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INDEX.

A Hundred Years Since, 680
Anniversary Address, delivered at Cheshunt
College, by Mr. Charles J. C. New, June,
1869, 622

Doré Gallery, The. By Rev. G. W. Conder, 481 Dried Flower from the Lebanon, A, 224

Eye upon the Treasure, The, 140

APOSTLE'S LADDER, THE. By Maggie Syming- Florence and its Neighbourhood, 758

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FOSTER SISTERS, THE; or, the Third Beatitude. By Emma Leslie

I. Fond of Music, 234

II. "Blessed are the Meek," 315
III. Nurse's Confession, 395
Frederick William Krummacher, 610
From London to Skye and Back, 538, 388

GENIE GATES. By Maggie Symington-
I. "So Stingy," 690

II. No Sense of a Wedding, 695
III. Nell's Letter, 762

IV. Faith and Unfaith, 766

V. Genie's Savings, 842

VI. The Rift within the Lute, 849 VII. Unstable as the Waves, 925 VIII. "The Music Mute," 932 Geology, and the Six Days, 752, 860

Girl of the Period, The, and Convent Life, 302 Giving, 382

Glimpses through the Clerestory; or, Side

Lights of the Church. By Timothy B.
Vane, Esq., 881

"God's Finger touched him, and he slept." A

Poem. By Margaret Housman, 800

Brighter Hope, The. By the Rev. W. M. God-speed to the Episcopal Church. By the

Statham, 561

Buchanan, Mr. Robert, 401

Cant, Religious and Political. By the Rev.
J. G. Rogers, B.A., 351

Charlie, by Lucinda Bowser, 159
CHILDREN'S HOUR, THE-

Cousins, The; or, Courage and Moral Courage. By Anne Depe, 629, 708, 789 Foster Sisters, The. By Emma Leslie, 234, 315, 395

Hampty-Dumpty, 73, 152

In the Lane. By Maggie Symington, 475
Lilla's Longing. By Emma Leslie, 872
Ditto, Part II., 950

Little Rosalind's Fairy Tale, 549

Christianity No Foe to Searchers after Truth.
By the Rev. W. M. Statham, 321
College Experiences. By Charles J. C. New,

622

Common Errors about the Lord's Supper, 81
COUSINS, THE; or, Courage and Moral Cou-

rage. By Anne Depe-
I. "The Kelpie," 629
II. A Pack of Cards, 708
III. Saved! 789

Rev. W. M. Statham, 112

GREY AND GOLD. By Emma Jane WorboiseXXVII. "Little Ellie," 20

XXVIII. An Old County Family, 28

XXIX. Poetry no Yield, 34

XXX. A Point Carried, 90

XXXI. The Old Bane, 98 XXXII. Lady Torrisdale, 106 XXXIII. Evening-tide, 171 XXXIV. Nothing like Money, 179

XXXV. Oswald astonishes Esther, 185
XXXVI. Esther is Misunderstood, 257
XXXVII. Prose and Poetry, 265
XXXVIII. At the Slade Again, 271
XXXIX. "It is all my doing," 331

XL. Cecil's Programme, 345
XLI. "Talking it Over," 416
XLII. Release, 423

XLIII. The Terrace-garden, 429
XLIV. A New Poem, 487

XLV. The Talisman, 501
XLVI. Via Boulogne, 569

XLVII. Miss Tucker asserts Herself, 578
XLVIII. "I never did you Justice," 582
XLIX. Cecil's Repentance, 647
L. A Visit Projected, 659
LI. Over the Hills, 733

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Beyond, 59

Charlie, 159

"God's Finger touched him and he slept,"
800

LILLA'S LONGING; or, The Fourth Beati- Sacramentarian Methodism.

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948

Only One Little Spray. A Poem, by Lucinda Unquiet Age, The, 200
Bowser, 80

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THE

CHRISTIAN WORLD

JANUARY, 1869.

MAGAZINE.

THE NEW ALLIANCE BETWEEN CHURCH AND STATE.

A LETTER TO LORD SHAFTESBURY.

BY PETER BAYNE, M.A.

MY LORD,-You are recognised throughout Christendom as the head of the Evangelical party in the Church of England. You possess the confidence of perhaps a larger proportion of the Nonconformist community than any other member of the Church, lay or clerical. You declared on a memorable occasion, in the House of Lords, that you had all your life been a Radical, and the correctness of the designation was felt, not because you have acted with this or that Parliamentary section, but because your countrymen believe that you have courage to go to the root of matters. You have had large experience. You know England well. Thoroughly understanding the Evangelical clergy, and sympathising with all that is right and honourable in their professional feeling, you are in a position, as a statesman, to take a broader view of the requirements of the nation and the circumstances of the time than can be reasonably expected of them. It is no disparagement to simple-minded persons, clerical or lay, to declare that, amid the changes of this agitating period, they are in perplexity. The path of duty seems wrapped in clouds. To you many eyes are at this moment turned for counsel and for guidance. You stand in the place of William Wilberforce, at a time when a greater than Wilberforce is needed for the crisis.

Of the gravity of the situation no man has a clearer conviction than your Lordship. Your speeches for the last few years, both at

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