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THOUGHTS on the late transactions respecting Falkland's islands. [By Samuel JOHNSON, LL.D.] The second edition.

London: MDCCLXXI. Octavo. Pp. 75. b. t.*

In collected works (Lond. 1792), vol. viii. THOUGHTS on the Litany. By a naval officer's orphan daughter. [S. M. HEATON.] Edited by the Rev. George Heaton, M.A. of Catherine Hall, Cambridge; chaplain of West Ham Union, and assistant minister of St. Olave's Hart Street.

London: 1840. Duodecimo. Pp. viii. 220. Signed S. M. H.

*

THOUGHTS on the naval strength of the British Empire. [By Sir John SINCLAIR.] Part ii.

London: 1782. Octavo.

The author's name appears on the title-page of part i. [See Mon. Rev., lxvi. 469.] THOUGHTS on the origin and nature of government. Occasioned by the late disputes between Great Britain Written and her American colonies.

in the year 1766. [By Allan RAMSAY, Junr., son of the poet.]

London: MDCCLXIX. Octavo. Pp. 64.* THOUGHTS on the present commercial distress, and on the means to prevent its recurrence. By a merchant. [Richard BLANSHARD, Esq.]

London: 1826. Octavo. Pp. 23.* THOUGHTS on the present prices of provisions, their causes and remedies. By an independent gentleman. [John SYMMONS.

London: 1800. Octavo. [W.] THOUGHTS on the present state of affairs with America, and the means of conciliation. [By William PULTENEY, Earl of Bath.]

London: MDCCLXXVIII. Octavo. Pp. 100. b. t.* [Bodl.]

THOUGHTS on the present state of the college of Dublin; addressed to the gentlemen of the University. [By J. FORSAGETH, D.D.]

Dublin: 1782. Octavo. Pp. 82.* [Bodl.] THOUGHTS on the privileges and power of juries, suggested by the case of James Robertson and Walter Berry, printer and booksellers, Edinburgh: to which are added observations on the present state of this country, in which the causes of the numerous failures are

explained, and a plan suggested by which the progress of that alarming evil may be stopped, and credit restored to its former state. [By James ANDERSON, LL.D.]

Edinburgh: 1793. Octavo. [W]

This pamphlet is signed Mercator, and is reprinted from the Bee.

THOUGHTS on the properties and formation of the different kinds of air; with remarks on vegetation, pyrophori, heat, caustic salts, mercury, and on the different theories upon air. [By Robert HARRINGTON.]

London: 1785. Octavo. [Mon. Rev., lxxiv. 449.]

THOUGHTS on the proposed change of currency, and other late alterations, as they affect, or are intended to affect, the kingdom of Scotland. [By Sir Walter SCOTT, Bart.]

Edinburgh: 1826. Octavo. Pp. 60.* The above is the 1st. of 3 letters addressed to the Editor of the Edinburgh Weekly Journal, and signed Malachi Malagrowther. The 2d and 3d will be found under their proper headings.

THOUGHTS on the prospect of a regicide peace, in a series of letters. [By Edmund BURKE.]

London, 1796. Octavo. Pp. iv. 131.* THOUGHTS on the providence of God. [By John SHORE, 1st Baron Teignmouth.]

London, 1834. Octavo.* [Bodl.] THOUGHTS on the riots at Birmingham. By a Welch freeholder. [David JONES.]

London: 1791, Octavo. Pp. 29. THOUGHTS on the several regulations necessary to the appointment of an Advocate - General, &c. [By MAWHOOD.]

London: [1775. Quarto. [W.] THOUGHTS on the slavery of the negroes. [By Joseph WOODS.]

London: 1784. Octavo. 2 sh. [Smith's
Cat. of Friends' books, ii. 955.]

THOUGHTS on the state of the country. [By Peter STUART.]

London: 1812. Octavo. Pp. 173. [Manchester Free Lib. Cat., p. 696.] THOUGHTS on the times, but chiefly on the profligacy of our women, and it's causes. Addressed to every parenthusband-and modest woman in the

Shew

three kingdoms. In two parts. ing first-the danger of public incontinence - - - the absurdity of our female education - - - the folly, and bad tendency of a fashionable life-and the evils that arise from French refinement -and secondly-how seldom menwidwives are necessary - - - that their practice is dangerous that it is repugnant to modesty-tends to destroy the peace of families, and endanger virtue. [By Francis FOSTER.]

London printed; 1779. Octavo. Pp. v.

200.

THOUGHTS on trade and a publick

spirit... [By Thomas BASTON.] London: 1716. Octavo. Pp. 212. [Manchester Free Lib. Cat., p. 730.]

THOUGHTS on trial by jury in civil causes; with a view to a reform of the administration of justice in Scotland. In a series of [xv.] letters. [By James GRAHAME.]

Edinburgh: 1806. Octavo. Pp. 70. b. t.* THOUGHTS upon a new coinage of silver. . . as it relates to an alteration in the division of the pound Troy. [By Magens Dorrien MAGENS.]

London 1798. Octavo. Pp. vi. 104. [Manchester Free Lib. Cat., p. 441.] THOUGHTS upon the aristocracy of England. By Isaac Tomkins, Gent. [Henry BROUGHAM, Lord Brougham and Vaux.] Sixth edition.

London: MDCCCXXXV. Octavo. Pp. 23.* [Quarterly Review, liii. 540.]

THOUGHTS upon the Catholic question, by an Irish Roman Catholic. [Anthony Richard BLAKE.]

Dublin 1828. Octavo. Pp. 1. b. t. 85.* THOUGHTS upon the four last things: death; judgment; heaven; hell. A poem in four parts. [By Joseph TRAPP, D.D.]

London: MDCCXXXIV-V. Folio.* [Bodl.] Each part has a separate title and pagination. THOUGHTS upon the present condition of the stage and upon the construction of a new theatre. [By Frederick HOWARD, Earl of Carlisle.]

London: 1808. Octavo.* [Gent Mag., xcv. ii. 370.]

THOUGHTS upon thought. For young men. In three parts. [By John G. HEWLETT.]

London: 1843. Octavo.*

THOUSAND (a) lines: now first offered to the world we live in. [By Martin Farquhar TUPPER.]

London: 1845. Duodecimo. Pp. 60. [W.] THREATENING letter from Douglas [Andrew REED] the self-acknowledged author of "No fiction," to Lefevre [F. Barnett]. With Lefevre's Reply. Second edition.

London: 1822. Quarto. [W., Brit. Mus.] THREE (the) barriers: notes on Mr. Darwin's "Origin of species." [By Gilbert RORISON.]

Edinburgh & London. MDCCCLXI. Octavo. Pp. 180. Preface signed G. R.

THREE (the) chancellors, or sketches of the lives of William of Wykeham, William of Waynflete, and Sir Thomas More. [Three biographies first published independently.] [By Augusta Theodosia DRANE.]

London 1860. Octavo.

:

THREE comedies, translated from the Spanish [by Henry Lord HOLLAND].

London: 1807. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] THREE considerations proposed to Mr. William Pen, concerning the validity and security of his new Magna Charta for liberty of conscience, by a Baptist; which may be worthy the consideration of all the Quakers, and of all my dissenting brethren also that have votes in the choice of parliament men. [By Thomas COMBER, D.D.]

N. P. 1688. Quarto.sh. [Smith, Bib. Anti-Quaker., pp. 25, 135.]

In the Memoirs of the life and writings of Dr. Comber, by his great-grandson, it is stated (append. p. 427) that one of the MSS. found among his papers has the title, "Three considerations addressed to W. P. concerning the security of his new Magna Charta for liberty of conscience." From this it has been inferred, with great probability, that Dr. Comber was the author of the above work.

THREE courses and a dessert; comprising three sets of tales, West country, Irish, and legal; and a melange. [By William CLARKE.] With fifty illustrations by George Cruikshank. Fourth edition.

London: MDCCCL. Octavo. Pp. 432.* THREE days at Killarney; with other poems. [By Rev. Charles HOYLE, Overton, Wilts.]

London 1828. Octavo.*

THREE (the) death-cries of a perishing

Church. From "The Nottingham Review," with additions and corrections. [By William HOWITT.]

Nottingham 1835. Duodecimo. I sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 102.] THREE dialogues concerning liberty. [By Jackson BARWIS.]

London, MDCCLXXVI. Octavo. Pp. 116.* A fourth dialogue concerning liberty has the author's name.

THREE dialogues on the amusements of clergymen. [By Rev. William GILPIN.]

London: 1796. Octavo. Pp. 224. [N. and Q., 18 Dec. 1869, p. 530.]

In Gent. Mag., xci. i. 53 (see also p. 194), this work is reviewed under the following title, "On the amusements of clergymen, and Christians in general. In three dialogues between a dean and a curate. By Edward Stillingfleet, Lord Bishop of Worcester. In the preface it is stated that the original MS. of this publication is said to have been written by Dr. Josiah Frampton. This is all fiction: the real author is as above.

THREE discourses, 1. On the use of books. 2. On the result and effects of study. 3. On the elements of literary taste. Delivered at the anniversary meetings of the Library Society at Chichester, Jan. 1800, 1801, 1802. By the President. [Thomas SANDEN, M.D.]

London: 1802. Octavo. Pp. 55. 58. 67.* [N. and Q., 1 April, 1865, p. 269.]

The above is a general title-page to the Three discourses, which were published separately in the years in which they were delivered.

THREE discourses on eternity, and the importance and advantages of looking at eternal things. [By J. ORTON.] London: [1830?] Duodecimo. [W., Brit. Mus.]

THREE discourses: one, a defence of private judgment; the second, against the authority of the magistrate over conscience; the third, some considerations concerning the re-uniting of Protestants. The two first translated from the Latin, the third from the French, of Dr Samuel Werenfels, professor of divinity in the University of Bale, in Switzerland. With a prefatory epistle to the Reverend Dr. Tenison; giving an account of the occasion of translating them, and their use in the Bishop of Bangor's controversy.

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THREE dramas. By the authoress of "St Bernardine," and other poems. [Catherine SWANWICK.]

London: 1866. Octavo. Pp. 208.* THREE essays concerning church government, viz. I. An impartial inquiry into the order and government setled by Christ and his apostles in the Church. II. An inquiry into the divine right of Presbytery. III. The Phoenix: or, prelacy revived from the ashes of its Funeral, and established upon the same principles and arguments which are made use of against it, by the author of The Funeral of prelacy. [By Simon COUPER, curate at Dunfermline.]

Edinburgh. 1704. Quarto.*

THREE essays on important subjects, read at Thearne, in the parish of Beith, at the close of three successive exhibitions of cattle, in 1827, 1828, and 1829. By a cultivator of the ground. [Andrew AITKEN.] Octavo. Pp. 40.*

Beith MDCCCXXX. [New Coll. Cat.] THREE experiments of living. Within the means; up to the means; beyond the means. [By Mrs Hannah F. LEE.] A new English edition.

London: 1848. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] THREE general epistles to be read in all the congregations of the righteous, who are gathered out of the house of Adam in the fall, into the house of Christ that never fell, to be read amongst them. By G. F. [George Fox.]

Printed in the year, 1664. Quarto. Pp. 22. b. t.*

THREE hours after marriage. A comedy, as it is acted at the Theatre Royal. [By John GAY.]

London: 1717. Octavo.*

The " Advertisement" concludes in these words:" I must farther own the assistance I have receiv'd in this piece from two of my friends; who, tho' they will not allow me the honour of having their names join'd with mine, cannot deprive me of the pleasure of making this acknowledgment.' John Gay.-The friends alluded to are Pope and Arbuthnot.

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THREE hundred and fifty portions of the Book of Psalms selected from various versions, with a collection of

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THREE Irish glossaries. glossary codex A. (from a manuscript in the library of the Royal Irish Academy), O'Davoren's glossary (from a manuscript in the library of the British Museum), and a glossary to the Calendar of Oingus the Culdee (from a manuscript in the library of Trinity College, Dublin). With a preface and index by W. S. [Whitley STOKES.]

London; 1862. Octavo. Pp. lxxx. 168.* THREE letters addressed to the Editor of the Quarterly Review, in which is demonstrated the genuineness of the three heavenly witnesses, I John v. 7. By Ben David. [John JONES, LL.D.] London: 1825. Octavo. Pp. 70.* [Gent. Mag., April 1827, p. 372.

THREE letters addressed to the readers of Paine's Age of reason. By one of the people called Christians. [Jeremiah WARING.]

London: 1797. Octavo. 2 sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, ii. 216.] THREE letters addressed to the Right Hon. Lord Viscount Melbourne and the Right Hon. Sir Robert Peel, Bart. on the present state of parties, urging the necessity of union, and suggesting the means by which it is attainable. By a conservative Whig. [Thomas WALLACE.]

London. 1835. Octavo. Pp. ii. 124.* THREE letters concerning systematic taste, exemplified, in the Centaur not fabulous: Laicus's letter of June 7th, 1755. London Evening Post. And the Bishop of London's second volume of discourses. [By Caleb FLEMING.] London: 1755. Octavo. Pp. 4. b. t. 58.* [Bodl.]

THREE letters concerning the present state of Italy; being a supplement to Dr. Burnets letters. [By Gilbert BURNET.]

N. P. 1688. Octavo. [New Coll. Cat., p. 129.]

THREE letters, containing remarks on some of the numberless errors and defects in Dugdales Baronage: and occasionally in some other authors. [By Charles HORNBY.]

London: MDCCXXXVIII.

Octavo. Pp.

250.* [Gent. Mag., June 1810, p. 507; Aug. 1810, p. 188.]

THREE letters on military education, addressed to the editor of "The Times." By Jacob Omnium. [M. J. HIGGINS.]

London 1855. Octavo. Pp. 19. THREE letters on the policy of England towards the Porte and Mohammed Ali. [By Sir J. Gardner WILKINSON.] London: 1840. Octavo. Pp. 63. [W] THREE letters relating to the Navy,

Gibraltar, and Portmahon. Wrote in the year 1747, and 1748. But now first published; being very applicable to the present time. [By James LIND, M.D.]

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THREE letters to Dr. Clarke, from a clergyman of the Church of England; concerning his Scripture-doctrine of the Trinity. With the Doctor's replies. Published by the author of the said Three letters. [John JACKSON.]

London, 1714. Octavo. Pp. 33.* [New Coll. Cat., p. 180.]

THREE letters to Dr. Price, containing remarks on his Observations on the nature of civil liberty, the principles of government, and the justice and policy of the war with America. By a member of Lincoln's Inn, F.R.S. F.S.A. [John LIND.]

London, MDCCLXXVI. Octavo.*

THREE letters to Lord Viscount Howe. With remarks on the attack at Bunker's Hill. The second edition. Το which is added, a comparative view of the conduct of Lord Cornwallis and General Howe. [By Israel MAUDUIT.] London: MDCCLXXXI. Octavo. Pp. 48. b. t.*

THREE letters to the author of the
Confessional. [By Gloucester RIDLEY,
LL.B., and Archbishop SECKER.]
London: M. DCC. LXVIII. Octavo.*
Each letter has a separate title and pagina-
tion.

"If instead of reading only the Confessional they (the petitioning clergy) would read together with it Dr. Ridley's answers, wherein he was assisted by our late most worthy and most able metropolitan (Secker) they would see the sophistry of the arguinents detected, &c.-Bp. Newton's Memoirs. See Gent. Mag., Nov. 1774, and Jan. 1775 in which they are stated to be almost entirely written by Archbishop Secker.

THREE letters to the members of the present parliament, with a discourse on kings and ministers of state. To which is prefixed a letter to Sir John Philipps Bart. occasioned by his recess from parliament. [By Caleb D'Anvers, i.e., Nicholas AMHURST.] London: MDCCXLVII. Octavo. Pp. 54.* THREE months' rest at Pau, in the winter and spring of 1859. By John Altrayd Wittitterly. [Elizabeth T. CARNE.]

London: 1860. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. [Boase and Courtney, Bib. Corn., i.

267.*

60.]

THREE more letters on the subject of the Catholics, to my brother Abraham, who lives in the country. By Peter Plymley. [Sydney SMITH.] London: 1807. Octavo.

THREE new songs, entituled, I. The artillery recruiting, or a new song in praise of that brave and useful body of men. II. The allies triumph. III. Pride and passion. By W. D. [W. DUNCAN.]

Dundee, 1794. Duodecimo. Pp. 12.* [J. Maidment.]

THREE nights in Perthshire; with a description of the festival of a "Scotch Hairst Kirn:" comprising legendary ballads, &c. In a letter from Percy Yorke, Jr. to J. Twiss, Esq. [By Thomas ATKINSON, Junior, bookseller.]

Glasgow. 1821. Duodecimo. Pp. 2. b.t.

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66. Privately printed. [Letter from the author accompanying the presentation copy sent by him to Sir Egerton Brydges, Bart.]

THREE (the) partes of commentaries, containing the whole and perfect discourse of the ciuill warres of Fraunce

With an addition of the cruell murther of the Admirall Chastilion, and diuers other nobles, committed the 24 daye of August Anno 1572. Translated out of Latine [of Peter RAMUS] into Englishe by Thomas Tymme, minister.

London, by Francis Coldock, 1574. Quarto. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

Each part has a separate title page. The work which in the original Latin consists of nine books, has been by some attributed to John de Serres, and by others to Francis Hotoman."

THREE poems, Mahanaim, or, strivings

with a Saviour, containing a dialogue

betwixt Jesus and an afflicted soul; Peniel, or, the combatant triumphing, expressing comfort under clouds, and the triumph consummat, or the state of glory. By an experienced admirer of sanctified afflictions. [James WEBSTER.]

Printed in the year 1706. Quarto.* THREE poems of St. Paul's cathedral: viz. The ruins. The rebuilding. The choire. [By James WRIGHT.] London, 1697. Folio. Pp. 12.* THREE praiers, one for the morning, another for the evening: the third for a sick-man. Whereunto is annexed, a godlie letter to a sicke-friend; and a comfortable speech of a preacher, vpon his death bed. 1591. [By Henry SMITH.]

London. Imprinted for Thomas Man. 1591. Octavo. Pp. 20.* [Bodl.]

THREE R

1 bloods; or, a lame R-t, a darling commander, and a love-sick admiral. A poem. By Peter Pindar, Jun. author of the R—I lover. [John AGG.] Seventh edition. London: 1812. Octavo. Pp. 27.*

THREE seasonable quæres, proposed to all those cities, counties, and boroughs, whose respective citizens, knights and burgesses have been forcibly excluded, uniustly eiected, and disabled to sit in the Commons house, by those now acting at Westminster. [By William PRYNNE.]

London, 1660. [Broadside.]

THREE short discourses on the duty of parents, the Holy Scriptures and the Sabbath. [By J. CHARLESWORTH?] Newark 1787. Duodecimo. [W., Brit. Mus.]

THREE speeches against continuing the army, &c. as they were spoken in the House of Commons the last session of parliament. To which are added, the reasons given by the Lords, who protested against the bill for punishing mutiny and desertion. The first is by WS, Esq; [William SHEPPEN.] The second is by EJ, Esq; [E. JEFFRYS.] The third is by Sir T- H- Bart. [Sir T. HANMORE.]

London: 1718. Octavo. Pp. 46.* THREE speeches unspoken in the last session of parliament, and reserved to

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