Index.

Abelard, [96],

age of, [263]

Accomplishments not education, [144]

Addison, his Vision of Mirza, [279];

his care in writing, [284];

the child of the Revolution, [312], [329]

Æschylus, [258]

Alcuin, [17]

Aldhelm, St., [17]

Alexander the Great, his delight in Homer, [258];

conquests of, [264]

Anaxagoras, [116]

Andes, the, [136]

Animuccia and St. Philip Neri, [237]

Apollo Belvidere, the, [283]

Aquinas, St. Thomas, [134], [263], [384]

Arcesilas, [101]

Architecture, [81]

Arian argument against our Lord's Divinity, [95]

Ariosto, [316]

Aristotelic philosophy, the, [52]

Aristotle, xii., [6], [53];

quoted, [78], [101], [106], [109], [134], [222], [275];

his sketch of the magnanimous man, [280], [383], [431], [469]

Athens, the fountain of secular knowledge, [264]

Augustine, St., of Canterbury, mission of, [16]

Augustine, St., of Hippo, quoted, [410]

Bacci's Life of St. Philip Neri, quoted, [236]

Bacon, Friar, xiii., [220]

Baconian philosophy, the, [109]

Bacon, Lord, quoted, [77], [90], [117-119], [175], [221], [225], [263], [319], [437]

Balaam, [66]

Beethoven, [286], [313]

Bentham's Preuves Judiciaires, [96]

Berkeley, Bishop, on Gothic Architecture, [81]

Boccaccio, [316]

Boniface, St., [220]

Borromeo, St. Carlo, enjoins the use of some of the Latin classics, [261];

on preaching, [406], [412], [414], [421]

Bossuet and Bishop Bull, [7]

Brougham, Lord, his Discourse at Glasgow, quoted, [30], [34-35]

Brutus, abandoned by philosophy, [116]

Burke, Edmund, [176];

his valediction to the spirit of chivalry, [201]

Burman, [140]

Butler, Bishop, his Analogy, [61], [100], [158], [226]

Byron, Lord, his versification, [326]

Caietan, St., [235]

Campbell, Thomas, [322], [326]

Carneades, [106]

Cato the elder, his opposition to the Greek philosophy, [106]

Catullus, [325]

Chinese civilization, [252]

Christianity and Letters, [249]

Chrysostom, St., on Judas, [86]

Cicero, quoted, [77];

on the pursuit of knowledge, [104], [116], [260];

style of, [281], [282], [327];

quoted, [399];

his orations against Verres, [421]

Civilization and Christianity, [255]

Clarendon, Lord, [311]

Colours, combination of, [100]

“Condescension,” two senses of, [205]

Copleston, Dr., Bishop of Llandaff, [157];

quoted, [167-169]

Corinthian brass, [175]

Cowper, quoted, [191], [467]

Crabbe, his Tales of the Hall, [150];

his versification, [326]

Craik, Dr. G. L., his Pursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties, quoted, [103], [104]

Dante, [316], [329]

Davison, John, [158];

on Liberal Education, [169-177]

Definiteness, the life of preaching, [426]

Demosthenes, [259], [284]

Descartes, [315]

Dumesnil's Synonymes, [368]

Du Pin's Ecclesiastical History, [140]

Edgeworth, Mr., on Professional Education, [158], [170], [176]

Edinburgh, [154]

Edinburgh Review, the, [153], [157], [160], [301], [329]

Edward II., King of England, vow at his flight from Bannockburn, [155]

Elmsley, [xiv].

Epicurus, [40]

Euclid's Elements, [274], [313], [501]

Euripides, [258]

Fenelon, on the Gothic style of Architecture, [82]

Fontaine, La, his immoral Contes, [315]

Fouqué, Lamotte, his tale of the Unknown Patient, [119]

Fra Angelico, [287]

Franklin, [304]

Frederick II., [383], [384]

Galen, [222]

Gentleman, the true, defined, [208]

Gerdil, Cardinal, quoted, xiii., on the Emperor Julian, [194];

on Malebranche, [477]

Giannone, [316]

Gibbon, on the darkness at the Passion, [95];

his hatred of Christianity, [195], [196];

his care in writing, [285];

influence of his style on the literature of the present day, [323];

his tribute to Hume and Robertson, [325]

Goethe, [134]

Gothic Architecture, [82]

Grammar, [96], [334]

Gregory the Great, St., [260]

Hardouin, Father, on Latin literature, [310]

Health, [164]

Herodotus, [284], [325], [329]

Hobbes, [311]

Homer, his address to the Delian women, [257];

his best descriptions, according to Sterne, marred by translation, [271]

Hooker, [311]

Horace, quoted, [257], [258], [329]

Horne Tooke, [96]

Hume, [40], [58];

style of, [325]

Humility, [206]

Huss, [155]

Jacob's courtship, [232]

Jeffrey, Lord, [157]

Jerome, St., on idolizing the creature, [87]

Jerusalem, the fountain-head of religious knowledge, [264]

Ignatius, St., [235]

Job, religious merry-makings of, [232];

Book of, [289]

John, King, [383]

John of Salisbury, [262]

Johnson, Dr., his method of writing the Ramblers, [xx].;

his vigour and resource of intellect, [xxi].;

his definition of the word University, [20];

his Rasselas quoted, [116-117];

style of, [283];

his Table-talk, [313];

his bias towards Catholicity, [319];

his definition of Grammar, [334]

Joseph, history of, [271]

Isaac, feast at his weaning, [232]

Isocrates, [282]

Julian the Apostate, [194]

Justinian, [265]

Juvenal, [325]

Keble, John, [158];

his Latin Lectures, [369]

Knowledge, its own end, [99];

viewed in relation to learning, [124];

to professional skill, [151];

to religion, [179]

Lalanne, Abbé, [9]

Leo, St., on the love of gain, [87]

Literature, [268]

Locke, on Education, [158-160], [163], [319]

Logos, [276]

Lohner, Father, his story of a court-preacher, [411]

Longinus, his admiration of the Mosaic account of Creation, [271]

Lutheran leaven, spread of the, [28]

Macaulay, Lord, his Essay on Bacon's philosophy, [118], [221];

his Essays quoted, [301], [435-438], [450]

Machiavel, [316]

Malebranche, [477]

Maltby, Dr., bishop of Durham, his Address to the Deity, [33], [40]

Michael Angelo, first attempts of, [283]

Milman, Dean, his History of the Jews, [85]

Milton, on Education, [169];

his Samson Agonistes quoted, [323];

his allusions to himself, [329]

Modesty, [206]

Montaigne's Essays, [315]

More, Sir Thomas, [437]

Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History, [140]

Muratori, [478], [520]

Music, [80]

Neri, St. Philip, [234]

Newton, Sir Isaac, [xiii]., [49], [53];

on the Apocalypse, [304];

his marvellous powers, [324]

Newtonian philosophy, the, [49]

Noah's ark, [73]

Olympic games, the, [107]

Optics, [46]

Painting, [79]

Palestrina, [237]

Paley, [58], [449]

Palladio, [57]

Pascal, [315]

Patrick, St., greatness of his work, [15]

Periodical criticism, [333]

Persian mode of letter-writing, [277]

Pindar, [329]

Pitt, William, his opinion of Butler's Analogy, [100]

Pius IV., Pope, death of, [237]

Plato, on poets, [101];

on music, [110]

Playfair, Professor, [157]

Political Economy, [86]

Pompey's Pillar, [136]

Pope, Alex., quoted, [118];

an indifferent Catholic, [318];

has tuned our versification, [323];

quoted, [375], [501]

Porson, Richard, xiv., [304]

Pride and self-respect, [207]

Private Judgment, [97]

Protestant argument against Transubstantiation, [95]

Psalter, the, [289]

Pulci, [316]

Pythagoras, [xiii]

Rabelias, [315]

Raffaelle, first attempts of, [283]; [287]

Rasselas quoted, [116]

Recreations not Education, [144]

Robertson, style of, [325]

Rome, [265]

Round Towers of Ireland, the, [95]

Sales, St Francis de, on preaching, [406], [410], [411]

Salmasius, [140]

Savonarola, [235]

Scott, Sir Walter, [313];

his Old Mortality, [359]

Seneca, [110], [116], [327]

Sermons of the seventeenth century, [140]

Shaftesbury, Lord, his Characteristics, [196-201], [204]

Shakespeare, quoted, [150];

his Macbeth quoted, [280];

Hamlet quoted, [281];

quoted, [284], [287];

morality of, [318];

quoted, [410], [513]

Simon of Tournay, narrative of, [384]

Smith, Sydney, [157]

Sophocles, [258]

Southey's Thalaba, [323];

quoted, [324]

Sterne's Sermons, quoted, [270-272]

Stuffing birds not education, [144]

Sylvester II., Pope, accused of magic, [220]

Tarpeia, [140]

Taylor, Jeremy, his Liberty of Prophesying, [472]

Terence and Menander, [259]

Tertullian, [327]

Thales, [xiii].

Theology, a branch of knowledge, [19];

definition of, [60]

Thucydides, [259], [325], [329]

Titus, armies of, [265]

Virgil, his obligations to Greek poets, [259];

wishes his Æneid burnt, [284];

fixes the character of the hexameter, [325], [329]

Voltaire, [303], [315]

Utility in Education, [161]

Watson, Bishop, on Mathematics, [101]

Wiclif, [155]

Wren, Sir Christopher, [57]

Xavier, St. Francis, [235]

Xenophon quoted, [107], [258]

FINIS.