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OPINIONS concerning the University of Oxford, and subscription to the Thirty nine Articles. By a clergyman. [James WILLIAMSON, M.A., of St. Alban Hall, Oxford.]

London: MDCCLXXIV. Quarto. Pp. 22. b. t.* [Bodl.]

OPINIONS of learned and eminent men on the truth, style, and importance of the Holy Bible. [Collected by Horace RODD.]

London: MDCCCXXXIX. Duodecimo. Pp. vii. 395.* [Sig. Lib.]

OPINIONS (the) of Sarah DuchessDowager of Marlborough. Published from original MSS. [Edited by Sir David DALRYMPLE, Lord Hailes.]

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Author's name in the hand-writing of Dr.
David Laing.

OPIUM (the) question as between nation and nation. By a barrister at law. [Samuel WARREN.]

London. 1840. Octavo. Pp. 52.* [Athen.
Cat., p. 526.]

OPPORTUNITY (the); or, reasons

for an immediate alliance with St. Domingo. By the author of the 'Crisis in the sugar colonies.' [James STEPHEN.]

London 1804. Octavo. Pp. 156. [Manchester Free Lib. Cat., p. 688.] OPPOSITION no proof of patriotism : with some observations and advice concerning party-writings. [By William ARNALL.]

London: 1735. Octavo.

OPPOSITION politics exemplified. By the editor of the Beauties of Fox, North, and Burke. [George CHALMERS.]

London 1786. Octavo. [W] OPTICK (the) glasse of humors, or the touchstone of a golden temperature, or the philosophers stone to make a golden temper. Wherein the foure complections, sanguine, cholericke, phligmaticke, melancholicke are succinctly painted forth and their externall intimates laid open to the purblind eye of ignorance it selfe, by which every one may judge of what complection he is, and answerably learne what is most sutable to his nature, by T. W. [Thomas WALKINGTON] Master of Artes.

London. 1639. Octavo.* Edition of 1664 has pp. 22. 168.

OPTICKS: or a treatise of the reflections, refractions, inflexions and colours of light; also two treatises of the species and magnitude of curvilinear figures. [By Sir Isaac NEWTON.]

London: 1704. Quarto. [W]

OPTION (the): or, an enquiry into the grounds of the claim made by the archbishop, on all consecrated or translated bishops, of the disposal of any preferment belonging to their respective sees that he shall make choice of. [By Thomas SHERLOCK, D.D.]

London in the year MDCCLVI. Folio. Pp. 20. b. t.* [Brit. Mus.] ORACLES (the) of Christ, and the abominations of antichrist compared : or, a brief view of the errors, impieties, and inhumanities of Popery, and of the great danger of its speedy prevalence in Britain. In a letter to a friend. [By John BROWN, minister at Haddington.]

Glasgow: MDCCLXXIX. Duodecimo. Pp.
98. b. t.* [Memoir, Edin., 1856.]
Letter signed J. B.

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ORANGE Lily. By the author of Queenie," "A' jewel of a girl," "My love, she's but a lassie," &c., &c. [May CROMMELIN.] In two volumes. London: 1879. Octavo.*

ORANGE (the) system exposed, and the Orange societies proved to be unconstitutional, illegal, and seditious; in a letter to the Marquess Wellesley. [By Thomas WALLACE, LL.D.] Third edition, with an appendix, containing their oaths, obligations, &c.

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all, are treated of at large. [By Rev. Samuel LEE, M.A.]

:

London 1659. Folio. [Darling, Cyclop. Bibl.]

ORCADIAN rhymes; or, verses from the far north. [By J. L. SINCLAIR.] Kelso: MDCCCLXIV. Duodecimo. * [Author.]

ORCHESTRA or a poeme of dauncing. Iudicially proouing the true obseruation of time and measure, in the authenticall and laudable vse of dauncing. [By Sir John DAVIES, or DAVIS.]

At London, printed by I. Robarts for N. Ling. 1596. Octavo. No pagination.* [Bodl.]

"This is the first edition of Sir John Davyses poem on dauncing."-E. Malone. ORDEAL (the) for wives. By the

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author of "The morals of May Fair," Creeds," ""The world's verdict," &c., &c. [Mrs Annie EDWARDS.] In three volumes.

London: 1865. Octavo.*

On the title-page of the work, Ought we to visit her?, the authoress' name is given as Edwardes.

ORDER before anarchy; or, a letter to a friend containing an exposition of the principles levelled by Paine, and others, at the overthrow of the British constitution. To which is added, an appendix upon the death of Louis XVI. [By J. CASTLEY, of Jesus College, Cambridge.]

1793. Octavo. [Brit. Crit., ii. 255.] ORDER (an) for the solemnization of matrimony together with an order for the burial of the dead. [Compiled by Rev. Eustace R. CONDER.]

London 1854. Quarto. [Brit. Mus.] Preface signed E. R. C. ORDER (the) of ceremonies obserued in the annointing and coronation of the most Christian king of France and Nauarre, Henry the IIII. of that name, celebrated in our Lady Church, in the cittie of Chartres vppon Svnday the 27. of February 1594. Faithfully translated out of the French coppy printed at Roan, by commaundement of the said Lord. By E. A. [E. AGGAS.]

London, N. D. Quarto. No pagination. B. L.* [Bodl.]

ORDER (the) of keeping a court leet, and court baron, with the charges appertayning to the same. Truely

and plainely deliuered in the English tongue, for the profit of all men, and most commodious for yong students of the lawes, and all other within the iurisdiction of those courts, with diuers new additions thereunto added. [By John KITCHIN, of Gray's Inn.]

London, 1605. Octavo. Fol. 31. B. L.* [Bodl.]

ORDER (an) of service to be used in the ministration of public baptism of infants, at the same time as the reception into church of infants privately baptized. [Compiled by Edward Thomas CARDALE, rector of Uckfield.]

London, Oxford, and Cambridge.
MDCCCLXVI. Octavo. Pp. 15.* [Bodl.]
Preface signed E. T. C.

ORDER (the) of the installation of
Henry Duke of Norfolk, Henry Earl
of Peterborow, and Laurence Earl of
Rochester. Knights and Companions
of the most noble Order of the Garter.
In the royal Chappel of St. George at
Windsor, July 22. 1685. [By Gregory
KING.]

London: 1685. Folio. Pp. 12. b. t.* [Bodl.]

Author's name in the hand-writing of Wood. ORDER (the) of the installation of Prince George of Denmark, Charles Duke of Somerset, and George Duke of Northumberland. Knights and Companions of the most noble Order of the Garter. In the royal chappel of St. George at Windsor, April the 8th 1684. [By Gregory KING.]

London, 1684. Folio. Pp. 13.* [Bodl.] Author's name in the hand-writing of Wood. ORDER (the) of the primitive Churches, as it is fully described in the inspired writings of the apostles and evangelists, humbly enquired into. By an impartial hand. [Thomas CAWDWELL.] London: 1719. Octavo. Pp. 107.* [Bodl.]

ORDER (the), solemnitie and pompe of the feastes, sacrifices, vowes, games and triumphes, used upon the nativities of emperours, kinkes (sic), princes, dukes, popes and consuls, &c. [By Lodowick LLOYD.]

London: 1610. Quarto. B. L. [W., Brit.
Mus.]

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ORDERS (the) in council at present in force, and some of the acts of Parliament for the regulation of the naval service. [Compiled by C. P. RONEY.] London, 1842. Octavo. Pp. 628. [W., Martin's Cat.]

ORDINARY (an) journy no progress : or, a man doing his own business no mover of sedition. Being a vindication of Dr. Sacheverell, from the slanders rais'd against him, upon the account of the late honours which have been paid him in the country. [By Joseph TRAPP, D.D.]

London: 1710. Octavo. Pp. 8.* [Chalmers, Biog. Dict.]

OREMUS: short prayers in verse for Sundays and Holy Days suggested by the services of the Church of England. [By Rev. J. SEDGWICK?]

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London 1862. Octavo. Pp. viii. 126.* ORGULA: or, the fatal error. tragedy composed by L. W. [Leonard WILLAN.] Whereunto is annexed a preface, discovering the true nature of poesie, with the proper use and intention of such publick divertisments. London, 1658. Octavo. Pp. 10. b. t. 88. [Biog. Dram.] ORIENTAL eclogues.

Written

originally for the entertainment of the ladies of Tauris. And now translated. [By William COLLINS.]

1757. Quarto. Pp. viii. 23. [Mon. Rev., xvi. 486.]

Published also under the title of "Persian
Eclogues."

ORIENTALIST (the): or electioneering
in Ireland; a tale. By Myself. [Mrs
PURCELL. In two volumes.
London: 1820. Duodecimo.
ORIGIN (on the) and progress of
language. [By James BURNETT,
Lord Monboddo.] [In six volumes.]
Edinburgh: MDCCLXXIII. M. DCC. XCII.
Octavo.

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To vol. ii. are annexed, three dissertations, viz. 1. Of the formation of the Greek lan

guage. 2. Of the sound of the Greek language. 3. Of the composition of the antients; and particularly of that of Demosthenes.

ORIGIN (the) of evil : a celestial drama. [By Ter. Tisanthrope. [William Honyman GILLESPIE.]

London: 1873. Octavo. Pp. xx. 123.* ORIGIN (the) of evil and other sermons. [By A. W. MOMERIE.]

Edinburgh and London MDCCCLXXIX.
Octavo.

ORIGIN (the) of laws, arts, and sciences, and their progress among the most ancient nations. Translated from the French of the President de Goguet. In three volumes. [Vol. I was translated by Robert HENRY, D.D., Vol. 2 by Dr DUNN, and Vol. 3 by Alexander SPEARMAN.]

Edinburgh: 1775. Octavo.*

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ORIGINAL (an) canto of Spencer : design'd as part of his Fairy Queen, but never printed. Now made publick, by Nestor Ironside, Esq. [Rev. Samuel CROXALL.]

London; M.DCC.XIV. Quarto.

ORIGINAL (the) constitution of the

Christian Church: wherein the extremes on either hand are stated and examined. To which is added an appendix, containing the rise of the Jure Divino prelatists; and an answer to their arguments, by episcopal divines. By T. A. [Thomas AITON, minister of the Gospel at Alyth.] Edinburgh, MDCCXXX. Octavo.* ORIGINAL (an) draught of the primitive Church in answer to a discourse [by Peter, Lord King,] entituled, An enquiry into the constitution, discipline, unity and worship of the primitive Church, that flourish'd within the first three hundred years after Christ. By a presbyter of the Church of England. [William SCLATER.]

London: 1717. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] Ascribed to J. Sclater. [Bodl.]

ORIGINAL essays and translations, by different hands. [By Professors William RICHARDSON and Archibald ARTHUR, of Glasgow.]

Edinburgh: 1780. Octavo. [Laing's
Cat.]

ORIGINAL letters and memoirs, written

by the Lord Chancellor Bacon, during the reign of King James I., many addrest to the King, the Duke of Buckingham, and other eminent persons. Corrected and published with remarks by Robert Stephens Esq., late historiographer royal. To which is prefixed a large historical introduction. [Edited by J. LOCKER.] Second edi

tion.

London: 1736. Quarto. [W.] ORIGINAL letters &c. of Sir John Falstaff and his friends; now first made public by a gentleman, a descendant of Dame Quickly, from genuine manuscripts which have been in the possession of the Quickly family near four hundred years. [By Charles LAMB

and James WHITE, of Christ's Hospital.]

London: 1796. Duodecimo. Pp. 123. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., s.v. Falstaff.] ORIGINAL letters, from the Right Hon. Lady Mary W. Montague to Sir James and Lady Frances Steuart: and memoirs and and anecdotes of those

distinguished persons. [Edited by DUNLOP, collector of excise at Greenock.]

Greenock printed 1818. Duodecimo. Pp. vi. 159. [W. Martin's Cat.]

ORIGINAL lines and translations.

By

the author of Bioscope or dial of life. [Granville PENN.]

1815. Octavo. [Brit. Crit., Feb. 1815, p. 223.]

ORIGINAL love-letters between a lady of quality, and a person of inferior station. [By William COMBE.] [In two volumes.]

Dublin 1784. Duodecimo. [European Mag., vi. 376.]

ORIGINAL memorials; or, brief sketches of real character. By a clergyman of the Church of England. [Charles BRADLEY.]

London, 1822. Octavo. Pp. 5. b. t. 196.* [Bodl.]

ORIGINAL plans of thought for village preachers. By a country pastor. [John SISSON.]

London 1848. Duodecimo.*

ORIGINAL poems. By a lady. Dedi Icated to Miss Ann Henderson. A tribute to gratitude and friendship. [By Charlotte CARSTAIRS.]

Edinburgh printed in the year 1786.
Quarto.

The poems are numbered First-Eighth, On the title-pages of First-Fifth, the lady is said to be "The author of the Hubbleshue." The authoress' name is in the hand-writing of Dr David Laing. ORIGINAL poems, by a young gentleman. [James RIDDELL, M.D.]

Edinburgh MDCCLXXX. Octavo, Pp. iv. 89.1

ORIGINAL poems, for infant minds. By several young persons. [Ann and Jane TAYLOR.] [In two volumes.] A new and revised edition.

London: N. D. [1843.] Duodecimo.* ORIGINAL poems on several occasions. By C. R. [Clara REEVE.]

1769. Quarto. [N. and Q., April 1860, P. 327. Mon. Rev., xli. 476.]

ORIGINAL poems on various subjects. By a young lady, eighteen years of age. [Miss Anna Maria PORTER.] London N. D. Quarto.*

ORIGINAL (the) power of the collective body of the people of England examined and asserted; with a double dedication to the King and to the Parliament. [By Daniel DEFOE.]

London: 1701. Folio. [Wilson, Life of
Defoe, 24.]

ORIGINAL remarks on the general training of the horse. By B. C. [Bracy CLARK, F.L.S., member of the Royal Institute of France.]

London: 1842. Quarto. Pp. 20. [W.] ORIGINAL right; or, the reasonableness of appeals to the people. Being an answer to the first chapter in Dr. Davenant's Essay, entitled, Peace at home and war abroad. [By Daniel DEFOE.]

London: 1704. Quarto. [Wilson, Life of
Defoe, 48.]

ORIGINAL (the) speech of Sir W——m St-pe [William STANHOPE], on the first reading of the bill for appointing the assizes at Buckingham, Feb. 19, 1748.

London, 1748. Folio. Pp. 8.* [Bodl.] ORIGINAL stories, from real life; with conversations, calculated to regulate

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ORIGINES Divisianae: or, the antiquities of Devizes; in some familiar letters to a friend, wrote in the years 1750 and 1751. [By John DAVIS, M.D., of Devizes.]

London: 1754. Octavo.* [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., p. 635.]

ORLANDO inamorato; the three first bookes of that famous noble gentleman and learned poet, Mathew Maria Boiardo Earle of Scandiano in Lombardie. Done into English heroicall verse, by R. T. [Robert TOFTE] gentleman.

Printed at London by Valentine Sims, 1598. Quarto. [W]

ORMINGTON, or Cecil, a peer. With a word from the author. [By Mrs GORE.] In three volumes. Second edition.

Duodecimo.*

London: MDCCCXLII. ORMONDS curtain drawn in a short discourse concerning Ireland; wherein his treasons, and the corruption of his instruments are laid bare to the stroke of justice. [By Sir J. TEMPLE.] [London: 1646.] Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.] ORNAMENTS (the) of churches considered, with a particular view to the late decoration of the parish church of St. Margaret Westminster. To which is subjoined an appendix, containing the history of the said church; an account of the altar-piece, and stained glass window erected over it; a state of the prosecution it has occasioned; and other papers. [By Thomas WILSON.]

Oxford, MDCCLXI. Quarto. Pp. 143 and
Appendix 38.* [Watt, Bib. Brit.]

Ascribed also to Archdeacon Hole, pub-
lished with additions by Dr Wilson. Upcott
says-"published by Dr C. Wilson."

ORPHAN (the). A novel. In a series of letters. [By Miss ELLIOTT.] In two volumes.

London 1783. Duodecimo. [European
Mag., iii. 363.]

ORPHAN (the) of Novogorod, an
Illyrian tale. By an ex-officer of
the British commissariat. [Louis
DONATTI.]

London: 1841. Octavo.*

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tale of Scottish life. By the author of "Christie Redfern's troubles," etc. [Margaret Murray ROBERTSON.] London: N. D. Octavo. Pp. vi. 187.* [Adv. Lib.]

ORPHANS (the) of Glenulva: a tale of Scottish life. [By Mrs T. A. LATTA.] Edinburgh: 1862. Octavo. [Adv. Lib.] ORPHAN'S (the) trial A tale in blank verse. [By G. FISK.]

London 1847. Octavo. Pp. 86. b. t.* ORPHEUS and Eurydice; an opera. [By John DENNIS.]

N. P. N. D. Octavo. Pp. 4.* [Bodl.] ORTHODOX (the) communicant : by way of meditation on the order for the administration of the Lord's Supper, or holy communion; according to the liturgy of the Church of England. [By Laurence HOWEL, nonjuror.]

In the Savoy, 1712. Octavo. Pp. xii. 46.* [Lowndes, Brit. Lib.]

The author composed this work during his confinement in Newgate.

ORTHODOX (the) dissenting-minister's reasons, for a farther application to parliament, for relief in the matter of subscription to the Articles of the Church of England. (Address'd to his own and other congregations.) [By Joseph JENKINS, M.A.]

London: MDCCLXXV. Octavo. Pp. 24.* [Bodl.]

ORTHODOX (an) plea for the sanctuary of God, common service, white robe of the house, being writ for the good of all, but more especially intended for the common sort; being composed in a stile fitted for their capacities. By G. A. [George ALSOP] sometime of Oxford, of St Johns.

London, 1669. Octavo. Pp. 8. b. t. 86.* ORTHODOXY is not evangelism : being a letter of remonstrance, in the name of Christ, to all orthodox ministers, preachers, and professors of the gospel; in the Establishment, or out of it. By a probationer of the

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