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<h2><span>Lecture X.</span></h2>
<h2><span>Christianity And Medical Science. An Address to the Students Of Medicine.</span></h2>
<h3><span>1.</span></h3>
<p>
I have had so few opportunities, Gentlemen, of addressing
you, and our present meeting is of so interesting
and pleasing a character, by reason of the object
which occasions it, that I am encouraged to speak freely
to you, though I do not know you personally, on a subject
which, as you may conceive, is often before my own
mind: I mean, the exact relation in which your noble
profession stands towards the Catholic University itself
and towards Catholicism generally. Considering my
own most responsible office as Rector, my vocation as
an ecclesiastic, and then again my years, which increase
my present claim, and diminish my future chances, of
speaking to you, I need make no apology, I am sure,
for a step, which will be recommended to you by my
good intentions, even though it deserves no consideration
on the score of the reflections and suggestions themselves
which I shall bring before you. If indeed this University,
and its Faculty of Medicine inclusively, were set up
for the promotion of any merely secular object,—in the
spirit of religious rivalry, as a measure of party politics,
or as a commercial speculation,—then indeed I should
be out of place, not only in addressing you in the tone
of advice, but in being here at all; for what reason could
I in that case have had for having now given some of
the most valuable years of my life to this University,
for having placed it foremost in my thoughts and anxieties,—(I
had well nigh said) to the prejudice of prior,
dearer, and more sacred ties,—except that I felt that
the highest and most special religious interests were
bound up in its establishment and in its success? Suffer
me, then, Gentlemen, if with these views and feelings I
conform my observations to the sacred building in which
we find ourselves, and if I speak to you for a few minutes
as if I were rather addressing you authoritatively from
the pulpit than in the Rector's chair.</p>
<p>
Now I am going to set before you, in as few words as
I can, what I conceive to be the principal duty of the
Medical Profession towards Religion, and some of the
difficulties which are found in the observance of that
duty: and in speaking on the subject I am conscious
how little qualified I am to handle it in such a way as
will come home to your minds, from that want of acquaintance
with you personally, to which I have alluded,
and from my necessary ignorance of the influences of
whatever kind which actually surround you, and the
points of detail which are likely to be your religious embarrassments.
I can but lay down principles and maxims,
which you must apply for yourselves, and which in some
respects or cases you may feel have no true application
at all.</p>
<h3><span>2.</span></h3>
<p>
All professions have their dangers, all general truths
have their fallacies, all spheres of action have their limits,
and are liable to improper extension or alteration. Every
professional man has rightly a zeal for his profession,
and he would not do his duty towards it without that
zeal. And that zeal soon becomes exclusive, or rather
necessarily involves a sort of exclusiveness. A zealous
professional man soon comes to think that his profession
is all in all, and that the world would not go on without
it. We have heard, for instance, a great deal lately in
regard to the war in India, of <em><span style="font-style: italic">political</span></em> views suggesting
one plan of campaign, and <em><span style="font-style: italic">military</span></em> views suggesting
another. How hard it must be for the military man to
forego his own strategical dispositions, not on the ground
that they are not the best,—not that they are not acknowledged
by those who nevertheless put them aside
to <em><span style="font-style: italic">be</span></em> the best <em><span style="font-style: italic">for</span></em> the object of military success,—but
because military success is not the highest of objects,
and the end of ends,—because it is not the sovereign
science, but must ever be subordinate to political considerations
or maxims of government, which is a higher
science with higher objects,—and that therefore his sure
success on the field must be relinquished because the
interests of the council and the cabinet require the sacrifice,
that the war must yield to the statesman's craft, the
commander-in-chief to the governor-general. Yet what
the soldier feels is natural, and what the statesman does
is just. This collision, this desire on the part of every
profession to be supreme,—this necessary, though reluctant,
subordination of the one to the other,—is a process
ever going on, ever acted out before our eyes. The
civilian is in rivalry with the soldier, the soldier with the
civilian. The diplomatist, the lawyer, the political economist,
the merchant, each wishes to usurp the powers of
the state, and to mould society upon the principles of
his own pursuit.</p>
<p>
Nor do they confine themselves to the mere province of
secular matters. They intrude into the province of Religion.
In England, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, lawyers
got hold of religion, and never have let it go. Abroad,
bureaucracy keeps hold of Religion with a more or less
firm grasp. The circles of literature and science have
in like manner before now made Religion a mere province
of their universal empire.</p>
<p>
I remark, moreover, that these various usurpations are
frequently made in perfectly good faith. There is no
intention of encroachment on the part of the encroachers.
The commander recommends what with all his heart and
soul he thinks best for his country when he presses on
Government a certain plan of campaign. The political
economist has the most honest intentions of improving
the Christian system of social duty by his reforms. The
statesman may have the best and most loyal dispositions
towards the Holy See, at the time that he is urging
changes in ecclesiastical discipline which would be
seriously detrimental to the Church.</p>
<p>
And now I will say how this applies to the Medical
Profession, and what is its special danger, viewed in relation
to Catholicity.</p>
<h3><span>3.</span></h3>
<p>
Its province is the physical nature of man, and its
object is the preservation of that physical nature in its
proper state, and its restoration when it has lost it. It
limits itself, by its very profession, to the health of the
body; it ascertains the conditions of that health; it
analyzes the causes of its interruption or failure; it seeks
about for the means of cure. But, after all, bodily health
is not the only end of man, and the medical science is
not the highest science of which he is the subject. Man
has a moral and a religious nature, as well as a physical.
He has a mind and a soul; and the mind and soul have
a legitimate sovereignty over the body, and the sciences
relating to them have in consequence the precedence
of those sciences which relate to the body. And as the
soldier must yield to the statesman, when they come into
collision with each other, so must the medical man to the
priest; not that the medical man may not be enunciating
what is absolutely certain, in a medical point of view,
as the commander may be perfectly right in what he
enunciates strategically, but that his action is suspended
in the given case by the interests and duty of a superior
science, and he retires not confuted but superseded.</p>
<p>
Now this general principle thus stated, all will admit:
who will deny that health must give way to duty? So
far there is no perplexity: supposing a fever to break
out in a certain place, and the medical practitioner said
to a Sister of Charity who was visiting the sick there,
<span class="tei tei-q">“You will die to a certainty if you remain there,”</span> and
her ecclesiastical superiors on the contrary said, <span class="tei tei-q">“You
have devoted your life to such services, and there you
must stay;”</span> and supposing she stayed and was taken
off; the medical adviser would be right, but who would
say that the Religious Sister was wrong? She did not
doubt his word, but she denied the importance of that
word, compared with the word of her religious superiors.
The medical man was right, yet he could not gain his
point. He was right in what he said, he said what was
true, yet he had to give way.</p>
<p>
Here we are approaching what I conceive to be the
especial temptation and danger to which the medical
profession is exposed: it is a certain sophism of the intellect,
founded on this maxim, implied, but not spoken
or even recognized—<span class="tei tei-q">“What is true is lawful.”</span> Not so.
Observe, here is the fallacy,—What is true in one science
is dictated to us indeed according to that science, but
not according to another science, or in another department.
What is certain in the military art has force in
the military art, but not in statesmanship; and if statesmanship
be a higher department of action than war, and
enjoins the contrary, it has no claim on our reception and
obedience at all. And so what is true in medical science
might in all cases be carried out, <em><span style="font-style: italic">were</span></em> man a mere
animal or brute without a soul; but since he is a rational,
responsible being, a thing may be ever so true in medicine,
yet may be unlawful in fact, in consequence of the <em><span style="font-style: italic">higher</span></em>
law of morals and religion having come to some different
conclusion. Now I must be allowed some few words to
express, or rather to suggest, more fully what I mean.</p>
<p>
The whole universe comes from the good God. It is
His creation; <em><span style="font-style: italic">it</span></em> is good; it is all good, as being the work
of the Good, though good only in its degree, and not after
His Infinite Perfection. The physical nature of man is
good; nor can there be any thing sinful in itself in acting
according to that nature. Every natural appetite or function
is lawful, speaking abstractedly. No natural feeling
or act is in itself sinful. There can be no doubt of all
this; and there can be no doubt that science can determine
what is natural, what tends to the preservation of
a healthy state of nature, and what on the contrary is
injurious to nature. Thus the medical student has a vast
field of knowledge spread out before him, true, because
knowledge, and innocent, because true.</p>
<p>
So much in the abstract—but when we come to <em><span style="font-style: italic">fact</span></em>,
it may easily happen that what is in itself innocent may
not be innocent to this or that person, or in this or that
mode or degree. Again, it may easily happen that the
impressions made on a man's mind by his own science
may be indefinitely more vivid and operative than the
enunciations of truths belonging to some other branch of
knowledge, which strike indeed his ear, but do not come
home to him, are not fixed in his memory, are not imprinted
on his imagination. And in the profession before
us, a medical student may realize far more powerfully and
habitually that certain acts are <em><span style="font-style: italic">advisable in themselves</span></em>
according to the law of physical nature, than the fact that
they are forbidden according to the law of some higher
science, as theology; or again, that they are accidentally
wrong, as being, though lawful in themselves, wrong in
this or that individual, or under the circumstances of the
case.</p>
<p>
Now to recur to the instance I have already given: it
is supposable that that Sister of Charity, who, for the
sake of her soul, would not obey the law of self-preservation
as regards her body, might cause her medical adviser
great irritation and disgust. His own particular profession
might have so engrossed his mind, and the truth of
its maxims have so penetrated it, that he could not
understand or admit any other or any higher system.
He might in process of time have become simply dead
to all religious truths, because such truths were not present
to him, and those of his own science were ever present.
And observe, his fault would be, not that of taking error
for truth, for what he relied on <em><span style="font-style: italic">was</span></em> truth—but in not
understanding that there were other truths, and those
higher than his own.</p>
<p>
Take another case, in which there will often in particular
circumstances be considerable differences of opinion
among really religious men, but which does not cease on
that account to illustrate the point I am insisting on. A
patient is dying: the priest wishes to be introduced, lest
he should die without due preparation: the medical man
says that the thought of religion will disturb his mind
and imperil his recovery. Now in the particular case,
the one party or the other may be right in urging his
own view of what ought to be done. I am merely
directing attention to the <em><span style="font-style: italic">principle</span></em> involved in it. Here
are the representatives of two great sciences, Religion
and Medicine. Each says what is true in his own science,
each will think he has a right to insist on seeing that the
truth which he himself is maintaining is carried out in
action; whereas, one of the two sciences is above the
other, and the end of Religion is indefinitely higher than
the end of Medicine. And, however the decision ought
to go, in the particular case, as to introducing the subject
of religion or not, I think the priest ought to have that
decision; just as a Governor-General, not a Commander-in-Chief,
would have the ultimate decision, were politics
and strategics to come into collision.</p>
<p>
You will easily understand, Gentlemen, that I dare
not pursue my subject into those details, which are of
the greater importance for the very reason that they
cannot be spoken of. A medical philosopher, who has
so simply fixed his intellect on his own science as to have
forgotten the existence of any other, will view man, who
is the subject of his contemplation, as a being who has
little more to do than to be born, to grow, to eat, to drink,
to walk, to reproduce his kind, and to die. He sees him
born as other animals are born; he sees life leave him,
with all those phenomena of annihilation which accompany
the death of a brute. He compares his structure,
his organs, his functions, with those of other animals,
and his own range of science leads to the discovery of no
facts which are sufficient to convince him that there is
any difference in kind between the human animal and
them. His practice, then, is according to his facts and
his theory. Such a person will think himself free to give
advice, and to insist upon rules, which are quite insufferable
to any religious mind, and simply antagonistic to
faith and morals. It is not, I repeat, that he says what
is untrue, supposing that man <em><span style="font-style: italic">were</span></em> an animal and nothing
else: but he thinks that whatever is true in his own
science is at once lawful in practice—as if there were not
a number of rival sciences in the great circle of philosophy,
as if there were not a number of conflicting views and
objects in human nature to be taken into account and
reconciled, or as if it were his duty to forget all but his
own; whereas</p>
<br/>There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
<br/>Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
<p>
I have known in England the most detestable advice
given to young persons by eminent physicians, in consequence
of this contracted view of man and his destinies.
God forbid that I should measure the professional habits
of Catholics by the rules of practice of those who were
not! but it is plain that what is actually carried out
where religion is not known, exists as a temptation and
a danger in the Science of Medicine itself, where religion
is known ever so well.</p>
<h3><span>4.</span></h3>
<p>
And now, having suggested, as far as I dare, what I
consider the consequences of that radical sophism to
which the medical profession is exposed, let me go on to
say in what way it is corrected by the action of Catholicism
upon it.</p>
<p>
You will observe, then, Gentlemen, that those higher
sciences of which I have spoken, Morals and Religion,
are not represented to the intelligence of the world by
intimations and notices strong and obvious, such as those
which are the foundation of Physical Science. The
physical nature lies before us, patent to the sight, ready
to the touch, appealing to the senses in so unequivocal a
way that the science which is founded upon it is as
real to us as the fact of our personal existence. But
the phenomena, which are the basis of morals and Religion,
have nothing of this luminous evidence. Instead
of being obtruded upon our notice, so that we cannot
possibly overlook them, they are the dictates either of
Conscience or of Faith. They are faint shadows and
tracings, certain indeed, but delicate, fragile, and almost
evanescent, which the mind recognizes at one time, not
at another,—discerns when it is calm, loses when it is in
agitation. The reflection of sky and mountains in the
lake is a proof that sky and mountains are around it,
but the twilight, or the mist, or the sudden storm hurries
away the beautiful image, which leaves behind it no
memorial of what it was. Something like this are the
Moral Law and the informations of Faith, as they present
themselves to individual minds. Who can deny
the existence of Conscience? who does not feel the force
of its injunctions? but how dim is the illumination in
which it is invested, and how feeble its influence, compared
with that evidence of sight and touch which is the
foundation of Physical Science! How easily can we be
talked out of our clearest views of duty! how does this
or that moral precept crumble into nothing when we
rudely handle it! how does the fear of sin pass off from
us, as quickly as the glow of modesty dies away from
the countenance! and then we say, <span class="tei tei-q">“It is all superstition.”</span>
However, after a time we look round, and then
to our surprise we see, as before, the same law of duty,
the same moral precepts, the same protests against sin,
appearing over against us, in their old places, as if they
never had been brushed away, like the divine handwriting
upon the wall at the banquet. Then perhaps we approach
them rudely, and inspect them irreverently, and
accost them sceptically, and away they go again, like so
many spectres,—shining in their cold beauty, but not
presenting themselves bodily to us, for our inspection, so
to say, of their hands and their feet. And thus these
awful, supernatural, bright, majestic, delicate apparitions,
much as we may in our hearts acknowledge their sovereignty,
are no match as a foundation of Science for
the hard, palpable, material facts which make up the
province of Physics. Recurring to my original illustration,
it is as if the India Commander-in-Chief, instead of
being under the control of a local seat of government at
Calcutta, were governed simply from London, or from
the moon. In that case, he would be under a strong
temptation to neglect the home government, which
nevertheless in theory he acknowledged. Such, I say,
is the natural condition of mankind:—we depend upon
a seat of government which is in another world; we are
directed and governed by intimations from above; we
need a local government on earth.</p>
<p>
That great institution, then, the Catholic Church, has
been set up by Divine Mercy, as a present, visible antagonist,
and the only possible antagonist, to sight and
sense. Conscience, reason, good feeling, the instincts of
our moral nature, the traditions of Faith, the conclusions
and deductions of philosophical Religion, are no match
at all for the stubborn facts (for they <em><span style="font-style: italic">are</span></em> facts, though
there are other facts besides them), for the facts, which
are the foundation of physical, and in particular of medical,
science. Gentlemen, if you feel, as you must feel,
the whisper of a law of moral truth within you, and the
impulse to believe, be sure there is nothing whatever on
earth which can be the sufficient champion of these
sovereign authorities of your soul, which can vindicate
and preserve them to you, and make you loyal to them,
but the Catholic Church. You fear they will go, you
see with dismay that they are going, under the continual
impression created on your mind by the details of the
material science to which you have devoted your lives.
It is so—I do not deny it; except under rare and happy
circumstances, go they will, unless you have Catholicism
to back you up in keeping faithful to them. The world
is a rough antagonist of spiritual truth: sometimes with
mailed hand, sometimes with pertinacious logic, sometimes
with a storm of irresistible facts, it presses on
against you. What it says is true perhaps as far as it
goes, but it is not the whole truth, or the most important
truth. These more important truths, which the natural
heart admits in their substance, though it cannot maintain,—the
being of a God, the certainty of future retribution,
the claims of the moral law, the reality of sin,
the hope of supernatural help,—of these the Church is in
matter of fact the undaunted and the only defender.</p>
<p>
Even those who do not look on her as divine must
grant as much as this. I do not ask you for more here
than to contemplate and recognize her as a fact,—as
other things are facts. She has been eighteen hundred
years in the world, and all that time she has been doing
battle in the boldest, most obstinate way in the cause of
the human race, in maintenance of the undeniable but
comparatively obscure truths of Religion. She is always
alive, always on the alert, when any enemy whatever
attacks them. She has brought them through a thousand
perils. Sometimes preaching, sometimes pleading,
sometimes arguing,—sometimes exposing her ministers
to death, and sometimes, though rarely, inflicting blows
herself,—by peremptory deeds, by patient concessions,—she
has fought on and fulfilled her trust. No wonder
so many speak against her, for she deserves it; she has
earned the hatred and obloquy of her opponents by her
success in opposing them. Those even who speak against
her in this day, own that she was of use in a former day.
The historians in fashion with us just now, much as they
may disown her in their own country, where she is an
actual, present, unpleasant, inconvenient monitor, acknowledge
that, in the middle ages which are gone, in
her were lodged, by her were saved, the fortunes and
the hopes of the human race. The very characteristics
of her discipline, the very maxims of her policy, which
they reprobate now, they perceive to have been of service
then. They understand, and candidly avow, that
once she was the patron of the arts, the home and sanctuary
of letters, the basis of law, the principle of order
and government, and the saviour of Christianity itself.
They judge clearly enough in the case of others, though
they are slow to see the fact in their own age and country;
and, while they do not like to be regulated by her,
and kept in order by her, themselves, they are very well
satisfied that the populations of those former centuries
should have been so ruled, and tamed, and taught by
her resolute and wise teaching. And be sure of this,
that as the generation now alive admits these benefits
to have arisen from her presence in a state of society
now gone by, so in turn, when the interests and passions
of this day are passed away, will future generations
ascribe to her a like special beneficial action upon this
nineteenth century in which we live. For she is ever
the same,—ever young and vigorous, and ever overcoming
new errors with the old weapons.</p>
<h3><span>5.</span></h3>
<p>
And now I have explained, Gentlemen, why it has
been so highly expedient and desirable in a country like
this to bring the Faculty of Medicine under the shadow
of the Catholic Church. I say <span class="tei tei-q">“in a country like this;”</span>
for, if there be any country which deserves that Science
should not run wild, like a planet broken loose from its
celestial system, it is a country which can boast of such
hereditary faith, of such a persevering confessorship, of
such an accumulation of good works, of such a glorious
name, as Ireland. Far be it from this country, far be it
from the counsels of Divine Mercy, that it should grow
in knowledge and not grow in religion! and Catholicism
is the strength of Religion, as Science and System are
the strength of Knowledge.</p>
<p>
Aspirations such as these are met, Gentlemen, I am
well aware, by a responsive feeling in your own hearts;
but by my putting them into words, thoughts which
already exist within you are brought into livelier exercise,
and sentiments which exist in many breasts hold intercommunion
with each other. Gentlemen, it will be your
high office to be the links in your generation between
Religion and Science. Return thanks to the Author of
all good that He has chosen you for this work. Trust
the Church of God implicitly, even when your natural
judgment would take a different course from hers, and
would induce you to question her prudence or her correctness.
Recollect what a hard task she has; how she is
sure to be criticized and spoken against, whatever she
does;—recollect how much she needs your loyal and
tender devotion. Recollect, too, how long is the experience
gained in eighteen hundred years, and what a right
she has to claim your assent to principles which have
had so extended and so triumphant a trial. Thank her
that she has kept the faith safe for so many generations,
and do your part in helping her to transmit it to generations
after you.</p>
<p>
For me, if it has been given me to have any share in
so great a work, I shall rejoice with a joy, not such indeed
as I should feel were I myself a native of this generous
land, but with a joy of my own, not the less pure, because
I have exerted myself for that which concerns others
more nearly than myself. I have had no other motive,
as far as I know myself, than to attempt, according to
my strength, some service to the cause of Religion, and
to be the servant of those to whom as a nation the whole
of Christendom is so deeply indebted; and though this
University, and the Faculty of Medicine which belongs
to it, are as yet only in the commencement of their long
career of usefulness, yet while I live, and (I trust) after
life, it will ever be a theme of thankfulness for my heart
and my lips, that I have been allowed to do even a little,
and to witness so much, of the arduous, pleasant, and
hopeful toil which has attended on their establishment.</p>
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<h1><span>Note on Page </span><SPAN href="#Pg478" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left"><span>478</span></SPAN><span>.</span></h1>
<p>
I think it worthwhile, in illustration of what I have
said above at the page specified, to append the following
passage from Grandorgæus's catalogue of Muratori's
works.</p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“Sanctissimus D.N. Benedictus xiv. Pont. Max. Epistolam
sapientiæ ac roboris plenam dederat … ad
Episcopum Terulensem Hispaniæ Inquisitionis Majorem
Inquisitorem, quâ illum hortabatur, ut <span class="tei tei-q">‘Historiam Pelagianam
et dissertationem, etc.,’</span> editas à claræ memoriæ
Henrico Cardinali Norisio, in Indicem Expurgatorium
Hispanum nuper ingestas, perinde ac si aliquid Baianismi
aut Jansenismi redolerent, prout auctor <span class="tei tei-q">‘Bibliothecæ
Jansenisticæ’</span> immerito autumavit, quamprimum expungendas
curaret. Eoque nomine Sapientissimus Pontifex
plura in medium attulit prudentis œconomiæ exempla,
qua semper usum, supremum S. R. Congr. Indicis Tribunal,
à proscribendis virorum doctissimorum operibus
aliquando temperavit.</span></p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“Quum autem summus Pontifex, ea inter nomina
illustria Tillemontii, Bollandistarum, Bosoueti Ep. Meld.,
et illud recensuerit L. A. Muratorii, his ad Auctorem
nostrum delatis, quam maximè indoluit, veritus ne in
tantâ operum copiâ ab se editorum, aliquid Fidei aut
Religioni minùs consonum sibi excidisset.…</span></p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“Verùm clementissimus Pontifex ne animum desponderet
doctus et humilis filius, pernumaniter ad ipsum
rescripsit … eumque paternè consolatus, inter alia hæc
habet: <span class="tei tei-q">‘Quanto si era detto nella nostra Lettera all'
Inquisitore di Spagna in ordine alle di Lei Opere, non
aveva che fare con la materia delle Feste, nè con verun
dogma o disciplina. Il contenuto delle Opere chi qui
non è piaciuto (nè che Ella poteva mai lusingarsi che
fosse per piacere), riguarda la Giurisdizione Temporale
del Romano Pontifice nè suoi stati,’</span> ”</span> etc. (pp. lx., lxi).</p>
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<h1><span>Index.</span></h1>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Abelard</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg096" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">96</SPAN>,
<br/>age of, <SPAN href="#Pg263" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">263</SPAN>
<br/>Accomplishments not education, <SPAN href="#Pg144" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">144</SPAN>
<br/>Addison, his <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Vision of Mirza</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg279" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">279</SPAN>;
<br/>his care in writing, <SPAN href="#Pg284" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">284</SPAN>;
<br/>the child of the Revolution, <SPAN href="#Pg312" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">312</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg329" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">329</SPAN>
<br/>Æschylus, <SPAN href="#Pg258" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">258</SPAN>
<br/>Alcuin, <SPAN href="#Pg017" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">17</SPAN>
<br/>Aldhelm, St., <SPAN href="#Pg017" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">17</SPAN>
<br/>Alexander the Great, his delight in Homer, <SPAN href="#Pg258" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">258</SPAN>;
<br/>conquests of, <SPAN href="#Pg264" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">264</SPAN>
<br/>Anaxagoras, <SPAN href="#Pg116" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">116</SPAN>
<br/>Andes, the, <SPAN href="#Pg136" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">136</SPAN>
<br/>Animuccia and St. Philip Neri, <SPAN href="#Pg237" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">237</SPAN>
<br/>Apollo Belvidere, the, <SPAN href="#Pg283" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">283</SPAN>
<br/>Aquinas, St. Thomas, <SPAN href="#Pg134" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">134</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg263" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">263</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg384" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">384</SPAN>
<br/>Arcesilas, <SPAN href="#Pg101" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">101</SPAN>
<br/>Architecture, <SPAN href="#Pg081" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">81</SPAN>
<br/>Arian argument against our Lord's Divinity, <SPAN href="#Pg095" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">95</SPAN>
<br/>Ariosto, <SPAN href="#Pg316" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">316</SPAN>
<br/>Aristotelic philosophy, the, <SPAN href="#Pg052" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">52</SPAN>
<br/>Aristotle, xii., <SPAN href="#Pg006" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">6</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg053" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">53</SPAN>;
<br/>quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg078" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">78</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg101" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">101</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg106" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">106</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg109" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">109</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg134" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">134</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg222" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">222</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg275" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">275</SPAN>;
<br/>his sketch of the magnanimous man, <SPAN href="#Pg280" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">280</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg383" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">383</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg431" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">431</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg469" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">469</SPAN>
<br/>Athens, the fountain of secular knowledge, <SPAN href="#Pg264" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">264</SPAN>
<br/>Augustine, St., of Canterbury, mission of, <SPAN href="#Pg016" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">16</SPAN>
<br/>Augustine, St., of Hippo, quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg410" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">410</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Bacci's</span></span> Life of St. Philip Neri, quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg236" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">236</SPAN>
<br/>Bacon, Friar, xiii., <SPAN href="#Pg220" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">220</SPAN>
<br/>Baconian philosophy, the, <SPAN href="#Pg109" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">109</SPAN>
<br/>Bacon, Lord, quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg077" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">77</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg090" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">90</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg117" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">117-119</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg175" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">175</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg221" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">221</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg225" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">225</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg263" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">263</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg319" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">319</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg437" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">437</SPAN>
<br/>Balaam, <SPAN href="#Pg066" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">66</SPAN>
<br/>Beethoven, <SPAN href="#Pg286" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">286</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg313" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">313</SPAN>
<br/>Bentham's <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Preuves Judiciaires</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg096" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">96</SPAN>
<br/>Berkeley, Bishop, on Gothic Architecture, <SPAN href="#Pg081" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">81</SPAN>
<br/>Boccaccio, <SPAN href="#Pg316" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">316</SPAN>
<br/>Boniface, St., <SPAN href="#Pg220" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">220</SPAN>
<br/>Borromeo, St. Carlo, enjoins the use of some of the Latin classics, <SPAN href="#Pg261" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">261</SPAN>;
<br/>on preaching, <SPAN href="#Pg406" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">406</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg412" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">412</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg414" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">414</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg421" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">421</SPAN>
<br/>Bossuet and Bishop Bull, <SPAN href="#Pg007" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">7</SPAN>
<br/>Brougham, Lord, his Discourse at Glasgow, quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg030" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">30</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg034" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">34-35</SPAN>
<br/>Brutus, abandoned by philosophy, <SPAN href="#Pg116" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">116</SPAN>
<br/>Burke, Edmund, <SPAN href="#Pg176" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">176</SPAN>;
<br/>his valediction to the spirit of chivalry, <SPAN href="#Pg201" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">201</SPAN>
<br/>Burman, <SPAN href="#Pg140" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">140</SPAN>
<br/>Butler, Bishop, his Analogy, <SPAN href="#Pg061" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">61</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg100" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">100</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg158" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">158</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg226" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">226</SPAN>
<br/>Byron, Lord, his versification, <SPAN href="#Pg326" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">326</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Caietan</span></span>, St., <SPAN href="#Pg235" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">235</SPAN>
<br/>Campbell, Thomas, <SPAN href="#Pg322" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">322</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg326" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">326</SPAN>
<br/>Carneades, <SPAN href="#Pg106" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">106</SPAN>
<br/>Cato the elder, his opposition to the Greek philosophy, <SPAN href="#Pg106" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">106</SPAN>
<br/>Catullus, <SPAN href="#Pg325" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">325</SPAN>
<br/>Chinese civilization, <SPAN href="#Pg252" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">252</SPAN>
<br/>Christianity and Letters, <SPAN href="#Pg249" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">249</SPAN>
<br/>Chrysostom, St., on Judas, <SPAN href="#Pg086" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">86</SPAN>
<br/>Cicero, quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg077" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">77</SPAN>;
<br/>on the pursuit of knowledge, <SPAN href="#Pg104" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">104</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg116" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">116</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg260" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">260</SPAN>;
<br/>style of, <SPAN href="#Pg281" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">281</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg282" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">282</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg327" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">327</SPAN>;
<br/>quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg399" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">399</SPAN>;
<br/>his orations against Verres, <SPAN href="#Pg421" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">421</SPAN>
<br/>Civilization and Christianity, <SPAN href="#Pg255" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">255</SPAN>
<br/>Clarendon, Lord, <SPAN href="#Pg311" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">311</SPAN>
<br/>Colours, combination of, <SPAN href="#Pg100" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">100</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-q" style="text-align: left">“Condescension,”</span> two senses of, <SPAN href="#Pg205" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">205</SPAN>
<br/>Copleston, Dr., Bishop of Llandaff, <SPAN href="#Pg157" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">157</SPAN>;
<br/>quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg167" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">167-169</SPAN>
<br/>Corinthian brass, <SPAN href="#Pg175" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">175</SPAN>
<br/>Cowper, quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg191" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">191</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg467" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">467</SPAN>
<br/>Crabbe, his <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Tales of the Hall</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg150" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">150</SPAN>;
<br/>his versification, <SPAN href="#Pg326" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">326</SPAN>
<br/>Craik, Dr. G. L., his <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Pursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties</span></span>, quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg103" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">103</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg104" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">104</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Dante</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg316" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">316</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg329" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">329</SPAN>
<br/>Davison, John, <SPAN href="#Pg158" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">158</SPAN>;
<br/>on Liberal Education, <SPAN href="#Pg169" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">169-177</SPAN>
<br/>Definiteness, the life of preaching, <SPAN href="#Pg426" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">426</SPAN>
<br/>Demosthenes, <SPAN href="#Pg259" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">259</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg284" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">284</SPAN>
<br/>Descartes, <SPAN href="#Pg315" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">315</SPAN>
<br/>Dumesnil's Synonymes, <SPAN href="#Pg368" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">368</SPAN>
<br/>Du Pin's Ecclesiastical History, <SPAN href="#Pg140" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">140</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Edgeworth</span></span>, Mr., on Professional Education, <SPAN href="#Pg158" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">158</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg170" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">170</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg176" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">176</SPAN>
<br/>Edinburgh, <SPAN href="#Pg154" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">154</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Edinburgh Review</span></span>, the, <SPAN href="#Pg153" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">153</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg157" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">157</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg160" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">160</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg301" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">301</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg329" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">329</SPAN>
<br/>Edward II., King of England, vow at his flight from Bannockburn, <SPAN href="#Pg155" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">155</SPAN>
<br/>Elmsley, <SPAN href="#Pgxiv" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">xiv</SPAN>.
<br/>Epicurus, <SPAN href="#Pg040" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">40</SPAN>
<br/>Euclid's Elements, <SPAN href="#Pg274" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">274</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg313" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">313</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg501" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">501</SPAN>
<br/>Euripides, <SPAN href="#Pg258" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">258</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Fenelon</span></span>, on the Gothic style of Architecture, <SPAN href="#Pg082" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">82</SPAN>
<br/>Fontaine, La, his immoral <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Contes</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg315" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">315</SPAN>
<br/>Fouqué, Lamotte, his tale of the <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Unknown Patient</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg119" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">119</SPAN>
<br/>Fra Angelico, <SPAN href="#Pg287" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">287</SPAN>
<br/>Franklin, <SPAN href="#Pg304" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">304</SPAN>
<br/>Frederick II., <SPAN href="#Pg383" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">383</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg384" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">384</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Galen</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg222" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">222</SPAN>
<br/>Gentleman, the true, defined, <SPAN href="#Pg208" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">208</SPAN>
<br/>Gerdil, Cardinal, quoted, xiii., on the Emperor Julian, <SPAN href="#Pg194" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">194</SPAN>;
<br/>on Malebranche, <SPAN href="#Pg477" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">477</SPAN>
<br/>Giannone, <SPAN href="#Pg316" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">316</SPAN>
<br/>Gibbon, on the darkness at the Passion, <SPAN href="#Pg095" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">95</SPAN>;
<br/>his hatred of Christianity, <SPAN href="#Pg195" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">195</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg196" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">196</SPAN>;
<br/>his care in writing, <SPAN href="#Pg285" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">285</SPAN>;
<br/>influence of his style on the literature of the present day, <SPAN href="#Pg323" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">323</SPAN>;
<br/>his tribute to Hume and Robertson, <SPAN href="#Pg325" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">325</SPAN>
<br/>Goethe, <SPAN href="#Pg134" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">134</SPAN>
<br/>Gothic Architecture, <SPAN href="#Pg082" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">82</SPAN>
<br/>Grammar, <SPAN href="#Pg096" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">96</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg334" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">334</SPAN>
<br/>Gregory the Great, St., <SPAN href="#Pg260" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">260</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Hardouin</span></span>, Father, on Latin literature, <SPAN href="#Pg310" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">310</SPAN>
<br/>Health, <SPAN href="#Pg164" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">164</SPAN>
<br/>Herodotus, <SPAN href="#Pg284" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">284</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg325" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">325</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg329" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">329</SPAN>
<br/>Hobbes, <SPAN href="#Pg311" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">311</SPAN>
<br/>Homer, his address to the Delian women, <SPAN href="#Pg257" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">257</SPAN>;
<br/>his best descriptions, according to Sterne, marred by translation, <SPAN href="#Pg271" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">271</SPAN>
<br/>Hooker, <SPAN href="#Pg311" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">311</SPAN>
<br/>Horace, quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg257" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">257</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg258" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">258</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg329" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">329</SPAN>
<br/>Horne Tooke, <SPAN href="#Pg096" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">96</SPAN>
<br/>Hume, <SPAN href="#Pg040" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">40</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg058" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">58</SPAN>;
<br/>style of, <SPAN href="#Pg325" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">325</SPAN>
<br/>Humility, <SPAN href="#Pg206" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">206</SPAN>
<br/>Huss, <SPAN href="#Pg155" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">155</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Jacob's</span></span> courtship, <SPAN href="#Pg232" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">232</SPAN>
<br/>Jeffrey, Lord, <SPAN href="#Pg157" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">157</SPAN>
<br/>Jerome, St., on idolizing the creature, <SPAN href="#Pg087" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">87</SPAN>
<br/>Jerusalem, the fountain-head of religious knowledge, <SPAN href="#Pg264" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">264</SPAN>
<br/>Ignatius, St., <SPAN href="#Pg235" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">235</SPAN>
<br/>Job, religious merry-makings of, <SPAN href="#Pg232" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">232</SPAN>;
<br/>Book of, <SPAN href="#Pg289" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">289</SPAN>
<br/>John, King, <SPAN href="#Pg383" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">383</SPAN>
<br/>John of Salisbury, <SPAN href="#Pg262" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">262</SPAN>
<br/>Johnson, Dr., his method of writing the Ramblers, <SPAN href="#Pgxx" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">xx</SPAN>.;
<br/>his vigour and resource of intellect, <SPAN href="#Pgxxi" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">xxi</SPAN>.;
<br/>his definition of the word <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">University</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg020" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">20</SPAN>;
<br/>his <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Rasselas</span></span> quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg116" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">116-117</SPAN>;
<br/>style of, <SPAN href="#Pg283" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">283</SPAN>;
<br/>his Table-talk, <SPAN href="#Pg313" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">313</SPAN>;
<br/>his bias towards Catholicity, <SPAN href="#Pg319" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">319</SPAN>;
<br/>his definition of <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Grammar</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg334" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">334</SPAN>
<br/>Joseph, history of, <SPAN href="#Pg271" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">271</SPAN>
<br/>Isaac, feast at his weaning, <SPAN href="#Pg232" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">232</SPAN>
<br/>Isocrates, <SPAN href="#Pg282" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">282</SPAN>
<br/>Julian the Apostate, <SPAN href="#Pg194" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">194</SPAN>
<br/>Justinian, <SPAN href="#Pg265" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">265</SPAN>
<br/>Juvenal, <SPAN href="#Pg325" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">325</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Keble</span></span>, John, <SPAN href="#Pg158" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">158</SPAN>;
<br/>his Latin Lectures, <SPAN href="#Pg369" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">369</SPAN>
<br/>Knowledge, its own end, <SPAN href="#Pg099" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">99</SPAN>;
<br/>viewed in relation to learning, <SPAN href="#Pg124" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">124</SPAN>;
<br/>to professional skill, <SPAN href="#Pg151" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">151</SPAN>;
<br/>to religion, <SPAN href="#Pg179" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">179</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Lalanne</span></span>, Abbé, <SPAN href="#Pg009" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">9</SPAN>
<br/>Leo, St., on the love of gain, <SPAN href="#Pg087" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">87</SPAN>
<br/>Literature, <SPAN href="#Pg268" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">268</SPAN>
<br/>Locke, on Education, <SPAN href="#Pg158" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">158-160</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg163" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">163</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg319" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">319</SPAN>
<br/>Logos, <SPAN href="#Pg276" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">276</SPAN>
<br/>Lohner, Father, his story of a court-preacher, <SPAN href="#Pg411" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">411</SPAN>
<br/>Longinus, his admiration of the Mosaic account of Creation, <SPAN href="#Pg271" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">271</SPAN>
<br/>Lutheran leaven, spread of the, <SPAN href="#Pg028" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">28</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Macaulay</span></span>, Lord, his Essay on Bacon's philosophy, <SPAN href="#Pg118" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">118</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg221" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">221</SPAN>;
<br/>his <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Essays</span></span> quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg301" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">301</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg435" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">435-438</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg450" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">450</SPAN>
<br/>Machiavel, <SPAN href="#Pg316" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">316</SPAN>
<br/>Malebranche, <SPAN href="#Pg477" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">477</SPAN>
<br/>Maltby, Dr., bishop of Durham, his Address to the Deity, <SPAN href="#Pg033" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">33</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg040" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">40</SPAN>
<br/>Michael Angelo, first attempts of, <SPAN href="#Pg283" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">283</SPAN>
<br/>Milman, Dean, his History of the Jews, <SPAN href="#Pg085" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">85</SPAN>
<br/>Milton, on Education, <SPAN href="#Pg169" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">169</SPAN>;
<br/>his <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Samson Agonistes</span></span> quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg323" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">323</SPAN>;
<br/>his allusions to himself, <SPAN href="#Pg329" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">329</SPAN>
<br/>Modesty, <SPAN href="#Pg206" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">206</SPAN>
<br/>Montaigne's Essays, <SPAN href="#Pg315" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">315</SPAN>
<br/>More, Sir Thomas, <SPAN href="#Pg437" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">437</SPAN>
<br/>Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History, <SPAN href="#Pg140" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">140</SPAN>
<br/>Muratori, <SPAN href="#Pg478" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">478</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg520" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">520</SPAN>
<br/>Music, <SPAN href="#Pg080" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">80</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Neri</span></span>, St. Philip, <SPAN href="#Pg234" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">234</SPAN>
<br/>Newton, Sir Isaac, <SPAN href="#Pgxiii" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">xiii</SPAN>., <SPAN href="#Pg049" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">49</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg053" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">53</SPAN>;
<br/>on the Apocalypse, <SPAN href="#Pg304" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">304</SPAN>;
<br/>his marvellous powers, <SPAN href="#Pg324" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">324</SPAN>
<br/>Newtonian philosophy, the, <SPAN href="#Pg049" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">49</SPAN>
<br/>Noah's ark, <SPAN href="#Pg073" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">73</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Olympic</span></span> games, the, <SPAN href="#Pg107" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">107</SPAN>
<br/>Optics, <SPAN href="#Pg046" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">46</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Painting</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg079" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">79</SPAN>
<br/>Palestrina, <SPAN href="#Pg237" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">237</SPAN>
<br/>Paley, <SPAN href="#Pg058" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">58</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg449" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">449</SPAN>
<br/>Palladio, <SPAN href="#Pg057" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">57</SPAN>
<br/>Pascal, <SPAN href="#Pg315" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">315</SPAN>
<br/>Patrick, St., greatness of his work, <SPAN href="#Pg015" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">15</SPAN>
<br/>Periodical criticism, <SPAN href="#Pg333" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">333</SPAN>
<br/>Persian mode of letter-writing, <SPAN href="#Pg277" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">277</SPAN>
<br/>Pindar, <SPAN href="#Pg329" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">329</SPAN>
<br/>Pitt, William, his opinion of Butler's Analogy, <SPAN href="#Pg100" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">100</SPAN>
<br/>Pius IV., Pope, death of, <SPAN href="#Pg237" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">237</SPAN>
<br/>Plato, on poets, <SPAN href="#Pg101" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">101</SPAN>;
<br/>on music, <SPAN href="#Pg110" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">110</SPAN>
<br/>Playfair, Professor, <SPAN href="#Pg157" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">157</SPAN>
<br/>Political Economy, <SPAN href="#Pg086" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">86</SPAN>
<br/>Pompey's Pillar, <SPAN href="#Pg136" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">136</SPAN>
<br/>Pope, Alex., quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg118" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">118</SPAN>;
<br/>an indifferent Catholic, <SPAN href="#Pg318" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">318</SPAN>;
<br/>has tuned our versification, <SPAN href="#Pg323" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">323</SPAN>;
<br/>quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg375" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">375</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg501" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">501</SPAN>
<br/>Porson, Richard, xiv., <SPAN href="#Pg304" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">304</SPAN>
<br/>Pride and self-respect, <SPAN href="#Pg207" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">207</SPAN>
<br/>Private Judgment, <SPAN href="#Pg097" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">97</SPAN>
<br/>Protestant argument against Transubstantiation, <SPAN href="#Pg095" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">95</SPAN>
<br/>Psalter, the, <SPAN href="#Pg289" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">289</SPAN>
<br/>Pulci, <SPAN href="#Pg316" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">316</SPAN>
<br/>Pythagoras, <SPAN href="#Pgxiii" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">xiii</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Rabelias</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg315" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">315</SPAN>
<br/>Raffaelle, first attempts of, <SPAN href="#Pg283" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">283</SPAN>; <SPAN href="#Pg287" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">287</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Rasselas</span></span> quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg116" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">116</SPAN>
<br/>Recreations not Education, <SPAN href="#Pg144" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">144</SPAN>
<br/>Robertson, style of, <SPAN href="#Pg325" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">325</SPAN>
<br/>Rome, <SPAN href="#Pg265" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">265</SPAN>
<br/>Round Towers of Ireland, the, <SPAN href="#Pg095" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">95</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Sales</span></span>, St Francis de, on preaching, <SPAN href="#Pg406" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">406</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg410" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">410</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg411" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">411</SPAN>
<br/>Salmasius, <SPAN href="#Pg140" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">140</SPAN>
<br/>Savonarola, <SPAN href="#Pg235" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">235</SPAN>
<br/>Scott, Sir Walter, <SPAN href="#Pg313" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">313</SPAN>;
<br/>his <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Old Mortality</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg359" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">359</SPAN>
<br/>Seneca, <SPAN href="#Pg110" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">110</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg116" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">116</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg327" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">327</SPAN>
<br/>Sermons of the seventeenth century, <SPAN href="#Pg140" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">140</SPAN>
<br/>Shaftesbury, Lord, his <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Characteristics</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg196" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">196-201</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg204" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">204</SPAN>
<br/>Shakespeare, quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg150" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">150</SPAN>;
<br/>his <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Macbeth</span></span> quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg280" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">280</SPAN>;
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Hamlet</span></span> quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg281" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">281</SPAN>;
<br/>quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg284" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">284</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg287" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">287</SPAN>;
<br/>morality of, <SPAN href="#Pg318" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">318</SPAN>;
<br/>quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg410" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">410</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg513" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">513</SPAN>
<br/>Simon of Tournay, narrative of, <SPAN href="#Pg384" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">384</SPAN>
<br/>Smith, Sydney, <SPAN href="#Pg157" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">157</SPAN>
<br/>Sophocles, <SPAN href="#Pg258" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">258</SPAN>
<br/>Southey's <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Thalaba</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg323" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">323</SPAN>;
<br/>quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg324" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">324</SPAN>
<br/>Sterne's Sermons, quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg270" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">270-272</SPAN>
<br/>Stuffing birds not education, <SPAN href="#Pg144" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">144</SPAN>
<br/>Sylvester II., Pope, accused of magic, <SPAN href="#Pg220" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">220</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Tarpeia</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg140" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">140</SPAN>
<br/>Taylor, Jeremy, his <span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-style: italic">Liberty of Prophesying</span></span>, <SPAN href="#Pg472" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">472</SPAN>
<br/>Terence and Menander, <SPAN href="#Pg259" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">259</SPAN>
<br/>Tertullian, <SPAN href="#Pg327" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">327</SPAN>
<br/>Thales, <SPAN href="#Pgxiii" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">xiii</SPAN>.
<br/>Theology, a branch of knowledge, <SPAN href="#Pg019" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">19</SPAN>;
<br/>definition of, <SPAN href="#Pg060" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">60</SPAN>
<br/>Thucydides, <SPAN href="#Pg259" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">259</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg325" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">325</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg329" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">329</SPAN>
<br/>Titus, armies of, <SPAN href="#Pg265" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">265</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Virgil</span></span>, his obligations to Greek poets, <SPAN href="#Pg259" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">259</SPAN>;
<br/>wishes his Æneid burnt, <SPAN href="#Pg284" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">284</SPAN>;
<br/>fixes the character of the hexameter, <SPAN href="#Pg325" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">325</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg329" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">329</SPAN>
<br/>Voltaire, <SPAN href="#Pg303" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">303</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg315" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">315</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Utility</span></span> in Education, <SPAN href="#Pg161" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">161</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Watson</span></span>, Bishop, on Mathematics, <SPAN href="#Pg101" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">101</SPAN>
<br/>Wiclif, <SPAN href="#Pg155" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">155</SPAN>
<br/>Wren, Sir Christopher, <SPAN href="#Pg057" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">57</SPAN>
<br/><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Xavier</span></span>, St. Francis, <SPAN href="#Pg235" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">235</SPAN>
<br/>Xenophon quoted, <SPAN href="#Pg107" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">107</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Pg258" class="tei tei-ref" style="text-align: left">258</SPAN>
<p>
FINIS.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />