Imatges de pàgina
PDF
EPUB

DISCOURSE (a) of fish and fish-ponds, under the following heads, viz. I. Of the situation and disposition of the principal waters. II. The manner of making and raising pond-heads, with their dimensions, and how to secure the banks. III. Of sluices, stews, moats, auxiliary waters, and the course of laying the great waters dry. IV. Of the breeding and feeding of fish, and the manner of stocking waters. V. Of disposing of fish, of the management for carriage, of nuisances to ponds and fish, of frosts, and the ways to save the fish in them. VI. Of the benefits and improvements by fish. Done by a person of honour. [Hon. Roger NORTH.]

London, 1713. Octavo. Pp. 6. b. t. 79.* [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

DISCOURSE (a) of free-thinking, occasion'd by the rise and growth of a sect call'd free-thinkers. [By Anthony COLLINS.]

London, M.DCC.XIII. Octavo. Pp. 178.* DISCOURSE (a) of government with relation to militia's. [By Andrew FLETCHER, of Salton.]

Edinburgh; MDCXCVIII.
66.* [Brit. Mus.]

Octavo. Pp.

DISCOURSE (a) of money, being an essay on that subject, historically and politically handled, with reflections on the present evil state of the coin of this kingdom, and proposals of a method for the remedy. In a letter to a nobleman. [By J. BRISCOE.]

London: 1696. Octavo. Pp. 204. [W] DISCOURSE (a) of natural and moral impotency. By the author of The great propitiation. [By Joseph TRUMAN, B.D.]

London, 1671. Octavo. Pp. 216.* DISCOURSE (a) of natural and reveal'd religion in several essays: or, the light of nature, a guide to divine truth. [By Timothy NOURSE.] London, MDCXCI. 363.*

Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t.

DISCOURSE (a) of pluralities; (with the attendant non-residence) evincing the great evil in taking, and necessary duty of forsaking them by him that would approve himself a faithful minister of God. [By William HUGHES, preacher to St Thomas' Hospital in Southwark.]

London, 1680. Quarto.* [Bodl.]

[blocks in formation]

DISCOURSE (a) of profiting by sermons, and of going to hear, where men think they can profit most. [By Symon PATRICK, D.D.]

London, 1683. Quarto.*

DISCOURSE (a) of schism: design'd for the satisfaction of conscientious and peaceable dissenters. [By George TROSSE.]

London: 1701. Quarto.* [Bodl.] DISCOURSE (a) of sea-ports, principally of the port and haven of Dover, written by Sir Walter Rawleigh and address'd to Queen Elizabeth, with useful remarks &c. on that subject by command of his late majesty K. Charles the second, never before made publick. [Published by Sir H. SHEERS.]

London: 1700. Quarto. [W] DISCOURSE (a) of subterraneal treasure. Occasioned by some late discoveries thereof in the county of Norfolk, and sent in a letter to Thomas Brown, M.D. [By Thomas LAWRENCE, M.Á.]

London, 1668. Octavo. Pp. 6. b. t. 94.* [Bodl.] Address to the reader signed T. L. DISCOURSE (a) of suppressing vice, and reforming the vicious. Delivered in several sermons in the moneths of June and July, 1701. By a minister of the Church of Scotland. [William WISHART, D.D.]

Edinburgh, 1702. Quarto.* [Adv. Lib.] DISCOURSE (a) of the communion in one kind in answer to a treatise of the Bishop of Meaux's, of communion under both species, lately translated into English. [By William PAYNE, D.D.]

London: M DC LXXXVII. Quarto.' DISCOURSE (a) of the danger of governing by one minister. In which is demonstrated, that the most advantageous administration, both for the king and the people, consists in an establishment of many councils; or, a polysynody. [By Charles Irenée Castel SAINT-PIERRE.] Done into English.

[blocks in formation]

DISCOURSE (a) of the duties of people
to their pastors. In an essay upon
Hebr 13: 17.
By M. J. C. minister

of the Gospel at Dirletoun. [James
CLARK.]

Edinburgh, 1701. Quarto.* [D. Laing.]

DISCOURSE of the empire and of the election of a king of the Romans, the greatest business of Christendome now in agitation. [By James HOWELL.] 1658. Octavo. [Bliss' Cat., 154.]

DISCOURSE (a) of the excellency of Christianity. [By Henry HALLYWELL.]

London, 1671. Octavo.*

DISCOURSE (a) of the general notions of money, trade & exchanges, as they stand in relation each to other. Attempted by way of aphorism: with a letter to a minister of state, further explaining the aphorisms, and applying them to the present circumstances of this nation. Wherein also some thoughts are suggested for the remedying the abuses of our money, By a merchant. [Simon CLEMENT.] London, 1695. Quarto.* [Bodl.]

DISCOURSE (a) of the grounds and reasons of the Christian religion. In two parts the first containing some considerations on the quotations made from the Old in the New Testament, and particularly on the prophesies cited from the former and said to be fulfill'd in the latter. The second containing an examination of the scheme advanc'd by Mr. Whiston in his Essay towards restoring the true text of the Old Testament, and for vindicating the citations thence made in the New Testament. To which is prefix'd an Apology for free debate and liberty of writing. [By Anthony COLLINS.] London. MDCCXXIV. Octavo.* [Darling, Cyclop. Bibl.]

DISCOURSE (a) of the holy eucharist,

in the two great points of the real presence and the adoration of the host; in answer to the two discourses [by Abraham Woodhead] lately printed at Oxford on this subject. To which is prefixed a large historical preface relating to the same argument. [By William WAKE, D.D.]

London, MDCLXXXVII. Quarto.* DISCOURSE (a) of the judicial authority belonging to the Master of the Rolls in

[blocks in formation]

London, 1662. Quarto.*

DISCOURSE (a) of the nature, ends, and difference of the two covenants. Evincing in special, that faith as justifying, is not opposed to works of evangelical obedience. With an appendix of the nature and difference of saving and ineffectual faith, and the reason of that difference. [By William ALLEN, D.D., vicar of Bridgewater.] To which is prefixed a preface, by Mr. Rich. Baxter.

London, 1673. Octavo.*

DISCOURSE (a) of the nature, offices, and measures of friendship, with rules of conducting it. Written in answer to a letter from M. K. P. (To which are added, two letters to persons newly changed in their religion.) By J. T. [Jeremy TAYLOR, D.D.]

London: 1657. Duodecimo. [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) of the nature, series, and order of occurrences as they are prophetically represented in the II chap. of the Revelation. By W. A. [William ALLEN.]

[blocks in formation]
[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small]

DISCOURSE (a) of the original, countrey, manners, government and religion of the Cossacks, with another of the Precopian Tartars. And the history of the wars of the Cossacks against Poland. [By Pierre CHEVALIER; translated by Edward BROWN.]

London, 1672. Octavo. Pp. 10. b. t. 195.* [W., Brit. Mus.]

Ascribed also to Sir Henry Blount.

DISCOURSE (a) of the pope's supremacy. Part I. In answer to a treatise, intituled, St. Peter's supremacy faithfully discuss'd, according to Holy Scripture, and Greek and Latin Fathers. And to a sermon of St. Peter, preached before her Majesty the Queen Dowager, on St. Peter and St. Paul's day by Thomas Godden, D.D. [By Nicholas STRATFORD.] London: MDCLXXXVIII. Quarto.* DISCOURSE (a) of the religion of England. Asserting, that reformed Christianity settled in its due latitude, is the stability and advancement of this kingdom. [By John CORBET.]

London, M. DC. LX. VII. Quarto.* [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) of the rise & power of parliaments, of law's, of courts of judicature, of liberty, property, and religion, of the interest of England in reference to the desines of France; of taxes and of trade. In a letter from a gentleman in the country to a member in Parliament. [By Thomas SHERIDAN.]

Printed in the year, 1677. Octavo.*

DISCOURSE (a) of the sacrifice of the Mass. [By William PAYNE, D.D.] London, MDCLXXXVIII. Quarto.* [Darling, Cyclop. Bibl.]

DISCOURSE (a) of the terrestrial paradise, aiming at a more probable discovery of the true situation of that happy place of our first parents habitation. [By Marmaduke CARVER, rector of Harthill, Yorkshire.]

London, 1666. Octavo. Pp. 28. b. t. 167.* The epistle dedicatory is signed M. C. DISCOURSE (a) of the truth and reasonableness of the religion delivered by Jesus Christ; wherein the several arguments for Christianity are briefly handled; the miracles done by our Saviour, apostles, and christians in confirmation of this doctrine are proved. [By Sir Henry YELVERTON.]

London: 1662. Octavo. [Darling, Cyclop.
Bibl.]

DISCOURSE (a) of the unity of the
Catholic Church maintained in the
Church of England. [By William
CAVE, D.D.]

London: 1684. Quarto. [Jones' Peck, p. 11.] "By Dr Thorp, as he told me himself." E. Sydall.-Chetham MS. in Peck, p. 11. DISCOURSE (a) of the use of images: in relation to the Church of England and the Church of Rome; in vindication of Nubes testium. GOTHER.]

London: 1687. Quarto.*
Collection Cat., p. 132.]

Lancashire.

[By John

[Mendham

Edward

DISCOURSE (a) of the warr in
[By Major
ROBINSON.] Edited by William
Beamont, Esq.

[London] MDCCCLXIV. Quarto. Pp.
XXXIV. 164.* Vol. Ixii. of the Chetham
Society's Publications.

DISCOURSE (a) of toleration in answer to a late book [by John Corbet] intituled, A discourse of the religion of England. [By Richard PERRINCHIEF.] London, 1668. Quarto. Pp. 58.* [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) of trade. By N. B. [N. BARBON], M.D.

London: 1690. Duodecimo. [W] DISCOVRSE (a) of trade, from England vnto the East-Indies: answering to diuerse objections which are vsually made against the same. By T. M. [Thomas MUN.]

London. 1621. Quarto. Pp. 58.* [M*Cull.
Lit. Pol. Econ., p. 98.]

DISCOURSE (a) on baptism: containing observations on Dr. Priestley's Chapters on the same subject. By Philalethes. [T. TWINING.]

1788. Octavo. [Murch's Dissenters, p. 80.] DISCOURSE (a) on our Saviour's miraculous power of healing. In which the six cases excepted against by Mr. Woolston, are considered. Being a continuation of the Defence of the Scripture history, &c. By the same author. [Henry STEBBING.]

London: M. DCC.XXX. Octavo. Pp. 66.* DISCOURSE (a) on the Bookland and Folkland of the Saxons: wherein the nature of these kinds of estates is explained; and the notion of them advanced by Sir John Dalrymple in his Essay on feudal property, examined and confuted. [By Reyner HECKFORD.] Cambridge: M. DCC.LXXV. Octavo. Pp. viii. 54.

*

Author's name in the handwriting of Gough in the Bodleian copy.

DISCOURSE (a) on the conduct of the government of Great-Britain, in respect to neutral nations, during the present war. [By Charles JENKINSON, Earl of Liverpool.]

London: M. DCC. LVIII. Quarto. Pp. 84. b. t.* An edition with the author's name was published in 1794.

DISCOURSE (a) on the emigration of British birds; or, this question at last solv'd whence come the stork and the turtle, the crane and the swallow, when they know and observe the appointed time of their coming? Containing a curious, particular, and circumstantial account of the respective retreats of all these birds of passage, which visit our island at the commencement of spring, and depart at the approach of winter; as the cuckow, turtle, stork, crane, quail, goat-sucker, the swallow tribe, nightingale, blackcap, wheat-ear, stone-chat, whin-chat, willow-wren, white-throat, etotoli, flycatcher, &c. &c. Also, a copious, entertaining, and satisfactory relation of winter birds of passage: among which are the woodcock, snipe, fieldfare, red-wing, royston crow, dotterel, &c. &c. Shewing the different countries to which they retire, the places where they breed, and how they perform their annual emigrations, &c. With a short account of those birds, that migrate occasionally, or only shift their quarters

at certain seasons of the year. To which are added, reflections on that truly admirable and wonderful instinct, the annual migration of birds! By a naturalist. [George EDWARDS.]

London: 1795. Octavo. Pp. xv. 64.* DISCOURSE (a) on the English constitution; extracted from a late eminent writer, and applicable to the present times. [By William STEVENS.] London: 1776. Octavo. [Gent. Mag., Feb. 1807, p. 173.]

DISCOURSE (a) on the establishment of a national and constitutional force in England. [By Charles JENKINSON, Earl of Liverpool.]

London: 1757. Octavo. [Watt, Bib. Brit.]

DISCOURSE on the husbandry of Brabant and Flanders. [By Sir R. WESTON.] Published by Hartlib. London: 1645. Quarto. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., p. 250.]

DISCOURSE (a) on the late fast. By Phileleutherus Norfolciensis. See A Discourse, Luke xiii. 2, 3, &c.

DISCOURSE (a) on the memory of that rare and truely virtuous person, Sir Robert Fletcher of Saltoun; who died the 13. of January last, in the thirtyninth year of his age. Written by a gentleman of his acquaintance. [Gilbert BURNET, D.D.]

Edinburgh, 1665. Octavo.*

DISCOURSE on the method of rightly conducting the reason, and seeking truth in the sciences. By Descartes. Translated from the French with an introduction [by John VEITCH].

*

Edinburgh and London: MDCCCL. Duodecimo. [Adv. Lib.] The introduction is signed J. V.

DISCOURSE (a) on the study of the laws, by the Hon. Roger North. Now first printed from the original MS. in the Hargrave collection. With notes and illustrations by a member of the Inner Temple. [H. ROSCOE.]

London. MDCCCXXIV. Octavo. Pp. xv. 105.* [Lincoln's Inn Cat., p. 560.]

DISCOURSE, opening the nature of that Episcopacy which is exercised in England. [By Robert BROOKE.]

London: 1641. Quarto. [Watt, Bib.
Brit.]

DISCOURSE (a) proving the divine institution of water-baptism: wherein the quaker-arguments against it are collected. With as much as is needful concerning the Lord's Supper. By the author of, The snake in the grass. [Charles LESLIE.]

London: M.DC.XCVII. Quarto. Pp. 64.* [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) representing the liberty of conscience, that is practised in foreign parts. By N. Y. [John DURY.]

London, 1661. Octavo.* [Bodl.] DISCOURSE (a) shewing that protestants are on the safer side, notwithstanding the uncharitable judgment of their adversaries; and that their religion is the surest way to heaven. [By Luke de BEAULIEU.] London: MDCLXXXVII. Quarto.* DISCOURSE, (a) shewing that the expositions which the ante-Nicene fathers have given of the texts alleged against the Reverend Dr Clarke by a learned layman [Mr. Nelson], are more agreeable to the interpretations of Dr Clarke, than to the interpretations of that learned layman. By a clergyman in the country. [John JACKSON, M.A.]

London, 1714. Octavo. Pp. 72.* [Bodl.] Ascribed to Daniel Whitby, D.D. [New Coll. Cat.]

DISCOURSE (a); shewing, who they are that are now qualify'd to administer baptism and the Lord's-supper. Wherein the cause of episcopacy is briefly treated. By the author of a Discourse proving the divine institution of waterbaptism. [Charles LESLIE.]

London, 1698. Quarto. Pp. 63.* DISCOURSE (a) tending to prove the baptisme in, or under the defection of antichrist to be the ordinance of Jesus Christ. As also that the baptisme of infants or children is warrantable, and agreeable to the word of God. Where the perpetuity of the estate of Christs Church in the world, and the everlastingnesse of the Covenant of Almighty God to Abraham are set forth as maine grounds, and sundry other particular things are controverted and discussed. By P. B. [P. BAKEWELL.]

London: 1642. Quarto. [Bodl.]

DISCOURSE (a) touching provision for the poor. [Ascribed to Sir Matthew HALE.]

London 1683. Octavo. [MCull. Lit. Pol. Econ., p. 275.]

DISCOURSE (a) touching the pretended match between the Duke of Norfolke and the Queene of Scottes. [BySAMPSON, a preacher.]

[1571.] Octavo. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.] DISCOURSE (a) touching the Spanish monarchy. Wherein we have a political glasse, representing each particular country, province, kingdome, and empire of the world, with wayes of government, by which they may be kept in obedience; as also the causes of the rise and fall of each kingdom and empire. Written by Tho. Campanella; newly translated into English, according to the third edition of this book in Latine [by Edmond CHILMEAD].

London: 1654. Quarto. [W]

The edition of 1659 has the translator's

[blocks in formation]
« AnteriorContinua »