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INDEX TO THE ADDITIONAL PIECES

A.

IN THE

THIRD VOLUME.

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Bacon (lord),his Historyof Henry
VII. 299.

Baudrand, his Dictionary com-
mended, 300.

Bayle's Dictionary commended,
ibid.

Belief, what it is, 330.
Bergeron (Peter), his Collection
of Voyages, 298.
Bernier, his Memoirs of the Grand

Mogul commended, ibid.
Blood, the circulation of it, 322.
Bodies, luminous, pellucid, and

opake, 323, 324.

Boileau, his translation of Lon-

ginus commended, 295.
Bottom of a question should be
sought for, 283.

Bracton, that author commend-
ed, 297.

Brady, commended, ibid.
Brown, his Travels commended,
298.

Bruyere, his Characters a fine
piece of painting, 299.
Burnet, Bishop of Sarum, his
History of the Reformation
commended, ibid.

C.

Cæsar, his Commentaries, 295.
Calepin,his Dictionary commend-
ed, 300.

Camden, his Britannia commend-
ed, 298.

Cange (Charles du), his Glos-

sarium mediæ et infimæ La-
tinitatis commended, 300.
Cannon-bullet, how long it would
be in coming from the sun
to the earth, 311.

Cervantes, his Don Quixote,300.
Chillingworth, his eulogium, 295.
Chronology, books that treat of
it, 299.
Common-place-book, Mr. Locke's
new method of making one,
331, &c.
Comines (Philip de), his me-
moirs recommended, 299.
Coke (lord), his second Insti-
tutes commended, 297.
Cooper, his Dictionary commend-
ed, 300.

D.

Dampier, his Voyages commend-
ed, 298.

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Perspicuity in speaking, wherein
it consists, 294.
and how to obtain it,

ibid.
Petavius, his Chronology com-
mended, 299.

Petit, his Rights of the Commons

of England commended,
297.
Plants, their several sorts, nou-

rishment, and propagation,
320.

Politics, contain two parts, 296.
Practice, or exercise of the mind,

Practice, the understanding is
improved by it, 213.
Prejudices, every one should find
out and get rid of his own,
228.
Presumption, a great hinderance
to the understanding, 271.
Principles, when wrong, are very
prejudicial, 216, &c.

we should carefully
examine our own, 230, &c.
the usefulness of inter-
mediate principles, 243.
Puffendorf, his writings com-
mended, 296.

Purchas, his Collection of Voy-
ages commended, 298.
Pyrard, his Voyages commended,
ibid.

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should not be beyond its Sagard, his voyage mentioned,

strength, 255.

298.

Sandys (George), his Voyages,

298.

Scaliger de Emendatione Tem-
porum, 299.

Sedler, his Rights of the King-
dom commended, 297.
Selden, his Titles of Honour

commended, 300.

Sidney (Algernon), his Dis-

courses concerning Govern-
ment, 296.

Skinner, his Lexicon commend-
ed, 300.

Society (civil), books that treat of
the rise and nature of civil
society, 296.

Spelman, his Glossary commend-
ed, 300.

State-tracts, two collections of
them commended, 297.
Stephens (Robert), his Thesaurus
Lingua Latinæ commended,
300.

Stones are real vegetables, 319.
Strauchius, his Chronology com-
mended, 299.

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Transferring, how this difficulty
may be overcome, 288.
Travels, books of travels and

voyages commended, 298.
Tully, his books de Oratore et de
Officiis commended, 295,
296.

Tyrrel (James), his History of
England commended, 296.

V.

Vegetables, an account of them,
319.

Understanding of man, its ope-
rations, 293.

how it may be im-
proved, 213. 293.

man's last resort to

it for conduct, 205.

to be improved by
practice and habit, 213.

wherein the last
judgment of it consists, 236,

&c.

Universality of knowledge, how
it should be pursued, 238.
Vossius (Gerhard John), his Ety-
mologicum Lingua Latina,
commended, 300.

Voyages, see Travels.

W.
Wandering, we should endeavour
to keep our minds from it,
259.
Whear, his Methodus legendi
Historias, commended, 297.
Words, should not be used with-
out a fixed sense, 257.

Y.

Year, made by the revolution of
the earth about the sun, 310.

THE END.

LONDON:

PRINTED BY THOMAS DAVISON, WHITEFRIARS.

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