1506 



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

 Vol. XIII. (continued)'. 

 Tabula Chronologica Archiepiscopatuum et Episcopatuum in Anglia et Wallia, &c. 



explicata. 

 Enquiry into the Authority of the Primitive Complutensian Edition of the New 



Testament, as principally founded on the most Ancient Vatican Manuscripts. 

 Preface to a short and sure Method proposed for the Extirpation of Popery, in 



the Space of a few Years. By a Person of Quality. 

 Divinity of our Saviour proved out of the Old and New Testament, &c. 

 Dodd (Charles). Certamen utriusque Ecclesiae ; or a List of all the Eminent 



Writers of Controversy, Catholics and Protestants, since the Reformation. 1724. 

 A Cat may look upon a King. 1714. 



Atterbury (Bishop). English Advice to the Freeholders of England. 1714. 

 English advice to the Freeholders of England. 1714. A Parody on the tract preceding. 

 False Steps of the Ministry after the Revolution ; in a Letter to my Lord. 1714. 

 Walpole (Robert). Secret History of one Year, 



Index to the Report of the Secret Committee ; in a Letter to a Friend. 

 Copy of a Letter from the Right Honourable the Lord Viscount Bolingbroke. 1715. 

 Representation of the Right Honourable the Lord Viscount Bolingbroke. 1715. 

 Old English Constitution, in Relation to the Hereditary Succession of the Crown 



antecedent to the Revolution of 1688. 1714. 

 Somers (Lord). History of the Succession of the Crown of England. 1714. 

 Leslie (Mr.) (1) Letter to a Member of Parliament in London. 1714. (2) The 



Church of England's Advice to her Children, and to all Kings, Princes, and 



Potentates. 1715. 

 Steele (Sir Richard). The British Subject's Answer to the Pretender's 



Declaration. 1716. 

 ' Declaration of the Archbishop of Canterbury, and the Bishops in and near London, 



testifying their Abhorrence of the present Rebellion. 1715. 

 Bishop Atterbury's and Bishop Smalridge's Reasons for not signing the Declaration 



lately put forth by the Archbishop of Canterbury and the other Bishops. 1715. 

 Letter from the Earl of Mar to the King, &c. before His Majesty's Arrival in 



England. With some Remarks upon my Lord's Subsequent Conduct, by Sir 



Richard Steele. 1715. 

 Asgill (John), Abstract of the Public Funds, granted and continued to the 



Crown since. 1st William and Mary, and still existing. With an Essay for the 



more speedy Redemption of the Perpetual Funds; an Apology for the same; 



and an Appendix for Exchange of a Revenue in Ireland. 1715, 

 Two Lists; shewing the Alterations that have been made in the House of 



Commons, from the Beginning of the Reign of King Henry VIII, to the End 



of that of James I, and in the House of Peers, from the Accession of King 



James I to this Time, With some Observations, 1719. 

 Reasons for Taxing the Public Funds. 1716. 



Letter to the Lord Chief Justice King, on his Lordship's being designed a Peer. 1726. 

 Two Essays on the Balance of Europe. 1720. 

 Law (John). Money and Trade considered; with a Proposal for supplying the 



Nation with Money. 1720. 

 Hue and Cry after Dr. Swift; occasioned by a true and exact Copy of Part of 



his own Diary, found in his Pocket-Book. 

 Life of Aristides the Athenian, who was decreed to be banished for his Justice. 



Translated from an Arabick Manuscript. 1714. 

 Swift (Jonathan). Letter of Advice to a Young Poet ; together with a Proposal 



for the Encouragement of Poetry in this Kingdom. 

 Remarks upon the ancient and present State of London, occasioned by some 



Roman Urns, Coins, and other Antiquities lately discovered. 1723. 



