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Glasgow: 1843. Octavo. Pp. 16.* [Bodl.]

ORTHOGRAPHIE (an), conteyning the due order and reason, howe to write or paint thimage of mannes voice, most like to the life or nature. Composed by I. H. [John HART] Chester Heralt.

Imprinted at London by William Seres, dwelling at the west ende of Paules, at the signe of the Hedgehogge. Anno. 1569. Octavo.* [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

OPOOAATPEIA: or, a brief discourse concerning bodily worship: proving it to be God's due; to be given unto him with acceptation on his part, and not to be denyed him without sin, on ours. A thing worthy to be taken into consideration in these dayes, wherein prophaness and irreverence toward the sacred majesty of God hath so much corrupted our religious assemblies, that men are regardless of their being before God, or of Gods being amongst them in his own house. By [S. G.] late preacher of the word of God in the cathedrall church of Peterburgh. [Symon GUNTON.]

London, 1650. Quarto. Pp. 6. b. t. 56.* [Bodl.]

OSME: or the spirit of Froust. [By
Rev. John BOLLAND, son of Judge
Bolland.]

London: MDCCC LIII. Octavo.* [N. and
Q., May 1868, p. 409.]

OSMOND, a tale.

By the author of "The favourite of nature." [Mary Ann KELTY.] In three volumes.

London: 1822. Duodecimo.*

OSRIC. A missionary tale. By Charlotte Elizabeth. [C. E. TONNA.] London: N. D. Duodecimo.

OSWALD, a poem, in four cantos. [By
Robert Pierce GILLIES.]

Edinburgh: 1817. Quarto. [Laing's Cat.]
An unpublished poem.

OTHELLO in hell, and The infant: with a Branch of olives. By one in the ranks. [Michael CONSTABLE, private in the 49th Regt.]

Dublin MDCCCXLVIII. Octavo. Pp. 102.* OTHER juvenile poems, by the author of Rimes. [John PINKERTON.] N. P. N. D. Octavo. Pp. 1. b. t. 42.*

OTHER people's children Containing a veracious account of the management of Helen's babies by a lady who knew just how the children of other people should be trained Also a statement of the exact measure of the success obtained By the author of "Helen's babies." [John HABBERTON.] London 1877. Octavo. Pp. 303.* OTHER (the) side of the question; or, an attempt to rescue the characters of the two royal sisters Q. Mary and Q. Anne out of the hands of the D D---- of

--

- S

- [Duchess Dowager of Marlborough]: in which all the remarkables in her Grace's late account are stated in their full strength, and as fully answer'd; the conduct of several noble persons is justify'd; and all the necessary lights are thrown on our court-history from the Revolution, to the change of ministry in 1710. In a letter to her Grace. By a woman of quality. [By James RALPH.]

London: 1742. Octavo.* [Brit. Mus.] OTHER times; or, the monks of Lead

enhall. By the author of The Lollards; -The mystery ;-Calthorpe, or fallen fortunes; &c. &c. [Thomas GASPEY.] In three volumes.

London: 1823. Duodecimo.*

OTHO and Rutha. A dramatic tale. By a lady. [Miss EDWARDS.]

1781. Duodecimo. [Biog. Dram. Mon. Rev., lxvi. 309.]

OTIA sacra. [Poems in Latin and English.] [By Mildmay FANE, Earl of Westmoreland.]

London Printed by Richard Cotes. 164-. Quarto. Pp. 174. b. t.* [Bodl.] The above work has an engraved title, and appears, from the last poem, to have been intended only for the author's friends.

OUABI; or the virtues of nature. An
Indian tale, in four cantos. By Philenia,
a lady of Boston. [Mrs MORTON.]
Boston: 1790. Octavo. Pp. 52. [Rich,
Bib. Amer., i. 493. Mon. Rev., xii. 72.]
OUGHT, or ought not the Church of

Rome in Ireland to be disestablished?
The question considered in a letter to
the Right Hon. Sir R. Peel, Bart.
First Lord of the treasury, &c. &c.
By A. M. Oxoniensis. [Nathaniel
Tilson MARSH.]

London: 1843. Octavo.* [Bodl.]

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OUR ancestors as wise as we : or ancient precedents for modern facts, in answer to a letter from a noble Lord. [By Sir Thomas BURNET.]

London: 1712. Octavo. Pp. 34.* OUR childhood's prayer; or, Our Father stories. [By C. A. JONES.]

Gosport 1871. Octavo. Pp. viii. 228.*
Dedication signed C. A. J.

OUR Churches. By a scion of the old
Church. [Rev. Robert Rodolph SUF-
FIELD.]

London and Cambridge: 1844. Octavo. OUR difficulties and the way to deal with them; by a working clergyman. [John Henry BLUNT.]

London: 1857. Octavo. [Bodl.] OUR doctor, and other tales of Kirkbeck. By the author of "Lives of the Fathers," ""Tales of a London parish," etc. [Henrietta Louisa FARRER.] Edited by the Rev. W. J. E. Bennett, M.A., vicar of Frome.

London: MDCCCLII. Octavo. Pp. ix. 330.*

"OUR doctor," or memorials of Sir William Chas. Ellis, M.D., of Southall Park, Middlesex. By the author of "The kaleidoscope," "Toils and triumphs," "Denmark and her missions," etc. [Harriet Warner ELLIS.] London: [1868.] Octavo. Pp. viii. 89.* "OUR doctor's" note-book: by the author of "Tales of Kirkbeck," "Alice Beresford," "Lives of the Fathers," &c. &c. [Henrietta Louisa FARRER.] London: N. D. [1857.] Octavo. Pp. 3. b. t. 195.*

OUR eternal homes. By a Bible student. [Rev. John HYDE.] London: MDCCCLXIV. 183.*

Octavo. Pp. viii.

OUR farm of four acres: how we managed it, the money we made by it, and how it grew into one of six acres. [By Miss COULTON.] Tenth edition, illustrated, carefully revised, and greatly enlarged.

London 1870. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] OUR heavenly home; or, glimpses of the glory of bliss of the better world. By the author of “God is love;""The

brother born for adversity;" "The Comforter;" &c. [James GRANT.] London: MDCCCLIX. Duodecimo. Pp. xii. 414. *

OUR holiday at Laverstock House asylum; how we visited Stonehenge, and what we learned there. [By John Stevenson BUSHNAN, M.D.]

London: MDCCCLX. Octavo. Pp. 67.* OUR home and foreign trade. A supplement to Notes on the rates of discount in London, 1866-73, with continuation to the close of 1876. [By W. J. DUNCAN, National Bank, Edinburgh.]

:

Edinburgh 1880. Octavo. Pp. viii. 29.* [Presentation copy from the author.]

OUR home islands: their natural features. [By Thomas MILNER, M.A.] London: N. D. [1859.] Duodecimo. Pp. iv. 318.* [Bodl.]

OUR little life Essays consolatory and domestic With some others. By the author of "The recreations of a country parson," &c. [A. K. H. BOYD.]

London 1882. Octavo. Pp. vi. 329.* OUR maid-servants : a few friendly hints and counsels. By A. F. G. [A. F. GASTON.]

London 1866. Octavo. [Adv. Lib.] OUR national Church. An appeal against disestablishment addressed to the common sense and Christian spirit of lay Presbyterians in Scotland. [By Robert BROWN, Principal of Birkenhead school.] Second edition.

Edinburgh: 1879. Octavo. Pp. 190.*
Preface signed R. B.

OUR naval position and policy. By a naval peer. [Edward PLUNKETT, 16th Baron Dunsany.]

London 1859. Octavo. Pp. xii. lxxii. 588.*

OUR new rector; or, the village of Norton. [By Mrs Wildon H. BINNS.] Edited by Cuthbert Bede [Edward BRADLEY], author of "Mr Verdant

Green."

London 1861. Duodecimo.* [N. and Q., 2 May 1868, p. 408.]

OUR premier; or, love and duty. By Frank Foster [D. PUSELEY], author of "Number one; or, the way of the world," etc., etc., etc.

London: 1867. Octavo. Pp. 172.*

OUR project for the good of England: that is, our civil union is our civil safety. Humbly dedicated to the great council, the Parliament of England. [By William PENN.]

[Smith's

N. P. [1679.] Folio. 3 sh.
Cat. of Friends' books, i. 40; ii. 297.]
Signed "Phil'anglus." Inserted in Penn's
Works, ii. 682.

"OUR street." By Mr M. A. Titmarsh. [William Makepeace THACKERAY.] London: MDCCCXLVIII. Sm. Quarto. Pp. 54.*

OUR summer in the Harz forest, by a Scotch family. [By Mrs John Hill BURTON.]

Edinburgh 1865. Octavo. Pp. ix. 278.* OUR sympathizing High Priest: meditations on the daily sorrows of the Saviour. By A. L. Ó. E. [Charlotte TUCKER.]

London : N. D. Octavo. Pp. xi. 108.* OUR trip to Blunderland or grand excursion to Blundertown and back. By Jean Jambon. [John Hay Atholl MACDONALD.] With sixty illustrations by Charles Doyle. Fourth thousand.

Edinburgh and London MDCCCLXXVII.
Octavo. Pp. 1. b. t. 231.*

OUR world; or, the democrat's rule.
By Justia, a Knownothing author of
etc. etc. etc. [F. Colburn ADAMS.]
In two volumes.

London: 1855. Octavo.* [Cat. of Congress Lib.]

OUR year: a child's book, in prose and verse. By the author of "John Halifax, Gentleman." [Dinah Maria MULOCK.] Illustrated by Clarence Dobell. Cambridge: MDCCCLX. Octavo. Pp. 3.

b. t. 313.

OUR Zion; or, Presbyterian Popery. By ane of that ilk. [William Edmonstoune Aytoun, D.C.L.]

Edinburgh: M.DCCC.XL. Octavo. Pp. 34.*

OUT and all about, fables. By H. A.
Page. [Alexander H. JAPP.]
London: 1874. [Lib. Jour., vi. 190.]
OUT at last! or, the fallen minister.
By Peter Pindar, Esq. [John WOL-
COTT, M.D.]

London: 1801. Quarto. Pp. 31. b. t.* OUT for a holiday with Cook's excursion, through Switzerland and Italy. Arthur Sketchley. [George ROSE.] London: N. D. Octavo. Pp. 140.*

By

OUT of the hurly-burly; or, life in an odd corner. By Max Adeler. [Charles Heber CLARK.] With nearly four hundred illustrations. (Authorised edition, with copyright preface.)

His

London: N. D. Octavo. Pp. 398. b. t.* OVT-port-cvstomers accompt, of all his receipts, to a shilling, or a penny, without concealement or enstaulement of any; according to his oath at his first admission. Wherein he plainely sets downe, as well the motiues and occasions, as the method and style of all his former writings; namely, his first apology for cvstomers, against informers of all sorts. His reply, or second apology for publike traffique, against priuate societies. His cavtion for subsidies, vnder the name of cvstomes, against extreamity by farmers. alphabet and prymer for orderly commerce. His acroamata for bullion and staples besides his late mystery of iniqvitie. All which howsoeuer heeretofore held hard and obscure; are heere out of rules of diuinity, and humanity together, by way of illustration, fitted to capacity of common sense and reason; for the fuller satisfaction of all vnpartiall readers, fearing God sincerely, and vprightly seruing kings, and such as are not desperately wilfull, to make shipwracke of their consciences, and dispise their owne happinesse. With an open declaration of the mystery itselfe, to perfect this accompt. Summa totalis. The cvstomers resolution. Summa Summarum. His daily confession. Harty prayer with thankesgiuing, and qvietvsest. And a short memorandum, in perpetuam rei memoriam, for the kings special honor, his loyall subiects good, and his cvstomers discharge, from all imputations both past and to come, against ignorance and her fellowes. [By Thomas MILLER.]

N. P. N. d. Folio. No pagination.* [Bodl.] OUTLANDISH proverbs. Selected by Mr G. H. [George HERBERT.]

London, at the Castle in Cornhill, 1640. Sm. Octavo. 35 leaves. (Signatures A to E 3.) [W.]

The second edition of this work was published in 1651 under the title of "Jacula Prudentum."

OUTLAW (the). By the author of "The buccaneer," &c. [Anna Maria HALL.]

London 1835. Duodecimo.*

OUTLINE engravings and descriptions of the Woburn Abbey marbles. [The descriptions of this valuable collection of marbles were mostly written by John RUSSELL, sixth Duke of Bedford, who printed one hundred and eighty copies for distribution to his friends; the copper-plates were destroyed.]

[London:] 1822. Folio. [W., Martin's Cat.]

OUTLINE of lectures on the law of Scotland; for the use of students in the University of Edinburgh. [By Robert BELL.]

Edinburgh: MDCCCXXVII. Octavo. Pp. vii. 142.* [D. Laing.]

OUTLINE of sematology; or, a new theory of grammar, logic, and rhetoric. [By B. H. SMART.]

London, 1831. Octavo. [Athen. Cat., p. 289.] Privately printed.

OUTLINE of the laws of thought. [By William THOMSON, D.D., Archbishop of York.]

London 1842. Octavo.*

OUTLINES for the classification of a library, respectfully submitted to the consideration of the Trustees of the British Museum. [By Rev. Thomas Hartwell HORNE.]

London 1825. Quarto.

:

OUTLINES (the) of a new commentary on Solomon's Song, drawn by the help of instructions from the East. Containing, I. Remarks, on its general nature. II. Observations, on detached places of it. III. Queries, concerning the rest of this poem. By the author of Observations on divers passages of Scripture. [Rev. Thomas HARMER, of Wattisfield, Suffolk.] Corrected with care.

London MDCCLXVIII. Octavo. Pp. xxiv. 364.* [Watt, Bib. Brit. Lowndes, Brit. Lib. Gent. Mag., lviii. 1127.]

OUTLINES of a plan for the reform of the administration of justice in the supreme courts of Scotland; and relative observations. With an appendix, illustrative of the modes of pleading in England and Scotland. [By Thomas MEGGET.]

London: 1830. Octavo. Pp. 24. 64.* [Adv. Lib.]

OUTLINES of a plan of education. [By Isaac PAYNE.]

N.P. 1805. Duodecimo.sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, ii. 273.]

OUTLINES of a treatise on the disordered states of the lungs : intended to illustrate the origin and nature of many ofthe most important diseases; and also to afford proper indications to assist in their treatment and preservation. [By Thomas ALDER.]

London 1804. Octavo.* [Watt, Bib. Brit.]

OUTLINES of ancient history, from the Deluge to the division of the Roman Empire. Compiled from the writings of the most approved authors. [By W. R. Gray BATES.]

London, 1833. [W., Martin's Cat.] OUTLINES of cookery for the young wife, including recipes savoury, sweet and medicinal, with a few domestic hints. By S.W.E. [Miss S. W. EVITT.] London: 1839. Duodecimo. [W] OUTLINES of English history, chiefly abridged from the History of England by Edward Baldwin. [William GODWIN.] [A new edition continued to the present time.]

London: 1856. Duodecimo. [W., Brit.
Mus.]

OUTLINES of Persian grammar: with extracts. For the use of students in the University of Edinburgh. [By Alexander BRUNTON, D.D.]

Edinburgh: 1822. Octavo. Pp. xxxi. 24.* OUTLINES selected from the blotting book of an invalid. [By the Hon. Robert Fulke GREVILLE.]

London Cat.]

1825. Octavo. [W., Martin's

A miscellany consisting of Essays in prose and verse.

OUTRAGEOUS apostates expos'd, or, a relation of the monstrous outrages, errors, and blasphemies committed by Isaac Pearson, and his impious associates, upon several occasions; but more especially in meetings held for the performance of divine service and worship of Almighty God, by the people, call'd Quakers in the county of Cumberland. [By John SENHOUSE, of Wigton.] Printed in the year, 1718. Octavo. 5 sh. [Smith, Bibl. Anti-Quaker., p. 354.1 OUTWARD bound; or a merchant's adventures. By the author of "Rattlin, the reefer," "The old commodore," &c. [Lieutenant Edward HOWARD.] In

three volumes.

London: 1838. Octavo.*

OVER volcanoes or through France and Spain in 1871. By A. Kingsman.

[Rev. Robert William ESSINGTON, M.A., vicar of Shenstone, Lichfield.] London 1872. Octavo. Pp. xi. 340.* [Lib. Jour., i. 376.]

OVERTHROW (the) of the gowte. Written in Latin verse by Chr. Balista ; translated by B. G. [Barnaby GOOCH.] Printed for Abraham Veale, 1577. Octavo. [W.] OVERTHROVV (the) of the Protestants pvlpit-babels, convincing their preachers of lying and rayling, to make the Church of Rome seeme mysticall Babell. Particvlarly confuting VV. Crashawes sermon at the Crosse, printed as the patterne to iustify the rest. VVith a preface to the gentlemen of the Innes of Court, shewing what vse may be made of this treatise. Togeather with a discouery of M. Crashawes spirit: and an answere to his Iesuites ghospell. By I. R. student in diuinity. [John FLOYD.]

Imprinted Anno M. DC.XII. Quarto. Pp. 328. 3. [Bodl.]

*

OVERTURE for cleansing of the streets. [By Sir Alexander BRAND.]

N. P. N. D. Quarto. S. L.* OUIDS banquet of sence. A coronet for his mistresse philosphie, and his amorous Zodiacke. With a translation of a Latine coppie, written by a fryer, anno Dom. 1400. [By George CHAPMAN.]

London, 1595. Quarto. No pagination.* [Bodl.]

"It was written by Chapman, and I believe one of his earliest publications."-M[alone]. OVID'S Metamorphoses Englished,

mythologiz'd, and represented in figures. An essay to the translation of Virgil's Æneis. By G. S. [George SANDYS.]

London. 1640. Folio. [Mendham Collection Cat., p. 224.]

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OWAIN Goch. A tale of the Revolution. By the author of "The Cavalier," King of the Peak," &c. &c. [William BENNETT.] In three volumes. London: 1827. Duodecimo.* Dedica

tion signed Lee Gibbons. [Bodl.] The "Cavalier" and "King of the Peak" are in this Dictionary ascribed to Thomas Roscoe, Junr., but, it is believed, erroneously.

OWAIN Miles, and other inedited fragments of ancient English poetry. [Edited from the Auchinleck manu

script by David LAING, LL.D., and W. B. D. D. TURNBULL.]

Edinburgh: M. DCCC.XXXVII. Octavo. Only thirty-two copies printed for private distribution.

OWEN-a waif. By the author of "No Church," and "High Church." [Frederick William ROBINSON. three volumes.

London: 1862. Octavo.*

OWEN Glendower; or, the Prince in Wales. An historical romance. [By Miss HARDY.] In two volumes. London: 1849. Duodecimo."

OWEN Gwynne's great work. By the author of "The story of Wandering Willie," "Conrad the squirrel," etc. [Lady Augusta NOEL.] In two vol

umes.

London: 1875. Octavo.*

OWEN Tudor; an historical romance.
By the author of "Whitefriars,"
""Cæsar
Borgia," etc. [Miss Jane ROBINSON.]
In three volumes.

London: 1849. Duodecimo.*

OWLET (the) of Owlstone Edge: his travels, his experience, and his lucubrations. By the author of S. Antholin's. [Francis Edward PAGET, M.A., rector of Elford.]

London 1856. Octavo. [Adv. Lib.]

OXFORD (the) Argo: by an Oxford divine. [Richard BURDON.]

London 1845. Octavo. Pp. 24.* [F. Madan.]

OXFORD besiedged, surprised, taken, and pittifully entred on Munday the second of Iune last, 1645. by the valiant forces of the London and Westminster Parliament. Written, by a trusty wellwisher of theirs, who stedfastly hopes, and heartily prayes, they may have the like prosperous successe in all their future undertakings. The writers name and surname begins with the 9th letter of the Greeke alphabet, Io. Ta. [John TAYLOR, the water-poet.]

Printed in the last year of the Parliament's raigne. 1645. Quarto. Pp. 7. b. t.* [Bodl.]

Author's name in the hand-writing of Wood

OXFORD (the) crisis. A word to the wise. By a member of Magdalen College, Oxford. [James BATEMAN, M.A.1

London: 1845. Octavo. Pp. 31.*

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