senterie atrophy, symptoms of, 375; rickets, 376; worms, ib.; diarrhea, ib.; cutting on the teeth, 377; croup, ib.; vaccination, its es imation abroad, 377, 8; small-pox extirpated at the Cape of Good Hope and the island of Ceylon, 378; security from vaccination per- manent, 379
Dissent, general remarks on, 277, et seq.
Dissenting ministers, their application to Lord Liverpool, in favour of the perse- cuted Vaudois, 100
Djezzar Pasha, his cruel policy to secure tranquillity to his successor, 20 Doctrine of the Church of England on the efficacy of baptism vindicated, by Dr. R. Lawrence, 172, et seq. Donovan on the nature and combina- tions of a newly discovered vegetable acid, with observations on the malic acid, &c. 351
Eclectic Review, attack of the Christian Observer on it, 209, et seq. See Chris- tian Observer. Eclectic Review, NEW SERIES, indepen- dent on the original work, in regard to management, &c. 220 Edicts, former, against the Waldenses, 95, enforced by Victor Emanuel in 1814, 96, et seq. Edmonds's Gospel committed to faithful men, 388, 9; dissenting literary insti- tutions, 389; on suitable candidates for the ministry, ib. et seq.; appeal to can- didates, 390 Edwards, the Rev. Jonathan, Hopkins's memoirs of, 79, et seq.; extract from a letter on his being appointed to the pre- sidency of New Jersey college, ib. Egypt, a series of engravings of, from Denon's expedition of the French, 562, et seq. Egyptian hieroglyphics, their elucida- tion utterly hopeless, 33; extract, ib.; Crux ansata, the only one hitherto de- tected, ib.
Egypt still literally subject to the plagues inflicted by the hand of Moses and Aaron,
22
Electricity, Singer's elements of, 558, et seq.
Eloquence in the House of Commons, its
present low state, 143; probable causes,ib. Ely's visits of mercy, 87, et seq. Endemic disorders, see Adams on epi- demics, &c.
English officer, generosity of one to an American prisoner, 89
Engravings of the antiquities, &c. of Egypt, from Denon, 562, et seq. Epidemic diseases, Adams on, 456, et seq.
Essays in rhyme, on morals and man- ners, 263, et seq.
Evangelical religion, Rogers's elements of, 399, et seq.
Faith in regard to particular practitioners or medicines, its great efficacy, 188 Farewell sermons of the Nonconformist ministers, 578, et seq; evil effects of the act of uniformity, 579, et seq.; inconsistency of some modern evan- gelical clergymen, 582; extracts from the sermons, 585, et seq. Fatal experiment of some young men at Edinburgh, 460
Favell's speech in the court of common council, 499, et seq.; treaty of the Holy Alliance, 501 Forgiveness of sins, a reigning sense of the security of, combined with an operative sentiment of abhorrence at sin, 246; extract from Dr. Jones's ser- mons, ib. Foster-nurses,
Dr. Clarke's objection against them, 280 Fortune, the goddess, worship of, 59 Fouché, memoirs of, 511, et seq.; his cruelty and tyranny, 513; not con- stitutionally ferocious, ib.; his laud- able conduct under Napoleon, 515 For, C. J. notice of his parliamentary cha- racler, 149
French divines, not models for English preachers, 151
French preacher, Cobbin's, 150, et seq. Friedlander de l'education physique de Phomme, 277, et seq.; marks and mon- trosilies, 279; superiority of English over French mothers in the early treatment of children, 281; vaccina- tion its high estimation abroad, 378; small-por extirpated at the Cape of Good Hope and Island of Ceylon, ib; see dis- eases of children.
Frost, on remuneration to witnesses, in civil actions, for loss of time, &c. 78
Garland for the grave of Sheridan, 502, et seq.
Gas, from coal, mode of procuring it, 66; apprehension of danger from gas unfounded, ib.
Gas light, Accum's practical treatise on,
61, et seq.; remarks on the combustion of candles and of oil, 61,2; cause of the superiority of wax over tallow candles,
ib.; improvement in the mode of burn- ing tallow candles, 63; light from gas complete at once, ib.; pit coal, its three classes, ib.; coal should be sold by weight only, 64; Mr. Acker- mann's statement of the expense of lighting with gas, compared with the former mode, 65; mode of procuring gas, &c. 66; danger less to be apprehended from burn- ing gas than from candles or lamps, ib. Gelidus, Dr. Johnson's character of, ill- conceived, 188
Gironde party, notice of the, 235 Goitres of the Alps, 469 Goodwin's triumph of faith, 486, 7; account of the author, ib. Gordon, Peter, narrative of his impri- sonment, and escape from France, 89, et seq.; author's departure from Cambrai, 90, et seq.; his testimony of the benefits conferred by the patriotic fund,
93
Gospel committed to faithful men, a sermon by Thomas Edmonds, at the Stepney academical institution, 388, et seq. Graham's, the Rev. W. remarks on tole- ration, 137
Greatheed's life and writings of W. Cowper, 313, et seq.
Great pyramid of Djezza, supposed to have been built by the Israelites to re- ceive the body of Joseph, 30; objec- tions to this supposition, ib. Greek cities, peculiarity of their situations,
297
Gregoire, M. on the last article of the French constitution, 522; on an here- ditary peerage, 531 Gyles's elements of Hebrew grammar, 485, 6
Habitations, the earliest among the Britons, nature of, 123, 4 Hall, the Rev. Robert, on religious con- troversy, 181, et seq.
on the consistency of Christianity with a love of freedom, 528,9 (note).
Ilaskins's battle of Waterloo, a poem, 93, 4 Hawksley's emendations of Hopkins's memoirs of President Edwards, 79, et seq. Hebrew Grammar, Gyles's elements of, 485, 6 Hereditary peculiarities of the human race, 456, et seq.; hereditary com- plaints, 468, et seq.; seeAdams on epi- demic disorders
High-Church party at the restoration, their sentiments in regard to baptism, 178, 9 History of the French factions till the abdication of Napoleon, 229, et seq. Hoare's ancient history of S. Wiltshire,
105, et seq.; nature of the author's re- sources, 106; deep interest excited in the mind, by the investigation of aboriginal British antiquities, ib. et seq.; notice of Mr. Cunnington, of Heytesbury, 107, 8; remarks on the Celtic and Belgic controversy, ib.; in- dicia of ancient British towns, &c. 109; national varieties of the ancient mounds and ditches, ib.; author's classification of barrows, 110; long- barrows, 111; Druid, or female bar- rows, ib.; various modes of interment, ib. et seq.; positions of the inhumed bodies, 111, 2; remarks on the cre mations, 113; examination of the con- tents of various barrows, 114; et seq.;. composition of the urns found in the early interments, 120; remarks on the sites of the ancient towns, 123; on Stone- henge, 125, 6. Holford's, Miss, Margaret of Anjou, 73, et seq.; character of the work, 74; extracts, 75, et seq.
Holland, Lord, his parliamentary character,
150
Home on the structure of the organs of respiration in animals which hold an intermediate place between the class pisces and the class vermes, 352 Homer, no actual portrait of him in pos-
session of the ancients, 56, 7 Homicide by implication, curious in- stance of in the island of Cos, 38 House of Commons, its influence proba- bly widely extensive, 141 Hopkins's memoirs of the Rev. Jonathan Edwards, 79, et seq.
Horse's head, its admirable position in the temple of Minerva, 293 Hypochondriac, his fatal conduct in studying his feelings, 191, 2
Insbriation a species of self-murder, 189 Infancy, a poem, 290, 1; extracts, 291 Innes's relative responsibility, 386; the
universe a system of order and de- pendence, ib.; relative responsibility of almost universal concern, 387; extract, ib. et seq.
Inquisition, absurdity and cruelty of its con- stitution, 50, 1
Insanity, hypochondriasis, &c. Reid's essays on, 183, et seq.
Insanity not to be remedied by harsh measures, 190
Intellect, vigour of, its great effects, 611 Iron not found among the deposites of the earliest British interments, 120
Job's execration of his birth-day, Booth- royd's rendering of, 593
Johnson's, Dr. John, poems by W. Cow-
per, vol. 3, 313, et seq.
Johnson's, Dr. Samuel, retort on Millar
Jones's Dr. sermons, 238, et seq.; dif- ference between spoken and written eloquence, ib.; style of the author, evangelical, 241; subjects of the ser- mons, ib.; advantage of religion to the marriage state, 244-5; remarks on the forgiveness of sins, as connected with an operative sense of abhorrence of sin, 246; extracts, 246-7; reflections on the doctrines of salvation, 249; ex- tracts illustrative of the author's style, ib. et seq.
Jones's history of the Waldenses, 42, et seq.; additions to the present edition, 43-4; reasons for counteracting the present attempt to revive popery, 44-5; principles of Athanasius intole rant, 45; character and conduct of the catholic clergy of that period, 46; cer- tain opinions of Erius, condemned by Mosheim and his translator; the writer's exposition of their inconsistency, 47; the true nature of self-inflicted pe nances, 48; growing superstitions of the church opposed by Vigilantins, ib.; who is denounced as a heretic by Jerome, ib.; account of Claude of Turin, ib.; origin of the Waldenses 49; their contemptuous names con- ferred by their enemies, ib.; in France called Albigenses, ib.; become ob- noxious to the court of Rome by the preaching of Peter Waldo, 49; short account of Waldo, 50; views and practices of the Waldenses similar to those of the reformers, ib.; wickedness of the constitution of the inquisition, 50, 1 ; first general altack on the Waldenses by
the papists, 51, 2; cruelty perpetrated by the papists in the valley of Loyse, 52; barbarous decree, under the autho- rity of the court of Savoy, to expel its Waldensean subjects, 52, 3; noble conduct of Oliver Cromwell on the occasion, ib.; orders Milton to write an appeal to the protestant princes of Europe, ib.
Juvenile delinquency in London, report of the committee for investigating the causes of the increase of, 405, et seq.; Judge Dallas's address to the grand jury of Warwick, 406, 7; causes of de- linquency, 408, et seq.; progressive de linquency from the want of education, 409; evils arising from the defective system of prison discipline, 410, the pre- sent excellent management of the boys in Newgate, 410; necessity for classing criminals, 411; intended re- gulatious in regard to the boys at the penitentiary, 412
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Lambesc, prince of, his conduct at the Tuilleries variously related, 233, 4 La Mar Zarah, its course by Tombuctoo into the Niger, 258
Langles M. his consummate plagiarism, 476
Larochejacquelein, memoirs of the marchioness de, 440, et seq; consi- derations of the effects of war in re- gard to the female portion of society, 442; duties of females, to counteract a military spirit in young persons, 2b;. family, &c. of the marchioness, ib. et seq.; M. de Lescure, her first hus- band, ib.; are prevented from emi- grating by the queen, 444; generous presence of mind in a Parisian grocer, 445; description of la Vendée, or, le pays du bocage, ib.; et seq.; feudal state of its inhabitants, 446, 7; causes of the reaction, 448; atrocious cruelty of the republicans, ib.; the peasantry the originators of the war, 449; its utterly hopeless prospects, 450, 1; conduct of the Bretons, ib.; admirably dispassio- nate style of the marchioness's state- ments, 452; her perils and great suf- ferings, ib.; death of Lescure, 454;
fanaticism of the French royalists, 455; their distress and total rnin, ib. Laurence's, Dr. vindication of the doc- trine of the church of England on the efficacy of baptism 172, et seq.; pre- liminary remarks, ib.; true state of the question, 173; objectionable peculia- rities of Calvin's system not held by modern Calvinists, ib.; baptism con- sidered by Dr. L. as involving the na- ture of Divine election, 174; phraseo- logy of the Church of England bor- rowed from that of Rome, 175; bap- tism and regeneration considered by the Fathers as synonymous terms, 175; ser- vice for adults in the Church of Eng- land, considers them as unregenerate till baptized, ib; office for adult baptism compiled by anti-calvinists, 177; Luther on baptism, ib.; language of the Latin articles on the same subject, ib. el seq.; sentiments of the high-church party at the Restoration, 178, 9; Dr. L's remarks on a supposed disposition in infants to fulfil their baptismal engagements, ib.; remarks of the Rev. Robert Hall on controversy, 181, 2 Lavallée's history of French factions, 229, et seq.; character of Louis XVI, 231; notice of the present royal fa- mily, 252; late duke of Orleans, ib.; Abbé Maury, 232, 3; differing ac- counts of the conduct of the prince of Lambesc, 233, 4; Vergniaux and others, 235; Robespierre, ib. et seq.; his fall and death, 236, 7; notices of various prominent characters, 357, et seq.; Bonaparte at Paris after his re- turn from Egypt, 359; anecdotes of Bonaparte, 360, et seq.; the infernal machine, 360, 1; of the Pope at Paris, 363
Lavington's sermons to young people, 286, et seq.; remonstrance against conferring with flesh and blood, 287
Lay of the Laureate, 196, et seq.; Le Faucheur, on the merits of Christ, 161 Light from gas, its superior brilliancy and its causes, 63 Looking unto Jesus, by Isaac Ambrose, 192, 3
Love, on the French stage, its sameness, 380; its wonderful variety on the English, ib.; in modern drama, a guilty passion, 381 Loyse, massacre of the Waldenses in the valley of, 52
Luke xxiii. 32, its objectionable rendering in the common version of the Scriptures, 597 Lusieri, his admirable skill as an artist,
40; exquisite nature of his designs taken at Athens, ib.
Maltby's Morell's Lexicon Græco-proso- diacum, 481, et seq.; plan, &c. of the work, ib.; additions by Mr. Malt- by, 482; specimens of the work, ib et seq.; its execution, &c. 484 Man of taste, prejudices of the, 266,7; devotion of the, 270, 1 Mant's academical sermons, 417, et seq.; truth not an equi distance between opposite errors, 418; absurdity of the high-church clergy in classing Cal- vinists and Socinians together as abettors of heresy, 418; extreme bi- gotry of Dr. Mant, ib. et seq.; remarks on the party zeal of the Evangelical clergy, 421; their prejudices against the Dissenters unreasonable and un- justifiable, ib.; evils occasioned by uniformity, 422; inconsistent rea- soning of the clergy the occasion of triumph to the Papist and the Soci- nian, 422, 3; tenderness of Dr. Mant towards Socinians, 424; his high tone in speaking of Dissenters, 425; sub- jects of the sermons, ib.; Dissenters anxious to seek intelligent guides to the understanding of the Scriptures, 426; Dr. M's exposition of the errors of methodism, 427; on intruding into the priestly office, 428; on the authority requisite to justify the taking of the office, ib. et seq.; apostolic succession of the English Church, derived from Paul, independently of the Romish succession from Peter, 431; speci- men of Dr. M's logical powers, ib.; the principal continental reformed churches are without episcopal ordi- nation, ib.; John Wesley episcopally ordained, 433; locality of the epis- copal powers of the bishop of Cal- cutta, ib.; Cranmer on the electing of bishops, 434; nature and purpose of ordination considered, 434, 5; Church of England ordination a civil trans- action, ib.; extract from a sermon at Mr. Yockney's ordination, 435, et seq.; cautions to the political dissenting mi- nister, 438,9; to the temporizer,439, 40 Marbles ancient, description of the col- lection of, in the British Museum, 54, et seq.; heads of Hercules and Bac- chus, nobler than nature, 56, ancients possessed no real portrait of Homer, 56, 7; had finer models of the human countenance than nature now offers, 57; female figures, ib.; Dionysea, 58; worship of the goddess Fortune, 58, 9
b
Margaret of Anjou, 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 between a Reformed and a Presbyterian church in North America, 344; jealousy of innovation of long ac- quired habits, &c. 544; on the UNITY OF 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 secta- 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, et seq. 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 seq. Monastic and baronial remains, 553, et seq.
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.
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