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"Culled," says Mr Park, "by BALDWIN, from the communications of Mr [George] Steevens, in the St James's Chronicle, and put forth with a preface by William Cooke, Esq." [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.] ADDRESS (an) of thanks from the society of rakes, to the pious author of An essay upon improving and adding to the strength of Great Britain and Ireland by fornication. RAMSAY.] To which is epistle to the said author, hand.

Edinburgh; MDCCXXXIV. 16.* [D. Laing.]

[By Allan added, An by another

Octavo. Pp.

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ADDRESS (an) on the position of the

Church of Scotland, and the duty of Seceders at the present time. Published by authority of the Synod of original Seceders, May 1841. [By Rev. William WHYTE.]

Edinburgh: 1841. Octavo.. Pp. 42.*

ADDRESS (an) . . . relative to the compiling a complete History

of... the county palatine of Durham. [By G. ALLAN.]

Darlington: 1774. Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.]

ADDRESS (an) to bachelors. By a Bird at Bromsgrove. [John CRANE.] Birmingham: N. D. Duodecimo. [W.] ADDRESS (an) to Baptists of all denominations, on the tenets of their religion, by Aristogeiton. [P. FRASER.]

Loughborough. 1835. Octavo.* [Athen. Cat., p. 423.]

ADDRESS (an) to Christians, particularly those who are united in circulating the Scriptures. By a layman, who is desirous to see Christianity accompanied with that lively faith which bringeth all deeds to light, that it might be made manifest that they are wrought in God. [By Joseph JEWELL] Oxford: 1821. Octavo. Pp. 88.1 [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books.] ADDRESS (an) to Doctor Cadogan, occasioned by his dissertation on the gout and other chronic diseases with remarks and observations. [By William FALCONER, M.D.]

London: MDCCLXXI. Octavo. Pp. 36. b. t.* [Bodl.]

ADDRESS (an) to Dr Priestly, upon his Doctrine of philosophical necessity illustrated. [By Jacob BRYANT.] London: MDCCLXXX. Octavoj Pp. 136. b. t.*

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London, 1710. Duodecimo. Pp. 48.* [Adv, Lib.] ADDRESS (an) to his fellow-countrymen in a letter from Verus, in allusion to some of the popular doctrines agitated at the present time, and guarding bis countrymen against delusion. [By Edward BURTON, D.D.]

London: 1820. Octavo.* [Dub. Cat. Adv. Lib.]

ADDRESS (an) to honest English hearts, being an honest countryman's reflections on the cyder-tax, the commitment of M. Wilkes, the late treaty of peace, and the present opposition. [By Stephen GREENAWAY.]

1762. Octavo. [Mon. Rev., xxix. 393. European Mag., xxviii. 285.]

ADDRESS (an) to Lord Teignmouth, President of the British and Foreign Bible Society, occasioned by his address to the clergy of the Church of England. By a country clergyman. [Thomas SIKES, M.A.]

London: 1805. Octavo. [Bodl.]

ADDRESS (an) to my parishoners on the subject of the murder lately committed [by William Corder] at Polstead, in Suffolk. By a Suffolk clergyman. [John WHITMORE.]

London: [1828]. Duodecimo. [W., Brit.
Mus.]

ADDRESS (an) to parents to bring
their children to church baptism. [By
Henry GANDY.]
London: 1712.
Brit.]

Octavo. [Watt, Bib.

ADDRESS (an) to persons of fashion, relating to balls: with a few occasional hints concerning play-houses, cardtables, &c. In which is introduced the character of Lucinda, a lady of the very best fashion, and of most extraordinary piety. By the author of Pietas Oxoniensis. [Sir Richard HILL.] The sixth edition, revised, corrected, and very much enlarged.

Shrewsbury MDCCLXXI. Duodecimo.
Pp. 176.*

ADDRESS (an) to Protestant dissenters of all denominations, on the approaching election of members of parliament, with respect to the state of public liberty in general, and of American affairs in particular. [By Joseph PRIESTLEY, LL.D.] [In two parts.] London: 1774. Octavo. Pp. 16.* [Bodl.] ADDRESS (an) to rational advocates for the Church of England, and to all who read the scriptures in their original languages. By Tyro Phileleutherus. [John DUNCAN, D.D.]

London: 1768. Octavo.
Mag., iii. 371.]

[European

ADDRESS (an) to the bishops: upon the subject of a late letter from one of their Lordships to certain clergy in his diocese. With the letter prefixed. [BY John DISNEY, D.D.]

London: MDCCXC. Octavo. Pp. 1. b. t. 14.* [Bodl.]

ADDRESS (an) to the cocoa tree, from a Whig. [Bishop John BUTLER.] London: 1762. Quarto. [Almon's Anecdotes, i. 71.]

ADDRESS (an) to the committee for the relief of distressed seamen; containing the outline of a plan for that purpose; to which are added a few remarks on, and a list of the errors in the nautical almanacks. By the merchant seamen's friend. [Jeffrey DENNIS.]

London: 1813. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] ADDRESS (an) to the deans and chapters of the cathedral churches in England and Wales, on the election of bishops; to which is prefixed a prayer for the orthodox catholics while the church is under persecution. By a presbyter in the diocese of Canterbury. [Hon. Arthur Philip PERCEVAL.]

London: 1833. Octavo. Pp. 43.* [Adv. Lib.]

[By

ADDRESS (an) to the dissidents of
England on their late defeat.
John AIKIN, M.D.]
London: MDCCXC. Octavo. Pp. 32.*
[Gent. Mag., xciii. 1, 87.]

ADDRESS (an) to the electors and other free subjects of Great Britain; occasion'd by the late secession. In which is contain'd a particular account of all our negociations with Spain and their treatment of us for above ten years past. [By Benjamin ROBINS.] The third edition.

London: 1739. Octavo. Pp. iv. 63.* [Adv. Lib.]

ADDRESS (an) to the electors of Great

Britain. [By Joseph TOWERS, LL.D.] 1796. Octavo.* [Gent. Mag., lxxiii. 1. 335.] ADDRESS to the freeholders of Scotland, on the legality and effects of a revaluation of landed property. [By John CAMPBELL, W.S.]

Edinburgh: 1795. Octavo. Pp. 46. b. t.* [Sig. Lib.]

ADDRESS (an) to the freemen and freeholders of the nation. [By Edmund BOHUN.]

London: 1682. Quarto. Pp. xi. 66.* [Adv. Lib.]

Ascribed to Sir Roger L'Estrange. Entered in Watt, Bib. Brit, under both names. ADDRESS to the friends of Bible

societies in Perthshire, by the dissentients from the committee of the Perthshire Bible Society. [By James M'LAGAN, D.D.]

Edinburgh 1829. Octavo. Pp. 43.* [New Coll. Cat.]

ADDRESS (an) to the good sense and candour of the people of England in behalf of the dealers in corn, with some few observations on a late trial for regrating. By a country gentleman. [Sir Thomas TURTON.]

London: 1800. Octavo. Pp. 178. [W]

ADDRESS (an) to the Hon. Admiral Augustus Keppel; containing candid remarks on his late defence; with some impartial observations on such passages as relate to the conduct of vice-admiral Sir Hugh Palliser. By a [John STEVENSON.]

seaman.

London: 1779. Octavo.* [European Mag., vii. 213.]

ADDRESS (an) to the Honourable

Committee for the relief of distressed seamen; containing the outline of an effectual plan for that purpose; pointing out defects in the payment of wages, and in the manner of taking apprentices, which is highly prejudicial to the merchant service. To which are added a few remarks on, and a list of errors in the nautical almanacks: also directions for the use of the sea or marine barometer and thermometer, including a curious table for the use of those who are in possession of mountain barometers; and another, shewing the probable length of passage to and from the principal ports in India. By the merchant seaman's friend. [Jeffery DENNIS.]

London, 1818. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.]

Author's name given in second edition. ADDRESS (an) to the inhabitants of Birmingham, upon the necessity of attending to the philosophy of the mind -previous to their forming a just or complete theory of education-upon the influence of education, and its relative value with a particular address to tutors and parents. By a patriot. [Joseph PRIESTLEY, LL.D.]

Birmingham: N.D. Octavo. Pp. 59.* [Bodl.]

ADDRESS (an) to the inhabitants of the two great cities of London and Westminster; in relation to a pastoral letter said to be written by [E. Gibson] the Bishop of London, to the people of his diocess, occasion'd by some late writings in favour of infidelity. [By Matthew TINDAL.]

London, MDCCXXIX. Pp. 76.* [Adv.
Lib.]

ADDRESS (an) to the ladies from a young man. [By Henry Revell REYNOLDS.]

1796. Octavo. [Watt, Bib. Brit. Rivers, ii. 196.]

ADDRESS to the ladies of Great Britain, relating to the most valuable part of ornamental manufacture in their dress. [By Dorothy HOLT.] 1757. Octavo.

ADDRESS to the Medical Society of London, together with some correspondence relative to a consultation at Norwich. [By Edward W. MURPHY, M.D.] From the London Medical Gazette.

London 1851. Octavo. Pp. 15. [W., Brit. Mus.]

ADDRESS (an) to the members of the Church of England, entitled to vote for members of parliament. By a churchman. [The Hon. and Rev. Arthur Philip PERCEVAL, B.C.L.]

London: 1835. Octavo. Pp. 12.* [Bodl.] ADDRESS to the members of the Episcopal Church in Scotland. By a layman. [John Hay FORBES, Lord Medwyn.]

Edinburgh: 1847. Octavo. Pp. 169.* ADDRESS to the members of the General Assembly, and to the ministers of the Church of Scotland generally. [By John Campbell COLQUHOUN.] Glasgow: N.D. Octavo. Pp. 3.* [New Coll. Cat., p. 5.] ADDRESS to the ministers of the Church of Scotland, on the subject of the overture and regulations, respecting chapels of ease. By a moderate clergyman, of the Synod of Aberdeen. [G. Skene KEITH.]

N. P. 1797. Octavo. Pp. 16. ADDRESS (an) to the nobility and gentry of the Church of Ireland, as by law established. Explaining the real causes of the commotions and insurrections in the southern parts of this kingdom respecting tithes. And the real motives and designs of the projectors and abettors of those commotions and insurrections: and containing a candid inquiry into the practicability of substituting any other mode of subsistence and maintenance for the clergy of the Church established, consistent with the principles of reason and justice, in the place of tithes. By a layman. [Patrick DUIGENAN, LL.D.] Dublin: M, DCC, LXXXVI. Octavo. Pp. 112.* Signed at the end "Theophilus."

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London, MDCCXC. Octavo. Pp. 41.* [Brit. Mus.]

ADDRESS (an) to the parliament of Great Britain, on the claims of authors to their own copy-right. Second edition. By a member of the university of Cambridge. [Richard DUPPA, B.C.L.]

London: 1813. Octavo. Pp. 58. b. t.* [Bodl.]

ADDRESS (an) to the people of England. [By Anthony FRESTON.]

London: 1796. Octavo. Pp. 25.* [Gent.
Mag., xc. 279.]

ADDRESS (an) to the people of England;

being a protest of a private person, against every suspension of law, that is liable to injure or endanger personal security. [By Granville SHARP.]

London: 1778. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] ADDRESS (an) to the people of Great Britain, on the propriety of abstaining from West Indian sugar and rum. [By William Fox, Attorney at law.] The twenty-fourth edition.

London [1792.] Octavo. Pp. 8.* [Bodl.] ADDRESS (the) of the people of Great Britain to the inhabitants of America. [By Sir John DALRYMPLE.]

London: MDCCLXXV. Octavo. Pp. 60.* [Rich, Bib. Amer., i. 214.]

ADDRESS (an) to the people of Ireland; shewing them why they ought to submit to an union. [By Roger O'CONNOR.] Dublin 1799. Octavo. Pp. 16.* [Bodl.] ADDRESS to the people of Scotland,

issued by appointment of the convocation of ministers, held at Edinburgh, November 1842. [By James BUCHANAN, D.D.]

[Edinburgh, 1842.] Octavo. Pp. 16.* ADDRESS (an) to the people of Scotland, on the nature, powers, and privileges of juries. By a juryman. [Alexander SMELLIE.] Edinburgh: M,DCC, LXXXIV. [Adv. Lib.]

Octavo.*

ADDRESS (an) to the people of the British dominions, on behalf of humanity, and of the suffering Greeks. To which is added, an easy method of paying off the national debt. By Richardus Incognitus. [Richard BRASH.]

London 1825. Octavo. Pp. 49. b. t. A presentation copy to Mr Bowring, accompanied by a letter from the author. [Bodl.] ADDRESS (an) to the poor. [By Charlotte REES, afterwards Lloyd.]

Bristol 1811. Duodecimo. I sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 84.]

ADDRESS (an) to the proprietors of East India stock. [By J. T. HOLWELL.]

Quarto. Pp. 14.

London: MDCCLXIV. b. t.* [Adv. Lib.] ADDRESS (an) to the Protestant interest in Scotland. Being an humble

and seasonable warning, wherein is clearly demonstrated, the inexpediency and danger of repealing our penal laws against Popery, or allowing that dangerous and idolatrous religion to be openly profest within this realm. More particularly shewing, I. That Popery is a false and unscriptural religion. II. That it is opposite to the civil constitution and liberty of this kingdom. III. That it is a religion, which has hitherto been propagated and nourished only by blood. IV. That the penal laws against it, in Scotland, were not founded in persecution, but in self-defence. V. That a repeal of the above laws would appear to infer, in so far, a breach of the articles of the Union. VI. A comparative view of the Act of Parl. of the 11th and 12th of King William against Popery; and the Act of last session in favour of the professors of that superstition in England. VII. Address concluded. With a postscript, giving a short account of the Popish Bill, lately passed in Ireland: and an appendix, containing a copy of the above two acts. [By James MORRISON, A.M., minister at Paisley.] The second edition with improvements. Glasgow N. D. Duodecimo. Pp. 60.* ADDRESS (an) to the public, in justification of the conduct of the author of the pamphlet entitled Observations on frauds practised in the collection of the salt duties, and the misconduct of officers fairly stated. [By William VANDERSTEGEN.] Reading: N. D. Octavo. [Bodl.]

Pp. vii. 96.*

ADDRESS to the Right Honourable Lord President Hope, and to the members of the College of Justice, on the method of collecting and reporting decisions. [By John HANNAY.] Edinburgh: 1821. Octavo.* Robert Hannay. [Adv. Lib.]

ADDRESS (an) to the Right Hon. William Pitt, &c., &c., &c., on some parts of his administration. Оссаsioned by his proposal of the triple assessment, in the House of Commons, in November 1797. [By Thomas James MATHIAS.]

London: [1797.] Octavo. Pp. viii. 21.* [Dyce Cat.]

ADDRESS (an) to the Right Reverend the Prelates of England and Wales, on the subject of the slave-trade. [By George HARRISON.]

London 1792. Octavo. I sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 75.] ADDRESS (an) to the Roman Catholics of England. [By C. Purton COOPER?] London 1851. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] ADDRESS (an) to the Roman Catholics of the United States of America. By a Catholic clergyman. [John CARROLL, Bishop.]

Annapolis M. DCC. LXXXIV. Octavo. Pp. 116.* [Bodl.]

ADDRESS (an) to the serious and candid professors of Christianity: on the following subjects, viz., I. The use of reason in matters of religion, II. The power of man to do the will of God, III. Original sin, IV. Election and reprobation, V. The divinity of Christ, and, VI. Atonement for sin by the death of Christ. Occasioned by an appeal lately published on the same subjects. [By Ambrose SERLE.] Edinburgh: 1789. Duodecimo. Pp. iv. 72.*

ADDRESS (an) to the Society of Friends,

on the employment of means for disseminating Christian knowledge among the heathen. By a member of the Society. [Edward ASH.]

London: 1828. Octavo. I sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 96, 134.] ADDRESS (an) to the University of Oxford occasioned by a sermon, intituled, The divine institution of the ministry, and the absolute necessity of church government; preached before that university by the Rev. Joseph Betty. By I. W. L. [WARNER.] London: 1730. Octavo. Pp. 73. [Darling, Cyclop. Bibl.]

ADDRESS (an) to those of the Roman communion in England: occasioned by the late act of parliament, for the further preventing the growth of Popery. [By Richard WILLIS.]

London: 1700. Duodecimo. Pp. 2. 160.* [Bodl.]

ADDRESSED to His grace the Duke of Marlborough. Thoughts, &c. [By Vaughan THOMAS.]

See "Thoughts on the cameos and intaglios, &c."

ADDRESSES to young children, originally delivered in the Girls' Free School, Bell Lane. [By the Baroness Lionel de ROTHSCHILD.]

London: 1859. Duodecimo. 274. [W., Brit. Mus.]

Pp. viii.

ADELA Northington, a novel. In three volumes. [By Mrs BURKE.]

London: 1796. Duodecimo.* [Crit. Rev., xvii. 351. Watt, Bib. Brit.]

ADELAIDE; a story of modern life. [By Miss CATHCART.] In three volumes.

London: 1833. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] ADELAIDE Lindsay. A novel. Edited by the author of "Emilia Wyndham," "Two old men's tales," &c., &c. [Mrs Anne MARSH.] In three volumes. London: 1850. Octavo.* [Bodl.] ADMINISTRATION (the) of the colonies; wherein their rights and constitution are discussed and stated. [By Thomas POWNALL.]

London: 1765. Octavo. [Nichols, Lit. Anec., viii. 65. Watt, Bib. Brit.] ADMIRABLE curiosities, rarities, and wonders in England, Scotland, and Ireland. Or, an account of many remarkable persons, and places, and likewise of the battels, seiges, prodigious earthquakes, tempests, inundations, thunders, lightnings, fires, murders, and other considerable occurrences, and accidents for several hundred years past. Together with the natural, and artificial rarities in every county, and many other observable matters; they are recorded by the most authentick, and credible historians of former and latter ages; adorned with the lively description of several memorable things therein contained, ingraven on copper plates. By R. B. Author of the History of the Wars of England, &c., and Remarks of London, &c. [Richard BURTON.]

as

London 1682. Duodecimo. Pp. 2. b. t. 232.* [Bodl.]

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