THE Eclectic Review, MDCCCXV. JANUARY—JUNE. NEW SERIES. VOL. III. Φιλοσοφίαν δε ου την Στωικην λεγω, ουδε την Πλατωνικην, η την Επικούρειον τε CLEM. ALEX. Strom. Lib. 1. LONDON: PUBLISHED BY JOSIAH CONDER, 18, ST. PAUL'S CHURCH-YARD. SOLD ALSO BY DEIGHTON AND SONS, CAMBRIDGE; AND OLIPHANT, WAUGH, AND INNES, EDINBURGH. Page Abernethy's Introductory Lecture for the year 1815, exhibiting some A Faithful Narrative of the Re-passing of the Beresina by the French Alison's Sermons, chiefly on particular Occasions Alpine Sketches, comprised in a short Tour through parts of Holland, 586 628 550 Butler's Essay on the Life of Michel de L'Hôpital, Chancellor of France Gilfillan's Essay on the Sanctification of the Lord's Day Gregoire, M. de la Traite et de l'Esclavage des Noirs et des Blancs Hopkinson's Religious and Moral Reflections Hull's Doctrine of the Atonement, an essential Part of the Christian Kohlmeister and Kmoch's Journal of a Voyage from Okkak on the Coast of Labrador, to Ungava Bay 1, 156 Labaume's circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Russia 628 Leftley's Sonnets, Odes, and other Poems, with Ballads and Sketches, &c. By William Linley, Esq. 623 Letters from a Lady to her Sister, during a Tour to Paris in the months of April and May, 1814 73 Memorial on Behalf of the Native Irish Fage Penn's Prophecy of Ezekiel concerning Gogue, the last Servant of the Church; his Invasion of Ros, his Discomfiture and final Fall Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, for the year Ramond's Travels in the Pyrenees, translated from the French 211 Salt's Voyage to Abyssinia, and Travels into the Interior of that Coun- Shepherd's Paris in Eighteen Hundred and Two and Eighteen Hundred and Fourteen 72 Somerville's Remarks on an Article in the Edinburgh Review, in which the Doctrine of Hume on Miracles is maintained 611 Wathen's Journal of a Voyage in 1811 and 1812 to Madras and China, Whitaker's Sermon, preached in the Parish Church at Lancaster, at Wilson's (Susannah) Familiar Poems, Moral and Religious 447 336 65 501 13 THE ECLECTIC REVIEW, FOR JANUARY, 1815. Art. I. Journal of a Voyage from Okkak on the Coast of Labrador to Ungava Bay, westward of Cape Chudleigh; undertaken to explore the Coast, and visit the Esquimaux in that unknown Region, By Benjamin Kohlmeister and George Kmoch, Missionaries of the Church of the Unitas Fratrum, or United Brethren. Le Fevre, 2, Chapel place. Seeley. 1814. THE natural enmity of the human heart to the things of God, is a principle, which, though it find no place in the systems of our intellectual philosophers, has as wide an operation as any which they have put down in their list of categories. How is it then that Moravians, who, of all classes of Christians, have evinced the most earnest and persevering devotedness to these things, have of late become, with men of taste, the objects of tender admiration? That they should be loved and admired by the decided Christian, is not to be wondered at: but that they should be idols of a fashionable admiration, that they should be sought after and visited by secular men; that travellers of all kinds should give way to the ecstacy of sentiment, as they pass through their villages, and take a survey of their establishments and their doings; that the very sound of Moravian music, and the very sight of a Moravian burial-place, should so fill the hearts of these men with images of delight and peacefulness, as to inspire them with something like the kindlings of piety;all this is surely something new and strange, and might dispose the unthinking to suspect the truth of these unquestionable positions, that "the carnal mind is enmity against God," and that "the natural man receiveth not the things of the spirit of VOL. III. N. S. B 2 |