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lost their power, are refuted. Το
which is subjoined, a copy of a letter
confirming the account given of the
rise and progress of the schism. By
one of the ministers of this present
Church. [G. HAMILTON.]

Printed in the year MDCCXII. Quarto.
Pp. 48.*

Part II. Containing reflections on the reply to the letter it self. Wherein the answers to the queries are examined, and found unsatisfactory: the replyer's arguments, for vindicating Mr. John M'millan and other separatists, are weighed, and found light: and the arguments adduced in the printed letter, against their schismatical and seditious principles and practices, are vindicated: the author's judgment sometimes interposed. To which are subjoined, some reflections upon the printed protestation, declinature and appeal. By the author of the former part. [G. HAMILTON.] Written in May, anno 1710.

Edinburgh: 1712. Quarto. Pp. 68.* JUST (a) reprimand to Daniel de Foe. In a letter to a gentleman in South Britain. [By James CLARK, minister of the Tron Church, Glasgow.]

N. P. N. D. Quarto. Pp. 8.* [D. Laing.] JUST (the) scrutiny or,

serious

enquiry into the modern notions of the soul. I. Consider'd as breath of life, or a power (not immaterial substance) united to body, according to the H. Scriptures. II. As a principle naturally mortal, but immortaliz'd by its union with the baptismal spirit, according to Platonisme lately Christianiz'd. With a comparative disquisition between the Scriptural and philosophic state of the dead; and some remarks on the consequences of such opinions. By W. C. [William COWARD, M.D.]

London: N.D. [About 1704.] Octavo. Pp. 221. b. t.* [Brit. Mus.] JUST (a) view of the constitution of the Church of Scotland, and of the proceedings of the last General Assembly in relation to the deposition of Mr. Gillespie. [By John HYNDMAN.]

Edinburgh: 1753. Octavo. Pp. 36.* [Adv. Lib.]

JUST (a) view of the principles of the Presbytery of Relief. Being an answer to a pamphlet [by Bennett], entitled, Terms of communion of the Scots Methodists, generally known by

the specious denomination of The presbytery of Relief. By a lover of the truth in Fife. [William CAMPBELL, minister of the Gospel, Dysart.] Second edition.

Edinburgh:

MDCCLXXVIII. Octavo. [Struthers' Hist. of the Relief Church (1843), p. 571.]

JUST (a) vindication of learning: or, an humble address to the high court of parliament in behalf of the liberty of the press. By Philopatris. [Charles BLOUNT.]

London, 1679. Quarto. [Bodl.]

JUSTICE (the) and expediency of the plan contained in a report addressed by the Right Hon. H. Labouchere, to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, on the subject of the present affairs of Edinburgh and Leith, dated Board of Trade 18th January 1836, examined and considered by an Edinburgh burgess of 1786. [John GLADSTONE.] Edinburgh. MDCCCXXXVI. Octavo.* JUSTICE (the) and utility of penal laws for the direction of conscience examined; in reference to the dissenters late application to parliament : addressed to a member of the House of Commons. [By John FELL, dissenting minister.]

Pp.

London: M DCC LXXIV. Octavo. 128* [Adv. Lib.] Signed Phileleutheros. JUSTICE (the) of our cause in the present war, in respect of what is peculiar to the English, in the matter of civil right. [By Edward STEPHENS.] N. P. N. D. Quarto.* [Bodl.] JUSTICE (the) of the present establish'd law, which gives the successor in any ecclesiastical benefice on promotion, all the profits from the day of avoidance, justified; and a proposal that hath been offered for making an alteration in it, in favour of the predecessor fully examined and shown to be contrary to charity, justice, the good of the Church, and interest even of those ministers themselves, for whose sake this alteration is pretended to be endeavoured. The practice of patrons in taking upon them to dispose of the fruits of their vacant churches to the widows or children of deceased ministers, shown to be simoniacal, sacrilegious, and oppressive. And a new proposal offered, how best to provide for the poor widows and children of

clergymen deceased. [By Humphrey PRIDEAUX, D.D.]

London: MDCCIII. Quarto. Pp. 56. b. t.* [Bodl.] Signed at end "A. B." JUSTICE revived, being the whole office

of a country justice; briefly and yet
more methodically than ever yet extant.
By E. W. [Edmund WINGATE] of
Grays Inn, Esq.

London: 1661. Duodecimo. [Wood,
Athen. Oxon., iii. 426.]

JUSTICES (the) of peas. The boke of iustyces of peas, &c. See BOKE (the) of iustyces of peas.

JUSTIFICATION by faith alone. [By John BERRIDGE.]

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JUSTIFICATION (the) of a sinner,
being the main argument of St. Paul's
Epistle to the Galatians. [By Thomas
LUSHINGTON.]

London: 1650. Folio. [Wood, Athen.
Oxon., iii. 530.]

JUSTIFICATION of Mr Murdoch M'Kenzie's Nautical survey of the Orkney Islands and Hebrides, in answer to the accusations of Doctor [James] Anderson. [By John CLERK, of Eldin.]

Edinburgh: 1785. Octavo. Pp. 55. [W] JUSTIFICATION (a) of the present war against the United Netherlands. Wherein the declaration of his Majesty is vindicated, and the war proved to be just, honourable, and necessary; the dominion of the sea explained, and his Majesties rights thereunto asserted; the obligations of the Dutch to England, and their continual ingratitude: illustrated with sculptures. In answer to a Dutch treatise, entituled, Considerations upon the present state of the United Netherlands. By an English man. [Henry STUBBE.]

London. 1672. Quarto. Pp. 80.* JUSTINA play. Trapslated from the Spanish of Calderop de la Barca by J. H. Denis Florence M'CARTHY.] London: 1846. Octavo. b. Jour., March 187

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JUSTORUM semita; or, the path of the just. A history of the lesser holydays of the present English kalendar. [By James Augustine STOTHERT.] Edinburgh: MDCCCXLIV. Octavo.*

JUSTORUM semita; or, the path of
the just. A history of the saints and
holydays of the present English kal-
endar. [By James Augustine STOTH-
ERT.]
Octavo. Pp.

Edinburgh: MDCCCXLIII.
xlvi. 254.

JUVENALIAD (the); a satire. [By
George WALLIS.]

London: 1774. Quarto. [Mon. Rev., 1. 232, 484.]

In Baker's Biog. Dram., the title is given as "The Juveniliad," and the date 1773.

JUVENALIS redivivus. Or the first satyr of Juvenal taught to speak plain

English. A poem. [By Thomas
WOOD.]

Printed in the year 1683. Quarto.* [Wood,
Athen. Oxon., iv. 557.]

JUVENILE (the) culprits. By the author of "The juvenile moralists." [George MOGRIDGE.]

Wellington, Salop, 1829. Duodecimo. [W., Brit. Mus.]

JUVENILE indiscretions; a novel. By the author of Anna, or the Welsh heiress. [Mrs A. M. BENNET.] In five volumes.

1786. Duodecimo. [Watt, Bib. Brit. Mon. Rev., lxxv. 315.]

JUVENILE (the) museum; or, child's library of amusement and instruction. By "Quiet George." [George Frederick PARDON.] Illustrated by numerous engravings.

London [1849.] Octavo.* [Olphar
Hamst.]

JUVENILE performances in poetry.
By a student in the University of
Edinburgh. [Charles KERR, Abbot-
rule.]

Edinburgh: M. DCC. LXXXVIII. Octavo.
Pp. 112. [D. Laing.]

*

MIMINA

NUS TIC ILLUME.

1297

KAPÉLION (the), or poetical ordinary; consisting of great variety of dishes in prose and verse; recommended to all those who have a good taste or keen appetite. By Archimagírus Metaphoricus. [William KENRICK, LL.D.] To be continued occasionally.

N. P. N. D. Octavo.* [Watt, Bib. Brit.]

66

KARL Krinken, his Christmas stocking. By the authors of "The wide wide world," Queechy," "Dollars and cents," etc. etc. [Susan and A. B. WARNER.]

London: 1857. Duodecimo.

KARMATH. An Arabian tale. By the author of "Rameses," an Egyptian tale. [Edward UPHAM, mayor of Bath.]

London: 1827. Duodecimo.* [Adv. Lib.] KATE Kennedy. A novel. In two volumes. By the author of "Wondrous strange," &c. [Mrs C. J. NEWBY.] London: 1865. Duodecimo.* KATE Walsingham. By the editor of "The Grandfather," by the late Ellen Pickering. [By Elizabeth YOUATT.] In three volumes.

London: 1848. Duodecimo.* KATHARINE Ashton. By the author

of "Amy Herbert," "The experience of life," "Readings preparatory to confirmation," etc. etc. [Elizabeth Missing SEWELL.] In two volumes. London: 1854. Octavo.*

KATHERINE. A tale. [By Mrs Barbara HOFLAND, née Wreaks.] In four volumes.

London: 1828. Duodecimo.* KATHERINE Evering. By the author

of "Mr Arle." [Emily JOLLY.] [Vol. ii. of "Love in light and shadow," q.v.] Edinburgh: MDCCCLVII. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.]

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KATHERINE'S trial. By Holme Lee, author of "Kathie Brande," "The beautiful Miss Barrington," Sylvan Holt's daughter," etc. etc. [Harriet PARR.]

London: 1873. Octavo. Pp. 1. b. t. 277.*

KATHIE Brande; a fireside history of a quiet life. By Holme Lee author of "Thorney Hall,"

""Gilbert Massen

K.

ger,"

""Maude Talbot," &c. [Harriet PARR.] In two volumes.

London: 1856. Duodecimo.*

KATIE Stewart. A true story. [By Mrs OLIPHANT.]

Edinburgh: 1853. Octavo. KEEKIAD (the), a poem. [By John MACLAURIN, Lord Dreghorn.]

N. P. N. D. Octavo. Pp. 24. b. t.* KEEPER'S travels in search of his master. [By Edward Augustus KENDALL.]

London: 1798. Duodecimo. [Gent. Mag., Dec. 1842, p. 671.]

KENILWORTH; a romance. By the author of "Waverley," "Ivanhoe," &c. [Sir Walter SCOTT, Bart.] In three volumes.

Edinburgh: 1821. Octavo.*

KENNETH; or, the rear guard of the grand army. By the author of Scenes and characters, Kings of England, etc. [Charlotte Mary YONGE.]

Octavo.

Oxford and London : 1850. KENSINGTON garden. [By Thomas TICKELL.]

London: 1722. Quarto. Pp. 32. b. t.* KENTISH (the) traveller's companion : in a descriptive view of the towns, villages, remarkable buildings and antiquities situated on or near the road from London to Margate, Dover, and Canterbury. [By Thomas FISHER, bookseller of Rochester.]

Canterbury: 1776. Duodecimo. [W.,
Smith, Bib. Cant., p. 80.]

KEY (a) opening a way to every common understanding, how to discern the difference betwixt the religion professed by the people called Quakers, and the perversions, misrepresentations and calumnies of their several adversaries. Published in great good will to all, but more especially for their sakes that are actually under prejudice from vulgar abuses. [By William PENN.]

London, 1693. Octavo. Pp. 37. [Smith's
Cat. of Friends' books, ii. 306.]

KEY (a) to the chronology of the Hindus; in a series of letters, in which an attempt is made to facilitate the pro

gress of Christianity in Hindostan, by proving that the protracted numbers of all oriental nations when reduced agree with the dates given in the Hebrew text of the Bible. [By Alexander HAMILTON.] In two vol

umes.

Cambridge: 1820. Octavo.* [Bodl.] KEY (a) to the delicate investigation, &c. [By Samuel Ferrand WADDINGTON.]

1812. Octavo. [Watt, Bib. Brit.] KEY (a) to the Fragment. By Amias Riddinge, B.D. With a preface. By Peregrine Smyth, Esq; [By William KING, LL.D.]

London: 1751. Octavo. Pp. viii. 46.* [Bodl.]

KEY (a) to the King's Cabinet; or animadversions upon the three printed speeches, of Mr. Lisle, Mr. Tate, and Mr. Browne, spoken at a common-hall in London, 3. July, 1645. Detecting the malice and falshood of their blasphemous observations made upon the King and Queenes letters. [By Dr. Thomas BROWNE, Student of Ch. Ch., Oxford.]

Oxford, 1645. Quarto. Pp. 53. b. t.*
[Bodl.]

Author's name in the handwriting of
Barlow.

KEY (a) to the knowledge of Church
history [ancient]. [By Mary F. B.
POWNALL.] Edited by John Henry
Blunt, M.A. editor of "The annotated
Book of Common Prayer :" author of
"Household theology," etc. etc.
London, Oxford, and Cambridge 1869.
Octavo. Pp. vi. 1. 163.* [Bodl.]

KEY (a) to the lock. A comedy in two acts. Performed at the Hay Market. [By James J. FOORD.]

1788. Octavo. [Biog. Dram., iii. 475.] KEY (a) to the lock. Or, a treatise proving, beyond all contradiction, the dangerous tendency of a late poem, entituled, The rape of the lock, to government and religion. By Esdras Barnivelt, Apoth. [By Alexander POPE.] The third edition. To which are added commendatory copies of verses, by the most eminent political wits of the age.

London: 1718. Octavo. Pp. 32.*
[Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]
"Written by Pope himself." "(First ed.

in 1715.)”—MS. note in the handwriting of Dyce.

Ascribed also to John Arbuthnot, M.D. KEY (a) to the Memoirs of the affairs of Scotland. [By David CRAUFURD.] London: 1714. Octavo.*

KEY to the New Testament, giving an account of the several books, their contents, their authors, and of the times, places, and occasions, on which they were respectively written. [By Dr Thomas PERCY, Bishop of Dromore.]

London: 1779. Duodecimo. [W., Lowndes, Brit. Lib., p. 68.]

:

KEY (a) to the plot, by reflections on the rebellion. Shewing how, as, in matter of right, it was rais'd by the revolters against their own, most peculiar, principles; so, by providence, it turns towards the reverse of their design by precluding the like monstrous attempts to perpetuity; and curing many separate evils, that, otherwise might have retarded the completion of our felicity, under the protestant settlement. Discovering likewise, former vulgar mistakes, and great present changes, in relation to the state of Scotland, especially the north parts thereof, with regard to the government. In a letter from a countryman in Scotland, to a courtier in London. [By Francis GRANT, Lord Cullen.]

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KEY (a) to the Psalms, being an explanation of words, allusions, and sentences in them. By the Rev. W. C. [William COLE.]

Cambridge: 1788. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.]

KEY (a) (with the whip) to open the mystery & iniquity of the poem [by John Dryden] called, Absalom and Achitophel. Shewing its scurrilous reflections upon king and kingdom. [By Christopher NESSE.]

N. P. 1682. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 40.* [Bodl.]

KICKLEBURYS (the) on the Rhine. By Mr. M. A. Titmarsh. [William Makepeace THACKERAY.]

London 1851. Duodecimo. KIDDLE-a-wink (the); or, the three guests. By the author of "Patience Caerhydon," "Mildred's wedding,"

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Forgotten lives," "Olive Varcoe," &c. &c. [Francis DERRICK.] London: N.D. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. 359.*

KILLING, no murder: with some additions briefly discourst in three questions, fit for publick view; to deter and prevent single persons, and councils, from usurping supream povver. By William Allen. [Silas TITUS.]

London, MDCLIX. Quarto. Pp. 16.* [Bodl.]

The reprint of 1689 has William Allen on the title-page, and an Address to Oliver Cromwell signed W. A.

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London: 1765. Quarto.* [N. and Q., July 1864, p. 18.]

KIND (a) caution to prophane swearers.

By a minister of the Church of England. [Josiah WOODWARD, D.D.] London, 1704. Quarto.* [Bodl.] No separate title-page.

KIND (a) invitation to the people called Quakers, to the due consideration of some important truths: in a letter and twenty questions, sent long since to their second-days meeting, and now to them all. To both which, an answer from their present yearly meeting, 1697, is desired. [By Edward STEPHENS.]

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KINDNESS and cruelty; or, the grateful ogre. By Alfred Crowquill. Alfred Henry FORRESTER.]

London: [1859.] Octavo.

KINDNESS to animals. By Charlotte Elizabeth. [Charlotte Elizabeth TONNA.]

London. N. D. Duodecimo. Pp. 108.* KING (the) and the Church vindicated and delivered; or, the prime minister convicted of counselling to the crown, a violation of the coronation oath in an address to the House of Lords, and in a plain, solemn, and faithful appeal to his grace the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury. By a minister of the Church of Ireland. [The Hon. and Rev. Arthur P. PERCEVAL.] London: M. DCCC. XXXIII. 51.* [Bodl.]

Octavo. Pp.

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Or

London: MDCCXXXVII. Octavo.* KING Charles the First no man of blood, but a martyr for his people. a sad and impartiall enquiry whether the King or Parliament began the warre, which hath so much ruined and undon the kingdom of England? and who was in the defensive part of it? [By Fabian PHILIPPS.] Printed in the yeare 1649. Quarto.* KING Charles I. vindicated from the charge of plagiarism, brought against him by Milton, and Milton himself convicted of forgery, and a gross To the imposition on the public. whole is subjoined the judgment of several learned and impartial authors concerning Milton's political writings. [By William LAUDER, M.A.] London: MDCCLIV. Octavo. Pp. 64. b. t.* [Bodl.]

The fly title is The grand impostor detected. KING Charles the First's bishops no puritans. [By J. COLLIER.]

1713. Octavo. [Leslie's Cat., 1843.]

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