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SECTION II.
Page.
1. The bad reader,
2. Respect due to old age,
Percival's Tales,
Spectator,
89
90
4. Modesty and docility,
3. Piety to God recommended to the young, Blair,
5. Sincerity,
ib.
91
6. Benevolence and humanity,
7. Industry and application,
8. Proper employment of time,
9. The true patriot,
12. On pride,
10. On contentment,
Art of Thinking, 96
11. Needlework recommended to the Ladies, ib.
13. Journal of the life of Alexander Severus,
Spectator, 97
100
Guardian,
102
Gibbon, 104
14. Character of Julius Cesar,
Middleton, 105
15. On misspent time,
Guardian, 106
16. Character of Francis I,
Robertson, 110
17. The supper and grace,
Sterne,
113
18. Rustic felicity,
19. House of mourning,
3. The character of Mary, queen of Scots, Robertson,
4. The character of queen Elizabeth, Hume,
5. Charles V's resignation of his dominions, Robertson, 160
6. Importance of virtue,
7. Address to art,
8. Flattery
9. The absent man,
10. The monk,
11. On the head dress of the Ladies,
12. On the present and future state,
13. Uncle Toby's benevolence,
14. Story of the seige of Calais,
Price,
164
Harris, 165
SECTION V.
1. On grace in writing,
illustrated,
9. On the pleasure arising from objects
of sight,
2. On the structor of animals,
3. On natural and fantastical pleasures, - Guardian,
4. The folly and madness of ambition
5. Battle of Pharsalia, and the death of
6. Character of king Alfred,
7. Awkwardness in company,
8. Virtue man's highest interest,
Fitzborne's letters,
Spectator.
184
185
189
Spectator, 205
10. Liberty and slavery,
208
11. The cant of criticism
12. Hymn to the Deity, on the seasons of
the year,
237
7. Description of Mab, queen of the fairies, Shakespeare,247
8. On the existence of a Deity,
Young,
248
9. Evening in Paradise described,
Milion,
10. Elegy written in a country churchyard,
11. Scipio restoring the captive lady to her
lover,
250
12. Humorous complaint to Dr. Arbuthnot
of the impertinence of scribblers,
13. Hymn to adversity,
14. The Passions.-An ode,
Collins,
256
SECTION VIII.
1. Lamentation for the loss of sight,
2. L'Allegro, or the merry man,
3. On the pursuits of mankind,
4. Adam and Eve's morning hymn,
5. Parting of Hector and Adromache,
6. Facetious history of John Gilpin,
7. The creation of the world,
8. Overthrow of the rebel angels,
9: Alexander's feast, or the power of music, Dryden, 275
ELOQUENCE OF THE SENATE.
1. Speech of the Earle of Chesterfield,
2..
-Lord Mansfield,
SECTION III.
293
298
1. Romulus to the people of Rome, after building
the city,
2. Hannibal to Scipio Africanus,
3. Scipio's reply.
4. Calisthenes' reproof of Cleon's flattery to
Alexander,
5. Caius Marius to the Romans,
6. Publius Scipio to the Roman army,
7. Hannibal to the Carthagenian army,
Hooke,
b.
Q. Curtius,
316
317
-
8. Adherbal to the Roman senators,
9 Canuleius to the Roman consuls,
329
10. Junius Brutus over the dead body of Lucretia, ib,
7. Sir Charles and Lady Racket, Three weeks
after Marriage,
362
8. Brutus and Cassius, Shakespeare's Julius Cesar, 366
II. SPEECHES AND SOLILOQUIES
1. Hamlet's advice to the players, Tragedy of Hamlet, 369
2. Douglas' account of himself,
-the hermit,
3.
4. Sempronius' speech for war,
5. Lucius' speech for peace,
6. Hotspur's account of the fop,
7.
Tragedy of Douglas, 370
371
Tragedy of Cato,
372
1 Henry IV.
soliloquy on the contents of a letter, ib. 373
8. Othello's apology for his Marriage, Tragedy of Othello,
9. Henry IV's soliloquy on sleep,
10. Bobadil's method of defeating an
19. Soliloquy of Dick the Apprentice, Farce the Apprentice, ib. ·
20. Cassius instigating Brutus to join the
conspiracy against Cesar, Tragedy of Julius Cesar,383
21. Brutus' harrangue on the death of Cesar, ib.
22. Anthony's oration over Cesar's body,
23. Falstaff's soliloquy on honour,
24. Part of Richard IIId's soliloquy the night preceding
the Battle of Bosworth, Tragedy of Richard IIId, ib.
25. The world compared to a stage, - As you like it,
389
APPENDIX-Containing concise lessons on a new plan, 390