[pg 520]Note on Page478.I think it worthwhile, in illustration of what I have said above at the page specified, to append the following passage from Grandorgæus's catalogue of Muratori's works.“Sanctissimus D.N. Benedictus xiv. Pont. Max. Epistolam sapientiæ ac roboris plenam dederat … ad Episcopum Terulensem Hispaniæ Inquisitionis Majorem Inquisitorem, quâ illum hortabatur, ut‘Historiam Pelagianam et dissertationem, etc.,’editas à claræ memoriæ Henrico Cardinali Norisio, in Indicem Expurgatorium Hispanum nuper ingestas, perinde ac si aliquid Baianismi aut Jansenismi redolerent, prout auctor‘Bibliothecæ Jansenisticæ’immerito autumavit, quamprimum expungendas curaret. Eoque nomine Sapientissimus Pontifex plura in medium attulit prudentis œconomiæ exempla, qua semper usum, supremum S. R. Congr. Indicis Tribunal, à proscribendis virorum doctissimorum operibus aliquando temperavit.“Quum autem summus Pontifex, ea inter nomina illustria Tillemontii, Bollandistarum, Bosoueti Ep. Meld., et illud recensuerit L. A. Muratorii, his ad Auctorem nostrum delatis, quam maximè indoluit, veritus ne in tantâ operum copiâ ab se editorum, aliquid Fidei aut Religioni minùs consonum sibi excidisset.…“Verùm clementissimus Pontifex ne animum desponderet doctus et humilis filius, pernumaniter ad ipsum rescripsit … eumque paternè consolatus, inter alia hæc[pg 521]habet:‘Quanto si era detto nella nostra Lettera all' Inquisitore di Spagna in ordine alle di Lei Opere, non aveva che fare con la materia delle Feste, nè con verun dogma o disciplina. Il contenuto delle Opere chi qui non è piaciuto (nè che Ella poteva mai lusingarsi che fosse per piacere), riguarda la Giurisdizione Temporale del Romano Pontifice nè suoi stati,’”etc. (pp. lx., lxi).[pg 522]Index.Abelard,96,age of,263Accomplishments not education,144Addison, hisVision of Mirza,279;his care in writing,284;the child of the Revolution,312,329Æschylus,258Alcuin,17Aldhelm, St.,17Alexander the Great, his delight in Homer,258;conquests of,264Anaxagoras,116Andes, the,136Animuccia and St. Philip Neri,237Apollo Belvidere, the,283Aquinas, St. Thomas,134,263,384Arcesilas,101Architecture,81Arian argument against our Lord's Divinity,95Ariosto,316Aristotelic philosophy, the,52Aristotle, xii.,6,53;quoted,78,101,106,109,134,222,275;his sketch of the magnanimous man,280,383,431,469Athens, the fountain of secular knowledge,264Augustine, St., of Canterbury, mission of,16Augustine, St., of Hippo, quoted,410Bacci'sLife of St. Philip Neri, quoted,236Bacon, Friar, xiii.,220Baconian philosophy, the,109Bacon, Lord, quoted,77,90,117-119,175,221,225,263,319,437Balaam,66Beethoven,286,313Bentham'sPreuves Judiciaires,96Berkeley, Bishop, on Gothic Architecture,81Boccaccio,316Boniface, St.,220Borromeo, St. Carlo, enjoins the use of some of the Latin classics,261;on preaching,406,412,414,421Bossuet and Bishop Bull,7Brougham, Lord, his Discourse at Glasgow, quoted,30,34-35Brutus, abandoned by philosophy,116Burke, Edmund,176;his valediction to the spirit of chivalry,201[pg 523]Burman,140Butler, Bishop, his Analogy,61,100,158,226Byron, Lord, his versification,326Caietan, St.,235Campbell, Thomas,322,326Carneades,106Cato the elder, his opposition to the Greek philosophy,106Catullus,325Chinese civilization,252Christianity and Letters,249Chrysostom, St., on Judas,86Cicero, quoted,77;on the pursuit of knowledge,104,116,260;style of,281,282,327;quoted,399;his orations against Verres,421Civilization and Christianity,255Clarendon, Lord,311Colours, combination of,100“Condescension,”two senses of,205Copleston, Dr., Bishop of Llandaff,157;quoted,167-169Corinthian brass,175Cowper, quoted,191,467Crabbe, hisTales of the Hall,150;his versification,326Craik, Dr. G. L., hisPursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties, quoted,103,104Dante,316,329Davison, John,158;on Liberal Education,169-177Definiteness, the life of preaching,426Demosthenes,259,284Descartes,315Dumesnil's Synonymes,368Du Pin's Ecclesiastical History,140Edgeworth, Mr., on Professional Education,158,170,176Edinburgh,154Edinburgh Review, the,153,157,160,301,329Edward II., King of England, vow at his flight from Bannockburn,155Elmsley,xiv.Epicurus,40Euclid's Elements,274,313,501Euripides,258Fenelon, on the Gothic style of Architecture,82Fontaine, La, his immoralContes,315Fouqué, Lamotte, his tale of theUnknown Patient,119Fra Angelico,287Franklin,304Frederick II.,383,384Galen,222Gentleman, the true, defined,208Gerdil, Cardinal, quoted, xiii., on the Emperor Julian,194;on Malebranche,477[pg 524]Giannone,316Gibbon, on the darkness at the Passion,95;his hatred of Christianity,195,196;his care in writing,285;influence of his style on the literature of the present day,323;his tribute to Hume and Robertson,325Goethe,134Gothic Architecture,82Grammar,96,334Gregory the Great, St.,260Hardouin, Father, on Latin literature,310Health,164Herodotus,284,325,329Hobbes,311Homer, his address to the Delian women,257;his best descriptions, according to Sterne, marred by translation,271Hooker,311Horace, quoted,257,258,329Horne Tooke,96Hume,40,58;style of,325Humility,206Huss,155Jacob'scourtship,232Jeffrey, Lord,157Jerome, St., on idolizing the creature,87Jerusalem, the fountain-head of religious knowledge,264Ignatius, St.,235Job, religious merry-makings of,232;Book of,289John, King,383John of Salisbury,262Johnson, Dr., his method of writing the Ramblers,xx.;his vigour and resource of intellect,xxi.;his definition of the wordUniversity,20;hisRasselasquoted,116-117;style of,283;his Table-talk,313;his bias towards Catholicity,319;his definition ofGrammar,334Joseph, history of,271Isaac, feast at his weaning,232Isocrates,282Julian the Apostate,194Justinian,265Juvenal,325Keble, John,158;his Latin Lectures,369Knowledge, its own end,99;viewed in relation to learning,124;to professional skill,151;to religion,179Lalanne, Abbé,9Leo, St., on the love of gain,87Literature,268Locke, on Education,158-160,163,319Logos,276Lohner, Father, his story of a court-preacher,411Longinus, his admiration of the Mosaic account of Creation,271Lutheran leaven, spread of the,28[pg 525]Macaulay, Lord, his Essay on Bacon's philosophy,118,221;hisEssaysquoted,301,435-438,450Machiavel,316Malebranche,477Maltby, Dr., bishop of Durham, his Address to the Deity,33,40Michael Angelo, first attempts of,283Milman, Dean, his History of the Jews,85Milton, on Education,169;hisSamson Agonistesquoted,323;his allusions to himself,329Modesty,206Montaigne's Essays,315More, Sir Thomas,437Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History,140Muratori,478,520Music,80Neri, St. Philip,234Newton, Sir Isaac,xiii.,49,53;on the Apocalypse,304;his marvellous powers,324Newtonian philosophy, the,49Noah's ark,73Olympicgames, the,107Optics,46Painting,79Palestrina,237Paley,58,449Palladio,57Pascal,315Patrick, St., greatness of his work,15Periodical criticism,333Persian mode of letter-writing,277Pindar,329Pitt, William, his opinion of Butler's Analogy,100Pius IV., Pope, death of,237Plato, on poets,101;on music,110Playfair, Professor,157Political Economy,86Pompey's Pillar,136Pope, Alex., quoted,118;an indifferent Catholic,318;has tuned our versification,323;quoted,375,501Porson, Richard, xiv.,304Pride and self-respect,207Private Judgment,97Protestant argument against Transubstantiation,95Psalter, the,289Pulci,316Pythagoras,xiiiRabelias,315Raffaelle, first attempts of,283;287Rasselasquoted,116[pg 526]Recreations not Education,144Robertson, style of,325Rome,265Round Towers of Ireland, the,95Sales, St Francis de, on preaching,406,410,411Salmasius,140Savonarola,235Scott, Sir Walter,313;hisOld Mortality,359Seneca,110,116,327Sermons of the seventeenth century,140Shaftesbury, Lord, hisCharacteristics,196-201,204Shakespeare, quoted,150;hisMacbethquoted,280;Hamletquoted,281;quoted,284,287;morality of,318;quoted,410,513Simon of Tournay, narrative of,384Smith, Sydney,157Sophocles,258Southey'sThalaba,323;quoted,324Sterne's Sermons, quoted,270-272Stuffing birds not education,144Sylvester II., Pope, accused of magic,220Tarpeia,140Taylor, Jeremy, hisLiberty of Prophesying,472Terence and Menander,259Tertullian,327Thales,xiii.Theology, a branch of knowledge,19;definition of,60Thucydides,259,325,329Titus, armies of,265Virgil, his obligations to Greek poets,259;wishes his Æneid burnt,284;fixes the character of the hexameter,325,329Voltaire,303,315Utilityin Education,161Watson, Bishop, on Mathematics,101Wiclif,155Wren, Sir Christopher,57Xavier, St. Francis,235Xenophon quoted,107,258FINIS.
[pg 520]Note on Page478.I think it worthwhile, in illustration of what I have said above at the page specified, to append the following passage from Grandorgæus's catalogue of Muratori's works.“Sanctissimus D.N. Benedictus xiv. Pont. Max. Epistolam sapientiæ ac roboris plenam dederat … ad Episcopum Terulensem Hispaniæ Inquisitionis Majorem Inquisitorem, quâ illum hortabatur, ut‘Historiam Pelagianam et dissertationem, etc.,’editas à claræ memoriæ Henrico Cardinali Norisio, in Indicem Expurgatorium Hispanum nuper ingestas, perinde ac si aliquid Baianismi aut Jansenismi redolerent, prout auctor‘Bibliothecæ Jansenisticæ’immerito autumavit, quamprimum expungendas curaret. Eoque nomine Sapientissimus Pontifex plura in medium attulit prudentis œconomiæ exempla, qua semper usum, supremum S. R. Congr. Indicis Tribunal, à proscribendis virorum doctissimorum operibus aliquando temperavit.“Quum autem summus Pontifex, ea inter nomina illustria Tillemontii, Bollandistarum, Bosoueti Ep. Meld., et illud recensuerit L. A. Muratorii, his ad Auctorem nostrum delatis, quam maximè indoluit, veritus ne in tantâ operum copiâ ab se editorum, aliquid Fidei aut Religioni minùs consonum sibi excidisset.…“Verùm clementissimus Pontifex ne animum desponderet doctus et humilis filius, pernumaniter ad ipsum rescripsit … eumque paternè consolatus, inter alia hæc[pg 521]habet:‘Quanto si era detto nella nostra Lettera all' Inquisitore di Spagna in ordine alle di Lei Opere, non aveva che fare con la materia delle Feste, nè con verun dogma o disciplina. Il contenuto delle Opere chi qui non è piaciuto (nè che Ella poteva mai lusingarsi che fosse per piacere), riguarda la Giurisdizione Temporale del Romano Pontifice nè suoi stati,’”etc. (pp. lx., lxi).[pg 522]Index.Abelard,96,age of,263Accomplishments not education,144Addison, hisVision of Mirza,279;his care in writing,284;the child of the Revolution,312,329Æschylus,258Alcuin,17Aldhelm, St.,17Alexander the Great, his delight in Homer,258;conquests of,264Anaxagoras,116Andes, the,136Animuccia and St. Philip Neri,237Apollo Belvidere, the,283Aquinas, St. Thomas,134,263,384Arcesilas,101Architecture,81Arian argument against our Lord's Divinity,95Ariosto,316Aristotelic philosophy, the,52Aristotle, xii.,6,53;quoted,78,101,106,109,134,222,275;his sketch of the magnanimous man,280,383,431,469Athens, the fountain of secular knowledge,264Augustine, St., of Canterbury, mission of,16Augustine, St., of Hippo, quoted,410Bacci'sLife of St. Philip Neri, quoted,236Bacon, Friar, xiii.,220Baconian philosophy, the,109Bacon, Lord, quoted,77,90,117-119,175,221,225,263,319,437Balaam,66Beethoven,286,313Bentham'sPreuves Judiciaires,96Berkeley, Bishop, on Gothic Architecture,81Boccaccio,316Boniface, St.,220Borromeo, St. Carlo, enjoins the use of some of the Latin classics,261;on preaching,406,412,414,421Bossuet and Bishop Bull,7Brougham, Lord, his Discourse at Glasgow, quoted,30,34-35Brutus, abandoned by philosophy,116Burke, Edmund,176;his valediction to the spirit of chivalry,201[pg 523]Burman,140Butler, Bishop, his Analogy,61,100,158,226Byron, Lord, his versification,326Caietan, St.,235Campbell, Thomas,322,326Carneades,106Cato the elder, his opposition to the Greek philosophy,106Catullus,325Chinese civilization,252Christianity and Letters,249Chrysostom, St., on Judas,86Cicero, quoted,77;on the pursuit of knowledge,104,116,260;style of,281,282,327;quoted,399;his orations against Verres,421Civilization and Christianity,255Clarendon, Lord,311Colours, combination of,100“Condescension,”two senses of,205Copleston, Dr., Bishop of Llandaff,157;quoted,167-169Corinthian brass,175Cowper, quoted,191,467Crabbe, hisTales of the Hall,150;his versification,326Craik, Dr. G. L., hisPursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties, quoted,103,104Dante,316,329Davison, John,158;on Liberal Education,169-177Definiteness, the life of preaching,426Demosthenes,259,284Descartes,315Dumesnil's Synonymes,368Du Pin's Ecclesiastical History,140Edgeworth, Mr., on Professional Education,158,170,176Edinburgh,154Edinburgh Review, the,153,157,160,301,329Edward II., King of England, vow at his flight from Bannockburn,155Elmsley,xiv.Epicurus,40Euclid's Elements,274,313,501Euripides,258Fenelon, on the Gothic style of Architecture,82Fontaine, La, his immoralContes,315Fouqué, Lamotte, his tale of theUnknown Patient,119Fra Angelico,287Franklin,304Frederick II.,383,384Galen,222Gentleman, the true, defined,208Gerdil, Cardinal, quoted, xiii., on the Emperor Julian,194;on Malebranche,477[pg 524]Giannone,316Gibbon, on the darkness at the Passion,95;his hatred of Christianity,195,196;his care in writing,285;influence of his style on the literature of the present day,323;his tribute to Hume and Robertson,325Goethe,134Gothic Architecture,82Grammar,96,334Gregory the Great, St.,260Hardouin, Father, on Latin literature,310Health,164Herodotus,284,325,329Hobbes,311Homer, his address to the Delian women,257;his best descriptions, according to Sterne, marred by translation,271Hooker,311Horace, quoted,257,258,329Horne Tooke,96Hume,40,58;style of,325Humility,206Huss,155Jacob'scourtship,232Jeffrey, Lord,157Jerome, St., on idolizing the creature,87Jerusalem, the fountain-head of religious knowledge,264Ignatius, St.,235Job, religious merry-makings of,232;Book of,289John, King,383John of Salisbury,262Johnson, Dr., his method of writing the Ramblers,xx.;his vigour and resource of intellect,xxi.;his definition of the wordUniversity,20;hisRasselasquoted,116-117;style of,283;his Table-talk,313;his bias towards Catholicity,319;his definition ofGrammar,334Joseph, history of,271Isaac, feast at his weaning,232Isocrates,282Julian the Apostate,194Justinian,265Juvenal,325Keble, John,158;his Latin Lectures,369Knowledge, its own end,99;viewed in relation to learning,124;to professional skill,151;to religion,179Lalanne, Abbé,9Leo, St., on the love of gain,87Literature,268Locke, on Education,158-160,163,319Logos,276Lohner, Father, his story of a court-preacher,411Longinus, his admiration of the Mosaic account of Creation,271Lutheran leaven, spread of the,28[pg 525]Macaulay, Lord, his Essay on Bacon's philosophy,118,221;hisEssaysquoted,301,435-438,450Machiavel,316Malebranche,477Maltby, Dr., bishop of Durham, his Address to the Deity,33,40Michael Angelo, first attempts of,283Milman, Dean, his History of the Jews,85Milton, on Education,169;hisSamson Agonistesquoted,323;his allusions to himself,329Modesty,206Montaigne's Essays,315More, Sir Thomas,437Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History,140Muratori,478,520Music,80Neri, St. Philip,234Newton, Sir Isaac,xiii.,49,53;on the Apocalypse,304;his marvellous powers,324Newtonian philosophy, the,49Noah's ark,73Olympicgames, the,107Optics,46Painting,79Palestrina,237Paley,58,449Palladio,57Pascal,315Patrick, St., greatness of his work,15Periodical criticism,333Persian mode of letter-writing,277Pindar,329Pitt, William, his opinion of Butler's Analogy,100Pius IV., Pope, death of,237Plato, on poets,101;on music,110Playfair, Professor,157Political Economy,86Pompey's Pillar,136Pope, Alex., quoted,118;an indifferent Catholic,318;has tuned our versification,323;quoted,375,501Porson, Richard, xiv.,304Pride and self-respect,207Private Judgment,97Protestant argument against Transubstantiation,95Psalter, the,289Pulci,316Pythagoras,xiiiRabelias,315Raffaelle, first attempts of,283;287Rasselasquoted,116[pg 526]Recreations not Education,144Robertson, style of,325Rome,265Round Towers of Ireland, the,95Sales, St Francis de, on preaching,406,410,411Salmasius,140Savonarola,235Scott, Sir Walter,313;hisOld Mortality,359Seneca,110,116,327Sermons of the seventeenth century,140Shaftesbury, Lord, hisCharacteristics,196-201,204Shakespeare, quoted,150;hisMacbethquoted,280;Hamletquoted,281;quoted,284,287;morality of,318;quoted,410,513Simon of Tournay, narrative of,384Smith, Sydney,157Sophocles,258Southey'sThalaba,323;quoted,324Sterne's Sermons, quoted,270-272Stuffing birds not education,144Sylvester II., Pope, accused of magic,220Tarpeia,140Taylor, Jeremy, hisLiberty of Prophesying,472Terence and Menander,259Tertullian,327Thales,xiii.Theology, a branch of knowledge,19;definition of,60Thucydides,259,325,329Titus, armies of,265Virgil, his obligations to Greek poets,259;wishes his Æneid burnt,284;fixes the character of the hexameter,325,329Voltaire,303,315Utilityin Education,161Watson, Bishop, on Mathematics,101Wiclif,155Wren, Sir Christopher,57Xavier, St. Francis,235Xenophon quoted,107,258FINIS.
Note on Page478.I think it worthwhile, in illustration of what I have said above at the page specified, to append the following passage from Grandorgæus's catalogue of Muratori's works.“Sanctissimus D.N. Benedictus xiv. Pont. Max. Epistolam sapientiæ ac roboris plenam dederat … ad Episcopum Terulensem Hispaniæ Inquisitionis Majorem Inquisitorem, quâ illum hortabatur, ut‘Historiam Pelagianam et dissertationem, etc.,’editas à claræ memoriæ Henrico Cardinali Norisio, in Indicem Expurgatorium Hispanum nuper ingestas, perinde ac si aliquid Baianismi aut Jansenismi redolerent, prout auctor‘Bibliothecæ Jansenisticæ’immerito autumavit, quamprimum expungendas curaret. Eoque nomine Sapientissimus Pontifex plura in medium attulit prudentis œconomiæ exempla, qua semper usum, supremum S. R. Congr. Indicis Tribunal, à proscribendis virorum doctissimorum operibus aliquando temperavit.“Quum autem summus Pontifex, ea inter nomina illustria Tillemontii, Bollandistarum, Bosoueti Ep. Meld., et illud recensuerit L. A. Muratorii, his ad Auctorem nostrum delatis, quam maximè indoluit, veritus ne in tantâ operum copiâ ab se editorum, aliquid Fidei aut Religioni minùs consonum sibi excidisset.…“Verùm clementissimus Pontifex ne animum desponderet doctus et humilis filius, pernumaniter ad ipsum rescripsit … eumque paternè consolatus, inter alia hæc[pg 521]habet:‘Quanto si era detto nella nostra Lettera all' Inquisitore di Spagna in ordine alle di Lei Opere, non aveva che fare con la materia delle Feste, nè con verun dogma o disciplina. Il contenuto delle Opere chi qui non è piaciuto (nè che Ella poteva mai lusingarsi che fosse per piacere), riguarda la Giurisdizione Temporale del Romano Pontifice nè suoi stati,’”etc. (pp. lx., lxi).
I think it worthwhile, in illustration of what I have said above at the page specified, to append the following passage from Grandorgæus's catalogue of Muratori's works.
“Sanctissimus D.N. Benedictus xiv. Pont. Max. Epistolam sapientiæ ac roboris plenam dederat … ad Episcopum Terulensem Hispaniæ Inquisitionis Majorem Inquisitorem, quâ illum hortabatur, ut‘Historiam Pelagianam et dissertationem, etc.,’editas à claræ memoriæ Henrico Cardinali Norisio, in Indicem Expurgatorium Hispanum nuper ingestas, perinde ac si aliquid Baianismi aut Jansenismi redolerent, prout auctor‘Bibliothecæ Jansenisticæ’immerito autumavit, quamprimum expungendas curaret. Eoque nomine Sapientissimus Pontifex plura in medium attulit prudentis œconomiæ exempla, qua semper usum, supremum S. R. Congr. Indicis Tribunal, à proscribendis virorum doctissimorum operibus aliquando temperavit.
“Quum autem summus Pontifex, ea inter nomina illustria Tillemontii, Bollandistarum, Bosoueti Ep. Meld., et illud recensuerit L. A. Muratorii, his ad Auctorem nostrum delatis, quam maximè indoluit, veritus ne in tantâ operum copiâ ab se editorum, aliquid Fidei aut Religioni minùs consonum sibi excidisset.…
“Verùm clementissimus Pontifex ne animum desponderet doctus et humilis filius, pernumaniter ad ipsum rescripsit … eumque paternè consolatus, inter alia hæc[pg 521]habet:‘Quanto si era detto nella nostra Lettera all' Inquisitore di Spagna in ordine alle di Lei Opere, non aveva che fare con la materia delle Feste, nè con verun dogma o disciplina. Il contenuto delle Opere chi qui non è piaciuto (nè che Ella poteva mai lusingarsi che fosse per piacere), riguarda la Giurisdizione Temporale del Romano Pontifice nè suoi stati,’”etc. (pp. lx., lxi).
Index.Abelard,96,age of,263Accomplishments not education,144Addison, hisVision of Mirza,279;his care in writing,284;the child of the Revolution,312,329Æschylus,258Alcuin,17Aldhelm, St.,17Alexander the Great, his delight in Homer,258;conquests of,264Anaxagoras,116Andes, the,136Animuccia and St. Philip Neri,237Apollo Belvidere, the,283Aquinas, St. Thomas,134,263,384Arcesilas,101Architecture,81Arian argument against our Lord's Divinity,95Ariosto,316Aristotelic philosophy, the,52Aristotle, xii.,6,53;quoted,78,101,106,109,134,222,275;his sketch of the magnanimous man,280,383,431,469Athens, the fountain of secular knowledge,264Augustine, St., of Canterbury, mission of,16Augustine, St., of Hippo, quoted,410Bacci'sLife of St. Philip Neri, quoted,236Bacon, Friar, xiii.,220Baconian philosophy, the,109Bacon, Lord, quoted,77,90,117-119,175,221,225,263,319,437Balaam,66Beethoven,286,313Bentham'sPreuves Judiciaires,96Berkeley, Bishop, on Gothic Architecture,81Boccaccio,316Boniface, St.,220Borromeo, St. Carlo, enjoins the use of some of the Latin classics,261;on preaching,406,412,414,421Bossuet and Bishop Bull,7Brougham, Lord, his Discourse at Glasgow, quoted,30,34-35Brutus, abandoned by philosophy,116Burke, Edmund,176;his valediction to the spirit of chivalry,201[pg 523]Burman,140Butler, Bishop, his Analogy,61,100,158,226Byron, Lord, his versification,326Caietan, St.,235Campbell, Thomas,322,326Carneades,106Cato the elder, his opposition to the Greek philosophy,106Catullus,325Chinese civilization,252Christianity and Letters,249Chrysostom, St., on Judas,86Cicero, quoted,77;on the pursuit of knowledge,104,116,260;style of,281,282,327;quoted,399;his orations against Verres,421Civilization and Christianity,255Clarendon, Lord,311Colours, combination of,100“Condescension,”two senses of,205Copleston, Dr., Bishop of Llandaff,157;quoted,167-169Corinthian brass,175Cowper, quoted,191,467Crabbe, hisTales of the Hall,150;his versification,326Craik, Dr. G. L., hisPursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties, quoted,103,104Dante,316,329Davison, John,158;on Liberal Education,169-177Definiteness, the life of preaching,426Demosthenes,259,284Descartes,315Dumesnil's Synonymes,368Du Pin's Ecclesiastical History,140Edgeworth, Mr., on Professional Education,158,170,176Edinburgh,154Edinburgh Review, the,153,157,160,301,329Edward II., King of England, vow at his flight from Bannockburn,155Elmsley,xiv.Epicurus,40Euclid's Elements,274,313,501Euripides,258Fenelon, on the Gothic style of Architecture,82Fontaine, La, his immoralContes,315Fouqué, Lamotte, his tale of theUnknown Patient,119Fra Angelico,287Franklin,304Frederick II.,383,384Galen,222Gentleman, the true, defined,208Gerdil, Cardinal, quoted, xiii., on the Emperor Julian,194;on Malebranche,477[pg 524]Giannone,316Gibbon, on the darkness at the Passion,95;his hatred of Christianity,195,196;his care in writing,285;influence of his style on the literature of the present day,323;his tribute to Hume and Robertson,325Goethe,134Gothic Architecture,82Grammar,96,334Gregory the Great, St.,260Hardouin, Father, on Latin literature,310Health,164Herodotus,284,325,329Hobbes,311Homer, his address to the Delian women,257;his best descriptions, according to Sterne, marred by translation,271Hooker,311Horace, quoted,257,258,329Horne Tooke,96Hume,40,58;style of,325Humility,206Huss,155Jacob'scourtship,232Jeffrey, Lord,157Jerome, St., on idolizing the creature,87Jerusalem, the fountain-head of religious knowledge,264Ignatius, St.,235Job, religious merry-makings of,232;Book of,289John, King,383John of Salisbury,262Johnson, Dr., his method of writing the Ramblers,xx.;his vigour and resource of intellect,xxi.;his definition of the wordUniversity,20;hisRasselasquoted,116-117;style of,283;his Table-talk,313;his bias towards Catholicity,319;his definition ofGrammar,334Joseph, history of,271Isaac, feast at his weaning,232Isocrates,282Julian the Apostate,194Justinian,265Juvenal,325Keble, John,158;his Latin Lectures,369Knowledge, its own end,99;viewed in relation to learning,124;to professional skill,151;to religion,179Lalanne, Abbé,9Leo, St., on the love of gain,87Literature,268Locke, on Education,158-160,163,319Logos,276Lohner, Father, his story of a court-preacher,411Longinus, his admiration of the Mosaic account of Creation,271Lutheran leaven, spread of the,28[pg 525]Macaulay, Lord, his Essay on Bacon's philosophy,118,221;hisEssaysquoted,301,435-438,450Machiavel,316Malebranche,477Maltby, Dr., bishop of Durham, his Address to the Deity,33,40Michael Angelo, first attempts of,283Milman, Dean, his History of the Jews,85Milton, on Education,169;hisSamson Agonistesquoted,323;his allusions to himself,329Modesty,206Montaigne's Essays,315More, Sir Thomas,437Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History,140Muratori,478,520Music,80Neri, St. Philip,234Newton, Sir Isaac,xiii.,49,53;on the Apocalypse,304;his marvellous powers,324Newtonian philosophy, the,49Noah's ark,73Olympicgames, the,107Optics,46Painting,79Palestrina,237Paley,58,449Palladio,57Pascal,315Patrick, St., greatness of his work,15Periodical criticism,333Persian mode of letter-writing,277Pindar,329Pitt, William, his opinion of Butler's Analogy,100Pius IV., Pope, death of,237Plato, on poets,101;on music,110Playfair, Professor,157Political Economy,86Pompey's Pillar,136Pope, Alex., quoted,118;an indifferent Catholic,318;has tuned our versification,323;quoted,375,501Porson, Richard, xiv.,304Pride and self-respect,207Private Judgment,97Protestant argument against Transubstantiation,95Psalter, the,289Pulci,316Pythagoras,xiiiRabelias,315Raffaelle, first attempts of,283;287Rasselasquoted,116[pg 526]Recreations not Education,144Robertson, style of,325Rome,265Round Towers of Ireland, the,95Sales, St Francis de, on preaching,406,410,411Salmasius,140Savonarola,235Scott, Sir Walter,313;hisOld Mortality,359Seneca,110,116,327Sermons of the seventeenth century,140Shaftesbury, Lord, hisCharacteristics,196-201,204Shakespeare, quoted,150;hisMacbethquoted,280;Hamletquoted,281;quoted,284,287;morality of,318;quoted,410,513Simon of Tournay, narrative of,384Smith, Sydney,157Sophocles,258Southey'sThalaba,323;quoted,324Sterne's Sermons, quoted,270-272Stuffing birds not education,144Sylvester II., Pope, accused of magic,220Tarpeia,140Taylor, Jeremy, hisLiberty of Prophesying,472Terence and Menander,259Tertullian,327Thales,xiii.Theology, a branch of knowledge,19;definition of,60Thucydides,259,325,329Titus, armies of,265Virgil, his obligations to Greek poets,259;wishes his Æneid burnt,284;fixes the character of the hexameter,325,329Voltaire,303,315Utilityin Education,161Watson, Bishop, on Mathematics,101Wiclif,155Wren, Sir Christopher,57Xavier, St. Francis,235Xenophon quoted,107,258FINIS.
Abelard,96,age of,263
Abelard,96,
age of,263
Accomplishments not education,144
Accomplishments not education,144
Addison, hisVision of Mirza,279;his care in writing,284;the child of the Revolution,312,329
Addison, hisVision of Mirza,279;
his care in writing,284;
the child of the Revolution,312,329
Æschylus,258
Æschylus,258
Alcuin,17
Alcuin,17
Aldhelm, St.,17
Aldhelm, St.,17
Alexander the Great, his delight in Homer,258;conquests of,264
Alexander the Great, his delight in Homer,258;
conquests of,264
Anaxagoras,116
Anaxagoras,116
Andes, the,136
Andes, the,136
Animuccia and St. Philip Neri,237
Animuccia and St. Philip Neri,237
Apollo Belvidere, the,283
Apollo Belvidere, the,283
Aquinas, St. Thomas,134,263,384
Aquinas, St. Thomas,134,263,384
Arcesilas,101
Arcesilas,101
Architecture,81
Architecture,81
Arian argument against our Lord's Divinity,95
Arian argument against our Lord's Divinity,95
Ariosto,316
Ariosto,316
Aristotelic philosophy, the,52
Aristotelic philosophy, the,52
Aristotle, xii.,6,53;quoted,78,101,106,109,134,222,275;his sketch of the magnanimous man,280,383,431,469
Aristotle, xii.,6,53;
quoted,78,101,106,109,134,222,275;
his sketch of the magnanimous man,280,383,431,469
Athens, the fountain of secular knowledge,264
Athens, the fountain of secular knowledge,264
Augustine, St., of Canterbury, mission of,16
Augustine, St., of Canterbury, mission of,16
Augustine, St., of Hippo, quoted,410
Augustine, St., of Hippo, quoted,410
Bacci'sLife of St. Philip Neri, quoted,236
Bacci'sLife of St. Philip Neri, quoted,236
Bacon, Friar, xiii.,220
Bacon, Friar, xiii.,220
Baconian philosophy, the,109
Baconian philosophy, the,109
Bacon, Lord, quoted,77,90,117-119,175,221,225,263,319,437
Bacon, Lord, quoted,77,90,117-119,175,221,225,263,319,437
Balaam,66
Balaam,66
Beethoven,286,313
Beethoven,286,313
Bentham'sPreuves Judiciaires,96
Bentham'sPreuves Judiciaires,96
Berkeley, Bishop, on Gothic Architecture,81
Berkeley, Bishop, on Gothic Architecture,81
Boccaccio,316
Boccaccio,316
Boniface, St.,220
Boniface, St.,220
Borromeo, St. Carlo, enjoins the use of some of the Latin classics,261;on preaching,406,412,414,421
Borromeo, St. Carlo, enjoins the use of some of the Latin classics,261;
on preaching,406,412,414,421
Bossuet and Bishop Bull,7
Bossuet and Bishop Bull,7
Brougham, Lord, his Discourse at Glasgow, quoted,30,34-35
Brougham, Lord, his Discourse at Glasgow, quoted,30,34-35
Brutus, abandoned by philosophy,116
Brutus, abandoned by philosophy,116
Burke, Edmund,176;his valediction to the spirit of chivalry,201
Burke, Edmund,176;
his valediction to the spirit of chivalry,201
Burman,140
Burman,140
Butler, Bishop, his Analogy,61,100,158,226
Butler, Bishop, his Analogy,61,100,158,226
Byron, Lord, his versification,326
Byron, Lord, his versification,326
Caietan, St.,235
Caietan, St.,235
Campbell, Thomas,322,326
Campbell, Thomas,322,326
Carneades,106
Carneades,106
Cato the elder, his opposition to the Greek philosophy,106
Cato the elder, his opposition to the Greek philosophy,106
Catullus,325
Catullus,325
Chinese civilization,252
Chinese civilization,252
Christianity and Letters,249
Christianity and Letters,249
Chrysostom, St., on Judas,86
Chrysostom, St., on Judas,86
Cicero, quoted,77;on the pursuit of knowledge,104,116,260;style of,281,282,327;quoted,399;his orations against Verres,421
Cicero, quoted,77;
on the pursuit of knowledge,104,116,260;
style of,281,282,327;
quoted,399;
his orations against Verres,421
Civilization and Christianity,255
Civilization and Christianity,255
Clarendon, Lord,311
Clarendon, Lord,311
Colours, combination of,100
Colours, combination of,100
“Condescension,”two senses of,205
“Condescension,”two senses of,205
Copleston, Dr., Bishop of Llandaff,157;quoted,167-169
Copleston, Dr., Bishop of Llandaff,157;
quoted,167-169
Corinthian brass,175
Corinthian brass,175
Cowper, quoted,191,467
Cowper, quoted,191,467
Crabbe, hisTales of the Hall,150;his versification,326
Crabbe, hisTales of the Hall,150;
his versification,326
Craik, Dr. G. L., hisPursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties, quoted,103,104
Craik, Dr. G. L., hisPursuit of Knowledge under Difficulties, quoted,103,104
Dante,316,329
Dante,316,329
Davison, John,158;on Liberal Education,169-177
Davison, John,158;
on Liberal Education,169-177
Definiteness, the life of preaching,426
Definiteness, the life of preaching,426
Demosthenes,259,284
Demosthenes,259,284
Descartes,315
Descartes,315
Dumesnil's Synonymes,368
Dumesnil's Synonymes,368
Du Pin's Ecclesiastical History,140
Du Pin's Ecclesiastical History,140
Edgeworth, Mr., on Professional Education,158,170,176
Edgeworth, Mr., on Professional Education,158,170,176
Edinburgh,154
Edinburgh,154
Edinburgh Review, the,153,157,160,301,329
Edinburgh Review, the,153,157,160,301,329
Edward II., King of England, vow at his flight from Bannockburn,155
Edward II., King of England, vow at his flight from Bannockburn,155
Elmsley,xiv.
Elmsley,xiv.
Epicurus,40
Epicurus,40
Euclid's Elements,274,313,501
Euclid's Elements,274,313,501
Euripides,258
Euripides,258
Fenelon, on the Gothic style of Architecture,82
Fenelon, on the Gothic style of Architecture,82
Fontaine, La, his immoralContes,315
Fontaine, La, his immoralContes,315
Fouqué, Lamotte, his tale of theUnknown Patient,119
Fouqué, Lamotte, his tale of theUnknown Patient,119
Fra Angelico,287
Fra Angelico,287
Franklin,304
Franklin,304
Frederick II.,383,384
Frederick II.,383,384
Galen,222
Galen,222
Gentleman, the true, defined,208
Gentleman, the true, defined,208
Gerdil, Cardinal, quoted, xiii., on the Emperor Julian,194;on Malebranche,477
Gerdil, Cardinal, quoted, xiii., on the Emperor Julian,194;
on Malebranche,477
Giannone,316
Giannone,316
Gibbon, on the darkness at the Passion,95;his hatred of Christianity,195,196;his care in writing,285;influence of his style on the literature of the present day,323;his tribute to Hume and Robertson,325
Gibbon, on the darkness at the Passion,95;
his hatred of Christianity,195,196;
his care in writing,285;
influence of his style on the literature of the present day,323;
his tribute to Hume and Robertson,325
Goethe,134
Goethe,134
Gothic Architecture,82
Gothic Architecture,82
Grammar,96,334
Grammar,96,334
Gregory the Great, St.,260
Gregory the Great, St.,260
Hardouin, Father, on Latin literature,310
Hardouin, Father, on Latin literature,310
Health,164
Health,164
Herodotus,284,325,329
Herodotus,284,325,329
Hobbes,311
Hobbes,311
Homer, his address to the Delian women,257;his best descriptions, according to Sterne, marred by translation,271
Homer, his address to the Delian women,257;
his best descriptions, according to Sterne, marred by translation,271
Hooker,311
Hooker,311
Horace, quoted,257,258,329
Horace, quoted,257,258,329
Horne Tooke,96
Horne Tooke,96
Hume,40,58;style of,325
Hume,40,58;
style of,325
Humility,206
Humility,206
Huss,155
Huss,155
Jacob'scourtship,232
Jacob'scourtship,232
Jeffrey, Lord,157
Jeffrey, Lord,157
Jerome, St., on idolizing the creature,87
Jerome, St., on idolizing the creature,87
Jerusalem, the fountain-head of religious knowledge,264
Jerusalem, the fountain-head of religious knowledge,264
Ignatius, St.,235
Ignatius, St.,235
Job, religious merry-makings of,232;Book of,289
Job, religious merry-makings of,232;
Book of,289
John, King,383
John, King,383
John of Salisbury,262
John of Salisbury,262
Johnson, Dr., his method of writing the Ramblers,xx.;his vigour and resource of intellect,xxi.;his definition of the wordUniversity,20;hisRasselasquoted,116-117;style of,283;his Table-talk,313;his bias towards Catholicity,319;his definition ofGrammar,334
Johnson, Dr., his method of writing the Ramblers,xx.;
his vigour and resource of intellect,xxi.;
his definition of the wordUniversity,20;
hisRasselasquoted,116-117;
style of,283;
his Table-talk,313;
his bias towards Catholicity,319;
his definition ofGrammar,334
Joseph, history of,271
Joseph, history of,271
Isaac, feast at his weaning,232
Isaac, feast at his weaning,232
Isocrates,282
Isocrates,282
Julian the Apostate,194
Julian the Apostate,194
Justinian,265
Justinian,265
Juvenal,325
Juvenal,325
Keble, John,158;his Latin Lectures,369
Keble, John,158;
his Latin Lectures,369
Knowledge, its own end,99;viewed in relation to learning,124;to professional skill,151;to religion,179
Knowledge, its own end,99;
viewed in relation to learning,124;
to professional skill,151;
to religion,179
Lalanne, Abbé,9
Lalanne, Abbé,9
Leo, St., on the love of gain,87
Leo, St., on the love of gain,87
Literature,268
Literature,268
Locke, on Education,158-160,163,319
Locke, on Education,158-160,163,319
Logos,276
Logos,276
Lohner, Father, his story of a court-preacher,411
Lohner, Father, his story of a court-preacher,411
Longinus, his admiration of the Mosaic account of Creation,271
Longinus, his admiration of the Mosaic account of Creation,271
Lutheran leaven, spread of the,28
Lutheran leaven, spread of the,28
Macaulay, Lord, his Essay on Bacon's philosophy,118,221;hisEssaysquoted,301,435-438,450
Macaulay, Lord, his Essay on Bacon's philosophy,118,221;
hisEssaysquoted,301,435-438,450
Machiavel,316
Machiavel,316
Malebranche,477
Malebranche,477
Maltby, Dr., bishop of Durham, his Address to the Deity,33,40
Maltby, Dr., bishop of Durham, his Address to the Deity,33,40
Michael Angelo, first attempts of,283
Michael Angelo, first attempts of,283
Milman, Dean, his History of the Jews,85
Milman, Dean, his History of the Jews,85
Milton, on Education,169;hisSamson Agonistesquoted,323;his allusions to himself,329
Milton, on Education,169;
hisSamson Agonistesquoted,323;
his allusions to himself,329
Modesty,206
Modesty,206
Montaigne's Essays,315
Montaigne's Essays,315
More, Sir Thomas,437
More, Sir Thomas,437
Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History,140
Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History,140
Muratori,478,520
Muratori,478,520
Music,80
Music,80
Neri, St. Philip,234
Neri, St. Philip,234
Newton, Sir Isaac,xiii.,49,53;on the Apocalypse,304;his marvellous powers,324
Newton, Sir Isaac,xiii.,49,53;
on the Apocalypse,304;
his marvellous powers,324
Newtonian philosophy, the,49
Newtonian philosophy, the,49
Noah's ark,73
Noah's ark,73
Olympicgames, the,107
Olympicgames, the,107
Optics,46
Optics,46
Painting,79
Painting,79
Palestrina,237
Palestrina,237
Paley,58,449
Paley,58,449
Palladio,57
Palladio,57
Pascal,315
Pascal,315
Patrick, St., greatness of his work,15
Patrick, St., greatness of his work,15
Periodical criticism,333
Periodical criticism,333
Persian mode of letter-writing,277
Persian mode of letter-writing,277
Pindar,329
Pindar,329
Pitt, William, his opinion of Butler's Analogy,100
Pitt, William, his opinion of Butler's Analogy,100
Pius IV., Pope, death of,237
Pius IV., Pope, death of,237
Plato, on poets,101;on music,110
Plato, on poets,101;
on music,110
Playfair, Professor,157
Playfair, Professor,157
Political Economy,86
Political Economy,86
Pompey's Pillar,136
Pompey's Pillar,136
Pope, Alex., quoted,118;an indifferent Catholic,318;has tuned our versification,323;quoted,375,501
Pope, Alex., quoted,118;
an indifferent Catholic,318;
has tuned our versification,323;
quoted,375,501
Porson, Richard, xiv.,304
Porson, Richard, xiv.,304
Pride and self-respect,207
Pride and self-respect,207
Private Judgment,97
Private Judgment,97
Protestant argument against Transubstantiation,95
Protestant argument against Transubstantiation,95
Psalter, the,289
Psalter, the,289
Pulci,316
Pulci,316
Pythagoras,xiii
Pythagoras,xiii
Rabelias,315
Rabelias,315
Raffaelle, first attempts of,283;287
Raffaelle, first attempts of,283;287
Rasselasquoted,116
Rasselasquoted,116
Recreations not Education,144
Recreations not Education,144
Robertson, style of,325
Robertson, style of,325
Rome,265
Rome,265
Round Towers of Ireland, the,95
Round Towers of Ireland, the,95
Sales, St Francis de, on preaching,406,410,411
Sales, St Francis de, on preaching,406,410,411
Salmasius,140
Salmasius,140
Savonarola,235
Savonarola,235
Scott, Sir Walter,313;hisOld Mortality,359
Scott, Sir Walter,313;
hisOld Mortality,359
Seneca,110,116,327
Seneca,110,116,327
Sermons of the seventeenth century,140
Sermons of the seventeenth century,140
Shaftesbury, Lord, hisCharacteristics,196-201,204
Shaftesbury, Lord, hisCharacteristics,196-201,204
Shakespeare, quoted,150;hisMacbethquoted,280;Hamletquoted,281;quoted,284,287;morality of,318;quoted,410,513
Shakespeare, quoted,150;
hisMacbethquoted,280;
Hamletquoted,281;
quoted,284,287;
morality of,318;
quoted,410,513
Simon of Tournay, narrative of,384
Simon of Tournay, narrative of,384
Smith, Sydney,157
Smith, Sydney,157
Sophocles,258
Sophocles,258
Southey'sThalaba,323;quoted,324
Southey'sThalaba,323;
quoted,324
Sterne's Sermons, quoted,270-272
Sterne's Sermons, quoted,270-272
Stuffing birds not education,144
Stuffing birds not education,144
Sylvester II., Pope, accused of magic,220
Sylvester II., Pope, accused of magic,220
Tarpeia,140
Tarpeia,140
Taylor, Jeremy, hisLiberty of Prophesying,472
Taylor, Jeremy, hisLiberty of Prophesying,472
Terence and Menander,259
Terence and Menander,259
Tertullian,327
Tertullian,327
Thales,xiii.
Thales,xiii.
Theology, a branch of knowledge,19;definition of,60
Theology, a branch of knowledge,19;
definition of,60
Thucydides,259,325,329
Thucydides,259,325,329
Titus, armies of,265
Titus, armies of,265
Virgil, his obligations to Greek poets,259;wishes his Æneid burnt,284;fixes the character of the hexameter,325,329
Virgil, his obligations to Greek poets,259;
wishes his Æneid burnt,284;
fixes the character of the hexameter,325,329
Voltaire,303,315
Voltaire,303,315
Utilityin Education,161
Utilityin Education,161
Watson, Bishop, on Mathematics,101
Watson, Bishop, on Mathematics,101
Wiclif,155
Wiclif,155
Wren, Sir Christopher,57
Wren, Sir Christopher,57
Xavier, St. Francis,235
Xavier, St. Francis,235
Xenophon quoted,107,258
Xenophon quoted,107,258
FINIS.