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lasting glory, as the great objects of attainment;-infusing into him a portion of that divine spirit, which produced in antient Greece the highest perfection of art,-- and habituated the aspiring genius, to receive wealth as a meaner and inferior tribute, and to desire praise, and praise alone.

A.

ACADEMY Royal, i. 23. List of students who have obtained the
gold medal from the commencement of its establishment,
ib. S15, 341.

Achilles, Colossal Statue of, i. 65.

Allen, Mr. his Lectures at the Royal Institution, i. 27.

Artist, a publication so called, ii. 362. Advantages of the
same, and its proper objects, ib. 383-4.

Artists, importance of encouraging living ones, i. 16, 17. Emi-
nent antient ones, alphabetically arranged and treated of in
a series of five essays. See 'Essays'.

Arts and Sciences, their influence on the human mind, i. 3.
Causes that affected the progress of them among the ancients,
Essay on, i. 33. Proposed Establishment for the Fine Arts,
i. 140.

Askew, Dr. Anthony, Account of his Library, 11. 275. His Love
of Books, ii. 285. His MSS. ib. 286.

B.

Banks, the late Sculptor; some account of his life and works,
i. 70, 71, 72.

Beau, the Modern, divided into ten classes, i. 225 to 239.

Beggar's Opera, bad tendency of, ii. 79.

Belle, the Modern, divided into eight classes, i. 289, S02.
BIBLIOGRAPHIANA. Account of Booksales, with Anecdotes of
curious Books, and Collectors of them, i. 79, 114, 146, 176,
206, 247, 272, 303, 329, 364. ii. 44, 82, 115, 141, 170,
268, 305, 347.

Black Letter, ii. 83. Praise of, ii. 349-50.

Books, first editions, large paper, and illustrated copies, i. 116.
117, 118. Book-binding, i. 120. Printed on vellum, i. 120,
274. Praise of books in general, ii. 348-9. Sometimes chain-
ed, ii. 348. (Note.) Application to, ii. 351. Booksales
by Messrs. Leigh & Sotheby, King & Lochee, and Stewart.
ii. 355-6, 7.

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Brand, Rev. John, late Secretary of the Society of Antiquaries,
Account of his books, ii. 83. Prices which some of them

brought at the sale, ii. 270, 306.

Brydges, Mr. John, Account of the Sale of his Library, i. 178.
Biographical Notice of, i. 183.

Britain, State of the Arts in, i. 39.

Bryant, William, Account of the Sale of his Books, ii. 83.

C.

Caxton, various editions of, ii. 314, 316. his Knight of the
Toure,' ii. 358.

Cervantes, his Don Quixote alluded to, i. 5, 6.

Collins, Antony, Esq. the Freethinker, some account of his li-
brary, ii. 45.

Comedy, origin of the term, i. 351 (in note).

Crotch, Dr. his Lectures' On Music,' delivered at the Royal In-
stitution, i. 24, 60.

Crowe, Rev. Mr. Analyses of his Lectures 'On Poetry,' deliver-
at the Royal Institution, i. 27, 283, 285, 311, to 314, 375,
377. ii. 25, 54, 93, 123.

Cumberland, Mr. R. Tendency of his Plays, i. 361.

D.

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Davy, Mr. Analyses of his Lectures On Vegetable Chemistry,
and the Chemical Phenomena of Nature,' delivered at the
Royal Institution, i. 23, 48, 87, 154, 185, 218, 255, 314, 379,
ii. 27, 55, 92, 150, 177. ́.

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De Bury, Richard, some Account of, i. 185.

Dibdin, Rev. Mr. Analyses of his Lectures On the History of
English Literature,' delivered at the Royal Institution, i: 24,
57, 88, 126, 155, 157.

t

Director, The, Explanation of the Title, i. 7, 172. (note.)

Dormer, Sir Clement Cottrell, some Account of his Library, ii.

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Drama, Remarks on, i. 349.ii. 65, 225.

Dramatic Poetry, Analyses of Mr. Crowe's Lectures thereon,
i. 283, 285.

E.

ESSAYS CONTAINED IN THE DIRECTOR.

1. Introductory, 3.

VOL. I.

2. Causes of the Progress of Antient Art, 33.

3. Banks's Statue of Achilles, 65.

4. Connexion between Genius and Patronage, 97.

5. The same, 129.

6. Eminent Antient Artists, 161. On the Structure of our
Theatres, 171.

7. The Life of Proctor, the Sculptor, 193.

8. Sketches of Modern Characters, 225. On the Structure of
our Theatres, 240.

9. On the Art of Good Living, 257.

10. Further Sketches of Modern Characters, 289.

11. On the Gaelic Poems of Ireland, 321,

12. On the Drama, 349,

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19 Parallels between Art and Science, 193. Utility of Re
mains of Antiquity, 198. On neglected English Literature,'

206.

20 On the Drama, 225. On neglected English Literature, 243.
21 Eminent Antient Artists, 257.

22 The Mirror of Truth, 289.

23 The Alarmist, 321. On the Structure of our Theatres, 329,
24 Discovery of the Authors of the foregoing Essays, by their
different Styles, 367.

F.

Fashionable Friends, remarks on this play, ii. 75.

Fletewode, William, Esq. Sale of his Library, ii. 269.

Fly-flap, a Postscript, in reply to a pamphlet so called, i, 52.
Letter to the Director upon the same, i. 110. Author of the
pamphlet described, ii, 380.

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