N. B. To find any particular Book, or PAMPHLET, see the TABLE of CONTENTS, prefixed to the Volume.
BEEF-Tea, or infufion of beef, how made, 416. BEHAVIOUR, a propriety in, how estimated, 16.
BEN Johnfon his character, 28. BERGEN-op-Zoom, fome ac- count of the fiege of that place, 228.
BILLS of Mortality, their firft Their commencement, 66. deficiencies, 67.
BOATS, flat-bottomed, curious defcription of, 186. Bois-le-duc, fome account of the ficge of, 227.
BRASS fufceptible of magnetifm, 238.
BROTHERLY Love, motives to it, 61. BUCKINGHAM, George Villiers Duke of, the Poet, fome anec- dotes of his life, 207. Cha- racter of him, 214. His cha- racter by Dryden, 215.
HARLES to
CHA pofe Dunkirk
BANET, inconveniences and Cole of Dunstig denied,
defects of, compared with the Pike, 326. BEAUTY, Plato's definition of, 425.
CHEMISTRY, new Inftitutes of,
CHILLINGWORTH, his character,
CHINESE, a colony of Egypti-
ans, 520. CHRIST, not the fame with Je- hovah, 107. CLARENDON, whence his high notions of prerogative arofe, 25 Characters of his inti- mates. 28. Excellent advice given him by his father, 148. How he gained the favour of King Charles, 149. His dou- ble dealing with King and Par- liament, 152. His behaviour on his daughter's marriage with the Duke of York, 153. His remonstrance to Charles on his ill life, 160. His dif- grace, 161. (LERGYMAN. nothing more fuited to his character than a grave and abstracted severity,
17. COMMERCE, when deftructive to a ftate, 526. CONJUNCT Expeditions, lifts of,
188. Reflections on, 190. Cooks, a tale to illuftrate their cleanliness, 534. COVENTRY, Mr. William, his character, 158. CRITICISM deftructive to learn- ing, 385. CUSTOM, its influence on moral fentiments, 14. CZAR Peter, panegyric on, by Aaron Hill, 550. D.
DIET, vegetable, Dr. Che-
ney's recommendation of it erroneous, 407. The fleth of carnivorous animals more apt to generate putridity than herbivorous, or granivorous,
ABLE of the Crow and Hare, 240. of the Oak and Shrub, 294. FAITH, the great power and ef- ficacy of, 133. FASHION in Drefs, inftance of an abfurd compliance with, 370. FIRE-
WILL, Aaron, his character,
being hitherto injected, 404.
H546. His birth, 547. De- LAND, its fertility better increaf-
fcription of his perfon, 549. Receives a golden medal, be- queathed him by the Czar Pe- ter, 550. Satyrizes Mr. Pope, 551. His death, 555. HOBBY Horfes, every man en- titled to his own, 562. HORACE, a misunderstanding of a paffage in, rectified, 198. His genius characterized, ibid Imitation of, 200. HUSBANDRY, the advantages of the new, 146. An experi- mental comparison betwixt the old and new, 192.
AMES'S Fever Powder, two unfuccefsful exhibitions of it, 70, 72. JERUSALEM, Easter ceremonies at, 260. JEWS, caufes of the difference in their chronology, between the Hebrew text and the Septua- gint verfion, 79. Their natu- ralization a counter-action of the decrees of God, 222. The
ed by tillage than by manure,
[AD Dog, bite of, fuccessful
fentence denounced againit, M method of curing, 379.
them, wherein it confifts, 225. IMPUTED Righteoufnefs and per- fonal obedience not to be fe- parated, 470.
MAGNA Charta, its origin traced, 482.
MANCHINELLE Apple, its poi- NATURALIZATION of the Jews,
fonous quality, 230. MANUAL Exercife, the origin and intent of, 340. Rules for, 341. Of the Norfolk Militia, wherein different from the regular forces, 343- MAPS projected upon a plane, how erroneous; and a new recommended,
MARY Queen of Scots, her ma- licious letter to Queen Eliza- beth, 455. MATTER, the fame in the compo- sition of all bodies, 489. The principles of action in, affert- ed, 348. Controverted, 500. MAY, Thomas, his character, 30. MEASLES, inoculation of them defcribed, 73. Reflections on fuch inoculation, 74. METHODISTS, the notions of, coincide with many of the rankest herefies that ever de- filed the Christian church, 357. MILITIA, Norfolk, exercife of, 343- Officers, why armed with a fufee, rather than an efpontoon, 346. MISANTHROPY, of Swift and Voltaire, arifing from like caules, 84.
MORAL approbation and difap- probation, not to be perverted,
confidered in a religious light,
DE to a taper, 295. OFFICERS, American, pa- thetic address to them, 62. OXFORD, a capital defect in re- gard to education there, 218.
PIKE-men, a re-establishment of them in the army recommend- ed, 328.
PLAGUE, the causes of, pointed out by a juft inference, 67. Ridiculous hypothefis of, and abfurd regimen in it, 202. PLANETS, their various proper- ties, dependant on mechanical caufes, 511.
PLANTS, their vafcular parts, 489.
Poor Laws built upon falfe prin-
PROBABILITIES, the logic of, 298.
PSALMS of David, prophetic po- ems, 106.
PUBLIC Virtue, not confpicuous
till roused by oppression, 47.
the various readings of them, 285. When fubdivided into chapters and verfes, 287.
Marks of their divine autho- rity, 288.
SELDON, Mr. his character, 28. SENSATIONS, diftinct, of every
kind, caufed by motions of equal momenta, 510.
ABIES Canina, method of S'GRAVESANDE, Profeffor, an
R curing, 379.
RELIGIOUS Houfes, their diffo- lution brought on chiefly by the Catholics themselves, 275. Reflections on their diffolution,
RESENTMENT for wrongs jufti- fied, 304.
RESIDENCE and non-Refidence of the Clergy, difpute con- cerning, 435.
RESIDUAL Analyfis, defence of, 164.
RESISTANCE of folid bodies, the effect of their inteftine motion, 502. RESURRECTION, poem on, 352. RIDICULE, an immoderate paf- fion for, one of the predomi- nant qualities of the present age, 129. The causes of, 132. The bad effects of, 133.
SACRAMENT of lies arcending TYTES, the facred inftitution
the adminiftration of it in the church of Scotland, 57. SALT, Sea, in fome degree anti- fcorbutic, 409.
ers particularly fond of it in their diet, 410. SATELLITES, why their motions are irregular, 126. SAVAGE, Mr. Richard, his obli- gations to Mr. Aaron Hill, 550.
SCRIPTURES, probable caufes of
« السابقةمتابعة » |