Ib., cxiii, 170.-Poetry: Ib., xvii, 435; ib., cxiv, 167.-- Books: Blackw. Mag., xviii, 306, N. A. Rev., lv, 372. Literature: N. A. Rev., i, 307; Ed. Rev., 1, 125; For. Qu. Rev., xxi, 316; N. A. Rev., xiii, 478; Knick. Mag., ii, 161; Eclec. Mag., xiv, 532; Dub. Uni. Mag., xxxv, 461; Dem. Rev., xxii, 207.-Morals: O. Dewey, Chris. Ex. xxxvi, 250.-Scholarship: Knick. Mag., xxviii, 1. ---Society: Ib., ix, 163.—Traditions: Fras. Mag., ii, 321; iv, 96, v, 275.-Union, philosophy of: Dem. Rev., xxviii, 15. Not as strong as love: Swift's Wks., xi, 293.—Gov- ernment, elements of: Web. Wks., i, 103.-General theory of: Ib., vi, 537.—Labor to be protected: Ib., i, 283.-And European contrasted: Ib., ii, 24, 175, 467.— Legislation: Ib., vi, 221.-People: Ib., i, 73. iii, 76, vi, 224.-Policy: Ib., iii, 96.-Power: Ib., iii, 134.—Rev- olution, its purpose: Ib., iii, 16.-Its effect: Ib. 490. A 55. AMERICANISMS. — Liv. Age, cxiv, 446. -Dictionary of: Ib., xx, 79; Anal. Mag., iii, 404; N. Am. Rev., lxix, 94; Liv. Age, xx, 79; Alford's Eng. 6. (^56. AMERICANS.—The men who first asserted that lightning was but electricity, and heat a mode of motion, were Americans-Franklin and Rumford: Tyn- dall on Correlation of Forces, Introduction.-Native, believe all creatures have souls: Addison's Wks., ii, 297. "To South and North alike the land will be open, and while the Dane, eaten out of home, may find in Maine a climate as rough, and manners as kindly as his own, the Italian, unable to prosper, may grow Lacrima Christi on the slopes of Virginia, or renew the myrtles of Sicily by the blue waters of the Gulf of Mexico. There is room for all and to spare, and when the tale is complete, and Americans outnumber every white race, there will stretch before them other territories to possess, lands more vast, mountains more various, plains more rich, rivers still broader, cultivations and possibilities of social life yet more multiform and great, for they may cross the Isthmus, fix a capital greater than Rome, at a spot where the Pres- ident can look from the White House upon two oceans, and stretch away, pressing on in innumerable hordes, over the glorious wilderness of Brazil, and the rich allu- vium of the Amazon, mine the Andes, and fill those won- derful plateaus where, as in Bogota, the apple and the pine-apple grow side by side, and so spread slowly down away to the Antarctic zone. The half of the earth will then be American, and the curse of divided language done away with, and the human race, rid at last of physical misery, of war, of inequality, and of the paralysis of power produced by fears of each other, may commence a career as new as that which began when man first insti- tuted marriage, and discovered fire."-Living_Age, lxxxix, 488.-"Englishmen reinforced": Aut. Break. Tab., 278.-Domestic manners of: Blackwood's Mag., xxxi, 829.
57. AMNESTY.-Johns. Wks., xii, 224.
58. AMUSEMENTS.-- Versus gambling: Liv. Age, xciv, 320.-Men will have them: Liv. Âge, xcv, 650.-Ecce Deus, 145; Johns. Wks., iii, 113; Chris. Ex., viii, 201; Chris. Rev., xlv, 157; N. Eng., ix, 345. --Necessary: Ad. Wks., ii, 414; Trench on Words, 219; Spect., No. 93.
59. ANACHRONISMS. Liv. Age, xci, 455; Dub. Univ. Mag., xi. 701.—In tragedy of Ædipus. Ad. Wks., ii, 311.
60. ANAGRAMS.-Ad. Wks., ii, 349; ib., 363. 61. ANALYSIS. Trench on Words, 200.- Method of: Hobs. Wks., i, 66, 309, et seq.; vii, 188.
62. ANALYST, THE.—“has taken his balance, his measuring yard, his pound of food, and his man, and traced the material of support through the organs of the recipient, with all its successive changes, to its resolution into the elements of the earth or atmosphere, calling every organ to an account for its share in exact decimals, as a manufacturer might trace a ball of cotton through the hands of his various operatives."-O. W. Holmes. Currents and Counter-currents, 288.
63. ANALOGY.-Philosophical: Jour. Sci., 2d s., v, 33, 328; Lacon, 328.--Places man at the head of creation Man Primeval, (Harris,) 314.-Eng. Past and Pres., 56; Hume's Wks., i, 190; iv, 121, 267, 393; Hobs. Wks., i, 146, 156; Boling. Wks., iv, 461, 469, 474.
64. ANATHEMA maranatha. Stackhouse's Notes, 954.-The greater excommunication: Bingham's Wks., v, 461, 491, 494.
65. ANCESTRY.-Satire on the pride of: Dick- ens' Martin Chuzzlewit, chapter 1., Ad. Wks., iv, 244. Cy. Anec., 19. The old nobles . . . decreed that no individual should be presented at Versailles, unless he could prove four hundred years of gentility. With what feelings, at once ludicrous and melancholy does one read in Chateaubriand's Memoires, that just on the eve of the revolution, he had to send his pedigree for examination to an official before being permitted to hunt with the king!"- Living Age, xxxix, 6.- Remote and doubtful: Dickens' Hard Times, chap. 7.- Venerated: Spec. No. 612.-Respect for: Webs. Wks., i, ó.
66. ANCIENT authors.-Reading of, dangerous: Ad. Wks., v, 85.-Classics: Liv. Age, cxxiv, 104.- Amer. Qu. Rev., xxx, 335; Ed. Rev., xxxix, 346.-Vege- tation: Jour. Scie., xxxix, 315.-Method of inquiry: Cor. and Cons. of Forces, 317.
67. ANCIENTS.-Excel in genius: Ad. Wks., iii, 147: Lacon, 490.-Their advantages: Ib.. v, 214, 217 219, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226; Year Book, iv, 42.- Mode of writing: Ib., iii, 196.-Superiority of their music: Ib., iii, 202.-Casualties among: Ib., iii, 574. -In what they excel: Spec., Nos. 61, 249, 358.-Phil- osophic aims of: Cor. and Cons. of Forces, 13.-Their mode of explaining phenomena: Ib., 103.
68. ANECDOTES.-First English Collection: Yr. Bk., iv, 508.
69. ANGELS.-Present state: Wat. Ins., i, 420. -Nature, power, duties: Liv. Age, v, 415.-Visits: Liv. Age, lxxxiv, 291; ib., 247.-Ministration of: Liv. Age, xviii, 383; ib., xlii, 543.-Of Asian churches: Milton's Wks., i, 226; Hall's Wks., v, 47.-Of churches: Bing- ham's Wks., i, 79.-No worship of in ancient church: Ib., iv, 141.-Singing: Yr. Bk., iv, 228.-Guardian: Yr. Bk., i, 1326.-Orders of: Ib., 1329.-Their ideas of mankind: Spect., No. 610.-Employments of: Ib., No. 237.
70. ANGER. Watson's Exposition, 63.-Like poison: Ad. Wks. v, 26.—“There is no worse anger than that which comes on gradually, which is not directed toward any fixed object, and which one allows to be par- tially or entirely kindled by a person interested in excit- ing it." Preacher and King, 95.-Christ did not restrain his: Ecce Homo, 297.-Johnson's Wks., ii, 66, 72; South, C. P. Bk., iv, 625; Montg. Wks., 27, 356; Lacon, 35, 240; Cyclopædia Anec., 20, 21, 254; Milton's Wks., i, 186.-Defined: Guardian, No. 129.-Ill con sequences of Tatler, No. 172; Spect., No. 438; Aris
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