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INDEX.

ALFORD'S, Dean, Sermon on Biblical Revi-
sion, 209.

Allon, Mr., on Congregational Worship,

22.

Arbitration and Conciliation, 545.
Aspects of Revision - September, 1870,
207; two great principles on which
revision should be conducted, 209.
Athanasian Creed, The, 133; its first re-
ception a literary mistake, 133; its
internal characteristics, 136; anomalies
consequent on its use in the Church of
England, 150; its general recitation
comparatively of modern growth, 151;
arguments in its favour, 157; its offen-
sive features explained away by its sup-
porters, 157; its use become a burden
and a scandal, 161.

Athanasian Creed, A Few more Words on
the, 478.

Athanasian Creed, The: Postcript, 524;
the Solemn League and Covenant, 525;
the "three services" abolished in 1859,
528; Report of the Ritual Commission,
531.

BARRICADES, The Day of the, in Paris,

511.

Bismarck's semi-Napoleonism, 176.
Blochairn strike and lock-out, The, 558.
Brahmo Somaj, The, and the Religious
Future of India, 67; history of the
Rajah Rammohun Roy, 68; position of
the Brahmo Somaj in Christian Theism,
68; their worship, 69; bearing of the
movement upon the religious prospects
of India, 73; M. Emile Burnouf on
Christian Civilization in India, 74; need
for a native pastorate, 77; the vague
anticipations of Theism destined to
undergo vast modifications, 78; power
of Christian missions in India, 80.
British India under the Crown, 113; care-
lessness of the British public as regards
India, 114; the first decade of royal
rule, 117; advance of popular educa-
tion, 118; increase of revenue, 119; dis-
appearance of sumptuary rules and
caste distinctions, 127;
progress of
Christianity, 130; India's debt to Lord
Dalhousie, 132.

Brown, Mr. Baldwin, on the Influence of
the "Religious Life" on Christian
Society, 8.

Burnouf, M. Emile, on Christian Civiliza-
tion in India, 74.

CHRISTIAN Ministry not a Priesthood, The,
567; the ministry of gifts, 567; the
ministry of orders, 568; three conclu-

sions supported by historical evidence,
573; the Apostolic model of Church
government, 576; proof from the Epistle
to the Hebrews, 578; equality of privi-
lege ascribed in the New Testament to
every Christian, 579; collateral evi-
dence, 581.

Christian missions, Power of, in India,
80.

Church and State, Dean Stanley's Essays
on, 274.

Church Problems, Nonconformist Essays
on, 1; Dr. Stoughton on "Primitive
Ecclesia," 3; Mr. Thomson on the Idea
of the Church in its Historical Develop-
ment, 7; Mr. Baldwin Brown on the
Influence of the " 'Religious Life" on
Christian Society, 8; Mr. Eustace Con-
der on Church and State, 14; Dr. Rey-
nolds on the Forgiveness and Absolu-
tion of Sins, 18; Mr. Dale on the Doc-
trine of the Real Presence and the
Lord's Supper, 20; Mr. Allon on Con-
gregational Worship, 22; Dr. Mullens
on Modern Missions, 26; Mr. Rogers on
the Congregationalism of the Future,
26; Joint Communion of the Scripture
Revisers in Westminster Abbey, 28.
Coal, On the Formation of, 518.
Conciliation and Arbitration, 545; Lord
St. Leonards' Act, 546; the Conseils des
Prud'hommes described, 547; Mr. Mun-
della and the Nottingham Board of
Arbitration, 550; testimony of Mr.
Smiles, 553; of Mr. Rupert Kettle,
554; the Blochairn strike and lock-out,
558; labours of Mr. David Dale, 559;
Liverpool operative builders' scheme,
562; powers which ought to be given to
Boards of Arbitration, 565.

Conder, Mr. Eustace, on Church and
State, 14.

Conseils des Prud'hommes, The, described,
547.

Criminals, The employment of, 463; chief
objection against prison labour, 465;
action of the New York Working Men's
Assembly, 466; difference between free
and prison labour, 468; prison labour at
Wakefield, 469; at the City Prison,
Holloway, 471; and at the Model
Prison, Pentonville, 474.

Culture, The War and General, 440, 588.

DALE, Mr. David, Labours of, in connec-
tion with trade disputes, 559.
Dale, Mr. R. W., on the Real Presence
and the Lord's Supper, 20.
Dalhousie, Lord, India's debt to, 132.
Day Schools: their Advantages and Dis-

advantages, 224; difficulties of access to
day schools, 226; discipline, 231; rela-
tion between the master and his scholars,
232; the money question, 233; advan-
tage of combination of home life and
school life, 236.

Disestablished Church of Ireland, The

Constitution of the, 180; meeting of
the Provincial Synods of Armagh and
Dublin, 182; the " Organizing Com-
mittee," 184; the General Convention,
184; constitution of the General Synod,
186; the Diocesan Synods, 188; The
"Church Body," 193.

EDWARD III.'s siege of Paris, 503.
Europe and the War, 648.

FAMILY System for Workhouse Children,
The, 240.

GLADSTONE, Mr., in Transition, 630; his
Letter to Bishop Skinner, 634; his ear-
liest public palinode, 636; the vulgar
Tory idea annihilated, 640; connection
between the fundamental principle of
1841 and those of recent years, 645.
Grote, Professor, on Utilitarianism, 81.

HEGEL'S influence in Germany, 424.
Henry IV.'s siege of Paris, 514.
Hitchin College for Women, 57.
Holloway, Labour at City Prison, 471.
Huxley's, Professor, Lay Sermons, 195;
introductory letter to Professor Tyndall,
196; Descartes' "Discourse on Method,"
199.

INDIA, British, under the Crown, 113.
India, Religious future of, 67.
Ireland, The Constitution of the Disesta-
blished Church of, 180.

Italy, What Mazzini has done for, 383.

JEANNE d'Arc's siege of Paris, 507.

KANTIAN Philosophy, The, 415.
Kettle's, Mr. Rupert, opinions as to arbi-
tration in trade disputes, 554.
Knowing and Feeling, 425; how Will
comes to be used as synonymous with
Purpose, 426; moral responsibility, 429;
facts out of which it springs, 430; if
mind and matter are parts of one harmo-
nious whole, what influence has it on
our moral sentiments? 432; Will, the
relation between the psychical and phy-
sical properties of man, 436.

LEEDS and Wakefield colliers' strike, 45.
Lessing's influence in Germany, 412.
Liverpool operative builders' scheme of
arbitration, 562.

Lock-outs from the Workman's Point of
View, 32.

London building trade, Strike in the, 42.

MAZZINI, Joseph: What has he done for

Italy? 383; awakening of the national

idea in him, 384; arrested in 1830, 385;
insurrection of 1831, 386; rise of the
Moderate party, 389; insurrection of
1848, 391; flight of the Pope, and pro-
clamation of the Roman Republic, 395;
simultaneous rising in Genoa and Leg-
horn, 397; the Moderates condemn
Mazzini to death, 399; the alliance
between Napoleon and Italy, 400; ne-
gotiations between Mazzini and Victor
Emmanuel, 403; differences between
Garibaldi and Mazzini, 405; Mazzini's
arrest at Palermo and imprisonment at
Gaeta, 407.

Moabite Stone, The, 97; history of the
"stone," 99; the inscription, 101; its
special interest as the most ancient spe-
cimen of alphabetic writing, 105; chief
palæographical results which the dis-
covery has established, 112.

Mullens, Dr., on Modern Missions, 26.
Mundella, Mr., and the Nottingham Board
of Arbitration, 550.

Music and Emotion, 363; the fount of
colour, 363; the fount of sound, 364;
nature and art, 364; music and other
arts, 366; emotion and ideas, 367; ab-
stract emotion, 369; analysis of emotion,
371; connection between music and
emotion, 374; connection between music
and words, 376; sound-art and colour-
art, 378; music and the age, 380.

NAPOLEON's ruin the natural fruit of Na-
poleonic policy, 168.

Nonconformist Essays on Church Pro-
lems, 1.

Northmen, Inroads in France of the, 496.

PAPACY and National Life, The, 327; de-
feats of the Papacy in the second half of
last century, 328; political arrogance of
the Popes, 329; historical development
of the relations of the Church to 'civil
government, 334; impossible for modern
states to endure the pretensions of the
Papacy, 340; the State divine as well
as the Church, 344; the old ideas of the
State and the Church as untenable with
the course of Nature as they are irre-
concilable with the idea of God, 346.
Paris, Past Sieges of, 495; inroads of the
Northmen, 496; four years' siege in
885, 498; siege by Edward III. of Eng-
land, 503; siege by Jeanne d'Arc, 507;
the Day of the Barricades, 511; siege
by Henry IV., 514; capitulations of
1814 and 1815, 523.

Pentonville, Labour at Model Prison, 474.
Pietistic Movement in Germany, The, 410.
Postscript to Article on the Athanasian

creed, 524.

Prussian State and Prussian Literature,
The, 408; Schmidt's "Pictures from the
Intellectual Life of our Time," 409;
the Pietistic movement, 410; influence
of Lessing, 412; the Kantian philosophy,
415; the Romantic school, 417; influ-
ence of Hegel, 424.

RAMMOHUN ROY, History of, 68. 7
Revisers of Scripture, Joint Communion

of, in Westminster Abbey, 28.
Reynolds, Dr., on the Forgiveness and
Absolution of Sins, 18.

Ritual Commission, Report of the, 531.
Rogers, Mr., on the Congregationalism of
the Future, 26.

Romantic School in Germany, The, 417.

SCHMIDT'S "Pictures from the Intellectual
Life of our Time," 409.
Sheffield, Lock-out of the file trade in,
47.

Sieges of Paris, Past, 495.

Smiles's, Mr., testimony as to trades'
unions, 563.

Solemn League and Covenant, The, 525.
St. Leonards, Lord, Act for the Settle-
ment of Trade Disputes, 546.
Stanley, Dean, on Church and State,
274; the Gorham controversy, 275;
the "
Essays and Reviews," 278; the
High Church party, 283; the Dean's
peculiar advantages for the discussion
of theological questions, 285; the
Essays a contribution to the theology of
the nineteenth century, 286.

Stoughton, Dr., on "Primitive Ecclesia," 3.
Strikes and Lock-outs, from the Work-
man's Point of View, 32; early begin-
ning of disputes between employers and
employed, 33; strikes of two sorts,
aggressive and defensive, 35; lock-outs
distinct from strikes, 37; state of mat-
ters in Preston, 40; the strike in the
London building trade, 42; Leeds and
Wakefield colliers' strike, 45; South
Yorkshire colliers' strike, 46; lock-out
of the file-trade in Sheffield, 47; minor
strikes, 49; strikes against machinery
now rare, 50; the workmen have no
alternative but to strike, 51; with arbi-
tration every objection to union vanishes,
54.

THOMSON, Mr. Radford, on the Idea of the

Church in its Historical Development, 7.
UTILITARIANISM, Professor Grote on, 81;
the nature of happiness, 83; the social
instinct, 86; the distribution of happi-
ness, 87; the value of action, 90; moral
imperativeness, 91; to Christians the
will of God must be the ultimate rule
and authority, 94.

WAKEFIELD, Prison labour at, 469.

War, The Politics of the-Bismarck and
Louis Napoleon, 167; the Emperor's
ruin the natural fruit of Napoleonic
policy, 168; review of the history which
led to the war, 170; the immediate
cause of the war, 174; Bismarck's semi-
Napoleonism, 176; dangers in store for
Europe, 177.

War, Principles and Issues of the, 348;
France and Germany, in self-defence,
invincible on their own soil, 349; at its
inception, from the Prussian point of
view, no war between nation and nation,
349; the best part of the French nation
averse to the war, 351; after Sedan the
original principles of the war ceased to
operate, 353; the principles of the new
war not yet set forth in authoritative
documents, 354; temper of the German
people, 355; the future of France must
be essentially Republican, 358; dangers
for Europe from Germany, 359; the
time coming when peace must be en-
forced, 361.

War and General Culture, The: Conver-
sations, 440, 588.

War, Europe and the, 648; doubtful wis-

dom of the proposed armistice, 649;
progress of German warfare tends to
the annihilation of France, 650; peace
the general interest of all nations, 652;
the whole fabric of European political
society shaken by the war, 654; Gari-
baldi having cast in his lot with France,
the whole aspect of the war is changed,
658; peculiar position of Britain, 658;
change of feeling towards monarchy,
659; European action in the form of a
Congress imperative, 663; questions
which should occupy the attention of
the Congress, 664; first business to stop
the war, 667.

Women, College Education for, 55; col-
lege at Hitchin, 57; the money question,
59, the questions of education and of
employment converge, 61; the freedom
claimed for women will widely benefit
society, 65; dangers lurking in the
movement, 66.

Workhouse Children, The Family System
for, 241; deadening of the affections in
large schools, 247; results of the school
system, 248; its cost, 252; objections
to the boarding-out system, 254; how it
has wrought in Scotland, 257; and in
England, 265.

YORKSHIRE, South, colliers' strike, 46.

CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE.

Ainger's Temple Sermons, 291.
Baur's Religious Life in Germany during
the Wars of Independence, 299.
Bethune's Memoir of Bishop Strachan, 301.
Browne's Milton, 326.

Calvert's Missionary Labours among the
Cannibals, 325.

Church's Saint Anselm, 300.
Cobden's Speeches, 323.

Collins's (Wilkie) Man and Wife, 317.

Collins's Virgil, 314.

Complete Triumph of Moral Good over
Evil, 292.

Coxe on the Vatican Council, 324.
Davies (Llewelyn) on the Church of Eng-
land and the Church of Rome, 290.
Desprez's John: or the Apocalypse of the

New Testament, 292.

Doubleday's Matter for Materialists, 307.
Ewing's Present-Day Papers on Promi-
nent Questions in Theology, 289.
Freeman's History and Conquest of the
Saracens, 299.

Germany, Religious Thought in, 288.
Hodgson's Theory of Practice, 302.
Kaye's History of the Sepoy War, 293.
Legge's Growth of the Temporal Power
of the Papacy, 324.

Lowell's Among my Books, 322.
Lubbock's Origin of Civilization, 311.
M'Cosh's Laws of Discursive Thought, 306.
M'Gilvray's Ministry of the Word, 291.
Mann's Life Problems answered in Christ,

291.

Marriott's Testimony of the Catacombs,

289.
Oliphant's Three Brothers, 316.

Orr's Authenticity of John's Gospel, 292.
Papillon's Terence, 313.

Picton's New Theories and the Old Faith,
292.

Prendergast's Cromwellian Settlement of
Ireland, 296.

Quirinus's Letters from Rome on the
Council, 324.

Reichel's See of Rome in the Middle Ages,
324.

Richey's Lectures on the History of
Ireland, 296.

Rose's Ignatius Loyola, 300.

Rossetti's Commonplace and other Short
Stories, 319.

Three Weddings, 321.

Trollope's Commentaries of Cæsar, 314.
Trollope's Editor's Tales, 319.

Vaughan's Christ satisfying the Instincts
of Humanity, 290.

Von Liano's Church of God and the
Bishops, 291.

Wallace's Contributions to the Theory of
Natural Selection, 309.

Wordsworth's Lectures Introductory to a

History of the Latin Language and
Literature, 315.

VOL. XV.

END OF VOL. XV.

PRINTED BY VIRTUE AND CO., CITY ROAD, LONDON.

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