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Familiar Sermons on several of the Doctrines and Duties of the Christian Religion. By the Rev. William Barrow, LL.D. F.S. A. Prebendary of Southwell, &c. and Author of the Bampton Lecture Sermons for 1799. 2 vols. 8vo. 11. 1s.

Bishop Beveridge's Works. 6 vols. 8vo. 31. 3s.

Observations on the Bible Society, shewing that the present method of distributing Bibles among the lower orders of people, tends rather to check than encourage the doctrine of Christ. 8vo.

1s.

The Voice of Blood! a Sermon occa. sioned by the late horrid murder of Mr. George Bird, and Mary Simmons. Delivered at Greenwich, oè Lord's Day, Feb. 15. By George Scott.-1s.

Discourses on the Millennium. By David Bogue. 8vo. 14s.

TOPOGRAPHY AND TRAVELS.

Travels from Vienna through Lower Hungary; with some account of Vienna during the Congress. By R. Bright, M.D. Illustrated by 22 engravings and vignettes. 4to. 41. 4s. bds.

Peak Scenery, being the first of a series of Excursions in Derbyshire. By E. Rhodes Part I. in demy 4to. 11. 4s. in royal 4to. 11. 14s. and in imperial 4to. with India proof plates, 31. dedicated by permission to his Grace the Duke of Devonshire.

La Scava; or, some account of an excavation of a Roman Town, on the Hill of Chatale in Champagne, between St. Dizier and Joinville, discovered in the year 1772. To which is added a Journey to the Simplon, by Lausanne, and to Mont Blanc, through Geneva. By the Author of Letters from Paris in 1791-2, the Praise of Paris in 1802, a Slight Sketch in 1814, and two Tours in 1817. 8vo. 6s.

North of England and Scotland in 1704. f.cap 8vo. 5s.

This Journal (of which one hundred only are printed) is now first published from the original manuscript, formerly in the possession of the late Mr. Johnes of Hafod, the well-known translator of Froissart, Joinville, &c.— Nothing is known with regard to the Author, but it appears probable that he was a Londoner.

The Travels of Marco Polo, a Vene

tian, in the thirteenth Century; being a description of that early Traveller, of remarkable places and things, in the eastern parts of the World. Translated from the Italian, with Notes. By William Marsden, F.R.S. &c. 4to. 21. 12s. 6d. royal 41. 4s.

A Journey to Rome and Naples, performed in 1817; giving an account of the present state of Society in Italy; and containing Observations on the Fine Arts. By Henry Sass, Student of the Royal Academy of Arts. 8vo. 12s.

The Stranger's Guide to the city of New York, comprising a déscription of the public buildings, population, manufactures, markets, amusements, docks, and fortifications, with an account of the literary, philosophical, commercial establishments, and every object that can be interesting to the Stranger. To which is prefixed an historical sketch and a plan of the city. By E. M. Blunt, of New York. 4s. bds.

A New Picture of Rome; or, an interesting Itinerary, containing a general description of the monuments and most distinguished works in Painting, Sculp ture and Architecture, both ancient and modern, of that celebrated city and its environs. By Marien Vasi. Embellished with forty views of the public buildings, also a large plan of Rome, complete in one volume, 12s. bound.

Observations on Greenland, the adjacent Seas, and the North-West Passage to the Pacific Ocean, made in a voyage to Davis's Strait, during the Summer of 1817. By Bernard O'Reilly. Illustrated and embellished by charts, and numerous other plates, from drawings executed by the Author, from continual observations. 4to. 21. 2s. bds.

Letters during a Tour through some parts of France, Savoy, Switzerland, Germany, and the Netherlands, in the Summer of 1817. By Thomas Raffles, A.M. 12mo. 7s.

Journey through Asia Minor, Armenia, and Koordistan, in the years 1813 and 1814; with remarks on the marches of Alexander, and retreat of the Ten Thousand. By John Macdonald Kinneir. 8vo. 18s.

Greenland; being extracts from a Journal kept in that Country from 1770 to 1778. By H. E. Saabye. 8vo. 10s. 6d.

GENERAL INDEX.

VOL. IX. NEW SERIES.

Abrahams's, Benjamin, answer to the

;

Rev. C. Simeon's sermon, 375.
Africa, discoveries and travels in, 297, et
seq.; interior unknown to the ancients,
-299; account of the earliest attempts
to sail round Africa, 300; voyage of
Hanno, 301; early voyages of the
Portuguese, 303; remarkable account
of Ogané, a pagan chief of Benin, ib.
Capuchin missionaries sent to Congo
by the Pope, 393; Zingha, a female
chief, 304; Andrew Bittel, an English
prisoner among the Giagas, 305; early
proceedings of the French in Africa,
ib.; of the English, 306; Job, an
African prince, 307; the Dahomans,
308; proceedings of the African Asso-
ciation, 309; Ledyard, ib.; Lucas,
ib.; mortality at Sierra Leone, occasioned
by pestilential air, 310, 11; the Ashan-
tees, 311; republic of Cayor, 312;
French and Spanish trade in slaves, ib.
African Association, detail of its pro-
ceedings, 309.

African forts, papers relating to them,
297, et seq.

Agency of Divine Providence, O'Sulli-

van on, 42, et seq.

Agrippina, by Mrs. Hamilton, remarks on,

507.

Algebra moral, or Dr. Franklin's mode of
balancing arguments, 446.
Altar, domestie, a course of family pray-
ers, &c. 151, et seq.
Amlwch, its declining state, 425
Anecdotes of the life of Bishop Watson,
97, et seq.

Animals, Plumptre on the duties of men

towards them, 576, et seq.
Autinomianism, 401, et seq. the pious in-
quirer after Christian truth, not left
to wander in distraction of mind, 402;
inquiry into the causes of the cohe-
rence of the various complicated sys-
tems of opinions, 403; the reasoning
faculty has acted only a subordinate

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part in the process, ib.; Christianity
not traceable to any of the inherent
propensities of the human mind, ib.;
genuine test of a religious system,
404; its mode of application, ib. ; an-
tinomianism arises from a total cor-
ruption of the true design of religion,
ib.; may be called the stoicism of
Christianity, 405; intellectual and
sentimental quietism distinguished,
406; the mystic and the antinomian
contrasted, 406, 7; points selected as
prominent by antinomianism, 407;
adapted to produce simply a change
in the apprehensions of the mind,
409; on the doctrine of eternal justi-
fication, ib.; imputed sanctification,
410, et seq.; the moral law not a rule
of life, considered, 412, et seq.; a
believer not hurt by sin, 413, 4; re-
marks on prayer in reference to anti-
nomianism, 415; views and feelings
of the antinomian in regard to the
condition of unregenerate men, 417;
peculiar characteristics of antinomian
teaching and conduct, 529; agree-
ment between the socinian and the an-
tinomian in regard to the Bible, ib.;
discrepancy between the antinomian
system and the visible conduct of God
in his providence, 530; et seq.; the
system addresses itself cbiefly to the
minds of persons who enjoy great ex-
ternal tranquillity, 532, 3; is not
adapted, from its essential character,
to the mental condition of the bulk of
mankind, 533; inquiry into some of
the originating causes of antinomian-
ism, 534; viz. a passion for something
new and strange, &c. 535, 6; spiri-
tual pride, 537; licentiousness of con-
duct, 538; vanity or ambition, 539;
want of a solid theological education,
539; et seq.; provision of the church
of England for the theological educa-
tion of its ministers, exceedingly defec-

a

tive, 541, et seq.; inquiry how far an-
tinomianism has been increased by
the incautious language indulged in
by some public persons, 543, 4; whe-
ther the party owes or not its increase
to the influence of a reaction occa-
sioned by the general want of a se-
rious spirit in the professors of reli-
gion, 544; et seq.; Mr. Cowan's rea-
sons for seceding from the church,
546; his letter to the Bishop of Bristol,
ib.; his remarks on infant baptism, 547;
on sponsors in baptism, ib.; Mr. Bid-
dulph on the same point, 548; Dr. Ry-
land on salvation by grace, 549; on the
errors of antinomianism, 550; extract
from Mr. Bidlake on the same sub-
ject, 551; subjects of Mr. Cooper's
letters on truth vindicated, 551, 2;
his apology for the Calvinist, 552, 3; on
the correlative effects of Antinomianism,
553; character of Mr. Simons's letter,
.554.

Arabian writers give the first accounts of the
small-pox, 155.

Arrest under the inquisition, mode of, 351.
Assize ball at Lancaster, 428.

Austin's, Dr. theory of calculous concre-
tions, 274; his opinion that the ope-
ration for the stone is often a radical
cure for the disease, 275.

Autos de Fé, account of various, 357.
Ayton and Daniell's voyage round Great
Britain, 330, et seq.

Bank cases of forgery, 288.
Bark of plants, 324.

Bean, on the reasonableness of family
devotion, 151, 2.

Benger's, Miss, memoirs of Mrs. Hamil-

ton, 497; et seq.; residence at Mr.
Marshall's, 499; Dugald Stewart on.
youthful curiosity, ib. ; the imagination
frequently not duly appreciated, 500;
remarks on Sunday tasks, and the
mode of conveying religious instruc-
tion, 500, 1; attempt to shake her reli.
gious principles, 502; extract from a let-
ter on the loss of her brother, 503, 4;
her secluded state, 505; account of her
Hindoo Rajah, 506; Agrippina, 307;
remarks on Pestalozzi's mode of
teaching the Swiss peasantry, 509;
et seq.; her last illness and death,
511, 2; reflections on her birth-day,
extracted from her journal, 512
Beppo, a Venetian story, 555, et seq.;
extract, 556, 7.

Bible society controversy, 201, et seq.;
reflections on the over-ruling of op-
posing agencies, 203, ib.; Lloyd on the
assimilation of the Bible Society and the

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Church mission, 203, 4; extract from
Archbishop Sancroft's modern policies,
204; party-opposition against the so-
ciety, 205; former predictions and
denunciations of the Rev. Josiah
Thomas, in respect to the dissenters,
207; his present altered opinion, ib.;
Rev. Mr. Lloyd's opinion of the dis-
senters, 208; extract, 209, 10; op-
posite opinions of Dr. Wordsworth
and Mr. Twining, in regard to the
Bible Society, 211, 2; attack of Pro-
fessor Marsh, 212; Dr. Maltby's ob-
jection to giving away the complete
Bible, 213; origin of the Church Mis-
sionary Society, ib.; Mr. Lloyd on the
inefficacy of the Scriptures without an ex-
position, 214; his remarks on preach-
ing, 214; Stillingfleet on preaching,
215; Mr. Lloyd's appeal to the legisla
tors against the existence of organized
societies, 217, 8; unprincipled attempt
of Mr. Lloyd to misrepresent the
Bible Society, 219
Biddulph's search after truth in its own
field, the Holy Scriptures, 401, et seq.;
remarks on sponsors in baptism, 548
Bidlake's truth vindicated, 401; promi-
nent errors of antinomianism, 551
Birthwort, common, description of its singu-
lar structure, 266

Bloom on plants and fruits, 326
Borough compter, state of on Mr. Neild's
visit to it, 450; Mr. Buxton's account
of it. 456, et seq.
Boscastle Harbour, 338
Bossiney, 338

Botanical description of British plants in
the midland counties, by T. Purton,

159

Botanist's companion, by W. Salisbury,
159, et seq.

Botany, physiological, Keith's system,
259, et seq.

Boys, remarks on them as the subjects
of capital punishments, 289
Bristol jail, its dungeon, 463
Broome's selections from Fuller and
South, 128, et seq.; sketch of Fuller's
life, 128; his attachment to Charles's
party, ib.; his literary character, 129;
style, ib.; the faithful minister, ib. ; de-
finition of fancy, 130; South's genius
superior to Fuller's, 130, 1; his gene-
ral character, 131; on the original er
cellency of the understanding, 131, 2;
love, the bond of society, &c. 132; on
plainness of speech, 133
Bude Haven, 337

Bugg's country pastor, 252, et seq.;
subjects treated of, ib.; preachers of

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the doctrine of regeneration should them
selves be the subjects of it, 253; false
views of faith now prevalent in the world,
255; earnestness in preaching, ib,; re-
marks on the author's use of the terms
orthodox and evangelical, ib.; joining
the church, 257; on regard for an esla-
blished religion, 258

Butler, Bishop, on the mutual relations
existing among individuals of the
same species, 55

Buxton, on the present system of prison
discipline, 451, et seq. ; admiration of
virtuous character, seldom productive
of virtuous principles and motives,
451; example of Howard, ib.; false
notions entertained of the design of
imprisonment, 452; present mode of
punishment the source of crime, 452;

evils of a horror of reform, ib. ; dis
couragements of Howard, 453; many
important improvements have been ef-
fected by men of corrupt motives, 454;
Mr. Neild's labours in visiting prisons,
455; disappointment in his applica-
tion to government for authority, ib. ;
design of the present publication, ib. ;
account of Mr. Neild's visit to the Bo-
rough compter in 1801, &c. 456; de-
plorable situation of the prisoners on Mr.
Buxton's visit in 1817; the jailor's in-
formation, 459; Mr. B.'s visit to To-
thill Fields Bridewell, 460; jails at St.
Alban's, 460, 1; Guildford Jail, 461;
irons remarkably heavy, 462; Kingston
Jail and Bridewell, 462, 3; Bristol
Jail, 463; Caermarthen Castle, ib. ;
jail for debtors in Dover Castle, 464;
Mr. Neild's statement of the enormous
abuses of the King's Bench prison, ib.;
465; Hertford Jail, 465; Hereford
Jail, 466; capricious practice in different
jails with regard to irons, ib.; note;
debtors the most pitiable objects of the
British jails, 466; affecting stalement
in regard to a prisoner for fraud, 467, 8 ;
reflections addressed to the reader,
468, 9.

Caermarthen Castle, Mr. Neild's account
of its state, 463

Calculous disorders, Marcet's essay on
the chemical history and medical
treatment of, 270, et seq.
Campbell's voyage round the world,

162, et seq.; his birth and early ad-
ventures, ib.; enters on board a ship
in the Russian American company, ib.;
anchors in the harbour of St. Peter and
St. Paul, 163; wrecked on Sannack
Island, 163, 4; sails to Alexandria in
the Fox Islands, 165; second wreck,

and ils disastrous" consequences, ib.; ar
rives at the Sandwich Islands, ib.; re
lation of the late transactions in those
islands, ib.; method of detecting thieves,
166,7; author's surprise that no mis-
sionaries have been sent to these
islands, 168; remarkable ceremony prac
tised during the period called Macaheile,
167, 8; favourable character of the
present king, 168; author reaches Rio
Janeiro, and obliged to enter the hos
pital, 169; his further disasters and
return to Scotland, ib.; endeavours
to support himself by playing on the
violin on board a Clyde steam-boat, ib.
Caoutchouc, or India rubber, 327
Capital punishments, 284. See Punish

ments.

Catalani, opinion of her, in Italy, 475
Catechism, Geneva, 1

Cayor, a small African republic, 312
Chalmers's, Dr. sermon on the day of
the funeral of the Princess Charlotte,
84, et seq.

Charlotte, Princess, Edmeston's ode to
the memory of, 177

Charlotte, Princess of Wales, sermons
on the death of, 84; et seq.; extracts
from Dr. Chalmers's, 86,7; Mr. Hall's,
87,8; Dr, Smith's, 89; Mr. Hoare's,
279; Dr. Gray's sermon, 281: Mr.
Scott's, ib; Mr. Fletcher's, 282, 3;
Mr. Morell's, 283
Chartered schools in Ireland. See
Schools.

Chinese religious ceremonies, 40
China, Ellis's journal of the proceedings
of the late embassy to, 23, et seq.
Chinese, early acquaintance with the
small-pox, 136, 7

Chinese mode of communicating the
small-pox, 139

Chinese scenery, fine specimen of, 36, 7.
Christian manual, compiled from Eras-

mus's "Enchiridion," 366, et seq.
Christian records, 373, et seq.; charac
ter of the work, 374

Church Missionary Society, Wilson's de
fence of, 201

Churchman's epistle, 370, et seq.; an
imitation of Dryden's religio laici,
371; extract, ib. et seq.

Church establishments cannot be sent
into heathen lands, 562
Classification proposed of calculous con⚫
cretions, 271

Clergy, their conduct in supporting the

Bible Society, defended against Mr.
Lloyd, by the Rev. E.Cooper, 557, et seq.
Coalition between Lord North and Mr. Fox,
remarks of Bishop Watson on, 383, 4

Celebs deceived, 485, et seq.; the tale
objectionable, 486

Congo, visited by Capuchin mission-
aries sent by the Pope, 303, 4
Conveyance of animals to market, gene-
rally attended with very great unne-
cessary pain, 578

Coombe Martin, its lofty coast, 335
Cooper's letters to a serious and humble
inquirer after divine truth, 401; apo-
logy for the Calvinists, 552, 3; correla-
tive effects of antinomianism, 55
Cooper's vindication of the clerical sup-
porters of the Bible Society, in answer
to the Rev. E. Lloyd, 557, et seq.; spi
rit of the author, 557; summary of Mr.
Lloyd's objection to a clergyman's join-
ing the Bible Society, 557, 8; Mr.
Lloyd's objection in respect to joining
with dissenters considered, 558, et seq.;
division in the church, 560; operation of
the Bible Society, considered as inimical
to the Established Church, 561, 2; church
establishments impracticable in heathen
lands, 562

Coral rock, and worms, account of, on
the coast of Corea, 520

Corea, Hall's voyage to the western coast
of, 513, et seq.

Corean coast, erroneously drawn in our
charts, 514

Cornwall coast, great scarcity of its
trees, 334

Correspondence, private, of Dr. Frank-
lin, 433, et seq.

Cortes, cruel treatment of, by Ferdi.
nand VII. 360

Country pastor, by the Rev. G. Bugg,
252, et seq.

Cowan's reasons for seceding from the
established church, 401; et seq.;_ex-
tract from his letter to the Bishop of Bris
tol, 546; remarks on infant baptism,
547

Crimes, capital, multiplicity of, 284
Croly's lines on the death of the Prin

cess Charlotte of Wales, 579, et seq. ;
extract, 587

Croly's Paris, a poem, 579, et seq. ; re-
marks on modern society, 580; ex-
tracts, 580, et seq.
Crowther's Christian manual, 366, et

seg; the protestant cause indebted to
Erasmus, 366, 7; account of his "En-
chiridion Militis Christiani," 367;
extract, ib.; cautions in regard to read-
ing the Scriptures, 368; bitter reflections
of William the Conqueror, on a review of
his life, 269; on the worship paid to
saints by the Romanists, 370
Cunningham on the influence of friendly

societies on the morals, 80, et seq.;

superiority of friendly societies over
savings' banks, ib.; evils of savings'
banks exposed, ib,; author's reason.
ing defective, ib.; greater advantages
of friendly societies to the labouring
poor exhibited, 81; some objections
against them, opinion of Malthus on
savings' banks, 83; mistake of the
author, ib.

Cunningham's sermon on the death of
the Princess Charlotte, 84, et seq.
Cutaneous functions, probable relation be-
tween them and calculous complaints,
275, 6

Daniell's voyage round Great Britain,
330, et seq.

Dauphin, the late, his cruel treatment, by
Simon, 176; his wretchedness and
death, ib.

David's, St. site of, 343, 4
Deism, its prevalence among the fo-
reign reformed churches, 4
Dover Castle, jail for debtors, 464
Du Hamel, on the formation of wood,
325, 6

East's memoirs of Miss Emma Hum-
phries, 78, 9; extract, ib.
Edmeston's ode to the memory of the

Princess Charlotte, 177; extract, ib.
Education, great attention paid to it in the
Pays de Vaud, 70, 1

Education, proof of its tendency to repress
the influence of Popery among the poor
Irish, 127

Education, theological, the want of, one
among the causes of the prevalence of
antinomianism, 539

Ellis's journal of the late embassy to
China, 23, et seq.; difficult situation
of the resident mercantile gentlemen
at Canton, 25; causes of the present
embassy, 26, 7; ships anchor in the
Yellow Sea, 27; Chinese order of pre-
cedence, ib.; Chinese punishment, ib. ¡
Dress of the soldiery, 28; Lord Am-
herst's refusal to perform the Kotou,
ib.; impudent falsehood of the Chi-
nese commissioners, 29, 30; conti-
nued debates concerning the Tartar
ceremony, 30, et seq.; embassy not
permitted to enter Pekin, 31; unsuc-
cessful termination of the negociation, 31,
et seq.; abrupt dismission of the em-
bassy, 33; probable cause of the mis-
understanding, ib.; temple of the fire-
god, 34; a second temple described, 34,
5; the Chakho, or river with locks, 35;
beautiful specimen of Chinese scenery
and architecture, 367; exhibition of
military discipline aud manœuvres, 37, 8;
terminating intercourse between Lord
Amherst and the Chinese viceroy, 59;

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