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sending it you, I shall not load you with a troublesome and useless present. But since by desiring it you seem to promise me your acceptance, I shall as soon as it is re-printed take the liberty to thrust it into your study. I am,

SIR,

Your most humble and faithful servant,

JOHN LOCKE.

INDEX

TO THE

NINTH VOLUME.

A.

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C.

CAPEL (lord), his high esteem
of Mr. Locke, and his works,
369
Ceremony, an excess of it contrary
to good breeding, 137, 138
Certainty, an Irish bishop's letter
against Mr. Locke's notion of it,
439
Children, how a healthful consti-
tution should be preserved in
them,
7
should be enured to cold
7-9
should be much in the
12
should not have their
13
should eat but little flesh,
14

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and wet,
open air,
clothes strait,

Blackmore (sir Richard). Vid.

Locke, Molyneux.

Bread, children should be accus-
tomed to eat it,

15-17

Breeding, wherein its goodness
consists, and how to attain it,

133

Burridge undertakes to translate
Mr. Locke's essay into Latin,
367, 368

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Liberality, how children should be Locke relates to him the bad state

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the great advantage of pro-

moting it,
448
Locke (Mr. John), his letters to se-
veral of his friends, 289, &c.
writes to Mr. Molyneux about
the earthquake on September 8,
1692,
295
concerning some mistakes in
his remarks on the essay, 302

corrects some passages in his
essay, about the possibility of
matter's thinking, 303. finds it
difficult to reconcile God's om-
niscience and man's liberty, 305,
and yet is sure of both, ibid.
— his explication of genus and
species,
ibid.
his low opinion of the com-
mon logic,
306
informs Mr. Molyneux of his
: new account of freedom, 317,

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325

&c.
asserts the necessity of child-
ren's diversion, 323, 324. de-
sires Mr. Molyneux to use his
son hardily,
gives him a short account of
his chapter on what determines
the will,
325, &c.
explains his judgment of pu-
nishing a man for a fault con-
mitted when drunk, 329. ap-
proves Mr. Molyneux's distinc-
tion between a drunken and a
frantic man,
336

desires Mr. Molyneux to su-
pervise a Latin translation of his
essay, 356. signifies his thoughts
of adding something in it, about
enthusiasm,
ibid.
commends the often reading
of Tully, for gaining a good
Latin style, 359, 360. instances
a gentlewoman, who taught her
child Latin, without knowing it
herself when she began,

360

of our money,

367,376
sends him a paper concerning
the recoining it,

367

lord Capel's high esteem of
him and his writings,

369

prefers retirement for study,
before an honourable place of
10001. per annum,
376
recommends the gospel, as a
sufficient treatise of morality,
377

reflects on Mr. Synge's answer
to Mr. Molyneux's problem, 378

his contempt of the present
world, 383. his advice about
translating his essay into Latin,
ibid.

- his account of Dr. Sherlock's
temper, the Dean of St. Paul's,
396, 401
his judgment of Mr. Whis-
ton's theory of the earth, 397
his high esteem of Mr. Le
Clerc,
398

-

his ingenious remark on Mr.
Norris's representing the lady
Masham blind,

400

reflections in French on his
409

essay,
his mean opinion of Mr. To-
415

land,

-what benefit he expected from
the bishop of Worcester's writ-
ing against him, 417. his opinion
of Mr. Leibnitz, who made the
French reflections on his essay,
ibid.

his shyness of Mr. Toland,
and the reasons of it,

425

his good opinion of sir Richard
Blackmore,
426, 432
an Irish bishop's letter against
his notion of certainty, 439
a distinct account of his dif-
ficulty of breathing,

445, 446
represents the unintelligible-
ness of his adversary's writings,
447

his grief for the death of his
dear friend Mr. Molyneux, 458,

468

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