Belcher, Lady, The Mutineers of the 'Bounty' and their descendants, [115].
Bennet, Rev. James, The Wisdom of the King, [320].
Bentley Ballads, The, [209].
Berkeley's Works, Professor Fraser's Edition of, [256]; England's Neglect of her Philosophers, [ib.]; Berkeley's Historical Position not sufficiently recognised, [257]; Mr. Fraser's Picture of him at College, [258]; Two earliest books, [259]; Berkeley at Court, [ib.]; Interest in Social Morality, [259], [260]; Rapid Church Preferment, [260]; He starts for the Bermudas to found a College, [ib.]; Stops at Rhode Island, and remains there some years, [ib.]; Writes his 'Alciphron,' [261]; Dr. Johnson, [ib.]; Close of Berkeley's active life, [262]; Founds a Scholarship at Yale College, [263]; His life as Bishop of Cloyne, [ib.]; Belief in Tar-water, [ib.]; Removal to Oxford, [264]; Death, [ib.]; Berkeley's Philosophy, [ib.]; Views of two classes of his Critics, [265]; Too much founded on his Early Writings, [ib.]; The true Key to his Philosophy, [266]; Its relations to Locke and the English Mystics, [266], [267]; Three Stages of Development, [268]; 'New Theory of Vision,' [ib.]; 'Principles of Human Knowledge,' 269; The Abstract Idea of Matter, [270]; Something more than mere Sensations, [ib.]; Associations, [271]; Deficient Perception of Ethical Relations, [272]; The 'Siris,' [ib.]
Bingham, Hon. Cap., Journal of the Siege of Paris, [291].
Bible, The Holy, arranged in Paragraphs and Sections, [154].
Blackburn, Henry, Art in the Mountains, [129].
Blackmore, R. D., Lorna Doone, [139].
Blunt, Rev. J. H., A Dictionary of Doctrinal and Historical Theology, [146].
Bonapartism, The Downfall of, [218]; Analogy between the Imperialism of 1804 and that of 1852, [219]; The latter hopelessly collapsed, [220]; The Strange Revolution in Literature, [221]; The Mutual Hatred of French and Prussians in the Emperor's Favour, [222]; His Relations, real and supposed, to Religion, [222], [223]; The Second Empire rendered possible by the strength of the Napoleonic Idea, [224]; Causes of the Empire's Decay, [ib.]; Reaction against the Despotism of the Capital, [226]; Rottenness of Paris Life, [ib.]; Ignorance of itself and of other Nations, [227]; M. Leclercq's Views, [228]; 'Papiers Secrets,' [229]; Management of Money, [229], [230]; 'Cabinet Noir,' [230]; The Emperor warned by Persigny, [ib.]; Lanfrey's account of Napoleon I., [231]; The Erckmann-Châtrian Novels, [232]; General political knowledge assumed in them, and with reason, [233]; Impossibility of Predicting the Future of France, [234].