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The reader will be pleafed to obferve, that the let-
ters denote the volume, the figures the pages.

Albanius, the hermit, his reflections on fafting,

ii. 293.

Allegory, ii. 295.

Altercations between husband and wife, ii. 299.
Amusements, ii. 255.

Anticipation of miferies, wrong, i. 109.

Antinomians, their abfurd and licentious tenets cen-

fured, ii. 1.

Apoftles, their evidence, i. 89.

Arabs, their peculiar game, ii. 11.

Affembly, Seeking, its establishment, i. 192.

Auguftus (the emperor) his reply to his comforters,ii. 261.
Bath, letter from, ii. 254.

Beau and viper, a fable, i. 305.

Bee, Ant and Sparrow, a fable, ii. 199.

Bedell, Bp. recommended as an example, i. 38.

Beggars, common, a great nuifance, ii. 109.

Behaviour of a lunatic in the walks of Lincoln's-inn,

i. 216.

Benevolence and compaffion, excellence of, ii. 89.
Benvolio, amiable in retirement, i. 32.

Birth, its little worth without virtue, i. 42.
Candid, Philanthropy, Efq; vifited by his printer and
bookfeller, &c. undertakes the Visitor, i. 1.

account of his family, i. 7.

Charities, public, their excellence, i. 116.-254.
Charity, effay on, i. 254.

Chriftian Syftem, papers on the excellence of, i. 201.
-227-260. ii. 110-160-260.

Chriftian, the fincere, must be happy, i. 204.
City Affembly, i. 100. See Selima Seeker.
Clergy vindicated, i. 83.

-animadverted on, ii. 126.

Clemency in commanders applauded, ii. 89.
Comfort, Chriftian religion full of, ii. 261.

Death of Chrift confidered, i. 74.

Death of his late majefty, reflections on, ii. 118.

Debtor, a poor one, his distress, i. 167.

Depen

Dependance on God, i. 299.

Devotion, languors in, unavoidable, ii. 288.
Difpofitions differentin life, ii. 27.

Divine favour a fenfe of, the greatest happiness, ii. 250.
Douglas (Dr.) his criterion quoted, i. 244.
Dyer, Mr. fine paffage from his Fleece, ii. 141.
Education, wrong, its pernicious confequences, i. 61.
ii. 230.

Egotifm cenfured, ii. 157.

Epitaph on an infant, i. 165.

Equation (Mr.) a philomath, his character, ii. 46.
Eugenio, his custom on New-year's-day, ii. 221.
Euripides, a line of his quoted, i. 34.

Fable of the ftag, i. 111.

of the beau and viper, i. 306.

of the bee, fparrow and ant, ii. 199.

Fair sex defended, ii. 174.

Faith, its excellence, i. 73.

Fafting, public, on, ii. 266.

Feaft of the fons of clergy, an account of, i. 115.
Fenelon (M.) one of his dialogues of the dead, i. 210.
Ferrers (lord) reflections on his fad fate, i. 40.
Feftivals, Chriftian, prove the truth of our religion, i.55.
Folly of paffing a hafty judgment on noxious animals,
i. 305.

Free-will, on, ii. 204.

Fuggers, famous merchants, a story concerning them,
ii. 137.

Gaming, remarks on, ii. 9.

Glazier, a letter from, on the general mourning, ii. 152.
Good-Friday, meditations written for that day, i. 53.

ii. 272.

Good, a proper appellation of George the 3d, ii. 283.
Gratitude, remarks on, ii. 172.

Guittar (Harry) his paffion for mufic, ii, 30.
Happiness, where to be found, i. 174.—191.
Harveft, reflections on, i. 288-269.

Hafty (Mr.) his character, ii. 168.

Holy Spirit, a paper on the defcent of, i. 133.
Hooker (Mr.) author of ecclefiaftical polity, fond of
privacy and contemplation, i. 21.

Januarius (St.) liquefaction of his blood at Naples,

i. 219.

Immor-

Immortality of the foul, argument in proof of, ii.
Ingratitude, often wrongly charged, ii. 168.
Indian Tale i. 174-179-186.

Infidelity, no excufe can be made for, i. 201.

278.

Innholder, one in Normandy murders a young officer,
who proves to be his son, i. 284.

Intercourfe with God, man's highest happiness, ii. 251.
genuine teft of, ii. 287.

Fortin (Dr.) a quotation from his difcourfes on Chri-
ftianity, ii. 111.

Ireland, method of improving religion in, i. 36.
Knowledge mutual, in the future world,remarks on, ii. 21.
Law, evil of, i. 208.

Leaves of trees, moral inftructions from, ii. 180.
Letter from Bath on diffipation and extravagance,ii.254.
Letters after names, ridiculed, i. 235.

Lipfius, ftory of, ii. 266.

Liquefaction of St. Januarius's blood at Naples, i. 219.
Love-the-flefb, Jerry, an example of a citizen's retire-
ment, i. 19.

Loveform (Mr.) a feaman, his odd fpeech, ii. 49.
Magdalen, a letter from a grateful one, i. 47-60.
Magdalen, a real hiftory of one, i. 60.

Magdalen-houfe, the excellence of that institution, i. 47.
ii. 88.

Magifcatzin, his search after happiness, i. 174.

Maria, an unhappy young woman, her letter to the
author, ii. 228.

Men employed by the ladies in women's business, i. 104.
Merchants, refpectable, ii. 135.

Minifters recommended to vifit perfons ill of the small-
pox, ii. 306.

Miracles prove the truth of chriftianity, i. 91.

Monitor, his reflections on the clergy answered, i. 81.
Morality of the chriftian fyftem, its excellence, ii. 10.
Mother's diftrefs for the lofs of her infant, i. 158.
Mourning, public, in little tradesmen's wives ridicul'd.
comforted, i. 163.

Mountains, their ufe and beauty, ii. 144.

Murray (Mr.) extract from his letter to Mr. Pitt, li. 95.
Nativity of our Lord, remarks on, ii. 212-223.
Nature of God, beft made known by the Chriftian re-
ligion, i. 228-260.

New-

Newton (Bp.) a quotation from his book on the prophecies, ii. 139.

New Year's-day, reflections on, ii. 217.

a hymn for, 222.

Nobility (young) advice to, i. 41.

Obedience, universal, beft teft of communion with God, ii. 287.

Ocean, reflections on, ii. 33-53—62-70-96. Optimist, not of the family of the Candids, i. 15. Patience, ftrongest motives to, offered by christianity, ii. 260.

Peter (the great) his behaviour in his last moments, i. 269.

Pindar, his eulogium on water, ii. 65.

Predeftinarians, their opinions cenfured, ii. 193. Prisoners for debt, propofal for their redemption recommended, i. 173.

Prophecies fulfilled in Chrift, ii. 172.

Prophecies, ii. 212-272.

Profitutes, a nuifance to our ftreets, and a fcandal to our police, ii. 105.

Providence, ii. 268.

Pfalm XIII. a poetical verfion of, ii. 252.
Pfalm XLII. a poetical verfion of, ii. 291.
Pfalm CVII. its beauties compar'd with Homer and
Virgil, ii. 71.

Punishment, eternal, remarks on, ii. 162.

Quaker, a letter from one to the Visitor, i. 96.

a fecond letter from the fame, i. 122.

Reafon, its province, i. 144.

Redemption, on, i. 73.

Refurrection, on, i. 88.

Retirement, on, i. 15-29.

Routs, city, rebuked by a quaker, i. 130.

Rules, four, to prove the veracity of any fact, i. 56.

Sale (Mr.) quotations from his Koran, ii. 9.

Sampfon Gideon, i. 120.

Sea, a poem, ii. 39..

Seeker (Mifs Selima) her letters to the Visitor, i. 100.

192. ii. 41-186.

Self-tormenting, common but abfurd, i. 109.

Simonides, tranflation from him, ii. 184.

4

Simonides, the poet, his wifdom commended by Cir cero, i. 145.

Slander, its baleness, i. 250.

Small-pox, a formidable visitation, ii. 304.

Societies for promoting christian knowledge recommended, i. 35.

Spirit, Holy, on its defcent, i. 133.

Squire (Bp.) extract from his fermon, ii. 282.
Story, an affecting one of an inn-keeper, i. 280.
Storm, defcription of, ii. 75.

Sweepstakes (Thomas) his character, ii. 28. Sympatheticos, his letter to the Vifitor, on the folly of falfe pleasure, and the excellence of benevolence,

ii. 254:

Thomson (Mr.) his feafons quoted, ii. 67.

Timander, his character, ii. 300.

Timander and his wife their unpleafing contentions, ii. 300.

Time of Chrift's birth, ii. 212.

Tomervell (Mr.) his paffion for the ruft of antiquity,

ii. 31.

Tradefman, character of one half-crazed with politics,

i. 149.

Tradesmen, advice to, concerning retirement from bu-
Trade, its advantages, ii, 135:

Triflram Shandy, a quaker's rebuke of, i. 98-122.
Trinity, an effay on, i. 143.

Trouble-all (Mrs.) her character, i. 249.

finefs, i. 22.

Valiere de la (Madam) mistress to Lewis XIV. her behaviour, ii. 177.

Vanity of human life and human pleasures, ii. 180. Verfes on feeing lady H-in tears at the Magdalen chapel, ii. 164.

Virgil's defcription of a ftorm, ii. 76.

Vifitation, an account of one by a foreigner, i, 221.

Vifion, on our national charities, i. 254.

War, its mifchiefs, ii. 89.

Wheat, its prodigious increase, i. 301.

Winters-day in London, its beauties, i. 106.

Young, Dr. fine paffage of his confidered, i. 77,

FINI S.

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