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Index

TO VOLUMES V. AND VI.

The Roman figures indicate the Volume, and the Arabic, the page.

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Africa, natives of, refutation of calum.

nies on their character, v, 365. 394
America, its original empopulation, ac-
cording to different writers, v, 546—
configuration of its coast accounted
for, v, 554

Adair, Mr., on the peopling of Ame-
rica, v, 546

America, competition of the Ships of,
with British, vi, 378
Atcheson, N. Esq. American Encroach-
ments on British Rights. No. 1. vi,
33. No. II. vi, 361

Aquaviva, one of the generals of the
order of Jesuits, who succeeded
Loyola, vi, 105

Alra, atrocities of the Duke of, insti-
gated by the Jesuits, vi, 119
Annat, confessor of Louis XIV., vi,

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B

Benedictine monks, corruption and re-
form of, v, 41

Benevolence, supposed organ of, v, 231
Byron, Lord, characterized as a poet,

V, 451

Burke, Mr. opinion on the subject of
debt, v, 522

25

his opinion on the War, vi,

Bread, Report from the committee of
the House of Commons ou, vi, 147
British and Foreign Bible Society,
Abridged Statement of the leading
transactions of the, vi, 269
British rights, American Encroach
ments on, vi, 33. 361
Bachelors, tax on, vi, 18
Banks, Sir J. Short Account of the
Disease in Corn, called by Farmers
the Blight, the Mildew, and the
Rust, vi, 402

Borough Compter, rem. of the Com-
mittee of the House of Commons on,
vi, 518
Buonaparte, the real author of the re-
verses of the French, vi, 527

C

Carnot, M. Memorial addressed to
Louis XVIII. v, 6. short biog. notice
of, 3

Canobites, monks, v, 38
Christian Clergy, the depositaries of
knowledge, v, 39

Canons, regular of St. Augustin, v, 43
Compendious or brief Examination of
certayne ordinary complaints of divers
VOL. VI.
2 P

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520

Charmouth, in Dorsetshire, its cliffs,

after a heavy shower of rain in 1751,
emitted fire for several years, v, 552
Canada, its products, vi, 62
Clement XIV. Pope, his bull in aboli-
tion of the Jesuits, abrogated, vi,
101
Catholic Sovereigns, entreaty for the

abolition of the Jesuits, vi, 103
Catholic Faith, unprincipled duty of
opposing Princes who were hostile
to, inculcated by the Jesuits, vi, 110
Church of Rome, Jesuits accountable
for the hostile spirit of, vi, 110
Charles V. checked the influence of
the Jesuits, vi, 111

Clement XI. Pope, probably a Jesuit,
vi, 145

Corn-rent, recommended by Dr. Paley,

as a commutation for tythes, vi, 249
Commons, House of, report of their
committee on the King's Bench, Fleet,
and Marshalsea Prisons, vi, 474
Churches or Chapels, Outlines of a plan
for building Twenty five, vi, 569

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Forster, Mr. Thomas, Sketch of the

new Anatomy and Physiology of
the Brain and nervous System of
Gall and Spurzheim, v, 220

Essay on the application of
the Organology of the Brain to
Education, v, 473

Form, supposed organ of, v, 233
Fox, Mr. his opposition to the Slave
Trade, v, 371

Fund, to liquidate the outstanding debt,
proposed by Mr. Pitt, in 1784-vi,
15

France, real interest of, v, 23

Jesuits abolished there in 1764,
vi, 111; letter on the situation of,
written from Dresden to a Friend at
Paris, vi, 522

Fleet Prison, report of the Committee of
the House of Commons on, vi, 499
French Nation, apathy of, vi, 523. their
subservience to Buonaparte, vi, 526,
529; contributions imposed on, vi,
532; fallibility of, vi, 534

comparative indulgence
shown to, vi, 525, 532

-Subjects, censure of the conduct
of those attached to the king, vi, 535 ;
views of the disaffected, vi, 534
Falconer, T. M. A. Outlines of a Plan
for building twenty five Churches
or Chapels, &c, vi, 569

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H

Honor, defined in relation to polity, v,

24

Habeas Corpus Act, legislative motion
for the improvement of, v, 184

writ of, a return to,
though unfounded in fact, considered
valid in law, to detain the prisoner;
and the hideous facilities thus laid
open for oppression, v, 186

31 Car. 11. its im-
perfection, v, 184, 190
Hemisphere, avulsion of the Western,
some years after the deluge, v, 549
Hemispheres, the cranium formed of two
v, 228

Haughtiness, supposed organ of, v, 231
Hope,

V, 232
Hair, a feature much valued by the N.
American Indians, v, 548

House of Commons, proportion of the
number of its members to the popu
lation of the United Kingdom, vi,
564

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Justice, liable to be compromised by
the present regulations of the ver
dicts of petty juries, v, 333.
Jury, trial by, a protection to subordi-
nate agents, who refuse obedience
to illegal orders, v, 310.

Jury, petty, the stubbornness of one or
two of the pannel, frequently suffici
ent to ensure the verdict of the rest,
v, 338

Juries, unanimity not required in the
original Gothic institution of, v, 339
Johnson, Dr. opinion on the subject of
debt, v, 520

Jews, the hypothesis that they peopled
America, v, 547

Jesuits, Society of, v, 48

Jesuits, brief account of the, vi, 99—
their funds restored, vi, 101-unlike
other monks, are taught to inter-
fere with temporal affairs, vi, 105-
spirit of attachment to their order,
vi, 109-maxim of keeping the rules
of their order secret, vi, 111-as-
sume a paramount authority over
all other Societies and obligations,
vi, 113-have refused obedience to
Popes, Bishops and Kings, vi, 113
-books published by, relative to
the Constitution and rules of the So-
ciety, vi, 112-their atrocities in
Paraguay, vi, 115-disputes with the
parliaments and universities of France,
vi, 116

James I. expelled the Jesuits from
England, vi, 111

K

King's Bench, court of, has no power
to punish disobedience to its writ of
Habeas Corpus, during Vacation, v,

183.

King's Bench Prism, report of the com-
mittee of the House of Commons on,
vi, 474-- opportunities and instances
of the illegal oppression of the pri
soners, vi, 493
Kerrison, R. M. observations and re-
flections on the bill now in progress
through the House of Commons, for
regulating the Medical Profession in
regard to Apothecaries, vi, 313
Knight, T. A. Esq. Letter to Sir J.
Banks on the origin of the Blight,
vi, 415
Kirby, Mr., papers on the diseases of
corn, published in the Transactions
of the Linnean Society, vi, 403

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Liberty, its proper boundary under so-
cial government, v, 20-Montes-
quieu's definition of, vi, 440
Lombards, their devastation of Italy
caused disorder among the Benedic-
tine monks, v, 41

Lay Brothers, their introduction in the
Benedictine order of monks, v, 43
Lunatics, the Chancellor's power of in-
terfering to relieve them from false
imprisonment, during vacation, v,

185

Language, supposed organ of, v, 233
Longley, John, Esq. observations on
the required unanimity, &c. in the
Trial by Jury, v, 331

Le Clerc, General, his outrages in St.
Domingo, v, 373

Larch, the least inflammable wood, re-
commended for shutters, v, 408
Lamb, Mr., characterized as a poet,
V, 461
Loyola, made general of the order of
Jesuits, by Pope Paul III.,vi, 104
Lainez, one of the Generals of the Je-
suits, who succeeded Loyola, vi, 105
La Chaise, confessor of Louis XIV.
vi, 118

Le Tellior,———vi, 117

Ludgate Compter, remarks of the Com-
mittee of the House of Commons on,
vi, 516

M

Marsh Dr. H.-Confutation of his
opinion that the Dissenters aim at the
Subversion of the Religious Estab
lishment of the country, vi, 295.
His answer to the above, vi, 301
Missionaries, sent out by the Jesuits,
vi, 108

Motives, justifying crimes, vi, 198
Mitchell, James, a boy born blind and
deaf, account of, vi, 335
Maritime system recommended by old
writers, vi, 395

Marshalsca prison, report of the Com-
mittee of the House of Commons
on, vi, 506

Modicus, Letter to the Editor on a
Reform in Parliament, vi, 562
Monarchs, principle of their inviolabi-
lity discussed, v, 11

Monastic state, origin of, v, 37
Mendicant orders, v, 45

Military orders of the Church of Rome,

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