1801. ] 
D.D. now re-publithed by A. Lay, 4d. or 3s. 
per Dozen. Hatchard, 
The Origin and Utility of Creeds confider- 
ed; with a Vindication ef the Athanafian 
Creed, in a Sermon preached before the Uni- 
verfity of Oxford, November 16, 1800, by 
the Bifhop of Bangor, fs. Rivingtons. 
Confiderations on the Prefent State of Re- 
ligion ; on the Want of Churches, efpecially 
for the Poor, &c. &c. 2s. Ratchard. 
Devotional Exercifes for the Ufe of young 
Perfons, by Charles Wellbeloved, 2s. 
| jJohnfon. 
Sermons on various Subjects, by Samuel 
Stanhope Smith, D D. Prefident of the Col- 
lege of New Jerfey, America, 8vo. 7s. 6d. 
Mawman, 
A Difcourfe delivered at the Catholic Cha- 
pel at Irnham, on the laft General Faft Day, 
by M. Goffier, a French Clergyman, 1s, 
Booker. 
Harmonia Apoftolica; or, the mutual 
Agreement of St. Paul and St.. James; 
comprifing a complete View of Chriftian 
Juftification, and of the Deficiency of for- 
mer Commentaries ; tranflated from the La- 
tin of Bifhop Bull, by the Rev. Thomas Wil- 
kinfon, 8vo. 6s. Rivingtons. 
Sermons on the Parables, by John Farrer, 
M. A. vo. 7s. boards. Rivingtons. 
Remarks on two Sermons, by Mr. W. W. 
State of Public Affairs in April, 1801. 
35E 
Horne, of Yarmouth, entitled, ‘* The Faith 
of the Gofpel vindicated ;°° recommended to 
the Attention of the Baptift Churches in 
Norfolk, qd. Button. 
_. Refle&tions on the State of Religion at the 
Clofe of the Eighteenth Century ; a Difcourfe 
delivered at the Chapel in Prince’s-ftreet, 
Weftminfter, by Thomas Jervis, ts. 
Johnfon. 
The Duty of Keeping the Chriftian Sab- 
bath ; a Sermon preached in the Chapel of 
the Foundling Hefpital, March 8, 1801, by 
the Rev. John Hewlett, 1s. Johnfion. 
Pattoral Hints on the Importance of Reli- 
gious Education ; with an Outline of a fami- 
liar Plan of Inftru€tion for the Affiftance of 
Families, by Edward Burn, M.A. 1s. 
i Rivingtonse 
_ The Awful Judgments of God againft a 
Wicked and Impenitent People, exhibited 
in a plain practical Faft Sermon, as a folemna 
Warning to all the People of the United 
Kingdoms, by Chriftopher Hodgfon, L. L.B. 
Is. Rivingtons. 
A Letter to the Lord Bithop of Rochefter 
en his Opinion concerning Anti-Chrift, by 2 
Country Clergyman, Is. Mawman. 
A Spital Sermon, preached at Chrift Church 
on Eafter Tuefday, 1300, with Notes, by Sa- 
muel Parr, L.L. D. gto. 7s. 6d. Mawmang 
i 
a 
STATE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, 
in April, 1B0t. 
FRANCE. 
HE great object of viétory is a du- 
rable peace ; and the only mode 
of obtaining it, is moderation in the 
bafis propofed. Great Britain and 
France now ftand upon fuch equal ground, 
that a permanent and honourable paci- 
fication may -be an object of eafy ac- 
complifhment, if it be an object really” 
fought after by the governments on both 
fides. The prime obftacle to fuch an 
event, refulted from the Northern Con- 
federacy. The death of the Emperor 
Paul, has probably left this Confederacy 
without a head ; and Bonaparte cannot 
be much interefted in the concerns of 
any of the Powers of the North. The 
Minifter of Great Britain profefles, that 
the victory lately obtained fhall be ufed 
with moderation, and only as a means 
of obtaining a peace. ~ ae, 
The French papers of the 14th of 
April, contains nothing interefting with 
regard to that Republic, except the plea- 
fure they exprefs at the expected depar- 
ture of Lord Carysfort from the Court of 
3 
Berlin; an event which the French at- 
“tribute to the diplomatic dexterity of 
General Bournonville, the French Am- 
baflador at that Court. ‘They are dif- 
fufe in their details of the deliberate 
manner in which the King of Pruffia is - 
acting in the hereditary dominions of 
our Sovereign, as Ele€tor of Hanover. 
The chara&ter of Hanoverian Envoy at 
his Court he has totally fuppreffed ; and 
the Officers of State are all obliged to 
take an oath of fealty to him. Thofe 
of the rsth of April, dwell much on 
the confternation occafioned iu Paris by 
the fudden death of Paul, and on the 
uncertainty bow his fucceffor Alexan- 
der, may, or may not, be inclined to 
follow or relinquifh his father’s poli- 
tical maxims. ‘The papers are entirely 
filent as to Admiral Gantheaume’s {qua- 
dron. 
Superior to vulgar and narrow preju- 
dices, the Firft Conful has, with a de- 
gree of wifdom which ever charatteriled 
a great mind, reftored the Catholic re- 
ligion throughout France. | He has form- 
ed 
