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policy vindicated against the aspersions cast upon them by numerous Authors; the state of England compared with that of Ireland, Scotland, and France; &c. &c. By James Macphail. 2s.

Some remarks upon the measures recommended in the reports of the Secret Committees on the State of the Bank of England, and a plan suggested in lieu thereof. 8vo. 6d.

A Vindication of the Enquiry into Charitable Abuses, with an Exposure of the Misrepresentations contained in the Quarterly Review. 8vo. 4s.

THEOLOGY.

An Historical and Critical Enquiry into the Interpretation of the Hebrew Scriptures, with Remarks on Mr. Bellamy's new Translation. By John William Whittaker, M. A. 8vo. 9s.

Elementary Discourses; or, Sermons addressed to Children. By John Burder, M. A. 12mo. 4s.

A Concise History of Tithes; with an Inquiry how far a forced Maintenance for the Ministers of Religion, is warranted by the Examples and Precepts of Jesus Christ and his Apostles. 8vo. 1s.

Sermons preached in St. John's Chapel, Edinburgh. By Daniel Sandford, D. D. one of the Bishops of the Scotch Episcopal Church, and formerly Student of Christ Church, Oxford. 8vo. 12s.

Christian Missions an Enlightened Species of Charity; or, a Vindication of the Policy and Expediency as well as Benevolence of the Royal Letter, authorizing Subscriptions throughout the Kingdom, in aid of the venerable Society for propagating the Gospel. Respectfully addressed to the Members of the Society, and to the reverend the Clergy who are about to plead its Cause. By the Rev.. S. C. Wilks, A. M. Author of Christian Essays, and of the St. David's Prize Essay for 1811, on the Clerical Character, &c. 8vo. 2s. 6d.

The Trinitarian's Appeal defended, in Answer to a Letter by a Layman. By the Rev. J. Newton. 3d.

A Review of "Remarks on Scepticism, by the Rev. T. Rennell, A. M. &c." By De Wylke Edwinsford, Esq. of Caermarthenshire. 5s.

Remarks on the Foreknowledge of God, suggested by passages in Dr. A. Clarke's Commentary on the New Testament. By Gill Timms. 2s. 6d.

The Conference Reviewed, containing a Summary of the late Transactions among the Methodists of Ireland; and

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comprising an Apology for the primi tive Wesleyan Methodists attached to the Established Church. 12mo. Is. 3d.

The Epistles of St. Paul to the Colossians, to the Thessalonians, to Timothy, and to Titus, and the General Epistle of James: a new version from the Greek, and chiefly from the text of Griesbach. By Philalethes. 12mo. 3s.

The Death of a Servant of God, a Funeral Sermon in memory of the late Joseph Hardcastle, Esq. By William Bengo Collyer, D. D. F. S. A., &c. To which is prefixed, an Address delivered at the Interment. By the Rev. John Townsend. 8vo. 2s.

A Sermon on the same occasion, preached at Surry Chapel. By the Rev. D. Bogue, D. D. 1s.

Daily Bread: being a Series of Considerations useful to the support of the Christian character. 12mo. 5s.

TOPOGRAPHY, STATISTICS, &c.

An Accouut of the Kingdom of Nepal, and of the Territories annexed to this Dominion by the House of Gorkha. By Francis Hamilton (formerly Buchanan) M.D. F.R.S. L.E. and Fellow of the Societies of Antiquaries, and of the Linnean and Asiatic Societies. 4to. with engravings. 21. 2s. boards.

Journey to Persia, in the Suite of the Imperial Russian Embassy in the Year 1817. By Moritz de Kotzebue, Captain on the Staff of the Russian Army, and Knight of the Order of St. Wladimir, and of the Persian Order of the Sun and Lion. With plates. 8vo. 12s.

A Description of the Western Islands of Scotland, including the Isle of Man: comprising an Account of their Geological Structure; with Remarks on their Agriculture, Economy, Scenery, and Antiquities. By J. Macculloch, M. D. F. L. S. In 2 vols. 8vo. with a volume of illustrative engravings, in quarto.

A Geological and Statistical Description of Scotland. By James Playfair, D.D. F.R.S. and F.A.S.E. Principal of the United College of St. Andrews, and Historiographer to his Royal Highness the Prince Regent. 2 vols. 8vo. with an elegant and accurate sheet map of Scotland, 11. 4s. Voards.

A Classical Tour through Italy and Sicily, tending to illustrate some Districts which have not been described by Mr. Eustace in his Classical Tour. By Sir Richard Colt Hoare, Bart. 2 vols. 8vo. 11. 4s.

GENERAL INDEX.

VOL. XI. NEW SERIES.

Accommodations, scriptural, Horne's re-
marks on, 184, 5.

Aikin's England delineated, 179, et seq.;
improvements in the present edition,
ib.; situation, trade, &c. of Manchester,
180; Liverpool, its situation, commerce,
&c. 181.

Aikiu's, Miss Lucy, memoirs of the
court of Elizabeth, 105, et seq.; on
the just mode of forming a correct
estimate of an historical period, 106;
character of Elizabeth hitherto not
justly exhibited, 107; remarks on
her early life, 107, 8; Roger Ascham's
account of Elizabeth's proficiency in
learning, 108, 9; simplicity of her dress,
and appearance, 110; Mary's enmity to
her, 111; she is committed to the tower,
112; her treatment there, 113; death
of the Queen, 114; their conduct
contrasted, ib.; accession of Eliza-
beth, 115; her procession through the
city, 115, et seq.; establishment of the
band of gentlemen pensioners, 118;
Cecil's curious proclamation in regard to
portraits of the Queen, 119; her con- /
duct as head of the church con-
sidered, 120; her doubtful policy,
122; decline of her health and spirits,
124, 5; Robert Cary's account of her
last moments, 125, 6.

Alberico, an Italian visionary, account
of him, 563, et seq.
Algebra, early history of, 286.
Ameen, the Armenian prince, historical
account of him, 578; his letter to the
Earl of Northumberland, 579, 60.
America, Fearon's sketches on, 153,
et seg.

Anecdotes of his own times, by Dr.
King, 89, et seq.

Ankarstrom, the Swedish regicide, 516.
Anne, Queen, 200 persons touched by
her for the evil, 281.
Antediluvians, on the longevity of,
351, 2.

Antoinette, Marie, character of, by Mad.
Staët, 341.
Archipelago, Malayan, inquiry concern-
ing the Aborigines of, 285.

Ascham's, Roger, account of the great
proficiency of Queen Eilzabeth, in her
youth, 108, 9.

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Asiatic Researches, Vol. XII, 282, et
seq.; Major Lambton's trigonome-
trical survey across the peninsula of
India, 282, 3; description of the country
west of Bangalore, 283, 4; on the
Malay nation, 284; inquiry concern-
ing the Aborigines of the Malayan
Archipelago, 285; the early history
of algebra, 286; comparison between
the Bija Ganita, and the work of Dio-
phantus, 286, 7; Dr. Carey on the
funeral ceremonies of a Burman Priest,
287, 8; observations taken near Fort
St. George, for determining the obli-
quity of the ecliptic, 288; notions of
the Hindu astronomers concerning
the precession of the equinoxes, &c.
ib.; Indian theory of astronomy, 289;
on the height of the Himalayah
mountains, 289; translation of a
Sanscrit inscription on a stone found
in Bundelchund, 290; journey to
Lake Manasarovara in Undes, a pro-
vince of Little Thibet, 291.
Astronomy, Indian theory of, 289.

Bangalore, description of the country west
of it, 283, 4.

Basle, wretchedness of its mendicants, 176.
Bass, his daring adventure, 363.
Baudin, Capt. his base treatment of
Capt. Flinders, 367, et seq.
Beaufort's Karamania, 546, et seq.;
ruins of Myra, 547; counter currents
in the Archipelago, ib.; Yanar, or
volcanic flame, 548; Takhtalu and
Mount Taurus, elevation of, ib.;
ruins of the ancient Phaselis, 549;
rescue of sixty Turks from destruc-

a

tion, 549; anecdole of the Turkish go-
vernor of Boodroom, 551; capture of
some Mainot pirates, 552, 3; ruins of
Pompeipolis, 554; Ayas Bay, ib.;
Gulf of Iskenderoon, its abundant sup-
ply of fish and turtles, ib.; party at-
tacked and the captain wounded by some
armed Turks, 555.

Bell, Peter, a lyrical ballad, 473, et seq.
Belsham, on a millennial period, 129.
Burnet, Bishop of Salisbury, his disinte-

rested conduct, 96.

Bernard's, Made. Jeune Vendéens, 393.
Bigland's Letters on French history, 481.
Bigotry, its nature, 395.

Bishop of Chester censured for calling
upon his congregation to pray for
the soul of the deceased Princess
Charlotte, 444.

Blacks not permitted to worship with
the whites in some of the United
States, 155; the whites refuse to eat
with them, 156.

Blind persons, singular community of,
in Japan, 249.

Blunt's guide to New York, 274; Broad-
way-street, ib. ; this city noted for its
dirty streets, ib.

Bogue's discourses on the millennium,
127, et seq.; queries in relation to
the millennium, ib. early prevalence
of the opinion of a millennial age,
128; Belsham on a millennial period,
129;
other opinions on the subject,
ib. et seq.; character of the present
work, 131; subjects of discussion,
133; remarks on the spiritual part of
the millennium, 136, 7; means by which
it is to be hastened, 138, 9; on the
author's address to the kings of the
earth, 140; judgements of God intro-
ductory to the millennial state considered,
141, 2; the promised effusion of the
Holy Spirit, 143, 4; means by which the
ruin of Antichrist's kingdom will probably
be effected, 144; deism not one of the
formidable enemies of Christianity, 145,
6; return of the Jews to their own land
considered, 146; remarks ou some il-
liberal strictures on the author's works,
which iately appeared in a religious
Journal, 148, 9.
Bombay literary society, transactions
of, 423, et seq.; introductory dis-
course by Sir James Mackintosh, ib.;
real state of the female population in
warm climates, 424; eulogy on Sir
William Jones, 425, account of the
festival of Mamangom, on the Mala-
bar coast, b.; temperature of the
island of Bombay, 426; translations

of two Chinese edicts, ib.; the morals
of Nasir, a Persian system of ethics,
427; account of the caves at Salsette,
428; similitude between the Gipsy
and Hindostanee languages, 429;
translations of the opinions of the
Sunni and Shia sects of Mahomedans,
429; treatise on sufiism, or Maho-
medan mysticism, 430; present and
ancient state of Babylon compared,
432; hill fort of Chapaneer, in
Guzerat, 433; fifth sermon of Sadi,
ib. history of the Bunjaras, 434;
account of the Parishnath Gowricha,
worshipped in the desert of Parkur,
ib.; observations on two sepulchral
urns found in Bushire in Persia,
437; cave temple of Elephanta, ib. ;
on the substance called Gez, or
manna, found in Persia, ib.; manners
and customs of the inhabitants of
Kattiwar, ib.; Cornelian mines of
Baroach, 439; famine in Guzerat,
ib.; plan of a comparative vocabulary
of Indian language, ib.

Bonaparte, his character by Made. Staël,
491, et seq.; leading features of his
system exposed, 493.

Books, doctrinal, of scripture, mode of
discovering their true meaning, 186, 7.
Brambal, Bishop, his character, 446.
Brett, Dr. character of his writings, 448.
Briggs's history of the Bunjaras, 434, 5.
Bullar's memoirs of the late Rev. W.
Kingsbury, 537, et seq.; early life of
Mr. K. 538; exercise of his mind, in
regard to religion, 539, et seq.; his
reflections on quitting his pastoral charge,
at Southampton, 542, 3; character of the
late Mr. Newton, 544, 5.

Bunyan's pilgrim's progress, and holy

war, remarks on their character, 484.
Burman priest, Felix Carey on the fune-
ral ceremonies of one, 287, 8.
Butler, bishop of Durham, striking anec-
dote of, 89, 90.

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Carey, Felix, on the funeral ceremonies

of a Burman priest, 287, 8.
Carey's translation of the vision of
Dante, 556, et seq.

Carey's, Robert, account of the last moments
of Queen Elizabeth, 125, 6.
Catholics, Irish, state of, 54.

Celibacy, constramed, of the Romish
clergy, letters on, 265, et seq.; scrip-
tural evidence in favour of matrimony,
266; canon of the council of Trent
against marriage, 267; author's remarks
on these different statements, ib.; ob-
jection to his opinion of the eligibility
of celibacy, in the case of clergymen,
269; opulence of the church one chief
cause of the prohibition of marriage, 271;
forcible appeal on the alleged pollution of
married priests, 271; clerical competency
of wicked priests exposed, 273
Chester's, Bishop of, serinon on the scrip-
tural doctrine of man's salvation, 36,
et seq.; his lordship's object, ib.; his
statement of an apparent contradiction in
the Bible, concerning this doctrine, ib. ;
his lordship's two periods of salvation
considered, 37; extracts from his lord-
ship's sermon, 37, 8; note; perplex-
ing nature of his system, 38, et seq.;
his lordship's exhibition of the nature
and extent of the comfort offered by
the gospel, 40; remarks on the opi-
nion of Dr. Johnson, 41; note, ib.
the Christian's comfort keeps place
with the steadiness of his hope, &c.
42.

Cheyne, Dr. letter of, to Richardson, author
of Pamela, on abstemious regimen, 576,
7.

Childhood, poetic picture of, 222, 3.
Christians, Malubar, of the fifteenth cen-
tury, account of, 257.

Church of England does not deny the
authority of the Pope, 313, see Wix
on a general council.

Clair, General St. his ill treatment by the
American government, 164. 5.
Clarke's, Dr. travels in Scandinavia,
509, et seq.; present and former dimen-
sions of the island of Heligoland, 511;
: effect produced by the croaking of millions

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of frogs, 512; derangement of the king,
ib.; character of the Danes, 513; im-
mense forests of Sweden, ib.; probable
origin of the belief of fauns and satyrs
among the ancients, ib.; rapacity of the
lords proprietors of the lands, ib.; her-
ring fishery of Gottenburg, 514;
cataracts of Trollhætta, ib. ; freak of
the late king, 514; lake Wener, ib.;
burial place of the giants, 514, 5; ele-

gant structure of the cottages near
the Wener, 515; striking evidence of
Swedish honesty, 516; grand square at
Stockholm, ib; freak of the late beautiful
queen, 517; Ankarstrom, the regicide,
ib.; contrast between the Swedish
and the Italian conductor, 518; in-
convenience of a long protracted day
light, 519; merchants' annual expedition
to the north for skins, 520; musquitos,
522; cleanliness of the settled Lapps,
523; their national music, 524 ; manners
of the nomade Lapps, ib.; noise a chief
requisite in a preacher to the Lapps, 526;
description of a midnight sun, 527;
Lake Kilpis, 528; characteristic por-
trail of the Laplunder, ib.
Clergy, Irish, state of, 55.

Clergy, Romish, letters on their con-
strained celibacy, 265, et seq.
Coalition and France, 177, et seq.; de-
sign of the work, 178; extract, ib.
Cobbett's opinion of the Anglo-Americans,

160.

Colebrooke on the height of the Hima
layah mountains, 289, et seq.

on the notions of the Hindu
Astronomers concerning the preces-
sion of the equinoxes, &c. 288.
Collier, character of his writings, 444.
Colquhoun's treatise on the covenant of

grace 483, 4; specimen of the writer's
mode of treating his subject, ib.
Commentaries and annotations on the
Holy Scriptures, by Dr. Hewlett, 345,
et seq.
Commentators, caution in regard to the use
of, 187.
Constitution, English, futility of M.
Neckar's attempt to adopt it in France,

321.

Correspondence between a mother and
her daughter at school, by Mrs. and
Miss Taylor, 394.

Cosin, Bishop, sequestered from his
benefices, for practising popish su-
perstitions, &c. 445.

Cottages near the Wener, elegant struc-
ture of, 515.

Council of the Church of England and
the Church of Rome, Wix on the ex-
pediency of holding one, to accommo-
date their religious differences, 301,
et seq. 441, et seq.

Critique, theatrical, 473, extracts, 477, 8.
Curialia Miscellanea, 275, et seq.
Curiosities, epistolary, by Rebecca War-
ner, 573, el seq.

Currents counter, in the Archipelago, great
force of, 547.

Curwen's state of Ireland, 43, et seq.;

design of the work, 43, 4; wretched
state of the Irish cabins, 44; sufferings
of the poor, 45; author's visits to various
cabins, 45, et seq.; his opinion of the
causes of the misery of the common
Irish, 47, et seq.; smallness of the
farms, ib.; tithes, 48; conduct of the
tithe proctors, ib.; evils from illicit dis-
tillation, 50; from the absence of the
land proprietors, it; proposed reme-
dies, 51; Mr. Wynne's farm at Hazle-
wood, 51, 2; humane conduct of the
Bishop of Meath, 53; stooking of wheat,
52, 3; Irish inns, ib.; great impor-
tance of Ireland to Great Britain, 54;
state of the Irish Roman Catholics, ib. ;
of the Irish clergy, 55.

Dante's Vision, or Hell, Purgatory, and
Paradise, translated by Carey, 556,
et seq; merits of the present version,
556; the Italians the models of the
early English poets, ib.; inquiry re-
Jative to the period of the writing of
the poem, 558, el srq.; remarks on the
language of Dante, 560, et seq.; Dante
the father of Italian poetry, 561; esti-
mation of him by his successors, 562;
his claim to originality, ib. et seq.;
general prevalence of superstition in
his time, ih.; account of the visionary
Alberico, 563, 4, et seq.; his vision, ib.
differences and similarity of the two
poets, 564, 5; Matthew Paris's ac-
count of the vision of the Monk of
Evesham, and of Alari, 566, 7; Dante's
description of Lucifer, 568; chief inte-
rest of Dante's Poem, 569; meets
Guido's father in hell, 569, 70; his de-
scription of morning and evening, 570;
his attachment to his native city, 572;
his death, ib.

Danes, their character, 513.
Darnley's island, natives of, 362, 3.
David, Lacey's Life of, 484, et seq.
Day-break, verses on, 87.

Debtors in the Scotch prisons, their dis-
graceful situation, 240.

Deism not one of the formidable enemies of
Christianity, 145, 6.

Denmark, King of, melancholy proof of his

mental derangement, 512.
Dictionnaire des verbes François, par M.
Tarver, 572, 3.

Distillation, illicit, à cause of the poverty
of the Irish, 50.

Doctrines, important, of the gospel,
-Thornton's sermons on, 376, et seq.
Dog, sagacity of one at Rome, 380.
Doncaster jail, hard case of a poor widow
confined there, 239.

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Drivers, Swedish and Italian, contrasted,
518.

Durham, house of correction at, 239.
Duties, reciprocal, of parents and child-
ren, by Mrs. Taylor, 394, et seq.

Early rising, letters on the importance,
duty, and advantages of, 356, et seq.;
motives addressed to the various mem-
bers of a family, 357; address to the
son, 358, 9.

Echo of the study, 487, 8.

Elizabeth, court of, Miss Lucy Aikin's
memoirs of, 105, et seq.

Elocution, Wright's philosophy of, 389,
et seq.

Emigration, Fearon's remarks on, 161, 2.
Encyclopedists, French, decay of their

fame, 204; their works read only for
their licentiousness, 205.
England delineated, 179, el seg.
Enontekis, district of, in Swedish Lap-
mark, 526, 7.

Erskine on two sepulchral urns found in
Bushire in Persia, 437.

Erskine's account of the cave temple

of Elephanta, 437.

Essay on sonnet writing, &c. 473; ex-
tract, 475; sonnet on myself, 476, 7.
Essays, nautical, 482, 3.

Eusebius's arrangement of the canonical and
apocryphal books of Scripture, Horne's
remarks on, 191.

Evening, Dante's description of, 570.
Evidences, the principal, of revealed re-

ligion, Roby's lectures on, 259.
Eyam, desolation of the village of, by
the plague, 535; admirable conduct
of the clergyman and his wife, ib.

Farm, Mr. Wynne's, at Hazlewood, near
Sligo, 51.

Farms, Irish, evils occasioned by their
smallness, 47.

Fauns and Satyrs, conjectures concerning

the origin of the belief in by the ancients,
513.

Fathers, on the use to be made of their
writings, 459.

Fearon's sketches of America, 153, et
seq.; erroneous opinion of the state of
things in America, 154; peculiarity of
the Anglo-Americans, as a people, 155;
slavery practised by the Americans,
ib.;
the blacks not permitted
to attend public worship with the
whites, ib.; whites of the most degraded
stations refuse to eat with blacks, 156; no
slaves in New England, ib. ; hair-dresser
refuses to dress a black, 157; moral cha-

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