"He was qualified to excel in every branch of literature: he was well versed in the learned tongues, in Metaphysics, in Oratory, in Logic, in Criticism, and every requisite of a Christian Minister. His style was nervous, clear, and manly; his preaching was pathetic and persuasive; his Journals are artless and interesting; and his compositions and compilations to promote knowledge and piety, were almost innumerable. "I do not say he was without faults, or above mistakes; but they were lost in the multitude of his excellencies and virtues. "To gain the admiration of an ignorant and superstitious age, requires only a little artifice and address: to stand the test of these times, when all pretensions to sanctity are stigmatized as hypocrisy, is a proof of genuine piety, and real usefulness. His great object was, to revive the obsolete doctrines and extinguished spirit of the Church of England; and they who are its friends cannot be his enemies. Yet for this he was treated as a fanatic and impostor, and exposed to every species of slander and persecution. Even Bishops and Dignitaries entered the lists against him; but he never declined the combat, and generally proved victorious. He appealed to the Homilies, the Articles, and the Scriptures, as vouchers for his doctrine; and they who could not decide upon the merits of the controversy, were witnesses of the effects of his labours; and they judged of the tree by its fruit. It is true, he did not succeed much in the higher walks of life; but that impeached his cause no more than it did that of the first planters of the Gospel. However, if he had been capable of assuming vanity on that score, he might have ranked among his friends some persons of the first distinction, who would have done honour to any party. After surviving almost all his adversaries, and acquiring respect among those who were the most distant from his principles, he lived to see the plant he had reared spreading its branches far and wide, and inviting not only these kingdoms, but the Western world, to repose under its shade. No sect, since the first ages of Christianity, could boast a founder of such extensive talents and endowments. If he had been, a candidate for literary fame, he might have succeeded to his utmost wishes; but he sought not the praise of man; he regarded learning only as the instrument of usefulness. The great purpose of his life was doing good. For this he relinquished all honour and preferment to this he dedicated all his powers of body and mind; `at all times and in all places, in season and out of season, by gentleness, by terror, by argument, by persuasion, by reason, by inte rest, by every motive and every inducement, he strove, with unwearied assiduity, to turn men from the error of their ways, and awaken them to virtue and religion. To the bed of sickness, or the couch of prosperity; to the prison, the hospital, the house of mourning, or the house of feasting, wherever there was a friend to serve, or a soul to save, he readily repaired; to administer assistance or advice, reproof or consolation. He thought no office too humiliating, no condescension too low, no undertaking too arduous, to reclaim the meanest of God's offspring. The souls of all men were equally precious in his sight, and the value of an immortal creature beyond all estimation. He penetrated the abodes of wretchedness and ignorance, to rescue the profligate from perdition; and he communicated the light of life to those who sat in darkness and the shadow of death. He changed the outcasts of society into useful members: civilized even savages, and filled those lips with prayer and praise, that had been accustomed only to oaths and imprecations. But as the strongest religious impressions are apt to become languid, without discipline and practice, he divided his people into Classes and Bands, according to their attainments. He appointed frequent Meetings for prayer and conversation, where they gave an account of their experience, their hopes and fears, their joys and troubles; by which means they were united to each other, and to their common profession. They became centinels upon each other's conduct, and securities for each other's character. Thus the seeds he sowed sprang up and flourished, bearing the rich fruits of every grace and virtue. Thus he governed and preserved his numerous Societies, watching their improvement with a paternal care, and encouraging them to be faithful to the end. "But I will not attempt to draw his full character, nor to estimate the extent of his labour and services. They will be best known when he shall deliver up his commission into the hands of his great Master." The following description of Mr. Wesley's person will be agreeable to most readers now; and certainly will be more so, when those who personally knew him are removed to their eternal habitations. "The figure of Mr. Wesley was remarkable. His stature was low: his habit of body, in every period of life, the reverse of corpulent, and expressive of strict temperance, and continual exercise; and, notwithstanding his small size, his step was firm, and his appearance, till within a few years of his death, vigorous and VOL. IV. No. 43. 2 L muscular. His face, for an old man, was one of the finest we have seen. A clear, smooth forehead; an aquiline nose; an eye, the brightest and most piercing that can be conceived; and a freshness of complexion scarcely ever to be found at his years, and impressive of the most perfect health, conspired to render him a venerable and interesting figure. Few have seen him without being struck with his appearance: and many, who had been greatly prejudiced against him, have been known to change their opinion the moment they were introduced into his presence. In his countenance and demeanour, there was a cheerfulness mingled with gravity; a sprightliness, which was the natural result of an unusual flow of spirits, and yet was accompanied with every mark of the most serene tranquillity. His aspect, particularly in profile, had a character of acuteness and penetration. "In dress, he was a pattern of neatness and simplicity. A narrow plaited stock; a coat, with a small upright collar; no buckles at his knees: no silk or velvet in any part of his apparel ; and a head as white as snow gave an idea of something primitive and apostolic; while an air of neatness and cleanliness was diffused over his whole person." وو INDEX. Abbydarrig, iv. 114 Aberbrotheck. See Arbroath. Abercorn, Lord, his seat near Newtown- Aberdeen, iii. 50, 51, 129, 174-176, 245, Abergavenny, i. 222, 325, 529; ii. 46 Abidarrig, ii. 227, 325; iii. 6, 89, 358 A Caveat against the Methodists, an- Accounts, remarkable, ii. 318; iii. 275, Achalun, iii. 480 Acomb, ii. 10, 16, 186, 214, 364 Adams, Mr. his "Comment on the Epistle to the Romans"noticed, iii.462 Address of the Methodist Societies to Adelphi, the, a Comedy of Terence, Africans. See Negroes and Negro- slaves. Aghrim, ii. 58, 92, 98, 112, 143, 156, Ahaskra, ii. 92, 99, 143, 156, 325, 393; . Air-balloons, mischief occasioned by, Arbroath, iii. 386, 448; iv. 15, 16, 72, Alesden, ii. 66 Alexander the Great, character of, ii.33 Alnwick, ii. 65, 66, 68, 116, 184, 185, Alston, iii. 372 Altringham, i. 83, 474; iii. 48; iv. Alucterander, iv. 474 Amazons, the existence of such a na- American Colonies, remarks on the America, mode by which the work of Amesbury, iv. 163, 312 Amsterdam, i, 102; iv. 245-249, 337- 339 Anderson, Dr., his "Account of the Andover, ii. 196, 461; iii. 23 Angina pectoris, remedy for, iv. 12 Anham, iv. 271 of. ii. 402 Bailden, iii. 251 Baldon, ii. 135, 308, 309 Balham, iv. 463, 467, 491 Ballantyne, iv. 202 Animalcules, microscopic, peculiarities Ballast-Hills, iv. 20, 146, 202, 324, Annadale, iv. 368, 446 Annesley, Dr., i. 213; iii. 343 Anson, Lord, his "Voyage round the Antinomianism, ii. 237-what, i. 319— Antoninus, Marcus, an enlightened Antrim, iv. 305, 372, 448 Apocalypse. See Revelation of St. John. Apparitions, objections to, answered, iii. 316. See also, Accounts, strange. Ashbourne, ii. 277, 333; iii. 442; iv. 9 Ashburton, iii. 256 411 described, iv. 73 Ashby-de-la-Zouch, iii. 158, 395, 442; Bamff, iii. 174; iv. 72, 73—the town iv. 9, 154 Ashford, iii. 435 Ashkayton, iii. 419 Ashton-under-Line, ii. 20; iv. 217, 402 Astronomy, modern, uncertainty of, ii. Athlone, ii. 51, 53, 56, 58, 91, 92, 98, Aughalun, iv. 121, 369 394, 462 440 Bamff, Lady, iv. 267, 269 Bampton, iii. 259 Bandon, ii. 96, 97, 145, 146, 148, 230, Barking, iv. 259 Awkborough, i. 404; ii. 419; iii. 241, Barkswell, i. 401 Axholme, Isle of, iii. 69 Barksworth, i. 471 Axminster, i. 415, 440; iii. 256, 336; Barley, iii. 76 Barley-Hall, i. 363, 400, 405, 429, 445, Barnard-Castle, ii. 217; iii. 59, 131- Barnet, iii. 374, 434, 468; iv. 109, 258, |