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Gladstone, W. E., his book The State in its Relations with the Church, reviewed, ii. 600-669. Quality of his mind, 603. His grounds for the defence of the church, 605. His doctrine that the duties of government are paternal, 609. Specimen of his arguments, 610-613. His argument that the profession of a national religion is imperative, 611, 613, 617. The consequence of his reasoning, 620-628. Shrinks from the suggestion of persecution, 624. Fails to meet the consequences of his theory, 635. Considers difference of opinion unnatural, 641. Claims that the succession of the Anglican church was not broken in the Reformation, 645. Believes in unity in doctrine, 296. Gleig, Rev. G. R., his Life of Warren Hastings reviewed, iii. 114. Glover's Leonidas, compared with Fenelon's Telemachus, ii. 116. Godfrey, Sir E., ii. 323. Godolphin, Lord, becomes a Whig, ii. 176. Comes into power with Anne, iii. 423. Induces Addison to commemorate Blenheim, 426. Dismissed, 449. Goezman, bribed by Beaumarchais, ii. 440, 441. Goldsmith, Oliver, character, i. 713. Pleasantry about Johnson, 740. Goordas, Nuncomar's son, iii. 134. Goree, conquest of, ii. 216. Gorhambury, Bacon's country residence, ii. 421, 442. Government, must be adapted to its body politic, i. 62. Aims of, according to James Mill, 386. His reasoning against aristocratic and monarchical, 387, 388. Combinations of the simple forms of, considered, 395. Folly of Mill's conclusion, 398. Representative, 403. Its weak points, 404. Correctives for the evil tendencies of representative, 410. Influence of the middle class on, 415. Theory of, deduced from principles of human nature in only one way, 419. Must be founded on experience, 421. Absurdity of utilitarian principle of, 468. Sensible view of monarchic, 472. Of constitutional, 475. Religion as the basis of, according to Southey, 520. Grafton, Duke of, First Lord of the Treasury in Chatham's last ministry, iii. 669. Condition of that ministry after Chatham's retirement, 678. Granby, Marquis of, his character, ii. 728. Grand Alliance against the Bourbons, ii. 152. Grand Remonstrance, Debate on, ii. 43. "Great Commoner," the designation of the elder Pitt, ii. 281. Greatest Happiness Principle, i. 418. Its us
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