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25. At Maryville, by Haddington, Mrs Mary Hepburn, relict of the late Patrick Downey, Esq. of Prestonpans.

At Dunfermline, aged 59, Captain John Wardlaw, late of the Royal Marines, in which respectable corps he served, with unstained reputation, between 30 and 40 years.

Wrecked at sea, on her passage to Aberdeen, Jean Inglis, aged 18, (far advanced in pregnancy,) wife of Lieutenant William Drumbeck, of the royal navy.

-

At Edinburgh, William Gibbes, the infant son of Harbourne Gibbes Straghan, Esq.

27. Dr Primrose Blair, physician to his Majesty's fleet, at his apartments in St Martin's lane, London. At Edinburgh, George Edward, eldest son of the Rev. Henry Grey.

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At Drummochy, in Fife, Miss Magdalene Coutts, only daughter of Mr Ebenezer Coutts.

28. At Riccarton, James Hay, some time a soldier in the 56th regiment of foot, aged 111. He served as a soldier 36 years, and has now been 35 years an out-pensioner of Chelsea Hospital.

29. At Glasgow, Captain John Maxwell, of the 14th regiment of foot,

30. At Cahir-house, county of Tipperary, the Right Hon. Richard Butler, Earl of Glengal, and one of the representative peers of Ireland. His title devolves on his eldest son, the Hon. Richard Butler, Lord Viscount Cahir.

At her family-seat, Leslie-house, in the county of Fife, the Right Hon. Henrietta Ann, Countess of Rothes, Baroness Leslie and Ballenbreich, in the 29th year of her age. Her ladyship has left six children (two sons and four daughters) by her husband, George Leslie of Leslie, Esq.; and is succeeded in her honours and estates by their eldest son, George William Evelyn Leslie, now Earl of Rothes, Lord Leslie and Ballenbreich.

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At Leith, Mr Richard Ged, jun. -Mary Carson L'Amy, eldest daughter of James L'Amy of Dunkenny, Esq. advocate.

31. At Edinburgh, Mrs Margaret Cunningham, relict of the late Mr James Cunningham, writer, Edinburgh.

-At Leith, William Lanigan, gunner, royal navy.

At Portobello, Mrs Creelman, wife of William Creelman, Esq.

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At Irvine, the Rev. John Duncan, minister of Ardrossan, in the 71st year of his age, and 30th of his ministry.

Feb. 1. At Hawkhead, Renfrewshire, Lady Elizabeth Boyle, second daughter of the Earl of Glasgow.

At Edinburgh, Mrs Susan Smith, relict of Mr David Buchan, General Post-Office, Edinburgh, -At Dumfries, in the 91st year of her age, Mrs Isabella Kelburn, relict of Mr Allan M'Lachlan, printer and bookseller.

2. At Glasgow, John Riddell, M.D. a gentleman well known in the literary world.

In Wimpole-street, London, Jane, eldest daughter of the late Robert Arbuthnot, Esq. of Edinburgh.

3. At Castle-street, Edinburgh, in the 17th year of his age, Andrew, third son of the late James Tod of Deanstoun, Esq.

Mrs Jean Auchinleck, spouse of Mr Ninian Richard Cheyne, St John street, Edinburgh. 4. At Edinburgh, Thomas Young, only son of Mr William Young, Stamp-office.

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At Edinburgh, Mrs Kirkhom, late of Brumpton, Middlesex.

At Cheetwood, Lancashire, James Banks Robinson, late of the royal navy, in his 71st year. He was 50 years in his Majesty's service, and fought in twelve general engagements, among which were those of the Nile and Trafalgar, when he acted as pilot to the fleet. He commenced his career with the celebrated Bruce, and was one of the desperate few who carried up the bowl of punch, and sacrificed to Bacchus, on the top of Pompey's Pillar.

7. At Edinburgh, Jane Gordon Peterkin; and on the 9th, James Charles Peterkin, youngest children of the late James Peterkin, Esq. of Grange,

8. At Portobello, much and justly regretted, Miss Anne Nicolson, sixth daughter of the late G. Nicolson of Jerviston, Esq.

At Crieff, Mr James Wright.

At Hume, at an advanced age, Mr Thomas Shephard; and, on the 10th, Isabel, his wife.

9. At her mother's house, Nicolson-square, Edinburgh, aged 20, Martha, eldest daughter of the late William Renton, Esq.

10. At Barns-street, Ayr, William Logan, Esq. major of the late West-Lothian Fencibles.

- At Edinburgh, George Campbell, Esq. late comptroller of the customs at Dunbar.

13. Mr Michael Watson, shipbroker, Leith. -At Walgram, in Northamptonshire, the Rev. Alexander Payne, father of the Rev. Geo. Payne, Edinburgh.

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At his father's house, in Bank-street, Edinburgh, Alexander, second son of Mr Brown, solicitor-at-law.

14. John Sackeouse, aged 22, a native of the west coast of Greenland.

15. At Lauriston-place, Edinburgh, Mary Jane, youngest daughter of Mr Murdoch Cunningham.

At Edinburgh, Jessie, the infant daughter of Mr Alexander Milne, Royal Bank.

At Edinburgh, Mrs Davidson of Ravelrig, 16. At Ashton-hall, Lancashire, in the 79th year of his age, his Grace Archibald, Duke of Hamilton and Brandon, &c. His Grace was the second son of James, Duke of Hamilton, by Elizabeth, daughter of Edward Spencer, Esq. He succeeded his nephew, Douglas, Duke of Hamilton, in 1799. Married, in 1765, Lady Harriot Stewart, daughter of Alexander, Earl of Galloway, by whom he has left Alexander, now Duke of Hamilton; Lord Archibald Hamilton, M.P. for Lanarkshire; the Duchess of Somerset, Lady Anne, and the Countess of Dunmore. The present Duke married Miss S, E. Beckford, daughter of William Beckford of Fonthill, Esq. by whom he has one son, William, now Marquis of Douglas, and a daughter.

- Of a consumption, in South St David-street, St Andrew's-square, Mrs Jane Bland, of Frederickstreet, Edinburgh.

At Leith, Mr Robert Craig, intendant of the police of that town.

At Edinburgh, Simon Frazer, Esq. late of the ordnance-department in the island of Bermuda. 17. Mrs Agnes Murray, spouse of Mr John Panton, Knockymill, Aberdeenshire.

- At Edinburgh, of an inflammation in the liver, George Ranken, Esq. late superintendant surgeon on the Bengal establishment.

At his house, Bromley, Kent, in the 74th year of his age, William Walmisley, Esq. nearly 20 years clerk of the papers of the House of Lords.

Lately-At Notter, near Landrake, LieutenantColonel O'Docherty, of the royal marines, one of the most eccentric characters, perhaps in England. At Garlieston, Wigtonshire, Mr John Dunsmore, miller, at an advanced age, leaving property to the amount of £14,000, the whole of which he acquired at Garlieston. He was confined only three weeks. In his desk were found eleven hundred pounds, packed up with old iron, nails, &c.; he kept the key of his treasure under his head till he expired.

By the last arrivals from Madras, accounts have been received of the death of Major-General James Innes, third son of the deceased John Innes of Edingight, Esq. in the county of Banff.

At her residence in Hill-street, Berkeley-square, the Dowager Countess of Sefton. Her ladyship was in the 71st year of her age; she had been ill

about three months.

At London, Major-General John Wilson, colonel of the late 4th Ceylon regiment.

At his seat, Thorpe-lee, Surrey, in the 67th year of his age, Sir Henry Tempest, Bart. of Tonghall, county of York, and Hope-end, county of Hereford, the last branch of the very ancient family of the Tempests of Tong.

At Toulouse, Marguerite Reinaud, at the age of 117 years. She was born in 1701, was married in 1721, and became a widow in 1735. She had lived free from infirmities, and preserved to the last mement the full use of her faculties.

ACADEMICAL Institution, on the prospects

of a new one at Edinburgh, 217.
Acber II. the Great Mogul, account of, 121.
Acted Drama in London, notices of, No.
VII. 443.-No VIII. 708.

Administration, on the present state of the,
201.

Africa, hints concerning the colonization of,
652.

Ægina marbles, remarks on the, 420.
Alkali, vegetable, discovery of a new, 100.
Alps, sketches of scenery in the, 582.
America, on the means of education and
state of learning in the United States of,
546.-Medical profession, 550.-The
bar, 551.-Divinity, 552.-Libraries, ib.
-Professors in universities the only body
of men of letters in, 641.-The bar and
the senate, 642.-Peculiar character of
American eloquence, 643.-The clergy,
644. Philosophers and poets, 646.—
Science and arts, 647.

American sea serpent, account of, 100.-
Caught by Captain Rich, 489.
Amsterdam, the Mad Banker of, canto V.
563.-Canto VIII. 729.

Ancient city, remains of an, discovered near
Inverness, 101.

literature, on the revival of a taste

for our, 264.

Anecdote, singular one, 330.
Anecdotes of Garrick and Barry, 52.
Angels, Blessed, extract from Heywood's
Hierarchy of, 171.

Antar, remarks on the romance of, 385.
Appointments, promotions, &c. 114, 245,
379, 505, 634, 766.

Arabians and Persians, on the trade &c. of,
during the middle ages, 135, 292, 460.
Arctic regions, Barrow's chronological his-
tory of voyages to the, 187.
Aristophanes, unpublished translation of,
421.

Ascent to the south needle of Chammouni,
account of, 180.-To the blue mountains
of Jamaica, 654.

Asteria, a Roman lady of the fourth cen-
tury, description of her dressing-box, 47.
Athenæus, selections from, 23, 413, 666.
Augsburg, catalogue of pictures at, 318.
Auncient Waggonere, the rime of, by En-
sign Odoherty, 571.

Automaton che-player, exhibiting in Lon-
don, account of an, 579.

Balfour, Dr, of Glasgow, character of the
late, 252.

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Blue mountains of Jamaica, account of an
ascent to the summit of, 654.

Books, notices of reprints of curious old
ones, 28.

Böttiger, translation from the German of,
42, 164.

Brahmin Rammohun Roy, on the English
writings of, 141.

Breakwaters of Plymouth Sound, and of
Civita Vecchia, 561.

Bride of Corinth, a poem, from Goëthe, 688.
Bruges, the Minstrel of, 5.
Brutus, a tragedy, critique of, 445.
Bürger, translation from, 405.
Burns and the Ettrick Shepherd, compari-
son of the genius of, 521.—That of Burns
moulded and coloured by his agricultural
life, 524. The Ettrick Shepherd full of
wild enthusiasm towards external nature,
which formed a small part of the poetical
character of Burns, 527.

Callender, Mr, of Craigforth, his notes on
Milton, 658.

Campaign of 1815, remarks on General

Gourgaud's account of the, 220,
Campbell, Archibald, author of a voyage
round the world, notice of, 437.
Campbell's Specimens of English Poetry,
696.-Langlande, 702.-Chaucer, 703.
Elizabethan Age, 704.-Spenser, 705.-
Marlowe and Peele, 706.

Candide of Voltaire, remarks on, 155.
Carbonic acid gas, to prevent suffocation
by, 239.

Carriages without horses, account of, 237.
Catacombs, horrific description of a night
among the, 19.

Catalogue of pictures at Augsburg, 318.
Cave, description of a huge one in America,
103.

Censorship, literary, remarks on, 176.
Ceres, the complaint of, (from the German
of Schiller) 161.

Chammouni, ascent to the South needle of,
180.

Character and manners of the Tyrolese, 585.
Chateau of Coppet, the, 198, 277.
Christophe, the black Emperor of Hayti,
account of, 130.

Civita Vecchia, breakwater of, 561.
Cod, discovery of a great bank of, 99.-
Description of, 487.

Colonization of Africa, hints respecting, 652.
Colours, comparison of the beauty of sounds
with that of, 178.

Commercial Reports, 110, 247, 373, 496,
629, 761.

Congelation, limit of, 99.

Corinth, the Bride of, a poem, 688.
Cornwall, transactions of the Royal Geolo-
gical Society of, 363.

Crusades, remarks on the, (from the Ger-
man of Schlegel) 303.

Births, lists of, 116, 251, 380, 508, 636, Dandy Club, the, a pantomime, performed

767.

in London, account of, 448.

Deaths, lists of, 117, 252, 381, 509, 637,
768.

in Paris, during 1817, 489.
Delhi, modern history of the city of, 121.
Destruction of the Val de Bagne, account
of the, 87.

D'Israeli, Mr, review of his work on the

literary character, 14.

Domestic Letters of the Earl of Rochester,
541.

Dragoon, a heavy, remarks on poems by,
574.

Drama, acted, in London, notices of, No.
VII. 443.-No VIII. 708.
Dramatists, essays on the early English
ones, No VI. 66.

Dressing-room of a rich Roman lady, scenes
in, 42, 164.

Dressing-box of a Roman lady of the fourth
century, description of, 47.

Edinburgh, remarks on the new academical
institution at, 217.-On the medical
schools of Dublin and, 439.-Proposed
horticultural and academical institution
at, 488.-Account of the jail and bride-
well of, 606.

Edith and Nora, a pastoral poet's dream,
76.

Education in the United States, on the
means of, 546.-Defect in the system of,
548.

Naval, remarks on, 345.
Egypt, Belzoni's researches in, 234.
English Dramatists, essays on the early, 66.
Politics, Scheffer's essay on, 432.
Opera, notices of the, 715.
Essays on the early English Dramatists, 66.
-On the trade of the Arabians and Per-
sians, during the middle ages, 135, 292,
460.-On the Lake School of poetry,

257.

Esquimaux, account of a tribe of, discover-
ed by the Isabella and Alexander, 339.
account of the late John Sack-

eouse, the, 656.
Ettrick Shepherd, the, and Burns, com-
parative view of the genius of, 521.
Eve of St Jerry, by Ensign Odoherty, 569.
Everard, Edward Cape, memoirs of, 51.
Exmoor Courtship, a dramatic pastoral, 530.
Expedition to the North Pole, account of
the, 95.-Letter from an officer concern-
ing the, 193.

Fascinating power of serpents, example of,

102.

Fortune (from the Italian of Guidi) 162.
France, extracts from a tour through, in
1818, 594.

Franklin, Dr, the only American philoso-
pher, whose discoveries have benefited
mankind, 646.

Funds, public, on the principles of the, 55,
287.

Garrick, anecdotes of, 52.

Gas, discovery of a new inflammable, 100.
Genethliaca Venetian, 62.
Glorvina's Warning, 720.

Goethe, on the critique of his life in the
Edinburgh Review, 211.Translation
from, 688.

Gourgaud, General, on his account of the
campaign of 1815, 220.

Gray the poet, letter of, to Count Algarotti,
38.

Greece, remarks on the present state of civi-
lization in, 513.-Effect of the late war
in kindling a spirit of independent feel-
ing among the Greeks, 518.Cannot now
retrograde in civilization, 520.

Greenland, on the temperature of, 234.
Guidi, translation from the Italian of, 162.
Gurney's visit to the prisons of Scotland, ob-
servations on, 603.-His account of the
Jail and Bridewell of Edinburgh, 606.
Hayti, interesting account of, 130.
Heights, measurement of, by barometer, 99.
Heywood's hierarchy of blessed angels, ex-
tract from, 171.

Hills, height of, in Scotland, 99.
Holland, New, letter from Lieut. King, on
his survey of, 286.
Horæ Cantabrigienses, 63.
Horæ Historicæ, No II., 600.
Horticultural and botanical institution at

Edinburgh, prospectus of the, 488.
Hot weather, remarks on the late, 157.
Human Life, a poem, review of, 553.

Nature, remarks on the capacities

of, 649.
Hume, Patrick's, notes on Milton, 658.
Jamaica, ascent to the summit of the Blue
Mountains of, 654.

Jerry, St, the Eve of, by Ensign Odoherty,
569.

India, mineralogy of, 599.

Instrument, notice of one to hear by the
eye and see by the ear, 442.
Insurrection of the Tyrolese in 1809, ac-
count of, 585.

Interlude, account of a religious one per-
formed at the Carnival in Rome, 452.
Islam, the revolt of, a poem, observations
on, 475.

Kalendar, Perpetual, notice of a, 694.
Kater, Captain, account of his new method
of measuring the length of the pendulum,
182.

Kempf herhausen, translations from the Ger-
man of, 396, 735.

Knebelite, account of a mineral so named,
237.

Knowledge, of its effects upon society, 80.
Krudener, Madame, a German fanatic, ac-
count of, 609.

Lake School of Poetry, essays on, 257.
Lakes, letters from the, 386, 735.
Lambert, Jonathan, account of his taking
sovereign possession of the island of Tris-
tan d'Acunha, 280.-Interesting letter
from, 282.

Landaff, the late Bishop of, on the Edin-
burgh Reviewer's account of, 34.
Lauerwinkel, Baron von, remarks of, on
the poetry of Thomas Moore, 1.
Lausanne, letters from, 198, 277.
Learning, state of, in America, 546.
Letter of Gray the poet to Count Algarotti,
38.

of the Hon. Horace Walpole, 40.-
Unpublished one, 148.

Letter of the Emperor of Morocco to
Queen Anne, 41,

concerning Hayti, and its black

emperor, 130.

to Professor Pictet, on ascents to
Mont Blanc, &c., 180.

from an officer concerning the polar
expedition, 193.

on the present state of administra-
tion, 201.

from Lieut. King, on his survey of
New Holland, 286.

s of Dr Sternstare, on the national
character of the Scots, 328, 430.

from Lausanne, 198, 277.

from the Lakes, 396, 735.
Literary and Scientific Intelligence, 99,
234, 359, 487, 622, 753.

Literary Censorship, remarks on, 176.
Literary Premium, proposed one, 336.
Literature, ancient, on the revival of a taste
for, 264.

Ludlow, General, monument of, in Swit-
zerland, 334.

Mackenzie, Lieut., account of his system of
the weather in the British islands, 84.
Macneill, Hector, account of the life of, 273.
Mammoth cave of Indiana, description of
the, 103.

Manners and character of the Tyrolese, 585.
Marriages, lists of, 117, 251, 381, 509,
636, 767.

Medical instrument, account of a new one,
101.

Medical Schools of Dublin and Edinburgh,
remarks on, 439.

Memnon's Head, on its removal from The

bes to Alexandria, by M. Belzoni, 417.
Memoirs of Edward Cape Everard, the come-
dian, 51.

Memoirs written in the fifteenth century, 407.
Mental Impressions, on the indestructibili-
ty of, 690.

Meridian, measurement of an arc of, in
India, 753.

Metaphysics, on the decline of a taste for,
€82.

Meteorological Reports, 109, 246, 377, 495,
628, 759.

Meteorological observations, abstract of, for
1818, 472.

Mineral called Knebelite, account of, 237.
Mineralogical chemistry, 622.
Mineralogy of India, 599.
Minerals, new ones, 622.

Minstrel, the, of Bruges (concluded), 5.
Milton, Hume and Callender's notes on,
658.

Mogul, the Great, account of, 121.
Mont Blanc, and the South Needle of
Chammouni, account of an ascent to,
180.

Moore, Thomas, remarks on his poetry, 1.
More, Sir Thomas, remarks on Roper's life
of, 28.

Morocco, letter of the Emperor of, to Queen
Anne, 1,

Narrative illustrative of Pastoral Life, 663.
National character of the Scots, Dr Stern-
stare's, letters on the, 328, 430.

Natural History, inaccuracies of poets in,
159.

Naval Education, remarks on, 345.
Newcastle, Duchess of, remarks on her
poems and plays, 309.

Northern Herculaneum, searches for a, in
Sanda, 101.

North Pole, account of the expedition to,
95.-Letter from an officer concerning it,
193.

North-west passage, progress of the expedi-
tion sent in search of it under Captain
Ross, 338. Their discovery of a new
tribe of Esquimaux, 339.
Novel-writing, thoughts on, 394.
Observations on the English writings of the
Brahmin Rammohun Roy, 141.-On the
critique of Goethe's life in the Edinburgh
Review, 211.-On the Revolt of Islam,
a poem, 475.-On Gurney's visit to the
prisons of Scotland, 603.-On Peter's
Letters to his Kinsfolks, 612.
Odoherty, Ensign, life and writings of, con-
tinued, 320. Note from him to the Edi-
tor, 567.-His garland, in honour of Mrs
Cook, the great, and other poems, 568.
Old Books, reprints of curious ones, 28.
Opera, the English, No I. 715.
Painting, Statuary, Poetry, Politics, and

Pugilism, on the connexion between, 722.
Paris, account of a night in the catacombs
of, 19,-Deaths there in 1817, 489.
Parisiana, 560.

Parisina, the story of, 411.

Pasquinades on the late French ministry,
457.

Pastoral Life, narrative illustrative of, 663.
Pendulum, Captain Kater's method of

measuring the length of the, 182.
Perpetual Kalendar, notice of a, 694.
Persians and Arabians, on the trade of, with
Russia and Scandinavia, in the middle
ages, 135, 292, 460.

Peter's Letters to his Kinsfolk, observations
on, 612.-Peter's account of the Whigs
of Edinburgh, 614.-Of the state of edu-
cation there, 616.-His account of his
visit to Glasgow, and entertainment there,
618. Of the university of Glasgow, 620.
-Farther strictures on, 745.-The gaye-
ties of Edinburgh, ib. His sketches of
some of the ornaments of the bar, 748,-
Mr John Clerk, ib.-Mr Cranstoun, 750.
-Mr Jeffrey, 751.

Phillips, Charles, remarks on his speech in
refutation of the remarks of the Quarterly
Review, 213.

Pictet, Professor, of Geneva, his account of
the destruction of the Val de Bagne, 87.
Pictures at Augsburg, catalogue of, 318.
Platinum, method of purifying, 489.
Plymouth Sound, the breakwater there,

561.
Poems and Plays by the Duchess of New-
castle, remarks on, 309.

by a Heavy Dragoon, remarks on,
574.
Poetry The Prisoner's Frayer to Sleep,
13.-Verses to Lady Anne Scott, 74.—
Isdith and Nora, a pastoral poet's dream,

76. The Complaint of Ceres, 161.-
Fortune, 162.-Songs by Ensign Odo-
herty, 321.-A Tale of Terror, 233.-
To the Child of Corinna, 325.-A Por-
trait, 332.-Elegy, 333.-Our Joys (from
Goethe), 404.-The Interview (from
Schiller), 405. The Elements (from
Burger), ib.-Speech, to the tune of the
Emerald Isle, 406.-A Church-yard
Dream, 445.-Sonnet, ib.-St Helena,
456.-The King's Crutches, and the Roy-
al Vision, 457.-The Mad Banker of
Amsterdam, 563, 729.-Odoherty's Gar-
land, 568.-The Eve of St Jerry, 569.-
The Rime of the Auncient W
aggonere,
571.-Lines to Miss Grace Maddox, the
fair Pugilist, 725.-The Annual Pill,
726.- Account of a Milling Match, by
one of the Fancy, ib.-Elegiac verses,
744.

Poetry, on the Lake School of, 257.

of the Agricultural and Pastoral
Districts of Scotland considered, 521.

English, remarks on Campbell's spe-
cimens of, 696.

Painting, Statuary, Politics, and
Pugilism, on the connexion between,
722.

Poets, on their inaccuracies in Natural
History, 159.

Polar Expedition, account of the, 95.-
Letter concerning the, 193.

Politics, Statuary, Painting, Poetry, and
Pugilism, on the connexion between, 722.
Population, reflections on the theory of,
207.

Prediction, observations on, 266.

Pride and Vanity, on the difference between,
65.

Provençal Language and Literature, Schle-
gel on the, 300.

Publications, monthly list of new ones, 106,
242, 369, 492, 624, 756.
Fublic prints, reflections occasioned by some
late sins of the, 353.
Public Funds, explanation of the principles
of the, 55, 287.
Pugilism, Painting, Statuary, Poetry, and
Politics, remarks on the connexion be-
tween, 722.

Purchas, versification of a passage in, 344.
Rammohun Roy, the Bramin, on the Eng-
lish Writings of, 141.
Red Snow, 754.

Reflections on the Theory of Population,
207.-On some late sins of the public
prints, 353.

Religion and Patriotism of the Edinburgh
Review, remarks on the, 228.
Remarks on Roper's Life of Sir Thomas
More, 28.-On Mr Ricardo's Work on
Political Economy, 58.-On the Candide
of Voltaire, 155.-On the late Hot
Weather, 157.-On Literary Censorship,
176.-On Phillips' Speech against the
Quarterly Review, 213.-On the Pro-
spectus of a new Academical Institution
at Edinburgh, 217.-On General Gour-
gaud's Account of the Campaign of 1815,

220.-On the Religion and Patriotism of
the Edinburgh Review, 228.-On the
revival of a taste for our ancient Litera-
ture, 264.-On Prediction, 266.-On the
Duchess of Newcastle's Poems and Plays,
309.-On Training, 313.- -On Naval
Education, 345.On the Romance of
Antar, 385.-On Scheffer's Essay on
English Politics, 432.-On a Pamphlet
on the Medical Schools of Dublin and
Edinburgh, 439.-On Poems by a Heavy
Dragoon, 574-On Madame Krudener,
a German Fanatic, 609.-On the capaci-
ties of Human Nature, 649.-On the de-
cline of a taste for Metaphysics, 682.-On
the indestructibility of mental impres-
sions, 690.-On Campbell's specimens of
English Poetry, 696.-On the connexion
between pugilism, statuary, painting,
poetry, and politics, 722.

Review of Mr D'Israeli on the Literary
Character, 14.-Of Barrow's History of
Voyages to the Arctic Regions, 187.—Of
Human Life, a poem; by Samuel Ro-
gers, 553.

Review, Edinburgh, on its account of the
late Bishop of Landaff, 34.-Exposure of
its Infidelity to the Christian Faith, 37.-
On the Review of Ricardo's Political
Economy in, 58.-On the Critique of
Goethe's Life in the, 211.-On the ques-
tion, whether it is a Religious and Patri
otic Work, 228.

Revolt of Islam, a poem, observations on, 475.
Rhine, tour on the banks of the, 674.
Ricardo, Mr, on his Work on Political Eco-
nomy, 58.

Rochester, Domestic Letters of John Wil-
mot, Earl of, 541.

Rogers, Samuel, Review of his Poem, Hu-
man Life, 553.

Roper, W. remarks on his Life of Sir
Thomas More, 28.

Sabina (from the German of Böttiger), 42,
164.

Sackeouse, John, the Esquimaux, account
of the late, 656.

Savoy, Sketches of Scenery in, 582.
Scenes in the dressing-room of a rich Ro-
man Lady, 42, 164.

Scheffer's Essay on English Politics, re-
marks on, 432.

Schiller, translations from the German of,
161, 405.

Schlegel, observations by, on the Provençal
Language and Literature, 300.-On the
Crusades, 303.

Scientific and Literary Intelligence, 99, 234,
359, 487, 622, 753.

Scoresby, Captain, on the temperature of
Greenland, 234.

Scotland, height of hills in, 99.
Scott, Lady Anne, Verses addressed to, 74.
Scots, Letter on the National Character of
the, 328, 430.

Scottish Peasantry, poetical because they are
religious, 522.

Selections from Athenæus, 23, 413.
Serpents, on the fascinating power of, 103.

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