THE ECLECTIC REVIEW. MDCCCXXXIII. JANUARY-JUNE. THIRD SERIES. VOL. IX. Φιλοσοφίαν δὲ οὐ τὴν Στωικὴν λέγω, οὐδὲ τὴν Πλατωνικὴν, ἢ τὴν Ἐπισ CLEM. ALEX. Strom. L. 1. LONDON: JACKSON AND WALFORD, 18, ST. PAUL'S CHURCH-YARD. 1833. Cobbin's Moral Fables and Parables Colton's Manual for Emigrants Conder's Wages or the Whip, an Essay on the Comparative Cost and Productive- Correspondence Cropper's Vindication of a Loan of Fifteen Millions to the West India Planters Curtis's Existing Monopoly, an inadequate Protection of the Authorized Version Heath's Book of Beauty for 1833 88 Hinton's Harmony of Religious Truth and Human Reason asserted 413 Hints on the necessity of a change of principle in our Legislation, for the efficient Lewis's Remarks on the Use and Abuse of some Political Terms 473 Oxford Bibles. Mr. Curtis's Misrepresentations Exposed, by Dr. Cardwell Pecchio's Semi-serious Observations of an Italian Exile during his residence in Quarterly Review, No. XCV. Article on Robert Hall's Works No. XCVII. Article on the French Revolution Report from Select Committee on King's Printers' Patents Statistical Sketches of Upper Canada, for the Use of Emigrants Stickney's Pictures of Private Life Stuart's Three Years in North America THE ECLECTIC REVIEW, FOR JANUARY, 1833. Art. I. 1. Harmonia Evangelica, sive Quatuor Evangelia Græce pro Temporis et Rerum Serie in Partes Quinque Distributa. Edidit Edvardus Greswell, A.M. Coll. C. C. Apud Oxon. Socius. 8vo. pp. 418. Oxon. 1830. 2. Dissertations upon the Principles and Arrangement of a Harmony of the Gospels. By the Rev. Edward Greswell, M.A., Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford. In three Volumes. pp. xxx., 598; x. 574; vi. 354. Oxford, 1830. WE E are not entirely responsible for the delay in noticing this erudite and valuable performance, which, though it has for so long a time passed the press, will probably be new to the greater part of our readers. The volumes issue from the University press; much to the honour of the learned Delegates, to whose readiness in undertaking the publication the Author acknowledges his obligations. But, notwithstanding the high auspices under which they appear, we cannot learn that they have hitherto obtained the share of attention from the public, to which they are intrinsically entitled; owing, perhaps, to their not having been made known by the usual expedients adopted by London publishers. The "Harmonia Evangelica" and the three volumes of Preliminary Dissertations, compose one connected work. In the former, the evangelical history is distributed into five parts, comprising as many chronological divisions: these are subdivided into sections, the text of the Evangelists being arranged in two or more parallel columns. The Dissertations are fifty in number, to which are added some supplementary disquisitions and notes, in eight appendices. Of the object and purpose of these dissertations, which form a connected series, we shall first give an account, taken from the Author's own synopsis. The first volume comprises thirteen principal Dissertations. VOL. IX.-N.S. B |