Page:Initials and pseudonyms, second series (Cushing).djvu/30

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Britannicus. T. Robe. Letter from ... in praise of the queen [Caroline]. L. 1732.

Britannicus. Francis Randolph, D.D. A letter to William Pitt, containing some new arguments against the abolition of the slave trade. By . . . L. 1804.

Britannicus. U. A. Ward, Our in- sular shortcomings, and the equilibrium of Europe. Uy ... L. 1878.

Britanno-Hibernus, W. W. Henry. An appeal to the people of Ireland . . . By . . . Dublin, 1749.

British American, A. Oxenbridge Thacher. The sentiments of . . . B. 1764.

British Author, A. Sir Arthur Helps. International copyright between Great Britain and America : a letter to Charles Eliot Norton. In "Macmillan's Mag." (L.), June, 1809, pp. 89-95.

Britisli Canadian, A. Henrij James Morgan. The tour of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, througii British America and the United States. By . . . Montreal, 1860.

British Cicero, Tlie. William Pitt, Earl of Chatham. A new system of pa- triot policy, containing the genuine re- cantation of . . . L. 1756.

British Jlinister, The. F. ./. Jack- son. An appeal to the people; ... re- lating to the rejection of . . . N.Y. 1810. By William Coleman, editor of the New York "Evening Post."

Britisli Observer, The. William Henri/ C'oombes, D.D. His signature to letters on Catholic affairs, in " Cobbett's Register," in the years 1804-6.

British Officer, A. Rev. William Olubbe. Parallel between the characters and conduct of Oliver Cromwell and Bonaparte ... By . . . L. 1812.

British Officer, lately returned from the East, A. John Campbell. An account of the defence made at Jlangal- ore . . . By . . . L. 1786.

Brittatiicus. Thomas Brittain. Half a dozen songs by . Manchester, 1846.

Brn, ,1 — y. Mrs. Jenny Odmann. Bru- den pa 8tafsimd.

Broad Bottom, A. P. D. Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield. The interest of Hanover steadily pursued since the A[ccession] . . . Being a sequel to a late pamphlet, entitled " The interest of Great Britain steadily pursued." In a letter to the Right Hon. author (Horatio, Lord Walpole). By . . . L. 1743.

Broderick, Mark. Mrs. E. S. L. Thompson.

Broker, A. H. M. Guillemard. The


stock exchange : its use and abuse . . . By . . . L. 1877.

Brook, Antonie. Johanna Antonie BrSkel. Schutzlos aber nicht hiilfos : roman . . . Berlin, 1878.

Brook, Fanshawe. Fanny Susan Wyvill. Pansies. L. 1860.

Broolte, C. Miss E. Nesbit. Signa- ture in " Good Words," " Sunday Mag.," etc.

Brooksby. O. Pennell-Elmhirst, in the " Field."

B^o^vn, Mrs. George Rose. The go- ings on of Mrs. Brown at the Tichborne trial and in her own family . . . By . . . L. 1872.

Bro^wn, Jimmy. William L. Alden. The adventures of ... ; written by him- self . . . N.y. 1885.

First appeared in " Harper's Young Peo- ple."

Brovrn, Jones, and Robinson.

Richard Doijle. The foreign tour of . . . L. 1854.

Bro-svne, Henry. Henry Ellison. Stones from the old quarry; or, moods of the mind. L. 1875.

Brovrne, Phillis. A.G.Payne. Sunny Spain : its people, places, and customs. N.Y. 1884.

Brownlus, Johannes, A.M. Sir George Cornewall Lewis, Bart. InscriptiO' antiqua, in agro Bruttio, nuper ruperta. Bdiditet intertatus est . . . Oxon. 1862.

Bruin. .7. F. C. Adams. The bal- loon scouts. The black spy. Glass-eye, Light-house Lige ; or, Osceola. Lightning Jo. Old Grizzly. Old Zip. The young spy. N.Y. 1871-77.

Bruu Barnow, Ida v. Ida Brunsig, edle von Brun. Falsche wege: roman. N.Y. 1881.

BrunefUle, G. E. Lady Colin Camp- bell.

Bruno, J. Joseph Bruno, Graf von Mengerson auf Rheder. Irma und Nanka. Leipzig, 1842.

Bruuo, Thomas. Thomas Brown.

Brush Maker, The. Thomas Consta- ble. A rod for scorpions ; an edged tool for fools; and information for children ;. being a summary account of ... 's ram- bles, etc. 1806.

Bruto Inglese, II. John Wilkes. Bd.swell wrote as follows to Wilkes in a letter, dated Rome, April 22, 1765: —

" In the Italian gazettes they have thought prop- er to give you the epithet of ' II Bruto Inglese.'" Bruto in Italian may signify either ' Brutus' or

  • ugly ' ; and you must know it is disputed be-

tween your friends and your enemies, whether the epithet ought to be translated * the English. Brutus,' or ' the ugly Englishman.' "