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Catholic version, ii. 402-403.

Avow that the most profound igno-

rance and vice are more desirable,

in the children of Catholics, than

to receive their education from

Protestants, ii. 403. Publicly

preach against the School in St.

Giles's, ibid. Threaten the pa-

rents to deprive them of their

religious privileges if they suffer

their children to read the Scrip-

tures, ii. 407. Actively oppose

the St. Giles's Free School, ii. 420.

Oppose the National Schools, ii.

430, 431. Do not conceive that

any plan could be adopted in which

they could a
allow the Scriptures to

be taught, ii. 435. Will not allow

laymen to explain the doctrine of

their Catechism, ii. 440. Oppose

all education unless accompanied

by instruction in the tenets of their

own religion, ii. 437, 444. Deny that

the teaching to read the Prótestant

Scriptures will better the condition

of the poor, ii. 446.

Object to

all religious or moral instruction

given by Protestants, ii. 447. Sin-

gular conduct of, respecting the

British Union School, ii. 454.

Refuse absolution to such parents

as send their children to the St.

Giles's School, ii. 460.

Roman Catholic emissaries plot against

Queen Elizabeth, i. 151, 156.

Priests, their influence

much extended by auricular con-

fession, i. 36. Of Ireland, accused

of venality and immorality by the

author of the "Brief Account," i.

122. Singular method of vindi-

cating them by Mr. Dallas, ibid.

Their sedition and rebellion, i. 123.

Their bigotry and intolerance. i.

133.
Their immorality, i. 144.

And Jesuits league to establish Po-

pery in England, i. 102.

Princes protect the

Jesuits for their zeal against the

Protestants, i. 379.

Religion, its abuses

destructive of all religion, i. 59.
Its abuses encourage infidelity, ibid.

Roman Catholics, their persecutions

contrary to true Christianity, i. 58.

Make common cause with the Je-

suits, i. 9, 38, 237. ii. 395, 448.

Important facts relative to, i. 120*.

Their discontent increases with

their power, ibid. Hatred to Pro-

testants their reigning principle, i.

in, after the express prohibition of the King, ii. 150. Sardinia, King of, interdicts the Jesuits from teaching in his dominions, ii. 150.

Science and Literature discountenanced and opposed by the Jesuits, ii. 155.

Scotland, association of the Reformers in, to resist the tyranny and cruelty of Queen Mary, 165. Scots, Mary Queen of, the instrument of the Catholics against Queen Elizabeth, i. 152. Scroggs, Sir William, his charge to the Jury on the Popish Plots, extract from, by Hume, i. 115. Charge to the Jury, different account of, by Rapin, ibid. Accused of partiality by Mr. Dallas, ibid. Impartiality of, in Wakeman's trial, ibid. Thanked by the Portuguese ambassador for the acquittal of Wakeman, ibid. Scullabogue, massacre at, in 1798, i.

123. Activity of the Catholic Priests in it, i. 124.

Secreta Monita, Mr. Dallas's account of, answered, i. 326. Published

in many places, i. 327. Confirmed, ii 61.

Sectaries of England, and emissaries of

Rome, essentially different, i. 182. Sedition of Jesuits, i. 302. Seduction, female, by a Jesuit, defend

ed by the Society, case of, ii. 145. Seguier, M. Memorial of, referred to, i. 383*.

Serapa, the Jesuit, horrible doctrines

of, practised by the Jesuits, ii. 159. Serry, M. extract from his work, ii.

103. Anecdotes of, ii. 153. Singular assertion of, i. 315. Servien, M. de, serious charges of, against the Jesuits, ii. 75. Seville, the city of, defrauded by the Jesuits, i. 300.

Shadwell and its environs, number of uneducated Catholic poor in, ii. 412. State of the children, ii. 413. Wish of their parents to have them educated, ibid. Sharpe, Granville, and Protestant Society, collect proofs of Popish bigotry, i. 133.

Sicilian Vespers, History of the, referred to, i. 310.

Sligo, County of, affidavit from the, i. 354*.

Sotelus, letter of, to Pope Urban VIII. quoted, i. 314*.

South America, conduct of the Jesuits in, i. 41.

Sovereigns alarmed at the secrecy ob

served by the Jesuits, ii. 182. Spain, King of, refuses the Jesuits permission to found a College at Maracaibo, in Mexico, ii. 156. Complains to the Pope against the Jesuits, ii. 303.

Stafford, Lord, declared an innocent victim by Mr. Dallas, i. 108. Evidence against, adduced by Burnet and others, ibid.

Standish, an English Jesuit, sent to Rome as deputy of the English Church, ii. 29.

State Trials, the credibility of, attack. ed by Mr. Dallas, i. 114. St. Bartholomew, massacre of, i. 309. ii. 2.

of

St. Giles's Free School, publicly preached against by the Catholic Clergy, and attacked by the Catho lics, who break the windows, &c. ii. 403. Number of children educated there, ii. 405-408, 419. The nature of the establishment, ii. 406. Admits the children poor Irish parents of all denominations, ibid. Does not interfere with religious opinions, ii. 407. Meets with great opposition from the Catholic Clergy, ii. 406-407. Declaration of the School Committee of St. Patrick's, against, ii. 408*. Beneficial results from it, ii. 409. Its moral effects have been very beneficial both on the children and their parents, ii. 419. Difficulty in extending its benefit, owing to the opposition of the Catholic Priests, ibid. No attempts made there to proselyte the children to the Protestant faith, ii. 420.

poor, Irish, number of, uneducated, ii. 404-411.419. Their general wish to have their children educated, ii. 404. Ignorance and depravity of the parents and children, ibid. Their profanation of the Sabbath, ii. 405. Difference between the morals of the English and Irish in that neighbourhood, ibid. Their distressed state a hinderance to their education, ii. 420. The moral and intellectual condition of the poor much bettered by education, ii. 421. Their miserable habitations described, ibid. Their gratitude towards their benefactors. ii. 423. Their capa

city for learning fully equal to that of the English or Scotch, ii. 423. St. Patrick's Charity School, how supported, ii. 410. Admits none but the children of Catholics, ibid. Such an exclusion inconsistent with the fundamental rules of the institution, ibid.* Number educated, ii. 411. Expences of the Establishment, ibid.

Society, extract from the resolutions of, ii. 410*. St. Paul, observations on, i. 309. St. Pol de Leon, Bishop of, his letter on the Concordat, i. 16.

St. Pons, Bishop of, accuses the Jesuits of tergiversation, ii. 361. Stonyhurst College, chiefly belongs to Jesuits, i. 25*. Closely connected with that of Castle-Browne in Ireland, ibid. An account of, i. 333, 335

Sully, Duc de, his conduct towards

the Jesuits, i. 80-81. Unfairly quoted by Mr. Dallas, i. 81. Defended, i. 83. Extract from his Memoirs, i. 81, 82, 116. On the Catholics in England, i. 153. His opinion of the Jesuits, i. 258. His advice to Henry IV. ii. 39. Summarium of the Jesuits does not state their secret privileges, ii. 351. Summary of the History of the Jesuits defended, i. 39, 42.

Sunday School Union, its objects, ii. 414.

Schools, statistical account of the numbers educated in the, in the metropolis, ii. 415. Number of teachers in the, ibid. Their beneficial effects in Wales, ii. 416. Superstition and infidelity, their close alliance, i. 56.

T.

Tachard, the Jesuit, anecdote of, i. 299. Owed the East India Company of France 450,000 livres, ii. 375.

Tamburini, General of the Jesuits, his reply to the Pope, ii. 151. Duplicity of his conduct, ii. 151, 306. Deceives the Pope, ii. 358. Temple, Sir John, confirms Prynne's testimony, i. 90. His account of the massacre of the Irish Protestants, in 1641, i. 117. Tesmond, the Jesuit, in the plot of 5th of November, i. 37. Theology, false, taught by the Jesuits

at Douay, ii. 149. Faculty of denounces the Jesuits as dangerous, i. 384.

Thomas, St. disgraceful exhibition of, by the Jesuits, ii. 314.

Thoulouse, declaration of the Parlia ment of, against the Jesuits, i. 48. Tolendal, Lally, speech of, quoted and refuted, i. 49.

Toleration of Catholics, i. 43. Of the French Government, censured by Pope Pius VII. i. 17.

Tongue's dying statement, i. 112. Torregiani, Cardinal, bribed by the Jesuits, i. 288.

Tournon, charge of Cardinal de,
against the Jesuits, i. 315.
Treasonable doctrines of Becan the
Jesuit, ii. 48.

Tridentine Fathers, opinion of, i. 360.
Tumult the true element of the Jesuits,
i. 311*.
Turberville's dying statement, in proof
of Popish Plot, i. 109.
Typographical accusations, i. 69.
Tyrrius, a Jesuit, sent by Pope Sixtus
V. into France to foment the
League, i. 79.

U.

Unigenitus, Bull, extract from the, i 356. ii. 462.

Universities, list of those which have

opposed the Jesuits, i. 78. Extracts from the remonstrances of various ones against the Jesuits, i. 66.

and Ecclesiastics unite in their complaints against the Je suits, ii. 361.

Urban, Pope, Bull of, referred to, ir. 166.

Usurious conduct of the Jesuits in China, ii. 376.

Utrecht, Archbishop of, extracts from his letter to the Pope, ii. 90.

V.

Valence, University of, its charge against the Jesuits, ii. 67. Vallory, M. de, important anecdote related by, ii. 190.

Varade, the Jesuit, preaches regicide, ii. 13. Calls the resolution to murder Henry IV. a holy one, ii. 15. Venetians, the, accuse the Jesuits to the Pope, ii. 32. Banish the Je

suits perpetually, ii. 33. Venice, affairs of the Jesuits at, ii. 32. Victor Amadeus, King of Sardinia,

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Works quoted or referred to.

116. Brief of the Bishop of
Chalons, ii. 167. Butler's Ac
count of the Formularies, ii. 448.
Catéchisme des Jesuites, ii. 243,

371. Comptes Rendus, i. 54.

Constitutiones cum Examine et

Declarationibus, ii. 192 et seq.

Continuation of Fleury, i. 377.

Council of Trent, Resolutions

of, i. 19.

Dangéreuses Propositions de la

Morale, &c. i. 237. Decima

Cleri Secularis in Regno Polonia

defensa contra Exceptiones Pa-

trum Societatis, ii. 59. Decres

of the Parliament of Rouen in

1631, ii. 71. Decreta Congre-

gationis, ii. 355. Défenses de

l'Université de Paris, 1632, ií.

71. Dictionnaire Historique, į.

28, 348. Discours de l'Assem-

blée de la Faculté de Théologie,

i. 239. Dissertation Historique

et Politique sur l'Education de

la Jeunesse, i. 76. Du Pape ch

des Jesuites, i. 263.

Edict of the Spanish Inquisition,

1815, i. 21. Encyclopædia Bri-

tannica, i. 40. Essai Historique

sur la Puissance des Papes, i. 20.

Extrait des Procès criminels de,

Biron et de Bouillon fait au

Parlement, ii. 38.

Factum pour les Cutés de Rouen,

ii. 169. Foxes and Firebrands,

ii. 163.

Histoire des Religieux de la Com-

pagnie de Jesus, i. 379. ii. 14.

Histoire du Maréchal de Mati-.

gnon, ii. 14. Histoire du Peuple

de Dieu, i. 243. Histoire Mé-

morable du Procédé qu'ont tenu

les Jesuites, &c. i. 307. His

torical Memoirs of the Low

Countries, ii. 150. History of

Alphonso de Vargas, ii. 7.

tory of the Council of Trent, i.

98. History of Paris, i. 385.

Jesuites criminels de Léze Majesté,

ii. 5. Jesuites Marchands, ii.

98. Jesuites, les, tels qu'ils ont

été, &c. i. 21, 263-293. Jour.

nal de l'Abbé d'Orsanne, ii.

174.

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