Cranmer's Writings and Letters, Parker Society, 249. Criminal Tables, 645.
Cumming, J., Is Christianity from God? 381.
D'Aubigné, J. H. M., The Protector,
318, 320, 321; who the first vindi- cator of Cromwell, 320.
Davies, E., Memoir of S. Dyer, 642. Davies, John, Estimate of the Human
Mind, 205; tests of a metaphy- sician, 207; author's deficiency in analytic power, ib.; errors on voli- tion, 208, conscience, 209, imagi- nation, 211; his style, ib.
De la Graviere, Sketches of the Last Naval War, 511.
Devlin, J. D., Helps to Hereford History, 254.
Dumas, Chemistry applied to the Arts, 458, 460.
East, Rev. T., Forgiveness of Sin, 251. Ecclesiæ Dei, 253.
Education, Crosby Hall Lectures on, 596; by Baines, 599; Wells, 602; Reed, 603; Richard, 603; Com- missioners' Report on Wales, 604; its inaccuracies, 606, and partiality, 608. Elections, Borough Bill to regulate,
335; a delusion and a snare, 354. Elections, Corrupt Practices at, 335;
The Peoples' Charter' unsound, 338; Reform Act delusion, 340, and anomalies, 341; electioneering agents, 342; frauds in Registration Courts, 342; perjury suffrage, 343; distribution of electoral power, 347; sale of seats, 350, and of newspaper support, 351; treating, ib.; the poll- ing day, 352; election committees, 353; consequent low conventional standard of election morality, 356. Ellis, Mrs. Rawdon House, 254. Ellis, Mrs., Fireside Tales for the Young, 769.
English Life, Social and Domestic,
English Review, The, 740; its poli- tical opinions and perversions, 753; Anti-state-church Society misre- presented, 742; its religion not de- structive, 744; especial offence given by its anti-creed principles, 745, and anti-infallibility, 747;
means it employs, 759; and their results, 760; Regium Donum, 763; the voluntary principle not a mat- ter of religious indifferency, 751; limits of responsibility of civil governors, 756.
Fisher's Drawing-Room Scrap Book, 765.
Forrest, H. J., Dream of Reform,638. Francis, J., History of Bank of En- gland, 125.
Gaussen, L., It is Written, 381. Girardin, Essay on Manures, 458. Guizot, F. P., Democracy and its Mission, 102.
Halyburton's Memoirs, 639. Heath, Commander, Views in Indian Archipelago, 671; Sarawak, 673; Labuan, 675; piracy, 676–678; the future of Borneo, 680. Hengstenberg, E. W., On the Psalms, Vol. III., 767.
Henry, Matthew, Communion with God, &c., 126.
Henry, Rev. Philip, Life and Times of, 126.
Hervey, Lord, Reign of George 11, 184; its value, 186; Whigs in power, 189; character of the Queen, 190, 194, king, 192, prince, 193; repeal of the Test Acts negotiated for, 196; a royal-family dialogue,
Hewlett, J. P., Works of John Howe, 385; his person, 386; ejected from Torrington, 395; chaplain to Lord Massarene, 396; London pastorate, ib.; death, 398; character of his piety, 399; religious teaching, 401; compared with J. Taylor, 403; his style, 410; nonconformity, 413. Historical Charades, 642. History of Rome, Religious Tract Society, 641.
Houston, T., Life of John Livingston,
Hume, Rev. A., Learned Societies
and Printing Clubs, 247. Ireland under the Whigs, 613; Poor- law, 615; Land Improvement Bill, 616; encumbered estates, ib.; vice- royalty of Lord Clarendon, 619; disadvantages of delegated govern- ment, 621; the church nuisance,
623; spy system, 626; what justice for Ireland means, 629; effects of repeal, 631; endowment of the priesthood, 632.
Italy, its political prospects, 517; Sicilian revolution, 520; necessity of secret societies, 521; Catholicism the great difficulty, 522; Austrian influence, 523, and hateful policy, 525; Anglo-French mediation, 526; effects of Italian emancipation, 532.
James, G. P. R., Beauchamp, 636. James, J. A., Earnest Ministry, 59,
62; Church in Earnest, 59, 64; power and use of the press for evil, 66.
Jewel, Bishop, Works of, Parker So- ciety, 513.
Johnson, Dr., Wisdom of the Rambler, Adventurer, and Idler, 250. Jones, Peter, An Autobiography, 642. Juvenile Scrap Book, The, 769.
Keats, J., Life and Poems, 533. See R. M. Milnes.
Kindersley, E. C., History of the Che- valier Bayard, 213; his ambush for the Pope, 215; generosity at Brescia, 215; knights Francis I., 217; last prayer, 218.
Kitto, John, Journal of Sacred Lite- rature, 768.
Lads of the Factory, The, 641. Laneton Parsonage, 294. Lepsius, R., Todtenbuch der Ægyptus, 69; roll of funeral observances, 70; its general character, 71; essential points, 73.
Lindo, E. H., History of the Jews in
Spain and Portugal, 681; enact- ments of Council of Toledo, 683; leniency of the Saracens, 684; hatred of the Christians, 685; in- quisition established, 686; their banishment, 687; and sufferings, 688.
Literary Intelligence, 127, 255, 378, 515, 643, 771.
MacGregor, J., Germany, 102. Mackay, A., Electoral Districts, 102,
229; comparative statistics of agri- culture and commerce, 234; county and borough representation, 236; on what both should be based, 237;
proposed redistribution, 236; its results, 240; objections to, 242; reform inevitable, 244.
Mainzer, Dr., Music and Education, 254.
Margaret Percival, 294, 296; ap- proximation of English to the Romish Church, 298.
Marryat, F., Borneo and Indian Ar- chipelago, 51; Maylay proas, 53; a rajah at leap-frog, 54; Manilla, 55; Nangasaki, 57; a funeral ball, 58.
Martineau, H., Eastern Life, Past and Present, 87; its merits and faults, 88, 102; the real camel, 89; pyramids, 91, 95; El Uksur, 92; passage of the cataracts, 93; Cairo, 96; social state of Egypt, 98; author's denial of the miraculous in the Exodus, 99, and the legisla- tion of Moses, 100, and of the divinity of Christ, 101; her pan- theism, ib.
Maunder, S., Treasury of Natural History, 514.
Mc Cheyne, R.M., Additional Re- mains of, 253.
Mc Crie's Church History, 639. McFarlan, D., Revivals of Eighteenth Century, 639.
Middleton, C. S., Hours of Recrea- tion, 638.
Mill, J. S., Principles of Political Economy, 360, 361; his new ar- rangement of the subject, 362; no strictly international trade, 365; dependence of beneficial occupa- tion of land on density of popula- tion, 367; remedies for Irish land- tenure, 368; the social, the grand problem of the age, 372, arbitrary limitation of political economy, 374.
Millennium in its Three Hundredth Century, 251.
Milnes, R. M., Life of Keats, 533; his boyhood, 535; apprenticeship, 536; first poems, 537; introduc- tion to Leigh Hunt, 538; and to literary society, 539; Endymion published, 541; effect of the cri- tiques of it, 545; first symptoms of consumption, 547; despondency, 549; death, 550. Mirabeau, A Life History, 257; his
father's character, 261; and death, 275; his own military service, 263;
imprisonment in Isle of Rhe, 264; marriage, 265; Essay on Despo- tism, ib.; confined in Castle of If, 266; intrigue with Sophie de Mon- nier, 267; the trial at Aix, 270; residence in England, 271; English beauty, 273; in the States-General, 274; President of the Assembly, 275; passion for flowers, 276; death, 277.
Modern History, Some Passages from,
Modern Orator, 513.
Morier, D. R., What has Religion to do with Politics? 700, 715; reve- lation does not teach the best poli- tical system, 701; or define pro- perty, 702, right to the soil, 704; proportion of population to terri- tory, 705; governments powerless for civilization, 708; Ireland a case in point, 712.
Morren, Nath., Sermons, 382. Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History, 764. Motherwell, W., Poetical Works of, 289; 'Jeanie Morrison,' 292.
National Cyclopædia, 515. Neison, F. G. P., Statistics of Crime,
645, 664; ratio of its increase, 648; compared with population, 650; relative proportion in Counties, 652; influenced by density of po- pulation, 653, Irish Immigration, 655, supply of food, 665; offences classified, 657; ages of criminals, 664; retardation of crime, 668. Nelson's Puritan Divines, 126. Newman, W. A., Gospel of Christ, 255.
Nibelungenlied, Das, 26; Simrock's
version, 48; mythic origin of Ger- man traditions, 27; kindred legends, 30; purpose of this, 32; Siegfried at Worms, 35; marriage with Chriemhild, 37; Gunther's Expe- dition to Isenstein, 39; conquest and marriage of Brunhild, 41; quarrel of the queens, 43; Sieg- fried's death, 44; Chriemhild's vengeance, 46; and death, 47; the weird of the Nibelung treasure, 46. Norden, John, Progress of Piety, Parker Society, 255.
Parker, Theodore, Discourse of Mat- ters Pertaining to Religion, 252.
Patterson, A. S., Comment on 1st Thessalonians, 641.
People's League, The, 102; its object, 103; our present rulers not just, wise, or able, 105; oligarchical im- munities, 107; objections to man- hood suffrage answered, 112; evil effects of property qualification, 114; the Chartist panic got up by government spies and a venal press, 117: The Reform Act a failure, 119; the Legislature distrusted, 121; aristocratic nomineeship in small boroughs, 122.
Popery Delineated, 254. Prentice, A., Tour in the United States, 766.
Rawson, R. W., Statistics of Crime, 645.
Recognition Discourses of Rev. G. Thomson, 252.
Rest in the Church, 294; dogma of blind obedience, 301; vicarious prayer, 302; Friday supersanctity, 303; consecrated ground, 305; Rest in Rome, 306.
Robinson, H. G., Odes of Horace translated, 255.
Rowton, F., Capital Punishment, 129; expediency the sole rule of human punishment, 130; economy an essential ingredient, 131; death punishment inefficacious, 132; re- sults of a mitigation of penalties,
Sacred Geology, 379. Schomburgk, Sir R. H., History of Barbadoes, 639.
Scobell, E., Christ's Intercessory Prayer, 770.
Scottish Clergy, Our, 690; Wardlaw, 691; Candlish, 692; John Brown, 693; Russell, 695; Guthrie, 697; familiar preaching, ib.; true intent of preaching, 698; not above cri- ticism, 699.
Sermons for Sunday Evenings, 770. Session of 1848, The, 491; its con- temptible ending, 509; Bank Act, 495; retrenchment, 497; Whig finance, 498; repudiation of further reform, 501; condition of Ireland, 503; Tenure of Land Commission, 505.
Sheppard, J., On Dreams, 639.
Smith, J., Voyage and Shipwreck of Paul, 584; intended to test the narration of Luke, 585; his style, 588; where Phenice was, 595; incidents of the wreck verified, 594. Sketches, The, 294; should be called Tractarianism for Ladies, 306. Southey, R., The Doctor, 124. Soames, H., Latin Church in Anglo- Saxon Times, 307; growth of the Papacy, 310; Pontifical Book, 312; Decretals and Capitulars, 313; war with civil liberty, 314; contrasted with Protestantism, 317. Spring, G., Bible not of Man, 381. Sprague, W. B., True Christianity, 771.
Steinmetz, A., History of the Jesuits, 556; early course of Loyola, 557; his asceticism, 559; pilgrimage to Jerusalem, 561; founds his order, 562; its privileges and internal constitution, 563; and spread, 565; Jansenist controversy, 568; its lax morality, 569; suppression in 1773, 571; restoration in 1814, 574; present condition in England, 575, and prospects, 576.
St. John, P. B., The Fireside, 770. Stoughton, J., Spiritual Heroes, 219; defects of treatment, 221; Barrowe, 223; Robinson, 226; Bastwick, Burton, and Prynne, 227; The Five Dissenting Brethren, 228. Sunday Trading Bill, The, 174; Sun- day Railway Trains, 177; who have not a right to condemn them, 178; the Sabbath a privilege of the peo- ple, 179; yet not to be enforced by laws, 181; economic argument for,
Talfourd, C. N., Final Memorials of Charles Lamb, 465; once in a mad- house, 467; his sister's matricide, 468; devotion to his father and sister, 471; her character, 475; Wainwright the poisoner, 476. Thompson, P., Life in Russia, 479;
St. Petersburgh, 481; official ve- nality, 482; servility, 483; police, 484; character of Nicholas, 485;
Greek Church, 487; condition of the serfs, 489.
Thomson, James, The Seasons, 126. Thorn, W., Duties and Defects of Dis- senters, 383.
Tillett, J. H., Plain Facts for the Peo- ple, 512.
Towgood's Vindication of Dissent, 641.
Turner, Sharon, Sacred History of World, 253.
Twiss, T., Progress of Political Eco- nomy, 360.
Vinet, Alex., Vital Christianity, 640. Voice for the Millions, 102.
Watson, H. C., Public Opinion, 102. Walbridge, E. A., Memoir of John
Smith, of Demerara, 637, 728; his early history, 731; a missionary, 732; atrocities of slavery, 734; in- surrection, 736; Smith's arrest, 736; trial, 737; imprisonment and death, 738.
Ward, Harriett, Five Years in Kaf- firland, 156; her erroneous poli- tics and policy, 159, 163; mission- aries, 161; scenery, 164; Kaffir Eruption, 166; characteristics of the native tribes, 169; surrender of Pato, 172.
Warren, S., Sermons on Practical Subjects, 643.
Webb, Mrs. J. B., The Beloved Dis- ciple, 252.
Wight, G., Mosaic Creation and Mo- dern Geology, 379.
Wilson, D., Oliver Cromwell, 318; no hypocrite, 321; site for his sta- tue, 322.
Wilson, H. H., History of British India, 250.
Willmott, R. A., Bishop Jeremy Tay- lor, 385; his person, 386; ejected from Uppingham, 389; at Golden Grove, 391; second imprisonment, 392; at Lisburn, 393; his religious character, 399, and teaching, 400; compared with Howe, 403; his style, 410; clericalities of editor, 415.
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