Page:The Cambridge History of American Literature, v1.djvu/439

Rh Christianity, among the Christianized Indians in New-England. Written to ... Sir William Ashurst, etc. Boston, 1705. [Signed by I. Mather, Cotton Mather, Nehemiah Walter.] (159) Lex Mercatoria. Or, The Just Rules of Commerce Declared, etc. Boston, 1705. (160) Mare Pacificum; or the Satisfactions of afflicted Christianity. Boston, 1705. (161) Monica Americana. A Funeral-Sermon Occasioned by the Death of Mrs. Sarah Leveret, etc. Boston, 1705 (162) Nicetas. Or, Temptations to Sin, and Particularly to the Sin Wherewith Youth is most Usually and Easily Ensnared, etc. Boston, 1705. (163) Parental Wishes and Charges. Or, The Enjoyments of a Glorious Christ, Proposed, as the great Blessedness which Christian Parents desire for themselves, and for their Children. Boston, 1705. (164) The Religion of the Closet. Etc. Boston, 1705, 1706. 4th ed., 1715. (165) The Rules of a Visit. . . How the Visits of Christians to one another, may be so Managed, as to Answer the Noble Designs of Christianity. Etc. Boston, 1705. (166) The Christian Temple. Or, An Essay Upon A Christian Considered as A Temple. Etc. Boston, 1706. (167) Free-Grace, Maintained & Improved. Etc. Boston, 1706. (168) Good fetch'd out of Evil: A Collection of Memorables relating to our Captives. Boston, 1706. (169) Good Lessons for Children, in Verse. Boston, 1706. ["It quickly had a second edition."] (170) The Good Old Way. Or, Christianity Described. . . In the Lives of the Primitive Christians. Etc. Boston, 1706. (171) Heavenly Considerations: or the Joy of Heaven over them that answer the Call of Heaven. Boston, 1706. (172) The Impenitent Sinner disarm'd of his Plea for Impenitency. Boston, 1706. (173) The Negro Christianized. An Essay to Excite and Assist. . . The Instruction of Negro-Servants in Christianity. Boston, 1706. (174) New and Remarkable Discoveries of Quakerism. [Manuscript sent to London; perhaps not printed.] (175) Private Meetings Animated and regulated. Etc. Boston, 1706. (176) Vigilantius. Or, A Servant of the Lord Found Ready for the Coming of the Lord. A Discourse Occasioned by the Early Death of Seven Young Ministers, etc. Boston, 1706. (177) A Young Follower of a Great Saviour. Boston, 1706. (178) Another Tongue brought in, to confess the great Saviour of the World; or, Some Communications. . . put into a Tongue used among the Iroquois Indians, etc. Boston, 1707. (179) The Best Ornaments of Youth. Etc. Boston, 1707. (180) The Fall of Babylon. Boston, 1707. [A portion of no. 181, issued separately.] (181) Frontiers Well-Defended. An Essay To Direct the Frontiers of a Countrey Exposed unto the Incursions of a Barbarous Enemy, How to behave, etc. Boston, 1707. [See note to no. 45.] (182) The Greatest Concern in the World. [?], 1707. New London, 1718. (183) A Memorial of the Present Deplorable State of New-England, With the Many Disadvantages it lyes under by the Male-Administration of their Present Governour, Joseph Dudley, Esq. and his Son Paul, etc. [London], 1707. Reprinted in Preface to vol. II of Sewall's Diary. Mass. Hist. Soc. Col. Fifth Series, vol. VI. (184) Ornamental Piety. [?], 1707. (185) "Ye soldier told what he shall do." [?], 1707, [?], 1709. (186) The Spirit of Life entring into the Spiritually Dead. Etc. Boston, 1707. (187) A Treacle fetch'd out of a Viper. A Brief Essay Upon Falls into Sins; etc. Boston, 1707. (188) A Very Needful Caution. A Brief Essay to Discover the Sin that Slayes its Ten Thousands. . . With some Antidotes against the Infection of Covetousness, etc. Boston, 1707. (189) Corderius Americanus. An Essay upon the Good Education of Children. ... In a Funeral Sermon upon Mr Ezekiel Cheever. . . Master of the Free-School in Boston, etc. Boston, 1708, 1774. 1828 [Abridged and with new material]. (190) The Deplorable State of New-England, By Reason of a Covetous and Treacherous Governour and Pusillanimous Counsellors, with a Vindication of the Honble Mr Higginson, Mr