moved against the Methodists, this very wordy defence of them muft furely prove a fevere trial, indeed! Perhaps, the word spirit crept in by the Printer's mistake: if fo, we may, in all future advertise- ments of this pamphlet, read, The Trial of the Vicar of St. David's Patience.
SINGLE SERMONS fince May.
Reached by the Rev. Mr. John Conder, May 11, 1758, at the
Preached of the Rev. Mr. John Stafford to the Copaftorfhip
with John Guyfe, D. D. in the Church of Chrift meeting at New Broad-ftreet. Together with the introductory Difcourse, by the Rev. Mr. Thomas Gibbons. The Church's Recognition of their Call. Mr. Stafford's Acceptance of it, his Confeffion of Faith, and an Exhorta- tion delivered to him by the Rev. Mr. Thomas Hall. 8vo. 1s. Dilly.
II. The Beauties of Spring. Preached at the parish church of St. Saviour's Southwark, in May, 1756. By T. Jones, M. A. Chaplain of the faid parish. 8vo. 6 d. Dilly.
III. The Veffels of Mercy and the Veffels of Wrath delineated, in a new, uncontroverted, and practical light. Preached in New Kent, Virginia, Aug. 22. 1756. By Samuel Davies, A. M. 8vo. 6 d. Buckland.
IV. The Duty, Objects, and Offices of the Love of our Country. Before the Houfe of Commons, May 29, 1758, being the anniversary of the Restoration of Charles II. By George Fothergill, D. D. Principal of St. Edmund-hall, Oxford. 8vo. 5d. Rivington.
V. The People's Duty when the Hoft is gone forth against the Enemy: Preached June 11, 1758, in the parish churches of Weft Ham, Effex. and St. Olave's, Hart-ftreet, London. By William Dodd, Lecturer of those parishes. 8vo. 6d. Davis and Co.
VI. The two-fold Evidence of Adoption. Before the University of Oxford, at St. Mary's, on Monday in Whitfun-week, May 15, 1758. By John Allen, M. A. Vice-Principal of Magdalen-hall. 8vo. 6d. Rivington and Fletcher.
VII. Two Sermons, before the Univerfity of Cambridge; the one on the 29th of May, the other on the 22d of June. By Samuel Ogden, D. D. Fellow of St. John's College, and Vicar of Dameron in Wiltshire. 4to. 1 s. Rivington, &c.
ERRATA. Page 634, line 16 from the bottom, for word, read breath. P. 63. 1. 14 from the bottom, after the word godliness, infert abate.
N. B. To find any particular Book, or Pamphlet, fee the Table of Contents, prefixed to the volume.
not proper fubjects of it, 152. BIRDS in Iceland described, 201. BLAKE, Admiral, fome particu-
lars of, 575. Engages Van Tromp, ibid. Punishes his brother for bad conduct, 577- His death and magnificent fu- neral, 578. His perfon and character defcribed, ibid. BLASPHEMY and Herefy, the
Parliament's ordinance against them, in the time of the civil war, 410. BRUISES, a remedy for, 630. BONES, an extraordinary inttance of their flexibility 318. BOTANY, the rife and progress of the ftudy of, 326. BOUNTY upon exported corn, prejudicial, 616.
BRITONS, inftances of their im- provements in wifdom, 92.
CAGUI minor described, 239. CAMORS, taken by furprize, 626.
CANNON, their weight and length not conftructed from certain principles, 32. Light pieces more effectual in battery than heavy, 33-
CARDS, when brought into ufe, 398.
CARP, its medicinal virtues, 630.
CHARACTER of the age, not to be drawn from any particular clafs, but from the bulk of a people, 367. CHARACTERISTICS of a great minifter, 367. Of a Political Writer, 372.
CHARLES I. his treatment of the Parliament's commiffioners at Oxford, 135-457. His let- ters fall into the hands of the Parliament, 137. Is feized by Joyce, 144. His advice to the Prince of Wales, 413. His difingenuous letter to the Duke of Ormond, 414. His exe- cution cenfured, 415. His fi delity to the marriage-bed vin- dicated, 455. Conftant at re- ligious exercifes, 456. Charg- ed with fuperftition, 460. CHARLOCK, a weed not easily
diftinguished from turnips, 557. CHIRURGICAL Operations, pre- fence of mind necessary in the performance of, 317. CHRIST'S Agony in the garden account for, 35. CHRISTIANS, a serious addrefs to, 315.
CICERO, the best Latin Writer,
either in language or fenti- ment, 381. CIVIL War, in the reign of Charles I. originally begun upon patriot principles, 405. CLOVER, when the properest time to turn cattle into it, 552. A troublesome grafs to make into hay, 553- COD, how cured in Iceland, 202. COMMERCE, whether confiftent, with the interefts of monarchies, 252. With the pride of gen- tility, 253. COMMONS, when their legiflative power first commenced, 362.
to be judged of by his life, but by his writings, 358. Fre- quents fcenes of pleafure to expofe them, ibid. EVIL, natural and moral, how reconcileable with the goodness of God, 312.
FICTION and fcience, wherein
they differ, 219. FIELDING'S police to fupprefs vice, 267.
FORGERY, the diftinction between it and Fraud, 234. FOURAS, Fort, its fituation de- fcribed, 90. The poffibility of attacking it argued, 91. FOURNIER, Bernard, appeals from the Dean of Jerfey to the Bishop of Winchester, 227. Forces the Bishop into a cor- refpondence, ibid. Arrefts the Dean of Jersey, ibid. Forges a note from the Bishop of Winchester, ibid. Has dupli- cates of it, 231. FREE-WILL, the objections a- gainst it answered, 211.
what its glory and excellence confifts, 211. HENCKELL, Dr. abstract of his life, 173.
HENRIAD, fome particulars con- cerning that poem, 647. HERETIC, a term of reproach, how applied, 154. HISTORIAN, his duty, 289. HISTORIANS, feldom impartially judged, 452.
HORACE, examples of Mr. Dun- combe's tranflation, compared with Mr. Francis, 46. HORSE-hoing husbandry charac- terized from experience, 424.
-430. Compared with dril ling upon the level, 426. HUGUENOTS, how treated by Lewis XIV. 446. HUSBANDS ought to be fubordi-. nate to their wives, 80. Jufti- fied by history, 81. HUTCHINSON, characterized by the Bishop of Clogher, 160.
JACOB, his bleffing directed to Judah by Divine infpiration, 214. His bleffing related to fpiritual, not earthly things, ib. JAMES I. an inftance of his bafe- nefs, and treachery, 574- JEHOVAH, to whom this name is applied in the Scriptures, 161. JOKILER, and Jokell, defcription of two remarkable phænome- na in Iceland, fo termed, 195. ICELAND, its roads dangerous, 195. Its volcanos, 196. Its hot fprings, 198. Agricukure,. not practifed there, 200. Its Inhabitants described, 203. IDEAS, moral, their original, 514. IDOLATRY, an attempt to ac-
count for the different modes of it, from the different cli- mates
mates and fituations of coun- tries, 63. IMITATIONS in writing, probable marks to discover, 114. In- ftances of in Pope, 116, -120, -123. In Milton, 121. IRRESOLUTION, fatal in govern ment, 404.
Kisses, the different kinds of,
KNOWLES, Admiral, Vindication of his conduct, 621.
LATIN Grammars in Latin cen- fured, 375. LEWIS XIV. why not to be pi- tied in his distress, 296. LIBERTY, Civil, how to be used, 343.
MABLY, Abbé, his remarks on our conduct in the present war,
MACERATA, no Inquifitor there,
MADOC, the firft Difcoverer of
the Weft-Indies, 567. MANURE, its operation on ground
explained, 10. Plowing infuf- ficient without it, 11. MARCHAND, Mr. Profper, fome account of, 476. The extra- ordinary manner in which he compiled his Dictionary, 477. MARINE, the English, ftate of,
in Queen Elizabeth's time, 565. The prefent ftate of, 566. MARRIAGE, its public and pri vate advantages, 85. Hints of advice relating to it, 87. MICHAEL, the Guardian-angel of the Children of Ifrael, 162. The fame perfon as Chrift, 165.
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