the same subject, by an American poet, 380.
Dwight, beauties of, 92, et seq.; on the
divine benevolence, 934.
Ebioniles first mentioned by Irenæus, 342. Ebsambal, temple of, 4.
Elm, history of the, 177; probably not indigenous to England, ib.
Elpha, the last habitable place on the Nile to which Nubian boats ascend, 3. Eredy, Saint, cell of, 8, 9.
Ferdinand VII., king of Spain, memoirs of, translated from the Spanish, by M. J. Quin, 355, et seq.; beneficial effects of Christianity on political in- --stitutions, 356; the progress of free-
dom interrupted by the consequences of the French revolution, 356, 7; probable causes of the imbecility of Fer- dinand, 357; his peculiar situation in his father's court, 358; political cor- ruption and degradation of the kingdom at that period, 358, 9; causes from which great revolutions generally ori- ginate, 359; general results of those respective causes, ib.; French troops received in Spain as friends, 360, 1; bad policy of Bonaparte, 361; abdi- cation of King Charles, 362; letters of the queen expressive of her hatred of her son, 362, 3; death of Charles, 363; true character of Ferdinand, ib.; his amusements, 364; proofs of his ulter heartlessness, ib.; kis mode of govern- ment in accordance with the views of the Holy Alliance, 366.
ite, and ancient Hebrew Christians, con- founded by the Editors of the new version, 332; Ebionites first mentioned by Ire- næus, ib.; consisted of two sects, ib.; extracts from Epiphanius and Jerome, respecting the Hebrew gospel, 332, 3; their testimonies either mistaken or misrepresented by the Editors of the new version, 333; the Editors' state- ment of the case of Marcion, 334; case of Marcion examined by the present writer, 334, 5; remarks on the Editors' reference to the copies of Cerinthus and Carpocrates, 336, et seq.; contradictory assertions of a Calm Inquirer exposed, 339; remarks on the Editors' various renderings of Luke ii. 2., 339, 40. Grolius, his escape from prison, by the con- trivance of his wife, 41.
Hajji Baba, of Ispahan, adventures of, by Morier, 341, et seq.; character of Hajji, ib.; the present work a correct exposure of the state of society in Persia, 342; the Persians, the French- men of Asia, ib.; the modern Persians exhibit strong marks of their ancient origin, ib.; prefatory remarks of the author, 342, 3; design of the present work, 343; Hajji's introduction to the king's physician, ib. ; account of his interview with the Frank doctor, 346, et seq.; description of the interior of the physician's harem, 348, 9; contest between the Mollahs and a Frank dervish, 349, et seq.; Hajji's inquiries respecting the country of Frangistan, Boonapoort, and the Coompani, or old woman said to govern India, 352, et seq.
Hor, Mount, and tomb of Aaron, £9, Hunt's, Sir Aubrey de Vere, duke of
Mercia, &c. 163, et seg.; remarks on the author's subject, 164; ode to April, 167, 8; the family picture, 169; Jerusalem, from a drawing, ib.
India, Southern, Egypt and Palestine, diary of a tour through, by a field offi- cer of cavalry, in the years 1821 and 1822, 247, et seq.; pious intention of the author, 247; quits Bangalore for Madras, ib.; description of a singu. larly romantic village, ib.; and ex- tract; route to Arcot and Madras de- scribed, 248; visit to Tranquebar, ib.; Tamul bible association at Jaffna, composed wholly of natives; present rajah of Tanjore educated by Swartz, ib.; his attachment to the mission, ib.; grave stone to the memory of Swartz, 245; dexterity of the thieves of Serringa- pallah, 249; interview with Rhenius and Schmidt at Palamcottab, 250; stale of the schools in the Tinetelly country, 250, 1; a Roman Catholic congregation joins the Protestant com- munion, ib.; prosperous state of the central Tamul school at Nagracoil, in Travancore, 251, 2, and extract; country and town of Travancore de- scribed, 252; friendly disposition of Dr. Prendergast, the Pope's vicar, towards schools for the poor, ib.; au thor's visit to Coyam, 253; religious rites of the Syrian church at Cotyam, ib. ; great veneration of the Syrian churches for the name of Buchanan, ib.; unaf- fected humility and kindness of the Metropolitan, 254; author's estimate of the Syrian Christians, 255; Nil- gherree mountains described, 255, 6; dress, manners, &c. of the natives, ib. ;- produce of the country, 256, 7; elephant carriage of the rajah of the Mysore, 257;« the author's interview with the Abbé Dubois, 258; independent rajah of Coorga, ib.; author's journey to Egypt, ib.; his pilgrimage to the holy city, ib.; absurdity of the legends of
the monks, respecting the localities connected with the history of the holy city, 259; remarks on the supposed ruins of Capernaum, 259, 60; uni- versal desire among the Syrians to be under the protection of a European Christian power, 260; lady Hester Stanhope, ib.; uame of the author of the present work, ib. Irby and Mangles' travels in Nubia, Syria, and Asia Minor, during the years 1817 and 1818, 1, et seq.; ascent up the Nile to Elpha, ib.; description of the second cataract, ib. ; įvarious temples visited by the authors, 4; some formerly used for Christian churches, ib.; interior of the sanctuary of the temple at Armada, ib.; state of agriculture in Nubia, &c. 5; character, Bc. of the Nubians, 6; dress of the women, ib.; granite quarries at As- souan, 9; mode by which the ancients detached large masses of granite, 9, 10; temple at Arabat Matfooner, 10, 11; remarks on the three descriptions of monuments found in Egypt, 11; ab- original Egyptians incapable of cut- ting and polishing large blocks of stone, having no iron tools, ib.; no visible remains of gates or walls at Thebes, 12; lunar system discovered in the temple of Isis, at Tentyra, ib.; cause of the superior interest excited by Egyp tian antiquities, 13; the authors quit Cairo for Syria, ib.; visit Eden and the Cedars, 14; remarks on the Ce- dars, by Volney, Maundrell, and Pococke, &c. 14, 15; description of, by Burckhardt, 17; by Dr. Richardson, 16, 17; beauty of the banks of the Oron- tes, 18; girls of Georgia exposed to sale, 19; ruins and tombs of Palmyra, 19, 20; tombs of Om Keis, 20, 21; the supposed site of Gadara, or Ga- mala, ib. note; walers of the Dead Sea, bitter and buoyant, 23; authors' route to Petra, round the Dead Sea, de- scribed, ib. &c.; Necropolis of Petra, 26; lomb, interior of, ib. ; approach to Petra, 27; valley, &c. of Petra, de- scribed, 27, &c.; Mount Hor, and the tomb of Aaron, 29; fruit of the Dead Sea, 31.
Jamaica,recent conduct of the local authorities
in, Robert Hall's remarks on, 283, 4. Jerram's tribute of parental affection to the memory of a beloved daughter, 169, et seq.; great advantages of early religious culture, 170; on confirmation, 170, 1; exercise of his daughter's
mind during her last illness, 179, 3. Jerusalem, lines on, from a drawing, 169.
Jet, fossil wood passing into, 46, 7. Johnson's, Dr., private correspondence of William Cowper, Esq. 193, et seq.; the present letters submitted to Hay- ley, and rejected by him, ib. ; remarks of the author on the motive and the ill eject of the rejection, 194; attempt to conceal Cowper's malady, injudicious and injurious, ib. et seq.; letter of Cowper, on the case of Simon Browne, as supposed analogous to his own, 198; other letters, exhibiting the gloomy state of his mind, 199, et seq.; his sufferings occasioned by his dreams, 202; his de fence of his conduct from the charge of inconsistency, 203; remarks on his not attending public worship, 204, and extract; on his spending his time in translating Homer, 205; his own reasons for undertaking the translation 205, 6; extracts from letters alluding to the some subject, and the varying state of his mind, 206, et seq.; remarks on the charge of impropriety in reference to his domestication with Mrs. Unwin, 209, et seq.; the author's apology for publish- ing the desponding letters, 213; letter from an owl to a bird of paradise, 215, 16.
Jones's Greek and English Lexicon, 114, el seq.; extent and general design of the work, 115, 16; author's remarks on the origin of the Greek language and the elymology of Greek words, 116, 17; objection to the author's etymology, 117, &c.; real utility of the work, 121; extract, illustrative of the author's method, 121, 2; objections to certain renderings of the author, 123, 4. Joyce, cornet, circumstances attending his abduction of King Charles I. from Holdenby house, 132, et seq. Jury, trial by, in France, how managed, 35.
Kamhanni, mountains, the natural line of separation between the Hottentot and Kaffer races, 501.
Kolli, Baron de, memoirs of, 78, &c. Kroko, a New Zealander, his account of the massacre of a part of the crew of Morion's ship, 159.
Lausanne, the spirit of persecution_now raging there, 473.
Learning, classical, decline of, in this
country, with the causes of it, 230. Lee's, Professor, remarks on Dr. Hen-
derson's appeal to the Bible Society, on the subjects of the Turkish version of the New Testament, 530, et seq.; remarks on the preface to Dr. Hen- derson's appeal, 531; Dr. H. not a Turkish scholar, 532; detail of the cautious proceedings of the com- . mittee of the Bible Society, and sus- pension of the circulation of the Turkish New Testament, during near- ly three years, in deference to Dr. H.'s objections, 553; Dr. H.'s call for inquiry and a special committee of translations, 533, et seq.; he ques- tions the real qualifications of the Orien- talists consulted in reference to the Turk- | ish version, 534, 5; list of the persons to whom the question on the subject of the alleged errors of this version were submitted, 535, 6; remarks on Dr. H.'s unwarrantable aspersion of the institution, 537; his criticisms ex- posed, 537, 8; his opinion that mis- sionaries are the only proper persons to prepare modern translations ex- amined, 539; Burckhardt's objection to the Arabic version, 540; objection of the Rev. Mr. Connor, 541; con- sequent proceedings of the Bible So- ciety, ib.; the Bible an oriental work, and can be adequately translated only by a native, 542; Dr. H.'s charge of the Mahommedanism of Ali Bey's version, ib.; new ideas must be con- veyed by phrases previously in use, but employed in a new sense, 543; chief objects of the biblical trans- lators are, to make themselves intel- ligible, and to give the spirit of the original, 544; cause of the deformi- ties of the authorised version, ib.; verbal correctness not strictly adher- ed to by the sacred writers, 545; a genuine unexceptionable text of the sacred Scriptures does not exist, 546. Les Hermites en Prison: par E. Jouy et A. Jay, 33, et seq. ; reviewer's remarks on prosecutions for libels, 33, 4; on the French mode of conducting trial by jury, 34, 5; legal process against libels, in France, 35; circumstances connected with the prosecution of the authors, for a libel, ib. &c.; pleading of M. Jay, 37, 8; case of M. Jouy, 38; origin of the present work, 39; prison of St. Pelagie, 41; kindness of the women towards the prisoners, 41, &c. escape of Grotius from prison by the con- trivance of his wife, 41; dungeons of the Bicêtre, 42.
Letters from an absent brother, on a
tour through the Netherlands, Switz- erland, &c. 467, et seq.; author's apology, &c. for the publication, 467; his picture of popery, as exhibited at Courtray, 468; relics shewn to him at Brussels, ib.; inscription under an image at Bergheim, ib.; real heads of the three wise men who visited our Lord, with the name inscribed over each, 468; the state of true religion improving in Switzerland and some parts of Ger- many, 469; the Holy Alliance is thought to favour the Pope and the Jesuits, ib.; author's remarks upon the policy and conduct of Bonaparte, 469, 70; the re- vival of popery accompanied with all its former folly, 470, 1; Leander Von Ess, 471; conversion of Henhöfer, a catholic priest, 471, 2; he turns to the Lutheran church, with the lord of the village, and forty families, ib.; author's description of continental protestantism, 473; the spirit of persecution openly raging at Lausanne, ib.; author's remarks on the present state of the Genevese church, 474; notices of Lyon and Paris, ib.; a Parisian Sunday, ib. Libels, prosecutions for, remarks on, 33, et seq.
Lily encrinite, great number of its bones, 51, 2.
Litakun (Lattakoo) extent, population, &c. of, 505.
Lowell's brief statement of the reasons for dissent from the Church of Eng- land, 188, et seq.; subject of dissent rarely brought forward in dissenting con- gregations, 188; author's apology for speaking on the subject of dissent, ib. ; his remarks on the nature and duly of Christian candour, ib.
Manna of the Pharmacopeia, produced by two foreign varieties of the ask, 180. Mendham's clavis apostolica, 521, et seq.; the work designed as an answer to Dr. Taylor's key to the apostolical writings, 521; character and ten- dency of Dr. Taylor's system, ib.; on the real import of certain scriptu- ral expressions, 521,2; author's re- marks on some of the errors, &c. of Dr. Taylor's work, 522; on the agreements and differences of the Jewish and Chris- tian dispensations, 523, 4; on the mean- ing of the terms saved, purchased, re- deemed, 525; author's exposure of the inconsistencies and tendencies of the prin- ciples he opposes, 525, 6.
Millar's inquiry into the present state of the statute and criminal law of
England, 481, et seq.; evils arising from the accumulation of statutes and law reports, 481; progressive in- crease of the statutes at large, 482; causes of it, ib.; example of prolix phraseology, 483, 4; penal laws ought to be remedial, 485; our penal laws attended with positive evil, ib.; evil inherent in a system of indiscriminate severity, 486; repeated but unsuc- cessful exertions of Sir Samuel Ro- milly to remove some of the penal anomalies of the statute book, ib. ; the author's strong attachment to the black act, ib.; hardship occasioned by calling into activity penal laws that have been long disused, 487; present state of the statute book invests the judge with a power the law did not intend to confer on him, 488; case of Potter, in Essex, ib.; important con- cessions of the author in regard to the indiscriminate severity of the penal code, 489, et seq.; sentiments of the committee upon the capital punishment of forgery, 490; author's animadversion on it, ib.; admits the tendency of the frequent exhibition of death, to brutalize the spectators of it, 491; etfect of the present state of the criminal law on jurors and prosecutors, ib.
Missions, Roman catholic, their declin- ing state, 436.
Montgomery's chimney sweeper's friend,
and climbing boy's album, 588, et seq.; plan and design of the work, 558; list of contributors, ib.; verses entitled the climbing boy's album, by Ber- nard Barton, 558, 9; the chimney sweep- er, 559, 60; a word with myself, by the present editor, 560, 1.
Moor's Suffolk words and phrases, 89, et scq.; specimens, ib. &c. Morier's Hajji Baba, 341, et seq. Mosaic painting, rise, progress, and decay of, 457, el seq.
Narrative, personal, of a private soldier
in the forty-second highlanders, dur- ing the late war in Spain, 146, et seq.; retreat to Corunna, 149; wretched state of the army, 150, 1; battle of Corunna, 152, et seq.; death of Sir John Moore,
53; the bivouac, ib.; disastrous siege of Burgos, 153,4; miseries of the re- treat from Burgas, 154, 5; murderous battle of Toulouse, 156, 7. Negro slavery, 97, el seg; temper of
« 前へ次へ » |