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circus for bull-fights, gates, 453: Prado
and Delicias, 454: bridges, cabinet of
natural history, 455: royal collection
of paintings, 456 royal armory, 457,
squares, police, 459.
Magazine, American Mechanics', 34;
intended to contain principles applica-
ble to practical mechanics, ib.; lauda-
ble and useful design of, ib. ;-Atlantic,
the third volume of, 273; -Atheneum,
for June 1825; noticed, 273; - Black
wood's Edinburgh, degeneration of,
113; contributions of Neal, ib.; ac-
count of American writers, ib.; opin-
ion of Lionel Lincoln, 467 :-London,
its opinion of President Monroe's
speech, 76.

Magnetism, discoveries of Professor Bar-
low and M. Poisson, 232.
Match, account of a cricket, 303; of a
boxing, ib.

Mather, Cotton, 17, 446.
Massachusetts, its history, 91; continued

by Mr Bradford from Minot and Hutch-
inson, ib.; its singular and interesting
character, ib.; qualifications of its au-
thor, 92; battles of Lexington and Con-
cord. 93; remark of the author on Mr
Jefferson's administration objectiona-
ble, 94; typographical errors, ib.; op-
position to the constitution, 95.
Memoir of Josiah Quincy. jr. reviewed
and recommended, 241; materials for
it, 242; abstract of his life, ib. et seqq;
defends the British soldiers on the oc-
casion of the Boston massacre, 244;
sails for Charleston, 245, for England,
246; his proposed return and death, ib.
Mexico, Mr Poinsett's Notes on, 436.
Milton, discovery of papers relating to,

355.

Monastery, the Lay, see Monk.
Monk, the Lay, feelings respecting his
native country, 24; peculiarities of the
poetical character, 182; difference be-
tween poets and common-sense men,
184; character of the latter, 185.
Monroe, President, 76; his speech, ib. :
foreign opinion of, ib.

Mortality, comparative, in Paris, 277.
Mothers, Tales for, by J. N. Bouilly, 75;
character of them, ib.

Mourner, The. by Miss Roscoe, 61.
Munchausen, see John Bull in America.

N.

Napoleon, his codes of law, 150.
Natural history, American, proposals for
publishing, 117; of the Bible, 116.
Neal, John, his works, 113; his account
of American writers, ib.

North American tradition of the flood,
435.

Northampton, law school at, 395.
Novelists, the Italian, translations from
by Roscoe, 236: Scott's Lives of, 406.
Novels, American, noticed-Adsonville,
113: Goslington Shadow, 161: Red-
field, 234: Resignation, 392: The
Christian Indian, 394; The Refugee,
268; The Stranger of the Valley, 394:
The Travellers, 218: Frederick de Al-
geroy, 395.

0.

Oration, delivered at Concord by Ed-
ward Everett, reviewed, 293; occasion
of the performance, ib.; motives and
tendency of such works, ib.; inade-
quate resources of the colonists, 295;
general consequences of the revolution
upon our own country, 297; upon oth-
er countries, 298;-in honour of Gen-
eral Lafayette, by William Gibbes
Hunt, noticed and recommended for its
liberal spirit, 352;-delivered in Bos-
ton, on the 4th of July, by Charles
Sprague, noticed and commended, 353.
Owen, Robert, his New Views of Socie-
ty, 61; his productions diffuse and de-
clamatory, 62: his principles, ib.; and
plan, ib.; his success at New Lanark
to be attributed to circumstances, which
cannot exist in the United States, 64;
his views of religion dangerous, 65.

P.

Paris, statistics of, 275.
Partnership, the Law of, Gow's treatise

on, noticed and recommended, 194.
Peace Society of Massachusetts, Dr John

Ware's address to the, 73; encourag-
ing nature of its views and felicity of
its execution, 74.
Peel, Mr, 109.

Peep at the Pilgrims in 1636, English no-
tice of, 275.

Pestalozzi, account of his school, 132.
Plague, in London, description of, 311.
Pleiad, the Lost, 168.

Poems, Barton's, fourth edition of, 315;
by John Turvil Adams, noticed and
condemned, 235.

Poetry, occasional pieces, by Brainard,
167; their irregularity, ib.; the Lost
Pleiad, 168; Lines to the Dead, their
beauty, 169;-Original, A Dream of
the Sea, 430; Address to the Moon,
230; An April Day, 69; Epitaphs
from the Italian, 264; Gen. Frazer
slain at Saratoga, 170; Hymn, 28;
Hymn of the Moravian Nuns at the
consecration of Pulaski's Banner, 186;
Jeckoyva, 348; Love Asleep, 187;
Morning Twilight, 889; Song, 188;
Sonnet, 347; Spring, 30; Sunrise on

the Hills, 262; The Desolate City,
308; The Four Ages, from Schiller,
70; The Graves of the Patriots. 261;
The Mythology of Greece, 429; The
Grecian Partizan, 142; the Indian
Hunter, 143; The memory of joys that
are past, 390; The Proclamation of
Saladine, 223: The Reign of May,
112; The Sea Diver, 390; The Soul
of Song, 227; The Spirit of Beauty,
263; The Summer Morning, 391: To
a Friend at Sea, 112; To Fancy, 349;
To Genevieve, 310; To L. M. B. 347;
To the Arno, 310; True Greatness,
111; Venetian Moonlight, 144: Morn-
ing among the Hills, 459: Dreams, 462.
Poets, Italian Lyrical, number and cha-
racter of, 136: Savioli, his life and
character, ib.: translation of his ode
to Venus, 137: of his ode to Solitude,
138: life and writings of De Rossi, 225:
translations from his poems, 226: life
and writings of Cardinal Pietro Bembo,
258 translations of his sonnets, 259:
life and writings of Guidiccioni, 260:
translations from his sonnets, 261:
Fihenja, his life, character, and poems,
381, 332: translation of his sornet on
the Earthquake of Sicily, 383: of his
canzone on the siege of Vienna, 383:
life and writings of Claudio Tolommei,
427 of Bernardino Rota, 428: trans-
lation of one of his sonnets, ib.
Poinsett, Mr, English republication of his
work on Mexico, 436.
Pompeii, new discoveries in, 316.
Portsmouth, catastrophe in, 18.
Prior, see Burke.

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Remains, antediluvian, letter of Professor
Buckland concerning, 117: organic,
see Bat.

Rensselaer, Jer. Van, his Lectures on
Geology, 287,

Reporting, art of, its importance, 111, 463.
Reports of Cases in the Supreme Judicial
Court of Maine, by Simon Greenleaf,
noticed and commended, 463.
Resignation, an American novel, notic-
ed, 392.

:

Review, Edinburgh, for October 1824,
31: their opinion of a Tour in Ger-
many," 31: of French loyalty, 32: of
the reception of Lafayette in the Unit-
ed States, ib.: of the abolition of the
corn laws, 33: of impressment, ib.:
general character of, ib. its severity
against Göthe, 81: probable cause of
it, 82: circulated in Germany by Oker,
ib. --Number for January 1825, notic-
ed, 145: the opinion of Mr Campbell's
last poem, ib. of the manners and mor-
als of absolute princes, 146: of plans
for the government and instruction of
boys in large numbers, 147: of the
British policy in Western Africa, ib.:
of the state and prospects of Ireland,
ib. of the criminal law of Scotland,
149: of slavery in the British West In-
dia colonies, 149: of the duty on cof
fee, 149 of the state of Hayti, ib. of
Mr Brougham's pamphlet on the edu-
cation of the people, 150.-New York,
for June 1825, noticed, 273: articles
on Madame Knight's Journal, 273: on
Lionel Lincoln, ib. : character of the
number, 274: high price, ib. :- North
American, for April 1825, contents of,
150: insurrection of Tupac Amaru,
ib. vindication of Count Pulaski, ib. :
modern astronomy, ib.: Napoleon's
codes of law, ib.: Garnett's lectures on
education, 151: erroneous view, ib :-
Number for July 1825, noticed, 312: ar-
ticle on naval history, ib: Brown's phi-
losophy, 313: on Recollections of the
Peninsula ib.: on recent American nov-
els, ib. critique on the last, 314: article
on common law jurisdiction, 350: on
European politics, ib.: on Colombia,
ib.: Long's second expedition, 351: on
Da Ponte's observations, ib.; on Brai-
nard's poems, ib.: critical notices, ib. :
practice of puffing this review, 352.-
Quarterly, for October 1824, 31: their
opinion of a Tour in Germany, 31: of
the progress of dissent in England, 32:
of the Brazilian government, 33: of
the aborigines of America, ib. : gener-
al character of, ib.: attacked by the
Westminster, 151:-Number for March
1825, noticed, 189: change in the edi-

:

torial department, ib.: articles on the
funding system, ib, on canals and rail
roads, ib.: on artizans and machinery,
190: on Daru's Venice, ib.: on the
church in Ireland, ib.: complimentary
notice of Mr Irving's works, 191.--no-
tice of the sixty-third Number, 433:
articles on Church of England mis-
sions, Palladian architecture, the origin
of equitable jurisdiction, South Ameri-
ca, Dibdin s literary companion, ib. :
on the past and present state of the
country, Irish fairy tales, Niebuhr's
Roman history, 434: the English in
this last instance behind the American
literary public, ib : opinion of the
Quarterly Reviewers concerning Eng-
lish classical learning and the Eton
Greek Grammar, 435.- Westminster,
for January 1825, 151: not so well
conducted as the Edinburgh and Quar-
terly, ib. opinions of Dallas and Med-
win, ib. of Dibdin's library com-
panion, ib. of contagion and sanitary
laws, ib. severe articles on Mr Sou-
they's Book of the Church and an arti-
cle in the Quarterly Review, ib.:-
Number for February 1825 noticed,
231; article on libel, ib: on Schlegel's
lectures on literature, 232: on the dis-
coveries in magnetism, ib on Italy,
233-Number for April 1825 noticed,
265: articles on the corn laws, on prison
discipline, on emigration, on Boaden's
memoirs of Kemble, ib.: enlightened
character of the British ministry, ib.
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, a companion of
Burke, 48 value of his lectures, ib.
Rice paper, its composition, 436.
Roads, improvement of, 299: progress in
this department, ib.: deficiencies still
existing, 300: account of Mr M'Adam's
practice, 300: abundance of materials
in New England, 301: partial adop-
tion of the M'Adam system, 301: bad
effects of the practice of working out
the highway tax, 302.
Robinson, Samuel, his Catalogue of A-

:

:

merican Minerals, 193,
Romance in the heroic and middle
ages, 343, 344; Arthur and Charle-
magne, 345; comparison between
English and French, 346; com.
parison of its peculiarities, 386 et
seqq.; new, founded on Irish Sce-
nery and character, 316.
Rome in the nineteenth century,

praised by the Westminster Re-
view, 233; remains of obelisks in,

316

Rota Bernardino, 428.

Rothelan, a romance of the English
histories, noticed, 311.

Roscoe, Thomas, his selections from
the Italian novelists, 236.
Russia, books printed in, 355.

S.

Sales, his improvement of Josse's
Spanish Grammar, 35.
Savioli, see Italian Lyrical Poets.
Say, account of his American ento-
mology, 236.

Sayings and Doings, second series,
noticed, 265; character and ex-
tracts, 266

School, at Hofwyl and Yverdun, 132;
at Northampton, 134, 395; at Gar
diner, ib.; Edinburgh High, Gris-
com's account of, ib.; upon the
plan of Fellenberg, 267; account
of the Hazelwood, reviewed and
recommended, 170 et seqq.; ac-
count extracted, 171 et seqq.; diffi-
culties of school government, 176;
circulating media, 177.

Schoolcraft's Travels in the Central
portions of the Mississippi valley,
reviewed, 201; occasion of the
travels, ib. mode of travelling, 202;
frontier warfare, 203; habits of
New England emigrants, 204;
lead mines of Missouri, 205; In-
dian negotiation, 206; account of
the Michigan Territory, 208.
Scott, Sir Walter, elected Rector of
St Andrews, 197; his identity with
the author of Waverley, 407.
Scotland, criminal laws of, 149; re-
cords of, 315.

Shakspeare, recovered edition of,
115.

Sheep, Ladahk, Mr Moorcroft's ac-
count of, 117.

Sheridan, neglect of his talents, 49;
his great powers, ib.
Smyth, see Apocalypse.

Society, new views of by Robert Ow-
en, 61; see Peace; Worcester his-
torical, formation and objects of,
354.

Societies, Peace, advantages of, 73.
Solar, Mariano Cubi y, his Spanish
Grammar, 35.

Southey, his book of the Church at-
tacked, 151

Spirit of our country, the Literary, 24;
progressive nature of, 25; indu-
ence of climate and scenery upon,
25, 26.
Sprague, Charles, his oration on the
4th of July, 353.

Stanhope colonel,his letters on Greece,
43; his exertions in favour of the
Grecian cause, 43; an associate of
Lord Byron, 45; recalled from, 46;
his book too radical, 46; omissions
in the American edition, ib.

355; new one in England, 277;
prospectus of the new London, 468.
Universities, German, attack upon, 197.
Utica Lyceum, address to, notice of,
114

V.

Statistics, of Hayti, 198; of Paris, 275, Vapour, variation of its boiling points,

277; of Sweden, 397.

Steam-boat in Holland, 468.
Steam engines in England, 318.
Stranger of the Valley, The, an Ameri-

can novel, noticed, 394.

Sullivan, Mr William, his address to
the members of the Suffolk bar, 252.
Summer, Indian, see John Bull in
America.

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396

W.

Walladmor, a romance, noticed,
435; an imposition upon the Ger-
man public, ib; badly executed, ib.
Ware, Dr, see Peace Society.
Watchman, account of a wooden, 276.
Wayland, Rev. Mr. London editions
of his sermon, 316.

Webster, Daniel, his address at Bun-
ker hill, 327.

Weimar, the German Athens, 90; ac-
count of it, ib.

Werter, Sorrows of, see Göthe.
Wheaton, Henry, his address on the
opening of the New York Athenæ-
um, 267.

Whitehall Palace, see Chapel.
Winer, see Grammar.

Wines, Russian, Dr Lyall's account
of, 237

Worcester historical society, its for-.
mation and objects, 354.
Writers, American, account of them

in the Edinburgh Magazine, 113.
Writing on sand, used in Siberia, 317.
Wright, Francis, author of a Few
Days in Athens, 34.

Y.

Year in Europe, by John Griscom,
reviewed and recommended, 130;
advantage of such works, 131; his
observations confined to subjects
of practical utility, 132; account
of the schools of Fellenberg and
Pestalozzi, ib.

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