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INDEX

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SOME OF THE PRINCIPAL WORDS.

Ability, (dreaded by a certain class of persons,) part ii. ch. iii. § 2
Accessible arguments, (to the unlearned,) p. i. ch. iii. § 8.

Action, p. iv. ch. iv. § 6.

Adversaries, (testimony of,) p. i. ch. ii. § 4.

Advice to a Reviewer, p. i. ch. iii. § 7.

Advocate, (office of,) p. i. ch. i. § 1.

(endeavor of, to convince us that he thinks what he says,)
p. ii. ch. iii. § 3.

-, (habits formed by the occupation,) p. ii. ch. iii. § 5
Allegory, p. i. ch. ii. § 3.

Analogy, p. i. ch. ii. § 7.

Antiquarians, (estimate of their authority,) p. ii. ch. iii. § 5
Antithesis, p. iii. ch. ii. § 14.

Approach, (argument by,) p. i. ch. ii. § 6.

A priori, (argument,) p. i. ch. ii. § 2.

Argument, (distinguished from proposition,) p. i. ch. i. § 3.
-, (satisfactory and compulsory,) p. i. ch. iii. § 1.

Aristotle, (his definition of Rhetoric,) Introd. § 4.

-, (his distinction between real and invented examples,) p. i
ch. ii. § 8.

Arrangement, (of arguments,) p. i. ch. iii. § 4.

-, (of words,) p. iii. ch. i. § 3. and ch. ii. § 11.

Arrogance, (what,) p. i. ch. iii. § 2.

Articles, (how to be interpreted when drawn up by an Assembly,) p. i.

ch. iii. § 2.

Assembly, (documents proceeding from, how to be interpreted,) p. i.

ch. iii. § 2.

539

Bashfulness, (in public speaking,) p. iv. ch. iii. § 7, 8.
Belief, (coincident with disbelief,) p. i. ch. ii. § 5.
Benson, (extract from,) Appendix [M].

Burden of proof, p. i. ch. iii. § 2.

Burke, (extract from,) p. iii. ch. ii. § 8.

Butler, Bp., (his style,) p. iii. ch. iii. § 2.

Campbell, Dr., (extracts from,) Appendix [D] and [H].
Catlin, (his account of the Mandan Indians,) Appendix [DDD].
Cause, (argument from,) p. i. ch. ii. § 2.

Chances, (calculation of,) p. i. ch. ii. § 4, 5.

Character, (of Speaker,) p. ii. ch. i. § 3. and ch. iii. § 1.

-, (of persons to be addressed,) p. ii. ch. iii. § 1.

Cicero, (omits to state when, and why he begins with his proofs,) p. i.

ch. iii. § 5.

Climax, (use of,) p. ii. ch. ii. § 4.

Common Sense, p. i. ch. ii. § 6.

-, (when apt to be laid aside,) p. iii. ch. ii. § 6.

Comparison, (use of, in exciting any feeling,) p. ii. ch. ii. § 4.
or Simile, p. iii. ch. ii. § 3.

Composition, (fallacy of,) p. i. ch. ii. § 4.

Conciseness, p. iii. ch. ii. § 7.

Conclusion, (when to come first,) p. i. ch. iii. § 5.

Conscious, (manner,) p. iv. ch. iv. § 2. p. 248, note.

Consistency, (mistakes respecting,) p. ii. ch. iii. § 5.

Conviction, (distinguished from Persuasion,) p. ii. ch. i. § 1.
Copleston, Bp., (on Analogy,) Appendix [E.].

-, (Letter of Lord Dudley to,) p. i. ch. iii. § 2.

-, (his share in reviving the study of Logic,) p. i. ch. iii. § 2.
Council, (joint compositions of, how to be interpreted,) p. i. ch. iii. § 2.
Credulity, (coincident with Incredulity,) p. i. ch. ii. § 5.

Crowded, (style,) p. iii. ch. ii. § 9.

Debating Societies, (advantages and disadvantages of,) Introd. § 6.
Deference, p. i. ch. iii. § 2.

Delivery, p. iv. ch. iv. § 1.

Dickenson, Bp., ("Remains" of,) p. i. ch. iii. § 7.

Direct (Argument), p. i. ch. ii. § 1. and ch. iii. § 6.
Diversion of Feelings, p. ii. ch. ii. § 6.

Dividing (a question), p. i. ch. iii. § 4.

Doubt, (opposite to what,) p. i. ch. ii. § 5.

Dudley, Lord, (his statement of a presumption against logical studies,)
p. i. ch. iii. § 2.

Edinburgh Review, (extracts from,) Introd. § 6, and Appendix [F].

Effect, (Argument from,) p. i. ch. ii. § 3.

Elegance, (of style,) p. iii. ch. iii. § 1, 2.

Eloquence, (reputation for, its consequences,) p. ii. ch. iii. § 2.

Emphasis, p. iv. ch. ii. § 2.

Energy, (of style,) p. iii. ch. ii. § 1, &c.

Envy, (hard to be counteracted,) p. ii. ch. iii. § 1.

Epithets, p. iii. ch. ii. § 4.

Example, p. i. ch. ii. § 6.

(corresponding to a geometrical) diagram, p. i. ch. ii. § 7.

Exercises, Introd. § 5.

Expediency, (true character of,) p. ii. ch. i. § 2. and Appendix [GG]
Experience, (Argument from,) p. i. ch. ii. § 6.

-, (Authority derived from,) p. ii. ch. iii. § 5.

Extempore speaking, (character of,) p. iv. ch. i. § 3.

prayers, (apt to be delivered not as prayers,) p. iv. ch. ii.

§ 3. note.

Fable, p. i. ch. ii. § 8.

Fact, (matters of,) p. i. ch. ii. § 4. and ch. iii. § 3.
Fallacies, p. i. ch. iii. § 7.

Fathers, (appeal to their testimony, sometimes gives an advantage, in
.the eyes of the multitude, to the worse cause,) p. i. ch. iii. § 8.
Feelings, (apt to fall short of what the occasion calls for,) p. ii. ch. i. § 2.
Fine delivery, p. iv. ch. iii. § 4.

Free-trade, (questions relating to,) p. i. ch. ii. § 7.

Gender, p. iii. ch. ii. § 2.

General terms, p. iii. ch. ii. § 1.

Good-will, (essential to the Speaker's character,) p. ii. ch. iii. § 3.

Hampden, (Bampton Lecture,) p. iii. ch. ii. § 6.
Hinds, Dr., (extracts from,) Appendix [D].
Historic Doubts, (referred to,) p. i. ch. iii. § 7.

Illustration, p. i. ch. ii. § 7. and ch. iii. § 3.
Imagination, p. ii. ch. ii. § 2.

Imitation, p. iii. ch. ii. § 5.

Inconsistency, p. ii. ch. iii. § 5.

Indirect, (Argument,) p. i. ch. ii. § 1. and ch. iii. § 7.

Induction, p. i. ch. ii. § 6.

Ingenuity, (liability to be misled by one's own,) p. ii. ch. i. § 2.

Instruction, (distinguished from Conviction strictly so called,) p. i. ch. i
§ 1.

Integrity, (of the speaker's character,) p. ii. ch. iii. § 3.

Intellect, (dreaded by some persons,) p. ii. ch. iii. § 2.

Interrogation, p. iii. ch. ii. § 15.

Ironical form, p. i. ch. iii. § 7.

Johnson, Dr., (style of,) p. iii. ch. ii. § 8.

Language, (a necessary instrument of Reasoning,) Introd. § 4.

Loose sentences, p. iii, ch. ii. § 12.

Ludicrous, (a refuted sophism often becomes so,) p. i. ch. iii. § 7.

Mandan-Indians, (rashly assume to have raised themselves from the
savage state,) Appendix [DDD].

Manifesto, (see Council.)

Mathematics, (contempt formerly bestowed on the study,) Introd. § 4
Metaphor, p. iii. ch. ii. § 3.

Metonymy, p. iii. ch. ii. § 3.

Milman, (extract from,) Appendix [I].

Milton, (his opinion of exercises in composition,) Introd. § 5.

Natural delivery, p. iv. ch. ii. iii. &c.

Natural representations liable to be thought unnatural, p. i. ch. ïi.

§ 2r.

Negative probabilities, p. i. ch. ii. § 4.

Nominalism, Introd. § 4.

Number of words, (energy dependent on,) p. iii. ch. ii. § 7.

Oaths, (erroneous estimate of the value of,) Appendix [DDD].
Objections, p. i. ch. iii. § 7.

Omissions, (force of,) p. i. ch. ii. § 4.

Opinion, (see Fact.)

Oratory, (spurious,) p. iii. ch. i. § 4, 5, 6.

Paley, (Horæ Paulinæ,) p. i. ch. ii. § 4. and p. i. ch. iii. § 1.

Parable, p. i. ch. ii. § 7.

Paradox, p. i. ch. iii. § 2.

Parity of reasoning, p. i. ch. ii. § 6.

Party-spirit, p. ii. ch. iii. § 3.

Passions, p. ii. ch. i. § 3.

Pepys, Bp., (on negative proofs,) p. i. ch. ii. § 4.

Periods, p. iii. ch. ii. § 12.

Personification, p. iii. ch. ii. § 3.

Perspicuity, p. iii. ch. i. § 2, &c.

Persuasion, (analysis of,) p. ii. ch. i. § 1.

Plain, (ambiguity of the word,) p. iii. ch. i. § 3.

Plausible, p. i. ch. ii. § 2.

Plays, (acting of, at schools,) p. iv. ch. iv. § 2.

Pleader, (see Advocate.)

Poetry, (characteristic of,) p. iii. ch. iii. § 3.

Political Economy, (extract from Lectures on,) Appendix [C] and

[DDD].

Practice, (in composition,) Introd. § 5.

Presumptions, p. i. ch. iii. § 2.

Professions, (Lecture on,) appended to p. ii.

Prolixity, p. iii. ch. i. § 2. and ch. ii. § 7.

Proper terms, p. iii. ch. ii. § 1.

Propositions, (to find,) p. i. ch. i. § 3.

Quarterly Review, (extract from,) Appendix [B].

Ranting, (mistakes respecting it,) p. iv. ch. iii. § 3

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