Страница - 86 Страница - 88 Report from the Committee of the House of Commons, appointed
to inspect the Lords' Journals in Relation to their Proceedings
on the Trial of Warren Hastings, Esq. With an Appendix.
Also, Remarks in Vindication of the Same from the Animadversions
of Lord Thurlow. 1794 1 Speeches in the Impeachment of Warren Hastings, Esq., late Governor-General
of Bengal. (Continued.) Speech in General Reply. First Day: Wednesday, May 28, 1794 157 Second Day: Friday, May 30 227 Third Day. Tuesday, June 3 300 Fourth Day: Thursday, June 5 372 VOL. XII.
INDEX.Accidental things ought to be carefully distinguished from permanent causes and effects, v. 234. Account, capital use of an, what, i. 511. Act of navigation, i. 378; ii. 30, 33. Acts of grace, impolicy of, ii. 386. Acts of indemnity and oblivion, probable effects of, as a means of reconciling France to a monarchy, iv. 460. Addison, Mr., the correctness of his opinion of the cause of the grand effect of the rotund questioned, i. 150. his fine lines on honorable political connections, i. 529. Administration, Short Account of a Late Short, (Marquis of Rockingham's,) i. 263. censures on that administration, i. 379. state of public affairs at the time of its formation, i. 381. character and conduct of it, i. 388. idea of it respecting America, i. 397. remarks on its foreign negotiations, i. 412. character of a united administration, i. 419. of a disunited one, i. 425. the administration should be correspondent to the legislature, i. 471. Admiration, the first source of obedience, iv. 251. one of the principles which interest us in the characters of others, vii. 148. Adrian, first contracts the hounds of the Roman Empire, vii. 214. Advice, compulsive, from constituents, its authority first resisted by Mr. Burke, iv. 95. Adviser, duty of an, iv. 42. Agricola, Julius, character and conduct of, vii. 199. Aix, the Archbishop of, his offer of contribution, why refused by the French National Assembly, iii. 390. Aix-la-Chapelle, the treaty of, remarks on, v. 441. Akbar, the Emperor, obtains possession of Bengal, ix. 392 Alfred the Great, character and conduct of, vii. 261. his care and sagacity in improving the laws and institutions of England, vii. 482. Allegiance, oath of, remarkable one taken by the nobility to King Stephen, vii. 388. Alliance, one of the requisites of a good peace, i. 295. the famous Triple Alliance negotiated by Temple and De Witt, v. 438. alliance between Church and State in a Christian commonwealth, a fanciful speculation, vii. 43. Ambition, one of the passions belonging to society, i. 124. nature and end of, i. 124. misery of disappointed, i. 335. ought to be influenced by popular motives, i. 474. influence of, iii. 107. one of the natural distempers of a democracy, iv. 164. legislative restraints on it in democracies always violent and ineffectual, iv. 164. not an exact calculator, vii. 82. virtue of a generous ambition for applause for public services, x. 176. America, advantage of, to England, i. 297. nature of various taxes there, i. 355. project of a representation of in Parliament, its difficulties, i. 372. its rapidly increasing commerce, ii. 112. eloquent description of rising glories of, in vision, ii. 115. temper and character of its inhabitants, ii. 120. their spirit of liberty, whence, ii. 120, 133 proposed taxation of, by grant instead of imposition, ii. 154. danger in establishing a military government there, vi. 176. American Stamp Act, its origin, i. 385. repeal of the, i. 265, 389. reasons of the repeal, ii. 48. good effects of the repeal, i. 401; ii. 59. Ancestors, our, reverence due to them, iii. 562; iv. 213. Angles, in buildings, prejudicial to their grandeur, i. 151. Animals, their cries capable of conveying great ideas, i. 161. Anniversaries, festive, advantages of, iv. 369. Anselm, appointed Archbishop of Canterbury, vii. 373. supports Henry I. against his brother Robert, vii. 377. Apparitions, singular inconsistency in the ideas of the vulgar concerning them, vii. 181. Arbitrary power, steals upon a people by lying dormant for a time, or by being rarely exercised, ii. 201. cannot be exercised or delegated by the legislature, ix. 455. not recognized in the Gentoo code, xi. 208. Arbitrary system, must always be a corrupt one, x. 5. danger in adopting it as a principle of action, xi. 322. Areopagus, court and senate of, remarks on the, iii. 507. Ariosto, a criticism of Boileau on, vii. 154. Aristocracy, affected terror at the growth of the power of the, in the reign of George II., i. 457. influence of the, i. 457. too much spirit not a fault of the, i. 458. general observations on the, iii. 415. character of a true natural one, iv. 174. regulations in some states with respect to, iv. 250. must submit to the dominion of prudence and virtue, v. 127. character of the aristocracy of France before the Revolution, iii. 412; vi. 39. Aristotle, his caution against delusive geometrical accuracy in moral arguments, ii. 170. his observations on the resemblance between a democracy and a tyranny, iii. 397. his distinction between tragedy and comedy, vii. 153. his natural philosophy alone unworthy of him, vii. 252. his system entirely followed by Bede, vii. 252. Armies yield a precarious and uncertain obedience to a senate, iii. 524. remarks on the standing armies of France and England, iii. 224. Army commanded by General Monk, character of it, iv. 36. Art, every work of, great only as it deceives, i. 152. Artist, a true one effects the noblest designs by easy methods, i. 152. Artois, Comte d', character of, iv. 430. Ascendency, Protestant, observations on it, vi. 393. Asers, their origin and conquests, vii. 228. Assassination, recommended and employed by the National Assembly of France, iv. 34. the dreadful consequences of this policy, in case of war, iv. 34. Astonishment, cause and nature of, i. 160, 217. Atheism by establishment, what, v. 310. ought to be repressed by law, vii. 35. schools of, set up by the French regicides at the public charge, vi. 106. Atheists, modern, contrasted with those of antiquity, iv. 355. Athenians, at the head of the democratic interests of Greece, iv. 321. Athens, the plague of, remarkable prevalence of wickedness during its continuance, vii. 84. Augustin, state of religion in Britain when he arrived there, vii. 233. introduced Christianity among the Anglo-Saxons, vii. 235. Aulic Council, remarks on the, v. 119. Austria began in the reign of Maria Theresa to support great armies, v. 368. her treaty of 1756 with France, deplored by the French in 1773, v. 370. Authority, its only firm seat in public opinion, ii. 224; vi. 165. the people the natural control on it, iv. 164. the exercise and control of it together contradictory, iv. 164. the monopoly of it an evil, v. 151. Avarice, an instrument and source of oppression in India, iii. 107; ix. 491. Bacon, Lord, a remark of his applied to the revolution in France, v. 175. his demeanor at his impeachment, xi. 173. Bacon, N., his work on the laws of England not entitled to authority, vii. 479. Bail, method of giving it introduced by Alfred, vii. 265. advantage of it, vii. 265. Ball, John, abstract of a discourse of, iv. 178. Ballot, all contrivances by it vain to prevent a discovery of the inclinations, iii. 507. Balmerino, Lord, proceedings in his trial, xi. 34. Banian, functions and character of the, ix. 363. Bank paper in England, owing to the flourishing condition of commerce, iii. 541. Bards, the, character of their verses, vii. 178. Bartholomew, St., massacre of, iii. 420. Bathurst, Lord, his imagined vision of the rising glories of America, ii. 114. Bayle, Mr., an observation of his on religious persecution, vi. 333. Beauchamp, Lord, his bill concerning imprisonment; Mr. Burke's course with respect to it, ii. 382. Beauty, a cause of love, i. 114, 165. proportion not the cause of it in vegetables, i. 166. nor in animals, i. 170. nor in the human species, i. 172. beauty and proportion not ideas of the same nature, i. 181. the opposite to beauty not disproportion or deformity, but ugliness, i. 181. fitness not the cause of beauty, i. 181. nor perfection, i. 187. how far the idea of beauty applicable to the qualities of the mind, i. 188. how far applicable to virtue, i. 190. the real cause of beauty, i. 191. beautiful objects, small, i. 191. and smooth, i. 193. and of softly varied contour, i. 194. and delicate, i. 195. and of clear, mild, or diversified, colors, i. 196. beauty of the physiognomy, i. 198. beauty of the eye, i. 198. the beautiful in feeling, i. 201. the beautiful in sounds, i. 203. physical effects of beauty, i. 232. Bede, the Venerable, brief account of him and his works, vii. 250. Bedford, the first earl of, who, v. 201. Begums of Oude, accused by the East India Company of rebellion, ii. 475. pretence for seizing their treasures, xii. [33] . Benares, city of, the capital of the Indian religion, ii. 477, 484. province of, its projected sale to the Nabob of Oude, xi. 259. devastation of, during Mr. Hastings's government, xi. 302, 347. the Rajah of, nature of his authority, xi. 240. imprisoned by Mr. Hastings's order, xi. 277. the Ranny of, the soldiery incited by Mr. Hastings to plunder her, ii. 486. Benfield, Paul, his character and conduct, iii. 97. Bengal, extent and condition, of, ii. 498. conquest of, by the Emperor Akbar, ix. 392. era of the independent subahs of, ix. 392. era of the British empire in, ix. 393. nature of the government exercised there by Mr. Hastings, xii. [211] . Bengal Club, observations on the, iv. 324. Bidjegur, fortress of, taken by order of Mr. Hastings, xi. 291. Biron, Duchess of, murdered by the French regicides, vi. 41. Bitterness, in description, a source of the sublime, i. 162. Blackness, effects of, i. 229. Boadicea, Roman outrages against, vii. 197. Boileau, his criticism on a tale in Ariosto, vii. 154. Bolingbroke, Lord, animadversions on his philosophical works, i. 3. some characteristics of his style, i. 7. a presumptuous and superficial writer, iii. 398. a remark of his on the superiority of a monarchy over other forms of government, iii. 398. Boncompagni, Cardinal, character of him, iv. 338. Borrower, the public, and the private lender, not adverse parties with contending interests, v. 455. Bouillon, Godfrey of, engages in the Crusade, vii. 372. Boulogne, fortress of, surrendered to France, v. 204. importance of it to England, v. 204. Bouvines, victory of, important advantages of it to France, vii. 458. Brabançons, mercenary troops in the time of Henry II., their character, vii. 420. Bribing, by means of it, rather than by being bribed, wicked politicians bring ruin on mankind, iii. 107. Brissot, his character and conduct, iv. 371. Preface to his Address to his Constituents, v. 65. Britain, invasion of, by Cæsar, vii. 165. account of its ancient inhabitants, vii. 170. invaded by Claudius, vii. 191. reduced by Ostorius Scapula, vii. 191. finally subdued by Agricola, vii. 199. why not sooner conquered, vii. 202. nature of the government settled there by the Romans, vii. 205. first introduction of Christianity into, vii. 221. deserted by the Romans, vii. 223. entry and settlement of the Saxons there, and their conversion to Christianity, vii. 227. Britons, more reduced than any other nation that fell under the German power, vii. 232. Brown, Dr., effect of his writings on the people of England, v. 239. Buch, Captal de, his severe treatment of the Jacquerie in France, iv. 177. Buildings, too great length in them, prejudicial to grandeur of effect, i. 152. should be gloomy to produce an idea of the sublime, i. 158. Burke, Mr., his sentiments respecting several leading members of the Whig party, iv. 66. and respecting a union of Ireland with Great Britain, iv. 297. respecting acts of indemnity and oblivion as a means of reconciling France to a monarchy, iv. 460. his animadversions on the conduct of Mr. Fox, v. 7. his pathetic allusion to his deceased son, v. 207. Burnet, Bishop, his statement of the methods which carried men of parts to Popery in France, iii. 430. Bute, Earl of, his resignation, i. 381. his successors recommended by him, i. 381. supposed head of the court party called "King's Men," i. 467. Cæsar, Julius, his policy with respect to the Gauls, vii. 163. his invasion of Germany, vii. 164. and of Britain, vii. 165. Calais, lost by the surrender of Boulogne, v. 204. Calamity, its deliberations rarely wise, iii. 540. public calamity often arrested by the seasonable energy of a single man, v. 124. Caligula undertakes an expedition against Britain, vii. 190. Calonne, M. de, remarks on his work, "L'État de la France," iii. 479. extract from it, iii. 549. Campanella, curious story concerning him, i. 212. Canada Bills, convention for their liquidation, i. 409. Canterbury, dispute between the suffragan bishops of the province and the monks of the Abbey of St. Austin, vii. 446. Cantons, French, their origin, nature, and function, iii. 462, 464, 471. Cantoo Baboo, Mr. Hastings's banian, x. 19. Canute, his character and conduct, vii. 276. remarks on his code of laws, vii. 483. Capital, monopoly of, not an evil, v. 151. Care, appearance of, highly contrary to our ideas of magnificence, i. 154. Carnatic, the extent, nature, and condition of the country, ii. 492; iii. 65. dreadful devastation of it by Hyder Ali Khân, iii. 62. Caste, consequences of losing it in India, x. 89. Castile, different from Catalonia and Aragon, iv. 340. Castles, great numbers of them built in the reign of Stephen, vii. 389. Casuistry, origin and requisites of, iv. 168. danger of pursuing it too far, iv. 168. Catholics, Letter to an Irish Peer on the Penal Laws against, iv. 217. Celsus, his opinion that internal remedies were not of early use proved to be erroneous, vii. 184. Cerealis, extract from his fine speech to the Gauls, iv. 272. Change and reformation, distinction between, v. 186. Characters of others, principles which interest us in them, vii. 148. Charity, observations on, v. 146. not to be interfered with by the magistrate, v. 146. Charles I. defended himself on the practice of his predecessors, ii. 279. his ill-judged attempt to establish the rites of the Church of England in Scotland, vii. 8. Charles II. obliged by the sense of the nation to abandon the Dutch war, ii. 219. brief character of him, iv. 37. his government compared with that of Cromwell, iv. 467. Charles XII. of Sweden, parallel between him and Richard I. of England, vii. 436. Charters are kept when their purposes are maintained, ii. 565. Chatham, Lord, his character, ii. 61. Cheselden, Mr., his story of a boy who was couched for a cataract, i. 226. Chester, the County Palatine of, admitted to representation in Parliament in the reign of Henry VIII., ii. 150. Chesterfield, Lord, his conduct (when Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland) with respect to the Roman Catholics, iv. 235. Cheyt Sing, Rajah of Benares, nature of his authority, ii. 479; xi. 240. imprisoned by order of Mr. Hastings, xi. 277. Christendom, the several states of, have all been formed slowly and without any unity of design, v. 373. Christianity, original introduction of, into Britain, vii. 221. Church, the, has power to reform her doctrine, discipline, and rites, vii. 7. Church establishment in England, observations on it, iii. 352. the provision made for its clergy by the state, iii. 364. education of its clergy contrasted with that of the Roman Catholic clergy, iv. 231. eulogy on it, vi. 401; vii. 36, 56. Cicero, remarks on his orations against Verres, xii. [349] . Circumstances, importance of them in all political principles, iii. 240; vii. 55. Citizens, not to be listened to, in matters relating to agriculture, v. 146. Civil list, debts due on it, request for a supply for discharging them, how made, i. 508. plan of economy relative to it, ii. 350. Civil society, great purpose of, vi. 333. Civil vicinity, law of, what, v. 322. Civil wars corrupt the morals of the people, ii. 203. Clamor, justifiable when it is caused by abuse, vii. 121. Clarendon, Constitutions of, vii. 403. Claudius, the Emperor invades Britain, vii. 191. Clavering, Sir John, eulogy on him, x. 246; xii. [348] . Clear expression, different from a strong one, i. 260. Clearness not necessary for affecting the passions, i. 133. Clergy, convocation of, a part of the constitution, ii. 226. observations on the provision made by the state for them, iii. 364, 448. Roman Catholic, in France, character of them before the Revolution, iii. 424. laws of William and Anne respecting the Popish clergy, vi. 317. review of the state of the clergy in England down to the reign of Henry II., vii. 398. Clive, Lord, sent to India, ix. 438. his conduct there, ix. 439. Clootz, Anacharsis, his masquerade embassy to the Constituent Assembly of France, vi. 49. Coke, Lord, ingenious quotation in his Reports, i. 5. his observation on discretion in judicature, iv. 292. Colonies, commercial, mode of levying taxes in them, an important and difficult consideration, i. 354. American, import ten times more from Great Britain, than they spend in return, i. 393. Colonists, the British, in America, character of, i. 395. Colors, soft and cheerful ones unfit to produce grand images, i. 158. Comedy, observations on, vii. 150. Aristotle's distinction between it and tragedy, vii. 153. Comines, Philip de, his remarks on the English civil wars, vi. 252. Commerce and liberty, the two main sources of power to Great Britain, ii. 87. great increase of, in America, ii. 112. Common law, nature of the, vii. 462. Common Pleas, court of, its origin, vii. 466. Commons, the House of, observations on its nature and character, i. 491. what qualities recommend a man to a seat in it, in popular elections, i. 497. can never control other parts of the government, unless the members themselves are controlled by their constituents, i. 503. ought to be connected with and dependent on the people, i. 508. has a collective character, distinct from that of its members, ii. 66. duty of the members to their constituents, ii. 95. general observations on its privileges and duties, ii. 544. the collective sense of the people to be received from it, ii. 545. its powers and capacities, ii. 552. cannot renounce its share of authority, iii. 258. its composition, iii. 289. the most powerful and most corruptible part of the constitution, vii. 62. a superintendence over the doctrines and proceedings of the courts of justice, one of its principal objects, vii. 107. concise view of its proceedings on the East India question, ii. 559. Commonwealths, not subject to laws analogous to those of physical life, v. 124, 234. Communes, in France, their origin, nature, and function, iii. 462, 464, 472. Compurgators, in Saxon law, what, vii. 318. Condorcet, brief character of him, iv. 356, 372. extract from a publication of his, iv. 356. Confidence, unsuspecting, in government, importance of it, ii. 234. of mankind, how to be secured, v. 414. Connections, party, political, observations on them, i. 527, 530. commended by patriots in the commonwealths of antiquity, i. 527. the Whig connection in Queen Anne's reign, i. 529. Conquest cannot give a right to arbitrary power, ix. 456. Conscience, a tender one ought to be tenderly handled, vii. 54. Constantine the Great, changes made by him in the internal policy of the Roman Empire, vii. 220. Constantinople, anecdote of the visit of an English country squire to, v. 387. anecdote of the Greeks at the taking of, vi. 96. Constituents, in England, more in the spirit of the constitution to lessen than to enlarge their number, i. 370. their duty to their representatives, ii. 370. compulsive instruction from them first rejected by Mr. Burke, iv. 95. points in which they are incompetent to instruct their representatives, vii. 74, 75. Constitution, a, cannot defend itself, vi. 100. consequences of disgracing the frame and constitution of the state, vii. 103. the English, a change in it, an immense and difficult operation, i. 371, 520. English, changes in it to be attempted only in times of general confusion, i. 371. eulogy on it, iii. 561; v. 210; vii. 100. the whole scheme of it to prevent any one of its principles from being carried to an extreme, iv. 207. not struck out at a heat, iv. 209. commendation of it by Montesquieu, iv. 212. the only means of its subversion, what, v. 49, 52. Constitutional Society, The, its nature and design, iii. 236. Conti, Prince de, his character and conduct, iv. 436. Contract, an implied, one, always, between the laborer and his employer, v. 137. Contracting parties, not necessary that they should have different interests, v. 139. Control and exercise of authority together contradictory, iv. 164. Convocation of the clergy, though a part of the constitution, now called for form only, ii. 226. Conway, General, moves the repeal of the American Stamp Act, ii. 52. Cornwallis, Lord, (Baron,) proceedings in his trial, xi. 30. Cornwallis, Lord, (Marquis,) his evidence at the trial of Warren Hastings, xii. [359] . Coronation oath, its obligations with respect to Roman Catholics, iv. 259. Corporate bodies, their usefulness as instruments, iii. 441. more under the direction of the state than private citizens, iii. 447. Corruption, of nature and example, what the only security against, ii. 238. in pecuniary matters, the suspicion of it how to be avoided, iii. 95. Cossim, Ali Khân, his character and conduct, ix. 405. Country, lore of, remarks on, xi. 422. Credit and power incompatible, i. 368. Crimes, the acts of individuals, not of denominations, ii. 418. according to the criminal law, what, vi. 340. Cromwell, brief character of him, iii. 294. his principle in the appointment of judges, iv. 13. his conduct in government, iv. 37. his government compared with that of Charles II., iv. 467. Cross, the effect of it not so grand in architecture as that of the parallelogram, i. 150. Crown, the influence of it, what, i. 444. inheritable nature of it, iii. 258. this principle maintained at the Revolution, iii. 254. the only legitimate channel of communication with other nations, v. 10. Crusade, origin and progress of the, vii. 369. Curfew, origin and policy of the, vii. 354. Curiosity, the first and simplest emotion of the human mind, i. 101. general observations on it, i. 101. Custom, considered in relation to deformity and beauty, i. 179. not the cause of pleasure, i. 180. Cyprus, account of the conquest of it by Richard I., vii. 428. Danger and pain, the idea of them a source of the sublime, i. 110, 130. with certain modifications, delightful, i. 111. the danger of anything very dear to us removes for the time all other affections from the mind, iv. 95. Darkness more productive of sublime ideas than light, i. 156. necessary to the highest degree of the sublime in building, i. 158. Locke's opinion concerning, i. 225. terrible in its own nature, i. 226. why, i. 227. Davies, Sir John, his statement of the benefits of the extension of English constitutional law to Ireland, ii. 147; iv. 273. Day, not so sublime as night, i. 158. Debi Sing, his character and conduct, x. 69. Debt, the interest of, not the principal, that which distresses a nation, i. 329. Debts, civil, faults of the law with regard to, ii. 384. public, excessive, their tendency to subvert government, iii. 437. Deceivers and cheats never can repent, iv. 9. Declaration of Right, contains the principles of the Revolution of 1688, iii. 252. drawn by Lord Somers, iii. 254. proceeds upon the principle of reference to antiquity, iii. 273. Defensive measures, though vigorous at first, relax by degrees, iv. 355. necessary considerations with regard to them, vi. 100. Definitions, frequently fallacious, i. 81. Deformity not opposed to beauty, but to the complete common form, i. 178. Deity, power the most striking of his attributes, i. 143. Delamere, Lord, proceedings in his trial, xi. 31. Delight, what, i. 107. distinguished from pleasure, i. 108. the misfortunes of others sometimes a source of, i. 118. the attendant of every passion which animates us to any active purpose, i. 119. how pain can be a cause of, i. 215. Democracy, no example in modern times of a considerable one, iii. 396. an absolute one, not to be reckoned among the legitimate forms of government, iii. 396. Aristotle's observation on the resemblance between a democracy and a tyranny; iii. 397. the vice of the ancient democracies, what, iii. 508. the foodful nurse of ambition, iv. 104. Departments in France, their origin, nature, and function, iii. 461, 465. Depth thought to have a grander effect than height, i. 147. Description, verbal, a means of raising a stronger emotion than painting, i. 133. Desirable things always practicable, ii. 357. Despotism, nature of, i. 446; ix. 458. D'Espréménil, the illustrious French magistrate, murdered by the Revolutionists, vi. 40. Dialogue, advantages and disadvantages of it as a mode of argumentation, vi. 9. Difference in taste, commonly so called, whence, i. 89. Difficulty, a source of greatness in idea, i. 153. its disciplinary uses, iii. 453. political difficulties, ill consequences of attempting to elude them, iii. 454. Dignity, national, no standard for rating the conditions of peace, v. 257. Dimension, greatness of, a powerful cause of the sublime, i. 147. necessary to the sublime in building, i. 152. but incompatible with beauty, i. 242. Dinagepore, Rajah of, account of him, xii. [318] . Diogenes, anecdote of him, iv. 61. Directory, the, by whom settled, vii. 13. rejected at the Restoration, vii. 13. Disappointment, what, i. 108. Discontents, Thoughts on the Cause of the Present, i. 433. produced by a system of favoritism, i. 469. Discretion, Lord Coke's remark on, iv. 292. Discretionary powers of the monarch, should be exercised upon public principles, i. 469. Discrimination, a coarse, the greatest enemy to accuracy of judgment, v. 143. Dissenters, observations on the Test Act, in reference to them, iv. 264. Distress, great, never teaches wise lessons to mankind, iv. 10. Distrust, advantages of, iv. 443. Disunion in government, mischief of, i. 425. Divorce, observations on, v. 313. Domesday Book, origin, and nature of it, vii. 354. Double cabinet, project of a, in the English court, i. 447. nature and design of it, i. 454. mischievous influence of it, i. 478. how recommended at court, i. 485. its operation upon Parliament, i. 490. singular doctrine propagated by it, i. 525. Drama, Hints for an Essay on the, vii. 143. Dramatic writing, difficulty of, vii. 145. Druids, some account of their origin, character, and functions, vii. 176. the opinion that their religion was founded on the unity of the Godhead, confuted, vii. 185. Dryden, his translation of a passage in Virgil, v. 391. Du Bos, his theory of the greater effect of painting than of poetry on the passions, controverted, i. 134. Dunkirk, demolition of, i. 412. Dunning, Mr., brief character of, ii. 398. Du Pin, M. de la Tour, his account of the state of the army in France, iii. 512. Durham, County Palatine of, admitted to representation in Parliament, in the reign of Charles II., ii. 152. Duty, effectual execution of it, how to be secured, ii. 353. determined by situation, ii. 465; iv. 167. people do not like to be told of it, iv. 163. not dependent on the will, iv. 165.