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AUTOBIOGRAPHY (the) of John Brown the cord-wainer; with his sayings and doings in town and country: shewing what part he took in the spread of church principles among the working classes. Edited by a clerical friend. [George HUNTINGTON.] Oxford: 1867. [Bodl.]

Octavo. Pp. iv. 268.*

AUTOBIOGRAPHY (the) of the late Salmo Salar, Esq. comprising a narrative of the life, personal adventures, and death of a Tweed salmon. Edited by a fisherman. [By George RoOPER.] London: 1867. Octavo. Pp. viii. 68.* Appeared originally in "Macmillan's Magazine."

AUTODIDACTICE.

A plain and pleasant rode for the Latin scholar, Part I. Comprehending directly nouns substantive, and adjective only; the verb belonging to the 2d. part. [By John GOAD, D.D.] London, 1687. 302.

Octavo. Pp. 14. b. t.

Sum Jo: Aubry ex dono autoris. ... Goad B.D.-MS. note in Bodleian copy.

ATTOKATAK PITOI. Or, the Jesuits condemned by their own witness. Being an account of the Jesuits principles, in the matter of equivocation, the Popes power to depose princes, the kingkilling doctrine, out of a book entituled An account of the Jesuits life and doctrine. By M. G. [Martin GRENE, a Jesuit]. Printed in the year 1661. And found in possession of one of the five Jesuits executed on the 20th of June last past. Together, with some animadversions on those passages, shewing, that by the account there given of their doctrine in the three points above mentioned, those Jesuits lately executed, were, in probability, guilty of the treasons for which they suffered, and died equivocating.

Folio. Pp. 4. b. t.

London: MDCLXXIX. 18.* [Bodl.] AUTUMN (an) at Karnford, being a sequel to "Cousin Kate's Story." [By Catherine D. BELL.]

Edinburgh: 1847. Octavo. [Lond. Cat.] AUTUMN (an) near the Rhine; or, sketches of courts, society, scenery, &c. in some of the German states bordering on the Rhine. [By Charles Edward DODD.]

London 1818. Octavo. Pp. 524.* [N. and Q., 7 Aug. 1858, p. 117.]

AUTUMN (the) holidays of a country parson. By the author of 'The recreations of a country parson.' [Andrew Kennedy Hutchison BOYD, D.D.]

London: 1864. Octavo. Pp. vii. 418.* AVEBURY in Wiltshire, the remains of a Roman work erected by Vespasian and Julius Agricola, during their several commands in Britanny: short essay, humbly dedicated to the Rt. Hon. the Earl of Winchelsea. [By T. TWINING.]

:

a

London 1723. Quarto. Pp. 36. [W.,
Upcott.]

AVILLION and other tales.

By the author of "Olive," "The head of the family", Agatha's husband", &c. [Dinah Maria MULOCH.] In three volumes.

London: 1853. Octavo.*

AVON a poem. [By Rev. J. HUCKELL.]
Birmingham. MDCCLVIII. Pp. 78.* [Bodl.]
AXE (the) laid to the root of Christianity:
or, a specimen of the prophaneness and
blasphemy that abounds in
late writings. [By Francis ATTER-
BURY, D.D.]

London: 1706. Quarto.* [Bodl.]
Ascribed to Charles Leslie.
Cyclop. Bibl.]

some

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AYRSHIRE (the) legatees; or, the Pringle family. By the author of "Annals of the parish," &c. [John GALT.]

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Edinburgh: 1821. Duodecimo. Pp. 303.1 AZARIA and Hushai, a poem. [By Samuel Pordage. Elkanah SETTLE]

London, 1682. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 38.* [N. and Q., 1861, p. 371.]

Asoribed to Samuci Pordage. [Dout.] AZEMIA ; a descriptive and sentimental novel; interspersed with pieces of poetry. By Jacquetta Agneta Mariana Jenks of Belgrove Priory in Wales. [William BECKFORD.] In two volumes. London: 1797. Duodecimo. [Rogers' Table Talk, p. 216.] Entered under Jenks. [Watt, Bib. Brit.]

AZETH the Egyptian. A novel. [By
E LYNN.] In three volumes.

London: 1847. Duodecimo.* [Bodl.]

B.

B. Jon [Benjamin JONSON]: his part of King James his royall and magnificent entertainement through his honorable cittie of London, Thurseday the 15. of March. 1603. So much as was presented in the first and last of their triumphall Arch's. With his speach made to the last presentation in the Strand, erected by the inhabitants of the Dutchy, and Westminster. Also, a briefe panegyre of his maiesties first and well auspicated entrance to his high court of parliament, on Monday, the 19. of the same moneth. With other additions.

Printed at London by V. S. for Edward Blount, 1604. Quarto. No pagination. BABBLER (the); or, a new and old evangelical magazine. Complete in one volume. [By Theodore COMPTON.] N. P. N.D. Octavo. 24 sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 446.]

BABEL (the) of quakerism thrown down; or, the errors and inconsistencies of Robert Barclay's Apology for the Quakers discovered and confuted. In a letter to Dr Routh. By a lover of the truth. [Jonathan WARNE.] London: 1739. Octavo.

BABLER (the). Containing a careful selection from those entertaining and interesting essays. Which have given the public so much satisfaction under that title during a course of four years, in Owens' Weekly Chronicle. [By Hugh KELLY.] [In two volumes.] London, MDCCLXVII. Duodecimo.* [Bodl.] BABYLON the great: a dissection and demonstration of men and things in the British capital. By the author of "The modern Athens." [Robert MUDIE.] [In two volumes.] London: MDCCCXXV. Octavo.* [Gent. Mag., Aug. 1842, p. 214.]

BACCHANALIA: or a description of a drunken club: a poem. [By the Rev. Charles DARBY, Rector of Kelton, Suffolk.]

London: 1680. Folio.

BACCHANALIAN (the) sessions; or the contention of liquors with a farewel to wine. By the author of the Search after claret, &c. [Richard AMES.] To which is added, a satyri

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London: [1858.] Duodecimo. [Adv. Lib.] BACKWARD glances. Edited by the author of "6 Episodes in an obscure life." [Richard Row.] London: 1874. Octavo. 317.* [Adv. Lib.] BACKWOODS (the) of Canada: being letters from the wife of an emigrant officer, illustrative of the domestic life of British America. [Catharine Parr TRAILL.]

London: MDCCCXXXVI. Octavo. Pp. viii. 351.*

BACONIANA.

Or certain genuine remains of Sr. Francis Bacon, Baron of Verulam, and Viscount of St Albans; in arguments civil and moral, natural, medical, theological, and bibliographical; now the first time faithfully published. An account of these remains, and of all his Lordship's other works, is given by the publisher [Thomas TENISON], in a discourse by way of introduction. Second edition. London, MDCLXXXIV. Octavo.* BAD (the) consequences of dissention and party-rage considered. A sermon [on Matt. xii. 25.] preached at Buckingham on the 5th of July, 1747, the Sunday following the election. [By William GILPIN, M.A.] Published at the desire of several of the audience. London: MDCCXLVII. Octavo.* [Bodl.]

BAGLEY; a descriptive poem. With the annotations of Scriblerus Secundus to which are prefixed, by the same, prolegomena on the poetry of the present age. [By Thos. BURGESS, D.D.] Oxford M. DCC.LXXVII. Quarto.* [Harford's Life of Burgess, p. 9. Upcott, p. 585.] Ascribed to A. C. Schomberg. [Bodl.]

BAIRNS (the); or, Janet's love and service. A story from Canada. By the author of "Christie Redfern's troubles;" "The orphans of Glen Elder, a story of Scottish life;" etc., etc. [Margaret M. ROBERTSON.] London: MDCCCLXX. Octavo. Pp. 581.* BALAAM. By the author of Modern fanaticism unveiled. [Isaac TAYLOR, junior.]

London: 1831. 12mo. [W., Brit. Mus.] Ascribed to Mrs Henderson. [Lond. Cat. Ecl. Rev. vii. 36.]

BALANCE (the) of pain: and other poems. By Australie. [Mrs HERON, née Emily Manning.]

London: 1877. Octavo. Pp. vi. 141.* [Adv. Lib.]

BALDER.

Part the first. By the author of "The Roman." [Sydney DOBELL.]

London 1854. Octavo. Pp. 283.*

BALL room votaries; or, Canterbury and its vicinity. [By HUNTER,

of the Queen's Bays Regiment.] London 1810. Octavo. [W., Smith, Bib. Cant.]

BALLAD (the) book. [By George R. KINLOCH.] [Woodcut, entitled Mussel Mou'd Charlie.]

Edinburgh MDCCCXXVII. Octavo. Pp. xiii. 88. [Adv. Lib.]

BALLAD (a) book.

[Compiled by

Charles Kirkpatrick SHARPE.] [Edinburgh: 1823.] Duodecimo. 123. [W., Martin's Cat.]

Pp.

BALLAD (a) in macaronic Latin, entitled Rustica descriptio visitationis fanaticæ, being a country clergyman's tragicomical lament upon revisiting Oxford after the root-and-branch reform of 1648, 1649. By John Allibond, D.D. of Magdalen College, vicar of Bradwell, Gloucestershire. With preface and notes, the verses being done into doggrel in usum parliamenti indoctorum, ejusdem nominis secundi. [By Vaughan THOMAS.]

Oxford, 1834. Octavo.* [Bodl.]

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BALM from Gilead: or, the differences about the indulgence, stated and impleaded in a sober and serious letter to ministers and christians in Scotland. By an healing hand. [John BAIRDY.] London, 1681. Octavo. Pp. 188.* BANDERS (the) disbanded or accurat discourse solidly and plainly demonstrating how inconvenient, scandalous & sinfull it is, in the present circumstances of the Church of Scotland, for ministers of Christ there, that they may obtain a pretended liberty to preach and administer the sacraments, in such and such particular paroches, to give bond to their present rulers, that they shall live peaceably or for others, in their name and behalf, to bind to the said rulers for their peaceable living, and to present them when called so to do, and in case of faillzie to underly a great penalty: and so discovering clearly the great unfaithfulness of the affirmative vote, of the late meeting of ministers at Edinburgh, (Anno 1679.) concerning the lawfullness of giving the bond then presented by the Councill: as also occasionally holding forth many considerable truths very necessary to be known and pondered in these dark and difficult times. [By Robert M'WARD.] Printed Anno M. DC. LXXXI. Quarto.*

BANG the brocker, or Bully Pierce alias A――n [Allan] the turncoat. A new song. [By William FORBES, of Disblair.]

N. P. N. D. s. sh. Folio." [Adv. Lib.] BANK (the) charter act of 1844 truthfully considered in connexion with the dearness of money, free trade, the currency, and the fair employment of labour. By Honestus. [Edward NORTON.] London: 1857. Octavo.*

The second and third editions published in the same year have the author's name. BANKER-LORD (the): a novel. [By Madame PISANI.] In three volumes. London: 1840. Duodecimo." BANKS and bankers. By Daniel Hardcastle, jun. [R. PAGE.] Second edition, with an appendix comprising a review of the failures amongst private and joint stock banks. London: 1843. 460. [W.] BANKS (the) of the Wye: and other poems. [By J. H. JAMES.]

Duodecimo.

Pp. xx.

London: MDCCCLVI. Octavo. Pp. iv. 100.* [N. and Q., 19 Aug. 1865, p. 160.] BANNATYNE (ane) garlande, brevit be Maister Patrick, of the kingis chekar. [By P. Fraser TYTLER.]

Dunedin: M. DCCC. XXVI. Octavo. B. L.* BANQUET (the): in three cantos. Hans BUSK.]

[By

London 1819. Octavo. [Gent. Mag., lxxxix. i. 140. 629.]

BAPTISM and the conflict with indwelling sin. By the author of " Faith and works," and "The Canon of truth." [W. H. DARBY?]

London: 1859. Duodecimo. [W., Brit. Mus.] Signed W. H. Dy. BAPTISM (the) of infants, a reasonable service; founded upon Scripture, and undoubted apostolic tradition; in which its moral purposes and use in religion are shewn. [By John GILL, D.D.] The second edition.

London: MDCCLIII. Octavo. Pp. vi. I. 56. 2.* [Bodl.]

BAPTISMAL (the) vow, extracted from

the office of Baptism. [By-CURTIS.] Leeds: MDCCCXXXIV. Duodecimo.* [Bodl.] BAPTISTERY (the), or the way of eternal life. By the author of "The Cathedral." [Isaac WILLIAMS.] Oxford, MDCCCXLII.

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Octavo. Pp. xxiv.

The work is divided into three parts; a fourth was published in 1844.

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BARATARIANA. A select collection of fugitive political pieces, published during the administration of Lord Townsend in Ireland. [Edited by the Rev. SIMPSON.]

Dublin 1783. Duodecimo. [W]

The second edition, corrected and enlarged.
The writers of this work were the Right
Hon. Henry Flood, the Right Hon. Henry
Grattan, then a young barrister; Sir
Hercules Langrishe, Bart. ; and the Rev.
Simpson.

BARBADAZULO Vanagloroso, the de-
mon of the castle heights; or the brother's
Richardson's dramas.
By
revenge.
Cirujano. [George Borlase CHILDS.]
London: 1863. Octavo. [Boase and
Courtney, Bib. Corn., i. p. 68.]
BARBARA Heathcote's trial. A novel.
By the author of "Nellie's memories,"
and "Wee Wifie." [Rosa Nouchette
CAREY.] In three volumes.
London: 1871. Octavo.*

BARBARA'S warning. A novel.
the

By

to

author of "Recommended mercy," &c. [Mrs HOUSTON.] In

three volumes. London: 1874.

Octavo.*

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BARHAM downs: a novel.

volumes.

In two By the author of Mount Henneth. [Robert BAGE.] London: 1784. Duodecimo.* [Mon. Rev., lxxi. 223.]

BARLEY-BREAKE, or a warning for wantons. Written by W. N. Gent. [Nicholas BRETON.]

London: 1607. Quarto. [W.] BARNABÆ itinerarium, or Barnabee's Journal, [by Richard BRATHWAIT]; the seventh edition: to which are prefixed, an account of the author, now first discovered; a bibliographical history of the former editions of the work; and illustrative notes. [By Joseph HASLEWOOD.]

London: 1818. Duodecimo. [W.] BARNABEES Journall, under the name of Mirtilus & Faustulus shadowed : for the travellers solace lately published, to most apt numbers reduced, and to the old tune of Barnabe, commonly chanted. By Corymbæus. [Richard BRATHWAIT.] First edition. [London: 1648-50.] Duodecimo.

Latin and English, with Latin title, and frontispiece by Marshall, with the title, "Barnabe Itinerarium or Barnabees Journall."

BARONETAGE (the) of England; being an historical and genealogical account of baronets, from their first institution in the reign of King James I. . . . [By Arthur COLLINS.] In two volumes. London: 1720. Octavo. [Athen. Cat., p. 32. 2d Sup.]

BARRA HEAD: a sketch. Addressed to E. E. [By Thomas S. MUIR.] No separate title-page. [Edinburgh : 1866.] Quarto. Pp. 52. Signed Unda. Privately Printed. On the authority of the author.] BARREN HONOUR. A tale. By the author of "Guy Livingstone." [George Alfred LAWRENCE.] A new edition. London: 1863. Octavo. Pp. viii. 415.* BARRIERS to the national prosperity of Scotland; or, an inquiry into some of the immediate causes of modern social evils. By R. Alister. [Alexander ROBERTSON.]

Edinburgh: M.DCCC.LIII. Octavo.*

BARRIER-TREATY (the) vindicated. [By Francis HARE, D.D.] second edition.

The

London: MDCCXII. Octavo. Pp. 200.* [Bodl.]

BARRISTER (the): or, strictures on the education proper for the bar. Most of these papers appeared occasionally in the World, during the year 1791.-Some others are now added, with an introduction by the author. [Thomas RUGGLES.] In two volumes.

London: M DCC XCII. Octavo.*

BARROW (the) diggers. A dialogue in imitation of the grave diggers in Hamlet. With numerous explanatory notes. [By C. WOOLLS.]

London : MDCCCXXXIX.

Quarto. Pp.

112.* [N. and Q., April 1861, p. 298.] BARROW-DIGGING by a BarrowKnight, in six fyttes. [By S. ISAACSON.] 1844-5. [N. and Q., 13 April 1861, p. 298.] BAR-SINISTER (the), or memoirs of an illegitimate. Founded on facts. [By C. E. LAMBERT.] In two volumes. London 1836. Duodecimo.* [Adv. Lib.] BARTON (the) experiment. By the author of "Helen's babies." [John HABBERTON.]

London: 1877. Octavo. Pp. 126.*

BAS-BLEU (le); or, the fall of the leaf; a farce in two acts. Performed at the Theatre-Royal, Edinburgh, for the first time, March 30, 1836. [By William Hugh LOGAN.]

Edinburgh: M. DCCC. XXXVI. Duodecimo.* [N. and Q., Sep. 1859, p. 197.]

BASIL Godfrey's caprice. By Holme
Lee, author of "Sylvan Holt's daughter,"
"Mr. Wynyard's ward." [Harriet
PARR.] In three volumes.
London. M. DCCC. LXVIII.

Octavo.*

BASIL, the school-boy; or, the heir of Arundel. [By Edward MONRO, M.A.] London: MDCCCLIV. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. 269.*

BASSET-TABLE (the). A comedy. As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane, by Her Majesty's servants. By the author of the Gamester. [Susanna CENTLIVRE.]

London: 1706. Quarto. Pp. 7. b. t. 94.* [Bodl.]

BASTARD (the): a tragedy. [Ascribed to Cosmo MANUCHE.]

London, 1652. Quarto. Pp. 4. b. t. 80. 1.* [Dyce Cat., ii. 49.]

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