INDEX
- Admonition to Trew Lords, the, [130].
- Æschylus, [15].
- Agamemnon, [15].
- Arius, [91].
- Ascham, Roger, [81].
- Atonement, the, [90].
- Augustine, [99].
- Aurelius, Marcus, [100].
- Baptistes, the, [57], [58].
- Beaton, Cardinal, [122], [139].
- Begging letter-writer, [31].
- Beza, [81].
- Boëtius, [66], [100].
- Bordeaux, [58].
- Brahe, Tycho, [44], [81].
- Brissac, Marshal of, [51].
- Brewster, Sir D., [129].
- Brown, P. Hume, [18].
- Buchanan, George—
- Writings burned by hangman, [9].
- Milton and Buchanan’s De Jure, [10].
- Effect of the De Jure, [11].
- Relations to the Scaligers, [13].
- Wordsworth on Buchanan, [14].
- Porson and Buchanan, [15].
- Milton’s opinion of him, [15].
- Hallam’s estimate of him, [16].
- Froude’s opinion of him, [16].
- Buchanan’s scholarship, [17].
- His Detectio Mariæ Reginæ, [18].
- The Marians and Buchanan, [20].
- The chapbook Buchanan, [21].
- His humour, [22].
- Interview with Melvilles, [23].
- The Countess of Mar and, [25].
- Division of his life into periods of preparation and performance, [27].
- Why he became a Protestant, [28].
- Joseph Scaliger’s elegy on, [31].
- Begging letter-writer, [31].
- Letters to Mary, Queen of Scots, [32].
- Letters to Earl of Moray, [32].
- Comparison between Erasmus and, [35].
- Hospitality of Roman Catholic days, [36].
- His influence on cultured Europe, [38].
- Parallel between his conduct and that of to-day, [39].
- No loss of self-respect, [40].
- No notoriety hunter, [41].
- No money grabber, [43].
- Did not seek power, [48].
- Dates and aims of his works, [50].
- Moderator of General Assembly, [51].
- Various appointments held, [51].
- Aids in drawing up First Book of Discipline, [51].
- Appointed Principal of St. Leonard’s College, [51].
- Secretary to the Scots Commission re Mary, [51].
- Opinion of Sir James Melville of, [52].
- Not to be blamed for James VI.’s pedantry, [57].
- Dedicates his three great works to the king—Baptistes, De Jure, and the History, [57].
- Examination of the Prefaces to these, [58]-65.
- Resembled a Scots Stoic philosopher, [66].
- His courtly manners, [70].
- Alleged vindictiveness towards Morton disproved, [72].
- His policy regarding Scots affairs, [76].
- Further disproof of Sir J. Melville’s remarks, [80].
- His religious views, [83].
- The Scots Reformation position, [83]-88.
- His relations to Calvinism, [89]-96.
- Not a zealot, [90].
- His views of Evangelium, [90].
- His pension, [92].
- His dirge upon Calvin, [93].
- His period of doubt, [98].
- Why he never took orders, [101].
- Is Conformity allowable? [104].
- Renaissance morals, [106].
- Buchanan’s amorist poetry, [107].
- Biographical facts, [111].
- The Roman Catholic Church and education, [112].
- Lords of the Congregation and education, [114].
- His early years of education, [116].
- Enlists as a volunteer to invade England, [118].
- Life at St. Andrews University, [119].
- Proceeds to St. Barbe, [119].
- Friendship with Earl of Cassilis, [119].
- James V. invites him to write Franciscanus, [121].
- Leaves him to the vengeance of Beaton, [122].
- Escapes from prison to the Continent, [122].
- Migrates to Portugal: seized by the Inquisition, [123].
- Imprisoned in a monastery, where he translates the Psalms, [123].
- Returns to Scotland and declares for Protestantism, [124].
- Relations between Mary and Buchanan, [125].
- Accused of ingratitude towards her, [126].
- The multifariousness of his work, [128].
- Writes Admonition to the Trew Lords, [130].
- Characteristics of his History of Scotland, [132].
- Buchanan’s last days, [133].
- His burial-place and property, [135].
- Legend of his skull, [135].
- Characteristics, [136].
- Final summing up, [137]-145.
- Parallel drawn between Dr. Wallace and Buchanan, [138].
- Burns, [107], [116].
- Calvin, J., [82], [89], [90], [92], [94], [100].
- Cameron, [115].
- Cargill, [115].
- Carlyle, T., [34], [143].
- Casaubon, [13].
- Cassilis, Lord, [51], [119], [134].
- Catullus, [66].
- Chameleon, the, [50], [126].
- Chapbooks on Buchanan, [21].
- Charles II., [9].
- Cicero, [67].
- Coimbra, college of, [51], [98].
- Collége de Guyenne, [58].
- Congregation, Lords of, [114], [115].
- Covenanters, [115].
- Darnley, [128], [134], [139].
- Dawes, Canon, [15].
- Detectio Mariæ Reginæ, [18], [50].
- Diogenes, [69].
- Dionysius, Lambinus, [67].
- Dirge, the, [92].
- Discipline, Book of, [112].
- Divine right, [9], [11], [50], [57].
- Dryden, John, [10].
- Dunbar, William, [121].
- Education in Catholic days, [113].
- Election, doctrine of, [90].
- Elizabeth, Queen, [127].
- England, invasion of, [118].
- Erasmus, [13], [34], [96], [99], [100].
- Eucharistic controversy, [99].
- Evangelicals, the, [89].
- France, [124].
- Franciscanus, the, [50], [90], [98], [106], [121].
- Gamaliel, [58].
- General Assembly of Church of Scotland, [51].
- Genethliacon, the, [56].
- Gibbon, [67], [118].
- Gouvéa, André de, [58], [122], [123].
- Hackney, the, [75].
- Hamilton, Sir W., [135].
- Hebrew Psalms, [43], [123].
- Henry VIII., [127].
- Heriot, J., [116].
- Herod, King, [58].
- Herodias, [58].
- History of Scotland, [50], [57], [63], [132].
- Horace, [66].
- Hosack, [20].
- Humanists, [27], [28], [43], [58], [83], [84], [126].
- Incarnation, the, [90].
- Indulgences, [90].
- Inquisition, the, [43], [98].
- James IV., [112].
- James V., [50], [120].
- James VI., [46], [52], [56], [76].
- Johnson, S., [15], [129].
- Justification by Faith, [86], [90].
- Killearn, [111].
- Knox, J., [11], [37], [40], [75], [76], [81], [85], [92], [101], [102], [114], [115], [141].
- Latin Style, [17], [27], [132].
- ‘Lena’ poetry, the, [106].
- Lennox, Earl of, [33], [37].
- Leo X., [84].
- Lincoln’s Inn Fields, [9].
- Livy, [31], [51], [132].
- Luther, [84].
- Lyndsay, Sir D., [50], [121].
- Macauslan, [111].
- Major, John, [65].
- Mar, Countess of, [24], [81].
- Mary, Queen of Scots, [19], [31], [37], [40], [51], [64], [75], [92], [120], [127], [128], [139].
- Mary of Guise, [102].
- Melville, Andrew and James, [23], [40], [81], [102], [115].
- Melville, Sir James, [52], [80].
- Milton, John, [9], [10].
- Moderator of Assembly, [51], [128].
- Montaigne, [119].
- Moray, Earl of, [32], [33], [37], [51], [81], [92], [121], [129], [130], [139].
- Morton, Earl of, [73], [74], [75], [79].
- Neæra pieces, [108].
- Nicene Dogmas, [86].
- Oxford University, [9].
- Panætius, [67].
- Paris, University of, [116].
- Paten, Guy, [16].
- Pension, [92].
- Petrus, Victorinus, [67].
- Porson, [15].
- Portugal, [43], [51], [98], [123].
- Predestinarianism, [86].
- Principal of St. Leonard’s, [51].
- Private judgment, [86].
- Randolph, Sir T., [63], [71], [81].
- Reformation, Scots, [11], [83], [85], [87], [120].
- Renaissance, the, [83], [87], [96], [106].
- Revolutions, English, American, and French, [11].
- Rizzio, [128], [139].
- Roman Catholic hospitality, [36].
- —— —— Church, [28], [97], [99], [101].
- Russell, Lord William, [9].
- St. Andrews, University of, [118], [129].
- Sallust, [132].
- Scaligers, the, [12], [13], [30], [48], [81].
- Scott, Sir W., [116].
- Seneca, [63], [67], [100].
- Shairp, Principal, [107].
- Shakespeare, [12], [15].
- Skelton, Sir J., [20], [125].
- Skull, Buchanan’s, [135].
- Socrates, [69], [100].
- Stephanus, [12].
- Stevenson, R. L., [107].
- Stoic philosopher, [53], [63], [66], [69], [73], [82], [100].
- Tacitus, [132].
- Tennyson, [12], [127].
- Thackeray, [34], [81].
- Thyestes, the, [63].
- Transubstantiation, [90].
- Wordsworth, W., [14].
- Young, Peter, [53], [55], [57], [62].
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS ON THE ‘FAMOUS SCOTS’ SERIES.
Of THOMAS CARLYLE, by H. C. Macpherson,
The British Weekly says:—
‘We congratulate the publishers on the in every way attractive appearance of the first volume of their new series. The typography is everything that could be wished, and the binding is most tasteful.... We heartily congratulate author and publishers on the happy commencement of this admirable enterprise.’
The Literary World says:—
‘One of the very best little books on Carlyle yet written, far outweighing in value some more pretentious works with which we are familiar.’