narrative of an expedition that sailed poor, 426 ; its necessarily heavy ex- to join them, 575; et seq.
pense, 426, 7; objections of Mr. Paul's school, St, account of its foun- Nicolls, to a separate maintenance of
ders, foundation, and scholars, &c. the children of the poor, 428, 9; further See Dr. Carlisle on endowed grammar objections stated, 431 ; tendency of schools, &c.
schools to perpetuate the existing evils,' Peculiarily, remarkable, of the Icelanders, in 433; suggestion for combining the providing for decayed families, 177
higher and middling class in the exe- Persecution, the subjects of, 483 ; the nature cation of the poor laws, 434; select of, ib.
vestries not analogous to kirk sessions, Pike's consolations of gospel truth, 173 435 ; election and duties of the elders, Pleasures, domestic, by F. B. Vaux, 61-2 under the session, ib. ; management of Pocklington school, statement of the perver- their parochial poor's fund, 436; change sion of ils revenues, 362
to be made in general vestries, accord- Poor laws, pamphlets on, 201, et seq. ; ing to Mr. Sturges Bourne's bill,
poverty and its causes, 202, 3; pau- 436, 7; proposal for returning to the perism not dependent on population old law, with regard to settlements, and proyision, 203 ; labour and capi. 437; Messrs. Nicoll and Courtenay's tal necessary to the production of any objections to parochial benefit societies, kind of commodity, 204 ; the labourer 437, 8; Mr. Courtenay's proposition bas no right to enforce employment, for encouraging friendly societies, 440, 1; 204,5; is entitled to a just remune- on the poor of the dissenters, 442 ; ration for his service, ib. ; injustice of great relief afforded to parishes by the capitalist in reducing wages below dissenting places of worship, 443; the means of subsistence, 206; inju. . evil tendency ou the feelings, of ab- rious consequence of parish relief, 208 ; stract speculations on the state of the poverty of the ribbon weavers of Co- ventry, and its consequences, 208, 9; Popery, Ward's sermon on the reforma. Mr. Hale's report of the state of Spital- tion from, 275, et seq. fields, 210; poor laws not the primary Porden's, Miss, Arctic expeditions, a cause of poverty, 214 ; Mr. Courte- poem, 601, et seq.; anticipatious of nay's three considerations prior to the Quarterly Reviewers, 603; done abolishing the code of poor laws, ib.; into verse by the present writer, statute right of the poor to claiin 602, 3; further extracts, 603, 4 sustenance of the parish, 215; origi- Port Praya, capital of the Cape Verde nal pretence for appropriating livings islands, 454 to religious houses, ib. ; mendicity Posts and posting in the Turkish empire, an attendant on superstition, ib; acts stale of, 101 against vagrants, ib; begging by Princess Charlotte of Wales, Lord Byron's licence allowed, 216; origin of the lines on her death, 51, 2 poor laws, ib; Mr. Nicolls's remarks Principia Hebraica, 471, 2 on the poor laws, ib. et seq. ; prevalence Prison discipline, Buxton on the effects of mendicity in the Italian states, 218; of, 82, el seg. note; claim of dischar, seamen to Propolis of bees, ils use, 123 legal provision, 218; folly and danger Psycbe, or the soul; a poem, 263, 4 of leaving the maintenance of the poor to private benevolence, 219, 20; Ramparts and wall between England consequences of the subscriptions for and Scotland, 308 the Spital-fields weavers, 221; singu. Reformation from Popery, Ward's ser- lar remarks of Mr. Jerram on the poor mon on, 275, et seq. laws, 222
Reformation, Protestant, Hawksley's Poor laws, third report from the select sermon on, 275, et seq,
committee on, 420 et seq.; contents of Reykium, its boiling springs, 177 the report, ib. ; projects for removing Roaring-mount, in Iceland, connerion be- the radical evils of the system, 421;
tween ils noise and the eruption of jels of evil consequence of mixing relief with
steam, 260 wages, 422 ; two modes of obviating Rome, burning of by the Goths, Mr. it considered, 422, 3; proposition of Hobhouse's remarks on it examined, enactiog local bilis, 424 ; obstacles to
323, et seq. such a regulation, 425; separate Rope bridge over a tremendous pass in Ice. maintenance of the children of the land, 180
Rowlatt"s sermons on the doctrines, eri- 321; admirable intrepidity of Black Ag
dences, and duties of Christianity, nes of Dunbar castle, 322 945, et seq. ; modern fashionable ser- Selkirk, Alexander, Slecle's account of hin, mons, 245, 6; author's remarks on hu- 595 man depravity, 248 ; on the degree and Sermons on Popery, by the Rev. W. erlent of man's apostasy, 248, 9; on the Borrows, 482, 3 Divine influences, 249 ; justification, Shires or counties before the time of Alfred, 250; his definition of faith, 250 ; ex- 586 traci, 251; his speedy mode for acquiring Simons's, the Rev. John, letter, Spor's saving failh, 251 ; igxorant charge reply to, 242, et seq. against Calvinism, 252 ; unjusl censure Sinclair's, Miss Hannah, letter on the of Caloin, ib.
principles of the Christian faith, 77, Russian prisons of Petersburgh and Mos- 8; sanctification a progressive work, 78;
cow visited by Mr. Venning, by per- state of the young convert, ib. mission of the Emperor Ale.cander, Skaftar Yokul, its tremendous explosion 90,1
in 1783, 184; its present appearance,
ib. Sacrifices, Dr. Outram's dissertations Slaves, sale of, at Norfolk in Virginia, 35 on, 350, et seq.
Slavery, its baneful influence on Ameri- Sacrifices, origin of, 350, 1
can morals, 37,8 Sarons, origin of tilles among them, 586, 7 Smith, Lucy, a tale, 389, et seq.; Scandaroon, its ruinous state, 107,8 thor's explanatory preface, 390; the Scholars in St. Paul's school, origin of the story, 391, et seq.; evident desigo
number, as delermined by the founder, 531 and tendency of the work, 392 Scilly islands, report of the miseries of, Smith's illustrations of the Divine go-
494, et seq. ; unproduclive nature of the vernment, 336, et seq.; on carrying islands, 494, 5; male inhabitants speculative opinions beyond their cir- ehiefly pilots, 495; widows be- cumscribed limits, 337; caution in come so generally by their husbands regard to the management of opinions being drowned, ib. ; their unprovided- of a speculative nature, ib. ; dangerous for state, ib.; miseries of the inhabit. consequences of a licentious specula- ants chiefly occasioned by the rigorous tion on the doctrine of Divine punish- enforcement of the preventive sys- ment, ib.; author's mode of treating tem, ib. ; detail of various cases of er- his subject, 338 ; real question, whe- treme wrelchedness, 498
ther there is in the gospel any pro- Scott's, Walter, Border Antiquities of visional promise for the finally impe-
England and Scotland, 305, et seq. ; nitent, 339; the gospel-statement of character of the work, 307; funeral the doctrine, 340, 1 ; heavy responsi- monuments of the Celtic tribes, 308; bility of those who preach a final state locality and extent of the border of happiness to the unrepentant, country, ib,; the ramparts and wall 341, 2; a second preteuce urged for between the two kingdoms, ib. ; cir. preaching this supplementary gospel, cumstances that tended to determine the 342; the legitimate authority of the present boundaries of the two kingdoms, Christian minister, 343; on the doc- 309; clanship of Scotland not de- trine of final restitution, as connected stroyed by the feudal system, 310; with the plea of benevolence, 344, et benefits occasioned by the founding seq ; prevalence of a spurious benevo- of abbeys on the borders, ib.; ruinous lence, ib. ; inquiry if the doctrine was consequences of Edward the First's usur. preached to the faith of the primitive pation of the Scottish crown, 311 ; defen- believers, 346, 7; remarks on the al. sire system adopted by the Scots, 312; leged superior humanity of the abet- devastating inroads of the Earls of tors of the system, 348; indefinite ex. Essex and Hertford, 313; character, pectations of happiness indulged by &c. of the borderers, 314; their women, sceptics of contemplative habits, 349; 315 ; prisoners, ib. ; religion, 316; the author's argument from the infinite anecdote of Cameron, 317; dulies of the wisdom and benevolence of the Deity eri- wardens, ib.; oath of purgation, 318 ; mined and exposed, 540; difference in puniskment of the moss troopers, 319; the distribution of favours by the Deity dungeon of Bothwell castle, ib.; Nawarth improperly called partiality, 542,3; mar enstle, 320; its dungeon, ib. ; anecdote declared to be wholly the creature of air- of Sir Gideon Murray of Elibank tower, cumstance, 544; on panishment, .; all
punishment not corrective, 545, 6; Tiger, Mr, Pereira's dangerous encouro author's reasoning from the supposition of ter with one at the Cape, 413 a gradation of desert in good and in Timber, McWilliam's essay on the dry wicked men, 547, 8, 9; his definition of
rot in, 71, et seq. Divine justice, 550; on the doctrine of Timber, annual value of, cut down in election, 551, et seq. ; suggestions to the United Kingdom, 75 those who waver in their belief of uni. Timber of the American back-settle- versal restoration, 553, 4 ; indefensi.
ments, 42 ble treatment of the language of Scrip- Tilchbourne, Chidiock, his address to the ture by theorists, 555, et seq. ; certain populace, prior to his execution., 588, 9; Scripture terms examined, with re- verses wriiten in the Tower the night be- marks on the plain meaning of Scrip- fore he suffered, ib. tural statements, ib.; on the words Tongue of the bee described, 122, 3 hell and Satan, 562; the doctrine of Typical relation of the sacrifices, 356 universal, restoration irreconcilable with even the indirect intimations of Scripture in regard to future punish-
Valley of Smoke, 256
Vaux's domestic pleasures, 61, 2 Smoke, valley of, in Iceland, 256
Vaux's life of Anthony Benezet, 367, et Snorro Sturluston's hot baths, 255, 6 seq. Benezet's thoughts on education, 368, Snow's reply to the Rev. J. Simons,
on the intellectual powers of the 243, et seq. ; his reasons for recommending
Page 311, line 9 from top, for it is, read these are.
471, line 9 from bottom for latter, read former. 557, line 10 from bottom for efenôn, read išenon. 7 from top, for eXtiv,
read
Xev. 1 from top, for σοσηκουσα, τead προσηκουσα.
8 from top, for OYIIOTE, read OTTIOTE. 563, line 2 for profession, rend possession. 565, line 3 from bottom for OuYSIs, read OUVEGIS.
8 from bottom for ypapie ta, read ypospertal
14 from bottom for 795, read 75. 568 line 2 for Cæsraea, read Cæsarea.
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