History of Civilization in England, Vol. 3 of 3
ii. 277, 278
Caithness seized by the Norwegians, iii. 11
Calderon, his fanaticism for the Inquisition, ii. 481
Californian flora, the Oregon or Columbia river the boundary of the, i. 97 _note_
Calonne, M., his attack on the church property, ii. 333
Calvin, John, his doctrine of predestination, i. 13
Calvinism, its feud with Arminianism, ii. 338. Calvinism always democratic, 339. This doctrine one for the poor, 340. Animosity of the Church of Rome against it, 341. Reasons why it is the doctrine of the poor, 341, 342. More favourable to the sciences than to the arts, 342. Reasons why the professors of this religion are likely to acquire habits of independent thinking, 342, 343. The doctrine of necessity, 343. Alliance of Jansenism with Calvinism, 343
Campbell, Lord, character of his 'Lives of the Chancellors,' i. 441 _note_
Camus, his Jansenism, ii. 345
Cannibalism in Scotland, iii. 17
Canons, invention of, i. 206 _note_
Capital, Adam Smith's views as to, iii. 327
Carbon, in food, i. 55 _et seq._
Carolan, the last Irish bard, i. 292 _note_
Carra, his familiarity with the English language and literature, ii. 224
Carrillo, Martin, Spanish jurisconsult and historian, ii. 480
Cartaud, suppression of his 'Essay on Taste,' ii. 237
Cartwright, Dr., the nonjuring bishop, i. 412 _note_
Cashmere, rent paid by the cultivator to the sovereign in, i. 76 _note_
Casualties, diminution of, one cause of the increased duration of life,