Index

ABBOTSFORD, i. 260, 264, 300
Academia of the Catholic Religion in England founded, i. 524;
    Newman’s attitude towards, 525; first meeting of, 532; referred
    to, 521, 534, 535
Achilli trial, The, i. 276, et seq.; text of Newman’s indictment of
    Achilli, 279 n.; description of Achilli, 291; the Times and the
    verdict, 292; enormous expenses of the trial, 295-296; Newman
    goes up for judgment, 296-297; new trial moved for, 297-300;
    refused, 300; subscription among Catholics throughout the
    world for his expenses, 303. Newman thanks Sister Maria Pia
    for her aid in obtaining witnesses, ii. 521. Referred to, i. 7, 304,
    315, 318, 321, 327, 330, 546, 644. ii. 422
Acton, Cardinal, i. 103, 147, 162. ii. 435 n.
Acton, Sir John (afterwards Lord Acton), on Ultramontane
    writers, of the nineteenth century, i. 314; his first acquaintance
    with Newman, 443; on the study of Christian origins, 443;
    early history of, 459; his sympathy with Liberal Catholicism,
    459; relations with Döllinger, 464; and German liberal thought,
    465,467; desires to found an English organ of liberal Catholic
    opinions, 467; on the relation of theology to the scientific
    thought of the time, 468, et seq.; and W. G. Ward, 470; his
    connection with the Rambler, 474, et seq.; his interview with
    Newman on the future of the Rambler, 482, et seq.; urges
    Newman to become editor, 491; on Newman’s acceptance of
    the editorship, 492, 493; his indignation at the announcement
    dissociating Newman from the Rambler, 508, et seq.; W. G.
    Ward’s views on, 517; on the position of a Catholic Review
    and its duties to authority and public opinion, 527, et seq.; editor
    of Home and Foreign Review, 537, et seq.; suspends publication
    of Home and Foreign, 565-566; continues to urge his views in
    North British Review, 566. Pius IX.’s opinion of, ii. 167; his
    attitude towards Papal Infallibility, 215, 374, 375; Newman’s
    regard for, in spite of differences, 384; Newman’s relations
    with, 496. Referred to, i. 10, 264, 438 n., 445, 479, 480, 485,
    495, 501, 551, 633, 637, 639. ii. 80, 143 n., 161, 173, 284, 401.
    See also Letters
Affirmation Bill, Newman’s opinion of the, ii. 521
Agnosticism, Newman anticipated an age of, i. 392-393. ii. 415,
    et seq. Catholicism the only antidote to, i. 420
Aldo Brandini, Princess, i. 155
Alexander, Archbishop, his poem on Oxford in 1845, i. 6 n.
Alexander of Hales, i. 396
Alleyne, Rev. A. V., see Letters
Allies, T. W., his criticism of Newman, i. 20; and the Gorham
    Case, 230; conversion of, 252; lectures in Dublin on the
    'Formation of Christendom,' 308, 309. Referred to, i. 113, 130,
    300, 359 n., 505, 623. ii. 78, 196, 453, 496
Alphonsus, St., i. 169, 171, 188. ii. 16
Alzog, Dr., quoted, i. 461; referred to, 562
Amherst, Francis (Bishop of Northampton), i. 142, 244
Anglican Church, Newman and the Catholic movement in, i. 6,
    56 et seq.; compared by Newman to Catholic Church of fourth
    century, 42, 46-47; disestablishment of, imminent in 1833, 50;
    defended by Newman in his 'Prophetical Office,' 59, et seq.;
   
Newman uses vehement language in criticism of, 204; Newman
    holds it to be a bulwark against infidelity, {594} 232, 259, 651.
    Newman thinks it a great human institution, ii. 44-45;
    Newman’s further views on, 57-58; essentially Erastian,
    116, 117
Antioch, Council of, condemned the Homoousion, ii. 557
Antonelli, Cardinal, i. 358, 519, 522-524, 533. ii. 101, 285
Apologetics, Catholic, i. 392, 458, 473, 474. ii. 474-476
'Apologia, The.' (See also Kingsley.) Newman determines to
    write, ii. 13; parts of the original out of print, 14 n.; parts i. and
    ii. analysed and quoted, 14-18; hard work entailed in writing, 25;
    careful plan of the work, 26, 27; change in Newman’s public
    position after writing it, 32, et seq., 358-359; Newman discusses
    Infallibility and authority of the Church in, 36-41; last part
    censured by some theological critics, 42-43; Newman disclaims
    personal anger with Kingsley, 45-46; writes on Liberalism in
    second edition, 75; effect of, visible among the public, 108; Dr.
    Fairbairn’s attack on Newman’s treatment of human reason in,
    505; certain passages disliked at Rome, 544. Quoted, i. 42, 47,
    50, 250. ii. 354. Referred to, i. 11, 29, 79, 232, 585. ii. 67, 71,
    72, 92, 122, 123, 203, 316, 353, 355, 356, 399, 400, 401, 430,
    452, 463, 497, 508, 510, 522
Architecture, Newman on different styles, i. 139, 140-141, 204 n.
Argyll, Duchess of, her death a blow to Newman, ii. 387, 391
'Arianism and Apollinarianism,' Newman’s, ii. 399
'Arians of the Fourth Century, The,' writing of, i. 46; finished,
    50; Newman exhausted by writing of, 296, 637; Döllinger on,
    444; Newman answers Franzelin’s attack on his Rambler article
    'On Consulting the Faithful' in a later edition, ii. 174. Referred
    to, i. 43. ii. 381, 400, 576
Aristotelians, Medieval, i. 405; ii. 331
Aristotle out of favour in Rome in 1847, i. 165, 166. ii. 556.
    Adoption of his philosophy by thirteenth-century thinkers, i.
    405; on the magnanimous man, 409; his influence on
    Scholasticism, 562; referred to, 229, 396
Arnold, Arthur, see Letters
Arnold, Matthew, i. 309, 539. ii. 494
Arnold, Dr. Thomas (of Rugby), i. 37, 309. ii. 117
Arnold, Thomas (junior), i. 362, 379, 455-456; referred to, 542,
    543, 545. ii. 84. See also Letters
Arundel and Surrey, Lord and Lady, see Norfolk (14th Duke)
Association for the Promotion of the Unity of Christendom,
    ii. 81, 82, et seq.
Aston Hall, i. 94 n., 111, 153
Athanasius, i. 51, 172, 173, 181. ii. 400, 418, 433, 478, 528
Athenćum, The, its comments on the Kingsley controversy, ii.
    32
Athenćum Club, Newman invited to join the, i. 60
Atlantis, The, i. 418, 429-437, 474, 478, 482, 532
Augustine, St.: his dictum Securus judicat orbis terrarum, i. 67.
    ii. 455. Döllinger writes of him in the Rambler as the 'father
    of Jansenism,' i. 479; referred to, i. 139. ii. 38-39
'Authority of Doctrinal Decisions,' W. G. Ward’s work on the,
    ii. 151
Avenir, The, condemnation, i. 365, 461
Aytoun, Rev. Mr., i. 255 n.

BACON, LORD, i. 269, 404, 435. ii. 331
Badeley, Edward, i. 103, 284, 287, 291, 297, 298, 300, 358,
    505, 647. ii. 198, 204
Baggs, Dr., i. 553
Bagshawe, Mr., i. 507, 509
Bain, Alexander, i. 308. ii. 197
Baines, Bishop, Vicar-Apostolic of Western District, i. 102. ii. 52
Baltimore, Archbishop of, see Kenrick
Bamberg, Archbishop of, i. 562
Barlow, Dr., of Trinity College, Dublin, i. 366
Barnabo, Cardinal, i. 17, 24, 155, 347, 358, 451, 551. ii. 69, 124,
    125, 128-129, 140, 147, 148, 155, 156 n., 159-163, 173,
    178-180, 181, 184, 190, 191, 193, 200, 433-435, 543, 549
Barnewall, Mr. (afterwards Sir Reginald), i. 364
Baronius, Cardinal, i. 176, 178, 179, 223, 270, 530. ii. 158, 168,
    546
Barry, Dr., i. 27 n. ii. 508, 510, 511
Bathurst, Miss, ii. 316 n., 519. See also Letters
Bautain, M., i. 64, 174
Beaumont College, ii. 444, 445 {595}
Bede, St., ii. 528
Bedford, Mr. H., ii. 512. See also Letters
Beethoven, ii. 76, 336, 349-350
Bellarmine, i. 120. ii. 193, 404 n.
Bellasis, Edward, i. 27 n. ii. 349, 350
Bellasis, Henry F. (Father Lewis), ii. 469. See also Letters
Bellasis, Mr. Serjeant E., visits Newman at Milan, i. 142; and
    the Oratory School, 455, 456. 'Grammar of Assent' dedicated
    to, ii. 154, 262; his death, 387. Referred to, i. 298, 300, 363,
    545, 557, 594, 595. ii. 73, 389, 390. See also Letters
Bellasis, Mrs., see Letters
Benedictines, see 'Historical Sketches,' ii.
Benthamism, i. 57
Bernard, St., i. 164, 171
Berrulle, Cardinal, i. 223
Besançon, Archbishop of, i. 137-138, 184
Bianconi, Dr., i. 324 n.
Bible, The (see also Inspiration), proposed new English version
    of, to be edited by Newman, i. 418-419, 423-428; Newman’s
    Prolegomena to new translation, 423-425, 478; abandonment
    of the scheme, 425, et seq.
Biblical criticism, Newman desires a Commission on, ii. 477;
    referred to, 504 n.
'Biographical Sketches' of Kegan Paul, i. 191
Biography, Newman on the importance of letters as an element
    in, ii. 314
Biography of Newman, Materials for, i. 1, 29
Birmingham Oratory: idea of founding an English Oratory,
    i. 169 et seq.; noviciate of Newman and his companions at
    Santa Croce, 182-183, 187; Papal brief of foundation issued,
    197; the start at Maryvale, 198-199; project of branch houses
    mooted, 201; Frederick Faber and Wilfridians join, 202;
    divergences between Newman and younger members of, 202-204,
    216; criticisms of, by 'old Catholics,' 214-216; Newman moves
    to Alcester Street, 216; branch house founded in London, 217;
    Birmingham Oratory contrasted with London Oratory, 225-226;
    the 'Sermons for Mixed Congregations,' 228; 'Little Oratory'
    started, 264; the move to Hagley Road, Edgbaston, 281; account
    of formal separation of, from London Oratory, i. 450-451;
    description of Newman’s life at, chapter xxx.
Birmingham Oratory School, first planned at Maryvale, i. 198;
    foundation of the school, 452 et seq.
Bishops: (1) English, formation of new Hierarchy, i. 191, 195, 197;
    Wiseman’s sanguine views as to the new Hierarchy, 253;
    Newman’s views, 260; and the proposed translation of the Bible
    by Newman, 418, 428; threaten to censure the Rambler, 479,
    480, 486, 490; their censure of the Rambler and Home and
    Foreign Review, 544. In favour of prohibition of Catholics going
    to Oxford, ii. 65; majority of, identify themselves with Newman’s
    'Letter to Dr. Pusey,' 112; their letter of, to Propaganda regarding
    the education of Catholics at Oxford, 156
Bishops: (2) Irish, their opposition to 'mixed education,' i. 275, 305,
    et seq. ii. 518. Not sufficiently alive to the importance of
    University Education, i. 310; their formal invitation to Newman
    delayed, 321, et seq., 325, et seq.; attitude of, towards the Catholic
    University, 336; Newman’s visits to the Irish Bishops, 337-340;
    misunderstandings with Newman, 354, et seq., 359-360; their
    representations in Rome against Newman’s being made a bishop,
    356, 385-386; their relations to the laity, 364. ii. 397. Text of
    Newman’s letters to, announcing his resignation, i. 631-633
Bishops: (3) Scotch, congratulate Newman on Cardinalate, ii. 455
Bittleston, Fr. Henry, i. 321, 518. ii. 140, 150, 153, 156, 158, et seq.,
    457. See also Letters
Blachford, Lady, ii. 90, 341
Blachford, Lord (Sir Frederick Rogers), friend of Newman,
    1833-1840, i. 217; their meeting after long separation, 611.
    Deprecates sarcasm in first part of 'Apologia,' ii. 18, 19; frequent
    correspondence with Newman, 73; gives Newman a violin, 75,
    349; Newman stays with, 90; sends Newman Seeley’s 'Ecce
    Homo,' 118; Newman writes to, on Infallibility, 374; other letters
    to, 381, et seq.; receives peerage, 382, et seq.; advises Newman in
    his controversy {596} with Dr. Fairbairn, 508, et seq.;
    congratulates Newman on the Cardinalate, 579, 584. Referred to,
    i. 61, 67, 200, 555, 556, 579, 625, 627. ii. 22, 23, 73, 100, 130,
    348, 402, 520. See also Letters
Blennerhassett, Sir Rowland, Bt., i. 444, 565
Blomfield, Dr., i. 261
Bloxam, Dr. J. R. (Rector of Upper Beeding), i. 110. ii. 469. See also
    Letters
Boniface, St., i. 405
Bonn University, ii. 547
Borghese, Prince, i. 154, 155
Borghese, Princess, ii. 521
Bossuet, i. 2, 3, 228. ii. 420
Boston—the Socinians of Boston and Newman’s 'Essay on
    Development,' i. 161
Botalla, Fr., ii. 409
Bourdaloue, i. 228
Bowden, Charles, i. 193
Bowden, Henry, i. 126, 300. ii. 74, 93
Bowden, J. W., i. 33, 39, 124, 126. ii. 339
Bowden, Miss Charlotte, see Letters
Bowden, Mrs. J. W., Newman visits, i. 124; her conversion, 126
Bowles, F. S., i. 84, 94, 103, 120, 125, 154, 182, 188, 191, 214.
    ii. 349. See also Letters
Bowles, Miss E., ii. 47, 108, 364 n., 375, 403, 442, 446. See also
    Letters
Bowyer, Sir G. W., i. 196, 252, 256, 300. ii. 196, 561. See also
    Letters
Brabant, Duke of, i. 651
Bradlaugh, Charles, ii. 386
Bradley, Dean, i. 75 n.
Braye, Lord, ii. 484, 485, et seq. See also Letters
Bresciano, Fr. (Rector of Collegio di Propaganda), i. 149, 150,
    153. ii. 197
Briggs, Bishop, i. 111, 133
Brindle, Dr., of Prior Park, i. 102, 110
British Association meets at Oxford, i. 190
British Constitution, Analysis of, by Newman, i. 352; in time
    of war, 353, 354
British Critic, Newman editor of, i. 57, 549. Newman’s Essays
    in, ii. 400
British Magazine, i. 224
Britten, Mr. James, ii. 487
Brodie, Sir B., i. 299, 546
Brougham, Lord, i. 45, 638
Brown, Dr. (Bishop of Newport), i. 208, 503. ii. 146, 158, 165,
    171, 175, 176, 560, 581, 582. See also Letters
Brown, Principal (of Aberdeen University), on Christian Unity, ii.
    392, 393. See also Letters
Brownbill, The Rev. Mr., i. 103, 112
Brownlow, William Robert (Bishop of Clifton), i. 652-654. ii. 268.
    See also Letters
Brownson, Dr. (the American publicist), i. 160, 483. ii. 270
Brownson’s Review, i. 160
Brunelli, Cardinal (Secretary of Propaganda), i. 144, 148, 174,
    180, 181, 451
Bruno, Giordano: Newman endorses Leo XIII.’s protest against
    erection of statue to, ii. 533-534
Bryce, Right Hon. James, ii. 425, 428, 429
Buckle, Mr., Fellow of Oriel, ii. 342
Burgon, Dean, i. 309
Burke, Edmund, ii. 44
Burns, i. 191, 486, 526
Bute, Marquess of, ii. 579. See also Letters
Butler, Alban, 'Lives of the Saints,' i. 177
Butler, Archer, his attack on the 'Essay on Development' referred
    to, ii. 270
Butler, Edward, i. 359 n.
Butler, Bishop, 'The Analogy,' i. 38; referred to, 45, 269, 424,
    620, 624
Byron, Lord, ii. 354, 357

'CĆSARISM AND ULTRAMONTANISM' (by Cardinal Manning),
    Gladstone attacks, ii. 401, 402
'Callista,' i. 244, 352, 353
Calvinism, its influence on Newman, i. 30-32, 36, 41. ii. 343
Campbell, Lord, and the Achilli trial, i. 281, 284, 290, 296, 298,
    300, 303
Campion, Edmund, i. 518, 528
Capalti, Mgr., ii. 181
Capes, F. M., editor of the Rambler, i. 224, 243, 244, 474; his
    articles in the Rambler, 437, et seq.; his scheme for lectures
    against Papal Aggression agitation, 259, 260-266; Newman’s
    sympathy with, 437; Newman’s disapproval of his articles, and
    attitude towards his intellectual difficulties, 441, 442; left
    Catholic Church, 437; died a Catholic, 437 n.; referred to, 130,
    164 n., 221, 226, 301 n., 373, 427, 445. ii. 344. See also
    Letters {597}
Cardella, Father, the Roman Jesuit, ii. 155, 174, 179, 548, 549,
    559
Cardinalate conferred on Newman, and its effect, i. 14. ii. 433,
    et seq.; letter on the subject from the Duke of Norfolk, 436;
    text of Manning’s application for its bestowal on Newman, 577;
    other letters relating to, 578
Carlow College, i. 338
Carlyle, Thomas, ii. 316
Cashel, Archbishop of, see Leahy
Caswall, Father Edward, i. 225. ii. 41, 53, 324, 413-414, 572
Catholic Church (see also Infallibility and Papacy): Newman’s
    early invectives against Rome, i. 7, 68, et seq.; Newman’s view
    of, in relation to unbelief, 13, 415, 570; and Rationalism, 23; in
    Rome, 53; condition of, in England in 1845, 101; Newman’s
    letter on its character as one organised polity, 129-130; spirit of
    worship in, 139-140; rigidity of, 157; the most effectual
    upholder of Theism and Christianity, 412-413; guardian of
    morals, 414-415; guardian of faith, 416; Acton on its position
    in modern society, 468-469; Veuillot’s views of its relations to
    the modern world, 470; Newman’s letter to the Globe on his
    reported dissatisfaction with, 579-581; nature of its unity, 654.
    ii. the great support of faith against modern Agnosticism, 498;
    its witness to spiritual truth, 506, 507
Catholic Gazette, i. 376
Catholic Standard, Newman’s letters to, on the Crimean War, i.
    352. Also referred to, ii. 320
Catholic Truth Society, ii. 487
Catholic Union of Great Britain, ii. 580-581
Catholics, 'Old English' and Oxford Movement, i. 100; out of
    favour in Rome, 174; their character, and their dislike of
    devotional innovations, 204-205; their attitude towards Oratory,
    212-213, 215; their exclusiveness and defective education, 452
Cavour, i. 519-520. ii. 197
Celibacy of the Clergy, The 'Apologia' on, ii. 28
Celtic literature in the Catholic University of Ireland, i. 350
Certainty (see also Faith) and Catholic Theology, i. 163, 442;
    Newman on reasonableness of, 442; the great philosophical
    difficulty of Catholicism, 442, 623, et seq. ii. 43, 242, 245, 271,
    465-466, 587-592. See also 'Grammar of Assent'
Cesarini, Fr., i. 220
Challoner, Bishop, ii. 107
Charles, St., i. 141-142
Charlestown, Bishop of, i. 426, 427
Charlotte, Princess, ii. 341
Chateaubriand, i. 308, 315, 397, 461
Cheadle, St. Wilfrid’s, Cotton Hall, i. 202, 214, 221, 226, 235-236
Cherubini, ii. 351
Christian Observer, i. 625. ii. 434 n.
Christian Times, i. 255 n., 277
Christian Year, i. 57. ii. 318
Christianity, The type of primitive, i. 49; and scientific
    investigation, 401-403, 408-409, 474; Newman on its triple
    division into a philosophy, a political power, and a religious rite,
    ii. 421-423
Christie, Albany, i. 21, 84, 103, 120, 132, 135, 177
Church, Miss Helen (Mrs. Paget), ii. 520. See also Letters
Church, Miss Mary, ii. 520-521
Church, Mrs., ii. 390
Church, R. W. (Dean of St. Paul’s), i. 56, 60, 79, 83, 85, 96, 111,
    126, 549. ii. 19, 21, 23, 73, 75, 90, 109, 205, 207, 320, 332, 348,
    381, et seq., 411, 418, 425, 451, 487 n., 515, 529, 554, 583.
    See also Letters
Church, Anglican, see Anglican Church
Church, Greek, i. 129
Church and State, Relations of, i. 234. ii. 460-462
'Church of the Fathers,' see Historical Sketches
Church Review, ii. 33
Churton, E., ii. 571
Clarendon, Lord, i. 310, 312
Clement of Alexandria, St., i. 47
Clifford, Dr., Bishop of Clifton, i. 148. ii. 112, 113, 123, 191, 459,
    560, 584. See also Letters
Clifford of Chudleigh, Lord, i. 110, 144, 148 n.
Clough, Arthur Hugh, i. 309
Clutton, Henry, ii. 60
Cockburn, Sir Alexander, counsel for Newman in Achilli trial,
    i. 291; moves for new trial, 297-299
Coffin, Robert, i. 84, 107, 111, 135, 137, 182, 191, 205, 222.
    ii. 142
Colenso, Bishop, i. 418. ii. 117
Coleridge, Father, S.J., ii. 77, 78, 98, 114, 123, 133, 140, 205, 442.
    See also Letters {598}
Coleridge, Lady, ii. 391
Coleridge, Lord, i. 60, 74. ii. 411, 579-580. See also Letters
Coleridge, Sarah, i. 309
Coleridge, Sir John, gives judgment in Achilli trial, i. 301
Coleridge, S. T., i. 49
Comberbach, Fr., ii. 138-139
'Conflicts with Rome': Sir J. Acton’s article in Home and Foreign,
    i. 565
Conscience (see also 'Grammar of Assent'): Newman’s sense of
    God’s presence in, i. 30; its dictates certain, but easily obscured,
    413-415. An argument for God’s existence, ii. 265, 269;
    supremacy of, 404 n.
Constance, Council of, ii. 561
Contemporary Review, Newman’s article in, on 'The Development
    of Religious Error,' ii. 505-507; also referred to, 521
'Conversion,' Newman’s early, i. 30
Converts, Newman on, i. 134; their faith, 228-219; Sir J. Coleridge
    on their deterioration, 301; relations of, with 'Old English'
    Catholics, 452
Cope, Sir William, ii. 45. See also Letters
Copeland, George, ii. 554
Copeland, W. J., referred to, i. 17, 85, 117, 597, 650. ii. 19, 50 n.,
    72, 90, 130, 396, 411, 434, 577. See also Letters
Copernicanism, i. 400, 404. ii. 424
Copleston, Dr., i. 37
'Cor ad cor loquitur,' Newman’s motto as a Cardinal, ii. 457
Corn Exchange Lectures, see 'Present Position of Catholics'
Correspondant, The, i. 464, 550. ii. 212
Cotton Hall, see Cheadle
Cowper, i. 652
Cox, Dr., President of St. Edmund’s College, i. 109, 616
Crabbe quoted, ii. 91, 354
Craik, G. L., ii. 4
Crawley, Rev. Mr., Rector of Littlemore, ii. 206
Crimean War, Letters on, by Newman, i. 352-354. Newman’s
    interest in, ii. 513
Cromwell, Oliver, responsible, in Newman’s view, for Irish
    hatred of England, ii. 517
Cullen, A. H., see Letters Cullen, Archbishop (afterwards
    Cardinal), and the 'New Ultramontane' party, i. 13; invites
    Newman to be Rector of the Catholic University, 275-276, 311;
    opponent of the Queen’s Colleges, 275, 305; educational ideals
    differ from Newman’s, 311, 320,355, 366-370; invites Newman
    to lecture in Dublin, 311; translated from the See of Armagh to
    Dublin, 316; instalment as Archbishop of Dublin, 318; appoints
    officials in the University without Newman’s assent, 321-324;
    his reliance on Newman to overcome Irish apathy on University
    scheme, 324; his delay in giving Newman instructions, 325-328;
    attends Newman’s preliminary lectures, 327; arranges for public
    reception of Newman, 328-329; and the question of Newman
    being made bishop, 330, 357, 385-386; proposed by the Pope as
    Chancellor of the University, 330; and the University Church,
    347; objects to certain of Newman’s appointments, 359,
    362-362; his dilatoriness in corresponding with Newman,
    363-364 n.; his career and views summarised, 365-367; his
    difficulties with Dr. McHale’s party, 370-371; interview with
    Newman on latter’s proposed resignation, 376-377; Newman’s
    account of his differences with, 380-384; his jealousy of English
    interference in University scheme, 384-385; and Newman’s
    final resignation of Rectorship, 445-450. Reports favourably to
    Pius IX. on Newman’s writings, ii. 192; praise of Newman in
    Lenten Pastoral of 1875, 408, 561. Also referred to, i. 312, 329,
    341, 354, 458, 484, 629. ii. 176, 189. See also Letters
Curci, Father, ii. 505 n., 561
Curtis, Father, S.J., i. 333-334

DALGAIRNS, J. D., i. 84, 93, 94 n., 120, 124, 135-137, 153, 157,
    159, 160, 169, 171, 174, 182, 192, 198, 199, 205, 214, 216, 217,
    223, 226, 549. ii. 332, 413, 481. See also Letters
Darboy, Mgr., Archbishop of Paris, ii. 211
Darnell, Fr. Nicholas, Head Master of Oratory School, i. 455, 456;
    resigns, 456; referred to, 214, 264
Darras, Abbé, Church History of, i. 472
Darwin, Charles, i. 470. ii. 342
Daunt, O’Neill, see Letters {599}
Davy, Sir H., and the Miracle of St. Januarius, i. 189. Referred
    to, ii. 331
Deane, Emmeline, ii. 527. See also Letters
Deane, Louisa, ii. 554
Deane, Mrs., ii. 514. See also Letters
de Berulle, Cardinal, ii. 451
de Bonald, Vicomte, i. 44, 308, 460
de Buck, Father, i. 474, 504, 510, 634, 636
d’Eckstein, Baron: Newman objects to his article for the Rambler,
    i. 505
Degenelles, Abbé, Newman’s visit to, i. 135
Delany, Bishop, i. 338, 366
Delany, Dr., Rector of University College, Stephen’s Green, i. 310
de Lisle, Ambrose Phillipps (formerly Mr. Lisle Phillipps), i. 111,
    127, 128, 640. ii. 82, 115. See also Letters
de Luca, Cardinal, ii. 163, 175, 179, 181, 547
de Lugo, the Jesuit theologian, on certitude in matters of Faith,
    i. 163, quoted, 169 n.; also referred to, 248, 250
de Maistre, Count Joseph, i. 23, 315, 397, 460, 461, 464. ii. 79,
    214, 420
Democracy, Newman views with distrust, ii. 118, 513
Denbigh, Earl of, i. 256. ii. 143, 485, 561. See also Letters
de Ravignan, Pčre, i. 282, 461
de Rossi, Count, i. 194, 462
De Tocqueville, i. 308
Development, Doctrinal (see also Faith): Newman’s philosophical
    theory of, i. 2; principle of, and Christian evidences, 158;
    Newman re-expresses his general theory in deference to
    Perrone’s criticism, 186, et seq.; its similarity to that of
    Moehler’s 'Symbolik,' 315; of Christian Doctrine, 439; and
    Infallibility of the Church, 441; Döllinger’s views on, 563;
    letters of Newman on, 639, 640
'Development of Christian Doctrine, Essay on': Newman’s
    infinite trouble in writing, i. 86, et seq.; quoted, 87, et seq.;
    unfinished at time of Newman’s conversion, 94; publication of,
    99, 615; Dr. Wiseman declines to have its theology revised by a
    censor, 615; great public interest in, 121; impression made by,
    especially in Scotland, 156, 157; reception in America, 159, 160;
    reception of, by Roman divines, 161 et seq.; French translation
    of, 161, 168, 170, et seq.; opposition to, on the part of some
    Roman theologians, 174; Perrone’s criticisms of, 184, et seq.
    Attacked by Dr. Brownson, ii. 270; dedication of new edition,
    426, et seq.; Newman on criticisms of, 418, et seq. Also referred
    to, i. 43, 83, 123, 133, 223, 237, 425, 553. ii. 109, 559, 587, 590,
    591
'Development of Religious Error,' Newman’s article in
    Contemporary Review, ii. 505, et seq.
de Vere, Aubrey, and Newman, i. 58, 320; quoted, 66, 231, 309.
    Congratulates Newman on the offer of Cardinalate, ii. 581. Also
    referred to, i. 359 n. ii. 245. See also Letters
Devotional writings by Newman, ii. 364, et seq.
'Difficulties of Anglicans' (vol. i., containing the King William
    Street lectures), i. 186, 187, 195, 196, 230, et seq., 265, 274,
    654. ii. 316, 400
'Difficulties of Anglicans' (vol ii.), see Letter to Dr. Pusey; Letter
    to Duke of Norfolk
'Discipline and Influence,' see 'Historical Sketches'
'Discourses to Mixed Congregations,' see Sermons
Disraeli, and the Catholic University of Ireland, i. 352 n. Referred
    to, ii. 117
Dixon, Joseph, Archbishop of Armagh, i. 372, 375
Dmouski, ii. 197
Döllinger, Ignatius: his estimate of Newman, i. 3, 444, 446;
    Newman visits, 192; his work for Church in Germany, 438;
    Newman’s sympathy with, 19, 439, 444, 445; his visits to
    Newman, 443; his article in Rambler denounced in Rome, 479,
    et seq.; patron of Rambler, 504, 509, 510, 634; article on his
    work in Home and Foreign Review, 543; his Presidential
    Address to Munich Congress and its effects, 562, et seq., 640.
    And the Old Catholics, ii. 372; his secession, 375; Newman’s
    condemnation of his secession, 379-380; Newman’s intended
    visit to, as a Cardinal with a view to changing his attitude
    towards Rome, 466. See also i. 264, 459, 461, 464, 467, {600}
   474. ii. 401, 544, 557. See also Letters
Dolman’s Magazine, Mr. Price’s article in, on the Oratorian Saints
    Lives, i. 207, 212
Dominic, Fr., i. 92, et seq. See also 94, 95, 105, 123; see also
    Letters
Dominicans, The, i. 124, et seq., 144, 167, 168, 169. ii. 406, 561
Donatists, Schism of, i. 67, 616
Dotti, the Chevalier, i. 133
Douai College, i. 126
Downside, i. 222
Doyle, Sir Francis, i. 60. ii. 241, 356
Drane, Mother Frances Raphael, see Letters, ii. 480
'Dream of Gerontius,' ii. 76, 78, 203, 342, 356, 514
Dryden, ii. 44
Dublin Oratory proposed, i. 345, 347
Dublin Review, Wiseman’s article in, on Dr. Achilli, i. 278, 280;
    proprietorship and editorship of, given to W. G. Ward by
    Manning, 546, et seq.; Newman refuses to write for, 548, et seq.;
    effect of Ward’s editorship on Newman, 549. Ward’s articles in,
    on Pius IX.’s utterances, ii. 82, 83; Ward’s articles in, used by
    Pusey in the 'Eirenicon,' 91; Newman denounces attitude of, 404;
    its favourable review of Newman’s 'Grammar of Assent,' 273;
    and of his 'Letter to the Duke of Norfolk,' 406, et seq., 565. Also
    referred to, i. 284, 480, 489, 507, 510, 523 n., 537, 549, 556, 635,
    637. ii. 43, 48, 151, 213, 425, 439, 552
Duncan, Dr., Life of, ii. 393
Dupanloup, Bishop of Orleans, i. 10, 19, 388, 550. ii. 80, 82, 83,
    101, 123, 211, 286, 372, 552
'Durham Letter' by Lord John Russell 'on Papal Aggression,' i. 255,
    318

EAGLESIM, FR. PAUL, ii. 457, 468
Ealing, Newman sent to school at, i. 29
'Ecce Homo,' Seeley’s, reviewed by Newman, ii. 118, 309
Education: (1) Catholic (see also Birmingham Oratory School;
    Oxford; University, Catholic, in Dublin): i. 458, 515, 516. ii. 47
    et seq., 121, et seq., 189, 540, 541, 542, 554, 555
Education: (2) mixed, Irish Episcopate opposed to, i. 305; why
    feared, 305-311; difficulty of avoiding, 335, 336; Cullen's
    opposition to, 365; Cullen and Newman’s different conceptions
    in opposing, 368, 369. W. G. Ward’s views on, ii. 63; policy of
    Rome in regard to, 157, 160, 166; forced on the Irish, 517, 518
Edwards, G. T., ii. 333, 526, 535. See also Letters
Egypt and Soudan War, Newman’s interest in, ii. 513
'Eirenicon, The,' by Dr. Pusey, ii. 91, et seq., 99, et seq. Also
    referred to, i. 214, 232. See also 'Letter to Dr. Pusey'
Eliot, George, ii. 355
Emancipation, Catholic, Newman’s views on, 1829, i. 44
Emly, Lord (the Right Hon. Wm. Monsell), i. 300, 311, 320, 321,
    335, 351, 476, 550, 587, 634. ii. 143, 145-147, 155, 196, 211,
    472
English College, Rome, ii. 463-464
Ennodius, Bishop, ii. 575
Ephesus, Council of, ii. 105; referred to, 562
Errington, Archbishop, i. 421. ii. 560, 580. See also Letters
Errington, Mr., i. 335
Established Church, see Anglican Church
Estcourt, Canon, i. 103. ii. 56. See also Letters
Eusebius, ii. 39
Evangelicals and Evangelicalism, i. 30, 36. ii. 13, 526, 527
Eyston, Charles, ii. 519

FABER, FREDERICK WILLIAM, i. 19, 67, 84, 103, 108, 131, 133,
    202, 205, 206, et seq., 208, 211, 213, 216, 220, 223, 224, 225,
    228, 229-230, et seq., 389, 417, 423, 428, 450, 451, 472, 495.
    ii. 72, 81, 91, 99, 107, 125, 161, 170, 172, 173. See also Letters
Fairbairn, Principal, accuses Newman of philosophical
    scepticism, ii. 505, et seq.
'Family Adventures,' Mrs. Thomas Mozley’s, i. 28 n.
Feilding, Viscount (see Denbigh, Earl of), i. 256, et seq.
Fénelon, i. 2, 3, 12. ii. 420
Fenianism, ii. 119
Fessler, Bishop, Secretary-General to the Vatican Council, i. 22.
    ii. 373, 409, 559, 561
Ffoulkes, Mr., ii. 284
Fideism, i. 164, 174
Fitzgerald, Lord, i. 300, 335 {601}
Flanagan, Father Stanislas, i. 214, 334, 341. ii. 84
Flannery, Dr., Dean of the Catholic University of Ireland, i. 324 n.
Foran, Nicholas (Bishop of Waterford), i. 338
Forbes, Bishop of Brechin, ii. 216
'Formation of Christendom, The,' by T. W. Allies, i. 309
Formby, Mr., i. 108, 120, 177, 227
Fottrell, Mr., ii. 397, 398. See also Letters
Fourdrinier, Miss Eliza, ii. 484. See Letters
Fourdriniers, The, i. 27 and n., 614
Fox, Caroline, i. 333
France, Church of, i. 314. ii. 344, 520
Franco-Prussian War, ii. 118, 119, 554
Fransoni, Cardinal, i. 144; ordains Newman and St. John, 184;
    referred to, 126, 174
Franzelin, Cardinal, attacks Newman’s Rambler article 'On
    Consulting the Faithful,' ii. 174, 548; joins with Kleutgen in
    writing Historical Introduction to definition of Papal Infallibility,
    306; referred to, 180
Friedrich, Prof., ii. 80, 372
Froschammer, i. 465, 564
Froude, H. (junr.), i. 646, et seq. ii. 569
Froude, J. A., i. 60, 61, 189, 235, 239, 309. ii. 1, 26, 472, 473
Froude, Miss E. M. (Baroness Anatole von Hügel), i. 644. ii.
    569, 572. See also Letters
Froude, Mrs. William, i. 86, 115, 239, et seq., 301, 336, 539. ii.
    90, 96, 465. See also Letters
Froude, R. Hurrell, Newman’s friendship with, i. 39, et seq.;
    tutor of Oriel, 40; influence of, on Newman, 42; goes to
    Mediterranean with Newman, 50, et seq.; death of, 60; memoirs
    of, 60. His notion of biography, ii. 314. Referred to, i. 36, 56, 57,
    215, 227. ii. 333, 513, 587, 590. See also Letters
Froude, William, i. 22, 238, 241, 294, 622, et seq., 644, et seq. ii.
    22, 34, 43, 207, 465, 466, 560, 586. See also Letters
Furse, Mr., ii. 369

GABRIEL, SISTER MARY, ii. 387
Gabrielli, Contessa, i. 192
Gaisford, Mr., views of, on Catholics going to Oxford, ii. 66, 542.
    See also Letters
Galileo case, its effects on theology and interpretation of Scripture,
    see Copernicanism
Galitzin, Princess, i. 113
Gallicanism, Döllinger an opponent of, i. 445. Gradual
    extinction of, ii. 214. Also referred to, i. 460, 461. ii. 420
Gallwey, Fr., ii. 565
Garibaldi, i. 526, 581
Gaskell, Mrs., ii. 355
Gaume, Abbé, i. 417, 463, 472
Gazette, The Irish University, i. 347, 348, 349, 388, 396, 398. See
    University Lectures
Genesis, Book of, article on, in Home and Foreign Review, i. 542,
    543, 551, 561
Gentili, Fr., i. 209
Gerard, Fr., S.J., ii. 452. See also Letters
'Gerontius, Dream of,' see 'Dream of Gerontius'
Gerson, i. 270
Gesů College, Rome, i. 151
Ghianda, Abbate, i. 143, 144, 167
Gibbon, Edward, i. 34, 57, 309, 523. ii. 44, 343
Giberne, Miss Mary Rosina (Sister Maria Pia), i. 147, 148; assists
    Newman in obtaining witnesses for Achilli trial, 281-283, 289;
    also referred to, 103, 112, 151, 264, 358. ii. 67, 412, 432,
    466-467, 483, 516. See also Letters
Gillies (or Gillis), Dr. James (Vicar Apostolic, Eastern Scotland),
    i. 133, 156, 157. See also Letters
Gillow, Dr., i. 493, 495, 496, 635
Gioberti, i. 194
Gladstone, Mrs., ii. 401
Gladstone, W. E., i. 60, 70, 523. ii. 93, 117, 188, 317, 329, 332,
    382, 397, 401 et seq., 513, 517, 559
Glion, ii. 245
Gordon, Fr. Joseph, i. 198 and n., 214, 263, 282, 302. ii. 78, 414,
    514, 520, 572
Gordon, Fr. Philip, i. 198 and n., 214; 203, 204. See also Letters
Gordon, General, ii. 357, 514, 515
Gorham case, i. 230, 231
Gothic architecture, i. 229, 548
Goudon, M., i. 135, 137
Goulburn, Dean, i. 309
Graham, Sir J., i. 309
'Grammar of Assent, Essay in Aid of': genesis and purpose of, ii.
    208, 244, 245, 270, 400; its analysis of the grounds for Faith, 244,
    et seq.; Reasoning and Faith, 246, 247; Faith {602} and the Will,
    247, 248, 276, 277; the Illative Sense, 255; Newman’s fears as to
    its reception, 253, 254; Empirical character of, 262, 265-266;
    Philosophical value of, 262; dedication to Mr. Serjeant Bellasis,
    262, 267 n.; the 'Illative Sense' and the psychology of Certitude,
    263; Conscience as an Argument for Existence of God, 264, 265,
    274; Conscience and the moral sense, 265; Leslie Stephen attacks,
    in Fraser’s Magazine, 268; it accepts the argument for Theism
    drawn from 'Order,' but not from 'Design,' 269; the Month and,
    269; W. G. Ward welcomes, in the Dublin Review, 272-273, 274;
    as an Apologetic work, 275; Real and Notional assent, 336, 489;
    Dr. Fairbairn regards its philosophy as sceptical, 505. Also
    referred to, i. 12, 22, 158, 425. ii. 34, 346, 385, 397, 398, 525,
    554, 587-590
Grant, Dr. Thomas (Bishop of Southwark), i. 174, 183, 191, 331,
    357. ii. 64, 540, 542. See also Letters
Gratry, Pčre, i. 509, 510, 634, 636. ii. 101
Greek Church, the question of union with Anglican or Catholic,
    ii. 520
Gregory Nazianzen, St., i. 374. ii. 530
Gregory VII., Pope (St. Hildebrand), i. 268, 343
Gregory XVI., Pope, i. 123, 275, 365, 461, 462, 506. ii. 100, 458
Griffiths, Thomas, Vicar Apostolic of London District, i. 102,
    110, 133, 174, 197, 214 n., 216. ii. 103
Grissell, Hartwell de la Garde, ii. 486
Guardian, The, i. 484, 515, 625. ii. 45, 558
Guizot, i. 308

HALLAHAN, MOTHER MARGARET MARY, i. 295. ii. 324-325,
    480. See also Letters
Ham (near Richmond), Newman’s early days at, i. 29. ii. 337-340
Hamilton, Sir William, i. 638
Hampden, Dr., i. 57, 306. ii. 434 n., 513
Handel, ii. 350
Haneburg, Abbot, i. 562
Hanmer, A. J., i. 570
Harding, Sir John, ii. 207
Harper, Fr. Thomas, S.J., i. 593. ii. 235, 269, 554, 577. See also
    Letters
Harting, Mr., i. 287
Hawkins (Provost of Oriel), i. 37, 42, 43, 372
Hayden, Thomas, i. 350, 359 n.
Haydn, Johann Michael, ii. 350
Hecker, Fr. Isaac T., ii. 535
Hedley, John Cuthbert, O.S.B. (Bishop of Newport), ii. 486, 581.
    See also Letters
Hefele, Karl Joseph (Bishop of Rottenburg), ii. 371, 372, 373
Hegel, i. 308
'Help, Lord, the souls that Thou hast made' (Newman’s hymn),
    ii. 319-320
Hennessy, Henry, i. 350, 359 n., 629
Herbert of Lea, Lady, ii. 447, 464 n. See also Letters
Herbert, Sidney (afterwards Lord Herbert of Lea), i. 191, 607
Hermes, Georg, i. 163, 168, 172, 542 n.
Hewit, Fr., ii. 505 n. See also Letters
'Historical Sketches,' First volume: 'History of the Turks,' ii.
    316 n., 369. Second volume: 'The Benedictine Centuries,' i. 432;
    published in Atlantis, 433; Newman on the Genius of the
    Benedictines, 434; Benedictine Schools, conservative habit of,
    433 n., et seq. 'Church of the Fathers,' ii. 353; 'The Trials of
    Theodoret,' 562; 'St. John Chrysostom,' 511. Third volume:
    publication of, i. 348-349; general character of, 396. 'Discipline
    and Influence,' quoted, ii. 336-338, 340. Quoted, i. 194, 195,
    398; also referred to, 478. ii. 396 n.
Hoadly, Benjamin, ii. 117
Hobbes, Thomas, i. 411
Holland, Canon Scott, his recollections of a visit to Newman in
    1876, ii. 369-370. See also Letters
Holmes, Miss, i. 428. ii. 329, 412. See also Letters
Holy See, The, see Papacy
Home and Foreign Review, The, i. 537, et seq.; 565, et seq., 585,
    637. ii. 49, 62, 151, 495-496, 499
'Home Thoughts Abroad,' Newman’s, in the British Magazine,
    i. 56
Honorius I., Pope, The case of, and Papal Infallibility, i. 504.
    ii. 235, 237, 556-557, 562-563
Hooker, Richard, i. 45, 411
Hope, Miss, see Letters
Hope-Scott, James R. (Hope, J. R.), protests against the Gorham
    decision, i. 230; joins the Catholic {603} Church, 264;
    consulted by Newman in connection with the Achilli trial,
    278-279, 284. His sympathy with Newman in the Kingsley affair,
    ii. 25; Newman consults, as to possibility of raising money for an
    Oxford Oratory, 51; subscribes towards Oxford Oratory and Hall,
    53; co-operates with Newman in second Oxford scheme,
    130-131, 152, 155, 180-184; his death, 389; Newman on his
    character, 519. Also referred to, i. 58, 96, 111, 166, 167, 260,
    300, 305, 311, 332, 338, 341, 347, 363, 451, 454, 505, 605, 623,
    634, 652. ii. 43, 58, 65, 74, 187, 195, 197, 267, 316 n., 322, 387,
    388, 389, 401. See also Letters
Hopkins, Father, S.J., ii. 527. See also Letters
Hornyold, Bishop, Vicar Apostolic of Midland District, i. 119
Hort, Dr. J. A. F., i. 469
Howard, Cardinal, ii. 448, 458, 463. See also Letters
Howard, Lord Edward, ii. 143, 390
Hügel, Baron von, ii. 504 n. See also Letters
Hulst, Mgr. d’, i. 466 n.
Hume, David, i. 57, 309, 625
Husenbeth, Dr., i. 616. ii. 104
Hutchison, Fr. William Antony, i. 205, 217, 283
Hutton, Richard Holt (editor of the Spectator), on Newman’s
    literary style, i. 16; on Newman’s poems, 52; on the final
    passage of the 'Essay on Development,' 95; and the 'Lectures
    on Difficulties of Anglicans,' 233, 252. Intervenes in the
    Kingsley controversy, ii. 4, et seq.; his estimate of Kingsley’s
    pamphlet against Newman, 11-12; invites Newman to join the
    Metaphysical Society, 332; Newman’s affection for, 334-335,
    522; advises Newman in his controversy with Fairbairn, 508,
    511; writes an appreciation of Newman’s works in the
    Contemporary Review, 521. Also referred to, 204, 205. See also
    Letters
Huxley, Prof., on Newman’s scepticism, i. 16; on scientific
    methods and traditional beliefs, 307; and theological speculation,
    392; also referred to, 401. ii. 332, 333 n., 494, 571-572
Hyacinth, St., i. 152
Hyacinthe, Pčre, ii. 375. See also Letters

'IDEA of a University,' see University Lectures
'Ideal of a Christian Church,' Ward’s, publication and
    condemnation, i. 79. Also referred to, ii. 7, 224
'Idealism in Theology,' Ryder’s pamphlet on, in answer to W. G.
    Ward, ii. 224, et seq.; Newman’s share in, 228-229; controversy
    on, 229-235; analysis of, 224, et seq.; referred to, 406
Illative Sense, see 'Grammar of Assent'
Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin, Doctrine of, its
    bearing on the theory of development, i. 161, 164, 165, 185, 186;
    once opposed by all divines, 591. ii. 225. Also referred to, i. 195.
    ii. 297
Infallibility of the Church, i. 441. ii. 37, et seq.; Papal Infallibility,
    210-215, 218-223, 224-228, 229, et seq., 231, et seq.; Ward’s
    views on, 230-234; modification of his views, 235, 286;
    Renouf’s pamphlet on the Honorius case, 235; Newman and the
    Honorius case, 235-236; Ward in the Dublin on the same, 237;
    definition of, 238-240, 279, et seq.; Newman on the necessity for
    discussion before its definition, 282-283, 286-289, 295-299;
    deliberations of the Vatican Council on, 300; passing of the
    definition of, 303; Mozley’s account of the scene, 303-306; letter
    of inopportunist Bishops to Pius IX., 303; historical introduction
    to the definition, by Franzelin and Kleutgen, 306-307;
    exaggerations of Neo-Ultramontanes not countenanced by the
    Council, 307; Newman’s reception of the definition, 308-309,
    371-380; Newman fears evil consequences from it, 309-312;
    Newman’s view of its reasonableness, 376, et seq., 591; 'True
    and False Infallibility,' Fessler’s work on, 373, 409; Newman’s
    views on limitations of, 552, 556, et seq.; also referred to, 101,
    419, 420, 432
Infidelity, Necessity of preventing spread of, i. 24; natural to fallen
    man, 42; Newman deemed it his vocation to withstand, 58; he
    regarded the Anglican Church as a bulwark against its spread in
    England, 232, 259; Newman’s views as to how it should be met,
    ii. 49-50, 491, et passim
Inglis, Sir Robert, i. 218, 219, 220 {604}
Inspiration of Scripture, Vatican Council proposes to treat, ii.
    281-282; Newman’s letter concerning the Vatican Council
    Canons on the subject, 293-295; Newman’s article in Nineteenth
    Century, on necessity for some reconsideration of generally
    received opinions on, 502, et seq. Also referred to, i. 418, 542 n.
'In the Way,' by Mrs. Wilfrid Ward, Newman’s letter on, ii. 528-529
Ireland (see also Catholic University and Bishops, Irish), Young
    Ireland movement, i. 320, 361, 362, 367, 381, 382. England’s
    ignorance, of, ii. 119; members of Parliament for, congratulate
    Newman on Cardinalate, 453; his reply to the address, 454-455;
    her wrongs a source of sorrow to Newman, 512-513; character of
    people of, 517; necessity for a University for, 517-518;
    Established Church of, how viewed by the Irish, 518; Newman’s
    view of Home Rule for, 518; never yielded to the English, 527
Irish clergy, Newman’s estimate of, i. 354
Irish University Bill, Gladstone’s, ii. 397, 401
Irons, Dr., ii. 33
Irvine, Canon, ii. 206. See also Letters
Isidore, St., Newman’s sermon at the Church of, in Rome, i.
    154-156, 170, 174
Italy, Union of, i. 193, et seq., 365

JAGER, THE ABBÉ, Newman’s correspondence with, i. 59, 314
Januarius, St., Miracle of the blood of, i. 188, 189
Jebb, Sir Richard, ii. 473
Jenkins, Canon, see Letters
Jenkyns, Dr., of Balliol, i. 46
Jesuits: Newman on the wisdom of their conduct in London, i.
    220; in Rome, 145, 147, 151, 167, 168; Ambrose St. John’s
    admiration for, 153; Newman’s objection to joining, 170;
    Neapolitan Jesuits, Newman on, 188. Newman deprecates the
    tone of the attack on Pusey’s 'Eirenicon' by the English Jesuits
    in the Month, ii. 114, 115; always Newman’s friends, 123, 406,
    409; their proposal to form a Catholic University College, 195,
    197; invite Newman to preach for them, 321; Newman not in
    agreement with, as to the best manner of dealing with some
    theological questions of the day, 398; their favourable reception
    of his 'Letter to the Duke of Norfolk,' 425. Also referred to, i.
    139, 143, 146, 171, 176
John Chrysostom, St., Newman’s paper on, i. 510; also referred
    to, 343. ii. 134, 354, 430
Johnson, Manuel, i. 108, 126, 350, 650
Johnson, Samuel, i. 411. ii. 44
Jones, Fr., see Letters
Joseph II. of Austria, i. 313 n.
Jowett, Benjamin, i. 308, 610
'Justification, Lectures on the Doctrine of,' Newman’s, i. 637.
    ii. 400. Döllinger on Newman's work on, i. 444

KEBLE, John, his influence on Newman, i. 42, 54; his sermon on
    'National Apostacy,' 56; his 'Christian Year,' 57. Consulted by
    Newman in writing 'Apologia,' ii. 22; Newman’s last visit to,
    and description of, in 1865, 92-97; his death, 97; Newman’s
    tribute to his sincerity, 98; his dislike of 'the aristocracy of
    talent,' 333. Also referred to, i. 57, 61, 85, 130, 225, 238, 300,
    312, 620, 622, 623. ii. 29, 72, 73, 77, 81, 90, 314, 318, 384.
    See also Letters
Keble, Mrs., ii. 22, 94, 97
Kelly, Dr., nominated Vice-Rector of Catholic University, i. 446;
    also referred to, 448
Ken, Bishop, i. 129
Keneham, Dr., President of Maynooth, i. 334
Kenmare, Lord (3rd Earl), i. 335; (Lord Castlerosse, afterwards
    4th Earl), 300, 335, 633
Kenrick, Archbishop (of Baltimore), i. 303, 426-427, 428. ii. 404.
    See also Letters
Kettler, Bishop, of Mayence, i. 465
King William Street Lectures, see 'Dimculties of Anglicans'
Kingsley, Rev. Charles, i. 11, 232, 624. His attack on Newman,
    ii. 1, et seq.; Newman writes of him after his death, 45; also
    referred to, 200, 401, 421. See also Letters and 'Apologia'
Kleutgen, Fr., i. 463. ii. 307
Knox, Father Francis, i. 104, 160, 161, 192, 198, 199, 214.
    ii. 199

LACORDAIRE, PČRE, Newman's sympathy with, 19; his attitude
    towards {605} the modern Liberal movement, 306, 459, 464;
    resignation of his seat in French Parliament, 463; also referred
    to, i. 10, 144, 388, 409, 461, 470, 471, 495, 550. ii. 68, 80
Laity, English Catholic, i. 497, 502, et seq., 513,553. ii. 65, 69;
    address of, to Newman in 1867, 143, et seq., 544, 545; also
    referred to, 67
Laity, Irish Catholic, and the new intellectual movement, i. 314;
    how regarded by Irish ecclesiastics, 315; Newman’s desire to
    give them a share in government of University, 362-364, 381.
    ii. 397. Newman on the part played by laymen in Catholic
    Apologetic, i. 315, 397
Lake, Dean, i. 60
Lamennais, M. l’Abbé Felicité de, i. 23, 175, 308, 315, 365, 460,
    et seq., 506, 635
Landor, W. S., ii. 354
'Lead, Kindly Light,' i. 55. ii. 357, 359
Leahy, Dr. Patrick, Archbishop of Cashel, named Vice-Rector of
    Catholic University, i. 322, et seq.; Professor of Holy Scripture,
    359 n.; appointed Archbishop of Cashel, 378; on Newman’s
    resignation of the Irish Rectorship, 445, et seq.; also referred to
    324 n., 338, 370, 372, 379, 380. ii. 408. See also Letters
Leo XII., i. 175, 365, 460, 635
Leo XIII., allowed Catholics to go to Oxford, ii. 71; his election,
    432; and Newman’s Cardinalate, 435, 436; tolerance of, 500;
    character of utterances of, 501; Newman writes to him on his
    Encyclical on the Philosophy of St. Thomas, 501; his jubilee,
    529; protests against the erection of a statue to Giordano Bruno,
    533; referred to, 371 n. See also Letters
'Letter to the Duke of Norfolk,' its spirit and purport, ii. 403-406;
    its reception, 405-406; W. G. Ward and, 406-407; Dr. Neville,
    of Maynooth, and, 407-409; Newman’s letters on, 559-566.
    Quoted, i. 404 n.; referred to, 12. ii. 82, 85-86 n., 107, 232, 308,
    401, 425, 432, 497
'Letter to Dr. Pusey, The,' analysed, ii. 101-109; publication and
    reception, 108-109; reviewed in the Times, 109-112; its
    reception among Catholics, 112-113, 121, 122, 123; conditions
    under which it was written, 125; treats of the doctrine of the
    Immaculate Conception, 376. Quoted, i. 205, 214 n.; referred to,
    204 n., 232. ii. 189 n., 399, 421, 434 n. See also 'Eirenicon'
Letters and extracts from letters:
    I. Letters of Cardinal Newman to
    Acton, Lord, i. 479, 482, 506, 511, 518, 523, 524, 527, 532,
        634, 635, 636, 639
    Alleyne, Rev. A. V., ii. 315
    Arnold, Mr. A., ii. 558, 560
    Arnold, Mr. T., i. 543
    Bathurst, Miss, ii. 326
    Bedford, Mr. H., ii. 512, 564
    Bellasis, Serjeant E., i. 453, 454, 456, 594, 595. ii. 262
    Bittleston, Rev. H., i. 647. ii. 84, 85, 457
    Blachford, Lord (Mr. Frederick Rogers), i. 68, 70, 439. ii. 19,
        23, 74, 75, 90, 374, 381, 382, 383, 384, 388, 389, 390, 402,
        405, 407, 410, 413, 433, 509, 510, 570
    Bloxam, Mr. J. R., ii. 285 n.
    Bowden, Miss Charlotte, ii. 318
    Bowles, Miss E., i. 586, 589, 612. ii. 68, 69, 124, 125, 126,
        127, 128, 446, 477, 478, 519, 524, 554, 555
    Bowles, Mr. Frederick, i. 103, 135
    Bowyer, Sir G., i. 256
    Braye, Lord, ii. 485, 486
    Brown, Bishop, ii. 581
    Brown, Principal, ii. 393, 395
    Brownlow, Bishop, i. 652. ii. 269, 276, 283
    Capes, Mr. F. M., i. 215, 226, 244, 245, 246, 248, 249, 250,
        259, 260, 262, 287, 301 n., 373, 440, 441, 442
    Church, Miss Helen (Mrs. Paget), ii. 318, 319
    Church, Miss Mary, ii. 319
    Church, R. W. (Dean), ii. 19, 21, 24, 74, 75, 119, 120, 333 n.,
        383, 385, 386, 389, 391, 392, 403, 418, 426, 427, 451, 487,
        513, 515, 520, 524, 526, 529
    Coleridge, Rev., S.J., ii. 77, 114, 141, 186, 205, 268, 269, 282,
        294, 314, 347, 577
    Cope, Sir W., ii. 45, 556
    Copeland, Mr. W. J., i. 117, 597, 598, 599, 613. ii. 130
    Cullen, Cardinal, i. 326
    Cullen, Mr. A. H., ii. 416
    Dalgairns, Rev. J. D., i. 107, 109, 110, 124, 125, 126, 143, 148,
        160, {606} 166, 168, 169, 171, 172, 176, 178, 182
    Daunt, Mr. O’Neill, ii. 299, 310
    Deane, Miss E., ii. 527
    Deane, Mrs., ii. 323
    de Lisle, Mr. Ambrose Phillipps, ii. 82, 115, 292, 559
    Denbigh, Earl of, i. 256
    de Vere, Mr. Aubrey, ii. 245, 273
    Drane, Mother Francis Raphael, ii. 344
    Edwards, Mr. G. T., ii. 333, 526, 535
    Estcourt, Canon, ii. 56
    Faber, Rev. Frederick Wilfrid, i. 211, 217, 219, 220, 224, 227,
        228, 229, 231
    Fottrell, Mr., ii. 397
    Fourdrinier, Miss E., ii. 484
    Froude, Miss Isy (Baroness Anatole von Hügel), i. 602, 606,
        608, 609. ii. 317, 562, 563
    Froude, Richard Hurrell, i. 46, 47
    Froude, William, i. 294, 602, 612, 647, 649. ii. 207, 586
    Froude, Mrs. W., i. 86, 115, 116, 239, 242, 312, 336, 622, 646,
        649. ii. 90, 96, 284, 308, 376, 379, 380, 560, 561, 569, 572
    Gabriel, Sister Mary, ii. 325, 388, 414
    Gaisford, Mr., ii. 54, 66
    Gerard, Rev. J., ii. 452
    Giberne, Miss Maria Rosina (afterwards Sister Maria Pia), i.
        112. ii. 53, 281, 308, 341, 412, 414, 415, 430, 468, 483,
        516, 520, 521, 523, 553, 570
    Globe, i. 580
    Gordon, Rev. Philip, i. 204
    Hallahan, Mother Margaret, i. 289, 293. ii. 30
    Harper, Rev. Father, i. 593
    Herbert, Lady, ii. 477
    Hewit, Rev. Mr., ii. 505 n., 535
    Holmes, Miss, i. 428, 601, 603, 605, 606, 607, 608, 610, 612.
        ii. 70, 268, 275, 313, 326, 328, 329, 379, 412, 552
    Hope, Miss, ii. 528
    Hope-Scott, Mr. James Robert, i. 105 n., 278, 284, 287, 451,
        615. ii. 13, 25, 43, 51, 59, 65, 70, 137, 152, 182, 188, 190,
        195, 197, 267, 323, 552
    Hopkins, Rev. Father, ii. 527
    Howard, Cardinal, ii. 448
    Hügel, Baron von, ii. 417, 504 n.
    Hutton, Mr. R. H., ii. 6, 12, 204, 332, 334, 335, 522, 523
    Hyacinthe, Pčre, ii. 375
    Irish Bishops, i. 630, 631, 632, 633
    Jenkins, Canon, ii. 198, 284, 322, 574, 576
    Jesuits, at Farm Street, ii. 321
    Jones, Father, ii. 560
    Keble, Mr. J., i. 590. ii. 22, 92, 93, 94
    Kenrick, Archbishop, i. 303, 427
    Leo XIII., Pope, ii. 501
    Lewis, Mr. David, i. 145, 183
    MacColl, Canon Malcolm, ii. 322, 331
    McHale, Dr., Archbishop of Tuam, i. 360 n.
    McMullen, Canon R., ii. 516, 560
    Manning, Cardinal, i. 319, 363, 374, 525. ii. 88, 97, 447, 448
    Maskell, Mrs., ii. 415, 416
    Meynell, Dr. Charles, ii. 243, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261
    Mills, Rev. Austin, i. 339
    Moriarty, Dr., Bishop of Kerry, i. 378. ii. 289
    Mozley, Mr. J. R., ii. 479, 517, 518, 572
    Mozley, Mrs. John, i. 41, 70, 76
    Mozley, Mrs. Thomas, i. 41, 52
    Munro, Miss, ii. 327
    Neville, Father William, i. 579
    Nevins, Mr. Willis, ii. 556
    Newman, Mrs., i. 32, 33, 44, 45, 50, 51
    Newsham, Dr., i. 316 n.
    Nina, Cardinal, ii. 583
    Noble, Dr., ii. 416
    Norfolk, Duke of, ii. 443
    Northcote, Dr. J. S., i. 121, 302. ii. 311, 569, 574
    O’Hagan, John, ii. 456
    Ornsby, Robert, i. 367, 370, 379, 446, 447, 448, 449, 581, 628.
        ii. 49, 87, 554
    Patterson, James Laird, ii. 134
    Pattison, Mr. Mark, ii. 481, 482, 483
    Penny, Mr. William Goodenough, i. 140
    Percival, Dr., ii. 525
    Perrone, Fr., i. 184 n.
    Pollen, Mr. John, i. 348, 604, 605, 643. ii. 68, 524
    Poole, Sister Imelda, i. 286, 288, 289, 290, 293, 294, 295, 296,
        297, 301. ii. 29, 61, 67, 113, 266, 411, 414
    Pusey, Dr., ii. 100, 101, 102, 113, 217, 220, 223
    Renouf, Mr. Le Page, ii. 236
    Rogers, Sir Frederick, see Blachford, Lord {607}
    Rossi, Rev. C., ii. 585
    Russell, Dr., ii. 42, 86
    Ryder, Mr. George, i. 128
    St. John, Father Ambrose, i. 86, 103, 104, 105, 114, 123, 226,
        131, 202, 220, 317, 336, 337, 341, 360, 370, 372, 374 n.,
        376, 437, 545, 607, 609, 610, 611, 651. ii. 50, 60, 71, 80, 95,
        123, 130, 149, 154, 155, 169, 253, 320, 345, 540
    Sconce, Mrs., ii. 323
    Sheil, Sir Justin, ii. 135
    Simeon, Lady, ii. 192
    Simeon, Sir John, ii. 290, 291
    Simpson, R., i. 487,488, 505, 535, 635
    Smith, Mr. Albert, i. 570, 654
    Spurrier, Rev. A., ii. 526
    Standard, The, ii. 290
    Sullivan, Professor W. K., i. 430, 432
    Talbot, Mgr., ii. 176, 539
    Taylor, Dr., i. 375
    Telford, Rev. J., ii. 78
    Thompson, Mr. Healy, i. 496
    Ullathorne, Dr., Bishop of Birmingham, i. 492, 544, 554. ii.
        184, 287, 426, 439
    Vaughan, Rev. E. T., ii. 346
    Walford, Rev. J., ii. 266, 346, 412, 444, 553
    Walker, Canon, ii. 43, 44, 62, 228, 230, 240, 283
    Wallis, Mr. John, i. 498, 628. ii. 229
    Ward, Mr. F. R., ii. 544
    Ward, Mrs. F. R., i. 644. ii. 283
    Ward, Mr. W. G., i. 134, 283, 295, 490, 491, 515, 537, 547,
        548, 552, 554, 555, 556, 557, 637. ii. 224, 231, 232, 273, 325
    Ward, Mr. Wilfrid, ii. 488, 529
    Wayte, Dr. S. W., ii. 428, 452
    Wetherell, T. F., i. 540. ii. 55
    Whitty, Rev. Robert, ii. 295, 451
    Wilberforce, H., i. 17 n., 80, 82, 92, 93, 111, ,116, 117, 128,
        131 n., 138, 150, 187, 188, 192, 197, 235, 236, 237, 238, 302,
        344, 371, 372, 499, 573, 616, 618, 619, 621, 624. ii. 44, 61,
        104 n., 140, 205, 207, 233, 248, 252, 254, 267, 316, 320, 321,
        339, 340, 341
    Williams, Mr. Isaac, i 650
    Wilson, Mrs., ii. 566
    Wiseman, Cardinal, i. 123 n., 213, 331, 419, 615. ii. 171 n.
    Wood, Mrs., i. 257
    To other friends, i. 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 53, 54,
        55, 75, 201, 208, 209, 222, 223, 229, 233, 327, 346, 347,
        349, 350, 351, 364, 559. ii. 59, 87, 97, 98, 200, 203, 275,
        301, 315, 324, 325, 329, 338, 340, 347, 393 n., 457, 467,
        472 n., 545, 568, 586

    II. Letters to Newman from
    Acton, Sir John, i. 508, 522, 527, 529, 538, 539, 634
    Bittleston, Rev. Henry, ii. 158, 165, 172, 173
    Blachford, Lord, ii. 579, 584
    Bute, Marquess of, ii. 579
    Church, R. W. (Dean), ii. 583
    Clifford, Bishop, ii. 584
    Coleridge, Lord, ii. 579
    de Vere, Mr. Aubrey, ii. 581
    Döllinger, Dr., i. 444, 493
    Errington, Archbishop, ii. 580
    Gillies, Dr., i. 156
    Hedley, Bishop, ii. 580
    Howard, Cardinal, ii. 448
    Kingsley, Rev. Charles, ii. 1
    Leahy, Dr., i. 379 n.
    Manning, Cardinal, i. 319, 332 n., 525. ii. 88, 89, 449, 450, 534
    Nina, Cardinal, ii. 583
    Oakeley, Canon, ii. 578
    Ornsby, Robert, i. 447
    Patterson, James Laird, ii. 133
    Pattison, Mr. Mark, ii. 481
    Portal, Mr. Melville, i. 617
    Ripon, Marquess of, ii. 580
    Rossi, Rev. C., ii. 585
    St. John, Father Ambrose, ii. 160, 163, 166, 175, 178, 546, 548
    Shrewsbury, Earl of, i. 353 n.
    Simpson, Mr. Richard, i. 508, 633
    Stanton, Rev. R., i. 332
    Talbot, Mgr., ii. 177, 539
    Ullathome, Bishop, i. 212, 331, 332 n., 545, 555. ii. 132
    Wallis, Mr. John, i. 633
    Ward, Mr. W. G., i. 420, 489, 547, 556
    Wetherell, Mr. T. F., i. 517
    Wiseman, Cardinal, i. 330

    Other Letters from
    Acton, Sir John, to Richard Simpson, i. 481
    Bellasis, Mr. Edward, to a friend, ii. 350
    Bellasis, Mr. Henry, to his mother, ii. 469
    Bishops, the 'inopportunist,' to Pope Pius IX., ii. 303
    Bowles, Mr. F., to Rev. Ambrose St. John, i. 525
    Dominic, Fr., to the Tablet, i. 94, 95 n., 105 {608}
    Gaisford, Mr., to the Bishop of Southwark, ii. 542
    Holland, Canon, to Mrs. Ady, ii. 369
    Irish Bishops to the Oratorians, i. 629
    Manning, Cardinal, to Mgr. Talbot, ii. 145, 248; to Cardinal
        Nina, ii. 577
    Norfolk, Duke of, to Mr. W. Ward, ii. 436
    O’Ferrall, Mr. More, to a friend, i. 361
    Pollen, Mr., J., to Mr. W. Ward, i. 354
    Pope, Rev. T. A., to a friend, ii. 467; to Rev. Ignatius Ryder,
        ii. 462
    St. John, Rev. A., to Rev. B. Dalgairns, i. 120, 125, 137, 146,
        148, 153, 154, 174, 181, 182
    Sibour, Archbishop, to the Comte de Montalembert, ii. 209
        Smith, Canon Bernard, to Mr. W. Ward, i. 96
    Talbot, Mgr., to Cardinal Manning, ii. 146
    Ullathorne, Bishop, to Cardinal Manning, ii. 440, 442, 446; to
        Cardinal Nina, ii. 582
        Wagner, Rev. Mr. (of Brighton), to a friend, ii. 463
    Wiseman, Cardinal, to Dr. Cullen, i. 328; to Dr. Russell, i. 98,
        99
Lewin, Mr., i. 281, 283
Lewis, David, i. 84, 113, 115, 124, 126. ii. 196. See also Letters
Lewis, Sir G. Cornewall, ii. 43
Liberal Catholicism: dangerous symptoms of, on the Continent,
    i. 306; its different forms, 458, 460; origin and progress of the
    movement, 460, et seq.; Lacordaire’s theory of Ultramontane
    Liberalism, 462; opposition of Pius IX. to, 462; anti-Christian
    trend of, on the Continent, 463, et seq.; Lord Acton’s attitude
    towards, 467-469; W. G. Ward’s opposition to, 469-471;
    Newman’s attitude towards lenders of the movement, 471, 477;
    leaders of the movement in England, 474-476. And the
    Encyclical Quanta Cura, ii. 79; effect of Vatican Council on, 37;
    definition of Infallibility a check to the movement, 419, 420
Liberalism in religious thought, Newman’s war against, i. 4, 8;
    at Oxford, 43, et seq., 312. ii. 486. Catholic Church an antidote
    to, i. 413. Newman’s address on, as Cardinal, ii. 459; views of
    Newman on, 460, 461, 462. Also referred to, i. 571. ii. 209, 214
Liberatore, Fr., S.J., ii. 197
'Library of the Fathers, The,' i. 57
Liddon, H. P. (Canon), his influence withdrawn from Oxford, ii.
    486. See also 384
Lightfoot, J. B. (Bishop of Durham), i. 469
Lilly, Mr. W. S., ii. 487
Lingard, Dr., i. 635
Literature, Newman’s desire to create a Catholic, i. 315; and the
    Church, 410, 411
Littledale, Dr.: Newman protests against 'Plain Reasons,' ii. 487
Littlemore, i. 71, 74, 76, 79, et seq., 85, 115, 116, 121, 137, 150,
    193, 203, 217, 338, 618. ii. 205, 338, 349, 431
'Lives of the Saints,' edited by Father Faber, i. 171, 206, et seq. ii.
    8, et seq., 420
Llandaff, Viscount (Mr. Henry Matthews), i. 280-281
Locke, i. 34, 269
Lockhart, Rev. W.: his hopes for Reunion, ii. 99; his sympathy
    with the 'Eirenicon,' ii. 102
London Oratory: idea suggested, i. 216; a start made in King
    William Street, 217-218; Newman’s attitude towards its
    beginning, 218-220, 221, 227-229, 341; Newman describes its
    opening, 220-221; summary of relations between Birmingham
    and, 223-226; hymns of, 224-225; its great work, 228; Newman
    delivers lectures at (cf. 'Difficulties of Anglicans'), 230; account
    of its separation from Birmingham, 450, et seq. Honours
    Newman as Cardinal, ii. 472; Newman visits, 517. Referred to,
    i. 580
London University, ii. 68, 195
Longman, Messrs., ii. 20, 21, 23, 25
Loreto, i. 192, 193, 197, 198. ii. 342
'Loss and Gain,' i. 117, 191, 260. ii. 328, 336, 559, 591
Louvain University, i. 251, 276, 351, 355, 364, 628-629. ii. 50,
    64, 502
Lucas, Frederick, i. 335, 337, 381, 484, 633
Luther, i. 623, 625
Lyell, Sir C., on Newman, ii. 34 {609}
Lyons, Dr., i. 350, 359, 629
'Lyra Apostolica,' i. 52, 56, 224, 225. ii. 320, 356

MACAULAY, LORD, i. 142
Maccabe, Cardinal (Archbishop of Dublin), i. 324
McCarthy, Mr. Florence Denis, i. 359 n., 379
MacColl, Canon, see Letters
McGettigan, Daniel (Archbishop of Armagh), ii. 464
McHale, John (Archbishop of Tuam), i. 322, 325, 326, 338, 360,
    366, 370, 371, 375, 379 n., 381, 430. ii. 193. See also Letters
McIntosh, Dr. (of Queen’s College, Belfast), i. 308
Macmillan’s Magazine, ii. 1
Macmullen, Canon R. G., i. 108 n. ii. 516. See also Letters
Maguire, Dr., i. 253, 419
Malachi, St., Prophecies of, concerning modern Popes, ii. 371
Mallock, Mr. W. H., ii. 572
Malta, Proposed Oratory at, i. 182; idea abandoned, 184. Oratory
    at, offered to Newman by Pius IX., ii. 218. Also referred to,
    i. 52, 279 n. ii. 119
Manning, Henry Edward (Cardinal Archbishop): his opposition to
    'mixed' education and Oxford scheme, i. 12-13; a representative
    of the 'New Ultramontane' party, 13, 19, 24; his visit to Rome in
    1847, 191, 193; and the Gorham case, 230; received into the
    Catholic Church, 264; invited by Newman to be Vice-Rector of
    the Catholic University, 319; on Newman’s difficulties in Dublin,
    363; consulted by Newman on new English version of the
    Scriptures, 419; leads crusade on behalf of Temporal Power, 521,
    et seq.; suggests that Acton should dissociate himself from the
    Rambler, 523, et seq.; helps to found the Academia, 524, 525;
    and the Rambler, 534, et seq.; transfers the Dublin Review to
    W. G. Ward, 546. Opposed to an Oxford Catholic College and
    Oratory, in 1864, ii. 54, 60, 64-65, 67-68, 73, 79, 542;
    denounces the A.P.U.C., 81-82, 91; made Archbishop, 87;
    desires to obtain a bishopric for Newman, 88-89; Newman
    attends his consecration, 89-90, 161; his reply to Pusey’s
    'Eirenicon,' 110-112; and the Oxford question in 1867, 122-123,
    135, 182, 200-203, 543-544, 547-548; Newman’s opinion of
    Manning’s attitude towards himself, 125; his criticism on the
    address of the English Catholic laity to Newman in 1867,
    144-146; supports Ward’s view of Infallibility, 151; anxious
    for a rapprochement with Newman, 181, 182; and Oratory
    School, 191; and the attempt to start a Catholic University,
    195-199; his vow to promote definition of Papal Infallibility,
    210; issues pastorals in favour of Infallibility which are
    attacked by Dupanloup, 283, 286; a member of the
    Metaphysical Society, 332, 333 n; his 'Cćsarism and
    Ultramontanism,' 401-402; and Newman’s Cardinalate, 435,
    438, 440-443,446, et seq., 582; his arbitration in the dock
    strikes, 533, 534. Also referred to, i. 260, 311, 317, 329, 332 n.,
    357, 373, 386, 494, 537 n., 551, 566, 616, 654. ii. 36, 97, 101,
    102, 108, 109, 121, 124, 127, 128, 152, 155-156, 158, 164, 165,
    170, 176, 179, 487, 517, 555, 560, 561, 574, 575. See also
    Letters
Manzoni, Alessandro, i. 142, 143. ii. 23
Marriott, Charles, i. 94. ii. 377, 513, 571
Marshall, Rev. Henry, i. 108, 182
Marshall, Thomas William, i. 130. ii. 199
Martin, Mr. (correspondent of the Weekly Register), his Roman
    letter to Weekly Register, April 6, 1867, 140; its text, 543, 544;
    also referred to, 151, 175, 187, 188, 192, 547
Martineau, James, ii. 4, 395
Maryvale (Old Oscott), the first house of the Oxford converts, i.
    109, et seq.; its history, 119; Oxford converts’ life at, 120-121,
    122-126; beginnings of the Oratory at, 197, et seq.; Newman
    leaves, 214; also referred to, 105, 150, 154, 157, 166-167, 172,
    177, 190, 192, 202. ii. 451
Maskell, Mrs., ii. 415-416. See also Letters
Maurice, Frederick Denison, i. 312, 421. ii. 4
Maximilian, Emperor of Mexico, ii. 118, 120
Mayence, Theological School of, i. 465, 466 n. {410}
Mayer, Rev. Walter, i. 30. ii. 512
Maynooth, i. 334, 335, 616. ii. 407, 408, 561
Mazio, Padre, i. 147, 168. ii. 270
Mazzini, Giuseppe, i. 193, 195, 470
'Meditations and Devotions,' extracts from Newman’s, ii.
    364-368
Mediterranean, Voyage of Newman in the, i. 51, 52
Melbourne, Lord, i. 312. ii. 53
Mellerio, Count, i. 142, 145
Mendelssohn, ii. 350-351
Mercier, Cardinal, and the scholastic revival, i. 463. Founds the
    Institut de St. Thomas at Louvain University, ii. 502
Metaphysical Society, The, ii. 332, et seq.
Meynell, Dr. Charles, ii. 243. See also Letters
Milan, Newman’s visit to, and inspression of, i. 135-146
Mill, J. S., i. 11, 169 n., 308, 457. ii. 44, 48, 197, 494
Millais, Sir J. E., paints Newman’s picture, ii. 516
Mills, Fr. Austin, i. 339. ii. 41, 458, 540. See also Letters
Milman, Henry Hart (Dean), ii. 44
Milner, John (Vicar Apostolic of Midland District), i. 119, 120.
    ii. 107, 148
Milner, Joseph, his Church History, i. 42
Milton, ii. 44, 319
'Miracles, Essay on,' dedication of, ii. 383; referred to, 396 n.
Miracles, Newman’s philosophy of, ii. 9, 342-343, 494
Möhler, Johann Adam (author of the 'Symbolik'), i. 308, 315,
    461, 465
Monde, The, and the Encyclical Quanta Cura, ii. 80
Monica, St., i. 139
Monk, Maria, i. 273
Monophysites, i. 67, 237, 616
Monothelite heresy, ii. 214
Monsell, The Right Hon. William, see Emly, Lord
Montalembert, Comte de, and Liberal Catholicism, i. 10,
    459-461; Newman’s sympathy with, 19, 315, 388, 471; his
    Ultramontanism, 461; also referred to, i. 397, 465, 474, 495,
    550, 636. ii. 80, 83, 209, 211. See also Letters
Monte Cassino, Newman visits, i. 188
Monteith, Robert, i. 521. ii. 52
Month, The, ii. 99, 114, 115, 205, 347, 425
Moran, Cardinal (sometime Bishop of Ossory), ii. 464 n.
Moriarty, Dr. (Bishop of Kerry), i. 216, 311, 317, 320, 341, 347,
    350, 354, 361 n., 366, 372, 374, 378, 382, 628. ii. 289, 401.
    See also Letters
Morley, Viscount, of Blackburn, i. 2, 405. ii. 402
Morris, Canon John Brande, i. 84, 111, 113, 120, 603
Morris, William, ii. 355
Mostyn, Bishop (Vicar Apostolic of Northern District), i. 111
Moylan, Dean, i. 317
Mozart, ii. 350
Mozley, Miss Ann, i. 29. ii. 513
Mozley, James Bowling, ii. 387, 513, 570, 571
Mozley, Mrs. J. B., ii. 387, 388
Mozley, J. R., ii. 517, 519. See also Letters
Mozley, Mrs. John (Jemima Newman), i. 41, 70, 85, 618. ii. 479.
    See also Letters
Mozley, Thomas, i. 27 n., 50. ii. 303, 513
Mozley, Mrs. Thomas (Harriet Newman), i. 28, 41, 51. ii. 339.
    See also Letters
Müller, Max, i. 539
Munich, i. 192
Munich Brief, The, a censure of Döllinger’s address at the
    Munich Congress, i. 564, et seq.; effect of, on Newman and on
    the intellectual movement among German Catholics, 585. ii. 48.
    Newman’s analysis of, i. 640, et seq.
Munich Congress, The, i. 469, 562, et seq. ii. 372, et seq.
Munich School, The, W. G. Ward’s antipathy to, i. 47; aims of,
    459, et seq.; meets with opposition, 465; its theological
    differences with School of Mayence, 465 n.; the Rambler
    adopts its general policy, 474, 495; its orthodoxy suspected, 564
Munro, Miss, see Letters
Murray, Dr., Archbishop of Dublin, i. 275, 305, 311, et seq.,
    334, 366
Murray, Dr., of Maynooth, ii. 152, 153

NAPLES: Newman’s impressions of, i. 188-190; also referred to,
    52, 279 n., 280, 283
Napoleon I., i. 313, 651
Napoleon III., i. 519. ii. 209, 554 {611}
Nardi, Mgr., ii. 163, 164, 174; his visit to Newman, 188, et seq.
Nation, The (Irish), i. 362
Neve, Mgr. (Rector of English College), ii. 149, 158, 163, 164,
    165, 170, 173, 538
Neville, Dr. (of Maynooth), ii. 407-409
Neville, Fr. William Paine, Newman’s literary executor, i. 1;
    received into the Catholic Church, 264. Constant companion
    of Newman, ii. 432; goes to Rome with Newman, 457. Quoted,
    i. 149, 315, 345, 348, 385, 393, 425, 451. ii. 351-353, 359-364,
    439, 458-462, 468, 470-471, 473, 475-476, 481, 512, 513, 515,
    530, 532, 533, 534, 536, 537. Also referred to, i. 27 n., 29 n.,
    147, 193, 194, 354, 579, 648, 651. ii. 41, 53, 107, 130, 138,
    190, 410, 411, 453, 464 n., 465, 540. See also Letters
Nevins, Willis, see Letters
New Inn Hall (Oxford), i. 646
Newman, Charles, ii. 317, 339
Newman, Francis William, i. 123, 625. ii. 349
Newman, Harriet, see Mrs. Thomas Mozley
Newman, Jemima, see Mrs. John Mozley
Newman, Mr. John, i. 27 n.
Newman, Mrs., see Letters

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Newman Reader — Works of John Henry Newman
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