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Grant to Maynooth, the, 647.
Hannibal, 752.

Hats, a case of, 51.

History, on translating, 507.
Holy family, the, from Goethe, 178.
Homer, on the translation of, 507.
Homer, Dante, and Michael Angelo, 1.
Homeward bound, 18.

Hood, Thomas, stanzas to the memory
of, by B. Simmons, 768.
Husbandman, the, from Goethe, 175.
Isabel, Queen of Spain, character of
598.

Janus, from the Fasti of Ovid, 94.

J. D. To a Blind Girl, by, 98-Stan-
zas by, 314.

Juvenal, remarks on, 516.

King in Thule, the, from Goethe, 166.
Lebrun's Lawsuit, 705.

Leon, General, 606.

795

O'Donnell, governor of Cuba, 605.
Opium-Eater, a sequel to the confes-
sions of the, introductory notice, 269
-Part I. The affliction of childhood,
274-Part I. continued, 489-con-
cluded; the Palimpsest, 739-Levana
and our Ladies of Sorrow, 743-the
apparition of the Brocken,747-Finale
to Part I., Savannah-la-Mar, 750.
Overland passage, the, 204.
Ovid's Fasti, translation from, 94.
Painting, Cennino Cennini on, 717.
Park, the, from Goethe, 178.
Parting precepts, by B. Simmons, 114.
Pauperism, increase of, 531.

Peel, E. Borodino, an ode by, 30.
Peninsula, a glance at the, 595.
Perfect bliss, from Goethe, 176.
Philomela, from Goethe, 177.

Phoebus and Hermes, from Goethe, 179.

Letters of the Dead, by B. Simmons, Ping-Kee's view of the stage, 415.

114.

Levana and our Ladies of Sorrow, by the
English Opium-Eater, 743.
Lopez, character of, 601.

Love's Hour-Glass, from Goethe, 176.
Lucretius, remarks on, 517.
Malmesbury's Diary and Correspon-
dence, review of, 315.
Malta, 215.

Marriage unequal, from Goethe, 178.
Marston; or, Memoirs of a Statesman
-Part XV., 75-Part XVI., 461-
Part XVII., 679.

Matanzas, insurrection at, 605.
Maynooth, 647.

Merrifield, Mrs, translation of Cennino
Cennini on Painting, by, 717.
Mesmerism, 219.

Mexico in 1812-Part I., 251-Part

II., 331-Part III., 561.
Michael Angelo, 1, 15.
Midnight Watch, the Chap. I., 424—
Chap. II., 431-Chap. III., 439-
Chap. IV., 444.

Milne, Sir David, stanzas written after
the funeral of, by Delta, 766.
Milton, critiques on, 5, 503.
Modern Political Economy, remarks on,
529.

Mohammed Ali, 215.

Montenegro, a ramble in, 33.
Muse's mirror, from Goethe, 179.
My first spec in the Biggleswades, 549.
Narvaez, character of, 599.
New love, from Goethe, 179.
North's Specimens of the British Critics,
No. I., Dryden, 133-No. II., Dryden
and Pope, 369-No. III., Dryden,
503-No. IV, Dryden on Chaucer,
617-the same, concluded, 771.
Novel and the Drama, the, 679.

Poems and ballads of Goethe, No. III.
The waterman, 165-the king in
Thule, 166-the dance of death, 167

-the fairest flower, 168-sorrow
without consolation, 170-comfort in
tears, ib.-to a golden heart, 171—
welcome and departure, 172-even-
ing, 173-a calm at sea, ib.-the
breeze, ib. the cavalier's choice,
174-retribution, 175-poems after
the manner of the antique; the hus-
bandman, ib.-Anacreon's grave, ib.
-the brothers, 176-Love's hour-
glass, ib.-warning, ib.-solitude, ib.
-perfect bliss, ib.-the chosen rock,
177 the death-trance, ib.-Philo-
mela, ib.-sacred ground, ib.-the
park, 178-the teachers, ib.- -mar-
riage unequal, ib.-holy family, ib.—
exculpation, 179-the muses' mirror,
ib.-Phoebus and Hermes, ib.-a new
love, ib.-the wreaths, 180-the Swiss
Alp, ib.

Poetry-Borodino, an ode, by E. Peel,
30-Janus, from the Fasti of Ovid,
94-to a blind girl, 98-Vanities in
verse, by B. Simmons, 114-the
tower of London, by Thomas Ros-
coe, 158-the poems and ballads of
Goethe, No. III. 165-stanzas by
J. D., 314 stanzas written after the
funeral of Sir David Milne, by Delta,
766-stanzas to the memory of Tho-
mas Hood, by B. Simmons, 768.
Poetry, on the translation of, 507.
Political economy, remarks on modern,
529.

Pompeii, 218.

Poole's Englishwoman in Egypt, review
of, 286.

Pope, critique on, 369.

Practical agriculture, 298.
Pushkin, the Russian poet, No. I., by
Thomas B. Shaw, 657.

Race, the, a Red River recollection, 21.
Ragusa, sketch of, 41.

Ramble in Montenegro, a, 33.
Raphael, characteristics of, 17-critique
on, 411.

Rector's daughter, the, Chap. I., 580—
Chap. II., 582-Chap. III., 585—
Chap. IV., 588-Chap. V., 590—
Chap. VI., 592-Chap. VII., 593.
Red River recollections, Chap. I., home-
ward bound, 18-Chap. II., the race,
21-Chap. III., the stag-hunt, 26.
Red Sea, navigation of the, 208.
Retribution, from Goethe, 175.
Revelations of Spain, by an English re-
sident, review of, 595.
Reviews:-Gillman's life of Coleridge,
117--Widdrington's Spain and the
Spaniards, 181-Griffith's journey
across the desert, 204-Townsend's
facts in mesmerism, 219-Mrs Poole's
Englishwoman in Egypt, 286-Ste-
phens' book of the farm, 298-Lord
Malmesbury's diaries and correspon-
dence, 315 Walpole's memoirs of
the reign of George III., 353-Ves-
tiges of the natural history of crea-
tion, 448-Betham's Etruria Celtica,
474-Sismondi's études des sciences
sociales, 529-Revelations of Spain,
by an English resident, 595-Cen-
nino Cennini on painting, 717—Ar-
nold's history of Rome, vol. iii., 752.
Revolution, effects of the, 355.
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 16.
Rome, causes of the decline of, 546.
Roscoe, Thomas, the tower of London,
by, Part I., 158-Part II., 161.
Sacred ground, from Goethe, 177.
Savannah-la-Mar, by the
the English
Opium-Eater, 750.

Scott, Sir Walter, critique on, 8.
Settled at last, or Red River recollec-
tions; Chap. I., homeward bound, 18
-Chap. II., the race, 21-Chap. III.,
the stag-hunt, 26.

Shaw, Thomas B., sketch of the life of
Púshkin, by, 657.

Simmons, B., vanities in verse by-let-
ters of the dead, 114-parting pre-
cepts, 115-stanzas to the memory of
Thomas Hood, by, 768.
Sismondi, 529.

Slavery in the Spanish colonies, 605.
Solitude, from Goethe, 176.

Sorrow without consolation, from
Goethe, 170.

Spain as it is, 181–present condition of,

595.

Stage, Ping-Kee's view of the, 415.
Stag-hunt, the, a Red-River recollection,

21.

Stanzas to the memory of Sir David
Milne, by Delta, 766-of Thomas
Hood, by B. Simmons, 768.

Stephens' book of the farm, review of,
298.

Superfluities of life, the, a tale from

Tieck, Chap. I., 194—Chap. II., 198.
Suspiria de profundis; being a sequel
to the confessions of an English
Opium-Eater. Introductory notice,
269-Part I., the affliction of child-
hood, 274-Part I. continued, 489—
Part I. concluded, the Palimpsest,
739-Levana and our Ladies of Sor-
row, 743-the apparition of the
Brocken, 747-Finale to Part I., Sa-
vannah-la-Mar, 750.

Swiss Alp, the, from Goethe, 180.
Tasso, critique on, 405.

Teachers, the, from Goethe, 178.
Three guardsmen, the, 59.
Tieck, the superfluities of life by, Chap.
I., 194-Chap. II., 198.
To a blind girl, 98.

To a golden heart, from Goethe, 170.
To Livia, by B. Simmons, 114.
Tower of London, the, by Thomas
Roscoe, Part I., 158—Part II., 161.
Townsend's facts in mesmerism, review
of, 219.

Translation, remarks on, 507.
Vanities in verse, by B. Simmons-Let-
ters of the dead, 114-parting pre-
cepts, 115.

Vestiges of the natural history of crea-
tion, review of, 448.

Viceroy and the aristocracy, or Mexico
in 1812-Part I., 251-Part II., 331
-Part III., 561.

Virgil, remarks on Dryden's transla-
tion of, 520.

Virgil, Tasso, and Raphael, 401.
Walpole's memoirs of the reign of

George III., review of, 353.
Warning, the, from Goethe, 176.
Waterman, the, from Goethe, 165.
Welcome and departure, from Goethe,
170.

Widdrington's Spain and the Spaniards,
review of, 181.

Wreaths, the, from Goethe, 180.

Edinburgh: Printed by Ballantyne and Hughes, Paul's Work.

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