1504 



SOMERS (Lord), Collection of Scarce and Valuable Tracts (continued) 

 Vol. XII. (continued) : 

 Enquiry, whether it can be for the Interest of any Sort of People in England to have 

 the pretended King James III advanced to the Throne of this Kingdom. 1704. 

 Reasons against restraining the Press. 1704. 

 Catalogue of Books to be sold at St. James's. 

 True List of the Tackers. 



List of those Patriots who voted that the Bill to prevent Occasional Conformity 



might be tacked to the Land-Tax Bill. 1705. 

 Brief Account of the Tack. 

 Character of a Tacker and Anti-Tacker. 

 Letter touching the Rise of all the Embezzlements and Mismanagements of the 



Kingdom's Treasure from the Beginning of the Revolution, 1710. 

 Parallel Account of the National Expences from November 1640 to November 



1659, &c. 

 Essay on the Union of Scotland and England. 

 Scotland's Great Advantages by a Union with England. 

 List of the Nobility and Gentry in the Scots Parliament, who were for and against 



the Union. 1706. 

 Finch (Daniel, Earl of Nottingham), Memorial of the State of England, &c. 1705. 

 Lawton (Charlwood), Civil Comprehension, &c. 1705. 



Mackworth (Sir Humphrey). Abstract of Treatise entitled "Free Parliaments." 1705. 

 Kennet (Dr.) (1) Character of the late King James, in his Preface to an 



Address of Thanks. 1706. (2) The i^'rench Favourites. 



Scotch Echo to the English Legion; or The Union in Danger, &c. 

 Letter concerning the Scots Peerage. 

 Case of the Scotch Commons with respect to the Election of their Members to 



Parliament. 

 View of the late Scots Ministry, and of the Reasons the Scots had to wish for 



the Union. 1709. 

 Leger (Sir John D.) Account of what is said pro and con Dr. SachevereU. 1710. 

 Age of Riddles, or List of Extraordinary Positions, formerly called Contradictions, &c. 

 True genuine Tory and Whig Addresses. 

 High-Church or Tory Address. 

 Low-Church or Whig Address. 

 Whig Address. 



Satire upon the Addresses of the High-Church Party. 

 Queries? 1710. 

 Speech in the House of Commons on the late Ministry's forcing a New Charter 



upon the Town of Bewdly. 1710. 

 Thoughts of an honest Tory upon the present Proceedings of that Party. 1710. 

 Harley (Richard). Faults on Both Sides; or An Essay upon the Cause, &c. of 



the Factions in the Nation. 

 Letter of the Ministers of London, presented to the Divines sitting at Westminster, 



against Toleration. 1645. 



Vol. XIII. Containing 



Harley (Richard). A Vindication of "The Faults on Both Sides," from ths 

 Rejections of the "Medley," the "Specimen Maker," and a Pamphlet entitled 

 "Most Faults on One Side." With a Dissertation on the Nature and Use of 

 Money and Paper Credit in Trade, and the true Value of Joint Stocks, 

 maintaining the Assertions of the Author, in Relation to those Matters. 1710. 



Considerations for Competitors and Electors of Representatives in Parliament. 



Harley (Robert). (1) Essay upon Public Credit. 1710. (2) Essay upon Loans. 



Essay towards the History of the last Ministry and Parliament. 1710, 



