1/6 INDEX. 



PAGE 



LELAND, C. G., on Dickens and the Gipsies, 72153 



On John Bunyan's nationality, . n\6i 



LEWIS AND CLARKE'S allusion to wolves hunting their prey, ... 45 



MARMONTEL'S Memozreslhe alleged effect they had on Mill, . . 93, 96 

 MARRIAGE in connection with Mill, .... 98, 99, 101, 104, 105 



METHODISM, Mill's allusion to, 92, 96 



MILL, JAMES, his education for the Church, and rejection of all religion, . 69 

 Becomes a tutor, and then settles in London as an author, ... 69 

 His personal character as described by his son, . . . 69, 71, 86-88 

 His religious history previous to his becoming a practical atheist, 69, 70, 76 



The effect that Butler's Analogy had on him, 70 



His reading of sceptical books while at college, . . ... 70 



His playing the hypocrite for the benefit of the worldly advancement, 70, 71 

 His literary character as described by his son, . . 71, 85, 108, 109 



Becomes the servant and satellite of the East India Company, . . 72 

 His careful training of his family to have no religious belief, ... 73 

 His ideas on religion generally, ....... 73, 76, 82 



His ideas on the subject and standard of morality, ... 73, 80 

 The odiousness of his religious, or want of religious, sentiments, . . 74 

 His temper, deportment, and mode of instructing his children at home, 86, 87 



His humble rearing, 89 



His unfitness to have the charge of children, 89 



The estimate he put on feeling, 96 



How he left the world, . . . 108 



His ideas on human life, education, and government, . . . 108-110 



His letter to Jeremy Bentham, 108 



MILL, JOHN STUART, is brought up without any religious belief, . . 69, 73 

 As a servant and satellite of the East India Company, . . . 72,91 

 On the bad effects of reticence in the matter of religion, ... 72 



His aristocratic standing as an English atheist, 72 



His ideas of the worship of God in any form, 73 



His ideas on the subject and standard of morality, 73, 80, 85, 95, 96, 100 

 On religion in general, ........ 74~77> 82 



He makes a religion of his wife's memory, . . . . 77 



His philosophical canting, 80,107 



His Utopian ideas on what philosophers are- to accomplish, . . 8r 



Proposes his education as an example for others, . . . 82 



The probable opinion of the world in regard to it, . . . . 83 



His early " studies," . ' . . 83 



His wonderful acquirements, . . .84 



His complete break-down in defining the words, idea, and theory, . 84 

 His crude ideas regarding education and the capacity of children, 84, 85 



As a "tumbler" in the "arena of thought," 86, 95 



As a speaker, . . . . #86 



As a teacher of his brothers and sisters, . . . . . . 87 



On the " corrupting influences " of boys, and his lack .of boyish amuse- 

 ments, '87 



