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ADDRESS (an) to the officers and seamen in Her Majesty's royal navy. By the author of The seaman's monitor.

[Josiah WOODWARD, D.D.]

London, N.D. Quarto. Pp. 3.* [Bodl.]

ADDRESS (an) to the opposers of the repeal of the corporation and test acts. [By Anna Letitia BARBAULD.] The third edition.

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.]

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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.]

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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.]

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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. Pp. viii. 274. [W., Brit. Mus.]

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; as 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.]

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

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N. P. N. D. Pp. 4.* [Bodl.] ADMONITION (an) concerning publick fast, the just causes we have for it, from the full growth of sin, and the near approaches of God's judgments; and the manner of performance, to obtain the desired effects thereof; which ought to be other than our common forms; and with stricter acts of mortification than is usual amongst us. With an abstract of Mr. Chillingworth's judgment of the state of religion in this nation in his time. And of a letter from the Hague, concerning two sermons preached there in the French Church, at which were present divers of the English nobility. [By Edward STEPHENS.]

London, MDCXCI. Quarto. Pp. 10. b. t. 28. [Bodl.]

ADMONITION (ane) direct to the trew Lordes mantenaris of the Kingis Graces authoritie. M. G. B. [Master George BUCHANAN.]

Imprinted at London by Iohn Daye according to the Scotish copie printed at Striueling by Robert Lekpreuik. Anno Do. M.D.LXXI. Octavo. No pagination.* [D. Laing.]

ADMONITION (an) or Warning that the faithful Christiās in London, Newcastel, Barwycke, and others, may auoid Gods Vengence both in this Lyfe and in the Lyfe to come. Compyled by the seruaunt of God, John Knokes. [John FRITH.]

Wittonburge: by Nicholas Dorcaster, 1554. Octavo. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.] ADMONITION (an) to a deist. Occasioned, by some passages in discourse with the same person. [By W. ASSHETON.]

London, M DC LXXXV. Quarto. Pp. 38.*

ADMONITION (ane) to the antichristian ministers in the Deformit Kirk of Scotland. [By Nicol BURNE.]

N.P. [Paris.] 1581. Octavo. No pagination.* Burne was Professor of Philosophy at St. Leonard's college, St. Andrews; was originally a Calvinist; and afterwards joined the Church of Rome. ADMONITION to the magistrates of England upon our new settlement. [By Edward STEPHENS.]

N.P. N. D. Quarto. Pp. 12.* [Bodl.]
No separate title-page.

ADMONITION (an) to the parliament holden in the 13. yeare of the reigne of Qveene Elizabeth of blessed memorie. Begun anno 1570. and ended 1571. [By John FEILDE.]

Imprinted, anno 1617. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 62.* [Bodl.]

ADMONITION (an) to the people of England: wherein are ansvvered, not onely the slaunderous vntruethes, reprochfully vttered by Martin the Libeller, but also many other crimes by some of his broode, obiected generally against all Bishops, and the chiefe of the cleargie, purposely to deface and discredite the present state of the Church. [By Thomas COOPER, Bishop of Winchester.]

Seene and allowed by authoritie.

Imprinted at London, 1589.* [Adv. Lib.] ADONIS' revenge, an original musical dramatical sketch, in one act. [By Rosalie SALLON.] Manchester, 1877.

ADRIANO; or, the first of June, a poem. By the author of the Village curate. [James HURDIS, D.D.]

London: M DCC XC. Octavo. Pp. 105.* [Adv. Lib.]

ADULTERY analyzed; an inquiry into the causes of the prevalence of that vice in these kingdoms at the present day; dedicated to a married couple of fashionable notoriety. By Philippus Philaretes, A. C. C. [Thomas COMBER.]

1810. Octavo. [Watt, Bib. Brit. Brit. Crit., xxxvi. 421.]

ADVANTAGE (the) of a national observance of divine and human laws: a discourse in defence of our admirable constitution by a Layman of the County of Suffolk [P. DECK, Postmaster at Bury]; to which is added Mr Justice Ashurst's most excellent Charge to the Grand Jury for the County of Middlesex.

Ipswich: 1792. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.]

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London: 1803. Duodecimo.* [Brit. Crit., xxiii. p. 199.] [1804]

First edition appeared in 1792.

ADVANTAGES (the) of the Act of security, compar'd with these of the intended union: founded on the revolution-principles publish'd by Mr. Daniel De Foe. Or, the present happy condition of Scotland, with respect to the certainty of its future honourable and advantageous establishment; demonstrated. Wherein is shew'd, that both the projected union, and a nomination of a successor to the crown, tho' with limitations, cannot fail to compleat the miseries of this kingdom; but that the Act of security alone, if adher'd to, will infallibly retrive our lost happiness, and make us a rich and glorious people. [By Patrick ABERCROMBY.]

Printed in the year M.DCC. VI. Quarto.
Pp. 36.* [Adv. Lib.]

ADVANTAGES (on the) which have resulted from the establishment of the Board of Agriculture: being the substance of a lecture read to that Institution, May 26th, 1809. By the Secretary to the Board. [Arthur YOUNG.] London: 1809. Octavo. Pp. 70.* ADVENTURER (the). [By John HAWKESWORTH, LL.D., assisted by Dr Richard Bathurst, Dr Samuel Johnson, and Joseph Warton.] In two volumes.

London: 1753. Folio.

The papers that have the signature of T. are by Dr Saml. Johnson. Another edition in four volumes, London: MDCCLXXXVIII. Duodecimo. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.] ADVENTURERS (the); a farce. two acts. As performed at the TheatreRoyal, Drury-Lane. [By Edward MORRIS.]

In

London: M. DCC. XC. Octavo. Pp. 38.* [Edin. Univ. Lib.]

ADVENTURES (the) in Madrid. A comedy, as it is acted at the Queens Theatre in the Hay-Market. By Her Majesty's servants. [By Mary Pix.] London: N.D. [1709.] Quarto.* [Dyce Cat., ii. 164]

ADVENTURES (the) of a bank-note. In two volumes. [By Thomas BRIDGES.]

London, 1770. Octavo.

A third and a fourth volume were published in 1771. [Watt, Bib. Brit.] ADVENTURES (the) of a Brownie as told to my child. By the author of "John Halifax, Gentleman." [Dinah Maria MULOCK.]

London: 1872. Quarto. Pp. 1. b. t. 114.* [Bodl.] ADVENTURES (the) of a dramatist on a journey to the London managers. [By B. FRERE.] In two volumes. London: 1813. Duodecimo. [Watt, Bib. Brit.]

ADVENTURES (the) of a gentleman in search of a horse. By Caveat Emptor, gent., one, etc. [Sir George STEPHEN.] London: MDCCCXXXV. Octavo. Pp. xi. 336.*

The sixth edition, published in 1841, has the author's name.

ADVENTURES (the) of a gentleman in search of the church of England. [By Charles Audley Assheton ČRAVEN.] London. [Pub. Circ. 16th July 1853. Crockford's Clerical Directory.] ADVENTURES (the) of a king's page. By the author of "Almack's revisited." [Charles WHITE.] In three volumes. London 1829. Duodecimo.* [Ed. Lit. Jour., ii. p. 77.]

ADVENTURES (the) of a night. A farce of two acts, as it is performed at the Theatre-Royal, Drury-Lane. [By William HODSON.]

Pp..

London: MDCCLXXXIII. Octavo. 34.* [Brit., Mus. Biog. Dram. Mon. Rev., Ixix. 82.]

ADVENTURES (the) of a rupee.
Wherein are interspersed various
anecdotes Asiatic and European. [By
Helenus SCOTT.]

London : M, DCC, LXXXII.
Pp. ix. b. t. viii. 264.*

Duodecimo.

ADVENTURES (the) of a salmon in the river Dee, by a friend of the family. Together with notes for the fly-fisher in North Wales. [By William AYRTON.]

London: 1853. Octavo.* [Blakey's Lit.
of Angling.]

ADVENTURES of a younger son. [By
W. H. TRELAWNEY.]
In three
volumes.

London: 1831. Duodecimo.*
Lib.]

[Adv.

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Ascribed to Sir George Stephen. [Adv. Lib.]

ADVENTURES of an Irish gentleman. [By John Gideon MILLINGEN, M.D.] In three volumes.

London: 1830. Duodecimo.* [Adv. Lib.]

ADVENTURES of an old post chaise. [By Mrs Robert CHAMBERS.]

N. P. N. D. Duodecimo. Pp. 8.* Signed A. C. Written on the occasion of her brother-in-law's marriage. ADVENTURES (the) of Anthony Varnish; or, a peep at the manners of Society. By an adept. [Charles JOHNSTON.] In three volumes. London: M.DCC.LXXXVI. Duodecimo.* [Bodl.]

ADVENTURES of Bilberry Thurland. [By Charles HOOTON.]

volumes.

London: 1836. Duodecimo.* Cat. Bodl.]

In three

[Lond.

ADVENTURES (the) of David Simple: containing an account of his travels through the cities of London and Westminster, in search of a real friend. By a lady. [Sarah FIELDING.] In two volumes. The second edition, revised and corrected. With a preface by Henry Fielding, Esq.

London: M.DCC. XLIV. Duodecimo.*

The following note in the hand-writing of Dyce, occurs in vol. I. of the above :"This work was written by Sarah Fielding, sister of the great novelist.

"The great James Harris was no disdainer of trifles. He wrote the two comical dialogues at the end of 'David Simple,' an old novel composed by Dr Collins' sister, who was dead before I knew him, in conjunction with Sally Fielding, whose brother was author of Tom Jones,' not yet obsolete. Mrs Piozzi's Autobiography, &c., vol. ii., p. 29, sec. ed. See the above mentioned "Dialogues," in vol. iv., pp. 181-193. Vol. iv. forms the 2d vol. of the "Familiar letters,"- the sequel to the 66 'Adventures."

-Volume the last. In which his history is concluded. Vol. V. [Dyce Cat., i. 308.] London: MDCCLIII. Duodecimo.*

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London :

Pp.

MDCCLI. Duodecimo. xvi. 269.* [Dyce Cat., i. 398.] ADVENTURES (the) of Mr. Verdant Green, an Oxford Freshman. By Cuthbert Bede, B.A. [Edward BRADLEY.] With numerous illustrations designed and drawn on the wood by the author. London: 1853.*

ADVENTURES (the) of Mr Wilderspin on his journey through life. By Andrew Halliday. [Andrew Halliday DUFF.] Illustrated by William McConnell.

London: MDCCCLX. Quarto. Pp. 205. b. t.*

ADVENTURES (the) of Naufragus. Written by himself. [Horne of the India House.]

London: 1827. Octavo. Pp. xii. 225.* ADVENTURES (the) of Peregrine Pickle. In which are included, Memoirs of a lady of quality. [By Tobias George SMOLLETT.] In four volumes. Duodecimo.* [Dyce

London: MDCCLI. Cat., ii. 310.]

The first edition.

ADVENTURES (the) of Roderick Random. [By Tobias George SMOLLETT.] In two volumes. The ninth edition.

London: M. DCC.LXXIV. Duodecimo.*

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