Cælebs deceived, 485, et seq.; the tale superiority of friendly societies over objectionable, 486
savings' banks, ib.; evils of savings' Congo, visited by Capuchin mission- banks exposed, ib.; author's reason aries sent by the Pope, 303, 4
ing defective, ib.; greater advantages Conveyance of animals to market, gene- of friendly societies to the labouring
rally attended with very great unne- poor exhibited, 81; some objections cessary pain, 578
against them, opinion of Malthus on Coombe Martin, its lofty coast, 335
savings' banks, 83; mistake of the Cooper's letters to a serious and humble author, ib.
inquirer after divine truth, 401; apo- Cunningham's sermon on the death of logy for the Calvinists, 552, 3; correla- the Princess Charlotte, 84, et seq.
tive effects of antinomianism, 553 Culaneous functions, probable relation be Cooper's vindication of the clerical sup- tween them and calculous complaints,
porters of the Bible Society, in answer 275, 6 to the Res. E. Lloyd, 557, et seq. ; spi. Daniell's voyage round Great Britain, rit of the anthor, 557; summary of Mr.
330, el seq. Lloyd's objection to a clergyman's join- Dauphin, the lale, his cruel treatment, be ing the Bible Society, 557, 8; Mr. Simon, 176; his wretchedness and Lloyd's objection in respect to joining death, ib. with dissenters considered, 558, el seq. ; David's, St. site of, 343, 4 division in the church, 560; operalion of Deism, its prevalence among the for the Bible Society, considered as inimical reign reformed churches, 4 to the Established Church, 561,2; church Dover Castle, jail for debtors, 464 establishments impracticable in heathen Du Hamel, on the formation of wond, lands, 562
325, 6 Coral rock, and worms, account of, on East's memoirs of Miss Emma Hem- the coast of Corea, 520
phries, 78, 9; extract, ib. Corea, Hall's voyage to the western coast Edmeston's ode to the memory of the of, 513, et seq.
Princess Charlotte, 177, extract, ib. Corean coast, erroneously drawn in our Education, great attention paid to it in the charts, 514
Pays de Vaud, 70, 1 Cornwall coast, great scarcity of its Education, proof of its tendency to repress trees, 334
the influence of Popery among the per Correspondence, private, of Dr. Frank- Irish, 127 lin, 433, et seq.
Education, theological, the want of, one Cortes, cruel treatment of, by Ferdi. among the causes of the prevalence of nand VII. 360
antinomianism, 539 Country pastor, by the Rev. G. Bugs, Ellis's journal of the late embassy to 252, et seq.
China, 23, et seq. ; difficult situation Cowan's reasons for seceding from the of the resident mercantile gentlemen
establisbed church, 401 ; et seq. ; er- at Canton, 25; causes of the present tract from his letter to the Bishop of Brise embassy, 26, 7; ships anchor in the tol, 546; remarks on injani baptism, Yellow Sea, 27; Chinese order of pre- 547
cedence, ib. ; Chinese punishment, ib.; Crimes, capital, multiplicity of, 284 Dress of the soldiery, 28; Lord Am- Croly's lines on the death of the Prin. herst's refusal to perform the Kotou,
cess Charlotte of Wales, 579, el seq. ; ib.; impudent falsehood of the Chi- extract, 587
nese commissioners, 29, 30; costi- Croly's Paris, a poem, 579, et seq. ; re- nued debates concerning the Tartar
marks op modern society, 580; ex. ceremony, 30, et seq. ; embassy not tracts, 580, et seq.
permitted to enter Pekin, 31; unsut- Crowther's Christian manual, 366, et cessful termination of the negociation, S1, seq; the protestant cause indebted to
et seq.; abrupt dismission of the emn- Erasmus, 366,7; account of his “ En.
bassy, 33; probable cause of the mis- chiridion Militis Christiani,” 367; understanding, ib. ; temple of the fire- extract, ib. ; cautions in regard to read. god, 34 ; a second temple described, 34, ing the Scriptures, 368; bitter reflections 5; the Chakho, or river with locks, 35; of William the Conqueror, on a review of beautiful specimen of Chinese scenery his life, 269; on the roorship paid to and architecture, 367 ; exhibitor of saints by the Romanists, 370
military discipline and manartes, 37, 8; Cunningham on the influence of friendly terminaling intercourse between Lord
societies on the morals, 80, el seg. ; Amherst and the Chinese viceroy, 59;
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Chinese religious ceremonies, 40; inter- and extracts from his letters, 447, et nal state and regulations of the em- seg. pire, 40, 1
Freeston's directions to travellers to Empaytaz, considérations sur la divi. Zion, 74, et seq.; subjects considered, ib.;
nité de Jesus Christ, 1. See Geneva ca- religious experience seldom judici- techism.
ously treated, ib.; reasonableness of English at Naples, their amusements, 479 the doctrine of religious experience, Erasmus's Enchiridion, Crowther's com- 75; nature of religious experience, pilation from it, 366, et seq.
76; argument drawn from the design Evangelical and orthodox, remarks on and constitution of the gospel, 76, 7; the use of these terms, 257
excellence of the Christian Scriptures, 77 Evans's Old Man and his Granddaughter, Fuller, A. Ryland's life of, 181, et seq.
56, et seg. ; remarks on the character Fuller, Dr. T., Broome's selections from of the piece, 57; the old man's certainty his works, 128, et seq. ; bis life, ib.; li- of his deceased granddaughter's happiness, terary character and style, 129; the 57, 8; mystical union between Christ and faithful minister, ib. ; definition of fancy, his Church, and the election of grace, illus- 130 trated in the old man's account of his Geneva catechism, 1, et seq. ; cause of granddaughter, 58; remarks on the pe- the want of union among the various euliar phraseology adopted by rising reformed communione, ib. ; religious parties among Christians, 59; proba- state of the continent laid open by ble cause of this adoption, 60; objec- the operations of the Bible Society, 3; tionable expressions of the author effects of this society, 3, 4; preva- considered, ib. ; vehicle of his senti- lence of Deism among the foreign re- ments ill chosen, 61
formed churches, 4; Voltaire's and Excitability of vegetable structure, difi- Rousseau's remarks on the state of cult of explanation, 266, 7
religion at Geneva, 5; and note; doc. Experience, religious, seldom judiciously trines of the new Genevese catechism,
treated, 74; reasonableness of the said not to differ much from Oster- doctrine of, 75; its nature, 76
vald's, ib.; extracts from both contrast-
ed, 7; suppressions and substitutions of Paith, false views of it now prevalent, the New Calechism, in regard to the Holy 255
Spirit, 8; its exhibition of justification Pamily prayers, Smith's course of, 151, by faith, 8, 9; summary of what this
catechism does not teach, 9, 10; other Fancy, Fuller's definition of, 130
methods adopted by the Genevese Farina of plants, 320, 1
pastors, for the extirpation of the Fire-god, temple of, in Chine, 34
Christian doctrine, 10; promise exact- Fletcher's sermon on the death of the Prin- ed from all the candidates for the mi- cess Charlotle, 282
nistry, 11; project for forming a pro- Flowers of plants, 321 ; anomalies of, testant evangelical congregational 322
church at Geneva, 12; persecution of Forgery, on the severity and inefficiency certain students at Geneva, 13; M. of the laws in regard to it, 285
Mejanel's address to the Protestant mi- Formation of a protestant evangelical nisters, 15; congregational church
church on congregational principles, formed, 15, 6; inquiry into the pro- at Geneva, 12
bable causes of the deterioration of Pranklin, Benj. private correspondence the Genevese church, 16; evil occa-
of, 433, et seq. ; competency of the sioned by a change in the style collectiou to afford a correct esti. of preaching, 17; by making the mate of the writer, 434; deficiency Christian ministry an hereditary pro- of information respecting his real opi- session, 18; and by the general nion of the French court and govern- adoption of the French language in ment, 435; remarks on his conduct the German courts, 20; divine dis- and character, 436,7; his opinion of pleasure on account of the misim. the English parliament and constitution, provement of religious privileges, 21 438, 9; his political honesty, 441; Gibbon, Bishop Watson's letter to, 109. et seq. ; extract from a letter to an un. Governesses in private families, some re. known political British agent at Brussels, marks on, 180 442, 3; the Doctor's mode of balancing Gray's, Dr. sermon on the death of the arguments, or • moral algebra,' 446; Princess Charlotte, 281 remarks on Dr. F.'s religious opinions, Great Orme's head, 427
Guildford jail, 461, et seq.; ils irons
remarkably heavy, 462
Hall's sermon, occasioned by the death
of the Princess Charlotte of Wales, * 84, et seg. Hall's voyage to the west coast of Corea,
and the great Loo Choo Islands, 513, et seq.; error in the bydrography of the Corean coast, 514; appearance of the natives, 515; coast fringed with in- numerable islands, 516,7; arrival at Loo Choo Island, 517; visils of the na. lives, ib, et seq. ; account of a coral rock, and of the coral worms, 520; Loo Choo villages, 521; Madera, e chief, 522; Loo Choo dance, 524, 5; visit from the prince, 525; ships quit the island, 526; religion of the Loo Chooers, 527;
customs, &c. ib. Hamilton, Mrs. memoirs of, by Miss
Benger, 497, et seq. Hanno, his voyage along the African
Hereford jail, 466 ; the black hole, ib. Hertford jail, 465. Hibernian Society, the London, great effi-
cacy of its measures exhibited, 124, et seq. Hindo slan mode of communicating the small-
Hindoo Rajah, by Mrs. Hamilton, charac-
ter of, 506 Hoare's sermon on the death of the
Princess Charlotte, 279, et seq. ; ex-
Tract, 280 Horne's,' the Rev. Melville, address to
the Jews, 568, 9; extract, 569 Howard, his great difficulties and discou.
ragements, in his attempts to reform
prison discipline, &c, 450 ; el seq. Hue's escape, at the atlack on the Tuileries,
172 ; his condemnation, and subsequent adventures in a dungeon of the Holel de.
Ville, 174 Hunphries, Miss Emma, East's me-
moirs of, 78,9
Inquisition unmasked, 236, et seq. ; state
of Spain previous to the revolution, 237, 8; intolerance of the Cortes, in settling the religion of Spain, 240 ; inquisition declared incompatible with the constitution, ib. ; character of the present work, ib. ; its leading sub- ject, 242 ; original establishment of
this tribunal, ib. ; its progress in dif- , ferent countries, ib. ; criminal code
of the inquisition, 243 ; its method of proceeding, ib. ; its antichristian spi- rit, 244 , constitution of the inquisition, 245; meekness a characleristic of the Christian religion, 216; tendency of the inquisition to encourage hypocrisy, 216, 7; inefficiency of the inquisition to compel belief, 248 ; supposed remon- strance of an intended victim, 249 ; reli- gious rebellion in the Low Countries, 251; dismemberment of the seven United Provinces, ib. ; ignorance of the inquisi- tors, 348 ; agency of informers, 349; mode of inquisitorial arrests, 351; state of the dungeons, 352; examination of the accused, 353 ; sentence of torlure, 354 ; three modes of lorture, ib. ; impiety of the inquisilors, 356; account of va-. rious autos de fe, 357; burning of three Jews, 358; infamous conduct of Fer- dinand Vll to the Cortes, 360; indif. ference shewn by the British ministry to the restoration of the inquisition, 362 ; author's upostrophe on closing his work, 364 Ireland, chartered schools in ; inquiry
into the abuses of, 119, et seq. Irish language, attempt to eradicate it, in
the reign of Henry the Eighth, 120 Irritability of certain plants, 264, et seq. Irons, use of in different jails very capri-
cious, 466 Italian language, C. de Stendhal's remarks
on, 483, 4 Jenner, history of bis inquiries into the
nature of the cow-pox, 143, 4 Jews, burning of three, at an qulo de fe in
Majorca, 358 Jews, Melville Horne's address to, 568, 9. Job, an African prince, interesting ac-
count of him, 307. Keith's physiological botany, 259, et seq.;
the systematical and analytical me- thods, 260 ; advantage of physiologi- cal pursuits, 261; analogies between the systems of nature considered, 262; discovery of Kepler's grand analogy, 263 ; correspondence be- tween the structure of a vegetable
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Imprisonment, false notions in regard to
its true design, 452 ; seldom produc-
tive of reformation, 459 Inability, moral and natural, distinctions be.
tween them, 190, 1 India rubber, composition of, 327 India bill, Dr. Watson's remarks on it,
226, 7 Instruction, domestic, its present low
state among the dissenters, 156 ; pro-
bable causes of it, ib. Inquiry into the probable causes of the
deterioration of the Genevese churcb, 16
and living animal, 264 ; irrilability of Venus's fy trop, 264 ; of the moving plant of India, 264, 5; of yellow bal- sam, or touch me not, 465; of the common birth-worl, 266 ; difficulty of explaining the excitability of the ve- getable structure, ib.; on the influ. ence of temperature, humidity, and light, 166,7; vegetable clocks, weather- gages, 268 ; purple side-saddle flower, ib. ; Ceylou pitcher plant, ib. ; vege- table compass, 269; remarks on a floral calendar, ib. ; general contents of the present work, 313; definition of a plant, 314, 5; roots of plants, 315; truok or stem, 317; leaves, 318; for- mation of nut galls, &c. ib; functions of leaves, as exhibited in the leaf of the pitcher plant, 319, 20 ; farina, or pollen, 320, 1; flowers of plants, 321 ; ano- maly of flowers, 322 ; examples of veiled receptacles, 322, 3; great fertility of cerlain plants, 323; bark of plants, 324; Du Hamel's experiment in regard to the formation of wood, 325, 6; bloom on plants, &c. resins, ib; vegetable wax,
327; caoutchouc, or Indian-rubber, ib. Kepler's grand law of planetary mo-.
tions, &c. circumstance of its dis-
covery, 263, 4. King's Bench prison, Mr. Neild's ac.
count of its abuses, 465. Kingston jails, Mr. Neild's account of,
462.
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Low Countries, religious rebellion there
under the Spaniards, 251. Madera, a Loo-Choo chief, 522, et seq. Malthas on the operations of savings'
banks, 83. Marcet on calculous disorders, 270, et
seq. ; the four subjects of the present inquiry, 271; symptoms of the pre- sence of calculous concretions, ib. ; their chemical composition, ib. ; proposed classification of calculous concretions, 272 ; quihor's account of their several kinds and species, 272, 3; proposed mode of ascertainjog the precise nature of the substance, 273; Dr. Austin's theory of calculous con- cretions, 274; his supposition that the operation for the stone proves often a radical remedy for the dis- ease, 275; inquiry into the remote causes of calculus, ib.; probable re- lation belween calculous complaints and the functions of the skin, 275, 6; alka- line matter considered as a solvent of calculus, 276; case of lime water as a solvent, used by Bishop Newcomi, ib. ; inquiry into the effects of acids, on cer- tain kinds of calculi, 278; absolute ne- cessity of attending to the species of the calculous concretions in adminis-
tering a solvent, ib. Marron, M. the Parisian Protestant
preacher, slight notice of bim, 66. Marsden's narrative of a mission to
Nova Scotia and Somer's islands, 570, et seq. ; qualifications requisite fur a mis- sionary, 570 ; severity of the winter in New Brunswick, in 1805, 571, %; persecution of Mr. Stephenson, u mission- ary, in the Bermurlas, 572, et seq.; ar- rival and success of Mr. Marsden, 574;
soliciled by the blacks lo teach them, 575. Marshall's, Mrs. sketch of my friend's
family, 178, et seq. ; hints in regard to some piesent peculiarilies of religious so- ciety, ib. ; on governesses of families,
180. Mejarel's address to the protestant minis-
ters of Geneva, 15. Memoirs of the unfortunate John Vartie,
written by himself, 281, 290. Mirbel's definition of a plunt, 815. Missionary station, a desirable place
for one offers itself ju the Sandwich
Islands, 168. Mission to Nova Scotia and the Ber-
mudas, Marsden's narrative of, 570,
Leaves of plants, 318, et seq. Ledyard, the African traveller, 309. Lines on the death of the Princess Char.
lotte of Wales, by the Rev. G. Croly,
579, el seq: Lloyd's two letters addressed to a young
clergyman, 201; see Bible Society. Llyn, in North Wales, its desolate state,
420. London and Paris, striking, contrast be-
troeen them, both of a moral and political
nature, 645. London Hibernian society, great efficacy of
its proceedings, 124 ; ils conduct highly approved by the Roman Catholics, ib.; further advantages derived from it, 125,
Lonsdale's, Lord, colliery, near White-
haven, 499; neglect of the morals of the
people, ib. Loo-Choo islands, Hall's voyage to,
513, et seq. Louis XVIth, his character, 171, 2, M.
de Séze's defence of him at the bar of the convention, 172.
Modern policies, taken from Machiavel,
Borgia, &c. 201, et seq.
Moore's history of the small-pox, and
of vaccination, 134, et seq. ; small-pox unknown to the ancients, 131; our first accounts of il occur in Arabian wori- ters, ib, ; inquiry concerning the coun- try where it originated, ib.; ils et, isience in China at a very remote period, 136, 7; and in Hindostan, 137; rea- sons for its appearing so late in western countries, ib. and of its being found in Arabia, 178; visits Europe, the British islands, and America, ib.; inquiry into the discovery of inocula. tion, 139; known and practised early among the Chinese, ib. ; their mode of communicatiug the malady, ib.; mode practised in Hindostan, ib.; its progress in England and in Europe very slow, 140, 1; Small-pox Hos- pital built, ib. ; inoculation recom- mended by the London College of Physicians, 141; its rapid progress in England under the Suttons, 142 ; Spain has suffered less than other countries from small-pox, 143 ; mortality from small-pox progressively on the in- crease prior to the introduction of vaccination, ib. ; progress of Doctor Jenner's inquiries in regard to vacci- nation, 143, 4; on vaccination, as a security against small-pox, 145; re. marks on the alleged tendency of vaccination to leave bad humours behind it, 146, 7; inquiry how far vaccination is a preventive of small- pox, ib.; author's comparative estimate of failures between the two kinds, ib. ; sume objections stated, 148; vaccina. tion should be considered as a suffi- ciently safe preservative against the
small-pox, 150. Morrell's sermon on the death of the
Princess Charlotte, 283, 4, extract, ib. Moutiers, valley of, account of a se-
cluded anabaptist society there, 71. Murray's historical account of disco-
veries and travels in Africa, 297, et
seq. Merthyr Tydvil, canal of, 341.
Neild's, Mr. visits to various prisons,
454, el seq. New Brunswick, severity of the winter there
in 1805, 571, 2. Non-conformity, Wilks's sermon on,
489, et seg. Nut-galls, formation of, 319.
Ogané, a pagan chief of Benin, his
power somewhat resembles that of the Pope, 303,
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