course abolished, 394; land en- croachments of Colonists, 395; invasion of 1834-35, 397; com- missions of inquiry, 400; colonial government determined on war, 405; forbearance of the Caffres, 411; integrity and sound judg- ment of the missionaries, 415 Carrel, A., History of the Counter Revolution in England, 726; its inaccuracies, 728; duplicity of Charles 1. the cause of his ruin, 729; condition of England under the Protectorate, 729; treachery of Monk, 730; Convention-Par- liament, 731; Clarendon's minis- try, 733; the Cabal, 735; Test Act, 736; Danby's Administra- tion, 737; Popish plot, 738; Parliament of Oxford, 740 Chalmers, Dr., on the Evangelical
China, and her Spiritual Claims,
Christmas, Miss, Glendearg Cottage, 507
Clarkson, D., Select Works of, 611, 615
Continental Echo, 492
Czerski, J., 492; prejudices against him in England, 493; early life, 496; scruples, 498; marriage justified, 500; his liberality, 501; evangelicalism, 502; Ronge a neologist, 503
D'Aubigné, J. H. M., History of the Reformation, 252, 508 Dobbs, Rev. J., Century of Scottish Church History, 510
Eckett, Rev. R., Exposition of Laws of Conference Methodism, 129; constitution of Conference, 132; its leaders, 134; Jabez Bunting, ib.; his influence, 139, whence derived, 141; district meeting, 142; marriage of ministers, 144; examination of probationers, 145; special district meetings, 147; mixed and minor, 147; quarterly meeting, 148; special circuit meeting, 150; leaders' meeting, 151; discipline, 153; local preach- ers' meetings, 154; trustees' meet- ing, 156; financial arrangements,
157; missionary society, 158; theological institute, 159; schools, ib.; children's fund, 160; book- room, ib. use of liturgy, 161; love-feasts, 163; revivals, 164; public and private bands, 162; defects of Wesleyanism, 167 Evangelical Alliance, Proceedings of, 747; abolition of slavery in the British empire, 751; religious deputations to America, 752; re- trograde movement of the Free Church, 753; Presbyterian Ge- neral Assembly of United States, 754; their apology for slavery, 757; Birmingham resolution of the Evangelical Alliance, 760; disposition manifested by the General Conference, 761; tone of the American delegates, 762; their arguments, 764, protest, 768; first resolution of the Alli- ance, 765, final decision, 769, general results, 770; interior his- tory of the proceedings, 772; universal condemnation of the disgraceful compromise, 776; G. Thompson, ib.; W. L. Garrison, 777; Dr. Reed's withdrawment, 778; Manchester resolution of the British Branch of the Alliance, ib.; its effect on the American, 779; laws no excuse for slaveholding, 774
Fauriel, C., History of Provençal Poetry, 641; its plan, 642; influ- ence of Greek civilization, 644; of Roman, 646; derivation of the Provençal language, 648; its priority in metrical romance, 651; Round Table legends not of British origin, 652; chivalry of religion. 653, the Graal, ib.; Walther of Acquitaine, 657; defects of au- thor's system of civilization, 658 Fisher's Juvenile Scrap Book, 743, 745
Fletcher, Rev. J., Select Works and
Memoirs of, 660; his character, 661; parentage, 662; conversion, 663; course at Hoxton and Glas- gow, 665; pastorate and tutor- ship at Blackburn, 666; removal to Stepney, 667; his noncon- formity, 669; his writings, 670;
Lectures on Roman Catholicism, 672
Galt, J., Life of Wolsey, 380 German Nove.ists:-Schnabel, Gel- lert, Hermes, 468; Wieland, 469; Musæus and Trim, 470; Meissner, Tiedge, 471; Countess Hahn Hahn, Fanny Tarnow, 472; Kotz- ebue, 472; Schiller, 473; Tieck, Nicolai, 474; Klinger, 476; Von Knigge, 477
Gleig, Rev. G. R., Sale's Brigade in Affghanistan, 253
Glimpses of the Wonderful, 781 Godly Sayings of the Ancient Fa- thers, 510
Goethe, W. Von, his Prose Novels, 465; Werter, 469; Wilhelm Meis- ter, 470
Gordon, A., on the Irish Church, 239;
a great grievance, 240, 246; in- efficiency, 243; Whig temporising policy, 245; Lord John Russell on Roman Catholic endowment, 248; his scheme, 249
Gore, Mrs., New Year's Day, 780 Grammont's Memoirs of Court of Charles II., 94; their immorality, 95, and slight historical value, 96; escape of Charles, 97 Gray, J. T., Exercises in Logic, 92 Grote, G., History of Greece, 257;
objections to its form,261; growth of mythology, 259; iconoclasm of the early Christians right, 260; influence of the poets religiously pernicious, 265; enlargements of the Homeric legends of the gods, 266; untrustworthiness of the poetical legends, 267, 270; theory of intrinsic credibility, 269; belief of the Greeks themselves of no authority, 271; Argonautic fables, 272; Amazons, 274; theory of Odyssey and Iliad, 276; abnor- mal character of the Spartans, 279
Guizot, F., History of Civiliza- tion, 509, translated by Hazlitt,
Hanserd Knollys Society, 611; pur- pose, 618
Harvey, Dr. H., Phycolgia Britanni- ca, 60, 64
Hassall, A. H., British Algæ, 61; cause of colour in the Red Sea, 62
Heugh, Rev. H., Funeral Sermons for, 697, 712; his character, 698, 707; spiritual experience, 697; settlement at Stirling and Glas- gow, 701; last days, 701; pros- perity in his ministry, 702; dili- gence in his pastoral and denomi- national duty, 703; advocacy of the voluntary principle, &c., 705, 709; character as a public speaker, 706; atonement contro- versy, 708; his publications, 709 Hexapla, The English, 638 Hook, Dr. W. F., on National Edu- cation, 280, 301; objections to the principle of state education, 285; religious neutrality cannot be pre- served, 287; objections to its modus operandi, 288; not the duty of the state, ib.; hostile to freedom, 291; increases the power and pa- tronage of the executive, ib.; im- possible to be enforced, 295; State interference needless, 296; duty of dissenters, 297; profound im- portance of the subject, 306; au- thor's disclaimer of church and state alliance, 303
Horne, T. H., Introduction to Holy Scripture, 183; defects of the 9th edition, 184; plagiarisms and errors, 187; omissions, 189
![[merged small][ocr errors][merged small]](https://books.google.la/books/content?id=09sEAAAAQAAJ&output=text&pg=PA787&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:OCLC1012786239&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U1msiu7uYEvc2_srMTx6u52Hl54oA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=486,980,422,522)
Literature, 417; its plan, 419; Hengstenberg's change of view on prophecy, 422; his errors, 424; articles on natural history, 426; Behemoth, 428; geographi- cal and archæological articles, 430; angels of the churches, 432; biblical history and biography, 435 Kitto, John, Gallery of Scripture Engravings, 743, 746
Kitto, John, Standard Edition of Pictorial Bible, 781
Knox, A., Life of Wesley, 504
Leechman, John, Logic, 92 Life in California, 438; mission of St. Luis Rey, 440; tone of morals, 443; bear-baiting, 445; bull- fights, ib.; religious usages, 447 Literary Intelligence, 127, 255, 383, 511, 639, 783
Macintosh, Sir James, Miscellaneous
Works, 101, his start in life, 103; great reputation while alive, ib.; Vindiciae Gallicæ, 105; opinions on church property, 107; dis- sertation on the progress of ethi- cal philosophy, 110; character of Hobbes, ib. of Cudworth, 113; Butler's analogy, 113; Revolution of 1688, 116
Mackenzie, Rev. J. M., Remains of, 79; his early training, 80; con- version, 81; college course, 82; settlement at Poole, 86; marriage and tutorship, 87; death, 88 McNeile, Rev. H., Sermon on Prince Albert's Visit to Liverpool, 460 Marryatt, Capt., Privateersman, One Hundred Years ago, 381 Marsh, E. G., Chrysostom on the Priesthood, 509
Martin, W. C. L., History of the Dog, 168; its original stock, 171; Jewish prejudice against, 174; classic customs, ib.; Polar dogs, 176; shepherd's dog, 178; dog of St. Bernard, 179; sagacity, 180; hydrophobia, 182
Martineau, H., Forest and Game-law Tales, 230; Norman forest law, 231; Archbishop Langton, 234; Waltham Blacks, 235; present times, 236; real hunting, 237
Mignet, F. A., History of French Revolution, 638
Milner, Rev. T., Elevation of the People, 507
Ministry, A revived, the hope for a revived church, 23; deep piety needed, 27; and an aggressive character, 29; power of personal influence of religious teachers, 33; principles of selection for the office, 37
Monthly Prize Essays, 505
Norton, Hon. Mrs., Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 743
Old England's Alarum, 125
Palliser, Mrs., Modern Poetical Speaker, 254
Payne, G., Lectures on Divine Sovereignty, 253
Pericles, a Tale, 40; its era, persons, and plot, 42-46; Socrates and the fuller, 47; episode of Lyde and Arete, 49; a practical man, 51; immorality of Greek mytho- logy, 55; true character of Peri- cles, 57; foreign mothers not under legal disabilities at Athens, 59; war against Samos, 59 Peschel, C. F., Elements of Physics, 455; discovery of the dip of the magnetic needle, 457; electro- dynamics, 459
Pictorial History of England-Last Years of George ., 205, 216; comparative war taxation of Erg- land and France, 209; revival of literature, 210; public improve- ments-bridge architecture, 213 Princeton Theological Essays, 448 -454; Tholuck on the Influence of the New Philosophy, 448; Kant, Fichte, and Schelling, 449; Ja- cobi, 450-453
Recreation, The, 781
Richardson, D. L. Anglo-Indian Passage, 383
Ritchie, E., Lessons of Life and Death, 782
Robertson, Dr., Church Stationers, 123 Robertson, J., Edinburgh Election, 367; Roman Catholicism en-
dowed by the State, 378; duty of Dissenters, 379
Round Preacher, The, 129-131 Royal Gems from Galleries of Europe,
Ryland, J. E., Life of Foster, 346; character of his father, 349; his childhood, 330; enters college, 351; slight interest in institu- tional religion, 352; settlement at Chichester, 353; marriage, 354; life at Stapleton, ib.; last hours, ib.; his originality, 356; extracts from his journals, 357; tendency to gloomy judgments of men and things, 360; state of the departed, 362; nonconformity, 363; opinions on future punish- ment, 365; Mr. Shepherd's notices of him, 348
Schlegel, A. W., Lectures on Dra- matic Art, 125
Schlosser, F. C., History of Nine-
teenth Century, 65; literature in England and France at close of seventeenth century, 68; influ- ence of Locke's Philosophy, 69; Voltaire, 71; Montesquieu, 72; Hume, 73; Rousseau, 75 Scott, A., Common Sense and Rights of Conscience, 126 Sharpe, S., History of Egypt, 124 Smith, Sir C. E., Edinburgh elec- tion, 367; Irish ecclesiastical policy of the whigs, 368; May- nooth endowment bill, 370; en- dowment of Roman-catholic clergy, 372; declarations of cabi- net ministers, 372-376; their intentions, 376
Smith, W., Dictionary of Biography and Mythology, 591 Stephen, D. R., Luther, Milton, and Pascal, 382
Strickland, A., Lives of Queens of England, 594; Henrietta Maria, 594; birth of Charles 11., 596; residence in France, 600; prose- lytism, 601; author's one-sided view of character of Charles I., 603; Catherine of Braganza, 605; charge of corruption against Al- gernon Sidney refuted, 608, 742 Southey, R., Life of Wesley, 504
Speculative Difficulties of Professing Christians, 510
Tayler, J. J., Retrospect of Religious Life in England, 513; author's sketch of Dr. Owen, 515; capa- bilities of Puritanism, 516; spirit of Dr. Watts's ministry, 517; Unitarian reasoning, 518; mis- understanding of orthodox belief, 524; author's object, 526; his idea of Christian Union, 527; his theory of development, 528, 532 Taylor, Dr. W. C., Modern British Plutarch, 255
Thirlwall, C., History of Greece, 381 Tholuck, Merits of Calvin, 510 Thompson, W., Recollections of
Mexico, 307; slavery, 308; Mexi- can robbers, 309; wealth of the church, 311; feast of St. Augus- tin, 312; army, 314; General Santa Anna, 315; constitution, 316
Thorn, Rev., on The Evangelical Alliance, 786
Townsend, W. C., Lives of Eminent
Judges, 478; Lord Kenyon, 481; Ellenborough, ib.; Hastings's trial, 483; Lord Holland's re- proof, 484; Hone's trial, 486; Erskine, 488; his first retainer, 489; Horne Tooke's trial, 490 Tracts on Liberty of Conscience, 611 Trench, Rev. F., Scotland, its Faith and Features, 339; railroad men, 340; Scotch mountain scenery, 343; anecdote of Walter Scott, 345; clerical pietism, 346 Tweedy, W. K., Calvin and Ser- vetus, 511
Vaughan, R., Tracts and Treatises of John de Wycliffe, 611, 614
Wilson, James, Silent Love, 126 Wilson Thomas, Memoir of, by his Son, 549; vocation of religious laymen, 550; inconsistency of parents, ib.; Mr. Wilson's parent- age, 561; apprenticeship. 552; attainments, 553; retirement from business, 555; usefulness, 556; Hoxton College, 557; his kind-
ness to the students, 558; views of preaching, 559; their defects, 561; his liberality, 564; chapel ! building, 565; trust deeds, 567; last days, 571 Woes of War, 126
Wycliffe Society, 611; formation, 613, its failure, 617; reasons for, 618
Printed by WARD & GRIFFITH, 16, Bear Alley, Farringdon Street.
« PreviousContinue » |