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PAGEANT OF THE BIRTH, LIFE, AND LEATH OF Y
BEAUCHAMP. EARL OF WARWICK, KG 1
DILLON, DCL, F.SA, and W. H. St. Jons Hore
engraved from the original Manuscript in the Brass Minum
FSA Bound in boards with linen back. 4

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THE FATE OF EMPIRES: Being an Inquiry into the Stability of Civilisation. By ARTHUR JOHN HUBBARD, M.D. (Dunelm). 8vo. 65. 6d. net. STOLEN WATERS: A page from the Conquest of Ulster. By T. M. HEALY, K.C., M.P., Bencher of King's Inns, Dublin, and of Gray's Inn, London. 8vo. 10s. 6d. net.

This narrative is based on unpublished MS. State Papers, and historical trials or inquisitions. It brings to light the hitherto unknown frauds practised on the Crown and the City of London in the times of James I, Charles 1, Cromwell, and Charles II. The narrative is woven round the controversy as to the title to two great fisheries in Northern Ireland-The River Bann and Lough Neagh.

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CONTENTS.-Gautama Buddha-Asoka-Indo-Greek Dynasties of the PanjabChinese Pilgrims in India-Ibn Batuta-Akbar-Sivaji the Maratha-Robert KnoxRanjit Singh and the Sikh Nation-Foreign Influences in the Civilisation of Ancient India.

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Professor in the Rhodes University College, Grahamstown, South Africa.
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THE MAID OF FRANCE: Being the Story of the Life and Death of Jeanne d'Arc. By ANDREW LANG. With 3 Maps and 3 Portraits. 8vo. 12s. 6d. net. Cheap Edition. With 3 Maps. Crown 8vo. 6s. net. NAPOLEON I. A Biography. History in the University of Vienna. gravure Portraits and 7 Maps. 2 vols.

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whatever can be forgiven at the will of any Pope, or of any priest, or of any person whomsoever; but that a sincere sorrow for past sin, a firm resolution to avoid future guilt, and every possible atonement to God and the injured neighbour, are the previous and indispensable requisites to establish a well-founded expectation of forgiveness.

Fifth, And we have also been accused of holding, as a principle of our religion, that' no faith is to be kept with heretics'; so that no government which is not Catholic can have any security from us for our allegiance and peaceable behaviour.

This doctrine, that 'faith is not to be kept with heretics,' we reject, reprobate, and abhor, as being contrary to religion, morality, and common honesty :—and we do hold and solemnly declare, that no breach of faith with any person whomsoever can ever be justified by reason of or under pretence that such person is an heretic or an infidel.

And we further solemnly declare, that we do make this Declaration and Protestation, and every part thereof, in the plain and ordinary sense of the words of the same, without any evasion, equivocation, or mental reservation whatsoever.

And we appeal to the justice and candour of our fellow citizens, whether we, the English Catholics, who thus solemnly disclaim and from our hearts abhor, the above mentioned abominable and unchristian-like principles, ought to be put upon a level with any other men who may hold and profess those principles ?

The above Declaration and Protestation was signed by one thousand seven hundred and forty persons; including several Peers, and two hundred and forty-one Clergymen of the Catholic religion.

INDEX

ADDINGTON, afterwards Lord Sid-
mouth, 191-3, 198, 199, 204-5,
214-15, 217

Auckland, Lord, 69, 72, 73, 97, 126,
139

BANKS, Sir J., 262, 267
Barbauld, Mrs., 260
Barère, 134

Barlow, Joel, 186, 191

Beaufoy, Colonel, 182-3

Bedford, Duke of, 189, 198

Bentham, J., 23, 105 (note), 225
(note)

Bentham, Sir S., 171, 176

Boulton, 168-70, 180

Brougham, 229

Burdett, 190, 229, 240

Burke, 36, 37, 40, 45, 51, 56, 59-60,
86, 89-93, 96, 98–9, 100, 102, 117,

126, 156, 159, 229

Burnett, George, 242-3
Butler, Charles, 77-82

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Coleridge, 143, 242
Condorcet, 19, 107, 110-II, 114,
115, 123, 125, 170-1

DAER, Lord, III
Deffand, Mme. du, 18
Dumont, 105, 225 (note)
Dumouriez, 116, 118, 126

Dundas, afterwards Lord Melville,
22, 50, 126, 154, 202, 258
Dyer, George, 259-60, 267

ELDON, Lord, 150, chs. xi. and xii.,
passim

Ellenborough, Lord, 200, 216
Erskine, 149, 152, 154, 200, 205,
218, 223

FITZWILLIAM, 105
Fletcher, 228-30

Fox, 9, 12, 20, 39, 48, 50-2, ch. iv.,
passim, 72, 76, 86, 92, 103-7,
129, 152-4, 163, 189–90, 198, 229,
232, 238

Français, of Nantes, 96, 112-16
Franklin, Benjamin, 34-5, 111, 165
Frend, William, 210

Fulton, 166, 173-5, 184-6, 190-1,

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