rjo Appendix II. 



i4th. On crystallization ; by Alexander Eason, M.D. 



i5th. On the preservation of sea water from putrefaction, by 

 means of quick lime, with chemical observations ; by Thomas 

 Henry, F.R.S. And also an account of a newly invented machine 

 for impregnating water or other fluids with fixed air ; communi- 

 cated to Mr. Henry, by John Haygarth, M.B., F.R.S. 



i6th. On the nature and essential character of poetry, as distin- 

 guished from prose ; by the Rev. Thomas Barnes. 



lyth. Experiments on the respiration of animals, and the changes 

 effected in the air, in passing thro' the lungs, by Mr. Lavoisier, 

 translated from the Memoirs of the Royal Academy of Sciences for 

 the year 1777, by Thomas Henry, F.R.S. 



i8th. An essay on the combustion of phosphorus, and the forma- 

 tion of its acid, by the same ; translated by Mr. Henry. 



igth. On the comparative improvement of the intellectual and 

 moral powers of man in the present and future stages of his being 

 by Thomas Percival, M.D., F.R.S., &c. 



20th. Extract of a letter from the Rev. Dr. Griffiths, of St. Mary 

 Hill, to Dr. Percival, containing an account of the Chinese Whang 

 at Tong, lately in London, and an explanation of the Chinese 

 characters, which are marked on a stick of Indian ink. 



2ist. On the affinity subsisting between the arts, with a plan for 

 promoting and extending our manufactures, by encouraging those 

 arts on which they principally depend ; by the Rev. Thomas Barnes. 



22d. Remarks on the different success, with respect to health, of 

 some attempts to pass the winter in high northern latitudes ; by 

 Mr. John Aikin. 



23d. An essay on the formation of saltpetre ; by James Massey, 

 Esq. 



24th. A letter to James Massey, Esq., on the formation of salt- 

 petre : by Mr. Charles Taylor. 



25th. On the existence of air in the nitrous acid, and the means of 

 decomposing and recomposing that acid; by M. Lavoisier, translated 

 by Thomas Henry, F.R.S. 



26th. Translation of an eulogy on the late Dr. Haller; by Mr. 

 Henry. 



27th. Some remarks on fermentation and putrefaction, and on 

 the influence of the air on them ; by Mr. Wimpey. 



