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In our review of Mr Colebrooke's Treatife, at page 29th of the present Volume, it ought to have been mentioned, that the measure of the permanent fettlement of the revenues of Bengal, to which we have there given fuch merited praise, was originally fuggefted by Mr (now Sir Philip) Francis, in a plan submitted by him to the Court of Directors, fo long ago as the year 1776, and published in England in 1782. We have reafon to believe, also, that Lord Teignmouth, though he approved of the principle of that measure, resisted its immediate execution, and was, in this refpect, rather an opponent, than a coadjutor, of Lord Cornwallis.
Bundling, a curious mode of courtship in New England, 109.
Africa, prevailing prejudices againft, fet Buonaparte. See Dumourier.
in a new light, 202. Aga, 261.
America. See Janfon.
Arragon, population of the provinces of the kingdom of, in the 16th century, compared with what it is at present, 435.
Aftronomy, Indian. See Bentley.
Atoms, gravitation explained by the ope- ration of, 146, Epicurus's theory of,
Aufterlitz, affairs of the allies capable of retrieval, until the battle of, 372. Auftria, no chance of fuccess against France on the Continent where she is not the chief actor, 386.
Bailly, M., charge brought against him by Mr Bentley, on the fubject of In- dian aftronomy, 457. Beattie, Dr.
See Forbes, Sir William. Beattie, Mr Montagu, account of the death of, 182.
Begler-begs, the governors of the greater provinces among the Turks, 261. Bengal. See Colebrooke.
Bentley on the Indian astronomy, 455. Knowledge of the aftronomy of the Orientals when first brought to Eu- rope, 456. What the object of the prefent work, ib. Charge brought by the author againft M. Bailly, 457. Inquiry how far it is well founded, 459. Account of the Indian fyftem of aftro- nomy, 459. Reafons for believing it of very high antiquity, 463. Berg, anecdote of the grand duke of, 282. Bey, 261.
Birch, Deputy, on the Catholic bill, 124. Boppart, defcription of, 281. Boroughs, venal, remarks on, 420. Bofcovich, objection flated by, to the doc- trine of gravific atoms, 148. Boulogne flotilla carefully maintained in a ferviceable state, 5. Vaft army can be embarked there in a fingle day, 6. Brocquière, Bertrandon de la, travels of, 329. Holy places vifited by, in Palef- zine, &c. 330.
Burnett's view of the prefent state of Po- land, general character of, 438. De fcription of the scenery of Poland, 442. Villages, towns, &c. ib. Inns, 443- Provifions and manufactures, 444. normous wealth of fome of the great nobles, 445. Polifh hofpitality, ib. Houfes, 447. State of the peasantry, 448. Female manners, 451. Parti tion of Poland has not diminished the wealth or population of the country, 453. Probable policy of France to- wards, ib.
Cafalpinus, his arrangement of vegetables, 309.
Cali-Yug, commencement of, a celebrated epoch among the Indians, 463. Capmany, Qüeftiones Criticas, 422. Va- rious caufes to which the decline of the fuppofed wealth and power of Spain in former times has been afcribed, ib. Prefent weakness, &c. of, not a proof of her decline, but of the increased power of her neighbours, 424. View of the ftate of the commerce and ma- nufactures of, at different periods, 427. Of her agriculture and population, 433. Account of the author, 438. Carr's Stranger in Ireland, 40. General
character of, 42. Refemblance between the style of the author and that of the celebrated George Falkener, 44. Anec- dotes, 40. Defcription of the quarter- fellions at Killarney, &c. 49. State of education in Ireland, 53. Prices of la- bour, 56. Thrafhers, 57. Catholic e- mancipation, 58. Character of the Trith, 60.
Carr's Tour in Holland and Germany,
271. Author's way of writing books, ib. Journey between Delft and the Hague, 275. French not fo odious in Holland as is generally believed in this country, 277. Account of the Wood near the Hague, 278. Dutch theatre, 279. Defeription of the banks of the Rhine, 281. Anecdote of the grand -duke of Borg, 282. French confcripts,
ib. Extreme rigour of Bonaparte's go- vernment in matters of commercial po- lice, 283-
Caftile, account of the population, &c.
Catalonia, population of, at different pe- riods, 435.
Catharine, emprefs of Ruffia, anecdote of, 452.
Catholic emancipation, remarks on, 52. Catholics, Irish. See Parnell.
Catholics, English, fuppofed refusal of, to renounce the difpenfing power of the Pope, 133-
Caufes, final, illuftration of the doctrine of, 152.
Charles I., anecdotes of fome of his judges, 105.
Clarkson's Portrait of Quakerifm, 85. General character of the work, 86. What the basis of the Quaker morali- ty, 87. Specimen of their reasoning against mufic, 88. Inconfiftency of, expofed, 89. Are ftrictly forbidden the amusements of the theatre, dancing, 91. reading of novels, and the fports of the field, 92. Peculiarity in their drefs, ib. in their language, 93. Their arguments against calling any man Mr or Sir, &c. 94. Private manners of, 96. Their opinions with regard to trade, 97. Account of their principal tenets, 98. Of their interior govern- ment, 99. Character of the fect, 102. Cobbett's Political Register, reasons for taking notice of in the prefent review, 386. Change which has taken place in the author's sentiments of late, 387. Some of his inconfiftencies pointed out, 388. Points on which he has of late chiefly defcanted, 393. Doctrines which he has maintained for the last four months highly pernicious, 399. How far they admit of juftification, 405. What the three natural partitions of all focieties, their functions, &c. 411. Colebrooke's Remarks on Bengal, 27. Ex- tent, population, &c. of Bengal, 30. State of hufbandry in, 31, 37. Revenue, products, &c. 32. State of the pea- fantry, 35.
Confiderations on the trade with India, pre- liminary remarks on, 334. General character of, 336. Divifion of the fub- ject adopted, 337. Inquiry into the relative advantages with which a com- mercial concern may be carried on by a chartered corporation on the one hand, and by private adventurers on
the other, 339. Prefumptions in fa- vour of the latter, 349. Question con- fidered, how far the commerce of India may be extended, 350. Private trade of the Americans with, 352. State of the finances of the India Company, 353. Political grounds on which the Directors defend their monopoly considered, 355. Principal defects chargeable on, 359. What the moft probable alternative if the Company should be abolished, 364. Cork, defcription of the quarter-feffions at, 50.
Courtship, curious mode of, in New Eng land, 109.
Curran, Mr, verses written by, 46. A- necdote of, 49.
Dangers of the country, I.
View of the evils of being fubjugated by France, ib. Measures recommended by the author for the prevention of, 4. Hazard of invafion, in general, too much over- looked, 5. Means of defence in Bri- tain, by no means adequate to meet the threatened danger, 7. True caufe of the fueceffes of the French armies fince the Revolution, 10. Same causes that have contributed to the fubjection of the Continent, operate, but in a lefs degree, in England, and may be corrected without the expense of a re- volution, 13. Measures by which this may be effected, 17. Policy of mak- ing peace with France, confidered, 18. What the only poffible objects of per- fifting in hoftilities, 19. Advantages the enemy would derive from a pacifi- cation, 22.; more than counterba- lanced by the fecurity and opportu nity of recruiting our ftrength which we should thence enjoy, 23. Dantzic, defcription of the country be- yond the plain of, 442.
Davies, Sir John, his account of Ire- land, 41.
Dervifkes, a religious order among the Turks, 258.
Diofcorides, his method of arranging ve getables, 309.
Dogs employed to draw carriages in Hol. land, 279.
Doyle, General, anecdote of, 49 Dumourier, Jugement fur Buonaparté, 368. Character of, 369. Buonaparté, ac- cording to the author, indebted to good fortune alone for his fingular fuccefles, ib. Juftifies his disbelief of Buona- parte's military talents, 371. Affairs
of the allies capable of being retrieved until the battle of Austerlitz, accord- ing to him, 372. Ill fuccefs of Pruffia cwing to the mistakes of the cabinet of Berlin, and the difaffection of her generals, 374. Project afcribed to Bo- naparte, 375 French alliance always · popular in Sweden, 376. Whence the author expects the final destruction of Buonaparté, 377. Confequences of the late events on the continent con- fidered, 379 Dangerous fituation in which we are placed from the defeat of all our allies, &c. 382. Dwight, Dr, fpecimen of his poetry, 114. E
Education, board of, established in Ire- land, 5.3.
Education, public and private, advantages
and disadvantages of, compared, 184. Emirs, 259.
Epicurus, view of the atomical philofophy of, 219.
Equinoxes, preceffion of, of great impor- tance in determining the antiquity of aftronomical calculations, &c. 464. Exchange. See Wheatley.
Exiflence of external objects, view of the difpute concerning, 193. F
Falkener, George, ftyle of, compared with
that of Mr Carr, 44.
Fatah Ali Shah, the prefent king of Per- fia, account of, 66.
Fatio de Duillier, account of, 150. Feffenden, Mr, the Hudibras of America,
Final caufes, illuftration of the doctrine of, 152.
Forbes's, Sir William, Life of Dr Beattie, general remarks on, 171. Abstract of the doctor's life previous to the publi- cation of the Minstrel, 173. Vifits London, and has an interview with their Majefties, 175. Refufes the of- fer of a Profefforihip in the University of Edinburgh, 177.; and of a living in the church of England, 178. Account of a vifit to Dr Porteus, then bishop of Chester, 180.; of the death of his youngest fon, 182. Public and private education compared, 184. Second fight of the Highlanders explained, 186. Remarks on the credit due to the mar- vellous reports of voyagers. 187. On the glaring imagery of the eastern poe- try, 188. Strictures on the doctor's <writings, 192.
French people, character of, and their leader, 9.
Fund, finking. See Petty. G
Gefner, Conrad, fuggefts an improved me- thod of arranging vegetables, 309. Gmelin, alteration made in the arrange- ment of Linnæus by, 315. Goffe, General, one of Charles I.'s judges, fingular anecdote of, 106. Good's tranflation of Lucretius, account of, 217. Encomium on Athens, 218. Summary of the atomical philosophy of Epicurus, 219. Remarks on the poetical merits of Lucretius, 221. Some extracts from the prefent tranflation compared with the original, 223. Gordon's Hiftory of Ireland, 116. State of that country in the time of Hen- ry II. 118. Scheme of Sir John Per- rot for the civilization of, 120. Governments, new, generally infecure, &c. but ftrong and efficient in their mea- fures of public policy, II.
Gouging, a favage practice in North A- merica, 113.
Gravitation, reafon why that force varies inversely as the fquare of the distance, 146. Attempts to explain the nature of, not inconfiftent with fincere piety, 150.
Gravity, attempt to explain the nature of, 145.
Greeks, ancient, eulogium on, 250.
Hawkesbury, Lord, fpeech of, on the Ca tholic petition, 131.
Herrera, Alonfo de, author of a book on the agriculture of Spain, 434. Hippefley, Sir J. C.
Hope on Household Furniture, 478. Sub- ject beneath the regard of a gentleman, efpecially under prefent circumstances, ib. Style of the author, affords little evidence of his tafte, 479. Object he profeffes to have in view, 480. Diffi- culties he has had to encounter in the purfuit of, 481. Objections to the fafhions he withes to introduce, 483. Hunkiar, or the manflayer, a title of the Grand Signior, 225.
from England, 104. Arrives at Bof- ton, 105. Adventures of three of Charles the First's judges, ib. Character of the New Englanders, 106. De- feription of an American horse-race, IIO. Landjobbing, 111. Barbarous
practice in the southern states, 113. Newspapers, ib. Literature and the arts, 114.
Imam, office of, among the Turks, 258. Impulfion, view of Le Sage's theory of, 145.
Indians, North American, fuccefs of the
Quaker experiment for civilizing, 476. Ireland. See Carr, Gordon, and Parnell. Irish, character of, 60.
portant events which have occurred in Perfia fince the death of, 64. Nazareth, description of, 331. P
Parnell's apology for the Irish Catholics, 299. Conclufions which the author attempts to prove, 300. View of the history of Ireland, from the time of Henry II. to the grand rebellion in the reign of Charles I. ib. Barbarous con- dition of the Irish in the time of Queen Elizabeth, 301. Sanguinary frenes
which have from time to time taken place in Ireland not owing folely to the influence of the Catholic religion, 303. Pafba, 261.
Irifbman, loyal, curfory Reflections by, Peerage, little danger to be apprehended 131. from the influence of, 417.
Perrot, Sir John, plan of policy adopted
Perfia, anxiety of the French emperor to
fecure the alliance of, 63. See Waring. Petty's, Lord Henry, plan of finance, 72. Diftinguishing excellence of the funding system, 73. First establishment of the finking fund, 74. Taxation cannot be carried much further in Britain without degenerating into oppreffion, 75. Ex- tenfion of the finking fund propofed by the prefent writer, 76. Neceffity of guarding against its too rapid oper- ation, 77. Short view of the details of the plan, 78. Pinkerton's Geography, general remarks on, 155. Account of Pruffia, 156. Of the Auftrian dominions, 162. Of the population of England and Wales, 163. Methods the author has taken to fupply the defects in his former edi- tion, 164. Specimens of his skill in the Spanish language, 166. Remarks on the style of the work, 169. Placemen, no great advantage to be ex- pected from the exclusion of, from feats in Parliament, 416. Whence the principal danger from, arifes, 418. Plinius Secundus, Caius, his botanical ar- rangement, 309.
Poetical extracts from Sotheby's Saul, 207.-from Good's translation of Lu- cretius, 223.
Poetry of the Eastern nations, why fo full of glaring imagery, 188.
Poland. See Burnet.
Pope, illuftration of the nature of the fu premacy of, 134.
Porteus, Dr, defcription of his family e- ftablishment at Hunton, 180.
Nadir Shah, account of the most im- Prevoft's life of Le Sage, 137. Birth and
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