5. A Contrast of Josephus Brockway's Testimony and State- 6. Revivals of Religion, considered as Means of Grace; a Se- 7. The Importance of Revivals as exhibited in the late Con- vention at New Lebanon, by PHILALETHES. ART. VII.-1. The Franklin Primer. 3. The General Class-Book, or Interesting Lessons, in Prose and Verse. By the AUTHOR OF THE FRANKLIN PRIMER, &c. 4. Essays on the Philosophy of Instruction, or the Nurture of ART. VIII.—Sabbath Recreations; or Select Poetry of a Reli- ART. I.—Remains of the late Rev. Charles Wolfe, A. B. Curate of ART. II.-Correspondence between John Quincy Adams, Esquire, President of the United States, and several Citizens of Massachusetts, concerning the Charge of a Design to Dis- solve the Union alleged to have existed in that State. ART. III.-Provincial Antiquities and Picturesque Scenery of ART. VII.-1. Address of the National Society for Promoting the 2. Memorials to Congress on the Subject of Sunday Mails. 3. Reports of Messrs JOHNSON and MCKEAN, Chairmen of the Committees of the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States, to whom were referred the several Pe- titions on the Subject of Sunday Mails. ART. VIII.-1. A Plea against Religious Controversy. By N. L. 2. The Final Tendency of the Religious Disputes of the Pre- sent Day, impartially considered. By OLD EXPErience. ART. IX.-Memoir of Mrs Ann H. Judson, late Missionary to Burmah, including a History of the American Baptist Mission in the Burman Empire. By JAMES D. KNOWLES. 252 ART. X.-Letters written in the Interior of Cuba. By the late ART. I.-1. Eighteen Sermons and a Charge. 2. Sermons by the late Rev. John Emery Abbot, of Salem, Mass. With a Memoir of his Life, by HENRY WARE, Jun. 273 ART. II. Examples of Questions, calculated to excite and exer- ART. III.-1. Narrative of the Survey of the Intertropical and Western Coasts of Australia. By Captain PHILIP T. 2. Two Years in New South Wales; comprising Sketches of the Actual State of Society in that Colony; of its peculiar Advantages to Emigrants; of its Topography, Natural His- tory, &c. &c. By T. CUNNINGHAM, R. N. - ART. IV.-1. A Grammar of the Modern Greek Language; with ART. VIII.-The Republic of Cicero, translated from the Latin, and accompanied with a Critical and Historical Introduc- tion. By G. W. FEATHERSTONHAUGH, Esq. ART. IX.-Essays on the Pursuit of Truth, on the Progress of Knowledge, and on the Fundamental Principles of all Evi- ART. X.-Natural Theology: or, Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity, collected from the Appearances of Nature. By WILLIAM PALEY, D. D. Archdeacon of 389 INDE X. A. Abbot, Rev. Dr, his Letters from Cuba, 259 Abbot, Rev. J. E., Sermons by, with a Memoir of his Life, 273, 281, et seqq. his character, 282 Absentee, Miss Edgeworth's, her best work, 184 Adams' correspondence, 146-his allegation of a Northern Plot, 146 Alien and Sedition Laws, violent language of Virginia respecting, 169 All Things to be Changed, 136 Amended Text of the New Testament, 347-reasons for adopting an, 364 Annals of the Parish, 86 Apollos, probably the writer of the Augustin, quotes Cicero's Republic, 371, 372, 376 Auldjo, John, his ascent to the summit of Mont Blanc, 52-71 Australia, or New Holland, its singular structure, 291-attempts to explore, 292-its rivers, and conjectures respecting them, 293-its natural productions, 295-all its quadrupeds Marsupial, 295-its inhabitants, 301-320. See Natives of Australia. Authorship of the Epistle to the Hebrews, 198, 330. See Epistle to the Hebrews. VOL. VI.-N. S. VOL. I. Autumn Evening, by Rev. Mr Peabody, 136 B. Baillie, Mrs Joanna, her Dramatic Balwhidder, the Rev. Mr, 86 Beattie, his paraphrase of Horace's version of Lucretius' theory of man, 377 Beaumont and Fletcher's Plays, 51 tleton's Letters on the New Measures,' 101-his letter to Beman of Troy, 105-his letter of advice to Mr Nettleton, 107-the projector of the famous New-Lebanon Convention, 108-his severe invectives against his Western brethren and their new measures,' 118-120rem.arks on Davenport's revival, 119 said by Mr Beman to oppose revivals, because they were getting to be unpopular, 123-admits that disgraceful extravagances have attended the most notorious revivals, 126 Bentley, on the various readings of Terence, 355 Boswell's Life of Johnson, 183 Botany Bay, its extent and population, 291 Brief Remarker, his contrast of Brock way's Testimony and Statement, 101 Brockway, J., his Delineation of the Characteristic Features of a Revival 52 of Religion in Troy, 101-his ac- Burke, 244-his power, 162 Controversy, Religious, defended, 241 Correspondence between J. Q. Adams Burning, instance of, without sensa- Cuba, Abbot's Letters from, 259-re- tion, 396 Buxtorf's Hebrew Lexicon, 347, 348 C. Cabot, George, an eminent Federal- Canonical books, what is meant by, Carpzov on the Epistle to the He- Catholic Religion, its power to form Cheverus, Bishop, character of, 9 102 Church Architecture, 171 Clarke, Dr, his attempt to ascend Congress, its legislation should be ligion and priesthood of, 266 D. Dampier's account of the natives of Dante, 9 D'Arblay, Madame, her novels, 183 Dermid, the Grave of, 143 De Saussure, his ascent of Mont Blanc Devouassoud, his account of the loss 72 Disowned, the, by the author of Pel- Dog, the, of Australia, 296 Dryden, 51-his poems, 179 |