Pyramids, Espaliers, etc.; the laying out and arranging different kinds of Orchards and Gardens; the selection of suitable varieties for different purposes and localities, gathering and preserving fruits, treatment of Diseases, destruction of insects, descriptions and uses of implements, etc. Illustrated with upwards of 150 figures, representing different parts of trees, all practical operations, forms of trees, designs for plantations, :mplements, etc. By P. BARRY, of the Mt. Hope Nurseries, Rochester, New York. Rochester: Published
C. Sallusti Crispi Catilina et Jugurtha. Recognovit GEO. LONG, M. A. New York: Harper and Brothers. 1863.
Xenophontis Anabasis. Recensuit J. F. MACMICHAEL, A. B. New York: Harper and Brothers. 1863.
I will be a Soldier. A Book for Boys. By Mrs. L. C. TUTHill. Boston: Crosby & Nichols. 1863.
The Young Parson. Philadelphia: Smith, English & Co. 1863.
Romola. A Novel. By GEORGE ELIOT, Author of "Adam Bede," "The Mill on the Floss," "Scenes of Clerical Life," and "Silas Mar." With illustrations. New York: Harper and Brothers. 1863.
Peter Carradine, or the Martindale Pastorate. By CAROLINE CHESEBRO. New York: Sheldon & Co. 1863.
Sea-Kings, and Naval Heroes. A Book for Boys. By JOHN G. EDGAR, Author of "History for Boys," "Boyhood of Great Men," "Footprints of Famous Men," "Wars of the Roses," etc., etc. Illustrated by C. KEENE and E. K. JOHNSON. New York: Harper and Brothers. 1863.
In the October Number, 1862, on pages 560 and 566, for John Russell, read John Buzzell; on page 568, for C. K. Bacheler, read O. R. Bacheler; on page 572, for S. K. Moulton, read A. K. Moulton.
INDEX TO THE TWENTY-EIGHTH VOLUME.
ESTHETICS; or, The Science of Beau-COLENSO, Bishop J. W., his Pentateuch
ty, by Prof. John Bascom, noticed, 331.
AFRICAN HUNTING, by Wm. C. Bald- win, noticed, 335.
ALMANAC, NATIONAL, noticed, 333. AMERICAN BOARD of Commissioners, the Missions of, article on, by Rev. A. N. Arnold, 341; results of fifty years, 342; increasing receipts, 344-5, provision for disabled missionaries and missionaries' children, 346-7; average duration of missionary life. 348; missionary schools and their value, 349; Catholic spirit of the Board, false claims, 350-7; change in the moral aspect of the world since the origin of the A. B. C. F. M., 358. ANDREWS, S. J.,his Life of our Lord, no- ticed, 324.
BASCOM, Prof. John, his Esthetics, no- ticed, 331.
BETHUNE, Rev. Dr. G. W., his Memoirs of his Mother, noticed, 154. BRACE, CHAS. L., his Races of the Old World. noticed, 492.
and Book of Joshua critically exam- ined, reviewed, by Rev. O. S. Stearns, 464; attention excited by it account- ed for, 464-5; no danger from it to the thoughtful, and informed, 466; nothing new in it, 467-71; an excep- tion, 472; testimony of Christ and his apostles to the Pentateuch, 473; evidence for the credibility of the Pentateuch, 474; the Bishop's meth- od, 475; state of the Hebrew text, 476; the Bishop's difficulty as to the "harnessed men" who went out of Egypt at the Exodus, 477; Keil's ex- planation, 477-8; the Bishop's trou- ble about supplies for people and cattle in the desert, 478; good that will be accomplished by the book, 479-80.
D'AUBIGNE, J. H. MERLE, his History of the Reformation in the time of Calvin, noticed, 491.
DOCTRINAL THEOLOGY FOR CHRISTIAN PASTORS, an article on, by Prof. A. Hovey, 645; pastors are also teachers,
BURTON, JOHN H., his Book-Hunter, no- and should be well instructed, 646-7; ticed, 157.
BUSHNELL'S, DR., ARGUMENTS FOR IN- FANT BAPTISM, reviewed by Rev. Irah Chase, 501; Dr. B.'s idea of or- ganic connection, examined, 501-9; Jewish proselyte baptism, and the conversation with Nicodemus, 510- 20; the supposition that on the day of Pentecost, the Apostle Peter pro- claimed an institute which he him- self did not then think of, but which. at a later period. was properly devel- oped, 521-8; the reception of young children by our Lord, and apostolic authority, 529-39; early church his- tory, 540; Justin Martyr, 541-3; Irenæus, 544; Tertullian, 545; Origen 516; shepherd of Hermas, 547-9; in- scriptions on the monuments of chil- dren in the Catacombs, 550-9; Cyp-| rian and Council of Carthage, 560-1: Ambrose, 562; Pelagius and Au- gustine, 564-75; infant baptism and infant communion: testimony of the Fathers, 576-9; of Romish authors, 580-2; of the Council of Trent, 583- 4; of the Greek Church, 585-6; the arguments that disprove infant com- munion disprove infant baptism, 587 -9; infant baptism and infant church membership, 590-611.
special objections to instruction in doctrinal theology, 647; defence of the position that doctrinal theology is exceedingly desirable for Christian pastors, 647-8; demanded by their rational nature, 648-50; it meets a want of their moral nature, 650–2; essential to their spiritual good, 652 -3; when and how truth should be brought before the mind, 654; pas- tors should be well grounded in the- ology for the good of their people, 655; needed to save the ungodly, 656; Dr. Wayland's idea of preach- ing commented on, 657-9; pastors should feed the church, 659-60; should instruct it in truth for its spi- ritual growth, 661; to augment its in- fluence, 662; theological schools the best place for ministerial education, 663; the plan and range of study adopted may not be the best possi- ble, 664; the preparation needed bet- ter furnished in theological schools than elsewhere, 665-6; benefits of association with future fellow-labor- ers, 667; objection that the schools are not practical, 668; conclusion, 669.
DRAPER, Dr. JOHN W., his History of the Intellectual Development of Eu- rope, noticed EMANCIPATION, RESULTS OF, by Au- gustin Cochin, noticed, 155. COOK, JOEL, his Siege of Richmond, no- FRANCE, the Students, History of, ticed, 334.
CHAMPLIN, Pres. J. T., his text-books of Intellectual Philosophy, and Eth- ics, noticed, 330.
HAMILTON, Rev. JAMES, his Sunday Evening Book, and A Morning beside the Lake of Galilee, noticed, 326. HARPER'S LIBRARY OF SELECT NOVELS noticed, 493.
GASPARIN, DE COUNT, his Les Perspec- good works as conditions of salva- tives du Temps Présent, noticed, 481. tion, 44-7; eucharist, 48; doctrine of GASPARIN, MADAME DE, the Countess, the authority of the church and on the her Vesper, noticed. 160. sacred traditions, 49-51; the worship GAUSSEN, Prof. L., his Canon of the due to the holy cross, the Virgin Holy Scriptures, examined in the Mary, angels, and saints, 52-55: wor- light of History, noticed, 148. ship paid to the holy images and the GLACIERS, THE, OF THE ALPS; The holy relics, 56-58; religious fasts origin and phenomena of Glaciers, instituted by the Church, 58-9; state by John Tyndall, reviewed, by Prof. of the souls of the blessed after death Chester; Dewey, 297 the névé or and prayer for the dead, 60-3. snow-fields, 297; dimensions and GREEN, Prof. WM. H., his Pentateuch direction of the glaciers, 298; origin vindicated from the aspersions of of the name Mer de Glace, 298, 9;| Bishop Colenso, noticed, 325. the debris deposited on the glaciers, GUTHRIE, Rev. THOMAS, his Speaking to 300; the Alps formerly colder than the Heart; or Sermons for the Peo- at present, 300; granite blocks with ple, noticed, 485. ice pedestals on glaciers, 301; Tyn- dall's account of the formation of the Mer de Glace, 302: depth of a glacier, 303; the "moulins" or fun- nels of glaciers, 303; the first Amer- ican that ascended Mt. Blanc, 304; HARRIS, Lieut. WM. C., his Prison Life motion of a glacier, 304; variations in the Tobacco Warehouse at Rich- of velocity in different parts, 305; mond, noticed, 334. experiment of Profs. Agassiz and Forbes, 306; experiment of Tyndall to determine the influence of the tortuosity of the valleys on the mo- tion, 306-8: experiments to deter- mine the velocity at different depths, 309: also the motion of the ice in winter, 309-10; crevasses, fractures, and caverns, 310, 11; dirt-bands of the Mer de Glace, 311-2; cause of the motion of glaciers, 3'2; six theories 313-17; experiments with ice and] results, 318 Tyndall's summary of facts and conclusions on the constitu- tion and action of glaciers, 320; in- sufficient importance attached to the infiltrating water. 320-2; influence of temperature, 323.
GREEK CHURCH, THE, Alexander de Stourdza on, by Rev. A. N. Arnold, 31; introductory note, 31-2; state- ment of the controversy between the Eastern and Western Churches, Part I., 32; doctrine of the procession of the Holy Spirit, 33; existence of purgatory, 34; communion in both kinds, 34; immersion and triple im- mersion in baptism, 35; use of leav- ened or unleavened bread, in the communion, 36; definition of the primacy of the See of Rome, 37-39; claim of catholicity, 40; not to cou- found eternal religion with temporal civilization, 41; Part II., statement of the controversy between the Ortho- dox (Greek) Church and the Refor- mation of the xvith century, 42; the reformation Rome's expiation of the first schism, 42; appeal of the Pro- testant theologians of Tübingen to the Eastern Church, 43; principal points in controversy, 44; faith and
HOPKINS, Pres. MARK, his Lectures on Moral Science, noticed. 328-30. INFANT SALVATION, article on, by Rev. H. C. Townley, 416; the large pro- portion of the race that die in in- fancy, 416; brief statement and re- view of leading opinions on the doc- trine of Infant Salvation, 417; view that only the baptized are saved, 417 -20; that all infants are saved be- cause all are innocent, 420-22; that infants have no existence beyond the present life, 422-3; that the infants of believers, dying before they have committed actual sin, are saved, while all others are lost, 423-4; examina- tion of I. Cor. vii: 14, 424-6; Scrip- ture evidence that none are lost by the unbelief of their parents, 426-7; the opinion that the doctrine of elec- tion logically implies the damnation of infants, 427-9; the teaching of the Scriptures, 430; infants incapable of rejecting the gospel, 430-1; the res- urrection of the bodies of infants a strong presumption of their salva- tion, 432; the Scriptures teach that the guilt entailed upon the race by the first Adam (infants included) was removed by the atoning death of the second Adam, 433; different emotions of David on the death of an infant son and of Absalom 434–5; con- clusion that all infants are saved by the merits of Christ, 435. IRVING, Rev. EDWARD, THE LIFE OF, by Mrs. Oliphant, reviewed by Rev. Heman Lincoln, 234; England's in-
debtedness to the intellect of Scot- land, 234-5; defects of Mrs. Oli- phant's work, 235; Irving's parents and birthplace, 236-7; his great
strength and impetuous temper, 237 -8; his course at the University of Edinburgh, 238-9; his theological studies and life as a teacher, 239-40 ;| early clerical prospects not cheering, 240; removal to Edinburgh, 241; becomes colleague with Dr. Chal- mers, 241-2; his labors among the poor of Glasgow, 242-3; nobleness of his nature, 243; removal to Lon- don and high hopes, 244; his great industry, 245; cause of his sudden popularity, 245-6; results of his preaching, 246-7; his popularity not the occasion of his fall, 247; his want of tact and knowledge of men and occasions, 248-9; his waning influence in London. 247; infatua- tion in the study of prophecy, 250; his views of the incarnation, atone- ment, and infant baptism, 250-1; his notion of the Spirit's continued mira- culous power in the Church, and its results, 251-2; trouble from the Lon- don Presbytery and General Assem- bly, 252; rejected by the trustees and elders of his church, and ordina- tion revoked by Presbytery of An- nan, 254; deposed from pastorship by the prophets of his own church, 245; visit to Scotland, and death, 246; mystery of his life, 256; two causes of his failure, 257-8; instruc- tiveness of his example, 259. IRVING, WASHINGTON, his Life and Letters by Pierre Irving, noticed. 490.
JEWISH CHURCH, LECTURES ON THE HISTORY OF THE, by Prof. A. P. Stanley, noticed, 488. KORAN, THE, a new edition of a traus- lation of, noticed, 327. KRUMMACHER, F. W., his Risen Re- deemer, noticed.
and study, 1; recent origin of the science, 2; its claims to be called a science vindicated, 3; is it one of the natural sciences? 4-5; the two great laws of phonetic decay and dialecti- cal regeneration, 6-8, comparative inferiority of written to oral lan- guage, 8-9; language historical, 10- 11; reasons for the recent origin of the science of language, 12-13; its progress, 14-15; labors of the Jesuit Hervas, Sir Wm. Jones, the Hum- boldts, and others, 15-17; fruits of their studies; genealogical classifica- tion, 18-19; origin of tense and case endings, 19.20; original roots, three classes, 21; the doctrine of roots ap- plied to classification, 22; morpho- logical classification, 23; origin of language, 23-4; theories, 25-6; lan- guage a necessary product of man's rational constitution. 26-7: this theo- ry explains the origin of roots, 28-9; the real origin of language hidden and mysterious, 30.
LAW IN RELATION TO MIRACLES, arti- cle on, by J. M. Hoyt, 612; man's limited and imperfect knowledge, 612-13; definition of law, 613-14; uniform action suggests law, and law lawgiver, 615 pantheism, 616; a miracle defined, 617-18; a miracle neither without law nor against, but in a higher plane of law, 619-20; no reasoning about miracles with an atheist, 621; to a theist miracles are natural though above experience, 622; puerility of the objection that miracles are incredible because ex- traordinary, 623-5; law in its essence, 626; man's presumption and needed humility, 627-8.
LEFEBVRE RENÉ (Edouard Laboulaye,) his Paris in America, noticed, 496. MACDUFF, Rev. J. R., his Thoughts of God, noticed, 326. MACLEOD, Rev. NORMAN, his Parish Pa- pers, noticed, 487.
MARSH, GEO. P., his Origin and His- tory of the English Language and of the early Literature it embodies, no- ticed, 156.
MASON, Rev. F., his Burmah, its People
LANGUAGE, THE ORIGIN OF, article on, by Prof. Oscar Howes, 383; the ques- tion inevitable, 383; paucity of facts, 381-5; speech the distinguishing characteristic of man, 385; theories: the onomatopoetic and development, 386-9; the instinctive theory and its advocates, Marsh, Müller, Kendrick, 389-92; facts opposed to the instinc- tive theory, 392-8; Müller's theory of roots, 398-9; Dr. Kendrick's en- dorsement, 400; theory of the super- natural origin of language, 400; necessities which this theory alone MILLER, HUGH, his Tales and Sketches, satisfies, 401-2; statement of the probable facts of the origin, 402-3 tendencies of thought illustrated by the last three and leading theories, 403-6.
Language, The SCIENCE OF, Lectures on, by Max Müller, reviewed by Prof. A. C. Kendrick, 1; the science challenges our profoundest interest
and Natural Productions, noticed, 332. MASON, S. W., his Manual of Gymnas- tic Exercises for schools and families, noticed, 494.
noticed, 495. MILLENNIUM, THE, OF THE BIBLE, ar- ticle on, by Rev. Heman Lincoln, 131; Pagan and Jewish conceptions of golden ages, past and to come, 131; belief in a Millennium in the early church, 132-3; Old Testament pre- dictions of a happy age, 132-3; the New Testament refers to the second
advent of Christ as certain and to be eagerly expected, 133-5; the New Testament leaves no place for a Mil-
lous feeding of the five thousand, 205 9; the feeding of the four thousand, 210-12; miracles on his own body: the transfiguration, 212-15; the res- urrection, 215-18; the twelve mani- festations of himself by Christ after his resurrection, 218-26; testimony afforded by the records of Christ's miracles, 226; number and integrity of the witnesses, 227; their powers of observation and memory, 228; the phenomena attested were sensible, and the testimony positive, 229; testimony of the evangelists indepen- dent and harmonious, 230; Christ's miracles inseparably interwoven with his teachings, 231; their aim godlike, 231-2; great evidential value of mi- racles, 233.
lennium between the second adven- of Christ and the final judgment. 135-9; the world will not be filled with true Christians at the second advent of Christ, 139-40; nor will there be any Millennium on the earth before the judgment, 141-44. MILTONIC DEITY, THE, article on, by J. W. Stearns, 629; Dante's vision of the great poets in the Inferno, 629; Prof. Draper's estimate of the influ- ence of the Paradise Lost, 630; diffi- culties encountered in the Paradise Lost greater than those of the Inferno, 631-2; inconsistencies ir both poems. 632; Milton true to Scripture in his representations of spirits, 633-4; dif- ficulty of representing Deity, 634-5: Homer's gods, 635; third book of Paradise Lost falls below its subject. 636-7; reasons for its inferiority, 638 -40; similar defects in the fifth book, 541; incongruities of the battle of the angels 642; results to which forego- ing considerations lead us; Paradise Lost to be read not as a text-book in Theology, but as a poem, 643; its spirit eminently religious, 644; Deity not materialized, 645. MIRACLES OF CHRIST, articles on, by Prof. Alvah Hovey, 64; a miracle de- fined, 64; miracles not improbable, 64-5; Hume's objection to their cred- ibility on the ground of the known spuriousness of many alleged mira- cles, 65-6; Powell's objection from the constancy of natural causes, 66-8; the objection that the laws of nature are inviolable because divine, 68-72; the naturalistic and mythical hypo- theses, 72; the miracles of Christ divided into those wrought on hu- man nature, and those on the mate- rial world, 73; those on human na- ture: healing mortal sicknesses, 73; healing of the nobleman's son spe- cially examined, 73-8; healing of Pe- ter's wife and mother, 79-81; Christ's vicarious suffering in the healing of diseases, 82; healing of a man, who had the dropsy, and of the centur- ion's servant, 83-4: healing of chronic diseases, 85; of the paralytic, 85-90 miracles on the material world: mira- cles of absolute control, 186; the draught of fishes, Luke v: 1-11, 186 -9; a second draught, John xxi: 1 sq.. 189-91; the tribute money in the fish's mouth, 191-3; the stilling of MOSAIC TABERNACLE AND WORSHIP, the tempest, 193-5; Christ walking on the water, 195-8; judgment of the fruitless fig-tree, 198-202: miracles of creative power: the changing of water into wine, 202-6; the miracu-
MOHAMMEDAN SYSTEM, THE, in its reli- gious aspects and tendencies, article on, by Pres. G. W. Samson, 161; pres- ent interest in the subject, 152; works relating to it, 162-3; Moham- med's visit to Jerusalem at twelve years of age, 163-4; his early knowl- edge of Christianity, 165-6; his mar- riage, 167; influence on him of his wife's cousin, Woraka, 167-8; sympa- thy and influence of his wife, 168; preparation of the Arabians for Mo- hammed's teachings, 168-70; his first vision at the age of forty, 171; grad- ual growth of his influence, 171-2; his professed night journey to Jeru- salem and heaven, 172-4; the begira, 174; his successes, 175; the visions composing the Koran, 176; analysis of the Koran, 177-8; source of the true knowledge of God, 179-80; evi- dence on which Mohammed rests his claims of inspiration, 181-3; manner of receiving his revelations, 183-4; the divine unity his special doctrine, 185; his denial of Christ's divinity, 360; attributes, works and provi- dence of God, 361-3; negative views of man's character and of redemption, 364; denial of the sacrificial death of Christ, 364-7; grossness of his views of the future state, 368-72; his moral code, 372-3; statutes relating to do- mestic society, 374-7; slaves, 377; general social and civil duties, 378- 9; duties of religion, 379; prayer, 380; pilgrimage to Mecca, 381; prep- aration of the Arab and Persian for the gospel, 381-2; an incident in the writer's experience, 382-3. MOORE, FRANK, his Rebellion Record, noticed, 492.
THE, SIGNIFICANCE OF, article on, by Rev. D. B. Ford, 406; the tabernacle and its enclosure, 406-7; contents of the tabernacle, 408-9; manner of sacrifice, 409-10; who might enter
« PreviousContinue » |