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of Resistance, as laid down by Mr. Saurin in the Irish House of Commons, considered and confuted,

8vo. 1799.-A Letter to Earl Cholmondeley, on the Civil Policy of the Ancients, 8vo. 1799.-Union or

Separation, 8vo. 1799.-The Political, Commercial, and Civil State of Ireland, 8vo. 1799.-Misconception and Mis-statements of the Rt. Hon. John Foster, Speaker of the Irish House of Commons, proved and corrected, 8vo. 1799.-A Survey of the Strength and

Opulence of Great Britain, 8vo. 1801.-The Case of Ireland, 8vo. 1802.--Address to the People of Ireland, 8vo. 1802.-Historical and Political View of the Disorganization of Europe, 8vo. 1303.—Memoirs of the King's Supremacy, 8vo. 1809.

CLARKE, WILLIAM, formerly Professor of the English Language and Belles Lettres in the Coll. of Alais, Languedoc. Letters on the French Revolution, from the French of Malouet, 8vo. 1795.

CLARKSON, THOMAS, M. A. of Bury St. Edmund's; born in 1761, educated at St. John's College, Cambridge. His first publication, translated from a Latin dissertation, by which he obtained the first prize in the university in 1785, may be said to have been the first step towards the suppression of the African Slave Trade, as it led to those indefatigable exertions which so materially contributed to that great triumph of humanity, and which Mr. C. has so fully detailed in his History of its Abolition.

He has written:

Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, particularly the Africau, 8vo. 1786.-On the Impolicy of the African Slave-trade, 8vo. 1788.-On the Comparative Efficiency of the Regulation or Abolition, as applied to the Slave-Trade, 8vo. 1789.Letters on the Slave Trade, and the State of the Nations in those parts of Africa contiguous to Fort St. Louis and Goree, 4to. 1791.-Three Letters to the

Planters and Slave Merchants, 8vo. 1807.-The Portraiture of Quakerism, 3 v. 8vo. 1807.-The History of

the Abolition of the Slave Trade, 2 v. 8vo. 1808.Memoirs of the Public and Private Life of William

Penn, 2 v. 8vo. 1813.-Mr. C. is a principal coutributor to the Philanthropist, a quarterly publication. CLATER, FRANCIS, Farrier, Cattle Doctor, Chemist, and Druggist, at Retford, Nottinghamshire.

Every Man his own Farrier, 8vo. 1783. 21st ed. Every Man his own Cattle Doctor, 8vo. 1810.

CLAY, E. jun.

Historical and Topographical Description of Framling ham, Suffolk, 18mo. 1810. CLAY, J.

Elegy supposed to be written in the Place de la Re

volution, after the murder of Louis XVI. 4to. 1793.

CLAYTON, GEORGE, second son of John C. sen. educated at Hoxton Academy, belongs to what are called the Moderate Calvinists, and is Minister of the Meeting at Lock's Fields, Walworth.

The Dreadful Sin of Suicide, a sermon preached at the Meeting-House, New Court, Carey Street.

CLAYTON, JOHN, sen. formerly a Methodist Preacher, but having quitted that sect, has been for the last twenty years

pastor of the Weigh-House Independent Meeting in Eastcheap. He was originally placed in an apothecary's shop, but afterwards removed to Trevecca, one of Lady Huntingdon's colleges in Wales. He married a sister of Mr. Benjamin Flower, printer, of Harlow, Essex, with whom he and his family had a few years since so serious an altercation, as to require the decision of a court of law. He has published:

A Sermon on the Application of the Dissenters for a Repeal of the Test Act, ... Thanksgiving Sermon for the Peace of Amiens, 1802.-Charges at the Ordination of his sons John and George, and of Mr. Brooksbank, ... A Counter and Impartial Statement of Circumstances relative to a late With

drawment from a Dissenting Independent Church,

8vo. 1805.

CLAYTON, JOHN, jun. eldest son of the preceding, educated at Hoxton Academy, Meeting, but now of the Independent was some time Minister at Kensington Sermon before the Missionary Society, 1809.—On the Church, in Camomile Street. Choice of Books, 1811.

In

CLAYTON, Sir RICHARD, Bart. of Adlington, Lancashire, so created 1774. 1780 he married Anne, daughter of Charles White, Esq. of Manchester. He has published:

Connubia Florum, a poem in Latin verse from De la Croix, with notes, 8vo. 1791.-A Critical Inquiry into the Life of Alexander the Great, by the AncientHistorians, from the French of G. E. De St. Croix, 4to. 1793.-Memoirs of the House of Medici, from the French of Tenhove, 2 v. 4to. 1797.-The Science of Legislation, from the Italian of Filangieri, 2 v. 8vo. 1806.

Cheever, Web, D.D. Bishop and Archdeacon of St. Asaph and Vicar of Northon, Flintshire. This prelate is the Son of a clergyman and schoolmaster at Buckingham, and was educated at Brazen Nose College, Oxford, of which he became a fellow, and where he took his degree of M.A. 1764; D.D. 1786. He was tutor to the late Marquis of Buckingham, with whom he went to Ireland, during his viceroyalty. In that country his brother Dr. Euseby C. was promoted to the bishopric of Ferns, and afterwards to the archiepiscopal see of Dublin. The first preferment of any consequence obtained by Dr. William C. was a prebend of Westminster; he was elevated to the see of Chester in 1789, translated to Bangor in 1800, and to St. Asaph in 1806. He married about 1779 Miss Asheton, sister of Wm. A. Esq. of Lancashire, by whom he has several children. His publications

are:

De Rhythmo Græcorum Liber, 8vo. 1789.-Pardon

and Sanctification proved to be the privileges annexed to the due use of the Lord's Supper, a

Sermon, 8vo. 1791.-Sermons on select Subjects, 8vo.
-A List of Books recommended to the Younger
Clergy and Students in Divinity, 8vo. 3d ed. 1808.

CLEEVE, Rev. J. K. A. B. officiating Minister of St. Lawrence, Exeter, and resident at Oakford House, near that city, where he has lately opened a boarding-school. He has published:

A Sermon preached in the Church of St. Lawrence, Exeter, for the benefit of the Widows and Orphans of poor Clergymen, 8vo. 1812.

CLEGHORN, THOMAS, inventor of the

Ice Life-boat.

CLINTON, Major General, W. Henry, Quarter-master General in Ireland, and Guards. In 1808 he was Adjutant-geneMajor in the first regiment of Foot ral to the army under the command of Sir John Moore in Spain, concerning the operations of which he has published:

Remarks explanatory of the motives which guided the operations of the British Army during the late short campaign in Spain, 8vo. 1809.

CLIVE, J. H. of Newcastle-underLyne.

Mavor abbreviated, by the application of a new prin

The Hydro-Aeronaut, or Navigator's Life Buoy, ciple to his system of Stenography, 12mo. 1811.

12mo. 1810.

CLELAND, HENRY.

Life of the Rt. Hon. Wm. Pitt, 12mo. 1807.
CLEMENCE, M.

The True Lover of his Country, or a treatise on
Sovereignty, 12mo. 1801.

CLEMENT, THOMAS, formerly Curate of
Brendon, Devon.

The Key of Natural Philosophy, or an Introduction to the Knowledge of Nature.

CLENNEL, JOHN, F. S. A. Edin. and Perth, formerly resident at Newcastleupon-Tyne, now at Hackney, editor of the monthly miscellany entitled the Tradesman. There are many papers by Mr. C. in the Comm. and Agr. Mag. and in Nicholson's Journal. He has pub

lished:

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CLOUGH, H. G. M.D. Lecturer on Midwifery, Berners-street.

Syllabus of a Course of Lectures on Midwifery, 8vo.
CLOUGH, JAMES, Surgeon.

Observations on Pregnancy and the Diseases incident
to that period, 8vo. 1796.

CLOUTT, THOMAS, Minister of Pellstreet Meeting, Ratcliffe Highway. Christian Sympathy, a Fast Sermon, 8vo. 1806Age, a Sermon on the Anniversary of his Majesty's Righteousness the Dignity and Ornament of Old Accession, 8vo. 1809.

CLOWES, JAMES, M. A. Rector of St. John's, Manchester, and late Fellow of Trin. Coll. Cambridge. Mr. C., as will appear from the list of his works, is a zealous disciple of Baron Swedenborg.

He is the author of:

Swedenborg's Celestia Arcana, translated into English, 12 v. 8vo.-New Jerusalem Sermons, 2 v. 8vo. 1796.-Letters to a Member of Parliament on the

The Works of Wm. Hogarth elucidated, 2 v. roy. Writings of Swedenborg, containing a refutation of

8vo. 1810.

Gunner, Rev. Sir Wow. Hayar, Bart. Rector of Bury, Lancashire. He succeeded to the title on the death of his brother, Sir Francis, who was killed at Saratoga in 1777; and married in 1792, Byzantia, eldest daughter of Thos. Cartwright, Esq. of Aynho, Northampton

shire. He has written:

Thoughts on the Means of preserving the Health of the Poor by the Prevention of Epidemical. Fevers, 8vo. 1790.

CLIFFORD, CHARLES, Esq.

Remarks on a Speech of Lord Thurlow on the Insolvent Debtors' Bill, 8vo. 1788.-The Angler, a didactic poem, 12mo. 1804.

CLIFFORD, FRANCES.

The Ruins of Tivoli, rom. 4 v. 1810.

CLIFFORD, M. M. Esq. of the 12th Light Dragoons.

Egypt, a poem descriptive of that country, written during the late campaign, 8vo. 1802.-Poems, including 2d ed. of Egypt, fc. 8vo. 1808.

CLIFFORD, Hon. ROBERT, F.R. and A.S. Vice-president of the Society of Arts. Memoirs of the History of Jacobinism from the French of Barruel, 4 v. 8vo. 1798.-A Sketch of the Campaign of the French in Russia, fol. sheet, 1813.

Barruel's calumnies against him, 8vo. 1799.-Ser

mons on the call and deliverance of the Children of
Israel out of Egypt, 8vo. 1803.-A few plain answers
of Baron Swedenborg? 1806.-Letters to the Editors
to the question: Why do you receive the testimony
of the Christian Observer, in reply to their Observa-
tions on the " Plain Answers," 8vo. 1807.-The sole
exclusive divinity of Jesus Christ proved from his ap-
pellation of Saviour, a Sermon, 1808.-The Laws of

Divine Order stated and enforced, a Sermon, on the
Fast-day, 1809.

CLUBDT, Rev. Wretram, LL.B. Vicar of Brandeston, Suffolk.

Six Satires of Horace, in a style between free translation and literal version, 4to. 1795.-The Epistle of Horace on the Art of Poetry, translated into English verse, 4to. 1797.-Omnium, containing the Journal of a late three days' Tour in France, 8vo. 1798 Three Lyric Odes on celebrated occasions, 4to. 1806.

CLUTTERBUCK, HENRY, M. D. Memb. of the Roy. Coll. of Physicians, and Lecturer on the Theory and Practice of Physic, Materia Medica, and Chemistry, at his house, Crescent, New Bridge-street. Account of a new and successful method of treating those affections which arise from the poison of lead, 8vo. 1791.-Remarks on some of the opinions of the late Mr. John Hunter respecting the Venereal Disease, 8vo. 1799.-Inquiry into the Seat and Nature of Fever, part i. 8vo. 1809.-There are some papers

by Dr. C. in the Philos. Mag. and the New Lond. him to purchase a valuable estate at Bot

Med. Journ.

COAD, JOSEPH.

The true interest of the United Kingdom proved in

two plans of finance, 4to. 1804.

COBB, JAMES, Secretary to the East India Company. He was born in 1756; entered into the secretary's office at the India-House in 1751, and in 1800 married Miss Stanfeil, of Fratton, Hampshire. He has produced many dramatic pieces, of which the following have appeared in print:

Strangers at Home, com. op. 8vo. 1786-English

Readings, com. dram. 8vo. 1787.-The First Floor,

far. 8vo. 1787.-Love in the East, com. op. 8vo. 1788.-Doctor and Apothecary, far. 8vo. 1758. Haunted Tower, com. op. 1789.-Ramah Droog, 8vo. 1800.-A House to be Sold, mus. piece, 8vo. 1802.-The Wife of Two Husbands, mus. dram. 8vo. Belgrade, the Pirates, and the Shepherdess of Cheap

1603.-Mr. C. also wrote the songs to the Siege of

side.

COBB, JOHN, D D.

Light Sermons preached at Bampton's Lecture, 8vo.

1783.

sure.

ley, in Hampshire, where he resides.
For an article in this paper he was pro-
secuted by way of information by the
Attorney General. The trial took place
and sentenced to be imprisoned in New-
in June, 1810, when he was found guilty
gate for two years, and to pay a fine of
£1000. In some observations on this
event he says: "I have been laboring
I have never known what it was to enjoy
seventeen years since I quitted the army.
any of that which the world calls plea-
From a beginning with nothing,
I have acquired the means of making
some provision for a family of six child-
ren (the remains of thirteen), besides
having for several years maintained
almost wholly, three times as many
children of my relations." His publica-
tions relative to America need not be
particularized, as they have been reprint-.
ed in London under the title of Porcu-
pine's Works on the United States from
1793 to 1801, 12 v. 8vo. 1802. His
other productions are:
A Summary of the Law of Nations by Martens,
translated from the French, (Philad.) 8vo. 1795.
The same brought down to 1802, (Lond.) 1802.-To-

pographical and Political Description of the Spanish
part of St. Domingo, from the French of Moreau de
St. Mery, (Philad.) 2 v. 8vo. 1795.-Weekly Politi-
cal Register, 1802-13. 24 v. roy. 8vo.-Letters on the
fatal effects of the Peace with Bonaparte, 8vo. 1802.

The same with an Appendix, containing all the Conventions, Treaties, Speeches, and other docuEmpire of Germany divided into Departments, from ments connected with the subject, 8vo. 1802. The the French, 8vo. 1802.-Letters to the Hon. C. J. Fox on his visit to Bonaparte, 8vo. 1802.-Letters to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, shewing the fatal tendency of the Peace of Amiens with respect to 1803 to 1810. (when Mr. C. disposed of his interest Public Credit, 8vo. 1803.-Parliamentary Debates, in this publication,) 16 v. roy. 8vo.-Parliamentary History of England from the Norman Conquest to

COBBETT, WILLIAM, son of a farmer, born at or near Farnham, Surrey, 1766, and bred to his father's occupation, till in 1783, he privately quitted his home and repaired to London. Here after being employed a few months in the office of an attorney in Gray's Inn, he went in 1784 to Chatham and enlisted into a marching regiment, which he joined the year following in Nova Scotia. In 1791 it was relieved and sent home, and Mr. C. having in a service of near eight years attained the rank of serjeantmajor, obtained his discharge. In 1792 he visited France, whence he embarked for the purpose of settling in America. In that country he endeavoured to support himself by his literary exertions, which were devoted almost exclusively to political topics, and he also opened a bookseller's shop in Philadelphia. His publications ushered into the world under the name of Peter Porcupine, were calculated to counteract the ascendancy of COBBOLD, Rev. JOHN SPENCER, M. A. the French interest in the United States, Ipswich; educated at Gonville and Caius and the freedom of some of his observa- Coll. Cambridge, of which he became a tions subjected him to prosecutions for Fellow. He gained the Norrisian prize libels. In 1801 he returned to England, in 1793 and 1797, by the two Essays that and commenced a daily newspaper under the title of the Porcupine; this under- Essay tending to prove in what sense Jesus Christ commence the list of his publications: taking failed, and he began his Weekly hath brought life and immortality to light through Register, which is still continued. The the Gospel, 8vo. 1797.--Essay tending to shew the success of the latter, notwithstanding the Advantages which result to Revelation from its being notorious political tergiversation and occonveyed to us in the form of History, 1800.-Reply casional coarseness of the author, has Church of England, 8vo. 1804-A Chart of Sacred to the Dissenter's reasons for separating from the raised Mr. C. to affluence, and enabled History, 1807.

1803. v. i-xii. roy. 8vo. 1806-1812.-The Political

Proteus; a view of the l'ublic Character and Conduct of R. B. Sheridan, 8vo. 1804.-Essay on Sheep, by R. R. Livingston, with a Preface aud Notes, 8vo.

1811.

COCHRANE, Hon. BASIL, brother of the
Earl of Dundonald. This gentleman,
who has been in the civil service of the
East India Company, returned a few
years since from India with a splendid
fortune. He has erected baths on a new
construction at his house in Portman-
square and is desirous of bringing simi-
lar ones adapted to medical purposes into
general use. His name has lately ap-
peared, in a court of law, as the prosecu-
tor of a Mr. Harrison and Miss St. Julien,
with whom he had lived, for a con-
spiracy to extort money.
He has pub-
lished:

An Improvement in the Mode of administering the
Vapour Bath, 4to. 1809.-Appendix to the preceding,

4to. 1810.

COCHRANE, Hon. and Rev. JAMES ATHOL, M. A. Vicar of Manfield, Yorkshire, and formerly Chaplain to the 82d regiment of foot.

Plan for recruiting the British Army, 4to. 1779.Thoughts concerning the proper constitutional principles of manning and recruiting the Royal Navy and Army, 4to. 1791.-A Letter concerning the establishment of a provision for Sailors and Soldiers after certain length of services, 8vo. 1805.-Two Tracts on Agriculturai Subjects, 8vo. 1805. COCHRANE, JOHN.

The Seaman's Guide, 8vo. 1797.

Cock, S. merchant of London, and commercial agent for Liverpool.

An Examination of the Report of the Bullion Committee, 8vo. 1811.-Answer to Lord Sheffield's Pamphlet on the Navigation System, 8vo. 1804.

COCKBURN, WILLIAM, M. A. late Fellow of St. John's College, and Christian Advocate from 1803 to 1810, in the University of Cambridge. He gained the Seatonian prizes in 1802 and 3, and has published:

St. Peter's Denial of Christ, a Seatonian Prize Poem, 4to. 1802.-Christ raising the Daughter of Jairus, a Seatonian Prize Poem, 4to. 1803.-Remarks on Volney's Ruins, 8vo. 1804.--Authentic Account of the Death of Lord Camelford, 8vo. 1804.-A Dissertatiou on the best means of civilizing the British Subjects in India, 4to. 1805.-A Letter to the Editors of the Edinburgh Review, 8vo. 1805.-An Address to Methodists, and all others who conscientiously secede from the Church of England, 8vo. 1805.-An Essay on the Epistles of Ignatius, 8vo. 1806.-An Address to the Roman Catholics of Great Britain and Ireland, 8vo. 1807.-The Credibility of the Jewish Exodus defended, cr. 8vo. 1809.-A Sermon on the Fast-day, 1809, 8vo.-Strictures on Clerical Educa. tion at the University of Cambridge, 8vo. 1810. COCKELL, William, M. D.

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Stutterheim's Account of the Battle of Austerlitz,
COFFIN, Major PINE.
from the French, 8vo. 1806.

Walthamstow.
COGAN, E. Master of an Academy at

Address to the Dissenters on Classical Literature,
8vo. 1789.-Moschi Idyllia tria, Græce, cum Notis,
1795.-Reflections on the Evidence of Christianity,
12mo. 1796-A Sermon at the Old Meeting-house
Walthamstow, on the Death of E. Radcliffe, Esq.
1809.-A Sermon at the same place, on the Death of
Mrs. Hannah Cooke, 1809.-Mr. C. is the author of
several papers in the Monthly Mag.

COGAN, THOMAS, M. D. This gentleman who studied at Leyden, and practised for many years in the United Provinces, was, in association with the late Dr. Hawes, one of the first promoters of that excellent institution the Humane Society. Dr. C. is the reputed author of the "History of John Buncle, jun." and has published:

Dissertatio de Pathematum animi vi et modo agendi, (Lugd. Bat.) 4to. 1767.-Memoirs of the Society insti tuted at Amsterdam in favor of drowned persons, from 1761 to 1771, 8vo. 1773.-Philosophical Survey

of the Creation. ...Journey from Utrecht to series of Letters written from Holland to a Friend in Frankfort, chiefly by the borders of the Rhine, in a England in 1791 and 2, 2 v. 8vo. 1795.-The Works of the late Professor Camper, or the Connexion between the Science of Anatomy and the Arts of Drawing, Painting, Statuary, &c. 4to. 1794.-A Philoso. cal Treatise on the Passions, 2. v. 8vo. 1807.-Theophical Treatise on the Passions, 8vo. 1800.-An Ethilogical Disquisitions on the Characteristic Excellencies of Christianity, 8vo. 1812.

COGGAN, G. Merchant, of Hull.

A Testimony of Richard Brothers in an epistolary
Address to the People of England on the impending
Judgments of God, 8vo. 1795.

COGHLAN, Rev. Lucius, D.D. a native of Ireland.

The Fall of David, a sermon (preached at Bath,) 8vo.

1810.

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Improved System of Mnemonics, or Art of assisting
the Memory simplified, Vol. I. 8vo. 1813.
COHEN, L.

On the Retroversion of the Uterus, 4to. 1785.
COCKLE, Mrs. Governess to the Misses Sacred Truths, addressed to the Children of Israel re.
Fitzclarence.

The Juvenile Journal, 12mo. 1807.-The Fishes'

Grand Gala, 1807.-Three Gifts, or Young Farmer
Gubbins, 1807.-Elegiac Tribute to the Memory of Sir
John Moore, 1809.-Moral Truths and Studies in Nat.

siding in the British Empire, 12mo. 1808.

Corr, Tuomre, H.D. a Methodist preacher, who, in association with Mr, Henry More, published:

The Life of the Rev. John Wesley, 8vo. 1792.

Views of Places in the Kingdom of Mysore, with con cise descriptions, 4to. 1793.-A Digest of Hindu Law crit, 3 v. 8vo. 1801.-Remarks on the Husbandry and Commerce of Bengal, 8vo. 1806.-Dictionary of the Sanscrit Language, by Amera Sinha, with an English interpretation, 4to. 1808.-Two Treatises on the Ilin du Law of Inheritance, from the Sanscrit, roy. 4to.

on contracts and successions, from the original Sans

1810.

COLEMAN, CHARles, Esq.
Satirical Pecrage of England, 4to. 1784.

COKE, THOMAS WILLIAM, Esq. M.P. for the County of Norfolk. The paternal name of this gentleman, who in respect to landed property is one of the, most powerful commoners in the kingdom, was Roberts, but he assumed that of Coke upon inheriting the extensive estates of his maternal uncle, Thomas Coke, Earl of Leicester, a descendant of the celebrated lawyer, Sir Edward Coke. Mr. C. first obtained a seat in parliament COLEMAN, EDWARD, Professor of the in 1776; he was again elected in 1780, Veterinary College, St. Pancras, princi1790, 1796, 1802 and 1806, but on the pal Veterinary Surgeon to the British latter occasion the election was declared Cavalry and to the Board of Ordnance. void, and he was chosen for Derby in the Dissertation on suspended respiration from drowning, room of his brother Edward. In 1807, tions on the Structure, Economy and Diseases of the hanging and suffocation, 8vo. 1791, 2d ed.-Observa. 3 and 12 he was returned for Norfolk Foot of the Horse, and on the principles and practice without opposition. In 1775 he married of shoeing, 2 v. 4to. 1798-1802.-Observations on Jane, sister of the present Lord Sher- the Formation and Uses of the Natural Frog of the borne, by whom he has two daughters, Horse, with a description of a patent Artificial Frog, married to Captain Henry Digby, R.N. 8vo. 1800.-Veterinary Transactions, No. I. 8vo. and Viscount Anson. Mr. C. contributed a few papers to Young's Ann. of Agr. Whether the following pamphlet was published with his sanction seems doubtful:

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Reflections on the late election of a Chancellor of the University of Oxford, 1810.-Answer to a Letter of the Rev. Edw. Copleston, on the Reflections," 1810.

COLBECK, JOSEPH, jun.

Poems on various occasions, 1813.

COLDEN, ALEXANDER.

Examination of the New Doctrines in Philosophy and
Theology, propagated by Dr. Priestley, 8vo. 1793.

COLE, JOHN, Purser of H. M. S. Aboukir.

Mathematical Tracts, principally Astronomical and Nautical, consisting of Stereogoniometry: also Lee way and Magnetic sailings, 8vo. 1812.

COLEBROOKE, HENRIETTA. This lady is said to belong to the family of Sir George C. Bart. She is a warm admirer of Rousseau, and has published a selection from his works under the title of: Thoughts of J. J. Rousseau, 2 v. 12mo. 1788.

COLEBROOKE, HENRY THOMAS, third son of the late, and brother to the present Sir George C. Bart. born 1766. He entered early into the service of the E. Ind. Company; is Chief Judge of the Court of Sudder Dewanne and Nizamut Adawluts, and provisional member of Council in Bengal'; and holds in conjunction with his two brothers the patent office of Chirographer in the Court of Common Pleas. Mr. C. is the author of numerous papers in the Asiatic Researches and has published:

1801.

COLEPEPPER, J. SPENCER, Esq.
Important Facts submitted to the consideration of the

people of England, 8vo. 1793.

COLERIDGE, S. T. a native of Bristol and formerly a member of Jesus College, Cambridge. When the late Sir Alexander Ball was appointed governor of Malta, Mr. C. went with him in quality of Secretary. He has latterly been engaged in reading lectures on Poetry and the Belles Lettres, and has published:

The Fall of Robespierre, hist. dram. 8vo. 1794.-Conciones ad Populum, or Addresses to the People, 8vo. 1795.-A Protest against certain Bills, or the Plot discovered, 12mo. 1795.-Poems on various subjects, 8vo. 1796. 2d ed. with the addition of Poems by Charles Lamb, and Charles Lloyd, 8vo. 1797.--The Watchman, a Weekly Miscellany, No. 1-10. 1796.A Prospect of Peace, 1796.-Ode to the departed Year, 4to. 1797.-Fears in Solitude, written in 1798, during the alarm of an invasion, 4to. 1798.--The Piccolomini, or the first part of Wallenstein, a drama,

from the German of Schiller, 8vo. 1800.-The Death of Wallenstein, trag. from the German of Schiller, 8vo. 1800.-The Friend, a series of Essays, roy. 8vo. 1812.-Remorse, a tragedy, 8vo. 1813.- Mr. C. also contributed about four hundred lines at the beginning of his friend Mr. Southey's epic poem Joan of Arc. COLES, THOMAS, A.M.

Advice to Students and Ministers, a Sermon preached before the Bristol Education Society, 1813.

COLET, JOHN ANNESLEY. Review of the Life, Writings and Character of the Thomas Coke, LL. D. and Henry More, occasioned late John Wesley, 8vo. 1791.-Letter to the Rev. by their proposals for publishing a life of the Rev. John Wesley in opposition to that advertised to be written by John Whitehead, M.D. 8vo. 1792.

COLEY, JAMES MILLMAN, Member of the Roy. Coll. of Surgeons, London; Memb. of the Med. and Phil. Soc. of St. Bartholomew's Hospital, and Surgeon at

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