Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
PR3316.B28 N62 1652 | Noctes hibernæ, winter-nights exercises the first night : VII decads of sacred sentences / | 2 |
PR3316.B28 Z75 2000 | Jane Barker, exile : a literary career, 1675-1725 / | 1 |
PR3316.B28 Z75 2004 | Jane Barker, exile : a literary career, 1675-1725 / | 1 |
PR3316.B29 A65 2011 | An annotated edition of Joshua Barnes' The academie, or, The Cambridge Dunns : with an introductory essay on the place of Joshua Barnes in seventeenth-century English theatre / | 1 |
PR3316.B29 G47 1675 | Gerania a new discovery of a little sort of people, anciently discoursed of, called pygmies : with a lively description of their stature, habit, manners, buildings, knowledge, and government being very delightful and profitable / | 2 |
PR3316.B29 (INTERNET) |
A Christian admonition or friendly exhortation, sent to William Lawd, lace [i.e. late] Arch-bishop of Canterbury, now prisoner in the Tower ... The speeches, discourses, and prayers, of Col. John Barkstead, Col. John Okey, and Mr. Miles Corbet, upon the 19th of April being the day of their suffering at Tyburn : together with an account of the occasion and manner of their taking in Holland : as also of their several occasional speeches, discourses, and letters, both before, and in the time of their late imprisonment : faithfully and impartially collected for a general satisfaction. A letter from Colonel Barkestead, Colonel Okey, and Miles Corbet, to their friends in the congregated churches in London with the manner of their apprehension. |
3 |
PR3316.B3 (INTERNET) |
An apologie for Paris for rejecting of Juno and Pallas, and presenting of Ate's golden ball to Venus with a discussion of the reasons that might induce him to favour either of the three : occasioned by a private discourse, wherein the Trojans judgment was carped at by some and defended / Mirza a tragedie, really acted in Persia, in the last age : illustrated with historicall annotations / |
2 |
PR3316.B36 A33 | Additions to the poetical fragments of Rich. Baxter | 2 |
PR3316.B36 E58 | Englands warning-piece. To all sleepy secure sinners, Or, The true Christians subjection to Christ as their King and Saviour. Plainly and powerfully setting forth to the heart and conscience, of all careless secure sinners, their great folly and madness in refusing to submit to Jesus Christ as he is tendered in the Gospel. : With many cogent arguments and reasons to perswade all persons to come into Christ for salvation, now in the day of their visitation, before the fire of his wrath be kindled upon them, and the gates of Heaven be shut against them, and they perish for ever. : With some rules and directions how we may attain true happiness. / | 1 |
PR3316.B36H43 (INTERNET) | Poetical fragments heart-imployment with God and it self : the concordant discord of a broken-healed heart ... / | 1 |
PR3316.B36 (INTERNET) |
Richard Baxter's penitent confession and his necessary vindication in answer to a book called The second part of the mischiefs of separation, written by an unnamed author with a preface to Mr. Cantianus D. Minimis, in answer to his letter which extorted this publication. Additions to the poetical fragments of Rich. Baxter |
2 |
PR3316.B36 U6 | The unreasonableness of infidelity; manifested in four discourses, the subject of which is expressed in the next pages. Written for the strengthening of the weak, the establishing of the tempted, the staying of the present course of apostasie, and the recovery of those that have not sinned unto death. / | 1 |
PR3316.B36Z5 (INTERNET) | Exceptions against a vvriting of Mr. R. Baxters in answer to some animadversions upon his aphorisms / | 1 |
PR3316.B365 P36 1685 | A panegyrick on the coronation of King James the II and His Royal Consort Queen Mary on April 23, 1685 / | 2 |
PR3316.B37 (INTERNET) | The wall-flower as it grew out of the stone-chamber belonging to the metropolitan prison of London called Newgate : being a history which is partly true, partly romantick, morally divine : whereby a marriage between reality and fancy is solemnized by divinity / | 1 |
PR3316.B37 W34 | The wall-flower as it grew out of the stone-chamber belonging to the metropolitan prison of London called Newgate : being a history which is partly true, partly romantick, morally divine : whereby a marriage between reality and fancy is solemnized by divinity / | 2 |
PR3316.B4 1854 | The poetical works of Beattie, Blair and Falconer / | 1 |
PR3316.B4 A7 1803 | The minstrel, or, The progress of genius, with some other poems / | 1 |
PR3316.B4 A735 1992 | James Beattie's The minstrel and the origins of romantic autobiography / | 1 |
PR3316.B4 A8 | James Beattie's London diary, 1773 / | 1 |