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sirable, a survey of the Temple of Solomon, being the first acknowledged Christian that had been received within its holy walls since it has been appropriated to the religion of Mahomet. The favour was not thrown away upon him; for he brings to the holy land a memory fraught with scriptural allusions, and a mind apparently imbued with religious impressions. A visit to Jerusalem, however, under existing circumstances, is more calculated to chill devotion than to excite it. The disgusting apathy of those who shew the spots rendered sacred by the most solemn associations, the sordid avarice of the monks, the bickerings between Christians of different denominations, and the doubtful lives of many of them, all shew that it is not merely living among affecting objects that will inspire a proper veneration for them. A pitched battle between the Greek and the Roman Christians for precedence, on the celebration of the finding of the cross, was one of the spectacles that were presented to Dr. Richardson's contemplation, besides sundry pretended miracles, and solemn mummeries, that appeared still more disgusting and reprehensible, as acted in a place where all ought to be sincerity, simplicity, and truth. The accounts of Tiberias and Damascus are very interesting; and altogether these volumes will be found productive of some valuable information, and a considerable portion of amusement; though the Doctor's remarks upon modern manners among the inhabitants of the countries he has visited are not so acute as his criticisms on their antiquities, and his reflections on virtue and morality come rather too much in the form of truisms to deserve the space he has assigned them in his pages.

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LONDON.

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IX. On the Game of Chess in Europe during the Thirteenth Century. 125

X. Peter Pindarics :-The Fat Actor and the Rustic: The Bank Clerk

and the Stable-keepers

XI. Letters on a Tour through Switzerland, No. IV. .

XII. Drinking Song, from the French. By Maitre Adam

XIII. Dialogues of the Dead, No. I.

XIV. Letters on England. By M. De St. Foix. Letter XIII.
XV. Epigram, from the Italian of Pananti

XVI. Republic of Plato.

XVII. On Asses

XVIII. Sonnet. The Vision

XIX. The Poetry of Life

XX. Sonnet, from Zanotti. Jerusalem destroyed by Titus
XXI. The Liar. .

XXII. Sonnet, from Petrarch

XXIII. The London 'Prentices

XXIV. Napoleon in Exile. By Barry E. O'Meara, Esq.
XXV. Bridal Customs of the Irish

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REMOVAL.

OLIVER EVERETT,

HAS removed from No. 6, Court-street, to the Rooms over Messrs. Bartlett & Brewer, No. 13, Cornhill, sign of the Good Samaritan, where he has for sale, an ASSORTMENT OF BOOKS AND STATIONARY.

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