CONTENTS. ON the Discrimination of Female Character-Different 53. The Petition of Night, complaining of the Encroach 55. Letter from Hannah Waitfort, giving an Account of 57. Family Happiness of Aurelius, an amiable old Man 36 58. Mary Plain's Account of a Hunter after Truth .... .... ...... 63. Sufferings of a Husband under an œconomical Wife; in in a Letter from Robert Easay ... 65. Character of Mr. Wilful, a professed Votary of 66. Temper and constitutional good Spirits oftener the Cause of Happiness than Genius and Abilities, illus- 67. Superiority of modern Education over the ancient— Its Principle the Acquisition of Knowledge by Speak- 68. Critical Remarks on the Character of Falstaff 69. The same Subject continued 70. Happiness of a Man reclaimed from Extravagance and 71. The Pride of Poverty contrasted with the Vanity of 72. The Comfort, the Regrets, the Virtues, and the Failings 76. Proposal by W. Jenkin for a Standard of Fashion in 77. Sensibility and virtuous Feeling do not always lead to Be- 146 80. Letter from To-morrow, proposing a Division of his Ef- 81. Modern Soldiers less desirous of Fame than of Profit- 82. The Power of corrupt Society and false Shame over the 86. Men's Ideas of Happiness formed from their own fa- 88, Character of Dormer, a Man of Public Spirit rather than of private Benevolence or Virtue 89. Letter from Urbanus, in consequence of the late Paper at the Country Seat of a Man of Fashion . 90. Letter from Barbara Heartless, the unfortunate At- 91. On Misanthropy, and its different Species-Illustration 92. Martha Edwards's Complaint of a romantic Husband 259 93. The tender Indulgence of Melancholy, particularly 95. Visit from a young Relation of Colonel Caustic's— Improvements of Edinburgh for the ensuing Winter, 96. Amiable Picture of a Family in the Country 97. Extracrdinary Account of Robert Burns, the Ayrshire Ploughman; with Extracts from his Poems . |