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SKETCHES descriptive of Italy in the years 1816 and 1817, with a brief account of travels in various parts of France and Switzerland in the same years. In four volumes. [By Jane WALDIE, afterwards Mrs Watts.] London MDCCCXX. Octavo.* Bibliog. Man., p. 1173.] SKETCHES for an ecclesiology of the deaneries of Sparham and Taverham, in Norfolk; together with some more summary details of Ingworth deanery, in the same county. [By Caddy THOMAS.]

Norwich M. D. CCC. XLVI. Octavo. Pp. viii. 220.

*

A presentation copy to Dawson Turner, accompanied by a note signed by the author.

SKETCHES from St. George's Fields. By Giorgione di Castel Chiuso. [Peter BAILEY.]

London: 1820. Octavo.* [Gent. Mag., xcii. i. 347; xciii. i. 473.]

SKETCHES from the history of Pennsylvania, &c., intended for the information of that numerous class of

Christians who denounce war in general as a great evil; but who consider defensive war as allowable and unavoidable. [By William NAISH.] London: 1845. Duodecimo. 11⁄2 sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 107.] SKETCHES from Venetian history. [By Edward SMEDLEY.] Two] vol

umes.

London: MDCCCXXXI.-MDCCCXXXII. Octavo.*

The above form volumes xx. and xxxii. of the Family Library.

SKETCHES in Erris and Tyrawly. By the author of "Sketches in Ireland," "A tour in Connaught," &c. [Caesar OTWAY.]

Dublin MDCCCXLI. Duodecimo.* Preface signed C. O.

SKETCHES in Greece and Turkey: with the present condition and future prospects of the Turkish Empire. [By William Rathbone GREG.]

London: 1833. Octavo. Pp. vii. 2. 266.* [Macmillan's Mag., 9 June 1883.]

SKETCHES in Ireland: descriptive of interesting, and hitherto unnoticed districts in the North and South. [By Cæsar OTWAY.]

Dublin: M, DCCC, XXVII. Octavo.*

The letters of which this volume is composed are signed C. O.

SKETCHES in Scottish verse, and songs, from the Dundee Courier. [By Alexander LAING.]

Dundee: MDCCCXXVIII. Duodecimo. Pp. viii. 32.

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SKETCHES in the Pyrenees; with some remarks on Languedoc, Provence, and the Cornice. By the author of "Slight reminiscences of the Rhine,” and "The gossip's week." [Mary BODDINGTON.] In two volumes.

London: 1837. Duodecimo.*

SKETCHES in verse with prose illustrations. [By Richard POLWHELE.] London: 1796. Octavo. Pp. 156.

A second edition appeared in 1797, with the author's name.

SKETCHES of Cantabs. By John Smith (of Smith-Hall) Gent. John Delaware LEWIS.]

London 1849. Duodecimo.* [N. and Q., 2 May 1868, p. 408.]

SKETCHES of Christian life in England in the olden time. By the author of

"Chronicles of the Schönberg-Cotta family," &c. &c. [Mrs. CHARLES.] London: 1868. Octavo. Pp. 341.* SKETCHES of Corfù, historical and domestic; its scenery and natural productions: interspersed with legends and traditions. [By Frances MACLELLAN.]

London: 1835. Octavo.*

SKETCHES of country life and country

matters, by one of the old school. [Rev. W. B. L. HAWKINS.]

London. 1840. Duodecimo.* [Athen.
Cat.]

SKETCHES of Germany and the Germans, with a glance at Poland, Hungary, & Switzerland, in 1834, 1835, and 1836. By an Englishman resident in Germany. [Capt. Edmund SPENCER.] In two volumes. Second edition.

London 1836. Octavo.*

SKETCHES of history, politics and

manners, taken in Dublin and the north of Ireland in the autumn of 1810. [By John GAMBLE.]

1811. Octavo. [Watt, Bib. Brit. Mon. Rev., lxvi. 164.]

SKETCHES of India: written by an officer for fire-side travellers at home. [By Col. Moyle SHERER.] London: 1821. Octavo.* SKETCHES of Ireland sixty years ago. [By John Edward WALSH.]

Dublin MDCCCXLVII. Octavo. Fp. viii. 198.* [Adv. Lib.] Preface signed W. Ascribed to W. F. Wakeman. [Sig. Lib.] SKETCHES of Irish history, antiquities, religion, customs, and manners. By the author of "Three years in Italy." [Selina MARTIN.] With an introductory preface by Charlotte Elizabeth. [Mrs TONNA.]

Dublin: MDCCCXLIV. Octavo. Pp. viii. 340.* Introduction signed S. M.

SKETCHES of Irish political characters,

of the present day, shewing the parts
they respectively take on the question
of the Union, what places they hold,
their characters as speakers, &c. &c.
[By Henry M'DOUGALL.]

London: 1799. Octavo.* [N. and Q.,
July 1859, p. 59.]

SKETCHES of life among my ain folk.
By the author of Johnny Gibb of
Gushetneuk. [William ALEXANDER.]
Edinburgh 1875. Octavo. Pp. viii. 248.*

SKETCHES of Persia, from the journals of a traveller in the East. [By Sir John MALCOLM.] In two volumes. London: MDCCCXXVII. Octavo.* SKETCHES of the Edinburgh clergy of the Established Church of Scotland. [By John ANDERSON, Jun.]

Edinburgh M. DCCC. XXXII. Octavo.* SKETCHES of the history and antiquities of the parish of Stoke Newington, in the county of Middlesex. [By BROWN.]

London: 1783. Quarto. [W., Upcott.] SKETCHES of the history of man. [By Henry HOME, Lord Kames.] In two volumes.

Edinburgh: MDCCLXXIV. Quarto.* [Adv. Lib.]

SKETCHES of the Irish bar. No. I. Bethel a biography; or, 'Tis sixty years since. [By William Patrickson PIKE.]

No separate title-page. N. P. N, D. Octavo. Pp. 7.*

The Bench; the bar; &c. ParII. [By William Patrickson PIKE.] No separate title-page. N. P. N. D. Octavo. Pp. 17.*

SKETCHES of the lives and characters of eminent English civilians, with an historical introduction relative to the college of advocates, and an enumeration of the whole series of academic graduates admitted into that society, from the beginning of the reign of Henry VIII. to the close of the year 1803; by one of the members of the college. [Charles COOTE, LL.D.]

London 1804. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. vii. 140. 11.* [Bodl.]

SKETCHES of the lives of Correggio,
and Parmegiano. [By Rev. William
COXE, archdeacon of Wilts.]
London: 1823. Octavo.*

SKETCHES of the principal picturegalleries in England. With a criticism on "Marriage a-la-mode." [By William HAZLITT.]

London: 1824. Duodecimo.*
Mus.]

[Brit.

SKETCHES of truth, moral and religious, with reference to the alliance of Church and State. In two parts. 8 vols. [By COTES.]

Newcastle: 1808. Duodecimo. [Biog. Dict., 1816. Brit. Crit., xxxiii. 238.]

SKETCHES of young couples; with an urgent remonstrance to the gentlemen of England (being bachelors or widowers), on the present alarming crisis. By the author of "Sketches of young gentlemen." [Charles DICKENS.] With six illustrations by "Phiz."

London: MDCCCXL. Octavo. Pp. 92.* SKETCHES of young gentlemen. Dedicated to young ladies. [By Charles DICKENS. With six illustrations by "Phiz." Sixth edition.

London: MDCCCXXXVIII. Octavo. Pp. viii. 76.* [Forster's Life of Dickens, i. 128.] SKETCHES of young ladies: in which these interesting members of the animal kingdom are classified, according to their several instincts,habits, and general characteristics. By "Quiz.” [Edward CASWALL.] With six illustrations by "Phiz." Sixth edition. London: MDCCCXXXVIII. Octavo.* [N. and Q., May 1868, p. 514.]

SKETCHES on various subjects; moral, literary and political. By the author of The democrat. [Henry James PYE.]

London 1796. Octavo. Pp. 285. SKETCHES: or essays on various subjects. By Launcelot Temple Esq; [John ARMSTRONG, M.D.]

London: M DCC LVIII. Octavo. Pp. vii. 86.*

SKETCHES (the): three tales by the authors of "Amy Herbert," "The old man's home," and "Hawkstone." [Miss E. M. SEWELL, Rev. ADAMS, and Rev. William SEWELL.] London: 1848. Duodecimo.*

SKIALETHEIA. Or, a shadowe of truth, in certaine epigrams and satyres. [By Edward GUILPIN.]

At London: 1598. Quarto. No pagi

nation.

*

See Collins' "Reasons for a new edition of Shakespeare's works," 1841.

The above has been reprinted at the Beldornie press for E. V. Utterson, in MDCCCXLIII. Title taken from the reprint.

ΣΚΙΑΝΥΚΙΟΣ, The shadow of the night: containing two poeticall hymnes. Devised by G. W. [George CHAPMAN] Gent.

London: 1594. Quarto. Pp. 40. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

SKIMMER: (the), or the history of

Tanzai and Neadarne. [By CREBILLON.] [In two volumes.] London: M.DCC.XXXV. Duodecimo.* SLANG. A dictionary of the turf, the ring, the chase, the pit, of bon-ton, and the varieties of life, forming the completest and most authentic Lexicon Balatronicum hitherto offered to the notice of the sporting world, for elucidating words and phrases that are necessarily, or purposely, cramp, mutative, and unintelligible, outside their respective spheres. Interspersed with anecdotes and whimsies, with tart quotations, and rum-ones; with examples, proofs, and monitory precepts, useful and proper for novices, flats, and yokels. By Jon Bee, Esq. editor of the Fancy, Fancy Gazette, Living picture of London, and the like of that. [John BADCOCK.]

London: 1823. Duodecimo. Pp. xvi. 125.*

SLANG (the) dictionary; or, the vulgar words, street phrases, and "fast" expressions of high and low society. Many with their etymology, and a few with their history traced. [By John Camden HOTTEN.]

London: 1865. Octavo. Pp. xxi. 305.* SLAVE (the), and other poems. [By John BULL.]

London: 1824. Octavo. [See his "Museum."]

SLAVE (the) trade indispensable: in answer to the speeches of William Wilberforce, Esq. By a West India merchant. [INNES, M.P.]

London: 1791. Octavo. [European Mag., xxi. 34-6.]

SLAVERY; an essay in verse. [By Capt. John MARJORIBANKS.]

Edinburgh: 1792. Octavo. [Watt, Bib. Brit.]

SLAVES of the ring; or, before and after. By the author of "Grandmother's money," "Wildflower," "Under the spell," etc. etc. [F. W. ROBINSON.] In three volumes.

London: 1862. Octavo.* SLEEP-walker (the); a comedy in two acts. Translated from the French [of the Count Pont de Vesle] in March 1778 [by Lady CRAVEN, Margravine of Anspach].

Strawberry Hill: 1778. Octavo. Pp. viii. 56. [W]

On the back of the title are four lines

addressed to Lady Craven by Horace Walpole, signed H. W.

SLEEPING-draught (the): a farce, in two acts, by S. Penley. Printed from

the acting copy, with remarks, biographical and critical, by D- G. [George DANIEL.] To which are added, a description of the costume,cast of the characters, entrances and exits, relative positions of the performers on the stage,-and the whole of the stage business. As now performed at the theatres royal, London. Embellished with a fine engraving, by Mr. Bonner, from a drawing taken in the theatre, by Mr. R. Cruikshank. London: N. D. Duodecimo. Pp. 38.* SLIGHT reminiscences of the Rhine, Switzerland, and a corner of Italy. [By Mrs Mary BODDINGTON.] In two volumes. London: 1834.

Duodecimo.*

SLIGHT (a) sketch of Paris; or, some account of the French capital in its improved state, since 1802, by a visiter. [Stephen WESTON.]

London. 1814. Octavo. Pp. 100.* Dyce
Cat., ii. 418.]

SLIGHT (a) sketch of the controversy
between Dr. Priestley and his op-
ponents on the subject of his Disquisi-
tions on matter and spirit. In a letter
to a friend. [By Samuel BADCOCK.]
London: 1780. Octavo. [European Mag.,
xviii. 325. Mon. Rev., lxii. 223.]
SLIGHTED (the) maid, a comedy, acted
with great applause at the Theatre in
Little Lincolns-Inn-Fields, by
His
Highness the Duke of York's servants.
[By Sir Robert STAPYLTON.]
London, 1663. Quarto.

SLINGSBY (the) papers: a selection from the writings of Jonathan Freke Slingsby. [By John Francis WALLER.]

Dublin MDCCCLII. Octavo.* [Olphar Hamst, p. 120.] Appeared originally in the Dublin University Magazine.

SMALL (the) boy's mythological primer, in rhyme. By E. A. [Edward ARCHER.]

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By Martin Doyle. [Ross HICKEY.]
Fourth thousand.

London: 1855. Octavo.

SMALL (a) handfull of fragrant flowers, selected and gathered out of the lovely garden of Sacred Scriptures; fit for any honorable or worshipfull gentlewomen to smell to. Dedicated, for a newe-yeeres gyft, to the honorable and vertuous lady, the Lady Sheffeeld. By N. B. [Nicholas BAXTER.] Imprinted at London by Richard Jones, and are to be solde at his shop, at the South-west door of Paules. 1575. Quarto. Pp. 4. 21.* [Bodl.] Printed in Park's Heliconia, vol. i.

SMALL literary patchwork; or, a collection of miscellaneous pieces, in prose and verse, written on various occasions, chiefly on moral and interesting subjects. By a countrywoman. [Anne CLARKE.]

Printed at Shipston: 1808. [Gent. Mag., lxxviii. 239; lxxxiv. i. 582.] Second edition in 1814 has the author's name.

SMALL (a) specimen of the many mistakes in Sir William Dugdale's Baronage. Exhibited in some remarks on about half a page of that voluminous work. In a letter, &c. [By Charles HORNBY.]

London: MDCCXXX. Octavo.*

Though only one letter is mentioned in the title-page, the tract contains two. It was re-issued in 1738, with the addition of a third letter, under the title of "Three letters containing remarks," &c.

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SMALL (a) voice to England sent to the... will and order of the great God of heaven and earth. [By John WESLEY?]

London: 1749. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] SMALL (a) whole-length of Dr. Priestley, from his printed works: or a free account, (in consequence of a free inquiry,) of his style, his politics, his feelings, his logic, his religion, his philosophy. Concluding with an analysis, and an appendix of extracts from the writings of Dr. Priestley, which were read in Court at the Assizes at Warwick. [By William JONES.] Octavo. Pp. ii.

London: M DCC XCII.

62.* The title-page has a period instead of a comma, after the words style, politics, &c.

SMITHS (the). A novel. By the author of "The maid's husband,"

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London: 1763. Octavo. [M'Cull. Lit. Pol. Econ., p. 331.]

SNAKE (a) in the grass caught and

crush't, or a third and last epistle to a now furious deacon in the Church of England, the Reverend Mr. George Keith, with some remarks on my former epistles to him, especially that against plunging in baptism. By Trepidantium Malleus. [Samuel YOUNG.]

London; 1700. Duodecimo. I sh. [Smith, Bib. Anti-Quaker., p. 460.] SNAKE (the) in the grass: or, Satan transform'd into an angel of light. Discovering the deep and unsuspected subtilty which is couched under the pretended simplicity of many of the principal leaders of those people call'd Quakers. [By Charles LESLIE.]

London, 1696. Octavo. Pp. 4. b. t. cccxliii. 271.*

SNARE (the) broken, or, the natural and eternal deity of the Son of God; as also of the Holy Ghost, asserted: by a person, who having been formerly a Socinian, and then an Arrian, came at length, by a free consideration of the Scriptures, to be fully convinc'd of the truth of the catholick faith concerning the Blessed Trinity. Zachary MAYNE.]

[By

Printed in the year 1694. Quarto. Pp. 16.* The tract is signed Z. M. A. M. [Wood, Athen. Oxon.]

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SO many calls. By the author of "Earthly care a heavenly discipline." [Mrs Harriet Beecher STOWE.] Birmingham. [1855?] Sm. Octavo. [W] SO much of the diary of Lady Willoughby as relates to her domestic history, & to the eventful period of the reign of Charles the First. [By Mrs Hannah Mary RATHBONE.]

London. 1844. Quarto. Pp. 174. b. t.* SOBER (a) and charitable disquisition concerning the importance of the doctrine of the Trinity; particularly with regard to worship, and the doctrine of satisfaction: endeavouring to shew that those in the different schemes should bear with each other in their different sentiments; nor separate communions and cast one another out of Christian fellowship on this account. In a letter to the Reverend . [By Simon BROWNE, dissenting minister in the Old Jewry, London.]

London: M. DCC.XXXII. Octavo. Pp. 76.* [Bodl.]

SOBER (a) and temperate discourse, concerning the interest of words in prayer, the just antiquity and pedigree of liturgies, or forms of prayer in Churches with a view of the state of the Church, when they were first composed, or imposed. Together with a discovery of the weakness of the grounds upon which they were first brought in, or upon which Bishop Gauden hath lately discoursed, the necessity of a liturgie, or the inconveniency of altering the English liturgie, the utility of Church music, and the lawfulness of ceremonies: in which are mixed reasons justifying those godly ministers, who forbear the use of Common Prayer, against the late out-cryes of the said bishop. H. D. M.A. [John COLLINGES, D.D.] London, 1661. Quarto. Pp. 114. b. t.* SOBER (a) answer to the Friendly debate [by Bishop Patrick], betwixt a conformist and a nonconformist. Written

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