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ADVENTURES (the) of Signor Gaudentio di Lucca: being the substance of his examination before the Fathers of the Inquisition, at Bologna in Italy, giving an account of an unknown country in the midst of the desarts (sic) of Africa, copied from the original manuscript in St Mark's Library, at Venice, with critical notes by the learned Signor Rhedi, translated from the Italian. [By Simon BERINGTON.] London: 1786. Octavo. Pp. 103. [Adv. Lib. N. and Q., Oct. 5-19, 1850; Jan. 18, 1851.]

Often, but erroneously, ascribed to Bishop Berkeley.

ADVENTURES (the) of Sir Frizzle Pumpkin; Nights at mess; and other tales. [By James WHITE.] With illustrations by George Cruikshank. Edinburgh and London: M. DCCC.XXXVI. Octavo. [Adv. Lib.]

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London, 1855. Octavo. ADVENTURES (the) of the princesses of Babylon in their travels to the Temple of Virtue; an allegory. [By Miss Lucy PEACOCK.]

London: 1786. Duodecimo. [Watt, Bib.
Brit.]

ADVENTURES on the Mosquito Shore.
By Samuel A. Bard. [Ephraim George
SQUIER.]

London: 1856. Duodecimo. [W., Brit.
Mus.]

ADVERTISEMENT for the more easie and speedy collection of debts. [By Robert MORAY.]

N. P. N. D. [About 1682.] Folio. Pp. 2.* [Adv. Lib.]

ADVERTISEMENT to the General Assembly, 1720, or, ane account of the rise and tendencie of some new things in the printed overtures concerning Kirk-Sessions. In a letter from a

minister of the Presbytry of Glasgow, to a minister in the Presbytry of Edinburgh. [By James CLARK.]

N. P. [1720.] Duodecimo. Pp. 8.* [Adv. Lib.] Letter dated April 27, 1720. ADVERTISEMENT (an) to the jurymen of England, touching witches. Together with a difference between an English and Hebrew witch. [By Sir Robert FILMER.]

London, 1653. Quarto. Pp. 5. b. t. 24. [Bodl.] ADVICE: a

satire. [By Tobias SMOLLETT, M.D.]

London: 1746. Folio. [W., Brit. Mus.] ADVICE, and reproof: two satires. First published in the year 1746 and 1747. [By Tobias SMOLLETT, M.D.] London: MDCCXLVIII. Quarto. Pp. 32. ADVICE before it be too late: or, a breviate for the convention, humbly represented to the Lords and Commons of England. [By J. HUMFREY.]

N. P. N. D. Folio. Pp. 4.* No separate title-page. [Bodl.]

ADVICE concerning the education of youth, &c. [By Sir William PETTY.] London: 1647. Quarto. [Wood, Athen. Oxon., iv. 217.]

ADVICE (the) of a friend to the army and people of Scotland. [By William HARPER.]

Octavo. Pp. 30.* [Bodl.]
No separate title.

ADVICE (the) of W. P. [Sir William PETTY] to Mr. Samuel Hartlib. For the advancement of some particular parts of learning.

London, 1648. Quarto. Pp. 4. b. t. 26.* [Wood, Athen. Oxon.]

ADVICE to a painter, &c.; [a poem, with verses to the King.] [By Andrew MARVELL.

N. P. N. D. Folio. Pp. 4.* [Bodl.] ADVICE to a son at the university, design'd for holy orders. By a clergyman. [Jonathan SWIFT, D.D.] London, MDCCXXV. Octavo. Pp. 1. b. t. 91.* [Bodl.]

Ascribed to Thomas Curteis. [Brit. Mus.] ADVICE to a son; or directions for your better conduct through the various and most important encounters of this life. Under these generall heads. I. Studies &c. II. Love and marriage. III. Travell. IV. Government. V. Religion. Conclusion. [By Francis OSBORN.] Oxford: 1656. Octavo. Pp. 151.* [Brit. Mus.]

ADVICE to a young reviewer, with a specimen of the art. [By Edward COPLESTON, D.D.]

Oxford, 1807. Octavo. Pp. 17. b. t.* [Life by W. J. Copleston, p. 19. Bodl.] ADVICE to a young student. With a method of study for the first four years. [By Daniel WATERLAND, D.D.]

London: : M. DCC.XXX. Octavo. Pp. 4. 32.* [Van Mildert's Life of Waterland. Bodl.] ADVICE to all parties. By the author

of The true-born English-man. [Daniel DEFOE.]

London, MDCCV. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 24.* [D. Laing.]

ADVICE to an only child, containing the summ and substance of experimental and practical divinity. Written by an eminent and judicious divine. [Published and edited by Oliver HEYWOOD.]

London: 1693. Duodecimo. [W., Brit.
Mus.] Signed O. H.

ADVICE to Julia. A letter in rhyme.
[By Henry LUTTRELL.] New edition.
London: 1820. Octavo. Pp. 192.* [Adv.
Lib.]

ADVICE to posterity, concerning a point of the last importance. Written by a friend to liberty and property. [John LEWIS.]

London: MDCCLV. Octavo. Pp. 40.* [Bodl.]

ADVICE to the electors of Great Britain; occasioned by the intended invasion from France. [By Daniel DEFOE.]

Printed in the year 1708. Folio. Pp. 4.* [Adv. Lib.]

ADVICE to the future laureat an ode, by Peter Pindar, Esq. [John WOLCOTT, M.D.] A new edition.

London: M.DCC.XC. Quarto. Pp. 1. b. t. 18.* [Bodl.]

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ADVICE to the people of Great Britain, with respect to two important points of their future conduct. I. What they ought to expect from the king. II. How they ought to behave to him. [By Daniel DEFOE.]

London, 1714. Octavo. [Lee's Defoe, i. 237.]

ADVICE to the readers of the commonprayer, and to the people attending the same. With a preface concerning divine worship. Humbly offered to consideration, for promoting the greater decency and solemnity in performing the offices of God's publick worship, administred according to the order established by law amongst us. By a well-meaning (though unlearned) layick of the Church of England. [SEYMOUR, a goldsmith.]

London: 1682. Quarto. Pp. 14. b. t. 28.* [Bodl.]

ADVISER (the); or, the moral and literary tribunal. In four volumes. [By John BRISTED.]

London: 1803. Duodecimo. [Brit. Crit., xxi. 693, xxiv. 451. Mon. Rev., xliii. 448.] ÆSOP. A comedy. As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. [By Sir John VANBURGH.] The second edition, with the addition of a second part. London, 1697. Quarto. Part I., pp. 58; part II., pp. 16; preface and prologue, PP. 4.* [Bodl.]

ESOP'S Fables in English and Latin, interlineary, for the benefit of those who not having a master, would learn. either of these tongues, with sculptures. [By John LOCKE.]

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This rare piece of Locke's is not included in any edition of his collected works. It is the earliest specimen of interlineary translation in the language. [W.]

AFFECTION, its flowers and fruits. A
tale of the times. [By Sydney
WHITING.] In three volumes.
London: 1848. Duodecimo.* [Adv.
Lib.]

AFFECTIONATE (an) address to such
of the people called Friends, as reside
in London and its vicinity. By a lover
of that people. [John BARCLAY.]
London : 1818. Duodecimo.
I sh.
[Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 169.]
AFFECTIONATE (an) address to the
clergy of the united kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland, on the theological
writings of the Hon. Emanuel Sweden-

borg. By a clergyman of the Established Church. John CLOWES, M.A., Rector of St. John's Church, Manchester.]

Manchester: N. D. Octavo. Pp. 23.* AFFINITIES of foreigners. [By Janet ROBERTSON.] In two volumes.

London 1850. Duodecimo.* [Adv. Lib.]

AFRICAN (the) prince to Zara, at his father's court, and Zara's answer. [By William DODD, LL.D.]

1870. [Watt, Bib. Brit.]

AFRICAN (the) slave trade, or a short view of the evidence relative to that subject produced before the House of Commons, interspersed with such remarks as naturally flowed from it. All meant to evince the sound policy and moral obligation of its immediate and entire abolition. [By Neil DOUGLAS.] Edinburgh: 1792. Octavo. Pp. 200.* [Struthers, Hist. Relief Church, p. 349.] AFRICA'S mountain valley; or the Church in Regent's Town, West Africa. By the author of "Ministering children," "The cottage and its visitor," &c., &c. [Maria Louisa CHARLESWORTH.]

London. MDCCCLVI. Octavo. Pp. vi. 272.* [Adv. Lib.]

AFTERNOON (the) of unmarried life. By the author of "Morning clouds." [Mrs S. J. PENNY.]

London 1858. Octavo. Pp. xii. 308.* AFTERNOONS with Mrs. Maitland, a book of household instruction and entertainment. By the author of "Emma's Cross." [Gertrude PARSONS, née Hext.]

London: N. D. Duodecimo. Pp. 4. 200. [Boase and Courtney, Bib. Corn., ii. 426, col. 1.]

AGAINST the apple of the left eye of antichrist, or the masse book of lurking darknesse, making way for the apple of the right eye of antichrist, the compleat masse book of palpable darknesse. This apple of the left eye, commonly called, the liturgie, or service book, is in great use both among the halting papists, and compleat papists, and the things written heere are also against the compleat masse book. [By George LIGHTBODIE.] Printed, Anno 1638. Octavo. Pp. 80.* [Adv. Lib.]

AGAINST the stream. The story of an heroic age in England. By the author of "The Schönberg - Cotta family.” [Mrs CHARLES.] In three volumes. London 1873. Octavo.

AGAINST wind and tide. By Holme Lee, author of "Sylvan Holt's daughter," "Kathie Brand," etc., etc. [Harriet PARR.] In three volumes. London: M.DCCC. LIX. Octavo.* AGAMEMNON at home; or, the latest particulars of that little affair at Mycenæ. A burlesque sketch. [By Edward NOLAN.] First performed at the St. John's college amateur theatricals, during commemoration, 1867. Oxford: N.D. Octavo. Pp. 24.* [Bodl.] ΑΓΑΠΑΙ "Ασπιλαι; the Norfolk feast; a sermon, [on Jude, ver. xii. the former part] preached at St Dunstans in the East, upon the 18th of July, 1671. Being the day of the anniversary feast for that county, for some years omitted; but now intended to be continued. By a minister of that county. [William SMYTHIES.]

London, 1671. Quarto. Pp. 4. b. t. 36.* [Bodl.]

Address to the Stewards, &c., signed W.S.

AGATHA'S husband, a novel. By the author of "Olive," "The head of the family," &c. [Dinah Maria MULOCK.] In three volumes.

London: 1853. Octavo.*

AGATHOCLES the Sicilian usurper.
A poem. [By Thomas Hoy, M.D.]
London: 1683. Folio. Pp. 32.

A comparison of Oliver Cromwell with
Agathocles. [Brit. Mus. Wood, Athen.
Oxon., iv. 713.]

AGATHONIA. A romance. [By Mrs.
C. G. GORE.]

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AGE (the) of bronze; or, carmen seculare et annus haud mirabilis. [By George Gordon Noel BYRON, Lord Byron.] London, 1823: Octavo. Pp. 36.* [Sig. Lib.]

AGE (the) of credulity: in a letter to N.

B. Halked, Esq., M.P., in answer to his testimony in favour of Richard Brothers; with an appendix in vindication of the scripture prophecies. By the author of “The age of infidelity." [Thomas WILLIAMS.]

London: 1796. Octavo. [Brit. Crit., ix. 317. Mon. Rev., xvi. 468.]

AGE (the) of frivolity, a poem; addressed to the fashionable, the busy and the religious world. By Timothy Touch 'em. [Thomas BECK.]

London: 1807. Duodecimo. [Wilson,
Hist. of Diss. Ch., i., 328. Watt, Bib. Brit.]

AGE (the) of infidelity; in answer to Thomas Paine's Age of reason. By a layman. [Thomas WILLIAMS.]

Part II. In answer to the second part of the Age of reason; with some additional remarks upon the former. By a layman. [Thomas WILLIAMS.] [Watt, Bib. Brit. Mon. Rev., xv. 342, xx. 103, xxi. 212.]

AGE (the) of riddles. [By Joseph TRAPP.]

1710. [Watt, Bib. Brit.]

AGE (the) of the world collected in all its periods from the sacred Scriptures, and other histories of undoubted veracity. Or, a convincing demonstration that the lineal and uninterrupted succession of the Scots monarchy has continued much longer than that of any other kingdom in the known world. With some curious and useful observations in chronology, necessary for reading, and understanding of history. Written by J. S. in the year 1706. [John SYMPSON].

Printed in the year M. DCC.VII. Octavo.
Pp. 16.* [D. Laing.]

AGE (the) reviewed: a satire: with the runaways: a political dialogue. [By Robert MONTGOMERY.]

London, 1827. Octavo. Pp. 239. [Gent. Mag., March 1856, p. 311. Lit. Gazette, 1827, p. 356.]

I. AGE (the) we live in. A mock-heroic lecture.

II. Bull and Nongtonpaw; or national characteristics, British and foreign. By L. Mariotti. [Antonio GALLENGA.] London: MDCCCXLV. Octavo. Pp. 32. [Adv. Lib.]

AGE (the) we live in; or, doings of the day. By Frank Foster, author of "Number one; or, the way of the world," &c., &c., &c. [D. PUSELY.] London: 1863. Octavo. Pp. 44. I.* [Bodl.]

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ments of God's providence, and are imploy'd about kingdoms, and churches, and single persons, and that under Jesus Christ, who is the head of angels as well as men, and by whose procurement angels are ministring spirits for sinful Also something touching devils and apparitions, and impulses. With a practical improvement of the particulars handled, and of the whole doctrine of angels, especially for the promoting of an angelical life. Here such speculations as some would seem wise in, above what is written, are declined and such things only are handled as the holy Scriptures give us light in, and have been taught by sober divines. [By Richard SAUNDERS.]

London: 1701. Quarto.* [Edin. Univ. Lib. Bodl.]

AGGEUS and Abdias, Prophetes, the one corrected, the other newly added, and both at large declared. [By James PYLKYNGTON.]

London: 1562. Duodecimo or octavo. [W.]

AGGRAVATING Sam. A comic drama in two acts. By Matthews & Co. [Leicester Silk BUCKINGHAM.] London, N.D. [1854]. Duodecimo. Pp. 46. [Boase and Courtney, Bib. Corn., p. 48.] AGIS a tragedy. As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. [By John HOME.]

London: MDCCLVIII. Octavo. Pp. 71.* [Adv. Lib. Carlyle's Autobiog., 358.] AGLAURA. [By Sir John SUCKLING.] London, 1638. Folio. Pp. 2. 37. b. t.* [Bodl.]

AGNES Brown; or, "I will not offer unto the Lord my God of that which doth cost me nothing." By the author of the "Tales of Kirkbeck," etc. [Henrietta Louisa FARRER.]

London: MDCCCLVIII. Octavo. Pp. 30.*

AGNES de Castro, a tragedy. As it is acted at the Theatre Royal, by His Majesty's Servants. Written by a young lady. [Catharine TROTTER or COCKBURN.]

London: 1696. Quarto. Pp. 47.* [Biog.
Brit., iii. p. 664.]

AGNES Grey. A novel, by Acton Bell. [Anne BRONTE.] [In three volumes.]

London 1847. Duodecimo. [Adv. Lib.]

AGNES Serle. By the author of "The heiress." [Ellen PICKERING.] In three volumes.

London 1835. Duodecimo. [Adv. Lib.]

AGONISTES; or, philosophical strictures, suggested by opinions, chiefly, of contemporary writers. By the author of "A review of the principles of necessary and contingent truth." [Alfred LYALL.]

London: 1856. Duodecimo. Pp. xii. 400.* [Dub. Cat.]

AGREEABLE ugliness; or, the triumph

of the graces; exemplified in the real life and fortunes of a young lady of some distinction. [By Mrs Sarah SCOTT.]

London, 1754.

Duodecimo. [Brydges, Cens. Lit., iv. p. 292. Mon. Rev., x. 144.] AGREEMENT (an) between the Church of England and Church of Rome, evinced from the concertation of some of her sons with their brethren the dissenters. [By John GOTHER.] PubIlished with allowance.

London, 1687. Quarto. Pp. 6. b. t. 88.* [Mendham Collection Cat.]

AGREEMENT betwixt the present and the former government: or, a discourse of this monarchy, whether elective or hereditary? Also, of abdication, vacancy, interregnum, present possession of the crown, and the reputation of the Church of England. With an answer to objections, thence arising, against taking the new oath of allegiance. For the satisfaction of the scrupulous. By a divine of the Church of England, the author of a little tract, entituled, Obedience due to the present king, notwithstanding our oaths to the former. [Francis FULLWOOD, D.D.] London, 1689. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 75.1 [Bodl.]

*

Ascribed, also in the Bodleian Catalogue, to Daniel Whitby, D.D.

It is probable that Fullwood is the author, the tract mentioned on the title page being entered in the Bodl. Cat. under his name. Wood in his Athen. Oxon. makes no mention of Whitby as being the author. AGREEMENT (the) of the Customs of the East Indians with those of the Jews and other ancient people. [Translated from the French of de LA CRÉQUINIÈRE]; to which are added, Instructions to young gentlemen that intend to travel.

London: 1705. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.]

AGRICULTURAL (the) labourer viewed in his moral, intellectual, and physical conditions. By Martin Doyle, author of "Hints to small farmers," &c. &c. [Ross HICKEY.]

London: 1855. Octavo. Pp. 92.* [Adv. Lib.]

AGRIPPA King of Alba: or the false Tiberinus. As it was several times acted with great applause before his grace the Duke of Ormond then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, at the Theatre Royal in Dublin. From the French of Monsieur Quinault. [By John DANCER.]

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The dedication to the Right Honourable, the Lady Mary Cavendish, is signed J. D. AH, HA; tumulus, thalamus: two counter-poems; the first, an elegy upon Edward late Earl of Dorset ; the second, an epithalamium to the Lord M. of Dorchester. [By James HOWELL.]

London, 1653. Quarto. No pagination. [Bodl.] The Elegy is signed I. H. AHASUERUS, the wanderer: a dramatic legend, in six parts. By the author of Sketches in Hindoostan and other poems. [THOMAS MEDWIN.] London: 1823. Octavo. Pp. xiii. 112.* [Bodl.]

AIDS to the study of German theology. [By George MATHESON, B.D.]

Edinburgh: 1874. Octavo. Pp. vii. 184.* AILIEFORD, a family history. By the author of "John Drayton" [W. MITCHELL.] In three volumes. London: 1853. [W., Brit Mus.]

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