Volume Iv Part 26 (1/2)
Establishment of the balance of moral and intellectual influence in Europe.
The species of misrepresentation which abounds most in modern historians.
Hume, Gibbon, and Mitford.
Neglect of the art of narration.
Effect of historical reading compared to that produced by foreign travel.
Character of the perfect historian.
Instruction derived from the productions of such a writer.
Hoche, General, refuses to obey the cruel decree of the Convention.
Holy War, Bunyan's.
Homer, intense desire to know something of him.
Quintillian's criticisms on.
His inappropriate epithets.
His description of Hector at the Grecian wall.
Hoole, the metaphysical tailor, his friends.h.i.+p with Samuel Johnson.
Horace, his comparison of poems to certain paintings.
Hume, David, charges brought against him as a historian.
Hyder Aly, his successes.
Idler, Johnston's publication of the.
Imagination and judgment.
Power of the imagination in a barbarous age.
Inaugural Speech at Glasgow College.
India Bill, Fox's.
Inferno, Dante's, character of the.
Ireland, William Pitt the first English minister who formed great designs for the benefit of Ireland.
Isocrates, his defence of oligarchy and tyranny.
Italian language, Dante's first work on the.
Italian Writers, Criticisms on the Princ.i.p.al.
Dante.
Petrarch.
Italy, revolution of the poetry of.
Monti's imitation of the style of Dante.
Jacobins of Paris, policy of the.
Excesses of the.
Materials of which the party was composed.
Their cruelties in Paris and in the provinces.
Review of the policy of the Jacobins.
Jacobite, Epitaph on a.
Jacobites, revival of their spirits in 1721.
Plan for a Jacobite insurrection.