WOLLASTON WOOD. 



871 



WOLLASTON (WILLIAM), M.A-, of Sidney col- 

 lege, Cambridge. The religion of nature deli- 

 neated. London, 1725. 4 

 - Seventh edition. Glasgoiv, 1746. 8 



Another copy. 



Seventh edition. To which is added, a pre- 

 face containing a general account of the life, 

 character, and writings of the author. Also 

 a translation of the notes into English. 



London, 1750. 8 



\VOLLEBIUS (JOHANNES), Professor of theology 

 in the university of Basle. Compendium theo- 

 logise Christiame, accurata methodo sic ador- 

 natum, ut sit ad SS. Scripturas legendas, ad 

 locos communes digerendos, ad controversias 

 iutelligendas, manuductio. Editio nova. 



Amstel., 1642. 12 



- Faithfully translated into English, and in 

 some obscure places cleared and enlarged, by 

 Alexander Boss. 3d ed. To which is ad- 

 joyned, after the alphabetical table, the ana- 

 tomy of the whole body of divinity, delineated 

 in xiv. short tables, for the help of weak me- 

 mories. London, 1660. 12 



WOLLIUS (CHRISTOPHORUS). Hermeneutica 

 Novi Foaderis acroamatico-dogmatica certissi- 

 mis defecatse philosophise principiis corrobo- 

 rata eximiisque omnium theologies Christianas 

 partium usibus inserviens. Lipsice, 1736. 4 



WOLPHIUS (JOANNES), Professor of theology at 

 Strasburg. In secundi quatuordecim ultima 

 capita Libri Regum commentarii ; [cum Corn- 

 men tt. Petri MARTYRIS in Libros Regum]. 



1581 



WOLSEY (THOMAS), Cardinal. *Life of Car- 

 dinal Wolsey. By John Gait. 3d ed. , with 

 additional illustrations from Cavendish's Life 

 of Wolsey, and other sources. [Bogue's Euro- 

 pean Library.] London, 1846. 8 



W T OLZOGENIUS (JOHANNES LUDOVICUS). 

 Opera omnia ; exegetica, didactica et polemica. 

 2 torn. [Forming part of the BIBLIOTHECA 

 FratrumPolonorum.] Irenopoli, 1656. fol. 



WOMEN. The laws respecting women, as they 

 regard their natural rights, or their connec- 

 tions and conduct ; in which their interests 

 and duties as daughters, wards, heiresses, 

 spinsters, sisters, wives, widows, mothers, le- 

 gatees, executrixes, &c. are ascertained and 

 enumerated : also, the obligations of parent 

 and child, and the condition of minors. The 

 whole laid down according to the principles of 

 the common and statute law, explained by the 

 practice of the courts of law and equity, and 

 describing the nature and extent of the eccle- 

 siastical jurisdiction... In four books. 



London, 1777. 8 



Woman's mission. 7th ed. London, 1840. 8 

 WOMOCK, or WOMOCKE (LAURENCE), D.D., 



Bishop of St Davids. Beaten oyle for the 

 lamps of the sanctuarie ; or the great contro- 

 versie concerning set prayers and our liturgie, 

 examined in an epistle to a private friend : 

 with an appendix that answers the paralell, 

 and the most materiall objections of others 

 against it. Unto which are added some use- 



full observations touching Christian libertie, 

 and things indift'erent. London, 1641. 4 



The examination of Tilenus before the triers ; 

 in order to his intended settlement in the of- 

 fice of a public preacher in the common- wealth 

 of Utopia. Whereunto are annexed the te- 

 nents of the Remonstrants touching those five 

 articles voted, stated, and imposed, but not 

 disputed, at the Synod of Dort. Together 

 with a short essay (by way of annotations) 

 upon the fundamental theses of Mr Thomas 

 Parker. [Published under the signature of 

 N. N.] London, 1658. 12 



- Another edition. [In A collection of tracts 

 concerning PREDESTINATION.] 1719 



Arcana dogmatum Anti-REMONSTRANTiUM. 



1659 



Suffragium Protestantium. Wherein our go- 

 vernours are justifyed in their impositions and 

 proceedings against dissenters. Meisner also 

 and the verdict rescued from the cavils and 

 seditious sophistry of the Protestant Recon- 

 ciler, [Daniel Whitby]. London, 1683. 8 



WOOD (ANTHONY A V )M.A. Athenae Oxonienses. 

 An exact history of all the writers and Bishops 

 who have had their education in the most an- 

 tient and famous university of Oxford, from 

 the fifteenth year of King Henry the Seventh, 

 A.D. 1500, to the author's death in November 

 1695. Representing the birth, fortune, pre- 

 ferment, and death of all those authors and 

 Prelates, the great accidents of their lives, and 

 the fate and character of their writings. To 

 which are added, the Fasti, or annals, of the 

 said university. 2 vol. The 2d ed., very 

 much corrected and enlarged, with the addi- 

 tion of above 500 new lives from the author's 

 original manuscript. London, 1721. fol. 



* The lives of those eminent antiquaries John 

 LELAND, Thomas HEARNE, and A. a W. 



3772 



WOOD (EPHRAIM). Quakerism unveiled : truth 

 prevalent : in two letters ; addressed to the 

 members of the Society of Friends, Liverpool : 

 to which are added, fifteen propositions ; with 

 hints on the present negociation ; or, the way 

 to a true and lasting peace. 



Liverpool, 1815. 8 



WOOD (JAMES), Professor of tlieology in St An- 

 drews. A little stone, pretended to be out of 

 the mountain, tried, and found to be a coun- 

 terfeit. Or an examination and refutation of 

 Mr Lockyers lecture, preached at Edinburgh, 

 anno 1651, concerning the mater of the visible 

 Church: and afterwards printed with an ap- 

 pendix for popular government of single con- 

 gregations. Together with an examination, 

 in two appendices, of what is said on these 

 same purposes in a letter of some in Aberdene, 

 who lately have departed from the communion 

 and government of this Church. 



Edin., 1654. 4 



Another copy. 



WOOD (JAMES), D.D., Master of St John's col- 

 lege, Cambridge, and dean of Ely. The prin- 

 ciples of mechanics : designed for the use of 



