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1. Report of the Superintendent of Police of the Lower
Provinces for 1844-5
2. Report of the Committee of the House of Commons,
1828-9
186
ib.
ART. VI.-ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF ENGLISH
CONNEXION WITH INDIA.
1. The Journal of Sir Thomas Roe, Ambassador from
His Majesty, King James the First, of England, to
Jehangire, the Mighty Emperor of India, common-
ly the Great Mogul
2. A new account of the East Indies, being the Obser-
vations and Remarks of Captain Alexander Hamil-
ton; who spent his time there from the year 1688
to 1723, and travelling by sea and land, to most of
the Countries and Islands of Commerce and Navi-
gation, between the Cape of Good Hope and the
Island of Japan
3. A voyage from England to India in the year 1754.
And an Historical Narrative of the operations of
the Squadron and Army of India under the com-
mand of Vice Admiral Watson and Colonel Clive,
in the years 1755, 1756, 1757. By Edward
Ives, Esq.
4. Annals of the Hon'ble East India Company from their
establishment, by the Charter of Elizabeth 1600, to
the union of the London and English East India
Companies 1707-8. By John Bruce, Esq.
5. History of the Mogul Dynasty, translated from the
French of Father François Catron of the Society
of Jesus. 1826
6. Outline of the History of Bengal, by John C. Marsh-
man. Serampore, 1838.
7. The East India Sketch-book, comprising an account of
the present sate of Society in Calcutta, Bombay,
&c. in 1832
8. A few Local Sketches, by John Mawson. Carey and
Mendes, Calcutta, 1846.
220
MISCELLANEOUS CRITICAL NOTICES.
1. Sanskrit Grammar, by M. Williams, Esq.
2. Observations on the Nature and Treatment of Cholera,
by T. Hastings, Esq. M. R. C. S. Bengal Medical
Service, Calcutta, Ostell and Lepage, 1846
3. An Atlas of Anatomical Plates of the human body,
accompanied with descriptions in Hindustani, by
Fred. J. Mouat, M. D., Fellow of the Royal Col-
lege of Surgeons in England,-Assistant Surgeon
Bengal Army, Member of, and Secretary to the
Council of Education of Bengal, Professor of Materia
Medica and Medical Jurisprudence in the Bengal
Medical College, &c. &c. &c. Assisted by Munshi
Nussíradin Ahmud, late of the Calcutta Madrissa.
The drawings in stone, by C. Grant, Esq. Calcutta.
Bishop's College Press, 1846, Part II.
i
iv
ix
4. Investigation of Mortality in the Indian Army, by W.
S. B. Woolhouse, F. R. A. S. &c., London 1839. . xiv
Tables of the Universal Life Assurance Society
Ditto of the Family Endowment ditto
5. The necessity for Christian Education to elevate the
native character in India. An essay to which the
Sir Peregrine Maitland prize has been adjudged by
the University of Cambridge. By George Nugée,
B. A. London, 1846
χχίν
OF
No. XIV.-VOL. VII.
ART. I.-MACGREGOR'S SIKHS-POLITICAL AGENCY IN THE EAST.
The History of the Sikhs, &c. &c. by W. L. Macgregor,
M. D. Surgeon, 1st E. B. Fusilecrs, late 1st E. L.
Infantry. 2 Vols. Madden and Co. 1846
ART. II.-OUR INDIAN RAILWAYS.
1. Copy of Railway Reports from India. Presented to
Parliament by H. M.'s command
283
321
1.-Letter from the Government of India in the
Legislative Department, dated 9th May, 1846 ib.
2.-Report by Mr. Simms, and Capts. Boileau
and Western, dated 13th March, 1846
3, 4, 5.-Minutes by the Hon'bles Sir T. H.
Maddock, Knt., F. Millet, and C. H. Came-
ron
6.-Minute by the Governor-General of India
2. Report of R. Macdonald Stephenson, Esq., Managing
Director, to the Chairman, &c. of the East Indian
Railway Company
3. Report upon the Project upon the Dock and Diamond
Harbour Railway Company, by F. W. Simms, Esq.,
Consulting Engineer to the Government of In-
dia, &c. .
4. Indian Railways. By an Old Indian Postmaster
5. Letter to the Shareholders of the East Indian and
Great Western of Bengal Railways. By one of
themselves
6. Report on the application of Railway communication
in India, by Capt. Western, B. E. from Friend of
India, March 23d, 1843
7. Railways in England and France, by David Salomons,
Esq. pp. 77, London, 1847
il.
8. Papers Illustrative of the Prospects of the Great In-
dian Peninsular Railway Company. Bombay, Sep-
tember, 1846
9. Two Letters on the advantages of Railway Communi-
cation in Western India, addressed to Lord Warn-
cliffe, by T. Thos. Williamson, Esq., C. S. pp. 119. ib.
ART. III. THE PHILOSOPHY OF CONFUCIUS.
1. Les livres sacrés de l'Orient. Par M. Pauthier. Paris,
1840
2. Y-King, antiquissimus Sinarum liber quem ex Latinâ
interpretatione P. Regis aliorumque ex Soc. Jesu
P. P. edidit Julius Mohl. Stuttgartice, 1834.
3. The Works of Confucius, by J. Marshman, Seram-
pore, 1809
4. Le Chou-king, traduit et enrichi de notes par Feu le
P. Gaubil, &c. revu et corrigé sur le texte Chinois
par M. De Guignes, &c. Paris, 1770
5. China, or Illustrations of the Symbols, Philosophy, &c.
of the Chinese, by S. Kidd. London, 1841.
ART. IV.-INDIAN LAW REFORM.
1. An Act for establishing a Court of Subordinate Juris-
diction in the City of Calcutta. (Read in Council
for the first time on the 13th March, 1847.) Cal-
cutta Gazette, March 27.
2. An Act for the Improvement of the Administration of
Justice in the Supreme Court of Judicature at
Fort William in Bengal. Read first time 13th
March, 1847.-Ibid.
372
419
3. An Act for facilitating the execution of the Process of
the Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William
in Bengal and the taking of affidavits out of the
limits of the Jurisdiction of the said Court. Read
first time 13th March, 1847.—Ibid.
ART. V.-SIR ELIJAH IMPEY.
Memoirs of Sir Elijah Impey, Knt. first Chief Justice of
the Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William,
Bengal; with anecdotes of Warren Hastings, Sir
Philip Francis, Nathaniel Brassey Halhed, Esq., and
other cotemporaries; compiled from authentic docu-
ments, in refutation of the calumnies of the Right