Doctor Wallis's letter touching the doctrine of the blessed Trinity answer'd by his friend.
A Defence of the Brief history of the Unitarians, against Dr. Sherlock's answer in his Vindication of the Holy Trinity
A brief history of the Unitarians, called also Socinians in four letters, written to a friend.
How biased are culture-loaded tests? /
Correlates of voluntary social participation /
Portrait of a POW /
Historical testimony /
Bibliography of published writings of members of the American Historical Association for 1891-1892 /
General Washington's Farewell Orders to the Armies of the United States.
Observations on the four letters of Dr. John Wallis concerning the Trinity and the Creed of Athanasius
Lafayette, champion de l'émancipation des Noirs /
A brief history of the sheep industry in the United States /
A lesson of self-deniall, or, The true way to desirable beauty
The spouse raised from under the apple-tree, or, The way by which children of wrath come to be made the children of grace opening the doctrine of our redemption by the Lord Jesus Christ, both in respect to the purchase and application /
The spouses carriage in the wildernesse, in her leaning upon her welbeloved, opening the temper of the beleeving-soule in her severall wildernesses ... in a sermon formerly preacht in Andrewes Parish in Norwich, now reprinted, being corrected by the author /
The right vvay to true peace, or, A discovery of a gospel-mystery how the spirit that is troubled may find peace in Christ, and how a Christian may know whither the peace which his spirit hath in trouble, or with which it comes out of any trouble, be Christ's peace : discovered in a sermon, Joh. 16:33 /
The spouse under the apple-tree, or, The state of the elect by nature wherein is discovered, the distance that the highest saints by grace stand as by nature from the Lord Iesus Christ, by which they may know they have nothing to boast of, but what they have received /
Good advice before it be too late being a breviate for the convention : humbly represented to the Lords and Commons of England.
A reasonable defence of the Seasonable discourse, shewing the necessity of maintaining the established religion in opposition to popery, or, A reply to a treatise called, A full answer and confutation of a scandalous pamphlet, &c.
The late apology in behalf of the papists reprinted and answered in behalf of the royalists