[Transcriber’s Note: This e-text includes characters that require UTF-8 (Unicode) fileencoding, primarily the “oe” ligature (œ and Œ). If these characters do not display properly, or if the apostrophes andquotation marks in this paragraph appear as garbage, make sure your textreader’s “character set” or “file encoding” is set to Unicode (UTF-8). You may also need to change the default font. In the printed book, line breaks in the Congreve catalogue were shownas virgules or slashes / (the “shilling marks” described in the editor’sIntroduction). The breaks have been restored in this e-text, omittingthe / but retaining any hyphens. Book sizes printed with superscript“o” have been rendered as 4to, 8vo, 12mo. Other superscripts, includinga few books written as 8^vo, are shown in braces: 8{vo}, 2{3} edn. Bracketed periods [. ] were printed with small subscript brackets. Theyoccur whenever a catalog entry ends with an abbreviation (“Tom. ”, “Vol. ”, “papr. ”); the final period was supplied by the editor in mostof these entries. Under the headings of _Forma_, _Editio_, _Theca_(size, edition, case number), sets of four unspaced dots . .. . Wereadded by the transcriber to indicate an empty column. Variations and inconsistencies match the original, including: --Variation between œ and oe, æ and ae. --Dashes and hyphens. In general, four dashes ---- represent a single long line; other combinations are groups of distinct hyphens. --Spacing within entries in the _Editio_ column. --Dots and ellipses other than the . .. . Sets noted above. It was assumed that errors in the Catalogue itself, and inconsistenciesin quotations from original printed works, were reproduced from theiroriginals. Typographical errors, whether corrected or unchanged, arelisted at the end of the e-text. ] THE LIBRARY OF WILLIAM CONGREVE [Illustration: First page of Congreve’s “Bibliotheca, ” showing thepartially obliterated entries by the first hand. Reproduced from theoriginal in the library of the Yorkshire Archaeological Society bypermission of His Grace the Duke of Leeds. ] The Library of WILLIAM CONGREVE _By_ JOHN C. HODGES _University of Tennessee, Knoxville_ [Illustration] New York The New York Public Library 1955 Reprinted, with additional illustrations, from the _Bulletin_ of The New York Public Library of 1954-1955. Printed at The New York Public Library. The Library of William Congreve INTRODUCTION When William Congreve died in 1729 he left a collection of books whichhis old friend and publisher, Jacob Tonson, described (in a letterpreserved at the Bodleian) as “genteel & well chosen. ” Tonson thought sowell of the collection that he urged his nephew, then his agent inLondon, to purchase Congreve’s books. But Congreve had willed them toHenrietta, the young Duchess of Marlborough, who was much concerned withkeeping intact (as she wrote in her will) “all Mr. Congreaves PersonalEstate that he left me” in order to pass it along to her youngestdaughter Mary. This daughter, said by gossip to have been Congreve’sdaughter also, married the fourth Duke of Leeds in 1740, and thusCongreve’s books eventually found their way to Hornby Castle, chief seatof the Leeds family in Yorkshire. There apparently most of Congreve’s books remained until about 1930, when the eleventh Duke of Leeds sold his English estates and authorizedSotheby’s to auction off “a Selected portion of the Valuable Library atHornby Castle. ” Among the 713 items advertised for sale on June 2, 3, and 4, 1930, were ten books containing the signature of WilliamCongreve. These ten, along with a few others that have been discoveredhere and there with Congreve’s name on the title page, and nine bookspublished by subscription with Congreve’s name in the printed list ofsubscribers, made a total of some thirty-odd books known to have been inCongreve’s library. These, we may presume, were but a small part of theCongreve books which had been incorporated with the Leeds family libraryin 1740. _Finding and Identifying Congreve’s Book List and His Books_ Among the voluminous papers of the Leeds family now stored in theBritish Museum, the Public Record Office, and several other depositoriesin England are at least a half-dozen manuscript lists or catalogues ofLeeds books. In one list from the middle of the eighteenth centuryappear a few of the books known to have been in Congreve’s library. Thesame is true of lists dated 1810 and 1850. But it is impossible to useany of these to determine exactly which of the books had once beenCongreve’s. Fortunately another manuscript list proves to be not acombination of Congreve and Leeds books but a separate catalogue ofCongreve’s private library. This list, herewith printed, was found bythe editor in an English county depository, the Yorkshire ArchaeologicalSociety in the City of Leeds. Let us see why we may accept this list as Congreve’s and not simplyanother catalogue of Leeds family books--as the librarian of the Societyhad classified it. In the first place, it was found among the Leedspapers, in one of the sixteen boxes of manuscripts brought away fromHornby Castle shortly before it was torn down about 1930. Among the samepapers, interestingly enough, is a copy of the marriage settlement (onthe original parchment) whereby Mary Godolphin brought to the Leedsfamily the books which she had inherited through her mother fromCongreve. The list was just where a Congreve document might have beenexpected. In fact, the list was discovered incidentally while the Leedspapers were being searched as the most promising place to find Congreveletters. Not a single letter to or from Congreve was to be found, perhaps because the gossip to the effect that Mary was the naturaldaughter of Congreve had caused the family to destroy or mutilatedocuments bearing his name. Congreve’s copy of Terence (Number 595 inthe list) is a good illustration. On the title page the signature “Will:Congreve” was once entirely blotted out by the same ink that wrote“Leeds” at the side. But the two centuries that have since passed havecaused the Leeds ink to fade and thus show very distinctly the clear, black signature of the dramatist. As for Congreve’s 44-page manuscriptbook list, evidently it was too useful to destroy--too valuable a recordof the fine collection acquired by the Leeds family. So the list waskept, but the identifying title at the head of the list was crossed outexcept for its opening word “Bibliotheca. ” Although the name followingthat word is illegible for the average reader, one who knows what tolook for can still trace out “Gul:{mi} Congreve, Armigeri” (seefrontispiece). We do not, however, need to depend on this reading to prove that themanuscript lists the books of William Congreve, Esquire. All the proofneeded is to be found in the list itself. The 659 items bear datesbetween 1515 and 1728, with fourteen entries for 1728, the last year ofCongreve’s life. The list includes every one of the works, and the exactedition of it, for which Congreve is known to have subscribed, such asRowe’s translation of Lucan’s _Pharsalia_ (1718) and Bononcini’s_Cantate e Duetti_ (1721). Furthermore it includes the identical editionof each book said by the Sotheby catalogue for the Leeds Sale of 1930 tobear the signature of Congreve. But the most convincing proof that the list could have belonged only toCongreve is provided by three quarto volumes, each with Congreve’ssignature on the title page, bound together as one volume. This volume, as described by the Sotheby catalogue for the Leeds Sale, was made up of(1) Dryden’s _Of Dramatick Poesie_, 1684; (2) Horace’s _Art of Poetry_, made English by the Earl of Roscommon, 1684; and (3) _The Rehearsal_, 1687. In other words, the three separate quartos had been speciallybound together to form a unique volume, one to be found only inCongreve’s library. This same unique volume appears as item Number 406in the manuscript list, where it is described as one of the“Miscellanies bound together, ” consisting of “Dryden’s Essay on Dram. Poetry, Horace’s Art of Poetry by ye E. Of Roscommon, and theRehearsal”--the identical three quartos described in the Sothebycatalogue. In June, 1930, while the “Selected” books from the Leeds library werebeing sold at Sotheby’s in London in a three-day sale (referred tohereafter as the Leeds Sale), the “remaining contents” of Hornby Castlewere auctioned off by Knight, Frank, and Rutley at old Hornby Castle inYorkshire in a seven-day sale (referred to hereafter as the HornbyCastle Sale). The books, which made only a minor part of the lattersale, were all auctioned off on the sixth day. These books werecatalogued as Lots 1097 through 1294, with from 2 to 430 books in asingle lot, making a total of about 7, 475. Only a very small fraction ofthese were mentioned by title in the printed catalogue, and nothing wassaid about signatures on title pages. But among those mentioned appeartwenty-one of the exact editions in Congreve’s list: Numbers 37, 71, 158, 161, 168, 172, 233, 270, 288, 343, 380, 467, 492, 493, 499, 500, 516, 533, 543, 620, 652. Among the “Selected” books catalogued for theLeeds Sale appear sixty-one of the exact editions in Congreve’s list:Numbers 4, 10, 42, 55, 76, 79 (or 80), 96, 97, 98, 152, 160, 178, 179, 182, 183, 184, 207, 208, 234, 257, 258, 262, 281, 283, 292, 342, 360, 367, 406, 413, 421, 423, 427, 441, 442, 444, 451, 455, 458, 460, 462, 463, 465, 502, 507, 518, 529, 534, 536, 542, 544, 553, 558, 566, 579, 592, 639, 641, 649, 651, 656. Since Congreve’s books had been incorporated with the Leeds library in1740, we can understand how eighty-two of the identical editions in thelist could turn up in sales of Leeds books in 1930. Most of theeighty-two exact editions named (and many of the thousands of unnamedbooks) in these sales were probably once Congreve’s. The fact thatSotheby’s catalogue mentions the Congreve signature in only ten bookssuggests that he usually failed to write his name in his books. Sothebylists most of the books for which Congreve is known to have subscribed, and yet no mention is made of a Congreve signature in any of them. Nordoes any signature appear in the special edition of Rowe’s Shakespeare(Number 544 in the list) now in the Folger Shakespeare Library andalmost certainly once Congreve’s. But other books besides the ten mentioned by Sotheby’s were signed byCongreve. One example is Sotheby’s item Number 532 (Congreve’s Number518), which was sold to McLeish and Sons and then to E.  S. De Beer, Esq. , before the unmistakable signature of the dramatist was noted. Another example is Congreve’s Number 501, which was in the Hornby CastleSale and bears the true signature, “Wm: Congreve. ” Especiallysignificant is a letter to the editor dated August 20, 1949, from HerGrace Katherine, Duchess of the tenth Duke of Leeds, stating that manyyears ago she had herself “made a great hunt for any books at HornbyCastle bearing the signature of Congreve, ” had found “numbers” of them, and had made a full catalogue with the aid of “Mr. Charles Whibley, thewriter & bibliophile. ” Unfortunately this catalogue has been lost. If itis ever found, it will be an interesting record of autographed Congrevebooks held together by one family for nearly two centuries. But thecatalogue could not include all the items on the Congreve list since, aswe have seen, the dramatist evidently owned many books in which hefailed to write his name. In the twenty-odd books known to have been autographed by the dramatist, the signature is commonly “Will: Congreve, ” but the surname is sometimespreceded by “W, ” “Wm, ” “Willm, ” “Gul, ” “Gulielmi, ” or “Gulielmus. ” Oneof Congreve’s books (Number 236 in the list) preserved in the YaleLibrary uses both “W: Congreve” and “Gulielmus Congreve” in differentsignatures. None of the signatures should be accepted as that of thedramatist until the handwriting is verified, for “William” has long beena common Christian name in the Congreve family. In 1700 there wereliving no fewer than five Congreves bearing this name, all descendedfrom the same grandfather. One of these was Colonel William Congreve(1671-1746) of Highgate, a cousin of the dramatist, whose papers havebeen confused with those of the dramatist in many sales as well as inmany American libraries. The colonel usually signed “Will:” as did thedramatist, but the two cousins formed the “W” in strikingly differentways. The colonel rounded the first upper prong of this letter andbrought the middle prong to only little more than half the height of theother prongs; the dramatist sharpened the first prong and brought themiddle prong fully up to the height of the others. Since the present Duke of Leeds reports that he no longer has booksbearing Congreve’s signature, we may presume that they were largely, ifnot fully, disposed of in the two sales of 1930 and are now widelyscattered. Books with Congreve’s signature are preserved at the YaleLibrary (Congreve’s Numbers 236, 262, 441), at the Library of theUniversity of Tennessee (Numbers 119, 595), at the Morgan Library(Number 289), at the Boston Public Library (Number 192), at theBrotherton Library of the University of Leeds (Number 541), and in theprivate libraries of E.  S. De Beer, Esq. , (Number 518) and the ReverendJ.  F. Gerrard (Number 371). The editor of this work will be grateful forinformation concerning the location of other volumes bearing the truesignature of William Congreve (1670-1729). Such volumes will be doublyinteresting if annotated in the dramatist’s handwriting. Some of thebooks were thus annotated, according to Jacob Tonson, in his letter of27 January 1728/29 (a few days after Congreve’s death), to his nephew, Jacob Tonson, Junior: “His [Congreve’s] collection of Books were verygenteel & well chosen. I wish you should think them worth your buying;I think there are in [these] books several notes of his own orcorrections & everything from him will be very valuable. ” _Editing and Printing the Book List_ The manuscript list consists of 659 entries arranged in roughalphabetical order on forty-four pages in a sort of journalapproximately seven by eleven inches in size. The normal entry gives thename of the author (for perhaps three-fourths of the entries), the shorttitle, the format, the place and date of publication, and sometimes thepublisher. And finally, after most of the items appears the “Theca” orshelf number--one of 33 shelves on which Congreve arranged his books athis lodgings in Surrey Street, London. The list is set down in three distinct hands. That no one of these isCongreve’s need not surprise us since Congreve had very defectiveeyesight during the last half of his life. An adequate income fromgovernment posts enabled him at this period to employ a secretary, perhaps the “young Amanuensis” that he speaks of in writing to Popeabout 1726. That was the year, it seems, when the bulk of the list--587of the 659 items--was made out. The year is indicated by the fact thatthis hand enters titles of books published through 1725 but none later. After each alphabetical group a space is left as if for additions, andinto these spaces a distinctive second hand has made thirty-one entries, including some as late as 1727 but none later. Then follow forty-oneentries by a third hand, including four for 1727 and fourteen for 1728but none later. Entries by the third hand are probably for books addedto the library during Congreve’s final illness. It is interesting tonote that none of the entries in this last hand are followed by a“Theca” or shelf location, an omission indicating that by the time thesetitles were entered, the library had been moved from the originalquarters in Surrey Street. Perhaps the young Duchess, owner of the booksafter Congreve’s death, had already moved them to her house in St. James’s--and possibly the hand is that of her secretary. A small cross is marked before most of the 659 items--before all butfifty-eight (or thirty-seven, when allowance is made for duplicates). Perhaps these crosses were used in connection with an inventory taken in1729 when the books were inherited by the young Duchess of Marlborough, or in 1740 when the books were incorporated by marriage settlement intothe Leeds library. The thirty-seven items then missing (as indicated bythe lack of a cross in Congreve’s list) were Numbers 27, 29, 54, 97, 109, 110, 127, 136, 169, 196, 217, 227, 246, 249, 275, 307, 350, 373, 393, 417, 432, 438, 439, 492, 494, 517, 520, 529, 530, 531, 532, 590, 591, 598, 605, 653, and 658. The two books that had been lent to “Ld. Hervy” (see Congreve’s Number 81) and to the Duchess of Marlborough (seeNumber 372) were in place at the time of the inventory, and each wasduly acknowledged by a cross. An additional larger cross surrounded byfour dots appears before eleven items (Numbers 36, 65, 120, 232, 256, 283, 298, 303, 462, 484, and 516) to indicate books sent--so thelibrarian says in a marginal note--to the Duchess of Leeds. These largercrosses could not have been made, of course, before 1740. Congreve’s book list is here edited and printed for the first time. After the 659 numbers, which are supplied by the editor to facilitatecross references and indexing, the 659 items of the list are printedwith spelling, capitalization, and punctuation as in the manuscript. Occasional raised letters, such as the “r” in “Mr. ” and the “e” in “ye, ”are brought down into the line. The great variety of dots and dashesused to indicate shortened titles are consistently eliminated. Underscored words are printed in italics. The line breaks in themanuscript are indicated by shilling marks (/). In the manuscript manyof the “Theca” numbers have been written over older numbers (indicating, no doubt, a shifting of the books to different shelves). Most of theolder numbers are illegible, and only the newer, more legible numbersare printed. The occasional use of brackets in the manuscript (as inNumbers 120, 121, 157, 166, 167, and 238) makes impractical theeditorial expansion in brackets of such abbreviations as “p” in No. 9(for “par”) and in No. 180 (for “per”). The thirty-one entries by thesecond hand and the forty-one by the third hand (Numbers 34, 35, 36, 70, etc. ) are designated by the first line of the annotation. In the paragraph following each item from the manuscript list, theeditor attempts to give the author’s name (with dates of his birth anddeath), to fill out the short title somewhat when it seems interestingor helpful in identification, and to show the place of publication, thename of the publisher, the year of publication, and the format. Theletters “V” (for “U”) and “I” (for “J”) are usually given the Englishequivalents. Otherwise the short title follows the spelling andpunctuation of the title page of the copy examined (usually a copy inone of the key libraries), with capitalization for only the first wordof the title and for proper names. The line immediately below this paragraph is reserved for the number, ifany, in the _Short-Title Catalogue_ (abbreviated “STC” for the periodending 1640 and “Wing” for the later period) and specializedbibliographies; and for a short list of libraries in which a copy of theexact edition may be consulted. Then follows, for some items, a secondparagraph of pertinent editorial comment. All the items in Congreve’s list have been identified, at leasttentatively. There is most uncertainty, perhaps, about Numbers 114, 368, 375, and 412. Besides these, twenty others, though well enough known insome edition, have not been found in any library in the identicaledition of Congreve’s list: Numbers 9, 30, 113, 129, 130, 197, 210, 217, 240, 271, 277, 296, 323, 345, 366, 376, 435, 569, 578, and 637. Furthermore, Numbers 160, 185, 211, 379, 394, 567, and 647 presentdifficulties perhaps due to errors on the part of the person making themanuscript entry. It will be noticed that forty or more of the items have not been foundin the format given by the manuscript list. This discrepancy may beexplained, at least in part, by the tendency of the makers of the listto judge the format merely by size. For example, a large duodecimo(Number 528) is called an octavo, while many small octavos (Numbers 159, 346, 378, 516, etc. ) are called duodecimos. The discrepancies involvechiefly the smaller volumes. Not a single folio volume is involved. The finding lists of libraries (where copies of the exact editions inCongreve’s list may be consulted) have been arranged geographically, including usually one European library and several American librarieslocated from New England to the Pacific Coast. The ideal has been tofind a copy in each of seven key libraries: the British Museum (Europe), Harvard (New England), The New York Public Library, the FolgerShakespeare Library, and the Library of Congress (Middle Atlantic), theNewberry Library (Middle West), and the Huntington Library (West). Theeditor has checked Congreve’s list with the catalogues of the seven keylibraries, except for The New York Public Library and the NewberryLibrary, where the checking was done by members of the respectivelibrary staffs. Occasionally an ideal distribution in the seven libraries is found, asfor Numbers 10, 23, 42, 44, 88, 90, 99, and 100. Whenever an edition isnot available in the key library, an effort has been made to find it inanother library of the region. For books not at the British Museum, references are made to the Bodleian, the Bibliothèque Nationale, orother European libraries. Books not at Harvard are most frequently foundat Yale or the Boston Public Library. Those not at the HuntingtonLibrary are frequently at the nearby William Andrews Clark MemorialLibrary. Of the American libraries in the finding lists, exclusive of the keylibraries, the editor has examined practically all editions cited at theBoston Public Library, the Yale Library, and the Clark Library. OtherAmerican libraries are, for the most part, cited on the authority of theUnion Catalog of the Library of Congress. Of the European libraries, exclusive of the British Museum, the editor has examined practically alleditions cited at libraries in Paris, Brussels, The Hague, Leiden, Amsterdam, Florence, Rome, Oxford, and Cambridge, and at the variouslegal and medical libraries in London. Other English libraries are citedon the authority of the National Central Library, London. In Congreve’s list about sixty-two of the 659 entries are crossreferences or else duplicate entries. On the other hand, some entriesaccount for more than a single title. Numbers 405-408, for example, include a total of twenty-six titles. There are approximately 620separate titles in the list. Of these 620, about 481 (78 per cent) maybe found in the British Museum, 338 (55 per cent) in the HarvardLibrary, 192 (31 per cent) in the Library of Congress, 188 (30 per cent)in The New York Public Library, 186 (30 per cent) in the HuntingtonLibrary, 184 (30 per cent) in the Newberry Library, and 148 (24 percent) in the Folger Shakespeare Library. At the Bodleian may beconsulted about thirty-four titles not in the British Museum; and at theBibliothèque Nationale, about thirty-seven titles in neither the BritishMuseum nor the Bodleian. At Yale there are about sixty-eight titles notat Harvard; and at the Clark Library, about forty-seven titles not atthe Huntington. _Using Congreve’s Book List_ We may well ask, What are some of the uses that can be made ofCongreve’s book list? For one thing, it may be studied as a carefullyselected private library of the period. What authors, what editions, what subjects are to be found in such a library? Which of Congreve’scontemporaries are represented? Which of the current books seemedimportant enough for a fellow writer to buy or to subscribe for inadvance of publication? To what extent did the literature of ancientGreece, of Rome, of modern Italy, of France, of Spain, of Germany findits way into a private library in England’s Augustan Age? And to whatextent were such books in their original language? One scholar has foundin Congreve’s book list the information he needed about certain earlyeditions of Horace. Another, inquiring into the Italian influence onEngland during the eighteenth century, has found a partial answer in theItalian books and in the books about Italy set down in Congreve’s list. Fortunately the list can be made to give information about the one whocollected and used the books. We know less, perhaps, about Congreve thanabout any other equally significant writer of the period; andconsequently, additional information about him is especially important. We have long known of course, that he made translations from the French, the Latin, and the Greek and have assumed that he read those languages. We feel more confident about the extent of his reading when we find afull fourth of his library in French, nearly a fifth in Latin, and agoodly number of volumes in Greek. About twenty titles in Italian makeus reasonably sure that he read that language also. And since he had inSpanish only a Spanish-English dictionary and two Spanish books (foreach of which he had a translation in another language), we may assumethat his knowledge of Spanish must have been slight indeed. Hisdeficiency in German is strongly suggested by the fact that German isrepresented in the list only in translation. As a translator from the Greek and the Latin Congreve first broughthimself to the attention of Dryden, who pronounced the youthful Congreve“more capable than any man I know” to translate the whole of Homer. Congreve never completed that proposed translation, but years later hewas singled out by Pope for the dedication of his Homer. That Congreve’sgenuine interest in the classics continued throughout his life isattested by the constant and carefully chosen additions to his library. His collection is richest in the works of Cicero, Homer, Horace, andVirgil, but he owned the collected works of many other classicalauthors. The breadth of his interest is shown by the fact that oversixty Greek and Latin writers are either represented in his library orreferred to in his own writings. The Italian Louis Riccoboni visitedCongreve in 1727 and was surprised to find that a dramatist could be soscholarly. In Congreve, he said, “Taste [was] joined with greatLearning. ”[*] [Footnote: From Riccoboni’s _An Historical and Critical Account of the Theatre in Europe_, p. 175. One of the last books added to Congreve’s library was Riccoboni’s _Histoire du Théâtre Italien_, Paris, [1727]. See Number 314. ] Certain items in the inventory tend to confirm reports that havehitherto been given little credit. One of these has to do withCongreve’s interest in horses and horseback riding, which seems to besupported by item Number 277: The gentleman’s jockey, and approved farrier; instructing in the natures, causes, and cures of all diseases incident to horses. 8vo. London, 1717. Many people will find it difficult to associate with Congreve a specialinterest in horses, particularly an interest that extended beyond hisyouth, as suggested by the late date 1717. Another report that hasseemed even less in keeping with Congreve concerns the impact ofQuakerism on him. Could he have taken a special interest in one of theQuakers, visited him repeatedly, and could he have seriously consideredadopting the beliefs of the Quakers? The report that he did so has notbeen taken seriously. But we must not overlook the fact that Congreveowned (as item Number 53 in his list) the most important document ofQuakerism, the 574-page analysis and defense by Robert Barclay entitled_An Apology for the True Christian Divinity as the same is Held Forth, and Preached, by the People, called in Scorn, Quakers_, London, 1701 (or1703). Congreve did not, like his friend Jonathan Swift, lose interest in thepurchase of books during the last third of his life. For Swift’s librarywe have an inventory made when Swift was about fifty. Another inventoryat his death more than twenty-five years later showed but few additions. In the case of Congreve, the earliest inventory--the 587 items in thefirst hand made out about 1726--came only three years before his death. But active buying must have continued throughout his life as shown bythe dates in the imprints. The thirty-one entries by the second handseem to indicate approximately the purchases for 1727 and the forty-oneentries by the third hand approximately those for 1728. Congreve wasevidently an active purchaser of books from his youth and did not stopduring his last years. Congreve’s list emphasizes collected editions, especially for plays, andcontains very few quartos. When he collected his works in three volumesin 1710, he apparently destroyed (at least he did not list) the earliereditions of his plays in quarto. He loved to write such ballads as theracy “Jack French-Man’s Defeat, ” but he never recognized these byincluding them in his book list or in his collected works; nor did helist his youthful novel _Incognita_ (1691), if indeed he had a copy ofit. Such omissions were later made by men with much greater novels totheir credit. In the sales catalogues listing the books of Defoe andFielding, one looks in vain for _Robinson Crusoe_ or _Tom Jones_. But perhaps most important is the information given by the list aboutCongreve’s special fields of interest and the fact that the listprovides likely sources for his literary work. Mention should be made ofhis fine collection of drama (Greek, Roman, French, and English); ofsome one hundred titles of literary criticism; of nearly as manycarefully selected works in biography and history; of a choicecollection of thirty travel books and somewhat smaller lots in medicine, music, and cookery. Many of the books might be classified under religionand philosophy. The poets, both English and foreign, are wellrepresented. And surprisingly enough, there are more than one hundreditems of prose fiction, chiefly French. The influence of this fiction, if any, on Congreve’s own _Incognita_, and the influence of the literarycriticism on his essay _Concerning Humour in Comedy_, are only two ofmany studies that might be based on Congreve’s book list. Perhapssomeone will use the works on astrology to help account for one of hishumorous characters, old Foresight of _Love for Love_. Since many of the659 items consist of collected works, the library is actually moreextensive than the number of items might indicate. Jacob Tonson had goodreason for wanting his nephew to buy Congreve’s “genteel & well chosen”library. _Acknowledgments_ The editor is deeply grateful to the many librarians on both sides ofthe Atlantic and to others who have generously assisted in thepreparation of this study. A grant from the American PhilosophicalSociety in 1949 made possible the search which incidentally turned upCongreve’s manuscript book list, and grants from the Henry E.  HuntingtonMemorial Library (1951) and the Folger Shakespeare Library (1952)provided time and rare faculties for the editing. The staff of the Union Catalog of the Library of Congress has located inAmerica editions in the book list not already included in the Catalog;S.  P.  L.  Filon, Esq. , of the National Central Library in London, hashelped with English books neither in the British Museum nor in thelibraries at Oxford and Cambridge; and Dr. Stanley Pargellis has verykindly had Congreve’s list checked for all items in the NewberryLibrary. The Reserve Division has noted all titles in The New YorkPublic Library. To His Grace, the Duke of Leeds, and to the Trustees of the YorkshireArchaeological Society the editor is indebted for kind permission tophotostat and publish the list. Among the many individuals to whom the editor is indebted, specialmention should be made of Miss Isabel Fry and Mr. Lyle Wright, of theHuntington Library; Mrs. Edna C.  Davis, of the William Andrews ClarkMemorial Library; Miss Eleanor E.  Goehring, Professor John L.  Lievsayand Professor Alwin Thaler, of the University of Tennessee; and Dr. Giles E.  Dawson, Dr. James G.  McManaway, and Dr. Edwin E.  Willoughby, ofthe Folger Shakespeare Library. Many items in the book list might nothave been identified except for the kindness and the genius of Dr. Willoughby. ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE BOOK LIST BM The British Museum, London. BN Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris. Brooks “A Bibliography of John Oldham, ” _Proceedings of the Oxford Bibliographical Society_, v, 1936. Case _A Bibliography of English Poetical Miscellanies, 1521-1750_, Oxford, 1935. Clark The William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, Los Angeles, California. Folg The Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, D. C. Harv The Harvard Library, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Hunt The Henry E. Huntington Memorial Library, San Marino, California. LC The Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. Macdonald _John Dryden, a Bibliography of Early Editions and of Drydeniana_, Oxford, 1939. NYP The New York Public Library, New York City. STC _A Short-Title Catalogue of Books Printed in England, Scotland, & Ireland, and of English Books Printed Abroad, 1475-1640_, Oxford, 1926. Wing _A Short-Title Catalogue of Books Printed in England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, and British America and of English Books Printed in Other Countries, 1641-1700_, in Three Volumes, New York, 1945-1951. Names of libraries not given in full may usually be filled out by theaddition of “Library” or “University Library. ” BIBLIOTHECA GUL:{MI} CONGREVE, ARMIGERI [_Forma. _ _Editio. _ _Theca_] 1 Athenæi Deipnosophistarum Libri XV. Ex Recensione Casauboni. Apd Commelin [Fol. . . . 1611. 1] Athenaeus Naucratita (fl. _c. _ A. D. 200). Deipnosophistarum libri XV. Isaacus Casaubonus Graecum textum recensuit, & ex antiquis membranissupplevit, auxitque. Addita est Jacobi Dalechampii Latina interpretatio, cum notis. [Heidelberg], in bibliopolio Commeliniano, 1611. Fol. _Edinburgh Univ. ; Harv. _ The 1611 reprint, now very rare, differs from the first edition of 1597only in the title page. For Congreve’s copy of the Latin translation byNatale Conti, see No. 33 below. 2 L’Adone, Poema del _Marino_ [Fol. Paris 1623. 1] Giovanni Battista Marino (1569-1625). L’Adone, poema. .  .  . Con gliargomenti del Conte Fortuniano Sanvitale, et l’allegorie di Don LorenzoScoto. In Parigi, presso Oliviero di Virano, 1623. Fol. _BM; Harv. _ 3 ---- Idem 4 Tom. Con Fig. [24to. Amst. 1678. 5] L’Adone, poema heroico, del c. Marino, con gli argomenti del conteSanvitale, e l’allegorie di don Lorenzo Scoto. Aggiuntovi la tavoladelle cose notabili. Di nuova ricorreto, edi figure ornatto. Amsterdam, stamperia del S.  D. Elsevier, et in Parigi si vende appresso ThomasoJolly, 1678. 4 vol. 32mo. _BM; Yale, LC. _ 4 Ambassadors Travels into Muscovy &c. [Fol. Lond. 1669. 1] Adam Olearius (1600?-1671). The voyages and travells of the ambassadorssent by Frederick Duke of Holstein, to the great Duke of Muscovy, andthe King of Persia. .  .  . Containing a compleat history of Muscovy, Tartary, Persia. And other adjacent countries. .  .  . Whereto are addedthe travels of John Albert de Mandelslo .  .  . From Persia, into theEast-Indies. Containing a particular description of Indostan, theMogul’s empire, the oriental ilands, Japan, China, &c. .  .  . Faithfullyrendered into English, by John Davies, of Kidwelly. The second editioncorrected. London, for John Starkey, and Thomas Basset, 1669. Fol. Wing O270. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry. _ The first edition of the English translation, 1662, was derived from theoriginal work in German, 1647. For Congreve’s copy of the Frenchtranslation of 1666, see No. 616. A copy of the 1669 edition was a partof item No. 480 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 5 Aulus Gellius cum Notis _Gronovii_ [4to. Lug. B. 1706. 22] Aulus Gellius (_c. _ 123-_c. _ 165). Auli Gellii noctium atticarum libriXX prout supersunt .  .  . Perpetuis notis & emendationibus illustraveruntJohannes Fredericus et Jacobus Gronovii. Lugduni Batavorum, apudCornelium Boutesteyn, & Johannem du Vivié, 1706. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Chicago. _ 6 ---- Idem sine Notis [24to. Amst. 1665 5] Auli Gellii noctes atticæ. Editio nova et prioribus omnibus doctihominis cura multo castigatior. Amstelodami, apud Danielem Elzevirium, 1665. 12mo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 7 Aristotelis Rhetorica Gr. Lat. P Goulston [4to. Lond. 1619. 22] Aristotle (384-322 B. C. ). Aristotelis de rhetorica seu arte dicendilibri tres, græcolat. [Ed. Theodorus Goulston. ] Londini, typis EduardiGriffini, 1619. 4to. STC 766 _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 8 ---- Poetica p _Alex Paccium_ in Lat. Conversa [24to. Par. 1542. 5] Aristotelis Poetica, per Alexandrum Paccium .  .  . In latinum conversa. [Parisiis] prostant apud Jacobum Bogardum [1542]. 16mo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ Congreve had also the 1692 French translation by Dacier. See No. 198. 9 Aristote Rhetorique p Mr. Cassandre [4to. Ib. 1668. 22] La rhétorique d’Aristote en françois. Traduction nouvelle. [Par FrançoisCassandre. ] Paris, L.  Chamhoudry, 1654. 4to. Copies of the first quarto (1654) are at BN and Princeton, but no copyof a 1668 quarto has been located. 10 Art of ye Stage Translated from ye French 2 Vols[. ] [4to. Lond. 1684. 27] Francois Hédelin, Abbé d’Aubignac (1604-1676). The whole art of thestage. Containing not only the rules of the dramatick art, but manycurious observations about it. Which may be of great use to the authors, actors, and spectators of plays. London, for the author, and sold byWilliam Cadman, Rich. Bentley, Sam. Smith, & T.  Fox, 1684. 4to. Wing A4185. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ Congreve’s copy, with his signature in each volume, was item No. 298 inthe Leeds Sale, 1930. This is a translation of the first French edition, 1657, a copy of which appears as No. 469 below. 11 L’Art de Penser [12mo. Amst. 1697. 24] Antoine Arnauld (1612-1694) and Pierre Nicole (1625-1695). La logique ouL’art de penser, contenant outre les regles communes, plusieursobservations nouvelles, propres à former le jugement. Septiéme edition, revuë & de nouveau augmentée. A Amsterdam, chez Henri Wetstein, 1697. 12mo. _Leeds (England), Amsterdam; Cornell. _ 12 ---- de Faire les Devises [8vo. Par. 1645. 12] Henry Estienne, Sieur Des Fossez (fl. 1639-1649). L’art de faire desdevises, où il est traicté des hieroglyphiques, symboles, emblemes, ænygmes, sentences, paraboles, revers de medailles, armes, blasons, cimiers, chiffres et rebus. Avec un traicté des rencontres ou motsplaisans. A Paris, chez Jean Paslé, 1645. 8vo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 13 Arthur’s (King) Life & Death, wth: ye Knights of ye Round Table. Wants ye Title. Printed by Wynkyn de Worde [Fol. Lond 1529. 2] [La mort darthur. Translated from the French by Sir T.  Malory. ] BlackLetter. London, Wynkyn de Worde, 1529. Fol. STC 803. _BM; Michigan (film). _ The only copy reported by STC, in the _BM_, is described as “Imperfect;wanting the titlepage and first six leaves of the table. ” 14 Alcimus & Vannoza, a Trag. Hist. Of 2 Illustr Italian Families [8vo. Ib. 1677. 8] Jean Pierre Camus, Bishop of Belley (1584-1652). A true tragical historyof two illustrious Italian families; couched under the names of Alcimusand Vannoza. Written in French. .  .  . Done into English by a person ofquality. London, for William Jacob, 1677. 8vo. Wing C419. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 15 Aubrey’s Miscellanies [8vo. Ib. 1696. 8] John Aubrey (1626-1697). Miscellanies. London, for Edward Castle, 1696. 8vo. Wing A4188. _BM; Yale, LC, Clark. _ 16 Atterbury’s (Bp) Rights of an Eng. Convocat. Stated. 2d. Edit. [8vo. Ib. 1701. 14] Francis Atterbury, Bishop of Rochester (1662-1732). The rights, powers, and privileges of an English convocation, stated and vindicated. 2nd ed. London, Tho. Bennet, 1701. 8vo. _BM; Princeton, Newberry, Hunt. _ 17 Allexandri ab Alexandro Geniales Dies [8vo. Hanov. 1610. 7] Alexander ab Alexandro (d. 1523). Genialium dierum libri sex. Hanoviæ, typis Wechelianis, apud Claudium Marnium & heredes Joan. Aubrii, 1610. 8vo. _Museum of Antiquities (Leyden); Massachusetts Hist. Soc. (Boston), Oregon. _ 18 L’Abbé de Saint-Real Oeuvres 5 Tom. [12mo. Haye 1722 30] César Vichard de Saint-Réal (1639-1692). Oeuvres. [Ed. By P.  Marchand. ]A La Haye, chez les frères Vaillant & Nicholas Prèvost, 1722. 5 tom. 12mo. See also No. 129. _BM; Yale, Princeton. _ 19 Amours de Psiche et de Cupidon p Fontaine [12mo. Ib. 1700. 25] Jean de La Fontaine (1621-1695). Les amours de Psiché et de Cupidon. A La Haye, chez Adrian Moetjens, 1700. 12mo. _BM; LC, Clark. _ 20 ---- de Daphnis et Chloe p Amiot [12mo. ---- 25] [Jacques Amyot, Bishop of Auxerre (1513-1593)]. Les amours pastorales deDaphnis et Chloé. Ecrites en grec par Longus, & traduites en françoispar Amiot. A Amsterdam, chez les freres Westin, 1716. 12mo. _BN; LC. _ 21 ---- des Dames Illustres de Notre Siecle [12mo. Col. 1700. 26] [Roger de Bussy-Rabutin (1618-1693) and others. ] Amours des damesillustres de notre siecle. A Cologne, chez Jean Le Blanc, 1700. 12mo. _BN; Yale. _ 22 ---- de Tibulle p Mr. De la Chappelle 3 Tom. [12mo. Amst. 1715 24] Jean de La Chapelle (1655-1723). Les amours de Tibulle. A Amsterdam, chez Jean Fred. Bernard, 1715. 3 tom. 12mo. _BM; LC. _ This romance is interspersed with French verse translations ofselections from Tibullus. 23 Addison’s Travels, wth. Remarks on Several Parts of Italy [8vo. Lond. 1705. 28] Joseph Addison (1672-1719). Remarks on several parts of Italy, &c. Inthe years, 1701, 1702, 1703. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1705. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 24 Abra-Mulé, or, ye History of ye Dethronement of Mahomet IV. [12mo. Ib. 1696. 8] Eustache Lenoble, Baron de Saint-Georges et de Tennelière (1643-1711). Abra-mulè; or, A true history of the dethronement of Mahomet IV. Writtenin French by M.  Le Noble. Made English by J.  P. London, for R.  Clavel, 1696. 8vo. Wing L1051. _BM; Harv, LC, Newberry. _ 25 P. Aretino de Ragionamenti [8vo. . . . 1584. 6] Pietro Bacci Aretino (1492-1556). La prima parte de Ragionamenti. [PartI, pp. 1-198; Part II, pp. 1-339. ] 1584. 8vo. _BM; Harv, LC, Illinois. _ 26 Annales Galantes 5. 6. 7. 8 Parties [12mo. Par. 1677. 26] [Marie Catherine Hortense Desjardins, afterwards Villedieu (d. 1683)]. Annales galantes. Divisée [sic] en huit parties. Paris, chez ClaudeBarbin, 1677. 2 vol. 12mo. _BM. _ 27 Avantures D’Abdalla Fils d’Hanif [24to. Haye 1713. 26] Abbé Jean Paul Bignon (1662-1743); Pseud. , Mr. De Sandisson. Lesavantures d’Abdalla, fils d’Hanif, envoyé par le Sultan des Indes à ladécouverte de l’isle de Borico, où est la fontaine merveilleuse dontl’eau fait rajeunir. .  .  . Traduites en françois sur le manuscrit arabe, trouvé à Batavia [or rather written] par Mr. De Sandisson. A La Haye, chez Guillaume de Voys, 1713. 12mo. _BM. _ 28 L’Amant Oisif, Nouvelles Espagnoles [12mo. Brus. 1711. 26] L’amant oisif. Contenant cinquante nouvelles espagnoles. [ByGarouville. ] A Brusselles, George de Backer, 1711. 12mo. _BM; LC. _ 29 Aminta, Favola Boscareccia del _Tasso_ [24to. Amst. 1678. 5] Torquato Tasso (1544-1595). Aminta, favola boscareccia. Amsterdam, nellastamperia S.  D. Elsevier, et in Parigi si vende appresso Thomaso Jolly, 1678. 32mo. _BN. _ 30 L’Academie Francois Sentimens sur la Tragi-Comedie du Cid [12mo. Londres 1703. 24] Les sentimens de l’Académie françoise sur la tragi-comédie du Cid. [Chiefly by Jean Chapelain. First Ed. , 1638. ] A Paris, chez JeanBaptiste Coignard, 1701. 12mo. _BN. _ No copy of a 1703 edition has been found. 31 d’Ariste et Eugene Entretiens [12mo. Paris. 1671. 12] [Le P. Dominique Bouhours (1628-1702). ] Les entretiens d’Ariste etd’Eugene. Seconde edition. A Paris, chez Sebastien Mabre-Cramoisy, 1671. 12mo. _BN; Newberry, Clark. _ 32 Alaric ou Rome vaincu p Scudery [12mo. Ib. 1655. 6] Georges de Scudéry (1601-1667). Alaric, ou Rome vaincuë. Poëme heroïque. A Paris, chez Augustin Courbé, 1655. 12mo. _BM; Yale, Folg, Newberry. _ A copy of this edition, with Dryden’s signature on the fly leaf, wasitem No. 574 in the Leeds Sale, 1930, and is now in the FolgerShakespeare Library. Apparently this copy had been a gift from Dryden toCongreve. See James M.  Osborn, _John Dryden: Some Biographical Facts andProblems_, New York, 1940, p. 231. 33 Athenæi Dipnosophistarum. Tom. 3 Per Nat: Com: [12mo. Basil 1556 18] Entry by the second hand. Athenæi dipnosophistarum . . . Libri XV. Natale de Comitibus. Basiliæ, per Henrichum Petri, 1556. 8vo. See No. 1 above. _BM; LC, Newberry. _ 34 Arbuthnot’s tables of antient Coins, Weights, & Measures [4to. Lon. 1727 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. John Arbuthnot (1667-1735). Tables of ancient coins, weights andmeasures explain’d and exemplify’d in several dissertations. London, J.  Tonson, 1727. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Texas, Hunt. _ 35 ---- Oratio anniversaria Harvæana [4to. Lon. 1727 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Oratio anniversaria Harvæeana, habita . .  . Die xviii Octobris, A. D. 1727. Londini, impensis Jacobi Tonson, 1727. 4to. _BM; Harv, U. S. Surgeon General’s Office, Texas. _ 36 Arsinoe, an Opera [4to. Ib. 1705 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. [Peter Anthony Motteux (1663-1718). ] Arsinoe, Queen of Cyprus. An opera, after the Italian manner. London, for J.  Tonson, 1705. 4to. _Bodleian; Boston Public, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 37 Burnet’s (Bp) History of his own Time Vol. 1. From ye Restoration to ye Revolution [Fol. Lond. 1724. 1] Only the first volume of Bishop Gilbert Burnet’s history, published byThomas Ward, appears in Congreve’s list. The second volume was notpublished until 1734, five years after Congreve’s death. A copy of thisedition was listed under No. 1138 in the Hornby Castle Sale, 1930. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Hunt. _ 38 ---- Letters giving account of Things most Remarkable in his Travels p Switzerland, Italy &c[. ] [8vo. Rot. 1687. 3] Gilbert Burnet (1643-1715). Some letters, containing an account of whatseemed most remarkable in travelling through Switzerland, Italy, someparts of Germany, &c. Rotterdam, for Abraham Acher, 1687. 8vo. Wing B5918. _BM; Yale, NYP, Chicago. _ Three editions were printed at Rotterdam in 1687, but only one of these, the “second, ” was in 8vo. 39 Burnetii (Tho. ) Archæologiæ Philosoph[. ] [4to. Lond. 1692. 14] Thomas Burnet, Master of the Charter House (1635?-1715). Archæologiæphilosophicæ: sive Doctrina antiqua de rerum originibus. Libri duo. Londini, typis R.  N. Impensis Gualt. Kettilby, 1692. 4to. Wing B5943. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Washington State. _ 40 ---- Telluris Theoria Sacra Ed. 3a. [4to. Ib. 1702 14] Telluris theoria sacra: orbis nostri originem & mutationes generales, quas aut jam subiit, aut olim subiturus est, complectens. .  .  . Editiotertia. Londini, impensis Benj. Took, 1702. 4to. _BM; Yale, Vassar, Clark. _ 41 ---- Theory of ye Earth 2 Vols. [Fol. Ib. 1684. 1] The theory of the earth. . . . The first two books. London, byR.  Norton, for Walter Kettilby, 1684. Fol. Wing B5950. _BM; Harv, NYP, Michigan, Hunt. _ 42 Beaumont & Fletcher’s Comedies & Tragedies - - - Large Paper [Fol. Ib. 1679. 1] Francis Beaumont (1584-1616) and John Fletcher (1579-1625). Fiftycomedies and tragedies. All in one volume. London, by J.  Macock, forJohn Martyn, Henry Herringman, Richard Marriot, 1679. Fol. Wing B1582. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 40 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 43 Boccalini’s Advertisements from Parnassus [Fol. Ib. 1656. 2] Trajano Boccalini (1556-1613). I ragguagli di Parnasso: or, Advertisements from Parnassus; in two centuries .  .  . Put into Englishby .  .  . Henry Earl of Monmouth. London, for Humphrey Moseley, andThomas Heath, 1656. Fol. Wing B3380. _BM; Harv, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 44 Ben Jonson’s Works Old Edit. [Fol. Ib. . . . 2] Since “Old Edit” in No. 541 refers to the first folio of Shakespeare, itis probable that “Old Edit” here refers to Jonson’s first folio printedat London by Will Stansby, 1616. STC 14751. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ Congreve’s copy is extant. See J. Isaacs, _TLS_ for September 2, 1949. 45 ---- Ditto Best Edit. _L. Papr. _ [Fol. Ib. 1692. 1] The works of Ben Jonson. [Third edition. ] .  .  . To which is added acomedy called The New Inn. London, by Thomas Hodgkin, for H.  Herringman, E.  Brewster, T.  Bassett, R.  Chiswell, M.  Wotten, G.  Conyers, 1692. Fol. Wing J1006. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 46 Blackmore’s (Sir Richd. ) K. Arthur [Fol. Ib. 1697. 1] Sir Richard Blackmore (d. 1729). King Arthur. An heroick poem. In twelvebooks. London, for Awnsham and John Churchill, and Jacob Tonson, 1697. Fol. Wing B3077. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 47 ---- Eliza, an Epick Poem [Fol. Ib. 1705. 1] London, Awnsham & John Churchill, 1705. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, Newberry, Hunt. _ 48 ---- Creation, a Philosoph. Poem [8vo. Ib. 1712. 28] Creation. A philosophical poem. In seven books. London, for S.  Buckleyand J.  Tonson, 1712. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Newberry. _ 49 ---- Essays upon Sevl. Subjects [8vo. Ib. 1716. 14] London, E. Curll; J. Pemberton, 1716. 8vo. _BM; NYP, Newberry, Clark. _ 50 Blount’s (Tho. ) Law-Dictionary and Glossary. 3d. Edit. [Fol. Ib. 1717. 1] Thomas Blount (1618-1679). A law-dictionary and glossary .  .  . The thirdedition. [London, ] by E.  Nutt, and R.  Gosling for D.  Browne, J.  Walthoe, 1717. Fol. _BM; Harv, LC, Minnesota, Hunt. _ 51 Boadicea Q. Of Britain. A Trag. By Charles Hopkins [4to. Ib. 1697. 27] Charles Hopkins (1664?-1700?). Boadicea Queen of Britain. A tragedy. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1697. 4to. This play is dedicated to Congreve. Wing H2719. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 52 Bulstrode’s (Whitelock) Essay of Transmigra -tion [8vo. Ib. 1692. 8] Whitelocke Bulstrode (1650-1724). An essay of transmigration, in defenceof Pythagoras: or, A discourse of natural philosophy. London, forT.  Basset, 1692. 8vo. Wing B5450. _BM; Yale, LC, Hunt. _ 53 Barclay’s (Robt. ) Apology for ye Quakers [8vo. Ib. . . . . 14] Robert Barclay (1648-1690). An apology for the true Christian divinityas the same is held forth .  .  . By Quakers .  .  . A full explanation andvindication of their principles and doctrines. London, T.  Sowle, 1701. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP (1701), LC, Newberry (1701 only). _ Congreve’s copy was apparently of the fourth edition, 1701, or of thefifth, 1703, both of which were printed in London by T.  Sowle in 8vo. The earlier London editions were in 4to. 54 Le Berger Extravagant [8vo. Rov. 1640. 3] Entry crossed through but legible. [Charles Sorel, Sieur de Souvigny (1597?-1674). ] Le berger extravagant. Où parmy des fantasies amoureuses on void les impertinences des romans &de la poësie. A Rouen, chez Jean Berthelin, 1639. 8vo. _BM. _ An additional engraved title page bears the date 1640. Congreve had alsoan English translation of this work. See No. 350. 55 Balzac Oeuvres diverses [4to. Paris 1644. 2] Jean Louis Guez de Balzac (d. 1654). Les œuvres diverses du sieur deBalzac. A Paris, par P.  Rocolet, 1644. 4to. _BN. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 33 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 56 ---- Le Prince [4to. Ib. 1631. 2] Paris, chez Toussaint du Bray, Pierre Roccolet, et Claude Sonnius, 1631. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry. _ 57 Boileau Oeuvres avec des Eclaircissemens Historiques donnez p lui-meme 2 Tom. [4to. Amst. 1718. 19] Nicholas Boileau-Despréaux (1636-1711). Œuvres de Nicholas BoileauDespréaux. Avec des éclaircissemens historiques, donnez par lui-meme. A Amsterdam, chez David Mortier, 1718. 2 tom. 4to. _BM; Harv, Chicago, Clark. _ 58 ---- Ditto. 4 Tom. Avec des Remarq -ues [12mo. Ib. 1717. 30] Œuvres en vers . . . Avec des éclaircissemens historiques. A Amsterdam, chez les freres G. & R.  Westein, 1717. 4 tom. 12mo. _BN. _ 59 ---- Ditto 2 Tom. En-1 Vol. [12mo. Ib. 1695. 30] Œuvres diverses du Sieur D*** avec le traité du sublime. A Amsterdam, chez Antoine Schelte, 1695. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM. _ 60 Boyle’s (Charles) Exam. Of Dr. Bentley’s Dissert. On Phalaris Epistles [8vo. Lond. 1698. 33] Charles Boyle, Earl of Orrery (1676-1731). Dr. Bentley’s dissertationson the Epistles of Phalaris and the Fables of Æsop. London, for Tho. Bennet, 1698. 8vo. Congreve’s copy could have been the first edition, Wing O469 (_BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt_) or the second edition in the same year, WingO470 (_BM; Harv, Princeton, Clark_). 61 Bossu du Poeme Epique [12mo. Par. 1675. 12] René Le Bossu (1631-1680). Traité du poëme épique. Paris, M.  Le Petit, 1675. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Yale, Clark. _ 62 Burgersdicii Institutio Logica - - _abest Titulus_ [8vo. . . . . . 6] Franco Petri Burgersdijck (1590-1635). Fr. Burgersdicii institutionumlogicarum libri duo. Cantabrigiæ, apud Joann. Hayes. .  .  . Prostantvenales apud Guil. Graves Jun. , 1680. 8vo. Wing B5636. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg. _ This popular textbook on logic, edited and reissued many times duringthe seventeenth century, was probably represented in Congreve’s booklist by the last English edition, 1680. 63 Bourdeille, Seignr. De Brantom, Memoires contenant les Vies de Dames Galantes de son Temps. 2 Tom[. ] [12mo. Leyd. 1699. 26] Pierre de Bourdeille, Seigneur de Brantôme (1540-1614). Memoires, contenant les vies de dames galantes de son temps. Leyde, J.  Sambix lejeune, 1699. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Hunt. _ 64 Busbequii omnia quæ extant. Apd. _Elzevir_ [24to. Lug. Bat 1633. 5] Augier Ghislain de Busbecq (1522-1592). A.  Gislenii Busbequii omnia quæextant. Lugd[uni] Batavorum, ex officina Elzeviriana, 1633. 16mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 65 Bononcini Cantate et Duetti [Fol. Lond. 1721. 21] Giovanni Battista Bononcini (_c. _ 1672-_c. _ 1752). Cantate e duettidedicati alla Sacra Maesta di Giorgio Re della Gran Bretagna &c. Londra[no publisher given], 1721. Fol. _BM; Yale, Hunt. _ Congreve’s name appears in the printed list of subscribers. 66 Barnes Homer vide Homeri &c[. ] [. .. . . .. . 22] See No. 290. 67 Bates’ Dispensatory see Dispensatory [. .. . --- 4] See No. 215. 68 Boccae. S’ Nouels English [-- . .. . 33] Entry by the second hand. Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375). The decameron containing an hundredpleasant nouels. London, Isaac Jaggard, 1620. 2 vol. Fol. STC 3172. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry (Vol. 2 only), Hunt. _ [Illustration: Page four of Congreve’s “Bibliotheca, ” showing numbers55-67 entered by the first hand, 68-69 by the second, and 70 by thethird. The larger cross appears before number 65. ] The spelling “nouels” makes it probable that Congreve’s copy was fromthe first English translation of the _Decameron_, 1620, rather than fromone of the later translations. See also No. 123. 69 Holy Bible in four Voloumns [4to Oxford 1727 22] Entry by the second hand. The Holy Bible, etc. Oxford, J. Baskett, 1727, 26. 4to. _BM; Harv. _ Possibly Congreve had an interleaved copy of this edition in fourvolumes. 70 Bleinheim, a Poem [fol. Lon. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. [George Baron Lyttelton (1709-1773)] Bleinheim. London, for J.  Roberts, 1728. Fol. _BM; Harv. _ 71 J. Cæsaris quæ exstant Tabulis æneis. Ornata 2 Vol. Corio Russico. Apud Tonson _Charta Imper. _ [Fol. Lond. 1712. 10. ] Gaius Julius Cæsar (102-44 B. C. ). G. Julii Cæsaris quæ extant. .  .  . Tabulis Æneis ornata. Londini, sumptibus & typis Jacobi Tonson, 1712. 2vol. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1187 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 72 ---- Commentarii emendati et recogn. à Jo. Rosseto [Fol. Lausannæ 1571. 1] G. Julii Cæsaris commentarii, post omnes omnium editiones accuratasedulitate, .  .  . & studiosissimè recogniti à Joanne Rosseto. Lausannæ, excudebat Joannes Probus, 1571. Fol. _BM; Folg. _ 73 ---- Commentaires avec Remarques p le Sr. Sanson D’ Abbeville [4to. Par. 1650. 13] Les commentaires de Cesar. . . . Remarques sur la carte de l’ancienneGaule tirée des commentaires de Cesar par le Sr Sanson d’Abbeville. A Paris, chez la veuve Jean Camusat et Pierre Le Petit, 1650. 4to. _BN; Harv. _ 74 ---- Commentaries Translated into Eng. By Clemt. Edmonds [Fol. Lond. 1677. 1] In the Savoy [London], by Tho. Newcomb, for Jonathan Edwin, 1677. Fol. Wing C200. _BM; NYP, Cincinnati, Newberry, Hunt. _ 75 Chaucer’s Works Old Edit. Black Letter [Fol. Ib. 1561. 1] London, Jhon Kyngston for Jhon Wight, 1561. Fol. STC 5075 or 5076. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 76 ---- Ditto. Wth. His Life & a Glossogra -phy [Fol Ib. 1687. 1] Wing C3736. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 141 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 77 ---- Ditto. Wth. 3 Tales added by J. Urry. Best Edit. [Fol. Ib. 1721. 10] Eighth edition. London, for Bernard Lintott, 1721. Fol. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 78 Cowley’s (Abrah. ) Works Compt. 9. Edit. [Fol. Ib. 1700. 9] Abraham Cowley (1618-1667). The works. . .  . The ninth edition. To whichare added, some verses by the author, never before printed. London, forHenry Herringman; and are to be sold by Jacob Tonson and Thomas Bennet, 1700. Fol. Wing C6660. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Hunt. _ 79 ---- Ditto. 2 Vols. Wth. Cuts. _L. Paper_ [8vo. Ib. 1707. 19] The tenth edition. Adorn’d with cuts. London, Jacob Tonson, 1707. 2 vol. 8vo. _BM; Harv, LC, Michigan, Hunt. _ 80 ---- Ditto. 2 Vols. ---- Small Pap. [8vo. Ib. 1707. 27] See No. 79. A copy of this edition (listed as 3 vols. ) was a part of item No. 126(also a part of item No. 361) in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 81 Chardin’s (Sir Jno. ) Travels into Persia &c. Lent to Ld. Hervy [Fol. Ib. 1686. 9] Sir John Chardin (1643-1713). The travels of Sir John Chardin intoPersia and the East Indies. London, for Moses Pitt, 1686. Fol. Wing C2043. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 82 P. Corneille Theatre 2 Tom. [Fol. Roven 1664. 1] Pierre Corneille (1606-1684). Le Théâtre de P.  Corneille. 2 vol. Impriméà Rouen, et se vend à Paris chez Thomas Jolly, 1664. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP (v. 1, 1663, de Luyne). _ Each volume of Congreve’s copy bears this inscription: “Wm. Congreve thegift of my ffriend Mr. Jacob Tonson Senr. ” See J.  Isaacs in _TLS_ forSeptember 2, 1949. 83 ---- Ditto. 3 Tom. [8vo. Ib. 1660. 30] Imprimé à Rouen, et se vend à Paris, chez Augustin Courbé et Guillaumede Luyne, 1660. 3 vol. 8vo. _BM; BN, Harv, NYP, Hunt. _ 84 T ---- Poèmes Dramatiques 2 Tom. [8vo. Ib. 1661. 30] Thomas Corneille (1625-1709). Poëmes dramatiques de T.  Corneille. Imprimés à Rouen, et se vendent à Paris, chez Augustin Courbé etGuillaume de Luyne, 1661. 3 vol. 8vo. _BN; Harv. _ 85 Cotgraves French & Eng. Dictionary [Fol. Lond. 1660. 9] Randle Cotgrave (fl. 1610). A French and English dictionary. London, byWilliam Hunt, 1660. Fol. Wing C6378. _BM; Yale, Clark. _ 86 Cooperi (Tho) Thesaurus Linguæ Rom. Et Britan. [Fol. Ib. 1584. 9] Thomas Cooper (1517?-1594). Thesaurus linguæ Romanæ & Britannicæ. Londini, in ædibus Henrici Bynnemani, 1584. Fol. STC 5689. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 87 Cambridge Dictionary Eng. & Lat. [4to. Camb. 1693. 22] Linguæ Romanæ dictionarium . . . A new dictionary [Engl. And Lat. Lat. And Engl. ] Cambridge, for W.  Rawlins, T.  Dring, R.  Chiswell, C.  Harper, W.  Crook, J.  Place, and the executors of S.  Leigh, 1693. 4to. Wing L2354. _BM; Yale, Peabody Inst. (Baltimore). _ 88 Cyder, a Poem. _Large Paper_ [8vo. Lond. 1708. 28] John Philips (1676-1709). Cyder, a poem. In two books. London, JacobTonson, 1708. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 89 Callipædia made Eng. By N. Rowe [8vo. Ib. 1712. 20] Claude Quillet (1602-1661). Callipædia. A poem. In four books .  .  . MadeEnglish by N.  Rowe. London, for E.  Sanger and E.  Curll, 1712. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Folg, Hunt. _ 90 Cartwright’s (Wm. ) Comedies, Tragi-Com. With other Poems [8vo. Ib. 1651. 20] William Cartwright (1611-1643). Comedies, tragi-comedies, with otherpoems. .  .  . The ayres and songs set by Mr. Henry Lawes. London, forHumphrey Moseley, 1651. 8vo. Wing C709. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 91 Catulli, Tibulli, et Propertii Opera, cum variis Lectionibus Ch. Majori [4to. Cantabr. 1702. 17] Cantabrigiae, typis Academicis, impensis Jacobi Tonson bibliopolæLondin, 1702. 4to. _BM; Harv, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin. _ 92 ---- Eadem cum Notis Variorum, et ex Recensione Graevii. 2 Vol. [8vo. Traj. Ad Rhen. 1680 7] Trajecti ad Rhenum, sumptibus Rudolphi a Zyll, 1680. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Illinois. _ 93 ---- Eadem. Cum Foliis deauratis apd Tonson [12mo. Lond. 1715. 24] Londini, ex officinâ Jacobi Tonson, & Johannis Watts, 1715. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Illinois. _ 94 ---- Eadem [24to. Amst. 1686. 5] Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, cum C. Galli fragmentis. Amsteledami, apud Isbrandum Haring, 1686. 24to. _BM; Yale, Pennsylvania. _ 95 Catulli Opera Separatim. Ex Recensione Is. Vossii [4to. Lugd. Bat 1691. 7] Editio secunda. Lugduni Batavorum, apud Danielem à Graesbeeck, CorneliumBoutesteyn, Johannis de Vivie, Petrus van der Aa, 1691. 4to. _BM; Harv, LC, Cincinnati. _ 96 Congreve’s (Wm. ) Works 3 Vols. _L. Papr. _ [8vo. Lond. 1710. 28] London, for Jacob Tonson, 1710. 3 voi. 8vo. (The pages of the largepaper edition in the Huntington Library measure approximately 5½ by 8½inches. ) _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was a part of item No. 548 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. Congreve presented one copy of his 1710 works to Joseph Keally(see Congreve’s letter to Keally dated Nov. 9, 1710) and another toA.  Henley, in which he wrote on the title page, “The Gift of the Authorto A.  Henley. ” (See J.  Isaacs in _TLS_ for September 2, 1949). 97 ---- Ditto. 3 Vols. Small Papr. [8vo. Ib. 1710. 27] Entry crossed through but legible. See No. 96. A copy of this edition was a part of item No. 548 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 98 ---- Ditto. 2d Vol. _Fine Papr. _ [12mo. Ib. 1719. 27] The works of Mr. William Congreve. . . . The third edition, revis’d bythe author. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1719. 2 vol. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Pennsylvania, Chicago. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 156 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 99 ---- Amendments of Mr Collier’s False & imperfect Citations from ye Old Batchelour &c Large Paper [8vo. Ib. 1698. 8] London, for J. Tonson, 1698. Wing C5844. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 100 Collier’s (Jerem. ) View of ye Eng. Stage [8vo. Ib. 1698. 8] Jeremy Collier (1650-1726). A short view of the immorality, andprofaneness of the English stage. London, for S.  Keble, R.  Sare, andH.  Hindmarsh, 1698. 8vo. Wing C5263. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ Congreve probably bought the first of the three editions of 1698. 101 _Review of Mr Colliers View_ [8vo. Ib. 1698 8] A defense of dramatick poetry: being a review of Mr. Collier’s View ofthe immorality and profaneness of the stage. London, for Eliz. Whitlock, 1698. 8vo. The dedication to John, Viscount Lisburne, is signed “E.  S. ” [ElkanahSettle?] Wing F9051 (under Edward Filmer). _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 102 _Reflections on ye Stage & Mr Collier’s_ defence of ye View [8vo. Ib. 1699 8] John Oldmixon (1678-1742). Reflections on the stage, and Mr. Collyer’sDefense of the Short view. In four dialogues. London, for R.  Parker andP.  Buck, 1699. 8vo. Wing 0262. _Yale, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 103 _Stage Vindicated_ agt. Mr Collier by _Edw. Filmer_ [8vo. Ib. 1707 8] Edward Filmer (b. 1652?). A defense of plays: or, The stage vindicated, from several passages in Mr. Collier’s Short view. London, for JacobTonson, 1707. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 104 Creech’s (Tho. ) Translation of Horace [8vo. Ib. 1688. 20] Thomas Creech (1659-1700). The odes, satyrs, and epistles of Horace. Done into English. The second edition. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1688. 8vo. Wing H2775. _BM; Princeton, Michigan. _ 105 Collection of Treaties, Declarations of War &c _from 1648 to 1710_ [8vo. Ib. 1710. 14] A general collection of treatys, declarations of war, manifestos, andother publick papers, .  .  . From 1648 to the present time. London, byJ.  Darby for Andrew Bell and E.  Sanger, 1710. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Virginia, Oregon. _ 106 ---- The Statutes now in force relating to High Treason. Bound in Turky Leather [12mo. Ib. 1709. 6] A collection of the several statutes and parts of statutes, now inforce, relating to high treason, and misprision of high treason. London, printed by C.  Bill, and the executrix of T.  Newcomb, 1709. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Minnesota, Hunt. _ 107 Cuisinier Royal et Bourgeois 2 Tom. [8vo. Paris 1722. 32] Le nouveau cuisinier royal et bourgeois. 2 tom. Paris, chez ClaudePrudhomme, 1722. 12mo. _BM. _ 108 Cebetis Tabula Gr. Lat. _Notis Tho. Johnson_ [8vo. Lond. 1720. 6] Cebes. Tabula. Novâ versione, in puerorum usus, donata, ex selectioribuscriticorum notis illustrata. .  .  . Opera Thomæ Johnson. Londini, impensis authoris, 1720. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP. _ 109 Court Cookery, or the Compleat Eng. Cook By _Richd. Smith_ [8vo. Ib. 1725 32] Court cookery: or, The compleat English cook. .  .  . By R.  Smith, Cook(under Mr. Lamb) to King William. London, for T.  Wotton, 1725. 8vo. _Bodleian; LC. _ 110 Compleat Court-Cook by _Mr Lamb_ [8vo. Ib. 1710. 32] Patrick Lamb. Royal cookery; or, The complete court-cook. Containing thechoicest receipts in all the particular branches of cookery, now in usein the queen’s palaces of St. James’s, Kensington, Hampton-court, andWindsor. London, for Abel Roper, and sold by John Morphew, 1710. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC. _ 111 Clavis Homerica [8vo. Rot. 1655. 7] Antonius Roberti (17th century). Clavis homerica, sive Lexiconvocabulorum omnium, quæ in Iliade Homeri, nec non potissimâ Odyssæ partecontinentur .  .  . Gr. & lat. Roterdami, ex officinâ Arnoldi Leers, 1655. 8vo. _BM; Pennsylvania, Chicago. _ 112 Cornelianum Dolium. Comœdia [8vo. Lond. 1638. 5] Thomas Randolph (1605-1635). Cornelianum dolium. Comœdia lepidissima. .  .  . Auctore, T.  R. Londini, apud Tho. Harperum, et væneunt per Tho. Slaterum et Laurentium Chapman 1638. 12mo. STC 20691. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 113 Il Calloandro Fedele di Marini [12mo. Ven. 1654. 6] Giovanni Ambrogio Marini (1594-1650). A copy of a Venice, 1654, edition has not been found. A copy published at Venice in 1652 may be consulted at the BibliotecaApostolica Vaticana in Rome. 114 Il Celimauro, Istoria Spagnvola [12mo. Nap. 1622. 5] Not positively identified. Perhaps this was an Italian translation of aSpanish novel, the same novel that Antonio Giulio Brignole Sale(1605-1665) used about twenty years later as the source for _his__L’Istoria Spagnuola o il Celidoro_. 115 Cervantes Il Novelliere Castigliano [8vo. Ven. 1626. 3] Miguel de Cervantes Saavadra (1547-1616). Il novelliere Castigliano.  .  . Tradotto dalla lingua Spagnuola nell’Italiana dal Sig. GuglielmoAlessandro de Nouilieri, Clauelli. In Venetia, presso il Barezzi, 1626. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Pennsylvania, California. _ 116 ---- Nouvelles 2 Tom. [12mo. Amst. 1709. 26] Nouvelles . . . Traduction nouvelle. Seconde édition, augmentée deplusieurs histoires. A Amsterdam, chez Claude Jordan, 1709. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM. _ 117 Charron of Wisdom, English’d by Dr _Stanhope_ 2 Vols[. ] [8vo. Long. 1697. 33] Pierre Charron (1541-1603). Of Wisdom. Three books. Written originallyin French, by the Sieur de Charron. .  .  . Made English by GeorgeStanhope. London, for M.  Gillyflower, etc. , 1697. 2 vol. 8vo. [The firstvolume (516 pp. ) contains Book I and the second volume (708 pp. ), BooksII and III. ] Wing C3720. _Bodleian; NYP, Princeton, Cincinnati, Clark. _ 118 Celsus (Corn. ) de Medicina [8vo. Amst. 1713 4] Aulus Cornelius Celsus (53 B. C. -7 A. D. ). Aur. Corn. Celsi de medecinalibri octo. Amstelædami, apud Joannem Wolters, 1713. 8vo. _Royal College of Surgeons (London); Harv, Columbia, Chicago. _ 119 Comte de Gabalis, ou Entretiens sur les Sciences Secretes [12mo. Paris 1670. 29] [Abbé de Montfaucon de Villars (_c. _ 1635-1673). ] Le Comte de Gabalis, ou Entretiens sur les sciences secretes. A Paris, chez Claude Barbin, 1670. 12mo. _BM; Tennessee. _ Congreve’s copy, with “Will Congreve” on the title page, is now in thelibrary of the University of Tennessee. 120 Contes Arabes [les Mille et Une Nuit] p Mr. Galland 12 Tom. [12mo. Ib. 1705. 23] Antoine Galland (1646-1715). Les mille & une nuit. Contes arabes. A Paris, chez la veuve de Claude Barbin, 1704-1717. 11 vol. 12mo. _BN. _ 121 ---- Persans [les Mille et un Jour] p Mr. De la Croix 5 Tom. [12mo. Ib. 1710. 23] François Pétis de la Croix (1653-1713). Les mille & un jour. Contespersans, traduits en françois. A Paris, en la boutique de Claude Barbin, chez la veuve Ricoeur, 1710-12. 5 tom. 12mo. [Volumes II-V are dated1711 or 1712, and the booksellers vary. ] _BN; LC. _ 122 ---- Chinois, ou Vie du Mandarin Fum-Hoam 2 Tom[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1723. 30] Thomas-Simon Gueulette (1683-1766). Les aventures merveilleuses dumandarin Fum-Hoam, contes chinois. A Paris, Denis Moughet, 1723. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; NYP, LC, Newberry. _ 123 Contes et Nouvelles de Boccace avec Fig. 2 Tom[. ] [8vo. Col. 1712. 23] Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375). Contes et nouvelles. .  .  . Traductionlibre, accommodée au goût de ce temps. Seconde edition. A Cologne, chezJacques Gaillard, 1712. 2 tom. 8vo. _Bodleian; Harv. _ 124 ---- de Marg. De Valois avec Fig. 2 Tom[. ] [8vo. Amst. 1700. 23] Margaret d’Angoulême, Queen Consort of Henry II, King of Navarre(1492-1549). Contes et nouvelles de Marguerite de Valois, reine deNavarre. 2 tom. A Amsterdam, chez George Gallet, 1700. 8vo. _BM; Harv. _ 125 ---- de la Fontain avec Fig. 2 Tom[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1721. 30] Jean de La Fontaine (1621-1695). Contes et nouvelles en vers. A Amsterdam, chez N.  Etienne Lucas, 1721. 8vo. _BM; Pennsylvania. _ 126 ---- le Mème Livre 2 Tom en 1 Vol[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1699. 25] Contes et nouvelles en vers. A Amsterdam, chez Pierre Brunel, 1699. 2tom. In 1. 8vo. _Bodleian; Clark. _ 127 Chomel Abregé de L’Histoire des Plantes Usuelles [8vo. Par. 1712. 4] Pierre Jean Baptiste Chomel (1671-1740). Abrégé de l’histoire desplantes usuelles. Dans lequel on donne leur noms differens, françois etlatins. La maniere de s’en servir, la dose, & les principalescompositions de pharmacie, dans lesquelles elles sont employées. A Paris, Charles Osmont, 1712. 12mo. _BM; Library of U. S. Dept. Of Agriculture, Michigan. _ 128 Culpeper’s London Dispensatory [12mo. Lond. 1654 4] Nicholas Culpeper (1616-1654). Pharmacopœia Londinensis: or The Londondispensatory. London, printed by a well-wisher of the Common-wealth ofEngland, 1654. 12mo. Wing C7526. _BM; Yale, U. S. Surgeon General’s Office. _ 129 Conjuration des Espagnols contre la Repub. De Venise [12mo. Paris 1683. 24] César Vichard de Saint-Réal (1639-1692). Conjuration des Espagnolscontre la republique de Venise en l’anneé M. D. C. XVIII. A Paris, chezClaude Barbin, 1674. 12mo. _Aberdeen, BN, Royal Library (The Hague). _ A copy of a 1683 edition has not been found. 130 Chifflet Grammaire de la Langue Francois [12mo. Brux. 1688 24] Laurent Chifflet. Essay d’une parfaite grammaire, de la languefrançoise. A Bruxelles, chez Lambert Marchant, 1680. 12mo. _Amsterdam. _ A copy of a 1688 edition has not been found. 131 Cluverii Introductio in Geographiam [24to. Amsterd. 5] Philippus Cluverius (1580-1622). Introductionis in universam geographiamtam veterem quam novam libri VI. Amstelodami, ex officina Elzeviriana, 1659. 24to. _Liverpool, BN; Harv, Philadelphia, LC. _ 132 Corn. Nepos . . . . Foliis deauratis apd. Tonson [12mo. Lond. 1715 24] Cornelius Nepos (_c. _ 99-_c. _ 24 B. C. ). Excellentium imperatorum vitæ. [Edited by Michael Maittaire. ] Londini, ex officinâ Jacobi Tonson, &Johannis Watts, 1715. 12mo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 133 Cambrai (Evêque de) vide Salignac [. .. . . .. . 18] See Nos. 575-578. 134 Ciceronis de Officiis Libri 3 cum Notis variorum ex Recensione _Grævii_ 3 Vol. Typis Blavianis [8vo. Amsterd. 1688 31] Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 B. C. ). De officiis libri tres. Cato major, Laelius, paradoxa, somnium Scipionis. Ex recensione Joannis GeorgiiGrævii. Amstelodami, ex typographia P. & I.  Blaeu, 1688. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Indiana. _ 135 ---- Idem sine Notis ex Recens. Graevii [12mo. Ib. 1689. 32] M. Tullii Ciceronis de officiis libri tres. .  .  . Ex recensione JoannisGeorgii Grævii. Amstelodami, apud H.  Wetstenium, 1689. 12mo. _BM; Chicago. _ 136 ---- Epistolarum Libri XVI. Ad Familiares. Ex Recensione Grævii [12mo. Ib. 1689. 32] M. Tullii Ciceronis epistolarum libri XVI. Ad familiares .  .  . Exrecensione Io. Georgii Grævii cum ejusdem animadversionibus. Amstelaedami, apud Henricum Wetstenium, 1689. 12mo. _BM; Virginia. _ 137 ---- Opera Notis Gronovii XI. Vol[. ] [12mo. Lug. Bat. 1692 33] Marci Tulli Ciceronis opera quae extant omnia .  .  . Ab Jacobo Gronovio. Lugduni Batavorum, apud Petrum vander Aa, 1692. 12mo. _BM; Chicago. _ 138 ---- de Oratore ad Fratrem Q. Ex Recensione _Tho. Cockman_ [8vo. Oxon 1696 32] Oxoniæ, e theatro Sheldoniano, 1696. 8vo. Wing C4298. _BM; Yale, Chicago. _ 139 ---- de Finibus, Made English by S. P. & Revis’d by Mr Jer. Collier [8vo. Lond. 1702 32] Tully’s five books de finibus. . . . Done into English by S.  P. Gent. [i. E. , Samuel Parker. ] Revis’d. .  .  . By Jeremy Collier. London, forJacob Tonson and Robert Gibson, 1702. 8vo. _BM; Boston Public, Union Theological Seminary, Chicago, Clark. _ 140 ---- de Finibus cum Notis Tho. Bentley [8vo. Cantab. 1718 32] M. T. Ciceronis de finibus bonorum et malorum. .  .  . Emendavit, notisqueillustravit Thomas Bentley. Cantabrigiæ, typis academicis, 1718. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Michigan. _ 141 ---- Cato Major, Lælius, et Somnium Scipionis [24to . . . 24] De officis libri 3. Cato major . . . Laelius .  .  . Paradoxa .  .  . Somnium Scipionis. Amstelodami, ex officinâ Elzevirianâ, 1677. 24to. _BM; Harv, Newberry. _ Perhaps Congreve’s copy was from this edition or from one of theeditions in 24to issued in 1700 and 1703. Copies of the three editionsmay be consulted at Harvard. 142 ---- Traité de la Divination, p Mr. L’Abbe Regnier Desmarais [8vo. Amst. 1711 12] Traité de la divination traduit du Latin de Ciceron, par Mr. L’AbbéRegnier des Marais. A Amsterdam, chez Isaac Trojel, 1711. 8vo. _BM; Princeton. _ 143 ---- Epistolarum Libri XVI ad Familiares cum Notis Var. Ex Recensione _Grævii_. 4 Tom. [8vo Ib. 1693. 31] M. Tullii Ciceronis epistolarum libri XVI. .  .  . Ex recensione JoannisGeorgii Grævii. 4 tom. Amstelodami, ex typographia P. & I.  Blaeu, 1693. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Johns Hopkins, Michigan. _ 144 ---- Epistolarum Libri XVI ad Atticum cum Notis Variorum. Ex Recensione _Grævii_. 4 Tom. [8vo. Ib. 1684. 31] M. Tullii Ciceronis epistolarum libri XVI ad T.  Pomponium Atticum. Exrecensione Joannis Georgii Graevii. Amstelædami, sumptibus Blaviorum, &Henrici Wetstenii, 1684. 2 vol. Text and 2 vol. Notes. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Pennsylvania, Michigan. _ 145 ---- Orationes cum Variorum Notis Ex Recensione _Grævii_. 14 Tom. [8vo. Ib. 1699 31] M. Tullii Ciceronis oratione sex recensione Joannis Georgii Grævii. Amstelodami, P. & I.  Blaeu, 1699, [95-99. ] 6 vol. Text, 7 vol. Notes, indexes. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Pennsylvania, Illinois. _ 146 ---- de Natura Deorum cum Var Notis. Ex Recens. _Davisii_ [8vo. Cantabr. 1718 31] Cantabrigiæ, impensis Cornelii Crownfield, 1718. 8vo. _BM; Harv. _ 147 ---- Tusculanarum Disputationum Libri V. Cum Comment. _Davisii_ [8vo. Ib. 1723. 31] Editio secunda, auctior et emendatior. Cantabrigiæ, sumptibus CorneliiCrownfield, 1723. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP. _ 148 ---- Academica cum Comment. _Davisii. _ [8vo. Ib. 1725. 31] Cantabrigiae, sumptibus Corn. Crownfield, 1725. 8vo. _BM; Harv. _ 149 ---- Libri de Divinatione et de Fato. Cum Var Notis et _Davisii_ [8vo. Ib. 1721. 31] Cantabrigiæ, sumptibus Cornelii Crownfield, 1725. 8vo. _BM; Harv. _ 150 Comines (Phil. De) Memoires p Denys Godefroy 3 Tom[. ] [8vo Bruss. 1706 11] Philippe de Comines, Seigneur d’Argenton (1445-1509). Memoirs .  .  . Contenans l’histoire des Rois Louys XI. & Charles VIII. Depuis l’an 1464jusques en 1498. Augumentez .  .  . Par feu Mr. Denys Godefroy. A Brusselle, chez François Foppens, 1706. 3 tom. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Hunt. _ Congreve apparently did not have the fourth volume, which appeared in1714. 151 ---- History, wth. Annotations [Fol. Lond. 1674. 2] The history of Philip de Commines, Knight, Lord of Argenton. The fourthedition corrected, with annotations. London, for Samuel Mearne, JohnMartyn, and Henry Herringman, 1674. Fol. Wing C5542. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Illinois. _ 152 Camoens Luciad, or Portugal’s Historical Poem, Englishd by Rd Fanshaw [Fol. Ib. 1655. 2] Luiz de Camoens (1524?-1580). The Lusiad .  .  . Put into English byRichard Fanshaw. London, for Humphrey Moseley, 1655. Fol. Congreve’s copy, with his signature on the title page, was item No. 125in the Leeds Sale, 1930. Wing C397. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 153 Chapman’s Homer. Vide Homer [-- --- 21] See No. 292. 154 Council of Trent vide Paul’s History &c[. ] [-- --- 15] See No. 453. 155 Christian Religion &c vide Religion of a Church of Engld. Woman [-- --- 14] See No. 515. 156 Comte de Clare vide Religieuse Amoureuse. [. .. . --- 26] Entry crossed through but legible. See No. 520. 157 Collection of Poems [ye Grove] [8vo. Ib. 1721. 20] The grove; or, A collection of original poems, translations, &c. ByW.  Walsh, J.  Donne, Dryden, .  .  . Sir J.  Suckling, etc. London, forW.  Mears, 1721. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 158 Celsus De Medecina [8{vo}. Lug:Bat: 4] Entry by the second hand. Aulus Cornelius Celsus (53 B. C. -7 A. D. ). Aurelii Cornelii Celsi de remedica libro octo. Lugduni Batavorum, ex officina Plantiniana, apudFranciscum Raphelengium, 1592. Small 4to. _BM; Harv, LC, John Crerar. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1256 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 159 La Cyropedie de Charpentier 2 Tom. 1 vol. [12mo La Hay. 1717 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. François Charpentier (1620-1702). La cyropædie, ou L’histoire de Cyrus;traduite du grec de Xenophon. A La Haye, pour Paul & Isaac Vaillant, 1717. 2 tom. Small 8vo. _Bibliothèque Royale (Brussels). _ 160 Dryden’s (Jno. ) Comedies, Tragedies & Opera’s. 2 Vols. Large Papr. [Fol. London 1721. 10] John Dryden (1631-1700). The comedies, tragedies, and operas. .  .  . Nowfirst collected together, and corrected from the originals. In twovolumes. London, for Jacob Tonson, Thomas Bennet, and RichardWellington, 1701. Fol. Macdonald 107 a i. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Clark. _ The “1721” of Congreve’s List is apparently an error for “1701. ” A largepaper copy of the 1701 edition was item No. 210 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 161 ---- Translation of Virgil. With 100 Sculptures L.  Papr[. ] [Fol. Ib. 1697. 10] The works of Virgil: containing his pastorals, georgics, and Æneis. Translated into English verse; by Mr. Dryden. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1697. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1180 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. Congreve’s name appears in the printed list of subscribersas “Mr. Will Congreve. ” 162 ---- Ditto. Small Paper [Fol. Ib. 1697. 9] See No. 161. 163 ---- Juvenal & Persius L. Paper [Fol. Ib. 1693. 10] The satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis. Translated .  .  . By Mr. Dryden, and several other eminent hands. Together with the satires of AulusPersius Flaccus. Made English by Mr. Dryden. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1693. Fol. Wing J1288. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ For this edition Congreve translated the Eleventh Satire of Juvenal andcontributed verses “To Mr. Dryden on His Translation of Persius. ” 164 ---- Fables Ancient & Modern [Fol. Ib. 1700. 9] Fables ancient and modern; translated into verse, from Homer, Ovid, Boccace, & Chaucer. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1700. Fol. Wing D2278. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ 165 ---- Works 3d. Vol. Vizt. Original Poems & Translations [Fol. Ib. 1701. 9] The works of Mr. John Dryden. The third volume. Consisting of theauthor’s original poems and translations. Now first publish’d together. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1701. Fol. Macdonald 108 (2). _BM; Harv, Folg, Hunt. _ 166 ---- Works 3d. Vol [Plays] [4to. Ib. 1695. 27] The third volume of the works of Mr. John Dryden. London, for JacobTonson, 1695. 4to. Wing D2210; Macdonald 106 e. _BM; Yale, Folg, Clark. _ 167 ---- Works 4th. Vol [Poems] [4to. Ib. 1695. 27] The fourth volume of the works of Mr. John Dryden. London, for JacobTonson, 1695. 4to. Wing D2210; Macdonald 106 e. _BM; Yale Folg, Clark. _ 168 ---- Collection of Miscellany Poems in 6 Vols[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1702 &c. 27] Miscellany poems: the first (-sixth) part. .  .  . Publish’d by Mr. Dryden. The third edition. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1702, 1693-1709. 8vo. Macdonald 42 c, etc. ; Case 172 (1) (d), etc. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Michigan, Clark. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1110 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 169 ---- Ditto 6 Vols[. ] [12mo. Ib. 1716. 27] Fourth edition. 6 pts. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1716. 12mo. Macdonald 49; Case 172 (1) (e), etc. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Michigan, Hunt. _ 170 ---- Dramatick Works 6 Vols[. ] [12mo. Ib. 1717. 27] The dramatick works of John Dryden, Esq. London, for Jacob Tonson: andsold by R.  Knaplock, W.  Taylor, W.  Mearns, J.  Browne, W.  Churchill, E.  Symon, and J.  Brotherton, 1717. 6 vol. 12mo. This is the edition by Congreve with the famous introductioncharacterizing Dryden. Macdonald 109 a i. _BM; Harv, Folg, Clark. _ 171 ---- Essay on Dram. Poetry &c[. ] [4to. -1684 27] Of dramatick poesie, an essay. By John Dryden, servant to His Majesty. Second edition. London, for Henry Herringman, 1684. 4to. Wing D2328; Macdonald 127 b i. See also No. 406, which was apparently a second copy of Dryden’s essaybound with other works. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Illinois, Hunt. _ 172 Dictionaire Historique et Critique p Mr. Bayle 4 Tom[. ] [Fol. Rotterd. 1720. 16] Pierre Bayle (1647-1706). Dictionnaire historique et critique. Troisièmeédition. 4 tom. Rotterdam, chez Michel Bohm, 1720. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Ohio Wesleyan. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1175 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 173 ---- Universelle Fr. Et Lat 5 Tom. [Fol. ATrevoux 1721. 10] Dictionnaire universel François et Latin. Nouvelle édition. 5 tom. Imprimé à Trévoux, & se vend à Paris, chez Florentin Delaulne, etc. , 1721. Fol. _BM; Illinois. _ 174 ---- Francois p Richelet [4to. Genev. 1693 22] Pierre Richelet (1631-1698). Dictionaire François .  .  . Corrigéeaugmentée [by E.  Souciet]. A Geneve, pour David Ritter, chez VincentMiége, 1693. 4to. _BM. _ 175 ---- Italien et Francois p Veneroni [4to. Paris 1710 22] Giovanni Veneroni (1642-1708). Dictionaire italien et françois, contenant tout ce qui se trouve dans les autres dictionaires. .  .  . Nouv. Ed. A Paris, chez Michel David, 1710. 4to. _Aberdeen, BN; LC. _ 176 ---- Comique, Satyrique, Critique p le Roux [8vo. Amst. 1718 23] Philibert Joseph Le Roux (d. _c. _ 1790). Dictionnaire comique, satyrique, critique, burlesque, libre & proverbial. A Amsterdam, chezMichel Charles. Le Cène, 1718. 8vo. _BM; Yale, Newberry. _ 177 Davenant’s (Sir Wm. ) Works Compleat. [Fol. London 1673. 9] Sir William Davenant (1606-1668). The works of. London, by T.  N. ForHenry Herringman, 1673. Fol. Wing D320. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ 178 ---- Discourse upon Gondibert [12mo. Ib. 1650. 5] A Paris, chez Matthieu Guillemot, 1650. 12mo. Wing D322. _BM; Harv, Folg, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 182 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 179 ---- (Dr. ) Essay on ye East India Trade [8vo. Ib. 1696 8] Charles Davenant (1656-1714). An essay on the East-India-trade. By theauthor of The essay upon wayes and means. London, for J.  K. , 1696. 8vo. Wing D307. _BM; Harv, NYP, Columbia, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was a part of item No. 181 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 180 Dictionarium Historicum Geogr. Poet. P Car Stephanum et N. Lloydium [Fol. Ib. 1686. 9] Charles Estienne (1504-1564). Dictionaricum historicum, geographicum, poeticum .  .  . A Carolo Stephano .  .  . Nicolaum Lloydium. Londini, impensis B.  Tooke, T.  Passenger, T.  Sawbridge, A.  Swalle & A.  Churchill, 1686. Fol. Wing E3349. _BM; Yale, NYP, Chicago, Hunt. _ 181 ---- Spanish & Eng. By Minsheu [Fol. Ib. 1599. 2] Richard Perceval (1550-1620). A dictionarie in Spanish and English, first published .  .  . By Ric[hard] Percivale .  .  . Enlarged .  .  . ByJohn Minsheu. London, by E, Bollifant, 1599. Fol. STC 19620. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 182 Donne’s Poems [4to. London. 1633. 20] John Donne (1573-1631). Poems. With elegies on the authors death. London, by M.  F[lesher] for John Marriot, 1633. 4to. STC 7045. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 200 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 183 ---- Ditto [8vo. Ib. 1669. 20] Poems. . . . With elegies on the authors death. To which is added diverscopies under his own hand, never before printed. In the Savoy [London], by T.  N. For Henry Herringman, 1669. 8vo. Wing D1871. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was a part of item No. 631 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 184 Diemerbroeck Anatome Corporis Humani [4to. Ultraj. 1672. 4] Isbrandus de Diemerbroeck (1609-1674). Anatome corporis humani. Ultrajecti, sumptibus & typis Meinardi à Dreunen, 1672. 4to. _BM; Harv, Minnesota. _ Congreve’s copy, with “Will: Congreve ex dono D: Hobbs, ” was item No. 194 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. According to Professor J.  Isaacs (_TLS_ forSeptember 2, 1949) the inscription reads, “Willm. Congreve ex dono Dr. Hobbs. ” 185 Descartes Compendium of Musick [4to. Lond. 1657. 3] Wing does not list a 1657 edition of René Descartes’ _Compendium_. The1653 edition (Wing D1132), probably the one in Congreve’s library, maybe consulted in _BM; Harv, Newberry, and Clark_. This edition wasprinted in London, by Thomas Harper, for Humphrey Moseley and ThomasHeath, 1653. 4to. 186 Dennis (Jno. ) Select Works 2 Vols _Large Paper_ [8vo. Ib. 1718. 28] John Dennis (1657-1734). The select works of Mr. John Dennis. In twovolumes. London, for John Darby, 1718. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry. _ 187 ---- Remarks on Prince Arthur [8vo. Ib. 1696. 8] Remarks on a book entituled, Prince Arthur, an heroick poem. With somegeneral critical observations, and several new remarks upon Virgil. London, for S.  Heyrick and R.  Sare, 1696. 8vo. Wing D1040. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Clark. _ 188 ---- Remarks on ye Fable of ye Bees [8vo. Ib. 1724. 33] Vice and luxury publick mischiefs: or Remarks on a book intituled Thefable of the bees; or, Private vices publick benefits. London, forW.  Mears, 1724. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Folg, Texas, Hunt. _ 189 ---- Original Letters [4to. Ib. 1721. 33] Original letters, familiar, moral and critical. London, for W.  Mears, 1721. 2 vol. In 1. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 190 Dacier (Madame) Anacreon et Sapho [12mo. Amst. 1699. 25] Anne Lefèvre, afterwards Dacier (1654-1720). Les poesies d’Anacreon etde Sapho, traduites de grec en françois, avec des remarques. A Amsterdam, chez Paul Marret, 1699. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Williamsburg Colonial. _ 191 ---- Comedies de Terence 3 Tom. [12mo. Ib. 1706. 25] Les comedies de Terence, traduites en françois, avec des remarques, parMadame Dacier. A Amsterdam, aux dépens de Gaspar Fritsch, 1706. 3 tom. 12mo. _BM; Chicago. _ 192 ---- Comedies d’Aristophane [12mo. Ib. 1692. 25] Comedies grecques d’Aristophane. Traduites en françois, avec des notescritiques, & un examen de chaque piece selon les regles du theatre. ParMadame Dacier. A Paris, chez Denys Thierry et Claude Barbin, 1692. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Boston Public, NYP. _ Congreve’s copy, with the signature “W: Congreve” on the title page, isnow in the Boston Public Library. 193 ---- L’Odysseè d’Homere 3 Tom[. ] [12mo. Paris. 1716. 18] L’Odyssée d’Homere, traduite en françois, avec des remarques par MadameDacier. Paris, aux dêpens de Rigaud, 1716. 3 tom. 12mo. _BM; LC. _ 194 ---- L’Iliade d’Homere 3 Tom. [12mo. Ib. 1711. 18] L’Iliade d’Homere, traduite en françois, avec des remarques par MadameDacier. Paris, chez Rigaud, 1711. 3 tom. 12mo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 195 ---- de la Corruption du Goust [12mo. Ib. 1714. 18] Des causes de la corruption du goust. A Paris, aux dépens de Rigaud, 1714. 12mo. _BM; Yale, NYP, Michigan, Clark. _ 196 ---- Homer’s Iliad Translated by Mr Ozell 5 Vols[. ] [12mo. London 1712. 6] The Iliad . . . With notes. To which are prefix’d, a large preface, andthe life of Homer, by Madam Dacier. Done from the French by Mr. Ozell, [Broome, and Oldisworth], London, by G.  James, for Bernard Lintott, 1712. 5 vol. 12mo. _BM; LC. _ 197 ---- (Monsieur) Trag. De Sophocle [12mo. Amst. 1693. 25] André Dacier (1651-1722). L’Œdipe et l’Electre de Sophocle. .  .  . Traduites en françois avec des remarques. A Paris, chez Claude Barbin, 1692. 12mo. _BM. _ A copy of an Amsterdam edition of 1693 has not been found. 198 ---- Poetique d’Aristote [12mo. Ib. 1692. 12] La poetique d’Aristote, contenant les regles les plus exactes pour jugerdu poëme heröíque, & des pieces de théâtre. .  .  . Traduite en françois.  .  . Par Mr. [André] Dacier. A Amsterdam, chez George Gallet, 1692. 12mo. _Bodleian; Harv, Newberry. _ In the manuscript _List_ the “Ib. ” is crossed through, but nothing issubstituted. For Congreve’s Latin translation of the _Poetica_ seeNo.  8. 199 ---- Oeuvres d’Horace en Lat et Francois 10 Tom[. ] [12mo. Ib. 1709. 18] Troisiéme edition . . . Augmentée par l’auteur. 10 tom. A Paris, J. -B. -Christophe Ballard, 1709. 12mo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 200 Dale (Sam. ) Pharmacologia 2 Vol[. ] [12mo. London 1710. 4] Samuel Dale (1659?-1739). Pharmacologia, seu Manuductio ad materiammedicam. .  .  . Iterata editio, emendata & aucta. Londini, apud Benj. Walford, 1710. 12mo. _BM; Missouri Botanical Garden. _ 201 ---- Lat. 1 Vol. [. .. . 1705 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Pharmacologiae . . . Supplementum. Londini, impensis Sam. Smith & Benj. Walford, 1705. 12mo. _BM; U. S. Surgeon General’s Office. _ 202 Dion Cassius’s History Abridg’d by Xiphilin. Translated by Mr Manning 2 Vols[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1704. 13] London, for A. & J. Churchill, 1704. 8vo. _BM; Harv, LC, California. _ 203 Dodwell’s (Hen. ) Epistolary Discourse about ye Soul [8vo. Ib. 1706. 14] Henry Dodwell (1641-1711). An epistolary discourse, proving, from theScriptures .  .  . That the soul is a principle naturally mortal; butimmortalized actually by the pleasure of God. London, for R.  Smith, 1706. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Texas. _ 204 Discourse of ye Grounds & Reasons of Christian Religion [8vo. Ib. 1724. 14] Anthony Collins (1676-1729). A discourse of the grounds and reasons ofthe Christian religion. In two parts. London, [no printer given], 1724. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, California. _ 205 Doctrine of Chances or Method of Calculating ye Probability of Events in Play [4to. Ib. 1718. 2] Abraham de Moivre (1667-1754). The doctrine of chances: or, A method ofcalculating the probability of events in play. London, by W.  Pearson forthe author, 1718. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, John Crerar. _ 206 Don Quixote Vida y Hechos 2 Tom. [8vo. Amberes 1697. 11] Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (1547-1616). Vida y hechos del ingeniosoCavallero Don Quixote de la Mancha. Amberes, H. Y C. (or J.  B. )Verdussen, 1697. 2 tom. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC. _ 207 ---- Ditto Parte 1 [8vo. Bruss. 1662 8] En Bruselas, Juan Mommarte, 1662. 2 tom. 8vo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ Congreve had only the first of two parts. Compare item No. 179 in theLeeds Sale, 1930, where a copy of this edition was described as “PartePrimera _only_ (_should be two_). ” 208 ---- Translated into English [Fol. Lond. 1652. 2] The history of the valorous and witty-knight-errant, Don-Quixote, of theMancha. Translated out of the Spanish; now newly corrected and amended. London, by Richard Hodkinsonne, for Andrew Crooke, 1652. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 134 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 209 ---- done into English 2 Vols. [4to. Ib. 1620. 3] The history of Don-Quichote. London, for Ed. Blounte, 1620. 2 vol. 4to. STC 4916-4917. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Virginia, Hunt. _ 210 Don Quichotto Histoire en 4 Tom. [12mo. Paris 1679. 23] Histoire de l’admirable Don Quixotte de la Manche. A Paris, chez ClaudeBarbin, 1678. 4 tom. 12mo. _BN. _ A copy of the second edition, 1679, has not been found. 211 Demosthenes Orations, done from ye Greek by Several Hands [12mo. Ib. 1702. 11] Demosthenes (385?-322 B. C. ). Several orations of Demosthenes. .  .  . English’d from the Greek by several hands. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1702. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Chicago. _ 212 ---- Philippiques avec Remarques [4to. Ibid. 1701. 22] Philippiques de Démosthène, avec des remarques. A Paris, chez la veuvede Claude Barbin, 1701. 4to. _BN; Yale. _ 213 Dispensatory, Compleat English, by _Quincy_ [8vo. Ib. 1718. 4] John Quincy (d. 1722). Pharmacopœia officinalis & extemporanea: or, A compleat English dispensatory. London, A.  Bell, etc. , 1718. 8vo. _BM; Michigan. _ 214 ---- of ye Royal College by _Ditto_ [8vo. Ib. 1721. 4] The dispensatory of the Royal College of Physicians. London, byW.  Bowyer, for R.  Knaplock, B.  Took, D.  Midwinter, R.  Smith, W. AndJ.  Innys, and J.  Osborn, 1721. 8vo. _BM; Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science. _ 215 ---- by _Salmon & Bates_ 4th Edit. [8vo. Ib. 1713. 4] William Salmon (1644-1713). Pharmacopœia Bateana: or Bate’sdispensatory. .  .  . The fourth edition. London, for W.  Innys, 1713. 8vo. _BM; Richmond (Va. ) Academy of Medicine. _ 216 ---- London, _by Salmon_ 7th Edit. [8vo. Ib. 1707. 4] Pharmacopœia Londinensis: or, The new London dispensatory. .  .  . Theseventh edition, corrected and amended. London, by J.  Dawks, forR.  Chiswell, M.  Wotton, J.  Walthoe, G.  Conyers, J.  Nicholson, J.  Sprint, and T.  Ballard, 1707. 8vo. _Wellcome Historical Medical Library (London). _ 217 ---- 2d. Part, or Doron Medicum, by _Salmon_ [8vo. Ib. 1718. 4] Doron medicum: or, A supplement to the new London dispensatory. London, for T.  Dawks, T.  Bassett, J.  Wright, and R.  Chiswell, 1683. 8vo. _BM; Harv. _ A copy of a 1718 edition has not been found. 218 ---- London by Culpeper [12mo. Ib. 1654. 4] See No. 128. 219 E. Of Danby’s Letters _Duke of Leeds_ [8vo. Ib. 1710 33] Thomas Osborne, 1st Duke of Leeds (1631-1712). Copies and extracts ofsome letters written to and from the Earl of Danby (now Duke of Leeds)in the years 1676, 1677, and 1678. London, for John Nicholson, 1710. 8vo. _BM; Yale, Newberry. _ 220 Discourse upon Gondibert Vide Davenant [---- . .. . 5] See No. 178. 221 Cullpepers Dispensatory and English physn[. ] [8vo. Lon 1675. 4] Entry by the second hand. Nicholas Culpeper (1616-1654). Pharmacopœia Londinensis; or The Londondispensatory. London, for George Sawbridge, 1675. 8vo. _Royal College of Physicians (London), Cambridge; Cushing Library (Yale Medical School). _ Congreve’s No. 221 was probably made up of this work bound withCulpeper’s _The English Physitian_, which appeared in 1653 and manylater editions. 222 2 Dissertations concerning Sense, the Imagination,  &c[. ] [8vo. Lon. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. [Zachary Mayne (fl. 1728)]. Two dissertations concerning sense, and theimagination. With an essay on consciousness. London, for J.  Tonson, 1728. 8vo. _BM; Harv, LC, Chicago. _ 223 Demosthene, Phillippiques traduites en Francois 2 vol[. ] [24to Ams. 1688 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Demosthenes (385?-322 B. C. ). Traduction des Philippiques de Demosthene. A Amsterdam, chez Pierre Mortier, 1688. 2 tom. Small 12mo. _BN; Yale, LC. _ 224 Dunton’s Journal of the Sally Fleet [4to Lon. 1637 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. John Dunton, Mariner. A true journall of the Sally fleet, with theproceedings of the voyage. London, by John Dawson for Thomas Nicholes, 1637. 4to. STC 7357. _BM; NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 225 Daniels History vid. R. Entry by the third hand. See No. 528. 226 Echard’s (Laur. ) History of England from Julius Cæsar to ye End of K.  James 1st. Large Papr[. ] [Fol. Lond. 1707. 16] Laurence Echard (1670?-1730). The history of England. From the firstentrance of Julius Cæsar and the Romans, to the end of the reign of KingJames the First. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1707. Fol. _BM; Yale, LC, Michigan. _ Congreve had only the first of three volumes. 227 ---- Roman History - - 2 Vols. [8vo. Ib. 1696. 13] The Roman history, from the building of the city, to the perfectsettlement of the empire, etc. London, by T.  Hodgkin, forM.  Gillyflower, etc. , 1696-98. 2 vol. 8vo. Wing E152. _Cambridge; St. Benedict’s College (Atchison, Kansas). _ 228 ---- Ditto continued 3 Vols _Large Paper_ [8vo. Ib. 1704. 13] London, for Jacob Tonson (1704) and W. Freeman, etc. (1705, 1706), 1704-1706. 3 vol. 8vo. _Bodleian; Boston Public, Oberlin. _ 229 English Military Discipline [12mo. Ib. 1680. 8] English military discipline. Or, The way and method of exercising horse& foot. .  .  . With a treatise of all sorts of arms and engines of war. London, for Robert Harford, 1680. 8vo. Wing E3105A. _BM; Harv, Hunt. _ 230 Erasmi Adagiorum Epitome [12mo. Amst. 1649. 5] Desiderius Erasmus (1466?-1536). Adagiorum D.  Erasmi .  .  . Epitome. Exnovissima Chiliadum ceu ipsorum fontium recognitione excerpta. .  .  . Cumindice rerum ac verborum. Amsterodami, apud Joan. Janssonium, 1649. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Chicago, Washington State. _ 231 Essays & Characters [Microcosmographie] [12mo. Lond. 1629. 5] John Earle, Bishop of Salisbury (1601?-1665). Micro-cosmographie. Or, A peece of the world discovered; in essayes and characters. The fifthedition much enlarged. London, for Robert Allot, 1629. 12mo. STC 7442. _BM; NYP, Folg, Illinois, Hunt. _ 232 Eccles (Jno. ) Collection of Songs for 1. 2 & 3 Voices &c[. ] [Fol. ---- 21] John Eccles (d. 1735). A collection of songs for one two and threevoices together with such symphonys for violins or flutes as were by theauthor design’d for any of them. London, for J.  Walsh, [1704]. Fol. _BM; Yale, NYP, Folg. _ 233 Euremond (Monsr. De St. ) Oeuvres meslees 3 Tom _Grd. Papr. _ apud Tonson [4to. London 1705. 17] Charles de Marguetel de Saint-Denis, Seigneur de Saint-Évremond(1610-1703). Oeuvres meslées. .  .  . L.  P. A Londres, chez Jacob Tonson, 1705. 3 tom. [2 tom. In 3]. 4to. _BM; Folg. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1146 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 234 Englishman, being ye Sequel of ye Guardian _Large Papr. _ [8vo. Lond. 1714. 28] Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729). London, by Sam. Buckley, 1714. 8vo. _BM; NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition (not mentioned as Large Paper) was item No. 620of the Leeds Sale, 1930. 235 Etherege’s (Sir Geo. ) Plays & Poems [8vo. Ib. 1704. 20] Sir George Etherege (1635?-1691). The works of Sir George Etherege:containing his plays and poems. London, for H.  H. And sold by J.  Tonsonand T.  Bennet, 1704. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 236 Eustachii Summa Philosophiæ [8vo. Cantabr 1640. 7] Eustacius, a Sancto Paulo. Summa philosophiæ quadripartita. Cantabrigiæ, ex officinâ Rogeri Danielis, 1640. 8vo. STC 10578. _BM; Harv, Yale, Chicago. _ Congreve’s copy (in the Yale Library) bears this note on the frontinside cover: “Gulielmus Congreve est verus Possessor hajus Libri exDono Henrici Luther. ” Apparently in the same handwriting are the dates1682 and 1683 on the margin of the Preface, and the signature “W:Congreve” on page iii. Congreve’s signature appears at least four othertimes in the book. This book was bought by the Yale Library in 1942 fromC.  A. Stonehill, Ltd. , who had the book in stock as early as 1937, stockNo. 482, from some source that cannot now be traced. 237 Epistolæ Obscurorum Virorum [8vo. Franc. 1624. 6] Ortwinus Gratius (1491-1542). Epistolarum obscurorum virorum, ad Dn. M.  Ortwinum Gratium Volumina II. Francofurti ad Moenum, 1624. 8vo. _BM. _ 238 Egyptian History [Prodigies of Egypt] [8vo. Lond. 1672. 3] Murtadā ibn al-Khafīf. The Egyptian history, treating of the pyramids, the inundation of the Nile, and other prodigies of Egypt, according tothe opinions and traditions of the Arabians. Written originally in theArabian tongue by Murtadi, the son of Gaphiphus. Rendered into French byMonsieur Vattier, .  .  . And done into English by J.  Davies, of Kidwelly. London, by R: B. For W.  Battersby (or Thomas Basset), 1672. 8vo. Wing M3127-3128. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 239 Elemens de L’Histoire p Vallemont 2 Tom. [12mo. Paris 1699. 11] See No. 637. 240 L’Ecole parfaite des Officiers de Bouche [12 Par. 1716 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. L’escole parfaite des officiers de bouche, contenant, Le vraymaistre-d’hostel. Le grand escuyer-trenchant. Le sommelier royal. Leconfiturier royal. Le cuisinier royal. Et le patissier royal. Secondeédition .  .  . Corrigée. Paris, 1666. 12mo. _BM. _ The British Museum has also the seventh edition, Paris, 1715. A copy ofa 1716 edition has not been found. 241 Fabri (Tanaq) Epistolæ [4to. Salmuri 1674. 22] Tannequi Lefèbvre (1615-1672). Tanaquilli Fabri epistolæ. Pars prima. Editio altera priori emendatior. Salmurii, sumptibus Isaaci Desbordes &Joannis Lesnerii, 1674. 4to. _BM; Harv, Newberry. _ 242 Fontenelle (Mr. De) Histoire des Oracles [12mo. Par. 1698. 25] Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelle (1657-1757). Histoire des oracles. A Paris, chez Michel Brunet, 1698. 12mo. _BM; Gardner Sage (New Brunswick, N. J. ). _ 243 ---- Entretiens sur la Pluralitè des Mondes [12mo. Ib. 1698. 25] Quatrième édition. A Paris, chez Michel Brunet, 1698. 12mo. _BM. _ 244 ---- Nouveaux Dialogues des Morts 2 Tom. 5. Edit[. ] [12mo. Ib. 1700 25] Cinquième edition. A Paris, chez Michel Brunet, 1700. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM. _ 245 ---- Jugement de Pluton, sur les 2 Parties des Dialogues des Morts [12mo. Ib. 1684. 25] A Paris, chez C. Blageart, 1684. 12mo. _BM; LC. _ 246 ---- Poesies Pastorales [12mo. Ib. 1698. 25] Poesies pastorales. Avec un traité sur la nature de l’églogue, & unedigression sur les anciens & les modernes. A Paris, chez Michel Brunet, 1698. 12mo. _BM. _ 247 ---- Lettres Galantes de Monsieur le Chevalier D’Her * * * [12mo. Ib. 1699. 25] Troisiéme edition. A Paris, chez Michel Brunet, 1599 [for 1699]. 12mo. _BM; Harv. _ 248 ----’s Dialogues of ye Dead Translated [8vo. London 1708 8] Fontenelle’s Dialogues of the dead, in three parts. .  .  . Translatedfrom the French [by John Hughes]. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1708. 8vo. _BM; Yale, Folg, Newberry, Clark. _ 249 ----’s Plurality of Worlds, Translated by Mr Glanvil [12mo. Ib. 1702. 8] A plurality of worlds. Written in French by the author of the Dialoguesof the dead. Translated into English by Mr. Glanvill. London, printedfor R.  W. And sold by Tho. Osbourne, 1702. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Library Company of Philadelphia, Clark. _ 250 Fontaine (Mr. De la) Fables Choises 4 Tom. En 2 Vol[. ] [8vo. Anvers 1699 25] Jean de la Fontaine (1621-1695). Fables choisies. Mises en vers. A Anvers, chez la veuve de Barthelemy Foppens, 1699. 4 parts in 2 vol. 8vo. _Bodleian. _ 251 Femmes des XII. Cesars p Mr. De Servies [12mo. Paris 1718. 11] Jacques Roergas de Serviez (1679-1727). Les femmes des douze cesars, contenant la vie & les intrigues secretes des imperatrices & femmes despremiers empereurs romains; où l’on voit les traits les plusinteressants de l’histoire romaine. Tirée des anciens auteurs grecs &latins, avec des notes historique & critiques. A Paris, chez De Launay, 1718. 12mo. _BM; NYP, Illinois. _ 252 Fuller’s (Tho. ) Andronicus, or the unfortunate Politician [12mo Lond. 1646. 6] Thomas Fuller (1608-1661). Andronicus, or The unfortunate politician. Shewing sin; slowly punished. Right; surely rescued. London, byW.  Wilson, for John Williams, 1646. 8vo. Wing does not list a 1646 edition in 12mo, but lists three editions ofthat year in 8vo: Wing F2403--_Bodleian; Union Theological Sem. , Clark_;Wing F2405--_BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry_; Wing F2406--_Bodleian; Yale, Hunt_. 253 Filli di Sciro del _Conte Guidubaldo_ [24to. Amst. 1678 5] Guido Ubaldo Bonarelli della Rovere (1563-1608). Filli di Sciro, favolapastorale. In Amsterdam, nella stamperia del S.  D. Elsevier, 1678. 32mo. _Bodleian. _ 254 L. Florus - - _Foliis deauratis_. Apd. Tonson [12mo Lond. 1715 24] Lucius Annæus Florus (2d century after Christ). Cui subjungitur LuciiAmpelii liber memorialis. Londini, ex officinâ Jacobi Tonson, & JohannisWatts, 1715. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Alma College (Michigan). _ 255 Figgs Poems [12mo. --- 20] A collection of poems on several occasions. .  .  . To which is added apastoral, entitled, The fond shepherdess. Dedicated to Mr. Congreve. ByMrs. Sarah Fyge Egerton. London, to be sold by the booksellers, 1706. 8vo. _Folg, Texas, Clark. _ For the 1710(?) edition of this work see No. 461. 256 Galliard’s VI. Eng. Cantata’s after ye Italian Manner [Fol. ---- 21] Johann Ernest Galliard (1687?-1749). Six English cantatas after theItalian manner. London, for J.  Walsh, [1716]. Fol. [Words by Congreveand others. ] _BM; Harv. _ 257 Gay’s (Jno. ) Poems on Sevl. Occasions _Large Papr. _ [4to. Lond. 1720. 2] John Gay (1685-1732). Poems on several occasions. London, for JacobTonson and Bernard Lintot, 1720. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ Three copies of this edition were in the Leeds Sale, 1930, as Nos. 257, 258, 259. Congreve’s name appears in the printed list of subscribers. 258 ---- Trivia, or ye Art of Walking London Streets. _Large Paper_ [8vo. Ib. ___ 28] London, for Bernard Lintot, [no date. 1716?]. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 256 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 259 ---- Fables [4to Ib. 1727 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. London, for J. Tonson and J. Watts, 1727. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, Texas. _ 260 Garth’s (Sam. ) Dispensary, a Poem. _L.  Papr. _ [8vo. Ib. 1700. 19] Sir Samuel Garth (1661-1719). Fourth edition. London, printed and soldby John Nutt, 1700. 8vo. Wing G276. _BM; Harv, Princeton. _ 261 ---- Ditto 7th Edit[. ] [12mo. Ib. 1714 20] The seventh edition. With several descriptions and episodes never beforeprinted. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1714. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Michigan, Clark. _ 262 Guzman, ye Spanish Rogue, his Life [Fol. Oxon. 1630. 2] Mateo Alemán (c. 1547-1614?). The rogue; or, The life of Guzman deAlfarache. [Translated into English by James Mabbe. ] Oxford, by WilliamTurner, for Robert Allot, 1630. Fol. STC 290. _BM; Harv, Yale, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy with “Will: Congreve” on the title page was item No. 9 in theLeeds Sale, 1930, and is now in the Yale Library. 263 Gazæ (Theod. ) Gram. Institutionis Liber Primus [4to. Antv. 1516 14] Theodorus Gaza (1398-1478). Grammaticæ institutionis liber primus, sictranslatus per Erasmum Roterodamum. Basileae apud Joannem Frobenium, 1516. 4to. [Imprint at the back. The Preface ends with “Antuerpiæ. AnnoMDXVI. ”] _BM, Bibl. De l’Arsenal (Paris); Iowa. _ 264 et Luciani Dialogi 70. Gr. Lat: à Schotto [4to. Argent 1515 14] Bracketed with No. 263 in the manuscript. Lucian of Samosata (b. _c. _ A. D. 120). Luciani Samosatensis deorumdialogi numero. 70. Una cum interpretatione e regione latina. Argentine, Johannes Schottus, 1515. 4to. _BM; Yale. _ 265 Grammatices Græcæ Rudimenta, in Usum _Scholæ Westmon_. [8vo. Lond. 1693. 7] Richard Busby (1606-1695). Græcæ grammatices rudimenta. In usum scholæregiæ Westmonasteriensis. Londini, ex officinâ Eliz. Redmayne. 1693. 8vo. Wing B6224. _Bodleian; Washington and Lee. _ 266 Godfrey of Bulloigne, done into Eng. Verse by Edw. Fairfax [8vo Ib. 1687. 19] Godfrey of Bulloigne: or The recovery of Jerusalem. Done into Englishheroical verse, by Edward Fairfax. London, by J.  M. For H.  Herringman, and are to be sold by Jos. Knight, and F.  Saunders, 1687. 8vo. Congreve’s copy could have belonged to any of the three issues of 1687:Wing T174 (By J.  M. For H.  Herringman)--_BM; Harv, LC, Cincinnati_; WingT174A (By J.  M. For G.  Wells and A.  Swalle)--_Harv, Chicago_; Wing T174B(By J.  M. For Ric. Chiswell, Ric. Bentley, Tho. Sawbridge, and Geo. Wells)--_NYP, Illinois_. 267 Il Goffredo, overo Gierusalemme Liberata, del _Tasso_. 2 Tom[. ] [24to. Amsterd 1678. 5] Torquato Tasso (1544-1595). Il Goffredo, overo Gierusalemme liberata. .  .  . Con l’allegoria universale. Amsterdam, D.  Elsevier, 1678. 2 tom. 16mo. _BM. _ 268 Gerardo, the unfortunate Spaniard [8vo. Lond. 1653. 20] Gonsalo de Céspedes y Meneses (1585?-1638). Gerardo the unfortunateSpaniard. London, by William Bentley, and are to be sold by WilliamShears, 1653. 8vo. Wing C1783. _BM; Newberry. _ 269 ye Grove, a Collection of Orig. Poems. Translations &c[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1721. 20] See No. 157. 270 Gherardi Theatre Italien 6 Tom[. ] [12mo. Paris 1700. 25] Evaristo Gherardi (d. 1700). Le theatre italien de Gherardi, ou, Lerecueil general de toutes les comedies & scenes françoises jouées parles comediens italiens du roy, pendant tout le temps qu’ils ont été auservice. A Paris, chez Jean-Babt. Cusson et Pierre Witte, 1700. 6 tom. 12mo. _BN; Columbia, Iowa. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1219 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 271 le Gage Touchè, Histoires Galantes [. .. . Ib. 1711. 26] Eustache Lenoble, Baron de Saint-Georges et de Tennelière (1643-1711). A copy of a 1711 edition has not been found. Other editions may beconsulted at _NYP_ (1700), _BM_ (1718), _BN_ (1722), _Harv_ (1724), and_LC_ (1724). 272 Gassendi Philosophie Abregè p Bernier 7 Tom 6 voll[. ] [12mo. Lyon 1684. 12] Pierre Gassend (1592-1655). Abregé de la philosophie .  .  . ParF.  Bernier. Seconde édition. A Lyon, chez Anisson, Pousel, & Rigaud, 1684. 7 tom. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Michigan. _ 273 le Guide des Londres dedié aux Voyageurs Etrangers [12mo. ---- 6] [François Colsoni (fl. 1693). ] Le guide de Londres dedié aux voyageursetrangers. .  .  . Troisiéme edition. A Londres, imprimé pour le GermanBookseller Shop near Somerset-house in the Strand, 1710. Small 8vo. _BM; Harv. _ Congreve’s title follows that of the “third” edition (1710) rather thanthat of earlier editions in 1693 and 1697. 274 Gustave Vasa, Histoire de Suede [12mo. Par. 1697. 26] [Charlotte-Rose de Caumont de la Force (d. 1724. ). ] Gustave Vasa, histoire de Suede. A Paris, chez Simon Benard, 1698-7. 12mo. 2 tom. 12mo. The second volume is dated 1697. _BN. _ 275 Germaine de Foix, Reine d’Espagne [12mo. Amst. 1700 26] Entry crossed through but legible. Nicholas Baudot de Juilly (1678-1759). Germaine de Foix, reined’Espagne. Nouvelle historique. A Amsterdam, chez Hans Henry, MDCCC [for1700]. 12mo. _Bibl. De l’Arsenal (Paris). _ 276 Gulliver see Trauels [. .. . . .. . 29] Entry by the second hand. See No. 612. 277 Gentelmans Jockey [8vo. Lond:1717 4] Entry by the second hand. The gentleman’s jockey, and approved farrier; instructing in thenatures, causes, and cures of all diseases incident to horses. London, for Henry Twyford and Nath. Brook, 1671. 8vo. Wing lists eight editions, 1671-1687. _BM_ has the first and theeighth. _Harv_ has the seventh, 1683. A copy of a 1717 edition has notbeen found. 278 Gellius (Aulus) Var. Not. Gronovii [4to Lug. B. 1706] Entry by the third hand. See No. 5. 279 High Treason see Collection of Statutes &c[. ] [---- . .. . 6] See No. 106. 280 Howel’s French & Eng Dictionary. See Cotgrave [---- . .. . 9] See No. 85. 281 Hobbes’s (Tho) Leviathan, or Commonwealth Ecclesiastical & Civil [Fol. London 1651. 9] Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679). Leviathan, or The matter, forme, & power of acommon-wealth ecclesiasticall and civill. London, Andrew Crooke (orCkooke), 1651. Fol. Three folio editions have 1651 on the title page: Wing H2246--_BM; Harv, NYP, Newberry, Hunt_; Wing H2247--_Bodleian; Harv, Folg, LC, Illinois_;Wing H2248--_BM; Harv, Princeton, Chicago_. Two copies of the 1651 folio, both listed as the first edition, appearedas item Nos. 303 and 304 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 282 ---- Translation of Thucydides History of ye Poloponnesian War [Fol. Ib. 1634. 9] Eight bookes of the Peloponnesian warre written by Thucydides the sonneof Olorus. Interpreted .  .  . By Thomas Hobbes. London, for Richard (orH. ) Mynne, 1634. Fol. STC 24059. _BM; Harv, Folg, Illinois, Hunt. _ 283 Harmonia Sacra, or Divine Hymns & Dialogues Composed by ye best Masters. 2 Parts [Fol. Ib. 1703. 21] Henry Playford (1657-1706?). Harmonia sacra: or, Divine hymns anddialogues; with a through-bass for the theorbolute, bass viol, harpsicord, or organ. Composed by the best masters of the last andpresent age; the words by several learned and pious persons. London, byWilliam Pearson, for Henry Playford, 1703. Fol. (Book II: by EdwardJones, for Henry Playford. ) _BM; Harv, Illinois. _ The first part appeared in 1688 and again in 1703. The second partappeared in 1693. Since Congreve had two parts, he probably had the 1703edition of the first part and the first edition of the second part. Anedition in two volumes described as “1703-1693” was item No. 455 in theLeeds Sale, 1930. 284 Hales (Jno) Golden Remains 3d. Edit. [8vo. Ib. 1688 14] John Hales (1584-1656). Golden remains, of the ever memorable Mr. JohnHales, of Eaton-Colledge, &c. The third impression. With additions fromthe authors own copy, viz. Sermons and miscellanies. Also letters andexpresses concerning the synod of Dort. From an authentick hand. London, by T.  B. For George Pawlet, 1688. 8vo. Wing H272. _BM; Harv, Chicago, Clark. _ 285 Herodote Histoires mises en François p DuRyer. Grd. Papr[. ] [Fol. Paris 1658 16] Herodotus (5th Century B. C. ). Les histoires d’Herodote. Mises enfrançois par P.  Du Ryer. A Paris, chez Augustin Courbé, 1658. Fol. _BN; Harv, Lehigh (Pennsylvania). _ 286 Herodotus’s History Translated from the Greek by Is. Littlebury. 2 Vol[. ] [8vo. Lond. 1720 13] The history of Herodotus. Translated from the Greek. By IsaacLittlebury, London, for A.  Bell, etc. , 1720. 2 vol. 8vo. _Bodleian; Harv. LC. _ 287 Herodoti Historiarum Libri IX [8vo. Francof. 1584 7] Herodoti Halicarnassei historiæ libri IX: et de vita Homeri. Francofurti, apud hæredes Andreæ Wecheli, 1584. 8vo. _Bodleian; Harv, Vassar, Cincinnati, Hunt. _ 288 Hippocrate Oeuvres avec des Remarques. 2 Tom[. ] [8vo. Paris 1697. 4] Les oeuvres d’Hippocrate traduites en François, avec des remarques [byA.  Dacier]. A Paris, par la Compagnie des Libraires (or A.  Lambin), 1697. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Harv, U. S. Surgeon General’s Office. _ A copy of this edition, described as 12mo, was listed under No. 1182 inthe Hornby Castle Sale, 1930. 289 Homeri quæ extant Omnia Gr. Lat. Cum Comment. _Spondani_ [Fol. Basil 1606. 9] Homeri quae extant omnia. . . . Cum Latina versione .  .  . Jo. Spondani.  .  . Commentariis. Basileæ, per Sebastianum Henricpetri, 1606. Fol. _BM; Harv, Morgan, Northwestern, Hunt. _ The copy with “W. Congreve” on the title page is now in the MorganLibrary in New York. 290 ---- Ilias et Odyssea, et in easdem Scholia Veterum. Operâ et Studio _Jos. Barnes_ 2 Vol[. ] [4to. Cantabr. 1711. 22] Homeri Ilias & Odyssea, et in easdem scholia, sive interpretatio, veterum. .  .  . Opera, studio, & impensis, Josuæ Barnes. Cantabrigiæ, apud Cornelium Crownfield, 1711. 2 vol. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry. _ 291 ---- Ilias Græcè [8vo. Lond 1591. 7] Homeri Ilias, id est, de rebus ad Troiam gestis. Londini, excudebatGeorgius Bishop, 1591. 8vo. STC 13629. _BM; Yale, NYP, Folg, Hunt. _ 292 ---- Translated by Mr. Chapman [Fol. ---- 21] The whole works of Homer. . . . Translated .  .  . By Geo: Chapman. London, for Nathaniell Butter, [1616]. Fol. STC 13624. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was a part of item No. 309 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 293 Hardoüin Apologie d’Homere [12mo. Par. 1716. 18] Jean Hardouin (1646-1729). Apologie d’Homère, où l’on explique levéritable dessein de son Iliade, et sa theomythologie. A Paris, auxdépens de Rigaud, 1716. 12mo. _BM; Yale, LC. _ 294 l’Histoire de Charles V. Roi de France p L’Abbè de Choisy [4to. Ib. 1689. 13] François Timoléon de Choisy (1644-1724). Histoire de Charles Cinquièmeroi de France. A Paris, chez Antoine Dezallier, 1689. 4to. _BM; Augustana College. _ 295 ---- Generale des Larrons [8vo. Rov. 1649. 3] François de Calvi. Histoire generale des larrons. A Rouen, chez RobertDaré, 1649. 8vo. _Harv. _ 296 ---- Comique de Francion 2 Tom. [12mo. Rot. 1668. 26] Charles Sorel, Sieur de Souvigny (_c. _ 1597-1674). La vraie histoirecomique de Francion. Leyde, Hackes, 1668. 2 tom. 12mo. _National Library (Florence). _ A copy of a Rotterdam edition of 1668 has not been found. 297 ---- de la Cour d’Espagne [12mo. Haye. 1692. 26] Marie Catherine Jumelle de Berneville, Comtesse d’Aulnoy (d. 1705). Histoire nouvelle de la cour d’Espagne. A La Haye, chez Jean Alberts, 1692 12mo. _Royal Library (The Hague); Dartmouth College. _ 298 ---- de Gil Blas 3 Tom. [12mo. Amst. 1715. 26] Alain René Le Sage (1668-1747). Histoire de Gil Blas de Santillane. ParMonsieur Le Sage. Enrichie de figures. A Amsterdam, chez J.  Oosterwyk, Steenhouwer & Uytwerf, 1715. 2 tom. 12mo. (A third volume was publishedby Herman Uytwerf in 1725, and a fourth appeared in 1735 afterCongreve’s death. ) _Amsterdam. _ 299 ---- de la Vie du Pape Sixte V. De l’Italien de Greg. Leti. 2 Tom. [12mo Anvers 1704 11] Gregorio Leti (1630-1701). L’histoire de la vie du Pape Sixte CinquiémeTraduite de l’Italien de Gregorio Leti. A Anvers, chez la veuve deBarthelemy Foppens, 1704. 2 tom. 12mo. _Bibl. De l’Arsenal (Paris). _ 300 ---- du Card. Ximenès p Mess: Flechier, Evêque de Nismes. 2 Tom[. ] [12 Amsterd 1700 11] Valentin Esprit Fléchier, successively Bishop of Lavaur, and of Nîmes(1632-1710). Histoire du Cardinal Ximenés. A Amsterdam, chez la veuve deBartholemy Foppens, 1700. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Pennsylvania, LC. _ 301 ---- des Avanturiers Boucaniers qui se sont signalez dans les Indes. 2 Tom[. ] [12mo. Paris 1688. 3] Alexandre Olivier Exquemelin (1645?-1707). A Paris, chez Jacques LeFebvre, 1688. 2 tom. 12mo. _BN; NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 302 ---- de l’Invasion de l’Espagne p les Maures [_Relation Galante_] [12mo. Haye 1699 11] Nicholas Baudot de Juilly (1678-1759). Relation historique et galante, de l’invasion de l’Espagne par les Maures. A La Haye, chez AdrianMoetjens, 1699. 4 tom. 12mo. _Bodleian. _ 303 ---- de Marguerite de Valois, Reine de Navarre Tom.  4 [12mo. Paris. 1720. 23] [Mlle. Charlotte-Rose de Caumont de la Force (d. 1724). ] Histoire deMarguerite de Valois, reine de Navarre, soeur de François I.  A Paris, chez François Fournier, 1720. 4 tom. 12mo. _BN; Princeton. _ 304 ---- de Cyrus Traduite du Grec de Xenophon p Mr Charpentier [8vo. Haye 1717. 33] See No. 159. 305 ---- des Plantes vide Chomel. [-- --- 4] See No. 127. 306 History off trayale by willes. See Voyage Entry by the second hand. See No. 646. 307 History off Gilblas English 3 voll[. ] [12 Lon. 1725. 6] Entry by the second hand. Alain René Le Sage (1668-1747). The history and adventures of Gil Blasof Santillane. In three volumes. The second edition. London, for JacobTonson, 1725 12mo. _Bodleian; Harv. _ 308 History of Polexander. Engd. By Wm. Browne [Fol. London 1648. 2] Marin LeRoy, sieur de Gomberville (1600?-1674). The history ofPolexander: in five bookes. Done into English by William Browne. London, by Tho. Harper, for Thomas Walkey, 1648. Fol. Wing G1026. _Bodleian; Virginia, Newberry. _ 309 ---- of Infamous Imposters, that have Usurp’d ye Titles of Kings &c[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1683 8] Jean Baptiste de Rocoles (1620?-1696). The history of infamousimpostors. Or, The lives & actions of several notorious counterfeits, who from the most abject, and meanest of the people, have usurped thetitles of emperours, kings, and princes .  .  . Done into English. London, for William Cademan, 1683. 8vo. Wing R1766. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 310 ---- Secret, of Europe [8vo. Ib. 1712. 8] John Oldmixon (1673-1742). The secret history of Europe. .  .  . The wholecollected from authentick memoirs, as well manuscript as printed. London, printed for the booksellers of London and Westminster, 1712. 8vo. _BM; NYP, Cleveland Public, Texas. _ 311 ---- Secret, of K. Cha. 2d. & K. James 2d. [12mo. Ib. 1690. 6] The secret history of the reigns of K. Charles II. And K.  James II. Printed in the year 1600. [Place not given. ] 12mo. Wing S2347. _BM; Harv, NYP, Peabody Institute, Newberry, Hunt. _ 312 ---- of Polybius 2 Vols[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1693. 13] See No. 472. 313 History off the Otaman Empire by Sr: P: Ricaut [8vo. Lon:1682. 3] Entry by the second hand. Sir Paul Rycaut (1628-1700). The history of the present state of theOttoman empire. .  .  . The fifth edition. London, by T.  N. For JoannaBrome, 1682. 8vo. Wing R2403. _BM; Folg, Illinois, Washington State College. _ A copy of another issue of the same year, “by T.  N. For John Starkey, ”(Wing R2404), may be consulted at _Yale_. 314 Histoire du Theatre Italien de Riccoboni [8vo Lond. . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Louis Riccoboni (1674-1753). Histoire du theatre Italien depuis ladecadence de la comedie latine; avec un catalogue des tragedies etcomedies Italiennes imprimées depuis l’an 1500, jusqu’â l’an 1600. Etune dissertation sur la tragedie moderne. Paris, chez H.  D. Chaubert[1727]. 8vo. _BM; Boston Public, Duke, Miami (Ohio), Hunt. _ This book is written partly in French and partly in Italian. In anotherwork on the theatre (translated as _An historical and critical accountof the theatre in Europe_, London, 1744, p. 175) Riccoboni makes thiscomment on Congreve: “Amongst the Crowd of _English_ Poets, Mr. _Congreve_ is most esteemed for Comedy. He was perfectly acquainted withNature; and was living in 1727, when I was in _London_; I conversed withhim more than once, and found in him Taste joined with great Learning. It is rare to find many Dramatic Poets of his Stamp. ” 315 Horace, Tarteron, 2 tom. [8{vo}. Amsterdam 1710 3] Entry by the second hand. Les œuvres d’Horace, traduites en françois par le P.  Tarteron. A Amsterdam, chez Pierre de Coup, 1710. 2 tom. 12mo. [With the Latintext. ] _BM; Columbia, Princeton. _ 316 L’Honnéte Homme, et le Scelerat [12mo. Bruss. 1710 26] L’honnête homme et le scelerat. Scavoir, si pour parvenir dans le monde, il faut être honnête homme ou scelerat. Par Monsieur J.  D.  D.  C.  Suivantla copie de Paris. A Brusselles, chez Louis de Wainne, 1710. 12mo. _Bibl. De l’Arsenal (Paris). _ 317 Q. Horatii Opera cum Variis Lectionibus. _Ch. Majori_ [4to. Cantabr. 1699 17] Cantabrigiæ, impensis Jacobi Tonson. Londini, 1699. 4to. Wing H2764. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Newberry. _ 318 ---- in Usum Delphini cum Notis Desprez [8vo. Lond. 1694. 7] Q. Horatii Flacci Opera . . . Illustravit Ludovicus Desprez .  .  . Inusum serenissimi Delphini. Londini, impensis R Clavel, H.  Mortlock, S.  Smith & B.  Walford, 1694. 8vo. Wing H2763. _BM; Boston Athenaeum, Pomona College. _ 319 ---- Poemata cum Notis Rodellii ad Usum Delphini [8vo. Ib. 1690. 7] Q. Horatii Flacci poemata interpretatione et notis illustravit PetrusRodellius .  .  . Ad usum Delphini [“for the use of the Dauphin, ” son ofLouis XIV of France]. Londini, impensis Abelis Swalle, 1690. 8vo Wing H2780. _BM; Newberry. _ 320 ---- Opera. Foliis deauratis. Apd. J.  Tonson [12mo. Ib. 1715. 24] Quinti Horatii Flacci opera. Londini, ex officinâ Jacobi Tonson, &Johannis Watts, 1715. 12mo. _BM; Yale, Library Company of Philadelphia, Hunt. _ 321 ---- Eadem cum _Rutgersii_ Lectionibus 2 Vol. [12mo. Traject. 1699. 24] Q. Horatii Flaccus. Accedunt J. Rutgersii lectiones. Traject[i]Batav[orum], apud Franciscum Halman, Guiljelmum van de Water, 1699. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Chicago. _ 322 ---- Eadem ex Recensione _Heinsiana_ [24to. Amstel. 1676 5] Q. Horatius Flaccus. Daniel Heinsius ex emendatissimis editionibusexpressit, & repræsentavit. Amstelodami, apud Danielem Elzevirium, 1676. 16mo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 323 ---- Odæ in _Locos Communes_ digestæ à Jos. Langio [12mo. Lugd. 1604. 5] Quincti Horatii Flacci . . . Odæ in locos communes ad lyricæ poëseosstudiosorum utilitatem digestæ. Studio & operâ Josephi Langii. Hanoviæ, typis Wechelianis, apud Claudium Marnium & heredes Joannis Aubrii, 16048vo. _BM. _ A copy of a Lugduni, 1604, edition has not been found. 324 Histoire De L’Exile De Ciceron [12 paris. 30] Entry by the second hand. Jacques Morabin (1687-1762). Histoire de l’exil de Ciceron. A Paris, chez Lambert Coffin, 1725. 12mo. _BM; Yale (chez Andre Cailleau, 1726). _ 325 Histoire De France En brege Par. P: Daniel 9 Vol - Vid - R. - [. .. . . .. . 30] Entry by the second hand. See No. 528. 326 Iamblichi de mysteriis Liber Gr. Lat. P Tho. Gale [Fol. Oxon. 1678. 9] Jamblichus, of Chalcis (_c. _ A. D. 250-_c. _ 325). Jamblichi .  .  . Demysteriis liber. .  .  . Græce nunc primum edidit, Latine vertit, et notasadjecit. Gr. & Lat. Oxonii, e theatro Sheldoniano, 1678. Fol. Wing I26. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Northwestern. _ 327 Jeffrey of Monmouth’s British History Engd. By _Aaron Thompson_ [8vo. Lond. 1718. 13] Geoffrey of Monmouth (1100?-1154). The British history, translated intoEnglish from the Latin .  .  . By Aaron Thompson. London, for J.  Bowyer, H.  Clements, and W. And J.  Innys, 1718. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Newberry, Hunt. _ 328 Jacob’s (Giles) Treatise of Laws [8vo. Ib. 1721. 32] Giles Jacob (1686-1744). A treatise of laws: or, A general introductionto the common, civil, and canon law. London, for T.  Woodward, andJ.  Peele, 1721. 8vo. _Lincoln’s Inn (London); Harv, LC. _ 329 ---- Students Companion, or the Reason of ye Laws of Engld. [8vo. Ib. 1725. 32] The student’s companion: or, The reason of the laws of England. [London, ] in the Savoy, by E. And R.  Nutt, and R.  Gosling (assigns ofEdward Sayer), for T.  Corbett, 1725. 8vo. _Inner Temple (London); Harv, LC. _ 330 Ino et Melicerte, Trag. P Mr de la Grange [12mo. Paris 1713. 30] François Joseph de La Grange-Chancel (1667-1758). Ino et Mélicerte, tragédie. A Paris, chez Pierre Ribou, 1713. 12mo. _BN. _ 331 Illustres Francoişes, Histoires veritables 2 Tom[. ] [12mo. Haye 1713. 26] Robert Challes (1659-_c. _ 1720). Les illustres Françoises, histoiresveritables. Où l’on trouve, dan des caracteres tres-particuliers & fortdifferens, un grand nombre d’exemples rares & extraordinares des bellesmanieres, de la politesse. A La Haye, Hondt, 1713. 2 tom. 12mo. _National Library (Florence). _ 332 Justiniani (Imp. ) Institutiones. Curâ Vinnii [12mo. Amst. 1663. 5] Justinianus I (483-565). D. Justiniani, sacratissimi principis, institutionum .  .  . Cura & studio Arnoldi Vinnii. Amstelædami, exofficina Elzeviriana, 1663. 12mo. _Lincoln’s Inn (London); Harv, Minnesota. _ 333 Ignoramus, Comœdia coram Rege Jac. 1mo. [12mo. Lond. 1668 5] G. Ruggle (1575-1622). Ignoramus. Comœdia [in five acts and in prose]coram Regie Jacobo et totius Angliæ magnatibus per AcademicosCantabrigienses habita. Editio quarta. Londini, ex officina J.  R. , 1668. 12mo. Wing R2215. _BM; Yale, Folg. _ 334 Juvenalis et Persius Interpr. Et Notis Lud. Pratei ad Usum Delph[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1691. 7] D. Junii Juvenalis et A. Persii Flacci Satyræ. Interpretatione ac notisillustravit Ludovicus Prateus. .  .  . In usum serenissimi Delphini. Londini, impensis Tho. Dring, & Abel Swalle, 1691. 8vo. Wing J1285. _BM; Harv. _ 335 ---- Idem, sine Notis. Apd. Tonson _Foliis deauratis_ [12mo. Ib. 1716. 24] Decii Junii Juvenalis et Auli Persii Flacci Satyræ. Londini, ex officinâJacobi Tonson, & Johannis Watts, 1716. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Illinois. _ 336 Justini Historiarum ex Trogo Pomp. Libri XLIV. Apd. Tonson _Foliis deauratis_ [12mo. Ib. 1713. 24] Marcus Junianus Justinus. Justini Historiarum ex Trogo Pompeio libriXLIV. Londini, ex officinâ Jacobi Tonson, & Johannis Watts, 1713. 12mo. _BM; Harv. _ 337 Juvenal Hollady [Fol: Ox. 1673 . .. . ] Entry by the second hand. Barten Holyday (1593-1661). Decimus Junius Juvenalis, and Aulus PersiusFlaccus, translated and illustrated, as well with sculpture as notes. Oxford, by W.  Downing, for F.  Oxlad, Senior, J.  Adams, and F.  Oxlad, Junior, 1673. Fol. Wing J1276. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 338 Johnsons (Ben) Works V. Ben [Fol. . .. . . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. See Nos. 44, 45. 339 Kempii (Jo. ) Monumenta Vetustatis [8vo. Lond. 1720 6] John Kemp (1665-1717). Monumenta vetustatis Kempiana, ex vetustisscriptoribus illustrata, eosque vicissim illustrantia. [Ed. ByR.  Ainworth and J.  Ward. ] Londini, typis Danielis Bridge. Veneunt àPaulo Vaillant; G. & J.  Innys; & J.  Osborn, 1720. 8vo. _BM; Harv. _ 340 Kennett’s (Basil) Lives of ye Ancient Grecian Poets [8vo. Ib. 1697. 11] Basil Kennett (1674-1715). The lives and characters of the ancientGrecian poets. London, for Abel Swall, 1697. 8vo. Wing K297. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Cincinnati, Newberry, Clark. _ 341 ---- Antiquities of Rome [8vo. Ib. 1696. 11] Romæ antiquæ notitia: or, The antiquities of Rome. In two parts. I.  A short history of the rise, progress, and decay of the commonwealth. II.  A description of the city. An account of the religion, civilgovernment, and art of war; with the remarkable customs and ceremonies, public and private. London, A.  Swall and T.  Child, 1696. 8vo. Wing K298. _BM; Princeton, Newberry, Clark. _ 342 Killigrew’s (Tho) 5 Plays [Fol. Ib. 1664. 9] Thomas Killigrew, the Elder (1612-1683). Comedies, and tragedies. London, for Henry Herringman, 1664. Fol. Wing K450. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 341 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 343 Lucan’s Pharsalia Translated into Eng. Verse by N.  Rowe Large Paper [Fol. Lond. 1718. 16] Marcus Annæus Lucanus (A. D. 39-65). Lucan’s Pharsalia. Translated intoEnglish verse by Nicholas Rowe, Esq. London, J.  Tonson, 1718. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1140 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. Congreve’s name appears in the printed list of subscribers. 344 Lucanus de Bello Civili cum Variorum Notis, accurante Schrevelio [8vo. Lugd Bat 1669 7] M. Annæus Lucanus de bello civili . . . Notis integris & variorumselectiss. Accurante Corn. Schrevelio. Lugd[uni] Batav[orum] etRoterod[ami], ex officina Hackiana, 1669. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Cincinnati, Michigan. _ 345 Lucain Pharsale de Mr. De Brebeuf [12mo. Haye 1700. 24] Georges de Brébeuf (1617?-1661). La Pharsale de Lucain .  .  . En versfrançois. La Haye, chez A.  Leers, 1683.  12. _BM; Princeton. _ A copy of a 1700 edition has not been found. 346 Lucan’s Pharsalia Eng. By Tho. May [12mo. Lond. 1635 6] Lucan’s Pharsalia: or, The civil warres of Rome, between Pompey theGreat and Julius Cæsar. The whole ten bookes, Englished by Thomas May, Esquire. The third edition, corrected by the author. London, A.  M[athewes], sold by Will: Sheares, 1635. 8vo. STC 16889. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Chicago, Hunt. _ Perhaps Congreve’s edition (listed as 12mo) was misjudged because it issmall for 8vo. 347 Lloydii Dictionarium vide Diction. Historicum [---- . .. . 9] See No. 180. 348 Locke’s (Jno. ) Essay concerning Human Understanding 3d. Edit[. ] [Fol. Lond. 1695. 9] John Locke (1632-1704). An essay concerning humane understanding, infour books. .  .  . The third edition. London, for Awnsham and JohnChurchil, and Samuel Manship, 1695. Fol. Wing L2741. _BM; Harv, NYP. _ 349 ---- Posthumous Works [8vo. Ib. 1706. 33] Posthumous works. . . . To which is added, VI. His new method of acommon-place-book, written originally in French, and now translated intoEnglish. London, by W.  B. For A.  and J.  Churchill, 1706. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Hunt. _ 350 Lysis, ye Extravagant Shepherd, an Anti-Romance [Fol. Ib. 1654. 9] Charles Sorel, Sieur de Souvigny (1597?-1674). The extravagant shepherd:or, The history of the shepherd Lysis. An anti-romance; writtenoriginally in French, and now made English. London, by T.  Newcomb forThomas Heath, 1654. Fol. Wing S4704. _Bodleian; Harv, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ For the French original see No. 54. 351 Longinus de Sublimitate. Curâ Jac. Tollii [4to. Traj. Ad Rhen. 1694 22] Dionysii Longini de sublimitate commentarius, ceteraque quæ reperiripotuere. .  .  . Jacobus Tollius .  .  . Emendavit. Trajecti ad Rhenum, exofficinâ Francisci Halma, 1694. 4to. _BM; Harv, LC, Newberry. _ 352 Lucretii Cari de Rerum Naturâ, cum variis Lectionibus. _Ch. Maj. _ [4to. Lond 1712. 17] Titus Lucretius Carus (94?-55? B. C. ). Titi Lucretii Cari De rerum naturalibri sex. .  .  . Accesserunt variæ lectiones. Londini, sumptibus & typisJacobi Tonson, 1712. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Chicago. _ 353 ---- Idem cum Notis Tho. Creech. [8vo. Oxon. 1695. 7] Titi Lucretii Cari de rerum natura libri sex: quibus interpretationem etnotas addidit Thomas Creech. Oxonii, e theatro Sheldoniano, impensis Ab. Swall, & Tim. Child, 1695. 8vo. Wing L3445. _BM; Harv, NYP, Chicago, California. _ 354 ---- Idem cum Interpretatione Galli- =câ, ad postremam Giffanii Emen =dationem restitutus [8vo. Paris 1659. 7] Titi Lucretii Cari de rerum natura libri sex. Ad postremam ObertiGifanii I.  C. Emendationem. Lutetiæ Parisiorum, apud Guillelmum deLuyne, 1659. 8vo. _BM; Pennsylvania. _ 355 ---- Idem. _Foliis deauratis. _ apd. Tonson [12mo. Lond. 1713. 24] Titi Lucretii Cari de rerum natura libri sex. Londini, ex officinâJacobi Tonson, & Johannis Watts, 1713. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Johns Hopkins, Reed College (Oregon). _ 356 Lucien Oeuvres de Sr. D’Ablancourt 2 Tom[. ] [4to. Paris 1655 22] Lucian of Samosata (b. _c. _ A. D. 120). Lucien de la traduction deN.  Perrot, Sr. D’Ablancourt. A Paris, chez A.  Courbé, 1655. 2 tom. 4to. _BN; Yale, LC, Iowa. _ 357 ---- avec Annot. De J. _Baudoin_ [4to. Ib. ___ 14] Les œuvres de Lucian de Samosate autheur Grec de nouveau traduites enFrançois .  .  . Par J.  B. [Jean Baudoin], A Paris, chez Jean Richer, [1613]. 4to. _BN; LC. _ 358 Lees (Nat. ) Plays [4to. Lond __ 28] Nathaniel Lee (1653?-1692). The works of Mr. Nathaniel Lee, in onevolume. London, for R.  Bentley, 1694. 4to. Wing L845A. _Bodleian; Harv. _ Another possibility: London, for Richard Bentley and S.  Magnes, 1687. 4to. Wing L845--Clark. 359 Lilly’s (Wm. ) Prophecies [4to. Ib. 1644. 8] William Lilly (1602-1681). England’s propheticall Merline, foretellingto all nations of Europe until 1663 the actions depending upon theinfluence of the conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter, 1642 3. By William Lilly, student in astrologie. London, by JohnRaworth, for John Partridge, 1644. 4to. Wing L2221. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 360 Ld Lansdown’s (Granville) Poems [8vo. Ib. 1712. 20] George Granville, Baron Lansdowne (1667-1735). Poems upon severaloccasions. London, for J.  Tonson, 1712. 8vo. A copy of this edition was item No. 273 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 361 Lactantii Opera omnia [8vo. Cantabr. 1685. 14] Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius (A. D. 250?-317?). Lucii Coelii LactantiiFirmiani opera, quæ extant omnia. Cantabrigiæ, ex officinâ Johan. Hayes, impensis Hen. Dickinson, & Rich. Green, 1685. 8vo. Wing L140. _BM; Harv, Hunt. _ 362 Livii Historiarum quod exstat. Ex Recensione _Gronovii_ [12mo. Amsterd 1678 6] Titus Livius (59 B. C. -A. D. 17). Titi Livii historiarum libri, quotextent. Ex recensione J.  F. Gronovii. Amstelodami, apud DanielemElzevirium, 1678. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Free Library (Philadelphia), Newberry. _ 363 ---- _Tomus 1. Gronovii_ [12mo. Lugd Bat 1654 5] Titi Livii historiarum libri ex recensione J.  F. Gronovii. 3 tom. Lugd[uni] Batavorum, ex officinâ Elzevirianâ, 1654. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP (v. 2 only), Oberlin, Newberry. _ 364 Lipsius de Constantia - - - apd. Plantin [4to. Antv. 1584 7] Justus Lipsius (1547-1606). Justi Lipsi de constantia libri duo. Antverpiae, apud Christophorum Plantinum, 1584. 4to. _BM; Harv, Oregon. _ 365 Life of Pythagoras Translated from the French Edit. Of Mr. Dacier. With the Golden Verses, from ye Greek, by Nic. Rowe _Large Paper_ [8vo. Lond 1707. 13] André Dacier (1651-1722). The life of Pythagoras, with his symbols andgolden verses. By M.  Dacier. .  .  . Now done into English .  .  . ByN.  Rowe, Esq. London, for J.  Tonson, 1707. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Michigan, Hunt. _ See No. 631 for the French source of Rowe’s translation. 366 ---- of Almanzor wth: ye History of ye Conquest of Spain by the Moors [8vo. Ib. 1695. 8] Miguel de Luna (fl. 1600). A copy of a 1695 edition has not been found. A copy of a 1693 editionmay be consulted at _BM; Harv, Michigan_. 367 Lives and Characters of ye English Dram: Poets. 2 Vols. _Large Paper_ [8vo. Ib. 1719. 28] Giles Jacob (1686-1744). The poetical register: or, The lives andcharacters of the English dramatick poets. London, for Edmund Curll, 1719. 8vo. An historical account of the lives and writings of our most considerableEnglish poets. London, for Edmund Curll, 1720. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Ohio State, Hunt. _ The Poetical Register, 8vo, 1719, was a part of item No. 414 in theLeeds Sale, 1930. 368 Lives of the Grecian Poets [8vo Lond. 1709 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. See No. 340 for what may be an earlier edition. No copy of a 1709 edition has been found. 369 Littlebury’s Herodotus 2 Vols. [8. Ib. 1720. 13] See No. 286. 370 Lambs Cookery Vide Compleat Court Cook [---- . .. . 32] See No. 110. 371 Liturgia Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ Græcè [8vo. Cantabr 1665. 14] A Greek translation of the Book of Common Prayer of 1662, by JamesDuport, Dean of Peterborough (1606-1679). Published at Cambridge by theUniversity printer, John Field, 1665. Wing B3632. _BM; NYP, Divinity School of the Protestant Episcopal Church (Philadelphia). _ Congreve’s copy, with the inscription “Ex libris Gulielmi: Congreve, ” isowned by the Reverend J.  F. Gerrard, Wigan, England. 372 Lettres Historiques et Galantes p Mad. De C. {xxx} 4 Tom Lent to Ds. M-h. [12mo. Colon 1710 26] Anne Marguerite Petit Du Noyer (1663-1719). Lettres historiques etgalantes. A Cologne, chez Pierre Marteau, 1707-1718. 7 tom. 12mo. _BM. _ Perhaps Congreve had the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth volumes, dated1710, 1711, 1712, 1713. 373 ---- Persanes 2 Tom[. ] [12mo. Ib. 1721. 26] [Charles Louis de Secondat, Baron de la Brède et de Montesquieu(1689-1755). ] Lettres Persanes. Seconde edition. 2 tom. Cologne, chez Pierre Marteau, 1721. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP. _ 374 Lettres sur Les Anglois et les francois [12mo. Cologn 1725 30] Entry by the second hand. [Beat Louis de Muralt (1665-1749)]. Lettres sur les Anglois et lesFrançois. Et sur les voiages. A Cologne, [no publisher given] 1725. 12mo. _BM; NYP, Cleveland Public, Michigan, Hunt. _ 375 Mezzo Tinto Prints by J. Smith Large Papr. [Fol. --- 10] No copy of a folio volume of prints by John Smith (1652-1742) has beenfound. Congreve probably made a collection of Smith’s prints and hadthem bound. 376 Montaigne (Seignr. De) Essais [Fol. Paris 1658. 15] Michel Eyquem de Montaigne (1533-1592). Essais. .  .  . Avec augmentationde la version françoise des passages italiens. Nouv. éd. A Paris, E.  Couterot (or P.  Le Petit, etc. ), 1657. Fol. _BM; Harv, LC. _ No copy of a folio edition, Paris, 1658, has been found. 377 ---- Essais 3 Tom[. ] [12mo. Ib. 1659. 5] Les essais de Michel de Montaigne. A Paris, chez Christophle Journel (orL.  Rondet), 1659. 3 tom. 12mo. _BN; Harv, Princeton. _ 378 ---- Ditto. 3 Tom[. ] [12mo. Bourdeaux 1582 6] Essais . . . Edition seconde, reveuë & augmentée. A Bourdeaus, impr. DeS.  Millanges, 1582. 2 tom. En 1. Small 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP. _ 379 ---- English by _Cha. Cotton_ 3 Vols[. ] [8vo. Lond. 1695. 12] Essays. . . . Made English by Charles Cotton. London, forM.  Gilliflower, W.  Heusman, R.  Bentley, and J.  Hindmarsh, 1693. 3 vol. 8vo. _BM; Harv. _ Congreve’s copy probably belonged to the second edition, 1693. No copyof a 1695 edition has been found, and the edition of 1700 is called thethird. 380 Milton’s (Jno. ) Poetical Works in 2 Vols _Large Paper_ [4to. Lond. 1720. 17] John Milton (1608-1674). The poetical works. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1720. 2 vol. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1153 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 381 ---- Ditto 3 Vols. With Cuts _Large Paper_ [8vo. Ib. 1705. 19] Paradise Lost . . . Seventh edition, adorn’d with sculptures. 2 vol. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1705. 8vo. _BM; LC. _ 382 Malebranche de la Recherche de la Veritè [4to. Paris 1712 2] Nicholas Malebranche (1638-1715). De la recherche de la verité, où l’ontraitte de la nature de l’esprit de l’homme, & de l’usage qu’il en doitfaire pour éviter l’erreur dans les sciences. 6{e} éd. A Paris, chezMichel David, 1712. 2 tom. Enlarged 4to. _BN; Harv. _ 383 Musarum Anglicanarum Analecta. 2 Vol. _Charta Maj. _ [8vo. Oxon 1699. 19] Musarum Anglicanarum analecta . . . In duo volumina congesta. Oxon. , e theatro Sheldoniano, impensis J.  Crosley, 1699. 2 vol. 8vo. Wing M3136. _BM; Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ 384 Milbourne’s (Luke) Notes on Mr Dryden’s Virgil [8vo. Lond. 1698. 8] Luke Milbourne (1649-1720). Notes on Dryden’s Virgil. In a letter to afriend. With an essay on the same poet. London, for R.  Clavill, 1698. 8vo. Wing M2035. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Newberry, Clark. _ 385 Manilius’s Astronomy & Astrology, done into Eng. Verse, wth: Notes [8vo. Ib. 1697. 20] Marcus Manilius (fl. A. D. 9). The five books of M.  Manilius, containinga system of the ancient astronomy and astrology: together with thephilosophy of the Stoicks. Done into English verse. With notes [byT.  C. , i. E. T.  Creech]. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1697. 8vo. Wing M430. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Miami (Ohio), Hunt. _ 386 Moore’s (Sir Jonas) Treatise of Artillery or great Ordnance [8vo. Ib. 1683. 8] Sir Jonas Moore (1617-1679). A general treatise of artillery .  .  . Writin Italian by Tomaso Moretti, .  .  . Translated .  .  . By Sir Jonas Moore. London, by A.  G. And J.  P. For Obadiah Blagrave, 1683. 8vo. Wing M2726. _BM; Clark. _ 387 Molyneux’s (Wm) Case of Ireland’s being bound by Acts of Parl. In Engld. Stated [8vo. Dublin 1698. 8] William Molyneux (1656-1698). The case of Ireland’s being bound by actsof Parliament in England, stated. Dublin, by Joseph Ray, 1698. 8vo. Wing M2402. _BM; Harv, NYP, Hunt. _ Another octavo edition: Dublin, by and for J.  R. And are to be sold byRob. Clavel, and A. And J.  Churchil, booksellers in London, 1698. (WingM2403--_Cambridge; LC_) 388 Menandri et Philemonis Reliquiæ Gr. Lat. Cum Notis Hug. Grotii et Jo. Clerici [8vo. Amsterd 1709. 7] Menander (342?-291? B. C. ) and Philemon (361?-263? B. C. ). Menandri etPhilemonis reliquiæ .  .  . Cum notis Hugonis Grotii et Joannis Clerici. Amstelodami, apud Thomam Lombrail, 1709. 8vo. _BM; Harv, LC, Michigan. _ 389 de la Motte Fables Nouvelles [8vo. Paris 1719. 30] Antoine Houdar de La Motte (1672-1731). Fables nouvelles. A Paris, chezGregoire Depuis, 1719. 12mo. _BN; Harv, NYP. _ 390 ---- Poesies et autres Ouvrages 2 Tom[. ] [12mo. Brux. 1707 24] Poësies de Monsieur de la Motte avec un discours sur la poësie engeneral, & sur l’ode en particulier. Suivant la copie de Paris, & sevend, A Bruxelles, chez les Frères t’Serstevens, 1707. Small 8vo. _Biblioteca Marucelliana (Florence). _ 391 ---- l’Iliade, Poeme, avec un Discours Sur Homere [8vo. Paris 1714. 18] A Paris, chez Gregoire Depuis, 1714. 8vo. _Bodleian; LC. _ 392 Marzio Coriolano Drama p Musica [12mo. Ven. 1698. 30] Matteo Noris (_c. _ 1640-1708). Marzio Coriolano. Drama per musica. Darappresentarsi nel famoso teatro di S.  Gio: Grisostomo. L’anno 1698. InVenezia, Nicolini, 1698. 12mo. _BN, Biblioteca Nationale Vittoria Emanuele (Rome); LC (Schatz 8303). _ 393 Moliere Oeuvres 8 Tom. Avec Fig. En Taille-douce [12mo. Paris 1697 25] Jean Baptiste Poquelin de Molière (1622-1673). Les œuvres de Monsieur deMolière. Reveuës, corrigées & augmentèes. Enrichies de figures entaille-douce. 8 tom. A Paris, chez Denys Thierry, Claude Barbin, etPierre Trabouillet, 1697. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Chicago. _ 394 Maisons de Campagne de Pline, avec des Remarques p Felibien [12mo. Lond. 1717. 12] Jean François Félibien (_c. _ 1658-1733). Les plans et les descriptionsde deux des plus belles maisons de campagne de Pline le Consul. A Londres, chez David Mortier, 1707. 12mo. _Bodleian; Princeton. _ Perhaps Congreve’s “1717” is an error for “1707. ” There seems to havebeen no 1717 edition. 395 Sieurs de Maucroy et de la Fontaine Ouvrages de Prose et de Poësie [12mo. Amst. 1688 12] François de Maucroix (1619-1708) and Jean de La Fontaine (1621-1695). Ouvrages de prose et de poësie. A Amsterdam, chez Pierre Mortier. 1688. 12mo. _BN; Yale, LC. _ 396 Miege’s State of Denmark [12mo. Lond 1683 8] Guy Miege (1644-1718?). The present state of Denmark. London, for Tho. Basset, 1683. 8vo. Wing M2024. _Bodleian. _ 397 Malthus’s Treatise of Artificial Fireworks [8vo. Ib. 1629. 6] Francis Malthus (François de Malthe). A treatise of artificial fireworksboth for warres and recreation: with divers pleasant geometricalobservations, fortifications, and arithmeticall examples. .  .  . Englished by the author Tho: [or rather Fra:] Malthus. London, forRichard Hawkins, 1629. 8vo. STC 17217. _BM; Harv, Folg, Hunt. _ 398 Meursii Elegantiæ Latini Sermonis [12mo. ------ 24] Nicholas Chorier (1612-1692). Joannis Meursii elegantiæ latini sermonis. [No place or date. Perhaps 1680. Wrongly attributed to Johannes vanMeurs. ] 12mo. _Bodleian; Chicago. _ 399 Macrobii Opera cum _Notis Pontani_ 3 Vol. [8vo. Lugd. Bat. 1628 7] Ambrosius Theodosius Macrobius (fl. _c. _ A. D. 400). Aur. TheodosiiMacrobii .  .  . Opera. Joh Isacius Pontanus secundo recensuit: adjectisad libros singulos notis. Lugduni Batavorum, ex officinâ Joannis Maire, 1628. 8vo. _BM; Harv. _ 400 Management of ye War 2 Parts, _with other Pamphlets_ [8vo. Lond. 1711. 33] [Francis Hare, Bishop of Chichester (1671-1740)]. The management of thewar. In a letter to a Tory-member. London, for A.  Baldwin, 1711. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Newberry. _ A second pamphlet with the same title was soon published by A.  Baldwin“In a second letter to a Tory-member, ” and each was issued several timesduring 1711. 401 Minsheu’s Spanish & Eng. Dictionary vide Dictionary [. .. . ----- 2] See No. 181. 402 May’s Lucan see Lucan &c[. ] [. .. . . .. . 6] See No. 346. 403 Moivre’s Doctrine of Chances [4to. Lond. 1718. 2] See No. 205. 404 Memoirs of the Count de Grammont [8vo Lon 1714 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Anthony Hamilton (1645?-1719). Memoirs of the life of Count de Grammont. .  .  . Translated from the French by Mr. Boyer. London, J.  Round, W.  Taylor, J.  Brown, W.  Lewis, and J.  Graves, 1714. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Newberry. _ 405 Miscellanies bound together Vizt. [4to. ---- 28] a b Mother Shipton -- Tales of c ye Fairies -- Dr. Merryman d Hist. Of Hercules of Greece e ---- of Sir. Jno. Hawkwood f ---- of Dorastus & Fawnia g ---- of ye Gentle Craft h ---- of ye Destruction of Troy i ---- of ye Eng. Rogue j ---- of Captain Hind k ---- of Sir. Jno. Mandevile Number 405 probably included the following: (a) Richard Head (1637?-1686?). The life and death of Mother Shipton. London, for B.  Harris, 1677. 4to. Wing H1257--_Hunt. _ (Or one of the quartos of 1684, 1687, or 1694. ) (b) Marie Catherine Jumelle de Berneville, Comtesse d’Aulnoy (d. 1705). Tales of the fairys. Translated from the French. London, forC.  Cockerill, 1699. (_Term Catalogues_, III, 123, but described as in“twelves. ”) (c) S[amuel] R[owlands] (1570?-1630?). Doctor Merry-man: or, Nothing butmirth. London, for F.  Coles, T.  Vere, J.  Wright, J.  Clarke, W.  Thackeray, and T.  Passinger, 1681. 4to. Wing R2083--_BM; Hunt. _ (Or one of the quartos of 1609, 1616, 1618, 1619, 1627, 1657, or 1671. ) (d) The famous and renowned history of the life and glorious actions ofthe mighty Hercules of Greece. [London, 1710?]. _BM; Folg. _ (The Folgerhas a second undated copy printed for S.  Bates, probably about 1719. ) (e) Sir John de Hawkwood (d. 1394). The honour of the taylors; or, Thefamous and renowned history of Sir John Hawkwood. London, by AlexanderMilbourn, for William Whitwood, 1687. 4to. Wing H2599. _BM; Yale, Newberry, Hunt. _ (f) Robert Greene (1560?-1592). The plesant historie of Dorastus andFawnia. London, for F.  Faulkner, 1636. 4to. STC 12292--_BM; Folg, Hunt. _(Or one of the quartos of 1648, 1655, 1664, 1677, 1684, 1688, 1694, or1703. ) (g) Thomas Deloney (1543?-1600). The plesant and princely history of thegentle craft. [London, ] P.  Wilde and sold by P.  Brooksby, J.  Deacon, J.  Back, J.  Blare, and E.  Tracy, 1696. Wing D962--_Bodleian; Newberry. _ (Or one of the many earlier quartos. ) (h) Raoul Le Fèvre (fl. 1460). The auncient historie, of the destructionof Troy. .  .  . Translated from the French into English by W.  Caxton. London, by Thomas Creede, 1596. 4to. STC 15379--_Bodleian; Folg, LC, Hunt. _ (Or one of the many quartos ofthe next century and a quarter. ) (i) Richard Head (1637?-1686?). The life and death of the English rogue. London, for Eben. Tracy, [1700?]. 4to. Wing H1263. _BM; Clark. _ (j) We have brought our hogs to a fair market; or, Strange news fromNew-Gate; being a most plesant and historical narrative of CaptainJ[ames] H[ind]. London, for George Horton, 1651. 4to. Wing W1178. _BM; Hunt. _ (k) Sir John Mandeville (1300?-1372). The voyages and travels of SirJohn Mandeville, knight: wherein is set down the way to the Holy Land, and to Hierusalem. London, by A.  Wilde, for G.  Conyers andA.  Bettesworth, 1722. 4to. _Bodleian; Harv, NYP, Library Company of Philadelphia (Ridgway Branch), Michigan. _ (Or any of the earlier quartos. ) 406 ---- bound together Vizt. [4to --- 27] a Dryden’s Essay on Dram. Poetry b Horace’s Art of Poetry by ye E. Of Roscommon--and c the Rehearsal This specially bound collection of three quartos, with Congreve’ssignature on each of the three title pages, was item No. 209 in theLeeds Sale, 1930. Since the dates on these title pages are 1684, 1684, and 1687, the quartos could have been only the following: (a) Of dramatick poesie, an essay. By John Dryden. London, for HenryHerringman, 1684. 4to. Wing D2328. _BM; Harv, Folg, Chicago, Hunt. _ (b) Horace’s Art of poetry. Made English by the Right Honourable theEarl of Roscommon. London, for Henry Herringman, and sold by JosephKnight and Francis Saunders, 1684. 4to. Wing H2769. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Illinois, Hunt. _ (c) The rehearsal. . . . The fifth edition. London, for Thomas Dring, and sold by John Newton, 1687. 4to. Wing B5327. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Texas, Hunt. _ 407 ---- bound together Vizt. [4to. --- 28] a A mad World my Masters b c Cupid’s Revenge -- Merry d Wives of Windsor -- Byron’s e Conspiracy -- Chapman’s Homer, f and Heliodorus’s History in Verse by Wm Lisle Number 407 probably included the following: (a) Thomas Middleton’s A mad world my masters, in a quarto of 1608 (STC17888--_BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Hunt_) or of 1640 (STC 17889--_BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Texas, Hunt_). No. 490 indicates that the reference hereis to Middleton’s play rather than to Breton’s dialogue (STC 3667). (b) Beaumont and Fletcher’s Cupid’s revenge, in a quarto of 1615 (STC1667--_BM; Harv, Hunt_), of 1630 (STC 1668--_BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Texas, Hunt_), or of 1635 (STC 1669--_Bodleian; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt_). (c) Shakespeare’s The merry wives of Windsor, in the 1630 quarto (STC22301--_BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Hunt_). Also possible, but less likelybecause of the wording of the titles, are the quartos of 1602 (STC22299--_BM; Folg, Hunt_) and 1619 (STC 22300--_BM; Harv, Folg, Hunt_). (d) George Chapman’s The conspiracie, and tragedie of Charles Duke ofByron, Marshall of France, in a quarto of 1608 (STC 4968--_BM; Harv, Folg. Illinois, Texas, Hunt_) or of 1625 (STC 4969--_BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt_). (e) George Chapman’s Seaven bookes of the Iliades of Homere, prince ofpoets. London, by John Windet, 1598. 4to. STC 13632. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Hunt. _ (f) The famous historie of Heliodorus. Amplified, augmented, anddelivered paraphrastically in verse; by .  .  . William Lisle. London, byJohn Dawson for Francis Eglesfield, 1638. 4to. STC 13048. _BM; Yale, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 408 ---- bound together Vizt. [12mo. Lond. 30] Merry Wives of Windsor King Henry IV. 2 parts Julius Caesar -- Hamlet & Othello Moor of Venice The sequel of Henry the Fourth: with the humours of Sir John Falstaffe, and Justice Shallow. .  .  . Alter’d from Shakespeare, by the late Mr. Betterton. London, for W.  Chetwood, and T.  Jauncey, [_c. _ 1720]. 8vo. _BM; Yale, Folg, Hunt. _ Since _The sequel_ was the only “second” part of _Henry IV_ availablebefore Congreve’s death, it must have been one of the six plays in No. 408. The other five, as Dr. Giles Dawson of the Folger ShakespeareLibrary has kindly pointed out, were all available about 1720-1721 inthe second edition of the T.  Johnson octavos and may be consulted at theFolger Library. Furthermore, these octavos were small, about the size ofthe duodecimos of the period, and would have fitted well with _Thesequel_ into a volume which might easily have been classified accordingto size as 12mo. 409 Miscellaneous Poems & Translations vizt. Statius Thebais &c. [8vo. Lond. 1712. 20] Miscellaneous poems and translations. By several hands. London, forBernard Lintott, 1712. 8vo. [Begins with Pope’s trans. Of the _Thebais_of Statius and ends with Pope’s _Rape of the Lock_. ] Case 260 (i) (a). _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 410 ---- Poems vizt. Temple of Death &c[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1701. 20] A collection of poems: viz. The temple of death: by the Marquis ofNormanby .  .  . &c. London, for Daniel Brown and Benjamin Tooke, 1701. 8vo. [Congreve’s Epilogue to _Oroonko_ is printed on pp. 280-2. ] Case 151 (e). _BM; Yale, Folg, LC, Newberry, Texas, Clark. _ 411 ---- Poems by ye D. Of Bucks Cowley &c[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1692. 20] [Charles Gildon (1665-1724)]. Miscellany poems upon several occasions:consisting of original poems, by the late Duke of Buckingham, Mr. Cowley, Mr. Milton, Mr. Prior, Mrs. Behn, Mr. Tho. Brown, &c. London, for Peter Buck, 1692. 8vo. [Contains some of Congreve’s earliest printedwork, including “Upon a Lady’s Singing, Pindarick Ode, by Mr. Congreve, ”pp. 35-40. Other poems that may be Congreve’s are “The Decoy, a Song: ByW.  C. , ” pp. 64-65, and “The Masque, a Song: By W.  C. , ” pp. 71-72. ] Wing G733A; Case 197. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Texas, Clark. _ 412 ---- Poems by Oxford & Cambride Hands [8vo. --- 20] Possibly the same as No. 446 (or the issue of [1709]). 413 ---- Poems on ye Victories of Blenheim & Ramil- -lies by ye most Eminent Hands [Fol London 1708. 15] No. 413 was apparently a specially bound volume made up of Addison’s_Campaign_ (which had appeared twice in 1705 and again in 1708), Congreve’s _A Pindarique Ode on the Victorious Progress of her MajestiesArms_ (1706), and other poems. In Sotheby’s catalogue for the LeedsSale, 1930, item No. 5 reads as follows: “Addison (J. ), William Congreveand others. A Collection of Poems .  .  . Upon the Victories of Blenheimand Ramillies, _panelled calf. Folio. _ 1708. ” And perhaps it was thissame unique volume that Sotheby advertised for sale on 23 November 1931:“A Collection of Poems .  .  . Upon the Victories of Blenheim andRamilies. By the most Eminent Hands, 1708. ” (_CHEL_, II, 188) 414 ---- Poems by Mr. Steele [8vo Lond. 1714 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. See No. 568. 415 ---- Tea-Table [24to . .. . . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Allan Ramsay (1686-1758). The tea-table miscellany. Edinburgh, by Mr. Thomas Ruddiman, for Allan Ramsey, 1724. Small 12mo. Case 333. _Leeds; LC, Hunt. _ 416 Microcosmographie or Characters [24to Lond. 1629 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. See No. 231, an entry by the first hand, which lists Congreve’s copy ofthe _Microcosmographie_ (1629) as 12mo. This entry by the third hand(No. 416) probably refers to the copy mentioned in No. 231, and no doubterrs in giving the format as 24to. The seven known editions of the_Microcosmographie_ between 1628 and 1638 are all in 12mo. 417 Miscellaneous Letters & Essays [8vo. Lond. 1694. 8] [Charles Gildon, 1665-1724. ] Miscellaneous letters and essays, onseveral subjects. Philosophical, moral, historical, critical, amorous, &c. In prose and verse. Directed to John Dryden, Esq; the HonourableGeo. Granville, Esq; Walter Moyle, Esq; Mr. Dennis, Mr. Congreve, andother eminent men of the age. By several gentlemen and ladies. London, for Benjamin Bragg, 1694. 8vo. Wing G732. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 418 Miscellanies in Prose & Verse See Dr Swift’s [. .. . - - ---- 28] See No. 553. 419 Medicina Statica vide Sanctorius [. .. . . .. . 4] See No. 563. 420 Miscellanies, Pope & Swift - 3 vol. [8{vo}. Lond:1727. 27] Entry by the second hand. Miscellanies in prose and verse. London, for Benjamin Motte, 1727. 8vo. [The fourth and fifth volumes appeared in 1732 and 1735, afterCongreve’s death. ] Case 343-344(?). _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 421 Newton’s (Sir Isaac) Opticks [4to. London 1704. 2] Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727). Opticks: or, A treatise of the reflexions, refractions, inflexions and colours of light. London, Sam. Smith, andBenj. Walford, 1704. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Illinois, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 469 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 422 Nature of Man, a Poem. _L. Paper_[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1711. 28] [Sir Richard Blackmore (d. 1729)]. The nature of man. A poem. In threebooks. London, for Sam. Buckley, and sold by the booksellers of Londonand Westminster, 1711. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Newberry, Clark. _ 423 Nereides, Sea Eclogues [8vo. Ib. 1712. 20] [William Diaper (d. 1717)]. Nereides: or, Sea-eclogues. London, by J.  H. For E.  Sanger, 1712. 8vo. [Poetic dedication to Congreve. ] _BM; Harv, LC, Newberry. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 190 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 424 Natalis Comitis Mythologiæ Libri X [8vo. Genev. 1651 7] Natale Conti (1520?-1580?). Natalis Comitis Mythologiæ, siveExplicationis fabularum, libri decem. Genevæ, sumptibus Petri Chouët, 1651. 8vo. _BM; Yale, Washington and Lee, Chicago. _ 425 Nouvelles toutes Nouvelles [12mo. Amsterd 1710. 26] Chevalier de Mailly (d. _c. _ 1724). Nouvelles toutes nouvelles, parM.  D. L.  C. A Amsterdam, aux dépens d’Estienne Roger, 1710. 12mo. _BM; Minnesota. _ 426 Newton’s Chronology, unbound [4to Lon. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727). The chronology of ancient kingdomsamended. London, for J.  Tonson, and J.  Osborn and T.  Longman, 1728. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 427 Ovid’s Metamorphoses in XV. Books: Translated by ye most Eminent Hands: and adorn’d wth. Sculptures. Large Paper [Fol. Lond. 1717. 16] Publius Ovidius Naso (43 B. C. -A. D. 17). Ovid’s metamorphoses in fifteenbooks. Translated by the most eminent hands. [J.  Dryden, J.  Addison, W.  Congreve, etc. ]. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1717. Fol. Case 298. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this large paper edition was item No. 486 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. Congreve translated a part of Book X. 428 ---- Ditto Translated by G. Sandys [Fol. Ib. 1640. 15] Ovids metamorphosis Englished, mythologiz’d, and represented in figures. .  .  . By G[eorge] S[andys]. London, J.  L[egatt] for Andrew Hebb, 1640. Fol. STC 18968. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Illinois, Hunt. _ 429 ---- Art of Love, Together with his Remedy of Love &c Translated into Eng. Verse By Eminent Hands - & adorn’d wth. Cuts. _Large Papr. _ [8vo. Ib. 1709. 28] Ovid’s Art of love. In three books. Together with his remedy of love. Translated into English verse by several eminent hands [J.  Dryden, W.  Congreve, and N.  Tate. ] Adorn’d with cuts. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1709. 8vo. Case 252. _BM; Harv, Folg, Clark. _ Congreve translated Book III of the _Art of Love_, pp. 179-267. 430 ---- Ditto. Small Paper [8vo. Ib. 1709. 20] See No. 429. _NYP. _ 431 ---- Epistles Translated by Several Hands [8vo. Ib. 1681. 20] Ovid’s epistles, translated by several hands. [Preface by Dryden. ] Thesecond edition, with the addition of a new epistle. London, for JacobTonson, 1681. 8vo. Wing O660. _BM; Harv, Folg, Michigan, Clark. _ 432 Ovidii Elegiarum sive Amorum Libri [------ . .. . 6] P. Ovidii Nasonis amorum libri tres. Cum interpretatione gallica etrecentioribus notis. Lutetiæ Parisorum, apud viduam Petri Lamy, 1661. 8vo. _BM; Yale, Columbia, Iowa. _ 433 ---- Opera 3 Vol. _Foliis deauratis. _ apud. Jac. Tonson [12mo. Ib. 1715 24] P. Ovidii Nasonis opera tribus tomis comprehensa. Londini, ex officinâJacobi Tonson, & Johannis Watts, 1715. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Pennsylvania, Chicago. _ 434 ---- his Art of Love English’d; wth: ye Loves of Hero & Leander a Mock Poem [12mo. Ib. 1684. 20] Ovid de arte amandi, and The remedy of love Englished. As also The lovesof Hero and leander, a mock poem: together with choice poems, and rarepieces of drollery. London, printed in the year 1684. 12mo. Wing O653. _Yale, Folg. _ 435 Ogelby off the Roads [8vo Lond. 1727 4] Entry by the second hand. John Ogilby (1600-1676). Britannia depicta or Ogilby improv’d; being acorrect copy of Mr. Ogilby’s actual survey of all ye direct & principalcross roads in England and Wales. London, Tho. Bowles, 1720. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry. _ A copy of a 1727 edition has not been located. 436 Olearius’s Travels, by Davis; V. Ambassador’s [Fol. Lond. 1669 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. See No. 4. 437 Ovidii Amorum Lib. [8vo . .. . . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. See No. 432. 438 Oak and Dunghill, a Fable [Fol. Ib. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. [William Broome (1689-1745?)]. The oak, and the dunghill. A fable inverse. London, J.  Roberts, 1728. Fol. _BM; Harv, Illinois. _ 439 Ocean, an Ode [. .. . Ib. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Edward Young (1683-1765). Ocean. An ode. Occasion’d by His Majesty’slate royal encouragement of the sea-service. .  .  . By the author of Theuniversal passion. London, for Tho. Worrall, 1728. 4to. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Texas, Clark. _ 440 Ovington’s Voyage to Surat Anno 1689 [8vo. London 1696 28] John Ovington (1653-1731). A voyage to Suratt, in the year, 1689. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1696. 8vo. Wing O701. _BM; Yale, NYP, LC, Newberry. _ 441 Oldham’s Works, with his Remains [8vo. Ib. 1686. 20] John Oldham (1653-1683). The works of Mr. John Oldham, together with hisremains. 4 pt. London, for Jo. Hindmarsh, 1686. 8vo. Brooks 21; Wing O228. _BM; Yale, Folg. _ Congreve’s copy, with the signature “Will: Congreve” on the title page, was item No. 479 in the Leeds Sale of 1930 (where the date was wronglygiven as 1687) and is now in the Yale Library. An examination of thiscopy shows that it belongs to the last of the three editions of 1686. 442 Oughtred’s Circles of Proportion [8vo. Oxon 1660 8] William Oughtred (1575-1660). The circles of proportion and thehorizontal instrument. Oxford, by W.  Hall, for R.  Davis, 1660. 8vo. Wing O572. _BM; Cincinnati, Michigan. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 485 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 443 Officiers de Bouche [8vo. Par. 1716. 32] See No. 240. 444 Otway’s (Tho. ) Plays [4to. London 1687. 27] Thomas Otway (1652-1685). Apparently these “Plays” consisted of separatequartos which Congreve had bound in one volume. Such a volume, withCongreve’s signature on the title page, was item No. 484 in the LeedsSale, 1930. The date assigned to this volume is probably derived fromone of the two quartos dated 1687: _Alcibiades_ (Wing O540--_BM; Harv, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt_) and _The Souldiers Fortune_ (Wing O564--_BM;Harv, LC, Newberry_). 445 Orpheus Britannicus vide Purcell See No. 462. 446 Oxford & Cambridge Miscellany Poems [8vo --- 20] [Elijah Fenton (1683-1730), ed. ] Oxford and Cambridge miscellany poems. London, for Bernard Lintott, [1708]. 8vo. Case 248. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Texas. _ Lintott brought out another issue in [1709]. _NYP, Princeton, LC, Chicago. _ 447 L: Ortographe Francoise par Ozinde [4to. Lon. 1725 30] Entry by the second hand. J. B. Ozinde. Pratique de l’ortographe et de la pronunciation de lalangue françoise. A Londres, chez Henry Woodfall, 1725. 8vo. _Bodleian. _ 448 Plauti: Comediæ Notis Variorum 4 vol. [8vo. Amstelmi: 29] Entry by the second hand. M. Acci Plauti Comœdiæ. Accedit commentarius ex variorum notis &observationibus, ex recensione Joh. Frederici Gronovii. Editionovissima. Amstelodami, ex typographia Blaviana, 1684. 2 vol. 8vo. _BM, Royal Library (The Hague); NYP, LC, Michigan. _ Perhaps Congreve had a copy specially bound in four volumes. 449 Prideaux Connexion of the Old & New Testam[. ] [Fol Lond. 1717 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand crossed through but legible. See No. 454. 450 Plautus’s 3 Comedies made Eng. [8vo. Lond. 1694 20] Titus Maccius Plautus (254?-184 B. C. ). Plautus’s comedies, Amphitryon, Epidicus, and Rudens, made English: with critical remarks upon eachplay. London, for Abel Swalle and T.  Child, 1694. 8vo. Wing P2415. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 451 Plautii Comœdiæ Notis _Lambini_. Apd. Maceum [Fol. Paris 1587 16] M. Accius Plautus ex fide, atque auctoritate complurium librorummanuscriptorum opera Dionys. Lambini emendatus & comentariis explicatus. Lutetiæ [Paris], apud Bartholomæum Macæum, 1587. Fol. _BN; Harv. _ A copy of this edition was a part of item No. 417 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 452 ---- Fabulæ ex Recensione _Doussica_ [12mo. Franc. 1604 5] Fabulæ. . . . Ex recensione Dousica, etc. Francofurti, excudebat JoannesSaurius, impensis Petri Kopffij, 1604. 12mo. _BM; Mount Holyoke. _ 453 Paul’s (Father) History of ye Council of Trent. Eng. _by Brent_ [Fol. Lond. 1620. 15] Paolo Sarpi (1552-1623). The historie of the Councel of Trent. .  .  . Written in Italian .  .  . Translated into English by Nathanael Brent. London, Robert Barker and John Bill, 1620. Fol. STC 21761. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 454 Prideaux’s (Humph. ) Connection of ye Hist. Of ye Old & New Testament. 2 Vols[. ] [Fol. Ib. 1717. 15] Humphrey Prideaux (1648-1724). The Old and New Testament connected inthe history of the Jews and neighbouring nations. 2 pt. London, forR.  Knaplock and J.  Tonson, 1717-1718. Fol. _BM; Washington and Lee, Indiana. _ 455 Pembroke’s Arcadia, written by Sir Ph. Sidney. With his Life & D. [Fol Ib. 1674. 15] Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586). The Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia. Thethirteenth edition. London, for George Calvert, 1674. Fol. Wing S3770. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 600 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 456 Poetæ Graæcæ Principes, apd. H. Steph. [Fol. Paris 1566 15] Henri Estienne (1528-1598). Poetae græci principes heroici carminis, &alii nonnulli. [Paris], excudebat Henricus Stephanus, 1566. Fol. _Royal College of Physicians (London); Harv, LC, Illinois. _ 457 Pausaniæ accurata Græciæ De- -scriptio Gr. Lat. [Fol Hanov 1613 15] Pausanius (fl. 174 A. D. ). Pausaniæ accurata Græciæ descriptio .  .  . A Guilielmo Xylandro Augustano diligenter recognita. Hanoviæ, typisWechelianis, apud hæredes Claudi Marnii, 1613. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, Chicago. _ 458 Prior’s (Mat. ) Poems - - Large Papr. [Fol. Lond 1718 16] Matthew Prior (1664-1721). Poems on several occasions. L.  P. London, forJacob Tonson, and John Barber, 1718. Fol _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ Congreve’s name appears in the printed list of subscribers. A copy ofthis large paper edition was item No. 522 (also No. 523) in the LeedsSale, 1930. 459 ---- Ditto - - - Small Papr[. ] [Fol. Ib. 1718. 15] See No. 458. 460 ---- Ditto [8vo. Ib. 1709. 20] Poems on several occasions. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1709. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this was item No. 521 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 461 Poems on Sevl. Occasions by Mrs S. F[. ] [12mo. Ib. ___ 20] S[arah] F[yge Egerton]. Poems on several occasions, together with apastoral. By Mrs. S.  F. London, printed, and are to be sold by J.  Nutt, [1710?]. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry. _ An earlier edition, dated 1706, is probably represented by No. 255above. The pastoral is dedicated to Congreve. 462 Purcell’s (Hen. ) Orpheus Britannicus. Or Collection of Songs 2 Vols[. ] [Fol. Ib. 1698. 21] Henry Purcell (1658-1695). Orpheus Britannicus. A collection of all thechoicest songs for one, two, and three voices. London, byJ.  Heptinstall, for Henry Playford, 1698-1702. 2 vol. Fol. [Vol. II, 1702: by William Pearson, for Henry Playford] Wing P4218; Day and Murrie, _English Song Books_, No. 166. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Hunt. _ Congreve’s copy, with his signature on the title page of the firstvolume, was item No. 459 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 463 Pinto’s Voyages & Travels [Fol. Ib. 1663. 2] Fernam Mendes Pinto (1509?-1583). The voyages and adventures, ofFerdinand Mendez Pinto, a Portugal: during his travels for the space ofone and twenty years in the kingdoms of Ethiopia, China, Tartaria, Cauchinchina, Calaminham, Siam, Pegu, Japan, and a great part of theEast-Indies. With a relation and description of most of the placesthereof; their religion, laws, riches, customs, and government in thetime of peace and war. Where he five times suffered shipwrack, wassixteen times sold, and thirteen times made a slave. .  .  . Done intoEnglish by H[enry] C[ogan]. London, by J.  Macock, to be sold by HenryHerringman, 1663. Fol. Wing M1706. _BM; Yale, Pennsylvania, LC, Newberry. _ A copy of this edition was part of item No. 480 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. In _Love for Love_ Congreve refers to Pinto as a “Liar of the firstmagnitude. ” 464 Pindari Opera. Cura Schmidii [4to. Witeb. 1616 21] Pindar (518-438 B. C. ) . . . Hoc est Pindari lyricorum principis. .  .  . Opera Erasmi Schmidii Delitiani. [Witebergæ], sumptibus ZachariæSchureri, 1616. 4to. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 465 Pope’s (Mr Alex. ) Translation of ye ILIAD of Homer in VI. Vols. _Large Paper_ [4to. Lond 1715 17] Alexander Pope (1688-1744). The Iliad of Homer. Translated by Mr. Pope. London, by W.  Bowyer, for Bernard Lintott, 1715-1720. 6 vol. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was part of item No. 312 and also of item No. 313in the Leeds Sale, 1930. Congreve’s name appears in the list ofsubscribers printed in the first volume. Although the regularsubscribers received the first volume on 6 June 1715 (see the _Post Boy_for Tuesday, 31 May 1715), Congreve received his copy five days inadvance, as shown by Congreve’s holographic receipt preserved at theHuntington Library: “June 1st: 1715 Received of Mr. Lintott the firstvolume of Mr Popes translation of Homer by me Wm Congreve. ” Pope’sdedication of his _Iliad_ to Congreve appears in the last volume, 1720, pp. 220-221. 466 ---- Translation ye ODYSSEY in 5 Vols _Large Paper_ [4to. Ib. 1725. 11] The Odyssey of Homer. London, for Bernard Lintott, 1725-1726. 5 vol. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was part of item No. 312 and also of item No. 313in the Leeds Sale, 1930. Congreve’s name appears in the printed list of subscribers. 467 ---- Works - - _Large Paper_ [4to. Ib. 1717. 2] The works of Mr. Alexander Pope. London, by W.  Bowyer, for BernardLintot, 1717. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1172 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 468 Ponti’s (Sieur de) Memoirs Eng. By Charles Cotton [Fol. Ib. 1694. 15] Louis de Pontis (1583-1670). Memoirs of the Sieur de Pontis; who servedin the army six and fifty years, under King Henry IV. Lewis the XIII. And Lewis the XIV. .  .  . Faithfully Englished by Charles Cotton, Esq. London, by F.  Leach, for James Knapton, 1694. Fol. Wing P2807. _BM; Yale, Folg, Newberry, Clark. _ 469 Pratique du Theatre [4to. Par. 1657 14. ] François Hédelin, Abbé d’Aubignac (1604-1676). La pratique du theatre, œuvre tres-necessaire a tous ceux qui veulent s’appliquer à lacomposition des poëmes dramatiques. A Paris, chez Antoine de Sommaville, 1657. 4to. _BM; Vassar, Chicago. _ For the English translation of this work see No.  10. 470 Plutarch’s Lives Translated by Several Hands 5 Vols. Wth. Cuts - - _Large Paper_ [8vo. London 1693 13] Plutarch (_c. _ A. D. 46-_after_ 120). Plutarch’s lives. Translated fromthe Greek, by several hands. London, by R.  E. For Jacob Tonson, 1693. 5vol. 8vo. Wing P2367. _Cambridge (Trinity College); Folg, Newberry. _ 471 Patru (Mr. De) Plaidoyers et Oeuvres Diverses [8vo. Paris 1681. 14] Olivier Patru (1604-1681). Plaidoyers et œuvres diverses de MonsieurPatru. .  .  . Nouvelle édition. 2 pt. Paris, chez SebastienMabre-Cramoisy, 1681. 8vo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 472 Polybius’s History of ye World. English’d by Sir _H: Sheers_ 2 Vols. [8vo. London 1693 13] Polybius (_c. _ 203?-_c. _ 120 B.  C). The history of Polybius. .  .  . Translated by Sir H.  S[hears]. To which is added, a character ofPolybius and his writings: by Mr. Dryden. London, for Samuel Briscoe, 1693. 2 vol. 8vo. Wing P2786. _BM; Harv, NYP (v. 2), Folg, LC, Clark. _ 473 Petronius Arbiter’s Satyr. English’d by _Mr Burnaby_ [8vo. Ib. 1694. 8] Titus Petronius Arbiter (d. 66 A. D. ). The satyr of Titus PetroniusArbiter, a Roman knight. With its fragments, recover’d at Belgrade. MadeEnglish by Mr. Burnaby of the Middle-Temple, and another hand. London, for Samuel Briscoe, 1694. 8vo. Wing P1881. _BM; Harv, Cleveland Public, Clark. _ 474 Plinii Secundi Historia Naturalis, Variorum Notis 3 Vol. [8vo. Lugd. Bat. 1669. 4] Gaius Plinus Secundus (A. D. 23/4-79). C. Plinii Secundi naturalishistoriæ. Lugd. Batav. , apud Hackios, 1669. 3 vol. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Michigan. _ 475 Parnell’s (Tho. ) Poems [8vo. Lond. 1722. 20] Thomas Parnell (1679-1718). Poems on several occasions. .  .  . Published[with a dedication, in verse] by Mr. Pope. London, for B.  Lintot, 1722. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 476 Pomey Pantheon Mythicum, seu Fabu -losa Deorum Historia [12mo. Ultraj. 1697. 24] François Antoine Pomey (1618-1673). Pantheum mythicum, seu Fabulosadeorum, historia, hoc primo epitomes eruditionis volumine, breviterdilucidéque comprehensa. Editio quinta. Ultrajecti, apud Guiljelmum vande Water, 1697. 12mo. _BM. _ 477 Patin (Guy) Lettres Choises 3 Tom. [12mo. Par. 1692. 12] Guy Patin (1602-1672). Lettres choisies. A Paris, chez Jean Petit, 1692. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Pennsylvania, LC, Newberry. _ 478 ---- Lettres nouvelles 2 Tom. [12mo. Amst. 1718. 12] Nouvelles lettres . . . Tirées du cabinet de Mr. Charles Spon. A Amsterdam, chez Steenhouwer & Uytwerf, 1718. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 479 Phillippes’s Mathematical Manual [. .. . Lond. 1678 6] Henry Phillippes. A mathematical manual. London, by A.  Clark, forW.  Fisher, E.  Thomas, J.  Northcot, and E.  Harlock, 1677. 8vo. [Includedare tables printed in 1678. ] Wing P2048A. _Michigan. _ 480 Platon Oeuvres avec des Remarques 2 Tom[. ] [12mo. Paris 1699 12] Plato (e. 429-347 B. C. ). Les œuvres de Platon [the dialogues only]traduites en françois, avec des remarques .  .  . [by A.  Dacier. ] A Paris, chez Jean Anisson, 1699. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; NYP. _ 481 Pedantius, Comœdia [12mo. Lond. 1631. 5] Pedantius. Comœdia, olim. Cantabrig. Acta in Coll. Trin. Londini, excudebat W.  S. , impensis Roberti Mylbourn, 1631. 12mo. STC 19524. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 482 le Puits de la Veritè, Nouvelle Gauloise [12mo. Amst. 1699. 6] Charles Rivière Dufresny (1654-1724). Le puits de la verité, nouvellegauloise. Suivant la copie imprimée à Paris. A Amsterdam, chez HenryDesbordes, 1699. 12mo. _Acad. Lugduni Batavorum (Leyden); LC. _ 483 Phædri Fabularum Æsopicarum Lib. V. _Foliis deauratis. _ apd. Tonson [12mo. Lond. 1713. 24] Phaedrus (_c. _ 15 B. C. -_c. _ A. D. 50). Phædri .  .  . Fabularum Æsopiarumlibri quinque. Londini, ex officinâ Jacobi Tonson, & Johannis Watts, 1713. 12mo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 484 Il Pastor Fido del Guarini _con Fig. _ [24to. Amsterd. 1678. 5] Giovanni Battista Guarini (1538-1612). Il pastor fido, tragicomediapastorale. In Amsterdam, nella stamperia del S.  D. Elsevier. Et inParigi si vende appresso Thomaso Jolly, 1678. 16mo. _BM; Boston Public. _ 485 Poems on Blenheim vide Miscellaneous Poems [Fol. --- 15] See No. 413. 486 Polexander vide History of &c[. ] [Fol. --- 2] See No. 308. 487 Philippiques de Demosthene [4to. Paris. 1701. 22] See No. 212. 488 Philosophiè de Gassendi 7 Tom[. ] [12mo. Lyon 1684. 12] See No. 272. 489 Pharsale de Lucain [12mo. Haye 1700. 24] See No. 345. 490 Plays a Mad World my Masters &c[. ] [4to. --- 28] See No. 407(a). 491 ---- Merry Wives of Windsor &c[. ] [12mo ---- 30] See No. 408. 492 Pemberton’s View of Newton’s Philosophy [4to Lond. 1728. . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Henry Pemberton (1694-1771). A view of Sir Isaac Newton’s philosophy. London, printed by S.  Palmer, 1728. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1149 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 493 Quintiliani Institut. Oratoriæ Apud _Rob. Stephanum_ [4to. Paris 1542 22] Marcus Fabius Quintilianus (First century after Christ). M.  FabiiQuintiliani oratoris eloquentissimi, institutionum oratoriarum. Parisiis, ex officina Rob. Stephani typographi regii, 1542. 4to. _BM; Illinois. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1272 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 494 Quevedo Oeuvres 2d. Tome, contenant le VII. Visions [12mo. Bruss. 1699. 29] Francisco Gomez de Quevedo Villegas (1580-1645). Les oeuvres. .  .  . Seconde partie. Contenante les sept visions. A Brusselles, chez Josse deGrieck, 1699. 12mo. _BM. _ 495 ---- Oeuvres 2 Tomes, avec Fig. [12mo. Ib. 1718. 26] Les œuvres. A Bruxelles, chez Joseph t’Serstevens, 1718. 2 tom. 12mo. _Royal Library (The Hague). _ 496 Quinte Curce de la Traduction de Vaugelas. [12mo Amst. 1696. 11] Quintus Curtius Rufus (fl. A. D. 50). Quinte Curce, de la vie & desactions d’Alexandre le Grand. De la traduction de M. De Vaugelas. A Amsterdam, chez Henry Wetstein, 1696. 8vo. _BM. _ 497 Quintus Curtius---_Foliis deauratis. _ apd Tonson [12mo Lond. 1716. 24] Quinti Curtii Rufi de rebus gestis Alexandri Magni libri. [Ed. MichaelMaittaire. ] Londini, ex officinâ Jacobi Tonson, & Johannis Watts, 1716. 12mo. _BM; Harv, LC, Ohio Wesleyan, Hunt. _ 498 Quincy’s Dispensatory See Dispensatory [---- - - - - 4] See No. 213. 499 Raii (Jo. ) Historia Plantarum 2 Vol. _Charta Majori_ [Fol. Lond 1686 16] John Ray (1627-1705). Historia plantarum, etc. Londini, typis MariæClark, prostant apud Henricum Faithorne & Joannem Kersey, 1686-1704. 3tom. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Michigan. _ Apparently Congreve had only the first two volumes. These were listedunder No. 1181 in the Hornby Castle Sale, 1930, as “fol. 1686-8. ” 500 Rycaut’s (Sir Paul) Royal Commentaries of Peru. Illustrated wth. Sculptures [Fol. Ib. 1688. 15] Garcilasso de la Vega, el Inca (_c. _ 1540-1616). The royal commentariesof Peru. .  .  . Rendered into English, by Sir Paul Rycaut. London, byMiles Flesher, for Jacob Tonson, 1688. Fol. Wing G217. _Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ Congreve’s copy was probably of the issue by Jacob Tonson, but it couldhave belonged to any one of the other three folio issues of 1688: WingG214 (By Miles Flesher, for Richard Tonson)--_Bodleian; Virginia_; WingG215 (By Miles Flesher, for Samuel Heyrick)--_Cambridge; Yale, Folg, Michigan_; Wing G216 (By Miles Flesher, for Christopher Wilkinson)--_BM;Harv, Chicago, Hunt_. Copies of a 1688 folio edition were listed underNos. 1199 and 1223 in the Hornby Castle Sale, 1930. 501 Rhodigini (Lud. Cœlii) Lectiones Antiquæ. Apd. Wecheli Heredes [Fol. - ---- 1599. 15] Ludovicus Coelius Richerius (1450-1520). Ludovici Caelii Rhodiginilectionum antiquarum libri XXX .  .  . Postrema editio. [Frankfurt], apudheredes Andreae Wecheli Claudium Marnium & Joannem Aubrium, 1599. Fol. _BM; Harv, Library Company of Philadelphia (Ridgway Branch). _ Congreve’s copy, with the signature “Wm. Congreve” on the title page, was item No. 350 in Catalogue No. 335 of Myers & Co. , 1941; also itemNo. 423 in the Meyerstein Sale, Sotheby & Co. , December 17, 1952. Thebook carries the bookplate of the Duke of Leeds and the penciled note:“bought at Hornby Castle, ” evidently in the sale of 1930. 502 Rousseau (Mr. De) Oeuvres diverses 2 Tom. _Ch. Maj. _ et Corio Turcico undique deaurato [4to. Lond. 1723. 17] [ _apd. Tonson_ ] Jean Baptiste Rousseau (1670-1741). Œuvres diverses de Mr. Rousseau. Nouvelle edition. A Londres, Jacob Tonson & Jean Watts, 1723. 2 tom. 4to. _BM; Harv, LC, Clark. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 549 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 503 ---- Oeuvres [12mo. Rotterd. 1719. 30] Les œuvres choisies du Sr. Rousseau, contenant ses odes, odes sacrées del’édition de Soleure, & cantates. A Rotterdam, chez Fritsch & Bohm, 1719. 12mo. _BM. _ 504 Regis (Pierre Silvain) Cours entier de Philosophie. 3 Tom. [4to. Amsterd 1691 14] Pierre Silvain Regis (1632-1707). Cours entier de philosophie, ouSystème general selon les principes de M.  Descartes. A Amsterdam, auxdépens des Huguetan, 1691. 3 tom. 4to. _BM; Yale, Princeton, Chicago. _ 505 Rogers on ye 39 Articles of ye Ch. Of Engd. [4to. London 1661 14] Thomas Rogers (d. 1616). The faith, doctrine, and religion, professed, and protected in the realm of England .  .  . In thirty-nine articles. London, by John Field, to be sold by George Sawbridge, 1661. 4to. Wing R1833. _BM; Boston Public, Illinois, Wisconsin. _ 506 Rabelais’s Works 2 Vols[. ] [8vo. Lond. 1708. 28] François Rabelais (1494?-1553). The whole works of F.  Rabelais, M.  D. London, for James Woodward, 1708. 2 vol. 8vo. _BM; Cleveland Public, Illinois. _ 507 Roscommon’s (Earl of. ) Poems. _L. Paper. _ [8vo. Ib. 1717. 19] Wentworth Dillon, Earl of Roscommon (1633?-1685). Poems. .  .  . To whichis added, An essay on poetry, by the Earl of Mulgrave, now Duke ofBuckingham. Together with poems by Mr. Richard Duke. London, forJ.  Tonson, 1717. 8vo. _BM; Ham, Folg, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 548 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 508 Rochester’s (Earl of) Poems, With ye Frag. Of Valentinian [8vo. Ib. 1691. 20] John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (1647-1680). Poems, &c. On severaloccasions: with Valentinian, a tragedy. [Third edition. ] London, forJacob Tonson, 1691. 8vo. Wing R1756. _Bodleian; Harv, Folg, Chicago, Hunt. _ 509 Rapin’s Reflections on Aristotle’s Art of Poetry [8vo. Ib. 1674. 8] Rene Rapin (1621-1687). Reflections on Aristotle’s treatise of poesie. London, by T.  N. For H.  Herringman, 1674. 8vo. Wing R270. _BM; Yale, NYP, Folg, Newberry. _ A translation by Thomas Rymer. 510 ---- Oeuvres diverses ---- 2 Tomes [8vo. Amst. 1686. 12] Œuvres diverses . . . Concernant les belles lettres. A Amsterdam, chezAbraham Wolfgang, 1686. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Washington State College. _ 511 Regulating ye Silver Coin made easy [8vo. 1696. 8] [Samuel Pratt (1659?-1723)]. The regulating silver coin, madepracticable and easie, to the government and subject. Humbly submittedto the consideration of both houses of Parliament. By a lover of hiscountry. London, for Henry Bonwick, 1696. 8vo. Wing P3184. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Chicago, Hunt. _ 512 Reignier (L’Abbe) sur le Premier Livre d’Iliade [8vo. Paris 1700 18] François Séraphin, Abbé Regnier-Desmarais (1632-1713). Le premier livrede l’Iliade en vers françois. Avec une dissertation sur quelquesendroits d’Homere. A Paris, chez Jean Anisson, 1700. 8vo. _BN; LC. _ 513 Roland l’Amoureux 2 Vol. Avec Fig. [12mo. Ib. 1717. 23] Matheo Maria Boyardo, Conte di Scandiano (_c. _ 1434-1494). Nouvelletraduction de Roland L’Amoureux. A Paris, chez Pierre Ribou, 1717. 2tom. 12mo. _BN; Clark. _ 514 Racine (Mr. De) Oeuvres 2 Tom. [12mo Ib. 1697. 25] Jean Baptiste Racine (1639-1691). Œuvres. A Paris, chez Claude Barbin(or D.  Thierry), 1697. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Harv. _ 515 Religion of a Church of Engd. Woman [8vo. Lond. 1705. 14] Mary Astell (1668-1731). The Christian religion, as profess’d by adaughter of the Church of England. London, by S.  H. For R.  Wilkin, 1705. 8vo. _BM; Newberry. _ 516 Retz (Card) Memoires 5 Tomes [12mo. Amst. 1718 11] Jean François Paul de Gondi, Cardinal de Retz (1614-1679). Mémoires ducardinal de Retz, contenant ce qui s’est passé de plus remarquable enFrance, pendant les premieres années du regne de Louis XIV. Premièrepartie. A Amsterdam, [no printer given, ] 1718. 5 tom. Small 8vo. _BN; Harv, NYP, Ohio State. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1292 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 517 ---- Ditto Translated, 4 Vols. & bound in Turky Leather [8vo. Lond. 1723 30] Memoirs of the Cardinal de Retz. . . . To which are added some otherpieces written by the Cardinal de Retz, or explanatory to these memoirs. Translated from the French [by P.  Davall]. With notes. London, for JacobTonson, 1723. 4 vol. 12mo. _BM; Pennsylvania, LC, Oberlin. _ 518 Raymond’s Voyage through Italy [12mo. Ib. 1648. 6] John Raymond. An itinerary contayning a voyage, made through Italy, inthe yeare 1646, and 1647. London, Humphrey Moseley, 1648. 12mo. Wing R415. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ Congreve’s copy (item No. 532 in the Leeds Sale, 1930), with Congreve’ssignature on the title page, is owned by E.  S. De Beer, Esq. , of London. The unusual flourishes in the signature suggest an early period inCongreve’s life. Mr. De Beer has shown (_Review of English Studies, VIII_ [1932], 74-77) that Congreve borrowed for his youthful novel_Incognita_ descriptive passages from Raymond’s _Itinerary_. 519 Religio Medici, wth: Annotations [12mo. Ib. 1656. 6] Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682). Religio medici. The fourth edition, corrected and amended. London, by E.  Cotes for Andrew Crook, 1656. 8vo. Wing B5172. _BM; Harv, Folg, Illinois, Clark. _ 520 la Religieuse Amoureuse, ou le Comte de Clare [12mo. __Col. 1695. 26] Mme. De Tenain. La religieuse interessée et amoureuse, avec l’histoiredu comte de Clare. Nouvelle galante. A Cologne, chez* * *, 1695. 12mo. _BM; Yale. _ 521 Rowe’s Lucan vide Lucan &c[. ] [---- . .. . 16] See No. 343. 522 Relation de l’Invasion de L’Espagne p les Maures [12mo. Haye 1699. 11] See No. 302. 523 Roman Antiquities See Kennet [---- - ---- 11] See No. 341. 524 Rowe’s Pythagoras [8vo. Lond. 1707. 13] See No. 365. 525 Revolution de Repub. Romaine. 3 Tom. Vide Vertot [12mo. Paris 1719 11] See No. 633. 526 ---- de Portugal [12mo. Ib. 1711 11] See No. 634. 527 ---- de Suede [12mo. Ib. 695 11] See No. 635. 528 Histoire De:france En breqé Par P: Daniel [8vo. Paris: 30] Entry by the second hand. Père Gabriel Daniel (1649-1728). Abregé de l’histoire de France depuisl’etablissement de la monarchie françois e dans les Gaules. A Paris, chez Denys Mariette, Jean-Baptiste Delespine, Jean-Baptiste Coignard, 1723-24. 9 tom. Large 12mo. _BN; Library Company of Philadelphia (Ridgway Branch). _ 529 Reynard the Fox [4to. Lond. 1701 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. The most delectable history of Reynard the Fox. Newly corrected andpurged, from all grossness in phrase and matter. London, by T.  Ilive, for Edward Brewster, 1701. 4to, black letter. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 537 of the Leeds Sale, 1930. 530 Grounds of the Christian Religion [8vo Lond. 1724 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Anthony Collins (1676-1729). A discourse of the grounds and reasons ofthe Christian religion. In two parts. London, 1724. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, California. _ 531 Ramsay’s Travels of Cyrus, 2 vol. Unbound [8vo Ib. 1727 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Andrew Michael Ramsay (1686-1743). The travels of Cyrus. .  .  . To whichis annex’d, A discourse upon the theology and mythology of the ancients. London, sold by T.  Woodward and J.  Peele, 1727. 2 vols. 8vo. _Bodleian; Yale, Newberry. _ 532 Rolli’s Remarks on Voltaire’s essay on Epic Poetry unbound [8vo Ib. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Paolo Antonio Rolli (1687-1765). Remarks upon M.  Voltaire’s Essay on theepick poetry of the European nations. London, Tho. Edlin, 1728. 8vo. _BM. _ 533 Strabonis Rerum Geograph. Libri XVIII. Ex Recensione Casauboni [Fol. Paris 1620. 21] Strabo (64/63 B. C. -A. D. 21 at least). Strabonis rerum geographicarumlibri XVII. Isaacus Casaubonus recensuit. Lutetiæ Parisiorum, typisregiis, 1620. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Minnesota. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1272 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 534 Stow’s Survey of London [Fol. Lond. 1633 15] John Stow (1525?-1605). The survey of London. .  .  . Begunne first by thepaines and industry of John Stow, in the yeere 1598 .  .  . Now completelyfinished by the study and labour of A.  M[unday], H.  D[yson] and others, this present yeere 1633. London, Elizabeth Purslow, sold by NicholasBourne, 1633. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ Congreve’s copy, with the signature “William Congreve” on the titlepage, was item No. 625 of the Leeds Sale, 1930. STC 23345. 535 Spenser’s (Edmd. ) Works [Fol. Ib. 1679. 21] Edmund Spenser (1552?-1599). The works of that famous English poet, Mr. Edmond Spenser. London, by Henry Hills for Jonathan Edwin, 1679. Fol. Wing S4965. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 536 ---- Works, wth: ye Glossary. Pub. By Mr. Hughes. & Adorn’d with Cuts. 6 Vols[. ] [12mo. Ib. 1715. 19] The works of Mr. Edmund Spenser. . . . With a glossary explaining theold and obscure words. Publish’d by Mr. Hughes. London, for JacobTonson, 1715. 6 vol. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 614 in the Leeds Sale, 1930, butlisted as 8vo. 537 Stobæi Eclogarum Libri 2. Gr. Lat. Cum Interp. Canteri. Apd _Plantin_ [Fol. Antv. 1575 21] Johannes Stobaeus (5th century). Joannis Stobæi eclogarum libri duo.  .  . Interprete Gulielmo Cantero. Antverpiæ, ex officinâ ChristophoriPlantini, 1575. Fol. _BM; Harv, Johns Hopkins, Newberry. _ 538 ---- Sententiæ ex Thesauris Græ- -corum delectæ. In Lat. Sermo -nem traductæ a Gesnero [Fol. Tigur 1543 21] Sententiæ ex thesauris Græcorum delectæ .  .  . & in sermones sive locoscommunes digestae, nunc primum à Conrado Gesnero. Tiguri, excudebatChristoph. Froschoverus, 1543. Fol. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 539 Scapulæ Lexicon Gr. Lat. Cum Meursii Glossario contracto [Fol. Lugd. 1663 15] Joannes Scapula (fl. 1579). Joan. Scapulæ lexicon Græco-Latinum .  .  . Glossarium contractum. 2 pt. Lugduni, sumptibus Joannis AntoniiHuguetan, & Maroi Antonii Ravaud, 1663. Fol. _BM; Amherst, LC. _ 540 Suidæ Gr. Lat. Lexicon 2 Vol. Curâ Æmilii Porti [Fol. Col. Allob 1619. 21] Suidas, nunc primum integer Latinitate donatus .  .  . Opera & studioÆmilii Porti. [Gr. And Lat. ] Coloniæ Allobrogum, apud Petrum de laRouiere, 1619. 2 tom. Fol. [Vol. II: Genevæ, 1630. ] _BM; Harv, Illinois. _ 541 SHAKESPEARE’s Works old Edit[. ] [Fol. ------ 21] William Shakespeare (1564--1616). Mr. William Shakespeares comedies, histories, & tragedies. Published according to the true originallcopies. London, printed by Isaac Jaggard, and Ed. Blount, 1623. Fol. STC 22273. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ Congreve’s copy of Shakespeare’s first folio, with the signature “Will:Congreve” on the contents page (and “Charles Killigrew” on the flyleaf), is now in the Library of the University of Leeds, on loan fromthe Duke of Leeds. 542 ---- Ditto 6 Vols. Colla- =ted & corrected by _Mr. POPE. L.  Papr[. ]_ [4to. London 1725 29] The works of Shakespear. In six volumes. Collated and corrected by theformer editions, by Mr. Pope. London, J.  Tonson, 1725 (Vol.  I), 1723(Vols. II-VI). 6 vol. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 590 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. Congreve’s name appears in the printed list of subscribers. 543 Ditto small paper in 12 vols by Mr Pope [. .. . London 1723 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Apparently this was a set bound specially for Congreve in twelve volumesinstead of the regular six. A copy of this edition, described as “6vols. In 12, ” was listed under No. 1277 in the Hornby Castle Sale, 1930. 544 ---- Ditto 9 Vols. Wth Cuts _L. Paper_ [8vo. 1709. 19] The works of Mr. William Shakespear; in nine volumes. Adorn’d with cuts. Revis’d and corrected, with an account of the life and writings of theauthor. By N.  Rowe, Esq. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1709. 8vo. _Victoria and Albert; Folger, Pennsylvania. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 587 in the Leeds Sale, 1930, whereit was described as “6 vol. In 9, first octavo edition, large papercopy. ” This was one of perhaps six copies, all on large paper, bound innine instead of six volumes (see H.  L. Ford, _Shakespeare, 1700-1740_, p.  9). The copy in the Leeds Sale, now in the Folger ShakespeareLibrary, was almost certainly once in Congreve’s library. 545 ---- Collection of Poems in Turky Leather [12mo --- 27] A collection of poems, viz. I. Venus and Adonis. II. The rape ofLucrece. III. The passionate pilgrim. IV. Sonnets to sundry notes ofmusick. London, for Bernard Lintott [1709]. 8vo (12mo size). _BM; Yale, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 546 ---- 3d. Vol vizt. Merry Wives of Windsor &c[. ] [12mo. . .. . 30] Since no edition of Shakespeare printed before Congreve’s death had athird volume beginning with the _Merry Wives of Windsor_, No. 546 isapparently the same as No. 408, a specially bound duodecimo volumebeginning with the _Merry Wives_. But it is still not clear why a singlespecially bound volume should be called the “3d. ” 547 Sandy’s Ovid [Fol --- 15] See No. 428. 548 Salmon’s Dispensatory, see Dispensatory [---- . .. . 4] See No. 216. 549 Stanhope’s Charron vide Charron [---- . .. . 33] See No. 117. 550 Smith’s Cookery vide Court Cookery [---- . .. . 32] See No. 109. 551 Shirley’s Plays: _or the Valiant Welchman_. And also Carodoc ye Great [4to. _ 1663 8] This possibly consisted of _Two playes_, a quarto of 1657 (see WingS3490, citing the Huth Catalogue), and _The Valiant Welchman_. Or, _TheTrue Chronicle History of the Life and Valiant Deeds of Carodoc theGreat_. .  .  . Written by R.  A. Gent. London, for William Gilbertson, 1663. 4to. Wing A3698. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 552 ---- Six New Plays [8vo. __ 1653. 8] James Shirley (1596-1666). Six new playes. .  .  . Never printed before. London, for Humphrey Robinson and Humphrey Moseley, 1653. 8vo. Wing S3486. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 553 Swift’s (Jonathan) Miscellanies in Prose & Verse _Large Paper_ [8vo. Lond. 1711. 28] Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) [and Alexander Pope (1688-1744)]. Miscellanies in prose and verse. London, for John Morphew, 1711. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 638 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 554 ---- Tale of a Tub. With ye Figures. _5th Edit. L.  Papr. _ [8vo. Ib. 1710. 19] Jonathan Swift (1667-1745). A tale of a tub. Written for the universalimprovement of mankind. .  .  . The fifth edition. London, for John Nutt, 1710. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Newberry, Hunt. _ 555 Stanyan’s Grecian History _Vol 1. _ Adorn’d wth: Cuts _L.  Papr. _ [8vo. Ib. 1707. 13] Temple Stanyan (d. 1752). The Grecian history. .  .  . Adorn’d with cuts. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1707. 8vo. The second volume appeared in 1738, nine years after Congreve’s death. _BM. _ 556 ---- Account of Switzerland _Large Paper_ [8vo. Ib. 1714. 13] An account of Switzerland. Written in the year 1714. London, for JacobTonson, 1714. 8vo. _BM; LC, Texas, Newberry. _ 557 Syphilis or a Poetical History of the French Disease. Engd. By N.  Tate [8vo. Ib. 1686. 20] Girolamo Fracastoro (1483-1533). Syphilis: or, A poetical history of theFrench disease .  .  . Attempted in English by N[ahum] Tate. London, forJacob Tonson, 1686. 8vo. Wing F2049. _BM; Yale, College of Physicians (Philadelphia), Lane (Stanford). _ 558 Suckling’s (Sir Jno. ) Fragmenta aurea Collection of his Peices &c[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1648 20] Sir John Suckling (1609-1642). Fragmenta aurea. A collection of all theincomparable peeces written by Sir John Suckling and published by afriend to perpetuate his memory. Printed by his owne copies. London, forHumphrey Moseley, 1648. 8vo. Wing S6127. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 630 (also a part of item No. 631) inthe Leeds Sale, 1930. 559 Scaligeri (Jul. Cæs. ) Poetices Libri VII [8vo ___1594. 7] Julius Cæsar Scaliger (1484-1558). Poetices libri septem. [Heidelberg], apud Petrum Santandreanum, 1594. 8vo. _BN; Harv, Peabody Institute (Baltimore). _ 560 Sollii _Sidonii_ Apollinaris Opera, cum Notis P.  Colvii [8vo. Paris 1598 7] Caius Sollius Apollinaris Sidonius (430?-487?). Opera. .  .  . Petri ColviBrugensis in Sidonium notas edi curavit. Parisiis, apud AmbrosiumDrouart, 1598. 8vo. _Bodleian; Union Theological Seminary (New York). _ 561 Sydenham (Tho. ) Opera Universa [8vo. Lond. 1705 4] Thomas Sydenham (1624-1689). Opera universa. Londini, typisJ.  Heptinstall, impensis Walteri Kettilby, 1705. 8vo. _BM; Yale. _ 562 ---- English Works, Corrected by _Jno. Pechey_ [8vo. Ib. 1705. 4] The whole works of that excellent practical physician, Dr. ThomasSydenham. .  .  . The fourth edition .  .  . By John Pechey, M. D.  London, for R.  Wellington, 1705. 8vo. _Royal College of Physicians (London); U. S.  Surgeon General’s Office, Goucher College. _ 563 Sanctorius’s Medicina Statica, or Aphorisms. Translated by J.  Quincy [8vo. Ib. 1712. 4] Sanctorius (1561-1636). Medicina statica: being the aphorisms ofSanctorius, translated into English. .  .  . By J.  Quincy. London, forWilliam Newton, 1712. 8vo. _BM; Yale, Library Company of Philadelphia (Ridgway Branch). _ 564 Sol Britannicus, Regi consecratus a Domino Ludovico de Gand. [8vo. Ib. 1641. 4] Louis de Gand. Sol Britannicus regi consecratus. Londini, excudebatJ.  Beale & S.  Buckley, 1641. 8vo. Wing G194. _BM; Chicago, Clark. _ 565 St Real Oeuvres Vide L’Abbe de St. Real 5 Tom[. ] [. .. . --- 30] See No. 18. 566 Shadwell’s Dramatick Works 4 Vols. [12mo. London 1720 33] Thomas Shadwell (1642?-1692). The dramatick works of Thomas Shadwell, Esq. London, for J.  Knapton and J.  Tonson, 1720. 4 vol. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 584 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 567 Steele’s (Sir Richd. ) Rom. Eccles. History [8vo. Ib. 1715. 8] Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729). The Romish ecclesiastical history oflate years. London, for J.  Roberts, 1714. 8vo. _BM; Yale, LC, Michigan, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of a 1715 edition has not been found. 568 ---- Poetical Miscellanies, bound in Turkey Leather [8vo. Ib. 1714. 20] Poetical miscellanies, consisting of original poems and translations. Bythe best hands. Publish’d by Mr. Steele. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1714. 8vo. Case 279. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ Steele dedicated this _Miscellany_ to Congreve. 569 Scarron Romant Comique [8vo. Par. 1655. 3] Paul Scarron (1616-1660). Le romant comique. A Leiden, chez Jean Sambix, 1655. 12mo. _Royal Library (The Hague). _ A copy of a Paris edition, 1655, has not been found. 570 ---- Ditto [12mo. Amst. 1695. 26] Le romant comique. 3 pt. A Amsterdam, chez Pierre Mortier, 1695. 12mo. See also No. 569. _BM; LC. _ 571 ---- Nouvelles Oeuvres Tragi-comiques 2 Tom[. ] [12mo. Paris 1665 26] Les nouvelles oeuvres tragi-comiques. A Paris, chez Jean Ribou, 1665-79(or, chez Jean Baptiste Loyson, 1665). 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Harv. _ 572 ----’s Comical Works Translated by Mr _Tho. Browne_ [8vo. Lond. 1712. 33] The whole comical works of Mon. Scarron. .  .  . Translated by Mr. Tho. Brown .  .  . And others. The third edition, revised and corrected. London, for J.  Nicholson, J. And B.  Sprint, R.  Parker, and Benj. Tooke, 1712. 8vo. _Bodleian; Yale, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 573 ----’s City Romance _made Eng. _ [8vo. Ib. 1671. 33] Antoine Furetière (1619-1688). Scarron’s city romance, made English. London, T.  N. For H.  Herringman, 1671. 8vo. Wing S830. _BM; Harv, Newberry, Hunt. _ This work, actually a translation of Furetière’s _Roman Bourgeois_, wasomitted from _The Whole Comical Works of Mons. Scarron_ translated byTho. Brown, with the following comment in the Preface to the secondvolume: “_Some Persons may object, and ask, Why is not the_ City Romancehere? To which we answer, It was none of his, but one father’d upon him, to make it sell. ” 574 Shirley’s (James) _Six New Plays_ [8vo. Ib. 1653. 8] See No. 552. 575 Salignac (Monsr. ) Evêque de Cambrai, Lettres sur divers Sujets [8vo. Paris 1718. 18] François de Salignac de la Mothe Fénelon, Archbishop of Cambray(1651-1715). Lettres sur divers sujets concernant la religion et lamétaphysique. A Paris, chez Jacques Estienne, 1718. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Michigan. _ 576 ---- Dialogues sur l’Eloquence [8vo. Ib. 1718. 18] Dialogues sur l’éloquence en general, et sur celle de la chaire enparticulier. A Paris, chez Florentin Delaulne (or, Jacques Estienne), 1718. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Clark. _ 577 ---- Dialogues des Morts Ancient et Modernes, 2 Tom[. ] [8vo. Ib. 1718. 18] Dialogues des morts anciens et modernes, avec quelque fables. Composezpour l’education d’un prince. A Paris, chez Florentin Delaulne (or, J.  Estienne), 1718. 2 tom. 12mo. _Southampton University, BN; Harv, LC. _ 578 ---- Avantures de Telemaque, 2 Tom. [12mo. Ib. 1718. 18] Paris, F. Delaulne, 1717. 2 tom. 12mo. _BN; Harv, NYP, Clark. _ No copy of a 1718 Paris edition in 12mo has been located. 579 Scudery (Monsr. ) Alaric ou Rome vaincu [12mo. Ib. 1655. 6] Georges de Scudéry (1601-1667). Alaric, ou Rome vaincuë Poëme héroïque. A Paris, chez Augustin Courbé, 1655. 12mo. _BN; Yale, Folg, Newberry. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 574 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 580 la Source des Malheurs d’Angleterre [24to Col. 1689. 5] La source des malheurs d’Angleterre, et de tous les maux, dont ceroiaume a été affligé depuis le regne de Jacques I. & qui ont causé laperte de Charles I. & la desertion de Jacques II. A Cologne, chez PierreMarteau, 1689. Small 12mo. _Leeds, Biblioteca Marucelliana (Florence). _ 581 Sannazarii Opera Latina [. .. . Amst. 1689. 5] Jacopo Sannazaro (1458-1530). Actii synceri Sannazarii. .  .  . OperaLatina omnia. Amstelaedami, apud Henricum Wetstenium, 1689. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Michigan. _ 582 Sylvester’s Parliament of Vertues Royal [. .. . . .. . 6] Joshua Sylvester, the Poet (1563-1618). The parliament of vertues royal. [London, H.  Lownes, 1614. ] 8vo. STC 23581. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 583 Sallustii Opera in Usum Delph [8vo. Lond. 1715. 7] Gaius Sallustius Crispus (86-_c. _ 34 B. C. ). London, typographicaM.  Matthews, 1715. 8vo. _Yale. _ 584 ---- quae exstant. - - apd. Tonson _Foliis deauratis_ [12mo. Ib. 1713. 24] Caii Sallustii Crispi quæ extant. [ed. M.  Maittaire. ] Londini, exofficinâ Jacobi Tonson, & Johannis Watts, 1713. 12mo. _BM; Harv, LC. _ 585 ---- Eadem -- -- apud Elzevir [24to. Lugd. Bat. 1634. 5] C. Sallustius Crispus, cum veterum historicorum fragmentis. [Ed. M.  Z. Boxhorn. ] Lugduni Batavorum, ex officina Elzeviriana, 1634. 24to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Texas, Newberry. _ 586 ---- Eadem cum Catullo Tibullo &c[. ] [24to. Amsterd. 1684 5] C. Sallustius Crispus cum veterum historicorum fragmentis, ed. Nov. Amstelaedami, Janssonius, 1684. 24to. _Pennsylvania. _ 587 Senecæ Epistolæ ex Recensione Lipsii. Apud Elzevir [24to. Lug. Bat. 1639. 5] Lucius Annaeus Seneca (_c. _ 4 B. C. -65 A. D. ). L.  Annæi Senecæ philosophi. Tomus secunda. Inquo epistolæ, & quæstiones naturales. Lugdun. Batavor. , ex officina Elseviriana, 1639. 24to. _Glasgow, Royal Library (The Hague); Harv, NYP, Princeton, University of Western Ontario. _ 588 Secret History of Europe - - - - - [8vo. Lond 1712. 8] See No. 310. 589 Scribonius Largus [4to Patavii 1655 1] Entry by the second hand. Scribonius Largus (_c. _ A. D. 1-50). Scriboni largi compositiones medicæ. Patavii, typis Pauli Frambotti bibliopolæ, 1655. 4to. _BM; Harv, U. S. Surgeon General’s Office, Virginia, Northwestern. _ 590 Southerne’s Play, called Money the Mistress [. .. . Lond. 1726 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Thomas Southern (1660-1746). Money the mistress. A play. London, forJ.  Tonson, 1726. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 591 Shakespear’s Double falshood, by Theobalds [. .. . Lon. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Lewis Theobald (1688-1744). Double falsehood; or The distrest lovers. A play. .  .  . Written originally by W.  Shakespeare; and now revised andadapted to the stage by Mr. Theobald. London, by J.  Watts, 1728. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 592 Terentii Comœdiæ . . . _Ex Typogr. Regiâ_ [Fol. Par. 1642. 16] Publius Terentius Afer (195?-159 B. C. ). Publii Terentii comoediae. Parisiis, e typographia regia, 1642. Fol. _BM; Harv, Union College (Schenectady, N. Y. ), Newberry. _ A copy of this edition was a part of item No. 675 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 593 ---- Comœdiæ cum Variis Lectionibus. _Charta Majori_ [4to. Cantabr 1701. 17] Publii Terentii Afri Comoediæ ad optimorum exemplarium fidem recensitae. Accesserunt variæ lectiones. Cantabrigiæ, typis academicis, impensisJacobi Tonson, 1701. 4to. _BM; Harv, Washington and Lee, Illinois. _ 594 ---- Comœdiæ. - - - - apd. Tonson _Foliis deauratis_ [12mo. Lond. 1713 24] Publii Terentii Carthaginiensis Afri Comoediæ sex. Londini, ex officinâJacobi Tonson, & J.  Watts, 1713. 12mo. _BM; Illinois. _ 595 ---- Comedies _Eng. By Sevl. Hands_ [8vo. Ib. 1694. 20] Terence’s Comedies: made English. With his life; and some remarks at theend. By several hands. London, for A.  Swall and T.  Childe, 1694. 8vo. Wing T749. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ Congreve’s copy, with the signature “Will: Congreve” on the title page, is in the Library of the University of Tennessee. 596 Thucydide Histoire, de la Traduction du Sieur D’Ablancourt [Fol. Paris 1662 21] Thucydides (_c. _ 460-400 B. C. ). L’histoire de Thucydide, de la guerre duPoloponese; continuée par Xenophon. De la traduction de N.  Perrot, Sr. D’Ablancourt. A Paris, chez Augustin Courbé, 1662. Fol. _BM; Ohio State. _ 597 Tillotson’s (ABP) Works Published by Himself. 4th. Edit. [Fol. Lond. 1704. 21] John Tillotson, Archbishop of Canterbury (1630-1694). The works .  .  . Containing fifty-four sermons and discourses. .  .  . Being all that werepublished by his grace himself. .  .  . The fourth edition. London, forB.  Aylmer and W.  Rogers, 1704. Fol. _Cambridge. _ 598 ---- Sermons Vol. 1. Pub. In his Life-Time [8vo Ib. 1694. 32] Six sermons. London, for B. Aylmer and W.  Rogers, 1694. 8vo. Wing T1268. _BM; Harv. _ See also Wing T1254, 1260, and 1260B for other sermons by Tillotsonappearing in 1694 but less likely to have been represented by Congreve’sNo. 598. 599 ---- Sermons Posthumous _14 Vols. _ Pub. By his Chaplain Ra. Barker [8vo. Ib. 1704 &c. 32] [Sermons] . . . Published from the originals by Ralph Baker. London, forR.  Chiswell, 1700-1704. 14 vol. 8vo. _BM; Harv, Union Theological Seminary. _ 600 Teatro delle Favole rapprasentative. Da Flaminio Scala [4to. Ven. 1611 14] Flaminio Scala (fl. 1620). Il teatro delle favole rappresentative. InVenetia, appresso Gio: Battista Pulciani, 1611. 4to. _BM; NYP, LC (photostat). _ 601 Troili et Cresaidæ Amorum Libri duo priores, Anglico-latini [4to. Oxen 1635 20] Geoffrey Chaucer (1340?-1400). Amorum Troili et Creseidæ libri duopriores Anglico-Latini. Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield, 1635. 4to. STC 5097. _BM; Harv, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ [Illustration: Congreve’s copy of Terence, now in the Library of theUniversity of Tennessee, showing how the signature was onceobliterated. ] 602 Treatise Theological & Political; For ye Liberty of Philoso -phizing or making use of Natural Reason [8vo. Lond. 1689 14] A treatise partly theological, and partly political, containing some fewdiscourses, to prove that the liberty of philosophizing .  .  . May beallow’d. .  .  . Translated out of Latin [from Spinoza]. London, printedin the year, 1689. 8vo. Wing S4985. _BM; Harv, LC, Hunt. _ 603 Temple’s (Sir Wm. ) Miscellanea 3d. Part [8vo. Ib. 1701. 33] Sir William Temple (1628-1699). Miscellanea. The third part. ContainingI.  An essay on popular discontents. II. An essay upon health and longlife. III. A defense of the essay upon ancient and modern learning. Withsome other pieces. .  .  . Published by Jonathan Swift, A.  M. Prebendaryof St. Patrick’s, Dublin. London, for Benjamin Tooke, 1701. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, Newberry, Hunt. _ 604 Turkish Tales [12mo. Ib. 1708. 30] Chec Zade (Shaikzádah). Turkish tales; consisting of severalextraordinary adventures: with the history of the Sultaness of Persia, and the visiers. Written originally in the Turkish language .  .  . Forthe use of Amurath II. And now done into English. London, for JacobTonson, 1708. 12mo. _Yale, Clark. _ 605 Tartarian Tales [12mo. Ib. 1716. 30] T[homas]-S[imon] G[ueulette] (1683-1766). A thousand and one quarters ofhours; being Tartarian tales. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1716. 12mo. _BM; Newberry. _ 606 Tacite de la Traduction du Sieur D’_Ablancourt_ 2 Tom[. ] [12mo. Amsterd 1691. 11] Cornelius Tacitus (_c. _ A. D. 55-_after_ 115). Les oeuvres de Tacite, dela traduction de N.  Perrot, Sieur d’Ablancourt. A Amsterdam, chez AndreDe Hoogenhuysen, 1691. 2 tom. Small 8vo. _BM. _ 607 Theophraste Caracteres avec les Moeurs de ce Siecle Traduits du Grec p. _Mr. Bruyere_ [12mo. Brux. 1693. 12] Par Mr. De La Bruiere. Septiéme edition, corrigée & augmentée. A Bruxelles, chez Jean Leonard, 1693. 12mo. _BM; LC. _ 608 ---- Ditto made English by _Mr Budgell_ [12mo. London 1714. 8] The moral characters of Theophrastus. Translated from the Greek, byEustace Budgell, Esq. London, for Jacob Tonson, 1714. 12mo. _BM; Harv, Folg, LC, Texas. _ 609 Tasso Gierusalemme Liberata 2 Tom[. ] [24to. Amst. 1678. 5] See No. 267. 610 Thompson’s Translation of Jeffrey of Monmouth’s British History. [8vo. Lond. 1718 13] See No. 327. 611 Tale of a Tub. See Dr Swift’s [. .. . ----- 29] See No. 554. 612 Trauels Gulliver 2 voll: figuerd: [8{vo}. Lon: 29] Entry by the second hand. Jonathan Swift (1667-1745). Travels into several remote nations of theworld. In four parts. By Lemuel Gulliver, first a surgeon, and then acaptain of several ships. London, for B.  Motte, 1726. 2 vol. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Texas, Hunt. _ Since this entry by the second hand could have been as late as 1728, Congreve’s copy of _Gulliver’s Travels_ could have been from any one ofthe octavo editions or issues of 1726, 1727, 1728, but it was probablyfrom the first edition. 613 Virgilii Opera cum Notis Ruæi in Usum _Delphini_ [4to. Paris 1682 22] Publius Virgilius Maro (70-19 B. C. ). P. Virgilii Maronis operainterpretatione et notis illustravit Carolus Ruæus .  .  . Ad usum .  .  . Delphini. Parisiis, apud Simonem Benard, 1682. 4to. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Chicago. _ 614 ---- Opera - - - _Charta Majori_ [4to. Cantabr 1701 17] Publii Virgilii Maronis Bucolica, Georgica, et Æneis. L.  P. Cantabrigiæ, typis academicis, impensis Jacobi Tonson, 1701. 4to. _BM; Harv, Princeton, Newberry. _ 615 Voiture Oeuvres [4to. Paris 1650 2] Vincent de Voiture (1597-1648). Les oeuvres. A Paris, chez AugustinCourbé, 1650. 4to. _Cambridge; LC. _ 616 Voyage d’Olearius en Moscovie, Tartarie et Perse. Avec celuy de J.  A. De Mandelslo aux Indes Orient. 2 Vol[. ] [4to. Ib. 1666 28] Adam Olearius (1600?-1671). Relation du voyage d’Adam Olearius enMoscovie, Tartarie, et Perse .  .  . Seconde partie contenant le voyage deJean Albert de Mandelslo aux Indes orientales. A Paris, chez Jean DuPuis, 1666. 2 tom. 4to. _BM; Michigan. _ For the English translation see No. 4. 617 ---- du Tour du Monde de _Gemelli Careri_ 6 Tom. [12mo. Ib. 1719. 3] Giovanni Francesco Gemelli-Careri (_c. _ 1651-_c. _ 1725). Voyage du tourdu monde, traduit de l’Italien. A Paris, chez Etienne Ganeau, 1719. 6tom. 12mo. _BM; Harv, LC, Newberry. _ 618 ---- du Sieur _Paul Lucas_ dans la Grece, l’Asie Min. Et l’Afrique _2 Tom_[. ] [12mo Amst. 1714 3] Paul Lucas (1664-1737). Voyage . . . Dans la Grece, l’Asie Mineure, laMacédoine et l’Afrique. A Amsterdam, aux dépens de la compagnie, 1714. 2tom. 12mo. _BM; Yale, Swarthmore, LC, Ohio Wesleyan. _ 619 ---- du _Ditto_ au Levant 2 Tom. [12mo Haye 1709 3] Voyage . . . Au Levant. Où y trouvera entr’autre une description de laHaute Egypte, suivant la cours du Nil, depuis le Caire jusques auxCataractes. A La Haye, chez Guillaume de Voys, 1709. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM. _ 620 ---- du _Ditto_ dans la Turquie &c. 3 Tom[. ] [12mo Roven 1719 3] Troisième voyage . . . Fait en 1714 . . . Dans la Turquie, l’Asie, laSourie, la Palestine, la Haute et la Basse Egypte, etc. A Rouen, chezRobert Machuel, 1719. 3 tom. 12mo. _BM; NYP, Catholic University (Washington, D. C. ). _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1218 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 621 ---- du Monsr. _Du Quesne_ aux Indes Orientales 3 Tom. [12mo. Ib. 1721. 3] Abraham Du Quesne, the Younger (fl. 1690). Journal d’un voyage fait auxIndes orientales. A Rouen, chez Jean Batiste Machuel le Jeune, 1721. 3tom. 12mo. _BM; Newberry. _ 622 Virgilii Appendix, cum Supplemento multorum antehac nunquam excusorum Poematum Veterum Poetarum [8vo. Lugd. 1572 7] Publii Virgilii Maronis appendix, cum supplemento multorum antehacnunquam excusorum poematum veterum poetarum. Josephi Scaligeri in eandemappendicem commentarii & castigationes. Lugduni, apud Guliel. Rovillium, 1572. 8vo. _BM; Library Company of Philadelphia, Chicago. _ 623 ---- Thesaurus in _Locos Communes digestus_ [12mo. Paris 1683. 24] Thesaurus P. Virgilii Maronis in communes locos olim digestus. Parisiis, apud viduam Claudii Thiboust, et Petrum Esclassan, 1683. 12mo. _Royal Library (The Hague). _ 624 ---- Opera, _foliis deauratis_ - - apd. Tonson [12mo. Lond. 1715 24] P. Virgilii Maronis opera. [Ed. Michael Maittaire. ] Londini, ex officinâJacobi Tonson, & Johannis Watts, 1715. 12mo. _BM; Boston Public, Princeton, Newberry, Stanford. _ 625 ---- Eadem, ex Recensione _Heinsiana_ [12mo Ultraj. 1704. 24] P. Virgilii Maronis opera. Nic. Heins . .  . Recensuit. Ultrajecti, apudGuil. Van de Water, 1704. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Princeton, Illinois. _ 626 ---- Eadem, ex Officina Elzeviriana [24to. Lugd. Bat. 1636 24] Entry crossed through. P. Virgilii Maronis opera; nunc emendatiora. Lugd. Batavor. , ex officinaElzeviriana, 1636. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Newberry, Texas, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition bears the inscription, “Ex libris Gul: Congreve. ”See J.  Isaacs in _TLS_ for September 2, 1949. 627 Velleii Paterculi Historiæ Rom. Quæ supersunt. _Foliis deauratis_, apd. Tonson [12mo. Lond. 1713 24] Gaius Velleius Paterculus (_c. _ 19 B. C. -after A. D. 31). M.  VelleiiPaterculi historiæ Romanæ quæ supersunt. Londini, ex officinâ JacobiTonson, & Johannis Watts, 1713. 12mo. _BM; LC. _ 628 Violenta or ye Rewards of Vertue. Turn’d from Boccace into Verse [8vo. Ib. 1704. 8] [Mary (Griffith) Pix (1666-1720?)]. Violenta, or The rewards of virtue:turn’d from Boccace into verse. London, for John Nutt, 1704. 8vo. _BM; Boston Public. _ 629 Vie de Zizimè Fils de Mahomet 2. [8vo. Paris 1724 33] Claude Labottière (fl. 1724). La vie et les avantures de Zizime, fils deMahomet II. Empereur des Turcs. Avec un discours préliminaire, pourservir à l’histoire des Turcs. A Paris, chez Claude Labottiere, 1724. 12mo. _BN; LC. _ 630 ---- de Socrate p Mr. _Charpentier_ [8vo. Amst. 1699 33] Xenophon (_c. _ 430-_c. _ 354 B. C. ). La vie de Socrate. [Translated byM.  François Charpentier of the French Academy. The third edition. ]A Amsterdam, aux dépens d’Etienne Roger, 1699. 8vo. _BM; NYP, Virginia, Southern California. _ 631 ---- de Pythagore, ses Symboles, ses Vers dorez &c. 2 Tom p _Mr. Dacier_ [12mo. Par. 1706 12] André Dacier (1651-1722). La vie de Pythagore, ses symboles, ses versdorez, & la vie d’Hierocles. A Paris, chez Rigaud, 1706. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Yale, Library Company of Philadelphia (Ridgway Branch). _ For the English translation see No. 365. 632 ---- de Lazarillo de Tormes avec Fig[. ] [12mo. Bruss. 1698 26] La vie et avantures de Lazarille de Tormes. Escrites par lui meme. Traduction nouvelle. .  .  . Embellie de plusieurs figures. A Brusselles, chez George de Backer, 1698. 12mo. _Bodleian; LC. _ 633 Vertot (L’Abbé de) Histoire des Revolutions de la Repub. Rom. 3 Tom[. ] [12mo. Par. 1719. 11] René Aubert de Vertot D’Aubeuf (1655-1735). Histoire des révolutionsarrivées dans le gouvernement de la République Romaine. A Paris, chezFrançois Barois, 1719. 3 tom. 12mo. _BM. _ 634 ---- Hist. Des Revolutions de Portugal [12mo. Ib. 1711. 11] A Paris, chez Michel Brunet, 1711. 12mo. _Bodleian; LC. _ 635 ---- Hist des Revolutions de Sude [12mo. Ib. 1695. 11] Histoire des revolutions de Suede. Où l’on voit les changemens qui sontarrives. A Paris, chez Michel Brunet, 1695. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Harv. _ 636 ---- Hist. Des Chevaliers de Malte 5 vols Entry by the third hand. Histoire des chevaliers . . . De Malthe. A Paris, chez Rollin, QuillauPere & Fils, [et] Desaint, 1726. 5 tom. 12mo. _BM. _ 637 ---- Vallemont (Mr de) Elemens de L’Histoire 2 Tomes [12mo. Ib. 1699. 11] Abbe Pierre Le Lorrain de Vallemont (1649-1721). Les elemens del’histoire, ou Ce qu’il faut savoir de chronologie, de geographie, deblazon, de l’histoire universelle, des monarchies anciennes, & desmonarchies nouvelles; avant que de lire l’histoire particuliere. A Paris, chez Jean Anisson, 1696. 2 tom. 12mo. _BN. _ A copy of a 1699 edition has not been found. 638 Voyage to Surat by Ovington Anno 1689. [8vo. Lond. 1696 28] See No. 440. 639 Freziers Voyage to the South Sea English. [4to. Lon:1717 29] Entry by the second hand. Amédée François Frezier (1682-1773). A voyage to the South-Sea, andalong the coasts of Chili and Peru, in the years 1712, 1713, and 1714. [Trans. From the French. ] London, for Jonah Bowyer, 1717. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 250 in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 640 Ysbrants Ides to China [4to. Lon. 1705 29] Entry by the second hand. Everard-Isbrantz Ides (1660?-1700). Three years travels from Moscowover-land to China: thro’ great Ustiga, Siriania, Permia, Sibiria, Daour, Great Tartary, &c. To Peking. Containing an exact .  .  . Description of .  .  . Those countries, and the customs of the .  .  . Inhabitants .  .  . Done into English. London, for W.  Freeman, J.  Walthoe, T.  Newborough, J.  Nicholson, and R.  Parker, 1706. 4to. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ The date on the engraved title page is sometimes 1705, sometimes 1704. 641 Mandevile [4to. Lon. 1725. 29] Entry by the second hand. The voiage and travaile of Sir John Maundevile, Kt. Which treateth ofthe way to Hierusalem; and of marvayles of Inde, with other ilands andcountryes. Now publish’d entire from the original MS. In the CottonLibrary. London, for J.  Woodman, and D.  Lyon, and C.  Davis, 1725. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 391 in the Leeds Sale, 1930, described as “Large Paper (9 in. By 5½ in. ). ” 642 Funnell round ye world [8vo. Lon 1707 29] Entry by the second hand. William Funnell. A voyage round the world. Containing an account ofCaptain Dampier’s expedition into the South-Seas in the ship _St. George_, in the years 1703 and 1704. London, by W.  Botham, for JamesKnapton, 1707. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 643 Sr. Anthony Shirleys Voyages. Blue paper [8vo. Lon. 1613 29] Entry by the second hand. Sir Anthony Sherley (1565-1635?). Sir Antony Sherley his relation of histravels into Persia. London, for Nathaniell Butter and Joseph Bagset, 1613. 4to. STC 22424. _BM; Yale, NYP, Folg, LC, Hunt. _ 644 Sally fleet voyage and Journal vid. Dunton Blue pap[. ] [4to. Lon. 1637 29] Entry by the second hand. See No. 224. 645 Voyage De. Siam. Des. Jesuites 2 voll[. ] [12mo. Amster-1688 3] Entry by the second hand. [Guy Tachard (1651-1712)]. Voyage de Siam des peres Jesuites, envoyéspar le roy, aux Indes à la Chine. A Amsterdam, chez Pierre Mortier, 1688-1689. 2 tom. 12mo. _BM; Harv, NYP (v. 1), LC, Hunt. _ 646 Willes History of trayale [4to. Lon. 1577. 8] Entry by the second hand. Petrus Martyr Anglerius (d. 1526). The history of trauayle in the Westand East Indies .  .  . Done into Englyshe by Richarde Eden .  .  . Augmented, and finished by Richarde Willes. London, Richarde Jugge, 1577. 4to. STC 649. _BM; Harv, NYP, Folg, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ 647 Chaumonts Voyage to Siam [16mo. Lon. 1685. 6] Entry by the second hand. Monsieur de Chaumont, Ambassador to Siam (1640-1710). A relation of thevoyage to Siam .  .  . In the year, 1685. London, by T.  B. For J.  Robinsonand A.  Churchil, sold by S.  Crouch, 1688. 8vo. _BM; Harv, LC, Newberry, Clark. _ A copy of a 1685 edition has not been found. Perhaps Congreve’samanuensis confused the date in the title with that of the imprint. 648 Voltaire, Henriade [8vo. Lon. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Voltaire [Francois Marie Arouet] (1694-1778). La Henriade de Mr. DeVoltaire. Seconde edition revûe, corrigée, & augmentée de remarquescritiques sur cet ouvrage. A Londres, chez Woodman & Lyon, 1728. 8vo. _BM; Harv, LC, Clark. _ A variant octavo edition, 1728, may be consulted at _Yale_ or _NYP_. 649 ---- Id. [4to Lon. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. La Henriade de Mr. De Voltaire. A Londres, 1728. 4to. _BM; Yale, LC, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 678 (also 679) in the Leeds Sale, 1930. The printed list of subscribers, including Congreve’s name, appears in the copies at _Newberry_ and _Huntington_ but not in copiesat _BM_, _Yale_, and _LC_. For the list of subscribers preserved at the_Bibliothèque de l’Arsenal_ in Paris, see J.  Isaacs in _TLS_ forSeptember 2, 1949. 650 ---- Essay on the Civil wars of France [8vo Lon. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. An essay upon the civil wars of France. .  .  . And also upon the epicpoetry of the European nations, from Homer down to Milton. London, forN.  Prevost and Comp. , 1728. 8vo. _BM; Folg. _ 651 Wycherley’s Miscellany Poems [Fol. Lond 1704 21] William Wycherley (1640?-1716). Miscellany poems: as satyrs, epistles, love-verses, songs, sonnets, &c. London, for C.  Brome, J.  Taylor, andB.  Tooke, 1704. Fol. _BM; Harv, NYP, Newberry, Hunt. _ A copy of this edition was item No. 707 (and also No. 708) in the LeedsSale, 1930. 652 Willis (Tho. ) Opera omnia, Studio G. Blasii M. D. [4to Amst. 1682 2] Thomas Willis (1621-1675). Opera omnia. .  .  . Studio & opera GerardiBlasii. Amstelædami, apud Henricum Wetstenium, 1682. 4to. _BM; Virginia, Chicago. _ A copy of this edition was listed under No. 1244 in the Hornby CastleSale, 1930. 653 Waller’s (Edmd. ) Poems. 6 Edit[. ] [8vo. Lond. 1694 20] Edmund Waller (1606-1687). Poems, &c. Written upon several occasions, and to several persons. .  .  . The sixth edition; with several additions, never before printed. London, for H.  Herringman, sold by Jacob Tonson, 1694. 8vo. Wing W519. _BM; Harv, Texas, Hunt. _ 654 Wilkin’s (Bp. ) Mathematical Magick [8vo. Ib. 1648. 8] John Wilkins, Bishop of Chester (1614-1672). Mathematicall magick. Or, The wonders that may be performed by mechanicall geometry. London, byM.  F. For Sa. Gellibrand, 1648. 8vo. Two editions appeared in 1648: Wing W2198-_BM; Yale, NYP_; WingW2199-_BM; Harv, LC, Hunt_. 655 Wild’s Iter Boreale, & other Poems [12mo. Ib. 1670. 6] Robert Wild (1609-1679). Iter Boreale, with large additions of severalother poems. London, for John Williams, 1670. 8vo. Wing W2137. _BM; Harv, Folg, Chicago, Hunt. _ 656 Wynter of Bathing - two copies [8vo Ib. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. John Wynter. Of bathing in the hot-baths, at Bathe; chiefly with regardto the palsie, and some diseases in women. London, for W.  Innys andJames Leake, 1728. 8vo. _BM; U. S. Surgeon General’s Office, John Crerar. _ A copy of this edition was a part of item No. 659A in the Leeds Sale, 1930. 657 Westmonasteriensium Comitia [fol. Ib. 1728 . .. . ] Comitia Westmonasteriensium, in collegio Sti Petri habita dieanniversario fundatricis suæ reginæ Elizabethæ inauguratæ Jan. XV. London, typis Guil. Bowyer, 1728. Fol. _BM; Harv, Iowa, Hunt. _ 658 Young’s Vindication of Providence [8vo Lon. 1728 . .. . ] Entry by the third hand. Edward Young (1683-1765). A vindication of providence; or, A trueestimate of human life. .  .  . Preach’d in St. George’s Church nearHanover-Square, soon after the late king’s death. The second editioncorrected. London, for T.  Worrall, 1728. 8vo. _BM; Harv, NYP, Clark. _ 659 Zayde, Histoire Espagnole p Mr. De _Segrais_ 2 Tom[. ] [12mo. Paris 1705 23] [Marie Madeleine, Comtesse de La Fayette (1634-1693). ] Zayde, histoireespagnole. Par M. De Segrais [pseudonyn of the Comtesse de La Fayette]. A Paris, chez Pierre Aubouyn [or Christophe David], 1705. 2 tom. 12mo. _BN; Cornell, Illinois. _ [Decoration] INDEX OF AUTHORS, EDITORS, TRANSLATORS, COMPOSERS, AND ANONYMOUS TITLES _Numbers refer to the items_ Addison, Joseph, 23, 413, 427. Aesop, 483. Ainworth, R. , 339. Alemán, Mateo, 262. Alessandro, Guglielmo, 115. Alexandre, Alexander ab, 17. Ampelius, Lucius, 254. Amyot, Jacques, Bishop of Auxerre, 20. Anacreon, 190. Anglerius, Petrus Martyr, 646. Angoulême, Margaret d’, 124. Arbuthnot, John, 34, 35. Aretino, Pietro Bacci, 25. Aristophanes, 192. Aristotle, 7, 8, 9, 198, 509. Arnauld, Antoine, 11. Astell, Mary, 515. Athenaeus Naucratita, 1, 33. Atterbury, Bishop Francis, 16. Aubrey, John, 15. Augustanus, G. X. , 457. Aulnoy, Marie Catherine Jumelle de Berneville, Comtesse d’, 297, 405b. Balzac, Jean Louis Guez de, 55, 56. Barclay, Robert, 53. Barnes, Jos. , 290. Bates, 215. Baudoin, Jean, 357. Baudot de Juilly, Nicholas, 275, 302. Bayle, Pierre, 172. Beaumont, Francis, 42, 407b. Behn, Aphra, 411. Bentley, Thomas, 140. Bernier, F. , 272. Bible, Holy, 69. Bignon, Abbé Jean Paul, 27. Blackmore, Sir Richard, 46, 47, 48, 49, 422. Blasius, Gerardus, 652. Blount, Thomas, 50. Boccaccio, Giovanni, 68, 123, 164, 628. Boccalini, Trajano, 43. Bonarelli della Rovere, Guido Ubaldi, 253. Bononcini, Giovanni Battista, 65. Boileau-Despréaux, Nicholas, 57, 58, 59. Bouhours, Le P. Dominique, 31. Bourdeille, Pierre de, Seigneur de Brantôme,  63. Boyer, Mr. , 404. Boyardo, Metheo Maria, Conte di Scandiano, 513. Boxhorn, M. Z. , 585. Boyle, Charles, 60. Brébeuf, Georges de, 345. Brent, Nathanael, 453. Brignole Sale, Antonio Giulio, 114. Broome, William, 196, 438. Brown, Thomas, 411, 572. Browne, Sir Thomas, 519. Buckingham, Duke of, 411. Budgell, Eustace, 608. Bulstrode, Whitlocke, 52. Burgersdijck, Franco Petri, 62. Burnaby, Mr. , 473. Burnet, Gilbert, 37, 38. Burnet, Thomas, 39, 40, 41. Busbecq, Augier Ghislain, 64. Busby, Richard, 265. Bussy-Rabutin, Roger de, 21. Caesar, Gaius Julius, 71, 72, 73, 74. Calvi, François de, 295. _Cambridge Dictionary_, 87. Camoens, Luiz de, 152. Camus, Jean Pierre, Bishop of Belley, 14. Canterus, Gulielmus, 537. Cartwright, William, 90. Casaubon, Isaac, 1, 533. Cassandre, François, 9. Catullus, Gaius Valerius, 91, 92, 93, 94,  95. Caumont de la Force, Charlotte-Rose de, 274, 303. Cebes, 108. _Celimauro, Il, Istoria Spagnvola_, 114. Celsus, Aulus Cornelius, 118, 158. Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de, 115, 116, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210. Céspedes y Meneses, Gonsalo de, 268. Challes, Robert, 331. Chapelain, Jean, 30. Chapman, George, 292, 407d, 407e. Chardin, Sir John, 81. Charpentier, François, 159, 630. Charron, Pierre, 117. Chaucer, Geoffrey, 75, 76, 77, 164, 601. Chaumont, Monsieur de, Ambassador to Siam, 647. Chifflet, Laurent, 130. Chomel, Pierre Jean Baptiste, 127. Chorier, Nicholas, 398. Cicero, Marcus Tullius, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149. Clericus, Joannis, 388. Cluverius, Philippus, 131. Cockman, Thomas, 138. _Collection of Poems_, etc. , _A_, 410. _Collection of Poems_, 157. _Collection of the Several Statutes_, etc. , _A_, 106. _Collection of Treaties_, etc. , 105. Collier, Jeremy, 100, 101, 139. Collins, Anthony, 204, 530. Colsoni, François, 273. Colvius, Petrus, 560. Comines, Philippe de, 150, 151. _Comitia Westmonasteriensium_, etc. , 657. Congreve, William, 96, 97, 98, 99, 163, 256, 411, 413, 427, 429. _Contes et Nouvelles en Vers_, 126. Conti, Natale, 1, 424. Cooper, Thomas, 86. Corneille, Pierre, 82, 83. Corneille, Thomas, 86. Cornelius Nepos, 132. Cotgrave, Randle, 85. Cotton, Charles, 379, 468. Cowley, Abraham, 78, 79, 80, 411. Creech, Thomas, 104, 353, 385. _Cuisinier Royal et Bourgeois_, 107. Culpeper, Nicholas, 128, 218, 221. Dacier, André, 197, 198, 199, 288, 365, 480, 631. Dacier, Madame Anne Lefèvre, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196. Dale, Samuel, 200, 201. Dalechamps, Jacob, 1. Daniel, Père Gabriel, 528. Davenant, Charles, 179. Davenant, Sir William, 177, 178. Davall, P. , 517. Davies, John, 4, 238. Davisius, Joannes, 146, 147, 148, 149. _Defense of Dramatic Poetry_, _A_, 101. Deloney, Thomas, 405g. Demosthenes, 211, 212, 223. Dennis, John, 186, 187, 188, 189. De Sandisson, 27. Descartes, René, 185. Desjardins, Marie Catherine Hortense, 26. Desprez, Ludovicus, 318. Diaper, William, 423. _Dictionnaire Universel François et Latin_, 173. Diemerbroeck, Isbrandus de, 184. Dillon, Wentworth, Earl of Roscommon, 507. Dio Cassius, 202. _Dispensatory of the Royal College of Physicians, The_, 214. Dodwell, Henry, 203. Donne, John, 157, 182, 183. Dousica, 452. Dryden, John, 157, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 384, 406a, 427, 429, 431. Dufresny, Charles Rivière, 482. Duke, Richard, 507. Du Noyer, Anne Margaret Petit, 373. Dunton, John, 224. Duport, James, 371. Du Quesne, Abraham, 621. Du Ryer, P. , 285. Dyson, H. , 534. E. S. [Elkanah Settle?], 101. Earle, John, 231, 416. Eccles, John, 232. Echard, Laurence, 226, 227, 228. _Ecole Parfaite des Officiers de Bouche, L’_, 240. Eden, Richard, 646. Edmonds, Clemt. , 74. Egerton, Sarah Fyge, 255, 461. _English Military Discipline_, 229. Erasmus, Desiderius, 230, 263. Estienne, Charles (Carolus Stephanus), 180. Estienne, Henri, 456. Estienne, Henry, sieur Des Fossez, 12. Etherege, Sir George, 235. Eustacius, a Sancto Paulo, 236. Exquemelin, Alexandre Olivier, 301. Fabri (Lefèbvre), Tannequi, 241. Fairfax, Edward, 266. _Famous and Renowned History of . . . Hercules of Greece, The_, 405d. Fanshaw, Richard, 152. Félibien, Jean François, 394. Fénelon, François de Salignac de la Mothe, 575, 576, 577, 578. Fenton, Elijah, 446. Filmer, Edward, 101, 103. Fléchier, Valentin Esprit, 300. Fletcher, John, 42, 407b. Florus, Lucius Annæus, 254. Fontenelle, Bernard de Bovier de, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249. Fracastoro, Girolamo, 557. Frederickus, Johannes, 5. Frezier, Amédee François, 639. Fuller, Thomas, 252. Funnell, William, 642. Furetière, Antoine, 573. Galland, Antoine, 120. Galliard, Johann Ernest, 256. Gallus, Gaius Cornelius, 94. Gand, Louis de, 564. Garouville, 28. Garth, Sir Samuel, 260, 261. Gassend, Pierre, 272. Gay, John, 257, 258, 259. Gaza, Theodorus, 263. Gellius, Aulus, 5, 6. Gemelli-Careri, Giovanni Francesco, 617. _General Collection of Treatys_, etc. , _A_, 105. _Gentleman’s Jockey, The_, 277. Geoffrey of Monmouth, 327. Gesnerus, Conradus, 538. Gherardi, Evaristo, 270. Giffanius, O. , 354. Gildon, Charles, 411, 417. Glanvill, Mr. , 249. Godefroy, Denys, 150. _Godfrey of Bulloigne_, 266. Goulston, Theodor, 7. Graevius, Joannes Georgius, 92, 134, 135, 136, 143, 144, 145. Granville, George, Baron Lansdowne, 360. Gratius, Ortwinus, 237. Greene, Robert, 405f. Gronovius, J. F. , 363, 448. Gronovius, Jakob, 5, 137. Grotius, H. , 388. _Grove, The_, 157, 269. Guarini, Giovanni Battista, 484. Gueulette, Thomas-Simon, 122, 605. Hales, John, 284. Hamilton, Anthony, 404. Hardoüin, Jean, 293. Hare, Francis, Bishop of Chichester, 400. Hawkwood, Sir John de, 405e. Head, Richard, 405a, 405i. Hédelin, François, Abbé d’Aubignac, 10, 469. Heinsius, Daniel, 322. Heinsius, Nicholas, 625. _Heliodorus, The Famous Historie of_, 407f. Her, Chevalier d’, 247. Herodotus, 285, 286, 287. Hippocrates, 288. Hobbes, Thomas, 281, 282. Holy Bible, 69. Holyday, Barten, 337. Homer, 164, 193, 194, 196, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 391, 407e, 465, 466, 650. _Honnête Homme et le Scelerat, L’_, 316. Hopkins, Charles, 51. Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus), 104, 199, 315, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 406b. Houdar de La Motte, Antoine, 389, 390, 391. Hughes, John, 248. Ides, Everard-Isbrantz, 640. Jacob, Giles, 328, 329, 367. Jamblichus, of Chalcis, 326. J. D. D. C. , Monsieur, 316. Johnson, T. , 108. Jonson, Ben, 44, 45. J. P. , 24. Justinianus I, 332. Justinus, Marcus Junianus, 336. Juvenalis, Decimus Junius, 163, 334, 335, 337. Kemp, John, 339. Kennet, Basil, 340, 341. Killigrew, Thomas, the Elder, 342. Labottière, Claude, 629. La Bruyère, Jean de, 607. La Chapelle, Jean de, 22. Lactantius, Caecilius Firmianus, 361. La Fayette, Marie Madeleine, Comtesse de, 659. La Fontaine, Jean de, 19, 125, 250, 395. La Grange-Chancel, François Joseph de, 330. Lamb, Patrick, 110. Lambini, 451. Langio, Joseph, 323. Lawes, Henry, 10. _Lazarillo de Tormes, La Vie et Avantures de_, 632. Le Bossu, René, 61. Lee, Nathaniel, 358. Leeds, 1st Duke of, 219. Lefèbvre, Tannequi, 241. Le Fevre, Raoul, 405h. Lenoble, Eustache, Baron de Saint-Georges et de Tennelière, 24, 271. Le Roux, Philibert Joseph, 176. Le Roy, Marin, sieur de Gomberville, 308. Le Sage, Alain René, 298, 307. Leti, Gregorio, 299. Lilly, William, 359. _Linguæ Romanæ Dictionarium_, etc. , 87. Lipsius, Justus, 364. Lisle, William, 407f. Littlebury, Isaac, 286. _Lives of the Grecian Poets_, 368. Livius, Titus, 362, 363. Lloyd, Nicholas, 180. Locke, John, 348, 349. Longinus, 351. Longus, 20. Lucanus, Marcus Annæus, 343, 344, 345, 346. Lucas, Paul, 618, 619, 620. Lucian of Samosata, 264, 356, 357. Lucretius (Titus Lucretius Carus), 352, 353, 354, 355. Luna, Miguel de, 366. Lyttelton, George Baron, 70. Mabbe, James, 262. Macrobius, Ambrosius Theodosius, 399. Malebranche, Nicholas, 382. Mailly, Chevalier de, 425. Maittaire, Michael, 132, 584, 624. Malory, Sir T. , 13. Malthus, Francis (François de Malthe), 397. Maucroix, François de, 395. Mandelslo, John Albert de, 4, 616. Mandeville, Sir John, 405k, 641. Manilius, Marcus, 385. Manning, 202. Marchand, P. , 18. Margaret of Navarre, 124. Marini, Giovanni Ambrogio, 113. Marini, Giovanni Battista, 2, 3. May, Thomas, 346. Mayne, Zachary, 222. Menander, 388. Meurs, Johannes van, 398. Middleton, Thomas, 407a. Miege, Guy, 396. Milbourne, Luke, 384. Milton, John, 380, 381, 411, 650. Minshew, John, 181. _Miscellaneous Letters and Essays_, etc. , 417. _Miscellaneous Poems and Translations_, 409. _Miscellaneous Poems by Oxford & Cambridge Hands_, 412. Moivre, Abraham de, 205. Molière, Jean Baptiste Poquelin de, 393. Molyneux, William, 387. Monmouth, Geoffrey of, 327. Montaigne, Michel Eyquem de, 376, 377, 378, 379. Montesquieu, Baron de, 373. Montfaucon de Villars, Abbé de, 119. Moore, Sir Jonas, 386. Morabin, Jacques, 324. Moretti, Tomaso, 386. Motteux, Peter Anthony, 36. Munday, A. , 534. Muralt, Beat Louis de, 374. Murtada ibn al-Khafīf, 238. _Musarum Anglicanorum Analecta_, 383. Newton, Sir Isaac, 421, 426, 492. Nicole, Pierre, 11. Normanby, Marquis of, 410. Noris, Matteo, 392. _Nouveau Cuisinier Royal et Bourgeois, Le_, 107. Ogilby, John, 435. Oldham, John, 441. Oldisworth, 196. Oldmixon, John, 102, 310. Olearius, Adam, 4, 616. Osborne, Thomas, 1st Duke of Leeds, 219. Otway, Thomas, 444. Oughtred, William, 442. Ovid (Publius Ovidius Naso), 164, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434. Ovington, John, 440. Ozell, John, 196. Ozinde, J. B. , 447. Paccius, Alexandrus, 8. Parnell, Thomas, 475. Parker, Samuel, 139. Paterculus, Gaius Velleius, 627. Patin, Guy, 477, 478. Patru, Olivier, 471. Pausanius, 457. Pechey, John, 562. Pedantius, 481. Pemberton, Henry, 492. Perceval, Richard, 181. Perrot, N. , Sr. D’Ablancourt, 356, 596, 606. Persius (Aulus Persius Flaccus), 163, 334, 335, 337. Pétis de la Croix, François, 121. Petronius (Titus Petronius Arbiter), 473. Phaedrus, 483. Philemon, 388. Philips, John, 88. Phillippes, Henry, 479. Pindar, 464. Pinto, Fernam Mendes, 463. Pix, Mary, 628. Plato, 480. Plautus, Titus Maccius, 448, 450, 451, 452. Playford, Henry, 283. Pliny (Gaius Plinus Secundus), 474. Plutarch, 470. Polybius, 472. Pomey, François Antoine, 476. Pontanus, I. , 399. Pontis, Louis de, 468. Pope, Alexander, 409, 420, 465, 466, 467, 475, 542, 553. Portus, A. , 540. Prateus, Ludovicus, 334. Pratt, Samuel, 511. Prideaux, Humphrey, 454. Prior, Matthew, 411, 458, 459, 460. Propertius, Sextus, 91, 92, 93, 94. Purcell, Henry, 462. Pythagoras, 365, 631. Quevedo Villegas, Francisco Gomez, 494, 495. Quillet, Claude, 89. Quincy, John, 213, 563. Quintilianus, Marcus Fabius, 493. Rabelais, François, 506. Racine, Jean Baptiste, 514. R. A. Gent. , 551. Ramsay, Allan, 415. Ramsay, Andrew Michael, 531. Randolph, Thomas, 112. Rapin, Rene, 509, 510. Ray, John, 499. Raymond, John, 518. Regis, Pierre Silvain, 504. Regnier-Desmarais, Abbé (François Séraphin), 142, 512. _Rehearsal, The_, 406c. Retz, Cardinal de (Jean François Paul de Gondi), 516, 517. _Reynard the Fox, The Most Delectable History of_, 529. Riccoboni, Louis, 314. Richelet, Pierre, 174. Richerius, Ludovicus Coelius, 501. Roberti, Antonius, 111. Rocoles, Jean Baptiste de, 309. Rodellius, Petrus, 319. Roergas de Serviez, Jacques, 251. Rogers, Thomas, 505. Rolli, Paolo Antonio, 532. Roscommon, Earl of, 406b. Rosseto, Jo. , 72. Rousseau, Jean Baptiste, 502, 503. Rowe, Nicholas, 89, 343, 365, 544. Rowlands, Samuel, 405c. Ruæus, Carolus, 613. Rufus, Quintus Curtius, 496, 497. Ruggle, G. , 333. Rutgers, J. , 321. Rycaut, Sir Paul, 313, 500. Rymer, Thomas, 509. Saint-Evremond, Seigneur de, Charles de Marguetel de Saint-Denis, 233. Saint-Réal, César Vichard de, 18, 129. Sallust (Gaius Sallustius Crispus), 583, 584, 585, 586. Salmon, William, 215, 216, 217. Sanctorius, 563. Sandys, George, 428. Sannazaro, Jacobo, 581. Sanson d’Abbeville, Sr. , 73. Sanvitale, Fortuniano, 2, 3. Sapho, 190. Sarpi, Paolo, 453. Scala, Flaminio, 600. Scaliger, Joseph Juste, 622. Scaliger, Julius Cæsar, 559. Scapula, Johannes, 539. Scarron, Paul, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573. Schmid, Erasmus, 464. Schrevelio, Corn. , 344. Scoto, Lorenzo, 2, 3. Scribonius Largus, 589. Scudery, George de, 32, 579. Secondat, Charles Louis de, Baron de la Brède et de Montesquieu, 373. _Secret History of the Reigns_, etc. , _The_, 311. Seneca, Lucius Annaeus, 587. Séraphin, François, abbé Regnier-Desmarais, 142, 512. Settle, Elkanah, 101. Shadwell, Thomas, 566. Shakespeare, William, 407c, 408, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546. Sherley, Sir Anthony, 643. Shirley, James, 551, 552. Sidney, Sir Philip, 455. Sidonius, Caius Sollius Apollinaris, 560. Smith, John, 375. Smith, Richard, 109. Sophocles, 197. Sorel, Charles, Sieur de Souvigny, 54, 296, 350. Souciet, E. , 174. _Source des Malheurs d’Angleterre_, etc. , _La_, 580. Southerne, Thomas, 590. Spenser, Edmund, 535, 536. Spinoza, 602. Spondani, Jo. , 289. Stanhope, George, 117. Stanyan, Temple, 555, 556. Statius, Publius Papinius, 409. _Statutes Now in Force_, etc. , _The_, 106. Steele, Sir Richard, 234, 567, 568. Stephanus, Carolus (Charles Estienne), 180. Stobæus, Johannes, 537, 538. Stow, John, 534. Strabo, 533. Suckling, Sir John, 157, 558. _Suidas_, 540. Swift, Jonathan, 420, 553, 554, 603, 612. Sydenham, Thomas, 561, 562. Sylvester, Joshua, 582. Tachard, Guy, 645. Tacitus, Cornelius, 606. Tarteron, P. , 315. Tasso, Torquato, 29, 267. Tate, Nahum, 429, 557. Temple, Sir William, 603. Tenain, Mme. De, 520. Terence (Publius Terentius Afer), 191, 592, 593, 594, 595. Theobald, Lewis, 591. Theophrastus, 607, 608. Thompson, Aaron, 327. Thucydides, 282, 596. Tibullus, Albius, 22, 91, 92, 93, 94. Tillotson, John, Archbishop of Canterbury, 597, 598, 599. Timoléon de Choisy, François, 294. Tollius, Jacobus, 351. _Treatise Partly Theological_, etc. , _A_, 602. Trogus, Pompeius, 336. Vallemont, Abbe Pierre Le Lorrain de, 637. Vattier, Monsieur, 238. Vaugelas, M. De, 496. Vega, Garcilasso de la, el Inca, 500. Veneroni, Giovanni, 175. Vertot D’Aubeuf, René Aubert, 633, 634, 635, 636. Vinnius, Arnoldus, 332. Virgil (Publius Virgilius Maro), 161, 162, 187, 384, 613, 614, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626. Voiture, Vincent de, 615. Voltaire (François Marie Arouet), 648, 649, 650. Vossius, Isaac, 95. Waller, Edmund, 653. Walsh, William, 157. Ward, J. , 339. _We Have Brought Our Hogs to a Fair Market_, etc. , 405j. _Westmonasteriensium Comitia_, 657. Wild, Robert, 655. Wilkins, John, Bishop of Chester, 654. Willes, Richard, 646. Willis, Thomas, 652. Wilmot, John, Earl of Rochester, 508. Wycherley, William, 651. Wynter, John, 656. Xenophon, 159, 596, 630. Xiphilinus, 202. Young, Edward, 439, 658. Zade, Chec, 604. INDEX OF PLACES NAMED IN IMPRINTS Amsterdam, 3, 6, 11, 20, 22, 29, 57, 58, 59, 94, 116, 118, 124, 125, 126, 131, 134, 135, 136, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 176, 190, 191, 197, 198, 223, 230, 253, 267, 275, 298, 300, 315, 322, 332, 362, 388, 395, 425, 448, 478, 482, 484, 496, 504, 510, 516, 570, 581, 586, 606, 609, 618, 630, 645, 652. Antwerp (Amberes, Anvers, Antuerpiae), 206, 250, 263, 299, 364, 537. Basel, 33, 263, 289. Bourdeaux, 378. Brussels (Bruxelles), 28, 130, 150, 207, 316, 390, 494, 495, 607, 632. Cambridge (Cantabrigiae), 62, 87, 91, 140, 146, 147, 148, 149, 236, 290, 317, 361, 371, 593, 614. Cologne, 21, 123, 372, 373, 374, 520, 580. Dublin, 387. Edinburgh, 415. Frankfort (Francofurti), 237, 287, 452, 501. Geneva (Geneve, Coloniae Allobrogum), 174, 424, 540. Hague, The (La Haye), 18, 19, 27, 159, 297, 302, 331, 345, 619. Hanau (Hanoviae), 17, 323, 457. Heidelberg, 1, 559. Lausanne, 72. Leiden (Lugduni Batavorum), 5, 63, 64, 95, 137, 158, 296, 344, 363, 399, 474, 585, 587, 626. London, 4, 7, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16, 23, 24, 30, 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 60, 65, 68, 70, 71, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 81, 85, 86, 88, 89, 90, 93, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 108, 109, 110, 112, 117, 128, 132, 139, 151, 152, 157, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 177, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 196, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 208, 209, 211, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 221, 222, 224, 226, 227, 228, 229, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 238, 248, 249, 252, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 265, 266, 268, 269, 273, 277, 281, 282, 283, 284, 286, 291, 292, 307, 308, 309, 310, 313, 314, 318, 319, 320, 327, 328, 329, 333, 334, 335, 336, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 346, 348, 349, 350, 352, 355, 358, 359, 360, 365, 366, 367, 368, 379, 380, 381, 384, 385, 386, 387, 394, 396, 397, 400, 404, 405a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, 406a, b, c, 407a, b, c, d, e, f, 408, 409, 410, 411, 413, 416, 417, 420, 421, 422, 423, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 433, 434, 435, 438, 439, 440, 441, 444, 446, 447, 450, 453, 454, 455, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 465, 466, 467, 468, 470, 472, 473, 475, 479, 481, 483, 492, 497, 499, 500, 502, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 511, 515, 517, 518, 519, 529, 530, 531, 532, 534, 535, 536, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 561, 562, 563, 564, 566, 567, 568, 572, 573, 582, 583, 584, 588, 590, 591, 594, 595, 597, 598, 599, 602, 603, 604, 605, 608, 610, 612, 624, 627, 628, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658. Lyons (Lugduni), 272, 323, 539, 622. Naples, 114. Oxford (Oxoniae), 69, 138, 262, 326, 337, 353, 383, 442, 601. Paris (Lutetia Parisorum), 2, 3, 8, 9, 12, 26, 29, 30, 31, 32, 55, 56, 61, 73, 82, 83, 84, 107, 119, 120, 121, 122, 127, 129, 173, 175, 178, 192, 193, 194, 195, 197, 199, 210, 212, 240, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 251, 270, 271, 274, 285, 288, 293, 294, 301, 303, 324, 330, 354, 356, 357, 376, 377, 382, 389, 391, 393, 432, 451, 456, 469, 471, 477, 480, 482, 493, 512, 513, 514, 528, 533, 560, 569, 571, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 592, 596, 613, 615, 616, 617, 623, 629, 631, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 659. Padua (Patavii), 589. Rotterdam, 38, 111, 172, 296, 503. Rouen, 53, 82, 83, 84, 295, 620, 621. Saumur (Salmurii), 241. Strasbourg (Argentine), 264. Trevoux, 173. Utrecht (Trajecti ad Rhenum, Trajecti Batavorum, Ultrajecti), 92, 184, 321, 351, 476, 625. Venice, 113, 115, 392, 600. Wittenberg (Witebergae), 464. Zurich (Tiguri), 538. * * * * * * * * * Errata Noted by Transcriber: Errors in the modern (1955) material have been corrected. Otherirregularities are noted here but were left unchanged. Modern Material Introduction 338 (55 per cent) in the Harvard Library [_closing parenthesis missing_] No. 257 . .. In the Leeds Sale, 1930, as Nos. 257, 258, 259. [258. 259] No. 264 Bracketed with No. 263 in the manuscript. [363] No. 307 London, for Jacob Tonson, 1725 12mo. [1725 12mo] No. 313 _BM; Folg, Illinois, Washington State College. _ [_. Missing_] No. 463 _BM; Yale, Pennsylvania, LC, Newberry. _ [Pennsylvannia] No. 506 Rabelais’s Works 2 Vols_[. ] [_editorial [. ] misprinted as [. [_] No. 572 revised and corrected [_“and / and” at line break_] Index La Fayette, Marie Madeleine, Comtesse de, 659. [Comtessee] Murtada ibn al-Khafîf, 238. [_unchanged: body text has Murtadā_] Vaugelas, M. De, 496. [de. , ] Original Material No. 236 Gulielmus Congreve est verus Possessor hajus Libri No. 278 [4to Lug. B. 1706] [_columns as shown_] No. 313 History off the Otaman Empire No. 331 Illustres Francoişes [_cedilla under s instead of c_] No. 412 Poems by Oxford &/Cambride Hands No. 451 M. Accius Plautus No. 523 [---- - ---- 11] [_printed as shown_] No. 573 “_Some Persons may object, and ask, Why is not the_ City Romance here? To which we answer, It was none of his, but one father’d upon him, to make it sell. ” [_Passage italicized as shown. With italic main text, the expected form would be:_ “_Some Persons may object, and ask, _ Why is not the _City Romance_ here? _To which we answer, _ It was none of his, but one father’d upon him, to make it sell. ”] No. 645 [12mo. Amster-1688 3] Index Padua [_alphabetized after “Paris”, as shown; other cities are alphabetized by their modern names_]