The observations which I have here taken occasion to make have a common bearing on the Bibliographical Collections and Notes of 1876 and on the present volume, in which the same principle and aim have ruled me. The two books comprehend about 16,000 separate entries, gathered together at intervals from a great variety of sources, and often under difficult circumstances, but, I hope, in all cases with fidelity and success; and if to these we add 5000 for the portion of the Handbook of 1867, catalogued on the same plan, and therefore presumably of permanent worth, we arrive at a total of 21,000 orthodox titles. These will strike any person of experience as rather big figures. No volumes, X PREFATORY DEDICATION. indeed, in our own language, or probably in any other, afford an equal body of information on what in any country should be considered a subject of national dignity and concernment. The NOTES will be found tolerably plentiful. They are, as a rule, relevant merely to the subject-matter of the particular work to which they are appended, but occasionally they illustrate the life of the author, or refer to some interesting point connected with another book by him. They have not been drawn up without very considerable trouble, and they ought, perhaps, to assist in dispelling the common illusion that a bibliographer is very little more than a mechanical transcriber. How few things, on the contrary, he ought not to know, if his functions are to be satisfactorily performed! In conclusion, I shall do myself the pleasure to thank those who have most materially helped me: Mr. Henry Pyne, Mr. Furnivall, Mr. Richard Garnett of the British Museum, Mr. Aldis Wright, Mr. Christie-Miller, Mr. Alfred Wallis of Derby, Mr. Frederick Locker, my Publisher who invariably lets me see any book which he has bought, and the eminent auctioneers Messrs. Sotheby, Wilkinson, and Hodge, whose liberality and kindness this is not my first opportunity of commemorating. The Good Womans Champion: Or, A old at his Shop neare the Sarazens Head Snow Hill. [Circâ 1640.] 8o,8 leaves. Country, to a Citizen of London. London Printed in the year, 1660. 4°. Poems, Upon Several Occasions. By M. A. Together with some Choice Letters by the same Author. Licens'd June 12: 1668. London, Printed by S. G. 1668. 8o. A, 4 leaves: B-K in eights, last Some of these pieces are in the Derby. shire dialect. R., Cantabrigiensis. An Elegie upon the Deaths of the Earle Some Reflections upon a late Pamphlet, in a Letter to J. H. Printed for Joseph A. W. The Present State of the United Provinces of the Low-Countries; as to the Govern- ment, Laws, Forces, Riches, Manners, Customes, Revenue, and Territory, of the Dutch. In Three Books. Collected by W. A. Fellow of the Royal Society. The aged mans a bc. A ballad. Licensed to John Waley and the widow Toy in The A B C. Printed by John Tysdale 'A Libretto Di Abacho per far imparare gli A Briefe Description of the Whole World. ... Dedicated by Richard Vines to Mrs. Joan Purefoy, wife of Colonel Purefoy, of A Collection of Songs, in Several Lan- guages. London: Printed by William Pearson, . . . 1701. Folio, 14 leaves. With the music. Dedicated to William Abjuration of Poperie, By Thomas Aber- Absalom Senior: Or, Achitophel Trans- pos'd. A Poem. Revis'd, with Addi- tions. London: . . . 1682. 4o, A—F 2 Parallelismus nov-antiqui erroris Pela- giarminiani. [Quot. from Matth. 7, 16.] Londini, Impensis Roberti Mylbovrne. 1626. 4o, A—B in fours, or 8 leaves. A Parallel Of New-Old Pelagiarminian Error. Do men gather grapes of thornes or figs of thistles? Matth. 7. 16. don, Printed for Robert Milbourne. 1626. Vindiciae Academiarum Containing, Some briefe Animadversions upon Mr. Web- sters Book, Stiled, The Examination of Academies. Together with an Appendix concerning what M. Hobbs and M. Dell have published on this Argument. Oxford, Printed by Leonard Lichfield. The New Academy of Complements. ... London, Printed for Samuel Speed, near the Inner Temple-Gate in Fleetstreet. 1670. Price 1s. 6d. 8°, B-06 in twelves, besides the frontispiece and title. A New Academy of Complements: Or The Lover's Secretary. . . .The Eleventh Edition, with Additions. London: Printed for A. Bettesworth. . . . 1734. 8°, A-G in eights, last two leaves blank or with advertisements; but A in twelves. There is a curious descriptive list of dances at the end. The copy employed Fidelis Achates: Or, An Historical Ac |