Abortion, papers circulated by persons be.. longing to the Political Economists in London, to procure, 443-Suggestions as atrocious circulated and acted upon in the Factories, ib.
Absentees, injudiciousness of a tax on, 617 A Dozen Years Hence, 265
Affections, Characters of the, 124, 143 Ali Pasha, his war with the Sultan, 498 Alison, Archibald, Esq., History of the French Revolution, by, 889 Annunciation, the, by Mrs Hemans, 804 Anthology, the Greek, No. I. 865 Antwerp, 807
Antwerp, siege of, by Lady E. S. Wortley,
Apostates political, Burke's character of, 297 Appeal, a last one, to King, Lords, and Commons, 358
Aristocratic ministries, fall of, 598 Armatoles, or Greek militia in the service of
Ashton, Dr, evidence on the Factory sys- tem, 431
Ayans, magistrates in Ottoman cities, elected by the inhabitants, 936
Barry the painter, Burke's admirable letters to, 604
Beranger, songs after the French of, 844 Beresford, Rev. Marcus, his account of the principles of the Irish Conservatives, 234 Bethany, sisters of, after the death of Laza- rus, 805
Bible, child reading the, by Mrs Hemans, 262 Billy-roller, nature and uses of, 441 Bird, Mr, letter concerning costumes for his picture of Chevy Chase, 62-and answer from Sir Walter Scott, 64 Bishops' Lands, Lord Althorp's proposals concerning, 653
Blair, Mr, dinner to, in Edinburgh, 266 Bluebeard, a dramatic tale, by Tieck, 206 Blundell, Dr, evidence on the Factory sys- tem, 433
Bolingbroke, Lord, character of, 283 Bonaparte, invasion of Portugal, 2 Boyton, Mr, his description of the system pursued by the Irish government, 232— his account of the proceedings of the Dub- lin Conservative Society, 235-his speech on the Dutch war, 238
Brazils, arrival of the Portuguese royal fami- ly in, 4-subsequent history of the coun- try, ib.
Bringing up Lee Way, 298, 451 Brunswick, Duke of, his manifesto, 899 Bull, Rev. G. S., evidence on the Factory system, 443, 447 Burke, Edmund, Part I. 277—his eloquence did not apply to temporary emergencies only, but embodied principles universally
applicable, 278-his university career, 279-favourite authors in early life, 280 -his pamphlet against Brooke, and Letter to Dr Lucas, ib.-account of the metro- polis, ib.-stands candidate for the pro- fessorship of Logic in Glasgow, 282- design of going to America, 283-his Vindication of Natural Society, ib.- Treatise on the Sublime and Beautiful, 287-Johnson's opinion of him, ib.- anecdote of an encounter with a clergy- man at Litchfield, ib.-editor or author of a History of the European Settlements in North America, and of Dodsley's An- nual Register, 288-private secretary to Single-speech Hamilton, 289-private secretary to Marquis Rockingham, 290- comes into parliament, 291-defence of the Rockingham administration, 296- his character of political apostates, 297- Part II. 597-Burke's Thoughts on the cause of the present discontents, 598-his occupations at Beaconsfield, 603-patro- nage of Barry, 604-the part he took in behalf of America on the commencement of disputes with the mother country, 607 -his disapproval of a tax on absentees, 617
Cæsars, Chap. III. Caligula, Claudius, and Nero, 43
Caligula, his cruelties, 44
Carlisle, Sir Anthony, evidence on the Fac tory system, 432
Chalmers, Rev. Dr, his argument that a sys- tem of poor's laws is destructive of charity borrowed from the present Bishop of Ian- daff, and at the same time erroneous, 318 Characteristics of Women, No. I. Characters of the Affections, 124-No. II. 143- No. III. Characters of Passion and Ima- gination, 391-No. IV. Characters of In- tellect, 539
Charlemont, Lord, character of, 288 Chatham, Lord, administration of, 295-
Burke's humorous character of it, ib.- character of his lordship, 967
Chief, the, or the Gael and Sassenach, 503, 763
Child reading the Bible, by Mrs Hemans, 262
Cornwall and Devonshire illustrated, No. I. Gordon, Mr, his history of the Greek Revo-
Cortes of Lamego, history of, 20 Craven heart, the, by Mrs Godwin, 264 Cringle, Tom, his log, Chap. XVII. Scenes in Cuba, 26-Chap. XVIII. Cruise of the Wave, 170-Chap. XIX. Bringing up Lee Way, 298-Chap. XX. Bringing up Lee Way, 451-Chap. XXI. Second Cruise of the Wave, 737 Crocodile island, 105
Cruger, Mr, anecdote of, 610
Cruise of the Wave, 170-second cruise, 737 Cuba, scenes in, 26
Danton, character of, 906
Greek Anthology, No. I. 865
Green, Mr, evidence on the Factory system, 435
Greece, Revolution of, Part I. 476-that event proved fatal to the naval power of the Porte, 943
Gueuse, Water, song of the, 810
Democrat, life of a, a sketch of Horne Hamilton, Single-speech, character of, 289
Dere beys, or hereditary Turkish nobles, 935 Despair, by the Hon. Augusta Norton, 123 Desultory reading, its injurious effects, 279 Devonshire and Cornwall illustrated, 689 Diebitsch, his defeat of the Turks under Redschid, 942
Dismemberment of the Empire, 223 Doctor, the, and the patient, 845 Donatus, his account of Ireland, 923 Doyle, Dr, his able evidence in favour of the introduction of poor's laws into Ireland, 831
Dutch war, Mr Boyton on the, 238 Dying request of a Hindu Girl, by Mrs Godwin, 595
East India question, 776
Elliot, Ebenezer, description of a Reform jubilee, by, 444
England, degradation of, under the influ
ence of revolutionary passions, 945 Engraving, improvements and abuses in modern, 952 Factory system, 419
Farre, Dr, evidence on the Factory system, 434
Ferns, anecdote of the Bishop of, 659 Forrest-Race Romance, 243 Fountain, the ruined, by Mrs Godwin, 595 France, state of the poor in, 822 Franklin, vindictive and selfish character of, 616
French Revolution, the, 889
Future Balance of Parties, 115
Future state, rabbinical traditions concern- ing, 641
Gael and Sassenach, 503, 763 George II., character of, 597
Gilfillan, Robert, songs by, 855, 856, 857, 858
Girondists, their hypocritical and cowardly
conduct and deserved fall, 898, 902, 903, 908
Godwin, Mrs, Lyrics of the East, by, No.
III. 263 No. IV. 264-Nos. V. and VI. 595
Goldoni, his character as a dramatic writer, 372
Hartley, David, Burke's rejoinder to, 615 Hebron, widow of, a rabbinical tradition, 630 Hemans, Mrs, Hymns of Life, by, No. I. - 120 No. II. 122-Child reading the Bible, by, 262-Female characters of Scripture, a series of sonnets by, 593, 804 Hetaria, or secret society of Greece, 489 Hodson, Margaret, Lines to the memory of Ensign Holford, by, 60
Horne Tooke, a sketch of, 963-his educa-
tion, 964-his first libel, 965-letters to Wilkes, 966-insulted by Wilkes, 967- labours in his behalf nevertheless, 968- his libel on Mr Onslow, 970-the address of the London corporation said to have have been drawn up by him, 974-Beck- ford's famous address claimed by him, 975 -Society for supporting the Bill of Rights, 976-quarrel with Wilkes, and mutual recriminations and exposures, 977 Hymns of Life, by Mrs Hemans, 120 Ireland, No. I. 66-redundant population, ib.-indulgent legislation of James I. 69 -and consequent rebellion, ib.-conces- sions by George III. 70-and consequent rebellion, ib.-Catholic Emancipation, 71 -and present state of Ireland, ib.-Tithes, 73--bad effect of liberal institutions on an ignorant and volatile people like the Irish, 75-measures necessary to restore peace and prosperity, 78-conduct of the present ministry, 81-strength of the Repealers, 84-No. II. Dismemberment of the Em- pire, 223 the Repealers, 224-union and objects of the Irish Catholics, 227- their murders and burnings, ib.-incon- stancy of the Irish government, 231- <Conservative Society of Dublin, 235- anarchical meetings, 237-No. III. The Administration of Justice, 338-Ireland incapable of governing herself, ib.- changes in the administration of justice recommended by the committee during last parliament, 340-evidence of Sir John Harvey, 342-of Mr Barrington, 343, 344, 347-of Col. John Rochfort, 344, 345, 346, 348, 349-of Sir Hussey Vivian, 348, 355-of Mr Dupard, 349 -of Mr Dillon, 350-of Hovenden Sta-
pleton, Esq. 351-of Maj.-Gen. Crawford, 352, 354-of Dr Doyle, 354-general remarks, 356-frightful list of crimes committed in some of the Irish counties, 357, note-No. IV. 563-The Coercive Measures, 570-Church Spoliation, 573 -The Grand Jury System, 580 Ireland, on the introduction of poor's laws into, 811
Irish clergy, income-tax to be imposed on, 656
Irish church bill, letter to the King on the,
Isle of Beauty, by Lady E. S. Wortley, 261 Janissaries, massacre of the, 938-insuffi- ciency of the troops raised in their stead, 941
Jamaica, remonstrance of the House of As. sembly against interference with their in- ternal affairs on the part of the Reform Parliament, 226
Mary Magdalene at the Sepulchre, by Mrs Hemans, 806-bearing tidings of the re- surrection, ib.
Mathematics injudiciously made the chief -source of distinction in Dublin University, 279 Mauritius, late discontents in, 199 Mess, Nights at, 924 Mignon's song, 90
Miguel, Dom, history of, 17
Miriam, song of, by Mrs Hemans, 593 Mob oratory, weight of, in the House of Commons, 225
Moorish Maid of Granada, 40 Motherwell's Poems, 668 Movement, progress of the, 651 My Lisette, she is no more, 845 Nero, his cruelties, 45-his flight, 49-and death, 52
Nights at Mess, 924
Norton, Hon. Augusta, Despair, by, 128 Oak, the parent, 961
Jameson, Mrs, Characteristics of Women, O'Connell, concessions of ministers to, 81-
by, 124, 143, 391, 539 Jerusalem, women of, at the cross, by Mrs Hemans, 8 06
Joy, Judge, his charge to the Longford grand jury, 237
Kaye, Dr, on the Factory system, 437 Kicking, a common punishment in the Fac- tories, 441
his continued agitation, 82 Ottoman empire, rise and progress of, 481 Parish cess, 651
Parisian mob, their reception in the Na- tional Assembly, 897-they storm the palace, 900-massacre of the prisoners of the Abbaye, 907-and of the Bicetre, 907 Parties, future balance of, 115
King, letter to the, on the Irish church bill, Pedro, Dom, history of, 6
Ladies, studies of the, à la François, 844 Landaff, present Bishop of, his erroneous ar- gument that a system of poor's laws is destructive of charity, 818
Landscape, Scottish, 512
Late Discontents in Mauritius, 199 Lay-figure, the, a painter's story, 583 Life, comparative table of the duration of,
Lifting of the Conservative standard, 88 Lifting of the Revolutionary standard, 88 Little Brown Man, the, 844
Little Leonard's last good-night, 61 Loch Awe, 984
Lord Advocate, his behaviour in the Edin- burgh election, 267
Louis XVI. character of, 898, 901 Lyrics of the East, by Mrs Godwin, No. III. 263-No. IV. 264-Nos. V. and VI, 595
Macculloch, his preposterously false doctrine that workmen in manufactories are health- ier and more virtuous than country la- bourers, 439
MacNeill, Mr Duncan, his speech at the
Edinburgh Conservative Dinner, 272 Mahmoud, present Sultan of Turkey, his fa- tal innovations, 934 Manufactories, unhealthiness of, 437 Marat, character of, 906
Mary at the feet of Christ, by Mrs Hemans, 805-Memorial of, by the same, ib.
Penitent, the, anointing Christ's feet, 804 Picture, the, 90
Poetry.-Moorish Maid of Granada, 40— to the Memory of Ensign George Holford Walker, by Margaret Hodson, 60-Little Leonard's last good-night, 61-Ye Gen- tlemen of Ireland, 87-Ye Jackasses of Ireland, ib.-Lifting of the Conservative standard, 88-Lifting of the Revolution- ary standard, ib.-Zephyrs, 89-The Picture, ib.-Mignon's song, ib.-Siege of Antwerp, by Lady E. S. Wortley, 113 -Prayer of the Lonely Student, by Mrs Hemans, 120-Traveller's evening song, by the same, 122-Despair, by the Hon. Augusta Norton, 123-To the year 1832, 187-Grave of the Gifted, by Lady E. S. Wortley, 260-Isle of Beauty, by the same, 261-Child reading the Bible, 262 -Lyrics of the East, by Mrs Godwin, No. III. The Shiek's revenge, 263-No. IV. The Craven Heart, 264-A Dozen years hence, 265-The Graces, 527- Lines on a thrush confined in a cage near the sea, by Lady E. S. Wortley, 592- Female characters of Scripture, a series of sonnets, by Mrs Hemans, 593-Lyrics of the East, Nos. V. and VI. by Mrs God- win, 595 My Grave, 596-Female characters of Scripture, by Mrs Hemans, 804-Antwerp, 807-Song of the Water Gueuse, 810-Songs after the French of Beranger, 844-Death-song of Reg-
ner Lodbrog, 910-The Parent Oak,
Poor's laws, and their introduction into Ire- land, 811
Portugal, invasion by the French, 2-Re- turn of King John from Brazil, 15
Poussin, Gaspar, the only true pastoral painter, 685-prints from his paintings, 949-a scene near Vico Varo the subject of one of his pictures, 954
Prayer of the lonely student, by Mrs He- mans, 120
Rabbi David, story of, 649
Rabbins, traditions of, 628
Regner Lodbrog, Death-song of, 910-ac- count of his adventures, 915 Repealers, 224
Revolution, progress of, in France and Eng. land, 565
Revolution, the French, 889
Ricardo's erroneous definition of rent, 322 Rizpah, the Vigil of, by Mrs Hemans, 594 Roberton's Remarks on the health of Eng- lish manufacturers, 439
Robespierre, his character, 906-his fate,
Scotch and Yankees, by Galt, 91, 188 Scott, Sir Walter, original letter from, 62 Scottish landscape, 512
Scripture, female characters of, by Mrs Hemans, 593
Scrope, Mr, his able arguments for poor's laws, 817
Shakespeare's Hermione, 127, 148-Per- dita, 130-Desdemona, 131, 155-Imo- gen, 133, 150-Cordelia, 138, 159- Juliet, 392-Ophelia, 398,-Miranda, 409-Beatrice, 541-Rosalind, 548 Shiek's revenge, by Mrs Godwin, 263 Shunamite Woman, reply of the, by Mrs Hemans, 594
Siege of Antwerp, by E. S. Lady Wortley, 11° Simmons, Dr, evidence on the Factory sy tem, 431
Sinclair, Mr, his pamphlet on Indian affairs,
Sketcher, the, No. I. 682-No. II. 949
Slade, Mr, his Travels in Turkey, 931 Slavery, gradual abolition of, 41 Smith, Mr Samuel, evidence on the Factory system, 431
Solomon, rabbinical tradition concerning, 647
Standard newspaper, its account of the b- jects of the Conservative Society of Ire- land, 236
Suliotes, sketch of their history, 485, noie Talents, it is a fallacy that they make their own fortune, 290
Tea, price of, in England, misrepresentation. of the Edinburgh Review concerning, 799 -table showing the sale price of, in Eng- land and on the continents of Europe and America, by which it appears that tea is furnished fully as cheap by the East India Company as by the free traders any where else, 801
Thackrah, Mr, evidence on the Factory sy tem, 432
Thomson, Col. his exposure of Ricardo's erroneous definition of rent, 323 Thrush, lines on one, confined in a cage near the sea, by Lady E. S. Wortley, 592 Tieck, Bluebeard, a dramatic tale, by, 206 Tithes, Irish, 73, 82, 321
To the year 1832, 187
Transmigration of souls, rabbinical opinions concerning, 628
Traveller's evening song, by Mrs Hemans, 122 Turandot, a dramatic fable, by Count Gozzi, 371
Twaddle on Tweedside, 846
Turkey, the fall of, 931-strange indiffer- ence of England on seeing the Russian power extended in that quarter, 932 Ulema, the, or peerage of Turkey, 937- their lands free from arbitrary taxation, 937
Virgin, song of the, by Mrs Hemans, 804 Vivares, character of his etching, 951 Walker, Ensign George Holford, to the memory of, 60
Wilkes, character of, 963, 967 Winstanley, Dr, evidence on the Factory system, 431
Women, Characteristics of, No. I. 124- No. II. 143-No. III. 391-No. IV. 539
Wortley, Lady Emmeline Stuart, Siege of Antwerp, by, 113-Grave of the gifted, by, 260-Isle of beauty, by, 261-Lines on a Thrush confined in a cage near the sea, by, 592
Yankees, Scotch and, by Galt, 91, 188 Ye Gentlemen of Ireland, 87
Jackasses of Ireland, 87
>silanti, Alexander, unsuccessful insurrec- tion of, 495
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