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PORTUGAL The present political Crisis in Portugal. (Misc. Coll. vol. 8.) folio. London, 1847.

POTATO DISEASE—Observations respecting the Potato-Disease, and substitutes for the Potato. (Ath. Coll. vol. 210.) 8° London, 1847.

see also Coxworthy; Parkin.

"POTTER'S (W.). Proposals to the Councell of Trade."-An Essay upon W. Potter's design concerning a Bank of Lands to be erected in this Commonwealth. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 22.) 4° London, 1650?

POWELL (Captain). Description of an Invention for obviating the Difficulties of the Break of Gauge. (Ath. Coll. vol. 231.) 8° London, 1846.

POZZO DI BORGO-See Ouvaroff.

PRAYER-A form of Prayer to be used, January 9th, 1739, in all Churches and Chapels, being a day appointed for a General Fast. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 12.) 4° London, 1739.

see Liturgy.

PREACHING-Authorized Street Preaching a Remedy for our Social Evils, by a Country Parson. (Ath. Coll. vol. 271.) 8° London, 1848. PRETENDER—“ Prince Charles Edward, the Young Chevalier."-Extrait du Manifeste de Charles Edouard d'Angleterre, 1745. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 5.) 4o [Dublin], 1745. Relation de la Reddition de la Ville d'Edinbourg, et de la Victoire remportée, Oct. 1745, sur l'armée du Général Cope. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 4.) 4° Edinbourg, 1745.

Harangue du Lord Thaylord [

], au nom du Parlement d'Ecosse au Prince Royal Charles Edward, Edinbourg, le 15 Sept. 1745. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 4.) 4° Paris, 1745.

Lettre au Docteur Stmitrk, avocat de Londres, sur les affaires du Pretendant en Ecosse, et le Parti qu'il a dans Londres. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 4.) 4° Londres, 1746. PRISONS Synopsis of Charles Pearson's Lecture upon Prison Discipline, Discussions on the Same, &c., [at the London Literary Institution]. (Ath. Coll. vol. 275.) 8° London, 1849.

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On Solitary Confinement before Trial.-see Vyvyan.

Asylum Farms for Prisoners.-see Window.

PROCTOR (Thomas Beauchamp). An Appeal for the Ragged Schools. (Ath. Coll. vol. 270.) 8° London, 1849.

PROVENCE-Instruction Générale pour executer les premières décisions du Conseil de Santé sur la manière de secourir la Provence. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 8.) 4° Paris, 1721.

PRUSSIA-Exposé des motifs qui ont obligé Le Roi [de Prusse] de donner des troupes auxiliaires à l'Empereur. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 5.) 40 [Paris, 1744]. [With MS. corrections.]

Relation de la campagne du Roi de Prusse en Silésie de l'an 1745, et de la Bataille de Friedberg, gagnée 4 Juin. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 4.) 40 Berlin, 1745.

The Duke of Newcastle's Letter by H. M. order to Mons. Michell, the King of Prussia's Secretary, in answer to his Memorial, delivered on the 23 Nov. and 13 Dec. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 4.) 4° London, 1753.

PUNJAUB (The)-see Briggs; Gore.

PUSEY (E. B.). The Holy Eucharist a Comfort to the Penitent, a Sermon preached in Christ Church, Oxford, on the Fourth Sunday after Easter. (Tract. Cont. vol. 14.) 8° Oxford, 1843.

Replies.-see Garbett; Godwin; Lee; Meller; Torquemada; Woodgate.
Reply to his Circular in support of Isaac Williams.-see Bricknell.

PUSEY (Philip). The Poor in Scotland. (Ath. Coll. vol. 187.) 8° London, 1844.

QUAIN (Richard). Observations on the Education and Examinations for Degrees in Medicine as affected by the New Medical Bill, [Sir James Graham's]. (Ath. Coll. vol. 198.) 8° London, 1845.

QUARANTINE.-see Milroy.

QUEEN'S COLLEGE, London, for Female Education: its origin and progress. (Ath. Coll. vol. 288.) 8° London, 1849.

QUETELET (A.). Rapport sur les Travaux de l'Academie Royale de Bruxelles, pendant 1842-3. (Ath. Coll. vol. 199.) 8° (Bruxelles), 1844.

Statistique Générale: Rapport au Ministre de l'Intérieur. (Ath. Coll. vol. 286.) 8° Bruxelles, 1846.

QUINET (E.). La République: Discours au Collège de France. (Ath. Coll. vol. 270.) 8° Paris, 1848.

RAIKES (Henry). Charge to the Churchwardens of the Diocese of Chester. (Charges, vol. 7.) 80 London, 1844.

RAILWAYS-Reports of the Committee of the Board of Trade on the Railways projected and in progress. (Ath. Coll. vol. 194.) 8° London, 1845.

Railways and the Board of Trade. (Ath. Coll. vol. 194.) 8° London, 1845. Papers on the Demoralization and Injuries occasioned by the want of regulations of Labourers on Railways. (Ath. Coll. vol. 194.) 8° Manchester, (1845). Ruminations on Railways. No. 1. Railway Speculation. No. 2. The Railway Board of Trade. (Ath. Coll. vol. 194.) 8° London, 1845.

Suggestions for improved Railway Legislation at the present crisis. (Ath. Coll. vol. 231.) 8° London, 1846.

Chester and Holyhead Railway: Reports on erecting a Tubular Bridge across the Menai Straits. (Ath. Coll. vol. 230.) 8° London, 1846.

On the Selection of projected Lines, with Description of the Railway Scale. (Ath. Coll. vol. 231.) 8° [London, 1846].

Railways as they really are. way. (Ath. Coll. vol. 260.) 8°

don, 1847.

No. 1. London, Brighton and South Coast Rail-
London, 1847.

No. 2. The South-Eastern Company. (Ath. Coll. vol. 260.) 8° Lon

No. 5. The Great Western and all Broad Gauge Lines. (Ath. Coll. vol. 260.) 8° London, 1848.

No. 7. Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway. (Ath. Coll. vol. 260.) 8°

London, 1847.

Railway Policy; a Letter to George Carr Glyn, on the Correspondence of Captain Huish and J. Whitehead. (Ath. Coll. vol. 261.) 8° London, 1848.

Letter to the Shareholders of the Eastern Counties Railway on the Norfolk Amalgamation. (Ath. Coll. vol. 261.) 8° London, 1849.

THE GAUGE QUESTION:

Reply to "Observations" of the Great Western Railway Company on the Report of the Gauge Commissioners. (Misc. Coll. vol. 13.) 4° London, 1846.

A Railway Traveller's Reasons for adopting Uniformity of Gauge, addressed to J. K. Brunel. (Misc. Coll. vol. 13.) 4° Chiswick, (1846). Tracts on the Gauge Question, in 1 vol. 8° London, 1846.

Contents:

Dialogues of the Gauges.

Letter to the Directors of the Great Western Railway, showing the evils and
troubles of the Break of Gauge, by an Old Carrier.

Narrow Gauge speedier than Broad Gauge Railways, as well as cheaper, by H. S.
Melville.

The Broad Gauge the Bane of the Great Western Railway Company, by
£. s. d.

Fallacies of the Broken Gauge, by a Fellow of two Royal Societies.

Inconsistencies of Men of Genius exemplified in the practice and precept of J. K.
Brunel, by Vigil.

The Gauge Question: Evils of a Diversity of Gauge, and a Remedy, by Wyndham
Harding.

RAILWAYS THE GAUGE QUESTION, (continued):

The Origin and Results of the Clearing System which is in operation on the
Narrow Gauge Railways.

A Railway Traveller's Reasons for adopting Uniformity of Gauge, addressed to
J. K. Brunel.

Ward.

see also Dwarris; Harding; Kinnaird; Locke; Powell; Sidney;

see Salomons; Sidney; Whitmore.

Railway Administration, Legislation, &c.-see Entwisle; Hunt; Kinnaird; Morrison; Troup; Webb; Whitehead

Railway Speculation, Litigation, &c.-see A'Beckett; Aytoun; Harvey; Smith; Symons.

On a Government System of Railways in Ireland.- -see Brown. On Rating Railway Companies to the Poor.-see Penfold. INDIA-Indian Railways, "from the Asiatic and Colonial Quarterly Journal." (Ath. Coll. vol. 231.) 8° London, 1846.

Railways in India, "reprinted from the Railway Register." (Ath. Coll. vol. 231.) 8° London, 1846.

Letter to the Shareholders of the East Indian and Great Western of Bengal Railways. (Ath. Coll. vol. 230.) 8° London, 1847.

Letter to Lord John Russell on the subject of Indian Railways, by an East India Merchant. (Ath. Coll. vol. 261.) 8° London, 1848.

[Reply] Is India to have Railways? Fallacies of an East India Merchant exposed, by an East India Officer. (Ath. Coll. vol. 261.) 8° London, 1848.

Railways in India: Bengal, the Five per Cent. Guarantee. (Ath. Coll.

vol. 260.) 8° London, 1849.

see also Andrew; Clarke; Williamson.

RALEIGH (George). Albania; or certaine Concernments of Great Brittanny, truely represented under the faigned person of Albania. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 10.) 40 London, 1641.

RALEIGH (Sir Walter). The Prince; or Maxims of State.
London, 1642.

(Gibbon Coll. vol. 10.) 4°

Essay on Ways and Means to maintain the Honour and Safety of England, &c., with Remarks on our Harbours, principally those of Kent, by Sir Henry Sheers. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 17.) 4° London, 1701.

"RAMEE; Architecture du Moyen Age," Critique upon. (Ath. Coll. vol. 269.) 8° (London, 1848.)

RAMSAY (George). Repeal without Disunion. (Misc. Coll. vol. 12.) royal 8° Edinburgh, 1843.

RANDOLPH (Bernard). Present State of the Morea, called anciently Peloponnesus, after several years observation, 1671-1679, faithfully described. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 11.) 4o Oxford, 1686.

RANELAGH (Viscount). Legal Order and Constitutional Rights as defined by the Earl of Aberdeen. (Ath. Coll. vol. 191.) 8° London, 1845.

RAY (John). Biographical Sketches "from the Englishwoman's Magazine." (Ath. Coll. vol. 237.) 8° —, 1847.

READING GAOL.-see Prisons.

REBELLION of 1715-A Declaration of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishops in and near London, testifying their abhorrence of the present Rebellion, with an Exhortation to the Clergy. (Gibbon Coll. vol. 10.) 4° London, 1715.

REBELLION of 1745.-see Pretender.

REDESDALE (Lord). Reflections on the Doctrine of Regeneration, and its connexion with both Sacraments. (Ath. Coll. vol. 299.) 8° London, 1849.

Observations on the Judgment in the Gorham Case, and the way to unity. (Ath. Coll. vol. 296.) 8° London, 1850.

REFORM BILL-On the Working of.-see Mackay.

RENÉ DE BOUILLE (Comte). Des Droits de la Couronne de Danemark sur le Duché de Slesvig. (Ath. Coll. vol. 242.) 8° Paris, 1847.

RENNELL (Major Jacques)-Notice Historique sur sa Vie et ses Ouvrages par le Baron Walckenaer. (Misc. Coll. vol. 12.) Royal 8° 1842.

RENOUF (P. Le Page). The Greek and Anglican Communions: Letter to the Rev. T. Allies. (Ath. Coll. vol. 223.) 8° London, 1847.

REUMONT (A.)-see Italy.

REVANS (John). A Per Centage Tax on Domestic Expenditure to supply the whole of the Public Revenue. (Ath. Coll. vol. 226.) 8° London, 1847.

REVOLUTION OF 1688-Contemporary Single Sheets, Broadsides, &c., in 1 vol. fol. London, 1688-97.

Contents:

Address of the Lords and Commons to the King for suppressing the Rebels, with
H. M.'s Answer. 1688.

Partridge's Advice to the Protestants of England, (in verse).

True Interest of the Legal English Protestants, in a Letter concerning the
Test.

Poem in defence of the Church of England.

Account of the Tryal and Discharge of the Seven Bishops.

Tryal of Sir E. Hales, on an Action for 500l., with his Plea upon the King's dispensing with the Statute 25, Car. II., &c.

Earl of Rochester's Letter of Resignation to the Lords of the Ecclesiastical Commission.

Bishop Crewe's Letter of Advice to James II.

Memorial of the Protestants of the Church of England to the Prince and Princess
of Orange.

Memorial from the English Protestants for the Prince and Princess of Orange.
Of Magistracy, Prerogatives by Divine Right, Obedience and Laws, 4 chapters.
[The foundation of the "Bill of Rights.”]

Extract of the Resolutions of the States General of the Netherlands, October 14,
1688.

Extract of the States General, their Resolution, October 28, 1688.

Prince of Orange's Letter to the English Fleet, and the Form of Prayer used in the Dutch Fleet.

Form of Prayer, &c. [for the Success of the Prince of Orange]. Excester, 1688.
The Association of the Gentlemen of Devon to the Prince of Orange. Exon,
1688.

The Declaration of the Nobility, Gentry, and Commonalty at the Rendezvous at
Nottingham, November 22, 1688.

The Speech of Sir George Treby, Recorder of London, to the Prince of Orange,
December 20, 1688.

Address of the Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and Commons of the City of London to
the Prince of Orange.

His Majesties Reasons for withdrawing himself from Rochester, December 22, 1688. [The last publication of James II.]

A Proclamation against Papists, (Edinburgh).

Dr. Wild's Poem; or a New Song to an Old Friend, from an Old Poet, upon the
hopeful New Parliament.

Answer to Old Doctor Wild's New Poem, by Grand-Syre Gray-beard the
Younger.

The Recorder of London's Speech to the King at Kensington, November 18,
1697.

Humble Address of the House of Commons to the King, [against Profaneness and Immorality].

1697.

Speech by Isaac Crew, an orphan in Christ's Hospital, to King William III., in his passage through London, November 16, 1697.

REVOLUTION of 1688-A Second Collection of Tracts and Single Sheets, the publications of the time.

Contents:

folio:

Declaration of the Prince of Orange, of the Reasons inducing him to appear in
Arms. The Hague, 1688.

The Commissioners' Proposals to the Prince of Orange, with his Answer. 1688.
The King's Letter to the Earl of Feversham upon his leaving Whitehall. 1688.
Address of Admiral Lord Dartmouth to the King, December 1, 1688.

Declaration of the Lords in and about the Cities of London and Westminster,
assembled at Guildhall, December 11, 1688 [on James II.'s privately with-
drawing himself].

Speech of the Prince of Orange to divers Members of Parliament, and their
address in Reply, December 26, 1688.

Debate upon the Quarie, whether a King elected by the Lords and Commons,
coming to the said Lords and Commons, doth not make a Parliament, &c.
The Prince of Orange's Letter to the King. Exon. 1689.
Address of the Commons to his Majesty, April 25, 1689.

1689.

Advice before it be too late, or a Breviate for the Convention.
The Doctrine of Passive Obedience and Jure Divino disproved.
Reasons humbly offer'd for placing the Prince of Orange singly on the Throne
during Life.

Reasons for crowning the Prince and Princess of Orange King and Queen joyntly.

The necessity of settling the Crown of England.

The Speech of an honourable Peer in the House of Lords. 1689.

Historical Account concerning the Succession to the Crown of Scotland. 1689. Whether the King, Lords and Commons, now assembled be a legal Parliament?

Speech of the Bishop of Carlisle in the House of Lords.

Discovery of the private League between King James and the King of France to destroy all the Protestants of Europe.

Of Magistracy, &c., 4 chapters.

Tracts. Vol. 1. 4° London, 1688-9.

Contents:

The Desertion Discussed, in a Letter to a Country Gentleman.

History of the Desertion; or, an Account of all Publick Affairs in England, from September, 1688, to February 12th following; with an Answer to a Piece, called "The Desertion Discussed" [by Edmund Bohun].

The Prince of Orange his Declaration, showing the Reasons why he invades England; with a Preface and Remarks, and Animadversions upon the Decla

ration.

The Prince of Orange's Third Declaration.

Some Reflections upon the Prince of Orange's Declaration.

Representation of the Dangers impending over Protestants in Great Britain before the coming of the Prince of Orange [by Robert Ferguson].

The State Prodigal: his return, containing a true state of the Nation.

Animadversions upon the modern Explanation of 2nd Henry VII., cap. 1; or, a
King de Facto.

Inquiry into the Measures of Submission to the Supreme Authority.
Reflections upon our late and present Proceedings in England.

Humanum est Errare; or False Steps on both sides.

Tracts. Vol. 2. 4° London, 1688-9.

Account of the Expedition of the Prince of Orange for England. 1688.

Reflections upon the occurrences of the last year.

1688-9.

That Resistance may be used, in case our Religion and Rights should be

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