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of Finite Differences; Theory of Probability; Statics and Dynamics; Hydrostatics; Hydraulics and Pneumatics; Heat; Optics; Astronomy.

Candidates for Honours in Classics shall be examined in the following sub

jects

The Greek and Latin Languages:

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The Seven against Thebes, Eumenides, Persæ, and
Agamemnon.

Edipus Tyrannus, Edipus Coloneus, and Philoctetes.
The Birds, Clouds, Frogs.

Phoenissä, Orestes, Iphigenia in Tauris, and Alcestis.
The first and Sixth Books.

Phædo, Protagoras, and Gorgias.
The Ethics, and Poetics.

De Coronâ, and the Midias of Demosthenes.

Virgil.

Horace.

Juvenal

Persius

Plautus

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Terence
Lucretius

Cicero.

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Tacitus . .

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Aulularia, Capteivei, Trinummus.

Andria, Heautontimoroumenos, Adelphi.

The Fifth and Sixth Books.

De Naturâ Deorum, Tuscul. Disput. De Officiis De
Oratore, and the Letters.

The Annals and the Histories.

Composition in Greek, Latin, and English:

Greek Prose, translation, retranslation.

Latin Prose, translation, retranslation.

English Prose; analysis of any of the subjects selected for examination. Original composition upon questions arising out of the classical authors selected for examination.

The papers in Classics shall consist of passages to be translated, accompanied by Questions in Grammar, History, and Geography.

EXAMINATION FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS.

The Examination for the Degree of M.A. shall take place once a year, in May or June.

After the year 1841, no Candidate shall be admitted to the Examination for the Degree of M.A. until after the expiration of one academical year from the time of his obtaining the Degree of B.A. in this University, or in the University of Durham, nor unless he have shewn evidence of having completed his 20th year.

Candidates for the Degree of M.A. shall be examined in one or more of the following branches of knowledge:

I. Classics.

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II. Mathematics and Natural Philosophy.

III. Logic, Moral Philosophy, Philosophy of the Mind, Political Philosophy, Political Economy.

No Candidate shall be approved by the Examiners unless he shew a competent knowledge in one of these branches of knowledge.

The Examination in Classics shall include the following subjects :-The Greek and Latin Classic Authors; Prose Composition in Greek, Latin, and English; Ancient History, and the History of Europe to the end of the eighteenth century.

The Examination in Mathematics and Natural Philosophy shall include the

following subjects:-Algebra, including the Theory of Equations; Analytical Geometry; the Differential and Integral Calculus; Theory of Probability; Statics and Dynamics; Hydrostatics; Hydraulics and Pneumatics; Heat; Electricity and Magnetism; Optics; Plane Astronomy; Physical Astronomy. The Examination in the third Branch shall be left to the discretion of the Examiners.

EXAMINATIONS FOR CERTIFICATES OF PROFICIENCY.

Examinations for Certificates of Proficiency shall be instituted in the following subjects:-Architecture; Civil Engineering; Chemistry; Botany; Geology and Mineralogy; Zoology; Geography, Political and Physical; Navigation and Hydrography.

VOLUNTARY THEOLOGICAL EXAMINATION.

The Examination shall take place once a year.

No Candidate shall be admitted to this Examination unless he have previously obtained the Degree of B.A. in this University.

The Examination shall be conducted entirely by means of Printed Papers. Each Examiner shall have the power of putting a Veto upon any question. No question shall be put to any Candidate bearing upon any doctrinal point disputed between Christians and Christians, and no question shall be so put as to require an expression of religious belief on the part of the Candidate.

No answer or translation given by any Candidate shall be objected to on the ground of its expressing any peculiarity of doctrinal views.

Candidates shall be examined in the following subjects:-1. The Hebrew Text of the Book of Genesis; 2. The Gospel of St. Luke; 3. Paley's Evidences, Butler's Analogy; 4. Scripture History.

Candidates who shew a competent knowledge in any two out of the four subjects of Examination shall be approved by the Examiners.

The Examination shall take place on Tuesday and Wednesday in the week following the conclusion of the Examination for Honours in Classics; in the morning, from ten to one, and in the afternoon, from three to six.

In the course of the following week, the Examiners shall publish a list of the Candidates who have passed.

The Candidates shall be divided into three classes according to their proficiency, and alphabetically arranged in each class; and books to the value of five pounds shall be awarded to each of the first class.

A further Examination shall be instituted in the Hebrew Text of the Old Testament, the Greek Text of the New Testament, in the Evidences of the Christian Religion, and in Scripture History, for those who have passed this Examination at least two years previously."

[It will be very interesting to see papers for a theological examination so drawn up as not even to bear upon any point disputed among Christians, or to require an expression of religious belief on the part of the candidate. One can hardly imagine how it can be contrived.-ED.]

END OF VOL. XIV.

INDEX TO VOLS. XIII. & XIV.

ORIGINAL PAPERS, CORRESPONDENCE, AND POETRY.

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Baptism, xiii. 156

Baptismal and Communion Services, the Old
Lutheran, xiv. 125

Baptisms, Scotch, xiii. 646; xiv. 39, 541, 545,
782

Barnabas, St., Remarks on the Epistle of, by

the Rev. W. Fitzgerald, xiii. 502
Benediction, Meaning of the, xiii. 154, 416
Bibles, Popish, on Sir Charles Wolseley's Ac-
count of them, xiv. 762
Bishops, Suffragan, xiii. 48
Bread Monopoly, the, xiv. 136

Bull, Bishop, Extract from Nelson's Life of,
xiv. 171

Butler, Bishop, MSS. of, xiv. 768

Cathedral, the, xiii. 654
Cathedral, St. David's, xiv. 304
Catholics, Controversy with Roman, xiv. 174
Catholics, Roman, in England, their inter-
course with the Eastern Church, xiv. 286
Chapels, on Marriages in, xiv. 772
Churches, Reverence to, xiii. 416
Church Fasting and Temperance Society, xiii.

642.

Church Homage, the Term, xiv. 545
Church Matters, xiii. 77, 204, 337, 450, 567,
689; xiv. 99, 213, 347, 462, 567, 707; Ad-
ditional Curates' Fund, xiii, 221; Additional
Curates, Society for the Employment of,
340; Bath Church-of-England Lay As-
sociation, 222; Birch, Dr., Petition of, xiv.
99; Braintree Case, Church Rates, xiii.
700; Brighton Herald, the, and the Stand-
ard, xiv. 348; British Critic, the, xiv. 219;
Brougham's, Lord, Education Bill, xiii. 90;
Chichester, Cathedral of, xiv. 219; Church
Commissioners, xiii. 337; Church, Condi-
tion of the, 204; Church of England, in
North America, 701; Church Rates-
Quakers, xiv. 580; Devon and Exeter

Schools, 462; Edinburgh Review-Church
Rates, xiii. 164, 213; Education, xiv. 217,
573; Education, National, xiii. 234, 341,
450, 567; xiv. 466, 567, 707, 764; Cen-
tral Society of, and the Chapter of Canter-
bury, 575; Schemes, England, xiii. 450,
567, 689; xiv. 567; Ireland, 461; Ember
Days, xiii. 212; Fraser's Magazine and the
Record, xiv. 460; General Private Prayer
Union, 220, 300; India, Idolatry in, 347;
Metropolitan University and Dr. Pye Smith,
xiii. 210; M'Hale, Dr., 580; Mill, Dr., and
Bishop's College, 83; Address to, 84; Re-
ply to, 86; National System of Education,
Rev. J. Booker on, Letter III., 214; No-
vember 5th, Service for, 77; Alpha's Let-
ter, 81; Dr. Elrington's Letter on, 163;
Alpha's Reply to ditto, 270; Alpha on, 283;
Prisoners, Tracts for, 579; Quakers-
Church Rates, xiv. 580; Rating Bill, Mr.
Shaw Lefevre's, 215; Registration and
Marriage Bills, xiii. 223; Russell, Lord
John, Letter and Queries, xiv. 578, 688;
Services, Occasional, 100, 159; Society for
Promoting Christian Knowledge, 713; St.
Paul's, throwing open of, xiii. 223; Wakes
and Festivals, xiv. 213

Church Preferment, Disposal of Higher, xiii.
30, 139, 390, 512, 619; xiv. 12, 269, 383,
626

Church Rates, Mr. Perceval on, xiii. 521; Mr.
Goode's Reply to ditto, 636; Mr. Perceval's
Answer to Mr. Goode, xiv. 38; Mr. Goode's
Reply to Mr. Perceval's Answer, 153; Mr.
Perceval in Reply to Mr. Goode, 287; Mr.
Goode in Reply to Mr. Perceval, 400; Mr.
Swan on, 655

Churchwardens, on Dissenting, xiv. 792
Coddington, Mr., on Oxford Deacons, xiii.

426

Cologne, Conduct of the Archbishop of, xiv.
249, 378

Common Law, on the Meaning of the Term,
xiv. 761

Communion, Administration of, xiii. 47;
Variations in the Order for the Adminis-
tration of, xiv. 774; Communion, Frequent,
xiii. 43; Service, Rubric of the, xiv. 778;
Presbyterian Mode of Administering, 779
Confirmation, Appendix to the Paper on, xiii.
654; xiv. 801

Conversion of John Thauler, a Dominican
Monk, xiii. 26, 129, 608; xiv. 5

Darenth, Waldenses in, xiv. 387
Dark Ages, Scripture Readers in, xiii. 133
David's, St., See of, in the Twelfth Century,
xiv. 422

Davison, Mr., MSS. of, xiv. 768

Davies, Mr., Answer to Questions, xiii. 426,
531

Deacons, Office of, xiii. 45; xiv. 786
Divinity, on Reprinting Standard Works on,
xiv. 796

Dominus Deus Noster Papa, xiii. 652; xiv.
37, 173, 425

Ecclesiastical Canons, Royal Prerogative in
making, xiii. 283

Ecclesiastical Historians, a Brief Account of,
xiii. 1, 113, 374

Ecclesiastical History, Sources of, xiii. 603;
xiv. 1, 131

Edinburgh Review, Church Rates, xiii. 164,
213; Mr. Goode's Reply to, 363, 492
Education, Central Society of, xiv. 685
Education, National, on, xix. 764
Egypt, Wilkinson's, xiv. 797

Ember Seasons, Observance of, xiii. 49; xiv.
32, 34

England, Waldenses in, xiv. 531
Episcopacy, Primitive, xiv. 782

Eucharist, Officiating Minister's Reception of,
xiii. 155

Exorcism, Puritan, xiv. 489, 743

Extreme Unction, Query relating to, xiv. 300,
788

Fathers, the, Rev. J. Medley's Remarks on
Mr. Cunningham's Speech, xiii. 645
Fifteenth Century, Devotional Writings of,
xiv. 257

Footpaths in Churchyards, on Stopping up,

xiv. 530

Fox, the Martyrologist, his Conduct in the
Frankfort Troubles, xiii. 412
Frampton, Life of Bishop, xiv. 427
Froude, Remains of the late Rev. R. H., xiv.

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Logic, Mr. F. W. Newman's Treatise on, xiii.
422

Luke xxi: 32, True Interpretation of, xiv.

409

Lutheran Baptismal and Communion Ser-
vices, the Old, xiv. 125

Lydd, Extract from Parish Register, xiv. 388

Magic, Egyptian, xiii. 37

Matthew xxiv. 34, Remarks on, xiv.
Maitland, Rev. S. R., Remarks on Fox's Acts
and Monuments, xiii. 12, 122, 254, 385,
613

Marriage, Bans of, Forbidden for Scandalous
Conduct, xiii. 533, 648; xiv. 45, 166;
Prohibition of, xiv. 312

Matthias Flacius Illyricus, Fidelity of, xiii.

409

Metcalfe, Mr., in Reply to Mr. Austen, xiv.

647

Milton, Mr. St. John's edition of, xiv. 171
"Mother of God," on the title of, xiv. 678
Municipal Bill, Sale of church property under
the, xiv. 419

Music Meeting, Gloucester, xiv. 202

Nonjurors, intercourse with the Eastern
Churches, xiv. 415
Nuremburg, Diet of, xiv. 41

Occasional Services, xiv. 100, 159
Ordination, Presbyterian, Rev. J. C. Cros-
thwaite on Mr. Faber's views of, xiv. 398;
Mr. Faber's reply to, 532; Mr. Crosthwaite's
reply to Mr. Faber, 633; Primitive, 782
Ornaments of Ministers, xiv. 784.

Paris, Episcopal Church in, xiv. 416, 676
Parish-clerks, xiii. 424

Parsonage-houses, Loans for, xiv. 39
Paulicians, the Rev. J. G. Dowling on Mr.
Faber's account of, xiv. 393; Mr. Faber's
reply, 532; Mr. Faber's Postscript, 642;
Mr. Dowling's reply to Mr. Faber, 645

Peter, St. 1 Epistle, iii. 19, Remarks on, xiv.
408

Pharisaism and Lay Teaching, xiii. 280
Pietas Londinensis, xiii. 263

Placards, Charity-Sermon, xiv. 426

Pope Julius III., Advice of the Bishops to, xiv.

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Record Newspaper, the, xiii. 159, 406
Registers, Diocesan, xiii. 424
Registration Bill, xiii. 635

Responses in Church, xiii. 424; xiv, 163, 164
Rome, Church of, appropriate Appellation of
its Members, xiii. 52

Rome, Church of, Church-of-England View
of, xiv. 550

Rome, Church of, Inquiry respecting, xiii. 535

SACRED POETRY:

A November Scene, xiii. 33; Christian Re-
serve, 34; Translations from Bunsen-
Christmas Hymn, 35; New Year's Hymn,
36; The Death of the Faithful Servant, 37;
Increase of Enemies of the Church, 145;
Pastoral Disappointment, ib.; Ministerial
Patience, 146; Psalm cxxiii., ib.; The
Rising of the Floods, 147; Advent Hymn,
ib.; The Pastor's Helpmate, 267; Hope,
ib.; Hymn from Bunsen's Gesang-und-
gebet-buch, 269; Heavenly Signs, 398;
The Voyage of Life, 400; The Watchman
of the City, ib.; An Image, ib.; Hymn
from Bunsen for Lent, 401; Ideal Anticipa-
tions, 518; To a Robin, 520; A Church-
man's Private Meditations, 623; Passion-
week Hymn, 625; Easter Hymn, ib.; The
Country Pastor-The Return, xiv. 16;
Death of the Infant, 17; To a Lost Child,
ib.; Bereavement, ib.; Consolation, 18; A
Churchman's Private Meditations-A Walk
to the Sea, 18; A Waking Thought, 19;
The Aged Parishioner, ib.; Holy Martyrs,
21; Hymn from Bunsen's Collection, 21;
The Country Pastor-The September Noon,
147; The October Night, 148; A Novem-
ber Storm, ib.; A December Night, ib.; A
Thought from Mr. James Bonnel, 149; An
Evening after a Snow Storm, ib.; Reflec-
tion on the same, ib.; A Christmas Hymn,
150; Ode to the Church Catholic, 151; The
"Blessed Reformatian" of 1644, 279; Pri-
mitive Discipline, 280; The Solitary Wor-
shipper, 281; The Return of Prayers, 281;
The Watchman, 282; The Will of the
People, 283; The Voice of Waters, 390;
Hymn from the Latin, 391; Lines to a
Lady on Miles Coverdale, 392; Futurity,
ib.; An Antheme or Prayer for the Preserua-
tion of the Church, the Queene's Maiestie,

and the Realme, 393; A Song of Reioysing
for the Prosperous Reigne of our Most Gra-
tious Soueraigne Lady Queene Elizabeth,
394; The Patience and the Faith of the Saints,
511; Psalm xliii., ib.; "Via Pacis," 512;
Sonnet un Petra, ib.; Translation of Latin
Hymns-"Pulsum supernis Sedibus," 513;
"Quod lex adumbravit vetus," ib.; "Unus
bonorum fons, Deus, omnium," ib.; Jour-
ney of the Israelites, 630; Railway Sonnets,
632; "Let there be Light," ib.
Services, the Special, xiii. 418

Smith, Dr. Pye, and the Examination in the
Greek Testament, xiii. 526

Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge,
Essex Memorials to, xiii. 271, 627
Sodor and Man, See of, xiii. 53
Sponsors, Offices of, xiii. 157
Sunday Wake, Exposition of, xiv. 690
Sunday Wakes and Feasts, xiii. 50

Taylor, Bishop, Genuineness of his Contem-
plations on the State of Man, xiv. 302, 416
Tewkesbury Church, xiv. 622
Thauler, John, a Dominican Monk, Conversion
of, xiii. 26, 129, 608; xiv. 5
Thoulouse, Mr. Maitland on the Council of, by
Mr. Evans, xiii. 291; Mr. Maitland's reply
to ditto, 298; Canon of, 415, 531
Times, Talk of the, xiv. 9, 737
Timothy, 1, vi. 13, Remarks on, xiv. 689, 737
Tithe Property, Archdeacon Wollaston on its
Assessment to the Poor-rate, xiii. 246
Tithes, xiv. 419; Commutation of, xiii. 253,
524; Rating of, xiii. 403, xiv. 40, 294, 297,
298, 521, 647, 654, 758, 760

Tracts, Importance and Mode of Circulating,
xiv. 799

Tradition, xiv. 514, 670

Typography, Hebrew, xiii. 651

Vestments, Ecclesiastical, xiv. 784
Voltaire, xiv. 266, 498, 617

Waldenses, History of, xiv. 538; in England,
xiv. 531, 753

Week-day Prayers and Lectures, xiv. 548
Wills, New Form of, xiii. 54

Wilson, Bishop, Memoranda, xiv. 680
Wycliffe M.S. in Trinity College, Dublin, xiv.
275

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