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II.

BIBLIOGRAPHY.

(When not stated, the place of publication was London.)

I.

COLLECTED WORKS.

The Miscellaneous Works of the late Dr. Arbuthnot.
Glasgow, 1751. 12o.
2nd ed., with additions.
A new edition. 2 vols.

2 vols.

(Published in September, 1750.) 2 vols. Glasgow, 1751. 12o. London. 1770. 12o (with a

short life of Arbuthnot). [These volumes contain a number of pieces which are not by Arbuthnot. All the pieces in the collection are separately noticed below, and are distinguished by an asterisk.]

II.

SINGLE WORKS.

An Account of the Rev. John Flamsteed. By F. Baily. 1835. [Contains correspondence with Arbuthnot.]

4o.

An Appendix to John Bull Still in His Senses: or, Law is a Bottomless-Pit. Printed from a Manuscript found in the Cabinet of the famous Sir Humphry Polesworth : and publish'd (as well as the three former Parts) by the Author of the New Atalantis (May 8) 1712. 8o. (Anon.) second ed. 1712. 8o.

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An Argument for Divine Providence, taken from the constant

regularity observed in the Births of both Sexes ('Philo

sophical Transactions' of the Royal Society, 1710, vol. 27, p. 186; and reprinted in the 'Abridgment,' V. ii. 240).

* A brief Account of Mr. John Ginglicutt's Treatise concerning the Altercation or Scolding of the Ancients. By the Author. (February) 1731. 8o.

The Dunciad. (May 28) 1728. Dublin printed. London reprinted. 8°.

second edition. With Notes, Variorum, &c. 1729. 4o. (Arbuthnot made contributions to the notes, introductions, &c., including 'Virgilius Restauratus.')

An Epitaph on Francis Chartres. (See The London Magazine, April, 1732.)

An Essay concerning the Effects of Air on Human Bodies. (July) 1733. 8o.

(In French.) Paris, 1742. 120.

(February) 1751. 8°.

(In Latin; notes by F. de Felice.) Naples, 1753. 8o, 1756. 8°.

An Essay concerning the Nature of Aliments, and the choice of them, according to the different Constitutions of Human Bodies. (May) 1731. 8o.

second edition. 2 vols. 1731, 1732. 8o. (May, 1732.) 'To which is added, Practical Rules of Diet in the various Constitutions and Diseases of Human Bodies.' (These 'Rules' were sold separately, to perfect the former edition.)

third ed. 2 vols. 1735-6. 8°.

Dublin. 1731. 80.

(In German.) Hamburgh, 1744. 4°.

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An Essay of the Learned Martinus Scriblerus concerning the Origin of Sciences. (See 'Miscellanies in Prose and Verse,' 1727-1732, vol. III.)

*An Essay on the Usefulness of Mathematical Learning, in a Letter from a Gentleman in the City to his Friend in

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Oxford. Oxford, 1701. 8°. (Dated 25 Nov. 1700;

Imprimatur, Jan. 28, 1700-1701.) (Anon.)

*An Essay, &c., second ed. Oxford, 1721. 8°.

third ed. London, 1745.

8°.

*An Examination of Dr. Woodward's Account of the Deluge, &c. With a Comparison between Steno's Philosophy and the Doctor's, in the case of Marine Bodies dug out of the Earth. By J. A., M.D. 1697. 8°. (Said by Thomas Hearne to have been suppressed by the author.) A Philosophico-Critical History of the Deluge. . . . By Dr. Arbuthnot and Dr. Wotton. With other curious pieces. (Curll.) (July) 1741. 8°.

*ΓΝΩΘΙ ΣΕ ΑΥΤΟΝ, Know Yourself. A Poem. 1734. 4o. (Anon.) (Reprinted in Dodsley's 'Collection of Poems by several hands.' 1748, I. 196.)

The History of John Bull. (See 'Miscellanies in Prose and
Verse,' 1727, vol. II. In vol. V. of the edition of
Swift's Works published by Bathurst, &c., 1754, 'John
Bull' is given, with some illustrations by J. S. Müller.)
Edinburgh, 1712. 8°. (Anon.) (Law is a Bottomless-
Pit, exemplify'd, &c. In Three Parts.
In Three Parts. With the

Appendix, and a complete Key.')
Londres, 1753- 12o. (Le Procès sans Fin, ou l'Histoire
de John Bull. Par le Docteur Swift.')

Glasgow, 1766. 8°. ('Law is a Bottomless-Pit, or the
History of John Bull.')

1883. 8°. ('English Garner,' ed. Edward Arber,
vol. 6.)

1889. 12o. (Cassell's National Library,' ed. Henry Morley, vol. 204.)

[The History of John Bull' first appeared in 1712, in a series of pamphlets, each of which is fully describedunder its own title, viz. :

1. Law is a Bottomless-Pit.
2. John Bull in his Senses.

3. John Bull still in his Senses.

4. An Appendix to John Bull still in his Senses.

5. Lewis Baboon turned Honest, and John Bull

Politician.]

A History of Music. By Sir John Hawkins. 1853. 8°. [In vol. II. 872, is given a burlesque-taken from Harl. MS. 7316, f. 149, where it is attributed to Arbuthnot— of lines written by Pope for Signora Margarita Durastanti to recite upon her formal retirement from the English operatic stage in 1723. Pope's lines end, 'Happy soil, adieu, adieu'; Arbuthnot's, Bubbles all, adieu, adieu.' These lines are also given in the 'Annual Register' for 1775, and in the 'Additions to Pope's Works,' 1776.]

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John Bull in His Senses: Being the Second Part of Law is a Bottomless-Pit. Printed from a Manuscript found in

the Cabinet of the famous Sir Humphry Polesworth. (March 13-20) 1712. 8°. (Anon.)

second ed. (March 21) 1712. 8o.

third ed. 1712.

fourth ed.

8o.

8o.

1712.

Edinburgh. 1712. 8°.

John Bull Still in His Senses; Being the Third Part of Law is a Bottomless-Pit. Printed from a Manuscript found in the Cabinet of the famous Sir Humphry Polesworth. And publish'd (as well as the two former Parts) by the Author of the New Atalantis. (March 15-17) 1712. 8°. (Anon.)

second ed. (April 17-24) 1712.

third ed. (April 24-May 1) 1712. 8°.

Law is a Bottomless-Pit. Exemplify'd in the case of the Lord Strutt, John Bull, Nicholas Frog, and Lewis Baboon, Who spent all they had in a Law-Suit. Printed from a Manuscript found in the Cabinet of the famous Sir Humphry Polesworth. (Feb. 28-March 6) 1712. (Anon.)

second ed. (March 13) 1712. 8°.

third ed. (March 20-27) 1712. 8°.

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Letters to and from Henrietta, Countess of Suffolk. Edited by Croker. 2 vols. 1824. 8°. [Letters from Arbuthnot.]

Letters written by eminent persons in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. 3 vols. 1813. 8°.

[Letters from Arbuthnot to Dr. Charlett, I. 176, 178.] Lewis Baboon turned Honest, And John Bull Politician. Being the Fourth Part of Law is a Bottomless-Pit. Printed from a Manuscript found in the Cabinet of the famous Sir Humphry Polesworth: And Publish'd (as well as the Three former Parts and Appendix) by the Author of the New Atalantis. (July 31) 1712. 8°. (Anon.)

second ed. (Sept. 11-18) 1712.
Edinburgh, 1712. 8°.

8o.

Literary Relics. Edited by George Monck Berkeley. 1789. 8°.

[Letter from Berkeley to Arbuthnot, pp. 83-92.]

Lives of the Queens of England. By Agnes Strickland. 1852.

8°.

[Vol. VIII contains Letters to Arbuthnot.]

The London Magazine. April 1732. 8°. [Contains Arbuthnot's 'Epitaph on Don Francisco,' i. e. Francis Chartres.]

Memoirs of the extraordinary Life, Works, and Discoveries of Martinus Scriblerus. (See 'The Works of Mr. Alexander Pope. In Prose. Vol. II.')

Miscellanies in Prose and Verse. and Pope.) 3 vols.

1727.

(Preface signed by Swift

8o.

[Vol. II. contains 'The History of John Bull' and the

'Art of Political Lying.'

4 vols. 1727-32. 80.

[Vol. III. contains 'The Humble Petition of the Colliers,'
&c., 'An Essay concerning the Origin of Sciences,' and
'It cannot rain but it pours.']

Miscellanies in Prose and Verse.
Dr. Arbuthnot, Mr. Pope, &c.

Miscellanies in Prose and Verse.

By the Rev. Dr. Swift, 3 vols. (Oct.) 1730. 120. The Third Volume. Το

which are added several Poems,
Tracts not in the English Edition.
printed, and reprinted in Dublin.

and other Curious Second ed. London 1733. 8°. (Anon.)

Miscellanies. Containing [pieces as in 'A Supplement to Dr. Swift's and Mr. Pope's Works,' Dublin, 1739, q. v.]. By

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