446 



NOTES AND QUEEIES. 



[2»d S. No 49., Dec. 6. '6G. 



Plea thereto, upon the King's dispensing with the Stat. 

 25 Car. II., and the Opinion of the Judges thereupon." 



" An Enquiry into the Power of dispensing with Penal 

 Statutes, together with some Animadversions upon a 

 Book writ by Sir Edw. Herbert, entitled ' A Short Ac- 

 count,' &c. By Sir Eob. Atkyns. Lond. 1689. Folio." 



N.B. The following treatises originated in King 

 James's Declaration of Indulgence : 



♦' Reflections on his Majesty's Proclamation for a Tole- 

 ration in Scotland. 1687." 



See Macaulay's History, ii. 205. : 



" He had determined to begin with Scotland, where his 

 power to dispense with acts of parliament had been ad- 

 mitted bj"^ the obsequious Estates." 



•'His Majesties most gracious Declaration to all his 

 loving Subjects for Liberty of Conscience. 1688. Folio, 

 a single sheet." 



" The Humble Address of the Presbyterians presented 

 to the King. With his Majesties gracious Answer. 4to. 

 1687." 



" A Letter to a Dissenter, upon occasion of his Majesty's 

 late gracious Declaration of Indulgence. By George Sa- 

 vile, Marquis of Halifax. 1687. 4to." 



In the ninth volume of the Somers Tracts. See 

 Macaulay's History, ii. 217. 



" An Answer to a ' Letter to a Dissenter, upon occasion 

 of his Majesty's late gracious Declaration of Indulgence.' 

 1687. 4to." 



" Animadversions on a late Pamphlet, intitled 'A Letter 

 to a Dissenter, upon occasion of his Majesty's late gracious 

 Declaration of Indulgence.' By Henry Care. 1687. 4to." 



" An Answer to a ' Letter to a Dissenter, upon occasion 

 of his Majesty's late gracious Declaration of Indulgence.' 

 Bv Sir Roger L'Estrange, Kt. 1687. 4to." 



'« An Answer from the Country, to a late ' Letter to a 

 Dissenter, upon occasion of his Majesty's late gracious 

 Declaration of Indulgence. By a Member of the Church 

 of England. 1687. 4to." 



" A modest Censure of the immodest ♦ Letter to a Dis- 

 senter, upon occasion of his Majesty's late gracious De- 

 claration for Libertv of Conscience.' By T N , a 



true Member of the' Church of England. 1G87. 4to." 



" A Second Letter to a Dissenter, upon occasion of his 

 Majesty's late gracious Declaration of Indulgence. 1687. 

 4to." 



" The Layman's Opinion sent in a private Letter to a 

 considerable Divine of the Church of England. 1687. 

 4to." • 



" The Layman's Answer to the Layman's Opinion, in a 

 Letter to a Friend. 1687. 4to." 



" Dialogue between Harry and Roger ; that is to say, 

 Harry Care and Roger Lestrange. 1687." 



" An Answer of a Minister of the Church of England 

 to a Seasonable and Important Question, proposed to him 

 by a Loyal and Religious Member of the present House 

 of Commons, viz. What respect ought the true Sons of the 

 Church of England, in point of conscience and Christian 

 prudence, to bear to the religion of that Church whereof 

 the King is a member ? 1687. 4to." 



" An Apologj'for the Church of England, with relation 

 to the Spirit of Persecution for which she is accused. By 

 Bishop Burnet. 1687." 



In the ninth volume of the Somers Tracts, 

 p. 174. 



" A Letter writ by Mign Heer Fagel, Pensioner of Hol- 

 land, to Mr. James Stewart, Advocate, giving an Account 

 of the Prince and Princess of Orange's Thoughts concern- 



ing the Repeal of the Test and the Penal Laws. (Written 

 Nov. 4th, 1687.) 4to. Lond. 1688." 



In the ninth volume of tlie Somers Tracts, 

 p. 183. 



" James Stewart's Answer to Mr. Fagel. 1688." 

 " Their Highness tlie Prince and Princess of Orange's 

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

 a Collection of four select Papers, viz. : 1. Mign Heer 

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

 Mons. Fagel's Letter. 3. Fagel's Second Letter to Mr. 

 Stewart. 4. Some Extracts out of Mr. Fagel's printed 

 Letter. 4to. 1689." 



" Address to the King by the Bishop of Oxon, to be 

 subscribed by the Clergy of his Diocese, with the Reasons 

 for the Subscription to the Address, and the Reasons 

 against it by the Oxford Clergy." 



In the ninth volume of the Somers Tracts. 



" A Reply to the Reasons of the Oxford Clergy against 

 addressing. Lond. 1687. 4to." 



In the Somers Tracts, ib. 



" Reasons why the Church of Englarid as well as Dis- 

 senters should address the King upon his late gracious 

 Declaration. 4to. 1687." 



" Letters containing some Reflections on his Majesty's 

 Declaration for Liberty of Conscience. 1687." 



" The Anatomy of an Equivalent. By George Savile, 

 Marquis of Halifax. 1687." 



"The Assurance of Abbey and other Church Lands in 

 England to the Possessors, cleared from the Doubts and 

 Arguments raised about the Danger of Resumption. By 

 Nathaniel Johnstone, M.D. 8vo. Lond. 1687." 



" Abbey and other Church Lands not yet assured to 

 such Possessors as are Roman Catholics, dedicated to the 

 Nobility and Gentry of that Religion." 



In the ninth volume of the Somers Tracts, 

 p. 68. 



" A Petition of William Bancroft, Archbishop of Can- 

 terbury, and Six other Bishops to his Majesty touching 

 their not distributing and publishing the late Declaration 

 of Liberty of Conscience. 4to. 1688." 



In the ninth volume of the Somers Tracts, 

 p. 115. 



" A Letter from a Dissenter to the petitioning Bishops." 



Ibid. p. 117. 



" An Answer to a Paper importing a Petition of the 

 Archbishop of Canterbury, &c. 1688." 



Ibid. p. 119. 



" The Articles recommended by the Archbishop of Can- 

 terbury to all the Bishops within his Metropolitan Juris- 

 diction, the 16th of July, 1688." 



Ibid. p. 132. 



" The Examination of the Bishops, upon their Refusal 

 of reading his Majest^^'s most gracious Declaration ; and 

 the Non-Concurrence of the Church of England in Repeal 

 of the Penal Laws and Test fully debated and argued. 

 1688." 



Ibid. p. 134. 



" A Letter of several French Ministers, fled into Ger- 

 many upon the Account of the Persecution in France, to 

 such of their Brethren in England as approved the King's 

 Declaration touching Liberty of Conscience. 1688." 



" A Letter from a Clergyman in the City to his Friend 

 in the Country, containing his Reasons for not reading 

 the Declaration. 1688. 4to., a single half sheet." 



