VI. LETTERS on the ENGLISH CONSTITUTION. Fourth Edition, with Additions. By G. DYER, A. B. .... 143 VII. FUNERAL ORATION, delivered at Venice, on the Death of DOGE LEONARDO LOREDANO, by ANDREA NAVAGERO, Venetian Senator. Translated from the original Italian. To which are subjoined Remarks on the VENETIAN REPUBLIC. By C. KELSALL, Esq. [Printed exclusively in the Pamphleteer.] VIII. LETTER to PROFESSOR STEWART, on the Objects of General Terms, and on the Axiomatical Laws of Vision. Second Edition. To which are added some Remarks on the MONTHLY REVIEW on the Subject. IX. LETTER on the true Principles of ADVANTAGEOUS X. OBSERVATIONS on the Evil Effects produced in the Human Constitution by STIMULATING FOOD and by SPIRITOUS and FERMENTED LIQUORS, when taken moderately and habitually. Second Edition, re- composed for the Pamphleteer, with great Additions. 、! REMARKS on a COURSE OF EDUCATION, designed to prepare the Youthful Mind for a career of Honor, the Collection of the Ad Valorem Duties on Convey- ances and Mortgages; with a View to the Security of Titles and the Protection of Purchasers against FALSE Esq., Author of TRITOGENEA, &c. [ORIGINAL.].. 471 VII. To the EDITOR of the BRITISH REVIEW, in Answer to his Remarks on the Pamphlet of the Rev. Wm. Edmeades, respecting the Consequences of commuting the Tithes. By L. TADMAN, Esq. [ORIGINAL.] 493 VIII. OBSERVATIONS on the LIBELS published against Le VICOMTE DE CHATEAUBRIAND. Translated from the French of J. B. M. LEMOINE, exclusively for the Pamphleteer. By SIR JOHN PHILIPPART. ...... 539 On the APPROACHING CRISIS: or, On the Imprac- ticability and Injustice of resuming CASH PAYMENTS SUBSTANCE OF A SPEECH, &c. &c. &c. THAT part of the speech of the Lords Commissioners which relates to the want of accommodation for Public Worship, having been read by the Chairman, viz. "The Prince Regent has commanded us to direct your particular attention to the deficiency, which has so long existed, in the number of places of Public Worship belonging to the Established Church, when compared with the increased and increasing population of the country. His Royal Highness most earnestly recommends this important subject to your early consideration; deeply impressed, as he has no doubt you are, with a just sense of the many blessings which this country, by the favor of Divine Providence, has enjoyed, and with the conviction that the religious and moral habits of the people are the most sure and firm foundation of national prosperity?" The Chancellor of the Exchequer observed, that he believed no communication from the throne had ever been expected with greater anxiety, or received with more satisfaction by the public, than that which the Lords Commissioners had made, by command of the Prince Regent, at the opening of the present Session. For more than a century, the want of accommodation for Public Worship had been felt by the members of the Established Church as a most serious evil; and an attempt had been made so long ago by Parliament to remedy it, so far as respected the metropolis, and its immediate vicinity. This attempt, however, though attended with considerable expense, had been very imperfect in its execution, only eleven Churches having been built, out of fifty which it was proposed to erect. Since that time no further steps had been taken by public authority, though the evil had been perpetually increasing with the growing population of the country, which was now pro |