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          THE GODS.
           
            (1872.)  An Honest God is the Noblest Work of Man—Resemblance
            of Gods to  their Creators—Manufacture and Characteristics
            of Deities—Their  Amours—Deficient in many
            Departments of Knowledge—Pleased with the  Butchery of
            Unbelievers—A Plentiful Supply—Visitations—One
            God's  Laws of War—The Book called the Bible—Heresy
            of Universalism—Faith  an unhappy mixture of Insanity and
            Ignorance—Fallen Gods, or  Devils—Directions
            concerning Human Slavery—The first Appearance of  the
            Devil—The Tree of Knowledge—Give me the Storm and
            Tempest of  Thought—Gods and Devils Natural Productions—Personal
            Appearance  of Deities—All Man's Ideas suggested by his
            Surroundings—Phenomena  Supposed to be Produced by
            Intelligent Powers—Insanity and Disease  attributed to
            Evil Spirits—Origin of the Priesthood—Temptation of 
            Christ—Innate Ideas—Divine Interference—Special
            Providence—The  Crane and the Fish—Cancer as a proof
            of Design—Matter and  Force—Miracle—Passing
            the Hat for just one Fact—Sir William Hamilton  on Cause
            and Effect—The Phenomena of Mind—Necessity and Free Will—The 
            Dark Ages—The Originality of Repetition—Of what Use have
            the Gods been  to Man?—Paley and Design—Make Good
            Health Contagious—Periodicity of  the Universe and the
            Commencement of Intellectual Freedom—Lesson of  the
            ineffectual attempt to rescue the Tomb of Christ from the 
            Mohammedans—The Cemetery of the Gods—Taking away
            Crutches—Imperial  Reason 
           
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          HUMBOLDT.
           
            (1869.)  The Universe is Governed by Law—The Self-made Man—Poverty
            generally  an Advantage—Humboldt's Birth-place—His
            desire for Travel—On what  Humboldt's Fame depends—His
            Companions and Friends—Investigations  in the New World—A
            Picture—Subjects of his Addresses—Victory of the 
            Church over Philosophy—Influence of the discovery that the
            World is  governed by Law—On the term Law—Copernicus—Astronomy—Aryabhatta— 
            Descartes—Condition of the World and Man when the morning of
            Science  Dawned—Reasons for Honoring Humboldt—The
            World his Monument 
           
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          THOMAS PAINE.
           
            (1870.)  With his Name left out the History of Liberty cannot be
            Written—Paine's  Origin and Condition—His arrival in
            America with a Letter of  Introduction by Franklin—Condition
            of the Colonies—"Common Sense"—A  new Nation Born—Paine
            the Best of Political Writers—The "Crisis"—War  not
            to the Interest of a trading Nation—Paine's Standing at the
            Close  of the Revolution—Close of the Eighteenth Century
            in France-The  "Rights of Man"—Paine Prosecuted in England—"The
            World is my  Country"—Elected to the French Assembly—Votes
            against the Death of  the King—Imprisoned—A look
            behind the Altar—The "Age of Reason"—His  Argument
            against the Bible as a Revelation—Christianity of Paine's 
            Day—A Blasphemy Law in Force in Maryland—The Scotch
            "Kirk"—Hanging  of Thomas Aikenhead for Denying the
            Inspiration of the  Scriptures—"Cathedrals and Domes, and
            Chimes and Chants"—Science—"He  Died in the Land his
            Genius Defended," 
           
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          INDIVIDUALITY.
           
            (1873.)  "His Soul was like a Star and Dwelt Apart"—Disobedience
            one of the  Conditions of Progress.—Magellan—The
            Monarch and the Hermit-Why  the Church hates a Thinker—The
            Argument from Grandeur and  Prosperity-Travelers and
            Guide-boards—A Degrading Saying—Theological 
            Education—Scotts, Henrys and McKnights—The Church the
            Great  Robber—Corrupting the Reason of Children—Monotony
            of Acquiescence: For  God's sake, say No—Protestant
            Intolerance: Luther and Calvin—Assertion  of Individual
            Independence a Step toward Infidelity—Salute to  Jupiter—The
            Atheistic Bug-Little Religious Liberty in America—God in 
            the Constitution, Man Out—Decision of the Supreme Court of
            Illinois  that an Unbeliever could not testify in any Court—Dissimulation—Nobody 
            in this Bed—The Dignity of a Unit 
           
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          HERETICS AND HERESIES.
           
            (1874.)  Liberty, a Word without which all other Words are Vain—The
            Church, the  Bible, and Persecution—Over the wild Waves of
            War rose and fell  the Banner of Jesus Christ—Highest Type
            of the Orthodox  Christian—Heretics' Tongues and why they
            should be Removed before  Burning—The Inquisition
            Established—Forms of Torture—Act of Henry  VIII for
            abolishing Diversity of Opinion—What a Good Christian was 
            Obliged to Believe—The Church has Carried the Black Flag—For
            what Men  and Women have been Burned—John Calvin's Advent
            into the  World—His Infamous Acts—Michael Servetus—Castalio—Spread
            of  Presbyterianism—Indictment of a Presbyterian Minister
            in Illinois for  Heresy—Specifications—The Real
            Bible 
           
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          THE GHOSTS.
           
            (1877.)  Dedication to Ebon C. Ingersoll—Preface—Mendacity
            of the Religious  Press—"Materialism"—Ways of
            Pleasing the Ghosts—The Idea of  Immortality not Born of
            any Book—Witchcraft and Demon-ology—Witch  Trial
            before Sir Matthew Hale—John Wesley a Firm Believer in 
            Ghosts—"Witch-spots"—Lycanthropy—Animals Tried and
            Convicted—The  Governor of Minnesota and the Grasshoppers—A
            Papal Bull against  Witchcraft—Victims of the Delusion—Sir
            William Blackstone's  Affirmation—Trials in Belgium—Incubi
            and Succubi—A Bishop  Personated by the Devil—The
            Doctrine that Diseases are caused by  Ghosts—Treatment—Timothy
            Dwight against Vaccination—Ghosts as  Historians—The
            Language of Eden—Leibnitz, Founder of the Science  of
            Language—Cosmas on Astronomy—Vagaries of Kepler and
            Tycho  Brahe—Discovery of Printing, Powder, and America—Thanks
            to the  Inventors—The Catholic Murderer and the Meat—Let
            the Ghosts Go 
           
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          THE LIBERTY OF MAN, WOMAN, AND CHILD.
           
            (1877.)  Liberty sustains the same Relation to Mind that Space
            does to  Matter—The History of Man a History of Slavery—The
            Infidel Our  Fathers in the good old Time—The iron
            Arguments that Christians  Used—Instruments of Torture—A
            Vision of the Inquisition—Models of  Man's Inventions—Weapons,
            Armor, Musical Instruments, Paintings,  Books, Skulls—The
            Gentleman in the Dug-out—Homage to Genius and  Intellect—Abraham
            Lincoln—What I mean by Liberty—The Man who cannot 
            afford to Speak his Thought is a Certificate of the Meanness of the 
            Community in which he Resides—Liberty of Woman—Marriage
            and the  Family—Ornaments the Souvenirs of Bondage-The
            Story of the Garden of  Eden—Adami and Heva—Equality
            of the Sexes-The word "Boss"—The Cross  Man-The Stingy Man—Wives
            who are Beggars—How to Spend Money—By  the Tomb of
            the Old Napoleon—The Woman you Love will never Grow  Old—Liberty
            of Children—When your Child tells a Lie—Disowning 
            Children—Beating your own Flesh and Blood—Make Home
            Pleasant—Sunday  when I was a Boy—The Laugh of a
            Child—The doctrine of Eternal  Punishment—Jonathan
            Edwards on the Happiness of Believing Husbands  whose Wives are
            in Hell—The Liberty of Eating and Sleeping—Water in 
            Fever—Soil and Climate necessary to the production of Genius—Against 
            Annexing Santo Domingo—Descent of Man—Conclusion 
           
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          ABOUT FARMING IN ILLINOIS.
           
            (1877.)  To Plow is to Pray; to Plant is to Prophesy, and the
            Harvest Answers and  Fulfills—The Old Way of Farming—Cooking
            an Unknown Art-Houses, Fuel,  and Crops—The Farmer's Boy—What
            a Farmer should Sell—Beautifying  the Home—Advantages
            of Illinois as a Farming State—Advantages of the  Farmer
            over the Mechanic—Farm Life too Lonely-On Early Rising—Sleep 
            the Best Doctor—Fashion—Patriotism and Boarding Houses—The
            Farmer and  the Railroads—Money and Confidence—Demonetization
            of Silver-Area of  Illinois—Mortgages and Interest—Kindness
            to Wives and Children—How  a Beefsteak should be Cooked—Decorations
            and Comfort—Let the Children  Sleep—Old Age 
           
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          WHAT MUST WE DO TO BE SAVED?
           
            (1880.)  Preface—The Synoptic Gospels—Only Mark Knew
            of the Necessity of  Belief—Three Christs Described—The
            Jewish Gentleman and the Piece of  Bacon—Who Wrote the New
            Testament?—Why Christ and the Apostles wrote  Nothing—Infinite
            Respect for the Man Christ—Different Feeling for  the
            Theological Christ—Saved from What?—Chapter on the
            Gospel of  Matthew—What this Gospel says we must do to be
            Saved—Jesus and the  Children—John Calvin and
            Jonathan Edwards conceived of as Dimpled  Darlings—Christ
            and the Man who inquired what Good Thing he should  do that he
            might have Eternal Life—Nothing said about Belief—An 
            Interpolation—Chapter on the Gospel of Mark—The Believe
            or be Damned  Passage, and why it was written—The last
            Conversation of Christ with  his Disciples—The Signs that
            Follow them that Believe—Chapter on  the Gospel of Luke—Substantial
            Agreement with Matthew and Mark—How  Zaccheus achieved
            Salvation—The two Thieves on the Cross—Chapter  on
            the Gospel of John—The Doctrine of Regeneration, or the New 
            Birth—Shall we Love our Enemies while God Damns His?—Chapter
            on the  Catholics—Communication with Heaven through
            Decayed Saints—Nuns and  Nunneries—Penitentiaries of
            God should be Investigated—The  Athanasian Creed expounded—The
            Trinity and its Members—Chapter on the  Episcopalians—Origin
            of the Episcopal Church—Apostolic Succession  an Imported
            Article—Episcopal Creed like the Catholic, with a  few
            Additional Absurdities—Chapter on the Methodists—Wesley
            and  Whitfield—Their Quarrel about Predestination—Much
            Preaching for Little  Money—Adapted to New Countries—Chapter
            on the Presbyterians—John  Calvin, Murderer—Meeting
            between Calvin and Knox—The Infamy of  Calvinism—Division
            in the Church—The Young Presbyterian's Resignation  to the
            Fate of his Mother—A Frightful, Hideous, and Hellish 
            Creed—Chapter on the Evangelical Alliance—Jeremy
            Taylor's Opinion of  Baptists—Orthodoxy not Dead—Creed
            of the Alliance—Total Depravity,  Eternal Damnation—What
            do You Propose?—The Gospel of Good-fellowship, 
            Cheerfulness, Health, Good Living, Justice—No Forgiveness—God's 
            Forgiveness Does not Pay my Debt to Smith—Gospel of Liberty,
            of  Intelligence, of Humanity—One World at a Time—"Upon
            that Rock I  Stand" 
           
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          SHAKESPEARE
           
              (1891.)  I. The Greatest Genius of our World—Not of
            Supernatural Origin or  of Royal Blood—Illiteracy of his
            Parents—Education—His Father—His  Mother a
            Great Woman—Stratford Unconscious of the Immortal  Child—Social
            Position of Shakespeare—Of his Personal  Peculiarities—Birth,
            Marriage, and Death—What we Know of Him—No Line 
            written by him to be Found—The Absurd Epitaph—II.
            Contemporaries  by whom he was Mentioned—III. No direct
            Mention of any of his  Contemporaries in the Plays—Events
            and Personages of his Time—IV.  Position of the Actor in
            Shakespeare's Time—Fortunately he was Not  Educated at
            Oxford—An Idealist—His Indifference to Stage-carpentry 
            and Plot—He belonged to All Lands—Knew the Brain and
            Heart of Man—An  Intellectual Spendthrift—V. The
            Baconian Theory—VI. Dramatists before  and during the Time
            of Shakespeare—Dramatic Incidents Illustrated in  Passages
            from "Macbeth" and "Julius Cæsar"—VII. His Use of the
            Work of  Others—The Pontic Sea—A Passage from "Lear"—VIII.
            Extravagance that  touches the Infinite—The Greatest
            Compliment—"Let me not live after  my flame lacks oil"—Where
            Pathos almost Touches the Grotesque—IX.  An Innovator and
            Iconoclast—Disregard of the "Unities"—Nature 
            Forgets—Violation of the Classic Model—X. Types—The
            Secret of  Shakespeare—Characters who Act from Reason and
            Motive—What they Say  not the Opinion of Shakespeare—XI.
            The Procession that issued from  Shakespeare's Brain—His
            Great Women—Lovable Clowns—His Men—Talent  and
            Genius—XII. The Greatest of all Philosophers—Master of
            the  Human Heart—Love—XIII. In the Realm of
            Comparison—XIV. Definitions:  Suicide, Drama, Death,
            Memory, the Body, Life, Echo, the  World, Rumor—The
            Confidant of Nature—XV. Humor and  Pathos—Illustrations—XVI.
            Not a Physician, Lawyer, or Botanist—He was  a Man of
            Imagination—He lived the Life of All—The Imagination had
            a  Stage in Shakespeare's Brain. 
           
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          ROBERT BURNS.
           
              (1878.)  Poetry and Poets—Milton, Dante, Petrarch—Old-time
            Poetry in  Scotland—Influence of Scenery on Literature—Lives
            that are  Poems—Birth of Burns—Early Life and
            Education—Scotland Emerging from  the Gloom of Calvinism—A
            Metaphysical Peasantry—Power of the Scotch  Preacher—Famous
            Scotch Names—John Barleycorn vs. Calvinism—Why Robert 
            Burns is Loved—His Reading—Made Goddesses of Women—Poet
            of Love: His  "Vision," "Bonnie Doon," "To Mary in Heaven"—Poet
            of Home:  "Cotter's Saturday Night," "John Anderson, My Jo"—Friendship:
            "Auld  Lang-Syne"—Scotch Drink: "Willie brew'd a peck o'
            maut"—Burns the  Artist: The "Brook," "Tam O'Shanter"—A
            Real Democrat: "A man's a man  for a' that"—His Theology:
            The Dogma of Eternal Pain, "Morality,"  "Hypocrisy," "Holy
            Willie's Prayer"—On the Bible—A Statement of his 
            Religion—Contrasted with Tennyson—From Cradle to Coffin—His
            Last  words—Lines on the Birth-place of Burns. 
           
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          ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
           
              (1894.)  I. Simultaneous Birth of Lincoln and Darwin—Heroes
            of Every  Generation—Slavery—Principle Sacrificed to
            Success—Lincoln's  Childhood—His first Speech—A
            Candidate for the Senate against  Douglass—II. A Crisis in
            the Affairs of the Republic—The South Not  Alone
            Responsible for Slavery—Lincoln's Prophetic Words—Nominated
            for  President and Elected in Spite of his Fitness—III.
            Secession and  Civil War—The Thought uppermost in his Mind—IV.
            A Crisis in the  North—Proposition to Purchase the Slaves—V.
            The Proclamation of  Emancipation—His Letter to Horace
            Greeley—Waited on by Clergymen—VI.  Surrounded by
            Enemies—Hostile Attitude of Gladstone, Salisbury,  Louis
            Napoleon, and the Vatican—VII. Slavery the Perpetual 
            Stumbling-block—Confiscation—VIII. His Letter to a
            Republican  Meeting in Illinois—Its Effect—IX. The
            Power of His Personality—The  Embodiment of Mercy—Use
            of the Pardoning Power—X. The Vallandigham  Affair—The
            Horace Greeley Incident—Triumphs of Humor—XI. Promotion
            of  General Hooker—A Prophecy and its Fulfillment—XII.—States
            Rights vs.  Territorial Integrity—XIII. His Military
            Genius—The Foremost Man in  all the World: and then the
            Horror Came—XIV. Strange Mingling of Mirth  and Tears—Deformation
            of Great Historic Characters—Washington now  only a Steel
            Engraving—Lincoln not a Type—Virtues Necessary in a 
            New Country—Laws of Cultivated Society—In the Country is
            the Idea  of Home—Lincoln always a Pupil—A Great
            Lawyer—Many-sided—Wit and  Humor—As an Orator—His
            Speech at Gettysburg contrasted with the  Oration of Edward
            Everett—Apologetic in his Kindness—No Official 
            Robes—The gentlest Memory of our World. 
           
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          VOLTAIRE.
           
              (1894.)  I. Changes wrought by Time—Throne and Altar
            Twin Vultures—The King and  the Priest—What is
            Greatness?—Effect of Voltaire's Name on Clergyman  and
            Priest—Born and Baptized—State of France in 1694—The
            Church  at the Head—Efficacy of Prayers and Dead Saints—Bells
            and Holy  Water—Prevalence of Belief in Witches, Devils,
            and Fiends—Seeds of  the Revolution Scattered by Noble and
            Priest—Condition in England—The  Inquisition in full
            Control in Spain—Portugal and Germany burning  Women—Italy
            Prostrate beneath the Priests, the Puritans in America 
            persecuting Quakers, and stealing Children—II. The Days of
            Youth—His  Education—Chooses Literature as a
            Profession and becomes a Diplomat—In  Love and
            Disinherited—Unsuccessful Poem Competition—Jansenists 
            and Molinists—The Bull Unigenitus—Exiled to Tulle—Sent
            to the  Bastile—Exiled to England—Acquaintances made
            there—III. The Morn  of Manhood—His Attention turned
            to the History of the Church—The  "Triumphant Beast"
            Attacked—Europe Filled with the Product of his  Brain—What
            he Mocked—The Weapon of Ridicule—His Theology—His 
            "Retractions"—What Goethe said of Voltaire—IV. The
            Scheme of  Nature—His belief in the Optimism of Pope
            Destroyed by the Lisbon  Earthquake—V. His Humanity—Case
            of Jean Calas—The Sirven Family—The  Espenasse Case—Case
            of Chevalier de la Barre and D'Etallonde—Voltaire 
            Abandons France—A Friend of Education—An Abolitionist—Not 
            a Saint—VI. The Return—His Reception—His Death—Burial
            at  Romilli-on-the-Seine—VII. The Death-bed Argument—Serene
            Demise of  the Infamous—God has no Time to defend the Good
            and protect the  Pure—Eloquence of the Clergy on the
            Death-bed Subject—The  Second Return—Throned upon
            the Bastile—The Grave Desecrated by  Priests—Voltaire. 
            A Testimonial to Walt Whitman—Let us put Wreaths on the Brows
            of the  Living—Literary Ideals of the American People in
            1855—"Leaves of  Grass"—Its reception by the
            Provincial Prudes—The Religion of the  Body—Appeal
            to Manhood and Womanhood—Books written for the  Market—The
            Index Expurgatorius—Whitman a believer in  Democracy—Individuality—Humanity—An
            Old-time Sea-fight—What is  Poetry?—Rhyme a
            Hindrance to Expression—Rhythm the Comrade of  the Poetic—Whitman's
            Attitude toward Religion—Philosophy—The Two  Poems—"A
            Word Out of the Sea"—"When Lilacs Last in the Door"—"A
            Chant  for Death"—  The History of Intellectual
            Progress is written in the Lives of  Infidels—The King and
            the Priest—The Origin of God and Heaven, of  the Devil and
            Hell—The Idea of Hell born of Ignorance, Brutality, 
            Cowardice, and Revenge—The Limitations of our Ancestors—The
            Devil  and God—Egotism of Barbarians—The Doctrine of
            Hell not an Exclusive  Possession of Christianity—The
            Appeal to the Cemetery—Religion and  Wealth, Christ and
            Poverty—The "Great" not on the Side of Christ and  his
            Disciples—Epitaphs as Battle-cries—Some Great Men in
            favor of  almost every Sect—Mistakes and Superstitions of
            Eminent Men—Sacred  Books—The Claim that all Moral
            Laws came from God through  the Jews—Fear—Martyrdom—God's
            Ways toward Men—The Emperor  Constantine—The Death
            Test—Theological Comity between Protestants and  Catholics—Julian—A
            childish Fable still Believed—Bruno—His Crime,  his
            Imprisonment and 
           
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          LIBERTY IN LITERATURE.
           
              (1890.)  "Old Age"—"Leaves of Grass" 
           
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          THE GREAT INFIDELS.
           
              (1881.)  Martyrdom—The First to die for Truth
            without Expectation of Reward—The  Church in the Time of
            Voltaire—Voltaire—Diderot—David Hume—Benedict 
            Spinoza—Our Infidels—Thomas Paine—Conclusion. 
           
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          WHICH WAY?
           
              (1884.)  I. The Natural and the Supernatural—Living
            for the Benefit of  your Fellow-Man and Living for Ghosts—The
            Beginning of Doubt—Two  Philosophies of Life—Two
            Theories of Government—II. Is our God  superior to the
            Gods of the Heathen?—What our God has done—III. Two 
            Theories about the Cause and Cure of Disease—The First
            Physician—The  Bones of St. Anne Exhibited in New York—Archbishop
            Corrigan and  Cardinal Gibbons Countenance a Theological Fraud—A
            Japanese Story—The  Monk and the Miraculous Cures
            performed by the Bones of a Donkey  represented as those of a
            Saint—IV.—Two Ways of accounting for Sacred  Books
            and Religions—V-Two Theories about Morals—Nothing
            Miraculous  about Morality—The Test of all Actions—VI.
            Search for the  Impossible—Alchemy—"Perpetual
            Motion"—Astrology—Fountain of Perpetual  Youth—VII.
            "Great Men" and the Superstitions in which they have  Believed—VIII.
            Follies and Imbecilities of Great Men—We do not know  what
            they Thought, only what they Said—Names of Great Unbelievers—Most 
            Men Controlled by their Surroundings—IX. Living for God in
            Switzerland,  Scotland, New England—In the Dark Ages—Let
            us Live for Man—X. The  Narrow Road of Superstition—The
            Wide and Ample Way—Let us Squeeze the  Orange Dry—This
            Was, This Is, This Shall Be. 
           
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          ABOUT THE HOLY BIBLE.
           
            (1894.)  The Truth about the Bible Ought to be Told—I. The
            Origin of the  Bible—Establishment of the Mosaic Code—Moses
            not the Author of the  Pentateuch—Some Old Testament Books
            of Unknown Origin—II. Is the Old  Testament Inspired?—What
            an Inspired Book Ought to Be—What the Bible  Is—Admission
            of Orthodox Christians that it is not Inspired as to  Science—The
            Enemy of Art—III. The Ten Commandments—Omissions and 
            Redundancies—The Story of Achan—The Story of Elisha—The
            Story of  Daniel—The Story of Joseph—IV. What is it
            all Worth?—Not True, and  Contradictory—Its Myths
            Older than the Pentateuch—Other Accounts  of the Creation,
            the Fall, etc.—Books of the Old Testament Named  and
            Characterized—V. Was Jehovah a God of Love?—VI.
            Jehovah's  Administration—VII. The New Testament—Many
            Other Gospels besides  our Four—Disagreements—Belief
            in Devils—Raising of the Dead—Other  Miracles—Would
            a real Miracle-worker have been Crucified?—VIII.  The
            Philosophy of Christ—Love of  Enemies—Improvidence—Self-Mutilation—The
            Earth as a  Footstool—Justice—A Bringer of War—Division
            of Families—IX. Is Christ  our Example?—X. Why
            should we place Christ at the Top and Summit of the  Human Race?—How
            did he surpass Other Teachers?—What he left Unsaid,  and
            Why—Inspiration—Rejected Books of the New Testament—The
            Bible and  the Crimes it has Caused. 
           
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          WHY I AM AN AGNOSTIC.
           
              (1896.)  I. Influence of Birth in determining Religious
            Belief—Scotch, Irish,  English, and Americans Inherit
            their Faith—Religions of Nations  not Suddenly Changed—People
            who Knew—What they were Certain  About—Revivals—Character
            of Sermons Preached—Effect of Conversion—A  Vermont
            Farmer for whom Perdition had no Terrors—The Man and his 
            Dog—Backsliding and Re-birth—Ministers who were Sincere—A
            Free Will  Baptist on the Rich Man and Lazarus—II. The
            Orthodox God—The  Two Dispensations—The Infinite
            Horror—III. Religious Books—The  Commentators—Paley's
            Watch Argument—Milton, Young, and Pollok—IV. 
            Studying Astronomy—Geology—Denial and Evasion by the
            Clergy—V. The  Poems of Robert Burns—Byron, Shelley,
            Keats, and Shakespeare—VI.  Volney, Gibbon, and Thomas
            Paine—Voltaire's Services to Liberty—Pagans 
            Compared with Patriarchs—VII. Other Gods and Other Religions—Dogmas, 
            Myths, and Symbols of Christianity Older than our Era—VIII.
            The Men  of Science, Humboldt, Darwin, Spencer, Huxley, Haeckel—IX.
            Matter and  Force Indestructible and Uncreatable—The
            Theory of Design—X. God an  Impossible Being—The
            Panorama of the Past—XI. Free from Sanctified  Mistakes
            and Holy Lies. 
           
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          THE TRUTH.
           
              (1897.)  I. The Martyrdom of Man—How is Truth to be
            Found—Every Man should be  Mentally Honest—He should
            be Intellectually Hospitable—Geologists,  Chemists,
            Mechanics, and Professional Men are Seeking for the Truth—II. 
            Those who say that Slavery is Better than Liberty—Promises are
            not  Evidence—Horace Greeley and the Cold Stove—III.
            "The Science of  Theology" the only Dishonest Science—Moses
            and Brigham Young—Minds  Poisoned and Paralyzed in Youth—Sunday
            Schools and Theological  Seminaries—Orthodox Slanderers of
            Scientists—Religion has nothing  to do with Charity—Hospitals
            Built in Self-Defence—What Good has the  Church
            Accomplished?—Of what use are the Orthodox Ministers, and 
            What are they doing for the Good of Mankind—The Harm they are 
            Doing—Delusions they Teach—Truths they Should Tell about
            the  Bible—Conclusions—Our Christs and our Miracles. 
           
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          HOW TO REFORM MANKIND.
           
              (1896.)  I. "There is no Darkness but Ignorance"—False
            Notions Concerning  All Departments of Life—Changed Ideas
            about Science, Government and  Morals—II. How can we
            Reform the World?—Intellectual Light the First  Necessity—Avoid
            Waste of Wealth in War—III. Another Waste—Vast Amount 
            of Money Spent on the Church—IV. Plow can we Lessen Crime?—Frightful 
            Laws for the Punishment of Minor Crimes—A Penitentiary should
            be a  School—Professional Criminals should not be Allowed
            to Populate the  Earth—V. Homes for All-Make a Nation of
            Householders—Marriage  and Divorce-VI. The Labor Question—Employers
            cannot Govern  Prices—Railroads should Pay Pensions—What
            has been Accomplished  for the Improvement of the Condition of
            Labor—VII. Educate the  Children—Useless Knowledge—Liberty
            cannot be Sacrificed for the Sake  of Anything—False
            worship of Wealth—VIII. We must Work and Wait. 
           
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          A THANKSGIVING SERMON.
           
              (1897.)  I. Our fathers Ages Ago—From Savagery to
            Civilization—For the  Blessings we enjoy, Whom should we
            Thank?—What Good has the Church  Done?-Did Christ add to
            the Sum of Useful Knowledge—The Saints—What  have
            the Councils and Synods Done?—What they Gave us, and What they 
            did Not—Shall we Thank them for the Hell Here and for the Hell
            of  the Future?—II. What Does God Do?—The Infinite
            Juggler and his  Puppets—What the Puppets have Done—Shall
            we Thank these  Gods?—Shall we Thank Nature?—III.
            Men who deserve our Thanks—The  Infidels, Philanthropists
            and Scientists—The Discoverers and  Inventors—Magellan—Copernicus—Bruno—Galileo—Kepler,
            Herschel,  Newton, and LaPlace—Lyell—What the
            Worldly have Done—Origin and  Vicissitudes of the Bible—The
            Septuagint—Investigating the Phenomena  of Nature—IV.
            We thank the Good Men and Good Women of the Past—The 
            Poets, Dramatists, and Artists—The Statesmen—Paine,
            Jefferson,  Ericsson, Lincoln. Grant—Voltaire, Humboldt,
            Darwin. 
           
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          A LAY SERMON.
           
              (1886.)  Prayer of King Lear—When Honesty wears a
            Rag and Rascality a Robe-The  Nonsense of "Free Moral Agency "—Doing
            Right is not Self-denial-Wealth  often a Gilded Hell—The
            Log House—Insanity of Getting  More—Great Wealth the
            Mother of Crime—Separation of Rich and  Poor—Emulation—Invention
            of Machines to Save Labor—Production and  Destitution—The
            Remedy a Division of the Land—Evils of Tenement  Houses—Ownership
            and Use—The Great Weapon is the Ballot—Sewing  Women—Strikes
            and Boycotts of No Avail—Anarchy, Communism, and 
            Socialism—The Children of the Rich a Punishment for Wealth—Workingmen 
            Not a Danger—The Criminals a Necessary Product—Society's
            Right  to Punish—The Efficacy of Kindness—Labor is
            Honorable—Mental  Independence. 
           
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          THE FOUNDATIONS OF FAITH.
           
              (1895.)  I. The Old Testament—Story of the Creation—Age
            of the Earth and  of Man—Astronomical Calculations of the
            Egyptians—The Flood—The  Firmament a Fiction—Israelites
            who went into Egypt—Battles of the  Jews—Area of
            Palestine—Gold Collected by David for the Temple—II. The 
            New Testament—Discrepancies about the Birth of Christ—Herod
            and  the Wise Men—The Murder of the Babes of Bethlehem—When
            was Christ  born—Cyrenius and the Census of the World—Genealogy
            of Christ  according to Matthew and Luke—The Slaying of
            Zacharias—Appearance of  the Saints at the Crucifixion—The
            Death of Judas Iscariot—Did  Christ wish to be Convicted?—III.
            Jehovah—IV. The Trinity—The  Incarnation—Was
            Christ God?—The Trinity Expounded—"Let us pray"—V. 
            The Theological Christ—Sayings of a Contradictory Character—Christ
            a  Devout Jew—An ascetic—His Philosophy—The
            Ascension—The Best that Can  be Said about Christ—The
            Part that is beautiful and Glorious—The Other  Side—VI.
            The Scheme of Redemption—VII. Belief—Eternal Pain—No
            Hope  in Hell, Pity in Heaven, or Mercy in the Heart of God—VIII.
            Conclusion. 
           
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          SUPERSTITION.
           
              (1898.)  I. What is Superstition?—Popular Beliefs
            about the Significance  of Signs, Lucky and Unlucky Numbers,
            Days, Accidents, Jewels,  etc.—Eclipses, Earthquakes, and
            Cyclones as Omens—Signs and Wonders  of the Heavens—Efficacy
            of Bones and Rags of Saints—Diseases and  Devils—II.
            Witchcraft—Necromancers—What is a Miracle?—The
            Uniformity  of Nature—III. Belief in the Existence of Good
            Spirits or Angels—God  and the Devil—When Everything
            was done by the Supernatural—IV. All  these Beliefs now
            Rejected by Men of Intelligence—The Devil's Success  Made
            the Coming of Christ a Necessity—"Thou shalt not Suffer a
            Witch  to Live"—Some Biblical Angels—Vanished
            Visions—V. Where are Heaven  and Hell?—Prayers Never
            Answered—The Doctrine of Design—Why Worship  our
            Ignorance?—Would God Lead us into Temptation?—President
            McKinley's  Thanks giving for the Santiago Victory—VI.
            What Harm Does Superstition  Do?—The Heart Hardens and the
            Brain Softens—What Superstition has Done  and Taught—Fate
            of Spain—Of Portugal, Austria, Germany—VII. Inspired 
            Books—Mysteries added to by the Explanations of Theologians—The 
            Inspired Bible the Greatest Curse of Christendom—VIII.
            Modifications  of Jehovah—Changing the Bible—IX.
            Centuries of Darkness—The Church  Triumphant—When
            Men began to Think—X. Possibly these Superstitions are 
            True, but We have no Evidence—We Believe in the Natural—Science
            is the  Real Redeemer. 
           
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          THE DEVIL.
           
              (1899.)  I. If the Devil should Die, would God Make
            Another?—How was the Idea  of a Devil Produced—Other
            Devils than Ours—Natural Origin of these  Monsters—II.
            The Atlas of Christianity is The Devil—The Devil of the 
            Old Testament—The Serpent in Eden—"Personifications" of
            Evil—Satan  and Job—Satan and David—III. Take
            the Devil from the Drama  of Christianity and the Plot is Gone—Jesus
            Tempted by the Evil  One—Demoniac Possession—Mary
            Magdalene—Satan and Judas—Incubi  and Succubi—The
            Apostles believed in Miracles and Magic—The Pool of 
            Bethesda—IV. The Evidence of the Church—The Devil was
            forced to  Father the Failures of God—Belief of the
            Fathers of the Church  in Devils—Exorcism at the Baptism
            of an Infant in the Sixteenth  Century—Belief in Devils
            made the Universe a Madhouse presided over by  an Insane God—V.
            Personifications of the Devil—The Orthodox Ostrich 
            Thrusts his Head into the Sand—If Devils are Personifications
            so are  all the Other Characters of the Bible—VI. Some
            Queries about the  Devil, his Place of Residence, his Manner of
            Living, and his Object in  Life—Interrogatories to the
            Clergy—VII. The Man of Straw the Master  of the Orthodox
            Ministers—His recent Accomplishments—VIII. Keep the 
            Devils out of Children—IX. Conclusion.—Declaration of
            the Free. 
           
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          PROGRESS.
           
              (1860-64.)  The Prosperity of the World depends upon its
            Workers—Veneration for the  Ancient—Credulity and
            Faith of the Middle Ages—Penalty for Reading  the
            Scripture in the Mother Tongue—Unjust, Bloody, and Cruel Laws—The 
            Reformers too were Persecutors—Bigotry of Luther and Knox—Persecution 
            of Castalio—Montaigne against Torture in France—"Witchcraft"
            (chapter  on)—Confessed Wizards—A Case before Sir
            Matthew Hale—Belief  in Lycanthropy—Animals Tried
            and Executed—Animals received  as Witnesses—The
            Corsned or Morsel of Execution—Kepler an  Astrologer—Luther's
            Encounter with the Devil—Mathematician  Stoefflers,
            Astronomical Prediction of a Flood—Histories Filled with 
            Falsehood—Legend about the Daughter of Pharaoh invading
            Scotland and  giving the Country her name—A Story about
            Mohammed—A History of the  Britains written by Archdeacons—Ingenuous
            Remark of Eusebius—Progress  in the Mechanic Arts—England
            at the beginning of the Eighteenth  Century—Barbarous
            Punishments—Queen Elizabeth's Order Concerning  Clergymen
            and Servant Girls—Inventions of Watt, Arkwright, and 
            Others—Solomon's Deprivations—Language (chapter on)—Belief
            that the  Hebrew was< the original Tongue—Speculations
            about the Language  of Paradise—Geography (chapter on)—The
            Works of Cosmas—Printing  Invented—Church's
            Opposition to Books—The Inquisition—The  Reformation—"Slavery"
            (chapter on)—Voltaire's Remark on Slavery as  a Contract—White
            Slaves in Greece, Rome, England, Scotland, and  France—Free
            minds make Free Bodies—Causes of the Abolition of White 
            Slavery in Europe—The French Revolution—The African
            Slave Trade,  its Beginning and End—Liberty Triumphed
            (chapter head)—Abolition of  Chattel Slavery—Conclusion. 
           
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          WHAT IS RELIGION?
           
            (1899.)  I. Belief in God and Sacrifice—Did an Infinite
            God Create the Children  of Men and is he the Governor of the
            Universe?—II. If this God Exists,  how do we Know he is
            Good?—Should both the Inferior and the Superior  thank God
            for their Condition?—III. The Power that Works for 
            Righteousness—What is this Power?—The Accumulated
            Experience of the  World is a Power Working for Good?—Love
            the Commencement of the Higher  Virtues—IV. What has our
            Religion Done?—Would Christians have been  Worse had they
            Adopted another Faith?—V. How Can Mankind be Reformed 
            Without Religion?—VI. The Four Corner-stones of my Theory—VII.
            Matter  and Force Eternal—Links in the Chain of Evolution—VIII.
            Reform—The  Gutter as a Nursery—Can we Prevent the
            Unfit from Filling the World  with their Children?—Science
            must make Woman the Owner and Mistress  of Herself—Morality
            Born of Intelligence—IX. Real Religion and Real  Worship. 
           
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          INGERSOLL'S SIX INTERVIEWS ON TALMAGE.
           
              (1882.)  Preface—First Interview: Great Men as
            Witnesses  to the Truth of the Gospel—No man should quote 
            the Words of Another unless he is willing to  Accept all the
            Opinions of that Man—Reasons of  more Weight than
            Reputations—Would a general  Acceptance of Unbelief fill
            the Penitentiaries?—  My Creed—Most Criminals
            Orthodox—Relig-ion and  Morality not Necessarily
            Associates—On the  Creation of the Universe out of
            Omnipotence—Mr.  Talmage's Theory about the Pro-duction of
            Light  prior to the Creation of the Sun—The Deluge and 
            the Ark—Mr. Talmage's tendency to Belittle the  Bible
            Miracles—His Chemical, Geological, and  Agricultural Views—His
            Disregard of Good Manners-  -Second Interview: An Insulting Text—God's
            Design  in Creating Guiteau to be the Assassin of  Garfield—Mr.
            Talmage brings the Charge of  Blasphemy—Some Real
            Blasphemers—The Tabernacle  Pastor tells the exact
            Opposite of the Truth about  Col. Ingersoll's Attitude toward
            the Circulation  of Immoral Books—"Assassinating" God—Mr. 
            Talmage finds Nearly All the Invention of Modern  Times
            Mentioned in the Bible—The Reverend  Gentleman corrects
            the Translators of the Bible in  the Matter of the Rib Story—Denies
            that Polygamy  is permitted by the Old Testament—His
            De-fence of  Queen Victoria and Violation of the Grave of 
            George Eliot—Exhibits a Christian Spirit—Third 
            Interview: Mr. Talmage's Partiality in the  Bestowal of his Love—Denies
            the Right of Laymen  to Examine the Scriptures—Thinks the
            Infidels  Victims of Bibliophobia —He explains the
            Stopping  of the Sun and Moon at the Command of Joshua— 
            Instances a Dark Day in the Early Part of the  Century—Charges
            that Holy Things are Made Light  of—Reaffirms his
            Confidence in the Whale and  Jonah Story—The Commandment
            which Forbids the  making of Graven Images—Affirmation
            that the  Bible is the Friend of Woman—The Present 
            Condition of Woman—Fourth Interview: Colonel  Ingersoll
            Compared by Mr. Talmage tojehoiakim, who  Consigned Writings of
            Jeremiah to the Flames—An  Intimation that Infidels wish
            to have all copies  of the Bible Destroyed by Fire—Laughter 
            Deprecated—Col. Ingersoll Accused of Denouncing  his
            Father—Mr. Talmage holds that a Man may be  Perfectly
            Happy in Heaven with His Mother in Hell-  -Challenges the
            Infidel to Read a Chapter from St.  John—On the "Chief
            Solace of the World"—Dis-  covers an Attempt is being made
            to Put Out the  Light-houses of the Farther Shore—Affirms
            our  Debt to Christianity for Schools, Hospitals,  etc.—Denies
            that Infidels have ever Done any  Good—  Fifth
            Interview: Inquiries if Men gather Grapes of  Thorns, or Figs of
            Thistles, and is Answered in  the Negative—Resents the
            Charge that the Bible is  a Cruel Book—Demands to Know
            where the Cruelty of  the Bible Crops out in the Lives of
            Christians—  Col. Ingersoll Accused of saying that the
            Bible  is a Collection of Polluted Writings—Mr. Talmage 
            Asserts the Orchestral Harmony of the Scriptures  from Genesis
            to Revelation, and Repudiates the  Theory of Contradictions—His
            View of Mankind  Indicated in Quotations from his Confession of 
            Faith—He Insists that the Bible is Scientific— 
            Traces the New Testament to its Source with St.  John—Pledges
            his Word that no Man ever Died for a  Lie Cheerfully and
            Triumphantly—As to Prophecies  and Predictions—Alleged
            "Prophetic" Fate of the  Jewish People—Sixth Interview:
            Dr. Talmage takes  the Ground that the Unrivalled Circulation of
            the  Bible Proves that it is Inspired—Forgets' that a 
            Scientific Fact does not depend on the Vote of  Numbers—Names
            some Christian Millions—His  Arguments Characterized as
            the Poor-est, Weakest,  and Best Possible in Support of the
            Doctrine of  Inspira-tion—Will God, in Judging a Man, take 
            into Consideration the Cir-cumstances of that  Man's Life?—Satisfactory
            Reasons for Not Believ-  ing that the Bible is inspired. 
           
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          THE TALMAGIAN CATECHISM.
           
            THE TALMAGIAN CATECHISM.  The Pith and Marrow of what Mr.
            Talmage has been  Pleased to Say, set forth in the form of a
            Shorter  Catechism. 
           
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          A VINDICATION OF THOMAS PAINE.
           
              (1877.)  Letter to the New York Observer—An Offer to
            Pay  One Thousand Dollars in Gold for Proof that Thomas 
            Paine or Voltaire Died in Terror because of any  Religious
            Opinions Either had Expressed—  Proposition to Create a
            Tribunal to Hear the  Evidence—The Ob-server, after having
            Called upon  Col. Ingersoll to Deposit the Money, and 
            Characterized his Talk as "Infidel 'Buncombe,'"  Denies its Own
            Words, but attempts to Prove them—  Its Memory Refreshed
            by Col. Ingersoll and the  Slander Refuted—Proof that
            Paine did Not Recant -  -Testimony of Thomas Nixon, Daniel
            Pelton, Mr.  Jarvis, B. F. Has-kin, Dr. Manley, Amasa 
            Woodsworth, Gilbert Vale, Philip Graves, M. D.,  Willet Hicks,
            A. C. Hankinson, John Hogeboom, W.  J. Hilton, Tames Cheetham,
            Revs. Milledollar and  Cunningham, Mrs. Hedden, Andrew A. Dean,
            William  Carver,—The Statements of Mary Roscoe and Mary 
            Hindsdale Examined—William Cobbett's Account of a  Call
            upon Mary Hinsdale—Did Thomas Paine live the  Life of a
            Drunken Beast, and did he Die a Drunken,  Cowardly, and Beastly
            Death?—Grant Thorbum's  Charges Examined—Statement
            of the Rev. J. D.  Wickham, D.D., shown to be Utterly False—False 
            Witness of the Rev. Charles Hawley, D.D.—W. H.  Ladd,
            James Cheetham, and Mary Hinsdale—Paine's  Note to
            Cheetham—Mr-Staple, Mr. Purdy, Col. John  Fellows, James
            Wilburn, Walter Morton, Clio  Rickman, Judge Herttell, H.
            Margary, Elihu Palmer,  Mr.  XV  Lovett, all these
            Testified that Paine was a  Temperate Man—Washington's
            Letter to Paine—  Thomas Jefferson's—Adams and
            Washing-ton on  "Common Sense"—-James Monroe's Tribute— 
            Quotations from Paine—Paine's Estate and His  Will—The
            Observer's Second Attack (p. 492):  Statements of Elkana Watson,
            William Carver, Rev.  E. F. Hatfield, D.D., James Cheetham, Dr.
            J. W.  Francis, Dr. Manley, Bishop Fenwick—Ingersoll's 
            Second Reply (p. 516): Testimony Garbled by the  Editor of the
            Observer—Mary Roscoeand Mary Hins-  dale the Same Person—Her
            Reputation for Veracity-  -Letter from Rev. A. W. Cornell—Grant
            Thorburn  Exposed by James Parton—The Observer's Admission 
            that Paine did not Recant—Affidavit of  William B. Barnes. 
           
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          THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION; INGERSOLL'S OPENING PAPER
           
              (1881.)  I. Col. Ingersoll's Opening Paper—Statement
            of the Fundamental Truths  of Christianity—Reasons for
            Thinking that Portions of the Old Testament  are the Product of
            a Barbarous People—Passages upholding  Slavery, Polygamy,
            War, and Religious Persecution not Evidences of  Inspiration—If
            the Words are not Inspired, What Is?—Commands of  Jehovah
            compared with the Precepts of Pagans and Stoics—Epictetus, 
            Cicero, Zeno, Seneca, Brahma—II. The New Testament—Why
            were  Four Gospels Necessary?—Salvation by Belief—The
            Doctrine of  the Atonement—The Jewish System Culminating
            in the Sacrifice of  Christ—Except for the Crucifixion of
            her Son, the Virgin Mary would be  among the Lost—What
            Christ must have Known would Follow the Acceptance  of His
            Teachings—The Wars of Sects, the Inquisition, the Fields of 
            Death—Why did he not Forbid it All?—The Little that he
            Revealed—The  Dogma of Eternal Punishment—Upon
            Love's Breast the Church has Placed  the Eternal Asp—III.
            The "Inspired" Writers—Why did not God furnish  Every
            Nation with a Bible?  II. Judge Black's Reply—His Duty
            that of a Policeman—The Church not  in Danger—Classes
            who Break out into Articulate Blasphemy—The  Sciolist—Personal
            Remarks about Col. Ingersoll—Chief-Justice Gibson of 
            Pennsylvania Quoted—We have no Jurisdiction or Capacity to
            Rejudge the  Justice of God—The Moral Code of the Bible—Civil
            Government of the  Jews—No Standard of Justice without
            Belief in a God—Punishments for  Blasphemy and Idolatry
            Defended—Wars of Conquest—Allusion to Col. 
            Ingersoll's War Record—Slavery among the Jews—Polygamy
            Discouraged by  the Mosaic Constitution—Jesus of Nazareth
            and the Establishment of  his Religion—Acceptance of
            Christianity and Adjudication upon its  Divinity—The
            Evangelists and their Depositions—The Fundamental Truths 
            of Christianity—Persecution and Triumph of the Church—Ingersoll's 
            Propositions Compressed and the Compressions Answered—Salvation
            as a  Reward of Belief—Punishment of Unbelief—The
            Second Birth, Atonement,  Redemption, Non-resistance, Excessive
            Punishment of Sinners, Christ and  Persecution, Christianity and
            Freedom of Thought, Sufficiency of the  Gospel, Miracles, Moral
            Effect of Christianity.  III. Col. Ingersoll's Rejoinder—How
            this Discussion Came About—Natural  Law—The Design
            Argument—The Right to Rejudge the Justice even of a  God—Violation
            of the Commandments by Jehovah—Religious Intolerance  of
            the Old Testament—Judge Black's Justification of Wars of 
            Extermination—His Defence of Slavery—Polygamy not
            "Discouraged" by the  Old Testament—Position of Woman
            under the Jewish System and under that  of the Ancients—a
            "Policeman's" View of God—Slavery under Jehovah  and in
            Egypt—The Admission that Jehovah gave no Commandment against 
            Polygamy—The Learned and Wise Crawl back in Cribs—Alleged
            Harmony of  Old and New Testaments—On the Assertion that
            the Spread of Christianity  Proves the Supernatural Origin of
            the Gospel—The Argument applicable to  All Religions—Communications
            from Angels ana Gods—Authenticity of  the Statements of
            the Evangelists—Three Important Manuscripts—Rise  of
            Mormonism—Ascension of Christ—The Great Public Events
            alleged  as Fundamental Truths of Christianity—Judge
            Black's System  of "Compression"—"A Metaphysical Question"—Right
            and  Wrong—Justice—Christianity and Freedom of
            Thought—Heaven and  Hell—Production of God and the
            Devil—Inspiration of the Bible  dependent on the Credulity
            of the Reader—Doubt of Miracles—The  World before
            Christ's Advent—Respect for the Man Christ—The Dark 
            Ages—Institutions of Mercy—Civil Law. 
           
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          THE FIELD-INGERSOLL DISCUSSION.
           
            (1887.)  An Open Letter to Robert G. Ingersoll—Superstitions—Basis
            of  Religion—Napoleon's Question about the Stars—The
            Idea of God—Crushing  out Hope—Atonement,
            Regeneration, and Future Retribution—Socrates and  Jesus—The
            Language of Col. Ingersoll characterized as too Sweeping—The 
            Sabbath—But a Step from Sneering at Religion to Sneering at
            Morality.  A Reply to the Rev. Henry M. Field, D. D.—Honest
            Differences of  Opinion—Charles Darwin—Dr. Field's
            Distinction between Superstition  and Religion—The
            Presbyterian God an Infinite Torquemada—Napoleon's 
            Sensitiveness to the Divine Influence—The Preference of
            Agassiz—The  Mysterious as an Explanation—The
            Certainty that God is not what he  is Thought to Be—Self-preservation
            the Fibre of Society—Did  the Assassination of Lincoln
            Illustrate the Justice of God's  Judgments?—Immortality—Hope
            and the Presbyterian Creed—To a Mother  at the Grave of
            Her Son—Theological Teaching of Forgiveness—On 
            Eternal Retribution—Jesus and Mohammed—Attacking the
            Religion of  Others—Ananias and Sapphira—The
            Pilgrims and Freedom to Worship—The  Orthodox Sabbath—Natural
            Restraints on Conduct—Religion and  Morality—The
            Efficacy of Prayer—Respect for Belief of Father and 
            Mother—The "Power behind Nature"—Survival of the Fittest—The
            Saddest  Fact—"Sober Second Thought."  A Last Word to
            Robert G. Ingersoll, by Dr. Field—God not a  Presbyterian—Why
            Col. Ingersoll's Attacks on Religion are Resented—God  is
            more Merciful than Man—Theories about the Future Life—Retribution 
            a Necessary Part of the Divine Law—The Case of Robinson 
            Crusoe—Irresistible Proof of Design—Col. Ingersoll's
            View of  Immortality—An Almighty Friend.  Letter to
            Dr. Field—The Presbyterian God—What the Presbyterians 
            Claim—The "Incurably Bad"—Responsibility for not seeing
            Things  Clearly—Good Deeds should Follow even Atheists—No
            Credit in  Belief—Design Argument that Devours Itself—Belief
            as a Foundation  of Social Order—No Consolation in
            Orthodox Religion—The "Almighty  Friend" and the Slave
            Mother—a Hindu Prayer—Calvinism—Christ not the 
            Supreme Benefactor of the Race.  COLONEL INGERSOLL ON
            CHRISTIANITY.  (1888.)  Some Remarks on his Reply to Dr.
            Field by the Hon. Wm. E.  Gladstone—External Triumph and
            Prosperity of the Church—A Truth Half  Stated—Col.
            Ingersoll's Tumultuous Method and lack of Reverential  Calm—Jephthah's
            Sacrifice—Hebrews xii Expounded—The Case of  Abraham—Darwinism
            and the Scriptures—Why God demands Sacrifices of  Man—Problems
            admitted to be Insoluble—Relation of human Genius  to
            Human Greatness—Shakespeare and Others—Christ and the
            Family  Relation—Inaccuracy of Reference in the Reply—Ananias
            and  Sapphira—The Idea of Immortality—Immunity of
            Error in Belief from  Moral Responsibility—On Dishonesty
            in the Formation of Opinion—A  Plausibility of the
            Shallowest kind—The System of Thuggism—Persecution 
            for Opinion's Sake—Riding an Unbroken Horse.  Col.
            Ingersoll to Mr. Gladstone—On the "Impaired" State of the
            human  Constitution—Unbelief not Due to Degeneracy—Objections
            to the  Scheme of Redemption—Does Man Deserve only
            Punishment?—"Reverential  Calm"—The Deity of the
            Ancient Jews—Jephthah and Abraham—Relation  between
            Darwinism and the Inspiration of the Scriptures—Sacrifices to 
            the Infinite—What is Common Sense?—An Argument that will
            Defend every  Superstition—The Greatness of Shakespeare—The
            Absolute Indissolubility  of Marriage—Is the Religion of
            Christ for this Age?—As to Ananias and  Sapphira—Immortality
            and People of Low Intellectual Development—Can  we Control
            our Thought?—Dishonest Opinions Cannot be Formed—Some 
            Compensations for Riding an "Unbroken Horse." 
           
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          ROME OR REASON.
           
              (1888.)  "The Church Its Own Witness," by Cardinal Manning—Evidence 
            that Christianity is of Divine Origin—The Universality of the 
            Church—Natural Causes not Sufficient to Account for the
            Catholic  Church—-The World in which Christianity Arose—Birth
            of Christ—From  St Peter to Leo XIII.—The First
            Effect of Christianity—Domestic  Life's Second Visible
            Effect—Redemption of Woman from traditional  Degradation—Change
            Wrought by Christianity upon the Social, Political  and
            International Relations of the World—Proof that Christianity
            is of  Divine Origin and Presence—St. John and the
            Christian Fathers—Sanctity  of the Church not Affected by
            Human Sins.  A Reply to Cardinal Manning—I. Success not a
            Demonstration of either  Divine Origin or Supernatural Aid—Cardinal
            Manning's Argument  More Forcible in the Mouth of a Mohammedan—Why
            Churches Rise and  Flourish—Mormonism—Alleged
            Universality of the Catholic Church—Its  "inexhaustible
            Fruitfulness" in Good Things—The Inquisition and 
            Persecution—Not Invincible—Its Sword used by Spain—Its
            Unity not  Unbroken—The State of the World when
            Christianity was Established—The  Vicar of Christ—A
            Selection from Draper's "History of the Intellectual 
            Development of Europe"—Some infamous Popes—Part II. How
            the Pope  Speaks—Religions Older than Catholicism and
            having the Same Rites  and Sacraments—Is Intellectual
            Stagnation a Demonstration of Divine  Origin?—Integration
            and Disintegration—The Condition of the World 300  Years
            Ago—The Creed of Catholicism—The "One true God" with a
            Knowledge  of whom Catholicism has "filled the World"—Did
            the Catholic Church  overthrow Idolatry?—Marriage—Celibacy—Human
            Passions—The Cardinal's  Explanation of Jehovah's
            abandonment of the Children of Men for  four thousand Years—Catholicism
            tested by Paganism—Canon Law  and Convictions had Under It—Rival
            Popes—Importance of a Greek  "Inflection"—The
            Cardinal Witnesses. 
           
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          IS DIVORCE WRONG?
           
            (1889.)  Preface by the Editor of the North American Review—Introduction,
            by the  Rev. S. W. Dike, LL. D.—A Catholic View by
            Cardinal Gibbons—Divorce  as Regarded by the Episcopal
            Church, by Bishop, Henry C. Potter—Four  Questions
            Answered, by Robert G. Ingersoll. 
           
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          DIVORCE.
           
            Reply to Cardinal Gibbons—Indissolubility of Marriage a
            Reaction  from Polygamy—Biblical Marriage—Polygamy
            Simultaneous and  Successive—Marriage and Divorce in the
            Light of Experience—Reply  to Bishop Potter—Reply to
            Mr. Gladstone—Justice Bradley—Senator  Dolph—The
            argument Continued in Colloquial Form—Dialogue between 
            Cardinal Gibbons and a Maltreated Wife—She Asks the Advice of
            Mr.  Gladstone—The Priest who Violated his Vow—Absurdity
            of the Divorce  laws of Some States.  REPLY TO DR. LYMAN
            ABBOTT.  (1890)  Dr. Abbott's Equivocations—Crimes
            Punishable by Death under Mosaic  and English Law—Severity
            of Moses Accounted for by Dr. Abbott—The  Necessity for
            the Acceptance of Christianity—Christians should be  Glad
            to Know that the Bible is only the Work of Man and that the New 
            Testament Life of Christ is Untrue—All the Good Commandments,
            Known  to the World thousands of Years before Moses—Human
            Happiness of  More Consequence than the Truth about God—The
            Appeal to Great  Names—Gladstone not the Greatest
            Statesman—What the Agnostic Says—The  Magnificent
            Mistakes of Genesis—The Story of Joseph—Abraham as a 
            "self-Exile for Conscience's Sake."  REPLY TO ARCHDEACON FARRAR. 
            (1890.)  Revelation as an Appeal to Man's "Spirit"—What is
            Spirit and what is  "Spiritual Intuition"?—The Archdeacon
            in Conflict with St. Paul—II.  The Obligation to Believe
            without Evidence—III. Ignorant Credulity—IV.  A
            Definition of Orthodoxy—V. Fear not necessarily Cowardice—Prejudice 
            is Honest—The Ola has the Advantage in an Argument—St. 
            Augustine—Jerome—the Appeal to Charlemagne—Roger
            Bacon—Lord Bacon  a Defender of the Copernican System—The
            Difficulty of finding out  what Great Men Believed—Names
            Irrelevantly Cited—Bancroft on the  Hessians—Original
            Manuscripts of the Bible—VI. An Infinite Personality  a
            Contradiction in Terms—VII. A Beginningless Being—VIII.
            The  Cruelties of Nature not to be Harmonized with the Goodness
            of a  Deity—Sayings from the Indian—Origen, St.
            Augustine, Dante, Aquinas. 
           
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          IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING?
           
            (1890.)  A Reply to the Dean of St. Paul—Growing
            Confidence in the Power of  Kindness—Crimes against
            Soldiers and Sailors—Misfortunes Punished  as Crimes—The
            Dean's Voice Raised in Favor of the Brutalities of the  Past—Beating
            of Children—Of Wives—Dictum of Solomon. 
           
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          MY REVIEWERS REVIEWED.
           
            (1877.)  Answer to San Francisco Clergymen—Definition of
            Liberty, Physical  and Mental—The Right to Compel Belief—Woman
            the Equal of Man—The  Ghosts—Immortality—Slavery—Witchcraft—Aristocracy
            of the  Air—Unfairness of Clerical Critics—Force and
            Matter—Doctrine of  Negation—Confident Deaths of
            Murderers—Childhood Scenes returned to  by the Dying—Death-bed
            of Voltaire—Thomas Paine—The First  Sectarians Were
            Heretics—Reply to Rev. Mr. Guard—Slaughter of  the
            Canaanites—Reply to Rev. Samuel Robinson—Protestant 
            Persecutions—Toleration—Infidelity and Progress—The 
            Occident—Calvinism—Religious Editors—Reply to the
            Rev. Mr.  Ijams—Does the Bible teach Man to Enslave his
            Brothers?—Reply to  California Christian Advocate—Self-Government
            of French People at  and Since the Revolution—On the Site
            of the Bastile—French  Peasant's Cheers for Jesus Christ—Was
            the World created in Six  Days—Geology—What is the
            Astronomy of the Bible?—The Earth the Centre  of the
            Universe—Joshua's Miracle—Change of Motion into Heat—Geography 
            and Astronomy of Cosmas—Does the Bible teach the Existence of 
            that Impossible Crime called Witchcraft?—Saul and the Woman of 
            Endor—Familiar Spirits—Demonology of the New Testament—Temptation
            of  Jesus—Possession by Devils—Gadarene Swine Story—Test
            of Belief—Bible  Idea of the Rights of Children—Punishment
            of the Rebellious  Son—Jephthah's Vow and Sacrifice—Persecution
            of Job—The Gallantry  of God—Bible Idea of the
            Rights of Women—Paul's Instructions to  Wives—Permission
            given to Steal Wives—Does the Bible Sanction  Polygamy and
            Concubinage?—Does the Bible Uphold and Justify Political 
            Tyranny?—Powers that be Ordained of God—Religious
            Liberty of  God—Sun-Worship punishable with Death—Unbelievers
            to be damned—Does  the Bible describe a God of Mercy?—Massacre
            Commanded—Eternal  Punishment Taught in the New Testament—The
            Plan of Salvation—Fall  and Atonement Moral Bankruptcy—Other
            Religions—Parsee  Sect—Brahmins—Confucians—Heretics
            and Orthodox. 
           
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          MY CHICAGO BIBLE CLASS.
           
            (1879.)  Rev. Robert Collyer—Inspiration of the Scriptures—Rev.
            Dr.  Thomas—Formation of the Old Testament—Rev. Dr.
            Kohler—Rev. Mr.  Herford—Prof. Swing—Rev. Dr.
            Ryder. 
           
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          TO THE INDIANAPOLIS CLERGY.
           
            TO THE INDIANAPOLIS CLERGY.  (1882.)  Rev. David Walk—Character
            of Jesus—Two or Three Christs Described  in the Gospels—Christ's
            Change of Opinions—Gospels Later than the  Epistles—Divine
            Parentage of Christ a Late Belief—The Man Christ  probably
            a Historical Character—Jesus Belittled by his Worshipers—He 
            never Claimed to be Divine—Christ's Omissions—Difference
            between  Christian and other Modern Civilizations—Civilization
            not Promoted  by Religion—Inventors—French and
            American Civilization: How  Produced—Intemperance and
            Slavery in Christian Nations—Advance due to  Inventions
            and Discoveries—Missionaries—Christian Nations Preserved
            by  Bayonet and Ball—Dr. T. B. Taylor—Origin of Life
            on this Planet—Sir  William Thomson—Origin of Things
            Undiscoverable—Existence after  Death—Spiritualists—If
            the Dead Return—Our Calendar—Christ and 
            Christmas-The Existence of Pain—Plato's Theory of Evil—Will
            God do  Better in Another World than he does in this?—Consolation—Life
            Not a  Probationary Stage—Rev. D.O'Donaghue—The Case
            of Archibald Armstrong  and Jonathan Newgate—Inequalities
            of Life—Can Criminals live a  Contented Life?—Justice
            of the Orthodox God Illustrated. 
           
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          THE BROOKLYN DIVINES.
           
            (1883.)  Are the Books of Atheistic or Infidel Writers
            Extensively  Read?—Increase in the Number of Infidels—Spread
            of Scientific  Literature—Rev. Dr. Eddy—Rev. Dr.
            Hawkins—Rev. Dr. Haynes—Rev.  Mr. Pullman—Rev.
            Mr. Foote—Rev. Mr. Wells—Rev. Dr. Van Dyke—Rev. 
            Carpenter—Rev. Mr. Reed—Rev. Dr. McClelland—Ministers
            Opposed to  Discussion—Whipping Children—Worldliness
            as a Foe of the Church—The  Drama—Human Love—Fires,
            Cyclones, and Other Afflictions as Promoters  of Spirituality—Class
            Distinctions—Rich and Poor—Aristocracies—The 
            Right to Choose One's Associates—Churches Social Affairs—Progress 
            of the Roman Catholic Church—Substitutes for the Churches—Henry 
            Ward Beecher—How far Education is Favored by the Sects—Rivals
            of the  Pulpit—Christianity Now and One Hundred Years Ago—French
            Revolution  produced by the Priests—Why the Revolution was
            a Failure—Infidelity  of One Hundred Years Ago—Ministers
            not more Intellectual than a Century  Ago—Great Preachers
            of the Past—New Readings of Old Texts—Clerical 
            Answerers of Infidelity—Rev. Dr. Baker—Father Fransiola—Faith
            and  Reason—Democracy of Kindness—Moral Instruction—Morality
            Born of Human  Needs—The Conditions of Happiness—The
            Chief End of Man. 
           
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          THE LIMITATIONS OF TOLERATION.
           
            (1888.)  Discussion between Col. Robert G. Ingersoll, Hon.
            Frederic R. Coudert,  and ex-Gov. Stewart L. Woodford before the
            Nineteenth Century Club of  New York—Propositions—Toleration
            not a Disclaimer but a Waiver of the  Right to Persecute—Remarks
            of Courtlandt Palmer—No Responsibility for  Thought—Intellectual
            Hospitality—Right of Free Speech—Origin of the  term
            "Toleration"—Slander and False Witness—Nobody can
            Control his own  Mind: Anecdote—Remarks of Mr. Coudert—Voltaire,
            Rousseau, Hugo, and  Ingersoll—General Woodford's Speech—Reply
            by Colonel Ingersoll—A  Catholic Compelled to Pay a
            Compliment to Voltaire—Responsibility for  Thoughts—The
            Mexican Unbeliever and his Reception in the Other Country. 
           
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          A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
           
            (1891.)  Christianity's Message of Grief—Christmas a Pagan
            Festival—Reply  to Dr. Buckley—Charges by the Editor
            of the Christian Advocate—The  Tidings of Christianity—In
            what the Message of Grief Consists—Fear  and Flame—An
            Everlasting Siberia—Dr. Buckley's Proposal to Boycott the 
            Telegram—Reply to Rev. J. M. King and Rev. Thomas Dixon, Jr.
            Cana Day  be Blasphemed?—Hurting Christian feelings—For
            Revenue only What is  Blasphemy?—Balaam's Ass wiser than
            the Prophet—The Universalists—Can  God do Nothing
            for this World?—The Universe a Blunder if Christianity  is
            true—The Duty of a Newspaper—Facts Not Sectarian—The
            Rev.  Mr. Peters—What Infidelity Has Done—Public
            School System not  Christian—Orthodox Universities—Bruno
            on Oxford—As to Public  Morals—No Rewards or
            Punishments in the Universe—The Atonement  Immoral—As
            to Sciences and Art—Bruno, Humboldt, Darwin—Scientific 
            Writers Opposed by the Church—As to the Liberation of Slaves—As
            to  the Reclamation of Inebriates—Rum and Religion—The
            Humanity  of Infidelity—What Infidelity says to the Dying—The
            Battle  Continued—Morality not Assailed by an Attack on
            Christianity—The  Inquisition and Religious Persecution—Human
            Nature Derided by  Christianity—Dr. DaCosta—"Human
            Brotherhood" as exemplified by  the History of the Church—The
            Church and Science, Art and  Learning——Astronomy's
            Revenge—Galileo and Kepler—Mrs. Browning:  Science
            Thrust into the Brain of Europe—Our Numerals—Christianity
            and  Literature—Institution's of Learning—Stephen
            Girard—James Lick—Our  Chronology—Historians—Natural
            Philosophy—Philology—Metaphysical  Research—Intelligence,
            Hindoo, Egyptian—Inventions—John  Ericsson—Emancipators—Rev.
            Mr. Ballou—The Right of Goa to  Punish—Rev. Dr.
            Hillier—Rev. Mr. Haldeman—George A. Locey—The
            "Great  Physician"—Rev. Mr. Talmage—Rev. J. Benson
            Hamilton—How Voltaire  Died—The Death-bed of Thomas
            Paine—Rev. Mr. Holloway—Original  Sin—Rev. Dr.
            Tyler—The Good Samaritan a Heathen—Hospitals and 
            Asylums—Christian Treatment of the Insane—Rev. Dr.
            Buckley—The  North American Review Discussion—Judge
            Black, Dr. Field,  Mr. Gladstone—Circulation of Obscene
            Literature—Eulogy of  Whiskey—Eulogy of Tobacco—Human
            Stupidity that Defies the Gods—Rev.  Charles Deems—Jesus
            a Believer in a Personal Devil—The Man Christ. 
           
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          SUICIDE OF JUDGE NORMILE.
           
            (1892.)  Reply to the Western Watchman—Henry D'Arcy—Peter's 
            Prevarication-Some Excellent Pagans-Heartlessness of a  Catholic—Wishes
            do not Affect the Judgment—Devout Robbers—Penitent 
            Murderers—Reverential Drunkards—Luther's Distich—Judge 
            Normile—Self-destruction. 
           
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          IS SUICIDE A SIN?
           
            (1894.)  Col. Ingersoll's First Letter in The New York World—Under
            what  Circumstances a Man has the Right to take his Own Life—Medicine
            and the  Decrees of God—Case of the Betrayed Girl—Suicides
            not Cowards—Suicide  under Roman Law—Many Suicides
            Insane—Insanity Caused by Religion—The  Law against
            Suicide Cruel and Idiotic—Natural and Sufficient Cause for 
            Self-destruction—Christ's Death a Suicide—Col.
            Ingersoll's Reply to his  Critics—Is Suffering the Work of
            God?—It is not Man's Duty to  Endure Hopeless Suffering—When
            Suicide is Justifiable—The  Inquisition—Alleged
            Cowardice of Suicides—Propositions  Demonstrated—Suicide
            the Foundation of the Christian  Religion—Redemption and
            Atonement—The Clergy on Infidelity  and Suicide—Morality
            and Unbelief—Better injure yourself than  Another—Misquotation
            by Opponents—Cheerful View the Best—The  Wonder is
            that Men endure—Suicide a Sin (Interview in The New  York
            Journal)—Causes of Suicide—Col. Ingersoll Does Not
            Advise  Suicide—Suicides with Tracts or Bibles in their
            Pockets—Suicide a Sin  (Interview in The New York Herald)—Comments
            on Rev. Alerle St. Croix  Wright's Sermon—Suicide and
            Sanity (Interview in The York World)—As to  the Cowardice
            of Suicide—Germany and the Prevalence of Suicide—Killing 
            of Idiots and Defective Infants—Virtue, Morality, and
            Religion. 
           
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          IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT?
           
            (1891.)  Reply to General Rush Hawkins' Article, "Brutality and
            Avarice  Triumphant"—Croakers and Prophets of Evil—Medical
            Treatment  for Believers in Universal Evil—Alleged Fraud
            in Army  Contracts—Congressional Extravagance—Railroad
            "Wreckers"—How  Stockholders in Some Roads Lost Their
            Money—The Star-Route  Trials—Timber and Public Lands—Watering
            Stock—The Formation  of Trusts—Unsafe Hotels:
            European Game and Singing Birds—Seal  Fisheries—Cruelty
            to Animals—Our Indians—Sensible and Manly 
            Patriotism—Days of Brutality—Defence of Slavery by the
            Websters,  Bentons, and Clays—Thirty Years' Accomplishment—Ennobling
            Influence of  War for the Right—The Lady ana the Brakeman—American
            Esteem of Honesty  in Business—Republics do not Tend to
            Official Corruption—This the Best  Country in the World. 
           
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          A REPLY TO THE CINCINNATI GAZETTE AND CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH.
           
            (1878.)  Defence of the Lecture on Moses—How Biblical
            Miracles are sought to  be Proved—Some Non Sequiturs—A
            Grammatical Criticism—Christianity  Destructive of Manners—Cuvier
            and Agassiz on Mosaic Cosmogony—Clerical  Advance agents—Christian
            Threats and Warnings—Catholicism the Upas  Tree—Hebrew
            Scholarship as a Qualification for Deciding Probababilities 
            —Contradictions and Mistranslations of the Bible—Number
            of Errors in  the Scriptures—The Sunday Question. 
           
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          AN INTERVIEW ON CHIEF JUSTICE COMEGYS.
           
            (1881.)  Charged with Blasphemy in the State of Delaware—Can
            a Conditionless  Deity be Injured?—Injustice the only
            Blasphemy—The Lecture  in Delaware—Laws of that
            State—All Sects in turn Charged with  Blasphemy—Heresy
            Consists in making God Better than he is Thought  to Be—A
            Fatal Biblical Passage—Judge Comegys—Wilmington 
            Preachers—States with Laws against Blasphemy—No Danger
            of Infidel  Mobs—No Attack on the State of Delaware
            Contemplated—Comegys a  Resurrection—Grand Jury's
            Refusal to Indict—Advice about the Cutting  out of
            Heretics' Tongues—Objections to the Whipping-post—Mr.
            Bergh's  Bill—One Remedy for Wife-beating. 
           
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          A REPLY TO REV. DRS. THOMAS AND LORIMER.
           
            (1882.)  Solemnity—Charged with Being Insincere—Irreverence—Old
            Testament  Better than the New—"Why Hurt our Feelings?"—Involuntary
            Action of  the Brain—Source of our Conceptions of Space—Good
            and Bad—Right and  Wrong—The Minister, the Horse and
            the Lord's Prayer—Men Responsible  for their Actions—The
            "Gradual" Theory Not Applicable to  the Omniscient—Prayer
            Powerless to Alter Results—Religious  Persecution—Orthodox
            Ministers Made Ashamed of their  Creed—Purgatory—Infidelity
            and Baptism Contrasted—Modern Conception  of the Universe—The
            Golden Bridge of Life—"The Only Salutation"—The 
            Test for Admission to Heaven—"Scurrility." 
           
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          A REPLY TO REV. JOHN HALL AND WARNER VAN NORDEN.
           
            (1892.)  Dr. Hall has no Time to Discuss the subject of Starving 
            Workers—Cloakmakers' Strike—Warner Van Norden of the
            Church Extension  Society—The Uncharitableness of
            Organized Charity—Defence of the  Cloakmakers—Life
            of the Underpaid—On the Assertion that Assistance 
            encourages Idleness and Crime—The Man without Pity an
            Intellectual  Beast—Tendency of Prosperity to Breed
            Selfishness—Thousands Idle  without Fault—Egotism of
            Riches—Van Norden's Idea of Happiness—The  Worthy
            Poor. 
           
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          A REPLY TO THE REV. DR. PLUMB.
           
            (1898.)  Interview in a Boston Paper—Why should a Minister
            call this a "Poor"  World?—Would an Infinite God make
            People who Need a Redeemer?—Gospel  Gossip—Christ's
            Sayings Repetitions—The Philosophy of Confucius—Rev. 
            Mr. Mills—The Charge of "Robbery"—The Divine Plan. 
           
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          A REPLY TO THE NEW YORK CLERGY ON SUPERSTITION.
           
            (1898.)  Interview in the New York Journal—Rev. Roberts.
            MacArthur—A  Personal Devil—Devils who held
            Conversations with Christ not simply  personifications of Evil—The
            Temptation—The "Man of Straw"—Christ's  Mission
            authenticated by the Casting Out of Devils—Spain—God 
            Responsible for the Actions of Man—Rev. Dr. J. Lewis Parks—Rev.
            Dr. E.  F. Moldehnke—Patience amidst the Misfortunes of
            Others—Yellow Fever  as a Divine Agent—The Doctrine
            that All is for the Best—Rev. Mr.  Hamlin—Why Did
            God Create a Successful Rival?—A Compliment by the  Rev.
            Mr. Belcher—Rev. W. C. Buchanan—No Argument Old until it
            is  Answered—Why should God Create sentient Beings to be
            Damned?—Rev. J.  W. Campbell—Rev. Henry Frank—Rev.
            E. C.J. Kraeling on Christ and the  Devil—Would he make a
            World like This? 
           
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          AN ADDRESS TO THE COLORED PEOPLE.
           
              (1867.)  Slavery and its Justification by Law and Religion—Its
            Destructive  Influence upon Nations—Inauguration of the
            Modern Slave Trade by the  Portuguese Gonzales—Planted
            upon American Soil—The Abolitionists,  Clarkson,
            Wilberforce, and Others—The Struggle in England—Pioneers 
            in San Domingo, Oge and Chevannes—Early Op-posers of Slavery
            in  America—William Lloyd Garrison—Wendell Phillips,
            Charles Sumner, John  Brown—The Fugitive Slave Law—The
            Emancipation Proclamation—Dread of  Education in the South—Advice
            to the Colored People. 
           
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          INDIANAPOLIS SPEECH.
           
              (1868.)  Suspension of the Writ of Habeas Corpus—Precedent
            Established by the  Revolutionary Fathers—Committees of
            Safety appointed by the  Continental Congress—Arrest of
            Disaffected Persons in Pennsylvania  and Delaware—Interference
            with Elections—Resolution of Continental  Congress with
            respect to Citizens who Opposed the sending of Deputies  to the
            Convention of New York—Penalty for refusing to take
            Continental  Money or Pray for the American Cause—Habeas
            Corpus Suspended during the  Revolution—Interference with
            Freedom of the Press—Negroes Freed and  allowed to Fight
            in the Continental Army—Crispus Attacks—An Abolition 
            Document issued by Andrew Jackson—Majority rule—Slavery
            and the  Rebellion—Tribute to General Grant.  SPEECH
            NOMINATING BLAINE.  (1876.)  Note descriptive of the
            Occasion—Demand of the Republicans of the  United States—Resumption—The
            Plumed Knight. 
           
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          CENTENNIAL ORATION.
           
              (1876.)  One Hundred Years ago, our Fathers retired the
            Gods from Politics—The  Declaration of Independence—Meaning
            of the Declaration—The Old Idea  of the Source of
            Political Power—Our Fathers Educated by their 
            Surroundings—The Puritans—Universal Religious Toleration
            declared by  the Catholics of Maryland—Roger Williams—Not
            All of our Fathers in  favor of Independence—Fortunate
            Difference in Religious Views—Secular  Government—Authority
            derived from the People—The Declaration and  the Beginning
            of the War—What they Fought For—Slavery—Results of 
            a Hundred Years of Freedom—The Declaration Carried out in
            Letter and  Spirit. 
           
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          BANGOR SPEECH.
           
              (1876.)  The Hayes Campaign—Reasons for Voting the
            Republican Ticket—Abolition  of Slavery—Preservation
            of the Union—Reasons for Not Trusting the  Democratic
            Party—Record of the Republican Party—Democrats Assisted 
            the South—Paper Money—Enfranchisement of the Negroes—Samuel
            J.  Tilden—His Essay on Finance. 
           
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          COOPER UNION SPEECH, NEW YORK.
           
            COOPER UNION SPEECH, NEW YORK.  (1876.)  All Citizens
            Stockholders in the United States of America—The 
            Democratic Party a Hungry Organization—Political Parties 
            Contrasted—The Fugitive Slave Law a Disgrace to Hell in its
            Palmiest  Days—Feelings of the Democracy Hurt on the
            Subject of Religion—Defence  of Slavery in a Resolution of
            the Presbyterians, South—State of the  Union at the Time
            the Republican Party was Born—Jacob Thompson—The 
            National Debt—Protection of Citizens Abroad—Tammany
            Hall: Its Relation  to the Penitentiary—The Democratic
            Party of New York City—"What  Hands!"—Free Schools. 
           
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          INDIANAPOLIS SPEECH.
           
              (1876.)  Address to the Veteran Soldiers of the Rebellion—Objections
            to  the Democratic Party—The Men who have been Democrats—Why
            I am a  Republican—Free Labor and Free Thought—A
            Vision of War—Democratic  Slander of the Greenback—Shall
            the People who Saved the Country Rule  It?—On Finance—Government
            Cannot Create Money—The Greenback Dollar  a Mortgage upon
            the Country—Guarantees that the Debt will be Paid-'The 
            Thoroughbred and the Mule—The Column of July, Paris—The
            Misleading  Guide Board, the Dismantled Mill, and the Place
            where there had been a  Hotel, 
           
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          CHICAGO SPEECH.
           
              (1876.)  The Plea of "Let Bygones be Bygones"—Passport
            of the Democratic  Party—Right of the General Government
            to send Troops into Southern  States for the Protection of
            Colored People—Abram S. Hewitt's  Congratulatory Letter to
            the Negroes—The Demand for Inflation of the  Currency—Record
            of Rutherford B. Hayes—Contrasted with Samuel J.  Tilden—Merits
            of the Republican Party—Negro and Southern White—The 
            Superior Man—"No Nation founded upon Injustice can Permanently
            Stand." 
           
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          EIGHT TO SEVEN ADDRESS.
           
              (1877.)  On the Electoral Commission—Reminiscences
            of the Hayes-Tilden Camp—  Constitution of the Electoral
            College—Characteristics of the Members—  Frauds at
            the Ballot Box Poisoning the Fountain of Power—Reforms 
            Suggested—Elections too Frequent—The Professional
            Office-seeker—A  Letter on Civil Service Reform—Young
            Men Advised against Government  Clerkships—Too Many
            Legislators and too Much Legislation—Defect in the 
            Constitution as to the Mode of Electing a President—Protection
            of  Citizens by State and General Governments—The Dual
            Government in South  Carolina—Ex-Rebel Key in the
            President's Cabinet—Implacables and  Bourbons South and
            North—"I extend to you each and all the Olive Branch  of
            Peace." 
           
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          HARD TIMES AND THE WAY OUT.
           
              (1878.)  Capital and Labor—What is a Capitalist?—The
            Idle and the Industrious  Artisans—No Conflict between
            Capital and Labor—A Period of Inflation  and Speculation—Life
            and Fire Insurance Agents—Business done on  Credit—The
            Crash, Failure, and Bankruptcy—Fall in the Price of Real 
            Estate a Form of Resumption—Coming back to Reality—Definitions
            of  Money Examined—Not Gold and Silver but Intelligent
            Labor the Measure  of Value—Government cannot by Law
            Create Wealth—A Bill of Fare not  a Dinner—Fiat
            Money—American Honor Pledged to the Maintenance of the 
            Greenbacks—The Cry against Holders of Bonds—Criminals
            and Vagabonds to  be supported—Duty of Government to
            Facilitate Enterprise—More Men must  Cultivate the Soil—Government
            Aid for the Overcoming of Obstacles too  Great for Individual
            Enterprise—The Palace Builders the Friends of  Labor—Extravagance
            the best Form of Charity—Useless to Boost a Man  who is
            not Climbing—The Reasonable Price for Labor—The Vagrant
            and his  strange and winding Path—What to tell the Working
            Men. 
           
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          SUFFRAGE ADDRESS.
           
              (1880.)  The Right to Vote—All Women who desire the
            Suffrage should have  It—Shall the People of the District
            of Columbia Manage their Own  Affairs—Their Right to a
            Representative in Congress and an Electoral  Vote—Anomalous
            State of Affairs at the Capital of the Republic—Not the 
            Wealthy and Educated alone should Govern—The Poor as
            Trustworthy as the  Rich—Strict Registration Laws Needed. 
           
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          WALL STREET SPEECH.
           
              (1880.)  Obligation of New York to Protect the Best
            Interests of the  Country—Treason and Forgery of the
            Democratic Party in its Appeal to  Sword and Pen—The One
            Republican in the Penitentiary of Maine—The  Doctrine of
            State Sovereignty—Protection for American Brain and 
            Muscle—Hancock on the Tariff—A Forgery (the Morey
            letter) Committed  and upheld—The Character of James A.
            Garfield. 
           
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          BROOKLYN SPEECH.
           
              (1880.)  Introduced by Henry Ward Beecher (note)—Some
            Patriotic  Democrats—Freedom of Speech North and South—An
            Honest Ballot— 
           
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          ADDRESS TO THE 86TH ILLINOIS REGIMENT.
           
             
           
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          DECORATION DAY ORATION.
           
             
           
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          DECORATION DAY ADDRESS.
           
             
           
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          RATIFICATION SPEECH.
           
             
           
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          REUNION ADDRESS.
           
             
           
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          THE CHICAGO AND NEW YORK GOLD SPEECH.
           
             
           
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          ADDRESS ON THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT.
           
              Introduction by Frederick Douglass("Abou Ben Adhem")—Decision
            of  the United States Supreme Court pronouncing the Civil Rights
            Act  Unconstitutional—Limitations of Judges—Illusion
            Destroyed by the  Decision in the Dred Scott Case—Mistake
            of Our Fathers in adopting  the Common Law of England—The
            13th Amendment to the Constitution  Quoted—The Clause of
            the Constitution upholding Slavery—Effect of  this Clause—Definitions
            of a State by Justice Wilson and Chief Justice  Chase—Effect
            of the Thirteenth Amendment—Justice Field on Involuntary 
            Servitude—Civil Rights Act Quoted—Definition of the Word
            Servitude by  the Supreme Court—Obvious Purpose of the
            Amendment—Justice Miller  on the 14th Amendment—Citizens
            Created by this Amendment—Opinion  of Justice Field—Rights
            and Immunities guaranteed by the  Constitution—Opinion
            delivered by Chief-Justice Waite—Further Opinions  of
            Courts on the question of Citizenship—Effect of the 13th, 14th
            and  15th Amendments—"Corrective" Legislation by Congress—Denial
            of equal  "Social" Privileges—Is a State responsible for
            the Action of its Agent  when acting contrary to Law?—The
            Word "State" must include the People  of the State as well as
            the Officers of the State—The Louisiana Civil  Rights Law,
            and a Case tried under it—Uniformity of Duties essential to 
            the Carrier—Congress left Powerless to protect Rights
            conferred by the  Constitution—Definition of "Appropriate
            Legislation"—Propositions laid  down regarding the
            Sovereignty of the State, the powers of the General  Government,
            etc.—A Tribute to Justice Harlan—A Denial that Property 
            exists by Virtue of Law—Civil Rights not a Question of Social 
            Equality—Considerations upon which Social Equality depends—Liberty
            not  a Question of Social Equality—The Superior Man—Inconsistencies
            of the  Past—No Reason why we should Hate the Colored
            People—The Issues that  are upon Us. 
           
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          TRIAL OF C. B. REYNOLDS FOR BLASPHEMY.
           
              ADDRESS TO THE JURY.  Report of the Case from the New York
            Times (note)—The Right to express  Opinions—Attempts
            to Rule the Minds of Men by Force—Liberty the  Greatest
            Good—Intellectual Hospitality Defined—When the Catholic 
            Church had Power—Advent of the Protestants—The Puritans,
            Quakers.  Unitarians, Universalists—What is Blasphemy?—Why
            this Trial should not  have Taken Place—Argument cannot be
            put in Jail—The Constitution of  New Jersey—A higher
            Law than Men can Make—The Blasphemy Statute  Quoted and
            Discussed—Is the Statute Constitutional?—The Harm done 
            by Blasphemy Laws—The Meaning of this Persecution—Religions
            are  Ephemeral—Let us judge each other by our Actions—Men
            who have braved  Public Opinion should be Honored—The
            Blasphemy Law if enforced would  rob the World of the Results of
            Scientific Research—It declares the  Great Men of to-day
            to be Criminals—The Indictment Read and Commented  upon—Laws
            that go to Sleep—Obsolete Dogmas the Denial of which was 
            once punished by Death—Blasphemy Characterized—On the
            Argument  that Blasphemy Endangers the Public Peace—A
            Definition of real  Blasphemy—Trials for Blasphemy in
            England—The case of Abner  Kneeland—True Worship,
            Prayer, and Religion—What is Holy and  Sacred—What
            is Claimed in this Case—For the Honor of the State—The 
            word Liberty—Result of the Trial (note). 
           
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          GOD IN THE CONSTITUTION.
           
              The Feudal System—Office and Purpose of our Constitution—Which
            God  shall we Select?—The Existence of any God a Matter of
            Opinion—What is  entailed by a Recognition of a God in the
            Constitution—Can the Infinite  be Flattered with a
            Constitutional Amendment?—This government is  Secular—The
            Government of God a Failure—The Difference between the 
            Theological and the Secular Spirit—A Nation neither Christian
            nor  Infidel—The Priest no longer a Necessity—Progress
            of Science and the  Development of the Mind. 
           
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          A REPLY TO BISHOP SPALDING.
           
              On God in the Constitution—Why the Constitutional
            Convention ignored  the Question of Religion—The Fathers
            Misrepresented—Reasons why the  Attributes of God should
            not form an Organic Part of the Law of the  Land—The
            Effect of a Clause Recognizing God. 
           
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          CRIMES AGAINST CRIMINALS.
           
              The Three Pests of a Community—I. Forms of Punishment
            and Torture—More  Crimes Committed than Prevented by
            Governments—II. Are not Vices  transmitted by Nature?—111.
            Is it Possible for all People to be  Honest?—Children of
            Vice as the natural Product of Society—Statistics:  the
            Relation between Insanity, Pauperism, and Crime—IV. The
            Martyrs of  Vice—Franklin's Interest in the Treatment of
            Prisoners—V. Kindness  as a Remedy—Condition of the
            Discharged Prisoner—VI. Compensation  for Convicts—VII.
            Professional Criminals—Shall the Nation take  Life?—Influence
            of Public Executions on the Spectators—Lynchers  for the
            Most Part Criminals at Heart—VIII. The Poverty of the Many a 
            perpetual Menace—Limitations of Land-holding.—IX.
            Defective Education  by our Schools—Hands should be
            educated as well as Head—Conduct  improved by a clearer
            Perception of Consequences—X. The Discipline of  the
            average Prison Hardening and Degrading—While Society cringes
            before  Great Thieves there will be Little Ones to fill the
            Jails—XI. Our  Ignorance Should make us Hesitate. 
           
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          A WOODEN GOD.
           
              On Christian and Chinese worship—Report of the Select
            Committee  on Chinese Immigration—The only true God as
            contrasted with  Joss—Sacrifices to the "Living God"—Messrs.
            Wright, Dickey, O'Connor  and Murch on the "Religious System" of
            the American Union—How to prove  that Christians are
            better than Heathens—Injustice in the Name of  God—An
            honest Merchant the best Missionary—A Few Extracts from 
            Confucius—The Report proves that the Wise Men of China who
            predicted  that Christians could not be Trusted were not only
            Philosophers but  Prophets. 
           
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          SOME INTERROGATION POINTS.
           
              A New Party and its Purpose—The Classes that Exist in
            every  Country—Effect of Education on the Common People—Wants
            Increased by  Intelligence—The Dream of 1776—The
            Monopolist and the Competitor—The  War between the Gould
            and Mackay Cables—Competition between  Monopolies—All
            Advance in Legislation made by Repealing Laws—Wages  and
            Values not to be fixed by Law—Men and Machines—The
            Specific of  the Capitalist: Economy—The poor Man and
            Woman devoured by  their Fellow-men—Socialism one of the
            Worst Possible forms of  Slavery—Liberty not to be
            exchanged for Comfort—Will the Workers  always give their
            Earnings for the Useless?—Priests, Successful Frauds,  and
            Robed Impostors. 
           
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          ART AND MORALITY.
           
              The Origin of Man's Thoughts—The imaginative Man—"Medicinal
            View" of  Poetry—Rhyme and Religion—The theological
            Poets and their Purpose in  Writing—Moral Poets and their
            "Unwelcome Truths"—The really Passionate  are the Virtuous—Difference
            between the Nude and the Naked—Morality  the Melody of
            Conduct—The inculcation of Moral Lessons not contemplated 
            by Artists or great Novelists—Mistaken Reformers—Art not
            a  Sermon—Language a Multitude of Pictures—Great
            Pictures and Great  Statues painted and chiseled with Words—Mediocrity
            moral from a  Necessity which it calls Virtue—Why Art
            Civilizes—The Nude—The Venus  de Milo—This is
            Art. 
           
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          THE DIVIDED HOUSEHOLD OF FAITH.
           
              The Way in which Theological Seminaries were Endowed—Religious 
            Guide-boards—Vast Interests interwoven with Creeds—Pretensions
            of  Christianity—Kepler's Discovery of his Three Great
            Laws—Equivocations  and Evasions of the Church—Nature's
            Testimony against the  Bible—The Age of Man on the Earth—"Inspired"
            Morality of the  Bible—Miracles—Christian Dogmas—What
            the church has been Compelled to  Abandon—The Appeal to
            Epithets, Hatred and Punishment—"Spirituality"  the last
            Resource of the Orthodox—What is it to be Spiritual?—Two 
            Questions for the Defenders of Orthodox Creeds. 
           
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          WHY AM I AN AGNOSTIC?
           
              Part I. Inharmony of Nature and the Lot of Man with the
            Goodness and  Wisdom of a supposed Deity—Why a Creator is
            Imagined—Difficulty of the  Act of Creation—Belief
            in Supernatural Beings—Belief and Worship among  Savages—Questions
            of Origin and Destiny—Progress impossible without  Change
            of Belief—Circumstances Determining Belief—How may the 
            True Religion be Ascertained?—Prosperity of Nations nor Virtue 
            of Individuals Dependent on Religions or Gods—Uninspired Books 
            Superior—Part II. The Christian Religion—Credulity—Miracles
            cannot  be Established—Effect of Testimony—Miraculous
            Qualities of all  Religions—Theists and Naturalists—The
            Miracle of Inspiration—How  can the alleged Fact of
            Inspiration be Established?—God's work and  Man's—Rewards
            for Falsehood offered by the Church. 
           
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          HUXLEY AND AGNOSTICISM.
           
              Statement by the Principal of King's College—On the
            Irrelevancy of a  Lack of Scientific Knowledge—Difference
            between the Agnostic and  the Christian not in Knowledge but in
            Credulity—The real name of  an Agnostic said to be
            "Infidel"—What an Infidel is—"Unpleasant" 
            significance of the Word—Belief in Christ—"Our Lord and
            his Apostles"  possibly Honest Men—Their Character not
            Invoked—Possession by evil  spirits—Professor
            Huxley's Candor and Clearness—The splendid Dream  of
            Auguste Comte—Statement of the Positive Philosophy—Huxley
            and  Harrison. 
           
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          ERNEST RENAN.
           
              His Rearing and his Anticipated Biography—The complex
            Character of the  Christ of the Gospels—Regarded as a Man
            by Renan—The Sin against the  Holy Ghost—Renan on
            the Gospels—No Evidence that they were written  by the Men
            whose Names they Bear—Written long after the Events they 
            Describe—Metaphysics of the Church found in the Gospel of John—Not 
            Apparent why Four Gospels should have been Written—Regarded as 
            legendary Biographies—In "flagrant contradiction one with
            another"—The  Divine Origin of Christ an After-growth—Improbable
            that he intended to  form a Church—Renan's Limitations—Hebrew
            Scholarship—His "People of  Israel"—His Banter and
            Blasphemy.  TOLSTOY AND "THE KREUTZER SONATA."  Tolstoy's
            Belief and Philosophy—His Asceticism—His View of Human 
            Love—Purpose of "The Kreutzer Sonata"—Profound
            Difference between the  Love of Men and that of Women—Tolstoy
            cannot now found a Religion, but  may create the Necessity for
            another Asylum—The Emotions—The Curious  Opinion
            Dried Apples have of Fruit upon the Tree—Impracticability of 
            selling All and giving to the Poor—Love and Obedience—Unhappiness
            in  the Marriage Relation not the fault of Marriage. 
           
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          THOMAS PAINE.
           
              Life by Moncure D. Conway—Early Advocacy of Reforms
            against Dueling  and Cruelty to Animals—The First to write
            "The United States of  America"—Washington's Sentiment
            against Separation from Great  Britain—Paine's Thoughts in
            the Declaration of Independence—Author of  the first
            Proclamation of Emancipation in America—Establishment of a 
            Fund for the Relief of the Army—H's "Farewell Address"—The
            "Rights of  Man"—Elected to the French Convention—Efforts
            to save the Life of the  King—His Thoughts on Religion—Arrested—The
            "Age of Reason" and the  Weapons it has furnished "Advanced
            Theologians"—Neglect by Gouverneur  Morris and Washington—James
            Monroe's letter to Paine and to the  Committee of General Safety—The
            vaunted Religious Liberty of  Colonial Maryland—Orthodox
            Christianity at the Beginning of the 19th  Century—New
            Definitions of God—The Funeral of Paine. 
           
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          THE THREE PHILANTHROPISTS.
           
              I. Mr. A., the Professional Philanthropist, who established a
            Colony  for the Enslavement of the Poor who could not take care
            of themselves,  amassed a large Fortune thereby, built several
            churches, and earned  the Epitaph, "He was the Providence of the
            Poor"—II. Mr. B.,  the Manufacturer, who enriched himself
            by taking advantage of the  Necessities of the Poor, paid the
            lowest Rate of Wages, considered  himself one of God's Stewards,
            endowed the "B Asylum" and the "B  College," never lost a
            Dollar, and of whom it was recorded, "He Lived  for Others."
            III. Mr. C., who divided his Profits with the People who had 
            earned it, established no Public Institutions, suppressed Nobody;
            and  those who have worked for him said, "He allowed Others to
            live for  Themselves." 
           
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          SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED?
           
            SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED?  Trampling on the Rights of
            Inferiors—Rise of the Irish and Germans  to Power—The
            Burlingame Treaty—Character of Chinese Laborers—Their 
            Enemies in the Pacific States—Violation of Treaties—The
            Geary Law—The  Chinese Hated for their Virtues—More
            Piety than Principle among the  People's Representatives—Shall
            we go back to Barbarism? 
           
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          A WORD ABOUT EDUCATION.
           
              What the Educated Man Knows—Necessity of finding out the
            Facts  of Nature—"Scholars" not always Educated Men; from
            necessaries to  luxuries; who may be called educated; mental
            misers; the first duty of  man; university education not
            necessary to usefulness, no advantage in  learning useless
            facts. 
           
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          WHAT I WANT FOR CHRISTMAS.
           
              Would have the Kings and Emperors resign, the Nobility drop
            their  Titles, the Professors agree to teach only What they
            Know, the  Politicians changed to Statesmen, the Editors print
            only the  Truth—Would like to see Drunkenness and
            Prohibition abolished,  Corporal Punishment done away with, and
            the whole World free. 
           
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          FOOL FRIENDS.
           
              The Fool Friend believes every Story against you, never denies
            a Lie  unless it is in your Favor, regards your Reputation as
            Common Prey,  forgets his Principles to gratify your Enemies,
            and is so friendly that  you cannot Kick him. 
           
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          INSPIRATION.
           
              Nature tells a different Story to all Eyes and Ears—Horace
            Greeley and  the Big Trees—The Man who "always did like
            rolling land"—What the  Snow looked like to the German—Shakespeare's
            different Story for each  Reader—As with Nature so with
            the Bible. 
           
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          THE TRUTH OF HISTORY.
           
              People who live by Lying—A Case in point—H. Hodson
            Rugg's Account of  the Conversion of Ingersoll and 5,000 of his
            Followers—The "Identity of  Lost Israel with the British
            Nation"—Old Falsehoods about Infidels—The  New York
            Observer and Thomas Paine—A Rascally English Editor—The 
            Charge that Ingersoll's Son had been Converted—The Fecundity
            of  Falsehood. 
           
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          HOW TO EDIT A LIBERAL PAPER.
           
              The Editor should not narrow his Horizon so that he can see
            only  One Thing—To know the Defects of the Bible is but
            the Beginning of  Wisdom—The Liberal Paper should not
            discuss Theological Questions  Alone—A Column for Children—Candor
            and Kindness—Nothing should be  Asserted that is not Known—Above
            All, teach the Absolute Freedom of the  Mind. 
           
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          SECULARISM.
           
              The religion of Humanity; what it Embraces and what it
            Advocates—A  Protest against Ecclesiastical Tyranny—Believes
            in Building a Home  here—Means Food and Fireside—The
            Right to express your Thought—Its  advice to every Human
            Being—A Religion without Mysteries, Miracles, or 
            Persecutions. 
           
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          CRITICISM OF "ROBERT ELSMERE," "JOHN WARD, PREACHER," AND "AN AFRICAN
          FARM."
           
              Religion unsoftened by Infidelity—The Orthodox Minister
            whose Wife has  a Heart—Honesty of Opinion not a
            Mitigating Circumstance—Repulsiveness  of an Orthodox Life—John
            Ward an Object of Pity—Lyndall of the  "African Farm"—The
            Story of the Hunter—Death of Waldo—Women the 
            Caryatides of the Church—Attitude of Christianity toward other 
            Religions—Egotism of the ancient Jews. 
           
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          THE LIBEL LAWS.
           
              All Articles appearing in a newspaper should be Signed by the 
            Writer—The Law if changed should throw greater Safeguards
            around the  Reputation of the Citizen—Pains should be
            taken to give Prominence to  Retractions—The Libel Laws
            like a Bayonet in War. 
           
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          REV. DR. NEWTON'S SERMON ON A NEW RELIGION.
           
            REV. DR. NEWTON'S SERMON ON A NEW RELIGION.  Mr. Newton not
            Regarded as a Sceptic—New Meanings given to Old  Words—The
            vanishing Picture of Hell—The Atonement—Confidence being 
            Lost in the Morality of the Gospel—Exclusiveness of the
            Churches—The  Hope of Immortality and Belief in God have
            Nothing to do with Real  Religion—Special Providence a
            Mistake. 
           
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          AN ESSAY ON CHRISTMAS.
           
              The Day regarded as a Holiday—A Festival far older 
            than Christianity—Relics of Sun-worship in Christian 
            Ceremonies—Christianity furnished new Steam for an old Engine—Pagan 
            Festivals correspond to Ours—Why Holidays are Popular—They
            must be for  the Benefit of the People. 
           
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          HAS FREETHOUGHT A CONSTRUCTIVE SIDE?
           
              The Object of Freethought—what the Religionist calls
            "Affirmative  and Positive"—The Positive Side of
            Freethought—Constructive Work of  Christianity. 
           
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          THE IMPROVED MAN.
           
              He will be in Favor of universal Liberty, neither Master nor
            Slave; of  Equality and Education; will develop in the Direction
            of the Beautiful;  will believe only in the Religion of this
            World—His Motto—Will not  endeavor to change the
            Mind of the "Infinite"—Will have no Bells or  Censers—Will
            be satisfied that the Supernatural does not exist—Will be 
            Self-poised, Independent, Candid and Free. 
           
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          EIGHT HOURS MUST COME.
           
              The Working People should be protected by Law—Life of no
            particular  Importance to the Man who gets up before Daylight
            and works till  after Dark—A Revolution probable in the
            Relations between Labor and  Capital—Working People
            becoming Educated and more Independent—The  Government can
            Aid by means of Good Laws—Women the worst Paid—There 
            should be no Resort to Force by either Labor or Capital. 
           
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          THE JEWS.
           
              Much like People of other Religions—Teaching given
            Christian Children  about those who die in the Faith of Abraham—Dr.
            John Hall on  the Persecution of the Jews in Russia as the
            Fulfillment of  Prophecy—Hostility of Orthodox early
            Christians excited by Jewish  Witnesses against the Faith—An
            infamous Chapter of History—Good  and bad Men of every
            Faith—Jews should outgrow their own  Superstitions—What
            the intelligent Jew Knows. 
           
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          CRUMBLING CREEDS.
           
            CRUMBLING CREEDS.  The Common People called upon to Decide as
            between the Universities and  the Synods—Modern Medicine,
            Law, Literature and Pictures as against the  Old—Creeds
            agree with the Sciences of their Day—Apology the Prelude 
            to Retreat—The Presbyterian Creed Infamous, but no worse than 
            the Catholic—Progress begins when Expression of Opinion is 
            Allowed—Examining the Religions of other Countries—The
            Pulpit's  Position Lost—The Dogma of Eternal Pain the
            Cause of the orthodox  Creeds losing Popularity—Every
            Church teaching this Infinite Lie must  Fall. 
           
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          OUR SCHOOLS.
           
            OUR SCHOOLS.  Education the only Lever capable of raising
            Mankind—The  School-house more Important than the Church—Criticism
            of New York's  School-Buildings—The Kindergarten System
            Recommended—Poor Pay of  Teachers—The great Danger
            to the Republic is Ignorance. 
           
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          VIVISECTION.
           
              The Hell of Science—Brutal Curiosity of Vivisectors—The
            Pretence that  they are working for the Good of Man—Have
            these scientific Assassins  added to useful Knowledge?—No
            Good to the Race to be Accomplished by  Torture—The
            Tendency to produce a Race of intelligent Wild Beasts. 
           
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          THE CENSUS ENUMERATOR'S OFFICIAL CATECHISM.
           
              Right of the Government to ask Questions and of the Citizen to
            refuse  to answer them—Matters which the Government has no
            Right to pry  into—Exposing the Debtor's financial
            Condition—A Man might decline to  tell whether he has a
            Chronic Disease or not. 
           
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          THE AGNOSTIC CHRISTMAS.
           
              Natural Phenomena and Myths celebrated—The great Day of
            the first  Religion, Sun-worship—A God that Knew no Hatred
            nor Sought Revenge—The  Festival of Light. 
           
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          SPIRITUALITY.
           
              A much-abused Word—The Early Christians too Spiritual to
            be  Civilized—Calvin and Knox—Paine, Voltaire and
            Humboldt not  Spiritual—Darwin also Lacking—What it
            is to be really Spiritual—No  connection with
            Superstition. 
           
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          SUMTER'S GUN.
           
              What were thereby blown into Rags and Ravelings—The
            Birth of a  new Epoch announced—Lincoln made the most
            commanding Figure of the  Century—Story of its Echoes. 
           
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          WHAT INFIDELS HAVE DONE.
           
              What might have been Asked of a Christian 100 years after 
            Christ—Hospitals and Asylums not all built for Charity—Girard 
            College—Lick Observatory—Carnegie not an Orthodox
            Christian—Christian  Colleges—Give us Time. 
           
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          CRUELTY IN THE ELMIRA REFORMATORY.
           
              Brockway a Savage—The Lash will neither develop the
            Brain nor cultivate  the Heart—Brutality a Failure—Bishop
            Potter's apostolical Remark. 
           
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          LAW'S DELAY.
           
              The Object of a Trial—Justice can afford to Wait—The
            right of  Appeal—Case of Mrs. Maybrick—Life
            Imprisonment for Murderers—American  Courts better than
            the English.  BIGOTRY OF COLLEGES.  Universities naturally
            Conservative—Kansas State University's  Objection to
            Ingersoll as a commencement Orator—Comment by Mr. Depew 
            (note)—Action of Cornell and the University of Missouri. 
           
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          A YOUNG MAN'S CHANCES TO-DAY.
           
              The Chances a few Years ago—Capital now Required—Increasing 
            competition in Civilized Life—Independence the first Object—If
            he has  something to say, there will be plenty to listen. 
           
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          SCIENCE AND SENTIMENT.
           
              Science goes hand in hand with Imagination—Artistic and
            Ethical  Development—Science destroys Superstition, not
            true Religion—Education  preferable to Legislation—Our
            Obligation to our Children.  "SOWING AND REAPING."  Moody's
            Belief accounted for—A dishonest and corrupting Doctrine—A 
            want of Philosophy and Sense—Have Souls in Heaven no Regrets?—Mr. 
            Moody should read some useful Books. 
           
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          SHOULD INFIDELS SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SUNDAY SCHOOL?
           
              Teachings of orthodox Sunday Schools—The ferocious God
            of the  Bible—Miracles—A Christian in Constantinople
            would not send his  Child to a Mosque—Advice to all
            Agnostics—Strangle the Serpent of  Superstition. 
           
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          WHAT WOULD YOU SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BIBLE AS A MORAL GUIDE?
           
              Character of the Bible—Men and Women not virtuous
            because of any  Book—The Commandments both Good and Bad—Books
            that do not help  Morality—Jehovah not a moral God—What
            is Morality?—Intelligence the  only moral guide. 
           
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          GOVERNOR ROLLINS' FAST-DAY PROCLAMATION.
           
              Decline of the Christian Religion in New Hampshire—Outgrown 
            Beliefs—Present-day Views of Christ and the Holy Ghost—Abandoned 
            Notions about the Atonement—Salvation for Credulity—The
            Miracles  of the New Testament—The Bible "not true but
            inspired"—The "Higher  Critics" riding two Horses—Infidelity
            in the Pulpit—The "restraining  Influences of Religion" as
            illustrated by Spain and Portugal—Thinking,  Working and
            Praying—The kind of Faith that has Departed. 
           
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          A LOOK BACKWARD AND A PROPHECY.
           
              The Truth Seeker congratulated on its Twenty-fifth
            Birthday—Teachings  of Twenty-five Years ago—Dodging
            and evading—The Clerical Assault  on Darwin—Draper,
            Buckle, Hegel, Spencer, Emerson—Comparison  of Prejudices—Vanished
            Belief in the Devil—Matter and  Force—Contradictions
            Dwelling in Unity—Substitutes for Jehovah—A 
            Prophecy. 
           
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          POLITICAL MORALITY.
           
              Argument in the contested Election Case of Strobach against
            Herbert—The  Importance of Honest Elections—Poisoning
            the Source of Justice—The  Fraudulent Voter a Traitor to
            his Sovereign, the Will of the  People—Political Morality
            Imperative. 
           
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          A FEW REASONS FOR DOUBTING THE INSPIRATION OF THE BIBLE.
           
            Date and Manner of Composing the Old Testament—Other Books not
            now in  Existence, and Disagreements about the Canon—Composite
            Character of  certain Books—Various Versions—Why was
            God's message given to the Jews  alone?—The Story of the
            Creation, of the Flood, of the Tower, and  of Lot's wife—Moses
            and Aaron and the Plagues of Egypt—Laws of  Slavery—Instructions
            by Jehovah Calculated to excite Astonishment and  Mirth—Sacrifices
            and the Scapegoat—Passages showing that the Laws of  Moses
            were made after the Jews had left the Desert—Jehovah's
            dealings  with his People—The Sabbath Law—Prodigies—Joshua's
            Miracle—Damned  Ignorance and Infamy—Jephthah's
            Sacrifice—Incredible Stories—The  Woman of Endor and
            the Temptation of David—Elijah and Elisha—Loss of 
            the Pentateuch from Moses to Josiah—The Jews before and after
            being  Abandoned by Jehovah—Wealth of Solomon and other
            Marvels. 
           
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