Advantageous puel +4y-2177; nature of our go vi shall be done with Mexico dapaving, from our angam. almatians of race and com poddamnslators. 223; duties
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now the party in power. schờ thə əlank of the demano mla pandidato, 230. A? Uno Tr New Bottles, That : The Bors Pho - £2966an al Lite, and
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Conquest of Mexico, Calhoun's Speech against | the, (J. D. W.,) 217. Advantageous position of the Whig party, 217; nature of our govern- ment, 218; what shall be done with Mexico? 219; danger of departing from our original policy, 221; distinctions of race and color, 222; doctrine of circumstances, 223; duties of the citizen, 225; Executive encroach- ments, 226; conduct of the party in power, 227; the despot, under the cloak of the dema- gogue, 229; selection of a candidate, 230. CRITICAL NOTICES.-Old Wine in New Bottles, 102; The American in Paris, ib. ; The Boys' Winter Book, 103; The Lesson of Life, and other Poems, ib.; Pictorial History of Eng- land, ib.; Thomson's Seasons, and Gold- smith's Poems, illustrated by the Etching Club, 104; Horæ Biblicæ Quotidianæ, ib.; The Bethel Flag, ib.; The American Musi- cal times, ib.; Don Quixote de la Mancha, 213; Poetical Works of John Milton, 214; The Haunted Barque, and other Poems, 215; Lanman's Tour to the River Saguenay, ib.; Teaching, a Science, the Teacher an Ar- tist, ib.; Poems, by James Russell Lowell, 323; Chambers's Miscellany, 324; Von Schlegel's Philosophy of Life, and Philoso- phy of Language, 325; Scenes at Washing- ton, 326; Pictorial History of England, *435; The Library of American Biography, 436*; Abbott's Summer in Scotland, 541; The New Testament in Greek, with English Notes, by Rev. J. A. Spencer, A.M., 542; The Sketches, 543; An Illustrated History of the Hat, ib.; Corrections, 544; Silliman's Journal of Science, 652; History of the Mexican War, ib.; Lectures on Shakspeare, 653; Portrait of Daniel Webster, ib. ; À Col- lection of Psalm and Hymn Tunes, 654; Lives of the Queens of England,-Tales and Stories from History, 655.
De Beneficiis, verse, 459. Durfee, Chief Justice, Life and Writings of, (John M. Mackie, A.M.,) 471. Elected to the General Assembly of Rhode Island, 471; carries an important measure through that body, 472; his course in Congress, 473; his retirement, 475; publishes What-cheer, or Roger Williams in Banishment," a poem, ib.; made Chief Justice of Rhode Island, 476; his course in relation to the Dorr af- fair, 477; minor literary productions, 478; The Panidea, 481.
Evangeline, by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, review, (G. W. Peck,) 155.
Fame, verse, (J: D. W.,) 357.
Finances, The National-the War Lebt, (Charles King,) 170.
First Flower, The, verse, (Joseph Hartwell. Barrrett,) 520.
Foreign Miscellany, 99, 210, 320, 432, 537, - 646.
Frederick Wiliam IV., King of Prussia, Sketch of, 79. State of Europe at the period of hus birth, 79; Frederick the Great, 81; career of Bonaparte, 83; his insolence-anecdote of Sir Robert Wilson, (note,) ib.; death of Frederick William III.-his government and character, 84; early history of Frederick Wil- liam IV., 85; the Queen, 86; his accession to the throne, 87; fosters learning and the fine arts, 88; efforts to promote the interests of religion, ib; his attention engaged on the formation of a constitution, 89; submits one to a General Diet, 90; present state of Ger- many, 91; affair of Cracow, 92; his charac- ter defended, 93.
Future Policy of the Whigs, (J. D. W.,) 329. Foreign Immigration, (O. C. Gardiner,) 419.
Girondins, Lamartine's, review, (K. Arm- strong,) 358. Government, Representative, (H. W. Warner.)
Hamlet, (H. N. Hudson,) 94, 121. Historians of Ancient Greece, Recent English, (C. A. Bristed,) 178, 286. Hogarth's Musical History, review, (G. W. Peck,) 533.
Honor, verse, 470.
Hope, verse, (J. D. W.,) 70.
Human Freedom, (Rev. John W. Nevin, D.D.,) 406. All life at once actual and ideal, 406; spirit and matter, 407; personality and moral freedom, 408; individual independence the first great constituent of moral freedom, 409; does not consist in mere intelligence, but requires the power of choice, ib.; Kant's autonomy of the will, 410; an objective uni- versal law the other great constituent, ib.; reason universal in its very nature, ib.; the being of the law infinitely real, 411; has its seat primarily in the bosom of God, ib.; re- vealed under the most real and concrete form, 412; union of these two apparently op- posite forces in the constitution of moral freedom, ib.; not mechanical, ib. ; but inter- nal and organic, 413; man formed for free- dom, 414; tendency of our age to the ur lue exaltation of individual liberty, 415; vy, ib.; false liberty, 416; remedy not to be sought in blind submission to mere outward authority, ib.; but in a true equilibriun of the polar forces, 417; the theory of free m the world's problem, 418.
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