Page images
PDF
EPUB

Page Lines

ERRATA

314, 5 from the bottom, insert in after manner
315, 12, for combined, read contained

22, for heir, read hero

316, 2, for their, read the

7, for adapted, read adopted 12, after event, dele of

128, after still, insert he

317, 23, for some of these, read none of those
6 from the bottom, for proofs, read proof. :

318, 19, for arbicles, read article.

27, for Cavallos, read Cevallos

33, after character, insert and

319, 13. for commotion, read conviction

320, 26, for in, read to

27, for brought, read reduced

321, 4 from the bottom, for must, read may; and after have, insert ordered

322, 2, for natural, read ratioual

8, for and, read now

20, for throws, read throw

23, for decline, read declare

323, 29, for retarding, read declining

last line, for began, read begun

325, 10, for jurisdictions, read jurisdiction

327, 9, afler true, insert and

13, for on, read to; and for requisition, read negociation

388, 8 from the bottom, for relieving, read correcting 337, 12, from the bottom, for pleased, read placed

The Index, Table of Contents, Title-Page, &c. to Fot. XXXI, will be given with the Appendix to Vol. XXXII.

TO THE REMARABLE PASSAGES IN VOL. XXXI.

To find any particular Book or Pamphlet, see TABLE of CONTENTS annexed
to this Volume.

ABEL, his divine belief considered,
213; important lesson taught by
him to the world, 214; contrast
between his character and that of
Cain, 215

Abrantes, Duke of, conduct of the
English commanders in Portugal
considered in acknowledging the
title of, in the person of Junot, 78
Accum, Mr., remarks on his Manual
of Analytical Mineralogy, 309
Address, observations on his majesty's
answer to that of the city of London
on the convention in Portugal, 314
Agriculturists, attempt to resist the
distillation from sugar, 358
Albigenses, conduct of the pope (In-
nocent III.) in the war against them,
384; remark on their history and
religious principles, 386
Algarrabos or carob tree described,

178

Almogavares, a sort of moorish sol-

diers in Spain; description of their
singular mode of fighting, 243
Alpargatas, or Spanish sandals; con-
struction of, described, 178
America, remark on some important
proposals submitted by a cele-
brated public character in, to this
country, 326

Ancient ballads, by a Lady, con-
tents of, 57; their merits, 58
Angus, Mr. introduction to his Voca-
bulary and to Fulton's Dictionary,
206; merit of the work, ibid.
Anonymous criticisms, observation on
the importance of to literary Study,

26

Antiquarian and topographical Ca-
binet, observations on, -198; inte-
resting account of Mr. Scott's
Grotto at Amwell, ibid.

Armada, the invincible one, sent
against this country by Philip of
Spain, 372

Artists, their complaints of a want of
encouragement from the British
public, 231; useful recommenda-
tions to, ibid.

Austin, St., his opinion of the wick-
edness of schism, 330

Austria, remarks on her policy at the
present critical moment, 520
BAKU, delightful country of, on the
banks of the Caspian Sea, 268
Baldwin, Archbishop of Canterbury,
his mission into Wales, 6; his route
described, 12; humorous remark
of, 125

Bardic system, object and principle
of, 132; the subsequent corruption
of, ibid.

Bards among the ancient Britons,
130, 131; their periodical meetings,
131; description of their theology,
132; their provincial chair at Gla-
morgan, and the last of their con-
ventions there, 133

Barrow, Mr., his life of Earl Macart-

ney, 339; contents of, 343; impor-
tant sentiments of, 348

Beaver, existence of, in Wales, in the
days of Archbishop Baldwin, 123
Beauty, diversity of opinion respect-
ing, 197

Benefit societies, general utility of,
414; baneful perversion of this spe
cies of institution in the metropolis,
with the causes thereof, ibid.
Bentham, Mr., his reform of the ad-
ministration of justice in Scotland,
113; merits of the author, 116; his
answers to objections against his
system, 119; merits of the work,
120; inelegance of his style, ibid.

Argyles, institution so called, des- Bichât, anatomical system of, de.

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]

Biographers, general vindication of
them from the charge of partiality,
337; qualities necessary to, 339
Blair, Mr., his grammar of natural
and experimental philosophy, 59;
his plan considered, ibid.
Blair's grave, its low imagery, 225
Blake, Mr., his original designs for
Blair's grave, 225; passages from his
advertisement, 226; Mr. Fuseli's
address respecting, ibid.; his figure
of Christ descending into the grave,
228; his descent of man into the
vale of death, ibid.; other designs
of, from various passages, 230;
character of those designs, 233;
his portrait of, ibid.; his dedication
and poetical merits, 234
Bland, Rev. Robert, on his Edwy and
Elgiva and Sir Everard, 142;
detail of historical facts on which
those tales are founded, 143; inte-
resting opening of the poem, 144;
description of the incidents of the
piece, ibid., 145, 146, 147, 148,
149; interesting merits of his poe
try, 149; his translations from Eu-
ripides and Sophocles, 150
Boissy d'Anglas, president of the na-
tional convention, singular anec-
dote of, 361

.

Bosveld, Mr., his commentary on the
Epistle of St. Paul to the Romans,
367

Bonifaza in Valencia described, 169
Borringdon, Lord, report of the pro-
ceedings against Sir A. Paget; ob-
servations on Lady Borringdon's
letters, 212

Bounties, remarks on the impolicy

of granting them on the importation
of grain, 366

Britton, Mr., his catalogue of the
pictures belonging to the Marquis
of Stafford, 199; refutation of his
reasons for not exposing picture
galleries to the observation of the
public, ibid.; character of the Bri-
tish public vindicated, 200; utility
of the catalogue, 201
Buonaparte, his reinforcements sent

for the subjection of Spain, 326;
firm conduct of our government
respecting his late overtures, 431;
his hatred of literature, and his
efforts to destroy all learned insti-
tutions, 349
Burn's Poems, the effect of their po-
pularity, 304

Burrard, Sir H., his conduct on as-
suming the command of the British

army in Portugal, 325; his own
culpability admitted by himself,
424; the grounds on which he has
endeavoured to excuse his conduct,
425; singular effects produced in
him by his appointment to the
chief command in Portugal, 426;
circumstance in favour of, 432
CÆPIO, see Viriatus
Caerleon, town of, 14; remark on its
etymology, 16

Cæsar, Julius, his military operations.
in Britain, 8

Cambridge, Rev. G. O., sermon
preached by him to the clergy of
the archdeaconry of Middlesex, 413;
judicious observations on the
growth of sectarism, ibid.
Campbell, Duncan, Esq., observations
on his trial at Wells, 90; the case
stated, 91; severity of his sentence,
ibid.; his conduct justified, ibid, 92;
opinion of Lord Hale as applicable to
the case, 92; observations of the
judge, ibid, 94; justification of
Mr. Campbell's conduct, 94; evil
consequences of his conviction
considered in a public and moral
view, 95

Carr, Sir John, his action against
Hood and Sharpe for a libel, 19;
great importance of the verdict to
the liberty of the press, ibid.; opi-
nions of the Lord Chief Justice on
that occasion, 20; excellent senti-
ments expressed by him in the
course of the trial, 21; his summing
up thereon, 22; importance of the
trial, ibid.

Carter, his architectural knowledge,
134

Castellon de la plana in Valencia, its
great fertility and immense popu-
lation of, 171
Catholic sees in Ireland, mode of
filling the vacant ones, 493
Caucasus, mountains of, 258; nume-
rous tribes which inhabit them, 259;
divisions and various pames of,
260; climate of, 263; civil history
of, ibid.; interesting history of the
moral and domestic economy of the
inhabitants of, 264; their singular
marriage ceremonies, 265; their
ferocious habits, 266; striking simi-
larity between a governor among
them and Buonaparte, 267
Censure, exercise of vindicated, 97;
application of to the conduct of
private individuals, ibid.
Cevallos, secretary, great importanc

of his exposure of the conduct of
the Corsican towards Spain, 318;
effect produced by it on the minds
of the Spanish people, 319
Chelmsford, probability of its having
been a Roman fortress, 9
Christians, parties into which the
whole body of in England may be
divided, 87; character of the war
between them and the Moors in
Spain, 163

Church, on the origin of the, $28 ·
Cid Rodrigo Dias, the famous Cam-
peador, history of his origin, 236;
extravagant exploits attributed to
him, 237; ridiculous story of him
and a leper, with Mr. Southey's re-
marks, 238

Clarendon, Lord, his description of the
members of the two houses of Par-
liament, 393

Coffee recommended as a substitute
for malt liquors, 363
Collins, Mr., his Ready Reckoner, 211
Convention. See Dalrymple
Copenhagen, justice and policy of the
expedition to, vindicated, 183
Corinna, remark on the novel of, 278
Cornea of the eye, structure of, 39;
treatment of in inflammation, 40;
fleshy excrescences of, ibid; its
pustules or small tumors, with their
probable cause, 41; abscess of,
ibid.; ulcers of, 42; effects of
wounds and of foreign bodies on,
43; speck of, 44
Corruption and Intolerance, infatua-
tion of the author of two poems so
called, 308

ostame, importance of, in painting,

* 197

otton, Admiral, naval convention
signed by him at Lisbon, 79; his
authority to enter into that conven-
tion questioned, ibid.

ourts of civil judicature, advantages
of an increase in the number of,
118

rabb, on the expediency of publishing
an improved dictionary of the En-
glish language, 98; plan proposed
by him, ibid.

assigned by them for the mischiefs
and calamities of that revolution,
66; instance of their inconsistency
on theological subjects, 67; opinion
of, on the writings of St. Paul,
ibid; pretended neutrality of, in
matters of religion, 68; their opi-
nion on the Catholic claims, ibið.;
on the thirty-nine articles, 69, 70;
on the doctrine of original sin, 70,
71; observations of, on Mr. Robin-
son's principles and writings, 71,
72, 73; general observation on
their unparallelled inconsistency
and impudence, 73

Cromlech at Pentre Evan in Wales,
123

Crosby's Merchant's and Tradesmen's
Dictionary, utility of, 212

Cross, origin of the assumption of,

[blocks in formation]

Dalrymple, Sir Hew, his disgraceful
convention in Portugal, 74; effect
produced by his arrival in the Bri-
tish army, 75; the different arti-
cles of his convention and of the
suspension considered, 77, 78, 79;
plea of ignorance offered by him in
his defence, 80; conduct which he
ought to have adopted, 81; his
reasons for the convention refuted,
82; dishonourable character of the
convention, ibid.; probable cause
of his appointment to the command
in Portugal, 85; degree of blame
imputable to the person who ap-
pointed him, 316; his conduct,
322; real question on the subject,
as it affects him, 323; the confes-
sion of Sir H. Burrard diminishes
his guilt, 427; whom the blame
of appointing them to commands
in Portugal attaches, ibid.
David, St., patron of Wales, 121;
cathedral of, and incredible amount
of offerings at its shrine in the days
of popery, ibid.

ritical Reviewers, danger of their
principles to church and state, 62;
extravagant egotism of, ibid.;
specimens of their palpable incon-
sistency relating to British ma-
ritime rights, 63; another with
respect to the origin of the French Defenders, a popish banditti in Ire-
evolution, ibid.; their opinions on land, profligate and outrageous, 378
that event, and on the characters Defrichemens, definition of the word,
Necker, Talleyrand, and Buona- 357
parte, 64, 65, 66; cause falsely Derberd, a city in the mountains of

Caucasus, description of, with its
inhabitants, 268; great dread in
which the gate of is held by the
Turks, ibid.

D'Escury, Mr., Remark on his Latin
verses, 369; extract of one on the
vaccine discovery, ibid.
Dissentions in Religion, their direct
opposition to the injunctions in holy
Writ, 86; period from which the
origin of may be dated, 329
Dissenters, strong exhortation to the
conscientious among them, 90;
singular presumption and audacity of
two of their preachers, 333; circum-
stance favourable to them, ibid.;
the correction of their abuses re-
commended to the heads of the
church, 334

Don, origin of the Spanish title of, 235
Dress, modern distinctions of, con-
trasted with those of former times,
277

Druids and Ovates among the Britons,
description of, 131

Duchess of York, singular dedication
to, 275

ECCLESIASTICAL property, how it
was derived, 439

Economy of certain vegetables, 404
Edinburgh Review, the disloyal prin-

ciples of the writers of, and of the
Annual Review, 61; iniquitous
practice resorted to by them in re-
viewing publications, ibid.
Elizabeth, Queen of England,_her
spirited conduct towards Pope
Pius IV.

Enfield, Mr., merits of his Pronouncing

Dictionary, 59

Englishmen, their ignorance of the
more remote periods of their own
history, 142

Erfurth, excellent jeu d'esprit on the
meeting of the two emperors there,
224; probable object of Buonaparte
in his proposal after that meeting,
to this country, 320
Essex, public meeting there, on the
convention in Portugal, 325; the
different persons composing it, 326
Evidence, the English law of, very
defective, 118; mode suggested for
its amendment, ibid.

Europe, review of the political state
of, 213

Exhortation, earnest one, to the
bishops and established clergy on
the subject of a gross abuse of the
spiritual office, 285

FABRICIUS, his system of entomo-
logy, 140

Faculty of dispensation for a plurality,
form of a, 440

Fashion, vast importance of, in the
opinion of a certain female writer,
276

Fashionable world, great disorder in,
during the pending of a cause re-
lating to it before the chancellor,
288
Fermentation, the impolicy of adopt-
ing it in the making of bread, 364
Finland, armistice concluded in, be-
tween Sweden and Russia, 321;
remark on Buonaparte respecting,
ibid.

Fischer, C. A., history of Valencia,

168; merits of Shoberl's transla-
tion, 181

Fiske, Mrs., her character, 274; hu-
morous description of her "Records
of Fashion," ibid.; her remarks on
the subject of dress making, 277;
her history of the fashionable tiara,
284; of the shawl and glove, 285;
the fan, shoes, stockings, and Ro-
man sandal, 287; origin of the
garter, 289; fair travellers noticed
in her general view of female cos-
tume, 290; Copenhagen expedition
as connected with the fashions, 291;
her description of a veil, 292;
her remark on genius, ibid.; subject
of wigs, ibid.; her excellent descrip-
tion of a lady's hands and feet, ibid.;
her work strongly recommended
to the Bond-street sages, ibid.
Flemings, singular knowledge formerly
attributed to those who were settled
in Pembrokeshire, 17
Forsythe, Mr., vindication of his
method of plastering wounds in
trees, 400

Fourcroy, Mons., 279; humorous re-
marks on his history of lemon juice,
ibid.; remarks on his chemical ex-
periments on the milts of fishes, 354
French dominion, prevalence of, in-
timately connected with that of the
French language, 209

French language, frequent use of, a

great political and moral evil, 224
French Justice, instance of the true
character of, 368

French quacks, their superiority over
the English, 368
GANDIA, district and town of, in
Valencia, description of, 172
Garrow, Mr., immoral expressions
used by him on a crim. con. trial
99; serious consequences to be af,
prehended from the encouragemer
of such conduct among counsellor,
ibid.

Giraldus de Barri, his birth, famis,
and early acquirements, 5; ane-
dote descriptive of his inflexibity

« PreviousContinue »