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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, No. 584, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction, No. 584
+ Vol. 20, No. 584. (Supplement to Vol. 20)
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 22, 2004 [EBook #14124]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, William Flis, and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+Vol. 20, No. 584. (Supplement to Vol. 20)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+MIRROR
+
+OF
+
+LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT,
+
+AND
+
+INSTRUCTION:
+
+CONTAINING
+
+ORIGINAL ESSAYS;
+
+HISTORICAL NARRATIVES; BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS; SKETCHES OF SOCIETY;
+TOPOGRAPHICAL DESCRIPTIONS; NOVELS AND TALES; ANECDOTES;
+
+SELECT EXTRACTS
+
+FROM
+
+NEW AND EXPENSIVE WORKS;
+
+POETRY, ORIGINAL AND SELECTED;
+
+THE SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS;
+
+DISCOVERIES IN THE ARTS AND SCIENCES;
+
+USEFUL DOMESTIC HINTS;
+
+&C. &C. &C.
+
+VOL. XX.
+
+LONDON:
+
+1832
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The completion of the Twentieth Volume of this Miscellany presents us
+with another cause for self-gratulation, and thankful acknowledgement
+to the reading public. This continued and unimpaired success amidst
+a myriad of new-born aspirants, is the best proof of our maintenance
+of public esteem; and so long as our efforts are guided by the same
+singleness of purpose that first directed them we shall hope for
+a continuance of such favour. A multitude of contemporaries "whet
+each other;" "thinking nurseth thinking;" and, in like manner,
+reading nurseth reading, and awakens a spirit of inquiry, untiring
+and exhaustless, among all concerned in pursuit and wholesome
+gratification.
+
+In a retrospect of the hundreds of competitors who have started
+for the prize of public patronage since our outset, we shall not,
+perhaps, be accused of vanity in placing to our own account the first
+appropriation of such means as may have contributed to the partial
+success of our contemporaries. We owe them nothing but good will;
+for we rather regard things poetically than politically, and we are
+anxious to inform and amuse the reader--not to perplex, by constantly
+reminding him of his uncheery lot in life.
+
+Ten years' establishment in periodical literature may give us a
+sort of patriarchal feeling towards others; for, with one exception
+THE MIRROR is the oldest weekly journal of the metropolis. In this
+comparatively long career, our best energies have been directed to the
+progressive improvement of each department of the work. The plan of
+embellishment, which may be said to have originated with THE MIRROR,
+has been extended and improved, until few subjects are incapable of
+successful illustration in its pages; due regard being paid to nicety
+of execution, as well as attractive design. So much for the present,
+state of our "representative system."
+
+The selection of materials for each sheet of THE MIRROR has been
+regulated by a desire to extend useful information, and to cultivate
+healthful indications of public taste. In a journal, like the present,
+mainly devoted to the accumulation of facts, errors and misstatements
+are inevitable; but, our own diligence, aided by sharp-sighted
+Correspondents, has, from time to time, guided us to accuracy in
+most cases, and directed fruitful inquiry upon matters of no ordinary
+interest or character. Scientific information, really made popular,
+and of ready, practical utility, has uniformly found admission in
+our pages; and, above all, subjects of natural history have received
+especial attention, in graphic illustrations--which part of our plan
+has been adopted by every cheap journal of the last four years; or,
+from the first pictorial description of the Zoological Gardens,
+before the publication of the catalogue by the Society; while it is a
+source of gratification to know that within the above period, natural
+history, from being almost confined to public museums and private
+cabinets, has become the most popular study and amusement of the
+present day.
+
+Upon the continued cheapness of our little work, we do not intend to
+touch, more than by reference to the enlargement of the letter-press
+as commenced with the present volume. The alteration has, we believe,
+received general approbation; and, either with regard to the extent of
+the letter-press, or the condensed character of its subject-matter,
+we have still the satisfaction of knowing THE MIRROR to continue,
+as it has often been characterized by contemporaries, "the cheapest
+publication of the day." Its other merits we are content to leave to
+the discernment of each reader.
+
+Our future volume will be conducted upon the plan of its predecessors,
+with such improvements as time and occasion may suggest. To one point,
+economy of space, we promise our best consideration; though we may
+not succeed in rivalling Mr. Newberry, who, the good humoured Geoffrey
+Crayon tells us, was the first that ever filled his mind with the idea
+of a good and great man. He published all the picture books of his
+day; and, out of his abundant love for children, he charged "nothing
+for either paper or print, and only a half-penny for the binding."[1]
+Rest unto his soul, say we.
+
+This lengthened, but we hope not ill-timed reference to our whole
+course of Twenty Volumes has left us but little occasion to speak of
+the present portion, individually; although we trust this reference
+would be somewhat supererogatory, from the unusual number of
+Illustrations, and a copious Index to the main subjects, of the
+volume.
+
+To conclude. We thank all Correspondents for their contributions, and
+invite their cordial co-operation with our ensuing efforts. So now
+"_plaudite! valete!_"
+
+_December 26, 1832._
+
+[Footnote 1: Bracebridge Hall, vol. i.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NOTICES
+
+OF
+
+WASHINGTON IRVING, ESQ.
+
+AND HIS WORKS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Washington Irving was born, in the State of New York, in the year
+1782, and is, consequently, in his fifty-first year. His early life
+cannot better be told than in his own graceful language, prefixed
+to the most celebrated of his writings as "the author's account of
+himself."
+
+"I was always fond of visiting new scenes, and observing strange
+characters and manners. Even when a mere child I began my travels, and
+made many tours of discovery into foreign parts and unknown regions of
+my native city, to the frequent alarm of my parents, and the emolument
+of the town-crier. As I grew into boyhood I extended the range of my
+observations. My holiday afternoons were spent in rambles about the
+surrounding country. I made myself familiar with all its places famous
+in history or fable. I knew every spot where a murder or robbery had
+been committed, or a ghost seen. I visited the neighbouring villages,
+and added greatly to my stock of knowledge, by noting their habits
+and customs, and conversing with their sages and great men. I even
+journeyed one long summer's day to the summit of the most distant
+hill, from whence I stretched my eye over many a mile of terra
+incognita, and was astonished to find how vast a globe I inhabited.
+
+"This rambling propensity strengthened with my years. Books of voyages
+and travels became my passion, and in devouring their contents, I
+neglected the regular exercises of the school. How wistfully would
+I wander about the pier heads in fine weather, and watch the parting
+ships bound to distant climes; with what longing eyes would I gaze
+after their lessening sails; and waft myself in imagination to the
+ends of the earth.
+
+"Farther reading and thinking, though they brought this vague
+inclination into more reasonable bounds, only served to make it more
+decided. I visited various parts of my own country; and had I been
+merely influenced by a love of fine scenery, I should have felt little
+desire to seek elsewhere its gratification; for on no country have
+the charms of nature been more prodigally lavished. Her mighty lakes,
+like oceans of liquid silver; her mountains, with their bright aėrial
+tints; her valleys, teeming with wild fertility; her tremendous
+cataracts, thundering in their solitudes; her boundless plains, waving
+with spontaneous verdure; her broad, deep rivers, rolling in solemn
+silence to the ocean; her trackless forests, where vegetation puts
+forth all its magnificence; her skies, kindling with the magic of
+summer clouds and glorious sunshine:--no, never need an American
+look beyond his own country for the sublime and beautiful of natural
+scenery."[2]
+
+[Footnote 2: Sketch Book, vol. i.]
+
+Mr. Irving began his career, as an author, in periodical literature.
+His first work was a humorous journal, entitled "Salmagundi, or the
+Whim-Whams and Opinions of Launcelot Langstaff, Esq. and Others,"
+originally published in numbers in New York, where it met with a very
+flattering reception. The date of the first paper is Saturday, January
+24, 1827.
+
+Salmagundi has been several times reprinted in this country; and it
+may be acceptable to know, that the cheapest, if not the most elegant,
+edition may be purchased for twenty-pence. It would be difficult to
+explain the merits of Salmagundi to the reader, as they are of the
+most varied character; but, it may be remarked generally, that a vein
+of quaint humour and human kindness pervades these early papers, which
+will bring the reader and writer to the best possible terms.
+
+This lively miscellany was followed by a humorous History of New York,
+with the somewhat droll _nom_ of Dedrick Knickerbocker as its author.
+It possesses considerable merit, with a nice perception of the
+ludicrous; but, on its first appearance, this recommendation was
+generally overlooked, whether from the local interest of the subject,
+or the want of due judgment in its readers, it is difficult to
+determine.
+
+About this period Mr. Irvine's name was heard in England, almost for
+the first time; his only claims to public notice resting entirely
+on Salmagundi, and the History of New York. He was indebted for his
+introduction to the acquaintance of European readers, to a young
+fellow-countryman of high attainments, who alludes to the above works
+and their author in the following terms:--"Mr. Irving has shown much
+talent and great humour in his Salmagundi and Knickerbocker, and they
+are exceedingly pleasant books, especially to one who understands the
+local allusions."
+
+A few years subsequent to the publication of Knickerbocker, Mr. Irving
+visited England, or the "land of wonders," as he facetely terms
+our favoured isle. During his stay, he wrote a series of papers,
+illustrative of English manners, which were chiefly printed in
+America. These papers were afterwards published in a collected form,
+in England, under the title of "The Sketch-Book of Geoffrey Crayon,
+Gent." and dedicated to Sir Walter Scott, "in testimony of the
+admiration and affection of the author." In the advertisement to the
+Sketch-Book, Mr. Irving thus modestly refers to its origin:
+
+"The author is aware of the austerity with which the writings of
+his countrymen have hitherto been treated by British critics: he
+is conscious too, that much of the contents of his papers can be
+interesting only in the eyes of American readers. It was not his
+intention, therefore, to have them reprinted in this country. He
+has, however, observed several of them from time to time inserted in
+periodical works of merit, and has understood that it was probable
+they would be republished in a collective form. He has been induced,
+therefore, to revise and bring them forward himself, that they may
+at least come correctly before the public. Should they be deemed of
+sufficient importance to attract the attention of critics, he solicits
+for them that courtesy and candour which a stranger has some right to
+claim, who presents himself at the threshold of a hospitable nation."
+
+Mr. Irving's solicitations were not made in vain, as the rapid sale
+of several editions must have convinced him; while every journalist
+in the empire hailed the work as the most beautiful specimen of
+Transatlantic talent which had been recognised in this country.
+
+The two volumes of the Sketch-Book appeared at different periods;
+and, at the conclusion of the second, we find the following
+apologetic postscript: "The author is conscious of the numerous
+faults and imperfections of his work; and, well aware how little
+he is disciplined and accomplished in the arts of authorship. His
+deficiencies are also increased by a diffidence arising from his
+peculiar situation. He finds himself writing in a strange land,
+and appearing before a public, which he has been accustomed, from
+childhood, to regard with the highest feelings of awe and reverence.
+He is full of solicitude to secure their approbation, yet finds that
+very solicitude continually embarrassing his powers, and depriving
+him of that ease and confidence which are necessary to successful
+exertion. Still the kindness with which he is treated encourages him
+to go on, hoping that, in time, he may acquire a steadier footing; and
+thus he proceeds, half venturing, half shrinking, surprised at his own
+good fortune, and wondering at his own temerity."
+
+The success of the Sketch-Book was followed by the almost equal
+fortune of "Bracebridge Hall, or the Humorists;" a series of scenes
+of Old English life, as displayed in one of those venerable halls,
+that rise, here and there, in a British landscape, as monuments
+of the hospitality of our ancestors, and better times. In the
+autobiographical chapter of this work, the writer thus pleasantly
+refers to his previous success, as "a matter of marvel, that a
+man, from the wilds of America, should express himself in tolerable
+English. I was looked upon as something new and strange in
+literature,--a kind of demi-savage, with a leather in his hand,
+instead of his head; and there was a curiosity to hear what such
+a being had to say about civilized society." In referring the
+circumstances under which he writes his second work on English
+manners, he says: "Having been born and brought up in a new country,
+yet educated from infancy in the literature of an old one, my mind
+was filled with historical and poetical associations, connected with
+places, and manners, and customs of Europe; but which could rarely
+be applied to those of my own country. To a mind thus peculiarly
+prepared, the most ordinary objects and scenes, on arriving in Europe,
+are full of strange matter, and interesting novelty. England is as
+classic ground to an American, as Italy is to an Englishman; and Old
+London teems with as much historical association as mighty Rome."
+There is, also, great amiability in the concluding paragraph:--"I have
+always had an opinion, that much good might be done by keeping mankind
+in good humour with one another. I may be wrong in my philosophy; but
+I shall continue to practise it until convinced of its fallacy. When I
+discover the world to be all that it has been represented by sneering
+cynics and whining poets, I will turn to and abuse it also; in the
+meanwhile, worthy reader, I hope you will not think lightly of me,
+because I cannot believe this to be so very bad a world as it is
+represented."
+
+Soon after the publication of Bracebridge Hall, Mr. Irving left this
+country, where he had passed two years with literary and pecuniary
+advantage. He quitted England with a pathetic farewell; declaring that
+if, as he is accused, he views it with a partial eye, he shall never
+forget that it is his "fatherland." On the consanguinity of England
+and America too, and the cultivation of good feeling between them, he
+thus touchingly expresses himself in Bracebridge Hall: "We ask nothing
+from abroad that we cannot reciprocate. But with respect to England,
+we have a warm feeling of the heart, the glow of consanguinity
+that still lingers in our blood. Interest apart, past differences
+forgotten, we extend the hand of old relationship. We merely ask, do
+not estrange us from you, do not destroy the ancient tie of blood, do
+not let scoffers and slanderers drive a kindred nation from your side.
+We would fain be friends, do not compel us to be enemies." There is a
+manly affection in these sentiments which is truly admirable.
+
+Mr. Irving's works, with the exception of his early efforts,[3] had
+been the result of his love of travel: indeed, he describes himself
+as a traveller who has "surveyed most of the terrestrial angles of the
+globe." In similar vein, he next produced two volumes of "Tales of a
+Traveller," narrating legends of the continent, with masterly sketches
+of the scenery of the respective countries; the incidents of the Tales
+being fraught with points of grotesque humour, and abounding with
+pathos and poetic feeling.
+
+[Footnote 3: Among Mr. Irving's early effusions are Lines written on
+the Falls of the River Pasaic which are not printed in the author's
+works, but will be found in _The Mirror_, vol. ii. p. 452.]
+
+To these Tales succeeded a work of greater importance in literature
+than either of Mr. Irving's previous undertakings. We allude to a
+History of the Life and Voyages of Columbus, in four vols. 8vo., which
+appeared in the year 1828. Mr. Irving, at the time this work was first
+suggested to him, in the winter of 1825-6, was at Bordeaux; and, being
+informed that a biography was about to appear at Madrid, containing
+many important and some new documents relative to Columbus, he set off
+for the Spanish capital, to undertake the translation of the work.
+Mr. Irving, however, meeting with numerous aids at Madrid, resolved
+on producing an original history, which he has presented to the public
+with extreme diffidence: "all that I can safely claim," he observes,
+"is, an earnest desire to state the truth, an absence from prejudices
+respecting the nations mentioned in my history, a strong interest in
+my subject, and a zeal to make up by assiduity for many deficiencies
+of which I am conscious." This work has been abridged by Mr. Irving
+to one of the volumes of the Family Library. As we have intimated to
+the reader, it is of higher pretensions than either of the author's
+previous writings: a clever critic refers to it as "a spirited and
+interesting work, in which every thing is as judiciously reasoned as
+it is beautifully and forcibly expressed," and as "much more grave in
+its character and laborious in its execution than any of his preceding
+ones."[4]
+
+[Footnote 4: New Monthly Magazine.]
+
+Mr. Irving's next production was "A Chronicle of the Conquest of
+Granada," in which the author's knowledge of Spanish history is made
+to shine in detailing the chivalrous glories of the New World.
+
+In the spring of the present year it appears that Mr. Irving touched
+"the golden shores of old romance," and published Tales of the
+Alhambra; the origin of which work is thus told by the author. A few
+years since, Mr. Wilkie, the distinguished R.A. and Mr. Irving were
+fellow travellers on the continent. In their rambles about some of
+the old cities of Spain, they were struck with scenes and incidents
+which reminded them of passages in the Arabian Nights. Mr. Wilkie
+urged his companion to write something that should illustrate those
+peculiarities, "something in the Haroun Alraschid style" that should
+have a dash of that Arabian spice which pervades everything in Spain.
+Mr. Irving set about his task with enthusiasm: his study was the
+spacious Alhambra itself, and the governor gave the author and his
+companion, permission to occupy his vacant apartments in the Moorish
+palace: Mr. Wilkie soon returned to England, leaving Mr. Irving at
+the Alhambra, where he remained "for several months, spell-bound in
+the old enchanted pile." The result was two volumes of legends and
+traditions, which for interesting incident, and gracefulness of
+narrative, have few parallels in our romance-writing.[5] They are
+dedicated, in good taste, to the ingenious originator, Mr. Wilkie.
+
+[Footnote 5: For Two Illustrations and Notice of this interesting
+work, See _Mirror_, vol. xix. p. 337 to 342; whence the above origin
+of the work has been quoted.]
+
+In person, Mr. Irving is of middle height; and, according to a
+contemporary, of "modest deportment and easy attitude, with all the
+grace and dignity of an English gentleman."[6] Another describes
+him as "a most amiable man, and great genius, but not lively in
+conversation." His features have a pleasing regularity, and are lit
+up, at every corner, with that delightful humour which flows in a rich
+vein throughout his writings, and forms their most attractive charm.
+
+[Footnote 6: Fraser's Magazine.]
+
+Having noticed Mr. Irving's principal works, we have left but little
+occasion to speak of his general style. A contemporary has denominated
+him the "Goldsmith of the age;" and of Goldsmith we must remember
+that, in his epitaph, Dr. Johnson observes: "he left no species of
+writing untouched, and adorned all to which he applied himself"--a
+tribute which can scarcely be appropriately paid to any writer of
+our time. However, we know not any author that Mr. Irving so much
+resembles as Goldsmith: although no imitator, his style and language
+forcibly remind us of that easy flow so peculiar to the Citizen of
+the World. But, we have higher warrant for this parallel. "It seems
+probable," observes a critical writer of considerable acumen, "that
+Mr. Irving might prove no contemptible rival to Goldsmith, whose turn
+of mind he very much inherits, and of whose style he particularly
+reminds us. Like him, too, Mr. Irving possesses the art of setting
+ludicrous perplexities in the most irresistible point of view, and we
+think equals him in the variety of humour."[7]
+
+[Footnote 7: Quarterly Review.--Such is the variety displayed in
+the Salmagundi; the papers were supposed to be the joint efforts of
+several literati.]
+
+To conclude, we find the literary character of Mr. Irving illustrated
+in a contemporary journal, with unusual spirit. "There never was a
+writer," observes the editor, "whose popularity was more matter of
+feeling, or more intimate than Washington Irving, perhaps, because
+he appeared at once to our simplest and kindliest emotions. His
+affections were those of 'hearth and home;' the pictures he
+delighted to draw were those of natural loveliness, linked with human
+sympathies; and a too unusual thing with the writers of our time--he
+looked upon God's works, and 'saw that they were good.' * * * With
+him the wine of life is not always on the lees. An exquisite vein of
+poetry runs through every page,--and of poetry, his epithets who does
+not remember--'the shark, glancing like a spectre through the blue
+seas.'"[8]
+
+[Footnote 8: Literary Gazette.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ALPHABETICAL INDEX.
+
+
+ A.B.C. botanical, 336
+ Abernethian, a true one, 160
+ Absence, Lord Lyttleton's, 318
+ Accumulation of Power, 55
+ Acid, Oxalic, 207
+ Tartaric, 206
+ Action in forces, time of, 55
+ Adam, death of, 133
+ Adieu, the, by Lord Byron, 12
+ Adrian and Apollodoras, the architect, 384
+ Advice, by a Man of the World, 10
+ Ętna, visit to the summit of, 202
+ Agincourt, ballad of, 101
+ Alchemy and Printing, 160
+ Ale, bad Saxon, 261
+ Burton, 304
+ All on one side, 318
+ Almanacs, Saxon, 54
+ American Deer, mode of hunting them, 339
+ Improvements, 102
+ Navy, 102
+ Newspapers, 102
+ Papermaking, 103
+ Prison Discipline, 286
+ Wolves, 340
+ Ancients and Moderns, by Voltaire, 163
+ Angelica Kauffman, anecdote of, 291
+ Angler, an odd one, 317
+ Animal Instinct exemplified, 327
+ Annuals for 1833:
+ Amulet, 392--413
+ Book of Beauty, 386
+ Comic Offering, 389
+ Forget-me-not, 282
+ Friendship's Offering, 399
+ Hood's Comic, 287
+ Juvenile Forget-me-not, 334
+ Literary Souvenir, 420
+ Picturesque, 386
+ Antiquities, Domestic, 337
+ Antwerp, Citadel of, described, 405
+ City of, described, 369
+ Painters born at, 380
+ Aphorisms, choice, 442
+ Apologues, from the German, 403
+ Ararat, Mount, described, 313--379
+ Araspes and Panthea, anecdote of, 258
+ Architecture, ancient domestic, 274
+ Archy Armstrong, grave of, 416
+ Armada, the, by T.B. Macauley, Esq. 399
+ Armadillo, history of, 56
+ Armour, old English, 437
+ Arrogance, Feltham on, 271
+ Arrow Root, preparation of, 264
+ Arundel Castle, described, 157
+ Asmodeus in London, 364
+ Atmosphere, constitution of, 206
+ Atmosphere, properties of, 134
+ Auctions by the Drum, 330
+ Bachelors, Laws respecting, 35--339
+ Bagdad, plague at, 75
+ Bailly, physician to Henry IV., 96
+ Bar, anecdotes of the, 277
+ Barbel, large, 96
+ Bat, new species of, 408
+ Bath in Persia, described, 145
+ Baths, ancient and modern, 372
+ Battle, fish, 354
+ Beaches, sea, changes of, 79
+ Bear-hunting in Canada, 91
+ Beatrice Adony and Julius Alvinzi, a tale, 420
+ Beauchief Abbey, described, 113
+ Becket, murder of, 114
+ Bede, Venerable, memoir of, 440
+ Beefeaters, origin of, 80
+ Bees, economy of, 38
+ Beet root sugar, 88
+ Beetle, ravages of, 175
+ Bell, ancient, 345
+ Belvoir Castle, history of, 129
+ Bennett, Mr. George, visit to Rotuma, 377
+ Berwick, siege of, 222
+ Bewick, the engraver, birthplace of, 17
+ Bibb, the engraver, 368
+ Birds, bills of, 96
+ Birds, how they fly, 134
+ Birds, migration of, 40
+ Black Lady of Brabant, 140
+ Blacking, antiquity of, 192
+ Blessington, lady, her conversations with Lord Byron,
+ 6--86--110--156--269
+ Blind Seal, the, a tale, 298
+ Blood, price of, 71
+ Bloodless War, 336
+ Boar's head at Christmas, 431
+ Bolsover Castle described, 161
+ Bond, Mr. Sergeant, anecdote of, 278
+ Bones, waste of, 366
+ Borough, origin of the term, 211
+ Boy Burglars, account of, 333
+ Books, new, noticed and quoted:
+ Abrantes, Duchess of, her memoirs, 47--106--191
+ Babbage's Economy of Machinery and Manufactures, 27--54
+ Barrington's Sketches, 52
+ Biblical Atlas, 44
+ British Museum, 140--158
+ Buccaneer, 428
+ Byron's Works, 12
+ Catechism of Phrenology, 45
+ Characteristics of Women, 117
+ Contarini Fleming, 10
+ Double Trial, 125
+ Elements of Chemistry, 206
+ Encyclopędia Americana, 102
+ Excursions in India, by Capt. Skinner, 105
+ Framlingham, a Poem, 306
+ Geography, Questions in, 45
+ Gordon on Elemental Locomotion, 183--198
+ Knowledge for the People, 77--134--429
+ Life of Peter the Great, 300--308
+ Laconics, 31
+ Legends of the Library at Lilies, 350--403
+ Legends of the Rhine, 138
+ Life of Charlemagne, by G.P.R. James, 92--119
+ Lives of Scottish Worthies, 221--233
+ Macculloch's Dictionary of Commerce, 151--279
+ Memoir of Felix Neff, 147--171
+ Natural Magic, by Sir David Brewster, 72--107--191
+ New Gil Blas, 186
+ Numismatic Manual, 223
+ Outlines of General Knowledge, 45
+ Pilgrimage through Khuzistan and Persia, 73--314
+ Pompeii, 412
+ Popular Zoology, 57
+ Private Correspondence of a Woman of Fashion, 157--165--235
+ Sketches from Venetian History, 60
+ Songs, by Barry Cornwall, 11--46
+ Statistical Sketches of Upper Canada, 29--57--91
+ Taylor's Records of his Life, 291--317
+ Trials of Charles I., 41
+ Wild Sports of the West, 298
+ Brain of Man, 96
+ Braithwaite's Steam Fire-Engine, 111
+ Brass-plate Coal-merchants, 56
+ Bread, legal adulteration of, 366
+ Brent Tor church, 112
+ Brevities, 179
+ Bridewell, in the reign of Elizabeth, 357
+ Bridge, stupendous, in Spain, 24
+ Britain, early inhabitants of, 276--371
+ British Artists' Exhibition, 330--362
+ British Institution, School of Painting at, 362
+ British Museum, the, 140
+ Brougham, Henry, anecdote of, 182
+ Brydges, Sir Egerton, 86
+ Bull, national, 240
+ Burnham Abbey described, 81
+ Bustard, natural history of, 328
+ Butterfly, Chameleon, and Serpent, 425
+ Byron, Lord, conversations with, 6--86--110
+ and Anastasius, 156
+ early poems, by, 12
+ and Earl Grey, 80
+ and the English, 9
+ and Mrs. Hemans, 156
+ and Mr. Hope, 156
+ on horseback, 110
+ and Leigh Hunt, 157
+ and Italian women, 117
+ his love, 269
+ letter of, 290
+ and Moore, 7
+ personal description of, 7
+ and Scott, 110
+ and Shelley, 9
+ and Madame de Stael, 86
+ and Venice, 63
+ Cęsar, Julius, his superstition, 238
+ Cairngorm, origin of, 77
+ Caliga, origin of, 112
+ Caloric, or the matter of heat, 206
+ Canada, climate of, 57
+ notes on, 29
+ Canary Birds, breeding, 111
+ Candelabra and Lamps of Pompeii, 412
+ Canning, Mr., statue of, 25
+ Cannon Clock, 144
+ Cannon, names of, 160
+ Canova, vase, containing the heart of, 169
+ Caprices, national, 439
+ Caps, laws relating to, 319
+ Cara, lines to, 272
+ Carding a Tithe-Procter, 52
+ Card-playing, indifferent, 318
+ Cards, second-hand, 425
+ Caroline, the late Queen, 158
+ Cartoons at Hampton Court, 287
+ Cascades and Cataracts, origin of, 97
+ Cashmere Shawl goat, 94
+ Castle of Framlingham, 305
+ Catacombs at Paris, lines on, 338
+ Castanets, origin of, 160
+ Cats horticulturists, 80
+ Cedar trees, large, 341
+ Chair, ancient, 344
+ of St. Bede, 440
+ Chairing, parliamentary, origin of, 176
+ Chancellor, Lord, his office, 71
+ Salary, 128
+ Start in Life, 125
+ Chapel on the Bridge, Wakefield, described, 401
+ Chaptel, memoir of, 88
+ Charlemagne, life of, 93, 128
+ palace of, 119
+ Charles I., Trials of, 41
+ II., progress of, 261
+ Charters in the British Museum, 336
+ Chase, the, a sketch, 21
+ Chatsworth, beauties of, 432
+ Chimneys, invention of, 139
+ Chlamyphorus, natural history of, 263
+ Cholera, a cleanser, 432
+ Mount, by Montgomery, 315
+ Christmas, ancient and modern, 419
+ carols, 430
+ Dalmatia, 419
+ Hereford, 438
+ Kent, 419
+ Mexico, 438
+ Norfolk, 419
+ Why and Because of, 429
+ Church, Lestingham, described, 297
+ new, St. Dunstan's, 34
+ Cigar smoking, motto for, 208
+ Cinnamon and Cassia, 425
+ Cinque Ports, their past and present state, 299
+ Climatology, notes on, 134
+ Clockmaking in the 9th century, 127
+ Coach, the last, 432
+ Coals, high price of in London, 366
+ Coffee, duty on, 80
+ house, London, in 1731, 358
+ on roasting, 366
+ Coins, to read in the dark, 191
+ Colouring Cheese, 425
+ Colton, the Rev. Mr., 3
+ Column of Disgrace, 69
+ Comet of Biela, 185
+ Comparison, all things by, 368
+ Compliments, value of, 384
+ Condors, a pair of living, 303
+ Continence, anecdotes of, 258
+ Cookery, Chinese and Russian, 48
+ Cool Tankard at Newgate, 192
+ Coronation, expenses of the last, 32
+ Court Jester, by Fuller, 352
+ Courtier, an excellent, 352
+ Cowards, a warning to, 48
+ Cowley, the poet, 336
+ Cranmer, education of, 75
+ Craven, in Yorkshire, cave at, 87
+ Criminal Law, reform of, 267
+ Criticism, political, 207
+ Critics, warning to, 352
+ Cromwell, character of, 428
+ Cross Readings, from the Spanish, 144
+ Crosses, curious ancient, 113--329--360--424
+ Cornwall, 424
+ Devon, 424
+ Eyam, 113
+ Holbeach, 329
+ Leighton Buzzard, 329
+ Neville's, 360
+ in the Peak, 113
+ Percy's, 361
+ Wheston, 113
+ Crown, British, pawned, 358
+ Crucifixes, initials on, 430
+ Crusader, monument of, 441
+ Crusades, errors respecting, 319
+ Crystal, origin of, 77
+ Curran and the Mastiff, 48
+ Curse of the Black Lady, a legend, 139
+ Cuttle-fish, ink of, 175
+ natural history of, 103
+ Cuvier, memoir of, 137
+ Dacre, Lady, her eccentricities, 153
+ Dairyman's Daughter, 112
+ Damary Oak Tree, 112
+ Dante's Tomb, 168
+ Deafness, convenient, 176
+ Death, punishment of, 71
+ the actor, epitaph on, 448
+ Deepdene, notice of, 149
+ Deer of North America, 339
+ Dew, explanation of, 304
+ Derbyshire, antiquities of, 116
+ Dibdin, the song-writer, 128
+ Dice, invention of, 384
+ Dick's Coffee-house, 16
+ Diorama, Regent's Park, 40
+ Disease, causes of, 266
+ effect of on the memory, 190
+ Disposal of the body for dissection, 292
+ Distinction and Difference, 343
+ Dodo, natural history of, 311
+ Dovaston, Mr., his sketches of Bewick, 18
+ Dove, the River, 288
+ Dover, antiquity of, 294
+ Drama, essay on, 82
+ Dramatis Personę, origin of, 447
+ Drawing an inference, 292
+ Dream of the Beautiful, 82
+ Dripping Rock in India, 160
+ Drop of Dew, by Marvell, 199
+ Druids and their times, 20
+ Dryburgh Abbey, lines on, 268--296
+ Dryden's M'Flecknoe, 208
+ Ducks, wild, catching in India, 160
+ Duelling, 343--416
+ Eagle's Cliff, visit to, 299
+ "Eclipse," the horse, 354
+ Economy of Conveyance by Steam, 183
+ Time and Materials, 54
+ Edinburgh, by Mr. Cobbett, 287
+ Egyptian Pyramids and Hindoo Temples compared, 158
+ Elephant, natural history of, 66
+ Elephants in the Zoological Gardens, 66
+ Edmonton, Merry Devil of, 367
+ Eldon, Lord, his birthplace, 193
+ Elections, bribery in, 192
+ Electioneering in Westminster, 351
+ Electro-Magnet, the largest, 128
+ Elm, prodigious, 288
+ Emigration to British America, advantages and disadvantages of, 444
+ Emigration to Canada, 28
+ Enchantress, a tale, 386
+ England and France, former junction of, 448
+ Ennui, universal, 366
+ Envy, Owen Feltham on, 64
+ Epitaph at Bristol, 336
+ Epitaphs in Cambridgeshire, 368
+ Errors of the Day, 142
+ Essequibo, sailing up the, 359--379
+ Ethelbert and Elfrida, a tale, 323
+ Euphrates, sailing up, 74
+ Explosion, tremendous, 272
+ Extravagance, imperial, 416
+ Eyam, cross at, 113
+ Eye, structure of, 72
+ Eyes and Tears, by Marvell, 199
+ Eyes, varieties of, 96
+ Falconry Tenure, 345
+ Falls of the Genesse, 97--342
+ Niagara, visit to, 446
+ Farewell to the Muse, by Lord Byron, 13
+ Fashionable Manners, effects of, on Tradesmen and Servants, 331--348
+ Fat Living, 261
+ Favour, the only one, 80
+ Ferdinand VII. of Spain, character of, 444
+ Fern Owl, habits of the, 174
+ Fielding, Sir John, anecdote of, 279
+ Fish, consumption of, 415
+ Fishing, expensive, 432
+ Fleurus, battle of, 431
+ Flour, good, economy of, 366
+ Flybekins, a humorous story, 389
+ Fontenelle, genius of, 111
+ Food, animal and vegetable, 35
+ Foot of Man, 96
+ Forest Schools, 111
+ Framlingham Castle, 305
+ Francis, Sir Philip, epigram on, 336
+ French manners, 47
+ Fruit, effects of, and cholera, 79
+ maturation of, 39
+ Funeral garlands, 20
+ Funerals, Portuguese, 70
+ Garnets, varieties of, 78
+ Gazel, a ballad, by Moore, 10
+ Genesse, river of, 98--342
+ Genius, tributes to, 168
+ Geological changes by the sea, 78
+ Germans, ode to the, by Campbell, 9
+ Gilpin, John, popularity of, 367
+ Gipsies, king of, elegy on, 285
+ of old, 270
+ Giulietta, a tale, 282
+ Goat of Cashmere, 94
+ Goethe, medal of, 143
+ memoir of, 89--112
+ Gold-beating, particulars of, 320
+ Golden sands, 70
+ Goldsmith, Oliver, brother of, 275--402
+ Goose on Michaelmas Day, 208
+ Grace Huntley, Trials of, 393
+ Grose, Major, in Dublin, 318
+ Gudiaro, bridge across the, 24
+ Guides in India, 272
+ Ha! Ha! Fence, origin of, 448
+ Hail Storms in India, 128
+ Hale, Sir Matthew, 267
+ Hall, old, in Derbyshire, 273
+ Hampden, John, anecdote of, 160
+ Hanging, antiquity of, 192
+ Harvest home custom, 368
+ Hastings, antiquity of, 294
+ Hawthorn well, the, 339
+ Head-dress of the 14th century, 358
+ Hemans, Mrs., 110
+ Henry VIII. and Queen Katherine, 261
+ Hereford, Cathedral of, 324
+ Hoarding Money, 143
+ Holland, outline of, 338
+ Holy Cross, history of the, 392
+ Home of Love, the, 170
+ Home Truth, 64
+ Homeward Voyage, the, 98
+ Howard, the Hon. Charles, Lines to the memory of, 149
+ Hunchback, merits of the, 365
+ Huntsman, the, a tale, 67
+ Hythe, antiquity of, 294
+ Ignorance, imperial, 352
+ Illumination, origin of, 176
+ Imaum at Muscat, court of, 73
+ Incident on the coast, 373
+ in the life of a Rascal, 58
+ Inconsolable persons, 384
+ India, Letters from, 100
+ hail-storms in, 128
+ servants in, 105
+ Inheritance, custom of, 276
+ Innkeepers of former times, 79
+ Irish bar, anecdotes of, 63--80
+ Irish Mantle, Spencers account of, 415
+ Italian, lines from, 339
+ Jackalls in India, 80
+ Jack Spencer, eccentricities of, 317
+ James I., boyhood and education of, 233
+ Jemmy Maclaine, the highwayman, 291
+ Jews, persecution of, 319
+ John, King, death of, 288
+ Johnson, Dr., birthplace of, 257
+ and George III., 318
+ pun by, 272
+ Jones, Sir William, his plan of study, 358
+ Judas Iscariot's betrayal of Christ, 120
+ Judge, upright, one, 267
+ Juliet, character of, 117
+ tomb of, 265
+ Junot and Napoleon, anecdote of, 190
+ Kemble, John anecdote of, 318
+ Ken, bishop, 48--336
+ Kenulph, King, his daughter, a tale, 4
+ Key, ancient, 337
+ King William IV., domestic habits of, 303
+ Kings, poverty of, 358
+ Knife-handle, antique, 345
+ Knowledge, how to acquire, 416
+ Korner, lines from, 38
+ Laconics, 31
+ La Fontaine, absence of, 111
+ Land-storm, tropical, 426
+ Landers' Voyage and Discoveries on the Niger, 149
+ Langreish, Sir Hercules and his friend, 63
+ Last of the Family, 156
+ Laurencekirk Snuff-boxes, 151
+ Lawrence, Mr. Justice, 277
+ Laws of the Navy, ancient, 134
+ Learned Ladies, 304
+ Lee, church at, described, 153
+ Leg, the worst, 368
+ Lestingham Church described, 297
+ Levee of the Sheik of Fellahi, 75
+ Life, progress of, 144
+ Libels on Poets, 290
+ Lifting heavy persons, 73
+ Lines to ----, 226
+ Lion-killer, 80
+ Lisbon described, 209
+ dandy, 69
+ dinner, 70
+ dockyard, 70
+ dogs, 70
+ vanity, 70
+ water-carrier, 70
+ Lock, miniature, 352
+ Locomotive Engines in America, 192
+ Lord Mayors of London, 176
+ Lords, house of, forms of, 325
+ Lord's Prayer in Arawaak, 320
+ Louis XIV., real character of, 84
+ Lucretia Davidson lines on, 148
+ Lucretius, extract from, 192
+ Ludlow Castle, stanzas on revisiting, 67
+ Lydford Bridge described, 289
+ Machinery and Manufactures, economy of, 27
+ Macklin's grand pause, 367
+ Madonna, Italian hymn to, 34
+ Magic in the East, true stories of, 26--76
+ Magic, natural, 72
+ Making and manufacturing, 55
+ Maltese Legend, 370
+ Malt Liquor, antiquity of, 227
+ Manchester, public buildings of, 177
+ Infirmary, 178
+ Royal Institution, 179
+ Town Hall, 178
+ Manners, family, history of, 130
+ Marriage, curious, 271
+ Marriage custom, 439
+ Marrying, excuses for not, 336
+ Mercers and Drapers, respectability of, 320
+ Merchants, opulent British, 319
+ Men of no business and paper cutting, 272
+ Michael Angelo, ecstasy of, 16
+ Mind on the Body, influence of the, 354
+ Mistletoe, origin of, 430
+ Mock-heroics, 304
+ Monasteries, error respecting, 265
+ Money, Anne's, 224
+ of Betrayal, or Price of Blood, 120
+ Charles, I. and II., 224
+ Cromwell, 224
+ Ecclesiastic, 223
+ Edward I. and IV., 223
+ Henry VII., 223
+ James II., 224
+ Milled, 224
+ Richard III., 223
+ Stephen, 223
+ Moody, the actor, avarice of, 367
+ Mortality, comparative, in England, 152
+ Mosaic Pavement described, 409
+ Muscular strength, extraordinary, 432
+ Mussulman and Hindoo religion, 80
+ My Fatherland, 38
+ Nankeen, varieties of, 416
+ Napoleon's Return from Elba, 165
+ National Gallery, the proposed, 64
+ Natural History, errors in, 38
+ Nature, luxuriance of, 175
+ Necklaces, satin-stone, 342
+ Nell Gwynne and Dr. Ken, 336
+ Newcastle, grammar-school, 193
+ Newcastle, the learned duchess of, 161
+ Newcastle-under-Lyne, election at, 288
+ New Year's Gifts, 439
+ Niagara, recent visit to, 446
+ Niger, discoveries on the, 149
+ Nightingales in Essex, 144
+ Norfolk, the late duke of, 86
+ Norton Lees, hall at, 273
+ Nugent, Lord and Lady, legends by, 350
+ Nutria Fur, account of, 279--314
+ O'Brien, the Irish Giant, 182
+ Oil in cookery, 352
+ Old Soldier, the, a sketch, 403
+ Olive Oil, 79--424
+ Omen, evil one, 261
+ Opera and Theatres in London, 365
+ Opal, beauty of, 77
+ Oporto described, 49
+ Oriental Smoking, 170
+ Ornithorhyncus Paradoxus, the, 189
+ Ostrich speed, and diet of, 262
+ stomach of the, 303
+ Otway's "Venice Preserved," 50
+ Owen's almshouses, 143
+ Paddy Fooshane's Fricassee, 108
+ Painters born at Antwerp, 380
+ Painter's last passion, 132
+ retort, 128
+ Panorama of Stirling, 410
+ Parliamentary debates, origin of, 128
+ forms, 326
+ Parliaments, early, 211--325
+ Party-spirit, Fuller on, 352
+ Past, the, a song, 46
+ Past Times, a song, 46
+ Pastor, a faithful one, 207
+ Patriotism, genuine, 438
+ Peak, Antiquities of, 113
+ Pearl in the Oyster, 230
+ Pekin, ancient trade of, 320
+ Pelican, error respecting, 96
+ Pennsylvania, settlement of, 208
+ Pepper, varieties of, 416
+ Perrier, Casimir, memoir of, 116
+ Persian Bath, 145
+ Fable, 228
+ Peru, discovery of, 432
+ Peter the Great, anecdotes of, 300--308
+ character of, 361
+ Peter Pence, origin of, 343
+ Peter Simple, life of, 121
+ Petition to Time, 11
+ Petit-or, value of, 425
+ Petrarch's Tomb, 169
+ Phillips, Col., recollections of, 402
+ Phrenology, curiosities of, 45
+ Physician's Fees, 261
+ Pic Nic at Tempe, 15
+ Pickpockets, qualifications of, 334
+ Piracy in olden times, 26
+ Pitch-in-the-hole, ancient, 320
+ Pitt, Mr., statue of, 40
+ Plaint of certain coral beads, 406
+ Plants, light and air on, 262
+ in rooms, 263
+ Poets, Major and Minor, 51
+ Pompadour, Madame de, her toilette, by Voltaire, 163
+ Pompeii, antiquities of, 412
+ Poor Laws, origin of, 327
+ Popes, List of, 416
+ Portdown Fair described, 121
+ Portugal, antiquity of, 48
+ manners and customs in, 69
+ Posts for Letters, origin of, 322
+ Post Office, revenue of, 440
+ Potato, economy of, 127
+ Poverty, Owen Feltham on, 414
+ Prayer, a fragment, 179
+ Precious Stones, varieties of, 77
+ Preservation of the Human Body, 133
+ Primrose, withered, lines on, 95
+ Printer, studious, 128
+ Printing, invention of, 143
+ from wooden blocks, 55
+ Prison Discipline in America, 286
+ Psalmody, origin of, 146
+ Public Credit explained, 142
+ Punctuality of Colonel Boswell, 448
+ Quadroon Girl, a song, 46
+ Quin and Macklin, 367
+ Quizzing, literary, 144
+ Railway, Liverpool and Manchester, 112
+ Raw Materials, 56
+ Recollections of a Wanderer 21--373
+ Records in the Tower of London, 279
+ Regent-street, charms of, 365
+ Regulating Power, 55
+ Relics of Popery, 344
+ Religious Fastings, 195
+ Resting-place, the, 354
+ Review, the first, 176
+ Rhyming Ruminations on London Bridge, 26
+ Rising, advantages of early, 16
+ Robespierre, anecdote of, 95
+ fall of, 106
+ Robin Hood, history of, 180--204
+ Rome, by T. Moore, 364
+ Romeo and Juliet, story of, 118
+ Romney, antiquity of, 294
+ Rose of the Castle, 133
+ of Edendale, by L.E.L., 335
+ lines to, 221
+ Rotuma, island of, described, 376
+ Roundelaye, ancient, 16
+ Royalty, freaks of, 207
+ Rubens, memoir of, 381
+ Ruby, beauty of, 78
+ Rye, antiquity of, 295
+ Salads, antiquity of, 358
+ Salt, fine basket, 425
+ good effects of, 265
+ Saltpetre, manufacture of, 88
+ Sandwich, antiquity of, 295
+ Sapphires, beauty of, 77
+ Sargasso Weed, account of, 136
+ Satin-stone Necklaces, 342
+ Saving time in natural operations, 55
+ Savoyard, the, a ballad, 275
+ School Building in the High Alps, 171
+ Schoolmaster's experience in Newgate, 333
+ Schools before the Reformation, 75
+ Sciences, progress of, 266
+ Scipio, continence of, 258
+ Scotch "Bluid," anecdote of, 123
+ Scott, Sir Walter, Memoir of:
+ Abbotsford, 241--247--248--250
+ Sonnet, by Wordsworth, 420
+ anecdotes of, 435
+ baronetcy, 250
+ birth of, 241
+ Scott, Sir Walter, character of, 255--256
+ childhood, 242
+ clerk of Sessions, 247
+ death, 208--253--
+ --on the, by the Author of Eugene Aram, 219
+ Dryburgh Abbey, 256--436
+ education, 242
+ embarrassments of, 251--256
+ and the Ettrick Shepherd, 335
+ family, 253
+ fatal illness, 252
+ funeral of, 253
+ by an eye-witness, 345
+ Life of Napoleon, 251
+ love of reading, 243
+ law studies, 244
+ literary attempts, 244
+ marriage, 246
+ medal of, 255
+ memory, 245
+ Melrose Abbey, 436
+ parentage, 242
+ portraits of, 254
+ school days, 243
+ Selkirk, 437
+ sheriffdom, 246
+ telling a story, 243
+ Works of:
+ Dryden and Swift, edition of, 247
+ Eve of St. John, 245
+ Glenfinlas, 245
+ Goetz of Berlinchingen translated, 245
+ Lady of the Lake, 247
+ Lay of the Last Minstrel, 246
+ Leonora, &c., translations of, 245
+ Marmion, 247
+ Miscellaneous Works, 250
+ Novels, List of, 250
+ Rokeby and Minor Poems, 249
+ unpublished works, 255
+ Waverley, 249
+ Novels, 252
+ Sea, depth of the, 427
+ Sea-shore, changes on, 78
+ Seal, a blind one, 298
+ Seaman, knowing, 432
+ Secret Lover, the, from the Persian, 204
+ Servants affected by fashionable manners and customs, 331--348
+ Servants in India, 105
+ Servant, monument to a faithful one, 288
+ Servants, Vails to, 318
+ Shark, adventure with, 381
+ Shaving or throat-cutting, 272
+ Shelly, the poet, anecdote of, 407
+ Sheridan's Funeral, 448
+ Sheriff of London, Journal of, 196--212
+ Shrewsbury, Anna Maria, Countess of, 112
+ Silk Manufacture, outline of, 446
+ Skeleton Dance, from Goethe, 420
+ Slave Trade in England, 319
+ Smoking forbidden in Parliament, 336
+ Snake, anecdote of a tame one, 327
+ Snuff-boxes, Laurencekirk, 151
+ Snuffers, antique, 337
+ Soldier, annual cost of, 176
+ dress of, 448
+ Solecisms in Language, 350
+ Somersetshire, land-custom in, 112
+ Song from the Album of a Poet, 98
+ Songs, by Barry Cornwall, 46
+ Song, Scottish, 317
+ Song-writing, spirit of, 11
+ Sounds during the night, 107
+ Spain, stupendous bridge in, 24
+ Spaniards and Portuguese, 69
+ Spencer's account of the Irish Mantle, 415
+ Spinning-wheel Song, 391
+ Spirit of Despotism, by Dr. Knox, 106
+ Spirit-drinking, evils of, 307
+ in 1736, 133
+ Spontaneous combustion, 162--211
+ Spring, harbingers of, 174
+ St. Cross, Church and Hospital of, 217--228
+ St. Dunstan's in the West, new church of, 34
+ St. Goar on the Rhine, legend of, 386
+ St. Hellen's Well, Staffordshire, 228
+ St. James's Park, improvement of, 418
+ St. Paul's Cathedral, monuments in, 96
+ Stael, Madame de, 86
+ Stages, Islington, olden, 335
+ Stanzas for Music, 52
+ Stationers' Company, origin of, 286
+ Statue of Mr. Canning, 25
+ of Mr. Pitt, 40
+ Steam Carriages on common roads, 183--198
+ Coaches and Power, 128
+ Engine simplified, 315
+ Navigation, 48
+ Packets, value of, 272
+ Stirling, panorama of, 410
+ Stork, the, 216
+ Story, extraordinary one, 292
+ Strand, the original, 207
+ Stranger, a song, 46
+ Streets, narrow, of Cairo, 80
+ Success in Life, grand secret of, 85
+ Suffolk-street Gallery, exhibition at, 330--362
+ Sugar, improved raw, 148
+ Sugar-refining, history of, 149
+ Sumptuary Laws, intention of, 439
+ Swampy Kingdom, 207
+ Tanfield Arch described, 353
+ Tea-makers, hint to, 176
+ Tears, the, an apologue, 403
+ Teeth of Crocodiles, 96
+ Tempe, Pic Nic at, 15
+ Temper, equanimity of, 99
+ Tenterden Steeple and Goodwin Sands, 38
+ Thebes, description of, 141
+ Thou wert the Rainbow of my Dreams, 290
+ Thurlow, the great Lord, 259
+ Tiger, sight of, 100
+ Titian, grave of, 216
+ Titles, origin of, 287
+ Toad-fish, economy of, 135
+ Tom Cringle's Log, 381--425
+ Tombs, celebrated Roman, 231
+ Tomb of Caius Cestius, 233
+ Tomb of Cęcilia Metella, 232
+ Horatii and Curatii, 233
+ Juliet, 265
+ Tongue of Man, 96
+ Toothache, cure for, 212
+ Torchlight custom, 260
+ Tornado, by T. Pringle, Esq., 400
+ Tory, origin of, 144
+ Towers of Tarifa, the, 186
+ Trade, anti-free, 304
+ Tradesmen affected by fashion, 332--349
+ Tradesmen, ancient, 261
+ Tragedy and Comedy, essay on, 82
+ Traveller's Diary, scraps from, 219--364
+ Trials of Grace Huntley, a tale, 395
+ Truth, the plain, 207
+ Tulip, Fanny Kemble, 272
+ Tulip Tree, 38
+ Tunnel, natural, in Virginia, 433
+ Turkish Baths, 74
+ Turncoat, 336
+ Turtle Mayor, 336
+ Twins, monument of, 240
+ Umbrellas, invention of, 269
+ Uneducated, who are? 95
+ Usury in the Middle Ages, 320
+ Van Dieman's Land, civilization in, 5
+ Velocity, increased and diminished, 55
+ Venice, by T. Moore, 219
+ Vestry Dinner in Persia, 75
+ Victims of Susceptibility, 154
+ Vine, the, an apologue, 403
+ Viper, horned, poison of, 354
+ Virginia, natural tunnel in, 433
+ Voice of Humanity, the, 201
+ Volcanoes on the Globe, 448
+ Voltaire, anecdote of, 293
+ Voyage of Manufacture, 54
+ Vulture, 80
+ Wakefield, chapel on the bridge at, 401
+ Walcot, Dr., and Shield, 448
+ Walking Gallows, 52
+ Walnut Water, properties of, 176
+ Watching for the Soul, 368
+ Waterloo, battle of, 235
+ child, 128
+ day after the battle, 166
+ the year of, 165
+ Wearied Soldier, the, 195
+ Weather, journals of, 111
+ Were and Werelade, 71
+ Whale, gigantic, account of, 341
+ What's in a name? 391
+ Wheston, cross at, 113
+ When wilt thou return? 290
+ Wieland, on the Druids, 20
+ Wight, isle of, town in, 225
+ Wilks's Cottage, 225
+ Wilkes's Luckiest Number, 143
+ William the Conqueror, funeral of, 13
+ Winchelsea, antiquity of, 295
+ Windermere, scene on, 308
+ Wines, German, 281
+ Wingfield Manor House, described, 321
+ Wit, ready, 304
+ Witchcraft in 1618, 130
+ Witchcraft and Spontaneous Combustion, 162
+ Wolves of North America, 340
+ Women alias Angels, 32
+ characteristics of, 117
+ heroic, 16
+ Wonders of the Lane, 413
+ Wordsworth, sonnet by, 420
+ Worm, lines on, 201
+ Worsted, origin of, 320
+ Wrestling custom at Hornchurch, 319
+ Writing in France, 120
+ York Column and St. James's Park, 418
+ Zoffany, his gratitude, 368
+ Zoological Garden, natural, 101
+ Zoological Gardens, Regent's Park, 66--199--281
+ Armadillo House at, 200
+ Aviary, 281
+ Deer at, 200
+ Elephants at, 200
+ Fountain, 281
+ Llama House, 200
+ Maccaws, 281
+ Ostriches, 281
+ Repository, 200
+ Zoological Gardens, Surrey, 1--303
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+INDEX TO THE EIGHTY-EIGHT ENGRAVINGS.
+
+
+ ABBOTSFORD, (Armoury,) 248
+ (from the Garden,) 241
+ (Study,) 248
+ Antique Bell, (Two Cuts,) 345
+ Chair, 344
+ Key, 337
+ Knife-handle, 345
+ Snuffers, 337
+ Antwerp, (from the Tźte de Flandre,) 369
+ Ararat, Mount, 313
+ Bat, American, 409
+ Beauchief Abbey, 113
+ Bede's Chair, 440
+ Belvoir Castle, 129
+ Birthplace of Bewick, 17
+ the Earl of Eldon, 193
+ Dr. Johnson, 257
+ Bob in for Eels, 392
+ Bolsover Castle, 161
+ Bridge across the Guadiaro, in Spain, 24
+ Burnham Abbey, 81
+ Bustard, 328
+ Chapel on the Bridge, Wakefield, 401
+ Chlamyphorus, 264
+ Church, (new,) St. Dunstan in the West, 33
+ Cross, Cornwall, 424
+ Devon, 424
+ at Eyam, 113
+ at Holbeach, 329
+ at Leighton Buzzard, 329
+ Neville's, 360
+ Percy's, 361
+ at Wheston, 113
+ Cuttle Fish, (Three Cuts,)
+ Dandy Lion, 392
+ Dodo, 312
+ Dryburgh Abbey, 256
+ Elephant bathing in the Zoological Gardens, Regent's Park, 65
+ Falls of the Genesse, 97
+ Framlingham Castle, 305
+ Grave of Titian, 216
+ Hall at Norton Lees, 273
+ Hospital of St. Cross, (the Church,) 217
+ Isle of Rotuma, 376
+ Isle of Wight, and Wilkes's Cottage, 225
+ Lee Church, Kent, 153
+ Lisbon, (general view,) 209
+ Manchester Infirmary, 177
+ Royal Institution, 177
+ Town Hall, 177
+ Money of Betrayal, (Two Cuts,)
+ Monument of a Crusader, 441
+ Oporto, from Villa Nova, 49
+ Persian Bath, 145
+ Portrait of Chaptal, 88
+ Cuvier, 137
+ Goethe, 89
+ Pursuit of Knowledge, 392
+ St. Goar, on the Rhine, 385
+ Statue of Mr. Canning, 25
+ Pitt, 40
+ Tanfield Arch, Durham, 353
+ Toad-fish, 136
+ Tomb of Caius Cestius, 233
+ Cęcilia Metella, 232
+ Dante, 168
+ Horatii and Curatii, 233
+ Juliet, 265
+ Petrarch, 169
+ Tunnel, Natural, in Virginia, 433
+ Vase containing the Heart of Canova, 169
+ Wingfield Manor House, 321
+ York Column, from St. James's Park, 417
+ Zoological Gardens, Regent's Park:
+ Aviary, 281
+ Armadillo House, 200
+ Deer, 200
+ Elephants, 200
+ Llama, 200
+ Maccaws, 281
+ Ostriches, 281
+ Pond and Fountain, 281
+ Repository, 200
+ Zoological Gardens, Surrey:
+ Building for large Animals, 1
+ General View, 1
+ Rockwork for Beavers, 1
+
+
+END OF VOL. XX.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement,
+and Instruction, No. 584, by Various
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