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INDEX TO VOL. VII.

(NEW SERIES.)

A

ARTICLES AND SUBJECTS.

Our

American Church. Part II. See vol. vi. p. 677.
[Prayer Book and Canons of the American
Church. American Church Newspapers, &c.]
317-334. Hawks' Collections, 317. England
originates evil which others follow out, 318.
Applied to our inconsistent state; mixed
aspect of the Church of England, 319.
anomalous state, 320. Amplitude of our
means, 321. Settlement of Virginia, ibid.
Romanist settlement of Maryland, 322. Church
endowment in Virginia and Maryland, 323.
Want of Colonial Bishops, 324. Colonial
commissaries, 325. Drs. Blair and Bray,
326, 327. Bequests toward American Epi-
scopate, 328. Talbot and Keith, 328, 329.
Consecration of Welton and Talbot by the
Non-jurors, 329, 330. Opposition to the
American Episcopate, 331, 332. Dr. Chandler,
333. Virginian convention, ibid. Persecu-
tion of the Church during the revolutionary
war, 334.

C.

Children, the Church a home for. [Skinner's
Sermon, 'A Holy Zeal for her Little Children,'
&c.] 1-15. Unchanged nature of evil, 1.
Feeling instead of faith, 2. Unconscious
holding of heresy, 3. Unreal estimate of the
Catholic system, 4. Estheticism, 5. Rela-
tion of the faith to personal duties, 6, 7.
Church-fellowship a living truth, 8. Applied
to children, 9. Their trusting self-denying
nature; their relations to God and man, 10,
11. The life of the Catechism, 12. Attend-
ance of children on the daily service, 13.
Early Confirmation, 14; and Communion, ibid.
Christian Knowledge Society-Reign of Interim.
[Scott's Appeal to the Members of the S.P.C.K.
on Doctrinal Changes introduced into their
Tracts.] 265-288. "Laissez faire," 265.
S.P.C.K. at Bartlett's Buildings, 266. Little
concessions, 266, 267. Suppression of old
Tracts, 268. Messrs. Rivington, 269. Com-
mittee of General Literature, ibid. Change
of language, 270. "Pious Country Pa-
rishioner," 271. Appointment of Tract Com-
mittee, 272. Its composition, 273. "Death-bed
Scenes," ibid. Family Bible and Commentary,
274. Gilly's "Our Protestant Forefathers,'
-its Erastian nature, 275. Hey's tract, 276.
"Our Protestant Forefathers," 277. Influence
of "Interim," negative and positive, 278.
Mutilation of old books, 279. Publication
of the Appeal, ibid. Extracts from-Mutila-
tion of Ken, 280-284. Ditto of Wilson
NO. XLII.-N.S.

"

and Nelson, &c. 284. New tracts suggested,
285. Tract No. 619, 286. S.P.C.K.'s Report
on Ken's Manual, 287, 288. [See also p. 485.]
Church, Objective System of the. [Marshall's
Notes. Tracts on Doctrine and Practice.
Gresley's Anglo-Catholicism, &c. &c.] 521-
542. Man's faculties, 521. The Church sup-
plies objects, 522. Need of systems, 523;
their final end, 524. Feelings of reverence,
524, 525; Of shame, 526, 527. The Confes-
sional and Absolution, 527, 528. Of ambi-
tion, 529. St. Ignatius, Loyola, and St.
Francis, 530. Contrast between Church and
schism, 531. Of compassion, 532-535.
Moral interests, 536. Self-denial, 537.
citement, 538. Association, 539, 540.
reality of Low-Church system, 541. Remedies
of our defects, 542.

Ex-

Un-

Colonial Emigration - New Zealand. [Dr.
Dieffenbach's Travels in New Zealand.
Bishop Selwyn's Letters. Ritter's New Zea-
land, with a Map.] 393-426. New Zealand.
the Yeoman's Colony, 394. History of the
Colonization of the Island, 395-397. Arrival
and acts of the Bishop, 398. Nature of land
claims, 399. Auckland, its situation and
capabilities, 400-403. Waimate and the
region of the hot springs, 404, 405. Ton-
gariroo, Waikato, Rotu-Mahana and its hot
cascade, 406-409. Taranaki, or New Ply-
mouth, its peculiar fitness for small working
farmers, 410-413. Cook's Straits, Welling-
ton, Port Nicholson, the Valley of the Wan-
ganui, disadvantages of its locality, 413-
416. Nelson and the Valley of the Waimea,
417, 418. The New Zealander; mixed races;
early traditions of origin, 419-421. The re-
ligion of the native; the nature of his idola-
try, 422, 423. The general character of the
native, 424-426.
Coningsby. [Coningsby, or the New Generation,
by B. D'Israeli, Esq. M.P. &c.) 667-689. Cha-
racter and merits of this novel, 667-677.
Influence of Judaism on mankind, 671-675.
Mr. D'Israeli's alliance with Young England,
676. Young England an important symptom,
its real limits, 678, 679. Conservatism supplies
us with a positive and universally applicable
principle, 680-682. But yet an inadequate
one, and why, 682, 683. Whig ascendency,
its real character and aim, 684. Permanent
elements of the English Constitution, mon-
archy the prominently enduring one, its pro-
bable revival among us, 685-689. Warning
to Young England, 689.
Convocation, Revival of. [Lathbury's His-
tory.] 466-481. Railway travelling, 466.
5 D

Applied to Church system, 467. Laws of the
Church, parliamentary and canonical, 468,
469. Constitution of Convocation, 470. Arch.
bishop's writ, 471. History of Convocation,
472, 473. Want of independence, 474. Envy
of schismatics, 475. Yoke of the State, 476.
Suffragan Bishops, 478, 479. Restoration of
Convocation, 480. Recent petitions, 481.

D.

Defection from the Church. [Jukes's Reasons
for Separation. Examination of Mr. Close's
Pamphlet.] 542-562. Hull ten years since,
542. Church Reform and the Oxford Tracts,
543, 544. Mr. Jukes's defection, 545. The
Queen's Supremacy, 546. Baptismal Rege-
neration, 547-551. Mr. Jukes's irreverence,
552. His neglect of Church duties, 553. Mr.
Close's tendency, 554. Contrasted with Mr.
Jukes's, ibid. Position of the Low-Church
party, 555. Cause of defections to Rome, ibid.
Foresight of Jebb and Knox, 556, 557. Church
Missionary Society, 558. Relations towards
the Drummond and Dunbar Schism, 559. Mr.
Bickersteth's Mission, 560, 561. Relations of
English and Scotch Churches, 562.
Domestic Life of Dissent. [Ellis's Family
Secrets.] 591-596. Our mutual ignorance,
591. Mrs. Ellis a dissenter, ibid. Coarseness
of dissent, 592. Drunkenness, ibid. Vul-
garity, 593. Trustworthiness of Mrs. Ellis,
594. The "Minister," 595. Mrs. Ellis's
ignorance, 596. Character of "Family

Secrets," ibid.

Drummond and Dunbar Schism-Foreign Pa-
rallels. [Scottish Episcopal Times, &c.] 298
-304. (See "Scotch Communion Office.")
Parallel Schism in America. The Maryland
case, 298. Bp. Claggett's resignation. Mr.
Dashiell's attempt to become suffragan, 299.
Bp. Kemp's election, and Dashiell's excom-
munication, 300, 301. Free Church in Eng-
land, 302. Declaration of Clergy and Laity
against Church principles, ibid. Church Mis-
sionary Society, 303. Christian Union Society,
304.

E.

English Preaching. [Sermons on the Duties of
Daily Life, by F. E. Paget, M.A. &c. Ser-
mons preached to the British Congregation at
Florence, by their late Chaplain, the Rev. R.
J. Tennant, M.A. &c.] 596-614. The ordi-
nance of preaching as easily under as over-
rated; Mr. Froude's estimate of it contrary
to Catholic sentiment; the Puritan doctrine
on the subject a distortion rather than an
abandonment of the Primitive, inadequately
answered by Hooker, 597, 598. Case of
Origen, 600. Prevalent weakness of English
Preaching, 601, 602. Not to be remedied by
borrowing from others, 602-604. Human
means, mastery of common language distinct
from the copying thereof, 604-606. Evils of
too much condescension, 606, 607. No Spe-
cimens left us of Apostolical Preaching, 607.
The Reformation of the seventeenth century
does not supply us with perfect specimens, 608.
Folly of the Preacher prescribing to himself
a certain length, 608, 609. The exhibition of
one prominent view on the whole the best
form of Sermon, and that adopted by our best
Preachers at present, 609. Formal divisions,
609, 610. Augustine the best model in this
kind, 610, 611. Expository Preaching, Chry-
sostom the best model, 611. Comparison be-
tween St. Chrysostom and St. Augustine, 612.
Bull in the seventeenth century, Horne, Paley,

and Horsley, in the eighteenth, 613. Loss of
Bishop Butler's Parochial Sermons, 613.
Merits of Messrs. Paget's and Tennant's
Sermons, 613, 614.

F.

Fouqué [Life and Writings of.] 304-317.
Growing popularity of his writings a good sign
of the times-qualities required in order to ap-
preciate them, 305. Multifarious, but on the
whole having one tendency, 306. Bear a strik-
ing testimony to the definition of poetry, as
"the indirect expression of some overpowering
emotion, or ruling taste and feeling, the direct
expression of which is somehow repressed,"
307. This feeling in Fouqué "a deep and
mysterious yearning after the unseen world
simply as such," 308. Circumstances of his
childish life illustrative of this, 309. His
education injudicious treatment by his
friends-distressed state of mind-his mo-
ther's death-its happy effects, 312-317.

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H.

History of Scotland-The King and the Kirk.
[Tytler's History of Scotland, Vol. IX.
Lawson's Episcopal Church in Scotland from
the Reformation to the Revolution.] 639-659.
The position of James at his mother's death,
638-640. His marriage and coronation of
his queen, 640. The King's orations on
witchcraft and Church-government, 641, 642.
Violence of the Kirk; the Stewart Plot, 643
-645. Elizabeth's hypocrisy, 645. Kirk
and the Catholics, 646-648. The General
Assembly of 1596, 649. David Black and
the King, 650, 651. Riot in Edinburgh and
violence of the preachers, 652-654. The
victory of the King; the King's queries, 654,
655. Submission of the Kirk; the King's
progress towards Episcopacy, 656-658. The
Basilicon Doron; the ambassador's priest;
the players and the preachers, 658, 659.
Hope, Signs of. [Smith's Letters on National
Religion. Evans's Rectory of Valehead, and
Church of God. Testimonies of Wordsworth
and Coleridge to Catholic Truth. Maurice's
Kingdom of Christ.] 163-183. General in-
terest taken in Theology at present, and great
progress of Church sentiments, 163, 164. The
present age seems especially to call for a
development of the Catholic Church. Consi-
derations to be kept in mind in regard to
preceding periods, 164-166. Causes which
have conspired to one end, that of Catholic
sentiment, in our day, 166-182. Increased
seriousness of Religion among the High
Church clergy, 167, 168. Travelling,-legiti-
mate influence of Rome on the mind of those
who visit it, 169-171. Literary Revolution,
influence of Wordsworth, 171-173; of Cole-
ridge, 173-176. Students of Prophecy, 177.
Mr. Evans's works, Keble's Christian Year,
Bp. Jebb, and Mr. Knox, 177-179. Mr.
Maurice's Kingdom of Christ, 179-182.
Hymnology. [A Day in the Sanctuary, with an
Introductory Treatise on Hymnology, by the
Rev. R. W. Evans, &c.] 85-102. Popular
Misconceptions of a Hymn-no Scripture pre-
cedent for a metrical one, 85. Hebrew Poetry
proceeds upon rhythm only-advantages, ac-
cording to Mr. Evans, of rhythmic prose over
metre in sacred composition, 86, 87. Real
reason why verse must be excluded from any
distinctively Liturgic art is, that to give plea-
sure is its professed object, 88. The question,
Can the Church's stock of Liturgic Psalmody
be materially increased? 89-92. Although it
be very doubtful that it can, there may yet

INDEX.

be scope for such experiments as Mr. Evans's,
in which he is not unprecedented-Mr. Dor-
rington's, Hickes's, and Mr. Joshua Smith's
Books of Devotion, 92-95. Merit of Mr.
Evans's Hymns, 95-98. Possible applicability
Verse not to be
to Family Devotion, 98, 99.
absolutely prohibited in Church; the Anthem
may be metrical; untenable character of
some of Mr. Evans's arguments against it,
99-102.

M.

Mexican Civilization, and its Origin. [Pres-
cott's History of the Conquest of Mexico-
Cortez's Dispatches, by G. Folsom.] 27-53.
Undue tendency to depreciate the dangers of
the Spanish contest, 27. Arrival of the
Aztecs in the Valley of Mexico, 29. Cortez's
description of Mexico, 30. Elective monarchy
of the Aztecs, 31. Laws and judges, 32. Re-
ligious worship, 34. Resemblance of cere-
monial to Christian rites, 35. Hieroglyphic
Astronomical
writings and records, 36, 37.

knowledge, 38. Agricultural science, 39. The
Tezcucan republic-its refinement, 40, 41.
Nezahual-
The royal bard's poem, 42, 43.

coyotl and the golden age of Tezcuco, 44, 45.
Tlascala-its ferocity, 46, 47. Cholula, the
Holy City, 48. Various theories of the
peopling of America, 49, 50. Indications of
an Eastern origin, 50-52.

N.

Natural History of Man. [Dr. Pritchard's Na-
Varieties
tural History of Man.] 563-590.
of the human race, 563. Authority of Scrip-
ture testimony to the unity of the human race,
564, 565. Species and permanent varieties
defined, 565. Definitions of kind, likeness,
unity, 566. Natural affinity, 567. Hybrids,
568. Intermarriages, 569. Variation in the
Hooker on a
tribes of animals, 569, 570.
characteristic difference between mankind
and animals, 570. Bishop Butler on the pro-
gressiveness of mankind, 571. Different com-
plexions of mankind are neither specific nor
permanent varieties, 572, 573. Hair of the
negro, 573. Shape of the human skull, 574-
576. General conclusion from the foregoing
facts, 577. Mythological accounts of the
Dr.
origin of the human race, 578, 579.
Pritchard's classification of mankind, 580,581.
Syro-Arabian, Egyptian, Arian, Allophylian
races, their physical characteristics, religious
and social habits, 581-585. Comparison of
human races in respect of their mental en-
dowments, 585-587. No religion can be
wholly untrue, 588. Psychological characters
of the Aborigines of America, Africa, and
Oceanica, 588, 589. The Church Catholic,

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751

be lowered in value, 336. The ministry as a
profession, 336. Sacrifices of the Clergy, 337.
Its hold upon the middle classes, 338. Expen-
siveness of clerical education, 339. The Dia-
conate, 340. Retiring pensions for Clergy,
ibid. Privileges of the Ministry, 341. And
dignity, 342. Advice to parents, 343, 344.
Need of prayer-Revival of Convocation,
345. Our divisions, 346.

Orders, Holy, Education for. [Law's Address
to the Bishops.] 659-667. University train-
ing for orders, 661. Defective systems of the
Universities, 662. Diocesan theological col-
leges, 663. Their local advantages, 664.
Burnet's testimony, 665.

Connexion with

Cathedrals, 666. And with existing univer-
sities, 667.

Oxford and its Governors. [Macmullen's Ex-
ercises. Appeal to the Statutes. The Mac-
mullen Correspondence.] 690-709. State of
Oxford-opposition to authorities, 690, 691.
University Life, what it should be and what
it is, 692, 693. Constitution and government
-the Hebdomadal Board and Convocation,
693. Recent divinity statute, its rejection,
694, 695. If proposed honestly by the Heb-
domadal Board-if dishonestly, 696, 697.
General feeling towards the statute, 697. The
majority, 698. Implied censure on the Heb-
domadal Board, 699. Taking the edge off
the defeat, 700. Possible reasons for the re-
cent conduct of the Hebdomadal Board and
State Influence, 701. The Macmullen case,
702, 703. Mr. Macmullen's degree refused,
704. Dr. Hampden and Dr. Wynter, ibid.
Was the Vice-
Heylyn and Prideaux, ibid.
Re-
Chancellor's conduct statutable? 705.
Mr. Garbett's
turn to the disputations, 707.
sermon, 708. Laud's Instructions, ibid. Mac-
mullen's Exercises, 709.

Oxford New Divinity Statute. [Some Hints as
to the Character of the Statute now proposed
to Convocation.] 426-438. The ultimatum
of the Hebdomadal Board, 426. No substan-
tial change in the statute, 426-428. Regius
Professor, 429. New examination and new
degree in Theology, ibid. Paper issued at Ox-
ford, 430-432. Letter in the "Times," 433, 434.
Differ-
Influence of the Government, 434.
ence between German and English univer-
sities, 435. External aspect of Oxford, 436.
Dangerous tendencies exhibited by the Heb-
domadal Board, 437, 438.

P.

Plain Tune. [Dyce's Psalter, &c. with Plain
Tune. Jebb on Choral Serice. Bishop's Edi-
tion of Challis. Laudes Diurnæ.] 438-466.
An
Ornaments at York Minster, 438, 439.
epitome of parties in the Church, 441. Safe
Applied
men, and "via media," 441-443.
to Choral music, 444. Jebb's Choral Service,
ibid. His via media, 445. Practice at Win-
chester, Durham, and Westminster, 446.
"Principles" of plain tune, 447. Rules of
ditto, 448. Was ancient system based on
scale? 449, 450. Had the ancients a system?
451. Resources of old Gregorian music, 452.
Gregorian music "sui generis," 453. Gre-
gorian tones not to be adapted, 454, 455. Mr.
Oakley's Psalter with the tones, 456 Instincts
of the people, 457. Hindrances from the
Clergy, 458. Organs, 459. Accompaniment,
460. Addition of harmonies, 461. Profana-
tion introduced by Organists, 462. Bishop's
edition of Tallis, 463. Rejects Marbeck, 464.
False principle of Mr. Bishop, 465. Plain
Tune of Communion Office, 466. Note to
this article, 614, 616.

R.

Reviewals, republication of. [Contributions to
the Edinburgh Review, by Francis Jeffrey,
now one of the Judges, &c.] 347-362. Ad-
vantages attending the republication of Re-
viewals, 347-349. Peculiar merits of the
Edinburgh Review, 349, 350. Literary cha-
racter of Edinburgh, and literary eminence of
Rea-
its bar-causes of the latter, 350-352.
sons of its Epicurean tone, 353. Merits of
Lord Jeffrey, as a critic, 354. His treatment
of Wordsworth accounted for by his particular
temperament, 356. His republished attack
on Coleridge unjustifiable, 357-361.
favourable prospects for the Scottish mind;
state of the ancient Cathedral of Glasgow,
362.

Un-

Ritual Conformity. [Robertson's "How shall
we Conform to the Liturgy?"] 183-197. How
shall we conform? 184. Interest of laity in
this question, 185. Is the question difficult?
186. The question a moral one, 187. Autho-
rity of the Rubric, 188. Whether the Prayer
Book an ideal? ibid. Bp. Taylor's authority,
189. The argument historical, 190. Laud,
Wren, and Andrewes, 191. Their Conformity,
192. Lights on the Altar, 192-195. Distinc-
tion between Cathedrals and Village Churches,
196. Need of Caution, 197.
Roads and Carriages. [Sir H. Parnell's Trea-
tise on Roads. Adams' English Pleasure Car-
riages.] 198-219. Utility of roads, 198, 199.
Roman roads, 200-202. Roads in Great Bri-
tain, 202, 203. Legislation concerning roads,
203-205. Highland roads, 205-207. Gene-
ral Wade, 206. Art of road-making, 207-
211. Early carriages, 211, 212. Taylor, the
Water Poet's, invective against coaches, 213,
214.

"Nimrod's" illustration of the progress
of stage-coach travelling, 214-218. Private
carriages, 218, 219.

S.

Science and Religion. [Dr. Wiseman's Twelve
Lectures on the Connexion between Science
and Revealed Religion.] 15-26. Unity of
the human race, 15. Aristotle's classification
of mankind, 16, 17. Camper's and Blumen-
bach's methods of measuring the skull, 18.
Infidel theories, 19. Causes of sporadic varieties
in animals and men, 20-22. Affinity of lan-
guage an evidence of unity of origin in differ-
ent nations, 22. Recapitulation, 23, 24.
Science ancillary to Revelation, 25, 26.
Scottish Communion Office. [Cheyne on the
Authority and Use of the Scottish Communion
Office, &c.] 53-85. English Service Book from
Reformation to Charles I., 54. Kiug Edward's
First Book, 55. A full expression of pure
doctrine, 55. The model of Scotch Liturgy,

56. Episcopacy restored without the Liturgy,
57. Revolution of 1688, 58, 59. The Scotch
Service Book, 59. Lord Winton's edition of,
1713. The English Service Book permitted,
60. Collier's Liturgy and the Usages, 61, 62.
History of "Marked" Office, 63. Revision
of 1755 and 1765, 64. Synods of 1811, 1828,
and 1838, 65. Canon XXI. ibid. Agitation
against the Scotch Liturgy, 66 Condition of
Scotch Church, 67. Glasgow petitioners, ibid.
Dishonesty of, 68, 69.
Is
Mr. Craig, 69.
Scotch Liturgy un-Anglican? 70. Eucha-
ristic sacrifice, ibid. Invocation of Holy Spirit,
71; its agreement with all Christian litur-
gies, 72. Both Anglican and Anti-Roman,
ibid. Testimonies of English divines, 73-77.
Authoritative in Scotland, 78, 79. Appeal
to Scottish and English Churches, 79-81.
Bishop of Aberdeen, 82. Mr. Cheyne, 83,
Mr. Pratt, ibid. Duty of preserving Scotch
Liturgy, 84.

A

Scottish Communion Office. [Aberdeen Address.]
289-298. Reclamation against Scotch Ser-
vice a doctrinal movement, 291. Substitu-
tion of English for Scottish Service, 292.
service not a document, 293. Conformity to
English Ritual, 294, 295. Impregnable posi-
tion of Scottish Church, 296. Remonstrants
not of the Scottish Church, 297. Address to
Scotch Bishops, 298.

T.

Tasso, Life of, Part III. 1577-1586. 219-236.

W.

Witches and their Trials. [Proceedings against
Dame Alice Kyteler, for Sorcery, in 1344.
Edited by T. Wright, for the Camden Society.
Presbytery Book of Strathbogie, 1631 to 1654,
for the Spalding Club. Chandler's American
Criminal Trials.] 145-162. Prevalence of
a belief in Sorcery, 145, 146. The fate of
the Kytelers in Ireland in 1344, 146-148.
Witch persecutions in Scotland, 149, 150.
American Witches- commencement of the
persecutions at Salem in 1692, 150, 151;
dreadful persecution, and nature of the evi-
dence before the Special Commission, 151-
154. Evidence against Bishop, 155, 156;
fruitless endeavours of the ministers to calm
the popular feelings-execution of Burroughs,
157-159. Sudden change in public opinion,
160. Recantation of some of the leaders,
ibid. The nature of superstition, and the
truth of Satan's kingdom on earth, 161, 162.

Y.

Young England. Its real limits and promise,
678-689. [See Coningsby.]

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JANUARY.-St. Patrick's Purgatory - King's
Stories from the History of the Church-Pas-
sages from Keble, set to Music-Appeal to
the Members of the S. P. C. K.-Rhoda, or
the Excellence of Charity-Parting Gift to
Young Women-A Word in Defence of our
Altars, &c. - Dickens's Christmas Carol in
Prose-Select Pieces from Wordsworth-
Prayers, Meditations, &c. on the Sacrament
of Baptism-A Voice from Rome-Paget's
Churchman's Calendar for 1844-Little Alice
and her Sister, and Short and Simple Prayers
for Children-Romantic Fiction-Fouqué's
Four Seasons-Glimpses of Nature-Com-
panion to the Services of the Church-Liber
Scholasticus Remarks on the Book of
Psalms-What is the Church? answered-
Picture of Frederick Overbeck-The Church
in Canada-Letters from the Bishop of New
Zealand-Conciones Academica-Charges by
the Bishop of Bangor and the Archdeacon of
Surrey Sermons by Rev. Messrs. Marriott,
Poole, Manning, C. S. Bird, Oldknow, Dowd-
ing, 118-121.

FERRUARY.-Library of the Fathers and Anglo-
Catholic Library-Grant's Bampton Lectures
-The Orientator-The Empire of the Czar-
Harry Mowbray-Notes on the Episcopal
Polity of the Holy Catholic Church-History
of St. Andrews-Christ our Law-Life and
Times of Reuchlin-Modern Wesleyanism-
Restoration of Suffragan Bishops-Historical
and Practical Exposition of the Catechism-
Rev. J. B. Pratt's Pastoral Letter - Engrav-
ings illustrative of the Liturgy-Pietas Do-
mestica-An Apology for the Universities-
Letter from the Lord Bishop of Calcutta-
A Paper on Monuments-Discourses on the
Festivals-Tuson's Sermons-Archdeacon of
Bristol's Charge-Appeal to the Members of
the S. P. C. K. 246-248.

MARCH.-Report of Chaplain of Hackney
Union-Dr. Kalley and the Church in Ma-
deira-Maitland's Dark Ages - The Irish

Ecclesiastical Journal-Foundation Docu-
ments of Merton College-Tucker's Life of
Lord St. Vincent-A Letter to the Lady of
the House-Taylor's Ancient Christianity-
Cattermole's Literature of the Church of
England Elliott's Horæ Apocalypticæ -
Walker's Account of Stoke Golding Church-
Wilkinson's Farewell Sermon-Brock's Visi-
tation Sermon, 378-381.

APRIL-Grenfell's Epistles of the Fathers--
Stebbing's Church and its Ministers-New-
man's Life of St. Stephen Harding-Pusey's
Translation of Avrillon-Perceval's Sermons
on Fasting-Schoolmaster's Manual of Oral
Instruction-Bp. Doane's Reprint of Bp. Sel-
wyn's Letters-Moberley's Five Sermons-
Catechism of the History of the Church-The
Prophetic Register-Almsgiving, Ancient and
Modern-Letter to the Dean and Chapter of
Westminster-Primitive Church in its Epi-
scopacy-S. P. C. K. Illustrated Books-Amy
Herbert S. P. C. K. Reading Lessons-Bath
Almanack-Gresley's Anglo-Catholicism -
Clerical Club-Chronicles of Jocelyn of Brake-
lond-Sermons by P. Maitland, Griffiths,
Wilkins, &c., 491-496.

MAY.-Kemp's Lecture on Transubstantiation,
&c.-The Churches of Yorkshire and the
Churches of Cambridgeshire-Bishop Doane's
Sermon on Ancient Charity-A Pastoral for
the Season of Confirmation-Jarvis's Worldly
and Christian Education compared--Horne's
Mariolatry Bibliotheca Sacra and Theolo-
gical Review (U.S.)-Archæological Journal-
Zoological Sketches-Percy's Reliques--Cam-
bridge Camden Society and the Round
Church-Documents relative to the Erection
and Endowment of Colonial Bishoprics, 629,
630.

JUNE.-North British Review-Archæological
Journal-Dr. Jarvis' Chronology-Waylen's
Novelties which disturb our Unity-Instra-
menta Ecclesiastica-Remains of the Ancient

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