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London, 1684. Quarto. Pp. 56.*

In some copies, the date is incorrectly printed 1648. DISCOURSE (a) concerning conscience;

wherein an account is given of the nature, and rule, and obligation, of it. And the case of those who separate from the communion of the Church of England as by law established, upon this pretence, that it is against their conscience to joyn in it, is stated and discussed. [By John SHARP, D.D.] London, 1684. Quarto. Pp. 59.* [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning divine providence, in relation to national judgements. [By Thomas SMITH, D.D.]

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DISCOURSE (a) concerning fews and superiorities, shewing that the rigid observance of them is inconsistent with the nature of the British constitution. Humbly address'd to the parliament of Great Britain. [ByHEPBURN of Bairford.]

Edinburgh, 1716. Octavo.* [J. Maidment.] DISCOURSE (a) concerning invocation of saints. [By Samuel FREEMAN, D.D.]

London, 1684. Quarto. Pp. 72.* [Darling,
Cyclop. Bibl.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning Lent, in two parts. The first, an historical account of its observation: the second, an essay concerning its original; this subdivided into two repartitions ; whereof the first is preparatory, and shews, that most of our Christian ordinances are deriv'd from the Jews; and the second conjectures that Lent is of the same_original. [By George HOOPER, D.D.]

London, 1695. Octavo.*

DISCOURSE (a) concerning liberty of conscience, in which are contain'd proposals, about what liberty in this

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kind is now politically expedient to be given, and severall reasons to shew how much the peace and welfare of the nation is concern'd therein. By R. T. [Sir Peter PETT.]

London, 1661. Octavo. Pp. 83. b. t.* [Wood, Athen. Oxon., iv. 577.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning liturgies, and their imposition. [By John OWEN, D.D.]

Printed in the year 1662. Quarto. Pp. 67.*

DISCOURSE (a) concerning miracles wrought in the Roman Catholick Church, in vindication of their truth against Dr. Stillingfleet's unjust cavils. Where the miraculous translation of the Holy House of Loreto is asserted, and proved, an undeniable verity. E. W. [Edward WORSLEY.] second part.

Antwerp: 1674. Octavo.*

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The first part will be found under the Infallibility of the Roman Catholick Church," etc. The second part has a second pagination, but the signatures are continuous.

DISCOURSE (a) concerning penance. Shewing how the doctrine of it, in the Church of Rome, makes void true repentance. [By Peter ALLIX.] London: MDCLXXXVIII. Quarto.* DISCOURSE (a) concerning prayer, ex tempore, or, by pretence of the Spirit, in justification of authorized and setformes of lyturgie. [By Jeremy TAYLOR.]

Printed in the yeere, CIƆ IƆC XLVI. Quarto.* A second edition, with the author's name, was published in 1649, under the title of An apology for authorized and set forms of liturgie.

DISCOURSE (a) concerning Puritans. A vindication of those, who uniustly suffer by the mistake, abuse, and misapplication of that name. A tract necessary and usefull for these times. [By John LEY, pastor of Budworth, in Cheshire.]

Printed for Robert Bostock, 1641. Quarto.
Pp. 58.* Address to the reader signed
Philus Adelphus.

In Bishop Barlow's copy in the Bodleian, the above work is said by Barlow to be "writt by J. Ley." In Dr. Bliss's Sale Catalogue, i. 229, it is ascribed to Henry Parker [of Lincoln's Inn]. Watt has it under both.

DISCOURSE (a) concerning ridicule and
irony in writing, in a letter to the Rev.
Dr. Nathaniel Marshall. [By Anthony
COLLINS.]

London, 1729. Octavo. Pp. 77. [Darling,
Cyclop. Bibl.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning schools and school-masters, offered to publick consideration. By M. N. [Marchamont NEDHAM.]

London, 1663. Quarto.* [Wood, Athen.
Oxon., iii. 1187.].

DISCOURSE (a) concerning some prevailing evils of the present time: wherein Mr. Campbell's reasonings concerning the nature and influence of religious enthusiasm are particularly examined. [By William WILSON, minister at Perth.]

Edinburgh, M. DCC. XXXI. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.]

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London: 1706. Brit. Lib.] Ascribed to

Octavo. [W., Lowndes,

Harris. [Stewart's Cat.] DISCOURSE (a) concerning the devotions of the Church of Rome, especially, as compared with those of the Church of England, in which it is shewn, that whatever the Romanists pretend, there is not so true devotion among them, nor such rational provision for it, nor encouragement to it, as in the Church established by law among us. [By William STANLEY, D.D.]

London, 1685. Quarto. Pp. 67.* DISCOURSE (a) concerning the ecclesiastical commission, open'd in the Jerusalem-chamber, October the 10th, 1689. [By Thomas TENISON.] London: MDCLXXXIX. Quarto.* DISCOURSE (a) concerning the execution of the laws, made against prophaneness, &c. which contains some account of, the reasons and tendency of these laws; the occasions, which, till of late, obstructed their execution; the manner in which, now, they may be legally and easily made effectual; the obligations in duty, honour, and interest, of all ranks, in their respective stations, to promove this necessary work; the sin and misery, both as to private and publick, which will be the consequences of a neglect thereof; and the spiritual and temporal happiness, that will ensue on setting about it, without further delay in the same. [By Sir Francis GRANT, Lord Cullen.] Edinburgh, 1700. Octavo. Pp. 56.* DISCOURSE (a) concerning the great and wonderful events which shall come to pass in the last days. [By James ALLEN.]

Printed in the year 1708. Quarto.* DISCOURSE (a) concerning the illegality of the late Ecclesiastical Commission, in answer to the Vindica

tion and Defence of it: wherein the true notion of the legal supremacy is cleared; and an account is given of the nature, original, and mischief of the dispensing power. [By Edward STILLINGFLEET, D.D.]

London; MDCLXXXIX. Folio.* [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the law of inheritances in fee, and, therein, concerning the several degrees of consanguinity, &c. To which is prefixed a kalendar of the persons inheritable. The whole laid down in a new method. [By Robert ROBINSON.]

In the Savoy: MDCCXXXVI.

Octavo.*

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the laws, ecclesiastical and civil made against hereticks by popes, emperors and kings, provincial and general councils approved by the Church of Rome. Shewing, 1. What protestant subjects may expect to suffer under a popish prince according to those laws; 2. That no oath or promise of such a prince can give them any just security. that he will not execute these laws upon them. With a preface against persecuting and destroying hereticks. [By Daniel WHITBY, D.D.]

London: 1682. Quarto. [Jones' Peck, p. 69. 70.]

Ascribed to Bp. Barlow. [Reading's Cat. of Sion Coll. Lib.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the love of God. [By Daniel WHITBY, D.D.]

London, 1696. Octavo. Pp. 4. b. t. 126.* [Bodl.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the mechanical operation of the Spirit. In a letter to a friend. A fragment. [By Jonathan SWIFT, D.D.] London: MDCCIV. 283-322.*

Octavo. Pp. I. b. t.

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London: 1716. Octavo. Pp. x. 71. [Brit. Mus.]

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DISCOURSE (a) concerning the nature of idolatry in which a late author [Bp. Parker]'s true and onely notion of idolatry is considered and confuted. [By William WAKE, D.D.]

London: MDCLXXXVIII. Quarto.* [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the neces sity of believing the doctrine of the Holy Trinity; as profess'd and maintain'd by the Establish'd Church of England, in the first of the thirty nine articles of religion: 'There is but one 'living and true God, everlasting, with'out body, parts, or passions; of in'finite power, wisdom and goodness; the maker and preserver of all things 'both visible and invisible; and in 'unity of this God-head there be three 'Persons, of one substance, power and eternity; the Father, the Son, and 'the Holy Ghost.' [By Samuel MATHER.]

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London, 1719. Octavo.* [Adv. Lib.] Author's name in the handwriting of his father, Dr. Increase Mather. DISCOURSE (a) concerning the necessity of reformation, with respect to the errors and corruptions of the Church of Rome. [By Nicholas STRATFORD, D.D., Dean of St. Asaph, afterwards Bishop of Chester.] The first part. London, MDCLXXXV. Quarto. Pp. 60.* [Jones' Peck.] Part II. will be found under Necessity (the) of reformation.

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the object of religious worship. Or, a Scripture proof of the unlawfulness of giving any religious worship to any other Being besides the One Supreme God. Part I. [By William SHERLOCK, D.D.] London: MDCLXXXV. Quarto. Pp. 71.* [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the pretended sacrament of extreme unction; with an account of the occasions and beginnings of it in the Western Church. In three parts. With a letter to [Jos. Johnston] the Vindicator of the Bishop of Condom. [By William CLAGETT, D.D.]

London: : MDCLXXXVII. Quarto. Pp. xii. 136.* [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the priest. hood of Jesus Christ in which the

date, and order of his priesthood, as also the place, time, and manner of his performing the functions thereof, are distinctly consider'd. With a preface in vindication of the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews, occasion'd by the misrepresentations of a late writer. [By William MOOR, woollen-draper in the Strand.]

London: M, DCC, XLVII. Octavo. Pp. xxii. 2. 144.

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the resurrection bodies; tending to shew, from the writings of heathens, Jews, and Christians, that there are bodies called our own, which will not be raised from the dead: that there are bodies, properly called our own, which will be raised from the dead. By Philalethes. [Rev. John GOUGH, rector of Kirk-Ireton in Derbyshire.]

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DISCOURSE (a) concerning the resurrection of the same body: with two letters concerning the necessary immateriality of created thinking substance. [By Samuel BOLDE.]

London: 1705. Octavo. Pp. 10. b. t. 206.* [Bodl.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the rise
and antiquity of Cathedral worship.
In a letter to a friend. [By Edmund
CALAMY, D.D.]

London: 1699. Quarto. Pp. 36.* [Wilson,
Hist. of Diss. Ch., iv. 89.]

Signed N. N. Reprinted with An account
of the growth of deism in England. Lond.
1709.

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the second
Council of Nice, which first introduced
and established image-worship in the
Christian Church, Anno Dom. 787.
[By Thomas COMBER, D.D.]
London, 1688. Quarto.*
DISCOURSE (a) concerning the signi-
fication of allegiance; as it is to be
understood in the new oath of allegi-
ance. [By Theophilus DOWNES.]
No title-page, place, nor date. Quarto.*
DISCOURSE (a) concerning the small
pox, occasioned by Dr. Holland's
Essay, &c. In a letter to a friend. [By
John CHANDLER.]

London, 1729. Octavo. Pp. 64. [W.]
The second edition has the author's name.

DISCOVRSE (a) concerning the svccesse of former parliaments. [By Thomas MAY.]

Imprinted at London: MDCXLII. Quarte.* [Brit. Mus.] Reprinted in the Harleian Miscellany, vi. 377.

DISCOVRSE (a) concerning the tre notion of the Lord's Svpper. By R. C. [Ralph CUDWORTH, D.D.]

London, 1642. Quarto. Pp. 73.* [Brit.
Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the unity of the Catholick Church, &c. See Discourse of, &c.

DISCOURSE (a) concerning the unreasonableness of a new separation, on account of the oaths. With an answer to the History of passive obedience [by A. Marvell], so far as relates to them. [By Edward STILLINGFLEET, D.D.]

London, M DC LXXX IX. Quarto.* [Bril.
Mus.]

DISCOURSE concerning the worship of God towards the holy table or altar. [By S. PENTON.]

1682. Duodecimo. [Leslie's Cat., 1843] DISCOURSE (a) concerning the worship of the Blessed Virgin and the saints; with an account of the beginnings and rise of it amongst Christians, in answer to M. de Meaux [Bossuet]'s Appeal to the fourth age, in his Exposition and Pastoral letter. [By William CLAGETT, D.D.]

London, 1686. Quarto. Pp. 114.* DISCOURSE (a) concerning transubstantiation and idolatry. Being an answer to [Samuel Parker] the Bishop of Oxford's plea relating to these two points. [By Gilbert BURNET, D.D.] London, 1688. Quarto.*

DISCOURSE concerning treasons, and bills of attainder. Explaining the true and ancient notion of treason, and shewing the natural justice of bills of attainder. [By Richard WEST.] The second edition.

London: 1717. Octavo.* [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) delivered in the Catholic Apostolic Church, Gordon Square, on the occasion of consecrating the altar, and opening the church for public worship, Christmas Eve, 1853. [By J. CARDALE.] London: 1854. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] DISCOURSE (a) historical and political of the war of Hungary, and of the

causes of the peace between Leopold the First Emperor of the Romans, and Mahomet the Fourth Sultan of Turkey. By Louis de May of Sall. His knight and counsellor of his Highness the Duke of Wirtemberg. Translated into English. [By Sir James TURNER.] Glasgow, 1669. Octavo. Pp. 4. b. t. 125. [D. Laing.]

DISCOURSE (a), Luke, 13. 2. 3., on the late fast. By Phileleutherus Norfolciensis. [Samuel PARR, LL.D.] London: 1781. Quarto. [Darling, Cyclop. Bibl.]

DISCOURSE (a) of a cavalier gentleman, on the divine and humane laws; with respect to the succession. By Don A. B. [Capt. Alexander BRUCE.]

Printed in the year MDCCVI. Quarto.*

DISCOURSE (a) of a true Englishman, free from selfe-interest, concerning the interest England hath in the siege of Graveling. [By R. KILVERT.]

London, 1644. Quarto. [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) of angels; their nature and office, or ministry; also, something touching devils and apparitions, and impulses. [By Richard SAUNDERS, M.A.]

London: 1701. Quarto. [Darling,
Cyclop. Bibl.]

DISCOURSE (a) of artificial beauty, in point of conscience, between two ladies. With some satyrical censures on the vulgar errors of these times. [By Bishop GAUDEN.]

London, MDCLXII. Octavo. Pp. 8. b. t. 262.* The censures have a separate pagination [pp. 112].

This is another edition of "A discourse of auxiliary beauty," q. v. with regard to authorship.

DISCOURSE (a) of auxiliary beauty.

Or artificiall hansomeness. In point of conscience between two ladies. [By Bishop John GAUDEN.]

London. 1656. Octavo. Pp. 6. b. t. 200.* [Wood, Athen. Oxon.]

Watt and Lowndes have the above under Jeremy Taylor, with the intimation that it has been attributed to Gauden. In Dr. Bliss's Sale Catalogue (part i. p. 116), it is entered under Bishop Gauden, with the intimation that it is often ascribed to Jeremy Taylor, and occasionally to Obadiah Walker.

DISCOURSE (a) of conscience. The second part. Concerning a doubting conscience. [By John SHARP, D.D.] London, 1685. Quarto. Pp. 99.* For the First part of this Discourse see A discourse concerning conscience. DISCOURSE (a) of divine assistance, and the method thereof: shewing what assistance men receive from God in performing the condition of the promise of pardon of sin and eternal life. By W. A. [William ALLEN.]

London, 1679. Octavo. Pp. 26. b. t. 262.* [Bodl.]

DISCOURSE (a) of duels, shewing the sinful nature and mischievous effects of them, and answering the usual excuses made for them by challengers, accepters, and seconds. By T. C. [Thomas COMBER], D.D.

London, 1687. Quarto. Pp. 66. b. t.* [Brit. Mus.]

DISCOURSE (a) of earthquakes; as they are supernatural and premonitory signs to a nation; with a respect to what hath occurred in this year 1692. And some special reflections thereon. As also on that security and assurance of mind, which is attainable in the light and power of religion, under the greatest surprizals, and terrors of sense. With some enquiry upon the grounds both of our fears and hopes, as to the publick state of the Church of Christ in this day. By the author of the Fulfilling of the Scriptures. [Robert FLEMING.] London 1693. Octavo. Pp. 128.* Erroneously ascribed to Robert Fleming, jun., by Watt in his Bibliotheca Britannica, and by Wilson in the History of dissenting churches in London. This is the more surprising that both correctly assign the Fulfilling of the Scriptures to the elder Fleming.

DISCOURSE (a) of ecclesiastical politie; wherein the authority of the civil magistrate over the consciences of subjects in matters of external religion is asserted; the mischiefs and inconveniences of toleration are represented, and all pretenses pleaded in behalf of liberty of conscience are fully answered. [By Samuel PARKER, Bishop of Oxford.] London, 1670. Octavo.* [Brit. Mus.] DISCOURSE (a) of eternitie collected and composed for the common good, By W. T. [William TYPING.]

Oxford. 1633. Quarto. Pp. 4. b. t. 71.* [Bodl.]

Address to the reader signed W. T.

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