Deift however afperfed, not far from the kingdom of heaven, ib. DEISTS, the wifeft men in the heathen world, 35.
DELAVAL, Mr. his experiments
in electricity, 426. DENMARK, Hiftory of in the mo.
dern Univerfal History, 559. DEVONSHIRE, Duke of, his cha- racter, by an enemy, 467. Abufed for refigning, ib. DIALOGUES, modern, the grand defect of, 24. Thofe of Ly- cian inimitable, 25. Between a Stoic and the Mogul. 26. Between Lacian and Mellinius, 29.
DICKSON, Dr. his account of the benent of blifters in inconti- nence of urine, 194. Of their efficacy in other diforders, 196. DIGNITY, and Meannefs, confi- dered, 14.
DISSENTER, zealous, furious for
Mo eration, 434. DISSENTERS, their readiness to join in Communion with the Church, on a reformation of the Liturgy, 308. A Society formed for worshipping God by a new form of Common Pray- er, ib
Dove of Christianity, changed to
a Vulture, 413. DRAMATIC Poetry confidered, III. The modern Drama preferred to the ancient, 113. DUNTHORN, Mr. his Elements of new Tables of the Motions of Jupiter's Satellites, 422.
EDUCATION, the importance of it, 213. The business of pa- rents, 259. The worst in the world that, which keeps a child wavering between the will of its Tutor and its own, 347. The most important rule of it, not to gain time, but to lose it, ib. Mr. Locke's method of, to be rejected, 344. ELLIS, Mr. his account of an Enerinus, 332.
ELOQUENCE, Congenial and ef fential to human speech, 377. This propofition controverted, ib. Modes of Eloquence ar- bitrary and local, ib. Not to be expected in facred Writ, 378.
EMPHASIS, obfervations on, 286 Proper marks for, wanted in writing, 287.
ENGLISH, a free nation only dur ing the election of Members of Parliament, 501. ENTHUSIASM, effential in Ode- writing, 224.
EPIC and Tragic Poetry contrast- ed and distinguished, 111. EVIDENCE, historical, uncertain- ty of, 362.
EZRA, Aben, mittaken in his application of Pfalm CX. 5. F. ANATICISM, its character,
FATHERS, in begetting and pro- viding for their offspring, dif- charge but a third part of their duty, 259. FERNERS, Earl of, two queflions put to the Judges at his trial,
defended, 51. Garden Journal, 52. His Voy- age to Lisbon, ib. His death, ib. His general character, 53. His mifcellaneous works, 55 FIRE, not a material body, 126. Its ufe and effect in vegeta- tion, 443. FITZGERALD, Mr. his experi- ments for checking the too lux- uriant growth of trees, 329. His defcription of a new ther- mometer and barometer, 425. FOSTER, Judge, his Reports com- mended, 140. His cenfure of the Lord Chancellor Bacon's conduct, 145. FREE, Dr. his remarkable charge of ingratitude against the Go- vernment, 237. FREE-Will, Arminian doctrine of, abfurd, and of immoral tendency, 435. FREWIN, Dr. his acceunt of a large ftone voided through the perinæum, 423.
AERTNER, Dr. his account of the Urtica Marina, 329. GENEVA, Hiftory of, in the Mo- dern Univerfal History, 413. Fanaticifm reigning there, ibid. GENIUS Confidered, 259. GEORGE II. an enemy to perfe- cution, 433- His noble de- claration on that head, to Mr. Whiston, ib. GERMAN Paftoral, fpecimens of, 129, 133.
GOD's Goodness, proved from
the connection between virtue and happiness, vice and mifery, 363. GOODNESS, Divine, great diffi- culties in the confideration of, 363. Strong argument in proof of, ib. GOSPEL Righteousness defined,
233. GOTHIC Poetry confidered, 88.
HEARNE, Thomas, Epigram on him, 495. HEATHCOTE, Mr. his patriot- ifm, 384, 385. HEBERDEN, Dr. his account of an earthquake in the island of Madeira, 331.
HENRY, Dr. his account of an
offification of the muscles, 422. HERODIAN, his remark on the little regard paid to Truth, by Hiftorians, 358.
HISTORIANS, uncertainty of their teflimony, 362. HISTORIES of Kings and King- doms, little better than Ro- mances, 362.
Holy Spirit, its office and opera. tians, 37. Extraordinarily manifefted in the Gift of
and Pindar, 249. HORSE, the tendency of that ani- mal to degenerate from the fineft fpecies, 42. Accounted for, 43. Error of thofe Riders
who make too much ufe of the
bridle, 315 HUNDING, King of Swden, fin- gular compact between him and Hading, King of Den-
INGHAM, Mr. his account of the cure of a fiftula, 192. INSPIRATION of the New Testa- ment, Bishop of Gloucefter's notion thereof, 373. JOEL, prophecies the effufion of the Spirit, on the day of Pen- ticoft, 10. And the deftruction of Jerufalem, ib. Meaning of his expreffions, day of the Lord,' and great day of the Lord,' afcertained, ib. JoHN, King of Denmark, his
dying charge to his fon, 359.- JOHNSTONE, Dr. his account of two remarkable medical cafes,
ISAIAH, why tiled the Evangeli- cal Prophet, 2. ITALIAN Poetry, brief history of, 94-96.
ITALY, Hiftory of, in the Mo- dern Univeral Hillory, 413. K.
mark, 361. Fatal confequence KAIMIS, Lord, his Elements
thereof, ib. HUNTER, Dr. his account of an. Emphysema, of a monftrous fize, 99. Of a difeafed Tibia, 194. Of an uncommon cafe of a feparation of the cpu- bis, ib. His farther obferva- tions on a fpecies of Aneurism, 196.
of Criticism, praised, 116. KINGS, made for mankind, not mankind for Kings, 450. KIRKLAND, Mr. his account of a curious medical case, 192. L.
AMBERT, Mr. his account of a new method of treating an Aneurism, 195. LANGUAGE, with respect to found, confidered, 21. In- ftances of impropriety in, 111.. LANGUAGES, ancient, defects of, 136.
LAUDE, M. de la, his apology, in regard to what he had faid of Sir Ifaac Newton, 226. LIBERTY, Civil, never fo much
in danger, as where no danger is fufpected, 469. Can never be too watch fully guarded, ib. Unalienable, 450. Our lofs of it predicted to be near at hand, 471.
-, Religious, afferted,
and recommended, 364. Con- firmed by Divine Revelation, 365. LITERARY Property, great quef tion concerning its nature, and legal fecurity, difcuffed, 177
LITURGY, Church of England, fcheme for a reformation of, 298. Neceffity of, deduced from the cafe of the Clergy themfelves, 299; from that of the Laity, 301. Nobility and Gentry exhorted to begin a re- formation of the fervice, in their domeltic chapels, 307. LOCKE, Mr. the firit who clearly delineated the human mind,
LYONS, Dr. his defcription of
the Cephus, 331. LYRE, defcription of that anci- ent mufical inftrument, 243, the Note.
LYRIC Poetry confidered, 240.
ACDONALD Eneas, a rebel, his cafe, 141. MACAULY, Dr. his account of a lock'd jaw, 100 Of the powerful effects of the fublim- ate, 104.
MACHIAVEL, his political prin- ciples difplayed and condemn- ed, 162. A fincere advocate for tyranny and inhumanity, 165. Inftanced in his apology for Cæfar Borgia, ib. His in- confiftencies, 166, 167. Hor- rible maxims extracted from his Prince, 168. Merit of his works allowed, where due, 170. MACKENZIE, Dr. his account of a dropfical cafe, 193. Of a re- markable feparation of a large part of the thigh-bone, ib. MACKINLAY, Mr. his letter re- lating to an eruption of Vefa-
vius, &c. 333. MADNES, Canine, a probable
method of preventing it, im- mediately after the bite, propo- fed by the Reviewers, 149. MALACHI, prophefies of John
the Baptift, and Chrift, 2. MANUAL of fpiritual exercifcs, a popish book, its abominable. tendency, 474. Grofs impu- rities in it, 476. MASKELYNE, Mr. his letter re- lating to the Moon's parallax, 332. Concerning the aberra- tion of the rays of light, 419. MASON, William, his elegies. compared to Young's Night thoughts, 489. Some of them praited, 490. METAPHORS, wherein different from fimilies and allegories, 110. Should never be hunted down, 352.
MEAD, Dr. a very brief repre-
fentation of his moral and sci- entific character, 271. MESSENGER, mentioned by Ma- lachi, who, afcertained, 2. MIDDLETON, Dr. his opinion. concerning the gift of tongues on the day of Pentecoft, 372. His notion of the infpired lan- guage in the New Teftament, examined, 374. He foretells
the destruction of the New Te- flament writings, from the bar- barity of their itile, 376. An- fwered, 378. Miftaken in his ideas of the perfection requifite to infpired writings, 380. MODERN Univerfal hiftory, its character, 359.
MOLLOY, Mr. his account of an
earthquake at Lifbon, 331. MOORE, Mr. his extract of Holy-
Crofs Parish Regiller, 425. MORANT, Mr. his relation of an uncommon dilcafe, 423. MORTALITY, London, bilis of,
obfervations on, 420. MOTHERS, importance of their nurfing their own children, 259. MORRIS,
MORRIS, Dr. his account of the ORATORY, Mr. Sherridan's ex-
virtues of æther, 101. MURPHY, Arthur, his life of Henry Fielding, 49. MUSEUS, the ancient Greek poet, fome account of him and his writings, 243. MUSES offended by poetical Si- mony, 426.
ARRATION and Defcrip- tion confidered, 110. NATIONS, like children, tractable in their infancy, 452. And incorrigible as they grow old, ib. NEWCASTLE, Duke of, invective difplay of his character, 466. New Teftament, ftile and lan- guage thereof defended, 374. Defeats of, no objection to their divine infpiration, 375. Bar- harity of, deemed by Dr. Middleton a fure mark of im- posture, 376. NICHOLLS, Dr. his anatomical observations on the death of his late Majefty, 423. NIXON, Mr. his additional ob- fervations on fome antiquities found at Herculaneum, 333. NOBILITY and gentry exhorted to begin a reformation of the liturgy in their domeftic cha- pels, 307.
DE, the nature of that fpe-
cies of poetry confidered, 244. Owes its chief excel- lence to enthufiafm, 245. Far- ther confidered, 252. OPACITY of the cornea, and of the chryftalline humour, from no venereal caufe, cured by a folution of fublimate, from Baron Van Swieten to Dr. Syl- vetter, 102. CPPOSITION to the prefent mi- niftry. faid to be formed, and by whom, 466.
PLAGIARISM of a modern poet detected, 429.
POLAND, hiftory of, in the Mo-
dern univerf. Hiflory, 410. POLISH government, nature of, 411. Senate, 412. Diet, 413. POPE's epiftle from Eloifa to Abe-
lard, paffage in criticised, 20. PRECEPTORS fhould ftudy first their pupils, 214. Always
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