Fenelon. 19. Feelings excited by a long voyage, 20. Brief description of Pompey's Pillar,-Address 40. Egyptian Mummies, Tombs, and Manners, 64. Supposed feelings of Adam, on being called DIDACTIC PIECES. MORAL AND RELIGIOUS. 1. A Devotional spirit recommended to the young, 5. The Contrast; or Peace and War, 8. Advantages of a Taste for Natural History, 9. The Pleasures of a cultivated Imagination, 26. On the pleasure of acquiring knowledge, 43. The mutual relation between Sleep and Night, 81. On the reasonableness of Christian Faith, 82. On the importance of Christian Faith, 110. On the Dangers of Moral Sentiment unaccompanied with Active Virtue, 111. On Infidelity, 112. The same subject- 119. The Head-stone, 164. The Prodigal Son, ix DIALOGUES, ADDRESSES, AND SOLILOQUIES. 11. Real virtue can love nothing but virtue ;-a Dia- 199. Address of Brutus to the Roman populace, PIECES FOR RECITATION, OR SPEAKING. 32. Reply of Red Jacket to the Missionary, at a council of chiefs, 1805, 78. The Slave Trade, 146. Part of the letter of the British Spy, 149. Conclusion of a discourse delivered at Plymouth, Philanthropist. 86 WEBSTER. 183 WIRT. 324 6. Parallel between Pope and Dryden, 65. Scottish Music:-its peculiarity accounted for, 1 7. Select sentences and paragraphs, from various authors, 128. Fingal's Battle with the Spirit of Loda, 183. Contrasts of Alpine Scenery, DIDACTIC PIECES. MORAL AND RELIGIOUS. 3. Select sentences and paragraphs, from various authors, 17. Lines to a child on his voyage, 142. A belief in the Superintendence of Providence, the only adequate Support under Affliction, 150. Effects of Education upon Individuals :-its Lowth's translation of Isaiah. 401 Mrs. Barbauld. 413 475 113. Death-scene in Gertrude of Wyoming, Campbell. 253 DRAMATIC PIECES. DIALOGUES, ADDRESSES, AND SOLILOQUIES. and his friend, |