AUTHORS NAMES AND TITLES OF BOOKS.
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ACCOUNT of such personages as have
contributed to the honour of the French name, from 1789 to the pre- sent period,
528 Amphlet's Ned Bently, a novel, 89 An analytical abridgment of Locke's
essays on human understanding, 219 Angler, Hawkins's complete, 440 Angler's manual,
223 Annuities, Fortune's national life, 107 Appeal to the British public, 814 Astronomy, Villemer's poem on, 103 Asy,ums, Halliday on the state of the
Irish lunatic, Athens, Owenson's Ida of, 283 Attempt to elucidate the consequences of
a deviation from the orders in coun- cil,
327 BACHELOR, a novel,
431 Banks's dormant and extinct baronetage
of England, 137. Of the barony of Abergavenny, ibid. Curious parti. culars of lady Elizabeth Tuchet, 138. Inaccuracy respecting the last Vis- count Beaumont, 139. Origin of the le Despencer family, 140. A curious anecdote, 141. Ditto, respecting lord Lovel, who was said to have been slain in the battle of Hope, 143. Mag- nificent solemnities at Kevilworth castle in the time of Roger Mortimer,
143. Anecdotes of the Stafford fa-
mily, 145 et seq. Baronetage of England, vide Banks's. Bartram's report of the trial, Nightin-
gale versus Stockdale. Baths, Kentish on,
: 439 Baynes' sermon,
210 Bennet's constancy of Israel, 323 Blair's answers to objections against the
London female penitentiary, 382 Blondheim, Kotzebue's Leontine de, Bourgoing's modern state of Spain, 176.
Devotion exhibited by a muleteer previous to mounting the coach-box, 178. Fatal operation of the privia leges of the 'Mesta, 180. Royal shooting, 181. Of the inquisition, 182. Influence of the Catholic su. perstition on the minds of all classes
in Spain, 183. Spanish ladies, 185. Bragur, i
486 British Flora,
106 Bruce, Murray's account of the life and
writings of James, 68. Letter from Mr. Bruce to his father on the death of his wife, 70. Account of the na- tives of Gerba, 71. The hardships, difficulties, and dangers experienced in travelling in those parts, 72 De. scription of mount Libanus, 72. Cu- rious specimen of the Eastern epis.
tolary style, 73. Particulars of the domestic establishment of Abyssinian royalty, 74. Two specimens of Abyssinian annals, 77. Remarks on the use of oriental literature, 79. Ac. count of the nuptial ceremony in Abyssinia,
80 Buchan's account of the diseases inci- dent to children,
104 Buffa's appeal to the British public, 214 Buonaparte, Smith's intercepted frag- ment of instructions from
324 Buonaparte's campaigns in Italy, 511.
The battle of Montenolte, 512. Of Millesimo, 512. Misrepresenta. tions in the French accounts of the battle and capture of Dego, 513. Battle of Lodi, 514. Execution of a French soldier in Venice, 516. Con- spiracy at Milan detected, 517., In- surrection at Pavia, 518. necdote
of the treachery which made its way into the army of \Vurmser,519 Dillo,
520. The battle of Rivoli. Burns, Cromek's reliques of, 337. On
the comparative merits of the English Janguage, and that dialect of it which is used in Scotland, 338. Various extracts, 340, et seq. Origin of
Mary in heaven. . CALEDONIAN sketches, vide Carr. Cambrian traveller's guide, 217 Cambria, Cottle's fall of, 97, and 169 Canada, view of the political situation of Upper,
327 Carr's Caledonian sketches, 317. De.
scription of Edinburgh, 318. Of Holyrood house, 320. OfBridewell, 322. University of Edinburgh, 395. Leith grammar-school, 395. Ex- tensive use of whiskey among the Scotch, 396. Edinburgh markets, 397. The Tolbooth, 397. The Maiden, a Scottish instrument of de- capitation, 398. A bag-pipe contest, 399. Scotch process of washing, 400. Food of the Scottish peasantry, 402. Instance of civility in the lower orders, 402. Education of
ditto,403. The Caledonian canal,404 Causes of our late military and political disasters,
98 Charter-house, historical account of the,
196. Abstract of the code of laws promulgated by the founder, 198." Curious declaration published by a monk called Darley, about the time of subscription,
- 280 Chatfield's view of Hindostan, vide
Hindostan.
Chronicle of the Cid, vide Southey. Church-yard, and other poems, 101 Cid, Southey's Chronicle of the, vide
Southey. Cleveland, Graves's history of, 378,
Character of the Cleveland farmers, 381. Roseberry Topping, 383. Disa covery of a vein of alium in the neigh. bourhood of Guisborough, 384. Kirkleatham hospital, 385. Shel. ton castle,
385 Claytons, Flower's statement of facts
relative to the conduct of the, 8g Cockburn's credibility of the Jewish
exodus, Celebs in search of a wife, 250 Comber's inquiry into the state of na-
tional subsistence, 241 Effects of the feudal system on agriculture, from the conquest to the reign of Henry VII. 242. State of Poland and a great part of Russia, an exact pic- ture of what England is represented to have been for several ages after the conquest, 243. The encourage- ment given to the commercial habits of the people, by Henry VII. 245. Manufacturing industry only support. able and capable of being put in actia vity by an accumulation of floating wealth existing independent of land, 246. The exportation of corn ma- tured into a system under the Stewe arts,
247 Considerations on rifed barrel guns, 440 Commentary on the new Testament,
vide Testament. Consumption, Woolcome's remarks on
the progressive increase of, 425 Cottin’s Malvina,
· 502 Cottin's Theodore and Blanche, or the victims of love,
212 Cottle's fall of Cambria, 94, and 163 Cromek's reliques of Burns, vide Burns.
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DICTIONARY of domestic medicine,
Reece's practical, vide Reece. Disasters, causes of our late military
and political, Diseases incident to children, Buchan's account of the,
104 DIVINITY. Bayne's sermon,
210 · Bennet's constancy of Israel, 323 Cockburn's credibility of the Jewiska Exodus,
322 Discourses upon the Creed, &c. 210 Evans's Istter to Dr. Hawker, 432 Eves's scripture made easy, 98 Hioan's thoughts oa prophecy. 97 Jervis's Christian name,
209
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HALE'S address to the public on the
dangerous tendency of the London penitentiary,
221 Halliday on the state of the Irish lunaric asylums,
332 Hamilion's parliamentary logick, 386 Hawkins's complete angler, 440 Hawker, Evans's letter to Dr 432 Hindustan, Chatfield's view of. Come
merce of the East in the earliest periods, 351. Alexander's no’ion respecting the commerce of the East, 352. Arrival of Vasques de Gama, on the Malabar coast, in 1497. Por- tuguese dispossessed of the racquisi. tions by the Dutch,354 First charter of the English East India company, 35. The Engiish acquire the ascen. dancy in India in 1761. Messrs, Fox and Pitt's East India bill, 357. The insecurity of property, the im. pediment to civilization, 358. The first Menu of the Brahmins supposed to be the same as the Adam of the Jews, 359. Of the Vedras and Sas- tras, 359. The Koran examined, 361. Morality of the gospel, 363. The sect of the Wahabees, 364. Different attempts made by the Euro. pean nations to propagate Christianity in the East,
365 Hindus, enquiry into the causes which
oppose the conversion of the, Hioan's thoughts on prophecy, 97 Hodson's remonstrant,
333 Howett's angler's manual, Hull's British Flora,
FAMILY picture,
437 Familiar discourses upon the Apostle's
Creed, the Lord's prayer, and the
Litany, Fisher-boy, a poem, Fischer's picture of Valencia, vide vas Flora, Hull's British,
106 Flower's statement of facts relative to the conduct of the Claytons, 83
national life annuities, 107 Foot on venereal infection, 338 Fowling, a poem,
149 France, from the commencement of
the reign of Clovis in 431, to the peace of Campo Formio in October 1797, a history of, -
216 Frend's evening amusements for 1809,
108
GERALDINE Fauconberg, a novel, 104 Grammar, Grant's institutes of Latin,
431 Grant's Latin grammar,
431 Graves' history of Cleveland, 381 Greek poets, poems and translations from the minor,
100 Green's companion to lady Hunting. don's hymns,
441 Green's miscellaneous poetry, 211 Greyling's Hieropolis, 497 Without
the higher sort of education among the clergy, no good can arise from an
order of public instructors, 498 Gurs, considerations on rified barrel,
446
IDA of Athens,
283 Increase of sectaries, thoughts on the,
105 Infection, Foot on venereal, 332 India, strictures on the present govern. mint of,
434 Tu quiry into the state of national sube
sistence, Comber's, vide Comber. Institutes of Latin grammar, S. 431 Intolerance, Wyvill on, 291. Com- mission for ecclesiastical reformation in the reign of king William, 297.
Names of the commissioners, 300 Jervis's Christian name,
209 Juvenile dramas,
191 Juvenis's remarks on a recent publica. tion,
334 KAMEs, memoirs of the life and writ-
ings of lord, vide Memoirs. Kentish on warm and vapour baths,
439 Klopstock's works,
523
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dote, 40. The oratorical abilities of Murray (afterwards lord Mansfield), and of Lord Chatham, 40. in 1741. he marries, Miss Drummond. Ac- count of his domestic habit43. The first among the Scottish gentry who endeavoured to bring the Fnglish mode of husbandry into use, 44. In
1752, appointed one of the judges of - the court of session, 45. In 1757,
published the statute law of Scotland, abridged, 46. In 1759. his histo- rical law tracts and his introduction to the art of thinking, 47. In 1962, the Elements of Criticism, 48. 10. teresting particulars relative to the state of the Western Isles in 1764. Judicious observations on modern Mu. sic 125, Extract of a letter from Mrs. Montague, 127. From Lord Kames to the Duchess of Gordon, 127. Mrs. Montague's remarks on Ossian, 130. In 1774, Lord Kames published his " Sketches of the history of Man,'' 131. lu 1781, Loose hints on edu. cation,
133 Metrical Legends,
369 Modern medicine, U wins, 188 Molitor's indagator,
329 Monmouih, Naunton's memoirs of the
Earl of, vide Naunton. Moore's Bachelor, a novel, 431 Murray's account of the life and write
ings of James Bruce, vide Bruce. Murray's Mentorian Lectures on, sacred and moral subjects,
217
MALVINA, a novel,
502 MEDICINE. Buchan's account of diseases incident
to children, Expostulatory letter to Dr. Moseley
on his review of the report of the London college of Physicians on vaccination,
214 Foot on venereal infection, 333 Halliday on the state of the Irish lunatic asylums,
332 Kentish 01 warm and vapour baths,
439 Observations on an eruptive disease,
213 Practical materia medica, Reece's medical dictionary, 61 Thomas's observations on ophthalmia,
104 Uwins' modern medicine, 188
Woolcombe op consumption, 425 Medicine, U wins' modern, Memoirs of Thomas Brand-Hollis, Esq.
405. Mr. Brand born in 1719, edu. cated at Glasgow, sets out on a tour to the continentin company with Mr. T. Hollis, 495, who died in 1974, and left his fortune to Mr. Brand, who assumes his name, 406. Mr. B. Hollis convicted of bribery at an elec- tion, 407. A letter to B. Hollis from Mr. Adams, afterwards president of
the United States, Memoirs of the earl of Monmouth, vide
Naunton's. Memoirs of the Life and writings of
lord Kames, 35. Lord Kames born at Kames in the county of Berwick, in 1696.--I0 1712, placed in the of- fice of a writer to the signet at Edin- burgh, 36. Called to the bar in 1723.- In 1732, pubished essays on several subjects in law; 39. An anec. APP. Vol. 16.
NATIONAL subsistence, Commer's in.
quiry into the state of, vide Comber. National debt, observations on the, 433 Narrative of the siege of Laragoza, 2011 Naunton's memoirs of the Earl of Mon.
mouth, 237. The earl's address in reconciling Queen Elizabeth to her favourite the Earl of Essex, 237. How he reconciled the queen to him- self on his marriage with the daughter of Sir Hugh Tre vannion, 238. Cu- rious particulars of James and Charles ist, 240. Anecdote of Pawlet, Mar.
quis of Winchester, 241. Ned Bently, a nevel,
- 8 Nightingale's Sermons, is 210 NOVELS. Bachelor,
430 Celebs in search of a Wife, 251 Geraldine Fauconberg,
101 Ida of Athens,
282 Ned Bently, Theodore and Blanche,
2 1 2 Towers of Lothian,
OBSERVATIONS on an eruptive dis-' ease,
213 Observations on the National Debt, 433 Ophthalmia, observations on), 104 Owenso.a's iua.of Athens, . 283
counties of Derrv and Antrim, 115. On the difference in the structure of calculi, which arise from their leing formed in different parts of the drive ary passage, and on the effects that are produced on them by the internal use of solvent medicines, 18 On the changes produced in the atmos- pheric air, and oxygen gas by respi. ration, 120. Description of an ape paratus for the analysis of the com- pound inflammable gases by slow combustion, 306. Anatomical struc. tuie of the wombat, 309. Origin and office of the alburnum of trees, 310. Eclipses of the satellites of Ju- piter, 317. Electro-chemical re- searches on the decomposition of the earths,
312 Picture of Valencia, vide Valencia. Poems and translations from the minor Greek Poers,
101 Poem on astronomy, Porta's translation of the physiognomist,
PALEY'S Sermons, 225 Subjects of the
sermons, 227. Answer to the objec- tou that religion generates sadness and dejection, 227. The love of God, con- sidered, 228. Necessity of religious meditation, ibid. Spiritual religion examined, 238. On the purity of the
heart and affections, Parliamentacy Logic, Paterson's book of roads,
107 Paulus' Commentary on the New Tes-
tament, vide Testament. Penitentiary, Blair's answers to objec-
tions against the London Female, 332 Physiognomist, Porta's translation of
the, 494 The genuine science of physiognomy, 494. Remarks on the size of the head, 495. The man of
probity and his opposite, ' 496 Phillips s letter to the Livery of London,
270. Freeholder's book, 271. The practice of committing prisoners for trial to the Cold-Bath Fields and other houses of correction, 273. Petition to parliament on the subject of the abuses of that prison, 273. On de- taining prisoners after the grand jury have thrown out ihe bills, 275. Ac- count of Newgate, 277. Of Borough Compter,
273 · Philosophical Transactions for 1808,
18. Davy's Lectures on the decom- position of the fixed alkalies, 18. On the properties and nature of the basis of soda, 21. On the structure and use of the spleen, 84. On oxalic acid, 25. On super-acid, and sub acid salts, 28. On the juconvertibility of bark into alburnum, 29. Account of Cretinism, 31. On a new pro- perty of the tangents of three angles of a plane triangle, and of the tangents of three arches trisecting the circumfe- rence of a circle, 32. Account of the application of the gas from coal to eco- nomical purposes, 33. Obsei vations of a comei, made with a view to investi. gate its magnitude and the nature of its illumination, 113. Hydraulic inves. rigations subservient to an intended Croonian lecture on the motion of clie blood, 115. Richardson's letter on the alterations that have taken place in the structure of rocks, on the stríace of the basaltic country in the
Practical dictionary of domestic media
cine, Reece's, vide Reece: Practical materia medica, , 440 Prophecy, Hioan's thoughts on, 97 Politics. I Attempt to elucidate the consequences
of a deviation from the orders in
council, Bartram's report of the trial Nightin- gale v. Stockdale,
326 Buffa's appeal to the British public, Causes of our late military disasters,
98 Enquiry into the causes which oppose the conversion of the Hindos.
99 History of France from the com-
mencement of the reign of Clovis in 401, to the peace of Campo For-
mio, in 1“97, . 219 Molitor's indagator,
329 Observations on the national debt Parliamentary Logic,
380 Smith's intercepted fragment of in-
structions from Buona parte, 324 Speech which ought to have been spo-
ken in a certain assembly relative to the Catholic petition,
99 Sirictures on the present government of India, PR
- 434 Summary review of the evidence
against the Duke of York, 326 View of the political situation of Upper Canada,
327
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