iv I Incident in our Honeymoon, an-Leisure Hour, 283 ledge, the-Frazer's Magazine, 190 zine, 331 Italy-of the Arts, the Cradle, and the Grave- Blackwood's Magazine, 371 383 494 59 135 312 139 39 Jesse Bourn and Colin Grey-GEORGE CRABBE, 562 L Lady Trayelers in Norway-London Quarterly, 176 142-144; 287-288; 431-432; 568 | Recollections of Shelley and Byron-Westmin- Religion and Society: Paley and Channing 164 -- 289 228 Return, the, (Stanzas,)—Critic, 339 343 Literature, Italian, History of, 331 Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 136 454 Rome and her Rulers-Dublin University Maga- 511 Rushing Headlong into Marriage-Bentley's Mis- 201 M Magnificent Minories of Creation; or, the Zoölo- S British Review, Many Thoughts on Many Things-Titan, Maury's, Lieutenant, Geography of the Sea, 433 Modern Thought, the Conflict of, 89 British Review, 433 Melodies, English, 129 Mohammedan Lady to her Hand-Maiden, (Lines,) -Chambers's Journal, 129 Sovereigns, our, the Bones of-Leisure Hour, 306 burn's New Monthly Magazine, 426 British Review, 473 GENERAL INDEX. In the preparation of this Index, we have not aimed at either fullness or completeness. Had we done Antiquity of the Human Race, far-fetched proof of, Atmosphere, the meteorological agencies of the, its B the first complete English, 1536, 558; de- scription of its frontispiece, 558-9. the publication of the English Translation, Third, Edward the First, Edward the Second, Ed- Burke, as an orator; remarks by Dr. Johnson, Grat- tan, Wilkes, Gibbon, Horace Walpole, Conversa- Biographical History of Philosophy, Lewes's, 482, Byron, remark of, on literary composition, his own note. Body's decline and mind's growth, 324. Bolingbroke, the secret of his style, 317. estimate of his eloquence, by Pitt, Chester- Book-maker, humorously satirized, 72. slowness; his indifference to science and art, and British Education, absence of historical studies in Cavalcanti, Guido, 333. с Chalmers's estimate of Stewart, 478. British Philosophy, common defect of, (M. Cousin,) Channing, the moral and spiritual loneliness of his 476. Brougham's description of the duties of an advo- Brougham, Lord, example of a labored passage from, Bruno and Spinoza, M. Cousin's happy characteriza- Burial-places of English Sovereigns: William the Conqueror, 306; William the Red, -their friendship, 403; their intimacy with men Children, suggestions concerning the punishment of, Going out of Office: Lord Lyndhurst, 287. most corrupt when Christianity was most pure, Guinicelli, Guido, 333. Eagre, description of, 449. E Gulf Stream, the, a description of, 436-38. boon obtained for navigation by the study of its cause a problem; opinion of Franklin, of its influence over the meteology of the ocean, its influence upon climates, 437-38. its variety of temperatures, and its object, H Historical value of original correspondences and Homer, Theology of, 399-409; its lack of a Spirit I Imagination and Fancy, definition of, distinction be- Insanity, interesting case of simulated, and its de- Early Age at which eminent men have entered col- Italian Language, the Era in which it had its origin, lege, and advantages thereof, 475. Earthquakes, the awfully terrific impression they Education, Moral, the true aims and methods of, 149-151. English Character, Mohammedan opinion of the, Erroneous modes of thought in the fifteenth and F Franklin's, Benjamin, knowledge of the high tem- G Gods of Homer, the, 399; their influence in bring- and account of its early growth, 332. Poetry, introduction of the religious element, Italy-the Cradle and the Grave of the Arts, 372- Iteration, recommended by Dr. Johnson, Fox, Pitt, Literary habits of Shakspeare, Milton, Pope, Byron, Parents, hints for, in the treatment of their children, 160-163. Locke, John, the place he gives to sensation and to Physical Science, its condition three hundred years the experiential and the rational elements run- described all over the Continent as a sensa- on great severity of punishment, 159. M Mania, Religious, extraordinary and horrible cases Marriages in England and France, 143. Malespine, Ricordano, the first Italian prose-writer Pitt, how he acquired his readiness of speech, 321. Podi, Fra Jacopone da, 333. Poe, Edgar Allen, peculiar features and literary value Poetic Taste and Judgment, men of the keenest in- Poets, the Three Great, of the German critics, 168. R Rain, greatest quantity falls in the Northern Hemi- sphere, and Lieutenant Maury's explanation, 440. Reid, Thomas, his influence on Stewart, 476. Metaphysics, revival of, in Scotland, 493. "Moral Philosophy," Paley's, its popularity, 295, note. N "Natural Theology," Paley's, critique on, 295-8. Oratory, the, of the reigns of Elizabeth and James-- at the Restoration, 315. its importance, 313. spoken over oratory read, causes of its success, Orators, Modern, Derby and Gladstone, 324. P Paley and Channing compared, 291, 299–300. the representative of the selfish or unsocial 3. Sheridan, elaborateness of his style,322. Sicilian Vespers, its true history restored, 348-50. Stewart Dugald, personal bistory, 474-5, 79-80. Success in Literature and Science, only to be ob- tained by industry, 312. Survey of Modern Science, 29-32. T circumstances influencing and determining his Temperature, amusing instance of its effect on the career. 475. potato-pot, 234. Style, an elegant, Lord Chesterfield's opinion of its Zoology, its importance as a science, and the promise it holds out, 58. |