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AARON and the Priesthood, 42
Abernethy, selections from, 32
Acquirement of riches, on, 70

Action, necessity of determinate prin-
ciples of, 216

Adhesion and Cohesion, 55

Advice of a philosopher, 200
Age and Youth, 213.

Algebraic sigus, + and, origin of, 15
Altars, various kinds of, 197
American Indian tradition, 160
American's opinion of the wealth and
power of Great Britain, 101
Anatomy, See Comparative
Anderson, J. S. M., selections from, 134
Andrews, selections from, 176
Animals without feet, motion of, 136

powers of defence and offence
possessed by, 104

on the feeding of, 142
language of, Í., 22—11., 27

Animal life, wonders of, 70
Arabians, navigation of the, 161
Arnott, extracts from, 239

Art of gilding, 96

Arts and sciences, progress of, 246
Astronomy, Popular, Part II., 33-

III., 121-IV., 201

Attraction, on Capillary, 84, 156

Babylon, ruins of ancient, 2

Bacon, Lord, selections from, 136,
200, 212

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Black Rat, account of the, 216

Blair, selections from, 143, 184, 247, 248
Blessings, Christianity the greatest
of, 16

Blind School, Philadelphia, 187
Bodies, law of falling, 181
Body and Soul, 159

and Spirit, dialogue between, 159
Boleyn, coronation of Lady Anne, 72
Bolingbroke, selections from, 224
Botany, incentive to the study of, 87
Bounty of God, lines on, 88
Bowles, lines by, 250

Bray, Mrs., selections from, 88
Brevity of life, 143

161, 249

Brief history of Navigation,
British sailor's praise of the sea, 183
Buckland, selection from, 70

Buffalo, Tradition of the, 160
Building of the Tabernacle, 107
Burleigh, Lord, selection from, 189
Batterfly, organs of digestion in the,

104

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of Florence. 177

Centre of gravity, 188, 220
Chain-links of various forms, 176
Character of a true philosopher, 229
Chelsea water-works, mode of filtra-
tion adopted at, 54
Chemist, the young, XII., 91
Chest-explorer, account of, 226
Chief Butler, duties of, at corona-
tions, 59

Childhood, lines on, 64
Children, their propensity to imita-
tion, 32

of Israel, murmurings of, 12
China, No. IX., 89-X., 153
Chinese, filial piety of the, 89

domestic manners of the, 153
Christianity, the greatest of blessings,

16

Civet cat, the, 189

Civilized life, 239

Clarendon, selection from, 157

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Colton, selection from, 136
Combats, Judicial, 170
Comb-cutting engine, 224
Companions, necessity of
choosing, 191
Comparative Anatomy, Facts in, II.,
28-IV., 104-V., 136-VI., 240
Compassion, an emotion never to be
ashamed of, 184

Conscience, value of a good, 232
Conder, lines by, 3
Conductors and non-conductors
Electricity, 151

of

Consolations of Religion, 11
Construction of the violin, 199
Coronations, Chapters on. III, The

Regalia, 4-IV., Coronation Vest-
ments, 20-V. Great Officers of
State, 44-VI., Services performed
at the Coronation by tenure of
grand sergeantry. The Court
of Claims, 59-VII, 94
Coronation Anecdotes, III., 14—IV.,
29-V., 51-VI., 71-VII., 102
Cottage gardening, I., 84-II., 109
Cowper, selections from, 88
Creation, wonders of the, 70
Cultivation of the Manioc plant, 57
Dahlia, 111

Cumberland, selection from, 200

Dahlia, cultivation of the, 111

Dartmoor, description of, 113
Davy, Sir H., selections from, 150, 246
Day and night, how produced, 204
Deer, horns of, 93

Defence, powers of, possessed by ani-
mals, 104

Definition of Prose and Poetry, 30
Dependance of man upon his Creator, 3
Description of Tintern Abbey, 65
Desmond, Earl, fate of, 107
Dialogue between body and spirit, 159
Difficulties, resignation under, 70
Doum-tree of the Thebaid, 64
Dramatic writings of the Chinese, 153
Drink, excess in, to be avoided, 192
Drunkenness, evils of, 141

Earth, its appearance to the moon, 120
replenishment of, by plants, 191
Earthenware, remarks on, 13
Eclipses, solar and lunar, causes of, 127
Education, the use of a proper, 104
Effects of religious feelings, 15
Electrical experiments, 228
Electricity, 1., General Principles of,
111-II., Conductors and Non-
conductors, 151-III., Electrical
Machines, 172-IV., 212-V., 228
Elephant, various species of the, 160
Elizabeth, coronation of queen, 83
Ely Chapel, Holborn, 129, 185
Engine, comb-cutting, 224
English, navigation of, during the mid-
dle ages, 165
Envy, effects of, 68
Erdman, Mr., his description of phos.
phorescent lichens, 220
Euphrates expedition, account of, 1
Europe, comparative tables of the
weights, measures, and monies of,

62

Evils of drunkenness, 141
Excess in drink to be avoided, 192

Facts in Comparative Anatomy, III.,
28-IV., 104-V., 136—VI., 240
Falling bodies, on, 179
Feeding of animals, on the, 142
Filial piety of the Chinese, 89
Filtration of Thames water, 54
Fishermen of France, 169
Flatterers, danger of encouraging, 159
Florence and the Florentines, I., 138
-II., 177

Flower garden, beauties of the, 147
Forest-trees, notes on, XXV., The
Hazel, 116

France, oyster fisheries in, 133
fishermen of, 169

Francis, selection from, 173
Friendship, instability of, 240

necessity of care in the
formation of, 247

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Gecko, foot of the, 240
Genius and virtue, lines on, 32
Gerdil, selectious from, 223
Gilding, art of, 96

Gillman, Mrs., extract from, 187
Gisborne, lines by, 191

God, omnipotence and omnipresence
of, 173

God, lines on the bounty of, 88
God's overruling providence, 134
Gold-leaf beating, 248
Goldsmith, selections from, 11
Good conscience, value of a, 232
Goodrich Castle, Monmouthshire, 97
Gravity, centre of, 188, 220
Great Britain, an American's opinion

of the wealth and power of, 101
Great buffalo, Indian tradition of, 160
Grub, organs of digestion in the, 104

Hale, Sir M., selections from, 141, 191
Hamley, Rev. E., lines by, 144
Happiness the reward of a virtuous
life, 19

Harvest-time, hymn in, 200
lines on, 70

Hazel, the, 116

Health, lines on, 144
Herschel, selections from, 220
Hogg, selections from, 159
Home, what is, 3

Hope, Collins's ode to, extract from,
181

Horns of deer, 93
Hospitality, moderation in, to be prac-
tised, 189

Hour-glass, philosophy of the, 158
Howitt, Mary, lines by, 19
Humphrey, Rev. Dr., extract from, 101
Hurdis, lines by, 15, 30, 70, 88
Hydraulic ram, description of, 211
Hymu in harvest-time, 200

Idria, quicksilver mines of, 155
Ill-temper, evil attending, 248
Imitation, propensity of children to, 32
Incentive to the study of botany, 87
Indian ink, how prepared, 174
Indian tradition of the buffalo, 160
Inks, mode of preparing various, 174
Inkstands, 236

Inorganic substances, uses of some of,
to man, 119

Insects, on the transformation of, 150
Intellectual labour, aversion of man-
kind to, 3

Intemperance, lines on, 119

Jewish master, story of a, 150
Johnson, selections from, 3, 195, 231,
247

Judicial combats, 170

Kentucky, racoon hunt in, 53
Kilmallock, Ireland, description of, 105
King's champion, duties of, 94
Knox, selection from, 232
Kremlin bell, lifting of the, 235

La Fontaine, selection from, 147
Land measures of area, table of, 63
Language of animals, I., 22-11., 27
Latitude and longitude, what meant by
the terms, 208

Lavater, selections from, 221, 239
Leadhills, Lanarkshire, village of, 230
Learning not knowledge, 213
Leaves of plants, on the, 67
Leech, the medicinal, 231
"Let us go to the woods," 152
Liberality, what meant by, 134
Liberty conducive to happiness, 224
Lichens, phosphorescent, in the Dres-
den coal-mines, 220
Life, shortness of, 3

Light of the marine animals, 237
Lighting public street, custom of, 140
Lincoln Lunatic Asylum, 45
Lines on Childhood, 64
Liquids, level surfaces of, 7
Locke, selections from, 19, 70
Looking-glasses and mirrors, 144
Love and friendship, 147
Love of the world, 157
Lucas, selections from, 8

Macculloch, extracts from, 22, 27, 119,

136, 142, 152, 191, 237

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uses of some of the inorganic sub-
stances to, 119.

evidence of the ignorance of, 239
Manioc plant, cultivation of, 57
Mant, Bishop, selection from, 134
Manufacture of writing paper, 117
Marine animals, on the light of the, 237
Marking-ink, how prepared, 175
Maund, extracts from, 111, 147, 239
Measures of length, 62
Medicinal leech, 231

Mental diseases, treatment of, 45
Microscope, account of, IV., 16
Mirrors, mode of silvering, 144
Monday's expenses, 215
Monies of accompt, table of, 63
Monmouth, account of, 194
Montague, Lady Mary W., selection
from, 19

Monuments of antiquity, illustrations
of the Bible from, XV., 12-XVI.,
42-XVII., 107-XVIII., 148-
XIX., 196

Moon, phases of the, 125
Moral courage of women, 215
Morning, lines on a summer, 223
Motion of animals without feet, 136
Motion, on perpetual, 99

Moth, dwelling of a species of, 88
Mutual forbearance, 32

Myxine, glutinous hag, or borer, 184

National morality, its dependence on
religion, 15
Natural Philosophy, Recreations in,

II., 7-111, 55-IV., 84-V., 99—
VI., 156-VII., 179-VIII., 188-
IX., 220.

Natural phenomena, wonders of. 70
Nature, principles of cleanliness in, 195
Naval and military establishments,
Woolwich, 233
Navigation, brief history of, Part III.,
161-Navigation of the middle
ages the Arabians, 161 - The
English, 165-IV. The Venetiaus,
249-The Portuguese and Span-
iards, 251
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 209, 225, 241
Night-guards, establishment of, 214
Notes on forest trees, XXV. The hazel,
116

Nothing in nature lost, 240

Offence, powers of, possessed by ani-
mals, 104

Officers of state, duties of, 44
Old English sumptuary laws, 157
Omnipotence and omnipresence of
God, 173
Ordeal, trials by, 170

Organs of digestion in the caterpillar,
grub, and butterfly, 104
Origin of the signs + and -, 15
Oyster and oyster-fishery, 132

Painting, definition of, 28
Palaces of Rome, account of, 74
Paley, selections from, 32
Paper, history of writing, 68

manufacture of writing, 117
Parchment, preparation of, 194
Passing bell, the, 182, 190
Passions, government of the, 70
Pastor and village church, 130

Patrick, Bishop, selections from, 150,

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Poison fangs in serpents, 61
Polyanthos, account of the, 244
Poor, sinfulness of oppressing the, 173
Pope, selections from, 212, 223
Popular Astronomy, Part II., 33-

Comparative sizes of the planets,
33-The Sun, 34-Mercury, 37-
Venus, 38-III., 121-The Earth,
121-The Moon, 122-Phases of,
125 Eclipses, 126-Solar and
lunar eclipses, 127-IV., 201-The
seasons, 201-Day and night, 204
-Refraction, 205-Tides, 206-
Latitude and longitude, 207
Porter, selection from, 220
Portuguese and Spaniards, navigation
of, 251

Primrose, the common, 244

Printer's ink, what composed of, 175
Prize-fighting, on, 143

Profile machine, description of, 192
Progress of the arts and sciences, 246
Progress and public processions of
Queen Elizabeth, VII., 9-VIII.,
46-IX., 81

Prose and poetry, definitions of, 30
Public streets, custom of lighting, 140
introduction of stone

pavements in, 219

Queen Elizabeth, her progresses and
public processions, VII., 9-VIII.,
46-IX, 81

Quicksilver mines of Idria, 135

Racoon, natural history of, 53
Ragland castle, Monmouthshire, 145
Raleigh, Sir W., selections from, 159,
173, 200

Ram, description of the hydraulic, 211
Rats, method of taking, 216
Reading, cheap entertainment, 19
correct mode of, 247

Reason, advantages of, 8
Rebellion in 1745, anecdote of, 51
Recreations in Natural Philosophy,
11., 7-III., 55—IV., 84—V., 99—

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VI., 156-VII., 179-VIII., 188-
IX., 220

Regalia, account of the, 4
Regularity, evils attending the neglect
of, 110

Reid, selection from, 220
Religion, consolations of, 11
Religious feelings, effects of, 15
Replenishment of the earth by plants,
191

Resignation under difficulties, 70
Riches, on the acquirement of, 70

the baggage of virtue, 200
Road measures of length, table of, 63
Rome, some account of the city of,

Part 1X., 73-Palaces, 74-The
Vatican,75-The Sistine chapel, 75
-Loggie and Camere of Raphael,
76-Streets of Modern Rome, 78-
Fountains, 78-Piazze or squares
of Rome, 79-Modern Romans, 79
Rothschild, anecdote of Joseph, 58
Rottler, J. P., account of, 25
Ruins of Tintern Abbey, 65
Rural sounds, 152
Russia, scene in, 222

Sacrifice, universality of, 148
Sago Palm, description of the, 24
St. Swithin, 15

San Lorenzo, Florence, church of, 138
Sanford, Mrs. J., selections from, 150,
215

Say, J. B., anecdote by, 110
Scene in Russia, 222

Sea, British sailor's praise of the, 183
shell, lines on, 231
Seasons, successions of the, 201
Self-instruction, advantages afforded
for, 240

Sensibility of women, 159
Sensitive mind, advantages of a, 150
Serpents, poison fangs in, 61
Shakspeare, selections from, 147
Shortness of life, 3

Simpson, extract from, 54

Sin, deceitfulness of the pleasures of,

239

Sistine chapel, Rome, account of, 75
Slater, the, 31

Smith, selection from, 3

Smith, Adam, selection from, 19
Snake and the viper, 140
Sorrow, effects of, 147
Soul and body, 159
Sounds, rural, 152
South, selection from, 223
Stebbing, extract from, 159
Steele, selection from, 213
Sterne, selection from, 143
Stethoscope, or chest-explorer, 226
Stone pavements in streets, 219
Story, Robert, lines by, 183
Strafford, Lord, selection from, 192
Streets, lighting, 140

Struve, selection from, 212
Study of Truth, advantages of, 83
Botany, incentive to the, 87
Summer Morning, lines on, 223
lines on, 19
Sumptuary laws, old English, 157

"

Tabernacle, building of the, 107
Taylor, Jeremy, Coleridge's opinion
of, 24
Bishop, selection from, 224
Telford, extract from the life of, 62
Temple, Sir W., selection from, 223
Templeton, selection from, 96
Thames water, filtration of, 54
Thebaid, Doum tree of the, 64
Thinking not an easy employment, 247
Thompson, lines by, 200

Thoughts of the moment, value of, 136
Tides, operation of the sun, moon, and
earth in producing, 206
Tillotson, selections from, 136, 221
Time, value of, 231

Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, 65
Tolling of the passing-bell, reflections

on, 183

Transformation of insects typical of the

human being, 150
Trench, Mrs., selections from, 15
Trials by ordeal, and judicial combats,
170

Truffle, description of the, 29
Truth, on the study of, 83

the foundation of knowledge,
171

Tongue of the woodpecker, 28
Turnip-fly, account of, 6

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Foot of the Gecko, under side of, 240
Fourteenth century, war-ship of, 249
French fishing-port, 170
Fruit of the Doum Palm, 64
Furnace of the gilder, 96

Gecko's foot, under side of the, 240
General view of Florence, 137
Gilder's furnace, 96

Glutinous hag-fish, 184

Gold-leaf beating, figures illustrative
of, 248

Gondola, Venetian, 250
Goodrich Castle, ruins of, 97

Grand butler and carver at a royal
feast, 60

Gray Wethers, Dartmoor, 113
Great seal of Henry I., 5
Grey-street, Newcastle, 225

Hag fish, the glutinous, 184
Hammock, Anglo-Saxon sailor's, 164
Hazel, the, 1167

leaves, catkins and fruit of, 116
Hebrew lady in her pleasure-house,
109

Hillah, present town of, 1
Holly, leaves of the, 68

Horns of red and fallow deer, 93
Hydraulic ram, 212
Hydrostatic paradox, 8

Illustrations, microscopic, of the pro-
cesses of vegetation, 16
Inkstands, ancient. 236
Insect transformations, 88

Kasr, or palace, ruins of Babylon, re-
mains of, 3

Kilmallock, town of, 105

Latitude and longitude, diagram illus-
trative of, 208
Leech, medicinal, 232
Letter-writer, Roman, 73
Link-chains, various models of, 176
Llandogo, on the Wye, 217
Lunar eclipse, 128

Manioc flour, preparation of, 57
Mantle, imperial, 20
Medicinal leech, 232

Microscopic animals found in stagnant

water, 136

Microscopic Illustrations, 16

Misericordia, brother of the, 184

Monkeys gathering fruit, 12

Monument to J. P. Rottler, 25
Moon, the, 124

probable appearance of the
Earth to, 121

phases of the, 125

Mosaic, old, 168

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Washington, selections from, 15
Watchmen, the establishment of 14
Wayland, selections from, 70, 88
Wealth, how acquired, 88
Wealth and power of Great Britsia,
101

Weights of Europe, table of, 69
Wilberforce, selections from, 56
Willmott, selection from, 240
Wind, velocity of the, 192
Women, sensibility of, 159

-, moral courage of, 215
Woodpecker, tongue of the, 28
Woolwich, naval and military esta
blishments at, 233

World, love of, 157,
World, what the most sublime spet
tacle in, 136
Writing materials, IV.-History of
writing paper, 68-V. Manufact
of writing paper, 117-VI.
parchment, 133-VII. On ink, 174
-VIII., 236

Wye and Monmouthshire, II 17–
III., 49-IV., 97-V., 193-VI,
217

Young Chemist, XII., 91
Youth and age, 213

Sago-palm, fruit, &c, of, 24
Sail-maker, from a French print, 164
St. Paul's Cross, Cheapside, 48
St. Nicholas Church, Newcastle, 909
Sandals, coronation, 21
Scene in a Chinese drama, 153
Sceptre, king and queen's, with cross,4
with dove, 4

Seal, great, of Henry the First, 5
Seasons, the, 201

Serpents, poiscu fangs of, 61

Ship, Anglo-Saxon and Norman, 165
Silvering table, 144

Slating, diagram illustrative of, 31
Snake and viper, heads of, 140
Solstice, Suminer and Winter, 204
Spinning, ancient Egyptian method af,

108

Spring-tides, new and full moon, 207
Spurs, the coronation, 6
Staff of Lord High Constable and
Earl Marshal, 44
Staff, St. Edward's, 4
Strand, royal progress through the, 8
Sun, Summer and Winter, altitudes o
in the vicinity of Loudon, 203
spots on the, 34
comparative dimensions of, as
as seen from the different planets,

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Venetian gondola, 250
Venus, phases of, 39
Viper and suake, heads of, 140
Virge, queen's, or ivory rod, 4

War-boat, early English, 166
War-ship of the 14th century, 349
Westminster, water procession from, to
the Tower, 72
Wild boar, fountain of the, Florence,
177

Wilton Castle, 49

Woodpecker, tongue and skull of the

28

Woolwich, Rotunda or Repository 81,

233

Wye, New Weir on the, 193

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of the accomplished Surgeon and Naturalist of the Expedition, Mr. Ainsworth*, (to whom we are also indebted for the sketch, taken on the spot by Lieutenant Fitzjames, R.N., from which our engraving is made,) we are enabled to lay before our readers some curious and novel facts concerning the city of cities," Babylon the Great.

THE Euphrates Expedition, undertaken for the pur-
pose of ascertaining the navigability of that river,
must be considered one of the most useful and in-
teresting journeys recently made. Useful, not only
because of proving practicable a much shorter and
more convenient route from hence to India; but also
as opening out new sources of commercial enterprise"
with a people with whom we have as yet had little
intercourse; and whom, it appears, Europeans have
hitherto much misunderstood.

But the usefulness resulting from such an expedi-
tion even yields to the interest it must awaken in the
mind of the Biblical or classical antiquarian. The
"the
river Euphrates, whose banks have been styled
cradle of the world," whose margins bore the proud
weight of the greatest cities of antiquity; and whose
bosom was ploughed by the ships of the princely
merchants of Babylon, concerning which so many
prophecies of Holy Writ were recorded and terribly
fulfilled, the theatre of war of the Ten Thousand
Greeks and the army of Alexander, the early seat
of Christianity,-offers a mine of material for the
poet, the philosopher, and the historian.

Having been kindly granted access to the Notes
VOL. XIII.

The modern town of Hillah is situated upon the river Euphrates, where once stood a considerable suburb of Babylon. Its present population, which may average from six to seven thousand souls, consists chiefly of Arabs, who have their own Sheik, but the Mutsellim, or governor of the place, is under the pacha of Baghdad, and resides in a fortress within the There are bazaars and markets on both sides town. of the river. The shopkeepers are chiefly Armenians, A most important fact connected Turks, and Jews. with these traders is, that Manchester and Glasgow goods that were taken out by the Expedition as samples, were eagerly bought by them, at a profit

Mr. Ainsworth's work, Researches in Babylonia, Assyria, and' Chaldea, is now published, and the Author has departed on a journey to the Syrian Christians, under the auspices of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, and the Royal Geographical Society of London.

386

to the sellers of 100 per cent*. There is much trade carried on in the town both by camels from the interior, and by boats laden with rice, dates, tobacco, and other articles most in demand among the desert tribes.

In connexion with this town, and the immense extent and magnificence usually ascribed to the city of Babylon, Mr. Ainsworth makes the following observations:

The great question which has occupied historians in connexion with Babylon is, whether the account given of its size and magnificence by the ancient profane writers, in some cases supposed to have been eye-witnesses of its glory and splendour, are not exaggerated. There has been the customary abuse of the standard of measurement amongst classical authors, and the same difficulty of reconciliation left to the moderns +.

But in this question, a great elementary principle has been hitherto entirely lost sight of. The cities of the earliest races of mankind were not, as in

modern times, vast and crowded congregations of houses, built side by side in compact and extensive masses, but each dwelling had its garden, pasture, and tillage-lands surrounding it, the whole being enclosed by a wall. This fact at once reduces the wonder often evinced at the vast space occupied by many ancient cities of the East. In the centre of the vast enclosure, or in some conspicuous part, were the residences of the authorities, the chief of whom was already called king; here also was the temple of their god, or the house of their captives, as at Babylon. There are abundant evidences that this was the fact in the two great cities of antiquity,Babylon and Nineveh; of the former it is stated by Curtius, that the intervals which separated the houses were sown and cultivated, to provide subsistence in case of siege.

A consideration of these circumstances does not, therefore, allow of any comparison between the population of a city of Assyria or Babylonia with the population of a modern city of equal extent. This is an element in all the pompous records of the past grandeur of Babel, which must not be lost sight of. And even in reference to its boasted magnificence, the poetical character of Eastern writings, and the remote periods to which they refer, must not be forgotten in the overwhelming interest of the subject. The greatest cities of Europe," it has been said, "give but a faint idea of the grandeur which all historians unanimously ascribe to the famous city of Babylon;" and this opinion has been echoed by every lover of hoary antiquity. Then came the fulfilment of its predicted destruction, and the glory of God appears to be enhanced in the eyes of man, by the magnitude of the object against which his anger was directed; but a knowledge of the real state and circumstances of the great Eastern mart of iniquity, would probably show that mercy predominated over punishment.

Some modern authorities have thought that they *It would be curious if, in the progress of commerce and civilization, the neighbourhood of Babylon should again become the scene of princely mercantile traffic; it is described in the Revelations as having once been (xviii. 12, 13), "The merchandise of gold, and silver, and precious stones, and of pearls, and fine linen, and purple, and silk, and, scarlet, and all thyine wood, and all manner of vessels of ivory, and all manner of vessels of most precious wood, and of brass, and iron, and marble, and cinnamon, and odours, and ointments, and frankincense, and wine, and oil, and fine flour,

and wheat, and beasts, and sheep, and horses, and chariots, &c."

+ Herodotus gives the extent of the walls of Babylon at 120 stades on each side, or 480 stades in circumference; Diodorus 360 stades in .circumference; Clitarchus, who accompanied Alexander, 365; Curtius states it at 368; and Strabo at 385 stades. The general approximation of these measurements would lead us to suppose that the same stade was used by the different reporters, and if this was the Greek Itinerary stade, we may estimate the circumference of the great city at twenty-five British miles,

| could trace on the plains of Hillah the extent of ancient Babylon; but their data are frequently few, and in reality deceptive. The lines drawn on maps are often only used to divide distant mounds of ruin. Accumulations of pottery and brickwork are met with occasionally over a great tract, but the connexion supposed between these and the corn-fields and gardens, within the common precincts of a wall, is gratuitous in the extreme. Imagine London and Paris to be levelled, and the inhabitant of some future city to visit their ruins, as those of then remote antiquity; if in the one instance Sèvres, Mont Rouge, and Vincennes, or in the other Greenwich, Stratford-le-Bow, Tottenham, Highgate, Hammersmith, Richmond, and Clapham, be taken in as boundaries, or identified respectively as the ruins of those cities gain in the eyes of futurity! Paris and London, what a prodigious extent would those cities gain in the eyes of futurity!

Like other great cities in the East, the great Babel was, in the lapse of time, known by different names, and, ultimately, subdivided into various parts. been separated from the mother-city, if indeed it The first quarter of Babylon that appears to have was not originally distinct, was that on the west The word "Birs," as applied to this mound or ruin, side of the river, and contains the Birs Nimrood. cannot be satisfactorily explained in Arabic, as a derivative of that language; and it would appear, that all attempts to deduce it from the Hebrew or Chaldaic tongues have failed, as they are founded on a change of the radical letters.

It was from Birs, or Bursif, that the produce of the Birsean looms-the cloth of Birs-derived its name.

The almost only remnant of Borsippa, probably the temple of a national worship performed in high places, one of which belonged to each Babylonian city, and to each quarter of Babylon itself, still preserves its ancient name. Birs Nimrood has been pile of Babel, but it will appear much more probable generally looked upon as the remnant of the great to have belonged to the city of Birs, Bursif, or Borsippa, and one of the quarters of the Babylon of Herodotus.

Marudi, in his Universal History, mentions Babil, the earth, so named from the name proper to one the capital of Aferadun, and one of the " climates" of of its towns. This town is situated on both banks of the canal, derived from the Frat in the province of Irak, one hour's journey from the city called Jisr Babil and the canal of Al Birs.

its name, and to have received that of Nil. The The quarter of Babel itself appears to have changed mounds of Babel and the Mujaleba are nearly surrounded by two canals which bear that name in the the Frat as flowing to the city of Nil, and giving off Abulfeda described the main stream of present day. the canal of Nil, after which it is called the Nahr Sirat. D'Anville also notices a town called Nilus, without having a definite idea of its position.

The square superficies of the mound of Babel is 49,000 feet; its elevation at the south-east corner, 64 feet. To the south of it is the Mujaleba, having a square superficies of 120,000 feet, and a height of only 28; beyond this again, the Amram ebn Ali, having an area of 104,000 feet, and an elevation of 23 feet. The Mujaleba has been read as if it were Makalbid, from Kalba, "the overturned, or overthrown," whereas a much nearer affinity exists to Mujaleba, plural of Jalib, the "home of the captives," and not improbably the residence of the Israelites who re mained in Babylon. This version is favoured by the name of Heroot and Maroot also given to the mound by the natives, from a tradition that near the foot of

the ruin there is an invisible pit, where D'Herbelot relates that the rebellious people were hung with their heels upward, "until the day of judgment." The Kasr, or palace, is a mound of about 700 yards in length and breadth. Its moulded bricks, ornamented with inscriptions, and its glazed and coloured tiles, added to the sculptures that have been found there, speak of its importance, and have led to its being generally looked upon as the eastern and the largest of the palaces of the Babylonian monarch, renowned for its sloping gardens.

Between the Kasr and the Amram there is every probability the Euphrates once flowed, where the subaquatic tunnel of Semiramis may have existed, and where quays lined the banks at the time Alexander was carried over during his last illness.

The Amram ebn Ali (so called from a son of Ali,) has been more generally, and with probably a greater degree of plausibility, identified with the western palace. It is surrounded by ridges or mounds of ramparts which were the defence of this large space, and of all the establishments it contained.

The fourth quarter of Babel is marked in its central space by the mound of Al Heimar or Hámir, an isolated eminence once having a superficies of 16,000 feet, and an elevation of 44 feet, with a ruin on the summit eight feet high. Its modern name is derivable from the Arabic root hamará, "to be, or become red," denoting the red mass or ruin on the summit: Alhambra, one of the four wards of Grenada, was also so called from the red colour of the materials of its buildings.

DEPENDANCE OF MAN UPON HIS CREATOR. FOR the continuance of life a thousand provisions are made. If the vital actions of a man's frame were directed by his will, they are necessarily so minute and complicated, that they would immediately fall into confusion. He cannot draw a breath without the exercise of sensibilities as well ordered as those of the eye or ear. A tracery of nervous cords unites many organs in sympathy, of which, if one filament were broken, pain, and spasm, and suffocation, would ensue. The action of his heart, and the circulation of his blood, and all the vital functions, are governed through means and by laws which are not dependant on his will, and to which the powers of his mind are altogether inadequate. For, had they been under the influence of his will, a doubt, a moment's pause of irresolution, a forgetfulness of a single action at its appointed time, would have terminated his existence

Now when man sees that his vital operations could not be directed by reason, that they are constant, and far too important to be exposed to all the changes incident to his mind, and that they are given up to the direction of other sources of motion than the will, he acquires a full sense of his dependance. If man be fretful and wayward, and subject to inordinate passion, we perceive the benevolent design in withdrawing the vital motions from the influence of such capricious sources of action, so that they may neither be disturbed like his moral actions, nor lost in a moment of despair.

When man thus perceives that in respect to all these vital operations he is more helpless than the infant, and that his boasted reason can neither give them order nor protection, is not his insensibility to the Giver of these secret endowments worse than ingratitude? In a rational creature, ignorance of his condition becomes a species of ingratitude: it dulls his sense of benefits, and hardens him into a temper of mind with which it is impossible to reason, and from which no improvement can be expected.-BELL.

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WHAT different ideas are formed in different nations concerning the beauty of the human shape and countenance ! A fair complexion is a shocking deformity on the coast of Guinea; thick lips and a flat nose are a beauty. In some nations, long ears that hang down upon the shoulders, are the objects of universal admiration. In China, if a lady's foot is so large as to be fit to walk upon, she is regarded as a monster of ugliness. Some of the savage nations in North America tie four boards round the heads of their children, and thus squeeze them, while the bones are tender and gristly, into a form that is almost perfeetly square. Europeans are astonished at the absurd barbarity of this practice, to which some missionaries have imputed the singular stupidity of those nations among whom it prevails; but when they condemn those savages, they do not reflect that the ladies in England had, till within these very few years, been endeavouring, for near a century past, to squeeze the beautiful roundness of their natural shapes into a square form of the same kind.-SMITH.

MANKIND have a great aversion to intellectual labour, but even supposing knowledge to be easily attainable, more people would be content to be ignorant than would take even a little trouble to acquire it.-JOHNSON.

WHAT IS HOME?

THAT is not home, where day by day
I wear the busy hours away;
That is not home, where lonely night
Prepares me for the toils of light;
'Tis hope, and joy, and memory, give
A home in which the heart can live:
These walls no lingering hopes endear,
No fond remembrance chains me here.
Cheerless I heave the lonely sigh-
Eliza, canst thou tell me why?
'Tis where thou art, is home to me,
And home without thee cannot be.

There are who strangely love to roam,
And find in wildest haunts their home;
And some in halls of lordly state,
Who yet are homeless, desolate.
The sailor's home is on the main,
The warrior's, on the tented plain,
The maiden's, in her bower of rest,
The infant's, on his mother's breast;
But where thou art, is home to me,
And home without thee cannot be.
There is no home in halls of pride,
They are too high, and cold, and wide.
No home is by the wanderer found;
'Tis not in place; it hath no bound,
It is a circling atmosphere

Investing all the heart holds dear;
A law of strange attractive force,
That holds the feelings in their course.
It is a presence undefined,
O'er-shadowing the conscious mind,
Where love and duty sweetly blend
To consecrate the name of friend;
Where'er thou art, is home to me,

And home without thee cannot be.-CONDer.

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