expect the man in the child, ib. lous defenders of our liberties, ranny, 431. PRINCES, Spectacles of horror, his own works defended, 117. PRUSSIA, king of, his obferva- of, 391. PULTENEY, Mr. his acount of a RAPER, Mr. defends Sir Ifaac 500. defended against the mifrepre- ROMAN Catholic lady, remark- of, but God, 408. SCRIBBLERS, female, animad: verted on, 472. SCRIRLERUS, Martinus, criti-, cifes Mr. Mafon's elegies, 485. SENTIMENTS, their proper or improper expreffion, confidered, 19. SERMON, receipt to make one, for the 30th of January, 457SERVETUS, his horrible perfecution, and martyrdom, at Geneva, 413. SHAKESPEARE fuperior to all other writers, in delineating paffion, 21. A paffage in his Othello cenfured and defended, 20. His foliloquies accurate copies of nature, 21. SHAME, the folly and danger of being afhamed of religion and virtue, 364. SHARPE, Dr. Gregory, his critical, investigation of the CX. pfalm, 5.-8. His new verfion of that pfalm, 9. His fecond argument in defence of Chriltianity, drawn from the prophe cies, commended, 12. SHERIDAN, Thomas, rallied for his extravagant encomium on the art of oratory, 69, 203, 206. His fcheme for a new English dictionary, and grammar, ib. Deficient in the application of his own rules SHIRLEY, Rev. Mr. his laudable profeffion of his duty as a Chriftian minifter, 232. SIMILIES, in poetry, &c. confidered, 107. Examples of fome improperly ufed, ib. In what refpects different from metaphors, 110. SIMSON, Dr. his letter to Dr. Pringle, 101. SOCRATES, his difcourfe concerning the Deity, 171. SOLDIERS and Sailors, difcharged from Government-fervice, fcheme to provide for them, 382. ed, Son of God, not the immediate object of divine homage, 304. One God only to be worship305. SOVEREIGNS have no right to prefcribe any creeds but fuch as are merely political, 504. SPECTATOR, language of, in a particular expreffion, cenfured, 22. Defended, ib. SPENSER'S Fairy queen invefti gated as a Gothic compofition, 89, 94. SPIRITS of wine not to be frozen, even by the degree of cold that freezes mercury, 332. SPUNGE, the manner of applying it, for the effectual stoppage of hemorrhages after amputations, 77. The many fuccessful applications of it, occurring in the practice of one furgeon, ib. The The manner of applying it af- 192, 193. STEDMAN, Dr. his letter to Dr. Pringle, 101. STEPHENS, Mr. his account of a phenomena in Dorsetshire, 331. STILES, Sir Francis, his account of an eruption of Mount Vefuvius, 325. Farther account of the fame, ib. SWEDEN, hiftory of, in the Mo dern univerfal hiftory, 359. SWIFT, Dean, remarkable inftance of an impropriety of expreffion in his writings, 22. Extract from his fermon on fleeping at church, 273 His abufive remarks on Tindal, 274. His memoirs of Captain Creighton cenfured, ib. His character of Lord Wharton, a part:al performance, 275. His letters to archbishop Marth, fhew him to have been duped by the Tory ministry, ib. His tract on good manners praised, ib. His delicate compliment to Mrs. Houghton, 276. His verfes on St. Patrick's Well, 277. On Dr. Rundle's promotion, 279. Ill effects of the liberties he took in gentlemen's families where he was intimate, 280. SWINTON, Mr. his account of an Anthelion, 350. Of a remarkable Meteor, ib. Differtation on a Samnite Denarius, 332. SUPERSTITION, its character, 400. Its horrid effects in Geneva, 413. SYKES, Dr. mistaken in his interpretation of Pfal. CX. 7. TA T Asso formed the plan of his famous poem on a mixture of the Gothic manner, with the claffic model, 94. TASTE, ftandard of, difquifition TAYLOR, Dr. John, his ufual concerning, 113. charge to his pupils, previous to his lectures, 255. His fcheme of fcripture divinity explained, ib. His obfervations on the Shechinah, 256. TENETS proper for a political religion, 505. Few and fimple, ib. THEOCRITUS, character of his paftorals, 128. THICKNESSE, lieutenant-gover nor of Landguard fort, his un favourable treatment at a court martial, 510. THOMPSON, Mr. his obfervations on a dislocated shoulder, TOLERATION, Bishop Warbur 195: ton's fentiments concerning it, 407. Whether it hath been TRAGEDY, wherein that fpecies lately infringed? 430. of poetry differs from the Epic, 111. Ought not to admit of violent actions, as murder ;and why, 112. TRANSITIONS, how far allowable in the ode, 253. TRAVIS, Mr. his letter to Dr. Fothergill, 98. His account TRIQUET, Mr. his paper on of a dislocated thigh-bone, 99. TURNER, Mr. his account of the fublimate folution, 195, the cure of afcarides, by tobacco fumes, 194. V proof of it, from the di ACUUM, Sir Ifaac Newton's reation of the tails of comes, VASE, Mr. his account of a mor tal fever at Senegal, 192. Mercury, 331. Of Abbe Nollet's electricity, 425. WESLEY, John, attacked by the Bishop of Glocefter, 370. Charged with having laid claim to almost every apoftolic gift, 404. Inftances of his extravagant pretenfions, 405. Mach ufed to conflicts with the evil one, ib. The devil at length tired out, 406. WHIG, zealous, a flave to liberty, 429. Whig and Tory factions revived, 469. Such denominations despicable, 18. Noble declaration of a Whig, in favour of freedom, 470, 471. WHITE, Mr. his account of a new method of reducing diflocated fhoulders, 196. Of the fuccessful treatment of a locked jaw, ib. WHISTON, Mr. noble declaration made to him, by King George II. against perfecution, 433. WHITE, Dr. his accurate account of an epidemical diftemper at Edinburgh, 101. His letters to Dr. Pringle, on feveral cafes cured by fublimate folution, 102. |