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Nicholas CLAGETT, D.D., archdeacon of Sudbury.]

London: 685. Quarto. Pp. 57.* [Darling, Cyclop. Bibl.]

PERSWASIVE (a) to communion with the Church of England. [By Robert GROVE, Bishop of Chichester.] The second edition corrected.

London, 1683. Quarto. Pp. 43.* [Brit. Mus.]

PERSWASIVE (a) to consideration, tender'd to the Royalists; particularly those of the Church of England. [By Jeremy COLLIER, M.A.]

London, 1716. Octavo. Pp. 16.* [Bodl.] PERSVVASIVE (a) to loyalty, or the svbiects dvtie. Wherein is proued that resisting or deposing of kings (under what specious pretences soever couched) is utterly unlawfull. Collected by D. O. [— OWEN.] Dedicated to all dutifull subjects.

London, printed 1642. Quarto. Pp. 4. b. t. 30.* [Bodl.]

PERSWASIVE (a) to moderation to Church dissenters, in prudence and conscience: humbly submitted to the king and his great councel. By one of the humblest and most dutiful of his dissenting subjects. [William PENN.] N. P. N. D. [1686.] Quarto. Pp. 6. b. t. 48.* [Smith's Cal. of Friends' books, ii. 303.]

PERSWASIVE (a) to peace & unity among Christians, notwithstanding their different apprehensions in lesser things. [By William ALLEN, D.D.] London, 1672. Octavo. Pp. 150. b. t.* [Brit. Mus.]

PERSWASIVES with directions to the frequent and holy use of the Lord's Supper. By way of appendix to the Method of private devotion. By the same author. [Edward WETENHALL.] London 1684. Octavo.*

PERTH assembly. Containing. 1. The proceedings thereof. 2. The proofe of the nullitie thereof. 3. Reasons presented thereto against the receiving the five new articles imposed. 4. The oppositenesse of it to the proceedings and oath of the whole state of the land. An. 1581. 5. Proofes of the unlawfulnesse of the said five articles, viz. 1. Kneeling in the act of receiving the Lord's Supper. 2. Holy daies. 3. Bishopping. 4. Private baptisme.

5. Private communion. [By David CALDERWOOD.]

N. P.

MDCXIX. Quarto. Pp. 101.* PERUULA. [By John STANBRIDGE.] N. D. Quarto.* [Bodl.] PERUVIAN (the) letters, translated from the French [of F. d'Issembourg d'Happonville, Dame de GRAFFIGNY]. With an additional original volume. By R. Roberts, translator of Select tales from Marmontel, author of Sermons by a lady, and translator of the History of France, from the Abbé Millot.

London: MDCCLXXIV. Duodecimo.* PERVERSION: or, the causes and consequences of infidelity. A tale for the times. [By William John CONYBEARE, M.A.] In three volumes. London: MDCCCLVI. Octavo.*

PET Jessie-Anne's Exhibition of Unda's rubbings from monumental slabs and brasses For the benefit of the sick children's hospital. [By Thomas S. MUIR.]

[Edinburgh. 1871.] Octavo. Pp. 18.* Privately printed.

PET Marjorie: a story of child-life fifty years ago. [By H. B. FARNIE.] Revised and more complete edition of the original issue in 1858.

Edinburgh: 1864. Octavo. Pp. xi. 78.* PETER Bell. A lyrical ballad. [By John Hamilton REYNOLDS.]

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PETERS patern: or the perfect path to worldly happiness as it it was delivered in a funeral sermon preached at the interrment of Mr Hugh Peters

lately deceased. By I. C. [Joseph CARYL, translator of Pineda upon Job.]

London 1659. Quarto. Pp. 16.* A satire upon Hugh Peters. PETER'S pension. A solemn epistle to a sublime personage. With an engraving by an eminent artist. By Peter Pindar, Esq. [John WOLCOTT.] Second edition.

London: M. DCC. LXXXVIII. Quarto. Pp. 4. 47.* PETER'S prophecy. Or, the president and poet. Or, an important epistle to Sir J. Banks, on the approaching election of a president of the Royal Society. With an etching by an eminent artist. By Peter Pindar, Esquire. [John WOLCOTT.] Second edition.

London: M.DCC.LXXXVIII. Quarto. Pp. 52.*

PETITE'S romance. By M. J. M *** [Katherine KING.] In two volumes. London: 1870. Octavo.* PETITION (a) directed to her most excellent maiestie, wherein is deliuered I A meane howe to compound the ciuill dissention in the Church of England. 2 A proofe that they who write for reformation, doe not offend against the stat. of 23. Eliz. c. and therefore till matters bee compounded, deserue more fauour. [By Henry BARROWE.] Herevnto is annexed:

some opinions of such as sue for reformation by vvhich it may appeare hovve vniustlie they are slaundered by the bishops, &c. pag. 53. Togither vvith the authours epistle to the reader. p. 58. Also: Certayne articles vvherein is discouered the negligence of the bishops, their officials, fauourers and followers, in performance of sundrie ecclesiasticall statutes, lawes, and ordinances royall and episcopall, published for the gouuernement of the Church of Englande, pag. 60. Lastlie: Certayne quæstions or interrogatories dravven by a fauourer of reformation, vvherein he desireth to be resolued by the prelates, pag. 74.

N. P. N. D. Quarto. Pp. 83.* [Bodl.] PETITION (a) for peace: with the reformation of the liturgy. As it was presented to the Right Reverend bishops, by the divines appointed by His Majesties Commission to treat with them about the alteration of it. [By Richard BAXTER.]

London, printed, Anno Dom. MDCLXI.
Quarto. [Brit. Mus.]

PETITION (the) of the unborn babes
to the censors of the Royal College of
Physicians of London. [By Frank
NICHOLLS, M.D.]

London: 1751. Quarto.* [Gent. Mag., lv. 13.]

PETITIONARY remonstrance, presented to O. P. [Oliver the Protector.] Feb. 4. 1655. By I. G. D.D. [John GAUDEN, D.D.] A son, servant, and suppliant for the Church of England in behalf of many thousands his distressed brethren [ministers of the Gospel, and other good schollars] who were deprived of all publique imployment, (as ministers, or schollars) by his Declaration, Jan. 1. 1655.

London, 1659. Quarto. Pp. 6. b. t. 28.* PETRARCH translated; in a selection of his sonnets and odes; accompanied with notes, and the original Italian; also with the head of Petrarch from an antique bronze; by the translator of Catullus. [George Frederick NOTT, D.D.]

London: 1808. Octavo. Pp. xii. 268.* [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

PETREL (the): a tale of the sea. By a naval officer. [Admiral William FISHER.] In three volumes.

London: 1850. Duodecimo.*

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For another edition, see the "HOOP-PETTI-
COAT."

PEVERIL of the Peak. By the author
of "Waverley," "Kenilworth," &c. [Sir
Walter SCOTT, Bart.] In four volumes.
Edinburgh: 1822. Octavo.*

PHAETON or, the fatal divorce. A tragedy. As it is acted at the Theatre Royal. In imitation of the Antients. With some reflections on a book [by Jeremy Collier] call'd, A short view of the immorality and profaneness of the English stage. [By Charles GILDON.]

London, 1698. Quarto.*

PHAETON or the first fable of the second book of Ovid's Metamorphoses burlesqu'd. [By William MESTON.] Edinburgh: M.DCC.XX. Duodecimo. Pp. 32.* [D. Laing.]

PHANTASMAGORIA of fun. Edited and illustrated by Alfred Crowquill. [Alfred Henry FORRESTER.] In two volumes.

London 1843. Duodecimo.* PHANTASMAGORIA; or, sketches of life and literature. [By Maria Jane JEWSBURY.] In two volumes.

London: 1825. Octavo.*

Dedication to Wordsworth signed M. J. J. PHANTASMION. [By Sara COLRIDGE.]

London 1837. Octavo. Pp. 387.* PHANTOM (the) cruiser. Edited by Lieut. Warneford, R.N. author of "Tales of the coast guard," "Running the blockade," "The jolly boat," etc. etc. etc. [William RUSSELL.] Never before printed.

London MDCCCLXV. Octavo. Pp. 1. b. t. 233.*

PHANTOM fortune A novel By the author of "Lady Audley's secret," etc. etc. etc. [Mary Elizabeth BRADDON, now Mrs Maxwell.] In three volumes. London 1883. Octavo.* PHARISEE'S (the) council. A sermon [on Joh. xi. ver. 47] preach'd before their Majesties in their chappel at Whitehall, the Friday after Passion-Sunday April the 6th, 1688. By J. D. of the

Society of Jesus. [John DORMER.]
Permissu superiorum.

London, 1688. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 32.* PHASES and fallacies of society as it is. By the author of "The mind its sustenance and solace." [Charles FORD.] London: 1859. Octavo. Pp. xv. 428. 1.* [Adv. Lib.]

PHEBE; or the beggar's wedding an opera, in one act, as it is performed at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane by his Majesty's servants. [By Charles COFFEY.]

London: 1729. Octavo.
Dram.]

[W., Biog.

This play was published the same year with the author's name, having the title of "The beggar's wedding," the word Phebe being left out.

PHEMIE Keller. A novel. By F. G. Trafford, author of "George Geith," "City and suburb," "Maxwell Drewitt," "Too much alone," "World and the Church," "Race for wealth." [Mrs J. H. RIDDELL.] In three volumes. London: 1866. Octavo.*

PHEMIE Millar; by the author of "The Kinnears." [Henrietta KEDDIE.] In three volumes.

London: 1854. Octavo.* PHILADELPHUS, or a defence of brutes, and the Brutans history. Written by R. H. [Richard HARVEY.] London: 1593. Quarto. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

PHILANAX Anglicus: or a christian caveat for all kings, princes and prelates, how they entrust a sort of pretended Protestants of integrity or suffer them to commix with their respective governments. Shewing planly from the principles of all their predecessours, that it is impossible to be at the same time Presbyterians, and not rebells. With a compendious draught of their porctures and petigree done to the life, by their own doctors dead hands, perfectly delineating their birth, breeding, bloody practices, and prodigious theorems against monarchy. Faithfully published by T. B. Gent. [Thomas Bellamy, i.e. Sir Henry JANSON.]

London, 1663. Octavo.* [Wood, Athen.
Oxen., iv. 139.]

This work was published anonymously be-
fore 1663, and taken mainly from a book
entitled Jerusalem and Babel, q.v. The
edition above was corrected and added to

by Henry Iänson, and subscribed Thomas Bellamy.

PHILANDER. A dramatic pastoral. By the author of The female Quixote. [Charlotte LENNOX, née Ramsay.] London: 1758. Octavo.

IAEAAHNIKA or, poetic translations, with an introduction on the condition and prospects, social, religious, and literary, of the Greek nation. By a Scottish Philhellen. [Edward MASSON.] [In two parts.]

Edinburgh: 1852. Octavo.* [A. Jervise.] Each part has a separate pagination. PHILEMON.

[By Rev. Thomas PHILLIPS, formerly a Jesuit, afterwards one of the Canons of Tongres, author of the Life of Cardinal Pole.] Printed for the author. 1761. Octavo. [W., Martin's Cat.]

PHILEMON to Hydaspes; relating a conversation with Hortensius, upon the subject of false religion. [By Henry COVENTRY.]

London: MDCCXXXVI.
Lib.]

Octavo. [Adv.

The title page is adorned with a vignette engraved by Vandergucht after Gravelot. Four other parts were afterwards published, the last of which appeared in 1744.

PHILIP Colville; or, a covenanter's story. Unfinished. By the author of "The decision," "Father Clement," &c. &c. [Grace KENNEDY.] Edinburgh: M. DCC.XXV. Duodecimo.* PHILIP Paternoster. A tractarian love story. By an Ex-Puseyite. [Henry Nutcombe OXENHAM.] In two vol

umes.

London: 1858. Octavo.*

PHILO answered; his letter to the paper called "The Christian Advocate," thoroughly dissected, and his anti-scriptural tenets clearly refuted, from the Scriptures of truth. [By Henry MARTIN.]

London: 1836. Octavo. 11⁄2 sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 222.] PHILO-Theodosius; or, a new edition of Theodosius. With a new character of Mr Burke. To which are added, for the convenience of gentlemen disposed by duty or inclination to become perfect masters of the subject a series of propositions. On the nature of establishments, civil and religious. Containing the sum and substance of

all that has ever been advanced on the subject of the Test and Corporation Acts, in a few clear, concise, and distinct axioms of civil policy, so methodically digested, that a complete view of the question may be obtained at first sight. By an old M.P. [Philip WITHERS.]

1790. Octavo. Pp. 31. [Watt, Bib. Brit. Mon. Rev., ii. 108.]

PHILOBIBLON, a treatise on the love of books: by Richard de Bury, Bishop of Durham. Written in MCCCXLIV, and translated from the first edition, MCCCCLXXIII. With some collations. [By J. B. INGLIS.]

London: MDCCCXXXII. Octavo. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., p. 330.] PHILOCHRISTUS

Memoirs of a

disciple of the Lord. [By Edwin Abbott ABBOTT.]

London 1878. Octavo. Pp. xi. 440.* PHILOCOTHONISTA, or, the drunkard, opened, dissected, and anatomised. [By Thomas HEYWOOD.] London, 1635. Quarto. Pp. 8. b. t. 91.* 'This book was, in all probability, written by Thomas Heywood, though it is not mentioned in Langbaine's list of his works. See the signature to the author's poem in his book. The signature is Tho: Fænilignum. A short poem "Vpon the frontispiece" is signed T. H.

It was reprinted in 1650. 18°. in a mutilated form, under the title of "The eighth liberal science, or a new-found art and order of drinking, &c."-MS. note in the Bodl. copy in the handwriting of Douce. PHILOCTETES: a metrical drama, after the antique. [By William P. LANCASTER, M.A.]

London: 1866. Octavo.* PHILOCTETES in Lemnos. A drama, in three acts. To which is prefixed, a Green room scene, exhibiting a sketch of the present theatrical taste: inscribed, with due deference, to the managers of Covent-Garden and Drury-Lane Theatres, by their humble servant Oxoniensis. [Thomas MONRO.]

London: MDCCXcv. Octavo. Pp. xi. 100.1 [Gent. Mag., Oct. 1815, p. 378.] PHILODAMUS. A tragedy. As it was acted at the Theatre-Royal, Covent-Garden, the 14th December, 1782. [By Thomas BENTLEY.]

London: N. D. Quarto. Pp. vii. 64.* [Biog. Dram.]

PHILOLOGICAL (a) essay; or, reflections on the death of free-thinkers. With the characters of the most eminent persons of both sexes, ancient and modern, that died pleasantly and unconcern'd. By Monsieur D. [André François Bourreau DESLANDES] of the Royal Academy of Sciences in France, and author of the Poetae rusticantis literatum otium. Translated [Abel from the French by Mr. BBOYER.] With additions by the author, now in London, and the translator.

London: 1713. Octavo. Pp. 6. b. t. 128.* [Brit. Mus.]

PHILOLOGICALL commentary, or, an illustration of the most obvious and usefull words in the law. With their distinctions and diverse acceptations, as they are found as well in reports ancient and modern, as in records, and memorials never printed. Usefull for all young students of the law. By E. L. [Edward LEIGH] Gentleman, sometimes of the Middle Temple. London, 1652. Duodecimo.*

PHILOMORUS. A brief examination of the Latin poems of Sir Thomas More. [By John MARSDEN.] London MDCCCXLII. Octavo. Pp. 78.* [Manchester Free Lib. Cat., p. 454.] PHILOSOPHER (the) in Bristol. [By William COMBE.] In two volumes. 1776. Octavo. [Gent. Mag., May 1852, p. 467. Mon. Rev., Iv. 238.]

PHILOSOPHER (the) in three conver-
sations. [By David WILLIAMS.]
London: 1771. Octavo. [Gent. Mag.,
July 1816, p. 87. Mon. Rev., Jan. 1771,
P. 35, and p. 493 of same volume.]
PHILOSOPHER'S (the) opera. [By
John MACLAURIN, Lord Dreghorn.]
[Edinburgh, 1757.] Octavo. Pp. vi. 23.*
PHILOSOPHIC Venus, an ethic epistle,
addressed to a young nobleman. With
notes and illustrations. [By
DORSET.]

London, 1775. Quarto. [Watt, Bib. Brit.
Mon. Rev., lii. 552.]

PHILOSOPHIC (the) whim; or astronomy. A farce, &c. &c. By the author of Dramatic genius. [Paul HIFFERNAN.]

London: 1774. Quarto. [Biog. Dram.
Mon. Rev., lii. 269.]

PHILOSOPHICAL (a) and chymical

analysis of antimony: giving a rational account of the nature, principles, and properties of that celebrated drug, its various chymical preparations, and particularly, one that is not only an effectual cure for the present distemper among the cattle, but a preservative from their being infected. With directions how to manage them while under cure. And several critical remarks on the modern authors who have treated of antimony. By an eminent physician. The second [Peter SHAW, M.D.] edition.

London: MDCCXLVII. Octavo. Pp. 88. b. t. 2.* [Gent. Mag., xvii. 348.] PHILOSOPHICAL (a) and political history of the settlements and trade of the Europeans in the East and West Indies. Translated from the French [of William Thomas Francis Raynal] by J. Justamond, M.A. In four vol

umes.

London: 1776. Octavo. [W.] PHILOSOPHICAL collections, containing an account of such physical, anatomical, optical, or other mathematical and philosophical experiments and observations as have lately come to the publishers hands. As also an account of some books of this kind lately published. [Edited by Robert HOOKE, F.R.S.]

London: 1679-82. Quarto. [W.] Seven numbers; no more published. PHILOSOPHICAL conjectures on aereal influences, the probable origin of diseases, with an unusual cure in the scurvy. Address'd to Dr Shaw, by E-m-d L-tt-n. [Edmund LITTON.] London: 1747. Octavo. Pp. 57. [W.] PHILOSOPHICAL (a) dialogue concerning decency. To which is added a critical and historical dissertation on places of retirement for necessary occasions, together with an account of the vessels and utensils in use amongst the ancients, being a lecture read before a society of learned antiquaries. By the author of the Dissertation on barley wine. [Samuel ROLLESTON, M.A.]

London, MDCCLI. Quarto. Pp. 47. 1.* PHILOSOPHICAL (a) discourse on the nature of dreams, translated from the SAALFIELD, German of [Rev.

minister at Lutzen, Sommerren.] London: 1764. Octavo. [Watt, Bib. Brit. Crit. Rev., xvii. 157.]

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