Abbadie on the deity of Christ, extract from, 259.
Eschylus, remarks on the genius of, 141. Africa, travels in, 23; geography of, 33; see Lyon.
Alban, St. martyrdom of, 466. America, South, voyage to, 185. Amusements of clergymen, remarks on,
502; three dialogues on, 565, el seq. ; Angling, its lawfulness as an amusement, 565.
Animals, Braminical tenderness towards, not always connected with virtue, 566. Apocalypse, notice of works on, 462. Arctic miseries, 66.
Arctic voyages by Barrow, &c. 50, et seq.; enthusiasm and courage of the early navigators, 51; voyage of the Zeno's, ib.; voyages of the Cortereals, 52; anecdote of Estevan Gomez, 53; expedition of sir H. Willoughby, 54; notices of subsequent navigators, 1583 -1818; ib. et seq.; expedition under capt. Ross, 56; perilous predicament of the Isabella and Alexander, ib.; Esqui- maux, 57; scepticism of Mr. Fisher re- lative to Baffin's Bay, ib.; remarks on the getting up of capt. Ross's volume, 58; expedition uuder capt. Parry, ib.; difficulties of Artic navigation, 59; enthu siasm of the crew on entering Lancaster's Sound, 60; magnetic phenomena, 61; resolute conduct of lieut. Liddon, ib. ; precarious situation of the ships, ib.; winter amusements, 62; beautiful lunar halo, 63; intoxicating effect of cold, 64; frozen vapour, ib.; sequel of the expedition, ib.; general re- marks on it, 65; specimens of the winter chronicle, 66, et seq.; see North Georgia Gazette and Parry, Aristotle's Nichomachean ethics, a new translation of, 240, 1; singular vicis-
situde in the fame and influence of Aristotle, 240; his ethics still read, 241; merits of the translation, and specimen, ib.
Armenian population, state of, 315. Arrowhead character, its affinity to the Hebrew, 318.
Ass, the wild, or goorkhur, 316; estimation of it among the Jews, 520.
Baillie's, Joanna, metrical legends, 428, et seq.; remarks on author's preface, 428; character of the poetry, 430; apocryphal nature of the history of Wallace, 429; Wallace at the barns of Ayr, 432; peace, 433; legend of Co- lumbus, 435; legend of lady Griseld Baillie, ib.; filial piety of the heroine, 436; the happy exiles, 438; sequel, and epitaph on lady Baillie, 439; re- marks on irregular versitication, 440 ; Lord John of the East, ib. Baillie's, Marianne, first impressions on a tour on the continent, 282, et seq.; infidel cant of the writer, 282; French beauties, 283; féle de St. Louis, ib.; hospice on M. Cenis, 284; king of Sardinia, ib.; le Raffaelle des chats, ib. Barrow's chronological history of voy- ages, 50, et seq.; see Arctic Voyages. Bass's Geeek Lexicon, 563. Bath, oriental process of the, 299. Bellamy, John, infidel tendency of his criticisms, 156.
Benson's chronology of our Saviour's life, 336, et seq.; on what rests the importance of the inquiry, 336; ex- tent of the supposed difficulty, 338; the chronology of Josephus itself per- plexing, 339; proposed new reading re- lative to the age of Herod, ib. ; objec- tion to it, ib.; other discrepancies in Josephus, 340; on the data for fixing
the death of Herod, 341; author's rea- soning to fix the commencement of his reign in July, J. P. 4674, 342; opi- nions of Lardner, Maun, and the author compared relative to the date of his death, 344; inquiry how long the birth of Christ preceded the de- cease of Herod, 345; author's reason- ing to prove that the arrival of the Magi was prior to the execution of the rabbis, 346; unsoundness of his premises, ib.; spirit of forbearance character- istic of the evangelists, 347; the time respecting which Herod inquired of the Magi, not that of Christ's birth, `ib.; author's arrangement of the cir cumstances recorded by Matthew, ib. ; .1 precarious nature of his reasonings,
348; difficulties attending the inter- pretation of Luke ii. 2, ib. ; author's hypothetical correction of the text, 349; reasons for preferring the interpreta- tion given by Campbell after Calvin, 3&c. 850; internal marks of veracity
and competency in Luke, 351; to what taxing does Luke refer? 352; al- leged contradiction between Luke and Matthew, ib.; explanation afforded by the fact that Tiberius was colleague with Augustus, 358; import of the word translated' reign' (nyɛuonias), 354; -date of Tiberius's proconsular go- vernment, 355; duration of our Lord's ministry, ib.; merit of the work, 356.
Bible Society, British and Foreign, charge against by Luccock, 204. Bonaparte, Mr. Scott's remarks on the genius of, 168; true monument of, 169; character of, interesting only from his power, 413; meanness of, 4414, 16; portrait of, 417. Brazil, rapid progress of improvements
in, 196; geography of, 204; notes relating to, 206, et seq.; see Luccock. Bretons, the, origin of, 327; degraded state of, 163, 327.
· Britain, etymology of, 323; aborigines of, ib.; ancient language of, 325; in- troduction of Christianity into, 463; kee Hughes.
Brook's history of religious liberty, 481, et seq.; modern date of religions li. berty, 481; remarks on author's plan and style, 482; christianity not the anthor of persecution, but its victim, 483; importance of keeping alive the remembrance of the days of martyr- dom, ib.; the puritans martyrs, 484; attempts of Southey and others to transpose history, 485; efforts of the Lollards, &c. in favour of liberty,
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.cy/books/content?id=bf23CrEXzxEC&output=html_text&pg=PT3&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=%22Millions+of+spiritual+creatures+walk+the+earth,+Unseen,+both+when+we+wake+and+when+we%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U0DYt4aMRvrjlrVOf98W8px3v9Wzg&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=176,1556,6,6)
487; fatal influence of the act of su premacy, as regards civil andreli- gious liberty, 488 ; illegality and in-} consistency of the first acts of Mary I., 489; popedom of Elizabeth, 490, the act of supremacy precluded the pro-) gress of reformation, ib.; the growth of ecclesiastical power attributable to it, 491; sentiments of the Lollards on this point, ib.; declarations of the Re- formers, 492; act of supremacy pre- judicial to real religion, 493 ; the re- mote cause of the civil war, 494; character of James I. ib.; book of -sports, 495; character of Charles I. 496; intolerance of the parliament, 497; Cromwell a friend to religious liberty, 498; history of the test act, 499; the comprehension opposed by the clergy, 501; general remarks on the work, ib.
Browne, Mr. the traveller, mysterious murder of, 305.
Bunyan, admirable tendency of his al- legories, 559.
Byron's, lord, Don Juan, notice of, 374:
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.cy/books/content?id=bf23CrEXzxEC&output=html_text&pg=PT3&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=%22Millions+of+spiritual+creatures+walk+the+earth,+Unseen,+both+when+we+wake+and+when+we%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U0DYt4aMRvrjlrVOf98W8px3v9Wzg&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=890,772,32,14)
Calvin, eminence of as a commentator, 89.
Calvinism, on the reproach of, 88. Canada, hints to settlers in, 370. Caravansary, description of a, 313 Carey's Dr. J., clue for young latinists, 178, 9 notice of author's 'other works, 178. Carpenter's examination of the charges against Unitarians, 546, et seq.; ad- mission as to the disingenuousness of certain advocates of orthodoxy, 546; deprecation of state patronage in religion, 547; Dr. Hales's denunciation of Uni- tarians, 548; dissent a part of their offence, 549; impolicy of such a mode of conducting the controversy, ib.; importance of the sabbalk, 550 ; author himself chargeable with un- fairness, 551; attack in Monthly Repository on Dr. Dwight and his reviewer, ib.; note.
Celts, Asiatic extraction of the, 329. Cheltenham waters, Gibney's guide to, 381.
Children's books, remarks on, 557, et seq.
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.cy/books/content?id=bf23CrEXzxEC&output=html_text&pg=PT3&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=%22Millions+of+spiritual+creatures+walk+the+earth,+Unseen,+both+when+we+wake+and+when+we%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U0DYt4aMRvrjlrVOf98W8px3v9Wzg&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=908,1422,12,10)
Chinese language and literature, remarks on, 36, et seq.; 41, 2. Chinese temples, 569; etiquette, 570; hot-baths, 571; fortune-tellers, ib. Christ, chronology of the life of, 336, el seq.; duration of the ministry of, 355 Chronology, Grecian, remarks on, 131.
Chronology of the New Testament, re- marks on, 336, et seq. Church government, importance of right views of, 398 see Turnbull.
“bistory, see Brook and Hughes. Churches, on the mutual relation of, 405. Cobbett, character of as a writer, 280. Cold, intoxication produced by, 64. Comprehension, the, opposed by the - clergy, 501.
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.cy/books/content?id=bf23CrEXzxEC&output=html_text&pg=PT4&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=%22Millions+of+spiritual+creatures+walk+the+earth,+Unseen,+both+when+we+wake+and+when+we%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U36_IcwYpM4Lt0s0jb2RdRwGt8I-A&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=317,397,7,8)
Concordances, history of, 459. Craven's tour through Naples, 385, et
eq; general character of the work, 385; dangerous state of the district I of Puglia, 386; mock-judges and mock- "banditti, ib.; history of the Varda- relli band, ib.; castles of Otranto and Brindisi, 388; Tarantula, sup- posed effects and cure of, ib.; aspect of Calabria, 389; destruction of a monastery near La Serra, ib.; awful catastrophe attending the earthquake of 1783, 390; Sicily and Naples com- pared, 391; legend of a countess of Nicastro, 592; the Carbonari, 393; Carbonaro magistrate, 394; Neapoli- tan literature, ib.; popular classics, 395; lawless and ferocious habits of the population, ib. ; prevailing intem- perance, ib. modern Bacchanals, 396; the involuntary hermit, ib.; remarks on the recent struggle, 397. Crawfind's history of the Indian Archi-
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.cy/books/content?id=bf23CrEXzxEC&output=html_text&pg=PT4&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=%22Millions+of+spiritual+creatures+walk+the+earth,+Unseen,+both+when+we+wake+and+when+we%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U36_IcwYpM4Lt0s0jb2RdRwGt8I-A&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=82,1072,5,7)
pelago, 228, et seq.; commanding po- sition and advantages of the chain of islands, 228; geographical features of the five natural divisions of the groupe, 229; influence of food on the physical and moral character, 230; no. tice of works relative to Java, &c. 231; merits and deficiencies of the 199 present work, ib.; early history of the islands, 232; introduction of Ma- hommedanism, ib.; atrocities of the Portuguese and Dutch, 233; history of Surapati, 234; enlightened cha- racter of the chief of Samarang, 235; Malay character, ib.; running a muck, ib.; remarkable suddenness of these de- moniacal · seizures, 236; Javanese su- ? perstitions, ib.; arts and manufac- tures, 237; barbarism and perfidy in war, 238; fine arts, &c., ib. ; hus- bandry, language, and antiquities, 239; ruins of the thousand temples' at Brambanan, 240. Cymry, the, origin of, 330. Cyrus, tomb of, 317.
Dalzel's lectures on the Greeks, 121, el seq.; utility of classical studies, 121;
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.cy/books/content?id=bf23CrEXzxEC&output=html_text&pg=PT4&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=%22Millions+of+spiritual+creatures+walk+the+earth,+Unseen,+both+when+we+wake+and+when+we%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U36_IcwYpM4Lt0s0jb2RdRwGt8I-A&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=481,615,6,6)
pre-eminent interest of Grecian his tory, 122; character of the lectures, ib.; editor's apology, 123, notice of Dr. Hill's lectures, ib.; distribution of subjects, 124; opening observations on Grecian history, ib.; connexion of liberty and genius, 125; the, modern Greeks not the descendants of the ancient Greeks, 126; on the veracity of the Greek historians, ib.; author's Inis-quotation of Juvenal, in,; autho- rities for the fact of the cutting the canal through Athos, 127; the heroic ages not fabulous, ib.; Homer the his- torian of the heroic age, 129; author's assertion that the military art was well understood in the earliest age, ib. its utter incorrectness shewn, 130; on the age of Homer, ib.; on Grecian chronology, 131; history of the oracle of Delphi, 132; supplemental details, 133; amphictyonic council, 134; importance of the invention of letters, 135; remarks on the article, ib.; on the aorist, 136; illustrations of the present sense of the aorist, ib.; im- portance of the study of Greek, ib.; re- marks on the drama, 138; extraor dinary formation of the language, 139; account of Sophocles, 140, Es- chylus, Sophocles, and Euripides dis- criminated, 141; concluding obser- vations on the work, 142.
Definitions, on the misuse of, 70, 271. Deserts, travelling in described, 29; hypo- thesis as to the formation of, 208. Dissent, interesting only as the cause of religion, 564.
Divine decrees, remarks on the, 114, perfections, remarks on, 110,
117, 270. Divinity of Christ, arguments in sup- port of the, 256, 260.
Druids, oriental origin of, 329; prac- tices of, 332, et seq.; poem on the mas- sacre of, 335. Dwight's, Dr. Timothy, panegyricon, 97; parentage of, 98; his early proficiency, ib.; his intense application at college, 99; his character as a college-tutor, ib.; attempts to obviate the necessity of exercise by abstemiousness, ib.; ap- pointed chaplain to the patriot army, 100; death of his father, ib.; his filial piety, 101; his conduct as a le- gislator, ib.; accepts of the pastoral charge of the church at Greenfield, ib.; chosen president of Yale college, 102; his bold and decisive conduct to- tourds the infulel students, ib.; remarks on the policy which he adopted, 103;
state of the college during his presidency, 104; his paternal conduct to the students, 105; illness and death, ib.; spirit of his lectures, 109; his reason for wri- ting out his sermons, 175; attack upon by a Unitarian writer, 551. Dwight's, Dr., theology explained, 97, et seq.; 256, et seq.; high literary character of the work, 97; memoirs of the author, 98-106; origin and design of the work, 106; syllabus of the lectures, 107; revelation the foundation of theological science, 109; style and spirit of the lectures, ib.; analysis of the sermon on the benevo- lence of God, and extracts, 110, et seq. ; review of objections to the doctrine, 112; the existence of physical evil, apart from moral evil, inexplicable, ib.; remarks of Leibnitz on the ne- cessary perfection of the universe, 113; intuitive certainty distinct from air- tuous confidence, ib. ; proof of the Di- vine Benevolence from Revelation, ih.; the decrees of God necessarily productive of the greatest possible good, 114; on the circumstances attending the fall, ib. ; how can a holy being become sin- ful?'-reasoning of the author, 115; necessary fallibility of finite creatures, 116; remarks of Leibnitz on the pri- vative nature of evil, ib.; Divine equity in the permission of sin yindi- cated, 117; true cause of Adam's defection, 118; ultimate reason of the permission of evil, 119; practical re- flections on the fall of Eve, 120; four arguments in support of the Deity of Christ, 256; if Christ be not God, the most perfect displays of Divine perfection will be made by a creature, 257; the Jews, according to the Socinian scheme, justifiable, 258; analysis of Abbadie's reasoning, ib. ; extract from Abbadie on the love of God Christ, 259; three important facts de- cisive of our Lord's divinity, 260; three infinite Beings necessarily One, 261; our ignorance of the mode of the Divine existence renders all a priori objections to the doctrine of the Trinity nugatory, 262; on the supposed obstacle presented by the doctrine to the conversion of the Jews, ib.; the homage claimed by our Lord as incompatible with the Jewish prejudices as the doctrine of the Trinity, 263; triads of polytheism, 264; Unitarians renounce the whole of the Christian system, ib. ; harmony of Paul and James on the subject of jus- tification, 265; nature of regeneration,
207; necessity of the Divine agency in order to effect it, 268; the viner as such an object of the Divine compassion, 270; fallacy of a priori speculations, ibog im- propriety of a certain pliraseology in speaking of the Divine perfections, ib.; inaccuracy of author's definition of love, 271; wilfulness of the sin of profaueness, 272; on the perpetuity of the Sabbath, 272; criticism... on Col, it. 17., ib. ; moral and political benefits of the Sabbath, 274; import- ance of religious education, 275, ond
Elder, on the term, 400.al.edino Election, apostolic use of the doctrine
of, 90; false views of, deprecated, 360. Erskine on the internal evidence of re- velation, 180, et seq.; merit of the work, 180; author's design, ib.; arga- ment drawn from the harmony of the at- tions ascribed to God with our ideas of moral perfection, 181; supposed case of high credibility in the absence of external evidence, ib.; remarks on the applica- tion of it to religious belief, 182; Christianity sheds the light by which it is judged, 183; respective uses of external and internal evidence, ib. ; true cause of the tranquillity of the wick- ed man in this world, 184. Evangelists, spirit of forbearance-cha- racteristic of the, 347; marks of vera- cily in, 351.
Guel Evidence, remarks on moral, 18k 19 Euripides, remarks on the genius of,
![[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]](https://books.google.com.cy/books/content?id=bf23CrEXzxEC&output=html_text&pg=PT5&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=%22Millions+of+spiritual+creatures+walk+the+earth,+Unseen,+both+when+we+wake+and+when+we%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U309WGogDF89e79eE5FhUuzu3UWZQ&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=552,996,397,550)
TM of his private life, ib.; Poussin's defence of his! Moses striking the rock', 217, biogra- pher's description of his deluge' 218; Thypercritical nature of her criticisms vaexposed, 219; remarks on Michael An-
gelo's last judgement,' 220; Poussin's plast letter, 223; his death, and epitaph, iba; Sir J. Reynolds's panegyricou this merits, ib.; characteristics of his style, 224; his learning, 225; dialogue between Poussin and da Vinci, ib.; sum- hmary remarks on his works, 227. Greek, importance of the study of, 121, 136.
Greeks, lectures on the ancient, 121, et isega see. Dalzel.
g) modern, not the descendants of the ancient, 126. Guicheny's Italian grammar,
-Hall's, Robert, reply to Cobbett, 277, et Yo seq.; notice of former publications on No the question, 277; labour, property, kr278;* unpopularity of a preaching that
should direct its artillery against indi- vidual sins, 278; defence of the fund as wn means of withholding a portion of la- bour, 279; monstrous nature of Cobbett's À” sinister · recommendation to the knitters, 280; philippic against Cobbett, ib. ; au- thor's assertion of his adherence to his dearly political principles, 281. Hebrew language, remarks on, 157. Henry Schultze, and other poems, 143,
el seq. argument of the poem, 143; 1: progress of seduction, 145; death bed, 146; despair, ib.; the great difficulty of the poet is to imagine, not situa- tions, but characters, ih.; scene on a moorland, 148; the Savoyard, 149; the revolutionist, ib.; the sacked town, 151; the noyade, ib.; the tale pur- sued, 152; conversion of the Savoyard, 153; merits of the volume, 155. Hill's lectures on the Greeks, notice of, 123.
Hindoos, moral condition of, 527. History of England a desideratum, 1; see Hughes and Lingard.
· Greece, pre-eminent interest gridof, 122; see Dalzel.
religious liberty, 481; see
Homer, remarks on, 129, 130, Hooker, key to a curious passage in, 538. Horace, Wrangham's translation of the -li-odes of, 502, et seq. ; character of the
geuius of, 503. ******
'Hort's introduction to modern history, 369,70% on the system of outlines Pinceducation, 370; merits of the work, ib.
Hughes's Hora Britannica, 322, et seq.; 463, et seq.; derivation of the word Britain, 323; theories as to the aborigines, ib. ; three usurping tribes,' 324; what was the language of the ancient Britons, 325; three-fold divi- sion of the nation-Celts, Cymry, Germans, 326; the Picts, ib. the Bretons, 327; an Armoric version of the Scriptures a desideratum, ib. Mrs. Stothard's account of the degraded state of the Bretons, ib,; affinity of the several dialects, 328; defective arrangement of the work, ib.; orien- tal character of Druidism, 329; the Cells of Asiatic extraction, ib,; opi- nions of Sir W. Jones, Mr. Maurice, and Mr. Gale respecting the extrac- tion of the Britons, 330; probability that the Cymry had a Phenician ori- gin, ib.; remarkable passage in Dio- dorus Siculus, 332; the Druids worship- pers of Apollo, ib.; their serpent-wor- ship, 333; on the name Arthur, ib. human sacrifices practised by the Druids, 334; poem on the massacre of the Druids by the Romans, 335; ques- tion whether St. Paul visited Britain, doubtful and unimportant, 463; Christianity introduced into Britain by the family of Caractacus, ib. ; king Lucius sends missionaries to Rome, ib.; Mr. Lingard's account of Lucius, 464; statement of the fact after Usher, ib.; early intercourse be- tween Rome and Britain accounts for the introduction of Christianity, 465; Dioclesian persecution in Britain, 466; its singular mildness, ib.; state of religion in Britain, during the fourth and fifth centuries, 467; creation of a hie rarchy in Britain, 468; Pelagius, 469; Mr. Rickards's notion, relative to the ori- gin of Pelagianism, ib.; objections to the hypothesis, 470; character of the Bri- tish heresiarch, ib.; visitations of Germanus of Auxerre, 471; Britain replunged into barbarism, 472; state of the Silurian churches, according to Gildas, ib.; arrival of Augustine, ib.; Mr. Lingard's statement of the mis- sionary's conference with the Cam- brian prelates, 473; its misrepresen- tations exposed, 474; state of religion in Britain prior to Wicklif, ib.; Humoar, remarks on, 373." Hurwitz's Vindicia Hebraicæ, 155; Mr. Bellamy a retailer of infidel ob- jections, 156.
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.cy/books/content?id=bf23CrEXzxEC&output=html_text&pg=PT6&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=%22Millions+of+spiritual+creatures+walk+the+earth,+Unseen,+both+when+we+wake+and+when+we%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U3GfE-XuSH4R12vj3zr1M_s2rgWPw&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=474,1020,7,6)
Incidents of childhood, 556 el seg; apo-
« PreviousContinue » |