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a suffrage, its venality, and swamping the
tellectual portion of the community, 249.
(Matthew) Schools and Universities on
ntinent,' 219.

B.

8 Economy of Manufactures,' 185.
e's (Major) 'Our Military Forces and Re-

274.

ends to agriculture, 237; injury done by
ighter of small, 241; destroy insects and
is of troublesome weeds, ib.

(Bishop) on Confession, 48; memoirs by
Blomfield, 118; a pluralist, ib.; Bishop
ter, ib.; translated to London, ib.
M.), French agent employed in the nego-
for the Spanish marriages, 65.

Borumha's successful guerilla warfare
the Danes, 223; metrical dialogue be
Brian and his brother Mahon, ib.; routs
es of Limerick at the battle of Sulcoit,
rallel in Irish history to the devotion of
s Fabia, ib.; becomes King of Mun-
; succeeds Malachy as chief king, ib.;
nce to Alfred, ib.; victory over the
.D. 1014, 226; killed in the battle, aged
e of his death, ib.

r.) scheme for the regeneration of Ire-

Seum, increased urgency for more space,
at increase of acquisitions in zoology,
erings of the Staff for want of room,
ace of firemaker and fireman, ib.; sculp-
turdiest suppliant for space, 82; vast
increase of antiquities, ib.; the read-
83; refreshment rooms, ib.; the Treas-
ce, 84; alternative remedies examined,
ments for separating distinct collections,
ibrary not to be disturbed, 87; ques-
her the Antiquities or the Natural His-
ld be removed, ib.; Mr. Panizzi's ar-
that the antiquities should remain in
ry, ib.; enumeration of the host of
s of the ancient world, 88; peculiar
-f this collection of ancient sculpture,
larity and attractiveness of natural

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tions of the working classes in large towns, 48;
average value of Church preferments at differ-
ent periods, 117; inferior social position of the
clergy throughout the seventeenth and eight-
eenth centuries, ib.; the Episcopal Act, 119;
the Plurality and Cathedral Acts, 119,120; Parlia-
mentary grants in aid of spiritual destitution,
121; results of the Episcopal, Plurality, and
Cathedral Acts, 123; commutation of capitular
property, 124; statistics of rural and urban
parishes, 125; augmentations of the incomes of
parochial clergy still required, ib.; private lib-
erality in increasing the number and incomes of
the clergy, 126; three thousand new churches
built at a cost of ten millions, ib.; new sees of
St. Alban's, Southwell, and in Cornwall, 129;
income of deans, ib.; suggestions for greater
efficiency of chapters, 129, 130; annual sum re-
quired to relieve spiritual destitution and afford
a decent minimum income for the clergy, 180;
the prospects of the Church, 131, 132.
Church in Ireland, abolition of, 143; our Protest-
ant garrison, ib.; the Protestant clergyman in
Ireland the best friend of the peasantry, 283;
Church abolition would alienate every friend
England has in Ireland without conciliating a
single enemy, 284; the Roman Catholic Church
in Ireland not a poor Church, ib.; opinions of
Bishop Moriarty and Cardinal Cullen, 284, 285;
income of Roman Catholic parish priests and
curates, 285, 286; the voluntary system in that
Church not applicable to the Protestants, 286;
Church abolition would deprive of religious teach-
ing those sparsely scattered over a large country,
ib.; Mr. Arnold's proposal to transfer the Church
fabrics to the Roman Catholics, 287; the argu-
ments against Church revenues strike at the
whole institution of property, 288; the argu-
ments against the Irish Church soon to be ex-
tended to England, 289; fallacy respecting 199
parishes without a Protestant parishioner, 290,
291; disestablishment simple, but disendowment
involves a perplexing question, 292; Church abo-
lition will unite the Irish people in hostility to
England, 293; the Protestants anxious, not for as-
cendancy, but protection against the tyranny of
a majority, 294; disendowment will exasperate
religious bitterness to the highest degree, ib.;
reasonable expectation of preferment, not actu-
ally enjoyed, overlooked in estimating vested in-
terests, 299; Act of Union and Coronation Oath,
800.

Confession (private) in the Church of England,
Ritualistic view of, 43; necessity of resisting the
organised attempts to re-impose the yoke, 45;
reference to auricular confession in the first
Prayer-book of Edward VI., 46; its effects on so-
cial life, 47; its vital difference from preaching,
47, 48; confession in schools dangerous as de-
stroying mutual confidence, 48; Church exhorta-
tion to confession by a sick person only condi-
tional, 49, 50; arguments from Homilies show-
ing that confession is not retained, 51; the
Canons alien from the Ritualistic view, 52; prac-
tice of the Ritualists, 53; instructions given for
a first confession, 54; style of interrogation to
be used towards married persons, 55; inquiry
whether a clergyman is empowered to impose

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