Page images
PDF
EPUB
[ocr errors][merged small]

Or

London: MDCCCLXI. Octavo. Pp. 168.* PARLIAMENT (the) of ladies. divers remarkable passages of ladies in Spring-garden; in parliament assembled. Together with certaine votes of the unlawfull assembly at Kates in Cove-Garden. The second edition corrected by the originall, unto which is added a supplement of some further proceedings in the said parliament. [By Henry NEVIll.]

Pinted (sic) in the yeare 1647. Quarto. Pp. 15.* [Wood, Athen. Oxon., ii. 918.] PARLIAMENTARY (the) original and rights of the Lower House of Convocation clared, and the evidences of its separation from the Upper House produc'd on several heads; particularly, in the point of making separate applications, (as a distinct body of men) to other bodies or persons; in pursuance of an argument for the power of the Lower House to adjourn it self. To which is added a preface, giving an account of the dishonest methods of answering books, taken up by [Edmund Gibson] the chief asserter of the Archbishop's sole power, in his late pretended review of the case of the Schedule. [By Francis ATTERBURY, D.D.]

London: MDCCII. Quarto. Pp. xx. b. t. 54. xv.

*

PARLIAMENTARY portraits; or sketches of the public character of some of the most distinguished speakers of the House of Commons. Originally printed in the Examiner. [By Thomas BARNES.]

London: 1815. Octavo. Pp. iv. 240.
[N. and Q., 14 Jan. 1860, p. 29.]
Written under the signature of Criticus.-
W.

PARLIAMENTARY reform. What and where. By the author of "What will the Lords do?" [Henry RICH, M. P.]

London: 1858. Octavo. Pp. 47.* PARLIAMENTARY representation : being a political and critical review of all the counties, cities and boroughs of the kingdom of Ireland, with regard to the state of their representation. By Falkland. [John Robert SCOTT.]

Dublin, printed in the year MDCCXC.
Octavo.*
[N. and Q., 2nd Ser., vol. iv. p.
219.]

PARLIAMENTARY right maintain'd or the Hanover succession justify'd. Wherein the hereditary right to the crown of England asserted &c. is consider'd, in iii. parts. The Ist. Examins the plea from Scripture. The ii. That from the laws & history of England, for indefeasible right, nonresistance & disposition of the crown by will. The iii. Whether the parliament, can repeal the Hanover succession, as now establish'd by the Treaty of union. With reflections on the treasonable schemes of the party, as they occurr in their book: & particularly that of a new lurking Pretender. [By George RIDPATH.]

Printed in 1714. Octavo Pp. 6. b. t. 262.* [Adv. Lib.]

PARLIAMENTS power, in lawes for religion. Or, an answere to that old and groundles calumny of the papists, nick-naming the religion of the Church of England, by the name of a Parliamentary-religion. Sent to a freind, who was troubled at it, and earnestly desired satisfaction in it. [By Peter HEYLIN, D.D.]

Oxford, 1645. Quarto. Pp. 4. b. t. 36.* [Bodl.] Signed E. Y.

"Authore Dr Petro Helyn."-Barlow. PARLIAMENTS (the) resolution for the speedy sending an army into the north, the Earl of Essex to be generall; also the true relation of a fight performed at Newcastle, etc. [By John WILLIAM.]

London 1642. Quarto. [W., Brit.
Mus.]

PARLIAMENTUM pacificum: or, the happy union of king and people in an healing parliament: heartily wish't for, and humbly recommended, by a true protestant, and no dissenter. [John NORTHLEIGH, M.D.]

London 1688. Quarto.*

PARNASSIAN leaves. [Containing Hal Denys' wanderings and other poems.] [By Hugh Ker FOSTER, native of Hull.] 1828. [Newsam's Poets of Yorkshire, p. 109.] PAROCHIAL pasturage: or, the Church of England clergyman's thoughts and resolutions respecting his pastoral duty. Wrote in imitation of the pious Bishop Beveridge's Religious thoughts and

resolutions. Being a scheme of the ministerial practice, drawn from rules of Scripture, and from the example of the Apostles and primitive pastors of the Church. Together with an account of the author's application of these methods in his own parish, and his success. As also the publick charge he gave himself and the people, on his being inducted their minister. Dedi

cated to the Archbishops, Bishops, and all the English clergy; and humbly offer'd to their perusal and correction; as also to the three great religious societies in this city; that of propagating Christianity into foreign parts, of promoting Christian knowledge, and of reformation of manners and to the candid consideration of all pious Christians. By a presbyter of the Church of England, in a letter to his friend. [Brian HUNT.]

London: 1722. Octavo. Pp. 16. b. t. 103.*

Epistles dedicatory and recommendatory signed B. H.

PAROCHIAL tyranny: or, the housekeeper's complaint, against the insupportable exactions and partial assessments of select vestries. With a plain detection of many abuses committed in the distribution of publick charities. Together with a practical proposal for amending the same: which will not only take off great part of the parish taxes now subsisting, but ease parishioners from serving troublesome offices, or paying exorbitant fines. By Andrew Moreton, Esq. [Daniel DEFOE.]

London: 1727. Octavo. Pp. 36. [Lee's
Defoe, 243.]

PARODY on Gray's Elegy. By an Oxonian. [John DUNCOMBE, Fellow of C.C.C., Cambridge.]

1776. Quarto. [Crit. Rev., xli. 319. Mon. Rev., liv. 340.]

A republication of Duncombe's "Evening contemplation in a College.” PARRHASIANA: or thoughts upon several subjects; as criticism, history, morality and politics. [Translated from the French of John LE CLERC, Professor of Hebrew and Belles Lettres in the College of the Dutch Remonstrants at Amsterdam.] London: : 1700. Octavo. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man. Orme, Bib. Bib.]

This is a defence of the author's own works, written under the pseudonym of Theodorus Parrhasi.

[blocks in formation]

volumes.

London.

MDCCCXXXVI. Duodecimo.* PARROT (the). With a compendium of the times. By the authors of the Female Spectator. [Eliza HAYWOOD, &c.]

London: 1746. Octavo. [W.]

This paper only extended to nine numbers; the first is dated Saturday Aug. 2, 1746, and the last, Oct. 4, 1746. PARSONAGE (the) house. By a young lady. [Elizabeth BLOWER.] In a series of letters. In three volumes.

London: 1780. Duodecimo. [Watt, Bib.
Brit. Mon. Rev., lxiii. 70.]

PARSONS and widows. By the author of "Peter Priggins," "The parish clerk," &c. [James T. HEWLETT, M.A.] In three volumes.

London 1844. Duodecimo.* PARSONS (the) case under the present land-tax, recommended in a letter to a member of the House of Commons. [By George HOOPER, D.D.]

or

London, 1689. Quarto. Pp. 6. b. t.* PARSON'S (the) choice of town country: an epistle to a young divine. By the author of Religio clerici. [Edward SMEDLEY, M.A.]

London: 1821. Octavo. Pp. 20.* PARSON'S (the) daughter. By the author of "Sayings and doings," &c. [Theodore HOOK.] In three volumes. London: 1833. Duodecimo.*

PARSONS (the) guide: or the law of tithes. Wherein is shewed, who must pay tithes, and to whom, and of what things, when, and how they must be paid, and how they may be recovered at this day, and how a man may be discharged of payment thereof. By W. S. Esq; [William SHEPPARD.] London: 1654. Quarto.* [Adv. Lib.] PARSON'S (the) home: a poem. By an English vicar. [John Myers KING, vicar of Cutcombe, Somerset.] London: 1849. Octavo. Pp. 76.* PARSON'S (the) horn-book. Thomas BROWNE.] Second edition. Dublin 1831. Octavo. Pp. 203. b. t.* PARSON'S (the) parlour. A poem. By

[By

[blocks in formation]

1756. Octavo. [N. and Q., 21 July 1866, p. 48. Mon. Rev., xiv. 574.]

PART (a) of the life of Lady Margaret
Cunningham, daughter of the Earl of
Glencairn. [Edited by Charles Kirk-
patrick SHARPE.]

Edinburgh: 1826. Quarto. [W., Martin's
Cat.]

PART of the seventh epistle of the first book of Horace imitated: and address'd to a noble peer. [By Jonathan SWIFT.] London: 1713. Quarto. Pp. 12.* [Adv. Lib.]

PARTHENISSA, a romance. [By
Roger BOYLE, Earl of Orrery, then
Lord Broghill.] In six volumes.

London: 1655-69. Quarto. [W., Bliss'
Cat.]

PARTIALITY detected, or a reply to a
pamphlet entituled, Some proceedings
in the Convocation, A.D. 1705, faithfully
represented, etc. [by Bishop Atterbury]
discovering the many partial repre-
sentations and unjust reflections, con-
tained in the said pamphlet; par-
ticularly as to what concerns the pro-
ceedings of the Convocation in Ireland.
[By Charles TRIMNELL, Bishop of
Winchester.]

London: 1708. Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.] PARTICULAR (a) account of the Emperor of China's gardens near Pekin : in a letter from F. Attiret, a French missionary, now employ'd by that Emperor to paint the apartments in those gardens, to his friend at Paris. Translated from the French, by Sir Harry Beaumont. [Joseph SPENCE.] London: M.DCC. LII. Octavo, Pp. vi. 50.* [Adv. Lib., s,v. Attiret.] PARTICULAR (a) but melancholy account of the great hardships, difficulties, and miseries, that those unhappy and much-to-be-pitied creatures, the common women of the town, are plung'd into at this juncture. The causes of their misfortunes fully laid down; and the bad effects that too much rigour against them will produce. Likewise some proposals advanced, which, if properly executed, will not fail of reclaiming those unfortunate women, and render them useful members of the community. Humbly recommended to the serious perusal of the nobility and gentry of both sexes, to the married and unmarried, to par

[blocks in formation]

PARTICULARS of the life of a dissenting minister; written by himself. With occasional reflections illustrative of the education and professional state of the dissenting clergy, and of the character and manners of the dissenters in general. [By Charles LLOYD, LL.D.] London: [1812.] Octavo. [Gent. Mag., Oct. 1839, p. 428. Mon. Rev., Ixxiii. 220.] PARTY dissected; or plain truth: a poem. By a plain dealer. [Thomas RUSHTON.]

London: 1770. Quarto. [Sketches of obscure poets, p. 46. Mon. Rev., xlii. 486.] PARTY-tyranny: or, an occasional bill in miniature; as now practised in Carolina. Humbly offered to the consideration of both Houses of Parliament. [By Daniel DEFOE.] London: Printed in the year. Quarto. PASCAREL. Only a story. By Ouida. Author of "Chandos," "Tricotrin," "Under two flags," etc. [Louise de LA RAMÉ.] In three volumes. London : 1873. Octavo.*

*

1705.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

PASSAGES from the auto-biography of a "Man of Kent." Together with a few rough pen-and-ink sketches, by the same hand, of some of the people he has met, the changes he has seen, and the places he has visited. 18171865. Edited by Reginald Fitz-Roy Stanley, M.A. [By Robert COWTAN.] London: 1866. Octavo.*

PASSAGES from the diary of a late physician, with notes and illustrations by the editor. [By Samuel WARREN, LL.D.] In two volumes. Edinburgh: MDCCCXXXII.

Octavo.*

Originally published in Blackwood's Magazine.

PASSAGES in the life of an English heiress; or, recollections of disruption times in Scotland. [By Mrs Lydia Falconer MILLER, wife of Hugh Miller.]

London: MDCCCXLVII. Duodecimo.* PASSAGES in the life of Mrs. Margaret Maitland, of Sunnyside. Written by herself. [By Mrs OLIPHANT.] In three volumes.

London: 1849. Duodecimo.*
PASSAGES in the old story. [By

Fyfe CHRISTIE, a writer in Glasgow.]
For private circulation. [Glasgow 1865.]
Octavo. Pp. 31.*

PASSAGES selected by distinguished personages, on the great literary trial of Vortigern and Rowena; a comitragedy. "Whether it be-or be not from the immortal pen of Shakspeare?" [By Sir Henry Bate DUDLEY.] [In three volumes.]

London: N. D. Octavo.* PASSING clouds; or, love conquering evil. By Cycla. [Mrs Helen CLACY.] London: M.DCCC. LVIII. Duodecimo. Pp. 1. b. t. 238.*

PASSING thoughts. By Charlotte Elizabeth. [Mrs TONNA.]

London: 1838. Duodecimo. [W., Brit. Mus.]

PASSING thoughts on religion By the author of 'Amy Herbert,' 'Thoughts for the holy week,' etc. [Elizabeth Missing SEWELL.]

London 1860. Octavo. Pp. viii. 323.* PASSIONATE (the) pilgrim or Eros and Anteros. By Henry J. Thurstan. [Francis Turner PALGRAVE.] London: 1858. Octavo.* [Olphar Hamst.] PASSIONS (the) of the minde. By Th. W. [Thomas WRIGHT.] London: 1601. Duodecimo. [W.] PASSIONS (the) personify'd, in familiar fables. [By Edward YOUNG, LL.D.] Octavo. Pp. iv. b. t. 2.

London: N. D. 104.*

[blocks in formation]

1843. Folio. Pp. 8. No title. Signed J. B. U. [W.]

PAST and future emigration; or, the book of the Cape. [By E. H. D. E. NAPIER.] Edited by [Harriet WARD] the author of Five years in Kafirland. London: 1849. Duodecimo. Pp. vii. 379.* [Brit. Mus.]

PAST and present policy of England towards Ireland. [By C. C. GREVILLE.]

London: 1845. Duodecimo. Pp. xv. 359.* PAST (the) and present state of the tea trade of England, and of the continents of Europe and America; and a comparison between the consumption, price of, and revenue derived from, tea, coffee, sugar, wine, tobacco, spirits, &c. By the author of "British relations with the Chinese empire in 1832." [Robert Montgomery MARTIN.]

London: 1832. Octavo. Pp. xi. 222.* PAST events; an historical novel of the eighteenth century, by the author of "The wife and the mistress," ""The pirate of Naples," "Rosetta," Andronica," &c. &c. [Mary CHARLTON.] [In three volumes.]

66

London, 1824. Duodecimo. [Bodl.] PASTOR (the) and the prelate, or reformation and conformitie shortly compared by the Word of God, by

antiquity and the proceedings of the ancient Kirk, by the nature and use of things indifferent, by the proceedings of our ovvne Kirk, by the weill of the Kirk and of the peoples soules, and by the good of the commonwealth and of our outward estate with the answer of the common & chiefest objections against everie part: shewing whether of the two is to be followed by the true christian and countrieman. [By David CALDERWOOD.]

Anno M.DC.XXVIII. Quarto. Pp. 72.* PASTOR (il) fido, or the faithful shepherd, a pastoral tragi-comedy, attempted in English blank verse, from the Italian of Signor Cavalier Giovanni Battista Guarini. [By William CLAPPERTON.]

Edinburgh: 1809. Duodecimo.*

PASTOR (il) fido: or the faithfull shepheard. [By Batista GUARINI.] Translated out of Italian into English [by DYMOCK].

London 1602. Quarto. No pagination.* PASTOR (the); or, scenes from the life of a clergyman. [By James HOLLINS, incumbent of St Clement's, Bristol.] London: 1866. Octavo. Pp. 78. b. t.* [Bodl.]

PASTORAL-advice to a young person in order to his being confirmed by the bishop. By a minister of the Church of England. [Josiah WOODWARD, D.D.]

London, 1702. [Bodl.]

Duodecimo. Pp. 47.*

[blocks in formation]

PASTORAL advice to married persons. By a country clergyman. [Rev. Edward BERENS.]

Oxford: 1821. Duodecimo. [W., Brit.
Mus.]

PASTORAL advice to young persons before confirmation. [By William ADAMS, D.D.]

Shrewsbury: 1772. Octavo. [Watt, Bib. Brit. Mon. Rev., xlvii. 480.] PASTORAL annals. By an Irish clergyman. [J. Spencer KNOX.] London: 1840. Octavo. PASTORAL (a) cordial, or, an anodyne

sermon preached before their Graces

N[ewcastle] and D[evonshire] in the country, by an independent teacher of the truth. [John HALL-STEVENSON.] London; MDCCLXIII. Quarto. Pp. 31.* PASTORAL (a) epilogue to, and by the author of All the talents. [By Eaton Stannard BARRETT.]

London: 1807. Octavo. Pp. 16.* [Bodl.] "All the talents" is ascribed to William Combe by Dyce.

PASTORAL epistle from his Holiness the Pope to some members of the Uni

versity of Oxford. Faithfully translated from the original Latin. [By Charles DICKINSON, D.D., Bishop of Meath.]

London: 1836. Octavo.*

PASTORAL (a) on the distemper among the horned cattle. [By William DODD, LL.D.]

1747. Quarto. [Gent. Mag., xlvii. 341.] PASTORAL (a) puke. A second sermon preached before the people called whigs. By an independent. [John HALL-STEVENSON.]

London: MDCCLXIV. Quarto. Pp. 39.* PASTORAL (a) reflection on death. A poem. [By John POTENGER.]

London: MDCXCI. Folio. Pp. 12.*

PASTORE (il) incantato, a drama; Pompeii, and other poems. By a student of the Middle Temple, etc. etc. [Joseph BELDAM.]

London 1823. Octavo.* PASTOR'S (the) care and dignity, and the people's duty. A sermon [on I Cor. iv. 1] preach'd at the Assembly of ministers, at Taunton, 7th September, 1692. By G. T. [George TROSSE, of Exeter.]

London: 1693. Octavo. Pp. ii. b. t. 60.* PASTOR'S (a) memorial of a dying pastor, for the congregation of St. Peter, St. Alban's, June, 1846. [By Horatio Nelson DUDDING.]

London: N. D. Duodecimo. Pp. 16.* [Bodl.] Signed H. N. D.

PATERFAMILIAS'S diary of everybody's tour: Belgium and the Rhine, Munich, Switzerland, Milan, Geneva and Paris. [By Martin Farquhar TUPPER.]

London: 1856. Octavo.*

PATERNE (the) of perfection: exhibited in Gods image on Adam: and

« PreviousContinue »