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ANALOGIES and contrasts; or, comparative sketches of France and England. By the author of "Revelations of Russia," "The white slave," "Eastern Europe and the Emperor Nicholas." [C. F. HENNINGSEN.] In two volumes. London: 1848. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] ANALOGY (the) of Divine wisdom in the natural, moral, and spiritual system of things. In three discourses. [By Richard BARTON.]

London: M. DCCXXXXVII. Octavo.*
[Note-In the above date the XVII. at the
end are in MS. and evidently written upon
an erasure.]

[Watt, Bib. Brit., i. 80.] ANALOGY (the) which subsists be

tween the British constitution in its three estates of Queen, Lords, and Commons; and that of the Church of Scotland, in its mutual relations of pastor, presbytery, and people, shortly considered. Being a letter respectfully addressed to the Scottish representatives in parliament. By the head of a family, in communion with the Church of Scotland. [Charles COWAN.] Edinburgh 1840. Octavo. Pp. 16.* On the authority of the writer.

ANALYSIS (an) and summary of Herodotus. With a synchronistical table of principal events; tables of weights, measures, money, and distances; an outline of the history and geography; and the dates completed from Gaisford, Baehr, etc. [J. Talboys WHEELER.]

Oxford: MDCCCXLVIII. Octavo. Pp. xiv. 231.*

ANALYSIS (an) and summary of Old

Testament history and the laws of Moses. With a connexion between the Old and New Testaments. By the author of "An analysis and summary of Herodotus," and "Analysis and summary of Thucydides," [J. Talboys WHEELER.] Second edition, revised and improved.

Oxford: MDCCCLI. Octavo. Pp. xxxii. b. t. 336.* Preface signed J. T. W. The first edition appeared in 1850. ANALYSIS (an) and summary of Thucydides. With a chronological table of principal events; money, distances, etc., reduced to English terms; a skeleton outline of the geography; abstracts of all the speeches, etc. By the author of "An analysis and summary of Herodotus," etc. [J. Talboys WHEELER.]

Oxford: MDCCCL. Octavo.*

The preface is signed J. T. W. [Adv. Lib.

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Oxford, MDCCCXXX. 159. b. t. 66.*

Duodecimo. Pp.

The questions have a separate pagination. ANALYSIS of Dr. Newman's Apologia pro vitâ suâ: with a glance at the history of Popes, Councils, and the Church. By J. N. D. [John Nelson Darby.]

London: 1866. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] ANALYSIS (an) of Kant's Critick of pure reason. By the translator of that work. [Francis HAYWOOD.]

London. Octavo. Pp. vi. 215.* [Adv.
Lib.]

ANALYSIS (an) of Paley's view of the Evidences of Christianity. [By Jeremiah JOYCE.]

Cambridge: 1803. Octavo. Pp. 90. [W., Brit. Mus.]

ANALYSIS of pneumatics and moral philosophy. For the use of students in the college of Edinburgh. [By Adam FERGUSON, LL.D., Professor.] Edinburgh: MDCCLXVI. Duodecimo. Pp. 55.1

Author's name in the hand-writing of Dr.
David Laing.

ANALYSIS (an) of the moral and religious sentiments contained in the writings of Sopho (Henry Home, Lord Kames), and David Hume, Esq.; addressed to the consideration of the Reverend and Honourable Members of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. [By George ANDERSON.] Edinburgh: Printed in the year MDCCLV. Octavo. Pp. 49.* [Orme, Bib. Bib., s. v. Bonar.]

ANALYSIS (an) of the picture of the Transfiguration by Raffaello Sanzio d'Urbino. Translated from the French of S. C. Croze-Maignan [by Thomas Hartwell HORNE]; with the remarks and observations of Vasari, Mengs, Reynolds, Fuseli, and other distinguished artists.

London, 1817. Folio.

From a list of his works in the hand-writing of the author. The title is taken from the chronological list of his works appended to his "Reminiscences personal and bibliographical."

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London: MDCCLXXIX. Quarto. Pp. 128. [Watt, Bib. Brit., ii. 888. 1.]

ANALYST (the); or, a discourse addressed to an infidel mathematician. Wherein it is examined whether the object, principles, and inferences of the modern analysis are more distinctly conceived, or more evidently deduced, than religious mysteries and points of faith. By the author of The minute philosopher. [George BERKELEY, D.D.]

London: 1734. Octavo. Pp. 94.* [Sig.
Lib.]

ANALYTICAL (an) digest of the reports of cases decided in the courts of common law, and equity, of appeal, and nisi prius, in the year MDCCCXVII. By a barrister. [Henry JEREMY.] London 1818. Octavo. Pp. x. 2. 107.* [Bodl.]

ANALYTICAL (an) view of Christianity,

pursued throughout the historical and prophetical books of the Old and New Testament. [By Whitlock NICHOLL, M.D.]

London 1822. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] ANAPLYXIS biblica: or, the portions of Holy Scripture enjoined by the Church of England to be read in the course of her daily, occasional, and annual service. [By Lancelot SHARPE, M.A.]

London: MDCCCXLVI. Octavo. Pp. 62.* Preface signed L. S. [Bodl.] ANARCHIA Anglicana; or, the history

of Independency. The second part. Being a continuation of Relations and observations historicall and politique upon this present parliament, begun Anno 16. Caroli Primi. By Theodorus Verax. [Clement WALKER.] Printed in the year, 1649. Quarto.* [Brydges, Cens. Lit., iii. 241.] ANARCHIE reviving, by Abraham Philotheus. [A. WRIGHT.] 1668. Quarto. [Bliss' Cat., 344.]

ANARCHY (the) of a limited or mixed monarchy. Or, a succinct examination of the fundamentals of monarchy, both in this and other kingdoms, as well about the right of power in kings, as of the originall or naturall liberty of the people. A question never yet disputed, though most necessary in these times. [By Sir Robert FILMER.] Printed in the year, 1648. Quarto. Pp. 4. b.t. 39.*

"Writt by Sr. Rob. Filmer, in answer to Phil. Hunton's Treatise of Monarchy." MS. note by Barlow. [Bodl.]

ANASTASIA. [By Digby P. STARKEY.] London 1858. Octavo. Pp. 328.* [Adv. Lib.]

ANASTASIUS: or, memoirs of a Greek; written at the close of the eighteenth century. [By Thomas HOPE.] In three volumes.

London 1819. Octavo.*

The second edition, published in 1820, is not anonymous, the dedication being signed by the author.

ANATOMICAL (an) account of an elephant accidentally burnt in Dublin in 1681; with a relation on the eyes of animals. [By Allen MULLEN.]

London: 1682. Quarto. [Watt, Bib. Brit.] ANATOMICAL (an) treatise of the liver, with the diseases incident to it. By a member of the College of Physicians. [Jeremiah WAINEWRIGHT, M.D.]

London 1722. Octavo. Pp. 100.* [Adv. Lib.]

ANATOMIE (the) of the Common Prayer Book... By Dwalphintramis. [John BARNARD?]

:

London 1642. Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.] ANATOMIE (an) of the metamorphosed Aiax. Wherein by a tripertite method is plainly, openly, and demonstratively, declared, explained, and eliquidated, by pen, plot, & precept, how vnsauerie places may be made sweet, noysome places made wholesome, filthy places made cleanly. Published for the common benefite of builders, housekeepers, and houseowners. By T. C. Traueller, Apprentice in Poetrie, Practiser in Musicke, professor of painting, the mother, daughter, and handmayd of all muses arts and sciences. [Sir John HARRINGTON.]

At London, Imprented by Richard Field,

dwelling in the Black-friers. 1596. Octavo. No pagination.*

The (grace of God) guides well both age and youth,

Fly sin with feare, as harmless (hare) doth hound,

Like precious (ring) embrace more precious truth,

As (tunne) full of good iuyce, not emptie sound,

In these right scand, My sacmos name is found.

[Bodl.]

ANATOMIE (an) of the world. Where

in by occasion of the vntimely death of Mistres Elizabeth Drury, the frailtie and the decay of this whole world is represented. The first anniversarie. [By John DONNE, D.D.]

London, 1625. Octavo. Pp. 6. 54.* [Bodl.]

ANATOMY (the) of an equivalent [By
George SAVILE, Marquis of Halifax.]
No title-page.
Quarto. Pp. 16.* [Brit.
Mus.]

ANATOMY (an) of atheism. A poem. By the author of The duties of the closet. [Sir William DAWES, D.D., Archbishop of York.] The fourth edition, revis'd.

London: MDCCXXXI. Octavo. Pp. 6.

b. t. 24.

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ANATOMY (the) of Exchange Alley; or a system of stock-jobbing; proving that scandalous trade, as it is now carried on, to be knavish in its private practice, and treason in its publick. Being a clear detection, I. Of the private cheats, used to deceive one another. II. Of their arts to draw innocent families into their snare, understood by their new term of art, viz., being let into the secret. III. Of their raising and spreading false news, to ground the rise or fall of stocks upon. IV. Of the dangerous consequences of their practices, and the necessity there is to regulate or suppress them. To which is added some characters of the most eminent persons concern'd now, and for some years past, in carrying on this pernicious trade. By a jobber. [Daniel DEFOE.] [London,] 1719. Octavo. Pp. 64.* [Lee's Defoe, i. 303-305.]

ANATOMY (the) of humane bodies epitomized; wherein all the parts of man's body, with their actions and uses, are succinctly described, according to the newest doctrine of the most accurate and learned modern anatomists; by a Fellow of the College of Physicians, London. [Thomas GIBSON.] London 1682. Octavo. [W.] ANATOMY (the) of melancholy. What it is, with all the kinds, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seueralí cures of it. In three partitions, with their severall sections, members & subsections, philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened & cut up. By Democritus Junior. [Robert BURTON.] With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. The fourth edition, corrected and augmented by the author. Oxford. 1632. Folio.*

ANATOMY (the) of play, written by a worthy and learned gent. Dedicated to his father to shew his detestation of it. [By Sir John DENHAM.]

London: 1645. Octavo. [Brit. Mus.] ANATOMY (the) of the heretical synod of dissenters at Salters-Hall. Wherein is represented, I. The moderation and christian temper of an assembly of divines. II. The gravity and candor of their debates. III. The language and civility they use in religious controversie. IV. The reverence they profess for the divinity of Christ, for creeds, canons, &c. Collected from their late blasphemous writings for the information of posterity; with short remarks by the author of the Scourge. [Thomas LEWIS.] In a letter to a country friend. London : 1719. Octavo. Pp. 37.* [Bodl.] ANATOMY (the) of the Kebla; or, a

dissection of the defence of Eastward adoration; lately publish'd in the name of John Andrews, Vicar of SouthNewington in Oxfordshire, in a letter to the author of Alkibla: by a true son of the Church of England (as now by law established) in a letter to a friend. [By William ASPLIN, M.A.]

London: M.DCC. XXIX. Octavo. Pp. 55.* [Bodl.]

ANATOMY (the) of the Separatists,

alias, Brownists, the factious brethren in these times. Wherein this seditious sect is fairely dissected, and perspicuously discovered to the view of the world. With the strange hub-bub, and formerly unheard of hurly-burly,

which those phanatick and fantastick schismatiks made on Sunday in the after-noone, being the 8 of May, in the parish of S. Olaves in the Old-Jury, at the sermon of the Right Rev. Father in God, Henry, Bishop of Chichester. In the presence of the Right Honorable the Lord Mayor of this renowned metropolis, and diverse worthy members of the honorable House of Commons. [By John TAYLOR, the water-poet.]

London, printed in the yeare, 1642. Quarto. Pp. 6. b. t.* [Bodl.]

ANATOMY (the) of the Service Book dedicated to the High Court of Parliament. Wherein is remonstrated the unlawfulnesse of it by five severall arguments, whereunto are added some motives by all which we clearly evince the necessity of the removall of it, etc. By Dwalphintramis. [John BARNARD?]

[London: 1642?] Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.] ANCHORET (the): a poem. By the author of the Bermudian. [Nathaniel TUCKER.]

London: MDCCLXXVI. Quarto.* The Bermudian is not anonymous. ANCIENT and modern history of Lewes and Brighthelmston; in which are compressed the most interesting events of the county at large, under the Regnian, Roman, Saxon, and Norman settlements. [By William LEE.] Lewes 1795. Octavo. [Upcott.]

ANCIENT and modern liberty stated

and compar'd. [By John HERVEY, Lord Hervey.]

London: MDCCXXXIV. Pp. 67. b. t. Octavo.*

ANCIENT and modern Rome. A poem. Written at Rome in the year 1755. [By George KEATE.] London, MDCCLX. [Adv. Lib.

Quarto. Pp. 39.*

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doctrines of the Oxford Tracts for the times. By the author of " Spiritual despotism." [Isaac TAYLOR.] London: 1839.

A second volume was published in 1842.* ANCIENT documents in the possession of the Rev. S. C. E. Neville Rolfe, at Heacham Hall, Norfolk. [Edited by Dawson TURNER.]

Yarmouth: 1846. Octavo. [W., Martin's Cat.]

ANCIENT (the) domestic architecture of Edinburgh Edinburgh castle as before the siege of 1573. [By Robert CHAMBERS, LL.D.]

N. P. N. D. Octavo. Pp. 36. b. t.*
Read before the Archæological Institute, in
Edinburgh, July 1856.

ANCIENT history, English and French,

exemplified in a regular dissection of the Saxon Chronicle; preceeded by a review of Wharton's "Utrum Elfricus grammaticus?" Malmesbury's Life of St. Wulstan, and Hugo Candidus' Peterborough history, wherein the principal Saxon annalists are now (for the first time) identified. [By Henry Scale ENGLISH.]

London: 1830. Duodecimo. [Adv. Lib.] ANCIENT (the) history of the Hebrews vindicated or remarks on part of the third volume of the Moral philosopher [by Thomas Morgan]. Wherein a particular account is given of the shepherds in Egypt, and of the origin of circumcision in that country. By Theophanes Cantabrigiensis. [Samuel SQUIRE, D.D., bishop of St. David's.] Octavo. Cambridge: 1741. Pp. 100. b. t.* [Gent. Mag., lv. p. 626.] Ascribed to John Chapman and to Styan Thirlby. [Bodl.]

ANCIENT hymns for children. [By Isaac WILLIAMS.]

1842. Octavo. [Bliss' Cat., 332.] ANCIENT KITTO.]

Jerusalem. [By John

London: N.D. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] ANCIENT (the) Liturgy of the Church of Jerusalem, being the Liturgy of St. James, freed from all latter additions and interpolations of whatever kind, and so restored to it's original purity: by comparing it with the account given of that Liturgy by St. Cyril in his fifth Mystagogical Catechism, and with the Clementine Liturgy, &c. Containing in so many different columns, I. The Liturgy of St. James as we have it at

present, the interpolations being only printed in a smaller character. II. The same Liturgy without these interpolations, or the ancient Liturgy of the Church of Jerusalem. III. St. Cyril's account of that Liturgy in his Vth Mystagogical Catechism. IV. The Clementine Liturgy. V. So much of the corresponding parts of the Liturgies of St. Mark, St. Chrysostom and St. Basil as may serve for illustrating and confirming it. With an English translation and notes, as also an appendix, containing some other ancient prayers, of all which an account is given in the preface. [By Thomas RATTRAY, D.D., Bishop of Dunkeld.]

London: M.DCC.XLIV. Quarto. Pp. xx. 122.*

ANCIENT (the) right of the English

nation to the American fishery; and its various diminutions; examined and stated. With a map of the lands, islands, gulphs, seas, and fishing bank, comprising the whole cod fishery. Humbly inscribed to the sincere friends of the British naval empire. [By William BOLLAN.]

London: 1764. Quarto. Pp. 105. [Rich, Bib. Amer., i. 142.]

ANCIENT (the) rites and monuments of the monastical and cathedral church of Durham. By J. D. [John DAVIES.] London: 1672. Duodecimo. [Mendham Collection Cat., p. 92.] ANCIENT Scottish Ballads, recovered from tradition, and never before published, with notes, historical and explanatory, and an appendix containing the airs of several ballads. lected by G. R. KINLOCH.] Edinburgh: 1827. Octavo. [W., Martin's Cat.]

[Col

ANCIENT Scottish poems. Published

from the MS. of George Bannatyne, MDLXVIII. [Edited by Sir David DALRYMPLE, Lord Hailes.]

Edinburgh: MDCCLXX. Duodecimo. Pp. xii. 330.* [Adv. Lib.]

ANCIENT (the) Sculptured Monuments of the County of Angus, including those at Meigle in Perthshire and one at Fordoun in the Mearns. [By Patrick CHALMERS.]

Edinburgh: 1848. Folio. [W., Brit. Mus.] ANCIENT Songs, from the time of King Henry the third, to the revolution. [By Joseph RITSON.]

London: MDCCXCII. Pp. 2. LXXX. 332.
Octavo.*
[Bodl.]

ANCIENT (the) state, avthoritie, and proceedings of the Covrt of reqvests, 2 Octob. 1596. [By Sir Julius CÆSAR.]

Anno 1597. Quarto. Pp. 10. b. t. 162.* [Bodl.]

AND what if the Pretender should come? Or some considerations of the advantages and real consequences of the Pretender's possessing the crown of Great Britain. [By Daniel DEFOE.] London: 1713. 8vo.* [Wilson, Life of Defoe, 137.]

ANDROBOROS a bographical farce in three acts, viz. the senate, the consistory, and the apotheosis. [By Robert HUNTER.]

Printed at Monoropolis since August, 1714. Quarto. Pp. 5. b. t. 27.* Dedication signed B'ney Fizle.

ANDROMACHE. A tragedy. As it is acted at the Dukes theatre. [By John CROWNE.]

London, 1675. Quarto. Pp. 6. b. t. [Bodl.]

Epistle to the reader signed J. C. ANECDOTES. [By Helenus HALKERSTON, of Rathillet.]

N. P.

N. D. Octavo. Pp. 59.* [D.Laing.] ANECDOTES and observations relating to Oliver Cromwell and his family; serving to rectify several errors concerning him, published by Nicolaus Comnenus Papadapoli, in his " Historia Gymnasii Patavini." [By James BURROW.]

London: 1763. Quarto. [W., Martin's Cat.] A portion of this work was printed in the Gentleman's Magazine for 1767. ANECDOTES biographical and literary of W. Bowyer, compiled for private use. [By John NICHOLS.]

London : 1778. Octavo. Privately printed. [W.]

ANECDOTES of British topography. Or, an historical account of what has been done for illustrating the topographical antiquities of Great Britain and Ireland. [By Richard GOUGH.] London: M DCC LXVIII. Quarto. Pp. xxxv. 740. [Edin. Univ. Lib.] ANECDOTES of George Frederick Handel, and of John Christopher Smith. With select pieces of music, composed by J. C. Smith, never before published. [By William COXE.]

London: 1799. Quarto. [Mon. Rev., xxxi. 416.]

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