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PSALMS in metre, newly translated, and allowed by the General Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland. With twenty-three select psalm tunes, particularly adapted to the subject of the Psalms to which they are set [by MOORE, professor of music at Glasgow]. Glasgow: 1773. Octavo. [W] PSALMS (the) of David, a new and improved version [from the Swedish of John Adam TINGSTADIUS, D.D.] London: 1794. Octavo. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

PSALMS (the) of David, attempted in verse, regular, irregular, in the way of paraphrase, &c. By Senex, a clergyman. [Edward ROWLAND.]

Carlisle 1826. Octavo.*

PSALMS (the) of David, metrically paraphrased for the inmates of the cottage. By a Cambridge Master of Arts. [Edward FEILDE.]

London: M. DCCC.XLIV. Octavo.* PSALTER (the), arranged for chanting: as used in the college of St. Columba. [By Edwin MONK.]

London: M.D.CCC. XLVI. Octavo. Pp. v. i. 266.*

PSALTER (the) in its original form : or the Book of Psalms reduced to lines, in an easy and familiar style, and a kind of blank verse of unequal measures, answering for the most part to the original lines, as supposed to contain each a sentence, or some entire part of one. With arguments pointing out the general design of each Psalm; and with notes, accounting for some passages in the translation; opening and explaining also, in some places, the prophetic views. To which is added, a like plain translation of the last words of David, with notes. By the author of Thoughts on the Hebrew titles of the Psalms.

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PSALTER (the) of David, in Englishe, purely and faithfully translated after the texte of Feline [Martin BUCER] every psalme havynge his argument before declaring brefly thentente and substance of the whole psalme.

Argentine, by Francis Foye. 1530. Octavo. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.] PSALTER (the) of David with titles and collects according to the matter of each psalme. [By Christopher, 1st Lord HATTON.]

Oxford, 1644. Octavo. Pp. 18. b. t. 392. 63.* [Bodl.]

"These Psalmes with the devotions at the end were collected and published by Christop Ld Hatton. But written by Dr Jer. Taylor of Alls. Coll."-MS. note by Wood. Eighth edition, under the name of Jeremy Taylor. See Taylor (by Heber) xv. p. 93. Tenth edition anonymously.

PSALTER (the) or Psalms of David; in English verse; by a member of the University of Oxford. [John KEBLE.] Adapted, for the most part, to tunes in common use; and dedicated, by permission, to the Lord Bishop of Oxford.

Octavo.*

or

Oxford, MDCCCXXXIX. PSALTER (the), or seven ordinary hours of prayer according to the use of the church of Sarum, and the hymns, antiphons and orisons collects for the principal festivals and seasons; also the Litany and vigils of the dead, translated and arranged for private or coenobial use, with explanatory notes and comments. [Edited by John David CHAMBERS.]

London: 1852. Quarto. [W] Signed J. D. C.

PSALTER (the), with the Gregorian tones adapted to the several Psalms. As also the Canticles in the PrayerBook, and the Creed of St. Athanasius. [By William Beadon HEATHCOTE.] Oxford, MDCCCXLV, Octavo. Pp. xv. I. 215.* Preface signed W. B. H. PSVED O-Scriptvrist (the). treatise wherein is proved, that the wrytten word of God (though most sacred, reuerend, and diuine) is not the sole iudge of controuersies, in fayth and religion. Agaynst the prime sectaries of these tymes, who contend

Or a

to maintayne the contrary. Written by N. S. priest, and doctour of diuinity. [Sylvester NORRIS.] Devided into two parts. And dedicated to the Right Honorable, and Reuerend Iudges of England, and the other graue sages of the law.

Permissu superiorum. M. DC. XXIII. Quarto. Pp. 14. b. t. 147.* [Bodl.]

PSYCHÆ; or, songs of butterflies, by T. H. Bayly Esq., attempted in Latin rhymes (to the same airs); with a few additional trifles [by Archdeacon Francis WRANGHAM].

Malton 1828. Octavo. Pp. 46. [W., Martin's Cat.]

PSYCHE debauch'd, a comedy, as it was acted at the Theatre-Royal. T. D. [Thomas DUFFET.]

By

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London: 1805. Duodecimo. [W., Martin's Cat.]

ΨΥΧΩΔΙΑ Platonica: or a Platonicall song of the soul, consisting of foure severall poems; viz. ΨΥΧΟΖΩΙΑ. ΨΥΧΑΘΑΝΑΣΙΑ. ΑΝΤΙΨΥΧΟΠΑΝΝΥΧΙΑ. ΑΝΤΙΜΟΝΟΨΥΧΙΑ. Hereto is added a paraphrasticall interpretation of the answer of Apollo consulted by Amelius, about Plotinus soul departed this life. By H. M. Master of arts, and Fellow of Christs Colledge in Cambridge. [Henry MORE.]

Cambridge 1642. Octavo.

Each of the above poems has a separate title and pagination, and the preface to each is signed H, M. The Paraphrasticall Interpretation, and the interpretation of the more unusual names or words that occur in the foregoing Poems, are unpaged. PSYCHOLOGICAL inquiries: in a series of essays, intended to illustrate the mutual relations of the physical organization and the mental faculties. [By Sir Benjamin Collins BRODIE.] London: 1854. Octavo. Pp. viii. 264.* Advertisement signed B. C. B.

The second edition has the author's name. PUBLIC (the) economy of Athens, in four books; to which is added, a dissertation on the silver-mines of Laurion. Translated from the German of Augustus Boeckh [by Sir George Cornewall LEWIS]. London, 1828. Octavo.*

The second edition, published in 1842, has the translator's name.

PUBLIC instruction and moral improvement. [By R. ASPLAND.]

:

London 1846. Octavo. Pp. 57.* [Manchester Free Lib. Cat., p. 24.]

PUBLIC (the) pearl; or, education the people's right and a nation's glory; in two popular lectures on state interference, and in three letters to Lord John Russell. Dedicated by permission to Lady John Russell, by Celatus. [ OWEN.]

London 1854. Octavo.*

PUBLIC records. A description of the contents, objects, and uses of the various works printed by authority of the Record Commission; for the advancement of historical and anti

quarian knowledge. [By Charles Purton COOPER.]

London 1831. Octavo. [W.] PUBLIC (the) school Latin grammar for the use of schools, colleges, and private students. [By B. H. KENNEDY.]

London 1871. Duodecimo. Pp. xix. 519.*

PUBLIC (the) school Latin primer. Edited with the sanction of the head masters of the public schools included in Her Majesty's Commission. [By Benjamin Hall KENNEDY, D.D.]

London: 1866. Duodecimo. Pp. iv. 162.* [Adv. Lib.]

PUBLIC (the) school matches, and those we meet there; ups and downs of a public school. By a Wykehamist. Frederick GALE.]

London: 1867. Octavo. Pp. 153. b. t.* Dedication signed F. G.

PUBLIC (the) school: showing how it fared with Johnny after he ran away from Dame Europa's. The playing fields. [By Edward Shirley KENNEDY.]

London: 1871. Duodecimo. Pp. 32.* [Bodl.]

PUBLICK spirit, illustrated in the life and designs of the Reverend Thomas Bray, D.D. late minister of St. Botolph without Aldgate. [By Samuel SMITH.]

London: MDCCXLVI. Octavo. Pp. 54. 1. [Manchester Free Lib. Cat., p. 657.] PUBLICK (the) spirit of the Tories,

manifested in the case of the Irish

Dean [Swift], and his man Timothy. [By Sir Richard STEELE.] London: 1714. Quarto. Pp. 12.*

PUBLICK (the) spirit of the Whigs: set forth in their generous encouragement of [Sir Richard Steele] the author of the Crisis with some observations on the seasonableness, candor, erudition, and style of that treatise. [By Jonathan SWIFT, assisted by Lord BOLINGBROKE.] The second edition.

London: MDCCXIV. Quarto. Pp. 45.* [Moule, Bib. Herald., p. 285.] PUBLICK (the) testimony of above 1600 Christian people against the Overture of the Assembly 1731, made more publick, and set in its due light. Being a full confutation of their arguments adduced for the divine right of popular elections. author of the Modest and humble inquiry. [George LOGAN.]

By the

Edinburgh: 1733. Octavo. Pp. 74.* PUBLIKE (a) conference betwixt the six Presbyterian ministers, and some Independent commanders: held at Oxford, on Thursday Novemb. 12. 1646. [By Robert WARING, M.A.]

Printed in the yeare, 1646. Quarto. Pp. 14. b. t.* [Bodl.]

PVBLIKE (a) declaration and solemne protestation of the free-men of England and Wales, against the illegall, intollerable, undoing grievance of freequarter. [By William PRYNNE.]

Printed in the yeare. 1648. Quarto. Pp. 9. b. t.* PUBLISHING (a) of the peace vpon earth, and of the gratious tyme and acceptable yeare of the Lorde, which is now in the last tyme; out of the peace of Jesu Christ, and out of his holie Spirit of loue; published by H. N. [Henry NICHOLAS] on the earth. Translated out of Base Almayne into English.

1574. Octavo. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

PUCELLE (la); or the Maid of Orleans. A poem in XXI cantos. From the French of M. de Voltaire; with the author's preface, and original notes. [Translated by Lady CHARLEVILLE.] In two volumes.

London: 1796-7. Octavo. [W., Martin's
Cat.]

PUCK: his vicissitudes, adventures, observations, conclusions, friendships,

and philosophies, related by himself, and edited by Ouida, author of 'Strathmore,' 'Idalia,' 'Tricotrin,' 'Under two flags,' &c. [Louise de LA RAMÉ.] In three volumes.

London: 1870. Octavo.*

PUFFIAD (the): a satire. [By Rev. Robert MONTGOMERY.]

London: 1828. Duodecimo.* PULPIT-conceptions, popular-deceptions: or, the grand debate resumed, in the point of prayer: wherein it appears that those free prayers so earnestly contended for have no advantage above the prescribed liturgie in publick administrations. Being an answer to the Presbyterian papers presented to the most reverend the Ld. Bishops at the Savoy upon that subject. [By Laurence WOMOCK, D.D.]

London, 1662. Quarto. Pp. 5. b. t. 63.* [Bodl.] PULPIT (the) cyclopædia; and Christian minister's companion. the author of "Sketches and skeletons

66

By

of sermons," Christian's daily portion," "Sermons for family reading," &c. &c. &c. [Jabez BURNS.] [In four volumes.]

London: 1844. Duodecimo.* [Brit. Mus.] PULPIT-fool (the). A satyr. [By John DUNTON.]

London: 1707. Quarto. [Brit. Mus.] PULPIT (the); or, a biographical and literary account of eminent popular preachers; interspersed with occasional clerical criticism. By Onesimus. [Peter L. COURTIER.] In three volumes.

London 1809, 1812, 1816. Octavo.* PULPIT-popery, true popery: being an answer to a book [by Gother] intituled, Pulpit-sayings: and in vindication of the Apology for the pulpits, and the stater of the controversie [W. Clagett] against the representer [J. Lovell By John WILLIAMS, Bishop of Chichester.]

London, MDCLXXXVIII. Quarto. Pp. 4. b. t. 72.* [Brit. Mus.]

PULPIT-sayings, or, the characters of the pulpit-papist examined. In answer to the Apology for the pulpits, and in vindication of the representer against the stater of the controversie. [By John GOTHER.]

REFSE

ΓΛΥ

London, 1688. Quarto. Pp. 14. b. t. 58. 1.* [Bodl.]

PULPIT studies; or, aids to preaching and meditation, chiefly narratives and facts. [By John STYLES, D.D.] London: 1839. Duodecimo. Pp. vi. 234.* PUMP (the). [By J. REID.]

[Glasgow.] CIɔ ɔ cccxxxv. Quarto. Pp. viii.* [D. Laing.]

Only twenty-three copies printed. PUNCH and Judy, with illustrations drawn and engraved by George Cruikshank. Accompanied by the dialogue of the puppet-show, an account of its origin, and of puppet-plays in England. [By John Payne COLLIER, F.S.A.] Second edition.

London: 1828. Octavo. Pp. 141. b. t.*

PUPIL (the) of pleasure. By Courtney
Melmoth. [Samuel Jackson PRATT.]
The second edition, corrected, and im-
proved. [In two volumes.]
London, 1777. Duodecimo.*
PURCHASE in the Church, etc.

By

"Promotion by merit." [William ANGUS.] Letters reprinted from the

Manchester Examiner.

Manchester: 1878. [Lib. Jour., iii. 237.] PVRGATORIES trivmph over hell, maugre the barking of Cerberus in Syr Edvvard Hobyes Counter-snarle. Described in a letter to the sayd knight, from I. R. authour of the answere vnto the Protestants pulpitbabels. [John FLOYD.]

Permissu superiorum, M. DC. XIII. Quarto. Pp. 13. b. t. 197.* [Bodl.]

PURGATORY prov'd by miracles: collected out of Roman - Catholick authors. With some remarkable histories relating to British, English, and Irish saints. With a preface concerning the miracles. [By Rev. Samuel JOHNSON.]

London: M DC LXXXVIII.
44. Jones' Peck, ii. 401.

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Quarto. Pp.

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subject in my new edition of Seven plays imputed to Shakspeare-1780."-M[alone]. PURITANISM revived; or methodism as old as the great rebellion. In a series of letters from a curate to his rector. [By Richard MANT.]

London: 1808. Octavo. Pp. iv. 96. [Watt, Brit. Bib. Brit. Crit., xxxii. 541.] PURITAN'S (the) grave. By the author of "The usurer's daughter." [William Pitt SCARGILL.] In three volumes. London 1833. Duodecimo.*

PURPLE (the) island, or the isle of man: together with Piscatorie eclogs and other poeticall miscellanies. By P. F. [Phineas FLETCHER.]

Printed by the printers to the Universitie of Cambridge. 1633. Quarto. Pp. 11. b. t. 181.*

PURPOSE (the) of God for man revealed in Christ Jesus. [By A. J. Scott, A.M., Principal of Owen's College, Manchester.]

Glasgow: 1841. Duodecimo. Pp. 12. [Darling, Cyclop. Bibl.]

PURSUIT (the) of knowledge under difficulties; illustrated by anecdotes. [By George Lillie CRAIK.] [Library of Entertaining Knowledge. 2 vols.]

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Done from the Latin original. [By Jacobus LEOTIUS.]

London: 1715. Quarto. Pp. 15. b. t.* PYRAMID (the) and the Bible, the rectitude of the one in accordance with the truth of the other. By a clergyman. [William MACKENZIE.]

Edinburgh: 1868. Octavo. Pp. xii. 116.* [Adv. Lib.]

PYRNA a commune; or, under the ice. [By Ellis J. DAVIS.]

London: 1875. Octavo. Pp. 142. b. t. 1.* [Bodl.]

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QUADRILATERAL (the). [By Charles MACKINNON, Joseph H. GIBBS, and Montgomerie RANKING.] London: 1865. Octavo.*

The dedication to Carleton Morgan Crawford is signed C. M., J. H. G., M. R. The writers request their friend to accept of their verses 66 as the gift of us three to you, the fourth angle of our Quadrilateral." QUAERES concerning the state of the Church of Scotland. [By David CALDERWOOD.]

Printed Anno. 1621. Octavo. 7 leaves unpaged.* [Adv. Lib.

QUESTIO quodlibetica, or a discourse whether it may bee lawfull to take vse for money. [By Sir Robert FILMER.] London, 1653. Duodecimo. Pp. 38. b. t. 150. [Bodl.]

QUAKER (the); a comic opera. As performed at the Theare[sic]-Royal in Drury-Lane. [By Charles DIBDIN.] London: MDCCLXXVII. Octavo.* [Biog. Dram.]

QUAKER (the) and Methodist compared, in an abstract of George Fox's Journal. With a copy of his last will and testament, and of the Reverend Mr George Whitefield's Journals. With historical notes. Humbly

recom

mended to the perusal of the Quakers and Methodists. [By Zachary GREY, LL.D.]

London: 1740. Octavo. 61⁄2 sh. [Smith, Bib. Anti-Quaker., pp. 42, 204.] QUAKER (the) converted: or, the burthensom-yoke made easie by the

Q.

knowledge of Jesus Christ crucified. Being a full and plain narrative, written by a young-man's own hand at Hartford, in his own words and phrases, who for some years was of the faith and principle of the Quakers: how (through the grace of God) he was converted to Christianity; with several dealings of Christ with his spirit afterwards. Some things likewise annexed by himself for the detecting of that delusion, and prevention of the growth of it. [By W. Dimsdale.]

London, 1673. Octavo. Pp. 14. b. t.
30.* [Bodl.]

The epistle dedicatory is signed Will.
Haworth. The narrative is signed W. D.

QUAKERISM (on); being a letter addressed to the Rev. Mr Bogue, minister of an Independent church at Gosport; and the Rev. Mr Horsey, minister of a Baptist church at Portsmouth. By an old sailor, appointed to make brine for children's rods, in Portsea. [Isaac CARTER, of Portsea.] London [1800.] Octavo. I sh. [Smith, Bib. Anti-Quaker., pp. 46, 103.] QUAKERISM no paganism: or, a friendly reply to W. R. [William Russel] his unfriendly discourse intituled, Quakerism is paganism. Shewing the insufficiency of what he hath written to unchristian the Quakers, and to render them as heathens and pagans to the people. By W. L. [William LODDINGTON] a lover of peace more than of parties.

London, 1674. Octavo.* [Wilson, Hist. of Diss. Ch., iii. 392. Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, ii. 128.]

QUAKERISM unmasked: comprising a glance at J. Wilkinson's "Quakerism examined." By Amicus. [William ALEXANDER, bookseller, York.]

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