INDEX TO VOL. I. A. Child's, Mrs., Letters of, notes upon, re- view, (Donald G. Mitchell,) 60. City in the Sea, the, a Poem, (Edgar A. Poe,) 393. Clay, Mr., The Texas Question, (Prof. Tayler Lewis,) 75. Commerce, Library of, (Hunt's,) 110. (William Darby,) 424–Railroad to the Pacific, 432. Congress, Twenty-Eighth, review, (Ilo- race Greely,) 221-Auspices of its com- mencement, ib -Position of the two Parties, 222—Opening of the Session, ib.-Outrage of the admission of the Non-Districted Members, 223_States that joined in this violence, 224–Attack upon the Tariff, 226—Twenty-First Rule, Re-enactment of, 227-Repeal of the same, ib.—Postage Reform, 228—Indem- nity for French Spoliations, ib.-Annex- ation of Texas, 229. Hunt's Library of Commerce, 110–Life and Eloquence of Rev. Sylvester Larned, 111-Commerce of the Prairies, ib. Elements of Logic, ib.–Literary Re- mains of the late Willis Gaylord Clarke, 112—Ellen Woodville, ib.—Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, 215- Agri Somnia, ib.-Chaunt of Life, 216 Whitman,) 639. tipsi,) 195. E. Egmont, Goethe's Character of, review, D. Election, Result of the, 114–Tylerism; J. Parties necessary to the permanency of Liberty ; difference between a Párty Jack Long, or Lynch Law and Vengeance, and a Faction; late Election a struggle a tale of Texas Life, (Charles Winter- between a Party and a Faction, 115– field), 121. Rise and Progress of the Faction, its weapons of fraud, 116–Table showing Mr. Clay to have received a majority of 453. for congratulation, renewed hope, and Landscape Painters, Letters from, notice energy, on the part of the Whigs, 120. Emerson, Mr., and Transcendentalism, Larned, Rev. Sylvester, Life and Elo- 233—Definition of the term Transcend- entalism, ib.-Mr. Alcott ;. Extracts Last Chief Executive, the, 331–Harris- quence of, notice of, 111. burg Convention in 1839, 332–Mr. Ty- ler at the Convention, ib.-Mr. Tyler Soliloquy of the Nail-machine, 235— the supporter of Mr. Clay, 333–Mr. Propagation of New Systems; Coteries, Clay set aside, ib.—Mr. Tyler's grief, ib. 237—The Essay on Experience, 238– The Essay on History, 239—Illusion, -Mr. Tyler's tears through the ensuing night, ib.-General Harrison nominated, ib.-John Tyler proposed, ib.—Mr. Ty- ler's accession on the death of General Harrison, 334-Mr. Tyler's Whig Ad. dress to the People, ib.-Mr. Tyler's message indicating a change, ib. Mr. Tyler's abandonment of the Whig Party, 335—Mr. Tyler's veto of the Bank Bill, ib._statement of Senator Berrien, (note), ib.—memorandum of Mr. Sar- Forget-me-Not, the, from the Danish, 59. gent, (note), 334—Mr. Tyler's intrigues -Erleden,) 213. for a reëlection, ib.—pleasant contrast Frelinghuysen, Mr., Biographical Sketch of the opinions of the Democratic Re- view respecting Mr. Tyler in 1842, with those of that journal about the same gen- G. tleman in 1845, (note), 337–Mr. Tyler's corrupt patronage, 339—Mr. Tyler's Goethe, Imitations from, Poetry, 289. Laws of Menu, (James S. Whelpley), 510 Leila, George Sand's, review of, 624. Lighthouse System, our, (H. J. Raymond), (J. D. Whelpley,) 290—Origin of the Britain and France, 315—primary defect scientific men needed in the establish- --Polyzonal lenses, ib.-French light at Literature, Old Northern, (Hon. George P. Literary Prospects of 1845, (E. A. Duyck- inck), 146. notice of, 111. Whelpley), 194. Hymn to the Virgin, from the German of Machiavel, Nicholas, Opinions of, concern- I am Sir Oracle, (Nosmetipsi,) 405. ing Popular Governments, (James Inscription on a Ruined Temple, 616. D. Whelpley), 643. Introductory Address to Vol. I., 1. Manufactures, American, Infancy of, 49– Policy of Great Britain towards the Colo. Position of Parties, 6-earliest Division of nith, ib.-of Judge Cooper, 55—of -Political strife stirred up again, 9– General Jackson, 10—his Administra- tion, ib.—adoption of the motto “to the Health, by G. Amariah Brigham, wholesale removals from office, ib. War upon the United States Bank, 12— secret influence of Martin Van Buren, 13 14--Sketch of Mr. Van Buren, ib.- of Local Banks, ib.--Speculations, ib.— 17-Election of General Harrison, ib. Democracy of the Day, 18. Post-Office Reform, 199—grievances of the old Post-Office system in England with the abuses entailed, 200—Rowland Hill's system, 202—actual expense of transpor- from the new system in England, 205– same system demanded for this country, abolition of Franking privilege, 209– Wilson, contrasted in the Audubon, 248 Local Post-Offices, ib.—(Note.) R. Rangers, My First Day with the, a sketch of Texas Frontier Life, (Charles Win- terfield.) 280. 143. Records of the Heart, by Mrs. Sarah Lewis, notice of, 655. upon Mrs. Child's Letters, 60-School- craft's Oneota, 90—Simm's Life of Ma- rion, 104-Alison's History of Europe, 151-Goethe's character of Egmont, 183 -Emerson's Essays, 233—Thiers' Revo- lution, 311-Thiers' Consulate and Em- pire, 455—Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, 525–George Sand's Lelia, 617-Gesta Romanorum, 651. (by J. S. Babcock,) 362. 326. S. Single Speech Poets, (A, W. Jones,) 258. a Smith, Life of, literary notice of, 654. Thiers' Consulate and Empire, vol. I., re- Thiers' French Revolution, review of, (J. Thoughts on Reading, (Henry Norman Trading Spirit, influence of the, upon the social and moral life of America, (Rev. Fulton, 22–First Steamboat launched on Travels, Random Recollections of, 83. V. review of, (Prof. Tayler Lewis,) 525. Holland,) 597. W. Waltoniana, (Charles Lanman,) 384. Week between Florence and Rome, 613. Who shall lead the Nation ? a Poem, (- Erleden,) 81. Woodville, Ellen, notice of, 112. Words, an Essay, (E. P. Whipple,) 178. a |