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Spanish man-of-war, wrecked, 482.
Species of things, 328.

Speech, on the organs of, 361.
Sports of England, 133.

Stanhope, Mr, letter from, 444, 445.
Staremberg, Count, 445.

Stationers' Company, monopoly of
the, 203-205, 208.

Stewart, Dugald, on the progress of
philosophy, 9; his character of
Locke, 177; his remarks on
Locke's principles, 281.
Stewart, Mr, a Scotch Member of
Parliament, 438.
Stillingfleet, Dr, Bishop of Worces-
ter, opposes Locke's Philosophy,
194; reply of, 195; his death,
ib.; his attack on the Noncon-
formists, 346; Locke's answer
to it, ib.

Strachy, John, letters of Locke to,
13, 18, 21, 26, 27.
Strafford, the Earl of, 120.
Stringer, Mr, his illness, 34; ex-
tracts from his letters to Locke,
ib.
Study, results in knowledge, 92;
how to pursue it with profit and
advantage, 95; time requisite for,
99.

Substances, natural ideas of, 376,
389; on the names of, 382, 385.
Succession, idea of, 371.
Sully, Mémoires de, 85.
Sunderland, the Earl of, his corre-
spondence with Dr Fell, Bishop
of Oxford, relative to the expul-
sion of Locke from Christ Church,
147, 149, 152, 155.
Superstition, cause and rise of, 296.
Swammerdam, his collection of ani-
mal remains, 165.
Swerin, the Prince of, 12.
Sydenham, Dr, his praise of Locke's
medical skill, 9; alluded to, 44.
Sydney, Algernon, execution of, 139.

T

Taxes, levied in France, 72.

| Teachers, two sorts of, among the
ancients, 286.

Testament, the New, old manu-
scripts of the, 81.

Theists and Atheists, question be-
tween the, 314.

Thomas, David, his letter to Locke,
403.

Thought, amendment of the general
habits of, 180.

Thus I think, 306.
Tilliard, arrival of Locke at, 48.
Tillotson, Archbishop, 321.
Time, improvement of, 93.
Time and Duration, 370; ideas of,
371.

Toinard, M., new system of, 83.
Toland, his work entitled Christi-
anity not Mysterious, 194.
Toleration, Locke's letter on, 156;
a Second Letter for, 202; Locke's
Fourth Letter for, 364.

Tories, ill humour of the, 239.
Toulon, aspect of the country near,
67; the port of, and vessels there,
68.
Toulouse, sacred relics at, 80.
Tours, situation of the town of, 72;
taxes levied at, ib.

Townshend, Lord, 445, 446, 449,
450, 455, 463; his letters to the
Earl of Chesterfield, 467, 469;
conference at his house, 470; his
letters to the Duke of Newcastle,
473, 474, 476.

Tradition, recourse to, 296.
Treatise on Government, by Locke,
280.

Trinity, doctrine of the, 194, 196,
298; remarks on the, 342.
Trumbull, Sir William, his letter to
Locke, 245.

Truth, the proper object of the hu-

man mind, 101; on the clear con-
ception of, 103; the duty of man
to search after it, 282, 361; how
to arrive at it, 323, 393.
Tully's Works, imported copy of,
seized, 204.

Turf, its value in Holland, 167.

Tea, Japanese mode of making, 160. Tuscany and Parma, succession of,

472.

Tyrrell, Mr, a friend of Locke, | Walpole, Sir Robert, affairs during
3; his letters to Locke, 168, 169,
171, 193, 198.

U

Understanding-arguments positive
and negative, 329.
Understanding and Power, ideas of,
376.

Unitarians, texts of the, 297.
Uzes, town of, near Nismes, 55.

V

Valence, town of, 50.
Vane, Sir Walter, Envoy to the
Elector of Brandenburgh, 10;
Locke appointed Secretary to, ib.
Vard, Marquis de, 64.

Vaucluse, the famous fountain at,
69.

Vernet, the seat of the Abbé Defiat,
78.

Vernules, Duc de, Governor of Lan-
guedoc, 58, 61.
Versailles, Chateau at, 74.
Vice, remarks on, 293.
Vienna, secret treaty of, 447.
Virtue, things essential to, 116;
obligations of, 292.

Virtues and vices of mankind, 309.
Vita Eterna, 297.

W

Wager, Sir Charles, fleet under,
475, 476.
Waldegrave, Lord, instructions to,
484;
letters of the Duke of New-
castle to, ib., 486, 487.

his administration, 435; letter
from, 448; meeting of the Lords
at his house, 471, 477.
Wharton, Mr, 238.

Wichkot, Dr, sermons of, 272.
Wicked, doom of the, 323.
Wienwert, Church of the Labadists
at, 162.
William III., 238; determines upon
a Council of Trade, 240; sends
for Mr Locke, 249; his Majesty's
conversation with him, 251; speech
of, 260; his death, 451.
Wines, French, value of, 71.
Wolfenbuttel, treaty between George
II. and the Duke of, 455, 456.
Wood, Captain, his attempt to dis-
cover a north-west passage, in
1676, 132.

Worcum, approach to, 161.
Words, on the true value of, 93,

387; on the abuse of, 361; are
of two sorts, 379; nature and sig-
nification of, 380; have a double
use, 383.

Writings, inspired, remarks on the,
294.

Wynne, Mr, recommends Locke's

Essay to the University of Ox-
ford, 189; his letter to Locke
concerning it, ib.; reply to it, 191.

Y

Yelverton, Sir Henry, his work on
Miracles, 225.


Zinzendorf, Count, 463, 464.

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