Stewart, Right Hon. Lady Euphemia, Park Street. 6 copies royal. Tanner, Mr. Wm. George's Place, City Road. Thomas, Moy, Esq. Bearbinder Lane. copies. Valentine, Miss, F. Leicester. Walsh, Bemut. Mr. Tro. M. A Wagner, Anthony, Esq. Fulham. Street. terwick, near Boston. Weddell, Mrs. Upper Brook Street. * West, Rev. John, M. A. Lecturer of Wethersfield, Essex. Wharton, Rev. Robert M. A. Archdeacon of Stowe. * Wheeler, Rev. Wm. M. A. Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford. Wheeler, Rev. Mr. Bath. * Whincop, Mr. R. Lynn. Whittal, Mr. F. M. London House Yard. Whittingham, Mr. Charles, Goswell Street. copies demy, 25 copies royal. * Wilson, Rev. Daniel, M. A. Vice Principal of St. Edmund Hall, Oxford. Wilson, Joseph Esq. Highbury. Wilson, Benjamin, Esq. B. A. Queen's College, Cambridge. Wilson, Mr. John, Queen Street, Cheapside. Wilson, Mr. Wm. Fenchurch Street. Wolston, Mr. Adderbury, Oxon. Wood, Mr. Henry, College Place, Bristol. * Woodd, Rev. Basil, M. A. Minister of Bentinck Chapel. Woodhouse, Mr. George Edward, Vere Street, Oxford Street. Wcodrooffe, Rev. Nathaniel, M. A. Rector of Somerford Haynes, Wilts. * Woodthorpe, Mr. Henry, jun. Guildhall. Wordsworth, Rev. Christopher, M. A. Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Yeadon, Rev. Wm. M. A. Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford. C. WHITTINGHAM, Printer, 103, Goswell Street, London. ** The Reader is requested to alter the word Three, in the Advertisement prefixed to the First Volume, to Four : and also to notice the following ADDENDA AND ERRATA, lo speaking of the Revision of the Author's writings, the Editor should have added to what he has said in the Preface on this subject, that he has endeavoured to render the Sermons and the most complicated pieces more intelligible than they are in former editions, by a more systematic and clear notation of the principal and subordinate divisions. The Author usually divided his Treatises into Sections or Chapters, with little or no regard to the real gradations of his subject. Some of these pieces are left unaltered in this edition, as a specimen of his mapper : such are the Treatises contained in the Vlth volume, and a few others: and whereever the division is uniform, into Sections, or Chapters, or Epistles, or Casęs, &c. it may be considered to be that of the Author; but, for the more accurate and artificial divisions, the Editor is responsible. IV. - 508, pede 2, a pede a pede a pede 332, !!||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 3, a pede 380, 400, 459, 493, 499, 592, 595, 604, VI. Page 203, 267, VII. Page 130, IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIII!! a pede 155 417, VIII. Page 31 194, 351, a pede VIII. Page 367, line ult. for c. 46. read c. 44. 375, -- 29, - time. 454, remove the reference 1, in the text, to the next paragraph. 456, Note. By Sixtus's edition is to be understood the revision of that edition by Clement VIII. and not the edition published by Sixtus himself: for several of the errors censured by our author are to be found in Sixtus's own edition, but are corrected in the revision by Clement. IX. Page 92, line 2, a pede for Mart. read Marr. 370, Add to the Note-"as they now stand, but not as they stood in the author's time.” The revision took place in the reiga of Charles II. read fer. - taxon TOS. 571. 860, - 12, a pede – AD - S. T.D. X. Page 187, - 19, – Asper - Aspera. 201, - 4, a pede - Roma - Roma. 205, - 17, nyodor zice - TTXodoyle. 298, Note 5. By Ope-lyde was meant, in all probability, Skrove-Tide ; tbe Carnival of the Roman Church : which is, in most Popish Countries, a time of unusual liberty ; in recompence, as it were, of the abstinence wbich is to be encountered during the subsequent Lent. Our Author uses it elsewhere, in contra. distinction to Lent. See Vol. V. p. 458. “There is an Ope tide by his allowance, as well as a Lent." 361, In running Title, for Book I. read Book V. *** The Binder should be directed to cut very little off the margins on account of the extent of the letter-press. |