Your petitioner therefore desires your worship! to cite the clergyman before you, and to settle and adjust the length of canonical periwigs, and thel quantity of powder to be made use of in them, and to give such other directions as you shall think fit, And your petitioner, odessa roli iw bas linde Q. Whether this gentleman be not chaplain toi a regiment, and in such case allowed powdervac cordingly ? After all that can be thought on these subjects, I must confess, that the men who dress with a certain ambition to appear more than they are, are much more excusable than those who betray, in the adorning their persons, a secret vanity and inclination to shine in things, wherein, if they did succeed, it would rather lessen than advance their character. For this reason I am more provoked at the allegations relating to the clergyman, than any other hinted at in these complaints. I have, indeed, a long time, with much concern, observed abundance of pretty fellows in sacred orders, and shall in due time let them know that I pretend to give ecclesiastical as well as civil censures. A man well bred, and well dressed in that habit, adds to the sacredness of his function, an agreeableness not to he met with among the laity. I own I have spent some evenings among the men of wit of that profession with an inexpressible delight. Their habitual care of their character gives such a chastisement to their fancy, that all which they utter in company is as much above what you meet with in other conversations, as the charms of a modest are superior to those of a light woman. I therefore earnestly desire our young missionaries from the universities to consider where they are, and not dress, and look, and move like young officers. It is no disadvantage to have a very handsome white hand but were I to preach repentance to a gallery of ladies, I would, omethinks, keep my gloves on I have an unfeigned affection to the class of man-s kind appointed to serve at the altar, therefore am in danger of running out of my way, and growing too serious on this occasion; for which reason I shall end with the following epistle, which, by my interest in Tom Trot, the penny-post, I procured a To the Rev. Mr. RALPH INCENSE, Caplain to the I tre Countess Dowager of BROMPTON TA SIR, "I heard and saw you preach last Sunday. I am an ignorant young woman, and understood not half you said: but ah! your manner, when you held up both your hands toward our pew! Did you design to win me to Heaven or yourself?arrasta ここ "Your humble servant, "PENITENCE GENTLE." ADVERTISEMENTS. Mr. Proctorstaff, of Clare-Hall in Cambridge, is received as a kinsman, according to his request bearing date the 20th instant. The distressed son of Esculapius is desired to be more particular. 31ed by T. Maiden, Sherbourne Lane Lombard DIIe earl tv smoshaad voor saved on systemsbaden.. TO VOL. III. A. ACILIANUS, recommended by Pliny for a husband, 152. Advertisements, a dissertation upon them, 350, &c. Æneas's descent into the empire of death, and adventures there, Afflictions, imaginary, often prove the most insupportable, 267,&c. Album Græcum prescribed to a sick dog, 244. Alexander Truncheon, foreman of the male jury in Bickerstaffe's Allegories profitable to the mind as hunting to the body, 270. ation, 358. Antipathies treated of, 31, &c. Apollo, the god of verse and physic, 367. Apothecaries great orators, 370. Aristippus, his saying of content, 96. dv Arthur, King, the first that ever sat down to a whole roasted ox, 275. Atheist, his character, 515, 516. Athenians, their public spirit and virtue, 249. Authors, their precedency settled according to the bulk of their Avarice, what age of man most devoted to it, 235. Its region 200 Audiences, what ought to be their behaviour at the representa- Bacon, Sir Francis, his sentiments of poetry, 207. His legacy, . Bantam, Ambassador of, his letter to his master about the English,60. Bass-viol, the parts it bears in conversation, 287. Where most likely to be found, 289. Baxter, what a blessing he had, 137. Beef-eaters, order of them, 275. : Bickerstaffes, the history and genealogy of the family, 153, &c. 1 Bonosus, the drunken Briton, a saying of him after he had hanged Bribery a solicitor in the temple of Avarice, 255. Buzzard, Benjamin, indicted in the court of honour, 422. Cacœthes scribendi, or itch of writing, an epidemic distemper, 114. Calamites, whimsical ones, 62, &c. Callicoat, indicted in the court of honour, 421. Cambray, (A. B.) author of Telemachus, 301. 1 Cambric, a linen-draper, indicted by the Lady Touchwood, 420. Camilla's exit from the theatre, 148. Canes, how they ought to be worn, 197, &c. Case, Dr. grown rich by means of a distich, 369. Cato, an instance of his probity, 58. Cebes, his table, 314. تم Censors, a comparison betwixt the Roman and British, 320. Cestus of Venus described, 272m od tried somethibet dail Cherubims, what the rabbins say they are of Bromimeti of Liberty, 316. 111 Competency, a guide in the temple of Avarice, 254. is igul 10 gates of Hymen's temple, 239. Complainers, their importunacy, 266. ibid. Contention, allegorically described, 239. ?? ?????? Corruption, an office in the temple of Avarice, 254. 116, &c. No ceremony, 168. i Courts of justice and honour, erected by Mr. Bickerstaffe, 380, Critics, modern ones, some errors of theirs about plays, 133deiland D. Dancing-master, account of his studies and dancing by book, 170. peace, 404. pea Dead persons heard, judged, and censured, 208, &c. Delicates, false, their contradictory rules, 276. Destinies, their present to Jupiter, 268. Speech of one of them to that God, 270είδωτος καὶ το ποίεn 21 sidst ati ១៣ន |