Heart, 383. Collins, F. Mortimer Collins: his Let- Gibbs. The Battle of the Standard, 757. Histoire des Croisades ; ill. p. Doré, 507. Maréchal de Moltke, Lettres du, sur la Marley Castle. Edited by Sir Garnet Masson. Milton, Globe Edition, 253. Oxford Bible for Teachers, 253. Reid, Wemyss. Charlotte Brontë, 255. Sully. Pessimism, 745. Taylor. Sayings of the Jewish Fathers, Thornbury. Life of J. M. W. Turner, Thompson. Handbook to the Picture West. Hospital Organisation, 254. and Divine Revelation, 248. Wilson. Wines of the Bible, 750. Wood. Essays on Mental Culture, 128. O'Conor, Charles, 727. Occult and its Professors, The, 205. On Different Levels, 267. Once Upon a Time, 20. "Our Portrait Gallery" :- Samuel Birch, LL.D., D.C.L., &c., 53. John Linnell, Sen., 535. Theodore Martin, C.B., LL.D., 674. Out of Her Sphere: A Philosopher's Fancy, Ozanne, J. W., 385, 594. Physiology, On Elementary Instruction in,. Poetry, Some Contemporary, 133. Roman Poet at Home, A, 395. Sappho's Hymn to Love, 266. Supernatural, The, and "Supernatural Taylor, Tom. "Our Portrait Gallery," 142. Wilde, Lady, 70, 193. Wings of Escape, 415. Woeful Waif, A, 706. THE world has lately rung with some of those wild, sharp, unaccustomed notes which are said to presage great storms, or natural convulsions. A modern writer, who has something of the magical touch of great writers of the past, and who has enriched our literature by an account of the terrible winter of 1685, such as De Foe might have been proud to have written, has spoken repeatedly of the weird and unwonted sounds that heralded, or accompanied the great cold.* Some such presage of the coming war of elements, in mute expectation of which Europe is shuddering into hostile camps, may be recognized in a work which is perhaps more confident in tone than exact in logic, but which has disquieted many a reader, under the title of Supernatural Religion. ac There is an assumption of no slight importance which lies at the very threshold of this work. And not only from the mere circumstance of being assumed, is that assumption unphilosophical, but it further involves a tacit ceptance of almost all for which the author subsequently contends. It may be said that it is a mere question of words as to which we take exception. But the reply is, that in all exact thought, the definition of the language used is a necessary preliminary. It is not needful for the philosophical writer to give an etymological derivation of his terms, or to give an historical account of the different senses in which they have been employed or understood. But it is necessary for him to define the sense in which he intends to use any important * Mr. Blackmore's " Lorna Doone" is presumed to be the work referred to.-[ED.] |