, hereditary, the principle of it recognized at
the Revolution, iii. 252.
Succession, in visual objects, effects of it explained, i. 222.
Suddenness, a source of the sublime, i. 160.
Suffering, the force to endure, needful to those who aspire to
act greatly, v. 250.
Sujah ul Dowlah, his character, xi. 373.
Sully, M. de, an observation of his on revolutions in great
states, i. 441.
Superstition, nature of it, iii. 442.
Surplus produce, nature and application of it, iii. 444.
Sweetness, its nature, i. 235.
relaxing, i. 237.
Swift, Dr., a saying of his concerning public benefactors, ii. 472.
Sympathy, observations on it, i. 177; v. 398.
Taille, nature of, i. 330, 333.
Talents, eminent, obscure and vulgar vices sometimes blended with, iv. 26.
Tallien, the regicide, his sanguinary brutality, vi. 102.
Tamerlane, his conquests in Hindostan, ix. 388.
remarks on his Institutes, ix. 467; xi. 214.
Tanistry, what, vii. 297.
Taste, discourse concerning it, i. 79.
definition of it, i. 81.
want of it, whence, i. 95.
a wrong or bad one, what, i. 95.
a good one, i. 96.
of no mean importance in the regulation of life, iv. 30.
Taxes, mode of levying them in commercial colonies an
important and difficult consideration, i. 354.
nature of several in America, i. 355.
colonial, Lord North's project of a ransom of them by auction, ii. 171.
the great contests for freedom in England chiefly upon the
question of taxing, ii. 120.
taxes on different establishments, remarks concerning them, i. 368.
upon salaries, ii. 283.
details of English taxes, v. 476.
Terror, sometimes a source of delight, i. 119.
how, i. 214.
an effect of the sublime, i. 130.
its physical effects, i. 211.
Test Act, observations on it, iv. 264.
Thanes, brief account of them, vii. 300.
Theatre, general observations on the, iii. 338.
prosperous condition of it in England, v. 485.
made an affair of state in the French Republic, vi. 104.
Theodorus, Archbishop of Canterbury, brief account of him, vii. 249.
his services to the cause of letters in England, vii. 249.
Three Seals, the history of the affair so called, ix. 408.
Time blends the conquered with the conquerors, iv. 272.
Toleration, true, exemplified, iii. 431.
ought to be tender and large, iv. 258.
favorable to, and a part of Christianity, vii. 25.
not a virtue of the ancient heathens, vii. 31.
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