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Sorrow
455.
456.
Character of the Emperor Charles V.
457. Speech of General Wolfe to his army before Quebec
458.
459.
460.
461.
The happiness of obscurity
The Lilliputians' mode of selecting public officers
Pleasure of contemplating divine wisdom
Monte Nuovo
462. True wisdom
463. Despotic governments
464.
465.
Evanescence of ideas
Preface to Endymion.
466. Death of Cyrus the elder
467. A character
468. The force of association
469. Our duties towards God
503.
Escape of Queen Mary
Crimes and punishments
504. The slaves of Africa and those of the West Indies
505. Lord Clive before the battle of Plassy
506. The King and Bishop
507. Alexander's homage to learning
508. The part of the higher classes in war
W. Robertson
A. Cowley
7. Swift
T. Burnet
G. Sandys
E. Stilling fleet
7. Addison
S. T. Coleridge
Lord Macaulay
C. J. Fox
P. Holland
E. Burke
A. Pope
J. Taylor
W. Pitt
W. Paley
Lord Bacon
E. Gibbon
7. Norris
Sir R. Steele
Passages for Translation into Greek Prose, § 1-§ 397
15.
Disturbances in the time of King Richard
Objections to a public inquiry answered
Of Submission to God's will
The Cornish rebels on Blackheath, A.D. 1496
Of the pursuit of happiness
Honour-the reflection of a man's own actions
Letter
16. Love of our country-not a principle of passion
17. Judgment of a man-why suspended till after his
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
death
Regulation of the passions
Rights and responsibilities of the press
Defeat of the Athenians before Syracuse
The unseen in art and nature.
Terror-the ruling passion of the sublime
Dux vitæ mortalium animus
A just equipoise of the passions
25. Taxation of houses in Holland, unfair
26. The spirit of man and the spirit of the world
27. Story of Aristomenes
28. Original rights of man in civil society
29. Homage paid to virtue
30. Mary, Queen of Scots, leaving France
31. Xenophon, his retreat with the Ten Thousand
32. Spartan justice-an instance of it
33. The duties of a Statesman
Lord Bolingbroke
R. Southey
J. Froissart
D. Hume
J. Milton
Sir W. Ralegh
R. Hooker
C. Salustius
Sir W. Temple
Spectator
34. Queen Elizabeth's speech in the camp of Tilbury. D. Hume
35. Greek and Roman philosophy
Socrates, his method of teaching
38. Condemnation of the generals after the battle of
54. The Saxons and Angles
55.
Fortune
56. America-her marine enterprise
57. Unmerited praise, the practice of giving, censured.
58. Plato-his ideas
59. Selfishness oftener on the side of honesty
60. Savage nations-ferocity of their wars
61.
Men shift the blame of ill-success
62. Democratical governments
63. Written or unwritten laws-which are the better
64. The French anti-revolutionists, March, 1795
65. Navigation and commerce of the Romans
66. Genuine patriotism
67.
The physical condition of man and other animals
68. Analogy in the transmission of government
69. Parallel between Shakespeare and Fletcher.
70. Charles Townshend, his merits as a speaker
Sensible things.
71.
72. Ultimate predominance of intellect over sense
73. Civil injuries-several kinds of and remedies for
74. English colonial policy
75. Cleander to Hydaspes from Athens.
76. Examples of Divine benevolence
77. The origin of trade
78. Of the conjunction of body and soul.
79. India
80. Comedy-progress of bad taste in
81.
82.
Goodness, how to be discerned
Success of the Royalists, A. D. 1643
83. Bribery
84. Science of manufactures
85. Character of the true poet
86. Application to good ends
87. The atmosphere
88. King James I.'s suspicion of Perkin Warbeck
89. Socrates
103. Sleep
104-5. Dignity of man's nature
106. Parliament-commendation of their proceedings
107. Objects of history
108.
Divisions among the Councils at Oxford
Difference between the will and appetite
Extreme remedies
III. Character of John Hampden
112.
113.
114.
115.
Rome-the occasion of her greatness
Force-use of it, temporary
Advice on public speaking
The body considered as the soul's instrument
116. The soul-its high faculties,
117. Partisans of peace with France.
118. Preface to the History of the Rebellion
Sir J. Herschel
J. Dryden
G. Berkeley
Athenian Letters
R. Bentley
Sir J. Mandeville
Lord Clarendon
A. Smith
G. Wilson
R. Leighton
C. Thirlwall
N. Machiavelli
B. Jonson
124. Description of an earthquake
125. Story of Canute
126. Taking of Pontefract Castle
127. Wellington's address to the inhabitants of Oporto
128.
Of man's free will
129. England's crisis
130.
Gradual change in man's estimate of pleasure
131. Independence of spirit
132.
Moral of the story of Achilles and Chiron
133. Duty of prosecutors
134.
135.
Youth
The ancient critics, their employment
136. Surrender of the Carthaginians to the Roman army
137. Judgments of wise men
138. Interference of learning with business
139. Bees-a pattern of good government
140. Comparison between Agathocles and Richard III
Outdoor occupation of an Athenian gentleman
141.
142.
A dialogue
143. Mary Queen of Scots-her departure from France.
144. Employment variable.
145. Liberty to be given only to those who are worthy of it
146. Eumenes
147. Bond of nations
148.
149.
The elements-their uses
Actions influenced by notions
150. Independent existence
151. Religion not to be taken on trust
152.
Wealth alone will not cause a flourishing kingdom
153. Republics unfavourable to shining merit
154.
155.
Reasoning, man's most appropriate occupation
Difference of opinions does not imply uncertainty
156. Nature gives way to custom alone
157. Envy of virtue generally in the vicious
158. Opinion
159. Prejudice in favour of antiquity
The principles of government
Darius Hystaspes-his narrow escape out of Scythia Sir W. Ralegh
J. Ruskin
176. Renunciation of freedom
177.
Demosthenes
178. Job iv. 13-17
179.
Covenants
180.
Solon and Peisistratus
181.
182.
Actions apart from moral considerations
Law against the admission of strangers
183. Aristophanes
184. Factions
185. Negligence of learned men
W. S. Landor
R. Porson
186. Learning may pay homage to wealth
187. Peccant humours of learning
Praise of knowledge
188.