Footnotes

Footnotes1.Vid.Huber's English Universities, London, 1843, vol. ii., part 1, pp. 321, etc.2.Opere, t. iii., p. 353.3.Vide M. L'Abbé Lalanne's recent work.4.Cressy.5.In Roman law it means a Corporation. Vid. Keuffel,de Scholis.6.Hist. vol. ii. p. 529. London, 1841.7.Mr. Brougham's Glasgow Discourse.8.Arist. Ethic. Nicom., iii. 3.9.Introd. Lecture on Pol. Econ. pp. 11, 12.10.Advancement of Learning.11.Intr. Lect., p. 16.12.Vid. Abelard, for instance.13.Pursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties. Introd.14.Cicer. Offic. init.15.Τέχνη τύχην ἔστερχε καὶ τύχη τέχνην. Vid. Arist. Nic. Ethic. vi.16.Aristot. Rhet. i. 5.17.It will be seen that on the whole I agree with Lord Macaulay in his Essay on Bacon's Philosophy. I do not know whether he would agree with me.18.De Augment. iv. 2, vid. Macaulay's Essay; vid. also“In principio operis ad Deum Patrem, Deum Verbum, Deum Spiritum, preces fundimus humillimas et ardentissimas, ut humani generis ærumnarum memores, et peregrinationis istius vitæ, in quâ dies paucos et malos terimus,novis suis eleemosynis, per manus nostras, familiam humanam dotare digneatur. Atque illud insuper supplices rogamus, nehumana divinis officiant; neveex reseratione viarum sensûs, et accensione majore luminis naturalis,aliquid incredulitatiset noctis, animis nostris erga divina mysteria oboriatur,”etc.Præf.Instaur. Magn.19.Fouque's Unknown Patient.20.The pages which follow are taken almostverbatimfrom the author's 14th (Oxford) University Sermon, which, at the time of writing this Discourse, he did not expect ever to reprint.21.Crabbe's Tales of the Hall. This Poem, let me say, I read on its first publication, above thirty years ago, with extreme delight, and have never lost my love of it; and on taking it up lately, found I was even more touched by it than heretofore. A work which can please in youth and age, seems to fulfil (in logical language) theaccidental definitionof a Classic. [A further course of twenty years has past, and I bear the same witness in favour of this Poem.]22.Mr. Keble, Vicar of Hursley, late Fellow of Oriel, and Professor of Poetry in the University of Oxford.23.Vid. Milton on Education.24.I do not consider I have said above any thing inconsistent with the following passage from Cardinal Gerdil, though I have enlarged on the favourable side of Julian's character.“Du génie, des connaissances, de l'habilité dans le métier de la guerre, du courage et du désintéressement dans le commandement des armées, des actions plutôt que des qualités estimables, mais le plus souvent gâtées par la vanité qui en était le principe, la superstition jointe à l'hypocrisie; un esprit fécond en ressources éclairé, mais susceptible de petitesse; des fautes essentielles dans le gouvernement; des innocens sacrifiés à la vengeance; une haine envenimée contre le Christianisme, qu'il avait abandonné; un attachement passionné aux folies de la Théurgie; tels étaient les traits sous lesquels on nous preignait Julien.”Op. t. x. p. 54.25.Gibbon, Hist., ch. 24.26.Vid. Hallam's Literature of Europe, Macaulay's Essay, and the Author's Oxford University Sermons, IX.27.In Augment., 5.28.De Augm., § 28.29.Vid.the Author's Parochial Sermons, vol. i. 25.30.Bacci, vol. i., p. 192, ii., p. 98.31.NowLord Emly.32.Vid.Huber.33.Vid.the treatises of P. Daniel and Mgr. Landriot, referred to in Historical Sketches, vol. ii., p. 460, note.34.Sterne, Sermon xlii.35.“Position of Catholics in England,”pp. 101, 2.36.August, 1854.37.Macaulay's Essays.38.Hallam.39.Misc. Works, p. 55.40.This was written in June, 1854, before the siege began.41.Bombarding.42.The Black Sea.43.Here again Mr. Brown prophesies. He wrote in June, 1854.44.Vid.University Sermons, vii., 14.45.Vid.Article I.46.Macaulay's Essays.47.I use the word, not in the sense of“Naturalis Theologia,”but, in the sense in which Paley uses it in the work which he has so entitled.48.Cardinal Gerdil speaks of his“Metaphysique,”as“brillante à la verité, mais non moins solide”(p. 9.), and that“la liaison qui enchaine toutes les parties du système philosophique du Père Malebranche,… pourra servir d'apologie à la noble assurance, avec laquelle il propose ses sentiments.”(p. 12, Œuvres, t. iv.)49.Muratori's work was not directly theological.Vid.note at the end of the Volume.50.University Gazette, No. 42, p. 420.51.Vid.supr. p.231.

Footnotes1.Vid.Huber's English Universities, London, 1843, vol. ii., part 1, pp. 321, etc.2.Opere, t. iii., p. 353.3.Vide M. L'Abbé Lalanne's recent work.4.Cressy.5.In Roman law it means a Corporation. Vid. Keuffel,de Scholis.6.Hist. vol. ii. p. 529. London, 1841.7.Mr. Brougham's Glasgow Discourse.8.Arist. Ethic. Nicom., iii. 3.9.Introd. Lecture on Pol. Econ. pp. 11, 12.10.Advancement of Learning.11.Intr. Lect., p. 16.12.Vid. Abelard, for instance.13.Pursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties. Introd.14.Cicer. Offic. init.15.Τέχνη τύχην ἔστερχε καὶ τύχη τέχνην. Vid. Arist. Nic. Ethic. vi.16.Aristot. Rhet. i. 5.17.It will be seen that on the whole I agree with Lord Macaulay in his Essay on Bacon's Philosophy. I do not know whether he would agree with me.18.De Augment. iv. 2, vid. Macaulay's Essay; vid. also“In principio operis ad Deum Patrem, Deum Verbum, Deum Spiritum, preces fundimus humillimas et ardentissimas, ut humani generis ærumnarum memores, et peregrinationis istius vitæ, in quâ dies paucos et malos terimus,novis suis eleemosynis, per manus nostras, familiam humanam dotare digneatur. Atque illud insuper supplices rogamus, nehumana divinis officiant; neveex reseratione viarum sensûs, et accensione majore luminis naturalis,aliquid incredulitatiset noctis, animis nostris erga divina mysteria oboriatur,”etc.Præf.Instaur. Magn.19.Fouque's Unknown Patient.20.The pages which follow are taken almostverbatimfrom the author's 14th (Oxford) University Sermon, which, at the time of writing this Discourse, he did not expect ever to reprint.21.Crabbe's Tales of the Hall. This Poem, let me say, I read on its first publication, above thirty years ago, with extreme delight, and have never lost my love of it; and on taking it up lately, found I was even more touched by it than heretofore. A work which can please in youth and age, seems to fulfil (in logical language) theaccidental definitionof a Classic. [A further course of twenty years has past, and I bear the same witness in favour of this Poem.]22.Mr. Keble, Vicar of Hursley, late Fellow of Oriel, and Professor of Poetry in the University of Oxford.23.Vid. Milton on Education.24.I do not consider I have said above any thing inconsistent with the following passage from Cardinal Gerdil, though I have enlarged on the favourable side of Julian's character.“Du génie, des connaissances, de l'habilité dans le métier de la guerre, du courage et du désintéressement dans le commandement des armées, des actions plutôt que des qualités estimables, mais le plus souvent gâtées par la vanité qui en était le principe, la superstition jointe à l'hypocrisie; un esprit fécond en ressources éclairé, mais susceptible de petitesse; des fautes essentielles dans le gouvernement; des innocens sacrifiés à la vengeance; une haine envenimée contre le Christianisme, qu'il avait abandonné; un attachement passionné aux folies de la Théurgie; tels étaient les traits sous lesquels on nous preignait Julien.”Op. t. x. p. 54.25.Gibbon, Hist., ch. 24.26.Vid. Hallam's Literature of Europe, Macaulay's Essay, and the Author's Oxford University Sermons, IX.27.In Augment., 5.28.De Augm., § 28.29.Vid.the Author's Parochial Sermons, vol. i. 25.30.Bacci, vol. i., p. 192, ii., p. 98.31.NowLord Emly.32.Vid.Huber.33.Vid.the treatises of P. Daniel and Mgr. Landriot, referred to in Historical Sketches, vol. ii., p. 460, note.34.Sterne, Sermon xlii.35.“Position of Catholics in England,”pp. 101, 2.36.August, 1854.37.Macaulay's Essays.38.Hallam.39.Misc. Works, p. 55.40.This was written in June, 1854, before the siege began.41.Bombarding.42.The Black Sea.43.Here again Mr. Brown prophesies. He wrote in June, 1854.44.Vid.University Sermons, vii., 14.45.Vid.Article I.46.Macaulay's Essays.47.I use the word, not in the sense of“Naturalis Theologia,”but, in the sense in which Paley uses it in the work which he has so entitled.48.Cardinal Gerdil speaks of his“Metaphysique,”as“brillante à la verité, mais non moins solide”(p. 9.), and that“la liaison qui enchaine toutes les parties du système philosophique du Père Malebranche,… pourra servir d'apologie à la noble assurance, avec laquelle il propose ses sentiments.”(p. 12, Œuvres, t. iv.)49.Muratori's work was not directly theological.Vid.note at the end of the Volume.50.University Gazette, No. 42, p. 420.51.Vid.supr. p.231.

Footnotes1.Vid.Huber's English Universities, London, 1843, vol. ii., part 1, pp. 321, etc.2.Opere, t. iii., p. 353.3.Vide M. L'Abbé Lalanne's recent work.4.Cressy.5.In Roman law it means a Corporation. Vid. Keuffel,de Scholis.6.Hist. vol. ii. p. 529. London, 1841.7.Mr. Brougham's Glasgow Discourse.8.Arist. Ethic. Nicom., iii. 3.9.Introd. Lecture on Pol. Econ. pp. 11, 12.10.Advancement of Learning.11.Intr. Lect., p. 16.12.Vid. Abelard, for instance.13.Pursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties. Introd.14.Cicer. Offic. init.15.Τέχνη τύχην ἔστερχε καὶ τύχη τέχνην. Vid. Arist. Nic. Ethic. vi.16.Aristot. Rhet. i. 5.17.It will be seen that on the whole I agree with Lord Macaulay in his Essay on Bacon's Philosophy. I do not know whether he would agree with me.18.De Augment. iv. 2, vid. Macaulay's Essay; vid. also“In principio operis ad Deum Patrem, Deum Verbum, Deum Spiritum, preces fundimus humillimas et ardentissimas, ut humani generis ærumnarum memores, et peregrinationis istius vitæ, in quâ dies paucos et malos terimus,novis suis eleemosynis, per manus nostras, familiam humanam dotare digneatur. Atque illud insuper supplices rogamus, nehumana divinis officiant; neveex reseratione viarum sensûs, et accensione majore luminis naturalis,aliquid incredulitatiset noctis, animis nostris erga divina mysteria oboriatur,”etc.Præf.Instaur. Magn.19.Fouque's Unknown Patient.20.The pages which follow are taken almostverbatimfrom the author's 14th (Oxford) University Sermon, which, at the time of writing this Discourse, he did not expect ever to reprint.21.Crabbe's Tales of the Hall. This Poem, let me say, I read on its first publication, above thirty years ago, with extreme delight, and have never lost my love of it; and on taking it up lately, found I was even more touched by it than heretofore. A work which can please in youth and age, seems to fulfil (in logical language) theaccidental definitionof a Classic. [A further course of twenty years has past, and I bear the same witness in favour of this Poem.]22.Mr. Keble, Vicar of Hursley, late Fellow of Oriel, and Professor of Poetry in the University of Oxford.23.Vid. Milton on Education.24.I do not consider I have said above any thing inconsistent with the following passage from Cardinal Gerdil, though I have enlarged on the favourable side of Julian's character.“Du génie, des connaissances, de l'habilité dans le métier de la guerre, du courage et du désintéressement dans le commandement des armées, des actions plutôt que des qualités estimables, mais le plus souvent gâtées par la vanité qui en était le principe, la superstition jointe à l'hypocrisie; un esprit fécond en ressources éclairé, mais susceptible de petitesse; des fautes essentielles dans le gouvernement; des innocens sacrifiés à la vengeance; une haine envenimée contre le Christianisme, qu'il avait abandonné; un attachement passionné aux folies de la Théurgie; tels étaient les traits sous lesquels on nous preignait Julien.”Op. t. x. p. 54.25.Gibbon, Hist., ch. 24.26.Vid. Hallam's Literature of Europe, Macaulay's Essay, and the Author's Oxford University Sermons, IX.27.In Augment., 5.28.De Augm., § 28.29.Vid.the Author's Parochial Sermons, vol. i. 25.30.Bacci, vol. i., p. 192, ii., p. 98.31.NowLord Emly.32.Vid.Huber.33.Vid.the treatises of P. Daniel and Mgr. Landriot, referred to in Historical Sketches, vol. ii., p. 460, note.34.Sterne, Sermon xlii.35.“Position of Catholics in England,”pp. 101, 2.36.August, 1854.37.Macaulay's Essays.38.Hallam.39.Misc. Works, p. 55.40.This was written in June, 1854, before the siege began.41.Bombarding.42.The Black Sea.43.Here again Mr. Brown prophesies. He wrote in June, 1854.44.Vid.University Sermons, vii., 14.45.Vid.Article I.46.Macaulay's Essays.47.I use the word, not in the sense of“Naturalis Theologia,”but, in the sense in which Paley uses it in the work which he has so entitled.48.Cardinal Gerdil speaks of his“Metaphysique,”as“brillante à la verité, mais non moins solide”(p. 9.), and that“la liaison qui enchaine toutes les parties du système philosophique du Père Malebranche,… pourra servir d'apologie à la noble assurance, avec laquelle il propose ses sentiments.”(p. 12, Œuvres, t. iv.)49.Muratori's work was not directly theological.Vid.note at the end of the Volume.50.University Gazette, No. 42, p. 420.51.Vid.supr. p.231.


Back to IndexNext