FOOTNOTES.

[1] Lest another inference should possibly be drawn, it is right to state that this Letter (like the former) is addressed to no one whose name is known to the Public.

[5a] Reply to Dr. Vaughan’s Letter on the late Post Office Agitation. By the Rev. J. R. Pears, M.A., Master of the Bath Grammar School.

[5b] Reply, page 10.

[7] Parochial Sermons, page 291.

[8a] MS. Sermon, preached in the Chapel of Harrow School, Nov. 11, 1849.

[8b] The Lord’s Day.

[11a] Reply, page 21.

[11b] Reply, page 16, &c.

[12] Reply, page 19.

[13a] The Record, December 3, 1849.

[13b] Reply, page 19.

[13c] Reply, page 4.

[13d] Letter to the Hon. Grantley F. Berkeley, on the Delivery of Letters on the Lord’s Day. By the Rev. J. R. Pears, M.A.

[13e] Ibid, page 10.

[14] Reply, pages 12, 20.

[16] The Record, as above.

[19a] Letter I. page 8.

[19b] Letter I. Note 7, page 8.

[20a] Letter I. page 7.

[20b] See above, page 17.

[20c] Reply, page 18.

[21a] See above, page 14. Reply, page 13.

[21b] Reply, page 7.

[21c] Reply, page 6.

[22a] Letter I. pages 7, 8.

[22b] Reply, page 8.

[23] Letter I. note 8, page 10.

[24] Letter I. note 10, pages 11, 12.

[26] Letter I. page 13. See above, page 18.

[28] Reply, page 19.

[29a] Reply, pages 13, 14.

[29b] Letter I. pages 7, 8.

[33] Letter I. page 12. Nor is it perhaps altogether presumptuous to express a hope that the unrestricted transmission of letters on the Sunday may eventually be followed by an equally general suspension of their delivery; by which London and the country would be placed, in this respect, on a footing of perfect equality; the due observance of the Sunday being alike in both secured, with no injurious consequences, in either, to the business of the following day.