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^v.
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111
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GENERAL INDEX.
VOLUME XL.
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.; • •■.•11 ■■'■i' •-
THE
QUARTERLY REVIEW.
VOL. XL.
GENERAL INDEX
TO
VOLUMES XXI. TO XXXIX.
LONDON:
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET.
183L
LIBRARY
UMIVBSSITY OF CALIFORNIA
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LONDON t
Printed by William Clowes,
Stamford street.
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CONTENTS-
Page
Introductory Note ------- vii
Books and Subjects Reviewed i^c
Authors reviewed -_----- xxiu
Part I. — ^Personal Names 1
Part II. — Subjects - - ^^^
Part III.— New Publications 297
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NOTE.
The present volume completes the General Index of the Quar-
terly Review, down to the end of the Fortieth Volume, published
in 1829* The triple arrangement of the former volume (con-
taining the General Index to the Review from its commencement
in 1809> to the end of the Twentieth Volume in 18I9)> has been
adhered to.
Of the period embraced in the first nineteen volumes, it was
said, in the preface to their Index, ' it includes some of the most
important transactions in British History.' As regards Domestic
Polity, the succeeding period may claim a character of at least
equal importance.
London, Oct., 1831.
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WORKS AND SUBJECTS REVIEWED.
AbboT; the, a Novel, xxvi. 109.
Abipones, Dobrizhoffei's Account of the,
xxvi. 277.
Absentees, Irish, xxxiii. 455.
. Adventures of a French Serjeant, zzxiv.
406.
Africa, South, Latrobe^s Visit to, xxii.
247.
— — Northern, Travels in, by Captain
Lyon, XXV. 25.
Northern Central, McQueen's
View of, xxvi. 51,
■ South, CampbelPs Travels in,
xxvii. 364.
— — — Sketches taken during Ten
Vojrages to, xxix. 508.
— — Interior of, xxxi. 445.
Discoveries in, by Major Denham
and others, xxxiii. 518.
• Journal of an Expedition to the
Interior of, xxxix. 143.
African Committee, xxii. 273.
■ Institution, Sixteenth Report of
the Directors of the, xxviii. 161.
. Reports of, xxxiv. 579.
Agriculture, Report on the State of, xxv.
466.
■ and Rent, xxxvi. 391.
— — Bland's Principles of, ibid,
' Jacob on the Cultivation of
Poor Soils, xxxviii. 410.
Albania. See Travelt,
Alchemy, xxvi. 180.
America. See Europe,
— — — Resources of the United States
of, by J. Bristed, xxi. 1.
Statistical View of, ibid,
— — Sketches of, by H. B. Fearon,
xxi. 124.
• Facts and Observations re-
specting the United States of, xxiii.
373.
• North, Harmon's Travels in,
xxvL 409.
Harrises Tour through the
United States of, xxvii. 71.
-Views of Society and Manners
in, ibid.
' North, Welby's Visit to, ibid,
■■ James's War between Great
Britain and the United States of, xxvii.
405.
• Thompson's Sketches, I'M,
America, Memorable Days in, xxix. 370.
Noticias Secretas de, xxxv.
321.
■ Cornish Mining in, xxxvi. 81.
North, xxxvii. 260.
South, Reflections on the State
of Spanish South America, xxviii. 536.
Travels in, by Calddeugh,
xxxii. 125.
Waterton's Wanderings in,
xxxiii. 314.
Amulet, the, xxxvii. 84.
Anastasius, or the Memoirs of a Greek,
xxiv. 511.
Anatomy, Comparative, Lawrence's In-
troduction to, xxii. 1.
Anecdotes of Books and Men, xxiii. 400.
Angerstein's Collection of Pictures, xxxi.
210.
Anglo-Saxon History, xxxiv. 348.
Annals of the Parish, xxv. 147.
Antiquities, Proposal for a Museum of
National, xxxvii. 485.
Apocryphal New Testament, xxv. 347.
Arabs, treachery of, xxiii. 279.
Architecture of Vitruvius, xxi. 25.
— ^— — of the Middle Ages, xxv.
112.
- Gunn's Origin of Gothic,
- Rickman's English, ibid.
Britton's Ancient Architec-
ture of Great Britain, ibid.
' Specimens of Gk)thic,in Eng.
ibid.
land, ibid.
Application and Intent of
the various Styles of, xxvii. 308.
Cottingham's Henry the
Seventh's Chapel, ibid,
• Palladian, of Italy, xxxii. 42.
Aristarchus Anti-Blomfieldianus, xxiv.
376.
Arkansa Territory, Travels into the, xxix. 1.
Arthur, King, Prospectus of a Work in-
tended to comprise the most interesting
particulars relating to, and his Round
Table, xxi. 486.
Armour, Ancient, Critical Inquiry into,
by S. R. Meyrick, xxx. 334.
Artizans and Machinery, Reports from
the Select Committee on, xxxi. 391.
Ashantee, Bowdich's Mission to, xxii,
873,
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WORKS AND SUBJECTS REVIEWED.
Quarterly
Asia, Historical Account of Discoveries
and Travels in, xxiv. 311.
-^— Nazaroff's Notices in the Central
Parts of, xxvii. 138.
Aspersions Answered, by W. Hone, xxx.
472.
Assurance Societies, Babbage on Life,
XXXV. 1.
— ^— - Society, Morgan's Bye-Laws
of the Equitable, ibid.
Astrology, xxvi. 180.
Astronomy, Woodhouse on, xxii. 129.
— — — ^— Observations on the Dis-
tances of 380 Double Stars and Triple,
made in 1821, 1822, and 1823, xxxviii. 1.
Observations, &c., with a
Reexamination of 36 Stars of the sasae
Description, ibid.
Athenians, Manners of the, xxiv. 419.
Australasia, Statistical Account of the
British Settlements in, by Wentworth,
xxxii.311.
Australian Colonies, ibid.
Autobiography, xxxv. 148.
Bacon, Friar, the Famous History of,
xxix. 440.
Bampton Lectures, preached at Oxford
in 1822, by R. Whately, xxviii. 144.
Bank. See Savings Banks.
Essay on the Principles of Banking,
xxxi. 128.
' of England, Mushet on the Issues
of, xxxix. 451.
Bayard, Memoirs of, xxxii. 355.
' Right Joyous and Pleasant Hi»>
tory of the Feats of, ibid.
Bible, a New Translation of, xxiii. 287.
Vindication of our Authorised Trans-
lation of, xxiii. 287. See Scriptures.
*— — Society, British and Foreign, Owen's
History of, xxxvi. 1.
Twenty-Second Report of,
ibid.
Statement by the Committee
of the Edinburgh, ibid.
— — — Second Statement, ibid.
Third Statement, ibid.
• Haldane's Review of the Con-
duct of the Directors of the British and
Foreign, ibid.
Haldane's Second Review,
iUd.
• Remarks on the Accusations
against, ibid.
Bibliotheque Chr^tiennepour I'Edification
de la Jeunnesse, xxxvi. 305.
Biography of Voltaire and Madame du
Ch^telet, xxiii. 154.
Lodge's illustrated, xxxviii.
378.
Blow-pipe, Gas, History of the Philoso-
phical Apparatus so denominated, xxiii.
466.
Books, Observations and Characters of,
collected from the Conversation of Mr.
Pope, &c, xxiii. 400.
Bracebridge Hall, xxxi. 473.
Brambletye House, a Novel, xzxr. 518.
Brasbridge, J., Memoir of, xxxv. 148.
Brazil, Voyage to, by Maria Graham^
xxxi. 1.
— — Travels in, by J. B. Von Spiz, and
C. T. P. Von Martins, ibid,
Bristol Institution, xxxiv. 153.
Britain, Great Military Force of, xxr. 67.
Britton, Brief Memoir of, xxxiv. 305.
Buenos A3nres, xxxv. 114.
Buonaparte, Napoleon, Life of, xxtix.
475. See Napoleon'— St. Helena,
Burke, Prior's Life of, xxxiv. 457.
Biurmese War, Narrative of the, wasfi
481.
Bush Rangers in Van Diemen's Land,
Narrative of the Atrocities committed
by, xxiii. 73.
Caen, Essai sur la Ville de, xxv. 112.
Cain, a Mystery, xxvii. 476.
Cambist, Kelly's Universal, xxvi. 416.
Cambridge Philosophical Society, Trans-
actions of the, xxxiv. 153.
Camoens, Life and Writings (^, xxviL 1.
Campaign of the Allied Army in the
Western Pyrenees and South of France,
in 1813 and 1814, by Captain Batfy,
XXX. 61.
Campaigns of the British Army at Wash-
ington and New Orleans, xxxvii. 504.
Canada, Facts and Observations respect
ing, xxiii. 373.
Upper, Emigrant's Guide to, ibid,
Visit to the Province of, in 1819,
ibid.
Canadas, Campaigns in the, xxviL 405.
" Sir George Prevosf s MiUtary
Administration in the, ibid.
Canals and Rail-Roads, xxxi. 349.
Canova, Memoirs of, by Memes, ssbv.
110.
Cape of Good Hope, Importance of, to
Great Britain as a Colony, xxii. 203.
- Hints on £migra«
tion to, ibid.
lony of, ibid.
to, ibid.
- Calendar, ibid,
' Account of the Co-
- Guide to, ibid.
- Emigrant's Guide
. Notes OB the, xzr.
453.
Caitwright, Major, Life and Correspond"
ence of, xxxv. 148.
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WORKS AND SUBJECTS RXVISWSIX
Caflh Paymdnis, Letter to Lord GrenTUle
on the Resumption of, xxxix. 451*
Catechism, Protestant Dissenter's, by W.
Newman, xxxi. 229.
Cathedral Antiquities, by Britton, xxziv.
305.
Catholic Question, xxxviii. 535.
■ Kendall's Letters on
the, ibid.
Century of Inventions, zxxii. 397.
Cephalonia. See Corfu,
Chancery, Court of, Obseryations on the
Judges of, XXX. 272.
■ on the Power exercised
by the, of depriving^ a Father of the
custody of his Children, xxxix. 183.
Charge delivered at the Pripaary Triennial
Visitation of the Province of Munster, in
1823, by Richard, Archbishop of Cashel,
'.491.
Chemistry, Brande's History of, xxvi. 180.
Chile, Miers' Travels in, xxxv. 1 14.
Chili, Travels to, in 1820^ 21, xxx. 441.
— Journal of a Residence in, by Maria
Graham, ibid,
»— -. Journal written on the Coast of, by
Captain Basil Hall, ibid,
China, Journey in the Interior of, by
Clarke Abel, xxL 67.
Chinese Embassy, Narrative of the, by
Sir G. T. Staunton, xxv, 414.
— Novels and Poetry, xxxvi. 496.
Christian Doctrine, Milton's Treatise on,
xxxii. 442.
I — Knowledge, Reports and Cor-
respondence of the Society for pro-
moting, xxxii. 1.
. Psalmist, xxxviii. 16.
Christmas Box, the, xxxvii. 84.
Church in Danger, xxiii. 549.
. Basis of National Wel&re, con-
sidered in reference to the Safety of the
Church of England, xxiii. 549.
■ Sketch of the History of Chttrches
in England, xxiii. 549.
-_ Letter to Lord Liverpool on that
part of the Speech of the Pnnce Regent
which recommended the attention of
Parliament to the deficient in the
places of Public Worship, xxiii. 549.
— — Butler's Book of the Roman Ca-
tholic, xxxiii. 1. -
. Strictures on the Poet Laureate's
Bookofthe, t6iU
— of England, Appeal in behalf of,
xxix. 524.
of Englandism, by J. Bentham,
xxi. 167.
~— of Ireland, Case of the, in a Let-
ter to the Marquess Wellesl^, xxxi.
491.
— ' Case of the, ia a Second
Letter^ ibid.
Church of Rome, in IreUuid, Kendall's
History of the Policy of the, xxxviii.
535.
Churches, New, Report of the Commis-
sioners for Building, xxxi. 229.
Clergy of the Church of Bngland^ Defence
of, xxix. 524.
Cdlingwood's, Lord, Co rre s po nd e nc e and
Life, imLvii. 364.
Colonial PoUg^, xxvi. 522.
Colonies, Poutical Importance of our
American, xxxiii. 410.
Reflections on the Value of the
British West Indian Colonies, ibid.
. Observations on the Impor-
tance of the North American Colonies,
ibid.
...».-.—. Spanish, Mal-Adminisiration of
the, xxxv. 321.
• of Holland, Account of the
Poor, xxxviii. 410.
-de la Colonie de Frsderidis-
oord,par le Baron de Keverberg, xxxviii.
410.
Colonization, or the Means of affording
Employment to the redundant Populai>
tion of Great Britain and Ireland, by,
xxii. 242.
Comedies, Orgueil et V«nit6, xxix. 414.
—. La Fille d'Houneur, par A.
Duval, ibid,
• Le Folliculaire, par M* de la
Ville de Mirmont, ibid.
■ Les Plaideurs sans Pkt)c^, par
M. Etienne, ibid.
• L' Amour et 1' AinbitioBi par M.
Ribout6, t6iVi^
" VaUrie, par M. Scribe, ibid.
Le Secretaire et le Cuisinier, par
M. Scribe, ibid.
- of Aristophanes, xxxiii. 332.
. the Birds of Aristophanes, by
the Rev. H. F. Cary, xxxiii 332.
Commerce, Freedom of, xxiv. 281.
— — — Observations on the injurions
Consequences of the Restrictions upon
Foreign, ibid,
des Nouveaux Etats de
r Am^rique, Documens rdati& au, xxxiv.
45.
— " — — Review of the Negotiations
between America and Great Britain
respecting, xxxix. 215.
Contagion and Quarantine, zxvii* 524.
■ ■ Progress of Opinion on the
Subject of, xxxiii. 218.
' Report from the Select Com*
mittee on the Doctrine of, in the Hague,
ibid.
Conversations, Imaginary, of Literary
Men, by W. S. Landor, xxx. 508.
Copyright Ac^ Inquiry into the, xxv.
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WORKS AND SUBJECTS REVIEWED.
QVAMTSRht
Cop3rn^ht, Case between the Public Li-
braries and the BookaeUers, zxv. 196.
— Duppa's Address, on the Claims
of Authors to their own Copyright,
ibid,
■ Brydges* Reasons for a further
Amendment of the, ibid.
' Summary Statement,
ibid,
i Vindication of the
pending Bill for the Amendment of the
Copyright Act, ibid.
• Christian's Right of the Univer-
sities to a Copy of every New Publica-
tion, ibid.
• Montagu on Copyright, ibid.
Corfu, Essay on the Islaiids of Corfu,
Leucadia, Cephalonia, Ithaca, and
Zante, zxix. 86.
Com, Impolicy of Restriction of the Im-
portation of, zxv. 466.
-»— Jacob on the Trade in, xxxv. 269.
'— Laws, ibid.
• Whitmore's Letter on the.
ibid.
•zxzvii.426.
• Observations on the, ibid.
— Trade, Cayley on, xxxvii. 426.
Cornwall, Transactions of the Royal Geo-
logical Society of, xzxiv. 153.
Coronation Oath, Dr. Phillpotts' tm the,
xxxviii. 535.
Lane on the, ibid.
Correspondence, Private, of W. Cowper,
XXX. 185.
Courts of Justice, Greek, xxxiii. 332.
Cradock, J. Memoirs of, xxxv. 148.
Crim Tartars, Manners and Customs of,
xxix. 116.
Crime, Wilmot on the Increase of, xxxvii.
489.
Crimes, Russell on, xxxvii. 147.
Criminal Law, Amendments of the, xxxvii.
147.
' Carrington's Supplement to, ibid.
■ Pleading, by Storkie, ibid.
Cromwell, Histoire de, par M. Villemain,
XXV. 279.
—— — Memoirs of, by Oliver Crom-
well, ibid,
' and his Times, byC. Cromwell,
ibid.
Cromwelliana, ibid.
Culinary Poisons, Accum on, xxiv. 341 .
Currency, State of the, xxvii. 239.
' Hardcastle on, xxxix. 451.
— — Sir James Grstham on. ibid,
-- Tooke on the State of^ibid.
• Joplin's Views on, ibid.
Dbaq, Tales of the, xxii. 348.
P^ftf Mid Dumb, Art of li^stnicting, x^cvi.
Deluge, Reliquia Diluviante, xxix. 138.
Denderah, Notice sur le Zodiaque de^
xxviii. 59.
• Nouvelles Considerations sur
le Plauisphdre de, ibid.
D*£nghein, Due, la Catastrophe de, xxix.
561.
■ Pieces relatives au Proces du,
ibid,
De Vere, a Novel, xxxvi. 269.
Diary of Henry Teonge, xxxii. 429.
Dictionnaire Infernal, par Colin de Plancy,
xxii. 348.
Digamma, JEoUc, History of the, xxvii. 39.
Digest of Cases at Common Law and
Equity, xxi. 398.
Discovery, Voyage of, by Captain Ross,
xxi. 214.
Parry's Voyage of, xxv. 175.
^^— — — Second Voyage of, xxx,
231.
■ Third Voyage of, xxxiv.
- Kotzebue's Voyage of, xxvi.341 .
Dissent, Progpress of, xxix. 229.
Dissertation, Stewart's Second, xxvi.474.
Divine Influence, by T.T. Biddulph, xxxi.
111.
Divorce, Fergusson's Reports of Decisions
in Actions of, xxv. 229.
Inquiry into the Scriptural Doc-
trine of Marriage and, xxviii. 179.
Essay on the Scripture Doctrines
of Adultery and, ibid.
Dongola, Narrative of an Expedition to,
xxviii. 59.
Drama, the Spanish, xxv. 1.
Shelley's Prometheus Unbound,
xxvi. 168.
■ Goethe's Faust, by Lord F. L.
378.
Gower, xxxiv. 136.
Milman's Anne Bolejrn.
351.
Isaac Comnenus, xxxviii. 442.
Dry-Rot, Naval, by J. Burridge, xxx- 216.
Durham, History and Antiquities of the
County Palatine of, xxxix. 360.
Edgeworth. See Memoirs.
Education of the People, by Brougham,
xxxii. 410.
Reply to the above, by Grin-
field, ibid.
■ on the Importance of Educating
the Infant Poor, ibid.
Inquiry, Irish, Report of the
Commissioners of, xxxvii. 459.
Principles of Elementary Teach-
ing, xxxix. 99.
-' Elements of Tuition, ibid.
• Potter's Letter on the Systems
of, proposed by the popular Parties, ibid.
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WORKS ANii SUfiJECTS REVIEWED.
ziii
EgittO; Viaggio da Tripoli all*, dal Dot-
tore P. Delia Cella, xxvi.209.
Egypt, Belzoni*8 Operations and Dis-
coveries in, xxiv. 139.
' Notes during a Visit to, by Sir F.
Henniker, xxviii. 59.
' Notice sur le Voyage de M. Lelor-
rain en Egypte, ibid,
Histoire de TEgypte^ par Fdix
Meng^u, XXX. 481.
Electro-Magnetism, xxxv. 237.
— Recueil d'Observations Electro-
Dynamiques, ibid.
Emigration Report, xxxvii. 539.
England, Gottu de P Administration de la
Justice Criminelle en Angleterre. xxii.
247.
'■ on, by Mr. Rubichon, xxiii. 174.
■ and France, xxv. 534.
— — de la Constitution de T Angleterre,
xxv. 534.
Old, Sketch of,xxx. 519.
Present State of, in regard to
Agriculture, Trade, and Finance, by
Lowe, xxxii. 160.
■ History of, by Lingard, xxxiii. 1.'
• History and Prospects of English
Industry, xxxiv. 45.
Lettres sur 1' Angleterre, par A. de
Stael-Holstein, xxxiv. 45.
Jomnal Hebdomadaire des Arts
et Metiers, &c., de 1' Angleterre, ibid,
Hume's History of, xxxiv. 248.
Hallam*s Constitutional History
of, xxxvii. 194.
and France, Comparative View of
the Social Life of, xxxix. 475,
Epid^mies, Lemons sur les, par Fr. E.
Fod6r6, XXX. 133.
Epistles of St. Paul, translated by Thomas
Belsham, xxx. 79.
Equitable Jurisdiction, Origin of, xxxii. 92.
Equity. See Reports,
■ > Supplement to Bridgeman'9 In-
dex of Equity Cases, by Flather, xxxii.
92.
Esteban, Don, or Memoirs of a Spaniard,
xxxiii. 205.
Ethiopia, Waddington and Hanbury's
Visit to, xxvii. 215.
Etonian, the, xxv. 95.
Europe and America, Beltrami's Pilgrim-
age in, xxxvii. 448.
Fablks, iVom la Fontaine, xxiii. 455.
Fairy Legends of the South of Ireland,
xxxii. 197.
— Tales, by Benjamin Tabart, xxi. 91.
Fernando Po, xxvi. 51.
Fevers, Intermittent, Facts and Observa-
tions respecting, by Sir G. Blane, Bart.,
XXX. 133.
Finances, Robinson's Speech on, xxxv.283.
Finaudal Accounts of the Year 1823, ibid.
Forester's Guide, by R. Monteaih. zzzvi.
558.
Forget-Me-Not, the, xxxvii. 84.
Foscari, the Two,, a Tragedy, xxvil
476.
Fossil Bones, Antediluvian, Buckland on,
xxvii. 459.
France. See England,
Vieir of the A g ricu liui c , Maita*
factuMi, &c, of Pkrti of, xxiii. 434.
— — — Montlosier de la Monarchie Fran-
<{aise, xxvii. 146.
France, M^moires pomr servir i THistoire
de, sous Napoleon, xxviiL 219.
Histoire de I'Assembl^ Constita-
ante, xxviii. 271.
- Memoires sur la Revolution Fran*
^aise, xxix. 561.
Friendship's Offering, xxxvii. 84.
Friendship, the Pledge of, xxxvii. 84.
Funding System, xxxi. 311.
Fusion, Art of, by Burning the GhMeoui
Constituents of Water, xxiii. 466.
Gaols. See Prisons^
Genlis, Madame de, Memoires de, xxxiv*
421.
Geology of Central France, by Scrope,
xxxvi. 437.
■ ' . ' note on the*
xxxvii. 297.
Georgia, Travels in, xxxvi. 437.
Germany. See Travel*,
' View of the Agriculture, Manu-
factures, &c., of, xxiii. 434.
Tour in, in 1820, 21, 22, xxxi.
178.
Geschichte des Feldcuges von 1799 in
Deutschland, xxii. 380.
God, Heber on the Omnipresence of, xxxv.
445.
Gourmand, Almanach des, xxiii. 245.
Granby, a Novel, xxxiii. 474.
Grdce, Histoire des Evenemeus de la^
xxviii. 474.
Histoire de la R4g^n4ration de la,
xxxv. 221. *
Greece, Ancient, Hill on the Institutions
of, xxii. 163.
Mitford's History of, xxv. 154.
Panegyrical Oratory of, xxvii 382.
the Greek Bubble, xxxv. 221.
Greek Language, Modern, Observations
relating to, xxiii. 136.
Greeks, on the Resemblance between the
Ancient and Modem, xxiii. 325.
Ancient, Dalzel's Lectures on the,
xxvi. 243.
Guatemala, History of, xxx. 151.
Hajji Baba, Adventures of, xxxix. 73.
Hay ley's Life and Writings, xxxi. 263
Hayti, Past and Present State of, xi<
430. '
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WOEK0 AH D SUBJECTS REVIBWED.
QUART1IU.T
Hurti, Almanach R<^al d', xxi. 430.
Hebrew Tales, xxxy. 86.
Hexaglot Q«orgic8| xxxviii 358.
Hi^roglyphes, Leiite ^ M. Dader, reUHvt
h 1' Alphabet des Hi^roglyphea Pho-
n^tiques (»Dploy6t par ley BgyptienSi
xxviii. 188.
Himala Mountains, Jouiroal of a Tour
throughi by J. 3. FcasWi xxiv. 102.
Highways, Repurt firom tl^o Select Com-
mittee OQ, mil, 96.
'^~-^— Essay on the Reps^k and Preser-
vation of Public Roads, ihid.
^Remarks on the Preseut System
of Road-Making, ibi<4,
Essay on th© Gootliiictian of
Roads, ihid.
Treatise on the Makiog i^ul Up-
holding of Rot^, ibid.
Histpire des Sectes Religieuses, pax M.
Gr^goire, x^iii. 1.
■ Annuaive Historique UnifCTiel,
xxviii. 474.
History of the Christian Church, by W.
Jones, xxxiii. 134.
JJolland, View of the Agriculture, Mauu^
factures, &c., of Parts of, xxiii.434.
•f Accounlof tl\e Poor Colonies of,
xxxviii. 410.
Horticultural Society of London, Trans*
actions of the, xxiv. 400.
^ . ... . Memoirs of the Cale-
donian, ibid.
Horticultore, Rise and Progress o^ xxiv.
400.
Howe, Michael, the Last of the Bush Ran-
gers of Van Diemen's Land, Narrative
of Atrocities commuted by, xxiii. 73.
Hymns by Heber, xxxviii. 16.
Icon Basilike, who wrote ? by Words-
wpxth, xxxii. 467.
■ Supplement to the above, ibid,
JUadj Finn's Examination of th^ Pri-
mary Argument of the, xxvii. 39.
Illinois, Letters from the, xxvii. 71.
India, Sur T Elevation des Montagoes de
VJnde, xxii.415.
Central, Memoir of, xxix. 382.
Malcolm's History of, xxxv. 32.
...^..-- Letter on the Administration of
Indian Affairs, ibid^
Stewart on the Policy of the ^(h
vemment of, ibid,
.-^-— Church in, xxxv. 445.
- Heber's Joviri^ey through, X3pLvii<
100.
■ Free Trade and Colonisat^ of,
xxxviii. 489.
Indian Archipelago, History of, xxviii,
lU.
Indians, North Awiencan, Histojy, Man-
ners, and Customs of, by J, Ruch^aap;
xxxi. 76,
Insanity, Inquiry into certain Errors relfr*
tive to, by Dr. Burrows, xxiv. 169.
Institutions, Scientific, xx3(iv. 153.
Inventions, the Century of, by the Mar-
quis of Worcester, xxxii 397 .
Ionian Islands, Proceedings in, xxiii. 111.
Ireland, Case of theChiurdi of, xxxi. 491.
Inquiry whether the Disturbances
in, have originated in Tithes, ibid,
— Statement relative to the Bishop's
court in, ^d.
' Causes of the alarming Condition
of the South and West of, wid,
• Speech of the Rt. Hon. C. Grant,
April 22, 1822, on the State of, ibid,
' Fairy L^^^ of the South of.
xxxii. 197.
. Minutes of Evidence taken before
the Select Committee of the House of
Lords appointed to inquire into the
State of, xxxiii. 455.
- Minutes of Evidence taken before
the Select Committee of the House of
Commons, ibid.
Scenes of Life in, xxxv. 148.
535.
• Kendall on the State of, xxxviii.
- its Evils and their Remedies,
xxxviii. 53.
the real State of, in 1827, xxxviii.
53.
• Reports of the Commissioners
appointed to inquire into the Nature
and Extent of the Bogs in, xxxviii. 410«
Iron Mask, History of the, xxxiv. 19.
Italy, by Lady Morgan, xi(V. 529.
' Palladian Architecture of, xxxii. 42.
Ithaca. See Corfu,
Ivanhoe, a Novel, xxvi. 109.
Jamaica, Report relative to the Present
State of, xxvi. 522.
Japan, Rikord's Captivity in, xxii. 107,
Jews, Geschichte, Lehren, und Meiuun-
gen der Judeui xxxviii. 114.
Journey to Two of the Oases of Upper
Egypt, by Sir A. Edmonstone, v^uu
59.
Franklin's, to the Shores of the
Polar Sea, xxviii. 372,
Juries, Bentham on the A^t of Packings
xxvii. 377.
Keepsake, the, xxxvii. 84.
Kemble, J. P., Memoirs of the Life of^
xxxiv. 196.
Michael, Reminiscences of, ibid.
Kenilworth. a Novel, xxvi. 109.
Kit-Cat Club, Memoirs of the, xxvi. 426.
Kuick^bocker's New York, xxxi. 473.
Kokania, Expedition to, xxvii. 138.
Kuzzilbash, a Tale of Khorasan, xxxix«73.
Ljpq)S9AFfi ^dening, xxxvii, 303.
Digitized by VjOOQ IC
S](YISW.
WOBKS AND SUBJECTS REVIEWED.
LauzuBj Due dcf M^moirus du^ xkvL 405. {
Law, Crimiual, of Ea^lmdj xiiL 247.
— ^— iliil^ort from tbtj Select
Cummittce on^ sxiv. 195.
— Ca^aa pf Wdcot r. Walkt?r, Souihey
V. Sh^rwot^d, Murray v. Buubow, and
Lawftu^ti i\ Smithy xxvii, \TA.
' Spoflch DQ th(j Prestiiit SUt8 of,
zxxviii. 241.
-~~ Suggestions for some Alterations in,
ibid,
— 1— - Letter on Le^al Reforms, ibid.
Laws of Great Britain, State of the, igd.
398.
Letter to the Rev. T. Rennell, xxii. 1 .
to the Prince Regent^ by Lysias^
«di. 430,
— to George IV. on the Temper of
the Times, xxviii. 197.
— to D, O'Connellj occasioned by the
PptitJou iidiipttid at the Meeting of the
CiitlioUcEt of Irdand, xxxi. 491.
— tu C, Btitlcr, Esq-, by the Bishop
of Chcsteii KXiiii. I .
— — Aofiwer to the Bisho^i of Chester,
by C. Butler, ibid.
— ^- to ihe Clergy of the Diocese of St.
David's, un the AuthenUci^ uf 1 John
V, 7, by the Bishop of St. David's,
xxxiii. 64.
-«~— Three Letters on the Genuineness of
th^ Three Heavenly Witnesses, 1 John
V. 7, by Ben David, ibid,
— — to Mr. Brougham on the Subject of
a London Uniyersity, by T. Campbell,
xxxiii. 257.
— to Sir H. Halford, on Inoculating
for the Small-Fox, by Dr. Ferguson,
xxxiii. 550.
to the Earl of Liverpool on Somer-
set House, xxxiv. 153.
— to the Karl of Liverpool, by H. H»
Norris, xxxvi. 1.
-*— to R. Haldane, by C, F, H. Stein-
kopff, ibid,
— to Lord Bexley, by Dr. Thoooson,
ibid.
ii^— . on Legal Reforms, xxxviii. 241.
■ to the Duke of WeUington, xxxviii.
410.
on the Coronation Oath, by Dr.
Fhillpotts, xxxviii. 535.
Letters to and from Henrietta, Countess of
Suffolk and the Hon. George Berkeley,
from 1712 to 1767, xxx. 543.
of George III. and William Pitt,
xxxvi. 265.
from the Irish Highlands, xxxviii.
63.
— — on the State of Ireland, by E. A.
Kendall, xxxviii. 535.
to King George IV., by Captain
Rock, ibid.
Letters from the West, by Judgo Hallt
xxxix. 345.
Leucadia. See Corjkt,
Libel, Starkie on, xxxv. 566.
Holt on, ibid.
Library Companion, by Dibdin, xxxii.
152.
Life, Inquiry into the Probability of Mr.
Hunter's Theory of, xxii. 1.
Philosophy of, by Sir T.G.Morgan,
ibid,
of the Rev. F. Scott, by John Scott,
xxxi. 26.
Historical, of Joanna of Sicily, xxxi.
65.
of Napoleon Buonaparte, xxxix. 475.
Li8bo^ m 1821, 22, and 23, by M. Baillie,
xxxi. 378.
Literary Souvenirs, xxxvii. 84.
Literature, SchlegeVs Lectures on, xxi.
271.
.—-.-. Ciuriosities of, xxiii. 245.
Liverpool Royal Institution, Report of the,
xxxiv. 153.
London, Architectural Improvements in,
xxxiv. 179.
-^^— Expediency of Building a Me-
tropolitan Palace, xxxiv. 179.
on the Improvements carrying on
in the Western Parts of, ibid,
on the Improvements now carry*
ing on, ibid,
. Transactions of the Geological
Society of, xxxiv. 507.
_ University, Letter on the Subject
of, xxxix. 99.
Macedonia. See Travels,
Machinery. See Artizan$.
Magie, Histoire de la, en France, xxii.
348.
Magnetic Attractions, Barlow on, xxxv.
237.
Mal'aria,xxx.l33.
de Regionibus XtalisB Aere perni-
cioso coutaminatis, Auctore J. F. Ko-
reff, ibid,
sur I'Air Mar^gaux, par J. S.
£. Julia, ibid,
Malayan Miscellanies, xxviii. 111.
Manchester, Memoirs of the Literary an4
Philosophical Society of, xxxiv. 153.
Marino Faliero, a Tragedy, xxvii. 476.
Marlborough, John, Duke of. Memoirs of,
xxiii. 1.
Marriage. See Divorce.
Martyn, Rev. H., Memoir of, xxv. 437.
Martyrs, Review of Fox's Book of, xxxiii.
Masque de Fer, Histoire de PHomme au,
xxxiv. 19.
Matilda, a Novel, xxxiii. 474.
Maurice and Berghetta, a Tale, xxi. 471.
Digitized by
Googk
WORiCS AND SUBJECTS REVIEWED.
QuAlttBALir
Maynooth, xxxvii. 459.
Measures. See JVeiytUa,
Mechanical l^hilosophy, Lloyd's Elemen-
tary Treatise of, xxxix. 432.
Mechanics* Institutes, xxxii. 410.
Magazine, ibid.
Melanges Historiques, xxviii. 219.
Melmoth the Wanderer, xxiv. 303.
Memoir of the Rev. H. Martjm, xxv. 437.
MImoires du Due de Lauzun, xxvi. 405.
Memoirs of John, Duke of Marlborough,
xxiii. ].
■' of Charles Lewis Sand, xxiii. 434.
of R. L. Edgeworth, xxiii. 510.
from 1754 to 1758, by J., Earl of
Waldegrave, xxv. 392.
• of a Life in Pennsylvania, xxvi.
364.
- of CamoenSjby Adamson,xxvii. 1.
of the Last Ten Years of the
Reign of King George II., xxvii. 178.
> of Marie Antoinette, xxviii. 449.
— — — of the Mexican Revolution, by
• W. D. Robinson, xxx. 151.
■ of the Rev. J. Newton, by Richard
Cecil, xxxi. 26 — ^by himself, ibid,
>' ■ of a Captivity among the Indians
of North America, by J, D, Hunter,
xxxi. 76,
of William Hayley, xxxi. 263.
■ Royal Memoirs, xxxi. 464.
of Bayard, xxxii. 355.
of Samuel Pepys, xxxiii. 281.
of the Rt. Hon. R. B. Sheridan,
by J. Matthews, xxxiii. 561 — ^by T.
Moore, ibid,
of Canova, by Memes, xxxiv.llO.
Military, xxxiv. 406.
■ of the Life and Travels of John
Ledyaid, xxxviii. 85.
- of General Miller, xxxviii. 448.
Men, Anecdotes, Observations, and Cha-
racters of, collected from the Conversa*
tion of Mr. Pope, &c., xxiii. 400.
Middle Ages, Mythology of, xxii. 348.
Middleton, Bishop, Memoirs of, xxxv.
445.
Mineral Waters, Scudamore on, xxv. 216.
Mines of Guanaxuato, James's Remarks
on the, xxxvi. 81,
Mining Associations, Head's Reports re<
lating to the Failure of the Rio Plata,
xxxvi. 81.
Minstrelsy, Servian, xxxv. 66.
Mexico, Memoirs of the Mexican Revolu-
tion, xxx. 151.
■ ■ Aquila Mexicana, ibid.
Miller's, General, Memoirs, xxxviii. 448.
Mirror of Parliament, Part V., xxxviii.
241.
Missionary Register, 1813-1824, xxxii. 1.
■ Registers, xxxv. 445.
.. Travels in South Africa, xxvii. 367,
Missions, Religions, xxv. 437.
' Church of England, xxxii. 1.
— — American Baptist, to the Bur-
man Empire, xxxiii. 37.
Mississippi, River, Travels from Detroit
North- West, to the Sources of, xxix. L
Monachism, British, xxii. 59.
Monastery, the, a Novel, xxvi. 109.
Monkeys, Anecdotes of, xxxi. 487.
Mosquito Shore, Sketch of the, xxviii.
157.
Murray, Lindley, Memoirs of, xxxv. 148.
Mythology of the Biiddle Ages, xxii. 348.
Napoleon in Exile, xxviii. 219.
— ^— — Journal .de la Vie Priv6e de
TEmpereur Napoleon i Ste. H6l^ne,
ibid,
' Demiers Momens de, xxxiii.
176.
Nativity, La Soeur, Butler on, xxxvi. 305.
Vie et Revelations de, ibid.
Naturalist, Journal of a, xxxix. 406.
Navigation, Act for the Encouragement
of, 3 Geo. IV., c. 43, xxviii. 430.
Abstract of the New Naviga-
tion Act, ibid.
Abridgment of the Two Im-
portant Navigation and Commercial
Acts just passed, ibid.
Navy, on the Marine Establishments of
France and England, by Dupin, xxii. 34.
. of England and of France, by Du-
pin, xxvi. 1.
Nervous Affections, Reid on, xxvii. 110.
New South Wales, Description of the
Colony of, xxiv. 55.
Journal of two Expe-
ditions into the Interior of, ibid.
- Geographical Memoirs
• Two Years in, xxxvii.
on, xxxii. 311.
New Spain, Historia de la Revolucion de
Nueva Hispaua, por Don Jose Guerra|
xxx. 151.
— Revolucion de Neuva Es-
pafia, por Don Juan Lopez Cancelada,
ibid.
New Zealand, Residence in, by R. A«
Cruise, xxxi. 52.
Nigel, Fortunes of, xxvii. 337.
Niger and Nile, Rivers, Dissertation
showing the Identity of the, xxv. 25.
Normandy, Tour in, by D. Turner, xxv.
112.
Cotman's Architectural Anti-
quities of, ibid.
' Stothard's Tour in, ibid.
Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, xxiv.
352.
North Pole, Narrative of an Attempt to
reach the, xxxvii. 523.
Digitized by
Googk
Rkvibw.
WORKS AND SUBJECTS REVIEWED.
xvu
North-West Passage, Parry's Voyage for
the Discovery of xxv. 175.
■ Parry's Second Voyage
for the Discovery of, xxx, 231.
NoveKsts, Scott's Lives of the, xxxiv. 349.
Novels, Modem, xxiv. 352.
Rob Roy, Tales of My Landlord,
Ivanhoe, Monastery , Abbot, Kenilworth,
xxvi. 109.
^— the Pirate, xxvi. 454.
of Fashionable Life, xxxiii. 474.
Peveril of the Peak, Quentin
Durward, St. Ronan's Well, Redgaunt-
let. Tales of the Crusaders, Woodstock,
XXXV. 518.
Brambletye House, The Tor Hill,
ibid,
De Vere, xxxvl 269.
Sung-kin, History of, a Chinese
Tale, xxxvi. 496.
Whitehall, xxxvii. 84.
Nubia, Travels in, by J. L. Burckhardt,
xxu. 437.
NuptiiB Sacrte, xxviii. 179.
Opinion, Public, on the Rise, Progress,
and Present State of, xxxix. 475. *
Oratory, Panegyrical, of Greece, xxvii.
382.
Orlando Furioso, translated by W. S.
Rose, xxx. 40.
Owhyhee, Ellis's Tour through, xxxv.419.
Painting, New Churches, considered with
respect to the Opportunities they offer
for the Encouragement of, xxiii. 549.
Palestine, Buckingham's Travels in, xxvi.
374.
Pampas, Head's Journeys across the, xxxv.
114.
Paper Money, Banking and Overtrading,
Sir James Paruell on, xxxix. 451.
Paraguay, Tale of, by Southey, xxxii. 457,
Parents, of the Right of a Father to the
Custody of his Children, xxxix. 183.
Parga, Proceedings in, xxiii. 111.
— Exposition of the Facts that pre-
ceded and followed the Cession of, ibid»
Paris, Cemeteries and Catacombs of, xxi.
359.
— Promenade aux Cimetieres de, par
M. P. St A., ibid.
— Description des Caiacombes de, ibid.
Penal Jurisprudence, Roscoe on, xxx. 404.
Additional Observations on, ibid.
Peninsula, Recollections of the, xxx. 61.
Peninsular War, Southey*s History of,
xxix. 53.
Penitentiary. See Prisons.
Pennsylvania, Memoirs of a Life in, xxvi.
364.
Persia, Morier's Second Journey through,
xxvL 437.
VOL. XL. NO. LXXIX.
Persia, Sketches in, xxxvi. 353.
Pestilence, Laws and Phenomena of, by
Dr. Hancock, xxvii. 524.
Pestilential Diseases, Residts of an Inves-
tigation respecting, xxvii. 524.
Petrarque et Laure, par Madame de Gen*
lis, xxiv. 529.
Peveril of the Peak, xxxv. 518.
Philosophy, Grecian, View of, xxi. 271.
Stewart's Second Dissertation
on the Progress of, xxvi. 474.
Physiological Lectures, by J. Abernethyj
xxii. 1 .
Physiology, Lectures on, ibid.
Piedmont, Excursion to the Mountains of,
by the Rev. W. S. Gilly, xxxiii. 134.
Pirate, the, a Novel, xxvi. 454.
Plag^ie, Faulkner on the, xxvii. 524.
Evidence before the Select Com-
mittee on the VaUdity of the Doctrine
of Contagion in, ibid,
■ a Contagious Disease, xxxiii. £*18«
Plain Preaching, xxvii. 450.
Plantations, Ornamental, xxxvii. 303.
Planter's Guide, by Steuart, xxxvii. 303.
Plata, la, Miers' Travels in, xxxv. 114.
Poems and Poetry ; —
Laon and Cythna, by P. B.Shelley,
xxi. 460.
The Revolt of Islam, by P. B. SheU
ley, ibid,
— — Narrative and Romantic Poems of
the Italians, xxi. 486.
Casti's Court of Beasts, by W. S.
Rose, ibid.
Knight's Eastern Sketches, xxii. 149.
— > Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery,
by J. Clare, xxiii. 166.
Fall of Jerusalem, by the Rev. H.
H. Milman, xxiii. 198.
- Greece, by W. Haygarth, xxiii.
325.
Comedies of Aristophanes, by T.
Mitchell, xxiii. 474.
- Advice to Julia, xxiii. 505.
by Mrs. Hemans, xxiv. 130.
Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered, by
Hunt, XXV. 426.
by Wiffen, xxxiv. 1.
O Oriente, Poemade Jose Agostinho
deMacedo, xxvii. 1.
Moore's Irish Melodies, xxviii. 138.
- Pindar, xxviii. 410,
- Theodric and other Poems, by T.
Campbell, xxxi. 342.
m~~—. by J. Conder, xxxii. 211.
Pope's Works, xxxii. 271.
Tale of Paraguay, by Southey, xxxii.
457.
Shelley's Posthumous, xxxiv. 136.
Philippe Auguste, par F. A. Parse-
val, xxxiv. 399.
Dartmoor, xxxv. 165.
b
Digitized by
Googk
xvu;
WORKS AND BUBJVGTSI I^BVIBWED.
QuABVBBI.1r
Poetry— Milton's Poetical Works^by Todd,
xxxvi. 29.
Chinese Courtship, by P. p. Thorns,
xxxvi. 496.
'— May Fair, xxxvii. 84.
Epistles in Verse, xxxviii. 145,
■ Rogers's Italy, ibid.
- Invariable Principles of, xxiii. 400.
Polar Sea, Franklin's Second Journey to
the Shores of the, xxxviii. 335.
Police, xxxvii. 489.
Political Essays, by Hazlitt, xxii. 158.
■ Economy, Essay on, xxx. 297.
Outlines of a System of,
by T. Joplin, xxxi. 128.
— ^— ^— ^— West on the Application
of Capital to Land, xxxvi. 391.
• on Modern Theories respecting
Rents and Prices, ibid,
• Brereton on the Wages
of Agricultural Labourers, xxxvi. 484.
on the Workhouse Sys-
tem in Agricultural Districts, ibid.
Poor, Bill to amend the Laws regarding
the Maintenance of, xxviiL 349.
•— Infant, on the Im|)ortauce of edu-
cating the, xxxii. 410.
— — on the Necessity of a Legal Pro-
vision for the Irish, xxxviii. 53.
Laws, xxxiii. 429.
Rate, Report from the Select Com-
mittee on, xxviii. 349.
Pope's Works and Character, xxxii. 271.
Population, Godwin on, xxvi. 148.
Portraits of Illustrious Personages, by
Lodge, xxxviii. 378.
iPredesunation, Inquiries into the Doc-
trines of, xxvi. 82.
-^— — ^— Copleston on, ibid,
' Archbishop King on, ibid.
Press, State of the, xxxv. 566.
iPrices, Thoughts on High and Low, xxix.
214.
Prisons and Penitentiaries, xxx. 404.
■ Act relating to certain Gaols and
Houses of Correction, 4 Geo. IV., c.
64, ibid,
i First, Second, and Third Reports
from the Committee on the Laws relat-
ing to Penitentiary Houses, ibid.
Report on the State of the Gaols
of the City of London, &c., ibid.
* First to Fifth Reports of the Sfo-
ciety for the Improvement of Prison
Discipline, ibid,
— Thoughts on Criminal Prisons, '
ibid.
» Vindication of the Penitentiary at
Milbank, &c., by G. Halford, ibid.
$ Correspondence on Prison Labonr,
by Sir J. C. Hippesley, ibid.
P" Thoughts on Prison I^abour, ibid.
Prisons, Rvdes of the Penitentiary at Mill-
bank, xxx. 404.
Report on t^e Penitentiary ai
Millbank, ibid,
IMson Discipline, Report of the Comn^it-
tee of the Society for the Innprovement
of, xxxvii. 489.
Prometheus Unbound, by P. B- Shejley,
xxvi. 168.
Prussian Reforms, xxxi. 3^7.
Pulpit Eloquence, Essai sur TEloquence
de la Chaire, xxix. 283.
Irving' 8 Orations, ibid.
QuENTiN Durward, xxxv. 518.
Real Property, Humphreys on the Laws
of, xxxiv. 540.
Redgauntlet, xxxv. 518.
Reflexions sur les Noirs et les Blancs, par
le Baron de Vasty, xxi. 430.
Reform, Radical, by G. Ensor, xxii. 102.
Reformation in England, xxxiii. 1.
Cobbett's History of. ibid^
in Italy, M'Crie's History of,
xxxvii. 50.
Rail-Roads, Origin and Progress of, by
T. G. Cumming, xxxi. 349.
Report of, by C. Sylvester, ibid.
Letter on the Projected ^ail-
Road between Liverpool and Manches-
ter, ibid.
Reason and Revelation, xxxiii. 356.
Reports in Equity, Digest of, by Ham -
mond, xxxii. 92.
Digest of, in the Courts of Com-
mon Law and Equity, by *f eremy, ibid.
Review, Letter to the Editor of the Quar-
teriy, xxiii. 360.
Revolution Francjaise, M^moires sur la,
par Morellet, xxvi. 229.
Reynolds, F., Life and Times of, xxxv.
148.
Rhine, an Autumn near the, xxiii. 434.
Rifleman, Adventures of a, xxxiv. 406.
Roads. See highwaySj Rait-Roads.
Rob Roy, xxvi. 109.
Rock, Captain, Detected, xxxviii. 535.
Rocl^ Mountains, Expedition from Pitts-
burgh to the, xxix. 1.
Romance, Historical, xxxv. 518.
Rome, Bankes's Civil History of, xxvii.
273.
Early History of^ ibid. ; xxxiL
67.
315.
ibid,
ibidp
Burton's Antiquities of, xxviii.
• History of, by Niebuhr, xxxii. 67.
• Early History of, by Wachsmutb,
Creuzuer*s Roman AntiquitieS|
Digitized by
Googk
Churdi Architecture o^ xx
Itussia,
37.
Tableaux Pittoresqnesdes McBurs,
&c., des Russes, par J. Q. G. Teissier,
xxvi. 37.
• Pedestrian Journey through hy J.
D.
363.
Cochrane, xxxi. 215.
I}ender$on'8 Travels
^»
■ Gamba, Voyagp dan; la Ru§sie
Meridionale, ibid.
Efesigns of, xxxix. 1.
■ on our relations with, ibid.
Russian Missions to Bokhara and ^hiya,
xxxvi. 106.
Ruspians, Character of the, by R. Lyall,
xxxi. 146.
St. DoMiNao, History of, xxi. 43P.
— ^— ; M6raoires pour servir & I'Hi?-
toire de la Revolution de, par J*, de
Lacroix, ibid.
Ste. HeUne, Memorial de, xxviii. 219.
St. Petersburgh, Granville's Travels to
and from, xxxix. 1.
St.Ronan's Well,xxxv. 5^8.
ISalmagundi, xxxi. 473.
Salmon I^isheries, Report on, xxxvii.345.
Salmonia, or Days of Fly Fishing:, xxxviii.
503. ^
Sand, Chariei Lewis, Memoirs of, xxiii.
434. ^ ' ^
San4oval, xxxiv. 488.
Sandwich Islands, Voyage to the, xxxv.
419.
— ^— — Islanders, xxxv. 419.
Sardanapalus, a Tragedy, xxvii. 476.
Savings Banks — Acts of 0eo. III. and
Geo. IV., for the ^ncomragement ^nd
Regulation of Savings Banks in Ire
land and England, xxxi. l28.
— — Substitution of, for Poor-
Laws, xxxvi. 484.
Scepticism, Remarks on, by f, Rennell,
xxii. 1.
Schwimmknnst, Oronzio di Bernardi*s
voUstSndiger Lehrbegriff der, von F.
^Kries, xxxiv. 35.
Scotch Banker, xxxix. 45 U
Scriptures, Inquiry into the Interpretation
of the Hebrew, xxiii. 287.
: Supplement to the Inquiry,
ibid.
' — Reasons in favour of a New
Translation of, ibid. See Bih/e.
Scripture Sacrifices, Essay on the Nature
and Design of. xxxiii. 356.
Sedgwick, H. D., Vindication of, xxxv.
221.
Select Pieces in Prosfe and Verse, by J.
Bowdler, xxi. 112.
Sennaar, Narrative of an Jlxpedition to
xxviii. 59. ..,_...
apK
Sermon, a Farewell, by R. ^%hef^ xxxv.
445.
Sermons, by the ^ev. R. W. Mayow,
xxvii. 450. *'
Sheridan, Memoirs of, xxxiii. 561.
Sheridan^ana, ibid*
Ship-Boy, Adventures of % xpcv. 148;
Sfiam and Hu6, Crawfprji's Mission tOi
xxxiii. 104.
Sicily and its Islands, xxx. 382.
'— Memoir descriptive of the Resources
of, by W. H. Smyth, ibid.
S^tch-^oo]t of Qeo£B:ey Crajpjj, jxY*
50.
Slaye-Tradp, State of the, xxyi. 51.
^— ^ Papers relating to, ^pxviii.
.161.
• Porrespondei^ce rejatjng to
the, xxxiv. 579.
Corre^ndence with Foreign
Powers relating to the, ibid.
Slavery, Debate in the tipuse of Com-
mons on a Motion for tne Abolj^on of,
xxix. 475.
— • Negro, View of, ibid.
Objects of the Liverpool Sjoci^ty
Iqr the Abolition of, ibid.
Negro, xxx. 559.
of the British West India (Colo-
nies, by J. Stephez^ ibid,
• Colonial, ibid.
— West Indian, xxxii. SOQ.
First and Second Jleports of the
Committee of the Society (or i\ie Abor
^tion of, ibid.
' Considerations on, by McDonnell,
ibid.
■ Considerations on the Abolition
of, by Barham, ibid.
— — Slaves of the West Indies, ^-PP^^l
in behalf of, xxix. 475.
Review of the Arguments against
Parliicmentary Interference in behalf of,
ibid.
• on the Necessity of improviii|j^ the
Condition of, in the Britisn Oolonies,
by Mr. Clarkson, ibid.
■ Commentarj' on Mr. Clarkson's
^i^amph^et, xxx. 559.
First Report of the New Xork
Colonization Society, ibid.
" — Report of the Cpmmittee of the
Council of Barbadoes on the Actual
Condition of the Slaves in that Island,
ibid.
Small-Pox, Willan's Inqiiiry into the An-
tiquity of the, xxvii. 524.
. Opinions respecting the Varie-
ties and Secondary OccuiTence of,
ibid.
ScBur Nativity, Vie et Revelations de 1^,
xxxiii. 375.
Somerset Hpuse, l-etter to Lord Liveri!oo^j
b3
Digitized by
Googk
WORKS AND SUBJECTS REVIEWED.
QuARTSRLir
• proponng; to finish the East Wing of,
for National Galleries, zxxiv. 153.
■Spain, the Grins of, zxriii. 536.
_ ConstitucionPoliticadela Monarquia
Eipagnola, ibid,
_de TExcellence de la Guerre avec
rEtpagne, ibid*
.-—« Anecdotes of Spanish and Portu-
guese ReTolutbns, ibid.
— Visit to, xxix. 240.
Speech of Mr. Plunket, Nor. 23, 1819^
xxii. 492.
I of Mr. Canning, Nor. 23, 1819^
ibid.
I of Lord Grenville, Nov. 30, 1819,
ibid.
— ^-^ Substance of the Speech of the
Chancellor of the Exch^uer, March
16, 1818, on propoung a Grant for pro-
viding additional places of Public Wor-
ship, xxiii. 549.
■ Michael Nolan*s on the Poor-
Laws, zxviii. 349.
■I Dr. Chalmers on the Extinction
of Compulsory Pauperism at Glasgow^
ibid.
■ on the Confinement of Offenders
in the Hulks, by G. Holford, xxx.
404.
— •^— — on the Employment of Prisoners
committed for Trial, ibid.
' on the Slave-Trade, by Mr.
Canning, xxx. 559.
• of the Right Hon. C. Grant,
April 22, 1822, on the State of Ireland,
xxxi. 492.
• of John, Lord Bishop of Lime<
rick, on the Irish Tithe Commutation
BiU, ibid.
' of Sir H. Inglis on the Catholic
Question, xxxviii. 535.
Spirit, Holy, Operation of the, xxxi.
Stamp Act, Indian, xxxviii. 489.
State Papers, British and Foreign, xxxiv.
579.
State Trials, Phillips's, xxxvi. 51 1.
Howell's, iWrf.
Statutes of Great Britain and Ireland; xxi.
398.
General Index to, xxxix. 41.
Strategie, Grundsfttze der, erl&utert durch
die Darstellung des Feldzugs von 1796
in Deutschland, xxii. 380.
— ^-^-— Priucipes de la, ibid.
Subaltern, the, xxxiv. 406.
Sumatra, Proceedings of the Agricultural
Society established in, xxviil 11 1.
— Ander8on*s Mission to, xxxiv.
99.
Swan River, Suggestions to Settlers yxxxix.
315.
■ Note on the, ibid.
Swimming, Bemardi on the Art of, xxxiv.
35.
Sylla, Trag^die, par E. Jouy, xxviil 97.
Synonymes, English, xxxv. 403.
— — ^— ^ Taylor on, ibid.
' Crabbe on, ibid.
Table Talk, by Hazlitt, xxvi. 103.
Tales of My Landlord, xxvi. 109.
of a Traveller, xxxi. 473.
— of the Crusaders, xxxv. 518.
Taxation and Expenditure, xxxv. 283.
TeatroEspafiol, el; 6 CoUeccion de Dramas
escogidos de Lope de Vega, Calderon
de la Barca, &c., xxv. 1 .
Thames, Improvements on the Banks of
the, suggested by Lieutenant-Colonel
Trench, xxxiv. 179.
Theology, Natural, xxi. 41.
Th^ophilantropie, Histoire de la, xxviii.
493.
Thesaurus, Stephens's, xxii. 302.
Thessaly. See Trave/t,
Tithes, Letter to the Hon. Pierce S.
Butler on the Subject of, xxxi. 491.
' Thoughts on, ibid.
Speech on the Irish Tithe Com-
mutation Bill, ibid.
Tone, Theobald Wolfe, Life of, xxxvi.
61.
Tor Hill, the, a Novel, xxxv. 518.
Toscana, Monumenti della, xxxii. 42.
Tourgouth Tartars, Staunton's Embassy
to the, xxv. 414.
Trade, First Report from the Select Com*
mittee of the House of Lords, appointed
to inquire into the Means of extending
the Foreign Trade, xxiv. 281.
-*— — - Report from the Select Committee
of the House of Commons, on the
Means of extending the Foreign Trade,
ibid.
.Lord Liverpool's Speech on the
Means of extending, ibid.
. Reflections on the Difficulties of
the Country, and on relieving them,
ibid.
— — Foreign Reports relative to, xxvi.
522.
Tradition, Hawkins's Dissertation on, xxi.
352.
Tragedies, Brutus, by J. H. Payne, xxii.
402.
Evadne, by R. Shiel, ibid.
* — 11 Conte di Carmagnola, di
Alessandro Manzoni, xxiv. 72.
Ricciarda, di Ugo Foscolo, ibid,
*— Francesca da Rimini| di Silvio
Pellico, ibid.
' Blomfield's jEschyli Agamem
non, xxv. 505.
' of Lord Byron, xxvii. 476.
— ~— Attila, par H. Bis, xxix. 25.
Digitized by
Googk
Review.
WORKS AND SUBJECTS REVIEWED.
XXI
TragBdies, Regulus, par M. Arnault, fili,
xxix. 52.
— — — • Maccabees, par A. Giroux, ibid.
' Saul, et Clytemneitre, par A.
Soumet, ibid.
• Don Carlos, by Lord J. Russell,
xxix. 370.
of Sophocles, by Dale, xxxi.
198.
Tragedy, Italian, xxiv. 72,
Travels of Marco Polo, xxi. 177.
! ■ by Humboldt and Bonpland, xxi.
320.
in the Ionian Isles, Albania,
Thessaly, Macedonia, &c., xsiii. 325.
■' in the North of Germany, X2uii
434.
■ to the Equinoctial Regions, Hum-
boldt's Personal Narrative of, xxv. 365.
— ^— of Buckingham, xxvi. 374.
in Greorgia, &c., by Ker Porter,
xxvi. 437.
' along the Mediterranean, by Dr.
Richardson, xxviii. 59.
of Theodore Ducas, xxviii. 365.
^— — to the Sources of the Mississippi,
xxix. 1.
— — into the Arkansa Territory, ibid,
— in New England and New York,
by Timothy Dwight, xxx. 1.
— through Sweden, Norway, and
Finmark, to the North Cape, in 1820,
by A. de Capell Brooke, xxx. 115.
to Chili in 1820-21, by Peter
Schmidtmeyer, xxx. 441.
' ■ in Brazil, by J. B. Von Spix, and
C. F. P. von Martius, xxxi. h
» to the Sources of the Rokelle and
Niger, by A. G. Laing, xxxi. 445.
— in South America in 1819-20-21,
by Caldcleugh, xxxii. 125.
*.. in Southern Russia and Georgia,
XXXV. 363.
■ to and from St. Petersburgh,
xxxix. 1.
Tremaine, xxxiii. 474.
Turks, Establishment of, in Europe, xxxviii.
172.
United States,';Travels in, by F. de Roos,
zxxvii. 260.
Universities, German, Defence of, xxiii.
434.
State of the, xxxvi. 216.
. Baumgarten die Deutsche
Universitaten, xxxvi. 216.
-Education, J ardine's Outlines
of Philosophical, xxxvi. 216.
Thomson on, of
Candidates for the Degree of Doctors of
Medicine in the Scottish Universities,
ibid.
Universitiesj Johnston's View of Public,
in France, xxxvi. 216.
" Thiersch, ttbcr i^ehite
Schulen mit besonderer Rttchsicht auf
Baiern, ibid.
London, xxxiiL 257.
— — — Library, Inquiriei req^ecting,
by B. Montagu, xxi. 196.
Usury Laws, Reasons against the Repeal
of, xxxiii. 1 86.
Vaccination, xxxiii. 550.
Van Diemen*s Land, Descriptian ot^ zxvii.
99.
■ Account of the Colony
of, by Curr, xxxii. 31 1.
Vaudois, History of the, xxxiiL 134.
Sketch of the History and present
Situation of, ibid,
Venezia, le Fabbriche piik cospicue di,
xxxii. 42.
Venice, Histoire de la R^publique de, par
P. Daru, xxxi. 420.
Veritas, Letters of, xxvii. 405.
Vie de Marie Angiglique de la Providence,
xxxvi. 305.
de M. Henri Marie Boudon, ibid,
Villa^ Sketches, xxxi. 166.
Vindication of 1 John v. 7, by the Bishop
of St. David's, xxvi. 324.
»-.-....—...-...—. from the Ob-
jections of M. Griesbach, xxxiii. 64.
Vox Stellarum, xxvi. 180.
Voyages in the Levant in 1817 and 1818,
xxiii. 83.
— -^ in the Interior of Africa to the
Sources of the Senegal and Gambia,
xxiii. 225.
dans la Grande Bretagne, par C.
Dupin, xxv. 67.
Malte Brun*8
514,
Spurious, xxvi.
■ par le Chevalier Lapie, ibid,
Voya^ h TOasb de Thebes, par Caillaud,
xxviii. 59.
round the World, by Captain
Freycinet, xxxviii. 332.
to the China Sea, by J. White,
xxx. 351.
dans la Grande-Bretagne, depuis
1816, par C. Dupin, xxx. 368.
to Brazil, by Maria Graham,
xxxL 1.
Historique et Litt^raire en Angle-
terre, et en Europe, xxxii. 342.
.^-- — Parry's Third, for the Discovery
of a North- West Passage, xxxiv. 378.
WeddeU's, towards the South
Pole, ibid.
Coleccion de los Viages y Descu-
brimientos que hicieron por Mar los
Espa&oles, XXXV. 321 «
Digitized by
Googk
\VORkS AND SUBJECTS REVIEWED.
Voyage, d*Orenbourg k Boukli&ra, par le
Baron G. de Meyendorfi^ xxxvi. 1 06.
— en Turcomanie, par M. N. Mou-
raviev, ibid.
Wages, Report of the Select Committee
• appointed to inquire into the Wages of
Labour, zxxiii. 429.
Wallenstein, Schillefs, by Coleridge^
XXXV. 518.
Waste- Lands, on Planting, xxxvi. 558.
-^— — Cultivation of, xxxviii. 410.
Weights and Measures^ State o£ xxvL
416.
■ Reports On the
Subject of, ibid;
' M6moires des
Poids et Mesuresj par S. A. Tarbg,
ibid.
— Adams's Report
on, xxvi. 416.
• Kater ou^ ibid.
Wesley, Life of, by Southey, xxiv. 1.
West India Colonies^ xxx. 559,
Calunmies against
them refuted by J. M'Queen, ibid.
West Indies, Six Months in the, xxxiii.
490.
the West Indian Question
practically considered, ibid.
Chronological History of.
xxxviii. 193.
Westphalie, le Royaume de, xxii. 481.
Winchesier School, of the System of F&g-
^g at, xxxix. 99.
Wines, Ancient and Modem, by Hendet^
son, xxxii. 232.
Witchcraft, Tracts on, xxix. 440.
Woodstock, a Novel, xxxv. 518.
ToRKSHiRE Philosophical Society, xxxir.
153.
Zantk. See Qn/u.
Digitized by
Googk
AUTHORS REVIEWED.
Abbi/s Journey to the Interior of China,
xxi. 67.
Abernethv's Inquiry into the Probability
of Mr.Uunter's Theory of Life, xxii. I.
-^— — Physiological Lectures, ibid.
Accum, on Adulteration of Food, and
Culinary Poisons, xxiv. 341.
Adams's Sketches during ten Voyages to
Africa, xxix. 597.
* Report on Weights and Mea-
sures, xxxvi. 139,
Adamsou's Life of Camoens, xxvii. 1 .
^schius, xxvii. 332.
Agostinho, Jose, Oriente, O Poema, ihid.
Ampere, Recueil d' Observations Electro-
Dynamiques, xxxv. 237.
Anderson's Mission to Sumatra, xxxiv. 99,
Andrewes's Navigation ana Commercial
Acts, xxviii. 430.
Andrews's Review of t'ox's 6ook of Mar-
tyrs, xxxiii. 1.
Angouleme (Duchess of), Royal Memoirs,
xxviii. 464.
Antommarchi, F., Derniers Momens de
Napoleon, xxxiii. 176.
Arago's Narrative of a Voyage round the
World, by Capt. Freycinet, xxviii. 332.
Aristophanes' Comedies, by Mitchell,
xxxiii. 332.
" Birds, by Cary, ibid,
Arnault's Regidus, Tragedie, xxix. 25.
Arrowsmith's Instruction of the Deaf and
Dumb, xxvi. 391.
Auger, CEuvres de D^mosthene et
d'Eschine, xxviL 382.
■■ Traduction des (Euvres de D6-
mosthene et d'Eschine, xxix. 313.
Babbaob on Life Assurance Societies,
xxxv. 1.
BaiUie's Lisbon, xxxi. 378.
Baily's Juarros's History of Guatemala,
XXX. 151.
Bankes's Civil History of Rome, xxvii. 273.
Barham, on the Abolition of Negro Sla-
very, xxxii. 506.
Barker's Aristarchus Anti-Blomfieldia-
nus, xxiv. 376.
Barlow on Magnetic Attractions, xxxv.
237.
Barrow, Mirror of Parliament xxxviii. 241 .
Barry, Noticias iSecretas de America,
xxxv. 321,
Batty's Campaign in the Western Py-
renees and South of France, in 1813-
14, XXX. 61.
Baumgarten, iiber wissenschaftliche Frei-
heit an sich und in Beziehung auf die
Deutsche Universit^ten, xxxvi. 216.
Beer, Ghischichte, Lehren, und Meinungen
der Juden, xxxviii. 114.
Bellamy's Translation of the Bible, Pari
II., xxiii. 287.
Bell's Elements of Tuition, xxxix. 99.
Belsham's Epistles of Paul, xxx. 79.
Beltrami's Pilgrimage in Europe and
, America, xxxvii. 448.
Belzoni's Discoveries in Egypt and Nu-
bia, xxiv. 139.
Bentham's Church of Englandism exa-
mined, xxi. 167.
on the Art of packing Juries,
xxvii. 377.
Berkeley, Letters to and from the Coun-
tess of Suffolk, from 1742 to 1767,
xxx. 543.
Bernardi, Oronzio de, vollst^lndiger Lehr-
begriff* der Schwimmkunst, von Frede-
rich Kries, xxxiv. 35.
Biddulph on Divine Influence, xxxi. 111.
Bis, Attila, Tragedie, xxix. 25.
Bland*s Principles of Agriculture, xxxvi.
353.
Blane on Intermittent t'evers, xxx. l33.
Blomfield's iEschyli Agamemnon, xxv.
Boaden's Life of J. P. Kemble, xxxiv.
196.
Bonney's Life of Bishop Middleton, xxxv.
445.
Bonpland's Travels, xxi. 320.
. Personal Narrative, xxv. 365.
Bosset's Proceedings in Parga and the
Ionian Islands, xxxiii. 111.
Bowdich's Mission to Ashantee, xxii.
273.
■ African Committee, ibid,
Bowdler's Select Pieces, xxi. 112.
Bowles's Principles of Poetry, xxiii. 400.
^ Pope's Works, xxx. 271. ^
Reply to the Charges in the
Quarterly Review against the last edi-
tion of Pope's Works, ibid.
Poetical Character of Pope, ibid.
Letters to Lord Byron on a Ques-
tion of Poetical Criticism, ibid.
Digitized by
Googk
AUTHORS REVIEWED.
QVARTSRLY
Bowles's Final Appeal to the Literary
Public relative to Pope, xxx. 271.
Braode's History of Chemistry, zxvi. 180.
Braybrooke's, Lord, Memoirs of Samuel
Pepys, xxxiii. 281.
Brereton on Agricultural Laboiurers,
xxxvi. 484.
■' on the Workhouse System, ib.
Brewster's History of Churches in Eng-
land, xxiii. 549.
Bristed, John, Resources of the United
States of America, xxi. 1.
Britton's Ancient Architecture of Great
Britain, XXV. 112.
■ Cathedral Antiquities, xxxiv.
305.
Brooke's Travels through Sweden, &c. in
1820, XXX. 115.
Brougham on the Education of the Peo-
ple, xxxii. 410.
-^— Speech on the Present State of
the Law, xxxviii 241.
Brydges on Copyright, xxi. 196.
— '• Summary Statement of the In-
jury done by the late Copyright Act, ib,
■ Vindication of the pending Bill
for the Amendment of the Copyright
Act, ibid.
Buchanan's History, Manners, &c., of the
North American Indians, xxxi. 76.
Buckingham's Travels in Palestine, xxxvi.
374.
Buckland's Account of Fossils discovered
at Kirkdale, xxvii. 459.
Burchell's Hints on Emigration to the
Cape of Grood Hope, xxii. 203.
Burckhardt's Travels in Nubia, xxii. 437.
Burges's Reasons in favour of a New
Translation of the Holy Scriptures,
xxiii. 287.
Burgess's, T., Bishop of St. David's Via-
dication of 1 John v. 7, from the Ob-
jections of Mr. Griesbach, xxxiii. 64.
— Letter to the Clergy of the Dio-
cese of St. David's, on the Authenticity
of 1 John V. 7, ibid»
Burnet's Own Time, xxix. 165.
Burridge on Naval Dry Rot, xxx. 216.
Burrows on Insanity, xxiv, 169.
Burton's Antiquities of Rome, xxviii.
315.
Butler's Book of the Roman Catholic
Church, xxxiii. 1.
■ Answer to the Bishop of Chester,
ibid.
■ on the Revelations of la Sceur Na^
tivit^, xxxvi. 305.
Buxton's Inquiry whether Crime is pro-
duced or prevented by our present Sys-
tem of Prison Discipline, xxx. 404.
Byron's, Lord, Dramas, xxvii. 476.
■ Letter on Mr. Bowles's Strictures
on Pope, xxxii. 271.
Byron, Lord, and his Contemporaries,
xxxvii. 402.
Caillaud, Voyage i I'Oasii de Thebes,
xxviii. 59.
Calddeugh's Travels in- South America,
xxxii. 25.
Campan's Memoirs of Marie Antoinette,
xxviii. 449.
Campbell's Appeal on Behalf of the
Church of England, xxxix. 524.
Theodric, xxxi. 342.
Traveb in South Africa, xxvii.
364.
■' T., Letter on a London Uni-
versity, xxxiii. 257.
Cancelada, Revolucion de Neuva Espafia,
xxx. 151.
Canning's Speech, Nov. 23, 1819, xxii.
492.
— — Speech on the Slave Trade,
March 7, 1824, xxx. 559.
Carrington's Dartmoor, xxxv. 165.
Supplement, xxxvii. 147.
Cashel (Archbishop of), Charge in 1823,
xxxi 491.
Casti's Court of Beasts, by Rose, xxi. 486.
Cayley on Corn Trade, Wages, and
Rent, xxxvii. 426.
Cecil's Memoirs of the Rev. John New-
ton, xxxi. 26.
Chalmers's Speech, explanatory of the
Measures pursued at Glasgow, for the
Extinction of compulsory Pauperism,
xxviii. 349.
ChampoUion, Lettre k M. Dacier, relative
^ I'Alphabet des Hieroglyphes Phone-
tiques employes par les Egyptieus,
xxviii. 188.
Charles, Archiduc, Prmcipes de la Stra-
t^gie, xxii. 380.
Chester's, Bishop of, Letter to C. Butler^
Esq., xxxiii. 1.
Christian on the Right of Universities to
a Copy of every new Publication, xxi.
196.
Clapperton's Journal of a Second Expedi-
tion into the Interior of Africa, xxxix.
143.
Clare's Poems, descriptive of Rural Lifei
and Scenery, xxiii. 166.
Clarke on the Gas Blow-pipe, xxiii. 466. ,
Thoughts on the Necessity of
improving the Condition of the Slaves
in the British Colonies, xxix. 475.
Cobbett's History of the Reformation,
xxxiii. 1.
Cochrane's Journey through Russia and
Siberian Tartary, xxxi. 215.
Coleridge's Schiller's Wallenstein, xxxv.
518.
Colin de Plancy, Dictionnaire Infernal,
xxii. 348.
Digitized by
Googk
Rktiew.
AUTHORS REVIEWED.
Collet, Vie de M. Henri-Maiie Boudon,
xxxvi. 305.
Collingwood's Correspondence of Vice-
Admiral Lord Collingwood, xxxviL 364.
Conder's Poems, xxxii. 211.
Copleston on Predestination, xxvi. 82.
Coray's EkXnvtxfi Bi/3Xi«^'*»), xxiii 136.
Cotmau*s Architectural Antiquities of
Normandy, xxv. 112.
Cottingham^s Henry the Seventh's Cha-
pel, xxvii. 308.
Cottii de TAdministration de la Justice
Criminelle en Angleterre, xxii. 247.
Cowper's Private Correspondence, xxx. 185.
Coxe*s Memoirs of the Duke of Marlbo-
rough, xxiii. 1.
Crabbers English Synonymes, xxxv. 403.
Crawford's Mission to Siam and Hu6,
xxxiii. 104.
Crawfurd^s Indian Archipelago, zxviii.
111.
Creuzer*s Abriss der Rtfmischen Antiqui-
taten, xxxii. 67.
Croker's Letter to Lord Liverpool, pro-
posing to finish the East Wing of So-
merset-house for National Galleries,
xxxiv. 179.
Cromwell's, Oliver, Memoirs of Oliver
Cromwell, xxv. 279.
-^— — Thomas, Oliver Cromwell
and his Times, ibid.
Cruise's Residence in New Zealand, xxxi.
52.
Cumming on Rail and Tram-rdads, xxxL
349.
Cunningham's New South Wales, xxxvii.l .
Curr*s Account of Van Diemen's Land,
xxxii 311.
Dalb's Sophocles, xxxi. 198.
Dalzel on the Ancient Greeks, xxvi. 243.
Dam, Histoire de Venise, xxxi. 420.
David, Ben, Three Letters on the Ge-
nuineness of 1 John V. 7, xxxiii. 64.
Delille*8 Virgil's Georgics, xxxviii. 358.
Della-Cella, Viaggio da Tripoli all' Egitto,
xxvi. 209.
Delort, Histoire de THomme au Masque
de Fer, xxxiv. 19.
D^mosthene, OBuvres completes, xxxiii.
332.
Demosthenes, xxvii. 382.
Dibdm's Library Companion, xxxii. 152.
D'Israeli's Curiosities of Literature, xxiii.
245.
Dobeneck, des Deutschen Mittelalters,
Volksglauben und Heroensangen, xxii.
348.
Dobrizhoffer's Accoimt of the Abipones,
xxvi. 277.
Dodd's Letter on Legal Reforms, xxxviii.
241.
DouglaS; Hon. F. S. N., on the Resem-
blance between the Ancient and Mo-
dem Greeks, xxiii. 325.
Douglas, John, Observations on the Ne-
cessity of a Le^al Provision for the
Irish Poor, xxxviii. 53.
Drovetti, Voyage & TOasis du Dakel,
xxviii. 59.
Dudley on the Identi^^ of the Rivers
Niger and Nile, xxv. 25.
Dupin, M^moires sur la Marine de France,
et d' Angleterre, xxii. 34.
Voyages dans la Grande Bretagne;,
xxv. 67 ; xxx. 368 ; xxxvi. 1.
— — ' Pieces relatives au Proces du Due
d*£nghien, xxxix. 561.
Duppa on Copyright, xxi. 196.
Duval, La rllle d'Honneur, comedie,
xxix. 414.
Dwight's Travels in New England and
New York, xxx. 1.
Edgbworth, R. L., on Roads and Car-
riages, xxiii. 96.
Maria, Memoirs of R. L.
Edgeworth, xxiiL 510.
Edmonstone*s Journey to Two of the
Oases of Upper Egypt, xxviii. 59.
Ellis's History of <The iron Mask,' xxxiv.
19.
^— Tour through Owhyhee, xxv. 419.
Elmes*s Letter to Lord Liverpool on the
Deficiency in the Number of Places of
Public Worship, xxiii. 549.
Ensor on Radical Reform, xxii 102.
Eschines, xxvii 382.
Eschine, CEuvres Completes, xxxiii. 332.
Etienne, Les Plaideurs sans Proces, co-
medie, xxix. 414.
Evans* s Description of Van Diemen*8
Land, xxvii. 99.
Desigpis of Russia, xxxix. 1 .
Ejrrie's Annales des Voyages, xxvi
514.
Faulkner on the Plague, xxvii. 524.
Faux's Memorable Days in America,
xxix. 338.
Fearou's Sketches of America, xxi 124.
Ferguson, Dr. R., on the Small Pox,
xxxiii. 550.
Fergusson's Reports of Decisions in Ac-
tions of Divorce, xxv. 229.
Field's Greographical Memoirs of New
South Wales, xxxii 311.
Fisher on the Importance of the Cape of
Good Hope as a Colony of Great Bri-
tain, xxii. 203.
Flather's Supplement to Bridgman's Di-
gested Index, xxxii. 92.
Flower's Letters from the Illinois, xxvii.
71.
Fod^r^, Le<{oos sur les Epid^mies^ xxx.
loo.
Digitized by
Googk
AUTHORS REVIEWED.
QCARTBRLT
Frank's Memoirs of Lindley Murray, xxv.
148.
Franklin's Journey to the Shores of the
Polar Sea, xxviu. 372.
Second Expedition, xxxviii.
335.
Fraser*s Tour through the HimSlla Moun-
tains, xxiv. 102.
Forbin* Voyage dans le Levant en 1817
et I8l8,xxiii.83.
Fosbrooke*s British Monachism, xxii. 59.
Foscolo, Ugo, Ricciarda, tragedia, xxiv. 72.
(GrAMBA, Voyage dans la Russie Meri-
dionale, xxxv. 363..
Garinet, Histoire de la Magie en France,
xxii. 348.
Greissler, Tableaux Pittoresques des Moeurs,
&c. des Russes, xxvi. 37.
Geulis, Madame la Contesse de, Pe-
trarque et Laure, xxiv. 529.
George IIl.'s Letters to Lord Kenyon on
the Coronation Qathj xxxvi. 285.
Gilchrist's Letter to Mr. Bowles, in an-
swer to the Reply of an unsentimental
sort of (Critic, xxxii. 271.
Second Letter to Mr. Bowles,
ibid.
Third Letter, to Mr. Bowles, ib.
Gilly's Excursion to the Mountains of
Piemont, xxxii i. 134.
Giroux, Maccabees, trag^die, xxix. 25.
Gisbome's Testimony of Natural Theo-
logy to Christianity, xxi. 41.
Godwin on Population, xxvi. 148.
Goethe's Faust, by Lord F. L. Gower,
xxxiv. 136.
Goodisson's Essay on the Islands of
Corfu, Leucadia, &c., xxix. 86.
Grourgaud, M^moires pour servir h I'His-
toire de France, sous Napoleon, xxviii.
219.
Gower's, Lord F. L., Goethe's Faust,
xxxiv. 136.
Graham, Residence in Chili, xxx.441.
Voyage to Brazil, xxxL 1 .
on Com and Currency, xxxix.
451.
Granville's IVavels to and from St. Pe-
tersburgh, xxxix. 1 .
Grece's Canada, xxiii. 373.
Gr^goire, Histoire des Sectes Religieuses,
xxviii. 1.
— — ^ Histoire de laTh^ophilantropie,
xxviii. 493.
Grenville's, Lord, Speech on the Distress
of the Countr}-,Nov. 30, 1819, xxii. 492.
Grimm, Deutsche Sagen, xxii. 348.
Grinfield's Reply to Mr. Brougham on
the Education of the People, xxxii.
410.
Guerra, Historia de la RevQlupion i%
Neuva Espana^ xxx, 151.
Gunn's Ori^n of Gothic Architecture^
xxv. 112.
Guzman^s Virgil^s Georgks, xxxviii. 358.
Haooart's Life of Hinyself, xxxv. 149,
Haldane's Review of the Conduct of the
Directors of the British and Foreign
Bible Society, xxxvi. 1.
Haliburtou, on the Importance of the
North American Colonies of Great
Britain, xxxiii. 410.
tiall's Journal on the Coast of Cliili,
Peru, and Mexico, xxx. 441.
Letters from the West, xxxix. 345.
Hallam's Constitutional History of Eng-
land, xxxvii. 194. .
Hamniond's Equity Digest, xxxii. 92.
Hanbury. See Waddington,^
Hancock on Pestilence, xxvii. 524.
Hardcostle on Currency, xxxix. 451.
Harmou's Travels in North America,
xxvi. 409.
Harris's Tour through the United States
of America, xxvii. 71.
Hawkins on Tradition, xxL 352.
Hay don' i» New Churches, considered with
respect to the Opportunity the^ offer
for the Encouragement of Painting,
xxiii. 549.
Haygarth's Greece, a poem, xadii. 325.
Hayley's Memoirs of Himself, xxxi. 2i54.
Hazlitt's Political Essays, xxii. 158.
Table Talk, xxvi 109.
Head's Journeys across the Pampas^ XXXV.
114.
on the Rio Plata Mining Associa^
tion, xxxvi. 81.
Heber's Farewell Sermon, xxxv. 445.
on the Omnipresence of God, ib,
India, xxxvii. 100.
Hymns, xxxviii. 16. ^
Hemans, Felicia, Restoration of the
Works of Art to Italy, xxiv. 130.
Tales in Verse, ibid.
— Translations from Camoens, ib,
• The Sceptic, a poem, ibid.
' Stanzas to the Memory of the
late King, ibid,
Henderson on Ancient and Modern Wines,
xxxii. 232.
Biblical Researches and Tra-
vels in Russia, xxxv. 363.
Henniker's Notes during a Visit to Egypt,
xxviii. 59.
Herschel's Observations of the apparent
Distances and Positions of 380 double
and triple Stars, made in 1821, 1822,
andl823, xxxviii. 1.
Hill on the Institutions of the States of
Ancient Greece, xxii. 163.
Hippesley on Prison Labour, xxx. 404.
Hodgskin's Travels in the North of Ger-
many, xxiii. 434.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbyiew.
AUTHORS REVIEWED.
xxTii
tiolderness on the Manners and Customs
of the Crlm Tartars, xxix. 116.
Holford's Speech respecting Confinement
in the Hulks, xxx. 404.
' oii Criminal Prisons, ibid.
— Vindication of the Penitentiary
at Milibank, ibid.
Holland's Travels in the Ionian Isles,
Albania. Thessaly, Macedonia, See,
• during 1812 and 1813, xxiiL 325.
Holt on the Law of Libel, xxxv. 566.
Home's Works, by Mackenzie, xxxvi.
. 167.
Hone's Aspersions Answered, xxx. 472.
Howell's State Trials, xxxvi. 511:
Hubertsberg, Geschidite des Pteussischen
Staates, xxxi. 327.
Hudson, Ann H., Account of the Ameri-
can Baptist Mission to the Burtnan
Empire, xxxiii. 37.
Hulin, Explications offertes aux Hommes
Impartiaux, xxix. 561.
Humboldt's Travels, xxi. 320.
■ ' — -sur I'El^vation des Mon-
tagues de rinde, xxii. 415.
- Personal Narrative, xxv. 365.
Hume's Histoiy of England, xxxiv. 248,
Hum|)hreys on the Laws of Real Pro-
perty, xxxiv. 540.
Himt's Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered, xxv.
426.
• Lord Byron and Contemporaries,
xxxvii. 402.
Hunter's Memoirs of a Captivity among
the Indians in North America, xitxi.
■ 76.
guntington's Rev. W., Works, xxiv. 462.
urwitz's Hebrew Tales, xxxv. 86.
Inolis, Sir R. H., Speeches on the Catho-
lic Question, xxxviii. 535.
Irving's Orations, xxix; 283.
Jacob's View of the Agriculture, Manu-
factures, &c. of Germany, and Parts of
' Holland and France, xxiii. 434.
— on the Trade in Corn, xxxv. 269.
' on the Cultivation of Poor Soils,
xxxviii. 410.
James's War between Great Britain and
the United States of America, xxvii.
405.
" Account of an Expedition from
- Pittsburgh to the Rocky Mountains,
xxix. 1.
James on the Mines of the District of
Guanaxuato, xxxvi. 81.
Jardine's Outlines of Philosophical Edu-
cation, xxxvi 216.
Jeremy's Analytical Dij^^st, xxxii. 92.
Johnson's Cowper's Private Correspond-
ence, XXX. 185.
I ■■ Hayley's MemoirS; x». 263.
Johnston's View of Public Education in
France, xxxvi. 216.
Jones's History of the Christian Church,
xxxiii. 134.
JopUu's System of Political Economy,
xxxi. 128.
Views on the Currency, xxxix. 45 1 .
Jouy, Sylla, Trag6die, xxviii. 97.
Juarros, History of Guatemala, xxx. 151.
Julia, sur I'Air Mar6cageux, xxx. 133.
Katbr on Weights and Measiures, xxxvi.
139.
Kelly's Universal Cambist, xxvi. 41 6.
Kendall's Letters on tlie State of Ireland,
xxxviii. 535.
Keverberg, de la Colonic de Fredericks-
- oord, xxxviii. 410.
King, Archbishop, on Predestination,
xxvi. 82.
Knight's Eastern Sketches, xxii. 149.
Koref, de Regionibus Italic Aere perui-
doso contaminatis, xxx. 133.
Kotzebue's Voyage of Discovery, xxvi,
341.
Kries. See B§mardi,
Lacretbllb, Histoire de I'Assembl^e
Constituante de France, xxviii. 271.
Lacroix, La R6volution de St. Domingue,
xxi. 430.
Laing's Travels io the Sources of the Ro-
keUe and Niger, xxxi. 445.
Landor's Conversations of Literary Men,
xxx. 50S.
Lane on the Coronation Oath, xxxviii. 535.
Lapie, M^moires sur les Voyages executes
dans l'0c6an Glacial Arctique, xxvi.
514.
Las Casas, Memorial de Ste. H^ldne^
xxviii. 219.
Latrobe's Visit to South Africa, xxii. 203.
Lawes' Suggestions for some Alterations
in the Law, xxxviii. 241.
Lawrence's Introduction to Comparative
Anatomy, xxii. 1.
* Lectiures on Physiology, ibid.
Limerick, Bishop of, Speech on the Irish
Tithe Composition Amendment Bill,
xxxi. 492.
Lingard's History of England, xxxiii. 1.
Liverpool, Lord, Speech on the Means of
extending the Foreign Trade of the
Country, xxiv. 281.
Lloyd's Mechanical Philosophy, xxxix.
432.
Lodge's Portraits, xxxviii. 378.
Lowe's Present State of England, xxxii.
160.
Lucian of Samosata, by W. Tooke,^ xxxvii.
32.
Lyall's Character of the Russians, xxxi.
146.
Digitized by
Googk
AUTHORS REVIEWED.
Quarterly
Lyon*s Travels in Northern Africa, xxv.
25.
Lysias's Letter to the Prince Regent, xxii.
430.
M'Adaii*s Essay on Public Roads, xxiiu
96.
Remarks on the Present Sys-
tem of Road-making, xxiii. 96.
M'Crie's History of the Reformation in
Italy, xxxvii. 60.
McDonnell on Negro Slavery, xxxii. 506.
Maclean on Epidemic Diseases, xxvii.
524.
Macmichael on Contagion, xxxiii. 218.
McQueen's Northerii Central Africa, xxvl.
51.
West India Colonies, xxx. 559.
Malcolm's Central India, xxix. 382.
India, xxxvi 32.
Malet, on the System of Fagging at Win-
chester School, xxxix. 99.
Markland's Letter to Lord Aberdeen on
the Museum of Antiquities, xxxvii. 485.
Marsden's Marco Polo's Travels, xxi. 177.
Malone's Spence's Observations of Books
and Men, xxiii. 400.
Malte-Brun, Annales des Voyages, xxvi.
514.
Manzoni, Alessandro, il Conte di Carma-
gnola, Tragedia, xxiv. 72.
Maquart, Refutation de TEcrit public par
le Due de Rovigo sur la Catastrophe de
M. le Due d'Knghieu, xxix. 561.
Martius, Travels in Brazil, xxxi. I.
Maury, Sur I'Eloquence de la Chaire, xxix.
283.
Mayow's Plain Preaching, xxvii. 450. .
— — Sermons, ibid.
Memes's Memoirs of Canova, xxxiv. 110.
Mengin, Histoire de TEgypte, xxx. 481.
Merlm's Strictures on the Poet Laureate's
Book of the Church, xxxiii. 1.
Meyendorff, Voyage d'Oreubourg II Bouk-
hara, xxxvi. 106.
Meyrick on Ancient Armour, xxx. 334.
Miers' Travels in Chile and La Plata,
XXXV. 114.
Mill's Travels of Theodore Ducas, xxviii.
365.
Miller, General, Memoirs of, xxxviii. 448.
Milman's Fall of Jerusalem, xxiii. 198.
Ann Boleyn, xxxv. 351.
Milton on Christian Doctrine, xxxii. 442.
Works, by Todd, xxxvi. 29.
Mirmont, Le Folliculaire, Comedie, xxix.
414.
Mitchell's Aristophanes, VoL I., xxiii.
474.
Mitford's History of Greece, xxv. 154.
Miss, Our Village, xxxi. 146.
Moffat, J., Menaoirs of, xxxv. 148.
MoUien, Voyage dans I'lnt^rieur deTj/lL-*
frique aux Sources du S^n^gal et de la
Gambie, fait en 1818, xxiiL 225.
Mental's Inquiries respecting the Uni-
versity Library, xxi. 196.
— — ^— on the Aheration of the Law of
Copyright, ibid.
Monteath's Forester's Guide, xxxvi. 558.
Montgomery's Christian Psalmist, xxxviii.
16.
Montholon, Melanges Historiques, xxviii.
219.
Montlosier, De la Monarchic Franqaise,
xxvii. 146.
— — — ^— — depuis le Retour de
la Maison de Bourbon, ibid.
> depuis la Seconde
Restauration, jusqu'^ la Fin de la Ses-
sion de 1816, ibid.
- au 1' Janvier, 1821,
ibid.
Moore's Vox Stellarum, xxvi. 180.
Irish Melodies, xxviii. 138.
— — Abraham, Odes of Pindar, xxviii.
410.
'— Memoirs of Sheridan, xxxiii. 561.
Morellet, M^moires sur la Revolution, xxvi«
229.
Morgan's Philosophy of Life, xxii. 1.
; — Lady, Italy, xxv. 529.
Morier's Journey through Persia, xxvi.
Motte-Fen^lon, Abreg^ de la Vie des Phi-
losophes de 1' Antiquity, xxiv. 419.
Mouraviev, Voyage en Turcomanie, xxxvi.
106.
M. P., St. A., Promenade aux Cimetieres
de Paris, xxi. 359.
Murray, Hugh, Historical Account of
Discoveries and Travels in Asia, xxiv«
31L
Mushet on the Issues of the Bank of
England, xxxix. 451.
Nazaroff's Notices in the Central Part
of Asia, xxvii. 138.
Neuman's Protestant Dissenter's Cate-
chism, xxxi. 229.
Newton's, Rev. John, Memoirs of Him-
self, xxxi. 26.
Nicol on Scripture Sacrifices, xxxiii. 356.
— J., Memoirs of, xxxv. 148.
Niebuhr, Romische Geschichte, xxxii. 67.
Nolan's Speech on a Bill to amend the
Laws for the ReUef of the Poor, xxviii.
349.
Norris's Letter to the Earl of Liverpool^
xxxvi. ] .
Nuttal's Travels into the Arkansa Terri-
tory, xxix. 1.
O'Meara's Napoleon in Exile, xxviii. 2 1 9,
Owen's British and Foreign l^ihl^ §<)•
ciety^ xxxvi. L
Digitized by
Googk
■Review.
AUTHORS REVIEWED.
Oxley*8 Two Expeditions into the Inte-
rior of New South Wales, xxiv. 55.
Palkie's Works, xxxviii. 305.
Parueirs Maurice aud Berghetta, xxi.471,
^— on Paper Money, Banking, and
Overtrading, xxxix. 451.
Letter to the Editor of the Quar-
terly Review, xxiii. 360.
Parr's Works, xxxix. 255.
Parry's Voyage for the Discovery of a
North-West Passage, xxv. 175.
Second Voyage for the Discovery of
a North-West Passage, xxx. 231.
— Third Voyage of Discovery, xxxiv.
378.
Parseval, Philippe Aug^ste, Poeme He-
ro'ique, xxxiv. 399.
Partington's Marquis of Worcester's Cen-
tury of Inventions, xxxii. 397.
Paterson on Public Roads, xxui. 96.
Payne's Bnitus, xxii. 402.
Pecchio's Spanish and Portuguese Revo-
lutions, xxviii. 536.
Pellico, Silvio, Francesca da Rimini, xxiv.
72.
Penn's Examination of the Primary Ar-
gument oi the Iliad, xxvii. 39.
Pepvs's Memoirs, xxxiii. 281 .
Phelan's Policy of the Church of Rome
in Ireland, xxxviii. 535.
Phillips's State Trials, xxxvi. 511.
Phillpotts on the Coronation Oath, xxxviii.
535.
Pichot's Voyage en Angleterre et en
Europe, xxxii. 342.
Pillans' Elementary Teaching, xxxix. 99.
Pitt's Letters to George III., xxxvi. 285.
Planche, (Euvres Completes de D6mo8-
thene et d'Eschine, en Grec et en Fran-
<{ois, xxix. 313.
Plunket's Speech, Nov. 23, 1819, xxii.
492.
Pope's Works, by Roscoe, xxxii. 271.
by Dr. Warton, ibid,
— — — by Bowles, ibid.
Porter's Travels in Georgia, xxvi. 437.
Potter's Letter on the Systems of Educa-
tion proposed by the popular Parties,
xxxix. 99.
-Pouqueville, Histoire de la Regeneration
delaGrece, XXXV. 221.
Prior's Life of Burke, xxxiv. 457.
Qum's Visit to Spain, xxix. 240.
Raffbnbi., Histoire des Evdnemens de
la Grece, xxviii. 474.
Raffles, Sir T. S., Crawford's Mission to
Siam and Hu^, xxxiii. 104.
Ram, on the Right of a Father to the
Custody of his Children, xxxix. 183.
Ravenstone, en the Funding System, xxxi.
311.
Reid on Hypochondriasis, xxvii. 110.
Renuell's Remarks on Scepticism, xxii. 1.
Reynolds' Life and Times, xxxv. 148.
Riboute,L' Amour et TAmbition, Com^die,
xxix. 414.
Richardson's Travels along the Mediter*
ranean, xxviii; 59.
Rickman's English Architecture, xxv .112.
Rikord's Captivity in Japan, xxii. 107.
Robinson's Mexican Revolution, xxx. 151.
Rt. Hon. F. J., Speech on the
Financial Situation of the Country,
March 13, 1826, xxxv. 238.
Rock, Captain, Letters to King Gkorge
IV., xxxviii. 535.
Rogers's Italy, Part II., xxxviii. 145.
Roos, F. de. Travels in the United States
and Canada, xxxvii. 260.
Roscoe on Penal -Jurisprudence, xxx. 404.
Additional Observations on Penal
Jurisprudence, xxx. 404.
. Pope's Works, xxxii. 271.
Rose's Casti's Court of Beasts, xxi. 486.
— — Orlando Furioso, xxx. 40.
Ross's Voyage of Discovery, xxi. 214.
— Cape of Grood Hope Calendar, xxii.
203.
Rubichon, De 1' Angleterre, xxiii. 174.
Rue, Essai sur la Ville de Caen, xxv. 112.
Russell, Lord John, Don Carlos, a Tra-
gedy, xxix. 370.
— — on Crimes, xxxvii. 147.
Sadler's Ireland, xxxviii. 53.
St. David's, Bishop of. Vindication of
1 John v. 7, xxvi. 32.
Saint Martin, Notice sur le Zodiaque de
Denderah, xxviii. 59.
Sanders on the Projected Rail-Road be-
tween Liverpool and Manchester, xxxi.
349.
Saulnier, Voyage de M. Lelorrain en
Egypte, xxviii. 59.
Saver's Works, by Taylor, xxxv. 175.
Schiller's Wallenstein, by Coleridge, xxxv.
Schlegers Lectures on Literature, xxi. 271.
Schmidtmeyer, Travels to Chili in 1820-
21, xxx. 441.
Schoolcraft's Travels from Detroit North-
West to the Sources of the Mississippi,
xxix. 1.
Scott's Life of the Rev. Thomas Scott,
xxxi. 26.
Sir W., Lives of the Novelists,
xxxiv. 349.
Scribe, Valerie, Com^die, xxix. 414.
^— Le Secretaire et le Cuisinier, ibid.
Scrope's Geology of Central France,
xxxvi. 437.
Digitized by
Googk
AUTHOlig ftEVlBWBa
QUARTBRUr
Scudamore on Mineral Waters, xxv. 216;
Shelley's Laon and Cythna, xxi. 460.
Revolt of Islam, ibid,
' Prometheus Unbound, xxvi. 168.
-^— — Posthumous Poems, xxxiv. 136.
Shiel's Evadne, xxii. 402.
Smith's Willan's Works, xxvii. 524.
Smyth's Memoir of Sicily, xxx. 382.
Snodgrass's Narrative of the Burmese
War, XXXV. 481.
Soave's Virgil's Georgics, xxxviii. 358.
Sotheby's Virgil's Georgics, xxxviii. 358.
Soumet, Saul, Trag6die, et Clytemnestre,
Trag^die, xxix. 25.
South's Observations of the apparent
Distances and Positions of 380 double
and triple Stars, made in 1821, 22,
and 23, xxxviii. 1.
r Observations, &c., with a Re-ex-
amination of 36 Stars of the same
description, xxxviii. 1.
Southey's, Robert, Life of Wesley, xxiv. 1.
■ Peninsular War, xxix. 53.
— — Tale of Paraguay, xxxii. 467.
— Thomas, West Indies, xxxviii.
193.
Sparks's Life- and Travels of JohnJ^ed-
yard, xxxviii. 85.
Spence's Anecdotes of Books and Men,
xxiii. 400.
Spix, Travels in Brazil, xxxi. 1.
Stael-Holstein, Lettres sur TAngleterre,
xxxiv. 45.
Starkie on the Law of Libel, xxxv. 566.
■ on Criminal Pleading, xxxvii.147.
Staunton's Chinese Embassy, xxv. 414.
I^teiukopff's Letter to R. Haldane, xxxvi.
Stephani Thesaurus, xxii. 302.
Stephen's Slavery of tjie British West
Indies, xxx. 559.
Steuart's Planter's Guide, xxxvii. 303.
Stewart, Dugald, Second Dissertation,
xxvi. 474.
• Colonel, on the Government of
India, xxxv. 32.
Stothard's Tour in Normandy, xxv. 112.
Strachan's Visit to the Province of ypper
Canada, xxiii. 373,.
Strangeway's Sketch of the Mosquito
Shore, xxviii. 157.
IStuari's Emigrant's ^uide to Upper
Canada, xxiii. 373.
Sumner's Translation of Milton on Chris-
tian Doctrine, xxxii. 442.
Surtees' History of the County Palatine
of Durham, xxxix. 360.
Sylvester's Report of Rail-Roads and
Locomotive Engimes, xxxi. 349.
Tab art's Fairy Tales, xxi. 91.
Tarb6, Manuel des Poids et Mesures, xxvi.
416,
Tasso's Jeru&alem Delivered, by Hunt,
* xxv. 426 — by Wiffen, xxxiv. 1 .
Taylor's Sayer's Works, xxxv. 175.
English Synonymes, xxxv. 403:
Tazewell's Negociations between the
United States of America and Great
Britain, xxxix. 215.
Tebbs on Adultery and Divorce, xxviii.
179.
Teonge's Diary, xxxii. 429.
Thackeray's Defence of the Clergy, xxxix.
524.
Tbiele, Danske Folkesagn, xxii. 348.
Thiersch, uber gelehrte Schulen mit
besonderer Ruchsicht auf Baiem, xxxvi.
216.
Thorns, History of Sung-kin, xxxvi.
496.
Chinese Coiurtship, ibid,
Thomson's Sketches of the War between
the United States and Great Britain,
xxvii. 405.
on the Varieties and Secondary
Occurrence of the Small-Pox, xxvii.
524.
on the Education of Candidates
for the De^e of Doctor of Medicine
in the Scottish Universities, xxxvi. 21 6»
• Letter to Lord Bexley, xxxvi.
1.
Thury, Description des Catacombes de
Paris, xxi. 359.
Jod^'s Vindication of our authorized
Translation and Translators of the
Bible, xxiii. 287.
' Milton's Works, xxxvi. 29.
Tone's, Theobald Wolfe, Life, xxxvi. 61.
Tooke's Thoughts on High and Low
Prices, xxix. 214>
— ; on the Currency, xxxix. 451.
on the Resumption of Cash Pay-
ments, ibid.
Lucian of Samosata, xxxvii. 32.
Touche (Meh6 de la), Exttait des Me-
moires In^dits sur la Revolution Fran-
qaise, xxix. 561.
Turner's Tour in Normandy, xxv. 112.
Vasty, Reflexions sur les Noirs et les
Blancs, xxi. 430.
Villaununti^, Apuntes Historicos, xxx.
151.
Villemaiu, Histoire de Cromwell, xxv.
279.
Vitruvius's Civil Architecture, translated
by Wilkins, xxi. 25.
Virgil's Georgics, xxxviii. 358.
Voss's Virgil's Georgics, ibid.
Wachsmutb, die Ultere Geschichte des
Romischer Staates, xxxii. 67.
Waddington and Haubury's Visit to
Ethiopia, xxvii. 215.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtibw*
AUTHOllS REVIEWED.
Waldegrave's, Lord, Memoirs, xxv. 392.
Walpole's Memoirs of King George II.,
xxvii.178.
Warton's Pope's Works, xxxii. 271.
Waterton's Wanderings, xxxiii. 314.
Watkins's Memoirs o? Sheridan, xxxiii.
* 561.
Weddell's Voyage towards the South
Pole, xxxiv. 378.
Welby's Visit to North America, xxvii. 7 1 .
Wentworth's New South Wales, xxiv. 55.
British Settlemenl^ in Aus-
tralasia, xxxii. 311.
West, on the Application of Capital to
Land, xxxvi. 353.
Whately*s King on Predestination, xxri.
82.
Bampton Lectures, xxviii. 144.
White's Voyage to the China Sea, xxx.
351.
Whitmore on the Corn-Laws, xxxv. 269.
Whittaker*s Inquiry into the Interpreta-
tion of the Hebrew Scriptures, xxiii. 287.
■ Supplement to the Inquiry,
xxiii. 287.
Wifien's Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered,
xxxiv. 1.
Wilberforce's Appeal in Behalf of the
Negro Slaves, xxix. 475.
Wilderspin on the Education of the In-
fant Poor, xxxii. 410.
Wilkins*s Civil Architecture of Vitruvius,
xxi. 25.
Willan's Miscellaneous Works, xxvii.
524.
Williams's (Sir C. Hanbury) Workg»
xxviii. 46.
Wilmot's Letter on the Increase of Crime,
xxxvii. 489.
Wilson*s Emigrants' Guide to the Cape
of Good Hope, xxii. 203.
Winter's Wreath, The, xxxvii. 84.
Woodhouse on Astronomy, xxii. 129.
Wordsworth's *Who wrote Eixo^v Btt&f
)uxfi ? * Answered, xxxii. 467.
Supplement to * Who wrote
EtxM¥ BaffiXi»fi ? * ibid,
Yates, The Church in Danger, xxxiii.
549.
Basis of National Welfare, xxiii.
549.
Commentary on Mr. Clarkson*8
Pamphlet on the Condition of the
Slaves in the British Colonies, xxx. 559.
Young's Catalogue of the Angerstein
Pictures, xxxi. 210.
Digitized by
Googk
Digitized by
Googk
INDEX
TO
THE QUARTERLY REVIEW,
FROM
VOLUME TWENTY-ONE TO VOLUME THIRTY-NINE.
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
A.
Aaron, xxU. 68; xxlv. 484; xxvii.
528; XXX. 110, xxxv.96. Se^Haroun,
Abasolo, XXX. 173.
Abaziel, xxix. 51.
Abbas the Great, xxvi. 444.
Mirza, successful efibrts of, in dis-
ciplining the Persian army, xxvi. 445.
XXXV. 393; xxxvi. 389.
Abbatutis, G. A. xxi. 94. See Basile.
Abbott, Judge, xxiii. 576 — Chief Justice,
rule for me admission of affidavits of
the truth, in case of libel, xxxv. 602.
Abdallagh, xxiL 151.
Abdallatif, xxiv. 164 ; xxv. 383.
Abdel-Kerym, notice of, xxiii. 233, note,
Abdias, xxxiii. 410.
Abdin CasheflP, xxvii. 218-220— liberality
oi^ towards Messrs. Waddington and
Hanbury, 230.
Abdullah Benhahi, xxxviii. 107.
Bey, xxiii. 114.
Abel, Clarke, F.L.S., Journey in China,
reviewed, xxi. 67 — arrival at St. Sebas-
tian, 68— account of his j oumey to Pekin,
7 1-74— character of the Chinese, 75-79
— treasons why the tea-plant cannot be
profitably cultivated anywhere but in
China, 88 — Mr. Abel's description of
Buonaparte, 90.
— Mr., xxxix. 68.
xxvii. 512; xxix. 180.
Abenhayen, Geber, xxix. 453.
Aben Musa, icxvi. 182.
Aben Rayhel,' xxvi. 181.
Abentaria, xxix. 453.
Abercom, Marquis of, anecdotes of, xxxiv.
213,214.
Abercrombie, Mr., xxiv. 218.
Aberdeen, Lord, conjecture of, on the con-
nexion of the fir-cone with the worship
of Bacchus, xxiii. 332 — arguments used
by, for the eastern origin of the Gothic
arch, xxv. 144.
■ xxxvii. 487.
Abemethy, John, Inquiry into Mr. Hunter's
VOL. XL. NO. LXXIX.
Theory of Life, and Physiological Lec-
tures, reviewed, aodi. 1 — attacked by
Mr. Lawrence, 3 — vindicates his Theory,
4 — on the separate existence of percep-
tion and intelligence, 5 — ' blue pill' of,
xxv. 216.
Abemethy, xxx. 196 ; xxxix. 12.
Ab^arus, xxx. 477.
Abiram, xxiii. 214; xxv. 281.
Aboubek'r, xxiii. 230.
Abou Bouker, a native of Houssa, notice
of, xxix. 597, 598.
Abou-Koraim, xxx. 489.
Abou Taleb, xxxix. 75, 96.
Abraham, promise to, never yet fulfilled,
xxxviii. 143.
-^ — xxiv. 467, 486, 509 ; xxv. 374;
xxviii. 529 ; xxix. 497 ; xxx. 90 ; xxxii.
19; xxxiii. 393.
Abrantes, one of the writers of the Investi-
gador Portuguez, xxxi. 12.
Abreschius, xxv. 507-520.
Abreu, D. de, befriended Camoens, xxvii. 1 0.
Absalom, xxii. 406 ; xxv. 313 ; xxix. 37.
Abson, Governor, remark made to, by the
King of Dahomey, xxii. 273-288.
Abu Abdalla, xxi. 194.
Abubecker, xxxix. 154.
Abulfeda, xxxvi. 122-128.
Abul-Walid, xxi. 194.
Acacius, xxii. 345.
Acbar, Mogul Sultan, memorable inscrip-
tion on the seal of, xxiii. 6; xxxviii.
597.
Accum, Frederick, Treatise on Culinary
Poisons, reviewed, xxiv. 341 ; remarks
on his preface, 341 — adulterations of
food, 343— of physic, 344 — of other arti-
cles, 345 — ^presence of lead in water,
347 — adulterations of wine, &c. ib. 350.
Acerbi, xxx. 117.
Acestes, xxii. 536.
Acestor, xxiv. 428.
Achard, F. C, experiments with oxygen .
gas, xxiii. 472.
Digitized by
Googk
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUASTBBLT
Achilles, shield of; how described by Ho-
mer, xxiii. 266 — French character of
him, xxix. 44.
• xxL 508; xxii. 371; xxiv. 439;
XXV. 430 ; xxvi. 225 ; xxriL 480 ; xxviiL
413; XXX. 42; xxxiL 348; xxxiv. 72,
254; XXXV. 113, note.
Ackber, xxix. 387.
Ackeiman's Forget Me Not, zxxvil 88.
Acland, General, xxix. 81.
-^— — Sir Thomas, xxxviii. 548.
Hugh Dyke, Esq., Brief Sketch of
the History and Present Situation of the
Vaudois, reviewed, xxxiii. 134, 139, 142.
Acosta, Chnstoval, xxxviii. 200.
Acrasia, xxv. 432.
Acripanda, xxiv. 77, 81.
ActsBon, xxiiL 352.
Actides, xxiii. 252.
Acton's Case, xxxvi. 519, note.
Acuna, xxv. 381.
Adah, speech of, over her sleeping boy,
xxvii. 512.
Adair, xxxi. 77.
Adam^ remarks on an attempt to prove the
fall of, from physical phenomena, xxL
55-60.
xxii. 13 ; xxiii. 343, 514, 515 ; xxiv.
484, 491; xxvi. 91; xxvii 509; xxix.
453; XXX. 97,510; xxxii. 130; xxxiii.
392; XXXV. 104, 105.
— — Mr., xxxvii. 454.
• Sir F., xxiii., 135, 136 ; xxix. 108.
WilHam, MP., xxxvi. 189.
Adamastor, xxvii. 25, 31.
Adams, difference of opinion as to the cor-
rectness of his narrative of the town of
T^buctoo, xxiii. 231.
■ Captain John, Sketches of Ten
. Voyages to Africa, reviewed, xxix. 508
— remarks thereon, ib. 509.
■ Dr., Observations on Hereditary
Distempers, xxiv. 177, 178.
— — J. Quincy, Report on Weights and
Measures, xxxvi. 139— observations of, on
the enactment of the great charter con-
cerning them, 143 — and of the act 51
Henry III. t6. 144 — on the data whence
he deduces the capacity of the wine gal-
lon, 145 — on the dimensions of the tun
and hogshead, 146 — present condition
of the Americans described, xxxvii. 262,
263.
xxi. 6, 126, 140; xxvi.
269 ; xxxix. 224, 225, 227.
Mr., xxxvi. 288 ; xxxix. 191, 356.
Mr. G. W., xxvi. 126, 139.
Adamson, John, Memoirs of Luis de
Camoens, reviewed, xxvii. 1. See
Qtmoens.
Addison, observations on the capacity of
continual improvement in man, xxii. 21
-<-ieal state of Pope*s quarrel with him,
xxiiL 419-421, 440, 466 — remark on the
faculties of the soul, xxvi. 494 — Pro-
fessor Stewart's criticism on it, 495-498
— character of his dramatic writings,
xxix. 422, 423.
Addison, xxi. 482; xxvi. 425, 427, 433,
436 ; xxvii. 214 ; xxviii. 48; xxix. 301 ;
XXX. 195; xxxii. 350; xxxv. 153,405;
xxxvi 204; xxxvii 417; xxxviii 27, 92,
385.
— Judge, account o^ xxxix. 359.
Adet, citizen, xxxvi. 70.
Adie, Lillias, confession and execution o^
xxix. 445, 446.
Admetus, xxiv. 428; xxvii. 483; xxviii.
428.
Adonis, xxi. 508; xxiv. 421, note; xxxii
348.
Adrian, Emperor, malediction upon, xxi
364 — persecution of the Jews, xxxv. 87.
xxii. 306; xxv. 70, no/e.
685.
. Mr., xxxiii. 234. ___,..
• Pope, celebrated bull o^ xxxviii.
■ St., miracle at the tomb o^ xxxix.
100.
Adulphus, xxxii. 98.
Adumissa, xxii. 287.
i^desius, xxxii 19.
MgsBuSy xxiii. 522.
^lian, opinion of, on the failure of the
Clouds of Aristophanes, not to be den
pended on, xxi. 303-305— remarks on
his style, xxiii 143, 144 — description of
the earliest foods of different nations,
267.
xxii. 309 ; xxv. 70, note.
iEmilius, xxi. 105.
Portus, xxii. 310.
JEneas, xxiii. 363; xxv. 428; xxvi. 126;
xxvii 23, 44, 282; xxviii. 95, 819;
xxxvi. 54.
— Sylvius, literary reputation of Con
stantinople in the tune of, xxiii. 137.
^pinus, xxxv. 238.
^schines, Complete Works of, translated
by the Abb6 Auger, reviewed, xxvii.
382 — his account of the indifference
of the judges in the Athenian coiuts,
xxxiii. 338, 339.
xxiv. 427, 428, 441, note,' xxv.
160; xxvi 247.
iEschylus, accoimt of the Grecian custom
of wearing flowers at feasts, xxiii. 264,
265, 482, 492 — comparison between his
Greek and that of Homer, xxv. 169—-
character of his tragedies, 505— parti-
cularly of his Agamemnon, 506 — notice
of his various editors, 507 — and of Dr.
Blomfield's edition, 509-529 — disre-
garded the unities, xxvii. 483.
— xxi. 273, 503; xxu. 187,344;
xxui 149; xxiv. 381, 397; xwr. 6, 12;
Digitized by
Googk
Rktibw.
INDEX OP NAMES.
3
xxvi. 176 ; xxvii. 329 ; xxviii. 416 j
xxix. 31 ; xxxiii. 361, noie; xxxiv. 128.
^sculapius, xxiv. 422 ; xxviii 414.
-^son, xxviii. 427.
^sop, xxi. 494; xxii. 104; xxiii. 462;
XXIV. 422; xxvii. 263; xxx. 521.
^thylbyrht, laws of, xxxiv. 259.
^tion, xxii. 194.
^tius, xxxiv. 120.
Affleck, Commodoie, xxi. 438, note,
Aforz, xxix. 453.
Afiicus, xxxiii. 521, and ttote,
Aga Mahomed Khan, xxvi. 445 ; xxxvL
108.
Agag, XXV. 333 ; xxxvi 30.
Agamemnon, xxi 35 ; xxiv. 91 ; xxix. 45,
Aga Syyud Mohamed, xxxvi. 389.
Agatha, xxix. 535.
Agathias, xxiii. 144 ; xxvii. 532, 533, note,
Agathon, xxi 298 ; xxiii. 476 ; xxiv. 429
—431,441; xxix. 336.
AytxXi»fy xxii 343.
Ageiidamus, xxviii. 413.
AgesilauBjXxi. 317; xxxv. 232.
Ag^as's Map of London, xxxiv. 184.
Agis, XXV. 164 ; xxxvi. 204.
— - of Rhodes, a famous cook, xxiii 270,
note.
Aglaia, xxii. 339, note.
Aglionby, Captain, xxxviu. 213.
Agnar, xxi. 96, note,
Ag^es, St., xxix. 456.
Agostinho, Jose, O Oriente, a poem, re-
viewed, xxvii. 1 — analysis of it, with re-
marks, 33-39.
Agoub, M., xxx. 481.
Agoult, Marquis d', prevented from ac-
companying Louis XVI. in his journey
to Varennes, xxviii. 302, 303.
Agra^us, xxiv. 403.
Agricola, xxxvi. 562.
Agrippa, xxvii. 300 ; xxx. 388, 389.
Cornelius, xxii. 374 ; xxviii. 37.
Aguecheek, xxiv. 362.
Aguera, Col. Jose de la Riva, xxxviii.
479.
Aguirre, L. de, xxi. 329.
Ahab, XXV. 343 ; xxvii. 345.
Ahala, xxvii. 305.
Ahmet, xxvi 211, 222.
Ahrimar, xxxiii. 146.
AiguiUon, Due d', xxviii. 281, 458.
Aikin, curious fact relating to, xxiv. 191,
note.
— ; — — Dr., xxxiii. 233.
Aillai, Pierre d'. Cardinal of Cambray,
xxxiv. 334.
Ailsie, Gourlay, xxvi. 1 23.
Ainsworth's Dictionary, number of words
in, xxxvi. 497.
Airoldi, Alfonso, xxx. 395.
Aiscough, William, xxxiv. 337.
Aitzema, observation o^ on the liberty of
the press, xxviii. 523.
Ajax, remarks on Foscolo't traeedy o£
xxiv. 90, 91.
- xxvii. 64, 65, 398, note; xxviii. 54.
"— Mastigophorus, xxiii 148.
Akaitcho, xxviii. 397.
Akenside^s Pleasures of Imagination, eh**
racter of, xxxi. 288.
notice o^ xxxv. 192, 205— qno-
tation from, xxxvii. 303.
Akerblad, xxviii. 1 89.
Akiba, Rabbi, account o^ xxxv. 87, 88—
Talmudical tale concerning, 110.
Alacoque, M. M., xxviii. 26.
Aladdin, xxii. 281 ; xxvi 117 ; xxx. 526.
Alaman, Senor, Observations on the State
of Mexico, XXX. 165, 166, 169.
Alamanni, Luigi, notice o^ xxiv. f §.
Alanus de Rupe, F., xxxiii. 156, 157.
Alarcon, SeSor, Yxrii, 393.
Alashtar, xxii. 155.
Alava, xxxvii. 379.
Alaykin, xxvi. 299.
Albathem, Mahomet Ibn Geber, Kxvi 181.
Albemarle, Admiral, xxvi 27.
Duke o£ xxviii 159 5
479.
• Lord, xxviii. 214.
Alberick, Kin^, xxi. 105.
Alberoni, xxviii. 542 ; xxxvi. 552.
Albert, Archduke, xxix. 575.
Albert de Capitaneis, horrible crueltiet o^
against the Vaudois, in Dauphinj,
xxxiii. 161 — he is defeated by them m
Piedmont, 162.
Albert the Great, treatise ' De Mirabilibus .
Mimdi,' falsely ascribed to, xxix. 458. -
Alberti, xxii. 309 ; xxv. 517.
Albertus Magnus, xxi. 110; xxii. 378;
xxix. 461.
Albinus, Abbot of Tours, xxxiv. 276.
Albret, Jeanne d', xxv. 562.
Albuquerque, xxx. 578 ; xxxi. 16,
Alcaeus, xxi. 501 ; xxvii. 50, 51.
Alcamenes, xxii. 195.
Alcazar, xxvi. 182.
Alceste, remarks on the character o^xiir.
418.
Alcestis, xxii. 181 ; xxiv. 439 ; xxv. 520.
Alcibiades, drinking feat of, xxii 442. 52 !•
xxii. 191 ; xxiv. 429 ; xxvi. 256,
262 ; xxix. 120, 207, 323 ; xxxii 240.
Alcidamas, xxi. 288.
Alcina, her magical operations counter-
parts of those of Circe, xxx. 42.
Alcinous, xxi. 33 — gardens o^ xxiv. 402»
xxv. 509 ; xxxvi. 59.
Alciphron, xxii. 176 5 xxiii 139.
Alcmaeon, xxvi. 109.
Alcman, xxiii. 266.
Alcuin, xxxiii. 71.
Aldama, xxx. 173.
B 2
Digitized by
Googk
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
Aldersey, L., notice of the travels of, in
Palestine, xxiv. 313.
Alderson. See BarnetualL
Aldravandus, xxxviii. 524.
Aldus, xxii. 309; xxv. 507, 511, 519, 520,
525.
Alegpro, Seigneur d', xxxii. 395.
Alembert, M. d', xxxiii. 348 ; xxxviii. 8.
Alep Arselan, xxxv. 392.
Alessandri, xxiv. 336.
Aletin, xxvi. 295.
Aleviso, xxvi. 47.
Alexander, of Abonoteichos, xxxvii. 41.
' Bishop of Alexandria, xxxiii.
190.
Captain, xxxv. 503.
■ Emperor, ukase of, xxxv. 387,
393— caricature of, xxxvi. 108, 390—
ukase respecting the Jews, xxxviii. 118
— his plans for meliorating their con-
dition, 119 — abolished the government
of the rabbis, 123.
xxii. 109, 117, 122;
xxvi. 443 ; xxvii. 145 ; xxix. 86 ; xxxiii.
176 ; xxxix. 26.
J. A., Esq., affecting little anec-
dote from his ' Travels from India to
England,' xxxvi. 383, note.
of Macedon, conquered Asia
with 30,000 men, xxii. 382, 456— m-
consistencies in Mr. Mitford's narrative
of Alexander's warfare with the barba-
rous nations, 1 61 — and of the conspiracy
against his authority, 164-166, 283,
527 — hieroglyphic of the name of,
xxviii. 191 — ^rabbinical tale concerning,
xxxv. 111,112.
xxi. 195; xxiii. 138, 141,253;
XXV. 69; xxvi. 375, 454; xxvii. 38;
xxxii. 386; xxxv. 387.
. I. (of Scotland), xxx. 342— IT.,
345^111., ordinance of, xxxvii. 356.
II. (Pope), xxii. 81— IV., 87—
VI., xxxii. 368 ; xxxiii. 2 — VII., xxviii.
Alfonso the Wise, xxix. 453.
VI. of Portugal, xxix. 195.
329.
the Coppersmith, xxvi. 375.
Mr., xxvii. 7.
Alexias, xxvi. 258.
Alexicles, xxxiii. 353.
Alexidemus, xxiv. 423.
Alexis, xxii. 200 — amusing fragment of,
xxiii. 257 — account of Athenian fish-
mongers, 261.
xxiv. 454, note, 525-527.
Alexius Comnenus, xxiii. 145.
■ Emperor, xxxiv. 293.
Alfaqui, xxvi 181.
Alfieri's tragedies, character of, xxiv. 82,
83 — ^remarks on his tragedy of Don
Carlos, xxix. 373, 37^, 426.
xxvi. 140 ; xxvii. 479 ; xxix. 337 ;
xxxii. 60, 65; xxxv. 192.
Alfonso, xxv. 19.
Alfred, King, character o^ xxv. 564 —
question of his having taken a general
survey of England, xxxix. 54.
xxv. 67, 145 note, 146 ; xxxii. 11 ;
xxxiv. 273.
Algarotti, xxiii. 417.
Al&;emon, xxxvi. 516.
Ah, xxiu. 243 ; xxviii. 87 ; xxx. 207.
AliBey, xxxi.381.
Ali Pasha, xxii. 152; xxiii. 113-119—
character o^ 335-337.
All Shah, xxvi. 446.
Alia Bhye, interesting anecdotes of, xxix.
390,391.
Alimentus, L. Cincius, xxxii. 69, note.
Allan, Mr., xxxv. 372.
Alle^i's Miserere, xxxi. 184.
AUem, R., xxiv. 473.
Allen, Cardinal, notice of his True and
Modest Reply to Lord Burleigh's ' Li-
bel of English Justice,' xxxiii. 29, 30—
and of a tract by him, in which he dis-
putes the title of Queen Elizabeth, 30
— character of, xxxviii. 409.
Col. E., xxvi. 370.
Dr., youthfiil anecdote by, of Dr. J.
Parr, xxxix. 259.
— — Mr., xxxvii. 557.
AUende, xxx. 173.
Alley, Bishop, Pentateuch translated by,
xxiii. 298.
Allison, xxv. 210, note.
AUix, notice of, xxxiv. 338 ; xxxv. 99.
Almaimon, xxvi. 181.
Almamon, Almansor, Al Raschid, cultiva^
tors and patrons of astronomy, xxxviii. 5.
Almanzor, xxv. 24.
Almeida, xxvii. 25.
Almon, xxvi. 12, note; xxviii. 318.
Alnus, xxix. 535.
Alo-eddin, the old man of the mountain,
account of, xxiv. 325-327.
Alonzo XI., xxi. 194.
the Wise, obligations of Europe
to, xxvi. 181 — notice of his astronomi-
cal tables, ibid. 182 — account of his
alchemical studies and writings, 192-
194.
Alperius, xxvii. 540.
Alphege, St., xxxiv. 280.
Alphila, xxix. 453.
Alphonso, xxii. 363, note.
X., of Spain, his astronomical
tables, xxxviii. 5.
Alquibicio, xxvi. 181.
Alric, Mr., notice of, xxxv. 180.
Althaus, Colonel, xxxviii. 484.
Althorpe, Lord, xxiv. 218.
Altieri, xxxvii. 73.
Alva, Duke of, xxviii. 3 ; xxxiii. 27, 28 ;
xxxiv. 60 ; xxxvii. 80, 229.
Digitized by
Googk
Revibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
Alvarado, General, xxxviii. 474.
Alvida, xxiv. 17,
Alyattes, king of Lydia, xxxiv. 72.
Amadis, xxv. 4.
Amadoo-Fatima, xxxix. 160.
Amariah, xxiii. 211.
Ambrose, xxv. 361 ; xxxiii. 82.
Captain, xxix. 397.
— — — de Lamela, xxxvii. 20.
St., xxii. ^^ J hjTnns composed
by, xxxviii. 37, 38.
Ambrosius, xxvi. 138.
Ame, Duke, virtues of, xxxii. 359.
Ameer Khan, xxix. 385.
Ameipsias, xxi. 303.
Ameha, Princess, xxii. 197, 213.
Ames, the antiquary, burial of, xxi. 381.
Amescua, xxix. 425.
Amherst, Lady, xxxvii. 108.
Lord, xxi. 67 — abuses in the
army, when he was commander in chie^
xxv. 79, 374— his probable estimate of
Burmese power and resources, xxxiii.
61 — durbar, or native levee held by him
at Calcutta, xxxvii. 107, 108, 133—
mispvings from the ' yellow screen/
xxxix. ]5].
Amici, Professor, geological discoveries
by, xxxvi. 451, note.
Amida, a deity invoked by a pagan wo-
man, xxxii. i.
Amidea, xxii. 410.
Amir Valliami, xxiv. 335.
Amiro, Prince, xxvii. 224.
Amman, xxvi. 392.
Ammianus, xxix. 117 ; xxvi. 384.
Ammonius, xxii. 307; xxiii. 150, 151.
Amoretti, xxi. 181 ; xxvi. 517.
Amos, xxiv. 506.
Ampere, M., Recueil d'Observations Elec-
tro-Dynamiques, reviewed, xxxv. 237 —
abstracts of his theory of electro-dyna-
mics, with remarks, 251-264— its ad-
vantages, 268 — efifect on the needle, by
the passing of electric currents, xxv.
204.
Amphis, xxiii. 259— insolence of the Athe-
man fishmongers, 261.
Amphitheus, xxiii. 477.
Amphyction, altar erected by, at Athens,
xxih. 266, 267.
Amurath I., victory obtained by, at Kos-
sova, xxxv. 67— his death, 68.
Amy, xxiii. 167.
Amynias, xxiv. 425, note,
Amyot, Pere, xxx. 352.
Amythaon, xxviii. 428.
Anacharsis, xxiv. 422, 512 ; xxviii. 365.
Anacreon, crypt of, in the catacombs of
Paris, xxi. 3»8 — alterations made in the
dialects used by him, xxiii. 144.
xxiv.552; xxv. 511, 515; xxvii.
398 J xxxii 159.
Anagnosta, Theodorus, xxxiii. 88.
Anan, Butler, Earl of, xxvi. 435.
Ananias, xxii. 72.
Anastasius, or the Memoirs of a Greek,
reviewed, xxiv. 511 — analysis of the
fable, with extracts and remarks, 513-
526 — comparison of the Memoirs, with
the Adventures of Hajji Baba, xxx. 200.
xxvi. 271; xxvii. 224.
Anaxagoras, xxi. 225, 279, no/r, 280;
xxii. 193, note-, xxxiii. 362 — anecdote
of, 587.
Anaxarchus, xxv. 166.
Anaximander, xxi. 279, note.
Anaximenes, xxi. 279, no/e, 280 ; xxxiii.
361.
Anaya, Diego de, xxxiv. 337.
Anchises, xxii. 362.
Ancus, xxi. 459.
Andate, a British goddess, xxxii. 445.
Anderson, ^^neas, xxi. 67, 72.
Alexander, xxxii. 418.
Captain, xxvi. 52.
Dr., xxxv. 192.
Grisel, xxix. 445.
John, mission to the East Coast
of Sumatra, xxxiv. 99— object of his
mission, 100. See Sumaira, Part II.
Mrs. xxvi. 366.
Aiidilly, A. d*. Essay on Fruit-trees, notice
of, xxiv. 406.
Andocides, xxvi. 261 ; xxvii. 384, 395,
note — character and misfortunes o^
xxix. 323 — notice of Lysias's speech
against him, 324 — and of his defence,
326.
Andoin, M., notes by, of the revelations of
Sister Nativity, xxxiii. 378-381.
Andrada, A., notice of the journey o^ over
the Himalaya mountains, xxiv. 337,
338.
Andr6, Major, xxxi. 285.
Andrew, son of Carobert of Hungary, be-
trothed to Joanna, afterwards queen of
Naples, xxxi. 67 — aspires to the crown
of Naples in his own right, 68 — ^is mur-
dered, ibid. 69.
xxv. 99, 101.
Andrewes, G. P., Abridgment of two Na-
vigation and Commercial Acts of Par-
liament, reviewed, xxviii. 430.
Andi'ews, xxvi. 146.
Bishop, notice of, xxiii. 301 ;
xxix. 211; xxxvi. 47 ; xxxvii. 240.
' Dean, xxi. 1 74.
W. E., Review of Fox's Book
of Martyrs, character of, xxxiii 7, 8.
Andiieux, xxix. 27.
Androcles, xxiv. 426.
Andromache, xxii. 171 ; xxiii. 440; xxv.
525 ; xxxvi. 48.
Andromeda, xxv. 533 ; xxx. 43.
Aneurin, xxi. 502*
Digitized by
Googk
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUA&TB&LY
Angel, Miss Harriet, xxi. 138.
Angelica, xxx. 43, 51.
Angelique, xxix. 431.
Angell, Mr., xxx. 397, note.
Angelo da Cremona, the inquisitor, xxxvii.
Angelo, Michael, remarks on the edifices
erected by, xxxii. 52-55.
xxi. 488, note; xxx. 48;
xxxvi. 51.
Anfi;erstein*8 collection of pictures pur-
chased for the public, xxxi. 210 — ad-
vantages resulting from this measure,
ibid. 211; xxxiv. 188 — its removal to
the British Museum deprecated, xxxi.
214, 215.
Anglade, Dr., xxxvii. 469.
Angl6, Mr., xxxiii. 234.
Anglesey, Earl of, said that Dr. Gauden
was the author of Icon Basilike, xxxii.
468, 469.
Anglois, Abb6 T, xxviii. 524.
Angoul^me, Due d', xxxiv. 494, 505.
— — — — Duchess of. Narrative of the
Journey to Varennes, and Private Me-
moirs, reviewed, xxviii. 464 — account of
the day on wluch her father was exe-
cuted, 472— and of the treatment of the
Dauphin, her brother, 473.
xxviii. 303; xxxiv. 453.
Anino, Count, calumnies against, xxix.
97.
Anion, Louis of, appointed by Joanna of
Naples to be her successor, xxxi. 73.
Anla^ xxxiv, 273.
Anna Comnena, xxiii. 145.
Annabergius, a Spirit of the Mine, accoimt
o^ xxu. 366.
Annseus Comutus, xxvii. 49.
Anne of Cleves, wife to Henry VIII.,
xxxvi. 17,21.
Anne, Queen, of Austria, xxxvi. 326.
wife of James I., xxxii. 1 64.
■ abstract of the Copyright
Act passed in the eighth year of, xxi.
197, 198, 205, 413; character of her
coimsellors and captains, xxii. 435, 548
— state of affairs at her accession, xxiii.
9, 10 — composition and character of her
ministers, 10, 11 — her letter to the
Duke of Marlborough, against his re-
signing the command-in-chief, 20 —her
reflection on the battle of Blenheim, 30
— her duplicity to the Duke, 43 — her
death, 69. See Marlborough.
' want of church accommo-
dation in the reign of, xxiii. 553 — Act
of, for building a£litional churches only
partially carried into efiect, 563 — design
of the act, 566, 567 — number of exotics
introduced into England in the reign
of, xxiv. 415 ; inclosiure acts, and land
inclosed in her reign, xxxyi. 401.
Anne, Queen, xxv. 469; xxvL427; xxix.
541 ; xxx. 542; xxxvii. 485.
Annibal, xxviiL423.
Annie Winnie, xxvi. 122.
Anselm, Archbishop, remonstrance o^
against severe discipline in schools,
xxxix. 101.
Anson, Lady, xxii. 96.
— — Lord, vindication o^ from Wal-
pole's slander, xxvii. 201.
xxi. 77 ; xxv. 410 ; xxviii. 246 ;
XXXV. 322.
Anspach, Margravine of, xxxiL 62.
Anster, xxxiv. 136.
Anstruther, General, xxix. 81.
Ansty, Mr. E., anecdote o^ xxix. 459.
AntsBus, xxvii. 302 ; xxxvi. 305.
Antar, xxi. 225 ; xxv. 4.
Anteia, xxii. 199.
Anthony, Mark, xxxv. 177.
Antigone, xxii. 181.
Antipater, xxv. 164.
. L. Coelius, xxxii. 69, note,
Antiphanes, xxiii. 249 — ^ludicrous accoimt
of fishmongers in his days, 263.
Antiphon, xxvi. 260, note — ^remarks on the
orations of, xxvii. 388-390— observation
of; xxxiii. 337, note.
Antisthenes, xxiv. 444, 447.
Antius Restio, xxiv. 350.
Antommarchi, Dr., Derniers Momens de
Napoleon, xxxiii. 176 — appointment of
the Doctor to be physician to Buona-
parte, 179 — ^his account of Napoleon's
disease, with remarks, 181, 182 — and of
the appearances on dissection, 183-185
— ^the disease a cancerous ulcer of the
stomach, 185 — ^the case of Buonaparte
latterly mistaken by Antommarchi, 186.
Antonine, xxii. 456.
Antoninus Pius, xxviii. 70, 188; xxxv. 88.
St., xxviii. 2, note.
Antonio, xxvi. 125 ; xxvii. 12.
M. and P., xxvi. 47.
St., pretended miracles of, xxviii.
22-24.
Antony, xxii. 60; xxv. 566; xxvii. 45,
289 ; xxviii. 343 ; xxix. 284.
the Great, St., xxii. 61, 355 ; xxiv.
351.
Aonioo Palearia, account of, xxxvii. 76.
Apartado, Marquis, notice of the gains of,
by mining, xxx. 168; xxxvi. 99.
Apelles, xxu. 195 ; xxiii. 511 ; xxv. 156.
Aphrodite, xxii. 363.
Apis, xxiv. 159.
Apodaca, Admiral, xxx. 178.
Apollo, xxii. 67; xxiii. 325; xxiv. 446;
xxvi. 103, 175, 222, 386; xxvii. 23;
xxviii. 420.
Belvidere, xxiii. 225.
Apollodorus, xxiii. 138; xxiv. 429, 430;
xxxiii. 352.
Digitized by
Googk
Bimw*
INDEX OF NAMES.
ApoUonius, Homerie LexLcon o^ not the
first, mi. 305, 307 ; xxvii. 43, note.
Discolus, xxii. 320; xxiii. 138.
, .^— Herophilius, account of peiv
fumes used by the ancients, xxiii. 263.
- Rhomus, xxii. 365, note; xxiii.
141, 150 — examination of an argument
• drawn from his Argonautics, as to the
identity of the Niger and the Nile of
Egypt, XXV. 46, 47, 513, 519, 522 —
borrowed from, by Virgil, xxxii. 159.
Appius Claudius, xxvii. 305 ; xxviii. 323.
Apsley, Lord, comparison of the number
of controverted appeals determined in
the House of Lords by him, with those
ABtermined by Lord Eldon, xxx. 286.
Apthonetus, a famous cook, xxiii 270,
note.
Apuleius, xxiii. 245, note ; xxix. 456 ;
xxxiv. 16.
Aqui, Fril Jacopo de, zxi. 181, 187, 190.
Aquila, xxiii. 323.
Aquinas, St. Thomas, opinion o^ with re-
gard to the dead, xxi, 365.
XXV. 21 J xxvi 91,
note ; xxxiii. ; xxxvi. 320 ; xxxvii. 60.
Axago, J., Narrative of a Voyage round
the World, reviewed, xxviii. 332 — sd-
ventures at Teneriflfe, 333, 334— -visit to
the slave-market at Rio Janeiro, 336^
anecdotes of the late King of the Bra-
sils, 337— character of the mulattoes in
• the isle of France, 340 — of the inha-
bitants of the island of Ombay, 342 —
and of those of New Guinea and the
neighbouring islands, 343, 344 — descrip-
tion of the natives of New Holland, 34S.
■■■'■ construction of a magnetic cylinder
suggested by, xxxv. 259, 269 — extent
of his meridional observations, xxxvi.
152.
Araktcheef, General, account of his visit
to the Emperor of Russia, xxxi. 1 54.
Arominte, xxix. 433.
Aranda, Count of, xxix. 265.
Aratus, xxii. 305.
Arbaces, xxvii. 497— -character o^ 499.
Arbatel, xxix. 453.
A^blay, Madame d', xxxiii. 487.
ArbutKnot, notice of the attacks o^ on
Burnet^ xxix. 170— why attached to the
Prince of Wales's court^ xxx. 546.
""" xxxii. 277.
Arc, Joan of, xxii. 545.
Arcadius, xxvi. 49.
Areas, xxx. 464.
Areesilas, xxxiii. 362.
ArcesUaus, xxviii. 426.
Archambaud, xxviii. 259.
Archdall, xxiii. 364.
Archelaus, xxi. 279, no/e— description of
the Deity, 280,
%xm, 103 1 m. 338.
Archestratus, xxiii. 246, 248, 253, 258,
259.
Archias, XXX. 383.
Archilochus, xxi. 501,* xxii. 338: xxt.
512.
Archimago, xxi. 467.
Archimedes, alterations made in the dia-
lects used by, xxiii. 144 — ^his discoveries
in mechanical philosophy, xxxix. 432.
Archippus, xxiii. 259.
Archytas, xxx. 383.
Arculfus, xxiv. 312.
Arden, xxxix. 396.
Ardour, xxvi. 130.
Arenales, General, xxxviii. 475.
Aretaeus, xxvii. 532.
Aretino, xxxii. 65.
Arezao, G. d', xxiv. 548, 562.
Argan, xxix. 430.
Argante, xxx. 50.
' — Madame, xxix. 431.
Argelejos, Count of, xxxiv. 606.
Argensola, xxix. 425,
Arghun, xxi. 184.
Arguelles, character o( xxviii. 548, 549.
xxxv. 156.
Argyle, Duke o^ xxv. 328; xxvi 117;
xxxiii 588; xxxvi 179.
•' Earl of, xxix. 167 j xxxvii 257.
Ai|^ll, M., xxv. 153.
Anadne, xxiii. 350 ; xxiv. 450.
Arias, xxv. 16, 17.
Dr;, xxix. 248.
— Gomez, xxv. 23.
Ariobarzanes, xxviii.' 103.
Ariodante, xxx. 50.
Arion, xxii. 315 ; xxiv. 422.
Ariosto's Orlando Furioso, anal3r8i8 o^
xxi. 529-541 — comparison between him
and Bojardo, 527, 528, 489, 498— con-
tests between his admirers and those of
Tasso, xxiii. 408, note — anecdotes oi^
xxviii. 370-372.
, translated by
Mr. Rose, xxx. 40 — origin of romantic
poetry, 41, 46 — general remarks on the
Orlando, 47-5()u-critical parallel be-
tween it and the Grerusalemme Liberate
of Tasso, 50, 51 — notices of former
translations, 52, 53 — specimens of Mr.
Rose's translation, with remarks, 53, 61.
' notice of Harring-
ton's translation, xxxiv. 5, 6 — criticisms
on the original, 16, 17, 115 — ^remarks
on, as to religion, xxxvii. .62.
xxiv. 453 ; xxv. 98, 427, 436 ;
xxvii. 316; xxxii. 198; xxxiii 62;
xxxvi. 49.
— — Galeasso, xxx. 61,
Aristsenetus, xxxiii. 564.
Aristander, xxiii. 153.
Aristarchus, xxiii. 170; xxiv. 378; xxv.
529 3 xxvii. 43 i xsdii 353.
Digitized by
Googk
8
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QVAUTESOsY
Arisiaichus, astronomical opinions of,
xxxviii. 4.
Aristeas, xxiii. 319.
Aristides, xxvi. 262 ; xxxvii. 454.
Aristion, a noted cook, xxiii. 270, note,
Aristobulus, xxiii. 319.
Aristocles, xxi. 301.
Aristodemo, notice of the tragedy o^ xxiv.
83-86.
Aristodemus, xxiv. 429, 430, 442.
Aristogeiton, xxvi. 255, note — oration of
Hyperides against, analysed, with re-
marks, xxix. 334-337.
Aristophanes, character o^ by M. Schle-
gel, xxi. 271-273 — causes of the success
of his earlier pieces, 276 — exposition of
the manners and doctrines of the so-
phists, 289-294 — observations on the
Clouds, 300-305— proofs that Aristo-
phanes did not write the Clouds to ex-
pose Socrates, but the sophiste of the
day, 311-316.
analysis, with specimens,
of his Lysistrata, xxii 182-188, 310,
333, 345— extracts from the comedies of,
xxiii. 254-278.
' Comedies of, translated by
Mr. Mitehell, reviewed, xxiii. 474 — ^inci-
dents of the ThesmophoriazousaB, 476,
477 — origin of the Achamians, 477 —
and of the Knights, ibid. 478 — ^plot of
the Achamians, 485 — ^translation of a
scene omitted by Mr. Mitehell, 486-489
— examination of the execution of par-
ticular parts of Mr. Mitehell's transla-
tion, with specimens, 491-504.
remarks on the Banquet of,
with extracts, xxiv. 424-428 — ^insinua-
tion of the corruptibility of the theatri-
cal judges, 449, note — scenes from his
comedy of Nephelococcygia, 455-461 ;
character of the Athenian ^cast, xxix.
314, 315 — his character of a judge,
xxxiii. 335, 336.
xxiii. 146, 150, 151,153,248;
XXV. 506, no/e, 529; xxvi. 247,271;
xxxii. 159 ; xxxiv. 19 ; xxxvi. 59.
Anstoteli, A., cathedral at Moscow, built
by, xxvi. 46-49.
Aristotle, mention made of red snow by,
xxi. 232 — ^number of Athenian sauces
mentioned by him, 254, note.
— — - — term used by, to express a * gen-
tleman,' xxiv. 422, note — remarks on
the form of government recommended
by him, xxv. 159, 160, 168, 171— inten-
sity of sound of rushing water by night,
366 — does not mention the digamma,
xxvii. 42 — inquiry into his authority for
preserving the unities, 484 — ^importance
of his works, xxxii. 70.
• xxiii. 137, 143, 181, 200, 249,
251, 256,ifo/e, 257, 270, 278, 466; xxiv.
353, 357, 362, 390, 444, note ; xxv. 156 ;
xxvi. 118, 124, 245, 480; xxvU. 39;
xxix. 32, 45, 301 ; xxx. 388 ; xxxii. 69^
70, 79; xxxiii. 36b, note; xxxiv. 171,
294 ; XXXV. 565 ; xxxvi. 221 , 298 ; xxxvii.
418,463; xxxix. 64, 137.
Aristoxenus, xxi. 30, 38.
Arius, xxxiii. 100 — arianism of the WaU
denses and Spaniards, 143— -arian prin-
ciples of Milton, xxxiL 452.
Arkwright, xxx. 303 — Sir Richard, xxxiL
172.
Arlotto, xxi. 99, and note,
Armado, Don, xxiL 207.
Armagnac, Count d*, xxv. 555, 557, 567.
General d*, obtains possession
of Pamplona by treachery, xxix. 60, 61.
Armand, Capt., xxxiv. 591.
Armida, xxv. 432, 435 ; xxix. 451 ; xxx. 50.
Armide, xxx. 379.
Arminio, notice of the tragedy o^xxiv. 87.
Arminius, difficulties in the scheme o^
xxvL90,91.
Armstrong, xxxvi. 542.
■' ■ John, xxxvi. 3.
_..- Sir Thomas, xxxvi. 523.
Amaud, Henri, the Vaudois pastor, xxxiii.
174 — ^kept a journal of thePiedmontese
war, ibid, note.
Amauld, xxvi. 494.
Arnault, M., Regulus, trag^die, reviewed,
xxix. 25 — remark on it, o2 — and on the
author's preceding tragedies, 49 — par-
ticularly lus Marius and Lucrece, 49, 50.
Ame, xxxii. 346 ; xxxvi. 519, note,
Amobius, xxvi. 89 ; xxxiii. 82 ; xxxvii. 50.
Arnold's Chronicles, notice o^ xxiv. 404.
Arnold, excellence of two pocket chrono-
meters by, xxv. 205.
General, xxiii. 382.
Amott, Dr., account given by, of the cause
of Buonaparte's death, xxviii. 262, 263
— consulted on the disease with which
Buonaparte was affected, xxxiii. 182,
185.
Amould, M., xxvi. 531.
Arrian, xxv. 160, 162, 167 ; xxxviii. 372.
Arrowsmith, xxiii. 235 ; xxvi. 404.
J. P., the Art of Instructing the
Infant Deaf and Dumb, reviewed, xxvi.
391 — ^interesting account of the manner
in which a deaf and dumb brother of
the author learned to read, 392, 393;
See Deaf and Dumb, Part II.
Stephen, trial of, xxxvi. 517,
518.
Arsenius, Scholia on Euripides collected
by, in the fifteenth century, xxiii. 140.
Arsinoe, xxii. 455.
Artaserse, xxvi. 146.
Artemis, xxix. 456.
Arthur, cause of the failure of the dif-
ferent poems on, aadii* 201
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtisw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
9
Arthur, xxi. 93,498, 505 ; xxii.371 ; xxiii.
153, nof<^— xxxii. 360 ; xxxiv. 286.
Article, M. L', xxxiii. 378.
Arti^as, xxxii. 138.
Artois, Count cV, xxvii. 174; xxix. 669,
570.
Asa, king, xxxiii. 30.
Ascelin, travels of, iu Tartary, xxiv. 317-
321 — his narrow escape with his life
from the hands of a Tartar chief, 318,
319.
Asche, Rabbi, collected the Babylonish
Talmud, xxxv. 89.
Ascondas, xxiv. 426.
Asdrubal, xxix. 38.
Asfeld, M. d', xxxiv. 24, 25.
Asgill, Dr., xxxiii. 480.
Ashbumham, xxv. 326, note.
Mr., xxxiii. 305.
Sir William, Bishop of Chi-
chester, performed the service at Hayley
the poet's marriage, xxxi. 276.
Ashforth, WilUam, xxxv. 159.
Ashhurs^ Judge, xxxix. 191.
Ashmole, xxvi. 184, 196 — ^Elias, xxxv. 550.
Ashton, xxv. 331.
. Lady, xxvi. 121.
Lucy, xxvi. 120, 141.
— Mr, xxxvi. 513, 514.
Sir W., xxvi. 121.
Ashtown, Lord, bog reclaimed by, xxxviii
422.
Askew, Anne, xxxiii. 17, 20.
Asmodeus, xxiv. 497.
Aspasia, xxii. 190 — funeral speech in Thu-
cydides, said by Plato to have been
written by her, 193, 198.
— — xxiv. 437.
Assad, xxiv. 519.
Assadroo-deen, xxxvi. 385.
Asser's Life of King Alfred, account of,
xxxiv. 279.
Astbury, Mr., xxiv. 2.
Astell, Mary, notice of a plan for a female
college, xxii. 95.
Mr., xxxv. 160.
Astle, Mr., curious receipt preserved by,
xxxii. 246.
Astley, xxv. 315, 316.
Astley's Voyages, xxiv. 339.
Astolpho, xxi. 503, 504.
Astrsa, xxvL 253.
Astyages, xxvii. 59.
Astyanax, xxiL 171.
Atay, Murza, xxix. 133.
Atayde, D. Catharina de, xxvii. 2, 7 —
death o^ 9.
Athanasius, xxii. 61; xxvi. 328; xxxiii
82 ; xxxviii. 22.
Athelstan, xxvi. 129.
Athelstane, origin of his Saxon title, the
* giver of bracelets,' xxxvii. 487.
AthenseuS; does not mention the digamma
in his references to the ^olian lyrics,
xxvii. 50.
Atheneeus, xxi. 28, 293, 301 ; xxii. 169,
note, 305, notCy 327, 336 ; xxiii. 148, 150,
258, noie, 476; xxiv. 442, note; xxv.
505, 517 ; xxvi. 109 ; xxxii. 203, 238.
Athenodorus, xxiii. 138.
Athlone, Earl of, xxiii. 12.
Athol, Duke of, xxxvi. 585.
Atkins, xxii. 295 ; xxxvi. 533.
Atkinson, Mr., extract from his work on
New South Wales, xxxvii. 21.
Atkyns, Sir Robert, xxxvi. 520.
Atlante, xxx. 43.
Atlee, xxvi. 372.
Atossa, xxiii. 422 ; xxxii. 279.
Atreus, xxi. 34 ; xxiii. 250.
Atropos, xxviii. 421.
Atterbury, xxiv. 9^-character of his ser-
mons, xxix. 287.
Atticus, xxvii. 44 ; xxxvii. 239.
Attila, xxi. 94 ; xxvii. 54.
Atwood, Mr., xxvii. 260.
Aubermenil, M. d', form of worship recom-
mended by, xxviii. 497.
Aubert, xxx. 232.
Aubrey, xxii. 369, note.
Aubuisson, M. d', xxxvi. 439, 460, 466.
Auchinleck, Lord, anecdote o^ xxxvi. 225,
note,
Auckland, Lord, notice of a bill of, con-
cerning cases of adultery, xxviii. 183.
Aud, xxi. 96, note.
Audley, Elizabeth, xxxii. 1 19, 120.
— ^ James, Lord, xxxii. ibid,
Nicholas, xxxii. ibid.
Aufidius, xxviii. 106.
Auger, Abb6, (Euvres completes de D6-
mosthene et d'Eschine, reviewed, xxvii.
382; xxix. 313.
xmx. 267.
Augerius, xxix. 441.
Augui^, Mademoiselle, xxviii. 453.
Augustin, xxiii. 293 — Septuagint version
of the Bible used bv him, 322.
Aug^stina, a Spanish heroine, notice of,
xxix. 76.
Augustine, St., legendary tale of, xxi. 367 ,
370 — opinion of, on the subject of ana-
tomy, 376 — founder of the order ui Re-
gular Canons, xxii. 66 — author of all
the disputes on predestination, xxvi. 89
— pretended miracles worked by, xxxii.
9, 10, 36 — on Psalmody, xxxviii. 22,no/e.
■ xxiiL 581 ; xxiv. 6, 25 ;
xxv. 360 ; xxviii. 35 ; xxxiii. 82.
Augustino, Messer, xxxii. 388, 389.
Augustus, xxi. 27, 29; xxiii. 138, 141, 149,
411 ; xxiv. 161, 532, 561 ; xxvii. 44,45,
278, 289, 382 ; xxix. 421 ; xxx. 47, 388 ;
xxxii. 70, 238, 273.
II. king of Poland, xxxvii. 476
— ^— - Stanislas, xxxvi. 68.
Digitized by
Googk
10
PART L— INDEX OF NAMES.
QOAMBRU
Auratut, xxv. 507.
Aurelian, xxv. 17 ; xxvi. 213; xxxiv. 64.
AuieliuSy Ambrosius, xxxiy. 276.
Marcus, xxxiii. 365 j xxxv. 88 ;
xxxvii. 35, 454.
Auiengiebe, xxxvii. 127, note,
Aurinia, xxvi. 457.
Aurora, xxv. 16, 17, 506.
Aurungzebe, bigoted conduct o^ xxix.
387.
Ausonius, xxiii. 152.
Austin, gospel of the birth of Mary, quoted
by,xxv. 356, 357,359.
— — Miss, excellent moral lessons to
be derived from the novels o^ xxiv. 359,
360-363~chaTacter of her < Mansfield
Park,' 363^67— and of her 'North-
anger Abbey,' and * Persuasion,* with
extracts, 363^72.
Austria, Archduke Charles of, on Strate-
gics, 38Q — observations on the old and
present art of war, 381-383 — analysis
of the theoretical part of his work, 386
—and of th« campaign of 1796 in Qw-
many, 387-392^-and of the campaign
of 1799 in Italy, 393-401.
Austria, John, Archduke o£, -r y^^, 390.
Autolycus, xxi. 298 ; xxiv. 444— -effect joo-
duced by his beauty on the guests in the
Xenophontic banquet, 446.
Avaray, Count d', escape of, with Louis
XVIII., to Bruxelks and Coblent«,
xxviii. 467469.
Avedik, xxxiv. 26, note.
Avenel, Julian, xxvi. 129.
Averardo, xxiv. 91-96.
Avicenna, xxvi. 181.
Avril, P., xxxvi. 399, no/e,
Ayles, Mr., tutor to Hayley the poe^ xjoi,
269.
Aylmer, Bishop, xxxvii. 323.
Mrs., XXXV. 162.
Ayhrin, Alderman, xxxix. 44.
Aymer, xxvi. 129.
Ayrault, xxxvii 491.
Azaria, the piophot, sqtiU. 30.
B.
BaATU, xxiv. 322.
Baba, xxii. 293.
-Babani, xxxviii. 105.
Babbage, Charles, Comparative View of the
various Institutions f(» the Assurance of
Lives, reviewed, xxxv. I — his motives
for publication, 2 — execution of his
work, 3. See Assurances, Part II.
xxxv. 269.
Babelin, Gabel, executed for witchcraft,
xxix. 447.
Baber, Mr., xxi. 209.
Bacchis, xxii. 197, 198.
Bacchius, xxii. 305, note, 307.
Bacchus, altar erected to him, xxiii. 267.
-~— xxi 309; xxii. 182; xxiii. 247,
note, 248, 253, 261, 265, 332, 482 ; xxiv.
449, 450; xxv. 505; xxvi. 257, 386;
xxvii. 21, 232, 234 ; xxx. 43, 384 ; xxxiii.
495.
Bacci, Pietro, xxi. 488, note,
Bache, xxx. 14.
Back, Lieut., xxxviii. 343.
Mr., xxviii. 372.
Bacon's sculpture, character oi^ xxxiv.
125, 126.
Bacon, Lord, adipocire known by, xxi. 384
— observations on revising and altering
the laws of England, 264, 265 — opinion
on the transmutation of the baser metals
into gold and silver, xxvi. 200 — not
as great a philosopher as Shakspeare,
xxix. 45 — existence of animal mag-
netism admitted by him, 469-— com*
plaints of delay in the buaiuMft of Chan-
cery made against him, xxx. 275-<-i^ho-
risms of, on making statutes, xxxiv. 559—
mushroom growth of poetry, xxxv. 184,
405 — on learning, extract from, xxxvi.
242 — ^proposal for amending the criminal
law, xxxvii. 150, I51«*aph(msm o^ 495
—quotation from, 500 — his opinion on
the subject of emigration, 575-^his ver-
sification of Psalms, xxxviii. 23 — caution
.against change, 285— -on the law of
uses, 294 — on deferring remedies, 549.
Bacon, xxi. 8, 211, 428; xxiii. 181, 455,
541; xxiv. 229; xxv. 329, 498, mIc;
xxvi. 114; xxvii. 117, 120, 187, 199
xxviii. 37, 431, 494; xxix. 141, 301
xxxiv. 513 ; xxxv. 405 ; xxxvi 267, 499
xxxix. 184.
Roger, was acquainted with tha
composition of gunpowder, xxi. 194;
credulity of, xxii. 378— account of the
philosophy of, xxix. 465-468.
Badcock, Miss, xxxix. 272.
Mr., writer of the Bampton Lec-
tures, xxxix. 271.
Baddeley's, Rev. T., misrepresantatioiui
exposed, xxxvi 313, 314,
— ; Rev. T., notice of his tract, en^
titled, ' A sure way to find out the tru«
religion,' xxxiii. 7— extract from, xxxvi.
313, 314, no/e.
Baden, Grand Duke of, xxxix. 8.
Margrave of, xxiii. 22.
Badenach, Capt,, statement o^ relative to
the mprtalify of the British offioers in
th« fieogftl MiQyi sorit 136.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbvibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
11-
Badia, xxvi. 204.
Badman, Mr., xxviii. 22.
Bafiin, proof of the authenticity of his
third voyage to the polar seas, xxv. 175,
176, note,
xxi. 232, 236, 237 ; xxxiv. 386.
Bage's novels, strictures on, xxxiv. 367,
370.
Baghos, Mr., xxiv. 141.
Bagot, P., a Jesuit, notice o^ xxxvi. 330.
Sir C, XXX. 263, note.
Baian, xxix. 118.
Baif, xxix. 33.
Bailey, Dr., xxxviii. 404.
Bailey's sculpture, character o^ xxxiv. 133.
Bailey, Sir Daniel, British consul-general
at Petersburg, xxxi. 218.
BaiUie, Dr., extract from his work on Mor-
bid Anatomy, xxxiii. 183, 220.
■ XXXV. 181.
■ charctcter of, by Burnet, xxix. 1 67.
Miss, respect for her tragedies,
xxiv. 130 — causes of their limited suc-
cess, xxix. 418.
. xxxvii. 420.
■ Mrs., account of Lisbon in 1821,
1822, and 1823, xxxi. 378— her obser-
vations on the filthiness of that city, 380,
381, 382 — ^visits the Inquisition at Lis-
J^on, 387 — her description of the super-
stitious adoration paid to Nossa Senhora
da Baracca, or our Lady of the Cave,
388, 389 — ^remarks on her account of
Cintra, 384-386.
Bailly, M., president of the National As-
sembly, xxviii. 278; xxvi. 230; death
of, 239.
Baily, J., Translation of Juarros's History
ox Guatimala, xxx. 151.
■ Mr., XXXV. 2.
Bain, Dr., xxxiii. 587, 589.
Baiothnoy, a Tartar chief, account of his
reception of an ambassador ftom Pope
Innocent IV., xxiv. 318, 319.
Baird, Dr., xxxviii. 17, note.
Baiazet, xxiv. 332 ; xxxv. 67, 68.
Baker, Benjamin, xxxvi. 3.
Mr., evidence of^ before the select
committee of the House of Commons,
concerning the criminal laws, xxiv. 227.
Mr. and Mrs.j friendship of, for
Huntington, xxiv. 502, 509, 510.
Bakewell, notices the geology of Auvergne,
xxxvii 297.
BakewelVs, Mr., improvements in the rais-
ing and feeding of live stock, xxxvi. 402,
403.
Bakin, method of trading among the Arabs,
xxv. 44.
Balaam, xxiv. 506 ; xxvii. 523 ; xxxv. 87,
88.
Balbi, Gasparo, notice of the travels of, in
P»gu, udY. 337.
Balboa, Vasco NuSez da, the first Spa-
niard who set eyes on the South Sea,
xxxviii. 209.
Balbus, xxviii. 109.
Balcombe, xxviii. 224.
Baldelli, xxi 178.
Baldus, xxi. 36 ; xxvi. 203.
Baldwin, Archbishop of Canterbury, bigo-
try of, xxi. 367.
Balguy, xxxix. 278.
Bale, xxii. 310.
Bishop of Ossory, xxiii. 296.
Ball, Captain, letter firom Captain Colling-
wood to, xxxvii. 372.
D/., Dean of Chichester, xxxi 271.
and Beatty, xxi. 403, note,
Ballantine, Major, xxxvii 141.
Ballantyne, xxvii. 329.
Balthazar, xxix. 455.
Balwhidder, Gilbert, xxv. 150.
Rev. Mr., xxv. 147-153; xxvi
368.
-Mrs. xxv. 150.
Balzac, xxxii. 304.
Bamba, King, xxi. 95.
Bamberham, xxi. 503.
Bambridge, xxxvi. 523.
Bampfylde, a poet of Warton'i school,
xxxi. 289.
193, 194.
Bampton, Rev. J., xxviii. 144.
Bancroft, Archbishop, xxv. 234.
Dr., opinion o^ that the plague
is contagious, xxxiii. 234.
Bankes's sculpture, character o^ xxxiv.
126.
Bankes, Henry, Civil and Constitutional
History of Rome, reviewed, xxvii. 273
— ^remarks on the three principal histo-
rians of Roman affairs, 274-277 — notice
of writers who have treated on the uncer-
tainty of Roman history, 280 — moral
improbability of the institutions and acts
ascribed to Romulus, 283-286, 289-292
— contradictions in the history of Dio-
nysius, 286, 287 — nature of the relation
between patron and client, 288, 289 —
Mr. Bankes's account of Numa's insti-
tutions considered, 295, 296, and also
those of Servius Tullius, 297, 298— in-
stitution of the office of tribunes of the
people, 300, 301, and of decemvirs, 303,
304 — defects of Mr. Bankes as an his-
torian, 306-308.
■ Mr. W., discoveries of, at Ebsam-
bul, xxii. 454 ; xxiv. 140, 153, 154— con-
duct of Mr. Buckingham towards him,
382, notey 387 — ^hieroglyphics on an obe-
lisk brought by Mr. Bankes from Philae,
xxviii. 189— post-tuberance of an Abyssi-
nian, princess, xxxi. 467. See Bucking-
ham.
XXV. 49, 125 ; xxvi. 379 ^ xxviii 76.
Digitized by
Googk
12
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
Banks, Mr., feat on a railway stated by
him, xxxi. 365.
— Sir J., the British Maecenas of the
Sciences, xxii. 40— sentiments of, on the
merits of Mr. Seppings's plans, 43 —
state of horticulture among the Ro-
mans, xxiv. 403.
xxii. 426, 438; xxiv. 414; xxv.
205; xxvi. 36, note, 235, 418; xxviii.
138, note; xxxii. 410 ; xxxiv. 157, 158 ;
XXXV. 134; xxxvi. Ill, 157, 161 ; xxxviii.
93; xxxix. 171.
Banuatyne, Mr., remarkable statement
by, xxxii. 417-419.
Bannister, Jack, xxxiv. 247 — anecdote of,
248.
Banza, Don F., xxvi. 518.
Barbadoes, Bishop of, xxxii.
Barbarigo, xxvii. 505.
Barbaro, xxiv. 333, 336.
Barbarossa, Frederick, traditions and pro-
phecies concerning, xxii. 371, 372 ; xxvi.
187.
Barbauld, Mrs., prophecy o^ xxx. 382, note
— (Laetitia Aikin), xxxv. 177, 178.
Barbe, a French priest, fanaticism of,
xxviii. 299.
Marbois, xxi. 22, note,
Barben, Hans, xxx. 125.
Barber, Alderman, anecdote o^ xxiii. 423.
Barboro, M., xxi. 187.
Barbot, xxii. 295.
Barca Gana, xxix. 515 ; xxxiii. 534.
Barchochoba, honours paid to, by the Jews,
xxxv. 87.
Barclay, work of, prevented by copyright
act ffom being printed, xxi. 202.
^—^— Alex., bom in England, xxxviii.
298, 299.
Captain, squadron of, defeated on
Lake Erie, xxvii. 429.
Consul, xxxviii. 91.
Mr., agricultural improvements.
account of, xxxvi. 398, 399.
Bardas, literature encouraged by, xxiii. 140.
Bardolph, xxv. 424; xxvii. 142.
Barentz, William, xxi. 259 ; xxv. lS7,note;
xxviii. 407, note ; xxx. 270.
Barham, J. F., Considerations on the
Abolition of Negro Slavery, &c., xxxii.
506 — his account of the encouragement
given by Great Britain to the colonists
to continue and extend the slave-trade,
521 — observations on it, 522.
-^— — — Lord, apathy of his conduct re-
specting the battle of Trafalgar, xxxvii.
380.
Baring, Mr., one cause by which money is
liable to be depreciated, mentioned by,
xxvii. 247 — evidence of, on cash pay-
ments, 256, 264 — observations on negro
slavery, xxix. 483.
-~— xxi 78.
Barkah, xxi. 181.
Barker, Mr. (Consul) xxii. 439; xxvi.
382, note,
Mr., xxii. 330, 332 — ^remarks on
his manner of conducting the new edi-
tion of Stephens's Thesaurus, 347.
Aristarchus Anti-Blomfieldianus,
reviewed, xxiv. 376 — remarks on his
title-page, 377, 378 — his attack on Dr.
Blomfield, 378-381, 393-397— remarks
on his defence of his in-egularity in
abbreviating proper names in his edition
of Stephens's Thesaurus, 381, 382 —
and on his curious apology for inaccu-
racv, 383, 384— attack on the Quar-
terly Reviewer's notice of the Delphin
Classics, 384, 385 — strictures on the
Reviewer's alleged censure of Her-
mann's panegyric of this edition of
Stephens's Thesaurus, 386-388 — and on
his vindication of it from particular cri-
ticisms of the Reviewer, 389 — ^parting
advice to, 398, 399.
• Thomas, xxxvi. 142, note.
Barlow (navigator), xxx. 233.
a watch-maker, invented repeaters,
xxxiv. 78.
Mr. xxxiii. 304 ; xxxiv. 382.
Mr. P., important discovery of,
xxx. 238, and note — ^Essay on Magnetic
Attractions, &c. xxxv. 237.
^—^— Sir George, xxxv. 41 — notice of
the principles acted upon by him in the
government of India, 42.
Sir William, xxxix. 379.
Barmecide, xxiv. 424.
Barnabas, xxi. 61.
Bamaby, Drunken, xxxvi. 30.
Bamavej xxviii. 280.
Barnes, xxv. 527 ; xxvii. 64, 65 ; xxxiii. 20.
Richard, Bishop, account o^ xxxix.
377.
Sir E., xxx. 580.
Bamett, Mr., testimony of, to the reluc-
tance of the public to prosecute capi-
tally, xxiv. 212, 222.
Mr., notice of his reply to Mr.
Andrew Reed, xxxi. 247.
Bamewall and Alderson, xxi. 403, note,
and Cresswell, xxx. 415, note.
Baronius, xxxvi. 317.
Barood, Sheik, xxv. 27.
Barras, xxviii. 254.
Barre, Chevalier de la, xxvii. 155.
Barr6, xxiii. 540 ; xxvi. 235.
Barreda, xxvi. 314.
BaiTcre, xxiii. 196.
Barreto, F., exiles Camoens from Goa, for
satirizing him, xxvii. 4, 5.
J. de O., xxix. 58.
' P., ill treatment of, towards Ca-
moens, xxvii. 9, 10.
Barrham, queen's serjeant, xxxvi. 518, note.
Digitized by
Googk
INDEX OF NAMES.
13
Barrington, Bishop, xxxix. 405.
D., xxiv. 403,407; xxxvii. 152.
— Lord, wrote an essay on the
Divme dispensations, xxxi. 112.
Mr., xxxvii. 532.
Barron, Professor, xxxvii. 448.
Barros, J. de, xxvii. 10, 19.
Barrow, Dr., a cogent defender of Chris-
tianity, xxviii. 528; xxix. 210 — cha-
racter of his sermons, ibid. 301.
— — xxi. 320 ; xxviii. 145 ; xxxvi. 29.
— — Isaac, character of, xxxviii.305 —
study of, recommended to young theolo-
gists, xxxix. 289.
I Mr., rarity of terrace cultivation
in China, xxi. 83 — defence of the Hot-
tentots, XXV. 454 — improvement in the
Dutch boors since his time, 459 — re-
quest of Lieutenant Clapperton, xxxi.
456.
. J. H., Esq., Editor of the Mirror
of Parliament, xxxviii. 241.
Thomas, hazardous escape of,
from the castle of Donne, xxxvi. 181
— ^ xxi. 236, notCy 261 ; xxvi. 516;
xxxii. 456 ; xxxiii. 139; xxxv. 187.
Bamielj xxviii. 36.
• Abb^, notice by, of the Revelations
of La SoBiur Nativity, xxxiii. 376 — no-
tice of his conduct in relation to the first
edition of the Revelations of Sister Na-
tivity, xxxvi. 307, 308, 317.
Barry, xxiii. 411.
the actor, xxxvi. 187.
— Don David, his account of the mis-
sionaries sent from Spain to South Ame-
rica, xxxv. 332 — and of the services
conferred by the Jesuits there, 333 — on
the causes of the hatred between the
Spanish colonies and the mother coun-
tiy, 336, 337— notice of the revolt of
the Cacique Tupacamaru, 340 — sug-
gestion respecting his translation of
Ulloa's ' Noticias Secretas,' relative to
South America, 350.
. Madame dn, xxvii. 161, 177; xxxiv.
434.
— ^ Peggy, xxxii. 207.
Cornwall, character of his literary
productions, xxxvii. 419.
Biuihelemi, Abbe, xxiv. 512; xxviii. 365.
Barthelemy, xxiv. 419.
Barthez, xxiii. 258, note.
Bartholinus, xxi. 103.
Bartholomew, St., xxv. 21.
Bartolocci, xxi. 365.
Bartoloccius, extract from, xxxv. 92.
Bartolomeo Bartoccio, account of, xxxvii.
77.
Bartolozzi, remarks on, xxxviii. 393.
Barton, B., beautiful poem by, xxviii. 4, 5
—bard of the * unimaginative race,*
xxxi. 250.
Barton, William, xxxviii. 31.
Basil, xxii. 74; xxiii. 139; xxvl 182;
xxxiii. 82.
the Macedonian, xxiii. 142.
Valentine, xxvi. 198.
Basile, Giovan Battista, compiler of the
Pentamerone, xxi. 94.
Basileia, xxiv. 456, 459.
Baskah, xxiv. 325.
Bass, Mr., reports concerning, xxiii. 73,
note; xxvii. 101 — account of some na-
tives of New South Wales, 103.
Bast, xxii. 324.
Bate, Julius, xxi.49.
Bateman, xxxvi. 522.
' Dr., opinion of, on the alleged
increase of insanity, xxiv. 180— -obser-
vations on his work on Cutaneous Affec-
tions, xxvii. 529.
• Mr., xxviii. 55.
Bates, xxv. 285.
Miss, xxiv. 362.
Batesham, John, xxx. 278, note.
Bath, Pulteney, Earl o^ blunder respect-
ing, xxvi. 434.
• xxvii. 193 ; xxviii. 49.
Bathurst, Earl, reasons assigned by, for
not having a council to assist the go-
vernor of New South Wales, xxiv. 57
—despatch o^ to the governors of our
West India colonies, xxix. 478; xxx.
543 — ^proceedings in the West Indies
occasioned by his despatches, 561, 562
— despatches of, to Demerara, respect-
ing the manumission of slaves, xxxiii.
606, 514, 519.
xxii. 284 ; xxiii. 226 ; xxvi. 57 ;
xxviii. 57, 260, 372 ; xxxi. 456; xxxii.
277; xxxiii. 179, 236; xxxviii 357;
xxxix. 144, 166.
•Mr., xxiv. 218.
Bathy, xxiv. 318.
Baton, xxix. 122.
Khan, xxvi. 42.
Batteville, Baron de, character of, xxix.
191.
Battoni, Pompeio, xxviii. 27.
Batty, Captain, Campaign in the Pyre-
nees, reviewed, xxx. 61 — character and
plan of his work, 62, 63, 7 1-73— descrip-
tion of a night sortie by the garrison of
Bayonne, 75-78.
Batu, xxi. 181 ; xxiv. 325.
Baudin, Captain, xxiv. 70 ; xxviii. 332 ;
xxxix. 318.
Bauer, Mr., xxi. 232.
Baumgarten's Travels in Palestine, notice
of, xxiv. 313.
Bausset, Abb6 de, xxviii. 296.
M. le Cardinal de, xxxi. 47.
Bavaria, Elector of, xxiii. 22.
Baxter, xxiv. 7 ; xxv. 289, 293— is invited
to be chaplain to Cromwell's troop of
Digitized by
Googk
14
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTSRI.T
horse, 302— afterwards regrets his refusal
of this oflfer, 324, 336— admirable re-
mark of, xzviii. 533, 534 — his services in
the cause of Ghrbtian morals, xxix. 210.
Baxter, xxvii. 61 ; xxviii. 3, 145 ; xxzii.
18; xxxvi. 40|xxxix. 401.
I Dr., xxxiii. 177.
Mr., xxviii. 227.
Bayard, Chevalier, history of, xxxii. 355 —
his real name and birth, 356 — early edu-
cation, 357 — is placed in the service of
the Duke of Savoy, 359 — and afterwards
in that of Charles VIII., King of France,
358 — ^performs his first chivalrous feat,
360-363 — goes into Picardy, and gives
a tourney, 362 — distinguishes himself
at the battle of Taro, in Italy, 366— is
again employed in Italy under Louis
XII., 370 — ^is taken captive, and gene-
rously liberated by Ludovico Sforza,
371, 372 — engages Sotomayor, a Spa-
nish captain, in single combat, and kills
him, 373 — combat of thirteen Spaniards
with thirteen Frenchmen, 374, 375 —
generous conduct of Bayard, 376— com-
mands a company against the Venetians,
377 — ^is engaged at the siege of Padua,
379 — nearly seizes the Pope, 387 — gal-
lant conduct of Bayard at the siege of
Brescia, 390 — ^is wounded at the battle
of Ravenna, 392 — ^his death, ibid. 393
— honours paid to his memory, 394.
XXV. 73, note; xxxix. 358.
Bayle, statement of, on the subject of
predestination, xxvi. 91 — remark of
D'Alembert on him, xxviii. 510.
• xxvi. 478; xxvii. 313, note; xxxii.
3, note.
Bayley, Mr. Justice, xxxv. 602, 603.
Baynard, Dr., xxvii. 116, 541.
Bayou de Libertas, M., xxi. 440, 441.
Beard, Dr., story of Cromwell being flogged
by, XXV. 282, 283.
B^assou, a leader of the insurgents in St.
Domingo, xxi. 437.
Beatrice, xxiv. 562 ; xxxvi. 51.
Beattie, xxxv. 195 ; xxxvi. 288.
Beatty. See Ball.
Beauc6, M., xxxvi. 306.
Beauchamp, xxii. 388.
Beauclerc, xxxiv. 320.
Beaufort, Dr., xxiii. 536.
Due de, xxxiv. 21.
M., notice of a dissertation of,
on the Uncertainty of the Early Roman
History, xxvii. 280.
xxxii. 69, 71.
Beaufoy, Colonel H., plan for exploring
Africa, xxxviii. 98.
Beauhamais, Alexandre de, communicated
to the National Assembly the intelli-
gence of the departure of Louis XVI.
from Paris, xjmii. 306.
Beauharnais, Emilie de, xxviii. 453.
— Eugene de, ibid.
— i— .— — » Hortense de, ibid.
Mad. de, places her daughter
and niece in the establishment of Mad.
Campan, ibid,
Beauhamois, xxix. 65.
Beaujeu, M., xxvii. 348.
Beaujour, M., remarks o^ on the climate^
&c., of Ghreece, xxviii. 485.
BeauUeu, Edward, Earl o^ xxviii. 55.
Beaumarchais, xxix. 28, 420.
Beaumcht, Dr., xxxi. 380.
Beaumont, Lewis, Bishop, charactra o^
xxxix. 370, 371.
■ Mr., xxvii. 105.
Sir George, xxxiv. 123, 188.
and Fletcher, the unities neg-
lected by, xxvii. 481 5 xxix. 37, 426.
Beausobre, xxv. 358, note; xxviii. 521;
XXX. 476 ; xxxiii. 144, 145, 147.
Beauvais, Vincent de, story of a witch
related by, xxix. 441.
Beauvilliers, xxxii. 436.
Beaver, xxi. 145.
Beccaria, xxL 168 — notice of his Essay on
Crimes and Punishments, 236, 237;
xxvi. 232 — which is the happiest of
nations, xxix. 3 14-- iniquity of torture,
xxxiii. 346.
^— ^ electro-magnetic experiments,
xxxv. 242, 248.
Beche, M. de la, xxix. 152
Becher, Rev. J., xxx. 428.
Becheraud, Abb6, pretended miracle per-
formed on, xxviii. 31.
Becket, Archbishop, xxi. 367.
Mr., xxvi. 368.
Thomas a, xxxii. 99.
Beckman, xxx. 40 — seeds of tobacco when
first brought to Portugal, xxxviii. 202
— tobacco when first cultivated in the
East Indies, 203.
Beda, xxi. 370, note; xxvii. 49.
Beddoes, Dr., notice of his poem in imita-
tion of Dr. Darwin, xxxv. 200.
Bede, xxii. 7& ; xxiii. 582, note; xxvi. 334;
xxxiii. 71, 72 ; xxxiv. 121, 259.
Ecclesiastical History, character of)
xxxiv. 275, 276.
Bedel, Bishop, notice of the life of, xxix.
210.
Bedemar, Marquis of, xxxi. 425.
Bedford, Duchess 0^ stanzas addressed to
by Mr. Wiffen, xxxiv. 18.
• Duke of, xxii. 545; xxiii. 372;
xxv. 410 ; xxix. 339 ; xxxiv. 190.
regent of France, 3
Jasper, Duke of, xxv. 280.
regent of England, xxv. 548.
Bedlow, remarkable testimony given by,
xxxvi. 533.
Digitized by
Googk
RXTIBW.
INDEX OF NAMES.
15
Bodmar, Maiquif o^ xSEiii. 12, 18.
Bedwell, William, notice of, xxiii. 301, 302.
Bedyll, Thomas, xxxiii. 18.
Bee, Mr., xxix. 345.
Beecher, method of correcting the bad
property of malaria soils, xxx. 148, note.
— ■ Mr., statement of the lamentable
want of religious instruction in the
United States, x^dii. 551.
BMchey, Capt., xxxv. 439, 440.»extract
of a letter from, on the Taheitan islands,
442, note.
.-«-— ^ xxxvii. 535.
■ Lieut., XXV. 216.
■ Sir W., notice of an intended ex-
pedition to Northern Africa, by the two
sons 0^ xxvi. 57.
Beechy, Mr., accompanies Mr. Belzoni up
the Nile, xxiv. 151 — inundation of thie
Nile witnessed by him, 166.
Beer, Peter, History, Doctrines, and Opi-
nions of the Jews, xxxviii. 114.
Beethoven, anecdote of, xxxi. 194, 195.
Beggee JSn, xxxvi. 119 — ^notice of, xxxvi.
372.
Behmen, Jacob, xxiii. 486; xxviii. 37;
xxxvi. 39.
Behnes, a sculptor, xxxiv. 133.
Behring, xxvi. 344.
Beke, Antony, Bishop, account and
character of, xxxix. 368.
Bekevitch, Prince, xxxvi. 121— cruelly put
to death by the Khivians, 126.
Bekker, xxii. 306, 342 j xxv. 522,
Belauger, xxviii. 398.
Beleses, xxvii 497— character of, 499.
Belford, John, accompanies Mr. Ritchie
in his mission into the interior of
Northern Africa, xxv. 2ft, 39.
Belial, xxiv. 494.
Belinda, xxiii. 511 ; xxv. 23.
Belinus, xxv. 280.
Bell, appointed by Cranmer an itinerant
preacher, xxiv. 34, note,
xxiii. 411.
— Captain, xxix. 22.
Dr., xxi. 171 — comparison of, with
Mr. M*Adam, xxiii. 97, 98 ; xxvi. 402.
— George, xxxix. 389.
John, xxv. 419, 422 ; xxxv. 192.
— — — of Antermony, xxxvi. 107 j
xxxvii. 448.
Mr. T., XXX. 580.
. Peter, xxxv. 518.
— — Rev. Andrew, Elements of Tuition,
xxxix. 99.
Bell's Weekly Messenger, xxxvii. 409.
Bellabre, xEoi. 360, 361, 363.
Bellair, Charles, a Congo chief, devastation
among the French, made by, xxi. 448.
Bellamy, Mr. John, New Translation of
the Bible, Part II. reviewed, xxiii. 287
— additional proofs of bis unfitness for
the work, ibid. 288--iefutation of his
assertion, that Jerome made his Latin
translation from the Greek and not
from the Hebrew, 292, 293— and that
all modem European translations have
been made from the Septuagint and
Vulgate, 294-298— his slander of the
English universities disproved, 299,
300 — and also his assertion that there
was not a single critical Hebrew scho^
lar among the translators of the autho-
rized version, 301-304 — specimens of
his blunders, 307-317 — ^his utter incom-
petency for the task he has undertaken,
324, 325.
Bellamy, Mr. John, xxii. 13j xxiv. 395.
Bellario, xxvi. 125.
Bellarmine, xxiii. 300.
Bellaston, Lady, xxix. 332.
Bellay, Joachim, verses of, on the Tiber
and the Ruins of Rome, xxxiv. 316—
translations of them by Spensei and
Quevedo, ibid, note,
Bellcare, xxix. 347.
Bellegarde, General, xxii. 383.
Bellenden, Lord, xxxiii. 47 9«
Miss, XXX. 543, 552.
Bellerophon, xxx. 42.
Bellhaven, Lord, xxxvii. 324, note,
Bellingham, xxxvi. 557.
Bello, the Fellata chief, character of, xxxi.
457, 458.
— xxiii. 232 ; xxxiii. 544 ; xxxix. 163,
165,166,169,521.
Belloi, du, xxix. 26.
Bellona, xxvii. 326.
Belmoiu*, Lord and Lady, xxii. 478} xxiii.
91,92; xxv. 49; xxviii. 61,73.
Beloe, Mr., xxiii. 402.
Belsham, Rev. T., xxiii. 578 — Translation
of St. Paul's Epistles, reviewed, xxx.
79 — his qualifications and preteasions
as a scholar, ibid. 80 — remarks on his
theoy of inspiration, 81, 83 — and of
justification,83-86 — ^itsfalsehoodproved,
87-92 — examination and refutation of
some passages of the work, 93*112 —
unfairness of Mr. Belsham and of the
Unitarian critics, 113-1) 5.
Mr., xxxiv. 461.
Belt, Mr., xxxix. 191, note.
Beltrami, J. C, Pilgrimage in Europe
and America, leading to the discovery
of the sources of the Mississippi and
Bloody River, &c., xxxvii. 448 — ac-
count of the work, ibid. — account of the
author, 449 — instance of his consum-
mate vanity and gross ignorance, 451
— makes the rattlesnake viviparous,
452— calls the mephitis the mouffeta,
453 — describes a steam-boat of 200
tons ascending a river 22,000 miles,
ibid, — avoided by Major Long as- a spy
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PART L^INDEX OF NABiES.
QvAKrKMXX
455 — his total ignorance of g^graphy,
456-458 — a word of advice to hioi, 458.
Belus, xxvii. 235, 494.
Belvidera, xxix. 429 ; xxxii. 66.
Belzebub, xxiv. 558 ; xxv. 532.
Belzoni, M., colossal remains at Ebsam-
bul, uncovered by, xxii 454 — attempt
on his life at Thebes, xxiiL 94 — trains of
Berenice discovered, 95.
* ' Narrative of the Operations
and Recent Discoveries within the Pyra-
mids, &c. of Eg^t and Nubia, reviewed,
xxiv. 139 — arrives at Cairo, and is mal-
treated bv a Turk, 141 — ^undertakes the
construction of an hydraulic machine
for the pasha, the effect of which is
frustrated by the knavery of the Arabs,
142 — honourable tribute to his charac-
ter by the late Mr. Burckhardt, ibid. —
his description of Thebes, 145, 146 —
embarks the bust of Memnon, 146, 147
—.and also the granite obelisks of
Philae, 163 — incurs great danger in ex-
ploring a cavern in the mountains of
Goumou, 147, 148 — negociates with
the Cacheffs for permission to open the
temple of Ipsambul, 151 — description of
its interior and exterior, 152, 153 — ^re-
turns southward, and explores the Vale
of Tombs, 154 — observations on the
arts of the Ep^tians, t6i£^.— difficulty
aud danger m penetrating into the
mummy pits,. 155 — descnption of a
mummy, 156 — discovers the tomb of
Psammis, 157 — description of it, 158-
160 — confirmation of Holy Writ by M.
Belzoni*s researches, 16 J, 162 — he
penetrates into the second pyramid of
Ghizeh, 163— discovers the position of
the true Memnonium, 165 — notice of
his excursion to the ruins of the ancient
Berenice, 166, 167— and to Elloah, the
Oasis of Jupiter Ammon, 168.
xxv. 49; xxvi. 195, «o/e;
xxvii.230 ; xxviii. 64 ; xxix. 597 ; xxxi.
457; xxxvii. 448.
■ Mrs., xxiv. 141.
Belzunce, M. de, murder o^ xxviii. 281.
Bembo, Pietro, xxiv. 133; xxxi. 423;
xxxii. 379.
Ben David, Three Letters of, to the Editor
of the Quarterly Review, xxxiii. 64 — de-
sign of them, 103— remarks thereon, t^W.
Benavides, J., xxvi. 297.
Benbow, xxviii. 218 — Murray v. See
Murray.
Ben-Cathla, xxiii. 212, 220.
Benedetti Locarno, notice of, xxxvii. 72.
Benedetto da Rovezzano, xxxii. 64.
Benedict, Friar, sent on an expedition to
the Tartars, xxiv. 317, 321.
III., Pope, XXX. 44.
— - XII., xxxiv. 335.
Benedict XIII., xzzv. 92 ; xxxvii. 474.
XIV., xxxvii. 470.
' St, founder of the monastic order,
xxii. 66 — ^pretended miracles attributed
to him by his biographers, 67, 68 — rule
for a monastic society, 69-74 — observa-
tion on the rule, 74-78 — the fifth c<n»-
mandment altered by Benedict, 101,
354 — ^his structure a revisal of ancient
institutions, xxiv. 50 — good Saint, zzx.
48.
Benedicta, xxii. 87.
Bengel, notice of the tenets o^ xxviii. 17.
Bengelius, opinion o^ on 1 John v* 7;
xxvi. 330; xxxiii. 65, 89.
Ben^r, Miss, xxix. 316.
Benjamin, xxvi. 375, note,
Bemntende, xxvii 490.
Bennet, the historian of dissent, xxiv. 40;
xxxi. 245. See Bogue,
— ~- Dr., Bishop of Gloyne, xxxix. 256
— schoolfellow and friend of Dr. S. Parr,
259 — deemed Parr no politician, 300.
Henry, xxxiv. 338.
— — Mr., xxii. 40; xxviii. 165.
Mrs., xxiv. 362.
Bennett, Mr. Grey, xxiv. 244 — ^remarks of,
on prison discipline, 250, 251 — danger
of an opposition composed of such as
Bennett, &c, xxviii. 205 ; presents the
Ionian petition, xxix. 87.
xxix. 205.
Bennie, xxiii. 24 1 .
Benoit, xxviii. 3^97.
Bensley, xxiv. 462, 502.
Benson, notice of the Hulsean lectures o(
xxviii. 528.
Bishop, xxiv. 13, 28.
XXX. 106.
Bent, Andrew, xxiii. 73.
Bentall, Mr., testimony o^ to the reluc-
tance to the public to prosecute capi-
taUy, xxiv. 212.
Bentham, Bishop, Psalms translated by,
xxiii. 298.
■ General, improvements of, iu
Portsmouth Dock-yard, xxii. 48.
Jeremy, Church-of-Englandism,
reviewed, xxi. 167 — ^his attacks on the
Church catechism, 170, 171 — on the Na-
tional Society and its secretary, 171, 172
— and on the Church of England, 172-
176— his reveries exposed, xxii. 59, 60,
103 ; xxiv. 236, 510 — unwarranted asser-
tions on the art of packing iuries, xxvii.
380, 381 — liis head worthjr to have
presided at the fete of Toleration, xxviii.
502 — ^introduction of his wild extrava-
gances into the isle of Sicily, xxx. 39^1 —
notice of his Panopticon, 427, 428 —
Defence of usury, remarks on, xxxiii.
188, 189 — on the subject of perjury,
xxxviii. 287, note — his religion, accord-
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Review.
INDEX OP NAMES.
17
ing to the commentaiy of a daily paper,
568.
Bentham, Jeremy, xxxv. 437 ; xxxvi. 514 ;
xxxix. 112.
Bentinc, XExyii. 254.
Bentinck, xxiv. 339.
Lord W., zxxiii. 141.
Bentivoglio, Comelio, xxiv. 133.
Bentley. xxii. 307, 309; xxiii. 138--the
xcsvfi diaXtxroSf never the popular idiom
among the Greeks, 141, note, 144 — why
Dr. Bentley was called Aristarchus,
xxiv. 378 — canons of the church when
fixed, XXV. 350— the plays of Thes-
pis, Phrynichus, and ^schylus, cha-
racterized, 505, 508 — notice of Bent-
ley's intention to restore the Iliad and
Odyssey to their original readings,
xxvii. 39, 40, 54 — ^remarks on his re-
searches on the digamma, 58-60, 67
— spirited sketch of, xxxix. 284.
■ observations of, on the genuine-
ness of 1 John V. 7; xxxiii. 65 — ob-
servations thereon by Bishop Biurgess,
65, 66 — remarks on the bishop's obser-
vations, proving that Bentley had de-
termined against the genuineness of
the verse, 66-69.
• xxvii. 182; xxx. 398, note; xxxv.
211; xxxvi. 54.
Mr. and Mrs., notice of, xxix.
367.
Benwick, Captain, xxiv. 372.
Benzenberg, author of a book on the ad-
ministration of Prince Hardenberg,
xxxi. 190.
Benzoria, xxix. 441.
Beortulf, king of Mercia, xxxiv. 268.
Beradat, St., brief notice of, xxii. 64.
Beraldus, Nicolas, xxii. 312.
Bere, Hi Sullivan, xxi. 476.
Beren^er, Ramon, xxxiii. 144.
Berenice, xxii. 456.
Beresford, Lord, xxx. 67.
■ — Lord J. G., Archbishop of Ar-
magh, xxxviii. 15.
■ Marcus, xxxvi. 69,
Mr., xxxvL 70.
Berganza, xxi. 95, note,
Berger, Dr., xxv. 223.
Berghetta, xxiii. 360, 372.
Berigny, M., xxii. 53.
Berington's Introduction to Memoirs of
Gregorio Panzain, extract from, xxxiii.
32, 33.
Berkeley, reality of things consists in per-
ception, xxvii. 114 — a subtle defender
of Christianity, xxviii. 528 — reflections
by, xxxiv. 349 — inquires if a nation may
not have every comfort without foreign
imports, xxxvii. 547.
• xxii. 162; xxvi. 479, 480 : xxxv.
182.
VOL. XL. KO. LXXXX.
Berkeley, Hon. G., Letters to and fifom,
reviewed, xxx. 542.
James, Earl of, blunders re-
specting, xxvi. 431, 435.
Berlanga, Bishop T. de, the first who
took the plantain to St. Domingo,
xxxviii. 198.
Bernard, xxiv. 312.
an apostate priest, notice of.
xxvi. 241.
St., xxxii. 369.
Bemarda, Pedro de, xxvi. 518, 521,
522.
Bemardi, Oronzio di, on the Art of Swim-
ming, xxxiv. 35— character of the Ger-
man translation of his work, 37 — out-
line of his method and theory of swim-
ming, 41-43 — his reason for recom^
mending the upright position in swim-
ming, 40 — ^its successful practice, 44 —
results of his plan, 45.
Berneval, A. de, xxv. 131.
Bemi, xxi. 496, note — analysis of his
* Orlando Innamorato,* 541-544.
xxxiv. 6 — ^notice of Mr. Rose's
translation of the Innamorato, 9.
. sentiments of, as to clergy, xxxvii.
63 ; xxx. 43 ; xxxvi. 49.
Bemier's travels, notice of Brock's trans-
lation of, xxxvii. 126, note,
Bemouilli, xxxvii. 282.
D., xxii. 130.
James, xxii. 134, note ; xxxix.
442.
- John, xxiii. 156; xxxix. 442.
Bemstor£^ Count, xxiii. 451.
Berosus, xxvi. 375.
Berry, Due de, xxviii. 338.
James, notice of, xxv. 320.
Bertha, Queen, xxv. 125; xxix. 181.
Berthier, General, appointed Governor-
General of Corfii, xxiii. 115 — murder of,
xxviii. 280.
BerthoUet, xxiii. 472.
Bertie v. Falkland, xxxix. 188.
Bertram, xxiv. 303 ; xxvii. 339.
Edmund, xxiv. 362-366.
Sir T., character of, in ' Mansfield
Park,' well drawn, xxiv. 364.
Maria and Julia, xxiv. 364.
Bertrand, capture of his slave ship the
' Succes,' xxvi.71.
General, xxviii. 226.
Louisa, xxviii, 297, 298.
Madame, xxviii. 237,
del Bazzo, employed by Cle-
ment VI. to punish the murderers of
Andrew of Hungary, xxxi. 69.
M., anecdote of, xxviii. 457.
a physician at Marseilles,
his account of the plague there, xxxiii.
223.
Berwick, xxiii. 14, 55.
c
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18
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarter LT
Besbonmgh, Lord, zrri. 388. <
Bess, Queen, xxi. 91.
Bessario, xxiii. 137 — ^used Uie Romaic
Greek, 147.
Bessi^ies, Marshal, morements o^ in
Spain, xxix. 73.
Bes^ Chief Justice, xxxyIL 168, note —
xxxix. 67.
Bethsabe, xxix. 37.
Betterton, xxxiii. 311 ; jncxiv. 211.
Beugnot, Count, xxii. 482 — anecdotes ofj
486.
Beveridge, Captain, xxxvii. 15.
Beverley, Mr., xxi. 240.
Beverly, Mr., xxxvii. 525.
Bevilaqua, xxviii. 317.
Bevis, Sir, xxi. 91.
Bewick, xxxL 480.
Beza, xxii. 314; xxiil 297 ; -mnW 392 ;
xxxvii. 197; xxxviiL 386.
Colonel , xxxviiL 457.
Bezerillo, xxxviii. 209.
Bezenval, Baron de, xxviiL 280, 450.
Bheem-«ing, xxii. 418.
Bhoo Kaloom, expedition under, against
the FeUatas, xxix. 515-518.
Bhowannce, xxiv. 114.
Bhyram, xxiv. 127.
Bianchi, xxiv. 74.
Bias, xxiii. 396 ; xxiv. 424, note,
Bichat, answer to the views of, xxii. 1.
Bicknell, Mr., xxiii. 523.
Biddulph, Rev. T. T., on Divine Influ-
ence, xxxi. Ill — character of his for-
naer publications, ibid. — design of his
publication, ibid., 112 — character of it,
112,113 — ^his observations on the reli-
gious knowledge oC our first parents,
113 — on the character of Noah, iW.,
114— on the case of Cornelius, 114 —
singular coincidence between Mr. Bid-
dulph and Dr. Knox's quotations, 115,
117— extracts fix)m his treatise, with
remarks, 117-120 — vindication of Dr.
Paleyfirom his censures, 121 — of Arch-
bishop Tillotson, 121-123-and of Bishop
Warburton, 123-125.
— ^— Mr., xxxiii. 275, note,
Biddy, Miss, xxiii. 462.
Biel, xxii. 336 ; xxx. 110.
Bigg, Evan, xxvi. 114.
Bigge, Mr., xxiv. 58; xxxii. 331, 332;
xxxvii. 1.
Bigot, XXV. 520.
Bigsby, Dr., xxxiv. 519, note, 525.
Billings, Captain, xxxviii. 96. ,
Bilson, Bishop of Winton, notice of, xxiii.
302.
Binel, M., xxxvi. 318.
Binefield, Colonel, equerry of the Duke of
Marlborough, death of, xxiii. 40.
Bingham, ongin and progress of burying
in churches traced by, xxi. 378, 379—
notice of his ' Origines Ecclesiasticae,*
xxvii. 320 — opinion of, as to the intro-
duction of singers into churches, xxxviiL
23 — and hjrnms, 37.
Bingham, Mr., xxxv. 439, 440.
Bion, xxxii. 159.
Biot, xxiiL 357 ; xxxv. 249, 254 ; xxxvi.
152, 160, 161.
Birch, Colonel, xxiiL 26.
Dr., xxiiL 404 ; xxxiL 470.
Mr., xxxiL 307.
■ T., remarks on, xxxviiL 389.
Bird, Lieutenant, xxxvii. 526,
Mr. xxxvL 141, 142.
W., xxu. 197.
Birkbeck, xxL 12, 124--efiecl of his ex-
aggerated descriptions of the United
States, on Emigrants to North Ame-
rica, xxiiL 374 — account of his settle-
ment in Illinois, xxviL 90-95.
xxxix. 364, 365; xxxix. 353,
355.
. Doctor, his account of the
origin of Mechanics* Institutes, xxii.
4lT.
— ..^-«— . Mr., testimony o^ to the reluc-
tance of the public to prosecute capi-
tally, xxiv. 212.
Biron, xxv. 14.
M. de, xxvi. 406. See Lauzun.
Bis, H. Attila, Trag^die, reviewed, xxix.
25.
Black, xxxv. 181.
Dr., xxxvi. 168 — anecdotes o^ 197,
198.
Mr., xxxii. 412.
Blackader, Colonel, xxiii. 23, et seq,
Blackall, bishop of Exeter, xxxiL 469.
Blackbird, an Omawhaw chie^ notice of
the burial of, xxix. 12.
Blackboum, notice of Horace Walpole's
slander against, xxvii. 186, 187.
Blackbume, Mr., xxxvii. 563.
Blackchester, Lady, xxvii. 347.
Blackett, Sarah, xxxvii. 367.
Blacklock, xxiiL 406, 430.
Blackmore, Sir Richard, notice of, xxxii.
231 — succession of poets worthy of his
age, xxxv. 189 — melancholy celebrity
of in his old age, xxxviii. 31 — remark
on his poems, xxxix. 185, note.
Blackstone, in favour of the perpetual
copyright of authors, xxL 201 — remark
on, by M. Rubichon, xxiii. 1 93 — remark
of, on the interest which all classes have
in the criminal law, xxx. 405 — opinion
on penitentiaries, 426 — favourable to the
poor laws, xxxvii. 540.
xxii. 532 ; xxv. 259, note, 534;
xxvi. 244, 248; xxix. 329 ; xxx. 425,
427 ; xxxii. 84, 92, 184, 349 ; xxxv. 417 ;
xxxvL 230; xxxvii. 164, 167; xxxviiL
262.
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RXVIBW.
INDEX OF NAMIS.
19
Blackstone, Cornet, xxzvL 553. I
Blackwall, xxiii. 411. '
Blackwell's * Essay on the Writing
and Grenius of Homer/ notice of^ xxviL
69.
Blackwood, Captain, zxxriL 376.
Blagden, Claries, xxxvi. 157.
; Sir C, XXV. 198, note,
Blaikey, xxiv. 410.
Blair's Sermons, style of, xxix. 303.
Blair, the poet, xxxiii. 390.
Dr., character of, xxrviii. 307.
Blake, the painter, xxxiii. 390.
— ^— Admiral, xxvi. 28.
General, xxviii. 549.
Mr., xxix. 237, note; xxxvil 562.
V. Leigh, xxxix. 189.
Blanch, xxvi. 120.
Blanchlande, M. de, xxS. 437.
Bland, xxv. 259, note.
William, principles of igrictd-
ture, xzxvL 39 i . See Agricuitwe. Part
II.
Blandford, Lord, xxiii. 17.
Blandy, Miss, xxxvi. 519, note,
Blane, Sir Gilbert, Facts on Intermittent
Fevers, reviewed, xxx. 133 — observations
of, on marsh effluvia, 134-136.
Blanco, Commodore, xxxviii. 460.
Blaney, Major-General Lord, xxiii. 181.
Blaquiere, Mr., conduct in Greece, xxxv.
224.
Bleda, Father, xxvi. 189.
Blenkinson's patent steam-carriage, notice
of, xxxi. 358.
Bligh, Captain, xxvii. 101.
Mrs. Helena, xxxix. 194.
Blinkhoolie, xxvi. 138.
Bliss, xxxvi. 519, note,
Rev. P., tax on his edition of An-
thony Wood's AthensB Oxonienses, xxi.
208, note,
Blomfield, Dr. C. J., remarks on the as-
sumption of his being the reviewer of
Stephens's Thesaurus, xxiv. 378 — his
learning, and exemplary character as a
Christian pastor, 379. See Barker.
— — ililschyli Agamemnon,
reviewed, xxv. 505 — notice of the earlier
editions of this tragedy, 507— charac-
ter of this edition, ibid. — vindication
of Stanley, from the charge of plagia-
rism, 507, 508 — critical remarks on Dr.
Blomfield's lectures and notes, 509-
529 — characteristic qualities of, xxxii.
91.
Blonder s, M., Theory of the Plan of the
Odes of Pindar, xxviii. 415.
Bloomfield, comparison of Clare with him,
xxiii. 173.
xxxv. 518.
Blount, Martha, testunonjr o^ •saja^ ^
charge of Pope being sordid, xxiii. 413*
418, 421, 422— nature of Pop«*f inter-
course with her, xxxii, 286.
Edward, xxxii. 305,
. Miss, xxx. 543.
character of, in ' Kenilworth,' xsri.
145.
Bloxam, Rev. Mr., xxxv. 419 — couu^gpoiis
enterprise of Kapiolani related by, 427,
428 — reflections on the death of the
King and Queen of the Sandwich
Islands, 435.
Blucher, xxviii. 247; xxxiii* 406; lEZxr*
230.
Blumenbach, xxil 4, 28, 38 ; xx?it, 475 ;
xxix. 154.
Blunt, xxxiii, 484.
Sir Christopher, notico of his trial,
xxxvi. 513.
Blythe, Mr., xxxv. 383, 384.
W« xxix. 408.
Boaden, James, Memoirs of the Life of
John Philip Kemble, xxxiv.. )96— <h»*
racter of his work, 203, 204-241. See
Kembie.
Boadicea, xxvi. 377, 457.
Milton's notice of her wiferiigs,
xxxii. 444, 445.
Boaz, xxiv. 491 ; xxv. 146.
Bobbin, Tim, xxxii. 37.
Boccaccio, xxi. 488 ; xxiv. 549, note, 559,
562 — sends Dante's poem to Petrarch,
563; xxx. 45, 60.
■ Eulogies of Joanna^ Queen of
Naples, xxxi. 65, 71.
'Decameron, exorbitant price
given for, xxxii. 154.
Bochart, xxi. 51.
Bocken, Jane, xxxiii. 17, 20.
Bodega y Quadra, Don J. de la^ xxvi. 344
Bodin, xxix. 457.
Bodleigh, John, xxiii. 297.
Boece, Hector, xxxvii. 360.
Boeck, xxv, 506, note,
Boehler, Peter, xxiv. 21, 27.
Boerhaave, notice of his account of th
small-pox, xxxiii. 244.
xxv. 224; xxvi. 199; xxxix
Sir B., xxx. 533.
Blount, zzii. 13, note.
257.
Boethius, xxv. 67.
Boetius, xxx. 44.
Boety, Chevalier, xxiv. 143.
Bogue and Bennet, observation of^ on the
cemetery in Bunhill Row, xxi. 381 —
Samuel Wesley reviled by, xxiv. 40.
• an historian of dissent xxxi
245.
Bohier, Abbot, xxv. 131.
Boileau, levity of, xxi. 490 — ^remarks on
his epics, 506, 508 — defence of him,
against the attacks of Mr. Landor, xxx.
416, 417,
o2
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20
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTBRLY
BoileaUi Ait Poetique en vers, notice of,
xxxii. 297, 298.
, XXV. 428 ; xxvi. 245 ; xxix. 425;
xxxiv. 400; xxxvii. 418.
Boindin, M., xxvii. 292, note,
Bois Gruilbert, xxvi. 128; xxvii. 341; xxix.
442.
._ John, notice o^ xxiiL 302.
Boissard, xxxviii. 386.
Boisser^e, S., notice of his engravings of
the cathedral of Cologne, xxv. 134,135,
140, note.
Bobsonade, xxii. 324, 334 ; xxv. 508.
Bojardo's Moreante Maggiore, analysis of,
with remarks, xxi. 526— comparison
between him and Ariosto, 527, 528.
XXX. 42 ; xxxvi. 49.
Boki, an Owhyhee chief, anecdotes of,
XXXV. 429, 431, 432, 433, 434— copy of
a letter written by him, 609.
— xxxvi. 298, note,
Boleyn, Dr., xxiv. 405.
— — Mary, xxxiii. 14.
■ Queen Anne, xxix. 317— character
of, calumniated by Roman Catholic
writers, xxxiii. 12, 13 — ^vindication of
her, especially from the charges of Dr.
Lingard and Mr. Butler, 13-16 ; xxxvii.
209 — character of, xxxviii. 396.
Sir Thomas, xxxiiL 9 — ^high cha-
racter 0^ 14,
Bolin^broke, xxiii. 67, 422; xxvi. 429;
xxvii. 190; xxviii. 52; xxix. 288; xxx.
543; xxxii. 3, note; xxxiv. 482; xxxv.
191; xxxviii. 248; xxxix. 278.
Bolivar, emancipated all his slaves, xxviii.
177, 252.
. xxxviii. 481.
Bolton, xxvi. 36, note,
■ Comet, xxxiii. 306.
Stawarth, xxvi. 138.
Bonald, M. de, notice of, xxxiv. 429.
Bonanni, xxviii. 330.
Bonaventure, xxvi. 182.
Bonbokar, Al Saidi, xxxix. 171.
Bonduca, xxvi. 457.
Bones. See Fan Brunt.
Boniface, xxiii. 438 ; xxvi. 136.
VIII., resurrection-men excom-
municated by, xxi. 376; jubilees and
indulgences of, xxiv. 557.
xxxiv. 3; xxxvii. 205,470.
Bonifacius Simoneta, xxii. 68.
Bonner, xxviii. 44 ; xxxvi. 313.
Edmond, xxxiii. 3, 9, 10, 22,
27.
Bonnet, xxii. 26 ; xxvi. 392.
Bouney's Life of Bishop Middleton, xxxv.
445.
Bonpland, M., xxxii. 138, — 'particulars
respecting his detention in Paraguay,
139, note. See Humboldt,
Bonvyse, xxxvii. 205.
Booker, xxxv. 550.
Boo-Khaloom, xxxiii. 527— deatho^ 528.
Boon, Daniel, xxix. 14.
Booth, Mr., xxvi. 152, 159 ; xxix. 101 ;
xxxiii. 481 ; xxxiv. 211.
Boothby, Sir B., xxiv. 418.
Borda, M., xxxvi. 151.
Borde, Andrew, xxxviii. 383.
Borelli, xxxiv. 35.
Borromini, xxxii. 56.
Borg, S., xxvii. 537.
Borg, a Maltese phy^sician, xxxiii. 228.
Borgia, Csesar, xxxii. 356.
Borrow, Mr., xxxv. 82.
Bosanquet, Mr. Sergeant, xxxviii. 495.
Boscawen, Admiral, xxvii. 207, 208.
Bosman, description of the Ashantee
music, xxii. 277, 295.
Bosset, Lieutenani<3olonel, proceedings at
Parga, xxiii. Ill — his mistakes coi^
rected, 115 — his misconduct as Go-
vernor of Parga, 129, 130.
Bossu, xxviL 479. ,
Bossuet, strictures on Cardinal Maury s
character of his sermons, xxix. 289.
xxvii. 398; xxviii. 2, 18, 274,
505 ; xxxiii 2, 35.
Boswell's Life of Johnson, observation on,
xxiii. 402, 403.
xxiii. 476; xxiv. 429, 443;
xxviii. 533 ; xxxv. 408 ; xxxvi. 243 ;
xxxix. 287.
Botham, Mr., testimony of, to the im-
provements in the roads eflfected by Mr.
M'Adam, xxiii. 100.
Botho, xxii. 361.
Bothwell, xxvi. 139.
Botsford, xxix. 358.
Bottom, xxi. 275.
Bouchard, notice o^ xxii. 484, 485.
Boucher, J., xxviii. 519, note.
Boudh, xxv. 420, 424.
Boudin, xxi. 260.
Boudon,'La Vie de M. Henri-Marie, par M.
Collet, reviewed, xxxvi. 306— birth and
early education of, 326, 327— instance of
his enthusiasm, 327, 329— goes to Paris,
and becomes tutor to M. de Montmo-
renci, 330 — forms an ecclesiastical com-
munity, 330, 331— anecdote of one of
his community, 331— appointed grand
archdeacon of Evreux, and ordained,
332, 333 — ^account of his visitation, 333,
334— charged with improper intimacy
with a female devotee, 335— his conduct
under this charge, 336, 337— inter-
views with a young enthusiast, Claude
Petit, 338, 339— becomes the spiritual
director of the Duchess of Bavaxia, 340
— advices given to her, 341 — ^his senti-
ments during a tour in Germany, 341,
342 — devotion to the Virgin Mary,
343, 344 — abstract of his Life of
Digitized by
Googk
Kbview.
INDEX OF NAMES.
21
Marie Ang^lique de la Providence,
344-353.
Boufflers, Comtesse Am61ie de, xxxiv.
432.
' ■ " ■ Marshal, xxiii. 12, 54, 56 ; xxxiv.
28.
Bougainville, xxviii. 37 ; xxxi. 62.
Bouguer, diagonal bracing, xxii. 42 — in-
utility of his attempts to give strength
to ships, XXX. 369; ignorance of the
practical effects of an agitated sea on a
ship, xxxvii. 282.
geodesical operations of in Quito,
XXXV. 322.
Bouill^, M. de, xxviii. 298.
Bouillon, Princesse de, xxxvi. 333, 340.
Bouker, Abou, account of his journey from
Cashna to the Bight of JSenin, xxxi.
470.
Boulanger, xxviii. 37.
Bouldesel, W. de, notice of the travels of,
in Palestine, xxiv.313.
Boulogne, xxvii. 159.
Boulter, Archbishop Hugh, on the state
of Ireland, xxxviii. 55.
Boulton, xxii. 366, note,
Bourbon, Due de, xxxii. 378.
Bourchier, Elizabeth, married to Oliver
Cromwell, xxv. 285.
Sir J., xxv. 285.
Bourdaloue, xxviii. 505 — remarks on his
style, xxix. 289.
■ '■ xxxiii. 35,
Bourguig^on, xxv. 555, 557.
Bourke, Major-General R., remarks on
the method adopted in Ireland, in
order to duniuisji the population, xxxiii.
463.
Bourne, Mr. S., xxviii. 357 ; xxxiii. 490.
xxxvii. 576, note.
Boursault, indeUcacies of, in his play of
* The Mercure Galant,' xxix. 430.
Bouterwrek, xxv. 21.
Bovet, R., anecdote from the * Pandemo-
nium,' of, xxix. 459.
Bowden, Mr., xxx. 224.
Bowditch, T. E., * Mission to Ashantee,'
reviewed, xxii. 273 — origin and objects
of the mission, 273, 274 — notice of the
village of Payntree, 274, 275--beautiful
scenery on the banks of the Bossempra,
275, 276— entrance of the mission into
the capital of Ashantee, 276, 277 — de-
scription of their approach to the sove-
reign, 277, 279 — and interview with
him, 279, 280-282— remarks on Mr.
Bowditch*s conduct on this occasion,
282, 283 — ^inefficiency of his negocia-
tions, 283, 284 — ^war between the Ash-
* antees and Fantees, 285 — ^power of the
sovereign, 286, 287 — singular laws,
287 — condition of the women, 287 —
human victims immolated on the death
of the sovereign, 288 — population
and employment of the inhabitants
of Coomassie, 289 — account of that
place, 290 — curious sample of Ashan-
tee music, 291 — ^remarks on Mr. Bow-
ditch's account of the course of the
Niger, 292, 293— additional account of
Mr. Park's death, 293, 294— causes of
Mr. Bowditch' s censures of the African
Company, 299, 300.
Bowditch, T. E., xxii. 147; xxiii. 243;
treaty of, 244, note — ^protuberances of
Ashantee ladies, xxxi. 467.
Bowdler, John, * Select Pieces,' reviewed,
xxi. 112 — bio^aphical notice of him,
113-116 — ^notice of his poetry, 117—
and of his prose works, 1 18— particu-
larly his theological tracts, 119 — re-
marks on his genius and character,
121-124.
Mr., appointed one of the super-
visors for the erection of a penitentiary,
xxx. 427.
Bowen, Captain John, R.N., first settler
in Van Diemen's Land, xxiiL 74.
Bower, Captain, xxxvii. 371.
Bowes, Greneral, xxix. 81.
Bowles, Rev. W. L., the * Invariable
Principles of Poeti^,' reviewed, xxiii.
400— his hostility to Pope, 407, 408—
observations on Pope's poetic character,
409, 410 — ^vindication of the poet's pri-
vate character against his aspersions,
412, 421 — characteristic anecdote of
Mr. Bowles, 425, 566, 567, note; xxvi.
435.
edition of Pope's
work, and publications respecting them,
xxxii. 271— character of it, 274-276—
his summary of Pope's character, 277
— remarks thereon, ibid. — his omission
in his estimate of Pope's character, cen-
sured by Lord Byron, 277, 278 — stric
tures on his neglect to vindicate Pope
from the charge of taking money from
the Duchess of Marlborough to suppress
the character of Atossa, 278, 279— his
charge against Pope for satirizing the
Duke of Chandos disproved, 280 — as
also his charge against Lady M. W.
Montague, 281, 282 — remarks on "Mi,
Bowles's * Final Appeal,' 281, note —
his supposition that Pope introduced
Dr. Mead into the ^Dunciad,' and that
he satirized the Earl of Halifax, dis-
proved, 283 — as also his charges against
Pope for licentiousness, 284 — particu-
larly in his connexion with the Blounts,
285, 286 — and of disingenuousness in
his publication of his letters, 288, 289
— and of ingratitude to Mr. Wycherley,
298.
Bowring, Mr., money transactions, xxxv.
Digitized by
Googk
d2
PART I.— INDKX OF NAMES.
QltARTBRLT
*223— boasting in Gieece, 225— his four
maxims, 235.
Bowyer, Admiral, deprived of a leg in the
adion of the 1 st June, xxxvii. 367 — ^re-
commends Captain Collingwood, for his
eallantiy in that action, to the first
lord of the Admiraltv, ibid.
'— 2o6.
Boyordo, xxxir. 14.
Boyce, Mr., xxxvi. 527.
Boyd, General, ixviL 437.
Mr., translated the Arancana, xzxi.
283.
Boy dell, Alderman, 3Exiii.411.
Boyer, succeeds Petion as President of
the republic of Hayti, xxi. 452 — sus-
pected of a design to betray the island
to the French, 456, 457— extract from a
proclamation o^ wherein the introduc-
tion of foreign sugar into St. Domingo
is admitted, xxx. 5/7.
' Boyle, obtained the repeal of an Act of
Heniy VI., to prevent making money
by alchemy, xxvi. 203 — story related
by, respecting a shining stone, xxx. 19,
xxv. 223, 509, note ; xxvi. 1 99, 486 j
xxix. 212, 470; xxxii. 399.
Brabant, John, tradition respecting, xzxix.
389.
Brabantio, xxv. 15.
Bracebrid^, Mr., xxxi. 476.
Bracegir&, xxxvi. 554.
Bracton, xxxii. 99 — quoted, xxxvii. 498.
Bradamante, xxi.42, 51, 509.
Braddock, xxxi. 103.
Bradshaw, xxv. 334, 346 ; xxxiL 444, 449 ;
xxxvii. 411.
Mr., canal agent to the Duke
of Bridgewater, xxxi. 366, 367.
— xxxvi. 295.
• Mrs., letter from, to Lady Suf-
folk, xxx. 553, 554.
Bradwardine, Rose, comparison of the cha-
racter o£ with that of Brenda, xxvi.
471.
Brady, xxxix, 44.
■ Rev. Dr. Nicholas, his version of
the Psalms, xxxviiL 31.
Brahm, xxL 464.
Braidwood, Mr., remarks on the system of
teaching the deaf and diunb, pursued
by, XXVI. 396, 397.
Brakenridge, xxxix. 359.
Bramah, Mr., notice of his correspondence
with Huntinj^on, xxiv. 502.
Bramante, xxvii. 316 ; xxviii. 329.
Bramble, Mathew, xxviii. 61.
Brancas, the Italian philosopher, men-
tioned an engine moved by steam, xxxii.
404.
Brand, Mr., remarks ou his game bill,
xxi. 429.
Brande, W. T., Bsq., opinion o^ on the
colouring matter in red snow, xxi. 229
— his science and his toils at the Royal
Institution, xxiv. 343— analysis of, xxv.
222.
History of Chemis-
try, &c., reviewed, xxvi. 180— ably traced
the history of chemistry from its empi-
rical origin, 199 — firm belief by alchy-
mists of the transmutation of baser
metals, ibid. — ^notice of one of the last
true believers in the art, 205.
Brantome,xxix. 371 ; xxxi. 66.
Brasbridge's, Joseph, Fruits of Experi-
ence, XXXV. 148 — illustrations of his
maxims, 158-162 — notice of sundry
clubs mentioned by him, 163, 164.
Brathwaite, Admiral, xxxvii. 366.
Bravo, F. Nicolas, xxii. 68, note.
General, xxx. 183.
Bray, Mrs. See Stofhard.
xxxvii. 489, note.
Braybrooke, Lord, editor of Pcpys^s Me-
moirs, xxxiii. 284.
Breckenridge, Mr., xxx. 540.
Biedon, W., an astrologer, notice o^ xxvi.
184, 185.
Brembridge, Richard, xxxix. 67.
Brenda, xxvi. 456, et seq.
Brenier, (Jeneral, xxix. 81.
Brennus, xxv. 280.
Brera, Professor, xxx. 135.
Brereton, Rev. T. D., Practical Inqniry
into the Number, &c., of Agricultural
Labourers, and the Workhouse System,
xxxvi. 484 — character of his work, ibid.
— evils of the poor-laws, 485 — improve-
ment effected by the introduction of
savings banks, ibid. — examination of
the application of the principle of
savings banks to diminish the evil of
the poor laws, 486-496.
Breteuil, Baron, xxiii. 156.
Bretonniere, Fran<jois de la, xxxiv. 26,
note
Brewster, Rev. John, Sketch of the His-
tory of Churches, xxiii. 549.
Dr., theory of. as to the coldest
point of the arctic hemisphere, xxv.
197,198,208,211.
— xxxvii. 536.
X. 370.
Briare, xxx. 370.
Briareus, xxvii. 222, 232.
Bridget, St., xxviii. 20 ; xxxiii. 409
Bridgewater, Duke of. xxii. 58 ; xx
Bridport, Lord, xxxvii. 373.
Brienne, M. de, notice of, xxvi. 231.
Briges, M. de, xxviii. 458.
Brigges, xxv. 1 76, note.
Mr., liberality of, xxiv. 145, 163
— active in furthering the opening of
the canal of Mahmoudiah, xxx. 502.
. Mr. H., the mathematician, of
Digitized by
Googk
33sTisw.
IND&X OF NAMES.
2a
opinion that a passage ronnd the Ame-
rican continent did somewhere exist,
XXX. 233.
Briggs, house of, xxri. 337.
Brighadoro, xxx. 43.
Brigniel, F. J., xxvi. 296, 299, 306.
Brindley, xxx. 370.
Brine, Mr., xxvii. 230.
Brinkley, bishop of Cloyne, xxxvi. 263 —
sidereal astronomy mdebted to him,
xxxviii. 9.
Brisbane, M. General, xxviL 444.
Mr., xxxiv. 392.
' Sir James, xxxv. 517.
T., xxxii. 323 J xxxril 5.
Brissac, James, xxviiL 465.
Brissot, xxi. 434.
Bristed, John, on the Resonrces of the
United States of America, reviewed,
xxi. I — sketch of the constitution of
the United States 2, 3 — judicial system,
4-6 — state of religion, 7, 132 — English
system of poor laws adopted by some
states, 9 — madequacy of the population
for military purposes, 12, 13 — local
circumstances that will prevent the for-
mation of a powerful navy, 1 5 — apolitical
views of the repubhcans and federalists,
23 — state of religion in the United
States of America, xxiii. 550.
Bristol, Lord, xxv.298; xxxiL470—noble
speech of, in passing the indemnity act,
xxix. 175, 176.
Bristow, xxxiii. 30.
Bristowe, Dr., xxxv. 451.
Britius, St., xxii. 356.
Britton's, John, Chronological and Histo-
rical Illustrations of the Ancient Archi-
tecture of Great Britain, reviewed, xxv.
112. See .«<rcAi/<?c/Mre, Part II.
■ Cathedral Antiquities
and Life, xxxiv. 305 — struggles of his
early life, 310 — books read by him, 311
.i— his first hterary adventure, in con-
junction with Mr. Brayley, 311, 312 —
circumstances which led to the pub-
lication of his ' Beauties of Wilt-
shire,' 312, 313— and the 'Beauties of
England and Wales,' 314 — ^plan and
character of that work, ibid., 315 —
account of his ' Antiquities of Salisbiuy
Cathedral,' 319^49. See Salitbury,
Part II.
Broc, Madame de, xxviii. 454.
Brock, Major-General, successes of, against
the Americans, xxvii. 409 — ^prevented
from following them up, 410 — ^his brave
death at Queenston, ibid.
Brock, Henry, xxxv. 199.
Brock's translation of Bemier's Travels
in the Mogul Empire, notice of, xxxvii.
126, 127, note,
Brocquire, B. de la, notice of the travels o^
in Palestine, xxiv. 313.
Brodsns, xxv. 509, note.
Broderod, xxxi. 16.
Brodie, Mr., xxxiii. 331.
the historian^ notice o^
xxxvii. 229, note.
Broglie, Due de, xxviii. 169.
Brohon, Mademoiselle, xxviii. 28.
Bromley, Chief Justice, xxxvi. 512.
Bromton, xxi. 370, note.
Bron^iart, M., xxxvi 446,472, note.
Bromovius, character of the Crimean Tar-
tars, given by, xxix. 130.
Brook, Mr., notice of his invention of a
blow-pipe, xxxiii. 47 1 .
Mr. T., alleged breach of parole of,
xxvi 3, 4.
deatli of, in the cause of Protes-
tantism, xxix. 255.
Brooke, Lord, prevented by Charles L
£rom going out to settle in New $ng-
lan^ xxv. 288.
the herald, anecdote of, xxvii.
316, note,
. A. de Capel, Travels to the North
Cape, reviewed, xxx. 115 — fadUty of
the Swedes in acquiring languages ac-
counted for, 118— -circumstances of the
Swedish peasantry, 120-122— descrip-
tion of Drontheim and its environs,
123, 124— and of several Swedish
islands, 127 — ^notice of the town of
Hammerfest, 131— arrival at the North
Cape, 131,132.
I Colonel, xxxvii. 507.
xxxiv. 395, 396.
Sir J., xxx. 233.
Mr., xxxvii. 90
Sir R., xxxvii. 165, note.
Brookes, Mr., xxvii. 465; xxxiv. 161.
Brother, John, xxi 501.
Brothers, R., xxviii 17 ; xxxiii. 402.
Brotherton, drawing-master to Hayley the
poet, xxxi. 270.
Brougham, H., xxii. 527, note\ xxiv.218;
xxix. 296 — ^his observations on negro
slavery, 483 ^his character as a
speaker, xxx. 535.
Practical Observations on
the Education of the Poor, reviewed,
xxxii. 410 — remarks on the character
and probable tendency of his public
measures and suggestions, 413, 414 —
extract from his speech at the second
annual meeting of the Anti-slavery So-
ciety, 513, 514 — strictures on it, 514-
516.
xxxiii 24, 512; xxxv.294;
xxxvii.448 — speech on the present state
of the law, 241— characterized, 249—;
subjects treated in it, 250.
xxxix. 2, note.
Brouffhton, Captain, xxi. 234, 252 — object
of his visit to one of the Kurile Islands
misconstrued by the Japanese, xxii. 118
Digitized by
Googk
24
PART I.— INDEX OF NABIES.
QUAKTBBLT
Brower, a Dutchmaiii visited New Zealand,
xxxi. 52.
Brown, Dr., xxxii. 21 ; xxxv. 182.
-iron cable manufactory of, xxii.
38.
. xxiii. 236 ; xxv. 49 ; xxvii. 106 ;
xxviii. 66.
General, xxvii. 437,
. Mr., xxiv. 21 1 — opinion o^ on the
efiect of executions, upon spectators and
convicts, 223.
xxv. 445 ; xxxii. 312 ; xxxiu. 127.
Thomas, xxiiL 462, 463.
xxii. 378 ; xxiv. 341 ; xxvii. 121 ;
xxviii. 532; xxxv. 188.
Sir Sackville, xxxv. 160.
• a ph^ician, xxxviii. 94.
Browne, xxvui. 160.
' his style of {gardening, xxxvii.316,
321.
— Mr., 'opinion of, on the colour-
ing matter of the red snow, xxi. 231,
232.
— i— ^ xxvi.448 — accoimt of the mur-
der of, at the pass of Irak, 449, 450 ;
xxvii. 216.
— Hamilton, perfidious conduct of,
towards his benefactor, Sir T. Maitland,
xxix. 89.
— — Sir T., extracts from the Hydrio-
taphia of, xxi. 360,361, note — adipodre
known by him, 384, 396 — shrewd con-
jectures of respecting future times, xxvi.
190,191. '^ ^
Master Thomas, xxxix. 50.
xxxii. 86 ; xxxiii. 41 1, 565.
Henry, xxxvi. 157.
Wogan, xxxvi. 69.
Sir Anthony, lands of, on his
heirs-male becoming extinct, xxxviii,
274.
Bruce, xxii. 427, 442 — character of his
travels, 463, 464 — his opinion of the
, identity of the Niger of Soudan and the
Nile of Egypt, 476, 477; xxiv. 518;
xxv. 49 — pronounced the Abiad, a *dead
nmning river,* 50 — remark of, on the
columns sent to Eneland from Lebida,
xxvi. 213— notice of marble and sup-
posed emerald mines at the foot of
Mount Zabarah, xxviii. 64 — despon-
dency in his inquiry as to the source of
theNile, XXX. 116.
xxv. 423 ; xxxi. 473; xxxiii. 549;
xxxvii. 73; remark on reaching the
source of the Nile, 457.
Dr., xxiii. 468.
■ — xxxvii. 50.
Michael, xxxv. 193.
Brucioli, xxxvii. 71.
Brucker, xxi. 282, note,
Bruguer, xxii. 416.
Brumoy, xxiv. 420,
Brunck, xxiiL 492, 495, 498; xxv. 519,
525.
Brun^hault, xxv. 565; xxxiv. 253.
Brunei, M., liberal treatment o^ by the
Britbh government, xxii. 40 — notice of
the saw-mill in Chatham dock-yard, 41-
48 — munificent reward, for his invention
of the block machinery, xxvi. 19, 36 —
sent by English projectors to plan the
laying down of pipes for watering Paris,
XXX. 373.
xxxv. 2.
— Mademoiselle Pelagie, superior des
S^raphines, xxxiii. 379.
Brunelleschi, xxviii. 329— remarks on the
edifices erected by, xxxii. 51, 52.
Brunet, xxL 304, 447.
Bruni, Leonardo, xxi. 488, note.
Bruning, Father, notice by, of the revela-
tions of la Soeur Nativity, xxxiii. 376.
Brunner, Dr., xxii. 25.
Bruno SeideUus, xxi. 107.
Bruuoi, M. de, ridiculous fancy of, xxi. 393.
Brunswick, Duke of, march o^ through
Germany, xxii. 490 — hb brave attack
on Halberstadt, ibid, 491 — defeats a
corps of the Westphalian army, 491-~
successful retreat to England, 492 — his
death, ibid,
Brunton, Mr., xxxii. 32.
labours of, in translating the
New Testament into Turkish, at Kajrass,
xxxv. 382, 383.
Bruton, Dr., xxxiii. 183, 185.
Brutus, xxi. 472; xxii. 402; xxiii. 372;
xxiv. 82; xxvii. 282, 293— remarks on
Mr. Bankes's opinion of his penetration,
298, 299.
xxviii. 106, 107, 502— character of,
as represented by Arnault, xxix. 49, 50.
Bruyere, La^ observations o^ on the me-
diocrists in painting and poetry, xxxv.
185.
Bryan, W., artifices practised upon, by the
revolutionary sect of Avignon, xxviii.
38, 39.
— — the poet, xxxiii. 15.
Biyant, xxiu.411 ; xxviii. 115.
Brydges, Sir Edward, observations of, on
the copyright act, xxi. 196. See Coptf-
right, Part 11.
Sir Egerton, xxxii. 153; xxxvii.
556 ; strictures on the English nobility,
xxxviii. 395, note,
Brydone, xxx. 383.
Brynhilda, xxi. 96.
Buache, xxvi. 519.
Bubb, Captain, an astrologer, notice of,
xxvi. 185.
Buccleugh, Dowager Duchess of, xxii.
96.
Henry, Duke of, xxxvi. 189.
Bucephalus, xxx. 43.
Digitized by
Googk
Revxbw.
INDEX OF NAMBS.
25
Bucer, xxxiii. 163 ; xxxvii. 70, 217.
Buch,Von, xxvi. 356.
Buchau, Dr., advice of to hypochondriacs,
xxvii. 115.
— — xxxiii. 234 ; xxxiv. 311.
Captain, curious fact related by,
XXV. 200.
• xxxiv. 385; xxxvii.
535.
Buchanan, complimentary epigram on
Budaeus, xxii. 313.
■ ■ xxvi. 246.
' Mr., xxvi. 524 ; xxxiii. 44.
I Dr. F., remarks of, respecting
the inhabitants of the east of Asia,
xxviii. 1 16.
■ James, Sketches of the History,
&c., of the North American Indians,
xxxi. 76, See Indicms, Part II.
Buck, xxi. 403, note.
Sir William, xxxix. 128, note,
Buckeridge, Bishop, xxiii. 301.
Buckhurst, Lord, xxxiii. 307.
Buckingham, Duke of, xxvi. 146 ; xxvii.
345 ; xxix. 188 ; xxx. 511 ; xxxiii. 307 ;
xxxiv. 74, 351, 521 ; xxxvi. 530.
Duchess 0^ xxiii. 422 ; xxx.
543.
■ Lord, xxiii. 372.
J. S., Travels in Palestine,
&c., reviewed, xxvi. 374 — ^rhetorical flou-
rishes, ibid. — mistakes in names and
places, 375-377, 384, 386, 388, 390—
scripture miracle on the lake of Tiberias,
378 — fort of Caesarea, 380 — Arabic
scholarship, ibid. — the Druses, 381 —
amour with the Abyssinian lady, 381,
382 — the mercantile house and Mr.
Bankes, 382, notey 383, notCy 387, note
— joiurney beyond Jordan, 383 — Fella,
t6i</.— Geraza, 384— vignette, 384, 385
— circus, 385 — ^temples at Jerash, 386
— Hecatompedon theatre, ibid. — ruins
of Oomkais, 388 — tombs and bath of
Gadara, 389 — ^his plates and map, 384,
390,391.
letters of, taken from the Cal-
cutta Journal, xxii 445, note — pro-
gress and end of the Calcutta Journal,
XXXV. 63— cause of the additional re-
straint laid on the press in India, ibid.
Buckland, Professor, account of the geo-
logical structure of the Soudah moun-
tams, XXV. 30 — and of Tripoli and
Fezzan, 36, 37.
— :— on Antediluvian Fossil Bones,
xxvii. 459 — plan of his paper, 461, 462
—description and classification of some
antediluvian remains discovered in the
cave of Kirkdale, 464-466.
■ Rehquiae Diluvianae, reviewed.
xxix. 138 — importance of his geological
lectures, 146 — notice of his distribution
of the proofs of the deluge, 147— ^r»/,
account of the appearances of caves and
fissures of rocks, containing fossilized
remains of animals, 147-149 — secondly y
evidences of the deluge derived from
diluvial beds of loam and gravel, con-
taining animal remains, 152-156 —
thirdly, the evidence derived from vallies
of denudation, 156 — the Mosaic ac-
count of the deluge, 161, 162.
Buckland, Professor, xxxiv. 166, 517 — ^re-
marks on certain fossil oviparous quadru-
peds, 523 — ^mammiferous quadruped in
an ancient secondary rock, 529 — ^paper
on the south-western coal district of Eng-
land, 533 — attraction and effects of his
geological lectures at Oxford, xxxvi.
263 — on the bones discovered in the
valley of the Couse, 462 — on the fresh
water formation of Auvergne, ibid. —
gravel-beds of the upper Val d' Arno to
what age referred, 463, note,
Bucklaw, xxvi. 121, 147.
Buckley, xxxix. 111.
Buckthome, character of Mr. Irving' s tale
of, xxxi. 483, 486.
Bucbeus, notice of the Commentarii Graecso
Linguae of, xxii. 312, 313.
Buddh, xxi. 464.
Buddha, xxi. 106.
Buffon, XXV. 125; xxvi. 230; xxvii. 167,
459.
Buhle, xxvi. 475.
Buisson, xxvi. 407.
Bull, Bishop, XXV. 349 — opinions of, on
the obedience required by the Mosaic
law, xxx. 87, note — character of, xxxviii.
305.
xxxii. 453, 456, 493; xxxix. 307.
Mrs. xxiv. 501.
BuUein, xxxii. 1 63.
BuUen, Anna, xxii. 367.
Commodore, xxxiv. 588, 589-
letter on the atrocities committed in the
slave-trade, 591, 600.
BuUinger, xxxvii. 73.
Bulow's, General, System of Tactics, no-
tice of, xxii. 384.
Btilow, Von, xxxi. 337.
Bunbury, Sir C, xxx. 427.
Bunce, xxvi. 468.
Bungay, xxix. 440, 468.
Bunyan, John, where buried, xxi. 381 —
imitated by Huntington, S. S., xxiv.
496 — maps which Bunyan should have
designed for his Pil^im's Progress and
his Holy War, xxviii. 1— horrors of his
picture of madness in his * Grace
Abounding,' xxx. 191, note — account
of his havmg been tempted by the devil
to sell his Saviour, xxxi. 40, 41.
Buonaparte, Jbrome, appointed King of
Westphalia, xxii. 483— extent of his
Digitized by
Googk
26
PART I.<-INDEX OF NAMES.
QUABTBRLT
dominions, 482 — his childish amuse-
ments, 484 — anecdotes of his court, fa-
vourites, and government, 484-487 —
character of his army, 489 — dissolution
of his kingdom, 492.
Buonaparte, Jerome, anecdote o^ xxxi.
187.
-^— Joseph, xxviii. 556 — made
King of Spain, xxix. 70; xxx. 171.
Louis, xxviii. 335.
— — — ^ LuciEN, remark o^ on the
French jacobins, xxviii. 505.
Buonaparte, Napoleon, person of, de
scribed, xxi. 90 — sends an expedition
to St. Domingo, under General Le Clerc,
444 — ^proclaims himself Consul for life,
492, 493.
■ xxii. 35, 119, note
— Mr. Hazlitt's idol, 160 — Greek verses
on his marriage with Louisa, and trans-
lation, 339, note — men in his hands
mere machines, 381 — accoimt of his
creation of the kingdom and court of
Westphaha, 482-487— and of its down-
fall, 492 — ^remark of Madame de Stael
on his policy, 555.
xxiii. 83 — absurd
story of Count Forbin, of the panegyrics
lavished on his army by the people of
St. ^ Jean d'Acre, 88-90 — invasion of
France from Elba falsely stated to be
connived at by the English, 194, 446 —
effect of his decrees upon the Hans
Towns, 449, 451.
represented by Fos-
colo, in his tragedy of Ajace, m the
character of Agamemnon, xxiv. 90 —
salutary effect, upon French manufac-
tures, of his reslarictive decrees, 295 —
notice of some Greek verses on his mar-
riage with Maria Louisa, 394, note —
prophecy of Huntington concerning
him, 504 — ^wanton barbarity of his sol-
diers, xxv. 125, J 56.
xxviii. 1 — his fall
fatal to the Whigs, 210— conduct of
Sir Hudson Lowe towards him, vindi-
cated, 228-238 — remarks on Buona-
parte's observations on him, 247— on
Sir G. Cockbum, 248, 249— on the
Duke of Wellington, 250 — on Lord
Londonderry, 25 0-25 2-— frauds of Buo-
naparte relative to his birth ahd family,
263, 254 — his instructions to Talley-
rand, when Chief Consul, 255 — exag-
gerated accounts of his ailments, 261 —
and of the disease of which he died,
262 — real cause of his death, 262,
263.
perfidious measures
of, to obtain possession of Portugal,
xxix. 55, 56 — sends an army into Spain,
CO — gets the Spanish royal family into
his custody in France, 65-67 — intrudes
Joseph Buonaparte into the throne of
Spain, 70 — difficult situation of the
French in Catalonia, 73— compelled to
raise the sieges of Valencia and Zara-
goza, 74-77 — surrender of the French
army under General Dupont, 78— de-
feat of that under Junot, in Portugal,
80-82 — convention of Junot with Sir
Arthur Wellesley for the evacuation of
Portugal, 82-83 — refutation of Savary's
attempt to exculpate Buonaparte from
the charge of murdering the Due d'En-
ghien, 567-572 — examination of the
mock trial, 572-580 — disbeUef of his
army in his abdication, xxx. 78 — ^versa^
tility of the Parisians in their clamorous
applause of Napoleon and Louis XVIII .,
443.
Buonaparte, Napoleon, anecdote of, xxxi.
1 8 6— attempted to encourage the French
manuTactures, by prohibiting the im-
portation of English goods, 394.
furst indication of
illness in, xxxiii. 1 77 — treatment of his
case by Mr. O'Meara, 177-179— Dr.
Antommarchi appointed his physician,
179 — abstract of his treatment of Buo-
naparte, with remarks, 181, 182 — ob-
servations on the dissection of Buona-
parte, 183 — the disease which proved
ratal to him, a cancerous ulcer of the
stomach, 185, 424 — anecdote of, xxxv.
161 — despondency in the hut of a
weaver, in the retreat out of Russia, 367
— description of, xxxvi. 79, 80 — his
failure with respect to the Jews, xxxviii.
129, note — ^his overthrow, 174.
-xxi. 391,393,442;
xxiiL 462, 589; xxv. 83, 91, 93 ; xxvi.
1, 10, 11, 407, 445 ; xxvii. 38, 146; xxx.
481; xxxii. 396; xxxiv. 426, 471, 472;
xxxvi. 77, 388 ; xxxviii. 231, 449.
Burbadge, xxxiv. 202.
BurcheU, W. J., Hints on Emigration to
the Cape of Good Hope, reviewed, xxii.
203. See Cape of Good Hope, Part II.
Burckhardt, best lunar tables due to, xxii.
144, 292.
J. L., Travels in Nubia, reviewed.
xxii. 437 — biographical notice of him,
437, 438 — comparison of him with
Humboldt, 438— engages in the service
of the African Association, 439— em-
barks for and anives in Syria, ibid. —
notice of his excursions in Syria, 440 —
arrives in Egypt, ibid. — description of
the Valley of Ghor or Araba, 441 —
notice of his travels in Egypt, 442 —
and of his visit to Mecca, 443 — his sub-
sequent travels in Egypt, 444 — death
and character of Mr. Burckhardt, 444,
445 — analysis of his journey into Nu*
Digitized by
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RjSTUS#.
INDEX OP NAMES.
27
bia,446— dhoTinfabifeadofthe Nubians,'
how made, 446, 447 — progress of Mr.
Burckhardt into Nubia, 447 — massacre
of the Mamelukes, 448 — arrival at Derr,
ibid. — obtains permission to travel to
the second cataract of the Nile, 449 —
arrival at Mahass, 450 — notice of the
colossal remains at Ebsambul, 453-456
— wanton despotism of a Nubian kashef ,
457 — economy of Mr. Burckhardt's
travelling, 4d8 — account of his suf-
fering in his journey from Nubia, across
the desert to £astem Africa, 464, 465
— appearance of the Serab or, Mirage,
465 — arrival at Berber, AGi^ — appear-
ance of that place, and character of
the inhabitants, 467, 468 — arrival at
Damer, 470 — account of its schools and
inhabitants, ibid. — arrival at Shendy,
471— character of the inhabitants, ibid.
— preparations for a pilgrimage to
Mecca, 473 — character of the conductor
of the caravan, 473, 474 — notice of the
district of Taka and its inhabitants,
474, 475 — Mr. Burckhardt's opinion of
the identity of the Nile of Soudan and
the Nile of Egypt, A7^ — objections to
this opinion, 477-4S\.
Burckhardt, xxiii. 151, no/e, 226 — opinioB
of, as to the correctness of Adams's
information relating to the town of
Timbuctoo, 231 — origin of the name
Bomou, 232, note — reason why the
country eastward of Timbuctoo is not
so well known by Moorish traders as
the rest of Central Africa, 234 ; xxxiii.
524.
— — honourable testimony o^ to
the character of Mr. Belzoni, xxiv. 142
— Belzoni's testimony to his character,
145.
— — .— honourable testimony to his
memory, xxvii. 221 — female slave
thrown into the Tiady on its overflow,
xxix. 512.
■ xxiv. 316, note; xxv. 44, 49 :
xxvi. 387, note; xxvii. 217.
J. R., xxii. 438.
Burdett, Sir F., xxi. 159, note; xxii. 264,
521, no/e; xxiii. 194, note; xxv. 92
xxviii. 205, 253 ; xxxv. 601, 603 ; xxxvi
557 ; xxxviii. 549.
Burges, Sir J. B., Reasons in Favour of a
New Translation of the Bible, xxiii.
287 — his abuse of the Quarterly Re-
view, 289 — specimens of his ignorance
and unfairness, 289, 291 — ^refutation of
his assertion, that Jerome executed his
Latin version of the Old Testament
from the Greek and not from the He-
brew, 293, 294 — wilfiil blunder respect-
ing the authorized translators of the
Bible, 303, note, 305^ 306, 307— eiuir-
mination of his misrepresentations con-
cerning the Quarterly Review, 318-324
— his plagiarism, 321.
Burgess, Bishop, Vindication of 1 John
v. 7, from the objections of M. Grie*-
bach, reviewed, xxvi. 324 — abstract of
his refutAtion of Griesbach*s judgment
against the genuineness of the disputed
clause, 325 — remarks thereon, 326 —
summary view of the iniemal testimony
for the genuineness of this clause, 329
331 — and of the external testimony,
331 — hints to future vindicators of this
clause, 340, 341.
notice of his controversy
about the ^olic digamma, xxvii. 41 ;
tribute to his character, xxviii. 181 —
Locke ashamed of his faith evidenced
by the bishop's quotations, xxx.8 4.
Vindication of 1 John
V. 7, from the objections of Griesbach,
Second Edition, with a Preface, in Re-
ply to the Quarterly Review, xxxiii. 64
— ^remarks on the principal alterations
in the Vindication, 69-71 — and on his
Preface, 71— proof that WalafiidStrabo
did not understand Greek, 71, 72 — ^rea-
sons for thinking that he was not the
author of the Commentaries on the Pro-
logue to the Canonical Epistles, 72, 73
— ^nor of the Glossa OrAnaria, which
bears his name, 73, 74 — ^the Prologue
to the Canonical Epistles, evidence as to
Latin MSS., but not as to Greek, 74
— the original sources of all our know-
ledge of the Greek Testament examined,
75, 77 — Erasmus thef first editor of the
Greek Testament, 77 — why he omitted
the disputed clause, 77, 78 — which was
also omitted by Luther, 78 — ^the bishop's
reason for investing the ^atin version
and the Latin feithers with ai. authority
from which there is no appeal, 79 — ex-
amination of them, 79, 80-83 — the pro-
bable introduction of the disputed clause
into the confession of the African bi-
shops accounted for, 83, 84 — and also
its gradual reception into the sacred
text, 85 — ^the verse not quoted by Eu-
cherius, 86 — suspicious circumstances
attached to the supposed quotation of it,
by Fulgentius,87— feeble arguments from
the Greek fathers, in defence of the verse,
87— -examination of the internal evidence
for the verse, 88 — ^it is not necessary to
the context, 88 — ^the grammatical diffi-
culties of constniction not removed by its
introduction, 89, 90 — ^remarks on Mr.
Porson's rejection of this verse, 91-93 —
and on the circumstances that led him
to appear in this controversy, 98-— exa-
mination of the testimonies of Selden
and Bishop Peaison, quoted by Bishop
Digitized by
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PART I.— INDEX OF NABIES.
QUAftTBRLT
Burgess, 94, 95— renewal of the contro-
versy in 1715, between Evelyn, and
Martin, and Calaray, 96 — and between
Mace and Twells in 1729, 97.
Burgess, Bishop, Letter of the Clergy of
the Diocese of St. David's, xxxvi. 64 —
remarks on his conjecture, that the dis-
puted verse was quoted by Constantine,
100 — on its supposed existence in a
MS. in Lincoln college, 100, 101 — and
on the supposed quotation of it in the
Symbolum Antiochenum, 101, 102.
, xxi. 174; xxii. 322 j xxv. 296.
xxxiii. 309.
Captain, statue of, xxxiv. 126.
Burgh, Lord Chief Baron, xxiiL 518.
Burghley, xxxviii. 396,
Bur^^dy, Duke of, xxiii. 12.
Burigny, J. de, xxv. 507.
Burita, Countess, brave and noble conduct
of, xxix. 76.
Burke, Edmund, his opinion with regard
to the French revolution, changed,
xxviii. 272 — ^vindication of his character,
314 — * tun of ancient pomp* in the
time of Louis XIV., xxix. 41 — ^his re-
mark on the value of bank-notes, xxxi.
142 ; imperial right of the British par-
liament to control the colonial legisla-
tures, xxxiii. 507, 508.
■ I — high station attained
by him as a parliamentary leader,
xxxiv. 457 — importance of the period
during which he lived, 458 — inveteracy
of the attacks on his memory, 461 —
character of his political enemies, 461,
462— early parliamentary career of Mr.
Burke, 463 — remarks on his conduct
during the American war, 464 — ^pro-
cures the publication of debates and
proceedings in parliament, 465 — his
disinterested exertions in behalf of Ire-
land, 465, 466 — reform in public ac-
counts procured by him, 467 — ^wisdom
of his suggestions in behalf of ne^o-
slaves, ibid. 466 — his conduct during
the trial of Mr. Hastings, 460— in-
tegrity of his subsequent political con-
duct, 470 — vindication of his conduct
and sentiments respecting the French
revolution, 471-474 — vindicated from
the charge of venahty, 474 — and of poli-
tical treachery, 475, 476 — his influence
both as an orator and as a writer, ex-
amined, 476-480 — value and importance
of his political writings, 480, 481 —
their moral tendency, 482 — vindication
of his writings from the charge of ex-
aggeration, 482-485 — his estimable pri-
vate character, 486,487 — remark on the
law of primogeniture, 567 — story told by,
xxxvii. 191 — his remark on war, xxxviii.
175^K)n ab8tra(;t principles, 555.
Burke, Edmund, xxii. 160, 161, 483, 526 ;
xxiii. 540 ; xxv. 67 ; xxvi. 374 ; xxvii.
279, 282, 310, 404; xxviu. 207; xxix.
284, 420 ; xxxiii. 572, 573 ; xxxv. 306,
417, 571, 582; xxxvi. 42; xxxvii. 476,
note; xxxviii. 175, 549; zxxiz. 269,
300, 485, 507.
Burke, Ridiard, xxxvi. 67.
Burleigh, Lord. See Cecii,
xxv. 175, and note; xxix.
565; xxxiii. 29, 32, 564; xxxvii. 221,
239.
Burley, xxiii. 211.
Burlington, Lord, xxvi. 428 ; xxxii. 280.
Burmann, though scurrilous, yet amusing,
xxiv. 380.
Bum, Dr., xxviii. 362.
Bumaby, xxx. 15.
Burnet, Bishop, xxii. 95, 534, note; xxiii.
30, 305 — want of church accommoda-
tion in his time, 553 — state of the na-
tion in the midst of Marlborough's
glorious career, 563, note,
remarkable instance of
teaching a deaf and dumb child, re-
corded by, xxvi. 399, 400 ; xxvii 386—
confession of the Earl of Rochester to,
xxviii. 524.
' History of his own
Times, with notes, reviewed, xxix. 165
— specimens of Dean Swift's, on Bur-
net, 166, 168 — character of Lord Dart-
mouth's notes, 168, 169 — remark
of Cunningham on Burnet, 169 — ju-
dicious strictures on the History oy
the Rev. Dr. Routh, 170-172— reflec-
tion on the disgraceful events subse-
quent to the restoration of Charles II.,
172-174 — Lord Clarendon's observa-
tions on the indemnity act, 176, 177 —
why Charles II. was favourable to
popery, 183, 184 — intrigues for dissolv-
ing the marriage of James II. with his
wife, 190-193 — negociations for marry-
ing Charles II. to the Princess of Por-
tugal, 194-196— credulity of the nation
with regard to Oates's plot, 199,200—
eflects of the profligacy of Charles II.
and his court on the literature of Eng-
land, 206-209 — character of Bishop
Biumet as a preacher, 210, 211.
— — — his remarks on Prior,
xxxi. 287 — account of the revenues of
the monasteries, xxxiii. 24, 25.
xxx. 81, 545; xxxii. 368,
469; xxxiii. 19 ; xxxiv. 200, 347 ; xxxvi.
534; xxxvii. 211, 221 ; xxxviu. 315.
Mrs., xxiii. 29.
Burnett, Dr., the fever which prevailed in
the Pyramus ship of war, not caused
by coal-tar, nor the effect of contagion,
xxx. 221, 222.
Bumey, Admiral, notice of his i>pinion|
Digitized by
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Review.
INDEX OF NAMES.
29
that Behring*s strait is a deep bay,
xxi. 226.
Bumey, Admiral, xxvi. 516 ; xxviii. 406 ;
xxxvii. 538.
Captain, xxi. 261 ; xxv. 213.
Dr., xxii. 308; xxv. 512, 531 ;
xxxvui. 19, note; xxxix. 297.
Mbs, xxxiv. 361.
Burton, death of, in the cause of Protes-
tantism, xxix. 255.
xxxviii. 328 ; xxxix. 270, 390.
Bums, xxi. 122, notice of, and comparison
with Clare, xxiii. 173 — comparison be-
tween and Cowper, xxxii. 217, 218 —
cited, 295 — ^where his muse found him,
xxxiv. 131~remarks on, xxxviii. 374,
note,
Buiridge, John, the Naval Dry Rot, re-
viewed, xxx. 216 — his ignorant and con-
tradictory statements exposed, 218, 219
— his nostrum for curing the dry rot,
223,224.
Burroughs, xxiv. 314.
Burrows, Dr., Inquiries relative to Insanity,
xxiv. 169 — errors of the ancients on this
subject exposed, ibid. 170 — importance
of limiting researches into the connec-
tion between organization and intellect,
172, and between mental aberration and
bodily ailment, ibid. — arguments to
show that recoveries from insanity would
exceed those from corporeal diseases,
were the same chances of cure given in
both cases, 173-176 — comparative view
of the cures of cases of insanity, in dif-
ferent institutions for lunatics, 194 —
proofs that insanity is not increasing,
nor extraordinarily prevalent in Eng-
land, 176-183 — discussion, illustrated
with cases, on the question, how far
religion is a cause or an effect of insa-
nity, 184-189— observations on legisla-
tive interference, 190— on the quahfica-
tions of superintendents and keepers,
ibid. 191 — defects of the statute 59th
Greo. III. cap. 127, respecting pauper
lunatics, 192 — suggestions for the proper
management of lunatics, 192, 193 —
expediency of instituting a fresh inquiry
into the present condition of lunatic
asylums, 193.
Burt, Mr., xxxv. 816, note.
Burton, Dr., advice of, to Wesley, xxiv.
15, 17.
Rev. E., Description of the Anti-
quities, &c. of Rome, reviewed, xxviii.
315 — ^remarks on his account of aque-
ducts, 320 — ^population and extent of
ancient and modern Rome, 321, 322 —
strictures on the author's account of the
Via Sacra, 323 — and of the topography
of the Capitol, 324, 325 — notice of the
Circus and Flavian amphitheatre, 325-
328 — sepulchral inscription, 328 — the
architecture of St. Peter's Church, 329
— influence of the senses on religion, 33 1 .
Bury, Rich. Bishop, account of, xxxix.
371.
Bushell's case, xxxvi. 525.
Bushman, Mr., xxi. 244 ; xxx. 250.
Butcher, Tom, xxi. 91.
Bute, Lord, xxv. 397, 400; xxvi. 430;
xxvii. 182; xxxvi. 187, 188.
Butler, Bishop, curious cause of the exalta-
tion of, xxvii. 186, note — observations
on superstition, xxviii. 525, 526 — cha-
racter of his writings, 302 — character
of, xxxviii. 307, 327.
xxix. 165 ; xxxiv. 539.
Dr. Parr an imitator of, xxxix.
292 — ^his character and talents, 402 —
that he died in the communion of the
church of Rome proved to be slanderous,
405.
- Mr. C, observations of, on the sect
of * Convulsionnaires,' xxviii. 34.
The Book of the Roman
Catholic Church, xxxiii. 1 — character
of it, 4, 5 (see Reformation, Part II.)
his denial that Dominic took an active
part in establishing the Inquisition, re-
futed by facts, 157.
Reply to the article in the
Quarterly Review, on the Revelations
of La SoBur Nativite, xxxvi. 305 — re-
marks on Mr. Butler's love of contro-
versy, ibid.-- on his statement of the
opinions of foreign divines concerning
those revelations, 306, 308, and of the
opinions of English divines on the same
subject, 308-310 — refutation of his
charge of impiety agaiust the Quarterly
Review, 311 — of his recrimination, 312
— and of his appeal to all gentlemen,
312-316.
xxxiii. 144, 157 ; xxxv. 92;
xxxviii. 570.
Captain, ill-treatment of, by some
Arab guides, xxii. 440, note — extract of
a letter from him, giving an account of
the same, xxiii. 279, 280.
V. Forbes, notice of the case of,
xxv. 241, 242, 263, 264.
• Archdeacon, xxv. 512,520; xxx.
474.
xxvi. 117, 119— observation o
the examination of, in the Heart of Mid
Lothian, xxvii. 341.
xxxii. 158.
Alban, xxxvi. 324 — ^his extrava-
gant eulogy of Boudon, 326, note.
• Samuel, his character of a traveller,
xxxviii. 166.
— the poet, xxxiii. 303; xxxv. 189;
xxi. 493 ; xxii. 161 ; xxviii. 140.
— - V. Freeman, xxxix. 189.
Digitized by
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30
PART L^INDEX OF NAMES.
QVAJ^TEMVT
Butler, Dr., preaches Dr. ParrU fiineral
sermon, xxxix. 298.
Button, Sir Thomas, notice of the voyage
of discovery of, xxx. 232.
Buxton, Mr. F., fallacy of the ground of
his opinion of the public sentiment re-
specting the undue severity of the cri-
minal law, xxiv. 211, 218, 237, 254, 256.
xxix. 413, declaration o^ on the
gradual abolition of slavery, 482.
Inquiiy into our present system of
Prison Discipline, reviewed, xxx. 404 —
resolution proposed by Mr. Buxton in
the House of CommoBS for the abolition
of slavery, 560.
observations oi^ on the gradual
aboUtion of slavery, xxxii. 527,
speeches on slavery, remark* on,
xxxiii. 496, 497.
• xxxiv. 1 05,
Buxtorf, xxiii. 300 ; xxvii. 19, note ; xxriii.
186; XXXV. 91.
Bylot and Baffin, notice of the voyages of
discovery of, xxx. 232.
Master Robert, xxi. 234.
Byng, Regius Professor of Hebrew, xxiii.
303.
Admhal, xxv. 405, 407 — remarks
on his sentence, xxvi. 22, 23 — Walpole's
account of his execution examined and
refuted, xxvii. 207-214.
Byrhtric, xxxvii. 487.
BjTon, Lord, testimony of, in favour of Ali
Pasha, xxiii. 128 — character of the
Greeks, 340 — anecdote of what passed
between him and Mr. Bowles, 425.
. Dramas of, reviewed, xxvii.
476 — his attack on the British drama
for the neglect of the unities, refuted,
479-483 — total failure of his ' Marino
Faliero,' 487 — analysis of his ' Sarda-
napalus,' with extracts and remarks,
497-504, and of his * Two Foscari,'
505-508 — his ' Gain * improperly called
a ' mystery,' 508, 509 — analysis of it,
with remarks on its tendency, and on
his attack upon the writings of Moses^
509-524 ; his works have spread the
taste for romantic literature, xxix. 437.
Byron, Lord, Letter to John Murray, £sq.,
on the Rev. W. L. Bowles's Strictures
on the Life and Writings of Pope, re-
viewed, xxxii. 271 — his censure of Mr.
Bowles, 277, 278.
account of Sheridan, xxxiiL
582 — conduct o^ in Greece, xxxv. 229-
231 — reproof to Moore, xxxvi. 582.
— - his first acquaintance with
Mr. Lei^h Hunt, xxxvii. 411 — his dis-
satisfaction with him during his subse-
quent intercovurse, accounted for, 412,
413 — his parting letter to Mr. Hunt^
though suppressed by the latter, still in
being, 4 1 5-— his habit of quizzing and
mystifving ascribed to his associating
with that gentleman, 416 — his strictures
on Keats the poet, 418 — ^his concern in
the journal entitled the Liberal, 419 —
his opinion of the literary productions of
Barry Cornwall, ibid. — considers Pope
as greatly superior to any of the poets
of the present day, 420 — his religion,
421 — applies to himself some of the
epitaphs at Ferrara, 426. See also Hunt
his aversion to angling, xxxviii.
504.
xxi. 366 J xxiii. 125 j xxiv. 74,
101 ; xxvi. 105, 435 ; xxvii. 123; xxxiv.
136, 429; xxxv. 185.
Lady, mistress to Charles II„ xxxiii.
291.
Greorge, Lord, excellent hints given
by, to the national council of Owhyhee,
xxxv. 437 — his departure thence, ibid,
438.
t^ABANis, xxviii. 300 ; xxix. 474.
Cabanos, Colonel, xxxviii. 460.
Cabbell, xxi. 403, note.
Cabillo, xxix. 425.
Caboche, xxv. 554.
Cabota, xxx. 232.
Cabral, xxvii. 10; xxix. 57.
Cabrera, G. D. L. de, Cordoba founded by,
xxvi. 282.
— ^ ■ medecine given to
Carlos, xxix. 371.
Cabreiio, Giraldo de, xxii. 363, note,
Cachin, M., xxvi. 37.
Cacus, joti. 137 j xxvi 106.
Cadamosto, method of trading among the
Arabs, mentioned by, xxv. 44.
Cade, Jack, xxii. 164; xxxi. 496; xxxiv.
181.
Cadeau, Nicolas, xxxiv. 62, 75.
Cadell, Mr., xxviii. 182.
Cadmus, introduction of the alphabet into
Greece ascribed to, xxvi. 41.
xxi. 286; xxvi. 1; xxviii. 414;
xxix. 304,
Cadogan, General, xxiii. 56.
Cadwallader, xxv. 280.
Caernarvon, Lord, xxxiii. 301.
Csesar, force at the battle of Pharsalia,
Digitized by
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Review.
INDEX OF NABOSS.
31
xxii. 382, 383^Roman order of march,
as described by, xxv. 71, 72 — literary
reputation of, xxvii. 45 — altered the po-
sition of the rostra, xxviii. 318 — mode
of drinking his health, xxxii. 244.
Caesar, xxi. 191, 373, 500 j xxii. 339, note;
xxiii. 146, 204, 278; xxiv. 73, 532;
xxv. 283 ; xxvi. 389 ; xxvii. 54, 279, 283 ;
xxix. 33, 284 ; xxx. 13; xxxii. 76, 365 ;
xxxiv. 180, 255 ; xxxvi. 54, 175 407,
466;xxxvii. 197.
Autocrator, xxviii. 192,
a negro boy, shocking treatment
of, at Kentucky, xxi. 154.
Caesars, Greek inscription relating to the,
found in the temple at Philae, xxii. 455.
xxvi. 190 ; xxvii, 322.
Cafarelli, xxi. 447.
Cagliostro, xxviii. 276.
Cagnola, Marchese, remarks on his style
of architecture, xxxii. 57.
Cailhava, xxix. 27.
Caillaud, pretended discovery of the ancient
Berenice, xxiii. 94,95 — ^Voyage ^ T Oasis
de Thebes, reviewed, xxviii. 59.
xxiv. 167 ; xxvii. 231, 238.
Cain, xxii. 13 ; xxvii. 509-524 ; xxix.
51. See Byron.
Caio Graccho, a tragedy, by Monti, notice
of, xxiv. 86.
Caius, Dr., xxxix. 127.
Calamis, xxii. 194.
Calamy, xxviii. 25, note; xinriii. 96.
Calas, xxvii. 155.
Calchas, xxv. 513.
Calcott, xxxvii. 407 ; xxxviii. 378.
Calcutta, Bishop of, xxv. 452.
Caldcleugh, Alexander, Travels in South
America, xxxii. 125 — character of his
work, 126. See America, Part II.
Mr., xxxii. 35 ; xxxv. 115.
Calder, Sir Robert, remarks on the censure
of, xxvi. 22, 23.
xxxvii. 398.
Calderara, Ottone, remarks on his style of
architecture, xxxii. 57.
Calderon, the Spanish dramatic poet, xxii.
359 — character of the dramas of, xxiii.
475 — general character of, xxv. 12-14 —
strictures on his plays founded on com-
mon life, 15-1 7 — on his historical dram as,
17-19 — on his mythological and classical
plays, 19 — and on his religious plays, 21
— ^particularly his 'Devocion de la Cruz,*
21, 22 — estimate of his comic genius, 22
— and of his tragic powers, 23, 24.
quotation from one of his plays,
xxxi. 290.
xxix. 40, 425 ; xxxiv. 148, 354.
Caleb, xxvi. 121— character of, 123.
Caled, xxxv. 177.
Calhoun, Hon.' J. C, xxix. 1.
Caliban, sd. 497 5 xxiii. 479; xxviii. 552.
Caligula, xxiii. 192, 196.
Calila, xxi. 99.
Calisto and Meliboea, story 0^ xxix. 424.
Cahxtus II., Pope, xxi. 510.
Calla, M., xxxi. 407.
Calleja, xxx. 174 — appointed viceroy of
Mexico, 176.
Callender, Colonel, xxix. 99.
Calleas, anecdote of, xxiv. 444, note,
xxvi. 256 ; xxix. 323.
Callicles, xxi. 284.
Callicrates, xxxii. 45.
Calliergi, xxii. 307.
Callimachus, xxii. 307 ; xxiii. 149 ; xxiv.
398 ; xxvii. 43 ; xxxii. 159— hymns of
xxxviii. 18.
Callippus, xxvi. 260, note,
Callisthenes, xxv. 166.
Callisto, nicknamed * the Sow,' xxii. 199.
Callistratus, xxi. 308, note,
Callithea, xxiii. 153.
Callot, M., xxiii. 155.
Callots, xxiv. 3^51.
Calmet, xxii. 68, 70, note; 101, note,
Calonice, xxii. 182-185.
Calonne, M., financial measures of, xxvii.
165, 166 ; xxviii. 276.
Calovius, xxx. 95,
Calprenade, xxxviii. 442,
Calpurnius, xxvL 385, note,
Calthorpe, Lord, xxx. 276, 583.
Calvert, Dr., xxvii. 548.
notice of his account of the
plague at Malta, xxxiii. 228.
Calvin, opinions of, mote prevalent in
France than those of Luther, xxv. 559,
560 — his followers ill calculated to
make converts to Christianity, xxxiii.
42.
— — ^ xxiii. 571, 573; xxiv. 636; xxviii.
19, 149, 330; xxxiii. 139, 141, 164;
xxxvii. 196, 217.
Camara, Fr. L. G. de, xxvii. 11.
Cambis, Madame de, xxxiv. 423.
Cambray, M., exaggerated account of some
Celtic remains at Camac, xxv. 138.
Cambyses, xxii. 276,454; xxiv. 76; xxviii.
196; xxx. 548.
Camden, Lord, opinion of, on the law of
copyright, xxi. 211 — comparison of the
number of controverted appeals deter-
mined in the House of Lords by, with
those determined by Lord Eldon, xxx.
286 — ^vehement language of, xxxvi. 529
—declaration of, on the discretion of
judges, xxxvi. 529.
xxiii. 372; xxiv. 404 ; xxxiii.
29 ; xxxiv. 69.
Camelford, Lord, xxxix. 482.
Cameniates, John, xxiii. 140.
Camerarius, Joachim, notice of his Greek
and Latin Commentaries, xxii. 313,
314.
Digitized by
Googk
32
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTBRLT
Cameron, Mrs^ xxxvi. 415, note,
Camilla, xxi. 475.
Camillus, defeat of the Gauls by, xxxii.
71 — ^introduced iron and steel helmets,
83.
Camoens, Luis de, Memoirs of the Life
and Writings of, xxvii. 1 — his birth
and education, 1, 2 — ^is banished firom
the court of Portugal, and embarks for
India, 2, 3 — is exiled firom Goa, for satir-
ising the governor, 4, 5— completes his
* Lusiad,' 7 — ^various misfortunes, 8-1 —
returns to Europe, and publishes his
* Lusiad,' 10, 1 1-dies in extreme poverty,
12— «pitaph on him, 13 — account of his
editor and commentator, Manoel de Faria
e Sousa, 14-19; remarks on the ma-
chinery of the ' Lusiad,' 19-26 — notice
of its translations, particularly that of
Sir Richard Fanshaw, 26-29— and of
Mickle, 29-32.
xxi. 502 ; xxiv. 133 ; xxxi. 386.
S. V. de, father of Luis de
Camoens, notice of, xxvii. 1.
V. P. de, notice of, xxvii. 1.
Campan, Madame, Memoirs of Marie An-
toinette, reviewed, xxviii. 449 — vindica-
tion of, firom the falsehoods of O'Meara,
256-258, 449-452— and from the charge
of treachery to the Queen of France,
455 — character of Louis XVI. by his
queen, 456, 457— faction against the
queen, 458— -insult of the king, by the
National Assembly, 461 — ^vindication of
Mr. Pitt from the charge of fomenting
the disturbances in France, 461-463.
Campasp^, xxii. 195.
Campbell, Thomas, xxiii. 425 — Letter to,
on the Poetical Character of Pope, 400-
409 — observation of, on the natiure of
Cowper's works, xxiv. 535 ; xxv. 2, note;
XXX. 535.
Theodric, a tale, xxxi.
342 — ^high character of his former poeti-
cal productions, 343 — sketch of the
fable of his poem, 344 — specimens of
it, with remarks on its feebleness, 345-
347 — character of his fugitive pieces,
348.
- Letter to Mr. Brougham
on a London University, xxxiii. 257-
character and design of his pamphlet,
259, 260— -abstract of his plan, 260-270
— remarks on the absence of religious
instruction in it, 271, 272.
-— a disputant on the
natvure of poetry, xxxii. 290 — Gertrude
of Wyoming, its effects when translated
by Dr. Pichot, 342 — specimen of the
Doctor's rendering, 352 — opinion of
Lord Byron, xxxvii. 420 — verses from
his poem on revisiting the Clyde, 431,
note — in what sense to be thanked with
reference to the institution of King-'s
College, xxxix. 135; xxv. 2, note; xxvi.
110; XXX. 535.
Campbell, a volunteer in Sir John Cope's
army, xxxvi. 179.
of Glenlyon, xxxvii. 257.
Augustus, Appeal on behalf of
the Church of England, reviewed, xxix.
524. See Oer^y, Part II.
Captain, xxxix. 168, note, «
Colonel, xxxix. 168, note.
Dr., xxi. 180.
' Dr. Drummond, death of, xxvi.
450.
• General Fletcher, xxxvi. 200.
General Sir J., xxiii. 116, 117-
calunmies against, xxix. 87.
' Mungo,xxv. 153.
— — — Rev. J., xxv. 466— Travels in
South Africa, reviewed, xxvii. 364 —
account of the mission among the
Bootshuanas, at New Lattakoo, 366-
370 — ^Mr. Campbell advances into the
interior, 372 — description of a species of
African rhinoceros, supposed to be the
unicorn of the Scriptures, 376.
Sir Archibald, xxxv. 484, 487
494, 503 ; xxxvii. 324, note.
Sir Colin, xxxvii. 257.
Campeggio, Cardinal, splendid reception
of, in England, xxxiv. 341, 342.
Campian, xxxvii. 323.
Campion, xxxiii. 33.
Campomanes, Count of, xxix. 265.
Camus, xxviii. 294.
Canace, xxiv. 76.
Canaletti, xxx. 74.
Cancelada, Juan Lopez, Origen de la Re-
volution de Nueva Espina, xxx. 152.
See Mexicoy Part II.
Candeille, Madame, xxix. 27.
Candia, xxix. 451.
Canning, Right Hon. George, substance
of the Speech of, Nov. 24, 1819, on the
Address to the Throne, reviewed, xxii.
492 — character of his eloquence, 497,
498 — observations on the legality of the
Manchester meeting, and of the state of
the country, 511-513, 516-518, 521, 522
— on parliamentary reform, 526-530.
Speech on Negro Slavery, re-
viewed, xxx. 559 — resolutions proposed
by him, and adopted by the House of
Commons, 561 — ^remarlcs on them, 567,
568 — his account of the course contem-
plated by government for improving the
condition of slaves in the island of
Trinidad, 563-566 — remarks thereon,
566, 567, 570, 571 — observations of, on
the genius of Christianity, 585— and on
the most efficient mode of improving
the condition of slaves, 586, 587.
■ eloquence and accuracy of his
Digitized by
Googk
LBVIBWt
INDEX OF NAMES*
33
speech ia defence of the neutral policy
in the affairs of Spain, xxviii. 558, 559
— contemplated the eventual freedom of
the negroes, xxix. 480 — on the gp:adual
abolition of slavery, xxxii. 527, 528—
remarks thereon, 529.
Canning, xxi. 19; xxii. 160; xxiii. 573;
xxvi. 167, 168 ; xxix. 288 ; xxx. 374,
535; xxxii. 350; xxxui. 506, 511, 512;
xxxiv.585, 587, 589; xxxv.431; xxxix.
31.
^ Stratford, xxxix. 235, 236.
Captain, xxxiii. 54, 57.
Canonici, a modem Italian architect,
xxxii. 57.
Canova, Antonio, birth and early educa-
tion of, xxxiv. 110, 11 1 — goes to Rome,
112— his reception and patrons there,
ibid. — list of his productions, with re-
niarks, 113, 114-116— character of his
historical works of a religious kind, 116,
117.
xxiii. 443, 591 ; xxxii. 65 ; xxxiii.
489, note,
Pasino, grandfather of the sculp-
tor, xxxiv. 110.
-« Pietro, father of the sculptor,
xxxiv. 110.
Canson, Mr. and Mrs., xxix. 357.
Canter, xxv. 507, 511, 520.
Canterac, Gen. xxxviii.471, 479, 480.
Canute, xxx. 340 ; xxxiii. 162.
King, xxxix. 364.
Capel, Lord, xxv. 303, 311 — ^reasons given
by Cromwell for his being put to death,
330.
xxv. 347 ; xxvi. 436 ; xxxii.
474.
Capet, Hugh, xxv. 547, 551, 571 ; xxvil
150.
Capmani, xxviii. 548,
Capnio, xxiii. 300.
Capon, John, Bishop of Salisbury, no-
tice of, xxxiv. 342.
Cappe, Joseph, xxxv. 181.
Cappelli, Ottavio, xxviii. 41.
Cappellus, xxiii. 300.
Capper, Mr., xxiv. 222.
Capucefalo, Count, put to death by the
Venetian inquisition, xxxi. 442.
Capulet, xxiv. 74.
Caracalla, xxxvii. 110.
Caracci, Annibal, xxxiv. 189.
Caraccioli, Ascanio, xxxvii* 78.
Cardan, xxix. 458,
Carden, Captain, xxvii. 75.
Cardopion, xxiv. 425.
Careless, Mr., xxxiii. 478, 481.
Carey, Dr., originated the Society for the
Propagation of the Gospel in the
Heathen World, xxxii. 24— disappoint-
ment at the effects of his writings, in
the East, xxxiii. 38 — notice of his Ben-
TOL. XL. MO. LXXIX.
galee version of the New Testament,
xxxvi. 15-17.
Carey, answer to a scurrilous publication
by Carey, an Irishman, xxi. 165,
V, Bertie, xxxix. 187.
Carey's porter-house, xxi. 152.
Carhampton, Lord, xxx. 229, note,
Carie, Hon. Mrs. Anne, xxii. 68.
Carleton, Captain, xxxiv. 407.
Sir Dudley, xxxviii. 697.
Carlile, advantage taken by, of Bellamy's
translation of the Bible, xxiii. 287, ^
— ^handbill of debate concerning, 576.
Carlisle, Earl of, xxxvii. 256.
' Lord, xxvi. 436.
■ Mr., xxiv. 417.
Carlos, Don, part of Posa in, xxiii. 444.
-~— or Persecution; a tragedy,
by Lord John Russell, reviewed, xxix.
370 — character and death of Carlos,
370, 371 — probably poisoned by tha
king's order, 371 — notice of Otway*s
tragedy, founded on his death, 372 —
of Schiller's, 373, 374— analysis of Lord
John Russell's tragedy, with specimens
and remarks, 375-382.
■ ' Infante of Spain, enticed into the
toils of Buonaparte, xxix. 66.
Carlyle, Professor, computation of, as to
the number of Greeks in Europe, xxiii,
327, note, 345.
Dr., xxxvi. 183, 184.
Mr., xxxiv. 136; xxxviu. 334.
Carmagnola, Francesco, base murder of,
by the council of ten, at Venice, xxxi.
436.
Carmarthen, Lord, xxxvi. 541.
Carneades, xxv. 526 ; xxxiii. 362.
Camewaith, Lord, xxv. 312.
Carnilliac, Admiral, xxviii. 171.
Camot, xxiii. 196.
xxxvi. 71,72.
Carobert, King of Himgary, xxxi. 67.
Caroline, Queen, remarks on Jeannie
Deans's interview with, xxv. 118.
__ xxvi. 186, note; xxx.
514.
Carpenter, Dr. L., xxx. 101, note,
Carpiu, xxi. 178.
Carpini, J. de Piano, Travels of, in Tar-
tary, xxiv. 317-321.
xxvi. 44 ; xxix. 121,
Carr, Earl of Somerset, xxxviii. 388.
Holwell, xxxiv. 188.
— Mr., evidence of, on the efiect of the
present administration of the criminal
law, xxiv. 224.
Carrara, Francesco, Prince of Padua, and
his sons, base murder o^ at Venice,
xxxi. 435, 436.
Carratala, General, xxxviii, 471, 472.
Carrera, Don Jose Miguel, notice of, xxx,
468, 469.
Digitized by
Googk
34
PART I^INDfiX Ot NAMES.
QtTARtERLY
Carreri, GemelH, xjcxvii. 448.
Carrier, xxxiii. 160.
Carrington, F. A., Supplement to all the
Modem Treatises on the Criminal Law,
xxxvii. 147.
. N. J., Dartmoor, a descriptive
poem, XXXV. 165 — description of Dart-
moor, 166 — its rivers, 167, 168 — Cran-
mere lake, 167 — mountains or tors, 169
— forest, ifttrf.— specimens of Mr. Car-
tington's poem, 170, 174.
-S Sir C. E., xxii. 533, note.
Carstairs, xxxvii. 253.
Carte, xxxix. 53, note.
Carter, Dr.,xxiv. 174.
■ Matthe\<r, xxxv. 115.
■ Mr. Justice, xxxvi. 519, rtote.
Carteret, Lord, xxi. 482.
Sir G., x-xiii. 298.
Cartier, xxx. 232.
Cartwright, xxxiii. 311 ; xxxvi. 31.
Commissioner, xxiii. 129, 130.
— — — — Frances, xxxv. 154.
Major, xxii. 499, 528.
Memoirs and Corre-
spondence of, xxxv. 148 — remarks there-
on, 154 — pursuits and literary labours
of the Major, 155,156.
Carvalho, one of the writers of the Inves-
tigador Portugez, xxxi. 12.
Cary, Rev. H. F., jxxv. 436 — notice of his
translation of Dante, xxviii. 370 j and
xxxi. 284.
■ notice of his translation of the
Birds of Aristophanes, xxxiii. 338,
note,
' ' translation of Dante, specimen of,
with remarks, xxxiv. 8, 9.
Carysfoot, Lady, xxii. 96.
Carystus, xxiii. 273.
Casalis, Sir Gregory, xxxiii. 12.
Casas, Barth. de Las, xxxviii. 204.
Casaubon, Isaac, Xxii. 311 — notice of the
Thesaurus of, 316.
xxiii. 500; xxiv. 429;
XXV. 358, note, 359; 507, 511, 517.
Cashel, Archbishop of, xxxi. 504, 507 —
vindicates the Irish clergy from the
charge of non-residence, 511-513.
■ xxxv. 89.
Cashells, dean of, xxxvii. 245.
Cashman, xxiv. 211, 254.
Casimir, xxxiv. 425.
■ III., of Poland, great mass of
the Polish Jews descended from, xxxviii.
115.
Cass, General, xxix. 1.
Cassandra, xxii. 194 ; xxv. 506, 522.
Cassel, Mr., xxvi. 68.
Cassian, xxii. 71.
.Cassilis, Lord, xxix. 317,
Cassini, Xxxviii. 6,
Cassio; xxv. 84,
Cassiodorus, xxvi. 333 ; xxvii. 48;
44 ; xxxiii. 89.
Cassius, xxiii. 372 ; xxviii. 502.
— ^-^ Avidius, xxxvii. 35.
Castanheda, xxvii. 20.
Castaniza, P. Maestro, xxii. 81.
Castanos, General, xxviii. 552 ; xxix. 78.
Castellane, Comte, xxxiii. 233.
Castelvilani, xxvii. 16.
Casti, Giambattista, notice of, xxi. 487-491
— design and character of his * Animali
Parlanti,' 491-493 — specimens of Mr.
S. Rose's version of it, 494-497, •'>08.
Castlemaine, Lady, anecdotes of, xxxiii.
291, 292, 293.
Castlereagh, Lord, xxi. 19, 135, 241 ;
xxii. 160 ; xxiii. 123,«o/<?,453 — ^instruc-
tions of, to consuls abroad for procuring
foreign standards of weights and mea-
sures, xxvi. 420, 421.
> xxxvii. 382; xxxix.
225.
Castor and Pollux, xxii. 184.
Castro, G. de, xxix. 40, 425.
J. de, xxvii. 24, 25 ; xxxi. 386.
Castronovo, Petrus de, xxxiii. 155.
Catcott's Theory of the Deluge, remarks
on, xxix. 139, 140.
Cathcart, Colonel, xxxi. 219.
Catharine I., xxix. 189.
of Arragon, xxv. 17.
of Sienna, xxxiii. 409.
Catherine, Empress, xxi. 491 — attempt of,
to establish friendly relations between
Russia and Japan, xxii. 108, 109 —
abolished capital punishment in Russia,
235, 522 — political views of, in Asia,
xxxvi. 107, 1 08— fnistrated in her at-
tempts to form an establishment on the
eastern coast of the Caspian sea, 1 08 —
and in forming pei-manent establish-
ments in China, 109 — Admiral Qreig's
answer to, xxxix. 32.
xxiii. 11, 448; xxiv.
5; xxix. 123; xxxv. 381 ; xxxviii. 127;
xxxix. 32.
Queen, divorce of, by Henry
VIII., and her cruel treatment by him,
not chargeable upon the Reformation,
xxxiii. 9 — Parr, Queen, ancestor of Dr.
Parr, xxxix. 258.
de Medici, xxv. 545; xxvi. 189;
xxix. 455 ; xxxv. 548.
xxvi. 136.
Cathos, xxix. 36.
CatiUne, xxi. 491 ; Xxii. 403 ; xxviii. 102,
291 ; xxix. 284.
Catinat, xxxiv. 24, 25.
Cato, crj^t of, in the catacombs of Paris,
xxi. 388, 491.
xxiii. 421 ; xxiv. 73, 82; xxvi. 210,
366; xxx.225,«o/e/ xxxvi. 204; xxxvii.
454.
Digitized by
Googk
Hbtibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
35
Cato, M., the censor, xxxii. 69, note,
Cattanio, Dannasio, xxxii. 63.
Catiillus,xxvii.61; xxviii.367, 421 j xxxii.
159; xxxiv. 19.
Cavalcante, xxxi. 16.
— G., remark of, on his own
writings, xxiv. 546.
Cavallino, xxxiii. 229.
Cave, XXV. 359 ; xxvi. 328 ; xxx. 475,
Cavendish, Charles, xxv. 303.
— ^— — — Lord George, xxxiv. 183.
Cavendishes, xxi. 164.
CavigUa, xxiii. 93 ; xxiv. 145 5 xxviii. 73.
Caulaincouit, Duke of Vicenza, sent to
seize the Duke d'Enghien, xxix. 563.
Caumont, Mr., xxxi. 15, 16.
Causton, Miss, (afterwards Mrs. William-
son,) rejects an offer of marriage made
by John Wesley, xxiv. 17.
Mr., xxiv. 18.
Cawdor, Lord, xxxiv. 112.
Cawley, John, xxxii. 407.
Caxton, xxiii. 73, 550.
Cayenne, Mr., xXv. 153.
C^ley, Edward, Com Trade, Wligfeilj and
Ken^ xxxvii. 426.
■ Mr., Table of Wages and Prices
of Wheat, xxxvii. 430, nott — extracts
from his work, 438.
Cazal, P. M. A. de, xxvi. 323.
Cazalla, xxix. 249— execution of, 253.
Cecatto, C atterina, grandmother to Canova,
xxxiv. 110.
Cecil, xxxvii. 221.
Sir William, xxxiii. 8.
— W., Lord tiurleigh, characttt of,
xxxviii. 406.
Cecrops, xxiii. 258.
Cedric, xxvi. 129, 456.
Celedensis, Marcus, xxxiii. 89.
Celestina, xxix. 424.
Cellier, Elizabeth, xxxvi. 555.
CeUini, B., xxvi. 145.
Celsus, contagion never mentioned by, as
a cause of disease, xxvii. 531.
Cennick, xxiv. 41 — anecdote of, 473, note,
Centlivre, Mrs., the dramatist, xxxi. 292.
Cephalus, xxix. 327.
Cephisius, xxix. 324.
Cephisodotus, xxvi. 258.
Ceratinus, Jacobus, xsii. 312,
Cerberus, xxiii. 349.
Ceres, xxii. 338 ; xxiii. 246, ftciey 247, fwfe,
248, 268 ; xxiv. 455 ; xxvi. 326 ; xxvii.
23; xxix. 323.
Cervantes, xxii. 372, 401 } xxiv. 454 ; xxv.
1, no/e— character of, as a dramatist, 5
— analysis of his Nuihancia, with spe-
cimens, 6-12.
— ■ xxvii. 13, 112; xxviii. 366; xxix.
258, 425 ; xxxui. 209 ; xxxiv. 352—
Aotice of, 354, 358 ; xxxv. 235, 522 5
xxxvii. 49 j xxxviii. 512,
Cesarotti*s Translation of the Iliad, de-
fects of, xxxiv. 4, 5.
Cesira, xxiv. 84-86.
Cetamwakomani, a North American In-
dian chief, xxxvii. 454.
Cethegus, xxviii. 291.
Cevallos, dissuades Ferdinand from quitting
Madrid, xxix. 66.
Chaderton, Laurence, notice of, xxiii.
302.
Chads, Ci^tain, xxxv. 516.
Chadwick, Mr., xxxvii. 245.
Chahjrn Bey, cruel treatment 0^ XSX.
487.
Chaigneaux, M., xxxiii. 132.
Chalmer, Captain, killed in the battle of
TYafklgar, heroism of his feelings in
dying, xxxvii. 378.
Mr., xxxvii. 378.
Chalmers, Alexander, xxxv. 192.
• Rev. Dr., Speech on the Extinc-
tion of Compulsory Pauperism in Glas-
gow, reviewed, xxviii. 349 — ^refutation
of his proposition that the demands of
human want may be supplied by gra-
tuitous means, 351, 352.
- xxix. 312; xxxvi. 493;
xxxviii. 70, 75.
I George, xxxiv. 234.
• Mr., xxvi. 427 — \at estimation
of the amount of English ihippio
xxxii. 179, 180 — ^notice of his Estimate
of the Comparative Strength of Great
Britain, 195.
Chamberlayne, Captain, xxix. 68.
Chambonin, Madame de, xxiii. 160.
Chambr€, Mr., xxiv. 222.
Chamillatt, M, de, xxxiv. 20,
Chamisso, M. A. Von, xxvi. 347, 352 1
xxviii. 344.
Champagne, Comtesse de, x»v. 534,
535.
Champollbn, M., Lettre snr TAlphabet
des Hi^ro^yphes JPhonitiques employes
par les E£m***^s> xxviii. 188 — accOimt
of some ot his researches, 190-193—.
topy of his hieroglyphic alphabet, 194
—remarks on his labouw, 195, 196.
— -^-— M., xxxvi. 496 ; xxxviii.
194.
Chana,xxxv. 108. .
Chance, xixiv. 537;
Chandler, xxii. 344 ; xxiii. 148.
Dr., remark 0^ on tiie honey of
H3rmettus, xxiii. 332.
■ General, xxvii. 417*
Chandos, XXV. 72 — ^notice of his death by
a lance, xxx. 348.
Duke of, xxxii. 280) Xxtvii.
406.
Channing, Dr., extract from a disrcotirse
of, on the Evidences of Retealied Reli"
gion, xxviii. 535, 535,
Digitized by
Googk
36
PART L—INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
Chantrey's sculpture, character of, xxxiv.
131-133 — statue of Washington, xxxvii.
Chantry, Mr., xxxii. 347, 349.
Chaos, xxiv. 435, note.
Chapelier, xxviii. 307.
Chapman, inefficiency of the attempts of,
to give strength to ships hy diagonal
hracing, xxii. 42.
— — Mr., notice of a treatise hy,
on the Prevention of Dry-Rot, xxx.
224.
— ^— xxix. 37.
George, xxxvii. 465.
Chaptal, M., a French minister, xxxi. 396,
397 — his exertions to improve the ma-
nufactures in France, 398-401 — ^thevine,
whence brought into Greece, xxxv. 388.
Charchemish, xxiv. 161.
Chardin, xxvi. 452.
Chares, xxix. 319.
Chariclo, xxviii. 427.
Charlemagpie, attempt to put an end to
, burying in churches in the reign of,
xxi. 379^-considered a religious con-
queror, 510 — skull exhibited as his,
xxxix. 6.
xxi. 498, 504 ; xxii. 368 ;
XXV. 145, note, 146, 429, 551,' xxvi.
182; xxvu. 277; xxx. 44, 343; xxxii.
11; xxxiv.25l.
Charlemont, Lord, xxiii. 521 ; xxxiv.
474.
Charles I., was fond of poetry and paint-
ing, xxiii. 590.
patronised horticulture, xxiv.
405 — number of exotics introduced into
England during his reign and that of
Charles II., 415.
XXV. 125, 175, note — state of
England on his coming to the throne,
287, 288 — accusations against him, 297
— his protestations of regard for the
liberty of his subjects, 297 — ^his reflec-
tions on signing the bills for Strafford's
execution, and prolonging the parlia-
ment, 298, 299--liis army defeated at
Marston Moor, 301 — and at Naseby,
311, 312 — ^his cabinet seized and letters
published, 312 — ^is betrayed and sold by
the Scotch, 316 — ^barbarous treatment
of him by Joyce, 321 — ^unfeeling con-
duct of Cromwell on his death, 330 —
his execution, 550, 565.
prophecy and omens of the
death of, xxvi. 189, 192.
reflections on the murder of,
xxix. 177 — his unhappy marriage with
Henrietta of France, 181 — ^his charge
to his son, 182 — reflection of, on the
outrageous conduct of the pmitans, 183
— ^price of corn in his reign, 221.
' sends Fox on a north-west ex-
pedition, xxx. 233— character of Charles
vindicated, 511 — ^was the author of the
EijiMtfv BaM-Aixff, 512.
Charles I., remark on the Running Lec-
ture, xxxii. 26.
external evidence to prove that
the Icon Basilikd was written by him,
xxxii. 493— Jirttf part of his Medita-
tions, which were written before the
battle of Naseby, ibid. — Mecondly, the
statement of the persons concerned in
printing it, 494 — thirdly, the assertion
of Bishop Earle, ibid, — ^preponderance
of external evidence in favour of the
King, ibid. — ^proofs of his qualifications
for composing such a work, and of Dr.
Gauden's inability to write it, 495 —
statement of the internal evidence, flrom
the book itself, that it was written by
the King, 497-505.
xxi. 205; xxvii. 27; xxx.3af;
xxxii. 401 ; xxxiv. 79.
■ notice of, xxxvi. 33, 34, 37.
II., act of, for burying in woollen,
repealed, xxi. 411.
profligacy of the court of.
xxii. 431, 532.
. xxiv. 7 — state of horticulture
in the reign of, 406, 407 — ^remark of, ou
the climate of England, 412, 413.
280 — anecdote of him
and Oliver Cromwell, in their early
years, 283, 332 —defeat of, at Wor-
cester, 335 — Charles and his family ex-
cluded from the throne by an act of
parliament, 343, 345, 470.
. notice of the Navigation Act,
xxviii. 431 — ^infidelity alleged to have
been imported into France by the court
of, 510.
triumphant restoration of.
xxix. 172, 173 — subsequent disgraceful
events of his reign, 174 — ^why he leaned
to popery, 183, 184 — ^influence of the
profligacy of his court on the literature
of England, 206-209 — negociations for
marrying him to the Princess, of Portu-
gal, 194-196— duplicity of his policy,
203, 204 — ^immorality of his court, 421.
xxiii. 3, 507, 511; xxvi. 429,
436 ; xxvii. 27 ; xxx. 334, 443 ; xxxii.
39.401; xxxiii. 172, 286; xxxv. 550;
xxxvi. 41.
venality of, xxxvi. 301 — ^want
of attention to his personal accommo-
dation, 305 — profligacy of the noblemen
about his court, 307— -deplorable state
of morals among the people, 308 — at-
tempts an alteration m the national
dress, 309 — a scene at his court de-
scribed, 291.
of Spain, degradation of Spain
in the reign o^ xxix. 263.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbvikw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
3f
diaries III., character of, xxviii. 543.
efforts of the ministers of, to
check the influence of the Church, xxix.
265.
■ IV., charges his son Ferdinand
with conspiring against him, xxix. 59 —
abdicates the tl^one of Spain, 64—
tigainst which he protests, as compul-
sory, 65 — abdicates a second time, and
is carried into France, 67.
v.. Emperor, xxii. 37^
• destinies of him and Francis I.
poised hj Henry VIII., xxiii. 185 — ^the
secret tnbunal fell into disuse, on his
introducing a new criminal code, 441 —
juggling trick performed, on his enter-
ing Nuremberg, xxix. 458 — ^remarks on
the colonial system of, xxx. 444.
• xxiv. 5 ; XXV. 7, 548 ; xxviii.
543; xxix. 247; xxx. 45; xxxi. 5; xxxii.
21; xxxvii. 72, 312; xxxviii. 196.
of France, xxi. 374, 382— pro-
ceedings of the States-General in the
time of, XXV. 553, 554.
— — of Spain, xxxiii. 210.
VI., struggles for power in the
minority of, xxv. 545-^and subsequently
in his affliction with insanity, 547—
state of the nation in his reign, 554-—
massacres in Paris, 566.
VI., Emperor, xxviii. 42.
VII. of France, outrages com-
mitted against, xxv. 547.
• — ' VIII., proceedings of the States-
General in the reign of, xxv. 555 —
Bayard presented to, xxxii. 360 — rapid
loss of his conquests, 370.
IX., distiu'bances in the minority
of, xxv. 545, 561 — enormities committed
in his reign, 568.
X. of France, xxxiii. 415.
' XII. of Sweden, xxiii. 46 ; xxvii.
493; xxxiv. 222.
XIV. of Sweden, xxxiii. 415.
Prince, remarks on the story
and character of, in Waverley, xxvi.
115.
• xxvii. 345, et seq.
— — — Archduke, sought for the post of
generalidsimo of the allied British and
Ihitch forces, xxiii. 12, 58.
Buonaparte*8 opinion of
as a general, xxviii. 250.
> of Anjou, King of Naples, xxi.
193.
364.
— of Burgundy, xxx. 350.
the Bold, xxv. 72, 551 ; xxxii.
462.
Duke of Germany, xxiii. 444.
• of Luxembourg, xxv. 555.
• de Navarre, xxxv. 547.
Lieutenant-Colonel, xxxviii. 461,
Charles, Thomas, xxxvi. 7, 8.
Charlett, Dr. Arthur, xxxiv. 295, note,
Charlier, xxviii. 41.
Charlotte, Queen, xxxvi. 80.
— — — F^ncess, xxii. 97 — funeral song
for her, xxxvii. 94.
Charmides, xxiv. 444-447 — his reasons
for preferring poverty to wealth, 452,453
Chamock, xxvi. 431 ; xxxvi. 516, 544.
Charon, xxiii. 261.
Charpentaire, xxv. 572.
Chartier, Alan, the poet, xxxi. 282.
Chartres, Duke de, xxvii. 174.
Chase, Sir M., xxv. 109.
Chataud, Captain, xxxiii. 223.
Chateaubriand, M., his singultur proof of
the divine institution of baptism,
xxxviii. 48, Hote.
M. de, xxvi. 204 ;' xxviii.
542, note; xxxiv. 402, 586.
Chdtelet, Marchioness du, origiii of hdif
acquaintance with Voltaire, xxiii. 156,
157 — ^her reception of Madame de Gra^
figny, 157— description of her apart-
ment^ 159 — ^her occupations, 160—
pries into the letters of her visiters, 161
—-the votary of Venus as much as of
Minerva, 162— her barbarous treatment
of Madame de Grafigny, 163-165*^
connection of her reputation with that of
Voltaire, xxvii. 175 — her name will be
preserved from obUvion by her comment
tary on the Principiaj xxxix. 435,
— ^— M. de, xxiii. 154.
Chatham, Lord, Pitt reproduced in, xxi.
19 — absurd story of, xxvi. 12.
interesting letters of, to
his son, the Right Honourable William
Pitt, when a student at Cambridge,
xxxvi. 295-298— his letters to Lord
Camelford, xxxix. 482.
xxix. 288; xxx. 374; xxxii. 346;
xxxiii. 507, 508 ; xxxiv. 351, 464, 477 ;
xxxv. 306 ; xxxvii. 367.^
Chatterton, xxi. 122 — ^remarks on the mix-
ture of moroseness and levity in his
mind, xxviii. 140.
xxxiv. 233 ; xxxv. 193.
Chaucer, Pope's character of the writings
of, xxiii. 433.
xxiv. 542; xxvi. 116, 201;
xxx. 51, no/e, 541 ; xxxii. 98, note, 224,
225, 291, 292, 293 ; xxxiii. 314 ; xxxiv.
14; xxxv. 191; xxxvi. 67; xxxvii. 49,
311.
Chaulieu, xxiv. 133.
Chaumettes, xxii. 543.
Chaumont, M. de, xxxiii. 123, 126.
Chauncey, Commodore, xxvii. 411.
Chauntrey, xxvi. 256 ; observations on his
productions, xxvii. 326.
Chenier, M., remarks of, on the French
Drama, xxxix. 25-28.
Digitized by
Googk
3S
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTBBLT
Cheron, M., xxix. 27.
Chersias, xxiv. 422.
Cheselden, xxxiv. 311.
Chester, Bishop of, College of St. Bees
founded by bim and Lord Lonsdale^
xxiii.581.
■ xxxiii. 4 — his re-
marks on some writings against the
Protestant religion, 7.
xxxvi. 305, 312.
activity of his exer-
tions for relieving the manufacturing
districts, xxxvii. 545~commend8 the
disposition of the weavers under their
sufferings, U>id,
Chester, Kichard Fitchugh, earl of, xxx.
343.
Chesterfield, Lord, notice of his Corres-
pondence with Lady Suffolk, xxx. 556
— manners of the age exemplified in
his own person, xxxix. 482.
xxi. 482; xxT. 409;
xxviii.49; xxxi.477; xxxii. 155; xxxiv.
125 ; XXXV. 499.
Che8w?nska, Coimtess Orlof, of Moscow,
xxxi. 147.
Chetwynd, Mr., xxxvi. 523.
Chevalier, M., xxxiv. 32, 33.
Chevert, xxvii. 153.
Cheyne, Dr., extraordinary story related
by, xxvii. 1 1 6.
on the Irish poor, xxxviii. 77.
Chiabrero, contests between his admirers
and those of Petrarch, xxi^L 408, note,
Chichester, Mr., xxix. 356.
Sir. J., xxxix. 172, 272.
Chickley, Sir T., xxv. 290.
Chifflet, xxix. 454.
Child, Sir Josiah, disapproves of the re-
moval of paupers, xxxvii. 667,
Childeric, xxv. 545.
Chillingsworth, xxiii. 571, 573.
Chilpenc, xxv. 565.
Chimene, xxvii. 486; xxix. 40, 41, 421.
Chippendale, Mr., instance of a deaf and
dumb person beins fond of muiic, mefi-
tioned by, xxvi. 404.
Chiron, xxvi. 225 ; xxviii. 414«
ChishuU, xxiii. 150.
Chitalin, xxvi. 295.
Chitty, xxi. 403, note.
Chivosto^^ employed by Resanoff, to take
vengeance on the .fapanese^ for their
treatment of him, xxii. 109-hiS untimely
fate, ibid. — consequences of his conduct
upon Captain GoloMmin and his com-
panions, 110-118 — his proceedings un-
authoDzed by the Russian government,
127.
ChlebnikofT, capture and subsequent treat-
ment of, by the Japanese, xxiL 112-121
— isUberated, 128.
Chloe, xxix. 434 ; xxxii. 274.
Chosrephilua, a famous vender of saltrfish
at Athens, xxiii. 256.
Choeris, xxiii. 493.
Choiseul, Duke de, xxvii. 161; xxviii.
450 ; xxxiv. 33.
Choiseul-Gouffier, Comtesse de, xxxiv.
431.
Choisy, xxxiii 104.
Cholmondeley. Earl, xxv. 410.
Choris, M., xxvi. 347.
Chous, xxviii. 88.
Chowes,xxvii.218, 228.
Christ, practical view of the character of,
by J. Bowdler, xxi. 119.
hymn on his crucifixion, xxxviii.
43— divinity of, 328.
Christian, Edward, Esq., Vindication of
the claims of the Universities to a copy
of every new publication, xxi. 196 —
his reasoning, m behalf of the claims
of the University of Cambridge, ex-
posed, 200, 201, 205— and also his
false statements respecting the book-
sellers, ibid,
Mr., xxxvii. 170.
Christianus, letter on the University of
London, xxxix. 100.
Christie, xxvi 133 ; xxvii. 342, 353 ; xxxv.
269.
Christina, Queen of Sweden, xxxiu
368.
• of Stumbala, xxxvi. 324.
Christophe, General, firmness of, xxi. 444,
445 — proclaimed king of Hayti, 451 —
his character, 452, 453 — state of his
dominions, 452-459 — his military force,
455— population and finances of his
government, 456.
Chromachit, son of the king of Siam,
xxxiii. 119.
Chromatins, xxv, 358.
Chronus, xxiii. 248.
Chryses, xxvi. 251.
Chrysippus, xxxiii. 362.
Chrysopulo, xxiv. 522.
Chrysostom, xxiii. 140, 302; »Y. 861 J
xxxiii. 88 ; xxxviii. 38.
Chubb, xxiii. 567.
Churcher, Mrs., x?i. 136.
Churchill, the poet, anecdote of, xxiii.
433— notice of, xxxv. 293.
Arabella, xxiii. 2 ; xxv. 392,
, General Charles, xxviii. 56.
Sir Winston, xxiii. 2, 193.
Chute, Mr., xxiii. 420.
Cibber, remarks oi, on the character of
Addison, xxiii. 420 ; substitution of
lines of, for Shakspare's, xxviii. 109,
note — character of his dramatic writings,
xxix. 423 ; best theatrical history since
his Apology, xxxiii.591 — alterations by
of Shakespeare perpetrated with impu>»
nity, xxxiv. 306.
Digitized by
Googk
^Review.
INDEX OF NAMES.
39
Cibber, Mrs., xxxvi. 204.
Cibber's sculpture, remarks on, xxxiv.
123.
Cicero, pure Greek words used by him, in
Latin sentences, xxiv. 384 j points re-
quired in a judgd. xxxiii. 335 — character
of Grecian witnesses, 344 — citations,
human virtues traced to a divine origi-
nal, 360, note — dogmata of the ancient
' philosophers on the human mind and
the divine essence, 362, 363, note —
Cicero's guarded opinion on the argu-
ments of Cotta and Balbus, 364, note.
' xxi. 30, 467, 491 ; xxii. 486, 558 ;
xxiii. 146, 544, 573; xxiv. 72; xxv.
336 ; xxvi. 82, 96 ; xxvii. 44, 45, 53,
• 64, 63, 277, 384, note, 484; xxviii. 51,
100; xxix. 284; xxx. 44. 186, 386;
xxxii, 67, 7&, note, 80 ; xxxvi. 29, 47 ;
xxxvii. 43 ; xxxvlii. 41, 248, 249 ; xxxix.
256, 490.
Ciceron, Manuel Blanco, xxxviii. 458.
Cicognara, Count, Le Fabriche di Vene-
zia, xxxii. 42 — character of the work,
65, 66. See Italy, Part II.
Cieza, Pedro de, curious remark of, xxi,
363.
Cimber, xxviii. 102.
Cincinnatus. xxvii. 305.
Cino, xxiv. 549, 562.
Cinthio, Giraldi, notice of, xxiv. 7^,
Cipriani, xxviii. 230.
Circe, xxv. 22 ; xxx. 42.
Citeaux, Abb6 de, bloody aiivice of, xxiii.
196, 197.
Civitali, Matteo. xxxii. 64, 65.
Cladan, Count, slanders of, xxix. 87.
Clairaut, his advantages as one of New-
ton's successors, xxii. 131 — method of
integrating equations, 134 — observations
on it, 135-137 — effects of his visits on
Voltaire, xxiii. 162.
■ Euler, D'Alembert, Lagrange,
and Laplace, instrumental in completing
the theory of the system of the worl^
xxxviii. 8.
Clairon, Mademoisene,xxxi. 18 ; xxxiv. 423.
Clancarty, Lord, notice of the correspon-
dence of, with the Dutch government,
on the subject of the slave trade, xxviii.
166.
Clanronald, xxxvi. 208, 209.
Clapperton, Lieut., direction of his in-
quiries, xxvi. 56; residence at Mour-
zouk, xxviii. 93 — exploratory researches
of, in copapany with others, ?nto the
inte4or of Africa, xxix. 509-523.
■ xxxi. 455 — account of
Dr. Oudney's death, 456, 457-465.
■ — excursion of, to the
country of the Tuaricks, xxxiii. 520—
account of the researches made by him
and his associate?. 3$e Africa^ Part XL
Clapperton, Capt., arrival of, in the interior
of Africa, xxxiv. 604, note — low tempe-
ratiure on the deserts of Africa, xxxvi.
114.
•* — • his expedition to Africa,
xxxviii. 109 — ^writes from Katunga, 110
—sets out for the Borgho country, ibid,
— his death 111 — his journals saved,
ibid.
Journal of a second ex-
pedition into the interior of Africa,
xxxix. 143 — origin of the expedition,
and names of the persons associated in
it, 144 — arrives off Whidah, where one
of the party lands, and after proceeding
to Youri is no moi-e heard of, 145 — the
captain commences his journey from
Badagry, ibid. — arrives at Bauza, ibil,
— is seized with fever and ague from
sleepmg in the open air, t6iV/.— death of
Captain Pearce and one of the servants
at Janna, 146 — several towns visited by
Clapperton described, 1 48 — quits DufFoo,
ibid beautiful mountain between Kra-
wa and Chaki, 149 — other towns visited
by the traveller, ibid, — quits Tshou, and
arrives at Katimga, 150— question of
ceremonials, 151 — entertainments, ibid,
— Katunga described, 152 — -is not al-
lowed to visit the Quorra, or supposed
Niger, 153 — arrives at Kiama, ibid. — -
conduct of Yarro, the sultan, 153, 154—
Houssa caravans, 1 54 — arrives at Warra,
ibid. — account given him of the death
of Mungo Park, 155 — is beset by a wi-
dow, who wanted to marry him, 155,
156 — lax morals of the inhabitants, 157
— further statements respecting Mungo
Park, 158, 159 — again annoyed by the
widow, and his baggage detained on her
account, 160 — Kolfa described, 161 —
at Zaria meets his old friend Hadji Hat
Sala, 162, and at Jaza his old friend the
Gadado, ibid. — is robbed of his journal
and remark-book, which occasions an
hiatus in his narrative, liiV/.— describps
the lakes near Zurmie, ibid. — how re-
ceived by the Sultan Bello, who is en-
camped before Coonia, 163 — curious
assault of this city, 163, 164 — arrival
and stay at Soceatoo, 165 — his spirits
broken by the manner in which he was
treated there, 166 — attacked with dysen-
tery, ibid. — his last instructions to his
servant Lander, 167 — his death, 168 —
particulars of his family and history,
ibid., note—hi^ burial, 169 — African
geography greatly indebted to him, 177
— note relating to Jiis JQurney into
Africa, 521.
Clare, Dame, xxiii. 168.
John, Poems, descriptive of Hural
Lift?, xxiii, 166— biographical notice of
Digitized by
Googk
40
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QrAfeTftftiY
liiin, 166-1^1 — specimens of his poems,
l68-172-^ompariHon of him with Burns
and Bloomfielu, 173 — concluding advice
to him, 174.
Clarendon, Lord Chancellor, xxxiii. 300.
— — — hours of business in the
House of Commons in the time of, xxii.
104 — remarks of, on conduct of the
European powers towards Charles I.,
329, 347 — observations on the indem-
nity act, jjdx. 176, 177.
XXV. 288, 291, 297, 309,
note, 324; xxvi. 258, note; xxx. 511;
xxxii. 397 ; xxxv. 187 j xxxvi. 40, 529 ;
xxxvii. 249 J xxxviii. 382, 569 j xxxix.
277.
Clarissa^ Scxvi. 130.
Clark, Dr. James, xxx. 135.
m Mr., xxiv. 222 ; xxviii. 165.
Clarke, xxxii. 159.
' notice of rock thunders heard by,
xxvi. 285.
■ criticisms of, on Homer, xxvii. 65.
— — 's Homer, xxxii. 157.
— afterwards Due de Feltre, xxxvi.
72, 73, 75.
-— — Capt., xxxviii. 89.
T Dr., argument of, for the immate-
riality of the conscious principle in man,
xxii. 31 — ^mistake of, xxiii. 329, note —
notice of the church of St. Basil at
Moscow, xxvi. 48, 379 — explored the
Tauric Chersonesus, xxix. 123 — num-
ber of servants kept by some of the
Russian noblemen of Petersburgh and
Moscow, xxx. 302 — his opinion of the
Caraite Jews, xxxviii. 127.
xxiii. 140 ; xxiv. 342 j xxvi.
478 ; xxxiii. 67 ; xxxv. 377, 378, 452 j
xxxvii. 104; xxxix. 3, 403.
■ Dr. A., xxvi. 325.
Dr. E. D., on the Gas Blowpipe,
xxiii. 466 — orie^n and progress of his
discoveries in the art of fusion, 467, 468
— account of his mode of using the
blowpipe, 468-470 — on the analogy in
its operations to the nature of volca-
noes, 470, 471 — remarks thereon, 473.
■- Dr. S., published an answer to
Toland, xxv. 353 ; xxvi. 87 — style of his
sermons, xxix. 302.
■ Mr., the Unitarian, placard issued
by,xxiii. 570, 571.
Clarkson, Thomas, Thoughts on the Ne-
cessity of improving the condition of
Negro Slaves reviewed, xxix. 476 — ^re-
marks thereon, 489. See Aeyro Slavery,
xxx. 659.
Clarona, xxiii. 203, note,
Clavell, Lieut., xxxvii. 376, 377.
Clavering, xxv. 109.
Clavi^ro, xxvi. 278.
Clavijo, notice of the travels o^ in the
East, xxiv. 333 — is admitted to the pre-
sence of Hmur, ibid, — his account of
Samarcand, 334.
Claviio, xxvii. 142, 143; xxxvi. 129.
Claude Petit, a female devotee, her inter-
course with M. Boudon, xxxvi. 337-340.
Claudian, observation of, on the prosperity
of the wicked, xxix. 177.
xxiii. 429 ; xxvii. 61 ; xxx. 43 ;
xxxiii. 159 ; xxxvii. 420.
Claudius, notice of a treatise of, on the
Dig^mma, xxvii. 45, 53.
xxviii. 102, et teq.
■ C, xxvii. 294.
' notice of the aqueduct of, xxviiL
321.i_population of Rome in his reign,
ibid.
Clay, xxxix. 356.
-— ^ General, defeat o( xxvii. 423.
. Mr., xxvii. 412.
Clajrpole, xxxviii. 392.
Clayton, Mr., xxx. 19.
I Sir Richard, xxxiv. 587.
Clearchus, dates the ruin of the Lacedae-
monians from their wearing the cosmo-
sandalus, xxiii. 265.
Cleaveland, xxix. 178.
• Duchess of, xxxiii. 290.
Lady, xxix. 213.
Cleisthenes, xxiv. 426; xxvi. 264; xxvii.
384.
Cleitagora, xxiv. 428.
Clemens Alexandrinus, xxvi. 333 ; xxxiii.
81 ; xxxvii. 50 ; xxxviii. 37.
Clement IV., Pope, death of, xxi. 182.
, VI., Pope, licentiousness of, xxiv.
558, 559.
■ punishes the murder
of Andrew, husband to Joanna, Queen
of Naples, xxxi. 69, 70 — his character,
75.
- VII., Pope, xxv. 7 ; xxxi. 73 — ^his
character, 75.
VIII., xxxv. 92.
XI., xxxvii. 475.
XII., xxxvii. 476.
I XIII. xxviii. 27 ; xxxvii. 470.
■ Guicciardjni's character of.
xxxiii. 3.
Clenard, Nich., his account of slaves in
Evora and Lisbon in the fifteenth cen-
tury, xxxviii. 205.
Cleon, xxi. 306 ; xxiii. 267, 268, 477, et
seq.; xxiv. 427, 428.
Cleopatra, xxii. 60; xxiv. 163 — ^hierogly-
phic of her name, xxviii. 190.
Cleophas, Don, xxiv. 497 ; xxxiii. 210, 21 1 .
Clepnane, Dr., xxxiii. 232.
Clepsydra, xxii. 200.
Clerc, xxvi. 394.
Clerk's System of Naval Tactics, not ori-
ginal, xxvi. 27.
Clerk of Eldiu; xxxvi. 168.
Digitized by
Googk
Aeview.
INDEX OF NAMES.
4t
Clerk, Sir G., xxvi. 418; ipcxvi. 161, 162.
Clermont, Bishop of, xxviii.301.
■ M. de, xxxiv. 424.
Clermont-Tonnerre, xxviii. 287.
Clerveaux, xxi. 448.
Clerj^, M., xxviii. 470, 472.
Cleveland, xxxv. 185, 189.
— — — Clement, xxvi. 459, et seq.
Judge, in India, notice of,
xxxvii. 124.
Cleves, Princess of, xxiii. 416.
Clifford, xxxii. 494.
■ M. M., xxi. 507, note,
Clift, Mr., xxvii. 465 ; xxxiv. 160.
Clinker, Humphrey, xxv. 460.
Clinton, De Witt, governor of New York,
opinion as to the derivation of the North
American Indians, xxxi. 77,
Clinton, Sir H., tribute of, to the splendid
fame of the Duke of Wellington, xxvi.
17, note.
Clisson, Sir O. de, xxv. 137.
Clistorel, M., xxix. 432.
Glive, Lord, xxx. 559 j xxxvii. 347.
Cloanthus, xxx. 50.
Clodius, xxvii. 277 j xxix. 284 ; xxx. 28.
Clonbrock, Lad^, xxii. 96.
Clootz, A., xxviii. 502.
M., xxviii. 313.
Clorinda, xxx. 50.
Clorindano, xxx. 51.
Clostermans, xxxi. 212.
Olotaire II., xxv. 565.
Clotho, xxviii. 421.
Clotworthy, Sir John, xxxv. 94.
Cloyne, Bishop of, xxvi. 505.
Clugny, xxvii. 162.
Clutterbuck, Captain, xxvii. 364.
Cluverius, xxx. 383.
Clytcmnestra, xxv. 506, no/e, 518, 520, 522.
Cobaruvias, xxii. 359.
Cobbett, remarks on the conduct of, xxi.
135, and on his abuse of Mr. Fearon,
136, 137 — notices of some of the cre-
ditors whom he defrauded, 136. note.
•^— History of the Reformation, cha-
racter of, xxxiii. 9.
xxii. 102, 160, 533, no/e, 534, no/c;
xxiv. 486; xxvi. 105, 158; xxvii. 94;
xxviii. 210; xxix. 350; xxxii. 420; xxxv.
155 ; xxxviii. 557.
Cobelitz, Miles, killed Amurath I., at the
battle of Kossova, xxxv. 68 — put to
death, ibid.
Cobham, Lord, xxix. 199; xxxvi. 514.
Cobur^, xxviii. 273.
Cocchi, xxiii. 407.
Cochrane, Captain D., notice of the explo-
ratory travels of, xxv. 213, 214; xxvi.
342, 343 ; xxviii. 406.
- — Pedestrian Journey
through Russia, xxi. 215— design of his
journey, 216-*remaxks on its execution,
216 — his reception in Prussia, 217 —
adventure at Narva, 218 — departure
from St. Petersburg, 219 — ^is robbed at
Tosua, ibid. — ^liis hospitable entertain*
ment by the Russian peasantry, 220,
and rough treatment at Vladimir, ibid,
— visits the iron-works of Kkatherine-
bourg, 221 — thermometrical blunders of
the Captain exposed, 222 — ^voracity of
the wild natives of Yakut, 223 — diseased
prevalent among them, 224— ceremony
of baptizin|2^ two Tchutski chieftains, 225
— observations on Lake Baikal, 227, 228
— character of his work, 225.
Cochrane, Lord, xxx. 446, 448, 465 —
charges against, 470, 471 ; his accusa-
tions against San Martin, 471, 472-—
thefts committed in his house in Chili,
xxxv. 141 — extraordinary naval exploit
of, xxxviii. 467.
Lady, xxxv. 140, 141.
Sir A., xxxvii. 519.
Cochranes, xxi. 352.
Cockburn, Admiral, abused by Mr. Fea*
rou, xxi. 135 — ^remarks on Buouaparte*s
conversations respecting him, xxviii.
248, 249.
Sir George, xxxvii. 276, note.
Cocker, xxxv. 234,
Cockeran, Henry, xxxv. 188,
Cockerell, Mr., xxvii. 313, note, 329.
xxxiv. 170.
Cockerell's manufactory of machines at
Liege, notice of, xxxi 408, note, 417,
418, note.
Cocks, John, xxxiii. 18.
Cocuy, xxv. 382.
Codrus, xxiv. 439.
Codrington, Sir E., xxxvii. 385.
Coello, xxix. 425.
CoDur, Jacques, xxxiv. 82.
CcbIus, xxxiii. 361, note,
Cogia, Achmet, xxviii. 95.
Cohorn, xxiii. 12, e/ seq.
Coke, xxx. 475.
Dr. xxiv. 2, 16, 41, 43, 51.
xxxii. 24.
Lord, simplicity of the law in the
time of, xxi. 402, 403— opinion of, on
altering the law of England, xxiv. 265.
xxi. 428 ; xxii. 545 ; xxiv. 229;
xxv. 113, 124; xxvi. 203; xxx. 275,
422; xxxii. 98, 116,349.
- Sir Edwar^ xxi. 121 — remark on,
by M. Rubichon, xxiii. 193.
xxix. 443; xxxiv. 261;
xxxvi. 513, 519 ; xxxvii. 160, 165,»o/ff,
486; xxxix. 128.
Lady Mary, xxviii. 56.
- Miss, xxiv. 417.
Mr., tendency of the speeches of,
xxviii. 214.
■ ■■ .n xxix. 339 ; xxxix. 255.
Digitized by
Googk
42
PART I.^INDBX OF NAMES.
QVARTSRL.lt
Coke, Mr8.| x». 554.
-^— William, and Alison Dick, burning
of, for witchcraft, xxix. 444, 445.
Colas, XXX. 400.
Colbert, xxiv. 294 ; xxvi. 531 j xxvii. 157;
xxviii. 274 ; xxxiv. 62.
— — observations on his policy, xxxvi,
428.
Colburn, Mr., xxxv. 163 ; xxxvii. 403.
Colby, Major, xxxii. 404.
Colchester, Lord, xxi. 483 — notice of his
bill for extending the laws of copyright
to Ireland, 199.
' devised the record com-
mission, xxxix. 66.
Colder, Cadwallader, xxxvii. 268, 270.
Coldwell, Bishop of Salisbury, notice of,
xxxiv. 346.
Cole, one of the joint translators of the
Geneva Bible, xxiii. 297.
_ xxiii. 403.
King, xxix. 509.
Mrs., xxxv. 141.
Thomas, translated Ezekiel and
Daniel, xxiii. 298.
Colebrooke,Mr.,xxii. 416; xxiy. 123, 129;
xxxiv. 532.
Coleman, xxxvi. 530.
W., xxvi. 401 .
Colepepper, Captain, xxvii. 358-360.
William, xxxvi. 554.
Coleridge, Bishop, landing of, at Barba-
dos, described, xxxiii.*492.
■ Dr., xxxiii. 491.
— — ' Mr., traduced by Hazlitt, xxii.
160 — notice of his * Remorse,' 402 ;
XXV. 102 — his Kubla Khan, a remark-
able instance of the energy arising from
the use of intoxicating drugs, xxix. 451
— beautiful description of the luminous
appearance of the sea, xxxv. 108, note —
his * Aids to Reflection' characterised,
114 — paneg3rric from, on Hurwitz, ib. —
notice of his translation of Wallenstein,
531, 532 — graceful stanzas, addressed
to a ' Lady on her recovery,' xxxvii. 90
— his ^ Wanderings of Cain' charac-
terised, 91.
-xxxii. 412; xxxiv. 3; xxxv.
102, 108.
Colet, Dean of St. Paul's, xxxix. 107.
John, his scheme of tuition, xxxix.
113.
Coligni, condemned to death, xxv. 557.
Coligny, attempted to plant a Huguenot
colony in Brazils, xxxii. 20.
Colin die Plancy, J. A. S., Dictionnaire
Infernal, xxii. 349 — character of the
work, ibid. 350.
CoUedge, trial of, xxxvi. 520,
Collet, M., Vie de H; M. Boud&n, xxxvi.
305. See Boudon,
Cplley, Sir Henry, jcxiy. 10.
Collier, Jeremy, xxi. 367 — notice of his
attack upon tne stage, xxix. 209.
xxxvi. 185.
Collier, Sir George, horrid account of a
slave vessel boarded by, xxi. 431 — ac-
coimt of the island of Annabon, xxvi.
55 — evasions of the treaties entered
into by the continental powers with
England, for the abolition of the slave
trade, 62-64 — account of the cruelties
inflicted by the Spanish and Portuguese
slave-dealers, xxviii. 165 — noble con-
duct of Sir G., and of the officers under
him, 174 — his opinion of the eligibility
of the island of Fernando Po, as a
settlement for counteracting the slave-
trade, 175.
Collines, lines from, xxxiv. 227.
CoUings, Colonel, journal of, xxxix. 340.
CoUingwood, G. L. Newnham, Selection
from the Public and Private Correspon-
dence of Vice Admiral Lord Colhn^-
wood, interspersed with Memoirs of his
Life, xxxvii. 364— though participatine"
in the victories of Lord Howe and Lord
Nelson, the merits of Lord CoUing-
wood but little known till this publica-
tion, 364 — admirable spirit of his let-
ters, 365 — his birth, education, and first
naval preferments, 366 — engaged in
the attempt to pass into the South Sea
by the river San Juan, and the lake
Nicaragua, ibid. — his account of this
proceeding, 367 — ^his marriage, ibid.—»
Lord Howe's injustice to him, ibid. —
his conduct under it, 368 — participates
with his friend Nelson in the battle off
Cape St. Vincent, 369 — the battle de-
scribed by him, ibid. — exults in its sur-
passing Lord Howe's, of the 1st of June,
307 — Nelson's letter commendatory of
him to the Duke of Clarence, ibid.
— Nelson's personal acknowledgments
to him, 371 — medal given to him on
this occasion, with that withheld from
him on Lord Howe's victory, ibid.—^
describes the attack of Teneriffe, in
which Nelson lost an arm, ibid. — ^la
ments his not being at the battle of the
Nile, 372 — promoted to the rank of rear-
admiral, ibid. — describes the irksome
nature of the long blockade of Brest,
373 — his amusements on his return to
his family, 374 — friendly conduct of
Nelson to him previous to the battle of
Trafalgar, 375— the battle described,
376 — his feelings on the death of his
friend, 378 — anecdote of his kindness
to a brother officer, ibid. — adored by the
Spaniards for his humanity after the
battle, 379 — dissatisfied with the first
Lord of the Admiralty on the score of
promotions, 380^raised to tbe peerage
Digitized by
Googk
Kevibw,
INDEX OF NAMES.
43
with a pension, 381 — letter written to
him by order of the king, ibid. — hia ad-
mirable feelings on the subject of his
pension, 382 — appointed commander-in-
chief of the Mediterranean station, ibid.
— his ideas of the justifiable causes of
war, 383, note — his description of the
King and Queen of Sicily, ibid. — enter-
tained a high opinion of Turkish honour
and fidelity, 384 — his extensive corre-
spondence, 386 — his severe attention to
the duties of his station, injurious to
his health, 387 — appointed major-gene-
ral of marines, 389 — obliged by his
health to resign and to return to Eng-
land, ibid. — dies on the passage, 390 —
his demeanour in his last moments,
389 — monument voted by parliament
to his memory, 391 — ardour dnd purity
of his domestic affection, 392 — propriety
of his thoughts on female education,
392-395 — excellence of his character in
every branch of his profession, 395-398
— ^his opinion of the impressment of
seamen, misunderstood byhis editor, 400.
CoUingwood, Vice-Admiral, Lord, xxvi. 17;
for the particulars of his life, see CoUing-
wood j G. L. Newnham.
. Hon. Miss, advice to, by her
father, Lord CoUingwood, xxxvii. 395.
Sir Cuthbert, notice of,
xxxvii. 365, no(e.
Collins's odes, character of, xxxi. 287.
I xxxv. 205 — his Ode to Evening
noticed, 211.
extract from his Ode to Fear,
xxxvi. 175.
Collins, xxiii. 362, 432, 567 ; xxvi. 433,
478 J xxxii. 241 ; xxxiv. 15; xxxv. 193.
__ Colonel, xxxii. 322 ; xxxvii. 17.
Lieutenant-Colonel, xxiii. 74.
' W., testimony of, before the Select
Committee on Criminal Laws, xxiv. 227.
CoUot d'Herbois, xxxiii. 160.
Colman's unfavourable opinion of Hay-
ley's * Syrian Queen,' xxxi. 277,
■ xxxviii. 225.
George, xxxi. 177.
' and Kemble, notice of the dis-
pute between, xxxiv. 232.
— — — Mr., a missionary to India, xxxiii.
54, 56.
Colocotroni, xxx. 518.
Colombine, P. la, xxviii. 26,
Colomies, xxii. 308.
Colonna, character of, in ' Evadne,' xxii.
408-410.
Cardinal, xxii. 532, 558.
■ Chevalier, extract of a letter ftom
Antommarchi to, xxxiii. 181.
Don F., XXV. 16, 17.
Prospero, xxxii. 374,
■■ Stefano, 3«iv. 558.
Colquhoun, Dr., opinions of, on the effect
of tlie present administration of the cri-
minal law, xxiv. 225, 2-26.
Mr., remark of, on the increase
of British shipping, xxvi. 534, note;
xxxvi. 492.
Colvin, Mr., xxii. 423.
Columba, xxxiii. 394.
of Rieti, xxxvi. 324.
Columbe, St., xxviii. 20.
Columbus, xxi. 251, 430 ; xxvii. 24 — ^way
in which he discovered America, xxix.
/ 508 — discovery of America, xxxviii. 194.
xxx. 232 ; xxxiii. 545 ; xxxv.
347 ; xxxvii. 329, 457 ; xxxviu. 196 ;
xxxix. 479.
Don Diego, xxx. 578.
Columella, xxiv. 403 ; xxx. 225, note.
xxxii. 234 — recommends the
mixture of salt water with wine, 235, 236.
xxxvi. 59.
Colyer, Miss, xxvi. 435.
Combe, Dr., his controversy with Parr,
xxxix. 283.
Comestor, Petrus, xxvi. 336.
Comines, P. de, xxvi. 323 ; xxxiv. 371.
Commenge, C. de, the mistress of Pope
Clement VI., xxiv. 558.
Commodus, xxii. 306 ; xxviii. 327 ; xxxv*
88; xxxvii. 35, 43.
Comneni, the, literature encouraged by,
xxiii. 140.
Compte, Le, xxxiii. 41.
Compte, Pere le, xxi. 80.
Compton, xxviii. 57.
Bishop, xxxvi. 540.
Sir W., xxxiU. 311.
Comus, XXV. 20.
Comuto, Prince, xxix. 95.
Comyn, Chief Baron, xxxviii. 274,
Condamine, xxxiii. 548 ; xxxv. 322.
M. de la, xxi. 321 — notice of
eddies in the river Amazons, 350 ; xxii.
4 1 6 — slope of the bed of the Amazons,
479 — notice of the race of Amazons,
XXV. 381 — shocking exhibition of two
fanatics, xxviji. 33, 34 ; xxx. 152; xxxi.
473.
Condi, Prince de, xxiii. 2, 195, 590; xxv.
73 ; xxvii. 154,161 ; xxviii. 274; xxix.
575.
Conder, Josiah, the Star in the East and
other poems, xxxii. 211 — extracts from
the Star in thfe East, 212— from the
minor poems, 212, 213-215 — ^remarks
thereon, 215, 216.
xxiv. 227.
Condillac, X3fiii. 252, 358; jucvii. 167,
286, 288, 291.
Condorcet, opinions of, on the subject of
ideas, xxiii. 251, 252, — doctrines of, as
to the perfectibility of the human race,
xxix. 471, 473.
Digitized by
Googk
44
PART 1.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QCARTSIILY
Condorcet, xxiii. 472; xxxvi. 151.
Confucius, xxviii. 507; xxxvi. 498; xxxviii.
92.
Congrete, xxiii. 420; xxiv. 331; xxvi.
437; xxvii. 481 — erroneously said by
Dr. Johnson to have first taught that
Pindar was not irregular in his odes,
xxviii. 412 — character of his dramatic
writings, xxix. 423 ; xxx. 548.
• xxxiv. 50; xxxv. 157; xxxvii.
417.
— Sir William, xxxiii. 284, note.
Gonheso, J. el, xxvi. 181.
Coningsby, Lord, xxiii. 70.
Coningsmark, Count, xxxvi. 514.
Connas, xxi. 308, and note,
Connus, xxi. 308, note^
Conolly, Mr., xxviii. 377.
Conon, xXli. 198; xxiv. 441, note,
Conrad, xxv. 65.
— ^ GJesner, xxii. 314.
Con-se-qua, a merchant of Canton, gene-
rous act of, xxi. 78.
Constable the painter, xxxviii. 3^8.
Constance, xxv. 67 \,
» — « of Sicily, xxxi. 74.
Constant, M. Benj., extract from a speech
of, on the slave-trade, xxviii. 171, 172.
xxxi. 190.
Constant, M. F. de St., notice of a work
on England by, xxv. 535.
Coustantine, xxvi. 194; — supposed quota-
tion of 1 John V. 7, disproved, xxxiii. 100,
xxxvi. 49 ; xxxix. 202.
Emperor, his letter to Alex-
ander, Bishop of Alexandria, and to
Arius, quoted, xxxiii. 100.
xxxv. 589.
brother of the Emperor Ni-
cholas, reform supposed to be effected in
his character, xxix. 202.
• the Great, xxiii. 142; xxvi.
327; xxvii. 37; xxx. 51.
Lascaris, xxiii. 147.
Manasses, xxiii. 153.
Monomachus, xxiii. 153.
_— Porphyro^ennetus, literature
encouraged by, xxiii. 140, 147 ; xxvi.
39.
- Prince of Salmsalm, embraced
the reformed religion, xxxvi. 317.
R., notice of a lexicon by.
xxii. 312, 314
• de Braganza, D., xxvii. 7,
Constantius Chlonis, Emperor, xxxiv. 58.
Contarene, Cardinal, xxxvii. 71.
Contarini, xxiv. 336.
Conti, Nicolo, notice of the travels of, in
the East, xxiv. 335, 336.
Conway, General, xxvii. 182, 187.
Conybeare, Mr., notice of his papers on
the fossil genera Ichthyosaurus and
Plesiosaurus; »udv. 521, 522.
Conybeare, Mr., xxxv. 86.
Conyngham, xxvi. 370.
Cook, xxv. 346 ; xxxv. 420.
■ ' Captain, xxi. 252— ^supposed to have
introduced small-pox into New South
Wales, xxiv. 60 ; xxv. 207, 211, 2l2—
comparison between him and Captain
Parry, 215; xxvi. 341, 345, 518 ; xxvii.
101 ; xxviii. 372; xxix. 508; xxx. 265
— ^visited New Zealand, xxxi. 52, 62 —
discovered Moreton Bay, xxxii. 319.
■ xxxiii. 545 ; xxxiv. 392 ;
134; xxxvii. 31, 365; xxxviii. 89,
336.
Cooke, a famous gardener in Charles II/s
reign, xxiv. 407, 412.
the actor, xxxiv. 218.
— — Captain, xxxiv. 158.
Mr., injury inflicted on, by the
copyright act, xxi. 202.
Rev. H» on the different ideas
attached in Ireland to the removal of
Catholic disabilities, xxxiii. 473.
Cooper, xxxiii. 313.
Dr., xxxix. 245.
Mr., xxxii. 412— character of his
novels, xxxiv. 377.
the painter, xxxviii. 340.
Sir Astley, xxxviii. 246.
— — S., remarks on, xxxviii. 390.
Coote, Mr., xxxvi. 554.
C, xxii. 303, note,
Cootry, King, xxix. 509.
Cope, Mr., xxxvii. 15.
Sir John, xxxvi. 169, 175, 176, 177.
Copernicus, xxxviii. 3 — ^his system, 6.
Copland, Wyllyam, xxi. 108.
Copleston, Dr., Inquiry into the Doctrine
and Necessity of Predestination, reviewed,
xxvi. 82 — ^principle of his first discourse,
94, 95 — ^remarks of, on the difficulty of
reconciling the controlling influence of
Divine Providence with the free agency of
man, 97— on the question whether there
be few that be savedy 1 00 — hints to candid
Calvinists and Arminians, 101, 102.
— — - xxxix. 256.
Corabiuo, xxv. 8.
Coray, M., *EkX*iviKri BifiXiaP^Kfij reviewed,
xxiii. 136. See Greek Language, Part
II., 256, note,
Corberon, M. de, notice of an inscription
set up by, on the summit of a high
mouiAain, xxx. 125, note,
Cordery, xxii. 164.
Cordier, M., his work * Sur les Ponts et
Chauss^es,* quoted, xxxi. 411, 412.
Cordoba, D. Leonora, xxix. 375.
Cordova, Gonsalvo de, xxxii. 373, 374.
"■ Martin Femandes de, xxxiv.
337.
Corianno, xxii. 199.
Corinseus. See Corinoran,
Digitized by
Googk
Asvifiw*
INDEX OP NAMES.
45
Corinna, xx7. 533.
Corinorau, Giant, xxi. 107.
Coriolan, xxv. 13.
Coriolanus, xxxvi. 51.
■ character of, how performed
by Mr. Kemble, xxxiv. 223.
C. M., xxii. 403 J xxiv. 73;
XXV. 17; xxvii. 84, 301.
Cork, Earl of, xxxyii. 246.
Cormontaigne, xxv. 75.
Comaro, xxxiv. 311.
Comeille, xxxiv. 354.
remarks on the tragedies of,
xxiv. 73 ; xxv. 1, 17 — * the miities' not
strictly observed in his tragedies, xxvii.
485 ; xxix. 425 — ^remarks on his trage-
dies, 39, 40— particularly * The Cid,'
40-43— observations of M. Schlegel on
Gorneille, 52.
— — — Thomas, xxix. 26.
Cornelias, xxiv. 35.
the Roman centurion, xxxi. 1 14.
Comwallis, Admiral, xxxvii. 375.
Lord, xxi. 482 ; xxvi. 435, 436 ;
XXXV. 41, 42, 51 — ^removed the editor of
the Bengal Journal to England, 63.
• xxxvii. 133 ; xxxix. 85.
Corny, Mr,, xxi. 17,
Coronis, xxviii. 422.
Corrado, xxiv. 92.
Correa, Antonio, notice of the Travels of,
in Pegu, xxiv. 336.
Correggio, xxxiv. 189.
Corrie, Archdeacon, xxv. 445.
Mr., xxxvii. 105, 124 — ^his observa-
tions on the Mohammedan and Hindoo
religions, xxxii. 39, 40.
Corry, Captain, xxviii. 83.
Cortereal, xxx. 232.
Cortes, XXXV. 347, 348.
Corvetto, M., brief notice of, xxiii. 191.
Coryate, Tom, xxxi. 383.
Coryphaeus, xxv. 103.
Cosm, John, Bishop, detailed account of,
xxxix. 390—395.
Cosmo, xxii. 411.
Coss, Governor, of Canada, xxxvii. 455.
Cossus, xxvii. 278.
Costa, Hippolita da, editor of the ' Coireio
Braziliense,' xxxi. 12.
Costard, xxii. 207.
Costauro, the historian, xxxi. 71 — asseris
the innocence of Joanna of Naples, 72,
73.
Costigan, xxxi. 379.
Cotelerius, xxviii. 186.
Cotman, J. S., Architectural Antiquities
of Normandy, reviewed, xxv. 112 —
character of the work, 115. See Archi-
tecture^ Part II.
Cotonier, Nicolas, reception of the English
by, at Malta, xxxii. 433.
Cotta, Velleius, xxxiii. 364, note.
Cottin, xxviii. 281.
Cottingham, Lewis, Plans, &c. of Henry
the Seventh*8 Chapel, xxviL 308 — cha-
racter of his work, 309.
Cotton, Bishop of Sdisbury, notke of,
xxxiv. 346.
- Brigadier.G^neral, xxxv. 501, 502.
Dr., xxx. 189.
^— Rev. Mr., opinion of^ on the con-
fessions made by convicts, xxiv. 212,
223.
Cottu, M., notice of his work on the cri-
minal justice of England, xxxii. 349.
Cottu' s description of an English court of
justice, xxxiii. 335, 336.
Coventry, Lord Keeper, xxxiv. 182.
Sir W., xxxiii. 299.
Coverdale, xxxvi. 2.
Miles, notice of his translation
of the Bible, xxiii. 296.
Coverley, Sir Roger de, xxxiiL 476,
Coulanges, M., xxxvi. 340.
Coulumb, xxxv. 239.
Coiurcils of Poitou ancestors of the Church-
hill family, xxiii. 2.
Courtenay, Mr., xxiv. 218; xxxvii. 569.
Courtesy, Lady, xxxii. 373.
Cousin, Don M., xxi. 339.
Coutinho, D. G., xxvii. 13.
F. de, xxvii. 8.
Couto, D. de, xxvii. 10.
Cowley, xxiii. 169, 429, 433 ; xxviii. 412 ;
XXXI. 190 ; xxxii. 230 ; xxxiv. 367 ;
xxxv. 184, 185 ; xxxix. 269.
Cowling, xxix. 365, 366.
William, his statement of culti-
vated and waste lands in Great Britain
and Ireland, xxxviii. 418.
Cowper, xxxiii. 499; xxxv. 197, 200.
William, xxi. 113 — experienced
domestic emotions, xxiii. 406---remarks
on the insanity of, xxiv. 185 — observa-
tion of Campbell on his works, 535.
Private Correspondence
of, reviewed, xxx. 185 — character of his
letters, 187 — remarks on his insanity,
188, 189— extract of one of his letters,
while labouring under it, 191 — letter of
Cowper, vindicating his conduct, 193,
194 — remarks on his last hours, 196 —
advice respecting religious reading, 197-
199, 543.
• notice of the Life of, by
Hayley, xxxi. 263 — refused the laureate-
ship, 289 — ^undertakes a life of Milton,
300 — letter to Hayley on that subject,
ib, — ^visits Hayley at Eartham, 301 — ^his
opinion of Hayley's son, ib. 480.
• comparison between, and
Burns, xxxii. 217, 218, 231— transla-
tion of the * Iliad,* notice of, xxxiv. 4 —
Poems, character of, xxxv. 203 — de-
scription of Dr. Trusler, 407.
Digitized by
Googk
46
PART I.-INDfiX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
Cowpep, William, xxxriii. 27$ xxr. 428,
436 J xxvii. 62, 64.
Lord, xxxTii. 162 — panegyric on,
zxviii. 51.
■ ' xxiii. 61 — complaints made
against, of delays in Chancery business,
XXX. 277.
■ Lord Hi^h Steward, xxxvi. 523.
Cox, Bishop, xxiii. 298.
Captain, xxvii. 101.
— Colonel, xxxiii. 57.
Coxe, Archdeacon, Memoirs of John,
Duke of Marlborough, reviewed, xxiii.
1 — strictures on his remark on Sir R.
Walpole's opinion of history, ib. See
Matihorough, xxvii. 191 j xxviii. 48.
Coyne, R., xxxvii. 464.
Crabb's, George, ' English S3mon3rmes*
explained, xxxv. 403 — specimens of his
work, with remarks, 415-419.
Crabb, James, curious advertisement by,
xxxii. 29.
Crabbe, Rev. G., his minute and searching
pen, xxii. 150 — blundering notice of him,
by Mr. Paulding, corrected, xxx. 538,
539 — fisherman, xxxiii. 313 — his long
poetic silence and subsequent exceE
fence, xxxv. 195 — highly ranked by
Lord Byron as a poet, xxxvii. 420 —
remarks on,xxxviii. 368.
xxiv. 463 J xxxii. 343 ;
xxxviii. 368.
• Thomas, xxx. 538, 539.
Cracow, Duchess of, xxiv. 320.
Duke of, xxiv. 320.
Cracroft, Mr., xxxvii. 140.
Cradock's, Joseph, ' Literary and Miscel-
laneous Memoirs,' xxxv. 148 — notice of
them, 151, 152 — specimen of his poetry,
152.
Cragie, xxiv. 442, note,
Craggs, xxiii. 413.
Craig, Sir J., character of the Hottentots
given by, xxv. 454; xxix. 115.
Craig, William, xxix. 445.
Craiffengell, xxvi. 147.
Cranbume, xxxvi. 513.
Ctane, Gaffer, xxi. 103, note.
Ichabod, legend of, xxv. 59-65.
_ xxxi. 483.
Cranmer, xxXvi. 2, 38.
Cranmer's Tianslation of the Bible, notice
of, xxiii. 297 — itinerancy on a reduced
plan proposed to be retained hj him,
ixiv. 34, 36 ; xxvi. 90 ; xxviii. 2 -,
xxix. 317.
Cranmer, Archbishop, conduct of, in the
affair of Henry Vlll.'s divorte from
Queen Catharine, set in its true light,
xxxiii. 9-12 — falsely charged with bi-
gamy, 16-17 — ^his public character and
conduct vindicated, 18-21 — ^his inter-
ference in behatf of the Princess Mary,
with Henry VIII., 21 — ^how far he pro-
moted the Reformation during his reign,
22-24 — prudence of Cranmer in pro-
moting the Reformation during the
reign of Edward VI., 24 — conduct of,
xxxvii. 210 — share taken by him in the
Reformation, 212, 213.
Cranmer, Archbishop, xxxix. 304.
Cranstoun, xxvii. 339.
George, xxxvii. 324, note.
Crantz, xxi. 229 — account of the missions
in Greenland, xxxii. 24.
Crashaw, xxviii. 515 ; xxxii. 230.
Crastonus, Joannes, compiler of the first
Greek and Latin Dictionary, xxii. 312,
Cratcherode, Whiffin, xxiv. 350.
Crates, xxiii. 256.
— ^— an actor, and writer of the old
Greek comedy, xxi. 308.
Cratinus, the priee of victory awarded to,
for his ' Wine Flask/ xxi. 303-305.
Craven, xxix. 171.
Craufurd, Sir J., alleged breach of parole
of, xxvi. 3, 4.
Crawford, xxii. 416.
Mr., xxix. 352 j xxxviii. 489—
mission to Siam and Hue, failure of,
xxxiii. 122-130 — remarks thereon, 131-
133.
Miss, xxiv. 365.
Crawfurd, J., History of the Indian Archi-
pelago, reviewed, xxviii. Ill — remarks
on his account of the aboriginal races
inhabiting the Indian Island, 111-116
— on the languages of the Archipelago,
1 1 7 — ^particularly that of Sumatra, 119,
120 — execution of the historical parts of
the work, 125, 126 — remarks on the
policy which ought to regulate the future
intercourse of the English with the
Indian Islands, 127-129 — on the prices
paid for cloves, 131-132 — on his account
of the nutmeg tree, 134, 135.
Crayon, Geoffrey, Sketch-book of, re-
viewed, xxv. 50-67.
Crebillon, xxix. 26.
Creed, Mrs., xxxiii. 299.
Crellius, xxx. 101.
Cliemer, Abbott, xxvi. 200.
Crequi, Duke of, xxxv. 550.
Cressy, xxiii. 581 — ^the church historiail,
xxxix. 393.
Creuzer, Friedrich, Abriss der Romischen
Antiquitaten, xxxii. 67 — character of the
work, 68-84. See Rome, Part II.
Crewe, Nat., Lord, Bishop, account of,
xxxix. 395 — anecdote respecting the
monument of his second wife, 398 —
Bamborough Castle, the produce of the
forfeited estates of his brother, ib.
Crichton, Captain, xxxiv. 407.
Cripps, Mr., on the excellent state of the
Swedish roads, xxiii. 101— his testis
Digitized by
Googk
Review*
Index op names.
47
rnony to the merits of Mr. M'Adam,
101.
Crisp, Mr. J., xxviii. 132,
Crispe, xxvii. 392.
Crispin, xxix. 431.
Critias, xxxiii. 353.
Critobulus, xxiv. 444-449.
Croesus, xxxviii. 324.
Crofton, Captain, xxx. 78.
Crofts, Jacob, xxx. 284, note.
Croix, M. de, generous proposal of, xxviii.
307.
Croke, xxi. 403.
Richard, xxii. 314.
Sir A., xxviii. 185 ; xxxvi. 529,
note.
Sir John, xxxvi. 526, 527.
Croker, Crofton, xxxvii. 90.
J. W., xxviii. 228.
Letter to the Earl of Liver-
pool, xxxiv. 179 — ^its object, 184.
• T. Crofton, xxxv. 77.
Cromwell, xxxii. 286-288 — ^notice of Pope's
correspondence with, 305.
xxxii. 163, 400, note, 405, 444,
449,497; xxxiii. 3, 19.
Beau, xxiii. 418.
— ■ Earl of Essex, character of,
xxxviii. 399.
Henry, xxv. 279.
' Oliver, Memoirs of, by Oliver
and Thomas Cromwell, and others, xxv.
279— descent of the Protector, 280—
his parents and birth, 281 — anecdotes
of his early years and education, 282,
283— goes to Cambridge, 284— his cha-
racter at the University, ibid. — ^his con-
duct towards his uncle, 285 — ^marries,
ibid. — ^his hostility to the established
church, 286 — ^returned to parliament,
tWrf.— state of England in 1635, 287,
288 — Cromwell disappointed of sailing
to America, 288— extract of a letter of
his, 289 — ^protects the prosecuted non-
conformist preachefTS, ibid. — ^his parlia-
mentary conduct, 290 — his appearance
and behaviour in the Long Parliament,
291 — ^remarks on the state of parties
with reference to the condemnation of
the Earl of Strafford, 294, 295— conduct
of the parliament contrasted with that
of King Charles L, 296, 297— conduct
of Hampden, Cromwell, and their asso-
ciates, 299 — appointed captain of a
troop of horse at the commencement of
the civil war, 300 — ^his mode of training
and irpng the courage of his men, 302
— seizes Cambridge lor the Parliament,
and keeps down the neighbouring coun-
ties, 303— relieves Gainsborough, t'AiV/.—
remarks on his conduct at the battle of
Marston-Moor, 304 — quarrels with the
Earl of Manchester, 306— the Scotch
cabal against him, 307 — ^his conduct
with regard to the self-denying ordi-
nance, 308, 309— defeats the royal army
at Marston-Moor, 312 — state of parties
after the total discomfiture of the royal
armies, 318-328 — his unfeeling conduct
after the murder of Charles I., 330 —
defeats the rovalists in Ireland, 332 —
and the Scotch at the battle of Dunbar,
333— and Charles II. at Worcester, 335,
336 — turns out the Parliament, and pro-
cures one to be nominated, consisting
of his own creatures, 338, 339 — assumes
the protectorship, 339— remarks on his
policy, foreign and domestic, 339-344—
his wretched state of mind during the
latter years of his life, 345, 346.
Cromwell, Oliver, xxiii. 72 — promoted agri-
culture, xxiv. 405, 406, 408; xxvi. 187;
xxvii. 26; xxix. 170, 199, 290; xxx.
153, 443 — imaginary conversation of,
with Walter Noble, 510, 511.
— interference of, in behalf
of the Vaudois, xxxiii. 170-173, 313.
permitted the return of
the Jews to England, xxxv. 94, 550.
notice of, xxxvi. 32, 37.
xxxvi. 40, 50, 254, 562;
xxxvii. 237, 243, 250, 251— strange
imputation against, xxxviii. 250.
xxxviii. 222, 230, 246,
321 ; xxxix. .389.
Richard, xxv. 279. 320, 343.
• Robert, father of the Protector,
notice of, xxv. 281.
• Sir Henry, notice of, xxv. 281.
Sir Ohver, uncle of the Pro-
tector, notice of, xxv. 281, 303.
Sir Richard, notice of, xXv. 280,
281.
■ Thomas, ' Oliver Cromwell and
his Times,' reviewed, xxv. 279»
. xxix. 199.
Cronahan, Molly, xxxii. 207.
Cronegk, xxix. 427.
Cronus, xxiii. 500.
Crop, Thomas, xxxii. 103, 104.
Cropper, Mr., xxx. 559.
Crosby, Captain, xxx. 470.
Crosby's case, xxxvi. 520, note.
Cross, xxv. 111.
.- Mr., xxxiii. 552— number of persons
vaccinated bv, at Norwidi, 556.
Croton, xxiv. 449.
Crotty, Dr., xxxvii. 462^remarks on, 473.
Crouch, Mrs., xxxiv. 242, 247.
Croucher, xxiv. 484.
Croim, Admiral, xxxi. 163.
Crousai, xxix. 425.
Crowe, xxxv. 195.
Crowe, Mr., xxxiv. 386.
Crowne, notice of his tragedy of the De-
struction of Jerusalem^ xxiii. 200^ note^
Digitized by
Googk
48
PART L-i-lNDEX OF NAMES.
QUART&RLT
203, fio/e— specimens of it, 21 6^ 219,
220, notes.
Croxtone, Thomas, xxxvi. 527.
Cruden, xxiv. 507.
Cruikshank, xxxv. 181.
Cruikshanks, xxxiii. 8.
Cruise, Captain, residence in New Zea-
land, xxxi. 52 — occasion of his voyage,
53 — -description of the mode of saluta-
tion of the New Zealanders, ibid. See
New Zea/andj Part II.
vernia Orby Hunter, xxxix. 191.
Crusaz, xxvi. 494.
Crusoe, Robinson, xxxiii. 481.
Crusius, M., xxiii. 153, note.
Cruz, Donna M. da, xxviii. 164.
Ctesibius, xxxix. 433.
Cubrieres, xxvi. 240.
Cuchi, xxix. 100.
Cuesta, xxix. 78.
Cueva, Father C. de la, a Jesuit mission-
ary, notice of, xxvi. 319, 320.
' J. de la, notice of a poem of, on
the Laws of the Drama, xxix. 425.
Cuffe, xxxvi. 513.
Cuiacius, xxiv. 451 ; xxvii. 147.
Cmlen, xxiv. 170 ; xxxv. 181 ; xxxix.
257.
■ Dr., xxxvi. 216, note.
Cullum, Sir John, his account of a farm
in Norfolk, xxxii. 163.
Culpepper, Miss, xxxvii. 522.
Cumberland, Clifford, Earl of, account of,
xxxviii. 212, 214 — lines from an epistle
to his widow, 214.
• Duke of, XXV. 403; xxvii
182, 188; xxxvi. 207.
— ^— — ^ Earl of, died on his passage
to Brazil, in 1 593. xxxi. 14.
■ Mr., the 'Clouds,* how habited,
xxi. 301 — deficiency in his translation
of the * Clouds,' 302, no/e— error into
which led by a parabasis to the con-
demned play, 304, note — notices on
Greek cookery to be found in his ' Ob-
server,* xxiii. 249 — living characters in-
troduced by, in works of imagination,
xxxiii. 479 — ^why not classic, either as a
novelist or dramatist, xxxiv. 358.
. xxvi. 366 ; xxxiv. 247.
Cumin, William, Bishop, obtains the dio-
cess of Durham by intrigue, xxxix. 366.
Cumming, Professor, xxiii. 467.
— T. G., Illustrations of the Origin
and Progress of Kail and Tram-Roads,
&c., XXXI. 349. See Rail-Roads, Part
II.
Cunningham, calumnious remark of, on
Burnet's ' History of his own Times/
xxix. 169.
•— — Allan, xxxvii. 32.
Mr., the botanist, xxxii, 316,
323.
Cunningham, Mr., evidence of, on the effect
of prison discipline, xxiv. 251, 255.
P., Two Years in New South
Wales. See Wttlet, New South, Part U.
Cuper, extract from, xxxiii. 154.
Cupid, xxiii. 158, 195; xxvii. 3*24; zxx.
43.
Curiatii, xxvii. 276.
Curll, his publication of Pope*H letters, his-
tory of, xxxii. 287 — proceedings of Pope
on this occasion, 288, 289.
xxiii. 431 ; xxiv. 400; xxviii. 47;
xxx.229,«o/e.
Curr, Edward, account of the colony of
Van Diemen's Land, xxxii. 311 — his
description of the farms and farmhouses
there, 388, 389.
Curran, change of opinion in, with regard
to the French revolution, xxviii. 272 —
^ instance of his passionate but frothy
eloquence, xxix. 326.
xxxiii. 499, 565.
Currie, James, a physician, notice of, xxxiii.
180, 181.
Curtain, James, accompanies Mr. Belzoni
in his travels to Egypt, xxiv. 141 — ^meets
an unfortunate accident, 142.
Curtis, a slave-dealer, brutal conduct of, to
a British boat^s crew, xxvi. 65, 66.
Dr., xxxvii. 465.
— Joseph, xxiv. 227.
— Rev. Mr., xxxix. 265.
Sir W., xxxiv. 185.
Stephen, xxiv. 227.
Curtius, XXV. 160 ; xxvii. 281 ; xxxviii. 372.
Curwen, Mr., xxiv. 204.
Cuthbert, St., xxxiv. 276 ; xxxix. 364.
Cutwode, Thomas, xxxii. 155.
Cuvier, M., observations of, on fossil re-
mains, xxi. 45-47, 54'; weight of the
brain in man and different animals,
xxii. 22 — safety of his theory respecting
fossil human bones, 429 — ^remarks on
Demaillet's visionary notions of the
a(|uatic origin of all animated nature,
xxvii. 460 — indications of the Egyptian
zodiacs, xxviii. 78 — testimony of, to
the Mosaic account of the deluge, xxix.
144, 145.
xxxiv. 160, 509, 510, 513, 517,
523,524; xxxvi. 446, 452, 472, note;
xxxviii. 312.
Cuyne, Khan, xxiv. 320.
Cyclops, XXX. 383.
Cycnus, xxviii. 413.
Cymon, xxi. 276.
Cyprian, xxvi. 325 — doubtfulness of the
quotation of 1 John v. 7, attributed to
him, 332, 333.
xxxiii. 77-79 — ^whether he used
the Greek Testament or the Latin ver-
sion, 80, 81 — ^whether the argument for
the authenticity of 1 John v, 7, is
Digitized by
Googk
Rsvisw.
INDEX OF NAMfig.
4d
sfren^hened by a reference to his writ-
ings, 81, 82.
Cyriack, notice of, zxxii. 443.
Cyril, Septuagint version of the Bible used
by, xxiii. 322.
xxii. 310; xxv. 361 j xxxiii 82.
Cyrila, xxxiii. 84.
Cyrus, xxi. 314; xxiv. 79, 443, 503; xxvi.
453 ; xxvii. 493 ; xxxiv. 79.
Cytherea, xxx. 49,
Cythna. See Laon,
D.
Dacisr, Madame, xx. 279, noie^ 303, 304,
note; xxiii. 156; xxix. 425.
Dacre, Lady, xxiv. 537.
D acres. Captain, noble conduct of, xxvii.
76.
Daendels, infamous conduct of, xxvi. 64,
65.
T)aer, W. Lord, xxxv. 181.
Da Fonta, xxvi. 520.
I } agon, xxiv. 503.
Dagobert and Nauthildes, exhumation of,
inl793, xxi. 374.
xxii. 367.
D'Aguessau, Chancellor, observation of,
on international law, xxv. 245.
Daguesseau, xxvii 155.
DaiU^, xxv. 349.
Daines, Mr., xxxvii. 532.
Dakins, William, notice o^ xxiii. 302.
D'Alarcon, xxix. 425.
JD'Albignac, Greneral, xxii. 488.
Dale, Colonel, xxxix. 357, note,
' Squire, xxi. 476.
m Rev. Thomas, Translation of the
Tragedies of Sophocles, xxxi. 198 —
rarity of ^ood translations accounted
for, tbid. — ^ms remarks on the (Edipus
Coloneus, 199 — defects of his version,
204 — specimens of his translation of
the (Edipus Coloneus, 206-209 — its
general excellencies, 209.
Dalecampius, xxiii. 258, note,
D'Alembert, xxii. 131 ; xxvi. 230; xxvii.
167, 168, 478; xxviii. 35,510; xxxix.
439, 442.
Dalgarno, Lord, xxvii. 346^62.
Dalgetty, Dugald, xxvi. 126 ; xxvii. 341.
D'Alibard, electro-magnetic experiments,
xxxv. 242.
Dallaway, Mr., xxiii. 414, 416, 418.
Dallaway's edition of Lady M. W. Mon-
tague's works, xxxii. 281.
Dalrymple, xxxvii. 253.
Mr., xxi. 261 ; xxiv. 333, note,
— ^— - Sir John, xxxvii. 257.
Dalton, Mr., xxviii. 404 ; xxxiv. 167,
Daly, Right Hon. George, xxxvi. 8.
Dalzell, Professor, xxii. 296, note^ 312—
Iiectiures on the Ancient Greeks, re-
viewed, xxvi. 243 — state of classical
literature in Edinburgh when he under-
took the Greek professorship, ibid, —
vol.. xu NO. ucxix.
character of his work, 244-247 — his
defective account of Grecian orators,
247 — ^vindication of Issbus from Mr.
Dalzel's censure, 247-250 — incorrect-
ness of his assertion respecting Grecian
freedom and happiness, 252--and con-
cerning the state of society in Athens^
256-270.
Damas, Baron de, xxxiv. 585.
'" M. de, xxviii. 465.
D'Amboise, G., xxv. 132.
Damm, xxii. 336.
Dammaree, xxxvL 549.
Damocles, xxiii. 160 ; xxix. 336.
Damon, xxvii. 349.
Dampier thought there was a great strait
or river openmg behind the Archipelago
of the Rosemary Islands, xxiv. 70.
XXX. 152.
■ Captain W., trained in the school
of the buccaneers, xxxviii. 235.
Justice, opinion of, on the vast
increase of law reports, xxi. 405.
Dampierre, M. de, murder of, xxviii. 305.
Danae, xxx. 47; xxxii. 134.
Danby, Judge, xxxvi. 531.
Dance, Mr., xxxi. 15, 16.
Dancourt, xxix. 415.
Dandin, Greorge, xxix. 419.
Dandolo, Andrea, xxi. 187 ; xxiv. 565.
Dan^au, xxvi. 229.
Daniel, xxvii. 38 ; xxix. 37.
ranked low as a prophet by the
modem Jews, xxxviii. 123.
book of, translated by Thomas
Cole, xxiii. 298 ; xxvii. 37— belief of, in
a futiure state, 523.
the poet, xxxv. 195.
Father, xxii. 370.
- Mr., prevented by Copyright Act
from continuing his works on Africa,
Ceylon, &c., xxi. 202.
• Pere, xxv. 566 — description of the
burning of six Calvinists, 567.
- Princ(
uce, xxix. 121.
Daniell, xxi. 403, note; xxx. 403.
Capt., xxxii. 432.
Danneker, a famous German sculptor, no-
tice of, xxiii. 443, 444.
Dante, instances of the use of literal meta-
phors, xxi. 301, note— the Galdralag or
magical lay, usod by him, 364— could
Digitized by
Googk
AO
PART I—INDK OF NAMES.
QuAmnmLt
not have produced the ' Rape of the
Lock/ udii. 410 — comparative merit of
Pope with, xxiv. 82, 99, 101, 546 •—
comparison of him with Petrarch. 549,
564--his poem sent to Petrarch, 563 —
influence of his poetry on the Uterature
of Italy, 564, 565 — his circiunstances,
565 — remarks on his merits, xxviii. 369
^-compliment paid by him to Homer,
and absence of all accurate Homeric
allusions in his work, xxx. 45.
Dante, translation of, begun by Hayley,
xxxi. 283 — notice of Mr. Carey^s trans-
lation, 284.
■ compared with Milton, in his de-
scription of heaven, xxxii. 229 — more
original than Ariosto, xxxiii. 489.
m, notice of Mr. Carey's translation
of, xxxiv. 8, 9.
, comparison of his Divina Comme-
diawith Milton's Paradise Lost, xxxvi.
49-54, 473.
■ remarks on, xxxvii. 57 — curious
key to his Divina Gommedia, 58 ;
xxxviii. 372.
xxi. 388, 396, 494,511;mi. 106,
159; XXV. 16,436; xxvu. 62, 402.
D'AnviUe, xxii. 291; xxiii. 231, note;
xxiv. 168; xxvi. 391.
Daoud Cacheff, xxiv. 149.
Daphne, xxiv. 549 ; xxx. 43.
Daphnis, xxix. 456.
Dapper, xxii. 293.
D'Arco, General, xxiii. 24.
Darcy, xxiv. 362.
Daretas, xxiii. 137.
D'Argenson, xxviii. 35.
D'Argeutal, M., xxiii. 165.
Darius, xxii. 110; xxiii. 266; xxiv. 79;
xxvi. 451.
■ Nothus, xxx. 162.
Darling, General, xxxvii. 5 ; xxxix. 318
— chain of mountains called from his
name, 319.
Darlington, Lord, xxxiii. 323.
Darmas, D., xxvii. 35.
Damley, xxvi. 140.
■ compared with Andrew of Hun-
gary, xxxi. 75.
D'Artagnan, Marshal, xxiii. 61.
Dartmouth, Lord, remarks of, on Burnet's
History of his own Time, xxix. 168,169
— ^their severity accounted for, 169.
' xxxix. 267.
Dartneuf, xxxvi. 437.
Daru, Count, appointed Intendant-General
in the kingdom of Westphalia, xxii.
485— description of the scene between
him and Buonaparte after the Battle of
Trafalgar, xxvi, 18.
— P., Histoire de la Republique de
Venise, xxxi. 420— character of it, 426,
427, See Twice, Part n.
Darwin's, Dr., poetical works, character o^
XXXV. 200-202.
absurd hypothesis of, on
life and orffanixation, xxii. 14, 2$ ;
— ^letter to Mr. Edgeworth, xxiii. 523.
■ xxiii. 251, 4U ; xxiT. 434,
note; xxvii. 117, 461 ; xxxv. 406.
Darwin, Mrs., xxiii. 535.
Dashwood, Sir F., xxvii. 211.
Daste, Grajan, xxxii. 375.
Dathan, XXV.281.
Daubeny, Dr., xxxiv. 519; xxxvi. 439—
definition of trachyte, 454, »o/e— classi-
fication of the volcanoes of Auvergpe,
480.
I on Volcanoes, xxxvii. 297,
fwie — hypothesis of, explained, 298.
Daubrai, General, xxix. 69.
Daumerliug, xxi. 100.
Dauphin, xxi. 145.
Daussy, M., xxii. 148.
Davanzati, the historian, xxxiii. 2, 12.
Davenant foretold the decrease of the pros*
perity of Great Britain, xxxii. 183.
xxvii. 248 ; xxix. 208 ; nonr.
187.
— — "^ bishop, xxxiv. 347.
David, xxi. 62; xxiii. 218; xxiv. 486;
XXV. 360 — example of, quoted as a
proof that dancing, singing, and clapping
of hands, are acceptable offerings of
praise to the Almighty, xxvii. 97— de-
scription of him, xxix. 37, 177 — ^trans-
lation of the fieht between him and
Goliah into the Malabar language, 412
— dancing before the ark, xxxviii. 366,
note,
■ xxvii. 319, note; xxviii. 97;
xxx. 192.
Captain, xxxii. 363.
St., xxi. 372; xxiii. 581.
the painter, xxxi. 175.
Davidofi; untimely fate of, xxii. 109«
Davie, J. C., xxvi. 32.
Davies, xxi. 101, mo^.
— notice of his poetry, xxxii. 231 .
Bishop, Joshua, Judges, and
Ruth, translated by, xxiii. 29&.
Davila, xxv. 299.
Davipe, San M. de, xxv. 380.
Davis, the navigator, xxxiv. 386.
•^ Captain, xxi. 237, 240 ; xxviii.
407 — ^notice of the voyage of discovery
of, xxx. 232.
~ Dr., xxxix. 2, note,
Mr., Chinese novel translated by,
xxi. 79 — the * Heir in Old A^c,' xxv.
425 — Chinese proverbs from his collec-
tion, xxxvi. 500.
Mr., xxi 126.
Sur 3(}lan, xxiii. 371, 372.
Davison, John, xxxvi. 495.
Davoust, xxii. 487.
Digitized by
Googk
RSTIBW*
INDEX or VAIfES.
<1
Davus, zziii. 146.
Davy, Dr., xxxv. 181.
Sir Humphry, xxi. 259— his tafety-
lamp a spell against the demon of the
Corona Rotaceoy xxii. 366, »io/c— re-
marks on the effects of gypsum in agri-
culture, xxiii. 379, note — tints of dif.
fereut seas, to what owing, xxr. 378.
xxi. 259; xxvi. 108; xxix. 147}
XXX. 220 ; xxxi.384 ; xxxii. 349 ; xxxr.
2, note.
Dawes, rule for the use of A* with an
optative verb, xxv. 526 — ^remarks on his
researches on the digamma, 59, 60,
xxii. 322 ; xxvii. 48, 54.
Dawes, Dr., an emigrant to America, no«
tice of, xxix. 348.
Dawson, Captain, xxxv. 516.
G. R., on the Catholic Associa-
tion, xxxviii. 541, 542.
■ J., xxxvi. 597.
: Mr., remarks on the climate of
New South Wales, xxxvii. 7— on the
country round Port Stephens, 13 — at-
tempt of, to civilize the natives, SO;
xxiii. 518.
Nancy, xxiii. 486.
Day, Mr. Thomas, notice of him and his
absurdities, xxiii. 523-526.
Dealtry, xxii. 148.
Deans, David, xxvi. 117— •character of,
119.
Effie, xxvi. 115.
Jeannioi xxvi. 117, 141.
Dearlxnm, General, concludes an armistice
with SirG. Prevost, xxvii. 410 — lands
an American army on the Canadian
shore, 4 16 — surprised by a small British
force, and put to flight, 417.
De B., notice of, xxii. 487.
De Barros, xxviii. 115.
Debayakaikin, an Abiponian chieftain, no-
tice of, xxvi. 297-300— he is killed, 309.
De Bourgueville's History of Caen, notice
of, xxv. 115.
De Bracy, xxvL 129.
De Bucfa, M., xxxvi. 439.
Decatur, Commodore, xxi. 128.
De Caze, xxii. 482.
Decii, xxiii. 587.
Decio della Horte, notice of a tragedy by,
xxiv. 77.
Decius, xxii. 60; xxv. 17.
Decker, Sir M., the pine-apple first grown
by, in England, xxiv. 407.
Decres, M., xxvi. 3, 5.
Decretot, M., xxxi. 401.
Deering, Sir E., xxviii. 18.
Deffand, Madame du, xxvii. 175.
— comparative view of
the social life of England and France,
by the editor of the letters o^ X3uux.
475.
Defoe's noreli^ often eonsidertdinia narra-
tives, xxiv. 361 1 xxvii. 345— object of
his * Religious Courtship,* xxix. 180^
an advocate for the poor laws, xxxvii 54 1 1
— — xxxiii. 218; xxxiv. 407.
Degonstoff, M., xxix. 134.
De Grasse, Admiral, xxvi. 27.
De Grey, Sir W., xxv. 266.
De Heere, xxxviii. 380.
Dehmaun, Mohammed ben, account of
Mungo Park's death given by, ssdii.
Deinarchus, xxvii. 384 ; xxix. 337.
Dekker, xxix. 37.
De la Fosse, Dr., xxvi. 450.
Delahogue, Dr., xxxvii. 472.
Delambre, M., xxxvi. 152.
De la Motte, Count, xxiii. 12, 18, 67.
De la Rue, Abb4, Essai Historique sur la
Ville de Caen, reviewed, xxv, 1 12,
Delaval, xxvii. 184.
John, notice of a rinir of, xxix.
454.
Sir F., xxiii. 519-522.
Delaware, Lord, xxxvii. 17, note.
DeUlah, xxvi 377.
Delille, Abb6, xxiv. 552; notice of an
imaginary conversation of, with Mr.
Landor, on French poetry, xxx. 5 1 6, 5 1 7.
' J., his version of the Georgics,
xxxviii. 366, 367, 369, 371.
Delisle, xxii. 291 ; xxvi. 519,
Dell, W., xxv. 314.
Delia Casa, xxiv, 133.
Della Cella, Dr., xxvi. 57 ; Viaggi da Tri-
poli alle Frontieri dell' Egitto, reviewed,
209 — account of Tagiura and its envi-
rons, 211, 212— notice of the ruins of
Lebida, 212, and of the Cistern^ of
Ptolemy, 213 — ^his journey across the
African desert to the Cyrenaica, 214-
219— present state of Cyreue, 221 — pro*
ductions of Derna, 223 — remains of
ancient art found at Bengazi, 224-226.
De Lolme, xxv. d34, 542; xxvi. 244; re*
marks of, on the establishment of the
feudal system in Europe, xxvii. 150,
151.
Deloraine, xxvii. 339.
Delort, J., Histoire de THomme au Masque
de Fer, xxxiv. 19 — character of his work,
20. See Iron Matk, Part II.
Delrieu, M., xxix. 26.
Delrie, xxii. 375 ; xxvi. 194 ; xxix. 452.
Deluc, xxii. 415.
Delves, John, xxxix. 58.
Demades, xxix. 336.
Demaillet, M., visionary theory of the
earth, xxvii. 460.
De MauneviUe v. De ManneviUe, xxxix.
191.
Demetrio, xxvii. 224.
Demetrius, xxiii. 344 ; xxvi. 147.
E 2
Digitized by
Googk
59
PART I.-INDEX OF NAMES.
QcuiTEBUr
Demetrius the Silversmith; xxxii. 12.
p Phalereus, xxvii. 63, 64, 384,
PoUorcetes, xxii. 192, note.
Demidoff, M., vast wealth acquired by,
from the Russian gold mines, xxxix.25.
Demo, xxii. 153.
Democritus, xxi. 280, 282; xxiii. 251.
Demogorgon, xxvi. 172, 175.
Demophoon, xxvii. 49.
Demosthenes, definition of the ' hetaer©,'
or female friends, xxii. 191, 311.
■ his works complete, translated
by the Abb6 Auger, reviewed, xxvii. 382.
■ remarks on his oratory, xxix.
318 — ^his oration against Aristogeiton,
not genuine, 333 — specimen of it, with
remarks, 335-337.
.1 xxxiii. 337 — ^his abuse of the
Athenian orators, 343, note.
' xxii. 35, 31 1 ; xxiii. 139, 141,
393, 480, 497; xxiv. 441, note, 449,
note; xxv. 336 ; xxvi. 247, 248, 259;
xxix. 384 ; xxxvi. 57 ; xxxix. 267.
Demus, xxi. 306 ; xxiiL 268, 503, 504 ;
xxvi. 264,271.
Penham, Lieut, (afterwards Major), xxvi.
56 — explanatory researches of, in com-
pany with others, into the interior of
Africa, xxix. 510-523 — dangerous situa-
tion and providential escape of, 517, 518.
' Major, voyage of, down the river
Shary, to Lake Tsad, xxxi. 459, 460—
journey through the Loggun country,
461 — notice of his intended expedition
round the Tsad, 464 — his interview with
a Mohammedan from Timbuctoo, 468,
469.
■ (imd others), discoveries of.
in Africa, xxxiii. 518 — las account of an
Arab song, 522.
xxxiii. 121 ; xxxiv, 604 ;
xxxviii. 334; xxxix. 144.
Sir John, xxxii. 290 ; xxxviii. 30.
Denis des Moulins, Bishop of Paris, xxi.
382.
Denison, Mr. xxxvii. 261, note,
Denman, Mr., xxxiii. 516.
Denmark, Prince of, xxiii. 12.
Dennett, Father, xxvi. 129.
Dennis, xxiii. 431.
. Charles, xxxv. 199.
. J., xxxvi. 311.
Denon, M., dismissed from the museum,
to make way for Count Forbin, xxiii.
83.
* xxviii. 74 ; xxxv. 123.
P'Entrecasteaux, xxiv. 70 ; xxvi. 358 ;
xxvii. 101 ; notice of the natives of Van
Diemen's Land, 102,
Depazzi, xxii. 410.
Depons, M., xxi. 335 ; xxx. 152.
Derby, Ljidy, xxxvi. 45.
Derham, xxi. 49 ; xxxiv. 311 ; xxxvi. 150.
Dering, Sir E., xxxvii. 240.
Dermody, xxi. 122.
De Ruyter, xxvi. 28.
Derwentwater, Lord, xxxvii. 366, note.
De Sacy, xxiv. 328, note ; xxv. 383.
Desaguliers, Dr., xxxii. 407, 408.
M., xxxvi. 150.
Desaix, General, xxviii. 74 ; xxxvi. 79.
Desborough, objects to Cromwell*8 assum-
ing the title of king, xxv. 344.
Descartes,'xxii. 129; xxv. 529, 572; xxvi
84, 486 ; xxxiii. 481 ; xxxix. 435, 439.
Deschneff, xxv. 213 ; xxvi. 518.
Desdemona, xxvi. 143 ; xxxiii. 16.
Desfontaines, M., xxi. 373.
Desgenettes, M., opinion of, as to the con-
tagious nature of the plague, xxxiii.
235.
Deshnew, xxvi. 342, 344.
Deshoulieres, Madame, lines of, on Pe-
trarch and Laura, xxiv. 552 ; xxxiv.
429.
Desideri. See HippoHto,
Desilles, xxviii. 298.
Deslandes, M., xxxiv. 84.
Deslons, M., xxviii. 465.
Desmarest, M., xxxvi. 439.
Desmarets, Lieut., xxiii. 155, 157, 162,
163.
Desmoulins, Camille, xxi. 373.
Dessalines, xxi. 446 — retaliates on the
French for their atrocities, 448 — ^pro-
claims the independence of St. Domingo,
and is appointed governor-general, 449
.—further bloody conduct, 450 — is
crowned emperor of Hayti, 450— cha-
racter of him aud his government, 451
— ^his death, ibid.
Destouches, xxix. 27, 415.
De Thou, xxv. 555.
Deucalion, xxx. 383.
Devaux, M., xxiii. 155, 161.
Devilliers, xxi. 351.
Devonshire, Duke of, xxi. 482 ; xxv. 406,
410; xxvi. 435, 436; xxvu. 182, 188 ;
xxxi. 498 ; xxxii. 153— Dr. Pichot's ac-
count of, 346, 347.
xxxiii. 415; xxxiv.
240 ; xxxvii. 255.
De Wilton, xxvii. 339.
De Witt, xxiii. 10; xxxv. 550.
Dian,xxiv. 435, note.
Diana, xxii. 193, note^ 359 ; xxiii. 501 ;
xxvii. 23 ; xxviii. 422 ; xxix. 52, 441 ;
xxx. 49.
— Munychia, xxiii. 347.
Diagoras, xxv. 519.
Diaper's Poems, character of, xxxv. 191,
192.
Diaz, Berual, attached to planting trees,
xxxviii. 198.
Peter, xxix, 250.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
53
Dibdin, Mr., xxii. 347 ; xxv. 115; xxriii.
86f note.
' Rev. T. F., the Library Compa-
nion, xxxii. 1 52 — character of his former
publications, ibid. — ^his account of the
sale of the Duke of Roxburghe's Boc-
caccio, 153, 154, and of the Roxburghe
Chib, 154, 155 — remarks on his s^le,
155, 156 — ^plan of his Library Compa-
nion, 156 — extract from it, 157 — re-
nuurks thereon, 158 — and on the execu-
tion of his book, 158-160.
'" remarks on, xxxviii.
386.
Dicsearchus, xxii. 194, note.
Dicaeopolis, xxiii. 477, 479, 485, 492, 494,
495.
Dicast, Mrs., xxiii. 271.
Dick, Alison, xxix. 444, 445.
Dickson, Dr., xxix. 481 ; xxxiii. 520.
Mr., his expedition to the coast of
Africa, xxxviii. 109, 110 — supposed to
be dead. 111, 449; xxxix. 144.
Mr. R., xxvii. 424.
Robert, superintendent of the Mis-
sissippi Indians, xxxi. 100 — his influ-
ence over them, 106.
Diderot, xxiii. 251 ; xxvi. 230, 234 ; xxvii.
167, 168 ; xxix. 28, 427 ; xxxv. 546.
Dido, xxiii. 440 ; xxv. 428.
Didot, xxi. 492 ; xxii. 54.
Didymus, compiler of a Tragic Lexicon,
xxii. 305.
Diemerbroerch, xxii. 25.
Dietrich, xxi. 105, note.
Digby, xxix. 469.
Gr., Earl of Bristol, remarks of, on
the Test Act, xxxviii. 552.
• Lord, xxv. 293; xxix. 317; xxx.
511; xxxviii. 421.
Mr., notice of a letter from him to
Pope, xxxii. 285.
Digges, xxxiv. 209 ; xxxvi. 183.
Dillenius, xxxiv. 1 67.
Dillingham, xxiii. 302.
Dillon, Lord, bog reclaimed by, xxxviii.
421.
Dimnah, xxi. 99.
Dinewulph, Bishop of Winchester, xxxiv.
290.
Dinmont, Dandie, xxvi. 116.
Diodes, xxii. 199 ; xxiv. 422 ; xxvi. 257 ;
xxvii. 283.
Dioclesian, Emperor, xxiii. 87.
Diocletian, xxiii. 144; xxxix. 202.
Diodorus, xxxii. 71 ; xxxiii. 88.
■ Siculus, thought Homer had
visited Eg}'pt, xxi. 33.
correctness of his as-
sertion established, that the Ptolemies
built many magnificent temples in
Egypt, xxii. 457.
— — popular assemblies a
part of the civil polity of the Macedo-
nians, xxv. 160.
Diodorus Siculus, the Ethiopians a mighty
people, xxvii. 234— the practice of com.,
posing orations to be spoken by others
originated with Antiphon, 390, 497.
— xxx. 397; xxxiv. 91;
xxxix. 433.
Diogenes, xxx. 521.
" ■ of Apollonia, xxi. 279, note.
Laertius, xxi. 279, note, 288,
note, 313; xxiii. 148; xxvii. 389.
Dio^enianus, xxii. 305, note — notice of
his Lexicon, 306.
Diomed, xxiii. 141.
Diomede, xxviii. 57.
Diomedes, xxvii. 48.
Dion, xxiii. 257.
Cassius, xxvii. 293.
Dionysidorus of Chios, xxi. 284.
Diouysius, xxii. 304 — criticisms on Isseus
and Lysias, xxix. 328, 329.
xxxii. 69, 70 ; xxxiii. 121.
the Areopagite, xxiii. 143 ; xxxiv.
336.
■ I., xxx. 388.
11., xxi. 318.
of Ualicamassus, xxiii. 141, 150;
xxvi. 245, 259, note.
the first Greek
who speaks of the Digamma, xxvii. 43,
44, 50 — remarks on his Roman History,
274, 276 — connexion between patron
and client, 286-288 — ^his narrative of
Romulus' s division of the people into
tribes and curiae, 289-292 — origin of the
senate, 292 — institutions of Servius Tul-
lius, 297, 298— commencement of the
TepubUc, 299 — the institution of Tri-
bunes, 301 — and of the decemvirs, 303,
304, 383, notei xxviii. 324.
Thrax, xxiii. 141.
Dionysodotus, xxiii. 266.
Diopeithes, xxvi. 262.
Diophanes, xxvi. 264.
Dioscorides, xxii. 307; xxiii. 148, 333;
xxv. 508.
Diotima, xxiv. 433, 437.
Diphilus, account of the tricks of Athenian
fishmongers, xxiii. 262 — quotation from,
xxxiii. 345.
Dirce, xxiv. 83.
Dirk Hatteraick, xxvii. 340.
D' Israeli, Mr. J., Curiosities of Litera-
ture, vol. iii., reviewed, xxiii. 245, 412,
421.
Mr., xxxiii. 313; xxxvii. 194,
note, 404 ; xxxviii. 443.
Ditmarus, xxvi. 43, 44.
Dixon, Mr., xxxi. 407-417 ; xxxvii. 461.
Tom, xxvi. 52.
Dobbs, on the State of Ireland, xxxviii. 54.
Mr., xxx. 236.
Digitized by
Googk
S4
PART I.—INDBX OF NAMES.
Quaaterlt
Bobeneck, L. F. Von. Des Deutschen
Mittelalten^ &c., notice ot, xzii. 349,
350.
Dobo, M.,xxxi.402.
Dobree, Professor, xxxi. 180.
Dobrizhofibr, M., Account of the Abi-
pones, reviewed, xxn. 277 — notice of
the author, ibid. — arrives in the river
Plata, 279— dangerous journey to Cor-
doba, 279-281— is stationed in one of
the Guarani Reductions, 285 — ^his mode
of addressing the savaees, 287 — ^is sent
to reside among the Abipoues, 290 —
removed thence, 315 — his privations
and sufferings, 315-319 — is obliged to
defend himself against a hostile tribe,
321 — character of the good Father and
his work, 322, 323.
■ XXX. 152 J xxxii. 461 — ^his de-
scription of Mooma, 462, nQte.
Bobson, Mrs., description of the person of
Petrarch, xxiv. 532.
Docherd, Dr., notice of the journey of, in
the interior of Africa, xxiii. 241, 242;
xxvi. 56 ; xxvii. 143.
Dodd's Roman Catholic Church History,
character of, xxix. 166 — quoted, xzxiii.
16, 27— notice of him, xxxvii. 205.
Dodd, C. E., letter to Mr. Peel on Mmie
of the legal reforms proposed by Mr.
Brougham, xxxviii. 241, 253, 272.
Dr., xxxir. 311.
— Mary, xxi. 156.
Mr. R., zxx. 225.
Doddington, xxxii. 184.
Doddricbe's, Dr., translation of a passage
in St. Paul, observations on, xxx. 96.
Dodington, Bubb, xxiii. 403 ; xxv. 400,
401— intrigues of, 404, 405, 406, 412,
413 — ^remarks on a plot of Walpole's,
xxvii. 183, 204, 206.
Dodsley, xxiii. 40 1— brought out by Spence,
406 — compelled to publish a fFor/d
Extraordinary i xxvii. 202.
Dodson, xxi. 403, note,
BodweU, xxii. 31 j xxv. 853 j xxxvii. 33,
35.
» Mr., injury to, from existing Copy-
right Act, xxi. 203 — extract from his
Tour through Greece, xxiii. 341.
Dolben, Judge, xxxvi. 531.
Dolce, Ludovico, notice of, xxiv. 76.
Doleman, xxxiii. 21.
DoUond, the optician, xxxiv. 75, 76— achro-
matic telescope invented by, xxxviii. 8.
Dolomieu, M., xxix. 144.
Domberg. See Ruix.
Domenioiino, xxxii. 52.
Domiano, xxx. 144.
Dominic, the first inquisitor-general, xxxiii.
154 — cruel penance imposed by him on
Ponce Roger, 155 — pretended miracles
wrought by him^ 156,
Dominic, St., a notable fanatic, account of,
xxu. 79-81.
xxviii. 19 } xxxiii. 155, 156,
157} xxiv. 476, 557.
Domitian, Emperor, xxiii. 192 \ xxxiii. 8 ;
xxxvii. 43.
Don, General, xxviii. 333.
Donaldson, Mr., paper on the Cultivation
of Tobacco in Australian Colonies,
xxxix. 334.
Donas, xxx. 144.
Donatello, xxxii. 65.
Donatus, xxvii. 47, 48 ; xxx. 44.
Donald Bean, xxvi. 129.
Donne, Lines on the Grave, xxi. 392-—
style of, xxix. 299.
xxxii. 291; xxxvii. 260.
— — John, xxxix. 382.
Donnil Dhu, xxvi. 474.
Dorante, remarks on the character o^ xxix,
418, 419.
Dorchester, Earl of, xxxiii. 307.
Lord, xxxiv. 186.
Dorhout, xxxiii. 88.
Dormer, Lieutenant-Colonel, xxvi. 435.
Dorotea, xxv. 23.
Dorothea, xxiii. 162.
Dorotheus, xxii. 305, note,
Dorset, Duke of, xxi. 482 ; xxv. 410.
Lord, xxvi. 427, 435, 436 j xxvii.
146; xxix. 206.
D'Orville, xxx. 383.
Dorville's Journey over the Himalaya
Mountains, uotice of, xxiv. 339.
Dotchm, Mr., xxxii. 412.
Douce, Mr., xxxvii. 488.
Dougherty, Jesse, advertisement concern-
ing, in a Kentucky newspaper, xxi.
156.
DoTighty, Mary, xxvii. 450.
R. xxvii. 450.
Douglas, xxxvi. 168.
I. Bishop of Salisbury, xxxiv. 347.
Dr., xxxii. 157 ; xxxiii. 375, 376 ;
xxxvi. 308.
(Jeorge, xxvi. 142.
Hon. F. S. N., xxiii. 125, note-^
Essay on Certaiu Points of Resem-
blance between the Ancient and Modern
Greeks, reviewed, 325. See Greece,
Part II. — every flower had some mean-
ing among the Greeks, 264.
— . John, necessity of a legal provi-
sion for the Irish poor, xxxviii. 53, 83.
Mary, xxxii. 41, note.
Mr., xxxi. 401.
- consul at Tangier, xxxviii. 1 08.
Robert, hazardous escape from the
castle of Donne, xxxvi. 181.
Sir H., the Crisis of Spain, re-
viewed, xxviii. 536 — character of his
pamphlet, 540 — state of Spaiu, in 1808;
on ito iuTasbn by Buonaparte^ 545.
Digitized by
Googk
lutniKw*
INDEX OF NAMES.
55
DouWj the painter, xxxi. 482.
Dow, xxi. 403, note; xxv. 267, note,
' Lorenzo, notice of the sect of Jerkers
in America, xxviii. 7.
Downie, Captain, xxi. 17 — gallant death
of, xxvii. 446, 447.
Downing, Sir G., xxxiii. 308.
]>ownshire. Marquis of, xxxiii. 459.
Doyle, Dr., Letter on the church establish-
ment in Ireland, xxxvii. 476, note.
— contradictory opinions of, as to
Catholic emancipation, xxxviii. 566, 567
—vehemence of his Catholic hallucina-
tions, 587 — ^his wilful misrepresentation
on the subject of tithes, 588 — falsely
accuses the ±*rotestant church of perse-
cution of popery, 589, 590.
xxxiv. 401; xxxvi. 228, note;
xxxviii. 543, 557.
Draces, xxiii. 254, note,
Draco, xxi. 170.
Drake, Sir F., xxxvii. 17, note — ^the first
in obloquy abroad and renown at home,
ibcxviii. 212 — anecdote of the old stew-
ard, xxxix. 347.
Drayton, xxi. 100; xxxii. 230, 291.
Drouet, escape of Louis XVI. prevented
by, xxviii. 304.
Drax, Colonel, xxxviii. 227.
Drovetti, M., two agents of, suspected of
a plot against M. Belzoni's hfe, xxiii.
• 94; xxiv. 147, 154 — further observe^
tions on the attempt on M. Belzoni's
life by Drovetti's supposed agents, 1 66 ;
ixvii. 224, 239.
— — Voya^ k rOasis du Dakel, re-
viewed, xxviii. 59 — falsehoods of, ex-
d,70.
XXX. 491.
Dribble, xxxi. 484.
Drummond, xxiii. 169.
the poet, xxxviii. 41.
Gen. Sir G., xxvii. 435.
Drummond, H., on poor-rates and the
tent of cottages, xxxviii. 67, note.
Mr.,xxxvu. 157; xxxviii. 352.
■ Sir William, xxii. 13 ; xxvii.
480.
Dryden denaturalized the character of the
apologue of the ' Hind and the Pan-
ther,* xxi. 497 — rhyming tragedy written
by his ridiculous rivals xxiii. 200, note —
apostate, called Oxford the English
Athens, 246^ontest between his ad-
mirers and those of Pope, 408, note —
comparison of, with Waller, 430 — rock
on which he foundered, xxv. 24 — obser-
vation of Johnson upon, xxvi. 256.
' xxix. 174 — immoraUty of his
plays, 206 — his observations on the
English stage, 208, 301 — ^want of talent
in, for dramatic poetry, 422 — blunder of
Mr. Paulding respecting, corrected, xxx.
538 — his notions of the duties of a
translator, xxxiv. 2 — his skill in the use
of alliteration, 13,14 — considered at
the best model of a poet, xxxv. 215—
his 'Absalom and Achitophel,' quota-
tion from, xxxvi. 537, note — verses of,
xxxviii. 381, 385.
Dryden, xxiii. 402; xxiv. 76; xxv. 1, 18,
98, 428, 435; xxvi: 116; xxvii. 481;
xxxi. 273 ; xxxii. 230, 290, 294; xxxiii.
293, 304 ; xxxv. 187, 189 ; xxxvi. 185,
229, 522; xxxvii. 32, 417; xxxviu.
37 ; xxxix. 103.
Dryfesdale, xxvi. 141.
Duarte, xxv. 18.
Dubarry, Madame, xxviii. 458.
Dubois, xxi. 100, note.
Abb6, opinion of, as to the expe-
diency of changing the institutions, re-
Ugious or civil, of the Hindoos, xxix.
409. 410.
xxxiii. 38 — account of the
character of the Indians who become
converts to Christianity, 39, 40.
— — Cardinal, sudden exaltation oi^
xxvii. 154.
Du Bourg, A., condenmed to death as a
Protestant, xxv. 557.
Dubravius, xxxviii. 524.
Dubster, Mr., xxxiii. 480.
Du Cange, xxvi. 195.
Ducarre^ Dr., Anglo-Norman Antiquities,
character of, xxv. 114.
Ducas, Theodore, Travels of, xxviii. 365-—
plan of the work, 366, 367 — anecdote
of Machiavel, 368, 369— literary cha^
racter of Guicciardini, 369— anecdote of
Ariosto, 370-372.
Ducetius, xxx. 383.
Duchayla, xxxix. 439.
Ducis*s imitation of Shakspeare's Hamlet,
remarks on, xxix. 46, 47 — and on hit
imitation of Romeo and Juliet, 47, 48—
and his other imitations of Shakspeare,
48, 49.
Duckworth, Sir John, xxxvii. 386.
Duclos, xxvi. 230; xxvii. 167.
Dudley, C. S., xxxvi. 4.
Earl of Leicester, xxxiii. 8.
Lord, xxxix. 240.
Robert, Earl of Leicester, charac-
ter of, xxxviii. 403— his domestic life, ib.
Rev. John, Dissertation on the
Identity of the Niger and the Nile, re-
viewed, xxv. 25 — ^laudable motives of
his publication, 45— examination of his
argument for such identity, from the
Argonautics of ApoUonius Khodius, 46-
50.
Rev. Mr., xxvi. 103.
Duende, xxii. 359.
Duffy, Colonel, xxix. 110.
Dufresny, xxix. 27, 415.
Digitized by
Googk
66
PART I.--.INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTERLT
Dogdale, xxxvi. 536.
Dugdale's Monasticon, heavy tax on the
reprint of, xxi. 203.
Du Guesclin, xxv. 72.
Du Halde, xxi. 67, 76, 80.
Duhesme, General, movements of, in Si)ain,
xxix.73.
Duigenan, Dr., xxiii. 517.
Duionca, xxxiv. 32.
Duker, xxii. 345.
Dumas, Count de, xxviii. 304.
Dumont, xxiv. 236.
Dumoiuiez, xxix. 576.
Dunboyne, Lord, xxxvii. 462, note.
Duncan, xxv. 430 ; xxix. 429.
Dr., xxiv. 408, 417, 418.
— - Jonathan, notice of, xxxvii. 124.
Lord, xxvi. 15, 30.
Mr., xxxiv. 166; xxxvii 139.
Dimcombe, Mr., xxix. 147.
Dundas, remarks on, by M. Rubichon,
xxiii. 193.
— — — Captain, xxii. 477.
Henry, xxxiii. 592,
'■ Mr., xxxiv. 469.
Sir D., xxv. 77-— notice of the
manoeuvres introduced into the army by
him, 81.
Dundee, xxix. 171.
Dunier, xxxiii. 216.
Dunlop, XXX. 43.
Dunn, John, of Cape Girardeau, in the
state of Missouri, xxxi. 87 — evidence of,
before the House of Lords, relative to
Irish absenteeism, xxxiii. 458.
Dimois, xxv. 72.
Dunstau, St., xxi. 106, 372, 379 j xxii.
10, 67, 76.
Dunton, John, xxix. 180 — observation of,
on the stage, 208 ; xxxiv. 204.
Duntze v. Levett, notice of the case, xxv.
241, 263, 264.
Duperray, M., account of the chan^
effected in Otaheite by the missionanes,
xxxi. 61, 62.
Dupin, English seats too glowingly por-
^ayed by, xxxviii. 156.
— Charles, M^moires sur la Marine
de France et d'Angleterre, reviewed,
xxii. 34 — account of the wet docks in
London, 36-38 — ^victualling department
at Deptford, 39 — Dock-yards at Wool-
wich, Sheemess, and Cnatham, 40, 41
— vindication of Mr. Seppings*s im-
provements in naval architecture, 42-44
— notice of M. Dupin's account of
Portsmouth Dock-yard, 48 — and of the
block machinery there, 49, 50 — the
author's just tribute to the talents and
merits of Mr. Watt, 56.
I Voyages dans la Grande
Bretagne, premiere partie, reviewed,
XXV. 67 — plan of his work, 85~Kis
homage to Great Britain and the British
army, 86, 87-89— strictures on his tirade*
on our alleged inhumanity to prisoners,
of war, S7y 88 — his remarks on our
cavalry, 90 — on the amount of our an-
nual losses in the season of warfare, 91
— ^his tribute to our military colleg^es
and schools, 92 — especially tliat for
sappers and miners, ib. — number of
arms furnished by Britain, from 1803
to 1816, 93 — notice of the author's
errors, 93, 94.
Diipin, Charles, Voyages dans la Grande
Breta^e, deuxieme partie, reviewed,
xxvi. 1 — ^refutation of his misstaten^ents
relative to the treatment of French
prisoners of war, 2-1 1 — statement of the
moral causes of the superiority of the
English navy to that of France, 12-14
— parsimony of Buonaparte towards the
French navy, 19 — points of superiority
of the Enghsh over the French navy, in
its best state, 21-31.
Sur la Force Commerciale
de la Grande Bretagne, reviewed, xxx.
368 — observations of, on the defective
education of the French, 371— on the
various improvements now carrying on
in England, 375 — comparison of British
streets, sewers, and roads, with those of
France, 376-379~and of British canals,
380 — ^remarks on Waterloo Bridge, 381,
382.
— » M., Pieces Judiciaires relatives au
Proces du Due d'Enghien, reviewed,
xxix. 561^-extracts from the preliminary
proceedings of the mock court for trying
the Duke, with remarks, 572-574 — the
interrogatory of the Duke, 574-576 —
observations thereon, 576-580 — ^results
of M. Dupin 's publication, 572.
— — ^ xxxi. 410, note — incorrect asser-
tions of, respecting England, xxxiv. 56
— refutation of them, 57, et seq., 88, 89
— character of his work on England, 87.
L'Avocat, xxv. 86; xxvi. 1.
- xxiii. 319.
Du Plessis, Commodore, xxviii. 167.
Duplin, Lord, xxv. 409.
Duponceau, Peter, of Philadelphia, xxxi. 8 1 .
Dupont, General, surrender of the French
army under, xxix. 78.
-^— — - M., accompanies Mr. Ritchie to
Africa, xxiii. 227 — and suddenly leaves
him, ib. note,
•frereSf number of wives married
by them, xxx. 142.
Diippa, xxxii. 475.
— Bishop of Salisbury, xxxiv. 347 —
letter by, to Richard Ligon, author of
an early history of Barbadoes, xxxviii.
225.
— :— R., Address to Parliament on
Digitized by
Googk
^HBir^
INDEX OF NABiES.
57
Copyright, x^* ^9^* See Copyri^hi,
Part if.
Dupuis, Mr., appointed Vice-Consul of
Coomassde, xxii. 284.
xxiii. 244 ; xxviu. 77 ; xxxi.
470, 471.
Durandus, xxvii. 319.
Duras, Duke de, xxviii. 302.
Durionius, zxiv. 350.
Durweish Suffer, xxxvi. 383.
Durazzo, Charles, Duke of, xzxi. 69.
Dutch Sam, xxi. 92.
Dutens, M., M^moires sur les Travaux
publiques de TAngleterre, brief notice
of, xxiL 58, 59 — blunder in his map
of Plymouth Sound, xxviu 239.
xxi. 35, note; xxxiv. 31.
DuTot, xxvii. 259.
Duval, Amaury, £xpos6 des Faits sur la
Cession de Parga, reviewed, xxiii. Ill —
falsehood of his statements, 1 27, 1 33, note.
Duval, M., La Filled'Honueur, Come die,
reviewed, xxix. 414.
Duvalle Tableau, xxix. 27.
Duvaucel, M., xxxiv. 161, note,
D'Uuzeda, Duke, xxi. 478.
Dwight, President, melancholy statement
of the deficiency of religious ordinances
in the United States, xxi. 7 — three
millions of souls in the United States
destitute of religious worship, xxiii. 550.
Dwight, Presideni, Tmrels in New Eng-
land and New York, reviewed, xxx. 1
— interesting facts in natural history,
noticed bv him, 2 — his theory of the
origin of the diseases commonly ascribed
to stagnant waters and marsh mias-
mata, 9 — ^account of an extraordinary
waterspout or burst on land, 15 — and of
a moving rock, 16 — ^his theory respect,
ing the coldness of particular winds, 20
— observations on Ehr. Dwight*s poUtical
bias, 23-27 — his remarks on the present
condition of New England, 31— on the
division of states, 33-S6-^ account of the
manner in which new settlements are
made, 37-39.
's Travels in America, quoted,
xxxi. 509.
Dyer, character of his * Fleece,* xxxi. 287,
288— brought us back to the love of
natural objects, xxxv. 192.
George, beautiful sentiments on the
advantages of antiquarian pursuits,
xxxix. 360.
Mr., difference between schools and
universities pointed out by, xxxix. 127.
Mrs., xxxv. 160.
Sir J., xxi. 402, 403.
Dymoke, Rev. Mr., xxx. 524.
Dyson, Mr., xxxiii. 234,
E.
Eachard, xxiii. 580.
Eadbehrt, xxiii. 582, note,
Eadric, notice of the laws of, xxxiv. 259.
Eady, Dr., xxiv. 510.
Eames, Mr., testimony of, to the bad state
of the roads near London, xxiii. 99, 100.
Earle, Bishop, xxxii. 485, 494.
— Commodore, incompetency of, xxvii.
411.
Eamscliff, xxvii. 340.
Earnshaw, xxv. 179.
East, Mr., xxi. 200.
Ebba, xxi. 97.
Ebn Haukal,xxix. 118; xxxvi. 122, 128.
Echard, xxii. 534, note,
'— F., xxx'ii. 154.
Eden, Mr., remarks on the statute (esta-
blishing the hulk system) drawn up by
him, xxx. 425 —offences improperly
classed under the hard denominatiun of
rebellion, xxxvi. 549.
Sir F. M., xxix. 219 ; xxxii. 193.
Edgar, King, xxi. 100; xxiii. 560 — ^laws
to regulate weights and measures formed
as early as, xxvi. 416.
Edgell, Mr., xxiv. 222.
Edgewortb, Captain, zxiii. 511.
Edgeworth, Francis, xxiii. 511.
—————John, xxiii. 511.
' Lady, anecdote of, xxiii. 512.
Miss, defects in her novels,
xxiv. 358, 359.
-xxix. 31 5; xxxi. 479 ; xxxiv.
361. See Edgeworth, R. L., Esq,
— — R. L., Esq., Essay on the Con-
struction of Roads and Carriages, xxiii.
96 — he recommends some degree of
curvature in laying out roads, 102 — his
opinion of the inemcacy of convexity in
laying out roads, 103— advises the ma-
terials to be broken small, 104 — his.
mode of forming roads on unsound sub-
strata, ibid.
• Memoirs of, by himself
and his daughter, xxiii. 510 — anecdotes
of his ancestors, 511-514 — ^his lax no-
tions of the degrees of kindred betwee i
whom marriage may be contracted, 51 J.
— sundry improbabilities in his narrative
pointed out, 513 — birth of Mr. Edge-
worth, 510 — anecdote of his early yeari,
5 1 4 — ^his mock marriage, 5 1 5— falsehood
detected in his account of it, and in his
statement relative to a college-examina-
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PART I.— mDSX OF NAMES.
QuiftHWLi
tion, 516-518 — ^his fiMt marriage, 518,
519 — attempts at telegraphic apparatus,
520 — remarks on his claim to the in-
vention, 521, 522 — is recalled iVom
France by the death of his wife, 526 —
becomes acquainted with Miss Honora
Sneyd, 527, whom he marries, 529 —
retires into Ireland, 530 — state of that
country, 531 — vacillating conduct of Mr.
Edgeworth, 532 — ^letter of Dr. Darwin
to him, ibid. — curious blunder of Miss
Edgeworth relative to the meaning of
the term decade, 535 — death of Mr.
Edgeworth's fourth wife, 536 — ^his^A
marriage, t5irf. — rebellion of 1798, 537
— temporising conduct of Mr. Edgeworth,
ibid, — its efiects to himself, 538 — stric-
tures on his conduct in parliament, rela-
tive to the union of Ireland with Eng-
land, 540, 541, and on his experimental
method in education, 541, 542 — ^last
hours of Mr. Edgeworth, 543 — ^reasons
for inferring his disregard of Revelation,
543-548— concluding strictures on the
Memoirs, 548, 549.
Edgeworth, R. L. Esq., bog reclaimed by,
xxxviii. 421.
Edmonstone, Mr., xxxvii. 130, 133.
■ Sir A., Journey to two of the
Oases of Uppw Egjrpt, reviewed, xxviii.
59 — ^ascent of the pyramid of Cephrenes,
—73.
■ V. Lochart, notice of the case,
XXV. 240, 263.
Edmund, Canon of Salisbury, biographical
notice of, xxxiv. 328, 329 — pretended
miracles ascribed to him, 330, 331.
Edney, Mr., xxix. 356.
Edred, xxxii. 99.
Edrisi, knowledge of the geography of
Africa retarded by him, xxiii. 238-— A«tf
of the Niger confounded with its eur-
rent, xxvii. 216 — inaccurate description
- of the direction of the Bahr el Abiad,
xxviii. 91.
■ xxii. 291 ; xxiv. 316.
Edward I., xxii. 547 ; xxv. 564 ; xxvi.200 ;
xxvii. 322 j xxxii. 93, 94, 99, 100, 106,
164 J XXXV. 93 ; xxxvii. 199.
it II., murder of, xxv. 550; xxxii.
93,100, 102; xxxvi. 140.
" ■' III., price of corn in the reign of,
xxix. 219, 220.
■ xxi. 194, 403; xxii. 548;
xxvi. 25 ; xxvii. 252 ; xxx. 339, note,
346, 422; xxxii. 93, 99, 101, 102, 108,
> IV., law against importation, 3,
cap. 4 ; xxi. 410.
— VI., xxii. 584 ; xxiv. 34 ; xxv. 56 1 ;
xxvi. 188 ; xxviii. 19 ; xxxiii. 6 ; xxxiv.
79; xxxvii. 210.
" the Black Prince, why so called^
«zx. 346.
Edward the Gonfesfloir, xsdSi. 554)
192.
■' Prince, xxr. 401.
xxv. 111.
• and Guthram, xxix. 457.
Edwards, the, principles of res^iction in
commerce ^evailed in theitign of, xxiv.
283.
Edwards, notice of his Palemon and Ar-
cite, xxix. 36.
' ^mgrened, xxix. 181.
Bryan, instance of fidelity in a
negro slave mentioned by, xxi. 437.
xxviii. 160; xxix. 482; xxxvii.
• Jonathan, author of the History
448.
of Redemption, xxxi. 112.
Mr., xxx. 22. 261 ; xxxi. 408.
364.
Edyth, Widow, xxxii. 155,
Effie, xxv. 99, 102.
Egana, Don Mariano, xxxr. 115^ 145.
Egede, xxi. 229.
Egehric, Abbot, xxxiv. 289.
Egelwin, Bishop of Durham,
Egeria, xxviii. 318.
Egerton, Bishop, xxxix. 405.
■ Lady, xxxix. 255.
Lady S., xxvii. 213, 214.
Mrs., xxvii. 339,
Eg^lesham, Lord, xxv. 1 53.
Egidius, Dr. J., notice of, xxix. 247 — the
founder of the Protestant church at Se-
ville, 249 — ^account of his persecution
and death, 250.
Eginhart, xxxiv. 251.
Eglantine, F. d*, xxix. 27.
Eglin, xxxvii. 74.
Eglintoun, Lord, xxiii. 520.
— Eari of, xxv. 153.
Egmont, Comtesae d', xxx. 558.
'■■ Lord, xxv. 405.
— Van, xxii. 105.
Egremont, Earl of, xxiv. 410 — agricultu-
ral improvements at the Stag Park^
xxxvi. 396, 397.
Ehliug, executed for witchcraft xxix. 447.
Ehrmann, M., notice of chemicdl experi-
ments made by, xxiii. 472.
Ehud, xxii. 365.
Eichorn, Professor, xxvii. 44 ; xxxi. 179.
Eiro, A. P. de, xxvii. 14.
Eisenmenger, xxxviii. 124.
Ela de Vitri, xxxiv. 325.
El-b4kery, Mahomet, xxxiii. 544.
Elbeuf, Duke of, xxxiv. 28.
Elcho, Lord, xxxvi. 178.
Eldon, Lord, xxii. 460— judgment of, in
certain cases of literary piracy, xxvii.
126-132 — examination of the principles
of his decisions, 133-135 — particularly
its effects on the liberty of the press, 135-
137, 155.
■■ uzijus% charged with delays
Digitized by
Googk
Rsniw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
«•
in Chancery, zxx. 274— cause of such
delayK, 278, and of the increase of busi-
ness in his court, 279-283 — statement
and comparison of the various judg-
ments pronounced by his Lordship and
by Lord Hardwick, 284, 285— proofe of
Lord Eldon*s official despatch of Judicial
business in the House of Lords, 286-288
— ^real evils in the Court of Chancery,
and sugg^estions fbr remedying them,
' 291—- conduct to have been pursued on
the abolition of the slave-trade, zxxiv.
583.
Lord Eldon, simplification of the bankrupt
law by, xxxvii. 187 — a schoolfellow of
. Liord Collingwood, 366.
■ conduct of, as a reformer of
our laws, xxxviii. 243 — opinion of, as to
the removal of a magistrate, 260 — on
the casuistry of Catholics respecting
oaths, 563.
- his decision in the case of
Percy Bysshe Shelley, xxxix. 193— in
the case of T. L. Wellesley, 195.
£leanor of Guyenne, statue o^ discovered
by Mr. Stothard in the abbey of Fonte-
Yrauld, XXV. 136 j xxxix. 47.
Princess, xxv. 427.
^leaxar, xxiii. 202-224 ) xxxv. 96.
Electra, xxiii. 475, note ; xxv. 508.
Elers, Miss, xxiii. 526.
— Mr., xxiii. 518, 529.
Eleutho, xxviii. 420.
Elfi Bey, xxx. 488.
Elgin, Lord, sneers and declamation of
Count Forbin against, xxiii. 84, 85;
xxvii. 236, note.
M xxxviii. 334.
Elhasan, xxvi. 195, noie,
Eliakim, xxiv. 162.
Elias, xxi. 397.
Elibank, Lord,xxxvi. 183— anecdotes o^
198.
Eliezer, Rabbi, dying admonition of, xxxv.
97.
Elijah, xxviii. 38, note; xxxiv. 131 ; xxxvii.
76.
Eliot, the apostoUc, notice of his translation
of the Bible into the language of the
Six Nations, xxxii. 18.
Elisa, son of Javan, xxxi. 380.
Elisha, xxiv. 497 ; xxxiv. 131 ; xxxvii. 539.
Elizabeth, Madame, xxviii. 458, 466.
■ Queen, mreat evils arisinfl^ from
the 43d of, xxi. 424 — seen to sink into
the flames of Etna, &c., xxU. 367 — com-
parative decorum maintained by her in
her court, 434 — ^wife of Marlborough
would have made a queen like her,
xxiii. 1 1 — ^helped to plat^ on the throne
of France the most national monarch
that ever sat upon it, 185— the Bishops'
BibU published undeo: her authority in
1568, 297 — an example and pattern of
learning, and prosperous state of He*
brew hterature under her, 300— pre-
vented by motives of policy from reme*
dyine the evils of transferrinff impro-
priations from the regular mto lay
hands, 561 — appearance among us
again, of the spirit of poetry, such as tt
was in her eolden age, 589 — contests
against Calvmistie doctrines fVom het
times downwards, xxiv. 6 — announce-
ment by the chancellor, of her intention
to amend the laws, 264 — romantic story
of a ghost in print in Elisabeth's days,
309 — ^number of exotics introduced in
her reign, 415 — tomb at lona, of her
time, xxv. 119 — halls of her days al-
most worn out, 125 — ^warmly patronized
the search for a North-West passage,
177— opinion of the Church of England
in the beginning of her reign on the
law of divorce, 234, and note — esteem of
Elizabeth for Sir Richard Cromwell's
eldest son, 281 — establishment of the
Inquisition in France the year she as-
cended the English throne, 560 — in-
fluence on her of the prevailing leaning
to the reformed creed on the part of her
subjects, 561 — correctness of Sir Wal-
ter Scott's delineation of her as queen,
xxvi. 116 — alleviations allowed to her
rival, Mary, 139 — causes of the interest
attached to her name, 143 — ^portrait of
her extraor^ary and contradictory pe'
culiarities, ibieL — law (5 Eliz. c. 15)
passed against false prophecy, 188, 189
-^noble exclamation, when dissuaded
from gazing at the comet, which was
thought to TOde evil to her, 209 — notice
of laws for the protection of British
•hipping, ''xxviii. 431 — statute ag^st
witchcraft, xxix. 443.
Elizabeth, Queen, theory of the reign of,
devised by Roman Catholic writers,
xxxiii. 26— insinuations against her pri.
▼ate character, ibid. — ^repeUed, on Roman
CathoUc authority, by a review of her
moderate and conciUatory measures at
the commencement of her reign, 27, 28
— ^proofs that the seminary priests, put to
death in her reign, were capitally pu-
nished fbr treason, 29-32 — anecdote of,
xxxvi. 313, note,
— — — ^— her proceedings with
regard to the Reformation, xxxvii. 217,
218 — excommunicated by Pope Pius V.,
222, 225.
wanting in generosity.
xxxviii. 144— Anecdote respecting, 380
—character of, 401, 402.
• xxiii. 510; xxiv^. 314,
mtef xxvii. 341 ; xxviii. 19 ; xxix. 185 ;
jja, 52, 232, 526 ', xxxu. 22, 164, 227j
Digitized by
Googk
6<^
PART I.—INDEX OF NAMES.
QUABTEKLT
xxxiii. 311, 436, 438, 440, 443 ; zxxiv.
60, 182; xxxvii. 73, 470, 536.
Elizabeth of Schonauge, xxxvi. 32.
£llenborough*8, Lord, act, Mr. Bentham*8
opinion of, xxi. 170.
■ remarks on the law
of Ubel, XXXV. 572-575.
his character as a
legislator, xxxviii. 2 13.
XXX. 471 ; xxxvii.
410 ; xxxviu. 243 ; xxxix. 192.
EUer, Elias, notice of the tenets of, xxviii.
14, 15.
Elliesiaw, xxvii. 340.
Elliot, Anne, xxiv. 369-371.
. Colonel, Indian superiutendant,
xxxi. 107.
Elliott, Mr., opinion of, on emigration to
America, xxix. 348.
•xxi. 482.
531.
• Sir G., XXX. 427; xxxiii. 579, 580,
. Sir W., xxiv. 368.
Ellis^ curious fact related by, xxv. 200;
xxviii. 382; xxx. 41.
" *s Knowled^ of Divine Things, re-
marks on, XXXI. 118.
Hon. G. A., The True Histoiy of
the State Prisoner, called the Iron Mask,
xxxiv. 19 — character of hb work, 35.
See Iron Mask, Part II.
— Mr., xxi. 67, et teq. ; xxv. 413 j xxvi.
130; xxxiii. 11, 16.
Monasticon quoted,xxxix.54, note.
' of Madras, xxix. 412.
" the missionary, xxxvi. 298.
- Charles, remarks of, on neg^-
slavery, xxix. 482.
*— William, Narrative of a Tour
through Owhyhee, &c. xxxv. 419 — ^his
account of the taboo, 423— of the vol-
cano of Kiranea, 426 — of the departure
of the Queen of the Sandwich Islands
for Europe, 430.
Ellwood, the quaker, xxxix. 255.
Elmes, James, Letter to Lord Liverpool
on New Churches, xxiii. 549 — ^his pro-
posal for improving their architecture,
586, 587.
Elmsley, xxiii. 142, note — his criticisms
not approved by Hermann, xxiv. 393 —
critical remarks on some of his various
readings in the Agamemnon of ^schy-
lus, xxv. 512, 513, 526— the most finely
Attic scholar of his age, xxxii. 91.
EIrayra, xxii. 1 57.
Eloisa, xxiii. 418; notice of Pope's epistle
to, xxxii. 299.
Elphinstone, Mountstuart, doubts the Is-
raelitish descent of the Afghans, xxxviii.
144.
•— Mr., xxix. 409; xxxvii. 133,
137.
Elrington, Dr., xxxvii. 477, note,
Eisner, xxxiv. 104, note. j
Klspeth, xxv, rOl ; xxvi. 137.
Elton, Capt., xxxv. 386.
Elvira, XXIX. 41.
Elwes, Sir Jervis, trial of, xxxvi. 515.
Elzevir, xxxvi. 29.
Emanuel, King of Portugal, xxiv. 335 ;
xxvii. 34.
Emily, a neglected poet, character of, with
specimens of his productions, xxxv. 1 93,
194.
Emlyn's Inquiry, notice of, xxxiii. 96.
Emmett, xxxvi. 66.
Mr.xxL137.
Empedodes, xxvii. 384 ; xxix. 453 ; xxx.
148, fio/f; xxxiii. 362.
Empson, xxxvi. 524.
Enderlin, xxxiv. 78.
Endimion, xxi. 507.
Engelhardt, xxvi. 441.
Engelmann, xxvi. 441.
Enghien, Duke d*, pamphlets relative to the
murder of, xxix. 561 — ^refutation of M.
Savary's attempt to charge M. de Talley-
rand with the chief guilt of this murder,
562-567, and of his exculpation of Buo-
naparte, 567-572 — details of the duke's
mock trial, 572-576— remarks thereon,
576-580 — Savary's attempts to excul-
pate himself examined and disproved,
and his participation in that murder
established, 580-5b5 — picture of his
death proposed by Mohammed Ali, xxx.
488.
Englehardt, xxxv. 391.
English, Mr., Narrative of an Expedition
to Dongola and Sennaar, reviewed,
xxviii. 60 — his journey through Nubia,
86, and the country of the Berbers, 87
— the seat of the ancient Meroe disco-
vered by him, 88 — remarks on his ac-
count of the river Bahr-el-Abiad, 89, 90
— arrives at Sennaar, 94 — description of
its capital, 95.
Ennius, xxxii. 69, note.
Enoch, xxvii. 512 ; xxxiii. 145.
Enrique, xxv. 18.
Ens, xxv. 353, note,
Ensor, George, on Radical Reform, xxii.
102 — causes of neglect of his writings,
102 — ^his jealousy of Jeremy Bentham,
103, 104 — observations on his view of
the defects of our constitution, 104 — an
advocate for annual parliaments, 105,
and for radical reform, 106 — ^his abuse
of George III., 107 — word legitimacy ^
scream of terror at the, xxvi. 107,
Epaminondas, xxii. 168 — his army at
Leuctra consisted of only 6000 men, 382 ;
xxv. 171.
Epaule. See Scapula.
Ep6e, Abb4 de T, the first practical teacher
Digitized by
Googk
«Kjcttsw«
INDEX OF NAMES.
t\
of the deaf and dtimb, on sdeniific prin-
ciples, xxvi. 392 — ^remaiks on the devia-
tion of the Abb^ Sicaidfrom his system
of tuition, 395, 396,
Bphendion, zxiv. 426.
Sphialtes, xxviii. 426.
Kphippus, an enormous fish mentioned by,
xxiii. 256, note.
Kpiceleustus, xzii. 307.
£{nchares, xxix. 324.
iBpicharmus, xjd. 275— consequences of a
Grecian entertainment, xxiv. 423, noie ;
454, note.
Epicrates, xxvi. 260, 266 ; xxxiii. 352.
£pictetu8, xxiii. 414 ; xxxiv. 171.
Epicurus, xxiii. 141. 259 ; xxxiii. 372.
Epig^ies, xxvi. 264.
Epinay, Mad. d', xxxiv. 435.
Epiphanius, xxiii. 144 ; xxv. 356, 357, and
noie, 359, 361; xxvi. 333; xxviii. 2;
xxxiii. 82,87.
Epistemon, xxix. 443.
Epps, xxi. 97.
l^aneus, xxii. 307.
Erasmus, xxii. 312 — testimony of, to the
character and learning of Bishop Ton-
stall, xxiii. 297 — ^remark of, on Canter-
bury Cathedral, 583.
— — xxiv. 33, 229— his paraphrase
of the gospels ordered by Cranmer to be
read in churches, xxvi. 90, 246.
xxviii. 43 — fulfilment of his
wish, that the English were as indus-
trious as they were in^nious, xxix. 1 79.
XXX. 95 ; xxxii. 159 ; xxxiii. 14 ;
xxxvi. 43 ; xxxvii. 52 — the first editor
of the Greek Testament, xxxiii. 77 —
why he omitted the disputed verse 1
John V. 7, 78.
character of, xxxvii. 64 — de-
scription of the pedagogues of his time,
xxxix. 106, 307, 374.
Bishop of Arcadia, refused to
ordain Wesley, xxiv. 47, note,
Eraste, xxix. 430, 431.
Eratosthenes, his discoveries in astronomy,
xxxviii. 4 — analysis of the oration of
Lysias against, xxix. 330-333.
Ercilla, xxv. 6; xxx. 448.
Erebus, xxiv. 435, note,
Ergasion, xxiv. 426.
Ergocles, xxvi. 267.
Eriphile, xxix. 45.
Ermanilda, St., supposed miracle by, xxxix.
101.
Erminia, xxx. 50.
Ernesti, xxii. 315 — his remark on the
correspondence in phraseolo^ between
Polybius and the sacred writers, xxiii.
142.
Eraesti's Homer, xxxii. 157.
Emulphus, xsx, 130, note, 527 ; xxxiv.
Erotian, xxii. 305, note, 337.
Erotocritus, xxiii. 148.
Enkine, General, xxxiii. 63.
Lord, xxix. 288 ; xxxix. 193.
Mr., XXXV. 582— :. impassioned
language in Uardy*s case, xxxvi. 346,
347.
■'■ " Thomas, curious account of him
by R. Pichet, xxxii. 342.
Erycius Puteanus, xxxvii. 410.
Eryx, xxx. 392.
Ei^ximachus, xxiv. 429.
Eschenmeyer, Professor, xxiii. 445.
Eschholz, Dr., xxvi. 347, 357.
Eschwege, Von, visited Brazil, xxxi. 19.
Escobar, xxxiii. 150.
Fray Luys de, object of sprinkling
graves with holy water, xxi. 37 1 .
Eslain, a German actor, notice of, xxiii.
444.
Esnay, M. de, xxxii. 357.
Espafia, reviewed, xxx. 1 52. See Mexico,
Part II.
Espinasse, Madame de 1', xxvii. 1 75.
Esquirol, Dr., xxiv. 184.
Esquivel, P., notice of a trigonometrical
survey of Spain, made by, in the reign
of Philip II., xxix. 258, note.
Ess, Leander Van, Professor, his zeal in
circulating the scriptures in Germany,
xxxvi. 4, 5.
Essex, Coimtess of, xxxiv, 183 ; xxxvi.
555.
Essex, Lady, xxvi. 144.
Essex, Lord, xxv. 301, 304 — instance of
political foresight in, 306, 307 ; xxviii,
46, 47 ; xxx. 52.
Estang, Sieur 1', xxxiv. 28, 29.
Esteban, Don, or Memoirs of a Spaniard,
xxxiii. 205— strictures thereon, 206-217.
Estela, xxv. 16, 17.
Esther, xxiii. 298.
Estrades, Abb6 d', xxxiv. 22, 24, 25.
Estr^es, Mar^chale d*, xxxii. 251.
Ethelbald, xxxiv. 267.
Ethelbert, king of Kent, xxxiv. 258.
Ethehed, xxxii. 99.
Ethelweard, xxxiv. 280.
Etherege, xxix. 212.
Etherington, Major, xxvi. 366.
Etienne, H. See Stephens.
M., Les Plaideurs sans Proces,
Com^die, reviewed, xxix. 414.
' Robert, xxii. 315.
R. St., xxviii. 272.
EhayMfj xxii. 343.
Eubulus,xx'u. 200— quotation from, xxxiii.
344.
Eucherius, Bishop of Lyons, xxvi. 325,
338 — ^improperly said to have quoted
1 John V. 7, xxxiii. 86.
Eucina, Juan de, xxxviii. 373.
Euclid; xzii. 501; xxiii. 148; xxvi. 258.
Digitized by
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QvARTlBtt
£ucrateS; xxii.^85> ttoief xjciii. 477.
Eudes^ XXV. PSl.
Euergetes II. xxiii. 138^ 142.
Eufraxia, St., brief notice of, xxii. 64.
£ug8Bon, xxi. 286.
Eugene Napoleon, Prince, zxriii. 225.
IV., Pope, xxiv. 335.
Prince, xxiii. 21, et teq,
Euler. See Clairauit,
^— opinion of the Newtonian phikno-
phj^, xxi. 43, note ; xxii. 130, 134, notef
xxiii. 358 — munificence of Parliament
to, ixxvi. 19; xxxvii. 282.
Eulogius, xxii. 305, note,
Eumenes, xxx. 388.
Eumetis, xxiv. 424, «o/e.
Eunice, xxx. 105.
Eunicus, xxii. 199*
Euphiletus, xxix. 331.
Euphrauor, xxii. 194.
Euphrosyne, xxiv. 522-525, 527.
EiipoUs, xxiii. 258.
Eurenoses, xxxv. 67.
Euripides, observations on his ^ Eleetra,*
xxiii. 475, note, tt teq. — unity of place
disregarded by, xxvii. 483.
xxi. 273, 275; xxii. 165, note,
315; xxiii. 268, 482, 487, note, 495;
xxiv. 76, 429; xxv. 506, notes xxvii. 57 ;
xxix. 33 ; xxxiv. 148 ; xxxviii. 379.
*Ev^t9ri'^ns, xxiii. 152.
Euryalus, xxx. 51.
Eusebio, xxv. 21.
Eusebius, inquiry whether 1 John, v. 7, was
omitted by him, xxvi. 327, 328.
! xxii. 441 ; xxiii. 139, 149, 319 ;
xxx. 480; xxxiii. 70; xxxiv. 285.
Eusebius, St., first monastery supposed to
be founded by, xxii. 66.
Eustace, xxvi. 136 ; xxx. 346, note.
' Rev. Mr., mistakes of, xxi. 488,
note,
Eustathius, xxii. 30&-.his Commentaries
on Pindar and Homer, written in the
twelfth century, xxiii. 140, 141, 152.
xxv. 517, 520, 527.
Euthycles, xxii. 197, 198.
Euthydemus, of Chios, xxi. 284.
Euthymius, xxv. 361.
Eutocius, sixiii. 144.
Eutychus, xxxv. 454.
Euzina, xxix. 424.
Evadne, xxviii. 420.
- a tragedy, reviewed, xxii. 402—
analysis of the story, 407, et seq.
Evagrius, xxii. 63, 65 j xxvii. 532.
Evander, xxviii. 319.
Evandra, xxix. 207.
Evans, Lieut.-Colonel de Lacy, on the
Designs of Russia, reviewed xxxix. 1
— miseries anticipated by him, from the
capital of Turkey falling into the hwids
of the Russian autocrat; 30— -pr^^cribes
as a remedy an antied intervention^
32.
Evans, Mr., account of the meetings of the
f'reethinking Christians, xxiii. 575.
■ xxiv. 61, 62, 68 — Gteographi*
cal and Historical Description of Van
Diemeu's Land, reviewed, xxvii. 99.
notice of the evidence of, be-
fore the Select Committee of the House
of Commons on the Criminal Laws,
xxiv. 208, 214, 216, 219, 224.
• xxi. 92; xxxii. 153, 154.
" a ballad-printer, xxxiv. 311, 312,
Evanson, Rev. W. A., notice of a pamphlet
translated by, xxxvi. 317, note,
Evanthe, xxxvi. 204.
Eve, not the first woman, according to Mr.
Lawrence's notions, xxii. 13.
xxiii. 343; xxiv. 484; xxvii. 512;
xxviii. 72; xxix. 187; xxx. 105, 510.
Evee, a New Zealander, xxxi. 54.
Evelyn, regretted there was no public
cemetery without the walls of London,
xxi. 381 — great increase of buildings in
London, xxiii. 553 ; xxiv. 404 — dis*
couraged the cultivation of the potato,
406 — ^reception of Charles II. in London
after his restoration, xxix. 173.
xxxi. 481 ; xxxii. 163 — character
of, and comparison with Pepys, xxxiii.
288, 289 ; xxxvii. 74— extract from his
* Dianr,' 236.
Dr., xxxiii. 476, 480.
> Miss, xxxiii. 478, 480.
Evenus, of Pares, xxi. 284.
Everard, Thomas, xxxvi. 140.
Everett, Mr., notice of a sermon of, before
the President of the United States, xxix.
353.
Evora, Archbishop of, xxvii. 19.
Evremond, St«, obiservations of, on monas-
teries, xxii. 89, 90.
Ewald, Johannes, xxxv. 207.
Ewer, Mr., xxxvii. 144.
Ewing, John, xxvii. 75.
Ewlia Effendi, xxi. 376 — curious foci
stated in his Travels, of a tobacco pipe
found before the birth of Mohammed;
xxxviii. 203.
Exeter, Lord, xxxit. 190.
Exmouth, Lord, xxii. 51 j xxxv. 484 |
xxxvii. 276, note.
Eyck, Hubert Van, xxxix. 4.
■■ John Van, xxxix. 4.
Eygyr, the generating power, xxi. 93.
Eyre, Judge, xxxvi. 514, note ; xxxix.
191.
— — Lord Chief Justice, xxvii. 125, 126.
Miss, xxxix. 298.
Rev. J., xxxix. 298.
- V, Coimtess of Shaftesbury, xxxix,
188.
Eyries, M., xxvi. 5 14.
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INDEX 07 NAMES.
63
Ezekiel, crypt pf, in ^e catacombi pf
Paris, xxi. 388— his belief in a future
state, xxvii. 523.
Esekiel, xxiii. 298 1 xm. 42, 913; %^h
453.
Ezra, xxiii. 298 j xxxv. 87.
— Aben, xxxv. 103.
Faber, immense tax upon his Pagan Ido-
latiy, xxi. 203.
Rev. G., xxxv. 100.
Fabert, xxvii. 153.
Fabian, Captain, xxxii. 393.
Fabius Maximus^ xxvii. ^74.
Fabridus, xxii. 308 ; xxiv. 451 — notice of
the Codex Pseudepigraphus of, xxv.
354, 358, note, 362, 505 j xxx. 474.
Fabrigas, Mr. A., xxv. 266, note,
Facundus, xxvi. 333.
Faden, xxui. 232, note,
Fagel, xxii. 534.
Fahrenheit, xxiii. 329.
Faille, J. de la, xxix. 33.
Fairbrother, xxvi. 118.
Fairfax, xxv. 304, 310, 312— created a
Baron, 318, 321, 328~^efuses the com-
mand of the army in Scotland, 332.
— — 's Translation of Tasso, remarks
on, xxv. 426, 427 — further notice of,
xxxiv. 6 — specimen of his translation,
12, note.
Justice, xxxvii. 161, note.
Fairservice, xxvi. 119, 457.
Fairthome, xxxiii. 313.
Faiole, M. de, xxxiii. 407, 408, 409.
Falconer, a cavalier, xxxvi. 552.
— — — Captain, xxxvi. 181.
Dr., xxv. 225.
$*alieri, Marino, Doge of Venice, tragical
death of, xxxi. 434, 435.
Faliero, B,ertuccio, xxvii. 489.
' Marino, xxvii. 491.
Falkner, xxx. 152.
Falstaff, xxiii. 474 ; xxxiii. 476.
Fanshaw, Lady, xxix. 183.
■ ' Sir K., specimen of bis trani|la-
tion of the Lusiad, xxvii. 6, note — re-
marks on the translation, 26-29.
Fiuraday's, Mr., electro-magnetic experi*
ments, notice of, xxxv. 248, 249.
Farey, Mr. B,, on the {»ropriety of watering
roads, xxiii. 106, 107.
Faria, Luisade, xxvii. 14.
— ^ e Sousa, M. de, the editor and com-
mentator on Camoens, biographical ac-
count of, xxvii. 14-19 — character of his
commentary, 17 — ^vindication of it from
the criticism of Mickle, 19.
»■ S. de, xxvii. 10.
Farinelli, xxyiii. 542.
Parish, Professor, xxxvi. 263.
Fanner, Dr. jft., character of, vaax, 2^<^*
Farnham, Lord, xxxvii. 476, note,
Farquhar, xxxiv. 50.
Governor, xxviii. 173.
— — Sir Robert, xxxiii. 44.
Fatima the immaculate, xxxvi. 376.
Fatimeh, xxx. 207, 208.
Faulkland, Lord, xxv. 291, 292— charac^
ter of, 347.
Faukland, Viscount, xxii. 68.
Faulkner, George, xxxii. 307.
Sir A.B., Treatise on the Plague,
reviewed, xxvii. 524, 525.
■ Sir Robert, xxxiii. 228.
Faustus, xxv. 359 — who he was, 360;
xxviii. 104; xxx. 480.
Faux, Guy, xxxviii. 545.
■ W., Memorable Days in America,
reviewed, xxix. 338 — adventures of, at
Boston, 341— -at Charleston, 341^44—
accounts of his interviews with different
English emigrants, 347-352, 359, 360,
361-367 — description of a log-house,
362, 363— the author visits Birkbeck's
settlement, 364, 365— which is a mere
bubble, 360.
Faventino Fannio, account o^ xx:^ii. 75,
Fawcett, xxvii. 205, 206.
Fayette, xxi. 435.
Fazio, xxiii. 225.
Fazzello, xxx. 383.
Fearnought, Richard, xxii. 370.
Fearon, H. B., Sketches of America, re-
viewed, xxi. 124 — state of society and
manners at New York, 127, 128— state
of slavery in America, 130, 131, 154,
155 — of religion, 132 — Mr. Fearon's
progress through the United States,
137-140 — his calumnies on the king,
141 — state of society at Boston, ib. —
and at Philadelphia, 143 — specimen of
American elections. 144 — miseries of
emigration, 1 4 7, 148, 1 52 — state of so-
ciety at Kentucky, 154 — and at New
Orleans, 157-159 — ^his account of the
cheapness of the American goveror
ment, 163-165.
xxvii. 71, 76 ; xxix. 480.
Felicity, Sister, fanaticism of, xxviii. 33, 34
Felix, xxiv. 29 ; xxix. 39.
Pratensis, xxiii. 300.
Fenelon, xxxi. 47; xxxiii. 35.
■■ Archbishop, act of generosity
shown towards, by Marlborough, xxiii .
65 ; xxvi. 374 j xxix. 291.
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PAR* I.— INDEX Of NAMES.
QVAAtiXLt
Fen^lon, F. de, Abr^g^ de la Vie des Phi-
losophes, xxiv. 419— remarks thereon,
421.
Fenix, xxv. 18.
Fenwick, trial of, xxxvi. 533.
— — — Lady Mary, xxxvii. 256.
- Sir John, xxiii. 6 — attainder and
execution of, xxxvii. 255.
Fercouri, M. de, notice of an inscription
set up by, on a mountain, xxx. 125, note,
Ferdinand Charles, Duke of Mantua,
xxxiv. 22.
■ I. of Naples, prided himself on
his gardens, xxxviii. 199.
of Spain, xxxii. 368 — ^his cha-
racter considered, xxxiv. 494-497.
• v., of Spain, xxyiii. 209; xxxvii.
• VI., introduction of liberal prin-
199.
ciples into Spain in the reign of, xxix.
265.
• VII., xxviii. 252 — cause of the
revolution of 1820, 540.
- character of, xxix. 58, 59 —
his mean letter to Buonaparte, 59 — is
charged by his father with conspiring
against him, ibid. — his father abdicates
in his favour, 64 — ^he falls into the toils
of Buonaparte, and is carried prisoner
into France, 66, 67, 273 j xxx. 171,449.
and Isabella, xxiv. 132; xxv.
72.
FerdAsijXxx. 211.
Ferguson, xxxii. 279, «o/e, 293.
> Dr., xxx. 136.
■ Dr. R., Letter to Sir H. Hal-
ford on Vaccination, 550 — ^progress of
vaccination on the continent compared
with that in England, 550 — mortality of
small-pox before inoculation, 551— exa^
mination of the question, what is the
{)roportion of the vaccinated who are
iableto the small-pox, 55 1-557^-discus-
sion of the protecting power of vaccina-
tion, 557-558 — Dr. Ferguson's design
of producing a mild disease by vacci-
nating, a few days before inoculation,
with small-pox, 550 — ^remarks thereon,
559, 560.
Genera], xxix. 81.
Ferg^sson, xxxvi. 168.
A., xxxvi. 171, 183 — remark
on theatrical compositions, 187.
Dr. Adam, anecdotes of, xxxvi.
196.
— James, Reports of Decisions in
actions of Divorce, reviewed, xxv. 229-
272. See Divorce.
Miss, xxxvi. 191, note.
• Mr., reforms in law proceedings
proposed by, xxxviii. 254 — his profes-
sional knowledge as to the administra-
tion of justice in India, 285.
Fernandcx, Mr., txt. 40^.
Fernando, Infante of Portugal, xxv. 18.
King, xxvii. 1.
Femao do Po, xxvi. 51.
Fcmaiid-Bauvinay, M., religious creed of,
xxviii. 497.
Ferrar, xxii. 93.
Ferrara, Gtomez, xxvi. 68, 69.
Ferrargus, xxi. 505.
Ferran, xxi. 505.
Ferrel, Mr., description of the log-house of,
xxix. 363, 364.
Ferrer, St. V., notice of a prophecy of,
xxvi. 189.
Ferriar, Dr., xxii. 26, note.
Ferri^res, M. de, xxviii. 450.
Fersen, Count de, xxviii. 302, 465.
F^rressac, Baron de, xxxvi. 481 .
Fesch, Cardinal, xxviii. 225— K:hose An-
tommarchi to succeed 0*Meara as sur-
geon to Buonaparte, xxxiii. 179 — absur*
dity of tliis choice, 180.
Festus, xxvii. 288, 290 ; xxxii. 69, 74.
Feuillade, Mar^chal de la, xxxiv. 20.
Feuquieres, xxiii. 55.
Fever, Susan, xxiv. 464.
Fiacre, M., xxxvi. 331.
Fian, Dr., xxix. 456 ; xxxii. 155*
Ficoroni, xxiii. 407.
Field, xxix. 37.
— a famous gardener in Charles Ild.'s
reign, xxiv. 407.
Barron, Geographical Memoirs on
New South Wales, xxii. 311. See New
South fVaiety Part II.
— - Dr., testimony of, to the value of the
authorised translation of the Bible, xxiii.
303, 304.
-—Mr., xxxii. 316, 322 ; xxxix. 258.
Fielding, what a Newgate ordinary was in
the days of, xxiv. 27, note — comparison
of Tom Jones with Auastasius, 511 —
impurity of his plays, xxix. 209, 332.
■ never misled by present popularity,
an instance of it in Glover's Leonidas,
xxxiv. 3 — failure as a dramatist, 358 —
accounted for, 358, 359 — novels of, com-
pared with those of Smollett, xxxiv.
372-376— -habits of this writer, 370.
xxxiii. 479; xxiv. 311; xxxv. 519,
522.
■ Copley, xxxviii. 378.
Fienne8,xxv. 314; xxx. 276.
Fi^^aro, character of, xxix. 420.
Filicaja, xxiv. 133.
Filmer, Sir R., xxx. 25.
Finan, St., xxiii. 582, note.
Finch, Lord Keeper, xxxix. 397.
Finden, xxviii. 373.
Findlater, Earl of, planted the grape at
his ch&teau, near Dresden, xxiv. 410.
pnlay, xxi. 144 ; xxiv. 218.
Finlayson^ Captain, xxvi, 69,
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INDEX OF NAMES.
65
Finla3rson, George, Mission to Siam and
Hue, xxxiii. 104— character of his work,
105 — character of the Chinese at Pulo
PenansT, or Prince of Wales's Island,
106, 107 — culture of pepper and nut-
megs there, 107, 108 — depopulated state
of Malacca under the Dutch govern-
ment, 1 08, 109 — description of the island
of Singapore, 109 — account of the rapid
increase and prosperity of the settlement
there, 109, 111 — ^importance of this co-
lony^, 112 — remarks on the heat and
moisture of intertropical climates, 113 —
vegetahle productions of Singapore, 114
—character of the Chinese emi^prants
there, 115 — of the Malays who hve at
sea, 116, and of those inhabiting the
land, ibid. — arrival of the mission m the
kingdom of Siam, ibid, — sail up the
river to the capital, described, 117 — ser-
vility of the Siamese to their superiors,
118, 119 — description of the royal au-
dience, 119, 122 — difference between
the reception given to the ambassador
from the govemoivgeneral of India, 122
— departure of the mission from Siam,
126---visit to the city of Saigon, in Cam-
bodia, 127 — difference between the ac-
counts of Mr. Finlavson and Captain
White, ibid. — probable solution of those
differences, 128 — ^reception of the mis-
sion at Saigon, ibid. — description of a
fight between an elephant and a tiger,
128, 129 — remarks on the conduct of
the envoy, 130, 131 — failure of the mis-
sion and its return, 132, 133.
Finnegar, John, xxxii. 318, 321,
Finnett, Sir John, xxxix. 88.
Fioravanti, L., xxiv. 194.
Firdousi, literary merits of, xxxvi. 362.
Firenzuola, Agnolo, notice of, xxiii. 245,
note. %
Firouz Mirza, notice of, xxx. 213, 214.
Fischer, XXV. 521.
— botanical professor at Petersburg,
xxxix. 26.
Fisher, the Jesuit, xxxvii. 240.
" Ames, xxiii. 574— observation of,
on the liberty of the press, 578.
Bishop, xxxiii. 17, 21 ; xxxvii. 203.
— Mr., xxi. 229— extracts from the
Journal of, 234, «o/e, 245, note; xxxv.
460.
I » R. B., on the Importance of the
Cape of Good Hope as a Colony,reviewed,
xxu. 203. See Cape of Good Hope,
Part II.
Fitch, President, xxx. 5.
Fitzclarence, Colonel, route of, through
India and Egypt, xxiii. 230, note.
Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, xxxiii. 570.
. Mr., xxvi. 81, note;
mm Vesey, xxxviii. 562»
VOL* XU VQ, LXXJXr
Fitzgeralds, xxi. 476 ; xxiii. 362.
Fitzgibbon, Lord Chancellor, xxiii. 518.
— ; Lord, xxxvi. 69.
Fitzherbert's Abridgment, xxxvi. 524.
Fitzherbert, Judge, xxxvii. 165, note, 498 ^
xxxix. 184.
Mrs., xxxiii. 576, 577.
Fitzhugh, Mrs. W., xxvu. 7.
Fitz- James, xxvi. 120.
Fitzpatrick, Barnaby, xxxvii. 210.
FiUwilliam, Earl, xxiii. 372, 576.
Flaccus, Siculus, xxxii. 74.
Flacourt, xxviii. 115.
Flambard, Ralph, character of, xxxix. 365,
Flamburiari, Count, xxix. 98,
Flamel, N., xxvi. 198, 204.
Flaminius, xxv. 165.
Flamstead, Mr., xxxvi. 142, note,
Flaxman, xxxi. 207 — liberidity to Hayley,
291 — offers to instruct his son in the
fine arts, 301.
character of his sculpture, xxxir.-
128.
Fleetwood, xxv. 336, 344.
Flechier, xxviii. 522.
Flechiere. See Fletcher.
Fleming, Dr., hypothesis of, xxxvi. 478,
note, 481 ; xxxvii. 347.
Fleta, xxxii. 99, 163.
Fletcher, dramas of, characterized, xxiii.
475, 479 — some of his plays taken from
the Spanish, xxv. 1, note, 527.
— *— Dr., predatory incursions of the
Tartars into the Russian territory, xxix.
130.
I General, xxxvi. 194.
Rev. Mr., brief notice of, xxiv. 43,
51.
xxvi. 474.
Fleurant, M., xxix. 430.
Fleury, Cardinal, xxxvi. 74 ; xxxix. 53,
■ Joly de, financial measures of,
xxvii. 165 ; xxviii. 157, 158 — his minis-
try had a tendency to improve the morals
of the French court, 172.
Flinders, Captain, xxi. 252, 257, 361;
xxiii. 73, note; xxiv. 69, 70 ; xxvi. 358 j
xxvii. 101 ; xxxii. 319 j xxxix. 411.
Flins, M., xxix. 27.
Flood, xxiii. 532, 540.
Dr., xxxvii. 468.
Florence Macarthy, xxi. 144.
Floridablanca, xxix. 265.
Florilegus, notice of, xxxiv. 281.
Florio, xxii. 409.
Flower, xxix. 360.
B., xxvii. 71.
Mr., xxxix. 353.
Mr. George, xxi. 161.
R., Letters from the Illinois, re-
viewed, ^vii. 71 — remfurks on them, 72
— specimen of his Veracity, 95,
Fludd, xxviii. 497.
y
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PART. I^INDBX or NAMES.
QvAsamBLt
Fluellen, xxxiii. 486.
Fluelliu, xxxvi. 174.
Fluellyn, xxvii. 24.
Fo, XXV. 424.
Fod6r6, F. fi., Leoons sur lei Spideoniet^
' reviewed, xxx. 133 — account of the
miserable state of certain districti in
France, l4l, 142.
Foe, Omito, xid. 81.
i— She Kia, xxi. 81»
Tsie Yin, xxi. 8l.
Foesius, xxii. 307.
Foh, xxi. 464.
Folard) Chevalier^ zxviii. 35.
^oldger, Capt., xxxv. 441*
Foley, xxxvii. 252.
Foliamb, xxv. 234.
Folkstone, Lord^ zxviii. 214*
Folopodria, Queen, xxix. 453,
tjmif Si^d de la, xxi. 336.
Fonseca, P. da, xxvii. 35.
jfontaine, crypt oi^ in ^ Cfltacottibg of
Paris, xxi. 388.
Fontallard, xxiii. 472.
Fontanges, M. de, xxviii. 46b,
Font6, Admiral de, notice of the. fictitious
voyage of, xxvi. 518 —its absurdities
exposed, 519-521.
Foote, the actor, xxxii. 350.
^bee. See Butler,
Dr., xxxii. 411.
■ James, xxviii. 224*
-r— - Lord^ xxvii. 347,
' ,j ^ ■ Mr.| account of the singular prac-
tices of llie inhabitants of Bro^k, in
Holland, xxviii. 12.
" ■' Sir Charles, xxxv. 46.
Forbin, Count, Voyage dans le Levant,
reviewed, xxiii. 83 — succeeds Denon in
the custody of the Museum, ibid* — em-
l^aifcs at Marseilles, ibid, — arrives at
Athens, 84 — specimen of his mawkish
declamation there, ibid* — blunders of his
. corrected, 85 — ^his foolish sneer on Eng-
lish and German artists, t6i<^.— his
vanity mortified W the popularity of the
^ Enghsh, 86 — ^misfortunes that befel him
at .Constantinople, »6tc{.— commercial
meanness of the Count, 87-^hi8 igno*
ranee exposed, 88, 89, and falsehood
90, 92— arrives at St. Jean d*Acre, 88
— ^traverses. Palestine, 88, 89 — arrives
at Cairo, 90 — deterred from visiting
Upper Efflrpt by dread of ihe English,
91, 92— his abuse of Mr. Salt corrected,
9o.
« erroneous statements of, xxiv,
151, «o/e— flight from Thebes, 164—
uncandid conduct towards Belzoni, le-
. speding the second pyramid of Ghueh,
;. ftSw— hint to respecting his conscientious
declanuitions against tiie * spoliations of
MilorEl^in^ xxvii. ^, .»o/e—' great
changes' in scripture chronology, foroi
seen from the sodlAe of Dendera, xxviii.
79— dismay of the Count at M. Chaih-
pollion, 192.
Ford, xxvii. 481 ; xxix* 37, 426.
— — Simon, xxxviii. 31.
Fordham, Bishop, xxxix. 372.
Fordun, absurd story related by, xxi. 367-
370.
Forlis, M. de^ xxiii. 269, no/e.
Forman, Dr. S., an astrologer, notiee of,
xxvi. 184 1 xxxvi. 555.
Forster, John, xxxix. 398.
— Sir Williani, xxxix. 397i
Forsyth's Ital)r, extract from, ttxii. 48,
noief 54, notef 56, nettt
Forte^erri's Ricdardetto, a ibock poem,
design and character of, xxi. 503, 504
'•^-and of his burlesqile poems on the
Eremitic character, 505*
Major^knend off maritie.
r.44.
f orte8cue,xxX. 543 1 xxxii* 277^
Fosbroke, Mr., xxxiv. 332 ; xxxv. 200*
Foslnrooke, Thomas Dudley, British Mo-
nachism, reviewed, xxiL 59. See J#>-
naohitmf Part II.
Foscari, Francesco, his eonduct And tepu-
tation, xxxi. 437'^cniel perseeution of,
by the Council of Ten, 437, 438— his
death, 439.
— — — Jacopo, fourth son of Franeeseo,
refinement vi Venetian crtielty in the
conduct of the Council of Ten towards,
xxxi. 437— tortured for the third time
before the eyes of his father, and death,
438.
■ ■ Two, a Tragedy, by Lord Byron,
reviewed, xxvii. 476— character of Lori-
dano, 505 — speech of JacopO, describing
the amusements of his youth, 507*
Foseolo, Ugo, Ricciardo, Tragedia di, re-
viewed, xxiv. 72— fable of it, 91, 92—
ai«alysis of this tra^y, with eOLtracts,
92-96 — remarks on it, 97-*and on his
tragedies of Thyeste and Ajax, 90— sug..
^estion to, respecting the choice of sub-
jects for his future dramas, 101, 10^-^
artful contrivance to conngnthe petition,
from the Ionian Islands to, xxix. 101—
rare union of ^mlities in him, xxxiv. 4
'—dexterous imitations of Homer, in his.
fragments of an Italian Iliad, 4, 5—
mode in which he caught his style, and
superiority to Pope, 5— extract from his.
essay on Petrarch, 17.
Foster, Captain, gallant eondujct of, xxx.
77.
■ xxxvii. 526 ; xxxviii. 354,
Dr., xxxix. 264
Leslie, estimate of the value of
Iri^h sees, xxxi. 504, 515.
■remarks on the excessive.
population of Ireland, xxxiii. 461, 462.
tmrnGu the cotton nuuiatactiure^464«
Digitized by
Googk
Bbtibw*
INDEX OF NAMES.'
6f
Foster^ Leslie, mVi. 8 1 xxxvii. 461.
— Mr. on the itate of Ireland^ xxKviii.
56.
- — — Lieut., X3EK. 238, nofe / xxxir. 382.
— *- Messrs.^ testimony of, before the
. Select Committee of the Hotise of Com-
mons on the Criminal Laws, as to ttie
reluctance of the pubUc to prosetiittf
capitally, xtiv. 212*
——Mr. Spaker,xxiiL 518*
— — — Sir Michael, ixsvi, 843.
' -"" ■ W., afterwards Bishop of Cloehtr,
xxiii. 517, 531. ^ '
-— — Mtti. 138 ; XXX. 405*
Fothergill, Dr.> xxr. 222 1 xxx. 426.
Foucault, Marquis de, xxtiii. 282,
FoUch^, destrtictire rerolutiodwy proceed-
iu^s at Lyons, xxiii. 196.
FouUs, xxvii. 329*
Foulon, murd^ of, xxtni. 280*
Foulques, an inquisitor, tf deltiMm of, «»t*
560.
Fouqtiet, XxxiVj 21 i
Fourcroy, Xxiii, 472) teixii* 295*
Fourier, xXfiii. 77.
Fourmont, xiiJir 332,
Fourneaux, Capt., notice of his qtiarfel
with the New Zealanders, xxxi. 58,
■ ' * ■■ ' ■■ '" Madame! de, defused of Ifc-
I*ropet intercourse with M* Bo^dOn,
xxxvi. 335,336.
Fowler, Mt., xxtiii. 224^
Fox, founder of Corpus Christi C(^We,
Oxford, Xxxiii. 23, note*
—-the martyrologist, t^aeity itf, esia-
bhsbed, x»dii, 8.
-*«*■ George, xxyiii. 508.
' ^ohn, xxitii* 84*
•*—^ Judge, xxiii. 539.
— **- Lady CaroHne, xxvM. 202.
■*- — Mr. (afterwards Lord Holland), xiv,
396— character of, 403, 404— designs
his office in the Duke Of NeWcaStR's
administration, 403,406^ 410.
■ " ■ 1 ' r jBivM; 181— tindkated ftahi the
aspetsions of Hotaee Wdlpole, 202, 209,
211j
Her* Mr., xXxix. 129, 135.
-*-— iUehard, Bishop, acdotint of, xiddx.
373*
^ Right Hon. Charles, xxi. 119 — ira-
' duced by Mr.Hazlitt, xxH. 160— Vmdi-
catiott of his Historical Work, liotice of
an action brought by the Umrersity of
Cambridge, fo* the non-tklivery of a
copy of, 201— com{)arison of Mr. Plrm-
ket's oratoty wHh that of Fox, 497.
: *^ xxit.35l5 xxxvil
46$.
^ xxvi. 374, obser-
vations ori the restrictions on our colo-
nies, 537.
' XJEtii.404; XXv^.
207^characterized by Buonaparte, 251
— ^remarks of, on the British constitu-
tion, and that framed br France* ill
1791,547.
Fox, Right Hon. Charles, xxix. 288,420—
contemplated the eventual finedotti of
the negroes, 480.
; _ xxxii. 345-^^-0^1-
nion of, on the aboUtieB ef slaveryr
xxxiii. 501,
xxxiii. 571»578 ;
kxxivi 466, 469^ 487 1 novi 806 1 xEivif
287$ xxxix.269,
Right Hon. H. xxtiii* &2i
Foxe, Captain L., correctness of his thati
of Baffin's bay, xid. 256. 2&7{
iOkrt 17 5f 170, neie;
xxvi. 520*
notiet ef the tdyagii of
discoveff of, xxx. 233*
Foxes, xxifi* 540*
Fracftirtorius, xxvii* 24, 33.
Frampton, John, xxi. 180*
Franceschij Xxviii. 230.
Franda, Dr.^the dictator df Pwiiguayi ac-
count of, xxxii* 138-140-^TObbery By,
of the Entre Rids, &t Pittagoay, from
Bnenos Ayres, xxxv. 133*
Frslncis, Xxiii. 463 $ xxiv. 556*
I.j exhutnatiott of, in 1799^ si.
Ms destinies, and thote of
374*
Charles V. poised by H6itf Jr VIII*^ xJii.
io5.
feas telief of his* iiiteirview wife-
Henry VIII* in the Champ da Drap
d'or, XXV. 127. 545, &48-^-enermitie8
committed by Ihrn, 567, 568*
xxtiii; 294-^ his poffiga^y.
513; xxxi. 409 j xxXiii. 27, 164*
-^^^ ^ the first Christian a% of the
Turks, xxxviii 185.
-*- — - II., reigh of, not Sobloodjr asihttee
fef his predecessors, XXV* 568*
— St., of Assisi, monks of, goverrf a
vast portioii of South America, xxi. 350
-^remark on the machinedry in hiK le-
gends, xxii. 67 — his miraefes not less
numerous and m<metton8 than those of
St. Dominic, 84 — nfttrative of thri ini-
racles in the church of Portfenctda, 85
^^blacmhemotis imposture of the appeitr-
anc€? of Clnrist to, and imprinting upon
him five wounds, 86 — ^penalty for preach-
ing against St. Francis with the St^-
mata, 87-^itiner8int preaching revived
by, xxiv. 33 — a tool in the hands of
more artful followers, 50 — ^revelation of,
io sister Nativity, xxxiii. 398, 399.
xxviii. 508 j xxxvi. 48.
• de Paula, xxxiii. 160,
Francisco, Manuel, xxiv. 133.
Franeke, Ftofessor, xxxii. 22.
f2
Digitized by
Googk
68
PART I.— INDEX OP NAMES.
Quarterly
Francois, a baker in Paris, murder of,
xxviii. 292.
Francoise, sister, fanaticism of, xxviii. 34.
Frank, Richard, remarks on, xxxviii. 522,
528.
Frankenstein, xxit. 303 ; xxxi. 483.
Franklin, Lieut, (now Captain), xxi.
262.
' observations of the Au-
rora BoreaKs, xxv. 200, 201 ; 204, 210,
noie.
' the tiiermometer at 89^
below the freezing point in lat. 64°,
xxvi. 355,ito/tf,357.
• Narrative of a Journey
to the Polar Sea, reviewed, xxviii. 37:
— arrival at Hudson's Bay, 374— cha-
racter of the Cree Indians, 377 — opi-
nion of a Black-foot Indian on a future
state, 378 — notice of the Stone Indians,
379 — and of the Chepeywans, ib. — re-
markable instances of frozen insects and
fishes recovering animation, 382, 383 —
excursion to the head of the Copper-
mine river, 384 — snow-houses of the
Esquimaux, 386 — manners of the Cop-
per Indians, 388— description of the
Copper mountains, 389, 390— remarks
on the geology and mineralogy of the
same, 403 — on the Aurora Borealis, 404»
405 — circumstances which render it
probable that there is a communication
Dy'water between the Pacific and Atian-
tic'Oceaus, 406-409.
■ ' (Captain), Second Expedition
to the Shores of the Polar Sea, xxxviii.
335<— hardships of his first expedition,
336— character of, 337— Fort Franklin
built for winter-quarters, 338 — delta of
the Mackenzie, 339 — reach Garry Island
in the Polar Sea, ib. — ^wood coal ignited
spontaneously, ib — ^abundance of fish,
340 — winter occupations, 340, 351 —
scarcity of food, 341 — Indians some-
times put their female infants to death,
342 "—register of phenomena, ib, — expe-
ditions in the boats, 343, 344 — ^Esqui-
maux described, 345, 349, 350 — ^large
rivers, 346 — general fogginess, ib, —
obliged to return, 347— eastern expe-
dition, 349 — abundance of large drift
timber, ib. — ^plants, 352— various speci-
mens of natiiral history, 353— tempera-
ture, ib. — variation of the needle af-
fected by different circumstances, 354 —
importance of the northern expedition,
355 — suggestions for accomphshing a
north-west passage, 356.
• XXX. 234 — ^proposed
enterprise of, 271, note.
xxxiii. 125 :
387, 388 ; xxxvii. 270, 535.
Dr., rejection, by the American
Convention of his proposal to commence
their proceedings with prayer^ xxiii. 551,
552, note — advantages to relimon in the
erection of additional chunmes, 566 —
strong grounds for demanding tithes of
the dissenters in England, xxix. 544^
observations of, on swimming, xxxiv.
36.
Franklin Dr., account of the supreme
court of judicature in Pennsylvania,
XXXV. 588, note,
-^-^— — — translated Lucian^s works,
xxxvii. 32, 33 — anecdote by, xxxviii
203.
xxi. 139, 336, 435, notef
xxii. 159; xxvL 151,235,246; xxvii.
117 ; xxviii. 494 ; xxix. 295, note; xxx.
472 ; xxxiU. 179 ; xxxv. 226, note, 238;
xxxvi. 298,
" George, xxvi. 401.
Franks, Colonel, x£KviiL 91.
Franzius, xxii. 307.
Eraser, James Baillie, Tour through the
Snowy Ran^e of the Himal& Mountains,
reviewed, xxiv. 102 — observations on the
height of the mountains, 105, 106—
■ visits to the town of Nahu, 107 — and
fortress of Jytock, ib, — ^revoltin^^ prac-
tise of polyandry among the inhabi-
tants, 108, 109 — ^productions and culti-
vation of the Sine Range, 110 — cha-
racter of the mountaineers. 111, 112^
description of some captive Ghoorkas,
113 — high notions of miUtary obedience
and fideuty among them, 1 13, 1 14 — ^the
Roman catapulta in use, 114, 115— •
simple mode of smelting iron, 115— the
author crosses the river Sutiej by a sin-
gular species of bridge called a ' j'hoola,*
117, 118— character of the natives, 118
— description of their rajah, ib. 119-~
the unicorn of the scriptures discovered
in the Himala Mountains, 120 — Mr.
Eraser reaches the source of the river
Jumna, 121 — crosses the moimtainsto
Gangotree, the source of the Ganges,
125, 126 — and the crag of Byrum
Gattee, 127 — the peaks of Roodroo
Himala described, ib. 128 — observations
on Mr. Eraser's conjectures respecting
the height of the Himala Mountains,
129.
Fraser, Mr., xxxiv. 532; xxxix. 317, 332.
Fratteaux, Bertin de, xxxiv. 26, note,
Frayssinous, M., xxxvi. 481.
Frazier, Sir Alexander, xxxiii. 307.
Fredegonde, xxv. 565.
Fredegunda, striking instance of her pa-
triotism, xxxix. 54.
Frederic, Elector of Brandenburg, aspires
to regal dignity, xxxi. 328.
— — II., of Brandenburg, character of,
xxxi. 328 — outline of the system of
government adopted by him, 333 — that
system overtuxned by Barou Stein, t^.
Digitized by
Googk
Bbtxbw^
INDBX OF NAMES.
«9
Frederic IV., of Denmark, established a
mission at Tranquebar, xxxii. 21.
■ William, King of Prussia, cha-
racter of, xxxix. 12, 13.
Frederick, Caesar, notice of the Travels of,
in Pegu, xxiv. 337.
Duke of Wirtemberg, cultivated
alchemy, xxvi. 202 ; xxxix. 16.
■ III., Emperor, cultivated alche-
my, xxvi. 201.
the Great, notice of the Me-
moirs of, xxii. 383.
■■ xxiv. 5 — patronized
horticulture, 411.
successes of, xxv. 76.
—————— prevented the invest-
ment of money in lands, xxxi. 188.
- agricultural improve-
ments in Prussia, xxxviii. 429.
xxviii. 15, 16; x:
272.
Prince of Wales, xxv. 394,
of Prussia, xxxvi. 32.
Frediani, xxvii. 224, 231, 238.
Freeling, G. H., xxxii. 153.
Freherus, xxxviii. 386.
Freind, testimony of, to the fact of the
ancients considering contagion to be a
cause of disease, xxvii. 532, 533, note»
Sir John, xxxvi. 518.
. Freire, xxx. 443.
French, Archdeacon, xxxvii. 562 ', xxxviii.
422.
■ Robert, xxix.' 445.
Sir P., xxi. 481.
Frere, Mr., xxxii. 350.
Frey, Mr., xxxv. 90.
Freycinet, Captain, xxi. 260 ; xxiv. 72.
Narrative of a Voy-
age round the World made by him, re-
viewed, xxviii. 332 — baptism of two
Sandwich Islands' chiefs, by the chap-
lain of his ship, xxxv. 424.
Madame, xxviii. 343.
Freyrois, Mr., visited Brazil, xxxi. 19.
Frick, xxv. 353, note.
Friedemann, xxii. 344.
Frisell, Mr., de la Constitution d'Angle-
terre, reviewed, xxv. 534.
Frobisher, Martin, notice of the voyage of
discovery of, xxx. 232.
xxxiv. 391 ', xxxvii.
536.
Frodsham, Mr.^ xxv. 205 ; xxxvii. 526,
note*
Froiasart, makes no mention of cannon as
being used at the battle of Crecy, xxi.
194 — character of the British archers,
xxv. 90.
xxvi. 131 5 xxx. 346 ; xxxii.
247, 248.
Fromont, testimony of, to the improve-
ment in the roads effected by Mr.
M^Adam, xxiii. 100.
Front de BoBuf, xxvi. 127, 131-133.
Frowd, ludicrous distich on, by Kowe,
xxiii. 421.
Fnimentius, xxxii. 19,
Fry, Mr. W., testimony of, as to the reluc-
tance of the public to prosecute capitally,
xxiv. 212, 220.
Mrs., xxiv. 220 — benevolent efforts
of, to reform female criminals, 252 — ^re-
fractory and abandoned conduct of her
converts, xxxii. 333 — paper their hair
with the religious tracts furnished by
her, xxxvii. 20.
— Wendover, xxiv. 227.
Fudge, Master Bobby, xxiii. 462.
Fuente, C. P. de la, xxix. 248.
Fuentes, General, defeated by Matamoros,
a rebel priest, xxx. 175.
I Governor of Assumpcion, xxvi.
315.
Fulgentius, xxvi. 333 — ^testimony of, as to
the genuineness of 1 John v. 7, of no
weight, 338.
— — — notice of his opinion of th«
genuineness of 1 John v. 7, xxxiii. 86,
Fulke, Dr., xxiii. 297.
Fuller, mode of preserving life', mentioned
by, xxi. 363 — St. Paul's, the first church
erected in Britain, xxiii. 581, 582; xxiv.
483.
xxviii. 25 — remark of, on the sword
of the famous Talbot, xxx. 348.
• account of the pretended miracles
worked by Augustine, xxxii. 9,
. xxxiv. 342— eulogy of John Jewell,
345 — ^remark on Edward VI.'s opinion
of his uncle's guiltiness, xxxvii 210.
Fulman, xxxiv. 294,
Fulton, xxvi. 30.
Fimes, D. Gregorio, Dean of Cordoba, no-
tice of, xxvi. 282.
FiurJoso, Sir Orlando, xxxii. 433.
Furneaux, xxvii. 101.
Futteh Ali Shah, xxxvi. 130,357.
G.
Gabell, Dr., xxxix. 303.
Gabriel, xxix. 453.
Dr., xxxix. 272.
Gadbury, the astrologer, xxxiii. 251
xxxvi. 555.
Gadolus, Bernar^uS; xxvi. 337.
Digitized by
Googk
fo
PAROr I^IKDBX OF NAMES.
QuiOm&LV
Gag«riiii Prinee, xtf . 4!dd«f*accoaiit of hit
decapitatlou, 423.
Gftge, XX3C. 152.
the Dominican, xxxiv. 338.
.•v-f^ Thomas, account of, and his work
on the West Indies, xxxviii. 224.
QainsborQugh, xip(i. 212 ; xxs^iv. 189 ;
. xxxv. 816,
Gaisford, Professor, xxii. 310 j ladii. 152,
notei vad. 180) xxxii. 91.
Gaius, institutes of, xxxii. 71.
Galaiziere, Abb6 de, xxvi. 232.
Galatin, Mr., xxxvii, 289, note.
Galb^, Emperor, xxviii. 70.
Galbaud. »xi. 439.
Galbraith, Mr., xxxii. 411.
CJalejiWV. 353, notej xxx.479.
Galen, xj^i. 307) xxvi. 199) x^U. 532;
xxxii. 237,
Qi^eotto Manfredi, a tragedy by Monti^
notice of, x^iv, 86, 87,
Galiani, Abbe, argument of, to convince a
party of atheists, X%vi. 234, 235.
Galignaoi, i^xxiv, 349.
Galilei, xx^ii. 55,
G^leo, icxi. 488, note; xxii. 129) xxxii.
65 ; xxxvi. 475 ) i^xxvii, 41 1 i xxxviii. 6.
w^ ' ■ physieal science, in what vaspeet
indebted to him, xxxix. 434-436.
Galit«in, Wnce, xxacv. 364.
"r — n — Princess, wxv. 368.
Gall, xxii. 22 — remarks in prqef of the
nugatory luoubrations of, 26.
GaUfttio, M'., xifxix. 228, 239.
Gallegos, xxviii. 548.
Gallinato, Melen Rodriguez, x^i. 94, notf.
GaUus, ipciii, 146,
G§lt, Mr,, remarks on his editing the Me-
, moira oif a Life passed in Pennsylvania,
xxvi. 364.
GalvMi,'Kxi,336.
Galway, Lord, xxiii. 3 ; xxviii. 545.
Gami^ Vftsco de, remarks on the voyage
of, xj^vii. 20,31-38— sailing of the royal
family of Portugal for Braatil, from the
H^ot where Gama embarked, xxix. 57 —
lus voyage i^ndertaken and discoveries
effected on hypothetical grounds, xxxiii.
545.
Gitmba, Chevalier, Voyage dans la Russie
M^ridionale, xxxv. 363^Tnotice of his
scheme for promoting the commerce of
France, particularly at the expense of
that ,Qf England, 386— outline of his
travels, 387 — modern productions of
the ancient Colchos, 388— account of an
extraordinary monument in Georgia,
389 — state of Georgia, 390 — account of
the pass of Dariel across the Caucasus
390, 391— and of that of Derbent, 392
. r«-lu8torical notice of the kingdom of
Georgia, 392-395 — population of the
coun&y to thd southward of the Cauca-
sus, 395 —.BftMiBftrs of the Geovgiaa
women, 306^ — confirmation of a passage
of Plutarch, ib, 397^naphtha pits of
Bakou, 397— productions of Dagheatan,
tft. 398^-4itate of the province and town
of Kouba, 398— 'notice of conjectures
relative to the Caspian Sea, 399, 400—
proofs that its waters are on the decrease,
400, 401.
Gamba, Chevalier, xxxvi. 127.
Ganellone, xxii. 182.
Ganfridus I., xxv. 141.
GanganelU, Pope, supiwressed an Italian
translation of the Liffe of Mario Ala-
coque, xxviii. 27.
Ganilh, curioiis calculation of, as to the
progress of capital in America fifom
European ori^n, xxvi. 524.
Ganymede, xxvi. 925 ) xxxii. 400.
Garbett, Mr. E., xxvu. 323.
Garcias, Pedro, xxxiv. 372.
Gareilaso de la Vega, remarks on, xxxviii.
373.
Garcilasso, xxi. 902.
Gardanne, General, xxxvi. 384.
Gardiner, Bishop, exhibition of his bones,
xxi. 375-^Hnemorable passage from his
writings, xxxvii. 216, and note,
.. . . . ,m , .< '•^ xxviii. 44 ) xxxiii. 3, 9,
10, 22 ; xxxvi. 313.
- Colonel, his conversion,
37.
Gardner, Lord, xxxvii. 389.
Sir Allan, xxxvii. 373.
Garett, Samuel, xxiv. 227.
Garibay, xxx. 172; xxxiii. 144,
Garinet, Jules, Histoiro de la Ma^^e en
France, reviewed, xxii. 349-?Tcharftcter
of his work, 350.
Garlow, xxvi. 294.
Garnet, Henry, xxxvi. 513.
^ Dr., XXV. 227.
Garnier's tragedies, remarks on, with a
specimen, xxix. 33, 34.
m i' ., 'n m Madame, xxi. 109.
r^ Marquis, xxx. 314, 321.
Garrett, Mr., xxiv. 222.
Garrick, opinion of Hayky's first tragedy,
. xxxi. 274 — stylo of performances comr
pared with that of Mr. Kemble, xxxiv.
212, 213, 215, 216 ^ Dr. Pichot's Mn,'
gular opinion of the picture of Garrick
between Tragedy and Comedy, xxxiiw
347 — his distich « Before the cowrt,'
translated l)y the Doctor, 353-«8tory df
the Scotch dramatic author, xxxiii. 692
— his interest as manager, how best se-
cured, xxxvi. 182 — rejects Mr. Home's
appUcations, 182, 183 — ^his talents could
not give much vitality to Home's Agis,
187.
xxvi. 235.
Mrs., xxxi. 274. '
Garth, Sir S., xxvi. 427, 437..
Digitized by
Googk
'^Ebtibw*
IKDSX or HAMES.
tf
Crarzia, Don, xxfv* 101.
Gas, murder pf the family of, xxviii. 297,
298.
Oasca, Bishop of Paleneia, zzix. 252.
Gascoigne, xxix. 36.
G., xxvii. 38.
• Sir Thomas, xxxvi. 522.
Gasteldo, Andrea, xxxiii. 168.
Gaspar, xxix. 455.
Gataker, xxx. 95.
Gates, Sir P., xxxvii. 17, note,
Gauden, Dr., claim of, to be the author of
Icdn BasiUkd, considered, xxxii. 467—
sketch of the external evidence in his
favour ; ^r«/, the statement of his wife
' and curate, 471, 472 — improbabilities
detected in their narratives, 473, 480 —
8€C(md/y^ evidence derived from the doc-
tor's correspondence with Lord Claren-
don, 480-482— remarks thereon, 482-
492— /Atrc^y, evidence derived firom
Lord Anglesey's memorandum, &c.,
492 — this evid^ce rebutted by that ad-
duced in behalf of Kin^ Ghailes I., 493,
494— -proofs of his ability to write it,
- and of Gkuden's inability lo compos^ it,
495.
■ notice of, xxzir. 347.
. ^ XXV. 298, note,' xxxvii. 249.
— Mrs., xxxii. 469, 474, 475— her
statement as to who was the author of
Ie6n BasUikg, 478-480.
Gaul, Amadis de, xxix. 452.
Gaun, John, xxiv. 227.
Gaunt, Mrs., xxxvi. 513.
Gautheaume, xxxvii. 387.
Gavan, the Jesuit, xxxvi. 532.
Gawain, Sir, xxi. 500.
Gay, xxiii. 421, 457— Lady Suflblk's pa-
tronage of, inefiectual, xxx. 548, 549 —
correspondence of, with Lady Suffolk,
655,556.
xxxii. 277 5 xxxvi. 204.
QMyteire, Mr., xxvii. 309— eulogium on,
322.
Gaza, xxvi. 245.
Gazi, xxiii. 147, no/e, 358.
Geary, xxvii. 212.
Geber, xxvi. 199, 207.
QetSery, Dr., xxxiv. 342.
Ge^^a, xxvii. 297.
Geissler, J. G., Tableaux pittoresques des
McBurs, &c., des Russes, Tartares, Mon-
S>ls, et autres Nations de PEmpire de
ussie, reviewed, xxvi. 37 — obligations
' of Russia to Greece, 38 — especially for
architecture, ib. — singular baptism of
Vladimir, 40 — erection of the cathedral
. of Kieff, 41— of St. Sophia of Novogo-
rod, ib, — ^remarks on the origin of ttie
bulbous cupola, 42, 43 — on the cathe-
dral of dt. Michael at Moscow, 44-47 —
oth<ir buildings of the Kremlin, 47 —
notice of the ehtireh cf Si. Basil, 48-«
and of those of St. Isaac of Dahnatiai
and our Holy Mother of Gasan, 50.
Gel!, attendant of John Duke of Marl»
borough, presence of mind in, xxiii. 15.
, Sir William, xxi. 39 j xxviii 490,
note; xxx. 398, note.
GtelUus, A., xxvii. 1.
Crells, xxvii. 1.
Gelois, St., xxix. 38. '
Gremara on the Selection of particular
Jewish Psalms, xxviii. 20.
Genet, Abb£, editor of the Revelations of
Sister Nativity, appointed her spiritual
director, xxxiii. 379 — extracts of the
revelations and confessions made by her
to him, with remarks, 380-410.
: xxviii. 451 ; Kxvi. 306— no*
tice o^ 307.
Gengis-Khan, xxi. 181, 193; xxiv. 816;
820 J XXV. 543; xxvii. 139, 142.
Genlis, Madame de, P^trarque et Laure,
reviewed, xxiv. 529 — nature and expo^
sition of her work, ib. 530, 533.
■ M^moires de, xxxiv. 421
— anecdotes of her early years, 422—:
instances of her vanity and self-adula-
tion, 423-428 — her extravagant com-
mendations of Bonald, 429 — her-een-
sores of M. de Lamaxtine, 430 — and
Madame de Stael, 430, 431— lavish en-
eomiumt of the Gomtesse de Ghoiseul-
Gouffier, 431 — malignity of Madame de
Genlis towards her aunt, Madame de
Montesson, 432— platonic attachment
of the latter to the Duke of Orleans, ib.
— their marriage, 434 — marriage of
Madame de QenUs' daughter to Mon-
sieur de Valence, 435 — ^remarks on this
anecdote, 436 — ^intrigue of the Vicomte
deC .with Madame de Genlis, 437-
439 — state of society in France con-
trasted with that of England, 441-45Sr
— character of Madame de Gknlis*9
work, 456.
G«nnadius, xxiii. 137.
Gentianus, xxiii. 139.
Gentile, xxvii. 224.
Geoffrey of Monmouth's History, critiod
analysis of, xxxiv. 285-289.
Geoffiiii, Madame, xxvi. 233.
G^rge I., informers encouraged by 11^
cap. 30, xxi. 409.
■ xxiii. 12.
number of exotics introduced
into .England during the reign of, xxiv.
415.
xxx. 422, 644; xxxvi. 395.
. II., absurd clause in Goj^right
Act, repealed in reign of, xxi. 198, 405^
— ^ncourag^ement olfered to kiformers
by 22, cap. 36, 409— and 18, cap. 26,
413. "
Digitized .by
Googk
7a
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QqABTSBLT
George II., number of exotics introduced
into England in Hhe reign of, xxiv. 415,
511.
I XXV. 77, 392, 393— character
of, 397-399 — intrigues for place and
power in the latter years of bis reign^
404-411.
memoirs of the last ten years
of the reign of, xxvii. 178, 182.
xxviii. 536 1 xxx. 323, 544 ;
xxxvi. 180.
■ III., acts of, relating to copy,
right, xxi. 201, 398 — informers encou-
raged by 7, cap. 43, and 19, cap. 19,
409.
tribute to the memory of,
xxii. 436.
— ^.— - encouragement of the fine
arts, xxiii. 591*
- beautiful verses on, xxiv. 137-
139 — ^vast number of exotics introduced
into England in the reign of, 415.
XXV. 148, 176, 394— character
of, 399, 400— remarks thereon, 400, 401
^acts of 54 and 55, notice of, 478.
xxvii. 203, 252 J xxx. 276;
xxxii. 173.
406.
- notice of, xxxvi. 188 ; xxxvii.
- Letters to the late Lord Ken-
yon, xxxvi. 285 — estimable character of,
286-288—heightened by the publication
of his letters, 289 — extracts from his
notes to Mr. Pitt in 1784,t6. «o/<r— letter
from Mr. Pitt to him on the demands
of the Romanists, 290-292— his ma-
jesty's reply, 292, 293— further letter of
Mr. Pitt, 294 — his majesty's answer,
294, 295 — ^eat services conferred by
him on agriculture, 429.
— ^— • IV., the patron of the fine arts,
xxiii. 591.
XXV. 176; xxviii. 328.
xxviii. 181 — Letter to, on
the Temper and Aspect of the Times,
197, 252.
xxx. 276 ; xxxi. 141.
• Prince, xxvii. 185.
■ St., xxvi. 133.
- of Trebizond, xxiii. 137.
Greorgel, Abb6, xxviii. 450.
Georges, xxix. 563.
Georgio, Radulphus de S., xxix. 535.
Geralaa, xxxiii. 158.
Gcraldine, xxi. 475 ; xxiii. 362.
Gerard, xxiii. 333.
■ Lieutenant, notice of the journey
of, over the Himalaya Mountains, xxiv.
340,
Gerhard, xxx. 95.
Germaine, Lady Betty, extract from a
letter of, to her brothers, xxx. 554.
Germanicus, xxxix. 490.
Germanus, Si, zxxiv. 276.
G^ronte, xxix. 430.
Gerrald, Joseph, sentenced to fourteen
years transportation, letter of Dr. Pair
to, xxxix. 281 .
Gerrarde, xxiv. 405.
Gertrude, St., xxxiii. 409.
Gervase, xxii. 362.
Geryon, xxiii. 256, note,
Gesner, xxiv. 133,411 ; xxvU. 61 ; xxviii.
383, note; xxix. 51; xxxviii. 524;
xxxix. 423.
Geymet, M., moderator of the Vaudois,
xxxiii. 137, note,
Ghaleb, xxx. 489.
Ghest, Laurence, persecution of, for deny-
ing the Romish doctrine of transubstan-
tiation, xxxiv. 340 — ^his martyrdom, ib.
Ghazan, xxi. 185.
Ghibelins, xxi. 507 ; xxiv. 74, 530.
Ghiberti, xxxii. 65.
Giacomo della Porta, xxxii. 55.
Giannone, the historian, xxxi. 72.
Gibbon, Basle edition of his miscella-
neous works, what sold at, xxi. 204.
— XXV. 167— opinion of on 1 John v.
7, xxvi. 329, no/c^-extractof a letter to,
on the same subject, 335, 336, 384.
estimate of the population of
Rome, xxviii. 322 — ^infidel tendency of
his writings, 520.
Roman History, extracts from,
xxxvii. 42, 43 — remarks thereon, 44.
— xxii. 9; xxiu. 426; xxiv. 52, 76,
317,332; xxvi. 366 ; xxvii. 142; xxx.
198, 388; xxxii. 84; xxxiii 4, 5—
quoted, 40, 355 ; xxxiv. 21, 294 ; xxxv.
66, 103, 388, 389, 391; xxxvL 129j
266 ; xxxvii. 466.
Gibbons, L., xxvi. 519.
Gibbs, General, xxxvii. 520.
Sir v., opinion of on the vast increase
of law reports, xxi. 405 ; xxiv. 228.
Gibson, Bishop, xxiv. 30, 31, 52, 408;
xxxiv. 295, note,
Gideon, xxii. 365.
Gifibrd, William, Esq., request of Lord
Byron for writings of, xxxvii. 420 —
extract of a letter from Lord Byron to,
respecting the charge of infidelity,
421.
GifTord, a Mr., opinion of the Icon Basi'*
like, xxxii. 474.
Gilbert, Archbishop, notice of Horace
Walpole's slanders against, xxvii. 187.
Chief Baron, xxxvi. 517 ; xxxix.
188.
de Baillot, xxxiv. 269.
Mr. D., xxvi. 418; xxviii 362;
xxxvi. 157, 161.
Wotton, xxxix. 380.
Gil Bias, xxiii. 202; xxiv. 517, 520;
xxxiii. 476.
Digitized by
Googk
JtBvnw;
INDEX OP NAMES.
n
Gilby, joint iranslaiot K>f th6 Geneva
Bible, xxiii. 297.
Gilly, W. S., Excursion to the Mountains
of Piedmont, xxxiii. 134— circumstances
that led him to visit the Vaudois, ib. —
his arrival at the village of Poraeretto,
136 — description of his visit to M.
Peyrani, the moderator of the Vaudois,
136-141.
Gilchrist, Mr., xxxii. 282, 284.
Gildas the "Wise, notice of the treatise of,
xxxiv. 275, 276.
Gillespie, Major, xxvi. 281, note, 282.
Gilli,xxv.373,381.
Gillies, Dr., xxiii. 251, note, 282— cha-
racter oi, as a Grecian historian, xxv.
154.
Gilpin, Bernard, itinerant instruction of
the people in the principles of the Refor-
mation, adopted by, xxiv. 34 — anecdote
of, xxxviii. 314 — conduct of his imcle
. Tunstall for persevering in the reformed
faith, xxxix. 375.
■ John, XXX. 187.
's Forest Scenery, xxix. 48,
Genevra, xxx. 54.
Gioia, Flavio, improver of the mariner's
compass, xxi. 193.
Giotto, xxxii. 52.
Giovanni, xxvii. 231.
Girard, Abb6, xxxv. 407.
' . Greneral, xxx. 68.
Giraud, M., xxxvii. 15.
Gimiegae, xxi. 98.
Giroux, A., Maccabees, Trag^die, reviewed,
xxix. 25.
Gisborne, Thomas, Testimony of Natural
Theology to Christianity, reviewed, xxi.
41 — ^tribute to the author's character
and previous labours, ib. — remarks on
his attempt to prove, from physical phe-
nomena, the fall of man, 55-60 — stric-
tures on his observations on war, 61—^
and on death, 63.
n . xxxii. 159.
Gittermann, Dr., xxxiiL 553.
Giuliani, xxxiv. 23.
Giulio Romano, remarks on the edifices
erected by, xxxii. 55, 56.
Glaik, Meg, xxv. 149.
Glandeves, Bishop of, xxxii. 357.
Glandeves, M.de, xxviii. 296.
Glanville, xxii. 375; xxiv. 10; xxxii. 97^
note.
— — extract from the Scepsis Scien-
tificaof,xxix. 470, 471.
Glasse, Mrs., pithy advice of, xxx. 129.
Glassford, Mr., xxxvii. 461.
Glauber, xxii. 427 ; xxv. 217,
Glaucippus, xxvi. 257.
Glaucon, xxiv. 429.
Gleig, Mr., The Subaltern, xxxiv. 406—
sketch of Lord Wellington's campaign
in 1813, 408, 413— the anthor*g Inflec-
tion on subsequently visiting St. Sebas-
tian's, 413, 414 — amusements while the
British army were in cantonments, 415.
Glenalvon, xxxvi. 183.
Glendinning, Dame, xxvi. 136.
Edward, xxvi. 136.
— Halbert, xxvi. 136; xxvii.
339, et seq,
Glennie, Mr., xxxi. 16.
Glenthorn, Lord, xxiv. 355.
Glenvarlock, Lord, xxvii. 342, et seq.
Gloucester, xxii. 404.
Duke of, xxiii. 7 ; xxv. 336 ;
xxx. 583.
Glover's Leonidas, character of, xxxi. 286
Fielding's quiet sneer at, xxxiv. 3, note,
— — notice of, xxxv. 192, 205 — speci-
mens of his trochaics, iambics, and
cretics, with remarks, 212, 213.
• Mrs., xxxix. 395.
Glowrowrum, Lady, xxvi. 471.
Gluck, xxxii. 60.
Glycera,. xxiii. 266, note ; xxxvii. 48.
Gnathema, xxii. 192, note — appellation of
* Cistern ' given to, 199.
Gnecchi, Father, a missionary in Japan,
his answer to the inquiries of the Em-
peror Nobrenauga, xxxii. 15, 16.
Gneisenau, Greneral Count, xxxi. 337.
Groa, xxii. 485.
Gk)ad, Dr., xxvi. 91.
Gobelius, Giles and John, xxxiv. 63.
Gobert, xxx. 369.
Gk)celine, xxi. 370, note,
Godard, xxvi. 394.
Goddy, xxvi. 399.
Grodefroi, xxxii. 91.
Godefroy, P., xxxvi. 338.
Godfrey, Sir E., xxv. 428, 430 ; xxx. 50 ;
xxxiu. 307; xxxvi. 530.
Godin, xxxv. 322.
Grodinez, xxix. 425.
Gk)diva, poem, fine extract from, xxv. 106.
Grodolphin, Lady H., xxiii. 10.
• Lord, xxiii. I, et seq. ; xxvi. 435,
436; xxxvii. 255.
Godoy, xxviii. 552 — ^base treaty of, with
Buonaparte for the partition of Portugal,
xxix. 56, 62 — is witii difficulty preserved
in the insurrection at Aranjuez, 62-64.
xxx. 170 ; xxxvii. 383.
Grodwin, xxi. 470.
Earl, xxxvii. 487.
■ Lieut.-Col., xxxv. 516.
^ W., Inquiry into the Power of
Increase in the Numbers of Mankind,
reviewed, xxvi. 148 — ^notice of his * Po-
litical Justice,' 149 — on tlie progressive
increase of population and its effects,
150 — ^refutation of his remarks on Mr.
Malthus^s principle of the different rates
of increase, particularly in America, 151-
Digitized by
Googk
Ti
PART I...INDn or NAMES.
QUASVBBLV
• 15f-*-h]i eKaffgevftUd ealeiUalkmt of
• the increaie or population in America,
exposed, 157-159 — Mr. Malthu8*s prin-
. ciple, that population tends to increase
faster than the meant of subsistence,
corroborated, 160 — refutation of Bir.
Godwin's strictures on Mr. Malthus's
. obseryations on the right of the poor to
a maintenance, 161-168 ; xxvii.95, note;
xxrvu. 229.
Goervyl, xxxii.308.
Goes, D. de, xxvii. 35.
Gk)ethe, fine passage from, 0|>eration of the
• country on the mind, xxvii. 119— -com-
plaint of his Wa^er, 389 — remarks on
ths dramatic writmgs of, xxix. 427, 428
— kind reception by the Duke of Saxe
Weimar of his grey-headed friend, xxxi.
176"diasolution of the connexion be-
tween, him and the stage, at the age of
seventy-four, 177— wise remark, on
thinking too much either of the body
or mind, xxxiv. 311, note,
--Faust, design of, xxxiv. 138 -—
translated by Lord F. L. Oower and Mr.
Shelley, 136— character of Lord GK>wer's
translation, l37-148--character of the
> portions translated bjr Mr. Shelley, 148
— specimens of it, with remarks, 149-
151 — notice of his Wilhelm Meister,
363, 364.
-xxxiv. 311, notes zxzv. 81, 214,
216; xxxvi.271
Gofie, of Durham, had one brother a
regicide, another a su£ferin^ member
of the established church, xxxix. 393.
' Captain, of the Pirate, xxvi. 467.
Gog, xxiv. 315.
Go3co,xxxv. 78, 79.
Goldoni, xxix. 426 ; xxxii. 60; xxxiv. 243.
Goldsmith, Mr., testimony of, to the reluc-
tance of the public to prosecute capitally,
xxiv. 212, 213.
•r-^ — "— Dr., expansion of his beautiful
idea of the fondness of the Swiss for bis
home, xxii. 155 — Johnson's remark
on Goldsmith* s intention to travel in
search of useful inventions, xxiii. 361—
anecdote of his reply to Johnson, on the
difficulty of preserving consistency of
. character in fiJ)le,456,457 — suggestion
of Goldsmith's friend to the travelling
connoisseur, 505 — advised by Johnson
to undertake the translation of the
Lusiad, xxvii. 29--Mr. Grispe, 392^
remark of Johnson conoermng, xxix.
329— -points of resemblance in Wash-
ing Irving to, as a novelist, xxxi. 484 —
GK)ldsmith a good historian in John-
son's eyes, xxxii. 69 — design of his
. Gitixen of the World, xxxix. 74.
K. 525; xxxiv. 358, 479;
xxi(vi.68; zzxyii. 417.
Goldwaith, Captain, Bodf • 593.
Golfin, xxviii. 549.
Goliah, xxi. 107 ; xxiv. 392.
Golownin, Captain, Narrative of his Cap-
tivity in Japan, reviewed, xxii. 107 —
obiect of his voyag^ to the Kurile
Islands, 109, 1 10^-hieroglyphie corre-
spondence with the Japanese, 1 1 — winter-
view with the Governor of Kunaschier,
112 — ^unsuccessful attempt to return to
his ship with his companions, 112, 113
— sufferings on their journey to Chako-
dade, 1 13, 1 15— their treatment and ex-
amination at Chakodade, 1 16— inarched
off for Matsmai, 117 — unsuccessful at-
tempt to escape from thence, 120, 121 —
liberated, 128 — melancholy death of
one of the party, 128, 129.
■'■ ■ XXV. 212.
Gomes, a noted slave dealer, xxiL298;
xxviii. 164.
■ ■ ■■■■ Leonor, marfyrdom of, xxix. 256.
Lucy, xxix. 256.
Mana. xxix. 250— martyidom o^
256.
Theresa, xxix. 256.
Gkunsoo, aeoount of Mungo Park's daatli
g^ven by, xxxiii. 538.
Goncalves, Martin, xxvii. 11.
Gk)udomar, xxix. 191.
Gongora, xxix. 425 ; xxxiii. 210.
GK)nzale8, Bishop of Taiaiona, xxix. 252.
F., XXV. 366.
Gboch, Dr., Bishop of Sly, character of^
xxxi. 264, 265.
xxxiii. 476.
Good, Mr., strictures on the statements e^
with respect to dry-rot in the navy, xxx.
216.218.
Goodall, Dr., xxxii. 473.
Gk>odison, W., Historical and Topomphi-
cal Essay on the Ionian Islands, re-
viewed, xxix. 86— character of the work,
ib. See Ionian Iilaud$^ Fart II.
Groodman, joint translator of the Geneva
Bible, xxiii. 297.
evidence permitted to be read,
xxxvii. 256.
Goodridge, Richard, xxxviii. 31.
Groodwin, Bishop, xxiii. 297.
Mr., XXXV. 158.
• Thomas, xxviii. 25.
Gordon of Abbachie, xxxvi. 211.
- Captain, notice of the visit of, to
the Japanese, xxii. 119, note,
r determined to discover.
if possible, the source of the Bahr d
Abiad, xxviii. 93.
Lord George, xxiL 532; xxxiii.
34 ; xxxvi. 546, note,
' Sir James, xxiii. 117,
Gordon against PVe, notice of the casiw
xxv.239,249,26i3.
Digitized by
Googk
EB^nnWr
fKBlX or NJLMtd^
K
'Georgias of Leontluin, xxi. 284; 1288,
note 5 xxiv, 445 ; xxv. 80, «o/e-— re-
marks on the eloquence of, XKvii. 385-
388,
Gorgon, xxx, 393, note.
Gorham's history of St. Neot's, extract
from, xxxiv. 279, 280.
Goring, Lord, ruined the cause of Charles
by his profligate misconduct, xxv. 311;
sudx. 188.
Gorodsee, xxii. 127.
Gorrequer, Lieut.-Col., xxviii. 237.
Gosselin, Charles, xxxii. 344^352, 354.
Gothard, St., xxi. 867,
Gothe. See Ooethe.
Gt)ttsched, xxix. 427.
Gt)ugh, Mr., xxxiv. 292, note.
Goujon, J., XXV. 128.
Goulburn, Mr., xxxvii. 570 ; xxxix. 228.
Gourgaud, G6n^r£d, Memoires pour servir
^ THistoire de France sous Napoleon,
xxviii. 219; xxix. 562.
€k)urlay, xxiii. 400.
• ■ Mr.j mistaken in his opinion of
the eivilised and comfortable state of the
poor a century ago, xxxvii. 648,
Gouruay, xxv. 560,
V. de, a leader of the sect of
Economists in France, notice o^ xxvii.
160.
Qowan, Morris, xxv. 96.
Gower, extract from his Confessio Aman-
tis, xxxii. 363; XXXV. 191.
» 9 " Lord, xxv. 410 ; xxviii. 57,
Grabe, xxv. 350, 358, note.
Grabianca, xxviii. 37,
Gracchi, xxx. 28.
Gracchus, Tiberius, policy of his agrarian
law, xxxii. 77.
Gradasso, xxx. 67.
Gradenigo, Pietro, doge of Venice, his
character, xxxi. 431'— discovers and
resists a conspiracy formed to overthrow
the oligarchy, 432.
Graeme, Magdalen, xxvi.472.
• Malcolm, xxvii. 339.
Roland, xxvi. 141, 142.
GrfBvius, xxi. 110; xxiii. 429.
Graftgny, Madame de, Vie priv^e de Vol-
taire et Madame dii Ch&telet, reviewed,
xxiii. 154 — biographical notice of her,
155 — ^her reception by them, 157 — de-
scription of her apartment, 159, 160 —
and of their common pursuit, 160 — her
reflections on the misery of Voltaire and
■ Madame du Chfitelet, 162—- their cruel
treatment of her, 163-165 — her death,
166.
xxiii. 155.
Grafton, Duke of, xxvi. 436 .
— — and Whitchurch, xxiii. 296.
Graham, population of Buenos Ayres in
1818, xxx. 450, note.
Graham, Dugald, zkinrt. \M, note,
' Gleneral, xxiii. 417.
' " ' ■ ■ ■ Lady, xxx. 526.
— -— Mana, Journal of a Residence
in Chili, reviewed, xxx. 441 — character
of the work, 446.
- Journal of a Voyage to
Brazil, xxxi, I — ^her pretensions to accu-
racy, disproved, 13, 14 — accoimt of her
excursion from the besieged city of Per-
nambuco to the camp of the besiegers,
144 6— 'description of the residence and
manners of the inhabitants of Bahia,
17, 18.
xxxi. 384; xxxiv. 515; xxxv.
115,420.
Mr., xxxvi. 141, 142, 150.
— — Sir James, Com and Currency,
reviewed, xxxix. 451.
— — — Sir Thomas, marvellous story
about, xxx. 526 ; xxxiv. 409.
Gralent, xxii. 362.
Grammont, Count, xxii. 381— notice of
the Memoirs of, xxix. 185.
■ ■■■■■> ■ ■ Duchesse de, xxx. 559.
Grandpfousier, xxiii. 245.
Grandison, Sir Charles, xxxiii. 483.
Granger, xxvi. 433 } xxxviii383.
Grant, Mesnil, xxvi. 130.
■■■- ■ Mrs., xxiv, 365 ; xxvi. 292.
Mr, J. Pk, xxii. 627, note,
■ ■■■■ ■ Right Hon. Charles, observations
of, on the cause of disturbances in Ire-
land, xxxi. 497 — and on the evils cauaed-
by absentees, 526.
—- — — xxxviii, 548,
557; xxxix. 381.
Sir W., xxi. 404 ; xxiv. 230.
Granville, Dr., considers the plague not
epidemic, xxvii. 526 ; xxxiii. 253.
Journal of Travels to and from
Petersburg, xxxix. 1— his reasons for
travelling, 2 — is no judge of paintines,
4— mistakes the Netherlands proper for
the whole kingdom of William I., 5—
in his accoimt of Petersburg and the
Russians, borrows largely from Capt^
Jones, 14.
Lord, xxv. 401, 406, 410;
xxxiv. 585.
Sir R., xxxvii. 17, note.
Grappa, xxiii. 245, note.
Graswunckel, Theodore, xxxi. 425.
Gratien, Gteneral, xxii. 488, 491.
Ghrattan, H., change of opinion in, with re^
gard to the French revolution, xxviii.272.
proposes a bill for the main*
tenance and employment of the Irish
poor, xxxviii. 64 — on the admission £uid
subsequent retractation of the Veto by
the Catholics, 559.
xxxvi. 68»
Grattans, xxiii. 540.
Digitized by
Googk
7S
PART I.— INDEX OP NAMES.
Qoartbulc
Gratmi, Captain, txiii. 553.
Gravina, Dominic di, xxxi. 71.
Gray, remark on the sixth book of Plato*s
Republic, xxi. 287, note — ^his erudition
as exact as his genius was sublime, 2U6,
note — false translation of, corrected,
502, 503 — manner of speaking of
Speuce, xxiii. 406 — ^variety of his metres,
432 — poetic inspiration drawn from the
perennial fountains of Italy, xxiv. 102 —
tasteful and bold imitation of Petrarch,
549 — source of the magnificent ^oup
in his * Bard,' xxvii. 51 — notice of his
imitation of Pindar, xxviii. 424— cha-
. racteristics of his letter-writing, xxx. 1 86
— his letters playful, ingemous, and
amiable, 543 — immitable character of
his mosaic compositions, xxxi. 2d6, 287
— ^his Elegy, almost the only specimen
of sacred |)oetry that has obtained ce.
lebrity, xxxii. 231 — specimen of Dr.
Pichofs translation of the line ■' Words
that breatlie,' 352 — spirited versions of
some of the Scandinavian remains, xxxv.
184 — ^his lyric poems characterized, 193
— ^powerful efiect of his versions of the
Rimic poems, 204 — character of the
school of which Gray and Mason were
the joint-founders, 205 — Gray*s failure
in the attempt to translate Dante's pic-
ture of evening, xxxvi. 52.
xxi. 113, 114; xxiii. 426; xxv.
102; xxxvii. 94, 417; xxxviii. 39.
Alice, xxvi. 123.
. Lady Jane, xxxiii. 6, 18.
Major, xxiii. 241 ; xxxi. 450.
6^reatheed's, Mr., account of the recovery
of Cowper from the mental malady
under which he laboured, xxx. 189.
Grece, C. F., Facts and Observations on
Canada, &c., reviewed, xxiii. 373 — on
the comparative advantages of Canada
and the United States of North America
for emigration,376 — ^advice to emigrants,
377 — on the use of gypsum in agricul-
ture, 378, 379.
Green, xxix. 37.
— — EUinor, punished for abuse of her
minister, xxxix. 382.
Greneral, xxvi. 371.
Greenough, Mr., statement of the various
natural solutions offered to account for
the deluge, xxix. 159, 160 — ^remarks
thereon, 160, 161 ; xxxiv. 513.
Gregoire, M., opinion of, respecting the
intellect of the negroes, xxi. 433.
————— Histoire des Sectes reli-
gieuses, reviewed, xxviii. 1 — ^notices of
various sects in Holland, Grermany, &c.,
11-18 — ignorance of M. Gr^oire, con-
cerning the Church of EngUmd, 19 —
remarks on various pretended miracles,
19-24; 30-35— account of the theoso-
phy of St. Martin, 36, 37— and of the
revolutionary sect of Avignon, 38-41^
the present state of Protestantism con-
sidered, 42-44 — remarks on the re-union
of the Protestant and Papist churches,
44, 45, 282.'
Gregoire, M., Histoire dela Th6ophilan-
tropie, reviewed, xxviii. 493 — remark of,
on the failure of David Williams's
deistical rehgion, 495— origin of the
Theophilanthropists, 497 — account of
their creed, and various services, 498-
501 — schism among them, 502, 503^
decline of Theophilanthropism, 508 —
horrible consequencis of infidelity in
France, 509, 510— xxix. 181.
Gregories, xxvii. 54.
Gregorius, in his reference to the i^olian
Lyrics, does not notice the digamma,
xxvii. 50.
Gregory II., xxxiii. 159.
VII., xxxiii. 3; xxxvii. 205.
IX., xxii. 86 ; xxxv. 92 ; xxxvii.
474.
X. See Piacenza, Part II.
XI., xxxi. 74.
XII., xxxvii. 474.
Xlll., xxxiU. 28.
Bishop of Corinth, xxiiL 140.
Dr., xxxiii. 550, 555.
Mr., xxvi. 81, note,
— — of Nazianzen, xxiii. 139,140,152;
xxxiii. 82— quotation from, 90.
of Nyssa,his definition of ahymn^
xxxviii. 36 ; xxxiii. 82.
St., xxL 371 — ^reasons why greater
miracles are wrought by small relics
than by the whole bodies of saints, xxii.
83.
- xxii. 354 ; xxvi. 444 ; xxxii*
9 ; xxxvii. 470.
of Tours, xxxiv. 275,
Greig, Admiral, xxxi. 163; xxxv. 387;
xxxix. 31 — ^naval anecdote of, 32.
Grel,Dame, xxi. lObjnote.
Grenoble, Bishop of, xxxii. 357, 376, 394.
Grenville, Lord, xxi. 119 — assisted in
checkiug the spirit of legislation evinced
by the Commons, 427.
— Speech of, on the State
of the Country, reviewed, xxii.492 — cha-
racter of his eloquence, 498 — observa-
tions of, on the Manchester meeting and
the state of the country, 503-525.
xxiii. 288 ; xxix. 288 ;
xxxiii. 202, 582; xxxviii. 548; xxxix.
304.
Mr., xxvii. 210; xxx. 543.
Gresset, xxix. 27.
Gretter, xxi. 1 02.
Grevin, xxix. 33.
Grey, Dr., xxxix. 398.
Lady, xxviii. 231
Digitized by
Googk
Retxiw*
INDEX OF NAMES.
71
Grey, Lord, Plymouth Breakwater firtt
contemplated by, xzii. 51 ; xxriii.
205.
xxxiii.501, 576 ; zxxviii.548,
557.
— Samuel, xxvii. 457.
Griesbach, M., criticisms on the scriptures,
notice of, xxxiii. 80, 81— exposure of
his mistaJces respecting TertuUian and
Cyprian, ibid.
objections of, against
1 John V. 7, answered by Bishop Bur-
. gess, xxvi. 324, et »eq.
XXX. 96.
Griffin, Lieut, xxxiv. 590.
Griffith,Mr., xxi. 89.
Grimes, Mr., xxv., 212, 213.
Grimm, MM., important additions to
nursery literature made by, xxi. 95 —
Deutsche Sageu, notice of, xxii. 349,
350, 361-,i»o/e.
. xxvi. 230; xxviii. 33,-
xxxY. 177.
Grindall, Archbishop, appointed by Cran-
mer an itinerant preacher, xxiv. 34,
note.
' the lesser prophets
translated by, xxiii. 298 — school at St.
6ee*8, on his foundation, 581, noie»
Grinfield, Mr., xxxii. 426.
Grsvius, xxxii. 91.
Groignard, xxx. 369.
Gronovius, xxi. 1 10 ; xxxii. 91.
Grose, Captain, xxx. 336.
Gros-Rene, xxix. 430.
Grosseteste, Robert, Bishop of Lincoln,
made a complete Latin version of Suidas,
xxii. 310.
Grosthead, Bishop, xxiv. 404.
Grosvenor, Lord, xxvii 322.
Grotius, his doctrine of resistance to ty-
ranny, xxxviii. 186.
■ xxx. 101; xxxiii. 365, note;
xxxvi. 43 ; xxxvii. 243.
Grouchy, General, xxix. 69 ; xxxvi. 77,
Grozier, xxi. 67, 83.
Grub, Ezekiel, xxx. 536.
Grueber, notice of the journey of, over the
Himalaya Mountains^ xxiv. 339.
Chruter, xxiii. 150.
Gryphius, Andreas, xxix. 427.
Grysadal^, Mr., xxxiii. 234.
Guarini, xxxiii. 477.
Guarino, xxii. 312.
Gubbins, Lieut. -Col., satisfaction of the
Parganotes, xxiii. 132— civil governor
of the town of Parga, 136.
Gudula, St., xxii. 356.
Guelfo, xxiv. 91-96.
Guelfe, xxi. 507 ; xxiv. 74, 530.
Guennore, Duchess, xxv. 141.
Guent; Richard; xxxiii, 18.
Querra, Don Jos^, Historia de la Heroin-
cion de Nueva EspaSa, reviewed, xxx.
151. See ;i/rxico,Part IL
Guesdin, Du, xxxii. 386.
Guestel, M. de, xxviii. 33.
Guevara, xxix. 258, note,
Guevasa, xxix. 425.
GKiicciardini, literary character of, xxviii.
369— definition of a good pope, xxxiii.
3 — memorable reservation in speaking
of the character of Pope Clement,
ibid.
xxxii. 365, 375, 379, 3pO,
391 ; xxxiv. 69.
Guidi, xxiv. 562.
Guide, xxiv. 92-97.
of Ravenna, xxiv. 97.
Guignes, Comte de, jealousy of Madame
de Montesson of, xxxiv. 432, 433.
' De, calls the Toorki, Huns,
xxxvi. 120.
Guildford, Lord Keeper, xxvii. 200.
Guilford, Lord, popularity of, at Athensi,
xxiii. 352, 358 — munificence of, xxviii.
476.
■ xxix. 113 ; xxx. 488.
Guilhenni, M. de, extraordinary act of
courage of, xxviii. 307.
Guillaume, xxviii. 304.
Guillaumot, M. C. A., Inspecteur-G^o^ral
des Objets de Salubrity, xxi. 385.
Guilletierre, xxiii. 338 ; xxvi. 387.
Guilli6,M., xxviii. 171.
Guillot, General, xxix. 69.
Guiluz, Martin de, xxxviii. 210.
Guinard, Balthazar, xxvi. 189.
Guiomar, xxi. 330.
Guion. Madame, extracts from the memoirs
of, xxxi. 4246 — ^remarks on, 47, 48.
Guiscard, Robert, xxv. 141.
Guise, Captain, xxxviii. 461, 462, 466.
— .~— Cardinal de, miirder of, xxv. 556.
Due de, murder o^ xxv. 556 ;
xxviii. 511.
— — General, xxx. 77,
Mary of, xxxi. 14.
Guizot, M., strictures on, as an hbtorian,
regarding men as the puppets of a £a.tal
necessity, xxxviii. 196.
Gidley, xxi. 92.
Gulliver, xxi. 504; xxv. 282 ; xxx. 242,
543 ; XXXV. 58.
Giimilla, xxi. 335.
Gunn, Rev. W., Inquiry into the Origin
of Gothic Architecture, xxv. 112 — cha.
racier of the work, 116,118, 135, note.
Gurney, J. J.,xxxix, 132.
Mr. Hudson, xxix. 207, note;
XXXV. 220.
— — Mr., testimony of, to the reluc-
tance of the public to prosecute capitally,
xxiv. 212,
Digitized by
Googk
?s
PART L^INDBX OF NAMES.
QuAttmftLY
Onrney, Mr^ xlxiii. 190-*hit opinion oil
, Ihe usury-laws, 201, 202.
Gurth,xxvi..l29.
Gusman, J. de« his yersion of tho
Georgics, xxi^viii. 367, 371, 375-377.
Gustavus Adolphus, improvem«it in the
science of war effected by, xxv. 73, 74 —
, probably taken by Cromwell as hii
model, 324^-rough monument to his
memoryi at Lutsen, and pious regard
paid to it, zxxi. 183.
Guthrie, zzvi. 515.
Guyardi de* Moulins, translation of ihi
Vulgate by,.xxziii. 164, noie4
Guy, Mr., a surgeon, xxxi. 304.
Guys, M., zziii. 357.
Gwyn, Nell, anecdotes of, xxxiii. 290^ 2d3;
xxxix. 396. .
Gwynn, John, plans for the impretement
of London and Wettii^iter, xxxiv.
183.
Gyas, XXX. 50.
Gyges, xxi. 291 ) ttti 106 ; zxx. 42.
Gytippus,x3CK.384*
H.
HABmoToW, joi. 377 1 xxxii;230,
Hackelbere, xxii. 369.
^acker, thiB regicide^ xxxvi. 513, fiof?;
xxxix. 388.
Racket, Bishop, called Milton < a petty
school-boy scribbler,' iDud. 287.
Hackluyt, early exportation fVom Flanders
of fustians, xxxiv. 69.
itxxviii. 215. See Hakluyu.
&ckman, Mr., xxxv. 152.
Hackspan, xxxv. 99«
Haco, xxii. 368.
Haddington, Lord, xxxvi. 186.
Hadje Hat Sala, xxxix. 162.
• Mohamed, xxxijc. 165.
Hadji Aly, a slave -deiileT, character of,
xxii. 473.
Hamef, xiiii. 229 — route of,
through the interior of Africa, 231,
232.
-*■ >- Khan Hamed Bey, appointed com-
missioner of the Porte for the Island of
Parga, xxiii. 129, 130.
MahmOud, xxv. 39.
Hadrian, xxv. 353— vain attempt of him
;and his successors io make themselves"
beloved by the Greeks, xxxvii. 37— de-
lighted in the image of liberty, 43 — de-
portation by, of a father who slew his
son in hunting, on account of a sus-
pidon of adultery, xxxix. 202.
* Junius, xxii. 314*
Hsemon, xxxi. 201.
I^seootjfirock, xxviii, 386.
Hafiz, xxxv. 80— literary merits of, xxxvi.
364, 365.
Hagan, Licuteilant, xxvi. 64, 65, 73.
Haggarth, Dr., xxxiii. 248.
Ha^ias, xxvi. 248.
Haig, James, xxi. 241 *
I^nault, Pr^jsident, xxiii. 165.
Haines, General, xxxviii. 222.
Hainuka, xxxv. 72, 74,
Hajee Mahommed Hoossein, aceoutit of,
xxxvi. 370.
Hani BabA, Adventures of, reviewed, xxt.
199— comparison of them with the Me-
moirs of Anastasius, 200 — and with the
Thousand and One Nights,' 201— Ab-
stract of the work, with extracts and re-
marks, 202.215.
' xxxvi. 353— lendency to carl
cature of the advefitures of, 354— objec-
tions to his sweeping apology for his oWn
baseness, 356 — general fidelity of de-'
Scription observed in, ibid^
Hakewill, Dr. G., testimony of, to the lite-
rary character of Ins times, xxiii. 300,
301.
Hakluyts, xxi. 203 ; xxiv. 321, 325^.
Haldane, Robert, review of the conduct of
the directors of- the Bible Society. See
Bible Society, Part II.
— — ' xjovi. 26.
Haldimand, General, xxvli. 41^.
Mr., xxvii. 245.
Haldimund, Sir fi., xxvii. 350.
Hale, Lord, xxxvii. 167.
— *— Sir Matthew, remark on, by M. Ru-
bichon, xxiii. 193— ^opinions of, on alter-
ing the law of England, xxiv. 266, 267
— opinion of, on the validity of a Quaker
marriage, xxv. 260.
— xxxviii. 296 — on altera-
tion of the laws, 242 — ^motion for draw-
ing up proposals to Charles, xxix. 173
— nature of the * Council,' xxxii. 101 —
belief in witchcraft, xxxv. 448 — children
under twelve years of age not examined
on oath, xxxvi. 517 — a peer burnt in
the hand, under an erroneous construc-
tion of the provision of Edward VI.,
that peers should have benefit of clergy,
although they could not read, xxxvii. 1 71 .
xxi. 122; xxix. 171 j
xxxvii. 161.
Halero, Claud, xxvi. 460.
Halhed, Mr., xxxiii. 566, 568.
Haliburton, Mr., Observations upon the
Importance of the North American
Digitized by
Googk
BBToiir.
INDEX OF NAMES.
T9
Colonies to Gfeat Britain, xixiii« 410«
See Colbmet, Part II.
Halifax, Bishc^, xzzix. 304«
■ '■ M . Lotd, intri^es of, xxw» 404, 412.
■ m. 482 } zxiii. 43 ; xxvi.
426, 431, 436} utii. 212; kxzii. 283.
Hall, notice of John Reinolds, one of the
translators of the authcnrized Ttfrsion of
. the Bible, xxiii. 302.
— ^ notice of the Toyage of discoTery of,
XXX. 232. .
— — Bishop, style of hi< lennont, vdt
113.
•^-^ xxtiii. 145 1 xxix, 300 ; xxxii. 290,
444 ; xxxviii. 306.
«**^ Captain Ba^nl, account of an Esqui-
maux, supposed to be written by, xxi.
218, and note.
?! "" ■ '■ ■ ■■■ Jouiual written on the
CoastofChile, rQTiewed,xxx. 441( See
Chi/e, Part II.
■ ■' ■ ■ ■ information to be ex-*
pected from hii trayels in the United
States, xxxvii. 261.
— — — exuberance of, xxxii*
147— eulogfium on, as President of the
Dunbar Mechaniios* Institute, xxxix. 127,
note,
.115,135.
— — > Hon* Jndge, Letters from the West,
containing sketches, &c., connected with
. the first settlements of the western sec-
tions of the United States, xxxix. 345^—
his Honour's motiyes for visiting these
sections,yf^'c{.->-extent of his excursion
reaclnngonly from Pittsburgto Shawnee
Town, 346-->friyoloiis nature of his re-
marks, ibid. — sample of his poetic
power, d47-Hq)ecimeni of his wit and
facetiousness, ibid. — ^his gallantry, 348
—his work a silly book, stuflM with
. boyish leyities, t6tVi^*^->manner in which
he eyinces his justice and humanity,
. when speaking of the first settlers, 349
—describes Linch's law, once the iex
ioci of the frontiers, 361 — his ludi-
crous description of Coalhill, ibid,-^
. and of Shawnee Town, 352— considers
the numerous graves and the preva-
lence of miasma as no proof of the
unhealthiness of the climate, 353 —
— notice of his inconsistency, 354, 355
— <:au8e of his indignation at the Edin-
burgh Review, t6i</.— and at the Quar-
terly, 356— taunts the superiority of the
American soldier and sailor to the Eng-
lish, 356 — shows unintentionally, that
the vice of all democracies is neglect,
indifference, and ingratitude, towards
those who have done them best service,
358— the fetes of General Neville and
. General St. Clair cited as American
( pvoofii of tlns^ i^«««)ne probable ikte in
his new western Bhrmii^llAm predicted
from the value of his work, 359.
Hall, Lieutenant, xxix. 339, and ito/e^ 480*
— Margaret, xxxix. 395,
— Sir ^ames, Ledyard relieved by,
xxxviii. 91 — ^procures him A passage ta
the Pacific Ocean, 93.
n, I. ■ I r . xxi. 217»
Hallam, Henry, his account of the institu-
tion of free burghs in England,xxxii«95.
■ Constitutiomd I^teiy o£
England, xxxvii. 1 94-— animadversions
on the plan pursued by him, t6t(/.-*-«on-
siders the history of England at the^
accession of Henry VIL as asiuming a
new character, 199*^mistaken as to the
character of this prince, 202 — as to th*
character of Fisher, 204 — apt to fona
uncharitable conclusions (torn insuf*
ficient grounds, instanced in Luther^
209— 4n what he says of Edward VI^
210 — ^in what he says oi* Cranmer, 210-
212«-^udged to be too coldly inclined,
to the Reformation, 213-^ms moral
balance, as to the Protestant and Catho-
lic religions, controverted, 214 — ^mis«>
taken as to the effect of the doctrine of
transubstantiation, 216— as to the laws
of Elizabeth against the Romanists,
219— as to the Puritans, 225— compared
to Neale for uncharitablsness, 229—
contradicts himself as to the attainder oi
Strafford, 230— depreciates, and crimi-
nates bitterly and imjustly. Archbishop
Xaud, 238 — charge against Crom-
well of selling fifty English gentlemen,
who opposed his government, as slavea
at Barbadoe^, 250— Whios aspersed by
him as well as Tories, 25S^-the sWle of
his wo^k good, but the spirit evil, 359. .
- xxiv. 33 ; xxv. 552; xxvii.
153; xxxi.427.
'■ Robert, Bishop of Salisbury, de-^
puted to the councils of Pisa and of
Constance, xxxiv. 332 — singular dispute
whether the English were entitled to
rank as a nation and to vote accordingly,
>6t£^^— conduct of the Bishop on this oc-.
casion, and arguments adduced on both
sides, 333, 334— his death, and the
honours paid to his memory, 337.
• xxxiv. 334.
Hallaran, Dr., remarks of, on the increase
of insanity in Ireland, xxiv. 181, 189*
Haller, xxii. 22, 25.
Halley, Dr., discovered the tables of Ju-
piter and Saturn to be incorrect, xxii*.
142; xxvii. 286.
lines on Newton, xxxviii. 7.
Halliday, Mr., xxxviii. 247.
Hallifax, xxxix. 278.
Halloran, Dr., xxxvii. 15.
HalloweU, Admiral,, kxxvii. 389
Digitized by
Googk
80
PART I.-INDKX OF NAMES.
QUABTBRI.Y
Haly, zxvi. 183.
Ham, xxi. 50.
Haman^ xxv. 423.
Hamet, xxiv. 132.
Hamilton, Archibald, xxxv. 163.
Captain, xxix. 109.
■ Count, mode of carrying on
sieges before and after the invention
of gunpowder, xxii. 381 — effects of ad-
versity on Charles, xxix. 180.
Duke of, blundering account of
the duel of, wi^ Lord Mohun, xxvi.
432.
xxv. 328 — testimony
of, to the virtues of Charles I., xxix. 166
—wit of, xxxiii. 304.
■ xxxvi. 654,
— — Gavin, xxxiv. 112.
• General, xxx. 32, 36.
. Gerard, xxxiv. 474.
. Lady, refused Christian burial
in France, xxi. 366.
— ^ Lieutenant-Colonel, xxxvii. 258.
Lord A., xxx. 229, note,
— — Major, xxxix. 244,
• Mr., granite not employed in
Upper Egypt, except in obelisks and
some few propyla, xxii. 452 — proof
that the Greeks added much to Egyp-
tian temple of Philee, 455— explored the
Corc3rrian Cave, xxiii. 329, note,
— — xxiv. 145 ; xxviii. 78.
notice of a work of, on India,
xxix. 384, note,
' vines planted by, xxxii. 261.
■ Rev. Dr., xxii. 439.
- Sir W., xxvi. 235.
. T., xxi. 225, note,
. Mr., xxi. 482.
Hamlet, acted at Pittsburgh, xxi. 151 —
character of, as drawn by Ducis, xxix.
46, 47.
_— xxi. 391 5 xxii. 403; xxvi 398;
xxviii. 98; xxix. 429.
Hammond, xxv. 326.
■ Captain, remarks of, on the
vices of the Cavaliers, xxix. 178.
Hampden, Cromwell's first cousin, xxv.
286— when embarked for New England,
compelled to come on shore by Charles,
288 — character and conduct of, 293,
294, 299, 305— strength of character
and self-control of, xxix. 205 — singular
fact, that mi^ht suffice to reclaim an
ingenuous mmd from the worship of,
xxxvii. 235.
■ Rev. J., notice of a pamphlet of,
on negro slavery, xxx. 560.
Hampton, General, xxvii. 435.
Hamuel, xxvi. 195.
Hanani, xxv. 364.
Hananiah, xxiii. 217.
Hanbold;XXzii.71;91.
Hanbury. See Waddmgton,
Hancock, Dr., Researches into the Laws
of Pestilence, reviewed, xxvii. 524— -his
opinion as to the nature of contagion^-
538, 539 — ^his remarks on the plague in
London in 1665, 540-542— instances of
escape from the plague by attention to
cleanliness, 545.
Handel, xxii. 291 ; xxiii. 591 ; xxvii.383.
Hankey, Sir F., xxix. 89.
Hanmer, David, xxxii. 1 19.
Hannah, xxiv. 499.
Hannar, Mr., xxxvii. 461.
Hannibal, xxii. 39-^force of, at the baitie
of Cannae, 382.
— — xxiv. 79 ; xxv. 70 j xxvii. 73 ;•
xxxii. 69, note,
Hanno, xxvii. 36.
Hanover, Electoral Prince of, afterwards
George II., xxiii. 54.
Hanoze, xxii. 469.
Hanrott and Metcalf, Messrs., xxiv. 417.
Hans, David, executed for witchcraft,
xxix. 447.
Hanskirchof, xxii. 369.
Hansard, xxi. 426 ; xxiv. 267.
Hanson, Mr., xxiii. 171.
Hanway, xxxii. 184.
Hanway, Jonas, xxxv. 386.
Happer, Mysi6, xxvi. 136 ; xxvii. 362.
Happoncourt, Frances d'Issimbourgh de,
afterwards Madame de Grafigny, xxiii.
155.
Harbottle, General, xxxi. 477.
Harcourt, Harriet Eusebia, xxii. 95.
Lord, xxv. 394, 395 — slander
of Horace Walpole against, xxviL 184,
185.
Hardcastle, Daniel, Letters on Currency,
xxxix. 451.
Hardenberg, Prince, measures adopted
by him as a minister in Prussia, xxxi.
188, 189 — succeeds Baron Stein in the
ministry, 330 — and persists in the course
prescribed by the latter, ibid.
Hardicanute, xxxvii. 487.
Harding, one of the translators of the
authorized version of the Bible, notice
of, xxiii. 303.
' Elizabeth, xxvii. 451.
' W., xxvii. 451.
Hardouin, xxxiv. 254 ; xxxvi. 60.
Hardwicke, Colonel, xxii. 423.
■ Lord, pretended cause of
Walpole's hatred of, 189 — vindication of
him from Walpole's slander, xxvii. 193-
196.
— unjustly charged with
delays in Chancery, xxx. 277, 278 —
ihumber of judgments pronounced by
him, 284 — • and of bankruptcy and
lunacy petitions determined by him, 285.
■ M ■ »dii> 372; xxf. 4H
Digitized by
Googk
Rbyibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
81
409, 410 ; xxvii. 182, 188 ; xxix. 531 ;
xxxix. 188, 189, 278.
Hardwicke, Philip, secoud Earl of, obser-
vation of, on the conveyance of property,
xxxviii. 293.
' xxvii. 190 ; xxviii. 51.
Hardy's case, citation from, high sounding
declamation of Mr. Erskine, xzxvi. 546.
■ tra^dies, remarks on, with speci-
mens, zxix. 34-36.
■ Sir Thomas, xxxvii. 276, note.
Hare, Mr. R., junior, xxiii. 468, 470.
Harley, made secretary of state by Marl-
borough's influence, xxiii. 20 — ^base con-
duct towards Marlborough, 36, 45 —
noble answer of, xxx. 548.
— — appointed by Cranmer an itinerant
preacher, xxiv. 34, rwte,
Alderman, xxxiii. 400.
Harlowe, Clarissa, xxix. 424.
Harinan, Captain, xxxii. 436.
Harmarus, Joannes, absurd instances of
et3rmology in the Lexicon of, xxii. 323.
Harmer, Mr., xxiv. 216, 221, 224, 262.
Harmodius, xxiii. 504: x>iv. 428: xxix.
333.
Harmon, D. W., Voyage in New Cale-
donia, reviewed, xxvi. 409. See Caie-
donia,
Haro, a noble Spanish family, supposed
demoniacal origin of, xxii. 362, 363.
Harold, Earl, xxi. 379.
■ Gormson, xxii. 366.
Haroun, or Aaron, notice of the tomb of,
xxii. 441.
Haroun al Raschid, xxii. 280.
Harpalus, xxvi. 255, twie.
Harper, William, xxxiv. 338.
Harpocratis, xxii. 305, note — notice of his
Lexicon, 306, 308, 309.
Harrington, Mr., xxxiii. 312.
— Sir J., apology for his transla-
tion of certain passages of Ariosto, xxi.
489 — specimen of his version, ib, 490 —
character of his translation, xxx. 52,
and xxxiv. 5, 6.
• anecdote of Bishop Mat-
thew, xxxix. 379— anecdote of Sir W.
Raleigh's unworthy conduct, xxxiv. 346
— on Bishop Cotton's wife. Patience, ib,
Harris's voyages, extract from, xxxvi. 485.
• xxi. 180; xxii. 305.
• the historian, xxxvii. 229.
- Mr., xxx. 397, no/tf; xxxvi. 141.
W. T., Remarks made during a
Tour through the United States, re-
viewed, xxvii. 71 — strictures on it, 71,
72 — ^instances of his callous-heartedness,
87, 88— radical trash of, xxix. 340.
Harrison, mimificent grant to, for the in-
vention of a time-piece, xxvi. 9.
" ■ Description of Britain, extracts
from, xxxii. 164, 165, xxxiii. 434, <md
VOL. XL. MO. LXXIX.
xxxvi. 395, no/e — account of the dif-
ferent wines used in England,xxxii.249.
Harrison, Dr., xxxiii. 481 ; xxxiv. 3.
Harrison, General, xxv. 338, 343; xxvii.
414,421; xxxi.109.
Thomas, one of the translators
of the authorised version of the Bible,
notice of, xxiii. 302.
Harrowby, Lord, Dr. Dwight's remark on
his speech, xxxi. 509.
Harry, xxii. 404.
Hart, A., an astrologer, notice of, xxvi.
185.
Harte, xxiv. 405^onjectures of, on the
cause of the high degpree of perfection to
which horticulture luis attained in Hol-
land, 411.
- xxxvi. 402.
Hartington, Lord, xxv. 413
Hartley, xxxv. 182.
Hartlib, xxiv. 405 ; xxxii. 63
Hartlibb, Nan, xxxiii. 294.
Hartungus, xxii. 314.
Harvey, Dr., xxxvi. 201.
Lieut.-Col., brilliant action of, m
Canada, xxvii. 417.
W., the artist, xxxii. 233.
' xxiv. 350 ; xxix. 180, 305 ; xxxv.
190.
Harville, Capt., xxiv. 372, 373.
Harville, C. d', xxix. 27.
Harwood, Dr., xxi. 103,no/r.
Hase, xxiii. 148.
Haslam, xxii. 24, note,
Haslerig, Sir Ajrthur, created a baron^
xxv. 318 — account of, xxxix. 397.
xxv. 288, 325; xxxii. 440;
xxxix. 387.
Haslewood, great tax on his reprint of the
Mirror for Magistrates, xxi. 203.
Hassan, founder of a sect called 'Mulihet,*
xxiv. 327.
xxiv. 515 ; xxv. 36.
— — Abon, xxxiii. 353.
' Beg, xxii. 464.
Kasheff, xxii. 448, 449— despotic
act of, 457,459.
Hasselquist, xxiii. 89.
Hastie, Mr., xxviii. 173.
Hastings, Marquis of, testimony of, to the
services of Sir J. Malcolm, xxix. 384,
385 ; xxxiii. 104 — abolished the censor-
ship in India, xxxv. 63.
xxiv. 120; xxvi. 17,
note; xxxv. 32, 42, 482; xxxvi. 268;
xxxvii. 130, 133.
Warren, xxix. 284 ; xxxiii. 574,
593; xxxiv. 469; xxxv. 582; xxxvii.
123.
Hatchet, Mr., xxi. 230.
Hatfield, Thomas, Bishop, places built and
founded by, xxxix. 372.
Hathaway, xxicvi. 556.
o
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PART I— INDKC OF NAMES.
QuABTSRI.ir
Hatman, Danfodio, zziii. 233.
Hattoni Lord Chancellor, zzxiiLS ; xxzix.
277.
-^— - Mr., attempt towarda obtaining a
standard for measures, zxxri. 150.
Haughton, Lieut, xxxii. 430.
Havel, M., mvi 328.
Haversham, Lord, xziii. 56.
Hawke, Lord, xxxiz. 191.
Hawker, Dr., xxiv. 8.
Hawkesbury, Lord, zxxiv. 583.
Hawkesworth, Dr., zz?i. 235.
Hawkins, Dr., his liberal construction of
MiIton*s conduct, zzxii. 455.
■■■ ■ K., dissertation on tradition,
reviewed, xxi. 362.
- Mr., observations of, on the ge-
neral produce of the ^ains of Qnfic^,
xxiii. 330.
■ xxxvi. 516, fio#e— notice of
his trial, 526-529.
Sir J(^n, notice of hit voyages
to Africa and the West Indiee, ynrii.
507, 512.
• zzxviii.212.
Hawley, General, notice of his defeat near
Falkirk, xxxvi. 179, 180.
Haworth, Mr., ndv. 418.
Hay, Major-Gen., death of, xxx. 76.
Ha]^don, B. R., on New Churches, re-
viewed, xxiii. 549 — ^his proposal for de-
corating them with paintings, 587*—
observations on it, 588-591.
Dr. Pichofs remark on,
xxxii. 347.
fiayesj Captain, xrrii. 101.
Haygarth, W.^ Esq., Greece, a poem, re-
viewed, xxiii. 325.
Hayle^, Mrs., mother of the poet, her
anxiehr for her child in his early youth,
xxxi. 266, 267— epitaph on her, by her
son, 280, note.
" wife of the poet, h«f hus-
band's character of, xxxi. 293 — Miss
Seward's description, t6t</.— causes of
her separation from her husband, 294.
Thomas, Dean of Chichester,
grandfather of the poet, xxxi. 264.
son to the former, and
father to the poet, xxxi. 264.
- Alphonso, son of the poet,
early talents of, xxxi. 294, 295— be-
comes a pupil of Flaxman*8, 302 —
generous and grateful sentiments of
young Hayley to his father, ibid. — com-
mencement of his illness, 304 — his
death, 306.
_ William, in his Life of Cowper,
makes him relate his own life, xxi. 113.
Memoirs of, by himself,
xxxi. 263 — ^remarks on their execution,
264~notice of his parents, 264, 265—
his birth, and early «diicatipD» 265-269
— goes to Cambridge, 270— enters him -
self of the Middle Temple, 271— visits
Edinburgh, 272 — returns to London,
and writes for the stage, 273 — character
and failure of his first attempt, 274— his
marriage, 276 — second attempt at writ-*
ing a tragedy, and its failure, 276, 277
—begins an epic poem, 277 — loses his
mother, 279— elegant tribute to her
memory, ibid. 280 — composes an epi-
taph on his parents, 280, note — ^remarks
on it, 281, Mo/e— and on his Esss^ on
Painting, and on Epic Poetry, 281*-«
effects produced by his notes on the
latter, 283-— character of his trans-
lations from Ercilla and Dante, ibid^^
character of his Triumphs of Temper^
284— declines the poetlaureateship, 289
— ^his generous acknowledgment of sn*
periority in contemporary poets, 20^—
character of his Plays, written for a
private theatre, ibid, 291, 292— and of
his Essay on Old Maids, 292, 293—
separates from his wife, ih. — remarki on
that step, 294 — writes another tragedy,
which is coldly received, 297 — goes to
Paris, ibidj-^DAM enthusiastic regard for
the French, 299-<-compoaes an epitaph
on his faithful niurse, 300 — ^becomes ac-
quainted with Cowper, t&'cf.— ^Invocation
of Patience, and sonnets composed by
him during his son*s illness, 305-307—^
publishes his Life of Cowper, 309 — and
of Romney, t6tc{.— character of his later
pieces, ibid. — imprudently marries a
second time, 310.
Hayley, William, xxiv. 185 ; xxx. 189 1
XXXV. 193— notice of, 200, 201.
Hayman, an actor, xxxvi. 183.
Hayter, Bishop, vindications of, from
Horace Wal^le's slander, xxvii. 186;
187.
_ George, xxrii. 187.
Grace, xxvii. 187.
Hazlewood, Sir R., xxvii. 340.
Hazlitt, William, Political Essays, re-
viewed, xxii. 158 — ^remarks on his tern-
per, ibid, 159 — ^list of persons abused
and praised by him, 160 — his character
of Paley, ibid,—oi the Duke of Welling-
ton, il6i^.— of a Jacobin, 158— of a Tory,
160— of a Whig, 161— of Murat, ibid,
162— of legitimacy, lAtrf.— vanity of Bfr.
Hazlitt, ibid. — entomological character
ofhim, t6iV/. 163.
Table Talk, reviewed,
xxvi. 103— character of him as a writer,
t^. — specimens of his slang-whanging
style, 104-108 — his just estimate of his
own abihties, 108.
-^— — — a contributor to tiie
Liberal, and the consequences, xzzrii:
419. ■
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Heview*
INDEX OF NAMES.
83
Head| Gapi F. B., Rough Notes during
some Journeys across the Pampas, xxxv.
114 — object of his journeys, 116, 117 —
account of a milk and butter association
at Buenos Ayres, 119^-price of provi-
sions there, 1 1 8— 'fanatiasm of the in-
habitants, 120 — description of Santiago,
121,1 22---manner in which the Gauchos
slaughter cattle, 122— description of
one of his journeys across the Pampas,
123-125 — manners and habits of the
Gauchos, 126-128— description of San
Luis, a town on the Pampas, 132— of
Mendosa, 133 — gross indelicacy of the
inhabitants, 134— notice of his visits to
the gold-mines of Cerro de las Carolinas,
and of Uspa]lata,136 — modeof travelling
over the Goxdilleras mountains, 136, 137
— accoimt of Santiago in Chile, ISO-
mode of ascending and descending the
mines, 143.
— reports on the failure
of the Rio Plata Mining Association,
xxxvi. 81. See ilfm0«. Part II.
' xxviii. 449,
Headcroft, John, xxi. 473.
Headngg, Cuddie, xxxi. 479.
Heard, Sir Isaac, xxx. 339, note.
Heame, xxi. 249 — incorrectness of his
observations of the Copper-mine River,
260, 261 J XXV. 199, 207— instances of
frozen insects and animals recovering
animation, xxviii. 382 — misrepresenta-
tions exposed, 390. 391.
Thomas, xxi. 100, 110; xxxviii.
337.
Hearsay, Captain, xxii. 417, 420.
Heath, Archbishop, revised Cranmer's
Bible, xxiii. 297.
Dr. Benjamin, chosen head master
of Harrow School in opposition to Parr,
xxxix. 363.
XXV. 507, 523, 528.
— Mr. Justice, xxiv. 203.
Heavystem, Miss, xxxi. 180.
Hebe, xxvi. 229.
Heber, Reginald, citation from his Pales-
tme, xxi. 319.
■ Bishop of Calcutta, fare-
well sermon, &c., xxxv. 445, 446 — ^birth
and early education of, 450, 451 — ^his
honours at the university, 451, 452—
settles at Hodnet, 452 — account of his
conduct as a parochial clergjrman, 453,
454 — character of his Bampton lectures,
453— and of his life of Bishop Taylor,
455 — appointed preacher at Lincoln's
Inn, 455,456 — specimens of his hynms,
454,455, notes — nominated to the see of
Calcutta, 456 — ^beautiful extracts from
his farewell sermon at Hodnet, 457,
458 — embarks for India, 459 — his pur-
suits during the voyage, t6»rf.-p-arrives
in India, t6iU— his wise suggestioni for
the welfare of the church, 460 ~ descrip-
tion of travelling in India, 460, 461—"
laborious duties of Bishop Heber, 461— «
extract from one of his sermons, 461,
462 — his account of the natives of India,
464-467 — suggestions for their convert
gion, 468 — and education, 469, 470 —
observations on the architectural anti-
quities of Hindostan, 471-473 — ^resi*i
dence of Bishop Heber at Bombay, 473
— state of the Syrian church, 474 —
notice of the bishop's visit to Ceylon,
475, 476— his return to Calcutta, 476—
visits Madras, »6tc^^— his account of tha
MahapRaja, 477 — and of his son, ibid,
478 — ^Bishop Heber's fine character of
Schwartz, 478— his death, 479— honoori
paid to his memory, 480.
Heber, Bishop, journey tfanough tha
Upper Province of India, zzzvii. 100-.
chfljracter o( 102 — ^two copies of verses
by, 116,117.
I hymns written and
adapted to the weekly church service,
xxxviii. 16, 40— his doxology, 36, fio/e.
xxxvi. 131 ;xxxvii, 328^
note ; xxxix. 97.
.«— »« Mrs., xxxvii. 104.
Heberden, Dr., opinion of, on the alleged
increase of insanity, xxiv. 180 — and on
our exemption from the plague, xxvii.
547.
. xxxi. 267, 268.
Hebert, xxii 543; xxvi. 239.; zxviii*
256.
HecatflBus, xxi 266.
Hecate, xxii. 333 ; xxiii. 247 ; xxiv. 391 ;
XXV. 430 ; xxvi. 256 ; xxix. 441.
Heceta, Don, J. B., xxvi. 344.
Heckewelder, John, a Moravian mission*
ary, notice of his account of the North
Ajnerican Indians, xxxi. 80, 81 — of
their belief in witchcraft, 93— of their
notions of matrimonial happiness, 97,
98 — anecdotes illustrative of their cha-
racter, 99, 100 — remarks on European
virtues, 110.
Hector, xxiii. 363 j xxv. 109 ; xxviii. 54
— familiar mode of addressing his steeds,
xxx. 43.
Heaiba, xxiv. 392.
Hederic, xxii. 312.
Hedges, Mr., xxviii. 50.
Sir Charles, xxiii. 42.
Hedouville, General, xxi. 442.
Hedworth, Master, xxxix. 387.
Hegemon, xxix. 336.
Hegenon, xxii. 169, note,
Hemibach, Peter, xxxvi. 40.^
Heineccius, xxix. 267 ; xxxii. 91.
Heiusius, deputed to con^atulate the
Duk« of Marlborough, xxiii. 16.
o2
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84
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
Hem8iu8,xxm. 19, 51, 144, 149, 152, 153;
juudv. 26.
Heirisson, M., xxxix. 318.
Hela, the Scandinavian deity of death,
xxii. 369, 370.
Helen. See Rosalind.
■ xxii. 154; xxiii. 259, 440; xxv.
111,521; xxiv. 513, 527; xxvii. 59,
64, 386 ; xxxiii. 564 ; xxxvi. 59.
Heliodorus, xxii. 344 ; xxv. 358.
Heliogabalus, xxiii. 372 ; ixxiv. 64.
Helladius,xxii. 311.
Hellanicus, xxi. 286.
Hellaquin, legendary tale of, xxii. 370.
Helm, Mr., xxvii. 366.
Helmont, xxviii. 497.
Helms, XXXV. 1 14.
Helvetius, xxv. 572 ; xxvi. 199, 233— pro-
fligate opinions of, xxviii. 510.
Hemans, Mrs., Poems of, reviewed, xxiv.
130 — genersil character of them, ibid.
131 — ^particularly of her Restoration of
the Works of Art to Italy, 131— her tales
and historic scenes, 131, 132 — ^beautiful
extract from the Abencerrage, 132 — ^her
translations, 133 — exquisite dirge on the
death of a diild, ibid. 134 — character of
her Sceptic, with specimens, 134, 135-
137— verses on the death of his Majesty
George III., 137-139.
comparative extent of her
reputation, XXXV. 190.
Heminge, xxix. 37.
Hemingius, xxxiv. 270.
Hempel and Richter, xxvi. 37.
Hempy, Jock, xxv. 151.
Hemsterhusius, xxii. 305, note, ct seq,y 336 ;
xxiv. 381 ; xxv. 508.
Hemsterhuys, xxiii. 148.
Henderson, Dr., History of Ancient and
ModernWines, xxxii. 232 — character of
his work, 233 — his ingenious apology
for the medicated wines of the ancients,
236 — his reasons for thinking that
Sherry or Madeira resembles the ancient
Falemian wine, 239. See fVines, Part
II.
* XXX. 132, note ; xxxiii.
234; xxxvi. 19, no^e.
• Dr. E., Biblical Researches and
Travels, xxxv. 363 — character of his
volume, 364 — arrives at Novogorod, 365
— ^notice of that city, ibid. — ^avidity of
the Russians for the scriptures, ibid. —
reception of the Doctor by one of the
Starovaertsi or dissenters from the Rus-
sian Greek church, 366 — superstition of
the Betzpopootchini, or priestless, ano-
ther sect, ibid. — notice of the town of
Tver, ibid. — of Moscow, 367 — anecdote
of Buonaparte, ibid. — ^notice of Tula,
368 — improved state of the Russian
roads, tWrf.— piety of a Russian priest,
369 — singular spectacle at Bielgorod,
ibid. — character of the Malo-Russians,
370 — appearance of Little Tartary, ibid,
—sepulchral monuments there, ibid. —
monument at Pultowa, ibid. — notice of
Kief and its holy places, 371 — baptism
of the Russians in 989, ibid. — number
of Jews in the Russian dominions, 372
— character, pursuits, and opinions of
the Polish Jews, 372-374— notice of the
Chasidim,or Jewish Pietists, 374 — scene
at the quarantine of Skulani, ibid. — sin-
gular Mongolian monuments on the
steppe of the Dneister and the Bog, 375
—notice of Odessa, 375, 376 — of Ak-
metchet, the principal town in the Cri-
mea, 377— of Bagtchisarai, ibid. — de-
votion of the Tartau^ at divine worship,
ibid. — excellent character of the Karaite
Jews, 378 — colonies of the Nogai Tar-
tars, 379 — notice of the Russian Qua-
kers, 380 — and of the colony of Prussian
Mennonites, 380 — Scythian tumuli, ibid.
381 — Moravian colony at Sarepta, 382
—Scotch colony and mission at Carass,
ibid. — difficulties encountered by Mr.
Brunton, in printing his Turkish ver-
sion of the New Testament, 382, 383—
account of the Scotch mission among
the Ingush, 383 — ^its termination, 384
— German Millennarians in the vicinity
of Teflis, 384.
Henderson, Mr., xxv. 296; xxx. 513;
xxxvii. 488.
Hendley, Mr., xxxvi. 552.
Heneage, xxxiii. 8.
Hengist, xxi. 97; xxxiv. 276.
Henley, Sir R., xxv. 410.
Henniker, Sir F., Notes during a Visit
to Egypt, reviewed, xxviii. 59 — object
and character of the author and his
work, 60, 61.
Henrietta, Queen of Charles I., character
of, xxix. 181 — her efforts to proselyte
her children to popery, 182 — her conduct
to Lord Clarendon accounted for, 189,
190 — godmother to Boudon, xxxvi. 326.
wife of James II., xxxi. 42.
Maria of France, notice of the
funeral sermon on, by Bossuet, xxix. 290.
Henrique II., xxvii. 1.
Henry I., parliament instituted by, xxv.
55^ — his charter not ratified by blood,
564 — criterion of the yard measure
ordered by, xxvi. 417.
c. 340 ; xxxix. 47.
— II., statue of, discovered by Mr.
Stothard in the Abbey of Fontevrauld,
xxv. 136.
xxx. 340; xxxi. 501; xxxii. 97,
98; xxxv. 113; xxxix. 48, 49.
• III., standard weight in the time
of, xxvi. 417.
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JIbview.
INDEX OF NAMES.
85
Henry III., xxxii. 93, 94, 95, 100, 106 ;
xxxvi. 140.
IV., price of corn in the reign of,
xxix. 220.
■ XXX. 348; xxxii. Ill ; xxxiv.
334; XXXV. 177.
v., xxii. 401 ; xxv. 90, 124, 126;
xxvi. 369 ; xxx.350 ; xxxii. 101 ; xxxiii.
23.
YI., passed a statute against
making money by alchemy, xxvi. 203.
xxi. 205; xxv. 146, 550;
xxviii.431 ; xxx. 348.
VII., the ' Great Harry* built by,
xxii. 39 — search for a north-west pas-
sage commenced in the reign o^ 176,
280 — ^influenced by the prophecy of the
Dun Cow, xxvi. 188— plans, &c., of his
chapel, xxvii. 308 — Navigation Act
passed by, xxviii. 431 — danglers to the
liberties of England had Charles II.
resembled him, xxix. 205 — average price
of wheat in the reign of, 220 — notice
of the armour of, xxx. 348, 349, 422,
444— endeavoured to crush the power of
his barons, xxxiii. 431, 435 — encouraged
the woollen trade, xxxiv. 60-< character
of his reign, xxxvii. 200.
xxi. 375, 403; xxiu. 583;
xxv. 132, note^ 133; xxxvi. 140.
- VIII., established Woolwich Dock-
yard, xxii. 39, 548 — appointed Hebrew
Professors, 300, 560, 590— number of
exotics introduced into England during
the reign of, 415 — ^notice of a bas-relief
representing his interview with Francis
I. in the Champ du Drap d'Or, xxv. 127,
234, 470 — his generosity towards Fran-
cis I., 548, 561 — act of, against prophe-
sying, xxvi. 188 — navigation law passed
by, 431 — ^remarks on the character of,
xxix. 316, 317 — statute of against sor-
cery, 442 — took one-third of the tithes
from the Irish church, xxxi. 501 — di-
vorce and cruel treatment of Queen
Catherine proved not to be chargeable
on the Reformation, xxxiii. 9-16 — ^re-
marks on the character of, xxxv. 360,
361 — ^abolished a fixed rate of wages,
xxxvii, 553 — system in all grammar
schools, established by, xxxix. 110 —
Shakspeare*s play of, how got up by
Mr. Kemble's direction, xxxiv. 228.
xxi. 205; xxiii. 185; xxiv.
34, 404; xxv. 126; xxix. 186, 197;
xxxii. 163; xxxiii. 164, 434; xxxvii.
197,203; xxxviii. 322.
II. of France, added a fourth
estate to the states-general, xxv. 555,
560 — ^persecutions of Protestants in his
reign, 668.
mortally wounded
in the head by a lance in a tournament,
xxx. 348— Jdlled in July, 1558, xxxi.
14.
Henry II. of France, xxv. 73, note / xxvi.
190 ; xxviii. 271 ; xxxiii. 165 ; xxxiv.
64.
— Ill,, encouragement g^ven by, to
Stephens in the publication of his die*
tionary,- and other classical works, xxii.
317 — connived at the murder of the
Duke and Cardinal de Guise, xxv. 555,
556 — states-general required the revo-
cation of all pardons granted to heretics
by him, 562— Elizabeth's alarm at
assassination kept alive by the murder
of, xxxiii. 26.
» IV., indignities offered to the body
of, xxi. 373, 374— anecdote of, xxii. 370,
. 371, and xxxviii. 503 — memory of, en-
deared by the French, xxv. 545 — cause
of his conversion to the Roman Catholic
faith, 562 — omens of the death of,
xxvi. 191, 192 — ^real cause of his re-
noimcing the Protestant religion, xxviii.
511.
- date of his assassination, i
14 — encouraged the cultivation of the
mulberry-tree in Provence, 403-409 —
encouraged the silk manufactures,
xxxiv. 65.
- xxvii. 1 77 ; xxviii. 271 ; xxix.
195, 196; xxxi. 14; xxxii. 397; xxxiii.
289.
of Blois, xxv. 140.
' III. of Castile, sends ambassadors
to the court of Tamerlane, xxiv. 332,
333.
xxvii. 142; xxxvi.
129.
IV., Emperor, xxxi. 425 ; xxxvii.
470.
I., King of Hayti, xxi. 433.
Dr., the historian, persecution of
by Gilbert Stuart, xxxvii. 194.
■ remark on the * curious anec'
dotes' of Ingulfus, xxxiv. 296.
Henry, notice of, xxiii. 302.
. of Huntingdon's History, charac-
ter of, xxxiv. 282, 283.
Institor, xxii. 349.
M. Pierre, persecution and death
of, xxix. 268.
Mr., xxxiv. 167.
Prince, story of his retiring to the
rock of Sagres, xxxix. 478.
• xxiii. 81 ; xxvii. 34, 36, 37.
' Walter, his accoimt of the healthi-
ness of the climate of St. Helena
xxxiii. 177.
Henrys, xxiv. 283.
Henslow, Professor, xxxvi. 263.
Hentzner, xxi. 382.
Heo, a Cambodian chief, notice of, xxx.
352-354.
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PART Iv^INDSX OF NAMES.
QUARYBKLT
Hepburn, xxviii. 388, 397.
Hephsestion, xxiii. 152; xxv. 515,516.
Heracleitus, xxi. 280 ; xxiii. 251 ; xxiv.
420; xxxiii. 361.
Heraclius, xxv. 17; xxix. 118.
Herbelot, xxxii. 203.
Herbert*! Traveli, extract from,
note,
XXV. 290; xxxii. 230.
' Gteorge, the first stanza of his
Church-Porch, quoted, xxxi. 284— on
church music, xxxviii. 26, no/e.
• xxxviii. 30.
399,
Lord, his description of Chan-
tilly, xxxvii. 312.
— xxiv. 451; xxxiii. 12,
15.
of Cherbury, xxxvi. 242.
Herchance, Sir, xxvi. 131.
Hercules, account of the food o^ xxiii.
267 — gourmand propensities of, xxiv.
454, no/c/ 457-461.
■ xxi. 608 ; xxii. 168, note; xxiii.
158; xxvi. 225; xxvii. 234, 483;
xxviii. 413 ; xxix. 53 ; xxx. 43 ; xxxii.
347, 349; xxxvi. 305, 362; xxxvii.
259.
• Famese, xxiii. 201,
i Duke of Ferrara, xxxviii. 199,
Herder, xxxi. 176.
Herennius Philo. See Eranius,
Heriot, George, xxvii. 342.
Herman, xxix. 58.
■ ■■ de Lotharingia, xxxiv. 319.
Hermann, Professor, remarks on his pa-
negyric on the New Greek Thesaurus,
xxiv. 386, 387 — his quarrel with Porson,
392, 393.
• xxii. 307, 308, 328;
xxiv. 382 ; xxv. 507, 514, 516, 526.
Hermentruda, Queen, xxiv. 145, note.
Hermes, xxii. 456 ; xxvi. 194, 199.
Herminia, xxv. 432.
Hermione, xxvii. 355.
Hermogenes, xxii. 189, 305, note; xxiv.
444; xxv. 506; xxvii. 384, no/e.
Hernandez, Julian, xxix. 250.
Hero, the Greek mathematician, xxi. 28 ;
xxiii. 522— date when he lived, xxxix.
433.
Herod, xxix. 35 ; xxx. 388.
Herodes, xxi. 27.
Atticus, xxvi. 386.
Herodian, xxiii. 138.
Herodianus, xxii. 307.
Herodias, xxvii. 324; xxix. 441.
Herodotus, curious custom at entertain-
ments in Egypt mentioned by, xxiii.
278, 279 — confmnations of the correct-
ness of, xxvi. 213, 222 — does not men-
tion the digamma, xxvii. 42.
— — — Homer's introduction into
Greece of the religion of Egypt, xxi. 33
— describes the pyramids, but makes no
allusion to the Great Sphinx, 190 —
effect of his work in banishing the
marvellous prodigies of Cadmus and
Eugsean, 286 — simplicity of manner in
Greece in his time, 295— -death of Psam-
meticus, two hundred years before his
visit to Egypt, xxii. 454 — knowledge of
what passed with Egypt since the
reign of Psammeticus, i?jrf.— description
from the Euterpe, of funeral observances
in Egjrpt, and coincidence with Burck-
hardt's at Shendy, 471 , 472, note.
Herodotus, accuracy of his description of
the saline incrustation of the deserts of
Egypt, and of weUs of sweet water rising
out of a surface of salt, xxiii. 95 — ^his
supposed variation in temperature in the
Fountain of the Oasis accounted for,
96 (xxviii. 69)— -coincidence of events
mentioned by him and in the sacred
writings, xxiv. 160 — ^Paanmois the son
of Necos, 161 — ^never in the Oasis, and
inconsistency in the supposed miracle
of the fountain, 168— a stranger to the
country and manners of the Persians,
our only authority for what concerns
them, xxv. 68 — exaggeration of his
coimtrymen in the amount of the armies
that invaded Greece, 163 — his his-
tory occupied on the superficial part of
our nature, 171 — ^Palm-wine of the in-
habitants of Tagiura, known in his
time, 211 — Sesostris the only Egyptian
who was ever master of Ethiopia, xxvii.
233 — coincideuce of manners of central
Asia, and of the natives of the Nile,
235 — may have been misinformed on
the subject of the pyramids, 503 — ^prac-
tice in his time of the savage race of
Tauri fixing human heads on poles, as
guardians of their houses, xxix. 135 —
the Colchians black in his time, now
white, question whether they are the
same people, xxx. 1 1 — ^barbarians men-
tioned by, discharged their arrow in the
clouds whence the lightning flashed,
xxxiii. 374 — admiration bestowed by, on
a vase of iron, xxxiv. 72 — nmnber of
years and workmen employed in the
construction of the pyramid of Cheops,
91, steppey as the place of interment
of the Scythian kings, xxxv. 380.
xxii. 311 ; xxiii. 144; xxiv.
505, 509, wo/e, 512, 519; xxvii. 50, 63,
215 ; xxviii. 98 ; xxxii. 69 ; xxxvii. 463;
xxxix. 177,
Herophilius. See ApoRoniui.
Herrera, xxi. 364 ; xxv. 382 ; xxviL 10,
remarks on, xxxviii. 375.
Henries, Captain, made prisoner by the
French, xxx. 76.
Herschel, J. E. W., Apparent Distances
Digitized by
Googk
foVIBW«
mi^EX OF NAMteS.
87
and Positions of Double {md Triple
Stars, xxxviii. 1, 11.
Herschel, J. E. W^ xxii. 55 j xxx. 101 ;
XXXV. 2, 269.
— — SirW., discoveries by,xzzviii.
xxxiv. 165.
Hertford, Lord, refuses to place Parr in
the commission of the peace, xxxix.
268.
Hervey, crypt of, in the catacombs of
Paris, xxi. 388.
— I James, explanation of the passage
in the Epistle to the Colossians, c. ii. 12,
xxxi. 114,115.
■ Lady, remarks of, on the character
and disposition of George III., xxv.
401 ; XXX. 543, 552, 556 ; xxxvi. 204.
Lord, character of Pope's works,
xxiii. 431 J XXX. 556 : xxxii. 282 ; xxxix.
277.
Hesiod, xxii. 337, 338 ; xxir. 454, no/e;
xxvii. 51; xxxiL 159 j xxxiii. 339,
note.
Hesketh, Lady, letter of Hayley to her,
xxxi. 308.
• XXX. 193.
Hesse, Landgrave of, xxxiii. 12.
Prince of, xxiii. 59.
Hesychius, xxii. 305, note — notice of his
Lexicon, 308, 309, 335, 336, 344;
xxiii. 143, 148; xxiv. 381; xxv. 513,
517, 518, 525.
Heugh, Mr., xxxv. 517, note,
Heumaanus, xxiv. 451.
Hew of Lincoln, legend of, in Chaucer,
xxxii. 224.
Hewson, Mr., xxxi. 497.
Hey, Dr., xxv. 352.
— a Frenchman, went one hundred and
eighty miles up the river Arroek, xxxi,
473.
Heyden, Count, xxxix. 22.
Heyliger, Dame, xxxi. 480.
Heylyn, Peter, xxv. 129 ; xxix. 186; xxx.
13 ; xxxvii. 241.
Heyne, notice of his edition of Homer,
xxvii. 40.
-xxiii. 139; xxvii. 51, 65, 67;
xxviil 182 ; xxxii. 157.
Hey wood, xxii. 357 ; xxix. 37.
John, epigram on the cuckoo,
xxxix. 427.
Hialmgunnar, xxi. 96, note,
Hickamthrift, Tom, xxi. 100 — popular tra-
dition concerning, 102 — present state
of his supposed sepulchre, 103, note,
Hickes, xxxiv. 256, note; xxxvii. 488.
Hidalgo, account of the insurrection of, in
Mexico, xxx. 172-175.
Hiero, xxvi. 141 ; xxviii. 413 ; xxx. 387.
Hierophilos, the letters of, their publica-
tion a violation of the Maynooth sta-
tutes, xrrii. 481— sentiments eontained
in them, 482.
Hiester, xxi. 144.
Higden, Ralph, aceount of his chromdet
xxxiv. 250.
Higg, xxvi. 129.
Higgins, Mr., xxxvii. 474.
Highmore, the painter, xxxi. 212.
Hikkeiera, an aged Esquimaux, notice of,
xxx. 248.
Hilary, Father, xxxvii. 20.
St., wrote Latin hymns, xxxviiL
37, 38.
xxv. 361 ; xxxiii. 82.
Hildebraud, xxiv. 495.
Hill, extract of Pope's letter to, xxxii. 280.
Aaron, character of Pope's Works,
xxiii. 431.
Abigail, afterwards Mrs. Masham,
notice of, xxiii. 49.
Captain, xxxvi. 554.
Colonel, xxxvii. 257.
Dr., Essays on the Institutions, Go-
vernment, and Manners of the States of
Ancient Greece, reviewed, xxii. 163—
character of the work, 164, 165. See
Oreece.
- manner of living among the
Athenians, xxiii. 269.
Joseph, xxii. 314.
- Major-General,po8ition at the battle
of Vimeiro, xxix. 81 — movements in the
campaign of 1813 in the Peninsula,
xxxiv. 409.
Lord, xxx. 67.
— - Robert, xxiii. 406.
- Rowland, opposition to Himtington,
xxiv. 492, 493, 499.
Sir J., xxiv. 350.
- Sir Bicharf M. Gregoire's error
respecting, xxviii. 2.
Hillman, xxxiii. 529.
John, xxix. 510.
Hinuber, Major-Gten., xxx. 77,
Hipparchus, improvements by, in astro-
nomy, xxxviii. 4.
xxi. 25.
Hippasus, xxiii. 251.
Hippesley, Sir J. C, Correspondence on
Prison Labour, reviewed, xxx. 404—
inconsistent an^er with Mr. Peel for his
inquiry respecting the eflfect of tread-
wheels, 420, note,
Hippias, of Ells, xxi. 284.
xxiii. 144.
Hippocrates, notice of Lexicons to the
works of, xxii. 307.
xxiii. 145 1 xxvii. 63, 533 ;
xxix. 453.
Hippodamus, xxiii. 498.
Hippolite and Aricie, xxviii. 469.
HippoUto, notice ol the travels <^, over the
Himalaya mountains, in company with
Digitized by
Googk
88
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTBRI-T
Desideri and Manuel Freyie, xxiv. 339^
340.
Hippolitus, xxir. 396 j xxv. 508 j xxx. 47.
Hipponicus, xxiv. 444, note,
Hislop, Sir T., xxix. 388.
Hitt, xxiv. 412.
Hlothaere^ notice of the laws of^ xxxiv.
259.
Hoadly, Bishop, xxxiv. 347 ; xxxviii. 326
— remark on the bad system of ele-
mentary teaching in his time^ xxxix.
108.
Hoare, Mr., testimony of, to the reluctance
of the public to prosecute capitally,
xxiv. 212, 213.
H., jun., xxiv. 249.
Bobart, Sir Henry, xxx. 544.
Hobbes, correct view of the motives of
Cromwell, xxv. 305 — oppugned the
canon of Scripture, 352.
xxxvii. 259 — definition of uni-
versities, xxxix. 128.
xxi. 294, note;
V. 297, 299,
326* xxvii, 397; xxviii. 515 ; xxxiii.
256 ; XXXV. 182 : xxxvii. 259 : xxxix.
271.
Hobhouse, Mr., sinking of his heart on
hearing of the victory of the English at
Waterloo, xxi. 135 — description of the
Turkish Royal Mausoleums, 377.
■ ^* character of the Parga-
notes, xxiii. ' 124, 125— and of Ali
Pasha of Albania, 128 — extract from
his Journal through Albania,349 — ^time
in which he walked round tlie walls
of Rome, xxviii. 322 — tribute to Mr.
Peel for his amendments of the crimi-
nal law, xxxvii. 147
xxiii. 114, note; xxiv.
222; xxxvii. 413.
Sir Benjamin, xxii. 97.
Hobler, Mr., xxiv. 221, 223.
Hobson, Miss, xxxiii. 485.
Hoche, General, xxxvi. 74, 79.
Hodeken. See Hudken.
Hodges, xxvii. 541.
■ Dr., remained in London during
the plague in 1665, xxxiii. 218.
Ralph, xxxvi. 406.
Hodgskin, T., Travels in ihe North of
Germany, reviewed, xxiii. 434 — charac-
ter of them, 436, 437 — number of
sciences taught at the University of
Gottingen, 446, 454.
Hodgson, Captain, xxiv. 124, 129.
; Mr., xxxiii. 376.
Hodius, xxvi. 245.
Hody, xxiii. 319.
Hoel Dha, King of Wales, xxiii. 582.
Hoffinan, a bookseller at Weimar, xxxix.
10.
Hogarth, xxiv. 27, note, 368 ; xxv. 56 ;
xxx. 47; xxxiv. 189 ; xxxvii. 347.
Hogendorp, General, notice of, xxviii.
335, 336.
Hogg, xxxvii. 420.
James, xxxviii. 489.
Hohenlohe, Prince, xxxiii. 472 ; xxxviii.
368.
Holbach, Baron d', xxvi. 233, 234.
Holbein, Hans, notice of, xxxiv. 183 —
remarks on his drawings, xxxviii. 392,
393.
xxiii. 590; xxv. 127;
xxxiii. 313; xxxviii. 384.
Holcroft, XXXV. 216.
Holda, xxix. 441.
Holdemess, Mary, Notes on the Manners
of theCrim-Tartars, reviewed, xxix. 116
— character of the work, 138. See Crim-
Tartars, .
Holdemesse, Lord, xxv. 410.
Hole, Mr., xxxv. 205.
Holford, Mr., Tracts on Prisons and Pe-
nitentiaries, reviewed, xxx. 404 — sen-
sible remark of, on prison dietaries,
408.
xxiv. 218.
Hol^^er Danske, legend of, xxii. 372.
Hohnshed*s Chronicles quoted, xxxvii.
499.
— — ^ — xxxui. 9.
Holkar, present prosperous state of the
dominions of, xxix. 388 — its causes,
398 — amoimt of his revenues, 397.
Holland, Dr., testimony of, in favour of
Ali Pasha of Albania, xxiii. 128—
Travels in the Ionian Isles, Albania,
&c., reviewed, 325 — temperature in
Arcadia, 328, 329— extracts from his
work, 334-356.
xxnr. 409 ; xxxiii. 476.
— - H., his Heroologia Anglica,
xxxviii. 386-388.
Lady, xxviii. 222, note.
Lord, two letters of Petrarch, in
the library of, xxiv. 549, note — judicious
remark of, on Lope de Vega, xxv. 4, 5
— ^the supposed editor of Lord Walde-
grave's Memoirs, 413.
-author of the Life of Lope
de Vega, xxxi. 283.
- talked of anything but po-
ntics with Dr. Parr, xxxix. 300.
• xxvii. 1,13; xxviii. 46, 47,
242 ; xxxiii. 218, 586, 589, 590.
Hollar, xxv. 114, note.
Holies, xxxvii. 235.
Hollingworth, Dr., xxxii. 468, 469, 492.
Hollinshed, xxv. 90 ; xxxiv. 199.
Hollis, Mr., xxi. 109.
Thomas, created a viscount, xxv.
318 — characterised, xxxviii. 224.
xxv. 304, 307, 316, 321
323 ; xxxii. 405 ; xxxvii. 252.
Holmes, xxvii. 212.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbvisw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
«9
Holmes, W., notice of ft correspondence
of, with Mr. O'Meara, xxviii. 224-226.
Holroyd, Mr. Justice, xxxviii. 279.
Holt, remark on, by M. Rubichou, zxiii.
193.
Sir John, character of, xxxri. 513,
542, 543.
Holte, Lady, xxiii. 529.
Holtzman, Christopher, executed for
witchcraft, xxix. 447.
Holyoke,Dr., xxx. 20.
Home, Alexander, xxxvi. 169.
Dr. Francis, xxxiii. 251.
Earl of, xxxvi. 169.
John, Works, with a Life, by Mr.
Mackenzie, xxxvi. 167 — account of his
ancestors, 1 69 — and education, 171 — he
enters as a volunteer in 1745, 172 — ^re.
connoitres the bivouac of the Pretender's
army, 175, 176— joins the Glasgow
regiment of volunteers under General
Hawley, 179 — ^is taken prisoner, but
escapes with some comrades, 181 — ap-
pointed minister of Athelstaneford, 182
— ^writes his tragedy of Agis, which was
refused by Garnck, 182 — ^as well as his
Douglas, 183 — success of that tragedy
on the Edinbur^ stage, 183, 184 —
censures of the Edinburgh presbytery,
184-186— resigns his pastoral charge,
and the clerical profession, 186 — ^be-
comes secretary to the Earl of Bute, 187
— ^his marriage, 188 — enters the South
Fencibles, but is obliged to withdraw,
from an accident, 189 — anecdotes of
Mr. Home's latter years, 189, 190— his
death, 191 — state of society in Scotland
during Mr. Home's time, 192 — ^particu-
larly the literary society, 192, 193 —
anecdotes of some of his literary asso-
ciates, 193-201 — estimate of his literary
character, 201 —examination of his tra-
gedies, 201-206 — strictures on his his-
tory of the rebellion in 1745, 207, 208—
anecdotes of the Pretender, and of the
battie of CuUoden, 209-215.
xxvii.481.
Mr., of Floss, father to the above,
, xxxvi. 169.
Sir Everard, xxi. 229 ; xxvii.
376 ; xxix. 155 ; xxxviii. 312.
■ Sir James, xxxvi. 169.
Homer, knowledge and ignorance singu-
larly displayed in the poems of, xxi. 32
— intimate acquaintance with the cus-
toms of the Egyptians, 33 — ^ignorance
of their architecture in the VisSifibid. —
question of the identity of the author of
the Ihad and Odyssey, ibid, — doubt of
his being unacquainted with the pyra-
mids, yet makes no mention of them,
190 — ^works of, committed to memory
by the Grecian youth, 277— commen-
taries on, by Eustathins, written in the
twelfth century, xxiii. 140^probable
contest between his admirers and those
of Virgil, 408, iio/€«— comparison be-
tween his Greek and that of i^schylus,
XXV. 169 — ^Poem, fame and personality
of, vindicated, xxvii. 39 — remarks on
the liberties taken with, by his editors,
40— examination of the question whe*
ther the hiatus is to be excluded from
his poems, 64-70 — remarks on the elo-
quence of, 383—- observations on his ac-
count of Scylla, XXX. 399.
Homer, his Iliad and Odyssey evince no
symptom of barbarism, xxxvi. 59,
60.
hymns under the name of, xxxviii.
19.
xxi. 38, 39, 95, 283,295; xxii. 168,
304, 336; xxiii. 146, note, 152, 153,
note, 247, 253, 256, 266, 351, 411, 412,
429, 430, 517; xxiv. 101, 358, 361,
362, 402, 430, 454; xxv. 7, 46, 68,
428, 429, 509,510, 522, 527; xxvi. 246,
251, 374, 474 ; xxvii. 331 ; xxviii. 41 1;
xxix. 321; xxx. 41 ; xxxii. 82, 157-
159, 295, 311 ; xxxUi. 339, 565, 566 ;
xxxiv. J 13, 421 ; xxxv. 191, 216, 566 ;
xxxvi. 48, 56, 298 ; xxxvii. 50.
' ' '■ Mr., letters from Dr. Parr to, xxxixw
271, 278.
Hondius, xxii. 293.
Hone, W., Aspersions answered, review of,
xxx. 472 — ^remarks on the delay of this
answer, 473 — acknowledges he cannot
read Latin, 474— conduct of the editor
of the Apocryphal New Testament, 475,
ei seq. — ^manner in which the book was
put together, 481 .
xxv. 348, 362; xxvi. 103;
xxviii. 539.
Honey, xxviii. 539.
Houorius, transepts erected in Greece in
the reign of, xxvi. 49.
Pope, xxxiv. 323.
III., Pope, xxii. 85.
Hoo Chung, xxi. 82.
Hood, Mr., assassination of, xxviii. 400 —
eulogium on his character, 400, 401,
xxviii. 372 ; xxxiv. 313.
Hoogeveen, xxii. 328 ; xxv. 518, 523.
Hook, Robert, Mr. Edgeworth's notion of
a telescope taken from his works, xxiii.
520, 521— on the motion of the planets,
xxxviii. 7.
xxii. 129; xxxii. 399;
xxxiv. 71 ; xxxix. 437.
Theodore, punning verses by,
xxxvii. 98.
Hooke, the Roman historian, xxvii. 279,
293, 541.
Dr., xxv. 208.
Hooker, Richard, rem^urks of, on innova-
Digitized by
Googk
90
PAET U^WiaX OV NABfES.
QOAtflBtT
tioD, iztL 269, Mo^a-^-qaotttion from,
xxxiu.337.
Hooker, Rieltfurd, zziiL 301 ; zxix. 165,
299, 334, noU ; zxxu.227,456; xniii.
36; xxxix. 263.
— — a corrector of the preif, zzxii.
494.
■' ' ■ Bishop, zxxviii. 307.
■ Dr., furofessor of botany, zzxiv.
158; xxxrii. 533.
■ Justice, zxvi. 186.
■■ Major, mx. 357, 360.
Hookey, macMne for bending timber, in-
vented by, xxii. 39.
Hoole*8 Translation of Tasso, strictures
on, XXV. 426— translation of Ariosto,
XXX. 53— specimen of his translation,
I2j note,
■ xxxiv. 6.
Hooper, Mr., xxl 67; xxxiv. 342, 381 ;
xxxvii. 83.
Hope, Mr., Anastasius, or the Memoirs of
a Ghreek, reviewed, xxiv. 511 — analysis
of the fable, with extracts and remarks,
513<526— his Anastasius characterised,
and correctness in his delineations of
eastern scenery, xxix. 334— Memoirs of
Anastasius compared with the Adven-
tures of Hajji Baba, xxx. 200.
passion and gloomy in-
terest of Anastasius, xxxix. 77.
Sir George, xxi. 214.
■ ' Sir J. (since Lord Hopetoun),
xxx. 75 — ^wounded and made prisoner
by the French, 76.
— notice of his raiWay, xxxi.
364.
Hopkins, Mr., petition of, as to the custody
of his wards, xxxix. 188.
See Stemkold,
HopkinsoD, Mr., xxi. 3.
Hopper, Joachim, xxii. 314.
Hoppner, Lieutenant (now Captain), xxi.
253 — conduct of, applauded by Captain
Parry, xxv. 216 — attempt to cross
Cockbum Island, xxx. ^66 — meuque-
rae^ planned by, when shut up in
Port Bowen, xxxiv. 381.
Hopton, SirT., xxv. 303, 315.
Horace, not mentioned by Vitruvius, xxi.
30— crypt of, in the catacombs of Paris,
388— inquiry into the authority of, for
preserving the unities, xxvii. 483485 ;
notice of, xxxiv. 351— care to avoid po-
litics, xxxvii. 37.
xxi. 501 ; xxlii. 456, 463, 506 ;
xxiv. 377, 378, 551 ; xxvi. 245 ; xxvii.
30, 51 ; xxviii. 51, 411 ; xxix. 451;
xxx. 44; xxxii. 157, 159,237,238,282;
xxxiii. 318, 566 ; xxxv. 179, 185, 207 ;
xxrvi. 60, 255 ; xxxvii, 49, 418; xxxviii.
442.
Horatii, xxvii. 276.
Horatio, xxi. 151.
Horatius, xxii. 338.
Horn, appointed by Craamer an itinerant
I»eaeher, xxiv. ^, note,
King, xxi. 105.
— Mr., xxii. 95, note,
Hombrook, Mr., xxix. 364.
Home's Introduction to the Scriptures,
nustake in the first edition of, corrected,
xxxi. 124, note,
«— Bishop, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and
Lamentations, translated by, xxiii. 298
—style of his sermons, xxix. 302, 303—
on the Psalms, xxxviii. 34, 35.
■ 158.
-^— Mr., testimony of, to the bad state
of the roads near the metropolis, xxiii.
99.
Homemann, statement of, as to the
amount of the population of Fezzan,
xxv. 31— his opinion as to the identity
of the Niger and the Nile of Egypt,
45.
xxii. 291, 439, 476 ; xxiii.
95, 229, 234; xxv. 34; xxix. 512;
xxxi. 467, 470,471 ; xxxiii. 521 ; xxxix.
179.
Homer, Mr., xxxvi, 287.
Horrox, xvii. 129; xxxiv. 165.
Horsa, xxi. 97 ; xxxiv. 276.
Horsley, Bishop, opinion of, on 1 John v.
7, xxvi. 329— argpiment of, concerning
intermarrying in cases of adultery,
xxviii. 183— 2tyle of his sermons, xxix.
303 — assertion of Mr. Belsham respect-
ing him, xxx. 113.
xxxii. 159; xxxvl. 42;
xxxix. 305.
Horton, Right Hon. Robert Wilmot, com-
munication by, of some of Bishop
Heber*s letters, xxxvii. 103, note — ^right
in hb emigpration views, xxxix. 316.
Horns, xxii. 456 ; xxvii. 232.
Hosea, xxvi. 376. note,
Hosein, xxx. 202.
Hosseyn, xxii. 452, 459.
Hoste, Captain Sir W., xxiii. 1 17.
— P., on breaking the line, xxvi. 27 —
Clerk's asserted invention taken fh}m
the Jesuit works, ibid.
Hotspur, xxii. 404 ; xxxiii. 4.
Hottmger. xxvii. 19, note) xxxv. 103.
Hotze, xxii. 399.
Houbraken's Heads, strictures on, xxxviii.
388.
Houeh, xxix. 171 ; xxxiii. 52.
Houlding, Captam, xxxii. 429, 431, 433,
434.
Hourchid, xxx. 485.
Houssaye, Amelot de la, xxxi. 424.
Houston, Mr., xxxix. 146 — dies at Cape
Coast, 153.
Houtson, Mr., xxxviii. 109, 110.
Digitized by
Googk
Ravixw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
91
Howard^ Charles, afterwards Eari of Suf-
folk; xzx. 544.
Lady Katheiine^ xxxiii. 18*
Major General, xxx. 11*
■ ' Mr., want of employment in pri-
sons a gp*eat evil, xxx. 410.
-^— — - opinion of, that the plague is
contagious, xxxiii. 233.
xxiv. 255 5 xxvi. 11 j xxx.
425 ; xxxiii. 233.
' Mrs., afterwards Countess of
Suffolk. See Suffolk.
Sir R., xxix. 206.
Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, xxxviii.
389.
Howe, services- of, in the cause of Chris-
tian morals, xxix. 210.
Lord, instance of his neglect of a
deserving officer, xxxvii. 367.
; — xxvi. 15, 30 J XXXV. 154.
• Michael, the bush-ranger of Van
Diemen's Land, account o£ xxiii. 81-
83.
- Miss, extract from the correspond-
ence o^ with Lady Suffolk, xxx. 552,
553
Sir W., xxvi. 371.
Howell, notice of his Travels in New
South Wales, xxxii. 325.
Familiar Letters quoted, xxxii.
249.
xxxiii. 282.
' Messrs., state trials, value of,
xxxvi. 511 — suggestion to them, 557.
Howleglass, notice of, xxi. 108.
Howley, Bishop, xxi. 174, 176.
Howson, Bishop, xxxix. 381.
Hoz, xxix. 425.
Hubert, xxvi. 129.
' Archbishop of Canterbury, xxxix.
54.
de Burgh, xxxiv. 326, 327, 328.
St., xxu. 371 J xxvi. 129.
Hubner, xxxv. 240.
Huddart, xxii. 38.
Hudibras, xxi. 225 ; xxx. 187 \ xxxii.
429 ; xxxvi. 30.
Hudson, the painter, xxxi. 212.
' Henry, notice of the voyage of
discovery of, xxx. 232 — ^tribute to, as
an Arctic navigator, xxxiv. 386.
Hue, Dr., xxx. 435.
M., xxviii. 470.
Huerta, xxviii. 549 — ^remarks on the criti-
cisms of, on the Spanish drama, xxix.
426.
Huefs Origines de Caen, notice of, xxv.
115.
Huggins's translation of AriostO; notice
of, xxx. 52, 53.
xxxvi. 519, noie^ 523.
Hugh, Sir, xxi. 145.
Hughes, xxvii. 4$1.
Hughes, Mr., xxx. 383^ 385.
Hugo, xxviii. 27 \ xxxii. 71, 91.
Huise, Mr., xxiii. 526.
Hulagu, xxi. 181 ; xxiv. 327.
Hulin, M., £^>lication8 offertes aux
Hommes impartiaux, reviewed, xxix.
561 — extracts therefrom, with remarks
on the share he had in the mock trial
and murder of the Duke d'Enghien,
581-583.
Hull, General, surrender of, xxvii. 409.
Hulme, Mr., an English emigrant to Ame-
rica, notice of, xxi. 159 and note,
■ — xxxix. 353.
Humbercourt, Lord of, xxxii. 383.
Humbert, xxxvi. 74, 75.
— — ^ General, xxx. 177.
Humboldt, M., Sur TEl^vation des Mon-
tagues de rinde, reviewed, xxii. 415— •
recommended Mr. Ritchie as well qua^
lified for prosecuting discoveries in the
interior of Africa, xxiiL 226.
xxi. 178, 202; xxv. 197 j
xxvi. 117,284,355,516; xxviii. 377;
xxix. 155; XXX. 12, 116, 136, 157,
162 ; xxxii. 127, 138 ; xxxiii. 105 ;
xxxv. 147) xxxvi. 460; xxxvii. 298,
no/e.
■ and Bonpland, MM., Personal
Travels of, in South America, re-
viewed, xxi. 320 — progress of the tra-
vellers through the comitry, 324 — anec-
dote of a Mestizo, 328— and of Lopez
de Aguirre, 329 — geographical outline
of South America, 333, 334— experi-
ments with the Gymnotus Electricus or
Electrical Eel, 337, 338— perilous situ-
ation of M. Humboldt, 344 — ^tradition
of the deluge, 346— fortress of the
Jesuits, 350 — remarks on the political
situation of South America, 351, 352.
MM., Personal
Narrative of Travels to the Equi-
noctial Regions, vol. v., reviewed, xxv.
365 — arrival at the village of San Juan
Nepomuceno de los Atures, 366 — ^no-
tice of the Rapids of Matura, xhid. — de-
scription of the scenery roimd Atrures,
367, 368 — causes of the depopulation of
the Mission of Atures, 369 — especially
of the tertian fevers, 371 — manners of
the Indians around the Cataract of
Maypures, 372 — ^philosophical view of
the productions of the different countries
of the earth, 376, 377— notice of the
coloured waters of certain great rivers,
377, 378— and of the Pirijao palm, 378
— missions of the Oroonoko, 378 — sin-
gular vegetable substance, called dor
pitchoy 379 — probable origin of the
Amazons of South America, 381 — de-
plorable state of the Christian settle-
ments on the C{issiquiare, 382~^in-
Digitized by
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92
PART I.—1NDKX OF NAMES.
QUARTERLX
stances of cannibalism, 382, 383~no-
tice of the mission of Esmeralda, 384 —
of the vegetable poison called curarcy
385— of the juvia, a species of palm,
ibid.f 386 — notice of the cavern of Ata-
ruipe, the sepulchre of an entire Indian
tribe, 389, 390.
Hmnboldt, Von, minister of state in
Prussia, xxxi. 337.
Hume, notice of his traveb in New South
Wales, xxxii. 325.
— David, states cannon to have been
used at the battle of Crecy, xxi, 194 —
observation of on Fairfax's translation of
Tasso, 426 — strictures on his remarks
on * I'art de vivre,' 572, 573— observa-
tions on his ideal theory, 480 — ^recom-
mended lowering the standard of the
currency, xxvii. 258-260 — anecdote of,
xxviii. 517 — supposed the heathen my-
thology to exist in some of the other
planets, 526.
sophistry of, refuted, xxxiii.
369--want of critical investigation of
ancient authorities in the earlier part of
his history, xxxiv. 249, 250.
anecdotes of, xxxvi. 193-195
— injustice of Strafford's sentence,
xxxvii. 231 — vindication of Laud, 243.
xxi. 41 ; xxii. 9 j xxiii. 547 ;
XXV. 315, 333; xxvi. 152,478; xxvii.
304, 478 ; xxix. 312 ; xxx. 392 ; xxxii.
184,398; xxxiii. 5 ; xxxv. 181 ; xxxvi.
34, 168; xxxvii. 199.
J., charges of, against Sir T. Mait-
land, refuted, xxix. 95-104 — erroneous
assertions on dry-rot, exposed, xxx. 217,
218 — reply to ms Letter to the Quar-
terly Reviewers, 229, 230 — incorrect
statements of, relative to the residence
of the Irish clergy, exposed by the
Archbishop of Cashel, xxxi. 512 — and
by the Bishop of Limerick, 513.
— officious interference respecting
the Canadians, xxxiii. 427 — conduct
in the affairs of the Greeks, xxxv. 223,
227, 235.
xxviii. 205; xxxviii. 549,557.
Humphrey, Duke, exhibition of the body
of, xxi. 375.
«— ^— James, Observations on the
Laws of Real Property, xxxiv. 540 — ^im-
portant distinctions established by him,
between political and civil institutions,
as regarded with a view to correction,
541, 542 — sketch of the existing law of
real property, and the evils arising out
of it, 545-558 — ^remedies suggested for
its defective state, 559-574 — concluding
remarks, 575-579. See Recti Property.
Part II.
xxxviii. 272, note, 292,
note, 294, 295.
Hunsdon, Lord, xxxiii. 8.
Hung^rford, Mr., xxxvi. 545.
Hunt. See Huntington,
xxvi. 103.
Dr., xxiii. 345 —extract from his
Memoirs of European and Asiatic
Turkey, 346, 349.
Henry, question of the judge's im-
partiality at his trial, xxxviii. 283.
xxiii. 453 ; xxviii. 210, 532 ;
xxix. 365 ; xxxvii. 409 ; xxxviii. 283.
- Mr. Leigh, comparative estimate of
his character and Mr. Shelley's, xxi.
469 — has fought his way to the undis-
turbed possession of the Throne of
Cockney, xxii. 159 — ^the admiration of
Mr. Hazlitt, 160 — ^viciousness of his
style, xxxii. 216.
■ Lord Byron, and some
of his Contemporaries, xxxviii. 402 —
the work characterized, 403, 404 —
curious account of Mr. Hunt's father,
405 — Mr. Huntfs early acquaintance
and famiUars, 406 — educated at Christ's
r Hospital, 407 — becomes a writer both in
prose and verse, 408 — ^his own opinion
of his juvenile lucubrations, 408 — soars
to the drama and a newspaper, 409 —
— records a whimsical instance of in-
vention by his brother John, ibid. — bit-
terness of his personal spleen to the
royal family and its consequences, ibid.
— whimsical manner in which he
equipped himself for his trial, ibid. —
his ornamental and flowery investment
of his prison house, 411 — becomes first
acquainted with Lord Byron by his
visiting him in his confinement, ibid. —
his subsequent enmity to that nobleman
shown to be groundless, 412, 413 — sup-
presses in his work a letter written by
Lord Byron on terminating his ac-
quaintance with him, 4 14-— deemed an
incompetent judge of Lord Byron's
character from a contrast of their re-
spective works, 415— disqualified by his
defective judgment and bad literary
taste to be the friend and companion of
the great poet, 416 — ^this diversity of
feeling considered as the main cause of
Mr. Hunt's spleenful pen, 418-420—
similar diversity operating similarly as
to politics and relie^on, 421 — instances
of his want of deUcacy, where he was
bound to practise it most, 422 — concur-
rent testimony of those best qualified to
know Lord Byron, at variance with Mr.
Hunt's assertions, 423 — stanzas in the
Hmes newspaper, characteristic of Mr.
Hunt, as the historian of his deceased
patron, 424 — ^instances of his disin-
genuousness, as to Mr. SheUey and
Mr. Horatio Smithy 425 — probable fate
Digitized by
Googk
Kbyibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
93
of his book, 425 — the Cockney poet,
* farmy fields' of, 438.
Hunt, Mr. J., xxii. 160.
Rev. Isaac, xxxvii. 405, 406.
Rev. J. H., translation of Jerusalem
Delivered, reviewed, xxv. 426 — defects
and advantages of his version, 427, 428
— specimens, with remarks, 431-437.
' xxxiv. 9.
Hunter, John, an Inquiry into the Pro-
bability and Rationality of his Theory
of Life, xxii. I — coincidence of Mr.
Abernefchy's opinions with those taught
by Mr. Hunter, 2 — Mr. Lawrence's
views of Hunter's theory, 3 — additions
made b^ Mr. Hunter in the departments
of physiology and comparative anatomy,
4 — pious and ennobUng feelings in has
endeavours to elevate the minds of the
student, 5.
■ fanciful attempts to substi-
tute nominal for real essences, xxiv.
170 — incomparable museum of, xxvii.
465 — his museum when purchased and
given to the College of Surgeons, xxxi^.
159 — ^its extent and excellence, 160 —
Dr. Sayers his pupil, xxxv. 181.
similarity in feature be-
tween the Tartars and Malays men-
tioned by, xxviii. 116.
xxiv. 350.
J.D., Memoirs of his Captivity
among the Indians of North America,
xxxi. 76 — character of his work, 79-81
— account of his being taken prisoner,
81, 82 — ^his report of a speech by a
chief of the Kansas tribe, 82, 83~his
Ufe previously to being separated from
the Indians, 84 — impressions produced
on beholding the Pacific Ocean, 85 —
honourable anecdote of Hunter, 86 —
becomes gradually accustomed to civi-
lized society, 87 — ^his account of his
first acquaintance with books, 88 — re-
turns to America and to a savage life,
ibid. — his motives for so doing, 89, note.
Huntingdon, Lady, xxiv. 488.
Huntingford, xxii. 164.
Huntinglen, Lord, xxvi. 345, 346-362.
Huntington, Dowager Lady, xxiv. 43.
— — — ^ Major, accuses Cromwell be-
fore ParUament, xxv. 327, 328.
xxxii. 493.
William, S. S., Works and
Life of, reviewed, xxiv. 462 — ^his birth
and early adventures, ibid. 463 — his
superstitious fears, 463 — ^falls in love,
464 — his reflections on his conduct and
on marriage, 466 — changes his name
from Hunt into Huntington, 467 — ori-
gin of his degree of S.S., ibid. 468 — ac-
count of his reUgious scruples and
temptations, 469-474— ^bis couveiision
described, 475— his reflections there-
on, 476, 477 — and on the clergy,
477 — ^begins to preach in private, 478
— commences a public preacher at
Thames Ditton, 479, 480— is ordained
by Toriel Joss, 480 — his reasons for
writing and pubUshing the ' Bank of
Faith,' 482 — curious anecdotes from it,
ibid, 483— is recognised as William
Hunt, and pays a fi^e for an illegitimate
child, 486, 487 — removes to London,
487, 488— account of his building Pro-
vidence Chapel, 488, 489 — peculiar
characteristics of his preaching, 489,
490 — remarks on his doctrine of im-
puted righteousness, 491, 492 — ^his ad-
dress to Rowland Hill, 493 — and to
Timothy Priestley, 494 — implicit de-
pendence of his congregation upon his
preaching and writing, 495 — specimens
of his poetry, 496, 497— extracts from
his epistles, with remarks, 497-502 —
instances of his good fortime, 502, 503
— ^his loyalty, 504 — specimens of his
predictions, 505 — his absolute power
over his congregation, 506 — manner of
preaching, 507 — causes of its success,
and its effects, 507, 508 — ^his reflections
at the approach of old age, 509— death
and epitaph, 510.
Huntin^on, William, xxxvi. 39, 331.
Hurd, Bishop, Dr. Parr's conduct towards,
reprobated, xxxix. 275.
Hurdis's Poems, character of, xxxv. 201-
204.
Hurree, Mohun Thakoor, xxxvii. 108.
Hurwitz's, Hyman, Hebrew Tales, xxxv.
86— his apology for the Talmudists, 96,
97 — ^remarks thereon, 97-100 — ^his com-
plaint of the infideUty of the modern
Jews,l 00 — ^his eulogy of the JewishCab-
bala, 1 1 — remarks thereon, 1 1 -1 03 —
character of the Talmudic stories, 1 03 —
remarks on Mr. Hurwitz's attempt to ex-
plain some of them, 1 05-1 08 — allegorical
tale of Rabbi Bar Channa, 108, 109—
tale of Rabbi Akiba, 110— and of Alex-
ander the Great, 111, 112 — fine tribute
to Mr. Hurwitz hy Mr. Coleridge, 114.
Huskisson, Right Hon. W., Letters to, on
Negro Slavery, xxx. 560.
' ■ xxvii. 2i4.note.
247.
Huss, John, notice of, xxxvii. 474.
Hutchinson's singular mode of reasoning,
in arguing against witchcraft, xxix.449.
Colonel, xxv. 305.
xxi. 49.
late Governor, a journal by,
kept with great accuracy from day to
day, likely to appear, xxxix. 301.
Lord, xxiii. 87.
Mr., xxii. 274, et teq.; xxxi.
470.
Digitized by
Googk
94
PART I^INDEX OP NAMES.
Quarterly
Hutchinson, Mrs., xxv. 334 ; Tiny. 185.
Dr., XXX. 433.
Huttes, de, xxviii. 290.
Button, Matthew, Bishop, his zeal in be-
half of Lady Margaret Nevill, when
condemned to die, xxxix. 378.
— .— Dr., anecdotes of him and Dr.
Black, xxx?i. 197, 198.
I Philosophical Dictionary, great
tax on, xxi. 203 ; xxii. 374, nott — ^no-
tice of his theory of the earth, xxix. 140
— ^remarks on it and on Professor Play-
fair's illustration of it, 141, 142— and
on M. de Luc's examination of it, 142-
144.
Hutton, Mr., xxxvi. 69.
Huygens, his application of the penduhun
to clocks, xxxviii. 6.
xxii. 129 J xxxiv. 77; xxxvL
150,159; xxxviii. 6; xxxix. 437,
Hyde, xxv. 290.
Hyder Aly, xxxiii. 61.
Hyp[)en, xxvii. 326.
Hyperbolus, xxiii. 478, 499.
Hyperides, oration of, against Aristogei-
ton, analyzed, with remarks, xxix. 334-
337.
xxiii 260.
I.
Ibn-al-Varoi, method of trading among
the Arabs mentioned by, xxv. 44.
Ibn Batouta, notice of his work on the
geography of the interior of Africa,
xxiii. 238-240 — translating by the Ara-
bic Professor at Cambridge, xxiv. 316,
note,
Ibrahim, the feigned name of BIr, Bnrck-
hardt, xxii. 440.
■ ' ■ ' Aga, XXX. 483.
■ Beg, xxii. 448.
— — Pasha, xxii. 469; xxx. 484, 490,
494.
Ictinus, xxvii. 329 ; xxxii. 45.
Ida, St., of Louvain, xxxiii. 394.
Iffland, xxxiv. 198.
Ignacio, Don, accoimt of, xxi. 343.
Ignatius, St., mode in which he is said to
have heard the angels singing the
praises of the Holy Trinity, xxxviii.
Has, xxviii. 413.
Ilderim, xxii. 151.
Iligliuk^ an Esquimaux woman, character
and attainments of, xxx. 248-251.
Ilithyia, xxviii. 422.
Ilsuug, King, xxii 365.
Imaum, Mehdee, xxxvi. 376.
Inchiquin, xxi. 155, note,
Infautado, Due 6.\ xxvi. 518.
Ingham, Sir Oliver de, xxxvii. 489.
Inginac, M., account of the commerce of
Hayti, xxx. 572 — ^remarks thereon, 573,
574, note.
Incrle, Mr. and Mrs., description of the
family and residence of, xxix. 362, 363.
Inglewood, xxvi. 114,
IngUs, Sir R. H., Substance of two
Speeches in the House of Commons,
xxxviii. 535, 556 — on the mediocrity of
church rates in Ireland, 590 — on the
unchanged spirit of the Catholic churdu
592-595. I
Inffulphus, Abbot of Croyland, sources of
his chronicles criticany investigated,
xxxiv. 289.293— detection of its ana-
chronisms, 294— account of the several
manuscripts of it which are extant,
294-296.
' character of th« apo-
civphal writings under his name, xxxix.
54---de8cription of the extent of the
demesne of ' Ellowarp,' ib. note*
Iniguez Guerra, xxii. 362.
Inkle, Mr., xxix. 337.
Inman, Professor, xxxvii. 283.
Innocent III., xxix. 534.
— IV., sends an embassy to the
Tartar chiefs, xxiv. 317.
XXXV. 92; xxxvii. 205.
VI., xxiv. 559.
Insula, Robert de, xxxix. 367.
lolaus, xxiii. 486.
Ion, xxv. 508.
lone, xxvi. 175.
Iphigenia, xxii. 181; xxiv. 76, 91; xxv.
506, note, 516.
Iphimedia, xxviii. 426.
Ippolito, Cardinal, xxviii. 371.
Ipsilant6, Demetrio, xxix. 1 00.
Irby, Captain, xxii. 454, 478 ; xxiv. 151 ;
xxvi 388, note.
Ireland's forgery of the Shakspeare MSS.,
notice of, xxxiv. 233.
• Dr., Dean of Westminster, Lec-
tures on the Comparison between Pa^
ganism and Christianity, notice of, xxi
313, note,
Nuptiae Sacre, reviewed, xxviii.
179 — abstract of his argument, 184 —
passages taken from, by Mr. Tebbs
without acknowledgment, 185-169.
IreusBus, xxv. 353 ; xxxiii. 81 ; xxxvii. 489.
Ireton, xxv. 294, 305, 311— character of,
319,321,325,332.
Imng, Rev. E,| Orati^ms and Argument,
Digitized by
Googk
Rkvibw*
INOBX OF NAMS8.
95
reviewed, zziic 283^1us violations of
the rules of pulpit eloquence, 307, 308
---hiB unjust depieciation of the Eng-
lish clergy and Dissenting ministers,
308 — personal allusions to living
writers, 309 — strictures on bis selection
of subjects, and style, 309^13.
living's, Washington, Salmagundi and
other productions, xxxi. 473 — charac-
ter of his * Salmagundi,' 474— of his
* Knickerbocker's History of New
York,' 475— plan of his * Bracebridge
Hall,' with remarks, 475481— and of
his ' Tales of a Traveller,' 482-486—
his character of an English gentleman,
477— observatioui on foreign travels,
479-.ampres8iong on his arrival in
Enp^land, 481— observations on Mr.
Irving's style and conception, 483.
■ ■ zzxvii, 420.
Isaac, xxiv.49l; xxviii. 529; xxx. 102.
Ben Sid, Rabbi, xxvi 181.
-7— Comnenu%a play, reviewed, soxviii.
442 — ^ct forming the foundation of
the play, 444— «ztracti, 444-447^^hflk
racters and diction of the piece, 448.
St, «vi. 60.
Isaaco, xxi. 342.
Isabella, of Angouleme) statue of, dis-
covered by Mr. Stotbaid, in the Abbey
Fontevrauld, xxv. 136.
Donna, xxi. 343.
Queen of Bavaria, empties
mitted by order o^ xxv. 567.
— - — daughter of King John of France,
given in marriage to John Galess
Visconti, for 600,000 golden crowns,
xxv. 547.
. of Spain, xxv. 72; xxxii. 368.
xxvii. 340 5 xxix.370,371; xxx.51.
Isaeus, vindication of the merits of, as an
orator, xxvi. 247-250— his works trans*
lated by Sir W. Jones, 250, ifo/e--«om»
pared with Lytnas, xxix. 328— ^eo^
tion of Greek juries evidenced from his
pleadings, xxxiii. 337.
Isaiah, belief o^ in a future state, xxvii.
523 — walked naked and barefoot,
xxxviiL 366, note.
Isaiah, xxiii.142,298; zziv. 504,
Ischirnhausen, xxiii. 472.
Iscomacha, xxii. 178.
Iscomachus, lesson of, to his wife, xxii.
175-178.
Ishmael, xxii. 155 ; xxx* 102.
Isidore, xxxiv, 286.
Isis, xxii. 456; xxiv. 156, 160; xxv. 118,
518 ; xxvii. 232, 234.
Islam, xxv. 145.
Isle, M. Rigaud de I', xxx. 136.
Islip, Abbott, xxvi. 196.
Ismael Pasha, character of, xxvii. 217 —
honourable anecdote of, 219 — defeats
the Sheygya» an inland people of Africa, ^
220.
Narrative of an Expedition to
Dongola and Sennaar, under his com-
mand, reviewed, xxviii, 60 — noble con-
duct of, 83, 84— occasion of his death,
XXX. 490.
Ismene) xxix. 434.
Ismenias, xxiii. 489.
Isocratesi panegyrical oratory of, con--
sidered, xxvii. 393-395»
xxu. 168; xxvi. 247, 262;
xxvii. 63, 391 ; xxxiii. 339| note, 340,
note; xxxiv. 171.
Isola, Italian master to Hayley the poet,
xxxi.271.
Isolda, a faithful attendant, and nurse of.
Andrew of Hungary, xxxi. 69.
Israel, xxiv. 467.
Israf Ali, Meer, account of, xxxvii.l 14,1 15.
Istria, Count Capo d'> xxix. 97,
Ithamar, xxxv. 96.
Iturbide, General, elected Emperor of
Mexico, xxx. 181-*'abdicates the throne,
and retires to Italy, 182, 183.
Itunigaray, Don Josef, Viceroy of Mexico,
noticeof, xxx. 170-172.
Ivan L, xxvi. 44.
III., xxvi. 45, 47.
— ^ IV., xxvi. 47, 48.
— the terrible, xxix. 122.
Ivanhoe,xxv.99; xxvi.127,132, 133.
Ixion, xxvii. 25.
Izzard, General, xxvii. 443.
J.
Jabin, King, xxxv. 88.
Jablonsky, opinion o( on the use of the
digamma, xxvii. 52.
Jachin, xxv. 146.
Jack, a Negroman, xxi. 155.
-^— and the Bean Stalk, xxi. 106.
— the Giant Killer, origin of the story
of, xxi. 103.
— - of Kwtf ndi. 367, mic.
Jack-with-the-lantem, xxii. 367.
Jack, the painter, xxiii. 372.
Jack, Dr., geological observations o^
xxxiv. 616,
Jackson, Dean, cause of bis destroying
his diary, xxiii. 403.
. __ xxxiv. 3 ; xxxvi. 376.
i Major-General, (now President
of tbfi United £ftAto»>) account of hit
Digitized by
Googk
96
PART I.— INDEX OP NAMES.
QUARTBULT
conduct at New Orleans, zxxix. 357
note,
Jackson, Major-General, zxvii. 73 ; xxxrii.
293, 516.
Mr., zxiL 292, 481 ; xxiiL 230,
note; xxxvi. 70.
. the musician, xxxii. 346.
— — of Newcastle, xxxriii. 194.
M Richard, an American loyalist,
extraordinary integrity of, xxx. 21, 22.
Jacob, xxii. 69; xxiv. 464, 486, 498;
xxvi. 132, 183, 198; xxviii. 8, 529;
xxix. 129 ; xxxii. 19 ; xxxv. 87.
Ab Vena, xxvi. 182.
— - Mr., on the cultivation of poor soils,
xxxviii. 410, 414, 417, 426.
P., xxiv. 227.
■ William, view of the agriculture, &c.
of Germany, xxiii. 434— character of
his work, 437. See Qermany, Part II.
■ report on the trade in
com, &c, xxxv. 269. See Com Laws,
Part II.
— - and Walker, Messrs., xxvii. 128.
Jacobs, XXV. 517.
Jacoby, xxi. 155.
Jacques I., Emperor of Hayti. See Det'
salines,
brother of Og6, fate of, xxL 436.
Jaffier, xxix. 429.
■ Ali Khan, kind reception of Mr.
Martyn by, xxv. 445-447, 450, note,
lago, character of, xxix. 417.
• xxvi. 408.
Jahn, Professor, imprisonment of, xzxi.
341.
lamblicius, xxvi 389.
James I., munificence of, in supplying
churches in Scotland and Irelanci^ xxiu.
660, 561— patronized gardening, xxiv.
405 — witty remark of on the use of
armour, xxx. 351.
-* xxii. 44 ; ?ndii. 295, 300, 368 ;
xxiv, 264; xxv. 230, 233, 235, no/e,
243, 298 ; xxvii. 342 ; xxviii. 435 ;
xxix. 443 ; xxx. 232, 423 ; xxxiv. 79 ;
xxxvii. 228.
— II., restrictions of, on the press,
xxi. 197.
■ number of exotics introduced into
England in the reign of, xxiv. 415 — ac-
count of the intrigues for dissolving his
marriage, and uniting him to the In-
fanta of Portugal, xxix. 190-192 —
causes of the agitations of his reign,
205, 206.
xxii. 533, 542, 544 ; xxiii. 3,
513 ; xxv. 392; xxvi. 426 ; xxxii. 10 ;
xxxiii. 286 ; xxxv. 87, note.
IV., of Scotland, xxvi. 246, note,
— Dr. T., Bishop of Calcutta, gor-
geousuess of Petersburgh, xxxix. 19 —
pinnacle of power reached by Russia
under Alexander, 34 — ^incongruities in
its government, in wealth; and mili-
tary power, ib, — description of the Vol-
hynian Jews, xxxviii. 116.
James, Dr. T., xxxi. 158.
.— ^ Bishop of Durham, character o^
xxxix. 380 — pretended cause of his
death, »6.
Edward, remarks on the mines, &c,
of the An^lo-Mexican Mining Associa-
tion, xxxvi. 81 . See Mines and Mm-
mgy Part II.
t Edwin, Account of an Expedition
from Pittsburgh to the Rocky Moun-
tains, reviewed, xxix. 1— duuracter of
the work, 2. See Misnssippiy Part II.
Mr., Account of the late War
with America, reviewed, xxvii. 405.
See Canadasy Part II. ■
Mr., Governor of Accra, sent with
others on a mission to the King of
Ashantee, xxii. 274.
*»-. Mr., xxi. 161; xxiv. 518; xxvi. '
520; xxviL230; xxxviii. 111.
-^— Mrs. Eleanor, xxxvi. 542.
St., xxi. 61 ; xxv. 361, 362.
Jameson, Dr., xxv. 217; xxxiv. 519,
note,
' translator of Cuvier*8 The-
ory of the Earth, xxi. 44, note.
■ Sir John, xxxvii. 28.
Jamieson, Mr., xxxv. 82.
Jamus, xxviii. 419.
Janet, xxv. 101 ; xxvi. 146.
Jansz, Brother, xxi. 108.
Januarius, St, xxxii. 12.
Janus, xxviii 319.
Japan, Emperor of, xxii. 109.
Japhet, xxi. 50; xxvii. 1.
Jaquel, Mr., xxxvi. 553.
Jaques, Chnstian, xxxi. 14.
Jaral, Marquis of, xxx. 178.
Jardiues, G., outlines of philosophical
education, xxxvi. 2 1 6— See Universities,
Part II.
Jarente, M., xxvii 154.
Jarvis, Dr., of New York, xxxi. 81.
Jason, xxviii. 419 ; xxxv. 387.
Janniere, M. Binel de la, xxxiiL 405,
406.
Javan, xxiii. 204-223; xxxi. 380.
Javita, San A. de, xxv. 378.
Jay, Justice, xxvi. 185.
Mr., xxxix. 219.
Jayme, King of Aragon, parting chai^
to his sou, xxxii. 387.
Jean, xxx. 118.
Jean-Frau<;oLs, leader of the insurgents in
St. Domingo, xxi. 437, 441.
Jeanne de Bourbon, coffin of, opened in
1793, xxi. 374.
Jebb, Dr., xxxiii. 233.
•.iM John, Bishop of Limerick, speech -
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtibw.
INDEX OF NAMES,
97
of, in the House of Lords, xxxi. 492 —
its character, »^.-^his account of the
manner in which the episcopal lands
are let in Ireland, 505, 506 — vindica-
tion of the character of the Irish clergy,
507 — statement of their incomes, 508
-— ohservations o^ on the alleged non-
residence of the Irish clergy, 510 — and
on their benevolent labours in Ireland,
517,518.521,522-524.
Jefferies, observations on the conduct of,
as a judge, xxxvi. 540, 54K
xxix.205; xxxii. 396.
Jefferson, American President, pohcy of,
xxxiii. 423 — ^patronises Ledyard, and
projects the expedition of Lewis and
Clarke, xxxviii. 90.
■ xxi. 19,
132; xxvi. 372 ; xxvu. 73; xxix. 355 ;
xxxi,474j XXXV. 156; xxxix. 22U
Jeffery of Monmouth, xxi. 107.
Jeffrey, Mr., editor of Sir C. H. Wil-
liams's works, disingenuous conduct
of, xxviii. 46, 47.
Jeffreys, Lieutenant, xxvii. 103, 108.
Jehoahaz, xxiv. 162.
Jehudah, Rabbi, surnamed Haccadosh,
notice of, xxxv. 88 — account of his com-
pilation of the Mishna, 89, 96.
xxvi. 182.
Jekyl, Sir J., xxix. 210; xxxix. 188.
Jellett, Mr., xxxix. 389.
Jenkins, David, xxxvi. 406.
Dr., XXV. 351.
■ Judge, xxxvi. 32.
Jenkinson, xxiv. 314 ; xxvi. 47, 375.
Jenner, Dr. (of Doctors* Commons), opi^
nion on burying in iron coffins, xxi. 380.
— — Dr., extinction of the cow-pox, at
the first disclosure of bis discovery of
vaccination, xxxiii. 244.
Jennings, James, xxiv. 227.
— — Mr., notice of the recantation of, on
the cause of dry-rot, xxx. 218, and note,
xxxi. 408.
— Sarah, first Duchess of Marl-
borough, xxiii. 2. See Marlborough,
Jennison, xxxvi. 536.
Jensius, xxii. 324.
Jeujrns, Soame, character of, xxxviii. 310.
Jeremiah, crypt of, in the catacombs of
Paris, xxi. 388.
xxiii. 148, 298 ; xxx. 44 .
Jerome, St., vindicated from the charge
of having made his Latin translation of
the Old Testament from the Greek,
and not from the Hebrew, xxiii. 292-
294 — notice of two letters, absurdly at-
tributed to him, XXV. 358, no/e---de-
fended from the abuse of Mr. Hone,
xxx. 476 — notice of the Latin Vulgate
by, xxxvi. 2.
xxii, 61 J xxiii, 300 j xxY.
VOL. %u NO. JJOJ^*
101, 356, 357; xXvi. 328, 337, 375,
note; xxx. 44, 474; xxxiii. 82; xxxiv.
285.
Jervas, xxxi. 211.
Jessop, Mr., his estimate of the proposed
Peak Forest railway, xxxi. 363.
Jeswunt Singh, xxix. 387.
Jetzer, xxviii. 26.
Jewell, John Bishop, diligent studies of,
xxxiv. 343 — appointed Bishop of Salis-
bury, ib. — ^his episcopal labours, 344—
death, ib. — ^tribute to his memory, 345
— ^bis munificent patronage of Hooker,
345, 346.
xxix. 299 ; xxxii. 158 ;
xxxiii. 1 ; xxxv. 447 ; xxxvii. 51.
J. K. L., erroneous assertions of, respecting
Protestant missions, xxxiL 3, note*
Joab, xxix. 37.
Joam I., xxvii. 27.
Joanna, queen of Naples, Memoirs ofy
xxxi. 65 — her birth and education, 67
—is married to Prince Andrew of Hun-
gary, ib. — is privy to his assassination,
68, 69 — her dominions invaded by
Louis, King of Hungary, 70 — is ac-
quitted of being privy to her husband's
murder by the Pope, 71 — ^remarks on
the historical evidence for this transac-
tion, 71, 72 — ^is put to death by her
adopted heir, 73 — ^parallel between her
and Mary Queen of Scots, 75 — ^remarks
on the execution of the work, 74, 75.
Joannes Damascenus, xxii. 309.
Joannes Magnus, xxvii. 36.
Job, belief in a future state, xxvii. 523.
xxi.388 ; xxiii.149, 293, 298; xxiv. 497,
509 ; xxvi. 199; xxvii. 377; xxix. 176.
Jobson, xxvi. 114.
Jocasta, xxvi. 109.
Joceline, xxviii. 21.
Jochonan, Rabbi, collected the Jerusalem
Talmud, xxxv. 89.
Jocundus, xxi. 36.
Jodelet, xxix. 36.
Jodelle*s tragedies, remarks on, xxix. 33.
Joel, xxiv. 610.
John, xxvi. 185 ; xxvii. 28.
XXII., xxxvii. 205.
XXIII., xxvu. 474.
of Ayr, xxvi. 246.
of Gaunt, xxxvi. 216 j xxxvii. 53.
' a Jewish tyrant, how pourtrayed by
Mr. Milman, xxiii. 202.
— of Leyden, xxxiii. 20.
Don, of Austria, xxv. 18.
— King, body of at Worcester, found
to have been rifled, xxi. 373. 405 ; xxv.
136 ; xxix. 534 — surcoats became ge-
neral in his reign, xxx. 344.
King, of France, xxv. 546, 547, 548,
553 — massacres in France during his
reign, 566»
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§8
PART I.-INDW Of NAMES.
QuaAtkri^t
Jo^n, Prince, xrvi. 129.
— — St., canon of the New Testament
made soon after the writing of his
gospel, XXV. 350, 351 — ^vindication of
chap, v., V. 7, from the oli^ections of M.
Griesbach, xxvi. 324. See Burges8.
St., of Acre, xxvi 133.
Johnes, xxv. 127.
Johnson, bishop, notice of Horace Wal-
pole's dander against, xxvii. 187 — ^his
intrigue to obtain the dismissal of the
bishop from the preceptorship of George
III., 203-206.
Charles, Esq., testimony of, to
the bad state of the roach near London,
and ^e hnprovement of one under the
care of Mr. M*Adam, xxiii. 99.
— — : — Colonel, xxxix. 40.
. Dr. J., Private Correspondence
of Cowper, published by, xxx. 185.
i \ • Dr., his accoimt of Marlbo-
rough's old age not correct, Xxiii. 69 —
anecdote o^ 361 — ^the Newcastle manu-
script put into his hands, 406 — ^use
made of it by him, and how acknow-
ledged, 402 — sarcastic comparison of
him and Boswell, by an Itahan man of
letters, ib, — Spence, how spoken of by
lmn,4 06— observation of, on the poetry of
Pope, 408, 412 -regretted that he could
not supply the early history of Pope,
425 — Goldsmith*s conversation with, on
the difficulty of preserving consistency
of character in fabulous composttions,
456, 457 — ^remark of, on the Kterary
character of the public in his day, xxV.
25 — causes why his writings will, in a
few centuries, become unintelligible to
the inhabitants of Columbia, 67 — ^re-
mark on Savage on his departufre for
Swansea, 458 — on Dryden, xxvi. 256
-^-once intended translating the Lusiad,
xxvii. 29 — error in his derivation of the
word marshal f 61,62, note, 118 ^ — remark
on criticism, xxviii. 103 — no reader
6f our old poets, 412, note — uncandid
and uniust criticism on Ghray's imitation
of Pindar's .first Pythian ode, 424— re-
mark of, on Hume and other sceptical
writers, 517 — a) prayer of, 533 ^remark
on Goldsmith, xxix. 329— intended
culogium on Shakspeare, 416,417.
■■ mistaken notion of, concerning
the ancient history of Rome, xxxii. 68,
86 — his reasons for the fidlure of sacred
poets considered and refuted, 220-222
~^his petulant remarks on Pope^s epi-
taphs, 296, 297— notice of, by Pichot,
xxxii. 350
■ his definition of a weed, xxxv.
125-:.character of Shakspeaie's Queen
Katherine, 358, 359 — ^remark of^ oa the
popularity of Pomfret; 190^
Johnson, Dr., xxivi. 196, 225, note — life
of Mittofn, character of, 42— dictionary,
497.
— — — the etymological part of bis
dietionacry defective, xxxvii. 54.
• on devotional poetry, xxxviii.
52 — on portrait painting, 37rf.
high commendation of Dr. Paar,
xxxix. 278.
xxi. 114; xxiii. 296, 419 ^
xxiv. 50, 87 ; <xviii. 49 ; xxx. 4t)l, 517,
618; xxxii. 223, 352; xxxiii. 591;
xxxiv. 7, 185, 309, 365, 366, 391, 487 ;
xxxv. 67, 190, 233, 358, 406, 408, 409/
447 ; xxxvi. 195, 225, note; xxxvii. 417.
xxxix. 267.
Mr., xxiii. 535 ; xxiV. 220, 227.
— ~ ■ " ■ ■ saved Cromwell from drowning
in his youth, ixv. 282.
Itichard, notice of his Aris^
tarchus anti-Bentleianus, ixiv. 377,^378.
' Dr., contemplative piety, why it
can never be poetical taxL, 223 ; xxxv.
67.
'- — Tft. David, view of fiie public
education in Franc*, xxlvi. 216. See
Unitertiiies, Part II.
Johnston, Mr., xxxvii. 347.
a iudge of Trinidad, xxxiii. 510.
Johnstone, the mutiue^, at Botany Bay,
xxvi. 67.
— the Chevalier, memoirs 6t Ihe
rebellion in 1745 and 1746, obsetvafions
on, xxxvi. 211-214.
' James, father of the ahove, no-
tice of, xxxvi. 211.
■ Colonel, xxivii. 18.
— ^ Cdhmiodore, xxvii 32.
■ James, of Alva, xxxvi. 576.
• John, M.D., works of Dr. S.
Parr, edited by, xxxix. 255 — account of
himself in executing the task, 258 — a
better arrangement desirable in case df
a second edition, 298 — ^hiS aciionnt of
his friend's last illness, 299.
Sir Alexander, xxxV^. 475.
JoBivet^ M., notice of, xxii. 482.
Jollois, xxii. 351.
■ and Devilliers, MM., ixviii. 79.
Jomard, M., bhmdei^s' of, exposed, xxvifi.
70, 79, 92.
xxi. 351 ; xxvii. 239; xxx. 481 ;
xxxii?. 547, 548.
JomeHi, xxxii. 60.
Jomioi, Gteneral, ihrii. 383 — notice 6( his
system of tactics, 384,
Jonadafti, xxxiii. 539.
Jonah, xxvii. 37, note / xxviii. 2^.
Jones, notice of his defence of tfe ctfnon
of the New Testament, xxv. 349.
xxv. 354, 355, 358, note: xxx. 475-
480.
-— T-SM.346,347,
Digitized by
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RkVxjfiWr
INDEX Ot NAMES.
Mf
Jones, Captain^ anecdote by^ of a' Russian
court dinner, xxxix. 28.
— ^— Colonel, XXV. 84.
Imgo,xxv. 20; xxxiv. 182 : zzzvii.
314.
Judge/ xxxvi. 521,
■ Mr., strictures on the defence of,
against some remarks in vol. xxii. of the-
Quarterly Review, xxiv. 394, 395.
-r^- tstB. 169 J XXXV. 160.
Serjeant, xxxviii. 276.
— ■ Owen, xxi. 94.
r— — Paul, patronises Ledyard's north--
west coast expedition, xxxViii. 90.
Sir H., preliminary treaty with
Persia, concluded by, xxxvi. 388.
■ xxvi. 445 5 xxxvi. 355.
-T^-^ — Sir Thomas, xxxvJ. 5*3 1.
. Sir William, paraphrase of lines
. by Sir Edward Coke, xii. 121 — reseni-
btftnce between the Indian and Orecian
mythology proved by, xxt. 169.
-^^ friend and schoolfellow of Dr.
S. Parr, xxxix. 259 — chatracter by, of Dr.
Sumner, 262 — letter to Parr on hearing
"of his intention to publish ft sermon,
264 — another letter t6 the same,' fraught
with sentences of gold,' 267.
ixvi. 250, «o/e/ xxviii. 116,
- 141 J xxix. 350$ xxxiii. 333, note,*
xxxvi. 531 ; xxxix. 257.
— — Tom, lucky train of chances in,"
xxiv. 356.
■ XXV. 460.
— W., notice of hisf accoilnt of the
, persecutioiGts of the Van^is, txxiii. 174.
Jonson, Ben, belief as to his mode of burial,
xxi. 108 — ^analogy according to which
- he introduces the devil Puckkair^j xxii.
360 — difficulty in rendering interesting
. to an EngHsn audience subjects from
Greek or Roman history, 403 — ^fate of
. his Catiline, f 6 .-character of his co-
medy, xxiii. 479 — his powers as a ma^er
of learning and humour, 480 — distin-
guishing characteristics of his language,
ib, — ^use made by him, in the Silent
Woman, of Mandeville's exaggeration,*
xxiv. 331 — elaborate and harmonious
• felicity, in his masques and interludes,
XKvii. 481 — Pindar not irregular, xxviii.
412, note — Charles I., his liberal patron,
txix. 185 — superior to Moliere, 420 —
quotation from, xxxv. 186 — verses by,
xxxvii. 187.
^- xxiii. 444 ; xxix. 37, 206 ;
, xxxii. 224; xxxrsr. 1,241 ; xxxviii. 385.
Joozee Bey, xxxvi. 362.
Joplin, T., Outlines of a S3rstem of Political
JBconomy, xxxi. 126 — plan of his work,
134 — observations .on his remarks re-
specting the paucity of failures iii the
^MAckL basksi 136«-aiid on his gtKte* ^
mentofthe advantages respecting Scotch'
banking, as contrasted with the disad^
vantages of the English system, 136-
138 — ^remarks on his account of the*
conduct of the Bank of England in re-
fusing to accede to the rormation of
joint-stock banking companies, 138-14(r
—his scheme for the government of the'
currency, 141 — remarks thereony 142-
145.
JopUn, T., Views on the Currency, zxidi;
451.
Jordan, D. Guillen, xxxiii .144.
Mr., xxxiii. 495.
Jortin, xxiii. 138 j itv. 356 — character Of
his sermons, xxix. 302.
isdii. 138 ; xxv. 356 ; xxi. 480',^'
xxxii. 159.
Josaphat, Abbot of, xxxii. 857.
Jose, Rabbi, xxxv. 89.
Joseph, sale of, by his brethren, SLbsnrdly
stated by M. Rubichdn to have beetithe
first treaty of commerce, xxiii. 197.
xxiv. 314 ; xxvi. 286, 374, 375.
xxv. 129.361.
xxvi. 195,wo/ff.
a sculptor, xxxiv. 133.
II., observations on the penal code
of, xxiv. 235, 237, 238— ordmaricesi in
favocBf of the Jews, xxxviii. 118.
• Emperor, death of, 3«iii. 63 — ^ba-
nished froni Bohemia a sect Called
Abrahamites, xxviii. 1 6.
-xxi. 491.
336.
■ of Aiimfltfhea, xxiii. 581 ; xxxiv.
■ the j)hilosophef, Xxvi. 190.
Josephus, remarks on his history of the
Jewish War, xxiii. 201, 203.
xxiii. 197, 319; xivi. 376, 390 ;
XXX. 197, 389.
Joshua, xxi. 464, notej Xxii. 71, note $
xxUi. 218, 298; xxv. 149; xXvi. 380,
note s Xxvii. 324 ; xxxv. 96.
ben Chauma, ridiculous notion
supported by, xxi. 364, 365.
■ Rabbi, xxxv. 105.
Josiah, xxiv. 161, 162.
Joss, Tonal, ordains Huntington, xxiv,
480.
Josse Bade, xxii. 315.
Josselyn, Xxx* 7»
Jourdain, M., remarks on the chitf&ter ol",
xxix. 418, 419.
Jourdan, Marshal, Xxviii. 275; XXxi^,
409.
Jouy, M., Sylla, Trag^die^ retie^fed,
xxviii. 97 — remarks on the author's
preface, 97-101 — plan of the tragedy,
with specimens and remarks, 191-11 1.
Jove, xxiv. 78, 464, 459 ; xxv. 11 1, 169,
505.
Jovellanos; xxix. 258, note^ . .
b2
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PART I.— INDEX OP NAMES.
QUABTBRLT
Joven Gklan, xzv. 13.
Joycei ruffianly treatment of Charles I.
by, XXV. 321.
Juan, Don Jorge, associated with Ulloa,
in making researches in South America,
XXXV. 221. See Uiloa.
— xxxvil 282.
Juarros, Don Domingo, Histoiy of Guati-
mala, reviewed, xxx. 151 • See Mexico,
Part 11.
Judah, xxvi. 380, note.
Judas Iscariot, xxiv. 19; xxv. 281; xxxii.
379.
. Maccahfleus, xxi. 363 ; xxv. 13.
Rabbi, xxvi. 181.
Judio, F. J., xxvii. 13.
Jndson (Ann H.), account of the Ameri-
can Baptist Mission to the Burman
Empire, xxxiii. 37 — character of her
work, ib, — ^the little success of that mis-
non accounted for, 42, 43 — biographical
notice of Mr. and Mrs. Judson, 43, 44
^— her reflections on their situation at
Rangoon, 45 — conversation of Mr. Jud-
son with his Burman teacher, 48, 49-^
her reflections on the death of their
only child, 51 — kind and sympathising
conduct of the viceroy's lady on this
occasion, 50 — ^little success of the mis-
sionaries, 52, 53 — order of another vice-
roy against them, 53 — ^the missionaries
obtain permission to approach the sove-
reign, 54 — description of their audience,
66, 57 — return of the missionaries to
Rangoon, 57 — apprehensions for the fate
of Mr. and Mrs. Judson, 60.
■ XXXV. 517, note,
Ju^rtha, xxv. 6.
Julia, Advice to, a Letter in Rhyme, re-
viewed, xxiii. 505 — character of the
poem, ib. 506-510 — description of a
dandy's conversation, 507— of London
in autumn, 507, 508 — a trip to Mar-
gate in the steam-boat, 508, 509.
JuKa, xxv. 22.
J. S. E., Recherches sur VAir Ma-
T^cageux, reviewed, xxx. 133,
Julian, xxvi. 138— the Apostate, xxii.
367.
Juliet, xxv. 426 ; xxix. 430.
Julius, xxi. 30.
Pope, xxxii. 386.
n., xxxiii. 2.
III., Pope, XXXV. 92 ; xxxvii. 76,
Atticus,xxi. 27.
Caesar, xxii. 403 ; xxiv. 362.
Pollux, xxi. 311, note; xxiii. 149,
270 ; xxv. 508.
Jumsheed, xxxvL 357*
Junia, xxviii. 502.
Junius, xxxi. 425.
Juno, xxii. 194 j xxiii. 197; xxiv. 450,
459 J xxvU. 23, 25, 52, 295, note.
Junot, occupation of Portugal by, xxix.
57, 58 — atrocious conduct of his army
there, 79, 80— is defeated at the battle
of Vimeiro, 80-82 — compelled to eva-
cuate Portugal, 82.
xxxi. 385.
Jupiter, xxi. 33, 283, note; xxiii. 197,
258, note, 265, 267, 479; xxvi. 175,
292, 385 ; xxvii. 21, 28, 53, 277, 334 ;
xxviii.3-24 ; xxx. 383 ; xxxiii. 361, note.
Ammon, xxiii. 95 ; xxiv. 166,
168; xxvi. 220; xxvii. 232, 233.
Feretrius, xxvii. 278.
Jussu£^ Moussa ben, xxxi. 467.
Justice, James, notice of the &mou8
garden of, xxiv. 408.
Justin Martyr, xxiii. 149, 319; xxxiii. 81 ;
xxxvii. 50.
Justimann, xxiii. 140, 144 ; xxviii. 329..
Juvenal, meaning of his ' testarum cre-
pitus,' xxviii. 326.
■ xxi. 114; xxxii. 159, 238; xxxvii.
49.
Juxon, Archbishop of Canterbury,
480, 485.
K.
Kadu, an inhabitant of the reef of Ulea,
notice of, xxvi. 361, 362.
Kaimes, Lord, xxx. 39 ; xxxii. 184.
Kalm, xxx. 6.
Kaltschmidt, Dr., xxiv. 41 1 .
Kamdeen Shapoor, xxi. 364.
Kamehamaroo, Queen of Owhyhee, cha-
racter of, XXXV. 429 — account of her
departure with the King for England,
430— her illness and death, 431.
Kanemy, el, xxxiii. 524, 543.
Kang-hi, notice of an embassy sent by,
to the Khan of the Tourgouth Tartars,
ZXY. 418.
Kant, arbitrary signification of terms in
his transcendenUd philosophy, xxiii. 409
— h3rpothesis, that all the bodies in the
universe are collected into nebulie,
xxxviii. 9.
xxvi. 478, 501.
Karamsin, M., xxvi. 39, 46 ; xxix. 119.
Karilaph, William de. Bishop of Durham,
building of the present cathedral com-
menced by, xxxix. 365.
Kamey, Ouseley, a noted slave-deafer,
notice of, xxvi. 67.
Karthos, xxxv. 392.
Kater, Captain, account of the constnic*
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'Hktibw*
INDEX OF NAMES.
101
tion, &c., of the new standard of weights
and measures, xxxvi. 139 — account of
his experiments for determining the
standard length of the pendulum, 159-
161. See Weightt and Meatureti Part
II.
JCater, Captain, xxvi. 418 ; xxx. 238.
Katharine, Empress, xxvi. 37.
St., xxii. 349.
Katherine II., xxvi. 50.
* Queen of Charles II., anecdotes
of, xxxiii. 305.
Katlin, a servant-hoy, anecdote of, zxxiv.
* 35, 36, note,
Kavra, xxiii. 358.
Keale, Lieutenant, xxxv. 516.
Kean, Mr., xxviii. 109, «o/e/ zxxii. 343,
352 J xxxiv.218,355.
Keane, Major- Greneral, xxxix. 357, note,
Kearney, Bishop, xxiii. 518.
Keating's letter to Mr. Goulhum, xxxvii.
570.
Mr., compiled Major Long*s
Second Expedition, xxxvii. 458, note,
Keats, Mr., in what manner patronised
and introduced into puhlic notice by
Mr. Leigh Hunt, xxxvii. 416 — ^Lord
Byron*s opinion of Mr, Keats, ib. — ^liis
lordship's critique on Keats' poetry,
417 — citation from an elegy by Shelley
on Keats, parodied on Cock Robin, 418
•—rapid fall into oblivion of the Endy-
mion, 419.
Keble, xxxvi. 553.
Kedar, xxii. 418.
Keebetavalkin, death of, from the small,
pox, xxvi. 318.
Kehama, xxvi. 293.
Keil, xxiv. 408.
Keir, Mr., xxiii. 523.
Kellermann, xxix. 81.
Kellow, Richard Bishop, account of, xxxix.
370.
Kelly, the murderer of a slave in South
Carolina, xxix. 345.
f— Reminiscences, extract from, xxxiii.
589, /lo/e— notice of, 591.
«- ■ xxxiv. 197— character
of the work, 203, 204-242— Mozart's
advice to him, 243 — Mr. Kelly's musi-
cal proficiency, ib. — is insulted on the
stage, 208^^omic dialogue between him
and the commissioners of the income-
tax, 244 — anecdotes of Sheridan and
Kelly, 245, 246.
■ Captain, description of the natives
of Fernando Po, xxvi. 51-53 — ^recom-
mends that island as a station for watch-
ing the slave-trade, 54, 68.
«— Colonel, xxix. 358.
— Dr., the Universal Cambist, reviewed,
xxvi. 416, See fVeiaht* and Measures,
Part 11.
Kemble, John Philip, birth and early
years of, xxxiv. 205 — his first perform-
ance on the stage, i&.^-b engaged at
York, 207— liberality of the Duke of
Northumberland to him, ib. — is in-
sulted on the stag^, 208 — ^his manly
conduct on that and a subsequent occa-
sion in London, 208, 209 — visits Dub-
lin, 210 — his first appearance at Drury
Lane in the character of Hamlet, ib, —
description of his person at that time,
212— comparison between his style of
performance and that of Mr. Ghurrick,
212, 213, 215— remarks on Mr. Kem-
ble's pronunciation of the word acheif
217 — his attention to restore true read-
ings, t6. — ^remarks on his performance
of the characters of Richard III., 218
— Sir Giles Overreach, ib. — Macbeth,
ib, 219 — Hotspur, 219, 220— Heniy
v., 220 — Cato, Brutus, and Coriolanus,
ib., 222, 223— anecdote of Mr. Kemble'a
coolness, 221, 222 — review of his con-
duct as a manager of Drury Lane
Theatre, 224 — difficulties which he had
to encounter, ib. 225 — ^his attention to
dramatic costume, 225, 226— and sce-
nery, 226 — ^remarks on the mode in
which Macbeth was got up under his
direction, 227, 228— ^so Henry VIII.,
228— Mr. Kemble's conduct in the
business of the green room, 229 — his
final retirement from Drury Lane The-
atre, 231 — becomes manager and part
proprietor of Covent Garden Theatre,
t6.— dispute between him and Mr. Col-
man, 232 — destruction of that theatre
by fire, 235 — observations on the in-
creased extent of the interior of thea-
tres, »6. 237— the O. P. riots, 238, 239
— Mr. Kemble withdraws from the
stage, 240 — ^triumphant reception on
his return, ib, — his final retirement
and death, ib, — instance of Mr. Kem-
ble's high sense of honour, 241.
. xxvii.84 ; xxxiv. 355.
■ Roger, father of J. P. Kemble^
xxxiv. 205,
Kempe, Alleyn, xxnv. 202.
Kempelen, xxxii. 409,
Ken, Bishop, notice of his works, xxxii*
230, 231.
xnx. 197.
Kendall, E. A., on the state of Ireland, the
Roman Catholic question, and the
merits of constitutional religious dis-
tinctions, xxxviii. 535, 536.
Lieutenant, xxxviii. 343, 344,
352, 353.
Kendrew, J., xxi. 103, note,
Kennet, xxiii. 562.
Kenneth, King, xxvi. 126; xxxiv. 183.
Kennicott, Dr.; remark of; on the difler-
Digitized by
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102
PART h^VfJmi OF NAMES.
QvjLsamaik
ent Manuscripts of jkhe 3ible, x^ii.
321.
Kenny, Mr., pcxvii. 484.
l^ent, Ibis style of gardening, ;axvu. 314^
321.
Kentucky, Jonathan, xxvl. 269, notie.
J^enyon, Lord, letters firoin G^rge III.
to him, xxxvi. 28d, 547.
XXXV. 582.
Keogh, John, xxxvi. 66, 67, 71 ; xxxyiii.
559.
Kepler, xxxviii. 3 — discovery of the laws
of the planetary motions, 6.
-^ xxii. 129 ; xxvi. 183.
'Keppel, favourite of William ^11., xxxviL
254.
» Lord;^ xxxiv. 4fi3.
Mr., xxvil 211-213.
Kerr, Ljeutencint, hxilw 314
Keth, M.,xxxiv. a3.
Keverbiirgj B-ifLinj ou the colony of
Frederic ks-oord, xxxviji. 410.
Kmjl^s, kxxW* 544,
Khaled, xxviii. 67.
KJiim Siihibi sxsvi. 363, 364.
l^ia-Kiugj Emperor of t^hina, notice of,
xxi. 74j 75— let ret oi; to the King of
EiigUnd, &4'S6 — notice of the will of,
XXV, 4 IG, 4 J 7.
Kibblevfhite v. Rowlimd, notice of the
case, far n. divu^ct^, Xiiv. 242, 263.
Kiddj Captam, xxxvLalJ.
Mr., xxii. 340 ; xxxiii. 69.
Kidder, Bish[>p, xxx. 102.
Kit^^br, F^ofijfiS'Or, xxxvi, 4.
Ki*ju-lung, xxi. 74,75, 183; xxv.422.
Kiffin t^. Kiftia^ xxxix. 200.
Kilbi^i% Captain, xxxiv, bd2.
Kitby, Ridiardj notitro of, xxiiJ. 302.
Killalai Deau of, xxiv. 30S.'
Kiliian, xxxviii. 3B6*
Kllligriiw, Harryj xxxiii, 289, 295, 307.
Kilpcmt, Lord, xxvj. 126.
KiinboltoM, Lord, xxv. 231.
Kingt triiKl i'or the aturns^ation plot in
1G^6| xxxvi, 544.
'- ' — Archbishop, Discourse on Predesti-
^ nation, with Notes, by Rev. R. Whately,
reviewed, xxvi. 82 — remarks on Ins
analogical reasoning concerning the at-
tributes of the Deity, 86, 87 — on the
abuse of analogical reasoning, 88.
. xxi. 62, 63, note ; xxviii.
, 145.
— -- Bishop, n^^de a sermon of the
^hole Psalms, xxxviii. 30.
.— Captain, xxxiv. 398, 519; xxxix.
•318,411.'
- Dr., one of the translators of the
authorized version of the Bible, xxiii.
303 ; xxxvi. 208.
— Gregory, xxix. 225.
rr:/sfe.^-34^. ....
King, Lady IgiMU, IJifik^ Association
at Bra^hrook HoiisQ originated by,
xxii. 96.
Lieutenant, nautical survejrs of;
alojag the coaAt of Australia, xxi^^ ^0-
72.
Lord, xxiv. 47 ; xxviii. 214 j xxxviii.
548.
Mr., state of the American mercan-
tile navy, xxi. 14.
xxxix. 237, 239.
manager of Drury I^yae The-
atre, xxxiv. 224.
• the friend of Milton, xxxvi. 46.
Kingston, Duke of, xxvi. 435, 436.
^., Duchess of, XXV. 266 ani
note ; x^o^vii. 171.
Kinloch, Lady, xxxvi. 169.
Sir David, xxxvi. 188.
Kipahai, xxxv. 432.
Kipling, Deap, xxi. 174.
Kippis, Dr., xxiii. 406.
Kirby and Spence*s Introduction to Ento-
mology, extract from, xxxvi. 447, note,
Kircher, advocate the truth of patingfir
nesy, xxix. 469 — ^trick played upon him
with a paving-stone, xxxix. 287.
Kiriach, Morsey, xxix. 133.
Kirke White, xxi. 113 — most nearly
resembled Bowdler, 124.
Kirkpatrick, xxiv. 103.
kirtee Rana, a captive Ghoorlqt chief,
anecdote of, xxiv. 113, 114.
Kirwan, xxii. 423.
Kishen Kowar, notice of th^ afifectLog
. story of, xxix. 392.
Kissen Chund, Raja, xxxvii. 1 10.
Klaproth, xxxvi. 120.
Kleber, XXX. 481,515.
Klein, Father, xxvi. 307.
Klopstock, xxxv. 184, 205.
Knapp, Mr., xxiv. 222.
Knapton, the painter, xxxi. 212.
Knelle)r, Sir Godfrey, remarks on, xxxviii*
384.
xxvi. 425, 436^
xxxi. 211; xxxiii. 286.
Knertz, wife of, executed for witchcrafi,
xxix. 447.
Knevett, Sir J., xxix. 442.
Knickerbocker, Dietrick« xxxi. 482.
Knight, Henry Gaily, Eastern Sketches
in Verse, reviewed, xxii. 149 — extracts
from his * Ilderim,' with remarks, 151,
152— from his * Phrosyne,' 152-155—
from * Alashtar,* 155, 156 — ^remarks oa
some defects in these poems, 157, 158.
..— Mr., notice of his edition of Ho-
mer, xxvii. 40.
xxiii. 142, note, 146, nQt%
151 ; xxvii. 53, 65 ; xxviii. 182.
Payne, L^ondoo Horticultural
Society originatfed wit6,xxiv,ill§^. .
Digitized by
Googk
^aJ^yflH^f.
INDPX Qf Jf AMES.
103
3^j%Jit, fsijm ioiprjwjM ipf H^Bdmcape
gardening, xx^vii. 317.
: -r- xxiy. 401;,4I5,
■ and others, ijojtice Qf ihe unfbilu-
nate voyage of, xx^. 233.
.^ghtjey, xxiv. 3i62.
Knipp, 9J1. actress, x^cxiii. 295.
Knockdunder, xxvi. 117.
KnoUes, xxxiii. 8.
KnoUys, Sir Francis, xxxviii. 405.
Knowles, Herbert, account of, xxi. 396 —
beautiful verses written by, in thje
churchyard of Richmonid in Yorkshire^
397, 398— notice of, xx|[v. 195.
Mr. J., XXX. 219.
Knox, Dr., Vjcesimus, singular coinci-
dence between certain quotations ij^ his
* .Christiaji P^ijosopby/ and Mr. Bid-
dulph's ' Treatise on the Operations of
the Holy Spirit,' xxxi. U5-U7.
————— ^Exxifi. 275, not£^
XXXV. 194.
John, af^i^ed an itinerant preacher
' by (^ranmer, xxiv. 34, note,
• xxiii. 297.
— Mr., xxxvi. 70.
Knudtzon, Mr.; xxx. 1 30.
Knuffler, Dr., xxxii. 40.0.
Knurre-Murre, xxi. 98.
Knutzer, xxviii. 496.
^nyghton, xxxvii. 54.
Kaempfer, xxi. 8^ ; xxii. 129 ; xxviii. 115;
xxxy. 399, note.
Koeiug, the comp^ion pf Voltaire at
Cirey, xxiii. 158.
Kolett6, xxiii. 357.
Korah,xxv.281.
Koretf, Dr., Dp Be^onibus Italiae Aere
Pernicioso contaminatis, reviewed, xxx.
133 — ^his account of the wretched inha-
bitants of the Campa^^ di ^oma, 141.
Korff, Madame de, xxviii. 465.
Korsakow, xxii. 3d9.
Kosegarten, M., xxiii. 238, 239.
Kossie, xxvii. 371.'
Koster, xxxi. 19.
Kotzebue, immoral tendency of the |dra-
mas of, one cause of his assassin^ktion
by San4, wiii. 447— W«
vindicated by Professor Kmg, 445, 44i
— ^immoralitv of his plays, xxix. ^8 —
sentimental lamentation of, xxxiv. 247.
J^otzebue, travels through Italy, extrad;
from, xxxix. 73.
• his sfcount of the
beggars of Italy, xxxviii. 73,
Otto von, Voyage of Discovery
to the South Sea and Behring's Straits,
reviewed, xxvi. 341 — arrival at Easter
Island, 347— discovers Doubtful Island,
348 — description of Kotzebue's Sound,
and of the inhabitants foimd on the
adjacent laud, 349-35 1 — remarks on the
currents ii^ Bt^ring*s Strait, 354 —
manners, &c., of the inhabitants of its
shores, 356, 357— and of the Bad^rk
Islands, 363 — remarks on the final
abandonment of the voyage, 363 —
found a constant current setting im
Behring's Strait, xxx. 265, 449.
absence of ice in Beh-
ring's Strait, XXV. 212 ; ^q^baats*
teeth and tusks found by him in an ice-
berg of pehring's Strait, xxvii. 476 —
hypothesis respecting cpral reeis of ihe
£a^ Indiai^ archipel^^go, xxxiv. 519.
- xxviii. 344.
Kousrouf Pash^ xxy. 484.
Kray, General, xxii. 390.
Krim-lruerav, xxvii. 398.
Krug's, Professor, vindication of the mur-
der of Kotzebue by Saad, xxiii. 445,
446, note.
Krusenstern, Admiral, xxviii. 407, note ;
xxxi. 163.
Captain, xxii. 109 5 xxvi.
346 ; xxx. 265, note,
l^uanoa, XXXV. 432.
KuWai, xxi. 181 — his regard for the Polo
family, 184, 193; xxiv. 325.
Kuinoel, xxx. 95.
^uleukamp, xxii. 308.
Kuster, xxii. 310, 331, 336.
Kusterus, xxiv. 381.
Kynaston., ifxsm. 311.
La Bastays, form of worship recom-
mended by, xxviii. 497.
Labat, J. Baptist, funeral at Tivoli de-
scribed by, xxi. 379 — character of,
xxxviii. 236.
Jjabbe, xxii. 306, note.
Xabelye^ a Swiss architect, xxxiv. 181.
Xiabillardiere, xxvii. 106.
La Borde, the French banker, description
Qt the ho4^ Qf, ii^ Parjs, x^ 558, 559.
Laborde, Go^nt de, remark on his engra-
vings of Carnac, xxv. 138.
General, xxix. 81.
Joseph, notice of the great gains
of, by mining, xxx. 168 ; xxxvi. 99. *\
Labouchere, Mr., xxxvii. 261, note.
La Brocquiere, xxii. 62.
Labrousi^^, Mile., xxviii. 29.
I^iacey, xxxiii. 31}.
jL^jchiiw^e, xxix. ?7^ .
Digitized by
Googk
104
PART I.-.INDBX OF NAMES.
QUAATBBLT
Lachelier, Captain, zzziv. 588.
Lachesis, xxviii. 421.
Lackington, xxviii. 3.
Xacombe, xxi. 434.
Lacretelle, account of the Pare aux Cerft,
xxvii. 158, note,
-^ — Histoire de T Assemble Con-
stituanfe de France, reviewed, xxviiL
271. See Fr«nc<?, Part II.
xxvi. 407 ; xxvii. 164.
liacroix, Lieutenant-G^eneral Baron Pam-
phil6 de, account of the Revolution of
St. Domingo, reviewed, xxi. 430.
Lactantius, xxxiii. 82.
Ladbroke, Mr., xxxix. 283, note.
Laddie, Widow, xxxix. 161.
Lsnas, xxviii. 104.
Laespodias, xxiv. 457, note,
Lafayette, character of, xxviii 285, 286.
Lafitte, xxviii. 225 j xxxii. 253.
La Fleur, xxi. 473.
La Fontaine's Fables, translated, xxiii.
456— characteristic of his poetry, 455
—excellence of his narrations, 456 —
and characters, t6., 457»-8peciniens of
the translations, with remarks, 458-465
— ^Fable of, xxviii. 454, note.
' — xxi. 498 ; xxiv. 553.
Lafosse, xxix. 26.
Lagrange, the astronomer, xxii. 130, 133;
xxxvi. 151 ; xxxix. 443.
General, notice of, xxii. 482 ;
XXX. 484.
Lag^, xxiii. 1.38.
La Harpe, xxviii. 496, 521; xxix. 26,
432; xxxiv. 424, 456.
Lailos, xxviii. 285.
Laiuez, Diego, xxix. 41.
Laing, Captain, (afterwards Major,) A. G.
Travels in the Interior of Africa, xxxi.
445— notices of the Timannees, 446 — of
the Koorauko country, and of the Man-
dingo families resident there, 447, 448
— the Soolima country, and hospitable
reception there, 448— the capital Fala-
ha, 449 — notice of it, 453 — singidar
coincidences between Oriental customs
and those of the Mandingos, Koorankos,
and Soolimanas, 451.
'■ proposes to trace the
course of the Niger, xxxviii. 100— his
instruments destroyed on his journey,
401 — arrives at Ghadamis, ibid. — at
Ensala, 102— attacked by the Tuarie,
103, 104 — death of his two servants,
103— suspicions of the Sheikh Babani,
1 04, 105— reports of the Major's death,
106 — others contradictory of this, ibid,,
107 — further inquiry instituted, ibid. —
journals received from him, 108.
— "^ — — letters by, shortly pre-
vious to his death, xxxix. 171 — docu-
ments proving his death to have been
by asiassination, 172, 173— further ac-
count of his death, 176.
Laing, Major, xxxiii. 519, 521, 540.
— • Mr., xxxii. 470.
Lais, XXX. 1 05 ; xxxvil 48.
■ a Grecian beauty, xxii. 195, 196_
nicknamed the * Hatchet,' 199 — ^lines
on her downfall, 200, 201.
Laius, xxiii. 250.
Lalage, xxiv. 551.
La Lande, xxiii. 358.
Lally-Tollendal, Count de, xxv. 568;
xxvii. 155 ; xxviii. 287, 454.
Lamachus, xxiii. 485, 495, 496.
Lamar, Basil, xxi. 165.
La Mar, Ger., xxxviii. 474.
Lamartine, M', xxxiv. 429, 430.
Lamb, C, verses by, in an album, zxxvii.
92.
XXV. 102.
■■ — George, defends the conduct of
magistrates, xxxviii. 269, 270.
Mr., English ambassador in Spain,
xxxiv. 593.
Lamballe, Madame de, assassination of,
xxvui. 470, 471.
Lambard, xxxiv. 262, 265.
Lambarde, xxv. 147.
Lambert, his proposal to make Cromwell
king, xxv. 343.
xxv. 336, 338; xxxiii. 17, 19 j
xxxviii. 9.
Mr., the botanist, xxxiv. 158.
Lamboume, xxvi. 147.
Lamech, xxi. 61.
Lameth, xxviii. 292.
La Mettrie, xxvii. 168.
Lamia, epistle of, to Demetrius, xxii. 192,
193, note; derivation of her name,
199.
xxiv. 425.
LamoignoD, xxvii. 1 55.
La Monnoye, xxiii. 402.
Lampa Dona, xxi. 187.
Lampeto, xxii. 184.
Lamprear, Captain, xxviii. 167.
Lancaster, xxi. 171; xxix. 343; xxxviii
212.
Lancelot, of Rimmi, xxiv. 98-100.
Lancisi, xxx. 144.
Lander, Richard, servant of Captain Clap-
perton. Journal from Kamo to the Sea-
coast, xxxix. 143 — account of the sick-
ness, and death, and burial of his
master, 160-1 68— conduct of the Sultan
Bello to, 169 — at Damoy is told of a race
of cannibals, 174 — describes the inha-
bitants of FuUindushee, 175 — supposes
the plain of Cuttup to contain nearly
five hundred villages, 175 — seized at
Dunrora and obliged to return to the
King of Zegzeg, ibid. — his kind recep.
tion by the old JSLing of Wewa, t6irf.—
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtebw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
105
xeceiTes from him particulars of the
death of Major lAing, 176 — ^at Ba-
dagry had nearly been destroyed by
three Portuguese slave-merchants, ibid,
—submits to the Fetish ordeal, 177 —
conducted from Badaj^ to Cape Coast
by Captain Morris, ibid, — gives freedom
to his slaves, and embarks for England,
ibid.
Landless, lieut., xxxvii. 381.
Xiandon, xxii. 392.
Landor, W. S., Imaginary Conversations
of Literary Men, reviewed, xxx. 508 —
plan of the work, 509 — specimens of it,
with remarks, 510-519.
Lane, a young midshipman, letter to, on
the duties of his station, xxxviii. 399,
note,
— C. T., the coronation oath consi-
dered with reference to the principles of
the revolution, xxxviii. 535.
Laucy, xxix. 425.
Lanfranc, Archbishop, xxxiv. 277,
Lang, Mr., xxxii. 153.
Rev. Mr., xxxvii. 15.
Langdale, Sir M., xxxv. 328.
Langford, xxiv. 406.
Laughom (Major), an American traveller,
adventure of, xxxviii. 93.
■ Richard, one of the victims of
Oates's plot, beautiful poem by, xxix.
200, 201 — remarks on it and on his
character, 202.
trial of, xxxvi. 532.
Langier's History of Venice, character of,
xxxi. 423, 424.
Langius, notice of a work by^ called the
Empire of Orthodoxy, xxviii. 1.
Langlande, xxx. 51, note,
LangUs, M., xxx. 481.
Langley, Bishop, xxxix. 372.
Sir F., xxvii. 340.
Langston, Captain Anthony, xxxii. 439
— death of, 441 — epitaph on, 442.
Langton, Stephen, xxxii. 99.
Thomas, xxxiv. 338.
Lansdowne, Marquis of, speech of the
Right Hon. Lord Ghrenville on his mo-
tion to inquire into the state of the coun-
try &c., reviewed, xxii. 492 — ^Eulogium
on Lord Londonderry in his negotia-
tions for the abolition of the slave trade,
xxvi 59 — deplorable indifference in
France, on the subject of the slave trade,
evinced in the case of the ophthalmic
slaves of the Rodeur, 71 — opinion re-
specting the sincerity of the United
States for the abolition, 80.
• — — xxviii. 205; xxx.
543 ; xxxiii. 458 ; xxxviii. 559.
Lanval, xxii. 362.
Laocoon, xxvii. 49.
Laon and Cythera^ Teviewed, zzi. 460.
La Peyrouse, zxi. 234.
Lapie, Chevalier, M^moire sur lea Voyages
dans rOc^an Glacial Arctique, reviewed,
xxvi. 514 — ^his credulity and blunders
exposed, respecting the pretended voy-
age of Maldonado, 516.518 — and of
Barthelemy de Font6, 518-522.
Laplace, great advances in the science of
astronomy due to, xxii. 130 — analysis
of his mode of investigating secular
inequalities, 140, 141-^observations of,
on astronomy, xxvi. 208, 209.
xxix. 145 j xxxv. 254; xxxix.
439.
La Plume, defection of, xxi. 445.
Lapoule, xxviii. 281.
Larcher, xxii. 315.
Lardner, notice of his credibility of his
Gtospel History, xxv. 354.
his opinion of the founder of the
sect of Mani, xxxiii. 145.
xxv. 350, 331, 358, no/e— xxvi.
333; xxx. 480.
Lardner (Nath.), character of, xxxviii. 111.
Larimore, xxxvi. 526.
Laroy, M., Dean of la Pellerine, letter to,
from Sister Nativity, xxxiii. 407.
Larrey, M., notice,of his'division of the sea-
sons in Egypt, XXX. 496, 497.
' ' on the contagious nature of the
plague, xxxiii. 235.
Lascaris, Joannes, xxiL 312.
Las Casas, Bartholomew, zealous pro-
ceedings in behalf of the Indians of St.
Domingo, xxx. 578 —injudicious remedy
proposed by him for the indolence of
the Indians, 579.
Las Cases, Comte de. Memorial de Ste.
Heldne,* reviewed, xxviii. 219, et seq,
xxix. 561.
Las Heras, Col., xxxviii. 454.
Latham, Dr, M., extracts from the reports
of, on the state of disease among the
prisoners in the Milbank Penitentiary,
xxx. 436-438.
Latham, Dr. P. M., xxxiii. 221.
Latimer, style of his sermons, xxix. 298.
■ citation from one of his sermons
on education, xxxix. 105 — ^ignorance of
nobleman's sons^ 105, 106.
' xxiv. 36 ; xxix. 199 ; xxxiv. 181,
342; xxxv. 454; xxxvi. 31; xxxvii.
69 ; xxxix. 105.
Latinus, xxvii. 282.
Latouche, xxviii. 285.
Latour, xxxii. 251.
General, xxii. 389.
— ■ Madame, xxviii. 339.
Maubourg, xxviii. 305.
La Traite, M., xxxiv. 588.
Latrobe, Mr., testimony of, to the charac-
• ter of the Hottentots, xxv. 454.
Latter; Major; discovers the unicorn of the
Digitized by
Googk
.l¥
PA]^ f .H[N|W¥ OF KABIES.
Qu,
scripturea in i^ ^iqaitU ipoimtajgi^
mv. 120, 121.
' Lfrud, ArcJiWshop, fjunfrknf^ expwwion
of, XXV. 258.
xxxii. 25.
' charaiC^r o^ ^ucfvj^. 2^8 — wtracts
from his leUers, 244.
his defence satisfactqiy, ^(wurii. 240
^-vindication of him, 243.
* Cjaise charge agauut re^|>ectiog the
church service ^ogk of Scotl^d, xxxviii.
224.
* xxiii. 562; xxiv. 34; xxv. 342,347;
xxviii. 2 ; xx^vii. 229 ; xxxyiii. 6^ ;
xxxix.307, 38t.
Lauderdale, Duke of, x^LxiU.310 ; ^xxviii.
230.
• Lord, assisted in checking
th^ spirit of ^jeg^ation shewn hy the
Commons, xxi. 427 ; xxix. 88.
L&fince^ot, xxHi. 135 ; xxix. 340.
Laura, first intei^iew pf Petrarch ^ith,
xxiv. 531 — ^nature of hi§ Ipve for he^,
considered, 534-538— h^ death, 538—
Petrarch's loemorandum concemii^ it,
539 — ^remark^ on her ch9fa4er, ibid.
xxviii. 370. "
Laurence, Dr., ?atxv. 89.
Laurenciu, a merchant |it LFons, xxxii.
' 361.
Laurens, H., hojdy of, bur^ a,pcording to
. his wjil, ^. 362]
lAurent des AUemans, nf^, 357.
Laurin, King, xxii. 365.
Lauzun, Due de, J^^moir^ du, reviewed, .
xxvi. 405 — ^biographical i^ptjpe of the
duke, 406 — chaigctdfr of the publica-
tion, and statement of sonae extraordi-
nary "circumstances relative to it, ibiif. —
408 ; xxxiv. 25.
Laval, M. dje, ^xchdeacon of Syriai^,
xxxvi.332.
Lavalette, xxiii. 163 ; xxy. 86 ; xxix.
378.
Lavella, Col., xxxyii^. 474, 486.
Layeaux, Count de, xxi. 440^reljea«je4
from prison byXpiissaint, 441.
L&vingtop, SopU^ey compf^red wi^, ^v.
9, 36, 38.
Lavoi^,er,oxyge|i g^ first yarned hy, xxiii.
467, «o/c— 468, 4^0, 472; xxv. 572;
xxix. 468.
Law, Bishop, xxi. 63— opinion as to the
competency of lu^civiU^^d natipi^ to
derive benefit from religious iustrudioiii,
xxxii. 17.
Hon. J.,|ad^.^2.
— Right Hon. T., anejcdptes jo^ re-
specting his conduct in the United
$tatjBs, ^xix. 348-352 — prud.ent specula-
tion pf his son, 352---expl^uia^ion of
X-»w, Wil^wji, laav. Jg, U,W>,^i wyii.
454; xxxii. 158.
hsLWfdfif Hi., xxi. 154.
(Serjj^afli^ JB.), m^$gf^om for
^m9 9^Taiif>Jt9 of ^ Ikw, »uu^iii.
241.
Lawless, Jack, »PEyiii. ^7.
Lawre4ce, Cohw^ xxx. 554.
St., xxiv. 351, 454.
§ir T.,xxyL 256; x»U. 340;
xxxvi. 51, note ; xxxviii. 3i81.
. Smith, notice of the cojse <^
for literary p^acy, xxvii. 123, 126, 127.
W., Lectures ou Anatomy ^nd
Physiology, reviewed, x#ai. 1 — iq^ehted
to the French and iQrjermav (^lilosophe];?
for hi^ potions ojf the theory qX life, 4 —
his angry feelings on the publication of
Mr. At)ernethy*s physiological lectures,
5 — ^his politics and religion, 6 — inicgnsis-
tencies of his not^ns poiQted out by Mr.
Rennell, 7 — abuse of the scriptures, Jf-
14— ob^ctiojj^ to his system of m»t^
rialism, 17-31 —dangerous tendency ftf
Mr. Lawrenc&'s principles on sociefy,
33— his d^ly to the pHblic, 34.
Laxman, Lieutenant, en^i^pyed 1^ the
Russian govemn^nt, in ende^VAurmg |p
establish frie^dlyJ:elations between them
apd the Japane^, jqs4i* 108, 116^
xxxviii. 94.
jAya,M.,xxix.27.
Lasareff, General, xxxv. 393.
Lazarus, despot pf Servia, ^ucxv. 67— killed
at the haltle of ^ossova, 68.
Leach, Mr., xxx. 279.
Leader, Mr., xxxvi 142, note*
Leake, Colonel, Corpyriftn cave %ff3^xe^
by, xxiii. 329^ nf4?,
^— xxiii. 150.
Leandre, xxi^. 430*
Lear. xxvi. 125.
Le 5op, xxxiv. TH»
Le Brun, ^xiii. 200.
Le Bruyn, x^vi. .37^^ 384, 391.
Lechmere, Mr., .ske|4^ of th^ chaxacier o£,
xxyiii. 64.
Le Clerc, curious anecdote relating to him
^d ToJand, xxv. 353> «o/p.
. ^General, expecliion of to St. Po-
mingo, ^. 444, 445— njakes a treaty
of peace with Tpnssaint L'Ouverture
446 — subsequent treacherous conduct
towardf Toussaint, who is carried to
France, 447— iiis death, 448— fatQ of
his e^cpedition, 457.
Le Coq, ^pbert, notice of, ^xv. 554*
Leda, xxvii. 507; ^xii. 348*
Ledwich, Dr , xxiii. 364.
Ledyard (John), Z^emqirs of the Life and
Travels of, xxxviii. 85 — studies with ^
view of becoming a, i]ussipnary a^^tpog
th!9 Iw^asnfh *f^<TTmm^i 6f^ ^
Digitized by
Googk
JEtxEHEK.
QfQBx or {fAieSS.
m
6— largo can OhO fabricated l?y
him andl^£j feUuwstiiJeuis, tin J. — ita^y
of dijVioity propuwil tu^ 87 — j^oes as a
common sailui- tu Gibraltar^ ti^id^ — pro-
ceeds from Arnt^rica lo Enjijbu J in quest
of some rvlFUiuus yf his ikmily, 86 —
begs his way fruin Plymuuth to Luudoiij
ibid. — deenifid an impu^tofj iLid, — a eor-
poral of mdritit!!} an himxd Ci^ipt:^^
Cook's ship, 89 — ^ireaeiit at t'ouk's
death) t&^i. — project a a trail iag vuy^ige
to Nootka, iZ»jf/,^hia s^ehi'iim o-dopted by
Paul JoneSf 90— bis iteUtigs on vi^idag
the Foundlijij:^ Hut^pitul. iiud llEjipital
de Dieuin Puriii, 9i — planEi a Jouruey
through the Qorth of f^urope and Ajsia,
and thence acirpss Ameiica, ibid — ^pas-
sage to the Pacific Ocean procured by
him, 93— proceeds to Copenhagen, i^ia.
— ^reaches Betersb^rgh, 94 — obtains the
empress's passport^ ibid. — d^^ned at
Yal^utsk fyt the winter, 95 — ^retijurns to
Irkutsk ijrith Captain B^Ungs, 96 — ar-
rested by order of the empress, ibi4. —
• left on the frontiers of Pol^i^d, 97 —
tribute to the universality of femate
kindness, ibid. — ^iieaches London, 98 —
eiigages to explore 4/rica, ibid, — his ac-
count of his sufferings, 99 — ^r^m^rk^ OQ
th^ Nile and Egypt, ibid — diejs at CakOf
lOO^his person and c^iaracter, ibid*
Ledyard y<5>n), xxv. 213.
Xee, criticism 01^ the dramatic lyptings of,
xxix. 422.
'- Ann, account of a sect ca^ed 5^ai|9t?i
founded by, xxvii. 97.
Boo, xx^. 74.
I General, xxvi. 371.
Nathaniel, xxii. 403.
— Sir George, ^v. 409.
— and Kennedy, Messr?^ English
botany much indebted tp, xjdv. ilb,
■ :— x^ody. 169.
Leeke, Captain, accoi^ given by, Qf the
activity with which the slave h^a.^ is
ci^riied on, zxviii. 164.
Lees, Sir Harcourt, x|:^ii. 253.
Leetzen, xxvi. 388.
Lef(§bre, Gteneral^ xxxviii. 2Q1.
l.efebvre-Desnouettes, General, compelled
to raise th/e siege of ^arjagoxa, xxi^ 75-
' 77. ' '
Le Fevr9, J^an, xxi. 382.
J«efranc, xxix. 26.
Legendr6, xxiii. 357.
Legge, intrigues of, xxv. 4p4 j xzyji. 185.
xxix. 37 J xxxii. 485.
Legl^ Mr., xxii. 448, 449,458 ; xxiy. 147 ;
. xxvii. 544, noie.
Legouv^'s Mort d*Abel, roijoarks on, 7i^*
51,52.
Le Grand, xxi. 96,
Le Grice; as one.pf jthf |jc{iQ.9)li^Uov» fd
Mr. L. Hunt; chaiaderiMd, xusii.
408,
Leibnitz, xxii. 162; xxiii. 157 ; x»vi. 478,
479 ; xxviii. 37 ; xxi^ix. 4.03, 435.
LeiceiAQr (Karl of). Bee Pud4<^,
————— xxvi. 144 J jxviii. 66 j
xxxvii. 221 ; xxxviii. 396.
Leigh, Chandos, xxxvii. 405.
Dr., xxiii. 420.
Mr., xxxvii. 405.
^eighto9, Dr.. notice of his journal^ xxxv.
131.
»xii. 158.
Leilah, xxxi 208.
Leinster, Duke of, xxxi. 495 : xxxyi. 69.
]Le Jenne, Louis, xxiv. 534.
Leland, DrM extract from, xxxiiL 434,
435.
causes for the acknowledg-
ment of the Pope's authority in Ireland,
xxxviii. 584, 585.
xxiv. 404.
Li^us, xxiv. 556; xxix. 38 ; xxxiii. 281.
Lelorrain, M., xxviii. 60 ; researches of in
£gyp^, 75 — his falsehoods exposed, 7^
Lely, Rev. G., character of, xxxviii. 308.
— Sir Peter, remarks on, xxxviii. 384»
xxxiii. 292.
Lemercier's Levite d'£phraim, character
of ,^ xxix. 50) §1.
Lemierre, xxix. 26.
Lemon, Mr., xxxii. 443 ; xxxvi. 43.
Lemonuier, Madame, seduction and sui-
cide of, xxviii. 284.
Lemontry, M., notice of, xxvi. 229.
Lempriere, xxx. 383 ; xxxvii 418 ; xxxviii.
201.
Lendet, R., xxix. 570.
Le Neve, Mr. Phihp, xxxi. 102, 110.
Leonep, xxii. 320.
Lenoir, M., making the quarries in Paris
a receptacle for ue dead, first proposed
by, xxi. 385, 386.
Lentulus, xxviii. 291.
Leo, xxiii. 146 ; xxv. 52.
Leo Africanus, xxiiL 238, noie; xxvii.
216 ; xxxiii. 544.
Leo AUatius, xxiii. 153.
Archbishop of Ravenna, xxii. 68.
— Kmperor, xxii. 65.
the philosopher, literature encou-
raged by, xxiii. 140.
— X», xxi. 496, note — xxiv. 665 ; xxvii.-
46 ; xxviii. 322,367 ; xxxii. 369 ; xxxiii.
2.
XII., xxxvii. 471.
Leocrates, analysis of Lycurgus's speech-
ag^ainst, xxix. 319-322 ; xxxiii. 352. .
Leofri(;)C) xxxii. ^8.
Leon, xxix. 324.
Don J. P. de, xxix. 264.
Luis de, xxxviii. 374.
Leoncio, xxv. 7; 10«^
Digitized by
Googk
108
PART I— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTBRLT
Leoni, xxvii. 490.
Leonidas, xxxiv. 176. See Giover,
Xeonor, xxvi. 206.
Leonora, xxx. 51.
Leonsaimo, a Japanese, artful conduct of.
xxii. 123.
Leontes, character of, xxix. 417,
lieoutius, XXV. 358, note.
Leopold, Grand Duke of Tuscany, abo-
lished capital punishments in his terri-
tories, xxiv. 234 — beneficial effects of
that measure accounted for, 235 — re-
marks on his system of punishment, '
237,238.
Lepaux, xxviii. 498.
Lepel, Mary, notice of the correspondence
of, with Lady Suffolk, xxx. 552.
Lepidus, xxiv. 350.
Lepignietti, xxix. 96.
Lerma, Duke of, xxvi. 189 ; xxxiv. 351.
Lerouge, horrid murder of, xxviii. 297.
Le Roys, xxxiv. 78,
Le Sage, anecdote of, xxvii. 391— cha-
. racter of his Turcaret, xxix. 420.
— xxiv. 512; xxix. 27 j xxxiv.
349, 352, 354 ; xxxv. 522.
LesUe, xxii. 424 j xxv. 197.
Professor, xxxiv. 423.
' ■ Rev. G., character of, xxxviii. 308.
Lessing, notice of, xxix. 427 j xxxv. 180,
565.
L'Estrange, Hamond, notice of his style,
^ xxxv. 188.
— — Sir Roger, xxxv. 185.
Lesueur, xxviii. 274.
Lethellier, Mr., xxxiv. 268, note,
Le Tourneur, xxix. 437.
Leucius, xxv. 358, note,
' — Charinus, xxv. 358, note,
Le Vaillant, defence of the Hottentot
character, xxv. 454.
Levesque, M., opinion of, on the uncer-
tainty of the early Roman history,
xxvii. 280.
Levet, page to King Charles I., attests
having seen him write ' Icon Basilike,*
xxxii. 493, 494.
Levett, xxv. 241, 263, 264.
Levis, Due de, xxi. 395.
Lewes, Rev. H. D., xxxvi. 3.
Lewines, xxxvi. 79, 80.
Lewis, the traveller, xxxviii. 90.
— Dr., notice of his successful cure of
Hayley, the poet, when a child, xxxi.
268,
— — General, xxvii. 417.
■■ the German, xxv. 551.
i— M. G., xxvii. 480.
— Monk, xxxi. 483 ; xxxiv. 247,
' Mr., xxi. 97, 241.
— Thomas, xxiv. 227.
— — XI., xxxvii. 199.
. XIVy xxxiv. 63,
Lewis and Clarke, xxvi. 285 ; xxix. 14.
Ley^on, La Nobla, xxxvii. 55.
Leyden, Dr., xxi. 96, 97— tale of the
frog-lover, 98.
xxviii. 121.
L'H6pital, xxv. 555 ; xxvii. 155.
Libanius, xxiii. 139, 142.
Lichfield, Lady, xxxiii. 290.
Licinius Macer, xxvii. 274.
Licymnion, xxi. 284.
Liddon, Lieutenant, spirited conduct of,
XXV. 186, 216.
Lidiard's, Mr., account of American li-
berty, xxix. 359, 360.
Liebel, Ignace, notice of some Greek
verses composed by, xxiv. 394, note,
-; xxii 339.
Lightfoot, Rev. R. John, extract from his
Temple Service, xxxviii. 20, note,
xxiii. 302; xxv. 349; xxix.
300 ; xxxv. 90, 99.
Ligny, Lord of, xxxii. 360, 361, 362, 366.
Ligon, Richard, observations on W^ In-
dian fruits, xxxviii. 200 — early history
of Barbadoes by, 224.
Lilbume, John, xxxvi. 32, 521.
Lilla Fatma, account of Captain Lyon's
interview with, xxv. 28.
Lillo, xxvii. 481.
Lilly, W., the eminent astrologer, notice
of, xxvi. 184-187.
xxi. 138; xxxv. 550.
Lily, William, excellence of his gram-
mar and method of teaching, xxxix. 109.
Limborch, xxx. 111; xxxiii. 144.
Limerick, Bishop of. See Jebb.
Linacre, Thomas, xxxix. 375.
Linant, expected productions from his pen
and pencil, xxviii. 88— discovery of ft
papyrus by him, part of the last book
of the Iliad, ibid., note ; post'tuhemnee
of a figure of an Egyptian Queen, xxxi.
467 — state and course of the Azrek,
472, 473 — his expedition to Africa,
xxxviii. 113.
Linch's law, as once practised in the back
settlements of the United States, xxxix.
351.
Lincoln, Henry, seventh Earl of, xxvi.
431.
— — — ninth Earl of, xxvi. 431.
— 1 Lord, xxvii. 200.
— Lord Admiral, xxxviii. 383.
bigotry of Hugh Bishop of, xxi,
367,
Lind, xxx. 150.
Lindenau, Baron de, xxvi. 515.
Lindsay, Lieut, xxvi. 445 ; xxxvii. 258.
Lindsay v. Tovey, notice of the case for
a divorce, xxv. 238, 263, 267.
- Dr. James, xxxiii. 593, note,
Lindsey, Dr., xxxii. 421, note,
* ^- Mr., xxxfii. 593. -
Digitized by
Googk
Reyibw.
IND?X OP NAMES.
109
Itingard's, Dr., History of England, Vols.
III. and IV., character of, xxxiii. 5 —
: instances of his glossing over facts, 6,
25 — his theory of the reign of Eliza-
beth, 26 — ^refuted by a statement of
facts, 27-32.
^ — ^— extols the papal law of
clerical celibacy, zxxii. 35, 36 — censured
by Mr. Hallam, xxxvii. 208, 209 —
coloured and distorted views o£ xxxviii.
570.
Lingo, xxiii. 372.
Linguet, xxvi. 233, 240.
Linhares, Gonde de, xxxii. 131.
Linley, Miss, xxxiii. 567, 568-rCaptain
Matthews's proposals to, 569.
Linnaeus, notice of his division of the
genus * Homo,' xxxii. 85, 86— and of
his Systema Naturae, xxxix. 409, 425.
xxi, 54, 66, 341 ; xxiU. 247 ;
XXV. 378; xxviii. 80 j xxx. 8, 119 j
xxxiv. 265, 509; xxxvi. 221; xxxvii.
453.
Lintot, xxiii. 412.
Linus, xxiv. 454, note.
Lira, xxv. 6, 12.
Lise, xxix. 434.
Lisette, xxix. 431.
Lisle, xxv. 311 ; xxx. 276.
Lismahago, xxi. 89.
Listen, xxxiv. 202, 248, 452.
Lisuarte, King, xxxii. 360.
Little, Mr., xxxvii. 347.
— -— Mrs., xxix. 354.
Littleton, liord, charged with delay in the
business of Chancery, xxx. 276.
xxxiL 349; xxxix. 58, 74.
Mr., xxiv. 218.
Lively, Edward, notice of, xxiiL 302.
Liverpool, Lord, Letter to, on New
Churches, xxiii. 549 — speech of, on the
foreign trade, xxiv. 281.
■ . instance of his liberal
political conduct, xxxviii. 282.
— xxii. 160; xxviii. 262 ;
xxxiii. 202; xxxiv. 117.
Livingston, Mr., xxi. 67.
Livin^ne, Mr., xxxiii. 185.
liivima, Major, xxxviii. 450.
Livy, Roman order of march, as described
by, xxv. 71, 72 — notice of the argu-
ments of, upon the probable conse-
quences that would have ensued if
Alexander had invaded Italy, 168, and
note — ^remarks on his History of Rome,
xxvii. 276, 277.
■ his competency as an historian, xxxii.
81, 82.
■ xxi. 424 ; xxiii. 458 ; xxvii. 54 ;
xxx. 388 ; xxxii. 69, 70, 7 1.
Llandaff, Bishop of, observations by him,
on. an anecdote told of Dr. Waterland,
' tending to show^ that the latter believ^
the text of 1 John v. 7 to be spurious,
xxxiii. 67.
Llano, xxx. 177.
Llewellyn ap Jorwerth, xxxiv. 325.
Llorente, anecdote from his history of the
Spanish Inquisition, xxxvi. 316, 323.
xxix. 246 ; xxxiii. 158.
Lloyd, Dr. Barthol., Professor, Elemen-
tary Treatise of Mechanical Philosophy
for the use of the Students of the Uni-
versity of Dublin, xxxix. 432 — com-
mendation of the work, 444 — remarks
on the style, 447 — elegance with which
he has unfolded the general theory of
the curvilinear motion, 448 — suggested
improvements, 450 — ^further encomium^
451.
Lobeck, xxii. 327.
Lobel, xxiv. 411.
Lochinvar, the Young, xxxv. 71.
Lochleven, xxvi. 142,
Locke, John, difiKsrent object of his theory
from that proposed by Dr. Reid, xxvi.
479-486 — stridures on the method pur-
sued by him in his treatise, 487-490 —
remarks on his theory for interpreting
St. Paul's Epistles, xxx. 84, 85.
■ extract from his work on education,
xxxvi. 220, 221.
xxi. 8; xxii. 14; xxiii. 156,163,418 ;
xxiv. 52; xxvii. 136, 249, 259; xxix.
171 ; xxxi. 488 ; xxxii. 308 ; xxxv. 153,
182, 189, 404 ; xxxviii. 385 ; xxxix.
203.
Lockhart, Edmonstone v., xxv. 240, 263.
Elliot, xxxvii. 342.
Sir C. M., xxxvii. 342.
Lockier, Dean, xxiii. 407 — his opinion on
Pope's character of Addison, 420.
Lockit, xxx. 549.
Lockman, John, tale of a vizier, xxxix.
99.
Locksley, xxvi. 127.
Loddiges, Mr., xxxiv. 169.
Lodge, Edm., heavy tax on his Portraits
of lUustrious Personages, xxi. 203 — re-
marks on his Portraits, xxxviii. 385,
389, 393, 401-409.
xxix. 37.
Lodovico, Duke of Milan, xxxviii. 199.
Logistilla, xxx. 43.
Loguy, Madame de, xxxiv. 436.
Loison, xxix. 79.
Lok, John, notice of the travels of, in
Palestine, xxiv. 314.
Loke, xxi. 96, 105.
Loki, xxii. 354.
Lollard, Walter, xxxiii. 140.
Lolly, xxv. 230, note, 239, 267.
Lombard, Peter, xxvi. 336, noie,
Lombardo, Pietro, xxxii. 63.
Lomonosoff, xxvi. 40.
London^ z^v. 406^ 407*
Digitized by
Googk
ntf
PARr t-INDW bt NAMES.
QvAifaatLi
Londonderry, Leid, ^iSbrti of^ to pbtain
the abolitioa of the slave-trade by the
continental powers, xxvi. 59, 60 — ^re-
marks on Buonaparte's contersatioAs
' respecting him, 250-252.
■ ixvi. 81, note; itxviii.
163 ; XXX. 533 j xxriv. 189 j xxxvr.4eO.
Long, Alfwold, xxxix. 45.
' . Dr., prebendary of Exeter, xxxii.
468, 492.
Edric, xxxix. 44.
Major, object of the expedition of,
to the Rocky Mountains, xxix. 2 — se-
cond Expedition of, 458, note,
-: xxxvii. 455.
- — Mr., xxxiii. 569, 571 ; xxxtL 294.
Sir C^ Short Remarks and Sug-
gestions upon the Improvements now
carried on, xxxiv. IttO — analysis of
them, 187-189.
: XXX. 428.
Longinus, in his reference to the JBclRttti
Lyrics, does not notice the digtottoa,
±Xvii. 50, 393.
^ XXV. 518 ; xxvi. 245 j xxix. 334.
Longman, xxxisf . 111.
and Co., Messrs., loss^es sus-
• tained by, under existing Copyright act,
xxi. 202, 203— travels published by,
xixi. 197.
.: xxT^iiiM82.
Longspee, Winiam, Eatrl of Salisbury,
biographical accomit of, XXxiv. 325,
327,328.
Lonsdale, Earl of, muiiificence of, in
forming the College of St. Bees, xxifi.
581, ^nAttote,
Looff Ulee Khan, notice of, xxxvi. 374.
Lope de Vega, character of the drariiiCs of,
xxiii. 475 — notice of the dramas Of,
• XXV. 1— judicious remark of Lord ilol-
land on him, 4, 5.
— amount of Ms dramatic
works above those of the best French
ftuthro^s, xxix. 40 — estimation of his
plays by the Spaniards after the lapse
of two centuries, xxxiv. 354.
Lopez, Don Diego, xxii. 362.
Lopez, Don Ynigo de Ayala, xxxii. 374.
Lor^dano, xxvfi. 486 — sketch of the cha-
racter of, 505.
Jacopo, xxxi. 438.
Lorenzini, xxiv. 133.
Lorenzo, xxii. 410 ; xxvii. 382.
Loriga, Colonel, xxxviii. 460, 478.
Loring.'xxvi. 370.
Loris, Guillaume de, xxi. 169' } £xvii. 324.
Lormian, M. B., xxix. 26.
Lorrain, Le, xxxii. 378.
Losada, Diego de, xxi. 331.
Lothaire, xxv. 551.
Larbere, La, xxxiii. 104, 126.
Loughborough; Lord, zni. 53^
Lotiii VI., xxv. 552.
VIL, xxxix. 47.
VIII., account of the e^ionuilidn
ofy in 1793, xxi. 374.
IX., t±v. 547, 560, 56^; ixxfii
159.
X., xtv. 547.
XL, ixv. 555 t x±m. 147 ; ixvfii.
275.
Jiiquires into the pfeweiiittons of
the inquisitors amongst the Walden^s,
xxxiii. 160, 364.
xxxi. 403.
XII., xxv. 247, notei d&5, 670 f
±h^. 37d.
XIII., xxii. 382,- xxt. 545, 556;
ixViii. 254 ; xxti. 409.
-.:— XIV., body of, fexhuftttited iri 1793,
xxi. 374— opftiion of, on the Eng&h
coundfe, at the iccea^on of Queen
Anne, xXiii. 9, 10.
"^ masstiieres iti his reign, Jit^»
568 — learning encouraged by, xxvL 19,
- state of the French fin&m^ in
his time, xxvii. 156 — ^revokerf the edict
of Nantes, 511 — ^remarks on the con-
sequences of that revocation, ibid. 512.
remarks of, on the faith Of
treaties, xixx. 192, 193 — observations on
Massillon's fimeral oration on, 290-292.
— XIV., negociatrons of, with Ferdi-
nand Charles, Duke of Mantua, for the
fortress of Casal, xxxiv. 22-24— is fofied,
25 — causes Mathioli, the Duke's agent,
to be Arrested, 26, 27— observations on
his treatment of the latter, 32.
the period of his reign charac-
terized, xxxix. 481.
xxiii. ^, 8^ 485; xxiv. 406,'
xxv. 74, 75, 5-15, 546, 547; xxvi. 25,
189,213; xxvii. 147, 167, 171, 252;
xxviii. 14, 274; xxix. 41 ; xxx. 359 ;
xxxH. ^50, 433; xxxiii. 104; xxxvi*
427; xxxvii. 80, 252.
— XV., body of, exhumated in 1793,-
xxi. 374 ; his method of obtaining in-
formation of the interiosr of France,
xxiii. 163.
embarrassed finainees of, trfti.
156-159— his profligacy, 172.
. xxv, 546, 557; xxvi. 22; xxvii.
154 ; tt^'m. 29, 274 j xxxvii. 470.
. — XVI., character Of, xxv. 544, and
xxviii. 276.
embarrassed state of his finances,
xxvii. 162-166 — ^his exemplary conduct
of no influence in reforming the profli^
gate morals of the French nobility » 173
— remarks on his tragical death, 1 78. -
eflbrtsmstde to save him and
the royai family from the revolutionists,
xxviii. 300 — ^plan of their escape to Va-
t^im, 9ai|3t2— Ae Ihiehfiil&d'Axigott^
Digitized by
Googk
Rs^ufw*
iNDEl Oif NAMES.
ih
' l^e'saccotmtofit, 4d5 — ^itsfrusfr^C^n,
303j 304 — iiouid iicceptsthe cofisfitution
proposed by the Constituent Assembly,
307, 308— insulted by that body, 461—.
anecdote of his apa&y, timidity, at ^
serve, 457.
Louis XVI., xxii. 530 ; xxiii. 44$; jbcy.
551, 557 J xxvi. 22, 239, note ; xxvil
154 ; xxvfii. 36, 456 5 xxx. 351 j jaocvi.
310.
- XVIII. Narraitive of hisT Journey io
Bruxelles and Coblentz, in J791,<txTiii.
464— extracts from it, with rernaric? on
hi* frivolous conduct, 467-469^.
<ii. 452} xxiii. 83, 90, 191,
194; XXV. 137,- xxvii. 174; xxviii.
1671 XXX. 371,443.
the DebonnaJr, xxv. 553.
- — the Fit, xxv. 551.
-::::— King of Hungary, fake^ poissesfsibn
of Naples in revenge for tite mitrder of
Iris brother Andrew, xxii. 70 — is driven
out thence, and ih'akes ieiia^f ibid. 71.
-a — . le Grand, xxVJ. 190.
le Gros, xxvii. 147;
■ I Prince, x^dir. 35.
— - St., X3dv. 322.
-:-; — of Tarento, suspectfe* of an in-
trigue with Jbanna, Queen of Nappies,
xxxi. 68, 69 — ^married to her, 70.
Louis, xivii. 382.
Louifo; xxii. 339, miie.
Loijon, xxix. 27.
toury, txi. 40.
Ltwvois, Le TelKet de, ArcHbisfiofp^ of
Rheims, xiii. 440.
-; M. de, Lettfer to M. de St. Wai^,
3btxiv. 26.
Lovat, Lord, x*xVi. 517.
Love, an actor, xxxvi. 183.
Christopher, xxxvi. 553.
-i Mr., ixv. 336.
Loveday, Mr., xx^. 67, 68; xsxvi. 321.
Lovel, xxvii. 340.
Lord, sketch ^ the Charaicter df,
xxviii. 56.
Lovelace, xxiv. 52*9' j xxvi. 130.
Lovett, Mr., xxxvii. 537.
Low, Mr., Consul At Malta!, xixii. 435.
Lo^e, Joseph, on the Presenft State of
England, xxxii. 160 — plan and cha-
racter of his work, 161. Bee England,
Part II.
■ On the subject of corn,
^footed, itqtxvii. 432, note,
— "— Sir Hudsjon, vindication of, firom
the char^ of preventing Buonaparte
- from receiving newspapers, ixvSt. 228-
280— of incapacity, 230— of tampering
with Mr. O'Meara, to become a spy on
Buonaparte, 231-238— of cruelty to-
WSETds bmt, 238-242— remarks oU Btio-
■- 9ifMW'tf^l)g#iv«tantf«ttIiiBi/24^^
Lowe, Sir Hudson, xxx. 580.
Lowestofie, xxvii. 351, 358.
Lowick, xxxvi. 513.
Lowndes, Mr., xxvii. 249, 259.
Lowrie, Misses, xxv. 96.
Lowth, Bishop, give? Pscrr tf prebend itf
St. Paul's, xxxix. 268.
Dr., xxiii. 401, 4»i', xxxvi. 243, .'
245 ; xxxviij. 32.
Lowthef, Lord, xxviii. 441.
Mr., visit to Peyrani, moderafbr 6f
the Vaudois, xxxiii. 142.
Sir Grerard, xx < Vl r . 245.
Loyola, Ignatius, charact^ of; xxvi. 278.
: ^^— xxiv. 5 ; xlv.21 ; xxvfii;
508.
Lo^ano, Cordoba of America, why sto .
f^rtied, ^x^i. 292..
.' El Cbnde de, xxJi.41.
Lubin, xxvi. 241.
Lubovitii, XXXV. 71.
Lucan^ Erictho atj x^. 8 — absence of the
hiatus in, xxvii. 61.
— ixxii. 159; Xxxiv. 40^; kxiviii.
371.
Lucas, xiV. 311.
Paul,' character of the Fc^aners,
xxv. 32.
xxii. lOa, 291 ; ixv. 44 ; xxvf. 204.
Lucero, xxix. 375.
Lucia, St., xxix. 456.
btrcianyhis several translators enumeracted,
xxxvii 32 — ^the connecting link betv^eeu
the did literature and the new, 33 —
compared to Voltaire, 34 — his personal
hSstory, ibid. — controversy as to his
patrons, 35— betteir arrangement of his
Works desirable, 36 — state of the l^o-
man Empire in hii^ time, 39-48^
deemed not to have been a Christifto,
49.
' xxi. S6l; xxii. 339; 3^11. T43,
149; XXV. 515; xxvii. 385; xj^v. 35tJ,
4'63; xxxvi. 43.
hxicisiiius,intyf.^b'^,note,
Lucifer, xxii. 353; 3«vi. 19^6 ; xxvii. 128,
511.
Lucilla, XXviS. 32;^.
Lucille, xxix. 430^.
Luciria, xxvffi. 422.
Lucock, xxxi. 19.
Lucre, xxiv. 407.
Lucrece, xxiX. 49, 50.
Lucretia, xxii. 406j xxiii. 523 ; xxvii. 276^
298; Xxviir. 105 ; acxx. .51.
Lucretius, date of his death, xxi. 36 —
book that has more poetry in it than
Lucretius, 470— paticity of instatiCes of
the hiatus in, xxvil 61.
■ xxxii. 159.
Luc's, M. de, exaitainatlotf of the Hutto-
nian theory of the earth; itxix 142-144, -
LucuUuSi xndi« 241.
Digitized by
Googk
112
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QVAMTBRLX
Ludlow, xzv. 294, 311— character of^319,
320, 325, 327, 332.
Ludovic, xxiv. 556.
Ludovico, xxii. 408.
— — £nio, XXV. 22.
Luis, Don, xxix. 376.
Luke, Captain, xxvi. 66, 67.
St., xxiv. 395 J xxvi. 388.
Liikin, Mr., xxii. 40.
Lully, Raymond, the alchemist^ notice of,
xxvi. 200, 206.
Lullys, xxiv. 343.
Lumley, Col., xxxix. 177.
■ Lord, XXX, 552.
Luridan, xxii. 367.
Lushingtou, Dr., xxiv. 224, 258; xxx.
583.
Luther, Martin, his omission of the dis-
?uted clause in 1 John v. 7, accounted
or, xxxiii. 78 — ^remarks on, xxxvii. 51
—charged with falsehood, 209 — ^psalms
versified by, xxxviii. 24, 25.
> xxi.329j xxiii.143,296,
300, 570, 573; xxiv. 5, 36, 51; xxv.
559; xxviii. 14; xxix. 298; xxx. 174;
xxxi. 381 1 xxxiii. 9, 141, 378; xxxvi.
2, 325 ; xxxvii. 66, 83, 196, 2U4.
Lutin, xxvii. 349.
Lutkens, Professor, xxxii. 21.
Lutrin, xxi. 506.
Lutwidge, Capt., xxxvii. 535.
Luzan, notice of his Reglas de la Poesia,
xxix. 425.
Lyall, Dr. Robert, character of the Rus-
sians, &c.xxxi. 146 — biograpliical notice
of the Doctor, and of his qualifications,
147 — character of his work, 146-148 —
condemnation of the Russians, 149 —
vindication of the character of the Rus-
sian officers, 150, 151 — ^frauds practised
by Russians, 152-154 — remark thereon,
155 — and on other anecdotes re-
lated by the Doctor, 156, 157 — charac-
ter of the Russian women, 1 58 — ^mer-
chants, 159 — ^Lord Macartney's opinion
of them opposed to Dr. Ly all's, 160 —
clergy and faith of the Greek church,
161 — abuses in the civil administration
of the empire, 163, 164 — judicious con-
duct of the Emperor Alexander, 166.
■ XXXV. 372 ; xxxix. 3.
Lycon, xxiv. 444, 450.
Lycophron, xxiii. 147 ; xxv. 505 ; xxxiii.
565.
Lycurgus, speech of, against Leocraies,
analysed, xxix. 319-322.
■ xxii. 287 ; xxv. 537 ; xxvii. 73,
384; xxxiii. 340; xxxix. 291.
Lycus, xxxiii. 336.
Lydia, xxiii. 506.
Lydiard, the pedestrian traveller, xxxi.
216, 217. See Ledyard.
Lyly, xxix, 37.
Lynceus, xxiii. 248, mte, 258 — notice of
his book on fishmongers, 261.
Lyndhurst, Lord^ on Catholic casuistry,
xxxviii. 563.
Lynes, Rev. John, Dr. Parr married to his
sister, xxxix. 298.
Lynne, Mr., xxv. 281.
Lyon, Comte de, xxiii. 38.
— Lieut, (afterwards Capt.), offers to
accompany Mr. Ritchie to Africa, xxiii.
227 — ^is appointed to succeed him as
Vice-consul at Mourzouk, 229.
Narrative of Travels in
Northern Africa, reviewed, xxv. 25 —
notice of the inhabitants of the Ghanan
Mountains, 26 — ^tricks of the Maraboots,
27 — departure of Captain Lyon for
Mourzouk, Aid. — interview with an
Afiican beauty, 28 — description - of
Sockua and its inhabitants, 29 — ^town
of Hoon, 30 — geological structure of the
Soudah mountains, ibid, — effects of the
intense heat on dead bodies, 30, 31 —
arrives in the country of Fezzan, 31—
character and habits of the inhabitants,
32, 33 — agriculture, 33 — ^revenues of the
sovereign, ibid. 34 — description of the
capital, Mourzouk, ibid. — dress of the
women, 35 — poetry of the Fezzaners,
35, 36 — geology of Tripoli and Fezzan,
36, 37— description of the author's house
at Mourzouk, 38 — ^his unpleasant situa-
tion, 38 — generous conduct of a Moor
to him, 39 — death and interment of his
companion, Mr. Ritchie, ibid, 40 — ac-
count of the slave-hunters and slave-
dealers of the interior of Africa, 42, 43
— notice of the Tuarick people, 44 —
traditions of the natives, ibid. — their
opinion of the identity of the Niger and
the Nile of Egypt, 45.
xxvi. 56; xxix. 509;
xxx. 240, 271, note; xxxi. 448, 454,
458; xxxiii. 519, 521.
Lysander, xxxvi. 204.
Lysanias, xxvi. 388.
Lyra, Major, xxxviii. 477.
Lyons v. Blenkin, xxxix. 193.
Lysias, Letter of, to the Prince Regent,
xxii. 430 — influence of the morals of a
court on those of the community, 430-
432 — purity of the British court during
the reign of George III., 432, 433—
extracts from the work, enforcing a con-
tinuance of the same purity of morals,
433-436 — ^tribute to the memory of
George III., 436.
inveighed strongly against syco-
phants, xxiii. 267, no/e— character of his
writings, xxvi. 259, 260 — character of,
as an orator, xxix. 327, 329 — compared
. with Isseus, 328 — ^notice of his oration
against Andocides, ^24^ 3l25«-{ui|dysi8
Digitized by
Googk
Review. INDEX OF NAMES.
of his oration against Eratosthenes, 330-
333.
113
333.
Lysias; xxiii. 139; xxiv. 441, note, 453,
note; xxvi. 247, 257 ; xxvii. 390, 402 j
xxxiii. 339. 340, note; xxxir. 171.
Lysicles, xxiii. 477.
Lysimachus, xxx. 395.
Lysippus, XXV. 156; xxxiii. 564 ; xxxiv. 112.
Lysistrata, extract from, xxii. 172, 173.
Lj^ons, Mr., injury to, from existing Copy-
right Act, xxi. 203.
Lyttelton, Lord, sketch of the character of,
xxviiL 54.
' Sir G., intrigues of, xxv. 404,
405.
Lyttleton, xxxii, 277.
M.
318.
Mabillon,
Mably, xxv. 542.
M'Adam, J. L., Tracts on the Making of
Roads, reviewed, xxiii. 96 — ^his qualifi-
cations, 100 — his statements relative to
the actual improvements of certain
roads, 100, 101 — ^testimony to the
value of his> method, 101, 102 — ^recom-
mends the materials for the formation
of roads to be broken small, and why,
103, 104 — and that women and chil-
dren should be employed in breaking
them, 104 — ^his mode of making a road
over a boggy or swampy soil, 105, 106.
^^- abuses in the appointment
of surveyors of roads mentioned by, xxiii.
101.
^— xxx. 374.
Macaria, xxii. 181.
Macarius, xxii. 310.
• • St., mortification of, xxii. 64, 65.
M* Arthur, Mr., xxiv. 60 ; xxxvi. 597.
■ introduced fine wooUed
sheep into New South Wales,xxxvii. 10.
Macartney, Lady, xxi. 473.
■ Lord, his opinion of the Rus-
sians of his day, xxxi. 149, 150 — of the
merchants, 160 — account of their con-
fession of faith, 161.
-xxi. 72, 183; xxx. 362;
xxxvi. 496.
■ lieut-Gren., xxvi. 432.
M'Aulay, Allen, xxvi. 126, 127.
Macaulay, T. B., extract from the speech
of, at the first meeting of the Anti-
Slavery Society, xxxii. 510-512 — stric-
tures on it, 612-516.
• — • Mr. Babington, translation of
Filicaia*s magnificent ode on the Deli-
verance of Vienna, xxxvii. 92.
Zach., Tract on Negro-Slavery,
reviewed, xxix. 475-479, 480. See
Negro- Slavery, Part II.
Macauley, Mrs., xxxvii. 229.
M'Bean, Brig.-Gen., xxxv. 491.
Macbeth, character of, xxix. 417.
— how performed by Mr. Kemble,
xxxiv. 218, 219 — ^the play of, how got
up under his direction, 227, 228.
xxii. 403 ; xxiv. 362 ; xxv. 345,
430; xxix. 429.
I Lady, xxix. 429.
VOL. XL. NO. JJULIX.
Macbriar, xxiii. 211.
Mac Gall, Mr., xxxvii. 342.
McCarthy, Sir Charles, his death a great
loss to the inhabitants of Sierra Leone,
xxxi. 445.
. xxvii. 176; xxxii. 35.
• General, notice of, xxix. 358,
359.
Macclesfield, Lord, xxxix. 188.
M'Cormick, Rose, xxi. 478.
M'Cracken, xxxvi. 68.
M*Creagh, Brig.-Gren., xxxv. 499.
M*Crie, Dr. T., progress and suppression
of the reformation in Italy in the six-
teenth century, xxxvii. 50.
M'Culloch, a captain in the American ser-
vice, conduct of, xxxi. 102.
• Dr., notice of his treatise on
the art of making wine, xxxii. 234, 262.
J. R., theory of, with regard to
absenteeism, xxxiii. 458, 459 — remarks
on hb theory, 459-461.
xxii. 54 ; xxxviii. 65.
Mac Donald of Boisdale, xxxvi. 209.
— ^ of Boradale, notice of, xxxvi.
210.
of Glenco, xxxvii. 257.
of Sleate, xxxvi. 209.
Marshal, xxii. 395.
Mr., xxiv. 218.
SirA.,xxiy.216,219,221,224.
Macdonnel, Mr., xxviii. 73.
Macdonnell, Alexander, considerations on
negro slavery, &c. xxxii. 506 — ^incau-
tious language of some advocates for
the extinction or mitigation of slavery,
625, 526.
Mr., comparative view of the
expenditiure of a London and of a Pari-
sian mechanic, xxxv. 295.
Rev. Mr., statement by, xxxvi.
315,316.
Mace, notice of, xxxiii. 96, 97.
Mac Eagh, xxvi. 126.
Macedo, A. de Sa e, xxvii. !•
Macfaddin, xxi. 147.
M'Gregor, Helen, xxvii. 339.
Sir Gregor, xxviii. 157, 161 ;
xxxvii. 576, note.
M'Gregors, xxi. 352.
M^Grigor, Sir James, opinion of, that the
plague is contagious, xxxiii, 2^4.
Digitized by
Googk
114
PART L^INDBX OF NAMES.
QuABTXmLY
M'Qrigor, xzx. 433.
M^Guary, Col., xxix. 357.
Machado, D. Catharina, xxvii. 15.
M^Hale, Dr., Bishop of Maronia, xxxvu.
472 — statement of, that the Pope has
the power of dispeniing, 480 — wrote the
letters of Hierophilos, 481 — remarks on
them, 482.
— — — note in answer to his complaint
of being accused of having transgressed
the Statutes of Maynootb, xxxviii. 298.
Machault, xxvii. 158.
Machaut, G. de, xxiv. 534.
Machiavel, opinion of, on the origin of the
Agrarian law, xxvii. 3U2, noie — anecdote
of, xxviii. 368, 369 — ambitious maxim
of, xxix. 382 — remarks on, xxxvii. 562.
xxii. 486 ; xxiv. 82, 296 ; xxv.
15; xxvii. 279, 292. note, 295, 299 ;
xxix. 319, noie; xxxi. 440; xxxii. 65.
M*Int)ie, xxvu. 340,
M^Ivor, Fergus, xxvii. 340.
— — Flora, xxvi. 140 — comparison of
the character of, with that of Minna,
471.
Mackay, xxvi. 436.
Mackensie, xxxvi. 269 ; xxxviii. 337.
— ^-^— a writer in the Mirror and
Lounger, xxxi. 293.
Dr., opinion
of, that the
plague is contagious, xxxiii. 2J2.
and Heame, xxi. 227, 249,
261; xxv. 207; xxvi. 411,518.
• John, xxxvL 169<— account of
the reception of Mr. Homers Tragedy of
Douglas, at Edinburgh, 183 — remarks
on the Literary Society of Scotland,
192, 193— reasons for the failure of
Home's * Siege of Aquileia,' 205*-re-
marks on Mr. Home, 206, 207.
Sir A., xxii. 480.
- Sir G., account given hy, of
a woman accused of witchcraft, xxix.
449, 450.
.— -. xxiv, 417, 418.
Mackinna, Mr., xxxix. 503,
Mackintosh, Sir J., answers hy Mr. Plun-
ket and Mr. Canning to his arguments
for a parliamentary investigation into
the proceedings at Manchester, xxii.
5 1 8, 5 ) 9 — a member for a close borough,
527, noie — a member of the Committee
on the Criminal Laws, xxiv. 218 —
number and object of bills introduced
by him on the C^riminal l4aw, in May,
1820, 231— title ^iven by him to the
French people, xxvi. 70— character o^ as
a speaker, xxx. 536.
xxxiii. 580; xxxv.181,227;
xxxvii. 148.
Macklin, anecdote of, xzxiv* 226.
_ xxiii. 513.
Macknighty zzz, 95.
Maclaurin, zxiL 130 ; xxxix. 441.
Maclean, Dr., Inquiry respecting Epidemic
Disease, reviewed, xxvii. 525.
why sent to Constantinople
by the Lavant Company, xxxiiL 239 —
remarks on his pubUcation and evidence
as to the non-contagion of plague,
240— refutation of his arguments, 240«
255 — answers before the Committee of
the House of Commons, 255, 256 — re-
marks thereon, 256, 257.
Mr., removed by Iiord Wellesley
to England, xxxv. 63.
Mac Leod of Mac Leod, xxxvi. 209.
• Mr., xxi. 67, 77.
M'Mahon, Colonel, xxxiii. 590.
Macmichael, Dr., observations of, on the
decrease in the population of Rome, xxx.
147, 435. ,
— — — the progress of opinion on the
subject of contagion, xxxiii. 218. See
P/affue, Part II.
Macneil^ Dr., xxxvi 383.
M'Nevin, xxi. 134.
Dr., xxxvi. 66; xxxviii. 596.
Macomb, General, xxvii. 444.
Macpherson's description of the maisacre
of Glenco, xxxvii. 257.
Macquarrie, Governor, notice of a school
fowided by, in New South Wales, xxiv.
59, 62 — improvements in Hobart Town,
xxvii. 107, 108.
xxvii. 102; xxxil 323, 328,
331, 332 ; xxxvii. 5.
M'Queen, J., Geographical and Commer*
cial View of Northern Central Africa,
reviewed, xxvi. 51— remarks on his hy-
pothesis that the great rivers of Northern
Africa are ramifications from the Niger,
55, 56— recommends the Island of Fer^
uando Po, as the best station for watch-
ing the slave trade, 58.
— — on the West India Colonies,
reviewed, xxx. 559 — observations on Mr.
Steele's treatment of his slaves, 581.
Macquer, xxiii. 466.
M'Quig, Mr., notice of, xxxvL 8.
Macready, xxviii. 109, noie,
Macri, Count, xxix. 99.
M*Tier, xxxvi. 68.
M'Uthiel, xxiii. 364. See aToo/e.
M'WiUiams, xxx. 225.
Madden, Frederick, xxxiv. 272, noie,
Jack, xxxii. 205.
Maddock, xxi. 403, noie,
Maddox, Thomas, ascribes the origin of
the Court of Chancery to the Normans,
xxxix. 49.
xxxiv. 59.
Madeleine, xxix. 36.
— de S. Joseph, xxxvL 331.
Madgett, xxxvi. 72, 73.
Madison^ Amer. Pres.^ cooqitering propea-
Digitized by
Googk
Review*
INDEX OF NAMES.
115
sities of his politics, xxi. 19 — martial
expression of, xxv. 113 — fanfaronnades
of, xxxvii. 277 — personal superintend-
ence on the field, in the affair at Wash-
ington, 506.
Madison, xxxix. 223, 224^ 225.
Madox, xxxviii. 496.
Maelzel, xxxii. 409, 410.
Mulius, xxvii. 305.
Mafiei, different Italian idioms traced by,
to. Latin modes of speech, xxiii. 145,
146 — notice of his tragedy of Merope,
xxiv. 81,82.
■ xxiv. 75; xxix. 426; xxx. 387,
note.
Magdalene di Pazzi, xxxiii. 409.
Magee, Archbishop, xxx. 85 ; xxxii. 158 j
xxxvL 72 ; xxxviii. 582.
Magelhanes, xxi. 251 ; xxx. 232.
Magister, Thomas, xxii. 307.
Magliabecchi, xxiii. 406.
Magnes, xxi. 307.
Magnus, xxii. 307.
Magog, xxiv. 315.
Mahadeo, xxiv. 104, 128.
Maheil, murder of, xxviii. 297.
Mahmoud el Adelanab, xxvii. 217.
the Gasnavide, xxxv. 392.
Mahomed Reza Khan, notice of, xxxvi. 359.
————— Khan Burgashatee, xxxvi. 371
— notice of his opinions, 372.
Mahomet, xxvi. 182 j yxxiii. 83.
xxi. 464 J xxiii. 200, 574, note;
xxiv. 50, 326, 480 ; xxv. 145 ; xxvi.
190, 191, note; xxvii. 37, 144; xxx.
211.
« II., xxiii. 113, 335 ; xxvi. 46.
Ca^riuli, account of the monu-
ment of, xxi. 377.
Mahommed, account of countries and peo-
ple between Tripoli and Timbuctoo,
xxiii. 229.231.
Ali, xxiv. 141 — ^his character,
142.
— xxvii. 216, 229.
Effendi, xxvii. 225.
— el Muckne, kind treatment of
Mr. Ritchie, xxiii. 227.
Mahon, Lord, xxxvi. 298.
Mahoonoo Peloo, xxvii. 370.
Maignan, xxviii. 171.
Maillard, xxviii. 287.
Maimonides, extract from his Preface to
the First Section of the Talmud, xxxv.
96.
xxx. 102, 111; xxxiii. 365,
note ; xxxv. 88, 98.
Maingaud, xxviii. 221, 232.
Maintenon, Madame, xxxvii. 35.
Mainwaring, Dr., xxv. 286.
— — — Mr., opinions of, on the effect
of the present administration of the
criminal law, xxiv. 224.
Mairet, xxix. 34.
Maitland, Col., xxx. 77,
-i^— General, great confidence of, in
the integrity of Toussaint^s character,
xxi. 443.
■ Sir Peregrine, xxiii. 385.
Sir T., xxiii. 112— slanders
against refuted, xxix. 87 — perfidious
conduct of Mr. Hamilton Browne, 89 —
miserable condition of the Ionian Islands
before Sir T. Maitland's residence there
as Lord High Commissioner, 91-94 —
exposure of various charges against him,
95-104 — improvements effected by him
in the administration of justice, 104 —
improving and prosperous condition of
the Ionian Islands under the British
Commissioner's government, 113-116.
— opinion of, that the plague
is contagious, xxxiii. 236.
. xxx. 229, note; xxxix. 5.
Majemon, xxxv. 91.
Maiendie, xxxvii. 416.
Malagrowther, Sir Mungo, xxvii. 344.
Malaprop, Mrs., xxxiii. 565.
Malaspina, xxv. 211.
Malcha, Queen, xxxiii. 30.
Malcolm, Admiral, xxxvii. 518.
Charles, xxv. 149.
— — John, xxix. 445.
Kate, xxv. 149.
Mrs., xxv. 149.
— - Sir J., Memoir of Central India,
reviewed, xxix. 382 — noble testimony to
his services, from the govemor-^neral,
384, 385 — his judicious observations on
the condition and administration of the
British powers in Central India, with
remarks thereon, 404-414. See India,
Partn.
- Political History of
India, xxxv. 32 — ^its plan, ibid. 33 — and
character, 66 — his opinion on the trans-
fer of the government of India to his
majesty's ministers, 33, 34 — ^remarks
thereon, 34, 36 — qualifications requisite
for a director of the East India Com-
pany, 36, 37 — ^business of the Court of
Directors, 37, 39— on the exclusion of
individuals, who have served the East
India Company, from a share in the
government in India, as well as from
the highest offices of adnunistration, 41-
44 — his assertion that Indian affairs do
not receive sufficient attention in par-
liament refuted, 44 — examination of his
views respecting the local government
of India, 45-48 — necessity of revising the
judicial system— 49-51 — and the mode
of collecting the revenue, 51-52 — Sir J.
Malcolm's opinion on the earliest proper
age for persons being employed in the
civil service, 52, 53 — ^suggestions for im-
proving the reg^dation of the Indian
i2
Digitized by LjOOQ IC
116
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
army, 54.58 — abstract of his observa-
tions on the British community in India,
58, 59 — on the half castes or Anglo-
Indians, 60 — on the propagation of
Christianity in India, 61, 62 — and on
the Uberty of the press there, 63-65.
Malcolm (Sir John), xxv. 452 ; xxix. 515,
note; xxx. 212 ; xxxvi. 353; xxxvii. 102 ;
xxxix. 197.
Sir P., xxviii. 248.
Maiden, Lieut, xxxv. 427.
Maldonado, Captain L. F., notice of his
pretended narrative of a voyage in the
Polar Sea, xxvi. 515 — exposure of its
blunders and falsehoods, 516-518.
xxxi. 181.
Malebranche, notice of the argument of,
to disprove the existence of a material
world, xxvi. 481.
xxv. 572. .
Malee Row, xxix. 390.
Malem Danfodio, xxxix. 159.
Malemeino, Heiiricus de, xxix. 534.
Malermi, xxxvii. 56.
Malesherbes, L. de, xxvii. 160.
Malherbes, crypt of, in the catacombs of
Paris, xxi. 388.
Maliky, Abdel Gassam ben, xxxi. 368 —
relation of a visit paid by Europeans to
Timbuctoo, 469.
Malipiero, M. Gasparo, xxi. 186.
Mallet,xxiii. 168, 425,431.
Sir Alexander, account of the sys-
tem of fagging, xxxix. 100.
Malmsbury, William of, vineyards general
in the twelfth century in England,
xxxii. 260.
Malone, xxiil 400, 518 ; xxxiv. 233.
Malouet, xxviii. 287, 307; xxxiii. 512.
Malseig^e, M. de, xxviii. 298.
Maltby, Dr., notice of his Greek The-
saurus, xxii. 326.
xxiv. 386 ; xxxix. 287.
Malte-Bnm, Nouvelles Annales de Voy-
ages, reviewed, xxvi. 514 — remarks on
his opinion respecting the spurious
voyages of Maldonado and de Fonte,
515, 516.
xxi. 178; xxviii. 92.
Malthus, Mr., observations on emigration,
xxiii. 387, 388 — arguments relative to
the com trade, xxiv. 297, 301.
princi^e of, stated, with respect
to the different rates of increase of po-
pulation, particularly in America, xxvi.
151, 153 — Godwin's remarks thereon
refuted, 152-157 — Mr. Malthus's prin-
ciple, that population tends to increase
faster than the means of subsistence,
corroborated, 160 — his observations on
the right of the poor to a maintenance,
vindicated from the objections of God-
wm, 166-168.
Malthus, Mr., remarks on his work on po-
pulation, xxvii. 136.
on population, quoted, xxxil 182.
singular enactment respecting the
poor-laws, recommended by, xxxviL 540.
his doctrine not new, xxxviiL 53
— controverted, 53, 59, 76 — ^remarks
on, 415.
xxi. 468; xxii. 160; xxvi. 536;
xxvii. 95, note; xxix. 221, 234, 529;
xxx. 298, 321, 332 ; xxxiv. 50, 104.
Malvenda, xxxiii. 154.
Malvicino, Valerio, xxxvii. 77,
Malvoison, xxvi. 130.
Mammon, Sir E., xxvi. 206.
Manbv, Mr., xxxi. 407.
Manchegan, xxxi. 477.
Manchester, Duchess of, xxvii. 207.
Duke of, xxvi. 436 ; xxxiii.
516.
well, xxv. 306.
Earl of, quarrels with Crom-
. xxv. 291, 303 ; xxix.
191; xxxii. 493.
Manciui, Hortensia, xxix. 190.
M., xxxv. 550.
Mandat, M. de, xxviii. 458.
Mandavac, xxv. 382.
Mandelso, xxiv. 405.
MandeviUe, Sir John, specimens of the
exaggerations of, xxiv. 330, 331.
xxvii. 142 ; xxviii. 516 ; xxiii^
312; xxxix. 78.
Mandricidas, xxiii. 141.
Manes, tenets of, xxxiii. 145-150 — ^the
Waldenses proved not to be Mani-
cheans, 151, 152.
Manetho, xxiii. 139.
Manfred, xxi. 366 ; xxiv. 101.
Mangles, Captain, xxii. 454, 478 ; xxiv.
151 ; xxvi. 388, no/e.
Mangu-Khan, embassy to the court of,
XMV. 323, 324.
xxvi. 42.
Manilius, xxxii. 291.
Mann (Abbe), on the culture of wastes
in Brabant, xxxviii. 417.
Mannering, JuUa, xxvi. 116.
Manrique, D. J., xxvii. 8.
Mansel, Lady, xxvii. 337.
Mansfield, Lord, in favour of the perpe-
tual copyright of authors, xxi. 201 —
opinion of, on the law of copj^ght,
211 f note.
-the statute of Charles II. against
the right of petitioning not repealed by
the bill of rights, xxii. 532 — on the law
of residence in actions of divorce, xxv.
259 — failure in the formation of a mi-
nistry, 410 — remark on the character of
Walpole's Memoirs, xxvii. 182 — ques-
tions put by him to the members of
Admiral Byng's court-martial, 212.
Digitized by
Googk
Beyiew.
INDEX OF NAMES.
ii;
Mansfield, xxvi. 235; xxx. 543, 559;
xxxvi. 76, 547 ; xxxix. 278.
Maoso, Marquess of, xxxvi i. 74.
Mansong, xxiii. 241. •
Mantell, Gideon, xxxiv. 523, 525.
Mantins, xxiii. 159.
Mantravers, xxv. 550.
Manuel Freyre. See Hippoliio,
Manuel Palseolog^, literature encouraged
by, xxiii. 140.
Manuela, xxi. 343.
Mauuia, xxxv. 432.
Manutius, xxvii. 484, note.
Manyers, Earl, xxiL 97.
Manzanedo, Colonel, xxxviii. 477.
Manzaro, xxix. 93, 104.
Manzoni, Alessandro, II Conte di Carma-
ji^nola, tragedi^ di, xxiv. 72 — its defects,
87 — animated passages from it, 87, 90.
Maquart, M., Refutation de I'Ecrit public
par le Due de Rovigo, sur la Catastrophe
de M. le Due d'Enghien, xxix. 561.
Marabout, Mooktar, xxxviii. 101, 102.
JMaranny, xxix. 5'i8.
Marat, xxii. 512 ; xxviil 505 ; xxix. 450;
xxxiii. 573 ; xxxv. 348.
Marca, xxxiii. 152.
Marcel, Etienne, xxv. 547— notice of, 554,
566.
Marcellus, xxi. 30 ; xxix. 284; xxxvii.43.
Marcet, Dr., xxvi. 448.
March, Lord, xxiii. 520 — extraordinary
speed with which he obtained intelli-
gence from Newmarket, 522.
Murchand, xxviii. 232.
Marchi, xxv. 75, note.
Marchiali, or Matthioli, the man with the
I Iron Mask, xxxiv. 21 — account of the
circumstances which led to his arrest,
22-27 — and of his imprisonment, 28 —
particularly at Exiles, 29 — in the island
of St. Marguerita, 30, 31— and in the
Bastille, 32— his death, ibid., 33.
Marcion, date of his arrival at Rome, xxv.
351 — succeeded by Seleucus the Maui-
chaean, 358, note.
Marck, Bernard, burnt alive for witchcraft,
xxix. 447.
Marco, Capt.-Gen., xxxviii. 452.
Marco Polo, the Roc mentioned by, xxxii.
400. ^*
■ xxxvii. 457.
Marcus Antoninus, xxiii. 138.
Marcus Musurus, xxii. 307, 309.
Maret, Hugues, Duke of Bassano, xxix.
573.
Marfisa, xxi. 509 ; xxx. 51.
Margaret of Anjou, xxviii. 305.
• • of Cortona, xxxiii. 394 ; xxxvi.
32.
Margarita, Antonio, xxxviii. 124.
Margery, xxi. 108.
Marguerite, xxxi, 483.
Maria, xxvii. 19 ; xxxii. 2.
■ D., Infanta of Portugal, xxix. 58.
Feodorouna, empress-mother, of
Russia, notice of, xxxix. 16, 17.
. Filippo, Duke of Milan, xxxi. 437.
- Louisa, notice of some Greek verses
on the marriage of with Buonaparte,
xxiv. 394, note,
Madelina de* Pazzi, xxxvi. 324.
— — Theresa, Empress, xxvi. 277;
xxvii. 173; xxviii. 288.
Mariamne, xxix. 35.
Mariana, mentions the use of cannon, xxi.
194.
Mariando, Alberto, xxx. 395.
Maricastafia, xxi. 95.
Marie Antoinette, notice of, xxvii. 173 —
base calumny against, xxviii. 256, 257,
276— character of Louis XVI., 456—
faction against her, 458— her agony at
the assassination of the Princess de Lam-
baUe, 473— and of Louis XVI., 474.
Marie de Medicis, xxv. 556 ; xxxvi. 326.
Marie-Louise le Breton de Sainte Magda-
leine, notice of, xxxvi. 318.
Marie, Sister, xxviii. 34.
Mariner, Mr., xxi. 372 ; xxvi. 323.
Marinette, xxix. 430.
Marino, xxi. 506.
Marinus Scotus, xxxiv. 280.
Marion, Captain, notice of the natives of
Van Diemen's Land, xxvii. 102.
Dufresne, killed by the New
Zealanders, xxxi. 58.
Marius, character of, as represented by
Arnault, xxix. 49.
xxi. 500 ; xxv. 566 ; xxviii. 100,
321 ; xxx. 28.
Marivaux, remarks on the mannerbm of,
xxvii. 337, 338.
— xxiv. 367 ; xxix. 27 ; xxxiii. 13.
Mark, C. F. H., xxxiii. 254.
Mark Antony, xxii. 404 ; xxiii. 150 ; xxx.
28.
Markland, James Heywood, letter to the
Earl of Aberdeen on the expediency of
attaching a Museum of Antiquities to
the Antiquarian Institution, xxxvii. 484
— K:lass of antiquities that ought not to
be admitted, 485 — what it should con-
tain, specified, 487, 488.
Marlborough, present duke of, xxxvii. 311,
note,
. John Churchill, Duke of,
anecdotes of his early life, xxiii. 2, 3 —
created a peer, 3 — ^his disinterested
conduct to James II., ibid. — behaviour
at the Revolution, 4, 5 — corresponds
with James II., 6 — magnanimous con-
duct of William III. to him, ibid,j 7 —
state of Europe at the accession of Queen
Anne, 8, 9 — schemes of Louis XIV.
frustrated by the Countess of Marlbo-
Digitized by
Googk
118
PART I.-JNDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
ron^h, 10 — generalissimo of the Allied
British and Ihitch forces, and proceed-
ings in Holland, 12-14— narrowly es-
capes being taken by the French, 15—
created Duke of Marlborough, 16—
crooked policy of the Dutch, and mis-
conduct of their generals, 17, 18— is
withheld from resigning by Queen Anne,
19, 20 — ^proposes to carry the campaign
into Germany, 21— character of his army,
22,23 — defeats the Gallo-Bavarian army
at Schellenburg, 24, 25 — negociations
with the Elector, 26— the victory at
Blenheim, 28— conduct of the Duke's
political adversaries in consequence of
it, 29, 30— its important resuhs, 30, 31
— effects of his fatigues on the Duke's
health, 32— reception of the Duke on
his return, 33 — embarks again for the
continent, ibid. — manoBuvres of Marshal
Villars, 34— chagrin of the Duke, 35—
account of the campaign in Flanders,
36, 37— honourable anecdote of Marl-
borough's kindness, 38— movements of
the French under Villeroy, 39— victory
of Ramilies, 40, 41— vexatious situation
of aflfeirs to Marlborough, both abroad
and at home, 42, 43— disinterested con^
duct of the Duke to the Queen, 44, 45
— brilliant reception of the Duke on his
return, 45, 46— promotes the union
between England and Scotland, 46—
treachery of Harley against him, 50—
Marlborough forms the plan of a new
campaign on the continent, -51— battle
of Oudenard, 53— besieges and captures
LiUe, 54-56— invests Ghent, 57— resists
a bnbe from the French government,
tiid.— battle of Malplaquet, 59, 60— cap-
tures Mons, 61— enters upon his last
campaign, 63— his noble treatment of
Fenelon, 65— falsely charged with pecu-
lation, 66— peace of Utrecht concluded,
and Marlborough disgraced, 67, 68—
noble reception of him abroad, 69— is
recalled on the accession of George I.,
tbtd. — his death, ibid. — ^brief review of his
character, 71.73— excellent moral order
of his camp, 72.
Mwlborough, Duke of, state of things in
the midst of his glorious career, xxiii.
563, note,
' xxii. 380, 382; xxiii. 424,
579; XXV. 392; xxvi. 425, 435 ; xxviii!
^U P^-541; xxxii. 153,297; xxxiv.
176,200; xxxvii. 237, 255.
- — Sarah, Duchess of, adopts
a different Une of politics from her hus-
band, xxui. 11— her character, and opi-
nion on giving places, ibid., 12— dis-
nussed from her office by Queen Anne,
62, 63— her reply to proposals for a
second marriage, 70— generous conduct
to a Chelsea pensioner, 71, 72 — ^proof
that she did not offer Pope a thousand
pounds to suppress the character of
Atossa, 423, 424.
Marlborough, Duchess of, her character,
xxxviii. 409.
XXX. 543 ; xxxii. 279.
Marlowe, xxix. 37, 426.
Marmion, xxvii. 339.
Marmont, xxv. 83.
Marmontel, notice of, xxxvi. 47.
xxvi. 230.
Marot, Clement, psalms of, xxxviii. 25.
Jean, xxxii. 386 ; xxxvii. 71.
Marprelate, Martin, xxiv. 494.
Marquardus Gudius, xxii. 308.
Marquino, xxv. 7.
Marryat, Capt., throws up his command
before Rangoon, xxxv. 514.
xxxv. 484, 491, 494.
' Mr., observations of, on the present
condition of our negro slaves, xxix. 483.
Mars, xxii. 339, note; xxiii. 195 ; xxv.
Ill; xxvi. 367 ; xxvii. 23, 326 ; xxviii.
344.
Marsan, Madame de, xxx. 559.
Marsden, William, translation of Marco
Polo, reviewed, xxi. 177 — ^plan of his
work, 178, 179 — character of its execu-
tion, 179, 180. SeePoio.
similarity of feature between
the Sumatrans and Chinese, xxviii. 116
— observations on the Malayan lan-
guage, 1 19-1 21 — account of the Malays
of Sumatra, xxxiii. 116 — notice of his
history of Sumatra, xxxiv. 99, 102, 109
— ^his opinion as to the Golden Fleece,
xxxv. 388.
. xxiv. 321, note, 326, 336 ; xxxi.
55 ;. xxxiii. 520.
Marsh, Bishop, notice of the controversy
of, about the Molie digamma, xxvii. 41.
xxi. 174; xxxiii. 1, 69, 97.
Marshal, xxv. 296.
Beck, xxxiii. 293.
Marshall, Captain, xxvi. 358.
Mr., xxi. 92.
Stephen, xxxii. 495 ; xxxiii. 293.
Marsham, Sir John, xxxiv. 295, note.
Marshman, Dr., question of his fitness to
superintend the Indian version of the
Scriptures, xxxvi. 16 — number of dis-
tinct characters in the whole of Con-
fucius's writings, 490.
■ xxxvii. 144.
Marsin, Marshal, xxiii. 39.
Marsingale, Jane, first wife of Dr. S. Parr,
xxxix. 263.
Marston's tragedy of Sophonisba, remarks
on, with specimens, xxix. 37, 38.
Martel, Charles, exhumation of, xxi. 371.
xxii, 370; xxv. 145, note: xxx.
343.
Digitized by
Googk
RnvtBW*
INDEX OF NAMES.
119
Marten, account of t«d snoif b^r, xd. 232.
Martens, xxii. 485.
Marthe, Ste., xxix. 33.
Martial, xxiv. 403$ xxxil 159, 238, 242;
xxxviiL 374.
Martin, xxv. 193; xxvi. 137; zzxiii. 96.
. the artist, xxxvi. 51.
■ ■ Rear^Admiral, xxxvii. 389.
• Mr., notice of the evidence of,
before the Select Committee of the Uoufe
of Commons, on Criminal Lawi, xxiy.
- xxxiii. 128.
Scriblerus, xxiv. 47, note.
' Sir H., xxix. 491.
• St., introduced the monastic order
into France, xxii. 66.
~ xxii. 356 ; xxviii. 36 ; xxx. 384.
• ' '■ ■ Thomas, xxxv. 176.
Martindale, General, xxiv. 404.
Martine, M. de la, xxix. 438.
Martinengo, Mr. A., xxix. 98.
Martinet, xxviii. 344.
Martire, Pietro, xxxii. 365, 368.
MartivallejGaleotti, xxxv. 536.
Martyn's Flora Rustica, xxxix. 22.
Martyn, Rev. H., Memoir of, refviewed,
xxv. 437 — account of his earlier years,
439 — embarks for India, 441— notice of
his labours- at Dinapore, 443— arrival at
Shiraz, 445 — disputes with the Moham-
medan doctors, 446, 447— completes his
translation of the New Testament in the
Persian language, 448 — results of his
missionary labours in Persia, 450 — ^re-
marks on the most probable means of
spreading Christianity in Persia, 451.
xxii. 95, note; xxxv. 447.
Sir, a poem by Mickle, stanEaused
by him, xxvii. 31.
Marva, xxv. 380.
Marvel, xxxv. 550 ; xxxvi. 40.
Mary, spuriousness of the Gospel of the
birth of, proved, xxv. 356-360 — ^remarks
on the Gospel of, xxx. 475, 476.
xxii. 87 ; xxviii. 27.
< in the novel of the Monastery,
xxvi. 136.
Infanta of Spam, xxv. 17.
Magdalene, the Lamentation of,
in Chaucer, xxxii. 224.
xxiv. 333.
of Medids, xxvi. 191.
Queen, notice of Lingard's ac-
count of, xxxiii. 6.
■ xxii. 95 ; xxiii. 297, 298 ;
xxiv. 34; xxv. 235, 247, note, 560, 561,
567 ; xxvi. 188, 290 ; xxix. 168 ; xxxiii.
311 ; xxxvi. 313 ; xxxvii. 72, 208.
• Queen of Scots, similarity of her
story with that of Joanna of Naples,
XXXI. 75 — ^notice of Dr. Lingard's ac-
count of, xxxiii. 6 — origin of her con-
nexion with the Rtformert in Scotland^
and the French Reformers, 27.
Mary, Queen of Scots, xxvi. 116, 139,
143; xxlii.341; xxxv. 181.
Maryborough, Lord and Lady, xzziz. 195,
Mascagni, xxxiii. 180.
Mascanlle, xxix. 36.
Masham, Lady, intention of, to establish a
female college, xxii. 95.
Mason, in his lifb of Gray, makes him
relate his own life, xxi. 113 — character
of, as a poet, xxxi. 286.
■■ observations on his poetry, zxxr.
195— sonnet on his birtlwlay, 196-^hi8
Uttle influence on his contemporaries
and successors, 197.
xxviiL 424 ; xxxviii. 27.
Massena, xxii. 394-— astonishment at the
lines of Torres Vedras, xxv. 83^^church
of Alcoba9a burnt by his order, xxvii.
26 — ^bafiled by the unconqueredf xxix.
83 — barbarous and revengeful inflictioas
in Portugal, xxxiv. 316.
: xxxv. 230.
Massieu, Abbe, xxvi. 394 ; xxxvu. 35, 36.
Massillon, character of as a preacher, xxix.
289 — specimen of one of his sermons,
291 — damning passage from, 292.
— — ^— xxviii. 505 ; xxxiii. 35.
Massinger, the unities neglected by, xxvii.
481 -^remarks on his character of Sir
Giles Overreach, 419.
xxiii. 444 ; xxv. 1, notej xxix,
37; xxxiv. 218.
Massinissa, xxix. 34.
Master, Mr., xxviii. 67; xitxvii. 113, 114.
Matamoros, xxx. 175.
Mateebe, xxvii. 366.
MathsBis, Professor de, description of Boc-
cano, xxx. 141.
Mather's, Cotton, *Magnalia Christi,'flne
quotation from, xxxii. 18-20.
xxxviii. 229.
Mathew, Toby, Bishop, character of, xxxix.
378— and of his wife, 379.
Mathews, Captain, account of his ad-
dresses to Miss Linley, xxxiii. 569, 570.
Mathews, the comedian, xxx. 533 ; xxxi.
474 ; xxxii. 350; xxxiv. 202, 248.
xxv. 222.
Mathias, xxiii. 203, note, 211, 216, note,
220, note; xxxviii. 39.
Emperor, xxxiv. 79.
Mathilde, M., xxviii. 28.
Matilda, Countess, xxiv. 43.
Maton, Dr., xxx. 135.
Matsys, Quintin, the painter, XXXi. 484.
Matthai, no vestige in the Greek manu-
scripts of the disputed passage 1 John v.,
7, xxvi. 339.
Matthew, St., notice of a Gospel absurdly
_ attributed to him, itxy, 356-358, and
note.
Digitized by
Googk
120
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QuARTBiaT
Matthew, St., xdii. 147, note ; xnv, 395 ;
XXX. 475.
' of Westminster, account of the
Chronicle usually ascribed to, xxxiv.
281, 282.
. xxi. 371.
Matthewe, Thomas. See Matthews' s Bible,
Matthews's Bible, notice of, xxiii. 296, 305,
306.
Matthiaeus, xxii. 337, 338.
Matthieu, Father, xxii. 370.
Maturin, Rev. Mr., Melmoth, the Wan-
derer, a novel, reviewed, xxiv. 303 —
character of it, t5. 304, 305 — specimens
of nonsense, 305-307^-of want of vera-
city, 307-309— of ignorance, 309, 310
—of blasphemy and brutality, 310 —
foundation of his ghost story, 308 —
strictures on his obscenity, 311 — and on
his apology for publishing this novel, ib.
— notice of, xxxii. 351,
Maty, Dr., xxxii. 470.
Maud, Empress, xxx. 340.
Maude's visit to Niagara, extract from,
xxxiv. 35, 36, note.
Maudsley, Mr., xxii. 38.
Mauduit, Colonel de, instance of affection
in a black servant, shown towards, xxi.
437.
Maundrell, xxvi. 379— manner in which
the plates were furnished to his ioumal,
390. •* '
Maupertius, xxiii. 156 ; xxxv. 322.
Maurepas, barbarous conduct of the French
towards, xxi. 446.
xxvii. 163.
Maurice, xxiii. 360, 372.
Mauro, Frd, xxi. 189, note,
Maurocordato, xxx. 518.
Maurus, Father, xxii. 355.
— Terentianus, notice of the digam-
ma by, xxvii. 48.
Maury, Abbe, xxviii. 282.
Cardinal, Essai sur PEloquence de
la Chaire, reviewed, xxix. 283 — stric-
tiures on his character of Bossuet's ser-
mons, 289— and of Massillon's, ibid.
See Pulpit Eloquence, Part II.
Maussacus, xxii. 31 1, note,
Mavor, Dr., xxi. 210.
Mavors, xxvi. 515.
Mavroyeni, xxiv. 515, 519.
Mawe, Mr., xxxi. 19.
Maximilian, xxvi. 337, note; xxx. 349:
xxxii. 380.
■ Duke of Bavaria, xxxvi. 340.
Emperor, xxxv. 93.
" Prince of Neuwied, visited
Brazil, xxxi. 19.
Maximin, xxv. 24.
Maximovitsch, Alexei,xxii. 110, 120.
Maximus Tyrius, xxii. 189 ; xxiii. 139.
Maxwell, xxii. 293, 475.
Maxwell, Captain, xxi. 83.
Dr., xxix. 343.
Mayer, munificent grant to the widow o^
for his * Tables of the Moon,' xxv. 197..
xxi. 131 ; xxvi. 19.
Ma3mard, xxv. 307.
Mayne, Joseph, xxxvii. 32, 49.
Maynard, Serjeant, xxxvi. 522; xxxvii,
236, 238.
Maynwaring, xxvi. 429.
Mayow, J. S. W., xxvii. 450.
Rev.R., Sermons and Miscellanies,
reviewed, xxvii. 450 — ^biographical notice
of, 450-452 — ^remarks on his preaching,
452 — extracts and observations on b^
works, 453-458.
Mazarin, Cardinal, xxv. 545— refusal of
his niece to Charles II., and character
of the lady, xxix. 188, 189 — ^imprison-
ment of the man in the iron mask after
his death, ^cxxiv. 20.
Mazarine, a favourite lady of Charles II.,
xxxiii. 290.
Mead, Dr., considers contagion a cause of
disease, xxvii. 539 — ^Pope's obb'g^tions
to him, xxxii. 283 — extract from a letter
to, on the subject of plague, xxxiiL
232.
Meade, xxxviii. 277, 278.
Meadley, Mr., xxxviii. 331.
Meager, xxiv. 406.
Meason, Laing, remarks on transplanting
trees, xxxvii. 342.
Mecastatus, xxvi. 248, note,
Mecsenas, character of, xxxviii. 359.
xxi. 388 ; xxvi. 428 ; xxvii. 45 ;
xxxviii. 359.
Mechain, M., xxxvi. 1 52.
Mede, xxiii. 143 ; xxv. 349.
Medea, xxii. 165, note, 315; xxiv. 392.
Medici, Cosmo de, xxii. 68.
Lorenzo de, xxiv. 546.
Medicis, Catherine de, xxiv. 451; xxxiii.
27.
Medoro, xxx. 51.
Medusa, xxx. 398, note; xxxii. 60.
Meerza Aga Meer, xxxvi. 361.
Megara, xxii. 198.
Meg Merrilies, xxvi. 472 ; xxvii. 339.
Mehemmed Ali Pasha, xxviii. 60.
Meister, Wilhelm, xxxi. 485.
Melampus, xxviii. 428.
Melancthon, notice of, xxxvii. 82, 83.
xxvi. 102; xxxii. 159; xxxiii.
9 ; xxxvii. 70, 71.
Melanion, xxii. 179.
Melchior, xxix. 455.
Melchisedeck, xxviii. 14.
Meleager, xxviii. 319.
Melendez, Captain, xxxviii. 484,
Melendo, xxi. 93.
Meliora, xxii. 362.
Melissus, xxi. 280.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtiew.
INDEX OF NAMES.
121
Melitus, zxiz. 324.
i^elmoth the Wanderer, a Romance, re-
viewed, xxiv. 303-307. See Maturin.
. Mr., remark on Cicero's singu-
lar inconsistency in his opinions^ xxvii.
388, note.
Melon, xxvii. 259.
Melusina, xxii. 362.
Melvil, Sir J., xxvi. 144.
Melville, Lord, contemplated the eventual
freedom of tiie negroes, xxix. 480.
his opinion as to the im-
portance of the Cape of Good Hope to
England, xxxiii. 412.
-^— — observations of, on the
growth of naval timber, xxxvi. 559.
- xxii. 45 ; xxvi. 533 i xxxiii.
499 ; xxxiv. 389 ; xxxviii. 357.
' ■ " Major, xxvii. 340.
Memes, St., Memoirs of Antonio Canova,
xxxiv. 410. See Canova.
Memnon, probable cause of the musical
sounds uttered by the statue of, xxi. 351
— bust of, removed by Belzoni, xxiv, 144.
XXV. 506 ; xxvii. 234.
Mena, Juan de, xxxviii. 372.
Menander,xxi.303; xxii. 200; xxiii. 141^
148, 269 : xxv. 156.
Menasseh Ben Israel, xxxv. 94.
Mencken^ xxxix. 287.
Mendeli^ xxiii. 325.
Mendelsohn, Moses, gave the first blow to
Rabbinism, xxxviii. 125.
xxxv. 90.
Mendez, Ferdinand de Pinto, xxxv. 110,
Mendoza, xxix. 425.
Mends, Sir R., xxviii. 169.
Menecleides, letter of, to Euthycles, xxii.
197, 198, 201.
Menelaus, xxii. 186 ; xxiii. 256 j xxv. 58 ;
xxvii. 59 ; xxxvi. 60.
Menenius, xxiii. 458, 459.
Mengin, M. Felix, Histoire de TEgypte,
reviewed, xxx. 481 — remarks on his ac-
count of the political benefits conferred
by the French on Egypt, 482. See
Egypt, Part II.
Menno, notice of the disciples of, xxviii.
13, 14.
Mennois, Abb4 de la, remark of, on the
persecutions of the English Roman Ca-
tholics, xxv. 561.
Menou, reception by of the representatives
of the human race, xxviii. 292 — efiects
of his stupidity in Egypt, xxx. 48 1 .
Menteith, xxvi. 127.
Menu, xxi. 362.
Menzies, Rev. Mr., xxi. 260 ; xxx. 263.
Mephistophilus, xxi. 274.
Mercer, Mrs., xxxiii. 294, 295.
Mercoeur, xxx. 346, note.
Mercury, xxii. 334; xxiv. 391 ; xxvi. 175,
367 ; xxvii. 23, 28; xxx. 398, note.
Mercuiy of Babylon, xxix. 453.
Mercutio, xxix. 430.
Meredith, Mr., xxii. 273.
Merivale, Mr., faint historic mention of
Orlando, xxi. 511.
Merlin (or Milner), John, strictures on the
Poet Laureates Book of the Church,
xxxiii. 1^-character of that work, 6. "
-— — ~ Dr., remarks of, on the revelations
of la Sceur Nativity, xxxiii. 375.
-xxii. 351, 371 ; xxvi. 189 ; xxx.43«
Merope, a tragedy, notice of, xxiv. 81, 82.
Merrick, Rev James, his Psalms,xxxviii. 32.
Merry's poetry, popularity of, short-lived,
and why, xxxv. 199, 200.
xxxvii. 430, note,
Mex^enne, xxxix. 442.
Mertens, Dr. de, notice of his account of
the plague at Moscow, xxxiii. 226-228.
xxvii. 543.
Mertoun, B., xxvi. 456, et seq,
M. xi^i. 456, et seq,
Mervyn, G., xxv. 98.
Mesery, Madame, xxvi. 366.
Meslier, John, apostacy of, xxvii. 168.
Messala, xxvii. 45.
Messalina, xxviii. 290.
Metastasio, prejudice against Italian lite«
rature from his peculiar talent, xxiv. 82
— remark on the poems of, 548.
xxi. 491 ; xxiv. 87, 133; xxv.
98 ; xxix. 426 ; xxxii. 60.
Metaxa, Don C, xxix. 97«
Metcalf, xxiv. 417.
Metellus, xxvii. 294 ; xxviii. 102.
Metis, xxiv. 435.
Metzou, xxiii. 355.
Meun^, Jean de, xxi. 109.
Meursius, xxii. 305, note; xxiii. 147>
note; xxv. 505, 509, note; xxxii. 91.
Mexia, xxviii. 549.
. Meyendorff, Baron, Voyage si Boukhara,
xxxvi. 1 06 — character of his work, ibicL
— ^physical appearance of the country
. between Orenburg and the Moughodjar
hilb, 110, 111— of that between thesQ
hills and the river Sir-deria or Jas^-
tes. 111, 112— and from the Sir to
Bokhara, 114-116 — manners of tha
Khirgis,l 12, 1 13-:-desertof Kizil-Koum,
115 — reception of the Russian embassy
at Aghatma, 116 — their entrance into
Bokhara, 117— description of that city,
118 — estimate of the population, 119,
120.
_« state of the country from
Orenberg to Bokhara described by,
xxxix. 36.
Meyer, the painter, intimate with Hayley
trie poet, xxxi. 270.
General, xxii. 383,
Meyrick, Dr. S. R., Critical Inquiry into
Ancient Armour, reviewed, xxx. 334 —
Digitized by
Googk
12a
PART I^INDKX OF NAMES.
Quartbult
plan of the work, 336— iti defects, ihid,
337— its claims to atteution, 338-340.
See^rmourf Part II.
Heyrick, Dr. S. R., xxxiii. 524 ; xxztii.
88, 485.
Mezentius, xzvi. 126, 430 ; lovii. 499 }
xxxvii. 189.
Mezerai, xxv. 567 ; xxiiv. 64.
Mhamet Karomalli, xxvi. 210.
Miccalizzi, Mr., xxix. 98.
Michael, xxix. 453; xxx. 48.
— — Atiffelo, xxvii. 3 16-^u8e of graphic
allegory by, 326— departure from his
plan in St. Peter's, xxviii. 329— effect of
his statues, and the figures of his Last
Judgment, xxxi. 185 — of his works on
Canova, and the people of Italy, xxxiv.
115, 116 — ^bold conception of hanging
St. Peter's dome in the air, 332.
■ Archangel, xxxiii. 386.
St., XXVI. 44.
Psellus, xxiii. 153.
Michaelis, xxiii. 568 ; xxvii. 622 j xxx.
96, 480 ; xxxvi. 263 j xxxviii. 32.
Michaud, xxii. 488, 490.
Michel, xxviii. 397.
Michol, xxiii. 221.
Mickle, specimen of his translation of the
Lusiad, xxvii. 6, no/e— ^remarks on the
translation, 26-29.
Mickleton, xxxix. 379.
Midas, xxix. 265 ; xxxiii. 283.
Middleburgh, xxvii. 341.
Middlesex, Earl of, xxv. 298.
Middleton, mistake in his account of the
quaestors, xxvii. 294.
■ xxvii. 292, note; xxix. 37, 306 :
xxxviii. 309 ; xxxix. 256, 277.
' " Bishop, extract from the works
of, xxxiii. 68, 69.
' wise conduct of, in India,
XXXV. 449, 450.
motive of, in founding
the college at Calcutta, xxxvi. 23.
- xxvi. 330.
— Captain, notice of the voyage of
discovery of, xxx. 233— testimony of
Captain Parry to the merit of, 239
— xxi. 214, 249; xxviii.
405.
' Gilbert, a Northumberland gen-
tleman and freebooter, xxxix. 370.
■ Sir Hugh, xxxiv. 192.
Midias, xxiv. 449, note.
Miers, John, travels in Chile and La Plata,
XXXV, 114 — objects of his travels, 116,
1 1 7— description of a dinner at Buenos
Ayres, 118— profligacv of the Romish
c^^^gy* 121 — mosquitoes and winged
bugs, 129, 130— description of a gam-
bling scene at which he was present, 134
—character of the Chilians, 139, 348.
Miffhn, xxvi. 367.
Mi£;uel, Don, infante of Portugal, his con-
duct while sailing up the Tlumies, xxxviL
449.
Mihrab Khan Ufshar, notice of, xxxvi.
376.
Milboum, xxxii. 494.
Milbourne, xxxvii. 417.
Luke, xxxviii. 31.
Mildmay, Lieut, xxviii. 164 — gallant con-
duct of, in attacking and capturing seven
sail of slave-traders, 169-1/ !•
Milesius, John, xxii. 357.
Miletius, xxiii. 112.
Milford's tour through France, extract
from, xxxix. 72, 73.
Militza, XXXV. 69.
Milizia, extract from his work on Italian
architecture, xxxii. 63.
Mill, Mr., fallacy in his doctrine of supply
and demand, xxix. 232, note — effects of
an increase of the precious metals on
exports and imports, 238— character of
his writings, and inferiority of them to
Sir John Malcolm's, xxXv. 32.
— xxxiv. 50.
• Greek criticisms, xxv. 508 ; xxx. 99 j
xxxiii. 65— disputed verse, 1 John v., 7,
quoted l^ Tertullian and Cyprian, 77.
■ principal of Bishop's college at Cal-
cutta, xxxvii. 105.
Millamant, xxiii 525.
Millar, xxv. 542.
Professor, success of, as a teacher
of law, accounted for, xxxvi. 255.
Miller, Dr. G., xxxvi. 264.
"" General W., Memoirs of, xxxviii.
448-488. For the particulars of his
military adventures, see South Amarica,
Part II,
' ■ James, xxix. 445.
■ Joe, xxv. 457; xxx. 381; xxxii.
203 ; xxxiii. 313.
Mr., xxxvii. 174, 175.
Philip, notice of the improvements
in horticulture made by, xxiv. 407, 412.
xxxvii. 323, 336, 337.
Rev. Mr., xxviii. 516 — notice of
the Bampton Lectures of, 528.
. xxix. 183.
Millington, Professor, engine designed by,
xxxii. 403, 404.
Millioni, Messer Marco, name given to
Marco Polo, xxi. 187.
Millor, xxix. 367.
Millot, Abb6, xxiii. 358.
Mills, Charles, Travels of Theodore Ducas,
reviewed, xxviii. 365.
Dr., xxii. 309.
Milman's, Rev. H. H., Fazio, notice of,
xxii. 402.
Fallof Jerusalem, a
dramatic poem, reviewed, xxiii. 1 OS-
situation of the Jews at the siege of
Digitized by
Googk
RXTIBW.
INDEX OF NAMES.
123^
Jerusalem, 198-200— diffiailties attend,
ing the subject, 200, 201— construction
of the poem, 202, 203— -plan of it„with
extracts and remarks, 203-223 — general
observations on the poem, compared with
the author's former wor^, 223-225.
MUman's, Rev. H. H., Anne Boleyn, a
dramatic poem, xxxv. 351 — characters
introduced by him, especially- Angelo
Caraffa, ibid. 352, 355-357— parallel
between him and Shakspeare's Wolsey,
352, 353-355— between Mr. Milman's
Anne Boleyn and Shakspeare's, 359,
360.
xxxvii. 92.
Milne, an architect, xxxiv. 181.
Milner, Dr., his character as an ecclesias-
tical historian, xxxii. 90— origin of
pointed architecture, xxv. 139, 140,
note,
— — ~ opinion of M. Genet's * Vie
et Revelations,* xxxiii. 375, 399— (See
Merlin) — ^believed Ihat Sister Nativity
was an inspired prophetess, xxxvi. 308-
310 — ^remarks on his History of Luther,
xxxvii. 66.
xxv. 142 ; xxxiii. 134, 144,
150, 399; xxxiv. 56; xxxvi. 317;
xxxviii. 559 ; xxxix. 304.
Milnes, Miss, afterwards Mrs. Thomas
Day, notice of, xxiii. 525.
Milo, xxix. 286.
Milosch, xxxv. 74, 75.
Miltiades, xxi. 276 ; xxxiv. 56 ; xxxv. 232.
Milton, John, comparison of a song in the
< Fall of Jerusalem,' with his hymn on
the Nativity, xxiii. 209 — comparative
merit of Pope with, 410 — strictures on
Pope's criticism on, 432.
■ comparison of, with Dante,
blundering notice of Mr.
xxviii. 370.
Paulding concerning him, corrected,
XXX. 537, 538.
• why the Paradise Lost be-
came a sacred poem, xxxii. 228 — ^its ble-
mishes accounted for, 229 — ^history of
his manuscript treatise on Christian
doctrine, published by the Rev. Dr.
Sumner, 443 — general character of the
work, tbid. 446 — Milton an advocate
for the promiscuous reading of what is
false and seductive, 447 — ^remarks on
his religious character, 448, 449 — ^plan
of his treatise, 450 — ^his observations on
anthropopathy, or descriptions of the
Deity as in human form, 450-452 — Dr.
Sumner's note on this passage, 452 —
remarks on his account of the creation,
453 — and on his account of religious
assemblies, 455, 456.
• notice of his Iconaclastes,
xxxii. 468.
Milton, John, sonnet of, on the massacre of
the Vaudois, xxxiii. 169 — ^his description
of death, xxxiv. 124 — difference between
him and Lord Byron in their notions of
posthumous reputation, xxxv. 185 — de-
gradation of English poetry on the pub>
Hcation of his Paradise Lost, 186 — con-
sequences of attempting a depreciation
of Milton, ibid, — notice of his lyrical
poems, 211.
poetical works, by the Rev.
H. J. Todd, xxxvi. 29 — genuineness of
Milton's treatise on Christian Doctrine,
established, ibid. — ^his character of the
English after the death of Charles I.,
33, 34 — remarks on his political scheme
of government, 34-36 — on the spirit of
the age in which he lived and wrote,
36, 37-— on Milton's own conduct, 39 —
silence of his contemporaries concerning
him, 40 — his life yet a desideratum,
42 — character of his biographers^
Dr. Johnson, Dr. Symmons, and Mr.
Todd, 42, 43— remarks on MUton's
Comus, 45— on some of his sonnets, 46
— romantic turn of his mind, 47-^real
cause of the difference between the
Divina Commedia of Dante, and Mil-
ton's Paradise Lost, 49— comparison of
the two poems, 50, 54— observations on
the Paradise Regained, 55 — favourable
circumstances or the age when Milton
came into the world, 57.
- in danger of avowing his re-
ligious sentiments in Italy, xxxvii. 57, 74,
note — ^his notions of gardening, 305 —
notice of his description of Eden, 306
410.
■ his failure in psalmody,
xxxviii. 29.
xxii. 14, 166, note, 367;
xxui. 420, 429, 515 j xxiv. 102; xxv.
19, 98, 234, note; 328, 436 ; xxvi. 506 ;
xxvii. 62, 129, 283, 326, 481, 509;
xxviii. 48, 429 : xxix; 185, 212, 300;
XXX. 49, 512, 513; xxxU. 158, 163,
221, 225, 226, 275, 311; xxxiv. 15,
176, 404, 476, 538; 351, 405, 518;
xxxviii. 215, 385 ; xxxix. 112.
Mina, account of the insurrection of, in
Mexico, XXX. 178, 179.
XXX. 518 ; xxxiv. 499.
>— Juan de, a Castilian poet, xxxiii.
209.
Minerva, xxii. 195, 344; xxiii. 84, 85,
162, 247, notCj 325; xxiv. 449, note;
xxv. 520; xxvi. 257, 386 ; xxviii. 419;
XXX. 398, note.
Minerva Polias, xxi. 40.
Minim, Friar, xxviii. 27.
Minna, xxv. 456, et seq.
Mine da Fiesole, xxxii. 64.
Minos, xxix. 45,
Digitized by
Googk
124
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUAJEITSRLT
Minto, Lord, zzxiii. 580 ; xxxv. 32, 42,
482; xxxvi. 354, 355; xxxvii. 131,
133.
Miomandre, M. de, xxviii. 289 — gratitude
of Marie Antoinette to, 457.
Mirabeau, character of, xxviii. 283, 284 —
happy nickname g^ven to Lafayette by
Mirabeau, 286 — secret accusation a vir-
tue in free states, 292— his death, 300.
xxi. 436.
Mirabel, xxiii. 525.
Miraguarda, xxv. 125.
Mirandola, xxiv. 546.
Miriam, xxiii. 203-224 ; xxvii. 497.
Mirkhoud, xxiv. 327.
Mirkland, Mary, xxv. 1 52.
Mizy, xxv. 151, 152.
Mirmont, M. de, Le FoUiculaire, Com^die,
reviewed, xxix. 414.
Mirza Ahmak, xxx. 204.
Ibraheem, xxv. 446, 447.
Seid Ali Khan, kind reception by,
of Mr. Martyn, xxv. 445-448, 450,
note.
M. J. S., Orgfueil et Vanity, Com^die, re-
viewed, XXIX. 414.
Misenus, xxxiii. 577.
Mishnee, Mohamed, xxxiii. 546.
Miskhethos, xxxv. 392.
Mitchell, Dr., xxxiiL 183, 185; xxxvii.
269.
■ Mr., xxxiii. 493.
- Mrs., xxxiii. 493.
" T., Translation of Aristophanes re-
viewed, xxiii. 474 — examination of the
execution of particular parts, with speci-
mens, 491-504 — character of the transla-
tion, 505. See Aristophanes.
^itford. Bishop, xxxiv. 334.
Mary Russell, Our Village, &c.,
defects of, xxxi. 166-169 — description of
the village, 1 69 — character of a poacher,
170-172— and of an old bachelor, 173,
174.
■ Mr., original signification of the
term sycophancy, xxiii. 267 f note — value
and importance of Mr. Mitchell's * Aris-
tophanes,* since Mr. Mitford's publica-
tion, 505 — wish for Persian histories of
events, in which Persians were engaged,
xxv. 68.
History of Greece, reviewed,
xxv. 154 — remarks on his style and
manner, ibid. 155, 156, 158 — account
of the Macedonian government, 159,
160 — ^inconsistencies in the narrative of
Alexander's warfare with the barbarous
nations, 161 — and of the conspiracy
against his authority, 164-166 — speci-
mens of the author's narrative, 163, 164
-^his meagre account of Nearchus's ex-
pedition, 167 — proper objects of atten-
tion to a philosophical historian^ 169-1 74,
Mitford, Mr., funeral honotirspaid by the
Ghreeks to those who had fallen in their
country's service, xxvii. 398, 399 — ^mode
in which he has explained the Athenian
law of treason, xxix. 316.
account of the Helisea at
Athens, xxxiii. 336, 337 — remarks on his
statements as to the competency of the
judges, 339, 340.
xxvi. 244; xxxix. 427.
Mithndates, xxi. 509 ; xxviii. 103 ; xxx.
41 ; xxxv. 387.
Mitscherlischius, xxii. 337; xxiv. 394,
note.
Mnesilochus, xxiii. 476.
Mneson, xxvi. 266.
Mocenizo, Count, xxix. 91.
Mocktar, Sidi Mahomed, xxxix. 171.
Modeua, Duke of, xxiv. 562 ; xxxiii. 169.
Moeris, xxii. 307.
MofiPat and Hoggart, Messrs., memoirs oi^
xxxiv. 366.
Mohamed, a Fezzanie, servant to Captain
Clapperton, xxxix. 158.
Mohammed Aly, pasha of Egypt, xxii.
448, 475 — origin and elevation of, xxx.
483-486 — ^his treacherous murder of the
Beys, 487, 488 — ^is frustrated in his at-
tempt to train his Turkish forces after
the European manner, 498 — forms a
military arsenal at Cairo, 501 — causes
the canal of Mahmoudiah to be cleared
and opened, 502 — ^his efforts to promote
instruction, 503 — his police, 504 — ge-
neral observations on his character,
507, 508.
Mohammed Bey, xxx. 491.
Mohammed Kashef, xxii. 452, 459,
Mohareb, xxii. 155.
Mohilow, archbishop of, refused to take the
persecuting clause in the oath adminis-
tered to Catholic prelates, xxxviii. 583.
Mohun, Lady, xxx. 543.
Lord, blundering account of the
duel of, with the Duke of Hamilton,
xxvi. 432 ; trial of, xxxvi. 554.
xxiii. 67; xxxiii. 311.
Moivre, de, theorem of, as to the duration
of human life, xxxv. 4, 25.
Mokaschin, King, xxxv. 77, 78.
Molart, Lord of, xxxii. 377, 389, 390.
Moleville, M. de, xxviii. 450.
Moliere, character of his comedies, xxix.
415, 416 — ^particularly his Bourgeois
Gentilhomme, 418 — and his Tartuffe,
419 — filthiness and immorality of some
of his pieces, 430 — sterling dramatic
wit, his chief excellence, 420.
xxii. 197 ; xxiii. 491, 560; xxv.
529; xxvi. 105, 506; xxviii. 274;
xxix. 27, 207; xxx. 468; xxxii. 350;
xxxiii. 179 ; xxxiv. 354.
Molina, xxix. 425; xxx. 152, 441^ 460.
Digitized by
Googk
RSYIBW.
INDEX OF NAMES.
125
MoUneux, xxi. 92.
MoUien, G., Voyage dans rinierieur de
r Afrique, reviewed, xxiii. 225^-estimate
of his acquirements as a traveller, 242
— objects of his mission, 242, 243^the
information obtained by him of little
value, 243, 244.
Moloch, xxiii. 196.
Molyneux, Mr., xxv. 205, note,
Momus, xxii. 354.
Mompesson (Rev. Mr.), honourable anec-
dote of, xxxiii. 247.
Monardes (Nich.), ascribes the discovery
of the intoxicating quality of the tobacco-
plant to the devil, xxxviii. 202— says it
was first introduced into Spain for orna-
ment rather than use, 203.
Monboddo, Lord, xxii. 28; xxiii. 411;
XXXV. 182.
Moncayo, Marquis of, xxxiii. 214, 215.
Moncey, Marshal, honourable character
of, xxix. 60, 61— operations of, in Va-
lencia, 74.
Monchenu, Marquis de, xxviii. 238.
Monck, Sir C, xxiii. 112— effect of his
speech in the House of Commons, on
the Parganotes, 133.
Monconnis^ xxvi. 201.
Moncrief, Baron, notice of the famous
garden of, at Moredun in Scotland,
xxiv. 408.
Mon^e, M., xxxvi. 151.
MompUes, R., xxvii. 342, et seq.
Monjoye, xxxii. 360.
Monk, xxv. 320 — interested conduct of,
323 — ^rigorous observation of Crom-
well's orders for the treatment of the
Scotch, 339, 340 — danger of confusion
by waiting for conditions from Charles,
xxix. 173.
Monk Bams, xxvi. 123.
Monk, Professor, xxiv. 396 ; xxv. 520.
Monmouth, Duke of, xxxiv. 21, 182; xxxv.
550 ; xxxvi. 538 ; xxxvii. 254.
Monmouth, Lord, xxiii. 2.
Monna Paula, xxvii. 356.
Monnema, celebrated in Southey's tale of
Paraguay, xxxii. 458-460 — description
of her death, 463.
Mounet, Creneral, xxx. 140.
Monro, xxxv. 181.
Mr., xxxix. 221, 228.
Sir Robert, xxxvi. 196.
Monroe, Mr., xxi. 132; xxxvii. 289,fto/e.
Monstrelet, xxv. 125.
Montagu, Duke of, xxxiv. 232, note.
Lady M. W. (See Montague.)
Lord, xxxii. 345.
Mr. Basil, inquiries of, concern-
ing the University library, and the copy-
right acts, xxi. 196.
■ notice of the evidence of, before
the Select Committee of the House of
Commons, concerning the present ad-
ministration of the criminal laws, xxiv.
216, 224.
Montagu, Mr. Basil, xxiv. 224; xxxix.426*
Sir E., xxvii. 207; xxxiU. 285.
Montague, xxiv. 560.
Abbot, xxix. 189.
Lady J., xxviii. 54.
■ M. W., character of, xxiii.
414-416 — singular scheme for septen-
nial marriages, 415 — ^was self-educated,
416 — account of her quarrel with Mr*.
Pope, 417, 418.
intimacy of, with
Pope, xxxii. 280, 281, 284.
xxiv. 421, and note ^
xxvii. 214; xxx. 543; xxxvi. 321.
■ Mr. E. W., character of, xxiii.
417.
416.
-. Wortley, character of, xxiii.
Mr., xxvii. 182, 196.
Montajgfues, xxiv. 74.
Montaigne, remark of, on the government
of America, xxx. 23.
his saying with regard to old
age, xxxi. 288.
xxvi. 105; xxviii. 366, 511;
xxxvii. 406.
Montalvan, xxix. 425. ]
Montanus, xxiii. 300 ; xxxiii. 145.
Mont6, Mother, xxxv. 141.
Monteigne, Bishop, xxxix. 381.
Monteagudo, notice of charges made by,
against Lord Cochrane, xxx. 470, 471.
Montecuculi, xxv. 74, note,
Monteith, Robert, the Forester's Guide,
xxxvi. 558— character of his work, 596.
—See fVoite Lands (planting of), Part
IL
Montes, xxix. 254.
Moutesino, xxx. 577.
Montesquieu, curious mistakes of, relative
to England, xxiii. 188, 189 — distinction
between pure monarchy and despotism,
xxv. 549 — ^remark on tne agrarian law,
xxvii. 302, note,
— — wise distinction as to the
apportionment of punishment, xxxvii.
148, 189.
his Persian Letters, xxxix.
74 — saying of, respecting his son, 482.
xxi. 168; xxii. 181; xxiii.
192 ; xxiv. 182; xxvi. 259 ; xxvii. 174,
176, 279, 286 ; xxviii. 98, 444 ; xxxui.
346 ; xxxiv. 353, 565, 566.
Montesson, Madame de, xxxiv. 432, 433.
Montfaucon, xxi. llO—opinion of, on the
use of the digamma, xxvii. 52.
xxi. 110 ; xxx. 345 ; xxxii. 91.
Montferrand, M., xxxix. 26.
Montferrat, Blanche de, xxxii. 359.
Montford, Simon de, cruelty of, xxv. 566.
Digitized by
Googk
126
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
Montford, Simon de, crusade of, against
the Albigenses, xxxiii. 157^-ordinances
drawn up by him for his conquests, ] 58.
■ ■ xxiii. 196.
Montgelas, prime minister of Bavaria,
xxxi. 338.
Montgomery, xxT. 102.
■ J ames, quotation from his Ghreen-
land, on the Moravian missionaries,
xxxii. 30 — difibrence between his sacred
poetry and his Greenland, 217.
— — -^— — Christian Psalmist, re-
viewed, xxxviii. 16 — pious wish to be the
author of some imperishable hymns,
18 — ^requisites for the right construction
of a hymn, 35.
Montholon, Count, Melanges Historiques,
reviewed, xxviii. 219.
■ extract of a letter from
to the Countess, xxxiii. 185, 186.
. xxix. 562.
Monti, Vincenzo, notice of the Aristodemo
of, xxiv. 83, 84 — beautiful scene from
that tragedy, 84^6 — observations on his
other tragedies, 86, 87.
Montiano, A. de, notice of two tragedies
by, xxxix. 425, 426.
Montlosier, M., Trait^s de la Monarchic
Franyaise, reviewed, xxvii. 146.
xxxvi.439.
Montluc, lament of, on the use of the ar-
quebuss, xxv. 73, note.
xxxii. 397.
Montmorenci, M. de Laval de, xxxvi. 330.
Montmorency, xxvii. 149.
Montmorin, M. de, xxviii. 301.
Montoya, xxvi. 288.
Montrevil, M., xxv. 316.
Montrose, xxvi. 126.
Moodie, xxiii. 241.
Moody, Major Thomas, xxxvii. 546.
Moollah Adeenah, xxxvi. 383.
— — Aimed, xxxvi. 390.
Mooma, xxxii. 460 — description of, 462,
note, 463 — ^beautiful descrijption of her
death, 464, 465.
Moor, made prisoner by the Japanese,
xxii. 112 — ^treachery of, towards his
companions, 121 — his melancholy death,
128 — epitaph on his monument, 129.
■ Dr., xxxviii. 85.
■ and Smith, notice of the voyage of
discovery of, xxx. 233.
Moorcroft, Mr., consequences of his being
suffered to visit the lake Manasarowar,
xxii. 417 — difficulty of respiration in as-
cending the Ghaut, 420 — testimony to
the accuracy of its measurements, 425.
xxiv. 103, 107, 117, 337,
340.
Moore, Sir J., xxv. 90 — Buonaparte's opi-
nion of, xxviii. 250, 251 ; xxix. 83 —
errors of, 84; xxxv» 550,* xxxix. 301.
Moore, Thomas, Irish Melodies, reviewed,
xxviii. 138 — extracts, with remarks on
them, 140-144.
~— — ^— Memoirs of the Right
Hon. R. B. Sheridan, xxxiii. 561 — ^re-
marks on the style and execution of his
work, 562, 567 — on his account of Mr.
Sheridan's marriage with Miss Linley,
568-570 — of his conduct as a public man,
572, 573 — particularly with respect to
his advocating the Roman Catholic
claims, 575, 576 — ^parliamentary reform,
577, 578 — the regency question, 579-
681 — remarks on Mr. Moore's represen-
tation of the munificent conduct of the
Prince Regent to Sheridan, 584-590.
introduces Lord Byron to
Mr. Leigh Hunt, xxxvii. 411 — charac-
terized as a man and a poet, 420.
• xxi. 158, 363; xxvi. 105;
xxxiv. 461, 474, 475 ; xxxv. 82 ; xxxvi.
582.
• Abraham, translation of the Odes
of Pindar, reviewed, xxviii 410.
, Admiral, xxvii. 211-213.
Moore's Almanack, popularity of on the
decline, xxvi, 180.
Moore's Reports, xxi. 403, note.
Moore, Anne, xxii. 87; xxviii. 42.
Dr. H., xxix. 459.
— » Hamilton, xxi. 244.
— Lieut., made prisoner by the
French, xxx. 76.
Mr., xxiv. 16.
Mopsa, xxv. 111.
Mor — , minister of war in the kingdom
of Westphalia, notice of, xxii, 485.
Moraes, D. Fr. G. de, xxvii. 15.
• M. de, xxvii. 19 ; note.
Morales, Ambrosio, xxii. 81.
Morandro, xxv. 6-12.
Moraviev, Capt., xxxix. 36.
Moras, xxvii. 159.
Morata, Ol3rmpia, xxxvii. 75.
Moratin, xxv. 1.
Mordaunt, Lord, notice of his visit to
Teonge, xxxii. 440, 441.
■ Mr., xxx. 553.
Sir C, xxiv. 218.
Mordecai, xxiv. 517.
More, Hannah, xxviii. 2 ; xxxii. 37 ;
xxxix. 288.
Henry, xxviii. 37 ; xxxv. 188.
' Sir T., his opiuion of the Pope's
supremacy, xxxvii. 204.
>^— . character of him, xxxviii. 392.
' xxiv. 229 ; xxix. 473 ; xxxii.
397; xxxiii. 17, 21— xxxv. 178, note;
xxxix. 307, 374.
Moreau, Greneral, amount of his force in
the campaign of 1796, xxii. 387 — cha-
racter of, as a military leader, 388.
— __ xxi. 24 ; xxiv. 90, 91.
Digitized by
Googk
Hbvibw.
INDEX OF. NAMES.
127
Moreknd, Sir Thomas, xxxix. 5,
Morellet, M^moires de TAbb^ de, re-
viewed, xxvi. 229 — anecdotes of his
early life, 230,231 — becomes a writer
in the Encyclopedie, 232 — anecdote of
him and Diderot, 234, 235 — ^he visits
England and is patronised by Lord
Shelburn, 236 — remarks on his con-
duct during the French Revolution, 237,
238— account of his latter days, 242.
Morelos, an insurrectionary chief in Mex-
ico, notice of, xxx. 175— his capture
and execution, 177.
Moreto, xxv. 1 j xxix. 425.
Moreton, xxix. 423.
Morga^ni, scirrhus of the cerebellum, with-
out injury to the mental faculties, xxii.
25.
Morgain, xxii. 351.
Morgan assisted Dr. Davies in translating
the Bible into Welsh, xxiii. 298.
- Chief Justice, xxxvi. 518.
* •'■ Greneral, xxxvii. 519,
■ John, XXXV. 163.
'• Lady, writings of, viewed with
disgust by English ladies, xxi. 144.
■ Italy,* reviewed, xxv. 529 —
reasons for not analyzing her work,
ibid. 530 — notice of her letter to the re-
viewers, 533, 534.
■ her O'Briens and O'Flaher-
tys characterized, xxxvii. 484.
xxii. 35 ; xxiv. 303, 309 ;
xxvi. 107, 229, 406 j xxx. 541 j xxxi.
167 ; xxxvi. 343, note.
SirC, Sketches on the Philosophy
of Life, reviewed, xxii. 1 — character of
the work, 8, 9.
his * Philosophy of Life,* sur-
passed by that of the Athenian cook,
xxiii. 252.
xxv. 530 i xxx. 143.
Mr., xxiv. 203 ; xxix. 356.
' one of Wesley's companions at
Oxford, death of, xxiv. 13.
deed of settlement, &c., of the
Society for Equitable Assurances, with
his addresses, xxxv, 1 -^extract from his
address to the general court in Decem-
ber, 1809, 17, 18— strictures on its in-
terpretation and effect, 18-21 — and on
his address in 1825, 22, 28.
• Prior of Beverley, xxxix. 367.
Morhof, xxii. 308
Mori, General, taken prisoner, xxix. 76.
Morier, James, Second Journey through
Persia, reviewed, xxvi. 437 — his ac-
count of the formation of Tabriz marble,
447.
extract from his journal,
382— effect of his novels on the Persian
court, xxxix. 78, 79.
xxi. 99 5 xxxvi. 353, 370.
Morinus, xxiii. 300.
Morison, Dr., accompanies Clapperton,
xxxix. 145— dies at Jannah, 146.
Moritz, xxxiv. 313.
Morland, the painter, xxxi. 479.
xxxiii. 168, 169— account of his
interview with the Duke of Savoy on
the subject of the persecution of the
Protestant Vaudois, 170, 171.
John, xxiv. 368.
■ Sir Samuel, anecdote of, xxxii.
405, note — account of his contnvance
for raising water, 406,407, 408.
Morley, Dr., xxxii. 478, 479, 480, 483.
Mornay, M. de, xxviii. 511.
Moro, Cristoforo, Doge of Venice, xxxii.
63.
Morris, Captain, xxxix. 177.
Colonel, trial of, and subsequent
conduct, xxxvi. 553.
Governor, love of popularity the
ruin of republics, xxi. 2, note,
Miss, xxxv. 175.
Rev. Mr., xxx. 552.
- Robert, xxxviii. 90.
Morrison, Dr., notice of the Chinese ver-
sion of the Bible in which he assisted,
xxxvi. 18, 19.
. (surgeon in the navy) de-
spatched to the Right of Benin, xxxiii.
537— his progress and death, xxxviii.
109.
Lieutenant Colonel, xxvii. 437.
Morrit, Mr., xxui. 338.
Mortimer, xxvii. 21.
Morton, Bishop, character of, xxxix. 382
383 — nearly torn to pieces by the mob
in his way to the House of Lords, 384
— kindness of Sir Henry Vane to him
in his poverty, 345 — taken into the
family of Sir Henry Yelverton, 386—
his death and epitaph, iUd,
— xxvi. 141 5 xxvii. 340.
-E., xxv. 99, 107.
Morychus, xxiii. 487.
Moschopulus, xxii. 307.
Moschus, xxxii. 159. ,
Moses, a judicious husbandman, xxiv. 402.
character and writings of, vindicated
from the attacks of Lord Byron, xxvii.
520-523.
_»— law of, concerning divorce, con-
sidered, xxviii. 184.
accoimt of the deluge, xxix. 161,
• 162.
xxii. 42, 48, note, 397, 464 ; xxii.
441 ; xxiii. 213 ; xxiv. 42, 79, 486 ;
xxvi. 181, 374 J xxix. 146 ; xxx. 90,
395 ; xxxiii. 386 ; xxxv. 90, 96.
Esther, xxxvii. 157.
Solanus, xxii. 338.
Mosheim, the New Testament when col-
lected, xxv. 351.
Digitized by
Googk
12S
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
Mosheim, xxx. 477.
Moss, Henry, a native of Virginia, ac-
count of the change of complexion of,
XXX. 10, 11.
Mr., xxxiii. 234,
Mossen Jordi, passages from the writings
of, copied by Petrarch, xxiv. 550.
Mossuta, Ciulla, xxi. 94.
Mostyn, Lieutenant-Greneral, xxv. 266,
note,
-^-^— Mr. Browne, xxxviii. 400.
Mothe-Guyon, Madame J. M. B. de la^
notice of her life, xxxi. 46, 47.
Mother Bunch, notice of, 2uu. 109.
Moulineau, xxvii. 506.
Moult, T. J., a Neapolitan seer, notice of
the predictions of, xxvi. 187, 188.
Moim-Ing, an Indian fisherman, a con-
vert to Christianity, xxxiii. 43.
Moung Nau, xxxiii. 53.
Moung-Shwayguong, a teacher amongst
the Burmans, xxxiii. 43.
Moung Yo, xxxiii. 55, 56.
Moung Zah, Viceroy of Rangoon, xxxiii.
55,56.
Mounier, President, reply to Mirabeau,
xxviii. 287 — perceived the course of the
revolution to be fatal to liberty, ibid.
Mouraviev, M. N., Voyage a Khiva,
. xxxvi. 166 — character of the work, ibid.
' — account of his expedition to Khiva,
120-122 — his reception at Khiva by
Mahomed Khan, 123 — account of that
city, 123, 124 — audience of the klian,
124, 125 — number of Russian slaves,
125 — cruel treatment of them by the
khan, 126 — observations on M. Mou-
raviev' s political scheme for the con-
quest of Khiva, 127.
Moustier, M. de, xxviii. 465.
Mouts, M. de, xxx. 356.
Moyle, Mr., xxvii. 284.
Shear, and Blount, translators of
Lucian, xxxvii, 32.
Mozart, effect of his requiem from the
absence of the fiddles, xxxi. 184 — ad-
vice to Kelly, xxxiv. 243 — comparison
of melody and couuterpointists, ibid.
Muchta Bhye, devotedness of, to her hus-
band, xxix. 390, 391.
Mudge. See Short.
' ; — Colonel, xxii. 40 ; xxxvi. 152, 157.
Muircheartach, xxi. 472.
Mukni, Bey of Mourzouk, xxv. 26 — re-
ception of, at Sockna, 29 — by what
means he acquired power, 31 — is in
danger of losmg his office, 32 — his
ungrateful conduct towards Mr. Ritchie,
38, 39.
Mulatiu, XXXV. 69.
Muley, xxv. 18.
Muley Ishmael, xxi. 378 ; xxxix. 1 13.
Mulgrave, Lord, xxxvii. 388.
MiiUer, the translator of Tacitus, appointed
one of Jerome Buonaparte's ministers
of state, xxii. 485— character of, ibid.,
486 — remark of, on Dionysios's Roman
history, xxvii. 276.
J. H., an alchemist, adventures
of, xxvi. 202, 203.
- xxv. 135, note, 140, note.
Mumm, Arnold, xxxix. 10.
Munchausen, xxiv. 330.
— — — Baron, the pine-apple first
cultivated by, in Germany, xxiv. 410.
Mungo Brama, xxvi. 66.
Munro, Sir Thomas, xxxiv. 407 ; xxxv.
480 — ^value of the little naval force in
the Burmese expedition, 512 — adverse
to authoritative interference in the reli-
gion of the Hindoos, xxxvii. 133.
Munroe, Mr., xxxvii. 506.
Murat, character of, xxii. 161 — seizes
Madrid, xxix. 65 — entices the royal
family of Spain into the toils of Buona-
parte, 66, 67 — massacres the inhabitants^
of Madrid, 69.
xxviii. 454, 546 ; xxix. 564.
Muratori, xxi. 110; xxx. 345; xxxi. 71,
427; xxxii. 1, 3, 20, 36; xxxiv. 3U
xxxv. 415.
Muriel, xxvi. 297.
Murillo, xxxiv. 189.
Murphy, the dramatist, xxxiv. 207.
Murray, John, Esq., heavy loss of, from
existing Copyright Act, xxi. 203 — ^harsli
treatment of, by the officers of a pubhc
library, 209 — rapid mode of commu-
nicating intelligence of forthcoming
works, xxii. 302 — ^purchased Mr. Be-
loe's copy of the Newcastle MS., xxiii.
402 — fairness of his conduct towards
Mr. Valpy, xxiv. 377 — purchased Ho-
race Walpole's * Memoirs of his Own
Time,' xxv. 414 — ^his hospitality, xxx.
541,542— travels pubUshed by, xxxi.197.
xxviii. 182, 238 -, xxxvu.
413.
V. Benbow, notice of the case, for
literary piracy, xxvii. 123.
Colonel, xxvii. 434 — takes Fort
Greorge,435.
Dr., notice of the discovery of, as
to the ingredients of various mineral
waters, xxv. 217, 224.
xxviii. 89.
- xxxvii. 461 — the sodality of the
sacred heart of Jesus established by, 483.
- Earl of, parallel between him and
.^,.^. — , J — .
the Duke of Durazzo, xxxi. 75.
- xxvi. 136, 141 ; xxvii. 346.
Hugh, historical accoimt of dis-
coveries in Asia, reviewed, xxiv. 311.
See Mia, Part II.
- Lindley, memoirs of, xxxv. 148 —
. remarks thereon, 153, 154.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbvibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
129
Murray, Mr., afterwards Lord Mansfield,
charge of Jacobitisra against, xxvii.
203, et »eq,
Sir R., xxix. 197.
xxvii. 185; xxix. 288 j xxxii.277.
Morville, M. de, xxix. 26.
Musgrave, xxv. 510, 527.
Musgrove, Mary, xxiv. 369.
Mr., xxiv. 368.
Mushett, Robert, effect of the issues of the
Bank of England, xxxix.451.
Mussenden, Nathaniel, xxxiv. 593.
Mustaph-Aga, xxxv. 72.
Musurus, Marcus, xxviii. 367.
Mylius, M., xxviii. 168.
Mylne, William, xxxvi. 18.
Mjrrie, xxxvi. 178.
Myronides, xxii 181, ito/f.
Myrrha, notice of the tragedy of, xxiv. 83.
sketch of the character of, xxvii.
495,496.
Myrrhina, xxii. 184-187.
N.
Naaman, the Syrian, xxxvii. 539.
Naboth, xxvii. 345.
Nabucco, xxiv. 9 1 .
Nadir Shah, improvements in the Persian
military made by, xxvi. 444, 445, 447 ;
xxxvL 132, 357— anecdote of, 371.
— — Singh, characteristic incident at the
trial of, xxix. 395.
Naharro, a Spanish dramatic writer, no-
tice of, xxix. 424.
Nancy, Rebecca, xxvi. 79.
Nani, Battista, xxxi. 423.
Nanno, xxii. 202.
Nanthildes. See Dagoberi.
Napoleon, alleged curiosity of, xxiii. 163.
compared with Sylla, xxviii. 101.
— diplomacy of, how conducted,
xxxix. 89— his life in the Family Li-
brary, No. I., 475. See Buonaparte.
xxiii. 115, 134; xxviii. 78;
xxxiv. 112; xxxv. 230; xxxvi. 108.
Napper, Dr., xxvi. 184.
Narborough, Sir John, xxxii. 429, 434,436.
Narcissa, remains of, buried by Talma
and Madame Petit, xxi. 366.
Narcissus, xxiv. 421, note ; xxx. 43,
Naranzi, xxix. 92.
Nardini, xxviii. 318.
. J>]^ariskin, graud Russian huntsman, anec-
dote of, xxxix. 28.
NasaroflfJ embassy^ of, to Tartary, and im-
prisonment, XXIV. 334.
Nash, Roger, xxxiii. 312.
— — Mr., architectural improvements of,
xxxiv. 191.
Nasmyth, Mr., kindness of, to an Esqm-
maux, xxi. 217.
Nassau, Count of, exhibition of the body
of, in the church at Strasburg, xxi.
375.
Saarbruck, Prince of, xxiii. 1 2.
Nasuta, ToUa, xxi. 94.
Nathan, xxi. 146.
Nativity, la Soeur, Vie et Revelations de,
xxxiii. 357 — extravagant commenda-
tions bestowed upon her revelations,
i'ji'l., 3 76 — ^biographical sketch of, 376-
VOr.XL. NO.LXXIX.
379 — extracts, with remarks, of her
revelations concerning man in Paradise,
382— predestination, 383 — ^the incarna-
tion, ibid. — the ministers of the church,
385 — Antichrist and his persecutions of
the church, ibid.y 386— the final con-
summation, 387, 388 — the resurrection
and day of judgment, 390-392-395 —
incidental particulars, furnished by her
reveries, relative to the monastic state,
397, 398— revelation of St. Francis to
her, 398, 399— stigmata of St. Francis,
399, 400— remarks on her style, 403—
account of the latter years and death of
Sister Nativity, 405-409.
Nativity, la Soeur, remarks on Mr. Butler's
statement of the opinions of foreign di-
vines respecting her revelations, xxxvi.
306-308 — ^and of the opinions of Eng-
lish divines thereon, 308-310 — account
of the manner in which her revelations
were edited, 317, 318— specimens of the
absurd reveries therein contained, 319-
321 — her delineation of the interior of
a nunnery, 321-323— prediction of the
extent of the Romish Church, 323
reasons why that church will probably
not canonize her, 324. See Milner.
Naud6, xxix. 452.
Naugasuna Garbi, xxi. 99.
Navarete, Martin Fernandez de, xxxv. 347.
Navarre, Agnese de, xxiv. 534.
Nayler, James, the Quaker, xxxi. 250.
Nazaroff, P., Narrative of an expedition
to Kokania, reviewed, xxvii. 138 — oc-
casion of the mission, 139 — notice of
Khirgis Tartars, 140, 141— arrival at
Khokand, the capital of Kokania, 142
— reception of the mission, 143, 144
— return of M. Nazaroff to Russia, 145.
■ xxxvi. 109, 111, 132.
Nesera, xxii. 198.
Neal's History of the Puritans, character
of, xxix. 166, an;/ xxxvi. 30 — ^notice of,
xxxvii. 229.
Neale, Dr., xxv. 221-223, 227.
Neander, Professor, xxxviii. 116.
Digitized by
Googk
130
PART I.-INDEX OP NAMES.
Quarterly
Nearchus, remarks on Mr. Mitford's ac-
count of the famous expedition of, xxr.
167.
xxviii.320.
Nebuchadnezzar, xxiv. 186 ; xxr. 143.
Necker, M., account of the proceedings of
the States General of 1614, xxr. 566—
cajoled and terrified in his alteration of
the States General, xxvi. 236, 237—
Necker and the rest of the moderate
reformers the second causes of the
anarchy of France, 238 — remarks on
the financial measures of, xxvii. 163,
164 — error and vanity in his convoca^
tion of the notables, xxriii. 276.
■ Madame, xxxiv. 430,
• Mdlle., xxxiv. 430.
Necos, or Nechao, xxiv. 161.
Needham, xxy. 507.
Negprette, General, xxx. 183.
N6gri, M. de, xxxvi. 109, 117.
Nehemiah, xxui. 298.
Neile, Bishop, character of, xxxix. 381.
Neilson, xxxvi. 68.
Neitz, Conrad, translated portions of the
New Testament into the Galmuck Ian-
^age, xxxvi. 12.
Neixolenus, xxiv. 422.
Nelson, J. B., instituted a mechanics'
library, xxxii. 417.
■ Lord, the early friend of Lord Col-
lin^ood, xxxvii. 366— fought together
in Sie battle off Cape St. Vincent, 369—
loses an arm in the attack on Teneriffe,
371 — the battle described in which he
lost his life, 375.377-'anecdote of,
xxxviii. 521, note.
i— xxii. 292, 435 ; xxiii. 71 ;
xxir. 604 J xxvi. 15, 29, 30 ; xxvii. 155,
310, 326 J xxxii. 297 ; xxxiv. 187, 421 ;
XXXV. 176; xxxvii. 402.
>■ Mr., interred in the cemetery of St.
George's, Queen Square, xxi. 381, xxiv.
31 — ^his account of Wesley's preaching,
38 — anecdote ofhim and Wesley, 44, 45.
Nemours, Duke de, xxv. 557 ; xxxii. 391,
392.
Dupont de, xxviii. 503.
Nennius's history, character of, xxxiv. 284,
285.
Nepos, L. Opimius, xxxii. 242.
Neptune, xxi. 33 ; xxiii. 256, 500; xxiv.
457-461 ; xxvii. 2 1 ; xxviii.420; xxx. 143.
Nereus, xxvii. 51.
■ ■ of Chios, a celebrated cook, xxiii.
270, note,
Neri, xxiv. 74.
Nero, xxii. 367; xxv. 565; xxvi. 221,
380; xxvii. 237; xxxiii. 8; xxxvi.
298; xxxvii. 341.
Nerva, xxxvii. 43.
Nestor's wine-cap, how described by
Homer, xxiii. 266.
Nestor, xxix. 45 ; xxxvi. 59.
Neufchateau, M. F. de, xxix. 27.
Nevil, Archbishop of York, xxxii. 249.
Nevill, Lady Margaret, xxxix. 378.
Neville, A., xxix. 36*
, General, account of, xxxix. 358.
Johannes de, xxxix. 67.
Ralph, xxxix. 57.
Newberry, Mr., xxix. 117.
Ralph, xxi. 180.
Newcastie, Duchess of, xxvii. 2 13 1 txxhi.
296; XXXV. 550.
present Duke of, agricultural
improvements at Clumber Park, xxxvi.
397.
— — xxxviii. 56.
John Holies, Duke of, xxvi. 43L
Thomas Pelham, Duke of,
sketch of the character of, xxt. 401, 402,
etteq.
blundering account
of, xxvi. 430, 431.
pretended cause of
Walpole's hatred of, xxvii. 189— liis
abuse of the Duke, 193.
xxui. 400> 401 ;
xxvii. 182, 184, 188.
Lord, xxv. 303, 347.
■ xxix. 212.
Newcomb, Thomas, xxii. 94, note.
Newcome, Archbp., xxiii. 297; xxx. 100.
Newcomen, xxxii. 407.
Newenham, Major, on the state of Ire-
land, xxxviii. 56.
Newman, Mr., xxiv. 223.
— Mr. J. A., xxiv. 250.
Mr. W. L., xxiv. 223.
W., Protestant Dissenters Ca-
techism, notice of, xxxi. 229. See X>t«-
tenlert, Part II.
Newport, Young, xxxiii. 289.
Colonel, xxiv. 361.
Newton, Bishop, xxvi. 430.
Mr., xxx. 187.
■ Rev. John, Memoirs of, by him-
self, and by the Rev. Richard Cecil,
xxxi. 26 — extracts fifom, to illustrate
the position, that the effects of the dis-
cipline of circumstances are erroneously
attributed to a divine influence, 31-37
— remarks thereon, 38-40— state of the
parish of Olney, after he had laboured
there for sixteen years, 49.
. Sir Isaac, did not write for gain.
xxi. 211 — ^the science of physical astro-
nomy mainly attributable to, 129.
law of gravitation esta-
blished by, xxxviii. 385 — ^how disco-
vered, xxiii. 542.
• opinion of, on 1 John r. 7,
xxvi. 329.
■ problem of statics reduced
by him to a single principle, xxxix. 437.
Digitized by
Googk
Kkthw*
INDEX OF NAMES.
131
Newton,'Sir I., xxi. 6 j xxii. 14 ; jodii. 156,
157, 163 J xxiT. 52; xxvi. 18, 183,478 ;
xxix.l62,163,iio/e,468j Ma.297j xxxii.
399, 405; xxxiii. 64, 141 ; xmr. 76,
176, 181 } xxxri. 29, 233 ; xxxviii. 3.
Nexo-Charidei, xxr. 358, note,
Ner, Marshal, one of the nieces of Ma-
dame Gampan married to, zxrui* 454.
-;— XXX. 491.
Niabla, Sebast. Alonso de, his remark*
able bodily strength, xxxviii. 210.
Nial, xxiii. 367.
Nibbs, Josiah, xxir. 350.
Nicolini, a modem Italian architect, xxxii.
60.
Niceratus, xxiv. 444 — his wonderiU me-
mory, 447.
Nicetas, xxiii. 145.
■ Eugenianus, xxiii* 153.
Nicharchus, xxiii. 267, note, 486, 468.
Nichol, Dr., xxxvi. 262.
Nicholas, emperor of Russia, notice of,
xxxix. 16-^brait of him, 16~-4eTerity of,
29, 30*
II., XXX. 144*
' v., laid the first stone of 8t. Pe-
ter's at Rome, xxriii. 329.
. xxvi. 245.
• de Lyra, xxri. 337*
■ Secretary, xtrii. 469.
St.,xxii.360; xxiT.454i
Nichols, Mr., xxvi. 426,
xxxix. 256.
Widow, xxvi. 368.
■ James, Calvinism and Arminian-
ism compared, notice of, xxxvii. 228,
note — ^vindication of Archbishop Laud,
243.
• Ann, cruel conduct of a Cahrinist
to upon her death-bed, xxiii. 567, note,
■ Judge, xxxvi. 521.
Nicias, xxii. 169, notes zxiiii 407 ; xxiv*
447 ; XXX. 384.
Nick Bottom, xxiv. 307.
Nice, nicknamed the ' She-goat,' xxii. 199.
Nicodemus, xxv. 356 ; xxx. 477.
Nicol, Adjutant-General, xxiv. 120.
-^ — Dr., xxxiv. 157.
James, an £ssay on Scripture Sacri*
fices, xxxiii. 356 — remarks on the work,
and on the conduct of the author, 356,
357
iv., xxiv. 408.
Nicolas, xxiv. 556.
Nicolaus, xxiii. 266 ; xxx. 388.
Nicoll, S. W., on the poor-laws, remarks
on, xxxvii. 570, note,
Nicomedes, xxiii. 162.
Nicophemus, xxxiii. 351.
Nicostratus, xxtii* 118, note; xxvi. 249,
note,
Nicot, French ambasmder tt Lisbon,
zxxviii. 203.
Niebuhr, Baron, notice of his Roman his-
tory, xxvii. 280, 281.
plan and execution of his
work, xxxii 67, 68 — paradoxical mis-
take of, corrected, 85, 86. See Kome^
Part II.
xxxix. 8, 9, note.
Nierup, Professor, xxi. 101.
Nigel. See Fortunes of Nigel, Part II.
Niger, Greraldus, xxvii. 147.
Nightingale, General, xxix. 81.
. Joseph, xxiv. 40, note, 48.
Nigrinus, notice of, xxxvii. 38.
Nile, Mr., exaggerated account of the
number of En^ish landing on the shore
of North America, xxvii. 05, note,
Niles, xxvi. 158.
Niloi, xxix. 51.
Nimrod, xxvii. 492.
Nimmo, on the state of Ireland, xxxviii. 62.
Ninon of antiquity, Aspasia,xxii. 193, note,
Niobe, xxiii. 261.
Nisse Godreng, xxii. 358.
Nisus, xxx. 51.
N , Lady, anecdote o^ itxil.373, 374,
note,
Noah, character of, xxxi. 113, 114.
xxi. 50; xxx. 129.
Noailles, Dukede, xxvii* 156.
■ ■ Madame de, xxviii. 460.
Viscomte de, xxviii. 281.
Noble^ Mr*, kkv. 879, 283 ) zxti. 426,
433.
Walter, notice of an imaginary con-
versation of, with Cromwell, xxx. 510,
511.
Nobunanga, Emperor of Japan, doubts
the sincerity of the Christian mission-
aries, xxxii. 15, 16.
No^, Count de, xxi. 440.
Noel, Gerard, xxxii. 37.
Noel, Lady, xxiii. 243.
Mr. B., XXX. 584.
Nolan, Michael, Speech on the Poor
Laws, reviewed, xxviii. 349 — sound ob-
servations of, on the increase of popu->
lation, 358 — outlines of his bill for alter-
ing and amending the poor-laws, with
remarks thereon, 360-364.
xxxiii. 70, 71.
— — ' — Mr», genuineness of 1 John v. 7,
supported 1^, xxvi. 324 — ^refutation of
his hypothesis, that Eusebiui altered
the Scriptures^ 328, 329.
Nolasco, one of the writers of the Inves-
tigador Portugez, xxxi. 12.
NoUekens* sculpture, character of, xxxiv.
127.
Nonius, xxxii. 69.
Nonnus, xxiii. 144.
Nordlands, Bishop of, xxx. 127.
Norfolk, Duke of, spirit of legation
X 8
Digitized by
Googk
132
PART L—INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTBRLT
shown by the Commons, checked by,
xxi. 427.
Norfolk, Duke of, notice of hb trial, xxxyi.
514.
xxxiii. 469.
Norman, Mr., xxxvi. 298.
Norna,xxTi. 457, et seq,
Noronha, D. Antonio de, death o^ xxvii.
4.
Norreys, xxxiii. 15.
Norris, Admiral, xxrii. 210-213.
Mrs., xxiv. 363, 364.
of Bemerton, xxx\r. 188.
Mr., xxxvi. I.
North, Attorney-General Roger, com-
pares law to a garden, xxxviii. 241.
• Judge, xxxvi. 531.
Lord, slander of Horace Walpole
against, xxvii. 184, 185.
x. 269,301.
Mr., xxxii. 469.
Roger, remarks of, on Titus Oates
and his party, xxix. 202, 203.
xxxvi. 520 ; xxxvii. 229.
Sir Francis, xxxvi. 520,
Northampton, Earl of,xxviii. 187 ; xxxvi.
516.
Northey, Sir Edward, xxxvi. 142, note,
Northington, Lord, comparison of the
number of controverted appeals deter-
mined in the House of Lords by, with
those determined by Iiord Eldon, xxx.
286.
Northumberland, Duke of, liberality to
Mr. John Kemble, xxxiv. 207.
— xxxiii. 28.
Norton, xxxiii. 28.
John, translated the Gospel of St.
John, into the Mohawk language, xxxvi.
9 — remarks on that translation, 9-H.
■ xxxiii. 20.
Norwich, Bishop of, xxv. 394, 395.
Norwood, Mr., xxxii. 440.
Nostradamus, notice of the prophecies of,
xxvi. 189, 190.
expedient to cheat the devil,
xxii. 357, note.
Nothelm, Archbishop of Canterbury,
xxxiv. 276.
Nott, Dr., great tax on his edition of
Surrey and Wyat, xxi. 203.
Nottingham, Lord, xxx. 275.
Nouchurvan, xxxv. 392.
Noves, A. de, xxiv. 536.
Nugent, Lord, xxiv. 218. •
Numa, xxi. 459 — institutions of, con-
sidered, xxvii 294-296 — ^virtues of, how
viewed by the scholars of Germany,
xxxiv. 254.
Nunez, Elvira, martyrdom of, xxix. 256.
Nur Jehan, xxx. 208.
Nuttall, Thomas, Travels in the Arkansa
Territory, reviewed, xxix. 1 — character
of the work, and course pursued by the
author, 2.
Nye, xxv. 353.
O.
Oahari, xxvL 320.
Oaherkaikin, an Abiponian chieftain, cha-
racter of, xxvi. 298 — account of his
wars, 301-307.
Oates's plot, credulity of the nation with
regard to, xxix. 199, 200.
xxxiii. 34 ; xxxvi. 530.
Oberhamf, M., established a cotton manu-
. factory at Jouy, xxxi. 396.
Oberon, xxii. 172, 357.
Oboel, xxvi. 195, note.
Obregon, M. Count Valenciana, notice of
the enormous gains of, by mining, xxx.
— — xxxvi. 99.
0*Brian, Father, xxi. 472.
Ocellus Lucanus, xxiii. 144.
Ochiltree, xxvii. 340.
Ochino, xxxvii. 72,
Ochterlony, General, the first European
who discovered the passage of the Hi-
mala Mountains, xxiv. 103.
'■ xxxv. 41.
O'Connell, Daniel, his influence in Ireland,
xxxviii, 540, 546 — ^his description of the
unalterable spirit of the Catholic hier-
archy, 577 — his misrepresentation of
tithes, 688.
O'Connell, Daniel, xxxi. 522.
O'Connor, Arthur, xxxvii. 468.
". Phelim, xxiii. 462.
Octavia, xxi. 29.
Octavius, xxv. 566.
Odericus, travels of, in the East, xxiv. 323
— terrific valley described by him, 329.
Odier,Dr., xxxiii. 248.
Odin, variations in the mythology^ of,
xxii. 368, 369 — ^known in Brunswick as
the Hunter of Hackelberg, 369.
xxi. 96, 106 ; xxii. 360, 364 ; xxiii.
442; xxv. 119; xxix. 451; xxx. 41.
Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, xxxix. 47.
— Obertus de, xxvii. 147.
O'Donnell, Conde, xxi. 477.
O'Dounells, xxiii. 366.
O'Donoju, General, arrival in Mexico as
viceroy, xxx. 180 — his death of a con-
sumption, ibid.
Odoric. See Odericus,
Odumata, xxii. 287.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
133
Oecolampadius, xxxiii. 163.
(Ecumenius, xxv. 361.
CEdipus, xxii. 203; xxv. 519; xxvi. 109,
189, 246; xxix.52.
Coloneus, xxii. 165, note»
Tnrannus^ xxiii. 249.
(Ersted, Professor, notice of his electro-
magnetic researches, xxxv. 237, 246.
— xxv. 203.
CEtius, xxix. 463.
OTarrel, Mr., xxxiii. 234.
Ofella, xxviu. 102.
O' Flaherty, boiy reclaimed by, xxxviii.
422.
Og6, Vincent, unsuccessful attempt of, in
favour of his oppressed countrymen in
St. Domingo, xxi. 435 — his death
avenged, 438.
Og^, Mr., XXX. 225.
Ogier. See Holger.
Oglethorpe, General, xxiv. 15, 25 — ho-
nourable anecdote of him and Charles
> Wesley, 26, 27.
O'Higgins, xxx.443 — expulsion from the
government, 453 — brick huts in the
pass of Uspallata, xxxii. 151 — ^military
movements in 1817, xxxviii. 453, eiteq,
0*Keefe, notice of the dramatic writings
of, xxix. 423.
Okey, Colonel, xxxii. 493.
Oksakoff and Katu Bey, Russian and
Ottoman Admirals, Ionian Islands sur-
rendered to, xxiii. 114.
Olavide, D. Pablo de, notice of, xxix. 266,
note,
Olaus Borrichius, xxii. 318.
Olaus Magnus, xxx. 117.
Olchod, curious story by, of figs from the
Indies eaten in England, xxxviii. 201.
Oldham, xxxv. 193.
Oldmixon, xxxvii. 229.
Oldys, xxiv. 405.
Olearius, anecdote related by, xxvi. 48.
Oleg, Prince, xxvi. 38.
Olga or Elga, Grand Princess, conversion
and baptism of, xxvi. 38, 39.
Olimpia, xxx. 43, 51.
Olindo, xxx. 51.
Olivarez, xxiv. 520 ; xxviii. 548 ; xxxiv.
351.
Olive, pretended Princess, xxviii. 161.
Olivetan, xxxiii. 164.
Olivia, xxii. 41 1 .
Olj^pias, xxiii. 253.
Olympiodorus, xxviii. 70.
0*Meara, B. E., Napoleon in Exile, re-
viewed, xxviii. 219 — his statements and
charges against Sir Hudson Lowe, 223-
242 — remarks on his character of
Count Montholon, 242-245 — and on
his reports of Buonaparte's conversation
with him respecting Sir H. Lowe and
others; 246-252*^Buonaparte's frauds
relative to his birth and family, 253,
254 — vindication of Madame Campan,
256-258, 449-452— fable of Buonaparte
being forced to sell his plate, to prevent
his being starved, 259, 260 — real ac-
count of his death contrasted with
O'Meara's statement, 262, 263.
O'Meara, B. E., his accoimt of Buonap
parte's health at St. Helena, xxxiii.
177 — mistakes the disease of which he
died, 178, 179.
— — — xxix. 561 ; xxxiii. 186.
Omodei, Dr., xxxiii. 254.
Onceno, Don Alonzo el, xxi. 194.
O'Neal, David, xxi. 472.
xxiii. 362.
O'Neil, the rebel, xxxvii. 470.
O'Neils, xxiii. 366.
Onesimus, xxxiii. 502.
Onslow, Lord, xxxvi. 523.
-^— Speaker, testimony to Burnet's
powers as a preacher, xxix. 210 — cha-
racter of Jefieries as a chancellor, xxxvL
540.
Onvaroff, Theodore, xxxix. 24.
Opdam, General, xxxiii. 18.
Ophelia, xxv. 56.
Opie, xxxv. 220.
Opiz, notice of the dramatic works of,
xxix. 427.
Opora, xxii. 200.
Oppede, Baron d', xxv. 568.
Oppiau, xxx. 385.
Orange, Prince of, xxii. 534 ; xxiii. 3 ;
xxxiii. 26 ; xxxvii. 213.
Princess of, xxxii. 227.
Orbecche, xxiv. 76.
Ordericus Vitalis, xxii. 359 ; xxxiv. 296.
Ordonez, Gen., xxxviii. 457.
Orellana, watlike republic of women with^
. out husbands, xxv. 381.
Orense, Bishop of, banishment of, xxviii.
554.
Oreste, xxiv. 76.
Orestes, xxiv. 91 ; xxvii. 349 ; xxix. 52.
Orford, Lord, xxxii. 407, 410 ; xxxiv.
125, 370, 474.
Oriana, xxii. 411.
Origen, xxiii. 139, 143, 293, 301, 321 ;
XXV. 361 ; xxvi. 337 ; xxvii. 50 ; xxxiii.
81.
Oril, Lord, xxxiii. 459.
Orion, xxii. 308.
Orithyia, xxv. 506.
Orkney, Lady, xxx. 543. .
Orlando, xxi. 503, 504, 511; xxii. 169;
xxx. 43, 50.
Orleans, Philip, Duke of, declared regent,
xxv. 546 — financial distress of France,
and bankruptcy proposed by his council,
xxvii. 156.
. Duke of, unsuccessful attempt to
cultivate the pine-apple, xxiv. 410.
Digitized by
Googk
134
PART I.^^JNDBZ or NAMES.
QuASffBBUf
Orleans, Duka of, foments disturbances
at Paris, xxviii 278-280, 281— his ca-
bals in October, 1789, 285~ba8e cha-
racter of, 285 — author of the ma s s a cr e
at Versailles, 288, 289.
i ■ xxvii, 174; xxx. 163;
xxxiv. 424, 428 ; xxxvi. 71.
' ■ Mademoiselle d*, xxxIt. 424.
■ Duchess of, xxix. 195.
Ormerod, George, tax on his History of
the County Palatine and City of Ones*
ter, xxi. 208, note,
Ormeson, M. d', xxvii. 165.
Ormond, xxiii. 511.
Duke 0^ xxi. 432 j xxiii. 67 ;
XXXV. 550.
• Marquis o^ xxv. 331 } xxix. 170,
212.
Ormuzd, xxxiii. 146.
Oromaze, xxi. 464.
Orosius, xxxiv. 276.
O'Rourke, Daniel, extract from the story
of, xxxii. 207 ; xxxvi.81.
Orpheus, xxi. 503 ; xxii. 163 ; xxiv. 454,
note; xxvi. 287 ; xxxTii. 341.
Orrery, xxxv. 190.
Orri, xxv. 557.
Orry, xxvii. 157.
Orsilia, xxiv. 77-81.
Orsino, Virginio, xxxii. 366.
Ortis, xxiv. 101.
Orus, xxii. 308.
Osbaldi stone, xxvi. 114.
F., xxvii. 340.
Mrs. F., xxvi. 111.
Osborn, xxi. 375.
Mrs., xxvii. 207.
Osborne, Lorid S., xxix. 89.
Osiris, colossal figure of, in the temple of
- Ipsambul, xxiv. 153.
xxii. 449, 456; xxiv. 160; xxv.
518; xxvii. 1, 223, 334.
Osman Aga, xxx. 202.
Grovernor, xxxix. 172.
Osorio, xxvii. 1 ; xxix. 377.
. General, xxxviii. 453, 457.
Ossey Cacheff, xxiv. 149.
Ossory, Bishop of, xxxi. 504.
O'SuUivan, xxi. 485.
— — Mortimer, evidence on the
state of Ireland, xxxvii. 562.
xxxviii. 568.
Oswald, St., xxiii. 585.
Othello, xxiii. 433; xxiv. 74 ; xxvi. 125 ;
xxix. 417 ; xxx. 193 ; xxxii. 66.
Othman, xxxvi. 120.
Danfodio, xxxix. 165.
O'Tool, St. Lawrence, Archbishop of
Dublin, character of, xxxviii. 586.
O'Toole, xxiii. 362.
O'Tual, Berghetta, xxi. 475, et $eq,
Otus, xxviii. 426.
Otway, neglected the unities, xxvii. 481 —
remarks on hit tragedy of Don Carlos,
xxix. 372, 373^^general ohanieter of
his dramatic poetry, 422.
Otway, xxiv. 74; xxxii. 66; xxxiv. 199;
xxxv. 187 ; xxxvi. 168.
Oudney, Dr., Traveb of, in Bornou, xxsd.
455— his death, 456.
exoorsion o^ to the oountry
of the Tuarioks, xxxiii. 520, 521— result
of his researches and of those of his
associates, 521-529 —his death, 529.
See Africa, Part II.
— *^<i— Major Denham, and others,
researches in the interior of Afiriea,
xxix. 510*-<their reception at Mour-
souk, iUd, — journey to Kouka, 511,
512— account of the sheik, 513, 514—
of the Sultan of Birnie, 514 — danger-
ous situation and providential escape of
Major Denham, 517, 518 — the river
Bhary examined by Dr. Oudney 'and
Lieut. CUpperton, 519, 520— remarks
on their discoveries, 521, 522— popula-
tion, temperature, and productions of
Bornou, 520, 521.
xxvL 56; xxvii. 216; xxviii.
93; xxxvi. 114; xxxix. 180.
Ouseley, Sir G.-, xxv. 449; xxvi. 437,449.
Sir W., xxvii. 7 ; xxxix. 35.
OvaUe, xxx. 441, 460.
OveraJ, Bishop, notice of, xxiii. 301 1
xxxix. 390.
Overbury, Sir T., refusal of Weston, chief
actor in his muorder, to plead, xxxvii. 161.
Overkirk, xxiii. 21, 36.
Ovid, crypt of, in the catacombs of Paris,
xxi. 388 — origin of romantic poetry
ascribed to, xxx. 45— quotation from,
xxxiii. 363, noie.
xxi. 55, 109, 346 ; xxiii. 416, 429,
430 ; xxiv. 551 ; xxvii. 318 ; xxviii.
316; xxxii. 159; xxxiii. 579; xxxvii.
43 ; xxxviii. 286, 372.
Oviedo, Gonzalez, considered the West
Indies as reserved by God for Charka
v., xxxviii. 196 — ^his account of their
prolificness, 197 — of the pine-apple, 199
—considered the use of tobacco as a
vice, 202— his character of Salaaar , 2 1 0.
xxi. 330; xxv. 381.
Owen, services of, in the cause of Christ
tian morals, xxix. 210, 299.
Captain, account of Fernando Po,
xxxix. 181 — vessels captured by, 183.
592.
- — Dr., xxiii. 321, 323.
^^ — John, remarks on the translation of
the Gospel of St. John into the Mo-
hawk language by J. Norton, xxxvi. 9,
10 — notice of Mr. Owen*s narrative, 10.
— Mr., xxi. 93, noUy 94; xxii. 181,
note; xxvi. 105 ; xxvii. 96 ; xxviii. 352 ;
xxix.529;zzz.32.
Digitized by
Googk
Bivnw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
135
Owen Ghnmetlii body of, romoved out of
the Cathedral at Bangor, xxi. 367.
Owna, xxi. 472.
Oxford, Bishop of, xxiv. 13.
Earl of, xxiii. 429, 432 j wix.
206; xxxu. 287, 289.
Lady, xxiii. 416 j xxvi. 430, 431.
Oxlee, Mr., xxxiii. 87.
Oxley, Lieut., Journal of Two Expeditions
into the Interior of New South Wales,
xxiv. 55. See New South fVaies, Part
IL
Oxley, Lieut., xxii. 480.
Mr., xxxii. 316, 318, 319, 339;
xxxvii. 31 ; xxxviii. 113.
Ozauam, xxii. 374, note ; xxx. 150.
OseU,xx't. 508, fio/<r.
Paooqnio, p. Francesco, author of * Gen-
tio de Angola instruido nos mysteries de
i^)ssa santa Fe,' xxxii. 32, note,
Fachieke,xxvi. 300.
Pachomius, St., brief notice of, xxii. 64.
Packenham, Sir E., xxxvii. 518, 519 —
character of, 520,
Paes, Pedro de, gallant speech of, to the
Chevalier Bayard, xxxu. 392, 393.
Paez, Alouzo, xxiv. 333.
Page, Mr. Justice, xxxvi. 519, note,
-> Mrs. Anne, xxx. 548.
Paget, SirE., xxxvii. 113.
Pa^us, xxiii. 296, 300 ; xxvi. 337.
Paine, Tom, xxviii. 520 ; xxxiii. 9 ; xxxv.
582 ) xxxix. 279.
Paixhans, M., notice of his < Nouvelle
Force Maritime,* xxvi. 29.
Psdafox, Don, noble defence of Zaragoza
by, xxix. 75-78.
Falamedes, xxi. 288, and note ; xxii. 305,
$U4€,
Palasuelos, F. de, xxiv. 332.
Palaszi, Count, xxiii. 417.
Paley, Archdeacon, traduced by Hazlitt,
xxii. 160.
-. -^ i style of his sermons,
xxix. 303.
. I vindicated from the
strictures of Mr. Biddulph, xipu. 1^1* ,
Works of, xxxviii.
305— an able defender of the faith, 312
—his < Natural Theology,' iWrf.— * Evi-
dence of Christianity,' 316, 318,328—
« Hor» Paulina,* 316—* Moral Philo-
sophy,' 319 — not a Socinian, 326 — ^his
poUtics, 329 — ^hints to a traveller, 334
•—his character, 335.
• on the rights of pa-
rents, xxxix. 203.
xxi. 41, 66, 354 J
xxiii. 403 ; xxv. 350, 354 j xxvii. 519 ;
xxviii. 521 ; xxx. 81 ; xxxii. 159 ; xxxix.
112.
Palisse, Seigneur de la, xxxii. 374.
Palladas, xxiiL 145.
Palladio,xxvii.316,321.
Palladius, xxxiv. 292.
PaUas, xxU. 411, 453 ; xxiu. 264 j xxiv.
460} xxvii. 23; xxix. 123.
Pallas, Professor, xxxviii. 94.
Pallavicini, xxx. 513.
Palmella, Marquis of, xxxiv. 600.
Palmer, Charles, escape of, for robbing a
ready furnished hotMc, from a defect in
the statute, xxxvii. 159.
- Julius, a martyr, xxxiv. 342.
Rev. P., xxiu. 516.
Palmerin, xxvii. 15.
Palmerston, I^ord, xxi. 74 j xxxviii. 63.
Pamphila, xxix. 330, 456 — ^invented the
art of manufacturing silk, xxxiv. 64.
Pamphilus, xxvi. 329.
Pamphlet, Thomas, xxxii. 318, 321.
Pau, xxii. 182 J xxiii. 461; xxv. 386;
xxviii. 415.
Pancalier de Ph6, Marquis de, xxxiv. 33.
Pandora, xxiii. 403.
Pandrosus, xxiii. 85.
Pani, P., xxviii. 41.
Panpan, xxiii. 164.
Pantagruel, xxii. 165.
Panthea, xxvi. 175.
Paoli, described as an artful intriguer,
xxxvii. 368.
Papebroche, xxviii. 24.
Papin, M., invention of the steam-engine
attributed to, xxxii. 408.
Papirianus, xxvii. 48.
Pappus Alexandrinus, xxxix. 433.
Paracelsus, xxii. 362 ) xxiv. 343 ; xxvt>
281 ; xxviii. 37.
Paradin, xxxii. 359.
Paravey, M., xxviii. 78.
Pardieu, xxxii. 376.
Parini, cited, attention of ancient heroes
to their banquets, xxiii. 246.
Paris, xxiv. 449, note; xxv. 521 ; xxvii.
59, 64.
P^ris, xxvi. 241.
Paris, A. L. B., de I'Excellence de la
Guerre avec TEspagne, xxviii. 536.
Deacon, pretended miracles of,
xxviii. 31-33.
Dr., xxv. 220.
— — Matthew, account of the Tartar tribes,
xxiv. 316.
his account of the Rup-
tarii, xxxiii. 152.
— -, , - ^ xxii. 310; xxv. 560.
Digitized by
Googk
136
PART I^INDKX OF NAMES.
QUARTB<
Paris, Von, xxziii. 17.
Park, Mr^ xxxv. 194.
Miingo, account of the death of,
xxii. 293, 294 — his hypothesis as to the
course of the Niger, 475, 476.
— ^ notice of the death of, xzxiil.
538.
— account of his death, xzxix.
1 55 — further statements respecting, 157,
159.
— xxi. 329, 342 ; xxiii. 234, 239,
242; xxvi.213j XXX. 116j xxxiii. 319j
xxxvii. 448 ; xxviii. 338.
— — - a son of Mungo, proceeds on an ex-
S edition to Africa, xxxviii. 112 — his
eath, ibid,
Parker, letter of Huntington to a person
of the name of, xxiv. 499, 500.
" Arclibishop, superintended the
Bishop's Bible, xxiii. 297.
• his version of the
Psalms, xxxviii. 27 — character of, 407,
408.
- xxviii. 2 ; xxxiv. 261 ;
xxxvi. 31,42.
Parkes, Mr., xxxviii. 247.
Parkhurst, bishop of Norwich, xxxiv. 343.
Parkinson's Paradisus terrestris, notice of,
xxiv. 405.
~ and Frodsham, Messrs., accu-
racy of the chronometers of, xxv. 205.
— — Mr., xxxvii. 526, note,
Parkyns, xxxvi. 513.
Sir W., trial of, xxxvi. 544.
Parma, Alexander, Prince of, xxv. 16, 17.
— — Duke of, xxxvii. 470.
Parmenidcs, xxi. 280 ; xxxiii. 361.
Parmenio, xxv. 161 — treason, and execu-
tion of, 165, 166.
Parmeno, xxv. 83.
Parnell, the poet, xxiii. 422.
— Sir Henry, Observations on
Paper Money, Banking, and Over-
trading, xxxix. 451.
» — _ xxxvii. 561; xxxviii.
82.
William, Maurice and Berghetta,
a Tale, reviewed, xxi. 471 — plan of it,
with extracts, 472-478 — fulsome dedi-
cation to the Irish Roman Catholic
clergy, 478 — his representations and
suggestions relative to the Irish cha-
racter, 479-486.
Letter to the Editor of
the Quarterly Review, xxiii. 360 — an-
swer to his first complaint, that the
editor is totally ignorant of farming,
360, 361 — his mistakes in early Irish
history corrected, 362-365 — great in-
consistency, 365, 366 — the reviewer
vindicated from the charge of i&pao-
rance, 366, 367 — Mr. Parnell's ridicu-
lous abuse of the potatoe, 368, 369 —
refuted by facts, 369 — ^his mistakes con-
cerning the goTemment of the Irish,
370-372— concluding remarks on Mr.
Parnell, 372, 373.
Parny, xxvi. 229.
Parr, Dr. Samuel, a severe disciplinarian,
xxxix. 107— CoUected Works of, 255—
heterogeneous nature of hb mind, ibid.
— ^works suggested to him for which he
was eminently qualified, 256 — his birth,
parentage, and early years, 258-260 —
obhged from . narrow circumstances to
quit his college, 261 — becomes assist-
ant at Harrow School to Dr. Sumner,
takes deacon's orders, and warm at-
tachment to his cousin Frank, ibid. —
becomes a candidate for the head
mastership of Harrow, 263— opens a
school at Stanraore, ibid. — marries, ibid,
— accepts the mastership of an endowed
school at Colchester, 264— illegibility of
his handwriting, ibid. — elected to the
school at Norwich, 266 — ventures on
his first pubhcation, obtains the living
of Asterby, and exchanges it for the
perpetual curacy of Hatton, 267 — a
prebendary of St. Paul's, 268— com-
pelled from necessity to sell his copy of
Stephens's Greek Thesaurus, and ac-
count of Hatton, ibid. — applies twice to
be in the commission of the peace, and
is twice disappointed, ibid. — his preface
to a new edition of Bellendenus charac-
terised, 269 — ^his self-complacency as to
the merit of this work, 270 — ^his concern
in the Bampton Lectures, 271 — his re-
publication of the tracts by Warburton,
274— supposed motive of his spleen to
Hurd, as displayed in this work, 276 —
tribute to the memory of Warburton
and Johnson, 277 — his hopes of pro-
motion from a regency on the illness of
the king, 278— his address to the Dis-
senters of Birmingham, 280— his letter
to Mr. Joseph Gerrald, 281 — his con-
troversy with Dr. Combe, 282— his
enmities hasty but not durable, 284-—
his admirable character of the critic
Bentley, ibid. — compared, as to matter
and style, with Johnson, 285— deceived
by the forgery of the Irelands, 286 —
his Spital sermon, 287 — character of
his sermons, 290-296 — death of his un-
married daughter, of his wife, and of
his married daughter, 297 — marries a
second time, 298 — admits his two
grand-daughters into his family as his
own children, ibid. — ^particulars of his
illness, his conduct under it, and death,
ibid.j299 — whether qualified for a politi-
cian, 300 — instances of his inconsistency,
301-305, 307— his love and practice of
benevolence, 306 — the quality of mercj
in him in one sense strainec^ ibid. — his
extreme fondness for church bells; 308^
Digitized by
Googk
Bjiyhw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
13;
ffo/e— his style, 309— his character as a
scholar, 310 — ^Latin epitaphs, ibid, —
Greek attainments, 311 — summary of
his character, 317.
Parr, Dr. Samuel, xxxiii. 566; xxxviii.
39.
Frank, xxxix. 263.
Queen Catharine, character of,
xxxviii. 397.
xxxYii.210.
SirW., xxxix. 258.
Parrot, xxvi. 441 ; xxxv. 391.
Parry, Captain W. E., extract, with plan,
from his journal, relative to Lancaster
Sound, xxi. 244, 245, notesy 251, 253.
————— Journal of a Voyage
for the Discovery of a North West Pas-
sage, reviewed, xxv. 175— entrance of
the discovery ships into the Polar Sea,
177-182 — WeUington Channel dis-
covered, 183 — Bounty Cape, 184 —
dangerous situation of the Griper, 186
-^the discovery ships laid up for the
winter, 187— precautions of Captain
Parry for preserving the health of his
crews, 188— dramatic performances, 189
— ^North Georgia Gazette, 190— descrip-
tion of a winter's day in the Arctic Sea,
191 — ^pro^ress of the scurvy arrested by
Captain Parry's judicious treatment,
192 — return of spring, 194 — progress
of the ships in getting out to sea, 195 —
honourable character of some Esqui-
maux, 196 — abstract of the Hecla's
Meteorological Journal, with remarks,
197-200 — Aurora Borealis, 200 —
atmospherical electricity of the Arctic
regions, 201 — dip and variation of
the magnetic needle, 202 — notice of
the astronomical observations, 204 —
natural history of the Arctic regions,
205, 206 — important geographical dis-
coveries resulting from this voyage,
207 — probabilities of an open sea, at
uo great distance from the North
Georgia Islands, 208-212 — and of an
opening through Behring's Strait, 212,
213 — ^results of Captain Parry's voyage,
214 — tribute to the admirable conduct
of the officers and crews, 216.
• reward bestowed on,
by parliament, xxvi. 19 — opinion of, as
to the existence of a North West pas-
sage, xxviii. 407, 408.
Second Voyage for
the Discovery of a North West Passage,
reviewed, xxx. 231 — accommodations
of the discovery ships, 234 — survey of
Repulse Bay, 238-240 — amusements of
the ship's companies at Winter Island,
242, 243 — Esquimaux, their huts, man-
ners, and character, 243-248— danger-
ous situation of the Hecla and Fury,
252, 253— fruitless efforts to penetrate
the Polar Sea, 256, 257— establishment
of the discovery ships in their second
winter-quarters, 259 — reasons which
determined Captain Parry to return, 261
—result of the voyage, 263, 264— ob-
servations on the practicability of the
successful discovery of a north-west
passage, 267.271.
Parry, Capt., W. E., Journal of his Third
Voyage,xxxiv.378^-causes of the failure
of this voyage, 379 — manner in which
the winter was passed, ibid.y 380 — ad-
vantages of Silvester's warming appa-
ratus, 380, 381 — occupations of the
seamen, 381 — successful re.estabUsh-
ment of the schoob, ibid. — the Fury
driven on shore and abandoned, 382 —
nautical observations made by Captain
Parry, 383, 384— Mr. Crowe's settle-
ment on Greenland, 386 — accuracy of
the narratives of our early navigators
to the Polar Seas, 386 — Captain Parry's
views on the subject of a north-west
passage, unaltered, 387 —his recommen-
dations for a further voyage, 389 — ^pre-
parations making for it, 389, 390.
attempt to reach the
North Pole in boats, xxxvii. 523 — dif-
ficulties of the enterprise, 524— con-
struction of the boats, t6ic^.— account of
the expedition, 525-529 — abandonment
of the expedition, 530 — ice-floes, ibid.
— highest latitude reached, 531 — tem-
perature of the sea and air, 532 — in-
sects, return, red snow, ibid, — bear
killed, 533 — arrival on board the
Hecla, 534 — remarks on the expedition,
534-538 — a ship preferable to boats,
536 — situation of the western ma^etic
pole, 537 — subjects of natural history
collected, ibid, — probability of a north-
west passage bemg hereafter made by
the Americans, 538.
. remarks on his voyages.
xxxviii. 344356.
. xxvi. 31, 343, 352, 515,
516; xxvii. 473; xxviii. 373; xxxiii.
32, 545 ; xxxvii. 85.
• Mr., xxxv. 225 ; xxxix. 59, note.
Parseval, F. A., Philippe Auguste, Poeme
Heroique, xxxiv. 399 — pompous an-
nouncement of the work by the author,
ibid.y 400 — plan of the poem, with ex-
tracts and remarks, 400-406.
Parsons, Richard, xxxii. 318.
Partington, Mr., account of the number
of steam-engines, xxxii. 1 71 — edition of
the Marquis of Worcester's Century of
Inventions, 397 — ^his description of a
steam-engine constructed acccoiding to
the marquis's idea, 404. See fybrcetter,
Marquit of.
Digitized by
Gobgk
138
PART I^^INDBX OF NAMES.
QvAJommvg
ParuU, Paolo, zxxL 423.
Pascal, xxii. 162; xxviii. 30; zxxiii. 35;
xxxix. 437.
Pascoe, African interpretor to Belioni and
to Glapperton, xxxix. 146.
Pasion, xxvi. 259, no4e,
Pasley, Col. xev. 92.
Pasquali, xxiii. 406.
PassemantjXxxiv. 78.
Pastohni, xxiv. 133.
Paterson, Archbishop, xxix. 197*
■ James, iWtical Treatise on
Public Roads, xxiii. 96 — ^his illustration
of the difference between going over a
hill and round its bottom, 102 — his
mode of mending roads over springy
substrata, 103 — and of draining them,
106.
Patrick, xxxviii. 30.
■ Henry, xxi. 139.
■■ Miss, xxxvii. 407.
I Samuel, xxii. 315.
St, pretended miracles of, xxviii.
19-22.
n XXV. 22.
Patroclus, xxvii. 398, iio/e, 507; xxviii.
413; XXX. 522; xxxiv. 72.
Patten, Mr., xxviii. 165.
Paul, the first Christian hermit, account
of, xxii. 60, 61.
■ Emperor, false statement that the
English were accessory to the murder
of, xxiii. 194.
xxii. 400 3 xxxix. 26.
■ II., xxxvii. 475.
III., buU against Henry VIII.,
xxxvii. 205.
— xxvii. 532 ; xxxiii. 164.
— IV., XXV. 7, 560.
Father, xxxi. 440.
Sir G., XXX. 409, 417.
■ St., remarks on the theories of
Locke and Taylor, for interpreting the
Epistles of, XXX. 84-92 — specimens of
Mr. Belsham's mistranslation and mis-
interpretations of, 93-115, 193, 477.
xxi. 61; xxii. 85; xxiii. 347,
576,i«o/€; xxiv. 486, 490; xxv. 351,
437; xxvi. 198; xxviii. 150.
I Veronese, xxiii. 159 ; xxxii. 52.
and Virginia, xxv. 368 ; xxviii.
339.
Paula, St. F. de, anecdote of, xxiv. 476,
and note,
Paulding, J. K., Sketch of Old England,
reviewed, xxx. 519 — important informa-
tion communicated by him, 624 — his
notices of villages in the neighbourhood
of London, 525, 526 — ^his visit to Ox-
ford, 527 — observations on tithes,
taxes, and churches, 529-531 — vera-
cious account of the King's visit to
Ireland, 532— character of the opposi-
tion, &37— 4>f iha HoiiM of Commons,
ibid. — ^blunders ren)ecting Milton, D^y-
den, and Crabbe, ibid, 539— calumny oa
the British government, 539, 540 — Mr.
Murray and the Quarterly Review, 541>
542.
Paulding, J. K., xxix. 354.
Paule, St. V. de, holiday in hopour of,
xxviii.1501.
Paulo, xiv. 98-100.
Paulus, xxviii. 44.
Pausanias, notice of his Rhetoiie Lexieoiii
xxii 306.
, xxi. 36; xxii. 163;
xxui. 141, 152, 326, 328; xxiv. 429,
431, 443, 446 ; xxvii. 59 ; xxviii. 329.
Pausias, story related of, xxiii. 266, naie,
Pauw, M. de, prevalence of mysogynism
and misanthropism in Greece, asserted
by, xxii 179.
' observation on the criti-
cisms of, xxiv. 380.
— -_ , xxi. 76 J xxii. 427 ; xxv.
516, 620, xxxi. 467,
Payne, J. H., Brutus, a tragedy, reviewed,
xxii. 402 — remarks on his acknowledg-
ments to preceding dramatists, 403----
examination of his play, 404-407.
Mr., xxiv. 223.
I" Roger, the celebrated book-binder,
xxxi. 270.
Peachum, intended allusion of the quarrel
between him and Lockit, xxx. 549.
Pearce, N., illiberal disparagement of, by
Mr. Buckingham, xxvi. 382.
Pearse, Captain, proceeds on an expedition
to Africa, but soon dies, xxxviii. 109, and
xxxix. 144-146.
Pearson, Andrew, translated Esra, Nehe-
miah, and Job, xxiii. 298.
■ Bishop, character o^ xxxiii. 95 —
remark on his quotation of 1 John v.
7, ibid,
xxii, 310; xxx. 103.
' J., effects of the frost upon, in the
Arctic Regions, xxv. 189.
Pecchio, Count, Anecdotes of Spanish and
Portuguese Revolutions, reviewed, xxviii.
536.
Pechel, Mr., xxxiii. 293.
Pecock (Bishop), prayer of, xxxii. 18.
Peddie, Major, slight expectations from
his expedition, xxiii. 241.
xxxi. 450.
Pedro, xxvii. 25.
the Cruel, xxvii. 1 .
' Don, xxxii. 131.
■ Infante of Portugal, embarka-
tion of, for the Brazils, xxix. 57.
St., xxix. 193.
Peel, Rev. F., xxvii. 452.
Right Hon. Sir R., his liberal and
humane feelings, xxi. 138, 139--*4he
Digitized by
Googk
Rivnw*
INDBX OF NAMES.
in
^uage of Konett uidependraoe, how
fweived by him, 139— *ct of foi the
protection of children employed in cot-
ton manufactories, 421— river in New
South Wales named after him, xxiv.
69— five per cent, the amount of the de-
preciation of paper on the passing of his
pill, according to Mr. ^caido, xxvii.
243, no/e — consequences and advan-
tages of a bill like his, xxix. 239—
state of Oliancery business from his
speech, xxx. a82-p-extraordinary anger
of Sir J. G. Hippesley against, 420,
fio/e-smischief arising from the Bank
of £ngland*8 facility of discounting
without a counteracting principle, xudii.
202 — advantages of his Jury bill, xxxv.
571 — enviable name likely to accrue to
him from a reform of the laws, zxxvi.
242 — ^fame to be acquired by continuing
his course for the miprovement of the
penal code, xxxvii. 147 — ^necessity of
a simpUfication of it, evinced from his
speech, 148-^-eourse adopted by, in
amending the criminal law, 150-^alte-
rations and amendments introduced by,
157-l79.^«oncisene8s of his diction,
180— .benefits derived from his exertions,
192, 193, 493— mode of conducting his
kjgfal reforms, xxzviii. 243-«««emarks on
his expressing the willingness of go-
yemment to grant an inquiry limited to
the proceedings of the common law
courts, and to the state of real property,
251 — beneficial results of other legal
improvements made by him, 245, 256,
258, 270— remarks on Mr. Whit-
bread's questions in 1812, as to the
dangers nom religious differences, 566.
Peel, Ri^ht Hon. Sir R., letter to him by
Ghristiauus, xxxix. 129.
. xxi. 424, 483j
xxvii. 249 j xxxii. 334.
Peelers tragedy of David and Bethsabe,
remarks on, xxix. 36, 37.
Peffbrs, Mr., xxxvii. 378, note,
Pegasuf, xxx. 42, 398, noie.
I*egge, Dr., xxxii. 246.
Peignot, xxxi. 425.
Peisistratus, xxvii. 384.
Peisthetssrus, xxiv. 45 5.461 •
Pelagius, xxvi. 89 j xxxiiL 143.
Pelayo, xxix. 242.
Feleus, xxviii. 414.
Pelham, Mr., xxvii. 182, 188— pretended
cause of Walpole's hatred of him, 189
— Walpole's hostility to him and his
family, 196 — ^vindication of them from
Walpole's aspersions, 199 — ^his base-
ness towards tiiem, 200.
. " XXV. 401, 403; xxx. 543.
Pelias, xxviii. 427.
Pellico, Silvio, Frt^icesco da Rimini^ Tra-
gedia di, reviewed, xxir. 72-^^nalysis
of it, with extracts and remarks, 97-100
— sug^stion to, concerning the choice
of subjects for his future dramas, 101.
Peltier, xxviii. 397.
Pemberton, J., xxvi. 368.
■^^— ^— Judge, xxxvi. 531.
Pembroke, A. de Valence, Earl of, notice
of the monument of, in Westminster
Abbey, xxx. 345.
■■ Countess of, xxix. 185.
Karl of, xxvi. 192.
Regent of England, xxv. 548.
Penelope, xxx. 395 ; xxxvi. 59.
Penn, one of the itinerant preachers ap-
pointed by Cranmer, xxiv. 34, note.
.— xxxviu. 222.
-*— - Gh-anville, Examination of the pri-
mary argument of the Iliad, reviewed,
xxvu. 39.
and Mead, xxxvi. 525.
- (Sir W.), disgraoefVil failure of the
expedition under nim, xxxviii. 222. ^
Pennant, Lapland marmot of, xxx. 129.
Pennell, Miss, xxxi. 17.
Pennington, Mr., xxvi. 187,
Penrose's journal, curious account in, of
the buccaneers, xxxviii. 235.
Penrose, Sir G., xxii. 227 j xxv. 25.
Pepin, xxv. 545 ; xxxv. 104,
Pepoli, Count, xxiv. 87.
Pepple, King, xxix. 509.
Pepys, Mr., xxxvi. 533.
Mrs., xxxiii. 293.
Roger, xxxiii. 299.
Samuel, Memoirs edited by Lord
Braybrooke, xxxiii. 281 — biographical
notice of, 285, 286-^oompari8on of his
diary with that of Evelyn, 288-291—
description of a scene at the court of
Charles II., 291 — anecdotes and cha^
racter of Nell Gwynne, 293— of Mrs.
Pepys, 294 — anecdotes of Pepys, ilhis-
trative of his character, 295, 298— re-
flections on first riding in his own
coach, 299— venality of Charles II.'s
reign, 301— state of the navy, 302 —
specimens of Pepys' literary taste, 303
— Charles II.'s want of personal accom-
modations, 305 -^ anecdotes of his
Queen, Katherine, 306^arohiepi8copal
amusements, 306 — profligacy of the no-
blemen about the court, 307— deplorable
state of morals among the people, 309
—alteration in the national dress at*
tempted by the King, 309 — uses of
Pepys' Memoirs to antiquaries, 310,31 1,
312 — description of a run upon the
bankers in Lombard Street, 313.
Pepys, xxxii. 400, 405, note,
Perceval, Mr., xxxiii. 475.
Percival, Mr., negociations that followed
after hie death, xxxiii. 582,
Digitized by
Googk
140
PART I^INDEX OF NAMES.
Qujk&TBRLT
Percival, xxiii. 565.
Dr., xxxiv. 167.
Mrs. xxviii. 23).
Percy's Northern Antiquities, mention of,
XXXV. 204.
Percy, xxx. 41 j xxxv. 184, 193.
■ Lord, xxxiii. 13.
Pere Elis^, xxiii. 195.
Peregrinus, xxxvii. 49.
Pereiia, P. A., xxvii. 15.
Perez, Don J., xxvi. 344.
Perforatus, Andreas, xxxviii. 383.
Pergolesi, xxxii. 60.
Periander, xxiv. 422, 427, note.
Pericles, causes that contributed to the
glory of Athens under, xxi. 26 — cor-
ruption of morals at Athens, imder him,
xxii. 190, 19-1 — comparison of the ora-
tory of, with that of Plato, xxvii. 401.
. xxi. 276, 278, 282, 503 j xxii. 172,
188 ; xxiii. 477, 495, 496 ; xxv. 17] ;
xxvii. 327, 328, 382, 404 ; xxxiii. 587 ;
xxxiv. 176.
Peringskioid, xxi. 103; xxv. 119.
Perkins, Mr., improvement of canal steam
navigation by, xxxi. 365, 366.
■ steam-gun invented by,
xxxvii. 276, note.
Peme, Andrew, Ecdesiastes and Solo-
mon's Song, translated by, xxiii. 298.
Pernetty, Dom, xxviii. 37.
P^rouse, Captain de la, population of
Santiago, xxx. 449.
Perrault, xxviii. 398.
Perrin, xxxiii. 162,164.
Perrot, Mr., xxiii. 621, 522.
Perry, xxviii. 225.
Perseus, xxv. 533; xxvi. 103; xxx. 42^
398, note.
Persius, xxi. 114 ; xxxii. 159.
Persons, Father, extract from his Respon-
sio ad Edictum Reginse, xxxiii. 30.
xxxiii. 7, 8, 16, 21, 32 ;
xxxvL313.
Peruse, La, xxix. 33.
Petale, xxii. 201.
Petavius, xxv. 359.
Peter, xxii. 83, note.
— the Cruel, xxix. 254.
■■ Czar, alteration in Russian Church
architecture during the reign of, xxvi.
49, 50 — apolitical views of, in Asia,
xxxvi. 107.
xxiii. 485; xxv. 420, 422;
xxvi. 37, 46, 438 ; xxix. 371.
— Martyr, xxxvii. 72 — notice of, 83.
— — Pastoral, xxiii. 89.
St., accoimt of the c^iair of, xxviii. 330.
■ xxii. 85 ; xxiii. 582, note ; xxvi.
198; xxviii. 19.
Peterborough, Bp. of, xxxiii. 90; xxxvi. 1 .
■■ Earl of, extract from a letter
of, to Lady Suffolk, xxx. 547.
Peterborough, Lady, xxxiii. 312.
Mordaunt, Earl of, infamous
conduct of, xxiii. 6.
Peters of Devonshire, xxii. 365.
Hugh, xxv. 314, 332 ; xxix. 199 ;
xxxix. 42.
Peterson, P., xxvii. 342, 362.
Petion, heads an insurrection of the ne-
groes against Toussaint, xxi. 442 — de-
clared president of the republic of Hayti,
451— his character, 45^— internal admi-
nistration of his division of the island,
454 — his military force, 455 — ^population
and finances of his government, 456.
xxviii. 305, 471.
Petit, xxxii. 91 ; xxxix. 44.
Madame. See Ta/ma.
Petiver, Mr. J., xxvi. 520.
Petracco, xxiv. 530.
Petrarch, contests between his admirers
and those of Chiabrero, xxiii. 408,
note,
■ first interview of, with Laura,
described, xxiv. 531 — ^remarks on the
portraits and descriptions of his person,
532, 533 — inquiry into the nature of his
passion for Laura, 534-538 — ^his account
of her death, 539 — and of a dream in
which she appeared to him, 541, 542 —
observations on the poetry of Petrarch,
and on his mind and character, as deve-
loped therein, with specimens, 543-545
— influence of religion on his mind, 554
and of politics, 555-558 — remarks on
his political conduct, 560 — Dante's
poem sent to him by Boccaccio, 561 —
influence of the poetry of Dante and
Petrarch on the literature of Italy, 564,
565 — general character of Petrarch,
565— his death, 567.
Petrarch, eulogies of Joanna Queen of
Naples, xxxi. 65, 71.
■ translation of one of his sonnets,
xxxiv. 7 — criticism of, 17.
— — — a reformer, xxxvii. 60.
xxi. 508 ; xxiii. 534 ; xxiv. 101,
133; xxv. 98, 128; xxvii. 62; xxviii.
370; xxx. 45; xxxiii. 478.
Petrizzopulo, xxix. 105.
Petronella, xxvi. 198-204.
Petronius, xxvii. 237 ; xxxiv. 352.
Petruchio, xxii. 414.
Pett, Phineas, the Seppin^ of his day, .
absurd charges against, mvestigated by
King James, xxii. 44.
Petty, Lord Henry, xxxiii. 500.
— Sir William, on the state of Ireland,
xxxviii. 55.
■ xxxii. 400 ; xxxiii. 304.
Peyrani, Ferdinand, xxxiii. 134.
M., moderator of the Vaudois,
interesting account of, xxxiii. 136-141
—notice of his family, 142.
Digitized by
Googk
. Review.
INDEX OP NAMES.
141
Peyrerius, xxii. ISftiote,
Peyronie, xxii. 25.
Pfeflfercorn, xxxv. 93.
Phadrus, xxiy. 429, 443.
Phaenaret, xxi. 311.
Phanus, xxiv. 428.
Pharaoh, marks of his chariot wheels on
-the.shoresof the Red Sea, said by Baum-
garten to be visible, xxiv. 313.
xxiii. 310, 313 ; xxiv. 465, 491 ;
xxvi. 374.
Pharaohs, xxii. 62 5 xxiii. 90 ; xxvi. 195 ;
xxvii. 322.
Phamavaz, of Schinak'hartli, first king
of Georgia, xxxv. 392.
Phayllus, xxiii. 494; xxiv. 426.
Phedre, xxix. 45, 438.
Pheidias, xxi. 284.
Phelan, Dr., evidence on the state of Ire-
land, xxxvii. 562.
— — — — policy of the Church of Rome
in Ireland xxxviii. 535, 538, 545,
554.
xxxix. 137.
Ph^nice, xxix. 35.
Pherecrates, xxii. 199; xxiii. 248.
Pherecydes, xxviii. 37.
Pheres, xxviii. 428.
Pherore, xxix. 35.
Phidias, xxii. 195 ; xxiii. 85, 496; xxvi.
116; xxvii. 313, 329, 336.
Philelphus, xxiii. 147.
Philemon, xxL 303 ; xxii. 312.
Philetsenis, enormous fish mentioned by,
xxiii. 256, note,
Philidor, xxvL 111.
Philinus, xxii. 307.
Philip, xxiv. 446.
I. of France, xxv. 545.
II. of Spain, xxi. 329 ; xxv. 22 ;
xxvi. 290; xxvii. 13, 14; xxix. 194,
251 — ^remarks on the conduct of, towards
Don Carlos, 371 — character of, as re-
presented by Lord John Russell, 380 —
anecdote of, xxxiv. 307.
' xxv. 565 ; xxxiii. 164.
III., xxvii. 15 ; xxxiii. 209.
IV., xxv. 557-566.
xxvii. 15, 26 ; xxix. 263 ;
xxxiii. 210.
v., number of autos da fe in the
reign 0^ xxix. 264 — decline of Uterature
in Spain in his reign, 425.
. xxiii. 7, 57, 58 ; xxvi.
xxviii. 543.
— — Augustus, of France, xxi.
xxv. 548.
le Bel, xxv. 560.
de Comines, xxxv. 533,
282;
381;
548;
xxxix. 91.
Esquire, xxiii. 462,
the Gh)od, account of the palace
of, at Dijon, xxv. 126, 127 ; xxviii. 275.
Philip of Maeedon, some account of his
court, xxv. 160, 161.
* 275 5 xxvi.
255, note; xxix. 284.
and Maiy, Stationers' Company
first chartered under, xxi. 197.
of Pokanoket, xxv. 58.
Philipidi, xxiii. 358.
Phihppa, the Catanian, confidante of
Joanna Queen of Naples, xxxi. 68*-
punished as an accomplice in the mur«
der of Andrew of Naples, 69, 70.
Philippus Solitarius, xxiii. 153.
Philips, xxiii. 420.
Philhmore, xxi. 403, note; xxiv. 218.
Phillips (Katherine), remarks on the po«
pularity of, xxxv. 190.
Phillipps's, S. M., State Trials, xxxvi. 511.
Phillips, xxii. 290 ; xxix. 37.
the biographer of Cardinal Pole,
xxxiii. 13, 16.
■ Captain, xxxvii. 17.
Mr., an English emigrant to
America, account of, xxix. 361, 362.
Mr., xxxii. 412.
Sir Richard, xxi. 162, note; xxii.
35, note; xxiv. 227; xxv. 364; xxvi.
250; XXX. 473.
Phillpotts, Dr., letter on the coronation
oath, notice of, xxxvii. 484, note.
xxviii. 522; xxxviii. 290, 306,
312.
Philo, xxiii. 143, 319.
Q. Publius, xxxil 67.
PhUocles, xxv. 506.
Philocrates, xxix. 335.
Philomed6, xxxii. 279.
Philonides, account of the first introduction
of the vine into Qreece, xxiii. 265 — sup-
posed dialogue between him and Aris-
tophanes, 476, 477.
xxi. 308, note,
Philopoemen, xxiii. 141.
Philostratus, xxiii. 152.
Philotas, xxv. 165.
Philotes, xxii. 201.
Pliiloxenus, extract from, xxiii. 260, 261.
xxii. 310.
Phineas, xxiii. 220, note; xxxv. 96.
Phineus, xxv. 505.
Phippeu, R., xxiii. 106.
Phipps, Captain, xxxvii. 535.
Phle^yas, xxviii. 422.
Phocion, xxix. 337, note.
Phocyllis, xxxiii. 339, note,
Fh(Bbadius,'xxxiii. 89.
Phoebus, xxiii. 275, 278.
Phormion, xxiii. 500.
Phorhiis, xxi. 275.
Photius, notice of the Lexicon of, xxii.
308.
xxiii. 139, 145, 247.
Phrosyne, xxii. 1^^.
Digitized by
Googk
141S
PART I.— IKDEX OF NAMES.
QuAmTBRLt
Phryne, zxii. 200^ 802 ; xxviii* 328 ; ndx.
120; xxxvii. 48.
Phrynichus, xxii* 306, 312} xxy* 505 |
xxxiii. 352.
Phryxus, xxviii. 429 ; xmt. 388.
Piacenza, M. Tebaldodi, assumes the tiame
of Gregory X., xxi. 182.
Pibrac, M. de^ xxx. 24.
Picard, M., prolificnesi of his muse, and
character of his works, ndx. 27.
Piccatrix's, King, work on magic, notice
of, xxix. 453.
Pichegru, xxix. 565.
Pichot, Amad^e, Voyagis en Ang^eierre,
xxxii. 342 — specimens of his recipe for
making a book of travels, ibitU 343 — his
delicate allusion to English modesty,
344 — curious blunders respecting So*
merset House, 345— the British Museum
and Blackfiiars Bridge, 345, 346-^
English manners, 346, 347 — and £ng.
lish arts, 347-^on the general literature
of England, 349 — ^particularly periodi-
cal literature^ 350, 351 — specimens of
the Doctor's mistranslations, 352, 353,
354.
— — — xxiiv. 88*
Pickering, xxxiii. 8.
Picolhomini, Cardinal Ft, xxvi. 337*
Picquet, xxxii. 860, 361. 362.
Pictet, Professor, xxxvi. 153, 155, 157,
162.
Pie, S., xxviii. 330.
Pierce, Captain, xxxiii. 587.
Piercy, Sir, xxvii. 341.
Pierre, xxiv. 74 j xxix. 429.
— a servant, devotion of to hb deceased
master, xxi. 437.
*- — de Nemours^ Bishop of Paris, xxi.
383.
Retro, Damiand, St., xxii. 67, 80, 81 i
• da Cortona, xxxii. 52.
de Verona, xxxiii. 159.
Pilger, a veterinary surgeon, xxxiii. 244.
Pilkington, Bishop, account of, xxxix.
376.
Pillans, James, Professor of Humanity in
the University of Edinburgh, principles
of elementary teaching, xxxix. 99 —
character of the work, 114 — neglect of
I the parochial schools of Scotland, ibid.
— recommends higher Salaries and bet-
ter teachers, 115 — commends the vtva
voce plan of instruciion practised in the
Edinburgh sessional schools, by Mr.
Wood, 116 — his own plan of instruction
detailed, 117 — in what respect not Com-
mendable, 119 — neglects speaking of
the merits of Dr. Bell, whose system he
follows, 120.
Pillet, General, xxiii. 192 j xxv. 635 ;
xxvi. 5, 6 ; xxxiv. 88.
Pinabel; Count, xxx. 57,
Pinarius, xxvii. 297.
Pindar, commentaries on, by Eustathius,
written in the twelfth century, xxiii. 140
— alterations made in expressioBs in his
odes, 144.
— — — opinions of the ancients concern-
ing, xxviii. 410, 411 — ^remarks on his
fenius, and on the structure of his odes,
12-418 — character of Mr. Moore's
translation of them, 419 — specimens of
it, with remarks, 420-430.
xxU. 336 J xxv. 514, 616, 518,
522; xxvi. 141, 246; xxvii. 51 j xxx.
42; xxxii. 159; xxxvi. 48, 56.
Mr., xxxii. 41, note.
Pindemonte, Giovanni, xxiv. 87.
. [Ippolito, notice of his tragedy
of Arminio, xxiv. 87.
Pineda, J. P. de, xxix. 2d0»
Pinera, Lieut.-Col., xxXviii. 476»
Pinkerton, Dr., xxxvi. 3.
..-^.. — Mr., description of a funeral in
the cemetery of Montmartre, xxi. 390 —
scanty remarks of, on Groeee, in his
geography, xxiii. 326.
■ xxv. 176, ttoie f xxvi. 615 j
xxvii. 182.
Pinkney, Mr., xxxix. 221»
Pinner, Orson, xxvi. 146, note.
Pinto, F. M., notice of the travels of, xxit.
332.
Pionessa, Marquis, sent against the Pro-
testants in Hedmont, xxxiii. 169.
Pior, St.) notice of, xxii. 64.
Piozzi's (Mrs.) British synonymy, charac-
ter of, XXXV. 408, 409.
Pipiuo, Francisco, narrative of Marco Polo,
translated into Latin by, xxi. 188.
Pirithous, xxvii. 349.
Piron, xxix. 27.
Pisani, Grazia, xxvii. 537.
Pisano, xxii. 411.
PisistratidsB, xxi. 25.
Pisistratus, xxiL 454.
Pistoia, xxiv. 562*
Pistol, xxvii. 76, note / xxx. 350 ; xxxvi.
174.
Pitana, xxviii. 420.
Pitcaim, Dr., xxxiii. 220.
Pithyllus, xxui. 257.
Piti^liano, Conte di, xxxH. 366.
Pitkin, Mr., xxi. 14; xxvi. 151.
Pitt, Miss, xxx. 543.
■ William (Lord Chatham), re-
fuses to join the Duke of Newcastle's
administration, xxv. 404, 405 — or to
treat with Mr. Fox, 406 — forms a new
administration, 406, 407 — his character,
41 1, 412 — report of a speech of, xxvii.
185.
xxiii. 540; xxv. 403, 413 j xxz»
543.
'•'-^ Mr.^zxxit.l9$ 214,469.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtibw*
INDEX Of NAMES.
143
Pitt, Mr. Mortott, xxx. 433.
• Right Hon. William, traduced by
Hazlitt, xxii. 160.
' character of, by
M. Rubichon, xxiii. 193.
•^— — faroiirable to a
revision of the penal laws, xxiv. 267.
remark of Buona-
parte concerning him, xxviii. 251 — ^vin-
dicated from the charge of having fo-
mented the disturbances in France, 461-
463.
remarks on his
oratory, xzix. 286 — contemplated the
eventual freedom of the negroes, 480.
• anecdote of, when
a youth, xxxi. 278.
observations on
Bishop Tomline's memoirs of, xxxvi.
286 — extracts of notes addressed by his
Majesty George III. to Mr. Pitt, in
1784, 289, no/«r— letter of Mr. Pitt to
his Majesty, in 1801, on conceding the
demands of the Romanists, 290-292—
reply of his Majesty, 292— further letter
of Mr. Pit^ announcing his resignation,
294 — reply of his Majesty, ibid. — letters
to Mr. Pitt when a student at Cam-
bridge, by his father, the Earl of
Chatham, 295-298.
■ remark on the
poor-laws, xxxvii. 559*
-strictures on the
conduct of, xxxviii. 557.
character of, as
drawn by Dr. Parr, xxxix. 301, 302.
xxi. 19, 119 J
xxii. 535 ; xxiii. 540 j xxvi. 104 ; xxvii.
404; xxviii. 273, 361; xxix. 420;
Ittxii. 345 } xxxiii. 486, 577 ; xxxv. 27 ;
Kxxvi. 63, 66.
Pitts, J*, xxi. 103, note.
Pius v., xxxiii 28 ; xxxv. 92 ; xxxvii. 76,
470.
- — VI., XXX. 143.
VII., xxxvi. 308 ; xxxvii. 476.
Piearro, xxxv. 348.
Plaifere, xxvi. 90.
Planchfi, J. xxvii. 382 ; xxix. 313.
Plancius, xxx. 390.
Flangon, xxii. 202.
Pkmtagenet, xxiii. 579.
Geoffrey, xxx. 345.
Plato, notice of his Phaedon, xxi. 311,
and note.
* " > the study of, a mean of preserving
the Greek language, xxiii. 137.
analysis of the Banquet of, xxiv.
429-441 — comparison of it, with that of
Xeiidphon, 443, 444.
■ « ■ ' ' conjecture as to the origin of his
idealism, xxv. 169.
Plato, funeral oratory of, contrasted with
that of Pericles, xxvii. 398-404.
xxi. 35, 95, note, 275, note, 277 ;
xxii. 169, note, 306, 308 ; xxiii. 139,
144, 169, 247, note, 248, 251, 271, and
note, 278, 398, 495, 544; xxiv. 552;
xxv. 171, 510; xxvi. 247, 416, 480;
xxvii. 63; xxviii. 37, f4l7; xxix. 327,
453; xxxii. 69,160,303, 449; xxxiii.
302 J xxxiv. 171, 463; xxxvi. 39,61 J
xxxviii. 379.
Platoff, Count, hospitality of, towards Sit
R. Ker Porter, xxvi. 439.
Piatt, xxi. 98.
- Judge, xxxv. 236.
Mr., xxxv. 236.
Plattes, Gabriel, observation of, xxxvi.
394.
Plautus, xxii. 178, 194, note, 197; xxili.
146, 151, 152; xxvii. 44; xxxii. 160 J
xxxvi. 59.
Playfair, Professor, illustration of the
Uuttonian theory of the earth, xxix.
141, 142.
xxxvi. 154, 155, 233,
478.
Plegmund, Archbishop of Canterbury,
xxxiv. 290.
Pletho, xxiii. 137.
Pleydell, xxvi. 116.
Pliny, mention made of red snow by, Xxi,
232.
silent respecting the digamma, xxvii.
47.
xxii. 345, 441 ; xxiii. 141, 146 ; xxiv.
103, 121, 161, 402, 403 ; xxv. 47, 49 ;
xxvi. 217,220, 221, 388; xxvii. 497,
note; xxviii. 320; xxix. 461; xxx.
225, note, 389 ; xxxii. 238 ; xxxiv. 254,
524; xxxix. 177,490.
the younger, xxxiii. 242.
Plowden, Francis, memorable words of,
xxxiii. 410.
Master, xxi 402, 403.
Mr., xxii. 273.^
T — Rev. Charles, xxxiii. 32.
Plunket, Right Hon. C. (now Lord),
speech in the House of Commons, re-
viewed, xxii. 492 — occasion of it, 494 —
observations on the character of Mr.
Plunket's oratory, 496-498 — extract
from his speech, 510, 511.
■ xxxvi. 69 ; xxxviii. 557, 570.
Plutarch, remark of, applicable at the pre-
sent day, xxiii. 411.
remarks on the Banquet of, xxiv.
421-424.
observations on his Lives, xxvii.
277 — contradiction in his life of Numa,
294, 295.
quotation from, xxxiii. 361,
note.
Digitized by
Googk
144
PART I— INDEX OP NAMES
QUARTERI.T
Plutarcb, passage of, confirmed, xxxv.
396,397.
xxi. 503; xxii. 104, 185, 336;
xxiii. 139, 142, J46, 279; xxiv. 381;
XXV. 505, 508, 518; xxvii. 392, note;
xxviii. 98, 321; xxix. 327; xxxii. 69,
70; xxxiv. 171; xxxvi. 182; xxxvii.
454 ; xxxix. 432.
Plutcho, Henrik, xxxii. 22.
Pluto, xxiii. 479; xxiv. 83; xxviL 287 ;
XXX. 398, note.
Plutus, xxiii. 267, note,
Pochole, xxviii. 41.
Pocock, Dr. !£., xxiii. 302 ; xxix. 299.
Pococke, xxvi. 376 ; xxviii. 71.
Pocris, Colonel, homble conduct of, to-
wards the Albanians, xxiii. 127 and note,
xxvi. 5.
Poggio, xxiv. 335.
Poictou, Philip of, Bp., xxxix. 367.
Poincy, M. de, odd plea to save the loss of
an only ear, xxxviii. 230.
Poinsinet, anecdote of, xxix. 433, note —
plan of his ' Cercle, ou la Soiree k la
mode,' 434.
Poinsot, M., xxxix. 446.
Poisson, Mr., xxii. 147 ; xxxix. 443.
Pole, Cardinal, character of, xxxviii. 398.
xxiiL 300 ; xxv. 349 ;
xxxiii. 13, 15, 22; xxxvi. 313; xxxvii.
204, 205.
Polignac, Madame de, xxviii. 460.
Politianus, Angelus, xxii. 312.
Polito, xxiii. 456.
Pollak, Jacob, xxxviii. 123.
PoUexfen, Sir Hargrave, xxxiii. 483.
PoUini, xxix. 198.
PoUio, xxxix. 490.
Pollux, Julius, notice of his *OvafAuft»of,
xxii. 306 ; xxxii. 70.
Polo, Andrea de S. Felice, grandfather of
Marco, xxi. 181.
Fantina, xxi. 189.
Giovanni, xxi. 189,
Maffeo, xxi. 181.
Marco, notices of works respecting,
xxi. 177-180 — commercial visits of the
father and uncles of Marco, into Tar-
taiy, 181 — their return to Europe, 182
— revisit Asia, 183 — their contrivance
to obtain leave to return to Europe, 184
— talents and skill of Marco Polo in
China, 183, 184 — their arrival at Ve-
nice, and reception there, 185, 186, 198
— Marco, appointed to the command of
a galley, is taken prisoner by the Ge-
noese, 188 — ^vindication of him from the
charges of ignorance, 190-195.
xxiv. 3 1 6, note — notice of his
travels in Tartary, 325 — his account of
the Old Man of the Mountain, 325-327.
' Moretta, xxi. 1 89.
Polo, Nicolo, xxi. 181 ; ttiv. 325.
Stefano, xxi. 189.
Poltaratska, Madame, account of a fete
given by her, xxxi. 155.
PoTus of Agrigentum, xxi. 284.
Polverel, xxi. 439.
Polwhele, Mr., xxiv. 8 ; xxxv. 205.
Polybius, phraseology of, correspondent
with that of the sacred writers, xxiii.
142 — how treated by Dionysius, xxvii.
274.
xxv. 70, note, 71 ; xxxii. 71, 77,
81.
Polycarp, Archbishop of Larissa, notice o^
xxiii. 343.
St., xxiv. 351.
Polydorus, xxx. 43.
Polygnotus, xxii. 194.
Polynices, xxvii. 398, note.
Polyphemus, xxxiv. 152.
Polyxena, xxv. 510.
Pomeraye, xxv. 131, fiote,
Pomfret's poems, xxix. 180 — ^why popular,
xxxv. 190.
Pomfret. Lord, xxxix. 7.
Pompadoiur, Madame^ de, remains of, re-
moved to La Tombe Isoire, xxi 386.
— extravagance of, xxvii. 158—
her influence over Louis XV., 172.
xxxiv. 33.
Pompeianus, xxii. 355.
Pompey, xxii. 292, 382, 383; xxiii. 87;
xxiv. 79 ; xxvi. 389 ; xxx. 41.
Pomponne, xxxiv. 23, 24.
Poncet, xxv. 49 ; xxviii. 66.
Ponsonby, George, xxxvi. 65, 66.
•^— James Carrigee, xxxvi. 65.
Pont, Mad. du, xxxiv. 434.
Ponte, Conde da, xxix. 189, 194.
Pontey's treatise on plantations,, remarks
on, xxxvi. 592 — considered the trans-
planted decaying trees a deformity to the
landscape, xxxvii. 323.
Pontraci, Fran9ois, xxi. 383.
Poole, W., an astrologer, notice of, xxvi.
185.
Pope, Alexander, Warton's edition of his
works, xxi. 204— extent of influence of the
Secchia Rapita on him, 506 — remarks
on the epics of, 508.
the galdra-lag, or magi-
cal lay used by, in liis elegy, xxii. 364.
• character of, assailed by
his two last editors, xxiii. 407 — ^War-
ton's objection to him as a poet, 408 —
vindication of his poetical character
against the criticisms of Mr. Bowles,
408-41 1 — and from the charge of bcuig
sordid, 412-413 — instance of his gene-
rosity and independence, 41 3 — ^real state
of his quarrel with Lady Mary Wortley
Montague, 414-418 — vindicated against
Digitized by
Googk
Ubvibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
145
Mr. Bowles's fcotmt of his quairelwith
Addison, 419-421 — and from the charee
of sparing neither friend nor foe, in the
case of Rowe, 421, 422 — ^proof tiiat he
did not receive a thousand pounds from
the Duchess of Marlborough for sup-
pressing the character of Atossa, 423,
424 — account of his early education,
425-427 — his own statement of his poeti-
cal studies, 427-429 — gratitude of Pope
to the Abb^ Southcot, 428, no/e— his
opinion on writing a poem, 430, 431 —
Lord Hervey's and Aaron Hill's cha-
racters of his works, 431 — ^his preference
of antiquity to the best modern poets,
433 — criticism on Milton and Shak-
speare, 432, 433 — general character of
Mr. Pope's poetry, 433, 434— his defi-
nition of wi^ 456.
Pope, A., notice of his attacks on Burnet,
xxi^. 170 — ^remarks on his epistles, xxx.
185, 186 — ^why attached to the Prince
of Wales's court, 545, 546.
Works, xxxii. 27 1 — character of
Warburton's edition, 273— K>f Warton's
edition, 274-276— of Mr. Bowles's edi-
tion, 274-276— of Mr. Roscoe's edition,
274, 276, 277— character of Pope as
given by Warton and Bowles, 277 — ^re-
marks thereon, 277-279— the Duke of
Chandos not satiiized by Pope, 280 —
. Mr. Bowles's aspersion of Lady M. W.
Montague's cluuracter, disproved, 281,
282 — refutation of Mr. Warton's sup-
position, that Pope introduced Dr. Mead
into tlie Dunciad, 283 — and of Mr.
Bowles's accusation, that the poet ridi-
culed the Earl of Hali&x after his death,
ibid. — ^Pope proved not to be licentious,
284 — nature of his connection with the
Blounts, 285, 286 — ^vindication of Pope
from the charge of disingenuousness in
the transactions connected with the pub-
lication of his letters, 287, 289 — charac-
ter of Pope's versification, 290, 291 — of
Ins pastorals, 291, 292— of his * Windsor
Forest,* * Temple of Fame,' and * Imi-
tations,' 292, 293 — of his translation of
Homer, 294, 295 — petulant observations
of Dr. Johnson on Pope's epitaphs, 296,
297 — examination and character of
Pope's * Essay on Criticism,* 297 — con-
flicting opinions of Warton and Bowles
upon it, 298— the ' Epistle of Eloisa'
considered, 299, 300 — remarks on the
* Rape of the Lock,' 300, 301— on the
[■ Dunciad, 301 — on the Satires, 302 — on
the Ethic Epistles, 303 — ^particularly on
the Essay on Man, 303, 304— examina-
tion of Pope's epistolary writings, 304-
308 — eeneral review of the moral and
poetic£a character of Pope, 308-311 —
his Temple of Fame quoted, 157.
VOL. XL..MO.LXXIX.
Pope, Alexander, defects of his tranilation
of the Iliad, xxxiv. 3, 4.
■■ his influence on English
poetry, xxxv. 191, 192.
quotation from, xxzvii.
239— his superiority to the poets of the
present day, 420.
xxiii. 156; xxiv. 75;
XXV. 98, 426, 435 ; xxvi. 245, 435, 506;
xxvii. 64, 67 ; xxix. 185, note, 289 ; xxx.
525, 542; xxxiL 230; xxxiiL 282;
xxxiv. 226, 400; xxxvi. 42,204, 357;
xxxvii. 239, 417; xxxviii. 44; zxxix.
277.
Popham, Sir Home, improvements in te-
legraphic communications made by, xzii.
38, 39, and note, 342.
Poplun, Miss, xxxi. 483.
Tom, xxxi. 483.
Poppleton, Captain, xxviii. 238.
Porcel, xxvii. 19.
Porcius Cato, xxvii. 274.
Porden, Mr., xxv. 135, 140, note,
Porphyrion, xxiv. 435, note.
Porphyry, opinion of the intensive power
of S, xxii. 340.
xxv. 627.
Porsena, xxxii. 71.
Porson, Professor, second transcript of
Photius's Lexicon, xxii. 308— partial
censure by the German critics of Porson
and his school, 340, no/e— condemned
by the German critics, xxiv. 392,
393.
■ various readings in the Agamem-
non of i^schylus, xxv. 507 — hues of
acknowledged metre only to be admittedy
514 — result of the controversy on the
disputed verse, 1 John v. 7, xxvi. 324.
remarks on an imag^ary conver-
sation of, with Mr. Southey, xxx. 509,
510— characteristic qualities of, xxxii.
91.
rejection of 1 John v. 7, remarks
on, xxxiii. 91, 93 — and on the circum.
stances which induced him to embaric
in the controversy respecting its ge-
nuineness, 94 — arrangement of the
choral song in the comedy of the Peace,
xxxiii. 335, nofe — sufleied his chair at
Cambridge to be a sinecure, xxxvi.
263.
xxv. 520 ; xxx. 481:
Porta, B., xxix. 458.
Portalis, M, xxviii. 512, 525.
Porteous, xxvi. 115.
Porter, a base witness ag^st Sir J. Fen-
wick, xxxvii. 256.
Captain D., brutal conduct of, to
a British seaman, xxvii. 75.
Commodore, xxxvii. 280.
— ^ Sir R. K., Travels in Georgia, Ac,
reviewed, xxvi. ^437— departure from
Digitized by
Googk
146
PART I^INDEX OP NAMES.
Qvkwnntsic
Feianborg^, 438 — liif botpitable recep-
tion by Count Plotoff, 439— description
of the pais of Wlady-Caucasus, 440 —
hospitality of the Circassiant, 442— no-
tice of the ruins of Anni, 443 — arrival of
the author at the ruins of Persepolis^
451 — description of them, 4&2-454.-.
character of the Russian womeui zxxi.
158.
Pmt&c, SirR. K., zxv. 450, no/e; zxvi.
194 J zxxv. 390; xxxri. 353.
Porteus, Bishop, zxzii. 159 — his poem on
Death successful against Kmily's, xxzy.
Portsmouth, Duchess of, xzxiii. 290.
Lady, xxix. 213.
■ Lord, xxix. 317.
Portugal, D. F. de, xxvii. 13.
Porus, xxiv. 435 ; xxix. 386.
Posa, xxiii. 444 ; xxix. 373.
Postellus, XXV. 362.
Potemkin, Prince, hoax played off againsi
Catherine II., xxxi. 152.
Poterat, xxx. 152.
Potier, xxi. 304.
Potiti, xxvii. 549.
Pott, Archdeacon, advice of to a mission-
ary, XXV. 444.
Potter, XXV. 410, 511 ; xxxvii. 454.
■ Archbishop, xxiii. 271 ; xxir. 30,
34 ; xxvi. 333 ; xxviii. 186, 320.
*■ John Phillips, letter on systems of
education, xxxix. 100.
^ Mr., remarks on his translation of
Sophocles, xxxi. 200-203.
' " William, who was executed for
cutting down trees, remarks on the ease
of, XXIV. 202, 203, 223.
Pottinger, Captain, xxxvii. 137,
Pouilly, M. de, xxvii. 280.
Poulet, Earl, base conduct of, xxiii. 67.
Pouqueville (F. C. H. L.), Histoire de la
R6g6n^ration de la Grece, xxxv. 221 —
specimen of, tWrf. See Greek Committee,
Part II.
• xxiii. 114, note / xxiv. 409.
Poussin, Caspar, remarks on the land-
scapes of, xxvii. 337.
— N., remarks on the figures of,
xxvii. 387.
— — xxxir. 189.
Powell, Ann, xxxvi. 43.
— ; Dr., xxiv. 182 j xxxiv. 288.
— -^ — Major Thomas, evidence of, before
the House of Lords, relative to Irish
absenteeism, xxxiii. 458.
N versus Cleaver, xxxix. 190.
Power, Major-General, xxvii. 444.
Powis, Lord, xxvi. 518.
Powlett, Dr., xxxii. 139.
Powys, Glothyan, Lord of, xxv. 279.
' Mr. Justice, xxxvi. 552,
Poyntcr, Dr., xxxvi. 308.
Poto, C. del, xxi. 336.
Prades, Abb6 de, xxvii. 168.
Pradt, Abb6 de, remarkable expression,
characteristic of Buonaparte, xxix. 70
— empty terror at the Mexican navy,
xxx. 156.
Pratt, xxT. 410 ; xxxiv. 313.
— — Sir John, xxxvi. 546.
Praunce, xxxvi. 536.
Praxeas, xxvi. 332.
Praxinoe, xxiii. 197.
Praxiteles, xxii. 195.
Premare, xxv. 425.
Premontval, A. P. de, xxviii. 496.
Prester John, xxir. 314, 321 ; xxv. 283 ;
xxxix. 78.
Preston, Lord, xxxvi. 539, note,
■ ' Mr., his opinion on the necessity
of limiting the interest of money, xxxiii.
199.
xxi. 164 J xxxiii. 190, 197.
Pretorius, xxii. 361.
Prevost, M. Constant, geological observa-
tions by, xxxiv. 529-531.
■Sir G., Commander-in-Chief in
the Canadas, remarks on the ignoramce
and incapacity of, xxvii. 405, 415-424-
448— his death, 448.
Priam, xxi. 137 j xxiii. 550; Xxv. 519;
xxxvi. 48.
Priapus, xxxiiL 30.
Price, xxi. 403, note) xxiy. 401 ; xxvi.
151.
Captain, xxiv. 366.
Dr., xxvi. 235; xxxv. 509.
Fanny, xxiv. 363.
Mr., xxxiii. 234; xxxv. 510, 511.
- (Sir Uvedale), on gardening, xxxvii.
307,317,321.
■ xxxir. 3.
Pride, Colonel, opposes the proposition to
make Cromwell king, xxv. 344.
xxxv. 94.
Prideaux, xxiii. 319; xxix. 165; xzxii.
368.
Priestley, Dr., opinion of, with regard to
a supposed goblin, xxiv. 10, 11— quarrel
of, with Huntington, 493, 494.
I action brought bv, for compen-
sation for the loss of certam unpublished
MSS., xxvii. 125, 126.
xxiii. 467, 472, 573 ; xxvi. 235 ;
xxx. 107, 113; xxxv. 180; xxxix. 57.
Prieur, xxxvi. 72.
Primrose, Miss, xxxiii. 481.
Prince, Captain, xxxir. 591.
- Regent, noble conduct of, to Mr.
Sheridan, xxxiii. 584-585 — abused by
the latter, 585.
Pring, Captain, xxvii. 440.
Pringle, Sir J., opinion of, as to the cause
of the abatement, &c., in Europe, xxvii.
551.
Digitized by
Googk
RbVIKW*
INbEX OF NAMES.
14^
iMngle, xxii. 25 | Xfidii. 248.
Prior, xxvi. 427 ; xxxv. 199.
•**— Jumed, extract from hia Life of
Btirke, xxxir. 426— character of his
work, 459. See Burke.
Priscian, notice of the Digammft hy, ixrii.
49.
• XXV. 109.
Proclus, xxiT. 394, ni>/#.
Procopius, xxvii. 532; xxxiii. 159.
Procter, General, operations of, against
the Americans, xxvii. 409, 421, 422 —
his little army defeated, for want of pro-
per co-operation by Sir Q. Prevost, 430|
431 — throws up his command, 432.
■ Colonel, xxvii. 74.
Prodicus, xxiv. 435^ tfd/e, 445.
•- of Ceos, xxi. 284.
Prometheus, xxi. 3l9 j ixiil. 180, 265;
xxiv. 379, 455, 456; xxV. 505; xxvi.
168, 258.
Prony, xxxix. 439, 443.
Propertius, xxxii. 159.
Proserpine, xxiii. 248 ; xxv. 532 ;' xxviii.
415.
Prospero, xxi. 497 ; Xxxv. l77.
Protagoras, notice of, xxi. 282, and note ;
xxiv. 445, noie.
Proteus, xxiii. 462 ; xxv. 506, noie.
Providence, Marie Ang^lique de la, sketch
of the life and revenes of, xxxvi. 345—
early proofs of her enthusiasm, ibid. —
her humility, 347— obedience to her
Spiritual director, 348 — extraordinary
temptations, 348 — her mortifications
and sufferings, real and im^^nary,
350 — sufiered vicariously for the sins of
others, 351 — extravagant and impious
details of a vision, 352 — system of im-
posture carried on by the Romish
church, 353.
Provins, Guyot de, allusion to the mag-
netic needle in the writings of, xxi.
192.
Provost, M., remark on his attempt to
throw discredit on the travels of An-
drada, xxiv. 339.
Proxenes, xxv. 80, note*
Proxenete, xxiii. 348.
Prudentius, xxiii. 152 ; xxxv. 189.
Prudbomme, xxi. 384.
Prusieux, Madame de, xxxiv. 423.
Prussia, King of, xxiii. 12.
Prynne's, William, * Short Demurrer,*
notice of, xxxv. 94, 95 — ^hatred of the
Jews, ibid.
.*. -— ^_^_ merit of his labours,
as keeper of the records in the Tower^
xxxix. 65.
• xxi. 110; zxix«199;
xxxvii. 242.
— - — Sir W., xxxil. 493.
Pallida, AthanasluS; zzui. 3$7.
Psammeticus, xxiL 454 ; xxrt. 153.
Psammis, tomb of, discovered by M. fiel-
zoni, xxiv. 1 57-— description of it, 158-
160 — observations on the plates repre-
sentmg it, 160, 161 —confirms the truth
of Scripture history, 161, 162.
Psellus, Michael, xxii. 310.
Pseudolus, xxii. 194, note.
Ptolemies, Grecian literature encouraged
by the, xxiii. 138.
Ptolemy, probable ruins of the Cistern^
of, xxvi. 21 3 — ^hieroglyphic of the name
of, xxviii. 190.
xxi. 62 ; xxii 455 ; xxiii. 90, 94,
95, 236, note,' xxiv. 103, 105; xxvL
57, 181,* 183; xxvii. 63, 497, fto/e/
xxix. 386; xxxix. 177.
■ Claudius, his astronomical system
erroneous, xxxviii. 5, 6.
— Philadelphus, astronomy how
indebted to, xxxviii. 4.
— Philopater, xxii. 455.
Puar, notice of the dynasty of, xlix. 386i
Publius Mucius, xxvii. 278
Pucelle, xxv. 106.
Puck, legendary account of, xxiL 357-360*
Pudsey, Hugh, Bishop, account of, xxxix.
366.
Puff, Mr., xxiv. 79; xxix. 565; xxxiii.
564.
Puget of Marseilles, xxxii, 345.
Pugh, Mr., xxiv. 222.
Pugin, A., xxv. 113, 116.
Pugnet, Dr., xxxiii. 253.
Pulci, his Morgante Maggiore, wlien
written, xxi. 486— nature of his poems,
498 — Bojardo, liis contemporary, xxx,
47 — question of his religion, xxxvii.
61.
xxvii. 27.
Pullein, John, xxiii. 297.
Pulteney, xxix. 288.
Dr., xxiv. 405.
Mr., xxvii. 189.
W., Earl of Bath, notice of tke
correspondence of, xxx. 557.
Pulton, xxxvii. 498, note,
Pung, xxi. 97.
Purcel, xxxii. 346, 352.
Purcell, Mick, xxxii. 198.
Purchas, statement of, as to the colony of
Virginia, xxxvii. 17, noie,
xxi. 180, 257; xxiv. 314;
175, noiei xxvi. 444 ; xxxviii. 215.
— ^— Rev. Sam., his remarks on tra^
veiling, xxxviii. 151.
Piwley, xxii 290.
UvBeiyytXasj Xxii. 343.
Putnam, G^eneral, xxvi. 3/1 ; xxx. 5.
' Mr., curious account of an animal
seed preserved in a table, xxx. 5, 6. ^
Puylaurent, xxxiii. 153.
Puysegur, xxv. 74.
L 2
Digitized by
Googk
148
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTBRLT
Pye,xxv. 239, 263.
"SyrmsMoD, xxxiii. 563.
PyUdes, xxvii. 349.
Pym, prevented from goinst out to settle
iu New England, xxv. 288.
XXV. 297, 325 ; xxix. 205 j xxxvii
234,235; xxxix. 387.
Pyrrha, xxx. 383.
Pjrrrho, xxv. 526.
Pyrrhus, xxiiL 124, 141 ; xxv. 70 ; xxvii.
306.
Pythagoras, in him and Thales are traced
the soundest doctrines of modern astro-
nomy, xxxviii. 3.
xxi. 280; xxiii. 251 ; xxiv. 161;
xxvi. 374, 501 ; xxviil 37 ; xxxix. 294.
Pythias, xxvii. 349.
Pythionice, xxii. 194, note, 198.
Q.
QuAQUO, D^ xxv. 140, note,^
Quaresimus, xxvi. 375.
Quarles, observation of, on the great
terror of the plague, xxix. 174, 175 —
remarks on his poems, 185, note,
xxviii. 27 ; xxxii. 230.
Quashee Tom, xxii. 283.
Queensberry, Duchess of, notice of the
correspondence o^ xxx. 556, 557.
Quesnay, a leader of the sect of Econo-
mists of France, notice of, xxvii. 160.
xxiv. 283 J xxx. 334.
Quesnel, Abb6, xxxix. 482.
Quevedo, translation of Bellay*s verses on
the Tiber, xxxiv. 316, note,
xxiv. 133.
Quiara, celebrated in Southey's Tale of
Paraguay, xxxii. 458, 459.
Quickfall, xxx. 268.
Quickly, Dame, xxv. 465.
Quin, xxiii. 260, note; xxiv. 350.
— M. J., Visit to Spain, reviewed, xxix.
240. See5/)aiw,PartII.
Quinault, xxv. 1.
Quincy, xxxiv. 311.
Quintanilla, xxx. 449.
Quintilian, necessity of the digamma vin-
dicated by, xxvii. 47, 50 — ^Pope's praise
of, xxxii. 298.
xxxiii. 340 — ^his statement, that
no addresses to the passions were al-
lowed in the Athenian courts, untrue,
341.
. xxvi. 502 ; xxvii. 42, 387,«o/ff/
xxviii. 411 ; xxix. 288 ; xxx. 44 ; xxxiv.
171 ,• xxxvii. 463 j xxxviiL371 ; xxxix.
201.
Quintiney, the horticulturist, notice of,
xxiv. 406.
Quintella, Baron, xxx. 64.
Quiros, xxvi. 518.
Quixote, Don, parallel in Aristophanes,
xxiii. 485 — modifications of his charac-
ter, 498— pleasure from the marvels of
romance, xxix. 452 — when most de-
lightful, xxxiii. 476.
R.
Rabanus Maurus, xxxiii. 73.
Rabba Bar Bar Channa, xxxv. 107.
Rabelais, xxvi. 105 ; xxviii. 366 ; xxxvii.
49.
Rachel, xxiv. 464.
Sister, xxviii. 33.
Racine, remarks on his tragedies, xxix.
44, 45.
xxii 35 ; xxvii. 479 ; xxviii. Ill;
xxxiv. 456 ; xxxvi. 204.
Racket, Mrs., testimony of, against the
charge of Pope being sordid, xxiii. 413,
427.
Radama, King of Madagascar, treaty
made by, for abolishine slave^ealing
in his dominions, xxvi. 64, 75.
■ xxviii. 173.
Radcliffe, Dr., xxiii. 428 ; xxxiv. 164.
Mrs., xxx. 197.
Radclyffe, T., Earl of Sussex, character
of, xxxviii. 396.
Raebum, the painter, xxxvi. 191.
Raffenel, M., Histoire des Evenemens de
la Gr^ce, reviewed, xxviii. 474.
Raffles, Sir S., story of an ourang-ouiang,
xxv. 374 — skill of the simia carpolegwt^
385.
■ xxviii. 113 — account of the
Javans, 116 — expectations from his
management of Sumatra, 137.
excellence of his book on
Java, xxxiv. 99 — confirmation of the
cannibalism of the Battas, 109.
Sir Thomas, xxi. 68, 90.
Rahman Beg, xxxvi. 373.
Raikes, Mr., Corcyrian cave described by,
xxiii. 329, 330, note,
Raithby. See Tom/ins,
Rakim, Mahomed, xxxvi. 123.
Ralei|^h, Sir Walter, probably not the first
to introduce the potato into Ireland,
zxl 325 ; XXV. 336, 381— extract from,
Digitized by
Googk
Bbvibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
149
his ' Observations concerning the Trade
of England,' xxviii. 435, 436.
Raleigh, Sir Walter, sailed to Bahia in
1686,xxxi. 14.
■ trial of, xxxvi. 514.
■ notice of his history,
xxxvii. 198, 199.
XXV. 336, 381 ; xxvL
145; xxxii. 444; xxxiv. 82, 346;
xxxvi. 513; xxxvii. 17, note; xxxviii.
396.
Ram, James, observations on the natural
rig^ht cf a father to the custody of his
children, xxxix. 183.
Rambouillet, Madame de, xxxii. 344.
Ramirez, xxxiii. 216.
-^— General, xxxviii. 469.
Ramond, xxi. 232 ; xxii. 416.
Baron, xxxvi. 439, 445, 460.
Ramsay, xxiii 407.
■ David, xxvii. 342, et seq,
■ Margaret, xxvii. 355.
Ramus, xxv. 572.
Ramusio, xxi. 180, 185 ; xxiv. 335.
Randolph, lines from his * Muses' Look-
ing Glass,' xxxix. 125.
xxix. 37.
— — Lady, xxxvi. 168.
Mr., xxi. 10.
Ranken, Dr., xxxvii. 194.
Ranulph, the monk of Chester, xxxiii. 435.
Raper, xxiv. 103, 107, 126.
Raphael, xxiii. 26 ; xxvi. 186; xxvii. 331,
336; xxix. 437; xxxi. 175; xxxii. 52;
xxxiii. 495 ; xxxiv. 106.
Rapin, xxix. 425.
Rapp, xxvii. 96.
' General, xxiii. 93.
Rarthurus, xxiii. 153, note,
Rashleigh,xxvi. 110, 112.
Rask, Professor, opinion of, on the au*
thenticity of the Edda, xxii. 364, 365.
Rasselas, xxvii. 118.
Ratcliffe, Sir G., xxxvi. 516.
Ratmaroff, Lieut., xxvi. 349.
Ratton, xxvi. 116.
Rauschius. See Bmfu
RavaiUac, xxii. 371.
Ravenscroft, xxvii. 213.
Ravenstone, Piercy, Thou&^hts on the
Funding Sjrstem and its Effects, xxxi.
311 — ^his mistake in confounding the
general accumulation of capital in a
country, with the increase of capital
stock m the hands of the fundholders,
corrected, 312 — remarks on his view of
the consequences of the funding sys-
tem, 313.
Ravenswood, xxvi. 120.
Ravensworth, Lord, xxvii. 203-206,
Ravis, Dr., xxiii. 305.
Rawdon, Lord, xxxvi. 69.
Rawlins, Miss, xxxvi. 554.
Ray, xxi. 49 ; xxxiv. 311 ; xxxix. 22, 419.
Miss, XXXV. 152.
Rayment, Mr., xxxiii. 375.
Raymond, xxv. 565 ; xxxix. 188.
■ of Toulouse, xxxiii. 152.
Raymundo, xxxiii. 217.
Raynal, Abb^, remarks on his Histoire
Philosophique, xxvi. 285.
■ xxi. 441 ; xxvi. 230 ; xxviii.
496, 521.
Raynaldus, xxv. 118, note,
Raynerius, xxxvii. 55.
Raynouard, xxix. 26.
Rayon, xxx. 174, 175.
Rea, xxiv. 406.
Read, Sir Thomas, xxviii. 236.
Real, xxix. 563.
Rebecca, xxvi. 127 j xxvii. 497 f xxix.
442.
Rechab, xxxiii. 539.
Red Cap, xxii. 358.
Redesdale, Lord, xxiv. 245 ; xxxviii. 243.
Redmond, xxvii. 339.
Redondo, Conde de, xxvii. 26.
Reed, Aiidrew, author of a novel called
* No Fiction,' xxxi. 247.
Rees, Dr., interminable Cyclopsedia of,
xxii. 4.
xxiii. 546 ; xxv. 218.
Reeves, Mr., xxi. 87.
Regiomontanus, xxix. 458.
Regla, Count, xxxvi. 93.
Regnard, plan of his L^gataire Universel,
xxix. 431— extracts from it, 432~its in-
delicacy, ibid,
Reg^nard, notice of an inscription set up
by, on the summit of a high mountain,
xxx. 125, note.
xxix. 27.
Regnaud, xxii. 487.
Regnier, xxx. 22.
Regnobert, xxv. 145.
Rego, Luis do, governor of Pernambuco,
xxxi. 14, 15 — abused by the people, 16.
Regulus, xxv. 70 ; xxviii. 251 ; xxxvi.
225.
Reichard, xxvi. 55.
Reid, Dr., xxvi. 84— different objects of
the theory of, and of that of Locke,
479, 486 — ^his notion concerning the
philosophy of mind, 491-493, 498-505
— the meaning of the words reason, in-
stinct , and truth in the writings of Reid
and Professor Stewart, 505-512.
Reid, Dr., Essays on H3rpochondriasis and
other Nervous Afi'ections, reviewed^
xxvii. 110 — ^how far nervous diseases
can be resisted by the will,\ll5-117—
influence of the dread of death on
health, 117, 118 — on the injuriousness
of solitude in mental alienation, 118|
119— efifects of intemperance, 120.
■ xxxvi. 168.
Digitized by
Googk
w
PART I^'-IND^ OP ?f AMES.
Qi7A|^T9i(|.T
Keid, J.|Xxiv. 408.
Heinbald, xxxii. 98.
Reiner, xxxiii. 151.
Reinolds, John, notice of, xxiii. Z02*
Reisig, xxiv. 393.
Reiske, xxu. 337 ; xxvi. 259, ito/e; w%.
336, note.
Reitze, xxxvii. 32.
P^lfe's historical memoirs, extract from,
xxxvii. 509— remarks on, ibid, 511,
Remigius, xxii. 375.
Remus, xxiv. 79 ; xxvii. 25, 283.
R^musat, M. Abel, xxx. 352.
Renaud6, xxx. 379.
Renaudot, xxi. 375.'
Rennell, Maior, hypothesis of the termi-
nation x)f nie Niger, xxii. 293 — amount
of slope of the bed of the Ganges, 478
— epithet of Scylax, xxvi. 225 — his ac-
count of the descent of the Ganges,
xxxi. 473 — want of celestial observa^
tions in Northern Africa, xxxiii. 543 —
fall of the Ganges, 549 — ^position of
Sibnibas, xxxvii. 109 — commendatory
mention of, xxxix. 179 — ^his opinion as
to the course of the Quorra, 180, note.
« xxii. 291, 476; xxix.
520.
■ Rev. Mr, remarks on a pamphlet
attributed to him, xxxi. 229, 230,
■ T., Remarks on Scepticism,
reviewed, xxii. 1 — admirable plan and
execption of his work, 7, 8 — refutation
of Mr. Lawrence's theory of organiza-
tion, 16-18 — and of materialism^ 27,
• xsvii, 134.
Ilennes, Bishop of, xxxiii. 399.
Renn6ville, Constantin de, xxxiv. 32, note.
Rennie, Mr., improvements of, in the con-
struction of wet docks, xxii. 37 — smith-
ery in Woolwich Dockyard constructed
bv, 40 — and New Naval Arsenal at
Sheemess, ihid. — Mr. Rennie vindicated
from the charge of imitating the French
in constructing the breakwater \x\ Ply-
mouth Sound, 51, 52.
I his estimate of a proposed par
nal through Peak Forest, xxxi. 363.
— xxvi. 36, noiei xxviii. 160;
xxx, 381 ; xxxvi. 157.
Ilepaire, M. de, xxviii. 457.
Repero, |iittle, a New Zealander, xxxi.
53.
Repnin, xxviii. 273.
^epton, improver of landscape gar^eninsri
xxxvii. 317, 321.
Jleresby, Sir J., xxix. 181, note,
Resauoff, sent on an embassy from the
Emperor of Russia to Japan, xxii, 109
— ^his imbecile conduct, and its conse-
quences, ibid. — hisdeath^ t6irf, 112.
Resenius, xxi. 96, note,
Retz, Cardinal de, xx?. H^} |»yU» Wt
ReucWin, xxxv. 93.
Reuilly, M., xxix. 125, note.
ReveiUon, xxviii. 278, 462,
Revel, xxviii. 454.
Reyna, C. de, xxix. 250,
Reynolds, nature of his comedies, w^
. Captaiq, notice of his visit W
New Zealand, xxxii. 315, note,
_ Pr., xxxvi, 70, 71.
Frederick, Life and Time« of,
xxxY, 148— remarks Q» his work, 149-
151.
Mr., cemetery of, xxi. 395.
• Sir J., Mr. Hazlitt^s estimate o%
xxvi. 105.
^ remarks on, xxxviii. 384.
— xxviii. 370 ; xxxi.
xxxii. 347 j ^xxiii. 489 } ipadv,
212 J
189,
219,476,487; xxxix.4.
Reza Kooli Khauj novi. 358.
Rhadacant Deb, xxxvii. 108.
Rhadamanthus, xxiii. 588.
Rhys-ap-Tewdwr-Mawr, xxxv. 175.
Riall, Major-General, xxvii. 435,
Riance, lung, xxix. 466.
Ribadaneyra, xxix. 198 j xxxvii. 323.
Ribera, xxvi. 294.
Ribout^, M., xxix. 27— L* Amour et L* Am-
bition, Com^die, reviewed, 414.
Ricardo, Mr-, criterion of the depreciatipR
of the currency, xxvii. 243.
■ ' that taxation cannot be tlifi
cause of low prices, xxxv. 294.
remarks on his opinions as
to the currency, xxxix. 464, 465.
XXV. 477; xxvii. 246, 249 j
xxix. 234; xxx. 312, 315, 3^4] xwu>
458.
Ricci, xxiv. 162.
Scipion de, xxxvii, 207, 217, 483,
Ricciarda, a tragedy, notice of. Se« Fof
coio.
Rice, Dr., notice Qf a sermon ofj before t]i«
senate of the United States, xxix. 353.
Mr., xxxiii. 234 — his account of an
experiment made by Dr. Whyte, 237,
238.
Spring, xxxvii. 347 — ^increase of o^
cupying mners in Ireland, xxxviii. 82,
Richard tknur de Lion, statue of, dis-
covered by Mr. Stothard in the Abbey
of Fontevrauld, xxv, 136— ransPW of,
548,
-^ ^ .-xxi,102j xxvi. 127, 139;
xxx. 343, 344 1 xxxv, 93 ; xxxix. 62.
. 11., murder of, xxv. 550 — stf^tQ of
the commercial laws in the reign of,
xxviii. 431 — ^price of corn in the reign
of, xxix. 220.
- xxii. 548 ; sxv. 1 16 ; xxxii. 9^ I
105,110,111.
III., mmfU Q^ tb« ix^^m A
Digitized by
Googk
Emiw*
IKDBX OF NAMES.
151
somii. 108, 109— * character o£ xdx
417.
Richard III., 3Exii. 404 ; zxiv. 362 1 zzy.
550 ; xxvi. 146 ; xxvii. 347.
■ de Lud, xxxiL 97 > zxziv. 269.
.— M., xxxi 402.
Richards^ Captain, xxvi. 70.
— Dr., XXXV. 193.
Richardson, plan of a Protestant nunnery
suggested by, xxii, 92, 93-— prophecy
on the revival of the art of painting it
England, xxiii. 589.
■ ' xxiv. 367 ; xxvi. 130 5 xxvii.
345.
■' author of Grandison, xxxii.
307; xxxiii. 379.
■ Robert, M. D., Travels alonc^
the Mediterranean, &c., reviewed, xxviii.
59 — Zodiac of Dendera, 80, 81 — pro-
gress into Nubia, 82, 83 — ^nominated to
accompany Captain Franklin in the
expedition to the Copper>mine River,
374 — ^proposes accompanying Captain
Franklin to the Mackenzie, and to exa-
mine the coast between that river and
the Copper-mine, xxx. 273, note — opinion
of a Blackfoot Indian on a future state,
378 — ^providential escapes of Dr. Rich-
ardson, 389-395.
- Expedition along the shore of
the Polar Sea, xxxviii. 335, 340, 349
— character of, 337.
of Trinity College, Dublin,
xxiii 518.
•mode
down
fiorin grass
• John) xxxix. 271.
•Jonathan, remarks on por-
[e of laying
i, xxxviii. 421.
trait painting, xxxviii. 382.
■ ' Lord^Chief Justice, xxvL 185.
Mr., funeral service over
Wesley, read by, xxiv. 49.
■ Mr., XXV. 353 ; xxxv. 407.
Richelieu, Cardinal, xxvi. 232 ; xxvii. 147,
149; xxxiv. 62, 75; xxxvii. 236;
xxxviii. 218.
Due de, xxx. 373 ; xxxv. 375.
I Duchess of, xxiii. 159.
Mar6chal de, xxiii. 165 ; xxx.
558.
Richer, xxvi. 105.
Richmond, Charles Lennox, Duke of,
XXVL436.
Duke of, xxvi. 235.
Ricfater, J. P., characteristics of the Eng-
lish, French, and G^erman, with Madame
de StaePs commentary, xxxii. 86.
Richterhausen, xxvi. 201.
Rickerton, R, xxv. 149.
Rickman,Thomas, Attempt to discriminate
the different styles of English architec-
ture, reviewed, xxv. 112---character of
theweik,116« S^^JreMteeiure, Part II.
Rickman, Mr., xzz. 159.
Ricupero, xxx. 395.
Ridley, xxxiv. 342; ixxvi. 38: xzxvil.
76,83,213,217.
Dr., xxiii. 401, note.
— — Gloster, on the influence of the
Holy Ghost, xxxi. 48.
. quotation from his trlum^
Shant answer to Phillips, xxxiii. 16.
olfi, xxxiii. 28.
Rienzo, Cola di, pompous titles assumed
hy him, xxiv. 556, 560.
Rimo, a Marseillese, suspected to havfl
attempted the lifb of M. Belxoni, at
Theb^, xxiii. 94.
Rigaud, xxi. 440.
Rlho Riho, king of Owhyhee, description
of the residence of, xxviii. 346.
— — • anecdotes of,
429 — arrival of, with his queen,
in England, 430, 431 — ^their illness and
death, 431, 432 — their remains sent to
Owhyhee, 432, 433— funeral of, 434,
435.
Rikord, Captain, vo3rages to the coasts Of
Japan, reviewed, xxii. 107 — ^is sent by
the Russian government to Kunashier,
to ascertain the fate of Captain Golow-
nin, 122— captures a Japanese ship, 123
— ^his treatment of the captain on his
arrival at Kamschatka, 124 — ^returns to
Kunashier bay, 125 — ^noble conduct of
his prisoner, Kachi, 126, 127~obtain8
the Uberation of Golownin and his com^
panions, 128 ; xxv. 212, 213.
Riley, Mr., xxiv. 243.
Rimini, F. da, a tragedy. See Peiiico*
Rimius, xxiv. 25.
Rinaldo, xxv. 430 ; xxx. 50, 57«
Ringold, T., xxvi. 79.
Riquet, Francois, xxxiv. 86.
Risbton, xxxvii. 223.
Ritchie, Mr., admirable qualifications of
for exploring the interior of Africa, xxiii.
226 — ^notice of his researches in the
interior of Tripoli, 227— his premature
death, 228 — substance of information
procured by him relative to Timbuctoo,
Bornou, the river Niger, and the neigh-
bouring countries, 229-233 — ^probabili-
ties that the Niger is the same as the
Nile of Egypt, 236-241.
xxv.^25 ; xxvi. 56 ; xxix. 509;
xxxiii. 519.
Ritson, Joseph, spiteful pleasure in detect-
ing tiie errors of a superior intellect, xxi.
Ill— brahminical diet of, xxxviii. 505.
■ xxxiii. 313 ; xxxv. 82.
Rivadavia, D. Bernardino, xxxii, 142.
Rive, de la, xxxv. 266.
Rivers, Lady, xxiii 49.
Rivet, xxx. 475.
RobaiS; Van, xxziY. 62.
Digitized by
Googk
160
PART I.-.INDEX OF NAMES.
QU1BTSRL.1E
Robartg, Sir W., xadr. 462.
Robert I. of Scotland, xxxvii. 360.
- Bishop of Coutances, xxv. 141.
. the Devil, xxii. 370.
. Duke, XXX. 341.
■ of Gloucester, xxxii. 297.
■ King of France, xxv. 571.
■ King of Naples, usurped the crown
of that kingdom, and of Provence, xxxi.
67 — ^favoured Petrarch and Boccaccio,
71, 72.
■ a Monk, cnielties of, xxv. 560,
■ Mr., xxi. 384.
Roberts, Barr6 Charles, xxxvii. 485.
Captain, xxvii. 413.
■ Lewis, xxxii. 1 72 ; xxxiv. 69.
Mr., tutor to Hayley the poet, at
Eton, xxxi. 270.
Robertson, Dr., national peculiarity of his
writing, xxix. 312— judicious remark on
the eagerness of Las Casas, xxx. 579 —
absence of cruelty in the Spanish laws
for the Indians, xxxv. 348— eminence
as an historian, xxxvi. 168.
— xxxiv. 402.
" ' Mr., a merchant, advantages of
Annabon, ,xxvi. 55.
the murderer of Porteous, xxvi.
115— objections to the character of
George Robertson, 119.
John, observations on the
' gravity of the human body, xxxiv. 35.
■■ Mr., his style of eardenincr,
xxxvii. 316, 317. ^
Robertson's, William, edition of Schreve-
lius, notice of, xxii. 314.
Roberval, xxxix. 442.
Robeson, Rrofessor, xxxvi. 168.
Robespierre, memorable words of, respect-
ing the French colonies, xxi. 435-451.
xxii. 512, 543 ; xxv. 561 ; xxvi.
234 j xxviii. 280, 453; xxix. 450; xxx.
272; xxxiii.406, 573; xxxv. 348.
Robin Goodfellow, xxi. 107 ; xxii. 358.
Hood, xxii. 358; xxvi. 127.
Robinson, author of Ecclesiastical Re-
searches, xxxiii. 143, 144.
■ I — - a grammarian, xxxix. 110.
' , Crusoe, turned by Burckhardt
into an Arabian tale, xxii. 440.
' ' •'. xxiv. 332.
' Major-General, xxvii. 444.
'■ Michael, xxxvii. 16.
— Mr., gratitude of a Chinese
merchant towards, xxi. 78.
■ R., the Baptist historian, misre-
presentation of, xxviii. 2.
(Right Hon. F. J.), speech on
the financial situation of the country,
xxxv. 238. See Finance j Part II.
Sir T., xxv. 404, 409.
' — W. D,, Memoirs of the Mexican
Revolution, reviewed, xxx. 151. See
Mexico, Part II.
Robinson v. Bland, xxv. 259, note,
RoborteUus, xxv. 507, 509,511,525.
Rob Roy, xxvL 110, 112; xxvii. 340.
Robsart, Amy, xxvi. 143 ; xxvii. 341.
Sir H., xxvi. 147.
Roca, Duchess de la, xxiii. 367.
Rocha, Joao Bernardo da, author of
^ OPortugez,' a periodical work, xxxi.
12.
Rochambeau, General, xxi. 441, 444 —
succeeds General Le Clerc in the com-
mand of the French forces in St. Do-
mingo, 448.
Rocheu)ucault, Duke de la, xxvi. 373;
xxvii 403; xxviii. 282.
Rocheg^de, M. de, murder of, at Avignon,
xxviu. 299.
Rochester, Bishop of, xxiii. 6 ; xxxvi. 552.
' Lord, confession of, to Bishop
Burnet, xxviii. 524.
— ^ publication of his con-
fession by Burnet, not a breach of ho-
nour, xxix. 169, 170.
xxiii. 10; xxxiii. 307;
xxxviii. 315.
Rochford, xxxiii. 15.
Rochman Bey, xxvii. 229.
Rock, Captain, Detected, or the origin and
character of the recent disturbances,
xxviii. 535, 546^perusal of, recom-
mended, 573, note.
— xxxi. 494 ; xxxvii. 563.
Rockingham, Lord, xxxiv. 474.
Roda, Marquis of, xxix. 265.
Rodenstein, tradition of the family o^
xxii. 369.
Roderick Dhu, xxvii. 339.
Rodney, Admiral Lord, question of his
having received a hint of breaking the
line from Clerk, xxvi. 26, 27.
North America commissioner, xxx.
450, note.
Rodolph of Hapsburg, xxii. 371.'
Rodrigue, xxix. 40.
Rodriguez, courageous behaviour of, xxxviii.
457.
— xxx. 464.
Roe, Sir T., xxx. 233.
Roflensis, xxviii. 330.
Roger II., of Sicily, xxxiv. 64.
— Bishop of Salisbury, account of,
xxxiv. 320-322.
— (Ponce), cruel penance imposed on,
by Saint Dominic, xxxiii. 155.
— of Chester, xxxiv. 250.
the Norman, xxiii. 145.
M., xxix. 27.
— — Sir, xxvii. 81.
Rogero, xxx. 54.
Rogers, xxxvii. 420.
*■ Commodore, xxi. 134, 144.
Digitized by
Googk
Be VIEW.
INDEX OF NAMES.
153
Rogers, John, editor of Matthews' s bible,
xxiii. 296.
(Samuel), termed the grandfather
of living poetry, xxxvii. 420.
xxxiii. 586, 589, 590.
Rogers' sermons, character of, xxix. 302.
Roget, Dr., extracts from the reports of,
on the state of disease among the pri-
soners in the Milbank Penitentiary,
XXX. 436-438.
Rohan, Cardinal de, xxyiii. 276 ', xxix.
575.
— — — Duke of, xxxiii. 170.
Rohler, notice of the tenets of, xxviii. 15.
Roias, xxix. 425.
Rokeby, Lord, xxxiv. 164.
Roland, xxi. 511.
Rolle, Mr., xxiii. 401, note.
Rollin, character of, as a Grecian histo-
rian, xxT. 154 ; xxviii. 35.
RoUo, XXV. 118 ', XXX. 41.
Roma, Goimt, xxix. 98.
Romanus, xxvi. 39.
Romanzoff, Count, xxiv. 335 ; xxv. 213 ;
xxvi, 341 ; xxvii. 138.
Romeo, xxv. 14, 426 ; xxix. 430.
■ and Juliet, imitation of, by M.
Ducis, xxix. 47, 48.
Romilly, Sir S., opinion of, on the vast
increase of law reports, xxi. 405 — bill
for abolishing capital punishment in
certain kinds of larceny, xxiv. 196.
■ xxiv. 206,233, 239, 394,
395 ; xxvii. 126, note; xxviii. 207; xxx.
279, 428; xxxvi. 287 ; xxxvii 148;
xxxviii. 243, 245.
Romney, notice of Hayley*s life of, xxxi.
263.
Romolo, Signor, xxxiv. 44.
Romulus, moral improbability of the insti-
tutions and acts ascribed to him, xxvii.
283-292.
xxiv. 79 ; xxvii. 23, 25, 279 ;
xxviii. 319.
Ronald, St., xxvi. 457.
Rooke, Sir G., xxvi. 435.
Rookwood, xxxvi. 516.
Roos, Hon. Fred. Fitzgerald de, Travels in
the United States and Canada, xxxvii.
260. See United. States, Part II.
— -^— note t<^ .the review of his nar-
rative, xxxviii. 298* , ' "
Roostum, xxxvi. 3t^7, 36|2.
Roque, a French merchant, absurd remark
•' of, xxiii. 340.
Roquefeuille, J. de, xxiv. 532.
Rosa, Salvator, xxiv. 549. .
Rosalind and Helen, a poem, by P. B.
Shelley, notice of, xxi. 470.
Rosamond, xxi. 91 — body of, removed
from the quire of Godstow, 367.
■ xxi. 91 ; xxvii. 25.
Rosarges, xxxiv. 32.
Roscius, xxiv. 72 ; ficviii 101.
Roscoe's Pamphlets on Penal Jurispru-
dence, reviewed, xxx. 404.
• — Thomas, Works of Pope, xxxii.
271— character of his edition, 274-276,
277. See Pope,
■ ^— xxi. 154, note, 496, note^
xxv. 52 ; xxvi. 245.
Roscommon, xxxv. 190.
Rose, xxvi. 147.
the famous gardener of Charles II.|
xxiv. 406, 412.
Mr., xxvii. 131, note.
— « Right Hon. G., mainly contributed
to the establishment of savings banks
on their present plan, xxi. 422.
■ observations of, on
the improvement of the slaves on hid
West India estates, xxix. 482, 483 ;
xxxii. 162.
William Stewart, the Court of Beasts,
a poem, reviewed, xxi. 486 — specimenS|
with remarks, 493-498 ; xxii. 357, note;
xxvi. 191, note.
-Translaiion of Orlando
Furioso, reviewed, xxx. 40 — specimens,
with remarks, 53-61 ; xxx. 151.
Rosenfeld, Hans, notice of the tenets o^
xxviii. 15, 16.
Rosenmiiller, xxx. 94, note.
Rosmunda, xxiv. 76.
Ross, Bishop of, xxxvi. 518, note.
— ^ Captain J., Voyage of Discovery,
reviewed, xxi. 213 — remarks on his
failure and on his qualifications, 214 —
inaccuracy of his engravings, 216 — im-'
?ortant observation made at Wygat
sland, 217 — biographical notice of
John Saccheous, an Esquimaux inter-
preter, who accompanied Captain Ross,
217-219 — ^perilous situation of the ships,
220— account of the Esquimaux, 221-
228— and of the red snow, 229, 230—
Captain Ross's inconsistencies in his
account of Wolstenholme and other
Sounds, 233-244 — his justification of
his conduct, 246, 247 — advantages re-
sulting from the voyage, 256-262 — ^re-
sult of the voyage to the Polar Seas,
xxv. 175, note.
— xxvi. 516; xxviii. 405 —
notice of the voyage of discovery of,
xxx. 233, 234.
• instance of Chinese grati-
tude shown towards, xxi. 77; xxxvii. 526.
. D., xxix. 446.
James, xxxix. 359.
Major-Greneral, exertions of, in the
campaign at Washington, xxxvii. 506
—killed, 507, 511.
Sir P., xxix. 101.
Rosseau, Sir J., xxvi. 131.
RosseUni, Bernardo, >xxii. 64, 65.
Digitized by
Googk
IM
PART L-INDBX OF NAMES.
QuAwrsmLV
Bossettii Signor, motice of hit eommtiS^
taryon Dante, xxxrii. b7, 58.
Rossi, Mr. de, petition of, againit Sir
Thomas Maitland, zzix. 101 ; xxxr. 90,
100.
Rossignoli, xxvii. 225.
Rosslyn, Lord, comparison of the num-
ber of controverted appeals determined
in the House of Lords by, with those
determined by Lord Eldon, zzx. 287.
Rossoni, xxvi. 225.
Rothscluld, Mr., xxxiii. 190 — ^his opinion
on the usury laws, 202, 203.
— — xxvi. 260, note,
Rotrou, notice of the plays of, zxiz. 36.
Rottenburgh, Major-General de, zxrii.
421.
Roubiliac's sculpture, character of, xxziT.
124.
Roume, treacheiy of, xxi. 442, 443.
Roundhead, xxvii. 421.
Rousel or Russel, Abbot, xzv. 131.
Rousseau, pleasures to be derived from
wealth, xxiv. 420.
' " ' pleasures of a tour, xxvii. 119.
I I holiday in honour of, zxviii.
259.
censure of Peter the First's
conduct, xxxi. 150.
xxi. 122, 133} xxii.28j xxiii.
514; xxvi. 230, 285; xxvii. 167;
xxviii. 501; xxxii. 346; xxxv. 180;
zxxvii. 406.
Rousseau, J. B., crypt of, in the catacombs
of Paris, xxi. 388.
Routh, Dr., judidoui observationg of, on
Burnett's History of his own IHme,
xxix. 170-172.
— xxi. 285; xxvii. 323; xxxix.
295.
Rouvigny, xxix. 191.
Roux, xxvi. 234.
Bertrand, xxxvi. 452.
Rovere, Princess Lavinia della, xxxvii. 75.
Rovillius, xxxviii. 386.
Row, Sir Thomas, improvident marriages
of his Indian servant, xxxvi. 485.
Rowan, Hamilton, xxxvi. 68, 70, 71.
Rowe, Mr., killed by the New Zealanders,
xxxi. 58.
— Mrs., xxiv. 24 ; xxix. 305.
«— — Pope's observation on, considered,
xxiii. 421, 422 — ^the unities neglected
by, xxvii. 481 — character of the dra-
matic writing of, xxix. 422, 423.
Rowena, xxvi. 127.
Rowland, xxv. 242, 263.
Rowlandson, the pcdnter, xxxi. 484.
Rowley, xxix. 37.
Rowney, xxxii. 98, noie,
Roxanfe', xxii. 194.
Roxas, xxv. 1.
Roxburgh, sdv, 414.
Roxburgfae, Duke of, aeeomt of iht salt
of the library of, xxxii. 153, 154.
R<^, General, xxxvL 152, 161.
Royer, Jeanne le, birth and education of,
xxxiii. 376, 377 — assumes the names
of Sister Nativity, 377. See NativUL
Royston, xxxii. 494.
Rubens, picture of the crucifixion of Si
Peter by, xxxix. 4.
xxxiv.376; xxxvii. 41.
Rubichon, M., De PAngletene, reviewed,
xxiii. 1 74 — ^why Frenchmen dislike Eng-
land, 177 — impressions of an English-
man at Paris, 178— contrast between
the English and French, when speak-
ing of their countries, 180, 181 — difier-
ence between the intellectual endow-
ments of the two nations, 181-184 — in-
fluence of history and political circum-
stances on the characters of the two na-
tions, 184-186— the gpreat development
of all the intellectual powers of England,
a reason why Frenchmen find it di£S-
cult to form just ideas of that country,
187, 188— illustrated in the person of
Montesquieu, 188-190— qualifications ef
M. Rubichon for his work, 191 — dia-
racter of it, ibid. — specimens of his mis-
representations, 192, 193, 194 — his
strictures on modem French glory, 194,
195 — and on the policy of the Bourbons
since the return of Louis XVIII., 196
— ludicrous blunders of the author, 196,
197 — and contradictions, 198; xxv. 535.
Rubruquis, travels oi^ in Tartary, xxiv.
322-324.
xxi. 178; zx?L 42; zzix. 120.
Rucellai, xxiv. 76.
Rudakoff,xxii. 117, 122, 128.
Rudbeck, xxi. 103.
Rudin^, Mr., great loss sustained l^, from
existing copyright act, xxi. 203.
Rudyard, Sir B.> xxiii. 561 ; xxv. 292.
Rueda, Lope de, a Spanish dramatic
writer, notice of, xxix. 424.
Ruell, Rev. Mr., opinion of, on the con-
fessions made by convicts, xxiv. 212,
223, 250.
Ruffhead, Owen, extract from his preface
to the statutes, xxxvii. 188.
xxiii. 421.
Rufinus, xxix. 177; xxxii. 19.
Rugeley, Captain H., xxix. 344.
Rug^ero, xxviii. 371 ; xxx. 42, 50.
Ruggles, Mr., proposal of, for maintaining
the poor, xxviii. 362.
Ruhnken, xxii. 305, note^ 309 ; zziii. 139;
xxv. 506.
Ruitlandius. See OrUmdo,
Ruiz and Domberg, potatoes discovared
by, xxi. 325.
Rule, Sir William, zzzviL 283.
Rullus, P., zzzii. 76,
Digitized by
Googk
Bfyi»w-
INPBX 07 NAtfSP.
IM
Eumbold, Sir G., xxviii. 249.
Ilumfordj Count, xxxvii. 339,
Bumphius, xxiv. 414} xxviii. U4, Ii25 ;
xxxi. 64.
Kundell and Bridge, xxx, 491,
Rundell, Mrs., xxiv. 350.
Runjeet Sing, xxxvi. 135.
^vuinington, Serjeant, xxYvii- 188.
Rupert, Prince, unprudent conduct at the
battle of Marston Mopr, xxy. 304 — and
at Naseby, 311^— is protected by the
Portuguese, 329, 330.
t - ' - — '• x»x. 206 } xxxii. 495.
Rurik, xxvi. 37.
Ruscellai, x^pf. 61,
Rush, Dr., es^riment with th« y^iolous
matter, xxvii. 552.
m>m^ Friar, his history of Danish QfigiQ)
xxi. 107 J xxii, 358.
Mr., xxxvii. 27G, noi^, 295 5 wqpx.
225, 227, 229, 237.
Richard, xxvi. 364,
Rushout, xxviii. 57.
Rushworth, XXV, 309, not^ j ^x^. 493;
xxxviii. 246.
--- — -— Mr., xxiv, 362.
Rup^l, xxiv. 462, 467 j xxix. 357.
W. Oldnall, Treatise on Griines
and Indi?tabl« Misdeme^^nours, xxxvii.
147.
Ru8«eU, % poet of Witftou's school, eaily
death of, xxxi. 289 5 xxxv, 193, 194.
IftusiiU, History of Mod«m Bwopt 1 nxii.
90.
Admiral, xxxvii. 255^bfM f OH*
duct of, 256.
Captain, xxxvL 71, 72.
Dr., opinion of, on eoatagioiii
xxvii. 539.
Dr. Patrick, xxxiii. 239.
Lady, xxiv. 369-371.
Rachel, xxxvi. 522.
Lord John, Don Carlos, a Tra.
^edy, reviewed, xxix. 370 — analysis of
It, with extractii and remarks, 375-382.
- xxii. 545 ; xxiv. 218 }
567; xxxvi. 536, noh ; xxxvii. 252.
Lord William, xxxvi. 516^-ob8er.
vations on his case, 539.
•xxxvii. 252.
Mr., xxxvii, 157,
Russells, xxi, 164,
Rusticello, or Rustighallo, xxi. 188.
Ruth, xxiii. 298.
Rutherford, Scotch, xxix. 181.
Rutland, £arl and Countew of,xxxix. 386.
Ruysdael, xxxix. 3,
Ryan, Mrs. S., xxiv. 46«
Ryland, xxiv. 481.
Rymer, xxi. 110; xxiii. 432; lXTii.48l.
Ryou, Dr., xxiii. 661.
Rysbr^ch'i sculpture, character of, xxxiv.
123.
Ryves, Captaiu, xxxf . 515.
s.
SaIPI, XXX. 211.
Sabaco, xxvii 234.
Sabatier, Abb6, xxviii, 496 ; xxxiii. 65.
Sabellico, Marc' Antonio, xxxi. 423-425.
Sabine, Captain, edits tbe North Georgia
Gazette, xxv. 190 — observations taken
by him, 204 — ^tribute to his skill and
services, 216.
^-,— xxi. 220, 236, note,'
238, 251 ; xxv. 183, 184; xxxii. 34.
. Mr., notice of the communications
of, to the Loudon Horticultural Society,
xxiv. 416, 417.
Sabio, AlonzQ el, King of C&stije, xxi. 191.
Saboon el Fakir, origin of the name, xxiii.
233.
^acatoi, xxiv. 322.
Saccheous, John, an Esquimaux, interest-
ing account of, xxi. 217-219— his ittteiP»
views with some Esquimaux, 220,
Sacheverell, xxxvi, 529 } xxxvii. 252.
^ackeu. General, xxxi. 163*
SackviUe, xxiii. 432.
I-ord, xxix. 36,
^acis^eAtQi F(a lieandro ^0^ wo* Ul«
Saeripante, xxx, 54.
Sacy, M. Silvestre de, detected the cone*
spondence between the hieratic and de-
motic writing, xxviii, 189.
Saddletree, xxvi. 117, 119.
Sade, Abb6 de, xxiv. 532— Laura, of
whom the daughter, and when married,
536.
■ Countess de, xxiv. 532,
Sadee, the Persian poet, literary merita of,
xxxvi. 363.
Sadler (Mich. Thomas), Ireland, it« Evils*
and their Remedies, reviewed, xxxviiL^
53 — nature of his theory of populatioa^
53, 54 — superiority of the present con-
dition of Ireland, to that when its popu-
lation did not exceed a million, 54^-
former scarcities in Ireland under a
scantier population, 55 — grounds for
believipg the amount of paupers ra*
ceiving relief exaggerated, 70 — the na-
tions of antiquity, now and in what man*
ner planted, 194 — to what extent cor-
rect in his proposition for cultivating Uif
waste lands at home^ xxxix, 316.
Digitized by
Googk
156.
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
Sadler (Mr.), bog reclaimed by, zxxviif.
421.
Ssemund^ xxi. 105.
Sagan, xxiii. 216^ note.
Sa^, Le, xxxiii. 210.
SaiTootoo Quamina, King of Ashantee,'
xxii. 273.
Saib, Tippoo, xxxvi. 47.
Said, XXV. 39.
Saint Aguin, Seigneur de, xxxii. 396 .
< Alban, xxv. 146.
— Albans, Earl of, xxix. 181, note.
Clair, Gen., account of, xxzix. 358.
Columbanus, xxi. 102.
Cricq, xxxiv. 94, 95.
•— Cyr, General, xxxvii. 383.
Cyran, xxviii. 499.
David, Bishop of. College in Wales
founded by, xxiii. 580.
— Evremont, saying of the Dutch Ge-
neral Wurtz, xxviii. 504.
Fond, Faujas, xxxvi. 238.
Greorge, xxi. 92.
Lieut.-Col., xxvii 409.
Georges, Madame de, xxxii. 344.
Hilaire, Auguste de, visited Brazil,
xxxi. 19.
James, xxiv. 42.
Johu, xxiii. 20, 149, 425,- xxiv. 42;
xxv. 286, 290, 321, 325; xxix. 205;
xxxvii. 236, 238.
Mrs., xxv. 284, 288.
Lambert, xxiii. 155, 157, 162.
Mars, M. de, xxxiv. 28, 29--had the
custody of Matthioli, 29-32.
Martin (General), cruelty of, to the
Spaniards in Peru, xxxv. 135, 136.
• M. J., Notice sur le Zodiaque
de Denderah, reviewed, xxviii. 60.
— Palare, M. de, xxxiv. 402.
— Paul, remarks on the conversion and
subsequent history of, xxiv. 35, 36,
his observations on the Jews, xxxviii.
131 — his testimony examined, 316.
■ — xxiv. 15 ; xxxvi. 31.
Peter, xxiv. 35, 42.
Pierre, B. de, xxv. 368 j xxviii. 339,
521.
- — — Priscus, xxv. 124.
— Prix, xxv. 124.
Real, Abb6, xxxi. 425.
Simon, xxvi. 229; xxvii. 156.
Vincent, Lord, xxvi. 15, 30 ; xxxiv.
583 ; xxxvii. 369.
Vitus, xxiii. 180 ; xxv. 63.
Sakallarius, xxiii. 357.
Saladin, xxx. 504 — anecdotes of xxxvi.
385.
Salami, Mr., xxii. 294; xxxiii. 521, note;
xxxix. 159, note.
Salamenes, sketch of the character of,
xxvii. 496.
Salazar, xxix. 425.
Salazar (Diego de), account of, xxxviii.
206, 208, 210.
Gomez de, xxiv. 333.
Sale, Major, xxxv. 497.
Salgues, M., xxvi. 407, 408.
Saliceti, xxviii. 230.
Salisbury, Bishop of, xxv. 399 ; xxxvi.
29.
— -^— Lord, xxxiv. 190.
Mr., xxiv. 417, 418.
Sallier, Abb6, xxvii 279.
Sallust, confirmation of his assertion of the
absence of any mark to shew the con-
fines of the Cyreneans and Carthagi-
nians, xxvi. 216, 217.
xxviii. 100 ; xxxviii. 382.
Salmasius, observation of, on the Ag£i-
memuon of ^schylus, xxv. 506 — ^Mil-
ton's reproaches of, xxxii. 448.
xxiii. 141, 146, 148.
Salmatius, xxx. 538.
Salone, xxiii. 203, et teq.
Salt, Mr., abuse of, by Count Forbin, xxiii.
93.
'-- — xxii. 450, 454, 455 ; xxiv. 144 ;
xxvi. 382 ; xxviii. 75 ; xxx. 491 ; xxxvi
496.
Saltoun, Lord, operations of, before Bay-
onne, xxx. 76.
Saluberry, Lieut.-Col. de, gallant conduct
of, xxvii. 436, 437.
Salvert, M. de, xxviii. 458.
Samael, xxix. 453.
Sampson, xxxvi. 31.
-joint translator of the Geneva
Bible, xxiii. 297.
Sampsons, xxi. 119.
Samson, xxiv. 498 ; xxv. 19 ; xxvi 377 ;
xxvii. 27, 28.
'■ coimsellor, xxxvi. 77,
Rabbi, xxxviii. 126.
Rabbi, xxvi. 182.
Samuel, xxiii. 298 ; xxiv. 499 ; xxvii376.
San Bartolomeo, Paolino da, states the
jSrreat Wall in China to have been built
in the 14th century, xxi. 191.
Sanchery, xxxiii. 150.
Sanchez, Colonel, xxxviii. 480.
Don, xxxviii. 372.
Don F., notice of, xxi. 340.
Father J., a Jesuit missionary,
sufferings of, among the Abipones, xxvi.
312, 313.
Sancho, xxi. 509 ; xxii. 81, 485 ; xxiii.
485 ; xxvi. 125, 253.
Sanchoniathon, xxvi. 375.
Sancroft, Archbishop, xxix. 166 — con-
scientious conduct at the revolution,
167 — his elevation to the primacy,
xxxix. 397.
Sand, Charles Lewis, memoirs of, reviewed,
xxiii. 434 — his early career, 445 — his
Digitized by
Googk
Review.
INDEX OF NAMES.
157
assassination of Kotzebue vindicated by
Professor Krug, 445, 446, notes,
Sandars, Joseph, letter on the proposed
Liverpool and Manchester rail road^
xxxi. 349. See Raii Road, Part II.
Sanders, xxix. 198; xxxiii. 30; xzxvi.
313; xxxvii. 323.
Mr., xxxix. 259.
Sanderson (Bishop Robert), character of;
xxjcviii. 306.
John, xxi. 363.
Sandi's History of Venice, character of,
xxxi. 424-427.
Sandivogiiis, disastrous adventures of, xxvi.
202.
Sandrart, xxv. 135, note.
Sandwich, Lord, xxvi. 235; xxix. 212;
xxxiii. 285 ; xxxv. 152.
Sandys, Archbishop, the books of Samuel,
Kings, and Chronicles, translated by,
xxiii. 298.
George, notice of the travels of, in
Palestme, xxiv. 313, 314.
his version of the PsalmS;
xxxviii. 29.
xxxii. 290 ; xxxiv. 1.
S., xxviii. 53.
San Gallo, xxxii. 55, 64.
Sangrado, xxvi. 29. ■
Sanguines, M., xxvi. 70.
San Lorenzo, Duke of, xxviii. 538.
Martin, Greneral, assembles his army
at Mendoza, xxxviii. 452 — prepares to
pass the Andes, 453 — and see South
America, Part II.
xxviii. 252; xxx.
446,469.
Micheli, remarks on the edifices
erected by, xxxii. 50, 51.
Quirino, an Italian scene painter^
xxxii. 60.
Sansovino, remarks on the edifices erected
by, xxxii. 50, 64.
xxi. 187.
Santa Cruz, Gen., xxx. 352 ; xxxviii. 479.
Santalla, Colonel, xxxviii. 471.
Sauthonax, Toussaint made commander-
in-chief in Domingo, by, xxi. 441.
Santillana, Marques de, xxvii. 1 .
Santillane, Marquis of, xxxviii. 372.
Santini, xxviii. 219.
Sanuto, xxxi. 425.
Sapi, Fra Paolo, two MS. copies of his
treatise on the best mode of governing
Venice found at Paris, xxxi. 439.
Sapphira, xxii. 72.
Sappho, reasons given by, of the Grecian
custom of wearing flowers at feasts, xxiii,
265.
xxiii. 418 ; xxir. 551 : xxvii. 48,
50 ; xxxii. 282 ; xxxiv. 176.
Sarah, xxiii. 214; xxiv. 467.
Saravia, Adrian, notice of, xxiii. 301.
Sardanapalus, sketch of the character of,
xxvii. 493, 494.
Sargent, Mr., the biographer of Henry
Martyn, xxxi. 31 L
Saritsche^ Vice- Admiral, xxvi. 349.
Sarotti, Signor, mention made of red snow
by, xxi. 232.
Sartach, a Tartar chief, embassy to the
court of, xxiv. 322.
Satiel, xxix. 453.
Saturn, ring of, discovered, xxxviii. 6.
xxxiii. 361, note,
Saturnus, xxviii. 319.
Saul, xxiv. 499 ; xxvi. 375, note; xxx. 192.
Saulnier, M., Notice d'un Voyage en
Egypte, &c., reviewed, xxviii. 60.
Saunderson, xxxvi. 233, note,
Lady, married to Huntington,
xxiv. 503.
Sausse, xxviii. 305.
Saussure, red snow observed on the Alps
by, xxi. 232; xxii. 415 ; xxx. 116.
Savage, generosity of Pope to, in his dis-
tress, xxiii. 413, 414.
xxv. 458 ; xxxiii. 591 ; xxxix. 257.
Savary, M., Due de Rovigo, treachery of,
xxix. 66, 67.
' Extrait des
Memoires concernant la Catastrophe de
M. le Due d'Enghien, reviewed, 561 —
refutation of his attempts to charge M.
de Talleyrand with the chief guilt of the
murder of the Duke d'Enghien, 562-
567 — and to exculpate Buonaparte from
it, 567-572 — ^remarks on the circum-
stances of the Duke's mock trial, 572-
580 — examination of Savary*s attempted
vindication of himself, 580-585 — ^his
guilt established, 585.
xxiv. 518 ; xxvi.
407, 408 ; xxvii. 540 ; xxviii. 69 ; xxxv.
261, 263, 264.
Saverio, xxx. 403.
Savery (Captaiu), the steam-engine con-
structed by, xxxii. 407, 408.
Savigny, xxxii. 71, 91.
Saville, Lady, xxxix. 385.
Sir Gteorge, xxxiv. 466 ; xxxix.
385, 386.
Sir Henry, xxxiv. 295.
Savoy, Charles Duke of, xxxii. 357, 359.
— . Duke of, xxiii. 20 ; xxxiii. 162.
Sawyer, Sir Robert, xxxvi. 539.
Saxe, Marshal, qualifications for the com-
mander-in-chief of an army, considered
necessary by, xxii. 386.
Saxo-Grammaticus, xxvii. 36.
Say, Lord, xxxvii. 235.
M., erroneous views of, relating to pro-
duction, xxix. 230, 231 — remark on his
application of the word uti/ittf, xxx. 298.
xxx. 321, 328.
• Mr. T., xxix. 1.
Digitized by
Googk
1)8
PARt L^IKDSX Ot NAMES.
QuAHTfcAlt
gay 'imd' Sele, Lord, pterented by King
Charles, from going out to settle in New
England, xrr. 288.
Sayers (Dr.)) collective works of, with a
biographical memoir, txtY. 175 — ac-
count of his early years and education,
ibid,, 176- 1 79 — ^noble ofi^ made to him
by Bishop Thurlow, 180 — studies medi-
cine, 181 — graduates at Harderwylc, 183
• — settles at Norwich, and devotes him-
self to literary pursuits, 183, 184— Dr.
Sayers* mode of composing, 205 — re-
marks on his dramatic sketches, 205-
207, 211— specimens of them, 208-211
— ^translated into Gkrman, 214 — ^remarks
of German critics on them, 215 — extract
of his mock-heroic on Jack the Giant
Killer, 217, 218— fragment of his Gu^
of Warwick, 218— employment of his
latter years, 220— death, ibid,
Scsevola, xxiii. 146.
Sc&la, G. della, zxir. 562.
Scalfarotto, remarks on his style of archi-
tecture, zxxii. 57.
Scaliger, testimony o^ as to the general
reception of the Septuagint version of
the bible among the Jews, xxiii. 320.
xxii. 309, 327 ; xxv. 526 ; xxvi.
245 ; XXX. 44.
Scallon, xxv. 192.
Scamozzi, remarks on the edifices erected
by, xxxii. 51, 64.
Scapin, xxix. 419, 430.
Scapula, xxii. 311 — critical notice of his
epitome of Stephens's Thesaurus, 316-
318.
his Lexicon, xxxvi. 497.
Scaramucci, Signer, xxx. 146.
Scarborough, Ix>rd, xxvi. 428.
Scarlett, Mr., xxii. 527, note; xxiv. 218.
' Sir James, xxxviii. 250, 251.
Schsefer, xxii. 324 ; xxiv. 390 ; xxv. 520.
Scartellata, Popa, xxi. 94.
Schalchen, retiiarks on the paintings of,
xxvii. 337.
xxxi. 482.
Schedius, Elias, xxii. 360, noie,
Scheele, xxiii. 467.
Scheide, E., xxii. 322.
Scherbatoff, Prince, xxvi. 439.
Schill, Major, account of the bold institrcc-
tion of, in Germany, against the French,
xxii 487-489.
Schiller, notice of, remarks on his tragedy
of Don Carlos, xxix. 373, 374 — and on
his other tragedies, 427, 428.
■ xxxi. 176 — alteration of his play
of the « Robbers,' at Vienna, 192.
■ points of resemblance between his
Wallenstein and Quentin Durward,
x±xv. 530-547.
■ xxiii. 444 i tssir. 229,366 : xxxv.
665.
Sehhnlemftnn, xxL 103.
Schimmelmann, Count, monument to his
wife, xxi. 393.
Schimmelpennick, Miss, t3Eviii. 35.
Schinnding, Mr. Von, xxxii. 32.
Schischmareff, Lieut, xxvi. 347.
Schlegel, Frederick, Lectures on the His-
tory of Literature, Ancient and Modem,
reviewed, xxi. 271 — his character of
Aristophanes, 271-273 — probable reaton
why he selected Socrates as the subject
of ridicule in his Clouds, 273.
■ character of the criticisms of, Xxv.
14— -observations of, on the religiotis
plays of Calderon, 20, 24.
remarks on his criticisms on Sd*
phodes, xxxi. 199-201.
xxiv. 76; xxviii. 43 j xxix. 40,
52, 427 ; xxxiv. 140, 147.
- W., xxix. 314 ; xxxijc. 9.
Schleusner, xxiL 336 ; xxx. 92, 102.
Schlichtingius, xxx. 94, nott,
Schmid, George, one of the primitive Mo-
ravians, notice of his endeavours to con^
vert the natives at the Cape of Good
Hope, xxxii. 4, 5.
Schmidtmeyer, P., Travels to CHli, Te»
viewed, xxx. 441. See C*»/*, Part II.
Schneider, xxii. 311, 325 ; xxiii. 258, notef
xxiv. 383 ; xxix. 336, note,
Schoetgen, xxxv. 108, note,
Schoetgenius, xxx. 96.
Schoolcraft, xxxiii. 549, note,
H. R., Traveb to the Sources
of the Mississippi River, reviewed, :
1— account of the course of the Missis-
sippi, 6-9 — ^mistake in the author's cal-
culations of its elevation, corrected, 11,
12.
■■ ■ xxxiii. 549, note; xxxvii. 455.
Schow, N., xxii 309.
Schrevelius, C, notice of the h^c&ti at,
xxii. 314, 315.
Schulemberg, xxix. 106.
Schutz, critical remarks on Various read'
ings by, in the Agamemnon of JEachj^
lus, xxv. 507, 511, 513, 517.
— Dr., daughter of, executed for
witchcraft, xxix. 447.
Schwart, executed for witchcraft, xxix. 447.
Schwartzenberg, Prince, Buonaparte's
opinion of, as a general, xxviii. 250.
Schweighxuser, xxii. 324, 327.
Sciarrha, xxii. 409.
Sciarrone, Niccola, xxxiv. 44.
Scindea, xxix. 388.
SciofPata, Loza, xxi. 94.
xxiv. 543, 555 J xxvii 3, 219;
xxviii. 85, 251, 423; xxix. 34; 1ekx»
197; xxxiii. 281.
Sdpio, P. M.f xxv. 6, 8, 12.
Tettio, xxii. 306, n$te,
SdronS; lExi 300.
Digitized by
Googk
Baraw.
INDES: OF NAMES.
160
Scoresby, Mr.^ vast field of ic§ seen by
him, xxxvii. 535.
Scott, xxii. 324, 331 ; xndr. 429.
— — Archdeacon, xxxvii. 15. ^
Michael, xxix. 440.
— — Mr., XXV. 399.
- — - Reginald, xxu 107— aseribee malig-
nity to the (i^blins of the mine, xxii.
365; xxix. 461.
— - Rev. Thomas, Memoirs of, by his
Son, xxxi. 26— extracts from one of his
letters, illustrating the error of attribu-
ting the effects of education to super-
natural influence, 27-29.
— — Sir Walter, Lives of the Novelists,
xxxiv. 329^rigin of the publication,
ibid, — Sir Walter's opinion on the ten-
dency of novels, 365-367 — his remarks
on the novels of Bage, and on the mo-
rality of modern sophistry, 367-370—
comparison between SmoUet and Field-
ing, 372-376^nfluence of the novels
by the author of Waverley, on the
novel-literature of the age, 377, 378.
(See Noveh, Part Il.Wtranskted the
ballad on the battle oi Evesham, xxxv.
82 — song by, on the hero of Killy-
kraukie, xxxvii. 96.
xxi. 92, 404 5 xxii. 351,
360, note: xxiii. 362; xxvi. 105, 143 ;
zxvii. 330, 339; xxix. 437; xxx.348;
xxxii. 355; xxxiv. 136, 287; xxxvii.
324, note, 342, 420 ; xxxviii. 442.
Sir WilUam, xxxii. 104.
Seoular, a sculptor, xxxiv. 133.
Scribe, M.^ Val6rie, Com^die, and Le Se-
cretaire et le Cuisinier, Com^die, re-
viewed, xxix. 414.
Sctiblerus, xxx. 229, note.
Scroggins, xxi. 92 ; xxv. 457.
Scroggs, xxix. 205 ; xxx. 233.
— Sir William, anecdotes of, xxxvi.
531.
Scrope's, Q.P., Memoir on the Geology of
Central France, xxxvi. 437 — observa-
tions on it, 439 — and on the question at
issue between Mr. Scrope and other
English geologists respecting the forma-
tion of valleys, 477-480. See France,
Part II.
Mr., xxxvii. 297. note.
Poullet, xxxiv. 401, 519.
Scudamore, Dr., Treatise on Mineral
Waters, reviewed, xxv. 216. See iWt-
neral maers.FsLTt U.
Scudery, M.,xxviii. 1.
Mademoiselle, xxxviii. 442.
Scylax, xxvi. 225.
Seager, xxii. 343.
Sealy, Mr., extract firom a letter of, on Mr.
Steele's treatment ef his slaves; xxx. 580^
581.
Sebastiaoy isvtii. 330*
Sebastian, Brother, legend of, xxii. 867.
King, xxvii. 11.
of Portugal, xxii. 371.
Sebastiani, General, xxix. 100.
Sechelles, xxvii. 159.
Seeker, Archbishop, remark of, on the
necessity of early religious edtication,
xxi. 133.
■ ^' vindication of, from
Horace Walpole's slander, xxvii. 187,
note — ^refutation of the slander on his
friend Bishop Butler, of having died iH
the communion of the Romish Chmrch|
xxxix. 404, 405.
Sedaine, xxix. 28 — notice of his Gageure
Imprfevue, 434.
Sedgwick's, H. D., vindication of himself
xxxv. 221--«xtract from liis pamphlet,
236.
.._— . xxxvi. 263.
Sedley, xxxiii. 307.
Seed's sermons, character of, xxix. 302*
xxxii. 159.
Sefer, Dervish, notice of, xxX. 210^ 211.
Seguier, P., xxv. 560.
xxviii. 256.
Segur, M. de, xxvii. 153*
Seidler, xxiv. 393, 400, note.
Selden's canon of criticism, retntrks dn^
xxxiii. 94.
■ xxiv. 341 ; xxviii. 186 ; xxxiii.
65; xxxiv. 294; xxxv. 113; xxxviii*
385 ; xxxix. 44.
Seleucus, xxiii. 258 ; xxv. 357, 358, note*
Selim, xxiv. 517.
Selkirk, Alexander, xxiv. 332 ; xxix. 27 K
• Lord, xxvi. 410.
Sellon, Mr., visited Brazil, xxxi. 19.
Selvaggia, xxiv. 562.
Selym, xxii. 450, 459 ; xxiii. 230, note.
Semiramis, xxv. 17.
Semple, Mr., xxv. 455.
Steele, xxxix. 359.
Sempronius Gracchus, xxvii. 294.
Senate, Dr., xxi. 162, note.
Seneca, xxi. 388 : xxiii. 148, 432 ; xxiv.
73, 345, 421, note; xxix. 33, 36 ; xXx.
477 ; xxxii. 291 ; xxxviii. 307 ; xxxix.
269.
Seni, G. B.,the astrologer, notice of, xxvi.
187.
Senneserteus, xxiv. 161.
Sens, William of, xxv. 140.
Seppings, SirR., improvement of, in ships
of war, claimed by the French, xxi.
193.
— improvements in naval
architecture, vindicated from the charge
of being of foreign invention, xxii. 42-
44 — proof of the advantage derived
from them, 45 — admirable contrivanee
for lifting ships, 45, 46 — and for liftings
masts without the a^ of a sheer-hulk;
Digitized by
Googk
160
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
46 — improyements in the stern of shipS;
47,48.
Seppings, Sir R., munificent rewards given
to him, xxvi. 19 — ^the French adopting
his system, 35.
— — XXX. 219 — ^his sjTstem of
naval architecture laid claim to by the
French, 369.
xxvii. 25,* xxxvii. 279,
283 ; xxxix. 24.
Sepulveda, M. de, xxvii. 25.
Seraiah Dowla, xxxtii. 1 10.
Serenius, xxix. 463.
Sergius, xxvii. 48.
■ Paulus, xxiv. 35.
Serram, A., xxvii, 10.
Servius Tullius, institutions of, considered,
xxvii. 297, 298 — analysis of his politi-
cal institutions, xxxii. 77-81.
Seso, Don Carlos, death of, in the cause
of Protestantism, xxix. 254.
Sesostris, xxi. 19; xxvii. 222,'233.
Seth, xxxiii. 145.
Settignano, Desiderio da, xxxii. 64, 65.
Settle, XXXV. 189.
Elkanah, xxix. 212.
Sevajee, xxix. 387.
Sdve, Colonel, success of, in training the
. troops of the Pasha of Egypt after the
European manner, xxx. 491-493 — apos-
tatizes to Mohammedanism, 494.
Sever, Bishop, poisoned by his servant,
xxxix. 374.
Seversky, xxix. 120.
-Severus, xxiv. 363 ; xxxvi. 562.
^ Sevign6, Madame de, xxui. 70, 414 —
xxxii. 305 ; xxxvi. 340.
Seward, xxvii. 26; xxxiii. 313.
Earl, xxiv. 610.
— — Miss, Mr. Edgeworth's first in-
troduction to, xxiii. 526^-curious descrip-
tion of Mrs. Hayley by her, xxxi. 293.
xxiii. 534 ; xxxi. 285 ; xxxv. 205.
Sextus, xxix. 49, 50.
Seymour, Mr., xxxviii. 86.
■ Attorney-General, anecdote of,
xxxviii. 203.
Seyton, Catherine, xxvi. 140, 143.
Sfero, xxvii. 500.
Sforza, Ascanius, xxxii. 365, 368.
Ludovico, honourable anecdote of,
xxxii. 371, 372.
Sganarelle, xxvi. 517 ; xxix. 419.
Sgargiata, Paola, xxi. 94.
Shacabac, xxiv. 424.
Shadwell, xxix. 179— self-conceit of, ex-
posed, 207, 208.
xxxiv. 306 ; xxxv. 186, 189.
Shady Hand, a wild sectarian preacher at
Boston, xxviii. 6.
Shaftesbury, xxxii. 396 ; xxxvi. 530.
Earl of, xxii. 97 ; xxvi. 432 ;
xxix. 188 ; xxxiii. 286.
Shaftoe, xxiii. 520.
Shafton, xxvi. 136; xxvii. 362.
Shah-Abbas, xxxv. 392 ; xxxvi. 370.
Shah Jehan, xxix. 387.
Shahin Beg, xxii. 448.
Shak spear, Mr., rope bridges invented by,
xxxvii. 107, note,
Shakspeare, name of, absurdly spelt in a
French Journal, xxiii. 197, note; re-
marks on his Roman characters, 203 —
strictures on Pope*s criticisms on, 432,
433, 444 — remarks on the play of the
Tempest, 479 — and on the possibility of
making a good translation of his plays,
484 — ^variety in his characters, xxiv.
362 — remarks on the dream of Richard
III., xxviii. 108, 109— why not fairly
appreciated in France, xxix. 45 — limita-
tions of Hamlet, and Romeo and Juliet,
by Ducis, 46-48--appreciated by Charles
I., 185 — in what the excellency of his
character consists, 416-418 — great dis-
tance between him and SchiUer, 427,
428 — admirable scenes in Macbeth and
Hamlet, 429 — noble testimony to his
works by a French critic, 437.
Hamlet, analysis of the cha-
racter of, xxxiv. 210, 211 — comparison
of Messrs. Garrick's and Kemble's per-
formance of tliis character, 211, 213 —
remarks on Mr. Kemble's performance
of his Richard III., 218— Macbeth,
ibid., 219— Hotspur, 219, 220— Henry
v., 220— Coriolanus, 222, 223— and on
the manner in which the plays of Mac-
beth and Henry VIII. were represented
under Mr. Kemble*s direction, 227,
228.
Henry VIII., and Mr. Mil-
man's Anne Boleyn, parallel between,
with remarks, xxxv. 352-360.
xxi. 118,212; xxii. 21,35,
197 ; xxiv. 74, 87, 331 ; xxv. 2, 17, 56,
98, 345, 429, 506, note ; xxvi. 105, 123,
146, 369 ; xxvii. 286, note, 478 ; xxviii.
429, 532; xxix. 206; xxx. 131 ; xxxi.
481 ; xxxii. 66, 221, 226, 352; xxxiii.9;
xxxiv. 136, 199, 306, 352, 456 ; xxxv.
186, 205, 223, 405, 518, 521, 565;
xxxvi. 45, 204, 357; xxxviL 392;
xxxviii. 380.
Shallow, xxiv. 362.
Master, xxxiii. 476.
Shandy, Mr., xxii. 369, note; xxvii. 100.
Shannon, Lord, biographical blunder with
regard to, xxvi. 433, 434.
Sharp, Dr., xxxix. 399.
Shar|)e*s translation of William of
Malmesbury, notice of, xxxiv. 284, note,
Sharpe, Kirkpatrick, xxix. 446, 448.
Sharpitlaw, xxvi. 118.
Shaw, Dr., notice of, xxxii. 398.
xxvi. 213; xxxiii. 332.
Digitized by
Googk
ttEVISW.
INDEX OF NAMEI^.
161
Shaxton, Bishop of Salisbury, notice of,
xxxiv. 342.
Sheaffe, Gkineral, disgpraceful armistice
with the Americans, concluded by, xxvii.
411.
Shee, Mr., xxiii. 411.
Sheehy (Father), tried and executed for
murder, xxxviii. 546.
Sheemaker's sculpture, character of, xxxiv.
123, 124.
Sheffield, Lady, xxxviii. 405,
Lord, xxxi. 302.
(late Lord), xxxviii. 56.
Shelburne, Lord, afterwards Marquis of
Lansdown, xxvi. 235.
Sheldon, xxxii. 479, 485, 490.
Shelley, Percy Bysshe, Laon and Cythna,
and the Revolt of Islam, reviewed, xxi.
460 — ^poetical school to which he be-
longs, ibid, — beautiful stanzas from the
Revolt of Islam, 462— -reasons why it
cannot become popular, ibid., 463 — ^his
philosophical creed, 464 — ^his dislike to
Christianity, 464 — his political system
and desitms as displayed in his poem,
465-471.
Prometheus Un-
bound, reviewed, xxvi. 168 — predomi.
nating characters of Mr. Shelley's poetry,
169 — specimens of his want of meaning,
170-173 — ^his impiety, doggrel, and
nonsense, 173, 174 — ^his bitter enmity
to Christianity exposed, 178-180.
- Posthumous Poems,
xxxiv. 136 — specimens of his transla^
tiouB from Goethe's Faust, 149-151—
character of them, 148 — specimen of his
version of the Cyclops, 151, 152.
mock elegy on the
poet Keats, xxxvii. 418 — ^his portrait the
best in Mr. Leigh Hunt's reminiscences,
425 — supposed to have changed the
opinions that governed him in his early
career, 125.
veitus Westbrook,
;. 193-200, 210.
76.
xxiii. 201 ; xxiv.
Shelton, Mr., xxiv. 209, 219, 221, 223,
249.
Shem, xxi. 50.
Shenstone, xxiii. 534.
Sheppard, xxxvi. 538.
— — Mrs., pious munificence of,
xxvii. 322, 323.
Sherborne, Sir P., xxvi. 131.
Shereeff, Abraham, xxii. 294.
Sherefedden, xxvii. 142.
Shereffeden, xxxvi. 128.
Sheridaa, Rt. Hon. R. B., character of
his eloquence, xxviii. 207— change of
opinion with regard to the French Re-
TOL.XTm MO.UUUX,
volution, 272— dramatic wit of, xxix.
420.
Sheridan, Rt. Hon. R. B., remarks on
the marriage of, with Miss Linley,
xxxiii. 568-571 — biographical notice of
him, 571 — ^remarks on his public life as
a senator and statesman, 572-575 — ^par-
ticularly his conduct respecting the Ca-
tholic question, 575, 576 — on parlia-
mentary reform, 577-579 — ^and on the
regency question, 579-581 — his aliena-
tion from his political friends in 1806,
582 — wish of the Prince Regent for
Sheridan to stand for Westminster, 584
— pecuniary advances by the Prince
Regent to enable Sheridan to come into
Parliament, and Sheridan's subsequent*
conduct, 585 — arrested and thrown into
a spunging-house, ibid, — account of his
last illness, 586.588 — ^remarks thereon,
588-590 — and on Sheridan's character
as a dramatist, 592, 593.
anecdotes of^
xxxiv. 245 — ^in what manner his Pizarro
was composed, 246.
xxix. 288;
xxxiv. 223, 225, 358, 426 ; xxxvii. 268.
Charles, xxxiii. 568.
Mrs., xxxiii. 570, 571.
• Sir ThomaiB, xxxvi. 214.
Sherley, Sir A., xxvi. 444.
Sherlock, Bishop, xxi. 61, note — style of
his sermons, xxix. 302.
■» — xxi. 6 1 , notf ; xxxii. 159 ;
xxxiv. 347.
Sherrocke, xxiv. 406.
Sherwin, xxi. 126.
Sherwood, Southey v. See Southetf,
' Bishop, xxxix. 373.
Neely and Jones, xxv. 466.
Sheth, XXXV. 87.
Shiel, Richard, Evadne, a tragedy, re-
viewed, xxii. 402 — indebted for his plot
to Shirley, 407 — analysis of the plot,
407-409 — extracts from, and comparison
of his play with that of Shirley, 409-
414-— conduding advice to Mr. Shiel,
414, 415.
xxxix. 135.
Shipley, Dr., xxxv. 452.
Shireen, xxx. 208.
Shirley, Mr. Shiel indebted to, for his plot
in Evadne, xxii. 403^haracter of his
dramas, xxiii. 475.
xxvii. 481 ; xxix. 36.
Short, Dr., xxxiii. 183, 185.
Shore, Sir John, xxxv. 482.
Short and Mudge, improvement of reflec*
tors by, xxxvui. 8.
Shower, Sir Bartholomew, xxxvi. 546.
Shrewsbury, Countess of, xxvi. 430 ; ii
307.
Digitized by
Googk
163
PART I^INDEX OP NAMES.
QUARTBRLr
Shrewsbury, Duke of, xxiii. 26.
Earl of, xxxii. 249 j zxxiii.
307 : xxxvii. 255.
Shuckbiu'gh, Sir G., xxxti. 150, experi-
ment by, 153, 154, 159, 162, 163.
Shuckford, xxix. 165 j xxx. 383.
Shumeen el Kalmi, notice of, xxix. 513,
514.
Shungie, a New Zealander, xxxi. 53.
Sbylock, character of, xxix. 417.
xxiv. 74 J xxxii. 66.
Sibthorp, Dr., xxi. 202; xxiii. 329, 831,
338, 345, 347 ; xxxvi. 447, note,
Sibynna, xxiii. 252.
Sicard, Abb6, intelligent replies of the deaf
and dumb pupils of, xxvi. 394 — ^remarks
on his deviation from the Abb^ de
I'Ep^e's system of teaching them, 395,
396.
Sicuro, Count S., xxix. 98.
Siddons, H. xxxvi. 202.
•^ Mrs., anecdote of, xxxiv. 216.
■ xxxvi. 186 — ^notice of her
performance of the character of Lady
Randolf^, 803.
• xxiv. 86 ; xxix. 423 ; xxxv.
181 ; xxxvii. 314.
Sidi Hamet Tooghar, opinion of, relative
to the course of the Niger, xxiii. 231.
•^— Mahommed Dghies, opinion of, rela-
tive to the course of the Niger, xxiii.
^<S 1.
— Mousa, intelligence of, as to the
course of the Niger, xxiii. 233.
.r Sheik, xxxix. 165.
Sidmouth, Lord, concluding lines of an
address to, xxiii. 458.
xxi. 400 ; xxiv. 203 ;
xxxiii. 575.
Sidney, Algernon, eulogium on, xxix.
188.
. observations on the jii-
dicial treatment of, xxxvi. 539.
xxiii. 523; xxv. 294;
xxvii. 491; xxxvi. 516; xxxvii. 252;
xxxviii. 385,
Sabrina, xxiii. 523, 524.
* Sir Philip, version of the psalms
by him and his sister, xxxviii. 28.
■ xxi. 206 ; xxxii. 297,
Sidonius, xxiii. 152.
Siegfried, xxi. 103.
Bieyes, Abb^, xxvi. 236 — character of,
xxviii. 282.
Sigismund, xxv. 145, note,
Sigonius, xxxii. 91.
Sigurd, xxi. 96.
Silenus, xxiv. 443. "
Silhouette, financial measures of, xxvii.
158, 159.
Silius Italicus, xxxii. 159.
Sillery, Marquess of, xxxii. 251.
Silvester, Joshua, peculiiarities of his ver-
sification where learnt, xxxi. 282.
Simalion, xxii. 201.
Simeon, xxii. 482.
■ Metaphrastes, xxiii. 152.
Stylites, St., brief account of,
xxii. 65.
Simmons, xxi. 363.
— — — William, extract from a ballad
written by, xxxvi. 102, note.
Simon, a Jewish tyrant, how pourtrayed by
Mr. Milman, xxiu. 202.
■ xxiv. 441, note; xxviii. 473.
of Durham, account of the chro-
nicle of, xxxiv. 282.
M., xxiii. 188; xxvi. 335.
Magus, xxii. 82.
I Master, notice of the charactered
in Bracebridge Hall, xxxi. 477-478.
de Montford, xxxiii 153, 157;
xxxix. 62.
General, xxxviii. 201.
Simonides, xxiv. 154, 556.
Simple Simon, notice of, xxi. 108,
Simpson, Mr. J., xxix. 445.
— Mr. Thomas, xxx. 101, note,
-^— ~— Squire, specimen of an American
magistrate, xxix. 358.
— — — Thomas, Reserved eulogium on
his discoveries in mathematical sciencOi
xxii. 131.
Sinbad, xxv. 47.
Sinclair, xxii. 375.
Irish linens made up by, after the
German mode, xxxvi. 69.
Sir John, state of the peasantry
of the Highlands, half a ceiitury ago,
and remedies adopted, xxxiii. 465.
xxiv. 418 ; xxviii. 5.
Singer, S. W., notice of his edition of
Spence*s anecdotes, xxiii. 400 — remarks
on his life of Spence^ 404.
Sinope, xxii. 202.
Sirach, xxv. 364.
Sir Politic, xxiv. 331.
Sisera, xxxv. 88.
Sismondi, M., mistaken assertions of, with
fespect to Petrarch, xxiv. 561, 562^
observation of, on the religious dramas
of Galderon, xxv. 21.
xxii. 182 ; xxiv. 293 ; xxv.
5, 13 ; xxix. 121 : xxx. 321 ; xxxi.
427.
Sison, Mr., xxxvi. 141,
Sisyphus, xxv. 505.
Siva, xxii. 364.
SiuenT6, xxi.81.
Siward, xxxii. 98.
Sixtus Senensis, quotation firom, xxxiil«
86, note.
— — xxiii. 300; xxvi. 337,
note: xxx. 475.
Digitized by
Googk
Hbview*
INDEX OF NAMES.
J63
SkadthburgVSir Bobert de, xxxij. 104.
Skelton, verses cited, applied to Jeremy
Bentham, xxii, 59, note — character of
his singular verse, and to whom traced^
xxxi. 282.
Skene, xxi. 233.
Skinner, Daniel, xrrrl 29.
Skippon, XXV. 314.
Skirfawe, Bishop, xxxix. 372.
Skirving, the artist, xxxvi. 179.
' father of the above, extract from
a satiric ballad by, xxxvi. 179.
Skrimner, Giant, xxi. 104.
Skrine, Mr., xxvii. 116.
SkulUewbitter, Andrew, xxvii. 343, 346,
Slade, suggestion of, as to 1 John v. 7,
xxvi. 329.
Slameen Ben Kamerry, sheikh of the
Koran, letter of, to Bello, xxxi. 458.
Slaney, Dr., notice of the death of, xxx,
140, 141.
' Mrs., XXX. 141.
^langenburg. General, xxiii. 18 — ^remoTe4
from his command, 37.
Slender, xxiv. 862.
Slevin, Dr., xxxvii. 469— on the infallibility
of popes, 471.
Slingsby, Tom, xxxi. 479.
Sloane, Sir H., xxviii. 60 j S3G|iv. 15^.
Slop, Dr.; xxii. 380.
Small, Dr., xxiii. 523.
Smallridge, xxix. 302 ; xxxii. 15§.
Smart, xxiii. 463.
' Peter, xxxix. 391.
Smeaton, xxii. 171 ; xxxiii, 15,
Smelt, Mr., xxii. 448, 458.
Smirke, XXV. 135.
Smith, the missionary, xxxiii. 510.
■ account of the Greek church;
xxxviii. 37.
' Aaron, xxxvi. 520.
' Adam, remark of, on the whole-
someness of potatoes, xxiii. 369— his
opinions on free trade carried too far,
Xxiv. 301 — his argument that colonies
occasion a drain of capital, refuted, xxvi.
524— labour the only universal and ac-
curate standard of value, 233, 234, 529
—vindication of his definition and theory
of productive labour, xxx. 299-307 —
anecdotes of, xxxvi. 199-201.
xxi. 486 ; xxiv. 283, 292 ;
xxvi. 244 J xxix. 220 ; xxxii. 184; xxxv.
276; xxxvi. 168,216.
-^^— Bishop, notice of, xxiii. 302.
Colonel, xxxv. 499 ; xxxviii. 94.
> Courtney, opinion of, as to the
policy of the British government in
India interfering to prevent suttees,
xxxvii. 130.
Dr., Inquiry into the Small Pox,
&c., reviewed, xxvii. 525.
Smith, F., a sculptor, xxxiv. 133.
' Jenny, xxx. 553.
Mr., testimony of, as to the reluc-
tance of the public to prosecute capi-
tally, xxiv. 212. 220.
xxxii. 350.
trial of, xxxii. 526, 539.
■ of Jordanhill, in Lanarkshire,
experiments in transplanting trees,
xxxvii. 342.
Horatio, instance of Mr. Leigh
Hunt's injustice to, xxxvii. 425.
• Brambletye House, plan of
the novel, xxxv. 550-555 — observations
thereon, 555-559.
series of parodies on Mr.
Smith, in 'WhitehalV xxxvii. 87—.
specimen of the book, 88.
servant to Lord Collingwood,
xxxvii. 376.
Sydney, xxx. 98.
• W., xxi. 169; xxiii. 569-
marks of, on the tardiness of the colo-
nial governments in improving the con*
dition of the slaves, xxix. 482.
Pye, xxxiii. 97.
• Rag, prophecy about Pope, when
in his fourteenth year, xxiiL 427.
- Rev. Mr., observation on the case
of, XXX. 583, 584.
Sir J. E., xxxiv. 158 ; xxxix. 22.
Sir Michael, xxiii. 539.
Sir Thomas, xxi. 233 ; xxxii. 122
—his commonwealth, xxxvi. 517, note.
W., xxxiii. 500 ; xxxix. 134.
Wayland, xxvi. 146.
Lawrence v. See Lawrence.
Smollett, illustration of the Indian wife of
Lismahago. xxi. 89 — erroneous plea-
santry of his admirable banquet, xxiii.
249 — experienced a coma vigil during
halfa year, 427.
' xxiv. 512 ; xxxiii. 479 ; xxxiv,
311, 352, 358 ; xxxv. 205, 522; xxxvi.
207.
Smollett and Fielding, comparison of the
novels of, xxxiv. 372-376.
Smyth, Capt.,xxvi.57,212,218;xxviii. 71.
— -^ — Memoir on Sicily and its Islands,
reviewed, xxx. 382. See 5ici7y, Part II,
I Miles, xxxviii. 31.
. Mr., xxxix. 272.
Snaelsfoot, Bryce, xxvi. 457, et seq,
Snelgrove, xxii. 295.
Snell, xxvi. 129.
Sneyd, Miss Elizabeth, afterwards Mrs.
Eidgeworth, proposals of marriage made
to, by Mr. Thomas Day, xxiii. 525.
xxxi. 285.
Snodgrass, Major, Narrative of the Bur-
mese War, xxxv. 481 — necessity of the
Burmese War, ibid.t 482 — ^preparations
of the Burmese, 482— attack of a Brii
V2
Digitized by
Googk
164
PART I.— INDEX OF IJAMES.
QvARfjtni.r
tish post, 483 — account of Major-Ge-
neral Campbell's armament, 484 — inter-
nal appearance of Rangoon, 486 — Bur-
mese mode of warfare, and defeat of
them in the first attack, 487, 488 — cap-
ture of Kemmendine, 490— -account of
the corps of Invulnerables, and defeat
by the British forces, 493-495— Bur-
mese mode of entrenching, 497 — defeat
a detachment of Sepoys under Colonel
Smith, 499 — the Burmese defeated be-
fore Rangoon, 501, 502 — attack on
Donabew by the British, 502, 503, 504
—advance of the British army to Prome,
505— defeat of the Burmese, 506, 507
— ^horrors of the war, 508 — negociations
of the Burmese for peace, and treaty
concluded, 510, 511 — ^valuable services
rendered by the navy, 512-517.
Snodgrass, Major, xxii. 42; xxxiv. 412.
Snorro Sturleson, xxii. 363.
Snyders, remarks on the paintings of,xxyii.
337.
Soaper, James, xxiv. 227.
Soave, his version of the Georgics^ xxxviii.
367, 376.
xxiv. 227.
Sobieski, John, xxiii. 30.
Sobreviella, xxx. 1 52.
Socrates, objection of, to the use of per-
fumery, xxiii. 264 — speech of, from the
banquet of Plato, with remarks, xxiv.
433-440 — disputation whether Socrates
lived in good society, 451, 452; xxviii.
37 — ^holiday in honour of, 501 ; xxix.
303.
xxi. 271, 305 ; xxii. 174, 343—
xxiv. 421, 429, 430, 556; xxv. 171, 529;
xxvi. 329; xxix. 303; xxxii. 19,241;
xxxiii. 275, notey 362.
Soemmering, xxii. 23.
Soeur, Le, xxxiv. 182.
Sofronia, xxx. 51.
Soissons, Earl of, xxii. 370.
Solana, Marquis de la, gratitude to Admi-
ral CoUingwood, xxxvii. 379.
Solander, Dr., xxvi. 235.
Solanga, W. de, xxiv. 330.
Solano, Don, anecdote of, and of the Spa-
nish inquisition, xxxvi. 316.
Solano, S. Francisco, notice of a prophecy
of, xxvi. 284.
Soler, xxxviii. 453.
Soliman Khan Kajir, xxxvi. 381.
Solimano, xxiv, 76.
Soils, xxv. 1 ; xxix. 425.
Solomon, xxiii. 293, 298 ; xxiv. 24, 466,
486, 503; xxvi. 187, 194; xxix. 290;
xxx. 218.
Dr., xxi. 210 ; xxiv. 392, 480.
Solon, statute of, forbidding the sale of
perfumery, xxiii. 264.
xxi. 148, 277; xxii. 106, 190;
xxv. 523; xxvii. 73, 303, 384; xxiv.
56, 422, 460; xxix. 314; xxxii. 80;
xxxiii. 340.
Solorzano, xxii. 93, note,
Solyman, xxiv. 342.
Somers, Lord Chancellor, complaints of
delays in Chancery made agsunst, xxx.
277 — opinion that the king exercised
a protective jurisdiction over infants,
xxxix. 187.
■ xxii. 534 ; xxiii. 43 ; xxvL 425,
433,436; xxxviU. 243.
Sir G«orge, owed his death to a
293,
surfeit, xxxviii. 214.
Somerset, Countess of, xxxvii. 161 .
Earl of, xxxvii. 161.
■ Duke of, xxiii. 51, 71 ;
428, 436.
Somerville, Dr., xxiii. 50.
Sophronius, the patriarch, xxxiv.
294.
Sopingius, xxv. 517.
Soranzo, a MS. of his on the government
of Venice, found at Paris, xxxi. 440.
Sorell, lieutenant-Gtovernor of Van Die-
men's Land, xxiii. 79 ; xxvii. 108.
Sorenzo, xxi. 189, noie.
Sosandra, xxii. 194.
Sosipater, xxiii. 246, note,
Sostratus, xxix. 332.
Sotheby, W., Hexaglot edition of VirgiFa
Georgics, xxxviii. 258 — remarks on his
own version, 362*366 — his mannerism
and affectation, xxv. 428.
Sotira, Dr., on the contagious nature of the
plague, xxxiii. 235.
Song, xxi. 75.
Sonnini, xxiii. 359.
Sontag, Mademoiselle, xxxviii. 323.
Sophia, xxiv. 522.
Electress, xxiii. 68.
Empress, xxvi. 46.
Sophocles, extract from his Agamemnon,
xxii. 1 74 — observations on his Elecira,
xxiii. 475, note — disregarded unity of
place, xxvii. 483.
character of the tragedies of,
xxxi. 198-200— of Potter's translation,
200, 201 — specimens of Mr. Dale's
translation, with remarks, 204-209.
xxi. 273, 301 ; xxii. 165, «o/e,
310; xxiii. 148, 264; xxiv. 91 ; xxv.
12, 512, 518; xxvi. 246; xxix. 33;
xxxvi. 204 ; xxxviii. 379.
Sophonisba, xxiv. 75 ; xxix. 34.
Sophron, xxii. 334, 391.
Sophroniscus, xxi. 300 ; xxiv. 421, 451.
Sotomayor, Don Alonzo de, xxxii. 373.
P. de., xxiv. 332.
Soult, xxv. 83; xxviii. 338; xxx. 72;
xxxiv. 189, 408,410.
Soumet, A., Saul, Trag^die, et Clytem-
nestre, Tragedie, reviewed, xxix. 25.
Digitized by
Googk
RXTIBW.
INDEX OF NAMES.
165
Sour Kraut,"xxi. 144.
Sousa, de, xxxix. 145.
South, citation from his sermons on refor-
mation in religion, xxiii. 568 — effect of
external objects in exciting devotion,
586 — corruption of the English from
French fashions and yices, 510, 511 —
characterised, xxix. 210 — his style,
XXXV. 187.
— — xxxii. 159 ; xxxv. 454.
— ^ the historian, xxxvii. 228.
Dr. Robert, character of, xxxviii.
305.
James, apparent distances and
positions of double and triple stars,
xxxviii. 1-11.
Mr.,xxxiv. 165.
Southampton, Lord, xxix. 170.
Southcot, Abb^, affectionate concern of,
for Pope, rewarded, xxiii. 428, note.
Southcote, Joanna, xxii. 87 ; xxiii. 30,
note ; xxiv. 496, 504, 506 ; xxviii. 27,
509 ; xxxii. 153 ; xxxiii. 399 ; xxxvL
39,312.
Southern, notice of the dramatic writings
of, xxix. 422.
Southey, Robert, innovations in poetry
made by, xxiii. 202.
■ Life of Wesley, reviewed,
xxiv. 1— qualifications of, for a biogra-
pher of Wesley, 9 — sensible observa-
tion on preternatural appearances, 11.
See MethodUts, Part II. fVes/ey.
' XXV. 363, note — ^notice of
the case of Southey v, Sherwood, for
literary piracy, xxvii. 123, 126 — ^injunc-
tion refused, 127 — eloijuent remarta on
the wisdom of applying the national
resources to pubhc worfcs, 310, 311,
524.
— History of the Peninsular
War, reviewed, xxix. 53 — perfidious
manoeuvres of Buonaparte to obtain
military possession of Portugal, 55, 56
— the royal family of Portugiu emigrate
to the Brazils, 57, 58 — ^Prince Ferdinand
charged by his father with conspiring
against him, 59 — French troops get
possession of Pamplona by treachery,
61 -^insurrection at Aranjuez, 63 — ^re-
signation of Charles IV. and accession
of Ferdinand VII., 64 — he is sent pri-
soner to France, 66, 67 — ^massacre of
the Spaniards at Madrid, 69 — ^Joseph
Buonaparte put on the throne of Spain,
70 — ^military movements in Spain and
Portugal, 73-83 — remarks on Sir Ar-
thur Wellesley's convention with Junot,
82-83 — strictures on Mr. Irving*s re-
marks on Southey's Vision of Judg-
ment, 309; XXX. 191, no/e, 435,445 —
imaginary conversation of, with Porson,
509, 510.
Southey, Robert, his History of Brazil,
abridged by Mrs. Graham, xxxi. 13, 509,
510.
his Book of the Church,
answered by Mr. Butler, xxxiii. 4.
— a Tale of Paraguay, re-
viewed, xxxii. 457 —fable of the poem,
with extracts, 458-465 — ^remarks on it,
466, 467.
-funeral song for the Prin-
cess Charlotte, xxxvii. 94.
xxi. 94, 461; xxii. 160;
xxxi. 481; xxxii. 290; xxxv. 214;
xxxvi. 306; xxxvii. 218, 241, 420;
xxxviii. 322.
■ Captain T., Chronolo^cal His-
tory of the West Indies, xxxviiL 193.
Southwell, the poet, xxxiii. 33.
Souza, A. F. de, xxiv. 332.
D. Jose M. de, xxvii, 2, 7.
Sozomen, xxii. 65.
Spaar, General, xxiii. 18.
Spaewell, Mizy, xxv. 150.
Spagnoletto, xxiv. 519.
Spalding, xxiii. 303. «
Spallanzani, xxiii. 198.
Sparks, Jared, Life and Travels of John
Ledyard, xxxviii. 85 *- publication of
papers of Washington proposed by, 85,
note,
Speechley, improvement in horticulture
made by, xxiv. 407, 408, 412.
Speed, the historian, xxxiii. 29.
Spelman, account of Tom Hickifric, xxi.
102, note ; xxxix. 44.
Speuce, translator of Lucian, xxxvii. 32.
Mr., xxii. 181, note ; xxx. 32.
favourable to the poor-laws,
xxxvii. 540.
Rev. John, Observations, Anec-
dotes, and Characters of Men and
Boolu, reviewed, xxiii. 400 — secret his-
tory of the delay of their publication,
401, 402 — apprehensions of some of the
editors of Pope's works concerning their
being printed, 403, 404 — estimable
character and filial piety of Mr. Spence,
ibid,.y 405, 406.
Spencer, Earl, xxiv. 380 ; xxxii. 153, 154 ;
xxxvii. 371 ; xxxviii. 391.
Hon. Captain, xxx. 217.
Lady Anne, xxiii. 10.
Spenser, Pope vindicated against the
charge of traducing him, xxui. 433.
proved to be, pre-eminently, a
sacred poet, xxxii. 225-227, 231— why
he made choice of an allegorical sub-
ject for his Fairy Queen, 228, 311.
■translation of Bellay's verses on
the Tiber, xxxiv. 316, note,
description of the state of the
Irish, xxxviii. 54 and 535.
xxiii. 429; xxv. 432, 436, 511;
Digitized by
Googk
16$
PART I.— INDEX OP NAMES.
Quarterly
xxvii. 31, 38; xxx. 55; xxxiv. 14;
XXXV. 191 ; xxxvii. 311 ; xxxviii. 385.
Sperchneider, Mr., xxv. 444.
Speroni, S., notice of, xxiv. 76,
Speusippus, xxiii. 257.
Spight, Thomas, xxxii. 275.
Spiaola, xxiii. 40.
Spinoza, xxix. 169.
Spira, Francis, xxiv. 500.
Spiracchi, xxvii. 549.
Spiridion, St., xxiii. 347 ; xxiv. 518, 519^
527.
Spitzner, xxii. 344.
Spon, xxiii. 150, 328 — observations on the
characterofthe Greeks, 340; xxvi. 386.
Spong, xxi. 97.
Spottiswoode, Thomas, xxxvi. 576.
Sprat, Bishop, anecdote related by, xxxiL
39, 40.
Spurius Cassius, xxvii. 302.
Spurzheim, xxii. 22 — ^remarks on his
theory, 26 — ^belief in his infallibility by
the young gentlemen of Edinburgh,
xxxix. 6 — anecdote of his egregious
mistake, 6, 7.
Squacquarata, Giacova, xxi. 95.
Square, xxxiiL 481.
Squire, Colonel, xxiii. 87.
Squires, xxxiii. 32.
Ssidi Kur, xxi. 99, 106.
Stackhouse, xxiiL 580.
Stael-Holstein, M. de, Lettres sur TAngl^
terre, xxxiv. 45 — reason why the French
" know but little of England, 46 — the
author, an honourable exception to the
rest of his countrymen, tbid» — ^proofs
that England is more advanced in civi-
lization than any country on the conti-
uent, 47, 48 — remarks on his account of
the division of property in England, 49,
50 — and on his defective account of
family connexion, 50 — effect of vanity
on family connexion in France, 51—
refutation of his assertion^ that England
has not been the protector of the liber-
ties of other nations, 52, 53, 599.
■ ' ■ Madame de, sensations on crossing
the Rhine, xxiii. 437 — description of
German women, 443 — observation on
French comedy, xxix. 416 — and on
English comedy, 423.
— ;-^ ; her opinion of the Rus-
sians, xxxi. 150.
• xxi. 488, rwte^ xxii. 555;
xxv. 542, 569; xxvii. 483; xxviii. 1,
273; xxix. 47; xxxiii. 489; xxxiv.
138, 140, 422, 431 ; xxxvi. 39, 438.
Stafford, Henry, Duke of Buckingham,
' xxxviii. 389.
Lord, xxii. 164 ; xxix. 203 ; xxxvi.
' 515.
— Marquis and Marchioness of^
noble improvements made by, on their
property in Scotland, xxxiii. 466-469.
Stafford, Mr., xxxvii. 495.
Sir Edward, xxxviii. 485.
Staines, Sir Thomas, xxxv. 441.
Stair, Lord, observation of, on the law of
Scotland, xxi. 406.
xxvi.113 ; xxxvi 180, 569.
Stamford, Judge, commendation of, by
Lord Bacon, xxxix. 184.
Standlen, Professor, xxviii. 493.
Standsfield, Sir James, xxxvi. 555.
Stanhope, Lady Hester, xxxi. 467.
■ Lieutenant-Colonel, conduct o^
in Greece, xxxv. 224-226.
Lord, assisted in checking the
spirit of legblation evinced by the Coo^*
mons, xxi. 427 — revision of the statute
book proposed by, 428.
• xxvi. 436 ; xxxvi. 157.
• Sir Edward, letter from Lord
Strafford to, xxxvii. 247.
• Thomas a Kempis^ xxxi. 36.
Stanislaus, xxiiL 1 55.
Stanley, vindication of, from the charge of
his being a plagiarist, xxv. 507, o08.
511,520.
■ Mr., kindness of, to the Irish pei^
santry, xxxi. 519.
Stannon, Viscount. See Shannon,
Stannyhurst, xxix. 342.
Stanyan, xxvi. 436.
Stapleton, pv, 307.
Starkie, xxi. 403, note.
Mr., xxxvii. 157.
Thomas, Treatise on ] Criminal
Pleading, xxxvii. 147.
Starlight, Tom, xxxi. 480.
Statins, xxiii. 429 ; xxxii. 159, 293 ; xxxvi.
54.
Staunford, Serjeant, xxxvi. 512.
Staunton, Lady, xxvi. 116.
Sir Q., Translation of a Narra-
tive of the Chinese Embassy to the
Khan of the Tourgouth Tartars, xxv.
414 — ^valuable services of, in spreading
the knowledge of Chinese hterature,
418 — abstract of his narrative of the
embassy, 419 — account of Ayukee,
Khan of the Tour^ouths, 422 — transla-
tions from the Chmese, 423-425.
-— account of the Temple of
Boudh, xxi. 80-83.
xxi. 72, 183; xxvi. 116,
117 ; xxvii. 7 ; xxxvi. 496, 498.
Staveley, xxiii. 560, 583.
Stavorinus, xxvii. 25.
Steavenson, Mr., xxxvii. 347.
Steed, John, xxix. 347.
Steele, xxxii 350 ; xxxv. 417.
*— Mr., remarks on his treatment of
his slaves; xxx, 580-582.
Digitized by
Googk
Revibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
167
Steele, Mr., xxix.481.
r^— Sir BL, testimony ofj to the truth of
Pope's character of Addison, xxiii. 420
— character of Sir John Uolt, xxxvi.
542, 543.
■ xxvi. 436 ; xxxvi. 514, note,
Steen Praesten, a Norwegian pastor, no-
tice of, XXX. 127«
Steevens, Greorge, an acquaintance of
Hayley the poet, xxxi. 270.
l^fano, J. de S., notice of the travels of|
in Pegu, xxiv. 336.
L. di, xxiv. 556.
Steiglehner, xxxv. 240.
Stein, Baron, the Prussian minister, xxxi.
188 — outlawed by Napoleon, 330 — ac-
count of his plan of national refonui
ibid., 335.
I^teinkoprs, G. F. A., letter to Mr. Hal-
dane, xxxvi. I. See BiUe Society, Part
Stcinylter, xxix. 446.
Stella, XXX. 549, 551.
Stennis, xxvi. 468.
Steno, xxvii. 488.
'^-« Michael, a Venetian nobleman,
xxxi. 434.
Stephanius, xxi. 103.
Stephano, xxv. 22.
Stephanus, xxvii. 59.
■ fiytantinus, xxiii. 148.
Stephen, James, xxix. 495^the slavery
of the British West India colonies de-
lineated, XXX. 559. See fVeti India
Co/onies, Part II.
*- notice of his works on
slavery, xxxii. 5)5 — ^remarks on the
' abolition of slavery, xxxiii. 501.
' • King, XXX. 344,
> King of Poland, xxix. 130.
Stephens, Henry, biographical account of,
xxii. 315-317 — notice of Greek lexicons
prior to his Thesaurus Linguss Graca,
304-315 — observations on the execution
of his Thesaurus, 318-320*-advantag«
of its new editors over Stephens, 303 —
review of the new edition, 321-348—
notice of Valpy's edition of, xxiv. 378,
etieq,; xxv.507, 513.
Stephenson, J, H., xxxiii. 567.
367.
Mr., the engineeri mxi.
Stepney, date of his death, xxvi. 435.
Stepper Babel, xxix. 447.
Stere, Augustine, persecution of, for the
charge of heresy, xxxiv. 338, 339^-eruel
penance imposed on him, 339.
Sterling. M., xxv. 102.
Sterne, character and inconsistencies of
his writing, xxxi. 487.
xxvu. 1 12, 456 ; xxxii. 344 } xzzir,
311; xxxvii.49.
I..I.I.. Mr, X, xxT, 175| note.
Stemhold and Hopkins, their version of
the psalms, xxxviii. 27.
— — xxxiii. 316; xxxvi. 43.
Sterry, Mr., observation of, on the death
of Cromwell, xxv. 347.
Steuart, Sir Henry, the Planter's Guide,
or a Practical Essay on the best Me*
thod of giving immediate Effect to
Wood, by the Removal of large Trees
and Underwood, xxxvii. 303. See Treet.
Part II.
Steven, Bishop of Winchester, xxxviL
216, note,
Stevinus, a Flemish engineer, improved
the science of mechanical philosophyi
xxxix. 433.
Steward, Elizabeth, xxv. 281.
Sir T., xxv. 285.
W., xxv. 281.
Stewart, Archibald, xxxvi. 172, note,
' Dugald, Second Dissertation pre-
fixed to the Supplement to the Encyclo-
pasdia Britannica, reviewed, xxvi. 4/4-»
desultory plan of the present essay, 477,
478— different objects of the theories o£
Locke, and Dr. Reid, 479, 480-486-*
on the method pursued by Locke, 487-
490 — remarks on Dr. Reid's notion of
the philosophy of mind, 491 493 — ^pro*
bable source of Addison's remark on
the faculties of the soul, 494 — strictures
on Mr. Stewart's criticism on it, 495.
498 — further remarks on Dr. Reid'a
philosophy, 498-505 — strictures on the
Professor's extravagant commendations
of the infidel Hume, 513— concluding
remarks, 514.
xxi. 118; xxv. 169, note;
xxix. 312; xxx. 197; xxxvi. 168, 233,
note,
Dr. M., xxii. 137.
Ghineral, xxx. 485; xxxix. 168>
note.
Lieut.-Colonel M., considerations
on the Gk)vernment of India, xxxv. 32
— character of his work, 66. See India,
PartlL
. xxxv. 44 •— extract
from his work on India, 48, 52..notice
of it, 66.
Mr., xxxvii. 576, note.
Stillinp^eet, xxviii. 25 ; xxxii. 308.
Stimbister, Bet, xxvi. 474.
Stirling, Gi^ytain. See Swan River New-
Colony, Part II.
Earl of, xxix. 37.
Mr., xxiv. 222.
William, xxxvL 597.
Stobeus, quotation from, xxxiii. 361}no/e.
■ xxiii. 144.
Stockdale, xxxv. 582«
Stoian, xxxv. 78.
StoittO^, SXZT, 7Q*
Digitized by
Googk
168
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTEKLT
Stokoe, surgeon, xxviii. 221, ito/e-— dis-
missed the service, 226 — ^his report of
the state of Buonaparte's health at St
Helena, xxxiii. 179, 180,181.
Stolberg, Count F., xxviii. 43.
Stolzenberg, wife and two sons of, exe-
cuted for witchcraft, xxix. 447.
Stone, xxi. 155.
— Archbishop, remarks on Horace Wal-
pole's slander against, xxvii. 185-187.
— Mr., intrigue of Horace Walpole to
obtain the dismissal of, xxvii. 203-206.
Mrs., XXV. 367.
Stopford, M. General, xxx. 17,
Storta, Gicca, xxi. 94.
Stothard, Charles, account of statues dis-
covered by, in the Abbey of Fonte-
vrauld, XXV. 136, 137.
I valuable drawings by, in
the possession of the Society of Anti-
quanes, xxxvii. 488 — ^his memoirs and
other literary productions of his widow
highly commended, 489, note,
XXV. 112-115; xxx. 340;
xxxvii. 488.
Mrs. C, Tour in Normandy, &c,
reviewed, xxv. 112 — account of Celtic
remains at Camac, 137-139.
Stowe, xxxiv. 199; xxxvii. 110.
Stowell, Lord, xxxvii. 366.
Sir John, xxix. 173.
Strabo, xxii. 441; xxiii. 141, 144, 326;
xxv. 505, 509, note; xxvi. 215; xxvii.
60, 221, 222, 233 ; xxix. 124 ; xxx. 389,
528 ; xxxii. 71 ; xxxv. 388, 389.
— — Walafirid, did not understand
Greek, xxxiii. 71, 72 — not the author
of the Commentaries on the Prologue
to the Canonical Epistles, which bears
his name, 72, 73 — nor of the Glossa
Ordinaria, 73, 74 — the Prologue to the
Canonical Epistles, evidence only as to
Latin MSS., 74.
Strachan, James, Visit to the Province of
Upper Canada, reviewed, xxiii. 373 —
state of religion there, 384 — inland
navigation, 385, 386.
Strafford, Lord, xxv. 291 — ^remarks on the
state of parties with reference to the
condemnation of, 294, 295, 325, 347.
attainder of, xxxvii. 230 —
admirable defence of himself, 232-234
—his true character, 236, 237— extracts
from his letters, 247.
. benefits to Ireland, xxxviii.
536.
- xxvii. 26 ; xxix. 205, 287 ;
xxx. 511.
Strange, Sir T., xxxvii. 146.
Strangeways, Tliomas, Sketch of the Mos-
quito Shore, reviewed, xxviii. 157 —
fraudulent design of the publication ex-
posed, 158-161,
Strangeways, Thomas, on the geology of
Russia, xxxiv. 516, 517.
Strangford, Lord, procured an order \o
compel the Turkish troops to respect
the Grecian antiquities, xxvii. 331.
Strani, Mr., xxix. 101.
Strap, xxiv. 345.
Straparola, Signer, xxi. 94.
Strathfieldsajre, Lord of, love of agricul-
tmre, xxxviii. 429.
Straw, Jack, xxii. 106.
Strickland, Mr., on the bogs and wastes
of Ireland, xxxviii. 64, note,
Strogonoff, xxvi. 50.
Struve, his eminence as an astronomer,
xxxviii. 9, 12.
Struys, xxxv. 399, note.
Strype, deplorable state of the police of
England in 1586, xxxvii. 500-502.
xxiii. 298 ; xxix. 165 ; xxx. 527;
xxxiii. 29; xxxvii. 211.
Stuart, xxi. 36.
of Ardvoirlich, xxvi. 126.
— Alexander, xxvi. 246, note,
•^— Captain, The Emigrant's Guide to
Upper Canada, reviewed, xxiii. 373 —
observations on the deeded lands of
Upper Canada, 381 — settlement of
Perth, 382— strictures on his opinion of
the American methodists, 383.
— Charles, in the battle of Oudenard
with the French, xxiii. 54— character,
person, and disposition of Charles Ed-
ward, xxxvi. 208 — anecdotes of, on his
arrival in the Hebrides, 209 — vindica-
tion of his character, 211-215.
• xxxvi. 553.
Dr. (Hayti), xxi. 453.
■ Dr. Gilbert, persecution of Dr.
Henry by, xxxvii. 194.
Hon. lieut-Col., xxx. 17.
' James, notice of the harsh -policy
used against the natives of India, xxxv. 48.
Mary, xxiv. 521 ; xxxiv. 253.
Mrs., xxxiii. 291, 292.
Sir C, xxiii. 226 ; xxxiv. 586.
- Sir John, xxx. 485 ; xxxvii. 381.
Stuarts, xxiii. 566 — astrology flourished in
this country in the reigns of the three
first, xxvi. 184.
Stuckey, Mr., evidence of, before the Com-
mittee of the House of Commons on the
state of the currency, xxvii. 246.
Sturges, xxviii. 46.
Sturzius, xxii. 325.
Styles, xxvi. 151.
Subilet, xxix. 33.
Suchet, xxv. 91.
Suckling xxv. 13 ; xxix. 37.
Sucre, General, xxxviii. 474.
Suddleehop, Ursula, xxviii. 355.
Suetonius, xxiii. 201, 202; xxxii. 71";
xxxiv. 171.
Digitized by
Googk
Revibw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
169
Suffolk, Diichess of, xxxvii. 303.
■ Henrietta, Countess of, letteri to
and from, reviewed, xxx. 542 — ^biogra-
phical notice of, 544, 545 — extract of a
letter from the Earl of Peterborough to
her, 547 — why her patronage of Gay
{>roved inefiectual, 548, 549 — Swift's
ampoon against Sir Robert Walpole,
550-— inaccuracies of Horace Walnole
corrected, 551— letters to Lady Suffolk
by Miss Howe, 552 — by Mrs. Brad-
shaw, 553 — ^by Mr. Gay, 555 — and by
Horace Walpole, 558— letter of Lady
Suflfolk to Gay, 555 — character of
others of Lady Suffolk's corre8i)ondents,
656, 557 — and of the editorship of the
work, 559.
Sugden against Lolly, notice of the case,
XXV. 239.
■ M Mr., xxxviii. 251 — advantages of
our system of family settlements, 290 —
impracticability of giving legal effect to
the distinction between active and pai-
sive trusts, 295.
Suidas, notice of his lexicon, xxii. 309,
310.
— xxii. 305 } XXV. 505,J 525 ; xxxiii,
88 ; xxxvii. 34.
Suko of XJbeina, story of, xxxv. 71-74,
Sullivan, xxiii. 366, 367.
-^^— Greneral, xxxvi. 214.
Lieut..Col. Sir H., xxx. 78.
Sully, xxvii. 157 ; xxxiii. 289 ; xxxvi. 427.
Sulpicius, xxviii. 102.
Sumner, Dr., xxxvi. 29.
• opening for Dr. Parr, in a
life of, xxxix. 257 — head master of
Harrow School, 261-^ies of apoplexy,
262— character of, ibid.
Sunderland, Earl of, xxiii. 10, 42.
Surenhusius, xxxv. 113, note,
Surrey, xxxviii. 385.
Surtees, Robert, History and Antiquities of
the County Palatine of Durham. See
Durham, Fart II.
Sussex, Duke of, xxviii. 214.
• Earl of, xxvi. 146.
Lady, xxxiii. 290.
Sutton, Archbishop, uniform frankness
and liberality of, xxi. 170, 174.
Suwaroff, military talents of, xxii. 394 —
his successes, and masterly retreat
through Switzerland, 397, 398, 400—
lacomc note of, to the Archduke Charles,
398 — character of Suwaroff, 401 .
Suzzarelli, xxviii. 230.
Sviatoslaff, xxix. 119.
Swanston, xxi. 403, note,
Swartz, opinion on the policy of employing
native Christians in India, xxxii. 21.
XXV. 449.
Swedenborg, xxiii. 436 ; xxvii. 114.
Swendsen, xxxvi. 519.
Swertha, xxvi 459.
Swieten, Van, xxxiii. 244, 248.
Swift, Dean, calumniated Marlborough,
xxiii. 70 — never known to smile, xxviiL
140 — remarks of, ou Burnet's History
of his own Time, xxix. 166-168— re-
marks ou the epistolary style of, xxx.
186 — ^why attached to the Prince of
Wales's court, 546 — why not patronised
by Sir R. Walpole, 549 — whom he lam-
poons, 550.
■ — extract from his journal to
Stella, xxxv. 190, 191— his character of
Diaper's poems, ibid. — conduct of the
Presbyterian in power, xxxvi. 31 —
wretchedness of Ireland, xxxvii. 563.
his view of Ireland, xxxviii. 55.
xxii. 95; xxiii. 490, 509;
xxvi. 233, 245, 430; xxvii. 345 ; xxviii.
49 ; xxx. 542 ; xxxi. 475 ; 501 ; xxxii.
286, 289; xxxiv, 407; xxxv. 159j
xxxvii. 49, 417.
Swinburne, xxx. 383.
Swinden, Van, xxxv. 240, 242.
Swithin, St., humility of, carried beyond
the grave, xxi. 371.
Switier, xxiv. 406, 407.
Sybaris, xxiii. 506.
Sycaeus, xxiii. 267.
Sydenham, Dr., xxxiii. 218— notice of his
account of the small-pox, 243, 244.
xxvii. 541 ; xxxix. 257.
F., xxiv. 439.
Sydney. See Sidney,
Sylbur^us, xxii. 308 — assisted Stephens
in his Thesaurus, 318.
Sylla, representation of the character of,
xxviii. 99, 321.
XXV. 566 ; xxvii. 293; xxxii. 69, 76,
Sylveira, H. da, xxvii. 10.
Sylvester, xxx. 234.
II., xxx. 44.
Charles, report of rail-roads and
locomotive engines, xxxi. 349 — observa-
tions of, on the celerity of motion on
rail-roads, 566, 567.
- table of the relative ad-
vantages of common turnpike-roads, rail-
roads, and canals, xxxi. 366.
- Joshua, xxxi. 282 — his poem on
tobacco, xxxviii. 203. See SUvetter,
Sylvio, xxvii. 9, note.
Symeon. See AmmoniuB,
Symes, Colonel, xxiii. 81 ; xxiv. 336 ;
xxviii. 1 13 ; xxxiii. 47, 57.
Symmachus, xxiii. 323.
Symmons, xxxii. 494.
-^-— Dr., xxxii. 455, 470— character
of his Life of Milton, xxxvi. 42.
xxxii. 455, 470.
Synesius, xxiii. 139.
Syphax, xxix. 34.
Syrianus, xxii. 189.
Digitized by
Googk
170
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTEBLt
Tab ART, Benjamin, collection of Fairy
Tales, reviewed, xxi. 91. 474.
^ xxii. 179.
Tachard, Pere, notice of his account of
a Siamese embassy of the King of Por-
tugal, in 1684, xxxiii. 125.
Tachart, xxxiiii. 104.
Tacitus, testimony of; to the obstinacy of
the Jews, xxiii. 199.
■ remark on the evils of pauperism,
xxxvi. 486.
— ■ xxii. 433, note, 485, 545 ; xxiii.
192; xxiv. 97; xxv. 392; xxvii. 53,
276 ; xxviii. 321, 510; xxx. 197 ; xxxiv.
19,255.
Tactus, xxv. 282.
Taher- Pasha, xxx. 484.
Takaytay-Kachi, a Japanese merchant,
account of the capture of, xxii. 123 — ^his
noble character and conduct, 125-127.
Talbot, Bishop, account of, xxxix. 402.
- Lord, inscription on the sword ofj
xxx. 348.
. xxv. 72, 344.
Lord Chancellor, xxxix. 402.
Miss C, xxvii. 195.
Talbot's Tower, at Falaise, in Normandy,
account of, xxv. 123.
Taliessin, xxi. 101, note.
Tallard, Marshal, xxiii. 12, 20 — his garden
at Nottingham, xxxiv. 306.
Talleyrand, mstructions given to, by Buo*
naparte, xxviii. 254.256 — charader and
conduct of, 293, 294 — exculpated from
the charge of M. Savary, of being guilty
of the murder of the Duke d'Enghien,
xxix. 562-567 — ^Buonaparte's opinion of,
as a minister, xxxi. 338 — opinion of, as
to the importance of colonies, xxxiii.
415.
Tallien, xxx. 272.
Talma, search for the remains of Narcissa,
xxi. 366.
. xxviii. 105 ; xxix. 47 ; xxxiv. 230.
Talon, Mr., xxvi. 373.
Tamaamab, xxviii. 346.
Tamama, xxviii. 542.
Tamasp, XXXV. 392.
Tambonneau, M., xxiv. 406.
Tamehamehaj xxxv. 421.
Tamerlane, embassy to, from the King of
Portugal, xxiv. 332, 333.
xxiii 26 ; xxvi. 43, note ;
xxvU. 142 J xxxv. 392.
Tancred, xxv. 430.
Tancredi, xxx. 50.
Tandy, J. Napper, xxxvi.. 66, 71 •
Tanneur, M. le, xxxvi. 330.
TantiaJogh, xxix. 3971
Taow-Kuang, xxv. 416. ]
Tarb6, S. A., Manuel Pratique des Poids
et Mesures^ reviewed, xxvi. 416.
Tardieu, xxxii. 376.
Targe, M., xxiii. 26.
Target, xxviii. 307.
TarUer, a publisher at Brussels, xxxix. 5.
Tarquin, xxi. 35 ; xxii. 402 ; xxvii. 293 ;
xxxii. 82 ; xxxiv. 254.
Tarquinia, xxii. 404.
Tarquinius Superbus, xxvii. 297, 299.
Tarru, a chief of Wangarooa, xxxi. 59.
Tarsis, Juan de, xxiv. 133.
Tarudante, xxv. 19.
Tasman, the Dutch navigator, discovered
New Zealand, xxxi. 52.
xxvii. 100, 102; xxxiii. 545.
Tasso, contest between his admirers and
those of Ariosto, xxiii. 408, note — no-
tice of the tragedies of, xxiv. 76, 77—^
representation of Love, 552 — character
of the translators of his Jerusalem l)e-
livered, xxv. 426, 427 — comparison ot
his hero with that of the ^ueid, 428-
430.
» lines of, quoted, xxxii. 66.
^—^ his Jerusalem, translated by Fairfax,
- character of, xxxiv. 6 — specimens of Mr.
Wiffen's translation, with remarks, 9*14
— important requisites in a translator of
this poet, 15-19.
xxiii. 156 J xxiv. 101; xxv. 98;
xxvii. 33 ; xxviii. 317 ; xxix. 451 ; xxxiii.
145, 477; xxxiv. 115; xxxvi. 49;
xxxvii. 411*
— Bernardo, and Torquato, xxiv. 133.
Tassoni's Secchia Rapita, design and cha-
racter of, xxi. 506-508.
Tate (Nahum), his version of the psalms,
xxxviii. 31.
xxix. 208; xxxiv. 306;
xxxv. 186, 189.
Tatius, xxvii. 293.
Tattaneeaeuck, xxviii. 386.
Tattersall, Mr., xxxv. 160 ; xxxvi. 47.
Tatum, Mr., xxxii. 412.
Taunton, xxi. 403, note.
Taurinus, Si, xxii. 358.
Taxis, Count de, xxxiv. 79.
Taylor, xxxv. 454,
— — an actor, xxxiv. 202.
Bishop Jeremy, style of his ser-
mons, xxix. 300.
■ hymns by, xxxviii. 41—
character of, 305.
• xxiv. 12 ; xxxviii. 5^4,
532 ; xxix. 210 ; xxxii. 227, 456 ; xxxiii'.
139; xxxv. 455: HKvi, 312: yaaix,
132, 277,
Digitized by
Googk
llSVIBW*
INDEX OF NAMES.
171
Taylor, Colonel, xxix. 353.
Dr. John, observations on the
theory of, for interpretiuij St. Paul's
Epistles, XXX. 85, 86 — its falsehood de-
f monstrated, 87-93.
- wrote an essay on the
divine dispensations, xxxL 112.
- John, rescued Alexander Hart
from the pillory, xxvi. 185.
— — Lieut.-Col., xxix, 81.
M. A., xxvii. 78 ; xxxiv. 193.
Mr., xxxvi. 76 ; xxxviii. 272.
- Richard, extract of his evidence
before the House of Commons respect-
ing the Copyright Act, xxi. 206.
. xxiv. 227.
83.
Rowland, anecdote o^ xxxvii.
— W., British Synonymes discri-
minated, XXXV. 403-l.specimen of it,
with remarks, 410.414.
• William, works of Dr. Sayers,
XXXV. 175 — description of Dr. Sabers*
mode of composition, 205 — his opmion
on the dirges of Moina, 208-21 1.
Tazewell, Hon. L. W., Review of the Ne-
gotiations between the United States
and Great Britain, respecting the com-
merce of the two countries, xxxix. 215
— character of the work, 216, 219.
Teacher, Mr., xxviii. 19.
Teague, Mr. John, xxiv. 250.
Tebbs, H. v., Prize Essay on Adultery,
reviewed, xxviii. 179 — remarks on his
disingenuous extracts from Dr. Ireland's
' NuptiaB Sacr»,' 185-188.
Tecmessa, xxiv. 91.
Tecumthe, a celebrated Indian chief, no-
tice of, xxvii. 422, 430— account of,
xxxi. 107 — object of his visit to the
Osages, 79, SO^account of his ha-
rangue to them, 92, 93— converted to
Christianity, 93.
Tedlie, Mr., xxii. 274.
Teigh, Archdeacon, notice of, xxiii. 301.
Teignmouth, Lord, xxix. 350 ; xxxv. 41,
42; xxxvii. 133.
Telemachus, xxiv. 421 ; xxxvi. 59, 60.
Telephus,xxiii. 261, 577.
Teliford, Mr., state of the roads in Wales,
xxiii. 103.
. XXX. 379 ; xxxi. 362.
Tell, William, xxiii. 444.
Tellez, xxviii. 92.
Tells, xxii. 371.
Temanza, a Venetian architect, xxxii. 57.
Temple, Lady, xxx. 543.
-— — ' Lord, XXV. 407 — excessive dis-
like of George II. towards him, 408 ^
xxvii. 208.
. Sir W., in what English gardens
excel; xxiv. 413^dissolutene8s of man-
ners in the time of Charles II-i xxix.
187.
Temple, Sir W., xxxiii. 485.
Templeton, Mr., xxii. 360, note.
Teniers, xxxi. 167.
Tennanfs tour on the continent, extract
from, xxxiii. 455, 456.
xxix. 445.
Tenneman, xxvi. 475.
Tennison, Archbishop, xxxiv. 182.
Teonge, Henry, diary of, xxxii. 429 — hit
account of his voyage down the river
to the English channel, 430-432—.
arrives at Tangier, 432-.at Malta, 433
—entertains several of the knights, ibid,
— account of a cruise in the Mediter-
ranean, 434-436 — arrives at Aleppo,
436 — description of his entertainment
there, 436, 437— returns home, 439—
interview with Charles I., 440— notice
of his second voyage, 440, 441 — ^his
epitaph on Captain Langston, 441, 442.
Teraminta, xxii. 404.
Teran, xxx. 177.
Terence, xxii 197 : xxiii. 146, 371, 372;
xxiv. 73 ; xxx. 44; xxxii. 160 ; xxxvi. 59.
Tereros, Don Pedro, Count Regla, enor-
mous gains of) by mining, xxx. 168;
xxxvi. 99.
Teresa, St, xxiii. 409.
Ternate, xxviL 6.
Temaux, M., the greatest woollen manu-
facturer in France, xxxi. 400, 401.
Terrail, Aymon, xxxii. 357.
Pierre du. See Bayard.
Terray, Abb£, account of the financial
measures of, xxvii. 161.
Terrene, Count de, xxviii. 163.
Tertre, F. J. Baptiste de, his work on
the West Indies, xxxviii. 215 — his cha-
racter as a writer, ibid. — as an admi-
nistrator of spiritual succour, 219 — ^hii
account of Barbadoes, 230 — of th&
Caribs, 233.
TertuUian, characterised anatomy at
butchering, xxi. 376 — quotation of 1
John V. 7, attributed to him, doubtful^
xxvi. 332.
■■ xxxiii. 77, 79 — whether he
used the Greek Testament or the Latin
version, 80, 81 — ^whether the argument
for the authenticity of 1 John v. 7, is
strengthened by a reference to his wri-
• tings, 81, 82.
■ xxiv. 1 ; XXV. 351, 361 ; xxvL
182, 325 J xxxvi. 38.
Testa Abb6, xxviii. 78.
Tetherington, Bob, xxxv. 163.
Tewsh, XXV. 237, 263.
Texier, le, xxxiv. 241.
Textor Ravisius, barbarity of school dis-
cipline in his time; xxxix, 104.
Digitized by
Googk
172
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QUARTERLT
Teynham, Lady, versut Barrett, case of,
xxxix. 188, 197.
Teyoninhokarawen, a chief of the Six-
nation Indians, translated the gospel of
St. John into the Mohawk lang^uage,
xxxvi. 9 — ^his unfitness for that task,
10, 11.
Thabaea, zxrii. 297.
Thackeray, Rev. F., Defence of the Clergy
of the Church of England, review^,
mx. 524. See Oerffy, Part 11.
Thais, xxii. 199.
Thalatta, xxiL 199.
Thales, xxi. 279 ; xxiii. 250 ; xxiv. 422,
424, no/tf, 427, fio/e; xxxiii. 361 ; xxxyiii.
3.
Thaletes, xxiii. 266.
Thamar, Queen of Georgia, xxxv. 383.
Tharek, Gebel, a Moorish diieftain, xxxiL
433, note,
Thargelia, xxii. 193.
Thauth, XXV i. 194.
Theagenes, xxiv. 425.
Theages, xxii. 198.
Theano, xxii. 202.
Thearion, a famous confectioner at Athens,
xxiii. 248, 249.
Theda, xxx. 477.
Thelwall,xxviii. 218.
Themistius, xxiii. 144.
Themistodes, xxi. 276, 282 ; xxiii. 340 j
xxvii. 384, 402, note ; xxxiv. 56.
Theo, compiler of a comic lexicon, xxii.
305.
ITieocritus, xxii. 312; xxiii. 276, note$
xxx. 385 ; xxxii. 159 ; xxxvi. 47.
Theodore of Oadara, xxiii. 138.
of Tarsus, xxxiv. 276.
Gaza, xxiii. 137.
Theodoret, xxiii. 144.
Theodoric, xxv. 118; xxvii. 49.
■ of Verona, xxii. 367.
Theodoras, xxiii. 582, note.
— of Byzantium, xxi. 284.
— — Prodromus, xxiii. 153.
Theodosius, burial within the city prohi-
bited by, xxi. 378.
xxii. 65, 311; xxviii. 322;
xxxiv. 180; xxxix. 202.
Theodote, xxiv. 443.
Theodotion, xxiii. 323.
Theodulus. See Magister.
Theognis, xxiii. 492 ; xxxiii. 339,> note,
Theognotus, xxii. 308; xxiii. 151.
Theophanes, xxiii. 147.
Theophrastus, many facts taught by,
which are considered as of modern dis-
covery, xxiii. 466.
^ xxiii. 265, 270, 333; xxvi.
281.
Theophylact, xxiii. 144 ; xxv, 361.
Theopompus, xxiii. 149 ; xxvi. 257.
Theorus, xxiv. 428.
Theotol^, Count Stefano, xxix. 98.*
E., xxix. 95.
Prince S., xxix. 95.
Theresa, St., description of a vision seen
by, xxvii. 114, 115 ; xxix. 259.
Thersites, xxi. 488.
Theseus, xxui. 350, 522 ; xxvii. 57, 284^
note, 349.
Thespis, xxv. 505.
Thetis, xxv. 506; xxvi. 251; xxvii. 25;
xxviii. 414.
Thevert, Abraham, xxxiv. 75.
Thibault, xxxviii. 222.
Thicknesse, Philip, former mode of inter-
ment in Paris described by, xxi. 382,
383.
Thiele, J. M., Danske Folkesagn, notice
of, xxii. 349, 350.
Thiken Das, xxiv. 114.
Thionville, xxiii. 194.
Thirn, justice, xxxvii. 165, note,
Tliomas k Kempis, xxiv. 12, 13.
Captain, xxxvii. 390.
Mr., xxxiii. 234.
« Mrs., xxiii. 418 ; xxxii. 286.
Palseologus, xxiii. 147.
Si, xxvu. 38.
■ Trae, xxvi. 124.
■ Thumb, xxi. 97 — ^popular tradi-
tions concerning, 101.
Thomas's case, xxxvi. 515.
Thomasius, xxii. 307.
Thomond, Earl of, xxxviii. 215.
Thompson, Chief Baron, xxxviii. 2S8.
Dr., on small-pox, xxvii. 525.
remarks on vaccination,
and the small-pox, xxiii. 553, 554.
• John, xxxii. 318.
Mr., xxiv. 223; xxxviii. 94;
xxxix. 69.
Thonis, P. P., the Affectionate Pair, a
Chinese tale, xxxvi. 496 — analysis of it,
501-504 — and of his poem entitled
Chinese Courtship, 505-510 — advice to
the author, 511.
Thomson, the painter, xxxviii. 378.
^— — the poet, xxiii. 406 ; xxxv. 192.
— — Andrew, letter to Lord Bexley,
xxxvi. 1. See Bible Society, Part II.
D., xxvi. 401.
— Dr. Andrew, xxxvi. 26.
- — Dr. T., experiments with mixed
gases, made by, xxiii. 468, 469.
• J. L., Historical Sketches of
the War between the United States of
America and Great Britain, xxvii. 405
— character of the work, 407. See
Canadasj Part II.
■ James, xxxvi. 3.
• John, notice of his observations
on the preparatory education of candi-
Digitized by
Googk
HbyieW.
INDEX 01? NAMES.
173
. dates for degrees in medicine, xxxvi.
223, 224.
* Thor, xxi. 93, nole; xxii. 364.
Thoresby, xxix. 186.
Thomhill, F. and W., xxiv. 227.
Thornrosa, xxi. 96.
Thornton, a friend of the poet Hayley,
xxxi. 271.
- Captain, xxxvii. 522.
-^ Colonel, xxxix. 357, note,
> Dr., observations of, on
people of Washington, xxix. 347.
> Mr. Henry, xxi. 121.
the
Thorpe, John, xxiv. 368.
Lieut., xxxvii. 371,
Miss, xxiv. 368.
Mr. Deputy, xxxv. 163.
Thou, de, xxxiv. 65. See TAuanm.
Thouion, xxiv. 404.
Thouret, xxviii. 307.
Thrasybulus, xxiv. 423 ; xxxiii. 352.
Thrasymachus, xxi. 284.
Threipland, Sir Peter, xxxvi. 178.
Thresher, xxiii. 406.
Throckmorton, xxx. 193 ; xxxiii. 32.
■■ Sir John, on the oath of
fealty and allegiance to the Pope,
xxxviii. 582.
.Sir Nicholas, xxxvL 511,
612.
Thuanus, xxviii. 511, 513 ; xxxiii. 160;
xxxvii. 475, note,
Thucydides, xxi. 275, note, 293 — descrip-
tion of a good woman, xxii 172.
xxii. 314, 335, 345 ; xxiii.
144, 340, 569; xxiv. 433; xxv. 228,
510, 525 ; xxvii. 63, 328, 398 ; xxviii.
98 ; xxx. 399 ; xxxii. 69, 70 ; xxxiv,
176; xxxvi. 298.
Thuill, E. xxv. 113.
Thunberg, xxii. 129.
Thunder the Supreme Leader, xxi. 93.
Thurketill, xxxiL 98, 99.
Thurloe, Secretary, xxxii. 405; xxxviii.
388.
Thurbw, Lord, comparison of the number
of controverted appeals determined in
the House of Lords by, with those de-
termined by Lord Eldon, xxx. 287.
, xxxv. 180 ; xxxix. 190,
192, 267.
Thurtell, John, xxxvii. 15, note.
Thury, L. H., Description des Catacombes
de Paris, reviewed, xxi. 359. See Ca-
Utcombt, Part II.
Thwackum, xxxiii. 481.
Thyeste, remarks on the tragedy of, by
Foscolo, xxiv. 90.
Thynn, Mr., xxxvi. 514.
Thyone, xxviiL 414.
Tibbets, Jack, notice of the character of,
in Bracebridge Hall, xxxi. 477, 478.
Tibbie, xxvi. 136, 137.
Tiberius, xxiii. 138 ; xxiv. 403 ; xxvii.
45, 53; xxviu. 7S, 101; xxx. 197;
xxxu. 238 ; xxxiii. 410; xxxvi. 55, 486 ;
xxxvii. 43 ; xxxix. 490.
TibuUus, xxxii. 159.
Tickell, xxiii. 168.
Tickell's Homer, Addison the author of,
xxiii. 419, 420.
Tieman, Major, xxviii. 38.
Tiepolo, Biemond, forms a conspiracy to
overthrow the oliearchy at Venice, xxxi.
432. ^ '
Jacopo, elected Doge of Venice,
xxxi. 431.
Tierney, Mr., xxii. 527, note; xxxiii. 583.
Tighe, Mr., evidence on the state of Ire-
land, xxxvii. 565.
Mrs., xxiv. 130.
Tillotson, Archbishop, character of his
sermons, xxix. 301, 302.
■ — character of, vindicated from
the censures of Mr. Biddulph and
others, xxxi. 121-123— Whitefield's in-
genuous acknowledgment of his treat-
ment of Tillotson, 121.
————— xxxiii. 139 — argu-
ment of, against transubstantiation,
368.
Timarchus, extract from ^schines*s
speech against, xxxiii. 339, note,
xxiv. 441, note.
Timseus, xxii. 305, note; xxiii. 139.
Timberlake, Henry, notice of the travels
of, in Palestine, xxiv. 314.
Timkousky, Mr., defended by Mr. Barker,
xxiv. 393, 394, note.
Timocles, xxiii. 150, 260.
Timoleon, xxiv. 82.
Timon, xxii. 179, 180 ; xxiv. 456 ; xxix.
207.418; xxx. 525.
Timotheus, xxii. 198 ; xxiii. 145, 261 ;
xxvi. 260.
Timothy, xxv. 352 ; xxx. 105.
Timour, xxi. 19 ; xxv. 543 ; xxvii. 139,
142; xxix. 386; xxxvi. 128.
Timur Beg. See Tamerlane,
Tindal, xxix. 199.
— — Sir John, xxx. 278, note,
Sir Nicholas, xxxvii. 188 ; xxxviii.
245.
Tingey, Commodore, xxxvii. 516.
Tlpaldo, A., xxix. 100.
Tippahee, a New Zealand chieftain, no*
tice of, xxxii. 311, note.
Tipper, Mr., Cobbett's letter to, xxi. 136,
note.
■Rppett, C, xxvi. 79.
Tiraboschi, xxiv. 562 ; xxvi. 245.
Tirali, xxxii. 57.
Tisias, xxi. 284.
Tissot, xxxiv. 311.
Titania, xxi. 275 ; xxii. 357.
Titian, xxxiv. 189.
Digitized by
Googk
174
PART I.— INDEX OF NAMES.
QrARTERLT
Titus, xxii. 405; xrv. 352; xxxv. 108;
xxxvi.31.
- Andronicus, xxiii. 201 ; rxiv. 76,
81.
Emperor, character of, xxiii. 201,
202.
■ xxiii. 198; xxvi.368; xxvii.
29.
Silas, xxxii. 308.
Toby, xxii. 380; xxiv. 104, 483.
Todd, Rev. H. J., two copies of his edition
of Johnson's Dictionary claimed by
Sion College, xxi. 209.
Vindication of the Au-
thorized Translation and Translators of
the Bible, reviewed, xxiii. 287.
-^— — edition of Milton's poeti-
cal works, character of, xxxvi. 44.
-xxxii. 470; xxxiii. 11,
19; xxxvii. 57, 211,
Toinette, xxix. 430.
Tojal, P. de Azevedo, notice of a poem by
on the conversion to the Romish faith of
Charles II., xxix. 197.
Toland, canon of scripture &ttac]ced by,
XXV. 352, 353.
XXX. 479 ; xxxii. 469,
Toledo, XXX. 176.
Tolumnius, xxvii. 278.
Tom a lin, or Tamlane, xxL 100.
Tom Fool, xxi. 108.
HicHathrift, xxi. 100.
Tomich, Pere, xxxiii. 144.
Tom Jones, its licentiousness and redeem-
ing qualities, xxiv. 511.
■ Long, xxi. 108.
Stitch, xxi. 108.
Tram, xxi. 108.
Tomline's, Bishop, Memoirs of Mr. Pitt,
observations on, xxxvi. 286.
Tomling. See Daumeriing,
Tomlins and Raithby, Statutes at Large,
published by, xxi. 405.
Tone, Theobald Wolfe, Memoirs of Him-
self, xxxvi. 61 — account of his earlier
years, 62 — enters himself in the Middle
Temple, 63 — ^writes a memorial on the
Sandwich Islands to Mr. Pitt, 63 — called
to the bar, 64 — writes apolitical pamph-
let, and receives civilities from Mr.
Ponsonby, 64-66 — ^his democratical no-
tions, 66 — becomes an united Irishman,
and secretary to the Roman Catholic
committee in Dublin, 67 — extracts from
his ioiumal, 68-70 — by the lenity of the
Irish government he is allowed to go
to America, 70 — goes to France to ne-
gotiate for the invasion of Ireland, 71
—his reflections on visiting the Palais
de Justice, 72 — extracts of his journal
during his negotiations, ibid. — endea-
vours to corrupt the British soldiers and
sailors at that time prisoners in fVancC;
73 — ^his suggestions to Camot about
ways and means, 74^sails with the
French expedition for Ireland, and is
taken prisoner, 76 — commits suicide, 76
^subsequent adventures of his family,
77 — concluding remarks on the cha-
racter of Tone, 77.
Tomo-Chichi, xxiv. 16.
Tomtegubbe, xxii. 358.
Tonson, Jacob, xxiii. 420 ; xxvi. 428.
Tonstall, Cuthbert, xxiii. 297.
Tooke, Home, xxvii. 55 ; xxx. 517, 518 ;
xxxv. 406 ; xxxvii. 418 ; xxxix. 7.
' Thomas, Thoughts and Details on
High and Low Prices, reviewed, xxix.
2\i — propositions established by him,
238.
quoted on the subject of
the corn-laws, xxxvii. 432.
Considerations
on thQ
State of the Currency, xxxix. 451—
Letter to Lord Grenville on the Re-
sumption of Cash Payments, ibid,
XXV. 483. 484.
■ Mr., translation of Lucian, defect
of, with its causes, pointed out, xxxvii.
32.
Toole, Lieut., joins Major Denham in his
exploratory travels in Africa, xxxi. 459
—his death, 462.
xxxiii. 519.
— Berret, xxi. 475.
Tootee, a Persian dancing-girl, anecdoto
of, xxxvi. 356, note,
Toplady, Augustus, xxiv. 43, 47 y note.
Torey, Marquis de, employed by Louis
XIV., to negociate with Marlborough,
xxiii. 57.
Torln, R., Esq., xxiv. 202, 203, 223.
Torre Tagle, Marquess of, xxxviii.48 1, 482.
Torrens, Colonel, quoted on the subject of
the corn-laws, xxxvii. 435.
xxx. 312.
Torrero, xxviii. 548.
Torres, an insurgent chief in Mexico, xxx.
178.
Torricelli, experiment by, xxxix. 436.
Torrismondo, xxiv. 77,
Toscanelli, xxv. 135, note,
Totila, xxiii. 364.
Tott, M. de, xxix. 26.
Touche, Daniel de la, xxx;. 14.
G. de la, xxix. 27.
M. Meh^e de la, Extrait des M^-
moires in^dits sur la Revolution Fran-
^aise, xxix. 561.
Touchstone, xxx. 220.
Toulouse, Archbishop of, furious rejoicings
occasioned by the dismissal of, xxviii.
276.
Toumemain, xxv. 145, note.
Toiurville, xxviii. 274.
Tourzel, Madame de, pertinacity of, fatal
Digitized by
Googk
Review.
INDEX OF NAMES,
m
to Louis XVI. and his family, xxxviii.
303.
Tousson Pasha, xxii. 443 ; xxx. 484.
Toussaint L'Ouverture, character of, xxi.
440 — his extraordinary rise to power,
441 — instance of his integrity, 443 —
his admirable discipline, 443, 444—
prosperity of St. Domingo under him,
444 — extracts from a proclamation fof,
respecting the slaves in St. Domingo,
XXX. 575.
xxix. 481.
Tovey, xxv. 238, 263, 267.
Towers, Dr., xxxiv. 311.
Townsend, Charles, anecdote of, xxxiv. 202.
XXX. 559.
• Mr., xxxiii. 5, 305 ; xxxvi. 306.
Townshend, Hon. Col., xxx. 76.
W.jxxvii. 198.
Lord, xxi^482 — agricultural
improvements effected by, in Norfolk,
xxxvi. 395, 396.
■ John, xxxix. 302.
TraflR)rd, J^ady Jane, presents Dr. Parr
with the living of Asterby, xxxix. 269.
Tragoso, xxix. 425.
Trajan, xxv. 353 j xxxvii. 43 ; xxxix. 202.
Traill, Mr., xxii. 419.
Trandello, Giant, story of, incredible, xxi.
107.
Trapbois, xxvii. 351.
Martha, xxvii. 851, 352.
Trapsaca, Giant, story of, incredible, xxi.
107.
Travers's case, xxxvi. 518, note.
Travis, Archdeacon, xxvi. 324.
Mr., xxxiii. 71, 72, 97 — attacks Mr.
Gibbon for his opinions expressed in
the dispute respecting the genuineness
of 1 John V. 7, 98 — is answered by Mr.
Porson, ibid.j 99,
Treby, xxxvi. 522.
Tredescaut, Sir John, xxxiv. 166.
Tregonwel, Dr. John, xxxiii. 18.
Tremellius, Cn., xxvii. 294.
Trench, Colonel, xxxi. 356.
■ Sketch of the North Bank
of the Thames, &c., xxxiv. 180 — ^its
plan, 185.
Treschon, P., xxxxi. 4.
Tresham, Will, xxvi. 111.
Tressilian, xxvi. 145.
Trevithick. See Fiv{an»
Trevethick, XXXV. 114.
Trevisa, xxiii. 582.
Trevor, Bishop, xxxix. 405.
Tribonian, xxi. 403.
Trinculo, xxiii. 479 ; xxv. 22 ; xxviii. 552.
Trinity, Count de la, xxxiii. 166.
Trisancu, xxvi. 271.
Trismegistus, Hermes, xxix. 453.
Trissino, notice of the tragedies of, xxiv.
75 — ^introduced the consonant v,^ xxvii.
46 — ^his ' Sophonisba,* by whom trans-
lated, xxix. 33.
Tristan, xxi. 107 ; xxix. 34.
Tristram, Sir, xxi. 499.
Triton, xxvii. 21.
Trivelmo, xxii. 328.
Troil, Magnus, xxvi. 456, ei seq,
— Noma, xxvii. 339.
Ulla, xxix. 451.
Trois Eschelles, confession and execution
of, for sorcery, xxix. 457, 458.
Trophonius, xxi. 295.
Trou^hton, Mr., ingenious standard of
weight proposed by, xxvi. 418,
XXXVI. 153, 157.
Trowbridge, Captain, conduct of, in the
attack on Teneriife, xxxvii. 371.
Troy, Dr., xxxvii. 477.
Trudaine, xxvii. 160.
Trumbull, Sir William, xxxii. 305.
Trusler's, Dr., work on British Synon)rmes,
character of, xxxv. 408.
xxvi. 515.
Truter and Somerville, xxvii. 366.
Truxillo,xxx. 174.
Trygeeus, xxiii. 275, 276.
Tryphiodorus, xxii. 337, 338.
Trypho, xxii. 312; xxvii. 50.
Tschudi, Dr., xxix. 446.
Tual, xxiii. 363.
Tuam, Archbishop of, xxxi. 517.
Tuathal, xxiii. 363.
Tubal, xxvii. 1.
Tuck, Friar, xxvi.'127, 129.
Tucker, Dean, xxvi. 93 — admirable re-*
mark of, on free-will and universal pro-
vidence, 99, 235.
Tuckey, Capt., manner of preserving the
dead in Congo, xxi. 363 — the Congo
negro's opinion of the intention of his
visit, xxii. 273 — ^position of the origin
of the Zaire established by his voyage,
476.
Tudela, Benjamin, notice of the travels of,
xxiv. 315.
his account of the Cara-
ite Jews, xxxviii. 128 — of the Recha*
bites, 142.
Tudor, Mary, <|ueen of Scotland, cha«
racter of, xxxviii. 399.
Tuke, Mr., statement of the number of
cases and cures in the Retreat for insane
persons at York, xxiv. 175, note,
Sam., xxxiii. 311.
Tu-li-shin, ambassador to the Tourgouth
Tartars, account of himself and his
qualifications, xxv. 419, 420 — his in-
structions, 421.
TuUey, xxxviii. 12.
Tullius Servius, xxxil 77 — traditions re-
specting, 79 — ^remarks on the regula-
tions instituted by, 79-81.
Tully, xxiii, 515; xxvii, 548*
Digitized by
Googk
i;6
PART l.-mDEX of NAMES.
QuARtfifttir
Tully, Mrs., xxv.26; xsax. 138.
Tiinstall, Cuthbert, Bp., account of. xxxix.
374.
■ ; xxvii. 342.
Turberville,* xxvi. 44, note; zxxvi. 537.
— — Thomas de, xxxix. 46.
Turenne, account of the exhumation of;
xxi. 373.
xxiL 390 ; xxiii. 2, 195 ; xxvii.
161; xxviii. 274; xxix. 290; xxxii.
397.
Turgot, M., character of, as a statesman,
xxyi. 23 1 ; xxvii. 160 — ^fiuancial mea-
sures of, 162.
Turketul, Abbot, xxxiv. 289^notice of his
Ufe,291,292.
TumbuU, Mr., xxx. 12.
Tumebus, xxv. 507, 511.
Turner, the late General, the slave-trade
checked by the vigorous conduct of,
xxxiv. 607 — benencial results there-
from, 607, 608.
xxiv. 103.
Anne, xxxvi. 555.
Captain, flourishing condition of
Regent's Town in Sierra Leone, xxviii.
176.
Colonel, xxxiii. 312 ; xxxvi. 516,
note,
the painter, xxxviii. 378.
Dawson, Account of a Tour in
Normandy, reviewed, xxv. 112. See
Arcfiitecture, Part II.
i_ Mr., xxix. 138.
Turner, the historian, xxxvil 1 99, 20 1 .
Turnus Rufus, xxxv. 108.
Turpin, xxvii. 277 ; xxxiv. 251.
Archbishop, xxi. 510; xxx. 51.
Tusanus, xxii. 314.
Tussejr's One Hundred Points of Good
Husbandry, notice of, xxiv. 404, 405.
Thomas, his complaint of school
discipHne, xxxix. 113.
Tutchin's case, xxxvi. 546.
Twells, xxxiii. 96, 97.
Twining, Thomas, xxxix. 264.
Tybalt, xxix. 430.
Tycho Brahe, xxii. 142.
Tydwell, E. ap, xxv. 280.
lydwell, Moweth ap, xxv. 280.
Tylney, Sir Frederick de, identified with
Tom Hickathrift, xxi. 102.
Tyndal, notice of his translation of the
New Testament and of the Pentateuch,
xxiii. 295, 296.
Typhous, xxvii. 27.
Typhosus, xxx. 383.
Typhon, xxii. 449 ; xxviii. 82, 425.
Tyrius Maximus, xxxiii. 364, note.
Tyro, xxviii. 428.
Tyrtaeus, xxiii. 169.
Tyrwhit, Mr., xxxiiL 519, 542; xxxviii.
108.
Tyrwhitt, Sir Thomas, xxxv. 174.
and Tyndall's statutes, xxxvil
151, note,
Tyschen, Professor, xxxi. 179.
Tzetzes, xxv. 505.
U.
Uananue, Don H., xxx. 450, note,
Udall's case, xxxvi. 519, note,
Ude, Mr., xxiv. 350.
Ugleisha, xxxv. 78.
Ugolin, Count, xxiii 194.
Ugolino, xxv. 11.
Ugovitz, Bosko, xxxv. 70.
Ulau. See Hulagu,
Ulenspiegel, xxi. 108.
XJlfketel, Abbot, xxxiv. 296.
Ulloa, Antonio de, * Noticias secretas,*
notice of, xxxv. 147 — ^reviewed, 321 —
qualifications of Ulloa and his asso-
ciates for observation, 322, 323 — cha-
racter and plan of his report, 324, 325
— flagrant abuses in Peru, 325 — power
of the viceroys, 326 — venality of justice
in the audiencias or chief court of jus-
tice, ibid,j 327, 328 — custom-house ma-
nagement, 328 — ^profligacy of the Ro-
mish clergy, 329, 330 — ^particularly to-
wards an Indian cacique, 331 — the
number of the ecclesiastics, how kept
up, 332— power of the Jesuits, and
benefits conferred by them on the
South Americans, 333 — bitter hatred
between the Spaniards and the Creoles,
334-336 — remarks on its causes, 337 —
rapacious conduct of the Spaniards to-
wards the aborigines, 338 — account of
the Repartimientos in forced allotments,
exacted of them, 339 — ^their absurdity,
340 — account of the mita or compulsory
service of the Indians, 341^-exactioas
of the priests and their concubines, 342
—mockery of religious services per-
formed among the Indians, 343.
Ulloa, Antonio de, xxii.416 ; xxx. 152, 460,
Ulphilas, xxxiii. 83.
Ulpian, xxxix. 201.
Ulysses, xxi. 39 ; xxv. 22, 509 ; xxvii 1 ;
xxx. 42, 395; xxxl 380 ; xxxiv. 152;
xxxvi 57, 59.
Unas, xxi. 472.
Unanue, xxx. 152.
Underwood, Mr., xxix. 152.
Undine, xxii. 362.
Uniacke, Crofton, on the Necessity of
Digitized by
Googk
Rbyiew.
INDEX OF NAMES.
177
formiog a code of the lawi of England^
xxxvii. 154, note,
Uniacke, Crofton, xxxii. 316, 317, 320.
Unwin, Mrs., xxx. 193.
Urban VI., xxxi. 73-75.
VIII., xxi. 365 ; xxvu. 16.
— ;— Sylvanus, XXV. 113; xxvi. 377.
Urbino, Alfonso, xxxvii. 77,
Urganda,xxii. 371.
Uriel, xxvi. 186 ; xxix. 453.
Ursula, Si, xxiv. 310«
Usbeck, xxvL 44.
Usher, Archbishop, xxiii. 518; xxxiii. 172 ;
xxxiv. 183 ; xxxvii. 55.
Ussimano, xxiv. 77-81.
Uthry Bendragon, xxi. 93.
Utterton w. Tewsh, notice of the cause of,
for a divorce, xxi. 237, 263.
Uztariz, proof given byj that colonies are
not a source of depopulation, xxvi. 523.
Vachtuno, sovereign of Georgia,
392.
Vaena, Isabel de, xxix. 249.
VaiUant, M. le, xxxvii. 448.
Valancey, General, xxvii. 218.
Valano, xxiiL 357.
Valckenaer, xxii. 307, 319; xxiii. 150,
151.
Valckenbergh, daughter of, executed for
witchcratt, xxix. 447.
Vald^s, xxix. 252.
Valdez, xxix. 375— character of, as repre-
sented by Lord John Russell, 380.
xxxvii. 72 ; xxxviii. 479.
Valence, M. de, xxxiv. 434.
Valens, xxii. 343.
Valentia, Lord, xxii. 450 ; xxiv. 333, note ;
xxxii. 84 ; xxxvii. 102.
Valentin, Dr., xxx. 147.
Valentine, St., xxi. 109.
Valentinian, xxv. 80, note ; xxxix. 202.
Valer, R. de, the apostle of the Reforma-
tion in Spain, xxix. 246-248.
Vdera, C. de, xxix. 246, note,
Valeria, xxviii. 105.
Valerian, xxxii. 273.
Valerius, xxvii. 293.
Antias, xxvii. 274.
Flaccus, xxxii. 159.
Maximiis, xxiii. 142.
Valhalla, xxii. 354.
Valla, xxvi. 338.
Valle de la Palermo, Marquis del, xxiii.
367.
Vallesantoro, Marquis de, xxix. 61.
Valli, Dr., experiment made by with pesti-
lential matter, xxxiii. 238.
Valliami, xxvii. 139, 145.
Valliere, Mademoiselle de la, xxxiv. 21,
424.
Valori, M. de, xxviii. 465.
Valpy's, A. J., Edition of Stephens's The-
saurus GraecsB Linguae, reviewed, xxii.
302 — ^advantage of the editor over the
original author, 303 — account of Greek
lexicons, prior to Stephens's Thesaurus,
304^15 — ^biographical sketch of Henry
Stephens, 315, 316, 317— remarks on
VOL. XL. MO. LXXIX.
the execution of his Thesaurus, 318-
320 — ^instances of its defects, and sug*
gestions for improving it, 321-325 —
diligence of Mr. Valpy and his coadju-
tors, 326 — defects in their plan and ex-
ecution, 327-346 — calculations as to the
probable size and cost of the new edi-
tion, 329, 330.
— ^ reply of, to the strictures
of the Quarterly Review, xxiv. 376,
377 — answer to i^ 377, et seq. — ^remarks
on his edition of the Delphin Classics,
385— address to him, 399, 400.
Dr., xxii. 348.
Vanagastus, xxii. 367.
Van Braam, xxi. 72.
Vanbrugh, Sir J., xxvi. 436 ; xxxvii. 315.
Van Brunt, xxv. 62.
Vanburgh, character of the dramatic
writings of, xxix. 423.
Vancanson, xxxii. 409.
Vancouver, visited New Zealand, xxxi. 52,
62.
xxi. 240, 252; xxvi. 345, 411,
521 ; xxviii 372 ; xxx. 239 ; xxxv. 420.
Vanderkemp, Dr., curious anecdote of
elephants, xxi. 361, note; xxv. 440.
Vandermast, xxix. 440, 468. ,
Vandevelde, xxxix. 4.
Van Diemen, xxvii. 100.
Vandyke, xxvii. 214; xxxvi. 72; xxxvii.
247; xxxviu.382,384.
Vane, Harry, xxvii. 205 ; xxviii. 57.
-^— Sir H., created a Baron, xxv. 318.
kindness of, to Bishop Mor--
ton, xxxix. 385.
. xxv. 290, 309,321, 325, 343 ;
xxix. 205 ; xxxiii. 312.
Van Helmont, xxix. 469.
Vannier, M., xxx. 362 ; xxxiii. 132.
Van Renselaer, xxvii. 412.
Van Ripper, xxv, 62.
Vansittart, Right Hon. N., Speech on the
Necessity of New Churches, xxiii. 549.
> xxvii. 262.
Van Tassel, Battus, xxv. 61.
Katrina, xxv. 61, 65.
Vantivelli, the Younger, xxxii. 62,
N
Digitized by
Googk
178
PART L-JNDEX 07 NAMES.
QUUETBILZ
Van Tromip, xxvi. 28.
Vargas, zxix. 248.
Vancouit, zxviii. 290.
Varignon, French Math>m»tirian> his
Projet d'une NouYelk Mecamqoty zsxiz.
4oo*
Varinufl. See Qmtrino^
Varlamo, Majiur N., mx, 97.
Yvniff, ixfi. 145 ; zxfii. 341.
Yarns pi. 30, 40; xxiL 67 ; xaf. 403—
the digamma mentioned by, zxYii. 44,
55,290; xxxiL 234, 241.
Vasco de Gama, xxxix. 478.
Vassili, xxvi. 47.
Vasseur, Le, account of his proceedings in
the West Indies, zxzviii 220.
Vasty, Baron de. Reflections on the King-
dom of Ha^, reriewed, xxi. 430.
Vauban, zxiii.40, 54 — improvements of,
in fiBrtification, xxt. 74, 75.
Vaughan, Mr^ letter to Dr. Bain sending
money to Sheridan, zxxiii 587, 589,
590.
——— xx?i. 470 5 XXX 233.
Yanghan (Rowland), xxxriii. 68, noU.
YwaUM, CUnde de, xxxii. 360, 362.
Vannoz, Madame de, xxi. 374.
VauTillerins, xxt. 507.
Vaux, Cadet de, Inn)ect«nr G6n6ral des
Objets de Salubrite, xxi. 483.
Vavosa, Antonella, xxi. 94.
Yedeta, Major, xxxTiii. 473.
Vega, 6. de, xxiv. 133.
•^— * Lope de, character of Faiia as a
commentator, xxTii. 17.
■ xx'u 506 ; xxb. 133 ; xxtii.
10, 16, note; xxriii. 366;. zxix. 40,
258, 425 ; xxxiii. 210.
Y^;;etius de Re Militan, extract from,
zxxri 487, noify 496.
■ ■ ■ xxiii2; xzr. 80.
Vegesio, Angek>> xxii. 315.
Velasco, governor of Paraguay, xxxii. 138.
Velciuus, xxviii. 330.
Velent, xxi. 105.
Yeles, Luis de Guevara, notice of his * El
Diablo Cojudo,' xxxiii. 210.
Veil Pasha, xxiii. 1 14, 341.
Velhura,xxiii.341, 343.
Yelleda, xxvi. 457.
Velly, XXV. 566.
Y^no, xxiv. 392.
Venables, xxxviiL 222.
Vend6me. Duke de, xxiii. 40, 47-—«n«c-
dote o^ xxxvii. 215.
Venegas, XXX. 172.
Venner, xxix. 199.
Yenns, xxi. 297; xxii 173, 182, 362;
xxiii. 162, 258, 261, 264; xxiv. 403,
435,436; xxv. 527; xxvi. 198; xxvii.
21,28,44; xxviii. 344; zxz.43.
Venus, Cnidian, xxii 195.
-— Fanesey ztiii 158.
Vera, Diego de, xxxii. 375.
Verdier, General, xxix. 77,
Vere, Lord, xxiii. 71.
Vere, Lady, xxx. 543, 532.
Verheyen, Philippus, epitaph placed over
the remains c^, xxi. 378.
Vermandois, Louis, Gomte de, zxxiv. 21.
Vermond, Abb6 de, xxviii. 460.
Veroes, xxix. 425.
Vemet, xxviii. 344 ; xxxix. 4.
Vemey, du, xxxv. 248.
Vemey, P. de, xxvii. 259.
Vernon, xxx. 153.
Diana, xxvi 111, 114, 140.
G. G. V. xxiv. 218.
. Hon. Greorge, xxii 97.
Sir F., XXVI. 111.
Veronica, xxxvi. 324.
Verres, xxx. 387, note,
Verrodiio, Andrea, xxxii. 64.
Verstegan, xxii. 369, noie.
Vertue (G.), remarks on, xxxviii. 389.
Venilam, Lord, description of a talismanic
ring, in the possession of, xxix. 454.
— — ^— ^— xxxix. 94.
Verville, B. de, xxv. 128.
Vervisiotti, V., dismissal o^ xaox. 95.
Vesely, M., xxxv. 66.
Vesey, Mr, xxi. 200.
Vespasian, xxvi 376, 390; xxvii. M.
Vespucius, Americus, xxxvii. 457.
Vesta, xxi. 40.
Vettori, F., xxviii. 368.
Veturia, xxv. 17.
Vezius, xxx. 22.
Vialard, xxvi 240.
Vibero, B. de, death 'O^ in the cans* of
Protestantism, xxix. 253.
F. de, death of, in the oanaa of
Protestantism, xxix. 253.
J. and C. de, xxix. 253.
L. de, xxix. 249.
Vicentio of Beauvais. See Ficeniim Bet-
lovaciut.
xxii 408.
84.
Vicentius BeUovacius, improbability of his
opinion that the Arabians invented the
magnetic needle, xxi. 192.
Vicramaditya, xxix. 386.
Victoire, Madame, xxviii. 29.
Victor An^adens II., xxxiii. 172 — notiee
of, 173.
P., xxviii. 322.
Vitensis, xxvi. 339 ;
Victoria, General, xxx. 178.
Victorius, xxv. 507.
Vida, xxvi 245 ; xxxvii. 418.
Vidaurre, xxx. 152,441.
Vieira, J. F., xxvii. 19, noie,
Vieyra, xxvii 3, 37, noie,
Vigerius, opinion o^ as to the i
nieating the dead) xxi 3^7.
Vlgeras^ xxv. 523.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtisw.
INDEX OF NAMEd.
1^9
VigHhu Tapsensia^ xzvi. 325, 338.
Tignea, brutal conduct o( to a British
boat s crew, xxvi. 65, 6B,
Vignola, parity of his architectute, nadi.
VlUa Florida, Count, xxxviii. 474.
Villani, xxi. 194 : xxiv. 548 : xxv, 547.
— — xxxi. 71.
YiQanueva, xadr. 320.
Villars, liarshal, mamBuvres of, in Flan-
ders, xxiii. 34--instance of loB falsehood
in laa memoirs, ibid,, 46, 47-H:haracter
of, 59— is defeated at the battle of Mai-
plaquet, ibid., 60.
-^ ; X3di. 390,' fiodl 397.
Villate, insurrection undei^ hi St. Do-
mingo, xxi. 441.
Villaurrantia, Sefior, Apuntes Hlstoiicos
del, xxit. 152.
Villebrun, xxiii. 256, note / 258, note,
Villegagnon, erroneously said to have con-
veyed the young Queen of Scotland to
France in 1648, xxxL 13.
A^emain, M., Histoire de Cromwell^ re-
viewed, XXV. 279. See Oromweff,
Villena, Marq., Kbrary of, burnt, xxix. 245 .
Villeneuve, Admiral, xxvi. IS—probable
fate of, 23 ; xxxvii. 377.
Villecimer, Duke, xxviii. 302..
Villeroy, Marshal, acxiii. 17— defeated at
the battle of Blenheim, 28— besieges
Liege, 34— is defeated at the battle of
Ramilies, 40.
Villiers, mistress to William til,, xxxvii.
254.
I^lloison, xxii. 305, note, 344 : xxiii. 140,
143,148,153.
Vince, xxii. 148.
Vincent, Dr., xxiv.316 J xxir.167; xsodii.
69 5 xxxix. 109.
— — ^ General, xxvii. 416, 420— result
of his disobedience of the orders sent
Mm to evacuate Upper Canada, 434.
J.,ixvil.342,355.
Vhgil, mention of, omitted by Vitruvius
from jealousy, x^. 30 — crypt of, in the
catacombs of Paris, 388— probable con-
test between his admirers and those of
Homer, xxiiL 408, note — ^hk Eclogues,
the sweetest poems in the world, 430 —
ntravagftnt conceit of the French critics
respecting, xxiv. 358 — had grey hair
while yotmg, 533 — ^Petrarch's memo-
tandum in a copy of, 538— Tasso his
imitator, xxv. 428 — instance of Vir-
gil's perverted moral feeling, 430 —
comparison of the two poets, Tasso and
Vir^, ibid,
■•— Georgica P. Virgilii Maronis, in
ouinque lan^as conversa, Hexaglot
Georgplcs, reviewed, xxxviii. 358— oia-
raderistics of the Georgics, ibicL — and
of ^gil^s peculiar genius, 359— the
practical tendency of the C^eorgics, to
what due, 363— 'Mt. Sotheby's version
of the description of an Itahan spring,
362.
Virgil, xxii. 486; xxiii. 363, 372, 429;
xxiv. 551 ; xxvi. 116, 430; xxvii. 4, 47,
54, 67, 69, 318, 331 j xxvili 319, 370 5
XXX. 44; xxxii. 82, l59, 273; xxxiii.
566; xxxiv.254,400,402; xxxv. 189,
210; xxxvi. 41, 62, 53, 56, 60; JOCKvii.
463; xxxviii. 18.
Vir^;inia, xxv. 368.
Vinato, xxv. 12,
Virieu, Count de, XxvlH. 2$^ 28/.
xxviiL 78.
Visconti, Bemabo, notice of &n dqtiestnaa
statue of, XXX. 345.
J. G., xxv. 547.
Visita^ara, M. de, xxviiL 26.
Vitriacus, Jacobus, Bishop of Ptolemais,
mention of the magnetic needle made
by, xxi. 192.
Vitruvius, plan of the work of, on archi-
tecture, xxL 28^— incorrect state of the
MSB. of his work, 31— analysis of Mr.
Wilkins's translation Of it, with re-
marks, 36-40.
xxviil. 316, 326; xxx. 225,
nates xxxvii. 308 ; xxxix. 43^,
Vivian and Trevithick, Messrs., steam-
carriage first used by, aood. 358.
Viviani, xxvi. 214.
Vi^zanius, xxiii. 144.
Vladimir, Grand Duke of Husiia, zxvi.
37 — singular conversion and baptism
of, 40, 41.
Yalroslavich, Prince, xxvi. 41.
Vlaming, xxxix. 327.
Voinovitch, Count, vainly attempts to
form a Russian establishment on the
eastern coast of the Casjoan Sea, XJacvi.
108.
Voisin, M. de, xxviu. 296.
Voiture, xxxii. 304.
Vokins, S., xxvi. 401.
Volero, xxvii. 302.
Volney, remarks of, on tliunder-stomu» in
America, xxx. 14.
xxii. 9; xxiv. 518; xxvii. 840;
xxvili. 520.
Volta, xxi. 336.
Voltaire, private life o{, with Madame ^n
Ch&telet, reviewed, xxiii. 154 — orig^ of
his connexion with her, 156 — ^it is an
unhappy one, 162 — ^their reception of
Madame de Grafigny, 157 — description
of his aparimenis, 158 — their occupa-
tions, 160 — ^his baseness towards hig
guests, 161-163 — consummate iarpn-
dence, 161 — ^his barbarous treatment qf
Madame de Grafigny, 164, 165— gene-
ral character of VMtaire, 166 — ^his ab-
surd judgment on the writings of AJruh
xc 2
Digitized by
Googk
180
l^ART I.-.INDKX OF NAMES.
QUARTBRLT
topbanef, zxir. 419, mo/^— obserrations
on the tragedies of, zxiz. 26.
Voltaire, his Merope, xxxv. 180.
, xxi. 122, 490, 498 ; xxii. 9, 33,
404; mil. 59, 192, 514, 547; mv.
81 ; XXV. 18, 423, 428, 431 ; xxvi. 230 ;
xxvii. 155, 168, 363, 392; xxviu.301,
464,495; xxix.316,»fo/e; xxxiii. 346;
xxxiv. 21, 22, 82, 354; xxxvi. 203;
xxxvii. 34, 406, 466; xxxix. 9, note,
307.
Volusianus, xxiii. 146.
Von Buch, XXX. 123.
Vondel, author of the poems entitled
' Lucifer,' uid * Adam in Ballingschap,*
zxxi. 282.
Von Spix and Von Martius (Drs.), Tra-
vels in Brazil, xxxi. 1 — character of
the translation of this work, 19— descrip-
tion of the harbour of Rio Janeiro, 19,
20 — and of its neighbouring scenery,
22, 23— effect produced there by the
removal of the Portuguese court thither,
20, 21 — description of the caravans, 23
— ^physical inconveniences incident to
Bradl, 24,25.
Von Spix and Von Martius (Drs.), Tra-
vels in South America, notice of, xxxii.
126.
Vopiscus, xxiii. 146 ; xxxiv. 64.
Voss, J. H., his version of the Georgics,
xxxviii. 368, note, 366, note, 367, 371.
xxxv. 216.
Vossius, xxii. 308; xxv. 358, note, 517;
xxvi. 245.
Vozzolosa, Meneca, xxi. 94.
Vuk, xxxv. 67.
Vulcan, xxvi. 225 ; xxviii. 344.
w.
Wachsmuth, M., xxvii. 281, 288, 291.
■ ■ W., Gteschichte des Romis-
chen Staates, xxxii. 67 — character of,
68-84. See Rome, Part II.
Waddington, G., Hanbury, Rev. B., Visit
to Ethiopia, reviewed, xxvii. 215 — state
of affidrs at the time of their excursion
up the Nile, 216-220— their honourable
tnbute to the memory of Mr. Burck-
hardt, 221— description of the pass of
the * Water's mouth,' 221, 222— con-
dition of the Nubians, 222-224— inter-
view with Ismael Pasha, 228 — ^they are
obliged to return to Cairo, 230 — account
of the pyramids of Djebel el Berkel,
231, 232— and of El Belial, 233-236—
concluding remarks on the execution of
the work, 238, 239.
xxviii. 84, 507.
Wade, Mr., notice of a pamphlet by, on
the diseases of timber, xxx. 224.
Wadlow, Simon, xxxiii. 313.
Wafer, xxx. 152.
Wagenseil, xxxv. 99, 103.
Waggoner, Judge, anecdote of, xxix. 360.
Wagner, executed foi vritchcraft, xxix.
447.
Wagstaffe, Dr. William, xxi. 100.
WagstaJBfe, Mr., notice of his Vindication
of King Charles the Martyr, xxxii. 469,
492.
Wailly, Mr., xxxii. 58.
Waithman, signification of the word, xxii.
369, no/c— alderman, xxxv. 161, 223.
Wake, Archbishop, xxiv. 34; xxx. 477;
xxxii. 22.
Wakefield's, Mr., exaggerated statements
of the amount of episcopal property in
Ireland, xxxi. 502— refuted, 504— his
cruel charges against the Irish parochial
clergy in respect of their incomes, 507
—refutation of them, 507, 508.
Wakefield, Mr., xxii. 337 ; xxiv. 396 ;
xxv. 516, 518; xxvii. 55; xxx. 106.
Wakeman, Sir George, xxxvi. 533, 534.
Walafrid Strabo, examination of the sup-
posed testimony of, to the genuineness
of 1 John V. 7, xxvi. 335, 337.
Walburg, S., xxi. 372.
Walcher, Bishop of Durham, xxxix. 365.
Walcot v. Walker, notice of the case, for
literary piracy, xxvii. 123.
Waldeck, Prince of, xxiii. 4.
Waldegrave, Lord, Memoirs of, reviewed,
xxv. 393— notice of the author, 394,
395 — ^remarks on the conduct of the
Princess of Wales, 395 — notice of
various tutors of her son, afterwards
George III., 395, 396 — character of
George II., 397-399— of George III.,
399^00 — character of the Duke of
Newcastle, ib., 402— of Mr. Fox, after-
wards Lord Holland, 403 — account of,
and observations on, the intrigues for
place and power which took place in the
latter years of Gkorge II., 404-411 —
character of Mr. Pitt, afterwards the
first Lord Chatham, 411, 412 — con-
cluding remarks on the editing of this
work, 413, 414.
xxvi. 229 ; xxvii. 178,
180.
Waldo, Peter, notice of, xxxvii. 55.
Wales, Princess of, remarks on the con-
duct of, xxv. 395, 396.
Walker, remarks on the Secchia Rapita,
xxi. 506 — notice of, xxiv. 75.
' ■ Col., xxix. 81 ; xxxvii. 140, 141.
Digitized by
Googk
RSTIEW.
INDEX OF NAMES.
181
Walker, Dr., statement of respecting Dr.
Gauden's being the author of Ic6n Ba-
. silike, considered, xxxii. 476-478.
xxiv. 404.
Matt, xxxii. 439.
Mr., xxiiL 106 — advantage of
paving roads, 107 — ^remarks on parish
roads, 109,110.
xzxvii. 458.
Obadiah, xxziv. 295, note.
. Walcot. See fTaicot,
Wallace, James, xxxix. 382.
Wallenberg, xxvi. 356.
Wollenstein, xxvi. 187.
Waller, comparison of, with Dryden, xxiii.
430— -description of the mall in St.
James's Park, xxiv. 406.
more esteemed than Milton, when
alive, xxxvi. 41.
XXV. 304; xxix.208; xxxii. 290;
XXXV. 185, 550 ; xxxviii. 52.
WalUch, Dr., xxiL 420, 425.
Wallis, xxvi. 392 ; xxviii. 515 ; xxxi. 62 ;
xxxix. 439.
■ Dr., xxxix. 271, note.
Walmsley, J. T., xxi. 172.
Walpole, Edward, xxvii. 198.
. Horace, remark of, on Mr. J.
Spence, xxiii. 406 — eulogy on the Kit-
Cat Club, xxvi. 426.
Memoirs of the last Ten
Years of the Reign of George II., re-
viewed, xxvii. 17^— history of his pub-
lication, 179, 180 — propriety of Lord
Holland's editing it defended, 181—
feneral character of the Memoires, 182-
85 — ^Walpole*8 account of George II. 's
visit to the Princess of Wales, 185, 186
— ^remarks on its libellous spirit, 186,
187 — ^treatment of his unde Horace,
192 — ^vindication of Lord Hardwicke,
193-196— rapacity of ^Walpole, 197,
198~his hostility to the Pelhams, 196
— ^vindication of them, 199— -his base-
ness towards them, 200 — ^vindication of
Lord Anson, 201— of Mr. Fox, 202—
intrigue of his own detected, 203-206 —
his narrative of Admiral Byng*s trial
and execution examined, 207-214^con-
cluding remarks on Walpole's repre-
sentations, 215.
inaccuracies in his remi-
niscences, corrected, xxx. 551 — ^letter to
Lady Suffolk, 558.
imjust character of the
Marquis of Worcester, xxxii. 398, 399.
— — — notice of a motto used by
him, xxxviL 197 — on gardening, 304.
- remarks on, xxxviii 379,
382 — sagacious observations of, 572.
- xxii. 360, note ; xxiiL 406,
423 ; xi:v.396,414; xxvi. 229; xxviii.
46,47.
Walpole, Horace, the Elder, abuse of, by
his nephew Horace, xxvii. 192, 193.
' xxxviii. 382.
Lord, XXV. 408.
Sir R., remark of, on history,
xxiii. 1 — interests himself for Pope's
tutor, 428, note — sketch of the charac-
ter of, xxviii. 58 — patronised neither
Gay nor Swift, xxx. 548, 649 — lam-
pooned by Swift, 550.
• xxiii. 417; xxv. 401 ; xxvi.
425, 436; xxvii. 198; xxviii. 536;
xxxii. 353; xxxviii. 381.
— Memoirs on Turkey, extract from,
xxiii. 329, 330, notes, 332, 333, 349,
353.
Wabraund, Robert, xxxix. 63.
Walrond, Colonel, xxxviii. 227.
Walsh, xxv. 535 ; xxvi. 78 ; xxvii. 73.
P., his character of the Irish pea-
santry, xxxviii. 543 — on the oath of
fealty and allegiance to the Pope, 582.^
Walsingham, xxxiii. 33, note; xxxvii.
221 ; xxxviii. 396.
Walsingham, Thomas of, no mention of
cannon being used at Crecy in his ac-
count of the battie, xxi. 194.
Walter the Pennyless, xxxv. 103.
Walterius de Constanciis, xxxix. 48.
Waltham, Sir John de, xxxii. 108, 109.
Walton, Brian, xxiii. 292, 300— testimony
as to the general reception of the Sep-
tuagint version of the Bible among the
Jews, 320.
' Icaak, verses by, xxxiv. 345.
■ observations on, xxxviii.
512, 514, 516 — ^verses by a lady com-
mendatory of, 514, note.
xxi. 206; xxiv. 45, 423;
xxviii. 383, note; xxix. 212; xxxi. 383;
xxxiii. 316; xxxv. 550.
Wamenitonka, xxxvii. 454.
Wanley, xxxvii. 485.
Humphry, xxxiv. 268, note.
Wapshott, xxi. 97.
Warburton, proof that Pope was not sor-
did, xxiii. 413, 421, 423, 428.
xxvii. 471 ; xxxv. 456 ; xxxvL
54.
Warburton, Bbhop, vindicated from the
censures of Mr. JBiddulph, xxxi. 123-
125.
■ anecdote of, xxxii.
273, note — character of his edition of
Pope's Works, 273 — and as an anno-
tator, 274, 275.
— effect produced by
his Divine Legation of Moses, xxxviiu
309.
tracts by, republished
by Dr. Parr, xxxix. 274.
■■ xxiv. 424, iw/e; xxvi.
Digitized by
Googk
w
PART }.*.JNPBS OF NAMES.
QvAMfgrnmut
235 ; 3nvii. 398, nolc, 522 ; xxviii. 24 1
xxix. 166.
Ward, origin of the Rit-Cftt Club, »yi.
427.
' ■ the painter, xui. 480.
— — Ed., his history of the grand rebel-
lion, xxxviii. 387.
— . Mr., quantity of wood reouired to
consume a human body hy nre, jpd,
361.
Mr., collector 4t Wallahabad,
Yxxvii. 1^1.
Mr., xxiij. 302 : xxxvi, 16,
Mrs,, xxxvi. 183.
Ward'i, Robert, De Vere, a novel, X¥xvi.
269 — comparison of it with his novel of
Tremaine, 270-272 — ^particular observa^
tions on De Vere, 273 — es^tracts from i<^
with remarks, 274-285.
W^di Seth Cfiuccessively Bishop of Exeter
and S^bury), munificence of, xxxiv.
347.
Warden, ft lawyer at Sydney, xxxii. 313,
Warden, xxvi. 136 -*^ hiy posthumous
stdtements of Buonaparte m his book,
xxix. 661 "-» conduct of Talleyrand
in the affair of the Puke d'Enghien,
566.
Warliam, Archbishop, xxxiii. 11,
Warner, Dr., a friend of Uayley the po«t,
- xwd.296,297.
-^^ — ex pgriCf xxxix. 191,
» r— Mr., xxxiv. 313.
— — Sir Thomas, a West Xndift adven-
turer, xxxviii. 216— Mulatto son of his,
231^234.
"V^arrender, Sir George, xxi. ?41,
Warrington, Colonel, testimony of, to the
character of Mr. Ritchie, xxiii. 228; xxv.
41 1 xxvi. 228.
■ Consul, at TrippU, %3em.
519; xxxviu. 106. .
Wartensleben, xxii. 389.
Warton, Thomas, xxi. Ill — ^relative price
of his edition of Pope in Switjierland
ftnd England, 204 — opanion on the
birth-place of the Mu9e of Chivalrous
Romance, 509— error in the History of
English poetry, lociii. 153, «o/e, 401,
tf/f^^.^-animadversion oa Cray's Fabl^
i^7 \ XXV. 428— difference between the
enchantments of the Runic poetry and
those in our chivalroua romances, xxisE.
451 ; XXX'41.
■ "--- Thomas, the fathej of the present
race of poets, xxxi. 289.
•w« — ■ ' ■ ■ ■■ ■■ — • edition of Pope's Works,
jpKxii. 271— chvacter of, 274— and of
Warton, as an annotator, 275— faults
in l\is edition, 276, See Pope,
quotation from, descriptive of
. WindiQi Castle* xxxii. 353 i xxxv,
193.
Warten, Dr., master of WinchuteysdiMl,
sxxl. 289.
Warwiek, E vl of, soii. 495, 496 1 znm.
554.
Guy, Earl of, »i. 91.
-.--—— Lord, refiises to place Parr in tbe
eommission of the peace, xxxix. 268.
Sir P., account of Cromwell,
xxv. 290, 291— feflectioBS of, ea &•
murder of Charlee I., xxis. 177, 178.
1 xxxii. 486.
Washington, George, holiday in honour
of, xxviii. 501 — rjiUc from the grave o^
presented to the king» xxix. 340-«^de*
Bcription of hie toml^ 369-«]^rovideDti«l
escape of, xxx. 23.
■ G., suggestions for the Im-
provtment of America, xx^i. 266.
publication of selection
from his papers proposed, zxxviii. 86,
note,
* " chmnicter of^ as a states^
man, xxxix. 229.
xxi. 3, 15, 139 J xxvi.
371; xxviii. 286) xxxvL 68 1
512; xxxviii. 539.
Waterford, Bishop of, xxxi. 612.
•r- Marquis o^ xxxvL 69.
Waterhouse, Mr., t«stiinony of, to the bad
state of the roads near London, xxiii
99.
Waterland, Di., anecdote of, tending to
shew that he believed the text of 1 Jdm
T. 7 to be spurious, xxxiii. 67-^4h« fact
of his belief en ti^ subieet discussed,
i6i4., 68, 69.
'■ — -ii^- xxxii. 158, 458 ; xxxix.
293.
Watersttme, xxix. 339.
Waterton, Charles, Wanderings in South
America, &c, reviewed, xudii. 314 —
sketch of his travels, 31S-318«-aecount
of his taking a oontacaaara, 319, 320,
321— capture of a cayman, 321, 322--
birds of Demerara, 323, 324.^the goat-
sucker, 324, 325— <the humming-bird,
and the cassique, or mocking-bird, 326
r^bite of the vampire^ and (^ the red
ants, 327— habite of the sloth, 328—
accoimt of the Wourali poison, 329^1
— concluding hints, 332.
Watkias, Colonel, an itinerant a d ve n t ur g
among the Osoges, xxxi. 85, 86 1 xxxiii.
18.
Watkins, Dr^ Memoirs of the Right Hon.
R. B. Sheridan, xxxiii. 561 — eharaeter
of his work, ibid. See Sheridan.
Watson, the assassin, des^^sed by Ame-
ricans, xxi. 152.
Bishop, his observations on ihe
Jews, xxxviii. 114.
> ■ ■ ■■ ■ xxiii. 571, ^673 1 xxviii.
521 ; XXX. 85 ; xxxvi. 42; xxxvni. 114.
Digitized by
Googk
Kiynw,
INDKX OF NAMBS,
lU
Watson, Dr., xxi. 164*
Mr.jxxvii. 79 ; xxx. 20 } joudii. 27.
' ■ Mr., of Linthouse, x^vii. 342.
Wfttt, xxi. 98 ; xxiii. 244 j xxxiv, 94.
■ James, merited eulogium of, xxii.
56, 366, note — notice of, xxvi. 36, nc^e.
XXX. 303 5 xxxvi. 168; xzxix.
123.
— Mr., xxxii. 171.
Watteau, xxiii. 159 ; xxx?ii. 306.
Watts, A. A., xxxvii, 88, 89.
Dr. Isaac, his psalmoi xxxriii* 31.
Waveriey, xxvi. 471.
Wayte, Dr., xxxiii. 234.
Weare, Mr., xxxvii. 15, note.
Weatherport, xxvi. 470.
Webb, Captain, abstract of the obverva-
tions of, on the height of (he Himalaya
mountains, xxii. 416, 417 — arrives at
the temple of Kedar-Nath, 4 1 8 — legend-
ary tale of the Bramins there, ibid., 419
— ascends the Nitee Ghaut or Pass,
420 — ^poisonous influence of its atmos-
phere, 421 — unsuccessful attempt to
open a traffic with the Tartars, 422—
observations on the height of the pass,
423, 424 — vegetable productions and
climate of these elevated regions, 425-
427— rcause of the increased heat on the
elevated plain of Tartary, 427-428—
organic remains discovered by Captain
Webb, 429 — antediluvian remains dis-
covered by, in the Himalaya mountains,
zxix. 155.
xxir. 107, 123, 126, 129.
General, xxiii. 56.
• W., remarks on the Rhine, notice
of, xxxvii. 227, note.
xxiii. 423, note.
Webbe, Edward, notice of the travels of,
in various parts of the East, xxiv. 314,
315.
Webber, M., xxviii. 450, 464.
Webster, xxv. 2 ; xxix. 37, 426.
■ Noah, xxxiii. 253.
Weddell, Captain, Voyage towards the
South Pole, reviewed, xxxiv. 378^-<*out.
line of his voyage, 392-394 — remarks on
its results, 395*397 — ^non-existence of
the islands called the Auroras, 398-399.
Wedderbum, Mr., xxxvi. 183.
Wedgwood, general improvement of pot-
tery by, xxxvii. 320.
— xxiii. 589.
Weeks, Mr., xxviii. 388.
Weigel, xxiv. 387.
Weinhold, xxxvii. 572.
Weir, Dr., xxx. 220.
-^^ Major, xxxi. 490 ; xxxvii. 47.
Weisse, xxix. 427.
Weland. See Feieni,
Welby, A., Visit to North America, re-
viewed, xxvii. 71. See America, Part II.
Welby, Mr., anecdote of Tokmdf nt. 363 ,
notei xxx. 479.
Welford, xxvii. 81.
WeUer,xxv.521.
Wellesley, Lord, xxxv. 42— cettfonhip in
India established by, 63«
xxii. 160 1 xxir, 10 ; zzlx.
410; xxxvi. 354i xxxvii. 123, 133.
. Mr., expedient of, to prevent the
burning of women at witebet in India,
xxix. 403.
Richard CoUey, efl^rwaids Eetl
of Mornington, xxiv. 10.
• Sir Arthur, defeats the Freiich
at the battle of Vimeiro, xxix. 80-82—
remarks on the wisdom of his convention
with Junot^ 82, 83. See WeUingion,
VuJkeof.
' " '•• ■ Sir H., proposal made by, to the
Spanish Cortes, xxviii. 549.
Tylney Long, case o^ ae to
custody of his children, xxxix. 194 — ^re-
fused by the Lord Chancellor, 196— 4he
refusal confirmed by the House of
Lords, t&iii.— legality of the decision.
197-210.
Wellington, Duke of, Haclitt*s character
of, xxii. 160 — ^tribute to the fame of,
xxvi. 17, no/e— ^remarks on Buonaparte's
conversations respectinf|p him, xxviiL
250-« proposal to make him commander-
in-chief of the Spanish army, opposed
by Arguelles, 549.
— Pichot's account of
statue erected in honour of, xxxlL 348.
* ■■ letter to the, xxxviii.
410.
campaign of, in 1813,
xxxiv. 408, 409— defeat of the French
at the battle of Viltoria, 410 — storms
the fortress of St Sebastian's, 411-413
<— amusements while the British army
were in cantonments, 415.
xxi. 483; xxii. 383;
xxiii. 71; xxiv. 10; xxvii. 155, 310,
326, 329, 442; xxviii. 166, 338, 339;
xxx. 75, 493; xxxiii. 141,486; xxxiv.
187; xxxv. 230; xxxvii. 505; xxxviii.
174; xxxix. 37, 356.
Wellwood, remaii of, on the religion of
Charles II., xxix. 204.
Wells, Dr., thinks erysipelas is sometimes
contagious, xxxiii; 220.
Wenceslas, Emperor, xxix. 422.
Wentworth, Captain F., xxiv. 369, 370.
. Mr., xxiv. 369 ; xxxvii. 1.
■ Sir G., xxxvi. 516.
W. C, Statistical description
of New South Wales, reviewed, xxiv.
55. See New South Wales, FhTtlL
- Statistical account of
the British settlements in Australasia^
xxxii. 311— remarks on sonoe of his
Digitized by
Googk
184
PART I.-.INDEX OF NAMES.
Quarterly
crude speeiilatioiM, 313 — numbers and
property of the emancipists or convicts
that have become free, 332 — on the
extent of reform among the convicts,
334, 335.
Wentworth, W. C, xxvii. 104, 106.
Wentzel, Mr., xxviii. 381, note, 385.
Werner, services rendeied to geology by,
xxvii. 461.
. xxxiv. 361, 508.
Werter,xxiv. 101.
Wesley, uncharitable remark of, xxi. 395
— advantages that might have accrued
had there existed an auxiliary force for
the established church, xxii. 90.
■ Life of, and the Rise and Pro-
flfress of Methodism, by Robert Sou^
Siey, reviewed, xxiv. 1 — difiusion, influ-
. ence, distinctive character, success, and
moral effects of methodism, at home
and abroad, ibid. — mischief of the
doctrines of methodism, 2 — numbers
of the professed Wesleyan metho-
dists, 2, 3 — incidental advantages to
the church from their preaching, 3 —
age, person, and deportment of John
Wesley, 4, 6— comparison between his
eloquence and that of Whitefield, 5, 7
— ^notices of his family, 9 — his early
education, ll~..studies and blameless
conduct at Oxford, 11, 12 — ^joins a
society of students termed methodists,
13~-declines the living of Epworth, 14
— goes to Georgia as chaplain and
missionary, 15, 16 — ^his success at Sa-
vannah, 16, 17-*refuses Mrs. William-
son the sacrament, 17 — becomes ac-
quainted with some Moravians, 19 — the
circumstances of what he calls his con-
version, 20,21-23 — ^breach between him
and Count Zinzeudorf, 25 — ^institutes
private religious meetings, 26~-conver-
sions said to have been wrought at them,
35-40 — they are opposed by his elder
brother, 40— -J. Wesley has recourse to
the Sortes Biblica, 32— preaches to the
colliers at Kingswood, t6iU— doctrinal
differences between Whitefield and
Wesley, 41 — extract of a sermon of
Wesley's on Election, 41-43 — notices
of his leading associates, 43— persecu-
tion of him and his preachers in Eng-
land and Ireland, 44— hardships at-
tending his itinerancy, 44, 45 — in-
stances of moral good produced by his
preaching, 45 — marries unhappily, and
parts from his wife, 46 — ^inconsistencies
in his ecclesiastical conduct, 47 — con-
sistency of his political conduct, 48 —
his death and frmeral, 49 — review of
his character, 50.52 — his doctrine, 53
—preaching, 53, 54— and system, 54
— important benefit to be derived from
the perusal of his life, 55.
Wesley, xxiv. 489, 507; xxviii. 2, 3, 520;
xxix. 283, 295 ; xxx. 191, note; xxxi.
237 ; XXXV. 464 ; xxxvi. 331 ; xxxix.
307.
_^_ Charles, refuses to go to Ireland,
xxiv. 10 — goes to America as secretary
to Governor Oglethorpe, 16 — ^honour-
able anecdote of both of them, 26 —
attends the prisoners in Newgate, 27 —
death and character of, 49, 60— disap-
proved of certain parts of tiie methodist
system of discipline, 49.
_.._^— . xxxviii. 322.
. Samuel, xxiv. 9— endeavours to
persuade his brother John to take the
living of Epworth, 14,30— his death, 40.
West, xxvu. 201 ; xxviii. 423.
■ Benjamin, xxxvii. 406.
Gilbert, xxxv. 205.
Mr., Essay on the Application of
Capital to Land, reviewed^ xxv. 467--
the nature of that ap^cation investi-
gated, 468-477.
xxiii. 591 ; xxx. 339, note.
Sir Edward, Essay on the Applica-
tion of Capital to Land, xxxvi. 391.
Westcott, Captain, statue of, xxxiv. 126.
Western, Sophia, xxi. 475.
Squire, xxxiii. 313.
Westmacotf s sculpture, character of, xxxiv,
129-131.
xxvii. 322, 326;
348.
Westmorland, Lord, xxiii. 372.
Weston, xxxiii. 15; xxxvii. 161.
Wetherall, Mr., xxvii. 131, note,
Wetstein, xxvi. 336 ; xxxiii 65.
Weydemeyer, Mr., xxxix. 13.
Whaley, Colonel, xxxii. 495.
WhaUey, Mr., Xxx. 426.
Wharton, Hall, xxxiii. 476.
Whately, Rev. R., republication by, of
Archbishop Kind's Discourse on Pre-
destination, XXVI. 82 — inaccuracy of
some of his remarks, 87 — ^particularly
on the freedom of the will, 92— excel-
lent observations of, on humility in
theological researches, 93, 94.
Bampton Lectures, on
Party Feeling in Matters of Religion,
reviewed, xxviii. 144 — advice concern-
ing controversy, 150 — and on the con-
duct to be observed towards dissenters,
1 51-1 53--on divisions within the church,
154.
Elements of Logic, ex-
tract from, xxxvi. 251, 252.
Wheble, Mr., xxxiv. 312.
Wheeler, Mr., xxvi. 386 ; xxix. 355.
Wheelock, Dr., xxxviii. 85.
Wbeler, Sir George, anecdote of a monu«
Digitized by
Googk
Bsvubw.
INDEX OF NAMES.
185
• meut at GonsUiitinople, related by, xsi.
377— account of, xxxix. 399,
Whewell, Mr., xxxvi. 233, note,
Whichcott, Sir Paul, xxxii. 493.
Whidbey, xxvi. 36, note — autediluYian re-
mains at Oreston, xxvii. 470, 471.
Whistlecraft, Messrs. W. and R., prospec-
tus and specimen of a national work,
reviewed, xxi. 486 — specimens of it,
with remarks, 498-503— advice to the
author, 508; xxv. 106.
xxiii.268j xxxv.218.
Whiston, xxii. 332 ; xxxvi. 233, note.
Mr., xxxiii. 66, 67.
Whitaker, great tax on his history of
Leeds, xxi. 203 ; xxv. 147.
Whitbread, Mr., xxxvii. 559— remark on
the poor-laws, 560— xxxviii. 566.
xxvi. 12; xxviii. 207,361;
xxxiii. 585, 586.
Whitby, XXX. 99.
Whitchurch. See Grafton.
White, Blanco, his picture of the misery
. of a cloister, xxxi, 42.
» his conversion, xxxviii. 316.
— .— — xxxiii. 5 ; xxxvi. 306 ;
xxxvii. 207.
White, Captain, notice of his history of a
voyage to the China Sea, xxxiii. 127,
131, 132.
Governor, xxii. 274.
H. Kirke, xxxv. 194.
r- Lieut. John, Voyage to the China
Sea, reviewed, xxx. 351 — sails up the
liver Donai, 352 — description of the
village of Cangeo, 356— produce of the
country of Cambodia, 357— description
of the fortifications and city of Saigon,
359-361 — and of Her6, the metropolis
of the country, 361,362 — character and
pursuits of the inhabitants, 364, 365 —
failure of Mr. White's commercial ad-
ventures, 368.
Mr., xxix. 69.
Rev. Gilbert, his Natural History
of Selborne, xxxix. 406, 409, 427.
xxxvi. 41, note; xxxviii.
Whitfield, xxii. 90, 478; xxix. 283, 295 ;
xxxv. 163, 454.
Whitehurst, John, attempt towards obtain-
ing a standard for measures, xxxvi. 150,
153, 157.
Whitelock, dissuades Cromwell from tak-
ing upon himself the title of king, xxv.
337.
. account of Strafford's conduct
durinff his trial and death, xxxtii. 235.
1 xxu. 104; xxv. 292, 301, 303,
307,334; xxx. 276.
Colonel, expedition under, to
515.
. Bampton Lectures, remarks on,
xxix. 306. See Bampton Lectures,
PartIL
Whitebread, trial of, xxxvi 533.
Whiteficld, austerities of, at Oxford, xxiv.
27, 28— is ordained by Bishop Benson,
28— his person and preaching, 29 —
character of his writings, ibid. — goes to
Georgia, 30— returns to England, ibid.
— preaches to the colliers at Kings-
wood, 31 — convulsive agitations, why
not produced by his preaching, 39 —
account of his dispute with Wesley, 41.
-^-^— ingenuous acknowledgment of
his eixors, vod. 121, 122, note.
St. Domingo, xxi. 439.
Whiter, Mr., xxiii. 492, note.
Whitfield. See Wkitejield.
. V. Hales, xxxix. 193, 197.
Whitgift, xxiii. 301 ; xxxvi. 31.
Whitmore, Mr., xxx. 572.
W. W., Letter to the Electors
of Bridgnorth upon the Com Laws,
xxxv. 269. See Com Laws, Part II.
Whittaker, J. W., Historical Inquiry into
the Interpretation of the Hebrew Scrip-
tures, with Remarks on Mr. Bellamy's
New Translation, reviewed, xxiii. 287
character of his work, 291 — when
any particular translation of the Bible
may be said to be made from an origi-
nal, 291, 292— vindication of Jerome
from the diarge of having made his
translation from the Greek and not
from the Hebrew, 292, 293— specimens
of his corrections of Mr. Bellamy's
blunders, 316.
Whitting, E., xxiii. 106.
Whittingham, joint translator of the
Geneva Bible, xxiii. 297.
xxxix. 377.
Whittington, xxi. 99 ; xxxii. 207.
Mr., xxv. 133.
Whittlesey, Mr., xxx. 15.
Whitworth, Lord, xxiii. 372.
Whyte, Dr., inoculated himself with pes-
tilential matter and died, xxxiii. 237,
238
1 Mr., xxxiii. 234.
Wicklifl? popularity of his doctrines, xxxvii.
54.
xxxvi. 49 ; xxxvii. 474.
Widmer, M., xxxi. 396. ,
Wieland, false ground of his opmion, that
Socrates lived in good society, xxiv. 451,
462, 461, note.
. xxxi. 176— remarks of, on Lu-
cian, xxxvii. 47.
xxvii. 114; xxxi. 176.
Wifien, J. H, Jerusalem delivered, trans-
lated from the Italian of Tasso, xxxiv.
1 eeneral character of his work, 12-
13— specimens of it, 11, 12— remarks
on his alliterations, 13, 14— important
requisites in a translator, 15-19.
Digitized by
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IM
PART L-*IKDBX 07 NAMES.
QuABItSBU:
Wiffep, Mr., xvaw. 148.
Wiggins, xxi. 134.
Wihtrad, xxxiv. 259.
Wilberforce, Mr., Appeal in Behalf of
Negro Slaves, reviewed, xxix. 475 . (See
Negro Siaverjft Part II.) — character
of Mr. Wilberforce, xxz. 536.
-^— ^— — - opinion of, in 1806, on
the abolition of ^avery, xxxiii. 500.
- — xxii. 160; xxiv. 218,
267; xxvi. 59, 66; xxviii. 2; xxix.
413; xxxii. 37, 515; xxxiii. 501;
xxxviii. 557.
Wilbraham, £. B., xxvii. 451.
Mr., xxYii. 131 5 xoix. 266,
Wild, Jonathan, xxiv. 27, no/e; mriii.
488 ; xxxvii. 493.
-^^ Jud^e> xxxTi. 531.
Wildfire, Sfadge, xxvi. 120,
Wilfred, xxvi. 145.
Wilkes, Mr., of Meaiham, statement re-
specting railways, xxxi. 364— experi-
ments on railways made by him. 370.
' xxxiii 400 ; xxxir. 477 ;
xxxT. 161, 197; xxxviii 568; xxxix.
129,301.
Wilkie, xxiv. 302.
Wilkins, Dr., xxxr. 550.
William, Translation of the Civil
Architecture of Vitruvius, reviewed,
zxi. 25 — analysis of the translation,
with remarks, 36-40.
■I ■ ■ * Secret and Swift Messenger/
gave Mr. £dgeworth the first idea of
his telegraph, xxiii. 520, 521.
. xxui. 148; xxv. 124, 132, notef
xxxii. 399 ; xxxiv. 262, 265.
Wilkinson, Lieut., xxxv. 514.
Major- General, xxvii. 433«-
retires before an inferior force, 437.
Mr.,, testimony of, before the
Committee of the House of Commons,
as to the reluctance of the pubUcto pro*
lecute capitally, xxiv. 212, 220.
Tate, xxxiv. 207.
Willan, Dr., opinion of, on the alleged
increase of insanity, xxiv. 180.
1 — xxvii. 527 j xxxiii. 560.
William of Malmesbury's History, cha-
racter of, xxxiv. 284.
the Norman, confirmed the laws
of the Anglo-Saxons, xxxiv. 260— ex-r
tract from one of his laws in Norman
French, 261 — remarks on it, ibid. —
comparison of it with the style g£ th»
Anglo-Saxon laws, 262, 263.
xxii. 359; XXV. 118,
319 ; xxvii. 151, 281 ; xxx. 337 ; xxxix.
47.
— ^— III., purity of the court of, xxii.
435-~dimensions of the Winchester
bushel not specified till the 3rd ef, xxvi.
417, 427, 431.Hrtat« of partita in the
reicoi of William aii4 Amie, xxix. 171 ,
204; XXX. 432; sxxiii. 175; xxxvii.
283, 309.
William III., character and conduct o^
xxxiv, 284.
xxii, 380, 538 ; xxiii. 503;
xxviii. 14 ; xxx. 42i ; xxxiL 195 ; xxxiii.
175; xxxvii. 283, 309.
■ and Mary, encouragement giTen
to informers by 4 and 5, cap. 15, xxi.
409 — rapid increase of population in
London, xxiii. 562, 563— repeal of tha
statute 9 and 10 against Unitariana,
569 — number of exotics brought int»
England in the reign of; xxiv. 416.
I., CouAt of Provence, xxv. 571.
- King of the Netherlands,xxxix.
4.
■ le Gentil, xxxix. 62.
de Kanleph, notice of, xxxix. Sfi'd.
of Newburgh, xxxiv. 287.
of Paris, xxvi. 199.
_w— de Wanda, xxxiv. 324.
of Wickham, xxv. 145, noie;
xxxiv. 188.
Williams, xxix, 357 ; xxxiii. 32 ; xxxviu.
283.
— - — ^— the painter, xxxviii. 378.
Archbishop, xxv. 285, 289.
. David, unsuccessful attempts of
to establish an infidel liturgy and wor-
ship in London, xxviii. 494, 495.
Helen Maria, xxv. 367.
. John, xxxv. 227.
Morgan, xxv. 280.
.. Rev. John, xxxvi. 224.
■■ . Sir C. H., Works of, reviewed,
xxviii. 46 — remarks on the gross in-
delicacy of his writings, 48, 49 — speci-
mens of the unexceptionable parts, with
remarks, 53-59.
Walter, notice of complaints
made by, against Lord Summers, for
alleged delays in the Court of Chancery,
XXX. 267, -277.
W., xxiv. 417.
Williamson, Mr., xxiv. 17.
Willibald, xxiv. 312.
Willis, Browne, anecdotes of, xxnv. 309^
notice of his survey of cathedrals, ibid,
— ■ Captain, xxxiv. 591.
Dr., assertion of, as to the propop*
tion of cases of insanity under his care,
which were cured, xxiv. 173, 176.
Willoughby, Lady, xxii. 96.
*■ Laura, xxxvii. 522.
.P.de,xxvL201.
Sir H., xxvi. 343.
Will-with-the.wi^ xxiL367.
Wilmington, Lord, xxvL 428; xxvii. 191.
Wilmot, Lord, xxxvii 247.
9>> * « ' '■■ R., xxix. 36.
■ Sir £U B., Barty Latttr to the
Digitized by
Googk
Birowi
INDEX OF NAM^S.
187
Ma^tr»iM of EngUmd on i\\» Inen«se
of Crime. See Crim§, Fsft II.
Wi\9on, sn. 403, luffe.
*■» ■ on the Ornithology of tht United
8t»t09, notice o( xxxiii. 310.
. the painter, nxi. 212 1 ixxivt 199.
• the poet, xxxvii. 420,
• Jud^e, nix. 356 ; xzxix. 191.
• Mr., xui. 407 $ xxzvi. 255, no/e,
296; xzxvii. 347.
> i"" " > f Mn., zxxvi, 77.
■*'*' Sir R., partial immunitiet from
the plague, of certain places in Egypt,
zxvii. 544, and ao/e^Zante petition,
zxix. 101^-hit omnion of the Buwians,
xxxi. 151, 132.
xxii. 292; Ejcviii. 218,
539 ) zxix. 572 ; zxxvii. 576, note,
■ ■ " " ■ ' GUneral, imperial cotton manu-
factory superintended by, in Ruiiia,
xxxix. 21.
^ Thomas, zxr. 152.
Wilton's sculpture, character o( zzziv.
129.
Wimble, Will, xzzi. 478 ; xzziiL 478.
Winchester, General, xxvii. 421; zsxi.
107.
■ - Marchioness of, xzxvi. 522.
Windielsea, Lord, xx¥. 408, 410.
Winckelman, xxiii. 92.
Windham, Mr., xxi. 482; bevi. 104^
xxix. 288 ; xxir. 592.
Windham, Sir W., xxrii. 190.
Windier, Gteneral, xxvii. 417.
Winkeknann, xxviii. 43 ; xxx. 389.
Winkelraid, Arnold von, xxxii. 893*
Winkle, Rip Van, xxxi. 483.
Winnebago, a North American Indian
chieftain, death of, xxxi. 100.
Winnington, Mr., sketch of the eharaeter
of, xxviii. 58, 59.
xxxvl 522.
Winstanley, his opinion of Milton, sou.
287.
Winter, Mother, xxi. 108.
Winterbottom, xxiii. 244.
Wintam, Karl of, xxxvi. 523.
Wisdom, Robin, xxxviii. 30.
Wise, a famous gardener, zxiv. 407.
•^— - Captain, charaeter ot, xxix. 340,
341.
Wither, O., imprisoned for his ' Abuses
stript and whipt,* xxvii. 4 — efibct on his
poetry of his poUtics and polemics,
xxxviii. 30.
Witherington, sailed to Bahia in 1686,
xxxi. 14.
Witsen, xxvi. 520.
Witsius, xxx. 87, no/e, 95.
Wittittgerode, Count, anecdote of, zzii.
486, 487.
Wittgenstein, General, xxxi, 163.
Woden, xxU. 368.
Wolcott, Dr., xxxr. 199.
Wolf, remarks of, on the anthtntidty of
the writings of Homer, xxvii. 40.
xxx. 99,111.
Wolfe, xxiii. 579.
Wolfenbuttel, Princess of, xxviii 42.
Wolfius, XXXV. 99 ; xxxix. 267.
WoW, the missionary, xxii. 17 — ^his ae«
count of a body of Caraites in the De*
Mert of Hitt, xxxviii. 127 — saw at Mosul
a MS, copy of the New Testament in
Arabic, but in Jewish letters, 137..
treated kindly by the Jews, when with*
out funds, 139 — his account of the Sa**
maritans, 143 — his translation of a
Caraite hymn, 145.
WoUaston, Dr., considers red snow a ve-
getable product, xxi. 230.
■ I X3ui. 41 ; xxvi. 418; xxviii
466; xxix. 151; xxxt. 243, 248;
XXIX.
xxxvi. 165, 157, 161, 162.
Wolsey, Cardinal, stern and sublime, xxiL
404-^Mr. Gait's Life of, rather above
mediocrity, xxvi, 364 — his olyect in
suppressing the monasteries, xxxiii. 23
-—Nelson buried in a marble sarcopha-
rvLS ordered by Wolsey, xxxvii. 390 —
bit character, xxxviii. 398 — ^preface to
LUy's Grammar ascribed to him, xxxix.
109.
xxii. 334; xxv. 17;
xxxiv. 320, 341 ; xxxix. 374.
Wolsine, xxxii. 98.
Wolstenholme, Sir J., xxx. 233.
Wombwell, Mr., xxix. 151.
Wood, xxvi. 248; xxviii. 182.
-— ^ Anthony, xxi. 208, nqtei xxiii 297 ;
xxx. 527 ; xxxiii. 263.
•— — Mr., testimony of, before the com-
mittee of the House of Commons, as
to the reluctance of the public to prose-
cute capitally, xxiv, 213, 213.
-"•^^^ Mx. Alderman, xxi, 126 ; xxiv. 218^
220, 510.
-— .- — -- Baron, xxxviii. 283.
of the KiUingwortU colliery,
xxxi. 367.
,,^ — ^ master of the Edinburgh Ses-
sional school, hit mode of tuition, xxxix.
115,116,
Wood, Messrs., and Co., kind treatment
of an Esquimaux by, xxi, 217.
Woodford, liieutenant-Colonel, xxx, 77.
■ ■■ ■■ ■ Samuel, xxxviii. 31.
■^■■ ■ ' >■ ■ ■ Sir Ralph, evidence of^ as to
the condition of the negroes in our
colonies, xxix. 484, 485.
— * story told by, xxxiii.
494, 495.
Woodhouse, Robert, Treatise on Physical
Astronomy, reviewed, xxii 129— excel-
lent plan of his work, 130— advantage
of applying m a them a tic a to physics^
Digitized by
Googk
188
PART I.-.INDEX OF NAMES.
QVARTERLT
132, 133 — analysis of the treatise, with
remarks, 133, 148 — recommendation of
it to students, 148, 149.
Woodmarston, Mr., xxxv. 163.
Woods, J., XXV. 140, note.
Woodthorpe, Mr., xxiv. 222.
— ^— — • Junior, xxiv. 222.
Woodville, Dr., xxxiu. 244, 559, 560.
•^— -^— Lionel, xxxiv. 338.
Woodward, Major, testimony of, to the
value of the services of the Irish Clergy^
xxxi. 518, 519.
Woolcombe, Captain, xxxiv. 596.
Wooler, xxi. 126; xxii. 102; xxviii. 213;
xxxii. 420 ; xxxviii. 283.
Woolrych, Mr^ notice of his Life of Jef-
feries; xxxvi. 541 .
Wooton, Sir H., xxiv. 406.
Worcester, Marquis of. Century of Inven-
tions, edited by Mr. Partington^ xxxii.
397 — vindication of the Marquis from
the cavils of Hume and Walpole, 398
— biographical notice of the Marquis,
48 — copy of an admirable prayer com-
posed by him, iind. — ^his suggestions
for constructing a steam«engine, 402,
403 — description of the machine ima-
gined by him, 404 — ^his idea made use
of by Samuel Morland, 406 — notice of
some others of the Marquis's inventions,
409, 410.
■ xxiii. 535.
Wordee, El, xxxiii. 529.
Wordsworth, Mr. HazUtt's opinion of him,
xxvi. 104, 105— tribute to Dyer, xxxi.
287, 288 — extract from his ' Excur-
sion,' xxxiii. 134 — cited, the * meanest
flower,' XXXV. 518 — description of the
countr3r of the lakes, extract from, xxxvi.
575 — lines to a sky-lark by^ xxxvii. 90
— ^remarks on, 368.
V.461.
xxii. 160; xxiii. 410, 411 ;
XXV. 102, 103; xxviL 20; xxix. 212,
309; XXX. 509, 510; xxxviii. 368;
. 9, »o/e, 347.
- Christopher, inquiiy concern-
ing the author of Eskuv BttftXtxti, xxxii.
467 — impression produced by the first
publication of the work, 468 — by whom
written, 468-470— external evidence of
Dr. Gauden : the narrative of his wife
and curate, 471-472 — improbabilities
in the narrative of Mrs. Gauden, 473-
475— strictures on the curate's state-
ment, 476-478 — and on Mrs. Gauden's
further statement, 478-480 — evidence
. derived from Dr. Gauden's correspond-
ence with Lord Clarendon, 480-482 — '
observations on it, 482-492 — evidence
from the expressions of Charles II.,
preserved in Lord Anglesey's Memo-
xaRdum, Buinef s History, and Bates's
Funeral Sermon, 492 — external evi-
dence in favour of Charles I., 493—
part of the Meditations written before
the battle of Naseby, 493— the state-
ment of the persons concerned in print-
ing it, 494 — assertion of Bishop Earle,
494 — ^the preponderance of evidence in
favour of Charles, 494 — ^proofs of his
qualifications for writing such a work,
495 — ^the inability of Gauden to com-
pose it, ihid. — internal evidence from
the book itself, that it was written by
the king, 497-505.
Wordsworth's Ecclesiastical Sketches, ex-
tract from, xxxiL 40, and xxxvii. 240 ;
xxxviii. 434.
Worlidge, xxiv. 406.
Wormius, xxi. 103 ; xxx. 130, note-
Worsley, Sir Bichard, vines planted by,
xxxii. 261.
WorownoflP, General, xxxi. 163-
Wortley, Hon. Mr., xxxvii 261, note.
I Sir Thomas, xxxvii. 311.
Wotton, SirH., xxxvii. 74.
Woulfe, Peter, the alchemist, anecdotes o^
xxvi. 205.
Wrangel, Baron, expedition to the north-
east Cajpe of Asia, xxviii. 341, 342 —
notice oi the journey of, to the north-
ward, over the ice, xxx. 270.
■ XXV. 214; xxviii. 406.
Wrangham, Archdeacon, xxx. 84.
— — — — Mr., xxxiv* 7.
Wren, Sir C, opinion of, on the origin of
Grotiiic architecture, xxv. 144-146 —
eulogium on, xxvii. 316, 317.
xxiii. 440 ; xxvi. 380 ; xxvii.
309 ; xxxiv. 183, 347 ; xxxix. 439.
Wright of Derby, recommends Hayley's
son to be educated as an artist, mnri.
301.
G., xxvi. 186.
■ John, artifices practised upon, by
the revolutionary sect of Avignon,
xxviii. 38, 39.
■ Miss, notice of views of society and
manners in America, by, xxix. 339,
note.
Wulstan, St., xxiii. 581.
Wurmser, Field Marshal, xxii. 387.
Wurtz, General, xxviii. 504.
Wyat, Sir Thomas, xxxiv. 182.
W)rati^ Mr., instructed Kinder in Chria«
tianity, xxxi. 87.
— ^— the poet, xxxiii. 15.
xxv. 132, note ; xxvii, 323.
Wyatville, Mr., xxxiv. 487.
Wycherley, character of the dramatic
writings of, xxix. 423.
' xxxii 287, 288— an allusion to,
discovered in some lines of Pope. 298.
305.
■ xxix. 209 ; xxxiv. 50.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbvibw.
INDEX OP NAMES.
189
Wycombe, Lord, xxvi. 236.
Wyncke,xxi. 108.
Wyndham, Mr., xxxix. 283.
Wynn, Mr. W., xxiv. 218; xxxv. 160;
xxzviii. 557.
Wynne, Mr., xxiv. 179.
Wyttenbach, xxii. 337.
Wyvile, Robert de. Bishop of Salisbnryy
character of, xxxiv. 331, 332.
X.
Xanthippb, xxiv. 447.
Xanthif^us, xxv. 70.
Xavier, Si Francis, avera^^ number of
persons baptized by, xxxii. 3.
xxv. 449.
Xenarchus, account of fishmongers at
Athens, xxiii. 262.
Xenocritus, xxii. 307.
Xenophon, remarks on the banquet of,
xxiv. 441-452.
xxi 26, 281, 303, 311; xxii.
174,311,383; xxiu. 271, 415; xxiv.
381 ; xxv. 72, 80, note, 163 ; xxvii.
393, note; xxviil 98; xxxii. 69, 70;
xxxiii. 333, note; xxxvi. 298, 385;
xxxvii. 197.
Xerxes, xxii. 382; xxv. 174; xxxiv. 79,
254.
Ximena, xxix. 41.
Ximenez, Cardinal, first Polyglot Bible
published by, xxix. 245 — conduct to-
wards America, when Regent, xxx. 578.
Xuarez, a Spanish captive, xxxviii. 206,
207.
■ Don L., xxi. 93, note.
Yaoblskt, Dr., xxxiii. 226.
Yahya Effendi, xxii. 443.
Yao Sieu, xxi. 82.
Yardley, Mr., xxiv. 223.
Yarico, source of the story of, xxviii. 224.
Yarmoloff, General, kind reception by, of
Sir R. Ker Porter, xxvi. 442.
Yarmouth, Lord, xxxiii. 582.
Yarradee, sham battle conducted by him,
in honour of Major Laing, on his arrival
at Falaba, xxxi. 449, 450.
Ytoro, Sultan, xxxix. 153.
Yates, Colonel, member of parliament for
Chichester, xxxi. 264.
— ^ J. A., on colonial slavery, xxx. 560.
Mr., xxxviii. 333.
Rev. R., The Church in Danger,
reviewed, xxiii. 549 — ^his statement of
the want of churches in various parts
of England, 553— dangerous conse-
quences of this want, 554 — on the acti-
vity with which infidel tracts are circu-
lated, 576, 577.
Ychamenraikm, xxvi. 300 — death of, 302,
303.
Ychoulaz, an Abiponian chieftain, account
of, and his wars, xxvi. 296, et seq, — ^his
character, 31 1 .
Yegros, xxvi. 316.
YeSowley, Triptolemus, xxvi. 457.
Yelverton, Sir Christopher, xxxix. 386.
Yeo, Sir James, opinion of Mr. James,
governor of Accra, xxii. 283 — ineffi-
cient state of the ganison and outposts,
229 — appointed to the naval command
on the Canadian Lakes, xxvii. 418 —
his activity, ibid. — ^his efforts crippled
by the negligence of the commander-in-
chief, 419, 420.
Yepes, xxii. 80.
Yermoloff, General, xxxvi. 120, 126, 389.
See Yarmoloff,
Yeruti, xxxii. 458, 460, 463— baptism of,
and death, 465.
Yevan, W. ap, XXV.280.
Yie Yie Miurza, stud of, xxix. 132.
Yogue, xxvii. 37.
Yong Lo, xxi. 80.
Yorick, xxi. 473 ; xxix. 429.
York, General, separated with his army
from the French troops in 1812, xxxi.
330.
— — Duke of, testimony of M. Dupin to
the excellence of the discipline intro-
duced by, into the British army, xxv.
89.
————— xxxii. 400, 469 ; xxxiii.
588; xxxvii. 410.
Duchess of, xxxiii. 293.
Thomas of, petition of, to Edward
III., xxxii. 103, 104.
Yorke, Mr., xxii. 44 — ^merit due to, of
adopting the plan of the Breakwater in
Plymouth Sound, 51.
xxvi. 322.
Young cited, story of Narcissa, xxi. 365,
366^-effect of his writings, and popu-
larity of his Night Thoughts, xxu. 286
Digitized by
Googk
190
PART I^INDBX OF NAMES.
QUABTBRtY Eh?.
—characteristics of hsi manner, zxxii.
231.
Young, xxvii. 481 j to. 548 } mhct. 190 ;
zxxvii. 417.
• observations on the opinion of, as
to the power of justification in the Mosaic
Law, XXX. 88, note.
' " imprisonment of Marlborough^
from his forged letters, tfiii . g.
• xxxii. 492.
'■ the actor, ixziy. 355.
Alexander, xzxvii. 324, note.
^— — Arthur, remark of, on the whole-
someness of potatoes, zxiii. 369 } ixiv.
411. '
' Charles, xxxiv. 218.
Dr., xxii. 456, 457— iuccissiU
antiquarian researches of, xxir. 160
l61-~interpretation of hieroglyphie in-
Icri^ons, 161 -^explanation of the
Zodiac of Deudera, 81 — successful re-
searches into Egyptian Ueroglyphies,
193.
Young, Dr., xxL 358 | ttdi. 456, 457;
xxvi. 195, 18) XJnriU. 78; xxxri 156,
157,161,496; xxxviii. 194.
— — John, catalogue of Angerstein
Collection of Pictures, xxxi. 210. See
Painting f Index of Matters.
■ Miss, xxxiv. 225.
Mr., xxviii. 109, note.
Yousef, a Mameluke^ suq)ected to have
attempted the life of M. B«ls<mi at
ThebM, xsiii. 94.
Yousef-B^, XXX. 484.
Yrala, xxvi. 294.
Yuiteph, Aben All, xxvi. 182.
Al-Haxen Bm, sxvi. 181.
Yussuf, XXV. 30, 39.
Yussu^ Bashaw of IVipoU^ nsi* 468,
note.
z.
Zadilair, Tinliquiz, xxix. 453.
Zadith, xxvi. 195, and note.
Zadkiel, xxvi. 186 ; xxix. 453.
Zafra, Doctor, xxix. 250.
Zag, Rabbi, xxvi. 181.
Zaumodio, xxxii. 393.
Zarina, xxvii. 495.
Zatrac, xxix. 453.
Zayda, xxiv. 132.
Zea, Father, xxv. 385.
Zeenab, tragical fate of, xx
Zeinunus, xxv. 363.
Zell, Duke of, xxiii. 12.
Zellosa, Ciommetella, xxi. 95.
Zenjis-Khan, xxxvi. 128.
Zeno, xxxiii. 362 ; xxxvii. 36.
Apostolo, xxi. 187.
Zenobia, xxv. 17.
Zenodotus, xxvii. 43.
Zenon's notion of the Deity, xxi. 280, 288,
note.
Zenothemis, xxxvii. 36.
Zerbino, xxx. 60.
Zerdusht, xxi. 464.
Zernojeortz, Ivan, xxxv. 74.
Zernojevitz, Maxim, marriajw of,
74-76.
Ziegenbalg, Bartholomceiis, the first Pro«
testant missionary in India, account of,
xxxii. 22.
Zigabenus, £uthymiu% quotation £rom,
xxxiii. 92.
24^breadi be-
V25;zzviii.50d.
Zingendorf, Count
tween him and i
Ziska, xxxiii. 159.
Zobeyr, xxvii. 218.
Zonaras, xxii 308.
Zoobditty Mudi, xxiv. 360.
Zopyrinus, xxiii. 262.
Zora, xxii. 156.
Zoroaster, notice of the religiout »yst«m
instituted by, xxxiL 13.
Zuazo, xxx. 579.
Zubofl^ Valerian, xxxvL 384,
Zucchero, Xxxviii. 380.
Zuingle, xxxvii. 70— notice of, 82, 83.
Zuliana, Venetian ambassador at Rooae, a
patron of Canova, xxxiv. 112.
Zuma, a widow, who wanted to many
Captain Clapperton, xxxix. 155, 156.
Zurita, xxi. 194, note.
Zurla, Abate, Dissertaziom di Marco Polo,
&c., reviewed, xxi. 1^7— d«lectiv» ^«li
of his work, 179.
END Of PART I.
Digitized by
Googk
GENERAL INDEX.
PART II.— REFERENCES TO SUBJECTS IN GSNBSAU
Abbot, the, a Novel, by the Author of
Waverley, analysis of, with remarks,
xxvi. 138-143.
Abduction, forcible, reason for not repeal-
ing the statute which makes that of-
fence capital, xxiv. 199, 200.
Abencerrage, beautiful extract from that
poem, by Mrs. Hemans, xxiv. 132.
Aberdeen University, improvements in the
qualifications for degrees in medicine
at,xxxvi. 218, 219.
Abipones, an Equestrian People of Para-
guay, an Account of the, from the
Latin of Martin Dobrizhoffer, reviewed,
zxvi. 277 — biographic notice of Do-
brizhofier, ibid.^ et seq. — character of the
translation, 278, 279— mode of travel-
ling of the Jesuits, 279, 280 — origin of
the Abipones, 291, 292— extent of the
country occupied by them, and of their
ravages, 293 — divided into three tribes,
296 — account of Ychoalay, one of their
chieftains, 297 — and of his wars, 298-
307, 309, 310 — his character, 311—
privations of the Jesuit Missionaries in
the Abiponian Reductions, 312 — insin-
cerity of. the S])auiards towards this
people, 314 — ravages of the smallrpox
among them, 317, 318.
Ablutions of pilgrims in the Himala
mountains, xxiv. 127.
Abolition of the slave-trade, inefficacy of
the measures for, xxi. 431. See Stave'
Trade.
Abolitionists of slavery, observations for
their guidance, xxx. .579.
Abrahamites, a Bohemian sect, tenets of,
zxviii. 17.
Absentee i^oprietors, evils caused by, in
Ireland, xxxi. 524— paltry sum sub-
scribed by some in a western county, to
relieve the poor, 525 — ^testimony of a
^ Munster Farmer ' on this sulject,
ibid. — address to them by the Right
Hon. Charles Grant, 526.
■ — — - in Ireland, not a re-
cent evil^ yixiii. 469 — ^remaxka oa Jilr.
M'Culloch*s theory, that the income of
an absentee landlord is really as much
expended in Ireland as if he resided
there, 459-461 — the expediency of im-
posing a direct tax upon the lands of
absentees, considered, 470, 471 — from
which the lands of resident landlords
should be exempted, 471.
Absenteeism injurious, xxxviii. 153, 154,
157.
Absolution from oaths and crinMS, preva-
lence of this doctrine with the CatfioUcs,
instanced from a proposed nmrder of
Napoleon, xxxvii. 480.
Abstract principles, observations on,
xxxviii. 555.
Abuses of the press, OTitline of the act for
preventing, xxii. 552— observations on
it, 552-557. See iVew.
^ Academy of Compliments,* notice of,
xxi. 109.
Actors, French and English, compared,
xxxiv. 229, 230.
Acts of Parliament, alarming increase and
imperfections of, xxi. 405, 406 —
causes of them, the number of reve-
nue acts, 406-409 — of acts granting
bounties, and prohibiting or allow-
ing exportation and importation, 410-
412 — number of local acts, 415, 416 —
members of parliament not sufficiently
attentive to the passing of these acts,
416 — remarks on the carelessness and
inaccuracy of their lan^agc, 417-419
— the love of legislation the most
powerful cause of the increase and im-
perfection of acts of parliament, 419-
430.
Adamouah country, notice of, xxxi. 467,
468.
Adipocire, scientific re-discovery of,xxi.384.
Administration of colonies, no burthen to
the mother country, xxvi. 525.
of justice, outline or the
act for preventing delay in, xxii. 551.
Adultery, prevalence of, in France, ttxiv.
453^454.
Digitized by
Googk
192
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
Quarterly
Advertisements) American, for slaves^ xzi.
130, 131, 154, 155.
Advice to Julia, a Letter in Rhyme, xxiii.
505— its character, 505, 506^ 1 0~ de-
scription of a dandy*sconversation,507 —
of London in autumn, 507, 508 — a trip
to Margate in the steam-boat, 508,
509.
^olic digamma, sketch of the history of,
xxvii. 41 — alterations introduced by
the Athenians in their dialect, 41, 42 —
early instances of the digamma, 43 —
disused by the Romans, 45 — ^its neces-
sity vindicated by Claudius, ibid, — and
by the andent grammarians, 4 /^no-
tices of it by them, 48-50— opinions of
Jablonski and Montfaucon on its posi-
tion and uses, 52 — ^the Elean inscription
the basis of all modem systems on the
digamma, 54 — a new view of its origin,
54-58— remarks on the researches of
Bentley and Dawes on the digamma,
59, 60.
JEAJ1B.J altitude and present state of, de-
scribed, xxx. 400, 401.
Affection, maternal, anecdote of, xxv. 369-
371.
— — natural strength of, in the
winged tribe, xxxix. 420 — exertions
made by them in feeding their young,
421.
Afghans, perhaps the descendants of the
tribe of Israel, xxxviii. 144 — ^their high
character for valour, ibid,
Afbura, granite formation at, xxxix. 148.
Africa, suggestions for civilizing the coasts
of, xxii. 301.
account of researches in the inte-
rior of, xxix. 509-523.
'■ account of discoveries in, by Dr.
Oudney and others, xxxiii. 518, 519 —
excursion of Dr. Oudney and Lieute-
nant Clapperton to the frontier town of
the Tuaricks, 520 — notice of the Tua-
ricks, ibid, — ^remarks on the language,
520, 521 — its wide diffiision accounted
for, 521 — arrival of Major Denhamand
his associates among the Kanem people,
522 — ^flocks of birds on the borders of
the lake Tsad, ibid. — reception of the
travellers by the Sheikh of Boumou,
523 — armour of his negroes described,
523, 524 — description of his court, 524 —
and army, 525,526— notice of the market
of Angornow, 525 — interview with the
Sultan of Mandara, 526 — description of
the people of Musgow, 527 — and of the
army of Mandara, 528, 529 — notice of
lieutenant Clapperton's excursion to
Soudan, 530 — hospitality of the Fela^
tabs, 531, 532— market of Kano, 532,
533 — manners of the inhabitants, 534
•—arrival of Lieutenant Clapperton at
Sackatoo, the capital of the Felatah
country, 535 — ^his reception by the so-
vereign, 535, 536 — interviews with him,
536, 537— account of the death of
Mungo Park, 538 — ^return of Lieutenant
Clapperton and Major Denhamto Eng-
land, 539— remarks on the native tribes
of the interior of Africa, 539, 540—
anecdotes of the sheiks of Bournou,
540, 541 — and of the sultan and people
of Soudan, 542 — ^remarks on the geo-
graphy of northern Africa, 543, 544 —
and on the supposed course of the Niger
and Nile, 545-547.
Africa, Ledyard engaged to explore,
xxxviii. 98 — plan of his journey, ibid. —
his death, 100— other subsequent expe-
ditions have proved fatal, ibid. — Major
Grordon Laing's attempt to trace the
course of the Niger, ibid, — ^range of the
thermometer in ttie desert, 101 — desert
of Tenezarof, 102 — ^report of the Major's
death, 106, 107 — ^reports of Moors and
Arabs not to be trusted, ibid, — expedi-
tion of Clapperton, Pearse, Morrison,
and Dickson, 109— of a son of Mungo
Park, 112--contains little worthy of
being known, ibid. — ^voyage from the
Nile up the Bahr el Abiad, 1 13 — ^Jews
in, 129, 130.
" interior of, notice of Captain
Laing*s travels in, xxxi. 445 — character
of the Timannees, 446 — ^notice of the
Kooranko country, 447, 448 — of the
Soolima country, 448, 453 — account of
Dr. Oudney* s and Lieutenant Clapper-
ton's travelsf, 455 — ^notice of Old Birnie,
the former capital of Bomou, ibid. —
humane conduct of the sultan towards a
conquered tribe, 456 — death of Dr.
Oudney, ibid. — anecdote and character
of the chief of Kano, 458— Major Den-
ham joined by Lieutenant Toole, 459 —
their voyage down the river Shary to
the lake Tsad, ibid. — notice of the Bed-
doumy islands, and islanders, ibid., 460
..their journey through the Loggun
coimtry, 461 — death of Lieutenant
Toole, 462, 463— Major Denham's in-
tended expedition round the Tsad, 464
—climate, population, and productions
of Bomou, 464, 465 — African notions of
beauty, 466 — notice of the country of
Adamouah, 467, 468 — interview of
Major Denham with a Mohammedan
from Timbuctoo, 468,469 — ^remarks on
the course of the rivers Joliba, and
QuoUa or Quorra, and on the possible
identity of the Niger and the Nile, 470-
473.
• Northern, notice of two expeditions
for exploring, xxvi. 66, 57.
— — South, Journal of a visit to, by
Digitized by
Googk
RbvieW*
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
Id3
C. J. Latrobe, xxii.203 — account of his
visit to the Moravian settlement at Gna-
denthal, 227-229. See Ciapperton and
Lander^ Part I. and Siave Trade.
African bishops, 1 John v. 7 — ^why pro-
bably quoted iu the confession of, xxxiii.
83, 84.
— — Company's forts, total ineflSciency
of, for the purposes of trade, xxii. 296,
297— especially for preventing the slave
trade, 297-299 — scanty salaries allowed
by the company to their officers, 300.
. Institution, suggestion of the di-
rectors of, concerning free labour, xxxiv.
601 — ^remarks thereon, 602.
Agents, evils of assurance societies allow-
ing commissions to, xxxv. 30, 31.
Agrarian law, account of, with remarks
thereon, xxxii. 72-77.
Agriculture of the United Kingdom,
Report of the committee of the House
of Commons on, xxv. 466 — drawn
up with great ability, 477 — substance
of the com laws stated, 478 — com-
plaints ^of agricultural distress admitted
to be well founded, ibid, — its causes
stated, alteration in the value of
currency, 480 — excess of supply as
compared with demand, and the ge-
neral derangement produced in the last
thirty years in commercial relations, and
the application of capital, and in the
demand for labour, 480-485 — ^the 0})e-
ration of the present corn laws, 486.
491 — necessity of abolishing them, 491
—the nature and expediency of a pro-
tecting duty on foreign com considered,
491-501 — answer and objections to the
prayers of the agricultural petitions for
the protection of agricultural productions,
equal to the protection given to manu^
factures, 501-503 — objections to the
warehousing system obviated, 503 —
concluding remarks, 504.
miserable state of, among the
Crim Tartars, xxix. 135.
.. of Fezzan, xxv. 34.
- of Mexico and Jamaica com-
pared, XXX. 163165— of Chili, 460.
> past and present state of, in
England, xxxii. 162-166.
- effects of the present unjustljr
low estimate of the importance of, xxxvi.
392 — the cultivation of the soil more
important to the community at large,
than manufactures, 393, 394 — sketch of
the improvements of agriculture in Nor-
folk, 395, 396— of the Earl of Egre-
mont, at Petworth, 396, 397— of the
Duke of Newcastle, at Clumber Park,
397— -in the parish of Elford, Stafford-
shire, ibid, — by Mr. Barclay of Ury,
398, 399 — ^number of iaclosuro acts
TOL.XL. MO.LXXJX.
passed between 1797 and 1827, 400—
and between the reigns of Queen Ann
and George IV., together with the ex-
tent of land inclosed, 401 — ^improve-
ments in the feeding of live stock, 402
— particularly by Mr. Bakewell, 402,
403 — benefits resulting from the present
mixed system of subsisting the popula-
tion, 403, 404— examination of the
opinion of some theorists, that no rent
can accrue from land so long as the best
soils only are cultivated, and that the
cultivation of inferior soils increases the
exchangeable value of agricultural pro-
duce, 406-408— proof that the whole
theory is a perfect delusion, and that the
cultivation of inferior soils, so far from
enhancing the rent paid for those of a
more fertile quality, has a direct and
irresistible tendency to retard the rapi-
dity with which the rent of the better
soils would have accumulated, 406-409
— small portion of rent which accrues
to the owner of land reclaimed from a
state of nature, 410 — ^the production of
com a manufacture, 411 — ^the artificial
aids of agriculture, a cause of the aug-
mentation of rent, 413— also, the appb-
cation of machinery, and improved me-
thods of culture, 413-415^-paramount
importance of aj?riculture evinced by a
consideration of the di£^ent channels
through which the produce of the soil
becomes finally distributed, 423-426—
efi^cts of neglecting agriculture in
France and Spain, 426-428 — great ser-
vice rendered to English agriculture by
King George III., 429 — importance of
ext^ding the education of farmers, 433-
435 — observations on book-farming, 436.
Agriculture, losses supposed to have been
sustained by, during the last ten years,
xxxvii. 436 — agriculturists and manu-
fSucturers in the question of loss and
gain, compared, 437 — agriculturists dis-
couraged by the laws respecting com,
443 — agricultural labourers always
treated unjustly by our laws, 551, 552-
554 — agriculturists censurable for hav-
ing dealt hardly with labourers in the
time of their prosperity, 556— evil re-
sulting from this, 557 — affecting in-
stance of the distribution of rewards by
the Bedfordshire Agricultural Society,
to labourers who have brought up fami-
lies without parochial relief, 571.
domestic, proposed extension
of, xxxix. 316.
Agriculturists. See Com Laws,
An-, discovery of the gravity of, xxxix.
336.
Akmetchet, notice of, xxxv. 377.
Alashtar; apoem, by EeiuyGaUy Knight,
Digitized by
Googk
194
PART IL—INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUABTBRLY
extract firom^ with remarks, xxii. 155,
156.
Albanians, character of, zxiii. 337 — ^their
dances, 351.
Albigenses, unjustly confounded by Ro-
mish writers with the White Companies,
xxxiii. 153 — persecutions of, by the
Romish Church, 155.
Albion, settlement of, notice of, xxix. 364,
365.
Alchemy, connexion of, with astrology,
xxvi. 193 — probability that it is of
Egyptian origin, 193 — cultivated by the
clergy in the middle ages, 196 — alche-
mical vestiges in Westminster Abbey,
196— in St. Margaret's church, de-
stroyed by the Pturitans, 197 — ^in the
Abbey Church at Bath, 197, 198— ob-
servations on the pretended transmuta.
tion of the baser metals into gold and
silver, 199 — notices of eminent alche-
mists, Raymund Lully, 200 — ^the Em-
peror Frederick the Third, and the Baron
of Chaos, 201— John Henry MuUer,
and Sandivogius. 202,203— an Usbeck
Tartar dervi&e, 204— Peter Woulfe, 205
— ^remarks on the infatuation of the
alchemists, 206-208.
Alexandria, state of literature at, xxiii.
137, 138.
■■ school of science at, xxxviii.
3 — destruction of the library, 5.
Alienation of property, different modes of,
xxxiv. 552 — by the act of the party,
Udd.—hy deed, 553— by wiU, 554, 555
— of involuntary alienation, 555, 556 —
and by adverse possession, 556, 557.
Alligators of Sumatra, notke of, xxxiv.
102.
Almanach des Gourmands, xxiii. 245.
Alphabet (Latin), when introduced among
the Anglo-Saxons, xxxiv. 257.
Altars of the Italian churches, observa-
tions on the architecture o^ xxxii.
63.
Amazons of South America, probable ori-
gin of, XXV. 381.
America, state of churches in, xxiii. 550,
55 1 — disregard of divine worsh^) by the
American Convention, 551, note.
'" - different rates of increase of po-
pulation in, as stated by Mr. Malthus,
xxvi. 151-153 — Godwin's remarks
thereon, refuted, 152, 157— emigration
Bot the only cause of the increase of po-
pulation in America, 157-158 — diffi-
culty of regulating the commercial in-
tercourse between the United States and
the British West Indies, 541-543—
the slave trade abolished by America,
by treaty with Britain, 64 — ^base conduct
• of the Americans in continuing the slave
^ade, contrw7 thereto^ 7^^ 73^ 7^^
proofs of the increase of slavery in
America, 79-81.
America, Indians of, of Tartar origin, xxix.
13 — remarks on their character, 15 —
particularly of the Kaskaya Indians, or
Badhearts, 24 — bombastic eulogy on,
338 — specimen of American honesty,
341 — present state of Boston, ibid. — of
society and slavery at Charleston, 343,
344— and at Baltimore, 345, 346— de-
scription of Washington, 346, 347—
salutary informatiou for emigrants to
this country, 346, 348 — distresses of
English emigrants, 356, 362, 363,
364-366, 369, 370— slave-flogging, at
Washington, by ladies, 354 — aristo-
cracy growing up in America, 355 —
samples of American law and justice.
356-358, 359, 360— present state of
Lexington, 359 — price of land in the
back settlements, 360 — state of the
country between Vincennes and Prince-
ton, 361 — and of Birkbeck's settlement,
364, 365 — insalubrity of the newly-set-
tled countries, 367-368 — condition of
the American people, 368 — effects of the
total neglect of religion, 369.
state of, in the time of Montaigne,
XXX. 23, 24 — political advantages o^
26 — observations on immigrations to
this country, 27, 28 — supposed paucity
of crimes there, accounted for, 29—
characters of different classes of inhabi-
tants in diflerent states, 29,30 — division
of landed property there, 31 — ^remarks
thereon, 32 — and on the efiects of the
division of states, &c., 32-35 — in what
maimer new settlements are made, 37-
39 — remarks thereon, 39, 40.
character of the first settlers in
North America, especially of the New
Englanders, and of their government,
xxxi. 2, 3 — effects of the revolutionary
war on, 3, 4 — state of the Spanish co-
lonies in South America, from their
first formation to the present time, 4-9
— and of the Portuguese colonies in
Brazil, 9-13 — ^manners, &c., of the
North American Indians, 79-99.
notice of the wines of, xxxii.
259.
the government of the United
States of, sincere in its desire to put an
end to the slave trade, xxxiv. 384 — de-
cree of the new states of Spanish Ame-
rica against it, 585.
discovery of, xxxviii. 193 — bar-
barous superstitions in, 195 — first
oranges raised in, 199 — ^whether more
harm or good haus arisen from its dis-
covery, 204 — di£^rence in the states o(
240 — ^{Hrogress of cultivation in^ 416.
See alio l^f^d SMea
Digitized by
Googk
kBTBtr.
INDEX Ot SUBJECTS.
195
America, effect on Europe of the discoTeiy
of, xxxix. 478.
■ North, causes of the proq)erity
^ of, xxi 2— sketch of the constitution of
the United States, ibid. 3— 4he Bresi-
deni, how elected, 3, 4— defects of the
judicial system, 4---number of insolvents,
5, noie — contrast hetween the dignity of
English Judges, and the levity of those
in America, 5 — ^the legal profession hut
little cherished, 6— baneful efi^s of
the absence of a church establishment,
7— state of reUgion, 132, 146, 147—
defects of education, 8— total want of
subordination in youth, ibid,, 9 — the
English system of poor-laws adopted, 9
— effects of the slave-holding system,
10, 129-131— desidentta wanting to
perfi^ the moral greatness of America,
1 1 — ^America, why necessarily an agri-
cultural country, 11, 12 — inadequacy of
its population wr mihtaiy purposes, 12,
13 — petty amoimt of its post-office
revenues, 12, noie — ^real state of their
navy, 13, 14-— local circtunstances that
will prevent the formation of a powerful
navy, 15-— causes of the partial naval
successes of the Americans, 17 — speci-
men of American political morality, 20
— inefficacy of the present government,
22 — ^political views of the Federalists
and Republicans, 23 — specimen of
American vanity, 24— state of society
and manners at New York, 127-130 —
at Boston, 141 — at Philadelphia, 146,
147— in Kentucky, 154-156— -and at
New Orleans, 157-159 — enormous rents
of houses at New York, 133, 134 — ^in-
quisitiveness of the Americans, 141-142
— specimen of American elections, 144
—and fanaticism, 145 — gain, their
ruUng principle, 151 — slavery perpe-
tuated in the state of Ohio, in defiance
of the law, 153 — cruel treatment of a
negro, 154 — what persons may or may
not beneficially emigrate to America,
134-161 — strictures on the pretended
cheapness of the American government,
163-165.
■ notice of views, visits, and
tours in, xxvii. 71-73 — American misre-
presentations of English officers, 74, 75
—incivility of the American servants at
New York, 76 — ^view of the interior, 77
•—causes of the declining manufactures
of Pittsburgh, 78— filthiness of Ame-
rican inns, 78, 79 — remarks on the
actual state of Ohio, 80 — ^American law
and justice, 81, 82 — sanguinary charac-
ter of the settlers, 82, 83 — miserable
condition of the slaves, 83, 84 — un-
healthiness of the southern country, 87
— spedmens of elegant manners « the
Americans, 85, 86— -misery of the Eng-
lish settlers in the country, 86, 87 —
account of Birkbeck's settlement in
Illinois, 90-95 — and of the settlement at
Harmony, 96 — ^worship of the Shaken
at Cincinnati, 97 — conduct of the Ame-
ricana during the campaigns in Canada.
See Canadat.
America, North, British possessions in,
compared with New South WaleS|
zxxvii. 2^ 16. See also United Staiei.
— — — — court of justice, anec*
dote of, zzXT. 236.
- South, geographical outline of.
xxL 333, 334— negro insurrection there,
330, 331 — ^immense numbers of wild
cattle found there, 335— description of
the cow tree, 329, 330— and of the sago
tree, 335— experiments with the elec-
trical ed of South America, 337, 338 —
ravages of the crocodiles there, 339,
340 — and of the caribe, a species of
fish, 343 — junction of the rivers Apure
and Oroonoko, 344, 345 — description
of the Caribbees of Parapana, 345, 346
—account of the turtle-fishery or harvest
of eggs, 347-349 — remarks on the pre*
sent political situation of South Ain«*
rica, 351, 352.
-description of the suc-
cession of animated beings in, xxxii.
127, 128— present state of the Bra-
zilian em^re, 129-138 — of Paraguay,
138, 139— of Buenos Ayies, 139-146—
of Chill, 146-149— and of Peru, 149-
151.
mal-administration
the Spanish colonies in, particularly in
Peru, XXXV. 325— power of the vice-
roys, 326— venality of justice, 326-328
— mismanagement of the cnstons, 328
—profligacy and rapacity of the Romish
clergy, 329-331, 342— mockery of di-
vine worship in the services p^ormed
by them for the native Indians, 343— ^
the supply of ecclesiastics how kept up,
332 — power of the Jesuits, and extent
of the benefits conferred by them in
South America, 333— bitter hatred of
the Spaniards and Creoles towards each
other, 334-336— causes of it, 337— ra-
pacious conduct of the Spaniards to-
wards the Aborigines, 338 — ^particularly
the lepartimientos or fitrced allotments,
339, 340 — and the mita or compulsory
service, 341 — ^mortification with which
the (^aniuds regard the rising pro-
sperity of South America, 349.
colonies, influence of the new
navigation laws on the commerce oi^
xxvi2.439,440.
importance o^ to Great
Britain, zzxiii* 417, <
o 2
Digitized by
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196
PART It— Index of subjects.
QoAfttVlL'k
Aminta of Taiso^ its character, zxi. 554.
Amulet, the, xxxvii. 84.
Amusements of the iuhahitants of west-
ern Caledonia, xxvi.415, 416.
Analogical reasoning, danger of, when
applied to the relations subsisting be-
tween the Creator and his creatures,
xxvL 85-89-99.
Anastasius, or Memoirs of a Greek, cha-
racter of, xxiv. 511 — ^plan of the work,
512 — analysis of its fable, with ex-
tracts and remarks, 513-526 — obser-
vations on its defects and excellencies,
527, 528.
' of Mr. J. Hope, xxxix. 17,
Anatomy and surgery, books on, not
allowed in Maynooth College, xxxvii.
466.
Ancestry, remarks on, xxxviii. 400.
Andaman islanders, account of, xxiii. 81.
Andes mountains, mode of travelling
over, XXXV. 137, 138.
Anecdotes of Le Clerc and Toland, xxv.
353, fwite.
of the Hon. Mr. Law in the
United States, xxix. 348.
■ of Kircher, xxxix. 287.
■ of Brooke, xxvii. 316, note.
Angling, observations on, xxxviii. 504-
506 — natural qualifications requisite,
507— cautions to anglers, 509 — anec-
dotes of anglers, 510, 511, 518, 521,
note — superiority of salmon-fishing,
519 — ^illustrious devotees of, 521— effect
of draining land on, 530.
Anglo-Norman poetry, specimens of,
XXXV. 83-86.
Anglo-Saxons, origin of the runes of,
xxxiv. 254— the Latin alphabet, when
introduced among them, 257 — applica-
tion of it and of writing to legal docu*
ments and to legislation, 258 — notice
of the laws of ^Ethylbyrht, 259— of
Hlothaere, Eadric, and Wihtrad, ihid. —
and of some succeeding kings, 260 —
the Anglo-Saxon laws confirmed by
William the Norman, ibid, — extract
from his laws in Norman French, 261
—remarks thereon, ihid. — comparison
of it with the style of the Anglo-Saxon
laws, 262, 263--difficulties attendant
on the investigation of the constitutional
history of the Anglo-Saxons, 264 —
their laws enacted in the Witenagemot,
265 — notice of a compact between the
Anglo-Saxons and the ancient Britons,
»6irf.— Anglo-Saxon charters, legislative
documents, 266 — but to be examined
with great caution, 267-270 — materials
of the Anglo-Saxon chronicles, 270 —
genealogies and pedigrees, tfcirf., 271 —
historical songs, 272--degree of credibi-
lity to which theyareentitied, 273, 274—
notice of the treatise of Oildas the Wise,
275 — character of Bede*s ecclesiastical
history, t6i<2., 276 — of the monastic
chromclers, 277 — ^account of the Saxon
Chronicle, il^d. 278, 279— of Asserts
Life of King Alfred, 279— of the Chro-
nicle of Florence of Worcester, 280,
281^f the chronicle usually ascribed
to Matthew of Westminster, 281, 282
— and of Simon of Durham, 282 —
character of the History of Henry of
Huntingdon, 282, 283— of William of
Malmesbury, 284— of Nennius, 284,
285— of Geoffrey of Monmouth, 285-
289— of Ingulphus, 289-292— anachro-
nisms detected in this work, 294 — ^no-
tice of several manuscripts of this his-
tory, 294-296 — observations on the in-
terpretation of these ancient authorities,
296, 297 — comparative merits of the
several Anglo-Saxon historians, 298.
Angornow, market of, xxxiii. 525.
Animal and vegetable life compared,
xxxvii. 327.
Animal magnetism, existence of, believed
in by Bacon, xxix. 469.
Animal i Parlanti, by Giambattista Casti,
design and character of, xxi. 491-493 —
specimen of Mr. Rose*s version of this
poem, 494^97.
Animals, evidence of desigpi in the struc-
ture of, xxxviii. 312.
Annals of the Parish, character of, xxv.
147— spwumens of the tale, 148-152 —
strictures on the work, 153.
Anni, notice of the ruins of, xxvi. 443.
Annual parliaments, curious argument for,
xxii. 105.
Antediluvian remains, found at Kirkdale,
description of, xxfii. 464-469 — and at
Oreston, 470-472.
Ant-hills, African, their great height,
xxxix. 161.
Antiphonal chanting, notice of, xxxviii 23.
Antiquary, character of, lauded, xxxix.360.
Antiquities, architectural, recently disco-
vered in Sicily, notice of, xxx. 398, nnte.
Ants in Brazil, devastations of, xxxi. 24.
Apocryphal New Testament, xxv. 347 —
disingenuity of infidels, 348, 349 — re-
marks on the formation of the canon of
the New Testament, 348-350 — when,
and in what manner it was settled, 351
— notice of the attacks of it by Hobbes
and Toland, 352, 353— disingenuity of
the editor of the Apocryphal New Tes-
tament exposed, 354, 355, 356 — ^the
spuriousness of the gospel of the birth
of Mary proved by internal and external
evidence, 357-360— and of the Prote-
vangelium, 361, 362 — specimens of
these forged productions, 363.
Apology, addi^ssed to the IVarellers'
Digitized by
Googk
Rbview.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
107
Club, xxxi. 487 — extracts from, 488,
■ 489— character of, 489.
Apostles were not enthusiasts or madmen,
xxxii. 6.
Appeal to England against the new In-
dian Stamp Act, xxxviii. 489, 493, 497.
Appeals, jurisdiction of the House of Lords
in, XXX. 286 — number of; determined
between the years 1737 and 1822, 286,
287 — new arrangement of the House
of Lords for facilitating the hearing and
determination of appeals, vindicated,
288, 289.
Apure. See Oroonoko.
Araba, valley of, described, xxii. 441.
Arabia, introduction of the plague in,
xxxiii. 247, 248, note.
Arabian notions of revenge as a duty,
xxii. 155.
Arabs, instance of the treachery of, xxiii.
279.
■ little faith to be placed in their
reports, xxxviii. 107-^country possessed
by them, 1 43.
Aranjuez, account of the Spanish insur-
rection at, xxix. 63.
Araucanians of South America, notice of,
XXXV. 131.
Arches, observations on the antiquity of,
xxi. 34.
Architecture, plan of Vitruvius's work on,
xxi. 28 — analysis of Mr. Wilkins's
translation of that work, with remarks,
32-40.
Ai'chitecture, importance of, in an histo-
rical point of view, xxv. 117 — the
earliest traces of English architecture
to be sought in Normandy, 117, 118 —
principal features of Norman architec-
ture, 118, 119 — sepulchral ornaments
of Scotland, sketched by Pagan Danes,
ibid. — difference between the Norman
buildings and those in other parts of
France, accounted for, 120-122 — cha-
racter of the Norman Romanesque
style, 123 — specimen of the military
architecture at Falaise, 123, 124 — other
Norman castles of Normandy, 124, 125
— early architecture of Spain, 125 —
Burgundian order of architecture, 126
— specimens of French domestic archi-
tecture at Rouen, 127 — description of
the Palais de Justice there, 128, 129—
and of the Church of St. Ouen, 130,
131— and of the cathedral there, 132,
133 — characteristics of the French
Gothic, 134, 135 — sepulchral monu-
ments of Normandy, 136 — Druidical
monuments, 137 — the pointed Gothic
or English architecture invented there,
139-142 — supposed eastern origin of the
Gothic arch considered, 144 — remarks
thereon^ 145, 146.
Architecture, on the application of the
various styles of, xxvii. 310 — character-
istic excellencies of the Grecian archi-
tecture, 311-313 — ^pecidiarities of Go-
thic architecture, 313, 314 — Grecian
architecture not capable of being natu-
ralized in England, 315 — inconsistency
of introducing heathen ornaments into
a Christian church, 318 — hints on the
architecture best adapted to churches,
318-320 — architecture and sculpture
inseparable, 324 — remark on the scheme
for restoring the Parthenon on the
Calton HiU at Edinburgh, 327-330—.
its inutility demonstrated, 331, 332 —
the conduct of the great Italian archi-
tects to be imitated, 333.
of St. Peter's Church at
Rome, remarks on, xxviii. 329, 330.
fundamental principles of
beauty in, xxxii. 43-47 — observations
on the architecture of some of Palladio^s
edifices, 48, 49 — and on those of San-
sovino, 50 — San Micheli, 50, 51 — Sca^
mozzi, 51 — Brunelleschi, 51, 52— of
Michel Angelo, 52-55— of Giulio Ro-
mano, 55, 56 — decline of architecture
of Italy, 56, 57 — remarks on the archi-
tecture of Genoa, 58 — Florence, 59 —
Naples, 59-63 — principal Italian archi-
tects now living, 57, 58 — monumental
architecture of Italy, 64, 65.
naval, improvements in, by
Sir R. Seppings, vindicated from the
charge of being of foreign invention,
xxii. 42-44, 45 — proofs of the benefits
derived from them, 45 — description of
his contrivance for lifting ships, 45-47
— improvement in constructing the
sterns of ships, 47.
Architectural improvements. See London,
Arians, used to perambulate Constantino-
ple, singing doctrinal hymns, xxxviii.38.
Arkansas, river, course of, xxix. 22, 23—
exuberant produce of native vines in
its vaUey, 23, 24.
Arminian scheme, difficulties of, 3cxvi. 90
— advice to Arminians, 101.
Armour, ancient, history of, during the
Norman reigns in England, xxx. 340,
341 — account of the rustred, scaled,
trellissed, pourpointed, and tegulated
mail, 342, 343— introduction of the
twisted chain mail, 34 3— offensive arms
in use between the eleventh and four-
teenth centuries, 343,344 — alterations in
the armour for the head, 344 — date of
armorial bearings, ibid. — notice of mixed
armour, 345 — introduction of plate ar-
mour, 346, 347— defects of the face
armour, 348 — description of the armour
of King Henry VII., 346— disadvan-
tages of plate armour, 350— changes
Digitized by
Googk
891
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUARTEULY
in armour introduced in the seventeenth
century, 351.
Arms, number of, furnished by Grreat Bri-
tain, from 1803 to 1816, xxv. 93.
Army, British, defects in, 79, 80 — ^reme-
died, 80— military colleges for, 80, 81
— improvements in it:* dress and disci-
pline, 81, 82 — ^its gallant exploits in
Spain and Portugal^ 83, 84 — ^homage
paid to it by an intelligent French tra-
veller, 85, 86 — his remarks on the
cavalry of, 90 — ^losses of, during the
late wars, 91 — ^practice school at Chat-
ham, for the instruction of sappers and
miners, 92 — exposition of prevalent
mistakes relative to the amount of the
peace establishment of, 94.
■ Indian, suggestions for improving
the regulations of, xxxv. 54 58.
■■ Roman, sketch of the origin and
composition of, and its connexion with
the political divisions of the common-
wealth, xxxii. 77-83.
Arroyo de Molinos, anecdotes of the
engagement at, xxx. 68, 69.
Art, works of, propriety of introducing
them into churches considered, xxiii.
586-592.
■ poetic and dramatic, its object, xxiii.
478.
Artisans, English, number of, in France,
xxxi. 392, 393.
Arts and Sciences, causes of the progress
of, in Greece, xxi. 25, 26^and at Rome,
27.
— of the ancient Egyptians, observa-
tions on, xxiv. 154, 155.
Ashantee, Mission to, xxii. 273 — its origin
and objects, 273, 274— entrance of the
mission into the capital, 276, 277 — its
approach to, and interview with, the
king, described, 277-282 — failure of
negociations, 283, 284 — war between
I the Ashantees and Fantees, 285 —
power of the sovereign, 286, 287 — sin-
gular laws of this country, 287 — ^state
of the women, ibid. — immolation of hu-
man victims on the sovereign's death,
288 — ^population of the capital and its
employment, 289, 290 — Ashantee mu-
sic, 291.
Ashmolean Museum, notice of, xxxiv. 166.
Asia, Account of Discoveries in, xxiv. 311
— ^notice of the travels of William de
Bouldesel in Palestine, 313 — of Ber-
trand de la Broc^uiere and Baumgar-
ten, ibidj—oi George Sandys and John
I^ck, 314— of Edward Webbe, i6W.—
of two Mahomedans, 316 — ^incursions
of the Tartars in Europe, 316, 317—
embassy of Ascelin and others to the
Tartars, 317— theb account of them,
dl7-321~travels of Rubruquis in Tar-
tary, 322-324— of Marco Polo in the
East, 325 — ^his account of the Old Man
of the Mountain, 325, 326, 327— travels
of Friar Odericus in India, 328 — terrific
valley described by him,329 — specimens
of the exaggerations of Sir John Man-
deville, 330, 331— travels of Clavijo in
the East, 333-^s admitted into the
presence of Timur, ibid. — his account of
Samarcand, 334 — Travels of Nicolo
Conti in India, 335, 336— Pegu visited
by Stefano and Correa, 336 — by Cassar
Frederick and Gasparo Balbi, 337— the
Himalaya Mountams crossed by Anto-
nio Andrada, 337, 333 — and by the
Jesuits Gnieber and Dorville, 339 — and
recently by Lieutenant Gerard, 340. ^
Asia, conduct of Cicero's brother in,
xxxviii. 4 1 , note,
Assignats, remarks on the issuing of, by
the Constituent Assembly, xxviii. 294-
313.
Assoula and Assulah, walled towns ^of
Africa, xxxix. 149.
Assurance for lives, nature of, xxxv. 3 —
its importance, 1 — number of insurance
societies uow in existence, 2 — ^remarks
on the principles upon which the difiKir-
ent tables for life assurance have been
constructed, 4, 5 — illustration of the
immense difference between making an
assurance by the existing tables, and by
the table proposed by Mr. Babbage, 5, 6
— in what manner the piofits on life
assurance are distributed by the various
societies, 6, 7 — table of thirty-two exist-
ing assurance-companies, exhibiting their
objects, amount of capital, nominal and-
actually paid up, the tables of mortality
by which they are regulated, the propor-
tion of profit given by them to the
assured, and the perio<& of division, 7
— classification of them, 7, 8 — ^table of
rates of profit charged by various offices,
at the presumed average of forty-six, 9
— ^remarks thereon, 609^onsiderations
of importance to the interest of parties
who are about to efifect insurances, 9 —
first, on the proportion of profits returned
to the assured by various societies, 9-1 1
— secondltfy of the mode of assigning the
bonus to the assured, 11-13 — additional
observations thereon, 610-613 — thirdly,
of the period at which the profits are
assigned, 13-15 — -fourthly, of tiie periods
at which assurers become entitled to
participate in a division of profits, 15 —
particularly the assurers with the Equi-
table Society, 16-27 — and with the Rock
Society, 28— notice of another malprac-
tice in the Equitable, 29 — ^remarks on
the proceedings of that society, 29, 30 —
and on the practice of assurance societies
Digitized by
Googk
Xivnw*
INDBX OF SUBJECTS.
199
paying eommisrions to agents^ loliciton,
or broken, 30, 31.
Astrology, judicial, on the decline in this
eounSy, zxtL 189, 181 — remarks on its
▼anity aud inutility, 208 — ^notice of emi-
nent astrologers, 181 — Alonso, king of
Castile, 181-184— Dr. Simon Forman,
184— William Bredon, 185 — Captain
Bubb, ibid. — Alexander Hart, ibid. —
William Poole, t*irf.— William Lilly,
186, 187— Thomas Joseph Moult, 187,
lS:i — Nostradamus, 189, 190 — connec-
tion between astrology and alchemy, 1 92.
Astronomical observations, made in Cap-
tain Parry's Voyage to the North Pole,
XXV. 204.
Astronomical Society of London, notice
of, xxxiv. 163.
Astronomy, importance of. xxxviii. 1 — a
boundless field of imagination, ibid. —
advantageous to morality, 2-^history of,
ibid. — its first period, 3 — second period,
6 — third period, 7— distance of some of
the fixed stars, 9 — observations on
uebuls, ibid. — the solar system move-
able, 10 — all double stars have not a
common centre of gravity, ibid. — peri-
odical times of some of them, 11-13 —
re{)eated observations recommended, 14
— interesting subject for inquiry, ibid.
^neglect of provision for its study by
the British government, 15. See Phtf-
tical Attronomy.
Ataruipe, the cavern of, the sepulchre of
an entire Indian tribe, notice of, xxv.
389, 390.
Atheists, why men are so, xxiii. 568.
Athenians, character of, xxii. 165-169-f—
remarks on their territory, habits, and
dress, 166, 167 — ^their love of the the-
atre, 1 69, and note — character and situ-
ation of women of reputation among
them, 172-174 — prevalence of mysogy-
nism and misanthropism at Athens, 179,
180 — respect of the Athenians for the
maternal character, 188 — their strict
laws for guarding the nuptial bed, 189
— corruption of morals at Athens under
Pericles, 190, 191 — character, manners,
and situation of the Hetserae, or female
friends, among the Athenians, 191-202.
— ^— — ancient, manners of, xxiii. 245
—different kinds of bread made and
used by them and the other Greeks,
246-248 — their pastry and confectionery,
249— account of their cooks, 249-254—
and sauces, 254-256 — different sorts of
fish eaten by them, 256, 257-259— in-
stances of their love offish, 259, 260 —
account of their fishmongers, 26 1,262 —
and of the perfumes used by them, 263,
264— especially of flowers^ 264, 265—
their wiuM, 266, 267— water drinkers
satirised, 268— general mode of living
among the citizens of Athens, 269—
their dubs and pic-nic parties, 270 — of
the repast of the common Athenians,
271-274— curious political salad, 275—
banquets of the higher classes, 276-278.
Athenians, observations on the manners
of, as pourtrayed in the Banquet of
Plutarch, xxiv. 421-424— of Plato, 429-
441— of Xenophon, 44 1-451 — ^and espe-
cially by Aristophanes, 424-428, 455-
461 — ^various disbursements, to which
the opulent Athenians were liable, 453.
— — threw the great burdens of the
state upon the more opulent individuals,
xxvi. 256 — ^forced contributions levied
upon them, 257-259 — and upon the
tributary cities, 261, 262— bribery of
public officers, 263 — ^perversion of justice
the consequence, 265, 267 — ^incorrect
statement respecting the state of society
amongst them, 256-270.
modem, character of, xxiii.
340, 341.
Athens, state of education at, xxi. 227-
286 — ^its influence upon the manners of
the Athenians, 286, 287 — and upon
their morals, 288-292.
state of, after the battle of Chas-
ronea, xxix. 321, 322— character of an
Athenian dicast, 314, 315.
number of law courts in, xxxiii.
333~de8cription of the Helisea, 335^
character of the Greek judge and jury-
men, 336, 337— evils and inconve-
niences of this judicial system, 338-
342— mode of getting up false witnesses^
344, 345 — number of slaves in Greece,
and particularly at Athens, 346 — cruel
treatment of them, 347 — defectiveness
of the Grecian corirts of law, as tribu-
nals for the distribution of justice be-
tween man and man, 348— deplorable
financial system of Athens, 349 — vena-
lity of witnesses, 350 — ^persons put to
death without the formality of a trial|
351, 352— trial sometimes allowed to the
dead, 352.
Athos, Mount, account of the monastery
of, xxiii. 345-347.
Atmospherical electricity of the Arctic
regions, remarks on, xxv. 231.
Attic glossaries, notice of, xxii. 307.
Atticistse and anti-AtticistsB^ notice of,
xxii. 306, and note,
Atures, village of San Juan Neponniceno
de los Atures, visited by Humboldt and
Bonpland, xxv. 366 — description of the
scenery around, 367,368 — causes of the
depopulation of the mission of, 369—
especially of the tertian fevers, 371.
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PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
Quarterly
Audiencias, or chief courts of justice, in
South America, Tenality of, xxxv. 326-
• 328.
Auricular confession, power it gives to the
Catholic clergy, xxxvii. 459 — tends to
. prevent small crimes and encourage
great ones, 215 — striking anecdote in
proof of this, ibid,
Aurora Borealis, appearance of^ in the
Arctic regions, zxv. 200.
-^— observations on the a|>-
pearance of, in the Polar regions, xxviii.
^ . 404 — its effect on the magnetic needle,
405.
Islands, proved to have no ejtis-
tence, xxxiv. 398, 399.
Australia, advantages of, zxzviii. 240.
Australian colonies, improved state of,
xxxii. 328, 329 — comparison between
Van Diemen*s Land and New South
Wales, 329, 330 — ^number and property
of the emancipists, or convicts, who had
become free, 332-— their importance to
the colony of New South Wales, 323—
disproportion between the male and
female part of the population, ibid. —
description of Australian farms and
farm houses, 338 — estimate of the
quantity of land remaining to be culti-
vated, 339, 340 — suggestious relative to
emigration to these colonies, 340, 341.
See New Holland New South JVales,
Fan Diemen^t Land, and Swan River
New Settlement.
Austria, present state of, xxxi. 191-193 —
anecdotes of the Emperor Francis II.,
195, 196.
title of empire assumed by, xxxviii.
176 — compensated in Italy for its losses
in Poland, 177— districts in Germany
also alloted to ii, ibid. — the first bulwark
against Russia, 178— -desirious of ex-
tendmg its acquisitions in Italy, 179.
Austrian armies, causes of the disasters
of, xxii. 393.
Authors cannot obtain an injunction in
the Court of Chancery, where their
works are of such a nature, that they
cannot maintain an action at law, xxviL
125, 126 — notice of some cases deter-
mined according to this rule, 126-132
— examination of its expediency, 133,
135 — its objectionable effect on the
liberty of the press, 135-137.
— — advantage to, of living in high
life, xxxvii. 419.
- characters of, not always deducible
from their writings, xxxviii. 443.
character of those of the present
day, xxxix. 498.
Auto-biography, observations on the mania
for, XXXV. 164.
Autos da Fe, account of two, at Valladolid,
xxix. 252,256.
Autumn near the Rhine, xxiii. 434— cha.
racter of, 436. See Germany.
Autumn in London, poetically described,
Xxiii. 507, 508.
Auvergne, account of the extinct volcanoes
of, xxxvi. 444-449 — incnisting springs
there, 450 — tubular fossils found there,
447.
Avars, irruptions of, into Europe, xxix.
118.
Avignon, horrid massacre at, xxviii. 299
— account of a sect of revolutionary
enthusiasts there, 38-41.
Avranches, cathedral of, almost destroyed,
XXV. 132.
B.
Badagrt, African town, xxxix. 145. .
Bagtchisarai, notice of, xxxv. 377.
Bahar-el-Abiad, river, remarks on, xxviii.
89, 90— visited, xxxviii. 113.
Bahia, residences and maimers of the
inhabitants of, described, xxxi. 17, 18.
Baikal, lake, observations on, xxxi. 227,
228.
Bail, improvement in the law of, xxxvii.
163.
Bakou, naphtha pits of, xxxv. 397.
Ballad, by a Cornish miner, extract from,
xxxvi. 102.
Bamborough Castle, the most useful and
munificent of all our eleemosynary in-
stitutions, xxxix. 399.
Bampton lectures of Dr* White, account
of the, xxxix. 271.
Banana, introduced into Portugal, xxxviii.
201.
Band meetings of the Methodists, evils of,
xxiv. 40, and note — ^were disapproved by
Charles Wesley, 49.
Bank Restriction Act, ill effects produced
by, xxi. 424.
• the depreciation of money, aggra-
vated by, xxvii. 249-256 — eflfects of,
xxix. 239.
of England, lenity of, in prose-
cuting capitally, for forgery, xxiv. 209 —
number of persons executed for forging
its notes, ibid., 210.
delusion respecting
the powers and functions of the direc-
tors, xxxix. 469— if the notes of, were
all withdrawn, it would probably have
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INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
201
no permanent effeti on the price of
commodities, 470.
Banks, h'ee Country Bank»,2inA Saving*'
Banks.
Banks of the sea and of rivers, cutting
down, a capital offence, xxiv. 201 —
reasons why the statute for punishing
it capitally should not be repealed, ibid.
Banquet of Plutarch, remarks on, xxiv.
421-424— of Aristophanes, 424-428—
of Plato, 429-441 -of Xenophon, 441-
450 — description of an Athenian ban-
quet, 446-448.
Banquets of the Athenians, account of,
xxiii. 276-278.
of the Greeks and Romans,
notice of, xxxii. 241-243.
Baptism of Vladimir, singular, xxvi. 40.
■ — supposed by the Indians of
Paraguay to cause death, xxvi. 318.
ceremony of baptizing two
Tchutski chieftains, xxxi. 225.
• poem on, xxxviii. 48, note.
Baptist missions in India, causes of the
failure of, xxxiii. 38-40.
Barbadues, state of the slave population
of, xxxiii. 495-497 — the landing of
Bishop Coleridge there, described, 492.
■■ flourishing state of, in the seven-
teenth century, xxxviii. 226-230, 236.
Barrow River, beautiful waterfall in, de-
scribed, XXX. 254, 255.
Basket Justices, appellation given to the
justices of the metropolitan county, in
the reign of James I., xxxvii. 502.
Bastile, £nner at Birmingham in comme-
moration of its capture, xxxix. 280.
Bath waters, effects of, xxv. 221, 222.
Baths, effect of the inordinate use of, on
the constitutions of the modern Greek
women, xxiii. 352.
Bathurst settlement, in New South Wales,
notice of, xxiv. 60.
Battas, a native race of Sumatra, canni-
balism of, xxxiv. 107-109.
Battles of Schellenberg, xxiii. 24, 25— of
Blenheim, 28— of Ramilies, 40— of
Oudenard, 53— of Malplaquet, 59, 60.
Bawza, an African town, supposed un-
healthy, xxxix. 145.
Bayonne, description of a night sortie by
the garrison of, xxx. 75-78.
Beauty, criterion of, in Africa, xxv. 27 —
description of Captain Lyon's interview
with one, 28.
siugidar notions of, in America,
xxxi. 466.
Beddoumy islands and islanders, notice of,
xxxi. 459, 460.
Bee, habits of the, xxxviii. 336.
Beer, adulterations of, xxiv. 349.
Beggars, suppression of, xxxviii. 67, 83 —
prevalence and liTes of; in Herefordshire
two centuries ago, 68— -in London in
the last century, 71 — ^profits of the
trade, ibid. — their abundance and bur-
densomeness in foreign countries, 72-^
in Scotland, 74 — in Ireland, 77 — in
Dublin, 83 — expense of maintaining,
77, 84.
Behring's Strait, probability of a passage
through, xxv. 212, 213.
' notice of Kotzebue's
Sound in, and of the inhabitants of the
adjacent land, xxvi. 349-351 — reasons
why there probably is no clear passage
through it to the Frozen Ocean, 351,
352 — description of an iceberg there,
352, 353 — ^remarks on the course of the
curreuts in this strait, 354 — manners,
character, and language of the inhabi-
tants of its shores, 356, 357.
elephants' teeth and
tusks found by Kotzebue in the iceberg
of, xxvii. 475.
Belgium, newly erected kingdom of, xxxix.
489.
Belief, no proof of a shallow mind, xxxviii.
525.
' remarkable instances of easiness
of, xxxix. 286, 287.
BeUy and the Members, fable of, versified,
xxiii. 458, 459.
Benares, description of, xxxvii. 117.
Bencoolen, importance of the settlement
of, xxviii. 1 37.
Benefices, number of, in England and
Wales, xxix. 554 — and in whose pa^
tronage, 554, 555 — average income of
each benefice, 557.
— ^-^^ poverty of some, and the small-
ness of others, a cause of the diminished
influence of the clergy, and of the in-
crease of dissenters, xxxi. 237-239.
Benefit of clergy, xxxvii. 1 70.
Benevolence, active, of the Irish clerg}',
xxxi. 522.
Bengazi, a city erected on the site of the
ancient Berenice, description of, xxvi.
224 — remains of ancient art found
there, 225, 226.
Benin, xxxix. 178.
Berber, situation of, xxii. 467 — description
of the houses there, ibid. — manners and
character of the inhabitants, ibid.^ 468
— ^their quarrels, 468 — mode of living,
469 — description of their cattle, ibid.
Berenice, ancient ruins of discovered, xxiiL
95, and xxiv. 167, 168.
Berlin Society for converting the Jews,
xxxviii. 133.
Betzpopoochini, a sect of dissenters from
the Russian Greek church, notice of^
XXXV. 366.
Beys of Egypt, treacherous murder of, xxx.
487, 488.
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PART I.— INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
QUASTBRLT
Bhats, or bards, of the Rajpoots, notice
of, xxix. 393.
Bheels, a native tribe of central India,
some account of, xxix. 394-396.
Bhyrara-Gattee, one of the Himala
mountains, notice of, xxiv. 127.
Bible, authorised translation of, tracts in
vindication of, xxiii. 207 — ^when any
translation may be said to be made from
the original, 291, 292— -notice of Eng-
lish translations of it antecedent to the
present authorised version, 295-298 —
notices of the translators, 301, 303 —
and of the instructions given to them,
305,306.
— avidity with which the Russian pea-
santry read it, xxxv. 365, 366.
— Society, reports of, xxxvi. 1 —
charged with defective statements in its
reports, 2 — with circulating the Apocry-
phal books on the continent without any
marks of discrimination, ibid. — ^with
waste and extravagance, 3, 4 — particu-
larly in the payments made to Leander
Von Ess, 4 — its new versions either
executed by incompetent translators, or
printed without having been subjected,
to proper revision, 6, 7 — remarks on
their edition of the Welsh bible, 7
— and of the Irish bible, 8 — on their
account of the Mohawk version of the
gospel of St. John, 9-1 1 — on the com-
, petency of the Calmuck translators, 1 1,
12 — on the competency of the Baptist
missionaries for their undertakings, and
on the mode in which their versions
^ were undertaken, 13-17 — on the Chi-
nese translation, by Dr. Morrison, 18,
19 — on the society's edition of the
Turkish version, 19, note — qualifica-
tions of a translator of the Bible, 19 —
and principles of translation, 21 — ^re-
marks on the rejection of the Georgian
version, executed or revised by the Arch-
bishop of Astrachan,20, 21 — institution
of the Baptist missionaries for training
translators, 22 — beneficial results which
may be expected from the foundation of
the college of Calcutta, 23 — considera-
tions on the apology offered for the
society, 24, 25— on the character of
some of their foreign agents, 26, 27 —
appeals to the presidents and vice-pre-
sidents of the society, 28.
— society, beneficial labours o^ xxxii.
17 — errors in some of its versions, ibid,,
note.
Bielgorod, singular spectacle at, xxxy.369.
Bijou, the, xxxvii. 84, 90, 91.
Bills of Mortality, in Paris, remarks on,
xxi. 392, 393.
Bilma, a town in the interior of Africa,
notice of; xxix. 511.
Birds of Demerara, description of, xxxiii.
323, 324 — particularly of the goat-
sucker, 324, 325 — the humming-bird,
326 — ^the mocking-bird, ibid.
fossil, notice of, xxxiv. 520.
pleasures derivable from,xxxix. 418.
Birkbeck*s settlement in Illinois, account
of, xxvii. 90-95, and xxix. 364, 365.
Birmingham, dinner at, in commemora^
tion of the taking of the Bastile, xxxix.
280 — second dinner prevented by the
forcible appeal of Dr. Parr, in a printed
address to the dissenters of that town,
ibid.
Births, number of legitimate and illegiti-
mate, at Paris, xxxiv. 454 — remarks
thereon, ibid., 455.
Bishops' Bible, notice of, xxiii. 297, 298.
Bishops, of the Church of England, re-
marks on the income of, xxix. 559.
— income of, in Ireland, grossly mis-
represented, xxxi. 503 — its actual
amount, 504— episcopal lands, how let,
tbtd., 506.
beneficial effects of the appoint-
ment of, in the West Indies, xxxiii.
490.
Bisons, herds of seen in the viduity of
rivers, xxix. 17.
Black Act, reasons for not repealing, xxiv.
199.
Black-Book, or Vetus Codex, xxxix. 61.
Blasphemous libels, outline of the act for
the punishment of, xxii. 552 — necessity
of it shown by a statement of previous
circumstances, 542-551 — observations
on it, 552-557.
Blatts, devastations of, in Brazil, xxxi. 14.
Blenheim, battle of, xxiii. 28.
Blood, curious magical charm for staunch-
ing, xxix. 455.
Blow-pipe, structure of, xxiii. 467 — ac-
count of its application to fusion, 468-
471 — ^analogy m its operations to the
natm-e of volcanoes, 470, 471— remarks
thereon, 473.
Boccano, influence of mal'aria at, xxx*
141.
Bogs, instances of the successful cultiva-
tion of, xxxviii. 420-423.
Boiling spring, notice of, xxix. 22.
Bokhara, commerce of the Russians with,
xxxvi. 109 — entry of the Russian em-
bassy into that city, 1 1 7— description of
it, 118 — ^population of the provmce of
Bokhara, 119, 120.
Bonon, university of, xxxix. 7-9.
Bonuses, how assigned to parties assured
in the different Life Assurance Societies,
xxxv. 11-13.
Bones, human, eagerness of English agri-
culturists, to obtain, for manure, xxi.
380, note.
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INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
203
Book of the Church, author of, erroneouily
charted with historical inaccuracy,
xxxvii. 217.
Book-making, state 'of the trade now the
schoolmaster is abroad, xxxvii. 443".
Book trade in Germany, remarks on, xxxi.
183, 184.
Buuks, regulations concerning the licens-
ing o(f xxL 196, 197. See Copyright,
list of, by travellers who never tra-
veiled, xxxvii. 448.
Booksellers* application to Parliament for
repealing the enactment requiring eleven
copies fur public libraries, xxi. 'i02-^ts
result, ibid, — proofs of its oppressive
operation, and ill effects on literature,
202-204 — particularly in the case of
Messrs. Longman and Co., 208 — and
Mr. Murray, 209.
Boosempra, beautiful scenery on the banks
ofthe, xxii. 275, 276.
Bootihuanas (at New Latakoo, in Africa),
account of the mission among them,
xxvii. 366, 367 — notice of their Peetros,
or general meetings of the captains,
367 — fraud of the rain-maker, 368— in-
fluence of the doctors, 369 — manners
and customs of the Bootshuanas, ibid,y
370.
Bordelais, wines of noticed, xxxii. 253.
Bomou, substance of information relative
to, obtained by Mr. Ritchie, xxiii. 233,
234.
climate, ^nppulation, and produc-
tions of, xxxi. 464, 465 — notice of Old
Birnie, its former tribe, 456.
population of, xxix. 522, 523 —
account of the great lake of Bornou,
511, 512, 520, 521— notice of the prin-
cipal towns, 511, 522, 523 — anecdotes of
the sheik, 513 — ^and ofthe sultan, 514.
anecdotes of the sheikh or sultan
of, xxxiii. 540, 541 — ^reception of Eng-
lish travellers by the sheikh, 523 — ar^
mour of his negroes, 523, 524 — ^his
court and army, 524, 525, 526.
Bosor in Palestine, Mr. Buckingham's ig-
norance respecting the site of, xxvi. 376.
Boston, state of society at, xxi. 141.
Botanical collections, notice of the princi-
pal, xxxivv 158.
Botany, how it ought to be studied, zxxiz.
409.
Botany Bay, attempts to civilize the na-
tives of, xxxii. 322, 323.
Bounties, remarks on the acts of parlift-
meut for granting, xxi. 410, 411.
Bourbons, policy of, since the return of
Louis XVI II., considered, xxiii. 196.
Boussa, where Mungo Park died, how
situated, xxxix. 157.
Boy of Bilson, imposture of, detected,
xxxix. 383.
Boyd, circumstances of the 'massacre of
the crew of the, xxxi. 58, 59.
Bracelets or armlets of gold discovered in
Ireland, account of, xxxvii. 487.
Brain, refutation of Gall and Spurzheim's
theory respecting, xxii. 26 — arguments
against narticles of the brain being
capable of consciousness, 27.
Brambletye House, plan of the work,
XXXV. 550, 555 — observations there-
on, 555-559.
Bramins, legendary tale of, at Kedar-Nath,
xxii. 418, 419.
Brandy, how adulterated, xxiv. 349, 350.
Brazil, progress and present state of the
Portuguese colonies in, xxxi. 9-13-^
commerce with England, 18, 19 — de-
scription of Mrs. Graham's excursion
to the camp of the provisional junta of,
14-16— of the harbour of Rio Janeiro,
19, 20— -of the surrounding scenery, 22,
23 — and of the caravans used in the
interior of Brazil, 23 — physical incon-
veniences incident to this country, 24,
25.
Brazilian empire, inoportance of, xxxii.
128 — ^population, 129 — kind treatment
of slaves by the Portuguese, 129, 130
— present state of literature and the
arts, 131 — ^productions and commerce,
132 — ^unsuccessful attempt to cultivate
the tea-plant, 132 — climate and dis-
eases, 132, 133 — nuisances and incon-
veniences, 133, 134— abundance of gold
found there, 134 — description of the
capital of the district of Minas Geraes,
135 — mode of collecting gold, 136 —
iron foundery on the river Ypanema,
ibid. — abundant produce of the district
of Santo Paulo, 137.
government, conduct of, with
regard to the slave-trade, xxxiv. 601 —
description of a Brazilian slave-trader,
ibid.
Bread, different sorts of, used by the
Athenians and other Greeks, xxiu. 246-
248.
adulteration of, xxiv. 348, 349.
Breaking the line, in Rodney's action,
purely accidental, xxvi. 27— question of
Clerk's claim to the * invention/ ibid.
Breakwater in Plymouth Sound, account
and description of, xxii. 52-54.
Brescia, siege and capture of, xxxiL 391,
392.
Brest, blockade of, xxxviL 368-373.
Bricks, amount of, chargeable with duty
since the year 1784, xxxii. 170.
Bride of Lammermoor, a novel, by the
author of Waverley, analysis of, with,
remarks, xxvi. 120-126.
Bridge, singular, over the Sutlej, described,
xxiv. 117, 118— destroying bridges a
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PART II^INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUABTBBLT
capital ofience by statute, 201 — reasons
why it should not be repealed, ibid.
Bridges, rope, xxxvii. 107, «o/tf.
Brisbaue river, discovery of, xxxii. 318,
319.
Bristol Institution, notice of, xxxiv. 169.
Britain, neutrality of, towards Spain, vin-
dicated, xxviii. 558.
Christianity when first planted
in, xxxii. 8.
British community in India, observations
on, XXXV. 58, 59.
flag, respect paid to, at Tripoli,
xxxiii. 519.
— ^ government, calumny on, by Mr.
Paulding, refuted, xxx. 539, 540.
-Museum, institution of, xxxiv. 155
— reasons why some of the collections
therein should be separated and form
detached museums, as in Frauce, 156
—number of volumes in its library,
compared with those of the Bodleian
Library at Oxford, and certain foreign
libraries, 157 — ^liberal admissions now
given to the British Museum, 158 —
improvements carrying on there, 184.
• theatre, evil influence of French
unities on, xxix. 421-423.
Britons, notice of a compact between them
and the Anglo-Saxons, xxxiv. 265.
Brock, notice of a singular sect of reli-
gionists at, xxviii. 12.
Brokers, evils of allowing commissions to,
for insurances, xxxv. 30, 31.
Bruchus pisi, devastations of, xxx. 7, 8.
Brussels, number of books printed at,
xxxix. 5 — number of English and
cheapness of living there, 6.
Brutus, a tragedy by John Howard
Payne, xxii. 402 — examination of, and
strictures on its defects, 404-407.
Buccaneers, xxxviii. 220, 234. 235.
Buenos Ayres and its dependencies, pro-
duce of, xxxii. 140, 141 — trade, 142 —
improving condition of, ibid. — ^popula-
tion, 143 — ^manners of the upper ranks,
ibid.
— ^— mode of living at, xxxv.
118 — failure of a milk and butter asso.
ciation there, 119 — fauaticism of the
inhabitants, 120 — profligacy of the
priests, 121.
Bugs of the Pampas, or Great Plain of
South America, xxxv. 130.
Buildings, increase of, in England, xxxii.
167-169.
Bumper-glasses, origin of, xxxii. 243.
Bunderpouch^ peak oi, described, zxiv.
125. I
Burgundian order of architecture, zxr.
126.
Burman empire, American Baptist mis-
sion to, xxxiii. 37 — difficulty of the
Burman language accoimted for, 39 —
and also the little success of the mis-
sion, 42, 43 — state of the Biurman
empire, 45— character of the Burmans^
45-47 — cruelty of their judicial execu-
tions, 46 — conversation of a missionary
with his Burman teacher, 48, 49 — ^popu-
lation of the Burman empire, 57 — ^fune-
ral honours paid to deceased Burmese
priests, 58 — ceremonies and establish-
ment of the White Elephant, 59— re-
marks on the expedition of the British
army against the Burman empire, 61-
63.
Burmese war, necessity of, xxxv. 481,
482 — preparations of the Burmese,
482— they attack a British post. 483—
amount of Major General Campbell's
armament, 484 — ^hostilities commenced,
ibid. — ^iutemal appearance of Rangoon,
486 — difficulties to which the British
troops were exposed, 487 — Burmese
mode of warfare, ibid. — they are de-
feated, 488 — their fortress of Kemmen-
dine captured, 490 — account of their
corps of Invulnerables, 493, 494 — who
are discomfited, 494, 495 — advance of
the British army, 496 — Burmese mode
of entrenching, 497 — they are defeated
in assaulting the British army, 498 —
and defeat a detachment of sepoys,
499 — the Burmese again defeated be-
fore Rangoon, 501, 502— failure of the
British army in an attack on Donobew,
502, 503 — ^which they afterwards carry,
504 — they advance to Prome, and de-
feat the Burmese, 505-507 — horrors of
the war, 508 — further advance of the
British forces, 509 — ^the Burmese nego-
tiate for peace, 510 — which is con-
cluded, 511.
Burning of widows in India, instances of,
xxiv. 335.
Bursts of waterspouts on land, observa-
titms on, xxx. 14 — account of an extra-
ordinary one, 15.
Bury Jail, remarks on the system pur-
sued in, xxx. 409.
Burying in churches, origin and progress
of, xxi. 378, 379 — beautiful biurial-
grounds of the Mohammedans, Mora-
vians, and Welsh, 394.
Buxton waters, properties of, xxv. 219—
efiects of the Buxton bath, 226.
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INDISX OF SUBJECtS.
m
Caa, or tea of Paraguay, properties of,
xxvi. 289, 290 — cultivated by the
Jesuits, 289 — cruel couduct of the
Spaniards towards the Indians, whom
they employed in its culture, 288.
Cabalist, anecdotes of a, xxii. 374.
Cabbala, Jewish, remarks on, xzzv. 101-
103.
Cadiz, tedious blockade o^ xxxvii. 371.
Caesarea, account of tlie ruins of, by Buck-
ingham, xxvi. 379, 380.
Caff res, character of, xxii. 230 —their
hospitality to some shipwrecked Ame-
ricans, 230, 231 — causes of their recent
irruption into the colony of the Cape
of Good Hope, 231.
Cain, Lord Byron's tragedy "of, impro-
perly called a Mystery, xxvii. 508, 509
— analysis of it, 509-514 — remarks on
its tendency, 514-524.
Cairo, population of, xxx. 504 — ^military
arsenal formed there by the pasha, 501 .
Calchaquis, a tribe of South American
Indians, cruelty of the Spaniards to,
xxvi. 290.
Calcutta, importance of the mission col-
lege at, XXV. 452, 453.
■ ' beneficial results to be expected
from the foundation of the college at,
xxxvi. 23.
Caledonia, Western, first discovery of,
xxvi. 411 — latitude and extent, ibid. —
geographical description, &c., ibid. —
manners and pursuits of the inhabitants,
conveyances, funeral rites, and amuse-
ments, 413-416 — fisheries, especially
that of salmon, ibid., 41 A — quadrupeds,
414.
Caledonian Horticultural Society, origin
of, xxiv. 416 — character of its transac-
tions, 417, 418.
Callenberg Institution for the conversion
of the Jews, xxxviii. 133.
Calmuck translation of the bible, remarks
on, xxxvi. 11, 12.
Caloyers, or Greek monks of Salympria,
account of, xxiii. 343, 344 — and of
Mount Athos, 345-347.
Calvinistic scheme, difficulties of, xxvi.
90— advice to Calvinists, 101, 102.
Calvinists, cruel treatment of, in France,
XXV. 567, 568.
Cambodia, situation of, xxx. 351 — visited
by Lieutenant White, 352— villa^ of
Cangeo described, 352-355— of Saigon,
358-362— notice of Hue, the capital,
363, 364 — ^manners and character of
the Cambodians, 363-365 — knavery of
one of the governors^, 354 — ^and of the
custom-house officers^ 366-368-* com-
parison of the Cambodians with the
Hindoos and Chinese, 368.
Cambridge Philosophical Society, notice
of, xxxiv. 169.
^-^— — University, account of the ex-
amination of students previously to their
being entered, xxxvi. 218, 219 — design
of the professorships of law, metliciue,
and theology founded there, 229 — im-
provements in various faculties intro-
duced there, 231, 234 — number of
under-gpraduates, 240 — examination of
the danger apprehended by some per^
sons from the introduction of profes-
sional lectures, 252-254— observations
on the beneficial changes already in-
troduced, 258-263.
Camp meetings, description of, xxviii. 8-
10.
Campagna di Roma, effects of the mal*-
aria on the inhabitants of, xxx. 141.
Campo Mayor, anecdotes of the engage-
ment at, xxx. 67.
Canada, advantages of, for emigration
over the United States of North Ame-
rica, xxiii. 374, 375, 376 — advice to
persons emigrating thither, 377 — ^im-
portance of gypsum as a manure there,
378, 379-r-OD8ervations on the deeded
lands gralnted by government, 381 —
settlement of Perth, 382— state of the
church in Upi)er Canada, 383, 384 —
proposed improvements in its inland na-
vigation, 355,386 — objections to emigra-
ting to this country considered, 390 —
not likely to be conquered by the
United States of America, ibid. —
means of advancin^^ the prosperity of
this colony, 391 — importance of dif-
fusing information concerning it, 391,
392, 393— illustrated by an e^itimate of
expenses, 394, 395 — what class of per-
sons best for emigrating, 396-400.
' its present flourishing state,
xxxiii. 425, 426— conquest of, by the
United States, not a very easy affair,
426, 427— improbability of the Cana-
dians throwing themselves into the
hands of the United States, 427.
evils arising from its House of
Assembly, xxxix. 342-344.
Canadas, publications on the campaigns
in the, xxvii. 405 — character of them,
406, 407 — ^geographical position of the
line of defence of the Canadas, 408—
MichiUmachiuac captured by Major-
General Brock in 1811, 409— beneficial
results of the capture of Fort Detroit,
and surrender of General Hull, ibid,
•— efiK^cts of the injudicious ormistice
Digitized by
Googk
206
PARt IL-INDBX OF SUBJECTS.
QUARTSSLT
concluded with General Dearborn by
Sir George Prevost, 409, 410 — the
Americans force a passage across
the river St. Laurence at Queenston,
and are defeated, 410, 411 — armis-
tice concluded by General Sheaffe,
and naval operations on the Canadian
lakes in 1812, ibid, — failure of the
Americans in the campaign of 1812,
412— 4he weakness and inefficiency of
Sir Greorge Prevost, 413-415 — ^his con-
duct contrasted with that of the Ame-
ricans, in preparing for the campaign
of 1813, 415— the town of York cap-
tured by the Americans, 416 — proceed-
ings of Colonel Harvey and General
Dearborn, 41^ 417^^onduet oi Sir
George Prevost, 417, 418, 419, 420,
424. .440, 444 — appointment and acti-
vity of Sir James Yeo, 418 — ^loss of
Sa€kett*s harbour, 419— defeat of the
Americans by Colonel Procter on the
Detioit frontier, 421, 422 — co-operation
of the Indians frustrated, 424, 426—
Lake Erie, 424, 425— Ci^ain Barclay,
429— retreat of General Procter, 430,
431 — conduct of Sir George Prevost to
General Procter, 432 — Sir George
orders the whole of Upper Canada to
be evacuated as low as Kingston, 433
—General Vincent, 434 — ^the Ameri-
cans driven from Fort George and from
Fort Niagara, 434, 435 — ^transactions
of 1813 on Lake Champlain, t6iV/.—
defeat of the Americans by Lieutenant-
Colonel de Saluberry, 436— the Ameri-
can Gteneral Wilkinson compelled to
retire before an inferior force, 437, 438
— ^remarks on the campaign of 1813,
438-440 — transactions of the campaign
of 1814 — Sir George Prevost enters the
American territory, 440-444— -cause of
Captain Downie's death, and of the vic-
tory of the American fleet, 445-448 —
concluding remarks on these campaigns,
449.
Canadian river, course of, xxix. 22, 23.
— ^— - voyagers, want of moral feel-
ing among, xxviii. 379.
Canal navigation, past and present state
of, in England, xzxii. 170, 171.
. " progress of, in Eng-
land, xxxiv. 86.
Canals of England compared with those
of France, xxx. 380, 381— the canal of
Mahmoudiah in Egypt cleared and
opened, 502.
n comparison of, with rail-roads,
xxxi. 360-362— estimated cost of, per
mile, 363 — their disadvantages, con-
trasted with the speed of a rail-road,
363, 364— eiorbitant demands of the
ftvQ grcAt canal prqprieton^ 372"-*iiife-
riority of France to England in point
of canals and internal navigation, 409-
411.
Canary Islands, contributed to the dis-
covery of the West Indies, xxxvii. 197.
Cannibalism, instances of, among the
American Indians, xxv. 382, 383.
non-prevalence of, among
the New Zealanders, xxxi. 58-6 J .
existence of> among tli«
Battas, xxxiv. 107-109.
Cannibals, supposed African race of|
xxxix. 174.
Cannon, when invented, xxi. 193, 194.
Canon of the New Testament, observa-
tions on, XXV. 348-351 — futile attacks
on it by Hobbes and Toland, 35^
353.
Cantal, Mount, volcanic remains in, xxxvi.
463.
Cape of Good Hope, publications con-
cerning, xxii. 203^-character of them,
206-21 1— <:auses of the public jwredilec-
tion in favour of this colony, 205—
boundaries of the Cape, 212— its gene-
ral surface and state during the sum-
mer months, and after the rains, 213,
214 — divisions of the country and pro-
ductions, 215 — Cloture of the vine, 215-
217 — peculiar taste of Cape wines ac-
counted for, 217, 218— account of the
com distria, 218-220— and of the Vee.
boors or graziers, 220 — their oppressions
of the Hottentots under the Dutch gO'
vernment, 221 — mode of living among
the Vee-boors, 222, 223, 224— interior
of one of their hovels described, 224,
225 — character of the genuine Dutch
cattle-boor, 226— former state of the
Hottentots, 226, 227 — description of
the Moravian settlement among the
Hottentots at Gnadenthal, 229— cha-
racter of the Caffi«s, and their hos-
pitable reception of some shipwrecked
Americans, 230, 231— cause of the re-
cent irruption of the Caffres into the
colony, 231— outline of the plan pro-
posed by the British government, for
sending colonists to the Cape of Good
Hope, 232 — answers to objections
against this plan, from the time of em-
barking from England, 233 — from the
climate, 234 — from the settlers being
obliged to mix with the old colonists
and to learn their language, 235 — from
the want of markets, 235, 236— from
the hostiHty of the natives, 236— from
wild beasts, 237 — account of those
usually found in the interior of the
country, 237, 238, 239— real evils in
the Cape, 240 — ^the monopoly of the
East India Company, ibtd. — and the
defneciatecl eunrency^ t6u^.--accouiit of
Digitized by
Googk
Bbyisw.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
207
the district where it is intended to
plant the British emigrants, 240-246.
Cape of Good Hope, review of Notes on,
XXV. 453, 4.54 — importance of this
colony, ibid. — vindication of the cha-
racter of the Hottentots, 454 — actual
condition of the slaves, 455 — and of
the Dutch colonists, 456, 457 — account
of the Dutch boors, 458, 459 — charac-
ter of the female sex at the Cape, 459,
460 — situation and prospects of the
English settlers, 460, 461 — necessity of
afdopting the English laws in this
colony, 462, 463 — lenity and humanity
of the Dutch laws, 464 — remarks on
the staple productions of the Cape, 464-
466.
— — ^— — ^— grant of a repre-
sentative government io, indiscreet,
xxxix. 342.
Cape St. Vincent, battle of| descril)ed,
xxxvii. 369.
Capital, difficulties of transferring from
one sort of employment to another,
xxiv. 291, 292.
— application of, to the cultivation
of land investigated, xxv. 468-477 — ^not
to be estimated in the same method as
when applied to manufactures, 468,
470.
— -^— drain of, not caused by colonies,
xxvi. 524.
Capital punishment abolished in the
States of Florence, xxiv. 234 — bene-
ficial effects of such abolition accounted
for, 235 — effects of the abolition of
capital punishment in Austria and
Kussia, ibid. — examination of the ques-
tion, how far capital punishment may
hereafter be superseded by an im-
proved system of transportation and
imprisonment, 236-263.
Captives, cruel treatment of, among the
Zealanders, xxxi. 55.
Caraccas, destruction of, by an earthquake
described, xxi. 321-323.
Caraites, xxxvii. 119, no/e— account of
them, 126 — ^hymn in their liturgy, 145.
Caribbees of Parapaua, notice of, xxi.
345,346.
Caribe, a ravenous fish of South Ame-
rica, notice of, xxi. 343.
Carnac, a Celtic monument, described,
xxv. 137, 138,
Carolina, state of society at, xxix. 342,
343 — cruel treatment of slaves and
people of colour by the Carolinians,
343, 344.
Casan, notice of the church of our Holy
Mother of, xxvi. 50.
Caspian Sea, notice of various conjec-
tures concerning, xxxv. 399, 400 — -
waters of; on the decrease^ 400; 40L
Caspian Sea, vain attempt of the Empress
Catharine to form an establishment on
the eastern coast of, xxxvi. 108.
Castlereagh river in New South Wales
discovered, xxiv. 68.
Castles, Norman, at Falaise, described,
xxv. 123, 124 — architecture of other
Norman castles, 124, 125.
Catacombs of Paris, formation of, xxi.
385 — history and present state of them,
386-390.
Catapulta of the Romans, known and
used by the Ghoorkas, xxiv. 115.
Catechism of the Church of England
abused, xxi. 170, 171.
Cathedrals, observations on the destruc-
tion of, in various ages, xxxiv. 315-318
— account of SaUsbury cathedral, 319-
349.
Catholic Association in Ireland, xxzviii.
540, 548.
— — emancipation, erroneous notion
of, entertained by the Irish peasantry,
xxxiii. 473— effects of the removal of
political disabiUties on the higher
classes of Irish Roman Catholics and
the peasantry, 472, 473.
Catholics, meagre diet of, xxxviii. 237 —
difference between promising a thing
and swearing to it, 298 — toleration ot^
648-552 — apolitical expediency of grant-
ing emancipation to, 556 — admission
and subsequent retraction of the veto
by, 559 — not to be bound by declara-
tions or oaths, 560 — instances of dis-
pensation as to oaths, 561 — casuistry of,
on this subject, 562 — are the same now
as heretofore, 566 — danger to be appre-
hended from concessions, 570, 571 —
enticing nature of the religion of, 572
—character of their priests, 573 —
Papists and Romanists compared, 576
— hierarchy, 578 — oath taken by the
bishops, of fealty and allegiance to the
pope, 580 — sentiments of the Arch-
bishop of Dublin respecting this oath,
581 — persecuting clause in it surrei^
dered, but still practised, 582, 583, 589
— Catholic absurdities abroad and at
home, 593.
Cattle, number oi^ sold at Smithfield be-
tween 1819 and 1822, xxix. 218.
singular mode of catching described,
XXX. 458, 469.
Caucasus, reflections on beholding the
mountains of, xxvi. 439, 440 — descrip-
tion of the Pass of Wlady-Caucasus,
440 — geological structure of the rocks,
441.
Cavaliers, causes of the vices of, xxix.
178.
Cavern of Gouxuou descnbed; suut* 147.
X49,
Digitized by
Googk
208
PART II^INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
QtTAftTBRL^
Cayman, capture of, described, xxxiu.321,
322.
Celts, on the popular fictions of the, xxi.
94.
Cemeteries, privileges anciently conferred
on, xxi. 372 — account of the exhuma-
tion of the graves of the kings of France
in 1793, 373 — of Turenne, t6tW.— and
of Henry IV., ibid., 374— of Louis
XIV., XV., and Francb I., 374, 375—
remarks on the preposterous custom of
exhibiting the remains of deceased
persous of eminence, 375 — account of
the churchyard of St. Innocents at
Paris, 331, 382 — indecent mode of in-
terment at the end of the eighteenth
century, 382, 383 — exhumation and re-
moval of the remains of the dead to the
quarries of Paris, 384, 385 — state of
the catacombs during the revolution,
386, 387— inscriptions in them, 388 —
curious arrSt6 issued in 1800 relative to
the cemeteries and funerals of Paris,
389, 390 — present state of the new
cemeteries were, 391 — French and
Spanish custom of commemorating the
dead, 392 — observations on the taste
displayed in the new cemeteries of
Paris, 393, 394 — on the state of ceme-
teries in London, 380, 381 — and in
Switzerland, 395 — paucity of private
cemeteries in England accounted for,
395, 396.
Centripetal and tangential forces, sepa-
rate effects of, staled, xxii. 137, 138.
Cerro de las Caroliuas, notice of the goldr
mines of, xxxv. 136.
Ceylon, notice of the Dutch missions in,
xxxii. 21.
■ notice of, xxxv. 475.
Champagne wine, notice of, xxxii. 252.
Chancellor, salary and functions of the, in
the early periods of our history, xxxix.
48,49.
Chancery, court of, jurisdiction and
power of, xxii. 255, 256.
■' delays in, unjustly charged
upon Lord Kldon, xxx. 274 — similar
complaints urged against Lord Bacon,
275— and Lord Littleton, 276— during
the commonwealth, ibid. — against Lords
Somers and Cowper, 277 — Lord Hard-
wicke, 277, 278 — real cause of delays
in Chancery, 278 — causes of the in-
crease of business in the courts of law
and in the court of Chancery, 280-283
— duties of the Lord Chancellor, ibid. —
comparison of the number of Chancery
suits determined by Lords Hardwicke
and Eldon, 284 — and of bankruptcy,
lunacy, and other petitions and cases,
285 — duties of the Lord Chancellor in |
the House of Lords on appeals, 286**
comparison of the number of contro-
( , verted appeals determined in that
House by every Lord Chancellor since
the year 1737, with those determined
by Lord Eldon, 286, 287— the Chan-
cellor's parliamentary duties there,
doubled since Lord Hardwicke's time,
288 — the real evils of the coiurt of
Chancery, 291.
Chancery, Court of. Report of Commis-
sioners of Inquiry into, notice of, xxxiv.
540, 541 — and of the remarks thereon,
ascribed to a noble lord, 541, 542 — re-
commendation of the commissioners
resi>ecting the law and practice of con-
veyancing, 542, 543.
Court of, what originally, :
48 — ^hand-writing and arrangement of
the old rolls of, 51 — jurisdiction of, de-
priving a father of the custody of his
children, 183 — instances of the first
exercise of this jurisdiction in the early
part of the last century, 188 — ^various
instances of its exercise, 189-197 — ^rea-
sonings showing the jurisdiction to be
now established, 197-199 — question of
the propriety and policy of admitting
such a jurisdiction, argued, 200 — juris-
prudence of the Romans favourable io
the principle, 202 — sentiments of Arch-
deacon Paley and of Locke, 203 — ob-
jections answered, 205-2 13--argument
from the unfitness of judges to super-
intend the education of infants, shown
to be invalid, 207-211 — ^weakness of the
plea, that the jurisdiction may be made
the instrument of private revenge, 212
— the extension of it desirable but not
practicable, 213 — benefits accruing from
it to society, 214.
Chantilly, park of, xxxvii. 312.
Chapels, private, causes of the increase
of, xxiii. 564.
Chaplains of prisons, important regula-
tions concerning the duties of, xxx.
Charges on lands, observations on, xxxiv.
571, 572.
Charms, magical, curious notice of, xxix.
455, 456.
Charters of the Anglo-Saxons, legislative
documents, xxxiv. 266 — caution requi-
site in their examination, 267-270.
Charuus, or priests of the Rajpoots, notice
of, xxix. 393.
Charybdis, present state of, xxx. 399.
Chasidim, or Jewish Pietists, notice of,
xxxv. 374 — and xxxviii. 128.
Chatham, notice of the dockyard at, xxii.
41.
practice school at, for the in-
struction of sappers and miners, xxv.
92.
Digitized by
Googk
Rb¥ZBW«
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
20d
Cbeltenliaiii wate^ «£kctt of, xzr. 221,
222.
Chepewyan Indians, character o^ zxviiL
379 — ^remarkable instance of parental
affection in one, 380.
Chiadoo, its population, *^rgi^- 148.
Child, beautiful dirge on the death of *a,
xxiv. 133, 134. .
Children, extraordinary mode of nursing
to sleep, xxiv. 109, 110.
■' number of, bom at Paris be-
tween 1815 and 1824, xxxiv. 454— re-
marks thereon, 455 — number of deaths
during the same period, 455, 456.
Chili, notice of former and recent writers
on, XXX. 441,442, 446 — ^boundaries and
physical geography, 447 — excessive
drought in particukur, parts, 448 — ^popu-
lation, 449 — desolate state of the for-
mer city of Concepcion, 451 — descrip-
tion ^ of Santiago, 451, 452 — state of
society in the upper and lower classes,
453-457 — education, 457 — mode of
catching horned cattle, 458, 459 — agri-
culture, 460 — mining, 461 — manufac-
tures, 462 — commerce, 462-465 — anec-
dotes of the revolution in Chili, 468-
471.
— — extent of the government of, xxxii.
146— description of its capital, St lago,
ibid, — popuktion, and productions, 147
—condition of the miners, 1 48-— trade,
manners, and amusements of the inha-
bitants, 148, 149.
profligacy of the priests in, xxxv.
121, 122 — character of the inhabitants,
139, 140 — ^prevalence of gambling, 141
—notice of the earthqiuike in 1822,
141, 142.
China, reception of the English embassy
at, xxi. 70— description of a Chinese
dinner, ibid,, — of the coimtry and inha-
bitants on the banks of the Pei-ho, 71
— of the Chinese horses and their ac-
coutrements, 72 — ofa joiumey to Pekin,
7 1-74 — capricious character of the Em-
peror Kia-king, 75 — pleasing character
of the Chinese peasantry, ibid. — ^the
prevalence of infanticide proved, 77-^
the Chinese not deficient . in gratitude,
7j^ 78 — remarks on the Chinese cha-
racter, 79— description of a Chinese 616-
gante, ibid. — emperor of China's letter
to the Prince I^jent, 84-86— remarks
thereon, 86— of their mode of drying,
87.
. population of, xxv. 414— advan-
tages and defects of, 415— reverence of
the Chinese for their emperor, 415, 416
abstract of the will of the Emperor
Kiarking, 416, 417— and of the pro-
clamation of his successor, 418.
^ attempt of the Empress Catherine
TOL. XL. MO. I . XXrX .
. to form permaaent citablishments in,
xxxvi. 109.
Chinese at Pulo Penane, character of,
xxxiii. 106, 107 — and at Singapore,
115.
— — translation of the Bible, observa-
tions on, zxxvL 18, 19 — number of cha^
meters in the Chinese language, 497,
498— difficulty of translating Chinese
poetry, 498 — particularly from the
number of allegories, 499— analysis of
a Chinese tale, 501-504 — and of a
Chinese epic poem, 505-510.
Chocolate, prepared with eggs and Ma-
deira, not to l>e eaten on meagpre days^
.xxxviiL237.
Christchurch, Hampshire, euekisure of
wastes of, xxxviii. 432.
Christian advocate in the University of
Cambridge, his office and duties,
xxii. 7.
-^— ^— Knowledge Society, abstract of
the reports of, xxxii. 1 — assbted the
Danish missionaries in India, 22—
amount of its receipts, 27 — gppeat l>enefits
conferred by this society, 41 — notice of
its excellent lending libraries established
for the poor, 425, note.
^— — year, xxxviii. 48, noie.
Christianity, testimony of natural theology
tO|Xxi. 41.
disbelief of, |iroved to proceed
from the wvU, ni^t from the imderstand-
itif^j xxviii, 5125* 626 — sketch of its
t:videnceHf 5^3-531 — -temiier of mind
with whit;h its eiridences ought to be
studied J 532 — iU i^dapt^iion to the pro-
^n^&s of society^ and to the actual state
of man> 5.1^, 534^
- remorkfl on tbe mode of pro-
plating in India, x^dx, 412.
obscrvatJona on the
g^mus
and spirit of, ilx.x. 535,
- circumj^tiuicefl of the firal pro-
pagation of, consiJereU, xxxii, G, 7 — its
eHkict^, 7*y— eifuris oi the Ramiah mi»^
siouiU'Les to sprtad it, 10, 11 — dissimila-
rity of tlujcifcumataiices under which its
further cjttttiision is at present attempted,
12, 13 — difficulties which impt;d« ita
introduction amonj^ thoMi nations who
wt*s stiU in daiknt^^h a ad frrtir, 13^par-
licularly in India, 14 — and in Muham*
mc dan countries, 15 — inpagiin na^tions,
IG— irs btfnefidnl efidcts on the libe-
ratted nei^rotf!! at Sierra Leoncj 33-35.
■ cansideratiuns on the propa*
gation of, in India, xxxv. 61, 62.
- Protestant form o^ older than
the Romish, xxxvii. 50.
■ societies for converting the
Jews to, xxxviii. 133, 134— corruptions
of, 305-^virtues inculcated by, 311 — ^ita
If
Digitized by
Googk
m9
FART II/**I!nm OF SUBJECTS.
Qviatrmax
•nd Modtm
times, 318.
QmatioM, \>e9»iiioX reflMtbns ob, szv«
58.
■ box, xxxvii. 84, 89, 96, 97.
Cbroiuelet of the AnglOi43«aou, flaarees
of, KMMY. 270-275-^chanu:tMi of the
pnocipal duroaidan, 276-283.
Chionoiogy of the Aii||^o-Saxoii hitto-
riaoi, fltricturee on, zxxiv. 296, 297.
Chrcmometers, Engtiih, tupexkxit? of,
axir. 77.
Church, state of, in Canada, zxiiL 383.
384.
■ <tf Kngland, tpecimea of Mr.
Bentham'a treatment of, xzi. 172-17^.
■ I I ■' " ■■ indff eothr benefited
by Methodism, zxiv. 3.
- enoneooi auMrtione
conoeming, amected, xxriii. 19— why
the Church of England has changed
lesa than the pretended inmrataUe
Church of Rome, 25— stttte of this
dmrch during the early part of the
<»ghteenth century, 518-4he most able
defenders of Christianity produced by it,
527,528. ^^ ^
• iesttmonyof CSiailes
I. in favosr of, xxix. 182.
• remarks on the e»>
tablishment, zxxi. 253, 254.
■ " ' obligations of, to tiie
Vaudois, xmii. 139, 140.
*■■' " state ofitspsahnody,
aoacyyi. 16 — Spciety for promoting
Christian Knowledge, its great organ,
17 — psalms with the rest of the li-
turgy to be < said or sung,' 25— history
of its versions of the psalms, 27*— exoel-
lenee of its liturgy, 47.
— Missionary Society, suggestions
to, acKir. 452.
recdpts of,
zcdi. 29— number of missionaries and.
other persons in its employ, 29, 30—
its plan and objects. 30, 31— their early
proceedmgs, 31, 32— beneficial residts
in Africa, 33— at Sierra Leone, 33, 35,
38— in New Zealand, 38— in India^ 39.
■ of Scotland, employed in Xlevising
its psalmody, xxxviii. 17.
Churches, burying in, when ixl|btodnced,
xxi. 378, 379 — preference, in some
places, for lying under cover of the
diurch, 379, 380.
— sketdi of the history of, xxiii.
549. '
■ want of, in Nortii America, 550,
551 — want of tiiem in London in the
reign of William and Mary, 563— of
Queen Anne, 553 — deficiency of them
fit present, in Sngland, 553, 554— evil
comeqiiwaces of && want, 554-559^
ittfliNnoe of ttM dnodi OB the peasantry ,
558 — ^motives that anciently promoted
tlM erection of churches, 559, 560 —
liberality of James I. in erectui^
churches in Scotland and Ireland, 561
— ou^e of the act of parliament for
bnildii^ new lurches, 665, 566— Dr.
Franklm's opinion on building churches,
566 -^ speculative impiety circulated
through the press, a reason for the
erection of th«n, 567— St Paul's, the
first diurefa ereeted in Britain, 682—
beauty of the English churches, 583 —
the retaimng of pews in them, dkended,
584, 585— the propriety of decorating
them with works of art considered, 586-
592.
dmndies, the paittamentaiy g^nt fi>r
building new ones vindieat^ xzvii.
310, 311 -« hints on &e architecture
most suitable for diorches, 318-320.^
beautiftd diurdi ereeted at Theale, by
Mrs. Sheppard, 322, 823.
notice of the report oi the com-
imsBioners for bii^ldittg, xzxi. 229.
■ in Italy, remarks on the ardii-
tecture of the dmrdi of II Redentore,
at Venice, zxxii. 49 — ^the cathedral of
Flox«nce, 51— St. Peter's, at Rome, 52-
54— St. John Lateran, 55 — the catiie-
dral ttt Mantua, 55, 56— of San Si-
meone Minore, and San Niccolo da
Tolentini at Venice, 57— the church of
the Superga, at Turin, 58, 59— of the
Bapienza and other churches at Naples,
61, 62— on the altars of the It^ian
churches, 63, 64.
Russian, architecture of, of
Greek origin, xxvi. 38 — notices of the
cathedral churches of Kxeff, 41— of St
Soplda of Novogrod, t5trf.— -of St.
Midiael, at Moscow, 44-47-^of the
churdi of St. Basil, 48 — introduction of
transepts into the dmrches of Russia,
49— cnnrdies of St. Isaac of Dalmatia,
and of our Holv Mother of Casan, 50.
Clnlrch3rard8 of fiie metropolis, remarks
on, xxi. 380, and zziii. 559 — ^neglect in
the reign of Charles II. in providing a
general repository for London, xxi 381
— ^notice of the churchyards in Switzer-
land, 395— beautiful poem written in a
churchyard, 397.
■ ' simple expedient for preveut-
ing the robbery of graves in, Sooii. 559,
note.
Cigars, manufacture of, in the idand of
Majmla, described, xxi. 88.
Cincinnati, and its neighbourhood, de-
scribed, xxix. 3, 4.
Cintra, beautiftil scenery of, xxxl. 884,
385 — ^remaiiLs on Mc Bafllie's ftocoiint
of, 8W, 386r
Digitized by
Googk
Hbyisw*
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
211
Circassians, hospitality of the, xxvi. 442.
Cistern^, notice of the ruins of, xxvi. 212.
Civilization, progress of, in Otahext6, xxxi.
62.
— — — origin and progress of, xzxiv.
57 — in England it preceded France by
more than a century and a half, 47-57,
58.
Chunendon-press, important services ren-
dered by, to literature, xxix. 165, 166.
Claret wine, notice of, zxxii. 254.
Clarry, a sort of spiced wine, notice of,
xxxii.246.
Classical literature, fragnients and remi-
niscences of, part of uie material of the
Italian romance poetry, xxi. 512-514.
Clay idols of the Hmdoos, Bishop Heb^s
account of them, xxxvii. 105,
Clergy of England, duties of, before fhe
Reformation, xxiii. 553 — ^their influence
after that event, 554 — ^why they cannot
have the same influence now in large
paridies, 564 — ^real causes of their di-
minished influence, 580 — ^increased fa-
cilities given to produce qualified minis-
ters, 581.
— ^ of the Church of England, errors
and misrepresentations concerning the
revenues of, exposed, xxix. 524, 525 —
cause of the antipathy of Separatists
against them, 526 — proof that neither
the land-owner, the dissenter, nor the
member of the Church of England, pays
anything, in the sense intended by
those who use it, towards the expense
of supporting that church, 528-532 — ^the
real origin of tithes, collected from re-
cords, 527, 628, 533-537 — ^vindication
of the au^orities on which this proof
rests, 538, 539 — ^the assertion that tithes
originated in a parliamentary grant con-
sidered, 540, 541— the right of the
clergy to them established, 541-543 —
unfounded assertions respecting the
btirden of an ecclesiastical establish-
ment, 543, 544 — ^the right of the clergy
to a full tenth of the gross produce, esui-
blished, 544-546 — ^pecimiary sacrifices
made by the clergy, 547 — ^in their own
education, 557 — ^their services in the
education of youth, 552, 553 — amount
of the revenues of the clergy of the
Churchof England, 555, 556 — incomes
of the bishops, 559 — average income of
each benefice, 557 — comparison of the
incomes of the English clergy with.those
of the Scottish clergy, 558, 559.
» diminished influence of, from the
great increase of local population, xxxi.
232 — ^the spirit of pecuniary speculation,
233 — vindication of the Insh clergy
from the charge of non-residence, 509-
513— >thcf accounts of tixelr income
exaggerated, 507-509— estimate and
vindication of their diaracter, qualifica-
tions, and services, 514-520, 523. See
Ireland and Ditteniert,
Clergy, Romish, profligacy and rapacity
of, m South America, xxxv. 329-331,
342 — their numbers, how kept up, 382
— their careless mode of performing
divine service to the Indians, 343.
Swedish, exemplary character of,
XXX. 127.
• of modem Greece, wxetdied state
of, xxiii. 342.
Clerks, use of, in the early period of our
history, xxxix. 46.
Climate, effects of, on the animal economyi
XXX. 12, 13— change of, requisite to
account for the existence of fossil bones
in certain coimtries, xxvii. 473, 474.
M of the Cape of Good Hope, z^.
214.
of New South Wales, xxiv. 60.
of New Zealand, xxxi. 63— of
France, superior to that of England|
413.
of St. Helena, salubrity of, rrriii.
177, note.
of Sumatra^
104.
Clocks, application of the pendidnm to,
xxxviii. 6.
Close borough representation, Mr. Can*
iiing*s opinion of the advantages of itg
abolition, xxii. 527.
Clouds, the, of Aristophanes, object of,
xxi. 301, 302— its failure, 303— obser-
vations on it, 304, 305 — translation of
his Parabasis for a second play on the
same subject, 306-309— design of Aris-
tophanes in vniting his ' Clouds,' 311-
316,
dubs of the Athenians, notice of, xxiii.
270.
Coach making, progressive increase of,
xxxii. 188.
Coal formation of Pittsburgh and its
neighbourhood, remarks on, xxix. 2, 3.
district of England, geological ob-
servations on, xxxiv. 533-535.
ashes mixed with earth as a manure
for trees, xxxvii. 330.
tar, not the cause of dry-rot, xxz.
222 — nor injurious to the miman coih
stitution, ibid.
Code, penal, of France, instance of its
rigour, XXX. 417 and note.
Coins, notice of ancient, found at Cyrene^
xxvi. 220, 222.
Colchos, productions of, xxxv. 388.
Cold, instance of the eztraordinaxy eflfects
of, XXV. 189-193.
-p— intensity of, in Persia, xxvi. 448.
College of Surgeons, account of thQ
museom Of; smT* 1^0, 161.
p2
Digitized by
Googk
212
PART II.-'INDSX OF SUBJECTS.
QUARTSIU.T
College living*, the giving of, to college
tutorsi vindicattid, xidx. 553, 554.
Colonies, in a more inunoral state than
their mother countries, xxiii. 552.
I reports of the House of Com-
mons on, xxvi. 5*22— colonies not a
source of depopulation, 523 — occasion
no drain of capital, 524 — nor a burden
to the mother country, 525 -benetits
resulting from colouiol possessions, 526,
527 — discussion of the question, how
far free trade should be extended to
every colonial de))endence, 527-530 —
■ benefits of the restrictive system, 53U-
532 — ^progress and value of the pro-
ducts of the French colonies, 531, 532
— ^reasons why the British East India
possessions are not subjected to the co-
lonial regulations of commerce, 532— >
efiKscts of opening the East India trade,
533, 534— -amount of tonnage cleared
outwards to our principal colonies in
1820-21, 534— official value of exports
to the colonies, 535— consequences of
removing all restrictions on our colonial
settlements, ibid, — difficulty of regula-
ting the intercourse between the British
West Indies and the United States of
America, 5«^7 — concluding renuirks,
539.
— — *— observations on the liberal po-
licy of ancient Rome towards, xxx. 386-
390.
of the English, progress of, from
their first formation to their independent
condition, xxxi. 1-4 state of the Spa*
nish colonies from their formation to
the present time, 4-9 — of the Portu-
guese colonies in Brazil, 9-13.
■ ■ reveries of some modem political
economists concerning, xxxiii. 410, 411
— ^importance of the West Indian colo-
nies, 413-416>-and particularly of the
North American colonies, 417424.
• difference between planters and
settlers, xxxviii. 229-240 — pride of
colour a curse of| 231 — new colonies
now rising, 240.
Coma vigil, its nature, xxiii. 427 — its
effiicts on Smollett, ibid,
Comanians, irruption of, into Europe, xxix.
119, 120.
Combinations of journeymen, notice of,
xxxi. 391 — especially of the tailors^
t6tW.— -effects of the combination laws,
392.
Comedy, French, considerations on, xxix.
415 — ^their light comedy, what, ibid. —
of Moliire, 415, 416— his < Bourgeois
Gentilhomme,' 418—* Tartuflfe,* 419—
sterling dramatic wit the chief excel-
lence of Moliere, 420 — character of
licsage*! Turcareti 420, 421— evil in-
fluence of French writers on the British
theatre, 421-423— and of French syin-
metrieson the Spanish stage, 424-426 —
effects of French example on the Ger-
man theatre, 427, 428 — immorality and
filthiness of the French comedy, jtai-
ticttlarly in Moliere and in Reguard,
430, 431— excellence of the French
petites comeditfs, 433-436 — homage
paid to Shakspeare by a French critic,
437. See French iMnguage,
Comedy, strictures on thee-irly comedy of
modem Europe, xxiii. 474, 475 — princi-
ples of the Aristophanic comedy, 475, 476
— incidents of the Thesmophoriazouss,
476, 477 — origin of the Acharnians,
477_-«ad of the Knights, 477, 478—
plot of the Acharnians, 485 — transla-
tion of a scene omitted in Mr. Mitchell's
version, 486-489. See Ari*tophant$^
Part I., and aoudt.
Greek, different kinds of.
274 — state of the new comedy at the
time of Aristophanes, 275. See Arit'
iophanei,
Comharsein, notice of the state and vil-
lage of, xxiv. 115.
Commerce of modern Greece, notice of,
xxii. 335— causes of the stagnation of
commerce in Germany, 450.
operation of the earlier naviga-
tion laws on, xxviii. 431 — of the navi-
gation act of King Charles II., ibid. —
and of the recently passed laws, 4^2 —
particularly as they respect the exten-
sion of licen<:e given to British and
foreign ships respectively, 433, 434 —
the probable influence of these laws on
the commerce of the British colonies,
438-441— estimate of the actual benefit
obtained by altering the navigation laws,
of Chili, state of, xxx. 462-
465.
between Brazil and Great Bri-
tain, xxxi. 18, 19.
^ of England, sketch of the pro-
gpressive increase of, and its superiority
over that of France, xxxiv. 81-85.
— See Freedom of Commerce
and Trade,
Commination, poem on, xxxviii. 49, note.
Commissary Court in Scotland, origin of,
XXV. 232 — its jurisdiction in matters of
divorce, 233-236— remarks thereon, 243,
244.
Commissioners of Woods and Forests, hints
to, xxxviii. 441.
Commissions, evil of assurance societies,
allowing^ to agents, solicitors, and
brokers, xxxv. 30, 31.
Committees of Lords and Commons^ their
powers and value, xxiv. 217.
Digitized by
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'^Hbtibw.
INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
213
Common law of England, origin and de-
fects of, xxvii. 12.
— — Pleas, court of, nnmber of causes
despatched by, xxxviii. 253— its synkem
requires emendation, 254.
Comparative view of the social life of
England and Prance, xxxix. 475.
Complexion, remarks on the changes and
variety of, xxx. 10-14.
Comuneros, a secret society in Spain, a^
count of, xxxiv. 500-502.
Comus of Milton, remarks on, xxxvi. 45.
Conception, city, desolate state of, zzx.
441.
Confectionary of the Athenians, xxiii.
249.
Connecticut, society at, for the purpose of
obviating the increase of infidelity, zxiii.
551.
Conspiracy for assassinating his Majesty's
ministers, observations on.xxii. 557-560.
Constantinople, more difficult of attack
than has generally been thought, xzxvii.
386.
Constituent Assembly of France, account
of the component parts of, xxviii. 309,
310 — ^remarks on its proceedings, 311-
314. See France,
Constitution of the United States of
America, sketch of, zxi. 2, 3.
of England, account of, xxii.
263, 264.
■ of Spain, examination of,
xxviii. 546 — ^its defects, 555.
Constitutional history of England, xxxvii.
194.
Consumption, powers of ministering to,
efiected by unlimited freedom of com-
merce, xxiv. 292-294.
Contagion defined, xxvii. 527— distinction
between contagion and pestilence, 527-
531 — examination of the opinions of
Dr. Maclean, Sir A. B. Faulkner, and
Dr. Hancock, on the subject of conta-
gion, &c., 533-538 — conclusions to be
drawn respecting the nature and e£R^ts
of contagion, 552, 553. See Phgue,
— — by what signs to be distin-
guished, xxxiii. 219-221— -examination
whether these signs are discoverable in
the plague, 222-238.
Contract, Law of, considered, in reference
to marriage and divorce, xxv. 254-256
—objections to that law, 257.
Contributions, forced, levied by the Athe-
nians, xxvi. 257-2.59.
Controversy, advice concerning, xxviii.
150.
CoBver. ation, nature of, at a Greek table,
xxiv. 431,432.
Conversion of John Wesley, account of,
xxiv. 20, 21 — observations thereon, and
. on th^ true nature of coavtanon, 22, 23
— convnlsive agitations no part of, 35,
36.
Convicts transported to New South Wales,
character and habits of, xxiv. 57, 58"-
observations on their confessions pre-
viously to suffering death, 21 2 ^ex-
pense of transporting them, 247, 248—
number of persons convicted and exe-
cuted from 1700 to 1817, 260, 261—
remarks thereon, 262, 263.
expense of maintaining, in New
South Wales, and in the penitentiaries,
contrasted, xxxii. 335, 336 — gpreat re-
form effected among them, 334, 335—-
important advantap^es resulting from the
sending of convicts to New South
Wales, 336, 337— suggestions as to
the mode of distributing and employing
the convicts, 337, 338.
Convocation, evil of suffering it to fall
into disuse, xxviii. 518.
Convulsiounaires, notice of, xxviii. 30.
Cooks, Greek, account of, xxiii. 249-253
— ^notice of the fratemihr of, at Athens;,
253, 254.
Comassie, the capital of the Ashantee
country, notice of, xxii. 289, 290.
population and employment of
the inhabitants of, xxii. 289 — account
of that place, 290.
Coonia, capital of Goober, curious assault
on, xxxix. 163.
Co-ordinates, xxxix. 441 — ^axes of, iWcf.—
differentials of, ibid.
Coot, eaten by the Catholics on fast days,
xxxviii. 23/.
Copper mines and trade, present state of,
in England, xxxii. 176, 177.
■ Mountains, described, xxviii. 389,
390 — ^remarks on their get)logy and mi-
neralogy, 403— climate of this region,
405.
Copse-wood, on the cultivation of, xxxvi.
589-592^ mode of thinning copies, 593-
595.
Coptic language, never existed according
to Hardouin, xxxiv. 254.
Copts, con<lition of, in Egypt, xxx. 506.
Copyholds, observations on th6 law o^
xxxiv. 557, 558.
notice of, xitxviii. 272.
Copyright Act, inquiry into, xxi. 196 — ,
account of the licensing of books pre-
vious to the reign of Queen Anne, 196,
197 — abstract of the Copyright Act
passed in the eighth year of her reign,
197, 198 — its operation for a century,
198, 199— conduct of Mr. Montagu
in enforcing the claims of the Univer-
sity of Cambridge, 200 — reasoning of
Professor Christian, 200, 201— result
of the booksellers* application to par-
~ liam^t for a repeal of tiie enactment
Digitized by
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214
PART U^INDBX OF eUBJBOTS.
QvjjaxsLVz
requiring eleven copies for public libra-
ries, 202 — its oppressive nature, and
injury to literature, 202.204— Mr. Cbhs-
tian's tirade upon the rights and privi-
leges of universities, and statements re-
specting the booksellers, 205 — ^rapacity
of the universities, 206, 207 — oppres-
sive manner in which certain public
libraries have enforced their claim, 208
•—particularly in the case of Messrs.
liOUgman and Company, ibid, — and
iMr. Murray, 209— .modifications of the
existing Ciopyrieht Act, proposed by
the Committee of the House of Com-
mons, 210 — opinion of Lord Mansfield
on the law of copyright, 21 1^ noie — and
of Lord Camden^ 211 — strictures
thereon, 212.
Coral reefs of the East Indian Archipe-
lago, tiieir vast extent, xxxiv. 519, 520.
■ rocks, account of the formation of,
satvi. 358-360.
Coralline basis of rocks, errors respecting,
corrected, xxxix. 41 1.
Cordicoles, or worshippers of the heart of
JesuS) account O!^ xxviii. 25.27.
Cordillera, passes of, xxxii. 145, 146.
■ ■ mode of travelling over.zzxv.
136,137.
Cordoba, the capital of Tucuman, notice
ofy lovi 282— ^extraordinary physical
occurrence there, 283.
Cordova, present state o^ xxxii. 151.
Corn-district of the Cape ot Good Hope,
described, xxii. 218-220.
Corn, foreign, the expediency of imposinc^
a duty on, to protect the British agri-
culturist, xxv. 491-501.
— bullion prices of, in the 14th and
15th centuries, xxix. 219, 220— and in
the 16th and 17th centuries, 221—
causes of its hi^h price between 1793
and 1814,222 — ^mfluence of war thereon,
. 223, 224.
— increased production of, in England,
xxxii. 165, 166.
— mischiefs of gleaning, xxxvil 68.
— *— laws, substance of, stated, xxv. 478
— ^their operation, considered, 486-491
— necessity for abolishing them, 491.
"— observations on the alteration
of, XXXV. 269— -free importation, sub-
ject to adequate protecting duties in-
stead of absolute prohibition, the lead-
ing principie of the late parUamentaiy
changes in our commercial policy, ibid,
•—examination of the objections to this
ekangp of policy, 270— -particularly as
it respects the agricultoral interest, 270-
272— efikt of rigid adherence to the
pvesent system^ com-lows «iUi«ut
pettiflting modifications on the |^of
considerationi on the c£bct of a dini-
nished price of com arising from foreign
importation in immedi^ly relieving
the distressed manufacturers, 278-281 —
suggestions for relieving the existing
distress, 281-283.
Com, argument against the free trade in,
from its occasioning a great increase of
population, xxxvii. 426 — from the dan-
ger of supplies being cut oS, 427 — ^firom
other nations, sooner or later, consum-
ing their own com at home, 428 — ^in-
stances of injuries arising to countries
from their free trading in, 428, 429 —
mi staken notion, tl^t cheap bread
would result from the repeal of the corn-
laws, corrected, 429,430 — ^fluctuations
in the price of com not remedied bj a
free trade, 431 — exclusion of foreign
produce eligible, till that of home
growth has reached a high price, 433—
diminution of the growth of com in any
country a diminution of its wealth and
prosperity, 434— clashing interests of
the agricultorists and manufacturers as
to a free trade in com, considered, 435
—England less exposed to fluctuation
in the ^wth of com than any other
country in the world, 442 — ^by the free
admission of foreign com English
growth would be £nuni8hed, 443 — a
system for settling the future admission
of foieign com on a firm and pemuu
nent basis, indispensable, 446— sugges-
tion of what that system ought to ml
447.
Oomiah miners, manners and habits o^
xxxvi. 88-90<— -accomnt of those who
were sent to work the Mexican mines,
94r96, 100-103--extEact from a ballad
by one of the miners, 102.
Cornwall, account of the nnning district
of, xxxvi. 81 — ^mode of working the
mines there, 82-87 — and of dressing the
ores, 87, 88.
Corsica, miseraUe state of, xxxvii. 368.
Cortes, Spamsh, ii^udidons^ conduct of,
xxviu» 554r-their decree for punishing
slave traders, 162.
Cossignit^re, deplorable state of the Chris-
tian settlements on the, xxv. 382.
Cotton manufactures of JFrance, account
of, xxxi. 394-396_iinperfect sUte of
the madiinery nsed in, 397, 398 —
average vaKie of cotton imported iut*
France before and since the revoluiion,
399.
■ manufacture and trade in Bnfi^
kutd, post and presetBi state of, zzzii»
172, 173.
■" I ■ " beneficial^ inizo*
ducedinio Ireknd, zxxiiL 463, 464.
" .iiiwa faP9iii^i ta Swope^ aar*
Digitized by
Googk
Uwnmm^
INBSX OF 8UBISGm
21fr
69—tteooii»t of tha eoittta aawiiac-
. of steaao^nguM machinery to i^ 92«
GeuUicaiiaraj an enonnous soakO) cap-
tune o^ described, xzxiiu ai9» 320,
CouocU of Trant, romarlis oa the^ sszrii.
68.
CwKoixj banks, xniseiies caused by the
£ailures of, xxxi 135— numbtt of com-
miasions of bankruptcy against ihtm
from 1791 to 1818, t6t£U-^»aacity of
mtch fiftiluita in tib« Scotch bwoks,
135.
— -^ gentlemen, benefits to be derived
fiom their rending on their estates,
zzxni.303.
Ckmit of Beasts, a poem by WilUam Stew-
art R08e» zxi. 48&-^eaign of it, 491-
49 3 ■p sdmeni, 493497-HreDiatk8 on
ka eseeotion, 497, 498.
■ - influence c^ the m(Mrals aSf on the
morals of the eemmunity, Kxii. 430-
482..-.piirity of the British court during
tha re^ of George IlL, 432.
Courts, obeerrations on the German
cofuxti, xziii. 443 ea pecially Waanar
and Stuttgardt, t^M^.
*— ^— of justice in Greecftr mrvey of the
evys and defiBcts i^ xxnii. 333^35*
CkmrtsUp^ how conducted among the
North American Indians, sad. 96> 97.
Ooutaneea, tatfaedial of, when built, zzv.
141— -description of the bniWing and
its aicfaitecture, 141, 142.
Covent Garden Theatre, Aare o^ pui^
chased by Mr. Kemble, xxzif* 231 —
destroyed by fire, 235-'«-Mobaervatiott8 on
tbe inocosed extent upon which it was
td^nilt, 235-237-*-0*P.xiotatiieio, 238,
239-^ix. Kemble'a setiMnieiit ficom^it,
240.
Oowviree of Seutti Aneiieay desnibed^
xxi.330.
Cowri»tiee of New Zealand^ notictf o^
xxxi. 64.
Crambo, game of, introduced into a gram-
mar-school, xxxix. 122.
Cranmere Lake, description of, zxzv. 167,
168.
Cnditors^ ivbaemtioua on tiia rigfala 6(
xxxiy. 573.
Crsa Iadi8tt% ehsraeter o^ 3aviii«377»
Creoles, bitter hatred U, towards the
Spsuuacds, XZ3CT. 384^36— its cansis,
337.
Crim Tartars, their number and diffHtent
dassea, and sfataof the Ifmas or Tas-
tar noblesse, xxix. 127 — MuUaa or
priests, 128-^peasBBts> tbtd^'^'maaa^mtf
of nMumen with those of tilie patriai*
dml agesi IS^-^liaBea in the Tartar
dMTOctat conpaied wiOi that of their
amussmenta of the woxtn^ 131— ullbe^
tion of the Crim Tartars £»r their
horses, 132 — description of a Tartar
horse-race, 134— their sheephusbandry,
ibidi — indol^at mode of digjj^ng, 135^—*
agriculture^ »&m<^— superstitioua, 136«-«
cruel punishment of the knout inflicted
on some Tartar felons, 137.
Crimea, geography and productions of
the northern or level part of, xxix. 122,
123 — and of the mountainoua regiona
of, 124, 125— beautiftd Yalhea o^ 126.
Crimes, most effectual meana of repress*
ing, xxiv. 257— want of empk>yment
a source of, 257, 25a
— supposed paucity of, in America,
accounted for, — ""
and punishments^ increaae of the
one and decrease of the other, xxzfii.
1 48— early imprisonments considered as
a cause of the increase of crime, 49(K^
proposed remedy for the eril, Und,^
increase of crime in youth the svqppoaed
sesult of the paupenam of the patents,
and consequent neglect of their %&•
springs 492— power, ty the Napoleon
code, giyen to a fiither of imprisoning
hisdiUd, deemed a salutary law for
. the prevenrion of crime^ 493 — inc re as e
.of crhne aaeribable to d^ect in the
lawa or thsir admiaistratm% 494— ne>
cessity, for the sl^pcession of crime^
of a well-oonstituted police, 495.
Criminal Laws, fiepoart of the Select Com-
nnttee of the House of C<nanio|is con-
cerning, zxir. 195«*-kiiportaaoe of the
inquiry, 195, 196— obserYa^na on the
letnms of tha c^nmitments, oontic
tions, and asecutiana made to the
Conradttee, 197'*-£st of statutes pro.
posed to be ispealed by them. 198-—
vsmarka thoreoB, 199*20d*«--and on the
akeratio& prop(Med fbr the punishment
of larceny, 206, 207— and of forgery,
207-215 — ohaMOtsr c^jthe evidence
laid before the Committee, and remarks
on the assertion, that the public feeling
is adverse to the present criminal laws,
215-231— some proceedings in the
House of Commons in conseqwBce olT
the Committee's Report, 231, 232— &
donsdtdatiait of this ctiwrfnal lawa sugt-
geated fiw thor impn^ement, 363—
such a consolidation oontemplated in
fbtmor times, 264'-4nM» of eminenee
who have been Crvourable to their im«
provemoKt, 26fr4247-*-ift irkat manner
a consolidation of the criminal laws tan
best be e£feoted^ 268^0.
Ciitidsm, Pop^s, on MiUos, z:riii. 432^
on Shakspeare, 433.
and JohnsdB m Hut M^
ject Qf, compared; sxtlati 26§«
Digitized by
Googk
216
PART n.-*tNl>BX OF SUBUCCnS.
QcAxnxLt
Criiicinn, Hiftorical, aculeiieM of, may
lead to abuse, zzxhr. 254.
Crocodiles of South America, ravaget of,
described, zxi. 339, 340, 342.
Crusades had little effect on the character
and properties of socieh^, zxxix. 476.
Cuckoo, singular proceeding o^ in drop-
ping its eggs into the nests of other
birds, zxxix. 427.
Culprit, doubtful etymology of the word,
xxxTiL 1 70 — ^no longer existing in ar-
raignments, ibid,
CupoU, bulbous, remarks on the origin
o^ xxvi. 42, 43.
Curare, notice of the vegetable poison so
called, xxY. 385.
Currency, on the present state of, in the
country, xxvii. 239-^ enumeration of
the principal causes by which money is
liable to be depredated, 241-249— 4hc»e
causes aggravated by the Bank restric-
tion, 249<25&— remedies for these evils,
257— -the expediency of lowering the
standard considered, 258 — ^its impolicy
and injustice, 259-264 — various eiqie-
dients for lowering the value of cur-
rency suggested, 264, 265— hints for a
modified propertv-tax, 265, 266.
• a new scheme for reg^ating it,
. 141 — ^remarks thereon, 142*145.
■ paper and metallic, pamphlets
on the subject of, xzxix. 541— argu-
ment of those who advocate a paper
currency not convertible into cash, from
the prosperity of the country during the
late suspension of cash payments, exa-
mined, 452 — effect of a depreciated
currency, from ' its slowness, not com-
prehended by the superficial observer,
454 — ^frcm the diminished value of the
pound note, the return to a metallic
standard indispensable, 455— the occu-
pYing farmers the ppreatest sufferers by
this return, 456 — ^instance of a gentle-
maa deducting a fourth portion of his
lent from a flense of justice in this case,
457— contrary conduct in a noble eco-
nomist, 458---a stBl more striking in-
stance of hard conduct in a lan&>rd,
459 — persons whose fortunes are bene-
fited ^ the measure, 462 — alarm of
the Scotch banker from the effects of
the final suppression of the one-pound
note, 462 — prophecy of Mr. W. Cob-
bett on the subject proved already to
be false, 463 — the extinction of the
small paper money as beneficial to
bankers as to other classes, iind. — mis-
takes of Mr. Ricardo and the bullion«
ists respecting the effect on the value
of commodities by the return to the
metallic standard, 464 — ^mistake of Sir
' James Graham as to issues of the bank
and paper circulation reg^ulating the
price of wheat, 467 — table of the issues
of bank-notes and the prices of wheat
from 1810 to 1819, 468 — mistake
as to what constitutes the circulating
medium of the country, 470 — the real
inconvenience of a one-pound note
circulation is its toidencyto increase
the fluctuations consequent upon pa^
nics, 472 — ^an adequate supply of the
precious metals indispensable to per-
form the functioni of a circulating m^
dium, 474.
Currency, depreciated at the Cape of GkM>d
Hope, xxii. 240.
Curtis, Port, present state of, xxxii. 317.
Customs, mismanagement of, in South
America, xxxv. 328. .
Cynips, river, visit to,, xxvi. 213.
Cyrenaica, Journey across the African
Desert to the, described, xxvi. 214-219
— fertility of this reg^ion, 220 — ^moun-
taius of, 223.
Cyrene, present state o^ xxvi. 221— anns
of, 220,222.
Cyril Thornton, a novel, remarks on,
xxxvii. 521.
D.
Daohkstak, producttons of, xxxv. 397,
398. '
Bag^os, a large African town, -grri-r, 145,
Dalmatia, nouce of the church of St.
Isaac of, xxvi. 50.
Damage, small, why frequently given in
. actions for libel, xxxv. 598-600.
Bamer, schoob and inhabitants of, de-
scribed, xxii. 470.
Banco, African, xxxix. 148.
Bances of the modem Greeks, described,
xxiii. 350, 351.
Bandy, conversation of aj poetically da-
scribed«xziii.507.
Banish missions in India, notice of^ xxxiL
21, 22.
Bapitcho, singular veg^etable substance so
called, XXV. 379.
Dardanelles, the, importance attached to
the blockading of, exaggerated, xxxviL
386.
Bariel, pass oi, described, xxxv. 390,
391.
Dartmoor, a descriptive Poem, by N.J.
• Carrington, reviewed, xxxv. 165 — topo-
graphicalview of Dartmoor, 166— rivers,
167, 168— Cranmere Lake. 167— moun-
taias or toi%l69-^reflt|^M.-^coDdition
Digitized by
Googk
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
217
' of ilie poet, 171 — extracts from the
poem, 170-174.
Dead, variously disposed of in different
countries, xxi. 361 — cremation or burn-
ing, 361, 362 — ^mode of preserving the
dead in Congo, 363 — are exposed by
the Parsees, ibid, — Jewish fancies con-
cerning the dead, 364, 365 — burial re-
fused to deceased Protestants in France
and Italy, 3^6 — similar instance of
• bigotry in England, 367.
— hasty burial of, by some of the
Jews, xxxviii. 120.
Deaf and dumb, the art of instructing
first practically taught by the Abb^ de
I'Eple, xxvi. 392— the cuHivation of
the mental faculties of the deaf and
. dumb not promoted by the mere ca-
pacity of uttering articulate sounds,
394 — ^proof that those who have never
been taught to utter articulate sounds
may acquire a perfect command of a
system of manual and written signs,
394, 395-— remarks on the deviation of
the Abb6 Sicard from the Abb6 de
r£p6e's system of tuition, 395, 396—
and on the system adopted by the late
Mr. Braidwood and his followers, 396,
397 — proof that deaf and dumb children
• may be taught the use and application
of written characters and manual signs,
397, 398 — an instance of such teach-
ing recorded by Bishop Burnet, 399,
400 — ^remarks on the nimiber of candi-
. dates for admission into the Asylum for
Deaf and Dumb Children, 401 — sug-
gestions for mitigating their misfortune,
402, 403— the deaf and dumb not in-
- sensible to music, 404.
Death, strictures on Mr. Gisborne's Obser-
. vatious on, xxi. 63.
punishment of, why not to be done
away, xxiv. 259 — ^returns of persons ex-
ecuted from 1700 to 1817, 260, 261.
influence of the dread of, on
health, xxvii. 117, 118.
Deaths, proportion of, in different places,
xxxviii. 153, note.
Decalogue, in that of the Catholics, tbs
second commandment omitted, xxxvii.
464.
Decemvirs, cause of the institution of, at
Rome, xxvii. 303, 304.
Dedaration of Rights in 1688, observap
tions on, xxii. 533, 534.
J>eeded lands in Canada, observations
on, xxiii. 381.
Deer, fossil bones of, 15,000 feet above the
level of the sea, xxvii. 475.
Deism, novel schemes of, xxviii. 496. See
^ Jn/idfliijf, .
Deity, coatradictor3r tenets of ancient phi-
-1 losopheis respecting, xxxiii. 361,362-—
remarks thereon, 363-365— modem phi^
losophers obliged to take many things
for granted concerning the Deity which
the light of nature never could discover
to them, 365, note.
Delays in Chancery. See Chancery,
Delphin Classics, remarks on Mr. Valpy's
edition of the, xxiv. 385.
Deluge, tradition of, in South America,
xxi. 346.
proofs of the universality of, firom
the appearance of caves and fissures of
rocks containing fossilized animal re-
mains, xxix. 147-152 — from diluvial
beds of loam and gravel containing
similar remains, 152-156 — and from
yallies of denudation, 156 — crude specu-
lations of geologists to account for the
Deluge, 158.161 — ^the Mosaic narrative
of it, 161, 162.
Demand. See Supply,
Demons, enumeration of, xxii. 357 — ac-
count of the demon Gubbe or Groblin,
358, 359 — and of the Scandinavian de-
mons, 360-362, 363, 364— legends of
demons current in Spain, 362, 363—
demons of the mines, 365, 366— -tute-
lary demons of tiie Icelanders, 366,
367.
Denham upon the Coin, description of,
xxxviii. 515.
Denmark, state of gardening in, xxiv.
411.
— — -^ Norway taken from, and given
to Sweden, xxxviii. 177.
Depopulation not caused by colonies, xxvi.
Deptford dockyard, notice of, xxii. 39.
Derbent, pass of, described, xxxv. 392.
Dema, productions o^ xxvi. 223.
Descent, new system of, proposed, xxxiv.
564.
Despotism of a Nubian chie^ anecdote of,
xxii. 457.
Determine, its academical meaning, xxxiii.
69, note,
Dhourra bread of the Nubians, how pre-
pared, xxii. 446.
Dictionaries of dead languages, difficulty
of compiling, xxii. 311 — notice of the
principal Greek dictionaries extant
prior to the revival of ancient literature,
306-310— and of the Greek and Latin
dictionaries subsequent to that event,
312-315.
Diet held at Frankfort, notice of, xxxi.
175,176.
Dignitaries of the Irish church, real state
of the property held by, xxxi. 506.
Dinners of the Greeks, notice of, xxiii.
257, 258.
Dip of the magnetic needle, remarks <m,
XXV. 202.
Digitized by
Googk
218
PART IL^INDSX OF SUB^GTS.
Diplomacy y court, xeflectioBS on, xsxix.99.
Directors of the East India Con^Mmy,
observations on the qualifications of,
XXXV. 36, 37~and on the business of
the Court of Directors, 37-39.
Disabilities, Catholic, ideas affixed to the
removal of, in Ireland, xxxiii. 473.
Discipline of circumstances, effiacts of,
erroneously ascribed to a supernatural
influence, xxxi. 30 — ^proof ^ of thisj by
extracts from the Memoirs of the Bev.
John Newton, 31-37 — lemarks thereon,
. 38-40.
Disciplined force, the Persian monarehs
the first who maintained one, xxv. 68.
Discovery, voyage of, by Captain Eoss.
Seei2o«9,PaitI.
Diseases, causes of the jNtevaleuoe of,
xxxiii. 219.
Dismal Swamp in the valley of the Mis-
sissippi, described, xxix. 10.
Dissenters, on the conduct to be pursuisd
towards them, xxviii. 151-153.
character of, by the late Bev.
Tliomas Rennell» xxxi. 229 — ^principles
- of the differo^ denominations qI, 230 —
causes of their increase, the e&ormous
increase of local population, 232-^the
interested spirit of pecuniary specula-
tion, 23^— the total revolution of the
manners of the people as to the hours
. of rising and going to bed, 235— the
poverty of some benefices, 237"«nd
the smallness of others, 239 — ^the libe-
raUty of the clergy, and the contrary
. spirit on the part of the Dissenters, 240-
244 — influence of education on the Dis-
seutesB, 245^-«nd of a certain degree of
spiritual power, 245, 246— 'dissenting
literature, 247 — ^proc^s that the present
. race of Dissenters loe not oppressed,
249, 250 — advantageous arrangement
of th^ places of worship, 250, 251---
danger of ministers humouring their
hearers, 251, 252.
Distance, mode of measuring, zxzviii.
237.
Distempers, hereditary, lemxrka on, xxiv.
177, 178.
Distress, agricultural, existence of, ac-
knowledged, xxv. 478»-4ts causes, 480-
491.
Dividends, table of the number of persons
receiving half yearly, xxxH. 185— re-
marks thereon, 186.
'I^vining rod, power and properties o^ xxiL
373, note.
Division of property in France, the scourge
which the Revolution has fastened on
• thai country, xxxiv» 50— its conse-
quences depicted, ibid.
Divorce, Reports of Actions in, xxr. 22$
— coUIbIoq b«twe«a the Iftw «f SngUnd
andlSeotknd eonceniingy 229, 23d>—
account of the Comnussary or Coms-
torial Court, 232 — jxirisdiction of the
commissaries, 233-236 — abstracts of
cases before them, 237-242— remarks
on the jurisdiction of this court, 243-^
and on international law, 244-248—
considerations on the law of the juris-
diction, or the law of that country,
where the suit is brought, 249-252 —
objections to that law, 252-254— oon-
sid«rations on the law of the contract,
or of the law of the place where the
marriage was constituted, 254-256—
objections to that law, 257— considerar-
tions on the law of tiie residence, or of
domicil, 259, 260— otjections to that
law, 261-264 — ^the question considered,
what effect shall be given by courts of
justice in other quarters of the erajare
to the decisions of the Scotch courts,
when pronounced, 265-272.
Divorces, nnmbor of, in Paris, xxziv. 450
— con^iared wkh those in England,
ibid,
Dniester, singular Mongolian monuments
on the steppe of the, xslv. 375.
Dockyard at Deptford, notice o^ xxii. 39
—at Woolwich, ibid. — at Sheeraess, 40
—at Chatham, 41— at Poitsmou^ 48-
50.
Dog, character of the, xzxix. 417.
account of one en^loyed against the
West Indians, xxxviu. 208.
Dogsfoane, a plant destructive of insects,
xxxix. 413.
Domingo. See St, Domimffg.
Donabew, failure of an attack on, by the
British army, xxxv. 502, 503— subse-
quently taken by them, 504.
Donai, a river of Cambodia, notice o^ xzx.
352-357—- extraordinary subsqui^ cob-
cert there, 356.
Donatists, a religious sect^xxxviii 22, nefe.
Doomsday, record o^ xxxix. 53, 54, 56—
Exon doomsday, 55, »o#»— doomsday
of Bdward I., 57— of North Walei,
under Edward III., 58.
Doubtful Island discovered, xx?i« 348.
Dosologies, zzxviii. 36.
Draining, beneficial efiects of, on the salu-
brity of a country, xxx, 149.
Drama, moral infiuence of, considered,
xxii« 402 — ^subjects from classic history,
why not adapted for, 403— euccess of
Shakspeare in his historical plays, 404.
the French passionately attached
to, xxix. 28, 29---origiB of dtamatie
representation in France, 32— notice of
^e plays of JodeUe and othc!i% 33— of
Gamier, 33, 34— of Hardy, 34-36—
parallel between them atid the eent^mpo-
ntfyBngfi^dniiMMi^ 8» 88 "> p i ^
Digitized by
Googk
Bbvisw.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
219
g^acy of the English drama during the
reign of Charles II., 206.
Drama^ real pleasures of, fairly estimated,
xxxiv. 197-199 — ^remarks on the appli-
cation of the drama to history, 199,
200 — its important influence on the
morals of a country, 200, 201 — Mr.
Kemble's attention to dramatic cos-
tume, 225, 226— and scenery, 226. See
Novels,
■ its rapid perfection and decline,
zxxir. 354.
• Lord Byron's attack on the Bri-
tish, for neglecting the unities, refuted,
zxvii. 479-483 — ^the practice and theoxy
of antiquity against him, 484-486.
Spanish, collection of the produc-
tions o^ xxY. 1— 'why Uttle known be-
yond the precincts of Spain, %bid» — pa-
rallel between Spanish and Enghsh
drama, 2, 3, 4— remarks of Lord Hol-
land on Lope de Vega applicable to the
Spanish drama generally, 4, 5— cha-
racter of Cervantes as a dramatic poet^
5 — analysis of his Numancia, with
specimens, 6-12--character of Calderon^
1^14 — ^remarks on his plays of com-
mon life, 15-17 — on his historical
dramas, 17-19 — on his mythological
and classical plays, 20, 21 — particularly
hifl * Devocion de la Crui,' 21, 22—
comic powers of Calderon, 22 — ^his tra-
gic powers, 23, 24.
Dramatic poetry, origin and character of^
XXXV. 361, 362.
DiswingSy collection of, possessed by the
Society of Antiquaries, xxxvii. 485.
Dresden, account of, xxxi. 184, 185.
Society for Converting the Jews,
xxxviii. 134.
Drontheim and its vicinity described, xzx.
123, 124.
Druidical monuments abound in the Cel^
tic provinces of France, xxv. 137 —
description of the great work of Camac,
137, 138.
Drunkard, extract from the Confessions of
Ay xxvii. 120, 121 — ^hints for reforming
one, 121.
Drury-Lane Theatre^ management o^
und«r Mr. Kemble's directions, xxxiv.
224-230— hb retirement from ii^ 231.
Dry lot in the navy, no serious ground of
idann for, xxx. 216 — ^bhmderin^ asser-
tions of Mr. Hume on this subject, ex-
posed, 217, 218 — ignorance of Mr.
Burridge proved, 220--the dry rot not
caused by coal-tar, 221— notice of va-
rious ^blications on dry rot, 222, 223
—considerations on the cause of dry
rot, 224-227— remedy for it, 228, 229.
Dschoufait Kale, singular fortress of the
Caraite Jews, xxxviii. 126.
Dublin, abundance of beggars in, during
the joevalence of a fever, xxxvii. 83 —
arrangements to suppress them, ibid. —
ingenious contrivance to compel sub-
scriptions, ibid.
University, system of instruction
pursued in, xxxvL 246.
Dufibo, an African town, xxxix. 148.
Durham, History and Antiquities of the
Couiify^)alatine of, by Robert Surtees,
Esq., reviewed, xxxix. 360 — fitness of
the author for his undertaking, 361—
ancient state of Durham, ibid, — ^hum-
ble origin of its diocess, 362 — the dio-
cess divided, and Lindisfarne erected
into a separate see, ibid. — origin of the
cathedral, and history of the body of
St. Cuthbert, 362, 363— the possessions
of the see enlarged by presents from
northern chiefs and from King Canute,
364 — state of Durham under its dioce-
san Egelwin, ibid. — ^union of the civil
and ecclesiastical power on the accession
to the see of Walcher, 365 — ^building of
the present cathedral commenced, ibid,
— ^petition to Charles II. for the restora-
tion of the liberties and privileges be-
longing to the county-palatine, of which
it had Deen deprived by the Cromwells,
390^-court of wards in the diocess abo-
lished, 401 — ^the freeholders obtain the
privilege of sending representatives to
parliament for the county and city, 402
— question whether more good would
have resulted from sequestering the
possessions of this diocess than is now
dispensed by it, 405. See the name of
each Bishop, passim^ Part I.
Dutch, noble reception of the Duke of
Marlborough by, xxiii. 15 — ^vacillation
of the Dutch government, 12, 13 —
effects of their crooked policy on the
plans and progress of the Duke of Marl-
borough, 35, 36 — ^misconduct of their
generals, 18.
■ colonists at the Cape of Good
Hope, actual condition of, xxv. 456,
457— -account of the Dutch boors, 458,
459 — lenity and humanity of the Dutch
laws, 464.
— — missions to Ceylon, notice o^
xxxii. 21.
— — — Se& Nethcriandt^
Digitized by
Googk
220
PART IL-INDKX OF SUBJECTS.
QUARTBRLT
E.
Eagles in Scotland, zxxviii. 515— parent
birds teaching their youn^ to fly, 516.
Earth, philosophical view of the productions
of the different countries of the, xxv.
376, 377.
— ^^— magnitude of the, zxxviii. 4 —
settlement of nations on, 194.
Earthenware, increased manufacture of, in
England, xxxii. 178.
Earthquake at Garaccas, described, xxi.
321-323.
• frequency of earthquakes in
the valley of the Mississippi, xxix. 10.
Easiness of belief, instances of, in Parr,
Warton, and Kircher, xxxix. 286, 287.
East India College, importance of a Chi*
nese professor at, xxv. 426.
Company's monopoly, evils of,
xxii. 240.
library and mu-
seum, notice of, xxxiv. 161.
Indies, possessions of Britain in, why
not subjected to the colonial regulations
concemmg commerce, xxvi. 53£— eflecti
of opeuing the East India trade, 533.
— ^— pamphlets on the Stamp Act
in, xxxviii. 489-503 — Company's
charter must soon come before ParHa-
ment, 489 — Calcutta merchants' pti-
tion against stamp duties, ibid, — right of
imposmg taxes conferred by the charter,
490, 491,497 — stamp duties approved
by the Coiurt of Directors and Commis-
sioners for the AiTairs of India, 492 —
these at first confined to the interior,
ilnd. — registration in the Supreme Court
required for recovering penalties, 493 —
but infringement of the act punishable
by indictment, 494 — conduct of govern-
ment respecting the act, ibid. — not de-
sirous of checking the free expression
of the public sentiments, 495 — restric-
tions imder which British subjects reside
in India, 498 — government prohibits a
public meeting to discuss the legality of
its proceedings, 499 — opening the trade
at first oppoi^ed by the Company, 500
— cotton may be sent to Great Britain
worked \ip, and returnfd with profit,
501 — cotton exported to Great Britain,
fluctuation in its quantity, ibid. — sugar
works, 502.
practicability of the invasion
of, by the Russians, examined, xxxix.
35 — effect of the first discovery of a
passage to, by the Cape of Good Hope,
478.
Easter Island, arrival of Kotzebue at, xxvi.
347 — hostility of the natives accounted
for, 348.
Eau de Cologne, receipt for making,
xxxix. 7.
Ebony, captured negroes so termed by
French slave-traders, xxxiv. 594, 595.
Ebsambul, notice of colossal remains at,
xxii. 453-456.
Ecclesiastical history, remarks on the study
of, xxi. 115.
' revenues. See Clergy,
Ed^hill, battle of, its effects on the Par-
liamentary forces, xxv. 324.
Edinburgh, conduct of the volunteers of,
during the rebellion of 1745-46, xxxvL
172, 173 — improvement in the qualifi-
cations for degrees in medicine at the
University of Edinburgh, 223— excel-
lent system pursued in the newly esta-
blished public school there, 224, 225—
system of qualifying for degrees there,
255, 256.
^— — hit at the young craniolog^s
of, xxxix. 6.
- Review, falsehoods of,detectedy
xxiii. 135, 136.
errors in, concerning
marsh effluvia, exposed, xxx. 137,
138.
Education, defects of, in America, zxL 8
— state of, at Athens, 277-286 — its
influence upon manners, 286, 287 — and
the morals of the times, 288-292 — state
of, at Hayti, 458, 459.
■ pro^^s of, among the modem
Greeks, xxiii. 358, 359 — strictures on
the experimental method of education,
541, 542.
defective state of, in France,
xxx. 371— state of, in Chili, 457.
effects of, erroneously attributed
to a supernatural influence, xxxi. 27-29
— state of, in the University of Jena,
178-182— and at Gottingen, 187.
of mechanics in institutes, con-
sidered, xxxii. 421 — observations on
schools for the education of infants, 426-
428.
— defect of, in this country, xxxvii.
346 — suggestions on the subject of
female education, 392. 394, 395— im-
portance of clerical education, 459 —
home and school education compared,
570, no/e.
elementary, former and present
modes of, xxxix. 100 — whipping-boys
provided for ]>rinces, 107 — ^increase of
education and knowled^ in Euro|)e,
494 — education and reauing among the
lower orders pushed too far, ibid. — jiro-
Sess of education and reading among
e higher orders^ 495.
Digitized by
Googk
Bsvisw*
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
221
Eelyats, or wandering tribes of Persia,
. manners of, xxxv. 373, 374.
Egypt, the parent country of monachism,
xxii. 60.
notices of travels in, xxviii. 59-61
— ^remarks on the elephantine * Descrip-
tion de I'Egypte,* 62, 63 — discovery of
the supposed emerald miues, by M.
CaiUiaud, 63, 64 — notice of his re-
searches in the Thebaic Oasis, 65-67 —
journey of Sir A. Edmoustone to the
Oases of Upper Egypt, 67-69— present
state of Alexandria and Rosetta, 71, 72
— researches of M. Lelorraiu, 75 — ^his
falsehoods exposed, 76— antiquity of
the zodiac at Denderak, 77^ 78 — re-
marks on its signs, 80, 81 — progress of
the Earl of Belmore and suite through
Upper Egypt to Nubia, 81, 82— ni.ble
conduct of Ismael Pasha, 83, 84 — no-
tice of researches concerning the hiero-
glyphic characters of the Egyptians,
190-193 — copy of their hieroglyphic
characters, 194.
observations on the expulsion of
the French from, xxx. 481, 482 — ^bene-
fits conferred on Europeans in Egypt
through the influence of England, 485,
486 — account of the origin and eleva-
tion of Mohammed Aly, the preseut
Pasha of Egypt, 483.486— treacherous
murder of the beys by him, 487, 488^ —
his attempt to train his Mohammedan
soldiers in the European manner frus-
trated, 489 — loses two of his sons, 490
-—successful training of black troops
and Fellahs, 492-49 4-— physical geogra-
phy of Egypt, 495 ^seasons, 496 —
productions, 497 — large quantities of
. cotton wool exported to England, 498
— ^military arsenal formed at Cairo, 501
— the canal of Mahmoudiah cleared
and opened, 502 — efforts made by the
pasha to promote instruction, 503 — ^his
police, 504 — population of Egypt, par-
tic\darly of Cairo, 504 — different classes
of Christians there, 505 — state of the
Jews, Copts, 506— Fellahs, 500-506—
observations on the character of the
pasha, 507, 508.
a wretched country, xxxviii. 99.
. Researches and Discoveries in.
See Belzoni, Part I.
Egyptian sculpture, character of, xxxiv.
118.
Egyptians, customs of, at feasts, xxiii. 278.
. observations on the state of the
arts among them, xxiv. !54, 155.
Eikon Basilik§, xxxvii. 248.
Ekatheriuebourg, notice of the iron works
at, xxxi. 221.
jElection, doctrine of, considered, xxiv. 41-
43.
Elections in America, how conducted, xxi.
144.
Electrical eel, experiments with, described,
xxi. 337, 333.
Electricity, curious effiicts of, on g^pow-
der, xxxviii. 238.
Electro-magnetism, notice of M. Ampere's
researches in, xxxv. 237 — facts proving
the tendency of electricity to prodyce
magnetism, 238-242 — distinctions
which characterize the different forms
of electricity and galvanism, 243-245 —
experiments of Professor QBrsted, 246 —
of Mr. Barlow, 248— of Mr. Faraday,
248, 249 — remarks on the theory of
electro-magnetism, 249-25 1 — abstract
of M. Ampere's theory of electronlyna-
mics, with remarks, 251-21) 4 — observa-
tious on terrestrial magnetism, 265-267
— advantage of M. Ajnpere's theory,
268.
Elementary teaching, tracts and publica-
tions on, reviewed, xxxix. 99 — new col-
leges, 125 — University of London, 127
—King's College, 137.
Elephants, remains of, found in various
parts of England, xxiv. 152.
— honours paid to white elephants
in the Burman empire, xxxiii. 59 — and
in Siam, 124.
— — — tusks and teeth found in the
iceberg of Behring*s Strait, xxvii. 475.
Elford, agricultural improvements at,
xxxvi. 398.
Elgin Marbles, depositing of, in the Bri-
tish Museum,, proved to be a national
advantage, xxiii. 591.
EUoa, or El Wak, the Oasis of Jupiter
Ammon, notice of M. Belzoni*s excur-
sion to, xxiv. 168.
Eloquence, superiority of, in the parliament
of 1820, xxu. 493, 494.
-— — origin of, in Greece, xxvi. 383,
See Oratory.
Emancipation, Catholic, preposterous be-
nefits anticipated from it, xxxiii. 472 —
arguments of true Protestants respecting,
fallacious, xxxviii. 564, 565— argument
of expediency answered, 572 — in its
widest extent woidd not satisfy the claim-
ants, 596 — what required to justify
emancipation, 597 — means by which it
might be rendered unnecessary, 598.
Embalming, Circassian mode of, xxi. 376
— ^probable origin of, ibid*
Embleton, hamlet of, described, xxxix.
375.
Emigrants to Canada^ advice to, xxiii.
377.
— — to America, numbers of, in
1821,xxvii. 94, 95, no/e.
to the American Union, salu-
tary information to, zxix. 347, 348—
Digitized by
Googk
222
PART IL— INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
QUAS!TBmX.T
distiessefl of Englbh emigrants, 356,
362, 363, 364,366, 369, 370.
Emigration, miseiies of^ xxi. 147, 148, 152
— what persons ma^, or may not, be
benefited by emigration to America, 1 34,
161-163.
on the comparative advan-
tages of Canada and the United States
of North America for, xxiii. 376— ex-
pediency of, as a relief for distressed
population, considered, 387, 388 — ex-
penses of emigration to Canada,394,395.
-to the Australian colonies.
observations on, xxxii. 340, 341.
— — ~— — a means of reducing over-
grown population, xxxiii. 465.
from the United Kingdom,
necessity of, xxxvii. 539— question of
preventing it, investigated, 567 — no
other relief under our redundant popu-
lation, 575— opinion of Lord Bacon on
the subject of emigration, ibid. — ^mode
in which it is to be carried into execu-
tion, 576.
remarks on emigration^
xxxviii. 60, 61
Emmadoo, beautiful access to it, xxxix.
148.
Employment, want of, a source of crime,
xxiv. 257 — ^improvement in prisons by
fiunishing employment, xxx. 410 —
question of utility, ibid.
Enclosure Act. See Incloture and Waste
Lands.
England, popular fictions of, of Teutonic
origin, xxi. 97, 98 — ^notices of several
English nursery tales, 101.
— ^— institutions of, imitated in
France, during the Revolution, xxii. 247
^-excellent sketch of its constitution,
263, 264.
why disliked by the French,
xxiii. 177 — impressions of an English-
man at Paris, 178— contrast between
them in speaking of their respective
countries, 180, 181— difference in their
intellectual endowments, 181-184 — ^in-
fluence of history and political circum-
stances on their characters, 184-186 —
reason why the French find it diflBcult
to form just ideas of England, 187-190
^-curious blunders and misrepresenta-
tions concerning it, 192-194, 196, 197—
will not be impoverished by transfer of
capital to the other side of the Atlantic,
388, 389— population of England be-
fore the Reformation, 657.
state of horticulture in, durin^f
the early ages, xxiv. 404. See Horiu
culture J infra.
state of, in 1815, xxviii. 1^ —
in 1816, 1822, 198 — progress of revo-
lutionary principles aemong the people,
199— caused and promoted by libelloiis
publications, 200 — apolitical parties tiie
source of them, 201-203— influence of
the opposition prints on the radical pvess,
204, 205— character of the present oppo-
sition, 206,207— decline of talent among
the Whigs, ibid. — defence of the late
Whigs, 208, 209 — progress of revolu-
tionary principles among the modem
Whigs, 210 — their influence on the
public press, 212-214 — remarks on their
conduct 215-219.
England, superiority of, to^ France, in
mineral productions, xxn.^ 416 — in
abundance of capital, Hhid. — ^in the moral
character of workmen, 416, 417 — and
in machinery, 417 — character of an
English gentleman, 477-—impressions
made on a foreigner on his first arrival
in England, 479.
. past and present state of agri-
culture m, xxxil 162-166— increase of
buildings, 167-169 — amount of bricks
chargeable with duty since the ^ear
1784, 170 — state of canal navipition,
170, 171 — ^number of steam engines in
use, and their expense, 171, and note —
state of the cotton manufacture, 172,
173 — of the woollen manufacture and
trade, 173, 174— of the silk manufac-
ture and trade, 175, 176— of the iron
manufacture, 176— of the copper mines
and trade, 176, 177— of the manufeo-
ture of linens, 177, 178 — of earthen-
ware, 178— of glass, 178, 1 79— progres-
sive increase in British exports, 179 —
present state of the shippmg interest,
180 — ^increased amount of personal pro-
perty transferred by wills, 181 — ^positive
benefits resulting from the national
debt, 182— desponding anticipations of
former politicians respecting it, 183,
184— total number of persons receiving
half-yearly dividends in 1823, 185, 186
— ^progressive improvement in the mid-
dle and lower classes, 187-194 — dimi-
nution of pauperism, 195 — number of
houses for which taxes are paid, 195,
196 — a hint to reformer^ 197— Eng-
land, why not active in missionary
exertions until of late years, 22-24 —
superior intellectual character of Eng-
lishmen accounted for, 88, 89— defective
state of some branches of English litera-
ture, 9 — distinguished classical scholars
in England, 91— on the culture of the
vine in England, 260 — and the making
of wine, 261— curious blunders of a
French traveller respecting England,
exposed, 344-354.
— *— real state of, but little known to
the French, and why, xxxiv. 46— prooft
that civilisation is there more adyancod
Digitized by
Googk
JuTIBW«
nnXBXOF 8UBJSCTS.
tibm itt ADycountfyOB fhe coaiiiitoi,
paiticularijr France, 47-*«efiiiatien of
thd as8eiti(»itfaaA Eagluid ka« not been
the protector of the liberties of other
nations, 52,'53--|Hroo& of her superiority
over France in various respects, 58 —
particuiarly in her woollen manufac-
tures, 59-61— contrast of them with the
state of the woollen manufactures of
France, 62, 63— reasons why our ma-
nufactures are sq^or to those of
France, 63*HX>mpaiison of the amount
of woollens wrought in England in
1818, with the vaXue of silk manufac-
tured in France, 66-^progre8s of the
silk manufactioe hi EngUnd, 67 — of
the cotton manuf^ture, 69, 70— of the
linen manufacture, 70, 71— eupeiiority
of ^ Englbh in the metallurgic arts,
72, 73— in pottery, 74 — and in the ma-
ni^ture of glass for optical and astro-
nomical purposes, 75, 76 — superiority
of EngUsh chronometers, 77 — progress
sive increase of post-office revenues, 80
— superior in amount to those of France,
81-85 — progress of canal navigation in
England, 86 — force of tiie steam-en-
gines employed there, 91 — application
of them to the manufacture of cotton,
92 — superiority of England over France
accounted fi>r, 96-98— grandeur of her
future prospects, 98, 99 — geological
observations on the south-western coal
district of England, 533-535.
Bngland, suggestion of a history of, from
its language, x3EXvii. 53*-observations
on^e laws of, 148, 199 — Constitutional
History of, 194 — at the accession of
Henry VII. its history assumes a new
^aracter, 199 — reformation in, 204—
not in danger of falling, 227— mischie-
vonsness of the Puritans, 228— attainder
of Straffi)rd, 230 — charges of bribery
against the Whigs, 252— conduct of
William III., 254 — ^massacre of Glenco,
257<-^scu8sion8 with the United States
of America, 286— importance of the
fisheries to, 345— this little understood,
ibid. — defect in our national education,
d46>-absurd proposals for the relief of
England in its distress, arising from
want of employment for the poor, 558 —
tendency of Ae country to pauperism,
574.
■ ■ " improvement in the state of,
xxxviii. 59 — damour against the poor-
laws, 65— this founded in error, t6irf.—
exorbitant rent of cottages, 67, note —
pauperism since the age of Elizabeth
has declined, iWrf.— prevalence of beg-
gars in Herefbrdshire twocentuoriesago,
68«»the people have beeu greatly im-
proved l^ ilie pooi^aws, 79, 427— firo-
portion of deaths to the population,
small, 153, no/e-^iacrease of crime in,
154r-^miaeiiee of its aristocrat, ibid,
— ^its coimtry seats, 154, 156— 4ts public
Ubraries few, private numerous, 155^
speed of communication in, ibidt—
moral influence of landloxds diminiriied,
156— objects of research to an English
traveller, 167 — geology, 168 — me-
chanicsi, «6Mf.-»manu&cturss, 169 —
roads, canals, &&, ibid, -«- summer's
journey for a young traveller, 170—
agriculture and rural scenery, ibid, —
deeply interested in the present state of
the world, 173-^its opposition to the
French Revolution necessary, ibid. —
connexion of Hanover with, 178-M»uld
not participate in the Holy Alliance,
179— part beo(Hning it in maintaining
tiie balance of Europe, 181— its parti-
cular interest, 191 — curious fact in its
naval history, 212— new colonies form-
ing by, 240^present state of the law
of, 240 — See LaM>— modem mode of
sporting, 270 — on legal disputes be-
tween the king and subject, 273— at.
tempt of the United States to encroach
on the possessions of, 298 — state of
religion in the former part of the last
century, 305-Hremarks on the aristo*
cracy, 361— on the propensity to por-
trait painting, 378 — high rank attained
b^ landscape painting in, t^M^.— 'propen-
sity to chan^ of dress, 383— redun-
dant population in, 411, 433 — best
mode of employing this, ibid. — waste
land may be cultivated with profit in,
416, 417, 432 — changes in the employ-
ment of the people, 426^-enclo8ure acts,
some on too large a scale, 431, 437 —
love of independence, 433 — ^interest of
capitalists, 4 35 — hints to Commissioners
of Woods and Forests, 441— bank-paper
age preferable to the iron age, 442—
dramatists of, ibid. — Ireland always
ready to take advantage of the troubles
of, 638, 539.
English long deemed a travelling people,
xxxviii. 149 — great increase of the pro-
pensity, 150 — mischievousness of this,
151 — ^residence abroad, and education
of children there, deprecated, 151, 172
— foreign travelling seldom advisable
to invalids, 152 — mischievous aversion
to retrenchments, 157 — inconveniences
of travelling and foreign residence, 1 58
— females particularly injured by them,
159 — ^travelling in Italy, 160 — ^jroimg
travellers, 161 — ^ignorance of their own
country, 163 — our own classics too
much neglected, 145«->iat6risu:dmg tmr
Digitized by
Googk
224
PART II^INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QjJAMTBSLLt
language with Ibieig^ phrases, 166 — >
Ireland, as an object of travel to, 171—
their career in the West Indies, 212.
English language, notice of the various
attempts to fix, zxxv. 405-407.
— poetry, observations on, zzzv. 185
— ^mediocrity, why successful, HwL —
meretricious writers the most popular,
and on what account, 186— effect of the
Rebellion in perverting taste, 186, 187
— metaphysical poetry, 188 — golden age
of the mediocrists, 189 — ^Pomfret, why
popular, 190 — ^popularity of Katherine
Phillips, ibid, — Swifl*s character of
Diaper's poems, 190, 191 — ^influence of
Pope in improving English poetry, 190
— of the poets in the reign of George
II., 192, 193— of the reign of George
III., 193— particularly of Emily, 193,
194— of Mason, 195-197— brief con-
tinuance of the popularity of Merry,
197, 198— of Darwin, 200— character
of his poetry, 198-200— and of Cow-
per's, 201— and of Hurdis, 201-204—
of Dr. Sayers, 204-219.
Ensala, an African town in the province
of Tuat, xxzviii. 102.
Ensookosoo, zxxix. 149.
Entails, operation of the law of, zxxiv.
550-552.
Enthusiasm, evils of, xxiv. 39 — of the Me-
thodists, 36, 37.
of the Romish Church, in-
stances of, in H. M. Boudon, xxxvi.
327-3-29— in Claude Petit, 338, 339—
in Sister Nativity, 318.321— in Sister
Providence, 345-352.
Episcopal property in Ireland, gross
amount of, misrepresented, xxxi. 503 —
its actual amount, 504-506-— episcopal
lands, how let, 506.
Epitaph, ancient Latin, from the Vatican,
xxviii. 328. .
Equitable Assurance Society, remarks on
the proportion of profits returned by it
to the parties assured, xxxv. 10, 11 —
on the periods at which its profits are
assigned, 14, 15 — and those at which
assurers become entitled to participate in
a division of profits, 17 — Mr. Babbage's
view of the by-laws of 1816, 18-20—
observations on the measures of the
directors and actuary, 20-22 — and on
the recommendation of the actuary in
1825, 22-26 — evils resulting from this
system, 26— further remarks on the de-
parture from the deed of settlement, 27,
28 — notice of another malpractice in the
Equitable Society, 29 — ^reasons for as-
serting that this society has forfeited the
name of * e(|uitable,* 29, 30.
■ jurisdiction, origin of, in Eng-
land, xziii. 93 — ^no complaints ag^nst
the remedial powers of the ' council*
till the reign of Edward III., ibid,^
passage in Magna Charta explained, 94
—nature of the law of free-borgh, or
firank-pledge, 95— powers of the * coun^
cil ' before the reign of Edward I., 97
—writs, by whom tested, 97, 98 — the
practice of the Court of Chancery, when
first settled, 99 — proceedings of the
council in the reigns of Edward I. and
II., 100-102 — ^its powers under Edward
III., 103— complaints of the common-
alty against it, under Edward II. and
Edward III., 105, 106— ^•xtension of
its powers in the reign of Edward III.,
108-110 — ^regulation of them by parlia-
ment under Richard II., Ill — further
complaints in the reigns of Henry IV.,
v., and VI., 112, 113— remedial juris-
diction of parliament, 118-121 — va-
riously exercised, 122 — ^regulations con-
cerning the jurisdiction of the king's
council, 125.
Erfurth, present state of, xxxi. 186.
Error in religion, caused first by neglect
of the consideration that man is in a
state of moral and intellectual discipline,
xxvi. 83 — and secondarily, by the im-
perfection of human language, 84.
Erysipelas, instances of its being conta-
gious, xxxiii. 220.
Esmaralda, notice of the mission of« xxv.
384.
Esquimaux, interviews with, described,
xxi. 221-224 — obtained their iron from
aeroUtes, 224, 225~^escription of their
manners, pursuits, and mode of living,
227, 228.
— — ^— • honourable character of some,
xxv. 196.
————— arrival of a party of, near the
Discovery ships, xxx. 243— description
of their huts, 244, 259, 260— their man-
ners and habits, 245-248 — account of
the character and attainments of an
Esquimaux woman, 249-251.
Establishments, observations on the re-
duction of, XXXV. 292-299, 305, 306.
Esteban, Don, or Memoirs of a Spaniard,
xxxiii. 205 — strictures thereon, 206-
217.
Ethiopia, state of, when visited by Messrs.
H anbury and Waddington, xxvii. 216-
220— pass of * the Water's Mouth ' de-
scribed, 221 — habits of the Sheygya,
222 — pyramids of Djebel el Berkel,
231, 232— and of £1 Belial, 233-236
-~ Ethiopia the source of Egyptian
temples and sculptures, 236.
Eton Greek Grammar, defects of, zxxii*
90, note.
Digitized by
Googk
Bbvibw.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
225
Etonian, the, zzv. 95— ^notives of the
publication, ibid. — specimens of its tales
in prose, 96«10 1 — ^remarks on its criti-
cisms, 102 — and on its poetry, ibid.,
103— -specimens, 104.
Etymolo^icon Magnum, critical notice of,
xxii. 307, 303.
Europe, historical outline of the establish-
ment of the Turks in, xxxviii. 172 — ^its
federal interests not in a permanent
state, 172, 183, ISQ—former federative
system, 172, 188— >new arrangement
attempted, 175 — ^predominance of Rus-
sia to be guarded against, 177 — ^in an
embryo state, 1 79— Holy Alliance, ibid.
—part becoming the British govern-
ment in maintaining its balance, 181 —
different periods of its federative po-
licy, 182, 183 — ^introduction of tobacco
into, 201.
improvements that have taken
place in its communications, xxxix. 490
— consequent increase of travellers, 492
— ^periodical publications and other wri-
tings, 497 — authors of, 498 — ^improve-
ment in the outward condition of all
ranks of society in, 499 — increase of the
population of, 500 — improvement of
the several continental towns in manu-
factures, 505. See Education,
Europeans, wanton maltreatment of, by
the Turks in Egypt, xxiv. 141, 143, 144.
Evidence of slaves, the refusal of, by co-
lonists, considered, xxxiii. 506, 507.
what admissible in an action for
libel, XXXV. 578-580.
Examiner, the, a weekly paper, character
of, xxxvii. 409.
Exchange, effects of the turn of, xxix. 238
—in 1800, ibid.
Exchequer, court of, number of causes
despatched by, xxxviii. 253.
— what originally, xxxix. 48—
form and writing of the rolls of, 53.
Executions, number of, from 1700 to 181 7,
xxiv. 260, 261— remarks thereon, 262,
263.
Expedience, as a principle of morals, exa-
mined, xxxviii. 319 — political, as to
Catholic emancipation, 556.
Exportation and importation laws, increase
of, a cause of the g^eat bulk of our sta-
tute law, xxi. 410 — ^remarks on the ia«
expediency of many of them, 411.
Exports and imports of Van Diemen's
Land, xxiii. 80.
. to the British colonies, official
value of, xxvi. 535.
— — of Great Britain, amount of, for
the years 1822, 1823, and 1824— xxxi.
419, note,
' progressive in-
crease of, xxxii. 179.
Fables. See Foniainef La, Part I.
Faculties of the soul, remarks on, by
Addison, xxvi. 494~strictures on Mr.
Stewart*s criticism on, 495-498.
Fagging, in great schools, reprehended,
. xxxix. 142.
Fairs, unnecessary, a cause of crime, xxiv.
258.
Fairy Legends of the South of Ireland,
reviewed, xxxii. 197 — character of the
; work, 198— extract from the legend of
the Bottle Hill, 198-203— proof of its
oriental origin, 203— extract from the
legend of Knockgrafton, 203-206— re-
marks on it, 206, 207 — extract from the
legend of Daniel O'Rourke, 207-210.
Tales, or the Lilliputian Cabinet,
character of, xxi. 91. See Nunery Li-
ierature, infra.
Falaba, account of Major Laing's entrance
into, xxxi. 449, 450.
Falaise, specimen of the military archi-
tecture at, XXV. 123, 124.
Fall of man, remarks on Mr. Gtisbome*8
attempt to prove, from physical pheno-
mena, xxi. 55-60.
TOL. XL. NO. LXXX, '
Family Library, No. 1. of the, xxxix.
475.
Famines in Ireland, xxxviii. 56— in Eng-
land, 59.
Fanaticism, specimen of in America, xxi.
145, 146.
Fayetteville, unhealthy situation of, xxf ii.
87.
Feast, end of, usually troubled with beg-
gars, xxiv. 435.
Fellahs, or labouring classes in Eg^t,
condition of, xxx. 500-506 — successfully
trained after the European manner, 492-
494.
Fellatas, account of a predatory expedition
against, xxix. 515-517.
hospitality of, xxxiii. 531, 532—
their manners, 534— reception of Lieu-
tenant Clapperton by their sovereign,
535-537.
xxxix. 149, 150, 158, 159, 162,
180.
Female character, tribnte to the universal
kindness of, xxxviii. 97.
■ reformers of Athens, picture of^
zxii. 182.
Digitized by
Googk
5^
PART ir^INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
QUARTBBLT
l^male society, state of, in Ghreece, xxii.
172-202.
Fernando Po, island, when discovered,
zxvi. 51 — its appearance, 52 — dress,
manners, and language, of the inhabi-
tants, 53 — beautiful bay there, described,
54— its vahie as a place for employ-
ing captured negroes, ibid.
■ importance of, for counter-
acting the slave trade, xzviii. 175.
> recommended as the prin-
cipal station on the coast of Africa, for
prevention of the slave-trade, zxxiv.
602— its importance and advantageous
situation, GOS^-question of the right of
Spain or Portugal to the island, 605-
607.
• advantages to be expected
ttom the English settlement at^
181-183.
I^Bzzan, population of, xxv. 31 — character
and habits of the inhabitants, 32, 33 —
agriculture, 33 — revenues of the sove-
reign, ibid.f 34 — its capital, Mourzouk,
described, 34 — dress of the women, 35
— ^poetry of the Fezzaners, 36 — geology
of the coimtry, 36, 37.
lection, necessity of, for the conveyance
of instruction, in poetry and the drama,
xxiii. 478-^canons for the employment
of fiction, 479— skilful adaptation by
Shakspearon in the Tempest, ibid.
Fictions, popular, of the Teutons, remarks
on, xxi. 93 — of the Welsh, and of the
Celts and ltalians,94 — of Spain,95 — the
popular fictions of England and of the
Scottish lowlands, probably of Teutonic
origin, 95 — account of various early
English nursery fictions, 101-108 — ob-
servations on the fictions of the romantic
poems of the Italians, 514-516.
Finance accounts of the United Kingdom,
table of, for the year 1825, xxxv. 284,
285 — ^linear scale illustrating this table,
307 — explanation of that scale, 307-
313 — and of the table of expenditure,
286-288— effect of the national debt
upon the country, 288-290 — ^taxes re-
pealed since the battle of Waterloo, 291
—observations on the reduction of esta-
blishments, 292-299, 305, 306— incon-
yenience of the present system of finance,
as it respects the government, 300 —
schedule, showing the expenditure of
workmen, and the effect of prosperity
and adversity on the working classes,
as well as the effect of taxation in dimi-
nishing their comforts, 313-3 15.
Finances of France in the reigns of Louis
XV. and XVI., embarrassed state of,
xxvii. 156-166.
Finland tran^ezred to Russia^ zxzviii.
176.
Fire, cathedrals and chmthei injured by,
xxxiv. 316.
Fish, account of the different sorts of,
eaten by the Athenians, xxiii. 256-259
— ^instances of their love of fish, 259^
260.
■^— of extraordinary size, caught in New
South Wales, xxiv. 63.
. migrations of, xxxvii. 348.
■ effect of crimping, xxxviii. 518.
Fisheries of the Western Caledonians, no-
tice of, xxvi. 413, 414.
■ importance of, to this country,
xxxvii. 345 — ^very imperfectly under-
stood, ibid. — causes of this, 346 — poach-
ing extensively practised in, 347. See
also Salmon Fitheries.
Fishmongers, Athenian, notice of, xxiii.
261,262.
Flanders, account of the Duke of Marl-
borough's campaign in, xxiii. 36, 37 —
movements of the French under ViUe-
roy, 39— defeated at the battle of Ramil-
lies, 40 — its brilliant results, 40, 41 —
Marlborough commences a new cam-
paign there, 51 — battle of Oudenard,
53---siege and capture of Lille, 54-56
— Ghent invested, 57 — the French
again defeated at Malplaquet, 59, 60 —
Mons captured, 61 — a new campaign
commenced there, but terminated by
the peace of Utrecht, 63-65.
state of gardening in, xxiv. 411,
412.
Flavian amphitheatre, observations on,
xxviii. 326, 327.
Florence, remarks on the architecture o^
xxxii. 59 — and of the architecture of
the cathedral there, 51.
Flowers used by the Athenians at their
feasts, xxiii. 264, 265.
— ^— observations on, xxxix. 412.
Fluxional calculus, discovery of, zzzix*
439.
Fly-fishing. See Angling, ante.
Foliage, wisdom of Providence illustrated
in the decay of, xxx. 2, 3.
Folkmoots, in the time of the Anglo-
Saxons, meaning of, xxxix. 45.
Food, adulterations of, xxiv. 343.
Forces, pairs of, xxxix. 444 — composition
of, 446 — theory of central, 448.
Forest trees, seeds of, vegetate best on the
surface, xxx. 3— remarks on certain ap-
parently unaccountable changes in
forest vegetation in America, 3, 4.
Forests in France, extent of, xxxi. 436.
Forgery, obseiTations of the Committee of
the House of Commons on the punish*
ment of with death, xxiv. 207, 208—
observations thereon, 208-215.
Forget-me-not, xxxvii. 84, 88.
Forging entries of various sorts, a capital
Digitized by
Googk
RirxBW.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
by 26 Gko. III., c. 23, xxiv.
198 — reasons why such statutes ought
not to be repealed, 200.
Forgiveness, verses on, xxxviu. 46.
Fortunes of Nigel, reviewed, xxvii. 337 —
mannerism defined, 337, 338— remarks
on the mannerism of the Waveriey
novels, 339, 340 — analysis of the plot
of the Fortunes of Nigel, with extracts,
342-360 — ^mnaiks on the diiiexent cha-
racters, 361.364.
Fossil remains, obserrations of M. Cuvier
on, xxi. 45-47.
— organic remains, account of, xxxiv.
509 — mammiferous animals, 510-512
— remarks on the marine deposits with
which the strata inclosing them are
covered, 513-520 — remains of fossil
birds, 520 — oviparous quadrupeds, 521
—the Ichthyosaurus, wid. — the Plesio-
saurus, 521, 522 — the Megalosaurus,
523 — fossil reptiles, 5^ — ^Pterodactyls
or Flying Lizards, 524 — herbivorous
quadrupeds, 526 — fossil shells, ijtrf. —
tosaal plants, 527, 528 — ^analogy of the
fossil of Stonesfield and Cuckfield, 531,
532— «bservatiotts on the south-western
coal district of England, 533^535.
Fossilized remains of animals at Preston,
notice of, xxii. 52.
— classification of, xxiv.
148 — account of such remains found in
various parts of the world, 147, 149-156.
France, condition of, during the French
Revolution, and since the re-establish-
ment of the monarchy, xxii. 247, 248
— state of juries there, 256, 257 — ac-
count of the legal divisions of property
there, 257-259 — erroneous account of
the treatment of the French prisoners
in England, 260— observations thereon,
261,262.
■■ state of gardening in the south
of, xxiv. 410.
revolution of, in 1 789, traced in
its previous history, xxv. 536-550 — no-
tice of the States-General and their in-
fluence, 551-556 — proceedings of the
notables and parliament, 557, 558 —
nature of the liberties of the Gallican
church,558 — progress of the Albigenses,
559 — sanguinary conduct of the Inqui-
sition at Toulouse, 560 — and of the
French at their deliberative assemblies,
563, 564 — ravages of the Jacquerie and
others, 566, 567 — cruelty of Francis I.
towards the Calvinists, 567, 568 — causes
that unfit the French for liberty, 569,
570 — diaracter of French literature,
571 — and intellect, 573 — connexion be-
tween the liberty of France and Eng-
land, 574-576.
^>age conduct of, in coxttixroing
the slave-trade contrary to treaty, zzvL
70-72, 74, 75 — ^progress and value of
the productions of the coloniei of
France, 531, 532.
France, condition of the nobilitT of, in
feudal times, xxvii. 148, 149 — its situa-
tion in 1789, 149, 150— and of the
lower classes, 158---the clergy, 154—
magistracy, 155 — ^perplexed state of tho
French finances in the minority of Louii
XV., 156 — revival of the Chambre
Ardente, 157 — deplorable state of the
finances in 1759, 158, 159— origin and
principles of the political sect of Econo-
mists, 160 — ^financial measures of the
Abb6 Terray, 161— of Turgot, 162— of
M. Necker, 163, 164— and of M. Ca-
lonne, 165, 166 — condition of the pea*
santry of France before the Revolution,
166, 167 — ^influence of the atheistical
philosophers, 168, 169 — state of morals
m the reigns of Louis XV. and XVI.,
171-174— influence of the French
women in society, 175, 176 — remazkg
on the French Revolution, 177, 178.
state of, prior to the Revolution,
xxviii. 274, 275 — the states-general
convened, 277 — superseded by the na-
tional assembly, 278 — demotition of
the Bastille at Paris, 279 — usurped
power of the national assembly, 279,
280 — ^massacres at Paris and in the
provinces, 280, 281 — decree for the
abolition of feudal and other rights,
281, 282 — effects of abolishing the
game laws, 283 — embarrassed state of
the French finances, ibid. — ^tumults at
Paris, 285 — ^massacre at Versailles, on
the 5th and 6th of October, 1789, 287-
290— murders at Paris, 292— further
excesses and follies of the national as-
sembly, ibid. — celebration of the festival
of the 14th of July, 293— creation of
assignats, 294 — ^project for the annihi«
lation of revealed religion^ ibid. — car-
ried into eflfect, 295 — ^its consequences,
296 — massacres in various parts of
France, 297 — particulariy of the fto-
testants at Nismes, ibid. — ^spread of the
Revolution to the eastern provinces,
298 — massacres at Avignon, 299—
efforts made to save the royal famfly,
300 — ^plan of their escape to Varennes,
301, 302— account of its frustration,
303, 304-^the king compelled to return
to Paris with the queen and his chil-
dren, 305 — ^remarks on this proceeding,
306 — the king accepts the constitution
proposed by the assembly, 307,308—
table of the component parts of the
constituent assembly, 309, 310 — obser-
vations on its proceedings, 310-314—
conduct of the French government
Digitized by LjOOQ IC
228
PART II.— iKiiEi OP Subjects.
QuARTBKLt
relative to the slave-trade, 168, 169—
ravages committed by the French slave-
traders, 167 — atrocious case of the
French ship, the Rodeur, 171, 172—
impolicy of accumulating slaves in the
French colonies, 177, 178 — origin of
infidelity in France, 510-5 12 — its e£K$cts
there, 509, 5 10 — ^impious tenets of the
French republican infidels, 496, 497.
France, defective education in, xxx. 371 —
why English improvements cannot be
I introduced there, 371, 372— comparison
of British streets, roads, and sewers
with those in France, 376, 377 — and
also of British canals, 380.
— ^ number of English artisans in,
zxxi. 292, 293— account of the cotton
manufactures and machinery used in
them, 394-396 —imperfect state of the
machinery, 397, 398 — average value of
ootton imported before and since the
French Revolution, 399— state of the
woollen manufacture and machinery
used for it, 400, 40 1— Kjuantity of wool
imported and exported in 1822 and
1823, 402 — origin of the silk manufac-
tures, 403-^ present state of them, at
Lyons and Avignon, ibid. — at Tours,
and Paris, 404 — their supposed supe-
riority accounted for, ibid. — manufac-
tories of hemp and flax, 404, 405 —
reasons why the French government
will not readily accede to the importer
tion of machinery, 406, 407 — accoimt
of the principal manufactories of steam-
engines and other machinerj^, 407, 408
— iron mines, 408 — quantity of iron
imported, 409, note — difficulty of trans-
port in France, 409 — inferiority of
France to England in point of canals
and internal navigation, 409, 410 —
accounted for, 410, 411 — miserable
condition of most of the roads, 410 —
coasting trade no remedy for the de-
ficiency of inland navigation, 412 — the
complex machinery of the French go-
vernment, another impediment to ttie
prosperity of manufactures, 412, 413 —
advantages possessed by France over
England, 413 — in climate, productions,
and situation, 413, 414 — low prices of
provisions and of labour, 415 — ^inferi-
ority of France to England in mineral
productions, 416 — abundance of capi-
tal, ibid. — ^the moral character of the
workmen, 416, 417 — and in machinexy,
417, 418. See Iron, Gold, post.
review of her cond\ict with re-
gard to the slave-trade, xxxiv. 583, 586-
592. See Slave-Trade, post.
- observations on the agriculture
and manufactures of, xxxvi. 421, 422.
427, 428«*the central region of, the seat
of extinct volcanoes, 438 — geological
account of the granitic region, com-
prising the area occupied by the ex-
tinct volcanos of Auvergne, Velay, and
Vivarais, 444 — fresh water deposites on
the plain of the Limag^e, 445 — ^tubular
fossils of Auvergne, 447 — total thick-
ness of the fresh-water formation of
the Limagne. 448 — alternation and
intermixture of this formation with V(d-
canic matter, 418, 449 — fresh-water
formation at Menat, 449 — ^incrusting
springs in Auvergne, 449, 450 — fresh-
water ibrmation in the department of
Haute Loire (the old province of Ve-
lay), 451, 452^-description of asso-
ciated rodcs of gpranitic origin, 453—
particularly those called the Puys of the
Mont Dome, 453, 454 — description of
the volcanic cone called the Petit Puy
de Dome, 455 — and the Puy de Lou-
chadiere, 456-— division of these igne-
ous rocks into ancient and modem,
457 — ^account of Mont Dor and its vol-
canic remains, 459-462 — and of the
Cental, 463 — ^volcanic remains in the
lowlands of the Bas Vivarais and
Southern Languedoc, 464 — chrono-
logical classification of these volcanic
phenomena, 465 — ^the first period, 466
— the second period, 467 — ^the third
period, 467, 468 — the fourth period,
469 — on the organic remains of this
period, 470, 471.
France, inefficiency of tlie police, except
for political purposes, xxxvii. 43 — geo-
logy of central, 277 — law of France
respecting the exportation of corn,
427.
prevalence and mischief of beg-
gars in, in the last century, xxxviii. 74
— Jews in, 129 — revolution in, 173 —
effects of a wild spirit of democracy,
ibid. — ^this suppressed by military des-
potism, 174 — fury of democracy fol-
lowed by a thirst of foreign domiuion,
ibid.—al length reduced to submission,
ibid. — changes produced by it on the
continent, 175 — ^interference with Spain.
180.
Frankfort and its diet, notice of, zxxi.
175, 176. '
Fredericks-oord, colony of, xxxviii. 410.
Free-borgh, or Frank-pledge, origin and
nature of, xxxii. 95.
Freedom of Commerce, reports and tracts
on, xxiv. 282 — evils of unlimited free-
dom of, considered, 282, 283 — on
manufactures, 283-288, 294-296— and
.productive industry, 288-290— employ-
ment of capital, 291 — on consumption,
292-294— 4he influence of free trade on
our subsistence and maritime security,
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtibw*
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
229
297-301— proper limits to be assigned
to commerce, 30 1 , 302.
Freemasons, architects of the proudest
Grothic piles, xxv. 146.
Free-thinlung Christians' conference, in-
stituted, xxiii. 574 — questions proposed
for discussion, 574, 575 — theur tenets,
575 — utterly subversive of Christianity,
575, 576 — blasphemous handbills, 576
— activity of their agents in circulating
mfidel tracts, 576, 577.
Free-trade, how far to be extended to
every colonial dependence, xxvi. 527-
530. See Freedom of Commerce^ ante.
French defeated at the battle of Schellen-
berg, xxiii. 24, 25 — Blenheim, 28 —
Ramillies, 40 — Oudenard, 53 — Mapla-
quet, 59, 60 — ^why the French dislike
England, 177 — contrast between them
and the EngUshwhen speaking of their
respective countries, 180, 181 — difier-
ence between the intellectual endow-
ments of the two nations, 181-184 — ^in-
fluence of history and political circum-
stances on their respective characters,
184-1 86—why the French find it diffi-
cult to form just ideas of England, 187-
190 — strictures on the modern French
glory, 194, 195.
■ ignorant of the real state of Eng-
land, and why, xxxiv. 46 — superiorly
of England over France in civilization
by a century and a half, 47, 48 — effects
of vanity on family connexions in
France, 51, 52— state of the woollen
manufactures, 62, 63— origin and pro-
gress of the silk manufactures there,
64-66 — the French trade to Mexico,
why not so flourishing as that of the
English, 95 — moral state of society in
France and England contrasted, 441-
453.
•- army, defeat of, at Campo Mayor,
XXX. 67 — and at Arroyo de Moliuos,
68, 69— anecdote of French levity, 70.
■ domestic architecture, specimens
of, at Rouen, notices of, xxv. 127-133
— H^aracteristics of the French Gothic
style, 134, 135.
French language, value of speaking it
well, too highly rated, xxxviii. 164,
prophets, Wesley's caution againsf,
xxiv. 38.
Bevolution, brief account of, xxxix.
484.
French Serjeant, adventures of, xxxiv.
406^haracter of the book, 417 — ^ii
landed on the island of Cabrera, ibid,
— description of the distribution of
rations among the French prisonersy
418 — their pursuits and amusements,
419 — description of his dramatic per-
formances, 420, 421.
— — trader, disastrous condition o^
xxix. 6, 7--character of the French
nation, 28 — ^their vanity in supposing
their language to be umversal, 438.
Friendship's Offering, xxxvii. 84, 94.
Frost, intense, at Tabreez, xxvi. 448.
Frozen animals, extraordinary resuscita-
tion of, xxviii. 382, 383.
Fullindushee, xxxix. 175.
Funded property, amount of, xxxii. 186—
table of the total number of persons
receiving half-yearly dividends from,
185 — ^remarks thereon, 186.
Funding system, power and importance
of, xxxi. 31 1 — effects of the system as
a branch of government expenditure on
productive industry, &c., 313-324 —
observations on the discharge of the
public debt, 324-326— tlie funding sys-
tem not more expensive as to the col-
lection of taxes than that which is op-
posed to it, 318,319.
Funeral ceremonies of the modern Greeks,
xxiii. 349.
rites of the Western Caledonians,
xxvi. 415.
Funerals, royal, at Sarendib, notice of,
xxi. 376.
• rural, beautiful remarks on,
XXV. 56, 57.
Fusion. See Ga» BhW'pipe,
G.
Gadara. See Oomkait.
Galilee, derivation of the word, xxxix.
373.
Gallapers, tenets of the sect of, xxviii. 17.
Galvanism, how disting^uished from elec-
tricity, XXXV. 243-245.
Gamala. See Oomkait,
Gambling, prevalence of, in South Ame-
rica, XXXV. 134, 135.
Game-laws, one of the most seriouR eYils
of this country, xxxviii. 269 — pursuit
of game, 505.
Gangotree, the source of the Ganges,
dangerous approach to, xxiv. 125^ 126
—description of it, 127, 128.
Gaols, common, observations on, xxx.
422, 423.
Gardening, import of the term, xxiv. 401
— state of, in Lombard^, 409— in Eu-
ropean Turkey, ibid^-^m the south of
Digitized by
Googk
m
PART IL— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QvARTERLt
France and Gennany,410 — ia Russia,
Poland, and Sweden, 41 1 — in Denmark,
Holland, and Flanders, 411, 412. See
Horticulture,
Gardening, landscape, observations on,
xxxvii. 304 — history of, ibid. — im-
provements of Price, 307, 317— Dutch
school, 309 — improvements of Kent,
314— of Browne, 316 — of Knight,
Price, and Repton, 317 — on remunera.
tion for, 319 — materials of, 320 — ^water,
t6iV^.— trees, 321 — grand defect in, ibid.
—want of success in transplanting
large trees, 322 — this difficulty sur-
. mounted, 323. See Tree*.
Oas blowpipe, origin and progress of dis-
coveries with, in the art of fusion, xxiii.
467, 468 — Dr. Clarke's mode of using
it, 468-470 — analogy in its operations
to the nature of volcanoes, 470, 471.
Gaucbos, or peasants of the Pampas,
manners and habits of, xxxv. 125-128
— their mode of slaughtering cattle,
122.
Gavelkind, law of, xxxviii. 271, 272, note.
G^mara, notice o^ xxxv. 89.
■ on the selection of particular
Jewish psalms, xxxviii. 20.
Genealogies, a somrce of the Anglo-Saxon
Chronicles, xxxiv. 270, 271.
(General, remarks on the qualifications of
a, xxii. 385, 386.
GeneTa version uf the Bible, notice of^
xxiii. 297.
G^ius, no thought of, eventually lost,
. xxiii. 426 — ill fortune of the sons of,
427.
Genoa, remarks on the architecture of,
xxxii. 58.
Geography, important discoveries in, re-
sidting from Captain Parry's voyage,
XXV. 207.
— African, elucidations of, xxxiz.
177-181.
.Geological Society of London, notice o^
xxxiv. 162 — and of the Royal Geologi-
cal Society of Cornwall, 1 66 — their
transactions, 507 — importance and pro-
gress of the science of geology, 507-509
— sketch of geological discoveries, 509-
537 — beneficial results of these re-
searches, 535-540. See Fossil Organic
, Bemains.
Geology of the mountains of Soudah, xxv.
30 — of Tripoli and Fezaan, 36, 37— of
, the Arctic regions, 206.
■ — limits of the science of, xxvii.
. 459 — services rendered to it by Werner,
461.
' ' ■ province of, xxix. 138, 139.
■ '■ sciences requisite to the accurate
kiwwle4g« i>f, xxxyi. 440 — it» moral
uses, 475, 476— observations on mo-
dem theorists in geology, 482, 483.
Gteology of Central France, observations
on, xxxvi. 438, and xxxvii. 297. See
France.
Georgia, travels in, xxvi. 437.
« account of an extraordinary
moniuuent in, xxxv. 389 — its state, 390
— manners of the inhabitants, 393, 394
—especially of the women, 396 — pro-
ductions, 394, 395 — ^population, 395 —
historical notices of this country, 392,
393.
Geraza, supposed ruins of^ visited by Mr.
Buckingham and Mr. Bankes, xxvi.
383— probably those of Pella, 383, 384
— Mr. Buckmgham's account of the
antiquities discovered there, 385-387 —
his plan of them, and transcripts of
inscriptions, 387.
German theatre, evil influence of French
example on, xxix. 427, 428.
Germans, deficiencies in the intellectual
character of, accounted for, xxxii. 88.
Germany, estimable character of the in-
habitants of, xxiii. 435 — why they are
attached to secret societies, t6ic^.*_the
real design of such societies, 336 —
description of a German inn, 438, 439
— and of the sceu^ on the Rhine,
439, 440 — constitution and proceedings
of the secret tribunal, 441, 442 — forest
of Odenwald described, 442, 443 — espe-
cially Weimar and Stutgard, ibid, — -
want of discipline, the cause of the
irregularities of the German universities,
446— the professors there, dependent on
the students, 447, 448 — evils of the
subdivision of property, 449— causes of
the stagnation of German commerce,
450 — political state of Germany, 4dl-
453 — ^public journals there on the in-
crease, 453— curious blunder in one,
453,454.
■ state of gardening in. xziv.
410.
-i— I— tour in, xxxi. 174 — ^notice of
Frankfort and of the Germanic Diet,
175, 176 — description of Weimar and
of the grand-ducal government, 176-
178 — of Jena and the German univer-
sities, 178-182 — ^present state of Saxony,
183-186— of the electorate of Hesstt
Cassel, 187— of Prussia, 187-191— of
Austria audits dependencies, 191-196
— character of the work, 197.
• notice of the wines o^ xxxii
256, 257.
• mode of lecturing in the uni-
versities of, xxxvi. 244 — benefits result-
ing from the subdivision of employment
there; 247^ 849.
Digitized by
Googk
Biyaw*
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
t«I
Qennaajy three Jewish uniyeruties in,
xxxWii. 123— its unstable state, 173 —
the empire crushed by the French rero-
lutioD, 175 — new confederacy formed,
176 — its weakness, 179. See also
Austria.
— — universities of, hives of sedition
and turbulence, xxxix. 8.
Gerusalemme of Tasso, analysis of, xxi.
560-553.
Gharian mountains, notice of the inhabi-
tants of, zxv. 26.
Chadamis, a town in the interior of Africa,
xxxviii. 101 — ^payg tribute to the Tuaric,
102.
Ghent, invested by the Duke of Marlbo-
rough, xziii. 57.
University of, xxziz. 4— treaty of,
184.
Ghiseh, second pyramid of, explored, xziv.
165.
Ghoorkas, incursions of, into the territories
of the East India Company, xxiv. 103 —
their character. 111, 112--high notions
of military obedience and fidelity, 113,
114 — the Roman catapulta known to
and used by them, 115.
Ghor, valley of, described, xxii. 441.
Ghost story, authenticated, ^v. 308.
Glamis, injured under the guise of im«
provement, xxxvii. 314.
Gipsy countenance on the paintings of
Egyptian temples, xxviL 235.
Glasgow University, course of theological
education prosecuted at, xzxvi. 226.
Glass manufacture, increase of, in Eng-
land, xxxii. 178, 179.
— — superior manufacture of in England,
for optical and astronomical purposes,
xjoiv. 75, 7^,
Glenco, massacre of, xxxvii. 257.
Gloucester, notice of the penitentiary at,
XXX. 427.
Glow-worm described, xxxix. 430.
Gnadenthal, Moravian settlement at, de>
scribed, xxii. 229.
Goat-sucker of South America, description
of,xxxiii. 324, 325.
Goblin Demon, legendary account of, xxii.
358, 359.
GOD, just sentiments on the love of, xxi.
120.
Gold, &c., transmutation of the baser
metals into, xxvi. 199 — ^use of, prior to
{ that of iron, xxxiv. 72 — superiority of
the French in working, 73.
Gh>ld, extensive use of, xxxviii. 196. See
Alchemy,
— >*- mines of Brazil, account of, xxxii.
134-136-~modeof collecting gold, 136.
Gk>od Hope. See Ga^ of Qwd Hope,
Gospel of the birth of Mary; proved to be
spuriouf^ JX?» 357-360.
GK>thic architecture of Franca, character*
istics of, XXV. 134, 135 — ib% pointed
Gk)thic, or English architecture^ ii^
vented in Normandy, 139-142--«up«
posed eastern origin of the Gothic ardi
considered, 144-146.
Gottingen University, state of education
in, xxxi. 187.
Gk>urnou, caverns of, explored by M. Bel-
zoni, xxiv. 147, 148.
Government of America, remarks on the
pretended cheapness of^ xxi. 163-
165.
observations on theoriea re-
specting the origin of, xxx. 25.
Granby, a novel, remarks on the plan and
execution of, xxxiii. 488-490.
Gratitude, noble instances o^ in certain
Chinese, xxi. 77, 7S,
Gravitation, universal, xxxviii. 7.
Gravity, observations on the influence o^
xxii. 131, 132.
■ specific, of the human body in
water, xxxiv. 35, and mote*
Graziers of the Cape of QoodL Hope, ac-
count of, xxii. 220-226.
Great Britain, increase of wealth and
power in, xxxix. 33— -colonies origina-
ting in, superior to those of any other
nation, 215 — ^the settlements of Spain
and Portugal cited in proof, ibid. — ^fur-
ther proof in the colonies of Americai
while under the dominion of the parent
state, 216 — commercial negotiations of,
with the United States. (See United
States.) E£fect of the revival of learning
on, 477 — effect on, of the invention of
printing, ibid. — its spirits of inquiry and
enterprise urg^ on by the discovery of
a passage to the East Indies by the
Cape of Good Hope, and of the exist-
ence of the continent of America, 4/8
— effect of the rise and progress of the
reformation on, 479 — effix:t of the civil
wars on, 480 — ^revolt of the American
colonies, 482 — changes produced on,
and on Europe, by the French revolu-
tion, 484 — by the return of peace, 467
— ^improvement in the condition of all
ranks of its inhabitants, 499— founda-
tion on which its present greatness rests,
in appearance somewhat insecure, 504— -
its pubUc debt, 507 — its poor rates, 509
— ^its redundant population, 510--«k-
travagant notions stren^hened or en^
gendered by the prosperity of the last
thirty years, 512— Talue of its local
position, 513— value and variety of the
products of its soil, 514 — ^its minerals,
coalfields, and fisheries, 515— ci^ital
of its merchants, t6tV<.— how its pce-
eminence among the powers of Europe
ig to be upheld; 517.
Digitized by
Googk
232
PART It— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUABTBRLT
Great Desert of Mississippi, described,
xxix. 16-18.
Great rolls, period of their commencement,
^□ndx. 49 — original intention of, 50.
Great Seal, its first attachment to statutes,
xxux. 47 — that of William the Con-
queror described, ibid,
Greece, remarks on the progress of arts
and sciences in, xxi. 25, 26.
— ^— ancient, notice of essays on the
institutions, government, and manners
of the States of, xxii. 163-l65~estimate
of the character of the Athenians, 165-
169— their love of the theatre, 169 and
no/e^^construction of the Greek drama,
especially tragedy, 170,171-174 — ^lesson
of Iscomachus to his wife, 175-178 —
analysis of Aristophanes's Lysistrata,
182-188— satirical verses on them, 200-
202. See Atheniana, ante.
■ character of the di£^nt histo-
rians of, xxv. 154 — Dr. Gillies and Mr.
Mitford, 154-156 — ^withwhat spirit the
history of Greece ought to be written,
156-158 — ^plan of a plubsophical history
ofthat country, 169-174.
•— on the legal oratory of, xxix. 314
—description of an Athenian dicast, 314,
315 — analysis of Lycurgus's speech
against Leocraies, 319-322— character
and misfortunes of the orator Ando-
cides, 323 — ^notice of Lysias's speech
against him, 324, 325 — and of his
reply, 326~character of Lysias as au
orator, 327-329~comparison between
him and Isaeus, 328 — analysis of his
speech against Eratosthenes, with ex-
tracts and remarks, 330-333 — and of
Hyperides's speech against Aristogei-
ton, 334-337.
■ notice of the ancient wines of,
zxxii. 237 — and of the modem wines
of, 258.
- evils and defects of the courts of
justice in, xxxiii. 335-355.
modem, account of, and of its
inhabitants, xxiv. 325 — its physical
geography, 326, 327— population, 327
• — mountains, plains, and climate, 328,
329— productions, 330-334— account of
the Vlaki, or migratory shepherds, 334
-—commerce, 335 — character of the
Greeks of the continent, 336 — especially
of Ali Pasha, ibid., 337— the Albanians,
337 — and the Mainiotes, 338, 399 —
notice of the district of Maina, 339,
340 — character of the modem Athe-
nians, 340, 341 — ^wretched state of the
inferior Ghreek clergy, 342 — character
of the Archbishop of Larissa, 343 — ac-
count of the Caloyers of Salympria,
343, 344 — and of the monastery of
Mount Athos, 345; 346, 347.^attach-
ment of the modem Greeks to the su-
perstitious ceremonies of their ances-
tors, 347 — ^their nuptial ceremonies, 348
—funeral rites, 349 — amusements, 350
—the Romaika, or circular dance, 350,
351— dances of tbe Albanians, 351 —
attachment of the women to the bath,
and its effect on their constitutions, 352
— general character of the modem
Greeks, 353, 354 — their habitations and
domestic arrangements described, 354-
356 — state of Eterature among them,
357 — progress of education among
them, 359.
Greek bubble, verses on, xxxv. 222.
— committee, remarks on the conduct
of the emissaries of, xxxv. 224 — parti-
cularly of Lieutenant-Colonel Leicester
Stanhope, 224-226 — performances of
the committee, 227— outline of their
money transactions, 227, 228— conduct
of Lord Byron m Greece, 229, 230—
transactions connected with the second
Greek loan, 231, 232— composition of
the Greek committee, 232-235— expo-
sure of the conduct of the American
Greek committee, 235, 236.
drama and mythology, remarks on,
xxix. 30, 31.
■ language, causes of the preservation
of, for so many centuries, xxiii. 137-141
—-alterations effected in it by the Ma-
cedonians about the time of Alexander,
141 — ^at what period most pure, 141,
142— stmcture of the Greek of the Sep-
tuagint version of the Old Testament,
142, 143 — instances of the declining
purity of the Greek language in the
first ages of the Christian Church, 143
145 — particularly in the sixth century,
145^hanges in the terminations of
Romaic Greek words, 146, 147 — ^the
afl5nity of the Romaic Greek to the
Hellenic, why greater than the affinity
of the Italian to the Latin, 147 — illus-
trations, 147-149 — strictures on the pro-
nunciation of certain Greek letters, 149-
151 — and on the accentual mode of
reading and speaking, 151-153 — the
reason why there are no standard works
in the Romaic or modern Greek, 154.
— — ^~— — modem, mode of study-
ing, considered, xxii. 311, 312— diffi-
culty of compiling lexicons to the Greek
language, 311 — notice of the principal
lexicons previous to the revival of lite-
rature, 306-310 — and subsequent to that
period, 312-315.
— sculpture, character of, xxxiv. 119.
Greeks, neutrality of Great Britain to-
wards, vindicated, xxviii. 474, 475 —
inquiry into the line of policy which
ought to be pursued towards them, 475
Digitized by
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BxTsmwi
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
233
—past and ulterior proceedings for their
emancipation, 47&481 — ^the moral, re-
ligious, and intellectual amelioration of
C^ece, the only probable means of
benefiting that country, 481, 482 — pros-
pect of l^ppiness and prosperity to the
Greeks, in the event of their being re-
stored to freedom, 482 — ^probable con-
sequences that would result to Russia
from the possession of Greece, 483, 484
•—physical and commercial advantages
of Greece, 485-487 — outline of the con-
stitution which appears most adapted to
the state of liberated Greece, 489-490
—concluding address to the Greeks,
492, 493.
Greeks, generous conduct of the Ionian
government towards, zxix. 108, 109 —
remarks on their contest with the Turks,
112.
■ true policy of England with re-
spect to them, zzxviii. 185-»trea^ re«
specting them, 186^-latter ages of By-
zantine history, 443.
Greenwich Hospital out-pensioners, per-
sonating, a capital ofience, xxiv. 200—
reasons why 3 Geo. III. c. 16, should
not be repeale<l, 201.
— — and Chelsea hospitals, wis-
dom of the establishment and mainte-
nance of, xxxvi. 487.
Gunpowder, the use of, when first known,
xxi. 193, 194.
— ^— known and used in Ama, be-
fore it was known in Europe, xxiv. 321.
curious effect of thunder on.
xxxviii. 235.
Gymnotus Electricus, experiments with,
xxi. 337, 338.
Gypsum, importance of, as a manure, xjdii*
378, 379.
H.
Hackelberq, legend of the huntsman of,
xxii. 369.
Hajji Baba, adventures of, xzx. 199 —
comparison of them with the Memoirs
of Anastasius, 200 — ^and with the Ara-
bian Nights, 201 — abstract of the work,
with extracts and remarks, 202-215.
Halberstadt, in Ghsrmany, bold attack on,
by the Duke of Brunswick, xxii. 490,
491.
Half castes, in India, observations on the
state of, XXXV. 60.
Halle, first institution for the conversion
of the Jews, formed at, xxxviii. 133.
Hanmierfest town, notice of, xxx. 131.
Hanover, its connexion with England,
xxxviii. 178.
Happiness, remarks on Mr. Gisbome's
view of the operation of present happi-
ness, xxi. 60.
Hardware, superiority of England in every
species of, xxxiv. 72.
Harem of a Crim Tartar, described, xxix.
131, 132.
Harmony, notice of the settlement of,
xxvii. 96.
Haro, a noble Spanish family, supposed
demoniacal origin of, xxii. 362, 363.
Harrogate waters, properties of, xxv. 221.
Hastings, river, in New South Wales, no-
tice o( xxiv. 69.
Hattemistes, a Dutch sect, notice of, xxviii.
11.
Haute Loire, volcanic phenomena in the
department of, xxxvL 451-462.
Havannah, state of the sUv^trade at,
zzxiv. 592.
Hayti, independence of, declared, xxi. 449
horrid massacres of the whites, i6tV/. 450
— Dessalines crowned emperor, 450—
character of him and of his govern-
ment, ibid., 451 — his assassination, 451
— succeeded by Christophe, ibid, —
Hayti divided into two parts, the repub-
lican and the royal, ibtd. — character of
Petion, and of Christophe, 452-453--
iotemal administration of the two divi-
sions, 454 — ^their military force, 455—
population, 456 — Boyer, president of the
republic, suspected of a design to betray
it to the French, 457 — ^progress of edu-
cation and the arts among the Haytians,
458 — of religion, 459 — future prospects
of Hayti, t6iJ., 460.
soon stocked with European animals,
and produce for the European market,
xxxviii. 197 — city of St. Domingo bet^
ter built than most in Spain, 211— dis-
graceful failure of an English expedition
to, 222 — commemorated by a festival
in honour of the land crabs, 223.
and see Si, Domingo,
Health, influence of the dread of death on,
xxvii. 117, 118.
— ^— of invalids, not promoted by long
and precarious journeys, xxxviii. 152^"
maxims for preserving, 509.
Healths, origin of drinking, xxxii. 243.
Heart of Mid-Lothian, a novel, by the
author of Waverlev, analysis o^ with
remarks, xxvi. 115-120.
Heath, larch trees injurious to, xxxviii.
441.
Hebi«ir literature, proofs of the culti?ation
Digitized by
Googk
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PART II.— INDBX OF SUBJECTS.
QUABTXBUt
of^ in tiM reigni of EHzabeth tndJunes
I., xxiii. 299-303.
Hedge-sparrow, manneri and habiit of>
zxxiz.418.
Hellenic lang^ge, cultiTation of, extend-
ing, xxiii. 358.
Henry VIII., the . play of, how got up
under Mr. Kemble's cIirection,xxxiv.228.
Hep, or war-whoop against the Jews,
xxxviii. 117.
Herefordshire, prevalence of beggars in,
two centuries ago, xxxviii. 68.
Hermitage wine, notice of, xxxii. 252,
. 253.
Heroic and romantic poetry of the Italiansi
comparison between, xxi. 544-548.
^e8se Cassel, present state of the electo*^
rate of, xxxi. 187.
Hessian fly, remark on, xxx. 7.
Hetsrae, or female friends at Athensf, man-
ners and condition of, described, xxii.
291-302. See Greece, Athens,
Hiatus, frequency of, in ancient poets, xxvii.
61.
Hieroglyphics, ancient, interpreted by Dr.
Young, xxiv. 160, 161.
■ ■ Egyptian, reiearches into,
xxviii. 190*193 — copy of an hierogly-
phic alphabet, 194.
Hlerophulos, the letters of, their publica-
tion, a violation of the Maynooth sta-
tutes, xxxvii. 481 — sentiments contained
in them, 482.
Highways, importance of, on canals, xxiii.
97— testimonies to the bad state of the
roads near London, 99, 100— improve-
ments of certain roads, 1 00, 1 1 — curved
roads recommended, 102 — too great
convexity the prevalent fault in forming
• roads, 103 — their materials should be
' broken small, ibid,, 104 — suggestions
for improving roads on unsound bot-
toms, 105 — best mode of keeping roads
in repair, 106 — ^partial paving recom-
' mended, 107 — suggestions for improv-
■ ing highways, 108 — the appointment
of country or district surveyors, and the
union of several trusts within ten miles
of London, 108,109 — combining all the
existing highway laws into one code,
109 — ^benefit of a general commutation
for statute labour, ibid. — causes of the
defective state of parish roads, and its
remedy, 109, 111.
Himalaya Mountains, abstract of Captain
Webb's observations on the height of,
xxii. 416, 417^1evation of the Nitee
' Ghaut or Pass, 423.
' the Imaus of the
ancients, xxiv. 103 — names and general
direction of the chain, 104, 105— H:ha-
racter and height of the inferior hills,
105, 106—Btate of ngriculture, 107, 108
— ^lyandry of the inhabitaatai 108,
109— -singular customs, 109, 110 — pro-
ductions and culture of the Sine range,
110— description of the mountaineers,
111, 112 — the Roman catapulta in use
among them, 114, 115 — singular mode
of smelting iron, 115 — state of Com-
harseiu, ibid, — temple and village of
Manjwee, 116 — pass and range of Mo-
ralkeJLanda, ibid, — notice of the town of
Rampoor, 117 — singular mode of cross-
ing the rivers that flow through these
mountains, 117, 118 — character of the
natives, 1 18, 1 1 9 — ^the musk deer found
here, 1 19— and the unicorn of the scrip-
tures, 120 — description of Jumnotsee,
the source of the river Jumna, 122-124
— dangerous travelling to G^gotree,
the source of the Gauges, 12&-127*~
description of it, and of the peaks of
Roodroo Himala, 127, 128 — ^remarks on
the elevation of the Himala Mountains,
129, 130 — were crossed by various early
travellers, 337-339 — and recently by
Lieutenant Gerard, 340.
Hindoo countenance of Egyptian paint-
ings, xxvii. 235.
Hindoos, progressive improvement of,
XXXV. 446-^8 — suggestions for their
further improvements, 468.
Hispaniola. See Hajfti.
Historians, modem, of Greece, remarks on,
XXV. 154, 155.
History, on modes of writing, xxxviL 194
^-qualifications of a writer of, 197,
198.
sources of, xxxix. 251 — individual
biography and chronicles, 251-253 —
difficulty of extracting truth from th«
scanty memorials of remote ages, 253^
254. See Anglo SaxoM.
local, value of, xxxix. 360.
• of ancient Greece, view of the
writers of, xxv. 154— philos(^>hiciU, of
Greece, idea of, 169-174.
Hobart Town, in Van Diemen's Island,
account of, xxiii. 75, 76.
Hohenlinden, battle of, xxii. 393 — ^nuli-
tary observations on it, 393, 394.
Holland, state of gardening in, xxiv. 41 L
412.
remarks of Sir Walter Raleigh,
on the commerce of, xxviii. 435, 436.
— — — account of the poor colonies of,
xxxviii. 410, 426.
Holy Alliance, its ostensible and real ob>
ject, xxxviii. 179 — equally subversive of
external independence and internal free-
dom, 188.
■ See Spain,
— Spirit, ordinary and extraordinary
operations of, how distinguished, xzxi.
27'<-«rror8 resulting from sot distin-
Digitized by
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BSTSIHr.
INDEX OF SX^JEOTS.
286
guishing them,^r«/, the attributing to
a supernatural influence feelings and
conduct which may be referred to the
effects of very early education, ibid. —
illustration of this error, by an extract
£rom the Memoirs of the Rev. Thomas
Scott, 27-29 —. remarks thereon, 29—
seconMy, in attributing to supernatural
agencies, the natural and beneficial ef-
fects of the discipline of circumstances,
30 — this error illustrattd in extracts
from the Memoirs of the Rev. John
Kewton, 31-37 — ^remarks thereon, 38-
40 — thirdly^ in attributing to superna-
tural influence those moral changes,
which arise from the power of strong
belief to realise the thing believed, 40,
41 — illustration of this error from the
Life of Madam Guion, 42-46 — remarks
thereon, 47 — and on the mischievous
effects of these errors, 48-50.
Home, beautiful verses on, xxxii. 213, 214.
Home Missionary Society, remarks on
the plan and objects of, xxxii. 24-26.
Homilies, style of, xxix. 298.
Hoon, a town of Fezzan, notice of, xxv.
30.
Hope^v^ses on, xxiii. 169.
Horses, number of, kept by the principal
coach proprietors in and near London,
xxiiL 99, too.
— wild, singular mode of taking,
aLxix. 18 — anciently eaten by the Tar-
tars, 132, 133 — management o^ in the
Crimea, 132 — description of a Crim-
Tartar horse race, 134.
Horticultural societies, transactions of,
xxiv. 400 — origin of horticulture, 401
— state of, among the Jews, 402 — the
Romans, 402, 403 — ^in England during
the early ages, 404 — in the sixteenth
century, ibtd, — in the reign of James I.,
405 — of Charles II., 406 — improve-
ments in it by Philip Miller, 407 — pro-
gress of, in Scotland, 4 08-— comparison
of British horticuhure with that of other
countries, 409-412 — the horticultural
productions of Britain superior to those
of all other countries, 413, 4 14 origin
of the London and Caledonian Horti-
cultural Societies, 416 — character of
their transactions, 417, 418.
Horticultural Society, notice of^ xxxiv.
162.
Horticidtuire, progress of, in England,
xxxu. 163.
— — -— ~ in the fifteenth century,
zxxviii. 199.
Hottentots, oppressions of, under the
Dutch government, xzii. 221 — their
former state, 226, 227— description of
the Moravian settlement among them,
at Gnadenthal, 229.
Hottentots, character of, vindicated, xxv.
454.
the first Christian mission
among, xxxii. 4, 5.
House of Commons, hours of business in,
in Lord Clarendon's time, xxii. 104—
strictures on a reform in, 526-530.
— curious notice of, xxx.
537.
House of Lords, appellate jurisdiction o^
xxx. 286 — number of s^peals and writs
of error determined there, between the
years 1737 and 1822, 286, 287— the
Lord Chancellor's parliamentary duties
there, doubled since the time of Lord
Hardwicke, 288 — ^vindication of the new
arrangement made bv the Lords for
determining appeals, 288-290.
Houses of Correction, observations on,
xxx. 423.
Houses, number of, in England, paying
taxes, xxxii. 195, 196 — increased build-
ing of, 169.
Houssa caravans, xxxix. 154.
Hu^, the metropolis of Cambodia, notice
of, xxx. 362.
fortifications of, xxxiii. 131, 132.
Hulks, described, on board of which the
French prisoners of war were confined^
xxvi. 7| 8— erroneous statements of the
numbers confined therein, 2-5 — the
numbers actually confined, and itateof
their health, 8.
— observations, xxx. 424.
Humming bird, of South America, xxxiii.
326.
Hungarians, or Ungri, irruption of into
Europe, xxix. 119.
Hungary, notice of the wines of, xxxii.
257.
Huns, ancient, notice of, xxix. 116, 117.
Hunting, Persian mode of, xxxvi. 358.
Hyaenas, proved to have inhabited the
cave of Kirkdale, xxviL 466 — instances
of their ferocity, 467.
mode of destroying bones by,
xxix. 151,152.
Hymns, adbapted to the weekly church
service, xxxviii. 16 — of the Church of
Scotland, 17— of the Greeks, 18— of
the Jews, 19 — of the primitive church,
36 — rules for the composition of, 41^-
specimens of, 43, 49 — general observa-
tions on, 52.
Hyppocras, a sort of spiced wine, notice
of, xxxii. 245.
Digitized by
Googk
m
PART U.«IND£X OF SUBJ^ECTS.
QUABTBULT
I.
Iceboats, xxxvii. 297.
Icelandersi tutelary spirits of^ xxii. 366^
367.
Icelandic fiction, vestiges of, in an Eng-
lish nursery tale, yxi. 104-107.
Ichthyosaurus, a fossil oviparous quadru-
ped, notice of, xxxiv. 521.
Icon Basilike, inquiry concerning the
author of, xxxii. 467 — ^impression pro-
duced on the puhlic mind by this pub-
lication, 468 — notice of the Uterary con-
troversy respecting its author, 468-470
—abstracts of the external evidence in
favour of Dr. Gauden having composed
it, with remarks, 471-492 — ^external
evidence in favour of King Charles I.
having been the author ofj 493, 494 —
proofs that the king was qualified to
compose it, 495 — and that Dr. Gauden
was incapable of writing it, ibid. — in-
ternal evidence from an examination of
the book itself, 497-505.
Idolatry, abolition of, iu Owhyhee, xxxv.
425-427.
Ignorance, pharmaceutical, instance of,
XXV. 217.
Ilderim, a poem, by Henry Gaily Knight,
extract from, with remarks, xxii. 151,
152.
Iliad of Homer, remarks on the editors of^
xxvii. 40.
Illinois, account of Birkbeck's settlement
in, xxvii. 90-93.
Immorality of the revenue laws, xxi. 408,
409.
■' of the French comedy, in-
stances of, with remarks, xxix. 430,
431.
Immortality of the soul, not unknown to
Moses and the IsraeUtes, Xxvii. 522,
523.
Impressment of seamen, necessity of, dis-
cussed, xxxvii. 399.
Imprisonment, considerations on, as a
specific for the cure and prevention of
every sort of crime, xxiv. 245-247 — ^in-
efficacy of, for the reformation of con-
victs, 248-250 — ^prisons and houses of
correction more efficacious than con-
finement on board the hulks, 251 —
remarks on the description of persons
imprisoned, 253, 254--the present sys-
tem of imprisonment not calculated to
produce terror, 255-257.
Impropriations, notice of a society for
purchasing them, in the reign of Charles
I.,xxiii.561, 562.
Indosure actS; number of; passed between
the years 1797 and 1827, xxxvi. 400—
and between the reigns of Qutren Anne
and George IV., with the extent of land
inclosed, 401.
Inclosure acts, why in some instances in-
jurious, xxxviii. 431, 437.
; — ; See Waste Lands.
India, instance of burning of widows in,
xxiv. 335.
■ beneficial labours of the Church
Missionary Society in, xxxii. 39.
failure of the Baptist missions in,
accounted for, xxxiii. 38-40 — benefit to
be expected there from our church
establishment, 41.
• — • effects of transferring the ^vem-
ment of India to his majesty's mmisters,
xxxv. 33, 34— qualifications of the di-
rectors of the East India Company for
administering this government, 36—
suggestions for regulating the business
of the directors, 37, 38-41— and the par
tronage of the directors, 39 — proof that
services in India are not overlooked in
England, 41 — examination whether
there be any principle of exclusion to
the employment of individuals, who may
have served in India, from a share in
the home administration of that empire,
41-44 — proof of the attention given in
parliament to the affairs of India, 44 —
considerations on the local government
of India, 45-49 — and on the propriety
of employing natives in provincial
councils, 49, 50 — observations on the
mode of levying the land revenue of
India, 51— on the qualifications of the
civil servants of the East India Com-
pany, 53, 54 — suggestions for regu-
lating the Indian army, 55, 56 — and for
rewarding native officers, 57 — observa-
tions on the British community in India,
58, 59 — on the condition of the half
castes or Anglo-Indians, 60— on the
propagation of Christianity in India, 61
— and on the state of the press, 62, 63
— particularly as it respects the British
community, 64 — and the native popu-
lation, 65 — ^progressive improvement ia
the natives of India, 446-448 — ^wise
conduct of Bishop Middleton, 449 —
mode of travelling in India, 460, 461—
character of the different nations in-
habiting that country, 464-466 — sug.
gestions for the improvement of the
Hindoos, 468 — ^remarks on the archi-
tectural antiquities of India, 471, 472.
See Burmese War,
Digitized by
Googk
KxVIBIft
INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
237
India, examination of the
the invasion of, by the Russians, xxxvi.
1 29-136 — observations on the treatment
of the native Indian army, 137, 138.
■ journey through the upper provinces
of, xxzvii. 100 — remarks on the variety
of complexion in the people, 105 — ^idols,
ibid, — Durbar, or native levee of the
governor-general, 107 — Bengalee boats,
109 — ruins of the palace at Sib-uibashi,
109, 110 — ^interview with the rajah, 111
— bulls dedicated to Siva, lli — inter-
view with the nawab at Dacca, 113 — a
Mussulman fakir, 115 — description of
Benares, 117— effects of the British go-
vernment on, 119 — ^some of the brah-
mins disposed to religious inquiry, 124 —
schools for the native youth, tbid. — burn-
ing of widows, 125 — various regulations
respecting it, 130 — effects of British
interference, 132 —• numbers burned,
134 — infanticide, 139 — ^policy of pre-
venting self-bumiags by legal enact-
ments, examined, 143-146. See East
JndicM and Weit Indies,
• Central, Geographical Sketch of,
zxix. 385 — boundaries and surface,
ibid. — productions, 386 — ^principal cities,
ibid, — population, 388, 389 — account of
its component piurts : the Mahomedans,
389— Mahrattas, 389, 390— character
and manners of the Rajpoots, 386, 387,
391,392— their priests, 393— notice of
the classes that claim kindred to the
Bajpoots, ibid. — the Sondies or half-
cast8,393, 394 — ^bankers and merchants,
394— Mewatties, t^irf. — Bheels, 394-
396 — other tribes, particularly the
Hungs, 396 — ^revenues of Central In-
dia, 397 — present improve«l state of the
country, 398 — ^territorial divisions and
native hereditary officers, 399, 400 —
schools and festivals, 401, 402 — self-
immolation, rare, 402 — singular in-
stance of self-destruction, 402, 403 —
prevalent belief of witchcraft, 403 —
considerations on the best mode of
governing and preserving our dominion
in India, 406-410, 413, 414— remarks
on the versions of the scriptures in the
languages of modem India, 411 — and
on the mode of propagating Christi-
anity there, 412.
■ extraordinary instance of mater-
nal affection in, xxv. 369-371 — mis-
sions of the Atures, 369.
Archipelago, remarks on the abo-
riginal races of inhabitants, xxviii. 1 11<
116 — on the languages spoken there,
117, 119, 120 — remarks on the policy
to be pursued in future intercourse with
these islands, 127-129.
Indians, South American, their avidity tn
pigments, xxi. 349.
— — of Mexico, account of, zxx. 158,
159.
■ of North America, purity of their
religious belief, xxxi. 89 — ^their notions
of a future state, 90 — object and mode
of their worship, 91 — their habitual
piety, 92 — prophets and sorcerers, 93—
their moral character, ibid, — destructive
effects of intoxication upon an Indian,
94— condition of women among them,
95, 96 — account of Indian courtship,
96, 97 — polygamy prevalent among
them, 97 — divorce practised, ibid,-^
character and anecdotes of Indian
warriors, 98-100— death of a Winne-
ba^o chief, 100 — vindication of the
alliance of the British government in
North America with native tribes, and
their valuable services during the con-
test with the United States, 101-106—
speech of a chief of the Kansas tribe,
82, 83 — account of Tecumth^, a cele-
brated Indian prophet, 107 — reasons
for thinking that the extermination of
the Indian tribes is in rapid progress,
1 08 — proper line of conduct to be
adopted towards them, 109, 110.
Indigo, great improvement in the manu-
facture of, in the East Indies, xxxviii.
501.
Industry, productive sources of, would be
injured by unlimited freedom of com-
merce, XXIV. 288 •^290.
Infant schools, objections to, considered,
xxxii. 426, 427 — reasons why they
should not be gratuitous, 428.
Infanticide prevalent in China, xxi. 77.
Infidel tracts circulated with activity,
xxiii. 576, 577.
Infidelity, opinion of Michaelis on the
spread of, xxiii. 568.
real origin of, in France, xxviii.
510, 511 — its effects in that countnr,
509, 510— impious tenets of the repub-
lican infidels, 496, 497 — ^unsuccessful
attempts of David Williams to esta-
blish an infidel liturgy and worship in
London, 494, 495 — review of the ax*
cumstances which paved the way for
introducing infidelity into England,
512, 513 — ^its progress there during the
reign of Charles II., 5 14 — facilitated by
the writings of Hume, Voltaire, and
Rousseau, 515 — ^progress of infidelity in
England previous to the French Revo-
lution, 520 — its present state in that
country, 522 — ^remarks on the different
classes of infidels there, 523, 524—
secret misery of unbelievers, 524.
— — decay in the trade of, xxx. 472,
Digitized by
Googk
9M
PABT II.-'INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
QuAftTua.1
InfidelHy, Mmarki on, zzxfilL 525.
Infidels, disingenuitj o^ eiposed, zxy.
348, 349.
Ing^ush Tartars, notice of the Scotch mis-
sion to, XXXV. 383.
Injunctions in Chancery, origin of, xzvii.
124, 125 — ^the only security of literary
proper^, 125.
Inns of Germany described, zxiiL 438,
439.
— in America, filthiness of, xxvii. 78.
— — for student^ origin of, xxxiii. 263.
Inoculation, the plague propagated by,
xxxiii. 238.
Inquisition, barbarities of, at Toulouse,
XXV. 560.
— — ^— when first introduced into
Spain, xxix. 244 — commits to the
fiames all Hebrew and Arabic books,
245 — ^its sanguinary persecutions of the
Protestants, 252-256— fatal to litera-
ture in Spain, 258-260 — ^patronized and
encouraged by Philip v., 264 — perse-
cutes all persons suspected of republican
principles, 268.
— ' at Lisbon, xxxi. 387.
• xxxvii. 73 — suppression of
the Reformation in Italy, cmefly owinir
to, 73, 83. ^> / 6
Insanity, erroneous notions of the ancients
concerning, xxiv. 169, 170 — arguments
and facts to show, that recoveries from
insanity would exceed those from cor-
poreal diseases, were the same chances
of cure given in both cases, 173-176 —
comparative view of cures of insane
persons in different institutions for luna-
tics, 194 — ^proofs that insanity is not
increasing nor extraordinarily prevalent
in England, 176-180, 182, 183— has
increased in Ireland, 181 — religion,
how far a cause or an effect of insanity,
184-189— on the qualifications of super-
intendents and keepers of insane per-
sons, 190, 191 — necessity of keeping
registers of them, 191 — suggestions for
the proper management of lunatics, 192,
193— importance of an inquiry into the
present condition of asylums for the
insane, 193.
• considerations on the symptoms
and moral causes of, xxvii. 110-115 —
injurious effects of solitude on, 118,
119.
of Cowper, observations
XXX. 188, 189, 190, 192.
Inscription, sepulchral, at Rome, xxviii.
328.
Inscriptions, ancient, to the Ptolemies,
xxii456.
Insects, torment of, in parts of American
India, xxv. 374.
Insects, eztraordinavy instance of the
▼iradonsness of the eggs or seeds o^
XXX. 5, 6 — devastations of various^ in
America, 6, 8 — and in England, 8.
Insolvents, number of, at New York, xxL
5, Mo/e^— state of the American zasolvent
laws, ibid.
Inspiration, Unitarian theory of, lefnied,
XXX. 81-83.
Instantaneity, how far requisite to eon-
version, xxiv. 22.
Instinct, remarks on the meaninjr of the
term, in the writings of Dr. Reid and
Professor Stewart, xxvi. 505-512.
Integrals, defined, benefit of, xxii. 139.
Integration of equations, observations on,
xxU. 134-136.
Integ^i^, extraordinary instance of, zxx.
Intellect, French, character of, xxv. 573.
Intellectual character of the Germans,
causes of the deficiencies of, xxxii. 87,
88 — superiority of the intellectual cha-
racter of Englishmen accounted for, 88,
89.
Intemperance, effects of, xxvii. 120.
International law, remarks on, in matters
of divorce, xxv. 244-248.
Inundation in the Valais, ascribed to de-
mons, xxii. 361.
Invulnerables of the Burmese, account of
the corps of, xxxv. 493, 494.
Ionian Islands, great improvement in,
xxviii. 478, 479.
state of, in 1800 and in
1803, xxix. 91-94 — administration of
Sir Thomas Maitland, 95-106 — pro-
sperous condition of the islands uxmer
his government, 113-116.
Ipsambul, temple of, explored by M. Bel-
zoni, xxiv. 149 — description of its inte-
rior, 152 — and of its exterior, 153.
Ireland, insanity on the increase in, xxiv.
183 — ^why fewer CathoHcs than Pro-
testants are subject to insanity there,
189.
— ^— tracts on the church of, xxxi. 491
— state of tithe property there, 493—
proofs that the tithe system was not the
cause of various disturbances, 496, 497
— nor the exasperating motives of them,
though perpetually represented to be so,
498, 499 — plan of the tithe composition
bills, 500, 501— the Irish clergy robbed
of their agistment tithe, 501, 502 —
gross misrepresentations of the amount
of episcopal property, 503 — actual
amount, 504 — episcopal lands, how let,
504-506 — real state of the property held
by dignitaries, 506 — exaggerated state-
ments of the income of the Protestant
clergy, 507— refutation of them, SOS-
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtbiw.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
23d
Uie charge of non-residence against ihe
Irish clergy refuted, 509-513 — estimate
of the character, qualifications, and
services of the Irish clergy, 514-520-
523 — ^proofs that they are not unpo-
pular, 520, 521 — their active bene-
volence, 522 — ^the degradation of the
lower classes, an overwhelming curse
of the country, 523— and also the
amount of property withdrawn by ab-
sentee proprietors, 524-523 — injustice
of exterminating the Irish clergy and
confiscating their property, exposed,
526-528.
Ireland, probable efiect of introducing the
poor laws into, xxxiii. 454 — observa-
tions on the system of sub-letting and
sub-dividing land there, 456 — evils of
this system, 457 — which are aggravated
by the non-residence of the proprietors
of the soil, ibid. — most disturbances
where there is most poverty, 458 — ^re-
marks on Mr. M*Culloch's theory, that
the income of an absentee landlord is
really as much expended in Ireland as
if he were living m it, 459-461 — dis-
peopling of estates, in various degrees,
resorted to as a means of checkiag the
excess of population, 461 — misery of
the removed mmilies, 462, 463 — benefit
resulting from the introduction of the
cotton manufacture into Ireland, 463,
464 — the encouragement of emigration
a means of reducing the overgrown
population, 465 — resemblance of the
former state of Scotland to that of
Ireland, and how remedied, ibid. — im-
provements in this respect made by the
Marquis and Marchioness of Stafford,
466 — regard to the welfare of the
cottiers, 467 — beneficial results of these
improvements, 467, 468 — non-residence
of Irish landlords not a recent evil, 469
— considerations on the expediency
of imposing a direct tax on the lands
of absentees, and on the exemption
of resident landlords, 470, 471 — effects
of the removal of political disabilities
on the peasantry, 472, 473 — ^their no-
tion of Catholic emancipation, a divi*
sion of property, 473.
Letter of the Right Hon. William
Pitt to George III. on the demands of
the Irish Catholics, xxxvi. 290-292—
the King's Reply, 292 — further letter
of Mr. Pitt, 294— His Majesty's an-
swer, ibid.
. state of the church in the sevenr
teenth century, xxxvii. 244 — picture of
that country, 459 — emigration of its
poor to England increased by the use
of steam-boats, 460 — evils arising from
granting the forty-shilling elective fran-
chise, 562— state of its poor when its
population was estimated at a million
and a half, 563 — state of, now that it
amounts to seven milKons, ibid. — misery
resulting from the Irish landlords thin-
ning their tenantry by throwing down
their hovels as the leases fall in, 565—
instance of supernumerary beggars iu
England exported to Ireland, 566—
eviS from the influx of Irish paupers
enumerated, 566, 567 — a remedy
against the influx difficult to devise, 568.
Ireland, real state of, in 1827, xxxviii. 53-
57 — letters from the Irish highlands,
53 — observations on the necessity of a
legal provision for the poor, 53, 82 —
condition of the people, better than it
was centuries ago, 54— population in
the seventeenth century, ibid. — ^in the
eighteenth, 54-56 — ^in the present, 59—
scarcities in, 55 — ^famines in, 56— race
of small farmers, 58 — administration of
justice in, ibid. — improvement of agri-
culture requisite, 60, 78 — encourage-
ment of emigration not desirable, 60,
81 — redundant population might be
advantageously employed at home, 61
—linen manufacture capable of great
extension, 62 — introduction of platilla
into, ibid. — ^waste land in, 63— -nearly
the whole of this reclaimable, ibid.-^^
expense and profit attending it, 63,
64, note — method of rendering the
bog fit for tillage, 63 — systematic sup-
pression of vagrancy requisite, 64-—
absenteeism injurious, 65 — resistance
of the introduction of the poor-laws into,
t6i</.— evils for want of a system of re-
lief for the poor, 76 — compulsory sav-
ings'-banks not practicable, ibid.^ note
— prevalence of a fever in Ulster, 77-^
capital for relief of the poor not deficient,
t^tV^.— expenses entailed on the rich and
poor by the swarms of beggars, 77, 78,
84 — remedy for these evils, 78 — negli-
gence in farming, ibid. — transferring
capital to, without a change of system,
would be useless, 80 — mischief of sub-
dividing lands, ibid, — cause of absen-
teeism, ibid. — absentees particularly in-
terested in introducing poor-laws, 81 —
these would be a check on the middle-
men, ibid. — easiness of settling in, ibid.
— farmers a little above pauperism in-
creasing, 82 — propensity of the lower
class to theft, ibid. — and to perjury,
ibid. — swarms of beggars in Dublin, 83
—expense of maintaining them, and h^
whom to be defrayed, 84 — ^travelling in
recommended, 1/1 — young men and
women from, sent to Jamaica, 230— r
reports of the commissioners appointed
by the House of Commons to inquire
Digitized by
Googk
240
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QuAItTSRLT
coneemiDg the bop^ of, 410, 419,
423 — bogs reclaimed in, 421, 423—
instances of the benefit of wise mea-
sures, 536 — ^linen manufactory, ibid, —
church of, 536, 537 — tithe commutation
bill, ibid. — Elizabeth's apprehensions
from, 538^-ever ready to take advan-
tage of the troubles of England, 539—
threatening aspect of, ibid. — reconcilia-
tion of different parties, 540 — Catholic
Association, 54 1 — character of the
peasantry, 542, 546 — ^how is Ireland to
be saved? 548 — expediency of com-
plying with the demands of the Catho-
lics considered politically, 557^-eman-
cipation not likely to produce tran-
(^uillity in, 568 — the present generation,
hke the old Irish, priest-ridden, 577 —
still deemed a fief of the pope, 584 —
fables invented in support of this claim,
586, 592 — misrepresentation of tithes
in, 588.
Irish, remarks on Mr. Parneirs dedication
to the Irish Catholic clergy, xxi. 478 —
on his representations and suggestions
relative to the Irish character, 479-486.
Iron, how smelted in the Snowy Mountains,
xxiv. 115.
mines of France, notice of, xxxl. 408
— quantity of iron imported, 409, note,
■ manufacture and trade, present state
of, in England, xxxii. 176.
— the nation that excels in, the most
advanced in civilization, xxxiv. 72 —
effects on Europe by expunging the
word iron from the catalogue of modern
materials, ibid, — superiority of the Eng-
Ush over the French in working, 73.
— Mask. See iWarcAia/i, Part I.
Isle of France, manners of the Mulatto
women in, xxviii. 340.
Islington, selected by Mr. Howard as the
locality for his penitentiary, xxx. 426.
Italians, remarks on the popular fictions
of, xxi. 94 — and on their narrative
poems, 487-498, 503-509 — and roman-
tic poems, 510-556.
Italy, analysis of the campaign in, in
1 799, xxii. 393-400.
— literature of, influenced by the
poetry of Dante and Petrarch, xxiv.
564, 565.
Palladian architecture of, xzxiL 47
— ^remarks on the edifices erected liy
Palladio at Vicenza and Venice, 48,
49 — of Sansovino, at Venice, 50— of
San MicheU, at Verona, 50, 51— of
Scamozzi, at Vicenza, 51 — of Brunei^
leschi, at Florence, 51, 52^-of Leon
Battista Alberti, at Mantua, 52 — of
Michael Angelo, at Rome, 52-55— of
Giulio Romano at Rome, 55, 56 — decline
of architecture in Italy, 56— its revival,
57 — ^principal living architects, ibid, —
on the architecture of Genoa, 58— of
Turin, 58, 59 — of Florence, 59— of
Naples, 59-62— bad taste of the inte-
riors of some Italian churches, 61, 62
— on the altars of these churches, 63,
64 — monumental architecture of, 64,
65 — notice of the wines of modem
Italy, 258.
— progress and suppression of the
Reformation in, in the sixteenth cen-
tury, xxxvii. 50 — causes of the extinc-
tion of the Reformation there, 80.
■ a poem, xxxviii. 145 — average mor-
tality of, much greater than that of
England, 153, note — English travellers
in, 160 — a subject of speculation to the
politician, 1 73 — compensations given to
Austria in, 177 — desire of change in,
179.
Itinerancy, practised in England duringthe
early periods of the Saxon church,
xxiv. 33 — remarks on its necessity at
that time, ibid. — ^proposed to be retained
by Cranmer on a reduced plan, 32 —
why not adopted, ibid.
Ivanhoe, a novel, by the Author of Wa-
verley, analysis of, with remarks, xxvi.
127-138 — striking description of the
storming of a castle, 131-133.
Jack the Giant Killer, origin of the story
of, xxi. 103 — ^parallels between it and
an Icelandic fiction, 104-107.
Jacobin, definition of a tnie one, xxii. 158.
Jacquerie, ravages of, in France, xxv.
566.
Jamaica surrendered to the English,
xxxviii. 224 — ^women sent out to, 230 —
worthlessness of the settlers, 231.
■ present precarious situation of,
zxxiz.343.
Jannah, accomit of, and of its inhabitants,
xxxix. 146, 147.
Japan, visit of Lieut. Laxman to, xxii.
108.
Japanese, unsuccessful attempts of the
Russians to trade with, xxii. 108, 109 —
captivity of Captain Golownin and seve-
ral Russians among them, 110-120—
his liberation, 128 — account of a Japa-
nese lady, 123, 124 — noble conduct of
a Japanese captive; 125-128 — ^interview
Digitized by
Googk
BSTIBW.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
241
of Captain tSordon with the Japanese,
at Yeddo, 119, note — general character
of the Japanese^ 129.
Jats, an Indian tribe, notice of,zxxY. 474,
475.
Javanese, character of, xxL 68, 69.
Jelle men, or bards, in the interior of Af.
rica, notice of, xxxi. 443, 449.
Jena University, account of, xxxi. 178-182.
Jerkers, in America, notice of, xxviii. 7.
Jerusalem, Fall of. See Crowne^ Mi/-
fnan, Part I. City of, poetically de-
scribed, xxiii. 204.
Jerusalem, incorrect account of the con-
vent at, by Buckingham, xxvi. 381.
Jesuits, policy of, xxvi. 280 — their suc-
cessful efforts in civilizing the Indians
of South America, 283 — ^their excel-
lent discipline, 283, 284 — svstem pur-
sued in their reductions, 285, 286—
privations of their missionaries in the
Abiponian reductions, 312.
■ missions of, contrasted with those
of Protestants, xxxii. 1 — evils resulting
from their expulsion &om South Ame-
rica, 4 — defects of their system, ibicU
power of, in South America, and
benefits actually conferred by them,
XXXV. 333— their hostility to the Bible
Society, 364.
Jews, situation of, at the siege of Jerusa-
lem, xxiii. 198, 199.
— state of horticulture amone, xxiv.
402. ^
condition of, in Egypt, xxx. 505.
— number of, in the Russian domi-
nions, XXXV. 372 — character, opinions,
and pursuits of the Polish Jews, 372-
374— notice of the Chasidim,or Jewish
Pietists, 374 — excellent character of
the Karaite Jews, 378 — persecution of
the Jews by the Emperor Adrian, 87 —
and by the Popes, 92 — expelled from
England in 1279, 93— opposition to the
return of the Jews during the Rebellion,
94 — and to their being natiuralized, 95
— ^their veneration for the Talmud, 96.
— history, doctrines, and opinions of
the, xxxviii. 114—- observations on their
fate, ibid, — their state at present more
than ordinarily interesting, ibid. — ^their
number, i6iV/. — ^how distributed, ibid. —
cannot be connected with any Gentile
government by permanent ties, ibid. —
numbers lately introduced to Syria, 115
—old migration from France to Grer-
many, ibid. — ^from G^ermany to Poland,
ibid.~--iheir present state there, 116 —
comeliness of those in Poland, ibid. —
students of late in the German univer-
sities, t'&tV/. — ^many fought in the Ger-
man army against Buonaparte, ibid. —
allowed to purchase manors in Ger-
VOL. xim no. lxxx.
many, 117 — ^rioi) against them there,
and at Copenhagen, ibid. — ^subject to
military conscriptions in Germany, ibid.
— one refused admittance into a town,
to the rebuilding of which he had sub-
scribed largely, 1 18 — ^measure of Joseph
II. and the present Emperor in their
favour, ibid. — ukase of the Emperor
Alexander, ibid. — his plans for meliora-
ting their condition, 119 — Pharisaism
descended to the Rabbinical Jews, ibid,
— traditionary additions to the laws in-
creased, ibid. — obstacles in the way of
their becoming Christians, 120, 122,
134 — ^uot humbled by oppression lik«
the Parias of India, 120 — stubbornness
still inherent in them, 121 — character-
istic feature of, ibid. — treatment of
their women, ibid. — ^their rabbis, 122—
precarious marriages, ibid, — ^invention
of the present Talmudical system, 123
— ^three Jewish universities in Grermany,
ibid. — government of bodies under the
rabbis abolished in Russian Poland,
123— memory of the genealogy of their
families obliterated, ibid. — relaxation of
morals, particularly with respect to G^n-
tiles, 124 — ^this applicable to the rab-
binical Jews, ibid. — many of the others
eminent for their talents and virtues,
125 — a reformed worship in Germany,
ibid. — ^this prohibited in Prussia, ibid.
— ^account of Caraites, 123 — sect of
Zoharites, ibid. — sect of Chasidim, ibid.
— ^in France, 129 — little known of their
state for some time after the destruction
of Jerusalem, 130 — generally dispersed,
ibid. — difficulties respecting their poli-
tical treatment, ibid. — ^remarks on at-
tempts to convert them, 131 — the first
institution for this purpose, 133 — so-
cieties for promoting Christianity among
them, 133, 134 — some believers in
Christianity without professing, ibid.,
note * — celebration of the death of Ha-
man forbidden in Baden, ibid.f no/ef—
rabbinists confidently expect the de*
struction of Christian nations, 135>-*
prophecies of their restoration, ibid., note
— hiding place of the ten tribes not yet
discovered, 136, note, 143— symptoms
in favour of their conversion, 136—
several converted of late, 1 37 — Recha-
bites in the neighbourhood of Mecca,
142 — Samaritans, 143 — promise to
Abraliam never yet fulfilled, 143 —
Afghans, 144 — hymn of the Caraite
liturgy, 145 — ancient, compared with
other nations, 318.
J*hoola, a singular species of bridge, de«
scribed, xxiv. 117,118.
John Bull, as described by a foreign tra«
veller, xxxvii. 450.
B
Digitized by
Googk
242
PART IL^VXtaEL OF SUBJECTS.
Qu.
J^^cers, profetSiOBal, a compauion of a
GreciaH feast, xxit. 446.
Jotiba and Quorra riTera, remarks on the
course of, xxxi. 470-472.
JtHimal Hebdomadaire det Arts et Metiers,
xxxiv. 45— plan and character of the
work, 55.
Journal of a Naturalist, xxxix. 406 — cal-
culated to excite curiosity, and lead to
the study of natural history, •^V/.— its
adaptation universal, 407 — delightful
manner in which the author pleads the
cause of animals, 415 — sees in every
thing the ways and working^ of Prori-
dence, and a portion of this enjoyraeat
cannot fail to be communicated to those
who read his work, 431.
Journals, public, of Germany, notice of,
xxiii. 453.
Judges in the United States, levity of,
contrasted with the dignity of those in
England, xxi. 5.
— — — English, observations on the
power of, xxii. 251 — thekr impressive
manner of pronouncing sentence on
criminals, 251, 252.
Judges, observations on the discretionary
power vested in, xxiv. 239, 240.
■■ inequality of their labours in the
different courts, xxxviii. 253 — of une-
qual talents, 254 — appointment of, 259,
260, 280 — ^remedies for their miscon-
duct, 260 — protection of, 266— instances
of the office being declined, 282— snares
to which they are exposed, 284.
' of the King's Bench and Common
Pleas, origin Mid functions of, xxxtx.
48.
■ of Ancient Greece, character ©f,
xxxiii. 336.
Judgment, private, the right of, in mat-
ters of religion, ooniidtrad, zzzi. 242,
243.
Judgments, number of, prononnoed hy the
Lords Chancellors Hardwicke and
Eldon respectively, xxx. 284.
Judicial system of the United States of
America, defects of, xxi. 4.
Jumnotre, the source of the river Jumna
described, xxiv. 121.124.
Jupiter Ammon, notice of Belzoni*s ex-
cursion to, xxiv. 168.
Juries, observations on the French system
of, xxii. 257-259.
unwarranted assertions respecting
the packing of, xxvii. 380, 381 .
>Tiew laws respecting, xxxvii. 178.
Jurisdiotion, law of, in matters of divorce,
considered, xxv. 249-252— objections to
it, 252-254.
Jnry, ancient mode of trial by, xxxii. 115-
lU.
Jurymen of ancient Greece, character of,
xxxiii. 3.37.
Justice, outiine of the act for preventing
'delay in the adminittntion o€, xxii. 55 1 .
' pt^ersion^, at Athens, xxvi. 265-
269.
-^— curious aidministration o^ in Ame-
rica, xxix. 356-358-360.
venality and delay of, in Sicily,
Kxx. 392, 393.
• venality of, in the Spanish colo-
nies in South America, xxxv. 326-328.
- defective distribution of, in Greece,
xxxiii. 348.
Justification, Unitarian theory of, Ttfuted,
xxx. 83-92.
Juvia, a species of palm, notice of the,
xxv. 385, 386.
J*ytock fortress, described, xxiv. 197 —
state o£ agriculture in its vidmity, 1^7,
108.
K.
K.ANGAR0O4nmTnfa in New South Wales,
xxxvii. 28.
Karaite Jews, excellent character ot xxxv.
378.
Karass, notice of the Scotch mission at,
xxxv. 383, 384.
Kaskaia Indians, notice of, xxix. 24.
Katunga, capital of Yourriba, xxxix. 150,
152.
Keepsake, notice of the, xxxvii. 89.
Kemmendine, captured by the British
army, xxxv. 490.
Kenilworth, a novel, by the Author of
Waverley, analysis of, with remarks,
xxvi. 143, 148.
— remarks go, zzzr. 548, 549.
Kentucky State, condition of society in,
xxi. 154— cruel treatment of a negro-
boy at Natchez in that state, ibid. —
character of the Kentuokians, 155 —
specimen of their morality, 156.
Kentuckyans, anecdote of the barbarity of,
xxvii. 74.
Khayars, irruption ol^ into Europe, -gmV,
118.
Khirgis Tartars, manners of, xxvii 140 —
their mode of punishing theft, 141, and
xxxvi. 112, 113.
; the desert of, xxxix. 36.
Khiva, account of the Ru9(4an expedition
to, xxxvi. 120-122— their rece(ition, 123
— deacripti«a of the city, 123^ 124^
Digitized by
Googk
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
243
audieaee swen to ft« enibMsy hf the
Kkan, 124, 125 — ausober of Rutsiaii
slaves there, and their treatment, 125,
126 — remarks ob a plan for the con-
quest of Khiva, 127.
Kiama, city of Borgho, xxiiz. 153.
Kieff, in Russia, notice of the cathedral
churches of, xxvi. 41.
— notice of its holj places, zxz7.
371.
King's Bench, Court o^ number of causes
despatched by, xxxriii. 253.
■ College, projected one, for the
metropolis, xxxix. 123— desirable that
the school to form a part of it should be
conducted on the system of Dr. Bell,
ihid. — ^young men to under^ a public
ezaminadon pwrious to admission, 124
— want of such institutioiis, 125— no
danger from them of tiie people being
educated too much, 126 — desirable in
other parts of England, as well as in
London, 127 — 50,000/. offered by a
lady to establish one in Yoxkriiire, iiid,,
note, 389 — King's College not fonaed
in imitation of the Lon&n University,
but in opposition to it, 135-137— un-
justly aspersed, 136 — tite pmeent time
favourable lor such an establishment,
ibid. — the school of the college the most
important part of die design, 141 — the
Gfesham lectureships recommended to
be transferred to it, «6ut-^benefits likely
to arise from the rivalry of the two
colleges, 143.
Kingswood colliers, WhitefieM's preaching
to, described, xxiv. 31 — John Wesley
preaches to them, 32 — notice of some
supposed conversions at, 37-^reBiarks
on them, tbid., 38.
Kirkdale cave, account of antediluvian
remains found in, xxvii. 464^— descrip-
tion and classification of those remains,
465, 466'proo& that this cave was in-
habited by hyenas, 466.
■ remarks on the fossilised
remains of aafanals fouAd there, aodz.
147, 151, 152.
Kit-Cat Club, memoirs of, zxvi. 425
real origin of, 427, 428— author's mis-
take respecting it« 426, 427— biograp
phical errors, 428-437.
Kizil-Koum, desert of, xxxvi. 115.
Knaresborough, enclosure of the fosett o(
xzxviii. 432.
Knavery, American, instances of, zxix.
341-346,347.
Knights of Napoleon, notice of^ zxviii.
18.
Knout, horrkde punishment of, described,
xxix. 137.
Kokania, notice of the Russian missioa
to the khaa of, Kxvii. 142 — receptioa
given to it, 143, 144— ceremonial of the
khan's court, 144.
Koorankoo country, in Afnca, notice of,
xxad. 447, 448.
Koosoo, an Afirican town, xxxix. 14§.
Kotiebue*s Sound, description of, and of
the inhabitants found in the adjacent
land, xxvi. 349-351.
Kouba, state of the province and town o(
Kzxv. 398.
Kouka, the capital of Bonmoo, aotice of,
xxix. 522— ^account of the sheik, 512,
513.
Koulfu, described, xxxix. 161.
Kxakan, what, zxxviii. 526.
Kremlin at Moscow, the most remaiflcable
buildings of, when erected, xxvi. 47-w
remarks on, ibid,
Kiihloch, in Germany, animal lemaist
found in the cave at, xxix. 149.
Kurds, character of, xxxvi. 386— ^•notice
of one of their sovereigns, 387.
Kurile Islands, notice of, xxii. 109.
Knmuck, the capital of Loggur in Africa,
notice of, xxxi. 461.
Kurrechanes, manners and eu s toms of|
xxvii. 373, 374.
Kuzzilbash, a romance, commendatory
mention of, xxxix. 96^ 98.
L.
LiABOUR, productive, observations on a new
definition of, xxx. 299.304— the doc-
trine of Adam Smith on this subject,
vindicated, 305-307 — exajnination of
the position asserted by the new school
of political economists, that the quan-
tity of labour worked up in commodi-
ties, determines their exchangealde va-
lue, 308.313.
" ■ ' aversion of the Indians to labour,
XXX. 579.
low rate of^ in FraBce, xzsL 415.
Labourers, effects of the higher degree of
taxation on the En^ish labourer, as
compared with that of France, xxxv.
'295 — schedules of the expenditure of
workmen in different trad^ and occu-
pations, at di0erent periods for each
trade, showing the effects of prosperity
and adversity on the comforts of tha
working-classes, and the ^ects of taxa-
tion, 313-315.
remarks on th a^ieation of
ealbroed economy to the wMnu do*
b2
Digitized by
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Ul
PART It— im>EX OP SUBJECTS.
QUABTB<
scriptioDS of, xxxvi. 486-490— discus-
sion of the probable objections to this
system, 491-493 — and its probable con-
sequences, 493-496.
Xachlan River, in New South Wales,
state of the country surrounding, zxiv.
62, 63.
liancaster Sound, examination of Captain
Ross*s inconsistent account of, xxi. 237-
244 — extract and sketch of it, from
Lieutenant Parry's private journal, 244,
245, noiet — notice of the country, at its
westerly point, 253.
J^and, the application of capital to the cul-
tivation of, considered and explained,
. XXV. 468-477.
» difficulty of production on, how far
a regulator of profits, to the entire ex-
clusion of relative abundance, and com-
petition of capital, xxx. 320-333.
-i— evils of, minute subletting of, in Ire*
land, xxxiii. 456, 457 — simihr evils for-
merly existed in Scotland, 465 — ^how
removed, ibid. — particularly on the
estates of the Marquis and Marchioness
of Stafford, 466-469.
— — different customs respecting the te-
nure of, xxxviii. 271— dispute with the
crown respecting, 274— ou the disposi-
tion of property in, 289, 297 — (See also
fVaite Land) — draining detrimental to
I fisheries, 530 — beneficial to sheep walks,
531. See fVaste Lands.
Land-hoc, in the time of the Anglo-Saxons,
meaning of, xxxix. 44.
Land-owners, vindicated firom the false
charges of some modem theorists, xxxvi.
411.
Land-tax Commissioners Act, length of,
when unrolled, xxxix. 45.
Landed property, division of, in Central
India, xxix. 399.
' observations on the di-
visions of, in North America, xxx. 31,
32.
improvement of the
beauty of, recommended, and means of
accomplishing it, xxxvii. 304.
Landlords, absentee. See Ireland.
Landscape gardening. See Gardening,
Language, inaccurate, of Acts of Parlia-
ment, remarks on, xxi. 417-419.
■^-^— imperfection of, a secondary
cause of *error in religion, xxvi. 84.
atrocious perversion of, by the
French slave-dealers, xxxiv. 594, 595
Languedoc, southern, volcanic remains in^
xxxvi. 464.
Larceny, number of persons convicted and
executed for, xxiv. 206, 207— value of
stolen articles ought to be raised, 207.
Larch trees, importance of, xxxvi. 572,
-573-585, 586--"mo4e of preparing or
seasoning larch timber, 576^f planting
the trees, 577-581— distances between
the plants to be observed in putting
them into the ground, 583 — how they
are to be thinned, 584.
Larch trees, destructive to heath, xxxviiL
441.
Latin language, changes in, in the early
ages of the Christian era, xxiii. 145,
146.
- — - version of the New Testament, and
the Latin fathers, not of paramount
authority in the criticism of the Greek
Testament, xxxiii. 80-83.
Launcestou, in Van Diemen's land, no-
tice of, xxiii. 76.
Laws, originally simple, xxi. 398 — causes
of their subsequent complexity, 399-—
review of the causes of the increase and
imperfection of the English statute laws,
405-430.
— ** made with too great facility, xxiv.
233.
— observations on the registration of,
34, 574, 575.
of ^thylbyrht, notice of, xxxiv. 259
—of Hlothaere, Eadric, Wihtraed, 260
— of some succeeding kings, 260 — the
Anglo-Saxon laws confirmed by William
the Norman, 260— extract from one of
his laws in Norman French, 261— com-
parison of it with the style of the Anglo-
Saxon laws, 262, 263— the latter where
enacted, 265.
respecting the fisheries, defective,
xxxvii. 346 — ^parliament petitioned oi\
the subject, 347.
— — criminal, on the amendment of,
xxxvii. 147 — Lord Bacon's proposal for
amending, 150 — causes of confusion
and perplexity, 151, 155, 189 — amend-
ments by Mr. Peel, 157-179, 180— re-
duction effected thereby, estimated at
more than three -fourths, 187 — our early
laws uniformly unjust to the labouring
classes, 549, 552.
■ necessity of occasional reform, and
caution in attempting it, xxxviii. 241-
243 — ^mischiefs of change in, 242 — ^in-
conveniences of vivacious and popular
discussions o^ 243 — names of those who
have benefited our laws by reform, ibid,
— attempted partial amendment of, 2^15
— revision of, during the commonwealth,
246— effects of the study of, 248— the
three superior courts of, snould be ren-
dered more adequate to the disposal of
business, 253 — ^proposal to take from
suitors the choice of courts, 254 — judges
not of equal talents, 255— rcounsel should
confine their labours to particular courts^
ibid, — improvements in its practice de-
• «irable; 256^procee4ings should not b«
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Bsvaw*
INDK OF SUBJECTa
245
rendered ioo cheap, 256— chief sources
of expense, 257— jurisdiction of county
courts should he extended, 258 — ap-
pointment of magistrates considered,
ibid. — (See also jib^M/ra/tff)— i4)point-
ment of judges, 259, 260, 280— licen-
sing public-houses abused, 268 — game
lavs among our most serious evils, 269
^-^onflictii^]^ customs as to the tenure
of lands, 271 — gavelkind, 272— copy^
holds, ibid. — alleged inequality betwe«*n
the crown and the subject, 273, 275,
283 — abuse of the power of the Attorney-
General, 274. 276 — ^benefit of juries,
284— law of libel, 285— on the charac-
ter of witnesses, 286— evidence of ac-
complices, 288— -fines and recoveries,
289— -disposition of real property, 290
—statute of uses, 293.
Law-courts in Athens, number of, xxxiii.
333— description of the Heliiea, 335^
and of the evils of th^ constitution
and judicial system, 335-355.
Law-reports, importance of, xxi. 401, 402
^—remarks on the increase of, 402-404
— and on the consequences of that in-
crease, 404, 405.
Leamington waters, properties of, xxv.
221.
Learning, state of, in the early universities
of Europe, xxxiii. 261, 262.
— — effisct of the revival of, xxxix.
477.
Leases of episcopal lands in Ireland, on
what terms granted, xxxL 504-506.
Leasing. See Com.
Lebida, notice of the ruins of, xxvi. 212.
Legacy-duty, amoimt of, xxxii. 181.
Legal profession, but little cherished in
America, xxi. 6.
Legend of Montrose, a novel, by the au-
thor of Waverle)r, notice of, xxvi. 126.
Legislation, excessive love of, a cause of
the enormous increase of our statute
laws, xxi. 419— considerations of this
evil, 419-430.
L^slative Assembly, an improper grant
to a colony, xxxix. 342.
Legislature of the United States of Ame-
rica, form of, xxi. 2.
Legitimacy, Mr. Hazlitf s descriptions of,
xxii. 162.
Leipsig, book-trade at, xxxi. 183.
- . fair, xxxix. 12.
Lemming, manners and habits of, de-
scribed, xxx. 129, 130.
Leopard of the Cape of Good Hope, ac-
count of, xxii. 237.
Letters of Pope and Cowper, observations
on, xxx. 185, 186.
Letter-writing, female, advice respecting,
xxxvii. 393. H»*«^iP»*^
Lwricons, early Greek, notice of,'xxii. 306-
315— of Patisanias*s Rheiorie Lexieott|
306 — of Harpocraticus's Lexicon to the
Ten Orators, ibid. — of Lexicons of the
works of Hippocrates, 307 — Lexicon of
Photius, 308— of Hesyochius's, 308-309
—of Suidas's, 309-310— of Guarino of
Tavera's, 312— Schrevelius's, 314, 316
-*of Scopula's Epitome of Stephens's
Thesaurus, 316-318 —distinction be-
tween lexicons and glossaries, 305, 306.
Lexington, in North America, present
state of, xxix. 359.
Libel, law of, vague objections alleged
against, xxxv. 569— -unsatisfactoriness
of existing definitions of libel, ibid.^-
advantage of the law of libel being ad-
ministered by a jury, 570 — correct defi-
nition of libel, 571 — ^what constitutes a
Ubel, 572— publication, what, 572, 573
>— sketch of the law relating to publica-
tion, 573, 574— mode of procedure by
which it is enforced, 575---by informa-
tion, 576 — and by action for damages,
576, 577— what evidence is material,
578-580 — examination of the question,
whether truth ought or ought not to be
admitted as a conclusive defence to a
prosecution, 581-583 — and of the wit*
dom or injudiciousness of the law, which
forbids the tnith of the statement to be
^ven in evidence, on an indictment for
libel, 584-588 — refutation of the objec-
tions to the law declaring truth to bie a
libel, 594-598 — observations on the
causes why small damages are frequently
given in actions for libel, 59St^00 — and
on the question, whether the truth of the
libellous statement ought to be received
in evidence, in mitigation of the de-
fendant's guilt, when brought up for
judgment, 601— case of the Kin^ v,
Burdett, 603 — soundness and propriety
of the law, in this case, in point of reason
and justice, 604-607 — on the practical
execution of the law, 607-609.
on the law of, xxxviii. 285.
Libellous publications, the source of revo*
lutionary principles among the people,
xxviii. 199, 200 — are themselves caused
by political parties, 201-203 — ^particu-
larly by the conduct of the opposition,
205-215.
Libels, blasphemous and seditious, of the
Radicals, observations on, xxii> 542-
550 — analysis of the statutes for pre-
venting abuses of the press, and for
Eunishing blasphemous and seditious
bels, 552 — ^remarks on the wisdom and
necessity of them, 552-557.
Liberal, the extent of Lord Byron's con-
nexion with it, xxxvii. 412, 413 — its
character and rapid fall, 419.
Liberties) boasted, of the GalUcaa Church,
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1M6
PART IL— INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
QuiSfBRur
xxT. 558^-chcumstaiices that unfit the
French fot liberty, 569, 570.
Liberty of the people, proved to ha? e in-
creased since the revolution in 1688;
xxii. 534-536.
— — — press in India, observations
on, XXXV. 63-65.
Libraries, public, the impolicy and injus-
tice of their claiming a certain number
of copies of every book published, con-
sidered, xxi. 204-207— oppressive con-
duct of certain public libraries, 208-210.
■ of the Society for Promotinfi^
Christian Knowledge, notice of, x^xii.
425, noie — importance of caution in
selecting books for the libraries of Me-
chanic Institutes, 419, 420.
Library of the British Museum, xxxiv.
157 — number of books there, i6i</. — and
in the Bodleian Library, ibid. — in the
Vatican and some other Ubraries, ibid.
Licentiousness, how checked in the Eng-
lish universities, xxxiii. 263, 264.
Liege, besieg^ by Marshal Villeroy, xxiii.
34.
> ■ notice of a manufacture of media-
nics at, xxxi. 408, note.
Lies, anecdote of a French writer, respect-
ing, xxxvii. 195 ~- origin of historical
lies, 196.
Life, theories of, inquiry into the proba-
bility of Mr. Hunter's theory, xxii. 1-11
—controversy between Mr. Abemethy
and Mr. Lawrence, 2-4. Sqq Abemethy f
Lawrence^ and Rennelly in Index of
Names.
— — verses on, xxiii. 169, 170.
• \ Assurance. See Atsurance,
Lille, besieged and captured by the Duke
of Marllwrough, xxiii. 54-56.
Lima, present state of,xxxii. 149-150.
Limagne, plain of, fresh water deposites
on, xxxvi. 445-448.
Lime-kiln, singular narrative of a man
miserably burnt while sleeping on one,
xxxix. 412.
Linen manufacture of England^ present
state of, xxxii. 178.
— of Ireland and Scot-
land, xxxiv. 70, 71.
Linnean Society, notice of the labours of,
xxxiv. 159.
Lipari Islands^ present state of, xxx. 401,
402.
Lisbon and its environs, described, xxx.
63, 64.
fihhy state of, xxxi. 380-382— in-
fested by swarms of beggars, 383— in-
quisition, 387-— account of a pretended
miraculous image there, 383, 389.
Literary property, can be secwed only by
injunctions, xxvii. 125 — notice of the
cases ^f Wi^«ot v.. Witlke^ 126--.
Southcy r. Sherwood, 126, 127 — of
Murray «. Benbow, 128-130_and of
Lawrence «. Smith, 130t.l32— to1« of
law now established concerning the
pirating of literary property, 133 — ^its
inexpeSency, 133-137 — remedy sng-
gested, 138.
Literary Souvenir, xxxvii. 84, 89, 94.
Literature of England, influence of the
profligate court of Charles II. on, xxix.
206-209 — ^when and how counteracted,
209-213.
of France, character of, xxv.
571, 572.
• of Italy, influence of the poetry
of Dante and Petrarch on, xxiv. 564,
565.
> slow progress of, in Brasil, xxxi.
21— state of, in Germany, 18-3, 134—
and in Porhigal, 386.
. injury sustained by, wider the
existing copyright laws, xxi. 202-204
— (See Q^riffht.) — lectures on the
history of, by Schlegel, 271.
• preserved in monasteries, xxii.
■ state of, among the modem
77, 78.
Greeks, xxiii. 357, 358.
Liturgy, importance of reading it impres-
sively, xxiii. 558.
testimonies to the vahie of^ zzxii.
40.
Liverpool, in New South Wales, state of,
xxiv. 59.
Society for abolishing negro-
slavery, remarks on the declaration aS,
xxix. 480.
' progressive increase oi^ xxxi
374— Hrema^son the raiWroad projected
between this town and Manchester, 375-
377.
' — Royal Institution and Botanic
Garden, notice of, xxxiv. 168.
Livonia, population of, xxxix. 13.
Llanos, a district of South America, de.
scribed, xxi. 331-333.
Loans, Greek, remarks on, xxxv. 227,228*
232.
Local Acts of ParHament, evils of the
increased number of, considered, xxi.
413.
Locust of America, devastations of, xxx.
6.
Log-house, American, described, xxix.
362,363.
Loggim country, description of a jonraey
through the, xxxi. 461 — ^notice of Kur-
nuck, its capital, ibid,
Lomburdy, state of gardening in, zxiv;
409.
London, remarks on the cemeteries ol^
xxi. 380 — neglected in the reicrn of
Digitized by
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Bvmw.
INIffiX OF SUBJECTS,
ur
London and i(tc povt, aooount of, sxU. 35-
38.
— — — raBideoee in, why preferable to the
oouotry, xxvU. US. 119 — medical re-
marks on the pla^j^ that )>rev&iled there
iu 1665, 540, 542 — ^tlie present superior
clettdinesa, the meana by which it has
been preserved from the plague since
that time, 545, 546.
' publications on the architectural
improvements of, xiuuv. 179, 180 —
analysis of them, with remarks, 184-
189 -sketch of ancient London, 180-183
— ^particularly of Old London Btid^e,
181— St. Paul's Cathedral, i6irf.— Sir
Christopher Wren's plan for rebuilding
the city after the great fire, 1 83 — notice
of Mr. Gwynne's plans for the improve-
ment of the metropolis, 183 — his sug-
gestions for improving the communica^
Sons of the metropolis, 190-192 — and
also for increasing its architectural
S|dendour, 192-196.
■ number of beggars in, in the last
century, xxxviii. 71 — present pooNtates,
a6iV/.— .Society of, for promoting Chris-
tianity among the Jews, 138*^average
mortality, compared with that of Paris,
153— fishery for lobsters in the North
of Scotland, 529— aalmoa packed in
ice, ibid.
— Horticultural Society, origin of;
xxiv. 416— character of ita transactions,
417.
Inatitutioni notiot of, zxxiv. 162.
lK>ndon University, remarki on the plan
of, xxxiii. 260, 261, 268-270^--on the
absence of religioiis instruction in it
271,272.
XiOng Parliament, reflections of King
Charles I., and Archbishop Laud, on
the bill for perpetuating, xxv. 299,
299.
Longitude, Board of, graduated premiuatt
ofiered by, xxi. 260.
Lunatics, pauper, number of, in the parish
of Mary-le-bone, xxiv. 179 — ^remarks
thereon, 1 79, 180— defects of the statute
59 Geo. HI., c« 127, concerning them,
192. See J^jamVy.
Lupata mountains, veen only by the Por-
tuguese, xxvii. 372.
Lusiad of Camoens, remarks on the ma-
chinery of the, xxvii. 19-24— particu-
larly on the three principal passages,
24-26 — notice of its translations, paiti-
cularly that of Sir Richard Fanshaw,
26-29— and of Mickle, 29-32.
Lysias, letter of, to the Prince Regent,
xxii. 430— influence of the morals of a
court on those of the community, 43Q-
432 — ^purity of the British Court during
the reign of King George III., 432,
433— extracts from the work, enforcing
a continuance of the same purity of
morals, 433-436 — ^tribute to the memory
of George HI., 43Q^
Lysistrata of Aristof^banea, analysia of,
with specimens, xxii. 182*188.
M.
Macbkth, character of, how performed by
Mr. Kemble, xxxiv. 218, 219— the play
of, how got upuuder his direction, 227,
228.
Macedonians, altered the Greek language
in the time of Alexander, xxiii. 141,
Machinery, English, superiority of, to
that made in France, xxxi. 418 — pre-
sent state of the cotton machinery in
that coimtiy, 397 — ^its imperfect state,
397, 399-407 — impediments to the
further introduction of machinery in
France, 405, 407— difficulties under
which French engineers labour, 408 —
importance of the question, whether a
free trade is to be allowed for English
machinery, 418, 419.
• why more beneficial in Eng-
land than in South America, xxxvi.
98, 99 — ^the application of machinery
to agriculture, a cause of the increase of
rent, 413 — effects of machinery on ma-
nufactures, 419-421.
Machinery, introduction of, in manufac-
tures, the result of advancing science,
and cannot be stopped, xxxvii. 544,
547 — ^ood sense and good feeling
evinced by the Scotch and English
weavers under a conviction of this trutfi,
544, 545 — opinion that machinery will
increase to the substitution of human
labour, 546— evils of, enumerated, 546-
548.
.i. beneficial as a substitute for
labour, xxxviii. 40 1 .
Macou^ Indians, preparation of poison
by, xxxiii. 329.
Macquarrie, port, iu Van Diemen*s Land,
notice of, xxiii. 77— and xxiv. 69.
— — present state of, xxxii. 317.
river, state of the country on
each side of, xxiv. 67, 68.
Madagascar, the slave trade abolished iij,
xxviii. 173.
Madeira wine, introduction of, into Eng.
land) xxxii. 250 — reasons for supposing
Digitized by
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"248
PART II.-INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUABSSRLT
it io resemble the ancient Falernion
wine, 239.
Madrid, occupaiion of, by the French,
xxix. 68 — masiacre of the Spaniards
by them, 69 — ^re-occupied by the Spa-
nish patriots, 79.
Magdeburg, bold attack of, by Major
Schill,xxii. 488.
Magic, origin of, xxix. 461 — account of
the magical colleges of Spain, 452 —
probable origin of the introduction of
theurgic magic in that country, 453 —
remarks on the magical talismans of
the middle ages, 454— -curious magical
charm for staunching blood, 455 —
superstitious observances of the eve of
Saint John, 456 — tricks of some natural
magicians, 457 — the mag^c of the
Scandinavians, 460 — spread of natural
magic, 461, 462 — of the Anglo-Saxons,
461.
Magistrates, aj^ointment of, xxxviii. 258
— alleged responsibility of, 259, 271 —
appeals from, 263 — ^remarks on tbeir
being unpaid, 264 — on stipendiary, 265.
Magna Charta^ passage in, explained,
xxxii. 94.
Magnetic needle, known to and used by
mariners in the thirteenth century, xxi.
192, 193.
* remarks on the dip and
. variation of, xxv. 202.
influence of Aurora Bo-
realis on, xxviii. 405,
Magnetism, terrestrial, remarks on, xxxv.
264-267. See Electro Magnetism.
Mahmondiah, in Egypt, canal of, cleared
and opened, xxx. 502.
Mahommedans, notice of the travels of
two Mahommedans, in the East, xxiv.
316.
Maina, district of, brief notice of, xxiii.
339— character of its inhabitants, 338,
339.
Maison de Force, number of convicts in,
xxiv. 255 — state of that prison, 256,
note.
Malacca, declme of, under the Dutch
government, xxxiii. 108, 109.
Mal'aria, not confined to marsh effluvia,
xxx. 139 — ^its effects on the inhabitants
of the Campagna di Roma, 141 — ob-
servations on the mal'aria at Rome,
ancient and modern, 143, 146 — its
cause, 147, 148 — ^remedies for prevent-
ing the e£K;cts of mal'aria, 149-1 51.
Malayan Miscellanies, notice of, xxviii. 1 36 .
Malays, settled at Sincapore, account of,
xxxiii. 116.
of Sumatra, character and habits
of, xxxiv. 106.
Male-Russians, character of, xxxv. 370.
Malta, account of the plague in, in 1813,
xxvii. 536, 538-548, 549, and xxxiii.
228-230— remarks on it, 230, 231.
Malvern waters, properties of, xxv. 220.
Malwa, province, description of, xxix.
385, 386— K)verthrown by Aurungzebe,
387.
Mamelouks, massacre of, in Nubia, xxii.
448.
destroyed by the Pasha of
Egypt, xxvii. 229.
Mammiferous animals, fossil organic re-
mains of, xxxiv. 510-512 — observations
on the marine deposits with which the
strata inclosinef them are covered, 513-
520. ^
Man, triple nature of, xxii. 2— observa-
tions on the capacity of continual im-
provement in, xxii. 21 .
— on differences of complexion, xxxvii.
105.
Manchester meeting, observations on, and
on its consequences, by Lord Grenville,
xxii. 503-509-513-516, 51 9-521— by Mr.
Canning, 511, 513, 516, 518, 521, 522
—and by Mr. Plunkett, 509-611, 518,
519, 522-524.
' progressive increase of, xxxi,
373— observations on the importance
and advantages of the projected rail-
road between Manchester and Liver-
pool, 375-377.
— ^— — literary and Philosophical
Society, notice of, xxxiv. 167.
Mandara, interview of English travellers
with the sultan of, xxxiii. 526.
Mandingoes, character and habits of,
xxxi. 447.
Maniac, beautiful address to, xxiv. 1 35,
136.
Manilla, manufacture of cigars in the,
island of, describeil, xxi. 88 — descrip-
tion of a visit to a convent in, 89.
Manjnee, temple and village of, xxiv.
116.
Mankind, fecundity of, in the inverse ratio
of their condensation, xxxviii. 53 — this
the result of their happiness and pros-
perity, 54 — ^not wholly the creatures of
circumstances, 196.
Manners, state of, at New York, xxi. 127,
328— at Boston, 141— at Philadelphia,
146, 147— in Kentucky, 154-156— and
at New Orleans, 157-159.
Mantua, remarks on the architecture of
the cathedral at, xxxii. 55, 56.
Manufacturers, cause of the distress of,
examined, and remedy for it, xxxv. 275-
277 — considerations how far their dis-
tress would be relieved by a diminished
price of corn arising from foreign im-
portation, 278-281 — suggestions for
relieving that distress, 281-283.
" how interested in the ^iies-
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INDEX OF SUBJEOT&
^9
tion of the free trade in com, xzxvii.
434-438 — the fear of their commodities
beings undersold in the foreia^n market,
shown to be unfounded, 439 — advan-
tages possessed by the English over the
foreign manufacturer, 439-441. See
Corn,
Manufactures, evil consequences on, of un«
limited freedom of commerce, xxiv. 283,
288, 294, 296.
Manufactures, price of, how estimated,
XXV. 470, 471.
domestic, formerly carried on
to a great extent, xxxvi. 414 — still
carried on in Invernesshire, 415, note,
■ state of, in Chili, xxx. 462,
— — and in France. See
France.
Manumissions of negroes, instances of,
with remarks, xxix. 494 — necessity of
caution in manumissions, 493.
Maplaquet, battle of, xxiii. 59, 60.
Haraboots, tricks of, xxv. 27.
Marble, curious formation of, at Tabriz,
xxvi. 417.
March of the English army described,
XXX. 65-67.
Margate, trip to, in a steam-boat, poeti-
c^ly described, xxiii. 508, 509.
Mariner's compass, by whom invented,
xxi. 193.
Marino Faliero, by Lord Byron, total fail-
ure of, xxvii. 487 — ^remarks on this tra-
gedy, 487-491.
Marriages, septennial, curious proposal for,
xxiii. 415.
• early, policy of, in the poor,
considered, xxxvii. 569.
how conducted in France, un-
der the old regime, xxxiv. 441, 442 —
paucity of, between 1800 and 1814,
450.
Marseilles, account of the plague at, in
1720, xxxiii. 222-225.
Marshes, observations on the effluvia from,
xxx. 134-139.
Mashow, in South Africa, visited by Mr.
Campbell, xxvii. 371 — its population,
and mode of inoculation for the small-
pox, ibifl.
Massacres at Paris in 1789, xxviii. 280—
and in the provinces, 281-287 — ^particu-
larly at Nismes, 297 — and at Avignon,
299.
Masters in Chancery, origin of, xxxix. 46,
note.
Mate, what, xxxviii. 454.
Material point, term in physical science,
xxxix. 440.
Materialism, dangerous tendency of, ex-
posed, xxii. 9-11 — objections to Mr.
Lawrence's system of, 25-31, 33 — refu-
tation of, by Mr. Rennell, 27.
Materialism, modern, absordiiVof, ezpoied,
xxix. 473-475.
Mathematics, discoveries in mathematical
science by Mr. Simpson, xxii. 131.
Matilda, a fashionable novel, remarks on
the plan and execution of, xxxiii. 485-
487.
Matlock waters, properties of, xxv. 220.
Matura, notice of the rapids of, xxv. 366.
Mausoleums, Turkish, notice of, xxi. 377.
May Fair, a poem, xxxvii. 84, 85.
Maynooth College, system of study prose*
cuted at, xxxvi. 227.
Maynooth, Roman Catholic College of,
xxxviL 461—- expense of education there,
462 — number of classes and courses of
study, 463 — ^what parts of the Bible
read and what omitted, 463, 464— dis-
cipline observed, 465 — what publications
permitted and what forbidden, 466—
expulsion, 467—- oath of allegiance, 468
— -doctrines taught touching the powers
of the Pope, 469 — infallibility and tem-
poral authority, 469, 470 — g^eral
councils, 472-— church property, 475,
476 — excommunication, 477 — oaths
and the dispensing power of the Pope
respecting them, ^6-479 — ^rules of the
colleG;e violated by the publication of
the Letters of Hieorophilos, 481.
• note to a former article on the
college of, xxxviii. 298.
Blaypures, manners of the Indians around
the cataract of, xxv. 372.
Measures. See fVeigktt and Meaturet.
Mechanics' Institutes, first idea of, xxxii.
411 — ^notice of the Edinburgh Institute,
ibid. — ^formation of one in London, 412
— ^improvement of character resulting
from such establishmeuts, proved by an
account of the Gas-Light Chartered
Company at Glasgow, 417-419 — im-
portance of judgment in selecting books
for their libraries, 419, 420— 5he in-
struction given at these institutes only
a part of education, 421 — ^the positive
good to be expected from them, less
than their warmest supporters imagine,
423.
Medicine, qualifications for a degree in,
at Aberdeen and Edinburgh, xxxvi.
228— and in France, 228, 229— design
of the professorships of medicine esta-
blished at Oxford and Cambridge, 229.
MegalosauTus, a fossil oviparous quadru-
ped, notice of, xxxiv. 528.
Melville Island, on the coast of New Zea-
land, described, xxxii. 324, 325.
Members of parliament, inattention o^ to
certain legislative measures, xxi. 416.
Memnon, probable cause of the musical
sounds said to have been emitted by
his statue, xxi. 355.
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PABTn.-INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QnMaammis
Memnoii, Irast d^' MBWVvd hy M. Bel-
zoni, xxiv. 146, 147.
JI«inaoiiitiin. position of tlit tm^ dcBcribtd^
xxir. 165.
Memoinof a life passed in Penosylvaaia,
txmL 364 — gpeciiBetts of its style, 365-
368--descriptions, 368, 369 — and im-
partiality, 369-374,
Menat, fr^ water formation at, xxxn.
449.
Meiidoza, city, present state o^ xxxii. 144^
145.
— — ^ description of,xxxv. 133 — gross
indecency of tne inhabitants, 134.
Meano n i tes of Alsace, notice of, zxviii.
13, 14.
notice of a colony oty in
Southern Russia, zxxr. 380.
Mephitis, a traTeller*s straage account of
the, xxvii. 453.
Meribohwhey, the capital of the Tamma-
has, in South Africa, visited by Mr.
Campbell, xxiii. 370, 371.
Mermaid, reputed, Caithness, zxxriii.
527.
Merope, Maffei' s tngtdy of, characterised,
xxi?. 91.
Messiah, song to, xxiiL 209, 210.
Metals, transmutation of the baser, into
gold and silver, observations on, xxvi.
199.
precious, fall or rise in the value
of, how e£R;cted by long periods of the
abundant or deficient supply of com-
modities, xxix. 233-238.
■■ superior manufacture of, in £ng-
landi xxxiv. 72, 73.
Metaphysics, out of place in the pulpit,
xxxix. 288.
Meteorological Journal of the Hecla^ with
remarks, xxv. 197-200.
Methodists in America, observations on,
xxiil 383.
' numbers and influence of,xxiv.
If 2 — moral good produced by them, 3
—evils resulting from methodism, 3, 4
•^-origin of the appellation, Methodist,
13 — ^instances of enthusiasm among
them, 36, 37 — private meetings insti-
tuted among them, 26 — mischief re-
sulting from their meetings for mutual
confession, 40 and iio/e^— evils resulting
from the system and machinery of me-
thodism, 54.
• cause of the success of, zxiz.
295-297.
Mewatties, a tribe residing in Central
India, notice of, xxix. 394.
Mexican mines, how worked before the
revolution, xxxvi. 90-94 — ^failure of the
Anglo-Mexican mining companies, 94-
102— remarks thereon, 103-106.
Mexico, importance o^ m. 153«— physi-
cal geography of tikis eonaliy, 154, 155
— sea^xnts, 156 — populaiioa, 157 —
different castes of the iahabitanta, 157,
158— diversity of languages spoken,
158 — number of persons per acre, 159
< — produce, 160-162 — comparison of the
agriculture of Mexico with that of Ja-
maica, 163.165— mines, 166, 167-^
enormous produce of some of them, 160-
170 — commencement of the revolution
in Mexico, 171-»aecount of the insi»-
rection of Hidalgo, 173.175 — and of
Morelos, 176, 177 — and of the youn^^
Mine, 178, 179 — General Iturbide
elected eiiq>eror, 181 — abdicates the
throne and rerires to Italy, 182, 183—
consideiations on the future prospects
of Mexico, 184.
Middiipmen, letter of advice to, zxxviL
399.
Migration of birds, xxxix. 425-428.
Milbank, erection of a penitentiary at,
XXX. 428 — its internal regulations, 429,
430— remarks thereon, 430, 431— rea-
sons for a further trial of i^ 432— <;ir-
cumstances which led to a dbange of
the prisoners* diet, 433 — evidence of
the physicians on the epidemic among
them, 434-436— extracU from the Re-
ports of Drs. Latham and Roget there-
on, 436.438 — probable cause of the dis-
ease, and remedies fur it, 439, 440.
Military force of Hayti, state o^ xxi. 454,
455.
Millenaiiiis, German colony of, near
Teflis, XXXV. 384.
Minas Geraes, in Brasil, description of the
capital of the district of, xxxii. 135.
Mineral waters, classification of, xxv. 219
— alterative waters, ibid. — ^properties of
the Buxton waters. Odd. — eff^ of the
Buxton bath,226— of those of Matlock
and Malvern, 220 — notice of the api^
rient waters of Harrogate, ibid^ — of Lea-
mington, 221— of Cheltenham, 221,
222 — principal chalybeate waters, 223
Bath water, 223, 224— Tunbridge water,
225-~Niton water, 223 and ne/e^hint
to dyspeptic patients, 228.
Mines, demons of, xxii. 365— supposed
instances of their malignity accounted
for, 365, 366.
■ produce of, in Mexict^ xxx. 166-
170 — state of mining in Chili, 461.
■ of Cerro de las Carolinas, notice
of, XXXV. 136 — of Uspallata, ibid» — of
San Pedro Nolasco^ 142-144 — notice of
various English companies for working
South American mines, 145 — frauds
practised by the American agents, 146.
Mines and mining, sketch of the Cornish
system of mining, and of the character
of the Cornish miners, xxxvi. 81-dO^
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WmX OF SUBJECTS.
201
mod0 of woikm^ ike nioM of Mexico
before the revehitioiiy 90-94 — tniTal of
Conush minen in Mexicoy and foil-
lire of the speculatioiui of the Anglo-
Mexican ndning compamei, 94-100—
account of some of the events which at-
tended the actual execution of their
schemes, 100-102 — observatioss on the
speculations of the mininir compaaies,
103-106.
Mining' associaiums for South Amerieay
remarks on, xxxi. 352, 353.
Ministry, English, composition of, at the
accession of Queen Anne, xxiii. 10.
■ observations on the intrigues for
forming, during the latter years of
George II., xxT. 404411.
Miracles of the Apostles, remarks on,
xxxii. 6.
pretended, of the Romish saints,
xxii. 82-84— particularly of St. Francis
of Assisi, 85-87— of St. Dominic, 87—
and of St. Benedict, 67, 68.
• of St. Patrick, remarks
on, xxriii. 19-21— of St Antonio, 22-
24— of the Hohr Thorn, at Port Royal,
30-35— of the Deacon Paris, at Paris.
31-33.
Mirage, appearance of, described, xxii.
465.
Mh*r<»r of Parliament, xxxviii. 241.
Mishna, account of, xxxv. 89.
Mission College at Calcutta, importance
of, xxT. 452, 453.
Missionaries, benefickd labours o( in Ota-
heite, xxxi. 62.
MoraTian, at Sarepta, ac-
count of, xxxv. 382 — Scotch mission-
aries at Kaross, ibid. — and among the
Ingush, 383 — conduct of the American
missionaries at Owhyhee, 438-441 —
letter confirming their misconduct, 609.
Missionary, admirable advice to, xxt. 444.
Missions of the Methodists and Moravians,
observations OU; xxiy. 1.
• — — - Jesuits, considered with
those of the Protestants, zxxii. 1, 2 —
the errors of the Romish missionaries,
those of their corrupt church, 3— mis-
sion of Augustine to Britain, 8, 9— im-
pediments to missions considered, 13-
15 — advantages possessed by Protestcmt
missionaries, 17 — account of the Dutch
missions in Ceylon, 21 — of the Danish
missions in India, 21, 22— of those of
the Society for the Propagation of the
Gospel in Foreign Parts, 23 — notice of
the Baptist and some other Missionary
Societies, 24 — strictures on the plans
aud object of the Home Missionary So-
ciety, 24-26 — munificent subscriptions
in aid of missionary objects, 28, 29 —
benefit of married misiionaries, 36.
Missinippi, TsBey of, eadctnt of, xxix. 158
ancient and present population, 2 — no-
tice of Pittsburgh uul its coal forma-
tion, 3 — wheeling, ihid, — Cincinnati,
•6m<.— «tate of the intermediate country,
4— confluence of the Ohio and Missis-
sippi rivers, ibid, — course and naviga-
tion of the Ohio, 5 — and of the river
Mississippi, 5-10— remarks on its d^
vation, 1 1 — tumuli at the confluence of
the Mississippi and Missouri, 12, 13-r-
navigation of the latter, 13, 14— un-
healthy state of Camp Missouri, 14—-
habits and manners of the native tribef,
15— description of the Great Desert, 16
— vast herds nf bisons occasionally seen
in the vicinity of rivers, 17 — notice of a
prairie-dog village, 17, 18 — sources of
the River Platte, 18, 19— valley of the
Rocky Mountains, and their geolo^cal
formation, 20 — botanical productions,
21 — ^particularly the vine, 23 — ^boiling
spring described, 22 — courses of the
rivers Arkansas and Canadian, 22, 23
— character of the Kaskaia Indians, 24
—general remaifks on the valley of the
Mississippi, 25.
•— sources of, zxxvii 455 — ^blun-
ders of Beltrami respecting, 456.
Missouri, ancient tumuli at £e confluence
o£^ with the Mississippi, xxix. 13, 14—
unhealthy state of Camp Missouri,
14.
Missonriopolis, notice of, xxix. 13.
Mita, or compulsory service exacted by the
Spaniards of the natives of South
America, xxxv. 541.
Ifites, devastations of, in Brasil, xxxi. 2^1
25.
Mocking-bird, description of, xxxiii. 326.
Mohawk translation of St. John*s Gospel,
observations on, xxxvi. 9-1 ) .
Mole, fur and flesh of the, xxxix. 417.
Monachism, originated in Egypt, xxii. 60
— account of the first monk, Paul, th0
Egyptian, 60, 61 — extravagance of the
early monks, his successors, 62, 63 — St.
Antony the Gh-eat, the first institutor
of monasteries, 64 — ^mortification of the
Saints Pior, Pachornius, aud Macariu^,
ibid. — account of Simeon Stylites, 65 —
progress of monachism in Italy and
France, 66 — anecdotes of St. Benedict,
67 — pretended miracles attributed to
him by his historians, 67, 68 — ^analysis
of his ' rule,' 68 — duties of the abbot,
69 — order for celebrating divine service,
70 — order of the monks, 70, 73 — punish-
ments for the refractory, 70 — their
meals, 71— apparel, 72— mode of ad-
mitting novices, 72, 73— election of the
abbot, 73, 74 — remarks on this rule, 74,
75— its spread through Europe, 75—
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PART II.— INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
Ql^ARTEALY
benefits resulting from monasteries, 75,
76, 88 — ^preservation of literature in
them, 77, 78 — account of St. Dominic^
the Cuirassier, 79-81— contest among
certain monks, relative to their place in
heaven, 82 — St Evremond's opinion of
monasteries, 83, 84 — the fifth com-
mandment altered by St. Benedict, 101.
Monasteries, real effects of the dissolution
of, xxxiii. 437.
Monastery, the, a novel, by the Author of
Waveriey, analysis of, with remarks,
xxvi. 136-138.
Monastic orders, benefit of, to the church,
xxiii. 552.
MoDghodjar mountains, notice of, xxxvi.
Ill, 112 — description of the country
between them and the river Sinderia,
112.
Mongolian Tartar monuments^ notice of,
XXXV. 375.
Mongrel cedar, singular fact respecting,
XXX. 3.
Monkeys, adventures of two, xxxi. 488,
489.
Mons, captured by the Duke of Marl-
borough, xxiii. 61.
Mont Dor, volcanic remains of, xxxvi.
459-462.
Monte Video, present state of, xxxii. 138.
Monte Ddme, volcanic phenomena at,
xxxvi. 453.
Monuments, sepulchral, of Normandy,
XXV. 136 — Druidical monuments there,
137.
Moors, their reports little to be credited,
xxxviii. 107.
Morality, American, specimen of, xxi. 156,
and of the political morality of the
American government, 20.
' - expedience, not a sure guide,
xxxviii. 319--conscience in, 322.
Moral-ke-Kanda, mountainous pass of,
described, xxiv. 116.
Morals, corruption of, at Athens, under
Pericles, xxii. 190,191.
• state of, in France, during the
reigns of Louis XV. and XVI., xxvii.
171-174.
Moravian settlement at Gnadenthal, de-
scribed, xxii. 229.
Moravians, successful missions of, xxiv. 1
— anecdotes of some, 19 — remarks on
their enthusiasm, 23, 25.
first mission of, to the Cape of
Grood Hope, xxxii. 4, .5 — and in Green-
land, 24, 30.
Morgante Maggiore, Bojardo*s, analysis
of, with remarks, xxi. 526.
Mortality. See Death,
Mosaic account of the Creation vindicated,
xxii. 12-14.
Moscow, notice of the cathedral church of
St. Michael at, xxvi. 44-47 — other
buildings of the Kremlin, 47— of the
church of St. Basil, 48.
Moscow, account of the plague at, in
1771, xxxiii. 226-228.
— — notice of, xxxv. 367.
Mosquito shore, land bubble of, exposed,
xxviii. 157-161.
Mosquitos, ravages of, xxviii. 381.
— — — of the Pampas, notice ot xxxv.
129.
Motion, curvilinear, xxxix. 437 — recti-
linear, 440.
Mourzouk,the capital of Fezzan, described,
XXV. 34.
Mulattoes, observations on, xxxviii. 238,
239.
Mullas or Tartar priests, notice of, xxix. 1 28.
Mummy pits of the Egyptians explored by
M. Behsoni, xxiv. 155— description of a
mummy, 15&.
Murzas, or Tartar nobility, notice oi^ xxix.
127.
Music of the Ashantees, notice of, xxii.
291.
■ the deaf and dumb not insensible
to the pleasures of, xxvi. 404.
- — ' — sacred, efiects of, xxxi. 184.
connexion of, with religion, xxxviii.
18.
Musk-deer, described, xxiv. 119.
Mythology of the middle ages, xxi. 512.
popular, of the Middle Ages,
notice of works on, xxii. 349, 350 — ob-
servations on the difficulty of classifpng
the different systems of mythology,
351-353 — character of the legendary
Satan, 353 ^-legendary anecdotes of
him, in the lives of the saints, 354, 355-
357 — enumeration of other demons by
Heywood, 357 — account of Puck, and
the various names by which he is known
•on the Continent, 357, 358 — etymology
of his name, 359, 360 — account of the
demon Gubbe or Goblin, 358, 359—
and of the Scandinavian Neckker, and
the demons that derive their origin from
him, 360-362 — ^legends of demons cur-
rent in Spain, 362, 363 — of the Scan-
dinavian elves, 363, 364— demons of
the mines, 365 — supposed instances of
their malignity accounted for, 365, 366
*— tutelary spirits of the Icelanders,
366, 367— spirits of the fire, 367— Will-
with-the-wisp, 367, 368 — ^variations in
the mythology of Odin or Woden, 368,
369 — -Woden known in Brunswick as
the hunter of Hackelberg, 369 — ^Hela
the Scandinavian deity of death, 369,
370 — legend of Hellequin, 370 — ^legen-
dary tale of the Emperor Frederick
Barbarossa, 371-372 — anecdote of a
cabalist, 374 — ^the credulity of former
times contrasted with the confidence of
the present age, 376-37S*
Digitized by LjOOQ IC
RsvixWa
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
253
N.
Nahn, town, notice of, xxiv. 107.
Sautes, edict of, revoked, by Lewis XIV.,
xxviii. 511 — remarks on the conse-
quences of that revocation, ibid.t 512.
Naphtha-pits of Bakou, xxxv. 397.
Naples, remarks on the revolution in,
xxviii. 55.
■ remarks on the edifices of, xxxii.
59 — particularly the theatre of San
Carlo, 60 — the Palazzo Gravina, ibid,
— the Palazzo Corigliano, 61 — church
of the Sapienza, ibid, — of several other
churches, 61, 62 — the green-house in
the royal botanic garden, 62 — ^the Berio
palace, ibid. — the palace of Caserta, 62,
63.
Naples, beggars in, xxxviii. 73.
Narrative poems of the Italians, classifi-
cation of, xxi. 487 — account of the
Animali Parlanti of Casti, 487-498 —
— the Ricciardetto of Forteguerri, 503-
505 — ^the Secchia Rapita of Tassoni,
506-509.
National debt, amount of, xxviii. 240.
— — — positive benefits resulting
from, xxxii. 182— desponding anticipa-
tions of former politicians respecting it,
183, 184 — stable of the number of per-
sons receiving dividends from it, 185 —
remarks thereon, 186.
• effect of, upon the country.
xxxv. 288, 290.
— gailery, hints and suggestions
for,xxxiv. 189, 190.
society, and its secretary, abuse
of, by Mr. Bentham, xxi. 171, 172.
Nations, modes of intercourse between,
xxxvii. 51.
■ review of the events of a nation,
salutary, like the review of a man's life,
xxxix. 476.
Natural magic, anecdotes of, xxix. 460,
461.
-■ history, pleasures to be derived
from the study of, xxxix. 407 — the
excursions of the naturalist, a constant
scene of observation and remark, 414.
Naturalist, Journal of a, reviewed, xxxix.
406. See Journal.
Navarino, policy of the battle of, ques-
tioned, xxxvii. 385.
■ battle of, xxxviii. 186.
Navigation, inland, of Canada, proposed
improvements in, xxiii. 385, 386.
■ ■ See CnneUs.
of the river Ohio, remarks
5 — and of the Mississij^i,
• laws^ sketch of .the .earlier
on, XXIX.
5-10
laws prior to the navigation act of
Charles II., xxviii. 431 — operation of
that act on the commerce of Holland,
435, 437 — and of the new laws recently
passed, 432 — remarks on the extension
of license given by them to British
ships, and also to foreign ships, 433,
434 — the new laws calculated to favour
the shorter navigation, 434 — ^but not to
augment British navigation, 437, 438
— ^probable influence of the new laws on
the British colonies, 438-441 — ^remarks
on the warehousing bill, 443, 444—
estimate of the benefits actually obtained
by altering the navigation laws, 445-
449.
Navy, commerce essential to the mainte-
nance of, xxiv. 298 — ^probable effects of
unlimited free trade on our navy, 299-
302.
of England and France, moral causes
of the superiority of the former over the
latter, xxvi. 12-14 — ^the munificent libe-
rality of parliament for improvements in
nautical science, 1 9 — parsimony of
Buonaparte towards the French navy,
ibid. — its miserable state during the
revolution, ibid., 20 — superiority of the
British navy over that of France, in its
best state, 21 — particularly in its disci>
plinte, 22, 23— naval tactics, 2431— the
superior health of British seamen, and
the care taken to preserve it, 31, 32 —
the noble sums annually voted by par-
liament for the expenses of the navy,
33 — the superiority of the British naval
architecture, 34, 35— and also the orga-
nization of the British ports and arse-
nals, 35-37.
state of, in the reign of King Charles
II.,xxxiii.302.
British, imanimity of its co-operation
with the army, xxxvii. 511.
■■■ American, real state of, xxi. 13, 14
—local circumstances, that prevent the
formation of a powerful navy, 15—
causes of the temporary successes of the
American navy, 17.
American, xxxvU. 273 — ^remarks on
steam-vessels, 279 — on naval education,
282 — on the construction of ships, ibid.
Needle, magnetic, observations on the dip
and variation of, xxv. 202.
Negro baptisms and marriages, descrip-
tion of, xxxiii. 493, 494— and of a negro
nursery, 495 — condition of them in the
island of Barbadoes, 496.
Negro insurrection in South Americsi
notice of^ xxi. 330, 331.
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PART. n.-^INDIX OF 8US3ECTS.
QUiSTBSLT
Negro slavery, remarks on the several tracts
on, XXIX. 479-481 — and on the debates
in parliament, respecting, 481-485—
account of the actual condition of the
negro -slaves ia the West ladies, 485 —
Gicularly with respect to food, 485 —
fing, ibid. — ^labour, 486— days of
relaxation, 487— >Suuday markets abo-
lished, ibid. — causes of the diminution
of negro population, 487, 488 — mild
treatment of negro slaves, 489 — why
planters object to the di-nuse of the wlnp,
490 — the appearance of the negroes, a
proof that the charge of harsh treatment
is unfounded, 491 — proofs that their
treatment has £}r years been progres-
Mvely infMroving, 492 •^necessity of
caution in manumissions, 493— consi-
■ derattooB on the best mode of paving
the way for introducing voluntary labour
among the negroes, 500-504 — the im-
provement of their character to be gra-
- dually attempted, 505— causes of the
past neglect of their religious instnic-
tion, ibid. — successful ^orts of the
missionaries of the society for the cen-
version of negro slaves, 506 — proofs of
the increase od' religious feeling among
them, 507 — (^pressed condition of the
negroes and people of colour in the
' United States, particularly at Charleston,
843, 344— flogged at Washington by
ladies, 354.
■ remarks on a tract on, xxx.
571 — how the condition of negroes is
to be improved, 585-587. See S/ave
Labour. S/aves West India Coioniu.
Negroes, faculties of, not inferior to those
of the whites, xxi. 433— ^specimen of
negro eloquence, 454, 455.
■ liberated, ben^cial effects of
Chiistiauity on, xxxii. 34, 35 — notice
of the school for, at Codrington estate,
in. the island of Barbadoes, 41, noie—^
condition of negro slavery in Biasil,
129, 130.
Negroes, introduction of, into the West
Indies, xxxviii. 204 — numbers of in
Portugal in the 15th century, 205 —
price and state of, formerly, in the
West Indies, 228— character of, ibid.—
objection of the planterH to their con-
version, 229 — ordinary punishment of,
230.
Nervous diseases, how far reustible by
the will, zxvii. 115-117.
Netherlanders, prosecution of the slave
trade regardless of treaty, xxvi. 64, 65-
74.
Netherlands, poor maintained nearly on
our system, xxxviii. 72 — ^independence
of the Dutch destroyed by the Frendi
Revolution, 172«-eKcted intoa.king*
dom, 176— cidtivation of waste lands
in, 417.
Netherlands, great improvements in, xxxix.
5 — character of the present sovereign
of, 12.
Newcastle, settlement of, descittied, xxiv.
59.
New England, present st^ of, xxx. 31 .
New Guinea, character of the inhatntantf
of, and of the neighbouring islands,
xxviii. 343, 344.
— HolUad* natives o( described, xxviii.
348,
^ctekordinary dimate and
productions ait xxxii. 312 — colo»y esta-
blished ofi M«lville island, at its northern
nitremity, 324.
New Orleans, Sunday ait, ill observed, xxL
157, 158-rstateof society there, 159.
South Wales, demands of the colo-
nists of, xns, 56^-aecount of the cha-
racters and habits of the different
classes of eonvkts, 67 — description
of its diief towns and places, 58 — the
town «f Sydney, ibid^ — ^Paramatta, 59^ —
Windsor, Newcastle, and Liverpool, ibid,
— state of society, climate, and produce,
60 — ^proofs of the increasing prosperity
«f New South Wales, 61 — excursion of
Mr. Evans and Lieirteoant Oxley be-
yond the Blue Mountains, 62 — improved
state of the settlement of Bathurst, ibid.
—appearance of the country ihrough
which the Lachlan flows, 62, 63 —
extraordinarily large fish caught in it,
63 — sufferings of the travellers, 64 —
they retrace their way, 65 — ^new plants,
animals, and a native tomb discovered
by them, 65 — abstract of their north,
eastern tour, 66 — surprise two natives,
t4iV/.— face of the country in the inte-
rior, on each side of the river Macquarrie,
67~*great inundation account for, 68 —
river Castlereagh discoveied, tbid. —
notice of Peel's river, 69 — and of Hast-
ings' river, and port Macquarrie, 69, 70
^geographical results of these excur*
sions, 70, 71— nautical surveys of Lieu-
tenant King, 7 1 , 72 — ^what convicts are
likely to be useful there, 244.
,1 most eligible govern-
ment for, xxxii. 314 — ^flourishing state
of the town of Bathurst, 316— abstract
of Mr. Oxley's exploratory travels, ibid.,
— ^present state of port Macquarrie, 317
— and of port Curtis, ibid. — discoverer of
the river Brisbane, 318, 319— attention
of the natives to some shipwrecked sea-
men, 320 — manners of the natives of
Moretou Bay, 320, 321— efforts made
to civilise the natives of Botany Bay,
322, 323 — ^prosperous state of the town
of Sydney, 327«— dsscr^oa of P«rft-
Digitized by
Googk
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
m
matia, Windsox^ and Newcaitle, 328—
rapid improvement of ^is colony,
i6*d.
New South Wales, Two Years in, xxxvii.
1 — compared with British North Ame-
rica, as respects agricuhural emigrants,
2— and with the United States, 3 —
community of the capital, 4 — imported
animals become more prolific, and im-
prove in sice, 7 — brief chrontdogy of
events, 8 — pack of howids, 10, 11 —
Australian agricultural company, 12— ^
manufactures, 14 — public and private
carriages, 1 5 — schools, ibid. — news-
papers, ibid. — horse races, 16 — early
difficulties, 17 — population, 22 — ^policy
of transportation considered, 24 — treat-
ment of the convicts, i^'<^.— journey in
quest of a settlement, 27 — kangaroo
hunting, 28 — tame kangaroo, iMd,^-
natives, 29 — ^topografdty, 3 1 .
New York, number of insolvents at, xx\.
5, ito/£— extravagant rents of houses
there, 133, 134— state of religion there,
132 — and of society and manners, 127,
1 28 — degrading treatment of persons of
colour, 129.
■ Zealand, discovery and origin of the
name of, uod. 52— >tlue New Zealander's
mode of fi^utotion, described, 53 — petty
feuds among the different tribes, 54 —
their cruel treatment of captives and
alaves, 55 — ^mode of preserving from
decay the features tai the human face,
56 — character of the women, 57 — ^rea-
sons for concluding that the New Zea-
landers are not cannibals, 58-61 — cli
mate of New Zealand, 63-— popidation,
64 — produce, tbid.
Newspapers, number o^ in circulation,
XXXV. 567 — observations on the manner
in which they are conducted, 593, 594.
■ prohibited in Majrnooth col-
lege, xxxvii. 467.
Niduiames, prevalence of, at Atiiens, xxii.
199.
Nigel. See Fortunes of Nigel.
Niger, river, remarks on the supposed
course of, xxii. 292, 293.
■■ information relative to the course of,
xxiii. 229-333 — proofs of its identity
with the Nile of Egypt, with a plan,
236-240.
> remarks on Mr. McQueen's hypo-
thesis, that the great rivers of Northern
Africa are ramitications from the, xxvi.
55, 56.
- observations on the probiA)le course
. of, xxix. 522.
"■ and Nile, opinion of the natives of
the interior of Africa, on the supposed
identity of, xxv. 45-reKaminatioa of an
argument in support of that identity^
daduoed firom tlie Argonaidiot of Apol-
lomus Rhodttts, 46-50.
Niger and Nile, remarks on the peasible
identity of, xxxi. 472, 473.
remarks on tht supposed
course of, xzxiii. 545-547.
Nile of Soudan, not the Nile of Egypt,
xxii. 476-481.
- viewed with different eyes, by dif-
ferent people, xxxviii. 99.
Nismes, horrid massaorea at, xxviii.
297.
Nitee Ghaut or Pasa, poisonous atmo-
sphAroof, xxii. 421 — observations onihe
height of the pass, 423, 424--cHmate
and productions of this region, 425-
427.
Niton water, analysis and properties of,
xxi. 223.
Nobility of Hayti, account of, xxi. 454.
Nogai Tartars, colonies of, xxxv. 379.
N«re, the, causes of the mutiny at, xxxvii.
400.
Norfolk, agricultural improvements in, in
Hie esglSieeath century, xxxvi. ^5,
896.
Norman architecture. See Arckit&sturt.
' sculpture, character of, xxxrv.
121.
NoHAi America. See America,
Cape, notice of, xiac. 131, 132.
Georgia Gaaette, notice of, xxr.
190.
Pole, attempt to reach it in 1827
in beats, xxxvii, 523. See also Parry,
Fart I.
' W«Bt Company, singular custom
among iiie servants of, xxvi. 409, 410
— laudable efibrts of, for civilizing the
native population of their establish-
ment, 410.
passage, practici^le, xxxviii.
3i5 b e st mode of attempting, 356.
See Parry, Part I.
Norway, its poor maintained nearly on the
English system , xxxviii 72— transferred
to Sweden, 177.
Norwegian Archipelago, notice of islands
in, XXX. 127,
Note in reference to Swan River, xxxix.
520.
relating to * Clapperton's Journey
in Africa,' in No. 77, xxxix, 521.
respecting Maynooth, xxxviii. 2^.
Novel, why not found among ihe ancients,
xxxv. 5 19 -different kinds of novels,
520 — comparison of the novels of Field-
ing and Smollett, 52*2 — ^the late novels
of the Author of Waverley, why infe-
rior to his earlier productions, .')23 —
character of his Redgauntlet, 624 — re-
marks .on his diction, 525-528 — on
Waverley, 529^points of resemblance
Digitized by
Googk
236
PART J.—INDEX OF NAMES.
QUABTBRXJC
between QuenUn Durwaid and Schiller's
Wallenstein, 530-547 >— remarks on
Kenilworth, 548, 549 — plan of Bram*
bletye House, 550-555 — remarks there-
on, 555-559— plan of Tor-Hill, 559-563
— specimens of it, with remarks, 563-
566.
Novels by the Author of Waverley, xxvi.
109 — ^analysis of Rub Roy, with re-
marks, UO-l 15—of the Heart of Mid
Lothian, 1 15-120— of the Bride of Lam-
mermoor, 120-125^ — of the Legend of
Montrose, 126— of Ivanhoe, 127-136—
interesting description of the storming
of a castle, 131-133 — of the Monastery,
136-138— of the Abbot, 138-142— of
Kenilworth, 143-148 — advice to the
author, 148 — analysis of the Pirate,
454-470 — remarks on the characters
introduced, and on the execution of this
novel, 470-474.
observations on the defects of,
xxiv. 350-358 — particularly of Miss
Edgeworth, 358, 359— excellent moral
lessons to be derived from those of Miss
Austin, 359, 360 — observations on the
epistolary form of, 361, 362.
- of Fashionable Life, remarks on,
xxxiii. 474 — plan and execution of Tre-
maine, 474-485— of Matdda, 485-487
—of Granby, 488-490.
• books of travels, and memoirs,
character of those of the present day,
xxxix. 497.
■r why abundant among the modems,
while the ancients had none, xxxiv.
350-353 — comparison of the novel with
the drama, 354 357 — ^few novelists have
succeeded as dramatists, 358-362 — and
why, 362-364— Sir Walter Scott's opi-
nion of the moral tendency of novels,
365— exammation of it, 366, 367— his
opinion that novel reading indisposes
for useful literature and re^ history not
supported by facts, 371 ,372 — ^the novels
of Fielding and Smollett compared,
372-376 — influence of the novels of the
Author of Waverley on the novel lite-
rature of the age, 377, 378.
Novices, form of admitting into the Bene-
dictine order, xxii. 72, 73.
Novgorod, notice of the church of St So-
pluaat,xxvi. 41.
— notice of, xxxv. 365.
Nubia, political divisions of, xxii. 459—
revenues, ibid. — pecuniary compensa-
tion for murder, 460 — agriculture and
produce, ibid, — appearance of the Nu-
bians, 461— climate of their country,
ibid. — travels in. See Bwck/iardt,
Part I.
■ population of, xxviii. 83 — ^remarks
on the people inhabiting this country,
96, 97.
Numancia of Cervantes, analysis of, with
specimens, xxv. 6-12.
Nun taking the veil, xxxviii. 147.
Nuptial ceremonies of the modern Greeks,
xxiii. 348.
Nurse, an old picturesque one in Africa,
described, xxxix. 164.
Nursery literature, antiquities of, xxi. 91
—changes in, 91, 92— -remarks on the
popular fictions of the Teutons, 93 —
and of the Welsh, 94 — and Celts,
ibid. — of the Italians, ibid. — of Spain,
95 — ^important additions made to mu:-
sery literature bv MM. Grimm, 95, 96
— ^the popular fictions of the English
and Lowland Scotch, of Teutonic ori-
gin, 97 — ^the tale of the Frog-Lover,
probably of Tartar origin, 99 — ac-
count of the popular tradition respect-
ing Tom Thumb, 101 — and Mr. Tho-
mas Hickathrift, 102 — ^present state of
his supposed sepulchre, 103, note — ori-
gin of the story of Jack the Giant
Killer, 103 — ^parallels between it and an
Icelandic fiction, 104-107— the History
of Friar Rush of Danish origin, 107—
notice of Howleglass and Simple Simon,
108 — and of the Academy of Compli-
ments, 109 — observations on critics and
criticism, 110-112.
O
Oak, improved mode of propagating,
xxxvi. 588 — on planting woods from
the acorn, 596.
— two distinct species of, in England,
xxxix. 22.
Oasis of Jupiter Ammon, notice of M.
Belzoni's excursion to, xxiv. 168.
Oath, the sanctity of, not taught in May-
nooth College, xxxvii. 478.
Obehsks of Phil», removed by M. Bel-
zoni, xxiv. 163»
Observatory at Oxford, notice of, xxxiv.
164— ^at Dublin, 165 — and at Armagh^
164,165 — private observatories, 16^—
observatories at the Cape of Good Hope
and Madras, ibid.
Odenwald, forest of, described, xxiii. 442.
Odessa, present state of the port of, xxvi.
438.
notice of, xxxv. 375, 376.
Odour of sanctity, probable origin of|
«i. 377.
Digitized by
Googk
Bjsyibw.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
237
Ogiirs, or Onogurs, ravages of Europe by,
xxix. 117.
Ohio state, slavery perpetuated in, in de-
fiance of law, xxi. 153.
— ^ present state of the territory of,
zxvii. 80 — sanguinary character of the
settlers, 83.
river, confluence of, with the Mis-
sissippi, xxix. 4 — remarks on its course
and navigation, 5.
Old Bimie, the former capital of Bornou^
notice of, xxxi. 455.
Old Man of the Mountain^ account of,
xxix. 326,327.
Ombay, character of the inhabitants of
the island of, xxviii. 342.
Omens, remarks on, xxvL 191, 192, and
zxxviii. 524.
Oojein, city, notice of, xxix. 386.
Oomkais, ruins at, said by Buckingham
to be liiose of Gamala, proved to be the
ruins of Gadara, xxvi. 389.
O. P. riots at Covent Garden Theatre,
xxxiv. 238, 239.
Opera, French, remarks on, xxix. 414.
Opium eaters, observations on, xxvii.
122.
Opposition, character of, xxviii 206, 207
— influence of the opposition on the
radical press, 204, 205, 207-215.
— ^— — curious character of the, xxx.
537.
Orators, legal, of ancient Greece, remarks
on, xxix. 314 — ^particularly of Lycur-
gus*s oration against Leocrates, 319-
322 — of Lysias*s oration against An-
docides, and the reply of the latter, 324-
326 — Lysias and IsaBus compared,
328— character of Lysias, 327, 329—
analysis of, and remarks on, his oration
against Eratosthenes, 330-333 — and on
Hyperides's oration against Aristo-
geiton, 334-337.
Oratory of the Greeks, not destitute of
metrical arrangement, xxviL 384 — on
the oratory of the Sophists, particularly
of Gor^ias, 385-388— of Antiphon, 388-
390 — me outward form of the pane^-
rical oratory, considered, 392, 394—
particularly that of Isocrates, 395— on
the funeral and panegyrical oratory of
the Greeks, 396 — extracts from Plato,
398-401 — comparison of his with the
funeral oration of Pericles, 401-404.
Order in Council for improving the condi-
tion of slaves in Trinidad, substance of,
xxx. 563-566 — remarks thereon, 566,
570, 571.
Orenberg, appearance of the country be-
tween, and the Monghodjar hdls, xxxvi.
110,111.
Oreston, notice of fossil remains discovered
there, xxii. 52 — mode of excavating
VOL. XL. NO. LXXX.
stone there for the Breakwater at Ply-
mouth Sound, 52.
Oreston, remarks on the antediluvian
remains found at, xxvii. 470-47*i.
Organ, particularly adapted to devotiooi
xxxviii. 25.
Organic remains discovered in the Him*-
Itura mountains, notice of, xxii. 429^
Organization, curious definition of, by
Mr. Lawrence, .xxii. 16 — strictures
thereon, 16, 17 — refutation of Mr.
Lawrence's assertion that the material
brain is the source of thought, and of
all other faculties, 17-27.
Orlando Furioso of Aiiosto, critical analy*
sis of, xxL 529-541 — specimen of Sir
John Harrington's translation of it,
490.
—-——.—.-.—. the perfection of roman-
tic poetry, xxx. 46— general remarks on
this poem, 47-50 — critical parallel be-
tween it and the G«rusalemme Liberata
of Tasso, 50, 51 — notice of the various
translations of the Orlando Furioso,
52, 53— Sir John Harrington's the first,
52— wortiiless translations of Huggins
and Hoole, 52, 53 — specimens of, and
remarks on Mr. Rose's translation, 53-
61.
Innamorato of Bemi, analysis of,
xxi. 541-544.
Ornamental g^ardening, progress of, in
England, xxiv. 415.
Oroonoko, description of the Junction of
the river with the Apure, xxu 344, 345.
.— i— missions, xxv. 378.
■ source of the tragedy of, xxxviii.
219.
Ostend, Dr. Granville's vaunting account
of, xxxix. 3.
Otaheite, progress^f civilization in, xxxi.
62.
Otter breed of sheep, in America, notice
of, xxx. 10.
Ottoman Porte, faithful to its treaties,
xxxvii. 384 — ^policy of the allied sove-
reigns respecting, questioned, 385.
Oudeuard, battle of, xxiii. 53 — ^its brilliant
results, 54-56.
Ouen, St., church of, described, xxv. 130,
131.
Oviparous fossil quadrupeds, account of,
xxxiv. 521-523.
Owhyhee, huts of, described, xxviii. 346.
— — account of, xxxv. 424, 425 —
abolition of idolatry there, 425-427 —
anecdotes of the king and queen of,
429 — ^their embarkation for, and arrival
in England, 430, 431 — ^their illness and
death, 432— their funeral in Owhyhee,
434, 435 — excellent hints given to the
national councilfor govenxingtheislandi
Digitized by
Googk
258
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QvAxnwt
•437— *«onduci'of the American mission-
aries in this island, and its effects^ 438-
.441.
Oxford university, account of the examina-
itions previous to the entering of students
at, xxxvi. 218, 219 — design of the pro-
• f esiorships of divinity, law, and medi-
cine, founded there, 229 — ^improrements
introduced there in various faculties,
231-234— numher of under- graduates
there, 240— examhiation of the danger
apprehended by some from the intro-
duction of professorial lectures, 252-
254 — observations on the beneficial
changes already introduced, 258-263—
failure of measures to promote the study
oflogicthere, 251, 252.
Oxygen gas, notice of experiments with,
in aid of fusion, xxiil 472.
P.
Padua, siege of, xxxii. 379-382.
Pagoda, porcelain, at Nanking, described,
xxi. 80-82.
Painting, advantages of an annual grant
for the encouragement rf, xxiii. 589 —
munificence of British sovereign in
encouraging and promoting it, 590 —
etpecially of George III., 591 — and
Gteorge IV., ibid,
•- state of the art of, in England,
in the reign of Queen Anne, xxxi. 211
•—in those of G«orge I. and II., 212
^improvement of the art under George
III., t6tW.— importance of a national
gallery of paintings open to all, 213 —
. beneQts likely to result from the acqui-
sition of the Angerstein Gallery for the
I public, 210 — ^its removal to the British
Museum deprecated, 214, 215.
importance of portrait, xxxviii.
■ 378— patronage of, not deficient in
England, 379 — collections of portraits,
• 386.
Palaces of Italy, remarks on the architec-
ture of the Palazzi erected by San
MicheU at Verona, xxxii. 60, 51 —
• Palazzo Tirissino, at Vicenza, 51 — the
palaces of Ronae, 55 — the Palazzo Serra,
' at Genoa, 58-^Uie palaces at Florence,
59— at Naples, 60, 61— the Berio
palace> 62 — palace of Gaserta, 62,
63.
Palais de Justice at Rouen, described, xxv.
128, 129.
Palestine, notice of early travels in, by
. William de Bouldesel, xxiv. 313 — ^by
De la Brocquiere, and Baumgarten, ibid,
—by Sandys and Lok, 314.
■ travels in, by Buckingham,
xxvi. 394. See Buckinghamy Part I.
Palin, Piriiao, notice of the, xxv. 378.
Palm Sunday, hymn for, xxxviii. 42.
Pampas, plains of Buenos Ayres, notice
of, xxxii. 140, 141, 144.
— — or great plain of South America,
described, xxxv. 123, 124 — manners of
its inhabitants, 125-128 — ^infested with
< SMsquiteeB) )29«*-«nd winged
130 — notice of the towns on this plain,
132, 133.
Pamplona, fortress of, acquired by the
French, by treachery, xxix. 61.
PlEir, fish, observations on, xxxviii. 525.
Paradise Lost, comparison of, with the
Divina Commedia of Dante, xxxvi. 5Q-
54. Sea Jlfi/Zon, Part I.
Regained, observations on,
xxxvi. 65.
Paraguay, present state of, xxxii. 138-140
— ^plan of, and extracts from Mr.
South^'s Tale of Paraguay, 458-465.
SeQAbiponet,
Paramatta town, present state of, xxxii.
• 328.
Parental a£Rictions, greatest in the 4ower
classes of society, xxxvii. 569, 570.
Parents, the honouring of, enjoined by the
fifth commandment, changed by St.
Benedict, xxii. 101, and note,
Parga, general misimderstanding preva-
lent concerning the cession of, to the
Porte, xxiii. Ill — ^its origin, 112 — ex-
tent of its territory, 113 — shakes off its
allegiance to the Turks, 113, 114—
throws itself into the protection of the
French, 115 — surrenders uncondition-
ally to Generel Campbell, 116 -—the
right to Parga, in whom considered
vested by the British government, 117-
119 — provision made for the inha-
bitants previous to its surrender to Ali
Pasha, 121 — probable situation of Bri-
tain, had she insisted on keeping pos-
session of Parga, 122- 124— character of
theParganotes, 124-127— of Ali Pasha,
128 — proceedings for giving upParea
to the Porte, 129-131— estimate of the
property of the Parganotes, 131, 132—
liberality of the Lord Commissioners
to them, 133 — and of the amount of
compensation given to them) 134 — false
assertion of the Edinburgh Review, d^
tected, 135, 136.
Paris, churchyard of the Innocents at,
described, xxi. 381, 38*2 — account of its
exhumation, 384— and of the removal
Digitized by
Googk
Review.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
259
of the remains of the deceased to the
quarries, 385 — ^history and present state
of the catacomhs of Paris, 386^90 —
present state of the new cemeteries there,
391 — observations on the taste dis-
plaj^ed in them, 393, 394.
Paris, number of children born in, xxxiv.
454 — remarks thereon, between 1815
and 1824, 455 — ^number of births and
deaths during the same period, 455 —
observations thereon, 456.
" demoUtion of the Bastille at, in
1789, xxviii. 279 — tumults and mas-
sacres in that capital, 285, 292 — account
of the king's flight thence, and com-
pulsory return thither, 300-306.
population of, xxxviii. 73— propor-
tion of paupers, ibid. — visit to the
Foundling Hospital, and Hdpital de
Dieu, 92 — average mortality much
greater than that of London, 153,
note.
Parks, observations on, xxxvii. 311 — '
Chantilly, 312 — ^many injured or de-
stroyed in the civil wars, 313 — ^mate-
rials of, 320— water, 321— trees, ibid.
• —-Sir H. Steuart's at Allanton, 323.
Parliament, many documents respecting,
lost, xxxix. 61 — ancient election of
knights and burgesses to, 62.
Parliamentary eloquence, superiority of,
' in the present times, xxii. 493 — obser-
vations on the mode of reporting parlia-
mentary speeches, 494, 495.
— T reform, strictures on, by
Mr. Canning, xxii. 526-530.
Parthenon, remarks on the scheme for
restoring, on the Calton Hill at Edin-
burgh, xxvii. 327-330 — its inutility de-
monstrated, 331, 332.
Particular acts of parliament, alarming
increase of, considered, xxi. 413-415.
Parties in America, political views of, xxi.
23.
Parly-feeling defined, xxviii. 145 — uses
of, 146— its abuses, 147, 148— rules for
our conduct towards those who differ
from us, 148, 149— how to mitigate
party-spirit in our opponents, 149,
150.
Party-spirit, injurious effects of, in writers
of history, xxxvii. 198.
Pastry of the Athenians, notice of, xxiiL
249.
Patans, xxxviii. 144.
Patron and client, nature of the relation
between, among the Romans, xxvii.
288, 289.
Patronage of the Church of England,
tabular view of, xxix. 554, 555.
Patzinacse, irruption of, into Europe, xxix.
119.
Pauperism, diminishing in England, xxzii.
195.
alarming tendency to, in thig
country, xxxvii. 574.
Paving, recommended for roads near the
capital and great towns, xxiii. 107.
Pavntree, village, notice of, xxii. 274,
Peasantry, Chinese, character of, xxi. 75.
' of France, condition of, prior
to the revolution, xxvii. 166, 167.
Peasants of the Crimea, present state of,
xxix. 128 — and of those in Central
India, 401, 402 — condition of the Eng-
lish peasantry before and after the
Norman conquest, 498, 499.
Swedish, manners and circum-
stances of, described, xxx. 120-122.
Pease, destruction of, in America, by the
bruchut pisif xxx. 7, 8.
Peel's river, in New South Wales, disco-
vered, xxiv. 69.
Pegu, accounts of, by early travellers,
xxiv. 336, 337.
Pella. See Geraza,
Penal laws, a digest of, recommended,
xxiv. 268. See Criminal Law.
Pendulum, length of, explained, xxxvi.
158 — ^how it furnishes an invariable
standard of measure, ibid. 1 59 — account
of Captain Rater's experiments for de-
termining its length, 159-161.
Peninsula, Recollections of, xxx. 61 —
character of the work, 61, 62— descrip-
tion of Lisbon and its environs, 63, o4
— and of the march of the English army,
65 — anecdotes of the engagement at
Campo Mayor, 67 — and at Arroyo de
Molinos, 68, 69 — ^manners of some
French prisoners, 70.
Penitentiary system, inefficacy of, for the
purposes of reformation, or of terror to
criminals, xxiv. 252-259.
Perfumes of the Greeks, account of, xxiii.
263-265.
Pergamus, state of learning at, xxiii. 137,
138.
Periodical publications, how far useful,
xxxix. 496.
Perobotero, import of the word, xxxiv. 489,
and note.
Perpetuities, observations on, xxxiv. 570,
571.
Persepolis, ruins of, described, xxvi. 452-
454.
Persia, account of petrifying ponds in,
xxvi. 447 — discipline and present state
of the Persian army, 444-446— intense
cold at Tabreez, 448.
early efforts to introduce Chris-
tianity into, unsuccessful, and why,
xxxii. 12, 13.
s2
Digitized by
Googk
260
PART II^INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QuAWTERLlf
Persia, analysis of Sketches in, xxxvi. 353
—opportunities of the author for obtain-
ing information, 354-356 — retinue of
the English ambassador, 357 — ^Persian
mode of hunting and hawking, 358 —
cruelty of Persian punishments, 358,
359 — anecdote of Reza Kooli Khan,
359 — and of Mahomed Reza Khan,
ibid. — ^present state of Sheeraz, 359 —
Persian mode of sitting, 360 — character
of the Persians, 361 — literary merits of
Firdousi, 362 — of Sadee, 363 — speci-
men of his apologues, 364 — ^merits of
Hafiz, 364, 365 — Persian diplomatic
style, 365, 366 — arduous ftmctions of
the royal story-teller, 366, 367 — depar-
ture of the British mission from Sheeraz,
367, 368— Tehraun city selected as the
royal residence, 369 — anecdote of a
native of Ispahan, ibid. — character of
Hajji Mahomed Hoossein, 370 — coward-
ice of the inhabitants of Cashan, 371 —
manners and habits of the Turkomans,
372 — and of the Eelyats, or wandering
tribes of Persia, 373, 374— comparatire
condition of women in Persia and Eng-
land, 375 — divorces in Persia, 376 —
entry of the British envoy into Tehraun,
377 — account of his audience and con-
versations with the shah, 379-381 —
various duties of the sovereign of Persia,
38 1 — interesting anecdotes of Mahomed
Hussein Khan, 378 — different treat-
ment of the princes of the royal family
in Turkey and Persia, 383 — proper
mode of military defence for Persia,
384— anecdotes of Saladin, 385— cha-
racter of the Kurds, 386 — account of
one of their sovereigns, 387 — state of
public afiSiirs in Persia, and its relations
with Russia, 389 — ^reception given by
the shah to the syyud, or chief justice
of the holy shrine of Kerbela, 389.
Persian army, notice of, xxvi. 444-446.
Persians, testimony of, to the exalted cha-
racter of Mr. Marty n, xxv. 450, note —
considerations on the most probable
means of difiiising Christianity among
them, 451, 452.
character of, xxxix. 75 — sample
of the encomiastic style of writing, 80
— ^supposed reasonings of an envoy of,
on witnessing the ceremonial of an
English dinner, 83 — at the sight of
English furniture, 84 — at the simple
manners and appearance of the head
directors of the India House, 85 — ^ideas
entertained by, of a coiu-t audience, 86
— questions asked by him on visiting a
college library, 92 — on viewing the
paintings iu the old palace of Holyrood,
ibid, — ^fancied picture of Persian court-
ship, 93— sketch of a Persian cavalier,
97 — ^Persian taste likely to be improved
by the introduction of English litera-
ture, 98.
Perth, a settlement in Upper Canada,
notice of, xxiii. 382.
Peru, flagrant abuses in, xxxv. 325 —
power of the viceroys, 326 — ^venality of
justice, ibid. — ^mismanagement of the
customs, 328 — profligacy of the Romish
clergy, 329-331 — animosity between the
Spaniards and the Creoles, 334-337 —
exactions made by the Spaniards upon
the aborigines, 338, 339 — ^particularly
of the priests and their concubines, 342
—compulsory service of the Indians,
341 — mockery of the religious services
performed for the Indians, 343.
Petersburg, society for protecting Jewish
converts, xxxviii. 134.
— — — entrance to, from Strelna,
xxxix. 13 — speedy passage to, from
London, in a steam-boat, ibid., note —
average of the mortality of, 17— its
buildings, 19 — admiralty, 21 — ^palaceof
the Etat Major, 23 — museums, 24 —
Hotel des Mmes, ibid. — botanjcal gar-
den, 25 — church of St. Isaac, 26.
Phantasmagoria, early known, xxix. 459,
Pharisees, their descent, xxxviii. 119.
Philadelphia, manners and fashions at,
xxi. 143 — ^state of religion at, 146,
147.
Philae, granite obelisks of, removed by M.
Belzoni, xxiv. 163.
Philosophers, ancient, contradictory opi-
nions of, respecting the First Cause,
xxxiii. 361,362 — remarks thereon, 363-
365.
^— ^— — atheistical, influence of, in
. France, xxvii. 168,169.
- Grecian, exposition of the
principles and practices of, xxi. 289-294
— ridiculed by Aristophanes, under the
character of Socrates, 311-316.
■ modem, take many, things
for granted respecting the Deity, which
the light of nature never could have
discovered to them, xxxiii. 365, note.
Philosophy of mind. Dr. Reid's notion of,
xxvi. 491— remarks thereon, 492, 493.
Phrosyne, a poem, by Henry Gaily Knight,
extract from, xxii. 152-154.
Physic, adulterations of, xxiv. 344.
astrological, prevalence of, xxix.
462, 463.
Physical astronomy, progress of, xxii. 130,
131.
science, importance of introducing
into the universities, xxxvi. 220-222.
Physiology, lectures on, by W. Lawrence,
xxii. 1. Sqq Lawrence, Part I,
Digitized by
Googk
Rbvibw.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
261
Fic-nic parties of the Athenians, notice of,
xxiii. 270.
Pictures, proposal for decorating churches
-with, xxiii. 587, 588 — remarks thereon,
588-592.
Pietists in Denmark, notice of, xxviii. 11.
" Jewish, notice of, xxxv. 374.
Piety, habitual, of the North American
Indians, xzxi. 92.
Pilgrimage to Mecca, preparation for,
described, xxii. 413..^-character of the
conductor of the caravan, 473, 474.
Pilgrimages, xxxvii. 51.
Pine-apple, its excellencies, xxxviii. 199,
200.
— forests, conflagration of, in Sweden,
described, xxx. 119.
Pirate, the, by the author of Waverley,
xxvi. 454 — difficulties of his situation,
454, 455 — ^plan of this novel, with ex-
tracts, 456-470 — ^remarks on its execu-
tion, 470474-
Pisa, council of, xxxvii. 67.
Pittsburg, state of,xxi. 151.
■ manufactures of, why declining,
xxvii. 78.
' and its coal formation, de-
scribed, xxix. 2, 3 — state of the country
between it and Cincinnati, 3, 4.
Pittwater settlement in Van Diemen^s
Land, notice of, xxiii. 76.
Plague at Malta, xxvii. 536-538 — account
of, in 1813, 548, 649 — and of the
plague of 1665, in London, 540-542 —
why the plague has not returned, 545,
546— Persia, why exempted from the
plague, 551.
remarks on the supposed conta-
giousness of, xxx. 499.
— proved to be contagious by an
account of the plague at Marseilles in
1 720, xxxiii. 222-225— also of that which
prevailed at Moscow in 1771,226-228—
and of that at Malta in 1813, 228-230
— remarks on it, 230, 231 — ^testimonies
of medical men and others that the
plague is propagated by contact, 232 —
of Dr. Mackenzie, from the plt^zue at
Constantinople in 1 75 1 , ibid.^-of Orraeus
and Samoclowitz, 233--of Mr. Howard,
ibid. — of Dr. Bancroft, 234 — Sir James
M*Grigor, ibid. — M. Desgenettes, 235 —
Baron Larrey, ibid. — Dr. Sotira, ibid. —
Sir Thomas Maitland, 236— proofs that
the plague is communicable by ino-
culation, 238 — examination of Dr.
M' Lean's arguments for non-conta-
giousness of plague, 239-255 — absurdi-
ties of many of his answers to the com-
mittee of the House of Commons, 255,
256— remarks thereon, 256, 257,
Planets, mode of computing the distur*
bances in the elliptical motions of , occa-
sioned by another planet, xxii. 138-
140.
Planets, nine secondary, discovered, xxxviii,
6 — ^laws of their motions, ibid.
Plantain, taken from the Canaries to St.
Domingo, xxxviii. 198.
Plantations, ornamental, observations on,
xxxvii. 304-321.
' British, in North America,
sketch of the progress of, from their
colonial to their independent condition,
xxxi. 1-4.
— — ^— Spanish, in South America,
state of, from their first formation to
the present time, xxxi. 4-9.
— — — Portuguese, in Brazil, state
of, from their first formation to the pre-
sent time, xxxi. 9-13.
Planters' Guide, xxxvii. 303. See Trees,
Planting. See fVaste Lands,
Plants, fossil, notice of, xxxiv. 527, 528.
Plat^ of gold, description of one lately
discovered at Llanpeblic, Caernarvon,
xxxvii. 488, note,
Platilla, introduced into the linen manu-
factory in Ireland, xxxviii. 62.
Platte nver, course of, xxix. 18, 19.
Plesiosaurus, a fossil oviparous quadruped,
notice of, xxxiv. 521, 522.
Plymouth Sound, plan and description of
the breakwater at, xxii. 52-54.
Poetry, narrative, of the Italians, classifi-
cations of, xxi. 487 — critical analysis of
the principal narrative poems, 487-498-
503-509— account of the material of the
romantic poetry of the Italians, 510-516
— its peculiar form, 517— critical analy-
sis of the principal romantic poems, 518-
556.
•^— - examination of Mr. Bowles's In-
variable Principles of Poetry, xxiii. 410,
411. See Bowles, Rev. IV. L. Part I.
of the Fezzaners, specimen of, xxv.
35, 36— of France and EngliMid, con-
trasted, 571.
why less ;)opular than other spe-
cies of composition, xxxv. 518, 519.
See English Poetry.
' earliest rehgions, xxxviii. 18-^e-
votional, 44.
See Sacred Poetry.
Poland, number of Jews in, xxxviii. 114,
115 — proceedings respecting them, 119,
123 — change effected by the French
Revolution, 175, 177.
— ^— partition of, xxxix. 483.
Polar sea, expedition to the shore of the.
See Franklin and Richardson^ Part I.
Police, benefits resulting to a state of a
well-constituted one, xxxvii. 495 — diffi-
culty of determining the true limits of
Digitized by
Googk
262
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUABTEBLY
its powen, 497'^ezcellexice of thai of
our Saxon ancestors, 497 — causes of its
decline, 500— first police bill introduced
into parliament, in what respect defec*
tive, 502 — hopes to be derived from the
present parliamentary inquiry into the
state of tne police, 503 — suggestions of
what the committee oughtto do, 503,504.
Polish Jews, character, opinions and pur-
suits of, XXXV. 372-374.
Political economy, Essay on, in the Supple-
ment to the Encyclopaedia Britannica,
XXX. 297 — remarks on the definition of
wealth, 298 — and of productive labour,
299-304— vindication of Adam Smith on
this subject, 305-307^-examination of
the main principles of the new school of
pohtical economy, 307— that the quan-
tity of labour worked up in commodi-
ties determines their exchangpeable v alue,
308-313 — ^that the demand and supply
have no effect upon prices, except in
cases of monopoly, or for short periods
of time, 314-320— that the difficulty of
production on the laud is' the regulator
of profits, to the entire exclusion of the
' relative abundance and competition of
capital, 3 20-33 3 — similarity between the
system of the new school of political
economy, and that of the French econo-
mists, 333, 334 — errors of both systems,
334.
■ morality of the Americans, xxi.
20.
Polyandry, practised in the Himala moun-
tains, xxiv. 108, 109.
Polygamy, practised among the North
American Indians, xxxi. 97.
Pontopidan, remarks on, xxxviiL 526.
Pool of Bethesda, a poem, xxviii. 4, 5.
. Poor, Mr. Malthus's principles on the
right of to a maintenance, vindicated,
xxvi. 166-168.
effect of paying the wages of, out of
the parish rates, xxxvi. 485 — on the
application of savings' banks to diminish
the evil of the poor-laws, 486496.
— laws, English system o^ adopted in
America, xxi. 9.
' absolute necessity of alteration
in, xxvii. 267.
reports and speeches on, xxviii.
349 — refutation of Dr. Chalmers's pro-
position that compulsory assessment is
the cause of the great increase of pau-
perism, 330 — and that the demands of
human want may be supplied by gra-
tuitous means, particularly in Glasgow,
351, 352— compulsory provision for the
poor, not confined to England, 353, 354
— ^benefits resulting from such provision,
355— the moral gnevances of the poor-
laws exaggerated, 355— the pressure of
the poor-rate in certain districts, ac-
counted for, 356, 357 — evils of abolish-
ing the law of settlement, 358 — principle
of Mr. Nolan's bill for regulating the
poor, 359 — outline of its provisions, 360
—remarks on the different schemes pro-
jected for the management of the poor,
362, 364 — propositions for improving
the poor-laws, 365.
Poor-laws, origin of, xxxiii. 429-432 — ^hus-
bandry acts of Henry VII., with re-
mark^ 432-434 — evils of subdividing
land, 435, 436 — ^real effects of the dis-
solution of monasteries, 437 — in what
manner the poor were relieved before
the act of the 43rd of Elizabeth, 439—
observations upon that statute and its
effects, 440-446 — injustice of paying
wages of agricultural labourers out of
the poor-rates, 447-449— effect of the
36 Geo. III. in increasing paupers, 450
— and crime, 451 — ^the poor-rates a rent-
charge, 454 — the evils of the poor-laws
caused by the impolitic manner in which
they have been carried into effect, 451.
— objections to, by Mr. Malthus,
xxxvii. 540 — regarded favourably by
Blackstone and Mr. Spence, 540 — and
by Defoe, 541— regret that Mr. Pitt's
benevolent plan respecting the poor-laws
was not carried into effect, 559 — senti-
ments of Mr. Whitbread on the subject,
560 — report and evidence relative to
the poor-laws by Mr. S. W. Nicholl,
characterised, 570, note,
clamour against the, founded iu
error, xxxviii. 65, 472 — cause of in-
creased expenditure, 67, note — part
of the fund illegally applied to able-
bodied labourers, ibid. — exorbitant rent
of cottages, ibid,, note — ^their number
and expense diminished as the funds
for their relief have increased, ibid. —
suppression of beggars, ibid. — ^vagrants
more expensive than parish poor, 69,
71 — causes of error in returns of the
poor, 70 — amount of poor-rates in Lon-
don, 71 — ^in a few foreign countries pro-
vided for on a regular system, 72 — an
intolerable burden in others, ibid. — the
laws of England have improved their
habits, 79.
Poor-rates have increased from the middle
of the last century a thirteenth part
annually, xxxvii. 554.
Poor Man's Hymn, xxxii. 212, 213.
Pope, a good one defined, xxxiii. 3 — pro-
fligate characters of many of the popes,
2, 3, and xxxii. 369.
Popular preaching, remarks on^ xxix.
Digitized by
Googk
Bimw.
INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
Population, prof|prefsiTe increaae of, and
its e£&cts, XXVI. 150 — statement of Mr.
Malthus's principles of the increase of
population, particularly in Amevica,
15 1-1 53.-. refutation of Godwin's re-
nuurks thereon, 152-157— inunigration
alone, not the cause of such increase in
America, 157, 158— corroboration of
Mr. Malthus's principle, that population
tends to increase faster than the means
of subsistence, 160 — the number of
births not the sole criterion of the extent
of population, 162 — Mr. Malthus's opi-
nions on the right of the poor to a
maintenance, vindicated from the ob-
jections of Gk>dwin, 166*168.
' ■ increased by the low price of
provisions, xxxvii. 426— increased as
people become more wrretched, 547 —
cannot be checked, 568, 572.
• the influence of the poor-laws
upon the population of England, xxxiii.
443*445 — the increased population
found chiefly among those who are en-
gaged in manufactures and commerce,
446— dispeopling of estates, in various
degrees, resorted to as a means of
checking the excess of population in
Ireland, 461 — misery of the families so
removed, 462 — the encouragement of
emigration, a means of reducing the
excess of population, 465.
of Bokhara, xxxvi. 119.
- of the Burman empire, xxxiii.
57.
• of Fezzan, xxv. 31.
of Hayti, xxi. 456.
of Mexico, XXX. 157-159 — in-
crease of population in Great Britain,
one cause of the increase of lawsuits,
280-283— of Sicily, 397— of the Lipari
Islands, 401— at Chili, 447— of the
other Spanish dominions in America,
448, note — of Egypt, particularly of
Cairo, 504, 505.
' of Modem Greece, notice of.
xxui. 327.
■ of New Zealand, xxxi. 64 — ^the
local increase of population, one cause
of the diminished influence of the der-
fy, and of the consequent increase of
issenters, 232, 233.
of Nubia, xxviii. 83.
of Rio Janeiro and of Brazil,
xxxii. 129— of Monte Video, 138— of
ChiU, 147— and of Peru, 150.
of Rome, Ancient and Modem,
xxviii. 321, 322.
- of Sumatra, why reduced, xxxiv.
104.
. of Van Diemen*8 Land, xxvii.
109 — ^Mr. Godwin's blunders concerning
the population of Amtrica, eormcted,
95, note.
Port Royal, notice of the pretended mi-
racle of La Sainte Epine at, xxviiL 30-
35.
Portsmouth dockyard, notice of, xxii. 48
— account of the block machinery there,
48-50.
Portugal, perfidious measures of Buona-
parte to obtain possession of, xxix. 55,
56 — emigration of the royal family to
the Brauls, 57, 58 — atrocities com.
mitted in Portugal by the French under
Junot, 79, 80— defeat of Junot at tha
battle of Vimeira by Sir Arthur Welles-
ley, 80-82 — evacuation of Portugal by
the French, 82, 83.
— — present state of, xxxi. 379-rre-
medies suggested for it, 390.
• on the eve of a revolution,
xxxviii. 17d^-attempt of Spain to over-
turn its government 180, 184.
poor state of the colonies of,
xxxix. 215.
Portuguese, in Brazil, manners and habit
of, xxxi. 17, 18.
■ wines, notice ot xxxii. 255,
256.
' continuance by them of
the slave-trade contrary to treaty, xxvi,
68, 69, 74-*associated with the French
in the slave-trade, xxxiv. 592— their
numbers and proceedings, 595 — in-
stances of Portuguese cruelty, 596.
Post 'house, Swedish, described, xxx. 120.
Posts, origin and progress o^ xxxiv. 79—
priority of their establishment in Eng-
land over France, ibid. — progressive in-
crease in the post-office revenues, 80.
Potato, introduced into Spain as a delicacy,
xxxviii. 198 — ^variously used, ibid.
Pottery, superior manufacture of, in Eog^
land, xxxiv. 74.
■ general improvement of, xxxvii.
320.
Poyais land-bubble exposed, xxviii. 157-
161.
Prairie dogs, habits of, xxix. 17, 18.
Prayer, stanzas on, xxxviii. 44.
Predestination, notice of publications on,
xxvi. 82-^neglect of the consideration,
that man is at present in a state of dis-
cipline, the source of error in religion,
83 — also the imperfection of human
language, 84 — danger of analogical
reasoning, when aj^lied to the relation
which subsists between the Creator and
his creatures, 85-88 — Augustine the
original author of the disputes which
have divided the Christian church on
this subject, 89— difficulties of the Cal-
vinistic and Armiuian schemes, 90—*
Digitized by
Googk
264
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJBCJTS.
QUABTSBLT
mistake of both parties, 91. See Cb-
piettoUf Kirtfff Part I.
Pk'esident of the United States, how
elected, xxi. 3, 4.
Press, pretended freedom of, in France,
durine the revolution, xxii. 247— out-
line of the act for preventing abuses of,
552 — observations thereon, 552^57^ —
whether the restrictions imposed by
these acts are injurious to literature and
public liberty, 553-555 — dangers to be
apprehended from an unrestricted piess^
656, 557.
— observations on the liberty of, xxiiL
578.
— - activity of, xxxv. 567 — ^its causes
investigated, 567, 668— its effects, 568
— account of the Court of the Press
in Pennsylvania, iWrf., note — considera-
tions on the power of the press in the
case of libel, 589-592 — aftd on the man-
ner in which newspapers are conducted,
593, 594.
Prices, high or low, of commodities, in-
fluenced by supply and demand, xxix.
216-218. See Tooke, Part I.
" of commodities, how far affected by
supply and demand, xxx. 3 14-320 — evils
resulting from fixing prices in Sicily,
393.
Priests, licentiousness of, in South Ame-
rica, xxxv. 329, 330 — exactions made
by them and their concubines upon the
natives, 342 — mockery of the religious
services performed by them for the na-
tives, 343.
Primogeniture, observations on the law of,
xxxiv. 565-567.
Printing, benefits to society from the dis-
covery of, xxxix. 478.
Prisoners, French, on the treatment of
while in England, xxii. 260-262.
■■ of war, incorrectness of M. Du-
pin*s statements concerning those who
broke their parole of honour, xxvi. 2-5
—number of French prisoners confined
on board the hulks, 8— salutary regula-
tions under which they were, 7, 8 —
general healthiness of the prisons on
shore, where they were confined, 9-11.
Prisons and Penitentiaries, tracts on, xxx.
404 — different classes of prisoners re-
cognised by the law of England, 405 —
requisites to a prison, security and
health, 406, 407 — remarks on the eco-
nomy of different prisons, 408, 409 —
protection from bad company, and an
opportunity of attending to the duties of
religion, 411 — important regulations
concerning the duties of prison chap-
lains, made in the new prison bill, 412
-^observations on the intercourse of
prisoners with one another, and with
their friends, 412, 413 — on the employ-
ment of prisoners, 414— examination of
the question, whether they ought to be
compelled to labour, 415— particularly
of accused and imconvicted prisoners,
417 — advantages and disadvantages of
the tread wheel, 42(^, 421-^account of
the different sorts of places of confine-
ment provided by the law of England,
421— the common gaol, 421, 422, 423
^the house of correction, 423— the
hulks, 424 — ^penitentiaries, 425 — their
origin, and first le^slative enactments
for them, 426 — ^notice of the peniten-
tiary at Gloucester, 427 — erection of the
penitentiary at Milbank, 428 — account
of its internal regulations, 428, 429,
430 — ^remarks thereon, 430, 431 — ^rea-
sons why it should be still fiuiher tried,
432 — circumstances which led to a
change of the prisoners* diet, 433 — ex-
tracts from the evidence of the phy-
sicians on the state of disease among
the prisoners, 434-436 — extracts from
the reports of Drs. Latham and Roget
on this subject, 436-438 — concluding
observations on the probable cause of
the disease, and remedies for it, 439,
440.
Probates of wills, amount of tax paid on,
xxxii. 181.
Productions of Van Diemen*8 Land, xxiii.
78, 79— of Modem Greece, 330-334.
■ of New South Wales, xxiv.
60.
Productive labour. See Labour,
Professors of the German Universities,
account of, xxxi. 178, 179— dependent
on the students, xxiii. 447 — conse-
quences of such dependence, 448.
Profits, effects of deficient or abundant
supply of commodities on, when com-
pared with the demand, xxix. 223-232.
— how far regulated by the difficulty
of production on the land, to the entire
exclusion of the relative abundance and
competition of capital, xxx. 320-333.
Profligacy of Charles II. and his court,
influence of, on the drama, xxix, 206-
209— how counteracted, 209-213.
Promenade aux Cimetieres de Paris, xxi.
359. See Cemeteries.
Propagation of the Gospel in Foreijjn
Parts, account of the Society for, xxxii.
23.
Property, legal division of, in France, xxii.
257-259.
■' tax, modified hints for, xxvii. 265,
266 — why unpopular, xxxi. 317.
Prophecies of Nostradamus, suppressed by
a papal bull, xxvi* 190.
Digitized by
Googk
• RXTIBW.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
265
Prostration, court ceremony of, in Africa,
xxxix. 151.
' Protestantism, remarks on the present
state of, xxviii. 42-44 — and on the
union of the Protestant and Roman
Catholic churches, 44, 45.
Protestants, why hated by the Spaniards,
xxix. 257 — the superiority of Ir^otestant
states over Popish ones, accounted for,
26 1, 262 — sketch of the history of pro-
testantism in Spain, 246-257.
■ persecutions of, at Salisbury,
xxxiv. 328-341.
Protevangelium, or Gospel of James,
proved to be spurious, xxv. 361, 362.
Provisions, low price of, in France, xxxi.
415.
Prussia, wise policy of the king of, in his
government, xxxi. 187 l90---its bene-
ficial effects, 191 — ^number of divorces
in this coimtry, ibid. — judicious reforms
introduced by the king, aided by his
ministers Baron Stein and Prince Har-
denberg, 330-338 — remarks thereon,
340,341.
-" reformed Jewish worship not al-
lowed in, xxxviii. 125— first institution
for the conversion of the Jews esta-
blished in, 133 — Berlin society for this
purpose, ibid. — ^half of Saxony given to,
and other districts allotted to, 177.
• Psalms, those of the Church of England
require amendment and regulation,
xxxviii. 16— different collections used
in different churches, ibid. — church of
Scotland revising its psalmody, 17 — a
selection published by the episcopal
church in America, ibid. — history of
psalmody, 18 — ^Jewish Psalter, a collec-
tion of devotional poetry, not the hymn-
book of the temples, 20 — assigned to
partiailar persons, 22 — antiphonal ser-
vice, 23 — why dear to the early re-
formers, 24 — mischiefs of, ibid. — failure
of our poets in translating, 26 — history
of our versions, 27 — suggestions for the
improvement of these, 32 — and of oiu*
hymnology, 33, 35 — should be con-
nected with the Uturgy of the day, 41
—connection of supplication with, 49,
50 — obstacle to the general reception
of any collection, 51.
Fsammis, tomb of, discovered by M. Bel-
zoni, xxiv. 157 — description of it, 158-
160 — observations on the plates repre-
senting it, 160, 161 — confirms the
truth of Scripture history, 161, 162.
Pterodactyls, or fossil flying lizards, notice
of, xxxiv. 524.
Public Affairs, publications on the state
of, xxii. 492 — state of them at the
opening of parliament in November,
1819, 498, 499-»accountof the meeting
at Manchester, 499, 500— observations
on that meeting, 500-503 — remarks on
it by Lord Grenville, 503-509, 513-516,
519-521— by Mr. Plunket, 509-511,
518, 519, 522-524— and by Mr. Can-
ning, 511-513, 516-518, 521, 522— Mr.
Canning's opinions on Parliamentary
Reform, 526-530 — measures adopted by
parliament, 531 — state of the law for
preventing the holding of seditious
meetings or assemblies, previously to
the last session of parliament, 531-
533^-observation8 on the declaration
or bill of rights, 533, 534— actual in-
crease of popular liberty since the Revo-
lution in 1688, 534-536 — analysis of
the act of the last session of parliament
for preventing the holding ox seditious
meetings, 537— elucidation of its prin-
ciple, 538-540— analy^sis of the acts rela^
tive to military training and the seizure
of arms, 540, 541 — observations on
them, 541, 542 — instances of the deadly
tendency of radical tenets, 542, et seq,
—circumstances that led parliament to
enact the statute 60 Geo. III., c. 4, for
preventing delay in the administration
of justice, 551 — and of the statutes 60
Geo. III., c. 8, 9, against the abuses of
the press, and for the prevention and
{mnishment of blasphemous and seditious
ibels, 552 — observations on them, and
on the wisdom of all the measures
adopted by parliament, 552-557 — re-
marks on the recently detected and
atrocious plot for assassinating his
Majesty's ministers, 557-560.
Public houses, great numbers of, a cause
of crime, xxiv. 258.
— — abuses in licensing, xxxviii.
268— remedy for this, 269.
■ Opinion, Rise, Progress, and Pre-
sent State of, in Great Britain and other
parts of the world, xxxix. 475 — its sup-
posed author, 503 — contains many
curious speculations and valuable facts,
ibid.
Publication of a libel, what constitutes,
XXXV. 572, 573 — sketch of the law rela-
tive to publication, 573, 574 — mode of
proceeding, 575-580.
Puck, the fairy, legendary account of,
xxii. 357-360.
Puerperal fever, sometimes contagious,
xxxiii. 220.
Puffins, curious mode of catching, xxx,
128.
Pulo-Nias Island, account of, xxviii. 123-
125.
Pulo Penang, or Prince of Wales' Island,
character of the Chinese at, xxxiii. 106,
107 — culture of pepper and nutmegs
there, 107, 108.
Digitized by
Googk
266
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUAaTBHtT
Pulpit eloquence, importance of, zxix.
283-286— difference between the Eng-
lish and French pulpit style accounted
for,289 — causes which enable the French
preachers to bestow more polish and ela-
boration on their discourses, 290 — fine
opening of Massillon's funeral oration
on Louis XIV., 291 — English preachers
in a continued course of exertion, 292
— greater authority assumed by the
priestly character in Roman Catholic
countnes, 293, 294 — in Roman Catholic
countries the sermon is almost a distinct
service, 295 — causes of the popularity of
the Methodist preachers, 295-297— the
character of the pulpit eloquence of the
Church of England formed by circum-
stances, 297 — remarks on the style of
Latimer, 298 — of the homilies, ibid. —
of Andrewes and Donne, 299 — of Bi-
shops Hall and Taylor, 300— state of
pulpit eloquence after the restoration,
301 — character of Barrow, ibid. — of
Tillotson, ibid. — of Sherlock, Clarke,
and other divines of the eighteenth
century, 302— of Bishops Home, Hors-
ley, and Porteus, 303— of Drs. Paley
and Blair, ibid. — of Mr. Irving, 307-
313 — qualities requisite for a preacher,
304-306 — specimens of American pulpit
eloquence, 353.
Pultowa, monument at, xxxv. 371.
Punch, mode of making, in the seven-
teenth century, xxxviii. 237.
Punishment, capital, examination of the
question, how far it may be superaeded
by an improved system of transporta-
tion and imprisonment, xxiv. 234-263 —
whether punishment can be exactly pro-
portioned to the magnitude of crimes,
236 — remarks on the commutation of
death for a long period of confinement
in Austria, Tuscany, and Russia, 237 —
whether crimes would be suppressed by
certain and mild punishments, 238 —
objections to, and advantages of a dis-
cretionary power in the awarding of
punishments, 239, 240.
Punishment, corporal, shown not to be
necessary in naval discipline, xxxvii.
395.
Punishments, cruelty of, in Persia, xxxvi.
358.
Punning, lines on, xxxvii. 98.
Purgatorian Society at Dublin, notice of,
xxxii. 28, note.
Puritans, reflection of Charles I., on the
outragious conduct of, xxix. 183.
"^ remarks on the character and
conduct of, xxxvi. 30-32.
Purity of the Greek lang^uage, instancM
of its decline in the first ages of Chris-
tianity, xxiii. 143-145.
Pyee, or Prome, ruins of, xxxiiL 54, 55.
Pyramid of Ghizeh, the second, explored
by M. Belzoni, xxiv. 163.
Pyramids of I^ebel el Berkel described,
xxvii. 231, 232— and also thoM of £1
Belial, 233-236.
Q.
Quadrupeds, oviparous fossil, account of,
xxxiv. 521-523 — herbivorous quadru-
peds, 526.
Quakers, Russian, notice of, xxx. 380.
schismatics among them, xxxviii.
550.
Quarantine establishments, no absolute
protection against contagion, xxvii.
546, 547.
laws, beneficial effects of,
xxxiii. 218.
Quentin Durward, points of resemblance
between the novel of, and Schiller's
Wallenstein, xxxv. 530-547.
Quorra, African river, held in mystery
firom its being supposed to be the Niger,
xxxix. 153 — question of its being the
Niger negatively set at rest by Denham
and Clapperton, 1 77 — question as to its
identity with the Shary examined, 178-
180.
observations on its course, xxxi.
470, 471.
R.
Radack islands, manners and customs of
the inhabitants of, xxvi. 360.
Rail'roads and tram-roads, advantages of,
compared with canals, xxxi. 360-362 —
estimated expense of, per mile, 363 —
facility of caniage on them, 364^68—
observations on the projected Liverpool
and Manchester rail-road, 366, 367 — ^its
advantages in point of ssifety, 371 — of
certainty, ibid, — of economy, 372 — its
necessity, 373 — on the opposition which
will probably be made to it^ 376, 377,
Digitized by
Googk
Keyibw.
INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
267
Rajpoots, or native Hindoo princes, notice
of, xxix. 386, 387— their number, 388—
manners, 391, 392— priests, 392 — be-
lief in witchcraft prevalent among
them, 403.
Ramah, in Palestine, Buckingham's mis-
take respecting the site of, xxvi. 375 , 376.
Ramilies, battle of, xxiii. 40 — ^its brilliant
results, 41.
Rampoor, town of, described, xxiv. 1 1 7.
Ransoming of prisoners, gradual disuse
of, xxxii. 375.
Rattle-snake, ludicrous account of, xxxvii.
452.
Raven, singular faculty^ of, by which it
obtsLins at a distance mtimation of food,
xxxix. 422.
Real poperty, sketch of the existing laws
of England respecting, zxxiv. 545 — ^na-
ture of tenures, 545, 546— of uses, 546,
547 — of trusts, 547-549 — divisions of
real property, 549 — operation of the law
of entails, 550-552 — different modes of
acquiring real property, 552— of aliena-
tion by the act of the party, lA. — ^by deed,
553 — and by will, 554, 555-^-of powers,
555 — involuntary alienation, or the
rights of creditors, 555, 556 — ^and by ad-
verse possession, 556, 557 — ^law of copy-
holds, 557, 558— sources of the laws of
real property, 558 — on the remedy pro-
posed for the defective state of the laws
^of real property, 559 — the three great
causes to which the redundancy of the
laws of real property are attributed, 560,
561 — outline of the remedy proposed to
obviate them, 562, 563 — by descent,
564 — observations on the law of primo-
geniture, 565-567— proposalfor enabling
a testator to devise prospectively, what-
ever property he may be possessed of at
the time of his decease, 565-570 — of
perpetuities, 570, 571 — charges on
land, 571, 572— rights of creditors, 573
— of assets, ibid, — and of registration,
574, 575.
Reason, remarks on the meaning of the
term, in the writings of certain philoso-
phers, xxvi. 505-512.
defined, xxxiii. 358 — ^the source
of the improvements in society, 357 —
the process and use of reason with re-
spect to material objects, 358 — difficul-
ties which reason experiences in judg-
ing of spiritual objects, 359 — reason
may enable us to infer the existence of
a First Great Cause, but not the mode
of the existence of the Deity, 360 — this
evinced by the discordant notions of
ancient philosophers respecting the
Deity, 361, 362— remarks thereon, 363-
365 — modern philosophers take many
things for granted concerning the Deity,
which the light of nature never could
have discovered to them, 365, note —
tests for ascertaining the proper office
of reason respecting revelation, 366-—
inquiry into the authority of the mes-
senger and the nature of the communi-
cation, 366, 367.
Rebellion, efGdct of, in perverting taste,
XXXV. 186, 187.
Rechabites in the neighbourhood of Mecca,
xxxviii. 142.
Record, in the old English law, meaning
of, xxxii. 97, note.
Red ants, bite of, xxxiii. 327.
Red book of the Exchequer, xxxix. 64.
Red snow. See Snow.
Reductions of the Jesuits, economy of,
xxvi. 285, 286— history of them after
the expulsion of the Jesuits, 323.
Reformation in England, attacks of Ro-
man Catholics on, xxxiii. 1, 2, 7 — not
chargeable with the odium of Henry
VII I.*s first divorce, 9-12— vindication
of the character of Archbishop Cran-
mer from the charges and insinuations
of Romanists, 17-24 — prudence with
which he conducted the Reformation
during the reign of Edward VI., 24—
sangmnary reign of Mary, 25 — charges
and insinuations of Roman Catholic
writers against Elizabeth, 26 — ^repelled
by a review of her moderate and con-
ciliatory measures at the commence-
ment of her reign, 27, 28 — proofs that
the seminary priests who were capitally
punished suffered for treason, 29-34.
. in England, xxxvii 204.
. — in Spain, sketch of the his-
tory of, xxix. 246-251 — finally extin-
guished there by the inquisition, 252-256.
• progress and suppression of.
in the sixteenth century, xxxvii. 50 —
causes of its extinction there, 80.
■ great principle of the, xxxviii.
• chills and chantries in Dur-
24.
ham swept away by, xxxix. 375, 376 —
beneficial results of, 479.
Reform in parliament, observations on,
xxii. 526-530.
Reformers, cautions to, xxxviii. 242, 243,
248.
Regency of Cadiz, account of, xxviii. 551.
Re^nt's Town, flourishing state of the
liberated negroes at, xxviii. 176.
Regulators, a new class of American citi-
zens, notice of, xxix. 357, 358.
Relics at Rome, remarks on, xxviii. 330,
331— number of, said to have been pre-
served at Salisbury Cathedral, xxxiv.33 1 .
Religion, baneful effects of the non-esta-
blishment o^ in America, xxi. 7 — state
at New York, 132— at Philadelphia,
Digitized by
Googk
268
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUARTKRLT
146, 1 47 — specimen of fanaticism there,
144, 145— -state of religion among the
Ha;ytians, 459.
Religion the only basis of freedom, xxiii.
579.
.— state of, in France, xxiv. 184
—inquiry, with ilhistrative cases, how
far it is a cause or efiect of insanity,
184-189.
of the North American Indians,
xxxi. 89-91.
of the heathen world in the
second century, xxxvii. 39 — restraints
and penalties on religious opinions,
220.
. connexion of music with, xxxviii.
18 — organ particularly adapted to, 25
— state of m England in the former
part of the last'century, 305 — benefits
of, 524.
Religious reading, advice concerning, xxx.
197-199.
Rents and prices, remarks on certain mo-
dern theories respecting, xxxvi. 391 —
improved mode of cultivating the soil,
and disuse of domestic manufactures,
413-418. See Agriculture.
Repartimientos, or forced allotments, ex-
acted by the Spaniards of the Aborigines
of South America, xxxv. 339, 340.
Reports of adjudged cases in law and
equity, importance of, xxi. 401, 402 —
remarks on their enormous increase,
402-404 — and on its consequence, 404,
405.
Reptiles, fossil, notice of, xxxiv. 523.
Repulse Bay, account of the survey of,
XXX. 238-240.
Residence, law of, in matters of divorce,
considered, xxv. 259, 260 — objections to
it, 261-264.
Restoration of King Charles II. described,
xxix. 172,173.
Restrictions on colonial trade, benefit of,
xxvi. 530-532— consequences that would
result from removing all restrictions
on the British colonies, 535.
Retrenchment, aversion to, mischievous,
xxxviii. 157.
Revelation, blessings of, xxii. 32.
defined, xxxiii. 358 — the pro-
per office of reason with regard to it,
366-368 — the incomprehensibility of
certain doctrines contained in it, no
legitimate ground of objection against
revelation, 369, 370-372.
Revenge, notions of the Arabians with
respect to, xxii. 155.
Revenue laws, the number and intricacy
of, considered, xxi. 406-410 — immo-
rality of them^ 408,409.
*■ — — — of India, observations on the
mode of collecting, xxxv. 61, 52.
Revenues, ecclesiastical. See Ciergy,
^— — of Fezzan, xxv. 34.
Reviewers, abuse of, xxiv. 398.
Revolution, French, traced in its previous
history, xxv. 536-560 — anecdotes of,
xxvi. 238-240 — remarks on, xxvii. 177,
178 — state of the peasantry just before
its commencement, 166 — observations
on the effects of, xxviii. 207, 208-213,
311-314. See France,
— ^— in Mexico, account of, xxx.
173-180— and in Chili, 468-47 J.
Rhetoric lexicons of the ancient Greeks,
notice of, xxii. 306.
Rhinoceros, description of a species of,
supposed to be the unicorn of the Scrip-
tures, xxvii. 376.
Rhuisburg;hers, tenets of, xxviii. 1 1.
Richmond, beautiful lines written in the
churchward of, xxi. 397, 398.
Rio Janeiro, description of the harbour o^
xxxi. 19, 20 — and of the surrounding
scenery, 22, 23— effect of the removal
of the Portuguese court thither, 20, 21 .
divers in Van Diemen's Land, notice of,
xxiii. 75-77.
Roads, bad state of, near London, xxiii.
99 — some degree of curvation in laying
out roads, recommended by Mr. Edge-
worth, 102 — the inefficacy of convexity
in laying out roads, 103 — materials
should be broken small, 104 — Mr.
Edgeworth's mode of forming roads on
unsound sub-strata, ibid. And see
Highteayt,
— of England, compared with those of
France, xxx. 378, 379.
— structure of, in Russia, xxxv, 368.
Rob Roy, a novel, by the Author of Wa-
verley, analysis of, with remarks, xxvi.
110-114.
Robin, manners and habits of the, xxxix.
419.
Rock, moving, notice of, xxx. 16.
— Life Assurance Society, remarks on
the proi>ortion of profits returned by, to
the parties assured, xxxv. 10, 11.
Rocky Mountains described, xxix. 20,
21.
Rodenstein, legend of, xxii. 369.
Rokelle, river in Africa, notice of a sus-
pension bridge across, xxxi. 448.
Rolls or records of early history, the great
or pipe rolls, xxxix. 49 — rolls of the
Chancery, 50— rolls of the Exchequer,
and courts of justice, 51 — charter and
patent rolls, 52 — close rolls, 52, 61 —
rolls of France, Rome, and Almain, 53
— the liberate rolls, ibid. — Norman and
Gascon rolls, ibid. — rolls of parliament,
60 — many parliamentary documents
lost by neglect, 61.
Romaic, or Modern Greek language,
Digitized by
Googk
Kjbyibw*
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
269
changes in the terminations of, xxiii.
146, 147 — ^the affinity of this lan^age
to the Hellenic, why greater than that
of the Italian to the Latin, 147 — ^in-
stances of such affinity, 147-149 — cer-
tain letters how pronounced, 149-131 —
observations on the accentual mode of
reading and speaking, 151-153 — why
there are no standard works in the lan-
guage, 154.
RomaiKa, or circular dance of the Modem
Greeks, described, udii. 350, 351.
Roman Catholics, dangerous spirit of pro-
selytism of, xxii. 101, 102.
Roman empire, state of, in the second
century, xxxvii. 39.
Roman sculpture, character of, xxxiv. 1 24.
Romance, proved to be of classic origin,
XXX. 41-46.
Romanesque architecture defined, xxv.
118, note — character of the Norman
Romanesque, 123.
Romanists, letter of the Right Hon. Wil-
liam Pitt to George III. on the de-
mands of, xxxvi. 290-292 — ^his majesty's
reply, 292— further letter of Mr. Pitt on
the same subject, 294 — ^the king's an-
swer, ibid.
Romans^ cultivated Greek literature, xxiii.
138.
— character of, why unfavourable to
tragedy, xxiv. 72, 73-— state of horticul-
ture among them, 402, 403.
- excellence of their roads, and ex-
pedition with which they travelled,
xxxix. 490.
Romantic poems of the Italians, remarks
on the material of, xxi. 510 — ^historical
traditions, ibid. — the mythology of the
middle ages, 51 1 — fragments and remi-
niscences of classical literature, 512-514
— ^fictions derived from the Saraceus and
Normans, and arising from the feudal
ages, 514 — fictions gradually added by
the story-tellers, 515 — remarks' on the
peculiar form of the Italian romantic
poetry, 517 — examination of the Mor-
gante of Pulci, 5 18-525-— and of the
Morgante Maggiore of Bojardo, 526 —
comparison between him and Ariosto,
527, 628— analysis of the Orlando Fu-
rioso of Ariosto, with remarks on his
genius, 529-541 — analysis of, and re-
marks on, the Orlando Innamorato of
Berni, 541-544— characteristics of the
heroic and romantic poetry of the
Italians, 544-548 —the Grenisalemme of
Tasso, 550— -his Aminta, 554 — observa-
tions on the genius and misfortunes of
Tasso, 555, 556.
Rome, remarks on the three principal his-
torians of Roman affiiirs, xxvii. 274-277
—nature and authority of the early re-
cords of l^ome, whence our information
is said to be originally derived, 277-279
— notice of writers who have treated on
the uncertainty of Roman history, 280
— 'moral improbability of the institutions
and acts ascribed to Romulus, 233-286,
289-292— contradictions in the history
of Dionysius, 286, 287— nature of the
relation between patron and client, 288,
289 — Mr. Baukes's account of Numa*8
institutions considered, 295, 296 — and
also those of Servius TuUius, 297, 298
— institution of the office of tribunes of
the people, 300, 301 — cause of the in-
stitution of decemvirs, 303, 304.
Rome, mistaken notions concerning the
splendour of ancient Rome, coixected,
xxviii. 315, 316 — ^population of ancient
and modem Rome, 321, 322 — ^its ex-
tent, 322 — ^remarks on the Via Sacra,
323— on the topography of the Capitol,
324, 325— of the Circus and Fkvian
amphitheatre, 325-328 — sepulchral in-
scription, 328 — architecture of St. Pe-
ter's church, 329 — remarks on sup-
posed relics exhibited at Rome, 330,
331.
. uncertain accounts of the early his-
tory of, xxxii. 68, 69 — requisites .for a
full understaiiding of the history of
Rome, 69-71— particularly of the Ro-
man law, 71-77 — original composition
of the Roman army, and its connexion
with the political divisions of the com-
monwealth, as instituted by Servius
TuUius, 77 — account of the principal
Roman wines, 237, 238.
bills of mortaUty in, from 1767 to
1776, XXX. 144— and in 1819 and 1820,
145 — effiicts of the mal'aria there, 145,
146 — cause of its prevalence, 147 —
remedies for preventing the maParia,
1 48-151 — liberal policy of ancient Rome
towards her colonies, considered, 386-
390.
remarks on the architecture of the
Church of St. Peter's at Rome, xxxii.
52-54-^n the St. John Lateran, 55.
verses on the ruins of, xxxiv. 316,
and note,
Romish Church, intolerance of, xxviii.
612 — ^the real cause of Henry IV.* s re-
conciliation to it, 511.
^— observations on the sys-
tematic impostures of, xxxvi. 353.
. not the most ancient
form of Christianity, xxxvii. 50 — its
catechism, 69 — ^its resemblance to pa-
ganism, 80 — polytheistic, 213 — moral
J effect of confession, ibid, — mischievous
consequences of the doctrine of transub-
stantiation, 215 — ^intolerance of, 220 —
education of the Catholic clergy, a ques-
Digitized by
Googk
270
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUARTBRLY
tion of the highest moment, 459 — Ca-
tholic College of Mayoooth. See Bltnfm
nooth,
Roodroo Himala, peaks of, described,
xxiv. 127, 128.
Rook, the common, erroneously described
by Linnsus as a corn-gathering bird,
xxxix. 423.
Rouen, notice of French domestic archi-
tecture at, XXV. 127 — description of the
Palais de Justice there, 128, 129— of
the church of St. Ouen, 130, 131— and
of the cathedral, 132, 133.
Rowdies, a new class of American citizens,
notice of, xxix. 357.
Roxburghe Club, notice of, xxxii. 154,
155.
Royal Institution, notice of, xxxiT. 159.
Society, valuable labours of, xxxiv.
154.
■ of Literature, remarks on,
xxriii. 181, 182.
Royalties, claim of the see of Rome to,
xxxviii. 584.
Ruins of Persepolis, described, xxvi. 452-
454 — notice of the niins of Lebida, 212
—of the Cisterne of Ptolemy, 213— and
of those found at Bengasi, 225, 220.
Rule of Si Benedict, analysis of, xxii. 69-
73.
Runes, or alphabetical characters of the
Anglo-Saxons, account of, xxxiv. 254-
256.
Running lectures, notice of, xxxii. 25.
Russia, observations on the penal code of,
xxiv. 235, 236 — state of gardening
there, 411.
■ improved state of the roads in,
XXXV. 368.
attempts of, to open conmiercial
intercourse with the interior of Asia, on
the southern and eastern coasts of the
Caspian Sea, during the reigns of the
Czar Peter and Empress Catharine,
xxxvi. 107— and with China, 109—
arrival and reception of a Russian em-
bassy at Bokhara, 117 — account of the
expedition to Khiva, and its results,
120-126 — examination of the practica-
bilitjr of the invasion of India hy the
Russians, 129 — difficulties of their en-
trance through Persia, 130 — of the route
by Khiva and Bokh&ra, 132 — by Marov,
133 — ^probability of a successful route
by Lokan, Affghanistan, and Caubul,
133-135— difficulties to which the Rus-
sians would be exposed, in the event of
a successful irruption, 1 35.
character of the people, xxxviii.
95 — Finland transferred to, 176 — duchy
of Warsaw made a dependency, 177 — I
its present predominance in Europe to
be guarded against, 177 — the Mediter-
ranean will probably be the first scene
of its exertions and influence, 178 —
Gennauy the first bulwark against,
tftc(i.— desirous of dismemberingTurkey,
190.
Russia, a Few Words on our Relations
with, xxxix. 1 — On the Designs of, ibid,
— traits of the present Emperor, 15 — of
the Empress Mother, 16— institutions
for female education superintended or
established by her, 17 — state of its
nav^r, 22— estimate of its army, 23, 24
— ^mistaken result of its possessiag Con-
stantinople, 30 — ^its power of afi;gre8sion
weakened by extension of territory, 33,
34— question of its invading India exa-
mined, 35— disastrous result of its T\ir-
kish invasion, 41 — fiie last power to
which Poland should have been added,
487.
Russian army, observatioiis on its compo-
sition, xxii. 398, 399.
— — church architecture, observations
on, xxvL 41-50.
■ government, enterprising effi>rts of
discovery made under the auspices of,
xxvi. 341 — extraordinary ukase issued
by, claiming two thousand miles on the
north-west coast of America, 344 —
proof that it has no authority for such
claim, the territory being pre-occupied
by the United British North-West and
Hudson's Bay Company, 345, 346.
' government, toleration of, xxxv.
401— its real character, 402, 403.
Russians, imsuccessful attempts of, to
establish commercial relations with the
Japanese, xxii. 108, 109.
— sweeping condemnation of, xxxi.
149 — ^vindication of their character, 150,
151 — fraudulent conduct of Prince Po-
temkin, 152 — alleged instance of fraud
upon the emperor, 153, 154 — ^remark
thereon, 155 — strictures on the cha-
racter of the Russian women, 158 —
merchants, 159 — of the clergy, 160 —
alleged abuses in the civil administration
of the empire, 163, 164 — judicious con-
duct of the Emperor Alexander, 166 —
hospitality of the Russian peasantry,
220.
. avidity of, for the scriptures, xxxv.
365 — ^notice of the Starovaertsi, a sect
of Russian dissenters, 356 — and of the
Betzpopocchini, another sect, ibid. —
piety of a Russian priest, 369— character
of the Malo-Russians, 370 — of the Rus-
sian quakers, 380 — baptism of the Rus-
sians in 989, 371 — notice of an extraor-
dinary sect amon^ them, 385 — number
of clergy and mihtaiy, 403,
Digitized by
Googk
HSYIBW*
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
271
s*
Sabbath, evening of the, spent in amuse-
ments in foreign Protestant countries,
xxxviii. 523 — impropriety of this, ibid.
Sacrament, the case of expulsion from,
by a clergyman, how far legal, xxiv.
18.
Sacred poetry, requisites to, xxxii. 217 —
it must express the language of feeling,
ibid. — such feelings ought to be speci-
mens of the writer's general tone of
thought, 219 — Dr. Johnson's reasons
• for the failure of sacred poets considered
and refuted, 220-222 — the comparative
unpopularity of sacred poetry accounted
for, 223, 224— proofs that Spenser was
pre-eminently a sacred poet, 225-227,
231 — ^why he chose allegory as his
vehicle, 228 — ^Milton a sacred poet of
a diflPerent description, 228, 229— de-
cline of sacred poetry idler his time, 230
— notice of some subsequent writers of
sacred poetry, 231.
Sago tree, described, xxi. 335.
Saigen, a city of Cambodia, described,
XXX. 358-362.
Salad, political one, described, xxiii. 275.
Salisbury or Sarum, old or first cathedral
at, commenced by Bishop Osman,
xxxiv. 319 — account of his successor
. Roffer, 320-322— state of the cathedral
at his death, 322 — removal of it to its
present site, 323 — account of the foun-
dation of the new cathedral, and the
ceremonies with which it was attended,
324-327 — ^number of relics said to be
preserved there, 331 — progress of the
cathedral under Robert de Wyville, 331,
332 — settlement and declination of the
tower, 333 — remarks on the architec-
ture of the spire, 333, 334 — account of
Bishop Hallam, 334-337 — ^murder of his
successor, William Aiscough, 337 —
• death of Lionel Woodville, the next
bishop, 338 — character . of Thomas
• Langton, ibid. — ^persecution of Pix)tes-
tants by him, 338, 339 — ^reception of
the bishop. Cardinal Campeggio, 341,
342 — characters of Bishops Shaxton,
342 — John Capon, ibid. — of Bishop
Jewell, 343 — ^magnitude of his episcopal
labours, 344 — his death, ibid. — tributes
. to his memory, 345 — his munificent
patrona^ of Hooker, 345, 346 — cha-
racter of JewelVs successors, Coldwell
and Cotton, 346 — curious anecdote of a
bishop of Salisbury, and a Presbyterian,
' ibid. — notice of Bishops Duppa and
Ward, 347 — subsequent bishops, 347,
348 — observations on the more recent
alterations of Salisbury cathedral, 348.
Salmon, instruction for dressing, xxxviii.
517 — ^proper sauce for, 518 — superiority
of, as a sporting object, 519 — on the
food of, 526 — diminution of its quantity
apprehended, 527 — packed in ice to be
sent to London, 529.
• Fisheries of the United King-
dom, reports from the Select Committee
on, xxxvii. 345 — ^laws respecting, de-
fective, 346 — ^parliament petitioned on
this subject, 347 — deficiency of the
reports, ibid. — ^migrations of the salmon,
348-350 — spawning season, ibid. — ^pro-
ceedings of the fiy, after evolving from
the eggf 351 — irregularity in the fence
months^ for the protection of the fishe-
ries, fevourable to the poacher, 351, 352
— May, the proper penod for the com-
mencement of fishing, 353, 354 —
August, the period of its termination,
355 — eel-traps, kidels, and mill-dams,
destructive to the fisheries, 355, 356—
abolishment of these engines recom-
mended, 357 — ^remedies against the
evil of mill-dams, suggested, 359 — value
in this respect, of tide-nets, 360 — re-
strictions imposed by law on these nets,
ibid. — question of their utility examined,
361 — question examined, to whom the
salmon bred in rivers^belong, 362 — the
propriety of tide-nets further investigated,
363 — a speedy legislative enactment, as
to the fisheries, desirable, ibid.
' fishery of Western Caledonia,
notice of, xxvi. 413, 414.
Salmonia, or Days of Fly Fishing, by an
Angler, reviewed, xxxviii. 503 — sym-
pathy with the philosophic author, ibid,
— defence of angling, 504 — di£Ference
between the author and Walton, in the
former using no living baits, 505, 506 —
cause of our comparative less feeling for
the sufferings of fish, and anecdote of a
worshipper of nature, 506 — qualifica-
tions for angling, philosophical ten-
dency, poetical relations, and know-
ledge, demanded for the amusement,
ibid. — futility of attempting to * fish by
the book,* and personal requisites to
constitute a good fisher, 507 — precept
of H aliens, 508 — amusing contrast of
an awkward and a dexterous fly-fisher,
ibid. — fatality of a fisher compared with
the fisherman of the Arabian Nights,
609 — dangers of a too stimulating diet,
ibid, — lucky fishing days (508) and
Digitized by
Googk
272
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QuARTBRLir.
Specific for wet feet, 510— risk of
wading, 510, 511 — anecdote of the ill
effects of the practice, 511 — advantages
of a certain vade mecum, 5 1 2 — plan and
style of < Salmonia,' ibid* — comparison
between it and Izaak Walton's Com-
plete Angler, 512, 513 — notice of Izaak,
and cause of the pleasure derived from
his book, 513, 514 — sweet verses, writ-
ten by a lady of high rank, in a copy
of Walton, 514, note — descriptions of
scenery, 515 — of a grey or silver eagle,
516 — account of hooking and playing a
salmon in Loch Maree, and receipt for
cooking the fish, 517 — ^ratiouale and
effect of crimping, 518— encounter be-
tween a Highland dunnie-wassail and
the fishing party, 519 — doubt if Izaak
Walton ever saw a live salmon, ibid. —
the salmon the king of fish, and mode
of taking him, 520 — ^ilhistrions devotees
of the sport, 521 — anecdote of Nelson
and the sailor, ibid.^ note — debate whe-
ther the party shall pursue their amuse-
ment on a Sunday, 522— question of
the observance of the Sabbath, 523-^
preference of a firm religious belief to
every other blessing, 524 — ^philosophical
passage against the vulgar disbelief of
things incomprehensible, 525 — investi-
gations of the par and trout, ibid. — food
of the salmon, still a doubt, 526 — ques-
tion of the salmon deserting the more
southern of the Scottish rivers, 527 —
' art of packing salmon in ice perfected
thirty or forty years ago, 529 — causes
of the destruction of the fish, 530 —
effects of drainage, 530, 531 — upper and
lower fisheries, 531, b2^-^iackjisfdngf
533 — mode of redeeming the fisheries
firom almost certain ruin, 534 — ^parting
address of the Coryphaeus of Salmonia
to his party, 534, 535.
Salutation, singular mode of, at Si Law-
rence island, xxvi. 348.
Salutations of friends among the New
Zealanders, described, xxxi. 53.
Salympria, account of a Greek monastery
at, xxiii. 343, 344.
Samarcand, account of, xxiv. 334.
Samaritans at Sychem, account of, xxxviii.
143.
Sandoval, or the Freemason, xxxiv. 488
— strictures on the author's pamphlet,
vindicating Don Esteban, 488, 489,
490 — and on his character of the Spa-
nish clergy, 49 1, 492 — anatomical blun-
der of the author, 493— treatment of
Ferdinand, king of Spain, 494— cha-
racter and vindication of Ferdipand,
494497, 498— insubordination of the
Spanish army under Mina, 499-500 —
account of the lodges of the Comuneros,
500-502— and of an apostle of profll-
gacy and atheism, sent forth by the
secret societies, 503, 504 — remarks on
the present state of parties in Spain,
505,506.
Sandwich Islands, character and policy of
Tamehameha, king of, xxxv. 420, 421
—-accession of his son Jolani Riho
Riho, 422— he destroys the taboo., 422,
423— baptism of two chiefs, 424 — ac-
count of Owhyhee, 424, 425 — abolition
of idolatry and of the worship of the
goddess of fire, 425-427 — intrepidity
of a female Christian chief, 427, 428
— anecdotes of Riho Riho, 428, 429
— character of his queen, 429 — ac-
count of their embarkation for England,
430 — ^their reception here, 431 — ^Ulness
and death of the queen, ibid. — and of
the king, 432 — ^return of his suite with
the roval remains to Owhyhee, 432,
433 — funeral of the king and queen,
434, 435 — hints to the national council
of his lordship and the crew of the
Blonde from Owhyhee, 437 — conduct
of the American missionaries, and the
eflfects produced by it, 438-441.
San Luis, a town of the Pampas, descrip- .
tion of, xxxT. 132.
Santiago, description of, xxx. 451, 452.
in Chile, description of, xxxv.
121, 122, 139.
Santo Paulo, in South America, abun-
dant produce of the district of, xxxii.
137.
Sardanapalus of Lord Byron, remarks on,
xxvii. 492-497 — analysis of its fable,
with extracts and remarks, 497-504.
Sarepta,. notice of the Moravian colony at,
xxxv. 382.
Satire, proper objects of, xxxii. 302 — ^vin-
dication of Pope's satires, ibid,
Saturn, observations on the retardation of
the motion of, xxii. 142, 143.
SatjT and the Traveller, fkbleof, versified,
xxiii. 461, 462.
Sauces of the Athenians, account of, xxiii.
254-256.
Savings Banks Act, remarks on the im-
policy of, xxi. 422.
design of, xxxL 126 — ^pro-
tection and encouragement g^ven to
them by various acts of parliament,
127 — manner in which the spirit of
these institutions is generally violated
or evaded, with remedies for detecting
fraudulent investments, 128-131 — sug-
gestion for adding to the present ad-
vantages enjoyed by depositors, 132,
133.
• observations on the substi-
tution 0^ for the poor-laws, xxxvi. 486-
496.
Digitized by
Googk
BiTISW.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
273
Saxon sculpture, clunraeter o^ zxxiv. 121
— account of the Saxon Chronicle, 277-
279. See Angio Sasont,
Saxony, character of the government of,
xxxL 185.
.—— half o^ given to Prussia, xxxviii.
177.
Scandinavian elves, account of, xxii. 363,
364 — and of the Scandinavian Nekker,
and the demons deriving their origin
from him, 360-362.
Scepticism, remarks on, hy Mr. Rennell,
xxii. 1.
Schellenberg, battle of, xxiii. 24, 25— its
conse(|uence8, 26, 27.
Scholastic education, severe discipline of,
in monastic institutions, 'r^rri-r. 100 —
remonstrance of Archbishop Anselm
against this, 101 — ^the practice an abuse
of power, 103 — cruelty of, as described
by Ravisius Textor, 104 — as described
hy Erasmus, 106— whipping boys insti-
tuted to save the backs of courtly dunces,
107 — period of the mitigation of scho-
lastic severity, ibid, — why retained
longest in charity schools, ibid. — Dr.
Parr, the last learned schoolmaster, pro-
fessedly an amateur of the rod, ibid, —
system of education established in all
grammar schools, by Henry VIII., 110
—Lilly's Grammar, and method of
teaching, ibid,, 123---Grammar of Wil-
liam Haines, 111 — Eton Grammar,
Westminster, Christ's Hospital, Wes-
ley's, i6u/.— curious critical Latin Gram-
mar, 1 12 — defects of the present mode
of scholastic education, 1 13, 140 — evil
of great schools, ibid, — sirstem of Dr.
Bell, 114, 120, 121— of Mr. Wood,
master of the Sessional School at Edin-
burgh, 116— of Professor Pillans, 117
founding of grammar schools, one of
the means of effecting the Reformation,
124 — benefits arising from general
education, 126, 138.
Scientific institutions of Great Britain,
account of, — ^the Royal Society, xxxiv.
154 — British Museum, 155, 158 — Lin-
nean Society, 159 — Royal Institutions,
fftw^.— College of Surgeons, 159, 160—
Library and Museum of the India
Company, 161 — Horticultural Society,
162 — London Institution and Geolo-
gical Society of London, ibid. — Astro-
nomical Society of London, 163 — Ob-
servatory at Oxford, Dublin, and Ar-
magh, 164 — private observatories, 165
— oDservatories at the Cape of Good
Hope and Madras, ibid. — ^Ashmolean
Museum of Natural History at Oxford,
166 — Literary and Philosophical So-
cio^ of Manchester, 167 — ^Royal Geo-
logical Society of Cornwall, 168—
VOL. XL» MO. LXXX.
Liverpool Royal Institution, and Botanic
Garden, ibid. — Philosophical Society of
Cambridge, 169— Bristol Institution,
for the advancement of science, litera-
ture, and the arts, 169 — ^Yorkshire Phi-
losophical Sode^, 170, 171 — other
provincial institutions, l7l — import-
ance of scientific institutions for pro-
moting science and the fine arts, 173-
179.
Scotland, law of, concerning divorce. See
Divorce,
— — - progress of horticulture in, xxiv.
408 — comparison of Scottish horticul-
ture with that of other countries, 409-
412 — superiority of its horticultural
productions over those of all other
countries, 413, 414.
-remarks on the income of the
clergy of, xxix. 558-560.
• state of, from the minute sub-
letting of lands, formerly similar to the
present state of Ireland, xxxiii. 465 —
that state now removed, ibid. — ^noble
improvements made by the Marquis and
Marchioness of Stafford, upon their
Scottish estates, 466-469— existence of
personal slavery in Scotland until a few
years since, 499, and note.
— ^-^— family pride in, accounted for,
xxxvi. 170 — ^flight of the cavalry under
Brigadier-General Fowke, in 1745, 174
— conduct of the volunteers of Edin-
burgh, 172 — on the system of education
pursued at the Scottish universities. See
Univertitiet,
prevalence of vagrancy
xxxviii. 74 — progpress of improving the
soil in, 414, 430^— scenery of, 515—
eagles in, 516 — great destruction of
salmon in, 529. See Sa/monia, ante.
Scottish Lowlands, popular fictions of, of
Teutonic origin, xxi. 97, 98.
Scripture history confirmed by Belzoni's
researches in Egypt, xxiv. 161, 162—
and by the discovery of the unicorn in
India, 120, 121.
Scriptures, profane and infidel allusions
to, xxvi. 378.
on the disputed passage of 1
John V. 7. See Burgegs, Dr, Thoma$t
Bishop of St. David's, Part I.
versions of, in the languages of
India, remarks on, xxix. 411.
Sculpture, shown to be inseparable from
architecture, xxvii. 324.
origin of, xxxiv. 118 — character
of the sculpture of the Egyptians, ibid.
— of the Greeks, 119 — of the Romans,
120— of the Saxons, 121— of the Nor-
mans, ibid.^-oi the productions of mo-
dem English sculptors, 123 — ^particu-
larly Cibl^r, Ry sbrach, and Scheemaker^
Digitized by
Googk
274
PART 11.— INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
QvAwnAtsr
123, 124 — RoubiUac, 124, 125 —
Wilton, 125 — Bacon, 125, 126 —
Bankes, 126— Nollekens, 127— Flax-
man, 128— Westmacott, 129-131—
Chantrey, 131-133 — Bailey, 133 —
causes of the indifferent success of
British sculpture, 134, 135— observa-
tions on the sculpture of Canova, 1 13-
117.
Scylla, present state of, xxx. 399.
Scythian tumuli, notice of, xxzv. 380,
381.
Sea, temperature of, xxx. 177'^the sea
sciuiry successfully arrested in its pro-
gress, 192.
Sea-sickness, laudanum, a remedy against,
xxxix. 3.
Sea serpents, notice of reports concerning,
xxx. 126.
Sea snake, gigantic, fabulous, xxxriii.
526.
Seals, use of, among the Anglo-Saxons,
xxxiv. 268, 269, and notes.
Seasons of Egypt, xxx. 496.
Secchia Rapita, Tassoni's, design and
character of, xxi. 506-508.
Secret Tribunal, account of the constitu-
tion and proceedings of, xxiii. 441,
442.
Secular inequalities, investiiication of, xxii.
140,141? .
Security, maritime, importance of com-
merce to, xxiv. 298-302.
Seditious libels, outline of the act for the
punishment of, xxii. 552 — necessity of
that act shown by a review of previous
circumstances, 542-551 — observations
on it, 552, 557.
Seditious meetings, state of the law for
preventing, prior to 1820, xxii. 531-
533— outhne of the act of 1820 for
preventing the holding of such meet-
ings, 537— exposition of its principles,
and vindication of its enactments, 538-
540.
Seeds, vivacious natj^re of, xxx. 6, 6.
Seizure of arms, analysis of the act for
the, xxii. 540— observations on it, 541,
542.
Seminary priests, execution of, in the
reign of Elizabeth, proved to have been
for treason, and not for religion, xxxiii.
29-34.
Senate of Rome, Dionysius's account of,
xxvii. 292 — remarks thereon, 293,
294.
Sennaar, expedition of the pasha of Egypt
to, xxviii. 93, 94 — account of its capital,
94, 95.
Sensitive, fishes less so than man, xxxviii.
506.
Septuagint, Greek version of the Old
Testament, observations on the lan-
guage of, xxiii. 142, 143 — ^its present
state vindicated, 322.
Sermons, difference between French and
English accounted for, xxix. 292-299 —
remarks on the style of the principal
writers of sermons in the sixteenth,
seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries,
298-303 — character of Mr. Irving's
sermons, 307-313.
Servants, incivility of, at New York, xxvii.
76.
Servian Minstrelsy, translations from,
XXXV. 66 — account of the battle of Kos-
sova, between the Servians and Turks,
67, 68 — Servian version of it, 69 — spe-
cimen of Servian metrical romances,
and historical ballads, 71-80— of lyrical
ballads, 80— and songs, 81, 82.
Settlements and settlers in North America,
account of, xxx. 37-40.
Settlers, English, misery of, in America,
xxvii. 86, 87-89.
Shakers, account of the worship o( xxvii.
97.
Shary river, notice of, xxix. 519, 520—
voyage down the, to the Lake Tsad,
xxxi. 459, 460.
Sheep, singular breed of, in America, xxx.
10.
Sheeraz, present state of, xxxvi. 359.
Sheerness dockyard, notice of, xxii 40.
Shells, fossil, notice of, xxxiv. 626.
Sheygya, people of, account of, xxvii.
218-4heir mode of warfare, 219— de-
feated by the Pasha of E^t, 220—
ignorance of the art of medicine, 228.
Shipping of England, present state of,
xxxii. 180.
Siam, productions of, xxxiii. 123 — cha-
racter and pursuits of the Siamese, 123,
124— religion, 125, 126— their super-
stitious worship of the white elephant,
122 — servility of the Siamese to ttieir
superiors, 118, 119-124— description of
the royal audience given to the British
ambassador, 119-121 — and to the am
bassador from Cochin China, 122.
Sidly, policy of the Roman government
towards, xxx. 386, 387— outline of the
constitution given to the inhabitants of
this island by Great Britain, 391 — ^ve-
nality of justice, 392 — delays in the ex-
ecution of criminal justice, ibid. — evils
of fixing the prices of commodities,
393 — ^universal distrust prevalent, 394
— animal and vegetable productions,
395 — population, 397— character of the
Sicilians, 397, 398 — notice of some re-
cently discovered architectural antiqui-
ties, 398, «o/e— present state of Scylla,
399— and of Charybdis, ibid. — altitude
and appearance of Mount ^tna de<
scribed, 400, 401.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbyisw.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
275
Sicily, description of the old king and
queen of, by Admiral Colliugwood,
zxxvii. 383.
Sierra Iieone, flourishing state of, zxii.
300, 301.
'■ flourishing settlement of
liberated negroes at, xxviii. 176.
• beneficial results at, of the
Church Missionary Society's labours,
xxxii. 33^5.
-described as a pestiferous
charnel-house, xxxix. 181 — abandoned
as a naval station, 182.
Silk manufactures of France, origin of,
xxxi. 403 — their present state, 403,
404 — their supposed superiority ac-
counted for, 404.
■ manufacture and trade, past and
"present state of, xxxii. 175, 176.
— manufacture, antiquity of, 'Xxziv. 64
—introduction of silk-worms in Europe,
ibid. — origin and progress of this manu-
facture in France, 63 — rvalue of the silk
manufactured there in 1818, compared
with the value of the woollen goods
made in England in the same year, 66
— establishment of the silk manufacture
in England, 67.
Siloam, fountain of, exquisitely poetical
apostrophe to, xxxiii. 205.
Sine range of the Himala mountains, pro-
ductions and cultivation of, xxiv. 110.
Singapore island, description of, xxxiii.
109 — rapid increase and prosperity of
the settlement at, 109, 110, 111— im-
portance of this colony, 112---vegetable
productions of Singapore, 114 — cha-
racter of the Chinese emigrants there,
115--and of the Malays, 116.
Sir-deria river, state of the country between,
and Bokhara, xxxvi. 114-116.
Sketch Book of Geofiirey Crayon, xxv.
50 — ^the author's account of himself, 52
— American feehng^ towards English-
men, 55 — ^rural funerals, 58 — happy ex-
pression of sentimental feelings, 56, 57
— legend of Ichabod Crane and the
Sleepy Hollow, 61-65— concluding re-
marks on the style of the work, 66, 67.
Slave-holding system in America, evils of,
xxi. 10, 132, 146. 147.
Slave hunters and slave dealers of the
interior of Africa, account of, xxv. 42,
43.
Slave labour and free 'labour, the point at
issue between the aboUtionists and West
India colonists, xxx. 569 — quantum of
labour required for the production of
sugar, ibid. — results actually produced
by free labour in Sierra Leone, 572—
and in the island of Si Domingo, 572-
b77 — proceedings of the Spaniards in
South America on this subject, 578,
579.
Slave-market of Rio Janeiro, visit to^
xxviii. 336.
Slavery, perpetuated in Kentucky, in de-
fiance of law, xxi. 153 — barbarous treat-
ment of a negro-slave there, 154 — cu-
rious advertisements for slaves, 130,
131, 154, 155.
• state of, in Egypt, xxii. 473.
— evils of, in America, xxvii. 83, 84
— ^white men sold for slaves, 85.
-^— origin and progress of, xxix. 497
— its gradual decline and disappearance
in England, 499 — and in other counr
tries, 499, 500. See Negro Slavery,
' and slave-trade, the EngUsh both
nationally and individually among the
early and chief instruments of con-
tmuing the slave-trade, xxxii. 507 — re-
marks on this fact, 508 — fundamental
errors of promoters of the mitigation,
as well as the abolition, of slavery, 509,
510 — extracts from the speech of Mr.
Macaulay, at the anti-slavery meeting
in June, 1824, 510-512— strictures on
it, 512-515— -extracts from Mr. Brough-
am's speech at the meeting in 1825,
513, 514— strictures on it, 514, 515,
51 6 — considerations of the effect which
the mitigation or extinction of slavery
might have upon the colonists, 520-522
— a gradual mitigation recommended,
523 — effects of a rapid change in the
condition of ttie slaves considered, 523
—inefficient results of the abolitionists
io procure the discontinuance of the
slave-trade on the coast of Africa, 524
— ^remarks on the want of caution in
the language of some abolitionists, 525,
526— declaration of Bir. Buxton in 1823,
in favour of gradual abolition, 527 —
and also of Mr. Canning, 527, 528—
observations thereon, 529~the dissatis-
faction of the abolitionists with the al-
leged inactivity of government un-
founded, ibid.i 530 — points to be kept
in view in promoting the gradual abo-
lition of slavery, 530, 531 — proofs of
the amelioration of the condition of
slaves, 532, 534 — means for improving
their bodily comfort, 534-537 — the
stricter observance and further exten-
sion of their civil rights, 537-539 — com-
munication of monil and religious in-
struction to the slaves, 539-54 1 — ^address
to colonists on the treatment of their
slaves, 541,542.
Slaves, condition of, at the Cape of Good
Hope, xxv. 455 — and among the New
Zealauders, xxxi. 55 — and in Brazil,
xxxii. 129« 130.
t2
Digitized by
Googk
276
PART It— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUJUtTBRLt
Slaves, treatment of, by Mr. Steele, and
remarks thereon, xxx. 580-582. See
fVeit India Colonies,
«— number and treatment of, at Athens,
xxxiii 346, 347 — scriptural notices of
slaves and their treatment, 502, 503 —
opinions of the abolitionists of slavery
in 1805, 1807, and 1825, 500, 501— -re-
marks thereon, 501, 502 — marriage
scene amon^ the slaves at Barbados,
described, 493-494 — state of the slaves
on that island, 495, 496 — ^the average
condition of slaves better than is gene-
rally believed, 505, 506 — considerations
on the refusal of the colonists to receive
slave evidence, 506, 507 — and on the
giving of a slave a legal right to de-
mand his freedom for a given sum, 508-
5 1 6 — ^remarks on the conspiracy among
the slaves in Jamaica, 516, 51/.
Slave-trade, remarks on the continuance
of, on the African coast, xxii. 295-297
— horrid manner in which it is carried
on, 298.
— — enormous increase of, under
Spanish and Portuguese colours, xxvi.
59 — deliberate violation of treaties for
limiting the slave-trade, by Spain, 65-
68, 74 — the Portuguese, 68, 69, 74
— the French, 70-72, 74, 75 — the
Americans, 72, 79, 80 — the Nether-
landers, 64, 65, 74 — the slave-trade
abolished in Madagascar, 64, 75 — anec-
dotes of the barbarity of slave-dealers,
69, 71, 73, 76, 77 — inadequacy of the
mixed courts of justice on the African
coast for preventing this traffic, 63, 64
— conduct of Sir George Collier and of
the officers and crews employed under
him in preventing the slave-trade, 75
— the declaring of the slave-trade to
be piracy, the only remaining expedient
for abolishing it, 81 — ^proposed forma-
tion of a naval establishment on the
island of Fernando Po, 54, 82.
— review of papers concerning,
zxviii. 161— causes of the inefficiency
of the treaties concerning it, 1 62 — ac-
count of the Spanish slave traffic, 163
—and of the Portuguese, 164, 165-169,
170 — barbarous treatment of the cap-
tured negroes, 165 — on the slave-trade
of the Netherlands, 166 — ravages com-
mitted by the Frendi slave-traders, 167
— strictures on the conduct of the
French government, 168, 869 — ^atrocious
case of the French ship the Rodeur,
171, 172 — the slave-trade abolished in
Madagascar, 1 73 — remarks on the legis-
lation of America relative to the slave-
trade, 173, 174 — importance of the
island of Fernando Po; as a settlement
for preventing the slave-trade, 175 —
flourishing settlements of liberated ne-
groes at Sierra Leone, 176 — impolicy of
the French, Spanish, and Netherlandish
governments in accumulating slaves iu
their respective colonies, 177, 178.
Slave-trade, correspondence relative to,
xxxiv. 579 — ^resolution of the legisla-
ture of South Carolina against the
abolitionists, ibid. — remark^ thereon,
and on the petitions presented to par-
liament for the abolition, 579-581 — the
abolition of slavery by England alone,
has operated as a premium to other
nations to engage more actively in the
trade, 582 — particularly France, t&d. —
engagement of Louis XVIII. to procure
the abolition of the slave-trade, and
that it should absolutely cease on the
part of France in five years, 583, 584
— sincere desire of the government of
the United States to terminate this traf-
fic, 584 — the slave-trade prohibited in
the new states of Spanish America, 585
— ^review of the conduct of the French
government, ibid. — protestations of
Baron Dama», ibid. — ^flagprant case of
the ship Deux Nantais, 586 — public
opinion in France beginning to declare
against the slave-trade, 587 — proof that
the officers of the French cruisers do
their duty rehictantly, 588 — instances
of the atrocity with which the slave-
trade is carried on, 589 — ^particularly
in the case of the ships Orphie, 590 —
the Le Louis, 591 — the Eclair, ibid, —
the La Louise, 591, 592 — ^reflections on
the conduct of the French government,
592 — conduct of the French slave-
traders in conjunction with the Portu-
guese on the opposite coaat of Africa,
ibid, — the French equally engaged with
the Spaniards at the Havannah, 593 —
case of the Zee Bloem, and the frauds
by which the slave-trade is carried on,
593, 594— the Portuguese next to the
French slave-traders in point of num-
bers, and equal to them in point of
atrocity, 595 — instances of Portuguese
cruelty, 596 — small number of slave-
ships captured and condenmed, 597 —
insolence of the French traders, 598 —
inefficiency of the French laws admitted
by the Baron Damas, 599 — conduct of
the Brazilian government, 601 — descrip-
tion of a Brazilian slave-ship, ibid. —
observations on the system of free la-
bour, 601, 602 — suggestion for check-
ing the slave-trade, by making the
island of Fernando Po the principal
station of the coast of Africa, 602, 603
—check to the slave-trade in the inte*
Digitized by
Googk
RvriBW.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
277
rior, by the late General Tunier's treaty
with the chiefs of the districts neigh-
bouring to Sierra Leone, 607 — ^bene-
ficial effects which have already resulted
therefrom, 608.
Slave-trade of Sumatra, zxxiv. 105.
Sloth, the habits of, xxxiii. 328.
Small-pox, ravages of the, amongst the
Indians of Paraguay, xxvi. 3 J 7, 318 —
their terror of this disease, 318.
— I mortality of, before and after
inoculation, xxxiii. 550, 551 — ^its pre-
valence in Norwich in 1819, 552 —
comparative view of the proportion of
those who are vaccinated who are liable
to this disease, 552-557 — ^remarks on
the protecting power of vaccination,
r)5 7-558 — a new mode suggested of dis-
arming small-pox of its virulence, 559
— ^remarks thereon, 559, 660.
Smelting of iron, how performed in the
Himala mountains, xxiv. 115.
Smugglers, case of some, xxxviii. 276-280.
Snapdragon, the great, an insect trap,
xxxix.413.
Snow, remarkable fall of, in the North of
England, in 1614, xxxix. 380.
red, found by Captain Ross, account
of, xxi. 229 — its colouring matter, a
vegetable product, a species of moss,
230, 231 — notices of red snow seen in
various countries, 232.
Snowdrop described, xxxix. 414.
Snow houses of the Esquimaux described,
xxviii. 386.
Soccatoo, xxxix. 165.
Societies for assurance, table o^ xxxv. 7.
For an account of the principles on
which they are conducted, see Msu-
ranee.
Society, state of, at New York, xxi. 127-
130~at Boston, 141— at Philadelphia,
146, 147— in Kentucky, 154-156— and
at New Orleans, 157-159.
■ in New South Wales,
xxiv. 59, 60 — ^what constitutes good so-
ciety m all ages and countries, 45 1,452.
in Chili, xxx. 453-457.
■ moral state of, in France and
England, contrasted, xxxiv. 441-453.
rude and civilized, contrasted.
xxxix. 74 — authors who have availed
themselves of such contrasts, ibid.
for Promoting Christian Know-
ledge, deemed the great organ of the
Established Church, xxxviii. 17.
Sodnianism, its prevalence in Geneva,
xxviii. 25 — declension of the old Pres-
byterian congregations to Socinianism,
xxxi. 230, 253.
Sockna, a town of Fezzan, notice of, xxv. 29.
Sodality of the sacred heart of Jesus
Christ, account of, x»vii. 482,
Solar heat, hypothesis of climate being
formerly independent of, xxxiv. 528.
Solicitors, evil of allowing commissions to,
for insurance, xxxv. 30, 31.
Solitary vice, angling so termed by Lord
Byron, xxxviii. 504.
Solitude, influence of, on mental alienation,
xxvii. 118, 119.
Sondies, a tribe in Central India, notice
of, xxix. 393, 394.
Songs, historical, of the Anglo-Saxons, a
source of their chronicles, xxxiv. 272—
to what degree of credibility they are
entitled, 273, 274.
Sonnets of Milton, remarks on, xxxvi. 146.
Soolimas, an African tribe, notice of,
xxxi. 445 — hospitable reception of Cap-
tain Laing there, 448 — particularly at
the capital, 449, 450 — curious sophistry
of the Soolimanas, 453.
Sophists, Greek, view of their principles
and i>ractices, xxi. 289-291— ridiculed
by Aristophanes, 311-316.
' remarks on the oratory
of, xxvu. 385-388.
Sophonisba, Marston*8 tragedy of, with
remarks and specimens, xxix. 37, 38.
Sorcerers of the North American Indians,
extraordinary power of, xxxi. 93.
Sortes Biblicse, consulted by Wesley,
xxiv. 32.
Soudah, geology of the mountains of,
xxv. 30.
Soudan, observations on the sultan and
people of, xxxiii. 542.
Soul, remarks on the faculties of the, by
Addison, xxvi. 494 — strictures on Mr.
Stewart's criticism on, 495-498.
Sound, remarks on the propagation and
intensity of, xxv. 366.
South America, revolution in, xxxviii.
449 — treatment of Spanish prisoners,
450 — journey of Captain MUler from
Buenos Ayres to Chile, 451 — General
San Martin assembles his army at
Mendoza, 452 — prepares to pass the
Andes, 453 — ^treacherousness of the In-
dians, and battle of Chacabuco, ilnd.-^
officers mess according to their rank,
454 — style of living, ibid, — Buenos
Ayres artillery, 455— -dress of the sol-
diers, 456 — ^intrepid conduct of Captain
Miller in a case of danger, ibid. — -junc-
tion of San Martin* 8 columns, 457 — sur-
prised and defeated by the royalists,
ibid. — new army embodied, 458— defeat
of the royalists, ibid, — first naval essay
of the Chile government, ibid. — Major
Miller, with a flag of truce, made pri-
soner, and threatened with death, 459
— is laid under a shed in the line of fire
from the squadron, ibid. — ^released on
the interference of two Spanish offig^rs,
Digitized by
Googk
3;g
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUAJtTBBLT
460-^f\irth6r success of the Chilian
nftvy^ ikid. — joined by Lord Coch-
tane) but repulsed in the bay of Gal-
lao, 461 — serious accident to Major
Miller fifom the explosion of a caslc
of gunpowder, ibid. — preparations by
the Chilian squadron for another at-
tack, ibid. — this also frustrated, 462
—Major Miller wounded in an attack
on Pisco, ibid. — ^reduction of Valdivia,
463 — unsuccessful attempt on the island
of Chiloe, 466 — ^Esmeralda cut out
from Callao, 447-^-smaU detachment
landed near Arica, ibid. — proceeds to
the interior, 468 — returns to the coast
in safety, 470— anecdote of Colonel
Miller, ibid. — he takes Pisco, 471 — ^his
further gallant and successful progress,
ibid. — dissensions among the royalist
generals, i6it/.— -surrender of the castle
of Callao, 473 — retirement of Lord
Cochrane firom the service) ibid. — Peru-
vian legion of the ^ard embodied, ibid.
—English system introduced by Colonel
Miller, ibid. — lea lost by the impru-
dence of the governor, ibid. — iudepen-
dents victorious in Columbia and at Rio
Bamba, 474^^San Martin resigns his
authority to a congress, t&tef.-^proposed
expedition, under Colonel Miller, to the
coast between Ocona and Iquique, ibid.
-^consequences of the incapacity of
Greneral Alvarado, who chose to under-
take it himself, 475 — defeat of the
patriots, 476 — success of Colonel Miller,
ibid. — various stratagems, 476, 479 —
Lima entered by the royalists, 480 —
Riva Aguera deposed, and the command
assumed by General Sucre, ibid. — Lima
abandoned by the royalists, i6tV/.— in-
judicious conduct of Santa Cms, 481 —
Bolivar repairs to Lima, ibid. — Rlva
Aguera condemned to be shot, but
merely banished, ibid. — discord among
the royalists, 481, 483— revolt of the
patriot garrison of Callao, 482-^Bolivar
marches against the viceroy, ibid, — Ge-
neral Miller's provision for subsistence
in crossing the Andes, and difficulties
of the march, ibid. — ^royalists defeated
in an affair of cavalry, 483 — Bolivar re-
turns to Lima, leaving General Sucre
in command, ibid. — Canterac joined by
Valdez, ibid. — General Miller proceeds
to reconnoitre, ibid, — ^his narrow escape,
484 — Colonel Althaus taken prisoner,
486 — conduct of the Indians, ibid.' —
battle of Ayacuipo, 486 — the Spaniards
completely defeated,48 7 — independence
of South America thereby established,
488 — rewards conferred on General
Miller, who is made governor of Potosi,
ibid And see America*
Spain, remarks on the popular fictions ofj
xxi. 95.
'— base conduct of, in continuing the
slave-trade contrary to treaty, xxvi. 66-
68, 74.
pamphlets on the affiiirs of^ xxviiL
536— causes that operate to mislead
the judgment in the present state of
Spanish affairs, 536, 537 — causes of
the insurrection of 1808, 540 — ancient
powers of the kings, 542 — ^imbecility of
the later sovereigns, 543 — ^present state
of the country and people, 544, 545,
554 — examination of the Spanish con-
stitution, 547-551 — character of Ar-
guelles, one of its framers, 548 — ^his
want of judgment, 549 — account of the
regency of Cadis, 551-553 — ludicrous
proceedings in Cortes, 552 — Spanish
subscription and ball, 538, 553— -errors
of the new constitution, 555 — ^mutiny
of the Cadiz exjiedition, 556 — apathy
and levity of the Neapolitans during
the revolutionary proceedings, 557 —
judicious policy of the English govern-
ment in their foreign negociations, 558
— ^probable results from the adoption of
strong language, 559 — ^right of Spain
to the Mosquito territory, 159, ISO—de-
cree of the Spanish cortes for the punish-
ment of slave-traders, 162.
conduct of, towards the conc^uered
Moors, xxix. 242, 243 — ^introduction of
the Inquisition in that country, 244 —
antipathy to printed books, particularly
Hebrew and Arabic, 245-— the reforma-
tion in Spain first commenced by Rod-
rigo de Valer, 246 .^account of his
labours, 246-248 — notice of the Protes-
tant church at Valladolid, 249 — pro-
gress of Protestantism in Spain, 250,
251 — account of the first Auto da F6,
at Valladolid, 252, 253— and of the
second, 254, 255 — ^fortitude of Gonzales
and his sisters, 255, 256 — and of the
sisters and nieces of Gomez, 256 — the
source of the hatred of Protestants by
the Spaniards, 257 — ^the establishment
of the Inquisition fatal to literature in
Spain, 258-260 — real cause of the su-
periority of Protestant states over Popish
ones, 261, 262— efiects of the accession
of the House of Bourbon to the throne
of Spain, 263 — the Inquisition encou-
raged by Philip V., 264— eflbrts of the
ministers of Ferdinand VI. and of
Charles III. to check the influence of
the church, 265 — introduction of liberal
principles into Spain, 266, 267 — perse-
cution by the Inquisition of every one
suspected of republican principles as
heretical, 268 — remarks ou the two
parties into which Spain is divided, 269
Digitized by
Googk
Esnvw*
INOBX OF SUBJECTS.
279
. — ^and on the constitution of that coun-
try, 270-274 — ^picture of Spain in con-
sequence of it, 274, 275 — the only mea-
sure that will tranquillize that country,
276 — history of the invasion of Spam
. by Buonaparte, 60-79 — evil influence of
French symmetries on the Spanish
stage, 424-426 — ^remarks on the magi-
cal colleges of Spain, 452, 453.
^pain, conduct o( towards her colonies in
South America, xxxi. 4-9.
remarks on the present state of par-
ties in, xxxiv. 505, 506 — ^insubordma-
tion of the army under Mina, 499, 500
— mischief done by an apostle of profli-
gacy and atheism in, 503, 504.
■ ■' effects of the neglect of agriculture
- in, xxxvi 428.
— — on the verge of a revolution, xxxviii.
178 —-interference of France with,
183 — ^its attempts to overturn the go-
vernment of Portugal, 180 — treatment
of America by, 196— American plants
introduced into, 1 98, 20 1— common prac-
tice of propagating fruit-trees in, 198
— poetry of, indebted to the ancients, 372.
■ poor-ratesof the colonies of ,xxxix. 215.
Spaniards, insincerity of, towards the Abi-
pones, xxvi. 314.
* proceedings of, in St. Domingo,
XXX. 378, 379.
• hatred of, by the Creoles, xxxv.
334-337 —> their rapacity towards the
Aborigines of South America, 338-341
mal-administration of the Spanish colo-
nics in South America. See America^
Souik.
Spanish drama. See Drama.
poemsj mementos of the great an-
terior ages to be found in, xxxviii. 371 —
view of Spanish literature, 372, 373 —
pastoral ideas the leading feature of it,
375 — specimens of Don Juan de Guz-
man's translation of the Gtoorgics, 376,
377.
• slave-traders, atrocious conduct of.
xxxiv. 593, 594.
wines, notice of, xxxii. 254, 255.
Sparrow, the house, a bene£ictor as well
as plunderer, xxxix. 424.
Spars for topmasts, the finest in the world
afibrded by the cowrie-tree, xxxi. 64.
Speculation, pecuniary, interested spirit of,
a cause of the increaite of dissenters,
xxxi. 233 — observations on the various
gambling speculations, 349, 357.
Speech of Henry IV. to the Spanish am-
bassador, xxxviii. 503.
SpinningHnills in France, notice of, xxxi.
397.
Spirit. See Uo/y Spirit,
Spital Sermon, by Dr. Parr, critical exa-
mioation of, xxxix. 287.
Spitzbergen, number of graves on its
northern shores, xxxiv. 385 — ignorance
of its eastern coast, 390 — importance of
discovering new whale-fishing stations
on it, ibid.
Sportsman of the present day, to what ex-
tent modified by the refinements of the
time, xxxviii. 505.
Squaws, care for them by the Indians,
xxxi. 83 — person and demeanour of a
youthful squaw, 95 — ^how regarded and
treated by the men, t^i^;. — their duties,
96.
— half converted Indian squaw,
squeamish and inconsistent delicacy of,
xxxviii. 505.
Squittino della Hberta Veneta, its extraor-
dinary effect, and mystery of its author,
xxxi. 425.
Stage, profligate state of, in the reign of
Charles 11., xxix. 206-209— skill and
art requisite to adapt works for the
stage, xxxiv. 362. See Theatre,
Stamp Act, New Indian, an Appeal to
£ngland against, reviewed, xxxviii. 489
-^K:ase of the petitiouiug merchants of
Calcutta, 490 — general merits and
policy of the stamp tax examined, 491,
et teq. — cause of the proposed new regur
lation, 492 — assimilation of the system
of the presidency of Bengal to that of
the provinces, 492, 493 — question of
the necessity of registry of the regula-
tion, 493— disobedience to an act of paiv
liament which prescribes no punish-
ment, how punisnable by common law,
494'^'measures of detail adopted by the
Bengal government for carrying the
stamp regulation into effect, ibid. —
grounds alleged by the secretary of the
Bengal government for taxing the mer-
cantile classes of Calcutta, 496 — date
since which the local government in
India has possessed the legal authority
to tax the inhabitants of Calcutta, 498
-—forbearance of the Company's govern-
ment in execution of itsrignt, ibid,—
prohibition by the government of Ben-
gal,of meetings to discuss the legality of
their proceedings, 499 — question of the
fitness of allowing public meetings in
India, 499, 500.
Standard, royal, on the Tower of London,
rent, xxvi. 192.
Starling, habits and manners of the, xxxix,
423.
Starovoertsi, a sect of Russian dissenters,
notice of, xxxv. 366.
Stars, apparent distances and positions of
double and triple, xxxviii. 1 — distances
of some of the fixed, 9 — annual motion
and periods of some binary, 13 — rapid
revolution of ursa major, ibid. — con-
Digitized by
Googk
280
PART II.^INDSX OF SUBJECTS.
QVARTEmLX
Btant and careful measurement for some
years recommended, ikid. — Hercules,
ibid.
State trials, obsenrations on the mode of
conducting, in the reigns of Mary and
Elizabeth, xxxvi. 512^-on the practice
of interrogating prisoners, 513--ob6er-
Tations on the trial of Throckmorton,
515 — on the admission of hearsay evi-
dence, 5 1 6 — singular exception in favour
of infants, 517— remarks on Arrow-
smith's case, who was convicted on the
evidence of two infants, 517— ^n the
admission of the evidence of accom-
plices, 518— on the rule which forbade
a prisoner to be assisted by counsel for
the general purposes of his defence,
5l9^ase of Colonel Lilbume, 521 —
alteration of the practice in cases of
high treason, by the statute 7 W. III.,
c. 3, 523 — precarious fate of defendants,
by the insecure condition of jurors, 524
^-observations on HawkinsN trial, and
the conduct of the judges thereat, 525-
529 — conduct of the judges during the
trials for the popish p&t, 529-536 —
observations on the state trials as
illustrating national habits, manners,
and opinions, 552-556.
States, remarks on the division of, in North
America, xxz. 32<35.
States-General of France, constitution and
proceedings o^ xxviii. 277.
Statues of Canova, critical review of,
xxxiv. Ill — statues of the ancient
Romans, 120— of the Saxons, 121 —
absurd allegorical statues of our own
country, 1 22-— present improvement of
English statuary, 123 — Cibber's sta-
tues, Rysbrach*sand Scheemakefs, ibid,
— Roubiliac's, 124— Bacon, 125— cha-
racter of his Samuel Johnson and
Howard, 126— Bankes, ibid,— 'Nolle-
kens, 127 — ^his Pitt, and monument to
the three captains, ibid. — Flaxman, his
lofty and poetical mind, 1 28 — his remiss-
ness, 1 29 — ^his allegorical figures, ibid,
— ^Westmacott, his Widowed Mother,
and Collingwood, 129, 130— his Addi-
son and Pitt, 130 — statue of Achillcfs,
131— Chautrey, 131-133— Bailey, 133
— statues of St Paul's, 135 — portraiture
in the statues of Athens, ibid.
Statutes of the United Kingdom, xxi.
398 — laws originally simple, ibid, —
causes of their subsequent complexity,
399 — increasing bulk of the English
statute law, 405, 406 — remarks on its
causes, tlie number of revenue laws, 406-
409 — of laws granting bounties on
exportation and importation, for a li-
mited or unlimited time, 410-412 — the
number of local acts of parliament, 41 3
—of particular acts, 414 — and of tempo-
rary acts, 415,416 — ^these enactments
not sufficiently watched by members of
parliament, 4l6^-ob8ervations on the
maccurate language in which the sta-
tutes are usually drawn up, 417-419 —
excessive love of legislation, the most
powerful cause of increase and imper-
fection of our statute laws, 419-430.
Statutes of the Realm, Chronolo^al Index
to, by the Record Commission^ xxxix.
41 — their present enormous length, 42
—our limited monarchy, the result of
this, ibid. — no judicial records among
the Anglo-Saxons, 44 — ^land-hoc and
folkmoots of that period explained, i6i<<.
— house of rolls mentioned in scripture,
the earliest repository of statutes men-
tioned in history, 45— English statutes
and charters, by whom signed origi-
nally, 46— perioid of the Great S^
being first attached to statutes, 47 —
Doomsday statute, 55 — JJber FeudoruMf
57 — Inquisitiones post mortem, 58 —
statutes formerly discussed before being
brought into parliament, 63— chasms in
the records of our statutes, 64— merit of
Prynne in cleansing and arranging those
in the Tower, 65 — -benefit arising from a
record commission, 66 — a central depo^
sitor^, containing all legislative pro-
ceedings of courts of justice recoma
mended, t6ie/.— evils arising firom the
want of a new registration of the differ-
ent records, 67-73.
Steam-boats, immigration of Irish la-
bourers into England, increased by,
xxxvii. 560.
— ^— carriage, mortification and disap*
pointment anticipated from the exag.
gerated statement of its powers, xxxi.
361 — ^mode of facilitating its {Hrogress
on a snow-blocked rail-roa£ 363 — ^weight
of the steam-carriage, and experiments
to ascertain its powers, 367, 368.
Steam-engine, its mighty powers ennme-
rated, xxxi. 358 — l^tnefits derived ftom
it, 359 — advantages of the ap()^cation
of steam to railroads, 363 — to canal
navigation, 365 — first steam-engine
used in Manchester, 373 — number in
1824, and of looms worked by steam-
engines, 374— ^ucity of, in France,
397, 398— duties upon steam-eugfines
imported into France, increased by the
French ^vemment, 405 — account of
the principal manufactories of, in France,
407, 408.
engines, number o^ in use in Eng-
land, and their expense, xxxii. 171, and
note — the invention of them unjustly
claimed by the French, 408 — the first
suggestion of them ma4e by the Mai*
Digitized by
Googk
RcViMlf.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
281
c^nis of Worcester, 402, 403^e8criiv
tion of a machine constructed according
to his ideas, 404 — his scheme burrowed
without acknowledgment by Sir Samuel
Morland, 406 — adopted by Captain
Savery, 407.
Steam-engines in England, power of,
zxxiv. 91 — ^application of them to the
manufacture of cotton, 92.
• prevalence and power of,
xxxviii. 169.
-— ^ guns^ remarks on, xxxvii. 276,
noie,
▼essels, xxxvii. 279 — wonderful
account of one, by a traveller, 453.
-•— —— travelling facilitated by,
xxxviii. 150 — ^their probable application
to war, 151.
Stink, poetic description of, from Dr.
Beaumont, xxxi. 380— intolerable of
Lisbon, 381.
Stone Indians, notice of, xxviii. 379.
Stones, fetish, of Africa, xxi. 346.
■ musical, of South America, xxi. 350.
Stonesfield, and Cuckfield, analogy be-
tween the fossils of, xxxiv. 531, 532.
Stork, the only bird whose parental affec-
tion is repaid by filial piety, xxxix.
426.
Storm Bay, in Van Diemen*s Land,
described, xxiii. 75.
Story-teller to the sovereign of Persia,
arduous functions of, xxxvi. 366.
Strasburg, German cookery at, xxxL 175.
Strata, secondary, state in which the earth
was, during their deposition, xxxiv.
518.
Stromboli, volcano of, described, xxx.
402.
Strongbow Indians, tradition of their
westward origin, xxviii. 378.
St. David's Society for promoting Chris*
tian knowledge, remarks on the expe-
diency of, xxviii. 179, 180.
St. Domingo, state of, at the commence-
ment of the French Revolution, xxi.
433, 434— its effects there, 434— op-
pression of the free people of colour by
the whites, 437 — unsuccessful attempt
in behalf of the mulattoes, by Vincent
Og^, 435— he is put to death, ibid, —
general insurrection of the negroes,
436 •— barbarities perpetrated by the
whites, 437 — sanguinary and destruc-
tive war between them and the people
of colour and negroes, 438 — arbitrary
conduct of the French commissioners
sent to regulate the colony, 439 — part
of the island occupied by the British,
439, 440 — - character of Toussaint
L'Ouverture, 440 — ^hisrise to power, 44 1
— ^anecdote of his integrity, 442-443 —
bis excellent discipline, and prosperity
of the cobny, 443, 444— account of the
expedition of General Le Clerc, 444,
445 — pacification between the negroes
and the French, 446 — Toussaint treach
erously seized, carried to France, and
clandestinely put to death, by order of
Buonaparte, 447 — the war renewed,
with increased atrocities, between the
negroes and French, 443 — who are
finally expelled from the island, 449 —
independence of St. Domingo declared
by Dessalines, t6i</.— his sanguinary
conduct, 450 — is crowned emperor of
Hayti, ibid. See Ha^H,
St. Domingo, or Hayti, state of the com-
merce of, xxx. 572, 573, note — ^remarks
on the state of slave labour in that
island, b74'b77 — and on the conduct
of the Spaniards in introducing slaves
from Africa, 578, 579.
St. Kittys, beautiful scene in the island of,
described, xxxiii. 498.
St. Lawrence's Island, arrival of Kotzebue
at, xxvi. 348.
St. Peter's, Dublin, commuuicants and
Sunday collections in, xxx. 516.
St. Sebastian in Brazil, remarks on, xxi.
68.
St. Sebastian's, storming of the fortress
of, described, xxxiv. 411-413.
Students, disorderly conduct of, in the
German universities, xxxi. 180-182.
Stutgardt, observations on the court at,
xxiii. 443.
Subsistence, influence of unlimited freedom
of trade on, xxiv. 297.
Sufferings of fish, cause of our company
tive little sympathy with, xxxviii. 506.
Sugar-cane, conveyed from Spain to the
Canaries, and thence to the West
Indies, xxxviii. 197.
Suicide, how termed by Madame de
Stael, xxxiv. 431.
Suicides on the continent, more numerous
than in England, xxiv. 182.
Sumatra, Proceedings of the Agricultural
Society of, xxviii. Ill — important inform
mation contained in, 135-137.
— — - extent of the north -eastern coast
of, xxxiv. 100, 101 — gigantic size of
some of its vegetable productions, 101
— notice of its animals, 102 — particu-
larly the alligators, ibid. — anecdote of
one, ibid. — annoyances to travellers
from leeches, &c., 103— climate, 104—
causes of the thinness of the population,
ibid, — prevalence of the slave-trade
there, 105— exports from the eastern
coast of Sumatra, 106— ^iharacter and
habits of the Malays, ibid. — and of the
Battas, 107— the existence of canni-
balism among them established by facts,
107, 108, 109.
Digitized by
Googk
282
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QuAmramLir
Summer mornings poetical description of,
xxiii. 172.
■ temperature of South Africa,
xzxiy. 396.
Suu, magnitude of the, xzxviii. 4.
Supernatural influence, case of, errone-
ously ascribed to theefiects of education,
XXXI. 27.29.
Superstition, instances of, in France,
xxviii. 27 — in Rome and Greece, xxxvii.
45, 47 — extraordinary example of its
effects on the Indians of North America,
xxviii. 379 — ^less danger among us of
the growth of superstition than of infi-
delity, 520.
Superstitions of the Crim Tartars, notice
of, xxix. 136 — account of the supersti-
tious philosophy of the middle ages,
464-468 — of the seventeenth century,
469-471.
— — — frightful, of the buccaneers,
xxxviii. 235.
ofthe North, unedited poem
on the, ascribed to Mr. R. Surtees,
xxxix. 368.
Supply and demand, influence of, on the
prices of commodities, xxix. 216-218 —
effects of variations in the seasons of
the supply, as compared with the de-
mand, 219-223 — effects of deficient
or abundant supply, when compared
with the demand, on profits and com-
mercial speculations, 223-232 — and of
long periods of abimdant or deficient
supply, on the fall or rise in value of
the precious metals, 233-238.
Sutlej river, singulsur mode of passing,
xxiv. 117, 118.
Swallow and summer wheatear, inhuma-
nity of the sportsman in essaying his
skill on these harmless tribes, xxxix.
425.
Swan River, new colony on, regulations
for the guidance of those who may pro-
pose to settle there, xxxix. 315 — ^hopeful
appearances as to this settlement, 317
— favourable account of the coimtry by
Captain Stirling, lieutenant-governor,
318 — general structure and aspect of
the country, from Cape Leuwiu to Cape
NaturaUste, 319 — coal not found, be-
cause not sought after, 320 — abundance
of pure and fresh water, ibid. — the
coast, as to navigation, safe and easy,
321 — sketch, in form of a map, of the
settlement, 323 — extensive salt marshes,
deemed favourable to the growth of
cotton, 324 — ^the hills covered with a
variety of plants, ibid. — ^land on the
banks of the river superior to any in
New South Wales, 325 — animal pro-
ductions, ibid. — natives described, tbid.
— birds, 326 — fishes, ibid. — ^Buache, an
island in this quarter admirably adapted
for a fishing town, ibid. — ^live stock left
on this island by Captain Stirling, and
a garden planted and railed out, 327 —
miueralogical productions, ibid. — ^mine-
ral springs, 328 — superior advantage of
this over its sister colony, in having no
convicts or other description of prisoners
transported to it, 329 — in geographical
position its superiority to New South
Wales incalculable, ibid. — ^its merit in
a commercial point of view, 331 — its
possession desirable, from the injury
we might derive from it, if possessed by
an enemy, 332— a cordon of such set-
tlements round the whole habitable por-
tion of Australia, recommended, ibid. —
probability of the Australian colonies,
with the aid of the mother country,
rising, in proportion to their population,
to an equality with the United States,
333 — exportable articles that might be
cultivated in them to advantage, ibid.-"
benefits to be derived from the cultiva-
tion of tobacco, 334 — advice to those
about to resort to this new settlement,
337— question of colonization consi-
dered, 339 — at what state of population
and prosperity colonies might assume
independence, 341 — a legislative assem-
bly, an improper grant to a colony,
exemplified firom the conduct of Canada
and Jamaica, 342, note — addition to re-
gulations relating to, 520.
Sweden, climate of, unfavourable io gar-
dening, xxiv. 411.
progressive increase of population
in, xxvi. 152 — ^persons under fifteen and
above that age, 155 — ^favourable nature
of Sweden to ascertain the progressive
increase of population, 156 — physical
aspect of the country, 157 — exami-
nation ofthe Swedish tables, 160, 161.
circumstances of the peasantry in«
described, xxx. 120-122 — account of a
Swedish post-house, 120.
poor maintained nearly on our
system, xxxviii. 72 — Finland taken
from, and Norway given to, 177.
Swimming, importance of the art of, in
ancient times, xxxiv. 37 — Dr. Franklin's
advice on, 36 — importance of an erect
position, 38 — and of a conviction of the
fact that the body naturally floats, 38,
39 — advantages of an upright position
in swimming, 40— outline of Bernardi's
plan of swimming, 41-44 — ^its successfid
practice, 44 — results of an investigation
of his method of swimming, 45.
Swiss, capricious taste of, iu their church-
yards, xxi. 395.
Switzerland, effects of the minute subdi-
vision of land in, xxxiii. 455, 456.
Digitized by
Googk
RSVIBW.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
283
Swiiierlund, matntenaace of its poor,
xxxviii. 72.
Sword, academical, of the Oermaa biu>
schen, xxxi. 180.
Sydney, the capital of New Soath Wales,
notice of, xxiv. 58.
■ its flourishingly condition, described
by M. Arago, xxriii. 347.
present state of, xxzii. 327.
description of, xxxiii. 347.
Symbolum Antiochenum, supposed quota-
tion of 1 John v. 7, diraroved, zzziii.
101, 102.
Syria, ^[reat increase of Jews lately in,
xxxviii. 115.
Synonymy, proper objects of, xxxv. 404—
character of Dr. Trusler*8 work on Sy-
nonymes, 408 — of Mrs. Piozii's British
Synonymy, 408, 409— of Mrs. Taylor's
Eiof^lisn Synonymes discriminated, 410-
414— of Mr. Crabbe's, 415-418.
Syrtis of Africa, notice of, xxvi. 214,
et $eq,
Sytema Naturse of LinnsBus, defended,
zxxiz. 408.
Tablb Talk. See HoMiitif Part I.
Taboo in Owhyhee, nature of, xxzr. 422
^-its destruction, 433.
Tabriz marble, account of the formation
o^ xxvi. 447 — severity of cokl at that
place, 448.
Tactics, system of, by Gieneral Bulow, xxii.
384.
Tagima, town, notice of^ xxvi. 211.
Tailors, curious classification of, xxxi.
391.
Tales of the Dead, notice of, xxii. 350.
of a Traveller, reviewed, xxxi.
473.
Talismans, magical, of the middle ages,
remarks on, xxix. 454.
Talmuds, Jewish, account of, xxxv. 89-91
— remarks on Mr. Hurwitz's apology
for the Tahnud, 97-99— value of the
Talmudical writing, 99, 100— advan-
tage of a philosophical view of the whole
Talmud, 113.
Tamauacks, analo^us tale among them,
to that of Ovid, respecting the re-
peopling of the earth after uie deluge,
xxi.346.
Tangential and centripetal forces, e£R!!cts
of; xxii. 137, 138.
Tapirs, fossil, skeletons o^ xxxiv. 611,
513.
Tarpeian rock, question whether the epi-
thet * aurea' should be applied to it,
xxviii. 324.
Tartars, incursions of^ in Europe, xxiv.
316.31 7— account of embassies to them,
317*321 — travels of Rubruquis in Tar-
tary, 322-324.
■ and Malays, question of the sup-
posed connexion between, xxviii. 115.
— — irruption of, into Russia, in the
thirteenth century, xxix. 121 — descrip-
tion of their persons, i&t<:f.— defeat the
Russians, 122— are finally subdued, t6w^.
See Crim Tartars,
• devotion of, during divine worship,
xxxv. 377.
Tartary, cause of the increased heat of
the elevated plain of, xxii. 427, 428.
Little, appearance of, xxxv. 370
— sepulchral monuments there, iind.
Taste, effects of the rebellion on the per-
version of, xxxv. 186, 187.
Tattooing, its universality among the free
Indians, xxviii. 378 — the operation, how
performed, and more painful than am*
putation, ibid,
— — ^ belief of some superstitious no-
tion being attached to it, xxxi. 56 — its
design among the New Zealauders^
ibid.
Taverns and drinking houses, established
near the burial grounds in Paris, for the
accommodation of mourners, xxi. 391.
Taxation, I ndian, xxxviii. 496. See Stamp
Act, Indian^ ante.
Taxes, a few heavy ones preferable to
many and vexatious small ones, xxi.
409.
— repealed since the battle of Water-
loo, xxxv. 291.
Tea, how dried in China, xxi. 87 — reasons
why the tea-plant cannot be cultivated
elsewhere, 88.
Tea>plant, unsuccessfully attempted to be
cultivated in Brazil, xxxii. 132 — notice
of the tea-shrub of Paraguay, 138,
139.
Teflis, present state of, xxvi. 441, 442.
— notice of German millennarians in
the vicinity of, xxxv. 384.
T\slegraphs, notice of Mr. Edgeworth*t
attempts to construct, xxiii. 520 — ^re-
marks on bis claims to the invention of
them, 521.
Telescope, its advantage to astronomy,
xxxviii 6 — improvements in the, 8.
Temperature of the Arctic regions, obser-
vations and experiments on, xxi. 259-
260.
of the sea, xxv. 177.
I remarks on the difference o^
between the western and eastern coasts
Digitized by
Googk
284
PART II^INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QuAKTBRLir
of continentg or large itlmnds, zx?i. 355,
356.
Temples of Greece, melancholy dilapida-
fion of, xzviii. 492.
Temporary acts of parliament, evils of the
increased number of, considered, xxi.
413-416.
Teneriffe, attacked by Nelson unsuccess-
fully, xxxvii. 371.
Tenures, observations on the nature of,
xxxiv. 246.
Tepu-mereme, or ' the painted rock,' xxi.
346.
Tesoro, Libro del, of Don Alonzo, xxvi.
192 — specimen of its full-toned Castil-
lian prose, 192, 193, note,
Testament, New, the original sources of
our knowledge of its Greek text exa-
mined, xxxiii. 75-77 — the Greek Tes-
tament, first edited by Erasmus, 77 —
Latin version of, not of paramount
authority in the criticism of the Greek
Testament, 80-83.
Testament. See Apocryphal New Testa-
ment and Canon.
Testator, plan proposed for enabling one
to devise, prospectively, whatever pro-
perty he may be possessed of at the
time of his decease, xxxiv. 565, 570.
Testudo ferox, its habits described, xxxiv.
5?2.
Teutons, remarks on the popular fictions
of, xxi. 93 — ^the popular tales of £n^
land and of the Scottish Lowlands, pro-
bably of Teutonic origin, 97.
Text, gold, eift of by Hubert de Burgh,
xxxiv. 326.
Theatre, passion of the Athenians for,
xxii. 169, and note.
pleasure of, fairly estimated,
xxxiv. 197-199 — ^its important influence
on the morals and manners of the
country, 200-202 — observations on the
increased extent of Drury Lane and
Covent Garden Theatres, 235-237—
O. P. riots at the latter theatre, 238,
239.
Thebes, niins of, described, xxiv. 145,
146.
ThefV, how punished among the Khirgis,
xxxvi. 113.
Theophilanihropists, origin of, xxviii. 497
— their form of worship, 498-500 — creed,
500 — marriage rites, 501 — nomination
of infauis, t6i</.— -fimeral service and
holidays; ibid. — festival in honour of
toleration, 501, 502 — schisms among
them, 502, 503 — conduct of the repub-
lican government towards them, 504,
505 — behaviour of the theophilanthro-
pists in the departments, 506, 507 —
decline of theophilanthropism, 508.
Th6ophilantropie, Histoire de la, depuis
sa Naissance, jusqu'k son Extinction,
par M. Gr6goire, reviewed, xxviii 493.
Theosophy of St. Martin, notice o^ xxviii.
36, 37.
Thunder, curious effect of gunpowder on,
xxxviii. 238.
Tiberias, lake, Buckingham's account of,
erroneous, xxvi. 378.
Tiger, anecdote of a jaguar or tiger, xxv.
373.
— ^ hunter, in South America, account
of, xxi. 343.
Tigress, anecdote of one, xxx. 363.
Timannees, an African tribe, character
of, xxxi. 446.
Timber plantations conducted on im-
proper principles, xxxviii. 441 .
planting of. See Waste Lands.
Timbuctoo, accoimt of, xxiii 231.
arrival of Major Laing at,
xxxviii. 105, 106, 109.
Time, endeavours to escape its burden,
xxxviii. 148 — ^yet a ^neral propensity
to save, 150 — mode of measuring,
^o7.
Timor, island, the people yellow, xxviii
341.
Tinian, ruins on the island, and causes of
its desolation, xxviii. 345.
Tithe commutation bill, Ireland, political
sagacity and ability of the measure, and
advantages resulting from it, xxxviii.
537.
' church of the Tithe, at Kieff, xxvi.
41.
property in Ireland, state of, xxxi.
493-— proved not to have been the cause
of vanous disturbances there, 496, 497
—nor the exasperating motive of them,
498, 499— plan and object of the tithe
composition bills, 500, 501 — ^the agist-
ment tithe unjustly taken from the
clergy, 502.
Tithes, proved to originate in grant, or by
prescription, xxix. 527, 528, 533-537—
vindication of the authorities on which
that proof rests, 538, 539 — the assertion
that they originated in a parliamentary
grant considered, 540, 541 — and the
right of the clergy to them established,
541-543 — proof that tithes do not add to
the exchangeable, or money value of
land, 528-532 — and that the common
clamour about the burthen of an eccle-
siastical establishment is unfounded,
543, 544 — right of the clergy to a full
tenth of the gross produce established,
544-546 — the abolition of them would
not permanently increase the average
profits of capital employed in agriculture,
547.
' curious anecdote respecting, xxxir.
346.
Digitized by
Googk
Revikw.
INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
285
Titles, military, abundance of, in the
American republic, xxxi. 85.
Tobacco, its introduction into Europe,
xxxviii. 204 — ^modes of using, 202 — ^pipe
found in the walls of an old building in
Constantinople, 203.
benefits that would arise from
cultivating it in the Australian colonies,
zxxix. 334.
Toleration of the Russian government,
XXXV. 401.
xxxviii. 550, 551, 554.
Tomb of a native of New South Wales,
notice o^ xxiv. 65, 66 — the Vale of
Tombs, in Egypt, explored by M.
Belzoni, 154 — ^the tomb of Psammis
discovered by him, 157— description of
it, and of its ornaments, 158-161.
Tom-tit, parish rewards for the destruction
of tlus bird, difficidt to account for,
xxxix. 420---its manners and habits,
ibid.
Tonnage, amount of, cleared outwards to
the principal British colonies, xxvi.
538.
Topogpraphers, English, remarks on, xxv.
Tor-Hill, plan of the novel of, xxxv. 559-
563 — ^remarks thereon, 563-566.
Tortoises, mad, of South America, account
of the animal, and of the oil procured
from its eggs, xxi. 347.
Tory, character of a, xxii. 160.
Tour in Grermany,and some of the southern
provinces of the Austrian Empire, in
the years 1820, 1821, and 1822, re-
viewed, xxxi. 174. See Germany,
Tourgouth Tartars, narrative of a Chinese
embassy to the Khan of, xxv. 414 — ^the
ambassador's account of himself, and of
his qualifications, 419, 420 — his instnic-
tions, 421 — notice of the Khan of the
Tourgouths, 422.
Trade, free, discussion of the question
whether it should be extended to every
colonial dependency, xxvi. 527-530 —
benefits of restrictions on trade, 530-532
— efiects of free trade to the East In-
dies, 533 — consequences that would re-
sult from removing all restrictions on
the trade to our colonial settlements,
535 — difficulty of regulating the trade
bi^tween the British West Indies and
the United States of America, 537.
• shifting and changeable nature of,
xxxvii. 541 — changes in, though bene-
ficial upon the great scale, ruinous in
their immediate effects, 543 — instance
of this cited, Md. — ^the spirit of trade
short-sighted and rapacious, 573.
of Van Diemen*8 Land, xxiii. 79,
80.
Tradition, dissertation 0U| xxi, 352*-uii-
authoritative importance of, illustrated,
353-357.
Trafalgar, battle of, xxxvii. 376.
Tragedies of Sophocles, translated by
the Rev. T. Dale, reviewed, xxxi.
198.
Tragedy, why not cidtivated by the Ro-
mans, xxiv. 72, 73 — ^probable causes of
its discoiuragement in modem Italy, 74
— character of the tragedies of Trissino,
75 — notice of some early tragic writers,
76 — particularly of the Acripanda of
Decio delta Horte, 77— extracts from it,
with remarks, 77 j 78-81 — the Merope
of Maffei, 8 1 — character of the tragedies
of Alfieri, 82, 83— fable of the Aristo-
demo of Vincenzo Monti, 83, 84 — scene
from it, 84-86 — observations on his
other tragedies, 86, 87 — defects of the
Carma^ola of AUssandro Manconi,
87 — auunated passage from it, 87, 88*
90— character of Thyeste and Ajax of
Ugo Foscolo, 90 — ^fable of his tragedy
of Ricciardo, 91, 92 — analysis ^ it,
with extracts, 92-96 — ^remarlcs on it, 97
— analysis of the Francesca da Rimini
of Silvio Peltica, with extracts and re-
marks, 97-100 — suggestion to Foscolo
and Pellico, to draw the subjects of their
future productions firom Italian history,
101,102.
why allowed to take her plots
from known events, xxvi. 125.
— ^— receipt for making, xxxi. 275.
— — French, state o^ during and
subsequently to the Revolution, xxix.
26, 27 — passionate attachment of the
French to the drama since the restora^
tion of the Bourbons, 28 — the French
theatre descended firom the Greek stage,
29-32 — specimen of the tragedies of
Gamier, 33, 34— of Hardy, 34, 35—
remarks on the tragedies of Corneille,
39, 40— particularly of his * Cid,' 40-
43— on the tragedies of Racine, 44, 45
— and on the imitations of Shakspeare's
tragedies by Ducis, 46-49 — on the tra-
dies of Arnault, 49, 50 — Le Mercier, 50,
51 — Legouv^, 51 — on the later French
tragedies, 52---influeuce of the French
national taste upon the theatre, 52, 53.
Training to arms, outline of the act for
preventing, xxii. 540— observations on
it, 541, 542.
Tram roads. See Raii roads.
Translation, true principles of, developed,
xxiii. 480-484— application of them to
a trauslation of Aristophanes, 484-486-
489, 490 — exemplification of them in a
scene firom that poet's Achamiaus, 486-
489.
of Pindar, difficulties of,
xxxviii. 423.
Digitized by
Googk
286
PART II.—INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
Quabtbrl)
TranslatioDi propertiet of a good one,
XXX. 53.
masterly, the rarity of, ac-
counted for, xxxi. 198.
> of the tragedies of Sophocles,
xxxi. 198.
by eqoiralent expressions,
difficulty of, xxxiv. 1 — Drydeu's theory
of translation, 2 — defects of Pope's trans-
lation of Homer*s Iliad, 3, 4 — and of
Cesarotti's version, 4, 5 — character of
Harrington's translation of Ariosto, and
of Fairfax's Tasso, 6 — ^translation of a
sonnet of Pelrardi's, 7^-extract from
Mr. Gary's Dante, with remarks, 7, 8
— Mr. Rose's translation of Bemi, 9 —
observations on Mr. Wiffen's transla-
tion of Tasso's Gerusalemme, 9-14 —
requisites in a tranriator, 15-19.
TVansmutation of the baser metals into
gold and silver, observations on, xxvi.
199.
Transport, difficulty of, in France, xxxi.
409.
Transportation, not to be depended upon
as a permanent mode of punishment,
xxiv. 242-245— expense of transporting
convicts, 247, 248.
Transubstantiation, a stumbling-block to
the enemies of Christianity, xxxiii. 368,
note.
Trap, chalk in Ireland mixed with, xxxiv.
5 1 8 — identity of Indian varieties with
those found in England, 532.
Traveller, one of the early productions of
Mr. L. Hunt, xxxvii. 408.
Travelling in England in former ages,
how performed, xxxi. 356, 357 — re-
marks on foreign travel, 447.
— ^— - as a mode of emplojring time,
xxxviii. 149 — frequently to litfle pur-
pose, 151 — ^long and precarious jour-
neys not beneficial io invalids, 152 —
aversion to retrenchment a cause of,
157 — of young men, 161 — of tutors,
163, 164---things to be observed, 334
— meritorious class of travellers, 336.
IVavels, De Humboldt's, vol. iv., reviewed,
xxi. 320. See Humboldt^ Part I.
■ of Theodore Ducas, reviewed,
xxviii. 365.
— — value of, why frequently dimi-
nished, xxiii. 174, 175 — Dr. Holland's,
in the Ionian Isles, &c. 325 — Hodg-
skin's, in the North of Grermany, 434
— character of the latter, 436, 437.
Treachery of the Arabs, xxiii. 279, 280.
Tread-wheel, advantages and disadvan-
tages of, XXX. 420, 421.
Treason, improvement in the law for regu-
lating trials for, xxxvi. 543 — ^in what
manner it was first exercised, 545 —
considerations on the present law of
treason, 547, 551.
Tree of the church, the tree of life, xxxviii.
569.
marvellous, mentioned by M. Arago,
xxviii. 339.
Tree-ferns, vast fossil, of ancient strata,
xxxiv. 527.
Trees, cutting down, a capital offiince,
xxiv. 201 — reasons, accompanied by
facts, why the statute which punishes it
with death should not be repealed, 201-
203.
— considered as ornamental, xxxvii.
313, 316, 321 — ^want of success in trans-
planting them when large, 322-^this
difficult surmounted, 323^— -fimdamen-
tal principles, 326 — the trees must be
adapted to the soil, ibid. — their con-
dition and properties must be attended
to, ibid. — ^nutriment necessary, 327^
air of a proper temperament, ibid. —
almost seem to be endued with volition,
329 — affinity between the roots and
branches, ibid, — properties naturally
acquired by unsheltered trees, ibid. —
decay of trees transplanted from a shel-
tered to an exposed situation, 331 —
practical instructions, ibid. — age of trees
for transplanting, 333 — process of re-
moving, 334 — in transplanting, the
lee-side should be turned to the weather,
335 — the trees should not be pollarded,
336 — the roots must be placed with great
care, 337— earth mixed with coal-ashes
beneficial, 339 — expense of transplant-
ing, 350.
— oak, blunder of planting where oaks
have grown before, xxxviii. 441.
Tremaine, a Fashionable Novel, remarks
on the plan and execution of, xxxiii.
474-485.
Trent, Council of, xxxiii. 68.
Trial by jury, ancient mode of, xxxii. 1 IS-*
117.
Trials, French and English, contrasted,
xxii. 252-254.
Tribunes of the people, institution of the
office of, at Rome, xxvii. 300, 301.
Triennial parliaments, objections to, xxii.
529.
Trigonometry, spherical, originated with
Hipparchus, xxxviii. 4.
Trinidad, Island of, substance of order in
council for improving the condition of
slaves in, xxx. 563-566 — observations
thereon, 566, 567-570, 571.
a marriage scene
among the negroes there, described,
xxxiii. 493, 494 — notice of the Spanish
missions there, 492, 493.
Trinity, statute of 9 and 10 William III.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbthw.
INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
287
agfaintt impugneri of^ repealed, xxiii.
569.
Tripoli, geology of, xxv. 336, 337.
— — respect paid to the British flag at,
xxxiii. 519, 520.
Trout, change of residence induces change
of character, xxxviii. 525.
Trusts, observations on, xxxiv. 547-549.
Truth, how far admissible as a conclusive
defence to a prosecution for libel, xxxv.
581 •583— examination of the wisdom
or injudiciousnessof the law, which for-
bids the truth of the statement to be
given iu evidence on an indictment for
Ubel, 584-588 — refutation of objections
to the law declaring truth to be a libel,
594-598 — examination of the question,
whether the truth of the libellous state-
ment ought to be received in evidence,
in mitigation of defendant's guilt, when
brought up for judgment, 601-607.
Tsaad, lake, notice o^ xxix. 51 1, 512, 520,
521.
Tuarick, a people in the interior of Africa,
notice of, xxiii. 230, and xxv. 44.
Tula, town of, notice of, xxxv. 368.
Tumuli, at the confluence of the rivers
Mississippi and Missouri, notice of,
xxix. 12, 13.
■ ' sepulchral, in Little Tartary,
XXXV. 370— Scythian tumuli, 380, 381.
Tunbridge water, efifects of, xxv. 225.
Tunnel, Thames, wish to see it completed,
xxxi. 356.
Turin, remarks on the architecture of the
church of St. Superga at, xxxii. 58, 59.
Turkey in Europe, state of gardening in,
xxiv. 409.
high character of, for fidelity to
its treaties, xxxvii. 384 — propriety of
the conduct of the allied sovereigns to-
wards, questioned, 386.
Jews in, xxxviii. 129 — iu a totter-
ing state, 173— policy to be observed in
regard to, 184 — Francis I. the first
Christian ally of, 185— battle of Nava.
rino, 186 — Russia long desirous of dis-
membering, 190.
Turkish Spy, xxxix. 72.
Turkomans, manners and habits of, xxxvi.
372.
Turks, maltreat the Franks in Egypt with
impunity, xxiv. 141, 143, 144.
Turks, historical outline of their establish-
ment in Europe, xxxviii. 172.
Turnip, culture of, when introduced into
Norfolk, xxxvi. 396.
Turtle, fishery of South America, de-
scribed, xxi. 347-349.
Tver, town of, notice of, xxxv. 366.
Two Foscari, remarks on Lord Byron's
tragedy so called, xxvii. 505-508.
Two Witnesses of the Kevelations, cha-
racter of, assumed by two brothers of
Berne, xxviii. 15.
Typical representations, passage of, into
objects of idolatrous worship, xxviii.
28.
Tyranny, subtle and inexorable, of Ve-
nice, xxxi. 421— doctrine of resistance
to, xxxviii. 186.
U.
Ulster, superior, as to the moral condition
of the inhabitants, to any other part of
Ireland, xxxviii. 536.
Ultra Whigs, encourage a spoliation of
church-property, xxviii. 522.
Unbelievers of Charles II. 's age, causes
which hindered the diffiision of their
opinions, xxviii. 516 — condition and
number of unbelievers among us be-
fore the French Revolution, 520 — con-
nexion between unbelief and disaffec-
tion, 521 — classes of unbelievers with
whom it is in vain to reason, 523 — ex-
pressions of their feelings by Rochester
and the Abb61'Anglois,524 — connexion
in Gibbon and Hume, of a fondness fur
the polytheism of the ancients with un-
belief, 526.
Unicorn of the Scriptures found in the
Himala Mountains, xxiv. 120, 121.
Union canal, cost of, xxxi. 363.
Unitarian critics, unfairness of, xxx. 113-
115*-their theories of inspiration re-
futed, 81-83 — and also of justification,
83-96.
Unitarians, statute of 9 and 10 William
III. against, repealed, xxiii. 569 — ^re-
marks on such repeal, ibid. — its effects,
570 — infamous placards posted by one,
570, 571 — appeal to more discreet Uni-
tarians on the impudence and wicked-
ness of them, 572 — notice of the Unita-
rian conferences at Hackney, 573.
United States of America compared with
New South Wales, xxxvii. 3 — de-
scendants of German settlers in, 262 —
increase of territory and population,
ibid, — roads and canals, 265 — exports,
271 — imports, 272 — shipping, ibid. —
navy and naval establishments, 273 —
naval actions with the British, 276 —
difficulty of establishinjr dry docks, 280
— army and militia, 284 — expenses of
government, 285 — intercourse with
other governments, ibid. — discussions
with Great Britain, 286 — probability of
Digitized by
Googk
288
PART II.— INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
QuuitkiiLt
a change of gOTernment, 290 — striking
instance of party feeling, 293 — state of
religion, 294 — education, 295 — news-
papers, 296 — accommodations, ibid, —
ice-boats, 297— expedition against, 504
— arrival of the expedition in the Chesa-
peake, 505 — Washington selected as
the point of attack, ioid, — army as-
sembled for its defence, ibid. — its posi-
tion forced, and ships, ordnance, and
stores destroyed by the Americans, 507
— the squadron anchors below Baltimore,
and the troops landed, ibid. — Major
General Ross killed. 507, 511— the
Americans defeated, 507 — a night at-
tack projected, 508— this given up from
the fleet being able to give no assist-
ance, 509 — the troops re-embarked with
the prisoners and guns captured, 510 —
general principle in warfare with un-
disciplined troops, ibid. — ^remarks on the
injury done to Washington, 5i2>515 —
public property in the city of Alexan-
dria spared, 513 — ravages of the Ame-
ricans in Canada, 514— the expedition
proceeds to Jamaica for refreshments,
and thence to the Mississippi, 515 — the
first division lands on the left bank,
516 — cannonaded by a vessel stealing
up the river in the night, 517 — sur-
rounded by the enemy^,518— the enemy
beaten back, ibid. — Sir Edward Packen-
ham arrives, ibid. — his death, ibid. —
the American position under General
Morgan carried, 519 — two guns taken
at Saratoga captured, ibid. < — General
Gibbs killed, 520 — ^recourse to the as-
sistance of the Indians deprecated,
ibid.
United States of America, attempt to en-
croach on the British boundary line,
xxxviii. 298 — toleration limited in,
551.
■' character of, while under
the dominion of Great Britain, xxxix.
216 — progress of improvement since
their independence, ibid feelings of
the two countries towards each other
after the peace, 217 — ^laws enacted by
the States prejudicial to British interests,
218 — impose a higher duty on foreigu
ships than on their own, 219 — commer-
cial treaty between the States and Great
Britain, ibid. — article in it respecting
the West Indies not ratified by the
American president, 220 — peaceful and
statesman-like demeanour of Washing-
ton, ibid. — the treaty renewed, but re-
jected by President Jefierson, 221 —
embargo laid by the states on all their
own vessels, and a law passed forbidding
all intercourse with either Great Bri-
tain or France, i6t(^.— tvils resulting to
the States from these measures, ibid. —
war between the two countries, 222 —
new treaty negotiated and ratified, 223
— conduct of Great Britain respecting
the colonial trade defended, ibid. — new
propositions as to the colonial trade
discussed by the American minister and
Lord Castlereagh, 224 — cavalier con-
duct of the American government as to
these propositions, 225 — the proposi-
tions rejected by them, 227 — Congress
pass a law closing the ports of America
to all British ships from the West In-
dies, 227 — ^further negotiations between
the two countries, 228, 230— the ports
of the United States closed against
British vessels coming by sea, 231 — in-
jurious effect of this law to the States,
ibid. — the ports opened again in conse-
quence of a liberal enactment on the
part of Great Britain, 236— acts of the
British Parliament in 1825 respecting
the colonial trade, 238 — ^British order
in council closing the ports of the West
Indies against American vesseb, 239 —
further negotiation, on what ground re-
fused by Great Britain, ibid. — the loss
of the West India trade to the Ameri-
cans owing to the misnitinagement of
their own government, 240 — American
tariff, 241— state of parties in the
United States, 24 1-248— first settlement
ofthe western sections. See Hal/, Horn,
Judffe, Part I.
Univalve shells, predominance of in num-
ber over bivalve in secondary strata in
Europe, xxxiv. 526.
Universities, claim of, to eleven copies of
every work, considered, xxi. 202 —
proofs of the oppressive results to lite-
rature, 202-204 — strictures on the argu-
ments urged in behalf of the claims of
the University of Cambridge, 200, 201
— the rapacious claims of certain uni-
versities exposed, 206, 207.
of Europe, early state of
learning in, xxxiii. 261, 262 — origin of
inns, or receptacles of scholars, 263 —
licentiousness, how checked in the Eng-
lish universities, 263, 264 — ^remarks on
the system of education there pursued,
265-268 — and on the plan for a London
university, 260, 261, 268-270— absence
of provision for religious worship in it,
271, 272 — on the present capacity of
the English universities, 272-274.
• English, proofs of the culti-
vation of Hebrew literature at, in the
time of Elizabeth and James I., xxiii.
299-303.
German, cause of the irregu-
larities in, xxiii. 446 — extensive range
of sciences taught there, ibid, — the
Digitized by
Googk
Bbtixw.
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
289^
professors dependent upon the students,
447, 448.
Universities of Grermany, account of,xxxi.
178-182.
" characterized,
* i.8.
■ visitation of, in Scotland, by
a royal commission, xxxvi. 216— exa-
mination of the education preliminary
to students entering at the Universities
of Oxford and Cambridge, 2 18-— im-
portance of introducing physical sci-
ence, 220 — improvement in the qualifi-
cations for degrees in medicine at Aber-
deen and Edinburgh, 223 — excellent
system adopted in the newly established
public school at £dinburgh,224 — ^its pro-
bable influence in suspending private
tuition in opulent families, ibid. — course
of theological education prosecuted at
Glasgow, 226— on the system pursued
at the college at Maynooth, 227 — supe-
riority of the professional course in the
faculty of law, in foreign universities,
over that pursued in Scotland, 228—
-^qualification for a degree of medicine
in If'rance, t6t(f^— design of the profes-
sorships of divinity, law, and medicine,
founded at Oxford and Cambridge,
229 — ^the English universities at first
both schools and colleges, ibid, — ^im-
provements in the study of theology,
231— of mathematics, 232— -of classical
literature, 233 — consideration of the
consequences flowing from the aban-
donment of professional education, par-
ticularly as to its effects in excluding
from a university many who would
otherwise have enjoyed that benefit,
234 — ^illustration of these effects in the
faculty of medicine, 235 — of law, 236
— other aggravations of these effects,
238 — number of under-graduates in the
English and Scottish universities, 240
— wisdom of our ancestors in establish-
ing public professorships, 243 — ^mode of
lecturing in the German universities,
244 — system pursued in the university
of Dublin, 246 — benefits of subdivision
of employment evinced in the German
universities, 247 — logic but little culti-
vated at Oxford, 249 — examination of
the danger apprehended by some from the
introdi^ion of professional lectures into
our imiversities, 252-254 — success of
Professor Millar's lecture at Glasgow,
255 — account of the system pursued
at Edinburgh, 255— outline of the pro-
visions employed in the continental uni-
versities for organizing an efficient body
of teachers, 257 — observations on the
changes already introduced at Oxford
and Cambridge, 258-263— statement
of what is necessary, in order to accom-
plish a further salutary change in those
universities, 264-268.
University education, importance of.xxxi.
240.
— — of London, merit of the insti-
tution due to Mr. Thomas Campbell,
xxxix. 125, 127 — ^name of university
given to it, inapppropriate and arrogant,
ibid. — difference between a school and
a university pointed out, t6tW.— differ-
ence between a university and a college,
128, note — ^the omission of all religious
instruction in this university repre-
hended, 129 — statement of the council
of the university on the omission, 131
— ^this statement animadverted on, 131 -
134.
Uranie, French corvette, narrative of her
voyage round the world, reviewed^
xxviii. 332-^wrecked, 348.
Uses in law, remarks on, xxxiv. 546, 547.
statute of, xxxix. 69.
Uspallata, notice of the gold mines of^
XXXV. 136.
Usury Laws, Thoughts on the Repeal of,
xxxiii. 186 — design of the work, 187 —
remarks on Mr. Bentham's defence of
usury, 188, 189 — and on the evidence
before the Committee of the House of
Commons in 1818, 189, 190 — exposi-
tion of the injustice of the legislature's
restraining the moral liberty of the sub-
ject, by fixing a rate of interest, since
it is not morally wrong to lend money
at the market rate of interest, 191-194
—examination of other cases put in sup-
port of the usury laws as a security
against fraud, 195-197^-consideratioa
of the objection to the repeal of the
usury laws, founded on the supposed
influence of such repeal upon the
lauded interest, 197-200 — and on the
trading interest, 201-203 — ^the advan-
tage supposed to be conferred by the
usury laws upon the government m its
pecuniary transactions shown to be
imaginary, 203, 204 — ^the usury laws
unnecessary, 205.
Utrecht, peace of, xxiii. 63.
VOL. XL. NO, LXXX.
Digitized by
Googk
»0
PART II.-JNDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QUAKmLT
V.
TAOonvATioif] ppomsBof, on the conti'
nent, comparetf with iti progroM in
England) ziudii. 550— examination of
the proportion of the vaccinated who
are liable to small-pox, 651-556-^he
protecting power of vaccinatioB con-
sidered, 557, 558 — a new method sug-
sested of vaccinating a few days before
inoculation, with a view to generate a
mild disease, 559 — remarks thereon,
559, 560.
Vagrants, more expensive than parish
poor, xxxviii. 69, 71. See Poor Laws,
VfJenda, gallant defence of, by the Spa-
niards, xxix. 74.
Valley of the Mississippi described, xxix.
1-24 — general remarks thereon, 25.
Valparaiso, raising of its coast by an
earthquake, xxxiv. 515.
Value of currency, suggestions for lower-
ing, xxvii. 264, 265.
•— . of commodities, how far af^ed by
the quantity of labour actually worked
up in them, xxx. 368-313.
Vampire bat, described, xxi. 70.
bite of, xxxiii. 327.
Van Diemen*s Land, when first discovered
and settled, xxiii. 73, 74 — ^its climate
and physical appearance, 74 — descrip-
tion of its ports and towns, 75— Storm
Bay and Hobart Town, ibid, — settle-
ments of Pittwater and Clarence Plains,
76 — ^Port Dalrymple and Launceston,
»Wrf. — Port Macquarrie,77 — Port Davey,
tfttW.— state of farming there, 77, 78-—
natural productions, 78— exotic produc-
tions that thrive there, Und. — jurisdic-
tion, t^'(/.— abstract of the population,
land in cultivation, and stock, 79—
trade, ibid. — statement of exports and
imports, 80 — ^account of the aboriginal
inhabitants, 80, 81 — and of Michael
Howe, the bush-ranger, 81-83.
■ improperly so called,
xxvii. 100— -discovered by the English,
101 — its advantages for colonization
over America, 101, 102-106-109— no-
tices of the aboriginal inhabitants, 102,
103 — ^rivers of this island, 104 — scenery
of the Derwent, 104, 105 — mountains,
105 — climate and productions, 106 —
exports, 107 — improved state of Hobart
Town, 107, 108— and George Town,
108 — population of Van Diemen's
Land, 109.
Van Diemen's Land, improving state of,
xxxii. 326-329 — progress of civiliza-
tion there, 329, and see New South
Walet.
Vanity, American, tpedmen of, xxi. 24.
Varennes, journey to, causes of its exe-
cution being counteracted, xxviii. 302
— narrative of Louii XVL'taneit, 304,
305— the Duchess -of Angouleme's ac-
count, 464— contradictions in tiie ten
narratives of the transaction, 465 — ino-
portant consequences of the King's ar-
rest, 466.
Variation of the magnetic needle, experi-
ments on, xxi. 257, 258— observations
on, XXV. 202.
Vatican library, the most considerable in
the world, xxxiv. 157.
Vaudois, orWaldenses, unjustly stima-
tized as seditious fanatics, xxni. lo4 —
and as obscene Manicheans, 150— ori-
gin of, 143— ^erenot Manicheans, 144-
151— appealed only to Scripture, 151,
152 — crusade against them by Simon
de Montford, 157— his ordinances
against heretics, 158— persecution of
the Vaudois in Piedmont, 159 — and in
Savoy in 1400, ibid, — on the French
side of the Alps, 159, 160— Thuanns's
testimony to their exemplary character,
161 — horrible cruelties of Albert de
Capitaneis in Dauphiny, ibid, — ^he is
defeated in his attacks on the vallies of
Piedmont, 162— -cruelty of the Duke of
Savoy against them, 163 — the first
Protestant French Bible printed at their
expense, 164— persecution of the Vau-
dois by Francis I., lung of France, ibid,
—by Henry II., 165— by the Duke of
Savoy, on the restoration of Piedmont,
165, 166— heroio defence of the Vau^
dois, 167 — ^insidious arts employed by
the Romish missionaiies, l6fl^norrible
cruelties inflicted on the Vaudois in
1655, 168, 169— interference of Oliver
Cromwell in their behalf, 170.17*i—
noble subscription raised fbr them in
England, 172— diverted from its course
by the profligate Charles II., 175— 4he
persecution renewed by Victor Ama-
dous, 173 — gallant return of the exiles
to their valUes, 174— character and {ffe-
sent state of the Vaudois, 174.
— — the, account of their colonizing in
Calabria, xxxviii. 55 — cruelties and
massacre to which they were subjected,
77-80.
Veeboors, or graziers, of the Cape of Good
Hope, account of, xxii. 220 — their op-
pressions of the Hottentots under the
Dutch ^vemment, 221 — ^mode of liv-
ing, 222, 223— description of the inte-
rior of one of their hovels, 224, 225»
Digitized by
Googk
HXYISW*
INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
291
character of a genuine Dutch cattle
boor, 226.
Vegetable and animal life compared,
xxxvii. 327.
Velocities, virtual, xzxiz. 442.
Velay, volcanic phenomena in the ancient
province of, xxxvi. 451-462.
Venality of justice in Sicily, xxx. 392.
• in South America,
326-328.
Venice, origin and progress of the repub-
lic of, xxxi. 420, 421 — tyranny of its
government, 421, 422-p-character of the
historians of, 423-427 — early govern-
ment of this republic, 428 — origin of
the Pregadi, 429 — of the great coimcil,
ibid. — of the little council of the doge,
430 — of the senate, ibid. — of the coun-
cil of * the forty,* ibid. — restrictions im-
posed on the doge, ibid. — ^the people
gradually excluded from a seat in the
great council, 431 — they conspire
against the oligarchy, 432 — institution
of the council of ten, 433 — ^its great in-
fluence, ibid, — ^instance of its firmness
. and severity, 434 — and of its despotic
cruelty, 435, 436 — ^particularly of the
doge Francesco Foscari, 437, 438—
establishment of the inquisition of state,
439 — ^its organization and statutes, 441-
443-^pogressive decline and fall of the
Venetian republic, 444, 445.
■■■ « notice of the church of II Reden-
tore at, zxxii. 49 — of the libreria Vec-
chia, 50 — present fallen and unhealthy
state of, 66 — notice of the cathedral of
San Simeone Minore and San Nicolo
da Tolentini, 67.
Verona, remarks on the edifices at, xxxii.
60, 51-— particularly an altar in the
church at St. Anastasio, 63.
Verschoristes, a Dutch sect, notice of,
xxviii. 11.
Via Appia, its length, xxviii. 323.
— Sacra, its course, xxviii. 323.
Vice-chancellor, inefficiency of, for re-
ducing the business in the Court of
Chancery, xxx. 273.
Vicenia, notice of Palladio's edifices at,
zxxii. 49, 51.
Viceroys of South America, power of,
XXXV. 326.
Victims, human, immolated at Ashantee,
xxii. 288.
superstitious rites of the society
of, xxviii. 28-30.
Victualling department at Deptford, excel-
lent arrangement of, xxii. 39.
Vienna, present state of, xxxi. 192-194.
Villeinage, state of, in England, in the
middle ages, xxix. 498 — its decline, 499.
Vimeiro, battle of, xxix. 80-82.
Vine, culture of, at the Cape of Good
Hope, xxii. 215-217.
— in ancient and in modern
times much the same, xxxii. 234, 235
— account of the culture of, in England,
260.
Vines, exuberant, in the valley of the Ar-
kansas, xxix. 23.
Viteaux, magistrate stoned to death at,
xxviii. 296.
Vittoria, notice of the village of, xxi. 327.
Vivarais, volcanic phenomena in the low-
lands of, xxxvi. 464.
Vlaki, or migratory shepherds of Modem
Greece, account of, xxiii. 334, 335.
Voice from St. Helena, reviewed, xxviii.
225.
Volcanic explosions and mountains in
North America, notice of, xxx. IB, 19
— description of the volcanoes of Mtnsi,
400— and of Stromboli, 402.
Volcanoes, analogy between, and the opep
rations of the blow-pipe, xxiii. 470, 471
— remarks thereon, 473.
■ geological, influence of, xxxiv.
519.
• of Owhyhee, account of, xxxv.
3.
extinct, in the central region of
France, account of, xxxvi. 438-464^
chronological classification of these voU
canic phenomena, 465-469.
xxxvii. 298.
424428.
Voyage Imaginaire, difficulty of executin^^
xxviii. 365, 366.
— — - from Bermudas to Ireland in a
vessel of two or three tons, xxxviii. 215.
Vulgarity defined by Hazlitt, xxvi. 106.
W.
Wabash, account of Birkbeck's settlement
on the, xxvii. 90-95.
Waday, a coimtry in the interior of
Africa, notice of, xxiii. 233.
Wading, danger of, in fishing, xxxviii. 510.
Wages, low rate of, in France, xxxi. 415.
■■ of labour. Report of the Select
. Com miitee on, zzziii 429-— remarks on
the injustice of paying wages of agri-
cultural labourers out of the poor-rates,
447-449.
Wages, governed by the price of com,
xxxvii. 429, 430 — state of, in the mid-
dle of the last century, 549 — ^in Edward
III.'s reign, 550 — fixed rate of wages
abolished by Henry VIII., 553-.^state
V 2
Digitized by
Googk
PART II.— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
QVABTEKLY
of wages in Sir William Petty' s time,
655— motion by Mr. Whitbread for
fixing the minimum, 559.
Waigooe, natives of, described, xxviii. 343.
Waldenses. See Faudoit,
Wangara in Africa, situation of,xxiii. 234,
235.
War, strictures on Mr. Gisborne's observa-
tions on, xxi. 61 — observations on the
old and present arts of, xxii. 381-383.
— sketch of the progress of, from the
earliest times, xxv. 68 — its state in the
Greek republics, ibid. — Macedonian
tactics, 69 — ^Roman art of war, 69, 70
— comparison between the Grecian and
Roman order of battle, 70, 71 — state of
the art during the middle ages, 72—-
origin of the European infantry, ibid.
—change produced in the art of war by
the invention of gunpowder, 73 — ^im-
provement effected by Gustavus, king
of Sweden, 73, 74 — ^notice of Vauban's
' System of Fortification,' 74, 75— tac-
tics of the armies of republican France,
76— defects in the British army, 78, 79
^-remedied, 80.
-^— influence of, on the price of com,
xxix. 222-224 — effects of the late war
on home consumption, as well as on
British exports, 227-229.
. I general principle in contending with
undisciplined troops, xxxvii. 510.
»_ leaves no nation in its former state,
xxxviiL 175.
Wards and liveries, court of, its institution
and abolition, xxxix. 186.
Warehousing bill, remarks on, xxviii. 443,
444.
■ system, objections to, obvi-
ated, xxv. 503.
Warriors among the North American In-
dians, character and anecdotes of, xxxi.
98-100.
Warsaw, duchy of, made a dependency of
France, xxxviii. 175 — transferred to
Russia, 177.
Washington, present state of, xxix.344,
345 — slave-flogging there, by ladies^
354.
Waste lands, importance of planting,
xxxvi. 559 — observations on the con-
version of lar^ tracts of wasteland into
woodland, without injiuy to agricul-
ture, 561 — directions for carrying this
plan into execution, 564-570 — mode of
inclosing the land, 571 — ^formation of
paths, 573 — ^preparation of the soil, ibid.
—•on the choice of trees, 572 — import-
ance of the larch, 572, 573-585 — man-
ner of planting the trees, 577-580 —
especially in wet soils, 581— distance to
be observed between the plants on put-
ting them into the ground, 533— direc-
tions for thinning them, 584 — improved
method of propagating the oak, 588 —
on the cultivation of copse wood, 589-
592 — mode of thinning copses, 593-
595_ou planting woods from the acorn,
596 — instance of a beneficial mode of
planting by tenants, 597 — ^remarks on
a case of a different kind, 598.
Waste lands, on the cultivation of, xxxviiL
410 — nature slowly but certainly me-
liorates them, 412 — ^progress of cultivap
tion on them, 413, 417, 421 — table
showing the quantity of, in the British
islands, 418— -obstacles to their cultiva-
tion, 423, 424 — suggestions for their
improvement, 424, 425, 430 — ^should be
treated as a national domain, 432— ca.
pitalists interested in the cultivation o(
435 — ^both agricultural and manufactu-
ring classes would be benefited by, 436.
Mr. Sadler, and the other
advocates for their cultivation in the
right, xxxix. 316.
Watch, system of London, the total sub-
version of it recommended, xxxvii. 504.
Water, on the presence of lead in, xxiv. 347.
Water contains much nutritive alimen^
xxxvii. 339.
Water-carriage, deficiency o^ in France^
xxxi. 409.
Water-drinkers among the Athenians,
satirized, xxiii. 268.
Waterfall, in Barrow river, described, xxx.
254, 255.
Waterford, number of communicants in
the city, and population adhering to the
established church, xxxi. 515.
Waterloo, munificent gratitude of the
English nation to the soldiers of, xxvi
16 — tribute to the achievements of the
Duke of Wellington at that battle, 17,
note,
bridge, durability of, xxx. 381,
382.
■ proposal to remove the toll, and
remunerate.the proprietors, xxxi. 357 —
remark of a French writer on this stu-
pendous national monument, ^id»
■ lake of, sea of fresh water , 80
named by Major Denham, xxxi. 459.
Waterproof garments, remarks on, xxxviii.
510.
Water-works, defence of, xxxvii. 307, 308.
Waverley, observations on the novel of,
XXXV. 529.
Wawa,itspopiulation, xxxix. 1 56-— account ,
oftheoldkingof, 175.
Wealth, observations on the definitions ofj
xxx. 298.
' enormous, of the clergy, vulgar
prejudice respecting, xxxi 237.
Wedlock, proportion of the annual popct<
lation of Paris, bom out o^ xxxir. 454.
Digitized by
Googk
Heyxew*
INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
Weighls and measures, reports and trear
tises on, xxvi. 416 — legislative measures
in England for regulating them, 417
—different bases proposed for stand-
ards, ibicL — notice of the reports of the
commissioners appointed by parliament
to consider the most practicable mode
of establishing an uniform system of
weights and measiures, 418 — ^inefficient
proceedings of the French revolutionary
governments to establish such a stand-
ard, 418-420 — ^instructions of the Bri-
tish government to consuls abroad for
procuring foreign standards of weights
and measures, 420, 421 — comparisons
of standards by the Royal Society of
]l»ondon, cmd the Royal Academy of
Sciences at Paris, 422, 423 — notice of
the recommendations of parliament re-
specting the having certain fixed stand-
ards of weight and of capacity, 424.
_ — — ^__^ importance of ob-
taining an uniform system of, xxxvi.
139 — sketch of the various attempts
made for this purpose, 140-142 —
observations on the regulation of the
great charter concerning, 143 — and on
the act 51 Henry III., ibid. — contents
of the wine gallon, 145— of the tun and
hogshead, 146 — alterations made by
Henry VII. in the standard weights
and measures, 147 — ^table of ancient
standards, and their supposed derivation,
149 — attempt of Messrs. Hatton and
Whitehurst towards obtaining a stand-
ard, 150 — and in France, 151 — ^remarks
thereon, 152 — experiments of Sir
George Shuckburgh, 153 — labours of
the committee of the House of Com-
mons in 1814, on this subject, 154 —
opinions of Professor Playfair, and Dr.
WoUaston, on the liest means of com-
paring standards of length with some
invariable natural standard, 155 — of
measures of capacity, 156 — inaccuracies
of the committee's report discovered by
Dr. Young, ibid, — a new commission
appointed, 157 — explanation of the
length of the pendulum, and how it
furnishes the invariable standard of
measures, 158 — account of Captain
Hater's experiments for determining the
leugth of the pendulum, 159-161 —
abstracts of the reports of the commis-
sioners concerning the standards to be
adopted, 161-162 — and of the report of
the Committee of the House of Com-
mons, 164 — simplicity and effectiveness
of the measures now established, 166 —
observations on a particular clause of
the act of parliament, 167.
Weimar, observations on the court at* xxiii.
443.
Weimar, the Athens of Germany, state of
society at, xxxi. 176, 177 — constitution
of the Grand Duchy of, 177, 178.
table-d'hote at, described, xxxix. 10.
Welsh, notice of their Mabonogiottf xxi.
94 — indifference of the Cymry for the
productions of their ancestors, ibid.
West India Colonies, tracts relating to,
XXX. 559, 560 — notice of proceedings
in the colonies, in consequence of Lord
Bathurst's despatches to the colonies,
561, 562^substauce of the order in
council for improving the condition of
the slaves in Trinidad, 563-566 — ^re-
marks thereon, 566, 567-570, 571 —
resolution proposed by Mr. Buxton, but
rejected, in the House of Commons, for
the abolition of slavery, 560 — resolu-
tions proposed by Mr. Canning, 561—
remarks on the first resolution relative
to the amelioration of the condUtion of
the slaves, 567 — on the progressive
improvement contemplated by the second
resolution, 568 — and on the anxiety
expressed by parliament for the accom-
plishment of that improvement, 568 —
the question of free and slave labour,
the main point at issue, 569 — quantum
of labour required for the production of
sugar, 569 — examination of the results
actually produced by free labour in
Sierra Leone, 572 — and in the island
of Hayti, 572-577 — proceedings of the
Spaniards in that island, considered,
578, 579 — account of, and remarks on,
the system of slave management prac-
tised by Mr. Steele, 580-582— observa-
tions on the proceedings of the society
established for the abolition of slavery
in the colonies, 583, 584 — considera-
tions on the most efficient mode of im-
proving the condition of slaves, 586,
587.
— -^— ^^— — importance of, xxxii.
517, 518 — advantages of them over the
East Indies, 519, 520— the West Indian
colonists opposed the importation of
slaves, 52 J — necessity and justice of
their having compensation, 522. See
Siavery.
West Indies, difficulty of regulating the
intercoiffse between, and the United
States of America, xxvi. 537.
— probable influence of 'the
new navigation laws on, xxviii. 438,
439, 440.
■ importance of, to Great Bri-
tain, xxxiii. 413-416 — benefits resulting
from the appointment of bishops for,
490 — account of Bishop Coleridge's
landing at Barbados, 492 — notice of two
Spanish missions at Trinidad, 492, 493
—A marriage scene among -the negroes
Digitized by
Googk
294
PART II.— INDEX OP SUBJECTS.
QUAmTBRtt
there, described, 493, 494— consternap
tion of a smuggler at the first sight of a
steam-vessel, 494, 495 — remarks of the
slave population of Barbados, 495,
496 — ^beautiful scene in the island of
St. Kitts, described, 498 — opinions of
abolitionists , of slavery in 1805, 1807,
and 1825, 500, 601— remarks thereon,
501, 502 — general wisdom of the mea-
sures proposed by ministers in reference
to the West Indies, 504 — the average
condition of slaves proved to be much
better than is generally believed, 505,
506 — the refusal of the colonists to re-
ceive slave evidence, considered, 506,
507 — and also the giving of a dave a
legal ri^ht to demand his freedom at a
given price, 508-516 — observations upon
tiie conspiracies among the slaves in
Jamaica, 516, 517.
West Indies, chronological history of,
xxxviii. 193 — ^introduction and multipli-
cation of European animals and pro-
duce, 197 — Canary Islands contributed
to the discovery of, ibid. — introduction of
negroes into, 204-— danger of this early
apprehended, 205 — anecdote of a Spa-
mard and an Indian, 206 — accounts of a
blood-hound, 208 — folly of the Spanish
restrictions, 211 — career of the English,
212 — Porto Rico taken by the Earl of
Cumberland, 213 — abandoned ifrom
sickness, 214 — Bermudas taken pos-
session of by Sir G. Somers, ibid, —
voyage thence to Ireland in a vessel of
two or three tons, 215— settlement of
St. ELitts, ibid. — quarrels between the
English and French there, 217, 218—
Guadaloupe settled by the French, ibid.
— Pope Alexander's bull in favour of
the Spaniards, tacitly revoked by Urban
VIII., i5i'rf.— Tortuga settled by free-
booters, 220— taken by the Spaniards,
and evacuated, 222 — English expedi-
tion against St. Domingo shamefully
defeated, ibid. — ^Jamaica surrendered to
the English, 224— settlement of Bar-
bados, 226 — price and treatment of
negroes, 228 — objection of planters to
the conversion of slaves, 229 — ^persons
sent to Jamaica as settlers, 230 — ^pride
of colour a curse of, 231 — ^buccaneers,
234 — attempt to prevent the increase of
mulattoes, 238 — neutrality for, in wars,
advantageous, 239.
commerce with. See United
States.
Westphalia, kingdom of, its origin, xxii.
482 — extent, ibid. — regency, ibid, —
Jerome Buonaparte appointed king,
483 — anecdotes of his court, favourites,
and government, 484-487 — character of
^ the Westphalian araoy; 4d9*-'diwolu-
tion of the Westphaliaa monarehTt
492.
Wet Docks of London, account o^ xxii.
36-38,
Whales, destruction o( on the western
coast of Spitsbergen, xxxiv. 390.
Wheat, excellent, &om the Cape of Grood
Hope, XXV. 464.
threshing of a woman in France
like a bundle of wheat, under the in-
fluence of religious insanity, xxviii. 32.
Wheeling town, present state o^ xxix. 3.
Whig, character of a, xxii. 161.
Whig party, character of, previous to the
Revolution, xxxvii. 252.
Whiggism, shade of it, chosen by Burke,
xxxiv, 473.
Whigs, violent conduct of, against the
D^e of Mariborough, xxiii. 43, 44.
■ defence of the late Whigs, xxviiL
208, 209 — progress of revolutionary
principles among the present Wings,
210 — their influence on tiie public press,
204, 205, 212-214— remarks oa thdr
conduct, 215-219.
Whipping-boys, xxxix. 107.
Whitehall, or the Days of George IV.,
notice of, xxxvii. 87.
Widows, instance of burning of in India,
xxiv. 335. See India.
Will, influence of, on nervous diseues,
xxvu. 115-117.
Winds, observations on the coldness of, in
North America, xxx. 20.
' and weather, supposed prognosti-
cations of, by burds and imimaig. "rrri-r,
422.
Windsor, notice of the improvements
carrying on at the castle, xxxiv. 187,
188.
a town of New South Wales,
notice of, xxiv. 59.
Wine, adulterations of, xxiv. 347, 348.
danger of indulgence in, xxxviiL
509.
account of the difierent sorts of,
used by the Athenians, xxiii. 266, 267.
Wines of the ancients, mixed with sea-
water, xxxiL 235~'impregnated with
rosin and other substances, 236 — this
circumstance accounted for, 236, 237—
notice of the wines of ancient Greece,
237— 'and of the principid Roman wines,
237, 238 — supposed resemblance of
Madeira or Sherry to the Falefnian
wine of the Romans, 239 — ttie exces-
sive dilution of ancient wines accounted
for, 240— notice of the spiced wines
used in the middle ages, 245-^particu-
larly hyppocras and ciarry, 245, 246—
favourite wines of the thirteenth and
fourteenth centuries, 246, 247 — French
wiaes; when introduced into EngUmd,
Digitized by
Googk
Rbvzxw.
INBIX OF 8UBJICTS.
995*
a4ft ■ taek wint, a49.-4ntrodqction of
Madeira wiiM, 250 — remarks on the
different sorts of wine at present made
in France, 251 — ^particularly Cham-
pagne, 252— Hermitage, 252, 253—
and the wines of the Bordelais, 253 —
particularly claret, 254 — notice of the
wines of Spain, 254, 255— of Portugal,
255, 256— of Germany. 256, 257— of
Hungary, '357— of modern Italy and
Greece, 258— of North and South
America, 259 — the making of wine in
England, a matter of amusement and
experiment, 261.
Wines of the Gape of Good Hope, ac-
count of, xxii. 217 — their pecuUar
flavour accounted for, 217, 218 — further
observations on, xxv. 465.
Winter travelling in the Polar regions,
described, xxviii. 375, 376 — dreariness
of Parry's third winter, zzxiv. 379 —
picture of the wintry desert, 380.
Winter's day, in the Arctic Sea, described,
XXV. 191.
Wreath, notice of, xxxvii. 89, 90,
92.
Witchcraft, tracts on, ndx. 440— belief
of, prevalent in central India, 403—
axguments used against it, in the
fifroenth century, 441-^how ptmished
by the old common law of England,
442 — notice of different acts of parlia-
ment, 442, 443 — ^particularly of the sta-
tute 1 James I., c. 12, 413 — extract
from King James I.'s dialogue on the
temper with which he wished that act
to be put in execution, 443, 444 — ^pro-
secution of William Coke and Alison
Dick, in Scotland, for witchcraft, 444,
445 — singular confession of Lillias
Adie, 445 — ^barbarous execution of a
Scottish witch in 1722, 446— and of
numerous other persons in New Eng-
land, ibid. — ^repeal of the British laws
concerning witchcraft, ibid. — account of
the horrid prosecutions for witchcraft at
Wurtzbur^h, in 1627, 1628, and 1629,
447 — and m the bishopric of Bamberg,
447, 448 — ^remarks on the confessions
extorted from witches by the rack, 449,
450 — on the witchcraft of the Scandi-
navians, 451, 452.
■ extraordinary belief of the In-
dians of North America, in its influence,
xxxi. 93.
Witenagemot of the Anglo-Saxons, notice
of, xxxiv. 265.
Witnesses, false, how procured, in Greece,
xxxiii. 344, 345 — ^venality of witnesses^
350.
Women, general rate of their wages in
manufrkcturing towns in France, zxxi.
415.
Woollen manufkctore of Fraaee, preeenft
state of, xxxi. 400, 401— quantity of
wool imported and exported in 1822
and 1823,402.
— ^— ^— and trade, past and
present state of, xxxii. 173, 174.
manufactures in England, ac-
count of, xxxiv. 59-61^-contrastedwith
those of France, 62, 63 — ^their superio-
rity to the latter accounted for, 63—
amount of the English woollen mana>
factures in 1818, compared with the
value of the French, 66.
Women, character and present sitoatioa
of, in England, xxii. 90-92 — ^plan of an
intended college for them, 94, 95— no«
tice of Mrs. Astell's scheme for such an
establishment, 95 — account of the esta-
blishment formed at Bath, under tfao
patronage of Queen Charlotte, 96-9^—
present state of this Ladies' Association,
100 — character and situation of women
of reputation in ancient Greece, 172-
178 — ^respect of the Athenians for the
maternal character, 188 — character,
manners, and situation of the hetserss, or
female friends, 191-200— satirical versei
on them, 200-202 — state of women
among the Ashantees, 287.
reasons why the capital punii^-
ment for forcible abduction of; should
not be repealed) xxiv. 199, 200.
■ of Fezzan, dress of, xxv. 35.
—^ influence of, on societ j^, in France,
prior to the revolution, xxvii. 175, 176.
• condition and amusements of.
among the Crim Tartars, xxix. 131, 132
—oppressive condition of, in ancient
Greece, 327.
• condition of, among the North
American Indians, xxxi 95, 96 — how
courted, 96, 97 — on the character of
the Russian women, 158.
- condition of, in France, under the
old regime, xxxiv. 441-443 — contrastof
English women and English society
with those of France, 446-454.
general character of, xxxviii. 97—
in a degraded state under all false reli-
gions, 121.
Woods and forests, alteration of system
proposed to the commissioners, xxxviii,
441.
Workhouses, remarks on the present sys-
tem of, xxxiii. 452, 453.
Workmen, English, superiority of the
moral character of, to that of French
workmen, xxxi. 416, 417. See La*
bourer.
World, general happiness of the, xxxviii.
313.
Worship of the North American Indians^
object and mode of; xxxi* 91.
Digitized by
Googk
29$
PART IIv— INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
Wourali poison, effects of, sucxiii. 329-
331.
Writing, letter on the wretched scrawl of
Br. Parr*s hand, xxxiz. 265.
Wurtemburg separatists, dangerous and
insane doctrines of the sect, zxviii.
17,
Y.
Taboo, xxxix. 149.
Yakut, a Siberian tribe, notice of, xxxi.
223 — diseases prevalent amone them,
224.
Yam, an enormous one, notice of, xxxiii.
127.
Yaou, river, notice of, xxix. 512.
YeUow colour, predominant throughout
the vegetable world, xxxix. 413.
Yerba, or teapshrub of Paraguay, notice
of, xxxii. 138, 139.
Yorl^ retreat for insane persons at, remarlu
on, zxiv. 172 — statement of cases ad-
mittedj'and of cures, from 1796 to 1819,
173, note.
Yorkshire Philosophical Society, notice of^
xxxiv. 170, 171.
Young Rifleman's Adventures, notice of,
xxxiv. 416.
Youth, total insubordination of, in Ame-
rica, xxi. 8, 9.
— — occupations o^ xxxviii. 162, 166.
Ypanema river, in Brazil, account of an
iron-foundery on the, xxxii. 136.
Zaffran, notice of the country around it,
xxvi. 215.
Zaragoza, account of the siege of, xxix.
75-77.
Zaria, capital of Zeg-zeg, xxxix. 162.
Zealand. See New Zealand.
Zoasi, humane .artifice to relieve some ua«
fortunate men of the tribe, xxvL 228.
Zoharites, a sect of Jews, xxxviii. 128.
Zoolog]^, a defective branch of education
in this country, xxxvii. 346.
Zurmie, xxxix. 162.
END OF PART II.
Digitized by
Googk
GENERAL INDEX.
PART III.— INDEX OF NEW PUBLICATIONS.
Abbassah, an Arabian Tale, xxxiv. 612.
Abbot, tbe, a Romance, xxiv. 276.
— — of Moutserrat, xxxiii. 597.
Abbott, Triumph of Christianity, a Mis-
sionary Poem, xxii. 270.
Abduction, xxxii. 267.
Abercrombie's Pathological Researches,
xxxix. 251.
Aberdeen, Lord, on Grecian Architecture,
ixvii. 268, 655.
■ View of, xxvii. 555.
Abemethy*8 Physiological Lectures, xxvi.
543.
' Lectures, xxzvii. 581.
Surgical Works, xxxix. 524.
Abipones, Account of, xxvi. 547 : xxvii.
269.
Academical Instruction in England, xxxiii.
595.
Acad^mie Royale de France, M^moires
de r, xxiv. 280.
Acciun on Coal-Gas, xxi. 558.
on Culinary Poisons, xxii. 564.
<— — on Wine Making, xxiv. 275.
^— ^— on Brewing, xxiv. 275.
Ackermann's Tour of the Rhine, xxiL
561.
Forget-Me-Not, xxxv. 316.
Acta Apostolorum cur& Robinson, xxxL
532.
Actor, Life of an, xxxi. 531.
Adam's Select Passages from the Bible,
xxvii. 560.
Adams, Sir W.« on restoring Vision, xxi.
562.
• on Depression and Extrac-
tion of the Cataract, xxi. 562.
" History of the Jews, xxi. 560.
■ Cases in the Ecclesiastical Courts,
xxviii. 267.
Herme's Philologist, xxxiv. 299,
Addresses, Squibs, &c., xxxiv. 613.
Adventurers, the, xxxii 549.
Adventures of a King*s Page, xxxix.
525.
Advice to Julia, xxiv. 27G.
.^schyli Choephorffi, by Blomfield, xxz.
588.
^schylus, by Scholefield, zxxvii. 580,
Africa, Western, xxv. 274.
Voyage to, by W.Hutton,xxvi. 276.
Tour to, by C. Hutton, xxvi. 276.
■ ■ South, Philips' Travels in, xxxviii.
304.
Age, Spirit of the, xxxi. 529.
Agriculture, Board of, Commimications to,
xxi. 557— of a district in the South of
France, 557.
Plan for Relieving, &c., xxvi.
545.
Quarterly Journal of, xxxviii,
• . 249, 522.
300;
Aikin's Select British Poets^ xxiv. 276^
572.
Court of James I., xxvi. 542.
Dr., Memoirs of, by Lucy Aikin,
xxiv. 277.
Lucy, Poetical Works, xxxv. 320.
Moral Biography, xxxviii. 599.
English Lesson Book, xxxviii.
601.
Aimwell, Miss, Gk^od Nature and Sensi-
bility, xxvi. 275.
Ainsli^s Materia Indica, xxxv. 617.
on the Cholera Morbus of In?.
dia, xxxv. 616.
Aird's Religious Characteristics, xxxvi«
303.
Airy Nothings, xxxii. 267.
Airy's Mathematical Tracts on Physical
Astronomy, xxxiv. 301.
Aislabie's First Book of Homer's Iliad,
xxvii. 554.
Albany, a Tale, xxi. 268.
Aldrich's Civil Architecture, by Smyth,
xxxi. 529.
Logic, xxxii. 264.
Alexander, on the Construction, &c., of
Chapels, xxiv. 567.
Travels from India to Eng-
land, xxxvi. 304.
I., Emperor of Russia,
Life, xxxiii. 594.
Alfieri's Saul, translated, xxv. 576.
Memoirs of, xxvi. 541.
Ali Pacha of Janina, Life of, xxviii. 2
Alison's Sermons, xxi. 566.
Alia Giornata, xxxiv. 612.
his
Digitized by
Googk
298
PART IIL— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
Qu.
Allan Ramsay, Poems of, zxii. 270.
Allan's Surgery, xxvi. 274; zxd. 531.
i— ^ Bridal of Caolchaim, xxvii. 271.
Allason*s Antiquities of Pola, xxi. 263,
557; xxii. 561.
Allen's Lectures, xxiv.278; xxv. 277.
History of Lambeth, zzzi. 262.
— Original Rhymes, xxxiv. 612.
Reply to Dr. Lingard's Vindica-
tion, xxxvi. 300.
History of London, vol. i., xxxvi.
604.
Alley's Vindicis ChristiansB, xxxiv. 303.
Allied Armies, Opeiations of, under
Schwaitxwibarg and Blucher, xxviii.
267.
— — — Campaign of the Left
"Wing of, in the Western Pyrenees,
under the Duke of Wellington, xxix.
279.
AUnatt on the Law of Partition, xxir.
274 ; xxvii. 556.
Alma Mater, xxxix. 525.
Alman's Genera of Plants, xxxix. 249.
Almanach do Gotha pour I'Ann^ 1826,
xxxiiL276.
r^ det Dames, pour 1826, xxxiii.
276.
Almanack, Companion to the, zxxvii.
581 ; xxxix. 252.
Alphonso, a Comedy, xxxvi. 299.
Alphonsus, a Tragedy, xxxii. 547.
Alps, Passes of the, No. VIIL, xxxix.
249.
Amaranth, xxx. 590.
Amaiynthus, xxiv. 572.
Ambition, xxxii. 549.
Ambler's Reports, by Blunt, xxxix. 251.
America and the Bntish Colonies, by W.
Kingdom, xxii. 566.
.— — Society, &C., in, xxv. 679.
^— Summary View of, xxxi. 262.
South, Twenty Yeani &ead«iioe
in, xxxiiL 290.
' North, United States of, xxxvi.
604.
xxxviii. 603.
American Philosophical Society, Tranaae-
tions of^ xxi. 568.
■ _^— — Transac-
tions of the Literary and Philosophical
Committee o^ xxi. 568.
Americans, Notions of the, xxxviii. 603.
« as they are, xxxviii. 304.
Amicus Protestans, Letters of, to W. Wil-
berforoe, xxvii. 271.
Amiens, Cathedral of, xxvii. 268.
Amos and Ferard's Law of Fixtures,
xxxvi. 602.
Amphlett*8 £migrant*fl Directory, xxii.
271.
Amulet, xxxiii, 276; aDORr, 316; vam*
299; xxxix. 249.
Anacreon, translated by Lord Tfauzloir.
zzTit5M.
Analecta Latina Majora, xxxiL 264.
Analogy, Universal, between the Natmral
and Spiritual World, xxxiii. 599;
xxxix. 526.
Anatomy of the Himmn Body, from the
German of Lavater, xxx. 294.
- Catechism of, xxxiv. 301.
— • Morbid, Journal of. Part I.,
xxxviii. 601.
Anderson's London Conmiercial Diction-
ary, xxi. 264; xxii. 562 ; xxxiii. 596.
Poetical Works^ xxiv. 276.
' on the Domestic ConstitutioBf
xxxiv. 611; XXXV. 319.
' Mission to the East Coast of
Sumatra, xxxiv. 614.
Prize Essay, xxxvL 301,
— Historical Sketches, xxxviii.
600.
Andrew's Christian Instruction, xxxr. 320.
■ Lectures on the Trinity, xxvii.
560.
" Journal from Buenos Ayrei^
xxxvi. 604.
Andrews, Bidiop, life, by Isaacson, Trrry ,
522.
Anecdote Library, xxvi. 544.
Anecdotes, Military and Naval, of the
late War, xxi. 560.
ofa Croat, xxix. 281.
Angelo, Michael, Reminiscences o^ zxxvii.
579.
Angels, Hobr, Existence, Nature, and
Ministry of, xxxvL 604.
Anglo-Irish of the Nineteenth Century,
xxxviii. 601 ; xxxix. 253.
Anglo-Saxons, History of, by S. Tunat,
xxix. 279.
Animal Economy, Conversations on,xxxvi«
603; xxxvii.301.
Animals, Sensibility of, xxvL 275.
Annaline, xxx. 590.
Annals of the Parish, xxv. 578.
Annesley on the Diseases of India, zxxvii.
581.
Anniversary, xxxix. 249.
Annuaire Historique Universel, par C. S.
Lesur, xxiv. 280.
Ann n al Biography and Obituary, xxL
263 ; xxiv. 568 ; xxv. 273 ; xxx. 292.
Register, tiie New, for 1824, xxxii.
264.
the Pocket, for 1824^
Edmburgh, lor 1824,
xxxii. 547.
Another Cain, a Mystery, xxvii. 558.
Anspach, Margravme o{ Memoirs^ xxxiii.
594.
Anstec'a Poems fron the GtHnan, xxL
564; xxii. 270.
xxxii. 265.
Digitized by
Googk
Bxvaw,
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
299
Anston Park, zziv. 572.
Answer to * An Apology for Deism^' zxiv.
278.
Ant, the, xxxrii. 301.
Antar, Life of, translated by T. Hamilton,
xxiii. 281.
' Anthology, British, xxxii. 550.
Antiquary, Tales of an, xxxviii. 303.
Antiquities, Jewish, &c., xxix. 281.
II Description of the Three An-
cient Ornamental Bricks, &c., xxxii.
263.
- Society of, of Scotland, Trans-
actions of, vol. iii., xxxYiii. 599.
Antommarchi's Napoleon, xxxi. 529.
Aosta, Valley of, xxviii. 265.
Apocryphal New Testament, xxiv. 573.
Appeal respecting the United States, bj
T. R. Walsh, xxii. 565.
Apuleius, Works o^ translated by T*
Taylor, xxviii. 268.
Archseologia i^liana, xxxvi. 601,
Archbold*8 Forms, xxxi. 258.
-^ Law of Bankrupts, xxxii. 548.
' ■ Practice, xxxiii. 596.
■ Summary, xxxiv. 610.
Peel's Acts, xxxvii. 580.
Ajrchduc Charles, Campagne de 1799,
xxiv. 280.
Archer's Saragossa, xxxi. 260. ^
Architect, Letters of an, xxxviii. 300.
Architecture, Gothic, xxxviii. 599.
■ " Grecian, liOrd Aberdeen on,
xxviii. 268, 555.
Ariosto's Orlando Furioso, translated by
W. S. Rose, XXX. 590; xxxvi. 302,
603.
by Johnson,
XXXV. 617.
Aristarchus anti-Blomfieldianus, xxiv.272.
Aristophanes, Birds of, by Rev. H. F.
Gary, xxx. 588.
Plutus, by Carrington, xxxii.
546.
curd Bekkeri, xxxvii. 299.
Aristotle's Ethics, xxi. 265 j xxxii. 264,
Aristotelis DoctrinsB Moralis Epitome,
per Theoph. Golium, xxxii. 264.
Anninius, Works of, translated, xxvi.
547.
— - by Nichols, xxxiL
550; xxxiiL 280, 599 ; xxjtviii. 262.
Armstrong's Idle Hours, xxvi. 545.
Address to the Royal College
of Surgeons, xxxiii. 278.
Gaelic Dictionary, xxxiii.
597.
Army and Royal Marines^ List of Offi-
cers on Full Pay of, xxi. 562.
on the Peace Establishment of,
xxvii. 271.
Amauld's History of the fi«tum iii the
Vaudois to their Valley in 1689, tran*.
lated by Dyke Adand, xxxv. 318.
Amott, on Stricture of the Urethra, z^
562} xxiv. 570.
'■ Account of the last Illness, Ac, of
Napoleon Buonaparte, xxvii. 557.
Arrowsmith's General Atlas, xxi. 560;
xxxv. 615.
Art, British Galleries of, xxxi. 255.
Articles of the Church of England, Ques«
tions on, xxx. 591.
Artis's Antediluvian Phytology, xxxiii.
279.
Arts, Society of, in London, Transactioot
of, xxi. 557.
— Sciences, &c., Register of, xxxi.
259.
Arundall's Visit to the Seven Apocalyptic
Churches in Asia, xxxvii. 302, 582.
Arundel, xxxiv. 612.
Arwed Gyllenstema, xxxv. 617,
Asaph, on the Hernnhutters, xxvii. 560.
Ashhurst, Explanation of the Belief, &c.^
xxi. 269.
AshilPs Friendly Visits, xxiv. 278.
Ashwell on Parturition, xxxix. 251.
Asiatic Society, Royal, Transactions o^
Parts I. and II., xxxv. 614.
Aspin, Analysis of Universal History,
xxii. 267.
■ Manners and Customs of the Inha-
bitants of England, xxxii. 265.
Assurance, life, Babbage on, xxxiiL 596.
Aston's Pompeii, xxxviii. 308.
Astro- Chronometer, xxviii. 265.
Astrolofi^r of the Nineteenth Century,
xxxih. 279.
Astronomical Society, Memoirs of, xxvii«
268; xxxv. 614.
Astronomische Hulfstafeln, xxvii. 554.
Astronomy, First Steps to, xxxviii. 600.
' Physical) by Luby, xxxviii..
301.
Athenian Oracle abrid^, xxiv. 275.
Athens, School of, xxxiii. 276.
Atherstone's Last Days of Herculaneum,
xxvi. 275.
Midsummer Day*s Dieam,
ii.261.
303.
Fall of Nineveh, xxxviii*
Atkinson's Ornithology, xxiv. 276.
Key to Latin, xxv. 577.
' Agriculture of New South
Wales, xxxiv. 614.
Gothic Architecture, xxxviii.
599.
Ornaments,
. 522.
Atlas, General, xxi. 560; xxxv. 615.
Attic Fragments, xxxiii. 279.
Attorney's Retainer Book, xxxi. 258.
Auctioneor'B l4air Instructor, xxxvii. 300.
Digitized by
Googk
;300
PART IIL— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUABTBRLT
Auffer et Plancbe, CEuyies de Demo»-
thene, &c, xxv. 278.
Augustus, xziy. 276.
Auldjo's Ascent of Mont Blanc, zzxviiL
304.
Austria as it is, xxxvii. 582.
Authoress, a Tale, xzi. 563 ; xxii. 270.
Autumnal Excursion, by T. Pringle, xxi.
268.
Ava, Two Tears in, xxxvi. 604.
Ayr, View of the Town of, xxxii. 263.
Ayreon Dropsy, xxxiii. 596 ; xxxvii. 301.
Ayton's Sketches of Character, xxxii.
548.
B.
Babbaoe on the Application of Machinery
to Calculating and Printing Mathema-
tical Tables, xxvii. 557.
-^^-— on Life Assurance, xxxiii. 596.
Babylon the Great, xxxii. 549.
Bach, J. S., Life of, xxiii. 281.
Bacon's Works, by Montague, xxxii. 266 ;
xxxvii. 581.
Bacot on Friction, xxvii. 557.
Badenach on the State of the Indian
Army, xxxv. 615 ; xxxvi. 300.
Badnall on the Silk Trade, xxxix. 253.
Bailejr's Scapula Lexicon, edited by J. R.
Major, xxiv. 272.
Erimaldi, xxvii. 555.
Baillie's Tour on the Continent, xxl 507.
■ Metrical Legends, xxiv. 572 ;
xxv. 276.
*-^..^— Manners and Customs of Por-
tugal and Lisbon, xxxi. 533.
Works, by Wardrop, xxxiii.
278.
. Martyr, xxxiv. 297.
. Bride, xxxviii. 602.
Baily on the Nautical Almanack, xxvii.
558.
Baker's Life of Sir T. Bernard^ xxi.
558.
■ Sermons, xxi. 566.
■ Genealogical Table of Descend-
ants from Geor^ II., xxiv. 274.
Bakewell's Introduction to Mineralogy,
xxii. 267.
■ Observations during a Resi-
dence in the Tarantaise, &c., xxix.
282.
. Geology,
xxxviii. 300.
Baldwin, a Tale, xxiv. 276.
Baldwin's History of Greece, xxvi. 542.
Balfour on the power of Emetic Tartar in
the Cure of Fever, &c., xxi. 266, 561.
■ on Rheumatism, &c., xxi. 267.
' Historical Works, xxxii. 265.
Balguy's Discourses, &c. xxvii. 560.
Ball's Edda, xxiv. 272.
Ballance's Remarks on BadnalPs View of
the Silk Trade, xxxix. 253.
Ballantyne's Novelists' Library, xxiv.
571 J xxviii, 268 -, xxxii. 267.
Ballantyne on the Human Mind, z
2b'2.
BaufiU's Third Letter to Sir T. Adand,
xxxix. 526.
Bango's New Calliope, xxx. 295.
Banim's Celt's Paradise, xxvii. 271.
Bank of England Defended, xxxiii. 598.
— — — — Letters of Daniel Hard-
castle on, ibid.
. Address on the Affitirs
of, xxxviii. 602.
Bankrupt Act, the New, xxxiv. 301
Bankruptcy, Law of, xxxii. 548 ;
300, 602.
< Cases, xxi. 266.
Banks's English Master, xxix. 278.
Banc^uet, a Poem, xxi. 268.
Baptism Discussed, by Daniel Isaac, xxvii.
561.
Baptismal Fonts, Ancient, Part I., xxxiii.
594.
Bar, the, a Poem, xxxi. 532.
Barbauld's, Mrs., Works, xxxii. 549.
Barbier, Examen Critique des Diction-
naires, xxiv. 280.
Barclay, Engravings of the Human Skele-
ton, xxii. 268.
— on Life and Organization, xxvi*
543 J xxviL270.
' ' on Slavery, xxxiv. 303.
• Sequel to the Diversions
of
Purley, xxxv. 617.
Barker and Cheyne, account of an Epi-
demic Fever in Ireland, xxv. 577.
— — Parriana, xxxviii. 601.
Barlace, Progress of Knowledge in Eng-
land, xxii. 663.
Barlass's Sermons, xxii. 566.
Barlee, Adjumentum, xxii. 272.
Barlow on Surgery, &c., xxvi. 543.
Barnard Castle, xxxix. 253.
Barnewall and Alderson's King's Bench
Reports, xxi. 560.
Barns's Equity Practice, xxxvii. 580.
Baron ou Tubercles, &c., xxi. 266, 561.
" ou Tuberculous Diseases, xxxiii.
278.
on the changes of Structure in
Men, &c., xxxviii. 302*
Digitized by
Googk
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NEW PUBLICATIONS.
301
Barrington's Personal Sketches, xxxvi.
299.
Own Times, xxxvi. 601.
•»— Naturalist's Journal, xxxvii.
581.
Theological Works, by Town-
send, xxxviii. 602.
Barrow's Sermons, xxv. 277.
Barry on Atmospheric Pressure, xxxiv.
611.
Barry Cornwall's Dramatic Scenes, xxi.
559.
— ^— ^^— Sicilian Story and
other Poems, xxii. 564.
Poetical Works, xxviii.
559.
JBart's Life, by Magin, xxxvii. 579.
Bartlet's Seven Discourses, xxxviii. 603.
Barton's Medical Botany, xxvi. 272.
B. Verses on the Death of P. B.
Shelley, xxvii. 558.
Poetic Vigils, xxx. 590.
Widow's Tale, xxxvi. 302.
. New Year's Eve, xxxix. 253.
Bass's Greek and English Lexicon, xxiii.
281.
to the
New Testament, xxv. 578.
Basset on Currency and Wealth, xxxviiL
602.
Bassett's Molech, xxxiv. 302.
iBassompierre*s Embassy to England, Me-
moirs of, xxi. 560.
Bateman on the Diseases of London, xxii.
268.
■ The General Turnpike-Road
Act, xxviii. 267 ; xxxix. 279.
. Life, xxxiv. 609.
Bath and Wells, Charge of the Bishop of,
xxxviii. 602.
Bather's Sermons, xxxvi. 303.
Bathing, Essay on, xxxv. 318.
Baths of Bagnole, xxxiv. 302.
Bathurst on Human Knowledge, xxxvL
301.
Batty's Paris, xxvii. 555.
Views on the Rhine, xxxi. 529.
Baverstock on Brewing, xxx. 294.
Bayard, Chevalier, Right Joyous and
Pleasant History, &c., xxxii. 263.
Bayldon on the Valuation of Property for
the Poor-Rates, xxxviii. 302.
Bayle, Dictionnaire Historique et Cri-
tique, xxiv. 280.
■ Dictionary abridged, VoL I., xxxiv.
610.
Bayley's Antiquities of the Tower of
London, xxv. 576; xxxii. 263.
— Law of Bills of Exchange, &c.,
xxvii. 556.
Bailey on Fines, xxxix. 251.
Ba3mes's G^eneral Catalogue, xxiv. 271 ;
xxxvii. 299.
Bean's Evidences of Christianity, xxiiL
284.
Parochial Instruction, xxix. 281.
Beasely's Search of Truth, &c., xxvii.
558.
Beatson, Description of a New Agricul-
tural Implement, xxiv. 567.
Beattie on Classical Learning, xxviii. 266.
Beauchant's Naval Gunner, xxxvii. 581.
Beauclerc, Disorder and Order, xxiL 564.
Beauclerk's Journey to Morocco, xxxviii.
603.
Beaver, Captain Philip, Life, by Smyth,
xxxviii. 300.
Beeche's Geological Memoirs, xxx. 293.
Beche, de la, on the Negroes in Jamaica,
xxxiii. 596.
Beck's Medical Jurisprudence, xxxi. 531.
Bedford on Treatment of Wounds, xxi.
266.
and Riches, History of Uxbridge,
xxi. 270, 567.
Beechey's Expedition to the Northern
Coasts of Africa, xxxvi. 304; xxxvii.
582.
Bees, Revolt of the, xxxv. 319.
Beethoven, Beauties of, xxxviii. 601.
Belfrage's Monitor to Families, xxx. 296.
Belgium, Tour through, xxvii. 272.
Bell, the Wrongs of Children, xxi. 264.
on the Circulation of the Blood, &c.^
xxi. 562.
Illustrations of the Capital Opera*
tions of Surgery, &c., xxiv. 275, 570 ;
xxv. 275.
Chronological Tables of Universal
History, xxiv. 272.
Letters from Wetzlar, xxvi. 275.
on Injuries of the Spine, xxx. 580 ;
xxxi. 258.
Zoological Journal, xxxi. 260.
Observations on Italy, xxxii. 551 .
Appendix to his Work on the Nerves,
xxxv. 616.
Bellamy's Translation of the Bible, xxi.
566.
Bellchambers, Life of Colley Cibber, xxvii.
268.
Bellecour, French Exercises, xxii. 266.
Bellenden, John, History of Scotland,
translated by, xxvi. 542, 543.
Belsham's Epistles of St. Paul, xxvii.
560.
-^ Discourses, xxxiv. 614.
Belshazzar, by H. Milman, xxvii. 268.
Beltrami's Pilgrimage, xxxvii. 582.
Belzoni's Discoveries in Eg)rpt, xxiv. 279 5
xxvi. 547,
Plates II.
lustrative of, xxiv. 279.
Benecki on Indemnity in Marine Insui
ranee, xxx. 589.
Bengal, Judicial System uf, xxiv. 570.
Digitized by
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PART ni.-OTEW PUBLICATIONS.
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Bengal, ProcMdingg of tlie Supreme Court
of, on the Stamp Reirulation, zxxviii.
602.
Benger's Memoin of Tobin, xxii. 561.
' Anne Boleyn, xxv.
273.
Scots, xxTiii. 267.
Mary Queen of
Eliiabeth Stuart,
zxxiii. 276.
Bennet on New South Walee and Van
Diemen*s Land, xxiv. 277.
— Official Report, &c.,xm. 259.
— ^— Fishes of Ceylon, xxxviii. 601.
Bennett's Table of Poisons, xxxii. 266.
• — — National Interest, considered,
xxwr. 618.
Benson's Hulsean Lectures, xxiv. 573;
xxvii. 272.
— — ^— Pulpit Remains, xxvi. 547,
■ Sermons, xxxi. 533.
Bentham on the Proposed Penal Code of
the Spanish Cortes, xxyI. 545.
Bentham's Observations on Mr. Peel's
Speech, introducing his Police Magis-
trates' Salary Raising Bill, xxxii 269.
Rationale of Reward, xxxii.
269.
• Naval Essays, xxxviiL 303.
• Papers, xxxix. 525.
Bentivoglio, by C. Masterton, xxx. 588.
Berens's Village Sermons, xxvii. 560.
■' Sermons, xxxi. 261.
Selection from the Papers of Ad-
dison, xxxvi. 301.
Beresford, the Cross and the Crescent,
xxxi. 261.
Berguer, Letter to the Opposition in both
Houses of Parliament, xxii. 565.
Berkeley, Colonel, and His Friends, xxxii.
267.
Bernard, Sir T., Life of, xxi. 558.
Bemier's Travels in the Mogul Empire,
xxxiv. 614.
Berry, Duke de. Life of, xxiv. 272 ; xxv.
273.
Bertha's Visit to her Uncle in England,
xxxix. 524,
Bertholet's Art of Dyeing, xxxi. 260.
Besfs Transrhenane Memoirs, xxxviii.
599.
Betham's Irish Antiquarian Researches,
xxxiv. 610.
Betrothed Lover^ from the Italian of
Manzoni, xxxviii. 303.
Bevan, National School System, xxii.
266.
Beveridge's Works, by T. H. Horne,xxx.
296.
Beverley's Tubal, xxxvi. 299,
Bew on Diseases of the Teeth and Gums,
xxi. 562 ; xxii. 268.
Bewick^s Birds, xxxiv. 611.
BiUe^ Hebrew, xxxi. 261. '
with English, ibid,
— — — Family, ibid,
New Testament and Common
Prayer, in Greek, Latin, Italian, Spa-
nish, French, and German, ibid.
The Comprehensive, xxxv. 618 j
xxxvii. 302.
Biblia Hebraica, by£. Vander Hoogbt,
xxviii. 269.
— — Sacra Polyglotta, xxxix. 254.
Bibliotheca Classica Latina, xxv. 278.
— Gloucestriensis, xxx. 292.
— Parriana, xxxvi. 601.
Bicknell, the Modem Church, a Satirical
Poem, xxiv. 572.
Biddulph's Theology o( the Early Pa-
triarchs, xxxii 551.
Bigland's History of the Jews, xxii. 562.
Biiou, xxxvii. 299 ; xxxix. 249.
Billington on Young Plantations of Oaks,
xxxv. 316.
Bingham's Law of Landlord and Tenant
xxiv. 274.
Bingham on Diseases of the Bladder,
xxviii. 267.
■ ■ Ojigines Ecclesiastics, xxiiv.
303.
— Three Discourses, xxxiv. 613.
Bingley's Biographical Conversations,
xxi. 263.
' Travels in South Europe, xxv.
579.
Biographical Magazine, xxi. 264; xxxviii
300.
— ^ Dictionary, xxxv. 316.
Biography, contemporary, xxxi. 256.
and Obituary, xxxi. 529 ;
614 ; xxxvii. 579 ; xxxix. 250.
Moral, xxxvii. 581.
Bion and Moschus, IdylUa and other
Poems of, xxxii. 268.
Bird's Machin, xxv. 276.
- Poetical Memoirs, xxix. 281.
• Dunwich, xxxviii. 303 ; xxxix. 304.
Birkbeck, Kxfracts from a Letter from the
Illinois, &c., xxii. 566.
Birmingham, Picture of, xxxviii. 603.
Birt*s Letter to Dr. Wardlaw, xxxii 651.
Bischoff, Observations on the Report of
the Earl of Sheffield at Lewes Fair,
xxiv. 572.
Bishop, the Beloved Disciple, xxii. 272.
Bismark's Field Service of Cavalry, by
Beamish, xxxiii. 278.
Cavahy Tactics, by Johnston,
xxxvi. 300.
Bisset's Reign of George III., xxiv. 274,
669.
Black on Light Infantry, xxi. 562 : xxii,
269.
Black's Clinical Reports, xxii. 268.
' Student's Manual, xxiv. 569.
Digitized by
Googk
NEW PUBLIGATIOKa
lOS
Black GonTtti, nii. 270.
— Robber, a Romance^ zxi. 268 ; zxii.
270.
Blackadder, Lieuienant-Colonel, life of,
xxxi. 255.
Blackall on Dropaiei , zxzi. 259.
Blackei't Mahratta War, zzr. 577.
Blackie on the Management of Hedge
Timber, xxii 561.
Blackley*! Sermons, miT. 303.
Blackatone*! Gommentariea, by Coleridge,
xxxiL 547.
by Chitty,
zzziii. 596.
Blagdon's Dictionary of Classical Quota-
tions, zxii. 562.
Blair on the Revival of Popery, zxi. 269^
566.
— Adam, Life of, zxvi. 541.
— — — Scientific Aphorisms, xxxvi. 301 .
Blake on Cases of Labour, &c. 266, 561.
Bland's Algebraical Problems, Key to,
xxxviL 300.
Blane's Medical Lc^^ zxi. 266.
■ on Vaccination, zxvi. 274.
■ Dissertations by, zzviii. 268.
Blanshard on the Statutes of Limitation,
xxxvi. 602.
Blaquiere on the Spanish Revolution,
xxvii. 556.
— — Second Visit to Greece, xxxii.
270.
Blaquey on Life Assurance, xxxiii. 596.
Bligh, Report of the Case of Bills of Ex-
change, &&, xxiv. 570.
' Reports, xxxiv. 610.
Blind on Intestinal Worms, xxxix. 251.
Bliss's Fruit-Grower's Instructor, xxxi. 256.
Blizard's Oratbn before the Hunterian
Society, XXXV. 616.
Blomfield, C. J., D.D., on the Traditional
Knowledge of a promised Redeemer, xxi.
566.
Matthise's Greek Grammar,
xxvii. 268.
]
xxix.281.
• Five Lectures on St. John,
• Duty of Family Prayer, and
Manual of Family Prayer, xxxi. 261.
Charge to the Clergy of
Chester, xxxiii. 280.
Bloomfield, Rev. £., Lectures on the Phi-
losophy of History, xxiv. 273.
S. G., New Translation of
Thucydides, xxxix. 250.
■ S. T., M. A., Recensio Synop-
tica Aunotationis Sacns, xxxiv. 303;
X. 254.
• Robert, May-Day with the
Blumenbach'f Manual of KatoMl His-
tory, by Gore, xxxiii. 279.
Elements of Natural His*
Muses, xxvii. 271.
Blore's Monumental Remams, xxxi. 529.
Blounf 8 MSS., xxxiv. 302.
tory, by Gore, xxxv. 316.
Elements of PhyMology,
xxxviiL 302.
Blunt's Vestises of Antient Customs in
Modern Itafy and Sicily, xxviii. 270.
Boaden's life of Kemble, xxxii. 263.
-^ Mrs. Siddons, xxzr.
614.
Boccaccio, Deeamerone, xxxii. 549.
Boeckh's Public Economy of Athens,
xxxvii. 582»
Body and Soul, xxvii. 558.
Bohn's Catalogue, xxviii. 265.
Boileau's Art of French Conversation,
xxi. 559.
Boileau on the Gferman Language, xxiii.
283.
Key to the German, xxxii. 264.
Bold^s Merchant and Mariner's African
Guide, xxL 559.
Bolen's Mysterious Monk, xxxiv. 611.
Bollman on Specie Payments, xxi. 565.
Bolster^s Irish Quarterly Magasine, No.
VI., xxxvi. 301.
Bombay Literary Society, Transactions o^
xxi. 267; xxiv. 275.
Bonar, Religion the best Friend of the
People, xxviii. 270.
Bond's Memoirs of Fisk, ^f^r^-g- 249.
Bon-mot, Egomet, * Some Passages' in
the Life ot; xxxiii. 276.
Bonney's Notices of Fotheringay, xxv.
277.
Bonnycastle^s Mensuration, Key to, xzzi.
258.
Book of Psalms in Verse, xxviii. 269.
Booker's Discouises on the Lord's Prayer,
xxxi. 261.
Boon on Modem History, xxvi. 273.
Boone's Book of Churches and Sects,
xxxiii. 598.
Sketches from Life, xxxv. 320.
Boosey's Catalogues, xxv. 273.
Booth's Interest Tables, xxi. 267.
' ■'■■'■.■ Tradesman's Assistant, xxv. 275.
— Analytical Dictionary of the Eng-
lish Language, xxvii. 558 ; xxx. 588.
Hydrophobia, xxxi. 258.
Borgnis, Traits de M^canique appliqu^
aux Arts, xxiii. 286.
Bomwlaski, Count, Memoirs of, xxv. 273,
576.
Bostock's Elementary System of Physio-
logy, xxx. 590.
Physiology, xxxiv. 301 ; xxxvii.
301,581.
Botanical Sketches, xxxiii. 597.
Miscellany, xxxviii. 300.
' - M and Horticultural Societiei of
Digitized by
Googk
iH
PART IIL—NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUARTBRLT
Durlianiy kc^ Traniactions of, xxx?iiL
300,
Botanist's Companfon, xxiv. 272.
Manual, xxx. 292.
Botany, Dialogues on, xxii. 266.
Conversations on, xxxviii. 599.
Boucher's Senndns, xxiv. 278.
Boudier's Sermons, xxi. 269, 566.
Bouilly, Les Jeunes Femmes, xxii. 562.
Tales for Mothers, xxxi. 260.
Boullon, Cours de Litterature, xxv. 576.
Boulton's Sketch of Upper Canada, xxxir.
303, 614.
Bounden's Poems, xxx. 590.
Bourdon, El^mens d'Arithm^tique, xxv.
278.
Bourn's (Gazetteer, &c, xxvii. 555.
Bourne's Poems, xxxiv. 302.
Bowden's Moral Dialogues, xxiv. 272.
Bowdich's Excursions in Madeira and
Porto Santo, xxxii. 270.
Bowditch's Ashantee Mission, xxi. 270,
568.
Bowdler's Poems, xxv. 578.
Family Shakspeare, xxix. 277.
Select Chapters from the Old
Testament for Sunday Schools, xxix.
282.
■ John, Memoir of, xxxiL 546.
Bowles's Principles of Poetry, xxi. 564.
Curfew, xxvii. 271.
Final Appeal, xxxii. 268.
-— ^— Lessons in Criticism, xxxiii. 596.
History of Bremhill, xxxvii. 582.
— — — Days Departed, xxxix. 253.
Bowring's Russian Poets, xxv. 276.
• Romances of Spain, xxxi. 260.
■ Servian Popular Poetry, xxxvi.
302 ; Polish Poets, 603.
> and Van Dyk's Batavian An-
thology, xxx. 295.
Boyd's Agamemnon of iEschylus, xxx.
292.
Illustrious Exile, xxxiii. 279.
Sinking Fund, xxxviii. 602.
Boydell's Picturesque Scenery of Norway,
xxii. 561.
Illustrations of Holy Writ, xxiv.
567.
Boyle, on Cholera, xxv. 275.
3oyne Water, the, xxxiv. 302.
Boys's Sermons, xxv. 277.
Captivity, xxxvi. 601.
Bracebridge Hall, xxvii. 270.
Bradfield's Waterloo, xxxiv. 612.
Bradley's Eutropius, xxii. 266.
Brady's Life of G. d'Alfarache, ' xxv.
578.
Varieties of Literature, xxxv. 314.
Braithwaite's Life, xxxii. 546.
Brambletye House, xxxiii. 597.
Brand's Voyage to Peru, &c., xxxviii. 603.
Brand's Manual of Chemistry, xxi. 264^
558; xxv. 274.
— .^— ,^_— Pharmacy, xxxiL 266.
Tables of Spedfic Gravities,
xxxvii. 581.
Brasse's Cards of Euclid, xxxii. 264.
Grreek Gradus, xxxvii. 300.
Bray's Discourses, xxv. 579.
De Foix, xxxiv. 302.
White Hoods, xxxvii. 581.
Brayley's Remains of Ancient Castles in
England and Wales, xxviii. 265 ; xxx.
292.
— ^— Theatres of London, xxxvii.
299.
Bread, Combination to raise the Price of,
xxiv. 277.
Brenton's Naval History of Great Britain,
xxx. 589 ; xxxi. 530 ; xxxii. 547.
Brereton on the Workhouse System, xxxiL
269.
Breston's Picture of Yarmouth, xxiii.
285.
Bretland's Sermons, xxiv. 573.
Brewer's, the. Monitor, xxxi. 260.
Brewer's Beauties of Ireland, xxxiii. 599 ;
xxxiv. 614. .
Brewerton, on the Mineral Water of As-
kem, xxiv. 274.
Brewing, Art of, xxxi. 529.
Brewster, on the Kaleidoscope, xxi. 562.
Encyclopaedia, xxi. 267.
Robison's Mechanical Philoso-
phy, xxvii. 270.
• Testimonies to Natural and Re-
vealed Religion, xxviu 560.
Brides of Florence, by R. Fitz-Eustace,
xxx. 588.
Bridge's Equations, xxvi. 274.
Bridgeman's Account of Knolle, xxL 567.
Bridges' s Note on the Suppression of Me-
moirs, xxxiii. 594.
Annals of Jamaica, xxxvii. 580 ;
xxxix. 250.
Roman Empire, xxxix. 600,
Briggs's Remains, xxxiii. 594.
Bright's Medical Cases, xxxvii. 301.
Brighton, Chain Pier at, by Dubourg,
xxxi. 529.
Brinkley's Astronomy, xxvii. 554.
Bristol, Bishop of, Letter to, xxvi. 543.
■ Ecclesiastical History,
xxxiv. 303.
Britannia Delineata, xxvii. 555.
Britannicus, on Radical Reform, xxii. 270,
271.
British Bards, xxiii. 284.
Botanist, xxiv. 568.
' Empire, Statistical Illustrations,
xxxiii. 598.
■■ ' Gallery, by Tresham and Ottley,
xxvii. 269.
Digitized by
Googk
^BVIBWt
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
805
British Poetry, Specimens of, with Origi-
nal Writings, by E. Scott, xxix.281.
' Poets, Portraits of, xxii. 561 ; xxv.
576.
Britton's Antiquities of the Metropolitan
Chiurch at York, xxiii. 285.
of the Cathedral at
Oxford, xxvi. 272.
■ Address, &c., xxvi. 541,
■ — History of Bath Abbey Church,
xxxii. 263 — Wells Cathedral, tbid,-^
Antiquities of Normandy, 545 ; xxxvii.
299— Illustrations of Exeter Cathedral,
liirf.— Wiltshire, 551 j xxxiii. 280.
Ancient Architecture of Great
Britain, xxxiii. 276 — Cathedral Anti-
quities of England, ibid,
Picture of London, xxxiv.304.
North Wiltshire, xxxiv. 614;
XXXV. 320.
Architectural Antiquities of Great
Britain, xxxv. 614; xxxix. 249.
Peterborough Cathedral, xxxvi.
601 — Union of Architecture, Sculpture,
and Painting, ibid,
-Views of English Cities, xxxvii.
299.
— — — Picturesque Antiquities, &c.,
xxxviii. 599.
Broadhurst's Advice to Young Ladies^
xxvi. 273 ; xxvii. 269.
Brockedon*s Passes of the Alps, No. IX.,
xxxix. 522.
Brodie, on Diseases of the Joints, xxii.
268 ; xxviii. 268.
History of the British Empire,
xxvii. 556.
Broker, Every Man his own, xxxii. 548.
Bromhead's Parent's Medical Assistant,
xxvi. 274.
'Brooke's Guide to the Stars, xxiv.271.
— — Retrospection, xxvii. 271.
Elegy on the Death of P. B.
Shelley, xxvii. 559 ; xxix. 281.
■ Journey through Lapland and
Sweden, xxxiii. 599: xxxiv.304; xxxv.
618.
Brooke and Warwick, Earl of. Letters to
Mrs. Wilmot Serres, xxi. 558.
Brooks's Study of Conchology, xxviii.
266.
Brookshaw's Horticultural Repository,
xxiv. 272.
Broome on Humanity to Brute Animals,
xxix. 280.
Broster's Brosterian System, xxxvii. 300.
Brother Jonathan, xxxii. 549.
Brothers, the Three, xxxii. 270.
Brougham's Education Bill, Observations
on, xxiv. 573 ; xxv. 276.
< on the Education of the Peo-
ple, xxxi. 530.
■ Inaugural Discourse, xxxii. 269.
YOI.. XL, NO. LXXX.
Brougham, Speech on the Laws, xxxvii.
580.
Broughton's Age of Christian Reason^
xxiii. 284.
Broussais, Conversations on the Physiolo-
gical System of, xxxiii. 278.
Brown, Expedition for the Service of the
Spanish Patriots, xxii. 267.
Philosophy of the Human Mind^
xxiii. 282 ; xxiv. 276, 572.
Patronage, a Poem, xxii. 565.
Memoirs of, xxvii. 268.
Suspension Bridge over the Tweed,
xxvii. 269.
Carwin, and other Tales, xxvii.
270.
Metrical Legend, xxxi. 261 — on
Cholera Morbus, 531,
Life, by Welsh, xxxii. 263.
' Comparative View of Christianity,
xxxiv. 613 ; xxxvi. 304 — Charge to
the Clergyof Ely, 614.
Browne on the Law-Sale, xxvi. 543.
on tlie State of Ireland, xxvii.
271.
on Metaphysics, &c., xxvii. 557.^
on the Differential Calculus, xxxi.
530.
Mont Blanc, xxxvi. 603.
Ada, xxxviii. 602.
Browning's History of the Huguenots,
xxxix. 523.
Brunswick, Anecdotes of the House of, by
J. Brown, xxiii. 569 ; xxiv. 274.
Brunton's Emmeline, xxi. 563.
Bryce's Latin Prosody, xxvii. 269.
Brydges's Tragic Tales, xxiv. 276.
Recollections of Foreign Tra*
vel, xxxii. 266.
- on the Cultivation of MangQ
Wurzel, xxxviii. 300.
Buchan's Symptomatology, xxx. 589.
■ Ancient Ballads, xxxix. 253.
Buchanan on Millwork, &c., xxix. 279.
. Anatomy of the Ear, xxx. 294.
Acoustic Surgery, xxxii. 266.
on the Organ of Hearing,xxxvii;
301, 302.
Buck's Bankruptcy Cases, xxi. 266.
Bucke's Fall of the Leaf, xxi. 564.
on the Beauties of Nature, xxv.
275.
Buckingham's Travels in Palestine, xxvi.
276.
among the Arab
Tribes, xxxi. 533 ; xxxii. 270.
. . in Mesopotamia,
xxxvi. 304.
in Assyria, &c.,
xxxix. 254.
Buckland's Reliquije Diluvianse, xxix. 278.
, Letters to an Attorney's
Clerk, xxx. 294.
Digitized by
Googk
dod
PART III.— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QvASLTSMLt
Buckler^B Cathedral Churches, xxvi. 272.
Budge's Miner's Guide, xxxii. 548.
Bue on Tic Doloureux, xxxi. 259.
Buenos Ayres, Five Years^ Residence in,
xucvi. 304, 604.
Bull's Sermons, xxxi. 261.
Bullamabee and Klimkataboo, History of,
xxxix. 253.
Bullar's Memoirs of Rev. W. Kingsbury,
xxi. 263.
Buller's Charge to the Clergy of the
Archdeaconry of Derby, xxxv. 320.
Bullion Payment, Observations on, xxi.
564.
Bulwer's Autumn in Greece, xxxiii. 599.
Buonaparte, Talents of, xxvi. 275.
■ Lucien, Memoirs of,xxii.265.
' Louis, Documens sur le
Gouvemement de la HoUande, xxiii.
282.
• Account of Napoleon's Last
Illness, xxvii. 557.
. Life, by Scott, xxxvii. 299.
'— — Reply to Scott's History of
Napoleon, xxxix. 250.
Burcheirs Travels in Southern Africa,
xxvi. 547; xxx. 296.
Burckhardt*s Travels in Nubia, xxii.
666.
' ' ■ in Syria, &c., xxvi.
547; xxvii. 272.
» in Arabia, xxxix.
526.
Burdekin*s Memoirs of Robert Spence,
xxxvi. 299.
Burder's Sermons, xxi. 566.
Essentials of Religion, xxxiii. 599.
Burgess, Bishop, on the Divinity of
Christ, xxiv. 573.
• Vindication of 1 John v.
7, xxvi. 546.
• Letter on a Passage of
the Second Symbolum Antiochenum,
xxxii. 550.
Description of the Circus on the
Via Appia, xxxviL 579.
Burgojme on the late Act for the Removal
of the Irish Poor, xxiv. 572.
Burke, Edmund, Life of, xxx. 588.
■ ■■ by Prior, xxxiv.
299.
Peerage for 1826, xxxiii. 594.
'• Heraldic Dictionary, xxxiv. 300.
Works, xxxvi. 603 ; xxxvii. 301.
and Lawrence's Correspondence,
xxxvi. 603.
Burleigh's Life, xxxviii. 300.
Burn's Justice, xxxii. 265.
Burne on Typhus Fever, xxxviii. 302.
Burnet on Composition in Painting, xxxi.
a55.
— on Colour, xxxvi. 601,
Burnett's Report on Fever, xxxi. 631.
Bumey's Tragic Dramas, xxi. 559.
Voyage of Discovery, xxi. 567.
..^.._ Commentary on the Planetary
Systems, xxii. 563 ; xxiii. 283.
Bums, Rev. R.| on the Law and Practice
with regard to the Poor, xxi. 560.
I R., Pilgrimage to the Land o^ xxvii.
561.
— Life of, by Lockhart, xxxviii. 300.
— Anatomy of the Head and Neck, by
Pattison, xxxviii. 600.
Bumside's Theory of Composition, xxxi.
256.
Burridge's Improvements in Civil Archi-
tecture, xxxii. 545 ; xxxiii. 276.
Burroughs on Practical Husbandry, xxiv.
567.
Burrow's Christian Faith and Practice,
xxvi. 546.
■ on the Legislative Regulation of
the Insane, xxi. 561.
• Errors relative to Insanity, xxiii.
282.
on Insanity, xxxix. 251.
Burton's Antiquities of Rome, xxvi. 541 ;
xxvii. 268, 554 ; xxxix. 249.
Law of Real Property, xxxviii.
302 ; xxxix. 251.
Bury St. Edmunds, Description of, xxxii.
270.
Busby'sHlstory of Music, xxii. 270.
■ Anecdotes of Music, xxxii. 549.
Grammar of Music, xxxvi. 301.
Busfield's Sermons, xxiii. 285.
Busk's Vestriad, xxi. 564.
Butcher's Chronology, xxxiii. 277,
Butlers Life of Fenelon, xxii. 561.
Memoirs of the Catholics of Eng-
land, &c., XXV. 274 ; xxvi. 542.
-^— Reminiscences, xxvi. 541 ; xxxv.
614; xxxvi. 299.
Book of the Roman Catholic
Church, xxxi. 533; xxxii. 550 — ^An-
swer to the Bishop of Chester, ibid,
Life of Erasmus, xxxiii. 594.
' Vindication of the Book of the
Roman Catholic Church, xxxiii. 598.
Appendix to, xxxiv.
303.
Reply to the Article on La Soeur
Nativite, xxxiv. 614 ; xxxvi. 302.
— Fragments in Verse, xxxv. 617.
Atlas, xxvii. 269.
Samuel, Remains of, xxvii. 271.
• Archdeacon^ Charge of, xxviii.
270.
' " on Latin Prepositions, xxx, 293.
Geography, 595; xxxv. 615;
xxxix. 250.
Butt on County Contested Elections,
xxxiv. 300.
Butter's Sketch of Wardour Castle, xxviii.
270,
Digitized by
Googk
Rbyibw*
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
S07
Battenrorth's Law Gafalogae, xxxvii.
299.
'Buxton, T. F., Letters to, on the depre-
ciated Value of Human Labour, xxii.
270.
3yron*8 Mazeppa, xxi. 564.
* '■ ' Works, xxi. 564 ; xxii. 564 j xxviii.
269.
' Beppo and Mazeppa, xxii. 564 j
xxiii. 285 ; xxiv. 277.
^ " ' Doge of Venice, xxv. 274.
— Letter to, xxv. 275.
——of, on Bowles's Strictures,
&c., xxv. 275.
-^— Sardanapalus, &c., xxvi. 542,
■ " ■ Memoirs of, xxvii. 268.
■ Werner, xxviii. 266.
" ■ ■ Private Correspondence, xxx. 590i
■ Deformed Transformed, xxx.
588.
Byron, Voyage to Corsica, xxxi* 262 —
Last Journey to Greece, 529.
Last Days, by Parry, xxxii. 263 —
Life, Writings, &c., ibid. — Anecdotes
of, ibid, — En Italie et en QrSce, par le
Marquis de Salvo, ibid. — Stanzas to the
Memory of, 550.
■ ■ Le Corsaire, xxxiii. 279.
— ^— Lady, Reply to her Lord's Fare-
well, xxxhi. 279.
— — ... Character and Writings, xxxiv.
299.
Works, xxxvii. 682.
' — Don Juan, xxxviii. 602,
Poetical Works, xxxix. 253.
Bythewood's Conveyancing, xxvi. 543.
Precedents, xxxi. 258.
' by Stewart, xxxi^.
251.
Bywater's Physiological Fragments, xxx.
590.
CABmst of Arts, xxi. 263.
• Lawyer, xxxvi. 300.
Caddick's Tales of the Afiections, xxxviii.
601.
Cadell's Journey in Camiola, &c., xxiii.
286.
Csesar's Commentaries, by Hamilton,
xxxix. 523.
Cagnoli on the Figure of the Earth, trans-
lated by Bailey, xxi. 557.
Calcott's History of Spain, xxxvii. 580.
Calculus, Differential and Integral, Ex-
amples of, by Peacock, Herschel, and
Babbage, xxiv. 570.
Caldcleugh's Travels in South America,
xxxi. 533; xxxii. 551.
Caldweirs Laws relating to the Poor,
xxvii. 556.
Caledonian Horticultural Society, Me-
moirs of, xxii. 266.
•Calmady, C. B., the Children of, by Law-
rence, xxxii. 545.
Calthorpe, or Fallen Fortunes, xxiv. 571.
Calvert, Two Sermons by, xxiv. 278.
> on Diseases of the Rectum, xxxi.
259.
Oambria, Beauties of, xxii. 272 ; xxv. 576.
Cambridge Philosophical Society, Trans-
' actions of, xxv. 275.
University Calendar, xxxvi.
301.
Churches, xxxvii. 301 .
Letters from, xxxviii. 302.
Cambrienze, B., Ambition, a Poetical
Essay, xxii. 270.
Camillus, xxxviii. 602.
Camisard; the, xxxiii. 279.
Camoens* Lusiad, by Musgrave, xxxiii.
597; xxxiv. 302, 612.
Campaigns of the British Army at Wash-
ington and New Orleans, in 1814 and
1815, XXXV. 318.
Campan's Private Life of Marie Antoi-
nette, xxxviii. 267.
Lettres de Deux Jeunes Amis,
by Duvard, xxxiv. 612.
Campbell, M'Intosh*s Gaelic Proverbs,
xxii. 269.
-^-^— — Ossian, xxvii. 271.
' — Consecration Sermon, xxxi. 26 1.
Theodric, xxxi. 532.
— ■ Case of Mary, Queen of Scots,
xxxii. 265.
■ Judgment of Babylon, xxxiv.
612.
• Poetical Works, xxxviii. 303.
Canada, Sketch of Upper, xxxiv. 303,
614.
Canning, Right Hon. G., Speech of, xxi.
268, 269.
Speeches of, xxiii. 284;
xxxiii. 279 ; xxxvi. 603.
Epistle from Lord W.
Russell to Lord W. Cavendish, xxiv.
276.
■■■ Speech on the Mo-
tion for the Suppression of Unlawful
Associations in Ireland, xxxii. 268.
• Speech on the Com
Laws, March 1, 1827, xxxvi. 302.
Memoir of, xxxvii.
299— Speeches, by Therry, 582.
Canova*s Works, engraved by Moses,
xxix. 278 J xxx. 203 j xxxix. 249,
X 2
Digitized by
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308
PART III.—NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUARTBRLT
Canoya, Memoirs of, by Hemes, xxxi.
529.
Cape of Good Hope Calendar and Guide,
xxiL 271.
— Account of, xxii. 271.
- Hints on Emigration
to,xxii. 271.
XXU.27L
• Emigrant's Guide to.
. Notes on, xxv. 278. ^
Capital, on Accumulation of, &c., xxvii.
559.
Caprice, xxxi. 260.
Carbonari, Memoirs of the, xxv. 273.
Carbonaro, xxxix. 525.
Carey's American Atlas, xxi. 568.
— - VindicisB Hiberuicse, xxii. 565.
—- .— Beauties of Modem Poets, xxiii.
284.
Greek Terminations, xxvi. 273.
Ainsworth's Latin Dictionary,
xxix. 277.
■ Tour in France, xxix. 282.
> Latin Versification simplified,
xxxxii. 547.
— — — — Key to, ibid.
Miss, Memoirs, xxxiii. 276.
Carlaveroch, Siege of, by Nicolas, xxxv.
617.
Carlile*s Sermons, xxv. 277.
Carmichael's Introductory Lecture, xxxvi.
301.
Carne*s Letters from the East, xxxiii. 599 ;
xxxiv.304.
Carnot's Treatise on the Defence of Places
with Vertical Fire, Observations on,
xxii. 269.
Caroline and her Mother, xxxix. 252.
Carpenter's Principles of Education, xxiv.
272.
— Interest Tables, xxxix. 253.
Carpue, on Lithotomy, xxii. 268.
Carr's Account of Van Diemen's Land,
xxxi. 262.
Carriages, Wheel, Fuller on, xxxviii. 303.
Carrington's Banks of Tamar, xxvii.
271.
Dartmoor, xxxiv.302 ; xxxvi.
302.
- Plutus of Aristophanes, xxxii.
' Supplement, xxxiv. 610.
Carter, Account of the Principal Hospitals
of France, &c., xxii. 268 ; xxvi. 274.
— Precedents in Conveyancing,
xxxviii. 301.
Cartwright's Life, xxxiv. 609.
Carwithen's Church of England, xxxix.
523.
Cary*s Birds of Aristophanes, xxx. 588.
' Jury Law, xxxiv. 610.
■ Law of Pai-tnership, xxxix. 251.
Cash Payments, Report of Secrtt Com-
546.
mittee of the Hoose of Commons on^
xxi. 564.
Cashel, Archbishop of, Charge by, xx]f«
296.
Casti, les Animaux Parians, traduits par
Marechal, xxi. 569.
Animali Parlanti, by W. S. Rose,
xxi. 268:
Tre Giuli, xxxiv. 302.
Castle*s Modern Surgery, xxxviii. 601.
Castle Baynard, by HaL Willis, xsx^
590.
of Villa Flora, xxii. 270.
Catalogue of Books, xxxi. 529.
Catel on Harmony, xxxii. 266. ^
Cathedrals, Antiquities of, xxvi. 272.
Cathluna, a Tale, xxii 564.
Catholic Association, Proceedings of the,
xxxii. 268.
Claims, Safety of conceding,
xxxvi. 303.
Emancipation considered, xxxv.
618; xxxvi. 303.
— ^— Religion of Eng-
land considered with Reference to,
xxxviii. 300.
Question, Essay on Religious
Persecution, xxxvL 303 — Pros and
Cons, ibid.
Protestant Securities
suggested, xxxviii. 300 — Full View o^
ihid,
— _^-^— Letter on, xxxix. 250.
Protestant Safety com-
patible with, &c., xxxix. 523.
■ Correspondence on, be-
tween R. W. Horton and Dr. Baines,
xxxix. 523 — ^Tlioughts on, ibid.
Catholics, Address on the Claims of the,
xxxvi. 303.
Caton on Nervous Diseases, &c., xxii. 268|
xxx. 589.
Catiillus's Marriage of Peleus and Thetis,
by Ottey, xxxvi. 302.
Caucasus, Letters from, xxx. 296.
Caulfield's Remarkable Persons, xxii. 265.
Causer, on the Morbid Respiration of
Domestic Animals, xxvii. 557.
Cavalier, a Romance, xxv. 275.
Cavalry, Organization, &c., of, xxii. 269.
Cavendish's Life of Wolsey, by Singer,
xxxi. 529 ; xxxii. 263.
Case, la V^rite sur Jeanne d'Arc, xxi.
569.
Cecirs Anecdotes of Extraordinary Cha-*
racters, xxi. 563.
Cell^rier, Discours Familiers, xxi. 569.
Cellini, B., Memoirs of, xxvii. 554.
Celsi MedicinsB, by Milligan, xxxiv. 301.
Cenci, a Tragedy, by P. B. Shelley, xxiii.
281.
Cervantes, Exemplary Novels of, xxvii,
009,
Digitized by
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NEW PUBLICATIONS.
309
Cesario Rosalba, by Ann of Swansea, xxii.
270.
Chalmers's Sennons, xxi. 269.
■ — Christian and Civic Economy
of Large Towns, xxii. 269 ; xxiv. 571 ;
xxvii. 559 ; xxxiv. 303.
■ Todd's Johnson's Dictionary,
xxiii.283.
• • Discourses, xxiv. 278, 573.
•> on Church Patronage, xxv.
579.
•« ■ Speech of, on the Extension of
Compulsory Pauperism, xxvii. 559.
Poetic Remains of Scottish
Kings, XXX. 591.
Picture of Scotland, xxxviii.
304.
Chambers on Cash Payments, xxi. 268.
■ on the Sinking Fund, &c.,*xxi.
565.
Bio^aphical Illustrations of
Worcestershire, xxiv. 272.
Civil Architecture, by Gwilt,
xxxii. 263.
Picture of Scotland,
582.
Rebellion in Scotland, xxxix.
523.
Chancery Reports, xxi. 560.
** Commissioners, Report of, xxxiii*
596.
■ Proceedings in, in the Reign of
Queen Elizabeth, xxxvii. 580.
• Practice, Orders for the Regula-
tion of, xxxviii. 301.
Chandler's Travels, xxi. 567.
> Life of Johnson, by Hobart,
xxxi. 255.
Characteristics in the Manner of Roche-
foucault's Maxims, xxix. 280.
Charities, Public, Account of, xxxv. 616.
Charles and Eugenia, xxxiv. 612.
Chateaubriand's Aben-Hamet, xxxiv. 612.
Chateauvieux's Italy, by Dr. E. Rigby,
xxi. 567.
Chatfield's Appeal in the Cause of the
Greeks, xxvu. 560.
» — History of the Darker Ages,
XXX. 293.
Teutonic Antiquities^ xxxvii.
579.
Chatham's, Earl of, Life by Thackeray,
xxxvi. 299.
Chaucer, Poems of^ by Singer, xxvii.
559.
Chauncey's^ Antiquities of Hertfordshire,
xxxv. 618.
Chaussier et Adelon, Morgagni de Mor-
. bis, &c, XXV. 278.
Cheltenham Mail Bag, xxiv. 572 ; xxxv.
. 319.
Cheltenham Waters, Directions for Drink-
ing, «uii. 548.
Chemistr}', Dictionary of the Apparatus
employed in the Operations of, xxxi.
531.
Philosophical and Experimen-
tal, xxxviii. 302.
Chess Problems, xxxvi. 603.
Chest, Disorders of the, xxii. 563.
Chesterton's Narrative of Proceedings in
Venezuela, xxiv. 273.
Chevalier's Hulsean's Lectures, xxxvii.
582.
Childhood, a Poem, by C. T. S. Hornby,
XXV. 578.
Children, Chemical Analysis, xxii. 266.
Diary, xxxi. 538.
in the Wood, by Benwell, xxxii.
545.
Child-stealing, Extraordinaiy Case of, xxi.
562.
Chimney-Sweeper's Friend, by J. Mont-
gomery, XXX. 590.
Chinese Moral Maxims, xxxi. 531.
Chitty's King's Bench Reports, xxi. 265,
560 ; xxviu. 267.
Prerogatives of the' Crown, xxiv.
274.
— — ^ on Descents, xxxii. 265.
on Contracts, xxxiv. 301.
Statutes, xxxviii. 301 — Criminal
Law, 600.
Chiverton, Sir John, xxxiv. 611.
Chomel, des Fievres, xxv. 278.
Christ, Constitution of the Character of,
xxviii. 270.
Christian's Vindication of the Criminal
Law, xxi. 266, 561.
Christian Armed, xxix. 282.
Devotedness, xxxiii. 599.
^ — Dispensation, Nature and Ex-
tent of, xxxvi. 303.
• Gentleman, Portraiture of a,
. xxxix. 526.
Christian's Retirement, xxxiii. 599.
Christianity) Divine Origin of, xxiv.
278.
Sermons on the Doctrine and
Practice of, xxvii. 272.
Christie on the Painted Greek Vases,
xxxiii. 594.
Christmas Stories, xxxii. 267.
■ Tales, xxxiii. 597.
Box, xxxvii. 299 ; xxxix. 249.
Chronicles of the Canongate^ xxxvii.
302.
— Second Se-
ries, xxxviii. 303.
Chronology of the Last Fifty Years, xxvi.
541.
Chudleigh, Views of, xxvii. 555.
Church's Angler, a Poem, xxi. 564.
Church Reform, xxxviii. 602.
Churchill, Description of a Surgical Ope-
ration, xxv. 275 ; xxvi. 274*
Digitized by
Googk
310
PART III.— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUARTBRLT'
Churchill's Analccta, xxvii. 558.
English Grammar, xxix. 278.
Churchman's Second Epistle, xxi. 268.
Churchwarden's GKiide, xxii. 270.
Duties of, xxvii. 272.
Hints to, xxxii. 266.
Cibber's Life, xxxiv. 609.
Cicero de Republic^ xxviii. 266.
Letters, by Heberden, xxxiii. 594.
Ciceronis Opera, by J. Carey, xxiv. 568.
Ciciloni's Italian Grammar, xxxii. 547.
Circulating Medium, Letters on, xxi. 268.
of the Bank, xxv. 276.
Citizen's Pocket Chronicle, xxxvi. 604.
Civique de Gastiue, Histoirtd' Haiti, &c.^
xxi. 569.
Clapham, Sessions Law, xxii. 268.
Clapperton and Oudney's Discoveries in
Africa, xxxiii. 599.
-^ African Joumal| xxxix. 526.
Clara Chester, xxx.295.
Clare's Poems, xxii. 565 ; xxiii. 284.
- Village Minstrel, xxvi. 275.
- Shepherd's Calendar, xxxvi. 302.
Clarendon's, Lord, Correspondence with
the Earl of Rochester, xxxviii. 301.
Clark^s Geographical, Historical, and Re-
ligious Chart, xxvii. 555.
- Naval Tactics, by Lord Rodney,
xxxvi. 300 — Landscape Painting, 601.
Clarke's Travels, xxi. 270, 568.
on Bathing, xxi. 561.
Architecti^a Ecclesiastica Lon-
dini, xxii. 561.
on Climate, &c., of France, Italy,
and Switzerland, xxiii. 282 ; xxiv. 275,
■ on the Diseases of Children, xxiv.
570.
■ Bibliotheca Legum, xxv. 577.
■ School Maps, xxvi. 273.
■ Skeleton Maps, xxvi. 273.
' on Diseases of Females, xxvi. 274.
Hours of Contentment, xxvi. 275.
Daniel, Life of, by W. Otter, xxx.
588; xxxi.255.
" Hundred of Wantley, xxxi. 533.
■ Geographical Dictionary, xxxiii.
095.
■ and Williams's Cydopasdia of
Commerce, xxi, 264, 558; xxiii. 281;
XXXV. 319.
Classical Collector's Vade-Mecum, xxvii.
•268.
300.
■ Manual, xxxvi. 602 j xxxvii.
Claude Lorraine, Beauties of, xxxiii. 594.
Claurens Lieslie, by Haas, xxxv. 319.
Claverie's French Grammar, xxxiv. 299.
Clavis Homerica, xxvi. 273.
Claxton's Address on the Shipping In-
terest, xxxviii. 601.
Cleghom on the Depression of Agriculture,
xxvu. 554,
Cleland's Account of the City of Olaigowii
xxiL 566 J xxiv. 279.
Cleobury on Operations on the Eyes^
xxxiii. 596.
Cleone, by Oscar, xxv. 276.^
Clergy, Dutiesof the, xxxviii. 603.
Clerical Guide, xxvii. 272.
Clery's Memoirs, xxxii. 546.
Clinton's Fasti Hellenici, xxx. 293.
Cochrane's Pedestrian Journey, xxx.591 ;
xxxix. 526.
■ M. . ■ I Travels in Colombia, xxxii. 270^
Cocoa-nut Tree, History of, xxx. 590,
Cohen's Compendium of Finance, xxvii.r
559.
Coins, Anglo-Gallic, in the British Mu*.
seum, Description of, xxxv. 614.
Coke's Reports, in Verse, xxxiiL 596;^
xxxiv. 300.
Life, by Woolrych, xxxiv. 299 ;
xxxvii. 579— Reports, 300.
Colchester's, Lord, Speeches on the Ca-
tholic Claims, xxxix. 250.
Cole's Bibliographical Tour, xxxi. 529.
Sermon on the Claims of the Esta*
blished Church, xxxvi. 304.
History of Weston Favell,xxxvL 604r
History of Tiley, xxxviii. 599.
Coleman's Sermons, xxxvi. 303.
Coleridge's Aids to Reflection, xxxii. 266^
551.
Coliseum, Views of the, xxvi 272.
Collectanea Latina, xxvii. 269, 555.
College of Physicians in Ireland, Transac*,
tions of, xxv. 577,
Recollections, xxxii. 549.
CoUeg^ns, xxxix. 525.
Collier's Pharmacopoeia, xxiv. 570.
Poetical Decameron, xxv. 578.
Collingwood's Correspondence, xxxvii*
299.
Collyer's Statutes, xxxviii. 600,
Colman, G., Letters, &c., xxiv. 272.
Colombia, Two Letters on, xxvii. 559.
Geographical Account of, xxxi.
257— by Hall, i^irf.— Letters from, 262.
Present State of, xxxv. 318;
xxxvi. 304.
Recollections of the War in,
xxxviii. 603.
Colombier's Panoramic View of Liver-
pool, xxxiii. 594.
Colonel Berkeley and his Friends, xxxii.
267.
Colonial Journal, xxi. 267.
Colonies, North American, Importance o^
to Great Britain, xxxiii. 598.
Poor, of Holland, xxxviii. 304.
Colquhoun, Hume's Essay on Public Ore*
dit, xxii. 271.
f- ■ on the Covenant of Works^
xxvi. 547.
Columbus, Memorials of, zi
Digitized by
Googk
Hbtow*
NEW PUBLICATIONa
311
ColumbuSi Lifd of, by Irving, xxxvii. 579.
Combe on Phrenology, xxii. 563.
Comforter, a Poem, xxii. 565.
Commerce, Cyclopadia of, xxi. 264, 558,
Commercial Dictionary, xxi. 558.
' I/)ndon, xxi. 264.
Clio's Protest, xxi. 268.
Clissold's Last Hours of Eminent Chris-
tians, xxxix. 526.
Clontaif, by W. H. Drummond, xxviii.
269.
Cloquet's Anatomy, by Knox, jpcxix.
252.
Close's Discourses on the Book of Genesis,
xxxiv. 303.
Cloutt, Rev. J., Owen's Works edited by,
xxix.282; xxx. 296.
Club, the, xxxiii. 279.
Clubs of London, xxxvii. 581.
Coal-^as Process of Manufacturing, by
F. Accum, xxi. 558.
Cobbett's English Grammar, Critical £xa*
mination ot; xxL 559.
• Parliamentary History of Eng-
land, xxi. 268.
• United States of Americ^) xxi.
568.
■ Portrait, xxxii. 263.
Cobbold's Poems, xxxii. 550} xxxvii.
302.
^ Valentine Verses, xxxv. 617,
Common Events, xxxii. 267.
Common^Place-Book of Anecdotes, xxxiv*
612.
Common Recoveries, xxvi. 543,
Comparative Height of Principal Moun-
tains, XXX. 589.
Comyn's Law of Landlord and Tenant ,
xxvii. 556.
Concert Room and Orchestra Anecdotes,
xxxii. 266.
Conchologist's Companion, xxx. 590;
xxxi. 260.
Coneybeare'f Bampton Lectures, xxxi.
261.
Confessions of an Opium Eater, xxvii.
558.
Congreve, Sir W., on Cash Payments,
xxi. 565.
— ■^— on Naval Ordnance, xxii. 269.
■■ Account of a New Rotative
Steam-Engine, xxii. 269.
■True Principles against For-
gery, xxiv. 275.
. Rocket System, xxxvii. 301.
Constantino and Eugene, xxiv. 573.
Constitutional Reform, Letter on, xxi.
563.
Contagion, Observations on, xxi. 266.
Contemplation, by A. Balfour, xxv. 276.
Continental Adventures, xxxiv. 612.
Contrast, the, xxxiii. 279.
■ by Roche, xxxviii. 303.
Conversational Preceptor, xxvii. 269, 555,
Conveyancer's Guide, xxvi. 273.
Conveyancing, Bjrthewood's, xxvi. 543.
Precedents in, xxxviii. 30 U
Conway's Tales of Ardennes, xxxii. 267.
Solitary Walks, xxxviii. 303,
Conybeare's Illustrations of Anglo-Saxon
Poetry, xxxv. 320 ; xxxvii. 582.
■ and Phillips's Geology, xxvii*
556.
Cook's Life of Dr. Hill, xxiv. 568.
Cooke's Delineations of the Southern Coast
ofEngland, xxiv. 271.
■ on Palsy, xxiv. 570 ; xxviii. 268,
on Apoplexy, xxvi. 543.
' ' " ■ Pleasures of Conversation, xxvL
545.
■ The Seats and Causes of Diseases,
&c., xxvii. 557.
' Views in Provence, xxix, 278.
Gems of Art, Vol. I., xxxiii. 276.
• Beauties of Claude Lorraine, Part
I., ibid.
' Views on the Southern Coast of
England, xxxiy. 614.
• Law of Insolvent Debtors, xxxvii.
580.
I Shipping, xxxviii. 300— on De-
rangements of the Digestive Organs,
302.
on Nervous Diseases, xxxix. 524.
• and AUen, Views of the Coliseum,
xxvi. 272.
Coombe's Letter to Francis Jeffirey, Esq.,
in answer to his Strictures on Phreno-
logy, xxxv. 319.
Coombes on Religious Controversy, xxxvi*
303.
Cooper's Sermons, xxi. 566.
on Qas Lights, xxi. 568.
-^ . Practice of Surgery, xxiv. 274.
— — — on Dislocations, xxviii. 267.
Sir Astley, Lectures, xxxi. 258 ;
xxxii. 548.
Vindication, xxxvi. 303.
— T on Hernia, by Key, xxxvii. 300—
Lectures by Tyrrel, ibid.
. ' Account of the Proceedings in
Parliament, relative to the Court of
Chancery, xxxviii. 302.
Diseases of the Breast, xxxix.
524.
Copeland on the Diseased Spine, xxiu
268.
' History of Madagascar, xxvi.
273.
Coplestone on Predestination, xxv. 277.
Corbett on the Elective Franchise in Cor-
porate Bodies, xxxiv. 300.
and Daniell, Reports of Contro-
verted Elections, xxiii. 282.
Com Trade, Restrictions on, considered,
xxiv. 277.
Digitized by
Googk
312
PART IlI.-NEW PUBLICAtlONS.
QuAieTBRLY
Corn, Cheap, best for Fanners, xxxiv.
613.
■ Question, ibid.
— * — Laws, Obiiervations on the,xxxvi. 302.
« — -- Laws, Nolan on, xxxviii. 304.
■ Toplin on, ibid,
— • Jacob's Tracts on, ibid,
Cornish Salmon and Channel Fisheries,
xxxi. 531.
Cornish on Purchase Deeds, xxxvlL 580 ;
xxxix. 251.
Cornwall, Excursions in, xxxi. 262.
Cornwallis's Preparation for the Lord's
Supper, xxxiv. 613.
Coronation Anecdotes, xxix. 280.
— ^— Oath, Letter on, xxxviii. 300.
Coronations of the Kings and Queens of
England, account of, xxiii. 282.
Corpe's Beauties of Handel, xxxi. 260.
Corporation and Test Acts, Necessity of,
xxxvii. 582.
Corpus Poetarum, xxxii. 546 ; xxxiii. 594 ;
xxxix. 250.
Correggio and Parmegiano, Sketches of
the Lives of, xxix. 277.
Costantiui, Morale Poetica Italiana, xxv.
577.
Costello's Songs of a Stranerer, xxxii.
268.
Costs in Bankruptcy, xxxix. 251.
Costume of France, xxi. 562.
■ the Spaniards, xxvii. 555.
Costumes Fran9aises, xxvii. 555.
Cotman's Architectural Antiquities of
Normandy, xxiii. 281 ; xxiv. 271 j xxvii.
654.
Cotton Factory Question, xxi. 565.
Cottu's Ciiminal Jurisprudence, translated,
xxvi, 545.
Counsels for the Sanctuary, xxxix. 254.
Country Neighbours, by S. Biirney, xxii.
564.
' Parson's Second Offerine, xxvii.
560.
' — Vicar, xxxii. 549.
Critical State of the, xxxiii. 598.
County Biography, xxiv. 568.
Court of Beasts, by W. S. Rose. xxi.
268.
• Relations of British Government
with Sultan of Palembang, &c., xxvi.
Courtney on Strictures, xxvii. 557.
— — ^— on the Sinking Fund, xxxviii.
303.
Cousin, Procli Opera, xxv. 278.
Coventry on Common Recoveries, xxv.
577.
Critical Inquiry regarding the
Author of Junius, xxxii. 550.
— Concise Forms, xxxv. 615.
■ 5J,ortgage Precedents, ibid. ;
xxxviii. 301.
Coventry, Digested Index, xxxvii. 580.
Pageants anciently performed
at, xxxviii. 300.
Cowper's Letters, xxx. 292.
Early Poems, xxxii. 549.
Poems, with Designs by Westall,
xxxiii. 279.
Cox's Residence in the Burmhan Empire^
xxv. 278.
Practical Confectioner, xxvii. 558.
Harmony of the Scriptures, xxix.
282.
Coxe's Correspondence of the Duke of
Shrewsbury, xxvi. 542.
Social Day, xxix. 281.
Crabbe's Tales of the Hall, xxi. 564.
- Poetical Works, xxii. 564 : xxiii.
283 ; xxiv. 277 ; xxviii. 269.
Illustrations of, by Heath,
xxviii. 269.
Historical Dictionary, xxxi. 530.
■ Poems, and Moore's Lalla Rookb,
Illustrations for, from designs by Cor-
bould, xxv. 576.
Cracklow's Churches in Surrey, xxxvii.
299.
Cradock's Memoirs, xxxiii. 594; xxxv.
316.
Craig on Political Economy, xxv. 276.
- on Drawing, &c, xxvi. 272.
Refutation of Popery, xxix. 282.
Craven's Tour in Naples, xxv. 579.
Crawfurd's History of the Indian Archi-
pelago, xxiii. 286.
Journal of an Embassy, &c.,
xxxviii. 603.
Crazed Maid of Venice, xxxiv. 612.
Creevey, T., Speech of, on the Ministerial
Pension Bill, xxvii. 559.
Creighton, GiflPord and Ellwood's Me-
moirs, xxxvi. 601.
Cresswell's Supplement to Euclid, xxi.
559.
' Geometry, xxiii. 282.
Crib's Memorial to Congress, xxi. 268.
Crichton, the Admirable, Life of, xxi. 558.
Life of Lieut.-ColoDel Black-
adder, xxxi. 255.
Crim Tartars, Customs, &c., of^ by Mary
Holdemess, xxv. 579.
Criminal Law, Vindication of, xxi. 266,
561.
' Trials, Observations on, xxi.-
561.
Criticisms on the Bar, xxii. 563.
Crockford House, xxxvi. 302.
Croker's Researches in the South of Ire-
land, xxx. 296.
Sayings and Doings at Killamey^
xxxix. 253.
Crol/s Catiline, xxvii. 268.
Croly, Rev, G., Poems by, xjdv, 276 ;
276.
Digitized by
Googk
RxvtBW*
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
313
Croly, Gems, drawn by Dagley, xxviii.
265.
« Popery and the Popery Question,
xxxii. 269.
— Apocalypse of St. John, xxxvi.
303.
Cromwell's Excursions through Ireland,
xxii. 272.
— ^— ^ Surrey,
xxU. 272.
Lein*
ster, XXV. 579.
Memoirs
of the Protector,
xxii. 561 ; xxv. 576.
- History of Colchester, xxxii.
551.
Cross on the Mechanism of the Human
Foot and Leg, xxi. 266.
■ Papal Supremacy, xxxv. 618.
Crouch on the Violoncello, xxxii. 266.
« Introduction to Lamarck's Con-
chology, xxxv. 616.
Crowe on English Versification, xxxvi.
302.
CrowquOrs Absurdities, xxxvi. 603.
Crowther's Law of Arrest, xxxviii. 302.
Cruikshank's Der Freischutz, xxxi. 259.
■ ' Gaiety de Paris, xxxv. 319.
Cruise's Ten Months' Residence in New
Zealand, xxix. 282.
Crutwell's Standard of Value, xxvi. 275.
Cubitt^s Essay on Bathing, xxxv. 318.
Gullen's Synopsis Nosologies Methodis,
xxvii. 557.
— Works, xxxvii. 301 .
Cumberland on the Ancient Engravers of
the Italian School, xxxvi. 601.
Cumin's Tour, xxi. 568.
Cumraing on Suspension Bridges, xxxi.
255 ; on Rail and Tram Roads, 532.
Electro-Dynamics, xxxvii. 581.
Cunningham, a Sermon by, xxii. 566.
Sermons, xxvii. 272, 560 ; •
xxxi. 262.
-^— — Tales of the English and
Scottish Peasantry, xxvii. 558.
Songs of Scotland, xxxiL
550 ; xxxiii. 598.
- New South Wales, xxxvi.
604.
Curiosity, by J. de Luce, xxvii. 558.
Curran, Li^ of, xxi. 558.
Letters to Rev. H. Weston, xxi.
563.
Currency Paper, Inquiry into, xxxiii*
598.
Curtis on Botany, xxi. 264.
on the Genus Camellia, xxvi,
541.
on Diseases of the Ear, xxviL
269 ; XXX. 294.
■ British Entomology, xxxv. 616.
— — on the Ear, xxxix. 252.
Curwen's Report to the Workington Agri-
cultural Society, xxiv. 277.
Cuthbertson on Electricity, xxiv. 570 ;
xxvii. 558.
Cuvier's Animal Kingdom, by Griffith,
xxxi. 260, 531; xxxvi. 299.
Cyril Thornton, xxxvi. 301 -, xxxvii. 582.
D.
Dacibr's French Dictionary, xxvii. 268 ;
xxviii. 266.
Dacre on .Salt as a Manure, xxxi. 529 ;
xxxix. 249.
D'Agincourt, Histoire de I'Art, xxi. 569.
Dagley's Theory and Practice of Drawing,
xxi. 263.
Dale's Irah and Adelah, &c., xxvi. 545.
Dallas's Sir Francis Darrell, xxiv. 276.
^ Private Correspondence of Lord
Bjrron, xxx. 590.
Dallaway, Walpole's Anecdotes of Paint-
ing, xxxvii. 579.
Daliymple's Annals of Scotland, xxi.
560.
Dakel's Lectures on Greek, xxv. 274.
Damer's Belmour, xxxvii. 302.
Damm's Lexicon to Homer and Pindar,
xxix. 277 ; xxxi. 256.
Dangeau's Court of France, xxxiii. 276.
Dangerous Errors, a Tale, xxvii. 270.
P'Angoul^me, Duke> Travel* through
France, xxii. 272.
Daniel's Meteorological Essays, xxxvi. 603.
Daniell's Voyage round Great Britain,
xxv. 576.
Kent Indiaman on Fire, xxxii.
645.
Dante, Comment on the Divine Comedy
of, xxviii. 268.
con Comenti di Rossetti, xxxiii.
279 ; xxxiv. 612.
Darley's Popular Trigonometry, xxxvii.
300.
■ Geometrical Companion, xxxixr
251.
Dam, Histoire de Venise, xxi. 569.
Darvell on the English Race Horse,
xxxviii. 302.
Daubeney on Volcanic Phenomena, xxxvii.
301.
■ Anti-Radicalism, xxiv. 573.
Andrews's Sermons, xxv.
579.
296.
• Protestant's Companion, xxzr
y Google
Digitized by ^
3U
PART IIL--NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QvjLBTvaj.x
Pavenport, far la IVononeiation Angloiaej
xxiiL 283.
Davidica, by Thompron, zxxvi. 303.
Davidson's English Grammar, xxix. 278.
Davies*8 Historic Prologues, xxiv. 569.
— — Hint* to Philanthropists, xxv.
578.
— *-— ' Tablet of Lifo Contingencies,
xxxiii. 596.
Estimate of the Human Mind^
zxxvii. 582.
Davis, Medical Annals, xxv. 577.
— on Agricultural Distress, xxvi. 546*
Chinese Moral Maxims, xzxi. 531.
»«-— Midwifery, xxxii. 548 ; xxxviii. 600.
Davisop, Reply to an Article in Edinburgh
Review, xxiii. 284.
' on Primitive Sacrifice, xxxii.
269.
D'Avrigni, Jeanne d'Arc, trag^die, xxi.
569.
Davy's Account of Ceylon, xxv. 579.
— - Six Discourses before the Royal
Society, xxxvi. 301.
Dawe's Portrait of the Duchess of Kent,
xxxii. 545.
Daiv^son's Nosological Practice of Physic,
xxxi. 259.
Dayer's Tour in Yorkshire, xxxi. 533.
Dayle on the Present State of Ireland,
xxvi. 546*
Days of Queen Mary, xxviii. 269.
Deacon's Law of Bankruptcy, xxxvi. 300,
602.
Deafness, Stevenson on, xxxviii. 302.
Deara on the Improved Mode of Building,
xxiv. 567.
Death-bed Scenes, xxxii. 267 ; xxxiv. 614 ;
xxxvi. 299, 604; xxxix. 253.
Death's Doings, by Dagley, xxxv. 320.
De Beauvoir, xxxvii. 581.
Debrett's Baronetage of England, xxxi.
531.
■ Peerage, xxxii. 268.
Decandolle and Sprengell, the Philosophy
of Plants, xxv. 576.
Decimals, New System of, xxii. 266.
Decision, a Tale, xxi. 563.
Declan on the Church of Ireland, xxx.
295.
De Clifford, xxxiv. 302.
Defferari's Selections from Classic Italian
Poetry, xxiv. 569.
Defoe, History of the Plague in 1665, xxii.
268,
Deheg^e's Dictionnaire Grec Modeme,
, xxxiii. 277.
Dehon,NSermons by, xxvii, 272.
Deism Refuted, xxii. 271.
Pe Lacy, xxxvii. 302.
De La Garde, on Cataract, xxv. 577.
Pelancy's Law9 of Twmpike Roads,
xxxix. 25U
Delanglard on Geographical Projections^
xxxviii. 301.
Delany, Mrs., Letters of, xxiv. 271.
Delara's Key to the Spanish Language^
xxxi. 256.
De Lisle, xxxvii. 581.
Delia CelU^ Expedition from Tripoli, &c.,
xxvii. 272, 561.
Delphin Classics, xxi. 264, 558; xxii.,
266; xxiv. 568.
Demosth^ne, (Euvres de, par Anger et.
Planche, xxv. 278.
Demosthenis Opera, xxviii. 266.
___ curante Schaefer,
xxxiii. 277.
Demurrer, Manuel on, xxxvii 580.
Dendrologia Britannica, xxix. 277.
Denham's Traveli in Northern Afncsi
xxxv. 320.
Clapperton and Oudney's Tra*
yels in Africa, xxxviL 582.
Denison on the Funding System, &c, x^
565.
Dennis, a Key to the Regalia, xxiv. 275,
Dennison'f Legends of Galloway, xxxii.
267.
Dental Surgery, by Koecker, xxxv. 318.
De Pradt, De la Revolution de I'Espagne,
xxiii. 286.
i Plan for Recognition of South
American Independence, xxviL 271,
Derbyshire, Vignettes of, xxxi. 262.
——Tourist, by Rhodes, xxxi*
262.
De Renzy, by B. N. Kelly, xxv. 276.
Enchiridion, xxv. 578.
Der Freischutz, etched by Cruikshanl^
xxxi. 259.
De Santilla, by Wentworth, xxxii. 267.
De Santillora, xxxii. 267.
Dessert and the Tea, a Poem, xxi. 268.
Desultory Thoughts in London, by C«
Lloyd, xxiv. 572.
Detraction Displayed, by Qpie, xxxiz<
525.
De Vavasour, xxxiv. 302.
DeVere, xxxvi. 381.
Dewar*8 Designs of Christianity, xxi*
566.
Dewhurst'f Introductory Lecture, xxxvii*
301.
De Willenberg, by J. M, H. Hales, xxvi«
275.
Dewint's Sicily, xxvii. 555.
Diable Diplomatique, xxxii. 267.
Dialogues on the Doctrines of the Esta^
blished Church, xxii. 272.
Diary of an Invalid, by H. Matthew^
xxii. 566 ; xxiii. 285.
— - of an Ennuy^e, xxxiv. 302.
Dibdin's Sermons, xxii. 566.
' Bibliograpl^cal Tour, jxw, 27^
5/9.
Digitized by
Googk
Hevisw*
NBW PUBLICATIONS.
31$
Dibdin*8 Libraiy Companion, xxxi. 255*
— Comic Taleg, xxxi. 532.
Introduction, xxxvi. SOS—Remi-
niscences, 299,
■ Sea Songs, xxx. 590.
Dick's Lectures, xxvi. 276.
Philosophy of Religion, xzxiv.
303.
Dickenson, Justice Law, xxii. 267.
■ on Yellow Fever, xxii. 268.
• Quarter Sessions Practice,
s. 524.
Dickinson's History of Newark, xxi. 269.
— Table of Ligaments of the
Human Skeleton, xxv. 577.
Dickson's Farmer's Companion, xxii* 265 ;
XXXV. 316.
' on Prevalence of Fever, xxi.
267,561.
Dictionnaire des Sciences M^dicales, xxiii.
286.
Diet, Advice on, xxxi. 259.
Paris on, xxxiy. 611.
Diflficulties of the Country, xxiv. 277.
Digby's, Sir Kenelm, Memoirs, xxxvii.
579.
Dillon's, Viscount, Eccellino da Romano,
xxxviii. 303.
Dillwyn's Catalogue of Shells, xxi. 559.
Dinan, a Romance, xxvi. 544.
Diocletian, Edict of, by Leake, xxxiv.
612.
Directions to Settlers in Upper Canada,
xxiv. 571.
Discarded Son, xxxiii. 597.
Disowned, the, xxxix. 253.
D'IsraeU's Literary Character, xxvi. 543.
Curiosities of Literature, xxviii.
268.
301.
Charles the First, xxxviii.
Dissent, Progress of, xxxii. 269.
Dixon on Title Deeds, xxxiv. 610.
Dobrizhoffer, M., Account of the Abipones,
xxvi. 547 ; xxvii. 269.
Dockray on Catholic Emancipation, xxxix.
523.
Dodd's Connoisseur's Repertorium, xxxi.
529} xxxiii. 276.
• Law of Elections, xxxiv, 300,
610.
524.
- Letter on Legal Reforms, xxxix.
Doddridge's Family Expositor, xxxii, 270,
' Sermons, xxxvii. 582.
Dods's Physician's Guide, xxv. 577.
Dodsley's Annual Register for 1819, xxiv.
273.
for 1822, xxix.
280.
Dodwell's Views in Greece, xxi. 557 ; xxii.
561.
' Tour in Greece, xxi. 567,
Domestic .EcouomT and Cookery, xxxr*
319.
Don's Prodromus Floras Nepalensis,
xxxii. 264,
Donald's Agriculture, xxvii. 268.
Don Esteban, xxxii. 267 ; xxxiii. 597.
Dongola and Sennaar, Expedition tOj
xxviu. 270.
Don Juan, xxi. 564 ; xxvi. 275.
Donnegan's Greek Lexicon, xxxiii 594. .
Donno^hue's Questions in Arithmetic, &c.^
xxvu. 555.
Key to, xxvii, 555.
Donovan's Natural History of Birds, xxi*
563.
of British Qua*
drupeds, xxiv. 276; xxvi. 274.
Naturalist's Repository, xxx.
590.
• on the Nests and Eggs of Bri*
tish Birds, xxxiv. 611.
Doo's Portrait of the Duke of York, xxxiL
2.63.
D' Orleans, A. P., Memoirs of, xxx. 588.
Douglas on Camot's Principle of Defence,
x». 562.
Medical Topography of Upper
Canada, xxii. 268.
on the Defence of Places by
Vertical Fire, xxii. 269.
. William, or, the Scottish Exiles^
xxxiv. 302, 612,
Dove, Tour of the, xxxiv. 302.
Dow's Reports, xxxvii. 580 ; xxxviii. 600.
Dowding's Catalogue, xxvii 554.
Dowling and Ryland's Reports, xxvii»
269 ; xxviii. 267 $ xxxii. 548.
II !■ ,. Magistrates Rfl*
ports, xxxi. 258.
Downes's Letters from Mecklenburgh and
Holstein, xxviii 270.
D'Oyley's Sermons, xxxv. 618.
^— Life of Archbishop Bancroft,
xxiv, 567, 568.
Drake's Winter Nights, xxiii. 282.
Sir Francis, Life, xxxviii. 599* .
Drama, Old English, xxx. 588.
Dramatic Synopsis, xxiv. 272.
Draper's Scripture Questions, xxxiv, 613.
Driver's Arabs, xxxii. 550.
Dropsy, Ayre on, xxxiii. 596; xxxvii*
301.
Druery's Notices of Great Yarmouth,
xxxiv. 612.
Drummond's Origines, xxxii. 265 ; xxxiv*
610 ; xxxv. 615 ; xxxix. 523.
— — on the Currency, xxxiv. 613.
Drunken Barnaby's Four Journeys, xxvi<
545.
Dryburgh Abbey, by HoUand, xxxiv..
302.
Dryden's Works, by Sir Walter ScotV
xxvii. 557,
Digitized by
Googk
916
PART III^NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUARTERL-X
Dry Kot, George on, xxxix. 525.
Dublin, Guide to, xxvi. 276.
■■■■■ Picture of, xxvi. 276.
■ ' Hospital Reports, xxi. 266 j xxvii.
557.
Dubois on Christianity in India, zdx.
282.
Dudley on the Identity of the Niger and
Nile, XXV. 275.
« by Miss CKeefe, xxi. 563.
DufP, Invention of the Tube-Sight, xxii.
563.
« History of the Mahrattas, xxxiv.
610.
Duffin*s Physical Education of Females,
xxxix. 251.
Dufief, Mode of Teaching Languages,
xxvii. 558.
Dufour on Hernia, xxviii. 268.
Dugdale's Monasticon, xxii. 561.
Diary, by Hamper, xxxvi.
. 299.
Duke of Mantua, a Tragedy, xxix. 277.
Dunbar's Analecta Grseca, xxv. 274.
Dimcan's Travels through Part of the
I. United States and Canada, xxx. 296.
Duncan's Catalogue, xxxi. 255.
Dunglison on Diseases of the Stomachy
xxxi. 259.
Dunlap's Memoirs of Brown, xxvii. 268.
Dunlop's Roman Literature, xxxviii. 600.
Dupin's Military Force of Great Britain,
translated, xxvi. 543 ; xxvii. 271.
■ Commercial Power of Great Bri-
tain, xxxii. 550.
Mathematics, by Birkbeck, xxxvi.
300.
• Residence in Ashautee, xxx. 591.
Duppa's Miscellaneous Observations, xxxii.
270.
Travels, xxxviii. 603.
Durant's Memoir of an only Son, xxvii.
268.
Durham, Transactions of the Botanical
and Horticultural Societies of, xxxviii,
300.
Duval, M. M., Th^dtre des Latins, xxv,
278.
Dwight's Theology, xxii. 271.
Dwyer, Account of the Confederation of
the Rhine, translated by, xxiv. 573.
Dymock*s Sallust, xxxi 530.
E.
Eaole and Younge*s Tithe-Cases^ xxxii.
265 ; xxxiii. 596.
Earle on Fractures at the Upper Part of
the Thigh, xxix. 279.
Earlom's Liber VeritatiSj xxi. 557.
Early Rising, Letters on, xxii. 269.
■' Duty and Advantages of,
xxxii. 547.
'—— Impressions, xxxix. 252.
Eamshaw^s Gazetteer, xxx. 293.
Earth, Theory of the, xxxi. 257.
Earthquake, a Tale, xxiv. 571.
East, Memoirs of Miss £. Humphries,
xxii. 265.
^-^- India Register, xxxi. 531 ; xxxiii.
279.
Eborall on Merchant Seamen, xxxvii.
301.
Ecart6 or the Saloons of Paris, xxxix. 525.
Economical Retrenchment, &c., xxvi. 545.
Eden on the Bankrupt Law, xxxii. 547 ;
xxxiv. 301.
Edgeworth's Frank, xxvii. 269.
•*i — ' Rosamond, xxvii. 269.
— Tales, xxxii. 267.
Edinburgh, a Satirical Novel, xxiv. 571.
Gazetteer, xxi, 265 ; xxx. 293 ;
XXXV. 615 — Abridged, ibid,
^ Encyclopfwlia, xxii. 269 ; xxvii.
557.
I- New Picture of, xxiv. 279.
Edinburgh Annual Register, xxv. 578;
xxxviii. 601.
Outlines of, xxvii. 559.
— Views of the City and Environs
of, xxviii. 265.
• Engravings of the Ruins, &c.,
xxxi. 529.
Atlas, xxxiii. 277 — Walks in,
280.
I Medico-Chirurgical Transac-
tions, xxxiv. 611.
Views in, by Storer, xxxvi. 300,
■ Transactions of the Royal So-
ciety of, xxxviii. 602.
Edmeston*s Sacred Lyrics, xxxiii. 284.
■ Woman of Shunam, xxxix,
. 525.
Edmunds's Practical Economy, xxxvii,
302 ; xxxviii. 304.
Edmonstone's Journey to Two of the
Oases, xxviii. 270.
Edridge's Scrinium, xxvii. 558.
Education, on Female, xxix. 273.
Domestic, Thoughts on, zxxv.
317.
• Newnham on, xxxix. 250.
Edward Neville, Novel, xxix. 280.
from the French, xxxiv. 611.
Edwards's Arithmetic, xxi. 559.
— — Medea of Euripides, translated,
xxv. 676.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbview«
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
317
Edwards's Alcestes of Euripides^ xsxi.
530.
■ Eton Latin Grammar, xxxiv^
299.
— Botanical Register, xxvi. 541 ;
xxxvi. 299 ; xxxvii. 299.
Egyptian Tombs, xxvii. 268.
Ekms's Naval Battles, xxx. 589 ; xxxix.
252.
• Reply to Sir R. Seppings, xxxi.
260.
Eldon, Lord, Letter to, on Forgeries, &c.,
XXV. 577.
Eldoniana, xxxiv. 612.
Elective Franchise, Essay on, xxv. 579.
Elizabeth, Queen, Progresses, &c., of,
xxx. 293 ; xxxii. 545.
• de Bruce, xxxv. 617.
lElliotson on the Use of Prussic Acid in
Affections of the Stomach, xxiv. 274.
■ Translation of Blumenbach's
Physiology, xxxviii. 302.
Elliott's Gift of Friendship, xxvii. 555.
Ellis's Debtor and Creditor Law, xxvii.
556.
Letters, xxxi. 257 — ^Acts Relative
to the Customs and Excise, 258.
— History of * The Iron Mask,' xxxiv.
299, 610.
■ Character of the Earl of Clarendon,
xxxvi. 300, 601— Original Letters, Se-
cond Series, 300.
— Tour through Owhyhee, xxxiv. 304.
Ellis Correspondence, xxxix. 523.
Elmes's School of Fine Arts, xxxii. 545.
■ On Architectural Jurisprudence,
xxxvii. 300.
Elsam on Prisons, xxi. 268, 565.
£1 Teatro Espa&ol, xxiii. 281.
Modemo, xxiii. 281.
Elton's Brothers, a Monody, xxiv. 276.
' Second Thoughts on the Person
of Christ, xxxvi. 304.
Emancipation, a Poem, xxix. 281.
Letter on the Securities
necessary towards, xxxviii. 599.
Emerson's Letters from the^^gean, xxxix.
254.
Emigrant's Guide to the Cape of Good
Hope, by J. Wilson, xxii. 271.
— ' — — to Upper Canada and
United States, xxii. 271.
byC.
Stuart, xxiv. 279.
. Directory to Western States
of North America, by W. Amphlett,
xxii. 271.
Emigration, Report on, xxxvi. 302.
. Strachan on, ibid.
. Hints on, xxxvii. 582.
Malcolm on, xxxviii. 304.
Emily, a Tale, xxi. 268 ; xxxi. 531.
Emir Malek, sxxvii. 30 2«
Empecinado, Military Exploits of, xxxiii,
276.
Encyclopedia Britannica, Supplement to,
xxi. 267 ; xxvi. 274 ; xxvu. 270.
— ■ Edinensis, xxi. 267 ; xxii
269 J xxv. 274 ; xxvi. 274.
■ • Metropolitan a, xxvi. 544 j
xxxi. 260, 531 -, xxxiii. 279 ; xxxv. 319 j
xxxix. 250.
~— — — Londinensis, xxxix. 525.
Endless Entertainment, xxxiii. 279.
Enfield's Scientific Amusements, xxr.
578.
England's Life of Rev. A. O'Leary,
xxviii. 265.
England, Declaration of, &c., xxv. 277.
Delineations of the Southern
Coast of, from Drawings by Turner and
Collins, xxx. 589.
History of, xxxviii. 600.
■ and France, Comparative View
of the Social Life of, xxxviii. 302.
English Grammar, xxix. 278.
Language, Analytical Dictionary
of the, xxvii. 558.
Grammatical Con-
struction of the, xxxvi. 302.
Perfumer, xxvii. 270.
Quotations, xxxi. 259.
in Italy, xxxii. 549 ; xxxiii. 280,
in France, xxxviii. 603.
> Fashionables Abroad, xxxvi. 30 U
Engel's Lorenz Stark, xxxiv. 609.
Engravings of Old Masters, Fac-Simile
Specimens of, xxxii. 515.
Ennuy^e, Diary of an, xxxiv. 302.
Ensor on the Relief of the Poor, xxix,
281.
Entomology, British, Nomenclature of,
xxi. 563.
Epigrammata Graeca Antholog^se, xxxiii,
277.
Epsom, History of, xxxii. 270.
Equity Practice, Barns's, xxxvii. 580.
Erasmus's Life by Butler, xxxiii. 594.
Erin, by Thomas Bailey, xxviii. 269.
Errors and their Consequences, xxi. 563.
Erskine on the Truth of Revealed Reli<»
gion, xxiv. 573.
Works of J. Gumbold, xxvii. 560,
Lord, Reply to, xxi. 565.
• Letter by, xxi. 565.
Letter to the Earl of Liver*
pool on the Subject of the Greeks, xxvii,
560.
on the Declension of Agri^
cultural Prosperity, xxviii. 269.
King James the Second of
Scots, xxxviii. 301.
Espinasse's Law of Bankrupts, xxxiy«
301.
Esqiumaux, a Tale, xxi. 268.
^ Peep at the, xxxii. 547,
Digitized by
Googk
818
PART HI— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUAHTBRLT
Em's Two Letters to the Rev. G. C. Got-
ham, with Grorham's Reply, xxxiv. 613.
Essays and Sketches of Life and Cha-
racter, xxiv. 275.
■ ' . Religious and Moral, xxv. 277.
Etymologiceu Dictionary,by Valpy, xxxviii.
600.
Euchd, Supplement io, xxu 559.
First Book of, by GJarde, xxxi-
258.
i Elements, by Philips, xxxiv. 610.
' ■■ ' by Lardner, xxxviii. 600.
Eugenia, by Miss Moore, xxix. 280.
Eunpides, Alcestes of, by Edwards, xxxi.
530.
Hecuba, by Major, xxxv. 317.
■ Bacchee and HeracUdae of, trans-
lated, xxxviii. 600 — Medea of, ibid,
Europe, xxvii. 271.
. Memoirs of the Affairs of, from
the Peace of Utrecht, xxxi. 530.
Eustace Fitz-Richard, xxxiii. 597.
Evans's Essays, xxi. 267.
* n i Description of Van Diemen's
Land, xxvi. 547.
' Richmond, xxsd. 262 — History of
Bristol, 533.
" Parterre, -XXXV. 320.
Evans, Mason's Fears of Dying, xxxvii.
582.
— — on the Designs of Russia, xxxviiii
602.
Evelyn*s Miscellaneous Works, by Up-
cott, xxxii. 549.
—— Sylva, by Hunter, xxxiv. 301 —
revised, xxxvii. 579.
Every-Day Occurrences, xxxii. 267.
Every Man's Book, xxxv. 319.
Night Book, xxxvi. 301.
Evesham, Antiquities of, by E. J. Rudge,
xxiii. 285.
Ewing*s Greek Grammar, xxxvi. 302.
Exchanges, Foreign, Manual of, xxiv. 568.
Exclusiou of the Queen from the Liturgy,
xxiv. 570.
Excursions of a Village Curate, xxxvi.
301.
Exile, an Historical Memoir, xxii. 563.
— Journal of an, xxxii. 270.
Exley's Natural Philosophy, zxxix. 525.
Experience, xxxviii. 601.
Exploits, Naval and Military, in the Reign
of George III., by J. Aspin, xxiv. 273.
Eye, Stratford ou the, xxxix. 251.
Eyes, Economy of the, xxxiii. 278.
Eynesbury and St. Neots, Antiquities of)
by G. C. Gorham, xxiii. 285.
F.
pABER*s Sermons, xxiii. 285.
■ Difficulties of Romanism, xxxiv.
' 303.
' Supplement to the above^ xxxviii.
301.
I Expiatory Sacrifice, xxxv. 320 ;
xxxvi. 303, 604.
Calendar of Prophecy, xxxviii.
304.
Fabrier, Journal, &c., xxi. 569.
Faeciolati and Forcellini's Latin Lexicon,
xxxix. 250.
Fairbairn on Breeding Cheviot Sheep,
Jtxx. 292.
Fairy Favours, xxxii. 268.
Legends of the South of Ireland,
xxxii. 267.
Mythology, xxxvii. 581.
Faith, Substance of Two Discourses on,
• xxxi. 261.
.— Formularies of, in the Reign of
Henry VIII., xxxii. 269.
Fall of the Angels, xxv. 276.
Family Picture Gallery, xxx. 590.
- Prayer, xxxi. 261.
• ~ by Clericus, xxxi. 262.
Lectures, by Pridham, xxxiii. 599.
Faraday's Chemical Manipulation, xxxvi.
^ 299«
Farey on the Steam-Englne, xxxvii. 581.
Farmer on Head-Ache, xxv. 577.
Farmer's Memorandum Book, xxiL 561.
Calendar, xxvi. 541.
■ Directory, xxix. 277.
— British Magazine, xxxvii. 299.
Farr on Cancer, xxvii. 269.
Farringdon, Literary Works of Sir J.
Reynolds, xxi. 562.
Fashionable Amusements, xxxiii. 597.
Father's Second Present to his Family,
xxii. 562.
' Love, by Mosse, xxxii. 549.
^ Guide, xxxvii. 580.
Father and Son, xxxii. 267.
Faulkland, xxxvi. 301.
Faulkner on the Plague, xxiv. 274.
Antiquities of Kensington, xxiv.
279.
Rambling Notes, xxxvi. 604;
xxxvii. 302.
Fault and Feeling, Tales of, xxxii. 267.
Fausset's Claims of the Established
Church, xxiv. 573.
Faustus, xxvi. 273; xxxii. 267.
Faux's Memorable Days in America, xxix.
282.
Favel»s Chiistian Faith, xxxi. 261.
Fawcett's Sermons, xxxix. 282.
Digitized by
Googk
SjnriBif*
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
»ld
Tawdington'f Case of Melanosis, xzxiv.
611.
Teiich on Mentid Derangemeuif, xxxviii.
•Fellenbere, J. de, Establiihments of. xxlr.
272.
Tellowes'f Historical Sketches, xxxviii.
301.
PeneloD, Life of, xxii. 661.
— — Lives of Ancient Sages, trans-
lated, xxii. 265.
Perdinand's Pupil, xxxii. 267.
Ferguson's Astronomy, with Notes by
Brewster, xxv. 273.
Fernandez, Synoptic Tables to the Spa-
nish Grammar, xxxi. 256.
Ferrara's Ignes de Castro, by Musgrave,
xxxii. 264.
F^russac, sur la G^ographie, &c., xxi. 569.
■ le Bulletin Gfen6ral, &c., xxix.
280.
Field's Geographical Memoirs of New
South Wales, xxxii. 270.
Life of Dr. Parr, xxxvii. 579.
Field Diversions, xxxi. 259.
■ Flowers, xxxiv. 612.
^Fielding's Select Proverbs, xxxi. 269.
Finances, &c, of the Country in 1820,
xxiv. 277.
'Financial System, Reform of, xxvi. 545.
Finati's Life and Adventures, xxxv. 316 ;
xxxvii. 579.
Finch's Moral Discipline, xxvii. 269.
' Christian Principles, xxxvi. 604.
Fine Arts, Annals of the, xxii. 561.
Finlayson's Mission to Siam, &c., by Shr
S. T. Raffles, xxxiil 599.
Fire Arms, on the Manufacture of, xxxix.
525.
'Fireside Book, xxxvii. 581.
Fisher's Voyage of Discovery, xxv. 278.
Fisk's Analysis of Coke upon Littleton,
XXX. 589.
— Memohrs, by Bond, xxxix. 249.
Fitful Fancies, by Kennedy, xxxvii. 302.
Fitz-Adam, Harp of the Desert, xxiv. 276,
572 — Lays on Land, xxv. 578.
Fitzallan of Berkeley, xxxii. 267.
Fitz-Clarence, Col., Journey over Land
from India, xxi. 568.
Fitzgerald's Life of Lord Londonderry,
xxvii. 554.
Flagellum Parliamentarium, xxxv. 614.
Flather's Digested Index to Equity Re-
ports, &c., xxix. 279.
Fletcher, Reformation Vindicated, xxvi.
547.
■ ' HorsB Subsecivae, xxvii. 557.
^ Christ's Victory, xxxi. 262.
Fleury de Chaboulon, M6moires de Na-
poleon, xxii. 563 — translated, ibid,
' Fhnt's Letters from America) xxviii. 270.
Flirtation; xxxvii. 302.
Flockart on Intellectual Improvement, &c.,
xxvii. 555.
Flood on the Nervous System, xxxix.
524.
Flora Domestica, xxix. 277 ; xxxi. 260.
Conspicua, xxxiii. 279.
Medica, xxxix. 522.
Flore du Dictionnaire des Sciences Medi-
cales, xxiii. 286.
Florist's Manual, xxvii. 554.
— — Guide, xxxvi. 299.
Flower's Letters from the Illinois, xxii.
566.
Flutter's Notes of a Bookworm, xxxvii.
301.
Fod^rd, Voyage aux Alpes Maritimes,
xxv. 278.
Fonthill Abbey, Description of, xxvii.
561.
•— -— Guide to, xxviii. 270;
xxix. 282.
Foote on Syphilis, xxviii. 267.
Forbes on Diseases of the Chest, xxvi.
543.
- on the Uses of the Stethoscope,
xxxi. 258.
' Laenec on Diseases of the Chest,
xxxvii. 301 ; xxxviii. 601.
Forbin^ Voyage dans le Levant, xxi. 569.
Forcellmi, Totius Latinitatis Lexicon,
edidit Jacobus Bailey, xxxv. 317.
Ford's Plays, by Gifford, xxxv. 317, 615.
Foreign Scenes, by Howison, xxxii. 270.
Forest Sanctuary, the, xxxiv. 30€.
Trees, Pontey on, xxxvii. 299.
Foresta, Marquis de, sur la Sicile, xxv.
278.
Foresters, the, xxxii. 268.
Forgeries, &c.. Letter on, to Lord Eldon,
xxv. 577.
Forget-me-not, xxxiii. 276 ; xxxvii. 299 ;
xxxix. 249.
Forster, Perennial Calendar, xxx. 295.
Bible Preacher, xxxi. 262.
Pocket Cyclopsedia, xxxv. 616.
Mahometanism Unveiled, xxxix.
254.
280.
on Atmospheric Phenomena, xxix.
Forsyth's Medical Pocket Book, xxxii.266.
Antiquary's Portfolio, xxxiii. 279,
594.
Philosophical and Experimental
Chemistry, xxxviii. 302.
Forteguerra's Ricciardetto, translated, xxii.
564 5 xxiii. 284 ; xxiv. 276 j xxvi. 545.
Fortification, Irving on, xxxix. 252.
Fosbrook's Practical Observations, &c.,
xxxii. 548.
Fosbrooke's History of Gloucester, xxii.
566.
■ " . Antiquities, xxxi. 529.
■ Tourist's Grammar, xxxiii, 599.
Digitized by
Googk
820
PART ill.— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QU/RTB<
Fosbrooke^s Forei};^ Topogjraphy, xxxviL
302; xxxix.254.
Foscolo on the Cession of Parga, xxiv.
273.
Foster on Popular Ignorance, xxiv. 275.
Fouch^'s Memoirs, xxxi. 529.
Foundling of Glenthom, xxix. 280.
Fox on Architecture, xxv. 273.
Foy's Peninsular War, xxxvi. 602.
Fragments of a Civic Feast, xxiv. 277.
Framlingham, its Ag^culture, &c., by E.
Rigby, xxiv. 271.
France during the Reign of Napoleon,
xxviii. 267.
Memoirs of the Court of, duiing
the Residence of the Marquis de Dan-
geau, xxxii. 546 — ^Views in the South of,
545. :
. ■ Secret Memoirs of the Roj^al
Family of, xxxiv. 609 — ^Four Years in,
614.
— — and Italy, Notes of a Journey
through, xxxiv. 614.
• and England, Comparative View
of the Social Life of, xxxvui.302.
Francia's Reign in Paraguay, xxxvi. 601.
Fraucis, Sir P., Claims of, refuted, xxvii.
557.
Frank's Memoirs, xxxiii. 594.
Frankland, Wakefield's Trial, xxxvi. 602.
Franklin's Memoirs, xxii. 562.
— — Inquiry concerning the Site of
Ancient Palibothra, xxvii. 561.
. Life, xxxiv. 609.
• Present State of Hayti, xxxvi.
604 ; xxxvii. 580 ; xxxix. 526.
- Privations and Sufferings, xxxix.
254.
■ Journey from the Shores of
Hudson's Bay, xxx. 296.
Franks's Sermons, xxvi. 546.
Fraser, Report of Horseman v. Buhner
and others, xxii. 267.
m. Trial of Kiunear and others, xxii.
267.
Fraser, Tour through fhe Himalaya
Mountains, xxiv. 280.
Views in the Himalaya Moun-
tains, xxiv. 280.
Journey into Khorasan, xxxiii.
280.
' Travels on the Shore of the Cas-
pian Sea, xxxiv. 304, 614.
Frederick III., King of Prussia, Art of
War, by Hamilton, xxxv. 617,
Freedom of the Press, xxvi. 275.
Freeman's Kentish Poets, xxv. 578.
■ Fashion, xxxii. 550.
Reports, by Smirke, xxxiiL 273.
Sketches in Wales, xxxiv. 304,
Freese's Cambist's Compendium, xxxviii.
601.
Free Trade, McDonnell on, xxxiv. 612.
French and others. Trial of, xxi. 561.
French's Phsedrus, xxvi. 541.
French Dictionary, Dacier's, xxvii. 268 ^
xxviii. 266.
Exercises, xxii. 266.
Grammar, xxxiv. 299.
Language, New Method of Study-
ing, xxiv. 272.
Freud's Evening Amusements, xxvL 541,
Friction, Bacot on, xxvii. 557.
Friendly Societies, Reports on, xxxi. 259.
Friendship's Offering, xxxiii. 276 ; xxxr.
316; xxxvii. 299; xxxix. 249.
Friendship, Blessings of, xxxiii. 279.
Frost on the Mustard Tree, xxxvi. 601.
Frosty Morning, by Sharp, xxxii. 545,
Fruits of Enterprise, xxvi. 542.
Fry's Lyra David is, xxi. 269.
Christian Church, xxxii. 269.
Translation of the Song of Solomon,
xxxu. 269.
on Wheel Carriages, &c., xxiv. 275%
Fudge Family in Edinburgh, xxiv. 277,
Fudger Fudged, xxii. 270.
Fuller on Wheel Carriages, xxxviii. 303.
Fyfe's Chemistry, xxxvii. 581.
G.
Gael. Origin and Descent of the, by
Grant, xxxvii. 581.
Gaelic Bible, xxiv. 277.
Gage's Antiquities of Hengrave, xxvii.
561.
Gaieties and Gravities, xxxii. 267.
Gaitskell on Inflammation of the Intes-
tines, xxi. 266.
Galbraith's Mathematical and Astrono-
mical Tables, xxxv. 616,
Galiffe's Italy in 1816 and 1817, xxiv. 279.
Gall's Historical and Biogra^ihical Pic-
tures, xxiv. 569.
Galvanism, La Beaume on, xxxv. 318,
Galway, History of, xxvii. 272.
Gamba's Narrative of Lord Byron's last
Journey to Greece, xxxi. 533.
Gambler on Parochial Settlements, xxxix,
251.
Gamble's Society in the North of Ireland,
xxi. 567 ; xxii. 272.
Gambold, Rev. J., Works of, xxvii. 560.
Gamester, Confessions of a, xxxi. 260.
Gaudy's Caswallon, xxxiv. 611.
Garbett's Nullity of the Roman Faith,
xxxvi 303, 604.
Digitized by
Googk
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NEW PUBLICATIONS.
321
Oarde's First Book of Euclid, xxxi. 258.
Gardener's Magazine, by Xjoudon, xxxiii.
596.
— ^— — Remembrancer, xxxvii. 579.
— — ^-^ Manual, xxxix. 522.
Gardiner's Fortnight's Visit, xxviiL 268.
■■ Original Tales of my Landlord^
xxviii. 268.
— — — Edward Westley, xxviii. 269.
Gardner's Original Tales of my Landlord^
xxvi. 544.
Garrow's History of Lyminfi:ton. xxxiii.
280.
Gas-Lighting, Theory and Practice of,
xxi. 558.
Gaston de Blondeville, by Radcliffe,
xxxiv. 611.
^ate to the Hebrew, Arabic, and S3rriac,
unlocked, xxxviii. 303.
Gay's Fables, Muss's Designs from,
xxxii. 263.
Gazul's Plajrs, xxxiii 277.
Gem, xxxix. 249.
Gems of Art, xxxiii. 594.
Genealo^cal Chart, xxxiy. 299.
Genesis m English Hebrew, xxxix. 250.
Genevieve, Legend of, xxxi. 532.
Genlis, Manuel du Voyageur, xxi. 563.
^ New iEra, xxi. 563.
■ Julien Delmour, translated, xxii.
270.
Poetical Travels of Eugenius and
Antonia, translated by Harriet Jones,
xxii. 565.
Palmyre et Flaminie, xxiv. 571.
— — r — Memoirs of the Marchioness de
Bonchamps, edited by, xxix. 277.
«— Memoirs of, xxxii. 263, 546;
xxxiii. 276, 594.
Crent's Poems, xxiv. 572.
Geoffirey's Chart of Madagascar, xxi. 567.
Geographia Sacra, xxv. 577.
Geographical Projections, Delanglard on,
xxxviii. 301.
Geography, Ancient, xxxviii. 301.
I Elements of, xxxviii. 301 ;
xxxix. 250.
• of Great Britain, xxxviii. 301.
Geological Primer, in Verse, xxiii. 284,
" Society of Cornwall, Transac-
tions of, xxxix. 249, 522.
Geology, Bakewell's Introduction to,
xxxviii. 300.
■ Conversations on, xxxix. 249.
Greorge III., his Court and Family, xxiii.
282.
— Letters to Lord Kenyon,
xxxvi. 603.
George on Dry Rot, xxxix. 525.
Geraldine, by a Lady, xxv. 276.
. Murray, by M'Leod,xxxv. 319.
Gerard^s View of Religion, xxxviii. 603.
VOL. XL. MO. I.XXX.
German hyne Poets, Specimens of, xxv.
276; xxvii. 559 ; xxxviii. 303.
— ^— Popular Stories, xxxiii. 597.
— Romance, Specimens of, by
Soane, xxxiv. 302; xxxV.319.
• ' Romances, xxxv. 617 ; xxxvi. 603,
Fairy Tales, xxxvi. 603.
— — - Language, Boileau on the, xxiii
283.
• Key to the German^ by the same^
xxxii. 264.
• Poetry, Taylor on, Xxxviii. 602.
Germany, Notes and Reflections during a
Ramble in, xxxv. 320.
— — Ramble among the Musicians
of, xxxviii. 304.
Gerold and Bei^, Mining District of
Mexico, xxxviii. 300.
GFesenius's Hebrew Lexicon, by Leo,
xxxii. 551.
Gksta Romanorum, xxx. 590.
Giant's Causeway, Guide to, xxxi 262.
Gibbon's Decline and Fall, &c., by Bowd-
ler, xxxiii. 595.
Gibbs on Common Recoveries, xxv. 577.
Hebrew Lexicon, xxxvii. 300.
Gribney on the Vapour Bath, xxxii. 548.
Gifibrd's Blackstone's Commentaries,
xxii. 663 ; xxvi. 273.
• Remonstrance, &c., Examination
of, by a Trinitarian, xxvii. 560.
.^— • W., Persius, xxvii. 554.
Ford's Plays, xxxv. 317, 615.
Gilbart, Lectures on the Bible, xxiii. 284 ;
xxiv. 278.
Gilbert's Sermon on the Death of George
III., xxii. 565.
— — Christmas Carols, xxviii. 269.
on the Law of Dbtress, &c., by
W. J. Impey,xxix.279.
Life of Williams, xxxi. 529.
- on MUitary CombinationSj
548.
Gilchrist's East India Vade Mecum,
xxxii. 266.
Gillespie, Gleanings during a Residence
at Buenos Ayres, xxii. 272.
Sermons, xxvii 260.
Gillet's Fashion and other Poems, xxi.
564.
Gillies's History of Ancient Greece, xxiv.
273.
' — Researches among the Vaudois,
XXX. 591.
German Stories, xxxv. 31 9,
Gilmour, Novel, xxxi. 532.
Gilpin's Life of Bernard Gilpin, xxxi
529.
■ Sermons, xxxvi. 304.
Giovanni Sbogarro, by P. Gordon, xxiv,
276.
Gipsey, the, xxxv. 319,
Y
Digitized by
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PART III.— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUASTIBLt
fiisborne^t Letter to Dr. Fhillpotts, xxxnii.
300.
Glasgow, Account o^ by Cleland, zzii.
5665 xxiv.279.
Glassford on the Principlet of Evidence;
xxiv. 569.
Olastonbuiy Abbey, zzzix. 253.
GleaningSy Moral and Religious, zzviL
555: ixvm.270.
Gleig*! Subaltern, zzzir. 609.
■ Sermons, zzxix. 253.
Glen's Tour from Astrachan to Karass,
xxviii. 270.
_ on the Law of Bills of Exchange,
&c., zxx. 589.
Glenbervie, Lord, Fortegiierri*8 Ricciar-
detto, translated by, xxvi. 545.
Glenfall and other Poems, by W. H. Hal-
pine, xxiiL 284.
Glenfergus, a Novel, xxii. 564.
Gloucester, History of, by Fosbrooke, cdi.
567.
Glyndwr, by Lloyd, xxxr.* 617.
Goatherds, by Eastlake, zxzii. 545.
Goddard, Dr., Visitation Scnnon by, xxvi.
560.
Grodwin on the Power of Increase in the
Numbers of Mankind, xxiv. 277.
■ Commonwealth, xxxiY.299, 610 j
xxxvii. 300 ; xxxix. 250.
Goethe's Faustus, xxri. 273.
' by Lord F. L. Gower,
xxxii. 264.
■ Memoirs, xxxi. 256.
- Young Rifleman's Comrade, xxxv.
316»
Go^agog Hall, xxi. 563.
Gomg too Far, xxxii. 267.
Golden Age, by Jackson, xxxii. 545.
Gold Headed Cane, xxxv. 617.
Goldicutt, Specimens from Pompeii, xxxiii.
594.
Goldsmith's Wonders of Nature and Art,
xxxii. 270.
Rising Village, xxx. 549*
' History of England, Abridge
mentof, by Dymock, xxxiv. 300.
Golis on Hydrocephalus, translated, xxr.
GoUand's Ruins of Ruthven Abbey, xxxv.
319. ■''
Gomez Arias, xxxviii. 303.
Gondola, the, xxxvi. 301.
Gonorrhcea, Century of Surgeons on,
xxxiii. 278.
Gonsalvo, a Tragedy, xxviii. 266.
Oooch, Golis on Hydrocephalus, trans-
lated by, XXV. 275.
Good's Study of Medicine, xxvii. 557*
'■ Book of Nature, xxxiv. SQl.
— Life, by Gregory, xxxvii. 579.
• Occasional llioughtfl^ laciCYiii* 602L
' ■ occasional inougbl
Qood Humour, xxiii. 283,
.267|
Good Nature and Sensibility, by Wu
Aimwell, xxvi. 275.
Goodison on the Islands of Corfu, &C.,
xxviii. 270.
Goodwin, Life of, xxvii. 268 ; xxviii. 265.
Gorden, a Tale, xxvi. 275.
Gh}rdou's Historical and Geographical
Memoir of the North American Conti-
nent, xxiv. 569.
Gh}re's Town of Liverpool, &c., xxv. 579.
— — Mrs. C, the Bond, a Dramatic Poem|
xxxi. 530 ; xxxii. 547.
Goring and Pritchard's Objects far the
Microscope, xxxix. 525.
Gossip, xxvi. 274, 544.
Gourgaud's Napoleon in Russia, zzuu
547.
Gourlay's Statistical Account of Uppe^
Canada, xxvii. 561.
Governess, the Complete, xxxiii. 595.
Gow's Nisi Prius Cases, xxii. 267.
-— i.- Partnership, xxxiii 278.
Gower's Auxiliaries to Medicine, 2
561.
' Poems, xxxi. 261.
Grade's Sermons, xxxix. 526.
Graduati Cantabrigienses, xxx. 294.
Grafenstein, xxxiv. 302.
Graham, Three Months in the Mountains
East of Rome, xxiv. 279.
■ Memoirs of N. Poussin, xxiv.
568.
— — on Epilepsy, xxix. 280.
Residence in Chili, &c,xxx.d9L
' on Cancer, xxxi. 531.
■■■ Domestic Medicine, xxxir. 610,
611 5 xxxv. 616.
' '" Com and Currency, xxxir. 613 j
xxxv. 320 ; xxxvi. 302.
United States of North America,
xxxv. 615; xxxvi. 300.
Grahame's Letter on a New Mode of
drawing Vessels by a Locomotive En-
gine Boat, xxxii. 268.
Grammar, Philological, xxxxi. 257.
Granby, xxxiii. 597.
Grandfather's Farm, xxxix. 525t
Grant's Stories founded on Facts^ xxiii*
281.
- History 'of the English Chnrch,
xxiv. 273.
on the East India College at
Haileybury, xxxiii. 595.
Chancery Practice, xxxiii. 596.
on the Origin and Descent of the
Gael, xxxvii. 581.
Granville's Midwifery at the Westminster
General Dispensary, xxi. 561.
. on Consumption, xxiv. 275.
St. Petersburgh, xxxviii. 304,
603.
Grattan's Philibert, xxi. 564 ; zsii. 565t
-«-<•..« Speeches, xxri. 546,
Digitized by
Googk
ASVIZIfi
mm PUBLICATIONS.
323
Grattan's Works, xxvii. 270.
Graves's Scriptural Proofs of the Trinity,
zxi. 566.
— on Calvinistic Predestination,
zxxii. 269.
Gray on Spinning Machiueryi jtxi. 267.
— Connexion, xxi. 666.
^ ^ British Plants, xxvi. 641.
Works, xxxii. 268 — Travels in
Western Africa, 270.
Great Britain, Martial and Naval Achieve-
ments 0^ XXV. 576.
" Public Revenue and Expen-
diture for 1821, xxvii. 271.
' " Original Houses of the Poets
and Philosophers of, xxviii. 266.
.Naval History of, byE.P.
Brenton, xxx. 589.
Grece on Canada and the United States,
xxiv. 279.
Grecian Stories, by M. Hack, xxi. 559.
Greece in 1823 and 1824, by Stanhope,
xxxi. 267— Visit to, by Waddington,
533 ; xxxii. 547.
' ' ' Modem Sketches of, xxxix. 526.
Baldwin's History of^ xxvi. 542.
Greek Revolution, Historical Outline of,
xxxu. 265, 547.
— and English Dictionary, xxxv. 317.
-•— Language, Rudiments o^ xxxv.
316 — ^Exercises by Valpy, 614 — Gram-
mar by Rost, ibid.
— — Exercises by Sandford, xxxvi. 602.
-!-— Ghrammar by Peithmann, xxxviL
300.
Extracts, xxxix. 523 — Grammar,
. liOndon, ibid.
Gradus, xxxvii. 300.
Greeks, Policy of England and France
with respect to, xxvii. 559.
Green's Parents and Wives, xxxii. 549.
■Letter to Sir Astley Cooper, xxxiii
596.
■ War in Gteecei xxxviL 300.
• on Ancient Coins, xxxix. 522.
Greenrhouse Companion, xxxi. 256.
Greenhow on Vaccination, xxxi. 531.
Greenough's Geology, xxi. 660.
Green Tea, Newnham on, xxxvi. 300.
Greenwood's Xenophontis Memorabilia,
xxx. 292.
Gregg's Law of Bankruptcy, xxxiv. 301.
' New Bankrupt Act, xxxiv. 301.
Gregory on Dropsy, xxi. 267.
— Arithmetic, xxv. 576.
' Selections from Chesterfield's
Letters, xxii. 266.
' on the Duties, &c., of a Physician,
xxvii. 557.
>■ Theory and Practice of Physic,
xxxii. 648.
Gregory's Mathematics, xxxiii.278 ; xxxix.
251.
Life of Dr. Good, xxxvii. 579.
Grenville, Lord, Speech of, on the State
of the Country, xxiii. 284.
— — • on the Sinking Fund, xxxviii. 303.
■ " Oxford and Locke, xxxix. 624.
Gresley's Letter to Lord Shrewsbury,
xxxviii. 599.
Greswell's Parisian IVpography, xxi. 270.
GreviUe's Scottish Cryptogamic Flora,
xxviii. 266.
Gh^y, Earl, Letter to, xxi. 564.
Lady Jane, Literary Remains of,
xxxiii. 277.
— — - Memoria Techniea, by Todd, xxxiii.
277.
Griesenthwaite on Agriculture, xxiv. 567«
Griffith's Vertebrated Animals, xxv. 578.
' Cuvier's Animal System, xxx.
295.
Grimm, MM., German Popular Stories
translated, xxviii. 269.
Grindley*s Scenery of India, xxxiv. 609.
Grinfield's Sermons, xxi. 269, 566.
Grocatt's Lay of the First Minstrel, xxvL
275.
Grotius, translated, xxiv. 573.
Grover's Socrates, xxxvii. 582.
Groves's Greek and English Lexicon^
xxxiv. 302.
Gryson. See Feitck*
Guahiba, a Tale, xxvii. 270.
Guatemsda, History of, by Juarrofl, xxxi.
257.
■ " Narrative of a Mission to,
by Thomson, xxxix. 526.
Ghiaszaroni's Italian Grammar, xxii. 266.
Key to, xxii. 266.
Companion to, xxii. 562.
Gude's King Bench Practice, xxxviii. 302.
Gnelph, History of the House of, xxiv* 569.
Guesses at Truth, xxxvii. 302.
Guest on Spinning Machinery, xxxviii.601.
Guicciardini's History of Italy, by G.
Rolandi, xxvL 542.
Guille's Instruction of the Blind, xxi. 559.
Gulistan, xxix. 280.
Gundy's Caswallon, xxxix. 525.
Gumey's Trial of A. B. French and
others, xxi. 661.
on the Evidences of Christianity,
xxxiii. 598.
Guthrie*s Geographical Grammar, xxii*
267.
Guy's Ovid's Epistles, xxvii. 554,
— Arithmetic, xxix. 278.
Gwilt's Architecture of Vitruvius, xxxiii.
276.
Gymnastic Exercises^ Instructions in, xxiX|
280.
y2
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PART III.— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUABTBRLif
H.
Hack's Grecian Stories, xzi. 559.
Hadeu's Popular Medicine, xxiv. 570.
' on the Management of Children^
by Alcock, xxxvii. 301.
Hadfield's Tailor's Preceptor, zxxv. 319.
Haggard's Reports, zmi.556; zzxviii.
Ha^e on Capital Punishment, xxi. 265.
Haidinger, Mob's Mineralogy, zxzii.
264.
Hajji Baba, Adventures of, zxx. 295.
■■■ in England,
xxxviii. 303.
Hakewill's Views in Italy, xxi, 263, 557.
Halford*s Warbeck of Wolstein, xxiv. 571.
Halidon HUl, by Sir Walter Scott, xxvii.
559.
Hall's Voyage to Loo Choo, xxii. 566.
— on Serous Morbid Afiection, xxiv.
274.
— on Digestion, xxiv. 275.
' ■ on Freedom of the Press, xxvi. 275.
Aphorisms, by R. B. Exton, xxix.
281.
-— Journal on the Coasts of Chili, &c.^
XXX. 591.
— — Colombia, xxxi. 257.
— Bishop, Life, by Jones, xxxiii. 594 j
XXXV. 316.
■^— Medical Essays, xxxiii. 596.
_ Obstinacy, xxxiv. 302.
on the Diseases of Females, xxxix.
251.
Hallam's Constitutional History, xxxix.
250.
Halliday's Annals of the House of Bruns-
wick, xxxiii. 595.
-, ■ House of Hano-
299.
- History of the House of Guelph,
xxiv. 569.
Halpin's Cheltenham Antholoey, xxxiii.
.279.
Hamel, xxxvi. 603.
Hamilton's Life of Antar, xxi. 263.
■ on Redemption, xxi. 269.
Account of Nepaul, xxi 567 j
xxii. 272.
]
xxii. 562
Introduction to Merchandize,
273.
Description of Hindostan, xxiv.
(harden of Florence, xxv. 578 ;
xxvi. 275.
Medicine, xxvl 543.
■'- Account of Fishes in the
Ganges, xxvii. 270.
— Hand Book, xxxii, 545 : xxxix.
250. '
Hamilton on Craniology, xxxiii. 596.
Charles, Sketches from the
Note Book o^ xxxiii. 597.
Analytical Geometry, xxxiv«
301— Strass's Epitome, 299,
Tour in Colombia, xxxv. 320 ;
xxxvi. 604
Kmg of Prussia's Art of War,
.617.
— Midwifery, xxxv. 616.
Prodromus Plantarum Indise-
Occidentalis, xxxv. 617.
Hamlet, xxi. 264.
Hammer's New Arabian Nights' Enter-
tainments, by Lamb, xxxiv. 302.
Hammond's Index to Term Reports, xxi.
560.
-^— Chancery Reports, xxvi. 273.
Hampden's Evidences of Christianity,
xxxvi. 604.
Hamper's Dugdale's Diary, xxxvi. 299. -
Hampson's Duties of Trustees, xxxi. 257.
Hancock on Instinct, xxxi. 259.
Handel, Beauties of, xxxi. 260 ; xxxviiL
601.
Hands, Proceedings on Election Petitions,
xxiii. 282.
on Fines and Recoveries, xxxiv.
300.
Hannibal, Passage of, over the Alps, xxiv.
273.
Hans of Iceland, xxxu. 267.
Hansard's Parliamentary Debates, xxvi.
275 ; xxxi. 257.
— TyP<^fin^*P^**> xxxiii. 279.
Happiness, Employment the True Source
of, xxxi. 531.
Hardcastle on the Bank Restriction, xxi.
565.
— — Twenty-ninth of May, xxxii.
268.
Hardiman's History of Galway, xxvii.
272.
Harding's Miscellaneous Works, xxi. 267.
— Stenography, xxviii. 268.
Antiquities in Westminster
Abbey, xxxiL 545.
■ Discourses, xxvi. 276.
Hardwick's Appendix to Dickinson's Jus-
tice of the Peace, xxx. 294.
Hardy on the Extraction of Teeth, xxi.
562.
■ Tour in the Pyrenees, xxxiii. 280.
Hare on Socinianism, xxvi. 547.
on the Stomach, xxviii. 268.
and Thirlwall, Niebuhr's Rome,-
xxxix. 250.
Harford's Life of Thomas Paine, xxii.
Digitized by
Googk
JLkViIW*
JXEW PUBLICATIONS.
32»
Hargrove's History of York, zxi. 270.
HarWs First Lessons in Landscape, zzii.
563.
— — Nonsense Verses, xxvii. 559.
Harmer's Miscellaneous Works, by W.
Young^an, xxix. 281.
Harness, Dramatic Works of Shakspeare,
■ xxxiii. 277.
Sermons on Schism, zxziz. 526.
Harp of Renfi«wshire, xxii 565.
of the Desert, by I, Fit&>Adam,
xxiv. 276, 572.
Harris's Catalogue of the Library of the
Royal Institution, xxv. 273.
■ Infant Salvation, xxvi. 647.
■ Tour through the United States,
xxvii.561.
— — Natural History of the Bible,
xxzi.260; xxxiii. 299.
Harrison on Fruit Trees, xzz. 292; xzzi.
256.
■ Surgical Anatomy, xxx. 590.
' on Spinal Diseases, xxxvii. 580,
■ Digest, xzxviL 580.
Harrovian, the, xxxvii. 581.
Harrowby, Earl of, Letter to, on the Dis«
covery of the atrocious Conspiracy, xxiii.
284.
Hartford, Letter on the Subject of the
Queen, xxiv. 572.
Hartstonge's Eve of All-Hallows, zxxii.
268.
Harvey's Key to Murray, xxvi. 273.
• on Ancient and Modem Wines,
XXX. 590.
Harwood, Survey of Staffordshire, xxiv.
279.
■ on the Curative Influence of
the Southern Coast of England, xxxviii.
302.
Hase on the Stomach, xxv. 275.
Hastings on Inflammation of the Lungs,
xxiv. 274.
Etchingsfromthe Works of Wil-
son, xxxi. 529.
Haughton's Institutes of Menu, xxxiv.
300.
Hausset*s, Madame du. Memoirs, xxxii.
546.
Havannah, Letters from, xxiv. 574.
Havell's Views round ^the Southern Coast
. of England and Ireland, xxxv. 614.
Hawker*H Instructions to Young Sports-
men, xxxiii. 279.
Hawkins on Tradition, xxi. 269.
— — — Devotional Exercises, xxix. 281.
■ Fleas of the Crown, by J. Cur-
wood, XXX. 589.
Haworth's Appendix to Synopsis Planta-
rum, xxi. 264.
Hay's Harmopious Colouring, xxxviii«300.
Haydn^ Beauties of, xxxviii. 601. ^
Hayes's Catalogue of Greek and Latin
Classics, xxvi. 272.
Hayley*s Life, xxxL 529.
Hayman on Brewing, xxviiL 268.
Haynes on Soils, &c., xxiv. 567.
Hayter's Portrait of the Countess of War-'
wick, by Cochrane, xxxv. 317.
Hayti, Franklin's Present State of, xxxvi;
604 i xxxvii. 580 j xxxix. 526.
Hayward's Science of Agriculture, xxxi.
529.
HazUtt's Lectures, xxi. 264.
. Political Essays, xxii. 270.
Table-Talk, xxv. 275.
Select Poets, xxxii. 268.
Life of Buonaparte, xxxvii. 579.
Head on Emigration, xxxviii. 602.
Headaches, &c., Directions for the Pre-
vention and Cure of, xxvii. 557.
Health, Methods of Improving, zzzviL
301.
— ^— Simplicity of, xxxix. 251.
Heard's Russian Grammar, xxxvii. 300.
Heart of Mid-Lothian, xxi. 559.
■ a Musical Drama,
xxi. 559.
Heath's Illustrations of Robinson Crusoei
xxiv. 567.
— the Monastery,
xxiv. 667.
xxiv. 271.
Byron's Works;
' Views in London, xxxi. 529 ;
xxxiii. 276.
Heathfield on Trade, xxvii. 271.
Heavenly Motions, Theory of, zxviii.
265.
Heber's Life of Jeremy Taylor, xxx. 588 ;
xxxi. 255.
Hymns, xxxvL 603.
■ Charge to the Clergy of Calcutta^
xxxvi. 604.
Narrative, xxxvii. 582 ; xxxix«
254.
— Drawings, Engravings firom, by
Walker, xxxix. 522.
Sermons, xxxix. 526.
Heberden's Letters of Cicero, xxxiii. 594.
Hebrew, Easy Method of Reading, xxvii.
658.
Tales, xxxiii 597.
Granmiar, by Newman, xxxvii
603.
— ^ Lexicon, by Gibbs, xxxvii 300.
Arabic, and Syriac, Gate to. Un-
locked, xxxviii. 303.
Hedge's Life, Fashion, and Feeling, xxvi.
544.
Hedgeland's Designs for Private Dwell,
ings^ xxiv. 567.
Hedm, a Tale, by Hon. W. Herbert, xjdi,
564.
Digitized by
Googk
SM
PART Itt-NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUAMSBUf
Helen deToornoB; by Mtdamede Souniy
zxiv. 571.
Helen's Pilgrimaffa to Jerufalem. xxxL
259. .
Hemans, Wallace's IiiTocation to Bruoe,
zxiL 270.
■ The Sceptic, a Poem, ixii 564 j
zxiv. 277.
■ Stanias to the Memory of the
late King, xxir. 277.
he Vespeis of Palennoi zsz.
293.
303.
>Recox4t of Woman, zzxviii.
Hemert's State of the Jews, by Jackson,
xzxii. 547.
Hende's Voya^, &C., xxi. 270, 568.
Henderson's History of Brasil, zzvi. 273.
■ — Biblical Researches and
Travels in Russia, zxxiv. 304.
- Practical Grazier, xxxiv. 611;
V.316.
Henuah, Aocomit of the Lime Rocki of
Plymouth, zxviii. 266.
Henniker's Visit to Mount Sinai, zxviii.
270.
Henry the Great, Court o^ zxz. 293.
— P., Life of, xxi. 568.
»■' Criminal Law oi Demeranu zxvii
559.
*■ ■ " ' M Life 0^ xxxii. 263.
» i - the Eighth, Court of, by Thomp-
son, xxxiv, 299, 610.
————— Reign of, by Turner,
XXXV. 317.
Heraline, 1^ L. M. Hawkins, xxr. 578.
Heraud on Stamps, xxxi. 258.
Herban, xxxiii. 279.
Herbarium Edinense, xxi. 558 ; zxii. 266.
Herbert on Bulbous Roots, xxvi. 541.
' '■■' '" The Wierd Wanderer, Ac., xxvi.
545.
■ Guabiba, a Tale, xxvil 270.
■ Lord, of Cherbury, Life of, xxxiu.
594) xxxiv. 299.
• Lacy, xxxvii. 581.
Hermit in London, xxi. 562 j zxii. 270 ;
xxiii. 283.
■ " in the Country, xziv. 275 } xxvii.
558.
• in Italy, xxxi. 632.
^HPOAIANOT 'EniMEPISMOI, Xxi. 264.
Herodotus, by Gaisford, xxx. 588.
— — and Thucyd^des, Maps and
Plans illustrative of, xxxiL 264.
— — Questions on, ibid.
Larcher's Notes on, zxxvii
299 ; xxxix. 523.
•*-— ly Taylor, xxxix. 523.
Herschel, Spence's Mathematical Essays,
xxi. 561. ' -
HertsleVs Collection of Commercial Ti«a-
tiea and Conventloni, tzif . 273 $ zxvL
546 } xxxvii. 300.
Herv6, How to Enjoy Paris, xxxii. 270.
Hervey's Sketches from the Note Book of
Chiurles Hamilton, xxxiii. 597.
Hett's Discourses, zxii 272.
Hewlett's Sermons, xxvi. 276 ; zxziL 269.
Cottage Comforts, zxxiiL 280.
Hewson on Ophthalmia, xxx. 590.
Heythuysen, Marine Evidence in Conrts
of Law, xxii. 267.
Hifford*8 Theban and Carthaginian Tales,
xxiv. 276.
Higginbottom on the Application of Lunar
Caustic, xxxiii. 596.
Higgins, Horse Sabbatiee, xzxiiL 508.
High Birth, a Satire, xxv. 276.
Highland Society, Prize Essay o^ zzzk
259.
Highlander, the, zxii. 270.
Highlands, Irish, Letters from, xxxi. 533.
■ ■■ Northern, Summer RamUe in,
xxxiL551.
Highways and Byways, xxviii. 269 f szxvii.
302.
Hill on the States of Ancient Greece, zzL
265.
— on the Use of Oxygen, zxiv. 275.
570.
— on Penmanship, xxvL 278.
— — Divinity Lectures, xxvi. 546.
Hillary, Sir W., on a National Institution
for f^eserving Lives and Property from
Shipwreck, xxx. 295.
Hind and the Panther, xxxii. 269.
Hindostan, Tour through Upper Provinces
of, xxx. 296.
Hinds's Veterinary Surgeon, zzzvi. 602 ;
zxxvii. 301.
■ Rise and Progress of Christianityi
xxxix. 254.
Hindu Law, by Stranger, xxxiii. 278.
Hints on Happiness, xxi. 562 j zxii. 562.
•— ^ on Education, zxiv. 569.
— to Philanthropists, by W. Davies,
xxv. 578.
to direct the Female Mind, xxviii.
266.
— to Parents, xxxiii. 277.
to Travellers, xxxiii. 280.
Hippisley, Sufibrings and Fate of an Ex-
pedition to the Rivers Orinoco and
Apure, xxii. 267.
Hirsch*s Integral Tables, xxxL 258.
Hirsch on the Literal Calculus and Alge-
bra, by Ross, xxxvi. 300.
Historical Characters in the Waveriey
Novels, xxvi. 544.
'■■' Connexion between the Old and
New Testament, xxx. 591.
■' and LitOTaxy Tour in England
and Scotland, xxxii. 551.
Digitized by
Googk
BSTIIW.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
m
Historiealand Critical Dktkmaiyiftbridged
from Bayle, zxz7. 615.
Historiettes, xxxvi. 301.
Hoare, Sir B. C^ Tour through Italy, zzi.
269, 568.
■ Memoirs of Granville Shaipe, zzir.
271.
■ Modem Wiltihire, xxviii. 270.
Hobart's United States of America, 4tc,
zxxiii. 599.
Hobbes's Thucydides, xxzii. 264.
Hobbyn's Georgics of Virgil, zxxiii. 594.
Hodgskia's Travels in the North of Ger-
many, xxiii. 286.
Hodgson's History of Northumberland,
mv. 574.
ii Letters from North America,
xxxi262.
■■ on the Augmentation of Small
Livings, xxxiv. 303, 304.
Select Portions of Sacred His-
tory, xxxviii. 599.
Hodson on Diseases of Arteries and Veins,
xxvii. 557.
Hofer, by C. Edwards, xxiv. 572.
■ ■ ^drew. Life of, from'the G^erman,
by C. Hall, xxiv. 271.
Hi^and's Tales of the Priory, xxiv. 276.
' Tides of the Manors, xxvii. 270.
■ " ' Moderation, xxxii. 549.
■ Alfred Campbell, xxxii. 268.
« Reflection, xxxiv. 612.
■ ■ Young Pilgrim, xxxiv. 612.
m Self-Denial, xxxix. 253.
Hogg's Queen's Wake, xxi. 564.
h Jacobite Relics of Scotland, xxii.
565 ; xxiv. 572.
» I Perilous Castles, a Romance,
xxvii. 270.
■ on the Culture of the Carnation,
xxvii. 554.
Holbein's Dance of Death, by Bewick,
xxxi. 260.
Holberg*8 Memoirs, xxxvi. 601.
Holden on the Divinity of Christ, xxiv. 573.
on the Fall of Man, xxix. 281 .
' Christian Sabbath, xxxiii. 280.
Holdemess, Customs of the Crim Tartars,
XXV. 579.
Holdred on Equations, xxiv. 570.
Holford on Prisons, xxv. 277.
' Miss, Italian Stories translated by,
xxix. 280.
Holland's Dryburgh Abbey, xxxiv. 302.
Lord, Letter to Dr. Shuttle-
worth, xxxvi. 301.
Holland, Descriptive History of, xxxiv.
614.
■' Account of the Poor Colonies of,
xxxviii. 304.
Hollis's Views of Chudleigh, xxvii. 555.
'bohnan's IVavels tbiough Russia, &e^
xxxii. 270.
Holt^s Shipping LawB of Great Britain,
xxiv. 274.
— - Bankrupt Laws, xxxvi. 602.
Holy Orders, on the Studies preparatory
to, xxxi. 262.
Inquisition, xxxiii. 280.
Holyrood House, History of, xxi. 567.
Home on Strictures in the Urethra, zzn
275; xxvii. 269.
— on Cancer, xxvii. 270.
—- on Prostate Gland, xxvii. 270.
■ on Comparative Anatomy, zzviL
270; xxix. 279; xxxix. 524.
Homer's Odyssey, in English Prose,
xxvii. 554.
Iliad, by Trollope, zzzfiL 300 ;
xxxviii. 600.
Homeri Ilias, xxi. 558.
Honeys Sports and Pastimes, Part I.^
xxxvii. 579.
' Poor Humphrey's Ptopheciei,
xxxix. 525.
Honor O'Hara, by Miss Porter, zxzv.
319; xxxix. 525.
Hood's Midsummer Fairies, xxxvi. 603.
Whims and Oddities, xxxvii. 301.
Hooke's Practice in the King's Bencb|
&c, xxxiv. 301.
Hooker's Flora Scotica, xxv. 273.
— — Botanical Ulustrations, xzvL
272.
> Exotic Flora, xxviL 554.
Botanical Miscellany, xxxviii.
300 ; xxxix. 522.
Hoole's Society and Solitude, xxiv. 571.
Hooper's Lexicon Modicum, xxxv. 318.
Hope Leslie, xxxvii. 302.
Hopkins on the Laws regulating Ren^
&c., xxvii. 559.
Horace, Lyrics of^ by Wrangham, xxvL
273.
Horatii Opera, by Nuttall, xxxvii. 300.
HorsB Sabbaticse, by Hig^ns, xinriii*
598.
Hornby on the Use of Lime, xxiv. 567.
Land Surve^ng, xxxvii. 301.
Home's Wheeler's Theolo^cal Lectures,
xxi. 269, 566.
— — ^ Dcosm Refhted, xxiL 271 ; zxxiii.
598.
— on the Doctrine of the Trinity,
xxiv. 277 ; xxxiv. 303.
— Introduction to Holy Scriptures,
xxvi. 275 ; xxxiii 280 ; xxxv. 320.
— Supplement to, xxvi.
275.
— — -~ Romanism contradictory to the
Bible, xxxv. 618 ; xxxvi. 303.
— — Queen's College Catalogue, xxxvi.
601 ; xxxix. 522.
Horrida Hystrix, xxxiv. 612.
Horses, a Treatise on, as the Subject of
Property; Sale^ &c.; szzii. 265,
Digitized by
Googk
328
PART in.— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
Qu^TBBi:t
Horsei, Hintg to the Purchasers of, xxxii.
266.
Horsfield's Zoological Researches, xxv.
578 ; xxvi. 544; xr?ii. 558; xxx.295 5
xxxi. 260.
- — — History of Lewes, xxx. 591,
Hort's Domestic Education, xxvii. 555.
Horticultural Society, Transactions o^
xxi. 265 ; xxii. 265 ; xxvii. 554 ; xxx.
292 ; xxxvi. 602.
Tour through Flauders, &c.,
xxviii. 267.
Horton's Letter on the Catholic Question,
xxxiiL 598 ; xxxiv. 303.
■ to the Bishop of Rochester,
xxxriii. 301.
Hortus SuburbanusLondinensis, xxvi. 541 .
Anglicus, xxvii. 554.
' Siccus Londinensis, xxxv.617*
Hough's Sermons, xxv. 277.
— ^ on Courts-Martial, xxxii. 265.
• Letters on the Neilgherries,
xxxix. 526,
Houghton's Wine Cellar Check-Book,
xxxi. 529.
Houstalla, xxxix. 252*
Hovenden's Chancery Reports, xxix. 279.
Jurisdiction of Equity in Mat-
ters of Fraud, xxxii. 265.
_ Supplement to Vesey, xxxvi.
602.
Howards Greek. Exercises, xxi. 559.
r on the Climate of London, xxiv.
571.
Beauties of Literature, (Kirk
White,) xxxu. 266.
Outline Plates to Shakspeare,
xxxvi. 299.
• Duties of Solicitors^ xxxvi. 602.
• Laws of the British Colonies,
xxxvi. 602.
Howe's Works, xxvi. 547.
Redeemer's Tears, &c., by Rev.
R. Gordon, xxviii. 270.
Howell's Collection of State Trials, xxi.
561.
• Memoirs of, xxvi. 272.
State Trials, xxxiv. 610.
• on the War Galleys of the An-
cients, XXXV. 318.
— ^-- Catalogue, xxxix. 522.
Howison's Sketches of Upper Canada,
xxv. 579 ; xxvi. 276.
— Grammar of Infinite Forms,
XXX. 295.
Foreign Scenes, xxxii. 270.
Hewlett's Metrical Chronology, xxx. 588,
Howship on Indigestion, xxxii. 548.
Huber's Natural History of Ants, trans-
lated by J. R. Johnson, xxiv. 276.
Hubershr on Property Tax, xxiv. 277.
Hug's Introduction to the New Testa-
ment, by Wait, x2aYi.604.
Hughes's Horffi Britannicss, xxL 265.
-^— Sermons, xxiv. 278.
Travels in Sicily, xxiv. 279.
.— Beauties of . Cambria, xxt.
576.
Itinerary of Provence, &c,
xxvii. 272.
• Life of William Peim, xxvik
554.
Address in the Cause of the
Greeks, xxvii. 560.
— — Views on the Rhone, xxviii.
265; xxix. 278.
Huish on the Management of Bees^ xxviii.
268.
Hulbert's Museum Asianum, xxvii. 557.
— — Museum Afiicanum, xxviii
266.
Hull's Inquiry into the Present Distress,
xxiv. 277.
Hulley's Annuity Tables, xxxix. 525.
Hullmandel's Manual of Lithography,
xxii. 563 5 xxv. 273.
Views of Italy, xxiv. 271.
Humbert, Anthobgie Arabe, xxL 569.
Humboldt's"Travels, translated by Helea
Maria Williams, xxL 270 ; xxv. 579.
Selections from the Works
of, by J. Taylor, xxx. 589 ; xxxi. 257.
■ et Bonpland, Nova Genera ei
Species Plantarum, xxiii. 286.
- Personal NarrativOf
279.
• Travels in Columbia, by Wit
Hams, xxxiv. 304 ; xxxviii. 603.
Hume's Essay on Pubhc Credit^ by Ds,
Colquhoun, xxii. 271.
Private Correspondence of, xxi*.
272.
Philosophical Works, xxxvL 301.
Humphrey's Observations on the Laws of
Real Property, xxadv. 300, 610: xxxvL
600.
Reply to Mr. Sugden, on the
Alterations in the Laws of Real Pro-
perty, XXXV. 615 ; xxxvi. 300.
Hungarian Tales, xxxix. 253.
Hunt's Bradow's Tables, xxxi. 257.
Redi's Bacchus in Tuscany, xxxii*
268.
Picturesque Domestic Architee^
ture, xxxiii. 594.
Architettura Campestre, xxxvi.
. 601 ; xxxviii. 300.
Designs for Parsonage Houses
&c., xxxvi. 601.
Hunter on Mineral Springs, xxii. 268,
Livy, xxiv. 569 ,• xxvii. 554.
Evelyn's Sylva, xxxiv. 301.
Huntingdon Peerage, by H. N. Bell, xyiii.
282.
Huntingford's Manual for the Sicl^ xx3^
2olf
Digitized by
Googk
Bxvnwk
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
Huhtingford on ihe Separate Existence of
the Soul, xxxix. 526.
Hurwitz's Vmdidae Hebraicae, xxiv. 573*
Husband Hunting, xxxii. 549.
Husbandry in Flanders, Surrey of, zxi.
263.
Hutchinson's Medical Jurisprudence, xxiv.
. 274.
Philosophy, translated by A.
Maxwell, xzvi. 273,
Hutchinson's Surgery, xxxiv. 6t0.
— — — Massacnusetts Bay, xxxviii.
301.
Button's Voyage to Africa, xxvi. 276.
Tour to Africa, xxvi. 276.
— — Course of Mathematics, by 0.
Gregory, xxxiii. 278 ; xxxix. 251.
Huyshe's Specimen, &c., xxxvii. 302,
Hyde's Love's Victory, xxxiii. 595.
Hydrophobia, White on, xxxiii. 596»
I.
Idls Hours Employed, xxxv. 319.
Idyls of an Idler^ xxxvii. 582.
II Bagatello, by E. Reale, xxvii. 269.
lU^rria and Dalmatia, xxiv. 569.
Imitation of Christ, by Thomas i Kempis,
translated by J. Pajrne, xxvii. 560,561.
Immortality, a Poem, xxiv. 277.
Imperial Remembrancer, xxxviii. 601.
Impey's Bankrupt Act, xxxii. 266.
Questions on the King's Bench
Practice, xxxiii. 278.
Impious Feast, by Landor, xxxvii. 582.
Impressment of Seamen, Hints on, xxxvi.
India, Memoirs of, by Wallace, xxxi. 530.
*■ Observations on the Law and Con-
stitution of, xxxii. 269.
— Map of, xxxiii. 695.
■ Prevalent Diseases of, xxxiii. 596.
Index of all Places in the Maps of,
xxxiv. 609.
— Atlas of, xxxvi. 602.
English in, xxxviL 581.
— on the Expediency of Applying the
Principles of Colonial Policy to, xxxviii.
602.
— Life in, xxxix. 253.
BritLsh, State of, xxxix. 523.
- Indian Afiairs, Letter on, xxxiv. 613.
and Lazarus, xxv. 276.
Indigestion, Howship on, xxxii. 548.
Infantry Movements, by Suaso, xxxiii.
597.
Infants, Management of, xxiv. 570.
Influence of Civil Life, &c., on Human
Health and Happiness, xxiv. 571 .
Influence and Example, xxix. 280.
; of Wealth, xxi. 564.
Inglis's Speeches on the Roman Catholic
Question, xxxviii. 599.
Ingpen's British Insects, xxxvi. 299.
Ingram's Mensuration, xxviii. 256.
■ Numeration, xxviii. 266.
Inheritance, the, xxx. 590.
Inman on Naval Gunnery, xxxix. 252.
Innes on Christian Revelation, xxi. 566.
>— — Account of the FanKdv of, xxiv. 271.
Insolvent Act, by Woodrofl^; xxxiv. 610.
Institutions Judiciaires des prindpaiuC
Pays de I'Europe, xxi. 561.
Insurgent Chief, xxxi. 260.
Integral Tables, by Hirsch, xxxi. 253.
Intestines, on Injuries of the, xxxv. 318.
Inventions, History of, by White, xxxvi.
301.
Iodine, Manson on the Effects of, xxxiii.
278.
lona, and other Poems, xxii. 270.
Ionia, Antiquities of, xxvi. 272.
Irah and Adelah, by Dale, xxvi. 545.
Ireland, on the State of, xxvi. 545 ; xxvii.
271.
— — — — Suggestions for the Improven^nt
of, xxxi. 261.
a Voice from, xxxi. 632.
— — Evidence, on the State of, xxxii.
268 ; xxxiv. 302 ; xxxvi. 302.
Letters on the State of, xxxii. 268.
" Pleasure Tours in, xxxii. 551.
in Past Times, xxxiv. 299.
• Sketches of a Soldier's Life in,
xxxiv. 611.
Sketches in, xxxvi. 301, 304.
• Memorial of the Establidied
Church in, to the King, Lords, and
Commons, xxxvi. 303.
Three Mouths in, xxxvi. 304.
State of, in 1827, xxxvi. 602.
• Fairy Legends of the South of,
Second Series, xxxvii. 581.
its Evils, &c., xxxviii. 304.
Address onthe State of, xxxviii. 599.
in Times Past, xxxix. 250.
Ireland, W. H., the Maid of Orleans,
translated by, xxvi. 545.
I The Bourbons, xxvi. 545.
— — History of Kent, :
254.
Irish Woman, a Comedy, xxi. 559.
Necromancer, by T. H. Marshall,
xxv. 276.
— Tithes, Letter on, xxvii. 271.
Life, Tales of, xxxi. 532.
— Peasantry, Real Grievances of th^^
xxxii. 268.
•«i« CommitteeB of both jQoui^ of Fai»
Digitized by
Googk
830
PAET III-^NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUABTSBLt
{ liamenti Evidence taken before^ wxiii.
279.
Iron Mask, Ellit'i History of the, zudv.
299, 610.
Railway, on a General, xxvii. 559.
Irvin, Nomenclature of Scottish History,
xxL 560.
' on the Law of Entail in Scotland,
xxziy. 300.
Irving, Key. £., Portrait o( zxiz. 278.
Trial of, xxix. 280.
— ^^— Orations, xxix. 281.
— ^ Translations of Ben Esra,
xxxvl 303.
W., Life of Columbus, xzxvii.
579.
C, on Fortification, zxxix. 252.
Isaac*s Baptism Discussed, xxrii. 561.
Isaacson's Translation of Jewel's Apology,
xxxi. 533.
■ Life of Bbhop Andrews, zxziz.
522.
Isabel, a Tale, by C. Uoyd, xdiL 283.
Story o^ xxziii. 597.
Isabella, xxviii. 269.
Italian Grammar, by Ciciloni, xzziL 547.
— ^ Stories, toanslated by Miss Hol-
ford, xxix. 280.
■ . Poets, Sonnets from, zxxvi. 603.
Italy in the Nineteenth Century, xxiv.
671.
— • by Lady Morgan, xxv. 579.
a Poem, xxvi. 545.
— — Percival's History of^ xxziL 265 ;
xxxix. 250.
— — * and Sicily, Simond's Tour in, xzxniL
304.
lu-Kiao-Li, zzxri. 603.
Ivanhoe, a Romance, xxii. 564.
' Illustrations o^ by Heath, axiii.
281.
iTes's History <^ the Churdi of God, xziL
563.
Izram, xxziy. 612.
J.
Jackson, Account of Timbuctoo and
Housa, translated by, from the Arabic,
xxiv. 279.
Amusements for Winter Even-
ings, xxvi. 542.
— — Life of Goodwin) xxvii. 268 ;
xxviii. 265.
Illustrations of Bishop West's
Chapel, xxxii. 263.
-Theoretical Mechamcs, xxxv.
616.
• Designs for Villas, xxxix. 249.
Jacob's Travels through Holland, &c,
xxiv. 279.
. Report on the Trad© in Foreign
Com, xxxiv. 613.
' — . Tracts on the Com Trade, xxxviii.
304.
James's History of the Italian Schools of
Painting, xxiv. 271, 567.
■ Courts-Martial, xxiv. 275.
■ on Money, &c., xxiv. 572.
II Naval lUstory of Great Britain,
xxvi. 542 ', xxix. 279 ; xxx. 293 ; xxxi.
257.
• Semi^Sceptic,
551.
. M Views in Russia, &c., xxxiv. 299.
. Travels in Russia, Faints to illus-
trate, xxxvi. 299.
James II., Memoirs of, xxv. 273.
Jameson's Wild Goose Chase, a Farce,
xxiv. 568.
• Manual of Mineralogy, xxy.
578.
Jamieioii*! Logio^ zzi. 265.
Jamieson's Conversations on History,
xxil. 267.
Grammar of Geography,
xxiv. 569.
xxvii. 268.
270.
Universal Science, zziv. 571.
• Celestial Atlas, xxvi 541 ;
• House of Raven^ur, zzviL
• Mrs., Cadijah, xxxi. 530.
• Modem Geography,
264.
-~ Dictionary of Mechanical
Science, xxxii. 545.
Japan, History of, xxvi. 547.
Jardine and Selb/s Illustrations of Omi-
thology, xxxix. 252.
Jarman, Powell on Devises, xxxvL 300.
Jarrin's Italian Confectioner, xxiv. 275.
Jarvis on the Duties of Coroners, xxxix.
524.
Jaume's Elementos de la Conversadon en
Espafiol, Frances;, Ingles, xxxv. 317.
Javons's Systematic Morahty, xxxviS.
304.
Jay's Family Prayers, xxiii. 285.
Jeanne d'Arc, Memoirs of, xxx. 589.
Jebb*s Sacred Literature, xxiv. 278.
' Bishop^ Charge by, xxx. 296. ^
Jefferson's Duties of Churchwardens, xxvii
272.
■ Tales of, xxviii 269.
— Tales of Old Mr., xxxii 267.
Jeffreys on the Use of Java Pepper ia
GenonhflBay xxv. 577t
Digitized by
Googk
NXW PUBLICATIONS.
331
JefPreys on the Muscles, zxvii. 270.
Jenkins, Hortus Marybonensis, xxii. 266.
on the Liturgy, xxv. 277.
■ and Hoskins's Architectural Or-
naments, zxxvi. 601.
Jenneri Letter of, to Dr. Pany, xxvL
543.
Jennings's Family Oydopedia, xxv. 275.
■ Omithologia, xxxvii. 581.
Jeremy's Digest, zxxvii. 580 ; xxxviiL
302.
Jesuits, Secret Instructions of, xxx. 590.
Jevons's Systematic Morality, xxxvi. 301.
■ Astronomy, xxxviii. 600.
Jew Exile, xxxix. 252.
Jewish Kings, History of, xxr. 274.
Jewitt, John R., Adventures of, xxx. 588.
Jickling on Legal and Equitable Estates,
xxxix. 524.
Job, New Translation of the Book of, by
Fry, XXXV. 6i8.
JodreU's Philology, xxiv. 277.
Johnson, Effects of the GUmate of Ghreat
Britain on Liver, Ac, xxii. 268.
-'■ Letters from Pennsylvania, xxii.
566.
> Indian Field Sports, xxviii, 268.
i» Typographia, xxxi. 255.
' Life, by Chandler, xxxi. 255.
■ Dictionary, abridged, xxxii. 547.
by Chalmers,
xxxvi. 302.
■ « ■ by Rees, ibid,
* by Todd, xxxvi, 302.
-by 6. Fulton, xxvi.
273.
Johnstone's History of the Rebellion in
1745 and 1746, xxiv. 569.
Account of Holyrood House,
XXXV. 320,
Jcnnt^tock Companies, Remarks on,
xxxii. 269.
Jones, Histonr of Music, xxii. 270.
Three Aacts, xxn. 270.
— on the Truth of Christianity, xxii.
284; xxiv. 278.
*— War in Spain, &c., xxv. 274.
Poetical Extracts, xxv. 578.
-< on the Moral Tendency of Divine
Revelation, xxv. 579.
— - Private Devotion, xxvi. 276.
■I Scripture Antiquities, xxvi. 276.
■ on the Bight Improvement of the
' Present Crisis, xxvii, 271.
■■ Poems, xxvii. 271.
Family Prayers, xxvii. 272.
I Life 01 Lady Glenorchy, xxvii. 554.
-— ~ Greek and English Lexicon, xxix.
277.
Jones on the Law of Bailments, by W.
Nicholls, xxix. 279.
— Reign of George III., xxxi. 530.
■ AnsdogisB Latinse, xxxii. 264.
History of Wales, xxxii. 265.
Paul, Life o^ nxii, 646} xxxiii.
276.
•*— * Life of Bishop Hall, xxxiii. 594.
— * Attonie:^'8 Pocket Book, xxxiv. 301 .
— — Travels in Norway, &c., xxxiv. 320 ;
xxxvi. 604.
— — Exposure of the Hamiltonian Sys*
tem, XXXV. 616.
—— « on Music, xxxvii. 301.
— Longinus, xxxvii. 580.
-**— Recollections of Royalty, zxxriii.
301.
Travels in Russia, xxxix. 254.
Jopling, Waistell's Designs for Archiiec*
tural Buildings, xxxv. 614.
Joplin on Corn and Currency, xxxf . 618.
Jordan de Assoy del Rio, and D. Miguel
de Manuel y Rodriguez, Civil Law of
Spain, by Johnston, xxxiv. 300.
Jortm's Sermons, abridged by Whitaker.
xxxiii. 599 ; xxxvi. 30a
Joseph and his Brethren, by H. L. How-
ard, xxx. 293.
Jourdian's Anatomy of the Foital Brain,
xxxiii. 596.
Journal of New Voyages and Travels,
xxii. 272.
■ of an Officer of the King's Ger-
man Leffion, xxxvi. 299.
Jouy's Sylla, by Brandreth, xxxiii. 595.
Jowett's Christian Researches in Syria
and Palestine, xxxii. 551.
Joyce's Chemical Mineralogy, xxxii 264i
" Lay of Truth, xxxii. 268.
Juarros, Statistical and Commercial His-
tory of Guatemala, by Baily, xxxi. 257 ;
xxxii. 551.
Judge V. Berkeley, xxxiii. 278*
Jndices Attici, xxxi. 530.
Juicson's Principles of Political Economy,
xxxi. 532.
Julia, a Pathetic Drama, xxviii. 266.
Julian, by Sir A. de Vere Hunt, xxvii.
268, 271.
Juliana Oakley, by Sherwood, xxxii. 267.
JuUien, sur la PhilosQphie des Sciences,
xxiiL286.
Junius, Letters of, xxvi. 274.
. Critical Inquiry regarding the
Author of, xxxii. 550.
Juvenalis et Persii Satire, eur4 Ruperti et
Koenig, xxxii. 264.
Juvenal's Satires, with a Translation by
Stirling, xxxii. 546.
Digitized by
Googk
333
PART III.— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QVAATEKLt
K.
Kalootitomia, zzn. 274.
Karnath^ an Arabian Tale^ nxvL 603.
Kean and Macready, Critical Examina-
tion of the Performances of, in Richard
III., xxii. 562.
Keating*s Narrative of an Expedition to
the Source of St. Peter'i River, xxxii
270; xxxiii. 599.
Keat8*8 Lamia, and other Poems, xxiv.
276.
Keegan on English Grammar, xxix. 278.
Keepsake, xxxvii. 299 ; xxxix. 249.
■ Juvenile, xxxix. 249.
KeUy*8 Reminiscences, xxxiii. 276.
KelsalPs Classical Excursions from Rome
to Arpino, xxiv. 279, 568.
Kemble's, J, P., life, by Boaden, xxxii.
263.
Kemp's New System of Musical Educa-
tion, xxiv. 272.
Kempe*s Historical Notices of the Col-
legiate Church of St. Martin-l&>Qrand,
xxxii. 551.
Kendall on the Roman Catholic Question,
xxxiii. 279, 598.
Kendrick, the Ionian Islands, xxvi. 547.
' Travellers, xxxiL 549.
Kenilworth, a Romance, xxiv. 571.
— — -^ Illustrations of, xxv. 576.
— — '— Castle, Account of, xxiv. 574.
Kennedy on Pretended Reformers, xxi.
565.
. ' ' on Psalmody, xxvi. 274.
Lectures on the Philosophy of
. the Mosaic Record of the Creation,
xxxiv. 303.
— — Law of Juries, xxxiv. 610.
Works, XXXV. 617.
— — on the Affinity of the Langua^s
of Asia and Europe, xxxvi. 603 ; xxxviii.
601.
Fitful Fancies, xxxvii. 302.
• and Grainger's State of the
Tenancy of Land, xxxviii. 509.
^enney's Benyowsky, xxxiv. 299.
Kenny's John Buzzby, a Comedy, xzvii.
555.
■ ■ Facts and Documents, &c., xxxvi.
303.
Kensington, &c., a Tour to, xxiii. 285.
Kent's English Grammar, xxvi. 545.
Kent, Duke of. Statement of the Case of,
xxii. 269.
— Duchess of. Portrait of, by Dawe,
xxxii. 545.
• Indiaman on Fire, by Daniell, xxxii.
545.
— History o^ by Ireland, zsziz. 254.
Kentish Poems on various Subjects, »di,
270.
Poets, xxv. 578; xxvii. 554.
Town, Account of, xxvL 276.
Kerr's Medical Sketches, xxi. 561 .
Kerrigan's Nautical Astronomy, xxv. 273.
Keux's Architectural Antiquities of Nor-
mandy, xxxiii. 276.
Keynes's Aged Pastor, xxv. 576.
Key's Catalogue of Old Books, xxu. 265.
Keyworth's Principia Hebraica, xxxiu.
277.
Khorasan, Fraser's Journey into, xxxuu
280.
Killarney, Guide to the Lakes of, xx?iu
272.
— Three Days at, xxxviii. 602.
Kilvert's Sermons, xxxvL 303.
King Edward and Queen Marguerite, a
Poem, xxviii. 266.
King's Interest and Discount Tables, xxu
.559} xxviii. 268.
Voyages of Discovery, xxxiv. 304;
XXXV. 61o.
Kmgdom's America and the British Co-
lonies, xxii. 566.
Kingsbury, Rev. W., Memoirs of, by J.
. BuUar, xxi. 263.
Kinsey's Portugal, xxxviii. 603.
Kirby on the Wry Neck, xxi 662.
and Spence's Entomology, xxxni.
597 ; xxxviii. 601 ; xxxix. 525.
Kirk White's Works, xxxl 261.
Kitchiner on Vocal Music, xxvL 274.
Sea Songs, xxx. 295.
Economy of the Eyes, xxx.
589.
. Housekeeper's Ledger, xxxi,
529 ; xxxiii. 276 j xxxv. 319.
- Traveller's Oracle, xxxvii. 301.
Kit-Kat Club, Memoirs of, xxvi. 272.
Klopstock's Messiah, xxxiii. 597; xxxiv.
302; xxxv. 320.
Knickerbocker's History of New York,
xxiv. 273.
Knight?s Theory of the Earth, xxi. 265.
Eastern Sketches, xxi. 564.
— »^ on Calvinism, &c., xxvii. 272.
— ^ — on Derangement of the MLnd^
xxxv. 616.
Knights of the Cross, xxxiv. 609.
— Calendar of, xxxviii. 601.
Knowles's William Tell, xxxii. 264.
' Beggar's Daughter, xxxix. 253.
Knox on Grammar Schools, xxv. 277.
_~ Christian Philosophy, xxx. 296.
Songs of Israel, xxx. 591.
«i»« on Longinus^ xxxv. 317.
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Koch's Revolotion itl Europe, by Crich-
ton, xxxix. 523.
Kcecker's Dental Sur^^r^, xxxv. 318.
Kohlmann on Unitananism, zxxi. 261.
Koni^'8 Icones FossUium SectUes, zzzii.
Kotzebue's Journey to Persia, xxi. 270^
567.
A. Von, Lifeof, xxiii. 281. .
' Voyage of Discovery, xxvi.
276,
Kruitzner, a Tale, by Harriet Lee, xxyiii^
268.
L.
La Bbaumb on Galyanism, xxxv. 318.
Itabourers, Means of Employment for, of
every Age, xxii. 269.
Lackington and Co.'s Catalogue, xxv. 273.
liadies at Home, xxii. 366.
Scrap Book, xxxii. 263.
Lady of the Manor, by Mrs. Sherwood,
zxix. 280; xxxiv. 611.
— Study of a, by Lawrence, xxxii. 545.
—'s Last Stake, by Hogarth, xxxii. 545.
> " ' s Maid, Duties of a^ xxxiiL 279.
Laennec on Diseases of the Chest, by
Forbes, xxxvii. 301 ; xxxviii. 601.
Laidler and Massie's Religion in India,
. xxxvii. 302.
Laing's Lexicon to the New Testament,
xxvL 276.
■ Travels, xxxi. 533 ; xxxiL 270.
Lairds, Last of the, xxxv. 319.
of Fife, xxxviii. 601.
Lake's Sieges of the Madras Army, xxxi.
530.
Lamarck, Syst^me Analytique des Con-
noissances, &c., xxiii. 286.
Lamartine's Last Canto of Childe Ha^
rold,xxxv. 617.
Lamb's Catullus, xxv. 274.
' Account of the Thirty-Nine Arti-
cles, xxxix. 526.
Lambert on G^nus Cinchona, xxv. 577.
Lambeth, Historical Account of, &c., xxx.
292.
■ and the Vatican, xxxii. 269.
Lamouroux, Exposition M6thodique des
Polypiers, &c., xxv. 278.
' Corallina, xxx. 295.
Lancaster's Harmony, xxxi. 533.
Lancastrise Ducatus. Pars Tertia, xxxvii.
580.
Xtandon, L. £., the Fate of Adelaide, &c.,
xxvi. 275.
Lander's Impious Feast, xxxvii. 582.
Landscape Painting in Water Colomrs, In-
structions on, xxiii. 281.
. Gburdening, Morris on, xxxvii.
299.
Landseer's Sabsan Researches, xxx. 292.
■I Monkeyana, xxxix. 249.
Lane's Little Red Riding Hood, xxxii.
263.
. Portrait of Dr. Birkbeck, xxxvi, 299.
Laneham^s Description of the Entertain-
ments given to Queen EUzabeth at
Kenilworth, xxiv. 574.
Languages, Gate to the French, Italian,
and Spanish, unlocked, xxxv. 317.
Lanktree's Roman Antiquities, xxxviiL
599.
Lanzi's History of Painting, by Roscoe,
xxxviL 579.
La Place, Illustrations of the Celestial
Mechanics of, xxv. 273.
Larcher's Notes on Herodotus, xxxvii.
299.
■ Remarks on Herodotus, xxxix.
523.
Lardner's Differential and Integpral Calcu-
lus, xxxiii. 278.
Works, xxxiii. 598.
Larkin's Introduction to Solid Geometry,
xxiii. 282 ; xxiv. 274.
Las Cases, Life, &c., of Napoleon at St»
Helena, xxviil 267.
— — Vision of, by Taylor, xxxii.
550.
Lascelles on Grothic Architecture, xxiv*
271.
Last Man, the, xxxiii. 597.
— — . of the Mohicans, xxxiv. 302.
Supper, xxxix. 254.
Latham's G^eneral Histoxy of Birds, xxv.
275.
Lathom*s One Found Note, xxiv. 276.
Puzzled and Pleased, a Tale^
xxvii, 275.
Latin Grammar, Sjrnopsisof, xxii. 266,
Language, Roots of the, xxxiii. 277,
_ Poets, Selections from, xxxiii. 277.
— Exercises, xxxvii. 300.
-i-.. Grammar, xxxvii. 300.
Latour's War in West Florida, xxi. 568.
Latreille, sur les Zodiaques Egyptiens,
xxv. 278.
Laud's Life, W Lawson, xxxix. 522.
Lauderdale, Earl of, on the Currency,
xxi. 564.
Laurence's Enoch, xxv. 579.
Laurent's Tour through Greece, &c.f xxv.
579.
Lavenham Church, xxvii. 559.
Law Memorials, by C. K. Sharpe, zx|,
265. ^
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Law on Digettioii| XZ7. 275.
— Bishop; Sermon, zxii. 565.
on the TlNory of RMigkm,
zziT. 278.
_ John, Life of, by Wood, zxzi. 529.
— — of Jara, zzvii 268*
— Collection of, Cases, xzxiv. 300*
.— . Magazine, xxxviiL 301.
Lawless's History of Ireland, zxxi. 530.
Lawrence's Stories from the History of
Greece, zziiL 28L
— »— i— Portrait of Lady Londonderry,
* \ 609.
— Stud^ of a Lady, zzzii. 545.
-^ Etonian out of Bounds, zxxTiii.
602.
— Last Autumn, zzxix* 525.
Lawson*s Orient Harping, xsii. 565 >
xxiiL283.
■ Bona Notabilia, zzzi. 530.
Life of Laud, xxxi. 522.
Lawyer, the Cabinet, zxxr. 318.
Lax, Tables for finding Latitude and
Longitude, xxr. 578.
Lays on Land, by I. Fitz-Adam, zzv.
578.
Leach's Introduction to the London Phar-
macopoeia, zxxvi.301.
Leake's Topography of Athens, zxv. 277.
■ Tour in Asia Minor, xxx. 591.
— — Greek Rerolution, xzxiii. 595.
■ Edict of Diocletian, xzxiv. 612.
Leamington Spa, Moncricrif's Guide to,
xxxi. 262, 533.
Leases, tteaJ&ae on, by C. H» Chambers,
xxi. 561.
Le Bas's Sermons, xxvii. 272 ) zxxfii.
582.
' on Mirades, xxx?ii. 682.
Leblanc's Conversational Preceptor, zzrii.
269, 555.
Le Breton on Prisons, zxrl 545.
Lecount on the Chan^ble Magnetic
Properties of Iron, xxiii. 571.
Ledyard's life and Travels, xxxvii. 582.
Lee*8 War in the South Department of
the United States, xxi. 568.
I Manager, xxvii. 555.
— Three Strangers, xxxiii. 595.
— Hebrew Grammar, xxxvii. 579-
Lees, John, Coroner's Inquest on, zxii.
563.
Leeuwen, Commentaries on the Roman
Dutch Law, xxiii. 282.
Lefanu's Leoliiie Abbey, xxi. 563.
■ Tales of a Tourist, xxvii. 271.
Legendre*s Elements of Geometry, by
Brewster, xxx. 294.
Legends of Scotland, xxvii. 270.
Legislative Government of the Country,
&c., on the Decay of, xxi. 565.
Legitimacy; a Poem, by J« Brown^ ksii.
565.
Leicester, Sir J. P., Descriptive Catalogua
of the Gallery of, xxi. 557.
Leigh's Picture of England and Wales,
xzii. 506 i xsiii. 285.
^-— Pocket Atlas, zxii. 566«
Pictiure of London, zzi. 567;
xxvi. 547.
_ - Poems, xxxiii. 598.
■ Pocket Road Book, xxxiv. 304.
— Road Map of England, xxxiv.304.
. and Dalzell*s Emutable Doctrina
of the Conversion of Ptoperty, xxxiv.
300.
Leighton*s Works, Selections from, zzzL
261.
...-^ by Pearson, zzzii. 269.
Le Litterateur, par B. Mansart, xxx. 588«
Leman on Vaccination, xxvii. 557.
Le Marchant's Reports.
251.
Lempriere's Natural History, zzzvi. 603 ;
zxxvii. 301.
L'Enfant du Boulevard, xxi. 569.
Leo, Gesenius's Hebrew Lexicon, zzzii.
551.
LeoUne Abbey, by Miss Lefanu, zzi. 563.
Leonard and Gertrude, zzzii. 268.
Marcet's Modem Jesuits,
^99
Roche Amauld's Modem Jesmts,
249.
Leslie's Geometrical Analyies^ zzvi. 543*
• Natural Philosophy, zziz. 280.
■ V. Blackwood, TVial o^ zzvii. 557«
Lesur, Annuaire Historique, xxi. 569.
Letter to the Gentlemen of England, zzii.
565.
Letters, on Early Rising, zxi. 267.
— from Portugal, ftc, zzi. 567;
zxii. 269.
I on History^ zxi. 560.
— — on the Depreciated Value of
Human Labour, xxii. 270.
from Gomany and Holland^
xxiv. 273.
■' in tihe time of Henry VI., Ac, by
SirJ. Fenn, XXX.292.
— — — ~ in Rhyme, zzxi. 261.
' from Cockney Lands, xxxiv. 612,
-^— — from an Eastern Colony, xxxix. 254*
Lever's Practical Seamanship, zxi. 267.
Lewin's Poor Laws, xxxvii. 580.
Lewis, Gioachimo Greco, on Chess, trans-
lated by, xxi. 562 ; xxvii. 558.
— Scenery of the Tamar and Tavy,
xxix.278.
Lexicon Thucydidseum, xxxi. 256.
Leyden, Dr., Poetical Remains of, xxi. 268«
Liber Scholasticus, xxxix. 523.
Lichfield, Account of, xxii. 566.
Life of an Actor, by Pierce Ej^an, xxx. 294.
-— ^ Love, and Politics, xxxii. 2i57.
Light, on Teaching Languages, zzv. 274j
678.
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Ii|htfi>ot*8 Mereaniile Time Tablet^ :
616.
Lilian Bride, by B. Wilford, xxv. 276.
Lillie'8 English Perfumer, by C. Mac-
kenzie, xxvi. 543, 544.
landley, on the Structure of Fruits and
Seeds, zxii. 266.
' Ro8arumMonogpraphia,zzvi. 541.
■ "; ' ■ ■ British Flora, xxxix. 522.
Lines, written for the Benefit of the suf-
fering Inhabitants of Portland Island,
xzxii. 268.
Lingard*s History of England, xxi. 560 ;
xxiv. 274 ; xxxii. 547 ; xxxix. 523.
LinnsBan Society of London, Transactions
of, XXXV. 614 J xxxix. 525.
Lionel Lincoln, xxxii. 267.
Litchfield's Advice to Young Mothers,
xxvi 274, 544.
Literary Pocket-Book, xxii. 564.
-^— Souvenir, xxziii. 276 ; xxxv. 316 ;
xxzvii. 299) xxxix. 249.
■ Gems, xxxviii. 302.
Literature, French, Chefs d'QEuvre of,
xxiii. 281.
Literature, Royal Society of, of London,
Transactions of, xxxv. 614 ; xxxvL 301;
xxxix. 524.
Lithographic Prints, from Drawings by
Marianne Colstow, xxviii. 265.
Liturgia Anglicana Polyglotta, xxiv.
573.
Liverpool, Earl of, Letters to, on the Dis-
tressed State of Agriculture, &c., xxiv.
277 ; xxvil 271— on the Contest be-
tween the Greeks and Turks, xxvi. 545
—on the Amelioration of Taxes, xxvi.
546.
' ■ Speech on Agricultural
Distress, xxvii. 271.
Letter to, by Western,
xxxiv. 613.
— — — Life of, xxxvii. 299.
Lives of Pocock, Pearce, Newton, and
Shelton, xxii. 265.
Livy, Maps and Plans illustrative of,
xxxiv. 299.
— by Drakenborch, xxxiii. 277.
Lizars* Anatomical Plates, xxx. 294;
ixxxi. 258.
• Picturesque Views of Edinburgh,
xxix.278.
Llave et Lepargo, Novorum Vegetabilium
Descriptiones, xxxv. 617.
Lloyd, on the Defects of the British and
Foreign Schools, xxiv. 572.
— on the Character of Pope, xxvi. 275,
545.
-; — Desultory Thoughts, xxvi. 545.
— Memoirs of Alfieri, xxvi. 541.
— Discourses, xxvii. 272.
*— Duke D'Ormond; a Tragedy, xxTiii*
266.
Lloyd, Botanical Terminology, xxxiv. 61 1 •
Glyndwr, xxxv. 617.
Turner's Views in England and
Wales, xxxix. 522.
Lochanud, a Tale, xxxii. 549.
Locker*8 Lectures on the Bible and Li>
turg^, xxvii. 560.
Views in Spain, xxx. 293, 689.
Lockhart's Pilgrim*8 Tale, xxx. 295.
-^— — Life of Bums, xxxviii. 300.
Lodgers Portraits of Illustrious Person-
ages, xxix. 278.
Loddiges' Botanical Cabinet, xxxviii. 300,
Logic, Manual of, xxv. 577.
Logician's Companion, xxi. 265.
Lollards, the, a Tale, xxviii, 268.
London, Privileges of the City of^ xxv.
577.
■ Catalogue, xxviii 265.
Views of the Environs of, xxviii.
265.
Bridge, Observations on the re-
building, XXXI. 255.
Views in, by Heath, xxxi. 529;
xxxiii. 276.
in the Olden Times, xxxii. 268,
549; xxxvi. 603.
Public Buildings of, xxxii. 545.
Hermit's Tour, xxxv. 319.
and its Vicinity, by Cooke, xxxv.
614 ; xxxvi. 300.
Pocket Chronicle, xxxvi. 304.
Bridge, Chronicles of, xxxvi. 604.
Londonderry, Lord, Life of, xxvii. 554.
Marchioness of. Portrait o^
xxxiv. 299.
— — — Marquess of, Narrative,
xxxviii. 301.
Long's Reflections on the Law of Eng-
land, xxxvi. 300.
Longinus, Knox on, xxxv. 317.
Longitude, Lunar aad Horary Tables, for
ascertaining the, xxxL 530.
Longman, Rees, and Co.*8 Catalogue,
xxxix. 522.
Lord-ChanceUors, Judges, &o., Series of,
xxiv. 300.
Lords of Grippy, xxviii. 269.
Lord's Prayer, Tales in Verse, illustrative
of, xxxiv. 614.
Lorenzo, a Tragic Drama, xxx. 293.
Lovekin's Men&l Calculator, xxiv. 569.
Loudon's Encyclopaedia of Agriculture,
xxxiii. 276 ; xxxvii. 579.
■ Gardener's Magazine, xxxV.
316.
Encydopsedia of Gardening,
xxxix. 522.
Louis XIV., Memoirs of the Court of,
xxi. 560 ; xxx. 589.
Love at First Sight, &c., xxxiii. 276.
Love's Victory, bv Hyde, xxxiii. 595.
Low's History of Scotland, zzzr. 318r
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QUAUTERL^
Lowe and Wrendford*8 Auction Laws,
xxxix.25].
Lowndes's, W*, Bibliog^pher^s Manual,
zxxviii. 599.
Luby's Physical Astronomy, zxxviii. 301.
Luccock's Notes on Rio Janeiro, &c., xxiv.
280.
Lucian, Selections from, xxvi. 273, 541.
Lucretii, Excerpta Libris de Rerum Na^
tura,xxx. 293.
Lumsden's Journey from Merui to Lon-
don, xxvii. 272, 561.
Lunan's Slave Laws of Jamaica, xxiv,
274.
Lungs, Williams on Diseases of the,
xxxviii. 601.
Lunn's Horse Jocosae, xxx. 295,
Lupton^s Ports of England, xxxiv. 304.
Lushington on the Religious Institutions
in Calcutta, xxxiv. 303.
Luther's Select Works, by Cole, xxxv.
320.
Luton Park. Antiquities of the Chapel at,
by Shaw, xxxvi. 601.
Luttrell's Letters to Julia, xxvL 544.
Lyall's Character of the Russians, xxx.
293.
Travels in Russia, &c., xxxi. 533.
Lymington, Garrow's History of, xxxiii.
280.
L3mch, on Nervous AfiPections, &c^ xxvi.
543 ; xxvii. 557 ; xxviii. 267.
Lynn's Star Tables, xxvi. 541 ; xxvii. 554.
Solar Tables, xxvi 541.
Lyon's Travels in Northern Africa, xxiv,
574.
— — Private Journal, xxx. 591.
Unsuccessful Attempt to reach
Repulse Bay, xxxi. 533.
Residence in Mexico, xxxviii. 304,
MginaL Marbles, xxxix. 522.
Lysons, Remains of a Roman Villa, xxiv,
271.
— Magna Britannia, xxvii. 561.
M.
Macaki^'s Medicamina OfEcinalia, xxvii.
270.
Macardy's Evidences of Christianity, xxv.
579.
M'Cabe's Military Medical Reports, xxxiL
548.
M'Cay, History, &c., of the Bank of Eng-
land, xxviii. 268.
M'Chronicle, Rouald, Legends of Scot-
land, xxvii. 270.
M*Cleland's Exchequer Reports, xxx. 589.
M^Cormac on Stammering, xxxviii. 60 1 .
.MaccuUoch's Classification of Rocks, xxv.
274 ; xxxi. 257.
M'CuUoch's PoUtical Economy, xxxi.
26L
— on Malaria, xxxvi. 602.
M'Derwent's Mystery Developed, xxxi.
532.
M*Diarmid*s Scrap Book, xxiv. 571;
xxxi. 531.
*.~~.-.. on Taste, xxvi. 544.
Hacdonald, on the Harmonic System,
xxviii. 268.
McDonnell on Negro Slavery, xxxii. 550.
— — — on Free Trade, xxxiv. 612,
Macfarren's Malvina, xxxiii. 595.
Macg^ill's Letters to a Young Clergyman,
XXIV. 573.
McGregor's Picture of Dublin, xxvi. 276.
Machan's Astronomical Mnemonics, xxxv.
616.
Machin, a Poem, by J. Bird, xxv. 276.
Macintosh's History of Scotland, xxviii.
267.
Ma<^kenzie on the Weather, xxv. 578.
M^Kenzie on the Lachrymal Organs, xxi.
266.
on Marine Surveying, xxi. 562.
' ■ on Mineral Waters, xxi, 562. .
Illustrations of Phrenology,
xxiv. 570.
• Scotland, xxvi. 542.
Mackie's Spirit and Constitution of the
Church, xxxvi. 604.
Mackintosh on the Law of Nature, &c.,
xxxviii. 600.
' Elements of Pathology,
xxxix. 524.
Maclaren, on the Plain of Troy, xxvii,
269.
Maclean's Progress of Medicine, xxL 266.
" Specimens of Systematic Mis-
rule, xxiii. 284.
• Evils of Quarantine Laws, xxxi.
258.
M'Leod's Voyage to Africa, xxiv. 279.
Tales of Ton, xxiv. 571.
Geraldine Murray, xxxv. 319,
Macmichael's Journey, xxi. 270, 567.
« on Scarlet Fever, xxvii, 557 ;
xxviii. 268.
■ on Contagion, xxxii. 548.
M'Nab, on the Political State of the Ci-
vihzed World, xxiv. 573.
Macnaghten*s View of the Catholic Ques^
tion, xxxix. 523.
Macphail, on the Poor Laws, xxi. 565.
Gardener's Remembrancer, xxi,
265.
Mac Queen's Northern Central Africa^
xxv. 274.
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Mac Queen's West India Colonies, xxxii.
269.
Macrimmon, a Highland Tale, xxviii.
268.
Madagascar, History of, lutvi. 273.
Maddy's Plane Astronomy, xxxv. 616.
Madeira, History of, xxvi. 273.
Rambles in, xxxviii. 603.
Madeline, by Mrs. Opie, xxvi. 544.
Madras, Transactions of the Literary So-
ciety of, xxxviii. 303.
Mag^c Lantern, xxviii. 268.
Mahrattas, Duff's History of the, xxxiv.
610.
Maid of Orleans, translated by W. H.
Ireland, xxvi. 545.
Maida, Memoir of the Battle of, xxii.
269.
Maid Marian, xxvii. 270.
Maillard; on the French Language, xxiii.
283; xxvii. 269.
Major Autrichien, xxi. 569.
Major's Questions on Mitford's Greece,
xxxv. 615.
Medea of Euripides, xxxviii. 600.
Malay Annals, xxv. 578.
Malcolm's Central India, xxix. 279,
xxxiv. 610.
History of Persia, xxxviii.
301 J xxxix. 250.
Buccaneer, xxxi. 260.
on Emigration, xxxviii. 304.
Malkin's Classical Disquisitions, xxxiL
547.
. Sermons, xxxvii. 302.
Mallet on Fagging at Winchester School,
xxxix. 252.
Malortie's Fortification, xxiv. 275.
Malt by 's Sermons, xxvii. 272.
Malte Brun's Geography, xxv. 577 ; xxvii.
555; xxxi. 257; xxxviii. 600; xxxix.
523.
Malthus's Principles of Political Eco-
nomy, xxiii. 280.
, Principesd' Economic Politique,
xxiv. 280.
Letters to, xxv. 276.
Inquiry into the Principles, &c.
of, xxv. 276.
Definitions in Political Eco-
nomy, xxxv. 617 ; xxxvi. 302.
Maltravers, Sir R., Life of, xxvii. 268.
Malvina, by Macfarren, xxxiii. 595.
Mammoth, on the, xxi. 563.
Man, by M. A. Hedge, xxviii. 269.
Remarkable Events in the History
of, xxxi. 530.
Manby's Voyage to Greenland, xxvii. 561.
Manchester Literary and Philosophical
Society, Memoirs of, xxi. 557; xxii.
270,564; xxxi. 259.
Mangel Wurzel, on the Cultivation of,
atxxviii.300.
YOU XL. NO. LXXX.
Manifesto to the Spanish Nation, by J.
M. Guerra, xxvii. 559.
Mansel on Demurrer, xxxvii. 580.
Mansford, on Epilepsy, Tti, 267; xxiv.
275.
Manson, Madame, Lettres de, xxi. 569.
Mant's Common Prayer Book, xxiv. 573 ;
xxxi. 533.
Book of Psalms, xxx. 296.
Biographical Notices of the Apos-
tles, xxxviii. 603.
Mantell's Fossils of the South Downs,
xxvii. 269.
-~-. Geology of Sussex, xxxvL 299.
Manuscript of 1814, written at command
of Napoleon, bv Baron Fain, xxix. 280.
Maps and Plans illustrative of Herodotus,
Thucydides, and Xenophon, xxxi. 256.
Marbles, Ancient, in the British Museum,
Engravings from. Part V., xxxv. 614.
Marcella, xxxviii. 601.
Marcet, on Calculous Disorders, xxi. 267.
Modern Jesuits, by Lepage, xxxvi.
299.
Marcian Colonna, by Barry Cornwall,
xxiv. 277.
Mar^chal, Casti's Animaux Parians, xxi.
569.
Marianne, xxxii. 267.
Marie Antoinette, life of, by Mad. Cam-
pan, xxviii. 267.
Marine Surveying, Treatise on, xxi. 562.
Markham's History of France, xxxv. 31 8;
xxxvii. 580.
Marlborough, John Duke of^ Memoirs of|
xxi. 263, 558.
__ ^_- an Histori-
cal Play, xxiv. 568.
Marratt's Mechanical Philosophy, xxxiii.
596.
Marriage Act, by G. Lawton, xxx. 294.
of the Favourite, xxxv. 319.
Bill, Unitarian, Letter on, xxxvi.
302.
. in High Life, xxxviii. 303.
Married and Single, a Comedy, xxxi. 256.
Marriott, Family Sermons, xxii. 272.
Catechetical Instruction, xxxiii.
280.
- Biblical Questions, ibid.
Marryat, on Impressment for the Navy,
xxvii. 271.
Marsh's Divinity Lectures, xxiv. 278.
Charge, xxiv. 278.
Marshall's Naval Biography, xxix. 277.
' Supplement
to, xxxvii. 299.
Marshman's Defence of the Deity and
Atonement of Christ, xxviii. 270.
Martin, Memoirs of Rev. H., xxi. 263.
on the Intellectual Powers, xxi.
264.
• Natural Philosophy, xxvi. 544.
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PART III.— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
Qu^BTXRLT
If aitin, Weftern Satiex, xxxviU. 300.
Martinelli*8 Italian and French Diction-
ary, xlii. b6^.
lfartyn*8 Flora Rustica, xxxi. 530.
Mary Stuart, and the Maid of Orleans,
Tragedies, translated from the German
by J. Salvin,xzx.293.
Mary, Queen of Scots, her Persecutions,
&c., xzxiii. 594.
Mason's Poetical Essays, xxvii. 271 .
Parochial Survey of Ireland,
zzvii. 559.
— ^— Tears of a Dying Christian, &c.,
xxxir. 613.
. by
Evans, xxxvii. 582.
Masonry, Nicholson on, xxxvii. 579.
Massachusetts Bay, by Hutchinson,
xxxviii. 301.
Massaniello, by Soane, xxxi. 530.
Massenburg, xxxii. 549.
Massillon's Thoughts, by Morris, xxxi.
262.
Massinger's Fatal Dowry, by Planch^,
xxxL 530.
Masterton's Stern Resolve, xxx. 293.
Maternal Conversations, xxi. 264.
Mathematical Analysis, Application of, to
the Theories of Electricity and Mag-
netism, xxxviii. 302.
Matheson's Gloljes, xxxiii. 277.
Mathison's Visit to Brazil, &c., xxxii. 551.
Matilda, xxxii. 549.
Matthews' 8 Leuella, xxxi. 26,1.
Matthise^s Greek Ghrammar, xxi. 558;
xxvii. 268.
Matthiasou's Infirmary, xxxviii. 602.
Maturin's Fredolfo, xxi. 559.
— Sermons, xxii. 272.
■ Universe, a Poem, xxv. 276.
Maude's Visit to the Falls of Niagara,
xxxiii. 599 ; xxxiv. 304.
Maugham's Law of Attorneys, xxxvii. 580.
on Literary Property, xxxix.
251.
Maund's Botanic Garden, xxxi. 256;
xxxvi. 299 ; xxxvii. 299.
Maiurice Powell, xxvi. 544.
Mauroi's Guide to the French Language,
xxv. 274.
Maw*s Scripture Lessons, xxxiv. 613.
Mawe, on Mineralogy, xxi. 562.
Voyager's Companion, xxvi. 544.
Maxwell, Plurality of Worlds, xxii. 563,
564.
— — Beauties of English and Scot-
tish History, xxxi. 530.
Mayer, Sportsman's Directory, xxii. 269,
270.
Mayo's Discourses, xxi. 269.
■• Anatomical Researches, xxvii.
557; xxviii.268; xxix.279.
Medical Botany, xxi. 264 ; zzviii. 266.
Medical Hints, xxiii. 282.
Transactions, xxiv. 274.
AnneJs, by Davb, xxxv. 577.
Profession, State of the, xxxiv.
301.
and Chirurgical Society of Lon-
don, Transactions of, xxxvii. 301.
Medici, Lorenzo de'. Life of, xxvii. 269.
Medicina Clerica, xxvi. 274.
Medicine and Surgery, Quarterly Journal
of, xxvi. 543 ; xxvii. 270.
Guide to the Schools of, xxxix.
252.
Medico-Chirurgical Transactions, xxi.
266 ; xxii. 268 ; xxiv. 274 ; xxv. 577 ;
xxxiii. 278.
Magazine, xxx. 294.
Pharmacopoeia, xxvii.
270.
Legalis, xxxix. 25 1 .
Melon, on the Culture of the, xxi. 557.
Melvin's Latin Grammar, xxxvii. 300.
Memes's Memoirs of Canova, xxxi. 529.
Memoirs of a Greek Lady, xxix. 277.
of an English Countess, xxx.
590.
Memorial to the Lord Chamberlain, xxi
264.
Memorials of the Reformation, by Strype,
xxiv. 273, 274.
Memory, Notes to assist, xxxii. 546.
Men and Manners, xxxviii. 601.
Mendham^s Clavis Apostolica, xxv. 579.
Mendicity, Plan for abolishing, xxviiL
269.
Mental Pastimes, xxvi. 544.
— Derangement, Feitch on, xxxviii
302.
Merceron, Trials of, xxii. 268.
Merchant's Petitions respecting Restrio-
tions on Foreign Commerce, xxiv. 277.
Merewether on Parliamentary Reform,
xxvii 271.
Merivale's Letter on the Chancery Com-
mission, xxxvi. 300. ^
Merle's Costan(ja, xxxviii. 303.
Merriman on Parturition, xxiv. 274, 570.
Metcalfe, Letters of Pope Clement XIV.,
translated by, xxi. 562; xxii. 269.
Metres of the Greek Tragedians, Intro-
duction to, xxxi. 530.
Metrical Tales, xxxv. 617.
Mexico, xxxi. 257 — History of, by Mills.
ibid.
Present State of, xxxii. 266.
Customs and Society o^ xxxvii.
582.
Mining District of, xxxviii. 300 —
Lyon's Residence in, 304.
Meyers's Vindication, xxxviii. 603.
Michaelis's Burial and Resiurrection of
Jesus Christ, xxxvi. 604.
Michell on Parturition; xxxviii 600.
Digitized by
Googk
lUvww.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
aag
Middleton's Fajrmer'i Caleadar, xxvi.
541.
— : Free Inquiry, &c., xxxi. 262.
Mid-Lothiaq, Scenery and Antiquities o^
xidi. 561.
Midnight Wanderer, xxiv. 571.
Midsummer Fakies, by Hood, xxxid.
603.
Midwifery, Davis on, xxzii. 548 : auxYiii.
600.
Miei8*s Ttssfth in Chili, xxxiv. 614;
xxxviii. 603.
Military Calendar, East Indift, xxxi.
259.
Combinations, by Gilbert, xxxii.
548.
Sketch Book, xxxvi. 299.
— ; Adventure, xxxix. 522.
Milizia's Celebrated Architects, by Cresy,
xxxiv. 299 ; xxxvii. 299.
Mill'^ Politick Kconomy, xxvi. 546 ; xxi.
591.
Millar's Elements of Chemistry, xxiv.
568.
School Atla^ xxT. 577.
-^' Encyclopaedia Edinensis, xxvi.
274.
Miller on Prevalence of Crime, xxi. 269.
— — Decimal Interest Table, xxiv.
568.
on Bathing, xxv. 577.
• Lily-shi^d Animals, xxvi. 544.
on Statute and Criminal Law,
xxvii. 269, 555.
on Modern History, xxx. 689.
. on Fines and Becoveries, xxxi.
258.
on the Civil Law of England,
xxxii. 265.
on the Doctrines of Christianity
in Reference to Arianism, xxxii. 269.
- Biographical Sketches of British
Characters, xxxiv. 609.
- Greneral, Memoirs of, xxxviii. 599.
Miller's Guide, the, xxiv. 567,
Millingen's Ancient Monuments, xxviii.
265.
Mills's Mexico, xxxi. 257.
Histonr of Chivalry, xxxiii. 378.
Mills on the Morbid Appearances on Dis-
section of the Brain, xxxiv. 301.
Sibyl Leaves, xxxiv. 613,
^— — History of the Crusades, xxxix.
523.
Milman, Tragedies, &c., by, xxv. 276.
Martyr of Antioch, xxvi. 541.
— r Belshaszar, xxvii. 268.
— ^— Anne Boleyn, xxxiv. 299.
Bampton Lectures, xxxvi. 603.
Milne on Comets, xxxix. 250.
Milner's Sermons, xxiv. 574.
Milton's Paradise Lost, in Welch, xxi.
564.
Milton's Poetical Works, by BairkiB%
xxxi. 532— by Todd, xx»v. 613.
Paradise Lost, illusteted by
Martin, xxxii. 268.
— — on Christian Doctrine, xxxii. 551.
on the Doctrine of the Trinky,
xxxviii. 603.
Mina, Life of, xxxi. 529.
Minas, the Two, and the Spanish €hi«-
rillas, xxxii. 268.
Mind, Essay on, xxxiv. 303, 613.
Mineralogy, Conversations on, xxvn. 370»
Mining Companies, American, Plans Mid
Progress of, xxxii. 266.
Notes on.
266.
Ministers of the Go^l, Monitor for,
xxxviii. 304.
Minnesingers, Lays of the, xxxii. 549.
Miracles, Penrose on the Use of, lead.
262.
Mirandola, a Tragedy, by Barry Cornwall^
xxiv. 568.
Miriam and Ellinor, xxxi. 532.
a Jewish Tale, xxxiv. 303.
Mirza Itesa Medeen, Travels of, by Alex-
ander, xxxvi. 604.
Misfortunes of Elphin, xxxix. 525.
Mitchel's Natural Philosophy, xxi. 563.
Mitchell's Aristophanes, xxiv. 272 ; xxvi.
542 ; xxvii. 268.
First lines of Science, zxxvii«
301.
System of Surveying, xxxvii.
301.
Mitford on Country Bankers, xxxiii. 598.
Foscari, xxxv. 317.
Our Village, xxxv. 319; xxxviii.
303.
— — Rienzi, xxxix. 253.
Moderation, by Hofland, xxxii. 549<
Modem Athens, xxxi. 532.
Mogg, Paterson's Roads, xxvii. 561 j
xxxiv. 614.
Mohr on Mineralogy, xxiv. 571 ; xxxU.
264.
Moins' Compendiiun, xxxi. 531.
MoleswOTth's Sermons, xxxii. 269.
Mollien's Travds in Africa, edited by T.
E. Bowdich, xxiii. 285.
Monarchy of the Bees, xxiv. 572.
— — Revived, xxvii. 269.
Monastery, xxiii. 283.
Moncriefs Guide to Leamington Spa,
xxxi. 262.
Bashful Man, xxxv. 317.
-Monkejrs, Memoirs of, xxxiii. 279.
Monkwearmouth and Bishopweannouth,
Account of, xxiii. 285.
Monro's Elements of Anatomy, xxxi.
531.
Montagu's Bankrupt Laws, xxi. 561.
Law of Lien, xxv. 577.
z2
Digitized by
Googk
340
PART III— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QuAHTfiALir
Montana's Letters on the Report of the
Chancery Commissioners, xxxvi. 300.
Montai^e, Le Christianisme de, xxi.
569.
Montbarey, M^moires du Prince de, xzxir.
609.
Mont Blanc, Auldjo^s Ascent of, zxzviii.
304.
Monteath, Diseases of the Eye, translated
from the German of Weller, xxy.275.
Montgomery's Pelican Island, xxxv'u 603.
i._— Omnipresence of the Deity,
xxxvii. 302.
■ Universal Prayer, &c.,
xxxviii. 602.
Monthly Review, General Index to the
New Series of, xxi. 563.
Montmorency's Exercise of the Lance,
xxiv. 275.
Montrose, James, Marquis of, Memoirs of,
xxi. 558.
Montville, xxxiii. 597.
Monumental Antiquities of Great Britain,
XXX. 292.
Moor*s Suffolk Words and Phrases, xxix.
280.
Moore on Management of Children, xxi.
' History of France, xxi. 569.
— Cases in Common Pleas and
Exchequer, xxii. 267.
Mrs. R., Eveleen Mountjoy, xxii.
270.
■ History of Richard III., xxvii.
556.
— Life of Wesley, xxxi. 256.
■ ■ Supplement, xxxi. 256.
Life of Sheridan, xxxiii. 276.
" Epicurean, xxxvi. 603.
Loves of the Angels, xxviii. 269.
— — - and Flather's Digest, xxxii. 265.
Moors, Tales of the, xxxvii. 581.
Moratin, La Mogigati, Comedia, xxii.
562.
More, Hannah, Sketches of Opinions and
Manners, xxii. 271.
Spirit of Prayer, xxxi. 533.
• Pietas Privata, xxxvi. 304.
More Odd Moments, xxxiv. 612.
Moreau's Statistical Chart, xxxi. 260.
— ■^— East India Company's Record,
xxxiii. 278— on British Trade, 598.
Statistical State of Ireland,
xxxviii 601.
' Records of British Finance,
xxxviii. 602.
Moreirs Elements of Philosophy and
Science, xxxvi. 301, 603.
Morewood on Ancient and Modem Inven-
tions, &c., in the Use of Wine, xxx.
294.
Morgagni, de Morbis, par Chaussier et
Adelon, xxv. 278.
Morgan's Lectures to Young People, xxi.
559.
Hampton Lectures, xxii. 271.
Lady, Italy, xxv. 579.
Emigrant's Note Book, xxxi.
262.
— — Law of Marriage, xxxv. 618.
_^— on the Equitable Society,
xxxviii. 601 .
Algebra, xxxix. 251.
- and Addison, on Poisons, xxxix.
524.
Morgann, on the Character of Sir J. Fal-
staff, xxii. 562.
Morison's Lectures on Mental Diseases,
xxxii. 266.
Morning and Evening Sacrifice, xxvii.
561.
— Meditations, xxxi. 261.
Mornings at Bow Street, xxx. 590.
Morpeth's Last of the Greeks, xxxviii.
301.
Morris, Owen, Naaman's History, &c.,
xxii. 272.
Botanist's Manual, xxx. 292.
MassiUon's Thoughts, xxxi. 262.
Flora Conspicua, xxxii. 546.
Landscape Gardening, xxxvii. 299.
Morrison's Prize Poems, xxvi. 545.
Mortgage Precedents, by Coventry,
xxxviii. 301.
Mortimer and Dickenson's Commercial
Dictionary, xxi. 558.
Morton, Po^cal Remains of Dr. Leyden,
xxi. 268.
Discourses, xxv. 579.
School for Grown Children, xxxv.
615.
Moschus. See Bion,
Moscow, an Historical Tale, xxvii. 558.
Moses, Outlines of Canova's Works, xxix.
278 ; xxx. 293.
Mosse's Father's Love, xxxii. 549.
Moss-Troopers, xxxiv. 611.
Mounteney's Inquiry, xxxi. 529.
Mountenoy's Selections from the Journals
of Travellers in Brazil, xxxii. 270.
Moule on Heraldry, xxvii. 556: xxviii.
267.
Moulin, Traits de I'Apoplexie, xxiii.
286.
Mount's Parables of our Saviour, from
the Commentary of Dean Stanhope,
xxx. 591.
Mozart, Handel, &c.. Beauties of, xxiv.
276.
Beauties of, xxxviii. 601.
Much to Blame, xxx. 590.
Mullinger's, Miss, Memoirs, xxxiii. 276.
Mullion*s Illustrations of M'Culloch's
Principles of Political Economy, xxxv.
320.
Mummy, the, xxxvii. 302.
Digitized by
Googk
RXTIBW.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
341
Mundel on the Fiscal Code, xxxviii. 602.
Munster Festivals, xxxvii. 302 ; xxxviii.
601 ; xxxix. 525.
Miirgatroyd*s Refugee, xxxii. 268.
Murphy*s Beauties of the Court of Charles
II., xxxvii. 299.
Murray's Historical Account of Travels,
&c., in Asia, xxiv. 279.
- Lindley, Memoirs, xxxv. 316.
• on the Glow-worm, xxxix. 525.
MusaB Biblics, xxii. 270.
Mus^e de Vari6t^s Litt^raires, xxvii. 270 ;
xxviii. 268.
Museum Criticum, xxvi. 543 ; xxvii. 554.
Musgprave's Translation of Ferreira's Ignes
de Castro, xxxii. 264.
— — — Camoens* Lusiad, xxxiv. 302,
612.
Mushet's Guide forFundholder8,xxv.579.
Mushet, Tables Overturned, xxvi. 545.
MusiC) Art of improving the Voice and
Ear, xxxii. 525.
■ Sacred, xxv. 616.
Works on, xxii. 270 j xxxii. 549 ;
xxxvi. 301.
Musicians, Dictionary of, xxxi. 255.
of Germany, Ramble among,
xxxviii. 304.
Muss*8 Designs from Gay's Fables, xxxii.
263.
Myers's System of Modem Geography,
xxiv. 273.
on Protestant Missionary Esta-
blishments, xxvii. 560.
Mylne's Treatise on Astronomy, xxi. 557.
My Lodger's Legacy, xxii. 270.
Mynshall, a Prison and Prisoners, xxv. 578.
Myriorama, xxx. 293, 589.
Mystery, a Tragedy, xxi. 264, 559.
Mythology, Conversations on, xxxvii. 300.
N.
Napier, Supplement to the Encyclopaedia
Britannica, xxii. 564.
Peninsular War, xxxvii. 580.
Naples, Revolution at, xxiv. 274.
Napoleon in Exile, xxvii. 556.
' Poem on the Death of, from
the French of P. Lebrun, xxviL 558.
• at St. Helena, Life and Con-
Tersations of, by Las Cases, xxviii.
267.
• Demiers Momens de, par An-
tommarchi, xxxi. 529.
• in Russia, by Gourgaud, xxxii.
- or the Mysteries of the Hun-
547.
dred Days, xxxiv. 612.
■ dans r Autre Monde, xxxv. 316.
Nares, Dr., Discourses by, xxii. 565.
> Ancient and Modern History,
xxvi. 542.
. Sermons on Faith, xxxi. 533,
Nathan's Theory and Practice of Music,
xxviii. 268.
Nation, State of, in 1822, xxvi. 545.
— — Answer to, xxvi. 545.
National Prosperity, Restoration of, xxvi.
275.
■ Wealth, Rooke on, xxxii. 550.
Natural History for Children, xxii. 267.
— Appendix of, to Parry's
First Voyage of Discovery, xxx. 295.
Naturalist's Companion, xxxi. 260.
. — Journal of a, xxxix. 525.
I Barrington's, xxxvii. 581 .
Naufragus, Adventures of, xxxvi. 299,
603.
Naval Biography, zzix. 277.
Naval Essays, by Bentham, xxxviii. 303.
Gunnery, Inman on, xxxix. 252.
Papers, referred to in Naval Essays,
xxxviii. 303.
Sketch Book, xxxiii. 597.
Subjects, Suggestions on, xxvii.
559.
Navigation Act, xxvii. 559.
Riddle on, xxxi. 260.
Navy List, xxi. 267.
Regulations, xxxiv. 611.
Neale's Views of Noblemen's Seats, xxii.
561.
Essay on Money-Lending, xxxiv.
302.
Necker, Notices de Madame de Stael,
xxii. 265.
Ned CUnton, xxxii. 267.
Neele's Lyrical Dramas, xxi. 659 ; xxii.
266— Odes and other Poems, xxiv.
572.
Romance of History, xxxvii. 302.
■ Literary Remains, xxxix. 252.
Lectures on English Poetry,
xxxix. 525.
Negro Slavery, McDonnell on, xxxii. 550.
Negro's Memorial, xxxii. 550.
Neilgherries, Letters on the, by Hough,
xxxix. 526.
Nellerton, Revolution d'Espagne, xxi.
569.
Nervous System, Flood on the, xxxix.
524.
Nesbitt and Little on Practical Guaging,
xxvii. 557.
Netherlands, xxx. 296.
Network, xxxiv. 612.
Digitized by
Googk
$4»
PART lU^NBW PUBLICATIONS.
QvAMtmaxjt
N«w9U on the Skmmy of Wales, xzv.
676 ; xxvii. 272.
New England Tale, xxviii. 269.
Newraaim's Hebrew Grammar, xxzvi.
603.
Newnhttn en Green Tea, xxzvL 300.
on Education, xxxix. 250.
Newton on Public Speaking, xxxii. 547.
Ifew Year*! Gift, xxxix. 249.
Nicholas's Notitia Historica, xxxi. 257.
" Epglish Peerage, xxxii. 547.
NichoU's Pathology, xxiv. 570.
■■ Recollections, &c., xxvi. 269.
Tradesman's Law Assistant,
. zxxv. 615.
Nichols' Two Muue Speeches at Gam-
hndge, &c, xxiL 269.
■ Pestivities of King /ames I.,
xxxrii. 300.
~-^— Literary Histoiy, xxxix. 249.
Collection of the Progresses,
Processions, &c., of King James J.,
".545.
Nicholson's Analytical and Arithmetical
Essays, xxiv. 570.
on Involution and Evolution.
xxiv. 274, 570. '
— Matbematici, xxvi. 643.
■ Key to, xxvi.
543.
• Rudiments of Ptetspective,
xxvii 555.
■ — Flute Instructions, xxxi. 260.
• Operative Mechanic, xxxii. 266.
on Masonry, xxxvii. 579.
Views in Scotland, xxxvii. 579.
— and Rowbotham's Alirebra,
Nicolas's Battle of Agincourt, xxxvi.
€02.
Niebuhr's Roman History, by Walter,
xatxvi. 300.
— —— ■ ' by Hare and
Thirlwall, xxxix. 260.
Nigel, Fortunes of, xxvii. 555.
Nimrod, xxkviii. 302.
Noble's Arabic Vocabulary, xxiv. 572.
Plenary Inmirationa, &c., xxxi
533.
Noel et La Place, Lepons Fran^aisM,
xxvii. 269.
No Fiction, a Tale, xxi. 563.
Nolan's Polyglott Grammar, xxi. 558.
Harmonical Gnunmar, xxvi. 544.
Spanish Grammar, xxxv. 617.
on the Com Laws, xxxviii. 304.
Nollekins and his Time% by Sm^
xxxix. 249.
Norman Conquest, History o^ by Thieny,
xxxii. 547 ; xxxiii. 595.
Normanbum, a Novel, xxi. 268.
Normanby, Lord, Speedi of on Roman
Catholic Petitions, xxi. 565.
Normandy, Keux's Architectural Anti-
quities o£, xxxiii. 276.
— Turner's Tour in, xxxviii. 603.
Norris, Rev. H. H., Letter to the Eail of
Liverpool, xxvii. 560.
North, Lives of Francis North, Baron
Guildford, Sir Dudley North, and Dr.
John North, xxxiv. 609.
on Convulsions of Infants, xxxv.
616.
North Pole, Narrative of an Attempt to
reach the, xxxvii. 582.
Northumberland, Architectural Antiqui-
ties of, by Dixon and Richardson, xxiv.
271.
History of, xxiv. 574.
North Wales, Tour through, xxvi. 272.
West Company, Aggressions o^ on
Red River, xxi. 563.
Norton's Piitileges of the City of Loo-
don. xxv. 577.
Note Book for 1822, xxix. 281.
November Nights, xxxiii. 597.
Nun of Arrouca, a Tale, xxvii. 271.
NuptiaB Sacrae, xxiv. 573.
Nuttall's Travds into iht Axkansaw
Territory, xxvii. 561.
Virgil's Eclogues, xxxiii. 694.
Horace, xxxvii. 300.
O.
OuLwooD Hall, xxi. 268.
O'Beirne's Sermons, xxv. 277.
Oberon, hy Planch^, xxxiv. 299.
Obituary and Biography, xxxiii. 594.
Observaticffls on the Letter of J. K. L.,
xxx. 295.
-^ — on die Payments and Sk-
ceipts in Bank of England Notes re-
duced to their Value in Gold, xxb. 27 1 .
Obstinacy, a Tale, xxxiii. 597: xxxiv.
302.
Odd Moments, yw^i 267,
Odelabea, Cioapaign in Saxony, xzii. 267.
Odes and Addresses to Great Pe(ft)le,
xkxU.288.
' fiom the Tini68 loumid, iooAk, 25S.
O'Donnoghue's 8tndtoae«s on Wix, xxL
567.
O'DriscM's Histety of Ir^landw xadrHL
300w
Ogle, Duncan, and Co.'sKl^atidogue, xxv.
273 ; xxvm. 265.
O'Halloran's Practical Remarks* ttxi.
259.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbtixw.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
343
O'Hi^oraii, a Novel) zxxiii. 279.
O'Hare, or 1798, xxxii. 549.
Family, Tales by the, xxxiL 267
— Second Series, xxxy. 319.
0'Keefe*8 Dudley, xxi. 563.
Recollections of the Life of,
xxrv. 316.
Old Arm Chair, xxx. 590.
Oldcastle's Royal Progress, zxvi. 275.
Old English Squire, xxv. 578 ; xxvi. 275.
Hi^s, by Reed, &c.,xxru. 264, 547.
Tapestry, a Tale, xxi. 268.
O'Leary, Rev. A., Life of, xxviii. 265.
Oliver's Star in the East, xxxi. 531.
— Free Masonry, xxxvii.301.
O'Meara's Account of the Treatment of
Napoleon Buonaparte at St. Helena,
xxi. 565.
. — Napoleon in Exile, xxvii. 556.
Opening of the Sixth Seal, xxxix. 525.
Opie's Detraction Displayed, xxxix. 525.
Opinion, Public, State of, in Qreat Bri-
tain, xxxvi. 582.
Opinions, Essays on, xxvi. 275.
O'ReUly*! Irish-English Dictionary, xxv.
578.
Orger's Anacreon, xxxii. 546.
Orgiazzi's Map of Italy, xxvii. 269, 555.
Orlo£^ M4moires sur le Royaume de Na-
ples, xxi. 569.
Onne's Memoirs of Dr. Owen, xxiv. 272,
568.
• Bibiiotheca Biblica, xxxi. 261.
Ormsby's Letters, xxi. 270, 567.
Orton's Sacramental Meditations, xxviii.
270.
Osmond, a Tale, xxvii. 658 ; xxviii. 266.
Oswald on Alluvial Deposits, &c.,xxix.
278.
of Dunnikier, Memorials of the
Life of, xxxii. 263.
Otter's Life of E. D. Clarke, xxxi. 255.
Ottey's Catuilus's Marriage of Peleus and
Thetis, xxxvi. 302.
Ottlev's Italian School of Desifm, xxiz.
278. ^
Catalogue of Picturei in the Na-
tional Gallery, xxxiv. 609.
' Dictionary of Chemistry, xxxiv.
609.
Algebra, xxxix. 251.
Oulton*s Picture of Margate, xxiii. 285.
Ouseley's Travels, xxi. 567 ; xxv. 579.
Outalissa, a Tale, xxxix. 253.
Outlaw of Taurus, by T. Dale, xxiv. 572.
Outlines of Character, xxviii. 268.
Owen, Dr. John, Memoirs of, xxiv. 272,
568.
Works of, xxix. 262;
XXX. 396.
System of Education at New La-
nark, XXX. 588.
Works, Selections from, by Wikon^
xxxiv. 613.
Oxford, Antiquities of the Cathedral at,
xxvi. 272.
Hints for, xxxvii. 301.
Night-Caps, xxxvii. 301.
Prize Poems, xxxviii 303.
Oxley's Expeditions in New South Wales,
xxiv. 279.
Page, Letters on the Bank Restriction,
xxii.27L
Paine, Thomas, Life of, by J. S. Harford,
xxii. 662.
Painters, Lives of Celebrated, xxxvi. 601.
British, Lives of, xxxix. 249.
Paintuag, New Process in, xxvi. 272.
Palais Royal, Picture of, xxi. 563.
Paleeoromaica, xxviiL 269.
Palestine, Historical Map of, xxiii. 282.
Travels in, by J. S. Bucking-
ham, xxvi. 276.
Paley's Evidences, Analysis of, xxx.
591.
. Works, xxxiv. 304.
Natural Theology, by Paxton,
and Engravings illustrative of, ibid,
Palgrave'fi Parliamentary Writs, xxxvii.
580.
Palin, Influence of National Manners on
Female Life, xxvii. 270.
Paknex on Railway b> xxi^ 279.
Palmer and Co., of Hyderabad, Pecu-
niary Transactions of, xxxiL 268.
Palmerston, Viscount, Letter to, on the
Subject of an Ophthalmic Institution
for Chelsea Pensioners, xxii. 268.
Panam, Madame Pauline A. A., Memoirs
of, xxix. 277.
Papal Power, the, xxxiii. 599.
Paper Money, Pamell on, xxxvi. 30% 603;
xxxvii. 302.
Parables, Lectures on, xxvi. 547 $ xxviL
560.
Paiga, a Poem, juui. 270.
Proceedings in, xxi. 565.
History of, by Col. de Bosset,
xxiv. 569.
Paiganotes, Estimate of the Property
abandoned by, xxiv. 273.
Paris on Diet, xxxiv. 611.
Paris, Pugin's Views of, xxviiL 599.
Parish Clerk, xxix. 280.
^ Poor; t»iw relating to, ixro. 251.
Digitized by
Googk
344
PART lU— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUARTBBLT
Park on Fever, xxvii. 270.
— — Contre Projet, zzxix. 524.
Parker's History of the Court of Chan-
eery, xxxvii. 580.
Parkinson's Synopsb Zoo-nosologica, xxi.
266,571.
« ■ on Fossil Organic Remains,
xxvii. 556.
Parliament, Instructions on the Passing
of Private Bills through, xxxii. 265.
•i*— ~ Session of, for 1825, xxxil547;
xxxiii. 278.
Parliamentary History of England, xrii.
270.
— — — — Debates, xxiv. 273; xxvi.
275.
Proceedings, Reports of,
Abstracts, for 1825, xxxiv.
History for 1826, xxxv. 317.
Review, xxxv. 317, 615;
xxxviii. 304.
Writs, by Palgrave, xxxvii.
xxxiii. 595.
294.
580.
Pamell on Paper Money, xxxvi. 302, 603 ;
xxxvii. 302.
Parochial Law^ xxxvii. 300.
Parr*s Life, by Field, xxxvii. 579.
^— Memoirs and Correspondence, by
Field, xxxviii. 599.
Works, by Johnstone, xxxviii. 602.
Parry's Experiments on the Arteries, xxi.
267, 561.
— ^— Voyage of Discovery, &c., xxv.
278.
— — Second Voyage, &c., xxx. 296.
Third Voyage of Discovery, xxxiv.
■ Voyages, xxxvii. 582.
■ Cambrian Plutairch, xxxi. 629.
• Last Days of Lord Byron, xxxii.
- Medical Writings, xxxii. 548.
Introductory Volume to the Me-
dical Writings of Dr. Parry, xxxiii. 278.
• Legendary Cabinet, xxxix. 526.
614.
263.
Parsonage Houses, Designs for, by Hunt,
xxxvi. 601.
Parthenon of Athens, remarks on the in-
tended Restoration of, as the National
Monument of Scotland, xxxi. 255.
— — the, xxxii. 548.
Partington's Historical Account of the
Steam-Engine, xxvii. 558.
Natural and Experimental
Philosophy, xxxvii. 581.
Parturition, Mitchell on, xxxviii. 600.
Passion, Tales of, xxxix. 253.
Passions, Historical Illustrations of the
Origin and Progress of the, xxxii. 266.
Past Feelings Renovated, xxxix. 252.
Pastor's Sketch Book, by Redford, xxxv.
614, ^ '
Patch's Law of Mortgages, xxvii. 556.
Paterson's Roads, by E. Mogg, xxvii.
561 ; xxxiv. 614.
. on Roads, xxi. 562.
on the Highways of the King-
dom, xxviii. 269.
Pathology, Pering's Principles of, xxxiii.
278.
Mackintosh's Elements of, xxxix.
524.
Paton's Principles of GJenius, xxvii. 558.
Paul, St., Epistles of, xxL 566.
Paxton's Illustrations of the Holy Scrip-
tures, xxxii. 269.
Peace Campaigns of a Comet, xxxix.
525.
Peall on the Foot-Rot in Sheep, xxxii. 546.
Pearce's Sermons, xxv. 579.
Pearson, Sermons by, xxiv. 573 ; xxxviii.
603. i
Astronomy, xxx. 588; xxxviii.
6€0 ; xxxix. 523.
Peasant of Auburn, xxi. 268.
Peckston on Gas-Lighting, xxii. 266.
Pedestrian, Recollections of a, xxxiv. 304.
Peel, Right Hon. R., Letter to, on the
Bank Restriction, xxi. 564.
————— ■ Speech on the Ro-
man Catholic Question, xxi. 565.
- Letter to, on the
Variable Standard of Value, xxi. 268.
. Second Letter to,
on the Increase of Pau^ierism, xxi. 268.
Acts, xxxvii. 300.
by Archbold, xxxvii. 580.
Peerage and Baronetage Charts, xxiv.
571 ; xxxi. 531.
' Ancient, xxxiv. 306.
Peithmann's Greek Grammar, xxxviL 300.
Pelham, a Novel, xxxviii. 303.
Penelope, a Novel, xxxviii. 303.
Peninsula, Heroine of the, xxxiv. 302.
Adventures in the, xxxv. 316 ;
xxxvi. 299.
Peon on the Iliad, xxvi. 273, 541.
Mineral and Mosaical Geology,
xxvi. 542.
W., Life of, by Mary Hughes,
xxvii. 554.
Comparative Estimate, remarks on,
xxxiii. 599.
Pennington's Journey into various Parts
of Europe, xxxii. 551.
Pennsylvania, Memoirs of a life in, xxL
568 ; xxvi. 541.
— — — i English Settlement in, xxi.
569.
Pen Owen, a Novel, xxvii. 270.
Penrose on Human Motives, xxiii. 285.
on the Use of Miracles, xxxi. 262.
' Journal, xxxii. 546.
Pope's Neapolitan Revolution, xxvi. 542.
Pepys's Memoirs, xxxii. 546.
Digitized by
Googk
BjCTlBW*
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
345
Percival on Typhus Fever, xxi. 266.
History of Italy, xxxii. 265;
250.
Percivall's Lectures on the Veterinary
Art, XXXV. 318.
Percy Anecdotes, xxvi. 272 ; xxvii. 558.
Percy's History of London, xxx. 59L
Peregrine Proteus, xxxi. 531.
P^re la Chaise, Monuments of, by Serres,
xxxi. 255.
Pering*s Principles of Pathology, xxxiii.
278.^
Periodico Trimestro, Intitulado Varie-
dades, xxx. 294.
Perke^s Diseases of Literary Persons, xxi.
561.
Persia, Journey in, xxiii. 286.
Malcolm's History of, xxxviii.
30i.
Persian Life and Manners, Sketches of,
XXXV, 320; xxxvi.304.
Perspective, Rules for Drawing in, xxxviii.
599.
■ Amateur's, xxxix. 249.
Pestalozzi on Early Education, xxxvii.
300.
Peter's Letters to his Kinsfolk, xxi. 567.
Peterkin on Orkney and Zetland, xxvii.
561.
Petersdorff's Law of Bail, xxxi. 257.
• Legal Dissertation, &c., xxxi.
258.
- Greneral Index, xxxi. 258.
- Abridgment, xxxi. 530.
• Supplement, xxxix. 251.
Petitot, Collection des M^moires, xxi. 569.
Petrarch, Essays on, xxviii. 268.
Petiet's Original Sacred Music, xxxvi.
301.
Pettigrew's Bibliotheca Sussexiana, xxxvi.
601.
Pettman on Political Economy, xxxix.
253.
Peveril of the Peak, xxviii. 268 — Hbtori-
cal Notices of Two Characters in, xxix.
280.
Pejrron's Defence of the Waldenses, by
Sims, XXXV. 318.
Peyrouse on the Agriculture of the South
of France, xxi. 557.
Pharmaceutical Guide, xxvii. 270.
Pharmacopoeia Collegii Regalis Medico*
rum Londinensis, xxx. 294.
in English, xxx. 294, 589
' New London, translated,*
xxxi. 259.
Phelan and O' Sullivan's Digest of Evi-
dence on the State of Ireland, xxxiv.
302.
Philandering, an Opera, xxx. 293.
Philip, on Symptomatic Fevers, xxiv. 274.
^■^— on Indig^estion, xxxv. 616.
Travels in South AInca, sxzviil
304.
Phillimore, Speech of, on the Marriage
Act, xxvii. 271.
Phillips' s Mineralogy, xxi. 562.
Pomarium Britannicum^ xxiv.
274.
272; xxvi. 272.
• on the Law of Evidence, xxiv
• Letter by, xxv. 577.
on Atomic Phenomena, &c.
xxvi. 275.
— — on Vegetables, xxvi. 541 .
Pharmacopoeia Londinensis,
XXX. 294, 589.
Floral Emblems, xxxii. 546 ;
xxxiii. 279.
State Trials, xxxiii. 596.
Tour through the United King-
dom, xxxix. 254.
Phillpotts* Letters to Butler on his Book of
the Roman Catiiolic Church, xxxii.
269; xxxiii. 698.
— — ^ Supplemental Letter, ibid.
Letter to Mr. Canning on the
Catholic Question, xxxv. 618; xxxvi.
302.
Philology, &C., Researches in, xxx. 589.
Philosophy, New Science of, xxx. 295.
Natural, Readings in, xxxviii.
600.
■ Intellectual, Conversations
on, xxxix. 525.
Phrenological Journal, xxx. 295.
Physicians, Colleges of, in Ireland, Trans-
actions of, xxi. 266.
Physiognomical Portraits, xxv. 576.
Picard, L'Homiete Homme, xxxii. 267.
— — ^ Novice, ibid.
Choix des Comedies en Prose, by
Duvard, xxxv. 615.
Pichler's Waldstein, xxxviiL 303.
Pichot's Historical and Literary Tour,
xxxiii. 280.
Pickersgill's Portrait of Lady Rodney,
xxxv. 317.
Picquot's Astronomy, xxvi. 541.
Picture-Galleries in England, xxx. 589.
Piggott's Christian Advocate, xxix. 282.
Pignotti^s History of Tuscany, translated
by J. Browning, xxviii. 267.
Pilgrim, Tales of a, xxxv. 617.
Pilgrims, Peep at the, in 1636, xxxii. 267.
Pilkington's Dictionary of Painters, xxxi.
255.
Pine-Apple, on the Cultivation of the,
xxvii. 554.
Pinelli's Views in Rome, xxxvi. 601.
Pine-Tree Dell, xxxvi. 603.
Pinkard, Cases of Hydrophobia, xxii.268.
Pinsent, on the Distress of Mercantile
Shipping, &c., xxiv. 277.
on Political Economy, xxv. 276.
Piranesi and Guichoney, Italian and
English Ghrammar, xxiii. 283.
Pirate, zzvi. 544; zzz. 295.
Digitized by
Googk
us
PART IIL—NKW PUBLICATIONS.
PusiM, Atrodtiet of, by Aaroa Smith,
xzx. 588.
Pitkiu*if Commerce of the United States,
sad. 568.
Pitman, on St. John, zzvi 276.
. Sermons, xixi. 533 ; xixrii. 3^ ;
xzxix. 254.
Succinct View, ftc, zxxii. 651.
Pitt (E. of Cha^am), Letter on Supersti-
tion, xxii. 269.
Right Hon. W., Life of, by Tomline,
XXT. 273.
Pius VII., Pope, Correspondence with the
King of Naples, zxxv. 616.
Place, on Population, xxri. 546.
Plain Truths, xxxi. 532.
Planch€*s Oberon, zxxiv. 299.
Descent of the Danube, zzzviii.
603.
Planta, on tile Helvetic Confedemy, zxvi.
542.
Planter's Ghiide, by Stewart, xxxTii. 579 ;
xzxix. 249.
{^atonis Phsdo, xxxiiL 277.
« Opera, recensuit Bekker, xxxv.
316.
Piatt's English Synonymes, xxxiii. 595.
Plaoti Comosdia Suporstites, xxix. 277.
Playfair's Works, xxvi. 544.
Pleasure Tours in England and Wales,
xxvii. 561.
Pleasures of Home, xxxii. 549.
Plumbe, on Ring-worm, xxv. 577.
Plumptre's Sermons, xxxvi. 303.
Poems, Indian and Laiarus, xxiy. 572.
for a Sick or Melancholy Hour,
xxxi. 260.
Professional, xxxvii. 302.
Poetry, Ancient Humorous, xxL 564.
Poinsot, Elemens de Statique, xxV. 278.
Poisons, Essay on, xxx. 590.
Morgan and Addison on, zxxix.
524.
Pola, Antiquities of, by T. Allason, xxi.
263,557; xxn.561.
Poland, Emigration to, xxii. 271.
Polar Sea, Narrative of a Second Expedi-
tion iot xxxviii. 304.
Police of London, Letter on, zxv. 276.
Political Economy, Essay on, xxv. 276.
— Obseorvations on, xxr.
276.
281.
> Questions in, xxix.
Aphorisms, xxv. 277.
Pnmer, xxxiv. 6 1 3.
Pollok's Course of Time, xxxvii. 582.
Polwhele^s Traditions, xxxiiL 594.
Polydetes, Travels of, xxxiv. 612.
Pomarium Britannicum, xxiv. 272 $ xxvL
272.
Pomologi^l Magazine^ by Sweet, noEVi.
602; »xirii.299.
QvAmmmiA
561;
Pompeii, DeHanattont of,
xxxvii. 601.
Ponder*8 Noctes Attics, xxxii. 267.
Pons*s Doctrine of the Church of Geneva,
xxxii. 269.
Pontey on Forest Trees, xxxvii. 299.
Poole's Byxantium, xxix. 281.
— .-^ Scape-Goat, xxxv. 317.
Poor Laws, Defence of, xxi 268.
Letter on, xxvi. 546.
Poor Man's Rreservative, by Whitfe,
xxxiii. 280.
PopaniUa, Captain, Voyage of, xxxviii.
303.
Pope's fiawy on Man, zxiL 564 ; zzBL
_- trandated into
Portugueze, xxii. 564.
Laws of Excise, xxii 267.
Merchant's Custom and Excite
Guide, xxix. 277.
Lecture oi^ Shipping, xxxi. 631.
Works, Supplement to, xxxii. 550.
Poppy, on the Cultivation o^ for Opium,
xxx. 292.
Popular Tales of the Northern Nations,
xxix. 280.
Population, Effect of an Increase of Ccff-
rent Money on, xxvL 559.
— of the British Empire, xxviii.
269.
Porchester's Moor, a Poem, xxxii. 549.
Don Pedro, xxxvii. 580.
Porden's Coeur de Lion, xxvii. 271.
Porquef s Trisor de TEcolier Francois,
xxxii. 547.
IVaducteur Parisien, xxxv. 317.
Poraon, Photii Lexicon, xxviii. 266.
— — Vindication of, xxxvii. 302.
II I NotsinAristophanem, xxiv. 272.
Portalis, L'Esprit philosophique duzant le
18me Si^e, xxiv. 280.
Porter, on Typhus Fever, xxi. 266,
Village of Maiiendorpt, xxiv. 671.
Transit in Georgia, &c, xxv.
278.
—Roche Bkndie, xxvii. 55Sf.
Tales round a Winter Hearth,
■kxiu. 597; xxxiv. 302.
-^— Honor O'Hara, xxxv. 319 ; xudx.
525.
Coming Out, &c,, xxxvii. 681.
Eminent Women, xxxix. 249.
Portfolio, The (Engravings), xxviii. 265.
Portia Bellenden, or The Only Child,
xxiv. 572.
Portraits of Foreign Composeics, xxiv. 271 .
of Eminent Characters in the
Waverley Novels, xxvii. 269, 555 ; xxx.
293.
— *- of Illustrious Persons, xxxv. 3 17,
Portugal, RevolutioBfl of^ xxxvL 602.
Fortogal, fay m&«qr, zniili* 603.
Digitized by
Googk
VBW PUBLICATIONS.
Uf
PoBtuffotte Life tdi MinwtWi by A. P.
D.&^xzxiv.304.
Pioithuiiioug Pltp«r», xxxvii. 302.
Pott, Archdeacon, Charge o( ud¥. 278 ;
xxvi. 275.
— Sermons, xxiv. 573.
— Discourses on the Rule of Life, zxix.
281.
Potter on the Senses of Words^ zxxix.
250.
Pouqueville, Voyage dans la Grece, zziv.
Powell on Derises, by Jarman, zxxvl
300.
Poynet, The Wiiard, Priest, end the
Witch, zxvi. 544.
Pozzo*s Catholicism in Austria, xxzvi. 302.
Pratt, on Courts of Requests, zxxi. 258.
— Difi;e8ted Index, xzxiv. 300.
*— ^ Cnminal Statutes, xxxvi. 602.
Praut's Illustrations of the Rhine, szxi*
255.
P^yer, Spirit ^ by Hannah More) Xtti.
533.
■ Forms of, xzxvti. 302.
Prayers, by Rev. T. LeMesurier, ili?.
278.
Pkeadier, or Sketches of Sermon*, xzrl.
546.
Precaution, xxv. 276.
Precept and Example, xxxii. 547.
Precipitance, H Tale, xxix. 280.
Prescriptions, Conspectus of, xxxi.531;
xijdi.548.
Piresent Distresses, Motives for an In-
quiry into, xxiv. 277.
Preston, on Abstracts of THles, xxi. 561.
on Estates in Fee, &e., xxii. 267.
Preston in Lancashire, History of, zxvii.
561 ; xxviii. 270.
Price's Exchequer Reports, xxi.560 ; xxii.
267.
Mahomedatt History, xxv. 269.
Chemistry, xxvL 543 j xxvii. 969.
on Leecbi^eeding, xxvii. 557.
Essay on the Physio^on^ of the
Inhabitants of Great Britain, xxxix.
525.
Prichard's Egyptian Mythology, xxiv.
671.
— — ^— - on the Nervous System^ xxvi.
543.
Physteal BMoty of Bfankitt^,
x^Lxv. 318.
Pridham's Family Lectures, xxxiii. 699.
Priestley's English Grammar, xxxvi. 802.
I^nce, on Conveyancimr, xxi. 265.
Pring, on die Laws of Orgainc life, xxii.
Prinsep's Narrative of tSie late Pc^ical
and Military Sv«ntk in fititish Indii^
xxiv. 278.
^■••^■■"** jxisuny vi uiD «iuiisiH.uuui m
India diuring the Administration of tfa«
Marquis of Hastings, xxxiL 550.
Prinsep, IVaniactions in British India,
xxxii. 265.
^— ^ Essay on Money, xxL 565.
— r— -on the Commerce, &C., ofBen-
^, xxix. 281.
Prmting, History of, in England, &c.,
xxi. 557.
Prior's Life of Burke^ xxx. 588$ xxxiv.
299.
Lectures on Astronomy, xxxv.
616.
Priory of Birkenhead, xxi. 268.
PtiqiMt's Nonveau Cours de la Litt^n^
ture, xxxv. 31 7.
Prison Discipline, R^>oit on, xxvL 273 ;
XXX. 295.
Proctor's Journey across the Cordillera
of the Andes, xxxii. 270.
Propaganda, xxi. 566.
Prophecies, relating to the Messiah, xxi.
566.
' of Eminent Persons, xxiv. 571.
Prophecy of the Tagus, from the Spanish,
xxix. 281.
■ Faber's Calendar of, xxxviiL
304.
Prophetess, a Tale, xxxv. 319.
Prophetical Connexion between the Old
and New Testament, xxx. 591.
Prophets and Apostles, compared, xxxiii.
Prose and Poets, xxxv. 617.
Prosings, by Humphrey Ravelin, xxviir.
269.
Protestants* Protest against the Catfaolie
Claims, xxxv. 320.
Protestant Securities Suggested, xxxviii
300.
The, xxxix. 253.
Provost, The, xxvii. 270.
Prout's Drawing-Book, xxvi. 272.
on Calculus, &c., xxvi. 274 5 xxvii.
270.
Prowett's Orthodox Belief, &c., xxvi. 276,
546.
Psalms, Commentary on, xxii. 565.
-^— translated by Sir P. Sydney and
the Countess of Pembroke, xxix. 281.
Translation of, xxxii. 551.
by Warner, xxxviii. 603.
Public Characters, for 1828, xxxviii. 300.
PuflBad, xxxviii. 602.
Pugin's Specimens of Gothic Ardiitee-
ture, XXIV. 567 ; xxvi. 541.
Grothic Furniture, xxxvii. 579.
■ ' Views of Paris, xxxviii. 599.
— ^— and Britten's Public Buildings
of London, txxvii. 299.
Pullen's Mother's Book, xxiv. 569.
Pcdse, ftncco on the, xsivii. 300.
Pursglove's Guide to Fariiety, xxx. 294.
Digitized by
Googk
948
PART III.— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
Quarterly
Pusey'fl Letter to Lord Carnarvon,
xzxviii.301.
— on the Rationalist Character in
the Theology of Germany, xxxviii. 304.
Puzcled and Pleased, by F. Lathom, zxvL
275.
Pyne*8 History of the Royal Residences,
xxiv.279.
Q.
QuAiN*8 Anatomy, xxxviii. 601.
Quarantine Laws, £vil8 of, by Maclean,
xxxi. 258.
Quarles's Enchiridion, xxvii. 270.
Spare Hours, xxvii. 558.
Quarterly Journal of Science, Index to,
XXXV. 617.
Queen Charlotte, Memoirs of, xxi. 558.
Queen's College Catalogue, by Home'
xxxvi. 601 ; xxxix. 522.
Quentin Durward, Historical Illustrations
of, xxix. 279.
Quin's Collectanea Latiua, xxvii. 269, 555.
Visit to Spain, xxix. 282.
Quinand, Account of, xxxl 531 .
R.
Rackbll's West Indies, xxxi. 531.
Radcliflfe's Gaston de Blandeville, &c.,
xxxiv. 611.
Rafiaelle Cimaro, a Tragedy, xxi. 264.
Raffles' s Lectures, xxiii. 285 ; xxvii. 560.
— — Sermon, xxxvL 304.
Rafter's Memoirs of Gregor McGregor,
xxiv. 273.
Ralfe's Naval Chronology of Great Bri-
tain, xxi. 560.
Ram's Law of Tenure and Tenancy, xxxii.
266.
— — on Wills of Landed Property,
xxxvi. 300.
— on the Right of a Father to the
Custody of his Children, xxxviii. 600.
Rambach's Meditations on the Passion of
Christ, by Benson, xxxvi. 303.
Rambles of Redbury Rook, by Wood,
XXXV. 319.
Rameses, xxxi. 260.
Ramsbotham's Observations in Midwifery,
xxiv. 570 ; xxv. 275.
Ranken's History of France, xxi. 265;
xxvii. 269.
' Institutions of Theology, xxvii.
272.
Ranking's Wars and Sports of the Mon-
gols and Romans, xxxiv. 300.
Raper's System of Signals, xxviii. 601.
Rational Recreations, xxxi. 259.
Rattenbury's Poems, xxvi. 545.
Ravenna, a Tragedy, xxxi. 530.
Ravenstone, on Political Economy, xxv.
578.
I I on the Funding System, xxxi.
532.
Raymond's Village Schoolmaster, xxix.
281.
Raynes's Practice of the Quarter-Sessions,
xxxiv. 301.
Reader, on Diseases of the Heart, xxv.
275 ; xxvii. 557.
Real Property, Analysis of the Law of,
xxxviL 580.
Reale's II Bagatello, xxv. 274.
Reasons for Op^sing the Present Admi-
nistration, xxvi. 546.
Rebel, the, xxxiii. 597.
Rebellion of the Beast, xxxiv. 612.
Rector's Memorandum Book, xxiv. 275.
Rector of Overton, xxxviii. 303.
Recollections of the Peninsula, xxix. 282.
Recueil deContes Frant^oises et Italiennea^
xxiii. 281.
Redgauntlet, xxx. 590.
Red Rover, xxxvii. 302.
Rede's Memoir of Canning, xxxvii. 299.
Redi's Bacchus in Tuscany, by Huni^
xxxii. 268.
Redivivus's Holy War, xxxiii. 279.
Reece on the Effects of Diosma Crenata,
xxxi. 259.
on Costiveness, xxxiv. 301.
Reeding's Coinage of Great Britain, xxL
564.
Rees's Cyclopaedia, xxi. 267.
Reeve's Stanmore, xxxi. 260.
Reeves's History of English Law, xxxix.
Reflection, by^Hofland, xxxiv. 612.
Reflections on the Difficulties of the Coun-
try, xxv. 276.
Reformation Vindicated, a Sermon, by J.
Fletcher, xxvi. 547.
— ^— ^ Religion of the, xxxiv. 613.
— ^-— ^ History of, xxxix. 250.
Reformers, English and Scottish, Works
of, xxxviii. 304.
Refugee, by Murgatroyd, xxxii. 268.
Renter, Annual, for 1827, xxxix. 252.
Reichard's Itineiaiy of Gennany, zzi. 567.
Digitized by
Googk
Rbvibw*
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
349
Reichard's Itinerary of Denmark, &c., xxiv.
280.
Reid on Hypochondriasis, xxv. 577.
Voyages to New South Wales, xxvi.
547.
Reign of Terror, xxxiii. 595.
Reine Ganziani, xxxii. 268.
Rejected Articles, xxxiv. 612.
Relfe's Music Scroll, xxi. 563.
Lucidus Ordo, xxv. 274.
— — Saltusad Parnassum, xxv. 578.
Relief of the Oppressed Labourers, Means
of, xxi. 565.
Religio Militis, xsccvi. 604.
Religion? Is this, xxxiii. 597.
of England, considered Politi-
cally, xxxviii. 300.
Religions, &c., of all Nations, xxiv. 574.
Rehgious Discourses, xxxviii. 304.
■ Opinions, Tendency to Extremes
in, xxxix. 254.
Reliquiae Diluvianae, by Buckland, xxix.
278.
Remarkable Events, by Watts, xxxi. 259.
Remonstrance on the Condition of the
Poor, xxi. 565.
Remusat, M6moires de la Dynastie R6-
gnante des Djogouns, xxiv. 280.
Renegade, by N. Hollingworth, xxiii.
283.
Rennell on Scepticism, xxi. 267.
Proofs of Inspiration, xxvii. 272.
Account of his Life and Writings,
xxxi. 256.
■ Sermons, xxxii. 269.
Rennie on Gout, xxxii. 548 ; xxxviii. 302.
Supplement to the Pharmaco-
poeias of London, &c., xxxiv. 301 ;
xxxviii. 302.
Rents, Tithes, &c., Fallacies on, xxxv.
618.
Renwick's Narratives of Miss M'Evo/s
Case, xxiv. 570.
Reports of the Select Committee of the
House of Commons on the Highways,
xxii. 271.
___ on Royal
Burghs, xxii. 271.
Republican's Mistress, by Charles Smith,
xxv. 276.
Retreats, by Thompson, xxxvii. 299.
Retsch's Outlines to Goethe's Tragedy of
Faust, with an Illustrative Analysis,
xxiv. 271.
Revelations of St. John, Survey of, xxxvi.
303.
Rey's Judicial Institutions of j^England,
&c., translated, xxxviii. 301.
Reynolds, Sir J., Literary Works of, by J.
Farringdon, xxi. 562.
Catalogue of Engravings
from Paintings by, xxxii. 263.
Reynolds's Life and Times, xxxiv. 299.
Reynolds, Bishop, Works of, xxxiv. 303.
_—— Works, by Chalmers, xxxv.
618 J xxxvi. 603.
Rhine, an Autumn near, &c., xxv. 579.
Illustrations of the, by Praut, xxxi.
• Tour on the, by Webb, xxxvi.
255.
304.
276.
Rhodes's Peak Scenery, xxii. 561.
— ■^— . Derbyshire Tourist, xxxi. 262.
Yorkshire Scenery, xxxv. 618.
Ricardo's Plan for a National Bank, xxx.
591.
• on Political Economy, xxv.
- on Protection to Agriculture,
xxvii. 271.
Ricciardo, Tragedia, da Ugo Foscolo, xxiv.
568.
Rich's Tables, xxi. 267.
Rich and Poor, xxix. 280.
Richards's Sermons and Letters, xxxvi.
304.
Richardson's Logic, xxi. 559.
The Exile of Poland,xxii. 564i
Travels along the Mediter-
ranean, xxvii. 272.
Zoology of British America,
xxxviii 302-
Poems, xxxi. 532.
- Poetic Hours, xxxiii. 597
Richelieu, a Novel, xxxiii. 597.
Richmond on the Manufacturing Popula-
tion, xxxi. 532.
by Evans, xxxi. 262.
a Novel, xxxvi. 302.
Richter, Letters to Mr. Malthus, xxv. 276 j
xxvii. 559.
Village School, xxxii. 545.
Rickman's English Architecture, xxL 263,
557.
Riddle on Navigation, &c., xxxi. 260.
Ridge's Veterinary Surgeon's Vade Me-
cum, xxxvi. 301 .
Rieu's Life, xxxi. 255.
Rifleman, Adventures of a, xxxiii. 594 ;
xxxiv. 609.
Ring's Commemoration of Handel, xxi.
564; xxii. 270.
— Translation of Virgil, xxii. 665 ;
xxxiii. 281.
Ringrove, by West, xxxvii. 302.
Rio de la Plata, Account of the United
Provinces of, xxxiii. 280.
Ritchie's Tales and Confessions, xxxix.
253.
Ritson's Life of Kmg Arthur, xxxvi.
601.
Rivers of England, from Drawmgs by
Turner, &c., xxix. 278 ; xxx. 293.
Rivington's Annual Register, xxiv. 273 ;
XXVI. 543; xxxi. 530; ^xxxii. 264;
xxxiii. 277.
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Road io Happiness, xzix. 978.
Roadty Improvement of, a Source of Em-
ployment for the Poor, xxiv. 275.
Rules for Repairiag, xxiv. 275.
Roberts's Modern Geography, &c., xxv.
577.
on Wills, xxxiv. 300.
— — Rival Houses of York and Lan-
caster, xxxvi. 300.
Robertson's Latin Phrasef, xxx« 283 f
zxxi. 256.
Robinson's Guide to the Lakes, zxL 567 ;
xxii. 272; xxviii. 270.
' Antiquities of Stoke Newinfiflon,
xxiv. 279. ^^
• Revolution of Mexico, xxv. 274 j
xxviii. 267.
Visitation S^ntnon at Bombay,
xxvi. 276.
^— Criminal Statutes, xxxix. 524.
Rt. Hon. F., Letter to, xxiv. 277.
• Speech of, xxvii. 271.
Robinson Crusoe, xxiv. 276.
Robson's London Directory, xxii. 562.
on Surveying, xxv. 275, 578.
Roche, R. M., The Bridal of Duamon,
xxviii. 269.
Castle Chapel, xxxiL 267.
Contrast, xxxviii. 303.
Roche Arnauld's Modern Jesuits, by Le-
page, xxxix. 249.
Blanche, by Miss A. M. Porter,
xxvii. 558.
Rochefoucault, Maxims of, xxi. 265.
Rock, Captain, Memoirs of, xxx. 588.
Rocking-horse, the, xxi. 267.
Bodd, Ancient Spanish Romances, trans-
lated, xxiii. 283.
Rodney, Lady, Portrait of, by Pieknth
gill, XXXV. 317.
Roe^s Law of Elections, xxi. 265.
Book-keeping, xxxiii. 277 ; xxxv
616.
Roebuck's Hindostanee Dictionary of Sea
Terms, &c., xxiii. 572.
Rogan on the Condition of the Middla
and Lower Classes in the North of
Ireland, xxi. 562.
Rogers's Sermons, xxi. 269, 566 j xxii.
272.
Human Life, a Poem, xxi. 268.
Italy, xxxi. 532 ; xxxviii. 602.
Poems, xxxiv. 612.
Ro^et on Human and Comparative Phy-
siology, xxxv. 616.
Rolandi, Diodati's Holy Bible and Testa-
ment, xxii. 271.
Rolando's Art of Fencing, by J. S. For-
syth, xxvii. 558.
Rolfe's Choice and no Choice, xxxii. 268.
Romaine's Life of Faith, by ChalmersL
xxviii. 270. ^
Roman Characters, Sketches of, xzr. 274. I
Roman ViUa, RemastH of, zzrii. 268.
Romans, Manners, &c., of, xxv. 578.
Rome, Antiqmties of, xxv. 576;
»41 ; xxvti. 268, 554 $ xxriii. 265.
— — in the Nineteenth Century, xxiv.
574; xxv. 277.
Buildings in, xxiv. 271; xxv.
273.
A^ewi in, hj Pm^ xzz^ 601.
Laws and U-ovemment o(
300.
■ System of Bduci^n for the King
of, xxiv. 272.
Romeo, F., The Mirror, leflecting Politica]
Facts, trai3t8lated by Rev. W. P. iiac-
donald, xxiii. 284.
Romilly, Sir S., Speeches o^ xxiv. 276 ;
xxv. 277 } xxvl 545.
Ronalds's Electrical Telegraph, xxix. 280.
Rondeai^ Recitations, xxvi. 545.
Rooke on National Wealth, xxxii. 550.
Roos's Travels in the United Stateai, xxxvi.
604.
Roots, Law of Bankruptcy, xxi. 265,
Rosser on the Law of Property, xxiv. 274.
Rosalvina, or the Demon Dwarf, xxxi. 532.
Roscoe on F^aX JurisiHrudence, xxi. 265 ;
xxii.:267.
■ Lifa of liOienzQ de' Media, xxvii*
269.
Memoirs of Cellini, xxvii. 554.
Italian Novelists, xxxii. 267.
— — Letter to Bowles, &c., xxxii. 548.
Actions relating to Real Prop^fy,
xxxiii. 278.
€terman Novelists, xxxiv. 611.
Law of Evidence, xxxvi. 602.
Lanzi's History of Painting,
xxxvii. 579.
Rose, Rev. H. J., on Mr. Bentham's
Church of Englandism, xxi. 269.
Letters from Italy, xa. 267.
. Translation of Ario8to*9 Orlando
Furioso, XXX. 590 ^ xxxiii. 597 ; xxxvi
302, 603.
Rose's State of Protestant ReUgioa in
Gonnany, xxxiii. 280.
Rose, on the Culture of, xxxviii. 599.
Rosenthal's translation of Pichler's Wald-
stein, xxxviii. 303.
Ross's Voyage of Discovery, xxi 270.
— — Explanation of Captain Sabine's
Remarks, xxi. 567.
Grammatical Studies in Latin and
English, xxii. 562.
■ • A. L., Remains of, xxvii. 554.
Steam Navigation, xxxviii. 303.
Rossini, Memoirs of, xxx. 292.
Rost*s Greek Grammar, xxxv. 614;
».a75.
302.
Roughley'i Jamaica Planter's Guide,
XXIX. 277.
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Jubilee, xxviii. 269.
— — SocietjT, Philosophical Transac-
tions of, xxvi. 274 ; xxxviii. 602.
• of Dublin, Transactions of,
xxi. 557.
I^ucco on the Pulse, xxxvii. 300.
Ruins of an Ancient City in Ghiaiemala,
xxviii. 265.
Rules for Gaols, &c., xxiv. 572.
Rural Economy, Hints on, xxii. 561.
Russell's Tour through Sicily, xxi. 270.
on Crimes and Misdemeanours,
xxii. 268.
. Lady R. W., life of, xxi. 558 j
xxii. 561.
• Lord W., Life of, xxi. 558 j
xxii. 561.
- Lord J., on the British Consti-
tution, XXV. 277 ; xxviii. 269.
• Speeches of, on Reform,
Don Carlos, a Tragedy,
xxvii. 559.
xxxviii. 266.
Russell and Ryan's CrowA Cases, zxxiv.
300.
— Dr., Connexion of Sacred and Pro-
Isne History, xxxvi. 604.
Works of the English and Scot-
tish Reformers, xxxviii. 304.
' Europe, from the Peace of
Utrecht, Vol. II., xxxix. 523.
Rusma, Travels through, by Holman,xxxii.
270.
' Wilson's Travels in, xxxviii. 304.
Russian Ta^ff for 1820, xxiii. 281.
. Grammar, by Heard, xxxvii. 300.
Rutt's Diary, xxxviii. 301.
Butter's Ghiide to Fonthill Abbey, xxix.
282.
Ryan's Biographical Dictionary of the
Worthies of Ireland, xxi. 558 ; xxv. 576.
Dramatic Table Talk, xxxii. 264.
Ryder's Sermon on the Nature and De-
sign of the Church, xxxiv. 613.
Charge, xxxviii. 603.
Ryley and Dethick's Visitation of Middle-
sex in 1663, xxvii. 556.
s.
SABiBAN Researches, xxx. 292.
Sabbath, Institution and Observance of,
XXXV. 320.
Sabine and Lindley's Pomological Maga-
zine, xxxviii 599.
Sadler, Ireland, its Evils and Remedies,
xxxviii. 304.
Sailors and Saints, xxxix. 525.
St. Aubin, a Novel, xxv. 276.
— Clair's Clavering Tower, xxvii. 270.
— David's, Bishop of. Charge, xxxix.
254.
— Hubert, xxxii. 267.
— James's, xxxvi. 603.
— Luke's Gospel, by Msyor, xxxv. 618.
— Michael, Account of the Island of,
xxvi. 547.
— Petersburgh in 1827, by Granville,
xxviii. 304.
Saint Ronan's Well, xxx. 295.
Sainte Bible, La, xxii. 271.
Salame's Account of the Expedition to
Algiers, xxi. 270, 568.
Salisbury on Employing the Poor, xxiii.
284.
Cottager's Agricultural Com-
panion, xxvii. 268.
Sallust, by Dymock, xxxi. 530.
Salmon on Stricture of the Rectum,
xxxvii. 581.
Salmonia, or the Days of Fly-Fishing,
xxxviii. 302.
Salt's Essays on Dr. Young's Phonetic
System of HieroglyphicS| zxxii« 263,
Salvo, Lord Byron en Italie et en Grece,
xxxii. 263.
SamoueUe's Entomologist's Compendium^
xxi. 563.
on Insects and Crustacea,
xxxiv. 611.
Directions for Preserving Ex-
otic Insects and Crustacea, xxxv. 316.
Sams's Annual Peerage, xxxv. 316.
Sancroft, Archbishop, Life of, by Dr.
D'Oyly, xxiv. 567.
Sand, C. L., Memoir of, xxii. 265.
Sandars's Letter on the Projected Rail-
Road between Liverpool and Manches-
ter, xxxi. 532.
Sanders's Tables of Weights and Mea-
sures, xxxii. 546.
Sanford, Bishop, Sermons of, xxi. 566.
United States, xxi. 568.
— — Inaugural Lecture, xxvii. 268.
Extracts from Greek Authors,
xxx. 292; xxxv. 317.
Greek Exercises, xxxvi. 602.
Sandwich Islands, Narrative of a Voy-
age to the, xxxv. 320, 618.
Stewart's Journal of a
Residence in, xxxviii. 304.
Sandwith's Introduction to Anatomy, xxx.
590.
Sanson's Sketches of Lower Canada,
xxiv. 279.
Santagnello's Italian Dictionary, xxii. 562.
. Phrases, xxvi. 540.
Saragpasa, a Romance, xxxi. 260.
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Sardinia, Smyth's Island of, xxxrii. 582 ;
xxxviii. 603.
Sarratt on Chess, xxiv. 571.
Satchwell's S^phire Costume, xxi. 263,
566.
Saul at Endor, by Smedley, zxxix. 253.
Saunders on Surrender of Copyhold Pro-
perty, xxi. 561.
'~ Pleading and Evidence, xxxviii.
600.
Savigny and Correard, Voyage to Sene-
gal, xxii. 272.
Savings Banks, Laws relating* to, xxxii.
265.
Rules for, by Webber,
xxxix.253.
Saviour, the, a Poem, xxxiii. 597.
Say, J. B., on Political Economy, xxv.
276.
Sayings and Doings, xpLvii. 581.
Scarlett, Letter to, on the Poor Laws,
xxvi. 546.
Scenes in Eg3rpt and Italy, xxx. 591.
Scenes and Thoughts, xxxi. 532.
Schieb6, Lettres de Change, xxi. 569.
Sche]ler*s Latin Grammar, by Walker,
xxxii. 264, 546 ; xxxvii. 679.
Schiller's Don Carlos, translated, xxviii.
266. •
Life, xxxii. 263.
WilUam TeU, xxxiii. 277.
Schimmelpenninck*s Biblical Fragments,
xxvi. 276.
Schism^ Sermons on, by Harness, xxxix.
526.
Schleiermacher on the Gospel of St.
Luke, xxxiii. 280.
Schleusner's Lexicon, xxiv. 280.
Schmidtmeyer's Travels into Chile, xxx.
296.
School for Mothers, xxvii. 558.
Schultes on the Elective Franchise of the
Citizens of London, xxvii. 271.
Schwartz's Remains, xxxii. 549; xxxiv.
613.
Schweighsuser's Lexicon Herodoteum,
XXX. 292.
Science and Arts, Journal of, xxii. 564.
■ Object, Advantages, and Plea-
sures of, xxxix. 250.
Scientia Biblica, xxix. 282; xxxi. 533;
xxxii. 269.
Scienti6c Gazette, xxxii. 545.
Scoresby's Account of the Arctic Regions^
xxiii. 286.
Scot's Peerage of Scotland, xxxiv. 300.
Scotch Nationality, xxx. 295.
Banker, xxxix. 253.
• Appeal Cases, xxxiv. 610.
Scotland, Provincial Antiquities of, xxi.
263.
Atlas of, xxvii. 555.
—*— Royal Visit to, xxvii. 556.
Scotland, Legends of, xxix. 280.
Critical Examination of Dr.
Mcculloch's Work on the Western
Islands of, xxxii. 551.
— — History of, by Stewart, xxxr.
318.
Tytler's History of, xxxviii.
301— Chalmers's Picture of, 304.
Scotsmen,. Lives of Eminent, xxvi. 272.
Scott's Christian Morality Indispensable,
xxi. 566; xxiv. 573.
Poetical Works, xxii. 564; xxiii.
283; xxiv. 572.
Miscellaneous Poems, xxiii. 283.
- Manners, &C., in Switzerland, &C.,
xxv. 278.
Provincial Antiquities of Scotland,
xxvii. 554.
Dryden's Works, xxvii. 557.
Halidon Hill, xxvii. 559.
Letters to, on the King's Visit to
Scotland, xxviii. 268.
- Essays, xxx. 292.
History of the Church of Christ,
xxxiv. 613.
Life of Buonaparte, xxxvii. 299.
Prose Writings, xxxvii. 301 .
Letter to, by Withers, xxxvii. 579.
on Chronic Inflammation, xxxvii.
580.
Chronicles of the Canongate, Second
Series, xxxviii. 303.
Key to the Hebrew Pentateuch,
xxxviii. 303.
Tales of a Grandfather, xxxix. 252.
Miscellaneous Prose Works, xxxix.
524.
' and Byron, Comparative Merits of,
xxxi. 259.
and Jameson's Herbarium Edi-
nense, xxi. 558 ; xxii. 266.
Scottish Ballads, xxxvi. 302.
Scraggs's True and False Religion, xxv.
277.
Scripture Chronology, xxi. 269, 566;
xxvii. 560.
- Names explained, xxix. 281.
— — History, Stories from, xxxv. 319.
' Adaptations of, to Family Devo-
tion, xxxvi. 304.
Scrope on Volcanoes, xxxiv. 601.
— - Geology of Central France, xxxvi.
299.
Scudamore on the Mineral Waters of
Buxton, &c., xxiv. 274.
Observations, &c., xxxiv. 301.
Sculpture, British, Gallery of, xxxii. 545.
Scurry, James, Captivity of, xxx. 588.
Sea-Bathing Infirmary at Westbrook,
Remarks on, xxiv. 275.
Seabury, Dr., Discourses by, xxii. 565.
Seager's Supplement to Johnson's Dic-
tionary, xxiv. 277.
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Seaman's Scientific Monitor, xxiv. 569.
■ Prayer Book, xxvii. 560.
Secchia Rapita, xxxiv. 302.
Secretary's Assistant, xxv. 275.
Seely's Wonders of Ellora, xxx. 591.
Voice from India, xxxi. 532.
Segar*s Princely Orders of Collars, xxxv.
615.
Segur, M^moires, xxxi. 529.
■ translated, xxxii. 263;
xxxiv. 299 J XXXV. 614.
— — History of the Expedition to Rus-
sia, xxxii. 265.
Russia, xxxix. 523.
Selby's Ornithology, xxvi. 274.
Spirit of the Lakes, xxvii. 558.
British Ornithology, xxxii. 549 —
Illustrations of, ibid.
Select Fables, xxiv. 272.
Self-Delusion, Novel, xxix. 280.
Denial, by Hofland, xxxix. 253.
Senecae Tragoediae, by Carey, xxx. 292.
Senefelder's History of Lithography, xxi.
267, 557.
Senior's Lectures on the Precious Metals,
xxxviii. 304.
Sentimental Travels in the South of
France, xxvi. 547.
Sephora, xxxiii. 597.
Seppings, Sir R., Ekius's Reply to, xxxi.
260.
Sepulchral Mottos, xxiv. 276.
Series and Differences, Theory of, xxvii.
556.
Serjeant in the French Army, Memoirs of
a, xxxiv. 609.
Sermons by Rev. Dr. Taylor and others^
xxvii. 560.
Fifth Volume of the Village
Preacher, xxxii. 269.
xxxvi.303.
Serres, Monuments of Pere la Chaise, xxxi.
255.
■ " Memoir of, xxxiv. 609.
Sessions' Practice, by Raynes, xxxiv. 301.
Sexaginta Conciones, xxvii. 560.
Sextuple Alliance, xxix. 281.
Seybert's Statistical Annals, xxi. 568.
Seyd Sayd, Sultan of Muscat, History of,
xxi. 265, 560.
Seyer's Memoirs of Bristol, xxvii. 561.
Shades of Character, xxxii. 267.
Shafton's Stories of Chivabry, xxxv. 617.
Shakspeare, Illustrations of, xxvi. 272.
Dramatic Works, xxix. 277.
King John, Dramatic Costume
of, xxx. 293.
Hamlet, xxxi. 530.
— ^— - Plays and Poems, xxxii. 547.
— — Illustrations of, ibid,
■ Dramatic Works, by Harness,
YOL, XL. HO, LXXX.
xxxiii. 277^by Chalmers, ibid, — by
Siuger, xxxiii. 595.
Shakspeare, in one Pocket Volume, xxtiii.
595.
with Engravings, ibid.
— — — King Henry IV,, ibid,
— — Romances, xxxiv. 302.
Memorials of, by Drake, xxxvii.
579.
Shaksperiana, xxxvii. 301.
Sharp's Life of John Sharp, xxxii. 546.
on the Pageants at Coventry, xxxiii.
595 ; xxxviii. 300.
Shaw, on Spine Complaints, xxx. 294.
• Nature Displayed, xxxi. 260.
Chapel at Luton Park, xxxvi. 601.
Shoe's Alasco, xxx. 588.
Sheffield, Hbtory of, by J. Hunter, xxiii.
285,
Shelley's Prometheus, xxiv. 272.
Verses on the Death of, by Ber-
nard Barton, xxvii. 558.
Elegy on the Death of, by Ar-
thur Brooke, xxvii. 559 ; xxix. 281.
■ Posthumous Poems, xxxiv. 612.
Shepherd's Reply on British and Foreign
Schools, XXV. 277,
Liturgical Considerations, xxx.
591.
Discoiurses, xxxiv. 613.
• Essays on the Perception of an
External Universe, xxxvi. 301 j xxxix,
252.
Sheppard's Commercial Guide, xxv. 576.
Precedent of Precedents, by
Williams, xxxi. 530.
Sheridan, Dramatic Works of, by Moore,
xxv. 274.
— : C. B., on the Greek Revolution,
xxvii. 560.
Songs of Greece, xxxii. 268.
Life, by Moore, xxxiii. 276.
Sherifie on the P^salms, xxv. 579.
Sherwood's Profane History, xxi. 5.59.
'- Lady of the Manor, xxix. 280 ;
xxxiv. 611.
Juliana Oakley, xxxii. 267.
Shipp's Military Career, xxxix. 522.
Shipping, by Cooke, xxxviii. 300.
Shipwrecked Sailor Boy, xxvii. 559.
Shoberl, Translation of the Patriot Fa-
ther, xxi. 559.
Shrewsbury, Earl of, Reasons for not
taking the Test Act, xxxviii. 301.
Shute's Medical Science, xxxiv. 611.
Shuttleworth, the Chiirch and the Clergy,
xxiv. 574.
Sermons, xxxvii. 302.
Paraphrastic Translation of
the Apostolical Epistles, xxxix. 526.
Sicily, Antiquities of, xxi. 263, 557.
Siddons, Mrs., the Story of our First
Parents, xxviii. 269.
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xxi.659.
of Miuolon^, vxxix. 525.
Sierra Leoae, Civilisation of the Negroes
in, xxvi. 076.
SSffBiUs, Systeni o^ l^ Baper,zxxviii. 601.
Silk-Trade, Works and Pamphlets on,
xxxix. 253.
Simoon's French Speaker, xz¥. &76.
Simmonds on th« Moral Character ei
Lord ^yron, zxxiiL 196.
Simon's Reports, zxyix. 251.
-^— and Stuaurt^s Reports, xzxiv. 610.
Simond on the unnoticed Theories of Ser-
vetus, xxxiv. 611.
n ji Tour in Italy and Sicily, zxzriiL
304; xxxix. 526.
' Svitseriand, xxvii. S72.
Simpson on Nocturnal Blindness, xxi.
562.
'■ Help to Mechanics, ftc., xzxi.
258.
' Fragfments, illustrative of the
History of Derby, xxxir. 614.
Sims's Sermons, xxxv. 618.
Simson's Anatomy, xxxvi. 300.
Sinclair's Hortus Gramineus Wobumen-
sis, xxxi. 256.
Scotland, xxxii. 550.
Shakspeare's Dramatic Wodu,
xxxiii. 595.
I Correspondence of Lords C^aron-
don and Rochester, xxxviii. 301.
Sinking Fund, Lord Grenville on, xxxFiii.
303.
— — — Courtenay's Letter on, ibid.
Letter to the Duke of Wel-
lington on, xxxviii. 304.
Sinnett's Atreus and Thyeste% xxvi. 542.
Sir Roland, xxxvi. 301.
Sismondi, Histoae des Fran^ais, xxv. 278,
577.
■ Literature of the South of
Europe, by Roscoe, xxxi. 257.
on the Progress of Religtoiis
Opimons, xxxiv. 614.
Sketch Book of G^offirey Crayon, xxir.
275.
Sketches descriptire of Italy, &c., xxiv.
279.
■ of Sermons, xxvi. 546 ; xxviii. 270.
Slaney on Rural Expenditure, xxxviiL 300.
Slatw s Sententia Chronologica, xxii. 562.
Slave Colonies of Great Britain, xxxiii.
279.
Slavery, Report on, &c., xxxi. 261 .
■ ' Conaderations on, xxxii. 550.
Sleights Surgery, xxxii. 548.
Slingsby, My €hrandmother*8 Guests,
xxxii. 268.
Smart's Song to David, xxi. 564.
Smart's Slocntion, xxii. 2^6 ; »▼. 272.
Smedley's Saul at Endor, xxxix. 253,
Smeeton's Biogra^^iia Curiosa, xxii. 562.
Smiles and Tears, xxxi. 260.
Smirke, Freeman's Reports, xxxiii. 279. .
Smith's Geographical Athis, xxi. 560.
Concoirdance to the Bible, xxii.
566.
: Geographical View flf Upj?«?
Canada, xxiv. 279.
Gramma* of Botany, xw. 568.
> Walkinghame's Tutor's Assistant,
xxiv. 568.
Scrtptnrta Testimopy to tte Mes-
siah, xxiv. 573.
. Forensic Medicine, xx¥. 577.
Correspondenco of Linneus a^^
otiUMES, XXY. 578.
WarwicMure Delinaated, xxv.
579.
Discourses, xxvi, 547.
View of Aberdeen, xxvii 556.
Art of Drawing, xxxi. 530— Prac-
tical Guide to the English Language
ibid. — Bay Leaves, 532.
English Flora, xxxiii 279;
xxxviii. 300.
Letter on the Catholic Question,
. 303— Pocket Companion, 614.
Architecture, xxxvii 299.
Wealth of Nations, by M'CWM**
xxxviL582.
Nollekens and his Times, XTfix.
249.
Smitiiers>s Student's Manual, xxxvi. 302.
Smugglers, a Tale, xxi. 563.
SmyUi's PractioB of the GnstAms, ^
XXV. 576.
Sicily, XXX. 293, 286.
Wars in the Low Counttiet, wxii.
266.
■ Life of Beaver, xxxviii. 300.
Sardinia, xxxvii 582; xx¥viii603.
Snodgrass's Narrative of the Bucmesa
War, xxxv. 615 ; xxxvi. 300, 602.
Snooke's Parochial Psalmodyy xxxvii.3fl2.
Snow's Minor Poem% xxxviu. 602.
Snowden's Sermons, xxiv. 278.
Soames' History of the RefqrmatioQ in
EngUnd, xxxv. 320 ; xxxix. 250.
Soane's Minstrel Love, &om the Gemkan)
xxvi. 275.
' Masanisllo, xxxi 530.
>— Specimens of Gkrman B o w a npf ,
xxxiv. 302; xxxv. 319.
Aladdin, xxxiv. 609.
J., Letter to, xxvu. 268.
Designs foe Buildings, xxxviii
300.
Solitary Hooks, xxxiv. 302.
Sonnets, &&, xxxii 549.
Sophoclis CBdipus Tjmaasu, cwi Ehns*
ley, xxw. 264.
Digitized by
Googk
B^TUW.
NBW PUBLICATIOVS.
355
Sophodis Tragflnlia, xxxiL 364.
- TragcedisB, cur4 Erfiirdt, zzzv.
• (Edipus Tyranuus, by Brosse,
614.
xzxi^.523.
Sotheby's Virgil's Gteorjg^cs, xxxv. 614.
Ita^, xzxviii. 303.
South on tha Nautical Almanae. zz?ii.
556.
— Dissector's Manual, xzxiiL 278.
South America, Present State of tiie
United Pro¥inces of, xxi. 270, 565.
Southey's Life of Wesley, xxiii. 281.
,. Visum of Judgment, xxiy. 572:
XXV. 276.
• B^editbn of Or8^a, &e., xxv.
578.
— — - Book of the Churdi, xxx. 206 ;
xzxii. 550.
Tale of Paraguay, xzxii. 549 ;
xzsiii. 598.
■ Vindidffl Ecelesise AnglicansB,
zzxii. 550.
War in Spain and Portugal,
xxviiL 267; xxxr. 615; xxxvi 602;
xxxvii 580.
Spae Wife, a Tale, xxx. 295.
Spain, History of, xxxr. 818— History of
the Inquisition of, ibid.
Spanish Main, Voyage to the, xxi. 270.
Daughter, by G. Butt, xxx. 590.
• Anthology, by Wilben, xxxiii.
598.
302.
> Grammar, by Whitehead, xxxiv.
by Nolan, xxxv. 617.
Spearman^s British Gunner, xxxix. 252.
Spectator, by Ogle, xxxv. 616; xxxvi.
301.
Speculum Gregis, xxiv. 278.
g^eer, Fabric and Functions of the Sto-
mach, xxii. 268.
Spence, Mathematical Sssays, by Hers-
chel, xxi. 561 ; xxiv. 570.
— — — — Anecdotes, by £. Malone, xxii.
564; xxiv. 275.
Old Stories, xxvi. 544.
II en Political Economy, xxvii. 271.
— Origin of the Laws, &c., of Mo-
dem Europe, xxxiv. 300, 610.
- Memoirs by Burdekin, xxxvi. 299.
Spencer's Vale of Bolton, xxxviiL 602.
Spenser, Lady, Letters to her Niece, xxi.
559.
Spiker's Travels through England, fcc,
xxiv. 280.
Spinster's Tour, xxxviii. 603.
Spirit of the Journals for 1825, xxxiii. 597.
Spirit of the Age, xxxv. 616.
Spitalfields Act, ruinous Tendency of,
xxvi. 545.
Spix and Maitius, Traveb of, i^ Brasil,
ZZZ.59L
Speitiag AUaanac §at 1826, xxxiii. 276.
Sportsmen, Hints to, xxxvii. 301.
Spursbeim on Education, xxv. 577.
on Phrenobgy, xxxiv. 610.
Si^ Glass, xxix. 280.
Squire's Exercises for Greek Verse, ¥xi.
264,559; xxvia.266.
Gl^ming^ &c.| xxvii. 560.
Stacey, Account of tl^e City of Norwich,
xxii. 272.
Biad. de, Ten Years* Exile, xxv.
576.
Staffi>rd, Marquis o( Improvements on the
Estates of, by J. Loch, xxiv. 275
Collection of Hctures,
xxviii. 269.
— — on Strictures
of the Urethra,
xxxviii. 600.
Stage, a Poem, xxi. 264.
Stahnan's Law of Election, xxxix. 524.
Stamford, History of, xxvii. 272, 561.
Stammering, M'Cormac on, xxxviii. 601.
Standish's Life of Voltaire, xxiv. 568.
Stanhope, Earl, on the Distress of the
Country, xxvi. 545.
Greece, xxxi. 257.
Lord, Letter on the Com Laws,
xxxvL302.
— ^^— — to the Occujoers of
Sheep-Faims, xxxviii. 599.
Stanley's Practical Anatomy, xxii. 268 ;
xxvii. 557.
Youn^ Horsewoman's Com-
pendium, XXXVI. 301 — Modern Riding,
603 ; xxxviii. 302.
Stanley Tales, Part L, xxxiv. 612.
Stanmore, by S. Reeve, xxxi. 260.
Stapylton's Letter on the Catholic Ques-
tion, xxxviii. 599.
Stark's Natural History, xxxix. 252.
Starke's Travels on the Continent, xxiv.
279.
Statutes, Vol. X., Part I., xxxiii. 596.
at Lar^, xxxvii. 300.
Staimton's Clunese Embassy, &e., xxv.
278.
■ Notices on China, xxvii. 271.
Steam-Boat, the, by the Author of Annals
of the Parish, xxvii. 558.
Engine, Farey on the, xxxvii 581.
Navigation, Ross on, xxxviii. 303.
Steele's Notes of the War in Spain, xxxv.
615.
Stephens's Thesaurus, xxii. 266; xxiv.
568.
St^henson's Fancy's Wreath, xxiv. 276.
and Churchill's Medical Botany,
xxxv. 617 ; xxxvii. 579.
Stepmother, the, xxxix. 253.
Stethoscope, Forbes on the Uses of, xxxL
258.
Steuart's Planter's Guide, xxxvii. 579;
xxxix. 249.
2 a2
Digitized by
Googk
356
PART IIL— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
Qu^BTXBLir
Stevens's Entomology Mandibulata,
xxxix. 252.
Stevenson on Gkitta Serena, xxvi. 274.
on Cataract, xxx. 589.
Sketch of the Progress of Dis-
covery, &c., xxx. 589.
South America, xxxii. 551.
on Deafness, xxxviii. 302.
Stewart, a Comedy, xxii. 266.
History of Scotland, xxxv. 318.
Philosophy of the Human Mind,
V. 617j xxxvi, 301.
Journal of a Voyage to the Sand.
wich Islands, xxxviii. 304.
• Epistle from Abelard to Eloise,
xxxviii. 602.
• Discourses, xxxix. 254.
Stillingfleet, Sermons on Idolatry, &C.,
xxii. 565.
Blasphemous Opinions,
xxii. 565.
- Amusements of Clerg^ymen,
xxiv. 278
Stirling's Juvenal, xxxii. 546.
by Nuttall,
277.
Stockdale*s Annual Register, xxii. 563.
Stokes on Dropsy, &c., xxx. 294.
Storer's Antiquities of the Cathedrals of
Great Britain, xxvi. 272.
. Gloucestershire, xxxi. 533.
Views in Edinburgh, xxxvi. 300.
Stories from Ancient History, xxi. 559.
for Christmas Week, xxxiii. 597.
Stothard^s Tour in Normandy, &c., xxiv.
574.
C. A., Life of, xxviii. 265.
Illustrations to Boccaccio, xxxiii.
279.
Stowe Gardens, a Day in, xxxi. 532.
Stowell, Life of Bishop Wilson, xxiL
265.
Straella*s English Baronet, xxxiii. 597.
Strachan's Visit to Upper Canada, xxii.
565 ; xxiv. 279.
on Emigration, xxxvi. 302.
Stranger's Hindu Law, xxxiii. 278.
Strass*s Epitome, by Hamilton, xxxiv.
299.
Stratford, Sovereignty of the Great Seal,
xxxv. 615.
on the Eye, xxxix. 251.
Strauss's Helon's Pilgrimage, xxxi. 259.
Strawberries, Improved Method of Culti-
vating, xxi. 557.
Strickland's Worcester Field, xxxiv. 612.
— on the Poor Laws, xxxvii.
302.
Strong's Discourses, xxvi. 546.
Stroud's Botany, xxv. 676.
Struthers's Harp of Caledonia, xxi 564.
Stuart's History of the City of Armagh,
xxiv. 574.
■ James, Trial of, xxvii. 558.
Stuart and Revetf s Antiquities of Athens,
xxxii. 263.
Student's Conunon-place Book, xxii. 564 ;
xxiv. 275.
Stump's Portrait of Lady Audley, xxxv.
317.
Sturgeon's Essays, xxvi. 544.
Styles, Early Blossoms, xxii. 265.
Suaso's Infantry Movements, xxxiii. 597.
Subaltern, The, xxxiii. 597.
Suchet's War in Spain, xxxix. 523.
Su£S)lk, Lady, Letters to and from, xxx.
292.
Sugden's Law of Vendors and Purcha-
sers, xxvii. 556.
on Powers, xxxiv. 300.
Sulim6 and Alid, xxi. 563.
Sulivan's Silent River, &c., xxx. 591.
Sumner's Sermons, xxv. 277 ; xxxvL 303.
Sunday Book, xxxix. 254.
Surveying, System of, by Mitchell, xxxvii.
301.
and Military Sketching, xxxix.
252— Treatise on, 522.
Suspirium Sanctarum, xxxiii. 599.
Sussex, Manteirs Geology o£ xxxvi.
299.
Sutcliffe's Refutation of Errors m the Wer-
nerian System of Geology, xxi. 265,
560.
Geological Essays, xxvii. 556.
Sutliffe's Medical Cases, xxxi. 258.
Swainson's Zoological Illustrations, xxvi.
544.
Swan on Affections of the Nerves, xxiv.
570.
Anatomy, Ac, of the Nervous Sys-
tem, xxvii. 557.
on the Action of Mercury on the
Living Body, xxviii. 267 ; xxix. 280.
Voyage up the Mediterranean, xxxiv.
304.
Swedenborg's True Christian Religion,
xxiii. 285.
Swediaur on Syphilitic Disorders, xxi. 561 ;
xxii. 268.
Sweet's Catalogue of Plants, xxiv. 272.
Botanical Cultivator, xxiv. 568 ;
xxvi. 541.
— GeraniacesB, xxvi. 541.
British Warblers, xxx. 295.
Hortus Britannicus, Part I., xxxiv.
611 ; xxxv. 316 ; xxxvi. 299.
- Pomological Magazine, xxxvi.
602.
County Courts, xxxviii. 600.
Swinboume, Farmer's Account Book, xxii.
. 265.
Syder's Questions and Answers in Physic,
&c., xxiv. 570.
Sydney Papers, by Blencowe, xxxii. 265.
SyUa, by M. Jouy, xxx. 588.
Sylvan Sketches, xxxi. 530; zzxii. 266,
Digitized by
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Rbvibw.
NEW PUBUCATIONS.
357
SyWester's Domestic Economy, xxi. 563.
Report on Rail-Roads, &c.,
ZZZ1532
Sjrmmonds's Agamemnon of iEschylusj
zxx. 588.
SypbiUsi Welbank on, xxxii. 548.
T.
Tabblla Cibaria, xxiv. 276.
Tabram's Law of Landlord and Tenant,
xxxi. 258.
Talbot's Five Years Residence in the
Ganadas, xzxiii. 280.
Tales of my Landlord, xxi. 563 ; xxiv. 571.
of the Fancy, xxix. 278.
of Imagination, xxiv. 276.
of Ton, xxvi. 544.
' of the Academy, xxvii. 559.
of a Traveller, xxxi. 260.
< by an Unwilling Author, xxxii.
549.
round a Winter Hearth, xxxiil 597.
■ of Modem G«nius, xxxvii. 302.
■ of a Grandfather, xxxvii. 581.
— ^-. and Confessions, by Ritchie, xxxix.
253.
Tamlyn on Terms of Years, xxxii. 548.
Tapworth on Ornamental Gardening, xxuc.
277.
Tas80*s Jerusalem Delivered, by Wi£fen,
xxxiii. 598.
Tattam's Helps to Devotion, xxxiii. 599.
Taiinton^s Reports, xxii. 267.
Taunton and Broderip, Reports, xxii. 267.'
Tavern Anecdotes, xxxv. 319.
Taxes des Parties Casuelles, &c., xxiii.
286.
Taxidermy, xxiii. 283.
Taylor's Law Glossary, xxi. 561.
— Naturales CuriossB, xxi. 563.
« Jeremy, Select Works of, xxii.
254—
271
Works by Heber,
Life by Heber, xxxi. 255.
History of the University of
Dublin, xxii. 272.
— -~ Mother's Journal, xxii. 562.
, Character Essential to Success in
Life, xxii. 562.
— Glory of Regality, xxiii. 282.
— Hindostanee and English Dic-
tionary, by W. L. Smith, xxiv. 277.
uEsop, in Rhyme, xxiv. 569.
Historical Prints, xxiv. 569.
Index Monasticus, xxiv. 574.
lamblichus, xxvi. 541.
Tales, &c., xxvii. 270.
■ Fragments of Archytas, &c., xxvii.
554.
257.
- Arithmetical Notations, xxx. 294.
• Selections from Humboldt, xxxi.
* Algelva, xxxi. 258.
Taylor's Itinerary of a Traveller in the
Wilderness, xxxii 267.
— Key to the Knowledge of Nature,
xxxii. 266.
Vision of Las Casas, xxxii. 550.
— — Jane, Memoirs, xxxiii. 594.
— on Mining, xxxiii. 596.
Old Enghsh Sayings, xxxv. 6 J 6.
. Eton Latin Grammar, xxxvii.
579.
on German Poetry, xxxviii. 602.
■< C. B., Sermons, xxxviii. 602.
View of the Money System of
England, xxxviii. 602.
Records of Mining, xxxix. 522,
• and Cresy's Architectural Anti-
quities of Rome, xxvi. 541 ; xxviii.
265.
. Revived Architecture of Italy,
xxviii. 265.
Tazewell on the Negotiations between the
United States of America and Great
Britain, xxxix. 526.
Tebbs on Divorce, xxvii. 272.
Tecumseh, a Poem, xxxviii. 602.
Teelin^'s Irish Rebellion, xxxvii. 580.
Temmmck, Manuel d'Ornithologie, xxiv.
280.
Templar, the, xxvi. 545.
Tennant, Poems of Allan Ramsay, xxii.
270.
Thane of Fife, xxvi. 545.
Tour through the Netherlands,
&c., xxx. 296.
- John Baliol, xxxiii. 277.
Teonge's Diary, xxxii. 263.
Terence's Andnan, translated by W. R..
Goodluck, xxiii. 281.
Test Act, Reasons for not taking, xxxviii.
301.
Testament, Greek, with the Readings of
Griesbach, xxxi. 261.
with English, ibid.
— — — Old and New, Prophetical Con-
nection between, xxxii. 270.
Harmony of, ibid, — Questions
ou, ibid. — Epitome of, ibid. — Historical
Connection between, ibid.
-New, arranged by Townsend,.
xxxii. 550.
Greek, by Valpy, xxxiv. 613 ;
xxxv. 618.
Tetanus, Warden, xxxii. 548; xxxiii. 278.
Thackerah, Nature and Properties of
Blood, xxii. 269.
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PART UI^NSW PUBLICATIONS.
QvMvrmaait
Ulackeray'i Def^nee •# tbft Cktgji zxfiL
272.
^-^ life 0f Letfl Obtlhaiii^ nswi
299.
Thames, Views on the, xxvii. 561.
Qvi^t Trench on the, xxxvi. 301.
Theocritus, Bion, et Moschus, xxzv. 317.
Theological Review, xxxiv. 614.
Thew*8 PeeitiSi xxiii. 808.
Thierry's History of the Morman Con-
<^tiefilt, xzdii §4r | kfidii. 595<
Thier and Bodin*s History of the French
Rareltition, xxxii. 947 } xniii. 595.
Thuies Inti^ble^ by Watit, uxiT. 309:
Thirsk, History of, fitr. 277.
Thirty-Mhi6 AfHdei, QuetlioDs en ttiej
xxxu. 370.
Thistle and his Weeds, uprooted in Cato
Street, ttiii. 084<
Thomas, Coke's First Institute, xzi. 266*
O^kigicid Map of ConntraU^Bii.
267.
270.
Rainbow and EelipM, Poemr, zxii.
on I)igestion, xxr. 275»
Sermons, xxv. 279.
-i en Publishing the RepoHs of Ju-
dicial Proceedings, xxvi. 543.
-^- en Health and Longevity, zxrii.
270.
< . Values of Estates, &c., xxx. 590.
Early Prose Romances, xxxvii. 302 .
Thomas Fitzgerald, a Romance^ xxxii
267.
Thompson en the IMstribotien of Wei^b,
XXX. 591.
■ London Dispensatory, xxxi.
859.
Attempt to Establish the First
Principles of Ghemlstry by Bxperiment,-
x^ii. 264.
Davidica, xxxvi. 303.
l*ravels in Southern Africa,
xxxvi. 304.
— Retreats, xxxvii. 299.
Narrative of a Mission to
Guatemala, xxxix. 526.
Thomson, Account of the Varioloid Epi-
demic, Ac, xxii. 563.
— — - Account of Boston, xxiv. 278.
— — Destination and Use of Works
of Art) translated by, xxv. 273«
— ^— Sermons, xxv. 277.
Botany, xxvii. 268.
Court of Henry the Eighth,
xxxiv. 299, 610.
-^ — i — ^ Emmons, xxxiv. 302.
Lunar Tables, xxxv. 616.
Thome's Guide for Boilder's Prices, xxxi
590.
Thornton's Anecdotes^ xxvi. 544.
■' " ^ " •• — ^ Gitfwi Heose Cempammi«
XXX. 292.
Therou^ Bast^ Introdiietieii t% ioL
563.
Thorp, High Sheriff of Dublhl, Debates,
&c., on the Charges against, xxix.
279.
Thorpe on Slave Trade, xxi. 267.
Catalogue of Books, xxviii. 265.
Thoughts to my Country, by Ahala, xxiL
565.
and Recollections, xxxii; 8664
• in Rhyme, xxxii. 268.
Thrift, Lessons of, xxiii^ 882.
Thucydides, by Hobbes^
264;
Thurlow,
545.
by Blomfield, xxxix. 250.
, Lora; Aroite and PUemoB, sm»
. Poems, xxvi. 545.
i Odes ef Anacreeii, zsvii*
555.
Tidd's Forms, xxxix. 851.
Tide's Munster Festivals, xxxvii. 302i
Tieck's Pictures, xxxii. 267.
Tilloch on the Apocalypse, xxix. 282.
Tilt*s Guide to the Pronunciation ef
French, xxii. 562.
Time's Telescope, xxii. 564 ; xxiv. 271;
xxti. 272; xxviii. 268; xxxi. 259;
xxxiii. 276 ; xxxv< 316 ; xxxviL ^9<
Htle Deeds, Dixon on, xxxiv. 610.
Titsingh, History of Japan, xxvi. 547*
Tobin, Memoirs of, xxii. 561.
To-Day in Ireland, xxxii. 268;
Todd's Vindication of the Authorised
Translation of the Bible, xxii 565.
Life of Bishop Walton, xxv. 273.
od Sternhold and HopkiBs's Ver-
sion of the Psalms, xxvii 560.
■ Historical Tablets, xxxvii. 300.
Toller on the Law of Tithes, xxvii; 556^
Tomlihe's Life of Pitt, xxv. 273.
Temlins, Digest of Criminal Statute Law,
xxi. 561 ; xxii. 267.
Tone, Theobald Wolfe, Memoirs ef « xxxvi.
299.
Teoke's Lucian of Samesata, xxiv. 272.
on High and Low Prices. &c,
xxix. 281.
on the Currency, xxuii. 598 j
xxxiv. 613.
" - on the Resumption of Cash Pay-
ments, xxxix. 526.
Too Late for Dinner, xxiv. 272.
Tonne's Chronological Hbtorian, xxxiv.
299.
Topham's Epitome of Chemistr^^ xxviii
Evidences of Religion, xxxi. 533.
Toplady's Works, xxxii. 270.
Toplin on the Cora Bill, xxxviii. 304.
Tor Hill, the, xxxv. 319.
Torrens on Cash Payments, xxi. 565.
ou Ptoductiou of Wealth, jxv,
579.
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MW PUBLICATIONSli
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Torrey on AmettoAii Slate Trade^ lezri.
Toulmin's Illustrations df AffectioOi a
Pwta, xxi. 265.
Tour in France, Ac, xjdn 574.
— {htoilgh Frante, Switserland, And
Ikly, in 1821 and 1822^ xiti^ 262.
The Border, xzziv. 614.
Tourist's Pocket Journal, xxi. 563.
Towers's Children's Fireside, xxxvii. 581,
Town's Speech on the Catholic Question,
xxxix. 523.
Tbwne's Fanner's GKiide, xxiv; 967 ; itxix.
277i
Townley's Biblical Literature, xxvi^ 276.
on the Laiirs Of Moses, xxtvi.
604.
-I'e^ndend's Accusations of History, fcci,
xxxii. 550.
^ — MemOirSi xteviii. 300.
Townshend's Arrangement of the Old
Testament, »t. 579.
Toxicological Chart, xxiv; 274.
^acts, Uistorifeal and Biographical, xxii.
563.
TradesmaHj the London, xxii. 269, 662.
Traits of Travel, xxxix. 525.
Translations and Imitations, by the Author
of Ireland, a Satire, xxxi. 261.
— — — Interlinear, of Homer's Iliad,
Book I., xxxviii. 599.
Translator, the, xxxii. 541.
Traveller's Tale, xxi. 268.
— ^ Fireside, by S.M. Waring, xxii.
566.
Trftteller; the, xxiv. 569 ; xxxiii. 597.
s — i^^ the Modern, xxxi. 533.
the Eccentric, xxxiv. 304.
Ttarellfets Club, Apology for, xxxi. 531.
the, xxxii. 268.
Travels on the Continent, xxii. 566 ; xxiii.
285;
■■ of My Nightcap, xxxii. 268.
Travers On Diseases Of the Eye, xxiv. 274,
•r 670;
on Constitutional Irritation, txxiv.
801 J XXXV. 318.
• on Injuries of thfe Intestines,
xxxix. 524.
- Random Rhymes, xxvii. 559.
Tread Mill, Description of, xxvii. 558.
Treaties between Great Britain and Fo-
.. reign Powers, xxv. 579.
Tredgold oil Ventilating Public Buildings,
&c., xxxi. 255.
-^ on Rail-Roads and Carriages,
xxxii. 546.
' ' Stearti-Engine, xxxvii. 581.
Tremaine, or the Man of Refinement,
^ xxxii. 267.
Trench on the Thames Qnay, Xxxvi. 301.
Tresham and Ottlcy, the British Oallety,
xxvii; 269.
Trial by Jury in Civil Case! iii Scotlsna
Thoughts on, xxii. 268. \
Trials, a Tale, xxx. 590*
— Celebrated, xxxiL 265.
of Life, xxxix* 252.
Trimmer'if Mrs.^ Lifej xxxii. 546.
Natural History, xxxii. 547.
Trison's Myographical Plates, xxxiii. 596.
Trist, Erudition for Christian Youth,
. xxviL272.
Trivial Poems, by P. Carey, xxiii. 283.
TroUope's Leisure Moments, xxxiv. 302.
Homer's Iliad^ xxtvii; 300 j
xxxviii. 600.
Trotter en Manning the Royal Navy, xxi.
564.
Walks through trelaild, xxii: 272.
Troubadour, the, by L. E. L., xXxii. 549i
Trout on Gravely Ac, xxiv. 570.
Trueba y Cosio's Gomez AriaSj kxJKtiii.
803;
Castilian, xxxix. 258.
Truth and Fashion, xxxii. 549.
a Novel, xXxiV. 612.
Tulket's Account of Preston, xxvi. 847.
Tidly's Letters from Tripoli, Xxii; 566.
On the Plague, xxv. 275;
Tupper, Inquiry into Gall's System con-
cerning Innate Dispositions, &c., xxii.
268.
Turkey, Military Reflections on, by Va-
lentmi, xxxvii. 581.
Turkish Testament incapable of Defence,
xxxii. 551.
Turks in Europe, xxxvii. 300.
Turner's Fuci, xxi. 558.
Views at Hastings, xxii. 561 j
xxiii. 281.
— ;— — Tour in Greece, &c., xxiv. 27l).
in Normandy, xxiv. 280 ;
xxxviii. 603.
— on the Agriculture, fet;, of the
British Empire, xxvii. 271.
' Histo^ of the An^lo-Sdxotls,
xxix. 279.
of England, Xxxii. 265;
xxxix. 523.
on the Arterial System, ixxiii.
596.
317.
Reign of Henry ihfe Eigtith, j
. on Medico-Chirurgical Edticaf ion,
XXXV. 318.
Elementsof Chemistry, XXXV. 617 ;
xxxti. 299.
Turner's Views in Engldld and Wales,
by Lloyd, xxxix. 522.
Turner and Girtin's River Scenery, xxxvi.
601.
Turnpike Act, 4 (3ee. iV., 6. 49, Ab|ttict
0^ xxxviii. 301.
Tursellihus de t'artibulis, edidit J« Bdilfy)
xxxviii, 600.
Digitized by
Googk
360
PART III.— NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QVARTSRL
Turton's British Concholog^, xxii. 266 ;
xxvii. 555.
Tuthill, Sir G., Pharmacopceia, &C., trans-
lated by, XXX. 294.
Twiss's Carib Chief, xxi. 559.
Two Hundred and Nine Days, xzxfL
302.
Two Mothers, the, xxxi. 260.
Tyrrell's Introductory Lecture on Anato-
my, XXXV. 616.
Tyrwhitt and Tyndale, Digest of Public
General Statutes, xxvii. 556.
Tytler on Morbus Oryseus, xxvL 543.
n — History of Scotland, xxxviii. 301.
U.
UaoLiNO, by Wilmot, xxxviii. 602.
Ulloa, Don, Adventures of, xxxiii. 277.
and Juan's Noticias Secretas de
America, by Barry, xxxvi. 304.
Uncles, by Lara Weutworth, xxvii. 558.
Undine, translated byG. Soane, xxv. 276.
Unitarianism, Kohlmann on, xxxi. 261.
United Irishmen, the, Novel, xxi. 563.
— ^ Kingdom Tributary to France,
xxiv. 277.
• States of America, History of,
xxxiii. 595.
Tour through, xxxviii. 304.
• Service Journal, xxxix. 252.
Universe, a Poem, by R. Maturin, xxv.
276.
University of London, Statement by the
Council of, xxxvii. 580 — Letter on,
ibid.
Upcott, Evelyn's Miscellaneous Works,
xxxii.549.
Upham's History of Budhism, xxxix. 526.
Urania's Mirror, xxxi. 257.
Urcullu, d', Grammatica Inglesa, xzxii.
264.
Ure*s Dictionary of Chemistry, xxiv. 568.
GJeology, xxxix. 522.
Usury Laws, Reasons against the Repeal
of, xxxii. 268.
Uxbridge, History of the Town o^ xxL
270, 567.
VAGRAlfT Act, XXX. 294.
Vaillant on the Holy Trinity, xxi. 566.
Valdenses, Details of, xxxvi. 602.
Valdimar, Novel, xxiv. 276.
Vale of Chamouni, xxvii. 271.
Valentini's Military Reflections on Turkey,
xxxvii. 581.
Valerius, a Roman Story, xxv. 276.
Valine, la G6ometrie Descriptive, xxi. 569.
Valleys, the, xxxv. 617.
Valpy's Delphin Classics, xxi. 264, 558 ;
xxii. 266 J xxiv. 568.
■ Homer's Iliad, xxii. 266.
■ Fundamental Words of the
Greek Language, xxxiv. 302 — Greek
Testament, 613.
Greek Exercises, xxxv. 614.
■ Etymological Dictionary, xxxviii.
600.
Vander Hooght's Biblia Hebraica, xxviii.
269.
Van Diemen's Land, Description of, by
G.W. Evans, xxvi. 547.
Chart of, xxvi. 547.
State of, by Widow-
son, xxxix. 249.
Van Halen's Flight from the Inquisition,
xxxvi. 601.
Vansittart's Cain and Lamech, xxxii. 551 .
Vapour Bath, Gibney on, ^axii. 548.
Variety, by Princeps, xxiv. 276.
Varley's Studies of Trees, xxx. 293.
Vaughan's Life of Wydiffe, xxxvii 582.
Vaults and Bridges, Tracts on, xxxix. 522.
Vaux, J. H., Memoirs of, xxi, 263.
VegeUble Kingdom, Wonders of, xxvii.
269.
VeitchandGryson's Memoirs, xxxii. 546.
Venables on Oxalic Acid, xxviii. 267,
Venise, Histoire de, xxi. 569.
Venus and Cupid, by Westall, xxxii. 545.
Verino on Calisthenic Exercises, xxxvi.
301.
Vernon, Archbishop, Sermon at the Coro«
nation of George IV., xxvi. 275.
Verri's Roman Nights, xxxii. 549.
Verse, Tales in, ilustrative of the Lord's
Prayer, xxxiv. 614.
Vetch, Letter on the Subject of an Oph«
thalmic Institution, xxii. 268.
■ on Diseases of the Eye, xxiv. 570.
Veteran, or Matrimonial FeUcity, xxi. 563.
Veterinary Art, Percival's Lectures on,
xxxv. 318.
Surgeon, by Hinds, xxxvi. 602;
xxxvii. 301.
Vicar of Iver, xxv. 276.
Victoria and other Poems, xxiv. 572.
Vidocq's Memoirs, xxxix. 522.
Views of Noblemen's Seats, xxL 269,
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RSYIBW*
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
361
Viger on Greek Idkmis, by Seager^ zzxvm.
599.
Village Preacher, zxiv. 573 ; xxvi. 546;
zxxii. 269.
' Coquettei xxyi. 544.
Pastor, xxxii. 268 : xxrvi. 301.
Villas, Designs for, zxxvii. 579.
Vincent, sur I'Unit^ Religieuse, xxiii. 286.
Vindication of the Aumenticity of the
Narratives in the Two First Chapters of
St. Matthew and St. Luke, xxviii. 270.
Vineyards, Topography of, xxxi. 256.
Virey, Traite de Pharmacia, xxiii. 286.
VirgU's Pastorals, by Thornton, xxv. 274.
«— — Bucolics, by Edwards, xxxii. 547.
■ Eclogues, by Nuttall, xxxiii. 594.
Virgil's Georgics, by Hoblyn, xxxiii. 594.
by Sotheby, xxxv. 614.
Vir^nia Water, Views of, xxxviii. 599.
Vision, a Jeu-d'esprit, by Sir H. M. Eden,
xxiv. 275.
Vittoria Colonna, xxxvi. 603.
Vocabulary, English and Spanish, xxxii.
264.
Voice from St. Peter's and St. Paul's,
xxix. 281.
Volcanoes, Scrope on, xxxiv. 601.
Voltaire, Pieces iuedites, xxiv. 280.
Life of, by F. H- Standish, xxiv.
568.
Charles the Twelfth, xxxvi. 301.
Voyages, Annual Cabinet of, xxxiii. 599.
W.
Wadd's Mems., Maxims, and Memoirs,
xxxix.524.
Waddington's Visit to Greece, xxxi. 533 ;
xxxii. 547.
> — and Hanbury's Visit to
Ethiopia, xxvii. 272.
Wade's Delineations of Scotland, xxviL
561.
— — ^^ Poems, xxxi, 532.
Waistell's Designs for Architectural Build-
ings, by Jo|«ng, xxxv. 614.
Waite's Sermons, xxxiv. 303 ; xxxvi.,303.
Wake on the Last Turnpike Act, xxviii.
268.
Wakefield's Trial, by Frankland, xxxvi.
602.
Waland*s Meditations on the Scriptures,
xxiv. 574 ; xxvi. 546 ; xxix. 282.
Wald, Matthew, History of, xxx. 590.
Waldegrave's Memoirs, xxv. 274.
Waldstein, byPichler, xxxviii. 303.
Wales, Freeman's Sketches in, xxxiv. 304.
Walker on Poverty and the Poor Laws,
xxi. 565.
i Map of India, xxiv. 273 ; xxx. 293.
Coronation of Charles II- xxiv.
273.
• Clavis Homerica, xxvi. 273.
- Lucian, xxvi. 273, 541.
- Annotations on Livy, xxvii. 554.
• Philosophical Essays, xxx. 295.
• Schiller's Latin Grammar, xxxii.
264, 546 J xxxvii. 579.
on the Present State of Medicine,
xxxv. 318.
— — Specimens of English Poetry,
xxxv. 320.
— Corpus Poetamm, xxxvii. 299.
Algebraic Notation, xxxvii. 580.
— — — Practice of the Prerogative Court
of Canterbury, ](xxyiii. 600.
Walker's Caswallon, xxxix. 525.
Walkinghame's Tutor's Assistant, by T.
Smith, xxiv. 568, 569.
Wallace on Chlorine, xxviii. 267.
— — Memoirs of India, xxxi. 530.
— Forty Years in the World, xxxii.
549.
251.
- on Desk Diseases, xxxv. 318.
- on the Action of Moxa, xxxv. 616.
- on Medicine and Surgery, xxxix.
-a Tragedy, by C. E. Walker,
xxiv. 272, 568.
Walladmer, from the German, xxxi. 260,
532.
Waller's Domestic Herbal, xxviii. 266.
Walpole's Travels in the East, xxiii. 286.
Horace, Correspondence of,
xxiii 283.
Memoirs of the Last
Ten Years of George II., xxvi. 542.
■ Letters, xxxii. 546.
Anecdotes of Painting, by Dalla-
way, xxxvii. 579.
• Works of Sir C. H. WUliams,
xxvii. 270.
Walsh's Journey from Constantinople,
xxxviii. 304.
Walter, Niebuhr's Roman History,xxxvi.
300.
— — Letters from the Continent, xxxvii.
582.
Walton, Account of the Philippine Islands,
translated by, xxv. 278.
— — SermouSy xxvii. 560.
— ^ Lives, xxxii. 546 ; xxxiii. 277.
■ and Cotton's Complete Angler,
Illustrations to, xxxvi. 601.
Wanderer, Stoiy of the, xxxv. 319.
Wanostrocht's British Constitution, xxviii.
267.
Digitized by
Googk
dit
PART IIIiiMIBW PUBLIOAnONS.
QvumaaM
Wftt, Duties ef Ghfislitos wHh ir^speet io,
mIv; 277.
Wafbiirioniati L«ctiir69, Stipplenieiit te,
ui. 566;
Ward, History. &c., of the Hindoos, siiv.
569.
-i— W-i Lettert t^, txtt 578^
Gems of Art, xxx. 293.
«— ^ bn TetalHiSi itiii. 548 ; zxxiu; Sf §.
Wardlaw, Dr., a Sermon on the IVtitb,
&c., of the QoApel, sodil SSS.
? «lti Ebelesiadtedj xxti. 2/6.
-=-^ : Twd Serinons, :txYiii. 270.
Wardour Castle, Sketch of, xxviii. 270.
Witdrwj'ti Mothid Aiiatcmit of the Bye,
— ^— on Aneurism, xxxix. 524.
Warner, Sermons, xxi. 269.
■ Illustrations of the Waverley
Novels, xxix. 280 ; xxxi. 260.
Warrand's Bankrupt Act, 6 Greo. IV.,
c. 16,x£liii.596.
W^rto Ott (he Wine Trade, mi. 581.
Warren's Gommeiitdryj xxxix. 524;
Warton'g HistOfy ©I Etiglish PetotHf,
xxii. 532.
-^ =• Death-Bed Scenes^ xxxv: 6 M.-
Warwick's Spare Minutes, xxvii. 270j
Warwickshire Delineated^ xxv. 579;
•- -" . - .. -M ^ Illustrations of^ iamH; 270;
Warwick VMe, xxxrii; 579;
Washington and New Orleans, G*m-
. (f^ighs at, xxv. 274.
Waterloo, a Poem, xxxiv. 612.
Witerton's Wanderings, xxxiii. 280 j
xxxix. 254.
Watheti's Views of St. Helena, xxvii. 559.
Watkins's Bidtfratohtesd Dietionstr, ut.
278.
on Copyhold, by Coventry,
xxxii. 265.
Bio^phieal Dietionary, xxxiv.
299.
• Wlsdoin and Happihess^ xxxiv.
614.
Watstra'fe PJayferSj xidv. 573.
Dendrologia Britaiktieaj
277i
on Arbitration, xxxii. 265.
■^ — '—^ Meinoirs and Sertaons, sxxiv.
609.
Watson and Pritchett, Plani, ftc^ of a
Lunatic Asylum at Wakefield^ xxiv.
567.
Watts' Bibliotheca Britannica, xxi; 958 ;
xxii. 265, 561 ; xxiv. 567 j xivii. 554 j
xidx. 280 } xxt. 294.
• ■- Remarkable Events, xxxi. 259;
Things Invisible, X±xiv. 302;
Poetical Albuiii, xxxvlii.303.
Wttveriey, &tty Mmueting^ fte;j xiii.
564.
Wavwl^ Hfm^Hi lIlMthittaft ef^ xni
260.
Weatherbead on Eryt^^M^ ke^ xxi; 966,
561 ; xxii. 268.
Webb's Summel' and crthev Poethsj Tsnt
275.
Torn bh the Rhine, xxivi; i04.
Wetbe*8 Psalmody; txvi. 274;
i ■-• P*alin Tunes, ixvi. 274*
Webber"! Rules for Savitigt Banks^ x^ix.
053.
Webster's IsUnd of St. Miehafel, xxvi; 9i47.
Wedded tifei Firdt AUd LMt ¥eart et;
^tXVi 319;
Weddetrt Voytt||e i&k9t(k tii% Bouth
Pole^ ttxiii. &^
Weights and Measures, Tables of the
New System of, xxxii. 266— Sanders's
Tables of, 546.
Weir's Historical Sketches of Homcastle^
xxiv. 278.
WelbaUk cfA Syphilid iixii; 548.
Welby's Signs before Death, ixxi; 53 li
Welch on Blood^Leiiing in £pideitti6
Fever, xxi. 562.
Welden's Biplaiiaiioh of the Elerawto ef
Chemistry, xxxii. 264;
Wellb^oved^ Lttw 0f Hiffhvihra^ xxzit.
251.
Weller's Disease ei the Bye^ tiE^skitedj
xxt; 279.
Wellesley, Marquiij Letter te^ en the
State of Irelfthd, xxvii; 271;
Wellington^ Duke ef, Early Campai^
of, xxii. 563; xxiv. 271.
Welsh's lifts of Brown, xxiii. 3694
Welshmen, Eminent, Memoirs of} ixxi.
529.
Wentwdrth'8 New Sdutk Wate§j xxi; 568;
xxivj 279f
Poetical Ndte Bvol^ txil.
261i
De SantiUa, xxxH; 267;
■ en Bxeciitorej xxxix. 524;
Wernerian Society, Memoirs of, xxv. 275;
ixvH; 558 ) xxxi. 260.
Wernifack's Serihoiis, xxViii. 270,
Dutch and English Dicti(Miury,
xxx. 588.
Wesley, Life of, bjr Southey, xxiii; 281
■ — ^ ; by Moore, ixxi. 256;
and his Disciples, xxxii. 253; 9
West's France^ xxv. 576.
Mission to the Indiaiifl tii Kew
Bmnswicki &c., txxvi. 604. j ^
Ringrove, xxxvii. 302.
West^ Talei of the^ xxxvii. 581;
- African Sketches, xxxi. 952.^
WeStdll, Victories (tf th<J Dtiko ef WdHng-
ion, xxH. 265.
^i^^i-^^ Vie#d of the LiduM «vf €h]IIIbe^
land an4 Weitfllfterlto4/ loMt 972,
Digitized by
Googk
Rartawi
VBW PUBLICATIONS.
MS
W«ttan, Ulttttratioiti to Uettk^'a Iriih
Melodies, xxxi. 529 — to Rogers's Pl^a-
•ur«g of Memery^ ibidi
Views in London, xxxii. 263;
WestcMii Addrett te ike Laiideiniersi jotwu
M6.
■ on Prison Discipline, xxvi. 948.
— ^^^— > on Grass^Lafad, nai. 856.
•*= — • — Lettet to Lofd LiYfenKtol, iBoofi
613<
West India Question, Remarks oh an
Address to the Membets of the New
ParliaaMmt, with lespeet toy sozr.
618.
Indian, the^ Norel, ±xit. flf 8i
Ookmies, Brititbi Value of.
Im-
xzxiii. 598.
-^ Posteraions, Biitilh^
Wportance of, xxxiv. 613.
eM Ind«M, Six Medths in, xxidii. 699«
' - Reports on the Adminkir*-
tion of Justice in, xxxvi. 602.
• Sketches of, xtxfii. 582.
lYestminster Hall, or Anecdotes tit the
Bat, iiCf xxxii. 265;
-i-i i- Abbey^ Antiquitiet ill, bjr
Harding, xxxii. 545.
W66tohalia, M^meira of the Oourt tif,
xiJii. 282.
Wetherby on Wills, xxxii. 265.
Wharbroke Legend, xxiiij 283} sxiV.
276.
What is Life ? hr T; Bailey, xxi?. 572.
What shall be, shall be, by Mrs. Meeke,
xxix.280.
Whately on the Difficulties of ihb N«#
Testament, xxxix. 254.
Wheatley on the Report of the Bank Gom^
mittcSes, txi. 665.
Wheewell*s Treatise on Mechaiiict, zxii.
563.
Whisper to a Newly Married Pair, txxi.
259.
Whims and OdditiiM, by Hood, zx±vii.
301.
Whittaker's History of RichmondshiTtf,
xxix. 282.
White's Letters, xxi 559 ; xxii. 266.
Arithmetic, xxvi. 542 ; xxvit. 555.
I on Strictures of the Heetuiii,
xxvii. 270.
y Sermons, xxvii. 560 j xxxix. 526.
Century Of lufentions, xxx. 294 j
History of Infentions, xxxvi. 301.
British Peerage, xxxii. 266.
Evidence against Gatholieum,
xxxii. 269, 550.
Poor Man*t Presenratit^, xniii.
280.
on Hydrophobia, zxxiii. 596.
Letter to Gharles Butler/ Bsq*,
xxxvi. 302.
White mi PaHsh Apprentie^, inns. 9M.
Whitefield's Sermoiti^ ixxti; 270«
Whitehal)jXXJEVii.8e2.
Whitehead's Lessons of Sadek, Sic^ iliv.
572.
" ^ Spanish Gramifiii^ txxiv.
302t
Whitehouse, Rev; iii Tribute td the Me-
mory of tiie late Mr. S. £. F. White-
house, xxii; 265.
Whiter on Death and iuspdiided Anima-
tion, xxii. 268;
" Btymdlogiesl Di^ttohary; soiit
264.
Whitmeie dtt the State of Ag:riettUiii«,
xxvii. 559.
— = — ^ Letter 0B the Cera Iiil#%xix¥.
320;
Whittaker's History of Yofkiihife^ xxi.
269, 567 t xtii. 566) mik: b74; xxvi.
547; xxvii. 561.
-^ i> Inquiry into the Ifater|it«tiltidti
of the Hebrew SeripttiroS| xxir. 278:
- Appendix to LoidisaudBhnete,
XXV. 277
Whittingham's Pocket lfovelM% ttfii.
559; xxviU;268.
WhitwelPs Astfontmiieid Ot«e(*his»,sxvi.
272.
Whitworthj Parshig BmtmtOi) xxh.268.
Who is the Bridegroom ? by Mrs. Qveen,
xxvii. 558 ; xzviti. 289.
WickliflP's Life, xxxvi. 681;
Wicklo^y Guide io the Geuifit of; xsviti.-
270.
Widow's Tale, xxvi. 545.
Wieland, an American Tale, itvi; 544.
Wierd Wanderer of Jutlaiid/ a Tragedy,
by W. Herbert, xxvii. 268.
Wifffeii'i Aoniah Hoiirs, ixi. 964.-
ivMA Alpihula, xxiv; 277*
Spanish Anthology^ ttxiH; 508.
Wigney on Brewing, xxx. 294.
Wilberforce, W., Letters to, xxtii. 271j
Wilcoeke on the Office &f Co n s tabl o j
xxxvii. 580;
Wikockson*s Rec«Jrde of PreMtih hi Lan-
cashire, xxviii. 270.
Wild's Illustration of liincMs Oatfaedfal,
xxi. 557.
Views of the Cslhednd of Ainiens^
xxvii. 288.
Wilderness, the, a Tale, xxix. 288*
Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeshrp, ftditi
the German of C^the, xxx. 598.
Wilkle's Rabbit on the Wall, engtiived by
Burnet, xxv. 576;
Etchints^ xxxii. 263.
AlIM hi the Neatherd's Cottage,
by MitcheU, xxxix. 249.
WiUiinls's Hitto^ of the De rtifac t i o n of
Jerusalem^ zxvii. 27i.
Digitized by
Googk
364
PART IIL—NEW PUBLICATIONS.
QUARTBRLT
WilkiosoQ, Account of Wallachia aud
Moldaviaj zxiii. 280.
— — - on Cutaneous Diseases, xxvii.
269.
Tours to the British Mountains,
zxxi. 262.
Wilks's Christian Missions, zxi. 566.
Christian Biography, xxiv. 568 ;
XXV. 277.
■■ Rev. M., Memoirs of, xxv. 273.
' on the Necessity of a Church
Establishment, xxv. 579.
on Reduction of the Public Debt,
&c., xxvi. 546.
Willan's Works, by A. Smith, xxvi. 274,
543.
Willcock's Law of Inns, &c., xxxix. 524.
WiUement's Regal Heraldry, xxvi. 273 ;
xxvii. 269.
— — — Canterbury Cathedral, xxxvi.
601.
Williams, Helen Maria, Humboldt's
Travels translated by, xxi. 270: xxv.
579.
Letters on France,
xxi. 560; xxii.271.
■ Farmer's Lawyer, xxii. 265.
— — Travels in Italy, &c., xxii. 566.
— ^— ~. on Sea Bathing, xxiv. 570.
Memoirs of Greorge HI., xxiv.
568,
Conversations on English Gram-
mar, xxiv. 569.
Sir C. H., Works of, xxvii.
270.
■ on Study and Practice of Law,
xxviii. 267.
• on Druidical Education, xxix.
278.
. Rev. E., Life of, xxxi. 529.
Sheppard's Precedent of Prece-
dents, xxxi. 530.
Abstract of Statutes, xxxi. 258 ;
xxxiii. 278 ; xxxvi. 602.
Cottage Bible, xxxii. 551.
Views in Greece, xxx. 293 ;
XXXV. 614 ; xxxvi. 601 ; xxxix. 522.
■' — on Diseases of the Lungs,
xxxviii. 601.
— ^— on the Subways in the British
Metropolis, xxxix. 252.
Williamson's History of North Carolina,
xxi. 568.
Willis on Trustees, xxxvi. 602.
Wills, Roberts on, xxxiv. 300.
Plain Advice on Making, xxxv. 318.
Wilmot's Ugolino, xxxviii. 602.
Wilson, Bishop, Life of, xxi. 558.
' Dictionary of Astrology, xxii.
■' Emigrant's Guide to tlie Cape of
Good Hope, xxii. 271.
Wilson, Tours on the Continent, xxiv.
279.
— — on the Thirty-nine Articles, xxv.
277. '
Double Wedding, xxvi. 273.
History of Christ's Hospital, xxvi.
273.
• Account of Aberdeen, xxvii. 561.
Practical Book-keeper, xxviii. 266.
Selections from Leighton, xxxi.
261.
Alice Allan, xxxi. 532.
Isle of Palms, xxxii. 268.
Sermons, xxxiii. 599 — ^Tracts, t^u'.
— Ministerial Zeal, ibid.
• Travels in Norway, &c., xxxiv.
- Selections from Owen's Works,
304.
xxxiv. 613.
- Travels in Russia, xxxviii. 304.
Winchester School, Mallet on Fagging at,
xxxix. 252.
Wine, Gtude to the Purchasers of, xxxviii.
302.
Winter's Castle Harcourt, xxxi. 532.
Winter Evening Pastimes,by Revel, xxxi.
532.
Winter's Wreath, xxxvii. 299; xxxix. 249.
Wisdom and Happiness, by Watkins,
xxxiv. 614.
Wiseman on Cask Gauging, xxvi. 544.
Wistar's Anatomy, xxvii 557.
Witherby's Hints to Commentators, xxv.
277.
Withering's British Plants, xxi. 264.
Withers's Aristarchus, xxvii. 555.
Letter to Sir Walter Scott,
xxxvii. 579.
Wix, Letter to the Bishop of St. David's,
xxii. 272.
— against Catholic Emancipation, xxvi.
546.
Woburn, Historical and Topographical
Account of, xxii. 272.
Wolfe's Remains, xxxiii. 599.
Wolfe of Badenoch, xxxv. 617.
Wolfe Tone's Life, xxxv. 614.
WoUastou's Moveable Planisphere, xxxviii.
301.
Wolsey, Cardinal, by G. Howard, xxx.
589.
— Life of, by Cavendish,
xxxi. 529 ; xxxii. 263.
Woman in India, byLawson, xxv. 276.
— — of Genius, xxvi. 544.
Woman's Love, xxxix. 253.
Wonders of the Heavens, xxiv. 567.
Wood, Catalogue of Shells, xxi. 559.
of Works on Natural
History, xxii. 561.
• Athense Oxonienses, by Bliss, xxii.
562
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NEW PUBLICATIONS.
369
Wood on Insects, xxv. 275 ; xxvl 274.
■ on the Primitive Irish, xxvi.
273.
Woods, Life of John Law, xxxi. 529.
on Rail-Roads, &c., xxxii. 266.
Subaltern Officer, xxxiiL 276.
— — • Outline Maps, xxxiii. 277.
• Rambles of Redbury Rook, xxxv.
319.
300.
• Letters of an Architect, xxxviii.
Woodfairs Law of Landlord and Tenant,
xxvii. 556.
Woodforde on Indigestion, xxv. 677 ; xxvi.
543; xxvii. 269.
— ^— — Catalogue of Plants, xxx. 588.
Woodhouse on the Apocalypse, xxxviii.
603.
Woodley*8 Comubia, xxi. 564.
on the Scilly Islands, xxvii.
561.
Woodroflfe's Insolvent Act, xxxiv. 610.
Woodstock, a Tale of 1651, xxxiv. 302.
Wool, Policy of Extending the Growth of,
xxx. 691.
Woolnoth's Ancient Castles, xxxiii. 276.
Woolrych's Life of Coke, xxxiv. 299 j
xxxvii. 579.
' on Certificates, xxxiv. 301.
Commercial Law, xxxix. 524.
Worcester's, Marquis of, Century of Inven-
tions, by Partington, xxxii. 266.
Worcester Election, Account of, xxii.
271.
Architecture of the Cathedral
of, xxix. 278.
Wordsworth, Peter Bell, xxi. 564— Parody
on, ibid,
• Waggoner, a Poem, xxi.
564.
Poems, xxiii. 283.
• River Duddon, and other
Wordsworth, Scenery of the Lakes, xxvii.
272; xxix. 282.
Tour on the Continent, xxvii.
272.
* Who wrote £i»wy B»ftXt»ti^*
xxxi. 532.
Working Bee, the, or Caterer for the Hive,
xxix. 277.
World in Miniature, xxvi. 276 ; xxviii.
266.
Worsley's American Indians, xxxviii.
603.
Worthington, Portraits of the Sovereigns
of England, xxviii. 265.
on Wills, xxix. 279— Prece-
dent for Wills, xxxiv. 301.
on Juries, xxxii. 5 48.
Wrangham's Horace, xxvi. 273.
Wren, Sir C, Life of, xxviii. 265.
Wright on Elocution, xxi. 566.
Guide to Dublin, xxvi. 276 — ^The
County of Wicklow, xxviii. 270 — Lakes
of Killarney, xxvii. 272 — Giant's
Causeway, xxix. 282.
Court of Tuscany, &c., xxvii.
268.
Altorf, xxvii. 555.
Ready Reckoner, xxvii. 558.
Interest Tables, xxix. 277.
Memoirs, xxxix. 250.
Wrightwick's Exchequer Reports, xxi,
560.
Wronski, M. H., Address of, to the Board
of Lon^tude, translated by W. Gardi-
ner, XXIV. 571.
Wycliffe's Life, by Vaughan, xxxvii.
582.
Wyld's Map of the Burmese Empire,
xxxiii. 595.
Wylie, Sir A., of that Ilk, xxvi. 544.
Wyville, Military Life of, xxiv. 271.
X.
Xbnoprontis Memorabilia, by Greenwood, xxx. 292.
York, History of the County of, xxvii.
^72.
Duke of. Portrait of, by Doo,
xxxii. 263.
Yorkshire Scenery, by Rhodes, xxxv. 618.
Young's Lectures, xxi. 566.
on Consumption, xxvii. 270.
— — Narrative, xxxix. 252.
Young Arthur, a Metrical Romance, xxi.
559.
Young Communicant's Remembrancer,
xxvii. 272.
Pilgrim, by Hofiand, xxxiv. 612.
Younge and Jervis's Reports, Vol. I.,
Part I., xlxvi. 300.
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Zbta*8 View of the CatholM: QuMtion,
zzzvili. 301.
ZiUa, a Tale of Jerusalem, xxxix. 263.
aoological Joqnul, |xz. 895 ; xxxi. 86il»
531 ; xzzii. 549.
Zoology of British AmePN^t, liy ^icbard-
Bon, xxxriii. 302.
Zophier, a Tragedy, wd. 559.
Zumpfs Latin Grammar, by Keipcick,
»iif. 277.
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