142 



NOTES AND QUERIES. 



[2nd s. NO 34., Aug. 23. '56. 



their Eeligion byToleration thereof. By Will. Denton. 

 4to. London, 1675." 



" The Established Test in order to the Security of His 

 Majesty's sacred Person and Government and the Pro- 

 testant Religion. 4to. 1679." 



" The Dissenter's usual Pleas for Toleration Discuss'd. 

 8vo. London, 1680." 



" A Discourse concerning the Laws of the Church of 

 Eome made against Hereticks, &c. &c. 1682. (Repr. 8vo. 

 Dublin, 1723.)" 



" Toleration proved Impossible. 4to. London, 1685." 



" A short Discourse upon the Reasonableness of Men's 

 having a Religion or Worship of God, by the Duke of 

 Buckingham. London, 1685." 



" A Short Answer to His Grace the Duke of Bucking- 

 ham's Paper concerning Religion, Toleration, and Liberty 

 of Conscience. 4to. London, 1685." 



" The Duke of Buckingham his Grace's Letter to the 

 unknown Author of a Paper entitled ' A Short Answer,' 

 &c. London, 1685." 



" A Reply to the Answer of the Man of no Name to the 

 Duke of Buckingham's Paper. 4to. London, 1685." 



"A Defence of the Duke of Buckingham's Book of Re- 

 ligion and Worship from the Exceptions of a nameless 

 Author. By the Pensylvanian. 4to. London, 1685." 



" The Danger and Unreasonableness of Toleration. 

 1685." 



" Considerations moving to Toleration and Liberty of 

 Conscience. 4to. London, 1685." 



" The Vanity of all Pretensions for Toleration. 1685." 



" The good old Test revived and Recommended to all 

 sincere Christians. 4to. 1687. 



"The true Interest of the legal English Protestants 

 stated in a Letter to a present Member of the House of 

 Commons. Fol. 1687." 



" Reasons for the Repeal of the Tests. 4to. (a single 

 sheet). 1687." 



"A Letter concerning the Test and Persecution for 

 Conscience Sake, to a Member of the House of Lords. 

 4to. 1687." 



" Remarks on the several Sanguinary and Penal Laws 

 made in Parliament against Roman Catholics. 4to. 

 1687." 



" How the Members of the Church of England ought 

 to behave themselves under a Roman Catholic King, with 

 reference to the Test and Penal Laws. In a I^etter to a 

 Friend, by a Member of the same Church. 8vo. London, 

 1687." 



" Advice to Freeholders and other Electors of Members 

 to serve in Parliament, in relation to the Penal Laws and 

 the Test. 4to. 1687." 



" A new Test of the Church of England's Loyalty. 4to. 

 1687." 



" The new Test of the Church of England's Loyaltj' ex • 

 amined by the old Test of Truth and Honesty. 4to. 

 1687." 



" Mr. James's Vindication of the Church of England in 

 answer to a Pamphlet entitled, A new Test of the Church 

 of England's Loyalty. 4to. 1687." 



"An instance of the Church of England's Loyalty. 

 4to. 1687." 



"A Letter from a Gentleman in the Country to bis 

 Friend in London on the subject of the Penal Laws and 

 Tests. 4to. 1G87." 



" A second Letter, &c. 1687." 



" A third Letter. 1687." 



" A Letter in answer to a City Friend, shewing how 

 agreeable Liberty of Conscience is to the Church of Eng- 

 land. 4to. London: 1687." 



" A Discourse for taking off the Test and Penal Laws 

 about Religion. 4to. 1687." 



" The Reasonableness of Toleration and the Unreason- 

 ableness of Penal Laws and Tests. 4to. 1687." 



" The Judgment and Doctrine of the Clergy of the 

 Church of England concerning the King's Prerogative in 

 dispensing with Penal Laws. 1687 ? " 



"An Answer to a late Pamphlet entitled, The Judg- 

 ment and Doctrine of the Clergy, &c., shewing that this 

 is not asserted by the Archbishops Bancroft, Laud, and 

 Usher, Bp. Sanderson, the Doctors Heylin, Barrow, Sher- 

 lock, Hickes, Nalson, Puller, so far as appears from their 

 Words cited in this Pamphlet. In a Letter to a Friend. 

 4to. 1687." 



" Reflections upon the new Test and the Reply thereto ; 

 with a Letter of Sir Francis Walsingham's concerning 

 the Penal Laws made in the Reign of Q. Elizabeth. 1687. 

 4to." 



" A Letter to a Dissenter from his Friend at the Hague 

 concerning the Penal Laws and Test ; shewing that the 

 popular Plea for Liberty of Conscience is not concerned in 

 that question. 4to., a single sheet. Hague. 1688." 



" Old Popery as good as new ; or the Unreasonableness 

 of the Church of England in some of her Doctrines and 

 Practices, and the Reasonableness of Liberty of Conscience. 

 4to. 1688." 



" The great and popular Objection against the Repeal of 

 the Penal Laws and Test brieflj' stated and considered, 

 and which may serve for answer to several late Pamphlets 

 upon the Subject. By William Pen, the Quaker, 1688. 

 4to." 



" An Answer to the Bp. of Oxford's Reasons for abro- 

 gating the Test, by a Person of Quality. London : 1688. 

 4to." 



" Their Highness the Prince and Princess of Orange's 

 Opinion about a general Liberty of Conscience, &c., being 

 a Collection of four select Papers, viz. 1. Mijn Heer 

 Fagel's First Letter to Mr. Stewart. 2. Reflections on 

 Mons. Fagel's Letter, and Fagel's Second Letter to Mr. 

 Stewart. 4. Some Extracts out of Mr. Stewart's Letters, 

 which were communicated to Mijn Heer Fagel, together 

 with some References to Mr. Stewart's printed Letter. 

 1689. 4to." 



" Animadversions upon Mijn Heer Fagel's Letter con- 

 cerning our Penal Laws and Tests ; with Remarks upon 

 that Subject occasioned bj' the publishing of that Letter. 

 1688. 4to." 



" Jus Regium Coronse ; or the King's supreme Power 

 in dispensing with Penal Statutes ; more particularlj'- as it 

 relates to the two Test Acts, in Two Parts. By John 

 Wilson. 1688. 4to." 



"A seasonable Discourse, showing the necessity of 

 Union among Protestants, in opposition to Popery, as the 

 only means under God to preserve the Reformed Religion. 

 Also the charge of Persecution lately maintained against 

 the Established Religion by W. P[en], H. C[are], and 

 other insignificant Scribblers detected, proving it to be 

 the Ministers of State, and not the Church, tliat prose- 

 cuted the Penal Laws on Protestant Dissenters. 1688. 

 4to." 



" Horse Subseciva; ; or a Treatise showing the original 

 Grounds, Reason, and Provocations necessitating our 

 sanguinary Laws against Papists made in the Daj-s of 

 Q,. Eliz., and the Gradations by which they ascended into 

 that severity, and showing that no Papist hath been exe- 

 cuted in England on the single account of his Religion, in 

 the Dales of Edwd. VI., Q. Eliz., James, Car. I. or 

 Car. II., though multitudes of Protestants were in the 

 Dales of Hen. VIII. and Q. Mary. 4to. 1688 ? " 



" A Collection of several Treatises concerning the 

 Reasons and Occasions of the Penal Laws : 1. The Exe- 

 cution of Justice in England, not for Religion but for 

 Treason, Dec. 17, 1583. [By Wm. Cecil Lord Burleigh.] 



