tracts from his Adversaria | have passed for his own, and hence opinions contrary to his own have been ascribed to him, 191. Induced to palliate Popery by his learn. ing, 193. His foresight of the Puritan's views, ib. Dis- couraged from coming to England, 195. Guacharo, F. Depon's account of the cavern of, 572. Guarini Grammar, striking il- lustration from, 639, 659. Guatemala, hasty building of missionary settlements in,
GUEVARA, the colour of the
hair, and the truthfulness of the heart, 346. Guiana, offensive Beast of, 588. Poultry of, 666.
Gum Arabic Acacia, of Upper Egypt, 490, 491, 582. Gunpowder, invention of, 639. Gutsein, the castle of, blown up, why, 193.
Gwent-land, warriors of, 617. GYRON LE COURTOYS, and the motto of a sword, 529.
H. HABINGTON, "The righteous hath hope in his death." 77. Supper-luxuries, 312. Hacqueton, the, what? 324. Hage-El, the bird that accom- panies the caravans to Mec- ca, 446.
HAKEVILL, address to his ve- nerable mother Oxford, 332. HALDE DU, account of the head-dress of the women of Myau-tse, 517.
HALL, BISHOP, his care in drawing up his discourses, 117. Mention of a remark- able miracle, 121. HALLAM, his imperfect judg- ment of Lord Clarendon's letters, 139.
Hammock Bridge, wonderful,
HAMMOND, his denial that any Papist in England was ever put to death on account of his religion, 195. HAMPDEN, his family said to
have been settled upon the same estate before the Con- quest, 149.
places frequented by those animals, 496. HERRERA On the conversion of the Indians, 60. Quoted, 281, 522, 523, 531. Natu- ral courage of the Miges, 537. The Panches, and their shields of skins, 538. His position, that religion has been communicated most to countries which have the richest mines, 589. Account of the Panches who take their dead warriors out to battle, 622. Herring-roe of Norfolk-Sound, delicacy of, 594. Skin of the sea-herring prevents beer from foaming or frothing, 648.
HEYLIN, PETER, his second journey, containing a sur- vey of the estate of the two islands, Guernsey and Jer- sey, 137. Hierarchy, Celestial, 384. HIERONYMO CORTE-REAL, 233 HIGGESON'S New England Plantation. Ears of corn in New England great and plen- tiful-Fertility of the soil, 655. Account of the abori- ginal religion of, 656.
Hell, opinion of, in the Romish Church, 384. HENDERSON, ALEXANDER,neat instance of Presbyterian hy- pocrisy, 195. HENNEPIN, LOUIS, New Dis- covery, painted barbarians-HILL, Indian way of striking a fire
Smell of fire by Indians -Great feast of the savages, 573.
HENRY, PHILIP, his use of al- literation, 23.
HENRY I., prodigy on the death
AARON, on allegoric gar-
dening, 668. HINDO0s, their extreme_no- tions of antiquity, 438. Rea- son of the rarity of Hin- doo writings, 449. Women, why kept in ignorance, 455. Form of emancipating a slave, 456. Metaphysical theology, 465. The Hin- doo bird Baya, 469. Pic- turesque effect of Hindoo women as bathers and wa- ter-bearers, 479. Yearly feast of the Hindoo maidens, 484. Offering for the re- turn of those at sea, 505. Custom of shaving the head amongst, 513. Notions of the end of the world, 516. Funeral superstition, 520. HOHENLOHE, PRINCE, pre- tended miracle of, 75. Holland, money transmitted to, owing to the state of inse- curity during the Great Re- bellion, 150.
HOLLAND, LORD, his altar to Asculapius, 607. HOLLIS, THOMAS, lines on Old Noll, 143. Gift of White- locke's MSS. to the British Museum, ib. HOLY GHOST, sin against, 126. Homilies homely, 9.
HOPTON, LORD, said to want advice, his head being full of Islands and Plantations,' &c. 155. Horses, the coats of when em- ployed in coal mines, soft and glossy, 648. Curious small ones in India, 649. Breeding of, 658. Horse Bread, 596. HOTHAM, SIR J., and speech
of his son, 147. Strafford thanks the king for his fa- vour to, 155. Character of, 185. Gave assurance that he would not deny the king entrance into Hull, 189. The first in the house who moved that Laud might be charged with high treason, and the person that suffered imme- diately before him, 189. Hottentot Lion-takers, 594. Skill in pottery, 634. HUARTE, quoted. Syllogisms and shackles-their connec- tion, 334. HUBBARD, WILLIAM, Narra-
tive of the Troubles of the Indians, &c. Effects of an eclipse on Indian military tactics, 538. Indian cruelty
- Incursion of the Indians, and hair-breadth esscape, 539. Palisadoes against the Indians - Indian tac- tics, 540. Cold weather a good besom to sweep the chamber of the air Jo- shua Tift, a renegado En- glishman, 543. Over-ruling of evil propensities - Faith- fulness and courage of the Christian Indians - Politic stratagem of a Cape Indian -Subtle device of the same Indians, 544. The Indian Canochet Cruelty, and its results, 545. One-eyed Mo- noco, or, One-eyed John - James, the printer - Pam- ham, the Narhagonset Sa- chim, 546. Sagamore John
The fear that fell upon the Indians, 547. Captain Church, the terror of the Indians, 548. Squaw Sachim of Pocasset - The death of Philip, 549. The alderman of Sahonet, the friend of the English, and the mur- derer of Philip - Philip's captain, Tespequin, 550. Pe quods and Narhagonsets, 551. Surprisal of the town of Medfield, 552. Massasoit, and the religion of his fore- fathers-Passaconaway's ad- dress and advice, 553. The death of the Indian chief, Alexander-Indian agree. ment, 554. Continued per- fidy, notwithstanding--Ad- mitted by one of his own fol- lowers, 555. The occasion of Philip's taking up arms, 556. Philip's escape from the swamp near Taunton, westward, 557. Treachery of Ninigret Burning of Springfield, 558, 559. Humma the,the Indian bird that ornamented Tippoo's throne,
de fer, 373. Nuremberg says he gave himself the name of Ignatius, quasi Ignem facio, 374. What truth in the ca- lumny against, 394. Illinois Village, 572. Images, 384.
Impiety Extraordinary of the old Spanish Poems, 240. Imposter Prophet, 122. Impropriations, godly design of purchasing in Laud's time, 132. Restored in Ireland by Strafford and Laud's inte- rest, 163.
INCA's, the immortal birds that afforded feathers for their crowns, 524. INCHIQUIN, LORD, entered into no terms with the Parlia- ment, till he saw there was no living in Ireland for any but Papists, 189. Incredulity and the Ridiculous, instance of, 452.
India, in their intercourse with, at first the English mere pirates, 390. Ancient no-
tions of, 425. Indian Agriculture in Ceylon, 419. Metempsychosis, 437. Mysticism, 521.
Indians, American, tradition of- Histories painted on trees - Notions relative to
the food they eat, 574. the joyful fields, 575. Pre- servation of their dead war- riors, 621. Hopes of, 655. Indifferent, when things are and when they are not so, 95.
Indigo, its introduction into Surinam, 578. Indulgence, 81.
Infallible Judge, set up by Pa- pists, Quakers, Enthusiasts,
&c. 66. Infantas, who, 277. Infidels, the wealth of, right- ful to the faithful, 444. Insurance, Travelling, in the days of Fynes Moryson, i. e. about 1600, 327. Interference, devil's dislike to, 102.
Inundations in India, how vil- lages and cattle protected under, 407. IRIA, SAINT, or, EREA, legend of, 380.
Ireland, extracts relative to, | 196, &c. Miserable estate of the Clergy and the Church, 198. Custom of having christenings and marriages in private houses, and the evil of it, ib. Want of good houses in, 199. Never to be trusted by England as long | as Popish, 200. Increase of trade and prosperity of, in 1678, 203. Why there are no venemous animals there, 357.
Irish disobedience, 80. Plot-
ting rebellion abroad, and inciting Spain and Rome to encourage and support it, 183, 188. The barbarism of the soldiers, 196. A people, says Wentworth, most in- tent upon their own ends, 197, 198. Acts passed for restraining the barbarous customs of, 199. Beggars in 1634, just as now, ib. Irish ignorance of respect, 200. Fickleness of their character, ascertained in the case of the young Earl of Desmond, 203. The origin of tenant, or sept, right, 205. Skilled in harpe and tymbre, 334. Slingers, 339. Mu- sical taste of, 349. Their ardour for the battle, 351. Irish insecurity, 359. Hap- less land of Ireland-Bardish strains, 361.
Iron, sold by the Spaniards to the Indians, and used against them, according to Bernardo de Vargas Machuca, 575. Bog iron of the Assawamp- set pond, 633. Iroquois Festival, 576. Ispahan, beauty of the bridges of, 487.
ISRAEL, MENASSES BEN, 252. Iry, Ground, the virtues of
Jackets, quilted cotton ones, used as a defence against the arrows of the Indians, 522.
JACKSON, JOHN, MR. a good
old Puritan, opposed to the treatment of Charles I., 151. Jagrenat, the Fakirs of, 515.
Jama, the, what? 511, 512. JAMES I., error of supporting the Calvinists at Dort, 194. Jansenists, taught that the saints were the only lawful proprietors of the world, 145. Japan, self-immolation in, ac- count of, 442.
Jaque, a greyhound's, what?
Jarraff, i. e. Giraffe or Came- leopard, that was set to kneel before a Christian, 429. Jashen stone, what? 479. Jara, tame fish of the island of, 660.
JAUREGUI, JUAN DE Y AGUI- LAR, 232.
Jay feathers, once fashionable in France for dresses, 577. JAYME, K. cruelty of, 291.
His skill in surgery, 318. His order that the last comers were to face danger, 319. JENKINS, JUDGE, excellent man-His writings ought to be collected, 194. Jenoune, the, who? Offence to,
JEROME, SAINT, translated the Bible into the Sclavonic tongue, 120.
JERONIMO CORTE REAL, 274. JERVASIUS SCROOP, MILES,
account of, 345.
Jerusalem, the sanctity of, 640. Jerusalem Conquistada, extract
from, 274, 282.
JESUITESSES, when they be- gan, i. e. about the year 1650, 30.
JESUITS and FRIARS, the ruin of Ireland, in Strafford's opi- nion, 182. Wealth of, in England, and danger from, 187. Charles I. sees the dan- ger of, and complains of to Rome, 188. Negotiations with Cromwell, 203. Mat- ters relative to, 372-377. Regula Societatis, ib. Mis- cellaneous incident relative to, 391. Imago primi sæculi Societatis Jesu, ib. Their success in Paraguay attri buted to their political sys-
tem connected with the faith they preached, ib. Perse- cuted, 395. Not confined to the Romish faith, 638. JOAM III., his character, 279.
Kadrouva Vinneta and Diti, 488.
Kalb, le Nahr, ou le fleuve du Chien, 482.
Kali, the worship of, 411. Kalmuck dread of fire-arms, 634.
Kashmire, the rose of, 487. KELLISON, MATTHEW, on the doctrine of angels, 5. KEMPIS, THOMAS A, extraor- dinary popularity of his works, 124. KENNET'S Parochial Antiqui- ties, quoted, 133, &c. 149. Kerkook and Moussul, belief of the wild inhabitants be- tween, 423. KESWICK, or Crosthwaite, or- ders appertaining to the church of, 55.
Khatries, their dress, &c. 512. Kilvanofa, poverty of the see of, 203.
not have too many horses, 57. The Back-house bowl, 85. Absolution of a mule at Paul's Cross, 97. Warrior's girdle Poor suitors - Ac- count of his father, 296. Looks to Edward VI.'s ex- ample, when he should come of age-Corruption in high places-Story of the shilling
Unmercifulness and lack of charity in London-Chris- tian apparel, or wedding gar- ment- Unpreaching pre- lates the cause that the blood of Hales so long deceived the people, 297. His idea of the nearness of the world's end -Love of pudding-Shovel- ling of feet and walking up and down at sermon time, 298. Robin Hood's Day English amusements Taught by his father to draw the bow-Bribery and un- just judgment, 299. Deceit- ful practices Our Lady likened to a saffron bag, 300. Aldermen of London turned colliers, or, remarks upon city monopoly, 619. LAUD, ARCHBISHOP, malig
nantly spoken of by Arch- bishop Abbot, as quoted by Rushworth, 130. His kind letter in behalf of the Catho- lic Priests in the Clink, ib. His anxiety for the Church of England, &c. 131. De- nounced by Sir Harbottle Grimston as the fons et origo mali, 132. No Bishop, no King, 134. His patience in confinement, ib. His anxiety for the Irish Church, ib. Wishes English taught in Irish schools to soften the malignity and stubbornness of the nation, 135. Censured too hastily by Gifford, 138. Letters to Strafford, 184. His Life and Troubles, ex- tracts from, 186, 187. His Arminianism the cause of his unpopularity, 195. Writes to Strafford on the tamper- ing with titles in Ireland,201. Law, called by Serjeant May. nard ars bablativa, 147. LAWRENCE, SAINT, account of, 381.
LINGUET, Histoire des Jesuites, 145, 372-374. LINSCHOTEN, his account of discipline in Portugueze ships, 269. Lion-keepers, the Sultan's, 645. Ali, the lion of God, the pa- tron of the lion-keepers, 647. LISTER, WILLIAM, remarkable
anecdote of, 151. Literature, humanizing power of, 123. Bastard, 324. LITTLETON, Coke's comment upon, thought Lord Keeper Guildford (?) ought not to be read by students, 206. Liturgy, Public, the clergy's duty concerning, 64. The value of, our enemies being judges, 107. Variations in the Scotch, made out of a desire to comply with those exceptions which were most known against it, 188. LIVINGSTON, JOHN, that great man of God, a saying of,
LIVRA DA NOA, awful signs in
the heavens, A. D. 1199, 278. Lizards, the gray lizard of Egypt, why sacred among the Turks and Egyptians, 490. The swift lizard, 568. The poison of the Lacerta Gecko, 588. Slow lizard,
Locks untied of a bride, 337. Locust-Bird, about the size of a starling, 459. Locusts, in Turkey, destroyed by the storks, 426. Flight of, 432. Larvæ of, in Italy,
destroyed by pigs, 655. Loire, the hills near the river, excavated into cellars, wine- vaults, &c. 631. London, want of lighting in, 1685, 643. Early lighting of, 667.
LOPE DE VEGA, 213. "Loqui variis linguis nolite prohibere," 108.
Lords, House of, sectarian abuse of, 153.
Loss, or Goupe of Norway, ac- count of, 580.
Loth, King, and his children,
Louse, according to Dobriz- hoffer, eaten by the Indian women, 527.
Low entrances, a defensive pre- caution of all uncivilized na- tions, 620.
LUCAS, PAUL, Travels of, form
of Turkish mosques, 506. Account of the papyrus, 508. Turkish call to prayers, ib. Le Baume Blanc, what? 509. Le talisman, ib. Mecca and Medina, 510. LUCENA, quoted, 279. Says that the proper name for the Jesuits is not Apostles, but the Religious of the Com- pany of Jesus, 391. LUIS D'AZEVEDO, DE, a morte
do Ifante Dom Pedro, 238. LUIZ, FR. DE Souza, 230. Lukewarmness, how to avoid the imputation of, 63. Lusit nia, derivation of, 277. Luxury, increase of, 301. Lying witness, taken for grant- ed in Mysoor, 428. LYNDSAY, SIR DAVID, extracts from, 309, &c. Lordly ap parel of prelates - Unspiri-
tual priests-Parson, &c. ib. Canons, powder-Stone balls -Scotch revels and games, 310.
M, the letter of, 523. MACEDO, FR. FRANCISCO De SANTO AGOSTINHO, account of, 255. Madagascar, proposition that the disrespected bishops of Charles I.'s day should go and plant a colony there, 144. Customs of, 336. MADAN, woman of Bedlam's Epigram on his Thelyph- thora, 637.
Magnetic compasses, 339. Magnetic influence, 646. MAIOMET, debate on his edu-
cation, 450. The Third, the tomb of, 513.
Mahmoudker, the river of, 518. Malabar, custom of succession in, as among the Nalchez, 409.
Malacca fruit, 409. Maldive notions relative to the world, 419. Sacrifice to the King of the Winds, 421. Malocas, or slave expeditions, 666.
Malt tax, advised by Strafford
in Ireland to check drunken- ness, 179.
Malta, Evlia Effendi's impre- cation on the infidels of, 443. Manchinelle Apple, poisonous effects of, 587. MANDELSLO's account of the banama, 498. Cocoa-nut, ib. Cocoa wine, 501. Bettele tree, ib. The areca tree, 501. Mangas tree, 502. Mandive juice, made to resem. ble soy, 610.
Man, Isle of, extraordinary
statute of, relative to women overlaying their children,
458. Manners English, in 1659, 663. Manoa, religion of Indians of,
MARTIN, DR. and DR. Lc. THER, 2. Martins, Strafford's desire to encourage in Ireland, one of these being as much worth as a good wether, 202. MARTYR, PETER, extraordi- nary instance of natural elo- quence, or, Columbus and the old man of Cuba, 537. Massachussett wigwams
Couches or mattresses, 655. MASSEY, GENERAL, and COLO- NEL-GENERAL POINTZ, de- claration of, and why they departed from the city and the kingdom, 152. Masses, purchase of, 15. MASSINGER, quoted, 322, 334- 336, 337, 358.
Matamores at Valencia, what? 277.
MATHER, COTTON, and the ve- nerable Eliot, 120. Matolas, Vanderkemp's ac- count of the use to which they turn their hair, 518. Matrasses, ships protected by,
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