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religion; address'd to the Honourable Lady Howard. In a letter to the same lady. [By Richard WILLIS, D.D.] London, 1697. Quarto. Pp. 29. b. t.*

: number V. Containing a defence of the ministry and ministers of the Gospel, against the suggestions of some late writers. In a letter to a friend. With a postscript relating to the author of The reasonableness of Christianity. [By Richard WILLIS, D.D.]

London, 1697. Quarto. Pp. 42. b. t.*

: number VI. Containing some considerations about disputes in religion, and particularly those in which the Church of England is at present concern'd, for the preventing of the ill uses which divers endeavour to make of them. In a letter to a friend. By Richard WILLIS, D.D.] London, 1697. Quarto. Pp. 31.*

: number VII. Shewing the usefulness of human learning in matters of religion; contrary to the suggestions of some sceptical men, in their late pamphlets. In a letter to a friend. [By Richard WILLIS, D.D.] London, 1697. Quarto. Pp. 31.*

: number VIII. Shewing the necessity of such a Christian discipline as is consistent with civil power; in opposition to the extremes on both sides. In a letter to a friend. [By Richard WILLIS, D.D.]

London, 1697. Quarto. Pp. 34. b. t.*

-: number IX. Containing some considerations about the danger of going to plays. In a letter to a friend. [By Richard WILLIS.]

London, 1698. Quarto. Pp. 23.*

Vol. III. Numb. XI. An essay to prevent uncharitable contentions about the doctrine of the Trinity. [By Moses LOWMAN.]

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OCCASIONAL (the) preacher, No. 1. Of forsaking profane and vicious company. A sermon [New Year], Prov. 9. 6. [By Samuel WRIGHT, D.D.]

London: 1741. Octavo. [Darling, Cyclop. Bibl.] OCCASIONAL queries concerning the true state of things in these our times. [By Henry STUBBE, or STUBBES.] London: 1659. [Watt, Bib. Brit.] OCCASIONAL reflections upon several subjects. Whereto is premis'd a discourse about such kind of thoughts. [By Hon. Robert BOYLE.] The second edition.

London, 1669. Octavo. Pp. 34. b. t. 413.
9.*
Dedication signed R. B.

OCCASIONAL remarks addressed to

N. B. Halhed, Esq. in answer to his late pamphlet intitled, A calculation of the commencement of the Millenium &c. With cursory observations on that gentleman's speech in the House of Commons, respecting the pretended prophecies of Richard Brothers. By George Horne, D.D. [pseud. of Walley Chamberlaine OULTON] author of Sound argument, &c.

1795. Octavo. [Biog. Dram. Mon. Rev., xvii. 103.]

OCCASIONAL remarks upon some late strictures on the Confessional: particularly in a pamphlet [by Thomas Townson], intituled, "Doubts concerning the authenticity of the last publication of the Confessional, &c." [By Francis BLACKBURNE.]

London, MDCCLXVIII. Octavo. Pp. 59.*

part II. Containing chiefly remarks on the first of three letters to the author of that work; and an examination of Dr. Maclaine's defence of Archbishop Wake, in the third appendix of a supplement to the quarto edition of Dr. Mosheim's Ecclesiastical history. Addressed to a respectable layman. [By Francis BLACKBURNE.] London, 1769. Octavo. OCCASIONAL sermons upon the following subjects: The office and duty of Bishops. Error and ignorance dispelled by the appearance of the Messiah. The incarnation of Christ matter of the highest joy. The inefficiency of external professions. On the same. Inequality of condition

advantageous to society. Death entailed on mankind by the fall of Adam. The evil tendency of false shame. Advantages of contentment. Benefits of an early virtuous education. The doctrine of the Trinity considered. The blessing of implicit faith in the Gospel. Religion the most perfect. system of morality. Universal obligation to works of benevolence. Public thanksgiving to God, its great Proviexcellency and importance. dence of God the sole guide of human affairs. Pernicious effects of evil company. Care of the poor recommended, especially of lying-in women. A religious life the source of true pleasure. Charity illustrated and recommended, from the life of Moses. Also Oratio in funere, &c. Written by a late eminent divine of the Church of England, [John LAWSON, B.D. Lecturer in oratory and history, Trinity College, Dublin.]

London: M.DCC.LXIV. Octavo. Pp. viii. 352.*

OCCASIONAL thoughts in reference to a virtuous or christian life. [By Dame Dameris MARSAM.]

London, 1705. Duodecimo. Pp. v. 282. OCCASIONAL thoughts on the present German war. By the author of Considerations on the same subject. [Israel MAUDUIT.] The third edition. London: M, DCC, LXI. Octavo.*

OCCASIONAL thoughts on the study and character of classical authors, on the course of literature, and the present plan of a learned education, with some incidental comparisons between Homer and Ossian. [By John GORDON, D.D., archdeacon of Lincoln and rector of Henstead, Suffolk.]

1762. Octavo. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., p. 1738. Mon. Rev., xxvii. 135. European Mag., xxiii. 8o.]

OCCASIONAL verses: to which are added, extracts from letters, &c., &c. By Sophia Baillie, née Denman. [Edited by her sister-in-law Joanna BAILLIE.]

London printed, not published. 1846. Duodecimo. Pp. 86. [W., Martin's Cat.] OCCASIONAL (the) writer. Numb. I. [By Henry St JOHN, Viscount Bolingbroke.] With an answer paragraph by paragraph.

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No. II. To the same. [By Henry St JOHN, Viscount Bolingbroke.]

London: M.DCC. XXVII. Octavo. Pp. 50. b. t.*

No. III. To the same. [By Henry St JOHN, Viscount Bolingbroke.]

London: M.DCC.XXVII. Octavo. Pp. 31.*
Published in A collection of political tracts.
By the author of the Dissertation upon
parties. London, 1775.

OCCASIONAL (the) writer: containing an answer to the second manifesto of the Pretender's eldest son: which bears date at the palace of Holyrood-House, the 10th of October, 1745. Containing reflections, political and historical, upon the last revolution, and the progress of the present rebellion in Scotland. [By William GRANT, Lord Prestongrange.]

London: 1745. Octavo. Pp. 54. b. t.* [D. Laing.]

Ascribed also to Thomas Hollis. OCCULT physick, or the three principles in nature anatomized by a philosophical opperation, taken from experience, in three books; the first of beasts, trees, herbs and their magical and physical vertues; the second book containeth most excellent and rare medicines for all diseases happening to the bodies of both men and women, which never yet saw the light; an incomparable piece; the third and last book, is a denarian tract, shewing how to cure all diseases with ten medicaments, and the mystery of the quaternary and quinary number opened, with a table shewing the suns rising, setting, hours of the day, hours of the night, and how many minutes are contained in a planetary hour both day and night, with a table of the signs continuance on the ascendant, fitted for magical uses, as gathering of herbs, roots, and the like, with their uses; whereunto is added a necessary tract, shewing how to judge of a disease by the affliction of the moon, upon the sight of the patients urine, with an example, also you are taught how to erect a figure of heaven for any time given. By W. W. [William WILLIAMS], philosophus, student in the cœlestial sciences.

London 1660. Octavo. 4 leaves, pp. 160. [W.]

"The Epistle dedicatory" subscribed "Will. Will."

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This work first appeared under the title of "Nautical essays," q.v.

OCELLUM promontorium: or short observations on the ancient state of Holderness, with historic facts relative to the seaport and market town of Ravenspurne, in Holderness, [By Thomas THOMPSON, F.A.S.]

Hull: 1824. Octavo. Pp. 117. [Boyne's Yorkshire Lib., p. 169.]

The printed title bears the date, 1821. OCTAVIUS: a dialogue. By Marcus Minucius Felix. [Translated, with notes, by Sir David ĎALRYMPLE, Lord Hailes.]

Edinburgh: MDCCLXXXI. Octavo.* [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

OCULIST (the). A dramatic entertainment of two acts. [By Phanuel BACON.] London; MDCCLVII. Octavo.* OCULUS Britanniæ: an heroi-panegyrical poem on the university of Oxford. Illustrated with divers beautiful similes, and useful digressions. [By Nicholas AMHERST.]

London: 1724. Octavo. Pp. 6. b. t. 64.* Dedication signed Philo-Musus. ODD fellowship and Wesleyan Methodism. A reply to an attack of the Rev. E. Moulton, of South Shields, which

appeared in the Methodist Magazine, for April, 1841, entitled, "Ungodly associations exposed." By a Wesleyan. [T. E. HORWELL.]

London 1841. Octavo. Pp. 8.* [Bodl.] ODD neighbours. By the author of "Lord Lynn's wife." [John Berwick HARWOOD.] In three volumes. London: 1865. Octavo.*

ODD showers: or, an explanation of the rain of insects, fishes, and lizards; soot, sand, and ashes; red rain and snow; meteoric stones; and other bodies. By Carribber. [Sir George Duncan GIBB, Bart.] Intended chiefly for young persons.

London: 1870. Duodecimo. Pp. 43.* ODD sketches, by the author of "Poetical aspirations." [William ANDERSON.] Edinburgh: MDCCCXXXI. Duodecimo. Pp. vi. 172.*

ODD (the) volume. [By the Misses CORBET.]

Edinburgh 1826. Octavo. Pp. 375.*

Second series. [By the Misses

CORBET.]

London 1827. :

381.*

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ODDITIES and outlines. By E. M. [E. MANGIN.] In two volumes.

1807. Octavo. [Biog. Dict., 1816.] ODDS and ends, done up in parcels to

suit all readers. [By W. MASKELL.] Published under the direction of the Committee of general literature and education appointed by the Society for promoting Christian knowledge.

London: N. D. Octavo. Pp. viii. 184.* [Biog. Dict., 1816. Adv. Lib.] Preface signed M. C.

ODDS and ends from an old drawer. By Werdna Retnyw, M.D. [Andrew WYNTER.] Illustrated by McConnell. London and New York. 1855. Octavo. Pp. 120.*

ODE (an). [By Soame JENYNS.]

London: M. DCC.LXXX. Quarto. Pp. 16.* ODE (an) addressed to the Savoir Vivre Club. [By Elijah FENTON.]

London N. D. Quarto. Pp. 16. b. t.* [Bodl.]

ODE by Dr. Samuel Johnson to Mrs. Thrale, upon their supposed approaching nuptials. [By James BOSWELL.] London: MDCCLXXXIV. Quarto. Pp. 16.*

"Written by Jas Boswell Esq. as he assured me."-MS. note by Samuel Lysons in the Dyce copy.

ODE commemorative of Her Majesty's visit to the Great Industrial Exhibition in Dublin. By Menenius. [Digby P. STARKEY.]

Dublin MDCCCLIII. Octavo. Pp. 15.* [On the authority of the author.]

ODE (an) consecrated to the memory of his Grace the duke of Newcastle, late chancellor of the University of Cambridge. [By Sidney SWINNEY.]

London 1769. Quarto. [Crit. Rev., xxvii. 235, 400.]

O DE occasioned by Sir William Browne's legacy of two gold medals, to be disposed of annually, for the encouragement of poetry in the University of Cambridge. [By John BAYNES, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge.] London: MDCCLXXVI. Quarto. Pp. 12.1 "In part, if not wholly the production.' MS, note on the Bodleian copy.

ODE (an) on a distant prospect of Eton
College. [By Thomas GRAY.]
London: 1747. Folio, Pp. 8.*
ODE on Lochiel [Donald Cameron of
Lochiel]'s birth-day, 1796. [By Rev.
William CAMERON, minister of Kirk-
newton, in Mid-Lothian.]

[Edinburgh? 1796.] Quarto. Pp. 7. [W.] ODE (an) on the peace. of Edwin and Eltruda. WILLIAMS.]

By the author [Helen Maria

London: 1783. Quarto. [Mon. Rev., Ixix. 167.]

ODE on the present state of English poetry, occasioned by reading a translation of select parts of Shakespeare, Milton, Thomson, Warton: Simonides, Sophocles, and others. By Cornelius Scriblerus Nothus. With remarks. To which is added, a translation of a fragment of Simonides. [By A. C. SCHOMBERG.]

Oxford: M.DCC. LXXIX. Quarto. Pp. 31.* [Bodl.]

ODE performed in the Senate-House at Cambridge, July 1, 1769, at the installation of Augustus-Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Grafton, Chancellor of the University. [By Thomas GRAY.] [Set to music by Dr. Randal, Professor of Music.]

Cambridge, M.DCC.LXIX. Quarto. Pp. 8. [Dyce Cat., i. 350.]

ODE to Dragon, Mr Garrick's housedog, at Hampton. [By Hannah MORE.]

London. 1777. Quarto.

ODE to freedom. [By William BOWRA.] London: MDCCXCIII. Quarto. Pp. 28.* Presentation сору from "the author, William Bowra."-MS. note on the Bodleian copy.

ODE (an) to love. [By Rev. Richard SHEPHERD, archdeacon of Bedford.] 1756. Quarto. [Gent. Mag., lxxix. 1. 91. Mon. Rev., xv. 447.]

Republished under the title of the Philologist.

ODE to Mr. Pinchbeck, upon his newly invented patent candle-snuffers, by Malcolm M'Greggor, Esq; author of the Heroic epistle to Sir William Chambers, and the Heroic postscript. [William MASON.] The fifth edition. London: MDCCLXXVI. Quarto. Pp. 11. The first edition was published in the same year.

ODE to Myra. In imitation of Horace's Ode to Canidia. [By W. KING, LL.D., St Mary's Hall.]

Dublin, printed. London, reprinted 1730. Octavo. Pp. 12. [Bodl.]

*

An

The above contains Myra's answer.
ode, in imitation of Horace, Lib. Ep. Ode
xviii. pp. 9-12.

ODE (an) to superstition, with some other poems. [By Samuel ROGERS.] London: MDCCLXXXVI. Quarto. Pp. 26. b. t.* [Dyce Cat.]

The original edition of Rogers' first publication.

ODE (an) to the Athenian society. In the second volume of the Athenian Oracle. [By Daniel DEFOE.]

London: 1704. Octavo. I leaf. [Wilson, Life of Defoe, 47.]

ODE (an) to the Creator of the world. Occasion'd by the fragments of Orpheus. [By John HUGHES, secretary to the Commissioners of the Peace.] London: 1713. Folio. Pp. 1. b. t. 8.* [Adv. Lib. Bodl.]

ODE to the Duchess of Newcastle on her birthday. [By Henry PELHAM, fourth Duke of Newcastle, K.G.]

[1810.] Quarto. Pp. 30. [W., Martin's Cat.]

ODE (an) to the Earl of Lincoln on the Duke of Newcastle's retirement. [By Rev. Samuel BISHOP, rector of St

Martin Outwich, London, and of Ditton, Kent.]

1762. Quarto. [Life of S. Bishop, prefixed to his works, p. 20.]

ODE (an) to the Livery of London, on their petition to his Majesty for kicking out his worthy ministers. Also an ode to Sir Joseph Banks, on the report of his elevation to the important Το dignity of a privy counsellor. which is added, a jeremi-ad to George Rose, Esq. By Peter Pindar, Esq. [John WOLCOTT, M.D.] London: MDCCXCVII. b. t.*

Quarto. Pp. 44.

ODE (an) to the Right Hon. the Earl of Lincoln. See "ODE (an) to the Earl of Lincoln, &c."

ODE (an) to the warlike genius of Great Britain. [By Rev. William TASKER.] London: M DCC LXXVIII. Quarto.* [Gent. Mag., lxx. i. 283.]

ODE (an) to tragedy. By a gentleman of Scotland. James BOSWELL.] Edinburgh: MDCLXI. [1761.] Quarto. Pp. 12. [Adv. Lib.]

Dedicated to "James Boswell Esq." ODE (an) upon dedicating a building, and erecting a statue, to Shakespeare, at Stratford upon Avon. By D. G. [David GARRICK.]

London: M DCC LXIX. Quarto. Pp. 34.* ODE upon ode; or, a peep at St James's: or, New-year's day; or, what you will. By Peter Pindar, Esq. [John WOLCOTT.] The seventh edition.

London: M.DCC.LXXXVII. Quarto. Pp. 79.*

ODES and addresses to great people. [By Thomas HOOD and J. H. REYNOLDS.]

London: 1825. Octavo. Pp. vi. 1. 136.* ODES and epistles. [By Robert CRAGGS, Lord Nugent.] The second edition.

Octavo. Pp.

London: M. DCC. XXXIX. 79.* [Dyce Cat., ii. 79.] ODES and miscellaneous poems. By a student of medicine in the University of Edinburgh. [Alexander CAMPBELL.] Edinburgh: 1796. Quarto. Pp. vi. 61.* [Rodgers, Mod. Scot. Minst., i. 162.] ODES descriptive and allegorical. [By Richard SHEPHERD.]

London, MDCCLXI, Quarto. Pp. iv. 50.* [Gent. Mag., lxxix. i. 91. Mon. Rev., xxiv. 139.]

ODES of importance, &c. To the shoemakers. To Mr. Burke. To irony. To Lord Lonsdale. To the King. To the academic chair. To a Margate hoy. Old Simon, a tale. The judges, or the wolves, the bear, and inferior beasts, a fable. By Peter Pindar, Esq. [John WOLCOTT, M.D.]

London: M.DCC.XCII. Quarto. Pp. 72. b. t.*

ODES on several subjects. [By Mark AKENSIDE.]

London: M.DCC.XLV. Quarto. Pp. 54.* ODES, on the four seasons. By W. Seymour. [Cuthbert SHAW.] Bury St Edmund's. M,DCC, LX. Quarto. Pp. 18.* [Chalmers, Biog. Dict. Mon. Rev., xxii. 516.]

Written when under 19 years of age. ODES to Kien Long, the present Emperor of China; with the Quakers, a tale; to a fly, drowned in a bowl of punch; ode to Macmanus, Townsend, and Jealous, the thief-takers; to Cælia. To a pretty milliner. To the fleas of Teneriffe. To Sir William Hamilton. To my candle, &c. &c. &c. By Peter Pindar, Esq. [John WOLCOTT, M.D.] London: M.DCC. XCII. Quarto. Pp. 77. b. t.*

ODES to Mr. Paine, author of "Rights of man ;" on the intended celebration of the downfall of the French empire, by a set of British democrates, on the fourteenth of July. By Peter_Pindar, Esq. [John WOLCOTT, M.D.] London: M. DCC. XCI.

Quarto. Pp. 10.*

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