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Church of England. By a legal son, and sincere conformist to the Church of England, as established by law. [Edmund HICKERINGILL.]

London 1682. Folio.*

FOXES and firebrands: or a specimen of the danger and harmony of Popery and separation. Wherein is proved

from undeniable matter of fact and reason, that separation from the Church of England is, in the judgment of Papists, and by sad experience, found the most compendious way to introduce Popery, and to ruine the Protestant religion. [By John NALSON, LL.D.]

In 1682,

London, 1680. Quarto. Pp. 4. b. t. 33.* [N. and Q., Nov. 1853, p. 486.] Dedication signed Philirenes. Robert WARE reprinted it with a second part of his own; and in 1689, he added a third and last part in 12mo.

FOXONIAN (the) Quakers, dunces

lyars and slanderers, proved out of George Fox's Journal, and other scriblers; particularly B. C. his Quakers no apostates, or the hammerer defeated: amanuensis, as is said, to G. C. (as he sometime wrote himself) Gulielmus Calamus, alias William Penn. Also a reply to W. C. (a Church-man, the Quakers advocate) his Trepidantium Malleus intrepidanter malleatus, &c. By Trepidantium Malleus. [Samuel YOUNG.]

London: 1697. Duodecimo. Pp. 100.* "FOX'S (a) tale:" a sketch of the hunting-field. By the author of "The autobiography of the late Salmo Salar, Esq., comprising a narrative of the life, personal adventures, and death of a Tweed salmon." [George ROOPER.] London 1867. Octavo. Pp. 78.* FRAGMENT (a). [By Henry STEBBING, D.D.]

London: N. D. [1751.] Octavo.* [Bodl.]

FRAGMENT of a parallel between the history, literature, and art of Italy in the middle ages. [By William Schomberg Robert KERR, Marquis of Lothian.] Edinburgh MDCCCLXIII.

FRAGMENT of a tragedy lately acted at the British Museum. [By Stephen WESTON.]

N. P. N. D. [1806.] Quarto. Pp. 3.*
"From the author St. Weston. 1806.
Aug."
."-MS. note in the handwriting of

Douce.

FRAGMENT (a) of the true religion. Being the substance of two Letters from a Methodist-Preacher in Cambridgeshire [Rev. J. BERRIDGE] to a clergyman in Nottinghamshire.

London 1760. Octavo. [W.]

Preface signed Faith Workless [Pseud.], editor.

FRAGMENT (a) on government; being an examination of what is delivered, on the subject of government in general, in the introduction to Sir William Blackstone's Commentaries : with a preface, in which is given a critique on the work at large. [By Jeremy BENTHAM.]

London: M. DCC.LXXVI.
Mus.]

Octavo.* [Brit.

FRAGMENT (a) on Mackintosh: being strictures on some passages in the dissertation by Sir James Mackintosh, prefixed to the Encyclopædia Britannica. [By James MILL.]

London 1835. Octavo. Pp. vi. 431.* [Adv. Lib.]

FRAGMENT (a) on the constitutional power and duties of juries. [By Sir S. ROMILLY.]

1785. [N. and Q., 16 Feb. 1867, p. 138.] FRAGMENT (a) out of the sixth Book of Polybius. [By Edward SPELMAN.] London: 1743. Octavo. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

FRAGMENTA Scoto - Dramatica. 1715-1758. [Edited by William Henry Hugh LOGAN.]

Edinburgh: MDCCCXXXV. the authority of the editor.]

Octavo.* [On

A very few copies privately printed at the expense of the editor.

FRAGMENTA Scoto - monastica : memoir of what has been already done, and what materials exist, towards the formation of a Scotish Monasticon. To which are appended sundry new instances of goodly matter. By a delver in antiquity. [William Barclay David Donald TURNBULL.] Edinburgh M. DCCC.XLII. Octavo. Pp. X. 31. xcvi. [Adv. Lib.]

FRAGMENTARY (a) chapter from the most pleasant and delectable history of Robert the Fox. [By Sir Robert PEEL.]

1846. Quarto. [Athen. Cat. (Sup.), p. 241.]

FRAGMENTS and anecdotes proper to be read at the present crisis by every honest Englishman. [By J. WILKES?] London: 1764. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] FRAGMENTS and scraps of history. [By George HARRISON.] [In two volumes.]

London: 1834. Quarto.*

"With best regards of his old and affectionate friend Geo: Harrison the author." -MS. note on Bodleian copy.

FRAGMENTS from the history of John Bull. [By George MOIR, advocate.] Edinburgh: MDCCCXXXV. Octavo. Pp. 242. b. t.* [Cat. Phil. Inst., Edin.] FRAGMENTS, in prose and verse. By a young lady, lately deceased. [Miss Eliz. SMITH.] With some account of her life and character, by the author of "Sermons on the doctrines and duties of Christianity." [Mrs BOWDLER.] London: 1808. Octavo. Pp. 227. [Brit. Crit., xxxiii. 217, and in a previous volume.]

FRAGMENTS of a civic feast; being a key to Volney's Ruins, or the revolutions of empires. By a reformer. [F. NOLAN.]

London: 1826. Octavo.

FRAGMENTS of a prospect from a hill in Fife. [By George WALLACE.]

N. P. N. D. [Edinburgh: 1754.] Quarto.
Pp. viii. 39.* [Martin's Cat.]

Forty copies privately printed. Published
with the author's name at Edinburgh, 1796,
8vo.; and a second edition, Edinburgh,
1800, 8vo.

FRAGMENTS of an intended tour—
July 12, 1819. [By Rev. Thomas
Frognall DIBDIN, D.D.]
Octavo. Pp. 16. [W.]

FRAGMENTS of ancient poetry, collected in the Highlands of Scotland, and translated from the Galic or Erse language. [By James MACPHERSON.] The second edition.

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FRAGMENTS of the table round. [By Professor Robert BUCHANAN, of Glasgow.]

Glasgow: 1859. Quarto. Pp. 72. b. t.* FRANCE painted to the life. By a learned and impartial hand. [Peter HEYLIN.] The second edition. London. 1657. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. 362.* [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

A spurious edition of the first part of Heylin's "Two Journeys." The first edition [1656] was printed surreptitiously, and published by William Leake, a bookseller, who, says Ant. à Wood, fathered it in Stationers Hall on one Rich. Bignall.'

FRANCESCA Carrara. By the author of Romance and reality, The Venetian bracelet, &c. &c. [Letitia Elizabeth LANDON.] In three volumes.

London: 1834. Duodecimo.* FRANCHISE (the). What shall we do to it? [By Charles TENNANT.] London: 1858. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] FRANCIS, Lord Bacon: or, the case of private and national corruption, and bribery, impartially consider'd. Address'd to all South-Sea directors, members of parliament, ministers of state, and Church-dignitaries. By an Englishman. [Thomas GORDON.] The fifth edition.

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Dedication signed Britannicus.

FRANCIS Spira, and other poems. By the author of "The gentle life." [James Hain FRISWELL.]

London 1865. Octavo. Pp. viii. 128.* FRANCO-Gallia: or, an account of the ancient free state of France, and most other parts of Europe, before the loss of their liberties. Written originally in Latin by the famous civilian Francis Hotoman, in the year 1574, and translated into English by the author of the Account of Denmark. [Robert MOLESWORTH, Lord Molesworth.]

London: 1711. Octavo.*

FRANK Fairlegh; or, scenes from the life of a private pupil. [By Francis E. SMEDLEY.] With thirty illustrations on steel, by George Cruikshank. London: 1850. Octavo.*

FRANKENSTEIN; or, the modern Prometheus. [By Mary Wollstone

[Gent.

craft GODWIN, afterwards Mrs. Shelley.] In three volumes. London: 1818. Duodecimo.* Mag., April 1818, p. 334.] FRATERNITYE (the) of Vacabondes. As wel of ruflyng Vacabondes, as of beggerly, of women as of men, of gyrles as of boyes, with their proper names and qualities. With a description of the crafty company of cousoners and shifters. Whereunto also is adioyned the xxv. Orders of knaues, otherwise called a quartern of knaues. firmed for euer by Cocke Lorell. The Vprightman speaketh. Our Brotherhood of Vacabondes, If you would know where dwell : In graues end Barge which syldome standes,

Con

The talke wyll shew ryght well.
Cocke Lorell aunswereth.

Some orders of my Knaues also

In that Barge shall ye fynde :

For no where shall ye walk I trow,
But shall see their kynde.
ye

[By Thomas HARMAN.]

Imprinted at London by Iohn Awdeley, dwellyng in little Britayne Streete without Aldersgate. 1575. Quarto. No pagination. B. L. [Bodl.]

FRAUD and friendship or the orphan and the foundling of the king's printing house. An Edinburgh tale.. [By David PAE.] Edinburgh 1857. Octavo. [Adv. Lib.] FRAUD detected: or, the Hibernian patriot. Containing all the Drapier's Letters to the people of Ireland, on Wood's coinage, &c. Interspers'd with the following particulars, viz. I. The addresses of the Lords and Commons of Ireland, against Wood's coin. II. His majesty's answer to the said addresses. III. The report of his majesty's most honourable privy council. IV. Seasonable advice to the grand jury. V. Extract of the votes of the House of Commons of England, upon breaking a grand jury. VI. Considerations on the attempts, made to pass Wood's coin. VII. Reasons, shewing the necessity the people of Ireland are under, to refuse Wood's coinage. To which are added, Prometheus, a poem. Also a new poem to the Drapier; and songs sung at the Drapier's club in Truck Street, Dublin, never before printed. With a preface, explaining the usefulness of the whole. [By Jonathan SWIFT, D.D.]

Dublin: re-printed, 1725. Octavo. Pp. 14. b. t. 222. 2.* [Bodl.]

FRAUDS and abuses at St. Paul's. In a letter to a member of parliament. [By Francis HARE, D.D.]

London: 1712. Octavo.*

FRAUDS (the) of Romish monks and priests, set forth in eight letters. Lately written by a gentleman, on his journey into Italy; and publish'd for the benefit of the publick. By Gabriel d'Emillianne, pseud. [Antoine GAVIN.] London, 1691. Octavo. Pp. 12. b. t. 416. * [Quérard, Supercher. dévoil., 1847, ii. 24.] Dedication, and address to the reader, signed G. D. E. E. A. P.

FREAKS, follies, fancies, and fashions. By H. E. R. Trin. Coll. Camb. [H. E. REYNOLDS.]

London: 1868. Octavo. Pp. 72.* [Bodl.]

FREAKS (the) of Cupid: a novel. By an Irish bachelor.

three volumes.

ABBOT.] In

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FREE and candid disquisitions relating to the Church of England, and the means of advancing religion therein. Addressed to the governing powers in Church and State, and more immediately directed to the two Houses of Convocation. [By Rev. John JONES.] London: 1749. Octavo. Pp. 27. 340. [N. and Q., June 1860, p. 448.]

FREE (a) and candid examination of the principles advanced in the Right Rev. [T. Sherlock] the Lord Bishop of London's very elegant sermons, lately published; and in his very ingenious discourses on prophecy. Wherein the commonly received system, concerning the natures of the Jewish and Christian dispensations, is particularly considered: with occasional observations on some late explanations of the doctrines therein contained. By the author of The critical enquiry into the opinions and practice of the ancient philosophers, &c. [John TOWNE.]

London, MDCCLVI. Octavo. Pp. x. ii. 375-*

FREE and candid thoughts on the doctrine of predestination. By T. E. [Thomas EDWARDS] author of C[a]n[o]ns of Cr[i]t[i]c[i]sm.

London: 1761. Octavo. [Brit. Mus.] FREE (a) and familiar letter to that great refiner of Pope and Shakespear the Rev. Mr. William Warburton, Preacher of Lincoln's-Inn. With remarks upon the Epistle of friend A. E. In which his unhandsome treatment of this celebrated writer is expos'd in the manner it deserves. By a country curate. [Zachary GREY, LL.D.] London MDCCL. Octavo.*

The "Epistle of friend A. E." is Zachary Grey's Word or two of advice &c." The letters A. E. are the vowels in q. v. Zachary Grey. FREE and impartial considerations upon the Free and candid disquisitions relating to the Church of England. Addressed to the authors [John Jones] of the Disquisitions. By a gentleman. [John WHITE, B.D., vicar of Nayland, Suffolk.]

London, MDCCLI. Octavo. Pp. 69.* [N. and Q., June 1860, p. 448.]

FREE (a) and impartial inquiry into the causes of that very great esteem and honour that the non-conforming preachers are generally in with their followers. In a letter to his honoured

friend H. M. By a lover of the Church of England, and unfeigned piety. To which is added a discourse on 1 Tim. 4. 7. to some of the clergy at a publick meeting. [By John EACHARD.]

London, 1673. Duodecimo. Pp. 204.* [Aberdeen Lib.]

FREE and impartial thoughts, on the sovereignty of God, the doctrines of election, reprobation, and original sin : humbly addressed to all who believe and profess these doctrines. [By Richard FINCH.] The second edition, corrected and enlarged.

London: M.DCC. XLV. Octavo.

Pp. 4.

b. t. 81. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 610.]

FREE (a) and necessary enquiry,
whether the Church of England in
her liturgy, and many of her learned
divines in their writings, have not
by some unwary expressions relating
to transubstantiation and the real
presence, given so great an advantage
to Papists and Deists as may prove
fatal to true religion, unless some
remedy be speedily applied? With
remarks on the power of priestly
absolution. By the author of the
System of divinity and morality.
[Ferdinand WARNER, LL.D.]
1755. Octavo. [Watt, Bib. Brit.]
FREE (a) and serious address to the
Christian laity, especially such
embracing Unitarian sentiments, con-
form to Trinitarian worship; to which
is prefixed an Introduction; wherein
the worship of the Holy Scriptures is
contrasted with the worship of the
Church of England and of Dissenters.
[By J. TOULMIN.]

London: 1781. Octavo.
Mus.]

as

[W., Brit.

FREE (a) and serious remonstrance to protestant dissenting ministers on occasion of the decay of religion. With some observations on the education of youth for the ministry. By a layman. [Nathaniel NEAL.]

London: 1746. Octavo. [Darling, Cyclop. Bibl.]

FREE (the) Briton extraordinary: or, A short review of the British affairs. In answer to a pamphlet intitled, A short view, with Remarks on the Treaty of Seville, &c. Printed for R. Francklin. By Francis Walsingham,

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FREE (the) Church: its principles and pretensions examined; with special relation to the attitude of the English Presbyterian Church towards the Church of Scotland. By a layman. [Andrew MACGEORGE.] Seventh thousand.

Glasgow: 1873. Octavo.*

Republished in " Papers on the principles and real position of the Free Church,' Glasgow, 1875, with the author's name at the Introductory note.

FREE (a) disquisition concerning the law of entails in Scotland. Occasioned by some late proposals for amending that law. [By John SWINTON, senator of the College of Justice.] Edinburgh: M, DCC, LXV.

IOI.

Scottish Law Tracts, III.

FREE-Enquirer (the). ANNET.] Vol. I.

Octavo. Pp.

[By [By Peter

London: MDCCLI. Folio. Pp. 72.*

The Free-enquirer consists of nine numbers. It was published weekly; the first number being dated Saturday, October the 17th, 1761; and the ninth, Saturday, December the 12th, 1761. The periodical mode of weekly publication, being found inconvenient, was discontinued.

FREE (a) enquiry into the authenticity of the first and second chapters of St. Matthew's gospel. [By John Williams, LL.D.]

London : 1771. Octavo. Pp. vii. 151. FREE (a) enquiry into the enormous increase of attornies, with some serious reflections on the abuse of our excellent laws by an unfeigned admirer of genuine British jurisprudence. And a postscript, in which the reform of our parliamentary constituency is again considered, by the original proposer of that interesting measure. [Henry Constantine JENNINGS.]

Chelmsford: M, DCC, LXXXV. Octavo. Pp. iv. 68.* [Bodl.]

Author's name by Douce.

FREE (a) enquiry into the nature and origin of evil. In six letters to [By Soame JENYNS.]

London: M DCC LVII. Octavo.*

FREE (a) enquiry into the vulgarly receiv'd notion of nature; made in an essay, address'd to a friend. By R. B. Fellow of the Royal Society. [The Hon. Robert BOYLE.] London, 1688. Octavo.*

FREE (a) examination of the common methods employed to prevent the growth of Popery. [By James USHER.] London: 1766. Octavo.* [Mendham Collection Cat., p. 312.]

FREE-holders (the) grand inqvest touching our soveraigne Lord the King and his parliament. [By Sir Robert FILMER, Knt.]

Printed in the three and twentieth year of the raign of our Soveraigne Lord King Charles [1647]. Quarto. Pp. 5. b. t. 64.1 "Ascribed to Sir Rob. Holbourne in a MS. note by Bp. Barlow in the above copy; and by Wood in his notice of Holbourne in his Fasti; but included in a list of Filmer's works prefixed to the tract by the latter on the Power of Kings, published in 1680."MS. note in Bodl. Cat.

FREE

=

holders (the) plea against stock-jobbing elections of parliament men. [By Daniel DEFOE.]

London: 1701. Quarto.* [Wilson, Life of Defoe, 18.]

FREE parliaments; or, a vindication of the parliamentary constitution of England. In answer to certain visionary plans of modern reformers. [By John ALMON.]

London: 1783. Octavo. [Watt, Bib. Brit.
Mon. Rev., lxviii. 374.]

FREE remarks on a sermon entitled, The requisition of subscription to the thirty nine Articles and liturgy of the Church of England not inconsistent with Christian liberty to which are prefixed, Reasons against subscribing a petition to Parliament for the abolition of such subscription. By a friend to religious liberty. [John PALMER, of Macclesfield.]

London: 1772. Octavo. Pp. 59.* [MS. note on copy.]

FREE-thinker (the): or, essays on ignorance, superstition, bigotry, enthusiasm, craft, &c. intermixed with several pieces of wit and humour. [By

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