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HARLEY, Earl of Oxford; and revised, it is supposed, by SWIFT."] London: 1711. Quarto. [Life of Swift by Sir W. Scott, prefixed to the edition of Swift's collected works, append., p. 60.] REASONS why a Churchman may with great justice refuse to subscribe to the British and Foreign Bible Society. [By Rev. Richard LOCKWOOD, vicar of Lowestoft.]

Yarmouth: 1816. Octavo. Pp. 16. 2.* [Bodl.]

Author's name in the handwriting of Dawson Turner. The pamphlet was never published or sold.

REASONS why a new translation of the Bible should not be published without a previous statement and examination of all the material passages, which may be supposed to be misinterpreted. [By Thomas BURGESS, D.D.] Second edition.

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London 1819. Octavo. Pp. 24.* First edition, Durham, 1816.

REASONS why a party among us, and

also among the confederates, are obstinately bent against a treaty of peace with the French at this time. By the author of the Reasons for putting an end to this expensive war. [Daniel DEFOE.] The second edition. Printed for John Baker, at the Black-Boy in Pater-Noster-Row, 1711. Octavo. Pp. 48.* [Lee's Defoc, 130.]

The first edition was published in the same year.

REASONS why a protestant should not turn papist: or, protestant prejudices against the Roman Catholic religion; propos'd, in a letter to a Romish priest. By a person of quality. [Hon. Robert BOYLE.]

sh.

London: 1687. Quarto. Pp. 32.* REASONS why Christian women should exercise the gifts of the Holy Spirit, particularly in reference to the ministry of the gospel. [By Susanna CORDER.] Lindfield: 1839. Duodecimo. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 452.] REASONS why the approaching_treaty of peace should be debated in Parliament as a method most expedient and constitutional. In a letter addressed to a great man. And occasioned by the perusal of a Letter addressed to two great men. [By Owen RUFFHEAD.]

London: MDCCLX. Octavo. Pp. 49.*

REASONS why the Parliament of Scotland cannot comply with the late K. James's proclamation, sent lately to that kingdom, and prosecuted by the late Viscount Dundee. Containing an answer to every paragraph of the said proclamation; and vindicating the said Parliament their present proceedings against him. [By James WELWOOD, M.D.] Published by authority. London: MDCCLXXXIX. Quarto.*

The dedication to his Grace the Duke of Hamilton is signed J. W.

REASONS why the Society of Friends should not vote for members of Parliament, &c. [By Daniel ROBERTS, of Painswick.] London : sh. Signed Philotesis. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 79.

1804.

Duodecimo.

REASONS why this nation ought to put a speedy end to this expensive war; with a brief essay, at the probable conditions on which the peace now negotiating, may be founded. Also an inquiry into the obligations Britain lies under to the allies; and how far she is obliged not to make peace without them. [By Daniel DEFOE.]

[London]. 1711. Octavo. Pp. 47.*

REASONS why we should admit the king to a personall treaty in Parliament, and not treat by commissioners. [By Clement SPELMAN.]

Printed in the yeere, 1647. Quarto. Pp. 8.* [Bodl.]

REAY Morden: a novel. [By Rev. NIBBS, missionary in Jamaica.] In three volumes. Second edition. Edinburgh MDCCCXXIX. Octavo.* First edition also 1829.

REBELLION in Bath: or the battle of the upper rooms: an heroico-odico tragico-comico poem in two cantos. By the late Peter Paul Pallet. [Rev. Richard WARNER.] Canto the first: edited by his nephew Timothy Goosequill to which is added, a vindication of the glorious revolution in 1688, from aspersions cast on it in a sermon preached by the Rev. Henry Phillpotts, vicar of Kilmersden, Somerset, before the University of Oxford. By Tom Type.

London: 1808. Quarto. Pp. 74. [Gent. Mag., Jan. 1858, p. 103. Mon. Rev., lxii. 326.]

For the second canto, see "The Restora tion."

REBELLS (the) catechism. Composed in an easy and familiar way; to let them see the heinousness of their offence, the weakness of their strongest subterfuges; and to recal them to their duties both to God and man. [By Peter HEYLIN, D.D.]

Printed, 1643. Quarto. Pp. 29.* Ascribed to Bp. Patrick. [Leslie's Cat., 1849. (61).]

REBELS (the) plea, or Mr. Baxters judgement, concerning the late wars, in these particulars: viz, The originall of government. The coordinate and legislative power in the two Houses. The third estate. The force upon the Houses in 1642. The principles the Houses went by at the beginning, destructive to monarchy. The covenant. The reasons for submitting to the late government. [By Thomas TOMKINS.]

London, 1660. Quarto. Pp. 45. b. t.* [Bodl.]

...

"Ex lib. T. Barlow ex dono autoris Dr.
Tomkins
1660."-MS. note in the
Bodleian copy, in the handwriting of Dr.
Barlow.

REBUFFER (the) rebuffed; or, a vindication of the Remarks on the second part of principles political and religious, and of several MS. letters sent to the Reverend Mr Sieveright, anno 1767. In answer to that gentleman's exceptions in his pamphlet, intitled, Miscellaneous tracts, No. 1. A rebuff. [By Dr. Abernethy DRUMMOND.]

Edinburgh: M DCC LXX. Octavo. Pp. 52.*

REBUKE (a) to the odious sin of uncleanness. By a minister of the Church of England. [Josiah WOODWARD, D.D.]

London, 1701. Duodecimo. Pp. 22.1 [Bodl.]

REBUKES for sin by God's burning anger: by the burning of London : by the burning of the world: by the burning of the wicked in hell fire. To which is added a short discourse of heart fixedness, as a means against perplexing fears in time of danger : occasioned by the general distractions of the present times. By T. D. [Thomas DOOLITTLE.] London: 1667. Duodecimo. [N. and Q., 2 Aug. 1856, p. 99.] RECANTATION; or, a second letter to the worshipful the Dean of Guild, and the merchants and manufacturers of

2098

the city of Glasgow: being a compleat refutation of every thing that has been advanced, or can hereafter be offered in favour of the Irish bills, and exhibiting the ruinous consequences which their passing into laws would infallibly produce. [By M. FITZGERALD.]

London: MDCCLXXIX. b t. 36.1 * [Bodl.] RECEIPT (the) tax.

Octavo. Pp. 8.

A farce, in two acts, as performed at the TheatreRoyal in the Haymarket, with universal applause. Written by the author of Too civil by half. [John DENT.] London: 1783. Octavo. [Biog. Dram. Mon. Rev., Ixix. 261.] RECENT (on the) prosecutions of persons vending books against Christianity an address to deists. By a dissenter. [JOHN Offor.]

London: 1823. Octavo. [Cat. Lond.
Inst., ii. 344.]

RECEPTION (the) of the Palatines vindicated in a fifth letter to a Tory member. [By Francis HARE, D.D.]

London: 1711. Octavo. Pp. 40.* RECESS (the); or, a tale of other times. By the author of The chapter of accidents. [Sophia LEE.] [In three volumes.]

London: M. DCC. LXXXV. [Dyce Cat.]

Duodecimo.*

RECESS (the) or autumnal relaxation in the Highlands and Lowlands; being the Home circuit versus Foreign travel, a serio-comic tour to the Hebrides. By Frederick Fag, Esq. of Westminster. [James JOHNSON, M.D.] London: MDCCCXXXIV. Octavo. Pp. viii. 245.* [Adv. Lib.] RECEYT (a) to stay the plagve.

De

livered by R. W. to his parishioners, the 29 of May, 1625. [Robert WRIGHT, D.D., Fellow of Trinity College.]

London, 1625. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 24.* [Bodl.]

The above is a sermon on Numb. 16. part of verse 46; and the two dedications are signed R. W. RECOLLECTIONS abroad, in years 1785, 6, 7, 8, 9, 90, 1791. [By Sir Richard Colt HOARE, Bart.] In four volumes.

the

Bath: 1815-1818. Octavo. [W., Martin's Cat.]

RECOLLECTIONS of a chaperon. [By Mrs Arabella SULLIVAN.] Edited

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RECOLLECTIONS of a fox-hunter. By "Scrutator," author of "The master of the hounds," etc. etc. [K. W. HORLOCK.]

London: 1861. Octavo. Pp. xi. 347.* RECOLLECTIONS of a pedestrian. By the author of "The journal of an exile." [Thomas Alexander Boswell.] In three volumes.

London: 1826. Duodecimo.*

RECOLLECTIONS of an excursion to the monasteries of Alcobaça and Batalha. By the author of "Vathek." [William BECKFORD.]

London: 1835. Octavo. Pp. xi. 228.* RECOLLECTIONS of General Garibaldi; or, travels from Rome to Lucerne; comprising a visit to the Mediterranean isles of La Maddalena and Caprera, and General Garibaldi's home. [By Madame SCHWARZ.] London: 1860. Duodecimo. Pp. vii. 267.* [See p. 211, compared with p. 93, of Sir Charles R. M'Gregor's "Garibaldi at home."]

Pp.

RECOLLECTIONS of my early Scottish home. [By Henry MAITLAND.] Edinburgh MDCCCLXXVI. Octavo. xii. 172. RECOLLECTIONS of Old Christmas: a masque performed at Grimston, Tuesday 24th December, 1850. [By Crofton CROKER.]

1850. Quarto. Pp. 22; index, pp. x. [W., Martin's Cat.]

Written at the request of Lady Londesborough. The prologue is by Barry Cornwall (Bryan Waller Procter). RECOLLECTIONS of Rugby, by an old Rugbæan. [R. N. HUTTON.] London: 1848. Octavo.* [Gent. Mag., July 1848, p. 63.]

RECOLLECTIONS of some particulars

in the life of the late William Shenstone, Esq., in a series of letters from an intimate friend of his [William SEWARD] to.... ...., Esq. F.R.S.

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Ascribed to Richard Graves. [Adv. Lib.] RECOLLECTIONS of the lakes, and other poems. By the author of "The moral of flowers," and "The spirit of the woods." [By Mrs William HEY.] London: MDCCCXLI. Octavo.* [Newsam, Poets of Yorkshire, p. 13.]

RECOLLECTIONS of the past A series of letters. By E. H. M. [E. H. MAIR.]

Edinburgh 1877. Quarto. Pp. xii. 102.* Privately printed. The Letters appeared originally in the Ladies' Edinburgh Magazine.

RECOLLECTIONS of the Peninsula. By the author of Sketches of India. [Major Moyle SHERER.] London: 1823. Octavo.* RECOLLECTIONS of the table talk of Samuel Rogers; to which is added Porsoniana [by William MALTBY]. [Edited by Rev. Alexander DYCE.] London: 1856. Duodecimo. [W] 'RECOMMENDED to mercy." [By Mrs HOUSTOUN.] In three volumes. London 1862. Duodecimo,* : RECONCILEABLENESS

(the)

of

God's prescience of the sins of men, with the wisdom and sincerity of his counsels, exhortations, and whatsoever other means he uses to prevent them. In a letter to the Honourable Robert Boyle, Esq. [By John HowE.]

London: 1677. Octavo. Pp. 2. b. t. 154.* Signed H. W.

RECONCILER (the): an attempt to exhibit, in a somewhat new light, the harmony and the glory of the divine government, and of the divine sovereignty. By a Quadragenarian in the ministry. [Robert WEAVER.] London 1841. Octavo.*

:

RECONCILER (the) of the Bible inlarged: wherein above three thousand seeming contradictions throughout the Old and New Testament, are fully and plainly reconciled. A like work never yet extant, and may serve for the explanation of the most difficult places of the Bible: being usefull for all such as desire to understand the sacred scriptures aright unto salvation. Humbly submitted to the censure of the sons of the prophets. By J. T. and T. M. [John THADDAEUS and Thomas

MAN] ministers of God's holy word

and sacraments.

London, 1662.

Folio. Pp. 6. b. t. 132.* [Horne's Introduction, v. 409.]

To the reader signed T. Man. Preface signed J. T.

RECONCILER (the); or, an essay to shew, that Christians are much more agreed in their notions concerning the Holy Trinity, than has been commonly represented. With a reply to Mr Ball [of Honiton]'s answer to some common objections. [By Joseph HALLET.]

London: 1727. Octavo. Pp. 47.* [Brit. Mus.]

RECONCILING (a) letter, upon the late differences about convocational rights and proceedings, as manag'd by those who have maintain'd the liberties of the lower clergy. [By White KENNETT, D.D.]

[London.] N. D. Quarto. Pp. 11.* [Bodl.]

RECONSTRUCTION (the) of the Church of Scotland and re-union of the Presbyterian Churches on the Reformation and Revolution basis of 1560 and 1690. By a parish minister. [William GRAHAM.]

Edinburgh: N. D. Octavo. Pp. 8.*

RECORD Commission-Letters from eminent historical writers relating to the publications on the public records. [Edited by Charles Purton COOPER, Q.C.]

London: 1836. Octavo. [W.]

RECORD (a) of rithme, being an essay towards the reformation of the law, offerd to the consideration of the committee appointed for that purpose. Written by some men of law, at a time when they had little else to doe. [By Alexander BROME.]

N. P. N. D Quarto. Pp. 8.*

Printed in the third edition of Songs and other poems, by Alex. Brome, Gent. London, 1668.

RECORDS of the chase, and memoirs

of celebrated sportsmen; illustrating some of the usages of olden times, and comparing them with prevailing customs. Together with an introduction to most of the fashionable hunting countries, and comments. By Cecil. [Cornelius TONGUE.]

London: 1854. Octavo. Pp. xx. 435.*

RECORDS of the ministry of the Rev. E. T. March Phillipps. [By Miss PHILLIPPS.]

London 1862. Octavo. [Adv. Lib.] RECOVERY from sickness: a present to one lately raised from a dangerous disorder. Containing serious reflections, resolutions and devotions suitable to that occasion. [By Micaiah TOWGOOD.] The second edition. London: 1746. Duodecimo. Pp. 34.* [Gent. Mag., Feb. 1792, p. 185.] RECREATIONS at Ramsgate. Poetical effusions, collated with and collected from original manuscripts in the possession of a lady. [By Henry TRESHAM.]

:

*

Ramsgate: 1802. Quarto. Pp. 46. [Mon. Rev., xxxvii. 439.] RECREATIONS in shooting with some account of the game of the British Islands. By Craven. [Capt. John William CARLETON.] With sixty-two embellishments, engraved on wood by Frederick W. Branston; from original drawings by William Harvey. London: MDCCCXLVI. Duodecimo. Pp. xxviii. 307.*

RECREATIONS (the) of a country

parson. [By Andrew Kennedy Hutchison BOYD, D.D.]

London, 1859. Octavo.*

Second series.

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RECRUITING (the) serjeant, a musical entertainment as it is performed at the theatre-royal in Drury-Lane. [By Isaac BICKERSTAFF.]

London. MDCCLXX. Octavo. Pp. 28.* RECTIUS instruendum: or, a review and examination of the doctrine presented by one assuming the name of ane informer, in three dialogues with a certain doubter, upon the controverted points of episcopacy, the covenants against episcopacy, and separation. Wherein the unsoundnes, and (in many thinges) the inconsistency of the informers principles, arguments, and answers, upon these points, the violence which he hath offred unto

the holy scripture, and to diverse
authors ancient and modern, is demon-
strat and made appear.
And that
truth which is after godlines, owned
by the true protestant presbyterian
Church of Scotland, asserted and vin-
dicated. [By Thomas FORRESTER.]
Printed in the year, 1684. Octavo.*
RECTOR (the) and The doctor's family.

-See "Chronicles of Carlingford."
RECTOR (the) in search of a curate.
By a Churchman. [W. F. WILKIN-
SON, M.A., theological tutor of Chelten-
ham College.]

London: 1843. Duodecimo.* [Darling,
Cyclop. Bibl.]

In two

RECTOR (the) of Auburn.
volumes. [By E. THOMPSON.]
London: MDCCCXXXVII. Duodecimo.*
RECTOR (the) of Sutton committed
with the Dean of St. Paul's, or, a
defence of Dr. Stillingfleet's Irenicum,
his discourse of excommunication,
idolatry, and other writings, against
his late sermon, entituled, The mis-
chief of separation. By the author of
the Christian temper. [John BAR-
RET.] In a letter to a friend.

London, 1680. Pp. 2. b. t. 80.* [Wood,
Athen. Oxon., iv. 110.]

RECTOR'S (the) memorandum-book ;
being memoirs of a family in the north.
[By Frances Elizabeth KING, née Ber-
nard.]

London: About 1800.

Mag., Jan. 1822, p. 90.]

Octavo. [Gent.

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A satire on Cardinal Wolsey.
REDEEMED (the) rose; or, Willie's
rest. By a lady. [Eliza RUMSEY.]
London: 1853. Octavo. Pp. viii. 108.*
REDEEMER (the) and the sanctifier;
or, the sacrifice of Christ, and the
operations of the Spirit vindicated; with
a free debate about the importance of
those doctrines represented in a friendly
conversation between persons of dif-
ferent sentiments. [By Isaac WATTS,
D.D.]

London: MDCCXXXVI. Duodecimo.*
REDEMPTION, a poem in five books.
By Joseph Swain, Baptist minister.
[Edited by C. E. COETLOGON.]

London: 1789. Octavo. [Brit. Mus.]
REDGAUNTLET, a tale of the
eighteenth century. By the author of
"Waverley." [Sir Walter SCOTT.] In
three volumes.

Edinburgh: 1824. Octavo.*

REDMOND the rebel. [By Alexander
SUTHERLAND.] In three volumes.
London: 1819. Duodecimo. [Edin. Lit.
Jour., vi. 27.]

REDSTONE'S Guernsey guide; or the
stranger's companion for the island of
Guernsey containing a brief descrip-
tion of the public buildings, antiquities,
and scenery, with an account of its
laws, privileges, customs, trade, and
biographical notices. By the author
of "Recollections of Sark," &c. &c.
[Louisa Lane CLARKE.]

Guernsey: 1841. Duodecimo. Pp. vii.
141.* [Bodl.]

REDUCING (the) of Scotland by arms,
and annexing it to England, as a

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