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Truth and Life in Jesus. Sermons preached in Mechanics' Institution, Manchester, October, November, and December, 1859: 1. Love; 2. Divine Charity; 3. Philosophy of Decay; 4. Recognition of Friends in Heaven; 5. Last Words of Jesus; 6. the Ideal and the Actual; 7. Christian Pilgrim's Progress; 8. Peril and Safety in the Path of Life; 9. Relation of Faith and Charity; 10. Our Future. 16mo. pp. 200. cloth. New York. 1860.

Modern Spiritualism; its Truths and its Errors. A sermon preached in Marylebone Institute, London, Sunday morning, January 15, 1860. 12mo. pp. 39; appendix: Mediumship in its connection with the twofold life of man. 12mo. pp. 9. New York. 1860.

Revolutions that Precede the Millennium.

A sermon preached in Marylebone Institute, London, Sunday morning, February 12, 1860. 12mo, pp. 16. London. 1860.

Aims and Issues of the New Church; pp. 16. The Mission of the New Church, and how it is to be accomplished; pp. 24. 12mo. Glasgow. 1863.

PUBLICATIONS ON THE NEW LIFE.

The Herald of Light A Monthly Journal of the Lord's New Church. Began May, 1857. Vols I to VI. 1857-1861. 8vo.

"The New Time." In cyclostyle manuscript. Quarto. pp. 8. Glasgow, May, 1887. Containing "A Hymn of the Battle," and "Overture," from Regina, a song of Many Days, by T. L. H. Published by John Thomson, Glasgow.

"The Univercœlum Illustrated." Vol. I, Nos. 1, 2, and 3. May 1, June 1, and 20, 1883. "To thee and thine, Thy will Most High God, be done." This journal contains chapters from "The Wedding Guest," and "The Lord: The Two-in-One." Published by N. A. T. Brown, San Francisco, Cal.

A lecture

"Life The Fundamental Principle of all Phenomena." by Arther A. Cuthbert. Printed for private circulation. 8vo. pp. 30. Glasgow. 1887. Designed to enlighen those who would know the path that leads the soul upward, and for the Brotherhood of the New Life.

Wanted-The following Works by T. L. Harris. The Golden Child. Part IV. (Containing sections Nos. 86 to 96.) Sermons on the Millennium. (Containing twelve discourses.) Miscellaneous Sermons. Cloth. 16mo.

First Book of the New Church.

First Book of the Christian Religion. 24mo. pp. 175.

Power and Glory of the Church of Christ.

16mo. pp. 37.

The New Church seen in its Doctrine of Regeneration. 16mo. pp. 24. The Herald of Light. Want. - Vol. I. Nos. 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12. Vol. III. Nos. 1, 2. 3, 4, 5, 6. Vol. IV. Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. Vol. V. Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, Vol. VI. Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.

8,

9.

S. C. GOULD, Manchester, N. H.

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And the stone which the builders rejected was composed of three triangles. And when he died he left the name he bore. i, 95. And whenever the way seemed long. iv, 300. And whither would you lead me then. vi, 299. Angels are bright still, though the brightest fell.

Death is the salve that ceaseth all annoy.iii, 109. Death the consoler.

iii, 54.

V, 96.

Defer not till to-morrow to be wise. Die, and endow a college or a cat. Die of a rose in aromatic pain.

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ii, 335.

Efficiunt totum, casus, natura, voluntas. vi, 267 Emerson said that Goethe said that Plato

A philosopher resteth not. Approbation from Sir Hubert Stanley is praise indeed.

vi, 333.

iii, 59, 83.

As knight upon the checquered board. As iron sharpeneth iron, so doth a man the countenance of his friend.

xi, 394.

iv, 385.

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verse.

said Culture. Title-page, vol. ii. Eripuit cælo fulmen, septrumque tyranis. i, 99, 134. Error belongs to the libraries, Truth to the human mind. iv, 271. Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty. i, 284, 317; ii, 349, 390; iii, 165, 192. Eureka. vi, 300, 308. Even-handed justice. ii, 356. Every bunch of willows is a mighty forest. ii, 415. Every human being is a center of the uniiii, 157. Evil commnnications corrupt good manners. v, 180.

iii, 110.

Exalted to heaven in point of privilege, iv, 385.

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ii, 496.

Blessed is he who is conversant in these good things.

Four first acts already past.

iv, 223.

Boys, we hold that field to-night.

Brevity is the soul of wit.

i, 11, 15, 54, 63, 65. Bread and wine which the Lord had commanded. iv, 385. i. 272; ii, 355.

Bright was the hour when Israel's

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i, 101, 134, 234; ii, 391, 607, 618. Friendship the love of the dark ages. i, 78. From onr inns a stranger might imagine that we are a nation of poets. iii, 77. Full of sound and fury signifying nothing. ii, 356. Gather up the fragments that nothing be lost ii, 361. Give me a place to stand and I will move the world. iii, 141. Give me the making of the songs. iii, 59, 81; v, 6.

vi, 3€5.

By that pure, Holy Four-Lettered Name on high.

vi, 314.

By the pricking of my thumbs.

Cabin'd, cribb'd, confined.

ii, 355. ii, 355.

Call me Daphne, call me Chloris.

Clothed in all the panoply of war. Coigne of vantage.

Close the door gently, bridle the breath. iii, 187.

iv, 299, 335.

Good Lord deliver me.

God is a circle whose circumference is
everywhere. i, 220; iii, 61, 62; iv, 412; v, 26.
God out of Christ is a consuming fire. iv, 430.
God tempers the wind to the shorn lamb. iv, 385.
God's image done in ebony.
Golden opinions.

iii, 59.

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ii, 356. ii, 374. i, 75, 131, 142. iii, 53.

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He felt as joyful as Archimedes.

i, 269.

In Xanadu did Kubla Khan.
In winter you may read them ad ignem.

vi, 298.

iii, 110.
i, 37.

Index learning turns no student pale.

He is a rash man, who outside of pure mathmatics, pronounces the word impossible.

.

V, 57.

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iv, 344.
iii, 54.

He who brings me the head of one of my enemies.

He who knows himself knows his own
Creator.
He who lived long ago, in the morning of
the world.
Heard ye those loud contending waves.
Heaven is one.

vi, 285.
v, 73.
i, 221.

vi, 349.

Heaven's empress mingles with the im-
Hew to the line, let the chips fall where
they may.
iv, 412.
Hic Diophantus habet tumulum. vi, 258, 335.
His name alone strikes every title dead.

ii, 496, 510. His school-room must have resembled an ogre's den. i, 13, ii, 557. History is philosophy teaching by example. ii, 341. History teaches you what has been done. iv, 344, 380. Hoc in tumbo, jacet presbyter et nebulo.vi, 284. How can I think each separate, and all one? iii, 109. How fast soever the tongue may run, the hand runs faster. ii, 402.

How much is to be done. Preface, Vol. vi.
How oft we lay the volume down to ask. ii, 336.
How should I greet thee?
ii, 496.
How swells the theme.

Preface, vol. I.
Humanity is but a man who lives perpet-

ally.

Hurrah! Great Britain beaten by barbers.

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ii, 356. iv, 223. It neither speaks nor hides, but signifies. Title-page, vol vi. i, 224. Keeping bachellor's hall. vi, 364. "Know thyself" descended from Heaven. iii, 1. Learn to know all, but keep thyself unknown. ii, 447; iii, 29. Leave no stone unturned. ii, 345. Let no one ignorant of geometry enter here. ii, 386; iii, 125. Let the world go round and round. iv, 300. Let us resist all iniquity and hate it. iv, 254, 294. Life is labor. death is rest. iii, 53. Linger, O gentle time. ii, 496. Live to thy neighbor, live unto thy God. vi, 364. Long, long be my heart with such mem

Infirm of purpose.

iii, 132. i, 100; iii, 46.

ii, 560, 589. It is more blessed to give than to receive.

ii, 384.

iv. 397.

vi, 332, 394.

i, 11, 31.

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Man is born, he suffers, and dies.
Man is the first dialogue that Nature
held with God.
Minister to a mind diseased.

iii, 142.

V, 1.

ii. 356.

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Multa rogare; rogata tenere; retenta docere.

i, 79.

iii, 64.

My heart is in the Highlands.

iv, 344.

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My life, I love the.

i, 280.

ii, 356.

My love, she's but a lassie yet.

ii, 496.

i, 74; ii, 380, 556.

Nature formed but one such man.

I've lost a day.

ii, 543, 553, 588.

I've seen a bishop dance a reel.
I mourn not those who banish'd from the
light.

iv, 412. iii, 53.

I pause for a reply.

i, 15.

I thank thee Lord, for last night's sleep. vi, 329.
I thought the sparrow's note from heaven.

i, 11, 28; iii, 43; Necessity is the mother of invention. Necessity, the tyrant's plea. i, 272; New occasions teach new duties. ii, 624. Night drew her sable mantle down. v, 87. Nine days they fell. vi, 225, 229. No danger should deter from acts of mercy.

iv, 404.

ii. 355.

ii, 355.

iv, 300.

I, too,shepherds,in Arcadia dwelt.ii, 496; vi, 364.
I would applaud thee to the very echo.
If it were done, when 'tis done.
If Jupiter were to speak.

i, 11, 32.

No hammer fell, no ponderous axes

ii, 356.

rung.

vi, 227.

ii, 356.

Not dead, but gone before.

iii, 112.

iv, 427.

Nothing endures save art.

vi, 364.

If ye die in your sins, whether I go ye

cannot come.

iv, 430.

In books lies the soul of all past ime.

Preface, Vol. vi.
Il faut que j'y songe encore. v. 148, 195.
In most admired disorder.
ii, 356.
In Nature's eyes to look and to rejoice. ii, 496.
In other lands another Britain see. i, 13.
In the house of mourning lay the casket. v, 16.
In the midst of life we are in death. iv, 385.

Not to be wise above what is written.
Nothing in his life became him, like the
leaving it.
ii, 356.
Nothing is to believed, which is not under-
stood.
i, 224.
Nothing's so hard but search will find it out.
ii, 414.
Now good digestion wait on appetite. ii, 356.
Now I lay me down to sleep. ii, 336, 366.
Now spurs the lated traveller apace.
ii, 356.

iv, 385.

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Sleep that knits up the revelled sleeve of care.

Supp'd full of horrors.

Sweet Innisfallen, fare thee well.

Teach him how to live.

i, 94. ii, 356. ii, 496. iii, 111. That government is best which governs least. ii, 356. That keep the word of promise to the ear. ii, 356. The air is full of farewells to the dying. iii, 112.

ii, 356. Some Dularete, drunk with truths and wine. i, 76. Some odds and ends with homely truths. Preface vol. II. Sometime, when all life's lessons have been learned. vi, 363. Some write their deeds in marble. V, 180. Stand not upon the order of your going. ii, 356. Stand out from between me and the sun. vi, 237. Still waters run deep. vi, 252, 329. Sun, stand thou still upon Gibeon. ii, 480, 511. Sunt lachrymæ rerum, et mentem mortalia tangunt.

i, 6, 27, 153; iv, 430. The whole earth is the brave man's country. iv, 317. The wholesomest meats will breed satiety. Preface vol. II. The wise and active conquer difficulties. iv, 343. The wisest, brightest, meanest of mankind. ii, 624; iii, 46. The word eternal is called the unknown quantity.

ii, 332.

There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio.

vi, 345. There's a great text in Galatians. i, 122, 245. There's a lean fellow beats all conquerors.

iii, 112. There is abundance of knowledge. ii, 517. There is a spirit above, and a spirit below. i, 78, 143. There is no proportion of the infinite to the finite. ii. 332. There's a divinity that shapes our ends. vi, 253. There was an old man, and he had an

old cow. vi, 315. These are the times that try men's souls. ii, 630, iii, 127. These birds of paradise but long to flee. iv, 412.

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Geometrical Construction for Circumference of a Circle, Vol. VI. p. 294.

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