Refutation, a Catholic’s, i. 349.

Regeneration of material bodies, iii. [286], 287.

Relics of Saints, bought, sold, and stolen, i, 239; treatise on, by Gilbert de Nogent, ib.; of St. Lewin, ib.; of St. Indalece, 240; of St. Majean, ib.; of St. Augustin’s arm, ib.; flogging of, ib.; miracles performed by, ib.; miraculously multiplied, 241; anecdote of a box of, presented by the Pope to Prince Radzivil, ib.; Frederick the Wise, a great collector of, 242; phial of the blood of Christ sent to Henry III., ib.; fall in price of, ib.; deceptive, 243.

Religion, state of, during the Civil Wars, iii. [433]; illustrative anecdotes of, [434]-436; contest between Owen and Baxter on, [437]; confusion of, ib.; a colt baptised in St. Paul’s Cathedral, [439], and note; anecdotes, [439]-441; noticed by George Wither the Poet, [442]; ordinance of the Parliament to rectify the disorders in, [443].

Religionism distinguished from religion, iii. [239].

Religious Nouvellettes, a class of very singular works, i. 363; account of one, 364; notice of one discussing three thousand questions concerning the Virgin Mary, 365; Life of the Virgin, 367; Jesuits usual authors of, 368; one describing what passes in Paradise, ib.; the Spiritual Kalendar, ib.

Representation, right of, not fixed in the 10th century, i. 162.

Residences of literary men, notices of several, iii. [394]-399.

Reviews.—See Literary Journals.

Revolutions, maxim on, iii. [278].