CONTENTS. VOL. XXXIII. No. 52. Witty sayings of several ancients. 53. Delineation of the life of Tiberius. 54. Review of events in the reign of King Charles the First. Of the education of a prince. 55. Advantages of a happy talent for discerning times and seasons. 56. The character of a proud man. 57. Advantages of a great fortune well applied. A poetic rhapsody in the manner of The Task. 58. The visit to Attalus concluded. 59. Notion that death may be avoided at will. 60. Meditations on the character of an infidel. 61. Of the morality of Christianity. 62. An argument for the evidences of the Christian religion. 63. Observations upon the several instances of right reason in the heathen world. 64. Reasons offered à priori for the necessity of a mediator. 65. Argument of David Levi for the superiority of the miracles wrought by Moses over those, which the Evangelists record of Christ. 91. A review of the present state of society in 92. Letter from Posthumous, complaining of a certain writer, who had published a collec- tion of his memoirs and remarkable sayings. 93. Kit Cracker, a dealer in the marvellous. 94. Walter Wormwood, an envious defamer. 95. Letter from Simon Sapling, describing his 96. On the topic of procrastination. 97. Letter from Benevolus, giving an account of 98. Letters from various correspondents, particu- larly from Gorgon, a self-conceited painter 99. Discovery of a curious Greek fragment. |