8053 school SSO searching houses, 1642 6713 sheriffs, etc. 1697^, 2277=*, 3676, 6188,8937'" sins (sermons), 1615 4223 1642-8 6426, 42-8 speeches, Guildhall, etc., 1644-5 1682, 6447 survey. Stow 8444-5 clubs 5849 companies' halls Broadsides 1866 ' ' corpomtion, hackney coachmen 7770 corresponding society 3S84 Court of 6322,7561 curiosicies of 887S customs, Arnold 278 cycloptedia 4884 Democritus in 2238 dens of, 1863 9100 in Dickens 6808 distances, 1861 8030 diurnal, character of a 1746, 6429-30, 9520 doings in, 1851 (plates) 2926 dresses, amusements, etc. 6746-6 1860-3, Cunningham 2183-4 1850-1, McCulloeh 6644 1851, Weale 9322 excursions from 4886 and exhibition, 1851 6122 Are, 1667 2683, 6344 621 •London— con^ food of 2517 rranoiscana Franciscans 1663 galleries of Art 4546-7 Gavanii in 3347 to Georgia, 1739 94'J7 grammar schools 7188^^ grave yards 9204 hand-bills 7691 Guild-hall chapel 4099 Holborn Bars, register office 1538 Horace in 8138 Ivy Lane 9688 journey to, 1698 7691 Knieht-rider Street 4221 labour and poor 5985 Leaden-hall St., execution, 1663 904-1 libraries 6589, 8061 life, curiosities of, story of 2139, 8120 andLilbume 6337'",'', 8 Little Wild Street, sermon 784S lives, Dnnton 2635-6 " London," poem. Glover 3457, 7014, 24 London, Knight 4889 cat. of books 5427-8 lyrics 6402 poems 1081 London'sliberty in chains 6337^'^ Long Acre 6736, 7047, 95'3 Look on me, London 1866 "^ Lord Mayors, etc. 4, 705 ' ^ 11.38, 1695 s*, 1597», *, ^. ^, '2', 1699 ' 3, 2277^8, 2952-3, 3576, 4099', i, 6188, 6231, 6337"*, 5447, 4066, 6829", 7188^ ^ "♦, ^, 7611, 7839 low 7292 manners, customs, etc. 6745-6 manufacturing industry 2516 memorials, Jesse 4620-1 and Middlesex, sheriffs 8937 " " militia 6.338,6734=1 modern, Bureaiid-Uiofrey 1136 music 4603 mysteries, IS*"" century 1605 news from, 1648 8937 ' '' to Norwich 4775 to Odessa 6242 Panton Street 3106 and Paris, dialogue, 1701 7024 past and present, 1852 6120 playgoer, 1851-66 6290 Presby. and Congreg. ministers, 1691 7844 primrose of, 1585 296» prisons 2505 recorder, 1641, 4, 7 1671, 6447, 7188™ religion, superstition 6745 remonstrance. She-citizens, 1647 5445 robberies, 1641 9007 rookeries, 1850 523 St. Paul's to St. James's (" the Town ") 441G St. Helen's, sermon 4472'= St. Lawrence, sermons 1138, 9613 St. Mary le Bow, sermon 4472n sanitarjr commission 6737 saunterings 7743 scrivener, character, 1667 9358 seven deadly sins Dekker 1855 '' - sketches and travels, Thackeray 8759 ' '* social and political, 1831-47 7263 songs published at 3313 Stone and Billingsgate 285" stradaroetrioal sui-vey, 1851 80.30 street-folk 5985 streets 52:8, 8149 Sunday in 1.360 survey. Stow 8144-5 on the Thames 7316 theatres 4396, 9138 Threadneedle Street 7691 topographical prints, catalogue 759 trained bands, 1642 6713 triers and judges of elders in, 1645 6734" University, Stow 8443 Tirgil in 2aJ9 volunteers, 1642 6713 ■Wanderungen 7742 water supply 6737 waterman, 1681 1672', » and Westminster 1209,2647,7188","*,7845 entry of W. 8, 1697, poem 7020 3970 6708 1658 4472" London and N. W. Railway, Head *Londonden'y, M. of, Martmeau on London and Chas. I. siege, &c. Londres ot I'Expobition de 1851 •Long, T., " Eikon " 4153 Long engagements, fiction 5461 life. Temple 8717 pack 4125 parliament Vsrney 1322, 1380 ' ", 1599 ' *, 369-2, 4311, 4681, 6518, 7839, 8937 ' ' vacation, satire, 1709 7012 voyage, Dickens 2406 Longbeard, W., life . Lodge 1855 " ^ Longevity 0640, 8155 •Longfellow, H. W. 144, 2248, 3260, 9193 •Longinus, on 3629 Longitude, of 8937 " ' LongstatE, W. H., mottoes, etc. 6135 ' " Longus 7808 •Lonsdale, J. G., hexameters 4063 Looking-glass for mahgnants, 1643 1594 Lord Bishops none of the Lords Bishops Hi69, 6175, 7207 Chamberlain 2735, 6968', 8788' Chancellor, office of 2699 speeches, 1672, 9 1602 Chancellors and Keepers, lives, catalogue of 1334,-5, 2599 High Steward, office 7047 Keepers 1696", 1697«, «, 6872 Lieutenants Lancashire 1639, 6735'°, 7048 Mayor of London, Action 91 Privy Seal, poem to, 1713 7010 Protector, government by, 1651 1599 " ^ Lord and the Lout, fiction 3553 Lord's Day, observance of, 1644 6734" Prayer, sermons 1674 Supper, 1645-6 6734", ^5 Lords, House of {see also "Parliament") 2385, ,3094, 4099n, 4469, 5176', 5337 »l,^ 6713, 14, 25, 34; 7162, 7188«-i", 7202, 9, 23 ; 7499, 8021, 8468-9, 8937 ^ " Lords, etc. slain, 1641, etc. 1551, 1597^ spiritual in Parliament 2277^ '"-^^ statute for placing 6482 in the Tower 7047', ' Lords' men, Occleve Courtesy 2674 Lorenzo Benoni 7652 Lorenzo de' Medici, life, etc. 5668, 7512-14 Lome, land of 1080 Los Gringos {Mexico, etc.) 9582 Loshes, the, lives 6486, 6435 " ' Lost Pleiad, poem 6041 senses, Kitto 4867-8 tales of Miletus 5583-4 tribes (Nestorians) 3,184 of Israel 4784 Lote, notice of 594 Lothair, fiction 2477 Lots. Gataker 3338-9 Lotteries, Ireland 4472^" •Loudon, General sgei M". 4970, 5491 •Louis XI. 1902-3 XIII. 1407, 4308, 9145 XIV., life, letters, reign, transactions with England, etc. 301, 979, 1.528, 1602, 2908, 3661, 4099«, ^ 4100, 4511-13, 4534 {life). 6698, 6S63, 7643, 49, 50, 91 ; 8812, 8937 " ", 9110, 9175 XV. 1112, 1328, 67, 3662-3, 9175 XVI. 1328, 1920-1, 3662-3, 621 n XVII. 632 XVIII. 2147, 3194, 6495 Philippe, King 1445 Louisa, Voss 9177 Lounger 950 Lounger's common-place book 6447 Louth book, Tennyson 8734 Louvain, Irish colleges 3252 Louvois, Marquis de, Ufe 5373 Louvre, the 7626 •Lovat, Ld., letters 2164 Love, Christ., case, speech, etc., 1651 1599 ' ^, 70472= (?) Love, A. Sidney 8038 art of, etc. 4831, 6642, etc. divine, Hollis 1315 and eloquence, 1685 6889 622 Love— COB*. given over, satire, 1710 7012 ill the Suds 4099 " itiiluence of, on literature and life 6561 lecture 902 letter 1858'2 story, Sotithey's " Doctor " 8259 Love me little, love me long, fiction 7326 Lovechiirin, fiction 8S72 Level the Widower, fiction 8759 '"i l,ovelace, life 59tf Lovell, poems 6705'" *i ,over, S., Heads of the People 6O09 Lover, the 40, SSS5 Lover's complaint, poem 7907 ^ ^ Lover's seat 2469 Love's Court of Conscience Croweh 1865 ' - Meinie 7669, 75 Loves of the Angels 6244 Poets 4551 Lovibond, poems 6705^5 •Low Countries, character of, 1660 2885, 4301 and commonwealth 0734*3 France and Spain, 1689 41)99" legends S600. letters and verses to, 1593 Nash 1867 " Lowden," Lord, speech, 1641 1597™ Lowe, Sir Hudson, Napoleon 3173 •Lowell, J. U. 141, 5084 •Lowell Lectures (U.S.) 868, 2993, 5915 •Lowth, hliiglish grammar 294 Loyal martyr vindicated 1580, 4099"^ Loyalties severe summons, 1681 2277^" Loyalty's speech to England, 1639 1696^ Loyola, Is. Taylor 8675 •Lucan, tr. by Bowe 933'», 670.58' 'Lucas, Sir Charles 1547, 7229 P., life 7416 Sir Gervase 15931= ♦I.ucian, imitation of 7029, 8562 » ^ Lucile, poem 5603-4 Lucilius, translation 4716 Lucina 4632 Lucrece, Shakespeare 7907 ' ^ 7962 Lucrecia, life 4033 Lucretia, fiction 5569-60, 85 •Lucretius, translation 9531^ Lucubrations of Humphrey Ravelin, Col.Proctor 1990 •Ludlow, E., iind his memoirs 1559, 80. 84 ; 3692, 4153, 71b8i« Ludlow, Castle, Milton 6143 churchwardens' accounts Jjiidlow 1322 prisoner in, 1642 1)97'*'^ Luminalin, masque Misc. *, 3284 Lumisden, A., life 2359 Lump of gold, etc., poems 6674 •Lunacy and lunatics 224, 3270, 4099', 5529-30, 6000, 6737, 6888, 9572, 4 Lunatic asylums 224, 1066, 5630, 6202, 6737, 9474 life, 1850 6529 Lund, John 2593 Luneau de Boisgerraain 7355 Lunsford 1694* 1697«, <« Luria, Browning 1043-4 •Lushington, S., hymn- 64^i.) >■ " Lusiad, translation 1326-7 Lusigncn, romance Partenay 2674 Lusitania illustrata 6435 ' '2-" Lusorium 6r)67 Lustra Ludovici (Lewis XIII.) 4308 Lusus juveniles, Dawes 2293 •Luther, Unily on ■ 396 life, writings, etc. 4930, 5217, 6870 Luther's devil 6934 Luther's psalm 1380 'S Osburn on 061 6 Stephen on 8396-6 vindication of .3857 Lutheran pinuciples, 1714 40:'9 ' Luttroll of Ariau, liction B.i97 Luizaii, battle of Camden .Visc,^, 1322, 1620 Luzara, ode, 1702 7024 Lycia, discoveries 2989-91 travels 9108 Lydgate Camden Misc. *, 1322 ; Courtesy 2674, 6829 Lydia, history of 2070 Lyly, Eupbuea Li/ly 211 Lyman, Theo. (U.S.) 3887 Lyme Regis, history 7436 Lyndhurst, Lord, lite, etc. 1336, 5876 Lynn book 6616 •Lyra Czeoho-Slovanskft (Bohemia) 788 elegantiarum. Locker 6403-4 Germamca (hymns) 1120 Lyric leaves, Webbe 9323 offerings, Blanchard 745 poetry, time of Edw. 1 6829'' Lyrica poesi, de 164 Lyrical ballads, &o. 9633 poems, 1589-1600 6829>5 Lyrici poetae, Graeci 7031 •Lyrics, Browning 1041-2 and legends of Rome 7602 for old Lutenists 1856 " i of Scotland, Aitken 100 of the Heart, Watts 9320 Lysimaohus Nicanor, 1640, 3 517, 1598*, 5163 •Lyttelton, Lords 638, 953i«, 976, 3521, 6705=", 9276, 9685 and Pbillimore 6876 •Lytton, Earl of 8720 Lord. Blanchard 747 Hazlitt 3946 Horace 4260-1 hterary address 948 notices of 3260, 4269 Schiller 7716-16 Water-patient 5091 An " denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as u heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type ; " v " stands for volume. M. Macara, Mudie, literary address 949 Macaronies, 1773 6387 Macaronique litt^rature 2333 •Miicaulay and Bacon, Spedding 8296 Bagehot on 380 character of the clergy, etc., Babing- ton 356 Gilfillan on 3413 Home on 4259 inscription by 8354 Leatham on 6203 literary address 948 Martineau on 6876 and Penn 1734, 2606-8 Bp. Philpotts 6904 tracts collected by 4099 •M'Carthy, D. P., Calderon 1290 Macclesfield, Moliueux 7473 M'Cosh, tendency of religious thought 6211 •MoCuUoch, Uicai-do 7354 Macdermots, fiction 8973-4 Macedonia, ancient 6494-5 through, 18'U 9208 •JIac Farlane, C, EiigUud 2785 Machiavelli, hfe tif'O maxims Sijgo modern policies 40*19^ on his " Prince " G551 „ , . . Osboru 0615 Machine, mfernale £864 •Machinery, results 488S 6669 Maohyn. diary, 1650-63 Machyn 1322 Mack, Rev. J., obituary 6485' •Mackenzie, P. L. and H., life 6103 Henry, Man of Feeling, eto, 9S2» M 623 M Macklieatb, Capt. 3356 •-Mackintosh, Sir J., Enc. Brit. 2776 life of More B377 notices ol 2228, 3964, M52 Peltier 6801 John, life 5699 •Macklin, C life, etc. 3299, 4099', 3 .20 9Tid Garrick 3319 Mttckworth, Sir Humphrv, case 4099^ Maclean, M". (Landon), life 2766 works 503G-13 (See also " Landon.") •Macleod, D'. Aichibald {i.e., TV. L. Bowles)874 *Maclise, D., catalogue of works 1453 illustrations, etc. 747, 1137, 2120, 2403, 7, 10, 14, 18, .'S^ ; 2481, 31S3, 6240, 6532, 8222, 8750 life 6568 •Macreadv, acting copies, plays 4St20, 7915, 18-20 Covent Garden. ls;}S-p 7708 to Forster (" Maid's Tragedy ") 6974? Home on 4259 presentation copy from Knowles 4920 PoiK 7069 copy of Shakespeare 7^1'-5 sonnet to, Talfourd ^627 Macro, IC. Coi i'cc. docunwnts 1322 Mad fashions, etc.. J. Taylor 293=i Mad houses, private 3870 Madame de Fleurv, tale 2692 Madaii,F.,Sacheverell 7611-12 M"., poems 702S •Madden, Sir. F., Wace 9182 Maddison, Sir Ralph, 1640 1595^ Madeira 3841, 4335, 6908, 6618 river 4759 Mademoiselle Panache 2692 Madness, lecture on 503 Madonna Pia and other poems 35S8 the, It^nds 4548 Madi-as, books 2009, 6539 jonmey to, 1826 3981 letters from, 1836-9 5741-2 provinces, irrigation 8153 Madrid, Charles P. of ^Tales at 1539-41 inciuisition 376-2 mission to, Malmesbiu-y 5756 Madrigals, etc. Davison 1853, 2173 bibliography of 7418 •Maerlant, Specolnm historiale S758 Maeviad (and Baviad) S403 Ma^zine cuttings and extracts, English and Amprican 2205, 3321-2 Maga zines. (See " Periodicals.") Magdalen, the, etc., tales 4912 Magdalene Co 1., Oi., visitation Carturright 1.522 Qneen of Jas. T., life 8480 Magellan, voyage Magellan 3756 Masric, etc. 201, 1897, 2801, 6184, 7663, 9669 Magic Ring, romance 3195 Maeician, life of a 6292 Maginu 4182, 6700 Magistracy and Government of England, 1689 7047** mystery of, unveiled, Tane 7347 il.ipistrate, duties of, Cicero 1'5?S Magistrates, clergy as 874 tenure of, Milton G134-3 Magliabeccbi, Spence S'^*'3 •Magna Charts, etc. 472, 2113,-5188, 5.%i7 •' ' new, 1648 8937 -"^ Mienanimity, poem, 1735 7021 Magnetism 4637, 5117. 19 ; 7350 animal 1897,2640,3642 and geolo.ry 4222 Zoistic 7773 !>[agnetical observations, Sabine 7609 Magnitudes an«l motions, Hobbes 4105 * M aguire, measures of ratios 6456 ^Mairyar conquest 859S Mahabhdrata, episode from 663 Mahomet and his successors, lives 449t)-2, 5381 (See also " Mohammed.") Bei, impostor 2893 Mahon, Lord (aft. Earl Stanhope) 1632, 5369, 6800, 8288, 8347, etc. Maid of Elvar, poem 2179 Marian, fiction 6783 of Messene and other poems 6805 Mail coach, English, De Qmncjy 2365 ' ♦ routes, England and Wales 5243-t Mainprize, Coke 17S1 Maintcnon, Madame de, life 5,.S2 Jiainwaring, Sir T. Amicia 1639 Mairwara and Mairs. ISoO 2495 Maistro, Joseph de, Morley 6297 •Maitland club books 1237, 5646 Maitre d'Armes, memoirs 2611 Majerus (Maier) Jlichael 8937 ' " Major Gahagan, Thackeray 8759 ' ^^ ilalabar, 16tn century JBarbosa 3756 Malai'ia and fevers, Africa 4439 Malay language 2104 ♦Malebranche, seeing all things in God 5397 Malibran. life 6062 Maliirnaiits, 164.3-4 1594", 1597', 5859 •Mallet, D., Bolingbroke 803 poems 953^, 6705^ Malmaison, court of 4699 •Malmesbury, monk of Eulagium 1663 WiJUam of William 1663 •Maloiie, Boswell 856 copies with MS. notes 469, 644, 3601 Dryden 2581 life 857 Reynolds 7378 Shakespeare 5909, 7S '5 papers 1494, 41<52 Speiiee 8300 Malt kilns and maltsters 7188 ^i, "= Malta 180, 3300, 6737 siege of 6435" Mslthus, notice of 3954 Maluco islands Middleton 3756 Malus, life 206 Malvern, water cure 5090-2 •Mammalia 801, 2207, 6916 Man and animal world 3641 antiquity of 5541 adaptation of nature to 1498 concerning (de homiue), Hobbes 4106 constitution of 8155 destination of 3020-1 duties of 6e04 earth and 3736 essay on, Pope 701S, 84 and external nature -ISll fall of 4l:»>' history of, 1627 72 IS human body, its connexion with 9495 inner life of 4^07 Ijeroy cm 5259 map of, .Sylrestcr S"is9 and his migrations 5136 in the moon 1599 ' *, 3347, 6829=5 moral nature of 7395 and his motives 6236 natural history 5138, 6913 nature and development 309 new existence of 6652 in paradise, poem 73-31-2 physical, intellectual, moral 4354 poems on (American Republic) 5937 power over himself unsanity) 6093 races of 6913 responsibility of 8020 satire against 7012 Schonw 7756 spiritual nature and relations 6914 subsequent to Christianity 8093 Voltaic mechanism 8097 Man and wife, fiction 1881 at arms, fiction 4535 made of money, fiction 4594, 7 of feeling, fiction 953 with the Book (Bible), the 93S2 ^Famffers, the, pro and con. 1710 8937'* •Manchester Abbott, Jlookei: Clietliam MS., ChetJiam Misc., Jacobites, Manchester and Popery lt;39 books 420.1639-40,2781,2824,41.3.3, •4460, 57S7, 5S77. 61Ss. 6968 ' '", '■ ; 7146, 93 ; 7447, 8217, 8313 Sueheu of, 1746 702^ M 624 M *Maiicliester — coni. Earl of Civil War 1322, 15952», 1597=, =*, *>, eYSl"", 8937 ' '2 first member 2824 school Manchester 1639, 2824 sketches and recollections 7146 streets 7195 Mancin, mirrour of good manners Barclay 8313 •Mandeville, B., executions, etc. 8937 " ^ Mandeville, Action 3-172 ♦Mansin, Bev. B. 0937, 7397 Manipulus vocabulorum Levins 1322 and 2674 Mankind, opinions on, Goethe 3492 types of 6542 *Mann, Sir Horace, "Walpole 9236 Manners, Ld. John, cruise 1848 7710 importance of literature 5369 Manners, ancient 2543 calendar of 4184 and customs, eighteenth century 173 East 6778 English 8438 French and English 2365 " ' Greeks and Komans 3622 olden time Babees 2674 and opinions, England, 14*"^ century 3470 satire 7018, 9442 ♦Manning, Cardinal (" H. E. M.") 5610 Manningham, John, diary, 1602-3 Manning- ham 1322 Manny, Sir "W., life 3430 Manoa (El Dorado) Balegh 3756 Manoeuvrins;, fiction 2692 Manon Lescaut 7161-6 Manors and their lords St.Panl's'iS.'iS,; 1699' = ; Chetham Misc?, Lincoln and Manchester 1639; Cofol781; Gilds imi Mansfield, Lord, hfe 1333, 7510 Mansfield Park, fiction 328 •Mantel), G., Surrey geology 909 Hauton, T., Sraectymnuus redivivus 5373 Mantuan collection 7614 Manufactures and arts, parly, paper 6737 children, etc. in 1648 dictionary 9085 Greek and Roman 3622, 7385 Switzerland 6787 textile 2518 Manufacturing industry, London, 1843 2516 Manns Aenea, Toma.sinus 6919 •Manuscripts, American authors, facsimiles 144 calendars 1299, 1301 catalogues 769, Dee 1332, 14.63, 3234, 6236, 7768, 8206, 832S, 8860-1, 9040, 82 Gr. testament, Jackson 8613 historical, commissiun 6737 Manwaring, Roger, 1628 7611'6 Manv thoughts on many things 8273 •Manzoni, Napoleon 3897-8 Map, CuUoden Moor 3571 N. Wales 2149 " Map of Mischief," 1641 1390, 8937 ' '^ Mapes, Latin poems Mapes 1323 Mapping, self-instruction 5493 ■'Marcet, M'^, Martineau on 6876 Mai'ch winds and April showers 27 Marchen ohne Bnde 1417 Marches, the, 1862 9002 Marchioness of Brinvilliers, romance 8107 Marok, Comte de la, Mirabeau 0162 Marco Visconti 3673 Margan, Annales do Monasteries 1663 "Martjaret of Anjou, letters Letters 1329 queen of Jas. IV., life 8480 Margaret, tale 8653 Percival, tale 7863 Marginalia, H. Coleridge 1789 Marguerite de Valois, romance 3608 Maria Theresa, liie 4549 Marie Antoinette, life 1 4. 1328 tale 2609 de Medici 6491, 6016 ■Louise 6043 Marietta, fiction 9003 Marine algae 3891 aquarium 8564, 6 insurance and average 9707 steam-engine 9707 terms 4666, 9707 Mariners, etc., 1648 7188"'>-" Marini, life 6220 Marisco, Ada de, epistolae Franciscans 1663 Maritime and inland discovery, history 1940 Market Hill, poems. Swift 8529, 77 Markets, tolls, prisages, London 5188" •Markham, Gervase Revenge 311 ; Misc.', 3284 Markland, A., notice of 694 J. 2849, 3189 Marks, porcelain and pottery 3574 print collectors 6614 •Marlborough, Duchess of, life, will, etc. 705 " ', 2002, 3667, 4213, 6814, 8832 Duke of, battles, paintings 7019 ' 1 funeral oration 401O life, letters, etc. 2059-61, 3450, 4536, 6216, 6386, 6666, 6814 neck or nothing 5386 poem to 7012 vindication 4099'' ■will 705 ' 1 Marlborough House 7019 ' '■ Marmion 7798 Marmont, Marshal Ragusa 7262 Maroccus extaticus 6839* Maj'oon war 53.51 Marot, Clement, Morley 6283 Marquesas Islands 6033 MariageRoyal, Guizot, 1863 3702 Marriage, bosse of Billingsgate unto London Stone 295>* case, Banbury 6231 Chas I. and Henrietta Maria 1593" choice in 8667-8 and divorce, bill and law 6634 Law Commission 6737 Due de Montpensier 6230 Duke of Newcastle, 1717, poem 70W tax on 8937 ' ' " Marriage Triumph " 6839' Marriage, fiction 3014 Marriages, dispensations 7295 Married, complaint of them that ben to late 1866 ' I Marriot, J., Gray's Inn 396^ •Marryat, Captain, life, letters, etc., 1667 4359 Marryat, Florence Church 1667 " Mars stript of his armour," 1709 7691' Marseilles, physician of, tale 3199 •Marsh-Caldwell, M"., Roland 7496 •Marshall, Chief Justice (U. S.), life 7687 Lt.-Col., speech, 1648 1698» M'., speech, 1643 1697^ 5448 (S.) and others, 1648 8937 " " Marshman, Joshua, life 6435 ^ ^ •Marston, J., Eastward Hoe, life 1531. 2626, Collier 7974 J. W., Home on 4259 Martahan, six months at 1169 Mnrtelierc, P. de la, argument, 1611 7095" ♦Marten, or Martin, H. 1594", 1697', ^s, 3i63 6337 » 2, 6338 Martens, F. Spitsbergen 3756 •Martial 7011, 23, 9096 Martial law, Fiulason 3054 mottoes 6435'= •Mar-tin, Sir Theodore 3346, 6369, 7253, 7712 Martin Chuzzlewit 2399, etc., 2132 Martindale, A., autobiography Martindale 1639 Lt.-Col., Canada 1.375 •Martineau, Harriet, Atkinson 3ii9 Bushnan 1224 Comte 1910 England 2786-7 , Home on 4239 James, observations on 4354 Martins of Cro' Martin, fiction 6298 •Martyn, D'. John, Grub Street 3681 Martyr (Plasidas or Eustas) for Jesus Christ „ , Partridge 1855 ♦ ' Royal (Clm-los I,), lite and death 1675 M 625 M Martyrology, loyal, Charles I, aad II. 1561 western 9371 Martyra, book of 8212 Gr. and Lat., legends 4S63 lives of 1228 ♦Marvell, A., lire, etc. 1787-8, 2547 Marvil'3 Ghost (f) 7012 popery, etc. iu England 2277* works 25«, 3284, 7027 *Mary, Pdnoess, 1641 1593^ 6659 Queen I., letters, etc. of State 1859 life and reign Chronicle 1322, 3462-3, 4790, 5897, 6584, 9048, 69 privy piu'se expenses (as princess) 5897 State papers 1298 statesmen, etc. 6393 "VoxCoeli" 7776 Queen II., and Carolina, sayings 4099' poems on death and funeralof 7012, 20 proceedings of, 1689 4099'> sermon before, 1706 4099'' sermon on death of 4099'' Queen of James V., life 8480 of Modena, Queen of James II. 1672'*, 1993, 7160-3 Queen of Soots, accounts and papere Mary 1322 life, reign, etc : Buckingham 1089 Jameson 4549 Jebb 4574 Melvil 6029 Mienet 6102 Oldmixon 6584 Eaumer 7301 Sobertson 74S6 Sainte-Beuve 7661 Sanderson 7273, 7675 Stanhope 8348 Strickland 8480 and E. of Shrewsbui-y 6115 State papers 1298 Mai-y de Padilla 2997 Mary Magdalene, legends 4653 tears Misc/', 3284 Mary Barton, flctioti 3330 Mai'yland, slave in 705^ '^ Marylebouo, Trinity Church, sermons 2786 Masauiello, histoiy of 7045 •Mivson, Kev. W., life, letters 1787-8, 3615, 9237 Masque of anarchy, poem 8003 Mass book, lay folks Mass 2674 breviary, etc., and liturgy 5372 Mass-priests, supplication of, 1604 7094 •Massachusetts Bay Company 9679-80 historical society 146, 9681 history 146, 5916 schools, 1849 6783 settlement of 9576, 79, 80 Masses, resorting to, 1637 7188» •Massey, Major^en. 2952^ '», 2963'*, '«, ", ", 67S42S, 7188'™ •Massinger, Ufe 2281, 2626, Collier 7974 ♦Masson, David, literary address 948 Master Humphrey's clock 2403, 33-4 Tyll Owlglass 5682 Master-Spirits, Buchanan 1082 Masters, M"., poems 7028 Masters, early. Christian decoration 9321 eminent, works of 6671 Mater, magna, Deum 6919 Materia Medica 4186 Materials for thinking 1133 Materials, sti-ength of 2948 Mathematica lux, Hobbes 4106 Mathematical books, Libri cat. 6326 Mathematicos, conti'a 7863 Mathematics, calculus 4037 equations 353, 4151 first notions in 503 free-thinking in 4099= Hobbes 4105-6 Holliday, 1745 4151 Savilian professors 4105' Mathew,' Father, Martineau on 5876 •Mathews, C, life . , , , S theatrical extracts 8786 Sir Toby Matthew 6946 ♦Mathieu, P., memorials of mortality 8591 Matignon, letters 1467 Matron, English 8829 Matter, phasis of 4774 and spirit, conference, 1762 8562' '■ 'Matthew Paris Matthew 1663 •Matthews, Eev. E., life 6185 Maud 8740, 6 Maude, J., Wakelield, notice of l-2o •Maundrell, travels, life 6674, 7636 Maupertuis, gravity, etc. 226 Mauprat, fiction 7666 •Maurice, F. D. 4847, 6214 Maurice of Saxony, life 6.S78 •Mauritius 879,6315 •Maximilian, I., triumphs 4133', "> II. 7285 Maxims, etc. 1633 ; Courtesy 2674, 3690, 6123-6, 6091, 7124, 9010 addressed to young ladies 1.376 of state and conversation, 1701 4964 •JIaxwell, Sir Murray, Chinese batteries 3778 Maxwell, fiction 4207 •May, T., life 2626 long parhament 3692 May, &c. 1709, transactions for 8937' ' -day, etc., poems 2773 flowers 28 games, England Maydiston, alliterative poem, etc. 8483 Maydiston 1322 •Mayhew, Henry and AuKustus 5991-3 Horace C/wcarti (?) 1643; 5991-3 Maynard, M'. 159753, "", 8468'=, 9= Sir J. 2932', '», 2953'*, '«, ", '», 6387' » Maynarde, T., Drake's voyage Maynarde 3756 •Maynwarmg, A. 43, 6380, 0017, 6586, 7029 •Mayo, Mr., deposition, 1643 1597= Mayors, etc., London London, 1322, 3676 {See also " Loudon— Lord Mayors.") Mazarin, Cardinal, life 5378 •Mead, life 6707 Meadows, Kennedy (? Kenny) 6968'^ Meals, olden times Babees 2674 Eoman, casuistry of 2365 Means and ends, Sedgwick 782S Measures, Greek and Roman 5249, 8172 Meccah, pilgrimage to 1216 Mechanic industry, encouraging, 1690 8937' ' Mechanical operation of the spirit 8529, 46 physics 1102 restraint 4088 Mechanics 5118, 325, 492 animal 6325, 6676 Mechanics, industrious and religion 8937' ' " Medal," answer to, 1682 7024 Medals, antique and counterfeit 7604 of creation (geology) 5793 Cromwell 4009 dialogues on 40 Levant, &c. 8917 and mentions. Exhibition, 1862 2934 „ ,. mitional g334 Media, travels, 1843 358I Mediaeval antiquities 2957 Arabic philosophy 8354 art 2326 Christian art 9057-8 Court, Crystal Palace 2161 Europe 6678, 8334 popes, emperors, kings, crusaders 1226 quotations, proverbs, mottoes 7117 tales (see also " Middle Ages ") .-.^ J- , , , , Gesta 2674 •Medical aspects, d< ath and the mind 3881 dissertations, Lat. and Hungarian 2492 essays, Beddoes 553 institutions, Austria 9483 jurisprudence, insanity 1017, 7307 notes and reflections, Holland 4142 profession and the community 4215 6014 60C0 4186 9147 1999, 8999 S378, 6220 1467, 6697 science and life students, addresses to testimony, lunacy vocabulary works, Villalohos •Medici, Catherine de' L. de', hfe Marie de', life, &c. M 626 M 'Medicine, cyclopaedia 4445 domestic 4446, 6016 Indian 4186 and mesmerism 0118 state 7557 and surgery, superstitions 6863 Medicines in common use 4445 elixirs, &c., 1707 8937" >° Medico-hypienic exercises 7753 Medio animarum atatvi, de 7353^ Meditations, Aurelius Antoninus 326 B. of Berkeley 642 and contemplations, Heryey 4046 divine. Waller 9223 and vows, Bp. Hall 3783 Mediterranean JDigby 1322, 2730, 3673, 6381, 7760, 8192, 9359 ♦Medley 43 Medley and Examiner, dialogue 6817 "Medusa," shipwreck 7704 Medway, Dutch in 6651 M(!eting8 and Church of England 7353" Meissner, fables, &c. 6272 Meissonier, illustrations 9624 Melaia, etc., poems 1929 Melancholy, anatomy of 1217 *Melancthon, epistolae 2812 Melanges, Marmontel 6825 historiquKS, Voltaire 9172 Melayne, siepre of Charlemagne 2674 'Melbourne (Australia) books 414, 6022 parly, papers 6737 Melcombe, Lord (Dodiiigton), diary 2522 Meldrum, Sir John, 1644 1697«, » W., histJ. etc. of Lindsay 2674 Meleager, hexameter trans. 4053 Meletae, poems 2763 Mellbrt, Earl of, letter 7040i» Meliboeus, Watson 211 Mellon, H. (Duch. of St. Albans), life 9560 •Melmoth, Courtney, Garrick 3320 Melpomene, poem 6971', 2* 3» ; 6973^ Melsa Monastery, chronicles Melsa 1663 Melusine, tale of Partetiay 2674 MtSraoires pour servir, Guizot 371)0 Memoirs, English, Peck 6788 from 1679, Temple 8719 literary and misc., Cradock 2070 of a peeress, fiction 3653 scientific. Young 9714 Wrcixall 9617-8 Memorabilia, Socrates Xenophon 9694 " Memorable observations " 1459 Memorandum of the providences of God, Coad 1756 Memoranda, Whitman 9461 Memorial, Church of England 4099 °, 8937 " ^ Enghsh Protestants, P. and P. of Orange 704S Elector of Hanover, 1712 7016 state of England, 1705 4099 ' Memorials of the dead 3467, 5725 " Memorialslof Godliness and Christianity " 6688 •Memories of Merton 6539 Memory, art of 2981 of the poets, sonnet 8627 *Men and books, best choice of, 1663 72U4 of character, Jerrold 4594 of England, ode 1461 extraordinary 7688 of genius and the public 4257 great, uses of 2774 knowledge and characters of. Pope 7083 of letters (U.S.) 4881 modern 3260 and science, George 3 980, 990 and manners, Chesterlleld 16j3 in America 3S25 manners, and things, thoughts on 3(i.S2 races of 4929 and women. Browning 1041-3, 9 Crowe, liction 2142 women, and books 4401j Mena, Jnan de. lil'o 62-20 Menageries, animals 8517 Meiiagius, philosophers 0:102 Mendelssohn, notice of 72^5 Mendip hills, poem 1195 Mendoza, D. Hurtado de, life 6220 J. G. de China, Mendoza S766 Mennes, life 594 Men's wives, Thackeray 8760 " * Mensa Isiaca 6919 Mensuration, self-instruction 5492 Mental education, Faraday 6213 and moral science 8186 operations, on 9474 pathology 2^71 iahysiology 4141 portraits, Tuckerman 9020 soundness, couditions 6000 Mercantile law 6302 Mercers Hall, 1701 7024 Mercuries message. Laud 5162-4 Mercurius Aciuaticus and Britannicus, Taylor 8682 Aulicus (ared otters), 1648,50 8937'!^ Mercury and Virtue, dialogue Salter 1865 ' ' Merchant and friar, Palgrave 6680 officer and seivice 6074 *M.6nm6e, Prosper (? " Gazul ") 3.358 ♦Merivale, Greek anthology 3619 Schiller 7718 Merks, Bp. of Carlisle 7163 •Merlin on K. Arthur Arthur 2674 (Lily's) for 1654, Gataker 3340 Merovingian era, and kings 1785, 8800 Merrimack river 8843 Mersennus, ballistioa, Hobbes 4106 Mervyn, Audley, speeches 1583, 1597'°' Mesmerism 2822-3, 5998, 6418, 7672-3, 8928-31, 9723 Mesopotamia, 1697, 1843 3584, 5953 Messenger and others, trial 6885 Messiah, the 4624, 7019 " ', 7077 supposed 2893 Metamorphoses 201-2, 6643, etc. Metals, British manufactures 251S Wisconsin 2983 Metaphysical and ethical science and religion 868 philosophy, progress of 8419 Metaphysics 226, 3009-10, 5825 Metaphysician, a, memoir of 2557 Metaphysicians, Locke, etc. 3168-9 •Metastasio, life 6220 •Metcalfe, Lord, life, letters 4786 Meteorological diary, 1678-9 32D0-1 essay.s, Arago 209 observations, Sabine 7609 Meteorology 6117, 6338 Arctic 4454 Madeira 5903 polar 4154 Russia (N. W. America) 9644 Methodism 8260 Metres, Greek and Etonian 6347 ti-agic and comic 2531 Metrical chronicle, Hardyng 3852 romances Thornton 1322, 2746-7 systems, Hecuba 2856 Metrico-prosaica, opuscula 1201 Metternioh 1354-5, 5453 and Austria 5876 on German politics 8354 Mouse, the 1997, 7010 Mews gai« and Spring Gardens 3738, 5387 •Mexico, travels, etc.. 1820-50 1294, 3637, 3777, 6982, 6618, 7597, 8659, 8822, 9266, 9582 ancient civilization 7160-1 conquest of 7150-1 and Cortes 1995, 7160 drama 96S2 mining companies, 1829 9266 New, campaign, 1818 270S statistics 9267 views, 1829 9267 voyage to 1599-1602 Champlain 3766 writing 437^; ' Meyer, L. der, notice of 7:!25 Meyerbeer, life 8683, 6995 Meyler, W., monody on Garrick 8;i20 Mezzotinlo engniving 2906 JMichficl Angelo as a poet 8888 and Tintoret 7575 Michiiel Armstrong, fiction 80it0 Michel, Ayenbile of inwyt Michel 2674 Mickiewicz, poems 73^,2 •Miokle, Caraoens 1326 poems ejQS" M 627 M •Microcosm, essays 960 Micro-cosmo-graphia, Sylvester 8589 -cosmographie (characters), Earle 211 Microcosmus, Purchas 7218 Micrographic dictionary 3666 Microscope and microscopical science 4121 animalcules 6795 •Middle age, lays of 3985 Middle ages, architectural works 3484 arts 4958 l3ibliomania • 6068 brick and marble 8475 Christian art 2464 dresses, decorations 7987 England 9667-8 Europe 2623, 3809-10 Gt. Britain and Ireland Chronicles 166S legends, jjurgatory, etc. 9671 literary history 639 literature, popular Percy Soc. 6829 manners, customs, dress 4968 military and religious life 4969 and renaissance, arts 4366, etc. romance-poetry 7734 secret societies •4756 truths and Actions' 6680 (See also " Mediaeval") Middleham, Yorkshire Middleham 1S22 Middlemarch, fiction 2722 Middlesex sessions, 1681 6231 "Wilkes 8937' "> •Middleton, Capt., log, 1741-2 Coats 3766 Conyers 1704, 9411 Sir H., Bantam, etc. Middleton 3756 T., life 2826 " Old Law " 5929 Sir T., 1644 1695« 1597«i Midland dialect Alliterative, Cursor, 2674 Midnight musings. Park 6704 sun, Bremer 922 Midshipman Easy 6834 life of 8728 Midsummer Eve, tale 3794 Medley, 1830, tales, etc, 8134 ■ moon, Cleveland, 1660 1744 nignt (Shakespeare), Tieck 8871 mornings' dream 8370 •Mignet, Sismondi 8079 Milan, 1848-9 (political) 8426 P. Sforza, Duke of, life 9090 Milbourn and Bradbury, dispute 4010 Mildreiados, Quarles 7228 Miletus, lost tales of 5583-4 •Military commanders, Biitish, lives 3450 dictionary (Prenoh) 1170 education 6597 history. Great Britain 3463 (American) journal 8049 life, Napier 6380 profession, farewell to £iche 7974 resources, European nations 9646 sermon, Shrewsbury, 1643 8595 statesmen, on 4392-3 surveying and sketching 2663 systems, England S450 terms 4666 Militia, 1641-8 159S», «, 16943, i696M « 1697« «i, 2953« 6338, 673*', M 9373 1692 6735W •Mill, J., epistle to, Bentley 630 J. S., logic Wliewell 9400 Mill on the Ploss, fiction 2721, 3 Millais, illustrations 131, 1886, 8977-8 Millar, Ajjublisher 1870, 6368, 9709 Millard, W. Duncan t&\S Millennium and millennial world 4099', 6862 •Miller of Angibault, fiction 7666, 9 •Mihnan, Dean 3393, 4231, 6624 tribute to (U. S.) 146 Milnes, R. M. 4275-83, 4743, 7 {See also " Houghton.") Home on 4269 •Milton, Areopagitica 211 censure on book by, 1660 1699' * character and writings, Channing 1619 " Christian Doctrine," Cbamung 1613 o 1650S. ♦Milton— COB*. Coleridge on 181S De Quincey on 2366' ' and family Chetham ]IIiec.\ 1639 history of Britain 4790 life, times, writings 694 ; Milionia22 j 3471, 4496, 4760-1, 4999, 6873-4, 8594, 8894, 6 Milton's devil 6934 miscellanea 6166 nephews of 3471 papers and letters Milton 1322 Paradise Lost (Greek) 2293 origin, remarks on 6922 7396, 8394 Bregained, on 6008 poems 953', 6705^ 7027 poems in style of 6873-4 Kaleigh 7266 and Salmasius 4010, 7660 songs from 6971' ' sublimity (of) asserted, poem 7012 suppressmg books by, 1660 7188'" tract attributed to 5612 use of the modems 6180 versification 6705* Mince-pie, romance of 7,119 Mind amongst the spindles 6507 and body 3455, 3832 duaUty of 9474 endowment of 6574 essays. Clarendon 1711 first principle of 2360-1 medical aspect 388I philosophy of 8419-20 study of 716 Mine adventurers, Wales, 1705 4099^^ Mineral kingdom 7753 sprmgs 4922, 9379 waters, comparative merits, etc. 4640 Mineralogy (Norway and Lapland) 1078 Minerals, characters of 1627 Mines, accidents 6737 South Australia ' 2661 children, etc. in 1648 dictionary 9086 and manufactures, Scotland 3172 and miners 8064 Mining, British ' 8064 companies, Mexico, 1829 9266 engineer, note-book 190 Miniatures, etc. 4377, 7752, 7 Ministers, 1637-64 1595", 1599' \ ', 1669, 1671», 6734'", IS, 3», 7188^ ejected, reign of Chas. II. 606-6 (of State) 1689 40994 Ministry, 1710 Marliorough 6817-18 1713 . . 6386 late, principal agitators, 1715 4099'' Whig, 1830 7473 Ministry of the beautiful 8088 Minnay Sotor, voyage 298S ♦Minor poets, English, lives 694 Minstrel, Persian, Kurroglou 684S the, poem 628-9 Minstrelsy, Border 6436", 7994 Highland 6572 Irish (ancient) 2571 northern 7790 Portugal 643513 Minutius Pelix 6769 •Mirabeau, .Carlyle on 1380' ^ life 7997 Mirabel, Prince 220, 705' \ 5817 Mirabilia descripta (east) Jordanus 3756 Miracle plays, Newcastle 9206 •Miracles 687 ! £arons' Wars 1322 i 2168, 2366 • \ , . 7663 and science 8457 Miraculous gifts ceasing in the church 94U Mirror, essays 959 for monks 753 Jacob, 1733 4507 of good manners, Barclay 8313 majesty 4133s modesty Salter 1865' 1 modesty Greene 1856' = our lady Mirror 2674 •Miscellanea critica, Dawes 2293 graphics, Pairholt 2957 s s M M Miscellanies, Beloe 603 Sir T. Browne 1023 Jas. Martineaa 6889 Pope, ebo. 7091 T. Taylor ■ 8692 Thackeray 8760 Warner 9278 of literature 2490 Miscellany, Asiatic SOD essays, etc., 1659 6616 verse and prose, Eeresby 7367 Misohiei of Cabals, 1686 7047" Miser (Elwes) , life 8910-11 Miseriae Curialimn , JBarclay 8313 Miseries of human life 636 Miser's daughter, fictioii' 92 Miss Mackenzie, fiction 8975 Missae offloium 2778 Missals, etc., catalogue 9040 " Missing Link," tract 7292 Missionaries, yaciflc islands 2016 Missionary alphabet 6343 in North America, memoirs 12 ■Williams 7203 Missions 7991, 8725 M'. Wray's oash-box, fiction 1886 and M". Frank Berry, fiction 87S9' i" M*". Armytage, fiction 8564 Gamp, Dickens 2466 Harris's petition, verses 7012 Leicester's school, fiction 6008 Margaret Maitland, fiction 6693 Perkins's ball, fiction 8769' ", 8771 •Mitchell, Sir A., memoirs and papers 720 W., autograph letters, catalogue 1464 W. A. 6436", 9028 *Mitford, Rev. J., copies and MS. notes 25, 44-5, 248, 1866, 2633, 2886, 3601, 8641, 4698, 6107, 6372, 6873, 7013, 7074,6, 7,88; 8301, 8649, 54, 69, 60 ; 8863, 9179 Goldsmith 8608-9 Gray 3615 Walpole 9237 Mary E., letters 836 Martiheau on 6876 Mithridates miA (language) 9361 Mobility, the, children of 6225 Mooket, view of the league and covenant 20381=" Mode, a (city of London), 1647 (verses) 1707 Model colony 1492 of a demooratioal government 7038 drawing 6066, 8645 prisons, Carlyle 1395-6 women and children 5990 Modelling, works in, Canova 1352 • " Moderation a vertue," answer to, 1704 7044 Moderation display'd, poem, 1704 7011 vindicated, poem, 1706 7011 Modern Griselda, fiction 952, 2692, 4 love and other poems 6060 men of letters 3260 painters 7570-1 rehgion and ancient loyalty, 1699, poem 7024 ModiuB Salium (Oxford humour), 1751 7013 Moeso-Goths, Bosworth 859 Mofussil courts 6693 Mogg Megone, poem 8465 Moghol emperors 3234 Mogul, great, embassy to, 1616-17 Garew 1322 Monanimed (and other spellings) and his suc- cessors 6661 no impostor 6168 Mohammedan India 2737-8, 61 law 393 Mohammedanism, history of, etc. 6212, 8700 reUgious idea in 6871 Mohammedans, sacred territories 1132 Mohun, Lord, life, 1714 5380 Moises, Eev. Edward 4329 Moldavia, travels, 1887 2335 Mole, river 8850 •Moleaworfli, Sir W., Hobbes 4105, C, 9 •MoUere, life, etc. 763, 7967 tales from 5261 Molluscous animals 2207, 4662, 6916 Moluccas Morga 8766 991 991 Monaohologia Monarch and other poems Monarchical Government MonarchieSjEastern and European •Monarchy, about, 1689 *"»»' asserted. Wren 9653 considered. Hall 3869 elective or hereditary f 1689 1672" English, foundation of 4099s 1690 7047" " grounds and reasons of (Scottish hist.) 3746 history of 4094 mixed, Brougham 993 or no monarchy, Lill.y 5345 the moderate (British) 3811 treatise of, 1689 4099s Monasteries, annals, chronicles, &c. 1663 funeral monuments 9339 Grande Chartreuse 6370 history of 2601 Levant 2200 S. Edmund, Bury Brahelonda 1322 suppression of Monasteries 1322 Monastic institutions 2298 libraries, Gt. Britain 6068 life Ancren Siwle 1322 orders, legends 4554 and social life, 12th century 4628 Monasticon Anglicanum 2601 Monck, General, letters from and to 1442, 1599 » 4, 1602 life, &o. 8701, 19, 20, 4636 Eestoration 2214, 7368 speeches, songs, &c. before 1366 ' ' •Moncriefi', James, literary address 949 El., magnanimity, &c. 7021 Monetary history, England 2643 •Money, Bastiat on 491 brass, 1640 1695« exportation, Ireland 4472^° false, Eoman 7504 and morals 4990 praise of Sarnfleld 1865 " i Eoman . 8172 H. Taylor on 8667-8 value of, Locke 5396 want of, 1674 8937 » i Mongolia, 1851 7173 •Monk, M"., poems 7028 Monks and friars, ballads 411 ' i giants, poem 9047 mirror for 763 natural history of 4918 Monmouth, Anne, Duchess of, life 2002 James, Duke of, life, rebellion, etc. 1765, 4999», 7437, 8099 ' » Earl of, 1641-3 16962=, imn "i Geoffrey of, chronicle 1664 "Monmouth " and " Poudroyant," ode 6435'° Monmouthshire, 1854 1748 Monodies, death of Garrick 3320 Monograms, pottery and porcelain 5846-7 Monopolies, Ireland 4472'° Monopolists and patentees, Laud 6176'* Monopoly cause of all evil 6564 •Monro or Monroe, letters, etc., 1646-9 1699 ' ■*, 1597", 7777 Mont Blanc 820, 8113, 4834, 8116 •Montagu, George, Walpole 9238-9 John, life 6468 Lady M. W., Italian memoir by 8354 lite, eto. 2002, 2470. 2766, 7636 poems 7028 M"., life, letters, &c. 1484, 2766, 9276 Montague, C. (E. of Halifax), epistle to 7018 works, hfe 953°, 3772, 7027 (?) Lord, apprehending of, 1642 2837 •Montaigne, life, etc. 2771, 7627, 7997 Montcalm, Oandiao de, hfe 5379 Monte Eosa, 1856 3113 Montemayor, Jorge de, life 6220 Montenegro 4949, 9496 Monterey, life in 8659 Montespan ' Caumont 1467 M 629 M Montesquieu, de, letters 5280 maxims 8690 spirit of laws •9514 Montez, Lola, notice of 7225 Montfort, Simon de Barons' Wars 1322 ♦Montgomery, General IHalogues 2389 H. R., Tatler 8649 Jas., lile, letters, works 4147, 6203, 7495 E, book presented to 6774 on Burke 1148 Home on 4259 Montgomery Castle, siege, 1644 1597'* Months, book of the, Soane 8200 the, L. Hunt 4405 Monti, life 6220 Montpelher Borde 2674 climate, &o. 8657 Montpouillan, Marquis de Caumont 1467 Montrose, Marquis of 1698", ■«, 3585, 6888, 8318 Montrose book 6624 Monumens, Mus^e Cbiaramonti *9ie4 Monument, Bp. Barnet 9515 E. Devereux, E. of Essex 1774 Goldsmith •3499, 7176 L. Hunt 4416 Locke 6393 Monumental column (to Henry P. of Wales) effigies 4161, 7390 history, Egypt 6621 inscriptions 2810-11, 8912 ts of actors 928 ancient 8830 (Central America) 1457 (Egypt) 2161, 9498 (Levant, &o.) 8917 of the dead 6725 Egypt, Etruria, Arabia 3133 engravings, Stow 8444 and ethnology 6542 funeral 9339 Godwin on 3464 Nicaragua 8328 Nineveh 6195-6 Eome 2684 Moodkee, battle 3845 Mooltan, siege of 2630 Moon, adventures in 48 iourney to 8571 ■mountains of 1939, 6166 new journey to world in 2319 new or full, finding 2336 rotation of , 3725 and sun, comical history 637 •Moor and loch , 1895 •Moore, E., poems 953i», 6705=i P., almanack 136 D'. J., Zeluco 952" Sir J., life 3450 J. H., poems 6706« T., Byron 1255 Haalitt on 3964 Leatham'on 6203 letter to, Mangin 6774 notice of 7226 Moorflelds, pleasant walks of Johnson 1856 '" Moorland cottage, fiction 8331 Moors, domestic manners 9026 Mora, parsonage of 921 Moral characters, Theophrastus 8794 duties ("offices ''), Cicero 1697-8 epistle. Lander 6073 essays 1503, 1824-6, 6680, 8692 influence of the commercial spirit 5212 miscellanies, M". Deverell 2377 philosophy 7485-6, 8160, 8421 in England, hist, of 9401 power, "W.IJ., Fox 3208 powers, philosophy of 8419 precepts, ancient .,S, » reflections, etc. oo scieiice 8*86 sentiments "!,";• tracts, Howard . *297 views, of commerce, society, politics 2386 Morality, Christian 3207 Malebranchs of 6748 Morality— ooMi. of poverty 8208 of the press 3208 principles of 2663- and the scriptures 8206-7 of various classes 3208 Morals, Cato's Cursor 2674 Christian 7866 development of 6297 and manners 6883, 8678 (verse) Marmontel 6825 philosophy of 6274 theory of 4078 Morata, Olympia, life 8997 Moravia, 1843 4931 Morbid conditions, animal economy 3466 Mordecai's memorial, 1716, 19 2638, 4099° Mordiford dragon 2380 •More, Hannah, life 2766, 7440 Henry, life, letters, etc. 8434, 9270, 9538 Sir T., animadvers'ons on 396 apophthegms 200 household of 6788 letters 2812, 6021 life 6377, 6689, 6263, 7247, 7507 lives of Edward V. and Eichard III. 4790 Utopia 211, 6906 •More shams still, 1681, Dangerfeild 7096" worlds than one 931 Morea 1994, 3361, 7127 •Morell, J. E., Tennemann 8723 Moreton bay to Port Essington 5238 Morga, A. de, Philippine islands, etc. Morga 8756 •Morgan, J. M., Phoenix library 6906 M., hfe 694 poem to "W. III. 7020 Moriniere, Angela de la, life 6379 Morland, Su- S., letters 9110 •Morley, G„ Bp. of Winchester, vindication of ' 73638 H., " Spectator " 8290 J., Buchanan on 1082 "Fortnightly" 3179 Mormonism and *Mormons 1926, 3727, 6986 Morning and evening prayer, compositions from 690 thoughts, Park 6704 Mornings in Florence, Euskin 7672 Morocco, 1817-63 2650, 4740, 7134, 9086 tale of 6001 Morpeth church 8398 •Morris, G. P., notice of 7225 Morris dance 2545 Mors, Eoderiok SrinUow 2674 Mora et Vis, trois (ancient Fr. poems) 4131 Mort, alphabet de la 4131 Mort d' Arthur, Malory 6763 Mortality, memorials of, Sylvester 8691 rate of 6419 true state of, poem, 1709 7oia Morte Arthure Arthur 2674 Mortimer, Margaret, memorial, 1712 7163 Morton, S. G. (U. S.), ethnology 6642 Mosaic record and geological 8050 Mosaic masters, fiction 7666 workers, fiction 7670 •Moschus, translations 156 {French) ; mV^, 670659, 87911 Moscovia, history of, Milton 6154 Moscovitioarum rerum, commentarii Berber- stein 3766 Moscow 861, 1623™ (?), 1898 Moses and Cromwell 2292 Mosses, Enghsh lakes 6881 Mosses from an old manse 3907 Mother Gin, 1736 8937 •< = Haggy 581712 Mother-tongue, instruction in 3422 Mothers and daughters, fiction 3655 and governesses 4562 Motion, Wallis on, Hobbes 4106 Motions and magnitudes, Hobbes 4106 Motive powers and circulation of the blood 9609 Motte, Benj., publisher 8551 Mottoes, family 6091 Latin 4133=, 7417 martial 643615 SS 8 M 630 M Moulin, Lewis du, appeal, 1681 ♦Moultrie, Efiv. J., Walker 7040' _ 9210 Mount St. Lawrence, fiction 6747 Sorel, flotiou B852 •Mountague, R., Bp. of Norwich 1671 Mountain beauty, Ruskin 7671 Mountfort (player), life 3299 Mountnoms, Earl of Valentia 9092 Lord, Ireland, 16SB 84682 Mourning muse of ilexis, poem 7012 song (MS.) 8919 Mouse grown a rat, 1702-3 4099' Movement cure 7529 *Moxon, B., book given by 8269 *Moyle, Walter, letters, etc. to 6289 Mozart, life, letters 4166, 6379 Mucruss (P Muokross) gardens 2369 Mug-houses, 1716-17 2276, 4099« MuUman, M». T. C, Chesterfield 1636, 8937 " ' Mulgrave, E. of, essay on poetry 7018 Mulholland, Rosa, " All the Year Round " 124 Mulook, Dinah M. Craik 2074-5 Mulready, illustrations 8533, 88 Multan. 1848 7882 Mummeries, etc., England 8483 Munchausen 4444 Munday, John A Kent Munday 7974 Munden.J. S.,life 6345 Mundi et cordis, carmina 9187 Mundus muliebris 2899-900 Munera pulveris, Ruskin 7583 Munich, art student in 4314 Munro, Sir T., life 8447-8 Murder, as one of the fine arts 2366-6 God's revenge against 7377 wiU out, 1696 4099' Murders, Abp. of St. Andrews 7097 Becket 8367 Boughton 8967' 2 Lord Bourgh 1856' i Brewen, 1692 1866'' Browne, 1605 1856' i Calverley, 1605 1866' i Charles I. 1584, 6377 Earl of Essex 2834, 4510, 7168 Godfrey, 1679 7048 Henry IV. and Charles I. 7368 Oliverotto of Fermo 5667 Parkman 605 Sinclair, 1728 7702 Stout, 1699 8957'! Murdoch, Patrick, life of Thomson 'igsi™ •Murphy, A., essay on Johnson 4644 letter to Voltaire 6971' hfe 2626, 3103, 3299 •Murray, D., Abp. of Dubhn, lite 6012 John, letter from Byron ST2-3, 1271 Lady, hfe 2766 Lord, Martineau on 5876 R., national bank 4099^ T., poem to, on picture 7011 Murray's handbook, church and state 7338 Musae Etonenses 2843 Musaeum Clausum, Browne 1024 Musaeus, translation 963", &10S" "Musaus, Carlyle on 1380' ^ 1381 Muscipula, or the Welsh mousetrap 9363 Muscles, the 8920 Musoovia, Ambassador of, 1623 4099' Muscovite empire, 1854 ^ 4978 Mus^e Chiaramonti •9164 Pie-C16mentin 9164 •Museum, Attisohes, Wieland 9471 Museum, D'. Bargrave Sargrave 1322 British 436, •1981,5794,6737, 8061,9112 Disneianum 2476 Minervae, college of 1992 Museums, Rome 2684 South Kensington 6904, 7461, 7762-»8 Zoology, Harvard 8887 Mushroom, the, 1682 7024 Music and the arts, Italy 3310 Beggar's Opera 3349 church, Germany 4157 Eastlake on 2682 England, 1784-1830 6706 German USB, 4157 Harris on S87S Music— co«*. Ireland 1917 H. Lawes 1438, 6143 London, 1791 4603 manual 6766, 6896 opera 4117, 4157 Purcel 69761 romances set to 7642 to songs, etc. Ill, 2392, 3349, SS7B, 6976' > speeches, Cambridge B460, 8683 Stewart on 5210 street 495 tale of, Chorley 1656 Music Master, poems 131 Musical biography 697 composers and writers, lives 697 drama, Hogarth, 4117 England 6062 matters and people B531 memoirs, ParKe 6706 Musician, a, musings of 5531 Musicians, Germany 4157 Mussulman civilisation 2650 Musurus, elegiac poem 3189 Muthiy, " Bounty " 8942 My adventures, Maxwell 6966 courtship, Wikoff 9476 cousin Nicholas, fiction 4457 diary, Rofle 7479 early days, Kennedy 4786 friends and acquaintances, Patmoro 6769 life. Rawston 7306 nightgown and slippers, Colman 1890-1 novel, fiction 5559-60 pocket book, Du Bois 2589 promise, how I kept it, Tumerelli 9052 uncle the curate, fiction 7699 uncle Toby, Sterne 8415 Myrc, instructions for priests Myrc 2674 Mysore, planter in 2739 Mysteries Chester, Coventry 7974 of Paris, fiction 8495 state, James I. 4520 and Government 1282 Towneley 8922 of Udolpho, fiction 962 •Mystery of Edwin Drood, fiction 2403, etc. iniquity, 1643 1699'* Mystery of life, Ruskin 7563 Mystic and other poems 385 Mystics, the, hours with 9111 Mytens, painter 7614 Mythologists, .^sop, etc. 70 Mythology, classical 1425, 8165, 8 fairy r4752, FMUvpps 7974 Greece and Italy 4754 Greek 6212, 6372 Gr. and Roman 8168 and history, 1696 6890 northern 8869 Polynesian 8647 scientific 6341 Myths, Greek, cloud and storm 7663 An " denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries [ in the Catalogue in small type : " V " stands for volume. N. Nadir Shah, hist. oJ Nahash Eedivivus, 1649 •Nalson, J„ Charles I. 3234 1699' » 1676,81; 8957'* N 631 N Names, Latin 8172 proper, 1696 Nanette and her lorers, fiction 6890 S7M Nantes edict, revocation 6863, 9340 Nantilda, hist, of 2997 Nantwioh, surprise of, 1642 1595« •Napier, Sir C, and Scinde 6637, 8067 D'., astrologer 034:4, Sir Josepli B209-10 Maovey 6387-8 Sir W., Martineau on 6876 Napiers, the, Marfcineau"on S876 •Naples, 1817 8391-2 185B 3539 Chinese college 7423 ohm ate, &c. 8657 Joanna I. and II. 4649 modern painting 6385 revolutions, 1650 3421 under Spanish dominion 7370 Narcissus, Shirley 8025 Narcotics, &c., use of 9522 •Nares, E., copy and MS. note 25 Narratives, Montgomery Narzaues, injured statesman 6219 705 '» Naseby. Charles I. Nash, Richard (" Beau "), life 1682 3523 T., various pieces Collier 1867, Nash 7974 Nassau, Brunnens of 3963 " Peace " poem, 1698 7018 Natal 489, 1786, 6905 Nation boutiquiSre, etc., poems 6534 Nation, progress of 1843 7101 the, credit of, 1697 4099'' •National airs,;Moor6 6244 Assembly, French 1920-1 Constituent Assembly, 1848 1978 cyclopaedia 2209 debt, account of '8656 defences S002, 3963 freedom, English 6731 Gallery 4647, 6737 Melbourne 6022 Land Company 6737 poems, Bennett 613 schools 874 songs, Servia 6607 subjects, sermons, Kingsley 4848 Nations, ancient, liberty of 2726 law of 2778 law of, and divine law 5303 laws of 4099J, 6188i» les moeura et I'esprit des 9168 origin of 859, 8493 Native tribes, N. America 2632 Natural events, every month 9717 history, animals, T. R. Jones 4680 archipelago, eastern 575 arctic 8510 Audubon in America 7632 "Beagle" 2257 beasts, birds, etc., 1671 1729 Bewick 667-9 birds, Ronnie 7361-2 British coasts 3892 Ceylon 8730 eonohology 4662 of creation 1607-10, 4772, 5212 England 8600 BngMsh cyclopaedia 4885 frozen seas 8510 Godalming 6438 British Guiana 2232 Highlands 7630 human species 8119 India, highlands 3171 insects 4868, 7363 Ireland 4472 ' » Levant, &o. 8917 mammalia 5764 man 6138, 6913 monkeys 6201 Pliniua 6997, 9096 popular 27-9 recollections, Jesse 4618 seaweeds 3891 Belborne 9414-16 Natural history— coMfc study, Swainson 8519 zoological notes and anecdotes 9724 zoology of the poets 6437 phenomena, atlas of 4659-60 philosophy 226, B117-19, 5397 first principles, Paris 6700-1 introduction to, R. Hunt 4418 history of, Powell 7129 study of, Herschel ' 4040 reason, use of 8321 relii?ion, obligations of 1730-1 science, reading book 6786 relation to art 7663« selection 2258 society, vindication of 1145 theology 980, 6678, 9399 Naturalist, Audubon 7632 calendar of 9415 in Jamaica 3663 note-book of a 861, 8817 rambles, Devonshire 3567 Nature, adaptation of, to man 1498, 4811 aspects of 43SS book of 4686 calendar of 4316 etudes. Saint Pierre 7645-6 gallery of 6137 interpretation of 363 language of 4944 law of, and divine law 6303 light of 9013 phenomena of 4421 jiopular pictures 7766 principles of 2283 printSl ferns 6256 of the scholar S018, 22 the soul in 6570 spirit of 4420 studies from, Masius 5903 of. Twining 9056 of things, Lucretius 6520-1 views of 4360 worship, America 8327 Nature and art, fiction 952'', 4446-7 and human nature, " Sam Slick " 3768 Naturgemasse Steuer 271 Naturis rerum, de, Neckam 1663 •Naunton, Sir R. 211 Nautical dictionary 9707 Navarre, court of, 1829 4699 Queens of 3247-8 to China, travels 607 Naval ballads 6829' biographical diet'. 6560 daring, British 8400-1 gunnery 2546 terms and ]]hrases 9707 history. Great Britain 924, 8261 and military French dictionary 1170 resources, European nations 9646 service in war, 1833 7846 worthies, Q. Elizabeth's reign 485 Navigation 5325 in the air 49 ancient 8144 and commerce, 1674 2902 encouragement of, 1693 7643 inland, ancient and modem 8562 ^ * steam S121 terms and phrases 9707 •Navy, anecdotes S400-1 battles 128 bills funded 8220 and Ohas. 2 . 7368* commissioners, tender of mariners, etc. to, 1648 7188"! compass system, 1847 4637 Gloria Britannica, 1689 6401 history of 924, 6476, 8261 manual of scientific enquiry 4038 past and future of, 1846 7001 pay, 1689 6401 safety of, 1642 7188" and sea-service, Ralegh 7267 shipwrecks 3417 state of, 1865 2947 N 632 N Naylor, B. S., time and truth, etc. 7972 Rev. D'., "Wakefield, notice of 1325 S., Keynard 7375 *Neal, J>., dissenters 4099'' *Neale, Key. Brsliine (.not Grleig) S305 Neaves, Lord, literary address 949 Necessity, Hobbes 4105 *Neck Adventures, Dunton 2638 Neck or Nothing 2638, 6386 Neckam, de naturis rerum, etc. Neckam 1663 Neoker, life, etc. 6378, 8333 Anne 1. G. StaSl 8331, etc. Neorographia authOrum, Brydges 1072 •Nedham, or Needham, M. 7030, 7040', 7095 Needle-work, art of 9569 Negotiations of peace, &c,, Eapin 7296 . Negrepont, 1686 1994 Negro life, America, Stowe 8448-53 races, Polynesian 2818 Negroes, "W. Indies 6318 Negroland of the Arahs 1942 Nehemiah, Greeks, &c. in days of 9397 Neighbours, fiction 912-13 •Nelson", 'death of, ode 6563, 6968 ' " .descent from Bdw. I. 3251 life 4999, 6861 and "Wellington, dialogue at St. Paul's 9356 Nelson and Brand (Byre case) 1767 " Nemesis," the 3802-3 Nemesis of Paith 3269 Power 7637 Nennius, chronicle 1664 Nepaul and Nepaulese 4114, 6691 Nepos, Cornelius 648; iV^epos 9096 Neptune, planet 6463 Nero, conspiracy against 6615 Nerves, apology for 6230 in health and disease 6230 nervous system 4139, 8097 Nervous system and ciriUzation 9125 Nesselrode 1354-5 Nest of Ninnies, Armin Fools 7974 Nestorians 3584, 7992 Netherlands, ambassadors of, 1641 1599 ' ' campaign, 1816 6331 and "P. Eugene 2844 history 3598 painting, school of 4612 revolt of, Schiller 7711-12 and Spain, wars between 1859 Spanish Netherlanders, 1689 4099" Spraohe und Litteratur (old) 4727 traditions and superstitions 8859 treaty with Charles 2 1602 Tnited, history. Motley 6312 war against, 1673 8489-90 war against Spain 7776' Netter, fasciculi zizaniorum Netter 1663 Netteslieim, Agrippa Ton, life 6292 •Nevile or Neville, H. 6722 •New Academy of Complements 25 Arabian nights 205 Athenian Comedy, 1693 7023 Athens, 1720 6166 Atlantis 861-2, 6262 Bath Guide 191-2 -comers, 1742 7045 Cratylus 2530 Creed, 1648 1695™ curiosities of literature 8200 dispensation (Swedenborg) 8521 England 146, 1208, 1670, 4426, 7183», 7453, 9576,9, 80 tale, Southey 8262 existence of man 6652 fiction, a, 1626 1690 foundling hospital for wit 9685 Guinea 4706, 6191 Haven, discourse at 1225 heavens and earth 1186 life, the, Dante 2255-6 Magdalen, fiction 1883 ■married lady, letter to 16S4 oath of allegiance justified, 1689 7040» Orleans, British army at 3440 Plymouth 146, 44^6 Pygmalion 8944 sayings, centuries of, 1660 4307 •New— eo«*. sentimental ioumey 1862 South "Wales 6096, 8486, 8924, 8961 spirit of the age 4259 Testament, emphatic, 1862 685 Timon, poem 6562, 88-90 Uncommercial Samples, Dickens 2436 "Whig guide 9404 world of words 6890 world, the, England in 9258-9 year, holiday book 1662 year's day, 1703, song 7023 1705, ode 7011 1716, ode 7010 York (U.S.) 963, 1208,1646, 2705, 4477-S, 8091, 9459, 9681 • Zealand 1653,3647,4434,6436,7134-6,8029, 8960, 2, 9197 Newark 1691, 1693i=, 1697=, ", ", 2865 Viscount, speeches, 1641 1597"" Newbury, battle of 1695»« •Newcastle, Margaret, Duchess of 2002, 6431-2, 7028 Duke of 2276, 7010=1, 'i-^, 8788'. 9709 (6th) Duke of, Martineau on 6876 •Newcastle-on-Tyne : Ass", for watching the wai', 1855 9014 books, tracts, etc. 266, 668-60, 960, 1133, 1622-6, 1598™, 1599 ' *, 3311-13, 98 i 3884, 4125, 6362, 64S4-6, 6594, 6968 ' *, 7606, 8221, 8428-9, 9028 Charles I. ]649,673#i companies 9205 corporation, &c. 9028 garrison, 1647 1599 ' * A. Henderson 1549 letter printed at, 1647 1699 » ♦ London, "W. 5424 mayor, etc., 1643 1698" miracle plays 9205 new picture of 6694 and the Scots, 1643-4 1697', 1698" songs and songster 8311-13, 8221 Newcome, autobiography and diary Nevicome 1639 Newcomes, fiction 8759 ^ ^ 73 Newfoundland 1208, 4706 Newgate 2520, 3355, 4681, 6337'' i, ', \ 5338, 6734', 70471,8937'" Newland, Abraham, life 1837 •Newman, Cardinal 2140, 3866, 4852-S, 6551, 9584 P. "W. 4176, 4249, 4330, 4942, 7483 Newmarch, C. H. Buckman 1101 Newmarket 1593*, 1699' ', 1602, 2962' Newport, L of "Wight, book 2216 Charles I. etc. 1680, 1593", ^, 1696« 2808,4091,7188"', 8937 ' " Newport Market, Henley 4010 Newry, tract 8562 ' » News from hell, etc., 1642 6612 1649 8937 ' 1^ 1721 7010" the Levane seas 1855 ' i Parnassus 7775^ out of purgatory Tarlion 7974 from Rome, 1641-2 6165, 6612 News, true news. Laud 61761'' Newspapers. *news-sheets, etc. : Daily Gazetteer 2221, 6454 Edinburgh Courant 2696 Examiner, 1710-12 2913 1808-75 2914 extracts and cuttings 2205 {axA American), 3321-2, •6630, 6704, 5902, 8786 Historical Register 4097-8 history of 2696, 4383 Leader 6198 London Gazette 4099s, 6431 Mercurias (with various titles), 1643-9 6414, 7846", 8937 ' " Anglicus, 1679 6464 Mercury, Irish, 1660 4472' Morning Post, 22 Peh. 1803 •6804 newspaper literature, America 3169 Parliament-iiite, 1618 8937 ' " Popish Courant, 1679 7815i' N 633 N Newspapers, 'news-sheets, etc.— coni. St. James's Chronicle, 1761 7621 Satui-day Review 2151, 6301, 7692 Stamford Mercury 2221 "Weekly Pacquet of Advice fr. Eome, 1 B7^-80 7093, 784512 ■Westminster Journal, 1742, 7 70«, 9374 •Xewton, Sir Isaac, Anti-Newtonian 4099'' and chronolopy 6372 lite, writings 931-S, 2966, 6381,5 optics 6325 prineipia 998 Eev. J., letters, &o. 9276 E., D.D., Amhurst 147 T., life 694 Newton Forster, fiction 6835 Ngami, Lake 172 •Nibelongenlied, Carlyle on 1380 » » Nibley Green, battle of, poem 4854 Nicaragua, 1852 8328 discovery of Andagoya 3756 Nice, climate, &c. 8657 •Nichol, J. P. 5369, 9222, 9534 Nicholas, Emperor, and family 3537, 4012-13, 6220, 5876, 9053 Sir E., letters 1595=^, 2888 Nicholas Nickleby 2399, etc., 2487 Nicboles, notice of 594 ♦Nicholls, M". Bell 582-7 Rev. N., life 593S •Nichols, J. 2636, 3117, 3282, 4828, 6493, 8043, 8381, 8527, 8647, 8S88 J. B. 2070, 6469 J. G. 389, 2813 •Nicolas, Sir N. Harris 497, 2467 2971, 4710, 6420, 7186, •7369, 7429, 8505, 8836 P. H. Johns 4631 Nicole, Pierre, Pens6es, etc. 6755 •Niebuhr, Carsten, Ufe 6381, 7636 Niger, Lander 6035 exploration, Hutchinson 4439 Nigger question, Carlyle 1380 ' ", 96 Night and morning, fiction 5559-61 -thoughts. Young 9709-10 -voices and other poems 8315 Nightmare Abbey, fiction 6783 Nights at mess and other tales 9419 •Nile, Fairholt 2959 Plutarch 4037 and Indus, regions between 1631 and Ptolemy 1939 ■White, 1840-1 9369 Nimroud, ruins 6196 Nina, fiction 912,14 Nine dales wonder, Kemp 4775 Nineteenth century, liistory 7746 Swedenborg 8521 Ninety-fifth regiment 3880 •Nineveh 3005, 6193-7, 9113 (and Persepolis) ; 9227 Court, Crystal Palace 2161 Cuneatic system 4376 fall of, poem 308 Ninian, St., life 7781 Nithsdale, Countess of 2218 song and peasantry 2125 No Body in the City to No Body in the country, 1679 6283 No Name, Action 1878 No post from heaven, nor yet from hell, 1643 1594 1" No Protestant plot, 1681-2 7096 Nobihty, England, 1715 9529 English and Soots, history, 1733 5697 and gentr.v, Ireland 4472'°," Scotch and Irish, 1685 1211 the, children of 1649 Nobility and others, grants to, Eapin 7295 sacrificed for loyalty to Ch. L and II. 1551 Scotland, remonstrance, 1639 7779 •Noble, — Standish 8340 Noblemen, etc. to repair to the north, 1638 7188"* Nobles and Commons, Athens and Kome, Swift, Noctes Ambrosianae 95*" Noctes Atticae, Gellina 3362, 9096 Noel, Baptist, Preechurch, Switzerland 5212 Noel-Feam, H. Christmas 1660 Nollekens, artists contemporary with 8150 hints to, verses 7016 and his times 8150 Non-metallic elements 2978 Non-resistance, 1710 4512 Non-restraint system, insane ^88 Non-scrihers, plea for, 1651 1699 ' ' Non-swearing parsons, 1696 1684 •Nonconformists, appeal, 1681 7040' history of 6402 plea for uniformity, 1674 7040" (Conformist's) second plea for, 1682 7040* vindicated from death of Ch. I. 7O40» Nonconformity, ethics of 6078 Nonjurors 4099 «, ', >, 7041 Nonsense, book of 6200 Norbane, Walter, life 455 Norden, J., county of Essex Norden 1322 Norfolk, county of 1763, 295313, gojo Dukes of 4291-2, 6885, 8957 " ' •Norman Conquest 227, 5703, 6232, 6678, 8796-8 English history prior to Vergil 1322, 6679 kings, Uves, etc. 3929, 6678 monarch, idea of (H. III.) 9203 structures 1098, 6435« Normanby, Marquis of, verses, 1709 7012 Normanby, Marquis of, Blanc, 1859 744 Normandy, Dukes of 6678 ecci. history 6603 and the Englisb, Monstrelet 6203 expulsion of Enghsh from Normandy 1663 history of 6678 rambles, 1846, 55 3755, 6371 ■WiUiam, Duke of 227, 6678 Normans, in England and Ireland 6450 •Norris of Bemerton, works, life MiscA 3284, 5397, 9538 Norris Papers Norris 1639 Norse pronunciation Ellis 2674 •North country words 960 Pole, Parry 6746 side view of slavery 2566 the, fight in, 1648 8937 '' '" North and South, fiction 3332 North-west passage 261; S««doZ2 3756; 6746, 8051 Northampton, AllhaJlows ch,, sermon 3124 book 403 Earl of, impeachment, 1642 15971" Northamptonshire, words and customs 403 Northanger Abbey, fiction 329 Northbrooke, treatise against dicing etc. Northbroohe 7974 •Northcote, J., conversations 3932 Northern minstrelsy 7790 mythology 8859 nations, irruption 8188 registers, historical papers Northern 1663 seas, voyages to, M"" cent, Zeno 3766 Northerns, distinguished, lives 1787-8 Northmen, discovery of America by 524 in America Zeno 3756 and Normans, England and Ireland 6450 the, Ferguson 3000 Norths, the, Uves 6519 •Northumberland assizes, procession 6435i^ is and the Border 9434 D. of 6334, 8190 Earls of 1597i»,', S840, 6447, 6528, 6735 Feuwyke of, ode 64851° piper, Allan 8221 remarkable places 4324 rural rides 176$ treasure trove 64S5i* Northumbrian castles, churches, eminent per- sons, etc. 3398 poem Ov,nwmi N 634 N Northumbrian—coMi. social society 6435' tale 4125 •Norton, C. E., Dante 2256 Colonel, victory, WM 1697" Hon. M". 4269, 8045 Norton and Sackville, Gorboduc, etc. Udalt 7974 •Norway, excuraions, travels, residence, etc. in, 1802-66. 1078, 1110-11, 3129, 4165, 4979, 5394, 6965, 6072, 6106, 9693, 9602 guide to, 1848 8899 history 2622 king of (Chaa. John) 6052 kings of 1887, 8194 language 859 and Lapland 1078, 6106 literature 4326 salmon fisher 6106, 8899 sport, flowers, etc. 460 and Sweden, 1348 6965 tale of 6879, 86 views 7278 Norwich books 748, 892, 938, 1022, 1626, 6466, 7936, 8370 London to Kemp 1322,4775 St. Peter's, Bp. Hall's funeral sermon 9438 W. Taylor, life, etc. 7434 Nose-gay for House of Commons, 1648 4284 Noses, notes on 4497 Notation of spoken sounds Ellis 2674 •Notes, Heron 4036 Notes fi:om books ; and from life, Taylor 8666-8 Notes of a Traveller, Laing 4980-2 Notes on poems and reviews, Swinburne 8582 Notices, Soobell 7770 Notitia orbis Antiqui 1477 parliamentaria 9529-80 Notre-Dame de Paris, Hugo 4351 ^ conferences 4965 Paris, Dean of, 1692 7023 •Nott, Sir "W., life 8432 Nottingham books 117, 382, 6 ; 6382. 9204 Earl of, 1647 2963 '^ (Chancellor) 1780, 22771* Col. Hutchinson 63R4 Nottinghamshire, Hucknall Torkard 1275 Kelham 6322 Newark (see "Newark ") rural rides 1763 Sorooby 4426, 6110 Nouvelette, Goethe 3476 Nouvelles Genevoises 8909 en vers 4972 •Novalis, Carlyle on 1380 " Nova Scotia, 1853 6737 geology 5542 Novara, campaign 8426 Novatorum, de fabrica, errores 6141 NoveUsts, British 952 Irish, Horne on 4259 lives of, Scott 7800 Novels by eminent hands, Thackeray 8759 " i' De Poe 2311, etc. Bdgeworth 2692 G. Eliot 2721, etc. Evelyn 2882 exemplary, Cervantes 1487 fairy 322 history of 2629 and novehsts 4573 poetical 7024 Riche, B. Miche 7974 Shakespeare library 7971 and tales, Disraeli 2477 Goethe 3476 ■Waverley 7804-6 Novicius 705 ' ^ 6817'3 Novum organum 363 Novus reformator vapulans, 1691 1672*° Now and Then, fiction 9281 " Now it's come " Church Tracts 1672' " Now or never's the time to tell truth," l7lo 76911 Noy, W., and Strafford 8468W Noy, M". William Wilkitis 9490 Nozrani in Egypt and Syria 9565 Nubia, 1845-6 7605, 7633 Nuoius Nicander, travels Nucius 1822 NugaeAntiquae, Harington 3862-3 I Nugae modernafi. Park 6704 •Nugent, Lord, I. D'lsraeli 2487 Nugis Curialium, de Mapes 1322 Numbers, book of, geographical commentary 4861 Numerical systems, ancient 6690 Numorus Infaustus, Caesar 6416-17 Nuraismata Cromwelliana 4009 Numismatic tracts 6435* Nunoius Coelestis, 1679 1822 Nuremburg 9321 Nursery rhymes, songs, tales 4166, 6829*, 6883-4 ; 9405 {Scottish) Nurture, books of Babees 2674 Nuruddin Abdurrahman JoMi 4559 Nut-brown Maid, poem 278 Nutcracker, 1761 7013 Nye, P., 1646 2712 An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a, heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type ; " v " stands for volume. 0. " 0, Grave, so narrow I " (verses) •O'Oonnell, life, speeches 6563 0'D(mald, Peregrine, psend. King 4835 O'Donnel, fiction 6271 O'Donoghue, fiction 6299 O'Hagan, John, Chaucer 6209 O'Hara family, tales by 6968* •O'Keefle, life 6676 O'Neale, Daniel, irnpeachment, 1641 1699' ^ O'Neale and Chaa. I., 1645 1593" O'Neil, Miss, performances 69571' O'Neill, Aodh (and predecessors), life 6168 Oakeley, Eev. P., Crosthwaite 2140 Oakham, Eev. A. Wright 760 Oasis of Jupiter Ammon 7623 Siwah, views 7624 •Oates, Titus, and plot 6276, 7096', *, 7097 Oath of abjuration, 1693 4611'* arraign'd, 1653 7040 allegiance (James I.) 843 1682 7354 1689-91 1672", 4099', 67359, 7040", », 7354 Heame, 1700 4099" and canons, convocation, 1641, against 1697"», 9275 covenant, 1639 1598^ 8937 ' '^ Oxford garrison, 1645 7188'* Oaths, about, 1689 4099> by army, inhibiting 7188" and covenants, concerning 1698' to King George, 1723 4512' separation on account of 67351* 1689, 91 4099', i tracts, 1640-5 2038 Oatlands, Coke's proceedings Camden Misc.^, „, ,. 1822 Obedience to the present king, 1689 7358* Obituary, Annual, 1817-24, 6 708 Admiral Hall 3803 Newcastle Lit. and Phil. Soc. 64851' scientific men, 1864 9357 1627-74 Smyth 1322 1714, etc. 4097-8 „,,. ,. veraes, Bp. Joseph Hall 9438 UDligation of human laws 843 of humanity to brutea 9705 635 Obsequens, Juliua, prodigia 8998 Observations and instructions Z. Beywood 1639 Observator, the, animadversions on, 1642 1542 character of, 1881 (?) 163T doting, 1681 6188» drawn to the life, 1704 8937 ' ' Qualiers advice to, 1704 7044" Observatory, Edinburgh 8180 Toronto 7609 Observer, British essayists 950 •Obsolete phrases, dictionary 6a?9 Oocaaional conformity, 1702-4 4099», 70 M Ocoleve, Lords' men Courtesy 2674 Occult sciences 7663 Ocean (lower (Madeira), poem 4336 " Oceana," on 9653 Ockenden, W., Killarney, etc. 2369 Ootavian, Emperor, romance 6829" Occupation, influence of, on health B214 Occupations, census 1841 8279 Odds and ends, Collier 1840 Odenwald, fairy tales 2960 Ode, Cambridge commencement, 1730 8683 Pindarique, 1702 7024 Prior, 1706 7010^ Odes and addresses to great people 4193-4 Collins 1870 Heraud 4019 Klopstook 4878 Lytton (historical) 5563, 6068« Petrarca 6854-0 Pindar 6925-30 probationary 7497 StaM-Holstein , 8334 Warton (not Otway) 6633 "Williams 8612-13 Odessa, 1833 6242 Odyssey 4169, 4179-81 Officers, general council of Fairfax 2952"-"' from the Eevolution, Maoky 6697 Offices, Brigittine monastery Mirror 2674 Offices, Ireland. 1662 4772W Offices, Cicero of, trans. 1607-8 Official rolls. British 3917 Offlciis, de, Cicero 16!i2-3 Ogden, J., Heads of the people 6009 Oglethorpe, Gen., life 9659 Oil paintmg, history 2677 guide to 1749 Okey, Colonel, 1645, C2 1597i», 7347 Old age, Cicero, trans. 1698, 7012 healthful 6640 preserving health to 3972 •Old-Bailey trials, 1680, 4 6853, 7346, 8957" ♦ Old Change, 1642 1604' Old Court suburb (Kensington) 4105 Old Curiosity Shop, fiction 2399, etc., 2438 England, pictorial 2790 England's new triumph, 1709, song 7012 English baron, fiction 962' '^ faith and new 8473 Hobson, conceits of 6829^ Jewry, sermon, 1766 7845 Judge, "Sam Slick" 8769 lamps or new P, Shakespeare 7916 leaves ("Household 'Words") 9544 man of the mountain, tale 8872 manor house, flotion ^^^' ,„ man's diary. Collier 1847 and New 'testament persons, in art 4558 red sandstone 6116 roads and new roads 7432 stories retold, Thombiu'y 884B story-teller, Bech stein 645 style, defence of 4099= Testament, age, &c. of 3409 introduction to 9378 and polygamy 2331 propnets and kings 6958 Old Will with the Spencer wig, 1742 7045 Olden time, lights and shadows 60bU •Oldfleld li"., life 664, 2717, 3299, 6579 Oldheld, M .. ure ^^^_ Bracegirdle 8937' ' •Oldham J.,life_^^ ,,,, f„81 •Oldys, English stage 664 epigrams 2806 UTe •1981=, 6589 Ealeigh 7265 Olivarea, Count, life 6378 Olive Mount, leaves from the, poems B715 •Oliver Newman, &c., poems 8262 Twist, flotion 2399, etc., 2439-40 Oliver's pocket looking glass 6817' 011a Podrida, British Essayists 950 Marryat 6838 " Olphar Hamst " 2538 Olympiads, chronology 6372 Olympic games, on 6929 Omagiia Simon 3756 ' Omto, Imilms and Seyyids iSaUl 3766 " Omnia Comesta Belo,' 1679 7364 Omniana, Southey 8263 Omoo, South Seas 6034 Once upon a time, Knight 4891 Only son, an 4787 Onslow, A., char, of Abp. Abbot 4 Oosterzee, 1023 4099' •Opera, Carlyle on ■ 1380' " Italy, Prance, Germany, England 4117 Munich, Dresden, Berlin 4157 •Operas after the Italian manner, Dennis, 1706 7011 Apollo and Daphne (words) 7021 Paust (words) 3489 Meyerbeer 3683 Sonnambula (words) 8222 Ulysses (words) 7021 various (words) 6600 Opie, J„ lectures on painting 487 M''., life, etc. 938, 5878 Opinion, authority in matters of 5312 Opinions, Brougham 996 Goethe 3492 formation and publication of 386 Opium-eater, confessions 2385-6 Optical instruments 6325 Optics 4108, 6118, 6325 Opuscula metrico-prosaica, Burton 1201 Oracles, ancient 272, 6141 Pagan, De Quincey 2365' of reason 764, 4822 Oraisons fimfebres, Bossuet 848 Oram, poems 6705** Orange, William, Prince of, 1623 41-2.1694', 4099!, 6669 Orange, William, Prince of ( W"»v III.) coming into England 4099V, 4510, 7158 declaration, 1688-9 4099> 8937" " and James 11. 40998, 4611 justification of 4099^^ Mackintosh 6688 poems on and to 7020, 4 Prince and Princess of 7040*^ 7048 Princess of 4511' ?romotion to the throne 4511 See also "William III.") Orateurs de la Grande- Bretajgne 4991 lUustres, (trans, of Cicero) 1703 Orationes et epistolae, Isocrates 4493-4 Orations, Cicero 1699-700 Demosthenes 2337 etc., 2965 Everett (U.S.) 2911 Hyperides 4441 Lester 6273 Duchess of Newcastle 6431 Sumner (U.S.) 8603 Orator, Modern (Brskine) 2820 Oratore, de (and translations), Cicero 1694, 9, 1703 Oratorios (words) 7021 in cathedrals 874 Orators, America 6732-3 Gt. Britain 3641, 4991 of the Age, 1847 3218 Oratory, Lincoln's Inn fields 4010 Oratory, Institutes of 7241 principles of 266-6 Orbis antiqui, notitia, Cellarius 1477 Orbs of heaven 6171 Oreo, the, tradition 7666, 70 Ordeal of Bichard Feverel, fiction 6061 N 634 N Northumbrian—coai. social society e4S5' taie 4125 •Norton, C. E.. Dante 2256 Colonel, victory, 16Mi 1697" Hon. M". 4259, 8045 Norton and Sackville, Grorboduc, etc. TJdaU 7974 •Norway, excursions, travels, residence, etc. in, 1802-66. 1078, 1110-11, 3129, 4155, 4979, 6394, 6965, 6072, 6106, 9593, 9602 guide to, 1848 8899 history 2622 kin(5 of (Chas. John) 6052 kings oJ 1887, 8194 language 859 and Lapland 1078, 6106 Uterature 4326 salmon fisher 6106, 8899 sport, flowers, etc. 460 and Sweden, 1843 6965 tale of 6879, 86 views 7278 Norwich books 743, 893, 933, 1022, 1626, 6465, 7935, 8370 London to Kemp 1322,4776 St. Peter's, Bp. Hall's funeral sermon 9438 ■W. Taylor, life, etc. 7434 Nose-gay for House of Commons, 1648 4284 Noses, notes on 4497 Notation of spoken sounds Ellis 2674 •Notes, Heron 4035 Notes from books ; and from hfe, Taylor 8666-8 Notes of a Traveller, Laing 4980-2 Notes on poems and reviews, Swinburne 8582 Notices, Soobell 7770 Notitia orbis Antiqui 1477 parliamentaria 9529-30 Notre-Dame de Paris, Hugo 4351 conferences 4965 Paris, Dean of, 1692 7023 •Nott, Sir W., life 8432 Nottingham books 117, SS2, 6 ; 6332, 9204 Earl of, 1647 2953 " (Chancellor) 1780, 227718 Col. Hutchinson B3R4 Nottinghamshire, Huoknall Torkard 1275 Kelham 6322 Newark {see "Newark") rural rides 1763 Scrooby 4426, 6H0 Nouvelette, Goethe 3476 Nouvelles Genevoises 8909 en vers 4972 •Novalis, Carlyle on 1380 ' ' Nova Scotia, 1853 6737 geology 8542 Novara, campaign 8426 Novatorum, de fabrica, errores 5141 Novelists, British 952 Irish, Home on 4269 lives of, Scott 7800 Novels by eminent hands, Thackeray 8769 " " De Eoe 2311, etc. Edgeworth 2692 G. Eliot 2721, etc. Evelyn 2882 exemplary, Cervantes 1487 fairy 322 history of 2629 and novehsts 4573 poetical 7024 Riche, B. Eiche 7974 Shakespeare library 7971 and tales, DisraeU 2477 Goethe 3476 "Waverley 7804-6 Novioius 705 ", 681715 Novum organum 363 Novus reformator vapulans, 1691 1672'"' Now and Then, fiction 9281 " Now it's come " Church Tracts 1672" " Now or never's the time to tell truth," l7lo 76911 Noy, W., and Strafford 8468" Noy, M". "William Wilkins 9490 Nozrani in Egypt and Syria 9565 Nubia, 1345-6 7605,7633 Nucius Nioander, travels Nucims 1322 NugaeAntiquao, Harington 3862-8 Nugae modemafi. Park 6704 •Nugent, Lord, I. D'Israeli 2487 Nugis Curialium, de Mapes 1322 Numbers, book of, geographical commentary Numerical systems, ancient Numorus Infaustus, Caesar Numisraata Cromwelliana Numismatic tracts Nuncius Coelestis, 1679 Nuremburg Nursery rhymes, songs, tales Nurture, books of Nuruddin Abdurrahman Nut-brown Maid, poem Nutcracker, 1751 Nye, P., 1646 6690 6416-17 4009 6435« 1822 9321 4166, 6829*, 6833-4; 9405 {Scottish) Babees 2674 Jami 4659 278 7013 2712 An ' denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type : " v " stands for volume. 0. " O, Grave, so narrow I " (verses) •O'Connell, hfe, speeches 6563 O'Dcinald, Peregrine, pseud. King 4835 O'Donnel, fiction 6271 O'Donoghue, fiction 6299 O'Hagan, John, Chaucer 5209 O'Hara family, tales by 6968* •O'Keefte, life 6576 O'Neale, Daniel, impeachment, 1641 1699' = O'Neale and Chas. I., 1645 15931' O'Neil, Miss, perfoi-mances 69571' O'Neill, Aodh (and iiredeoessors), life 6168 Oakeley, Eev. P., Crosthwaite 2140 Oakham, Eev. A. 'Wright 760 Oasis of Jupiter Ammon 762S Siwah, views 7624 •Gates, Titus, and plot 6276, 7095', 8, 7097 Oath of abjuration, 1693 4511" arraign'd, 1658 7040 allegiance (James I.) 848 1682 7364 1689-91 1672", 4099', 6735', 7040», », 7354 Heame, 1700 4099' and canons, convocation, 1641, against 16971*, 9275 covenant, 1639 1598', 8937 ' " Oxford garrison, 1645 7188'* Oaths, about, 1689 4099' by army, inhibiting 7188™ and covenants, concerning 1698* to King George, 1723 4512' separation on account of 67351* 1689, 91 4099', ' tracts, 1640-6 2038 Oatlands, Coke's proceedings Camden Misc.', 1322 Obedience to the present king, 1689 7353« Obituary, Annual, 1817-24, 6 708 Admiral Hall 3803 Newcastle Lit. and Phil. Soo. 6435" scientific men, 1864 9357 1627-74 Smyth 1322 1714, etc. 4087-8 verses, Bp. Joseph Hall 9438 Obligation of human laws 843 of humanity to brutes 9705 o 635 Obsequens, Julius, prodigia 6998 Observations and inatructious B. Heywood 1639 Obserrator, the, animadversions on, T.M2 1612 character of, 1681 (f) 1637 doting, 1681 6188" drawn to the Ufe, 1704 8937 ' ' Quakers advice to, 1704 7014" Observatory, Edinburgh 8180 Toronto _ 7609 Observer, British essajrists 950 •Obsolete phrases, dictionary 6S79 Occasional conformity, 1702-4 4099», 70M Occleve, Lords' men Courtesy 2674 Occult sciences 7663 Ocean flower (Madeira), poem 4335 " Oceana," on 9653 Ookenden, W., Killarney, etc. 2369 Ootavian, Emperor, romance 6829" Occupation, influence o(, on health 6214 Occupations, census 1841 8279 Odds and ends. Collier 1840 Odenwald, fairy tales 2960 Ode, Cambridge commencement, 1730 8683 Pindarique, 1703 7024 Prior, 1706 7010" Odes and addresses to great people 4193-4 Collins 1870 Heraud 4019 Klopstock 4878 Lytfain (historical) 6563, 69683= Petrarca 6864-0 Pindar 6926-80 probationary 74Q7 Stael-Holstein 8334 Warton {not Otway) 6633 "Williams 9612-13 Odessa, 1833 6242 Odyssey 4169, 4179-81 Officers, general council of Fairfax 2952"-"' from the Eevolution, Maoky 6697 Offices, Brigittine monastery Mirror 2674 Offices, Ireland, 1662 4772i» Offices, Cicero of, trans. 1697-8 Official rolls. British 3917 Offlciis, de, Cicero 1692-3 Ogden, J., Heads of the people 6009 Oglethorpe, Gen., life 9659 Oil painting, history 2677 guide to 1749 Okey, Colonel, 1645, 62 15971', 7347 Old age, Cicero, trans. 1698, 7012 healthful 66-40 preserving health to 3972 ♦Old-Bailey trials, 1660, 4 6863, 7346, 8957" * Old Change, 1642 1594' Old Court suburb (Kensington) 4405 Old Curiosity Shop, fiction 2399, etc., 2438 England, pictorial 2790 England's new triumph, 1709, song 7012 English baron, fiction 962" ^ faith and new 8473 Hobson, conceits of 6829' Jewry, sermon, 1766 7845 Judge, "Sam Slick" 3769 lamps or new ?, Shakespeare 7916 leaves ("Household 'Words") 9644 man of the mountain, tale 8872 manor house, fiction 952" == man's diary. Collier . 1847 and New Testament persons, in art 4558 red sandstone 6116 roads and new roads 7482 stories retold, Thombury 8848 story-teller, Bech stein 646 style, defence of 4099= Testament, age, &o. of 3409 introduction to 9378 and polygamy 2331 propnets and kings 6958 Old Will with the Spencer wig, 1742 7045 Oliipn time, lights and shadows oOby •Oilfield M"., life 654, 2717, 3299, 6579 Oldheia, M ., u^^ ^^^_ Bracegirdle 8937" ■> ♦Oldham J., We^^ 2796, foi •Oldys, English stags 664 epigrams 2806 life •1981=, 6589 Raleigh 7265 OUvarez, Count, life 6378 Olive Mount, leaves from the, poems 6716 •Oliver Newman, &o., poems 8262 Twist, fiction 2399, etc., 2439-40 Oliver's pocket looking glass 6817* 011a Podrida, British Essayists 950 Mariyat 5836 " Olphar Hamst " 2538 Olympiads, chronology 6372 Olympic games, on 6929 Omagua Simon 3756 ' Omto, Imdms and Seyyids SaUl 3756 " Omnia Comesta Belo,"' 1679 7354 Omiiiana, Soutliey 8263 Omoo, South Seas 6034 Once upon a time, Knight 4891 Only son, an 4787 Onslow, A., char, of Abp. Abbot 4 Oosterzee, 1623 4099' •Opera, Carlyle on ' 1380" " Italy, Prance, Germany, England 4117 Munich, Dresden, Berlin 4157 •Operas after the Italian manner, Dennis, 1706 foil Apollo and Daphne (words) 7021 Paust (words) 3489 Meyerbeer 3683 Sonnambula (words) 8222 Ulysses (words) 7021 various (words) 6600 Opie, J., lectures on painting 487 M"., life, etc. 938, 5876 Opinion, authority in matters of 6312 Opinions, Brougham 996 Goethe 3492 formation and publication of 386 Opium-eater, confessions 2366-6 Optical instruments 6325 Optics 4106, 6118, 6325 Opusoula metrico-prosaica, Burton 1201 Oracles, ancient 272, 6141 Pa«an, DeQuinoey 2366' of reason 764, 4822 Oraisons funfebres, Bossuet 848 Oram, poems 6706" Orange, William, Prince of, 1623 41-2. 1694', 4099^, 6669 Orange, William, Prince of (W"i III.) coming into England 4099',i, 4310, 7158 declaration, 1688-9 4099> 8937" " and James II. 4099^, 4511 justification of 4099'' Mackintosh 6688 poems on and to 7020, 4 Prince and Princess of 7040^1, 7048 Princess of 4611' Promotion to the throne 4511 See also " William III.") Orateurs de la Grande- Bretagne 4901 illustre.s, (trans, of Cicero) 1703 Orationes et epistolae, Isocrates 4493-4 Orations, Cicero 1699-700 Demosthenes 2337 etc., 2965 Everett (U.S.) 2911 Hyperides 4441 Lester B27S Duchess of Newcastle 6431 Sumner (U.S.) 86QS Orator, Modern (Brskine) 2820 Oratore, de (and translations), Cicero 1694, 9, 170S Oratorios (words) 7021 in cathedrals 874 Orators, America 6732-3 6t. Britain 3641, 4891 of the Age, 1847 3218 Oratory, Lincoln's Inn Pields 4010 Oratory, Institutes of 7341 principles of 266-6 Orbis antiqui, notitia, Cellarius 1477 Orbs of heaven 6171 Oreo, the, tradition 7666, 70 Ordeal of Richard Fevenl, fiotioa 6061 636 Orderly, an, revelations of 6693 Orders, Soobell 7770 in Council 6128, 8937 " " Ordinances, parliament, 1640, etc. 1596**, ", *', 6166, 6734, 7188=»,7769-70 Privy Council 7180 Ordination, concerning, 1689 6372' of ministers, 1646 6734=* Ijy presbyteries, 1645 6734^^ Ordinary, an, gallants at 6829* Oregon, exploring expedition 3250 or Columbia river, adventures 7523 question 9062 territory 2632, 6488 Orford, Horace Walpole, Earl of Walpole 9228, 9611 Robert Walpole, Earl of 2063, 7046 Organic remains 6793, etc., 6349, 8486 Organon (logical treatises), Aristotle 253 Oriental apologues 603 history 615, 2670 life, cases illustrative of 6837 Origen, Lamentation 8322 Origin of species 2258, 5541 Original poems and translations Prior 7180-1 the. Walker 9209 Origins and inventions 7212 Orion, poem 4260, 6985 Orkney, Earl of Kirkwall 4862 guide to, 1850 168 Orlando Furioso, trans, 229 Orleans, Due d', r^gence du 6825 Orleans, P. J. d", Tartary, etc. Orleans 8756 Orleans and Burgundy, civil wars 6203 ' Orley Farm, fiction 8977 Ormond, Action 2692 •Ormonde, 1st Duke of, and Charles I. 1697i^ '« Earl of Anglesey 227723, 30 Ireland 1432, 6326, 8861 life, letters, papers 644, 1431-2,1599'*, 6325, 8861 Ormond's peace, Milton 6164 Ormuzd and Ahriman, war of 2284 Ornament, analysis of 9635 ecclesiastical 7211 Ornamental art, hist, of 9635 Ornano, d' Cawnont 1467 Ornithological dictionar,y 6207 jambles, Sussex 4924 Orosius Alfred 2674 Orpington, Buskin 7663 Orrann, bard 6621 *Orrery, Charles, 4th Earl of, life, controversy 877, 1105 John, 5th Earl of. Swift 2330, 8529 ' i«, 8562' 2 Orthoepy and elocution 4905 Orthographer, dictionary 9151 Orthography, Landor on 6066 etc., Britan tongue Hume 2674 Ortis (Foscolq), letters •Orton, Rev. J., life Orton, or Tichborne case Orval, poem *Osborn, F., counsel to his children Sir T., letter to, 1672 Oseneia, annales monastic! *Ossoli, Marchesa d' (Fuller) Ossory, Countess of, letters to, "Walpole Ossuno, Duke of, life Ostend to Lake of Constance, journal Ostentation (on " Quakerism ") Osteology, fossil Oswestry, J. Owen, 1697 Otiis imperialibus, excerpta ex Ottley, Bev. J. B., Greek literature Ottoman Empire and Europe Otranto, Duo D.' 3185 6611 1768 5605 5798 70475 9240 5378 7861 2767 980,2 7040^^ Ralph 1663 2779 6093, 7290 9037 Fouchi 3194 •Otway, hfe 2626' = poems 9638, gigo, 6706*8, 7020 Oubliac, tale by 6861 Oudh, King of, manuscripts, catalogue 8325 Our dogs. Brown 1007 English (and French) watering place. Sickens 2405 Our — coni. glory-roll, poem 613 Mutual Friend, fiction 2399, etc., 2441 Street, fiction ' 8759 ' ", 8774 Our Lord, history of (in art) 4558 Ourselves, our food, our physio 7414 Out of haraess, A'Beckett 19 Outlaw, romance 3795 Outre-Mer, Longfellow 5473 ♦Ouvry, F. 3974, 4328, 8008 Ovatio Carolina, 1041 1571 Oyer-population, 1846 8866 Over shoes, over boots, answer to 8937 ' ' Overall, Bp. 6372" Overbury, Sir T., case of 4619 life 694 Ealegh 7270 valour anatomized 8041 Overland route, 1848 4114 •Overton, Ed., and others lAlburne 5337'^ 8 Overwork, etc., and disease amongst poor 6214 •Ovid, " Dolphin" 9096 epistles, burlesque on translations of 9590 imitation and life of. King 4831 Metam. Hubbard 1855 ' » ; 6705«'-^ 7076 translation, Dryden 2684 •Owen, John (poet), life 694 D'. John 507, 7047=" Sir E.. Crystal Palace 2161 Eobcrt, lite, &c. 6876, 6652 Owenson, Sydney Morgan 0268 Owl and nightingale 6829^' Owlglass 4328, 5082 Ox, farmer's library 2977 Oxburgh, Col., papers 7047^ Oxenedes, John of, chronica Oxenedes 1663 •Oxenford, John, " All the Year Eoimd " 124 notice of 7225 Oxenstieni, Count, life 6878 ♦Oxford, aoademians, 1641 4025 Anglo-Saxon lecture 6061 " Athenae," " Fasti " 9607-8 bargeman, Tom 1672', ^ Bp. of, and F. Charlton, 1683 2277" Newman's letter to 9684 and the test 704O" Blonde of Eeimes ] 322 books and prints, catalogue. Bliss 769 Braseu-nose 5770 broadside, 1643 7224 Canoellarii libri etc. Oxford 1663 character of London Diurnal 5429-30 Charles I. at 430, 1556, 7188«», " circuit expenses, 1596-1601 Camden Misc.*, 1322 city and university 6661 Corpus Christi statutes 9264 removal of courts to, 1643 7188" decay of learning, 1641 4025 decree, 1696 4099'' defence of, 1644 7188" and Edinburgh Eeview 2115 EvangeUcal churchmen 9108 Exeter coll. 6661, 7026 garrison, oath, 1045 718S" Green, G. S., watchmaker, play by 6972' humour 7013 D'. W. King's apology, 1765 4099° and Laud 6145-6, 75 letter (covenant) from 2038'* from a spy, 1643 1694" the Lords, 1644 1698" life and studies Oxford 1663 lords, retreat to Carlisle, 1641 Ugsi* Magdalene Coll., visitation Cartwright 1322 medieval 6450 Merton, statutes 6825 munimonta academica Oxford 1663 Parliament, 1643-4 7188°^, ^'', ^ 1681 1672', 2277", " petitions, 1641 4026, 6734= prize essay, E. Laudor on 6049 proclamations, etc. 4436, 7188'", etc. proctors, registers, etc. Oxford 1603 to Eome 3871 P. Rupert marching to, 1645 1697" sausage (verses) 6989 637 •Oxford— co«<. sermons 7025, 7611 servitour, 1709 4099" speeches at, 1.643 1697™ a step to (Creech), 1700 7023 Strabo and EdinburRh Review 2116 student, epistle to the Chevalier 7019' studies, Copleston 2115 surrender of, to parliament, 1646 1597" terrae-fllius 147, 8937 ' » theatre 7021, 7354 tracts, etc. 1223, 1656, 1699' *, 2038, 2466-6, 6661, 7045, 7167,7354,7611,7814, 8596, 9684 trials at 8644, 6337 ' S 8957 ' ' Trinity Coll., Warton 9298-9 University 147,8443 commission 4058, 6737 education 147 tests, visitations 4058 Vict-Ohancellor [Abbot] of, 1641 1690' visitations 4058 writers and bishops at 9607 writers and writings, Davies 2276 Oxford, Harley, Earl of 1187, 263S, 7065, 8629 Lord Vaux, Earl of Misc.\ 3284 Oxfordshire 1768, 6668, 8937 ' " Oxonian in "Nofw&y 6072 Oxoniana 6657 Oxonian's defence of loyalty to George I. 4099'' Oxus, river, journey to, 1836-8 9609 • Ozone, Faraday. 2S73 An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type : " v " stands for volume. "P. M. A. C. F." Pacha of many tales •Paciflc coast, 1849 Indian tribes, 1849 Fur Company and its Islands (and California) i by way of the Pole voyage to, Beechey Western, Islands, 185S Pack, Major 46, Packet of seeds, Gregory Packington, Sir John, speech Pacquet of advice from Rome, 1678-80 ♦"Paddiana," author of Paddington Padilla, Mary de Juan de Padre Ottomano, 1669 Padua, Arena chapel Pagan oracles Paganism, Rome under Pageants, Lord Mayors'_ •Paget, Sir James, physiology Pain and sorrow of evil marriage •Paine, T., life Painter, a, advice to, poem, 1710 progress of landscape, in Albania, etc, young, letters from 8354 5837 7373 7623 7623 1016-17, 7900 563 563 2818 1690' 2 3640 7041" 7093, 784612 6961 7461 2997 7567 2365 6105 6213 6829' 7411 7012 1183 6201-2 7684 ♦Painters, anecdotes, etc. British, lives characteristics of (verse) dictionary foreign, biographies handbook for young 2391, 7394 2178 7341 6670, 6021 2565, 6395-6, 9103^ 6267 ItaUan, lives " 2666, 2978, 4660, 9103-4 lives. Fielding 3039 memoirs of [fictitious] 548 modern, Ruskin 7570-1 old, historical sketches 5il6 and pictures, Dresden 2666 portraits of 7394 Spanish 2166, 9116 •Painting, anecdotes of 6670, 7394 art of 4380,6362,7378 colouring in 5866 criticism on, Richardson 7394 epochs of 9636-7 and the eye 1181 flower 2595 fresco and encaustic 6068, 8695 German, Flemish, Dutch 4962 on glass 694 Harris on 8875 hints, Jaives 4668 history of 4961-4, 9636-7 Italian schools 4951, 3, 4 Italy, Cimabue to Bassano 4650 Italy, history 5114 landscape 7670-1, 9056 lectures, Barry, Opie, Fuseli 487 Fuseli Haydon Howard Ruskin Naples (modem) oil, guide to, Clint history, Eastlake and painters, Jervis "Wornum perfection of Spanish and French schools Ijheory of 3287-8 8920-1 4294 7668 6385 1749 2677 4612 9637 3238 3961 7394 9150 6671 7767 3091 .3039 da Vinci, on works in Paintings, Dresden Gallery Dyce catalogue Florence Hogarth old Pair of clean shoes, 1722 spectacles for the city, 1648 1596, 6412 this purblind nation, 1659 266,8 Pair-oar expeditions 9076, 9306 Paisley books, etc. 1625, 4123-4, 9666 Paix avec les homines, Nicole 6756 Palace, Royal, discoveries in, Dunton 7010" Wither 8313 1599' \ 1774, 77765 Paiaemon to Caelia (Bath) Palaemon's prophetic prayer Palatinate iu^c •Palestine, biblical researches in ' ' 7462 mediaeval, 1125-1268 1226 Stanley 8360 temples and tombs 7505 travels, etc., 1806-40 1613, 3377, 7463 •Palgrave, Sir P., Nicolas 6487 •Palissy,ht6,etc. 4999,6394-5 Palladio and B. of Burlington, Pope 7083 Palladius, husbandry. Palladius 2674 Pallas, P. S., life moo •Palliser, Sir Hugh, life £23 Palm leaves, poems 4379 •Palmer, J., anecdotes of 4379 S., dissenters, 1705 4099^ i S., (painter) ill". 2445 Rev. W. 94g7 950^ •Palmerston, Viscount, Brit. Cabinet, 1853 ' 946 foreign secretaryship life, letters, 4c. 2229 Londonderry corre- spondence 6462 Martineau on 6876 new Whig guide 9404 and Pius IX. , 6215 Tucker on, 1855 8|)14 638 Palmes or Palmer, 'W., life of M". Lawson Paltook, Robert 9491 •Pamela «99', 6972>, 7397, 9 Pamtlll, Olympia, life 8997 Pampas, the 3969 Pamphlets, dramatic, etc. 6986 Henry VIII.'s reigii 2275 history of, Davies 2275 proclamation against, 1640 7188^* reformation 2275 scandalous Fairfax 2952" scurrilous {" Joclsey Club ") 4629 of sectaries, 1646 Bdwards 2714 seditious, 1714 4099' treasonous and seditious, 1663 7157 Panama, isthmus of 692, 6618 Pancharis Holland ISSS'' ' Pancras, St. (Panoredge) 7475 Pando, J. M. de, ep. to Bolirar 6435' Panegyric, on, 1750 856a» ' Panegyrici Veteres, " Delphin " 9096 Panizzi, Sir A., Comey *Vd«]}^ Panthea, spirit of nature 4420 Pantology 6703 Pantomime, a new, Kenealy 4781 Panton Street 3106 Pantropheon (hist, of food) 8277 Papacy, Germany 9118 history of . 7413 Papal, antipapal spirit and reformation 7525 conspiracy ^exposed, 1856 561 Rome 3078 States, handbook, 1843 6364 history 6104 Paper, false and scandalous, 1639 7188'* Paper, water-marks, IB"" cent. 8247 writing, copies on 3.368 Papers of a critic, Dilke 2470 for the people, Chambers 1512 schoolmaster 7752 Papist misrepresented and represented, 1687 709516 party, 1669 6413 plot, 1641 8937' " represented and not misrepresented, 1687 7095" Papists, assistance of, from Bruges, 1643 1597= designs of, reigns of Chas. 1. and 11. 7096 disarming, 1641 1597" exorcisms 7097^ expulsion, 1641 1597=5 intended rising, 1641 1699' * judgment on, 1623 80H9' i note to, 1 570, Knell 1856' ' and prelatical army 2038^ Papuans, Indian Archipelago 2672 Pari, residence at 2716 Parable in rhyme and outline 1310 Parables, German 6272 Krummacher 4950 of our Lord, illustrated 688 Paradise, concerning, Burnet 1135 of dainty devices, Paradyse 1853 Lost 6147-51 (Greek) 2293 Addison on 211,6706* introduction to 4750-1 Milton's use of the moderns 6180 Man in, poem 7331-2 middle ages legends 9671 of practical divinity, 1665 9716 printed in 7038 Regained 6152 vision of, Dante 2243, etc. Paradoxes, Cicero, trans. 1698 Osborn, 1669 6616 of state, 1702 4099s Paraguay, 1839 7360, 7449 Parallel, the, 1682 6231 Paralellogrammaton Witlier 8313 Parallels, historical 6751 Parana,, the 7450 Pardon to suoh as shall return to obedience, 1645 7188>4 Pardons, Rapin 7296 Pareuts and children, reciprocal duties 8653 •Paris, administration, 1846 7706 adventures on the road to, 1813-14i 8387 American in 4561-2 armourer of, novel 260 attic philosopher 8274 ball, 1654 4309 commune, 1872 9131 description of, 1765 8937' = possessed by English, Monstrelet 6203 excursion to, 1849 349 ' and exhibition, 1865 8342 Pudge family 6244 Guide, 1845 8292 Imperial, 1855 4608 Jesuits, Evelyn 2901 journey to. Lister 7691* letters from, 1648 1699' * and London, dialogue, 1701 7024 new journey to, 1711 7691= Notre-Dame, Dean of 7023 parliament 9170 peep into, 1794 3204 plan, 1814 9706 press 418 during siege, 1871 7688 sketch book 8759 ' ^, 8775 social and political, 1831-47 7263 society, Louis XV. and XVI. 3662-S surrender, 1816 6331 theatres and actors, 1794 3204 university 70951^ • Versailles, Marli, tour to, 1765 8937' = after Waterloo 8057 a winter in, 1811 1276 Parisians, Lytton 5561 Parish, Sandford 7678 Parish-churches, no conventicles, 1683 4099« clerk's album, Hucknall Torkard 1275 priests, instructions for Myrc 2674 'Park, Sir J. A., Stevens 8416 Mungo, hfe 7636 T., copies and MS. notes 1073, 1865 •Parker, H., Chas. I. tract, 1643 1542 Mai-tin 295 2» Theodore, Martineau on 5889 •Parkes, Joseph, copies and MS. notes 623, 627(f), 5188, 7038, 7770 M'«. Webster 9337 Parkhurst and Paschali case, 1702 4099' Parkins, Sir W., execution, 1696 4099 ', >> Sir W., speech, 1641 1697™ •Parkinson, J., on coffee 1777 Parlement d'Angleterre, histoire, 1749 7812 Paris 9170 •Parliament, acts, declarations, orders, ordi- nances, proclamations, speeches, etc. 1629-88. 1597, 2306-9, 4435-6, 6447-8, 6373, 6716, 7188, 7769-70 and army, 1648 8937' " 1663, 9 266, 8 army of, civil war 1647, 94, 97 ; 6448, 8937' " astrological prediction, 1649 6343 and Belgium, 1652 1585 Bury St. Edmund's Chronicle 1323 T. Chaloner, 1646-7 1501 and Charles I. 1463-4, 1668, 64, 66, 72, 85, 93, 98 ; 7188'=, 8937' " {See also " Charles I.") and Charles II. 1602, 3046, 7024 church gov', and liturgy, 1648 8937' " church reformation, 1660 1672" civil war 1463-4 ; " Charles I." (1642 etc.) i 2952-3 clergy, 1641 6169 commissioners of, 1647-8. 1667, 1664, , 1693, 1598, 1699' \ 2038, 2808, 2953 convention, 1660 2783 1688 1683= covenant tracts, 1640-5 2038 Cromwell, 1653 2133 Cromwells, Burton, diary 1218 debates, reign of Q. Elizabeth 2386 1610, 21, 25 Debates 1332 1641 (grand remonstrance) S138, 41 1768-71, 74 147S-4 639 ♦Parliament— eo«<. Sir E. Deering 2306-9 of Devils, poem Hymns 2674 dissolution, death of Princess of Orange 4611' elections 4099", 7047', '* Q. Elizabeth, journal (frontispiece) 23S5 speech 7038 Fairfax, Cromwell, Ireton Fair- fax Wii-Z; 8937'" B. Pinch, 1641 3048 French, 1611 70951* W. Fuller. 1697 7047 Lord Goring, 1648 1695" Sand remonstrance 3138, 41 ampden and ship-money 8021 Q. Henrietta Maria 1598' Hollis, etc, (impeached members) 2952^ ">, 2953", ", ", " X Ireland, 1631-68 6325 1641-1701 4472 1692 iOOiCi Whiteside 9453, 5 Wood's coin 8640 Jas. 11. 4610* Jenkin, Love, etc. 1661 lOW^ Judge Jenkins, 1647 4582, 8937' '^ Laud 6150,1,6,7; 6176-6 League and Covenant 2038 letters to a member, 1860 8864 Lilbume 6337>, =, *, 5338 Lilly's examination 5344 (forces) Lincolnshire, 1643 8937' " long Carhjle 1380 ' ", 1599' *, 2277*, * i 3692, 4311, 4581-2, 6518, 6718, 36 ; 7839 and city of London 8937' " Manwaring, 1628 7611" Marlborough 6817-18 meeting 7024 members, city of London, 1702 7024 1641-1660 9530 forcibly excluded, Prj-noe 7310 impeached, 1648 7209 instructions to 8937 ' ' privileges and their breach,1641 1595 public employment, 1706 4099° seized by army, 1648 67343S 1701 70471' Mistris,1648 8937 'i^ Monok 73682 Margaret Mortimer, 1712 7163 Bp. Mouutague 1671 Nose-gay for House of Commons, 1648 4284 1395 7219 about 1542 BrinUow 3674 1610 51882 1618-29, 1640 7662 1628 7039 , 1640-1653 (long) Kent & Verney 1322, 1501, 1642, 58, 80, 92-99; Fair/ax 2952-3, 3666, 4158, 6389, 5447-8, 5494, 6522-5, 6869, 6978, 6873, 6620, 6733, 6863, 7188, 7662, 7769-70, 8095 ; Wither 8313, 8937'*, '2 (See also above " Parliament,long.") 1664 1218 1666-9 1218 1659 1696,1699'* 1672, 9 1602 167S 8987'! 1678 4009'' 1680, persons capable to serve in 7047 "> 1685 8937 " 1688 8937'" 1689 ™*?'! 1694-B ,4099" last, history of, 1699 4099', 6736 1700 2558 1705 2638 1710 4099", "',7042 171S B386 •Parliament— con/, 1714 6512 1715 7042 new, thoughts on, 1796 8931 1852-3, history 6717 orders and ordinances (pretended), 1642-3 7188™, «, *» Oxford. 1643-4 7188**, *», 1681 1672', 2277", " passing Bills, 1641 ■ 6733*, 6735 Lord Pauw 1585, 6734« pensioners 2277** power of (judicature), 1640 1690 privileges 1595", =«, 1597'"', 6726, 6733* 84681* breach of, 1641 1697*i, =* Prot. rehgion and succession 7042 reform in, 1792-5 3384 remonstrances and petitions to 6337-8, 5447-8 nmip 7564-6 St. Stephen's chapel 7044 schism, 1714 6612 Scotland, 1640-9 1660, 1597'*. *». 1598, 1699 » *, 20382*, 5253 7778,8937''* 1672 1602 1689 40998 1702 6736 1706 7041 Scottish Commissioners and charges 16931, 15986 sermons before 1599 ' *, 7840, 4-6 ships and forces against France, 1678 7048 side. Clarendon's history 6582 sitting on the Lord's Day, 1641 7188*' speeches, Q. Elizabeth's reign 2S85 Sedley 7837 1641 to Union 7837 Strafford's trial, etc. 7562, 8461, etc. surrender of Oxford 15971* subscription to articles and liturgy 8921 summonses to, Bapin 7295 tackers, 1705 2638, 4099=, 8937 ' " treatise on 6981 treaty of, 1648 8937'" triennial, 1641 1597i»* unreported. Cavendish 1473 peace of Utrecht 7046 votes, Q. Elizabeth's reign 2385 1715 7043 Sir E. Walpole 7046 Bp. Wren 9662 Parliament of Vertues, Sylvester 8589-91 Pai'liamentaria Notitia 9529-30 Parliamentarians, 1642. Bradford and Leeds 5365 *Parhamentaryelection law 9286 history of England 2783 reign of G. 3. 1473 MS. documents 7770 mercies. 1641-2 9133. 6 papers. Colonies 6128 returns. Post office 7117 securities, sacredness of. 1714 40991 speeches, selection 3935 Parliaments, ancient, England 375, 2763 and Councils, England 6745 Irisb. ancient 6325 Lilbume 5337 t i list of, 1711 7042 manner of holding 6733* on, 1769 6731 prerogative of 7272 Parmegiano, life 2065 Parnassus Biceps, poetry 9354 England's A. (R.) 1853 Enghsh, 1677 706O *Parnell, fairy tale 321 Frogs and Mice 4179, 3733 Homer 6705** poems 963', 3616, 4665, 6705" Parochial and congregational elders, 1645 67341* history, 1848-9 951 Farochialia 737^ 640 Parodies 6968'8, w yoie, 73B1, 8189^1, 87B1 •PaiT, Harriet 124, 6218-19 S., life, etc. 450, 8080, 4668, 6742 Parrot, P., Ararat 1943 •Parry, D'., life 6707 Jas., restoration tract 7368^ Bev. Joshua, life 6744 Parry, "W., travels of Sherley J?arry 1856^3 PArsl religion 9659 Parsonage of Mora, Bremer 921 Parson's Daughter, fiction 4208 •Parsons, non-swearing, 1696 1684 Partenay, romance Fartenay 2674 Parten'o, British 6892 Parthenon, Lucas on 5514 Participles, English 9151 Particles, Greek 9143 Parties, Bolingbrolce on 804 Reformation to 1710 185 state of, accession of George I. 807-8 •Partridge, John, Plasidag Partridge 1855 ' = John {astrologer), advice to Pro- testants 7024 almanack 135 Bickerstaff 8937'"' will 9645 John {painter) sketches 1500 Party, Brougham on 983 history of 1932 •Pascal, life 6379, 7997 maxims 3690 Pasquier, diplomatist 1354-6 Pasquil's night-cap 925 palinodia 1856 » i Pasquin, A. C. Valery 9093 •Pasquinv. Paulder 3403 Pasquinades 4099°, 6436", 7690 Passion of a discontented mind, 1602 1855 ^ ^ of St. George, Anglo-Saxon 6829«s Passion, the. Hours of Bonamentura, 2674 symbols of Hol/y Rood 2674 Passionate Century of Love Watson 211 & 8313 Pilgrim, poem 7907'* Passions, influence of 8337 of animals 8818 Passive obedience and non-resistance 1672i', 4099',', 4512,7040', i» Past and present, Carlyle 1380, 4, 1405 Past Meridian, Sigourney 8046 Past, present, and future, 1848 1367 Pastime of people (Bastell's Chronicles) of pleasure Pastimes, calendar of 4184 Pastor I'ido 3685-6 PastoralC'Day") 2299 epilogue, 1807 7016 Kerry 6829' Tatchin 9054 Pastoral Care, Gregory Alfred 2674 letter, 1728 784618 Pastorals, Basse 1867" Britannia's 6829=1 Philips 7012 Pastor's Pire-side, tale 7103 Pastors in the Wilderness (Huguenots) 6863 Patent, play-house 8788= Patents, list, 1855 9367 Eapin 7295 Watt 6337 •Poterculus 7669, 9096 Paterson, S., Strange catalogue 8470 Pathfinder, fiction 1956 Pathology of drunkenness 9649 mental 2271 Patience, school of, Drexelius 2568 Patient Grissel 6829= •Patnjore, P. G. , , 7361 •Paton, Allan P., hterary address 949 Patriarcha, 1680 3047 Patriarchs, history of 4425 testament of 8758 Patrick, Bishop, antiquity of the church 709.51" Patriot king, idea of 807-8 true, character, 1705 2638 Patriotism, spirit of 807-8 Patristioal idea of Antichrist 6449 Patron Saints, legends 4568 Patronage, fiction 2693 7297 Patronage of British Art 7222 church 9184 Pattern for young students, [Cambridge, Bon- wicke 838 Patterns, Journal of Design 4700 Patterson, Prof., ethnology 6542 Pattinson, H. L., life 5486 •Pattison, Mark 2833, 7078 W., poems 963^ 6706«8 Pau, climate, &c. 8657 Paul, E«v. M'., papers 7047' Paul the Pope and Paul the Priar 9004 Paul Clifford, fiction 6667-60, 91 Diack, against the Prench, 1701 8937 ■■ = and Virginia, tale 7647 Paulding, view of residence, etc. (U.S.) 144 Pauhna, life 4033 Pauline, Browning 1043 Paul's letters to his kinsfolk 7800 •Pauw, Lord, and Parliament, 1662 1686, 6784-'s Pawnee Indians 6366 •Paxton, Sir J. Lindley 6,'i48 Pay, army, 1647 1699 ' ' sailors, 1689 6i01 soldiers. Civil War 2963=^ Payn, Nevil, letter 4099b, 4511 •Payne, Henry, answer to 7040i' Peabodjr, G., and Peabody education fund 146 Peace, civil war, proposals, etc. for Fairfax Tracts 2952-8 ; 6734f'i, 7188*S i»", =>, 8937 ' ^ Dardanelles, 1808-9 32 (1816-46) England during 2786, 8 introdnction to history of (1800-16) 2787 (and friendship) negotiations, !Rapin 7295 or. No Peace (poem), 1712 4099™ Peace ! What I have done to promote it 9052 poem on prospect of, 1713 7010 Eyswick 4612 poems 4099°, 7018, 20 Utrecht 3397 Westphalia 1526 •Peacock, George, Madeira 6908 Peak, Sir R., 1645 ] 6972a Peak, the. Wonders of, Hobbes 4106 ' ' •Peake, B. B., Heads of the people 6009 Peaks, passes, and glaciers 410 •Pearce, Bev. Samuel, hfe 8277 Peasant proprietors 4732, 886'7 Peasant and prince, tale 6887 Peasantry, Bavarian 7747 Irish, traits and stories 1374 Nithsdale and Galloway 2125 Peeoi (" Peak ") de mirabilibus 4106 " ' •Peck, Popery tracts Fopery 1639 Pecock, Bp., Eepressor etc. Fecock 1663 Pecuhar promptuary of time 9089 Pedestrian tour, N. Wales 609 Pedigrees, Q. Anne 1533 Berkeley 3182 Burke iiei Calverley, Blackett 6436= Lancashire Chetham Miw. 1, 1639 Urquhart 9089 Pedrarias Davila, proceedings Andagoya 3766 •Peel, Sir B., life, etc. 380, 2543, 2673, 3708, 6797-801, 8701 literary address 948 new Whig guide 9404 picture gallery 4646 and Prince Louis Napoleon 8354 Peer, manner of arraigning 7047' Peerage, grants of precedency 6482 Shrewsbury 6737 the. romance of 2O86 Peerages 1071, 1152, 9 ; 1860, 3917, 5418, 6186-6 Peeress, a, memoirs of, fiction 8563 Peers, four, preservation of 8840 House of. Piiirfax 2952' King and Peers in 6733* Lovat trial 6496 pretended impeachment by 1648 7209 Vicars 9132 JamesI 1076 and Lilburn 5337 v 1 life, Nicolas 6477-8 memoirs of 1071, 6 occasional 40991 641 Peers and pirvenus. Action PcK Woflington, Action Peine do mort, la, Hugo Peking, Court of Pcla^ianism Pelerinage, de Vhomme Pelham, H., life 3558 73:27 87S.i. 7423, 8373 Latin Tracts BUI seal 2062 ode on death of "OlS Pelham, fiction 6567, 9, 60, ;i2 Pelican Island, poem 6219 Pell. IX John, letters 9110 Pelling, D'., SO"" of Jan^ harangues 1684 Peloponnesian war 8862, otc. •Pembroke, Countess of, Emanuel 2£isc.^, 32St life 2002 Philip ith Earl of 1595» 1597'^', 1699 ' 1, 6447, 6784?", 89S7 ' "^ 7lh Earl of, trial 2079 •Pen and pencil pictures 120li wanderings 06S7 Penal laws, 16S8 7040-i working of, 1833 6678 Penalties, Ireland 4172'" Penance, Book of Cursor 2674 Pencil of Nature (photography) S615 Pendennis, fiction 8769^^67 Peugelly, Sir T., life 5384 Femnsular campaagns 199S, 3824 scenes, etc. 3847 war 2390, 5127, 5453, 6968, 6389 •Penn, Sip W., lite 6811 ■W., counsels to his children 679S Ufe 1734, 2.-J06-S queries to 7040-'" Pennington, Kev. M. 1077,1434 Pennsylvania, 1735 SS3 tale (Gertrude) 1843 •Penny, a^ worth of 67S0 Penritii, chaphooks 1522 " Friend " 1806 •Penrose, poems 6705^^ Pens6es, Pascal and !Nicole 6765. 60, 1 Penseroso, II, illustrated 6145-6 Pensioners, list of, 1679 735.)* Long Parliament 2277'*®, S937 ^' ^ votes of Commons concerning 2277^ Pensions, 1840-54 Parliamentary 6737 Pentaglot preceptor, 1796 5545 Pentiuneron, Landor 5074 Pentateuch, with notes 671 and Bp. Colenso ."iwO Pentelogia, Quarles 722S PentonTille prison 1197. 6737 •People of England, addresses to. 1757 76Hli' defence of, Hilton 615-4, c history of 27*4-5 I have met with 9531 the, Michelet 60S5 ameliorating condition of 6267 condition of, 1854 6466 (England and Europe) condition and education 4782 defence of, 1741 8987" holy alliance for 6652 and kings, rights, 1710 4099° and Lilburne 6837 ^ * occupations, census, 1841 S279 papers for 1513 poetry for 4288 prerogative and privileges 5337 ^ ^ religion and education 5104 Peoples echo to the Parhaments declarations, 1648 1598" Pepin, King 683S Pepperrell, Sir W., life Pepusoh. D'., overture •Pepys, Charles II. Pera, Piccadilly to Perceval, metrical romance •Percival Keene, fiction •Percy, Bp., ballads Peregrine Pickle, fiction Perez, Antonio, Mignet Benito 6752 3)49 .3819 6'S7 Thornton 1322 6838 412 S176 0100 S2J0 Perimedes the Blacksmith Oreent 1857 Periodicals, magazines, reriews, &c. : Ainsworth's magazine 97 All the Year Round 122-4 articles from 2403 Almanack of the Month 1.34 Anglo-Saxon 1S3 Annual register, Cobbett 1757 Appendix, 1703 7044 Art Journal, 1849-50 289 Asiatic Miscellany 300 Atlantic Monthly, articles fi-om, 1886 5084 Attisches museum 9471 Bee 3499, 3512 Blackwood's Edinburgh magazine 733 articles from 5068, 84 ; 5668 British Apollo 941 British archaeological ass^. journal 945 British magazine 951 British Quarterly Review 954 British Workman 956 Cam616on. Fr. jouraal 1323 Catbolic Magazine 1458 Classical museum 1736 Colonial Quarterly Review 3126 Companion, L. Hunt 4398-9 Connoisseur ; Or Dublin Monthly weekly) Gazette Comhill magazine ai'tides from (and 2688 1S1S3 8759' =°, 8SS3 2071 23S3 6321 2473 1-5 •Pericles, Greeks. &e., in days of l'S97 Pericles and Aspasia, Landor 6052. 75 Perils of the Nation and Remedies 7S2S-9 (N.B. — Only the " Semedies" bii Secley ; "Perils" by " CharloUo EU;abet/i" Tonna.) Craftsman Dial (U.S.) articles from Biogenes (comic) Dolman's magazine Douglas Jerrold's Shilling Magazine 4605 Dramatic Censor, 1770 8370 Dreamer, 1754 4883 Dublin Literary Gazette 2586 „ Monthly (and weekly) Gazette 25SS "Weekly Gazette 2587 Eclectic Review, articles from 8190 Edinbiu-gh ecc'. journal and htr. review 6711 Edinburgh Review, 1S02-76 ■ 2697 articles from, &o. 140, S74. 1SS7, 1925-6, 2115. 3137. 9; 3636, ■4576-7, 555S, 6619, 22, 30-2 ; 74«5. 8156. etc., &3P5-6, 8505, 9037 Edinburgh Tales 2698 Educational magazine 7231 Englishman, No. 57 7044 European Magaz'meand London Rei iew 2870-1 Esammer, 1710, etc. 2913, 8529^ 38 Examiner, "Whig 40, 43, 3684, 601 7 Fine Arts Quarterly Review 3052 Fog's "Weekly Journal, letters from 3097 Foreign and Colonial Quarterlv Review 8128 Foreign Quarterly Review 3127 articles from 3140, 59 Forei^ Review 312s Fortmghtly Review 8178-9, 8970 Fraser s Magazine 3237 articles from 4S51,5700 Friend 1806-8 Gentleman's Magazine 3371-4 articles from •1981, 2115 Germ S380 Grub-street Society Memoirs S6S1 Heraldic and historical register 7622 Historical register, 1714, etc. 4097-S Hood's Own 4191-2 Hood's Magazine 4190 Household Xiirrative, lSoO-5 42S6 Household Words 42S5-7 articles from 2400, etc., 62SS, 6360-1, 9541 Illuminated Magazine 4443 Indicator 4398, 9, 4415 Inspector, 1753. etc. 4083, 8788", ' 1S25 5773 642 P Periodicals, magazines, reviews, &o.—eont. Intelligencer 8637, 48-5 Jerrold's Shilling Magazine 4603 Journal of .Design and Manufactures 4700 Journal of Sacred Literature 4701 ladies' Companion 4970 Lancet, articles from 3896 Law Magazine 5181-6 Law Ueview 5186-7 I;eigh Hunt's London Journal 4402 Liberal, 1822-3 6324 London Journal, Leigh Hunt's 4402 London Magazine 5439-40 London Quarterly Review 5441 London Review 2870-1 Macphail's Edinburgh eco'. journal and lit?, review 6711 Magasiu theatral (Pr. plays) 6990 Manufactures, Journal of 4700 Medley 4S, 6017 Memoirs of the Society of Grub-street, 1730-2 3681 Microcosm 6097 Miscellanies over Claret, 1697-8 7011, 23 Month - 8117 Monthly Chronicle, 1728-30 6224 1838-41 6226 Monthly Magazine, article from 6968^ Monthly Repository 6226 Monthly Review 6227-8 My Tablets, or, Dublin Weekly Gazette 2587 National Review 6397 New Monthly Magazine 642S-9 articles from 1347, 6717 New Quarterly Review 6430 North American review, articles from 6521, 8288 North British review 6522 North Briton 6623 Notes and Queries 6541 articles from, etc. 436, •1981, 6589, 8651, 61, 8825 Observator, 1681-5 5275 Occasional Pauer, 1697 9533 Omnibus 2167 Oxford and Cambridge Review, etc. <663 Patrician 6774 People's Journal 6818 Periodical criticism, Scott 7800 Periodicals, papers from, 1831 5799 Philology, Journal of 1736 Plain-Dealer 8546 Political Register, Cobbett 1757, 64 Quarterly Educational Magazine 7231 Quarterly Journal of science, literature, and art 7232 Quarterly Review, 1809-76 7233 articles from, etc. 558, 873, 2118, 2682, 5661, 6876, 8348, 8930, 9647 Reflector 7344 articles from 5029 Rehearsals, 1708-9 62C6 Retrospective Review 7.369 St. James's Magazine, 1860 7622 Saturday Magazine, reprint from 9388-9 Scottish Review, 1853 7788 Scourge, 1717 4957 Seer 4410 Sizar, N" 1, Cambridge, 1799 8081 Tatler, ed. by L. Hunt 8660 Tribune 8645 True Briton 93S4 Watchman 1818 Weekly poUtical register 1764 Westminster Review 9375 article from 637 Whig-Examiner 40, 43, 3684, 6017 Whimsicalities 4198 Youth's Magazine, contributions to 8677 Zoist 9723 Perkin, P . - - - (i.e., the old Pretender) 7024 •Perkins, T. H., lite 1443 Permon, Laure de, life AbranUs 23 Perpoynt, W., speech, 1641 16978" Perron, Bp. Jaques du, oration, 1617 Persecution by Church of England 7040*° for differences in religion 1671' Persepolis 3006, 4376 'Persia, affairs of, and Narzanes 705' ' ancient, history 2670, 9113 monuments 3830 religion 8831 frontiers, Toumefort 8917 history 3234 Jews, 1669 2893 life, manners, notes. Shell 7992 sketches, Malcohn 5747 Sophi of, history 6382 travels, etc. Barbara 3756 Perrier, 1856 3011 Pfeiffler 6868 Sherl6y,1601 Parri/ 1856' " Varthema, 1603 TartTiema 8756 •Persian allegory 4569 arcMteoture 8005 fables of Pilpay 6923 Gulf, 1840 9859 poems from, Landor 5078 poetry, manuscript, catalogue 8325 translation from 4437 Persicis, de (Xenophon) 4027 Persiles and Sigismnnda, Cervantes 1489 •Persius, " Dolphin " 9096 imitations 6127 translations 95812, 4715-16, 6705'» Personal identity, Bp. Butler 1234 memoirs, Gordon 8546 and hty. memorials. Best 662 Perspective 1131, 5492, 6239, 8645 Persuasion, fiction 329 Perth, books 1624, 6953 Earl of, letters Ferth 1822 •Perthes, P., life 6846 Peru, chronicle of Leon 3756 conciuest of 7152-3 discovery of Andagoya, Fern 3756 Incas Vega. Tncas 3766, 7162-3 travels etc., 1820-49 3777, 9012, 9582 Peshiwur 4/S1, 6234 Pestalozzi, life 7300 on education 6908 Pesth, 1860 6770 tracts 24S2 •Peter, Pather, policy of {see also Petre) 7024 Peter Pindar 3403, 9597 the cruel. King of Castile 6055 Great, age of 4721 and Russia, Voltaire 9170 Peter Schlemihl 1516-16 Simple 6839 the long 4187 Peterborough, Benedict of, chronicle Benedict 1663 Bp. of (Kennet) 4790 chronicon Petroburgense Chronicon 1323 Earl of, campaigns, life etc. 8249, 8450, 4686, 9260 memoirs of secret service ^„ „ , , Smith S\Si •Peters, Hugh, a word for the army 1599 ' > a word to 1692 account of 3877, 8099'^ and Laud 5167 Lilbume 5337^ sermons 78398, 7540 speech and prayer, 1660 3882, 7ggg9 Petit Oarfeme, Massillon 5925 Petite Chouannerie, la 7422 Petitions and answers e639 Sir T. Aston, 1611 71885' Bastwick, Prynne etc., 1641 6733" Bucks and Herts, 1616 7188" to Chas. I. 15901", 6734', 8 clergy, 1641 673*" Cobbett 3823 Commons (verse), 1642 1909 Essex, Norfolk, Suffolk, Bucks, Herts _, . „ , 29531s Pairfax and army 29o2i* is, 2963 House of Commons, Popish priests, etc., 1641 169011" W. Jenkin, 16B1 7047*' 643 Petitions— coM^. laud 5167 leather, transportation of, 1611 6734= Lilbume 6337' ' London etc. 6387" ', 6144, 8, 6734", 9373 of and to Lord Mayor, &c. 6417, 7188'" mariners, etc.. Stepney etc. 7188"° masters, &c. of ships, 1648 7188"' Ld. Mountnorris 8468= Oxford, episcopacy &c., 1641 6734^ Presbyterian 7024 of right 2113 1629-88 7188 sequestered clergy, 1647 8937' ^^ Strafford 8469" Westminster, 1648 9373 ■yniiston 9408 Bp. Wren 9652 •Petrarca and Boccaccio, Landor 6052, 74 essays on, Poscolo 3184 life etc. 1345,5384,6220,6816,64,66 Petre, father, 1688 7040=0 Pettingall, B,., epistles 6867 Petty, Sir "W., taxes etc. 7039 Phafidrus, fabulae Valpy 9096 translations 8756 Phalaris, epistles 630, 877-8, 1105 Phaleuciorura poematum liber 5065 Phantasm of an university 4768 Phantasmion, fairy tale 1819 Phantom Ship, fiction 5840 World 1306 Pharaohs, Egypt under 4793 Egyptians in time of 9497 Pharmacy, Indian 4186 Pharsalia, trans. 5513, eTOo"-'" Phases of faith 5889,6413 Phasis of matter 4774 Philadelphia, 1735 8S3 plenipotentiaries, epistle to 9018 Philanthropy and the church 64311 Philidor, chess 8937' ' Philip of Macedon, life 7003 II., Spain 3246, 6100, 715.J Philip, adventures of 8759' '" Augustus, fiction - 4537 Musgrave, missionary 12 Philippa the Catanian, history of 5941 Philippicac, Historiae Justinus 9096 Philippine Islands, 16th century Morga 3750 1853 etc. 2323^, 4517 •Philips, A., pastorals 7012 poems 96S», 6160, 6706«, 7010i=, =" J. poems 953^ 6705i=, 7012, 18, 20 Katharine, life 2002 poems 7028 " M'.," 1720 6166 Sir Robert, speech, 1641 1599 ' » *Phillimore, R., Lyttelton 5555, 6876 •Phillips, E. & J., lives 3471 G. S. Searle 7815 J., satire ag. hypocrites 7026 Prof. J., importance of Literature 5369 Sir H., Addisoniana 41 S., Crystal Palace 2161 Welliugtoniana 9355 (?) Teresia C. 705 ' ^ 1636 Phillipsland 5097 Philological inquiries, Harris 3876 passages examined, Tillesley 8870 proofs, unity, etc. of human race 4630 study, G-r. & Lat. language 2530, 2 Philologists, biography and corr=', 7816-17 Philomene, complaint of Gascoigne 211 Philosopher, the, D. Williams 9516 •Philosophers, ancient, lives, etc. ^li^b Greek 226, 3140, 7122 time of Geo. 3, lives 980 Philosophiae, de consolatione 786 ; Boethius 9096 Philosophical arrangements, Harris 337S dissertations, Argens 226 essays, Chambers 1503 Foster (Eclectic Kcv.) 3190 D. Stewart 8419 16605. Philosophical— coh/. poems. More 6^60 problems, Hobbes 410.) '' ' rudiments, Hobbes 4105-6 tracts, Leslie 5271 ■works, Bolingbroke 803, 13 Hobbes 4105-6 Locke 6397-8 writings, More 6258 Philosophic et litt6rature, Hugo 4347 Philosophique diotionnaire 9167 Philosophizmg, liberty of 8321 Philosophorum, vitae, etc. 2474 Philosophos, contra, Sextus 7868 Philosophy, American 9072 ancient, history of 1241, 5304, 7431, 9072 of animated natiue 4139 Arabic, Europe 8354 Bacon to present day 6305 of the beautiful 5719 of the Bible 710 biographical history of 5304-5 of Bolingbroke exposed 813 consolation of 786, JBoethius 9096 of creation 7128 at the Cross 7638 (liscoveries in, 1757 3107 eastern 6902 of education 8646 elements of, Hobbes 4105 English 9072 essays in, Fraser 3233 in the Fens, poem 3617 first six centuries ^957 in Prance, Guizot .3718 German and Christian theology 9108 at German universities osiu of government, Sismoudi 8079 Greek, view of 8093 of health 8] 55 Hegel rill',1-20 history of 1241, 530i-S. 7431, 8303 S722-3, 9072 ot history 7738 inductive 7128 Italian 9072 of language 7739, 8134 of life 6273, 7739 of living 3090 mediaeval, modern 9072 of tlie mind 338, 8419-20 moral, Sydney Smith 7-1S5-6, 8160 moral, D. Stewart 8421 moral, England, hist, of 9401 of the moral powers, 1). Stewart 8419 of morals 6274 natural Lardner 5117-19 elements of, Locke 5307 history of 7129 study of 4O40 of Plato 6948 of progress 8039 progi-ess of, D. Stewart 8419 of ragged schools 8093 sacred 8020 of the sciences, Comlo 5306 speculative 857, 1502 in sport, Paris 6700-1 stoics 9091 PhUostorgius, ecc'. hist?. 8278 Phineas Finn, fiction 8978 Ilcdux, fiction 8979 " Phiz," ill"', by 137"!, 3838, 6974^, 8537 (See also "Browne, H. K.") Phoenicia 2670, 4794 Phoenician, writing 4373 •Phoenix Nest S. (S.) 185-i and turtle 7907 ' ' Phonetic type g151 Phonological introduction to dialects, Ellis Photius, patriarch 3273 Photography 4(23,8616 Phrases, choicest, ic; 7 7060 •Phrenology 55,-,,] and the hand 3832 Phreno-mnemotechny 2981 T T 6U Phrygia, history 2670 Physic, modern advancement, 1836 8058 our 7414i primitive 3901 Physio for the church 1671 Physioa prohlemata, Hobbea 4108 Physical atlas 4659-60 geography 3736, 8218, 9691-2 HoljjLand 4869' phenomena, living beings 5943 nature 4421 relationship of man to the earth 2912 science, harmonies of 4093 description of the universe 4356-8 'Physician, diary of a. Action 9280 of Marseilles, fiction 3199 and patient 4215 Physician's holiday (Switzerland, 1848) 3115 Physicians, lives 2966, 6707 and civilians, precedence 8662 'i and physio, Simpson 8058 young, duties and prospects 8058 Physico-harmonic geometry 46 Physics, elementary 4418 Hobbes ' 4105 "i mechanical llOa with reference to nat^. theology 9399 ponderable bodies 6847 principles of 6338 study of, Tyndall 5213 terrestrial. 4223 Physiognomical sketches, Theophrastus 2965 Physiognomy , 1753 Physiologicae, Institutiones, Blumenbach 2740 Physiology, animal 1422, G325 cerebral 9723 comparative .74 elementary 6.199 human 2740 mental 4141 study of, Paget 6213 vegetable 2210, 5325, 8093 Physiology of evening parties 8108 of London business 1708 Phytology, 1830 5325 Piano accompaniments, songs of Scotland 3678 Pic Nic Papers 2412 Picart, Bernai'd, plates 799 Piccadilly to Pera 6687 Pickwick Papers 2399, etc., 2443-4 'Pictorial Bible 6G7 half-hours 4392 history of England 2080, 2784-6, 88-9 and literary sketch-book, Brit. Em- pire 6034 life of our Saviour 4870 Sunday-book 4871 Picts, account of 7781 Picture-book without pictures, Andersen 362 Picture galleries, England 3933-4 London and neighbourhood 4640-7 George Granville, etc., poem 7011 of a new courtier, Cromwell 2 1 32 the, poem 7012 Pictures, amateurs in 1198 catalogue of, poem 6040 drawings, &c., catalogue, Dickens 2467-8 Dulwich 2606 Hampton Court 4619 Nat. Gallery 6395-6 Melbourne 6022 old, and dirt 6066 and painters, anecdotes 5426 Dresden Gallery 2565 prints, ko.. catalogue, Parmer 2075 Wilkie Gallery 0489 Wilson collection nsra Pictures from Italy 2300, etc, 24't6, 5735 of Sweden 103 I'icturcsque scenery. Twining !JU56 I'iedmont, Austrian campaign 37-19 country life ;ji!'.)l history of 3295 irrif^aiion 8l^i Longman, 1856 5-184 Vaudois, 1855 olto war hi. 17U3-0 1037 •Pierce, Thos., concio Synodica, 1661 S141 Pierce Penilesse Jfash 1837 & 7974 Pierce the Ploughman Fierce 2674 Pierces supererogation Harvey 1867 Piers, John, Abp. of York, 1590 Chetham Misc. 6, 1639 *Piers Plowman Langland 2674 Pietro of Abano, tale 8872 Pig, farmer's library 2977 Pig, or puppidog-water 2900 Piggott, liev. S. ("a clergyman ") 2876 Pilgrim, Purchas 7218 Pathers 146, 4426, 9108 of Glencoe, poem 1348 Pilgrimage and other poems, EUesmere 2731 Pilgrimage to Holy Land, 1506 Guilford 1322 Pilgrimages to English shrines 3796 of Erasmus 2813 in many lands 5725 Pilgrim's Progress 1123-8, 3691 Pilgrims of the Rhine 5557-60 sea-voyage Stations 2674 'Pilkington, Letitia, letter 705' ' poems 7038 Sir W., notice of 1325 — , letters to Bowyer 8529" "> Pillars of Hercules, travels 9086 Pillory, Lilburne's speech in 6337' sentence of, 1705 4099" the, hymn to 7021 Tutchinin 8937' ' Pilot, fiction, Cooper 1956 Pinacotheca Historica 4-819 'Pindar, attempt in style of 7018 translations 9531^ 39651'', 670558 Pindar, Peter 3403, 9597 •Pine, J„ book-plate by 9653 •Pinkerton, Jonn, "Walpoliar.a 9244 Pinners Hall, sermon at, 1753 78451" Pioneers, fiction 1967 •Piozzi, M"., Johnson 4647 Johnsoniana 852, 4654 life 2766 Pipes, on ,3285 Pippa Passes 1043-4 Piracy, Borneo 4804 law 4633 Pirates, female 4633 histoi-y 463S question as to, 1694 6188"= Pirokheymer, notice of 9331 Pisa, climate, &c, 8667 'Piscopade 4fl99« Piso and Vindei, conspiracy 6615 Pitcairn's Island 8942 Pitman, Isaac, Milton 6161 Pitman's pay and other poems 9564 Pitt, C, poems 953», 6705« trans, of jEneid 953" Vida 6705™ "W'., Byng 8937-" (.See also " Chatham.") yiK Anti-Jacobin 195-6 and Canning 8354 death of, verses 7016 and Fox 6561 age of . 5720 letters 3089 hfe 3402, 8903-3 and D. of Rutland ■ 8348 Goldwin Smith on 8128 and Temple 8364 at Walmer 8364 Pitti Palace, pictures, etc. 3091 Pitts, T., western martyrology 9371 Pius VII., Pacca ■ 6664 IX., history 6490 letters apostolic, Twiss 9061 and Lord Pahnerston 6215 Pix Jury O.ilO Places, remarkable, visits to 4324 Plagiary exposed, 1691 1580, 4 Plague, proclamation, 1638 71882" receipts tor 71881^' •Plain-deiilcr, Swift 8545 " Plain dealing," 1649 1699' * " Plain Bnglisli," 1643 1699' « Plain English to the Parliament, etc., 16-i9 1690 '5 64.5 Plain— oo«<. Prench, Dunton speaker, Hazlitt " Plain truth " Plaint of freedom, poem Planetary concretion Planninp:, self-instruction 2638 3940 8937' " 5362 650i. 6-«3 Plans, actions, American Revolution war 8049 Plant of health, water-cresses 7691" Plantagenet and Tudor, sovereigns S138, 41 Plantagenets tragical story (Edw. IV.) 9179 Plantarum, historia 8793 Plantations 6490, 6893 Plantations, English, America 141, 1729 Planter, experiences of, 1871 2739 Planting, on 6892, 8340 Plants, American 8340 bulbous 3559 Chinese 3181 ferns, mosses, English Lakes 6881 history of 3043 Levant, etc. 8917 natural system of 5493 Pratt on 7140 propagation 2904 Sohouw on 7756 six books of, Cowley 2042 structure, etc. 409 i^See also "Botany.") Plasidas, the knight, martyr, verse Partridge ISSS' 3 Plate, etc., Duke of Richmond Camden Misc. ', 1322 *Plato, characteristics of. Potter 7122 dialogues, Forster on 3140 introductions to, Schleier- macher 7740 Emerson on 2774 life, etc. 6948 observations on, Crawford 2101 Phafidon, Crawford on 2101 RepubUc 2365', 6262 Plato Rwdivivus, 1681 6425 Pljitonic philosopher, creed 8693 Platonists, doctrine 8692 Playbills • 1682, 3323, 6993, 9326 Players, lives 3299 scourge, Prynne 7208 in the shades, dialogue, 1743 8937' ' stage, complaint, 1641 295^ Playfair, John, Euc. Brit. 2776 Leslie tracts 5271, 8422 Sir Lyon, literary address, 1855 948 Methven 6074 TV., hist, chart 4366 Playfellow, tales 6885-7 Playgoer, London, 1851-66 6290 Playhouses, biographia dramatica 404 patent to D'Avenant 8788'' and plays, 1719 656 questions to those who frequent, 1704 87881 Playing cards, history 1610 Plays, British and Irish 404, 955 defence of, 1707 3044 English, account of 404, 956, 6099 blasphemy, etc. of, 1719 553 heroic, essay 6976' London theatres, from 1712 9138 miracle, Newcastle, 9205 names of, 1660-1706 2632 Northbrooke against Nortlibrooke 7974 and players, dialogue, 1699 6078 from prompt books 6957 sinful, etc., Prynne 7208 suppression of, 1647 295' time taken in performing 1056 Plays and playwriters : (Many which occtir as headings in the Catalogue are not repeated in this list.) A woman killed with kindness Ileywood 7974 A woman will have her will 3S99, 6978 A'Beckett, G. A., pai-ody on 696821! Abingdon, two angry women of 6829' Abra^Mule 6976i Abroad and at home 6861' Plays and play writers— cok^. Absent man 6972" Accomplished maid 6956^' Achilles 3355, 69.58» or Iphigenia in Aulis 0976'' Acting copies of plays 6074 (Macready) *6718, 0981-2 Acts and scenes, Landor 5052 Addison, H. R. 69718 * J. 6956^ ", 70«, 77, 88 ; 8381 Adelaide 6968=^ 76 Adopted child 6961^ Adrian 6968^1 Adventures of five hours 6970', 9024 Advocate of Dui'ango, Mexican drama 9682 •yEschylus 8620, 6968" .aSsop, comedy 6976' Affair of honour 6968>« Agamemnon, J3schylus 55-GO Thomson 8836 Agis 6971' Aglam'a 8494! Ajax 2849, 8228 Alarbas 6976^ Alasco 6968* Albertus VP'allensteiu 3435 Albion and Albanius 6976' queens egee'* Albovine, king of the Lombards 2261 Alcestis 2850, 3620 from Euripides and Hyp. Lucas 6908'^ (bm-lesque) 6968i= Alchymist 139, 6956", 74* Alcibiades 6976^ Alexander the Great 6966' *Alfleri 696S=«! Alfred, masque 8835 the Great 4918 All at Coventry 6794' for love 69576 in the wrong 69.57 '^ mistaken 0976' the world's a stage 6956^ vows kept 0987 AUingham, J. T. 6381=, 71" All's a delusion 6968'<' well that .ends well 7907 ' = Almanzor and Almahide 6976' Almida 697113 Alonzo 6971" Alphonso Barbo 69681^ Altemira 0970' Alzira 0966K' Alzuma G:)71" Amaryntlius S130 Ambitious statesman 0970' stepmother 3408, 6976= Amboyna 69762 Amidei 696828 Amintas (fr. Aminta of Tasso) 0976' Amphitrj'on, Dr.vden 6966", 7Ci Moll lire 6192 Plautus 6955 Andrea of Hungary 6057, 6968^, " Andrews, M. f . 09613 Andromache 2851 Angelo 4340 Animal magnetism 0981* Anna Bullen CSSei*, 76» Anne Blake 6968» Antigone .5620, 6817, 8229-30 imitative version 6S6823 Antonio Poscarini 6968^2 and Mellida 6S62 Antonio's Revenge 5862 Antony and Cleopatra 7907 ' ' Octavius 6053 Apollo and Daphne, opera 7021 Apollo's choice (;;K»2i Apostate 0902i Appearance is against them (:i:61* Appius 6972^ and Virginia 096.3= Apprentice 6961*. 72* Arden of Feversham 6340, 6961' Aristodemus 6968*, =» I T 2 646 Plays and playwriters— cow*. Armand 6968i« Arnold, S. J. 6966, 88 Arnold of Brescia 6159 Arrowsmith 6976» Arsinoe 6976' Art and nature 6972' Artful husband 69763, 87 As you find It 69762 As you like it 7907 ' ' Ask no questions 69742 Assassin 6988^' Astolfo 6968=' Athanase 6968" Atheist 69761 Atheists tragedy 6979, 8918 Athelstan 6968M 11' Athelwold 6968", 9, 8161 Athenian captive 6968', e, 8620, 7 Plays and playwriters— coK<. Borderers Borgia Borgias Borgias (and Mulleasses) 6906 Boucicault, D. 6968»», 9326 9627, 9 6968" Atkins, J. "W. Aurengzebe 6976' Author 3105, a96¥ Azamoglan (Greek revolution) 6968" Bacchae 3852-3 •Baillie, Joanna 69572*, 73=, 85 Baker, T. 6976'", "s Bale, Bp. Sale 1322, Misc. \ 3284 Bancroft, J. 6976'2 Bandit 6962' Banditti 6976' Banished lord 69682*, sg Bankrupt 3105, 6964' Banks or Bankes, J. 6956'*, 76", w, 22_ as Barbarossa 6956'°, 57" Barber Baron Baron Fitzardern Barham, F. Bartholomiiw, "W. Bashful lover 5929 man 6961* Bate [Dudley], H. 69562= Battle of Bothwell Bridge 6974" Brunanburh 6968" Hexham 6957* Beaconsfield, E. of 69682^, "> Beau Nash, comedy 4601 Beaumont, Lord 69682 Beaux Stratagem 69562 Becket 1461 Becket. Andrew 6962' Bedingfleld, K. 6968™ Beggar of Befchnal Green 6963= Beggar's Bush 69682^ daughter of Bethiial Green 4917, 6968= opera 3349, 3355-6, 6966' ; (witJi music) 6972" ; 87 Believe as you list 5927, 68292' Belisarjus 69eS2« Bell, John 6968" Robert .69682, =, '% =", ™ Bellamira 6973' Belle's Stratagem 6957", 72« Belphegor 6978* Bennett, G. J. 696821 Bernard, Baylo 6968", 23 Bernard, ^y. B. 69743, ', s Bertram 6968* Better late than never 69613 Bianca Cappello 69682= Bickerstall or Bickerstafle, I. 695621, 23, 24, 61', 3, *, 64» Birch, S. 6961' Biter 6976* Blackwcll, I. A. 69683' Bladen, Martin 69762= Blanche ot Navarre 69683* Blind Wife 6968" •Bliss, H. 696813 Bloody Brother, or, EoUo B3I, 8 Blot in the 'scutcheon 10i;j-i Blunderer, MolicM-o 6192 Boadicea, Glover 6971* Hopkins 6976* Boadicea's history 696822 Bold stroke for a husband (W.-i7'", 01" wife 6967", 61' Bon 1 on U060-'. 61= JJond-Man 6929 paj'ody on lalle' 6972" 6976" 69762, 3 9326 Box-Lobby Chall^ge Boyer, A. Boyle, C, Earl of Orrery Il.,Earl of Orrery Box and Cox " Boz " 6986 Brady, D'. 69762" Braganza 4686, 6971" Brave Irishman 69562* Bravo of Tenioe 6973" Brayshay, J. 6968" BreuDoralt 8494 Breval, J. D. 3357, 69762" Brian the probationer 69683' Bridal 6974=, 81 Bride of Messina 69683=, 7713, 19 Brides' tragedy 564 Britannia and Batavia 6340 British Enchantress 6976* Briton 6971"' •Brome, E. 6973', 76'* Brooke, H. 6956'8, 71'* M». 6961" Brothers, Anon. 6968" Cumberland 6957", 58= Young 6956'*, 71* Brown, Eev. D'. John 6956"", 71=, = •Browning, K. 69683= Brutus, Payne 6974= Tate 6976* Bubbles of the day 6968" •Buckingham, Duke of 211, 6956", 76=, 23 •Bucks, JHave at y= all 6956"= Buckstone, J. B. 6968", 743, gg Bullock, C. 69763» Burges, Sir J. B. 6974" •Bm-goyne, J. 695722, 61", ", 64= Burlesques, Talfourd 6968" Burnaby, C. 6976", "3 Burney, C. 695623 Bury Fair 7872 Busby, D'. 6973" Busiris 6956" B ussy D'Ambois 1628, 32, 69, 76* Busybody 6966*, 67" ; (2'i part) 76" Byron, Charles, Duke of 1630 Caesar and Pompey 1529 in Egypt 6972'", 7022 Borgia 6796' Caigniez and D'Aubigny, MM. 6966 Caius Gracchus 4915 Marius, Doubleday 6968*, = Otway 6976' Calaynos 802 Calcraft, J. W. 6968'* •Calderon, Pedro 8281 Cftlidas 1303 Cambridge, "gentleman of" 6956'= Oambyses 6976= Camilla 6976= Campaspe 6341 Captain Firncwald (German drama) 138 Capuchin 3105, 6964' Caractacus 6971* Careless Husband 1681, 76= Carey, H. 695623, "=, ei-,^, *, 712 Carmelite 6961* Caryl, J. 6076=, == Case of Conscience 772 Castilian S622-3 Castle of Andalusia 6957"2 ot Sorrento 6961* Spectre 6961' Catharine and Petruchio 69562* Catherine ot Cleves 6968'" Ciitilhie 6968* Calo 69563, 76' 1 (06s. 0«) 6988 Catspaw 696813 Cavalier 6071'i, 9+40 Oelesia, M". 6971'3, 72" Centlivre, M' . 696G', «, 67", 61', ", 74', y^jU 19, 20 21 3 647 Plays and playwriters— eo»<. Chaff : Yankee and Nigger at the Exhi- bition, 1853 C968» Challenge tor Beauty 4061, (i06S« Chances, Beaumont and Fletcher 634, 0957", 61* Duke of Buckingham 6956", 76» Changeling 6963* •Chapman, G. 6963', 76* Chapter of accidents 6958", 61' Charles, Duke of Byron 1680 Charles the first, Havard 1S63 Mitford 6908" Cheats 6976" of Scapin 6961*, liy" Cherry, A. 6961' Chester plays Chester 7974 Chester's triumph Chester 1639 Chettle, H. Beleher 7974 Child of Love 6989 Nature 6961^ Childe, C. O. 69682» Children in the 'Wood 69749 Choephorae 61-2 Chorley, H. P. 6968", '^ Christian Hero 5340, 6971' Tragedy (St. Cecily) 6976" Chrononhotonthologoa 6966*', 71" •Cibber, Colley 6966, 72, 76, 7022 Theoph. 69729 Cicero (drama) 1705 Cid, the 0416 Cinna's conspiracy 6976' Circe 6976' Cit turn'd gentleman, MoIi6re 6192 Citizen 6966"*, 69 tum'd gentleman 6976' City-Madam 6929, 6974i» Politinues 6976« Bamble 6976' Clandestine Marriage 6967", 71' Claracilla 4817 Clarke, Lady 6978 Claudius, tale 6968" Cleomenes 6976' Cleon 8809 Cleone 6971', 73" Cleopatra 7015 Cobb, J. 6961" Coffey, C. 695ff», 70 •Coleridge, S. T. 5718, 6968*, 73' Colman, G.^ 6966^-*, B7'«, 61', 66, 67, 719 la^ 15 731 3 G? 0967™-!, 61', 7S',' 74'>, =, '" Colombo's Birthday 1043-4 Comedies, Eejected (parodies) 18, 6968«i, =s Comedy after Italian manner 6976"* of Errors 6956',", 7907 « prohibited 6968" Comical Gallant 2352 Lovers 1681, 6976' B«venge 2839, 6976' Commissary S106, 6966"' Committee 6966" Comoediae, Plautus 6950-S, 9096 Terentius 8753-4 Comus, masque 6143, 6966', », 61", 72" Conceited Ladies, Moli6re 6192 Condi's Wife 6968' Confederacy 6966", 76' Confederates 3357 Conflict of Conscience 6969 •Congreve 9681 Conquest of China by the Tartars 6976' Granada 6976' Mexico 6976" Conscious Lovers 6966*, 8380 Constance 6968" Constant Couple 6956" Constantine 6971' the great 6976' Contrivances e966», 61* Cooke, T. 6971". '» Coriolanus, Shakespeare 7907' ' Thomson 6971'. 8886 Corner of the street 6968" •Cornwall. Barry 6976 Corona Minervae, masque 1992 Correggio 6669 Plays and playwriters— coni. Cosmo de' Medici 6908' Count Alarcos 6908", "9 Arezzi 6046 Julian 6055, 61 of Narbonne 4689, 6957"" Countess of Essex 6968', '* of Salisbury 6957", 71" Counterfeits 0976' Country captain 6433 m 6937", 67 lasses 6956" squire 6974" vfake 6964^' wife 6957", 76', 0679-80 Court comedies 6341 at Itavenna 69C8™ beauties 697'1' Coventry mysteries Coventrij 7974 6957'",61>,V.72' ♦Cowley, Mrs. Cozeners 3106, 6964' Cradock, .T, 69721" Craufurd, D. 6976" Creilsa 6971*, 72' Crisp, H. 6966", 71* Critic 69011 Crohoore of the bill-hook 6968* Cromwell, anonymous 6968' Hugo 4341 Leatham 5204 Richards Cromwell, Thomas, Lord 7961 Cross, J. C. 6961* Cross purposes 6961" Crowe, Catherine 6974" Crowne, J. 6976', «,',"«,"'; 77 Cruel brother 2262 kindness 6974" Cuckold in conceit, Moliftre 6192 Cumberland, E. 6957", 58i, «, 61>-*, 72', ", ", 73", 89 Cunning man 6956"^ Cure for the heartache 6957"', 84 Curfew 6961* Cutter of Coleman Street 2041, etc. Cyclops 2854 Cymbellne 7907 ' ' Oymon 6956"-', 61' Cyrus 6971" Dame aux Camillas 2615 Dance, C. 6974'," Daniel, G. 6968", 74, 81 Danish drama 4045 Darley, G. 6968', ',',", " Daughter, the 6968' of the regiment 6600 D' Avenant, C. 6976' • SirW. 6976"."* Day well spent 6653, 6974" Deaf and dumb 6961' lover 6961' Death of Marc Antony 7826 Marlowe 6968' Death's jest book 654 Deceived, the, 1531 6784 Deceit, the, farce 8562' •Decker, T. 3122, 6963 j Collier, Dehher 7974 Delap, Dr. 6971' De Lisle, Sieur 6971" Demetrius 7714 De Monfort 6957"*, 85 Denham, Sir J. 2344 •Dennis, J. 6976". ". "», "» Desert Island 6964", 71' Deserted daughter 6967"*, 68'" Deserter 6966"', 61^ Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus 6976' Deuce is in him 6961', 64" De Valencourt 6968" Devil to pay 6966!^, 70 upon two sticks SIO6, 6964' Devil's elixir 6974' Devin de Village 6966"" Dibdin,C. 6966"', 61',* C.,iun. y :6961",* * ' T. 6961*, 74', 9 Dice of Death ! 665 •Dickens, C. 6968"*, 74', 86 C, jun. 648 Plays and playwriters— core*. Dido 6979 Dilke, T. 69761= Bioolesian, dram, poem 2541 Disappointment 8248 Discovery 6958, IV, 83 Disobedient cliildj interlude 'Disraeli, B. 6968^, '^ Distress'd mother 6956', 76»; (o5s. ore) 6988 wife 6972' Diversions of the morning 1936, 9603 Dobell, S. T. 2511 Doctor and Apothecary 6961' and no doctor, Moli^re 6192 Faustus f 819-21, 6978 Dr. Last in his chariot 6964^ Dodsley, E. 6956^*, 61*, 71', 73' Dogget, T. 6964^ Don Carlos, Otway 6796= Schiller 7713, 20 Sebastian 6796' Double dealer 69768 gallant 1681, 6976" marriage 534 mistake 6971', 72' *Doubleday, '£. 6968*, « Douglas 6957", 71', 72-' Doves in a cage 6974^" Dow, A. 6971"," Downes, Captain G987 Dragon of Wantlejr 6961' Drama, early English 6969 Indian 1303,4718 of a life 6968* old English 6978 Dramas for the stage, Stephens 8402 Dramatic chronicle 6968', == pamphlets 6986 poet, position of, 1841 6886 poets, JSnglish, Lamb 5025-7 satire on the times (" Pasquin ") 6973'= scenes, B. Cornwall 1984 Landor 5074 and fragments, Beddoes 564 writers, early 6963 Dramatis personse. Browning 1043 Dramatist eDST*" Drummer 40, 6956", 77 'Dryden, J. 6966", 76 selections from 2682 and Davenant 6976^ and Lee 6976'," Duchess de la Talli6re 6562, 6968'= Eleanour 69681= of Malfi 6985, 9333 Ducks and green peas 2593 Dudley (Bate), H. 6961* Duel 6967 Duenna 6957i», 6H Duke lor a day 0416 of Guise 6976' of Milan 6929, 6961' »Dumas, A. 6968" Dupe 6907, 71' Duphcity 6961*, 68" D'Urfey, T. 6970', *, " Dwarris, Sir E. 6968" Earl of Brecon 6046, 6968" Essex, Banks 6976" H. Jones 6960', 6971' Gowrie 6968", 9420 Leicester 6968' Warwick, Francklin 69571', 6961' Hiffernan 6971" Eastward Hoe 1531 Edgar 6976" and Emmeline 6956'=, 64* Edrio the Saxon (f by J. E. Christian) Edward and Eleonora 6971", 8836 the black prince, Lindsay 6354 ■W. Shirley 6966", 71' II. 69S0 the third 2702, 6076' the fourt'o 4066 Edwin the fair 8661^ Egmont 3476 3082-3 2848, 65 8620, 6956", 8231 Plays and playwriters — cont. Elder brother Eleotra, Euripides Sophocles Blfrid 6976" Elfrida, dram, poem 6971' Elizabeth, Queen (If you know not m.e , etc.) Seywood 7974 Ellerman, C. P. 6968" Elliot, J. L. 6968'* Elmerick 5340 Elvira 6971", 72i Emperor of the East 6929 Empress of Morocco 6976' Bndimion 6341,6963'; flaJpire 7974 Enghsh merchant 6971^' mounsieur 6976' princess 6976' traveller 6963' Englishman in Bourdeaux 6972' Paris 3105, 6972' i-eturned from Paris 3105, 69722 English-men tor my money 3899, 6978 Entertainments 6956"-' Epidicus 6955 Epsom Wells 6976', 7872 Estcourt, E. 6976" Ethelstan 690S', " *Btherege, Sir 6. 6976', '* Eugene Aram 5575 Eugenia 6971', 72' Carnot 6968" Eumenides 64.-6 •Euripides, Alcestis (adapted) 6968" (bvirlesque) 6968" Hecuba (trans.) 6976" Iphigenia in Aulis (adapted) 69681* Eurydice 6956" hiss'd 6988 Evening's love 6976' Every man in his humour 4694-6, 6966', 72' one has his fault 6957", 7Si Evil genius 6968" Fair crusader 6962* example 6976" maid of the exchange 4062, Heywood 7974 west Heywood 7974 penitent 6956', 76" quaker of Deal 69561' queen, opera 6976" Fairies' opera 6971', 6976" Faithful shepherdess 533 etc. Faith's fraud 6048, 6968" Falkland, Viscount 2963 Fall of Poland 7035 Robespierre 1805, 6968* Saguntum 6972" False alarms 69731 dehcacy 697112, 72" friend 6976" impressions 6961* Falstafl's wedding 6966 Fame 69631' Family affairs 6968'', " legend 6973' politics 6062' Family reading, etc., plays adapted for 6928 Famous victories of Henry V. 6965 Fane, Sir F. 6976'* Farces 6653, 6966, "-', 61, 61, 69-70, 72', *, " 781, 742^ 3_ 7, 8^ 9_ 709^ io_ 2c^ 27, 7012, 8562' Farmhouse 6961' Farmer's wife 6961* Farquhar 6976, 86, 9681 Fashionable life (ChelteiAam) 6968" lover 6961' Fatal curiosity 6340, 6967" discovery 6971" dowry 6929, 6982 marriage 697U", 8248 Fate of Capua 6976", 8218 Father and son 6962' Faustus, Doctor 6319, etc., 6978 Favart 6972* Fawue 6862 649 Plays and playwriters— eo»<. Female prelate Fenton, B. 6976" 6956" " I'erragus," trag. by 6968» Ferryman Peudal times (Scottish) 6046, e968i» 6968" •Fielding Fiesco (Genoa) 6972',73^8t, 88 696811, 7714 Fine Lady's airs 6976'» Firmilian (spasmodic tragedy) .8« First-born S866 floor 6961= love 69571', 61-' Fitz-Ball, E. 6974«, « parody on 6968^i> Five to two 69682-' Flora 69B6", 61^ Florence, great Duke of 6929 Florizel and Perdita 6971* Follies of a day 6961= fashion 6968^ Fontainebleau 6967^ 'Foote 1936, 6956»-=, 66, 67, 70, 11\ *, 78", 9503 Foro'd mamage, Molifere 6192 Force of friendship 69761" •Ford, J. 5932 Forgery 6963' Foreign plays 6996 Fortune by land and sea 4073, Heywood 7974 Fortune's frolic 69812 Foundling 6966", 71", 72' Four plays in one 634 Fra Eupert 6057, 6968', », == Franoesca di Faenza 6968" Francis, P. 6971', ^ 72' Francklin, T. 6957i», 61', 71", i^ Prank Fox Phipps, Esq. 6974' French plays 6990-4 refugee 69743 Friendship in fashion 69761° Prowde, P. 6972i» Fugitive 69682, 736 Funeral 6976i«, 8380 Gahleo Galilei 1009 Gallathea 5341 Gait, John 6962 Gamester, Centhvre 6976" Moore 6967i», 71* Shirley 69741", 8024 Gamesters 6966i", 67 Gammer Gurton's nedle 6978 Garcia 69681' Garrick 1690, 69662'-^s, 69671', 6961, 4, 7, 9, 71', '-' 722--' Garrick's vagary 69781 Ga-wyim Honor 6968" •Gay, J. 6956', 72», ', 741, 87 Gazul, Clara (P pseud.ol P. M^rimie) 8368 Generous conqueror 6976ii husband 6976ii Genii (masque) 69621 Gentleman,T?. 6961=, 74;" Gentleman dancing-master 9679-80 George Barnwell 6340, 6967ii Dandin, Molifire 6192 Heriot 6974' German dramas 138 Gertrude's chen-ies 6968^ Gil Bias 6235, 6971' Gildon, 0. 6»76i', 88 Giovanna of Naples 6067, 6968', i' Giovanni in London 6961' Gisippus 69689 Glencoe 6968*, ', ', 8620, 26 Glengall, Earl of 6968™ Glover, E. 6971* GobUns 8494 •Goethe 6968=' Goetz von Berlichingen 3476 Golden and silver ages Heywood 7974 calf 4602 pippin 69662* Goldoni, 0. •Goldsmith Gondolier Gonzanga B»t Good natured man SB18, 6967", 69571', 66 Plays and plajrwriters— cont Gorboduc VdaU 7974 Goring, C. 6976" Governour of Cyprus 6976" Gower, Lord F. L. 69681^ Great Duke of Florence 6929 ■Western Railway guard, by 69682" Grecian daughter 6957", 71" Green, G. S. 6972' Green-eyed monster 6974? Greenwood, T. 6974" Gregory VII. 6968i», 21,33 Grey, Lady Jane 697.61' GrifBn, G. 6968" Griffith, M'». 6971", ", 72», i' •Grimston, Viscount 69761' Griselda, Arnold 273 Atkms 69682" Grove, the 6976" Guardian, Cowley 2043, 4 Garrick 69641, 71' Masainger 6929* Guidone 8164 Gustavus Vasa 69561", 7114 HaU, M". S. 0. 69743, " Hamlet 6956i, 7907 ", 68 Hanno 69682= Hans Beer-Pot 576 Harlequin a Schoolboy, etc. ■ 69762* King John 6968* Hartson,H. 69671", 71" Hartwig, G. L. 69682' Harwood, Miss (P " Eoss Neil ") 6416 •Haughton, W. 6978 ; Jjekker 7974 Haunted Tower 6961= Havard, W. 1563, 6971", 72" Haviland, A. 69681" Hawkesworth, Dr. 6966", '\ 64* Haynes, J. 6968" Hazard of the die 6974= He must be Married 6962* would be a Soldier 6961' Head Quartere (the East) 096822 Heart and the World 6968'" of Gold 69681' of Mid-Lothian 6974" Heartwell, H. 6961* Heath, S. 6968' Hector 6962* Hecuba, Delap 6971" Euripides 2849, 66, 6976i=, 7021 Heir at law 6967=1 of Scharfeneck 138 Heiress 1142, 69672= Henry the Second, Bancroft 6976i= Helps 4003 VCightwick 69682* IV. 7907'* V. 7907'* famous victories of 6965 VI. 7907" VIII. 7907" Heraolidae 2867 Heraud, J. A. 69681' Hercules Furens 2849, 68 Hemani 139, 4348 Hero and Leander 6961' Heroick love 6976i= He's much to blame 6961*, 68"= Hester, Queen, interlude 18561, jffjjo. *, 8284 •Heywood, T. 6963', 80, 7974 Hifleman, P. ' 6971" Higgons, B. 6976" High life below stairs 6964ii, 69, 72= Hill, A. 69561, 7li, ', ■", 72", 76" Isabel 6968'i Dr. J. 6972* Hint to husbands 6973' Hippisley, J. 6964= Hippolytus 2869 Historical Eegister for 1736 6988 Hoadly, B. 1687, 6966*, 71= J. 6972' Hoare, P. 6961* Holcroft, T. 6957=*, 6II-* 68==, 84 Hollander 8436 Holman, J. G. 6961* H ome, J. 69671", 71"-', i', ", 72*, 88 660 633 6961' 2302 69S8==, 8314 69731, = 6971'* 6976* =^1 Plays and play writers— cob*. Honest Man's Fortune Thieves "Whore Honesty in distress Honeymoon Hook, J. & T. B. Hoole, J. Hopkins, C, J.B. Horatii ■ Horestea, interlude Pikeryng ISSS'' Horn (musical composer) 6973^ Home, H. P. meS'^ U. H. 6968=, '», i», =', =■', ^, 6985 Hortensia 6962* Hoskins, "W. H. & H. H. 6968" Housekeeper 4600, 9326 Howard, Hon. E. 6976^, "> Hon. Jas. 6976^ ' Sir E. 69562 Hughes, J. 69661, 671" •Hugo, V. 139, 6968'=' Hull, T. 6967, 72" Hullah, J., composer 6986 Humorous Lieutenant 633, 6976^^ Humourists 69701", 7873 Humours of the Army 69761^ Hunchback 4919, 69681^ Hungarian daughter, dram, poem 6968^, ii Hunt, Leigh 6968=, », '^ parody on 6968^^ Hurlothrumho 7021-2 Hut of the red mountain 6974' Hyde &, Cornbury, Lord 6988 Hypochondriac, MoliSre 6192 Hypocrite 6961', 72'i I and my Double 6653 Ibrahim, thirteenth Emperor of the Turks 6976" Ida De Galls (Powys Castle) 6968'' If you know not me, etc. 4064-5, Seywood 7974 Ignoramus (Latin com.) 7653 Impertinents, Moli6re 6192 Impostor, MoliSre 6192-3 Impostors 6972i= Inchbald, M'«. 6967, 6967'^, 61i-* 68* 73'-', 741, 81-2, 84-6, 89 Inconstant 6956", 76>" Lady 9647 Incredulity of St. Thomas Camden Misc. 4, 1322 Indian Emperor 6976" Indiscreet Lover 6967 Ignez de Castro 6968^, » Inez di Castro 6968^2 In^annati, 1531 6784 Injur'd Love, anonymous 6976'^ N. Tate 6976" Inkle and Yarico 6957-'" Innocent Usurper (Lady Jane Grey) 697615 Interludes I8661, 2, 18561, Misc. S 3284, 6829^, Marriage 7974 against Northbroofce '79'74 Intrigues of a day 6962' Ion, Euripides 2860 Talfourd 6968', ', », i», 8620, 27 Ipliigenia, Dennis 6976" in Aulis 2849, 6968" (adaptation) in Tauris, Euripides 2848-9 Goethe 3476, 97 ; 6968'^= Irene, Goring 6976" Johnson 6971' Irish Lion 6974' Widow 6961', 64' Irishwoman 6976 Iron Chest 6974^ Irresolute Man 138 Isaac Comnenus 8661, 3-4 Isabella 6967', 61" Isidor and Olga, from 6974' Island Princess B33, 6976" Queens 6976" 4610 6976=» 6976" 6976" 6968" 6974« 6974» 6966»,61i,» Plays and play writers— co»l Italian Captain comedy, 1654 after Husband opera English'd from Ivan Illt, Russia Ivanhoe Jack Sheppard Jackman, I. James, G. P. R. Jameson, 11. W. 6968" Jane Shore 6956', 76" Jealous Wife 6967", 66, 83 Jeffreys 6968», 8314 ♦Jephson, R. 6967» 61', *, 71" •Jerrold, D. 139, 6968", ", ", ", ", "*, 6974=, ', ", 9326 parody on 6968"" Jew 6957", 61> of Arragon 9186 Malta 6980 Venice, altered from Merchant of "Venice 6976" John A Kent, etc, Munday 7974 Bull 6967»i King Sale 1322 troublesome reign of 6966 of Hapsburg 6968" Procida 6968', ", " Savile of Haysted 6968'<' Woodvil 6007, 22 Johnson, C. 6966", 76", " S. 6971' (Cheshire) 7021-2 Jones, G. 4675 H. 6966', 71' Inigo Jones 7974 Ja«>b 6968"J R. St. Clan- 6968", " •Jonson,B. 139, 1531, 6966", 6972', 6974^,*; Jones 7974 Jovial Crew 6956"', 7Si, 76" Jubilee, entertainment, 1776 7025 Judas Iscariot 6968", "* Judgment of Paris 6976" Julia 4688 Julian 6968» Julius Caesar 6987, 7907 ' ' Justina 1292 Justiza, the (tale of Arragon) 6968" K^hd&sa 1303, 4718 Keane, J. H. 6968" Kelly, H. 6961* 67, 71i" J. 6971" M. 69731 Kemble, C. 6967"*, 73' J. P. 6961", * Kennedy, "W. 6968», '* Kenney, J. 6973', 74' Kenny, J. 9326 Kenrick, "W. 6966, 71" King, T. 6961', 72" King and Angel 6416 and Miller of Mansfield 6966"* and no King 534, 9 ; 6976" Charles the first 1663, 3729, 6972» Edward the third 2702, 7912 Edward IV. Meywood 7974 John Bale 1322 Shakespeare 7907 ' * Lear 6976i=, 7907'' Leir and his daughters 6965 of the Commons 6968"=, 82 Rent's daughter 4046 Saul 6976"« Victor and King Charles 1043-4 King's friend 6968"' rival 6974", 8694 Kinnaii-d, D. 6961*, 68"" Knack to know a knave 6969 Knight, T. 69611, 4 Knight of Malta 534 the Burning Pestle 540 Knights 3106, 6964" Know your own mind 6957", 68 •Knowles, J. S. 6968*-=, '-', "-i", ", "', ", 6974', 81 parody on 6968"" R.B, 651 Plays and playwriters— com^. Kotzebue, A. von 0957^', 61', ', 73', ', 81',89 La joie fait pear 3423 Ladies priviledge 3437 triall 3120 visiting-day 6976" Lady-Errant 1438 Lady Jane Grey C936', 76", 88 of Lyons 5562, 696S", ss Lady's last stake 1681, 6956", Te'^' Lame Lover 3105, 6964* Lancaster witches 7872 •Lander, R. E. 6968" • W. S. 6968^ ", " •Lansdowno, G. Granville, Ld.6976*, 76"^, " Last Act 69622 I^tin comedy 7553 Lanncelot of the Lake 6968=, =« Law of Lombardy 4587, 6961' Lawes, H. 6972^ Lawyer's fortune 3667, 6976''' Le Eoi s' Amuse 4345-6 League's convert 6968'^ •Leatham, W. H. 6968" Lee, Miss 6958', 61^ N. msC, 70^, ', ', ", ", 21, 2», », 27, 87 Legend of Florence 6968^ =, == Lear, King 6976>=, 7907' Leir, King, and his three daughters 6965 Lemon, Mark 69682*, 742 parody on 69682'i Lennox, M". 6971" Lethe 1690, 6972* Levey, R. M. 6968'* Lewes, G. H. 69682* Lewis, M. G. 6961 >, 73', 2 E. 69682 Liar 3105, 69643, 67 Liberty asserted 6976" Libretti, opera 6600, 8222 Life's a dream 1293 •Lillo, G. 6957", 711 Lionel and Clarissa 69562', 7311 Lo Zingaro 6974« Locrine, son of Brutus 7961 lodge, A. 69683« Lodoiska 69612 London cuckolds 6976" prodigal 7961 " London stage " 6961 Lone hut 69682 Look before you leap 696827 Lord Chalkstone (character) 6972* of Burleigh 69682? of the manor 1142, 69612 Lords of Bllingham 69681, ", 8314 Lost and won 6968", 6974^ Lottery 695623 Love 6968=, ^ a la mode 6961' and a bottle 6976" and honour 2263 and intrigue, Schiller 7714 and jealousy 69682^ and law 2692 and revenge 6976" at first sight 69722, 76" betray'd 6976" -chase 6968=, ' for love 6957", 76" for money 6976" honor, and interest 6962= in a chest 6976" in a riddle 1681 in a village 695621, 69721 in a wood 6976" law and physic 6974' makes a man 6957=, 76" the cause and cure of grief 69712 triumphant 598, 6976" Lovell, G. W. 696827, « Lover, S. 6974» Lover's luck 6976" Lovers' progress 534 quarrels 6961' vows 695723, 731 Plays and playwriters— m«<. Love's a jest 6976" cure 684, 6976" Labour's Lost 6966», 7907» last shift 693617, 76" martyrdom e9682» mistress 4067 pilgrimage 634 trial 696827 triumph 6976" victim 6976" Loyal brother 8248 general 6976" subject 534 Lucas, Hyppolite 6968" Lucius Junius Brutus 6976" Lucille 6974» Lucrftce Borgia 4840,8 Lucretia 6968" Lunn, J. 6974» Lying Lover 697617 8880 Valet 695623, 643 •Lytton, Lord 139, 69683, u 2a.4_ saj parody on 696828 Mabel's curse 6974» Macbeth 79077 altered travestie 6968" Macklin, C. 6957", 613, 728 *Macready, W. C, acting plays 6981-2, 7915 M'Taagart, M". 69621 Mad lover 534 Madeline 696830 Magpie 6966, 88 Mahomet 69567, 5713 the im;)ostor 6971ii, 72" Maid and magpie 6966, 88 in the mill 534 of Bath 3105, 69732 honour 5929, 69747 Mariendorpt 696833 Orleans 3497, 7713, 22, 24, 8522 the mill 695621, 72i oaks 1142, 6964= Maiden aunt 6968" Maiden's fame 6974*, * Maid's last prayer 8248 tragedie 641, 697*3, 78", 81 Malade imaginaire 6964^ •Mallet, 1). 6965". 71" Man and wife 69731 -hater, Moliere 6192 of business 6967 mode 2841 taste 6972» the world 6958, 72« Mangora, King of the Timbusians 6976" Manoeuvring 6962* Man's bewitched 6976" the master 2264, 6976" Marc Antony 7326 Marguerite ggggs Manamne 6956" Marie Tudor 434Q Marina 53^ Marion 6968= ♦Marlowe, C. 6978-80 Mar-plot 697619 Marriage 6968», " a-la^mode 6976" in May Fair 69682' night •Marston, J. J. W. 69 Martelli Martinuzzi Martyn, B. Martyr Mary Stuart, Haynes SchiUer death of Tudor Mask and comedy, 1654 Masks and faces * Mason, Eev. W. Mason of Buda Masquerade Masques, Alfred Comus .69632, Jmei 7974 ■M 9 23 » 29 sa 36 6968" 6971" 7713,25 2371 4309-10 6974?, 8694 69713, • 6974» 69621 8835 614S, 6966«, 78* 652 Plays and playwritera — cont. Masques— co«<. Corona Minervae 1993 Court Jones 797-1 Heywood 4067 Howell 4309-10 Inlgo Jones, Jonson, Marston etc. Jones 7974 Judgment of Paris 6976^* Knowles 6968* Lnminalia Miscellanies 3284 marriage of Frederick and Eliza- beth 634 Orpheus and Euridioe 6976^^ Massacre 772 •Massinger, P. 6961'', 74»», 82 Master Clarke 6968" Master's rival 6974' Match at midnight 7541 Matilda 6971" Maturin, Eev. C. E. 6968* May day 6963* Mayhew, E. 6974" Mayor of Garratt 3106, 6966, 70 Measure tor measure 69361", 7907 v 1 Med bourne, M. 6976^ Medea 2861-2 Melodramas 6961 Menaeohmi 6965 Mendelssohn 6968*8 Merchant of Bruges 6961*, 68*2 Venice 7907" Venice, burlesque 6968i= Mercuritis Britannieus 904r5 M6run6e, P. (? " Clara Gazul ") 3358 Mermaid 6962'^ Merope 69711, 72' Merry beggars 6973i, 76'* devil of Edmonton 351 wives of Windsor 7907' Metastasio, P. 6070 Michele Orombello 6968^2 Midas, Lilly 5341 O'Hara 6956*3, 722 *Middleton, T. 6963*-= Midnight hour 69611 Midsummer night's dream 6966", 7907", SaPpin, FMllipps 7974 Milan, Duke of 5929 Miles Gloriosus 6953 Miller, J. 6956', 71^ ", 72=, ', » Miller of Mansfield 6961* Milhngen, J. G. 6974= Milner, H. M. 6974S *Milton, J. 6966', «, 61", 72" Minor 3105, 6972", 73* Miracle play, modern 6968i», "* Mirandola 6976 Miser, Pielding 6956«, 72', 84 Moliere 6192 Shadwell 6976i«, 7872 Miser's daughter 6974= Miss in her teens 6961", 64" Mistake 6966", 76^ Mistakes 6988 Mr. H , farce 6007 Mr. Nightingale's diary 6968"* Mitchell, W. A. 6968* *Mitford, Mary E. C9688, =* Mithridates 6987 Mock doctor 6961", 64= Modem antiques • 6986 Mogul tale 6901* Moile, N. [T. H. Bliss] 6968i= *Moli6re C964«, 70*= from 6972', " Moncreift, John 6072^ •Moncriefl, "W. T. 6901=, *, 70, 71' Money 139, 6562, 86-7 ; 6968=, = Monsieur d'Olivo (!!)C3= Tonson 6861= Mont Blanc, legend of 6968" •Moore, E. 0956'=,67",71=,*,72» T. 69731 Moral play Wit and Science 7974i representations 6960 ♦More, Hannah 6978= More dissemblers besides women 6963* 6971=, 72' Plays and playwriters— co»?. M5rgan, McNamara E.W. Mortimer, Earl of March Morton, J. M. 9326 T. 6967"=, 74', 5, 10, 8 4 Mother Bombie 6341 Mothers and daughters 6968", "=, == Motteux, P. 6976=, i", ", "' Mountaineers 6967"i Mountfort, W. 6976=, =» Mourning bride 6966=, 57" Mowatt, Anna C. 6968i« M. P., or the blue-stocking 6973' Much ado about nothing 7907" Mulberry-garden 6976'= MuUeasses 6906 Mimday, A. 7974 Miu?phy, A., 6956»-"s, 57i=, 61, 64, 69, 71', 8 11 14 703 4 12 6966"= 5754, 69711 6976'= 6663 6968'= 6961* 6961= 3106, 6964' 6979 6968's 4698 69761' Murray, A, Musical entertainment lady Mustapha Muzze muzzled My fellow clerk friend Ski-hi spouse and I Mysterious husband mother Nabob Napoleon the first's first love Nash, T. Neck or nothing Neffe als Onkel Nell Gwynne Nephew as uncle Nero New Inne rehearsal 6969, 88 way to pay old debts 6929, 6967=, 74' wonder, a woman never veit 6963= Newcastle rider 2593 Nice valour 534 Nichols, J. 6365 NinaSforza 6968=,','=,"* No followers 6653 No song no supper 6961* Noble gentleman 534 heart 6968** Non-juror 1681, 4099", 6972= Norris, H. 8562= Norton, Hon. M". Erskine 6968*' and Sackville, T. Udall 7974 Not so bad as we seem 139, 5562, 6968** Nuptials of Peleus and Thetis 4309-10 Oberon 6974" O'Brien, "W. 6961", 67 Occasional prelude 1936 Oedipus 6976" Coloneus 6817, 8232-3 Tyrannus 6817, 8234-6 O'Hara, K. 6966*=-*, 61' ,", = 72" O'Keeffe. J. 6957*", 73', 86 Old bachelor 6956", 76" English drama 6978 Portunatus 6963= heads and young hearts 6968*= law 5929 love and new fortune 6968*= maid 6936*= maids 6908" Oliver Cromwell, Green 6972' Leatham 6968'= Oliver Cromwell, the Protector 6968=" Oldmixou, J. 6978', " Olympic revels C97-4"> One clock 6973i Opera, Italian, after 6976= pastoral 6970"' 'Opel as 0956', *', 61, 64, 71=, 74=, i", 76=, =, 10^ 11^ 17^ 22^ S6 7021 comic ' 69721, '1, i*, 73' foreign 6995 Orators S105, 69645 Ordinary, the 1438 653 Plays and playwriters— ooref . Ormasoes ■ 4818 Oroonoko 6957', 76>», 8248 Orphan essT^', 76* of China 69612, 717 (from Voltaire) 6972^ Orpheus 6962^ and Buridice 6976^= Orrery, C. Boyle, Earl of 6976= E. Boyle. Earl of 6976^ Osbom, H. 696818 Osorio 1814 Othello 7907' Ot\yay, T. 69571", 61^ ^ % 16\ ', ', =, i", '", 26^ 27^ 20^ 81 Oulita 4004 Our village 6968i« Oxberry, W. (remarks) 6974=, 81, 84 •Oienford, J. 6974", 9326 Oxonian in town 6978" Padlock 6966", 72" Pageants, Lord Mayors' 6829i» Painter of Ghent 6974"' Pandora • 4818 Panel 6961" Papal tyranny 1681 Paracelsus 1042, etc., 1050 Parasitaster 6963" Park, A. 6968" Parodi es on dramatio authors 6968'^ "' Parricide 6972io Parsons'a minor theatre 6964 Parvenu . 0968", » Pa^q^uiu 6973" Passmg cloxid clouds (Florence) Passions, the, plays on 892 Patient Grissil Dehker 7974 Patmore,P.G. 8968"" Patrician's daughter 6968=, ', ^ Patron 3105, 6964= Paul and Virginia 6961* Payne, J. H. 6974= Peake, R. B. 6974" Pearson, H. "W. 6968"", » •Peele, G. 3631 Peep behind the curtain 6969 Peleus and Thetis, 1654 4309-10 Pentalogia, dramatic scenes 6074 Percy 6973' Perfidious Brother 6976!'i Pericles 7907«, 61 Perils of Pippins 6974= Periur'd husband Perkin "Warbeck Perplex'd lovers Perplexities 6967, 72" Persae 68 Perseus and Andromeda 7031 Persian Princess 6976"i Peveril of the peak 6974= Phaedra and Hippolitua 69661", W, 88 Pharaoh, dram, poem 6968"i Philaster 642, 6958i», 72i, IS'" Philip 6968^5 ofArteveldt 696S"i of Prance & Marie de M^ranie 6968"' the Second 69681' Van Artevelde 8661, 69^1 Phihps, A. 69661, 577 7110 76S, 88 Philoclea ■ '^^'^^\lt Philoctetes „°S Philp,B.K. 6968"" Phoenissae oow Picture 6929 Pie Voleuse 6988 Pilgrim 534 Pilot flf^ Pirate . 697| Piso'8_conspiracy ^^^6976^^ 69611 6966 6972' Pix, Mrs. M. Pizarro Plain-dealer Planch^, J. B/. parody on Platonic lovers wife 6961*, 74'.',' 2265 6971= Plays and playwriters— COJJ*. *Plautus Plautus, from Play-house wedding Play is the plot, the Plays adapted for family reading, &c. 6928 representation 6981, 2, 5 Plays, foreign 6995 French 6990-4 for the young 7521 Plighted troth 6968» Plot and no plot 69762» Plutus and translation 247-8 Point of honour 6957=^ Poland, fall of 703S Polly 6966» Honeycombe 6956", 61" Ponsard 69681" Poole, J. 6961*731,741'' Poor Gentleman 6957"i, 73' Pordage, S. 6976"* Portal, A. 6967 Porter, H. 6829= T. 6976"" Powell, G. 6976"3 T. 6968", "' Princess of Cleve 6976"i Parma 6976"i Prisoner of war 6968" Prisoners 4817 Procter, B. W. 6975 Prometheus 66, 69, 3630, 6968"' Promos and Cassandra 6965 Prophetess 6962i Proserpine, rape of 7021 Protector at Houghall 6968" Provoked husband 6966', 67», 81 Provok'd wife 6956", 76"», 9098 Provost of Bruges 6968'* Psyche 6976"i, 7872 " Punch ", writers of ■ Punch's pantomine Purcel, H., composer Puritan 7961 Purse 6961* Pyracmon 6968"" Pyrrhus King of Epirus 6976"i Quaker 69611 Quiet day 6653 fiachel, plays in which a part was taken by 6991-2 Jlailway results 69681* Ralph Royster Doyster Udall 211, 6974*, 78, Udall 1SH Rape of Lucrece 4069 of the lock (bm-letta) 6663 Rare triumphs of love and fortune 6969 Raupaoh, — 6974' Ravenscroft, E. 6976', ^, «, "« Raymond, G. 6968", i'(P) Reade, C. 6974" 1. B. 6968*, '1 Record of the pyramids 6968'i Recruiting officer 6956*, 76"" sergeant 6961' Rede, Leman 69681' W.Leman 69681' Reed, J. 6966"*, 61*, 72i" Reformation, the 6976"' Reform'd wife 6976»' Refusal 6966" 72' Register ofBoe 6956"*, 61* E^gnier, P. 6990 Regulus 6968'i Rehearsal BnckingTiam 211, 1090, 69561= •' Rejected theatre " 6962 Relapse 1828, 6966", 76», 9098 Remorse 1814, 6973' Renegade 5929 Rent day 189, 6968"* Reprisal 6956"' Respublioa (interlude) 1855 ' 1 Retired from business 69681' Return of the Druses 1043-4 Returned " killed" 6961* Revenge 69571", 6II of Bussy D'Ambois 1532 Revengeful queen 6976"" 654 P 8918 6957» 2863 1142, 69613 Plays and playwriters— comt Revengers tragedy Revolt of Flanders Reynolds, P. Rhesus Richard Coeur de Lion the Pirst II. TgoT* III. 7907= altered 1681 the Third (before Shakespeare) Richard 7974 death of 6976" Eiohards, A. B. 696820 Richardson, Jos. 6968^ 72^ Riohardus tertius Richard 7974 Richelieu 6662, 6968'°, '' in love 6968'=, ^ Riches 6974i» RiethmuHer, 0. J. 6968»,26 Rightful heir 6593 Rinaldo and Armida 2360, 6976^ Rival candidates ^saS^ fools 1681, 697ff" kings 6976=^2 ladies 6976"" queens 6976"^ Rivals 6967", 68", 71" Road to ruin 6957**, 84 Robber's Cave 6968«,"s Robbers 6600, 7714 Roberts, E. T. 6968'" Robespierre 757 fall of 1805 Robin Hood 69681" Robinson, Miss 696815, "', "« Eodwell, G. H. (composer) 6974* Roi's'amuse, le 4345-6 Rollo, Duke of Normandy 3084 Roman actor 6929-30 father 6957", 71", 72= the, dram, poem 2611 Romeo and Juliet 7907" travesty 6973" Romp 6961* Rory O'More 6974^ Rosamond 6976*" Rose of Arragon 6968' thistle, and shamrock 2692 Rosina 6961" Rousseau, J. J. 6956"3 Rout, the 6972-' Rowe, N. .3408, 69561, 3_ 7_ lo^ ib_ 67m_ 702, \ ]0^ 14 23^ 28^ 88 ♦Rowley, W, 4072, 6963-', Ileywoo'd 7974 Royal convert 6956', 76"^ king and loyal subject 4071, 6963", Heywood 7974 shepherdess 6976"", 7872 slave 1438 Rudens 6951, 5 Rudolf of Varosnay 6968^1 Rugantino 6973" Rule a wife, etc. 634, 3086, 6956', 61, 76"" *Rymer, T. 6976= Sacontaia (Indian drama) 1303, 4718 Sacrifice, the 6976"' Saggione, J. 6976"? Sailors' return 6962" St. Cecily e97e"« Clement's Eve 8661, 72 Ethelberht 6968i» James's park 6976" Thomas, incredulity of Camden Misc. 4, 1,323 Salem redeemed 6796 Samson Agonistes 6162 Sappho 3660 Sapho and Phno BS41 Saunders, J. 6968"= Savovnrd 61:62' Scanderbeg 6340, 0971'i Scapegoat 6(101* Scapegrace (iSli^ Scaramouch, harlequin, etc. 6976"* Scenes for the study. Lander C0B3, 9 from the rejected comedies 6968"°, "* •Schiller 3497, 6848 69C8'», >=, » Plays and playwriters — cont. School for arrogance 6961*, 68" husbands, Holifire 6192 lovers 6971' rakes 6971", 72''' scandal 6961*, 81 wives, Kellj 0961*, 67 Molifire 6192 of reform 6957"' Schoolfellows 6974= Scornful lady 634, 43, 6976"= Scott, "W. R. 6968"= Scowrers 6976"=, 7872 Scriveners' play, York Camden Misc. 4, 1322 Sea-captain Search after perfection Second maiden's tragedy Secret love Secretary 6968'=, "' Secrets worth knowing 6974' Sedaine, M. J. esei' •Sedley, Sir C. 6976" Selby, C. 6974?, » Selim and Zuleika 6962* Selindra 4818 Septem contra Thebas 63 Serf 6974' Serle, T. J. 6968"*, 74» Sesostris 6968"" Sethona 6971" Settle, B. 6976=, ', ", ", " Seven against Thebes 6817 Shad well, C. 6956", 76" *T. 6976 •Shakespeare , 7884-974 acting plays 6974*, = alterations etc., from 6956"*, "=, 71=, °, 72", 76" '* IS IB 24 28 doubtful plays ' 7896,' 7961 first and early quarto plays (reprints, fac-similes etc.) 7917, 23-33, 36-61, 63-57, 59, 60 imitations of 6966, 68=, "«, 71", 72», 76" Macready's acting copies 7915, 18, 19, 20 old plays u,sed by 6965 plays (various) /Shakespeare Society 7974 Shakespeare jubilee, Colman 6973' Shakespeare's early days 6974? Shannon, C. 6974' She stoops to conquer 3530, 6957" wou'd if she cou'd 6976"* would and she would not 6956=, 67' Shee, Sir M. A. 6968* Shell, R. L. 6968"", 73', 75 Shelley, P. B. 7999 Shepherd's well 6968" Sheridan, Mrs., F. 6968*, 67, 71', 83 •R. B. 6957", 71", 81 T. 6956"* •Shirley, J. 6966", 67, 74" W. 6956", 71", 72" Sicilian summer 8661 Molifere 6192 usurper 6976"* Siege, the 1438 of Antwerp 6968=, "* of Aquileia 6971^ 6983 of Babylon 6976"* of Belgrade 6061* of Damascus 6966', 67"' of Rhodes 2266-7, 6976"* Silvia 6340 Sir Anthony Love 6976"*, 8248 Courtly Nice 6976"=, 77 Harry Wildair 6966'=, 76"= John Oldcastle, Lord Cobham 7961 Martin Mar-all 0976"= Salomon 4099', 6976"= Thomas Moore 6976" More More 7974 William Crichton 8164 Sister 6971'= Sixteen and sixty 6962* Skelton, J. S, 65c Plays and play writers— C(m^ SIous, A. E. 696S'», » Smart, H. GOCrt, 8S Smibert, T. l!9i;S" Smith, E. GOoG'i, H^. SS Henry G976-1 M'., composer 6971^ W". 696S«.' •Smollett, T. 69o«^ Socrates r,9is' Soldier's daughter 6961' return 6973> Soldiers fortune 6070', »« Solon (19711-5 Somerset, C. A. lKi7 r Son's return (German drama) ISS •Sophocles 3620, 6^17, OOJil"' illustration of, from poets S76 imitative version (Antigone) 6;i68=s Sophonisba, Lee 6976*= Marston 5Si52 Thomson Gfioil", 71' Sopliy 23« Sorceress 6962^ Sordello 10-12, etc., 1054 Soul's traiscily 1043-4 South Briton 6967 •Southeme, T. 0957", 72'°, 70'». ", », -' Southey, R. S2fiS Spaniards O'.Mis Spanish frvar ii056'^. 70-'^ gipsy 0063' rale' 0:iOS'^ student 5-175 wives G;>76-^'' Spartacus 09{!S-'= Spartan dame 6166, 6972'" Speed the plough 0057-' •Spicer, H. 6968", '", '^ '\ -\ •'" Spink. Rev. S. 606S;' Spirit of contradiction 69,t0--' Spoiled child 0!1!1' Sprij^ of laurel 0073' Squire Lubberly, MoliCre 6102 of Alsatia 6876'». 7S72 Squire's dausthtcr 6965" St«ge-beaus toss'd in n blanket 101' State of innocence and fall of man 6976^, 6977 •Steele, R. 6956*. ', 70". 's ^, 77 •Stephens, Geo. 696S'. " Steward, the, anon. ili'7 1-" the, Spicer 8315 Still. John (ai7S Stolen heiress (ai70--' StraiTord. Browninir 1013, OiKK" Leatham 52ii-t Sterling SW7 Lally-Tolcndal (Fr.l 49SS Striingc gentleman 2450. 6974^ Stranger 6957*'. SI . 0320 Strathmore "V'S;' Successful candidate 'I?''"*" Such thinscs arc i;057-'. 73' Suil Dhur the coiner oi'T r Suleiman 6962- •SuUvan, R. ' 06S-; Sullen lovers 7S72 Sultan ''OOP Summer's tale "0 1 '- Sun poker, alteration from 00, 4"' Sun's-dnrling (masqne) 3122 Supplices, Aescliylus 07 Euripides 28 n>. 64 Sirrrcnder of Calais 6957". 74^ Suspicions husband 10S7, iU>50', 71- Swavne, Rev. G. C. 60 ; 0008- Svveethcarts and wives 9-i2i; Swinev. O. ''"'''': Sivlvostcr Daggcrwood 'K'''' "Tailor of Brussels 6416 Tailors liOOlMH''. .3; Talbot, R. «'•,*, Tale of mystery „ ««' TaUourd,^. '■■'';'^ ; ' m parodv- on _ ««■;* Tamerlane 0057'°. 70-'^ Plavs and plivwrilors— (^(>ttt. TamiiiL'Of a shrew (old play) 6965, Taminn 7974 of tlio shrew 6956«, 7007" Tancved and Sigismunda 6972'», 8S35 Tiirtnffe 6976'« •Tas^i, Aniiiita 6976> Tasto S105, 696-4' Tate.N. 6876', ", l^ '", " Taverner, "W. 6976», 87 •Taj'lor, Tom 6974' Tegue Divelly Tekeh 6976^ 7872 6978« Temper 6968» Tempest 6956^, 7907' Tcmplai' 6968*" Temple of love 6076-'' Temptation, the (>,icrcd play) Jlisc. •' ', 3284 Tender husband i;076-'-', 8880 Theater fiir die Jugcud 7521 Theobald, L. 6958"^, 76=', 87, 7021 Theodora 6962' Theodosins 6956', 76" Theresa 696S« Thermopylae 6962» Thierry and Theodoi-et 534 Thimon mislianthrope 6971" Tliom, R. W. 8809 Thomns. fi. P. 6968» AV. L. 6968« Tliomas i\ Bei-kot OOOS'. " (si-t- also "Becket") 6074"' Tliomas and Sally 6956", 61' Tlioinas, Lord Ci-orawell 7961 Thompson. Heujamin 6957", 81, 9326 •Thomson. Jas. 0966'^ 57 3 7ii_ S_ 14_ 7210 Thi-aciiin wonder eges" Tlu-ee deep 6974» honi-s after nian-iage SS57 ladies of London 6959 loi-ds and thi-ce Indies of London 6959 to one 6968=' weeks aftor man-iage 6956=*, 61' Thyestes Tide tai-rieth [for] no man 6976" iraptlU 1856= Timanthes 6971" Time works wonders ki06. 69l!8" Timoleon, Jameson 6008»s JIartyn 6971" Tiraon Timon 7974 in love 0O71'» of .Athens. Shadwell 6976--, 7S72-S of Athens, Shakespeare 7007 ^ ^ 'Tis pity, etc. .3121 well ifs no worse OIKU' Titus Audronicns 7007*^ and Berenice 6976=' To marry or not to mai-ry 6968', 81-2 Tobacconist 0961=. 71= Tobui, J. 1«157=\ 01' Tom and Jerry 007 1' Tom Jones 6072'= Thumb 6961= TomUns, F. G. 696S" Toitjuato Tasso 3175. 97 •Tourneur, Cyril 6979 To-ma and countrv 6974"' Towuley. J. I'OOO, 72= Toy-shop il!i56=' Trachiniae 8l'38 Tragedy, Greek, on the model of 0071^.^ of King Charles I. 10-19 lo.M Ti-app, Jos. 6070' Trevanion 0»;'OS=^ Trial of Foote for a libel on Peter Para- graph 1936 Trick to catch the old one 6963^ Tricks of the time 96S2 Trinnmmus 0952 Tiip to Calais 3105. 0904' to Sciirborondl 0!H;1= to tlie Jubilee 0970= Triumphs. Beaumont fi Fletcher o.lo Troades 28-1-8 Troilus and Cn>5sid.i, Pryden 6076- ■ Shakespeare 7007° p Plays and playwriters— codi. Troublesome reign o( K. John 6988 Troughton, E. Z. S. 69683, 9_ i8_ 24 True at last 6963=8 widow 6976", 7872 •Tuke, Sir S. 6976^ TuUey, J. H., composer 6974^! Tunbridge walks 6976™ Turnpike gate 6981* Twelfth night 7907= Twice killed! 6663,9326 Twin rivals 6960" Twins 6956== Two angry women of Abingdon 6829^ Figaros C9W gentlemen of Verona 6966^ 7907^ loves and a lite 697A 8694 misers 6961" noble kinsmen 634, 3086, 7906, 7:' » Sosias 69761 strings to your bow 6961^ Tyrannic love 6976W Udall, N. 211. 697#, 6978, 7974 Ulysses 696618,76^,7021 Unfortunate lovers 2268-9 Unhappy favourite 6976^ Uninformed girl (German drama) 138 Universal passion 6971^ Unnatiu"al brother 3045 combat 6929 Upholsterer 69641 Used up 9326 Usurper 6976'® Valentinian 6976 », 7012 Valli6re, Duchess de la 6662 •Vanbrugh, Sir J. 1828, 6976i, =, i°, i', =», »^, 6981, 9C81 Variety 6433 Vega, Lope de 5309, *8281 Venice preserved 6976=», 81 Very good wife 6976=' woman 6929 Vicar of Wakefield (burletta) 2394 Victorine 6986 Videna (legend ol early Britain) 6968i= Village coquettes 2465, 6986 lawyer Villain Villario Virgin martyi' 6929, 31 immask'd 0950», 61^ widow 8074 Virginia 695618, 71» Virginius 4914 Virtue betray'd 697e» Virtuoso 6976», 7872 Vittoria Corombona 6976=», 80 Volpone 696619, 78 *Voltaire 6972 Votary of wealth egei* Volunteers 6976=", 7872 'VTade, Thos. Waldeck (siege of Leyden) Walker, T. Walking statue 6976°, 7012 Wallace 6968' Wallenstein, Coleridge '6718 Glapthorne 3436 Schiller 7712 Walpole, Horace 69681= Wanderer 6978" Wapull.G. 1866» Ward, ± 8788* Wat Tyler, dram, poem 8268 Watch-house 6'-«i2' Waterloo in 1835 6908= Waterman 0961* Watson (composer) 6074' Waverley dramas 0;i71'' Wayof the World 1 913. (■.»7(j-»' to get married 0'.i.~w - ■ keep him 0907' '. 58= win her 6902= Ways and moans 6!i(;)' •Webster, J. 2304, 0070™, 86 Wedding day 6901= Wedding gown 4599 Weight of a crown eOW^ 6961* 3868 1272 69761^ 69721S, 6989 2304 3364 6653 6961* Plays and playwriters — coni. Welcome and farewell Werner West, E. West Indian West-ward hoe What d'ye call it have I done ? next? you will Wheel of fortune 6957i«, 72= When you see me you know me 7642 Whetstone, G. 6965 Which is the man ? 6961= White, B. H. * Eev. J. 6968", =, ^, White chateau devil 6980, 9334-6 milliner 69748 •Whitehead, 0. 6974' W. 6957", 71=, *, 8, 72=, » Whitsed, John 6968=? Whore of Babylon 2303 Who's the dupe i 69Gli who? 69731 Widow 69748 of Watling sti'eet 7961 Widow'd wife 69711^' Wife 6968^ for a month 534 Wife's stratagem 6974i» trial, dram, poem 6009, 29 Wightwick, G. 6968=8-* Wild gallant 6976™ -goose chase 634 oats 6957=* Wilhelm Tell, Schiller 684«, 7712, 23, 26 WiUiam Tell, Knowles 4916, 20 Williams. 0. H. 6968=^ Wilson, John 6976*. = Winter's tale 7907' Wit and science, moral play Wit 7974 in a constable 3438 of a woman 69768" Witch, the (dram, sketch) 6007 Witch-wife 6968", 8314 Witness 69621 Wits 2-270 Wives as they were, etc. ' 6957=8, 61= excuse 8248 Woman-captain 7872 hater 534 is a riddle 69768" kill'd with kindness 69S0 will have her wiU 3899 Woman's faith 697*8 love 9186 pride 634 will 6962* "wit 1€81,6968' Women beware women 6963= pleas'd 634 Women s conquest 69768" Wonder, the 6956* 67" of a kingdom 69638 Woodman 6961* Woods, — 6966=8 Word of honor 69621 Worlds idol (" Plutus " ) 248 World's slippery turns Worley, H. T. 6968W 6968= Wreck ashore 696818 Wright, Jas. 6978 ♦Wycherley, W. 6967, 76", 18, =0 Wynne, J. 9682 Xerxes 69768" Ximena 1681, 6966" Yeoman's daughter 69748 Yogi's daughter, the OrtiS= Yorkshire tragedy 7il01 •Young, B. 6956". 1", 071=, 71* Young lady from (he country (German drama) 138 the, plaj's for 7621 Younger brother 7022 Youthful queen C974' Zara G966i, 71i Zolmano 69768" Zenobia 6971ii 657 P Plays and playwriters— core*. Zingaro Zingis Zobeido Plea or protest, Pryniio Pleader's guide, poem •Pleading, courts Pleas of the crown. Hale C974» G971>? 897212 7209 19:i-i 6737 163 Pleasant memories ot pleasant lands, Sigoumey 8047 poesy of princely practice, 15IS Starhey 2674 Pleasure and pain Crowley 2674 Pleasures of memory 7489, etc. Plots, late, 1643 1597'" [Gates, &c.] 1678-83 5276, 7095S ", 7096 Romish rchgion 51761* Swedish and Jacobite, 1717 4512 against Wm. III. 4099^, 4511 Plough, God speed the Pierce 2674 Ploughers, sermon Latimer 211 Ploughmans creed Pierce 2674 Plumpton family, notices, coiT". Plumpton 1322 Plunder, prevention of, 1612 7188" Plunket, Lord, life 7000, 9452 Plurahty of worlds 3102, 9403 Plus ultra Glanvill 3133 Pluscarden, book of 7781 •Plutarch, in manner of 8303 Nile 4027 Plydell, Mr., speech, 1611 1697"6 Plymouth, books, &c. 1792, 6983^-*, 86 ; 8039 J. Young, Eikon Basilike 1683 Pneuma, or tho wandering soul, poem 1311 Pneumatics, 1851 5118, 5325 Pneumatology 6908 Poacher, fiction 5841 Poachers, Bavarian 7747 Pocket and stud 4073 book. Punch 7217 ♦Pooock, Dr. E., life 9055 Pococke, B., Greek literature 2V79 ]i., life 7636 Poemata, Lander 5076-7 •Poems before Congress 1037 Shakespeare library 7971 Poesy, English, art of Pattenham 211 beauties of 3511 help to, 1677 7060 essays in ' James I. 211 Poet, good, condition of, poem 7021 Poeta infamis, 1692 4099J Poetarum Anglicanomm thealrum C891 Poetesses, British 2658 •Poetic, Aristotle 251, 6 life, on, H. Taylor 8667-8 Poetiose praelectiones, Trapp 8940 Poetical blossoms, Cowley 2046 criticism, Bowles 873-4 decameron. Collier 1848 exercises, Cutts 2206 literature, Bnglish, Moir on 6182 Scrymgeouron 7810 meditations, Lamartine 4992, 5000 miscellanies 68291* early Wit & Science 7974 novels 7021 pieces, wits of Oxford 6989 rapsody Davison 1853 register, 1723 . 450S and religious harmonies, Lamartine 4992 review, on Garrick, etc. 3320 sea-piece 7814 tracts 6829«, 7030 Poetics, essay on poetry 2224 Poeticum cum musis colludium, 1G65 4113 •Poetry, ancient English, Percy 6826-8 apology for (or defence of) Sidney 211, 8043 art of, Horace 4235, etc., 4S30 Tida 6705™ British, extracts and essay 3113 for children, Burdon 1134 of creation 6090 and criticism 6636 early EngUsh (catalogue) , Corser 1639 Percy SocJ. 6829 popular, England 3960 timeofEdw. I. 6829' •Poetry— co?»<. English, discourse Webbe 211 essay on, Campbell 1341, 9 history, Ellis 2748 history, Warton 9297 selection. Trench 8951 epic. Homer to Milton 8937 ' 6 essay on, Mulgrave 7018 fleshly school 8582 of gardening 3306 Harris on 3875 influence of 7445-6 Jonson on 8043 lectures on, Campbell 1347 modem, advancement, etc. of, Dennis 2360-2 Newcastle repnnts 6435^i*i Pemberton on 6807 periodical criticism. Scott 7800 and poets, Britain 7810 British, Campbell 1341, 9 colloquies 5487 Ryan 7600 principles of, Bowles 873-4 of science 4421 Swift on 8677 taste, criticism, degeneracy, Dennis 2352-3 Temple on 8717 theories of, Masson 6934 what is ? 4397 Poet's blind man's bough WS''' (Otway) complaint of his muse 7026 day dreams, Andersen 164 pilgrimage 1849 Poets, America 3668, 4748-9 anecdotes etc. of 7600 Anglo-Latin, 12th cent. Poets 1663 and artists, Gt. Britain 3791-2 British, biog. notices and specimens 8908 Chaucer to Johnson 8265 Tennyson 7810 homes and haunts 4320 lives 4649 portraits, biographical etc. notes 7193 specimens etc., Campbell 1341, 9 works 953, 6706 Christmas with 1661 early English, EIUs 2748 English, lectures 2798,3941-2 lives, etc. 594, 45C6, 8, 4644, 8, 9576 names and characters (H. 3- EHz.) 6891 passages from (birds) 9699 selections, imagination and fancy 4397 wit and humour 4417 (later), specimens 8267 works. Bell 2796 English, dramatic, lives etc. 955, 5098-9 specimens 6026-7 of every age and nation 7600 female, America 3668 of Great Britain, select 3950 works 963 Greece (ancient) 117 (and dramatists), Ireland 5638 Italian, stories from, with lives 4412 laureate, lives 335 loves of 4551 memory of, sonnet 8i)27 minor, lives 594 works 6159-60 modern, 1660-1706 2552 in obscurity, Buchanan 1082 old. Christian year with 6610 Lowell on 6504 players etc., against Gosson 7974 pleasaimce 449S and poetry, Elizabeth and James I. 184s 19th century 577 Spain 4785 rural, Gilfillan on, 1846 3413 sacred, lives 9538 16th and 17th centuries Stanley 1639 the seasons (passages) 7033 sketches of, 1846 6810 658 Poets— COB*. Bpecimena of, Ryan 7eoO thoughts on. New Toi-k, 1846 9022 of the woods (sons birds) 9599 zoology of 6137 Points of war, Lushington 6584 •Poland, Anthony {? Shaftesbury), King of, will 7024 embassy to, 1676 1720 history 7036 John III., King of 6154 King of, speech to, 1677 7080 1766 4099' new constitution, 1791 1922 reformation in 4945 and scriptural doctrines 4945 Shaftesbury (?) as king of 7024, 7876 war, 1677 1606 Polar ba^in 4464 circle, 1848, Erman 2816 expeditious 225, 662-3, 3231, 9645 regions, Oaborn 6617 seas, voyage in, Bellot 601 Pole, Cardinal, dialogue with Lupset Starlcey 2674 letters 1854 Pole, North, voyage towards, Beechey 663 Police, Austrian 887 thoughts on 3870 Policy, elements of, Hobbes 4105 Polish princess, D'. "Wilmot's 8826 translation from 7342 Polite conversation. Swift 8629, 38 Politica opuscula, Xenophon 9687 •Political aphorisms, Bonaparte 828 1690 4099i ballads 6829', 9492 conferences 9067 economy, Bastiat 498 Burton 1208 De Quincey 2366 Jennings 4583 literature of 5643 logic ot 2367 Mill 6111 !Newmau 6442 Norway 4979 popular 3242-3 Jiuskin 7563 Senior 7837 Sismondi 8079 B. Stewart 8419 (Europe), Twiss 9065 essays. Alison 121 Curran 2193 W. J. Fox 3206 Greg 3636 Hazlitt 3961 C. Howard 4292 Masftres 6902 H. Rogers 7485-6 ethics 5332 exercises 8821 experience, ancients 8947 fallacies 627 fly-sheets. Tucker 9014 future, England 6214 history, England, G. Smith 8128 times of Milton's nephews 3471 index 3917 letters, Burke 1145 and pamphlets, W. Carpenter Mil literature, history of 7 111 •' lying," reply to, 1757 7691" memou-s, 1742-67 2641! miscellanies, Burke 1146 "RoUiatl" 7497 and moral dialogues 4431-2 novel, 1769 1448 philosophy, Brougham 991-3 progress of, D. Slcwart 8419 poems, Lushington 5531- and songs, E. 3 to R. 3 I'oems 1663 poetry, Switt 8529 portraits, AVhitty 016U "Political— co»<. principles, lectures on •Bei^ progress and democracy 5488 religious, and love poems Poems 2674 revolutions 4079 rights and obligations 2666 and satirical poems, Moore 6244 science. Brougham 995 Greg 3636 Humphreys 4373 sketches, Sheil 7993 songs, K. John to E. 2 Sotigs 1322 Morris 6306 system, Europe 4336 and colonies 3989 terras, use and abuse 5314 theories, rise etc. of 3987 tracts, Bohngbroke 804 Howard, L. 4297 Ireland 4467 Masferes 6902 Maynwaring 6586 Swift 8638 Towers 8921 Tucker 9018 writings, Lytton 6566 A. Sidney 7686 works, Fletcher 3080 (and historical) works, Milton 6163 Politicians, sketches of, 184fi 6810 •Politics, Aristotle 249-61 art of, poem 7015 Elliott (corn-law rhymer) 9315 German 8364 Hebrew 8456 moral views of 2386 observation and reasoning in 5315 Switzerland 3676 theory of 4079 Politique power, 1556 7038 PoliliCLues, lettres, Buveyrier 2662 Polity of reason 5001 Poll book, Manchester Chetham ilisc?, 1639 Poll-money, 1641 1597*=, " Ireland 4472" Pollio, C. Asinius, life '648 •Pollok, R., GimUan on 3413 Polo, Marco, life 7636 Polonia, ambassador of, 1623 4099" Polonius, wise saws, etc. 3062 Poison, A., law of nations 2778 Polwhelo, Theocritus, &c. 67065" Polychromatic paper, printed on 8246 Polychronicon Iligden 1663 Polygamy 2331 Polyglott bible 666 Polymetis, abridged 8889 Polynesia, 1849 9682 missionary to (Williams) 7203 Polynesian life 6033 mythology 3647 negro races 2818 *Pombal, Marquis of, life 6378 Pomfret, poems 953', 6706''^ Pompeian Court, Crystal Palace 2161 •Pompeii, Last days of 6557-60, 81 Pompey the little 962 Ponderable bodies 6847 Ponnet, J., politique power 7038 Ponsonby, Lord, corr"" with 6452 W""., printer 8310 Pontchartrain, correspondence 1467 Pontiflcum Anglorum, de ijestis William 1663 Pontus, researches, antiquities, geology 3826 •Poor, causes of disease amongst 6214 education 4781-2 employment of, 16T8 8937^' ' law a* It affects 6214 laws 6628, 6737 history of 6466 Loudon, 1851 6986 petition of, 1642 7188=« provision for, 1678 8937' ' Scotland 2690 si ate of, Eden 2690 lstS-9 961 Poor artist 4261 Jack 6842 man's pittance, ballad 411' ' traveller 2456 659 Popairilla, Disraeli 2477, 80-1 •Pope, A., Bolingbroke, letter to 806 Bowles, Byron, etc. 872-4, 1271 E. of Carlisle on 1878 character of 873-4 characters of women 7018 Gibber's letter to 1686-6, 1690 concordance to 6 conversation of, Spence 8301-2 cotemporaries of, poems 7075 Do Quincey on 2S65-6 Dilke on 2470 ed. by Elwin, Stephen on 8400 epistle to a^oung poet, concerning 7021 essay on cntioism 7013 man 7013, 18 (Joy 3366-«-7 historical rhapsody on 9066 Homer 96S»», 3326, 4099'', 4176, 7, 9, 80, 6706»»-«, 7021 G. Jacob 4507 letters Camden Misc. *, 1322, 8987' », 9276 life, etc. 341, 694, 1430, 2472, 7092, 7550, 9276 miscellanies 8629", 8673 etc. as a moralist, Stephen 8400 to the Earl of Oxford (pres°. copy) 7066 Pamell's poems 6738-9 poems 963», &!<>S^, '', 7010, 7019^ 7029, 8577 Bape of the Lock 3408, 6988, 7019^, 7022 Sainte-Beuve on 7651 preface, to Shakespeare, answer to 7438 and Swift, L. Hunt 4414 Thaokerayto 8759' '», 8764-6 universal prayer 7013 Warton on 9294^6 "Windsor Eorest 7010, 7019^ Pope, Sir T., life 9298 D'. "Walter, poems 7011, 29 Pope and Maguire, controversy 263 •Popery, apostate to, Spira 8322 beggars petition against 2277" British and foreign, 1861 6083 Chas. 2 and James 2 1427 and Christianity 7363, 7488 deliverances from 4610" in England, 1675 2277" history of, 1678, 9 7093, 7846i» increase of, 1681 7097 Ireland 1694«, 1597", 4472 and Laud 3782, 5163, 66, 68, 74, 76, 7206 laws 2196 Milton against 6157 Bp. Mountagu, 1625 6324 and paganism 4643 pedigree of 7024 spirit of, 1679 7097 tracts for and against Popery 1639 Latin 5141 Popes, Adrian Vf. 7266 Alexander VII. Bargrave 1322 Clement XI. 8382 Gregory Til. (Hildebrand) 8244 Gregory XV. 7776 history of 6133, 7281-4 Innocent VIII., Bull Camden Misc.\ 1322 Innocent XI, 8382 Leo X. 8189, 6378, 7515-16 Leo XI. 6616 mediaeval 1228 Paul V. 9004 Pius II. (Eneaa Silvius) Barclay 8313 VII. 6664 IX. 6216, 6490, 9061 Rome under 6106 Sixtus V. 8080 succession and characters 8493 supremacy 477 temporal authority 704(P Popish Courant, 1679 784613 views of the Euohanst 8676 French faction 617618 hierarchy, future ruin 8937' partv, 1647 plot 2277«, ', 4611", 6188", 7030, 48 Popish legends or Bible truths 8064 pretender, 1713 ,„ HiS priests 15901", 22777, 7048 o 16505. Popish— cowi. prince, danger of subjection to 4090'' recusants 6231, 7188'"', 8937' " successor. Settle 7048 danger of, 1714 7044 vicar generals, etc. 2038 Popkin, Eev. J . S ., life 2996 Popular cyclopaedia, natural science 2210 fallacies regarding general interests 499 history of England, Knight 4893 petitions, etc., 1680 7047' progress, English history 3163-4 rhymes 6884 tumults 9027 Population and capital 7410 subsistence 6489 trade. Prance, 1861 6868 over, and remedy, 1846 8866 I thriving, tests of 9060 Populo Auglicano, pro, Milton 6166 Porcelain 1481, 8574 Poroupinade, satire 4099°, 7690 Porphyry, Aristotle 263 •Person, Euripides 2851, 6, 61 (MS. notes) life, anecdotes etc. 449, 2656, 7099, 8879 Port Phillip, Lang 5097 Port UoyaUsts, Stephen on 8395-6 •Porter, Anna Maria, life 2766 G. E., Bastiat 499 Sir James, life, journals etc. 6128 Jane, Seaward 7108-9 Noah, Ueberweg 9072 ♦Porteus, Bp., poem on death 6705^ Portfolio, P. Tayler 8653 Portland, Earl of 4100 poem to, 1698 7018 Portrait of charity 8948 the Emperor (Napoleon) 3897-8 Portrait gallery. Crystal Palace, guide 2161 Dublin National, handbook . 2937 See. for diffusion of Useful Knowledge 7113 •Portraits {mentioned on title-pages) actors and actresses, catalogue 2240 American facts, 1845 7220 prose writers 8670 Americans, illustrious 142 ancient 7114 beauties of Chas. 2's Court 4642-3 British, Granger 3680-2 Miller, list 6122 Thorpe catalogue 8860 poets, notes 719S worthies 7111 Sir JnUus Caesar, etc. 5416-17 Queen Charlotte, etc. 9314 Ckrendon gallery 5321 Cromwell, house of 6609 Do Valles, Theatre d'honneur 9094 EngUsh 7111-14 Bliss catalogue 759 Parmer catalogue 2975 humourists 8769' 1= poets 4506, 8 extraordinary men 7688 foreign 7113-14 four Georges 8769' i" Prance, woman in, IS"" cent. 4728 French, De Valles 9094 the. Queen of 1221 Greece, 1740-1824 7126 half hours with the best authors 4887 Lord Houghton's monographs 4278 illustrious. Court of Henry VIII. 4132 Gt. Britain, Lodge 5419-20 India, princes and people 2689 Irish orators ^ , , 6886 Kings and Queens of England 4790 Kit-Cat club 4863 Lodge 6419-20 national, catalogues V76S-5 old England's worthies 7112 painters (by Worlidge, &c.) 7394 Queens of England 8478 Hastell's chronicles 7297 remarkable persons, 1688-1760 1465 Beresby, travels and memours 7366 U V 660 Portraits— CO -iit. royal and illustrious 8784 noble authors 02S1 Soottisb. Carlyle on ISSO' " Seward's anecdotes 7856 Sheridan and family 9313 Sterne 3069 "United Irishmen 572G Vanity Pair 9102 wits, 1721 6279 C. M. Toung (memoir) 9712 Portraits, literary, GilfiUan 8413 Portraiture, instruction in 6362 linear and mental 9617 Ports, Prance 8217 Portsea book 7545 Portsmouth 1541, IWI^^, 8957 ' ' •Portugal, books, etc., relating to, catalogue 643512 British army, 1808-14 6791 discoveries and history 4335 and Galioia, 1848 1413 handbook, 1856 6364 history 2626 and Ireland 4472'' minstrelsy 6436" misfortune of Churchyard 1853 notices on 64351^ poem on 6546 poets (early), lives 6220 Marquis de Pombal 7052 revolutions 9130 service of 5661 and Spain, 1833-40 2334 toiir, etc., 1817-47 6452, 5917, 7236 (Portingale) voyage to, 1689 18571^ war, 1807-14 7689 Portuguese, Africa 8637 ballads 6435i« discovery of Australia 3766 literature 4336 sonnets and their writers 648512 theatre 2391 Positive philosophy 1910 Possessions, quieting, 1660 7188"8 *Post-boy, 1717 4512= *Post-ofilce, Sunday labour 6737 telegraphs 8711 Posthumous memoirs, "Wraxall 9648 Postscripts, (llubbe on 1753 *Potter, T., pieces by 9585 Pottery and porcelain, Chelsea, catalogue 2240 history, illustrations, etc. 1491, 3574, 5346-7 Pottleton legacy, fiction 8115 *Potts, Thos., witches Fotts 1639 Poultry 2496, 2977 rates and prices 7188^, 3, s Poupar, M. , . , «5 Pourtales, L. P. de, echinoderms 8887 Poverty, prevention of, 1674 8937 ' ' Powel, Robert, puppet-show man 1187 *Powell, Baden ,^.,^ 2833 family of Mdton 1822 Eev. b.T., MS. (peerage) additions 1860 Rev. John, 1693 8937 "» T., Chaucer 1618 *Power, David, " small books " 8093 Power loom, Cartwright 7607 Power of love 6781 of soul over body 6237 wisdom, and goodness of God 4857 Powles Perulists, 1626 1590 •Poyntz, General, victory, 1615 1597'= Pozdambook " ,„?!'3 Pozzo di Borgo, notice of 1354-5 Practical christian, Sherlock 8017 wisdom 6798 Practice of divine love. Ken 4777-8 Praelectiones pocticae, Trapp 8940 Prague *9S1, 8426 Prairie, the, fiction 1958 1851 4766 Prairie bird, fiction 6356 Prairies, the, 1844, 60 4490, 4779 commerce of 3687 hunter in 6685 Praise of folly, Erasmus 2816 money Barnfield 1865"' Prance, Miles, 1679 704S Pranks and Jests, R. Goodfellow 6829^ •Pratt, R., Garrick 3320 S. J. Melmoih 6025-6 •Prayer, common, book of 664, 1697«, «, 1906, 6372, 7188" companion in verse 6223 compositions from 690 for domestic use 2222 Wheatly on 9394 See also " Liturgy." daily, directions for, 1690 7043 directions for. Ken 4778 and preaching, observing, 1644 7188*' Strafford 8468«i and thanksgiving, forms of, 1688-9 1672", 15 Vane 7347 Prayers, Johnson 4644 Laud 6149 MS. 4778 matron's life 1811 morning and evening, Melmoth 6027 regicides 7847, 68» Jer. Taylor 8679-80 for K. William and Q. Mary (Scotland) 7043 Preachers, non-ordained, 1646 67342" of the day, 1845 3413 Presbyterian 7839, 462» sketches of, 1846 6810 Precaution, fiction. Cooper 1959 Precedence, book of. Courtesy 2674 physicians and civilians 8562' 1 Precedency of kings 4303 patents of peerage 6482 Precepts, etc. for the ordering of life 1141 Predictions, Ennemoser 2801 for 1712 4099'» Prefaces, Johnson 4644 thoughts on 1763 Prelacy and church government, Milton 6154 Sions plea against, 1641 717 Prelates, outcry against, Pryrmo 61762 Prelatical episcopacy, Milton 6154 jurisdiction not divine, 1640 5175*, 7207 Prelude, the, poem 9630 Premature death and interment 3901 Premiers, English 2678 Prentices, London 6829^ Pre-Raphafilites, Germ 8380 Pre-Raphaelitism, Ruskin 7575 Prerogative, parliaments 6733^, ', 7272 Royal 126, 51882 Presbyter, moderate 1671 Presbyterial government, 1645 6734" Presbyterian, character of 1812 and congregational ministers, 1691 78445 covenant, 1702 40991' elders and government 1671, 6338 junto 5339 loyalty, 1706 4099= ministers executed, 1679 7097 ministers, Scotland 70401^ old, new high-church turned, 1709 plot, 1705 4099» preachers 7839, 4521' priestcraft, 1717 40991 queries, 1679 7358* unmask'd, poem, 1710 76911 Presbyterians, address to Jas. 2. 704011 not guilty of murder of Ch. I. 7043 petition by, verse 7024 remonstrance, 1661 1599" • and royalists, and Scottish army, 1648 7777 unmasked, 1679 7363* Presbyteries to ordain ministers, 1645 67341' Presbyters, bishop not to ordaiu without, 1660 1600 ordination by, 164<; 67342* Presbytery book, 1681-64 8471 " Presbytery examined," D. of Arg.yll 228 •Prescott, "W". H., view of residence, etc. 14*11 Present crisis, 1834, Lj'tton ■ 5661 " Pi'osent interest of Englaucl 8tated,".167a 7047* 661 Present time, 1860, Oarlyle 1395-6 President's daughters, liotion 913, 914 Presidents, U.S., addresses, &c. 9077 •Press, the, American 3169 (fourth estate) history of HiVi liberty of 2819, 4383 northern, early history 2696 Paris 418 and pulpit, Uberties of, 1680 7047* Presses, private 1028, 73 ; 8978-9, 643512, 7269 7474 etc., 8302, 9232 Prest, mysterionsness of Christianity 6212 Prestbury, Cheshire Benattd 1639 Prester John 6769 Prestwioh, M'. Langley and Rectors of Chet- ham Misc. ", 1639 •Pretender, the, 1702 4099b 1710 4099" (James the third) 4099* memoirs of, etc. 1712-13 6380 ("Perkin") 7024 young, life 4879-80 Pretenders and their adherents, lives 4623 Pretty eentleman, addii. to Garriok 8937 " ' lessons in verse for good children 1820 Previsions of Lady Evelyn, fiction B865 Prdville, iu6moires 6634 Prey, creatures of, Scotland 1895 Price, B., Norway 6B40 'Rev, John, memoirs 3692 Robert (Justice), life, -will 6383 Prices, hist, of, Tooke 8900 labour, provisions, etc., 1797 2690 provisions, etc., 1633 7188*-* Pricket, Tom, 1692 4099J Pride, Colonel 1599 ",5 Pride, essay on 1315 and lowliness, debate Thyrm 7974 and prejudice, fiction 330 Prideaux, Dean, letters Frideaux 1322 Priest miracles, Eome 6165 turn'd poet (Sacheverell sermon) 8937 ' '■' Priestcraft, danger of, 1702 4099'' history 4322 in perfection, 20*'' " Article " 8937 ' * Priesthood of letters 9108 •Priestley, D^ Martineau on 5889 Rachel Baker (P) 405 biography, chart of 7110 divinity, lectures 7110 Pi'iests, parish, instructions for Myrc 2674 women and families 6086 Prim, General, 1853 7332 Prime ministers and favourites, hist, of, 1763 7046 Primeval language 3133 " Primitive Christianity revived " 4099 Christians, manners and trials 4560 and Julian 4643 races, sketches of 8073 Primrose Hill, Sir E. B. Godfrey 8458 of London, 1685 295™ Prince, discourses to a 4620 English, instructions to 4520 the, Machiavelli 5667-8 poem on birth of, 1638 7018 Prince Arthur, poem 727 Hohenstiel-Schwangau, poem 1051 Mirabel 220, 705 'i of the fair family, tale 3797 Princely pelican 4026 Prince's cabala 4620 Princes, anciens et modemes 9094 confederate, 1695 4099" deposing of 4510* philosophers, etc., sayings 8651 and states against Lewis XIV. 4099*^ usurpations of, England 7047^ Princess, &c., Tennyson 8740, 48-50 Princesses of England, hves 3625 " Principia," ' the 998, 6457 Principia typographica, Sotheby 8247 Prinoipiis cogitandi, de. Gray 3613 Principles of human action 8936 nature 2283 Pringle, Sir John, life 5707 T., life, etc. 8942 Print- collector 5614 Printer, old, and modern press 489g Printers and printing 8887-4 stationers, and Star Chamber, 158, 1856-''' Printing, art of, lecture 5212 block 64361 Bradbury on 890 clubs 4363 dictionary 7703 history, etc. 8369 liberty of 7167 nature (ferns) 6256 origin of 6435', ', 8247 practical manual 8888 stereotype 64352 Prints, books on, catalogue 6614 catalogue. Farmer 2975 by Hogarth, catalogue 6469 knowledge of, prices, etc. 5614, 7394 Prinzenraub, the, Carlyle 1880 » " •Prior, M., life, letters, etc. 594, 705 " ', 9276, 9545 poems 953', 6160, 6705", ", 7010=, ', 7020,7,9 Thackeray on 8759 " ", 8764-5 Prison amusements, poem 6219 discipline 3028, 6578 Australasia 6032 felons in, 1725 8937 ' = Fleet, Lilbume 53371," life, etc. 1638 Pentonville 6737 reformer, Oglethorpe 9669 rhyme 1909 of Weltevreden 3396 -world, Europe 2503 Prisoners observation, 1646, verses 637S Prisons, 1844-8 6737 London and provincial 2505 model, Carlyle 1396-0 and prisoners, 1845 47 and stables in churches, 1643 1686 Privateer's-man, fiction 6843 Privateers, French, and English ships 2277* •Privy Council Conunittee, education 8031 orders Lancashire 1639 speech before, 1690 4099J councillors, choosing. Bacon 4520 purse expenses 6897, 6483-4 Prize essays, etc. Actonian 3200, 4681 Bulwer Lytton (mind and body) 3465 Burnett 9025 Fine arts' exhibition, 1851 9338 free trade 2619 Hulsean 4783, 8901 juvenile delinquency 4084 depravity 9639 Oxford, observations on 1802 6049 repeal 7864 Prize poems. Burns festival 2072 Latin (school) 64351'' Oxford and Cambridge 6662 Probabilities, theory of 7235 Probability, on 5325 Probationary odes 7497 Proceedings, Scobell 7770 Procession, the, poem, 1695, Steele 7020 Processionade, satire 4099", 7690 Proclaiming of William and Mary, 1689 - 7043 •Proclamations, 1639-60 1597=, 4436, 6716, 7040i'>, 7770,9; 8937'''=' Lord Mayor, 1633 7188=, = Scotland, 1639-89 2277", 70401=, 7043; 7779,8937'" •Procter, A. A. 124, 5182 B. "W., selections from Browning 1065 copies with autograph, etc. 636, 4128, Lunacy 6737 Cornwall (Barry) 1983-89 (N.B.— 1990 not by Procter but by Col. G. Proctor); 6134, 7900 Jonson 4693 presentation copy from Keats 4746 poems 6134 " ' 7E00 UU 2 662 Proctor, Col. G., " Eavclin " 1990 Proctor or Procter, Thomaa 1833, 1865 ' ' Prodigies 7663 ancient 0998 Prodigy, a, tale of music 1656 Productive forces of modern society 4888 Profaueness and immorality, laws 8937 ^ ^° Professional education 2695 Professions, industrial, and education- 841 Professor, the, fiction 583 Professor's wife, fiction 317 Prognostication, Charles I. 6346 "PoorEobin" 7064 Progress of a painter, 19"" century 1183 the intellect f.676 nation 7101 philosophy of 8089 Prop'ession by antagonism 6352 Projection, theory of 5326 Projectors downfall. Laud 5176'* •Prologues 7023-4 Prolusiones aoademicafi, Strada 8469 historicae, Duke 2603 Prometheus, poem. Swift 8540 unbound, compositions from 6773 Promise of sanctincation, verses, C. "Wesley 7845' Promotion in church and state, 1694, poem 7018 Promptorium parvulorum I'romptormm 1322 Promptuary of time 9089 Pronouncing vocabulary JSllis 2674 Pronunciation, American, of English JUllis 2674 Anglo Saxon Ellis 2674 Chaucer, Gower, etc. 1624, Mlis 2674 English 647 ; Mlis 1624 ; MU's 2674 Icelandic, Norse, Gothic UlUs 2674 Irish, of English Ellis 2874 Shakespeare Ellis 1624, JElIis 2674 Pronuntiatio erudita 4900 •Propertius Valpy 9096 Property law, handbook 7641 private, inquiry respecting 6906 Prophecy, Lady E. Audeley 295i' Priar Bacon 682915 concerning England and Europe 5346 Prench emperorship 2938 P. Grebnerus 6346 ; Wither 8313 Isaiah, Strachey 8466 and prophetic literature Thomas 2674 Scottish JBernardus 2674 interpretation of 283 Scripture 3584 Mother Shipton 295«, 8022 Old Sybilla 6444 symbolical 3135 "Wales 296» Prophetic studies 2169 Prophets and kings. Old Testament, Maurice 6958 Propitiation, the, extent of 6280 Proprietors, peasant 4732, 8857 'Prose from the south, Eeade 7333 and verse, M. Lemon 6247 D. Masson 6934 (selection for reading) 4909 writers, America, selections 8819 Enghsh, selections 2797, 8319 German, selections 3382 Prose 6 versi, Pepoli 6819 Prosecutions, abuses of informers, 1635 7188i» Ireland, 1845 4409 Proserpine, search after, poem 2876 Prosopographia, A. Thevet 7003 Prostitulion, lectures, "Wardlaw 9272 Protector and protectorate (Cromwell) 313, 1699" 5,4622,9651 Proteleia, Anglo-Batava, 1641, Oxon. 6669 Protestant doctrine, 1624 6321 household, intrigues in 5527 mask taken oil, 1693 4099' nonconformists, history 6402 plaiu-meaning 2088' Protestant— '' Sir T. S., life 6376 Raft, " Medusa " shipwreck 7704 Ragged schools 8093 Raglan Castle (and view) 1596", 7^1 lid., Martineau on 6876 ♦Ragusa, history of 9496 Rahab, history of '■Raikes, R., Gflocester 1468 9018 Raillerie a la mode, 1663 7264 Railway aiioidents, 1855 6737 clearing-house 3970 compensation, 1863 6308 economy, 1850 5120 „ ., English, history 3222 Railways, Adams, 1862 36 England and Wales 3801, 6243 Lardner 6121 London and North-western, Head .• , ,. 8970 practical results, 1860 5120 United Kingdom, Continent, America, .„ 1850 6120 Raines, Rev. Canon, Vicars of Rochdale 1 640 Rajahs, Jummoo 8181 *Raleigh, Sir W., and Bacon 6387 confession and execution 9581 farewell to his lady 296^ good speed to Virginia (?) 1866 •> " Gu'ana Ralegh 3756 and Hume 9070 instructions to his son, etc. 9248 life 1475, 7636, 8833, 9070, 9538 manual of life 5798 prerogative of parliaments 67335 " Revenge " Revenge 211 ,ti'ial 5948, 6885 last voyage Camden Misc. 5, 1322 Ralph of Coggeshall Ralph 1663 John, poets-laureate 335 Ralph the heir, fiction 8981 Ram, R., letter to Oroylaud, 1643 8937 •• ^ Rambler, Johnson 950, 4644, 51 Rambles beyond railways (Cornwall) 1884 by rivers, Thome 8860-2 Bamkins, Major A., life 6886 Ramnugger, battle 8752 ■•Eamsay, A„ death of Addison 70192 G., repeal essay 7864 Bamus Olivae (Civil war tract, for peace) 1599 » = Ranches, California^ 1851 4766 •Bandolph (poet) hfe 594 Banelagh (Renelaugh), Earl of, life, 1714 6380 Banke, Leopold von, Macaulay 5631 various works 7280 etc. Banks, the, life in 8691 Rape of the lock 6988, 7019 ' =, 22, 76-7 *Raphael, Lamartine go02 *Bapin, on his hist, of Q. Eliz. 8937 " ^ Rapport sur les questions coloniales 1894 Rare physic for the church isTis J^5?^ -^ , „ 952,4644.50 *Rathbone, Hannah M. 7331 Ratio oonstitutffl nuper reipublioffi, 1654 1699 ' s. Rational creation, the ggg Rationale of reward 625 Rationalism, Europe 5208 Ratios, measures of 6^50 ■Ratis raving Ratisimi Ratsey, thief, life and death, 1606 1855 » s Rattlin the Reefer, novel gm Raut Coilyear Charlemagne 2674 Ravelin, Humphrey, G. Proctor 1990 Bflvenscrott, notice of 2626 Bavenswing, tale 8769 ^ i^ ■►Bawdon, Mai-madulie, life Rawdon 1322 Bawley, 'William Bacon 361, 72 Rawlinson, G. and Sir H., Herodotus 4030 Richard, will, etc. C661 Sir Robert, lunatic asylums 6530 Rawson, J., poem, 1695 7020 *Bay, proverbs 793 R 665 R Bayden, Colopel, defeat, 1644 *Bead and wdnder. Laud •fieade, 0., FrisweU on 1697" 6168 8260 Eeader, here you'l plainly see, etc., Heywood 4070 Header, the, Steele 8335 •Beading, Abbey, legend 665B articles, 1643 7188™ book 3028 gaol 3028 Hoarne's journey to 9207 monastic coins 6435^ 16«r 2963^ Beading, art of, Knowles 490B, 9 English, course of 7221 for a gentleman, Locke B397 lessons in, Cobbett 1768 light, Mangiu 5772 results of 1296 Beadings for railways 4408 Eeal and ideal (tra.vel), 1840 8941 Eeasou and faith, H. Sogers 7487 natural, use of 8321 and unity of the human races 8184 Beasonableuess of Christianity, Locke 5396 Beasoning, art of 3405 easy lessons 9388-9 hints on 4164 primary principles 4812 theory of 389 Beasons academie, 1605 6910 Eeay (Bay), Martha 4099' Rebecca and Bowena 8769 » ", 60, 76 Bebmann, Eev. J., Africa 1941 Eebellion, a, character of 1637 Cade's 6610 discourse on 8937 ' ° Great, 1641 etc. 266-70, 1651, Claren- don 1712 etc. ; 4293, 6414, 6682-3, 7683 church and clergy 9208, 9675 in all its colours, 1681 7047'° Irish, 1641 4472, 8714 1798 6449. 6970, 8707 1715, 46 292, 1603, LancasUre 1639, 3025, 4610, 4879-80, 7010, 7047', 9411 Bebels, 1643 7188", ", s' at Westminster, 1648 7248 1688 8937 • '' Bebuses 2800 B^camier, Madame B609 Becantation, Laud 5170 Lilbume 6338 Beceipt for subscription. Pope's Homer 3325 Eeceipts, tax on, 1783 8937 ' = Beoollections of a chaperon 2217 S. Bogers 7494 Eeoord office, papers in 1298, etc. Kecord offices and commission 0487 Eeoorder, Londons new, 1647 7188'™ speeches, 1641, 4 1571, 5447 Eecords, public, handbook 881S pari? papers, 1800, 40-72 6737 reports 7615-17 secret, studies on 2366^ Becreations of a country parson 875 Christopher North 9661 Reculver, Kent 8121 Beeusants houses, 1641-2 1597", 1699' s money for Scottish war, 1639 8937 ' ^ Bed cotton night-cap country 1052 men, Canada 4666 Bover, fiction 1960 sea, 1802-6 9092 *Bedding, Cyrus, Lancashire 5033 Bede, Leman, heads of the people 6009 Bede me and be not wroth Soy 211 Bedgrave, E., Goldsmith 3507 •Samuel 7762-5, 7 Eedingstone, John, plain English, 1649 1599 » = Eedman, Boberfc Henry Y. 1663 •Beed, A., monument to 6435'^ Isaac, biographia dramatica 404 copies, with MS. notes etc. 1866, 8601, 8918 Shakespeare im,n Beedwater minstrel, lay of 6435'° •Iteeve, Clara, Old English Baron 952 ' ^ Beove, — , notice of 594 •Reeves, Justice Idlburne 6337 ' '■ Reflections on ancient and modern learning 9643 death 2519 the present state of the nation, Bolmgbroke 806 Eeform Bill, 1832, history 1932, 6188, 7473 dream of 3131 parliamentary, corresponding society 3384 speeches 2648, 5636 Itahan, 1851 2238 Reform schoolmaster, the •igsi'^ Reformation, church, 1660 1672'^ England, history etc. 312, 314, 1176, 6687, 6154, 6584, 8197, 8379, 8481 narratives Reformation 1322 pamphlets 2275 political histoiy 9047 tale of 3645 vindication of 8895 Europe 1358, 3987, 7525 Erance 2985, 6853 Germany 444, 6139, 7285-6 19th century 1280 Poland 4945 Scotland 6584 Beformation of manners, soc. for 8937 » '" ivicked rebellion Churchyard 1855 ' - Beformatory schools 1420 Beformed bible 670 cathohque, or, true protestant 7095° churches, letter to 2038*. = papist, character 1537 Beforms, Greeley 3624 and refonners, 1849 8364 Befugees, Erench protestant 9340 Begal tyranny, W". I. to Ch. I. Lilbume 5337 ' = Begency, court of England diu-ing 1092 Regeneration, poem 6861 Beggius, Honorius, ecclesia Britanniea 1585 •Begicides, lives, trials, execution etc. 501-2, 1546, 75 ; 3882, 6508, 853, 885 ; 7363 Eegii sanguinis [Charles I.] clamor 1585 Regimen, invalids Regiments, the five, 1647 in Scotland, 1648 Reginald Hastings, tale, 164- Begister-oifice, Holborn Bars Registers, Northern Priory of the Virgin Stationers' Co. Registries for conveyances, Ireland Registrar general, 1848, 66 Registration, title and land Begnier, letter to. Sand Benearsal, a new, Gildon Beid, G. W., Dyce catalogue Reign of terror, Lytton Eeigning vice, the, satire, 1827 Iteimchronik von Plandern Reimes, Philippe de, trouvere Reines d'Angleterre, CeUiez *B«iecfced addresses cartoons ^ comedies, A Beckett Belation, ideas of. Buskin Belation of a conference. Laud Belies, Blessington catalogue Eeligio laici, Dryden J. B. 724fi medioi 1023, 6 ♦Religion, account of, by reason 8494 analogy of 1234 of the Bible 710 Boodh 7173 D. of Buckingham, 1685 8937 ' " discourse of 6708 doctrine of 3018 Egypt (ancient) 9498 England, 1688, Jesuit account 7040^ 1715 8382 4922 1695« 1599 ' 1 9256 1538 Northern 1663 Worcester 1322 Stationers 1W14i 4472'° 6737 2711 7668 3408 7767 5661 8932 4727 Reimes 1322 1478 8139-41 1436 18 7571 6176, 7207 1461 R 666 B *Eeligion-^eo»<. „„„ essay on 769 and government, dialogue, 1680 1672^ of the heart UX)d history of 28M Hobbes 4105 and incredulity 3107 Indians 74fi5 inquiry oonoerning 6456 and insanity 9474 Irish 6638 Italian, 1849 9039 letters of, 1720-2 78441" Levant, etc., 1727 8917 and metaphysical and ethical science ,868 modem, and loyalty, ancient 7(124 modem societies 3718 natural (sermons) 8188 natural and revealed 3107 and the people 5104 philosophy of 3870 promotion of, 1688 8937 ' ^ by mechanics 8937 ' '■ reformation in, 1648 673435 revealed 310 Home 5955, 7680-1 speeches, Deering 2308 and superstition, London 6745 thoughts on, Beveridge 656 Pascal 6760-1 true, Milton 6164,7 unsettleness in. Laud 6149 western world, 1629 7680-1 Eeligions, ancient 3830-1 *EeliKiou3 development, (ireeka and Hebrews 6676 equality 3208 essays, etc., C. Howard 4292 history, Slavonic nations 4946-7 houses Weever 9339 France, 1855 1262 hypocrisy, sermons 9517 ideas, the 3210 information, 1848-9 961 intolerance and Scripture 9018 liberty, dangers to 1122 life in England 2831 of England 8665 imjjortance of 6027 middle ages and renaissance 4969 and moral reflections 4324 opinion, hist, of 9111 opinions, Townsliend 8936 Yeritasians 9124 orders, 'Weever 9339 persecution 1671^ pieces, early Meligious 2674 poems, early Foems 2674 13th cent. Miscellany 2674 profession 8687 reliques, the Savoy 7024 thought, present tendency, 1861 6211 tracts, Howard 4297 Beliques of ancient Enghsh poetry, Percy Ileliquiae Oarolinae ■VTottonianae 1543 9641-2 146B 6642,5 Bemarkable persons, 1688-1760 Eemedy of love Hemembrancer of excellent men 455 Eeminisoences, 0. Butler 1230 Dibdin 2398 from 1781, Sinclair 8066 Kemonstranoe (a), or the declaration of Parlia- ment, 1642 1693' army, 1649 1699 • » of citizens, Lilburne 6337 ^ ' citizens of Edinburgh, 1648 2699 London, 1643 6448 Commons, 1610 51882 shee-citizens of London 6446 state of the Kingdom, 1641 1699 ' = Eemonstrances to parliament, Lilburne 6337 ' ' Remorse of conscience Michel 2674 Orestes 6604 K«naissanoe, arts 4858, 4968, etc, court. Crystal Palace 2161 manners, customs, dress 4868 military and religious life 4869 remains 2957 Benaud, frank, hist, of Prestbury Beaaud 1639 •Bennie, James, birds 6207 ■Rentals and rentrolls ChetUam Misc. *, ^ ; Lancashire ; Moore ; Warrington 1639 Rents, raising, 167S 8937 ' i Beperfcorium bibliographicum, Clarke 1733 Bepresentation of the people 5960 Eepresentative govemmeni;, Europe 3715 men 2774 Eepressor of blaming of the clergy PeeoeJc 1663 Reptiles 2207, 6916 RepubKc, constitution, 1664 1599 ' = Dutch, rise 6314 England, and Cromwell, Guizot 8698 Plato 6946 Roman, Michelet 6084 fall of, Merivale 6056 revolutions 9129 Eepublioan France, 1790-1801 6127 government 5422 Republicanism, Italy 6005 Republicans and anti-republicans 3255 levellers, 1796 8921 Republics, ancient 6205 Bequest and suit of a true-hearted Englishman, 1553 Camden Misc. «, 1322 ♦Beresby, Sir John, Guizot 3692 Rerum, de nature, Lucretius 9096 Resolutions, Soobell 7770 Resolving of conscieiioe (Chas. I.), Feme 8006 RespubUoa Anglioana, "Wither 8313 Rest in the church 3872 Restitution of all things, 1850 6376 Bestauration, the, verses, city of London 7024 'Restoration, Charles II. Clarendon 1712 etc. ; 3819 comic dramatists, Macaulay 5632 literature, Masson 6934 transactions to, Stace 8330 Restoration of belief, I. Taylor 679 Restraint of the insane, mechanical 4088 Resuscitatio, Bacon 372 Retail of liquors, prevention 8937 ' = Retaliation, poem 8524-5 Retirement and study, use of 809 Retreat of the Ten Thousand 9688-9 Returns of spiritual comfort and grief 2621 Betz, Cardinal De, Ufe 6378 Reuben Medlicott, fiction 7700 Reuchlin, John, life 444 Reunion, trip to 6315 Revelation, facts, &o. in 7369 and heathen writers 8901 Revelation, book of, c. xi., sermon on 9613 Revelation, divine, Henley 4010 Revelation to the monk of Evesham Bevelation 211 Revelations from the Foreign Office 9476 Revelations historiques, Blanc 741 Revels, court, accounts of Cunningham 7971 " Revenge," last flght Mevenge 211 Revenue abuses, 1640 7188»3 Athens 2260 commissioners, Ireland, 1686-8 2649 P. of Orange's declaration, 1689 ,8937 ' " payments, H. 3-H. 6 2381-2 James I. 2332 Romans 7604 Revenues, England, public 2260 royal, 1500 Ungland 1322 France. 1692 70 47"^ woods, forests, land 6737 Reveries 6296 Review, the 1689, verses 7021 Reviewer [MacaulayJ evenings with, Spedding 8296 Reviewers, Critical, etc., word to 8320 Reviewing, Copleston on 211B Reviews, Goldsmith 8199 Johnson 4644 Whately . 9390 (5«e also "Periodicals.") Revival, the, i860 9605 K 667 R Revolt of the Bees (by J. M. Morgan) 6906 Netherlands, Schiller 7711-12 Eevolter, trage-comedy, 1687 4099s Revolution, America, history, Bancroft 423 lectures 6210, 8188 orators 6733 Stanhope 8288 war 8049 women of 2733 Austria, 1848 2058 causes and forms 7637 Colombia 4160 Denmark, 1772 4768 England, 1640, Coleman 1786 Dahlmann 2219 Guizot 3692, S696, etc., 3707, 10, 14 ISee also "Charles I.," " Cromwell.") Bngland, for the re-establishment of Popery, Carrel 1428-7 England 1688, Burton 1210 Chaslcs 1605 Clarendon 1720 Coad 1765 " Crisis " 7044 Sahlmann 2219 BUis 2549 Guizot 3692, 3707 historical tracts 4099'! Jacobite tracts 4511 Mackintosh 6688 tale 8131 to death of Geo. 2 8179 vindication of 8142 1688, period subsequent to, tracts 4099 and anti-revolution principles, England, 1714 7163 France, 1789, etc., Bassano 8243 Carlyle 1380, 88-90 causes of 8893 Coleman 1785 Oroker 2118 defence of 5690-1 English friends 8354 Girondists 4998 heroic women 4995 Jobson (history) 4627 i'ournal 2744 Jamartine 4995-6, 8 lectures 8187 Mac farlane 6662 Mallet du Pan 6755 Michelet 6083 Mignet (to 1814) 6101 parly, hist., Carlyle 1380' » precursors of 6059, 8893 reflections on, Burke 1145,7 Stanhope 8348, 54 tales of 6854 Thiers 8801-2 1848, Caussidiere 1470 Lamartine 4997, 5003 St. John 7639 next French, Thackeray 8759' '' Hungary, 1848-9 8426 Italian, 1861 8994 Naples, 1806 &391 Servia 7287-8 (See also " Revolutions.") Revolution in the human race, Owen 6661 Revolutionary epic 2479 Revolutionists, tale 3199 Er^volutionnaires, types 6865 Revolutions, Caussidiere, 1848 1470 Chateaubriand 1608, H England 4312, 7295 English and French, comparison « 6435" France 689, 5467, 7339 of government, 1648 293 Howell, 1661 4312 Hungaiy 7604 Revolutions— ooMi. insurrections, &o., Europe 8706 Naples, 1660 3421 Paris 6702 ?olitical, Hildreth 4079 'ortugal 9130 Roman republic 9129 Sweden 9130 Revolutions, surface of the globe 2208 Reward, rationale of 825 and punishment, divine institution 4364 Rewards and punishments 7045 •Reynard the Fox 6829" •Reynolds, B'. John, life 455 J. U., odes and addresses 4193 Sir J., life, etc. 6269, 6626-7, 7584, 8160 Rhapsody, 1750 7013 Rhetoric, Aristotle 265-6 elements, Neil 6417 Hobbes 410S Rhetorical dissertations. Brougham 980 invention, etc., Cicero 1699 Rhetoricians (ancient) celebrated 6998 Rhine, the, 1840-1, 1852 787, 5452 agriculture and manufactures 426-7 excursions, Hugo 4342 Falkenburg 761 handbook, 1862 6364 legend of 8759' '« and low cotmtries, legends 3600 middle 7812 panorama 6779 pilgrims of 6667-60 rural and manufacturing 426-7 scenery, legends, etc. 4384 Rboan, France, letter from, 1641 7433 •Rhodes, Hugh, book of nurture Satees 2674 Rhodian eloquence 448 Rhododendrons 8340 Rhone, the. Reach 7,313 Rhyme book 2752 Rhymed plea for tolerance 4802 Rhymes, Thompson 8819 from Cornwall 8436 nursery and popular 6883-4 popular, Scotland 1608 on the road, Moore 6244 and recollections. Thorn 8810-11 Rhyming chronicle, 1860 8885 English dictionary Levins 2674 Rhythming monosyllables 7060 Ribeyra, life 6220 Ribbonman, the, novel 1373 jsdcci, Scipio do, Bp. of Pistoia, life 7123 •Rich, Bamaby, honesty, etc, 6829U novels, etc. Biche, 7974 Penelope, Lady, life 2002 Lt.-Gen. Sir B., " Junius " 340 Rich and great, ways of 8666 Richard I., life, reign, etc. 638 i Biehardl. 1663 ; Crusades 2160, 4531-2 11. and city of London Maydiston 1322 poem on deposition Maydiston 1322 reign of English 1322, 4790 III., ghost of, poem Richard 7974 life, reign, etc. Vergil 1322 ; Bichard 1663 ; 3812, 4790 poem 904,9 usurper 9179 III., D. of Normandy 6678 le-bon, D. of Normandy 6678 sans-peur, D. of Normandy 6678 Canon, London Biehard 1. 1663 of Cirencester Bichard of C. 1663 • . 1664: (f forgery) of Devjzes Crusades 2160 theredeles Langland2S7i Richard Savage, romance 9439 •Richardson, Sir J., Martineau on 6876 M.A. Walker 9205 ' S., Chasles on ipos " Grandison," on 8937^ s Jeffrey on 4579 novels 962 Pamela in high life 6691 Pamela's letters 4099' Stephen on 8400 W"., ode 643511' R 670 B *Eome— «()»<■ stations of Stations 2674 test, establisliea, as against, 1679 736312 and its vicissitudes 945S •Eomer, Jonathan, autobioRraphy 6002 *B,omilly, life 7510 Eomisli church, secret articles 7775^ corporation dangerous, 1856 661 corruptions, 1395 7219 doctrines, Wiseman & Palmer 9584i infallibility, Tenison 7095" party, &o., 1689 8937 ' " plots, Qu. Bliz. to 1642, Laud 5X76 rituals and church liturgy 5372 Sisera, 1649, Eioraft 74,12 Eomney, H. Sidney, B. of, diary 8041 B,omoaldus, Mary Qu. of Soots 4674 ' ^ Bomola, fiction 2724 Eomsey book 6487 Eonconi, notice of 7226 Rood, Edward, Abingdon 6177° HK}oke, John, life 6485 Eookeries, London 623 Eookwood, novel 93-4 Eoostam, life 4999 Eory O'More, national romance 6497 Eosa, Salvator, life 6269-70 Eosamund Gray, Lamb 6007-9, 23 Eosas, Governor 4823 Eosoiad, Churchill 1673, etc. Eoscius Anglicanus, 1708 2552 Toung (Master Betty) 4600 'Eoscoe, "W., life 1787-8, 7609 Pope 7067 Pope and Bowles 873-4 *Eosoommon, Earl of, poems, 953", 6169-60, e705«, 7011-12 *Eose, John, English vineyard 2891 Eose and the ring , 8759 '", 8777 Rose Tavern, 1697-8 7011 Eosebud the sleeping beauty 4166 Eosetum geometricum, Hobbes 4106 Eosny, Marquesse of, 1623 4099' *Eoss, A., & Captain 7691', » John (or Dix) 6810 Eoss, account of 3183 Eosse, Lord, telescopes, De Quincey 2365* 'Rossetti, D. G.. illustration 181 W. M. Courtem 2674 Eossettis, the Qerm S380 Eossiter, Colonel 1693i= Rota, the, censure on Milton, 1660 1699 ' * Eotatory theory, storms 5870 Eotheram, John, M.D. 643613 E/Othstein, etc., movement cure 7629 Eotterdam, letters from, 1642 13972" Hugh Peters 6862 Eoubiliac, J. T. Smith 8160 Rouen, siege of, 1691 Camden Misc. i, 1322 Eoumania, songs and legends 6857 Eound Table (essays), Hazlitt 3952 Towers. Ireland 6666, 6857 EouBdabout Papers 8759 ' » 'Soundhead, character of 7631 Eoundheads 1594', 6176'=, 7061, 7631, 8937 ' » Eons, Pras., Thule Sous 8S1S Eev. John, diary Bous 1322 Eouse, John, execution 2277** *EouS8eau, life of 1626, 7633, 7997 J. Morley ou 6299 on suicide 4871 writings and character 8338 Eouth, E. J. Brougham 998 Martin Joseph, Burnet 1174 Ronton Heath, Chester, 1645 169723 " Roving Englishman " 6358-61 Rowe, M". B., poems 7028 N., Fair Penitent, prologue for 7023 lash for the laureat 4099" lite 335 Luoan 963ia, 6705«»-'i> on his plays 3408 poems 963', 6705, 7010, 29 Sir Thomas («ee"Eoe"), •Rowland, Duke Charlemagne 2674 Rowlands, S. four knaves 6829" humors looking glasse Row- lands 1867 6213, 8160 2749-51 7295 9230-1 1601 6339 2883 7784-6 433 9.343 9343 7458 9479 4099! Rowley (poems) controversy 1618, S6S9 {See also " Chattertou ".) ♦Eowley, W., life 2626 works 4072, 6929"*, 6829" •Roxburghe ballads 4113-8, 1338 club and books 760, 2664, 6969, 8023, 9081, 9640 Duke of, copies 248, 1629-30 Eoxby, E., verses 64851'', " Roy, W., Rede me Hoy 211 *E«yal Academy, commission 6737 lectures 487, 3287-8, 4294, „ ,. 7378 pictures, Euskm 7576-6 African 705» * descents 1161, 3261, 6454 exchange Chesham 3644 building of, Heywood 4066 family. Prance, 1808 3367 Geo. 3., anecdotes 2329 6t. Britain, genealogy 3363 favourite clear'd 45101 household, Edw. 3.— W". and Mary 8208 institution, lectures letters mandates and noble authors oak, Charles II. oak of Britain (plate) party, apology for, 1659 Scottish Academy Society, Banks Davy history presidents, lives Society of literature supremacy, argument for, 1861 subscription to,' 1854 Royalist party, 1659 EoyaUsts, Church of England, 1695 and Commonwealth, Pellowes 2988 defence, Chas. I. and the war 1688 and psalm, 106. 1699' * Royalty and republicanism, Italy 6005 satyr ou Marlborough 6816 Royston, Lord, Carleton 1371 Rubens, life, etc. 7614, 9180 Rubrucims, W". de (Ruysbroeok), life 7636 Suckert, translation 7342 Euddiman, life, etc. 1496 *Budyerd or Eudyard, Sir B., poems 6809, 7649 speeches 1596^, 159739^ 96^ 99^ 125^ 7549 Euflnus Marlborough 6817* Engby, Arnold 8369 book by a " Eugbaean " 9079 books 284, 9210 school sermons 280, 1 Euhl, J. P., knighthood 4902 Ruins of time Amos 153 Rumbald, Col., dying speech, 1689 7095' RumeUa, Russians in, 1828-9 6195 Euminator (essays, etc.) 1072, 7 Eundall, T., narratives of voyages Bundall 3766 Rundle, Bishop, letters 644 *Rupert, Prince, and cavaliers, memoirs 9255 declaration 673423 etching by 2906 and Fairfax (Bristol) 16972= letters 970, 6734', 9265 marching to Oxford 16972* and Maurice, declaration 678423 and Meldrum 1597" mezzotinto 2906 sermon before his army 8695 war with Holland, 1666 2583 (Robert), 'Worcester 159732 Eupert's Land, boat-voyage 7393 Eural affairs, Doyle 2564 economy. Prance, Belgium, Holland, and Switzerland 1892 R 671 R Sxaai—conf. and historical gleanings, eastern Europe 716 letters, &o., Willis 96S2 poems, Dorset 462 Bichardson 7404 poets, 1845, GilBllan 3413 rides, Cobtoett 1763 sports, Blaine 736 Gay .7010 •Rusliworth, Jolin, Stratford 8462 * Euskin, facsimi le of part of letter 6536 Friswell on 3260 •Eussell, Lady Caroline, ded". to 7845" house of, memoirs 9473 John, hook of nurture Bdbees 2674 Bp. of Lincoln, speeches Ed- ward Y. 1322 Lord John (aft. Barl Eussell) 687, 946, 8 ; 6265, 9108 ministry, colonial policy 8648 Eaohel, Lady, life, etc. 2002,3717 D'. Eichard Gr-ui Street 3681 Thomas, poems 6705*" ■William, Lord 2277'^-', ", ', 6885, 7095^ 7680, 1, 6 ; 8921 •Eussia, Alexander, emperor 6220 America (N-M^) 9644 Black Sea and Sea of Azof 6692, 7870 campaign of 1812 1739, 7106 captivity in, 1794-6 6499 1856 4986 Catherine II. 2269 church 6326 Czar 861, 4978, 6965, 9192 De Custine, 1839 2202-4 domestic scenes, 1856 9117 earliest ace', of Herherstein 3766 Emperors of, 1854 6220 andT^Bngland, 1864 6265, 7262 history of 692, 4763, 7260 Horsey, Sir Jerome, travels Eussia 3786 and India, countries between SOU invasion by Napoleon 4959 ioumey to. Van Halen 3762 Keiv in 1861, hist, romance 9165 Kohl, 1842 4935 life in, 1848 8816 London to Odessa, 1833 6242 Muscovite empire (see also "Mos- covia," " Muscovia, etc.) 4S78 new, 1833 , 6242 Nicholas, emperor and family 3637 4012-13,6220,5876,9063 notes on, 1866 7992 and Peter the Great, Voltaire 9170 productive forces, 1866-6 8710 progress of, 1863 ,„,§"?? revelations of, 1844 ^^^t and revolution, 1864 6083 " Eusse Common "Wealth" lUissm 3766 and the Eussians, Kohl 4936 St. Petersburg and Moscow, 1846 861 sixteenth century S/ussm 8756 sport 7631 travels in southern, 1837 „ „, 2336 and Turkey, 1854 8536, 5645 under Nicholas I. 3637 young, 1850 8|11 visit to, 1862 623,i Eussian army. 1813 861.5966,7m emperor, corr". with, Bentham 623 empire, Haxthausen 3913 travels, Stephens 8942 historical romance 9165 account of Inkerman 4458 native races "id? squadron against Turks 66bi wa?fl854r^ 2685,7692-3,8060,9014,62 Eussians in Bulgaria and Eumelia, 1828-9 6198 origin and early history oUd of the south. Brooks 976 the, 1864 *^° Eustick rampant, Cleveland J742 "Kusticus" lfewman6&S Euth, book of, illuminated 672 history of 4426 Euth, novel 3383 Eutherfurd, A., literary address 949 Rutland, D. of, and Pitt 8348 Butland papers Sutland 1322 Eutledge, Ch. Just (U.S.), hfe 7687 •Eyan (player), Ufe 8299 Eye harbour 8987' ' •Rymer, " Poedera " 3861, 7295 Eyswick (Eijswick), peace of, poems 7018 An " denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type : " v " stands for volume. s. Saa de Miranda, life 6220 Sabatai Sevi (supposed Messiah) 2893 Sabbath alliance i7117 -day sermons, Maurice 5959 laws and duties 2056 scripture readings, Chalmers 1497 the, Domville 2627-8 time of keeping 8937 » ' Sabre exercise 4043 Sacerdotum, Enchiridion. 1532 2775 •Sacheverell 4«99'',»',8937'"',^'<' Sacrament-houses, Nuremburg, etc. 9321 of the Lord's Supper, 1645-6 67S4'»,» Sacred biography (pati'iarchs, etc.) 4425 lands 6544 and legendary art 4653-4 literatrure, journal 4701 philosophy (Creation) 8020 and scriptural poems 6219 Sacke and Six, Laud 6167 Sackville, Charles, Earl of Dorset, poems 2540, 7026-7 (?) Thos., poems 953i, 2796 Viscount, and " Junius " 2039 Sadberge [f Sedburgh] 1696" Sadducismus triumphatus 3434 Saffron "Walden Nash 1857', 2963», 7064 Sage, Bishop, Presbytery examined 228 Sages, Romans des sept """" Sailor, a, life of 1614, 8728 -boy's log-book, 1862 9*36 SaUor's ballad, 1731 7021 songster ^, 8221 Sailors' pay, 1689 / 6401 songs for, Bennett 617 Sails, buoyant 49 *Saint, a, what constitutes ? 3208 *St. Alban's, abbey, metrical romance 7368 church, history 1098 annals, chronicles, etc. Albans 1663 bribery commission 6737 chronicles, etc., by monks of Albans & England 1663 Duchess of, Ufe 9650 Fairfax, 1647-8 2952", 2953", « ghost 220-1, 6817'=' letter to mavor of 58171 Monckat 1599'* Viscount Bacon 358 Alexius, life Adam Davy 2674 Amant, chess-match 8375 Andrews, Abp. of, murder 7097 Holbom, sermon, 1695 4099'' s 672 S St.— ooni. Bartholomew's Day, etc.. poems 541-1 Benedict, mission of 6«1 Bernard, life 6281 Brandan, legend 6829" Catherine of Siena, life 8997 Cecilia's day, ode 7010, 19S 76-7 Chrysostom, hist, sketch 6451 Columha, life 2626, 7781 David's, history mss day, poem 7010 Domingo, 1787 2704 Edmundsbury 2963^ 4628 Evremond, letters to and from 5107, 5250 Francis of Assisi, biog. essay 8396-6 the new, tale 8956 George, Anglo-Saxon passion 6829"' Bloomsbury, history 2512 Chevalier de, life, 1712 5386 the Martyr, eh., sermon, 1724 4010 Germains, Court of 4099", 4510, 12 ; 7097 Giles in the Fields, history 2512 and St. James, tale 4594 Helena, 1861 B961 Napoleon at 22, 3173, 3778, 6129-31, 6229 Helens, Lord, " Dispensary " 8325 Ives, tract printed at 3255 Ivo, life 3265 James's chapel, sermons, 1685 4S15 ch., Piccadilly, sermons 7843 librai7 8546 palace, 1711 7169 satirical poem 7620 taking away to, 1643 7188» to Convent Garden, poem, 1717 7010 Jeremie, tokens Adam Davy 2674 John, I. ep., V. 7 7098 the Baptist, in art 4568 Chrysostom, golden book 1666 of Jerusalem, order 6436" John, Bayle 4381, 7392, 7660 Henrietta Imxborough 5540 J. A. 6397-8, 6154-5, 6262 Mr,, speeches, etc. 1695', «, 1597«, ", ^, 5188=, 67381°, 8468-9 Juliana, liflade of Juliana 2674 Katherine, coll. church 7611" Lawrence, Jewry Crowley 2674 sermons 1138, 4099' Leger, Barry, Froissart 3264 Leon, novel 3474 Louis, crusade 2160 Lucia, histoiy, etc. 911 Luke, Gospel, exposition of 8840 sourcesof his writings 8144 Luke's, Berwick St., sermons 9441 Margaret Margaret 2674 Margarefs,"Westminster 1699' =, 4009'>, 7839-40 Martin's Lane, 1641 3840 in the fields, sermons 7839 Mary Abchurch 7844^ Bothaw, sermon 7844^ Mary's, taking of, poem 7013 Matthew, gospel 4910, 6335, 8S40 Mungo (Glasgow) chronicles 3890 Olave's, Hart Street, sermon 6626 Pancras, parish 7476 Patrick's cathedral and deans, Dublin 6914 Eve, tale 5301 hospital, Duhlin 8564 Purgatory 9671 Paul, computation of 737 epistles, Locke BS96 Btorffl PauliniE 6676 life and epistles 1927 and St. James, justification 3337 sermons on, Forster 3134 the tent-maker 8937' ' voyage and shipwi-eck 81'i4 Paul's cathedral & chapter Camden Misc."^ and /S*. Paul's 1322, 1866' ', 2000, 3780, 4099^ 6141, 7018, 7611, 7770, 7839, 0366 churchyard, cat, of books 6937' " dean of (Sherlock), 1090 4099'' echOoJ 4900, 9122 *SX.—eoni. Petersburg, guide to, 1835 8589 mission to, 1830 6336 Pictures from, 1852 4593 and Moscow, 1846 861 Philip's, Eegent Street, sermons 600 Stephen's (poem) 6694 chapel 7030, 7044* Coleman st. 4502 Sylvester's Day, etc. (poems) 3906 Thomas, western Christianity 4674 Tichburn-Crosse, 1626 ISOO^ Vincent, Earl of, life 923, 9017 Werburg, life St. Weriurg 1639 Saint Cloud, three hours at, Cass 1446 » -Hilaire, B. 2764 •Sainte-Beuve, C.A. 6190 Saint's tragedy (poem) 4847 *f-aints Patron, legends 4663 invocation of 6322 lives of Aelfric 1228, 2674, 5210 satanical, 1662 8957^3 warrior, legends 4553 Saints-days Poor Mobin 7064 sermons Aelfric 2674 Sala, G. A., All the year round 124 Dickens 2461 Friswell on 3260 illustrations 8103 Salad for the social 7696 for the solitary 7694 Salads (sallets), Evelyn 2880-1 SalS,mS,n and Absai, AHegoiy 4669 Salamanca, " T. O." doctor of, 1681 7047» Salaries, 1844-62 6737 Salathiel, Croly 2123 •Sale, G., Koran 49.H) oriental history 515 Maj. Gen. Sir B.. H., Jellalabad, etc. 3451, 9251 Salem, Indian collectorate 2664 Salesbury on English and Welsh, etc. Mlis 2674 Salford -hundred Inventories 1639 Salil-Ibn-Eazik ' - 3766 •Salisbuiy ballad, 1713 7029 Bishops of 4010, 4099^ », 7045, 8937' * books and tracts 874, 2520, 2603, 6514 oath., sermons, 1707, 45 7844', 9411 li.Ceoil, Earl of, letters to 2274 life & death 6435' place of Sec. of State 4620 J. Halle 2603 •Sallust, trans, by Eose 2966 ♦Salmasius and Milton 4010, 6164' ', 6 •Salmon, Dr., lives of the saints 6210 W., I'rederick III. of Prussia 5382 Salmon and deer 1924 fisher, Norway 6106, 8899 fishing 2804 Salmonia 2290 Salop book 6612 gentlemen of 7188» rural rides 1763 Salt Lake A'alley 3727 " Salt for the leach," 1712 735tf» Salt of lemons, 1707 8937' " Salter, T., mirror Salter 1855' i Salters Hall 4099', 4957 Saltonstall, life 604 Saltpeter and Saltpeter makers, 1634 7188' Salzkammergut, 1874 7747 Sam, ferryman of Doohet, 1681 1672', « Sam Slick Halihurton 3765, etc. Samarcand, 1403 ClaHjo 5756 •Sampson, Quavles 7228 Samson, Abbot Srakelonda 1322 Samuel Titmaish and gi'eat Hoggarty diamond 8759'!', 60' •',68 San Francisco, life In 8659 Saucrof t, Abp., letters 1442 and bishops, trial 6885, 7048 Sanctuary, the, R. Montgomery 6223 •Sand and Canvas (Egypt aiidRome) 655 Sandal in the olden time, poem 6204 Sandboys, adventures 6937 •Sanderson, Bp., considerations on 4099' life 5376, 81 obligation of laws 843 W., Mary Queen of Scots, etc. 7273 s 673 •Sandford, player, life 3299 Sandsbury, life 694 Sandstone, old red 6115 Sandwich, John, 4"' Earl of 3608, 4099', 6387 Islands 1029, 4669-70 Sandy Long-3ib, 1742 7045 •Sandys, Sir GeorRe, ooflee 1777 George, Anglorum speculum 7605 life (?) 594 Sanhite, the 7664 Sanitaria for Indian invalids 6315 Sanitary Commission, London, 1847-8 6737 condition. City of London, 1854 8053 law, Tom Taylor 6214 Sanitas, poem, Garriok pamphlets 3320* •Sanskrit, drama 1303, 4718 philosophical poem and philosophy Santa Crooe, Florence 7572 Santa F(S (Texan) expedition 4779 trader, journal 3637 Santander, printing 6436' Sappers and miners, history 1914 Sapphics, Hen. Smith Sylvester 8589 Sappho, trans. 166, 9S3>^ 6705'" Saracens, the, history of 6661 Sarawak 4804, 6501, 6346 Sardinia, 1812 3300 Sargent, James Adve7iture of Ferris 1866 ' * Sai'gon and Sennacherib, times of 8456 Sark, notice of 2617 Sarpi, Paul 9004 Sartor Eesartus 1380, 1400-9 Satan in search of a wife. Lamb 5024 Satanical saints, 1662 8957 " ' Satirae 4714, 6844, Horace 4SW, etc., Juvenalis, JPersius 9006 Satire and satirists, Hannay 3839 against virtue, Oldham 7023 of the three estates, 1602 Lindsay 2674 on satirists, Landor 60S1 upon the Tackers 2638 *Satires, causidicade, etc., 1760 4099= Donne 2533 Guilpin, 1698 Guilmn 1857 Hall 3784 Horace 4236 etc. Juvenal and Persius 4714-16, 6845 (and epistles). Pope 7078 remarkable, 1760 4099= various 7023-4 Voltaire 9169 ■Whitehead 9442 ■Wither 9587 Satiric verses, Cambridge, 1714 6460 Satirical poem (pursuits of literature) 5939-40 poets, Anglo-Latin Poets 1663 songs and poems on costume 6829^ tracts 7691 Satyra Romana 4227 Sauces, ancient 4830 •Saunders, J., Chaucer 1621 MS. letter 6968«' people's journal 6818 •Savage, Henr,y Church Tracts 1672^ R., life 3299, 4641S 7702 works 953», 670529, 7091 (?) Savage state, human progress 286 Savannah, Georgia, 1739 9487 Savary, A. J. M. Bene Eovigo 7637-8 Savile, G., Marq. of Halifax, letters Savile 1,322 works Halifax 3773-6 Henry, letters to and from Savile 1322 Savilian professors, Hobbes 4105 Saville, Lord, forged letter, 1640, 6685 Savings, investments for 6737 Saviour, Our, divinity and incarnation 4099^ pictorial life 4870 Savonarola, life {see also " Romola ") 5723 Savoy, Duke of 4087 and French King 4100 Prince Eugenius of, ode 7024 Savoy, the, books, tracts, etc. 1672>», 1993, 2893, 3238, 3748, 8937'" Jesuit in, 1687 7096" sale at 7024 Saws and adages, Howell 4307 Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Albert and Ernest Princes of iii Saxe-Gotha, Ernest, 1" Duke of 5139 Duke of, Grimm coiTespondence 3662-^ •Saxon England 5664 inhabitants, Britain 9664 kings, last of the [" Harold "] 5569-60 (semi) paraphrase. Brut of Wace 9182 prophecies, Lilly 6345 the, blunderings on. Massy 593.5 the last, grave of, poem 874 west, version Alfi-ed2674, Saxons m Britain 859 chronicle from settlement of, to K. Cnut . „ , Hyde 1663 m England 2638, 4770 Saxony, electors of, notices of 6139 king of, ioume,y, 1844 1440 prince-elector of 7775* Thuringian, 1842 534,3 •Say and Sele, W". ■Viscount, speeches, 1641-2 159533, 9J3_ 56^ C5 Sayer, Jas., Elijah's mantle 7016 Sayings, new, 1060 4307 repartees, &c. 5413 Sayings and doings, novel 4209-11 Scandal, ode to, Sheridan 8015 Scandalizade, satire 4099= Scandinavia, traditions and superstitions 8869 Scandinavian language and nation, origin 859 north, visit to, 1852 6867 and other poetic trans. 6126 studies, Buchanan 1082 Scandinavie, 1856 4937 Scarborough piers testimonial 6436 la Scarlet letter, fiction 3909 Scarlett (L''. Abinger), sketch of 9452 Scattergood Family, fiction 8106 Sceneiy, Borneo, etc. 6826 England, 1862 8217 Greece and islands 6361 Nicaragua 8328 Norway 6540 picturesque 9056 formation of 6898 science, and art, Ansted igo Yorkshire 6898 Scenes of clerical life, fiction ■ 2721, 6 and sports, foreign lands 6383 and thoughts in foreign lands, 1848 8757 Scenic effects, Covent Garden, 1838-9 7708 Sceptic, T. Moore g24A a, visit to, H. Rogers 7482 Schamyl g^gg and the Mnrids 39x5 'Scharf, G. 2161, 2249, 2991, 3708, 4231, 4743, 4853 „ , „ . ,.. , 5626, 6C94, 8166, 9624' Schefter, A., notice of 7225 ^' King 4835 Schiavonetti, etchings 733 'Schiller, Carlyle on 1380" Goethe, & Mad. de Stael Carlyle 1380' ' life, etc, 1380, 97-9, 23662, 6561 o^era founded on "Robbers" 6600 translations 3381, 4053, 6561,6606.8522 Schism, Milton 61647 act, 1714 409'9'> growth of, 1714 6512 Schismatics, conviction of, Laud 517619 ♦Sohlegels, the, sketches of, Schiller 7727 •Schleiermacher, on Socrates 9475 Schleswig and Holstein question, 1848 9063 •Schlosser, literary history, De Quincy on 23658 'Schmitz, Leoiihard 1618, 1735 Scholar, vocation and nature 3018 etc Schomberg, correspondence Caumont'uei School days at Saxonhm'st 3073 economy, Symons 8596 of the future, 1852 Zincke 9722 mfant,1816 geg Sandford on jgjo School of abuse, and apology Gosson 211 and 7974 of complement, Shirley 8026 for dreamers, fiction 3742 for Fathers, fiction 3743 tor good living 405^ of patience, 1640 2668 s 674 S School— coni. of politics, 1690, poem 7023,49 for scandal, Mangin on 5774 •Schoolmaster Ascham 211 village (Davies) 6899 Schoolmistress, poem 8012 'Schools, boarding 4963 drawing for, Tate 8645 elementary, Dawes 2294-5 establishment & teaching, Symons 8696 and families, extracts for 6906 of indnstry, 1787 8958-9 management of 3856 Massachusetts 6783 naitional 874 primary, foreign 4732 public, Prussia 6840 ragged 8093 and social economy 2754 Schreiber, Lady Charlotte, Mabinogion 6615 Science, curious subjects, 1817 6185 dictionary, Brande 896-7 economic, Hodgson 5213 England, before Norman Conquest 166S popular 8600 and history, cradle of 1660 influence of, on education 521,^ medical. Hinds 4093 objects, pleasures, advantages 995, 5325 opinions on, Goethe 3492 physical, harmonies 4093 poetry of, E. Hunt 4421 progress, 1866, Stanhope 8346 quarterly journal 7232 speculative and experimental 9118 and unity of the human races 8181 Tienna, 1843 9483 ♦Science and art estimates, 1856 6737 museum of (Lardner) 6369 year-book, 1841-66 9699 Sciences, definitions, 1698 ' 6890 dictionary 2066-7, 2776 English Cyclopsedia 4885 Trance, 1802 8854 history of, 1741 1370 Indians 7455 new method of studying. Bacon 5325 Scientific discovery, 1854 9357 enqiuiry, manual, 1849 4038 irrigator 4473 memoirs, &c., Toung 9714 men, Gt. Britain, lives 2626 obituaries, 1865 9.367 terms, explanation 6325 Scilly, Isle of. Vane 9101 Scinde, conquest of 66S7 Scipio Africauus, life 7003 Soipio's dream (trans.), Cicero 1698 Score of lyrics, 18*9 6652 *Sooresby, Vf"., life 7772 *Soot, T., " Belgiok Pismire " 1599 ».' •Scotland, affairs, 1714 6405 agriculture, commerce, mines, manu- factures • 3172 ancient, G. Lockhart 6406 inhabitants, Innes 7781 antiquities 2463, 7800 Bank of 5192 astrological prediction, 1649 5343 beauties of 3172 and borders, 1613-34 8.'i71 British Convention, 1793-4 3384 and Charles I. 1666, 1598^ 5253, 7188«, 8937''i» and Charles II. 1602, 8937 ' ^ and Chas. Ed. Stuart 292 Christianity and civilization 2626 chronicles Soece 1663, 4138, 7781 church of 1063, 1598", Covenant tracts 2038, 4099"', 7145, 7839, 8368 civil war 1656, 97", 98, 99 ' = commissioners of, and Charles I., etc. 1580=, 16931, 1698, 7188*", 7839, 8937 ' " commissioners of, and Laud and Stmilorrt 6178 complaintot, 1648-9 411'i(S'co«a«d2674 condition of, 1642 1699 " = confession of faith, 1641 1698' covenant tracts 2038 •Scotland— eo«i. criminal trials 1205 Cromwell in 2133 Gnlloden papers 2164 description, 1669 4302 1705 8937 '» deserittione di Scotia, 1588 9071 ecclesiastical history 228 Q. Elizabeth, Mary Q. of Scots, and K. James 6029 and Enghind 1598', 2133, 5154, 78 ; 5448, 6912, 7041, 71888a estates of, 1648 2699 expedition against, 1641 1699 ' ^ guide to, 1850 168 M. of Hamilton 1598=, 5263, 8937 ' '* heraldry 7848 High Court of Justiciary 3884 Highland wanderings, 1849 1896 Highlands, 1835 3846 history of 1203, 11 ; 3746, 7458, 7801, 8284, 8814 invasion (designed) from Prance, 1708 6405 independent faction Lilhurne 6339 and Ireland 1693', 4472 Kohl, 1844 4932 and Duke of Lauderdale, 1602, 41, 43, 2277 Lenox, D. of, speech, 1641 5253 Letter Office 7188» levying regiments in, 1648 1599 ' ' libellous pamphlets, &o. from, 1640 71883* Loch Awe, poem 3816 lunacy and lunatics 6737 lyric poets 2181 maps 3801, 6246 under Mary 4574 Mary and Jas. VI., reigns of 7456 ministers of, and Bp. Mountague 16711 mystery of iniquity, 1643 1599 ^ * noblemen of, petitions, 1643 1698" and Norman Conquest 8796-8 Parliament of 15971'', 1602, 4099s, 7041, 8937 >■ 1= people and country, 1659 2903 petitions, 1842-8 15981", " poor, Eden 2690 popular rhymes 1503 Presbyterian ministers 70401^ Privy Council, 1643-4 1698ii, « proclamations, 1639, 89 15982, 7043, 8937 ' 12 population, cities, towns, viUa^^s, etc. 3172 proper project for, 1699 4099^ Queens of, Strickland 8480 rebellions, 1715 and 46 3025, 9411 rebels, etc. 1598^ 2277", 7188'i Beformation, Oldmixon 6534 road-book, remarkable places 5216 King of Saxony's journey through, 1844 1440 scenery, etc. 2463 and Scots Covemnt Tracts 2038 seditious practices, 1638 - 7188^" songs 100, 2125-6, 36, 81 ; 3578, 7480, 9405 sporting, fishing 1895 state of, 1688 Zander 2674 state papers Calendars li93 statistical history, 1S63 2296 Strafford's tune 4989 Stuart kings 9316 superstitions 2233 tales of a grandfather 7800 toleration in, 1687 70401* tours, 1829, Leigh 5246 iraTOls, 1634-5 Brereton 1689 1830, Custine 2201 treason trials, 1820 8957 ' =-f troubles of, 1679 Chnrchyard 1863 tumults, 1639 Charles 1. 1585 union 5405 vindication of the honour of 9089 wit and humour 4985 Scots, ancient, Innes 7781 army and Ch. I, 6436* s 675 6385 Scots — cont. in England, 1640 invasion by, 1648 King of, and Capt. Hind 4092 march from Berwick to Newcastle, etc., 1644 isg?' Mary, Q. of, accounts and papers Mary 1322 life, reign, etc. 1089, 2002, 4549, 4574, 5898-900, 6102, 6584, 7273, 7301, 7456, 7651. 7675, 8348, 8480 Shrewsbury correspondence 5415 state papers Scotland 1298 nobility, secret history 5697 nobility, readiness to assist, 16*3 1697^ Robert de Broyss, King of Harbour 2674 scouts discoveries, 1833 7780 semce against, 1640 7188" statesmen, 1550-1660 7774 Scotsmen, characters of, Urqulinrt 9089 ♦Scott, A. J„ literary address 948 David, ill""., Bunyan 1127 J.,poems 6705" J. B,. Hope, Lockhart 6411 Eobert, D.D. lAddell 5830 Thomas, 1624 (see also " Scot ") 7038 Sir Walter, Abbotsford 5 ballads 412 Ballantynes and Ballantyne press 413, 16 Carlyleon 1380 "» centenary 146, 416 De Foe 3311, 18 Dryden 2674 and 0'. Ellis 64851* Goethe 3475 Hamilton 3818-19 Hazlitt on 3954 life, etc. 108S, 3449. 5110-11 , 5698, 9426 Moore's Byron 8252 Sadler 7613 Somers tracts 8213 Stephen on 8400 Sully 8502 Swift 8529 W. B. 1127, 4133", 6883 Scottish (and Scotch) army, 1643, 6, 8 1695", 1598'^, ", 7777 ballads and songs 1503, 1505, 6, 6829", 9443 bards 6624 charges, 1641 6178, 6733" chiefi, tale 7104 commissioners (see " Scotland ") field, poem on Hodden Vlietlmm Mise.\ 1639 heroes 5600 influence in British lite- rature 5934 Jacobite songs, airs, le- gends 4123-4 life and character 7275 methods and mysteries, 1660 1596' metrical romance Lance- lot 2674 minstrel, modern 7480 monasteries 2601 nobility, 1686 1211 pacification, Charles I. papers, answer to, 1646 8937 "» and Charles I., Chaloner 1501 peasantry 2126 poetry, to the time of Lindsay Lindsay 2674 poets, Eogers 7480 portraits, Carlyle 1380'" Presbyterian covenant, 1702 4099'' prophecies liernarclns 2674, 6346 Sr-nttisli (and Scotch)— core*. rebellion, 1639, to murder of Charles I. 6377 Eebellion, 1746-6 1503 soldiers speech, 1647 1598»i tales ("Altrive") 4122 war, recusants money, 1639 8987'^ waters, cruise, 1848 7710 worthies 2966 Scottishman and Jesuit, discourse, Strafford 9707 60S8 1316 Cabala 1282 3748 6504 494» 6219 1068 4426 o 16505. Screw-propeller Scribes, middle ages Scribleriad, poem Scrinia sacra reserata, Abp. Williams Scriptural geology doctrines and Poland poems, Montgomery Scripture, authenticity of biography and the Catholic creed, Newman &44« and chemistry 3669 chronology 8513 essay on, Wilson 071 and geology 8147 history, block books 8247 illustrations of manners and customs 6778 interpretation and undcrstarUding of 283 lands 4872, 9612 and morality, Pox 3206-7 names 4906, 9336 prophec.y. Grant .3684 readings, Chalmers 1497 and religious intolerance 9018 and the ErOman Church. Robins 7459 .scenes from, poems 2124 style of, Boyle 884 the, in English, 1460 Rod 21] and unity of the human races 8184 Scrivener, London, character, 1667 9358 Scrooby, Notts 4426, 5110 Scudamore, notice of 594 Sculptors, architects, engravers, dictionary 6670 British, Uves 2178 lives, Vasari 9103-4 Spanish 9116 Sculptura, Evelyn 2906 Sculpture, antique. Crystal Palace 2161 Greek WelckerSSiZ hints, Jarves 4668 Italian, S. Kens. Museum 7464 lectures, Buskin 7563, 76 modern. Crystal Palace 2161 Vatican . 6712 works in 1362, 6671 Sculptures (engravings) 656, 2891, 8489-90 Scytnia and Scythians, history 9395 origin and religion 3831 •Sea of Azof, Bussia 7870 -bathing places, England 3691-2 -board and Down, Warter 9293 commissions at, recalling, 1660 7188i** commanders, petition 7188"-' fight, England and Belgium, 1652 1585 life at, Dana 2285 -margins, ancient. Chambers 1604 -monsters, Ireland 8562 * ^ service, Raleigh 7267 children of those killed in, 1693 7643 •side book 3892 holiday (Tenby) 3669 stories, Venice, Ruskin 7574 the, depth of 8937 'i legend of 6829" -weed collector's guide 1773 -weeds, British 3891 *Seager, school of virtue Babees 2674 Seal, great, counterfeit, 1648 7188™ Seals. British, drawing.s, catalogue 8860 Cromwell 40(19 EoyaJ, plato 970 (sigilla) 6919 X X 676 S Seaman's opinion of a standing army, 1699 4099^ triumph, 1692 295» Seamanship, terms and phrases 9707 Seamen, motives to engage, 1648 7188ii^ raising, 1693 764S wounded, provision oJ, 1693 7643 Search after knavery (bakers), 1693 8937 '^ " Search for money " 6829^ Searcbtoot, Cervantes 1488 " Seasonable discourse," and defence of same, 1673-4 7095'', 6 " Seasonable memorial," 1680 7047*, 7167 Seasons, boy's book 6116-19 calendar 4316 chronicles of 8600 passages from poets 7033 Thomson 8835-9 Seats and arms, noblemen and gentlemen 1162-3 England 8912 Seaward, Sir E., narrative, fiction 7108-9 *Sebastopol 520, 4110, 6737, 7107, 9614, Seeker, Abp., life, etc. 4099'' Second sight 2801 Secondary, Poultry compter Smyth 1322 Secondary punishments 1638 Secret history, Bnglishand Scots nobility 6697 officers, etc. from the Eevolution 5697 services Secret 1322, 6697, 8162 societies, De Quinoey on 2366' middle ages *4756 Secretary of State, dangers of 4520 Sectaries, errors of, 1646 2713-14 Sects, Christian 5848 Secular instruction, practical 2294r6 Secularia (history), Lucas 5617 Sedgewick, O., speech, 1643 1697^ •Sedgwick, Catherine M. 144, 2273 W., justice on the army remon- strance, 1649 1699 »= Sedition, trials for, Gerrald, etc. S384 Seditions, L'Estrange on 6276 Seditious practices, Scotland, 1638 7188» •Sedley, academy 26 life 2626 *Seeley, Remedies for " The perils " 7829 Seeress of Prevorst 4807 Seine, department, irlministrution 7706 the, Blancii.iL'd 748 Selbome, natural history of 9414-16 'Selden, J., England, parliaments, etc. 376 life, etc. 78, 7610, 9290 Ld. Chancellor 2699 privileges of subjects 7039 table-talk 211 tithes 8876 Selections from many authors 8273 various writers 839 imagination and fancy, Eng. poets 4397 prose and verse 4391 wit and humour, Eng. poets 4417 Self-control, fiction 1066 -culture 3660-1 -government 6331 local 8161 -help 8101 -justification, Bdgeworth 2692 -knowledge. Mason 6907 -taught artist. Carter 2234 -training, Sedgwick 7826 Sella Lihini Sandese (the Sella's message) 8329 Seller, A., passive obedience, 1689 4099' Selwyn, George, Hayward on ,3927 Semiramis, lire 4549 Semitic languages, Miiller 6343 Senate, Great Britain, Fonblanque 3098 Seneca, life, tragedies 7003, Spenser 8313 Senegal 2604, 7704 and Gambia 6194 Sennacherib 6196, 8450 Sense and sensibility, fiction 331 Senses and intellect 397 lost 4807-8 Sentimental journey 8408, etc. new, Collins 1862 Sentiments and similes, Shakespeare 7965 Separate confinement 1197 Separation, on account of oaths, 1689, 91 4099', ' the new, 1642 8937 "'^ Separatists, correcting of, 1641 1697"^ satire against Zaud 6176" Sorooby, Notts 4426 Sepulchral remains, Rome 6739 Sepulchres, Godwin on 3467 Sequestered ministers, payments to, 1654 1699 ' ' Seraphim, the, poem 1038 Serbski Pesme (Servian songs) 6607 Serigo, 1812 3S00 Serious call. Law 5183 Sermonetta, Card., instructions to P. Caetano 'i 9248 *Sermons, etc. : — Alsop, 1696 4099'! Amory, 1766 784515 Anne, Q., before 4099'' Anonymous, 1715, 1648 7162, 7841, 6" Armagh, Abp. of, 1643 1694* Arnold, Dr. 280,1,3 Arrowsmith, long parliament Ash, long parliament 7839', % '" Assembly of divines, before 7839 Assize 7611, 7844 Baker, Eachel 406 Barrow 477 Baylie, long parl«. 7839*, " Bellew 600 Bentley (Boyle's lecture) 630 Beveridge, Bp. 4099" Binney 698 Birch, 1694, 6 4099* Bisse, 1718 4099= Bolton, long pari'. 78398,' Bond, „ „ 7839*,' Bowles, „ „ 7839* Boyle lectures 630, 1730-1 Boy-bishop Camden Misc. ', 1322 Brameld 893 Bridge, long pari'. 7839*, 3,i» Bridges, „ „ 7839^ Brokett, 1641 7840 Bvompton epis. chapel, at 6860 Brookfield 976 Brown, Eobert, 1649 7841 Brownist (A, Greene) 1662 Burgess, A., long pari'. 7839*,'',* Lord Mayor, 1644 1138 C, long pari'. 7839' Burroughs „ „ 7839',',* Bury, at, 1697 7040'^ Byfield, long pari'. 7839* Calamy, „ „ 7839', ^* Carter, T. „ „ 7839* "W.„ „ 7839',"' Cartwright, Dean of Kipon, 1686 4099' Caryl, long pari'. 7839', *, * *, * Case, „ „ 7830^, *,',*,'» Cattermole 1462 Cawdrey, long pari'. 7839* Chalmers 1497 Chambers, long pari'. 7839* Chas. II., at Newmarket, before 1602 Cheapside Cross, against 1690* Cheynell, long pari'. 7839", *, * " Christ Church," at 7839 Churchill 1674 Clark, W. E^ 7843 Clarke (Boyle lecture) 1730-1 Clipping, against, 1694 4099J Clubbe 1763 Coleman, long pari'. 7839*, *, " Coleridge (lay) 1803,10,6029 Conant, long pari'. 7839' Convocation, 1689 4099" Corbett, long pari' 7839= Covenant 2038**, 7839 Cowie, Dean of Exeter 7843 Cradock, Dr., 1677 4821 Cradock, W., long pari'. 7839' Cudworth. „ „ 7839'" Culloden, anniversary 4610'* Dale 2222 Dell, Ion g pari'. 7S39» Dodd, Dr., Johnson for 4662 677 *Sennoiis— coTO^. Durye, long pari'. 7839' Elliot, Dean of Bristol 2738 Ellis, long pari'. 7839" Evance, „ „ 7889^ Fast, thanksgiving, etc., 1641-8 7839-40 Fleetwood, 1694 4099J Fleming, 1763 7846'= Ford, decollation of Ch. I. 3124 Forster, 0. 3134 W. 3170 Foster, James 3188 John 3191 Fox .3206, etc. Foiorofl, long pari'. 7839' foxes and vines, 1776 4099'' funeral, on Atherton, 1640 461 Calamy, B., 1686 4099' Chandler, 8., 1766 7848'= Chapman, Ld. Mayor 1689 4099' Charles I. 1574,7841 Cope, 1660 78443 Devonshire, Duke of, 1707 7842 Dickens 2461 Essex, Earl of, 1646 9162 Fleming, 1779 8921 Foster, 1763 7846i« Guilford, Lady, 1699 4099'' Hall, Bp. Joseph, 1666 9438 Jervoice, Lady Lucy, 1641 7840 King, John, 1677 4821 Langwillin, parson of, by 9363 Iaud,Abp. 1200,5149, 68, etc. Mary Q. of Soots 4674'" 1 Mary, Q.,1694 4099'' Norton, Sir J., 1687 4099' O. T., doctor of Salamanca, 1681 7047" Pym,1644 1699'* Rochester, E. of 1179 Taylor, 1761 7846'* Walbank, 1653 7844 "Wellington, Duke of 698, 8170,5782,6860,7610 Gauden, 1640, etc. 1669, 7839' GJeree, Tewkesbury 2038", »» Gibson, long pari'. 7839' Gillespie, ., „ 7839',' Gipps, G., „ „ 7839= T., 1697 7040^2 Gleig 3462 Goode, long pari'. 7839=, « Goodwin,,, „ 7839'. s Gouge, „ „ 7839',' Gower, „ „ 7839* Grayes-Inne, before, 1648 4882 Greene, long pari'. 7839*. '» Greenhill, „ „ 7839^ Griffith, Dr., Milton on 6154 John, 1707 7842 Hales, Eton 3783 Hall, H., long pari'. 7839* Bp. George, 1655 S780 Bp. Joseph, 1641 3786 Hardwick, long pari'. 7839* Hard.y, „ „ 78399,'" Hare, Bp. of Chichester, 1711 6817 Harris, long pari'. 7839' Harwood, 1761 7845'* Hayley. 1696 4099* Henderson, long pari'. 7839=, *, = Henley " orator 4010 Herle, long pari'. 7839^,= Hessey 7843 Heyriok, long pari'. 7839= Hiokes,G. „ „ 7839* Hicks, J. „ „ 78398 Higgin8,l707 ,4p99« Hillflongparl'. 7839', ^* = Hoadly. J., 1707 7844 Hodges, Thos.. 1653 7844 Hodges. T., long pari'. 7839^^, '» Hooper, Bp. 4221 Hopkins, 1616 4223 Horneck, 1699 4099" Horton, long pari'. 7839' 1329. 7834 *Sermon8 — cout. Howson, Dean Hughes, long pari'. Hussey „ „ 7839'" Ireland, in 4472', '". ", " Jackson. Bp. of London 4601 Jenkyn, long pari'. 7839*, '" Johnson, E., long pari'. 7839'" Johnson. Samuel 4644, 62-3 Juxon, Abp. ? 7841 Kennet, Bp. 1580, 7842 Kentish Miscellany 2674 Kentish, R., long pari'. 7839'" Killigrew, 1685 4816 King, 1625-6 4820 Kingsley 4848 Kitchin, 1660 7844 Landon 6044 Langley, long pari'. 7839= Latimer, Bp. 211, 6140 Laud, Abp. 5142, 4, etc. Lay, Coleridge 1803, 10 ; 6029 Leechman, 1741 7845' Leslie, 1625 5270 Levant company, before, 1664 6526 Lever, 1560 211 Ley, long pari'. 7839" Lightfoot, long pari'. 7839",','" liturgy and ritual, W"" cent. 967 Lockyer, long pari'. 7839' long parliament, before 7839 Luke, 1664 5626 Manly 5782 Mannyugham, 1687-94 4099", ' Manton.longparl'. 7839'" Man waring, R. 7611 Marlborough, Duke of, before 6817* Marshall, S., long pari'. 7839'-*, =,", '" Pym, funeral 1699 ' * Martineau 6888 Mary. Queen, before, 16!i:i 4099" Massillon 5926-6 Maturin 6949 Maurice 6968-9 Maynard, long pari'. 7839", ' Mendes 6041 Mewe, long pari'. 7839* military, 1643 8595 Moreton, Bp. of Durham, 1639 1583 on the Mount 689, 6673 Mountagu, Bp., 1624 6822 Nalton, long pari'. 7839' Newcomen, long pari'. 7839'', =, =, ' Newman 6462 North, 1671 1602 Nowell, 1772 8921 Owen, long pari'. 7839' Palmer, „ „ 7839*, *. ' Parker 5889. 6709 parliament (long), before 7839 Parsons 1179 Perne, long pari'. 7839" Peters, „ „ 7839=, 40 Pettigrew 6860 Pigou 7843 Pikering, long pari'. 7839= Presb3rterian preachers, 1640-8 7839,46 Pretender, the, on, 1716 7162 Price, long pari'. 78393 Proftet „ „ 7839= Eeyner „ „ 7839= Reynolds „ „ 78S9' Roberts „ „ 7839" Robertson (Brighton) 7441-4 Rutherfurd, long pari'. 7839*, = Sacheverell 7611, 8937 ' '" St. Leger 7640 Saints days Aelfric 2674 Salwey, long pari'. 7839* Scot or Scott, T., 1620 7775 Scott, J., 1689 4099' Soudder, long pari'. 7839= Seaman „ „ 7839=,'" Seeker. W., 1729 7845 Sedgwick,0.,longparl'. 7839', »,*. =, '» W., „ „ 7839' Shaver's, for the fast day, 1795 7691'* Sherlock, T., Bp. of SaUsbury (rebel- lion), 1746 9411 W; 1686 4099i X X 2 s 678 *^ormonB—cont. Simpson, long parl^ 7S39-'' six-preacher (Forster) 3134 sleep, during (R. Baker) 405 Smart, 182S 6403, 8096 Smith, Elephant, 1681 7047« Peter, long pari'. 7889* Sydney 8156, etc., 61 sonnets, in 8933 Sortain 8245 Spurstowe, long parK 7839^, ^ Stafflord, 1697 8389 Stanhope, 1706 4099'' Stanley, Dean 2461 Staunton, long pari'. 7839*, ° Stennett, 1740 7845 Sterne 8408 Sterry, long pari'. 7889' Strickland, „ „ 7839^, ^ ', 40 Strong, „ „ 7839', ',",40 Sunda.7, Dale 2222 Sunday family reading, Howson 4329 Swift 8529', 8, 86628 Symmons, 1643 8596 Tayler 8654 Taylor, long pari'. 7839', ' Temple, „ „ 7839^' Tesdale, „ „ 7839' thanksgiving 600, 7839-40 thieves, in praise of Awdeley 2614i thirtieth of January 1644, 1680, 1684, 4010, 7611« 8921 Thorowgood, long parP. 7839' Tillotson, Abp. 4099'' Torshel, long pari*. 7839^ Towers, 1779 8921 Tucker, Dean of Gloucester 9018 Tuckney, long pari'. 7839' Turner, 1837 6435" Usher, Abp. 1648 8937 • ^ Valentine, long pari'. 78392, lo Vicars, 1627 9137 Vines, long pari'., etc. 78392, 4_ s^ 6^ 8_ io_ Walker, long pari'. 7839= Wards, 7839'i,M Webster, 1787 9329 wedding, 1729 7845 Wesley, 1741 7845 Wheeler 9398 Whin cop, long pai-l'. 7889«,' White, J., „ , 7839' Whitefoote, 16B6 9438 Whitehead 9441 Whittaker, long pari'. 78S9^ s, « Wilkinson 78398,5,9,7840 Williams, 1774 9617 Seven — oont. deadly sins of London extinguishers, poem lamps of architecture Dekker 1S65'2 8937 ' 3 7573 Williams, Bp. of lincoln, 1628 7844 Wilson, long pari'. 7839^ Woodcock, „ „ etc. 7839=, «, «, 9613 Worcester, Bp. of, 1695 4099'' Wordsworth, Bp. of Lincoln 7843 Young, E., 1688 4099' Young, T., long parlt. 7839* Serpent symbol, America 8327 Servant girl, history of, Lamartine 4994 Servants, directions to 8529 Servetus, life 2572 Servia, national songs 5607 Scrvia and Servian revolution 7287-8 •Service, Finsbury chapel 3211 Service, second, in the desk, 1683 4099' Servien, correspondence Caumont 1467 Servitour (Oxford), poem, 1709 4099'» Sesame and lilies 7663 Sessions of the peace, on, 1706 9444 *Seton, Sir John, letter, 1643 Cliefhnm Misc. ', 1639 Settle, E., life 2626 narrative 2277'*-= new Athenian comeil.v 7023 popish successor 704-8 Settlement, advantages of, 1089 6736 present, justice of. 1690 7047" •Settlers at home, tale 6885 Sevarites or Sevarambi 8034 Seven a^es of woman, poem 8476 Seven bishops, trial li^sn. T04S cllninpioiis of Cliristendoui l.'>21 seals broke open Bible 670 1793 and 1853, Cobden 1765 Seventeenth century, history 6059, 7302 " Several good things for a shilling " 8937 ' * Severambians 8035 *S6vign6, Marquis de, letters to B250 Marquise de (Madame), life, etc. 4999, 7997 9199 ♦Seward, Miss, life ' 2766 WilUam, copy 3601 *SeweU, G., poems 7010*2, 70191 Eev. W. 4248, 4865, 7858-60, 62-4 •Seymour, Sir E., Ludlow 6525 E., illustrations by 240 1, 48 ; 6970, 4 Seyyids of Omto iSaKl 3766 Sexagenarian, Beloe 604 Sextant, use of 2583 Sforaa, Caterina, life 8997 Eran., Duke of Milan, life 9090 Shabby genteel story 8759 " '» Shadow-seeker, poem 9187 Shadowless man, fiction 1615-16 *Shad.well, T., life 336, 2626 Shaftesbury, advices sent to, 1676 1672= pacquet of advice to, 1676-7 70408. 70951, s •Shaftesburv, 1st Earl of : Anthony. King of Poland (?) 7024, 7876 Chasles ou 1005 conspirac.v to murder 7048 indictment against, 7096"^ life, letters, speeches 1667-8, 2277", 6891 no Protestant plot 7096= regulating elections 4099" Test Act 8937'" 3rd Earl of: characteristics. Brown on 1005 defence, etc. of criticism 3408 6988 letters 3168-9 7th Earl of : Home on 4259 introduction, etc. by 1250, 9382 Shaftesbury papers 7615-17 '''Shakespeare {for editions of works and single plays see " Shakespeare " in catalogue a/nd "plays" in itidex) actors in his plays and time 7438 ColUer 7974 anecdotes of (Warwickshire) 7973 annotations on, Croft 2117 As you like it : adaptation (G. Sand) 7668 ed. by Caldecott 7922 notes on. Whiter 9460 study of, Eletoher 3081 autobiographical poems (sonnets), Brown 1000 autograph. Madden 6722 Bagehot, Shakespeare the indi- vidual 380 Bathurst, lectures on 503 Becket, Shakespeai-e's himself again 547 Birch, philosophy and religion 711 birthday, Corney '•198H8 Boaden, portraits, sonnets 771, 6 Bottom the weaver, 1661 29518 Brae, Uterary cookery 891 British poets, poems 953^^ Brown, C. A., sonnets 1000 H., sonnets 1003 Bucknill, medical knowledge, psychology 1108-4 and Cflrlderon 9075 Capell, Edward III. 2702 Olialmers, Shakespeare (Ireland) papers 1493-4 ohfirncter from his works. Brown 10011 s 679 ^ hakesjjeare — cant. characters, Bavies 2278 Hazlitt 3931 Richardson 7M2-3 Skottowe 8087 White (U.S.) 9428 Chaucer soc, pronunciation 1621, Chedworth, extracts from MSS. 7869 notes on 1627 ciu'onology of pla^s, Drake 2561 Cihher, Eichard III. 1681 Clarke, concordance, girlliood of heroines 1727-8 clowns and fools, Doueo 2645 Coleridge, Collier, lectures, Collier folio 891, 1813, 15 Collier, controversy 1816, 44-6, 1850-1; 2665, 3266, 3823, 4451-2, 6880, 7903, 8069, 9428 life, works, folio 1632, etc. i 1841, etc. edition, Dyce on 2667, 60 literary cookery 891 comedian (Singer), time of 8068 ; compared with Gr. and Fr. poets 6206 : concordance, Clarke 1727 ConoUy, Hamlet 1916 and contemporaries, glossary 6393 i language 9211 Comey, sonnets, birthday *1981 Courtenay, historical plays 2022 i Craik, Enghsh of, in Julius Cajsar 2077 I critical studies, etc. : Daries 2278 Drake 2661 Gildon (?) 791S Upton 9083-4 Walker 9211 White (U.S.) 0428 criticism, new principle of 9450 Croft, annotations 2117 Cymbeline, emendation 6880 study of 3081 Davies, observations, characters 2278 deer-stealing, Lander 6052, 4 Dennis, "Merry Wives" (altera- tion) 2362 De Quincey, biogi'aphy, Macbeth 2366 diversions, Jacox 4516 Douce, illustrations, clowns and fools 2646 Drake, memorials, life, criticism, sonnets, etc. 2660-1 dramatic art, UMoi 9076 Dunham, life and works, stage prior to and time of 2626 Dyce, Collier folio 2655 ColUer's edition 3657, 60 Knight's edition 2657 notes on 2656 early English text soc, pronuncia- tion ElUs 2674 editors and commentators of, re- marks on : Becket B47 Chedworth 1627 Heath 3977 Kenrick W96 Bitson 7430 Theobald 8789 White (U.S.) 9428 Edward the third 2702, 7912 Edwards, Warburlon's edition 2715 Emerson, representative men 2774 English of, Craik 2077-8 English poets, poems 2796 fairies, Halliwell-PhilliPDs Phtlhpps 7974 Tieck 8871 Falstafi 2352, 6276, 6878, 6966, 9418 faults, Richardson 7402 Finegan, passages 3053 *Shakespeare— cuji^. Fletcher, G., studies 3081 J., Two noble kinsmen 3086 folio, 1623 Moberts 7438, Shake- speare 7884-7 1632 /Sftafespeare 7888-9, 7903 {See also " Collier, con- ti'oversy "). folk-lore 8820 Freso, Kclilegel, Tieck, Collier folio 3256 friendship, love, and rivalry (sonnets) 1003 gallery (with plates), 1792 7970 Garriok in 2278 monody 8320 genius, Drake 2661 Montagu 6206 Procter 7900 in Germany, Thoms 8826 glossary 6303, 7895, 7906-7 and Goethe 6934, 9075 Guizot, Shakespeare and his' times .3721 Halliwell-Phillipps : fairy mythology Phillipps 7974 Fal staff 6878 Henry IV. & YI. Slialcespeare 7974 illustrations of Marriage 7974 life 6882 " Merry wives " Shakespeare 7974 plots Simrock 7974 •' who smothers her," etc. 6880 Hamilton, Collier controversy 3823 Hamlet, on 1916, 6968», 7968, 8468, text 7922, 9326 ; (French) 6991 handwriting (fac-simile) 5767 Havard, imitation of S. 1563 Hazlitt, characters, contem- poraries 3931, 7 Heath, text, editors and critics 3977 Henry the fourth and sixth Shakespeare 7974 hermeneutics, Ingleby 4453 heroines, girlhood of 1728 Heath's engravings 7969 himself again, Becket 547 Hunter, Tempest, life, etc. 4427-8 illustrations of; Douce 2.>15 Finegan 3053 Halliwell-Phillipps Marriage 7974 Hunter 1428 Knight 4896 Whiter 9450 imitations ol 1563, 6966 lugleby, Collier controversy, Ire- land forgeries, text 4451-3 Ireland forgeries, etc. 1493-4, 4452, 4462-6, 5757, 9418 Jacox, diversions 4516 Johnson's edition 4795, 7869 Jones, G., oration 4675, 6986 jubilee, Stratford, 1769 6973' oration, 1836 4676, 6986 Julius CBesar, Craik 2077-8 Kenrick, Johnson's edition, etc. 4795 King John, Cibber's 1690 study of, Fletcher 3081 Kingdom, quotations 4836 Knight, studies, life, etc. 4894, 6, 8 Knight's edition, Dyce on 2657 Lamb, tales 5008, 28 Lander, deer-steaUng 5062, 4 learning of, Whalley 9383 lectures on, Bathurgt 603 Coleridge 1813, 16 •' libra.ry," foundation of dramas 7671 680 S *Shakespeare — cont. life, timeSj writingSj etc. : .. Bagehot aso Cambridge (Clark & Glover) 7909 Chalmers 7891 CoUier 1842-3, 7899, Collier 7974 De Quincey 2866^ Drake 3661 Bunham 2626^ Dyes 79071 Gilflllan 7986 Guizot , 3721 Halliwell-Phillipps • Harvey 7894 Hudson (U.S.) 7902 Hunter 4428 Knight 4896, 8 ; 7901, 18 Lloyd Malone 7904 7893 Proctei'~ 7900 Eoberts (1729) 7438 Skottowe 8087 Staunton 7908 Stratford library cat. 7967 Symmons Theobald 7896 7890 "Warvnckshire anecdotes 7973 literary cookery. Brae 891 Macbeth, Elvrin's ed. 793,'! knocking at the gate 2366 study of, Pletoher 3081 Maolise, " Seven ages " 6701-3 Madden, autogi-aph, name 6722 Malone, edition of S. 6768, etc., 8909, 7430 handwriting of Shake- speare, etc. 6767 Ireland papers 4462, 5757 letter to Farmer 6768 manners, etc. of his age, Drake 2661 manuscripts [fabricated] Chal- mers 1493-4, Inglehy 44S2, Ire- land 4462-6, Malone Sim Mason, observations, editions 6909 Masson, Shakespeare and Goethe 6934 medical knowledge, Bncknill 1103 memorials of, Drake 2660 Merchant of Venice, text 9326 Merry Wives of Windsor : first sketch Shakespeare 7974 text ' 139 alteration of 2362 Midsummer Night's Dream : fairy mythology, Phillipps 7974 ylie's Endymion Hatpin 7974 and lylie's Endymion mind of, in works, Morgan Montagu, writings and genius, Voltaire 6206 Morgan, mind of S. in works 6266 Morgann, Falstafl 6276 Much ado about nothing, study of 3081 name, orthography of. Madden 5722 Nares, glossary 6393 Naylor, Time and truth, etc. 7972 night. Gov. Garden, 1847 e968»' notelets on, Thoms 8826 notes on, Chedworth 1627 Coleridge 1818, 15 Dyoe 2665 Walker 9211 observations on, Mason 5909 Upton 9083 oration, Jones 1076, 6986 philosophy and religion, Birch 711 plays, chronology of, Drake 2561 doubtful 7961 foundation of 6965, 7971 historical, Courtenay 2022 particular, Bathnrst 503 plots, Simrook Simrook 7974 Skottowe 8087 * Shakespeare— cow^. poems 958", 3796, 7962-6 Gildon (?) on 7913 Walker on 9211 poetry, etc., of his age, Drake 2561 Pope and other editors, Theobald 8789 Pope's preface, answer to 7438 portraits, Boaden 771 prologues and epilogues 7197 pronunciation, Chaucer Soc. 1624 Ellis BlUs WSli psychology, Bucknill 1104 publishers of first folio 7438 quotations from 4836, 9010 Reed's ed. 7869 remarks on, Seymour 7869 restored, Blwin (Macbeth) 7936 Theobald I 8789 Richard III., Gibber's 1681 poem ou Mcliard 7974 Richardus Tertius Mchard 1914, true tragedy of Michard 7974 Richardson, characters, faults 7402-S RitsoD, editions, Malone, etc. 7430 Roberts, Pope's preface, contem- porary actors, life, etc. 7438 romances, etc. foundation of plays 7971 Romeo and Juliet, study of 3081 Sand, " As you Uke it " 7668 Schlegel 3256, 7734 sentiments and similes 7965 " Seven ages," Maclise 5701-2 Seymour, plays, editions, Ched- worth MSS. 7869 shadows of (monody ou Garrick) 3320" socy, publications CoUier, Cun- ningham, Salpin, Marriage, PTiillipps, Richard the Third, 7974 Shakespeare's scholar. White (U.S.) 9428 Singer, J., comedian in time of S. S. W., text. Collier 8069 Skottowe, life, plots, characters, 8087 a soldier P, Thoms 8826 sonnets, Boaden 776 Brown 1000, 3 Gorney *1981" Drake 2661 stage prior to and time 012626,7488 Steevens's ed. , 5909,7869 Sti'aohey, Hamlet 8468 Stratford, club 6986 jubilee 6973', 86 library and museum catalogue 7967 Ward, diary 9268 studies of, Pletcher 3081 Knight 4894-6 superstitions, &c.of his age, Drake 2561 tales li'om. Lamb Taming of a shrew, old 5008, 28 Taming 7974 4427 Tempest, Hunter on text, examination of, Walker 9211 revisal of, Heath 3977 restoration of, Ingleby 4463 studies of. White 9428 vindicated. Singer 8069 Theobald, S. restored. Pope's and other editions 8789 Thoms, S, in Germany, folk-lore ; a soldier? 8826 Tieck 3266, 8871 Time and truth reeonoiUng the religions world to 7972 aud his times 2661, 3721, 7488 Two noble kinsmen 8086, 7906 s 681 S ^Shakespeare— co«^. ( Ulrici, S.'s dramatic art, relation to Calderon and Goethe 9075 Upton, observations 9083 versification. Walker 9212 and Voltaire, Montagu 6206 Walker, text, language, plays and poems, versification 9211-13 Warburton's edition 2715 Ward, diarjr 9268 Warwickshire anecdotes 7973 Webster, Merchant of Venice, Hamlet 9326 Whalley, learning, passages 9383 White, I'alstaff 9418 White (U.S.) Shakespeare's scholar, text etc.. Collier folio 9428 Whiter, "As you Uke it," new principle of criticism 9450 " who smothers her with paint- ing" 6880 writtiags 4428, 4895, 6206 works and single plays 7884, etc. Shane, etc., Ireland, ace', ol 6168 •Sharp, Granville, life 4102-3 •Sharpe, C. K., Eabelais 7253 S., mon" of Egypt 2161 W"., S. Rogers 7494 Shai-per detected, Houdin 4274 •Shaw, Cuthbert, poems 6706=5 Rev. Stabbing, Topographer 8912 D'. Thos., life 7636 Shebbeare, Towers on 8921 Sheep, Farmer's library 2977 multitude of, 1560 Fish 2674 Sheepfolds, construction of, Ruskin 7576 Sheffield, books 2781, 4140, 6 • statistics 4140 Sheffield, John (D. of Buckinghamshire), poems 963' Lord Gibbon 3394-5 •Shell, R. L., life 8914 •Shelley, M"., Home on 4259 P. B., Bagehot on 380 De Qutncey on 23658 GilfiUan on 3413 last days, Trelawny 8944 " Liberal " 5324 life, Hogg 4127 life, Medwiu 6019 Prometheus unbound, illustra- tions 6773 Shenkendorf, poems 6505 Shenstone, letters to 5540 life, etc. 3601 MS. notes, etc., Horace 4327 poems 963', 67011'^ Shepheards hunting. Wither 9587 Shepherd, Rev. D'. G., Tyne dialogue 6436" R. H., Blake 739 OoleridKe 1814 Shepherds calendar 8306. etc. in Latin 8312 Sheppaa-d, John. Foster ^^^3192 Sherborne books ^^^^'.S Sherbum castle «)99 •Sheridan, Miss, George IV. . 1219 M". (and family), life, writings, etc. 2766, B229 R. B., life, letters, etc. 4879, 5229, 6264, 6769, 8879, 9813 satirical character of 8320'' School for scandal, Mangin on, 6774 Thos. (1) 8527, 8, 9i», 15. 36, 8937' =,3 Thos. (2) 6769 Sheriffs counties, 1673 7048 Sherins, coun ^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ 7687. 8937 » " shrievalty, Lancashire, 1636 Farington Sherley, Sir A., travels, Fan-u 1866'^ and others, lives <>'>^ -Sherlock, T., Bp. of London, letter, earthquakes, sermon (as Bp. of Salisbury) 9411 •Sherlock,— coref. W., Dean of St. Paul's. Catholic church 1672'-' case of allegiance, 4099J. 673612, 13_ 73B4 challenge to 4099' Oxford decree iogg* Popery 7096» sermon 40991 Shields, South, and coal mines accidents 6737 •Shillingford, letters, etc. ShilUngford 1322 Shipbuilding, iron, Fairbairu 2947 terms and phrases 9707 Shipping, first invention of, Raleigh 7267 •Ship-money Camden Misc.'' 1322. 1596', », 67338-1", 7188™ Ships, ancient 8144 building. &c., terms and phrases 9707 encouragement for commanders taking. 1693 7643 English, taken by French privateers 2277' and forces agauist France, 1678 7048 masters, etc. of, petition, 1648 7188"' navy, where built, 1689 6401 •Shipton, Mother, prophesie 295^ Shipwreck, fortunate 6166 " Medusa " 7704 St. Paul 8144 Shipwrecks, Royal Navy 3417 •Shirley, J., life 2626 Shirley, fiction 684 Shirreff, Emily, self-culture 3660-1 Shoa, court and kingdom of 3878, 4661 •Shoberl, F. 704, 959 Shoes of fortune, etc.. tales, Andersen 166 Shooting, Blaine 736 " Craven " 2100 Shooting Niagara, Carlyle 1380 » ". 1410 Shore, the. wonders of. tongsley 4844 Bhoreham, sermons, 1847 9398 Shoreham. W™. de, poems 6829** Shore's wife, tragedy of Chwrehywrd \%i6^^ " Short View," EngEsb stage. Collier 1827, etc. Shorthand, correspondence. RoHe 7478 sermons. Rachel Baker 405 speeches, 1644. etc. (chiefly taken by Hinde) 1599", 1670 (?), 6149 (P), 6337" Shrewsbury castle, view 1695*i Charles I. at (and speech) 1596*i, 169711* Elizabeth. Countess of, life 2002 Duke of, book against 8153 letters to 9128 e* Earl of, corres". (Mary Q. of Scots) s, 5415 peerage 6737 sermon at. 1643 8595 Shrill cry in the ears of cavaliers, etc., 1648 1696' Shrines, English, pilgrimages to 3796 and sepulchres. Madden 6726 Shrubbery, the, Phillips 6898 Shrubs, evergreen 8340 Loudon 5490 Shunammite, good, illuminated 676 Shuttleworth house and farm accounts ShViUleworth 1639 •Shuttleworth. Sir J. K., literary address 949 Si am, embassy to, Orawturd 2106 le'i" cent. Morga 3766 Siamese twins, etc., poems 5595 Siberia 2816, 2986, 4089 exiles of, tale 7647 Sibylhne oracles, Vossius 5141 Sicilian summer, a, Taylor 8661 Sicily, travels, &c., 1809-46 180. 3223, 3300, 4104, 4337-8, 8824 Sick giant and doctor dwarf story 4694 Sickness and affliction, on, Sanderson 7674 laws of, Neison 6419 Siddons, M"., life, letters, etc. 775, 1346, 3067, 3293, 9 Sidmouth, Viscount, life 6803 •Sidney or Sydney, A., contemporaries of 7686 and Dalrymple 8921 life, letters, etc. 1859 3168-9, 6007, 7686 682 S 'Sidney or Sydney, A.— emit. trial, etc. 0885, 7095' H., 1869, 5798 P., apology for poetry Sidney 211 defence of the Earl of Leicester 1869 life, letters, etc. 862, 1869, 9070, 9726 poems and sonnets 768, .3284 E,., letters, etc. 1869 W., elegy for 8588 Sidney or Sydney, papers 8039 Sidneys or Sydneys, letters, memoirs, Collins 1859 Sieges, Brailow, Varna, Silistria, Shumla 6196 Malta 6436" Newcastle 6435= Paris, 1871 7688 Peninsula war 6389 Reading, 1643 7334 Bouen, 1591 Camden Misc.'- 1322 " sege off Melayne ' ' Charlemagne 2674 Vienna 7728 Siena, comedy at, 1531 6784 •Sierra Nevada, 1851 4766 Sieveking, B. H., dispensaries, etc. 5214 Sights and sounds, 1853, Spicer 8316 Siglarium Romanum, Gerrard 2940 Signs in the heavens, etc., 1661-2 6163-4 of the times, Bunsen 1122 Carlyle 1380'' Sikes, G., Sir H. Vane 9101 Sikhs, the, and war with 2182, 8181, 8388, 8782 Silas Bamstarke, fiction 3740 Marner, fiction 2721 Silence, on. Pope 7076 Silent love, poem 9566 river, dram, poem 8500 Silesian knight, 16''' cent. 8071 Silhouette, De 8937 ' « Silhouettes de Villes, Dgpret 2364 Silk countries, China 3181 Siluria, Murohison 6349 Silva, Evelyn 2907 Silver, assaying 9310-11 coinage, Locke 6396 *Simms, C. S., Chetham soc. index 1639 Simms (TJ.S.), view of residence, etc. 144 •Simon, Pedro, El Dorado, etc. Smon 3756 Simon, fiction 7666 Simon Shallow, life 4080 Simonidea •5086 Simony and church patronage 9184 Simple story, fiction 962i«, 4448 Simpleton, a, fiction ' 7328 Simplon, the, 1862 7861 •Simpson, Rev — , Baratariana 436 William, Crimea plates 888-9 Simrook, Karl 7974 •Sims, B., autographs 6422-3 Sinai, Mount, bibhcal researches in, Robinson 7462 and Palestine, Stanley 8360 peninsula, discoveries in, Lepsius 5266 rooks of, C. Forster 3133 Sind, Arabs in 2738 Sinde and England, Lushington 6532 travels, 1845, Orlich 6606 •Sindh, notice of 7882 •Singer, M". E., poems 7019^ 7179 S. "W., Shakespeare 7904 Singers, anecdotes, etc., Dibdin 2391 Singing book : singing at sight 9038 Single combat, 1610, Selden 7832 Singleton, Archdeacon, letters to, S. Smith 8166 Sion, Isleworth, monastery Mirror 2674 college, challenge to 7188'^ Sions elegies, sonnets, Quarles 7228 plea against the prelacy, 1641 717 Sir Charles Grandison, fiction 962, 7399, 8987 " s Bverard, poem 749 Perumbras Charlemagne 2674 Frizzle Pumpkin, fiction 9419 Gawayne, romance-poem Gawayne 2674 Hornbook, ballad 4166 Iliad Dorerel, Homerides, 1716 4099'" Otuell of Spain Clmrlemagne 2674 Sir Ralph Esher, fiction 4411 Roger de Coverley 8291-3 Thomas More : colloq.uies, Southey 8266 Tryamoure, romance 6829^^ Sirani, Elisabetta, life 889? Sirdars, Seik 8181 •Sismondi on history and politics. Stanhope 8354 Sisters of charity, Jameson 4555 Sisters, the, tale 4166 Siwah, oasis of, views 7624 Sixteenth century, history of 7302 Skegg, copy 9332 Skeleton, the, Haydon 3920 •Skelton, Rev. Philip, life 1135, 9056 Skelton, Rev. P., consultation, the, 1753 8562= Sketch book, W. Irving 4486 Sketch book, military 6108 Sketoher (essays). Eagles 2671 Sketcher's tour round the world 2765 Sketches by " Boz " 2399, etc., 2446-7 illustrations, Cruikshank 2168 and essays, Hazlitt 3963 Russell 7579 from life, Blanohard 747 the, tales, Sewell, etc. 7864 and travels in London, Thackeray 8V69 ' 1= of young couples, Dickens 2486, 48 gentlemen, Dickens 2449 Sketching society, Chalons and others 1500 Skialetheia, 1598 Chdlpin 1867 Skinner, Lt.-Col. James, life 3238 Thomas, restoration, etc. Bate 601 Skippon, speech and letter, 1646 1697" Skye, guide to, 1854 3112 •Slack, John, Soro[o] by hosp. 5110 Slane, B. MacGuckm de 4442 Slang, dictionary of S69 •Slater, minor poet, life 694 Slave, African, in Maryland 706'' American, Douglass 6436" coasts, Africa, 1849 - 4085 fugitive. Brown, 1856 1006 hnnts, Egypt, 1844 6686 Ufe, Georgia, 1865 1006 narrative, Northup, 1853 6529 son, the, "Wilkins, 1864 9490 states, America 1088, 2984, 6596, 8448, etc. trade 1368, 4051, 6737 ti'ading, charge of, 1843 9726 Slavery, abolition of, and Christianity 354 America, history. Helps 4005 American, 1856 140 north-side view of (U.S.) 2666 poems, Longfellow, etc. 5479 and slave trade, 1856 9478 United States 3786, 7665 "West Indies and America, Helps 3997 white, Sumner 8608 Slaves, fugitive, in Canada 2666 Slavic nations, languages, literature, poetry 8635 Slavonians, Turkey, 1863 494S Slavonic nations, religious history 4946-7 Wilkinson on 9496 poems 788-9 Sledge excursions, ice 8610 Sleep, anatomy of 699 in insanity, narcotics 9522 sermons, etc. during 406 sound 699 Sleeping beaute in the wood 4166 Sleswiok and Holstein, 1861, Laing 4982 Slips of yew, Roffe 7477 Sloane, Sir Hans, satire on 8937"" Slogans, north of England 64861* Smalridge, Bp. S77, 4099'' •Smart, B. H., i.e., " Francis Drake " 2557 Smai't, C, poems 6705^ translations 4240, 8766 Peter, 1628 6408 Smectymnuus, Milton 6154 redivivus 5372^ Smedley, Menella 6613 Smethley'and Holme, heralds Chetham Miscf, 1689 Smirke, R., Arabian nights 20S 683 •Smith, Adam, JJp. Honn; -1-251-5, auiS-B Hume 1367 life 5381 Albert, Gavarni in London 3.347 Charlotte, life 2766 Old manor house 952'« Edmund, poems 953', 6705*« Elephant, sermon, 1681 7047*' Elizabeth, life 2766 prose and verse 8123 E., Palestine, etc. 7462 Sir Frederic, Turkish empire 7262 Sir Harry, despatches 8846 Henry, sapphics 8589 Henry, B,oman Catholic ch., Germany 3383 James and Horaoe, life, letters, etc. 6769, 6879 parody on 7351 John, mici'ocosm 6097 Joseph (Mormon), life 5986 Robert, poem on death of Q. Mary 7020 Robert, microcosm 6097 Bobert H. Soden, and others 7763-5 Sir Sidney, life 482 Southwood, Home on 4259 Sydney, Home on 4269 Houghton on 4278 life, letters, etc. 4148-9, 8879 moral philosophy, H. Bogers on 7485 Su' Thos. (secretary), letters 9670 Toulmin, and Lucy Toulmin Gilds 2674 Sir W., speech to grand jurv, 1682 52.31* Smithfleld, executions, 1592 Kydde 1856 ' ' 1550 £e<;4el856'2 groans (Bart, fair), 1707 8937 ' » Smoke, London, 1661 2892 Smokeless fire-place 285 Smoking and smokers :J2S5 Smoky chimneys 1171 •Smollett, Gil Bias 5261 Humphry Clinker 952'" poems 953'», 4655, 6705« Thackeray on 8759"" Smuggler, the, fiction 429 *Smytn, Richard, obituai-y Smyth 1322 *Smythe, Hon. G. S., importance of literature 5369 James, heads of the people 6009 .Snape case. Surrey lunatic asylum 0737 Snobs, book of 87-59" '^ 8760 • ', 61 •Snow shroud, poem, Coxe 64S6'« Snuff, essay on 3285 'Soane Museum, pictures 4547 Soap and soap-makers, etc. 7188*, ', '» Sobieski, Princess, to the Chevalier, poem 7019' Sobraon, battle 3845 Sobriety in meats, drinks, etc. 2915 •Social aspects, J. S. Smith 814S condition of the people, Kay 4732 economy. Burton 1206 Chalmers 1492 essays, Conybeare 1925 growth, Greek conceptions ut 0297 life, 12"' century, Jocelin 4628 organisation, Harris 5212 philosophy and pol. economy, Mill 6111 progress and History, Lucas 5516 science, essays, Greg 3636 statics, Spencer 8304 systems, etc. founded on co-operation 4011 Sociahsm, French 1785 Societies, antiquaries, London 6487, 8204, etc., 9182 Newcastle 6435'^ archaeological institiite, Winchester, 1845 223 artists' fund, hist, of 7222 arts 2325, 4547, 9338, 9676 Arundel 512 ballad 411 Berkshire Ashmolean 1060 British ai-tists, Ruskin 7576 Camden 1322 Cavendish 9553 Celtic 1481-2 Chauiii(>ii 7181 Solomon's song paraphi'as'd, 1681 7030 Solway Moss 3315, 6435* s 684 S Solyman and Almena, Langhorue 5106 *Somers, Lord, life, etc. 1938, 7510 poems 6160 Sotners Town, private press 7^4, etc. Somerset, bishopric EGclesiastical 1322 Prances Howard, Countess of, life 2002 Elizabeth Percy, Duchess of, life 2002 Prances Thynne, Duchess of, life 2766 Duke of, ballads on 411^ B. of, collection of 7614 Somerset, Earl of, and Jas. I. 4519 Somerset, lord Protector, epistle Scotland 2674 Somersetshire, chap-book (proud squire re- formed) 7025 Conquest 6110 handbook, 1856 6364 petition, 1642 1597* recusants, 1642 1699 ' = . rural rides 1763 sheriff and committee, 1642 1699 '5 "Welhngton monument 4840 *SomerviIe, poems 951 Somnambulism Son, advice to, Osborn Song, battle of Hexham time of Edward IV. of faith of lady Bessy for New-Tear's day, 1703 of Itoland Song birds, English, pictures, etc. Song-writing, essay on, Aikin *Songs and ballads. Prince Albert Rimbault ballads, legends, etc. Durham and carols, 15"' cent, of cavaliers and roundheads of the people, Caspian Sea convivial and poems on costume day and night, AUingham from the dramatists English, Aikin Barry Cornwall Cundall Percy festive, M"" and IP^ cent. French, Oxenford invasions of Ireland 2801 6613-14 6435" 6435" 2872 7023 7496 9599 77,79 111 7420 7975 6306, 6557 131 2796 77,79 1985-7 2173 6826, etc. 6654 6829=1 3311-13 (see also Gar- 3990 488, 2121, 68291 4166 " Garlands lands) . Heine Ireland Kitchiner (with music), Dibdin nursery political. King John— Edward II. Songs 1322 and convivial, Morris 6306 national, Roumamia 6367 rump 7555-6 sacred, Moore 6244 for sailors 617 Scottish 1506, 2125-6, 2136, 8578, 7480, 7789-90, 9406 national, Servia Shakespeare Turbervile of Zion, Montgomery Sonnets {on title-pages) : Adam son 5607 7964, 6 Tnrbenile 1863 6219 64361= "Barry Cornwall " (B. W. Procter) Bowles "Peltham Burghley " Davison De Vere selected by Dyce Edwards Bnghsh (collections) S. Evans Googe Hanmer G. Harvey 1857 Knox 4926 Lamb 6007 lok (Christian passions) Misc. ", 3284 7888 870 1139 1853 2372 2669 2716 3173,2659,4288, 6737 2878 211 Sonnets— eoKi!. Petrarch 6854-6 Portuguese 6485" Shakespeare 7964 Sion's, uuarles 7228 Earl of Surrey and others 1853 Sydney, Sir P. 758 Talfourd 69681, ; 8620, 1, 7 treasury of. Main 6737 Turbervile 1853 Wade 9187 "Warton (not Otway) 6633 Westwood (" Foxglove bells ") 9377 Sonora, travels, etc. 5846 Sophia, Princess, Macky's memoirs, 1733 5697 SophiarCharlotte, Queen of Geo. III., hfe 9314 Dorothea, Queen of George I„ life, etc. 160S , 2536, 9525 Sophlsmes Economiques, Bastiat 499-600 Sophisms, free-trade 3242-3 Sophistry, Hobbes 4105 Sophists of Athens, Porster 3140 Sophocles, Boeckhius on 785 illustrations of, from poets 876 lexicon 2728 Sorcery, 1324 Eyteler 1322 and magic, Wright 9669 Soreau, Agnes, hist, of 2997 Soret, Goethe 3482 Sorrows of gentility, fiction 4625 Werther, fiction 3476 Sortilege, De Quincey 2365= Soto, Perdinando de Florida 3766 Soul, the, dietetics ol 3015 immortahty of 4371, 6258 in nature 6570 nature of 2101 power of, over the body 6237 sorrows and aspirations of 6445-6 summer and winter of 6406 view of 7299 Soul and body, dialogue, Howell 4313 Souls, free-trade in 6520 intermediate state 7363= men's, state of, Guizot ' 3718 Sound 927, 5118 in verse, variety of 7021 Sounds, imitative, on 5203 spoken, notation of EJJis 2674 Soups, ancient 4830 South, poems South Kensington Museum 5904, 7027 7050, 7464, ,, ,. ■„ 7762-*8 Moulton, Devon 169732 Place chapel 3206, etc. Sea, discovery of Andagaua 3766 islands, 1853 3385 scheme or bubble 7010*i (?) ; 8937 " » uninhabited island, Quarll 7230 voyage to Hawkins 3756 & 3904 Seas, adventures 6034 Winfield, Derbyshire 762 Southampton, Speed 8298 Southampton, Henry B . of, trial of 6885 papers attributed to 6757 Southern dialect Michel 2674 *Southey, binding of book ft'om his library 4465 copies, with MS. notes, book-plate, etc. 3583, 4107. 4466, 4684, 4881, 6099, 5745-6, 6258-60, 9300, 9305, 9437, 9501, 9711 Cowper 2048 dedication to, Lander 5074 GilfiUan on 3413 Hazlitt on 3954 Leatham on 52OS life, letters, etc. 336, 1016, 2008, 748i poems on slavery 6479 and Person, " Blackwood " 6068 W. Taylor of Norwich 7434 Soutliwark petitions, 1643, 8 5448, 6734*' tract, Lilburne 5337 " s Southwell, Sir Bobert, Ireland 6325 manuscripts, catalogue 8861 9638 poems 3284 (see also 1865 " 1) Souvenirs oontemporains, Villemain, 1864 9149 Robert (poet), life s 685 S Sovereigns of Bujrope, Beatsoii 3917 Sovereigns, female, lives '15-11' rights of, 1691 ■mi)', 51SS's Sovereignty discussed, 1680 1672* Sovereignty, nature and rights of, 1680 7047" Bowdone of Babylone, romance Charlemagne 3674 Spade husbandry 6652 ♦Spain, ancient 6491 Arabs in 1911 artists of 5973 Bible in 844i Bonaparte (Joseph), king of 820 Earl of Bristol in Camden Misc. ^ 1322 British army, 1808 6791 Castile and Andalucia 3101, 8721 . under Charles II. 8365-6 ohronioles, Proissart 3262-4 civil wars in 1998, 2334 conquest of, legends 4476 1806, Granger 3583 1809-10, Jacob 4509 1817, Keatinge W'm 1829-32, Cook 1930 1830, Inglis 4456 18S9, Londonderry 5452 1843, 'Widdrington 9470 1846, Pord 3123 1847, Quillinan 7236 1848, Urquhart 9086 1850 (" Gazpacho ") , Clark 1723 Trollope 9001 ■Wallis 9224-6 1853, Gantier 3346 Power 7134 and England, Landor, 1809 5083 negotiations Calendars 1300 Ferdinand and Isabella 7164 gypsies 846 handbook, 1846, Ford 6364 history, Dunham 2625 Infanta of, and Prince Charles 7776» inquisition, 1641 8937''* and Ireland 44*2 king of, and Charles P. of Wales 1639-41 and Chas. 2, 1680 7188™ and Louis XIV., 1689 4099' and Protestant kings 7776' service of 7776' violence of 7775» language (ancient) 4784 late disappointments in, Marlborough 6817' letters written in, Landor 5083 and Louis XIV. 8937 ' " misssion to, 1835, St. Germjins 7618 and Netherlands, wars between Collins 1859 news from, 1620 1699 " = painters and painting 2166, 3961, 4612, ^ 5973, 9116 painters, sculptors, architects 9116 Peninsula campaigns 1998 and Earl of Peterborough 3249 Philip II. and his court 3246, 716B IV. and Netherlands, etc. 7776 poetry and poets 2347,4785,8280 and Portugal (Portingale) voyage, 1689^ 1838-40 2334 Queens of 3376 Sir Otuell Charlemagne 2674 and Spanish, sketches, Lewis 6317 state papers, etc. calendar 1300 Villalobos, court physician 9147 voyages et aventures, Fontaney, 1836 3101 war with. Bacon 7272 war of the succession, Stanhope 8352 war, 1807-14 113, 7689 •Spalding, Line, Harington, etc., 1648 ^ ^^ Spalding club books '^^*^'ffn} Spaniards, in Italy, victory over, 1702 7024 Spanish ambassador, 1641-2 1694M696M ballads, Lockhart 5406-7 comedian, Gazul 3358 conquest, America, Helps 4005 Spanish— core*. drama 5309, 8281 dramotisls (rarly), livi.'^ 6220 empire, 16"' and 17"' cent. 7290 fables 9718 history. Ford 6364 invasion, 1588 7048, 8099 ' ' ladye's love 828S language, Eobertsonian method 6217 literature, history 865, 8870 main, Trollope, 1859 8989 marriage, 1617-23 iSpanish 1332, 3308 8702, 7775 marriages, 1849 6230 military nun, De Quincey 2366=' " pilgrim " 7776" poetry 8280 "Practices" 77766,' priests bone Are, 1072 7024 succession, Hill 4087 theatre, Dibdin 2891 translations from 9246 wai's, Csesar 1286 •Sparks, Jared, tribute to 146 Spas, England and Germany 3591-3 pilgrimages to 4640 Speakers, Abbot, diary, etc. 1784 Charlton, speech, 1672 1602 from Bdw. III., list, 1750 9630 Hanmer, life, etc. 3834, 7044* Lenthall, death-bed repentance 4026 speeches, etc. 1597", ^, »*, 2963'», 7188"' lives oJ 6790 Onslow, notes on Burnet 1174 Speaking, art of, etc. 654, 4385, 7643 Species, origin of 2268 •"Spectator" 960 essays, illustrative of 2559 inspected, touching French terms 4099"' Spectre, the, poem 2213 Speculative philosophy, history, etc. of 867, 1502 Speculum Britannise (IDssex) Norden 1322 historiale, Maerlant 3768 regum Angliae Michard 1663 •Spedding, James, Bacon 359, 60, 65 Overbury 4619 Speech, parts of, nature of 4730 philosophy of 4385 Speeches, Albert, Prince 110 Atkyns, Ld. Ch. Baron, 1693 5231 Bagshaw, 1640-1 1697«, »^ "' Beilhaven, Lord, 1706 7041 Bright 937 Bristol, Earl of, 1643 1597*i, ™ Brook, Lord, 1642 1597' Brougham 980, 94 Browne, John (Dorset), 1641 1597*' Burke 1145-6 Burroughes, 1643 1597' Calamy, B., 1643 1697= Campbell, Lord 1337 Car, Lord, 1641 1660 Chalonor, 1646-7 1601, 1592 Chancellor, Ld., 1672, 9 1602 Charles I., etc., trial and execution 1551, 61, 67, 79 Charlton, speaker, 1672 1602 Chatham 136 Cicero 1699 Coleridge, Sauriu v. Starr 1793 Coppinger, 1641 1697'= Cotton, Sir E., 1690 4099i Cromwell 1380, 1401-4 Culpeper, 1641 1591^ Davies, Sir J., 1613 2274 Demosthenes 2338, etc. Dickens 2461 Durham, Earl of 2648-9 Erskine 2819-20 Everett (C.S.) 2911 Flood, 1787 8662' ^ Fox, C. J. 3202 W. J. 3206 Haveraham 2318 Kossuth 4942 Laud 6148-9, 72, etc., 8937» ^ 686 Sjiceches— coM^. lienox, D. of, 1641 6263 Lytton 5566 Maoaulay 5618, 33-36 Mackintosh 5688 Maynard Strafford 8468-9 occasional conJormity, 1701 7044i'''-" O'Connell 6663 Packington, Sir J. 70«» Parliamentary, 1640-1, 60 6714, 16, 80 1641 to the Union 7827 Charles I. to 1812 3935 Peel 6798 Plunket 7000 Plydell, 1641 1597™ Prince Consort no Pym (Laud and Strafford) 7223, 8468-9 Rei^cides 7346-7 Rudyerd 7649 Russell, Bp. of Lincoln Edward V, 1322 AV"ni., Lord, and others 7095^ 7587 St. John, 1640-1 5188', 67331" Sedley 7827 Shaftesbury, 1st Earl of 1657 7th Earl of 7879-80 Smith, Sydney 8166 Strafford 8468-9 Sumner (tr.S.) 8603 TaUourd (copyright) Vane, Sir H. 6448, 7043, 8629 7347, 9101 Waller 9219 "Warrington, E. of, 16s)2 9287-8 9361, 4 9384 9458 9662 9577-8 8937' 1° 594 1768 873' 2 2592 8889 4868 5064 4861 Washington (U.S.) Webster, Daniel (U.S.) Wellington Wharton, Duke of Whiteside, Irish state trials Widdrington, 1641 Winthrop (U.S.) •Speed, D'. Batt upon Batt — , notice of Spelliug-book, Oobbett •Spence, Rev. J., anecdotes Duck Po'lymetis (abridged) W., entomology •Spenser and Earl of Essex, Latidor and Eafiry Queen, Kirkland imitations of 6971', 7010, 8012 lite, etc. 2626, 9070, 9538 poems 953^ and his poetry, Craik 2090 pronunciation JEllis 2674 Spenserian stanza, Odyssey, Tasso 4181, 8644 Sphere, the, Hobbes Sphinx, Theban, De Quincey •Spicer, Henry, All the Tear Round Spiegel historiael, Maerlant Spillan, D., insanity •Spinoza, answer to, etc. Spires, mediseval, England Spiridion, fiction Spirit, essay on Spirit drawings, Wilkinson, 1858 manifestations, American, 1863 rapping, Howitt, 1854 Spirit of the age, Hazlitt new. Home of the east, Urquhart of laws, Montesquieu of nature etc., poems of patriotism Spirits, etc. raising of world of Spirits and water, Lane Sniritual communications, Owen Lords in Parliament, 1679-80 22775, 10.13 " manifestations," review of, 1863 560 Quixote, novel 062, 3602 Spiritualist, tlie, 1S57 ,, 328-' Spithead, " Royal aeorgc 7546 Spittlo-Pields, Brick Lane, lb84 832.! Spittlehouse, J., Army vindicated, 1663 266 4106 23651" 124 3758, 6730 7307 1730, 6234 9469 7671 8662 ' 1 9606 8316 2801 3954 4269 9088 •9614 6673 807-8 1300, 2801 6344 4807 6093 Spitzbergen, documents on iSpUsbergeii 3756 Spleen, the, poem 3626-7 Splendid village, poem 2743 Sponge's (M'.) sporting tour, fiction 8507 Spoon, the, Westman 9372 Sport and sporting, Africa 172, 2172 Algeria 3879 Asia, Africa, America 882 Britanny 4219 Europe, north 5394 Europe, Asia, Africa 6384 Foreign lands, Napier 6383 Prance, 1802 8864 Germany, Prance, Ital.y, Russia 7631 Highlands 1895-6, 7630 India 3171, 5717 Ireland 5972 Norway 460 Salmon and deer 1924 " Scrutator" on sporting 7809 shooting recreations, " Cra- ven " 2100 sporting novels, Surtees 8606-7 Sports, calendar of 4184 Italy, South 6658 Jas. I", declaration 8099 " 1 and pastimes, England 8483 rural and field 736 Sportsmen, hints to, Norway 6540 Sprat, Bishop, letter 16721' life, etc. of Cowley 2041 poems 953«, 6160, 6706« 7027 Spring Gardens, Charing Cross 3738 Spring-tide, Akerman 106 Sprites, Radcliffe on 7260 Spurstowe, Rev. D'., Nugent 6546 Spy, fiction Cooper 1961 Square-caps turned into Roundheads Zand 5176" " Squib " (the), or Searchfoot, Cervantes 148S Squibs etc., Vauxhall affray, 1773 6387 Staat, Einflusz des 19. Janrhunderts auf den 2803 Staatskunde von Europa, Handbuoh 7761 Stable, management 4073 Stables in churches, 1643 1586 Stade, Hans, captivity in Brazil Stade 8766 Stadtholders, succession and character 8493 •Stael, Baronne de, life, etc. 6517, 7997 Staffin, Loch, geology 3112 Stafford, Ld., trial 6886 * R., apology for, 1690 7047" Staffordshire, mral rides 1763 Tettenhall Regis Gilds 2674 Stag, a, life of 3829 Stage, ancient 8937 ' 9 and modern, J. Colher 1832, 4 antiquit.v, sense of, on 1827 apology for actors Seywood 7974 British, rise. etc. of. Baker 404 effect 6974« Bnghsh, account of 3364, 6978 annals of 1841 Collier (Jeremy) controversy 1011, 1827-36, 2350, 6 ; 3044 costume, descriptions 6974 {end) daily journal (" Tatler ") 8650 desertion, late, 1743 8937 "■ ' directions, cast, etc. (MS.) 4694-6, 6981-2 and di'ama, early Alleyn 7974 eighteenth century, Macklin 6694 essay on, Eowe 7913 Hcnslowe's diary Henslowe 7974 historia histrionica, 1699 296'<' 6978 history, etc. 296» 664, 772-6, 965, 1641, 1682-4, 1841, 2391, 2662, 2626, 3364, 6694, 7891, 2, 9 impiety, etc.. 1704 8788' lUiliaii operas, 1706 7011 matters relative to, T. Gibber 1689 past and present, 1800 S788' s • 687 s. StiiKe, English— co»if. practice and genius, 1807 4896 reminiscences, Kelly 4761 retrospections ol, Bernard fi4(i romance of 8072 Roscius Anglicanus 2552 seventeenth century 2626 Shakespeare soc. 7B74 Shakespeare's time (and before) 2626, 7488 stage-management, etc., T. Gib- ber 6972' view of, T. Gibber 1690 • ^ view of (criticisraa), Hazlitt 8957 T. Weston's life 5387 French, Fleury 3087-8 Greece, Eowe 7913 history of, Chetwood 1611 invective against players, etc. Oosson 7974 Irish, history 1641, 3364 lawfulness of, 1787 8788' -players complaint, 1641 295* plays, suppression of, 1647 296' Borne, Eijwe 7913 usefulness of, Dennis 2350 Stag:gering state of the Scots statesmen 7774 Staines, printed at 6968''= Stamford, Henry, Earl of, 1642 169525, " mayor of, speech, 1641 1697' pamphlets 873 Stamp duty on publications, law of, 1830 1421 Standing army, 1699 4099' ♦Stanfleld, Clarkson, illustrations, etc. 1500 2399, etc., 3163, 5842, 7783 *Stanhope, Hon. Alex., correspondence 8355-6 1st Earl, voyage to France, ode 7010=* 3rd Earl, epistle to 5073 Philip Henry, 6th Earl, Chesterfield 1632 importance of literature 6369 Peel 6800 Sparks, Jared 8288 Lady Hester, Ohasles on 1605 'Stanley, A. P., Dean of 'Westminster, Arnold 279 Dickens 3461 Montague, lite 2670 Sir W»., Deventer Allen 1639 Stanley papers Stanley 1639 Stanleys, Earls of Derby Stanley 1689, 2S24 Stannaries, Cornwall, 1710 1365 Stans puer ad mensam Babees 2674 Stanyhurst.life 594 Staplehill, John, Lilbum, 1653 7048 Stapleton, Sir P., speech, 1641 imi^ •Star-chamber, Ld. Andover's speech concern- ing 1697"= Bastwiok, Prynne, etc. 1696", 6148 bill 1697'* clerks and their fees 16902, 8367 Laud 514«, 74 Lilburne 6337 " printers and stationers 1856 ^ ^ proclamation 7188' New, 1689 5372' Starcralt Leechdoms 1668 Starkey. Thomas, life, letters, etc. 1854, Starkey 2674 Stars, the, Wilson 9652 *State, affairs of, W"" cent., Melvil 6029 relations with the Church 3429 churches and kingdom of Christ 127 dunces, poem 7024, 9442 letters of, Milton 6154 medicine, Bumsey on 7567 mysteries of, Jas. I., etc. 4520 Baleigh 7266 papers, etc., Burghley 1140 calendars 1298, etc. catalogue, Thorpe 8860-1 Upcott 9082 Clarendon 1719 CuUodea 2164 Hardwicke 3848 Henry 8 8871 State papers, fXQ.—cont. Revolution to House of Hanover 4771 Sadler 7613 Thurloe 8868-9 paiTidoxes of, 1702 4099b poems 7027 prosecutions, Ireland, 1845 4469 the, Lieber 5S32 ecclesiastical and civil, Hobbes 4106 trials 8885, 7661, 8372, 8927 -weathercocks, Dunton 2638 -worthies, H. 8— Chas. I. 5393 States General, Low Countries, 1652 6784**, 7042,',7775S, 8937'" Statesman, H. Taylor 8673 complete (1" E. of Shaftesbury) 7876 thoughts and opinions of, Humboldt 8093 Statesman's almanack, ballad 7024 manual, Coleridge 1803, 10 ; 6029 Statfesmen, America, 1846 5963 American, homes, etc, of 145 ancient, Pliny 6998 biog. sketches, Knapp (U.S.) 4881 British, lives 5377 Commonwealth, Forster 3163 three English (Pym, Cromwell, Pitt) 8128 foreign, lives time ol Geo. III. military, L. Hunt Stationers' company, registers Stationers and Star-Ghamber Stations, Catholic, devotion of Borne, verse and prose 5378 980, 8-8 Statistical companion, 1854 dictionary, McCuUoch, 1854 history, England, 1688-1847 Scotland, 1863 papers (parly.), India register, Tegg tables, foreign countries 7974 1866 '!> 3873 Stations 2674 428 6642 paper) ;abl( 6737 8708 (parly. , . . 6737 tables, Ottoman empire, 1853 6093 view. United States, 1864 2300 libraries, Edwards, 1849 2707 Statistics, America, 1845 7220 Canada (West) 8173 dictionary of geography, 1860 4668 England, 1862 8217 flnanc« and commerce, 1846-6 7037 insanity, 1846-60 4201-2 8183 6737 9267 6787 9644 4140 6787 6419 7076 Valpy 9096 3091, 9342 1. ■519, 4056-7 Ireland, 1844-9 judicial, 1867-63 Mexico, 1829 parliamentary documents Eussia (N.W. America), 18.39 Sheffield, 1843 Syria, 1840 vital, Neison, 1846 Statins, Thebais, Pope works Statues Statutes, Cambridge colonies 6128 31 Henry 8 6482 1 Magna Charta to James I. 472 [ Oxford 8660, 6825, 9264 for preservation ol liberties, etc., Lil- burne 5387'' proposal for new modelling 472 •Staunton, Alderman, repeal 7364 Howard 7886-7, 7908 Steam-engine, marine 9707 and navigation, 1861 5121 Stedman, J., Presbyterian priestcraft 4099' 'Steele, Apology, 1714 7044* Bickerstafl 691 character of, by Toby 4099° crisis 7044, 8662' 1 Edgar, Sir J. 705 '^ Englishman, No. 57 7044 expulsion, 1714 7044 Guardian ,3684 Jack the courtier's answer, 1714 7044 s 688 S *Steele — cont. lite, letters, etc. Forster 3141, 60 literary relics 644 Thackeray 8759 "i", 8764^5 Timbs 8879 and Ld. Chamberlain 8788' Medley 43, 6017 ■' Nestor Ironside ' ' 8562' parliament, 1714 7044 *, ' procession, poem 7020 Spectator 8289 Tatler 691, 8647, etc. Steele Glas Gascoigne 211 Steevens, G., dedication to, Chalmers 1494 Pope 7076 Shakespeare 5909, 7869, 91, 94, 95 ; 7914, 17, 19 Steinitz, British constitution 3811 " Stella," anecdotes ol 2330 journal to 8529 portrait of 8526 and "Vanessa," romance 9194 Stellar universe 6464 *Stephanus, Eob., Gesner 3388 Steplien, Kin& acts ot 4016 'Stephen, Sir Fitzjames 5214, 8396 Sir James, literary address 948 ♦Stephens, J. L., travels 8942 "William, history of Castle Builders 1448 Stepney, G., poems 9536, 0159-60, 6705«, 7027 Stepney, mariners, etc. 7188ii° Stereoscope, Brewster 935 ♦Sterling, John, life 1380, 1400, 8405 *Steme, lUustjrations of, Ferriar 3008 me, Fitzgerald 3069, 8416 Thackeray on 8759", 8764-5 Sternhold, Ufe 9538 664 ♦Steward, Lord High, court and office of 6885, 7047' ♦Stewart, Dugald, Enc. Brit. 2776 Leslie tracts 6271 Eobertson 7462, 6 Adam Smith 8102-S John {" Walking ") 2365», 8424 Sir E. P., lecture on music 6210 ■William Boece 1663 Stieler, K. Schmid 114,1 ♦StilUngfleet, Bp. 607, 6396 Stirling, chap books 1623-4^5 Capt. Hind 4092 songs 3312-13 ♦Stirling, M». Simter 4430 Stirling-Maxwell, Lady Norton 6632, etc. Sir "W. 6973-7, 7807 Stock Exchange, chronicles, etc. of. 1866 3220 Stock-jobbing elections, 1701 40991' Stocks and stock-jobbing, 1714 26 Stockholm suppers 912-13 Stockton book 2800 •Stoddart and Conolly, Bokhara 9601 Stoics, doctrine and philosophy 8692, 9091 Stokers and pokers (L. & If. W. Railway) 3970 Stolberg, poems 7724 Stomach, a, memoirs of 9458 ♦Stone, Frank, ill»". 747, 2399, etc. Marcus, ill"'. 2399, etc., 8986 Stonehenge 6110 Stones ot Venice 7674 Stop your noses, 1648 6731 Storer, life 694 Stores, etc. for defence of a fort 7048 •Stories, Christmas 124, 2403, 54 ; 4287, 9720 from the classics 4856 English and foreign life 4327 household, Grimm 8665 from the Italian poets 4412 Latin 68298 old, retold 8848 that might be true, poems 3633 in verse, L. Hunt 4413 Yule-tide 9720 Storm, Greek myths, Huskin 7663 Storms, equinoctial 6870 Indian Ocean 8807 ♦Story, Joseph (U.S.) , life and letters S44U W. W., Wey's " Rome " 9380 Story about a Christmas 8074 of a feather, Jerrold 4694 of the guns, 1864 8731 Story-teller, Bell 596 old, German 546 Story without an end Stothard, illustrations 908 1417 1867, 6645, 7904, 8306 life 908 5212 5479 Stovel, truths peculiar to ChristJ'. Stowe, description of ♦Stowe, H. B., poems on slavery Stowell, Lord, life 8508 ♦Steabo, Oxford ed. 2115 ♦Straohey, W., Virginia Straclwy 3756 ♦Strada, Fam., Mary, Q. of Scots 4574 ' '■' •StradUng, life 694 ♦Strafflord, Earl of, attainder 1597", "-™ elegy and poem on 4024, 8466 essai sur, Lally-Tolendal 4989 and Ireland 6325 and Laud 5166, 69, 75i», 78-9 letter to Chas. I. 8937 ' " letter to his wife 8937 " '^ life, letters, etc. 3163, 4904 manual of life 5798 petition against 7188" Radohfle's life 9412 and Scottish commissioners 1598«, 6178 speech on scaffold 8937 ' '^ speeches, 1628 15971°= trial and execution 760, 6885, 7662, 8463 Straits (Streights) fleet, 1693 4099s Straker, Blackett memoirs, etc. 6435' Strand, " King's Head," 1648 nsH^^ ♦Strange, Sir E., life 2359 Strange histories, Deloney 6839^ news, Nash Nashe 1867 story 5660 Stratford, Essex, G. Edwards 8322 Stratford-on-Avon, Shakespeare jubilee, 1769 6973" Shakespeare jubilee oration, 1836 6986 Shakespeare hbrary, etc. 7967 Rev. J. Ward 9268 Strathmore, Countess of, life 3104 ♦Strauss, lite ol Jesus, Harwood on 8894 H. Rogers on 7487 ♦Strawberry Hill press, printed at 8303, 9232 Stray leaves, poems 6333 Strayed reveller, poem 277 ♦Street-folk, London 6986 Street music, London 495 Streets, London S36S, 6248, 8149 Stretton, Hesba, All the Tear Round 124 ♦Strickland, Agnes, Mary Q. of Scots 6898 Rome 8482 Strife and peace, fiction 912, 915 for the mastery, allegories 2667 Stringer, Moses, 1707 8937 " i° Strode, Mr., speeches, 1642 1595™-^ 16975^ Stroud, book 5144 Stroza, libri politicorum 249 Strozzi, Filippo 8998 Struensee, Count, conversion, etc. '6348 Struggles for life 2491 ♦Strype, John, Stow 8444 ♦Stuarts, Arabella, life 2002 Charles Edward, life, letters, adven- tvires, etc. 292, 860, 4879-80, 6319,6912, 8347 Court of England, reigns of 4622 last years, Bagford ballads 411"-" lives, reigns, etc. 2782, 4632, 4670, 6685, 6864, 9316 Mai'y Q. of Scots (see Scots) papers, etc. 1725, 8488 Pretenders, lives of 4828 Prmces, Strange and Lumisden 2359 restoration of, Guizot 3692 ,7, 9 ♦Stubbe, H., letter from 4i06' Stubbes, Philip, anatomy of abuses 1867 Stubborn Dame 2299 Stuck-up people SUS Stud, the 4073 Student, Lytton 5667, etc. s 689 S student-life, Venetia 5750 Studies of character, Tuckerman 9020 in conduct, Morley 6301 from nature, Masuis 6908 of a wandering observer, 1867 4466 Study, essay on, 1737 1726 for a gentleman, Locke 5397 Stump, S. J., sketches 1500 Stump-orator Parliaments 1395-6 Style 29911, 7'169 and versification, improvement in 5745 Style, old, defence of, 1751 4099° Styles (ornament), characteristics of 9635 Styria, 18*3 4931 Subject, the, liberty of, 1641 7039 Subjection to the higher powers, 1689 4099* present government, 1690 4099S Subjects, may they resist the king, 1642 1599 ' " obedience of, 1666 7038 propriety in their goods, 1641 6188^ rights and privileges, 1628 7039 Sublime, the, Longinus 5480-1 and beautiful, Burke 1145 Submission to the government, 1689 4099'' to supreme authority 5188" Successes [in war] of 1704, poem 7011 Successful merchant (Budgett) 290 " Suocessio," to the author of 7076 ^Succession and allegiance, 1689 4099" to the drown, 1568, Edwards 760 discussed, 1681 2277^ plea for, 1682 2277=' the, history of, 1681 2277»-i» Such is life, sketches and poems 2544 Suchet, Marshal Albufira 113 •Suckling, Sir John, in Prance 3049 news from, 1641 8987 " " poems 953", 6160 Sudbury,.church and parish 376 wills (archdeaconry) Wilis 1322 •Suetonius 4246, 6998, VaVpy 9096 Sufficiency of the spirit's teaching. How 7844* 'Suffolk, charges by a justice at sessions, etc., 1649 1599' = Hawsted and Hardwick 2165 petition to Fairfax 29531' rural rides 1763 Santon Downham, 1626-42 Rmis 1822 Whatfleld (Wheatfleld) 1763 Suicide, essays and letters on 4371 Henley on self-mm'der 4010 thoughts on 4099' Suleiman Pasha, monograph 4278 'Sullivan, M"., recollections of a chaperon, etc. 2217-18 Sully, life, etc. 1467, 5378 Sulpicia, poems, ti-ans. 4716,6705" Sultan, the, city of, 1887 • 6695 dominions of, 1854 8186 Summer time in the country 9536 tour (Ostend to Genoa), journal 7861 Summer and winter, debate between 296'" Summer and winter of the soul 6406 •Sumner, Charles (U.S.), speech 140 Sun Pire Oflce, hist, register 4097 Sun and moon, comicalnistory 637 Sunday-book, pictorial 4871 evening (sermons), Howson 4529 labour. Post Office Post Office 6737, 7117 laws relating to 6404 in London 1360 -schools, 1787 8958-9 imder three heads 2451 Sunderland, books 7976, 8341 Dorothy Sidney, Countess of, life, correspondence 2002, 8041 Charles, E. of, ode to, 1720 7010 Robert, B . of, letter, 1689 8987 ' " working man of, Euskin 7663 Sundon, Viscountess, life, etc. 8834 Sunny memories of foreign lands 8447 Supernatural illusions 565 the, belief in 7260 Superstition, ode to, Sogers 7489 modem, De Quincey 236B various countries 4762 Sunei-stitions, England, Middle Ages 9667 Great Britain, Brand 895 Superstitions— co«<. India, Stanhope 8354 medicine and surgery 6862 popular 3671, 6997-8, 7136 Scandinavia, Germany, Nether- lands 8869 Scotland, Dalyell 2233 age of Shakespeare 2661 Supper of our Lord Honaventura 2674 Suppers (Swedish), Bremer 913 SuppUcaiion for the beggars, 1539 Fish 2674 to Henry 8 „ 2674 of poor commons, 1646 „ 2674 Supply, 30O,O00«. 7188»« Supremacy, royal, subscription to, 1864 9479 Surgeons, emigrant, bill 5962 Surgery, lectures 7383 superstitions R8fi2 Surplice, use of, 1660 Surrey, Croydon and Keigate, Oldham history of lunatic asylum, Snape case native of, poems by proclamation, 1642 rural rides Stephens of, 1706 Sm'rey, Earl of, new year's gift to 1600 7028 909 6737 Peel 6790 718858 1763 4099" Churchyard 1863 • H. Howard, Earl of jjoems Tottel 211. 953S Tottel 1863, 2796, 7966 Surrey institution . 3937, etc. •Surtees soc. publication 8922 Survey, London and "Westminster, Stow 8441-6 Survey of England's champions, etc., Ricraft 7412 Surveying and sketching, military, 1861 2663 Susan Hopley 2141 Suspiria de profnindis, De Quincey 2366' Sussex, Cade's rising 6610 Durrington, Heene, Salvington, Tarring 9290, 3 glossary 1971 ornithological rambles and bu'ds 4924 proclamation, 1642 7188'" rural rides 1763 ♦Sutherland Gallery, Jameson 4546 Sutlej, battles, campaign 2182, 8888 •Sutton, John, M.D., life of Jackson 8518 Robert Lexington 6322 Suwarow, sketch of 6716 Swallow, Biuskin 7575 Swan tripe-club, satire in 1705 4099'", 7012 Swearer's bank. Swift 8535 Swearing, etc., suppressing, proclamations 718815, es Sweden, ambassador of (Constantinople), 1623 4099^ Charles XII., Voltaire 9169 Charles XIV. (Bernadote), life, etc. 6052, 8916 field sports 1827-8 Gustavus Vasa, history of 3788 history 2622, 3272 kin§ of (P Charles X.) 6616 hfe m, Bremer 912, 15 Bunbury 1110 literature, Howitt 4326 gietures of, 1861 163 political character 6052 residence in, 1802 9602 1827-8 5394 revolutions 9130 tour in, 1848 6966 •Swedenborg, Emerson on 2774 Goyder on 3572 life, Wilkinson 9494 Swedes, the, 1862 4607 in Prague, romance 6911 •Swedish Ambassy, 1658-4, "Whitelocke 9445-6 conspiracy, 1717 and Jacobite plot, 1717 70191 4512' language, Bosworth 869 novels and tales, Bremer 912, etc. poetry, trans. 8709 tales and traditions 9720 witches 3434 Sweet, British warblers 644 •Swift, Jonathan. Addison to 41 baiTier treaty battle of the books CaWt 7042 \res 1306 ,s 690 S *S\vift — cnni. Burnet's " History of liis own time " 469, 1174 " History of the reformation" 8937'* character of 8537, 8577 copies with MS. notes, etc. 361, 3362, 7079 on " Crisis " 7044 death of, verses by himself 7018, 8661, 77 dedication to, " Grobianus " 2305 Delanjr 2330, 7021, 8662»2 essai historique sur, Craufurd 2098 essay on, Deane Swift 8523 family of 8523 " Gregory Misosarum " 8937' * John Bull 8937' = law is a bottomless pit 219-20 letters 469, 644 E. Lewis to 3362 life, etc., Barrett 469 Berkeley 644 Delany 2330 Dilke 2470 T?orsler 3149-50,8525 by himself 8523 by himself, poem 8562^ 8577 Italian translation, 1768 (omit- ted in catalogue). Jefflrey 4578 Masson 6934 Mitford 8631 Orrery (and remarks on) 2330, 6608-9, 8.523, 8562 '2 Scott 7800, 8529 Swiftiana 8563, etc. Taylor 8566 Thackeray 8759"= Timbs 8879 and his man Timothy 4099" MS. notes, etc. 361, 3362, 6697, 8561 meditation upon a broom-.stick 8937 ' ^" panegyric on, verse 7021 and his party, " Medley " 6017 pieces by or ascribed to 469, 2330 poems 9539, 6160, 6705", » 7012, 7185 (select), ssn.smi-^" and Pope, imagy conversation 4414 Pope to 7079 Pope and others, miscellanies 8629, 73-6 preface by. Barber 487 Prince Mirabel 220 pubhc spirit of the Whigs (etc.) ^677 St. Aiban's ghost 220-1 Swiftiana 8563-72 tale of a tub, key to, etc. 8937''" Swiftiana 8568 "Wotton on 8648, 9643 Tatler 8648 Temple 8718-19 '■ Toby " (P) 4099= T^vickenbam hotch-potch 3356 verses on his own death 7018, 8661, 77 to and to his memory 8629'= "Wales, journey to 9363 ■Wood's halfpence 8524, etc., 40, 41, 72 Swift tracts, 9 volumes 8662 Abelard to Eloisa volume 3 admirable recipe 7 advice to freemen of Dublin 8 anointment, the 6 apology for a justice of the peace 5 apparition. Trinity Coll., Dublin 3 Arbuthnot 7, 9 army of wax 4 ars-punica (art of punning) 8 art of beauing 3 attornies riding circuit 9 Barber, Rupert 5 barrier treaty 7 battle of the bards 3 Baucis and Philemon 7 beasts confession 7, 8 beauty 3 Belvedere 11 Berkeley, Bp., letter to 4 birth of manly virtue, Callimncluis s Blackwell, James, paend, r, Bricklayer's poem, 1746 6 lirociido, Timotliy 9 *Swift tracts — cont. Browiae, Bp. of Cork, letter to 4 Bruges, English merchants 7 brush to the curry-comb of truth Burnet, Bp., six days preceding death of, etc. 9 C d, D'., poem on 6 Cadenus and Vanessa 7 Oallimachus, birth of manly virtue 5 Canary-bird, elegy on death of 6 Carmeu saeculare, 1700 5 Carteret, Lady and Lord 5, 7 caveat against the "Whigs 7 Chamberlain, Rev. Walter (! Chap-book, Dublin 4 Chesterfield, Earl of Music in Ireland 3 I on (> I Xestor Ironside 7 1 Xew simile for the ladies 3 ; Xorri!J, H., poems and farce 5 Nothing, on 4 O'Brien, Terence, poems Orrery. Earl of G ! Ovid, Metam., essay on and imitii. of 6 I Oxford, Robert, Earl of 7, S , Painters, Irish subjects for 4 Painting in Ireland, promotion of 4 ; Panegyric, on 1 ^ Parliament, white and black lists S Parties, essay 9 j Patriotism, concerning 4 i Petition of Frances Harris 7 Pheasant and lark, poem 5 Philocles, pseud. S Pig. Connaught, elegy on 5 | and mastiff S i Place of the damn'd, verses 9 Pleasures of a country life 6 I single life 5 Plots, essay 9 Poem ascrib'd to anon, authors 3 \ Poetry, on. a rapsody 3, 7 in Ireland, encouragement of 7, S Polyphemus evaporated 3 Pomfret. Rev. J. 5 l Poor children, proposal 4 | Pope's works, poem on 5 ! Popery, prevention of 9 j Powerscourt house 6 Pretender, ode to 9 I Pretender's nimcio 9 Priests, essay 9 Prior to Swift 9 , Proclamation from Parnassus S 1 Protestant reliffion and Parliament, it-SS —1715 -^ o 16505. 'S\rift tracts— con^. Pimninff. art of SdiVJ v. 8 Pun-Sibi, Tom 8 Religion, essay 9 Richardson, I^urence 6 Roman Catholics and sacramental test S Roscommon, Earl of 7 Sacramental test, repciil 8 St. Albans ghost 7 John, Holies, etc. 9 Patrick's church door 9 Satire, on 1 Scheme for making religion and cleigy useful 4 Scheme to pay the public debt 4 Scriblems, new Duuciad G St'i-inons S Shepherd, Rev. Samuel Sheridan, Thos. 7, S Sinzendorf. Count 7 Smedley, Mary, letter to 5 Soards match at foot-hall 5 Solitude, on 7 Specimen of thought on the gloomy re- ligion 3 Subjection, mutual, sermon S Swan Trii>e-Club, satire 7 S^nft, dedication to 6 hue and cry after (diary) 9 life and character, 17S3 3 panegyric on 5 verses on death of, reprinted 1739 6 will of 9 Tale of the finches 6 Tea-kettle, the 3 Thermometer, ecclesiastical 9 Thomson, John, Dublin, 17;i2 3 Three travellers 3 Tithe of hemp, fl:ts, &c. 8 Transfiguration, the 6 Treacherous confident 4 Ti'initj-, the, sermon 8 Tripe, I)^ Andrew 7 Tullamoore, L\, poem to 6 Vanbrngh's house 7 Vanessa (Miss Yanhomrigh) 7 Venus reveng'd S Ternon-iad 6 Virgil's Silenus, imitation of G Virtue, essay 9 "Waldron, John 6 Wax, army of 4 Weavers of lace &c., Dubhn 9 Weekes, J. E. e "Western Isle, the 5 "Whigs, caveat against 7 Wliite, Lawrence 5 White and black lists, Parliament 8 William and Mary, misrepresentations 9 {Jfaiiy of the tracts in 8562 are index^ sepsrately,) *SwinbiU'ne, Friswell on 32G0 poems and ballads, Rossetti on 752o Swinfield. Richard de, Ep, of Hereford Sirhijield 1822 ■Switzerland, 1S17. Shelley S002 1S17-19, Matthews 5SU7 1S30. Ctobbett 17oG 1S30, De Custine 2201 1S:>4. Came 1415 IJ-^. Talfourd Si^>.> (Saxon) 1S4S, Andei-sen 165 aS4S. Forbes S115 iSoO. Trollope 9001 lS5i, ABeckett 19 1S54, Lriing 4980 1S57. Longman (lecture) 5482 usi-iculture and rural economy, lS48 1893 ambassador to (Pell) 9110 Brown, Jones, and Robinson in 2555 Canton de Vaud, Fi-ee Church 5212 commeree and manufactures, 1836 6737 Geneva and glaciers of Chamoimi, 1ST 7 8002 Y Y 692 T * Switzerland— oo«<. handbook, 1850 177S history S686, 0141 letters from. Goethe S'lSO Piedmont, Italian lakes, 1850 6481 pohtios, 184,7 3870 Swiss men and mountains, 1863 3001 Swiss tale (Liesh) 1738 wanderer of, poem 6319 Sword-bearer (sermon) , T. Vicars, 1627 8137 and buckler, 160a JBas 1856 ' > sceptre, crown, Howell 8937 ' " Sy, Marquis de, ot M. Poupar 46B Sybil, liction 2177 Sybilla, prophecy ot, 1613 B4'U Sydenham, life 57(i7 panegyric on 80H3 Sydenham [Crystal] Palace 2Ha 6679, 9391 •1151 Terrestrial physics 4222 Terrible temptation, fiction 7329 Terrot, Bishop, literary address 949 •Terry, E., char, of Chas. II., 1660 1602 Terry Hogan 6082 TertuUian, spirit of, Neander 6409 Test act, for and against 8937 '« tracts. Swift 8629 a«ts, reasons against repealing, 1087 lOKi^ the established, 1679 7353>2 the, repeal of, 1687-8 7040", ^ •Testament, new, Bentley 630, 4099" Jackson's MSS. 8513 notes, Sharpe 7981-2 old, Sharpe 7982 age, authorship, authenticity 3409 Holbein's " icones " 4133 introduction to 9378 old and new, difficulties, etc. 7362 (See also Bible) Tests, University, He}"wood 4068 Tetrachordon, Milton 6164 Tewkesbury, J. Geree 1699 '=, 2038", «> Monastery Monasteries 166S Texan Santa F6 Expedition, 1844 4779 Texas, travels, etc, 1841, 4, 9 4779, 4788, 5845 Textile manutactures 2518 •Thackeray, W. M. 6009, 7192, 8433 Thaddeus of Warsaw, fiction 7105 Thame, Philip de Knights 1322 Thames, the, London on. Reach 731 6 rambles by, Thorne 8862 Y Y 2 T 694 T Thames Street, Nevell the Usurer 295" Thanet, Earl of, Erskine 2819 Earls of, memorials of 7008 Thanksgiving day, 1645 1 6m^', ^* leeo, proclamation 7188'»s 1689 4099' peace between England and Scot- land, 1641 7188« public, 1648 5448 sermons. Long Parliament 7839 1855-6 600 Theagenes and Chariclea 7808 •Theatre of the Greeks, Donaldson 2531 Theatre of Women 4133' Theatre d'honneur, 1618 9094 Thfetre en France, histoire 6990 ' * Theatres, ancient 8087 Gibber (T.) on 1690 Covent Garden 2755, 7708, 8788« Crete 2962 Drury Lane -706 ' ', 2755, 3323, 4761, 6982, 7025, 8139 English, 1743 8937'" (English) Court 1633, 9326 foreign, 1743 8937"' Goodman's Fields, Qarrick 4379 half-price, time of 1056 Haymarket 6982, 8 history of, Dibdin 2391 King's, Kelly 4761 laws relative to, 1756 1689 London, performers, 1807, Hunt 4396 and Dublin, 1730-71, history 9138 Lyceum 5593 memorial, 1818 2756 Olympic 2765 Parisian, 1794 3204 plan for new theatre 8788^ Prince's 3489 Eoyal Circus 4379 Sadler's 'Wells 4379 St. James's 2450, 5, 6974=, 6993 Sans Pareil 2756 Surrey 4379 - Tari6t6s, Potier 7121 Yorkshire, 1770-95 9503 (See also " Stage.") •Theatrical advertisements 4379 art thfetral. Talma 86.54 contemporaries of Garrick 2279 correspondence in death 8937 ' " criticisms, h. Hunt, 1807 4896 disputes, 174S 8937' = memorial, 1818 2755 performers, 1765-95 9503 plates 4396, 4690 revolutions, &c., T. Gibber 6972' songster 8221 subjects, T. Cibber 1688-90 usages 8087 Theatrum poetarum Anglicanorum 6891 Thebais, Statius, trans. 7076 Theban Sphinx, De Quincey 236oi» Thebes, MS. found at 4441 modem 9499 Theism 6709, 9025 Christian 1665 Themiseul de Saint-Hyacinthe 8937 ' ' Themistooles, etc., epistles 630, 9648 •Theobald, L., poem, etc. 7018, 21 Shakespeare 7890 ♦Theocritus, criticism, Landor 5062 translations 953", 6706™ Theodatus, life of, Evelyn 2882 Theodolite, use of 2663 Theodoret, hist, sketch 6451 Theodorus or Theoph. Verax 5337', 9 Theodosius and Constantia 5106 Theodosius and his son Aroadius Narlborough 5817» Theogony, Hindoo 722 Theological essays, Clinton 1750 H. Rogers 74S5-6 and political treatise 8321 tracts, Latin 5141 . works, H. More 6269 Thoologo-Historious, (life of Hpylyn) 459 Theology, dictionary, Eadle 2669 discoveries in, Forbes 8107 Grecian philosophers 226 natural, Paley 6876 natural, astronomy and physics 9399 new, proposals for, Sutton 8512 popular.Parker 6709 system, Leibnitz 5236 Theophilus and Eugenie, letters of religion 78441" •Theophrastus, characters (with plates) 2965 Theoretic faculties, Ruskin 7571 Theories, social, Boston (tT.S.), 1863 8202 Theory of the earth, Burnet 1185-6 moral sentiments, A. Smith 8103 reasoning, Bailey 389 Thermometer and pyrometer 5325 Thesaurus EUipsium Latinarum 6672 Graecafi linguae 8393 linguae Romanae 3388 Thetford book 4331 sei-mons, 1620 7775 Theutilla, Mfe 4033 Thevet, A., lives 7003 Thibet or Tibet 4332, 7173 Thibet, borders of, 1848 4114 Thieves and thieving Awdeley 2674 Things, misc. thoughts on (U.S.) 3682 Things not generally known 8880 Thinking, materials for, Burdon 1133 Thiodolf the Icelander 3196 •Thirlwall, Bp., Schleiermacher 9475 Schmitz 7748 Thirty years' war England and Germany 1322, 1526, 3309, 6313, 7711 romance of 6911 Thistle and cedar of Lebanon 3747 •Thomas of Elmham Thomas 1663 Erceldoune Thomas 2674 Thomas, Wm., speech, 1641 1597"' •Thompson, Captain, Kars 4986 G. T., illustrations 4416 Rev. H., Greek literature 2779 John 1137, 2399, 4963, .7904, 8291 Thos., obituary 3315 Thurston 761 "W., poems 9681", 67063'- W. G., verses 6436«, " W. Hepworth, Butler 1244 •Thorns, Merton A., Pulleyn 7212 W.J. ^Kecdofes 1322,3605, 6589, 8445, 9297 •Thomson, James, castle of indolence, ill"". 7421 life, 1079, •1981» poems 963', 1079, 2796, 6705=3, 6829" J. Cockbum, Bhagavad-giti 662-3 Thorn at Market Hill, Swift 8577 •Thombury, "Walter, All the year round 124 Thorney Hall, fiction 6219 •Thornton romances Thornton 1322 •Thorpe, Ben]., Lappenberg 5115 Thorough bass, introduction to 5766 Thought-book, Elmes 2758 and language. Smart 8094 laws of, Abp. Thomson 8812 Thoughts, evil, Chilcot 1644 Thoughts on the Creation 8020 on religion, Pascal 6760-1 of the times, 1838 1027 on vpheels, Montgomery 6219 Thousand and one nights 203-4, B089 Thrale, Mrs. Pioz^i 6933-7 Thread, gold and silver, 1635 "ISS'^ Threadneedle Street 7691i» Three clerks, fiction 8986 English statesmen 8128 gates, verse 8934n6 heavenly witnesses 7098 mouths in power, Lamartine 50O3 musketeers, fiction 2614 per cent, consols, 1789-1847 S320 Throat ailments 9700 Throckmorton, P., treasons 6448 Michael, letters 1854 Through the looking-glass 1429 •Thucydides, history 4105 (trans,)\ 9656 695 Thule, or vertues historic Sous 8318 •Thurloe, letters 9110 pooket-book 1581 Thurlow, Lord, life 7510 Thurston, engravings 8644 Thynn, F., pride and lowliness T/iynn 7974 Thynne, P. dtaucer 2674 Tia Fingida ("pretended aunt ") 1487 Tibbins Fleming 3079 TibuUus Valvy 9096 trans. 96i^, eiOi^ Tiohborue case, charge 1768 Tiohbum-Crosse, St., 1626 1690 Tiokell, T., Addison 39 letter (poem) to, Young 7010'" poems 9638, 6139-60, 6705'-', 7010°, " tickler tickell'd 7010» •Ticknor, Prof., to Southey 4881 Tidy, Colonel, life 9269 'Tieck, Carlyle on ] 380 " « translations 1381, 6366 Tierra Firme Aiidagoua and Simon 3756 *Tighe, Mrs. Psyche 201 Tigris, survey, Ciiesney 1631 Tilbury, Gervase of Ralph 1663 Tiles, encaustic. Temple ch. 7391 •Tillotson, Abp., elegy on 7020 letter to Lord Russell 22771= life and defence of 3745 vindication of sermons 4099'' Timber, projjagation, Evelyn 2907 *Timbs, J. 9366, 9699 •Time and tide, Euskin 7663 Times' whistle Times 2674 Times, the, thoughts of, 1838 1027 view of, 1708-9 5265 *" Times," the, letters of " an Englishman " 831 memoir of "Wellington 9365 summaries, annual 8886 Timothy and Titus, postscripts of epistles to 1597"= Timour, court and life of Clavijo 3736 •Tindal, M. 4099i, eiSS", 7157 Tinners, parliament of, 1710 1365 Tintoret and Michael Angelo, Buskin 7.575 Tirlough and others, Ireland 6168 •Tisohendorf, C, New Testament 680. 3 Tithes 1695", 2766, 6320, 67S4«i, 8876 history, Selden 7833, 8876 Spelman, etc. 8299 Tithes, Ireland ' 44721" Titi, Prince 8937 ' ^ Titian, house of, Jameson 4662 hfe 6526 Title and land registration 2711 Title-pages, book of, Tupper 9029 thoughts on, Clubbe 1753 Titraarsh and Hoggarty Diamond 8769'", 8768 " Tittle-tattle-mongers," Dawes 2293 Titus, Colonel, Chas I. to 4091 Tivoli, day at, poem 4800 To-day a man, to-morrow none 295"" Toadies and tuft-hunters 9023 Toast, the, poem 4835 Toasts and sentiments, 1812 178 Tobacco, abusive venting of, 1633 7188" counterblast to James VI. 211 discourse of, 1688 8937 ' ' duty on, 1733 8937 ' ' history, cultivation, etc. 1779, 2968 lessons on, 1861 6499 metamorphosis of, 1602 1856 ' ' paper of (and tobacco-boxes) 3285 Tobin, John, hfe 606 Tohv, character of St— le 4099 " Toby, story of. H. Melville 6033 Toby, my uncle, story of 8415 Toil and trial : story of London life 2139 Tokens before Doomsday Adam Davy 2674 •Toland, J., " Amyntor '' 726 Holies 4150 Shaftesbury 7878 Tolerance, Aymed plea for i672'« " 7354' 6612 5396 6154, 7 Toleration, 1685 1689 history of, 1718 Locke Milton Tom Jones 962. 3037 Tell-Troth, verse 7030 Thumb, on, 'Wagstaffe 9191 •Tomasinua, J. P. 6919 Tombs, Egypt, Nubia, Palestine 7605 *Toinlius, F. G., heads of the people 6009 Tom's coffee-house 8937 » <' Tongue-combat, two soldiers 7776 Tonkin, Thomas, Cornwall 1365 Tonna, "Charlotte Elizabeth," author of "Perils" 7828 Tonson, Jacob, advertisement 7011 *Tooke, J. Home, " Diversions ol Purley " 7388 grammar 3947 Hazlitt on 3954 life 8401 speech for, Erskine 2819 Toorkomans, notes on 7992 *Topham, P. W., frontispieces 2413 Tophara, John, wardrobe account 8207 Topics, Cicero 1699 Topographical dictionaries, Great Britain, and Ireland 3663, 7976 Topography, England, handbook to,Hotten 4271 histrionic 928 Torbuck, J., Welsh travels 9363 Tories, pubhc spirit of, 1714 4099" and tantivies, epistle to 7024 Toronto book 8173 observatory 7609 Torrentius, notice of 7614 Torres, L. V. de, letter Morga 3766 Straits Morga 3756, 4706 Tory, character of 1537 faction, history 1932 and tantivy, dialogue 1637 Tottel's miscellany Tottel 211, 1863 Tour round my garden 4726 Tourist, a, leisure hours of 6069 Tournay, battle 8937 " = •Tournetort, J. P. de, life 7636 Toussaint L'Ouverture, life 527 Tower, the, Atterbury Camden Misc.\ 132? Beauchamp tower 2398 Ld. Capel 1358 chronicle by a resident Chronicle Sir E. Dering, 1841 2309 E. of Derwentwater 7047' E. of Essex, 1683 22773' Bp. Hall 8937 ' '^ history, antiquities, armories 516 4052 Judge Jenkins 4681-2 Laud 6162, 74 Lieutenants of 5337 * ' Lords in, 1680 7047= Peters 6851 prisoners in Lilburne 5337-8 Slingsby 8092 speech concerning, 1643 1597' Strafford 8468-9, 8937 ' " Tower-hill 1599 " \ Land 5149, 68. 72, etc. ; Htrafford 8465, etc. Tower of London, fiction 95 Tower wharf, 1590 1866 ' 2 ♦Towers, Eev. Jos., Biog. Brit. 701 Towey, the, vale of 522 Town, the (London) 4416 *Towneley, C. and 11. Dodsworth Inquisitions 1639 John, Hudibras 124a Sir John, rent roll Chetliam Misc.^, 1639 ♦Townley case 6737 Towns, etc., principal, England and "Wales 5243-4 *Townsend, F. (? author) 2968, 3286, 6375 ♦Townshend, Charles, dialogues 2389 Ufe 3065 Viscount, " Baratariana " 436 letters to 4099' Toxophilus Ascham 211 Toys and sports, popular, D'. Paris 6700-1 "Tracts and chap-books, notices of 6829*' and criticisms, Poi-son 7099 D'. Johnson 4644 Marvell 6894 T 696 * Tracts— . Sloper 1690 Cochrane, Ld., and others 8937 ' ' Colledge or College, 1681 5276, 7095, „ ■ , 89571 Cornish 6885, 7095 Courvoisier 8927 " 1 criminal 1205, 1517, 3016, 4666 Cumberland, Suke of 4099'^ Day 11. Day, 1797 2079 Delamere, Ld., 1686 6885, 7048 Dodd, D'. 2520 Bgmout and Horn 7712 Essex, Earl of 6885 Pitz-Harris, 1681 7048 Freind and Parkins, 1696 4099'' Prend, W. 3265 Prost,Johu 8927"' Gaunt, Ehzabeth 6885 German S016, 6020 Gerrald, 1794 3384 Good, 1749 8562 « 1 Gordons, 1804 3544 Gorham, v Bp. of Exeter 3561 Gray, 1844 4702 Guthrey, 1661 1699 ' » Hampden 6886 Hawkins, Eev. E,., 1669 2079 Hewyit ; Hide 1599 " ' Hunter and others 8927 ' " 697 T *TriaIs— ooB^ Irish State (speech), 1841 9156 Jacobite, Manchester, 1694 Abbott and Jacobites 1639 James, John, 1661 7347 KBnigsmarlt 2079 Laud 7205, 6 libel 3094, 6S77, 6804, 8957 ■'■' Lilbume 6337 " ', ^ 8 Lisle, Lady 6886, 7095= Lovat, Ld. 6496 M'Naughton 8927 ' ' Margarol, 1794 3884 Messenger and others 6885 Moxon 8927 ' ^ Nelson and Brand (Byre case), charge 1767 Norfolk, Duke ol 6885 Norkott, Arthur, 1628 2079 O'Brien, Smith 8927 'i O'Connell and others 8927 ' ' O'KeeSfe v. Cullen 6577 Oxford, Edward 8927 ' ' Parkins, Sir W., 1696 4099','' Payn, Novil, 1693 4511 Peacham, Owen, Williams, Pine 6885 Peltier, 1803 6804 Pembroke, Earl of, 1678 2079 Perrys, the, 1681 2079 Pinney 8927 '2 Quatermayne, 1642 7234 Raleigh 5946, 0885, 7268, 70 Batsey, 1605 1865 "S Eegicides 1576, 3882, 6853, 86, 7345-7, 68 Bolph, 1648 7499 Kumbald 7095 Russell, Lord, 1683 2277'3, 6885, 7096 Sacheverell 7611-12 Sancroft and Bishops, 1688 6886, 7048 Saurin v. Starr (speeches) 1793 Scotland 1205 Shepherd, 1718 4099= Sidney, A. 6885, 7096 Simpson, Capt. John, alias Holiday 8099 "2 Slingsby 8092 Southampton, Earl ot 6885 Stafford, Lord 6885 Standsfield, Phihp, 1688 2079 State 6885, 8372 critical review of 7661 modern 8927 Stayley 6885 Stirling, Earl (titular) of 8927 ' i Strafford 760, 6885, 7662, 8461, etc. Stuart, James 8927 'i Throckmorton, Sir N. 6885 Tichborne (charge) 1768 traitors, 1587 Whetstone 1856 ' i Tutchin 9371 Vane, Sir H., 1662 6886, 7043, 7347, 9101 Viviers 6337 'i Wakeflelds, the 8927 ' ^ "Walcot, Capt., and others, 1683 2277=^ 7096= Webster (America) 005 Williams, J. A. 8927'^ witchcraft (German) 6020 Zulueta (slave trading) 9728 (See also " Executions " and ' Treason.") Trials of the heart, fiction 907 Tribe o£ Levi, poem 7030 Tribes, lost 4784 Tribunal, a competent (art) 3921 Tributes to eminent men, American 9681 Tricks of State (Westminster projects), 1648 8937 '"2 Tricolor on the atlas (Algeria), 1864 7213 Triennial parliament 1697'°* Triers, 1646 6734is Trigonometry, self-instruction 6492 Trilogy (Shakespeare conversations). Collier Trimmer, a, character ot 4099' ♦Trimmer, M'«., life 2766 Trimmer, Will., 1742 7048 Trinity, the, doctrine of 477, 3255, 3906, 4099", 8427,9410 Trinity-House, 1618 7188"' term, adjournment, 1643 7188'' Triple episcopacy, 1641 2809 Triploe heath 1599 '^ Tripoli, residence at, Tully 9026 " Tripos," Hobbes 4105, 8-9 Tristram Shandy 8408, etc. Triumph of beauty, Shirley 8025 Chas. I., London, 1641 1671, 1597" truth Procter liii"' the, poem, 1705 7011 of the wise man over fortune 8692 Triumphs oJ God's revenge against murder 7377 Emperor Maximilian 4183", '» of time, fiction 5855 Triumvirade, satire, 1760 4099°, 7690 Trivia, Gay 3353 Troiana historia Colowna 2674 Trojan horse of the Prcsbyterial government unbowelled 1671 Trojan war 7242, Dictys 9096 Trokelowe, J. de Albans 166S Trolling, " Ephemera " 2804 *Trollope, A., Friswell on S260 M"., Home on 4259 notice (American) of 7225 Troop of non-swearing parsons, 1696 1584^ Trosiener, Johanna H. Schopenhauer TJ5S Troubadour, poem 6040 Trouvere, a, romance by Beimes 1322 Trouv6res and Chaucer 1624 Troy, destruction of Colonaa 2674 Schliemann 7745 Troyes, Jean de 1903 Trubach, Volradus a, 1637 1699 ' ' True Cross, poem 6031 excellency of God and his testimonies, 1650 1696» " True Protestant Subject," 1680 7047" True state of mortality, poem, 1709 7012 TiTiro, tinners' parliament, 1710 1365 Truro, Lord (Wilde), sketch of 9462 Truth brought to light, reign of Jas, L 4521 nature of, Dennys 2360-1 ot, Ruskin 7671 and poetry, Goethe 3478 pursuit of, Bailey 387 what is? 7245 ♦Truths peculiar to Christianity, Stovel 6212 Tshadda exploration, 1865 4439 Tuam workhouse chaplaincy 6737 Tuath-De-Danaans, history of 6566 Tubular bridges 2942-3, 3967 ♦Tucker, R". D'., and Locke 8921 H. St. George, hie and letters 4737 Tudor, Lady Mary, life 2002 Owen, and the Queen Holland 1866 ' ^ sovereigns, Forster 3138, 41 Tudors, reigns of, 1485-1559 Wriothesley 1322 Tufton family 7008 ♦Tuke, " Holy Eucharist," 1625 Misc. " ^ 3284 Tunbridge- Wells, letters from, 1767 2369 Tunbridgiale, poem, 1726 7021 Tune, plain. Common Prayer, 1843 7143 Tunes, " Chivy-Chase " 7010« " Couragio " 7024 "Mad Tom" 6720 " Packington's Pound " 703O Tunnage and poundage, 1641 1597^' Tunstall, Marmaduke, memoir 6435* Turanian languages 6343 Turbervile, George, epitaphs, etc. Turbervile 1853 life 694 Turoo-Russian War, a reminiscence 9052 Turenne, Marshal, life 1766, 4536 Turf, British, history 9468 Turf, the, " Nimrod " 6503 Turk and Venetian War, Evelyn, 1669 2893 ♦Turkey, Busbequius, 1744 1220 Carne, 1830 1414 company, 1714 26 and its destiny, MacFarlane, 1847-8 6660 Golovin, 1854 3536 doom of, 1863 6654 and England, 1864 7262 European, military tour, 1863 7382 u •Turkey— eo»*. European and Asiatic, 1818 9245 Gait, 1809-11 3300 handbook, 1854 6364 history and progress, Larpent 5128 Hungarian emigration into 4381 MoCullooh, 1854 5646 Pouqueville, 1820 7127 provinces of, 1809-10, Hotahouse 999 roving Englishman in, 1855 6361 sketches of, De Vere, 1850 2374 slave provinces, 1853 7288 Slavonians, 1853 4949 Turkish empire, final annihilation 8937 '^^ state of, 1854 7262 travels, Stephens 8942 grammar, etc. 452-3, 7813 and Greek Waters, Carlisle, 1854 1377 "Spy," authorship *1981i2 Tm-kistan 1196, 3011, 6179 Turks, domestic manners 6695, 9026, 9413 Blphinstone's (Kussian) expedition 5661 in 1633 (drawings) government of, 1656 and Greece, history origin and early history sieges of Vienna year with, Smyth, 1854 wayfaring sketches, 1847 ♦Turner, Charles Tennyson, poems Dawson, copy J. M. W., Burnet on Gallery, Buskin and Girtin, views 5976 6616 3067 503 7728 8185 3623 8734 4335 1184 7576 6121 illustrations 6139-40, 7794 Liber Studiorum, catalogue 6535 list of drawings, etc. , Norton 6636 memoir, Cunningham 1184 works 1184, 6536, 7570-1 Tursellinus, Latin particles 2940 Turtles triumph, Brathwait 902 Turton and Gorton, church libraries Libraries 1639 Tuscan art, Euskin 7563 Tuscany, 1849, 59 9006 Catholicism, Scipio de Eicci 7123 Tusculan disputations (trans.) 1696,1701 Tusoulana, Edgar 2691 Tuski, the, ten months among, 1863 4217 ♦Tutchin, poems ' 4472 ' ", 7018 trial, etc. 9371 touch'd to the quick, etc. 8937" = Twentieth part, assessing, &c. of forbidden, 1642 7188=' Twenty looks over Eound-heads, 1643 7531 Twice told tales, Hawthorne 3910 Twickenham hotch-potch 3366 Twins, the, Bremer 912-13 Richter 7409 Tupper 9035 Twisleton, Hon. E., " Junius " 1490 *Twiss, Horace, Mfe ol Bldon 8608 Two admirals, notion 1962 hundred and fifty years ago, Carlyle 1380 " " old men's tales 6866-7 thousand five hundred (year), memoirs of 4216 years hence 6598 visions, Austin 332 witnesses, the, sermons, 1643 9613 years before the mast 2235 Twopenny post-bag 6244 Twysden, Sir Roger, copies etc. 6196-7 government of England Twysden 1322 Tvburn, executions 2277'", 4099S ', 5387, 7347, ' 8099 "2, 8937' = Tyler, "Wat 1742, 8268 Tylney hall, fiction 4197 Tymetes and Pyndara Turoervile 1853 Tyndall, John, study of physics 5213 Tyne bridge, iSewcastle 6435" fisher's farewell 6435" letters on 9028 Tyne— coMt rivers, dialogue 6435" Tees, Wear, Eden, &c., floods 3315, 6435= Tynemouth, garrison, 1647 1699 " * monastery 6435" nun, verse 6485"' Types and figures, Bible, Twining 9058 Types of mankind 6642 Types oJ Our Lord, in art 4568 Types revolutionnaires, 1793 5865 Typographical anecdotes 8888 soc, Newcastle 6435' Tyranny, deliverances from (England) 4510 kings of England, Lilburne 5337 ' ^ Tyrconnel, Ireland 4472 ' '° Frances Jennings, duchess of, life 2002 Tyrian era (America) 4674 Tyrians and American aborigines 4674 Tyrol 486, 2003, 9435 to Genoa 7861 Tyrone, Hugh, Earl of, life and times 6168 Tyrtaeus, translations 6706", 8791 Tyrwhitt, T. 264, 1617, 19 ; 6372, 6727 Tysdall, or Tysdale, printer 4221 •Tytler, P. P., Scottish worthies 2966 u. An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should he made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type : " v" stands for volume, Udall, N.. life of Vdall 7974 Ralph Roister Bolster Vdall 211 and 7974 TJgoliao deiia Gherardesca e I Ghibellini di Pisa 7522 TJhland, poems 7724 TJlin, bard, poems 6624 TJUoa, A. de, life 7636 TJhich, tale 3751 TJlster, O'Neill, Prince of 6168 Ulster, plantation in, 1610 2274 Ultima Thule, New Zealand, 1861 1653 Ultramontane doubts, H. Rogers on 7486-6 Ultramontauism, Quinet 7239 Ulysses, adventures of. Lamb 6008 Umbrellas and walking-sticks 9213 Umbria, 1862 9002 Umpire, the (England), 1706 4099° Uncle Peter's fairy tales 2961 t) ncle Tom's cabin, and key 8448-53 article on 140 Uncommercial samples, new, Dickens 2436 traveller, Dickens 2399 etc. 2453-4 Under the microscope, Swinburne 8582 Underground lite (mines and miners) 8054 Understanding, human, Locke 6396, etc. the, conduct of, Locke 6397 'Undine 3197-8 Unfortunate lady, to the memory of. Pope 7019^ Ungarischen Sprache 7366-6 Ungarischer Classiker 7355 Geschiiftsstyl in Beispielen 7367 Ungirding of the Scottish armour, 1639 1598' Unhappy man's life, tragical discourse '758 Union, Irish, Castlereagh 6449 memoirs. Maxwell 5970 repeal of, 1846 7364 tal9 of, Lever 6296 u 699 Union, Scotland 6405, 7U41 Unitarian doctrine and worship 9216 Uuitariauism 9698 England, hist, of 9216 United Kingdom, resources. &o., 1852 7976 Provinces, England, and Spain, 1620 1599 »=^ stadtholders 849S travels, 1634-5 Brereton 1639 treason against, 1623 4099' •United States, 1841, Sturge 8491 1842, Ldwenstern 5508 1845, 0, Lyell 5542-3 1846-7, Mackay 5672 1855, Everest 2909 1865, Weld 9345 agi'icultural tour, 1842, Bai'olay 4^9 American facts, 18 1.") 722U anthorities, con*, with, Beiitham 623 colonization of, Bancroft 422 constitution 1923, 8945 and its frainers 2196 educational institutions, 1853 8048 expedition, 1848, Lynch 554S exploring expedition, 1838-42 Wilkes 918C-7 geology 4101, 6642 handbook and guide, 1854 7636 history 422, 4077 Jefferson (President) 7279 letters from the West, 1828 3781 lives of the Chief Justices 7687 and Mexico, war 6075 minister (Rush) 7561 missions among Indians 7991 notes on public subjects, 1852 8946 notes and statistics, 1815 7220 slavery 37S(i, 7665 statistical view, 1854 2.'i00 Story (Justice) 8440 west, 1828. Hall 3781 (See also " America " and " American.") Unity of the human races 8184 truth, and reason, petition, 161(1 1599" of worlds, Powell 7128 Universal history, Bossuet 849 language, on 9089 madness, 1647 5446 prayer. Pope 7013 •Universe, the, harmony of 46 physical description, Humboldt 4.'JS6-8 the, poem 5950 true system, 1823 4099' Universities, Cambridge, teaching (see also "Cambridge") 25211 Cambridge and Oxford, 1650 1599 > ' Cambridge, Oxford, and London 8443 English, Huber 4330 German, education, etc. 6839-40 Glasgow, album for 1854 3489 Ireland 4099", 4472i» request to ministers in, 1650 1599 ' = rise and progi-oss, Newman 6450 time of Erasmus 4901 wits, poetry, 1656 9654 wits, remains, 1660 174-4 University chai-acter, an, 1660, Cleveland 1744 phantasm of an 4768 tbo, letter to a gentleman in, 1709 7018 Unreasonableness of separation, 1689 7040' •' Unsentimenlal sort of critic," Gilchrist 873-4 •' Up the country " (India) , Eden 2688 •Upoott,W.,biog.dicU. 704 Evelyn '»89 Upham, C. W., Vane 82S, Waslungton ^sod Upper.ten thousand (America) 577b Upstart, satire, 1710 '012 Urbanitatis -SaJ-^es 2b74 Urbino, dukes of j«5o Uriel, poem, Heraud 401-' Uriel and other poems, Jones 4678 Um burial (hydi-iotaphia) 1023-4 •Urquhart, Mr., 1856 9014 Urry, General-Major, 1645 1598" Ursua and Aguirre, expedition of,1660 Simon 8766 Usoocs, the 9*96 Use of riches. Pope 7083, 8577 Useful knowledge, libi'ary of 5325 Uses of great men, Emerson 2774 Usher, Abp., life 78, 2762, 6741 sei-mon 8937'" W. (U.S.), ethnology 6542 Usurpations of princes, England 7047*" Usury and exchange, Ireland 4472^° Utah, Mormon life 6304 Utilitarianism (Bentham's) 1887 Utopia, More 211 . 6262, 6906 Utrecht, Peace, etc. 812, 3397, 6230, 7046 " Ut rum horum," religious tract, 1691 7354 Uwins, T., sketches 1500 Uxbridge Fairfaj) 2aBS"," treaty 2038» Uzziah and Jotliam, poem, 1600 702'1 An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type : " T " stands for volume. " V," IX poems by 1751 V n, Ld., poems 7027 Vacancy, of, 1689 1672" Vacation rambles, Taltourd 8630-3 Vagabonds, 1560, etc. Awdeley 2674 Vaillant, F. de, life 7636 Vald' Arno, Euskin 7563 Vale of Lanherne and other poems 8437 Valencia, campaign of, 1707 8249 Valentine, Duke, Machiavelli 5667 Valesiana 9095 Valle, Pietro della, hfe 7636 " Vallev of a hundred fh-es," authoress of 124 ♦Valois', Elizabeth de, life 3246 A'alois, house of (Dues de Boui-gogne), Barante 434 Valour anatomized, Sidney 8044 and conquest, British, record of 4631 ♦Yalpy, D'., notice of 8621 Yiimpires 2801 Van Amburgh, life 6986 Diemen's Land, physical description 84S5 Neck, G., mil, etc. 6411 •Vaiibrugh, and Jeremy Collier 1828, etc. lite 2626 works 9681 A'andeput, 'West', election, 1749 4099O Viinderdoort, notice of 7614 Vandyke, portraits after 1464 Vane, Sir G., sheriff of Durham, 1645 1695" Sii' H., a healing question, 1666 7043 letter to wife 7347 life, etc. S163, 7347, 8287, 9101 plot made kno-wn by, 1643 5447 6735 speeches, 1642-4 1697', \ 6447-8 trial, etc. 6885, 7043, 7347 two treatises 7347 Vanhomrigh.Miss ("Vanessa") 8529",i»,62'" ♦Vanity Fair 8769 " 1, 79-80 Variae lectiones, ex op. uugatoriisBentleii, etc. V 700 1173 6196 *648 2532, 4809 Yarthema 3756 5382 6694 9342 561 6220 6309 6220 218 9114 2210, 6325, 8093 3042 2904 4114 6977 Varieties, 0. Knight Varillas's history oi heresies Varna, siege, 1828, Moltke Varro, M. Terentius, life Varronianus (and controversy) Varthema, L. di, travels, 1503-8 Vasa, Gustavus, life Vases, &c., Grreek Vathek, fiction Vatican decrees and Vaticanism, Gladstone 3431-2 sculptures 6712 Vaticinium votivum Wither 8313 Vaudois, the, rights and liberties, 1703 4087 Vaudois, the, travels 399, 2003 *Vaughan, Henry, hfe 9638 works 3284 Thomas, poems YmigTicm 3284 notice of 594 Vauvenargues, Morley on 6297 *Vaux, Lord, earl of Oxford, poems Misc. *, 3284 Vauxhall affray, 1773 6387 Veer, 6. de, voyages of Barents Veer 3766 Vega, G. de la, commentaries of the Tncas Tega 3766 Ufe Lope de, Lewes on hfe Vegetable diet, Arbuthnot food physiology world, Figuier Vegetation, Evelyn Himalayan Velazciuez, Stirling-Maxwell Velvet-breeches and cloth-breeches Greene 1867 *Venables, G. S., Lushington 5633 Robert and Elizabeth, ace*, of, etc. Chetham Misc. \ 1639 Venatica opuscula, Xenophon 9687 Venatione, de, Arrian 9687 Vendosme, Duke de, life 6380 Venetia, fiction 2477 Venetia, student-life in, 1861 6760 Venetian ambassador, despatches, 1515-19 3427 bracelet, poem 6041 histoiT 2966 story ("Bravo ") 1947 and Turk "War, 1669 2893 " Vengeur," sinkins of, Oarlyle 1380 ' " Venice, 1846, Oostello 2003 architecture, examples 7664 Austrian rule, a tradition 7666, 70 ballot 2277", 8937'" banks, 1714 26 legends of 4023 political movements in, 1848-9 8426 stones of, Ruskin 7674 Vennar, Eichard, apology Yennar 1865 '^ Ventilation 285, 1171 Ventorum, historia. Bacon 861 Venus and Adonis, poem 7907 ' *, 13, 63 veill6e de f6tes de 166 Verax or Varax, Theodorus or Theoph. 6337 ' ', 6339 Verbiest, Father, Tartary OrUans 3766 Verborum, de resolutione 7769 de significatione Flaccus 9096 Verbs, Greek 401, 8240 Vergennes, C. Gravier, Comte de, life 6983 *Vergil, PoLvdore, English history Yergil 1322 Vernal walk, poem Vemet, H., designs notice of Verney, Edmund, copy family, letters and papers long parliament Sir Harry Sir Ralph •Vernon, Lord, Alighieri Verplanck, G. C, importance of literature 6369 Verrier, Jean le Bontier 3766 Vers de soci6t6, etc. 6403-4 Verse, pretty lessons in, for good children 1820 variety of sound in 7021 translated, essay on 7011 2741 4268 7226 1212 Yerney 1322 Yerney 1322 1309 Yerney 1822 118 Verses fastened on the pulpit in St. Paul's 7018 to the memory of an unfortunate lady 7019^', 7077 Verses, &o., occasioned by the "Miscellanies" 7091 Vert-Vert, trans. 8646 Vertue, G., anecdotes of painting 6670 catalogue of eneravers 9229 hfe, etc. 9229 Vertumnus and Pomona, Pope 7076 Verulam, Lord (Bacon), advice to James I. 4520 Vesalius, Morley on 6282 Vestiges of civilization, 1861 1710 of the natural history of creation 1507-10, 6912 Vestigia Anghoana (history and antiquities of England) 1732 Vestns, Madame, ded". to 6974^ Vevay, books 6522-3 Via Dolorosa (Catholic " stations ") 3873 Viaggiana (ancient and modern Rome) 9376 Vicar of "VVakefleld 962, 3499, 3504, 33-4 "Wrexhill 8992 Vicar's will, the 6435= •Vicars, John, England's worthies 8099' ^ looking-glasse for malignants 1694= Vice, containing the history of Horestes (inter- lude) Pikeryng 1865'* Vicente, Gil, life 6220 Vicenza, Duke of Caulaincourt 1466 Vicissitudes of the eternal city (Rome) 9457 Victim, the, poem 6204 Victor Yalpy 9098 Victoria, Queen, annals, 1837-71 4475 coronation service, etc., Fox on 3208 picture galleries 4546-7 (as Princess), portrait 5379 Stuart papers 8488 Victoria in 1863 and 1858, Kelly 4767 1854, 'Wathen 9309 1861, Meredith 6047 1874, Trollope 8963 constitution and education, 1854 6737 and emigration, 1871 414 " Victoria Eegia," poetry and prose, 1861 7192 Victualling bills funded 8220 Vida, art of poetry 6706™ game of chess 3499 Vida de Cristo 8280 VidocQb notice of 7226 •Vienna, 1843, Kohl 4931 1848-9 (pohtioal), Stiles 8426 1860, Paton 6770 to Brazil, etc., PfeifEer 6868 court of 4099', 4758, 5322, 9525 events in, 1848, Auerbach 316 letters from, 1862 4495 mission to, 1806, Adair 31 science, hospitals, &o. 9483 sieges of, by Turks 7728 •Vigny, A. de, tale by 6854 Vigny, Count de, military life 6380 Vigo, battle at 2231 ♦Village dociior, fiction 216 Village tales, Auerbach 318 Villetore, de, Cicero 1703 Villegas, E. de, life 6220 •Villemain, 61oge on Montaigne 6210 essay on Pascal 6759 Villeroy, correspondence 1467 Villette, fiction 685 Villette, Rev. John, Dr. Dodd 2620 Villiers, Ld. Fras., elegy on Wither 8313 •Vinci, L. da, life 10O8 Vindication of natural society, Burke 1145 of the honour of Scotland 9089 Vindiciae Gallicae 6690-1 Vindicius Liberius, Toland 8897 Vine Tavern, Long-Acre, 1701 6736, 7047" Queries, 1701 4099' Vineyard, English, Rose, 1669 2891 Vingle, Joh., printed by, 1497 6642 •Violet, Mens., travels, etc. 6845 •Virgil, .SJneid, canto added to 6801 dissertations, etc., Martyn 6892 dream after reading 6th book 1690 '2 V 701 W *Virgil, MneiHr-cont. essays on, Greene 3629 key to 2322 anachronism (found». of Carthage) 6892 Bucolics and Georgics, notes on, Keight- ley 4766 character of, verse 7021 eclogue in imitation of 4099" flora 4765 gates of sleep, etc., Delataye 2322 golden age (fourth eclogue) 7023 and Homer, verdicts on 70H translations 96Si«, 2965», ", 3686, BTOS'^ Virgil in London, Daniel 2239 Virgin, the, and Christ Seclce 1866 " ^ hymns to Hymns 2674 4099> 4553 1729 1866 '2 7453 Stracliey 3766 7133 8769 "8, 81 1234 7023 Babees 2674 3188 2710 9463 4681 Virgin in Eden, the Virgin patronesses, legends Virginia, account of, 1670 good speed to, 1609 history, Eobertson Virginia Britannia, travels Virginia's hand, poem Virginians, fiction Viris illustribus, de Virorum illustrium elogia, Tomasiuus Virtue and happiness, Taylor nature of, Butler satire against, 1679 school of, Seager social (sermons), Foster true, Edwards Virtues, homely, Whiteside on Vision, sense of, Wharton Jones Vision of Barharossa, and other poems of the church 766 midsummer mornings* dream 8370 of Piers Ploughman Langland 2674, 6918 of sudden death, De Quincey 2366^ the, Oroxall 7010™ the, Dante 2243, etc. the, Howell 4313 Visions, Seafleld on 7811 Visions in verse. Cotton 2011 Visitiitions, heraldic, Cheshire (pan) Visitation 1639 Hunts Huntingdonshire 1322 Lancashire Chetham Misc^ & Visitation 1639 seats and arms, Burke 1162-3 Abp. of York, dioo. of Chester, 1690 Chetham Miscf 1639 Visiting, district and workhouse 6214 Visits to remarkable places 4324 and sketches, Jameson 4567 Vita de Dowel, etc. Langland 2674 Vita Nuova, Dante 2265, 6 Vital force, Eeichenbach 7350 principle, Aristotle 267 statistics, Neison 6419 Sheffield 4140 Vitious, &e. persons, proclamation, 1669 7188"8 Vlves, lud., epistolae 2812, 6021 Vivia Perpetua, dram, poem 36 Vivian Grey, fiction 2477 Vivier, notice of 7225 Vizier All Khan, massacre of Benares 2287 Viziers, Grand, history of, 1677 1606 Vocabulary, words used in accounts, 1714 26 eastern Archipelago languages 676 English, German, French, Italian Murray 6364 Greek 6136 Greek, Latin, and Scripture names 4906 pronouncing (English) MUs 2674 Vocal poetry (songs), Aikin 79 Vocation of the scholar 3018 Voice of a cry at midnight, 1664 7847 from Lebanon, 1847 4733 of the last trumpet Crowleu l&li Voice and gesture 1298 speech 4385 Voices of the night, Cumming 2170 Longfellow 6476-^ Voiture, letters 2354, 6279 to a young lady, with the works of 7076-7 Volcanoes 9592 Volga, voyage down, 1862 6592 Volney, life 7636 Volney Beokner, life 5379 Voltaic electricity, 1852 6119 mechanism of man 8097 •Voltaire, Cailyle on 1380 " ^ civil wars of France ; epic poetry 8937'!' letters to, Du Defland 2310 life, etc. 1115, 1626, 2825, 7997 "Morley on 6302-3 and Shakespeare, Montagu 6206 Volunteers, Irish, 1782 5710 Italian, 1848 2236 Voluspa, Icelandic poem 6867 Vossius, Is., de Oraouhs 6141 Voters and votes, long parliament, 1678 2277' Votes, parliament, annulling of, 1648 6734'* Scobell 7770 Vow and covenant tracts, 1640, etc. 2038 or covenant, forbidding, 1643 7188''' Vow of the peacock, poem 6042 Vows, rash, Grasmus 2813 Vox Coeli, Scot 7776» lachrymae, sermon, 1681 7047^^' plebis, Lilbume 6337 » ^ populi, news from Spain, 1620 1699 ' ^ veritatis, 1650 1696' Voyage round the world 574, 4317, 4826 Voyages and travels. Gait 3300 B. Hall 3776 Langsdort 6109 Mandevile 6769 Vraibleusia, island of, Disraeli 2481 Vulgar errors. Sir T. Browne 1023 adapted to 1846' 8093 w. An" denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue: reference should be made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the enti-ies in the Catalogue in small type : " v " stands for volume. 'Waddington (?) 66.34 *Wade, Sir C. M., mission 467 Wages, low, London 5985 officers and seamen, 1673 7048^ *Wagner, Moritz, Algeria 7213 WagstaU, Simon, pseud. 8638 *Wagstaffe, William 221 •Wakefield books 1437, 6204 lecture on 6203 notabilities 1326 play printed at 6968" Waldeck, Prince 8937 » s Walden, Netter of Netter 1663 Waldenees, persecutions 6374 poem 2376 Waldron, P. G., copy 3356 Wales, Annates Cambriae Wales 1663 beauties of (by counties) 959 counties, description, 1671 1729 Crete wonders by Crete prophet of, 1647 296» education, 1847 6737 gazetteer 2792 government (antient) I869 journeyings through, 1856 4824 w 704 W •■Wellington. Duke ot—cont. Stocqueler (life) 8431 Tennyson, ode 8746-7, 61 and Waterloo 2010, 5004 Wellingtoniana 93B2-6 Tonge (life) 9701 *"Wells, Bathurst, Dean of 9299 Marq. of Hertford and cavaliers 1699 ^ ^ trained-bands, 1642 1599 ' = ♦"Welsh, clironicle of the princes Srut 1663 languaee, Salesbury Ullis 2674 Levite tossed in a hlantet, 1691 1672i»' manuscripts, ancient, Mabinogiou 5615 prophecies, Lilly 5346 "Welsted, Henley's life 4010 poems 7010=1, n variae leotiones . . Welstedii 6987 Wcltevreden, prison of 3396 *W"elwood, Jas., Xenophon and Socrates 9693 Rd., present disasters, 1690 4099J "Wendover, Roger of, index 6944 Wensleydale, 1864 454 "Wept of Wish-ton-wish, fiction 1946 Werner, life and writings, Carlyle on 1380 » ^ Werwolf WilUam 2674 Wesley, C, Eupolis's hymn 6705" promise of sanctification (verses) 78463 J., dissenters' private academies 4099'' Mfe, Southey and Knox 8260 Primitive physio 3901 sermon 7845^ and 0., letter to 7845* S., elegies by 7020 notice of 594 •West, 6., Pindar (trans.) 95312, 6705=b, 6929 poems 963», 6706« E., Hecuba (trans.) 7021 poems 9631", 6705« West End, the, story of 2139 West of England, fight, 1648 , 8937 ' '^ Indies, poem, (see also Indies) 6219 Westall, E., ill". 867, 468, 7797 •Western Islands, Johnson 4644 •Westminster, ancient and present state, 1681 1209 Abbey, biog>. ill»». 8182 Essex's funeral, 1646 2835—6 handbook 2186 sermons 1699'*; 7839-40, 44; 9152 assembly of divines 1699 ' ", 2038=, » books 2813, 7653, 8330 Collin's walk thro' 2647 convocation, 1690 63728 courts 3186, 6552 David Simple 3038 election, 1749 4099= fair newly proclaimed, 1647 U692 gatehouse 1699 ' = hall, intelligence fi'om, 1648 8937 ' ^ trial, Charles I. 1567-70 Ld. Delamere, 1685 7048 Strafford 8461, etc. and head quarters, 1647 7845ii intelligence from, 1648 8937 ' ^ Kings Benoh-Barre, 1618 7270 Matthew of 5945 memorials, Walcott 9200 palace, Arnold 284 petition, 1648 6734" proceedings at, 1647 8937 » i^ projects (Derby House), 1648 1596^, 8937 ' 12 Raleigh 7270 rebels at, 1648 7248 St. Margaret's, league and cove- nant, 1643 sermons 4099^ 7839-40 school, Dryden 969 " Eudens " 69S1 Spira, 1692 8324 •Westminster— coM^. survey, Stow 8444-5 wedding, 1693 8937 ' ' Westminster, Marchioness of, yacht voyage, 3673 Westmoreland, forces of, 1844 1598i* northmen 3000 •Weston, M'. Baron, and others, impeachment, 1641 1597» Thos., comedian, life 3299, 6387 Westphalia, court of 817 French in, 1769 6382 peace of, 1648 1626 Westward for smelts 68292" Westward Ho !, fiction 4860 •Westwood, J. O., articulated animals 2207 Wetherelt Sir C, sketch of 9462 Wetstein, Gr. test. 678 •Wey, river 8850 Weybridge, books 3471, 6232, 8716 •Weyer, Sylvain van de, letters 465 Weymouth book 3814 Whaddon hall, Hearne's journey to 9207 Whale, the, Melville 6035 fishery and whaling cruise 1018 •Whalley, Easter EoUs, 1552-3 Chetham Misc. ^ 1639 Whalley Abbey, ooucher book WTuMey 1639 Whalley, E., procl». for apprehension of 71881=3 •Wharton, Capt. G., Bellum hybernicale, 1847 4*?27 Hemy, " Anthony Hurmer " 2212 Lord, message to pari'. 29532^ speeches, 1642 1596S'-'> Marquess of, poem to 7010 will 9545 E., " Cheviot " 6485' Sir Miles, on a letter to, 1713 4099i What is truth ?, 1864 7245 we must do to be saved, Baxter 509 will he do with it P, fiction 5660 •Whately, Abp., Bacon's essays 370 Enc. Brit. 2778 habits 5210 importance of literature 5369 life and letters 1974, 9386 Martineau on 6876 remains, etc., Copleston 1974 Whatfield (Wheatfield, Sufi.), history 17B3 Wheatley, Benjamin R., index 304 M'., 1740 8937 ' ' Wheel, the, broke on 979 •Wheeler, W. A., Dickens dictionary 6917 Whethamstede and others Albans 1663 Whetstone, G., censure of a loyal subject Whetstone 1866 ' 1 Gascoigne Gascoigne 211 Rocke of regard Wlietstone 1863 •Whewell, W., Enc. Brit. 2776 Grotius 3677 hexameters 4053 letter to, on his " liberal educa- tion " 161 science and education, lecture 6213 •Whig, a, character of 1637 character of. 1700 6386 country, letter from, 1715 4099'' ministry, 1S30, hist, of 7473 modern, character of 1637 character of, 1706 1812 picture of, 1701 7042 revived, picture of, 1707 4099" old and modern, truly represented, 1702 4099" party, memoirs of, Holland 4145 priests, committee of 8937 ' " and Tory, dialogue between, 1690 4099s factions, hist, of 1932 Whigg, Tom., distemper .ind death, 1710 4099= Whiggish faetion against Queen (Anno) and ministry 1313 scurrility, answer to, 1712 4099" Whiggism and literature, De Quincey 236Bi Whigs and Commonwealthsmen, justification of, 1702 8897 modern, and fanatics, 1702 40991' w 705 W Whiga—cont. public spirit of. Swift, 1714 7044?, 8538, 8562 ' 1, 77 the, fall of, poem 2984 tories, &c., Steele, 1714 7041 unmask'd, 1718 1313 Whimsical man, fancies of (? by F. Townsend) 2968 ■Whipping post, Danton 2637 Whippings, West of England 9371 Whist, Bunbury on 846 poem 8827 Whistler at the plough 8217 •Whiston, Cambridge 4099" letters, Jackson 861S life of S. Clarke, etc. 6386 primitive Christianity 4099» ♦Whitaker, D'. William, life 455 Whitby, Daniel, traditions 7096«i Whitby, Scoresby 7772 Whitcncot or Weever, Plantagenets story 9179 Whitcombe, R., Greek literature 2779 •White, D'., Dean of Carlisle, 1623 7088= H. Kirke, poems 7495 John, speeches, 1641 1697=*, " J. Neville, to Southey 4681 M'., de medio animarum statu 7353^ Eobert, verses 6435i» White and black lists, 1716 70428 hoods, fiction 907 House, Abraham Lincoln 1418 Lady, romance 9604 republican (Hiram Fuller) 6524 Eose, fiction 907 slavery, Sumner 8503 Whiteboy, story of Ireland, 1822 3798 Whitehall, a new fiction, 1626 16903 Chas. I., removal from 1695i«, 1697»2 council, 1638 7162 Q. Elizabeth's speech, 1601 7038* fair (satu'e in verse), 1648 456 gate, Charles I. 1661 hunting of the foxes 1699 ' * order in council, 1671 8937 ' '^ privy lodgings, 1611 159613 secret history, 1717 4670 sermons 3785, 4099'', 4815, 20 Whitehall, R., notice 694 Whitehaven, chap books 1625 * Whitehead, C, Grimaldi 2427 heads of the people 6009 P., poems 96311, 67054», 7018, 24 W., life 335 poems 6705« Whitelands Training Institution, prizes 1907-8 •Whitelocke, Bulstrode, and Clarendon 6582 life 9449 Sir James, Liber famelious Whitelocke 1322 White's [club] 6282 •Whiteside, cleanliness, prudence, industry 6211 Goldsmith 6210 MS. inscription 1781 •Whittier, poems on s&very B479 verses on E. Elliott 2742 Whittingham, Dean of Durham, life Camden Misc.", 1322 'Whitty, — 6565 Whom to marry, etc., fiction 5993 Wickam, 1647 2963>» Wicliffe (see Wyclif). Widow Bamaby, fiction 8993 Widow and the marquess, fiction 4212 Widow-burning 1222 •Widdrington, Sir T., speech 1641 1597»3 Wied-Neuwied, Prince of Maximilian 6964 •Wieland, sketch of 7727 Wieland, or the transformation, tale 1002 Wife, good Courtesy 2674 lapped in morels skin Taming 7974 Wife's manual, Calvert 1311 •Wigan, book 3590 Wiggins, J., Ireland 5721 Wight, Isle of, Carisbrook, and Chas. I. 4091 and Charles 1. 1547, 64, 66, 80, 4091 message from (pamphlet), 1648 8937'" Wight, Isle ol—eoni. proceedings in, 1648 7188'^ Scots Commissioners, 1047 1598^ W. Stephens Castle Builde-i's 1448 "UndercM" 5871 Wightman, John, D.D., life 4120 Wigwam and cabin 8052 •Wilberforce, Bp., M". Godolphin 2898 R. I. 6561, 8676 W., Hazlitt on 3954 life, letters 9480-1 Stephen on 8395-6 Wild, Robert, Iter boreale, 7368 notice of 694 Wild countries, travel in 3302 flowers, walks after 2550 fowl, Knox 4923 sports, Europe, .isia, Africa 6384 ofthe West (Ireland) 6972 tribes. Central India 3171 Wild Irish girl, fiction 6272 •Wilde, Serjeant, Bishops, 1641 718 Wilde, Sir W. R. W., lecture on Ireland 5211 Wilder, Theaker (Goldsmith's tutor) 6456 Wilhelm Meister 1381, 3493-5 •Wilkes, J:, circumstances relative to, 1768 8937'"' Dilke 2470 and " Junius " 4700 pieces by 9686 * Wilkie, Sir D., Haydon on 8921 fife, etc. 2177 principles and practice, Burnet 1182 W., poems 6706 's •Wilkinson, Sir J. G., Herodotus 4030 •Wilks, E. (actor), life 705' =, 3299, 6383, 9607 Willet, D'. Andrew, life 455 Willett, Ralph, origin of printing (t435i, ^ William I. (Conqueror), history, life, etc. 10, 227, 3929, 6678, 7611 II. (Eufus) life, history 3929, 6678 III. 4099 address to, 1689 4099e allegiance to 4099'' intended assassination 4511'^, '3, 7020 {poem) Chasles on 1605 commission to convocation 4099'' conspiracy against 4099s, 4511" 7020 {poem) grants 4099", s and government, conspiracy against 7161 at the Hague 4100 and Electress, etc. of Hanover 4099S letter to 4099e or Lewis XIV. 4099s and ministers, letters 3661, 9128 obedience to 73635 ode to. Prior V020 ( Prince of Orange) 4099, 7020 (poems) Panegyrics on 4099" poems to and on 4099", 7020 reign, Vernon 9128 secret services 5697 times of, letters 8041 to (?) 704ff» toleration 4099« William III. and Q. Mary 4099 accession of 1210 act for recognizing 40998 allegiance to 4099' conquerors (Blunt), 1693 7047" glory and safety under 4099s history and life 4790 '3 Ireland 4472'^ and James II. 6188'^ justification of 4099'' declaration ag, Louia XIT, 8937'! w 706 W William III. and Q. Mary— cont oath to 4099*, 6735' proclaiming oJ 7048° and Scotland, 1689 7043= theij good title 4099i William Longbeard, life and death Lodge 18B5 "'' •William of Malmesbury William, 1863 Longue-Ep6e, D. of Normandy 6678 of Orange, and Princess Mary, 1641 6659 the Silent 6312 [D. of Cumberland], son of George 8937 '8 William of Palerne, romance William, 2S74i and the Werwolf William 2674 •Williams, Sir C. H., pieces by 9585 Daniel, D.D., will 9546 D'., separation on account of oaths, 1691 4099J E. (" lolo Morganwg ") recollections 9274 E. and C. B. Lester (" Berkeley Men") 825 Isaac, Lyra 5551 John Pasquin 6762 John, Abp. of York, life, etc. 3748, 6872 sermon (asBp. of Lincoln) 7844 Bp. of Chichester 4099'' (?) ; 709618 missionary, life 7203 Morris 6166 Richard, poore mans pittance 411 ' " Eoger, life 2764 Rowland, -essays and reviews 2833 Gen. Sir W. F., letters 4986 Williamson, Sir Joseph, letters to Letters 1322 E.., reasons against committees, 1654 1699 » ' Robert H., obituary e435« ♦Willis, Browne, Hearne's visit to 9207 Hal. (C. B. Forrester) 6009 T., and J. Battersby, dispute between, 1714 7095" P., notice of 594 Willoughby, Lady, diary 7298 of Parham, Lord 1595», 1B971'" •Wills, W. H., " Spectator " 8291-2 •Wills, etc., Abbot, Abp. 4 Anthony king of Poland 7024 Bury St. Edmund's register Wills 1322 Canterbury, eminent persons Wills 1822 Carpenter, Lord 5383 Congreve 1690 Cromwell 2183 Dickens 2436 Doctors' Commons, correspondence 2513 earliest English Wills 2674 eminent persons, 1495-1695 Wills 1322 Pox, Sir Stephen 3205 Halifax, C. Montague, Earl of 3772 Haslerigg, Sir A.rthur 1595'' Henry VII. 4015 Hume 4368-9 James II. 1725 Johnson, D'. 4652-3 Lancashire and Cheshire Wills 1639, 40 Marlborough.Duke and Duchess of 705 ' i Meldrum Lindsay 2674 Peck (collection) 6788 Prior 705'!', 9545 Price, Robert (justice) 5383 Badcliffe, D'. 6386, 7259 Eawhnson, R. 6661 Stewart, J. 8424 Sudbury register Wills 1322 Van Neck 6411 the vicar's 64«5' Wilmot, D'., and Polish Princess 8825 Sir J. B., life 7610 •Wilson, Arthur, hist, of James I. 4790 Charles H., Brookiana 978 M". Corn well B., " Grace Darling " 6«5'" D'., elegy on, Quarles 7228 H. B., essays and reviews 2833 John (Professor), Burns 1190 •Wilson, John (Professor)— co»<. Gilflllan on 3413 literary address 948 Martineau on 5876 poems 6134 Rev. Thomas, poems, letters, lire Wilson 1639 Rev. Thomas, Pentateuch 671 William, Such is life, " Doableyou " 2544 — , anecdotes of 4379 •Wilton, Countess of ("a lady of rank ") 2006 Wiltshire, archdeaconry, address, 1710 4099" clergy, 1710 4099' clergyman, letter to, 1710 4099" delinquents' lands, possessors of, 1643 7188W Duck, S. 7022 handbook, 1856 6364 petition, 1^48 7188"' rural rides 1763 tales 107 Win Hill, poem 2741 Winchelsea, Anne, Countess of, life 2002 poems 7028 Winchester (Wintonia) Annales Monastici Monasteries 1663 Winchester, Archaeological Institute, 1845 223 Bishop of (Morley ?) , letter, 1682 book 9329 cathedral, sermons, 1787 9329 college, vindication of 874 Kings Bench-Barre, 1603 (Ealeigh) 7270 Marquis of, 1645 1597''" old usages Gilds 2674 trial, 1777 8957 -■ ' view of 1595^5 Windebank, Sir P., articles against 1599 ' = Finch and others, in France 3048 Windermere book 5881 Windham, Sir W., letter to 806 Winding-sheet for the rebels ac Westminster, 1648 7248 Window ti'acery, England 3244, 7979-80 Windows, decorated 7979-80 Winds, history of. Bacon 361 Windsor, annals (castleand town) 8874 attachment of Col. Lunsford, 1642 1594» book 6097 Castle, Stephen Duck 7022 fiction (Ainsworth) 96 pictures, Jameson 4547 poem, Otway 6632 theatrical entertainments 153S 9326 Forest, poem. Pope 7010', 7019 ' ', 7076-7 Jack the courtier's answer, 171.4 7044* prisoner at, 1647 1599 ' = St. George's Chapel, Halford, 1813 3764 sermon, before Chas. I., 1625 5270 supreme council, 1648 6715 tales 7022 Whitohcock, governor of, 1650 1596» Wine duties 4541,8733 duty on, 1733 8937 ' * pro.iectors and patent for, 1641 21 reply to Tennent on 4541 use and taxation 8733 verses, 1709 7012 Winei, France, Evelyn 2891 modern, Redding 7387 pricing of, 1635, 7 7188", ^ Winfleld, south, Derbyshire 762 Wingate, Captain, letter, 1642 1697«= Winkworth, Catherine, Lyi'a Grerraanica 1120 Susanna, Luther 4930 •Winslow, Forbes, lunacy 9574 •Winstanley, Gerard, humble request, 1650 1599 » = Winter, Miss, heads of the people 6009 Wini»r evenings, Brit, essayists 960 w 707 W Winter-garden 471! weavings, poems 5183 "Will terslow, Hazlitt 3953 *\Vinthrop, John, life, letters 0579-80 ,,.. . ,EoJ)ertC'., American pamphlets 146 \V isconsm, lead and copper, 1847 2983 >i isrtoni of the ancients. Bacon 301, 3, 6 and 'benefioence of the Almighty (vision) 4681 l>ool£ of Adam Davy 2674 of looking backward, 1715 4791 H. Taylor on 8067-8 * Wise child of three year old 295^ man Courtesy 2674 saws and modem instances, Fitzgerald 3062 "Sam Slick" 8770 *W.iscman, Card., answer to ("Transubstantia- tion ") 4911 Ld. Houghton on 4278 ^Tish, the, poem, 1097 7011 ■\Vished reformation of wicked rebellion Churchward 1855 ^ ^ *\Vit, anatomy of l/yly 211 and blunders, Irish, theory of 8140 folly, dialogue 0829*" humour of past times, 1760 7013 poems. Hood 4396 Scotland . 4985 selections and essay 4417 present state of. Swift S529 against wisdom, Erasmus 2815 Wti'. R. 1860 'i" •■ ■\Vitch of Endor," Gates, 1679 7097 stories, Linton 5359 Witchcraft 1897, 2801, 6184, 6829», 7802-3 trial (amber witch) 6020 Wilc-hes Po«s 1639. 3434, 6829» •AVither, G., life 594, 9538 works Wither 8313 Within and without, dram, poem 5647 Witness of the spirit (sermons) 4501 "-Wits and humourists, lives, Timbs 8879 letters of, 1724 B279 Witscu, N., Tariary Orleans 3756 * W itt, John do, life 6378 *Wodrow Society publications 9594, 6 Wiihlgemuth, notice of 9321 » Wcl r, J. W., fairy tales 2900 Wolf-hunting, French 8854 AVolf stript of his shepherd's clothing, 1704 70445 •A\"(iire, General, dialogues 2889 life 3450,4636,9658 John, book printed by 3928 •M"ol a, Ecv. U'., notice of 1326 * W oUstonecraft, Mary (Godwin), life, etc. 3465, 3473 "Welsey, Baily on 396 ballads on 411 » 1 and Henry Till., corri^". 8.371 Laud 6155 life and times 1471-2, 3023, 3298, 3678, 6377, 81 who wrote Cavendish's life ? 4429 " Wolverene," ofDcer of, letters, 1814 6123 AVolves and Lamb, Thackeray 8759 '' ^^ the, Livonian tale 2681 *Woman of business, fiction 7701 can she regenerate society ? 5005 in England, history of (to 1200) 5189 in t'l ance, 18"' century 4728 new satire against, 1700 7023 in nineteentn century, Ossoli 6628 papers relating to, Ossoli 6628 poem on, Barrett 468 of quality 4082 satn-e against, 1710 7012 in white, fiction 1877, 85 Woman's educational mission, Frobel 3261 journey round the world 6868 mission 9605 " mission" and position, Jameson 4552 rights and duties i9606 o 16505. Women, American Revolution 2733 bad and good, 1720 0166 in the Bible 1129 celebrated in poetry 4651 characters of, Pope 7018 of Christianity 4729 concerning, Heywood 4063 employments, Jameson 4545 (heroic), Fr. Revolution 4995 letters to, Luther 6536 memorable 21S8 philosophers 6902 plea for citizenship of 6297 theatre of, Ammon 4133? of the time, 185C, 08 6038-9 Wonder-book for girls and boys 8911-12 Wonderful wonder of wonders 8535, 8937 » '^ Wonders, world of, 1845 7136 •Wood, Anthony a, life of Churchyard 758 Oxford humour 7013 vindication of 2213 Lt.-Gen., Ufe, 1714 5380 Thos., notice of 594 D'. T., 1698 2212 Woodbridge commission of sewers, 1649 1599 ' 2 Woodcuts, early, catalogue. Bliss 759 Woodfall, H. S. " Junius " 4707, 9 Woodhouselee, Lord Tutler 9068 Woodland, the, Pratt 7140 Wood's halfpence, coinage Swift 8624, etc., 8640-1, 72 Woods, forests, and land revenues, 1848 6737 Woodstock Park, poem, 1708 7010 ♦Woodward, B. B., Cates's date book 1455 fine arts quarterly review 3052 and H. Secliis 7335 H., comedian 8788 2, = Wooing and complementing 6889 Wool, exportation of, Ireland 447210 Woolhouse, W. S. B., almanack, 1844 135 Woollen cloths, &e., subsidy and aulnage, 1660 71881=* manufacturers, Dublin, Swift 8536 Wools, &c. exportation, 1660 7188'=' Worcester, battle, 1642 1597^^ ^^ (1651) and Chas. II. 765-8, 3692, 3819 Cromwell 1681 Bp. of (f Still ingflcet), sermon 4099'i book 1938 Dean (Hare) of, letter to 4099'" execution, 1652 8099 ' ' Florence of 3092 letter from, to H. Martin 1697=' Marquis of, and Raglan Castle, 1646, 1697=1 Marquis of. Apophthegms 20O {See also Glamorgan) ordinaiices Gilds 2674 plan of 768 priory Worcester- 1322 Monasteries 1663 Worcestershire, history of 628 " J. B." 704012 rural rides 1763 Word to purpose, a (Commonwealth tract, 1659) 1699"* Wordbook, English-Latin Catholicon 2674 Worde, Wynkyn de 199, 295=,", 411 ' 1, 1856 ' 1 Bahees 2674 Words of a believer. La Mennais 6043 Words, new world of 6890 origin and meanings, Kavanagh 4730 phrases, names, etc., Nares 6393 study of. Trench 8963 teaching by. Trench 5214 transposed 2800 ♦Wordsworth, Dora Qiiillinan 7236 M"., Martineau on 5876 William, Burns 5029 Chaucer 1618 genius of, and his re- viewers 9655 GilfiUan on 3413 z z w 708 X i^ordsworth, "William— co;i^. " Grace Darling " 0135W Ilazlitt on 396* Home on ■ki:,;i Lcatham on 5203 lite, Austin and Ralph 333 Hood 4188 Wordswortli :ifi2j worthies of Cumber- land 5485 Tilasson on 5934 potitry, DeQuinceyon 2365^ H. Taylor on 866G sonnets,' H. Taylor on 8()6ii Worse, Maj.-Gen., life 2(!04 Work of ladies, everyday, Allen 5214i laws of, Euskin 7663 Workhouse visiting. Brewer 6214 Workhouses, 1797, Eden 2690 •Working classes, lectures to, Fox 3200 man, autobiography, Sovnerville 82li; confessions, Souvestre 8275 man's companion (results of ma- chinery) 5669 people, the, Hamilton - 3S21 Workman and franchise, Maurice 69G0 Workmanship, art, De La Motte 2335 Workmen and labourers, letters to, Euskin 76G5 Works and days, Hesiod 4050 World, ancient, Ansted 187 before the Deluso, Siguier 30 4i Flood, poem 6219 burning of, Burnet 1186 child's history of S:>72 chronology of 9215 and the chui-ch, Booth 842 description of. Abbot, l(i61 3 dictionary of, McCullocli 6642 discoveries of Galvaiio 375G encompassed by Drake Bralce 3756 history of, Raleigh 72(i5, 8 {tol8W), Roltcck 7630 ideal or intelligible, Norris (i516 journey round, Gerstaecker, 1855 3383 Simpson, 1841-2 8056 opinions on, Goethe 3492 sketcher's tour round, 18j4 2765 system of, Nichol 6466 true age of, Wallace 9216 undergroxmd, journey to voyage round, " Beagle " 2-2 413 1 37, 4826 Howitt, 1815 4317 Magellan Magellan 375B Seemanu 7830 woman's journey round 0868-9 a workshop. 1855 2912 " World," essays 950 World of wonders, 1845 713li words, new 6890 World's show, 1851 6987 AVorlds, plurality of 934, 3102, 9403 unity of 7128 Worlidge, etc., portraits of painters 7394 Worn wedding-ring, poem 618 Wratislaw, Bohemian poems Wray, Lady Mary, Steele Sir John, speeches Wrecks, British Isles, ISSO AVrekin, all round the. 1860 *Wi'cn, Bp., impeachment letter to 788-9 8384 1597"-','«, 617n» 3334 942il 1597SB,8937>" 1594* *Wornum, R. N. 487, 2978, (i:i;i.-i Worship, common-prayer, 1034 1906 substitution of, for religion 310 Wortcunning Zeechdoms 1663 " Worth of a penny," Pi-acham 6780 Worthies, British, portraits 7111 Cumberland 54S5 England and Wales, Fuller and Sandys 3282, 7603 Old England's, portraits and biog. 7112 septuagint of, Tupper !ili34 Worthines of Wales ChurcJi-yard 8313 Worthing, book 7S38 ■Worthington, Dr. John, diary, etc. Worthiiigtim 16.39 Wortley, Hon. J. Stuart, .Monk 3719 Sir F., life 594 •Wotton. Sir H., life 6376. 84 poems 6829" W., Tale of a tub S518, 8937 ' '» Wounds o£ the chest 37:i4 Wrangham, " Ruminator " 1077 Virgil 2905 Capt., proceedings against, 1689 89.37"" ' Sir C, life, etc. 2769, 6381 Wron, the, notice of 714 *Wright, Abraham and James, Strafford 760 G. N., China 1650 John, Cavendish 1473-4! Thomas Heywood 4059-60 Piers Ploughman 6918 Thomas, M.D., Agassiz 74 Wrights chaste wife Adam of Cohsain 267* Wriothesley, chronicle 1486-l.j69 Wriothesley 1322 Writing of all ages, specimens 4.376 art of, Humphi'cys 4.376 <:urrespondence of, ^yith soeech 1624 Ellis 2674 Enghsh MlUs 2674 Hebrew, Phoenician, Greek 4376 of the insane 374 Wrongheads, family of, apology for 4080 Wroth, Sir T., speech, 1642 1597« Sir W., speech. 1641 15975* Wutheriiig heights, fiction 687 Wyandotte, fiction 1964 Wyat or "Wyatt, Sir T., poems Tottel 211 and 1853, 953, 279S rebellion Chronicle 1322 Wyatt, Sir M, D , Crystal Palace 2161 "Wycherley, life, etc. 2354, 2626 Wyclif, apology for Lollard doctrines Wicliffe 1322 England in the days of 4331 Fasciculi zizaniorum, etc. Netter 1663 life, Vaughan 9109 MSS., account of 9109 pronunciation BlUs 2674 works Wyclif 2674 Wye, the 1748, 3183, 7427 Wykeham, Wm. of, life 5611 Wykes, ehronicon. 1066-1289 Monasteries 1663 Wyndham, Mrs. Ann 767 H. P. 2622 Wyntoun, Andrew of, chronicle 77S1 AVyrley, notice of 694 ■•Wyse, Thos. (" Dr. Abraham Eldon " ) . 2719 An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should be made to this heading. The small, figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type : " v " stands for volume. X. Xanthian marbles 4563 •Xenophon, Anabasis, trans. 2865 Cyropaedia, ti-ans. 2965 memoi-abilia, Socrates 1866 de Persicis 4027 reti-eat of the ten thousand, Ains- worth 85 revenue of Athens 2260 Xerxes, history of 11 invasion of 96S6 Ximenes. Card., life 6378 Xingrt, river, voyage 39 Xylographic delineations of Scripture hist. 8247 i09 Z Y. An * denotes that the word to which it is prefixed occurs also as a heading in the Catalogue : reference should bo made to this heading. The small figures and letters refer to the entries in the Catalogue in small type ; " v " stands for volume. Y, trial of , 2713 Yacht cruise, Scotch waters, 18iS 7710 voyage, Mediterranean, ISlO-l 3873 Yalden, poems O.J3", 0703" Yankee words and phrases 80D1 Yapp, G.W., Exhibition, 18B1 2917, 23 Yarrow revisited and other poems 9631 *Yates, Edmund, All the Year Round 124 J., answer to Mountagu 632-1 'Year of prodigies, &c„ 1661-2 G163-4 Year 108S-9, occurrences 4099g of revolution in Paris (Lord Nornmnby), answer to 744 Year books, Edward I. Edward 1. 1663 Year, the, beauties of *j,05 calendar of, Hono 4,18i country year-book 432') natural events in every month 9717 poetry of 7035 progress of 8600 Yeast, fiction 4851 Yellowplush memoirs, fiction 87J9 ' '^ Yeovil book C12S Yeowell, J., index 8479 Yew trees, loss of, Swift 7012, 8562' Tezidis (devil-wor-iUippers) 6194 Yncas, the Vega, Vncas 3766 *Yonge, Walter, iliury, lOOt-28 Yonge 1:122 Yore, the, vallev of 454 York, books, etc. 977, loSa^', 2117, 2907, 3605, 3724, 4424, 5281, 7187, 7188=9, «2, 9348, 9601, 3 ; 9725 Charles I. at 430 Gent, T., life, poems 3368-9 proclamations at 7187, SS^'J, ^^ recorder, speech, 1611 1697' under the Romans 9348 Scriveners' play Camden Misc. S 1322 Thompson, E. (letter from Marvell) 5896 use of Ilass Book 2674 York, Anne Hyde, Duchess of 2002 ' =, 4815 Fred., Duke of, illness and death 4099= James, Duke of, address to 4510 exclusion 2377" York, New, State, history 963 Yorke, C, letters 9261 Yorkshire, Calverley of, 1605 1856 ' " qastles (Wresill, Lekinfleld) 6538 history, Elizabeth-Charles I. 1437 Middleham Middleham 1322 month in. White 9432-3 Prof. Phillips 6898 racers, poem 7012 rivers, mountains, coast, etc. 6898 rural rides 1763 theatres, 1770-95 9603 "' You have heard of them " (short notices) 7225 ♦Youatt, W., liorse 6874 »Young, C. M., life 9712 *Yovmff—conf. E., Dean of Salisbury 371.), 4099' (y) E. (son), life .594 poems 953>», 67062"-', 7010", »'■■ John, Johnson and Gray 21 1 r, R., on Addison 45 V ^-'1''? r^ 206, 07.S2 Young adventurer [Prmce Chas. Ed. Stuiirt I 292 duke, fiction '2177 ladies, maxims to, 1789 1371; Men's Christian Association, lectures Men's Christian Association (Dublin) lectures .5210 Singleton, fiction ;j7,i.i, Younger son, a, adventures of snis Your life 7;J0i; Youth, dialogue on ("Euphranor ") i's-ii; remarkable, lives .^.'j-!) Yucatan, ancient monuments, views 14,7 histoiy o.,i;a travels 6613, 8403-4 Yvan, Dr. Callery 1.304 z. Zaara, desert Zaide. Kina Zand-avasift, Parsi rehgiou Zanoni, fiction Zanzibar, island of, 1840 Zara^oza, Aula de Dios 7704 7701. Mr/J 1018 8280 Zarah, Queen (Duch. of Marlborough) 705 ' Zeal examined (Commonwealth tract) 1599 ' ■■* Zealots, two, dialogue between, verse 9651 Zekiel and Ephraim, dialogue L'Estrange 5276 Zeluco, fiction 952 Zenana, the, poem, " L. E. L." 5043 Zeno, N. and A., voyages, 14" cent Zeiio 3766 Zenobia, Queen, life 45.4!) Zepheria, poem Zeplwria 8313 Zetland, guide to, 1850 168 Zillah, tale of the Holy Land 81.35 Zincali (gypsies of Spain) 84(i Zinzendorf, Count, lite 5378= Zizania, etc., 'Wyclit Netter 1663 Zoe, Action 4626 Zohrab, fiction 6279 Zoilus, life 6738 Zoistic magnetism, 1848 7773 Zoological, notes and anecdotes 9724 recreations, Brodorip 962 Zoologist, logbook, Buckland 1095 Zoology, Carpenter 1424 comparative, museum. Harvard 3887 Cuvier 2207 Jardin des plantes, Boitard 801 of English Poets 6437 Zoroastrians 9569 •Zouch, Ld., letters to, Wotton 9641-2 Zulu Kafirs, Colenso 1786 Zulus, tlie, lite with. Mason, 1855 590B 710 ERRATA IN CATALOGUE. No. 894. /m5to1. 127S. For C. B. C. Amicus, read Amicus (0. B. C.) 1298. For 43 vol. read 62 vol. f/nrfe;- "Reigns of Elizabeth "/or 1601, rearf 1603, o/i!er addenda, add 1547-1625, and /or 7 vol., read 10 vol. Under "Keign of Charles II.," for 1660-1, read 1660-7, and /or 1 vol., read 7 vol. 1428-9. For Lutwige, read Lutwidge. 1628. For Barrett, read Barrell. 1639. (p. 97.) .i4rfrf "Walworth and Seddon correspondence; building of Ringley chapel. Edited by J. J. Fletcher. 1705. Dele"!'.' 1729. For Countries in England, read Cotmties in England. 1S37. For Dye, read Dyer. 1990. By Col. G. Proctor, not B. W. Procter. 2436. For [? Field], read [Fields.] 2541-3. All by the same Thomas Doubleday. 2545. For Kamanorum, read Romanornm. 2555. Dele [Letter-press by Tom Taylor.] S305. For [Anon. ? Rev. G. B. Gleig], read [Anon. Rev. Erskine Neale.] 3347. -For Sulpice Paul, read Guillaume Sulpice. 4150. jFor Poland, read Toland. 4260. Also fifth edition, 1843. 4300. Dele " [if practicable] ." 4863. For Kellner, read Kneller. 6009. Dele [? Wills.] 6508. JFor 1748, read 1798., 6663. By T. Warton, not Otway. 7220. For tracts, read facts. 7828. By " Charlotte Elizabeth " Tonna, not E. B. Seeley. 8570. After 8570, insert *8570. Vita del dottore Gionata Swift . . tra- dotta dair Inglese da F. Vannesohi. Lucca, 1768. L O N D K : Printed by E T E E and Spottiswoode, Printers to the Queen's most Excellent Majesty. For ller Majesty's Stationery Clce. [23029.— 1000.— 2/88.] ^■^iS^:SsS