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DUTCHMAN'S (the) fireside. A tale. By the author of "Letters from the South," ," "The backwoodsman," &c. &c. [James Kirke PAULDING.] In two volumes.

London: 1831. Duodecimo.*

DUTIES (the) and happiness of domestic service, or a sister of mercy giving instructions to the inmates of the house of mercy placed under her care. [Drawn up by Henry FORMBY?]

London 1851. Duodecimo. [W., Brit.
Mus.]

DUTIES (the) and powers of public

officers and private persons with respect to violations of the_public peace. [By the Right Hon. Spencer PERCIVAL?]

[London? 1792?] Octavo. [W.,Brit. Mus.] DUTIFUL (a) letter [to Archbishop Tenison]. To which is adjoyn'd another [from Henry Dodwell to Dr. Tillotson]; to prove non-jurors no schismaticks. [By Thomas KEN, D.D.]

London: 1703. Duodecimo.* [Bodl.]
Second letter signed H. D.

DUTY (the) and blessedness of intercessory prayer; with tables of weekly intercessions at private prayer. [By Robert BRETT.]

London: MDCCCLXII.
Signed R. B.

Octavo.* [Bodl.]

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preached at the Wednesday lecture in St James's Church, Bury Saint Edmund's. By a country rector. [Rev. Spencer COBBOLD.]

Ipswich: 1835. Duodecimo. [W]

DVTY (the) of all trve subiects to their king as also to their native countrey, in time of extremity and danger. With some memorable examples of the miserable ends of perfidious traytors. In two bookes. Collected and written by H. P. [Henry PEACHAM.]

London, 1639. Quarto. Pp. 8. 63.*

DUTY (the) of allegiance settled upon its true grounds, according to Scripture, reason, and the opinion of the Church: in answer to a late book of Dr. William Sherlock, Master of the Temple, entituled, The case of the allegiance due to sovereign powers, stated and resolved, according to Scripture, &c. With a more particular respect to the oath lately injoyn'd. [By Rev. John KETTLEWELL.]

London, 1691. Quarto. Pp. 82. 2.* [Lathbury's Nonjurors, p. 117.]

DUTY (the) of associating against the profanation of the Sabbath day. [By Rev. Thomas DALE.]

Bath [1841.] Octavo.

DUTY (the) of christians, with respect to human interpretations and decisions, when propos'd to be believed and submitted to by them, as necessary parts of the Christian religion. By a clergyman in the country. [Samuel BOLDE.]

London, MDCCXVII. Octavo.* [Brit.
Mus.]

DUTY (the) of holding fast the form
of sound words: referred to the
Con-
Assembly's Catechisms, and
fession of Faith. To which is added,
a list of the divines in that Assembly:
the vow taken by every member at
his entrance; with a word of their
character. [By Rev. Daniel WILCOX.
1717. [Wilson, Hist. of Diss. Ch., iii. 207.]
DUTY (the) of praying for civil magis-

trates, with some of those instances of loyalty that necessarily flow from it, recommended in a discourse upon I Timothy ii. 1, 2. By a minister of the Church of Scotland. [Alexander CAMPBELL.]

Edinburgh: 1726. Octavo, Pp. 64.*

DUTY (the) of praying for others, enforced, by some arguments taken from the success of those prayers which the Church made for St. Peter's deliverance from prison. [By W. ROMAINE.] London: : 1757. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] DUTY (the) of servants. [By Henry GANDY.]

London: MDCCIV. S. Sh.* [Bodl.]

DUTY (the) of the Church in respect of Christian missions. [By Oswald Joseph REICHEL.] [The Ellerton prize essay.]

London 1866. Octavo. Pp. 32.* [Bodl.]

DUTY; or, ability and present action

contrasted. Designed to overtake the May meetings. By a layman. [William MACFARLANE.]

Edinburgh M.DCCC.LVI. Octavo.*

DWARF (the); or mind and matter. A novel. By E. L. A. Berwick, Esq. [James REYNOLDS, surgeon.] three volumes.

In

London 1855. Duodecimo.* [Bodl.] DYALOGES (the) in Englishe, &c. See Dialoges &c.

DYET (the) of Poland, a satyr. [By Daniel DEFOE.]

Printed at Dantzick, in the year MDCCV. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 60.* [Wilson, Life of Defoe, 75.]

DYING (the) command of Christ; or, the duty of believers to celebrate weekly the sacrament of the Lord's

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DYNEVOR Terrace or, the clue of life. By the author of 'The heir of Redclyffe.' [Charlotte Mary YONGE.] In two volumes.

London 1857. Octavo.*

DYSSHE (a) of sottleties ryght rychelie seasonid or, a goodlie garland of Duresme evergreens plaited by the ingenious. [Edited by the Rev James RAINE and Richard SURTEES.]

Imprynted by Master Francis Humble and his Felowes for anenst ye Neptune in Foro Dunelmensi. 1818. Octavo. Pp. 50. [W., Martin's Cat.]

DYUERS frutful gatheringes of Scrypture concernyng fayth and workes. [Written in Latin by Patrick HAMILTON; translated into English by John FRITH.]

[London, by W. Copland.] Octavo.

Reprinted in Fox's Acts and monuments, p. 226, edit. 1641; also in Knox's History of the Reformation in Scotland, p. 6, &c.

EARL Douglas; or, generosity betray'd. A tragedy. [By John WILSON.] Glasgow: MDCCLXIV. Octavo. Pp. 116.* [N. and Q., 9 Nov. 1861, p. 383. Leyden's Scottish descriptive poems.]

EARL Grey's circular (A memento.) "I have to instruct you hereafter officially to address the prelates of the Roman Catholic Church in your government by the title of Your Grace,' or 'Your Lordship,' as the case may be." Earl Grey, from Downing-Street, Nov. 20, 1847, as secretary of state to a Queen, who made her royal "Declaration against Popery," from her throne in the House of Lords, on Monday, Nov. 20, 1837. "I do declare, that no foreign prince, prelate, or potentate, hath, or ought to have, any jurisdiction, power, superiority, pre-eminence, or authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm." Earl Grey's oath, as a peer of parliament and minister of the crown. [By Dudley M. PERCEVAL.] London 1849. Octavo.*

:

The third edition with the title, "The Queen's ministers responsible," &c., published in 1851, has the author's name.

EARL (the) of Douglas: a dramatick essay. [By John WILSON.] London: MDCCLX. Pp. 74.*

Ascribed also, but without sufficient evidence, to Francis Douglas of Aberdeen. See N. and Q., 9 Nov. 1861, pp. 222 and 383.

EARL (the) of Warwick, a tragedy, as it is perform'd at the Theatre Royal in Drury-lane. [By Thomas FRANCKLIN, D.D.]

London: M. DCC.LXVI. Octavo. Pp. 71.* [Biog. Dram.]

EARL (the) of Warwick; or, the king and the subject. A tragedy.

Paul HIFFERNAN.]

1764. Octavo. [Biog. Dram.]

[By

E.

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EARLY friends and modern professors, in reply to "Strictures," by Joseph John Gurney. By the author of "The truth vindicated." [Henry MARTIN.] London: 1836. Duodecimo. 6/21⁄2 sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 221.] EARLY (the) history of Church patronage; being a precise statement of the Acts of Assembly and of the Scottish Parliament before the Revolution of 1688, in relation to this subject; also, of the Acts of Parliament 1690, of the act of Union, and of the act, c. 12; with an interpretation of certain passages in the second book of discipline. By a member of the faculty of advocates. [Charles FERGUSON, younger of Kilkerran.]

Edinburgh: MDCCCXXXIII. Pp. vii. 70.* [Bodl.]

EARLY influences. By the author of "Truth without prejudice.". [Miss WYNDHAM.]

London: Duodecimo.

EARLY magnetism in its higher relations to humanity, as veiled in the poets and the prophets. By ΘΥΟΣ ΜΑΘΟΣ. [Thomas SOUTH.]

London 1846. Octavo.

EARLY (the) works of Sir Edwin Landseer, R.A. A brief sketch of the life of the artist, illustrated by photographs of sixteen of his most popular works. With a complete list of his exhibited pictures. [By Frederic G. STEPHENS.]

London 1869. Quarto. Pp. viii. 80.* EARNEST (an) address to his parishioners, by a minister of the Church of England. [By William DODD, LL.D.] [Gent. Mag., Sep. 1777, p. 421.] EARNEST (an) address to men of all orders and degrees in the united Church of England and Ireland, respecting the papists. [By Harry Bristow WILSON, B.D., curate and lecturer of St. Michael's, Bassishaw.]

London: 1807. Octavo.* [New Coll. Cat., p. 586.]

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EARNEST (an) call to the people of England, to beware of the temptations of the regicide Ludlow, to contract the guilt of the murther of King Charles the First, by a conceit that the shedding of that royal bloud was no murther, but an act of justice. [By Edmund ELYS.]

Printed in the year, 1692. Octavo.* [Bodl.] "Edm. Elys the author."-MS. note by Wood.

EARNEST (an) exhortation to a frequent reception of the holy sacrament of the Lord's supper. By a layman. [The Hon. Mr. Justice PARK.] London: 1808. Duodecimo. [Queen's Coll. Cat., p. 167.]

EARNEST (an) exhortation to forsake

the devices and inventions of men; and to follow the pattern given in the word of God. By a convert from the Presbyterian religion, in a letter to his brother Scotchmen. [By Robert CAMPBELL, of Skerrington.] Edinburgh 1846. Octavo.*

EARNEST (an) exhortation to housekeepers, to set up the worship of God in their families. With daily prayers for morning and evening. [By Robert NELSON.]

London, 1702. Duodecimo.* [Bodl.] EARNEST (an) persuasive to unity, mostly extracted from the writings of pious and learned members of the Church. [By James Charles STAFFORD, B.D.]

Oxford, 1840. Octavo.* [Bodl.] EARNEST (an) perswasive to the serious observance of the Lord's day. By a minister of the Church of England. [Josiah WOODWARD, D.D.]

London, 1703. Quarto.* [Bodl.]
No separate title-page.

EARTHQUAKE (the); a tale. By the
author of "The Ayrshire legatees."
[John GALT.] In three volumes.
Edinburgh; 1820. Duodecimo.*
EASIE (an) method not to be found
hitherto in any author or history,
whereby the longitude of any places at
sea or land, west or east from any first
meridian, e.g. London, may be found
at any distance, great or small, by
certain fixed stars fitly chosen for the
season of the year, as hereafter speci-
fied; both geometrically and experi-
mentally demonstrated. [By George
KEITH.]

N. P. N. D. Quarto.*

EASIEST (the) introduction to the Hebrew language, designed for the use of young gentlemen and ladies. Containing I. Motives or incentives to learners, extracted from various excellent authors. II. Directions to beginners. III. Examples of success in the present age. IV. An earnest persuasive to the young clergy. V. Patterns of Hebrew nouns. VI. Patterns of Hebrew verbs. VII. A small vocabulary or Hebrew spelling book, or 400 words of one and two syllables. VIII. An easy praxis on the whole first chapter of Genesis, including the Hebrew text-a literal translation, and the root of every word, containing about the twentieth part of the whole language. [By KETTILBY]. Part I.

London: MDCCLXV. Octavo.* [Bodl.] EAST and West India sugar; or, a refutation of the claims of the West India colonists to a protecting duty on

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London: 1823. Octavo.* [M'Cull. Lit. Pol. Econ., p. 93.]

EAST (the) India military calendar; containing the services of general and field officers of the Indian army. By the editor of the Royal military calendar. [Sir John PHILIPPART.] [In two volumes.]

London 1823-24. Quarto.* [Lowndes,
Bibliog. Man., p. 709.]

EASTER a companion to the book of
Common Prayer. [By Prince HOARE.]
London: 1825. Duodecimo.
Records of my life, i. 318.]

[Taylor,

EASTER (the) gift, a religious offering. By L. E. L. [Letitia Elizabeth LANDON.]

London. 1832. Duodecimo.* EASTER-Monday (an) ode. By the author of Lines on the opening of London Bridge, etc. [J. PAYNE.] London: [1837.] Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.] EASTER not mis-timed. A letter written out of the countrey to a friend in London concerning Easter-day. [By John PELL.]

London, 1664. Quarto.* [Brit. Mus.] EASTERN Churches. Containing sketches of the Nestorian, Armenian, Jacobite, Coptic, and Abyssinian communities. By the author of "Proposals for Christian union." [Ernest Silvanus APPLEYARD.] Second edition.

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EASTON and its inhabitants; or, sketches of life in a country town. By L. E. [Hon. Eleanor EDEN.] London 1858. Octavo.* [Brit. Mus.] EASY (an) introduction to the Hebrew language on the principles of Pestalozzi. By Parens. [SYNGE.] Consisting of three parts; part I. A teacher's assistant, for developing the elements of Hebrew, (with a praxis.) Part II. A short Hebrew grammar with and without points. Part III. The Hebrew roots, arranged in twentyfour tables. Intended to enable parents and teachers who consider the original of the word of God the most suitable object of early instruction, to acquire it themselves in the act of teaching.

:

London 1831. Folio.* [Horne's Introduction.]

Ascribed also to Henry Craik.

EASY lessons on Christian evidences. [By Richard WHATELY, Archbishop of Dublin, and C. DICKINSON, Bishop of Meath.]

London: 1838. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] EASY (an) method of acquiring the Hebrew, without the points, according to the ancient practice. By an experienced teacher. [ BORRENSTEIN.]

London: 1822. Folio. [W., Lowndes,
Bibliog. Man.]

EATON Chronicle: or, the salt box. [Edited by William GIFFORD.]

1789. Octavo. Pp. 165. [W., Martin's Cat.] A collection of contributions by the friends of Earl Grosvenor collected at Eaton to celebrate the twenty-first birthday of Lord Belgrave.

ECARTÉ; or, the salons of Paris. [By Major John RICHARDSON.] In three volumes.

London: 1829. Duodecimo.* [Adv. Lib.] ECCE Deus Essays on the life and doctrine of Jesus Christ with controversial notes on "" Ecce Homo." [By Joseph PARKER, D.D.] Edinburgh: 1867. Octavo. Pp. ix. 1. 338.*

ECCE Homo. A survey of the life and work of Jesus Christ. [By John Robert SEELEY, M.A.]

London and Cambridge. 1865. Octavo. Pp. viii. 330.* [Men of the time (9th. ed.), p. 893.1

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