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Margaret of Anjon, a poem by Miss
Holford, 73, et seq. Marriage state, advantage it receives from
religion, 244,5 Marsh, Bp. on detaching regeneration
from baptism, 214, (note). Mason on sacramental communion, 543,
et seq.; union belween a Reformed and a Presbyterian church in Norih America, 344 ; jealousy of innovation of long ac- quired habils, &c. 544 ; on the UNITY OP THE CHURCH OF GOD, 545, 6; reason. ing and deductions of Dr. M. 546, 7; facts in apostolic times, considered, 547; in the primitive church, ib.; picture of the primitive Church, 548; moral description of the church, ib.; means of preserving unity in the primi- tive Church, 549; Calvin, the Paul of the reformation, 550 ; Dr. M.'s defence of the Puritans, 551; his remarks on the communion of saints, 552; on secla.
rianism, 553 Maturin's Bertram, a tragedy, 379;
love the basis of the piece, ib.; same- ness of love on the French stage, 380; its great variety on the English stage, ib.; love, in modern drama, a guilty passion, 381 ; extracts, ib. et seq. bad
taste of the present piece, 384 Maury, Abbé, political and senatorial cha.
racter of, 232, 3 Medical students, communications ad-
dressed to, 605, et seq. Mejanel's petit cadeau, 290 Memoir of the early life of W. Cowper,
Esq. written by himself, 313, et seq. - Memoirs of the Marchioness of La-
rochejacquelein, 440, et seq. Memoirs of the most remarkable and
interesting traits of the life of w. Cowper, Esq. written by himself, 313,
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Offices of the Church of England de.
signed to be indiscriminately admi-
pistered, 213, 4 Oil, its mode of producing fame, 61, 2 Olympus, Ossa, and Pelion, description of,
304 On, the ancient Heliopolis, Dr. Clarke's
excursion to the site of, 33; its cele-
brated obelisk described, ib. Ordination, its nature, 434, 5, in the
Church of England, a civil trans- action, ib; extract from a sermon preached at Mr. Yockney's ordina-
tion, 435, el seq. Orgies of Bacchus, ser Dionysea. Oriental scenery, by T. and W. Daniell,
472, et seg Otrante, duc d', public life of, 511 Oxford act, its enactments, 130
Messiah's Advent, Chase's, 365, et seq. Milton ordered by O. Cromwell to write
an appeal in favour of the persecuted
protestants, 53 Monachism, its rise and absurdities,
47 Monarchy according to the charter by
M. Chateaubriand, 522, et seg. Monastic and baronial remains, 553,
Parkyns's monastic and baronial re-
mains, 553, et seq.; nature of the feel- ings that should be excited by a view of monastic or baronial ruins, ib. et seq; execution of the work, &c. 556; historical description of Rieval Abbey,
557, 8 Parliamentary portraits, 141, el seq.;
ipfiuence of the British House of Com- mons probably vastly extensive, ib; low state of eloquence in the House, 143; its probable causes, ib. et seq.; a ma- jority of votes not a true criterion of the successful exertion of talent, 144; parliamentary character of Mr. Wilberforce, 145, 6; causes operating against the existence of a modern orator equal to Demosthenes, 147,
Monody on the death of Sheridan,
502, et seq. ; extract, 503, 4 Montmorin, M. de, his life saved by the admirable and generous presence of
mind of a Parisian grocer, 445 More, Henry, biographical notice of, 84, 5 Morell's Lexicon Græco-prosodiacum,
by Maltby, 481, et seq.
8; notices of various parliamentary I borrowed from the Church of Rome. speakers, 140; of Mr. Fox and Lord 174 Holland, 149, 50
Pit-coal, its three classes, and their qua- Patriotic fund, its beneficial effects acknowo- lities, 63 ledged, 93
Pleasure derived from objccts naturally Persecution, Dr. Farneaux's definition of unpleasing, on its nature and causes, it, 136
165 Petit Cadeau, par M. Mejanel, 290 Poetic mirror, 507, el seq.; the work an Philip's experiments, to ascertain the imitation of modern writers, 507;
principle on which the action of the probable author, ib.; the Guerilla, isi- heart depends, and the relation be- tation of the style of Lord Byron, tween the heart and the nervous sys- 509; Wat o' the Clench-Walter Scott, tem, 344
509; Wordsworth, 585, et seq.; Cole- additional experiments, &c. on ridge, 587; Southey, 588 the relation which subsists between Poet's pilgrimage to Waterloo, 1, et seq. the nervous and sanguiferous systems, Police system in France, its unconstilulional 354
and dangerous nailure, 534 Phillips's garland for the grave of She- Political economy, conversations on, 288, ridan, 502, el seq.
et seq.; on the substitution of machinery Philosophical transactions for 1815, che- for manual labour, 289
mical and physiological papers, 343, Polyglott Bible, prospectus of a, 59, et et seq.; on an ebbing and flowing seg.; explanation of the plan, 60; its stream, discovered by boring in the execution, &c. 60 harbour of Bridlington, 343; expe- Pompey's pillar, its remarkably small riment to ascertain the principle on base, 35; hieroglyphics on the base which the action of the heart depends, inverted, ib.; inscription on the pedestal, and the relation between that organ and the nervous system, 344 ; expe. Pope, at Paris, his treatment there, riments to ascertain the influence of 363,4 the spinal marrow on the action of the Porrett's further analytical experiments heart in fishes, 345 ; experiments, &c. relative to the constitution of the on the colours used in painting by prussic, of the ferruretted chyazic, the ancients, ib.; farther observations and of the sulphuretted chyazic acids, on the current that often prevails to &c. 350 the westward of the Scilly islands, Portrait, a, from Miss Taylor's essays in 346; experiments on a solid com- rhyme, 275, 6 pound of iodine and oxygene, and its Pottery found in the lumuli of Wiltshire, chemical agencies, 347; on the action its nature, &c. 118 of acids on the salts usually called Poule, Abbé, extract from a sermon on the hyper-oxymuriates, and on the gases Prodigal Son, 152 produced froin them, 348; further Pragela, valley of, the Waldenses inhabiling analytical experiments relative to the it, murdered by the papists, 51 constitution of the prussic, of the fer. Preaching, corrupted taste of the present ruretted chyazic, and of the sulphu- mode of, 155 retted chyazic acids, and of their salts, Press, Chateaubriand on the freedom of, &c. 350 ; on the nature and combi- 532, 3 nations of a newly discovered veget- Primitive church, picture of the, 548 able acid, and observations on the Prison discipline, evils arising from the de- malic acid, &c. 351; on the structure fective system of, 410 of the organs of respiration in animals Protestant dissenters of England, Toul- of an intermediate place between the min's historical view of the state of, elass pisces and that of vermes, &c. 127, et seq. 352; on the mode of generation of Protestant French preachers, their style the lamprey and myxine, ib.; an ac- defective in energy, 154 count of some experiments with a large Proverbialist, the, or Sancho, 67, et seq. Voltaic battery, 352; additional ex- Psalms, essential difference between the periments, &c. on the relation wbich common version and the prayer book subsists between the nervous and san- version of, 593 guiferous systems, 354
Pulpit eloquence, British, 81, el seg. Phraseology of the Church of England, Puritans, Dr. Mason's defence of, 551
on the soul, 401; opinions of Overi,
Edwards, and Fuller, ib. Rollo, Dr. his accouot of fever generated
in an individual by bis own efflavia
being confined, 462 Royal prerogative of the King of France,
Chateaubriand on, 550 Ryder's, Bishop, charge to the clergy of the diocese of Gloucester, 394, et seq; caution against the present Antinomian secession from the Established Church, 395, 6; his lordship's opinion. of bap- tismal regeneration, 396; admonition to
the preaching clergy, 379. Saccara, pyramids of, more ancient
than those of Djeza, 31; its cata-
combs, 32 Sacramental communion, Masou on,
543, et seq. Saïs, ruins of, 34 Sancho, or the Proverbialist, 67, et seg.;
ertracts, ib. Sarcophagus of Alexander secured by
Dr. Clarke, and deposited in the
British Museum, 34 Savoy, the Duke of, expels the Wal.
deuses from certain districts of his
dominions, 53 Sceplic philosopher's reflection over the
field of slaughter, (from the Poet's Pil-
grimage) 12, 13 Scott, Rev. J. notice of his letter in the
Christian Observer, in reference to two articles in the Eclectie Review,
Small-por, ettirpated at the Cape of Good
Hope and the Isle of Ceylon, 378 Solilude frequently hurtful lo the moral
character, 187 Soros or tomb in the great pyramid, 28,
9; projected demolition by some of the English soldiery, &c. prevented by Gen.
Stuart, 29 Southey's Poet's Pilgrimage to Waterloo,
1, et seq.; politics and modern war- fare not fit subjects for poetry, ib.; poetry and eloquence most influential on the feelings in the early periods of civilization, 2; effects of civili- zation on the feelings, ib.; the poet should study the peculiar feelings of the age, ib.; modern writers of poems on public occasious ignorant of the true nature of poetry, ib.; Mr. Southey's qualifications as a poet, 3; characteristic difference between Mr. S. and Mr. Wordsworth, as writers, 4; plan of the poem, 8 ; poet's return from Waterloo, ib.; 8,9; illumination of Brussels, 10; Brussels, after the battle, ib.; the field of baltle three months after the conflict, 11; the sceplic's ree Rections on the field of battle, 12, 13; the sacred mountain, 13, et seq.; the author's estimate of the moral im- portance of the victory, 15; its misa sionary enterprizes the noblest triumph
of Britain, 16, 17 Southey's Lay of the Laureate, 196, et
seq.; extracts, ib. et seq.; objections to
his remarks on sectarianism, 202, 3 Speech of Mr. Favell in the Court of
Common-council, 499, et seq. Sphinx, description of il, 31; inscription
behind the ear detected by Dr.Clarke, ib. Spitzbergen, Laing's voyage to, 477, et
seg. Spurinna, or the comforts of old age,
607, et seq. State, what is meant by it by high
church writers, 133, 4 Stonehenge, various observations con-
cerning its origin and use, 125 ; traceable to the earliest British times, 126; Mr. Cunnington's reinarks on
its use and structure, 127 Storer on an ebbing and flowing stream
discovered by boring in the harbour
of Bridlington, 343 Suhium, Cape of, enchanting scenery on
the approach towards it, 39 Taylor, Bishop Jeremy, Bonney's life f,
567, et seq. Taylor's, Miss J. essays in rhyme, 263,
et seg.; their character and style, 263, 4 ; subject of the essays, 265, el seq.; extracts, ib.; Paul al Athens, 266; essay on experience, extracts from, 269; devotion of the man of tasle, 270,1; the episcopal enthusiast, 271 ; observations and extracts, ib. et seq.; a portrait, 275 Temples, ancient, evidences of their sepul
chrul origin, 42 Thanksgiving Ode, Wordsworth's, 1, et
seg.; Theodore the Calmuc, his astonishing genius
as a painter, 41 Thermopyle, iumulus of the Sparlans eze
isting there, 301 Tiryus, its ruins and remote antiquity,
295 Toleration act, ils operation partial, 132;
inconsistency of its enactment, 138, 9 Toleration an infringement of human
rights, 135 Toulmin's historical view of the state of
the Protestant dissenters, &c. 127, et seq.; contents of the work, 128 ; de- claration of Charles II. from Breda, 129; corporation act passed, 129; act of uniformity, ib.; its ineffi. ciency, 130; conventicle act, ib.; Oxford act, ib.; servile conduct of the clergy in the reign of James II. 131 ; remarks on the toleration acl, 132; the State,' wbat is meant, 133; re- ligious inquiry the privilege of all, 134; toleration an infringement of human rights, 135; civil laws should take cognizance of temporal objects only, ib., religion should not be COA- sidered as a disqualifying principle, ib.; remarks on toleration, by the Rev. W. Graham,' 137; restrietive enactments of the toleration act, 138; new toleration act, 139; Mr. Cotton's account of the effects occasioned by the revocation of the edict of Nantz, 140; charity schools originated with the
dissenters, ib. Travels into Greece, Egypt, and the
Holy-Land, by Dr. E. D. Clarke, 18,
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Triumph of faith, by Dr. Goodwin, 486,7 Truth not an equi-distance between two
opposite errors, 418 Tombuctoo, Adams's narrative of a
residence at, 251, et seq.; city des. cribed, and manners, &c. of the na- tives, 257, et seq.; see Adams's nar.
rative. Tombuctoo, the seat of a Negro, not a
Mahometan, government, 252 Turkish barbarity at Cairo, 51
Turkish caravanserais, described, 303 Waterloo, a poem, 93, 4 Turkish seamanship, 37
Watts, Dr. on baptismal regeneration, Turks, their barbarily to some I'rench pri- (note) 575, 6
soners on their way to Constantinople, Wax candles, cause of their superiority 305
over tallow, 62
Well, remarkable one in the great pyramid, Uniformity, its nature and results, 422 27 ; observations and experiments on it, Unity of the church of God, 545, 6
ib. Unlimited invitations consistent with Wemyss's biblical gleanings, 559, et Divine decrees, a sermon, 606, 7
809.; on the nature and results of bib- Unwin, Mrs. illness and death of, 338, lical criticisin, 560; plan and con. et seq.
tents of the work, ib. et seq. Vaccination, ils high estimation abroad, Whichcot, Dr. extracts from one of his
377, 8 ; security from it permanent, sermons, 87 579
Whitbread, Whitehouse's panegyric of, Vaudois, population of the, 96, (note), 193, et seq.; extracts, ib. see Waldenses
Wilberforce, Mr. his parliamentary cha- Vendée, la, or pays du bocage, described, racler, 145, 6
Wilkins, Bishop, biographical notice of, Vergniaux, political conduct of, 234
35, 6 Visits of mercy, Ely's, 87, el seg. Will, its power of counteracting nervous
disorders, &c. 184, et seq. Waldenses, Jones's history of, 42, et Wilson's city of the plague, 164; et seg.
seq.; on the nature and causes of the Waldenses, Morgan's translation of a pleasure derived from objects natu.
sketch of the present state of, 94, rally unpleasing, ib. et seq.; real mi. et seq.; extracts from edicts against sery always connected with something the Protestants in 1602, &c. 95 ; offensive, 165; chief fault of the these edicts enforced in 1814, by Victor poem, ib.; extracts, 166, et seg. Emanuel, 96,7; population of the Wiltshire, South, Hoare's ancient his Vaudois, 96, (note); severities expe- tory of, 106, et seq. rienced by the Vaudois in 1815, 97; Winter evening recreations at M. 403 list of requests presented to Victor Withdrawment of God, rema: ks on the, 614 Emanuel by Count Bubna and Mr. Wordsworth's Thanksgiving Ode, 1, et Hill, 98,9; its cool reception by the seq.; characteristic difference between King, ib.; application of ihe committee Mr. Southey and Mr. Wordsworth, as of dissenting ministers to Lord Liver- writers, 4; style of Mr. W. 5; bis pool, in favour of the Vaudois, 100 politics objectionable, ib.; extraci from Waldo, Peter, his preaching excites an ode on the expedition of the French
the jealousy of the Court of Rome, into Russia, 7,8 49; some account of his life and Wretchedlness of the poor, false estimate of, labours, ib.
183,4
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