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A DICTIONARY

OF THE

ANONYMOUS AND PSEUDONYMOUS
LITERATURE OF GREAT BRITAIN.

INCLUDING THE WORKS OF FOREIGNERS WRITTEN IN,

OR TRANSLATED INTO THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE

BY THE LATE SAMUEL HALKETT,
KEEPER OF THE ADVOCATES' LIBRARY, EDINBURGH;

AND

THE LATE REV. JOHN LAING, M. A.,

LIBRARIAN OF THE NEW COLLEGE LIBRARY, EDINBURGH.

OF VIRGINIA

VOLUME THIRD.

EDINBURGH: WILLIAM PATERSON.

1885.

A DICTIONARY

OF THE

ANONYMOUS AND

PSEUDONYMOUS

LITERATURE OF GREAT BRITAIN.

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O BRAZILE, or the inchanted island; being a relation of a late discovery of the dis-enchantment of an island in the north of Ireland. [Usually ascribed to Richard HEAD.]

London: 1675. Quarto. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man., p. 1714.]

O PER SE O. Or, a new cryer of lanthorne and candle-light. Being an addition, or lengthening, of the Bell mans Second night-walke. In which, are discouered those villanies, which the Bell-man (because hee went i' the darke) could not see: now laid open to the world. Together with the shooting through the arme, vsed by counterfeit souldiers: The making of the great Soare, (commonly called The great Cleyme) The mad-mens markes : Their phrase of begging: The articles and oathes giuen to the fraternitie of roagues, vagabonds, and sturdy beggers at their meetings. And last of all, a new courting-song. [By Thomas DEKKER.]

Printed at London for John Busbie, 1612. Quarto. No pagination. B. L.* OAKFIELD, or fellowship in the East. By Punjabee. [W. D. ARNOLD.] In two volumes.

London and Rugby: M.DCCC.LIII. Octavo.* The author's name appears in the second edition published in 1854.

OATH (the) of abjuration considered,

both as to the lawfulness and ex

A

1764

pediency of its being taken by the ministers of the Church of Scotland, in a letter to a friend. [By George RIDPATH.]

Edinburgh M.DCC.XII. Quarto. Pp. 26. b. t.*

OATH (the) of abjuration, considered, in
a letter to a friend. [By Robert
MYLNE.]

Letter dated March 20. 1712. No separate
title. Quarto. Pp. 40.

OATH (the) of abjuration displayed, in its sinful nature and tendency, in its inconsisency with Presbyterian principles and covenants; the security it affords to the Church of England. Together with some remarks upon the evasions and explications offered thereupon, by the ministers who took it, shewing them to be contradictory to the sense of the oath, and meaning of the imposers. Being the copy of a letter sent to one of the Jurant-ministers of the Presbytery of Dumblane. [By Clerk, probationer.]

Printed anno MDCCXII. Quarto. Pp. 24.* OATH (the) of abjuration enquir'd into: in a letter to a friend. [By Allan LOGAN, minister at Torryburn.]

Letter dated 29 April 1712. Quarto. Pp.
15. No separate title.*

OATH (the) of abjuration set in its true
light; in a letter to a friend. [By Sir
James STEWART, of Goodtrees.]
Edinburgh, 1712. Octavo.*

OATH (the) of pacification: or a forme of religious accommodation: humbly proposed both to king and parliament. Thereby to set an end to the present miseries and broyles of this discomposed, almost shipwrackt state. [By Henry PARKER, of Lincoln's-Inn.]

London, 1643. Quarto. Pp. 30. b. t.* [Brit. Mus.]

OBEDIENCE and submission to the present government, demonstrated from Bp. Overall's Convocation book. [By Zachary TAYLOR, M.A.]

London, 1690. Quarto. Pp. 20. b. t.* "The author Zach. Taylor, minister of Ormkirk in Lancashire."-MS. note by Hearne in the Bodleian copy. OBEDIENCE due to the present king, notwithstanding our oaths to the Written by a divine of the Church of England. [Francis FULLWOOD, D.D.]

former.

London, 1689. Quarto. Pp. 8. b. t.* [Bodl.]

OBEDIENCE the best charter; or, law the only sanction of liberty. In a letter to the Rev. Dr Price. [By Rev. John MOIR.]

London : 1776. Octavo. [European Mag., iv. 126. Mon. Rev., liv. 328.] OBEDIENCE to magistrates_recommended, in a discourse upon Titus 3. I. Preached September the ninth 1683. Put them in mind to be subject to principalities and powers, and to obey magistrates. By J. C. rector of W. N. [Jonathan CHAPHAM, rector of Wramplingham, Norfolk.]

London, 1683. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 35.* [Bodl.]

OBJECTIONS against the Essays on morality and natural religion examined. [By Henry HOME, Lord Kames.]

Edinburgh: MDCCLVI. Octavo. Pp. 64.* Ascribed to Hugh Blair, D.D. [D. Laing.] OBJECTIONS (the) of a late anonymous writer [Collins] against the book of Daniel, consider'd, in a letter to a friend. [By John CHAPMAN, D.D.] Cambridge; printed at the UniversityPress. 1728. Pp. 46.*

The book to which this is a reply is, Collins' Scheme of literal prophecy considered.

OBJECTIONS (the) of the non-subscribing London clergy, against the address from the Bishop of London, and the clergy of London and West

1766

minster; printed in the Gazette of Thursday, Aug. 22. 1710. Humbly offerr'd in a letter from a clergy-man in London, to a member of parliament in the country. By the author of the Reasons of the absenting clergy. [John SWINFEN.]

Pp. 44.*

London: 1710. Octavo. [Kennett's Wisdom, p. 64.] OBJECTIONS to Bishop Middleton's doctrine of the Greek article. By Herman Heinfetter. [Frederick PARKER.] London 1841. Duodecimo. Pp. 36.* OBJECTIONS to Mr Lindsey's interpretation of the first fourteen verses of St. John's Gospel, as set forth in the Sequel to his Apology; with some strictures on his explication of St. Paul's text Phil. ii. 5, 6, &c. By a serious enquirer. [Anthony TEMPLE.] London: MDCCLXXVI. Octavo. Pp. vii. 78.* [MS. note on title page of the copy in the University Library, Edinburgh.] OBJECTIONS to the project of creating a Vice Chancellor of England. [By Sir S. ROMILLY.] The second edition. To which is added, A letter from the author to a noble Lord.

London: 1813. Octavo.*
Brit.]

[Watt, Bib.

OBJECTIONS to the proposed bill "for better regulating the forms of process in the courts of law," and to the present system of administering justice in Scotland; and suggestions for remodelling the bill, or framing another, for the purpose of improving the forms, lessening the expense and delays of procedure, and preventing appeals to the House of Lords. By the author of the Objections to the Scots new Judicature Bill published in the Edinburgh Magazine. [Peter CAMPBELL, S.S.Č.] Edinburgh: 1825. Octavo. Pp. viii. 176. 8.* [Adv. Lib.]

OBJECTIONS (the) to the taxation of our American colonies by the legislature of Great Britain briefly considered. [By Soame JENYNS.]

London: 1765. Quarto. [See his Works,
ii. 189. Mon. Rev., xxxii. 227.]

OBJECTS, advantages, and pleasures of
science. [By Henry, Lord BROUGHAM.]
[Extracted from the Preliminary treatise
of the "Library of useful knowledge."]
[London: 1826.] Octavo. Pp. 11.*
Published in the Pamphleteer, xxvii. 497.

OBLIGATION (the) of acting according to conscience especially as to oaths: a farewell sermon preached Jan. 22. 1718. [By Richard RUSSELL, M.A.]

London: 1716. Octavo. Pp. viii. 24. [W.]

OBLIGATION (the) of human laws discussed. By J. H. [John HUMFREY or HUMPHREY.]

London, 1671. Octavo.* [Bodl.] OBLIGATIONS (the) Christians are under to shun vice and immorality, and to practise piety and vertue, shewn from the express words of holy Scripture. [By Francis Fox, M.A., vicar of Pottern, Wilts.]

N. P. N. D. Folio. Single leaf.* [Bodl.] OBLIQUE (an) view of the grand conspiracy, against social order, or, a candid inquiry, tending to show what part the Analytical, the Monthly, the Critical Reviews and the New Annual Register, have taken in that conspiracy. By the author of A concise sketch of the intended revolution. [Thomas ATKINSON.]

London: 1798. Octavo.

OBSERVANCE (the) of the Lord's Day considered particularly in reference to railway travelling. By a clergyman of the Church of Scotland. [Rev. James FLOWERDEW, Eassie, Glammis.] Edinburgh. 1839. Octavo. Pp. 34. OBSERVATION (an) on the design of establishing annual examinations at Cambridge. [By William Samuel POWELL, D.D.]

No imprint, but dated at the beginning,
Cambridge, Nov. 14th, 1774. Octavo.
Pp. 16.*

OBSERVATIONS and advices oeconomical. [By Dudley NORTH, 4th Lord North.]

London, 1669. Octavo. Pp. 11. b. t. 132. 9.* [Bodl.]

"This pleasing little tract was written by Dudley the fourth Lord North." MS. note in the hand-writing of Malone.

OBSERVATIONS and conjectures upon some passages of Shakespeare. [By Thomas TYRWHITT.]

Oxford, At the Clarendon Press. M DCC LXVI. Octavo. Pp. 54.* [Adv. Lib. Dyce Cat., ii. 292.]

OBSERVATIONS and reflections on the late earthquake, or more properly called an airquake, which happened in

this town and neighbourhood, on Sunday, 14 Sept. 1777; and an attempt to investigate the causes of these dreadful harbingers of divine vengeance to mankind. By a gentleman of Manchester. [Thomas PERCIVAL, M.D.] N.P. 1777. Octavo. [Mendham Collection Cat., p. 235.]

OBSERVATIONS, censvres and confutations of divers errors in the 12, 13, and 14 Chap. of Mr. Hobs his Leviathan. [By William Lucy, Bishop of St. David's.]

London 1657. Duodecimo. Pp. 70. b. t. 235.* [Bodl.]

*

The epistle dedicatory signed William Pike Christophilus.

OBSERVATIONS concerning the original of government, upon Mr. Hobs Leviathan. Mr. Milton against Salmasius. H. Grotius De jure belli. Mr. Huntons Treatise of monarchy. [By Sir Robert FILMER.] London: 1652. Quarto.*

A reprint of "The anarchy of a limited monarchy."

OBSERVATIONS, &c. [Edward WEST.]

By E. W.

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London: 1777. Octavo. [Gent. Mag., June, 1800, p. 583. Watt, Bib. Brit. Mon. Rev., lvii. 245.]

OBSERVATIONS in illustration of Virgil's celebrated fourth eclogue. [By Granville PENN.]

London, 1810. Octavo. Pp. xii. 446.* [Gent. Mag., Nov. 1844, p. 545.] OBSERVATIONS in regard to the description of boys who appear, agreeably to the statutes, entitled to be admitted into George Heriot's hospital. [By Thomas MILLER.]

Edinburgh: MDCCCXXVII. Octavo. Pp. vi. 18. [New Coll. Cat., p. 364.]

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