Imatges de pàgina
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An account of great deliverances

Page

30

(22. An account of fome Irish kings and knights)

ibid.

(23. An account of Cormac Maccuillenan,

king of Munfter, and archbishop of CafhelThe pfalter of Tarah, and the pfalter of Cafhel)

30 The cafe of John Orton

32

38

51 A reflection on the bones of John Orton 48

(24. An explanation of the author's expreffion-Partaker of the divine nature by impreffions from it)

52 A meditation in a clofet

52

54

53 An inventory of the goods the author found at Mr. Orton's Lodge

57

The pifmires the best preparers of a skele

ton

58

54 The author's fcheme of a life to be paffed at

Orton-Lodge

60

56 A defcription of an extraordinary cave in one

of the northern fells of Westmoreland 64

(25. A description of the cave near CapeBonn; which was the 'grot that Dido and Æneas fheltered themselves in:and St. Donat's cave in Glamorganfhire)

ibid.

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73

58 An account of the owners of this feat 59 A rule to determine the tangents of curve

lines

79

60 Microscopical obfervations on plants, infects,

&c.

81

66 A reflexion on the works of nature as feen in

the microscope

67 An account of the library at Ulubræ

90

91

92.

68 An account of the book called Vindiciae contra Tyrannos, and who was the author of it (29. Some remarks on Charles I.—and account of two fermon's preached at his martyrdom)

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93

(30. Accounts of Du Pleffis MornayCardinal Perron--Paul V.-Cardinal d'Offat Cardinal Baronius-Ifaac Cafaubon-Centuriators of Magdebourg— Cardinal Bellarmine-The edict of Nantz-Theodore Agrippa Aubigne 99 69 Account of the author of a book De libertate ecclefiaftica

107

(32. An account of the writings of the two

Scaligers, and of Lewis Cappel) 108

71 An account of fome fubterraneous chambers in one of the mountains of Yorkshire

Stanemore

P. 112

(33. Account of Penpark-hole in Gloucefterfhire)

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ibid.

(34. Of Pool's-hole in Derbyfhire) 117 72 The author's dangerous defcent from the top of the mountain he arrived on, to the valley where Mr. Harcourt lived and his kind reception by that gentleman

119

126

73 The author's difcourfe with Mifs Harcourt, in relation to his religion (35. Of Dr. Jofeph Smith's book, fect. 3.)

128

74 Mr. Harcourt's obfervation on the difcourfe I had with his daughter, and his generous offer

136 75 An account of Harriot Eufebia Harcourt, (the lady mentioned in the first volume of my Memoirs of feveral Ladies of Great Britain, p. 324.)—and her paintings 139 (37. What a moral Shechinah is) 79 A description of a fine chamber in a moun

144

tain, and a descent from the chamber to a valley, where the author found his friend Turner's house

154

Characters of Mifs Turner and Mifs

Jaquelot

Page

168

82 The author departs from Skelfmore-Vale, and on the fide of a mountain, makes a morning reflection on the rifing fun 170 (39. The weakness of tradition)

174

84 A fine landscape from the top of a mountain -and the author's arrival at the feat of Mr. Berrisfort; a gentleman who came with him from Ireland in the fhip he had his paffage in

87

184

A paffage in a Greek author: and fome

reflections

189 88 The kind reception the author had from

Mr. Berrisfort

Fox

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89 Manner of living at Mr. Berrisfort's house -His character-and the characters of Mifs Berrisfort and Mic 91 The daring fpirit of Mifs Berrisfort in hunting

194

196

92 An account of two fad falls in the field in

a morning hunt

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93 A religious converfation between Mr. Berrisfort and the author

199

(40. Accounts of Erafmus, Grotius, Limborch, Baxter, Dodwell, and their writings, and of Dr. Sykes-Courcelles→→→ and Polienbourg)

208

1

(40. A remark on our little Vauxhalls;and a word of advice to the rich and gay, who frequent Ranelagh and Vauxhall) P. 216

(42.

(41. Of Simon of the Oratory-Du Pin; and their writings; and of Le Clerc's Sentimens de quelques theologiens) 228 Of Mr. Macknight's Harmony) 237 (43. Of Jones's method of fettling the canonical authority of the books of the New Testament-the Sacred clafficsDr. Lardner's Credibility of the gospel hiftory; particularly his admirable fupplement to the first book of the fecond part; and Mr. Jacob Ilive's letter to the bishop of London) 1243

(44. The cafe of prophecy and of Jerom, Ambrofe, and the firft St. Gregory) 249 94 The author departs from Yeoverin-Green, and arrives at a fhaking-bog-the nature

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96 A continuation of the journey from the haking-bogto Mr. Fleming's house

and the hiftory of Mr. Fleming and his

two brothers

-257

98 The author arrives at laft at Ulubræ, to the great joy of the gentlemen, his

friends;

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