T. Tacitus, parallel between, and Livy, vol. iv. 177. vol. vii. 119. Tartar Conquerors, fome account of, in the thirteenth century, Taylor's Diflertation, vol. iii. 236. vol. vi. 207. Telemachus, character of, vol. iv. 210. Compared with Sethos. Terraon, his Sethos characterized, vol. iii. 126. Compared Tertullian, quotation from, vol. v. 27. and the name of the Thebean Legion, differtation on the martyrdom of, vol. iii. Thomas, his Eloge on the Duke of Sully, vol. iii. 281. vol. vi. 252. Tiberius, his age the moft vicious of antiquity, vol. iv. 176. Tillemont, his Hiftoire des Empereurs, vol. iii. 106. His com- Timur, or Tamerlane, account of, vol. iv. 110. 112. Tranquebar, miffions to, vol. iii. 248. vol. vi. 219. Trembley (Mr.), his Researches on the Polypus, vol. iii, 251. Turks, their conquefts in the fourteenth century, vol. iv. 109 Turretin Alphonfo, his Eloge by Vernet, vol. iii. 159, vol. vi. ས་ Vaillant, his book on Medals, vol. iii. 3oo. vol. vi. 272. Vertot's Sentiments on the Social War, combated, vol. iii. 215 vol. vi. 186. Vefuvius, Hiftory of, by the Academy of Naples, vol. iii. 235. vol. vi, 206. Viani's account of Mezzabarba's voyage to China, vol. iii, 194. vol. vi. 163. Virgil, his Eneid examined by Dr. Hurd, vol. iii. 32. His story of Nifus and Euryalus compared with the night-adventure in the Iliad, 61. The defcription of the fhield compared with that in the Iliad, 71. His tomb, different opinions concerning, vol. iii. 242. vol. vi. 213. His Georgics tranflated by Martyn, vol. iii. 270. vol. vi. 241. His Works edited by Heinfius and Burman, vol. iii. 271. vol. vi. 243. His Catalogue praised, vol. iv. 2. vol. vii. 2. His ftory of Mezentius examined, vol. iv. 3. vol. vii. 3. His defcription. of the Temple of Janus, vol, iv. 67. vol. vii. 70. The neceffity of being acquainted with the ftate of Rome, its infancy, and its fplendor, to understand his beauties, vol. iv. 151. vol. vii. 91. His address in the conduct of the Æneid, vol. iv. 152. vol. vii. 92. His Georgics, vol. iv. 153. vol. vii. 92. The purpofe for which they were written, ibid. His anachronisms compenfated by his beauties, vol. iv. 165. vol. vii. 106. The inftance of Mezentius flain by Afcanius, ibid. The Epifode of Dido examined and juftified, vol. iv. 166. vol. vii. 107. The interpretation of the 6th Eneid by Bishop Warburton, examined and cenfured, vol. iv. 199. An account of that interpretation, 200. The nature and plan of the Eneid confidered, 204. The character of Æneas examined, 295. His difcourfe with Anchises, in the infernal regions, 214. His account of Eneas's defcent, 219. The epifode of the infernal fhades borrowed from Homer, 223. Its beauties pointed out, ibid. The reafons why Virgil has not recorded, in his 6th Æneid, the fecret of the Eleufinian Myfteries, 224. His Life, prefixed to Holdfworth's Remarks, mentioned with praife, vol. vii. 209. note 67. To prove that he did not reveal the fecret of the myfteries, a paffage from an ode of Horace is quoted, vol. iv. 228. The Ivory Gate, in the 6th Eneid, attempted to be explained, 237. Vivonnes Duke of), his obfervation to Lewis the XIVth, vol. iii. 1. vol. vi. 73. Voltaire, his Age of Lewis XIV. characterized, vol. iii. 88. His poem, entitled, What most pleases Woman, examined, vol. iii. 280. vol. vi. 252. His Treatife on Toleration confidered, vol. iii. 289. vol. vi. 261. Joffius (Ifaac), his Differtation on the Magnitude of Rome, vol. iii. 275. vol. vi. 145. His character, vol. iii. 181. vol. vi. 150. W. Warburton (Bishop), his interpretation of Virgil's fixth Æneid Wetstein's edition of the New Teftament, vol. iii. 288. 293, |