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ROCKITE (the) an Irish story. By Charlotte Elizabeth, author of Osric, The system, Consistency, &c. &c. [Mrs TONNA.]

London: M DCCC XXIX. Duodecimo. Pp. 286.*

RODENHURST: or, the church and the manor. By E. M. S. [Elizabeth M. STEWART.] In three volumes. London: MDCCCXLV. Duodecimo.* RODONDO, or the state jugglers. In three cantos. [By Hugh DALRYMPLE.] 1763-70. [N. and Q., June 24, 1854, p. 589.]

ROGER Widdrington [Roger PRESTON]s last reioynder to Mr. Thomas Fitz-Herberts Reply concerning the oath of allegiance, and the Popes power to depose princes: wherein all his arguments, taken from the lawes of God, in the old and new Testament, of nature, of nations, from the canon and ciuill law, and from the Popes breues, condemning the oath, and the cardinalls decree, forbidding two of Widdringtons bookes are answered: also many replies and instances of Cardinall Bellarmine in his Schulckenius, and of Leonard Lessius in his Singleton are confuted, and diuers cunning shifts of Cardinall Peron are discouered. Permissu superiorum. Pp. 28. b. t. 645.*

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1619. Quarto.

ROGUE (the) or the Life of Guzman de Alfarache. Written in Spanish by Matheo Aleman, servant to his Catholike Majestie and borne in Sevill. [Translated by James MABBE.] Oxford, 1630. Folio. [W]

The Dedication to "Don Juan Estrangwayes" (in Italian) is signed "Don Diego Puede-Ser; de Santa Maria Magdalena.' ROKE'S wife. A novel. In three volumes. By Kenner Deene, author of "Little Miss Fairfax," "The schoolmaster of Alton," &c. [Charlotte SMITH.] Second edition. London: 1868. Duodecimo.*

ROLLICKING (a) tour in Ireland. By Rag, Tag, and Bobtail. [James Cameron LEES, D.D.]

Paisley 1877. Octavo. Pp. 4. 103.* ROLLICKING (a) tour in the land of the Gael. By Rag, Tag, and Bobtail. With life at Tobermory. [By James Cameron LEES, D.D.]

Paisley 1878. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. 103.*

ROMA antiqua et recens: or, the conformity of ancient and modern ceremonies, shewing from indisputable testimonies that the ceremonies of the Church of Rome are borrowed from the pagans. [By Pierre MUSSARD.] Translated from the French, by James Du Pré.

London. 1732. Octavo. [Mendham Collection Cat., p. 215.]

ROMA illustrata; or a description of the most beautiful pieces of painting, sculpture, and architecture at and near Rome. [By Robert SAMBER.] London: 1723. Octavo. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., p. 2182.]

ROMAN (the). A dramatic poem. By Sydney Yendys. [Sydney DOBELL.] London: 1850. Octavo.*

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ROMAN-Catholick doctrines no novelties: or an answer to Dr. Pierce's court-sermon, mis-call'd The primitive rule of reformation. By S. C. [Serenus, or Hugh Paulin de CRESSY] a Roman-Catholick.

N. P. M DC LX III. Octavo.* ROMAN-Catholick principles, in reference to God and the king, explained in a letter fo a friend, and now made publick, to shew the connexion between the said principles, and the late Popish plot. By a well-wisher of his countrey. James CORKER.]

London, 1680. Quarto. Pp. 12. b. t.* [Bodl.] Letter signed M. B.

"James Corker, O. S. B., a condemned prisoner in Newgate, the authour."-MS. note by Wood.

ROMAN (the) Church's devotions vindicated from Doctour Stillingfleet's misrepresentation. By O. N., a catholick. [Serenus CRESSY.]

N. P. 1672. Octavo. Pp. 114. [Jones'
Peck, ii. 422.]

Attributed to Abraham Woodhead.
[Mendham Collection Cat., p. 331.]

ROMAN conversations; or, a short

description of the antiquities of Rome, and the characters of many eminent Romans. Intermixed with references to classical authors and various moral reflections; in a supposed conversation between some English gentlemen at Rome. [By Joseph WILCOCKS.] In two volumes.

London: M DCC XCII. Octavo.*

A second edition, with the author's name, and a title differing a little from the above, was afterwards published.

ROMAN forgeries or a true account of false records discovering the impostures and counterfeit antiquities of the Church of Rome. By a faithful son of the Church of England. [Thomas TRAHERNE, B.D.]

London, 1673. Octavo. Pp. 31. b. t. 316.* [Watt, Bib. Brit. Jones' Peck, i. 232.]

ROMAN tradition examined, as it is urged as infallible against all men's senses, reason, the Holy Scripture, the tradition and present judgment of the far greatest part of the universal Church, in the point of transubstantiation. In answer to a book called A rational discourse of transubstantiation. [By Richard BAXTER.]

Printed in the year, 1676. Quarto. Pp. 73. b. t.*

ROMANCE and reality. By L. E. L. author of "The improvisatrice,' "The Venetian bracelet," &c. &c. &c. [Letitia Elizabeth LANDON.] In three volumes.

London 1831. Duodecimo.* ROMANCE (the) of a dull life By the author of "Morning clouds" and "The afternoon of life." [Mrs PENNY.] London 1861. Octavo. Pp. 419. b. t.* ROMANCE (the) of common life. By "Waters." [William RUSSELL.] London [1861.] Octavo.

ROMANCE (the) of Gargantua and Pantagruel, translated from the French of Dr. Francis Rabelais, by Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromarty, Knight. Reprinted from the original editions. [Edited, with introductory notice and life, by Theodore MARTIN.]

Edinburgh: M. DCCC.XXXVIII. Quarto. Pp. xxx. 501.* [On the authority of the editor.] Introductory notice signed T. M. ROMANCE (the) of Octavian, Emperor of Rome, abridged from a manuscript

in the Bodleian Library. [By John Josias CONYBEARE.]

Oxford, 1809. Quarto. Pp. vi. b. t. 66.* ROMANCE (the) of the forest: interspersed with some pieces of poetry. By the authoress of "A Sicilian romance," &c. [Mrs. RADCLIFFE, née Anne Ward.] In three volumes. London: M.DCC. XCI. Duodecimo.* [Dyce Cat., ii. 213.] ROMANCE

readers and romance writers, a satirical novel. By the author of a Private history of the Court of England. [Mrs S. GREEN.] 1810. Duodecimo.

ROMANCES of real life. By the author
of "Hungarian tales." [Mrs Catherine
Frances GORE.] In three volumes.
London 1829. Duodecimo.*
ROMANISM an apostate Church. By
Non Clericus. [— COTTLE.]
London 1852. Octavo.*
:

[Adv. Lib.]

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London 1859. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. 406.* ROMANTIC (the) Scottish ballads; their epoch and authorship. [By Robert CHAMBERS.]

N. P. N. D. Octavo. Pp. 46.* [A. Jervise.] ROME a la mode. Or the true sentiments of the court and cardinals there concerning religion and the Gospell, as they are delivered by Cardinal Palavicini in his History of the Council of Trent. Written originally in French by one of that communion [Jean LE NOIR, Doctor of the Sorbonne], and now translated into English.

London, 1678. Octavo. Pp. 46. b. t. 258.* With the exception of the title, the above work is identical with The new politick lights of modern Romes church-government,

q.v.

ROME; a poem. In two parts. [By John CHALONER.]

London: 1821. Octavo. Pp. 146. b. t.* [N. and Q., 5 March 1864, p. 204.]

ROME and the abbey: the sequel to, and by the author of, Geraldine: a tale of conscience. [E. C. AGNEW.] London: 1849. Octavo.*

ROME and the early Christians being letters of Lucius M. Piso [W. WARE] from Rome to Fausta the daughter of Gracchus at Palmyra. Republished from Chambers' People's editions.

London and Edinburgh. 1861. Octavo. Pp. 416.* [Bodl.]

ROME, as it was under paganism; and as it became under the popes. [By John MILEY, D.D.] In two volumes. London: M DCC XLIII. Octavo.*

ROME, in the ninteenth century; containing a complete account of the ruins of the ancient city, the remains of the middle ages, and the monuments of modern times. With remarks on the fine arts, on the state of society, and on the religious ceremonies, manners, and customs, of the modern Romans. In a series of letters written during a residence at Rome, in the years 1817 and 1818. [By Charlotte A. EATON, née Waldie.] In three volumes. Edinburgh: 1820. Octavo.*

ROME, Naples, and Florence, in 1817. Sketches of the present state of society, manners, arts, literature, &c. in these celebrated cities, by the Count de Stendahl. [L. Alex. Cés. BEYLE.]

London 1818. Octavo.*

ROMEO and Juliet; or, the shaming

of the true! An atrocious outrage. Perpetrated at Oxford, by the St John's College amateurs, during Commemoration, 1868. [By Edward NOLAN.] Oxford: 1868. Octavo. Pp. 31.*

ROMES glory: or, a collection of divers miracles wrought by Popish saints, both during their lives and after their deaths. Collected out of their own authors, for information of all truehearted Protestants. Together with a prefatory discourse, declaring the impossibility and folly of such vain impostures. [By Gilbert BURNET, D.D.] London: 1673. Duodecimo. Pp. 6. b. t. 136.* [Mendham Collection Cat., p. 51.] ROME'S master-piece, or the grand conspiracy of the Pope and his jesuited instruments to extirpate the Protestant religion, re-establish Popery, . . . revealed out of conscience to Andreas ab Habernfeld by an agent sent from Rome

into England by Cardinal Barbarino. [By William PRYNNE.]

London, 1643. Quarto. Pp. 36. ROMISH (the) horseleech: or, an impartial account of the intolerable charge of popery to this nation, in an historical remembrance of some of those prodigious summs of money heretofore extorted from all degrees during the exercise of the Papal-power here. To which is annexed an Essay of the supremacy of the King of England. [By Thomas STAVELY.]

London, 1674. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] Attributed to William Stanley, D.D. [Lowndes, Brit. Lib., p. 1084.]

ROMOLA. By George Eliot, author of "Adam Bede," "The mill on the Floss," "Silas Marner," and "Scenes of clerical life." [Marian EVANS.] In three volumes.

London: M DCCC LXIII. Octavo.*

ROMP (the). A musical entertainment. In two acts. As performed at the Theatres Royal. [By Isaac BICKERSTAFFE.] A new edition.

London 1789. Octavo.* [Biog. Dram.] ROMULUS and Hersilia; or, the Sabine war. A tragedy acted at the Dukes Theatre. [By Ralph SCHOMBERG.] London, 1683. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 62. 2.* [Biog. Dram.]

RONA (the) Pass; or Englishmen in the Highlands. By Erick Mackenzie. [Mrs Millicent GROGAN.] In three volumes.

London 1857. Octavo. [Brit. Mus.] ROOK'S (the) garden Essays and sketches By Cuthbert Bede. [Edward BRADLEY.]

London 1865. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. 295.* ROOKWOOD: a romance. [By William Harrison AINSWORTH.] In three volumes.

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abominable, irregular, pitiful, stinking priests. [By R. WALLIS.]

1668. Quarto. [Reeves and Turner's Cat., July, 1874.]

ROPE'S (a) end for hempen monopolists;

or, a dialogue between a broker, a ropemaker, and the ghost of Jonas Hanway, Esq. In which are represented the pernicious effects of the rise in the price of hemp. By a halter-maker at the service of all monopolists. [Joseph REED.]

1786. Octavo. [Biog. Dram. Mon. Rev., Ixxvi. 72.]

ROSA Grey; or the officer's daughter. [By Christiana Jane DOUGLAS.] In three volumes.

London: 1857. Octavo.

ROSA Lindesay; the light of Kilmain.

By M. H., author of 'The children of the Great King,' 'Labourers in the vineyard,''The red velvet Bible,' etc. etc. [Matilda HORSBURGH.]

Edinburgh: N. d. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. 170.*

ROSA the work girl. A tale by a young lady. [Margaret PERCIVAL.] Dublin 1847. Duodecimo.

ROSABEL, a novel, in three volumes. By the authoress of Constance. [Mrs A. T. THOMSON.]

London: MDCCCXXXV. Duodecimo.*

ROSALIE, a Swisse relique, with other poems. [By Dr BEATTIE of Cockermouth.]

London: 1821. Octavo. Pp. x. I. 88.* ROSALIE; or, the castle of Montalabretti. [By Henrietta RHODES.] In four volumes.

London: 1811. Duodecimo. [Gent. Mag.,
April 1817, p. 374. Mon. Rev., lxvii.

320.]

ROSALINE De Vere. [By Henry Augustus DILLON - LEE, Viscount Dillon.] In two volumes.

London: 1824. Octavo.*

ROSALINE Woodbridge. [By Mrs H. M. JONES.] In three volumes. London: 1827. Duodecimo. ROSALYND E. Euphues Golden Legacie; found after his death in his cell at Silexedra. Bequeathed to Philantus sonnes noursed vp with their father in England. Fetcht from the Canaries. By T. L. [Thomas LODGE] Gent.

London: : 1590. Quarto. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.] ROSAMOND An opera. Humbly inscribed to Her Grace the Duchess of Marlborough. [By Joseph ADDISON.] London: 1707. Quarto. Pp. 36. [Biog. Dram.]

ROSARY (the) Magazine. [A monthly periodical commenced in 1867. Edited until 1870 by Robert R. SUFFIELD and C. WILBERFORCE.]

London and Derby: 1867. Octavo. ROSCIAD (the). By the author. [Charles CHURCHILL.]

London: 1761. Quarto. [Watt, Bib. Brit. Crit. Rev., xi. 209.]

ROSCIUS Anglicanus, or an historical review of the stage: after it had been suppres'd by means of the late unhappy civil war, begun in 1641, till the time of King Charles the II.s restoration in May 1660. Giving an account of its rise again; of the time and places the governours of both the companies first erected their theatres. The names of the principal actors and actresses, who perform'd in the chiefest plays in each house. With the names of the most taking plays; and modern poets. For the space of 46 years, and during the reign of three kings and part of our present Sovereign Lady Queen Anne, from 1660, to 1706. [By Robert

DOWNES.

London, 1708. [Bodl.]

Octavo. Pp. 52. b. t.*

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ROSE (the) its cultivation, use, and symbolical meaning in antiquity. Translated from the German. By O. L. [Octave DELEPIERRE.]

London: 1856.

Octavo. Title, dedication, 'A Madame van de Weyer,' I leaf; PP. 35. [W.]

ROSE (the) of Ashurst. By the author of "Emilia Wyndham," "Two old men's tales," "Evelyn Marston," &c. [Mrs Anne MARSH.] In three volumes. London: 1857. Octavo.*

ROSEMARY & Bayes: or, animadver

sions upon a treatise [by Andrew Marvell] call'd, The rehearsall transprosed. In a letter to a friend in the countrey. [By Henry STUBBE.] London, 1672. Quarto. Pp. 22. b. t.* ROSEWARN. A novel. By C. Sylvester. [Lady WOOD.] In three volumes.

London: 1866. Octavo. [Brit. Mus.] ROSINA. A comic opera in two acts. Performed at the theatre-royal, in Covent-Garden. [By Frances Moore, afterwards Mrs BROOKE.]

London: MDCCLXXXIII. 46. 2.*

Octavo, Pp.

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In addition to Rostang, there are Minor poems occupying from p. 53 to the end. ROTA (the): or, a model of a free-state, or equall common-wealth: once proposed and debated in brief, and to be again more at large proposed to, and debated by a free and open society of ingenious gentlemen. [By James HARRINGTON.] London, 1659. Quarto. Pp. 29. b. t.* [Bodl.]

"This goes under the name of Ja: Harrington."-Wood.

ROTHELAN; a romance of the English histories. By the author of Annals of the parish, Ringan Gilhaize, The spaewife, &c. [John GALT.] In three volumes.

Edinburgh: 1824. Duodecimo.* ROTHLEY Temple: a poem, in three cantos. [By Dr GISBORNE.]

London: 1815. Octavo. Pp. 88. [Gent. Mag., Dec. 1815, p. 521.]

ROUÉ (the) In three volumes. [By Samuel BEAZLEY.]

London: 1828. Duodecimo.* [Adv. Lib.] ROUGE et noir, Versailles and other poems. [By Sir John Dean PAUL, Bart.]

London: 1821. Duodecimo. [Lowndes,
Bibliog. Man, p. 2132.

ROUGH and smooth. A novel. By the author of "Recollections of a French Marchioness." [Sybil SCOTT.] In three volumes.

London. 1849. Duodecimo.* ROUGH (a) draft of a new model at sea. [By George SAVILE, Marquis of Halifax.]

London, 1694. Quarto. Pp. 30.* Reprinted in "Miscellanies by the most noble George Lord Savile, late Marquis and Earl of Halifax," 3rd ed. London,

MDCCXVII. 12mo.

ROUGH pencillings of a rough trip to Rangoon in 1846. [By Colesworth GRANT.]

Calcutta: 1853. Quarto. [Adv. Lib.] ROUGH (a) sketch of modern Paris; or, letters on society, manners, public curiosities, and amusements, in that capital, written during the last two months of 1801 and the first five of 1802. [By J. G. LEMAISTRE].

London: 1803. Octavo. [Mon. Rev., April 1803, p. 377; Oct. 1806, p. 161.] "ROUGHING it." By Mark Twain, author of "The celebrated jumping frog." [Samuel L. CLEMENS.] Copyright edition.

London: N. D. Octavo. Pp. xii. 244.* ROUND about the Minster green: stories of the boys and girls who lived there. By Ascott R. Hope, author of “A peck of troubles," "Stories of Whitminster," "The holiday task," "A book about boys," etc. [Robert Hope MONCRIEFF.] Eight full page cuts.

Edinburgh: N. D. [1876.] Octavo. Pp. viii. 310.

ROUT (the). A farce of two acts; as it is perform'd at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. [By Sir John HILL.] London: M DCC LVIII. Octavo.* [Biog. Dram.]

ROUT (the): or, a sketch of modern life.

From an academic in the metropolis to his friend in the country. [By Richard GRAVES.]

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