Testament, Old, prophecies of, 139, 530-2; lives lost in battle, No. ii., iv., Testimonies to the cause of peace, No. i.; against
Theologians on war, No. iii.
Thiers on the cost of sup-
Thirty years' war, its effects,
Tilly, on capturing Magde-
burg, Trafalgar, sufferings after
Trial by battle like war, 549-52; when abolished in France, 551; when in England,
Wales, South, convicts in, 575 War, arguments for, 257-63, 294-6, 223-4, 526–30, 335– 6; four aspects, 49; its abo- lition, 37-48, 209-12, 302- 4,320, 434; how to be abol- ished, No. ii., 46–8, 155–6; its former atrocities, 42; its causes, 56, 501-8, 129, 243, 318-20; slight, 507-8; du- ty of Christians respecting, No. iii.; its cost, No. ii, 117-24, 561-5, 415, 440-2, 469-70, 493; its cost to the U. S., No. ii., 119–20, 563- 4; comparative in different countries, 563; debts, 122, 193-6; incidental waste of property, 113-7; what might be done with the mo- ney it wastes, 123-4, 470;
and the decalogue, No. iv. ; and the gospel, ib.; declara- tion of, an awful act, 271; its delusions and suicidal results, 473; as defined by Lieber, Vattel, &c., 549; as described by Homer, 549; by Shakspeare, ib.; influ- ence on domestic happiness, 457-68; its effect in driv- ing Christianity out of the East, 491; the nurse of du- elling, 384; adverse to free- dom, 406-8; with England in 1812, a failure, 400; feu- dal, how abolished, 43; does not forgive, 49; glimpse of, by Dr. Channing, 313-24; its general evils and horrors, No. ii., iv., 65–76, 77-80, 151-4, 81-92, 113-24, 157-60, 161-72, 177-80, 197-200, 313-17, 325-32, 439-44,
305-12, 393-6, 449-68, 469–72, 488-98, 509-16; and the hearth, 457-68; its moral chief evils, 157–60, 509–16; on whom its evils fall, No. ii.; insensibility to its evils explained, 269-76; incon- sistent with nature, 77; with Christianity, No. iii., iv., 49, 77-80, 129-36, 137-48, 257- 62, 278-80, 434-9, 470-72, 517-40; its inefficacy. 397- 408, 550-2; the infidel's view of it as inconsistent with Christianity, 358; de- structive to minds, 582; in- fluences which still counte- nance it, 554-76; its influ- ence on literature, science, education, 580-3; influence on morals, 375; on piety, 576; on the Sabbath, 380; influence, its hardening
86-90 ; its laws, what, 231, 485; loss of life in, No. iv., 161-72; total loss of life
by, according to Dick, 172, according to Burke, ib.; its licentiousness, No. iv., 161, 382-3, 369-72; case at Al- bany, 371; at N. Y., 372; in its meliorations, Eng., 451; 42; its effects on mind, 578; obstructive to, missions, 386-8, 489-500; its moral character, 173-6, 179-80; not necessary, 39; its sup- posed necessity, 554; neu- tralizes means of grace,454; case, 455; occasions of, 243, 318-20, 501-8; offensive and defensive not distin- guished in the N.Testament, 536-7; prayers, 357, 556; punishments in, 65–76, No. ii. as a judicial redress, 485-8; only remedy for, 289-92; revivals, an obsta- cle to, 385; violates the Sab- bath, No. iv., 380; a school of profaneness, 383; sketch of, No. ii.; slavery, 132, 378, 576; solemn review of, 293- 304; sources or springs of, 318-20; substitutes for, No. i., 213-28; souls destroyed by, 449-56; spirit in con- trast with the Christian spi- rit, 453; its spirit, 586; suf- ferings of soldiers in, No. ii., and temperance, 379; a trial by battle, 549-52; unchristian, 257-68; of the Jews, 172; of the reforma- tion, ib.; of the Grecians, ib.; of the middle ages, ib.; of the twelve Cæsars, ib.; of the Romans, ib.; of the Sar- acens, ib.; of the Turks, ib.; of the Tartars, ib. Warriors, their testimonies against war, No. iii.; how enlisted, 457; how treat- ed, 65-76; engross politi- cal power, 580; wounded, 85, 394 their fate,
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