ABBOTSFORD, and Newstead Abbey. By the author of The Sketch Book ' Annuals, Illustrations to the Beattie's Switzerland Blackburn's Salvation of Britain Introductory to the Conversion of the World Boothroyd's Holy Bible. Broadhurst's Letter to Lord Melbourne on the Irish Church and Irish Tithes Christian Keepsake, The, for 1836. Church, The; a Dialogue between John Brown and William Mason Condensed Commentary and Family Exposition of the Holy Bible. Italy Dick's Dissertation on Church Polity Delamotte's Characters of Trees. 157 257 332 217 221 157 304 Grecian Sculpture, comprising a Series of Engravings of the most celebrated spe- 432 Hoppus's Ireland's Misery and Remedy, &c., a Discourse delivered before the Horne's Protestant Memorial, for the Commemoration, on the 4th day of October, 204 509 Howard's Remarks on the erroneous Opinions entertained respecting the Catholic Innes's Letter to lord Glenelg, Secretary of State for the Colonies 1 375 Irish Church. The Reform Association, to the Reformers of England, Scotland, 318 Jay's Slavery in America, &c., with an Introduction by S. H. Cox, D.D. Latrobe's Rambler in North America, 1832, 33 Lives of the most eminent Literary and Scientific Men of Italy, Spain, and Por tugal, Vols. I. and II., (Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopædia, Nos. 63, and 71.) Loudon's Arboretum Britannicum, or the Hardy Trees of Britain, native and Mendham's Memoirs of the Council of Trent, principally derived from Manu- scripts and unpublished Records Parsons's Memoirs of American Missionaries Penitentiaries (United States). Report of William Crawford, Esq., on the Peni- Recollections of an Excursion to the Monasteries of Alcobaça and Batalha. By the Author of Vathek Riland's Antichrist; Papal, Protestant, and Infidel Ritchie's Journey to St. Petersburgh and Moscow, (Picturesque Annual) Rudiments of Trees, from Nature. Sacred Classics. Vol. XIX. Knox's Christian Philosophy 304 241 Saffery's Poems on Sacred Subjects Scriptural Unity of the Protestant Churches exhibited in their published Con- Second Address of the Annual Assembly of the Congregational Union of England Silver's Memorial to his Majesty's Government on the danger of intermeddling Specimens of the Table-Talk of the late Samuel Taylor Coleridge Statement relative to church accommodation in Scotland Styles's, Dr., Ministerial Solicitude and Fidelity, a Farewell Sermon addressed to Testamentary Counsels and Hints to Christians on the right distribution of their Thomas Johnson's reasons for Dissenting from the Established Church Treasury Bible, The 358 283 199 332 THE ECLECTIC REVIEW, FOR JULY, 1835. Art. I.-1. Memoirs of the Council of Trent; principally derived from Manuscript and unpublished Records, namely, Histories, Diaries, Letters, and other Documents of the leading Actors in that Assembly. With Plates. By the Rev. Joseph Mendham, M.A. 8vo. pp. xxxii. 380. Price 14s. London, 1834. 2. Remarks on the erroneous Opinions entertained respecting the Catholic Religion. A New Edition. By Henry Howard, Esq. 8vo. pp. 16. London, (gratis,) 1829. THIS HIS volume, the production of a learned Protestant clergyman, exhibits the startling novelty of a Dedication to the Pope; but it is one which will not procure for the Author the favour of his Holiness, or protect his book against being placed in the Judex Expurgatoricis of the Court of Rome. We shall gratify the curiosity of our readers by transcribing it. To Gregory XVI., Sovereign and Pontiff of Rome, to whom it is competent to attempt the only means, which, if adopted, would be effectual, of exonerating his Church from the continued charge of superstition and idolatry, of perfidy, cruelty, and assumed dominion over secular sovereigns, by calling a council, for the express purpose of condemning and abolishing every enormity which classes itself under those offensive heads; the present Memoirs of a Council, to which, with others, they are principally indebted for their origin or establishment, are not irreverently addressed by one of the best wishers to his temporal and eternal welfare, THE AUTHOR.' If Mr. Mendham were not much too grave a person to be suspected of intending a joke, we should have supposed that this page of his work was meant in burlesque. The Christian world has seen enough of councils, to know that nothing good is likely VOL. XIV.-N.S. B 6 ever to proceed from them; and as to the present reigning supreme Pontiff, his infallibility would be exerted for no other purpose than the upholding of every enormity of the Papal system. Mr. Mendham has given, in his Appendix, a copy of the original edition of the Encyclical Letter of Gregory XVI., obtained, not without difficulty, from Rome; and the contents, he remarks, 'will demonstrate in what form and degree the doctrine defined ' and established by the last (and likely ever to be the last) General Council of the Roman Church, is at this day professed, published, and inculcated by the Supreme Head and Organ of its Faith; and how far the indulgent, but not eminently sagacious opinion is well founded, that the Faith of Romanists is changed or improved; an opinion against which not only the 'whole Papal hierarchy and clergy, but Francis Plowden, and Charles Butler, Esqrs., reclaim. In this Pontifical Manifesto, of which we regret that an English Translation is not given, the worthy successor of the Piuses, and Pauls, and Leos of the darkest ages, thus raves against the sacred rights of liberty of conscience. Atque ex hoc putidissimo INDIFFERENTISMI fonte absurda illa fluit ac erronea sententia, seu potius deliramentum, asserendam esse ac vindicandam cuilibet LIBERTATEM CONSCIENTIA. Cui quidem pestilentissimo errori viam sternit plena illa, atque immoderata libertas opinionum, quæ in sacræ, et civilis rei labem late grassatur, dictitantibus per summam impudentiam nonnullis, aliquid ex ea commodi in Religionem promanare. At quæ pejor mors animæ, quam libertas erroris ? inquiebat Augustinus." Again, as to the liberty of the press. Huc spectat deterrima illa, ac numquam satis exsecranda et detestabilis libertas artis librariæ ad scripta quælibet edenda in vulgus, quam tanto convicio audent nonnulli efflagitare ac promovere. Perhorrescimus, Venerabiles Fratres, intuentes, quibus monstris doctrinarum, seu potius quibus errorum portentis obruamur, quæ longe ac late ubique disseminantur ingenti librorum multitudine, libellisque, et scriptis mole quidem exiguis, malitia tamen permagnis, e quibus maledictionem egressam illacrymamur super faciem terræ. Sunt tamen, proh dolor! qui eo impudentiæ abripiantur, ut asserant pugnaciter, hanc From this polluted fountain of " Indifference," flows that absurd and erroneous doctrine, or rather raving, in favour and in defence of "liberty of conscience;" for which most pestilential error, the course is opened by that entire and wild liberty of opinion, which is everywhere attempting the overthrow of religious and civil institutions; and which the unblushing impudence of some has held forth as an advantage to religion. "But what," exclaimed St. Augustine, "what worse death to the soul than freedom in error?" |