![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.no/books/content?id=Eq0cY7GAAo4C&hl=no&output=html_text&pg=PT4&img=1&zoom=3&q=%22live,+And+by+them+did+he+live%3B+they+were+his+life.+In+such+access+of+mind,+in+such+high+hour%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U2YngTrc7Al9bpxioCxELtwJ1-1ag&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=482,407,5,10)
vourable estimate of the piece, ib. ance of Louis XVIU., at the Cathedral
of Nolie Dame described, ib. Ideas, theory of, unfounded, 132 L'Hôpital, Butler's essay on the life of, Insanity, Hill's essay on the prevention 148, et seq.
and cure o , 39, et seq.; its frequent Liadoui, dreadful catastrophe of the French occurrence, 40; asserted by the au- sick and wounded there, 633 thor, to be always founded on cor- Liberty, Hunt's descent of, a mask, 517; poral disease, ib.; it's proximate definition of a mask, ib.; subject, 517; cause, 47; its hereditary nature, 48; extracts, ib., et seq.; song of peace, 520; treatment, preventive and curative,ib., welcome of Ceres, 521 detection of pretenders to madness, Linley's poems, 627-8. 53-4
Lord of the Isles, a poem, by Walter Instinct of animals a law of nature, and Scott, 469, et seq; sketch of the
not an exertion of the reasoning prin- poem, 470, et seq.; extracts, 472 ciple, 327
Lunatic asylums, abuses and evils of, Interpretation of the Bible, Dr. Marsh's 49, melancholy instance of, ib..
course of lectures on,. 79, et seq.s of words, 84
Mac Culloch, on certain products ob-
tained in the distillation of wood, James I., state of religion in his reign, with some account of bituminous 271
substances, and remarks on coal, Jephthah, a poem, 205, et seq.
558; on the granite Tors of Cornwall, Jerome and Epiphanius, their assertion 559; Loggingrock, ib.; cheese-wring,
respecting the Hebrew Gospel used 560; on the vitrified forts of Scotland, by the Ebionites, (note) 375
56?; on the sublimation of Silica, John, first epistle, V, and 20th, Ward- 564; on the junction of trap and sand. Jaw's remarks on, 247
stone, at Stirling Castle, 568: miscel- • Johannes, a Mahikander Indian, his laneous remarks accoinpanying a ca- account of his conversion,' 5
talogue of specimens, 573; on several
parts of Scotland that exhibit quartz Keith's geometry, 174, el seg.
rock, &c. 573, isle of Rum, ib.; Craig Kidd, on the mineralogy of the neigh- of Ailsa, ib.; Arran, 574; Portsey,
bourhood of St. David's, Pembroke- ib. ; Crinan, ib.; on Staffa, 576; on. shire, 560
vegetable remains found in Chalce- Kohlmeister and Kmoch’s voyage from
dony, 576 Okkak to Ungava Bay, 1, et seq.
Madras and China, Wathen's voyage to,
447, et seq.; Conjeveram, 449; Vish- Labaume's narrative of the campaign nou's temple, ib.; temple and carri-
in Russia, 628, et seq., character of ages of Seeva, 451-2; Chinese tem- the work, 629, state of the French ple and holy pigsty, 455; British in- army on crossing the Niemen, ib. tegrity, its estimate in China, 457 ballle of Ostrowno, 630 ; admirable or- Maladelta , one of the Pyrenean chain, re- der of the Russians, 630; error of Buo- flections occasioned by the desolate ap- naparle, 630; destructive battle of Malo. pearance around it, 213 Jaroslavily, stern indifference of Buona- Malo.Jaroslavitz, destructive battle of, 632, parte, 632; dreudsul extremity of the Buonaparte's stern indifference on vieu- French army in ils relreal, 633 ; horrid ing the field of batile, ib. catastrophe al Liadoui, 633
Malumpava or Elephant tree, 227 Lathorn Hall, siege and defence of, 592-3 Man disqualified by sin for the full en- Laud, his cruel persecution of Alexan- joyment of the beauties and blessings der Leighton, 273
of nature, 13, et seq. Leftley's poems, 623, et seq.,, decline of Manuscripts of the books of Scripture,
his health, wilh his character, 624, in- their various readings, 81
cantation to the tooth-ach, 625-6 Marboré, one of the Pyrenees, picture of, Lent, all food rigorously prohibited till 213
after sun-set during its continuance, Marsh's course of lectures on the in- in Abyssinia, 420
terpretation of the Bible, 79, et seg.; Letters froin a lady to her sister, du. biblical criticism, its true object, 80;
ring a tour to Paris, in the months of. no book of Scripture extant in the April and May, 1814, 73-4; appear- author's own hand writing, ib.; form
in which the Scriptures existed pre- viously to the invention of printing, 1b.; manuscripts differ in their read- ings, 81 ; benefits resulting from bibli- cal criticism, 82 ; extract 83; inves- tigation of single words, ib.; Dr. Marsh, an advocate for the revision of the common version, 84; rụles for the interpretation of words, ib.; literal and figurative use of words, 85; alle. gory, its definition, 86; The Pope's su- premacy declared in the first chapler of Genesis,86; remarks on allegorizing texts,
87 Mary 1st, state of religion during her
reign, 267 Mask, what it is, 517 Mathematical tables, by the Rev. W.
A. Barker, 291-3 Mechanics, Bridge's treatise on, 308 Memorial on behalf of the native Irish,
607, et seq.; good effects of the Gaelic schools, 603; advantages of teachiog the Irish in their own tongue, 609; Dr. Johnson on circulating the
Scriptures, 610 Memory, causes of a bad one, 142 Merbury Francis, his examination before
Bishop Aylmer, 121, et sig. Mercury, table of its transits, 392 Mesuril; on the East coast of Africa, manu-
factory of M nioca there, 224 Military despotism, its demoralizing
influence, 540 Mind, its faculties not proportionate to
the size of the brain, 334 Miscellaneous papers of John Smeaton,
298, et seq. titles of the papers 299 Mont Perdu, the highest eminence of the
Pyrenean chain, 212 Monte Serrato, its hiermitage decribed,
308 Moon-light, a beautiful description of,
from Southey's Roderick, 365 Meral emancipation must precede poli-
tical freedoin, 541 Moral evil, its tendency to perpetuate
its own existence, 537; and to para- lyze the mass of the people in regard
to virtuous feeling, 538 Moravians, the public opinion of their
mode of christianizing the Heathen, founded upon deficient information, 1, et seq.; their mode not different from that of other missionaries, 8; eleven brethren slain by the Indians, 11; fail in their first attempt to settle at Labrador, 12; forin settlements at Nain, Okkak, and Hopedale, 13; specimen of a Moravian missionary, 157
More's (Mrs. H.) essay on the character and practical writings of St. Paul, 433; el seq.; chief difficulty of a writer on Christian morals, ib.; minds of various orders have respectively their appropriate scenes of action in their attempts to improve moral society, 435; causes that have tended to esta- blish the popularity of Mrs. More as a Christian Moralist, ib.; deficiency of her earlier writings in regard to Christian doctrine, 436; general cha- racter of her writings, 437; Author's vietos in treating on the character of St. Paul, 437-8; sketch of the contents, 438, et seq.; estimate of Pagan morality, ib; superiority of the Christian scheme, 439 ; on St. Peter's remark-that Si. Paul's epistles contain things hard to be understood, 439, epistles of St. Paul, of equal authority with the other scriptures, 440; distinction in regard to the cha. racter of Jesus Christ as exhibited in the Guspel, and in the Epistles, ib.; in- stance of an incautious mode of ex- pression, ib; remarks on the Gospel con- sidered as being merely a scheme of. words, 412; tendency of the doctrine of the Cross to raise the tone of moral oblin gation, 443; obedience requires not only molires, but inclination and power, 443; Paul's conduct in regard to ecclesiastical dignity, ib.; philosophy hostile to Chris. tian toleration, 444; ecils incident to somnolence of characler, 445, Author's reflections on the speculatists of the Ger- man school, ib. Mrs. More and Ma- dame de Stael contrasted, 446; St. Paul's heavenly mindedness, 600; on
the love of money,' ib. et seq.; de. ceptive nature of the principle, ib. the conduct of mun in his reception of the Gosprl, 603; God, the fountain of our mercies and virtues, ib.; on prayer, 604 ; Mrs. More's patrio'ism, 605; ENGLAND, remarks on her claims to having evan- gelized the heathen, &c. 606, estimate
of Mrs. More's work, 607 More's (Mrs. Hannah) sacred dramas,
404 Mosambique, some account of the Por-
tuguese slave trade at that place,
224, el seg Nain, a Moravian settlement formed
there, by Jens Haven, 13 Narrative of repassing the Beresina,
628 Native Irish, memorial of, 607, et seq. ;
good effects of the Gaelic schools, 608; advantages of teaching the frish
the later missions, not justly to be estimated by a contrast with the ad- vanced state of the Moravian mis- sions, 12; failure of the Moravians in their first attempt to settle in La- brador, ib.; Jens Haven renews the attempt and forms a settlement at Nain, 13; a second formed at Okkak, ib.; a third at Hopedale, 13; speci. men of a Moravian missionary, 157; state of the Labrador mission in 1812,
extracts from their Periodical Accounts relative to the settlement at Nain,' 157, et seq.; 'at Hopedale', 159, el seq.; ' situation of Okkak and Uogava Bay, and course of the voy- age,' 160; extracts from the journal, 161 ; mountains of Nachuak, 163; Es- quimaux mode of catching salmon-lrout, 164 ; address of an Esquimaux to his countrymen, 165; Esquimaux feast, 166 ; remarkable elevation of the tides, 167; extent of their voyage, 170; South river, ib.; Kohlmeister's address to the natives, 171; style and character of the work, 172 ; general success of the mission, ib.; appeal to the Chris- tian public on the embarrassments of
the Moravian funds, 173 Oliver Heywood, short account of him,
89; ertract, ib. Organs, their situations and external
marks according to Drs. Gall and
Spurzheim, 468 Original lines and translations, 619, et
seg.; e.rlracts, 620-1 Ostrowono, batlle of, 630 Oxen, Abyssinian custom of cutting the flesh
from their while living, 417-8 ; Bruce's account wantonly false, ib.
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.no/books/content?id=Eq0cY7GAAo4C&hl=no&output=html_text&pg=PT6&img=1&zoom=3&q=%22live,+And+by+them+did+he+live%3B+they+were+his+life.+In+such+access+of+mind,+in+such+high+hour%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U1-Y2bpAlZZ7bOhnhP5w5AAWrsjdQ&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=726,934,5,10)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.no/books/content?id=Eq0cY7GAAo4C&hl=no&output=html_text&pg=PT6&img=1&zoom=3&q=%22live,+And+by+them+did+he+live%3B+they+were+his+life.+In+such+access+of+mind,+in+such+high+hour%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U1-Y2bpAlZZ7bOhnhP5w5AAWrsjdQ&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=510,1110,3,7)
Paris, Eustace's Letter from, 74, et seq.
in 1802 and 1814, 72-3
letters from a lady to her sister during a tour to, in April and May
![[merged small][ocr errors]](https://books.google.no/books/content?id=Eq0cY7GAAo4C&hl=no&output=html_text&pg=PT7&img=1&zoom=3&q=%22live,+And+by+them+did+he+live%3B+they+were+his+life.+In+such+access+of+mind,+in+such+high+hour%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U0-5hSqxy1Uq9G-O8wvxCTwOgONnA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=994,35,6,203)
episties, ib.; the gospel as & scheme of morals, 412; doctrine of the cross, its tendency to raise the lone of moral obliga. lion, 443 ; obedience requires not only molives, but inclination and power, 443; Paul took no ecclesiastical dignity, ib.; philosophy hostile to Christian toleration, 444; somnolence of character, its evils, 445; remarks on the German school, ib.; St. Paul's heavenly minded- ness, 600; on the love of money, de- ceptive nature of the principle, ib.; God the fountain of our mercies and vir- tules, ib.; on prayer, 604; character of
the work, 607 Peace, song of, in the mask, 517; see
Hunt's Descent of Liberty Penn's prophecy of Ezekiel concerning
Gogue, 91, et seq.; prophecy become more clear as its accomplishment ap- proaches, 62; permanent peace for Europe not yet to be expected, 93 ; Gog, and the land of Magog, 95 ; Author's application of these names, 96; design of the work, 97; inquiry iuto the title of the prophecy, 98; nations signified by its names, ib.; in- vadiog army, its dative regions, 99 ; Gogue, its particular application, 101 ; prophetic signification of Jeru- salem and Israel, 103; declaration of the propkels, considered as threefold, after St. Augustine, 104 ; geography of the prophecy, 106; extract, ib.; objec- tions to the Author's system, 106.7;
general remarks, 108 Penry, John, bis persecution and execu-
tion in the reign of Elizabeth, 274 • Periodical Accounts of the Moravians,
extracts from', 157, el seg. Personality, its import as applied to a dis-
tinction in the Divine essence considered, 243; scriptwes asserl the fact, without
erplaining the mode, ib. Phillips on the veins of Cornwall, 361 Phillips's description of the oxyd of tip;
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.no/books/content?id=Eq0cY7GAAo4C&hl=no&output=html_text&pg=PT7&img=1&zoom=3&q=%22live,+And+by+them+did+he+live%3B+they+were+his+life.+In+such+access+of+mind,+in+such+high+hour%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U0-5hSqxy1Uq9G-O8wvxCTwOgONnA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=467,1108,4,10)
![[blocks in formation]](https://books.google.no/books/content?id=Eq0cY7GAAo4C&hl=no&output=html_text&pg=PT8&img=1&zoom=3&q=%22live,+And+by+them+did+he+live%3B+they+were+his+life.+In+such+access+of+mind,+in+such+high+hour%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U0zvsjS4dg3oHhpfJ8z3hrlRKacHw&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=513,148,400,523)
Poems by Leftley, 623, et seq.
Linley, 627, et seq. Poems by Susannah Wilson, 501, et seq.;
her origin and station of life, 502; ex.
tracts, ib. et seq. Pope, the personal infallibility of, indige
nantly disclaimed, by M. Gregoire,
547 Pope's supremacy taught in the first chapler
of Genesis, 86 Portugal, evils in regard to the slave trade
arising from the treaty toilh it, 310 Portuguese, extent of Their jurisdiction on
the east coast of Africa, 226 Potter's essays, moral and religious,
516 Precession, mode of deducing it, 389 Pretenders to madness, on the detection
of, 5:3-4 ; extract, ib. Priestley, Dr., indebted to his education
amung Calvinists for some of his best principles, note, 237; acknowledges that Calvinism is favourable to devo-
tion, 2, ib. Primary visitation sermon by Dr. Whi-
taker, 336, et seq.; polemical rancour, inquiry into its causes, 337; Dr. Horse ley's advice to the opponents of Calvinism, 339; peculiarities of Calvin's system, given by Dr. W. ib.; his remarks on them illogical, ib. et seq.; bis canou of criticism exposed, 340, et seq. ; bis statement of Calvin's tenets inaccu- rate, 342; his opinions respecting the human will examined, 345; he cautions against preaching Calvin's pecu- liar doctrines and thereby raising the • demon of assurance,' 347; see Whi.
taker Protestantism in France, its progress incun-
siderable, 78 Pulo Penang, its great beauty, 453 ;
danger from the Malays, 454 Puritans, Brooks' lives of, 113, et seq.
their rise, 269; separate from the national church, 270 Pyrenees, Ramond's travels in, 211, et
seg.
Rooms, objections against the English
mode of warming them, 194 Russian campaigo, Labaume's narrative
of, 628, et seq. Russians, manners and habits of the
lower classes, contrasted with English habits, 191
Sacred Dramas, by Miss Hannah More,
404 Salter's Angler's Guide, 616, et seq.; de- fence of angling, 617; character of
the work, &c. 618 Salt's voyage to Abyssinia, 218, et seq.;
Bruce, estimate of his merits and failures in regard to his description of this country, 213, and extract; his fame still almost unrivalled, 220 ; Mr. S.'s dedication to the Regent, 221; Elephant point, 222 ; whales numerous in Sofala bny, 223 ; Mosambique, ib.; manufactory for maniooa at Mesuril, 224; slave trade at Mosambique, ib.; Extract, 225; reflections on Mr. S.'s remarks, ih. ; extent of the Porluguese jurisdiction on this coast, 226; the Ma- hooa, 227; Malumpava or Elephant tree, ib.; fish used to catch turtle, ib.; Marati pirates, ib. ; immense shoal of dead fish, 229; remarkable appearance of the sun, occasioned by refraction, 229; Aden, ib.; the Dumhoeta, their manners, &c., 231-2; moving sands, 233; meets Mr. Pearce at Massowa, 234 ; Bruce's caves of the Troglodi. tes imaginary, ib. ; interesting scene (at Diran) in the interior of Africa, 235; Galla oren, their enormous horns,
Ramond's travels in the Pyrenees, 211,
et seq.; Mont Perdu, the highest emi- nence of the chain, 212; reflections on the desolate appearance from Maladella, 212 ; picture of Marboré, 213; Come- lie, ib., et seq.; Brecbe de Roland, line of separation between France and
Spain, 214 Reason the standard of revelation, con-
sequences of admitting it, 370 Reasons of Stale, Pope Pius öth's iliustra-
tion of them, 459
« ForrigeFortsett » |