History of Civilization in England, Vol. 3 of 3
ii. 361, 362
Therapeutics, Sydenham's reformations in, ii. 196. Difference between the art of, and the science of, pathology, iii. 416
Thibet, bards of, i. 292 _note_
Thomas, suppression of his 'Eloge on Marcus Aurelius,' ii. 238
Thomson, Hugh, the Presbyterian preacher, iii. 204 _note_
Thread manufacture of Paisley, rise of the, iii. 176
Thumb-screw, torture of the, iii. 149
Tigers worshipped by the Hajin tribe, i. 125 _note_. Superstitions of the Garrows and Seiks respecting them, 125 _note_. How regarded by the Malasir, 125 _note_. And by the inhabitants of Sumatra, 126 _note_
Tissues, food necessary for repairing the waste of the, i. 55, 58. Bichat's views respecting the, ii. 379-382. The degenerations of, 382 _note_. The study of, neglected by Cuvier, 383 _note_
Toledo, power of the clergy at, in the seventeenth century, ii. 437. Captured from the Arabs, 440. Decline of, in the seventeenth century, 502
Toleration, religious, origin of, in England, i. 337. Unusual amount of toleration in Holland two centuries back, 337 _note_. State of the two hostile creeds in England in the reign of Elizabeth, 338. Hooker's 'Ecclesiastical Polity' compared with Jewel's 'Apology for the Church of England,' 340. Causes which always hasten the march of toleration, 53, 54. Summary of the progress of toleration in England and France, 102. The religious toleration of the French government in the middle of the eighteenth, century, 334
Toleration Act, passing of the, i. 402
Toolholos, or bards of Thibet, i. 292 _note_
Tooth, golden, work of Dr. Horst on the, i. 332
Tories, the, re-established in power under George III., i. 443, 446
Tournaments, origin of, ii. 134. Extinction of, 134
Tournefort, his inferiority as a botanist, ii. 201
Townsend, his views respecting political economy, ii. 304
TracheƦ of plants, discovery of the, ii. 199
Trade-wind, tract north and south of the equator covered by the, i. 101. Causes of the, 192. Way in which the trade-wind is connected with the civilization of South America, 103
Trade, absurd notions respecting, in the 17th and 18th centuries, i. 213. Number of laws passed by the English legislature respecting, 213 _note_. Struggles of Parliament against the principles of free trade, 215. Objects of early commercial treaties, 216 _note_. Why the commercial spirit, formerly warlike, is now pacific, 218. Injuries inflicted upon trade by the interference of legislators, 276. Uncertainty of legislation the bane of commerce, 277, 278. Burke's advocacy of free trade, 462. Effect of the protective spirit carried into trade, ii. 107. Voltaire the first historian to recommend free trade, iii. 304. The free trade of the American colonies in the eighteenth century, 186
Tragedies of Corneille, period in which they appeared, ii. 209
Transubstantiation, relation of the Cartesian philosophy to the doctrine of, ii. 90. Development of the doctrine of, by the metaphysicians, 262
Travelling, advantages of, in producing contact and respect, and in weakening the love of war, i. 219-221
Travis, George, his letters on the text of the Heavenly Witnesses,