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tainment of Q. Elizabeth; who, with the nobles of both courts, was present thereat. [By W. CANNING.]

London, MDCLXXXVIII. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 68.* [Adv. Lib.] Epistle dedicatory signed W. C.

GEYSERS (the), or jetting fountains, near Haukadal in Iceland, as seen in the years 1814 and 1815. By E. H. [Ebenezer HENDERSON, D.D.]

Edinburgh: 1818. Octavo.* [New Coll. Cat.]

GHAIST (the) o' Dennilair: a legend of Fyvie. [By David SCOTT.] Peterhead: MDCCCLXX. Octavo. Pp. 8.* [A. Jervise.]

The above was revised by John Longmuir, LL.D.

GHEEL the city of the simple. By the author of "Flemish interiors." [Mrs William Pitt BYRNE.]

London 1869. Octavo. Pp. xvi. 195.* GHOST (the). By the author. [Charles CHURCHILL.]

London: M. DCC.LXII. Quarto. Pp. 56.* [Adv. Lib.]

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GHOST (the) of Richard the Third. Expressing himselfe in these three parts. His character. 2 His legend. 3 His tragedie. Containing more of him then hath been heretofore shewed, either in chronicles, playes, or poems. [By Christopher BROOKE.]

Printed for G. Eld: for L. Lisle and are to be sold in Paules Church-yard at the signe of the Tygers head. 1614. Quarto. Pp. 14.-the remainder of the work not paged. Epistle dedicatory signed C. B.* [Bodl.]

GIANT - killer (the); or, the battle which all must fight. By A. L. O. E., author of "Fairy know-a-bit," "The young pilgrim," "Wings and stings," &c., &c. [Charlotte TUCKER.]

London 1868. Octavo. Pp. 165.*

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GILDED (the) age A novel by Mark Twain [Samuel L. CLEMENS] and Charles Dudley Warner. In three volumes.

London 1874. Octavo.*

Preface to the American edition signed S. L. C.

GIMCRACKIANA, or fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago. [By John Stanley GREGSON, bookseller in Manchester.] Manchester: 1833. Octavo. Pp. 195.* [Fishwick's Lancashire Lib., p. 128.] GINX'S baby his birth and other misfortunes. [By Edward JENKINS.] London 1870. Octavo. Pp. 3. b. t. 224.

*

GIPHANTIA; or, a view of what has passed, what is now passing, and during the present century, what will pass, in the world. Translated from the original French [of C. F. TIPHAIGNE DE LA ROCHE] with explanatory notes. 1761. Duodecimo. [Barbier, Dict.] GIPSIES (the). A comick opera, in two acts. As it is performed at the Theatre-Royal in the Haymarket. [By Charles DIBDIN.]

London, MDCCLXXVIII. Octavo.* [Biog.
Dram.]

GIRLHOOD and womanhood The story of some fortunes and misfortunes By Sarah Tytler author of "Papers for thoughtful girls," "Citoyenne Jacqueline," etc. etc. [Henrietta KEDDIE.] London 1868. Octavo. Pp. vii. 359.1 GISELA: a tragedy. In five acts. By I. J. H. [Rev John James HOLROYD.] London 1839. Octavo. Pp. 3. b. t. 89. ii.* GISELLA. By the author of "Second love." [J. Palgrave SIMPSON.] In three volumes.

London 1847. Duodecimo.*

GITHA of the forest. By the author of "Lord Dacre of Gilsland," "Rodenhurst," &c. [Elizabeth M. STEWART.] In three volumes.

London: 1845. Duodecimo.* [Bodl.]

GIUSEPPE, the Italian boy; by the author of "The German shoemaker." [Margaret FISON.]

London: MDCCCXLVI. Duodecimo. Pp. 63.* [Bodl.]

GIUSTINA: a Spanish tale of real life. A poem, in three cantos. By E. S. L. [The Hon. Elizabeth Sophia LAW, sister of Lord Ellenborough.] Not published. [London.] 1833. [Martin's Cat.]

Octavo. Pp. 63.

GIVING alms no charity, and employing the poor a grievance to the nation. Being an essay upon this great question: Whether work-houses, corporations, and houses of correction for employing the poor, as now practis'd in England; or parish stocks, as propos'd in a late pamphlet, entituled, A bill for the better relief, imployment and settlement of the poor &c., are not mischievous to the nation, tending to the destruction of our trade, and to encrease the number and misery of the poor. Addressed to the Parliament of England. [By Daniel DEFOE.] London: 1704. of Defoe, 64.]

Octavo.* [Wilson, Life

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GLADSTONE (the) government Being cabinet pictures. By a Templar. [William Charles Mark KENT.] London: 1869. Octavo. Pp. I. b. t. 337-*

GLANCE (a) at the historical traditions

of Pittenweem during the two last centuries. By an old inhabitant. [James HORSBURGH, provost of Pittenweem.]

Pittenweem, N. D. [1851.] Duodecimo.* [A. Jervise.] Signed J. H. GLANCE (a) behind the grilles of religious houses in France; with an insight into the working of the Roman

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GLASS (a) for the people of New England, in which they may see themselves and spirits, and if not too late, repent and turn from their abominable ways and cursed contrivances. By S. G. [S. GROOME.]

Printed in the year 1676. Quarto. [W.] GLASSE (a) for gamesters: and namelie for suche as delight in cards and dise: wherein thei maie see not onely the vanitie, but also the vilenesse of those plaies plainly discouered and overthrowen by the word of God. Written by T. W. [Thomas WILCOCKS.] Imprinted at London by Ihon Kyngston, for Thomas Man. 1581. Octavo. No pagination. B. L.* [Bodl.]

GLEAM (a) of comfort to this distracted empire, in despite of faction, violence, and cunning; demonstrating the fairness and reasonableness of national confidence in the present ministry. [By Thomas Lewis Ö’BEIRNE, Bishop of Meath.]

London: 1785. Octavo. [Gent. Mag., xcii. I. 471.]

Ascribed to Denis O'Bryen. [Watt, Bib. Brit.] GLEANER (the): containing original essays in prose and verse, with extracts from various publications, particularly the reviews, and other periodical works. [Edited by James GRAHAME, advocate.] Edinburgh: 1795. Octavo.* [D. Laing.] One number only was published.

GLEANINGS after "Grand tour"-ists. [By Arthur Blennerhassett ROWAN, D.D.]

London: 1856. Octavo. [Gent. Mag.,
Nov. 1861, p. 565.]

GLEANINGS from a pastor's portfolio.
By the author of "Scripture localities

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donalds a tragedy, in five acts. [By Thomas Noon TALFOURD.]

[London 1839.] Octavo. Pp. vi. 95. [W. Martin's Cat.]

GLENCREGGAN: or, a highland home in Cantire. By Cuthbert Bede. [Edward BRADLEY.] Illustrated with three maps, eight chromolithographs, and sixty-one woodcuts, from the author's drawings. In two volumes. London: 1861. Octavo.* GLENFERGUS. [By Robert MUDIE.] In three volumes.

Edinburgh, 1820. Duodecimo.* [Gent. Mag., Aug. 1842, p. 214.]

GLIMPSE (a) at the social condition of the working classes during the early part of the present century. Trade strikes and their consequences to the people who may be immediately connected with them. With reflections upon Trades' Unions and their management. By the author of "The auto-biography of a beggar boy. [James Dawson BURN.]

London: N. D. [1868.] Octavo. Pp. iv. 156.*

GLIMPSE (a) of the world. By the author of 'Amy Herbert' &c. [Elizabeth Missing SEWELL.]

London: 1863. Octavo. Pp. 537. b. t.* GLIMPSES of Evangelical Europe; or, notes for Christian laymen compiled by one of themselves. [- SALMOND, manufacturer, Arbroath.] With a prefatory note by Rev. W. G. Blaikie, D.D., LL.D.

Edinburgh: [1879.] Octavo. Pp. 8. 151.*

GLIMPSES of the past. By Charlotte Elizabeth. [Charlotte Elizabeth TONNA.]

London. M, DCCCXXXIX. Octavo. Pp. 1. b. t. 351.* [Brit. Mus.] GLIMPSES of the unseen. Poems. By A. L. O. E., authoress of "The Claremont tales," ""Sketches of the life of Luther," &c. [Charlotte TUCKER.] Edinburgh: N. D. [1854.] Duodecimo. Pp. 108.*

GLIMPSES within the veil their teachings and consolations. By the author of "The coming struggle." [David PAE.]

Edinburgh: 1855. Octavo.* GLORIOUS (the) Gospel of Christ : considered in its relations to the present life. By the author of "God is love;" "The Comforter;" "Our heavenly home;" &c., &c. [James GRANT.]

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GLORIOUS (the) lover. A divine poem, upon the adorable mystery of sinners redemption. By B. K. [Benjamin KEACH] author of War with the devil.

London, 1679. Octavo. [Bib. Angl. Poet., No. 410.]

GLORY (the) of England, or a true description of many excellent prerogatives and remarkable blessings whereby shee triumpheth over all nations in the world. By T. G. [Thomas GAINSFORD.]

London, Edwd. Griffin, 1619. Quarto. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

GLORY (the) of their times. Or the liues of ye primitiue Fathers. Cotayning their chiefest actions, workes, sentences, and deaths. [By Donald LUPTON.]

London. 1640. Quarto. Pp. 6. b. t. 538.* [Bodl.]

GLORY or gravity essential, and mechanical. Wherein the objects and articles, of the Christian faith, are exhibited; as they were originally and successively reveal'd, hieroglyphically, by representations in figures. And as words were adapted to, and letters revealed to record, the ideas of those figures; the words are so explained: and each by the other illustrated. With some account of the origin and present state of the doctrine of the

the

Adversary. By J. H. [John HUTCHINSON.]

London: MDCCXXXIII. Octavo. Pp. 261.* [New Coll. Cat.]

The above forms part of the sixth volume of the collected works, published in 1749. It does not contain the "Mechanical" part, which occupies the greater portion of the eleventh volume. The Hebrew title is

.כבר יהוה

GLOSSARY (a) of provincial words used in Herefordshire and some of the adjoining counties. [By Sir George Cornewall LEWIS.] London: 1839.

Duodecimo. Pp. xii. 132.* [J. R. Smith, Cat. No. 95, 25 March 1868.]

GLOSSARY (a) of provincial words used in Teesdale in the county of Durham. [By Frederick P. DINSDALE, LL.D.]

London: MDCCCXLIX. Octavo. Pp. xiv. 151.*

GLOSSARY (a) of terms used in British heraldry with a chronological table, illustrative of its rise and progress. [By Henry GOUGH, barrister of the Middle Temple.]

Oxford: MDCCCXLVII. Octavo.* [Adv.
Lib.]

GLOSSARY (a) of terms used in Grecian, Roman, Italian, and Gothic architecture. [By John Henry PARKER.] The third edition, enlarged. Exemplified by seven hundred woodcuts. [In two parts.]

Oxford, M. DCCC. XL. Octavo.*

GLOSSARY (a) of Yorkshire words and phrases, collected in Whitby and the neighbourhood. With examples of their colloquial use, and allusions to local customs and traditions. By an inhabitant. [F. K. ROBINSON.] London: 1855. Duodecimo. Pp. x. 204 [Boyne's Yorkshire Library, p. 194.] GLOSSOGRAPHIA: or a dictionary, interpreting all such hard words, whether Hebrew, Greek, Latin, Italian, Spanish, French, Teutonick, Belgick, British or Saxon; as are now used in our refined English tongue. Also the terms of divinity, law, physick, mathematicks, heraldry, anatomy, war, musick, architecture; and of several other arts and sciences explicated. With etymologies, definitions, and historical observations on the same. Very useful for all such as desire to understand what they read. By T. B.

of

Inner-Temple,

[Thomas BLOUNT.]

barrester.

London: 1656. Octavo. No pagination.* [Bodl.]

Fifth edition, with additions, published in 1681.

GNOME (the) hatter! or, the elfinish wile and the well-finished tile. A "moral" impossibility. By Messrs. J. F. Sunavill & J. W. Hogo-Hunt. [James Frank SULLIVAN & John William HOUGHTON.]

N. P. N. D. Duodecimo. Pp. 47.* GNOME (the) king; or, the giant mountains: a dramatick legend, in two acts. First perform'd at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden; on Wednesday, October 6th, 1819. [By George COLMAN, the younger.] The musick by Mr. Bishop; the arrangement of the action under the direction of Mr Farley.

London: 1819. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. 52.* "This piece was written by George Colman (the younger)."-MS. note by Dyce.

GO in peace; some brief directions for young ministers in their visitation of the sick. [By John MARTIN, of Oriel College.]

66

1674. Duodecimo. [Leslie's Cat., 1843.] 'GO out quickly." (Luke xiv. 21). By poß pol. John MACGREGOR.]

London: 1855. Octavo.* [Mendham Collection Cat. (Sup.), p. 21.]

GOAT'S (the) beard. A fable. [By William WHITEHEAD.] The third edition.

London: 1777. Quarto. Pp. 40.* [Watt, Bib. Brit.]

GOD and man. [By James Alexander SMITH.]

London MDCCCLXI. Octavo. Pp. x. 165.* [Adv. Lib.]

The preface is signed J. A. S.

GOD and the king: or, the divine constitution of the supreme magistrate; especially in the kingdome of England: against all popular pretenders whomsoever. Published for the satisfaction of the weake: being a private discourse of a reverend Judge [David JENKINS], with some commanders of the army, for their satisfaction by their desire. [London] 1649. Quarto.* [Brit. Mus.] GOD is love; or, glimpses of the Father's

infinite affection for his people. By the author of "The brother born for

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GOD (of) or of the divine mind, and of the doctrine of the Trinity; also of Pantheism. In a series of letters to an undergraduate. By a Trinitarian.

[John PENROSE, M.A.]

Oxford, 1849. Octavo. Pp. iv. 110. [Boase and Courtney, Bib. Corn., ii. 458.] GOD save the king: or, the loyal and joyfull acclamation of subjects to their king. As it was opened in a sermon, preached in one of the congregations of the city of Edinburgh, upon the day of solemn thanksgiving for the Kings Majesty his happy return and restauration to his dominions. Kept June 19. 1660. at the appointment of the presbyterie of Edinburgh. By R. L. [Robert LAWRIE] one of the ministers of the city.

Edinburgh, 1660. Quarto.* [Adv. Lib.] GODFREY of Bulloigne, or the recouery of Hiervsalem. An heroicall poeme written in Italian by Seig. Torquato Tasso, and translated into English by R. C. [Richard CAREW] Esquire: and now the first part containing fiue cantos, imprinted in both languages. London, N. D. Quarto. Pp. 235.* Address to the reader dated 1594, and signed C. H., i.e. Christ. Hunt. GODLIE (ane) dreame compylit in Scottish meter be M. M. [i.e. Mistress Melvil] gentelvvoman in Culros, at the requeist of her freindes. [By Elizabeth MELVIL, Lady Culross.]

Edinburgh 1603. Quarto. No pagination. B. L.* [Lowndes, Bibliog Man.] GODLIE (a) forme of hovseholde government for the ordering of private families according to the direction of Gods word. Whereunto is adioyned in a more particular manner, the

seuerall duties of the husband towards his wife and the wiues duty towards her husband. The parents duty towards their children: and the childrens towards their parents. The masters dutie towards his seruants: and also the seruants dutie towards their masters. Gathered by R. C. [Robert CAWDREY.] At London. 1600. Octavo. Pp. 384.* [Bodl.]

Ascribed to Robert Cleaver. [Brit. Mus.] Another edition, 1612, has "First, gathered by R. C. and now newly perused, amended, and augmented, by J. Dod and R. Clever."

GODLY (a) and frvitefull sermon, made vpon the 20. & 21. verses of the 14chapter of the booke of Genesis: wherein there is taught, what prouision ought to be made for the ministrie: very necessarie to be learned of all Christians. [By Eusebius PAGET.]

N.P. N. D. Octavo. No pagination. B. L.* The Bodleian copy contains the following MS. note:-By Eusebius Paget. See it printed by Wolfe, 1583, which, except the title page, agrees page for page with this; yet the spelling, &c., shews it to be another impression.

GODLY (a) and necessarye admonition of the decrees and canons of the Counsel of Trent, celebrated under Pius the Fourth, Byshop of Rome, in the yeares of our Lord M.D.LXII. and M.D.LXIII Lately translated out of Latine. [Supposed to be done by Archbishop PARKER, or by his appointment.]

London, by John Day. 1564. Quarto. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

GODLY (the) mans portion and sanctuary: being a second part of Vindiciae pietatis. By R. A. [Richard ALLEINE.

Printed in the year, 1663. Octavo. Pp. 4. 148.*

GODLY priuate praiers, for houshoulders to meditate vpon, and to saye in their famylies. [By Edward DERING.] Imprinted at London by Iohn Charlewood. N. D. Octavo. No pagination. B. L.* [Bodl.]

GODLY (a) sermon preached at Detford the ix of June 1572. [By E. PAGET?]

London: 1586. Octavo. B. L. [W., Brit. Mus.]

GODODIN (the), and the odes of the month, translated from the Welsh. [By W. PROBERT.]

Alnwick, N. D. [B. Pickering's Cat.] GODOLPHIN. A novel. [By Edward George Earle Lytton BULWERLYTTON, Baron Lytton.] In three volumes.

London: 1833. Duodecimo.*

GOD'S blessing upon the providers of corn; and God's curse upon the hoarders. By C. F. G. [Charles FITZ-GEOFFREY?] Together with the corn imported into the London port in four months.

London. 1648. Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.] Three Sermons on Proverbs xi, 26.

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