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grandeur may be for ever maintain'd. First printed in the year 1698. III. The claims of the people of England essay'd. In a letter from the country. First printed in the year 1701. IV. Minutes taken from the speech of Sir E. S. upon his election. Publish'd in December 1701. V. Animadversions on the two last 30th of January sermons, the one preach'd to the Honourable House of Commons [by Dr Smallridge], the other to the Lower House of convocation [by Dr Bincker.] In a letter. First printed in the year 1701. VI. The principle of the Protestant reformation explain'd, in a letter of resolution concerning church communion. First printed in the year 1704. VII. A letter to the Lords upon the matter of the occasional bill. First printed in the year 1704. [Signed Roger.] VIII. Occasional thoughts upon the memorial of the Church of England, in a letter to the author. First printed in the year 1705. IX. A brief defence of the Church and State of England, against the reflections lately cast upon them in a pamphlet, entitled, The history of the Church in respect to its antient and present condition; written by one call'd a High Churchman. In a letter to a person of quality. First printed in the year 1706. [N. and Q. 2d Ser., vii. 133.]

Ascribed in Bodl. Cat. to William Freke. [London: MDCXCVI. Quarto. Pp. 32 ;] in Leslie's Cat., 1843, to Henry Hill. [1709. Octavo.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the growth

of

knavery, under the pretended fears of arbitrary government and popery. With a parallel betwixt the reformers of 1677, and those of 1641, in their methods and designs. In a letter to a friend. [By Sir Roger L'ESTRANGE.] London, 1678. Quarto. Pp. 72.*

The author's name appears in the second edition published in 1681. [J. Maidment.] ACCOUNT (an) of the growth of popery, and arbitrary government in England. More particularly, from the long prorogation, of November, 1675, ending the 15th. of February 1676, till the last meeting of parliament, the 16th. of July 1677. [By Andrew MARVEL.]

Amsterdam, 1677. Quarto.* [Adv. Lib.] ACCOUNT (an) of the Irides or Coronæ, which appear around and contiguous to, the bodies of the sun, moon, and other luminous objects. [By G. W. JORDAN.]

London: 1799. Octavo. Pp. 46. Signed 'G. W. J.' [W.] ACCOUNT (an) of the Jesuites life and doctrine. By M. G. [Martin

GREENE.]

Printed in the year 1661. Octavo. Pp. 12. b. t. 148. [Bodl.]

ACCOUNT of the last sickness and death of Archb. W. Sancroft. [By T. WAGSTAFF.]

Privately printed 1694. Quarto. [Bliss' Cat., p. 322.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the late establishment of presbyterian government by the parliament of Scotland Anno 1690. Together with the methods by which it was settled, and the consequences of it as also several publick acts, speeches, pleadings, and other matters of importance relating to the Church in that kingdom. To which is added a summary of the visitation of the Universities there; in a fifth letter from a gentleman at Edinburgh, to his friend at London. [By John SAGE.] London: MDCXCIII. Quarto. Pp. 6. b.t. 100.*

The letter concerning the Universities was probably written by Alexander Monro, D.D., to whom the entire work has sometimes, though erroneously, been ascribed. [Adv. Lib.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the late proceedings of the dissenting ministers at SaltersHall. Occasioned by the differences amongst their brethren in the country: with some thoughts concerning the imposition of humane forms for articles of faith. In a letter to the Rev. Dr Gale. [By John Shute BARRINGTON, Viscount Barrington.]

London: 1719. Octavo. Pp. 38.* ACCOUNT of the laws now in force in Ireland for encouraging the residence of parochial clergy and erecting of English schools. [By Edward SYNGE, D.D.]

Dublin, 1723. Octavo.* ACCOUNT of the Levant Company; with some notices of the benefits conferred upon society by its officers, in promoting the cause of humanity, literature, and the fine arts; &c., &c. [By Robert Walsh.]

London 1825. Octavo. Pp. 64.* [Adv.
Lib.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the life and character of Alexander Adam, LL.D., Rector of the High School of Edinburgh. [By Alexander HENDERSON.]

Edinburgh: 1810. Octavo. Pp. 162. xiv.* [Ñ. and Q., Oct. 1870, p. 286.] ACCOUNT (an) of the life and conversation of Isaac Milles of Highcleer, Hants. [By Thomas MILLES, Bishop of Waterford.]

London: 1721. Octavo.* [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the life and death of Mr Philip Henry, minister of the Gospel, near Whitchurch, in Shropshire. Who dyed June 24. 1696. in the sixty-fifth year of his age. With Dr Bates's dedication. [By Matthew HENRY.] The second edition, corrected and amended.

London: MDCXCIX. Octavo. Pp. 6. b. t. 180.* [Bodl.]

The first edition appeared in 1696. ACCOUNT (an) of the life and death of the blessed Virgin, according to the Romish writers. With the grounds of the worship paid to her; and a preface in answer to the apology for the contemplations, &c. By a lay hand. [William FLEETWOOD.]

London: 1687. Quarto. Pp. xliii. 39.* [Jones' Peck, ii. 414.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the life and writings

of the Rev. Alban Butler: interspersed with observations on some subjects of sacred and profane literature mentioned in his writings. [By Charles BUTLER, of Lincoln's Inn.]

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planter and distiller in Bengal to his friend in London. [By John PRINSEP.]

Octavo.*

London: 1793. ACCOUNT (an) of the method of electing a minister to the parish of Strathmiglo, first, with respect to the call of Mr Donald Cargill to be minister there, anno 1654, and afterwards anno 1655, with reference to the call of the said parish of Strathmiglo, to Mr J. Rig to be their minister. Directed in a letter to the Rev. Mr G. Gillespie, minister of the Gospel at Strathmiglo. [By G. LOGAN.]

Edinburgh: 1733. Octavo. [W., Brit.
Mus.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the mind of the Synod at Belfast 1721. In a short reply to Mr Dugud's remarks upon their declaration. [By Samuel DUNLOP.] No separate title-page. Octavo. Pp. 15.* [Adv. Lib.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the most striking and wonderful events in the life of Napoleon Bonaparte, from his sailing from Elba to his landing at St Helena: comprising a circumstantial description of the memorable battle of Waterloo, and of the singular island to which the ex-Emperor has been banished. [By E. MACKENZIE.] Embellished with a view of St Helena.

Newcastle-upon-Tyne: 1816. Octavo.
Pp. 119.* [A. Jervise.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the Muirheads of
Lachop, now represented by Muirhead
of Breadisholm, as the heir-male.
[By
Walter GROSSETT, of Logie.]

N. P. N. D. Quarto. Pp. 21.* [D.
Laing.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the obligations the States of Holland have to Great Britain, and the return they have made both in Europe and the Indies. With reflections upon the peace. [By Robert FERGUSON.]

London: 1711. Octavo. Pp. 48.* ACCOUNT (an) of the Oriental philosophy, shewing the wisdom of some renowned men of the East, and particularly, the profound wisdom of Hai Ebu Yokdan, both in natural and divine things; which he attained without all converse with men, (while he lived in an island a solitary life, remote from all men from his infancy, till he arrived at such perfection.) Writ originally in Arabick, by Abi

Jaaphar Ebu Tophail; and out of the Arabick translated into Latine, by Edward Pocok, a student in Oxford; and now faithfully out of his Latine, translated into English: [By George ASHWELL.] For a general service.

Printed in the year 1674. Octavo. Pp. 117.* [Adv. Lib.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the origin and formation of fossil-shells, &c. Wherein is proposed a way to reconcile the two different opinions, of those who affirm them to be the exuviæ of real animals, and those who fancy them to be Lusus Naturæ. [By Charles KING.]

London, MDCCV. Octavo. Pp. 88.* [Brit. Mus.]

ACCOUNT of the origin of the Board of Agriculture, and its progress for three years after its establishment; by the President. [Sir John SINCLAIR.]

London: 1796. Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.] ACCOUNT (an) of the paper roofs used at Pew Lodge, Oxon, so decidedly preferable for churches, warehouses, and agricultural buildings in point of economy, durability and elegance. [By J. C. LOUDON.]

London: 1811. Octavo. Pp. 14. [W.,
Brit. Mus.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the parish of Fairford, with a... particular description of the stained glass in the windows of the church, and engravings of ancient monuments. [By Ralph BIGLAND, edited by Richard Bigland.]

London: 1791. Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the persecutions and oppressions of the Protestants in France. [By Jean CLAUDE.]

Printed in the year 1686. Quarto. Pp. 48. b. t. A translation of "Les plaintes des Protestans." [Bodl. Adv. Lib.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the plague which raged in Moscow in 1771. By Charles de Mertens, M.D., &c.; translated from the French, with notes. [By Richard PEARSON, M.D.]

Birmingham: 1798. Octavo. Pp. x. 122. [W]

ACCOUNT (an) of the present state of Nova Scotia. [By S. HOLLINGSWORTH.]

Edinburgh: MDCCLXXXVI. Octavo. Pp. viii. 157.* [Rich, Bib. Amer., i. 335.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the preservation of King Charles II. after the battle of Worcester, drawn up by himself; to which are added his letters to several persons. [Edited by Sir David DALRYMPLE, Lord Hailes.]

London: 1766. Octavo. New edition, 8vo, 1803. [W.]

ACCOUNT of the proceedings at a meeting held on the 25th January, 1815, in the church of North Mimms, in the county of Hertford, for the election of eight new trustees of the charity estates belonging to and for the use of the poor of the parish of North Mimms; together with an account of the original foundation of the charities, of the exchanges which have taken place in the lands belonging thereto, of the present state and condition of the property, and of the past management and expenditure of the funds. Also the plans and regulations proposed and adopted at the meeting, for the future management and administration of the charities. With a supplementary statement of the proceedings of the trustees, up to the Ist of August 1815. [By Joseph SABINE.] London 1815. Octavo. Pp. 64. [W., Martin's Cat.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the proceedings between the two houses of convocation which met October the 20th 1702. Particularly of the several proposals made for putting an end to the present differences. With the instruments at large. By a member of the Lower House. [Charles TRIMNELL, D.D.] London: MDCCIV. Quarto. Pp. v. 32.* ACCOUNT (an) of the proceedings in convocation, in a cause of contumacy, commenc'd April 10, 1707. Occasion'd by the publishing a protestation made against it, in one of the common newspapers. [By Edmund GIBSON.]

N. P. N. D. Quarto. Pp. 18.* [Bodl.] ACCOUNT (an) of the proceedings in order to the discovery of the longitude. [By John HARRISON.]

London: 1763. Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.] ACCOUNT (an) of the proceedings in the convocation which began Oct. 25, 1705, so far as it could be given, by reason of the concealment of the acts of the Lower House, and the Prolocutor's refusal to transmit them to the proper office. [By White KENNETT.] London: 1706. Quarto.* [New Coll. Cat.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the proceedings in the House of Commons, in relation to the recoining the clipp'd money, and falling the price of guineas. Together with a particular list of the names of the members consenting and dissenting. In answer to a letter out of the countrey. [By Thomas WAGSTAFFE, A.M.]

No title-page. Dated London, Aug. 20, 96. Quarto. Pp. 16.*

The volume in the Bodleian Library containing the tracts by Thomas Wagstaffe has the following in the handwriting of Tho. Hearne :-"These tracts were all written by the reverend and learned Mr Thomas Wagstaffe, A. M., and were given to the Publick Library by his son, Mr Thomas Wagstaffe, A.D., 1713." [Bodl.] ACCOUNT (an) of the proceedings of the British and other Protestant inhabitants of the province of Quebec, in order to obtain a house of assembly. [By Francis MASERES.]

London: 1775. Octavo. Pp. 294. [Rich,
Bib. Amer., i. 217.]

ACCOUNT of the proceedings of the corporation of Bristol in the better employment, &c., of the poor of that city. [By J. CARY.]

N. P. 1700. Duodecimo. [Leslie's Cat., 1843.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the proceedings of the parliament of Scotland, which met at Edinburgh, May 6. 1703. Containing the state of the country at the time of their meeting. Their proceedings about the toleration. The state of conformity now, compar'd with that, in the reigns of Charles II. and James VII. from the acts of parliament on that head. The ecclesiastical proceedings in that matter since the Revolution, with an account of our general assemblies. The proceedings about the act of security and limitations, with the remarkable speeches and papers on that subject and others, and the act as it pass'd the house. A short comparison betwixt the limitations now propos'd and our old constitution. All the publick acts past in that session. And the list of the members of parliament prefix'd. [By George RIDPATH.]

Printed in the year 1704. Octavo. Pp. 14. b. t. 368. [Adv. Lib.] ACCOUNT (an) of the proceedings of the Right Reverend Father in God Jonathan [Trelawny], Lord Bishop of Exeter, in his late visitation of Exeter

College in Oxford. [By James HAR-
RINGTON.]

Oxford: 1690. Quarto. Pp. 58. b. t.
"First publish'd at Oxon. 23 Sept. 1690.
Jam. Harrington of Ch. Ch., M.A., the
author." MS. note by Wood on the Bod-
leian copy. [Bodl.]

ACCOUNT of the qualities and uses of coal tar and coal varnish. With certificates from shipmasters and others. [By Archibald COCHRANE, Earl of Dundonald.]

Edinburgh: M,DCC, LXXXIV.

Duodecimo.

Pp. 23.* [Gent. Mag., Aug. 1831, p. 172.
Cat. Lond. Inst., ii. 389.]

ACCOUNT of the Reformed Church of
France. [By Ingram COBBIN.]

London: 1819. Octavo. [Leslie's Cat., 1841.]

ACCOUNT (an) of the societies for reformation of manners, in England and Ireland. With a persuasive to persons of all ranks, to be zealous and diligent in promoting the execution of the laws against prophaneness and debauchery, for the effecting a national reformation. Published with considerable the approbation of a number of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Honourable Judges of both Kingdoms. [By Josiah WOODWARD, D.D.]

London: MDCXCIX. Octavo. Pp. 163, besides II preliminary and 4 supplementary leaves unpaged.* [Bodl.] ACCOUNT (an) of the statues, busts, bass-reliefs, cinerary urns, and other ancient marbles and paintings at Nice, collected by H. B. [Henry BLUNDELL.] Quarto. Pp. 331.

Liverpool: 1803. [W., Martin's Cat.] ACCOUNT (an) of the superstitious ceremonies and wicked practices of the Church of Rome, in the Holy week. By Parthenopaus Hereticus. [William GORDON.] The second edition. London: 1719. Octavo. Pp. 71. ACCOUNT (an) of the trial of William Brodie, and George Smith, before the High Court of Justiciary, on Wednesday the 27th, and Thursday the 28th days of August, 1788; for breaking into, and robbing, the general excise office of Scotland, on the 5th day of March last. Illustrated with notes and anecdotes. To which is added an appendix, containing several curious papers relative to the trial. By a juryman. [William CREECH.] Edinburgh M.DCC.LXXXVIII. Pp. xi. 125.* [Adv. Lib.]

:

Quarto.

ACCOUNT (an) of tythes in general. [By Thomas ELLWOOD.]

N. P. N. D. Quarto. Pp. 16.* Signed
T. E. [Bodl.]

ACCURATE (an) description and history of the cathedral churches of Canterbury and York, from their first foundation to the present year. [By J. HILDYARD.]

London: 1755, 1756. Folio.{[W., Brit. Mus.] ACCURATE (an) examination of the principal texts usually alledged for the divinity of our Saviour; and for the satisfaction by him made to the justice of God, for the sins of men: occasioned by a book of Mr L. Milbourn, called, Mysteries (in religion) vindicated. [By Stephen NYE.]

London, 1692. Quarto. Pp. viii. 59.* [Bodl.]

ACCURATE (an) historical account of all the orders of knighthood at present existing in Europe. To which are prefixed a critical dissertation upon the ancient and present state of those equestrian institutions, and a prefatory discourse on the origin of knighthood in general, the whole interspersed with illustrations and explanatory notes. By an officer of the Chancery of the Equestrian-secular and chapteral order of Saint Joachim. [Sir Levett HANSON.] In two volumes.

London N. D. Octavo.* [Gent. Mag.] ACCURATE (an) survey of the cities of London and Westminster and borough of Southwark; with a complete history of St Paul's Cathedral and Westminster Abbey: the whole being an improvement of Mr Stow, and other surveys, by adding whatever alterations have happened in the said cities, &c., to the year 1733, and correcting many errors in the former impressions. By Robert Seymour, Esq. MOTLEY.]

[John

London 1736. Quarto. [W.] ACCUSER (the) of our brethren cast down in righteous judgment against that spirit of hellish jealousie vented in a great confused book [by William Rogers], falsly entituled, The Christian-Quaker, distinguished from the Apostate and innovator; in five parts. The fallacy and force whereof being herein clearly detected and justly repelled. [By George WHITEHEAD.] London: 1681. Octavo. Pp. 26. b. t.* 270.

ACETARIA: a discourse of Sallets. By J. E., S.R.S. [John EVELYN.] London: 1699, or 1706. Octavo. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.] ACHARNIANS (the). [By J. Hookham FRERE.]

N. P. N. D. Quarto. Pp. 70.*

No separate title-page. [Malta: 1839.] [Dyce Cat.] ACHITOPHEL, or the picture of a wicked politician. Divided into three parts. [By Nathaniel CARPENTER, B.D., Fellow of Exeter College.] Printed for M. S. 1629. Quarto. Pp. 64.*

The dedication to James [Ussher], Archbishop of Armagh, is signed, N. C. The edition of 1638 is not anonymous. ACIS and Galatea, or the beau! the belle! and the blacksmith !!! A piece of Oxford extravagance. [By Thomas Foster PLOWMAN.] Written for the annual dramatic performance at the Victoria Theatre, Oxford, December, 1869, in aid of the Radcliffe infirmary.

Oxford: 1869. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. 43.* [Bodl.]

ACIS and Galatea: a masque. As it is performed at the Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane, by his Majesty's servants. [By P. A. MOTTEUX.] Set to music by Mr John Eccles, master of his Majesty's band of music.

London: MDCCXXIII.

Duodecimo. Pp.

24.* ACIS and Galatea: an English opera. In three acts. As it is perform'd at the new theatre in the Hay-Market; set to musick by Mr Handel. [By John GAY.]

London: MDCCXXXII. Octavo. Pp. 21.* ACROSS the Atlantic. By the author of "Sketches of Cantabs." [John Delaware LEWIS.]

London 1851. Octavo. Pp. x. 274.* [N. and Q., 2nd May, 1868, p. 408.] ACT (an) at Oxford. A comedy. By the author of The yeoman o' Kent. [Thomas BAKER.]

London: 1704. Quarto. Pp. 60.* [Bodl.] This comedy, in a slightly altered form, was republished in 1706, under the title of "Hampstead Heath."

ACTA Regia; or an account of the treaties, letters and instruments between the monarch of England and foreign powers, publish'd in Rymer's

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