Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 19.djvu/364

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INDEX.
Recipe, or nostrum, for procuring an universal system, in a small volume, of all things to be known, believed, imagined, or practised in life, ii. 130.
Reckoning. That of a Dutch landlord humorously censured, ix. 97.
Recorder (of the city of Dublin). His requisite qualifications, ix. 409.
Reformation. Transubstantiation, and communion in one kind, principal occasions of it, ii. 125. Allegorical account of it, 136. Owed nothing to the good intentions of Henry VIII, iv. 401. 402. The popish bishops at that time, apprehensive of ejectments, let long leases, v. 270. Received in the most regular way in England, 339. Presbyterian reformation founded upon rebellion, 340.
Regulus. An instance of his high sense of honour, xvi. 330.
Rehearsal. Runs to the opposite extreme of the Review and Observator, iii. 18.
Relations. Quarrels among them harder to reconcile than any other, xvii. 198.
Religion. Project for the Advancement of, ii. 399. Thoughts on, x. 166. The advantage of it, at least to the vulgar, ii. 392. The best means for advancing publick and private happiness, 401. A short view of the general depravity consequent to a disregard of it, 402. An office resembling that of the censors at Rome would be of use among us to promote it, 407. Why all projects for the advancement of it have proved ineffectual, 419. Maxims relating to it, x. 166. Seems to have grown an infant with age, v. 454. Those who are against it must needs be fools, 464. The mysteries of the christian religion should not be explained in sermons, v. 104. Disbelief of it taken up as an expedient to keep in countenance the corruption of our morals, 108. National religion called the religion of the magistrate, iii. 181. The state of it in the American plantations, 234. Opinions in it maintained with the greatest obstinacy, v. 339. No solid foundation for virtue, but on a conscience guided by religion, x. 46. 49. 51. 52. Among whom the little of it there is has been observed chiefly to reside, 60. To what the decay of it is owing, 130. Like other things, is soonest put out of countenance by ridicule, 133. True religion, like learning and civility, has always been in the world, but very often shifted scenes, xi. 50. Religious processions have some good effects, 7. The christian religion proposed at first to jews and heathens without the article of Christ's divinity, x. 167. The excellency of it beyond the philosophy of the heathens, 138. Good treatises on by laymen best received, xvi. 181. What would make all rational and disinterested people of one religion, xvii. 384. True religion, what, xviii. 389. Persecution for, xix. 117. 119. Ladies, out of zeal for it, have hardly time to say their prayers, xi. 11.
Repentance. The fallacies in it, x. 5.
Republican