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M. R.-Micrologia. Characters or Essayes: of Persones, Trades, and Places, offered to the City and Country. By R. M. Lond. 1629, 8vo.

Pp. 56, not numbered. Nassau, pt. i. 2248, russia, 17. 11s. Heber, pt. vi. 10s. 6d. Bliss, 19s.

M. R.-Voyage to Buenos Ayres, 1716. p. 306.

See BUENOS AYRES,

M. R. See MANERICK, Ra.; MANLEY, Roger; MOSSOM, R. D.D.; MURRAY, Sir R.

M. S.-See MARMION, Shakerley.

M. T.-Micro-cynicon : Sixe snarling Satyres. Insatiat. Prodigall. Insolent. Cheating. Iugling. Wise. Lond. by Thomas

Creede, 1599, 18mo.

Bindley, pt. ii. 1800, 247. resold Perry, pt. ii. 695, 197. Again, Heber, pt. iv. 71.

2s. 6d. No other known.

Formerly attributed to Marston (see Bibliotheca Heberiana), but now inserted in the Works (vol. v.) of Thomas Middleton by Mr. Dyce.

M. T.-The Silkwormes and their Flies: lively described in Verse, by T. M. a Countrie Farmer, and an Apprentice in Physicke, for the great Benefit and Enriching of England. Lond. by V(alentine) S(imms) for Nicholas Ling,

M. T.-The Ant and the Nightingale, or Father Hubbard's [i. e. Oliver Hubbard] Tales. Lond. 1604, 8vo.

A satirical work, a mixture of prose and rhyme, some of which, says Mr. Todd, is extremely beautiful. A copy is in the Duke of Sutherland's collection, another was sold among the Bridgewater duplicates for 5l. Included by Mr. Dyce in his edition of Middleton (vol. v.) See HUBBARD, Oliver, p. 1132.

M. T.-The Blacke Booke. Lond. 1604, 4to.

Black letter. Pp. 44. Steevens, 770, 17. 88. Roxburghe, 6671, 31. 13s. 6d. Reed, 1779, 47. 14s. 6d. Bindley, pt. i. 897, 61. 8s. 6d. resold Bright, 67. 2s. 6d. Bibl. Anglo-Poet. 35, 251. Saunders' in 1818, 7. 178. 6d. Inserted by Mr. Dyce as a

Work of Thomas Middleton's in Vol. V. of his edition.

M. T.-A Discourse of Trade from England to the East Indies. Lond. 1621, 4to. 4s. (? by Tho. Mun.)

M. T.-A Cloud of Witnesses or the Sufferers Mirror, made up of the Swan-like Songs and other choice passages of several Martyrs and Confessors. Alphabetically disposed, with Appendix, 1665, 12mo. 4 vols. in 3.

Bliss, 6s.

Constable, 155, 17. 2s. M. T.-See MANLEY, Thomas. MAY, Thomas. MERITON, Thomas. MIDDLETON, Thomas.

1599, 4to. woodcut on Title.
Pp. 75.
A didactic Poem, addressed to
'Marie, Countesse of Pembroke,' followed
by a table of contents. In some cata-Sir
logues the author is stated to be Thomas
Mouffat. Inglis, 1390, 27. 3s. Nassau, pt.

i. 2575, 21. 148. Boswell, 2591, 4%. 78. Perry,
pt. ii. 1177, 4l. 14s. 6d. Bibl. Anglo-Poet.
667, 157. 15s. resold, Saunders in 1818, 31.
10s. Skegg, 17s. Heber, pt. iv. 1399, 21. 2s.
Gardner in 1854, mor. 21.5s. See MUFFET,

Thomas.

M. T.-The Copie of a Letter written from Master T. M. neere Salisbury, to Master H. A. at

M. Sir T. See MAINWARING,
Thomas.

M. W.-A Remembrance of the Worthie Show and Shooting by the Duke of Shoreditch and his associates, the worshipful citizens of London, upon Tuesday, 17 Sep. 1583. Lond. 1583.

Reprinted in Roberts' English Bowman. Lond. 1801, 8vo

M. W.-The Huntingdon Di

London, concerning the Proceed-vertisement, an Enterlude, for an ing at Winchester. Lond. 1603. entertainment at Merchant Taylors' Hall, June 20, 1678. Lond. 1678,

4to.

Reprinted in the first number of Mor- 4to. gan's Phoenix Britannicus.

Roxburghe, 4176, 19s.

M. W.—The Man in the Moone, telling strange Fortunes, or the English Fortune-Teller. Lond. 1609, 4to.

Twenty-seven leaves. In this trifle, the dedication of which is subscribed W. M., three orators and thirteen characters are introduced. Bright, last leaf inlaid, 27. 2s. Inserted in Mr. Halliwell's privately printed volume 'Old Books of Charac

ters,' 4to. 1857; and reprinted for the Percy Society. See No. 84, list in Appendix.

See DRAYTON, M. MOONE.

M. W.-The Female Wits; or, the Triumvirate of Poets at Rehearsal; a Comedy. Lond. 1697, 4to.

ginal Papers touching that formid able Design. Lond. 1767, 4to. 2 vols.

This work contains some curious particulars relative to the young Pretender, and the banishment of the Jesuits from the French dominions. Bindley, pt. iii. 300, 5s.

MACARIA.-A Description of the famous Kingdom of Macaria. Lond. 1641, 4to.

Pp. 15. This little treatise, composed in the form of a novel, was designed to intimate a new model of government as

the properest means to reconcile the breach which was then beginning between King Charles and his Parliament. It is reprinted in the first volume of the Harleian Miscellany.

Roxburghe, 5353, date 1704, 48. MABLY, Gab. Bonnot, Abbé de. MACARIUS, St. Institutes of Observations on the Romans. Lond. Christian Perfection, translated by 1751, 8vo. 3s.-Lond. 1776, 12mo. A fit companion to Montesquieu's trea-Granville Penn. Lond. 1816, 12mo.

tise on the Grandeur and Declension of 5s. the Romans.

Observations on the History of Greece; or, the Causes of the Prosperity and Misfortunes of the Greeks. Geneva, 1766, 12mo.

Observations on the Manners, Government, and Policy of the Greeks; translated, with notes and illustrations, by Mr. Chamberlaud. Oxf. 1784, 8vo.

The Principles of Negociation; or, an Introduction to the Public Law of Europe founded on Treaties, &c. Lond. 1757, 8vo.

Observatios on the Government and Laws of the United States of America;

translated from the French, with a preface by the Translator. Lond. 1784, 8vo. Dublin, 1785, 8vo.

A good translation.

Primitive Morality; or, the spiritual Homilies of St. Macarius the Egyptian, done out of Greek into English, with several considerable Emendations and some Enlargements from a Bodleian MS. never before printed. Lond. 1721, 8vo. 6s.→ Bristol, 1749, in vol. i. of Mr. Wesley's Christian Library.

- The Travels of Macarius, Patriarch of Antioch; written by his attendant Archdeacon, Paul of Aleppo, in Arabic. Translated by F. C. Belfour. See Oriental Translation Fund Publications, in Ap

Phocion's Conversations; or, the Relation between Morality and Politics, ori-pendix. ginally translated by Abbé Mably, from a Greek manuscript of Nicocles. With Notes by William Macbean, A.M. Lond. 1768, 1770, 8vo. 5s.

prac

M'ADAM, John Loudon. A tical Essay on Road Making. Lond. 1822, 8vo. 78.

Remarks on Road Making. Lond. 1822, 8vo. 7s. 6d.

Observations on Turnpike Road Trusts. Lond. 1825, 8vo. 6s.

MAC ALLESTER, Oliver. A Series of Letters, discovering the Scheme projected by France, in 1759, for an intended Invasion upon England with flat-bottomed Boats; and various Conferences and ori

MACARONIC Poetry. Specimens of (edited by W. Sandys). Lond. Beckley, 1831, post 8vo. 6s.

A

Epistola Macaronica ad Fratrem. Macaronic Epistle, &c. with an English

version for the use of Country Gentlemen. Lond. Johnson, 1790, 4to.

Carminum Rariorum Macaronicorum delectus, in usum ludorum Apollinarium. Edinb. 1801, 8vo.

Editio altera, emendata et aucta. Edinb. 1813, 8vo. James Boswell, 493, 17.

MACARONEANA, ou Melanges de Littera

ture Macaronique des differents peuples de l'Europe, par M. Octave Delepierre. Brighton, 1852, 8vo.

Contains a valuable Bibliography of the subject.

MACAULAY, Thomas Babington [Right Honble. in 1846, and Lord in 1857].

(An index to the First, Second, and Third editions of vols. i. and ii. was pub lished separately in 1849, 8vo. at 1s. In the later editions it is included.)

Speeches corrected by himself. Lond. Longman, 1853, 8vo. 12s.

Speeches, Parliamentary and Miscella

16s.-Reissued, Lond. Clarke and Co. 2 vols. bound in 1, 8vo. 10s. 6d.

Under the impression that Lord Macaulay had published nothing previous to 1834, it was not intended to introduce a list of his writings into the present al-neous. Lond. Vizetelly, 1853, 8vo. 2 vols. phabet; but it appears that he wrote and published a political Jeu d'Esprit as early as 1826, and although it does not bear his name, its authenticity is undoubted. Having been favoured with perhaps the only copy preserved of this curious broadside, we gladly insert it, and make it the leader to his later and more important productions, which could not else be brought within our scope. It is given entire on a subsequent page.

Speech at a Meeting of the Electors of Edinburgh. Edinb. 1839, 8vo.

Dramatists of the Restoration.
Essay on Lord Byron and the Comi-
1853, (Travellers' Lib. part 40), 1s.-The
Lond.
same, with Speeches on Parliamentary
Reform, 1 vol. 2s. 6d.

Speeches on
1831-2. Lond, 1855. (Travellers' Library,
Parliamentary Reform,
part 52, 1s.)
Essay on Warren Hastings.
1855, sq. 16mo. (Travellers' Library, part
Lond.
1) 1s.

Lays of Ancient Rome. Lond. Long- Essay on Lord Clive. (Travellers' Liman, 1842, 8vo. 10s. 6d. With illustra-brary, part 2) 1s. With Essay on Warren tions designed by George Scharf, en- Hastings, 2s. 6d. graved by S. Williams. Lond. Longman, 1847, sm. 4to. 17. 1s.-1848 (and frequently since), sq. fcap. 8vo. 4s. 6d. With Ivry and the Armada, 1860, sq. fcap. 8vo.

4s. 6d.

Critical and Historical Essays, contributed to the Edinburgh Review. Lond. Longman, 1843, 3 vols. 17. 16s.-Third edition, 1844, 8vo. 3 vols.-Sixth edition, 1846, 8vo. 3 vols.-Tenth edition, 1860, 3 vols. New edition, in one volume, square small 8vo. 1860, 17. 1s.-People's edition, 1860, 2 vols. (or 7 parts), crown Svo. 8s.-Pocket edition, 1860, 12mo. 3 Vols. 1. 1s.

These Essays were first collected and pub. lished in a separate form in America (Philadelphia), 1842-4, 5 vols, 12mo.; and this edition contains several pieces which Mr. Macaulay did not think proper to republish in his own.

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The History of England from the accession of James the Second. Vols. i. and ii. (from 1685 to the Proclamation of William and Mary). Lond. Longman, 1848, 8vo. 2 vols. 17. 12s.-Sixteenth edition, 1860, 8vo. 2 vols. 17. 12s.

The History of England. Vols. iii. and iv. (from 1689 to 1697.) Lond. 1855, 8vo. 17. 16s.-New edit. 1860, 8vo. 2 vols. 17. 16s.-New edition of the four octavo volumes, revised and corrected, Lond. 1857-8, in 7 vols. sm. 8vo. (at 6s. each) 21. 2s. This is known as "The Cheap Edition."

A fifth volume (compiled from his posthumous papers), completing the work to the death of William III.; with a copious Index to the entire work. Edited by Lady Trevelyan. Lond, Longman's, 1861, 8vo, 12s.

Essays on Leopold Ranke's History of the Popes, and Gladstone on Church and State. (Travellers' Lib., part 8) 1s. The same, with W. Pitt Earí Chatham, 2s. 6d.

Essay on William Pitt, Earl of Chatham. (Travellers' Lib. part 5), 1s.

Essays on the Life and Writings of Addison and Horace Walpole. (Travellers' Lib., part 13) 1s. The same, with Essay on Lord Bacon, 2s. 6d.

Essay on Lord Bacon. (Travellers' Lib. part 25) 18.

Frederick the Great. (Travellers' Lib. part 85) 1s. The same, with Essay on Hallam's Const. History, 2s. 6d.

Essay on Hallam's Constitutional History of England. (Travellers' Lib., part 95) 1s.

Essays on Dr. Samuel Johnson, and on Piozzi's Anecdotes of Johnson. (Travellers' Lib., vol. 48) 2s. 6d.

Miscellaneous Writings; comprising his contributions to Knight's Quarterly Magazine; Articles in the Edinburgh Review, not included in his Critical and Historical Essays; Biographies written for the Encyclopædia Britannica; Miscellaneous Poems, and Inscriptions. Lond. Longmans, 1860, 8vo. 2 vols. portrait, 17. 5s.

Biographies. (From the Encyclopædia Britannica.) Edinb. A. and C. Black, 1860, 8vo. 10s. 6d. 12mo. 68.

See Articles on Macaulay and his Writings, Blackwood, July and August, 1859; his Obituary, the Times," Dec. 31, 1859, and the leading article; Athenæum, p. 18, 1860; Edinb. Rev., Jan.

1860.

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And now the day was come, whereon it behoved such knights as for love of the enchained prin cess were minded to encounter danger, to do battle against the champions of the Blue Magician. (1) So the Lists were set out, and proclamation made: and the Lady (2) was brought forth in her fetters, sad, but exceeding beautiful.

Then rode into the lists two knights of gallant bearing and courteous demeanour. The first (3) was in purple armour, and on his shield he bare a wheat-sheaf and a broken chain, with this motto

Liberte et Loyaute.' Next came a knight in party-coloured armour (4), which changed its colour, like shot silk, according as the sun shone upon it: for now it was purple, and now again it was blue. And his device was one falling between two stools. And round it was this scroll

Two sounds from one tongue,
Two breaths from one lunge,
Two faces in one hoode,

Never wrought gaine ne goode. And these two knights rode three times round the lists, and none appeared to measure lance with them. Wherefore all that pitied the captive Princess, or hated the Blue Magician, shouted for joy and hope.

But the Blue Magician called unto him the foul fiend who on earth is called Bourbedji (5), his familiar imp, and said to him, 'Bourbedji, thou seest that he of the purple armour, and he of the two stools, will carry the day and set free the lady, unless order be taken, and that right soon. Now, therefore, go forth and find me a champion.' And Bourbedji went forth, and he spoke with all the knights that were under the spells of the Blue Magician, with the Knight of the Spinning-jenny (6), and the Knight of the Orange Peel (7); but they would not hearken to him. Then he went to the knight who lives on the Wold (8), and bears in his scutcheon the seven lean ears of corn, with his mottoLet poor men starve, so there be feast

For Peer and Bishop, Knight and Priest.'

But neither would the Knight of the Seven Lean Ears comply; for he feared sore the prowess of the Now there lived purple knight. here a craven knight (9), that had neither head to contrive, nor heart to dare, nor tongue to utter, nor hand to execute aught gentle or

KEY.

(1) The Borough of Leicester in its Corporate Capacity; or rather the Corporation only.

(2) The Borough in its Elective Capa

city.

(3) William Evans, Esq. (4) R. Otway Cave, Esq.

(5) Thomas Burbidge, Esq., then Town Clerk.

(6) Sir Richard Arkwright.
(7) The first Sir Robert Peel.
(8) C. G. Mundy, of Burton Wolds.
(9) Sir Charles Hastings.

him down and trampled upon him. And the crowd shouted and clapped their hands, and said, 'Glory to the Purple Knight! Accursed be the Blue Magician and his slaves!' And the ladies threw on the Purple Knight violets and lilies. But him of the blue they took, and stripped off his armour, and scourged him, and rolled him in tar, and

noble, that never came either in mellay of battle, or galliard of ladies. To him came Bourbedji and said, 'Brave Sir, the Blue Magician is sore bestead; and if thou wilt do battle for him, thou shalt possess the Princess and her dowry.' And that unknightly knight put on his armour. It was blue, and his device was a cock azure, with a tail argent; and round it was written-stuck over him white cock's feathers, and set him on an ass with his face to the tail, and bade him to return whence he came, lest worse should befall him. Now of this craven our history saith no more.

"E dare ne strutte, ne crowe, ne
fighte,
For why? Because my tail

white.'

is

And when the Blue Knight came to the lists, he saluted not the ladies, nor gave largess to the heralds, nor caracoled round the open space, nor gave any sign of good cheer and stout heart, as beseems gentle blood; but he lay on his horse like a miller's sack, and he looked like a thief that hath reached the last round of the ladder and the last stave of the psalm. And he bade Bourbedji have a leech in readiness; and he held his spear as if he wist not how to couch it.

But not so he of the purple armour; for he rode at the recreant knight right furiously, and smote

Then all the people took the Blue Magician, and broke his wand, and burned him at a great stake, for a wicked and fiendish sorcerer. And his ashes they sprinkled in the air. And the Princess was set free, and she espoused the Furple Knight; and all that were there rejoiced; chiefly the Knights Templars of the Holy Temple (10), and that good and gentle Knight of the Frith (11), which had before loved and served the Princess, and which did now with great content deliver her to the Purple Knight.

CID HAMET BENENGELI.

A. COCKSHAW, PRINTER, HIGH STREET. KEY.

(10) The Babingtons of Rothby Temple (Lord Macaulay's birth-place).

(11) J. Paris, Esq., late M.P. for the Borough of Leicester.

To complete the page, the Publisher takes leave to annex an unpublished letter, which contains some new information respecting Addison's papers in the Spectator.

Albany, December 24, 1855.

Dear Sir, I beg you to accept my warm thanks for your present of Addison, which is a valuable addition to my library. All that I have seen of it leads me to believe that you have rendered a real service to literature. Yet I am sorry to find that you have omitted some papers which were undoubtedly Addison's, though he did not own them. I mean particularly the Spectator, No. 623, the richest and broadest specimen of his humour. It is a little indelicate; and that, no doubt, was his reason for not claiming it. He also abstained from claiming No. 608, though most undoubtedly his, and one of his best, because he could not have avowed it without avowing also No, 623. If any person can doubt that both the papers are Addison's, either that person or I must be an exceedingly bad critic. With repeated thanks for your kindness, I beg you to believe me, dear Sir, H. G. Bohn, Esq.

Your faithful Servant, T. B. MACAULAY,

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