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Miscellanies and on
Many of these papers were collected by him in a quarto volume entitled Miscellanies on various Subjects ( 1781 ).
* Samuel Jones-Poetical Miscellanies on Several Occasions
The Countess of Pembroke's Emanuell, hexameters on the nativity and passion of Christ, with versions of some psalms, were reprinted by Alexander Grosart in the third volume of his Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies ’ Library ( 1872 ).
The only work published by Aubrey in his lifetime was his Miscellanies ( 1696 ; reprinted with additions in 1721 ), a collection of 21 short chapters on the theme of " hermetick philosophy " ( i. e. supernatural phenomena and the occult ), including " Omens ", " Prophesies ", " Transportation in the Air ", " Converse with Angels and Spirits ", " Second-Sighted Persons ", etc.
See also Hazlitt's Spirit of the Age ; Coleridge's Notes on English Divines ; Carlyle's Miscellanies, and Carlyle's Reminiscences, vol.
A rhyming elegy on Brooke, published in Henry Huth's Inedited Poetical Miscellanies, brings charges of miserliness against him.
Hester Chapone was associated with the learned ladies or Bluestockings who gathered around Elizabeth Montagu, and was the author of Letters on the Improvement of the Mind and Miscellanies.
His poetical works, the Art of Dancing ( 1727 ) and Miscellanies ( 1770 ), contain many passages graceful and lively though occasionally verging on licence.
He wrote a treatise in seventeen books on the Ecclesiastes, and also six books of Miscellanies ( in Greek σύμμικτα ζητηματα ) or essays on various subjects ; all this and other books, like the life he wrote of Eusebius, are lost.
The Biographical Dictionary of Actors contains an inconclusive discussion of the claim in Davies ' Dramatic Miscellanies ( 1784 ) that Verbruggen was identical to the actor referred to in 1680s and 90s cast lists as " Mr. Alexander ", supposedly an alias based on the part of Alexander the Great in John Dryden's Rival Queens.
His chief literary works were the Miscellanies ( 1821 ), a collection of essays written for the Monthly Anthology and the North American Review, on subjects ranging from the " Secret Causes of the American and French Revolutions " to human misery, purring cats, and cranberry sauce ; The Life of James Otis of Massachusetts ( 1823 ), generally considered Tudor's best work ; and Gebel Teir ( 1829 ), an anonymous satire on international politics in which a council of birds, representing the United States, Spain, England, France, and the Elysian Fields, gathers to discuss politics.
Jonathan Wild was published in Fielding's Miscellanies, and it is a thorough-going assault on the Whig party.
In 1795 he published Persian Miscellanies ; in 1797-1799, Oriental Collections ; in 1799, Epitome of the Ancient History of Persia ; in 1800, The Oriental Geography of Ebn Haukal ( The Oriental Geography of Ibn Hawqal ); and in 1801, a translation of the Bakhtiyar Nama and Observations on Some Medals and Gems.

Miscellanies and included
This volume included the later works already mentioned, the Pindarique Odes, the Davideis, the Mistress and some Miscellanies.
The book was dedicated to his friend Edward Benlowes, and included his Piscatorie Eclogues and other Poetical Miscellanies.

Miscellanies and with
* See a Memoir of John Aikin, with selections of his miscellaneous pieces ( 1823 ); and the Memoirs, Miscellanies and Letters of Lucy Aikin ( 1864 ), including her correspondence ( 1826 – 1842 ) with William Ellery Channing, edited by P. H. Le Breton.
Far below came Theology and Ecclesiastical History, Natural History and Chemistry, Philosophy, Jurisprudence, Miscellanies, Mathematics, etc., and Medicine and Anatomy, all with fewer than 100 titles.
**-Poetical Miscellanies ( with contributions from Pope, Thomas Parnell, John Gay, Thomas Warton, Edward Young, and others )
**( with Pope and others ) Miscellanies: The Third Volume
* Henry Fielding-The Life of Jonathan Wild the Great in Miscellanies, with A Journey from This World to the Next
Because Welsted and Pope's other foes were championing this " sublime ," Pope commented upon and countered their system with his Peri Bathos in the Swift-Pope-Gay-Arbuthnot Miscellanies.
After taking the Grand Tour of the Alps he published his comments in a journal letter published as Miscellanies in 1693, giving an account of crossing the Alps where, contrary to his prior feelings for the beauty of nature as a " delight that is consistent with reason ", the experience of the journey was at once a " pleasure to the eye as music is to the ear ", but " mingled with Horrours, and sometimes almost with despair.
John Dennis was the first to publish his comments in a journal letter published as Miscellanies in 1693, giving an account of crossing the Alps where, contrary to his prior feelings for the beauty of nature as a " delight that is consistent with reason ", the experience of the journey was at once a pleasure to the eye as music is to the ear, but " mingled with Horrours, and sometimes almost with despair ".
The divinations referred to by Keats in this poem are referred to by John Aubrey in his Miscellanies ( 1696 ) as being associated with St. Agnes ' night.

Miscellanies and other
Miss Aguilar's other religious writings — some of them written as early as 1836 — were collected in a volume of " Essays and Miscellanies " ( 1851 – 52 ).
His other books include The Fourfold State, one of the religious classics of Scotland ; The Crook in the Lot, a short book noted for its originality ; and his Body of Divinity and Miscellanies.

Miscellanies and Charles
His son Charles, studying to be a divine at Christ Church, Oxford, died in 1731, the same year that the Swift and Pope Miscellanies, Volume the Third ( which was the first volume ) appeared.
* Essays and Addresses, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1901 ( same content as Miscellanies )

Miscellanies and Samuel
# Wordsworth wrongly attributes the passage to Samuel Johnson ; it is actually by Anna Williams ( 1706 – 1783 ), from her Miscellanies in Prose and Verse, 1766.

Miscellanies and .
* the Stromata ( Miscellanies ) – written c. 198 – c. 203.
In May, 1709, Pope's Pastorals was published in the sixth part of Tonson's Poetical Miscellanies.
Manuscripts 33118 ); Carlisle Correspondence ; Beresford Correspondence ; Stanhope Miscellanies ; for the Catholic question, W Anshurst, History of Catholic Emancipation ( 2 vols., London, 1886 ); Sir Thomas Wyse, Historical Sketch of the late Catholic Association of Ireland ( London, 1829 ); W. J. MacNeven, Pieces of Irish History ( New York, 1807 ) containing an account of the United Irishmen ; for the volunteer movement Thomas MacNevin, History of the Volunteers of 1782 ( Dublin, 1845 ); Proceedings of the Volunteer Delegates of Ireland 1784 ( Anon.
* Odd Whims and Miscellanies, 1804, 2 vols.
* This article incorporates text from the article the Disraeli family by Lucien Wolf, published in the Transactions and Miscellanies of The Jewish Historical Society of England, vol 5, pp. 202 – 218 ( 1902 – 5 ), a publication now also in the public domain.
Schott's Miscellanies are a set of best-selling books by Ben Schott.
His first published work, entitled Erubhin, or Miscellanies, Christian and Judaical, written in his spare time and dedicated to Cotton, appeared in London in 1629.
B. Grosart in Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies Library, vol.
* Henry Fielding-The Life of Mr. Jonathan Wild the Great ( enlarged and expanded from the Miscellanies of 1743 )
Miscellanies.
An inscription of 359, found at Tixter, in the neighbourhood of Sétif in Mauretania, was said to mention, in an enumeration of relics, a fragment of the True Cross, according to an entry in Roman Miscellanies, X, 441.
The proceedings were printed in a volume of Miscellanies published by Edmund Curll in 1714.
Grosart's collection of Dyer's works ( Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies Library, vol.

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