A Adams, Joseph, Treatise on the hereditary peculiarities of the human
race, by, 476 Africa, Park's Journal of a mission to the interior of, 158, 205 Africa, Campbell's Travels in, 110 Àfrica, Lichtenstein's Travels in, 334 Alcedo, Don Antonio De, Translation of his Geographical Dictionary, 358 America, Personal Narrative of Travels to the equinoctial regions of,
by M. de Humboldt, 458—Researches concerning the Insti-
tutions and monuments of the ancient Inhabitants of, 570 America, Remarks on the Treaty of Peace with, vii. 647—will it be last-
ing ? viii-out signal defeat of Napoleon ought to teach the Americans to think of us with respect, 425--they alone likely
to attempt the rescue of Buonaparte, 534 Anecdotes Parisiennes, 167 Armageddon, a Poem by the Rev. G. Townsend, 89 Arts and Sciences, Inventions, Discoveries, and Improvements in, 75,
195, 317, 427, 539, '648, 757, 866
B Badham, Dr., Translation of the Satires of Juvenal, by, 831 Baker, Rachel, remarkable Sermons, by, 840 Bampton Lectures, by W. Van Mildert, D.D., 286 Bardoue, or the Goatherd of Mount Taurus, by Arien de Sarrazin, 603 Baines, John, A Tour throughout the whole of France, by, 864 Barret, Eaton, My Wife! What Wife? a Comedy, by, 510 Berington, Rev. Joseph, A literary History of the Middle Ages, by, 563 Berwick, Rev. Edward, Lives of Pollio, Varro, and Gallus, by, 507 Bible Society, Dealtry's Review of Norris's attack on, 512 Book-keeping, A new and practical course of, by P. Thoreau, 665 Bowerbank, Rev. T. F. Waterloo Sermon, by, 470 NO. VIII. Aug. Ra.
VOL. I.
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Boyce, Edmund, the Belgian Traveller, by, 718 Broughton, S. D., Letters from Portugal and Spain, by, 100 Burder, Rev. Samuel, Memoirs of Pious Women, by, 600 Burns, Robert, Account of Ceremonies at his Mausoleum, 736 Buonaparte, Louis, Maria, or the Hollanders, by, 98 Buonaparte, Lucien, Charlemagne, ou l'église délivrée, 11 Buonaparte, Napoleon, Escapes from Elba, xiv-Result of his usurpa-
tion predicted, xvii—Foreseen that he would be glad to go into exile, 179--Opinions of the Parisians respecting him. ib.-was he the choice of the French people? 188—the subversion of his power always practicable, 307-vicissitudes in his lot, 493– St. Helena will be a fit place of abode for him, ib.—who is to maintain him? ib. 645—is he a great man? 529—he departs, but meditates a return, ib.-blameable lenity shown hin, 530– the allies would have been justifiable in bringing him to con- dign punishment, 531-is St. Helena a fit place of detention? 533–ihe Americans alone likely to attempt his rescue, 534– the good he has done, 537—his amusements at St. Helena, 641— his satellites of more consequence than himself, 774
Secret Memoirs of, 47-portfeuille de, 606 Butler, Charles, Esq., An easy Introduction to Mathematics, by, 610 Byron, Lord, Hebrew Melodies, by, 209
с Cambist, Kelly's Universal, 711 Campaign, the, a Poein, by John Gwilliam, 488 Campbell, John, Travels in South Africa, by, 110 Carnot, M. his memorial, 29 Carpe diem, 744 Carpenter, Rev. Lant, Systematic Education, by, 497 Charge delivered to the Clergy of the diocese of London, 251 Charucter, Essay on diversity of, 163 Charlemagne, ou l'église délivrée, par Lucien Buonaparte, 11 Chateuubriand, M. de, Essay on Revolutions, 271-The two Martyrs,
580---Souvenirs d'Italie, &c. 706 Chrestomathia Syriaca ; edidit Gustavus Knös, 696 Churches of England and Rome, Dr. Marsh's comparative view of, 145 Church, the, in danger, by the Rev. Richard Yates, 797 Clancarty, Earl ot, his letter to Lord Castlereagh, 182 Claudian, Strutt's translation of the Poems of, 325 Cobbold, Elizabeth, an Ode on the Victory of Waterloo, by, 785 Cockburn, Lt.-Gen. A Voyage to Cadiz and Gibraltar, &c. 678 Collyer, Dr. the great Mystery of Godliness, a Sermon, by, 141 Congress of Vienna, remarks on the object of, xi Corbeti, Sarah, the Tyro's Guide, by, 482 Cossack, the, a Poem, 575 Crauford, Earl of, the Poetical works of, 373 Cunningham, J. W. De Rance, a Poem, by, 367
D Dallas, R. C. The New Conspiracy against the Jesuits Detected and
Exposed, by, 724 Daubeny, Reo. Charles, Remarks on the Unitarian Method of Interpret-
ing the Scriptures, by, 639
Dealtry's, Rev. W. Review of Norris's Attack on the Bible Society, 512 De Rancè, a Poem by J. W. Cunningham, 367 Drama, British, Remarks on, 409, 522, 637 Duelling, Essay on, 69
E Edinburgh Review, Extract from, 194 Education, Systematic, by the Rev. W. Shepherd, the Rev. J. Joyce, and
the Rev. Lant Carpenter, 497 Elton, C. A. Specimens of the Classic Poets, by, 661 Engelbreth, W. F. Fragmenta Basmurico-Coptica Veteris et Novi Testa-
menti, 215 Epitaphs, Observations on, 299 Erskine, Lord, Preface to Mr. Fox's Speeches, by, 818 Eustace's, Rev. John C., Classical Tour through Italy, 698 Excursion, the, a Poem by W. Wordsworth, 343 Exile of Elba, a Poem by John Gwilliam, 488
F Fables for the Fireside, by John Lettice, D.D. 520 Fellowes, W. D., Paris in July 1815, by, 815 Fitzgerald, W.T., Wellington's Triumph or the Battle of Waterloo, by, 785 Flowers of Wit, by the Rev. Henry Kett, 685 Forster's Sketch of the New Anatomy of the Brain, &c. 281 Fox, C. J., Speeches of, in the House of Commons, 538_Preface to
ditto, 818 Fragmenta Basmurico-Coptica Veteris et Novi Testamenti, 215 Fragments on the Study of Man, 496 France-The best means of proceeding in the late war, x -Buonaparte
escapes from Elba, xii-The result of his usurpation predicted, xvii-Evident that Louis would soon be restored, 180 - Popu- larity of the war, 185, 313, 316—Was Buonaparte the choice of the French people ? 188—The mischievous intuence of military habits, 189-Edinburgh Review quoted to show the restoration of the Bourbons hopeless, 191-Bad faith of France the cause of the war, 304-Louis's hands will hereafter be at liberty, 305 -Revolutions make little impression ou the minds of the French, 311-Louis's weakness in admitting Jacobins into power, 421—Blucher's mode of proceeding well suited to the French, 422—Speedy termination of the war, 423— The policy of leaving France great and powerful questionable, 425, 1734 Necessity of dismantling the French fortresses, 420--Inade- quate punishment of ihe traitors, 535--Perturbed state of France, 643-Character of Jacobinism, 643— Disposal of the French fortresses and provinces, 644—Her altered state, 751– Will a Bourbon government revive the ancient spirit of eninity to England ? 753—Jacobins not subdued, 753—The conquest of France necessary to its prosperity, 773—The securities against French outrages insufficient, 775--They may again throw Europe into confusion, ib.-Ney's fate, 777-Vast number of the French traitors, 778
A Tour throughout the whole of, by John Baines, 864 French Dictionary on a plan entirely new, by W. Smith, 356 Frey's Hebrew Grammar in the English Language, 619
G Gall and Spursheim, Drs. the Physiognomical System of, 281 Gamble, John, Sarsfield and Howard, by, 670 Genlis, Madame de, Henri le Grand, 233 Geography, a Compendious System of, by Thomas Myers, 35, 131 Geographical and Historical Dictionary of America and the West Indies,
by Don Antonio de Alcedo, 357 Gibbon, Edward, the Miscellaneous Works of, 53 Gilchrist, John, a Collection of Scotish Ballads, by, 620 Gilmour, Robert, Lothaire, a romance, by, 28 Great Britain, prudent course adopted by, in the late war, xix-Popu-
larity of the war, 185, 313, 316—Her high military characier, 424-Improved condition of her affairs, 426—Popularity of Lord Liverpool's administration, ib.--Remarks on the Waterloo subscription, 536–Satisfaction occasioned by the favourable posture of affairs, 537-Services rendered to the world by her, 639—Her reward, 640-Her happy state, 646–Ought she to share in the spoils of Turkey? 780
-Journal of a Tour and Residence in, by a French Traveller, 194 Greek Exercises, by the Rev. J. Picquot, 635 Griffinhoof, Anthony, The Maskers of Moorfields, by, 506 Guihrie, G. J., On Gunshot Wounds of the Extremities, 719 Guy Munnering, or the Astrologer, 228 Gyles, J. F., Elements of llebrew Grammar, by, 848 Gwilliam, John, The Campaign and Exile of Elba, by 488
H Hamilton, Lady, Memoirs of, 136 Hatt, Richard, the Poems of, 495 Hebrew Melodies, by Lord Byron, 209 Hebrew Grammar in the English Language, by J. S. C. F. Frey, 619
Elements of, by J. F. Gyles, 848 Henri le Grand, par Madame de Genlis, 233 Herbert, Hon. W., Helga, a Poem, by, 827 Hints for establishing an Office at Newcastle, &c. by William Tho-
mas, 855 Hogg, James, the Pilgrims of the Sun, a Poem, by, 30 Hopkinson, Samuel, Religious and Moral Reflections, by, 482 Horæ Pelasgice, part the first, by Herbert Marsh, D.D., 437 Horsley, Bishop, Translation of the Book of Psalms, by, 328 Howard, a Novel, by John Gamble, Esq., 670 Humboldi, Alexander de, Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoce
tial Regions of the New Continent, 458—Researches concerning the Institutions and Monuments of the Ancient Inhabitants of America, 570
I Immortality, an Essay on, 715 Iną, a Tragedy, by Mrs. Wilmot, 483 India, Remarks on the War in, 646—Termination of it, 789--the Mar-
quis Wellesley's System ought not to have been abandoned, ib.
--the Bengal frontier greatly strengthened, 783 Ireland, Remarks on the State of, 755
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Italy, a Classical Tour through, by the Rev. John Chetwode Eustace, 698 Italie, Souvenirs de, etc., par M. de Chateaubriand, 706,
J Jebb, Rev. Jobn, Sermons on subjects chiefly practical, by 549 Jesuits, the New Conspiracy against, detected and briefly exposed, by R.
C. Dallas, Esq. 724 Joyce, Rev. J., Systematic Education, by, 497 Juvenal, Badham's Translation of the Satires of, 831.
K Keegan, W., the Universal British Merchant, by, 481 Kelly, Dr., the Universal Cambist, by, 711 Kelsall, Charles, the Phantasm of a University, by, 467 Kerrison, R. M., an Inquiry into the Present State of the Medical Profes-
sion in England, by, 277 Kelt, Rev. Henry, the Flowers of Wit, by, 685 Knüs, Gustavus, Chrestomathia Syriaca, 696.
L Lady Jane's Pocket, a Novel, 473 Latitude and Longitude, a Practical Treatise on finding, at Sea, by Tho-
mas Myers, 254 Letters from Portugal, Spain, and France, by S. D. Broughton, 100 Lettice, John, D.D., Fables for the Fireside, 520 Lichtenstein, Dr. Travels in Southern Africa, by, 334 Literary Compositions, Essays on the Sources of the Pleasures derived
from, 393 London, Bishop of, Charge to the Clergy of his Diocese, in the year
1814, 251 Lord of the Isles, a Poem, by Walter Scott, 1 Lothaire, a Romance, by Robert Gilmour, 28 Louis XVIII. (see France.)
Maria, or the Hollanders, by Louis Bonaparte, 98 Marsh, Herbert, D.D., Comparative View of the Churches of England
and Rome, by, 145—Horæ Pelasgicæ, 437 Maskers of Moorfields, 506 Mathematics, an Easy Introduction to, by Charles Butler, Esq. 610. Matrimony,Conversations on, by John Ovington, 851 Medical Profession, an Inquiry into the Present State of, by R. M. Ker-
rison, 277 Minchin, William, an Essay to Illustrate the Rights of the Poor by Law,
836 Mineralogy and Geology, Phillips's Outline of, 858 Mitford, Mary Russell, Poems by, 854 Month at Brussels, a Satirical Novel, 733 More, Hannah, an Essay on the Character and Practical Writings of St.
Paul, by, 148 Morell, John, LL.D., Reasons for the Classical Education of Children
of both sexes, by, 32 Myers, Thomas, A.M., a Compendious System of Modern Geography, by,
35, 131-a Practical Treatise on finding the Latitude and Longitude, 254
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