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by way of letter to the author thereof. By Philagathus. [Rev. Samuel ROLLE.] London, 1669. Octavo. Pp. 42. b. t. 294.* [Wood, Athen. Oxon., ii. 745.] SOBER (a) appeal to a Turk or an Indian, concerning the plain sense of Scripture, relating to the Trinity. Being an answer to Mr. J. Watts's late book, intitled, The Christian doctrine of the Trinity, or Father, Son, and Spirit, three Persons and one God, asserted and proved, by plain evidence of Scripture, without the aid or incumbrance of human schemes. [By Martin TOMKINS.]

London, M.DCC.XXII. Octavo. Pp. viii. 155.*

*

The second edition. To which are added I. Remarks on Dr. Watts's Three dissertations relating to the doctrine of the Trinity, published 1724. II. A sober appeal to all that have read the New Testament, whether the reputed Orthodox are not more justly chargeable with preaching a new Gospel, than reputed Arians. III. A reply to Dr. Waterland's Animadversions upon some passages in the Sober appeal.

London: MDCCXLVIII. Octavo. Pp. viii. 320.

SOBER (the) conformists answer to a rigid conformists reasons, why in this juncture no alteration should be made in the government of the Church of Scotland. By a lover of peace and truth. [William KER.]

Printed in the year 1689. Quarto.* SOBER (a) enquiry into the grounds of the present differences in the Church of Scotland. Wherein the matters under debate are fairly stated; the differences adjusted; and Mr. Hadow's Detections considered and weighed. [By Robert RICCALTOUN, minister of Hobkirk.]

Printed in the year MDCCXXIII. Octavo. Pp. xv. 446.* [Orme, Bib. Bib.] SOBER (a) enquiry into the nature, measure, and principle of moral virtue, its distinction from gospel-holiness. With reflections upon what occurs disserviceable to truth and religion in this matter; in three late books, viz. Ecclesiastical policy. Defence and continuation. And Reproof to the Rehearsal transpos'd. By R. F. [Robert FERGUSON.]

London, 1673. Octavo. Pp. 12. b. t. 327.* [Brit. Mus.]

SOBER (a) reply, on behalf of the people called Quakers, to two petitions against them, (the one out of Norfolk, and the other from Bury in Suffolk) being some brief observations upon them. Published on occasion of Francis Bugg's exposing one of the said petitions in print, and commending the other, &c. With many unjust aggravations and misrepresentations in his late book, falsly stiled A modest defence, &c. [By Thomas ELLWOOD.] London: 1699. Quarto. Pp. 16.* [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 566.]

SOBER (a) reply to Mr. Higgs's merry arguments, from the light of nature, for the tritheistick doctrine of the Trinity. With a postscript relating to the Reverend Dr. Waterland. [By Joseph HALL, serjeant-at-arms to the king.]

London: 1720. Octavo. Pp. 38. b. t.' [N. and Q., 4 July 1863, p. 6.]

SOBER sadness; or historicall observations upon the proceedings, pretences & designs of a prevailing party in both Houses of Parliament, with the resolution of all loyall subjects and true Protestants of the Church of England, thereupon. [By L. WOмOCK?] [Oxford?] 1643. Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.]

SOBER (a) whisper, concerning the evil of things present, and the good of things to come. By Tho. Narjenn. [Thomas TANNER.]

London, 1665. Quarto. Pp. 15.* [Bodl.] SOBER (a) word to a serious people : or, a moderate discourse respecting as well the Seekers, (so called) as the present Churches. Wherein the difference between them touching visible administrations, is discovered and discussed and may serve as a plea for the nations ministery. By a lover of truth and peace. [John JACKSON ] London, 1651. Quarto. 9 sh. [Smith, Bib. Anti-Quaker., p. 247.]

SOCIAL bliss considered: in marriage and divorce; cohabiting unmarried, and public whoring. Containing things necessary to be known by all that seek mutual felicity, and are ripe for the enjoyment of it. With the speech of Miss Polly Baker; and notes thereon. [By Peter ANNET.]

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Flax By Ajax.

SOCIAL wastes and waste lands.
ข. slave-grown cotton.
[AINLEY?]

London, 1862. Octavo. Pp. 34. [N. and Q., Feb. 1869, p. 168.] SOCIETY (the) of Friends; its strength and its weakness. [By Edmund FRY.] London: 1859. Octavo.* [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 811.]

SOCINIANISM unmasked: in four letters to the lay-members of the Church of Scotland, and especially to those of the Collegiate Church of Ayr : occasioned by Dr. M'Gill's Practical essay on the death of Jesus Christ. Proving that he denies the great doctrines of the atonement, of the deity of our Lord, &c. &c. To which are added, a letter to the Doctor, and an humble address to the members of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. By a friend to truth. [J. JAMIESON, D.D.] The second edition, corrected and enlarged: with reflections on the influence of the Socinian doctrine on holiness of life.

Edinburgh: M. DCC.XC. Octavo.* SOFTNESS A novel By the author of "Hardness." [Capt. Charles KNOX.] In three volumes.

London: 1842. Duodecimo.*

SOIMÊME A story of a wilful life. [By Mrs Stanley LEATHES.]

London, 1869. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] SOL in ascendente: or, the glorious appearance of Charles the Second, upon the horizon of London, in her horoscopicall sign, Gemini. [By Elias ASHMOLE.]

London, 1660. Quarto. Pp. 6. b. t.* SOLACE (the) of song Short poems suggested by scenes visited on a continental tour, chiefly in Italy. [By Charles Joseph LATROBE.]

London. MDCCCXXXVII. Octavo. Pp. xi. 4. 243.*

SOLDIER (the), a poem. [By Capt. Edward THOMPSON.]

London: 1764. Quarto. [Brydges, Cens. Lit., vii. 317. Mon. Rev., xxxi. 232.] SOLDIER (the) of Dierenstein; or, love and mercy. An Austrian story. By H.S.H. the M. of A. [Margravine of ANSPACH.]

London: 1802. Octavo. SOLDIER'S (the) return; or, what can beauty do? A comic opera, in two acts, as performed at the Theatre Royal, Drury-Lane. [By Theodore Edward Hook.] The overture and music entirely new, composed by Mr Hook. London: 1805. Octavo. Pp. 40.* [Bodl.] SOLID philosophy asserted, against the fancies of the ideists: or the method to science, farther illustrated, with reflections on Mr Locke's Essay concerning human understanding. By J. S. [John STILLINGFLEET.] London: 1697. Octavo. [W.] SOLID reasons for continuance of war: with means suggested to carry it on without additional taxes, and to diminish the rates of mercantile insurance. Shewing that, if hostilities be wisely conducted, the evils of war would be little felt in England; and, finally advising, for the interest of both countries, and the general repose of nations, an immediate and firm union between England and America. [By W. P. RUSSEL.]

[London] Dec. 1807. Octavo. Pp. 46.*
[Bodl.]

A fuller title to Old England and America,
against France and all Europe. In five
letters, by Patrioticus.

SOLILOQUY (the), a poem, occasioned

by a late decision. [By Hugh DownMAN, M.D., of Balliol College.] Edinburgh: N. D. Quarto. Pp. 12.* [Bodl.]

SOLILOQUY (a) in a thatched building in a retired part of W Gardens. [By Fulke GREVILLE.]

London: 1787. Quarto. [Mon. Rev., iii. 342.]

SOLILOQUY: or, advice to an author. [By Anthony Ashley COOPER, 3d Earl of Shaftesbury.]

London: M. DCC.x. Octavo. Pp. iv. 196.* SOLITARY hours. By the authoress of Ellen Fitzarthur and the Widow's Tale. [Caroline Anne BOWLES, afterwards Mrs Southey.]

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SOLITARY walks through many lands. By Derwent Conway: author of "Tales of Ardennes," &c. &c. [Henry David INGLIS.] [In two volumes.]

London: 1828. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] SOLOMON and Abiathar: or, the case of the deprived bishops and clergy, discussed between Eucheres a conformist, and Dyscheres, a recusant. [By Samuel HILL, archdeacon of Wells.]

London: M.DC. XCII. Quarto.* SOLOMON'S gate, or an entrance into the Church; being a familiar explanation of the grounds of religion, conteined in the fowr heads of catechism, viz the Lord's Prayer, the apostle's creed. x. commandments, and the sacraments. [By A. LITTLETON.]

1662. Duodecimo. [Leslie's Cat., 1843.] SOLOMON'S sermon: of man's chief felicitie called in Hebrew Koheleth, in Greeke and Latin Ecclesiastes; with a paraphrase upon the same; gathered out of the lectures of A. C. [Ant. CORRANUS] and now Englished for the benefit of the vnlearned.

Oxford, by Joseph Barnes. 1586. Octavo. Pp. 219. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.] SOLVTION (a) of Doctor Resolvtvs. [David Lindsay, Bp. of Brechin], his resolutions for kneeling. [By David CALDERWOOD.]

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SOLYMAN; a tragedy. [By H. F. CLINTON, M.A.]

1807. Octavo. [N. and Q., xi. 273. Crit. Rev., June 1807, p. 201.] SOMATOPSYCHONOOLOGIA showing that the proofs of body life and mind considered as distinct essences cannot be deduced from physiology but depend on a distinct sort of evidence being an examination of the controversy concerning life carried on by MM. Laurence, Abernethy. Rennell, & others. By Philostratus. [Thomas FORSTER, F.L.S.]

London 1823. Octavo. Pp. x. 1. 116.* SOME account of a journey across the Alps. In a letter to a friend. [By Abraham HAYWARD.]

London: [1854.] Duodecimo. [W., Martin's Cat.]

SOME account of domestic architecture in England, from Edward I. to Richard II. With notices of foreign examples, and numerous illustrations of existing remains from original drawings. By the editor of the Glossary of architecture. [John Henry PARKER.]

Oxford, MDCCCLIII. Octavo. Pp. v. 10. 352.1

SOME account of Great Milton, in Oxfordshire. [By the Rev. Thomas ELLIS, late vicar of the parish.]

Oxford, 1819. Octavo. Pp. 48. [W., Martin's Cat.]

SOME account of Mrs Clarinda Singlehart. By the author of "Mary Powell." [Anne MANNING.]

London: 1855. Octavo.

SOME account of my cousin Nicholas. By Thomas Ingoldsby, Esq. author of "The Ingoldsby legends." To which is added, The rubber of life. [By Richard Harris BARHAM.] In three volumes.

London: 1841. Duodecimo.*

SOME account of St John's Hospital, and the Free School, Coventry. [By Thomas SHARP.]

1820. Quarto. [W., Martin's Cat.] Only six copies privately printed, being a part of his collections for the History of Coventry.

SOME account of the alien priories, and of such lands as they are known to have possessed in England and Wales. In two volumes. [From the MSS. of John WARBURTON, Somerset Herald.

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SOME account of the church and windows of St. Neots in Cornwall. [By Rev. Benjamin FOSTER, rector of Boconnoc.]

London: 1786. Quarto.* [Upcott, i. 98.] SOME account of the circulation of the blood in the foot of the horse. By B. C. [Bracy CLARK.]

London: 1842. Quarto. No title-page. Pp. 8. [W.]

SOME account of the discussion on infallibility, which took place at CherryStreet Chapel, Birmingham, Sept. 30. and Oct. 1, 1830, by the Rev. N. Armstrong and J. E. Gordon, on the Protestant side, and by the Rev. Dr. Waterworth, of Ascott, and Mr. J. Falvey, on the Roman. By a plain man. [Rev. Joseph MENDHAM.]

Birmingham: 1830. Duodecimo. [Mendham Collection Cat. (Sup.), p. 23.] SOME account of the early history and foundation of the hospital of King James, founded at the sole costs and charges of Thomas Sutton, Esq. [By William HALE, M.A., archdeacon of London.]

1854. Octavo. [W., Bliss' Cat.] Privately printed.

SOME account of the English stage,

from the Restoration in 1660 to 1830. In ten volumes. [By Rev. John GENEST, of Bath.]

Bath: 1832. Octavo.*

SOME account of the Jewish doctrine of the resurrection of the dead. Tending to explain several passages of Holy Writ; and, in particular, that clause of St. Peter's relation of the conversion of Cornelius, which has been supposed to exclude the virtuous

heathens from happiness, and may on that account be thought to be a great objection to Christianity. [By Thomas HARMER.]

London: 1767. Octavo. [European Mag., xxi. 362. Mon. Rev., xliii. 307.]

SOME account of the late inclinations to popery. By B. G. [Benjamin GROSVENOR, D.D.] The second edition, corrected.

London, 1717. Octavo. Pp. 32.* [Darling, Cyclop. Bibl.]

SOME account of the late Peter Collinson, Fellow of the Royal Society, and of the Society of Antiquaries, in London, and of the Royal Societies of Berlin and Upsal. In a letter to a friend. [By John FOTHERGILL, M.D.J London: 1770. Quarto. 21⁄2 sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 443.]

SOME account of the life and character of the late Thomas Bateman, M.D. F.L.S. physician to the public dispensary, and to the fever institution in London. [By Dr. J. RUMSEY, of Amersham.]

London: 1826. Octavo. Pp. 1. b. t. 228.* Dedication signed J. R.

SOME account of the life and death of Matthew Lee, executed at Tyburn, October 11, 1752, in the 20th year of his age. [By John WESLEY, M.A.] Bristol: 1770. Duodecimo. Pp. 23.* [Bodl.] First edition appeared in 1752. SOME account of the life and death of Nicolas Mooney. [By John WESLEY, M.A.]

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SOME account of the life and most remarkable actions of Henry Baron de Goertz, minister to the late king of Sweden. [By Daniel DEFOE.]

London: 1719. Octavo. Pp. 46. [Lee's Defoe, 194.]

SOME account of the life and religious labours of Sarah Grubb. With an appendix, containing an account of Ackworth school, observations on Christian discipline, and extracts from many of her letters. [Edited by Lindley MURRAY.]

Dublin: M,DCC, XCII. Duodecimo. Pp. iv. i. 435.* [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 876.]

SOME account of the life and writings

of Philip Massinger. [By Thomas DAVIES.]

London: 1789. Octavo. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., p. 1511.]

SOME account of the life and writings of the late Rev. Thomas Rennell, vicar of Kensington, and prebendary of Salisbury. [By John LONSDALE, Bishop of Lichfield.]

London: 1824. Octavo. [Lincoln's Inn
Cat.]

SOME account of the life of Rachel Wriothesley, Lady Russell, by the editor of Madame Du Deffand's Letters [Mary BERRY], with letters of Lady Russell to her husband, Lord William Russell, 1672 to 1682, &c.

London: 1819. Quarto. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., p. 2155.]

SOME account of the life of the late Gilbert Earle, Esq. Written by himself. [By Barry St LEGER.]

London: MDCCCXXIV. Octavo.* [Gent.
Mag., xcix. ii. 642.]

SOME account of the melancholy situation of the young Pretender in Scotland, after his defeat near Inverness. Part of it written by himself (the whole being a translation from the French of two letters found near Arisaig soon after his departure from thence for France); to the Letters is prefix'd a relation of the discovery of the originals, &c. [by Robert DOUGLASS of Strathbogie].

London: [1746.] Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] SOME account of the rise, progress, and present state of the brewery. [By Michael COMBRUNE, brewer.]

London: 1757. Octavo. [M'Cull. Lit.
Pol. Econ., p. 238.]

SOME account of the several wards, precincts, and parishes in the city of London. To which is added lists of the lord mayors, sheriffs, and other officers, from the year 1660 to the present time; of the court of aldermen at the time of the Revolution in 1688; and of the aldermen and members of parliament since that period. [By William CHANCELLOR.]

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SOME account of the two nights court at Greenwich: wherein may be seen the reason, rise and progress of the late unnatural rebellion, against His Sacred Majesty King George, and his government. [By Daniel DEFOE.]

Edinburgh, re-printed in the year M. DCC. XVI. Octavo. Pp. 59.* [Wilson, Life of Defoe, 158.]

SOME advice humbly offer'd to the members of the October Club, in a letter from a person of honour. [Jonathan SWIFT.]

London, 1712. Octavo. Pp. 16.* SOME answer to the question, How did you vote on the 13th? In a letter to a friend, by a junior M.A. one of the 386. [William George WARD.] Oxford, 1845. Octavo. Pp. 15.* [Bodl.] SOME calculations relating to the proposals made by the South-Sea Company, and the Bank of England, to the House of Commons; shewing, the loss to the new subscribers, at the several rates in the said computations mentioned; and the gain which will thereby accrue to the proprietors of the old South-Sea stock. By a member of the House of Commons. [Archibald HUTCHESON.]

London, M DCC XX. Folio. Pp. 13. b. t.* SOME charitable observations on a late treatise of church lands and tithes; by Mr Forbes, advocat; and tendered to the publick by a moderat son of the Church of England. [James GORDON.] Edinburgh, 1706. Quarto."

SOME clear truths particularly demonstrated unto the King and council, and both Houses of Parliament, with all judges, justices, merchants, and shipmasters, why the innocent and peaceable people, called Quakers, ought not to be banished out of their native land, or any other way exposed to sufferings. Also, the law described in its nature and end. With a postscript to all honest, sober, and impartial jurors. By W. S. [William SMITH.]

Printed at London, in the year, 1664. Quarto. Pp. 12.* [Bodl.]

SOME considerations about the case of scandal, or giving offence to weak brethren. [By Benjamin CALAMY,

D.D.]

London 1683. Quarto. Pp. 60.*

SOME considerations about the reconcileableness of reason and revelation;

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