OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH OF HIS SON.
DAUGHTERS of Jove and of Mnemosyne, Pierian sisters, in whose sacred paths,
From my youth up these duteous feet have trod; Ye who with your awakening influence warm'd My youthful heart, disdaining not to accept The first fruits of an offering immature, And who into my riper strains have breathed Truth, knowledge, life, and immortality; An earthly heritage indefeasible Assuring to me thus, with Bards of old, With the blind Grecian of the rocky isle, The Mantuan, and the Tuscan; and more dear To me than all of elder Rome and Greece, My honour'd master, who on Mulla's side, Mid the green alders, mused his heavenly lay. Be with me, O ye Nymphs of Castaly Divine, be with me now; ye who so oft
Have given me strength, and confidence, and joy, O give me comfort now!-to you I look In sorrow, who in gladness heretofore, Yet never but with deepest faith devout, Have wooed your visitation. For no strain Of querulous regret I ask your aid, Impatient of the chastening hand of Heaven; But rather that your power may discipline Thoughts that will rise-may teach me to control
This additional fragment was found in a different book from that which contained the notes before printed, and being in the middle of poems, which have been long pub
The course of grief, and in discursive flight Leading my spirit, sometimes through the past, Sometimes with bold yet not irreverent reach Into the region of futurity,
Abstract her from the sense of present woe.
Short time hath pass'd since from my pilgrimage To my rejoicing home restored I sung
A true thanksgiving song of pure delight. Never had man whom Heaven would heap with bliss More happy day, more glad return than mine; Yon mountains with their wintry robe were clothed When, from a heart that overflow'd with joy, I pour'd that happy strain. The snow not yet Upon their mountain sides hath disappear'd Beneath the breath of spring, and in the grave Herbert is laid, the child who welcomed me With deepest love upon that joyful day; Herbert, my only and my studious boy, The sweet companion of my daily walks,
Whose sports, whose studies, and whose thoughts I shared,
Yea in whose life I lived, in whom I saw
My better part transmitted and improved, Child of my heart and mind, the flower and crown Of all my hopes and earthly happiness.
lished, was overlooked. The epitaph, numbered XXXVIII. among the Inscriptions, not improbably refers to the same bereavement.
of Kaf in search of the water of im-, Arabians, their mode of dividing the mortality, 43. twenty-four hours, 230.
Algernon Sidney, Epitaph on, 171.
Arabs, their singular manner of taking food, 229. Their gross superstition, 261.
Alhambra, description of the cabinet of Araf, a place between the Heaven and the, 85.
ADEL SHUFFLEBOTTOM, his Amatory Alphonso, 660. Poems, 114. Aberfraw, the Palace of Gwynedd, Algiers, Battle of, an Ode, 198 314. Ablutions, funeral, singular origin as- scribed to the practice, 218. Abmelec, or eater of locusts and grass- hoppers, a particular account of this singular bird, 241.
Abolition of slavery, celebration of the, 755.
Aclides, the, of the Romans, particulars concerning, 391.
Ad, the Tribe of, some interesting par- ticulars of their settlement in Al-ah- káf, 216. Their lapse into idolatry, 216. Their pilgrimage to Hegiaz (now Mecca), 216. Its results, 216. Adair, his account of the funeral of a Mosqueto Indian, 333. Adam and Eve, curious tradition con- cerning them and their immediate descendants after the Fall, 218. The body of Adam said to have been taken by Noah into the ark with him, 218. Adosinda, 645.
Afflighem, Abbey of, destroyed during the French Revolution, 733.
A freet, one of the evil genii, description of, 310.
Africa, To the Genius of, 100. Agatha and King Charlemain, 435. Age and Youth, 123.
Agincourt, consequences of the victory at, 15. Conduct of the English sol- diery at the battle of, 69. Agincourt, Henry of, description of his funeral, 19.
Agnes Sorel, mistress to Charles the Seventh of France, anecdote of, 23. Particulars of her history, her last illness, and death, 51. Agnes, St., her remarkable exclamation
at the stake, 27. Curious legend pre- served of this saint in Cornwall, 27. One of the saints especially reve- renced by Joan of Arc, 27. Aignan, St., the tutelary saint of Or- leans, 37. Al-ahkaf, or Winding Sands, the first settlement of the Tribe of Ad, 216. "Alas for the oak of our fathers, that stood," 123.
Alderman's Funeral, The, an Eclogue, 159.
Alentejo, Lines written in, 122.
Allan Cunningham, Epistle to, 209. All for Love; or a Sinner well saved, 516.
the Hell of the Mahommedans, 312. Ararat, Mount, monkish fable relative to the relics of the Ark of Noah, 288.
All-knowing Bird, the, curious particu- Araucans, Song of the, during a Thun- lars respecting, 303, 304.
Almanzor, the Victorious, founder of the city of Bagdad, some particulars respecting him, 254. Amalahta, 365.
Amatory Poems of Abel Shufflebottom,
Arbalist, the, some particulars concern- ing, 56. Archbishop of Canterbury, his reply to the propositions of the Archbishop of Bourges on the subject of Henry the Fifth's claim to the crown of France, 62.
America, Ode written during the War Arc, Joan of. See " Joan of Arc." with, in 1814, 192.
American Indians, Songs of the, 132— 134.
Americans, native, splendour of some of their ancient cities, 327. Amphilochius, Bishop of Iconium, ex- tracts from his Life of St. Basil,
Ampulla, Legend of the, 25. Amreeta, The, 622. Amreeta, the water of immortality, the Hindoo fable of its production by churning the sea with a mountain,
"Argalus and Parthenia" of Quarles, extract from, 730. Arius and Arianism, 630. Ark, Holy, of the Camara Santa, parti- cular description of, 692. Armada, The Spanish, 128. Armet, or chapelle de fer, the, descrip- tion of, 66.
Armour, remarks on the ancient regula-
tions relating to different kinds of, 48. Army, effective discipline of an, re- marks upon, 742.
Arrabida, The Convent of, Lines written after visiting, 137.
"And I was once like this! that glow- Arrival of the Gods, The, 380. ing cheek," 137.
Andrew Marvel, his description of the coracle, 349.
And wouldst thou seek the low abode," 118.
Animadversions on works of an immo- ral tendency, 769. Anjou, Mary of, queen of France, her
counsel to her husband, Charles VII., the means of saving the kingdom, 23. Anointing, royal, curious opinion re- specting, by Robert Grossetest, Bi- shop of Lincoln, 25. Great veneration of the French for the oil used in the coronation of their kings, 75. Antidius, St., the Pope, and the Devil, Ballad of, 451.
Arabian Tales, The, remarks upon, in connection with Ferdusi and Oriental literature, 115.
Alexander I., Emperor of all the Arabian saints, their habitations always Russias, Ode to, 195. near the sanctuary or tomb of their ancestors-the reasons for this cus- tom, 261.
Alexander the Great, Persian story of his visit to the cave in the mountain
Arrows, divination by, forbidden to the Mahommedans, 228.
Arrows of the Omen, account of those employed by the Tlaxaltecas, 331. Arrows, poisoned, general use of, among the Indians and others, 373. Artificial islands, common in China and Mexico, 386. "Asiatic Researches," extracts from,
illustrative of the Hindoo mythology, 553. 566. 570. 572. 577, 578. 585. 593. 602. 604. 611, 612. 622, 623. Assueton, Sir John, a Scotch knight,
account of a surprising feat performed by him, 48. "As thus I stand beside the murmuring stream," 107. Astrology, the Orientalists greatly ad- dicted to this science, 296. Absurd consequences resulting from it, 296. Astronomy, Translation of a Greek Ode on, 125.
Asturias, curious account of the relics deposited in, by Urban, Archbishop of Toledo, 691.
Aswamedka, the, or sacrifice of a hare, curious account of, 571.
"At length hath Scotland seen," 202.
Attila, signs said to have preceded and announced his wars, 633. Aullay, an imaginary monster of the Hindoos, 603.
Austerities, rigour and continuance of those practised by the Hindoo fana- tics almost incredible, 563.
Autumn, Lines on, 139.
Baths, the Enchanted, 263.
Bath, the, forbidden to the Moriscoes in Spain, 230.
Battle of Algiers, an Ode, 198. Battle of Blenheim, The, 449. Battle of Keirog, 316.
Battle of Pultowa, The, 124. Battle, The, 330. 391.
Autumn, view of the scene of war in, Bayle, or lists, some account of, 47.
reflections on, 739.
Awakening, The, 774.
"A well there is in the West Country," 448.
Bazaars of Persia, 255.
Beads, their use in the devotions of the Mussulmans, 258.
Bear, The Dancing, 163.
"A wrinkled, crabbed man they picture Beatification, The, 779. thee," 109.
Aymeric, Count, and Garci Ferrandez, 441.
Azrael, the Angel of Death, 223. Aztlan, The Return to, 359.
Bab al Jehennan, or Hell-gate, a name given by the Moors and Arabs to the bitumen springs at Ait, 258. Babel, Tower of, some particulars con- cerning, 256.
Babylon, ruins of, 256.
Bachelors, the three holy, of the Isle of Britain, 376.
Balance of the Dead, the, an article of belief in most ancient creeds, 299. Mahommed borrowed it from the Persians, 299. Use made of it by the monks, 300.
Baldred, St., the Confessor, 376. Ballad of " Old Poulter's Mare," 218. Ballad of St. Antidius, the Pope, and the Devil, 450.
Ballads and Metrical Tales, 417-479. Balsam tree, fables of, 288.
Baly, the city of, 600.
Baly, the Giant, mythological fables of, 600.
Bamboo houses of the East, description of, 593.
Banner and pennon, the, some particu- lars illustrative of their signification, 70.
Banquo, The Race of, 122.
Banyan tree, the, description of, 592.
Bardic system, curious extract from the
Bards, regulations to which they were
bound to submit, 341.
Bards, the rival, and their lays, 88. Bards, The Three of the Ruddy Spear, 377.
Bardsey, the Holy Islet, 347. Barnes, his account of the mode of mar- shalling bowmen, 14. He attributes the victory at Poictiers chiefly to the archers, 14. His notice of the magna- nimous conduct of Edward the Black Prince at the siege of Rouen, 18. His glowing description of the appear- ance of two contending armies drawn up in battle array, 70. Bartholomew's Day, St., 129. Basil, St., extract from the Life of, by Amphilochius, Bishop of Iconium, 514. Remarkable instance of his power in prayer, 528. Miracles re- corded to have been performed by him, 534.
Beaumont and Fletcher, extract from "The Mad Lover," 39. Beautiful Isle, The, 353. Beauty, a Welsh, description of, from
one of their original Chronicles, 365. Beaver, the, particulars of the last of the race in England and Wales, 345. Bedford, Grosvenor Charles, dedication to him of "Roderick, the last of the Goths," 628.
Bedouins, the, less superstitious than the Turks, 235. Their general po- verty, 236. Their mode of baking bread, 236. Their tents, description of, 237. Their head-dress, 237. Their music, 238. Their literature, 238. Bee, To a, 126.
Beguines, the, notice of their establish- at Ghent, 732.
Belus, Temple of, some particulars re- specting, 256.
"Berkeley, Old Woman of;" this story receives confirmation from the Dialogues of St. Gregory, 233. The Ballad, 454.
Bernardes, Diogo, character of his poetry, 647.
"Beware a speedy friend, th' Arabian said," 108.
Bhagvat Geeta," the, curious extract from, relative to the incorruptible na- ture of the soul of man, 553. The relative condition of the good and the bad after death, 563. Concerning the Hindoo Gods, 563. Character of the great First Cause, 612.
Bilderdijk, his Poem relative to the Author, 212.
Bird of Paradise, 305.
Birth-day of the world, fable of, 303. Bishop Bruno, 448.
Bishop, a wicked, God's Judgment on, 428.
Black Prince, the, anecdote of, 11. Blenheim, The Battle of, 449. Blessed, Island of the, description of, 499.
Blood, human, drank by the Florida Indians, and formerly by the Irish, under peculiar circumstances, 382. Boiling Well, near Bristol, some parti-
Bones of the dead, great respect paid to, among the Indians - curious instance of, 333.
Botany Bay Eclogues, 103-107. Bourges, Archbishop of, makes offers of peace to Henry V., 62. Bouthellier, Governor of Rouen, no- tice of, 18.
Bowles, Caroline, Lines addressed to, by the Author, 514.
Brough Bells, 465. Some particulars of the church, 466.
Bruce, fate of his heart, which had been committed to Douglas to bear to Je- rusalem, 52.
"Bruce, The," extract from, 389. Bruges, notices of the remains of its ancient grandeur, 731. Bruno, Bishop, 448.
Brunswick, the Duke of, tribute to his bravery at the battle of Waterloo, 741. Brussels, 733. Memorials and trophies of war at, 734.
"Buccaneers, History of the," remark- able instance of prophecy occasioning its own fulfilment, 300. Buffalo, the, its peculiar habits de- scribed, 576.
Buchanan, Dr. Claudius, extracts from his" Asiatic Researches," illustrative of Hindoo worship and manners, 576, 577. 593. 596, 597. Buonaparte, Ode written during the Negotiations with, in January, 1814,
Buonaparte, part of an Arabic poem in praise of, 753. His great crimi- nality, 753. Buonaparte, probable effect upon the world of the success of his ambitious designs, 727. Singular notion enter- tained on the Continent of the policy of England towards him, 742. Burgundian Insurrection in Paris, 22. Burney's" History of Music," extract from, respecting the use of the viol in France, 37.
Burrard, Paul, Lines to the memory of, 174.
Busaco, Convent of, memorable in the military as well as monastic history of Portugal, 184. Extracts from Dona Bernarda Ferreira's poem upon this venerable place, 185.
Cabinet of the Alhambra, $5. Cadwallon, 319.
Cæsarian operation, supposed earliest fact connected with, 304.
Caledonian Canal, Inscriptions for the, Charlotte, Queen, Ode on the Death of, 180, 181. 199. Camara Santa, the, a particular history Charlotte, Her Royal Highness the
and description of, 691, &c. Camel of the River. See Pelican. Camel, the, attachment of the Arabs to, 218. Difference in its treatment in hot countries and cold, 249. Parti- culars illustrative of its natural his- tory, 250.
Canary Islands, extract from Glas's History of, 568.
Canons, ecclesiastical, particulars of those of the Council of Laodicea re- lating to the sacerdotal garments, 694.
Canterbury, Archbishop of, his reply to the propositions of the Archbishop of Bourges, on the subject of Henry the Fifth's claim to the French crown, 62.
Caradoc and Senena, 406. Carbuncle, fabulous account of its won- derful properties, 220. Cardinal Ursino, the, 16.
Carlos the Second of Spain, some par- ticulars concerning, 735. CARMEN NUPTIALE, 756. CARMEN TRIUMPHALE, 184-190. Carmina Aulica, written in 1814, on the Arrival of the Allied Sovereigns in England, 194.
Carpets, great splendour of those used by the Persians, 266. Carol, Christmas, a curious one pre- served in Ritson's "Collection of Ancient Songs," 72. Casbin, the Grapes of, described, 267. Castle of Romorantin, singular mode of attack upon, by Edward the Black Prince, 60.
Princess, Dedication to her of the "Lay of the Laureate," 756. Funeral Song for," 765.
Charming of serpents, extracts and re- marks connected with this subject, 286.
Chase, the, predilection of the kings of Persia for, 285. Chatham, Our Lady of, superstitious tradition concerning her, 233. "Cheerful on this holiday," -a Song from Wat Tyler, 91. Chicasaw Indians, interesting dialogue between John Wesley and some of them, 335.
Chidder and Elias, Persian fable of, with remarks, 43.
"Come, melancholy Moralizer, come," 121.
Complaints of the Poor, The, 130. Compostella, The Pilgrim to, a Christ- mas Tale, 536. Concert of Frogs, 407.
Concourse, Place of, a name given to the city of Mecca by the Mahomme- dans, 217.
Conqueror, deliverer, friend of human kind," 193.
Contemplation, To, 117.
Convent of Arrabida, Lines written after a visit to the, 137.
Convent of Busaco, some particulars respecting it, 184.
Conversion of the Hoamen, The, 374. Cool Reflections during a Midsummer Walk from Warminster to Shaftes- bury, 162.
Chikkasah, The Old, to his Grandson, Coracle, the, particulars concerning,
Children, heathen practices with regard to, 493.
Christian world, its condition described at the commencement of the Saracen conquests, 633.
Christening, Queen Mary's, 467. Christianity, the only source of true greatness, 746.
Christians and Saracens, curious de- scription of a battle between, 717. Christmas Carol, a curious one, 72. Christmas Day, Lines written on, 136. "Chronicles of King Don Rodrigo,"
account of a splendid war-chariot, extracted from, 634.
Church, authority of the, Monkish ad- vocacy of, 28.
City of Peace, The, 254.
Cities, Oriental, corresponding features to be found in all, 254.
Cataia of the Romans, description of, Civil war, difference of the mode of con- duct, in England and in France, 11. Catapulta, the ancient, some notices of, Clarendon, Hugh, some particulars 47. Cataract of Lodore, The, 164.
from his "History of England," re- specting the siege of Rouen, 16.
Cedars of Lebanon, strange account of, Clarkson, tribute to his memory, in
by De la Roque, 294.
Cemeteries, Mahommedan, commonly planted with cypress trees, 292. "Censuria Literaria," the, extracts from, 786.
Century, Close of the, 410. Ceremonies, religious, usually preceded all settled engagements in battle in the 15th century, 69. Chair, St. Michael's, 431. Chamber of the Tomb; some particu- lars of the places of sepulture of the Persians, 276. Chamberlayne, William, extract from his "Pharonida," with remarks, 79. Champion, origin of the term, 187. Chapel Bell, The, 119.
Charlemagne, ridiculous monkish tale respecting him, 300.
Charles the Bold, account of the sin- gular preservation of his monument, and that of his daughter, 731. Charles the First, his conduct at the place of execution, 781. Charles the Seventh of France, his de- spair of maintaining Orleans against the besiegers, 23. He is encouraged by his Queen, Mary of Anjou, 23.
connection with the abolition of slavery, 756.
Cleanliness, some observations upon, in connection with knighthood, 674. "Clear shone the moon, the gale was fair," 128.
Clemency always allied to true great- ness, ironically instanced in the con- duct of Titus Vespasian at the siege of Jerusalem, 83.
Clouds, red, supposed by the American
Indians to be the blood of the brave, who have fallen in battle, 369. Coatel, 386. Death of, 402. Coatlantona, mother of Mexitli, made immortal for the sake of her son, 381.
Cock and a Hen, Legend of, 536. Coffee plant, the, notices of, 295. Coins, Gothic, some curious particulars descriptive of, 634.
"Cold was the night-wind, drifting fast the snow fell," 119.
Columbus, inference drawn by him from the elevation of the Pole at Paria, 360.
Com, character of the earthenware ex- ported from, 257.
349. Description of, by Andrew Mar- vel, 349.
Cornelius Agrippa, a Ballad, 434. Corston, Sonnet to, 107. Some account of the village, 144.
Cortez, his splendid reception at the city of Chololla, 328.
Cottage, The Ruined, an Eclogue, 155. Count Julian and Roderick, 710. Count Pedro's Castle, 672. Courage, incitements to, 10. Covadonga, battle of, superstitious tra- ditions connected with, 709. Covadonga, The Vale of, 707. Cowper, strictures on his Translation of Homer, 3.
Cranes, their immense number in the city of Bagdad; reasons assigned for it, 255.
Cressy, conduct of the English soldiery at the battle of, 69.
Crier, the royal, of the twelfth century, his duties, 318.
Crime the invariable precursor of suf- fering, 752. Several illustrious ex- amples, 752.
Crocodiles, The King of the, 437. Cross-bow, the, some particulars con- cerning, 56.
Cross Roads, The, 427. Cross, the oaken, of Pelayo, some par- ticulars concerning, 715.
Crystals, curious particulars concern- ing, 228.
Cu, the, (or Temple) of Mexico, some particulars respecting, 328. Cunningham, Allan, Epistle to, 209. CURSE OF KEUAMA, THE, 548. The Funeral, 549. The Curse, 552. The Recovery, 555. The Departure, 556. The Separation, 558. Casayapa, 561. The Swerga, 566. The Sacrifice, 572. The Home Scene, 575. Mount Meru, 577. The Enchantress, 586. The Sacrifice completed, 590. The Re- treat, 592. Jaganaut, 596. The City of Baly, 600. The Ancient Sepul- chres, 603. Baly, 606. Kehama's Descent, 608. Mount Calasay, 609. The Embarkation, 612. The World's End, 613. The Gate of Padalon, 617. Padalon, 619. The Amreeta, 622. Cupri-Kent, or the Village of the Bridge, 268.
Cymri, or Aborigines, a name by which
the Welsh designate themselves,
Cynetha and his Brothers, fate of, 320. Cypress trees, commonly used in plant- ing the cemeteries of the Mahomme- dans, 292.
Cyric, St., the patron saint of sailors,
"Did then the Negro rear at last the sword?" 99.
Dinas Vawr, the Great Palace, 319. 346.
Diogo Bernardes, character of his poetry, 647.
Divination by arrows, the practice of, forbidden to the Mahommedans, 228. Divination, particulars of, as existing among the American Indians, 364.
Damascus, the blades of, singular fact Dogs, absurd notions formerly held of connected with, 717.
Dammer Cappy, the Gates of Iron; a narrow defile in the mountains of the
Beni Abbess, 264.
Dancing Bear, The, 163.
their use in laying troubled spirits,
"Do I regret the past ?" 131.
Dolphin, the, curious description of, by Herbert, 325.
Dancing women of India, some pecu- Dolwyddelan, Tower of, some parti. liarities of, 268.
Dar-al-Salam, the City of Peace (now Bagdad), curious particulars relating to its origin, 254.
"Dark Horror! hear my call," 116. Dark Island, The, 314.
culars connected with, from the 'Gwydyr History," 337.
Egilona, Queen, her character, as drawn by the author of "Count Ju- lian," 654.
Egyptians, their mode of preserving their dead, 489.
Egypt, Pyramids of, account of their origin, 219. Ancient superstitions respecting these ancient monuments, not much improved upon by their exchange for the absurdities of the Romish religion, 643.
El-Alem, or the Signal, a white flag hoisted to warn the Mahommedans of the hour of prayer, 707. Elder Worthies, The, 781. Elephant, the Indian, singular provision of Nature in behalf of, 594. Mytho- logical fable respecting, 595.
Douro, Inscription for the Banks of Embarkation, The, 612. the, 175.
Davenant, extract from his play of Drayton, his description of the English Emmet, Robert, Lines written after
David, King of Wales, his character, Dreams, singular tale illustrative of
David, St., singular tradition of, 376. Day's Journey in Spain, Recollections of a, 138.
Dead, Festival of the, 368. Dead Friend, The, 131.
Dead, the, strange superstition of the
Turks and Persians respecting, 288. Various modes of preserving among different nations, 490.
"Death has gone up into our Palaces," 199.
Death of a favourite old Spaniel, Lines on, 137.
Death of Coatel, 402. Of Lincoya, 405.
Death of Wallace, The, 128. Death, reflections upon, 9. Deer, hunting the, supposed by the American Indians to be the employ- ment of those who honourably fall in battle, 369. This notion illustrated from Carver's Travels, 369. Deer-skins, white, used among the In- dians for enshrouding the bones of their dead, 333.
"Delegate of Heaven," the title claimed by Joan of Arc, 29.
Delia, Sonnets to, by Abel Shuffle- bottom, 114.
Deliverance, The, 396. Departure, The, 356. Descent of Kehama, 608.
Desert, disappointments of the, 249. Horrors of the, as related by Mungo Park, 251. Phenomenon of the pillars of sand, 252.
Desert, the, or Field of the Spirit, its import, 363.
Destruction of Jerusalem, The, 127. Devil's Walk, The, particulars con- nected with the disputed authorship of the piece, 165. The Poem, 166. Dharma-Raja, or King of Justice, of the Hindoos, mythology of, 621. D'Herbelot, his account of the Tribe of Ad, descendants of the son of Noah, 215.
the spiritual theory of, 76. A monkish miracle, to the same effect, 76. Dromedary, the, interesting particulars respecting, 251. Its extraordinary swiftness, 252.
Drums, account of enormous ones used by the Mexicans on special oc- casions, 329.
Drunkards, The Three Arrant, of Wales, the history of, from the" Cam- brian Biography," 347. Duke of Wellington, Inscriptions to his memory, 173, 174, 175, 176.
Eagle, the, poetical allusion to the opi- nion of this bird's casting its feathers in old age, and renewing its youth and vigour, 750. Earth, the, extravagant theories con- cerning its history and formation, 323. Extracts from Burnett's "The- ory of the Earth," with remarks, 269. East, the, some of the best accounts of, to be found in the writings of those Travellers who have been practical jewellers, 232.
Ebb Tide, The, 130.
Eberhard and Donica, 419.
Eblis, the name given by Mahommed to the devil, 225.
hearing his Speech on his Trial and Conviction for High Treason, 140.
Enchanted Island, The, 342.
Enchanter's glass, the, 754.
Enchanted Tower at Toledo, fabulous story of, with remarks, 666. Spanish ballad on this subject, 668. Account
of the first inhabitants of Toledo, 669. Enchantress, The, 586.
Engelbrecht, Hans, his vision of the heavenly world, 612.
England, the Poet's tribute in praise of, 754. Celebration of her martial achievements, 758.
England, her sufferings from war with France, 8. Her mode of conducting civil war contrasted with that of France, 11.
English soldiery, testimony to their bravery and good conduct at the battle of Agincourt, 69. And at the battle of Waterloo, 734. "Enter, Sir Knight,' the warrior cried," 425.
Epic Poems, strictures on, 3. Epilogue to the Young Dragon, 478. Epistle to Allan Cunningham, 209 EPITAPHS, 171–182. On Algernon Sid- ney, 171. On King John, 171. On a Mother, by her Son, 172. On Emma, 173. On General Moore, 174. On Clement Francis, 180. In Butleigh Church, 181. On Bishop Butler, 182. Epitaph on King Roderick, by Lope de Vega, 726.
Ebony tree, the, curious fact respecting, Erillyab, 326. 217.
Echo, superstition of the American In- dians on this subject, 368. Eclipse, account of the one which hap- pened in April, 1715, 242. Eclogues, English, 149. Some remarks on this kind of composition, 149. Edinburgh Review, some strictures upon its judgment as to the result of the war in the Peninsula, 184, &c. "Edith! ten years are number'd since the day," 482.
Ednowain, Palace of, description of its ruins, from Pennant's Snowdon,"
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