BEWLY, Mr. his experiments and ob- fervations relating to fixed air, 40. BLACK, Dr. his experiments on boiling water, 31.
BLAGDEN, Dr. his experiments, &c. in an heated room, 29. BONDET'S differtation on the Apoca- lypfe, &c. 480.
BOTANY. See TILLET.
BOUCHAUD, M. his memoir concern
ing the Roman publicana, 509 BREQUIGNY, M. ce, his refearches, in Londen, relative to the hiftory of France, 515
BRUCE, Mr. his account of the mufic of Abyffinia, 43. Bucnoz-Dictionaire Minera'gique, &c.
CoccHI-Lezioní fifica-anatomiche, &u
COLONIES, general obfervations on, fa- vourable to their liberties, by a learned Swifs, 571. CONDILLAC Cours d'etudé pour l'in struction du Prince du Parme, 321. CONGRESS, American, proceedings of, 153. Their explanation, to the In- dians, of the nature of their differences with Great Britain, ib. COPENHAGEN, account of the difibe tion of prizes hy the Royal Society of Sciences there, 584. New prize quei- tions propofed, ib.
COPPER, experiments on, 561. Coup d'oeil fut la Grande Bretagne, &c. 481.
COWPER, Lord Keeper, letter from, to the Elector of Hanover, 289.
DAUBENTON, M. his remarks on the housing of theep, 558. D'AZAGRA-Carras, &c. 402. D'AZARA's introduction to the natural hiftory and phyfical geography of Spain,
ESSAY concerning converging ferieses, 454.
HAFFENDEN, Mr. his account of
the effects of lightning, 450.
`ASSINI—Oedinis prædicatorum, &c. HARTLEY, Dr. fume obervations on
FEVERS. See TREATISE." FONTIUM arque commentarium juris privati fpecialis, &c. 485. FREE Thoughts on political fubjects,
FRENCH, too cunning for the Dutch, in
an article of trace, 562.
FRISI's memoirs of Galilei, 552.
his famous theory of the human mind,
FUESTLIN'S catalogue of the infects of HIGGINS, Dr. his difpute with Dr.
ALILEI, eulogy of that great man, 552. Many of his works loft, through the bigotry of his wife, 557. GANGANELLI, Pope. See CLEMENT. GARDEN, Dr. his experiments on the electrical eel, 23.
GAUL, ancient, ftate of letters in, 180. GENTIL, M. his arguments to prove
that a voyage from France to Califor- nia, by a north-eaft paffage, would be nearly as long as that by the Cape, 563.
GLOEBER-Verfuch einer mineralogef. chen befchreibung, &c. 398. GODOLPHIN, Lord, his fecret attach- ment to the Stuart family, 36. His general character, 39.
GOVERNMENT, origin and defign of, 493. British, conftitution of, ib. Monarchy and hereditary fucceffion exploded, 496.
GRAVITATION. See ATTRACTION, GROSIER, Abbé, fome account of his great undertaking of a new general history of China, 539. Mistake of bis, concerning the Grand Annals rec- tified, 54.
GUINEA, new, fome account of that country, 546. Wonderful rivulet of boiling water there, 547.
GUSFMES' dictionary of coins, &c.
AGEMANN's geographical defcription of Tufcauy, 397.
JAMES II. curious particulars relating to the death of that prince, 284. JERE, Mr. his reafons for reigning his church preferments, 68.
INDIANS, of North America, fome ac count of their manners, &c. 263. Their horrid cruelty to their prifoners, ib. Their husbandry, 265. INGENHOUS, Dr. his experiments on the torpedo, 22.
INSTRUCTIONS for the deaf and dumb, &c. 478.
INSTRUCTIVE letters of feveral learned Spaniards, 402.
INQUIRY concerning happiness, &c. 478.
JULIUS AFRICANUS, his Cafti, fome account of that work, 583.
Its operation as the fource of na- tional wealth, ib. Divifion of, 301. Wages of, confidered, 303. Farther investigation of this fubject, 458. LAFOUETTE'S new method of curing venereal diforders, &c. 483. LANDE, M. de la, his memoir on the Alux and reflux of the fea, 557. LASSONE, M. de la, his obfervations on zinc, 5:9.
LAVATER-Phyfiognomiche Fragmente, &c. 317.
LE BEAU, M. his memoir concerning the Roman legion, 509. LEPEE, Abbé, his curious infr.Aions for the deaf and dumb, 478.
Le Roi, M. his improvement of a new elect ical machine, 558.
LETTERS of feveral illuftrious men, vol. II. 324.
LETTRES Intereffantes du Pape Cle- ment XIV. tom. I. 481. LIBERTY, civil, obfervations on the nature of, 141.
LIGHTNING, account of the effects of, on an house furnished with an electrical conductor, 450.
LIND, Dr. his description of a portable wind-gage, 452.
LITERARY, historical, and critical li- brary, &c. 482.
LORGNA-Specimen de Seriebus Con- vergentibus, 484.
LUBERSAC'S difcourfe concerning the public monuments, &c. 394. LYMPHATICS, fyftem of, 14.
METHOD of confiruðing vizes, &c.
MINERALOGICAL and hydrographical dictionary, &c, 482.
MOLINA-Metodo per formare le Viti, &c. 401.
MONUMENTA Antiquiffimæ Hiftoriz, &c. 319.
MOUNTAINS, account of their pro- perty of attraction, 447. MURR-Journal zur Kunft gefchichte, &c 397.
Music, of the ancient Greeks, &c. cu• rious accounts of, 203, 438. Of the Romans, 445.
MUSICAL inftruments, curious account of fome, ufed in the fouthern parts of the globe, 28. declamation, 399.
PERGIANS, ancient inquiry into their SCRIPTURE, facred, illuftrated by the
theological fyftem, 517. Concerning the author of their Zenda Vefta, 519. PHILOSOPHICAL labours, by a Society of Friends, 319.
and political friend,
478. PHOSPHORI, experiments relating to, 115. Experiments on Mr. Canton's phosphorus, 428.
PHYSICIAN, the fervant of nature, &c. 433.
PHYSIOGNOMY, fcientifically treated, 317.
PINTO'S TWO Letters on the American controverly, 486.
PLAGUE, at Smyrna, fingular account of, 174.
PLATO, obfervations concerning his style, particularly the object he had in view in his Io, 505. POLE, North. See VOYAGE. PRETORIAN bands, of the ancient Ro-
mans, particular account of, 388. PRETENDER, his letter to Queen Anne, 287.
PUBLICANS, a refpectable Body among the Romans, sog..
knowledge of Eaftern manners and cuftoms, 354. Remarkable specimens of, 355. SEJOUR'S effay concerning the pheno mena of Saturn's ring, &c. 481 SHAKESPEARE tranflated into German, 399. Into French, 575. SHEEP, remark on the practice of bonfing them, in the winter, 558. SIBERT, M. de, his differtation con- cerning the Lex Sempronia, 509. On the Tiers-Etat in France, 516. SOMERS, Lord, his letter to the Elector of Hanover, 290.
SOPHIA, Princefs, letter from, to Lord Strafford, 292.
SPICE TRADE, practices of the French, to cheat the Dutch out of it, 562. STEEL, Mr. his account of curious mu- fical inftruments, 28. STRANGE, Mr. his account of basaltic columns in Italy, 27.
STUDY, general course of, 321. SUMMARY of the laws of nations, 397.
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