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TALES of my grandmother. [By Archibald CRAWFURD.] [In two volumes.] Edinburgh: 1825. Duodecimo,* [Paterson's Poets of Ayrshire, p. 334.]

TALES of my landlord, collected and arranged by Jedediah Cleishbotham, schoolmaster and parish-clerk of Gandercleuch. [Sir Walter SCOTT.] In four volumes. [Vol. I. Black Dwarf. Vols. II. III. IV. Old Mortality.] Third edition.

Edinburgh: 1817. Duodecimo.*

second series, collected and arranged by Jedediah Cleishbotham, schoolmaster and parish-clerk of Gandercleugh. [Sir Walter SCOTT.] In four volumes. [Containing The heart of Mid-Lothian.]

Edinburgh: 1818. Duodecimo.*

third series, collected and arranged by Jedediah Cleishbotham, schoolmaster and parish-clerk of Gandercleugh. [Sir Walter SCOTT.] In four volumes. [Containing The bride of Lammermoor, and A legend of Montrose.]

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Blue-Stocking Hall. [W. P. SCARGILL.]
In three volumes.

London: 1829. Duodecimo.*

Ascribed to Mrs J.C. Loudon. [Adv. Lib.] TALES of other days. With illustrations by George Cruikshank. By J. Y. A. [J. Y. AKERMAN.]

London: 1830. [Olphar Hamst, p. 186.] TALES of passion: Lord Lovel's daughter.-The Bohemian.-Second love. By the author of "Gilbert Earle." [Francis Barry Boyle St. LEGER.] In three volumes.]

London 1829. Duodecimo.* TALES of terror; with an introductory dialogue. [By Matthew Gregory LEWIS.] Second edition. London: 1808. Octavo.

154.*

Pp. 1. b. t.

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Etchings by Robert Cruickshank. TALES of the Crusaders. By the author of "Waverley," "Quentin Durward," &c. [Sir Walter SCOTT, Bart.] In four volumes. [Vols. I., II., The betrothed; Vols. III., IV., The Talisman.] Edinburgh: 1825. Octavo.*

TALES of the dead. Principally translated from the French. [By Mrs UTTERSON.]

London: 1813. Octavo. Pp. viii. b. t. 248.* [Bodl.]

TALES of the devil, from the original gibberish of Professor Lumpwitz, S.U.S. and C.A.C. in the University of Snoringberg. [H. W. BUNBURY, Esq.] Bury St. Edmunds: 1801. 56.* [Bodl.]

Quarto. Pp.

2543

By the House,'

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TALES of the early ages. author of "Brambletye "Zillah," &c. [Horace SMITH.] In three volumes.

London: 1832. Duodecimo.*

TALES of the first French Revolution. Collected by the author of "Emilia Wyndham." [Mrs Anne MARSH.] London: 1849. Octavo. Pp. 284.*

These tales are "Professional visits of le Docteur Noir," "Sealed orders," "Limoëlan," and "The soldier's fortune;" and form vol xxxi. of The Parlour Library.

TALES (the) of the Genii; or, the delightful lessons of Horam, the son of Asmar. Faithfully translated from the Persian manuscript; and compared with the French and Spanish editions, published at Paris and Madrid. By Sir Charles Morell, formerly ambassador from the British settlements in India to the Great Mogul. [By Rev. James RIDLEY.] Published in numbers at Is. each.

London: 1764. Octavo. [Nichols, Lit. Anec., ii. 382. Mon. Rev., xxxi. 478.] TALES of the great and brave. [By Margaret Fraser TYTLER.]

London: 1838. Octavo. Pp. iv. b. t. 322. [Bodl.]

TALES of the Great St. Bernard. [By George CROLY, LL.D.] In three volumes. Second edition.

London: 1829. Octavo.*

Each volume has its contents on the titlepage.

TALES of the Hoy; interpersed with song, ode, and dialogue. By Peter Pindar, Esq. [John WOLCOTT.] [Part I.]

London: N. D. Quarto. Pp. iv. 64.* TALES of the manor. By the author of The private history of the Court of England, &c. &c. [Mrs S. GREEN.] In two volumes.

London: 1809. Duodecimo.* [Biog. Dict., 1816. Brit. Crit., xxxiii. 95.] TALES of the martyrs; or, sketches from Church history. [By Annie Field ELSDALE.] Second edition.

London: 1844. Duodecimo. [Lib. Jour., iv. 137.]

TALES of the moor. By Josias Homely. [John BRADFORD.] Containing Reginald Arnolf, Tom Stirlington, etc. London: 1841. Duodecimo.

TALES of the moors: or, rainy days in Ross-shire. By the author of Selwyn in search of a daughter. [C. BOWLES, afterwards Mrs Southey.]

Edinburgh and London. M. DCCC.XXVIII.
Octavo.

TALES of the Munster festivals, containing, Card drawing; the Half Sir; and Suil Dhuv, the coiner. By the author of "Holland-tide, or Irish popular tales." [Gerald GRIFFIN.] In three volumes.

London: 1827. Duodecimo.*

TALES of the O'Hara family. Second series. Comprising The Nowlans, and Peter of the Castle. [By John BANIM.] In three volumes.

London: 1826. Duodecimo.*

TALES of the peerage and the peasantry.
[By Mrs SULLIVAN.] Edited by Ladv
Dacre. In three volumes.
London: 1835. Duodecimo.*
TALES of the slave squadron. By
Lieut. Warneford. [W. H. C. RUS-
SELL.]

London: [1860.] Octavo.

TALES of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. From the French of M. Le Grand. [Translated by John WILLIAMSON. In two volumes.

London: 1786. Duodecimo. [Gent. Mag., lxxi. ii. 957. Mon. Rev., lxxvi. 59.] Reprinted in 1790 under the title of "Norman tales."

TALES of the wars of our times.

By

the author of "Recollections of the Peninsula," &c. &c. &c. [Moyle SHERER.] In two volumes.

London: 1829. Octavo.*

TALES of the West. By the author of Letters from the East. [John CARNE.] In two volumes.

London: 1828. Duodecimo.*

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Octavo.*

London: M DCC LXVIII. TALISMAN (the), a drama. A tale of the eleventh century. By the authoress of "St. Bernardine" and "Poems by L.-three series." [Catherine SWANWICK.]

London: 1864. Octavo.* [Olphar Hamst, P. 73.1

TALPA: or the chronicles of a clay farm. An agricultural fragment. By C. W. H. [Chandos Wren HOSKYNS.] London: 1852. Octavo.* TALVI'S [Mrs Therese Albertina Louisa ROBINSON'S] History of the colonization of America. Edited by William Hazlitt, Esq. barrister-at-law. In two volumes.

London 1851. Duodecimo."

:

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TASTE, an epistle to a young critic. [By John ARMSTRONG, M.D.] London: 1753. Quarto.

TASTE (the) of the town: or, a guide to all publick diversions. Viz. I. Of musick, operas, and plays. Their original, progress, and improvement, and the stage-entertainment fully vindicated from the exceptions of Old Pryn, the Reverend Mr. Collier, Mr. Bedford and Mr. Law. II. Of poetry, sacred and profane. A project for introducing Scripture-stories upon our stage, and acting them on Sundays and holy-days after divine service, as is customary in most polite parts of Europe. III. Of dancing, religious and dramatical. Reflections on this exercise, public and private, with the learned Bishop Potter's sentiments thereon. IV. Of the mimes, pantomimes and choruses of the antients; and of the imitation of them in our modern entertainments after plays. V. Of audiences, at our theatrical representations, their due behaviour, and of cat-calls and other indecent practices, concluding with remarks on our pretenders to criticism. VI. Of masquerades; ecclesiastical, political, civil and military: their antiquity, use and abuse. Also of ridottos, assemblies and Henley's oratory. VII. Of the athletic sports of the antients: their circus compared with our bear-garden, and their gladiators with our prize-fighters. Of cockfighting, puppet - shows, mountebanks and auctions. [By James RALPH.]

London: MDCCXXXI. Octavo. Pp. xxiv.

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TAVERN anecdotes, and reminiscences of the origin of signs, clubs, coffeehouses, streets, city companies, wards, &c. Intended as a lounge-book for Londoners and their country cousins. By one of the old school. [Colin MACKENZIE.]

London: N. D. Octavo.* The preface is dated Nov. 1, 1825.

TAVISTOCKE (the) Naboth proved Nabal: an answer to a narrative by Tho. Larkham in the name of the church of Tavistocke in Devon. By F[rancis] G[LANVILLE], D[ig.] P[OLWHEELE], W[alt.] G[ODBEAR], N[ic.] W[ATTS, William] H[ORE], &c.

London: 1658. Quarto. [W., Davidson, Bib. Devon, p. 51.]

TAXATIO papalis: being an account of the tax-books of the united Church and court of modern Rome; or of the Taxæ cancellariæ apostolicæ, and Taxæ sacræ poenitentiariæ apostolicæ. By Emancipatus. [Rev. Joseph MENDHAM.]

London: 1825. Octavo. [Mendham Collection Cat., p. 202.]

TAXATION no tyranny;

an answer

to the resolutions and address of the American Congress. [By Samuel JOHNSON, LL.D.] The fourth edition. London: MDCCLXXIV. Octavo. Pp. 91. b. t. In collected works (Lond. 1792),

vol. viii. TAXES (the), a dramatick entertainment. [By Phanuel BACON.] London: MDCCLVII. Octavo.* TAYLORS physicke has purged the divel or the divell has got a squirt, and the simple, seame-rent, threadbare Taylor translates it into railing poetry, and is now soundly cudgelled for it. By Voluntas Ambulatoria. [Henry WALKER?]

[London:] 1641. Quarto. [W.]

A satire upon John Taylor, the waterpoet. TEACHERS (the) of the world unvailed. Wherein the ground of their ministry is manifested, both in doctrine and practice, to be out of the light which cometh from Christ, in the witchcraft deceiving the people. Where as in a glasse they are seene to be such that the prophets woo was against, and which Christ gave warning of, and the apostles saw in their dayes enter the

world, and are now in this day manifest to the children of light, and declared against by G. F. that all people may from them turne. With a brief declaration of the seed of evill doers, which from time to time have withstood the truth of God in all ages. As also certaine queries given forth touching Q. Maries law made for defence of the priests and Jesuits, by which the priests and false teachers of this nation now guard themselves, and persecute the children of light even to death by long and tedious imprisonments in holes and dungeons. [By George Fox.]

London; 1656. Quarto. Pp. 1. b. t. 30.* [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 650.] TEACHER'S (the) prayer. [By Emily MANN.]

London: N. D. Duodecimo.

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TEACHING (the) of the Scotch sermons exhibited and examined. By a layman. [Robert GOSSIP, late of the "Daily Review."]

Edinburgh: 1881. Octavo. Pp. 52.* TEARES (the) of the beloved: or, the lamentation of Saint John, concerning the death and passion of Christ Jesus our Saviour. By J. M. [Jervis MARKHAM.]

London, by Simon Stafford. 1600. Quarto. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

TEARES (the) of the Muses. By Ed. Sp. [Edmund SPENSER.]

London. Imprinted for William Ponsonbie, dwelling in Paules Churchyard at the signe of the Bishops head. 1591. Quarto. No pagination.

*

Followed by Virgils Gnat. Long since dedicated to the most noble and excellent Lord; the Earle of Leicester, late deceased, having no separate title-page.

TEARS (the) of Alnwick; a pastoral elegy, in memory of the late Duchess of Northumberland. By a student of the Middle Temple. [Henry LUCAS.] London: 1777. Quarto. [Watt, Bib. Brit. Mon. Rev., lvi. 68.]

TEARS (the) of genius. Occasioned by
the death of Dr. Goldsmith. By
Courtney Melmoth. [Samuel Jackson
PRATT.]

London: 1774. Quarto. Pp. 32. [Gent.
Mag., xliv. 275.]

TEARS (the) of St. Margaret; also, odes of condolence to the high and mighty musical directors, on their

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in Spanish by Casaus and made English by J. P. [J. PHILLIPS.]

London: 1656. Octavo. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., p. 1314.]

TEKMHPIA μEтрIка. Symptoms of rhyme, original and translated. [By Rev. Peter HALL, M.A.]

London: 1824. Quarto. Pp. 1. b. t. 69.* "25 copies printed. Presented by the author to the Bodleian Library. Peter Hall. July 8th. 1826."-MS. note by Hall in the Bodleian copy.

ΤΕΧΝΗ-ΠΟΛΙΜΟΓΑΜΙΑ; or, the marriage of armes and art July 12. 1651. Being an accompt of the act at Oxon. to a friend. By R. W. [Robert WHITEHALL.]

London, 1651. Quarto. No pagination.* "Rob. Whitehall of Merton coll. supposed to be the author."-MS. note by Wood. TELEMACHUS. A masque. [By George GRAHAM.] Set to music by Phil. Hayes, Bac. Mus.

London: MDCCLXIV. Quarto. Pp. 14.* [Bodl.]

TELESCOPE (the); or, moral views for children. [By Margaret ROBERTS.] London: 1805. Duodecimo. [Gent. Mag.] TELL me a story By Ennis Graham. [Mrs. MOLESWORTH.]

London 1875. Octavo. Pp. 3. b. t. 196.* Dedication signed A. V. G. M. TEMPERATE (a) discussion of the causes which have led to the present high price of bread; addressed to the plain sense of the people. [By Charles LONG, M.P., Secretary to the Treasury.] Third edition.

London: 1800. Octavo. Pp. 45. [W] TEMPERATE (a) ward-word, to the turbulent and seditious Wach-word of Sir Francis Hastinges, knight, who indevoreth to slander the whole Catholique cause, and all professors therof, both at home and abrode. Reduced into eight several encounters, with a particuler speeche directed to the

Lordes of her Majesties most honorable Councel. To whome the arbitrement of the whole is remitted. By N. D. [Father Robert PARSONS.]

Imprinted with licence. 1599. Quarto. Title and Preface, 3 leaves; pp. 129.* [Jones' Peck, p. 54.]

TEMPEST (the). An opera. Taken from Shakespear. As it is performed at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. The songs from Shakespear, Dryden, &c. The music composed by Mr. Smith. [By David GARRICK.]

London, MDCCLVI. Octavo. TEMPLARIA: Papers relative to the history, privileges, and possessions of the Scotish Knights Templars, and their successors the Knights of St John of Jerusalem. [Collected by James MAIDMENT.] In four parts.

[Edinburgh:] 1828. Quarto. [W., Mar tin's Cat.]

TEMPLARS (the). An historical novel. [By Peter LEICESTER.] In three vol

umes.

London: 1830. Duodecimo."

TEMPLE Bar the city Golgotha. A narrative of the historical occurrences of a criminal character associated with the present Bar. By a member of the Inner Temple. [James Holbert WILSON.]

London: MDCCCLIII. Quarto. Pp. 68. b. t.* [N. and Q., April 1870, p. 359.] TEMPLE (the) of corruption, a poem. [By W. CHURCHILL.] London

M, DCC,LXX. Quarto. Pp. 23. b. t.* [Bodl.] TEMPLE (the) of dullness. With the humours of Signor Capochio, and Signora Dorinna. A comic opera of two acts, as it is perform'd at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. The music by Mr. Arne. [This has been attributed to Colley CIBBER.]

London: 1745. Quarto.

TEMPLE (the) of health, a poetic vision. Occasioned by the universal joy expressed on his majesty's most happy recovery. By a lady. [Grace ARTHUR.] London: 1789. Quarto. Pp. 12. b. t.* TEMPLE (the) of Melekartha. [By Isaac TAYLOR.] In three volumes.

London: 1831. Octavo. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., p. 2583.]

TEMPLE (the) of truth: or, the best

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