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are willing to spend the time and labor necessary to carry out such researches. There is in the community, whether with or without reason, a growing dissatisfaction with medical practice; and it is only from seeing those, on whom we are so dependent in our weakness, earnestly engaged in the advancement of their science, that we can have the confidence so essential at once to our comfort and theirs.

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The Lecturess; A Tale; by the author of "My Cousin' Mary." Boston. 1839. We hold ourselves indebted, and the community with us, to any good writer, who in these days of theories and visions invites us back to the sober realities of life; who reminds us, when we are tempted to forget it, of the place in which Providence has set us, and helps us contentedly and faithfully to fulfil its duties. This is skilfully done by the writer of this little Tale, which she calls "The Lecturess," because her heroine prefers the hearing, still more the uttering, of lectures, and fulfilling her fancied destinies abroad, to conjugal affection and the blessings of home. The story is a sad one, but excellently well told; and should any of our fair readers find themselves tempted, by any misguided preferences of their own, to turn a mournful fiction into a more mournful fact, and forsake their own mercies by forsaking their own sphere, we affectionately commend it to their perusal.

A Letter to W. E. Channing, D. D., on the Subject of the Abuse of the Flag of the United States, in the Island af Cuba, and the Advantage taken of its Protection in Promoting the Slave Trade; by R. R. MADDEN. Boston: Ticknor. 1839. — The name of Mr. Trist has been frequently in the newspapers of late, with many disgraceful additions; but until we read this pamphlet of Dr. Madden we knew no sure ground of belief as to the justness of their application. This at least seems to be such. He brings against the Consul serious charges of misconduct, and substantiated by documentary evidence of apparently unquestionable authority. If it be true, as Dr. Madden states, that American vessels have been suffered to proceed with stores for Africa, and even to return to the Island of Cuba with slaves under the Portuguese flag, with the full knowledge of the Consul of the United States, - that fraudulent transfers of papers have constantly been made of vessels employed or destined for this trade, that slaves under fictitious titles described in fraudulent declaration, as free indented laborers, and duly attested by the Consul of the United States, have been exported from Havana to

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Texas, - that the slave trade from Cuba for the last two years has been carried on under the protection of the Portuguese and American flags, that the use and abuse of these flags was of necessity known to Mr. Trist, and connived at by him, if these things be true, then is all that has been said of this man more than justified, then is it true that he has violated the laws of his country, in aiding and abetting what those laws declare to be piracy, and that justice demands his recal and an arraignment at her bar to answer for his misdeeds. Beside these things, he seems, from the statements of Dr. Madden, to be a person, from the violence of his passions, wholly unfitted for the office which he fills. His usage of the British Commissioners, in his correspondence with them, is more like that of a madman or a vulgar braggadocio, than a man representing a great country in so important a place. So is his language touching slavery, where he says, "that he entertains a deliberate and oft revolved doubt, whether, considered merely in itself, the slave trade be not a positive benefit to its supposed victims. Were the trade open and regulated in the way that emigrant vessels are, I should entertain no doubt on the subject ;" and "then he enters," says Dr. Madden, " into a long and labored defence of slavery and the slave trade." We have no room to do more than call attention by these few remarks to a pamphlet written by a philanthropist on a subject, in which the honor of our country and the cause of humanity are deeply concerned.

Buckminster's Works. Two volumes. 12mo. J. Munroe & Co. -The publishers of these volumes have conferred a great favor upon the public in the very neat edition they have lately issued of the writings of Mr. Buckminster. It has been prepared for the press under the editorial management of Prof. H. Ware, jr. Being of the duodecimo form, it is better adapted to Church and other libraries than the octavo editions which have preceded it, — and no library, no religious library at least, no library for the young should be without it. In another number we hope to take a more extended notice of one of the most valuable reprints of the day.

Dewey's Discourses. A new volume of discourses by Mr. Dewey has lately been published, "in explanation and defence of Unitarianism." We greet its appearance with great, satisfaction, and from the preface offer the following extract stating the precise object of the work. "The author's purpose in this volume has been, in the first place, to offer a brief summary of the Unitarian belief;

in the next place, to lay down the essential principles of all religious faith; thirdly, to state and defend our construction, as it is generally held among us, of the Christian Doctrine; Fourthly, to illustrate by analogy our views of practical religion; and finally, in the two closing discourses, to discuss the true proportion and harmony of the Christian character." The following are the subjects of the separate discourses. Unitarian Belief; Nature of Religious Belief; On the Trinity; On the Atonement; On the five Points of Calvinism; On Future Punishment; Four discourses on the Analogy of Religion with other Subjects; a discourse on Liberality and Strictness; a discourse on Moderation.

Pictures of early Life; or Sketches of Youth; by Mrs. EмMA C. EMBURY. Boston: Marsh, Capen, Lyon, and Webb. 1839. This is one of the juvenile series of works put out by the Board of Education. It contains eighteen stories. Some of them are simple, affecting, natural; as that of "Moss Roses; or Brother and Sister; " while others, such as "Cecilia," and "School Friendship," are too much like little novels. There is, indeed, always a moral tone, and a moral aim; but with all that, frequently too much of the Romantic. Is there nothing to be apprehended from this boundless flood of romance, in the shape of children's stories, which is pouring into our libraries and parlors? Do none experience a difficulty in persuading_children now-a-days to read history and biography, accustomed as they are to this surfeit of so much more exciting nutriment? And if that be the case, is it not a sign of evil? Yet perhaps the objection lies rather against the character of the fiction than the fiction itself. There can no evil or danger result from the perusal of those little fictions, the Prodigal Son, or the Good SamariIf history be justly styled philosophy teaching by example, why may not some kinds of fiction be as justly styled relig ion teaching by example? But if so, it is only some kinds.

tan.

Rollo's Travels, and Rollo's Correspondence, are the titles of two more of this series of books for the young. We notice them not to commend, but to find fault, not with the matter of the volumes, for we have not read them, but with the prints, if prints they can be called. They are rather but the tracks of some poor tool upon some soft lead or softer wood. In the former volumes of the series the pictures have been tolerable; these are intolerable.

INDEX.

A.

American Slavery, as it is, 284.
Atheism, More's arguments against,
53-57.

B.

Bacon's thirteen historical discour-
ses, 201.

Biographical notices, of Mr. Hay-
ward and Mr. Hildreth, 114-
131.

Bulwer, his Ernest Maltravers, crit-
icised, 14.

C.

Carlyle, Thomas, his character and
influence, 157.

Channing, W. E., his Lecture on
War, 72.

Church of England, the charge of
inconsistency maintained against
it, 181-186.
Common School Journal, reviewed,
320 plan of the publication, 321
-importance and value of com-
mon school education, 322-324

various objects specified to
which the journal is and may be
devoted, 325-329-two modes of
education, 330— the insufficien-
cy of mere oral instruction, 331
-the greater value of books, 332.
Cowper, William, Life of, by Rob-
ert Southey, reviewed, 332-
sketch of his life, 333-343 -
remarks on the insanity of Cow-
per, 344, 345 his religion, 345
-351 - his state of mind the last
years of his life, 351- the pecu-

--

-

liar character of his writings, 351
- 356.
Cudworth, Ralph, his Intellectual
System, reviewed, 289-sketch
of the life of Dr. Cudworth, 289,
290 the Intellectual System
published, 1678, ib. its recep-
tion, 290, 291 Cudworth one
of those who withstood the licen-
tiousness and atheism of the
times of Charles II., 292-294-
the design of the True Intellec-
tual System, 295― the great di-
visions of the work, 297- the
atheism of Democritus, 298, et
seq. Hylozoic atheism, 301
system of Anaximander, and of
the Stoics, 302 Cudworth's
reply to an argument of atheism,
302- the objection to the reply
drawn from polytheism, answered
by showing polytheism to be es-
sentially monotheistical, 303-
305 -a hymn of Cleanthes
translated, 305- his digression
upon the trinity, 307- his confu-
tation of all the atheistic argu-
ments, 307, 308-the metaphys-
ical arguments for the existence
of a God, 309-316-concluding
remarks, 316-319.

--

D.

-

Dana, Daniel, his letters to Profes-
sor Stuart, noticed, 281.
Discoure on the latest form of infi-
delity, reviewed, 221.

Dramas, Discourses, and other
Pieces, by James A. Hillhouse,
noticed, 285.

F.

Future life of the Good, noticed,
286.

G.

Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar, trans-
lated by Thomas J. Conant, no-
ticed, 277.

Good Housekeeper, the, 287.
Greece, history of, by Thomas
Keightley, 137.

H.

Hale, Mrs. Sarah J., her Good
Housekeeper, noticed, 287.
Hayward, Mr. Charles, jr., bio-
graphical notice of, 116-121.
Hemans, Mrs., Memoir of her Life
and Writings, by her Sister, re-
viewed, 370.

Hildreth, Mr. Samuel T., biograph-
ical notice of, 122–131.
Hillhouse's Dramas, Discourses,
and other Pieces, noticed, 285.
Historical Discourses, by Kingsley
and Bacon, reviewed, 201.
Hobbes, his philosophy, 293.
Hunchback of Notre Dame,
Victor Hugo, reviewed, 145.

I.

by

Irving's Life and Voyages of Co-
lumbus, 387.

K.

Keightley's History of Modern
Greece, edited by J. Toulmin
Smith, 137- Gillies, Goldsmith,
Mitford, 138 Bulwer's Athens,
ib. - Thirlwall's Greece, ib..
Keightley, characterized, 139.
Kingsley's Historical Discourses,

201.

L.

Lamson's Second Century Dis-
course, reviewed, 236.

Last days of the Saviour, from the

German of Olshausen, noticed,
286.
Lecturess, the, a Tale, noticed, 408.
Letters to Professor Stuart, by
Daniel Dana, noticed, 281.
Lives of Eminent Individuals, as
published by the Massachusetts
Board of Education, 391.
Liverpool Unitarian Controversy,
28-its origin, ib.- correspon-
dence between the Unitarian and
Church of England clergymen,
27-40. analysis of the dis-
courses, 40-46- conclusion of
the controversy, with analyses of
the discourses, 357-369, vid. note.
Luther, life and times of, reviewed,
402.
M.

Madden's letter to Dr. Channing,
noticed, 410.

Means and Ends, or Self-Training,
134.

Memoir of Mrs. Hemans, by her

Sister, reviewed, 370.

Miller, Thomas, rural sketches by,
279.

Miracles, their value maintained as
the foundation of Christianity,
223-230.

More, Henry, D. D., general char-
acter of his works, 48- his first
published work a collection of
philosophical poems, 49–52 —
his antidote against atheism, 52 –
58 his discourse on Enthusi-
asm, 59 his mystery of Godli-
ness, 61-68-his mystery of
Iniquity, 69- his discourses, 70

More's character, 71.
Mosheim's Translation of Cud-
worth into Latin, note, 319.

N.

Northmen in New England, by
Joshua Toulmin Smith, noticed,

139.
Norton's Discourse on the latest
form of Infidelity, reviewed 221

distinction stated between the
fact and truth of the Gospel, ib.

occasion of the address, and
object of the author, 222-the

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