PUBLISHED BY HUNT AND CLARKE,
TAVISTOCK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.
AEROSTATICAL Speculations over London in a Balloon, constructed under the Scientific Directions of Signor Asmo- deus of Madrid, 351-Horse-guards, 352-Lambeth, 353-St. James's, 354 Opera-house, 355-Diorama, 356— Mayoralty-house and Guildhall, 356. Africa, the Ladies of, 217-Major Den- ham's menagerie at Kouka, 218-His character, 218-A Fesrany lady of Zeg- hren, 218-The ladies of Sockna, 221 -The most remarkable particulars of an Arab wedding, 221-The Alowang Shouars in the neighbourhood of Kabs- hary, 221-Tauricks, 222-The Tib- boos, 223-The women of Bornou, 226 -The people of Mandava, 227- Anecdote of two ladies of Maffatai, 229 The ladies of Loggun, 230. Angel Hunting, 289.
Angeloni on Political Force, reviewed,
Berney, Execution of Mr., at Norwich, in 1684, 94-Particulars of the murder for which he was imprisoned, 95-His sentence, 96-Ineffectual petitions from the people to King Charles II. 96- His death, 96.
Blarney and Hypocrisy; a sketch, 536. Boccaccio, 145-His description of the plague of Florence, 146-Italian tale, written more than a century before the time of Boccaccio, 148-Adventures of his Decameron, 150-The celebrated edition of Gianti, in 1527, 151-Cosmo I. Grand Duke of Tuscany, 152- Petrarch, 154-Anecdote of the abbey of Monte Cassino, 155-The Jesuits and the Decameron, 155-Remorse of conscience of Boccaccio, 156-Com- fort afforded to him by Petrarch, 157 -His death, 157. Bonaparte, Captain Maitland's Narrative of the Surrender of, reviewed, 268.
Cephalostatics, 458-Dr. Bämbuzler, 453-Cicero's head, 457-Menelaus,
Collegians, the, a poem, 60.
Diary for the month of April, 1-For the
month of May, 243-For the month of June, 391-For the month of July, 529. Dimorphosis, or Fashionable Movements, 373--Vivian Grey, 376-Granby, 373 -Tremaine, 373-Mrs. Million, 375 -Miss Toadey, 375-Lord Alham- bra's, 377-The Opera, 378-Scuffle in a gambling club, 379-Gregarious assemblage in the west end, 381-Sir Charles Grandison, 382-Denouement, 384.
Dying Game; a poem, 385.
Electioneering, 362-The cost and value of a seat in Parliament, 362-The best method of procuring a seat in Parlia- ment, 364-Means of turning a seat in Parliament to the best account, 366. Encaustic Ancient Painting of Cleopatra, with an Engraving, 65-Importance of its discovery, 65-Its condition, 65—— Inquiries on its authenticity, 66— Praises of the painting, 67-It is attri- buted to Timomachus, 68-An imputa- tion of Luigi Bossi against Raphael, 69-The ancient paintings in fresco still visible at Rome, 70.
Fraser's Travels and Adventures in the
Persian Provinces, on the Shores of the Caspian Sea, 258-The official personages at Amol, 259-Avidity of the princes at Saree, 259-Ramsaun Beg, 262-Picture of a young prince of Gheelan, 263-Specimen of high life in Persia, 264-Is invited into the harem
to prescribe, as a physician, for the sister of the prince, 264-The aspect of the country, 265. French Serjeant, Adventures of a, re- viewed, 500.
Funds, Prices of the English and Foreign, 144-288-432-574.
Greece, Adventures of a Foreigner in, No. I. 462-Sails from Leghorn with one hundred and fifty Greeks from Wallachia and Moldavia, 463-Occur- rences on board, 464-He lands on the coast of Calamata, 465-The appear- ance of the peasantry, 467-Reaches Calamata, 467-Foreign officers and their condition, 467-The comman- dant Paraschiva, 467-He visits the Agà, 468-Contest between French and Italian officers, 469-Greek cap. tains opposed to Prince Ypsilanti, 469 -He sets out for Tripolitza, 471-Is attacked by the Greeks, 472-Arrives in Tripolitza, 472-Condition of this town, 473-Intrigues of the chiefs, 474 Rapacity of Colocotroni, and other chiefs, at the taking of Tripo- litza, 476-He starts for Argos with the Prince Ypsilanti's aid-de-camp, 478-A Turkish woman with an infant murdered by the Greeks, 479-He pays a visit to Prince Ypsilanti, 479.
Highlands, a Three Day's Walk in the, in a Letter from a Citizen to a Citizen, 542-The Firth of Tay, 543--Killie- crankie, 545-Highland cottages, 546 -Dalwhynnie, 547-Strath Spey, 548 -Old Macpherson of Cluny, 551. Hunter, Mr. John Dunn, the hero of Hunter's captivity among the Indians, 317.
Indies, Six Months in the West, re- viewed, 18.
Irish Faction, Smiles and Tears of, 367 -the Marquis Wellesley, 368-Mrs. Paterson, 370-The Bible in Ireland, 372. Irish Writers on Ireland, 519-the esta- blished church party, 519-The Pres- byterian clergy, 520-The Catholic clergy, 520-The newspaper writers, 521-Their chief object, 523-The writings of professional and literary men, 523-The peasantry of Ireland,
Lives of the Forty, reviewed, 408- Origin of the French Academy, 408-
ALPHABETICAL INDEX TO VOL. V. NEW SERIES.
Table Talk, 126-273-422-559. Traveller on the Continent, Journal of a, No. III. 33-Arrives at Aix-la-Cha- pelle, 33-A confessor, 33-A flaming dandy, 34-Reliques of great antiquity, 34-The historiographer of the Grand Duke of Baden, 35-Prussian Diligen- ces, 35-Teutonic turnpikes, 36-Co- logne, 37-The tomb of the magi, 37— German advocates,38-Duns Scotus, 39 -Kreutzberg, 40-A Saxon student, 41 Reaches Coblentz, 44- Female chat, 45-Mayence, 48-Frankfort, 51 -Heidelberg, 53-The tun, 53-Pro- fessor Kreutzer, 55-Carlsruhe, 56- The museum of anatomy in Strasburg, 58 No. IV. 158-Anecdote with a barber, 158-Freyburg, 159-Lauf- fen, falls of the Rhine, 161-Des- cription of the country, 162- The 166- The Righi, 163-Lucerne, Devil's bridge, 168-St. Gotthard, 169 -Chorus of girls at Hospital, 170- A wooden house of a priest, 171- Meyringen, 173-No. V. 289 - He reaches Geneva, 292-The lamb-vul- ture, 293-Difficulty of the transport
of baggage, 294-Fears of the oppres- sors of Italy, 295-Alleve, 298-His mule at Martigny, 300-No. VI. 433 -A Polish gentleman, 434--The sources of the Arveron, 434-The Mer de Glace, 435-The Brevent, 435 -View of Montblanc from the bridge of St. Martin, 436-The Genevese women, 438-Ferney, 440- Swiss Protestants, 441-An instance of the self-conceit of the Genevese, 442- The monument of Mrs. Stratford Can- ning, 443-Ouchy, 444-The town of Vevay, 446-Murder of Mr. Lisle, 447-The Pays de Vaud, 449-The Simplon, 451-The titles of the king of Sardinia, 453.
Viterbi, the Diary of Luc' Antonio, kept by him during the Time he was starving himself to Death in the Prisons of Corsica, in the year 1821, 108.
Vivian Grey, reviewed, 207.
Ways and Means, a poem, 125. Woodstock, or the Cavalier, reviewed, 173.
Works just published, 143-286-432-
Works, list of projected, 142-286- 431-573.
Yankee Notions, No. II. 71-An Irish- woman, 81-Sea-sickness, 83-A calm, 83-A Preface to Brother Jonathan, 84- Raymond's Political Economy, 87- Windmills, 88-Custom-house officer at Liverpool, 89-No. III. 181 -Sketch-book, 181-Draught horses, 182-Nelson's monument, 183-Ex- change, 184-Market, 184-Portrait Spring, the of a race-horse, 185- champion, 186-Lions, one shilling for gentlemen, six-pence for others, 187 -Clumsy English boots, 188-Blind Asylum, 190-Botanical Garden, 193 -Painting, Roscoe's collection, 194-- conclusion, 197.
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