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Baplismal engagements of infants, Dr.
Laurence's remarks on a supposed dispo-
sition to fulfil them, 179 Baptism, Bishop Taylor on its benefits, 575. Bathing of infants, 282, et seq. Battle of Waterloo, a poem, 93, 4. Bear or Cherry Island, 479 Beddoes, in refutation of supposed tor.
pid melancholy, 138 - Barrows, Sir R. C. Hoare's classification
of 110; long-barrows opened and era- gained, 111; Druid or feinale bar- rows, ib.; accounts of borrows explored
by Sir R. C. Hoare, 113, et seq. Bering's Sermon on the celebrated Crillon,
ertract from, 152 Bernard's Spurinoa, or the comforts of
old age, 607, et seq.; reflections on the effects that Christianity might have produced on the mind of Cicero, ib. ; advantage of the Christian over the heathen philosopher, 608; hea• thea philosophers' conclusions not only uncertain but false, ib; moral writings of the ancients falsely esti. mated, 609; extract from Howe's ser- mon on the Redeemer's dominion over Hades, ib.; personages of the dia- logue, 610; arrangement of the inconve- niences of age, 611; on vigour of intel- lect, ib. et seq.; extract from Cicero, on the decay of sensual gratifications from age, 613; dialogue on the diminu- tion of animal enjoyment, 613, 4; on the withdrawment, and the presence of God, 614; the Christian's view of the calami- ties of life, 615; dangers of the Church, 615, 6; error and heresy, 616; thusiasm, 617; apprehension of dinger to the Church from the Methodists, juo
writer, 524; suppression of this work at Paris, 525; the three possible modes of governinent under a legitia mate king, ib.; the charter the only possible mode in France, 526; the mi- nisters alone responsible for the acts of government, ib.; Stuart principles re- viving in England, 527; political opinions of the Rev. T. Scott, (nole) 527; extract from
“ Christianity, consistent with a love of freedorn," by the Rev, Robert Hall, ib. M. C.
the royal prerogative, 530; on the chamber of peers, 531; M. Gré- goire on an hereditary peerage ib.; M. C.'s reinarks on the chamber of deputies, 532; the freedom of the press, ib. el seq.; the police system, 534; the three cabinets, 535, 6; on the ig- norance of the ministry in regard to public feeling, 537; the chamber of depulies represented the majority of the nation, 538; the anti-royalists a face tion conspiring against legitimate mo- narchy, 539; extracts, ib. real aud false royalists, 539, et seq.; true na- ture of M. C.'s charge of foreign in- fluence on French counciis, 540; the complete restoration of the church, the real object of M, C.'s
on its alleged debt of gratitude, 221 ; causes of the withdrawment of clcrical aid from the Eclectic Keview, ib.; avowed hostility of the Christian Observer, 222; remarks on the Christian Observer's charge in regard to the time of our alleged un- provoked attack, ib. et seq.; reasons for objecting to the original basis of the Eclectic Review, 224,5; remarks
ou dissent, &c, 227, et seg. Christian philosophy, its advantage over
the heathen, 608 Church of France, M. Chateaubriand on
the mode of restoring it, 241,2 City of the Plagne, a poem, 164, et seq.;
extracts, 166, et seq.; Civil laws, the proper objects of, t of
a temporal nature only, 135 Clarke, Dr. J. on the diseases of children,
277, et seq.; objections against foster- nurses, 280 ; 'op the clothing of infants, 282; infantile diseases chiefly dependent on the vessels that convey pourishment to the system, 372; Di. C.'s notion objectionable, ib.; see Dis-
eases of Children. Clarke's, Dr. E. D. travels into Greece,
Egypt, and the Holy Land, 18, el seg.; his enviable advantages in regard to authorship, ib.; prefatory notices, 19; treachery and cruelty of Djezzar Packa ot Acre, just before leis denih, 20; author enters Egypt, ib.; immense loys of men sustained by the English at their landing in Egypt, ib.; des. cription of the serpent-euters, 21; great fertility of the Delta, ib.; Edypt still literally subject to the plagues inflicted in the time of Moses, 22; author's first vier of the Pyramils, 23; rezidence at Caïro, ib.; strong testimony in favour of the general truth of Bruce's rela- tions, 24 ; remarkable well in the great pyramid, 27; SOROS of the founder, 28 ; ils demolition by the English sola diery prevented by General Sluart, 29; attempt of the French to penetrate the third pyramid, ib.; anthor's opi- nion that the great pyramid was built by the Israelites as a receptacle for the body of Joseph, 30; objections, ib.; the Sphinx, 31; pyramid of Saccara, 26.; the catacombs, 32; author's cer- tainty that the bodies were placed horizontally, ib.; he inclines to believe that the god Apis, Serapis, and Osiris was a deifi ation of Joseph, ib.; ex- corsion to Heliopolis, the On of the Mosaic history, 33; clucidation of thc Loyprian hicroglyphics altoscthcr
hopeless, ib.; the Cruz Arsalı, the only one that is detected, ib.; ruins of of Sais, 34; barbarity of the Turks at Cairo, ib.; visit to the catacombs of the ancient city of Racotis, 35; Pompey's pillar, ib.; inscription on the pedestal, ib.; Turkish seamanship, 37; and self-complacency, 38; conviction of homicide by implication, ib.; en. chanting scenery on the approach towards the Cape of Sunium, 39; account of Lusieri the artist, and his designs, 40 ; and of ike Calmuc, Theodore, the painter, 41; funereal character of Athens, ib.; evidences of the sepulchral nature of the ancient temples, ib. et seq.; author's re- marks on the despoiling of the temple of Minerva, 992; admirable position of the horse, antiquities of Tyrens, 295; tomb of Agamemnon, 296; pe- culiarity of the situotion of the Grecian cities, 297; Thebes, 292; elegant vae riety of the Corinthian order in the church of Demetrins, ib.; modern Greek music intolerably vile, 300; descent towards Delphi, 301; tomb of the Sper- tuns at Thermopylæ, 301,2; Mount Olympus, with Ossa and Pelion, 304; tumulus vear Pydaa,ib.; barbarity of the Turks to the French Prisoners ut ki.
lros, 305 Claude, extract from one of his sermons,
160, 1 Claude of Turin, short account of him,
48 Clergy, their temporising conduct in the
reign of James II. 131 Clift's experiments to ascertain the in-
fuence of the spinal marrow on the
action of the heart in fishes, 345 Cobbin's French preacher, 150, et seg.;
French divines not models for English preachers, 151; extract from Bening's sermon for the celebrated Crillon, 152 ; Latin extract from De Lingends's set- mon on the transfiguration, 152, 3; style of the French protestant preach- ers defective, ib.; pulpit character of Mr. Lavinglon, 154, 5; quthor's testi. wony against the present prevailing style of preaching, 155; Bossuet, ib. et seq ; writers, and subjects, of the serinona, 157, 3; extracts from Cheminais, the Abbé Poule, Claude, Le Fuucheur, 158, el seg.; notice of the Abbé Maury, 163; Bourdalone accustomed to preacha
with iris eyes shut, ib. Conjectura! emendation a dangeroi's
mode of determining the real wean-
ing of texts, &c. 594 Controversy, religious, causes of thiet
Cretinism of the Alps, probable causes of
ils permanency, 469 Cromwell, Oliver, appeals to the pro.
testant princes of Europe in favour of
the persecuted Wadenses, 53 Croup in children, 377. Cunnington, Mr. of Heytesbury, his en-
thusiasm for British antiquities, 101 ; his discovery of the indicin of aneleng British residence, 109; his remarks on the construction of Stonehenge,
127 Cuthbert's year in Canada, 40+; er-
tract, i6 Cutting on the teeth, to assist difficult
dentition, 377
atersion to, 181 ; 'remarks of the Rev.
Robert Hall on,' 181 Conventicle act, its operation, 130 Conversations on political economy,
288 Corinthian order, elegant variety of, 299 Corporation act, enacted, 129 Correspondence, letter from Mr. Snow,
520 Cotlon mills lighted by gas insured of a
lower premium than if lig'ted by candles
or lamps, 66 Cotton's Rev. T. testimony of the cruel
effects of the revocation of the edict
of Nantz, 139 Cowper, Wm. life and writings, 313, et
seq.; manuscript of his early life by himself, ib.; objections against its pub- Jication, 314 ; publisher's apology, ib.; Cowper's morbidness of mind, antece dent to the existence of his particular religious opinions, 316; unhappy state of mind under his relapse, ib.; not oc- casioned by his religious notions, ib. et seq.; sketch of his life, 317; ren- dered incompetent by his disorder, to give a correct statement of his feel. ings, ib. et seq.; remarks on the na- ture of the operations of physical causes on the moral faculties, 318, et seg.; Cowper's mode of life at the Temple, 321, 2; his literary contributions, 323 ; circumstances that originated his unhappy inorbidness of mind, 324, et seq.; progress of his disorder, 325; its entire independence on religious opinions, 327 ; his interview and con. versation with the Rev. Mr. Madan, 327; is placed under the care of Dr. Cotton, 328; settles at Huntingdon, ib.; return of his disorder at Olney, 329, 30; its causes, and peculiar direc- tion, 332, et seq.: parallel case of Mr. Simou Browne, 334 ; Cowper engages in poetical composition at the request of Mrs. Unitin, 335; his acquaintance with Mr. Bull, 336; letter of Cowper to Mr. Bull, 337, 8; illuess of Mrs. Unwin, 338, 9; great increase of bis disorder, ib.; death of Mrs. Unwin, 340; continues his translation of Homer, ib.; seized with the dropsy, 340; his death, 341; concluding re- fections, ib.; observations on some notices of the life, &c. of Cowper,
342 Cranmer on the power to elect bishops,
434 Cremation, two modes in use among the
ancient Brilons, 112
Dallas, Judge, his admirable address to
the grand jury of the county of War
wick, 406, et seq. Daniells' oriental scenery, 472, el segon
original notice of the work, 473; its execution and subjects, 474, el seg.; consummate plagiarism of M, Lar
gles, 476 Davidson's Waterloo, a poem, 93, 4 Davy on the action of acids on the salts
usually called hyper-oxymuriates, and on the gases produced from them,
348 Davy's experiments, &c. on the colours
used in painting, by the ancients,
345 Davy's experiments on a solid compound
of iodine and oxygene, and on its che
mical agencies, 347 Dead, Sir R. C. Hoare's, remarks on the
early modes of disposing of them, 112 Delta, prodigious fertility of its soil, 21 *Deposites in ancient British tumuli. foc
Hoare's ancient history of Wiltshite Dionysia, or orgies of Bacchus, 58,9 Disease, Dr. Adams's supposition and
proofs of its being perpetuated by isola-
lion, 469 Diseases of children, 277, et seq.; evils
likely to result from English mothers emigrating to France, &c. 278; ob- jections against foster-nurses, 280: and the use of pap, 281; weaning of infants, ib.; their clotbing, 282; ba- thing, 282, 3; air, 284; error of French mothers in nursing, 285, et seq.; nursing among the Caffres (note). ib.; infantile diseases chiefly depen- dent on the vessels that convey nou rishment to the system, 372; Dr. Clarke's notion of infantile ailments objectionable, ib. et seq.; hydrnce- phalus, originally brainular,374; me-
senteric atrophy, symptoms of, 375; rickets, 376; worms, ib.; diarrhea, 3b.; cutting on the teeth, 377; croup, ib.; vaccination, its estimation abroad, 377, 8; small-pox extirpaled at the Cape of Good Flope and the island of Ceylon, 378; security from vaccination per-
manent, 379 Dissent, general remarks on, 277, et
seg. Dissenting ministers, their application to
Lord Liverpool, in favour of the perse- cuted Vaudois, 100 Djetzar Pasha, bis cruel policy to secure
trauquillity to his successor, 20 Doctrine of the Church of England on
the efficacy of baptism vindicated, by
Dr. R. Lawrence, 172, et seq. Docovan on the nature and combina-
tionskof a newly discovered vegetable acid, with observations on the malic
acid, &c. 351 Eclectic Review, attack of the Christian
Engravings of the antiquities, &c. of
Egypt, from Denon, 562, el seq. Epidemic diseases, Adams on, 456, et
seg. Essays in rhyme, op orals aud man
ners, 263, et seq. Evangelical religion, Rogers's elements
of, 399, et seq. Faith in regard lo particular practilioner
: or medicines, its great efficacy, 188 Farewell sermons of the Nonconformit
ministers, 578, et seq; evil effects of the act of uniformity, 579, el seg.: inconsistency of some modern eval. gelical clergymen, 382; extracts from
the sermons, 585, et seq. Fatal experiment of some young men at
Edinburgh, 460 Faveil's speech in the court of common
council, 499, et seq.; treaty of the
Holy Alliance, 501 Forgiveness of sins, a reigning sense of
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