INDEX TO VOL. XX. A moral history, Belmont schools, 87; James Wil- son and Thomas Arnold, 88; educational report of , 54; Longfellow, 57. cash, 90, success leads to increased beneficence, science, 247; sets out to measure the arch of a ter mont tracts, 94. Cony beare's contributions, 179; specimens of his new translations, ib.; general merits of the work, 232. D Dahlmann's biography of Herodotus, 208. Diodati, family of, note, 39. Domestic service-Nelly Armstrong, 95; too little attention paid to the subject of domestic service, ib.; advantages and disadvantages of service near home, 96; dreary kitchen life, 99; instinctive longings for companionship, ib. ; want of confidence be- tween different classes of society, 101; familiarity with servants, 102; duties of employers, ib. ; dan- gerous attractiveness of maid servants, 104; “no followers allowed," 106; training schools for ser- vants, 108; comforts of domestic service, 109; want of family sympathy, 110; unhappy effects of class prejudice, 111. E , his bitter persecution of Madame de Electric Telegraph first suggested by C. M. of Ren- frew, 264, 265. Eynard, Charles, notice of his “ Lucques et les Bur- F Popes, 27. tronomical Observator," and the institution of the Greenwhich Observatory, 122. Flourens, M., his éloge on F. Arago, 246. G Geological Society, institution of, 130. German Protestantism, struggles and tendencies of, history of Price's Patent Candle Company, 86;] cities, 227, 228; revival of doctrine in the univer- |