C42 



MOOR MORATA. 



Letter to the elders and members of St I. 

 church, Edinburgh. 7;./,.., l.s-rj. i-j 



Connection between the principles ah 

 proved, and tlie real eiiiuiency of the Churcli. 



'/:-/;/.., 1842. 12' 



The Song of Songs. An exposition of the 

 Song of Solom n. London, 1867. 8 



MOOR(BERNHARDINUSDE). Coinmentariiis per- 

 petuus in Johannis Marckii Compendium thc-o- 

 logite Christiana). 7 vol. 



Lugd. Batav., 1761-74. 4 



Another copy. 



Another copy. [Wanting vol. vii., the sup- 

 plement.] 



MOOR (EDWARD), Lieut, on the Bombay Estab- 

 li*hnient. A narrative of the operations of 

 Captain Little's detachment, and of the Mah- 

 ratta army, commanded by Purseram Bhow ; 

 during the late confederacy in India, against 

 the Nawab Tippoo Sultan Bahadur. 



London, 1794. 4 



MOOR (JACOBUS), LL.D., Professor of Greek in 



the university of Glasgow. Elementa lingua: 



Graecse ; novis, plerumque regulis, tradita... 



Glasyiue, 1795. 8 



Another copy. 



MOORE (Mrs). Evidences for heaven ; [with 

 The godly man's ark, by Edmund CALAMY]. 



1825 



MOORE (GEORGE), M.D. The power of the soul 

 over the body, considered in relation to health 

 and morals. 3d ed. London, 1846. 12 



MOORE (JOHN), M.D. A view of SOCIETY. 



1779 



A view of the causes and progress of the French 

 Revolution. 2 vol. Dublin, 1795. 12 



MOORE (THOMAS). The universality of God's 

 free-grace in Christ to mankind. Proclaimed 

 and displayed from 1 Tim. 2. 6. and Heb. 2. 

 9. according to their genuine sense. That all 

 might be comforted, encouraged ; every one 

 confirmed and assured of the propitiation and 

 death of Christ for the whole race of mankind, 

 and so for himself in particular. 



London, 1646. 4 



An explicite declaration of the testimony of 

 Christ, according to the plain sayings of the 

 Gospel ; and therein, of the purposes, pro- 

 mises, and commands of God, as by Gospel 

 declared. With a consideration of a question 

 stated about faith. London, 1656. 4 



MOORE (THOMAS). Lallah Rookh, an Oriental 

 romance. 4th ed. London, 1817. 8 



The Fudge family in Paris. Edited by Thomas 

 BROWN, the younger. [Pseud.] 3d ed. 



London, 1818. 8 



The loves of the angels, a poem. 



London, 1823. 8 



MOORE (W. KENNEDY), M.A., Minister of the 



English Presbyterian Church, Liverpool. Life's 



everlasting victory. London, 1866. 8" 



MOORE (WILLIAM). The millennium ; or latter 



day glory : a sermon [on Num. xiv. 21]. 



London, 1796. 8 I 



MORAL OBLIGATION. An essay on moral ' 

 obligation : with a view towards settling the 



controversy, concerning moral and positive du- 

 In answer U> two late pamphlets. [By 



Thomas .JollNSdX. ] /.'/(/' ;i, 17:;l. 8 



MORAL PHDJOBOFEOOL The moral philoso- 

 pher. In a dialogue between 1'liilaletlies a 

 Christian deist, and Theophanes a Christian 

 Jew. In which the grounds and reasons of 

 religion in general, and particularly of Chris- 

 tianity, are distinguish'd from the religion of 

 nature; the different methods of conve\in^ 

 and proposing moral truths to the mind, and 

 the necessary marks or criteria on which they 

 must all equally depend ; the nature of posi- 

 tive laws, rites and ceremonies, and how far 

 they are capable of proof as of standing perpe- 

 tual obligation ; with many other matters of 

 the utmost consequence in religion, are fairly 

 considered, and debated, and the arguments on 

 both sides impartially represented. [By Tho- 

 mas MORGAN.] 2d ed. London, 1738. 8 



Vol. ii. Being a farther vindication of mo- 

 ral truth and reason ; occasioned by two books 

 lately published : one intitled, The divine au- 

 thority of the Old and New Testaments assert- 

 ed. With a particular vindication of Moses 

 and the Prophets, our Saviour Jesus Christ, 

 and his Apostles, against the unjust assertions, 

 and false reasonings of a book intitled, the 

 Moral philosopher. By the Rev. Mr Leland. 

 The other intitled, Eusebius : or, The true 

 Christians defence, &c. By the Rev. Mr Chap- 

 man. By Philalethes, [i. e. Thomas MORGAN J. 



London, 1739. 8 



Vol. iii. Superstition and tyranny incon- 

 sistent with theocracy. Occasioned by the 

 Rev. Dr Leland's second volume of The divine 

 authority of the Old and New Testament as- 

 serted : and the Rev. Mr Lowman's Disserta- 

 tion on the civil government of the Hebrews. 

 By Philalethes. London, 1740. 8 



MORALITY. Essays on the principles of mo- 

 rality and natural religion. In two parts. [By 

 Henry HOME, Lord Kames.] Edin., 1751. 8 



A delineation of the nature and obligation of 

 morality. With reflections upon Mr Hume's 

 book, intitled, An inquiry concerning the prin- 

 ciples of morals. 2d ed. Edin. , 1763. 12 



The morality of the New Testament digested 

 under various heads... With an introduction 

 addressed to deists. ; in which the character of 

 Jesus Christ is vindicated against the asper- 

 sions of modern unbelievers ; and also an at- 

 tempt is made to prove, that the religion 

 taught by Jesus Christ was the pure religion 

 of nature and of reason. The whole conclud- 

 ing with observations on a late treatise, in- 

 titled, The doctrine of grace, written by Dr 

 Warburton, Bishop of Gloucester ; together 

 with an inquiry how far the belief of any doc- 

 trine may be necessary to salvation ; and some 

 observations on the arguments of Mr Locke 

 and Dr Leland. By a rational Christian. 



London, 1765. 4 



MORATA (OLYMPIA-FULVIA). O. F. Morate 

 foeminae doctissimse ac plane divkue orationes, 

 dialogi, epistolae, carmina, tarn Latina quam 



