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Exercise necessary to the finer organs, i. 216. Expression, difference between a clear and a strong one, i. 260. Eye, the, in what its beauty consists, i. 198. Eyre, Sir Robert, (Solicitor-General,) extracts from his speech at the trial of Dr. Sacheverell, iv. 138. Factions, formed upon and generate opinions, vii. 44. Fame, a passion for it, the instinct of all great souls, ii. 65. the separation of it from virtue, a harsh divorce, ii. 243. Fanaticism, epidemical, formidable nature of it, iii. 435. may be caused by a theory concerning government as much as by a dogma in religion, iv. 192. Farmer, dangerous to try experiments on him, v. 147. amount of his usual profits, what, v. 148. difficulties of his business, v. 152. Favoritism, a system of, in the executory government of England, at variance with the plan of the legislature, i. 469. Fear, cause of it, i. 210. early and provident fear the mother of safety, vii. 50. Feeling, the beautiful in, i. 201. Female sex, the moral sensibility more acute in them then in men, xii. 164. Finances, three standards to judge of the condition of a nation with regard to them, i. 330. importance of them to a state, iii. 534. admirable management of the French finances under Necker, ii. 273. Financier, duty of a judicious one in respect to his calculations, i. 348. his objects, what, iii. 538, 558. Fire, a chief object of worship to the Druids, why, vii. 182. Firmness, a virtue only when it accompanies the most perfect wisdom, i. 440. Fitness, not the cause of beauty, i. 181. the real effects of it, i. 184. Flattery, why so prevalent, i. 124. Florence, republic of, its origin, vii. 331. Force, not impaired, either in effect or opinion, by an unwillingness to exert itself, ii. 108. objections to its employment against the American colonies, ii. 118. Forest lands, plan of economical reform concerning them, ii. 300. Foster, Justice, extracts from his Crown Cases and Discourses on the Crown Law, xi. 28, 123. Fox, (C.J.) panegyrics on him, ii. 533; iii. 219. reluctant dissent from his opinion concerning the assumption of citizenship by the French army, iii. 218. animadversions on his commendation of the French Revolution, iv. 77; v. 7. policy of a treaty with France maintained by him, v. 26. his conduct contrasted with that of Mr. Pitt, v. 60. France, from its vicinity,
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