Page:Notes and Queries - Series 12 - Volume 2.djvu/478

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NOTES AND QUERIES. [12 B. n. DEC. 9, 1916.

14. Hmte of the Glory of Christ as the Friend and

Bridegroom of the Church : From the Seven last Verses of the Fifth Chapter of Solomon's Song, &c. 1748. Pp. 100. 9rf.*f Angus Library, 21 g. 38 d.

15. Thoughts on the Lord's Supper. 1748.

London. Angus Library, 21 g. 38 c.f

16. Thoughts on Sandeman's Letters on Hervey's

Theron and Aspasio. Pp. 54. 1761.*

17. Letters against Sandemanianism, with a Letter on Reconciliation. Later than 1755.*

18. Letter to all Men on the General Duty of Love amongst Christians. 1741. *t

19. A Letter to the Reverend Mr. John Wesley :

In Vindication of the Doctrines of Absolute Election, Particular Redemption, Special Vocation and Final Perseverance. Pp. 88. 1742, 8vo. B.M. Cat. 4139 c. 2 (3).

20. Letters to Mr. Wesley, against Perfection.

1743. f

21. A Letter to the Believing Negroes lately con-

verted to Christ in America. 1742. t

22. A Letter to such of the Servants of Christ who may have any scruple about the lawfulness of printing anything written by a Woman. Pp. 12. Id. 1743. *t

23. A Letter to all those that love Christ in

Philadelphia. To excite them to adhere to, and appear for, the Truths of the Gospel, f Published prior to August, 1743.

24. A Letter to Christians at the Tabernacle.

This Tabernacle was, no doubt, Whitefield's. In view of the obscurity that surrounds the differences prevalent during Whitefield's voyage to Georgia, a recovery of this tract is most desirable. .

25. Letters on the Ordinance of Baptism. 1746.

This is probably identical with ' Hints con- cerning Baptism,' London, 1746. Angus Library, 21 g. 38 p. ' Brief Hints concerning Baptism, 1746,' are mentioned in her auto- biography.

26. A Letter to Mr. William Cudworth. In

Vindication of the Truth from his Mis- representations. Being A Reply to his Answer to the Postscript of a Letter lately Published, &c. April 23, 1747.t

The Postscript referred to is No. 41 in this list.

27. A Letter on Perseverance against Mr. Wesley.

28. A Discourse on Justification. October, 1740.

29. A Letter on the Application of the Holy

Scriptures. 1754. Printed by J. Hart, Popping's Court. Sold by J. Lewis of Paternoster Row.*

Seen by J. C. W. at Messrs. Dickinson's, 89 Farringdon Street, B.C.

30. Five Letters of Advice to Parents and Children,

the Young and Aged, &c.

31. A Letter on the Saviour's Willingness to

Receive and Save all who Come to Him.

32. A Letter on the Dominion of Sin and Grace.

33. Letters on the Divine Eternal Sonship of

Jesus Christ and on the Assurance of Faith.

34. Letters on the Chambers of Security for

God's People, and on the Duty of Prayer.

35. Five Letters to a New-Married Pair. 1759.*

36. Three Letters on the Marks of a Child of God.

37. A Letter against Sabellianism.

88. Letters on Spiritual Subjects, sent to Relations and Friends. Prepared for the press by the Author before her death. To which are

prefixed Memoirs of God's Dealings with her in her last illness. In 8 vols., now publishing. (Only 2 vols. printed.)* ..J^ .J

39. Letters on the Being and Working of Sin^inja justified Man. c. 1745.f

40. Letter on the Duty and Privilege of a Believer

to live by Faith ; and to improve his Faith unto Holiness. June 12, 1745. f

41. A Postscript to a_ Letter on the Duty and

Privilege of a Believer to live by Faith, &c. July 7, 1746.f

To this pamphlet William Cudworth replied. Mrs. Dutton was much angered with the reply, " a very sophistical per- formance," and retorted with No. 26. William Cudworth's dialogue, ' Truth de- fended and cleared from Mistakes, 1746, B.M. Cat. 1355 c. 11, closes the controversy' so far as it took the form of pamphleteering,

42. A Caution against Error when it springs up

together with the Truth, in a Letter to a Friend. 1746-t

43. Some of the Mistakes of the Moravian Brethren.

in a Letter to another Friend. 1746. f

44. Wisdom the first Spring of Action in the

Deity. A discourse in which among other things the absurdity of God's being acted upon by natural inclinations of unbounded liberty is shewn, &c. 1734, 8vo.

This is ascribed to Anne Dutton by an American bibliographer. The style differs from anything she has elsewhere written. B.M. Cat. 4224 cc. 17.

'45. Divine, Moral and Historical Miscellanies, &c. Edited by A. D. 1761, &c., 8vo. B.M. Cat. 4409 h. 15 (1).

This is The Spiritual Magazine for 1761-3. Whether it is a continuation of ' The Divine Miscellany' published by Withers of Fleet Street hi 1745 is worthy of investigation.

46. Salvation Compleated and Secured in Christ as the Covenant of the People, Considered in a Discourse on that Subject.

Conjecturally Anne Dutton's. Cong. Lib. B. b. 36. London, 1753.

47, A Discourse on the Nature, Office and

Operations of the Spirit of Truth. (No copy known. Reference in advertisement in the above No. 46. Published c. 1754.)

J. C. WHITEBBOOK, Lieut.

I have referred to ante, p. 197, and find no sepulchral memorial there of Mrs. Dutton. Perhaps LIEUT. J. C. WHITE- BBOOK intended to refer to p. 216, where I gave an inscription copied by my friend, the late vicar of the parish of Great Gransden, from the memorial erected by Mr. James Knight about 1887, which replaced an earlier one erected there by Mr. Christopher Goulding. I have no reason to doubt its accuracy or truthfulness. If the MS. variant is different, one of them must be wrong. The inscription states that Mrs. Dutton " resided 34 years in this parish." She arrived at Great Gransden in 1732, and died there in 1765. Her husband was away in America from 1743 until his death in 1748. LIEUT.