343 fhould not think the addition of it fufficient acknowledgment of his merit; especially fince I am informed, that the fimplicity of his life is agreeable to his useful know. ledge and learning subres The praife of this author feems to me to be the great perfpicuity and method which render his work intelli gible and pleafing to people who are strangers to facht inquiries, as well as to the learned. It is a very defirable entertainment, to find occafions of pleasure and fatisfaction in those objects and occurrences when we have all our lives, perhaps, overlooked, or beherd without exciting any reflections that made us wifer or happier.. The plain good man does, as with a wand, fhow us the wonders and fpectacles in all nature, and the particular capacties with which all living creatures are endowed for their feveral ways of life; how the organs of crea tures are made according to their different paths in which they are to move, and provide for themselves and fami lies; whether they are to creep, to leap, to fwim, to fly, to walk; whether they are to inhabit the bowels of the earth, the coverts of the wood, the muddy or clear ftreams; to howl in forefts, or converfe in cities. All life, from that of a worm to that of a man, is explained: and, as 1 may fo fpeak, the wondrous works of the creation, by the obfervations of this author, lie before us as objects that create love and admiration ; which, without fuch explications, ftrike us only with confufion and amazement. The man who, before he had this book, dressed, and went out to loiter, and gather up fomething to entertain a mind too vacant, no longer needs news to give himself amusement. The very air he breathes, fuggefts abundant matter for his thoughts. He will confider, that he has begun another day of life, to breathe with all other creatures in the fame mafs of air, vapours, and clouds, which furround our globe; and of all the numberlefs animals that live by receiving momentary life,. or rather momentary and new reprieves from death, at their noftrils, he only stands erect, confcious and con templative of the benefaction. A man who is not capable of philofophical reflections from his own education, will be as much pleased as with any other good news which he had not before beard. The agitations of the winds, and the falling of the rains, are what are abfolutely neceffary for his welfare and accommodation. This kind of reader will behold the light with a new joy, and a fort of reasonable rapture. He will be led from the appendages which attend and forround our globe, to the contemplation of the globe! itfelf, the diftribution of the earth and waters, the variety and quantity of all things provided for the ufes of our world. Then will his contemplation, which was too diffufed and general, be let down to particulars, to dif ferent foils and moulds, to the beds of minerals and ftones, into caverns and vulcanos, and then again to the tops of mountains, and then again to the fields and vallies. When the author has acquainted his reader wi⚫. the place of his abode, he informs him of his capacity to. make himself eafy and happy in it, by the gift of fenfes, by their ready organs; by fhewing him the ftructure of thofe organs, the difpofition of the ear for the receipt of founds, of the noftril for smell, the tongue for tafte,: the nerves to avoid harms, by our feeling, and the eye by our fight, straynon de ceilingt i 1 The whole work is concluded (as it is the fum of fif teen fermons in proof of the existence of the Deity) with reflections which apply each diftinct part of it to an end, for which the author may hope to be rewarded with an immortality much more to be defined, than that of remaining in eternal honour among all the fons of men. ers, beijaib, „dood and bad of 97old cla.m et gainism & qu wodną bas jomat (7206 THE IN DE X. The figures refer to the numbers of the papers. ACtive parts of mankind 130 152. Alnarefchin, the Great, King Art, thofe that are capable of it most fond of nature 173. Atalantis, author of, to whom Athalia of Racine, fome parts customs of that place Alphonfo, story of, as told by 4. Praifes of the waters ib. Strada's Lucan 19 AV and the lion 139.lifoni: fure 135 f Beauty at war with fortitude 15 2 to the Guardian 124. CAre, Dorothy, her letter Coxcombs, lettered, where to against mens open bofoms Claudian, Strada's 115.1193 His by the learned Philautus 95. Complaifance, its benefits 162, 85. Of an ill critic 1 1 5.2 their familiarity 126. it 113. be found 94. Dangerous in Craffus, a chilly old fellow 102. confideration of them 175. Edalus's letter about flying A A in China: 96,! intitled, Phyfico-theology: $75. Mr Oliver Parville; Gent.95. Diftreffes imaginary,the greatest part of man's affliction 162. L ons 158.1 Deyden's Virgil' faulty 86 A EAging Nicholas, Efq; his mother 150. about the Evites 142. Fear of God, all fortitude foun- ded upon it 147. bout modefty pieces 118. T France, a tour there 100. Court Frank Forefight, his good hus• French, their humanity 101, Their poverty and mirth ib. Allantry between a foot- Gaming among the ladies a |