Princess, Dedication to her of the "Lay of the Laureate," 756. Funeral Song for," 765.
Caledonian Canal, Inscriptions for the, Charlotte, Queen, Ode on the Death of, 180, 181. 199. Camara Santa, the, a particular history Charlotte, Her Royal Highness the and description of, 691, &c. Camel of the River. See Pelican. Camel, the, attachment of the Arabs to, 218. Difference in its treatment in hot countries and cold, 249. Parti- culars illustrative of its natural his- tory, 250.
Canary Islands, extract from Glas's History of, 568.
Canons, ecclesiastical, particulars of those of the Council of Laodicea re. lating to the sacerdotal garments, 694.
Canterbury, Archbishop of, his reply to
the propositions of the Archbishop of Bourges, on the subject of Henry the Fifth's claim to the French crown, 62. Capture, The, 383.
Caradoc and Senena, 406. Carbuncle, fabulous account of its won-
derful properties, 220. Cardinal Ursino, the, 16.
Carlos the Second of Spain, some par- ticulars concerning, 735. CARMEN NUPTIALE, 756.
CARMEN TRIUMPHALE, 184–190. Carmina Aulica, written in 1814, on the Arrival of the Allied Sovereigns in England, 194.
Carpets, great splendour of those used by the Persians, 266. Carol, Christmas, a curious one pre- served in Ritson's "Collection of Ancient Songs," 72.
Casbin, the Grapes of, described, 267. Castle of Romorantin, singular mode of attack upon, by Edward the Black Prince, 60. Casyapa, 561.
Cataia of the Romans, description of, 392.
Charming of serpents, extracts and re- marks connected with this subject, 286.
Chase, the, predilection of the kings of Persia for, 285.
Chatham, Our Lady of, superstitious tradition concerning her, 233. "Cheerful on this holiday,"-a Song from Wat Tyler, 91. Chicasaw Indians, interesting dialogue between John Wesley and some of them, 335.
Chidder and Elias, Persian fable of, with remarks, 43.
Chikkasah, The Old, to his Grandson, 134.
Children, heathen practices with regard to, 493.
Christian world, its condition described at the commencement of the Saracen conquests, 633.
Christening, Queen Mary's, 467. Christianity, the only source of true greatness, 746.
Christians and Saracens, curious de- scription of a battle between, 717. Christmas Carol, a curious one, 72. Christmas Day, Lines written on, 136. "Chronicles of King Don Rodrigo," account of a splendid war-chariot, extracted from, 634.
Church, authority of the, Monkish ad- vocacy of, 28.
City of Peace, The, 254.
Complaints of the Poor, The, 130. Compostella, The Pilgrim to, a Christ- mas Tale, 536. Concert of Frogs, 407.
Concourse, Place of, a name given to the city of Mecca by the Mabomme- dans, 217.
"Conqueror, deliverer, friend of human kind," 193.
Contemplation, To, 117.
Convent of Arrabida, Lines written after a visit to the, 137.
Convent of Busaco, some particulars respecting it, 184.
Conversion of the Hoamen, The, 374. Cool Reflections during a Midsummer Walk from Warminster to Shaftes bury, 162.
Coracle, the, particulars concerning. 349. Description of, by Andrew Mar- vel, 349.
Cornelius Agrippa, a Ballad, 434. Corston, Sonnet to, 107. Some account of the village, 144..
Cortez, his splendid reception at the city of Chololla, 328, Cottage, The Ruined, an Eclogue, 155. Count Julian and Roderick, 710. Count Pedro's Castle, 672. Courage, incitements to, 10. Covadonga, battle of, superstitious tra- ditions connected with, 709. Covadonga, The Vale of, 707. Cowper, strictures on his Translation of Homer, 3.
Cranes, their immense number in the city of Bagdad; reasons assigned for it, 255.
Cities, Oriental, corresponding features Cressy, conduct of the English soldiery to be found in all, 254. at the battle of, 69.
Civil war, difference of the mode of con- duct, in England and in France, 11.
Catapulta, the ancient, some notices of, Clarendon, Hugh, some particulars 47. Cataract of Lodore, The, 164.
from his " History of England," re- specting the siege of Rouen, 16.
Cedars of Lebanon, strange account of, Clarkson, tribute to his memory, in by De la Roque, 294.
Cemeteries, Mahommedan, commonly planted with cypress trees, 292. "Censuria Literaria," the, extracts from, 786.
Century, Close of the, 410. Ceremonies, religious, usually preceded all settled engagements in battle in the 15th century, 69. Chair, St. Michael's, 431.
Chamber of the Tomb; some particu- lars of the places of sepulture of the Persians, 276.
Chamberlayne, William, extract from his "Pharonida," with remarks, 79. Champion, origin of the term, 187. Chapel Bell, The, 119. Charlemagne, ridiculous monkish tale respecting him, 300. Charles the Bold, account of the sin. gular preservation of his monument, and that of his daughter, 731. Charles the First, his conduct at the place of execution, 781. Charles the Seventh of France, his de- spair of maintaining Orleans against the besiegers, 23. He is encouraged by his Queen, Mary of Anjou, 23.
connection with the abolition of slavery, 756.
Cleanliness, some observations upon, in connection with knighthood, 674. "Clear shone the moon, the gale was fair," 128.
Clemency always allied to true great- ness, ironically instanced in the con- duct of Titus Vespasian at the siege of Jerusalem, 83.
Clouds, red, supposed by the American
Indians to be the blood of the brave, who have fallen in battle, 369. Coatel, 386. Death of, 402. Coatlantona, mother of Mexitli, made immortal for the sake of her son, 381.
Cock and a Hen, Legend of, 536. Coffee plant, the, notices of, 295. Coins, Gothic, some curious particulars descriptive of, 634.
"Cold was the night-wind, drifting fast the snow fell," 119.
Columbus, inference drawn by him from the elevation of the Pole at Paria, 360.
Com, character of the earthenware ex- ported from, 257.
Crier, the royal, of the twelfth century, his duties, 318.
Crime the invariable precursor of suf- fering, 752. Several illustrious ex- amples, 752.
Crocodiles, The King of the, 437. Cross-bow, the, some particulars con- cerning, 56.
Cross Roads, The, 427. Cross, the oaken, of Pelayo, some par- ticulars concerning, 715.
Crystals, curious particulars concern- ing, 228.
Cu, the, (or Temple) of Mexico, some particulars respecting, 328. Cunningham, Allan, Epistle to, 209. CURSE OF KEHAMA, THE, 548. The Funeral, 549. The Curse, 552. The Recovery, 555. The Departure, 556. The Separation, 558. Casayapa, 561. The Swerga, 566. The Sacrifice, 57%. The Home Scene, 575. Mount Meru, 577. The Enchantress, 586. The Sacrifice completed, 590. The Re. treat, 592. Jaganaut, 596. The City of Baly, 600. The Ancient Sepul- chres, 603. Baly, 606. Kehama's Descent, 608. Mount Calasay, 609. The Embarkation, 612. The World's End, 613. The Gate of Padalon, 617. Padalon, 619. The Amreeta, 622. Cupri-Kent, or the Village of the Bridge, 268.
Cymri, or Aborigines, a name by which
the Welsh designate themselves,
Cynetha and his Brothers, fate of, 320. Cypress trees, commonly used in plant- ing the cemeteries of the Mahomme- dans, 292.
Cyric, St., the patron saint of sailors,
"Did then the Negro rear at last the sword?" 99.
Dinas Vawr, the Great Palace, 319. 346.
Diogo Bernardes, character of his poetry, 647.
Divination by arrows, the, practice of,
forbidden to the Mahommedans, 228. Divination, particulars of, as existing among the American Indians, 364. Damascus, the blades of, singular fact Dogs, absurd notions formerly held of
connected with, 717.
Dammer Cappy, the Gates of Iron; a narrow defile in the mountains of the
their use in laying troubled spirits,
"Do I regret the past?" 131.
Dolphin, the, curious description of, by Herbert, 325.
Dancing women of India, some pecu- Dolwyddelan, Tower of, some parti. liarities of, 268.
Dar-al-Salam, the City of Peace (now Bagdad), curious particulars relating to its origin, 254.
"Dark Horror! hear my call," 116. Dark Island, The, 314.
culars connected with, from the "Gwydyr History," 337. Donica, 418.
Douro, Inscription for the Banks of the, 175.
Dragon, The Young, 473.
Edward the Black Prince, his magna- nimous conduct at the siege of Rouen, 18.
Egilona, Queen, her character, as drawn by the author of "Count Ju- lian," 654.
Egyptians, their mode of preserving their dead, 489.
Egypt, Pyramids of, account of their origin, 219. Ancient superstitions respecting these ancient monuments, not much improved upon by their exchange for the absurdities of the Romish religion, 643.
El-Alem, or the Signal, a white flag hoisted to warn the Mahommedans of the hour of prayer, 707. Elder Worthies, The, 781.
Elephant, the Indian, singular provision of Nature in behalf of, 594. Mytho- logical fable respecting, 595. Embarkation, The, 612. Embassy, The, 408. Emma, 336.
Davenant, extract from his play of Drayton, his description of the English Emmet, Robert, Lines written after "Love and Honour," 553.
David, King of Wales, his character, Dreams, singular tale illustrative of 315.
David, St., singular tradition of, 376. Day's Journey in Spain, Recollections
Dead, Festival of the, 368. Dead Friend, The, 131.
Dead, the, strange superstition of the
Turks and Persians respecting, 288. Various modes of preserving among different nations, 490.
"Death has gone up into our Palaces," 199.
Death of a favourite old Spaniel, Lines on, 137.
Death of Coatel, 402. Of Lincoya, 405.
Death of Wallace, The, 128. Death, reflections upon, 9. Deer, hunting the, supposed by the American Indians to be the employ- ment of those who honourably fall in battle, 369. This notion illustrated from Carver's Travels, 369. Deer-skins, white, used among the In-
dians for enshrouding the bones of their dead, 333.
"Delegate of Heaven," the title claimed by Joan of Arc, 29.
Delia, Sonnets to, by Abel Shuffle- bottom, 114.
Deliverance, The, 396. Departure, The, 356. Descent of Kehama, 608.
Desert, disappointments of the, 249. Horrors of the, as related by Mungo Park, 251. Phenomenon of the pillars of sand, 252.
Desert, the, or Field of the Spirit, its import, 363.
Destruction of Jerusalem, The, 127. Devil's Walk, The, particulars con- nected with the disputed authorship of the piece, 165. The Poem, 166. Dharma-Raja, or King of Justice, of the Hindoos, mythology of, 621. D'Herbelot, his account of the Tribe of Ad, descendants of the son of Noah, 215.
the spiritual theory of, 76. A monkish miracle, to the same effect, 76. Dromedary, the, interesting particulars respecting, 251. Its extraordinary swiftness, 252.
Drums, account of enormous ones used by the Mexicans on special oc- casions, 329.
Drunkards, The Three Arrant, of Wales, the history of, from the " Cam- brian Biography," 347.
hearing his Speech on his Trial and Conviction for High Treason, 140.
Enchanted Island, The, 342.
Enchanter's glass, the, 754.
Enchanted Tower at Toledo, fabulous story of, with remarks. 666. Spanish ballad on this subject, 668. Account
of the first inhabitants of Toledo, 669. Enchantress, The, 586. Engelbrecht, Hans, his vision of the heavenly world, 612. England, the Poet's tribute in praise of, 754. Celebration of her martial achievements, 758.
Duke of Wellington, Inscriptions to England, her sufferings from war with his memory, 173, 174, 175, 176.
Eagle, the, poetical allusion to the opi- nion of this bird's casting its feathers in old age, and renewing its youth and vigour, 750. Earth, the, extravagant theories con- cerning its history and formation, 323. Extracts from Burnett's "The- ory of the Earth," with remarks, 269. East, the, some of the best accounts of, to be found in the writings of those Travellers who have been practical jewellers, 232.
Ebb Tide, The, 130.
Eberhard and Donica, 419.
Eblis, the name given by Mahommed to the devil, 225.
Ebony tree, the, curious fact respecting,
Echo, superstition of the American In-
dians on this subject, 368. Eclipse, account of the one which hap- pened in April, 1715, 242. Eclogues, English, 149. Some remarks on this kind of composition, 149. Edinburgh Review, some strictures upon its judgment as to the result of the war in the Peninsula, 184, &c. "Edith! ten years are number'd since the day," 482.
Ednowain, Palace of, description of its ruins, from " Pennant's Snowdon," 338.
France, 8. Her mode of conducting
civil war contrasted with that of France, 11.
English soldiery, testimony to their bravery and good conduct at the battle of Agincourt, 69. And at the battle of Waterloo, 734. "Enter, Sir Knight,' the warrior cried," 425.
Epic Poems, strictures on, 3. Epilogue to the Young Dragon, 478. Epistle to Allan Cunningham, 209 EPITAPHS, 171-182. On Algernon Sid- ney, 171. On King John, 171. On a Mother, by her Son, 172. On Emma, 173. On General Moore, 174. On Clement Francis, 180. In Butleigh Church, 181. On Bishop Butler, 182. Epitaph on King Roderick, by Lope de Vega, 726.
Erminonville, Inscription for the Ceno- taph there, 171. Espringal, the ancient machine for throwing large darts,description of, 56. Eucharist, the Holy, particulars con- nected with, 712.
Evening Rainbow, The, Sonnet to, 108. Evil Prophet, The, 746. Excommunication, The, 353.
Fabliaux of Le Grand, some particulars from, connected with the story of Joan of Arc, 12.
"Faery Queen" of Spenser, extracts from, 762.
"Faint gleams the evening radiance through the sky," 117.
"Fair be thy fortunes in the distant land," 109.
Fairies, the Fountain of, 12.
"Fair is the rising moon, when o'er the sky," 108.
Family, The Last of the, an Eclogue,
"Farewell, my home; my home no longer now," 109.
Fastolffe, some particulars respecting him, 74.
Feast of Rajahs, 571. Feast of Souls, 368.
Felix, St., The Monastery of, 648. Female sacrifices in India, remarks and extracts relating to, 550, &c. Ferdusi, the Persian Poet, called by some the Oriental Homer; remarks on the inferiority of his Poem, 115. Fergus, The Wife of, a Monodrama,111. Festival of the Dead, The, 368. Field of Battle, The, 734. Notices of
the principal places rendered memo. rable by the battle of Waterloo, 735, &c.
Fierro, one of the Canary Islands, de-
scription of a singular tree on, 568. Filbert, The, 163.
Fire-fly, the, curious particulars of, 396.
First of December, Lines written on the, 120.
First of January, Lines written on the, 121.
Five Suns, tradition of the, 411. Flanders, 729. The Poet's description of a Flemish landscape, 731. Canal scenes, 732.
Flath-innis, the Noble Island, Mac- pherson's account of, 344.
Fletcher of Madeley, his observations on the corruptibility of the human body, 490.
Florinda and Roderick, 663. Flying-fish, the, some particulars re- specting, 325.
"Fly, son of Banquo! Fleance, fly!"
Foot-bearer, the ancient, his duties de- scribed, 317.
Fœdera, The, of Rymer, extract from, relating to the disastrous effects of the contest between France and Eng- land, 20. Forehead,-belief of the Mahommedans
that the decreed events of every man's life are impressed in invisible cha. racters on his forehead, 259. A similar notion ascribed to the Hindoos, 609. Fortifications, ancient, some particulars respecting, 55.
Fountain in the Forest, The, 701. Fountain of Fairies, The, 12. France, deplorable condition of, during her contest with England in the fit- teenth century, 8. Contrast drawn between France and England in their respective modes of conducting civil warfare, 11.
Francis, St., and the Grasshopper, the Tale of, 13. His reputed labours in the conversion of animals, 13.
Franklin, Dr., his account of the state of things at the time of Wilkes's po- pularity, 777.
Frederic William, king of Prussia, Ode to, 197.
Freedom, the praise of, 754. Friend, The Dead, 131. Friend, To a, 118.
Friend, To a, on his inquiring if I would live over my youth again? 131. Frogs, concert of, 407.
Froissart, extracts from, 39, 40.
Gilding, partiality of the Turks and Persians for, 267.
Girdles of the Arabs, 250. Glass, the Enchanter's, 754. Glendoveers, the, description of, 562. Globe, the, strange notions of the Hin- doos concerning its formation, 577. Glory to Thee, in thine omnipo- tence," 141.
Gwaelad, the Lowland Canton, particu lars respecting, 347.
Gwgan, of Powis, story of, 346.
Fruit of Paradise, Mahommedan mi- Godfrey crowned with thorns in Jeru- racle relating to, 302.
Fruit of the Zaccoum, description of,
from the Koran, 271.
Fuller, extract from his "Historie of the Holy Warre," relative to the Knights of Rhodes, 36. Curious ex- tract from his "Church History," relative to the suppression of religious orders in England in the reign of Henry IV. and Henry V., 62. Passage from his "Church History," on " Pri- mitive monks, with their piety and playfulness," 688.
Funeral ablutions, singular origin as- cribed to the practice, 218. Funeral rites, account of those em-
ployed among the North American Indians, 326.
Funeral Song for the Princess Char- lotte, 765.
"God of the torch, whose soul-illuming flame," 120.
God's Judgement on a wicked Bishop, 428.
Gold and silver trees of Paradise, 220. Golden Palaces of the East, 558. Ge- neral use of the term "golden" in the kingdom of Ava, 558. Goldsmith's Essays, extract from, re- lative to the practicability of intro- ducing the hexameter into English composition, 770.
Gomara, his account of the barbarous practice of skinning the bodies of dis- tinguished persons taken captive in war, 329. His description of the Tlascallan army, 331. His account of the "arrows of omen" used by the Tlascallans, 331.
Gonzalo Hermiguez, story of, 452.
Funeral, the Alderman's, an Eclogue, Gorsedd, The, 341. 159.
Funeral, The Pauper's, 135. Funeral, The Soldier's, 135. Funerals of the Mahommedans, some particulars concerning, 292. Descrip- tion of one, by an eye-witness, 292. Future state, the, conflicting opinions entertained on this subject by different nations, 499. 553.
Goose, Sonnet to a, 108.
Gooseberry Pie, a Pindaric Ode, 196. Gorseddan, or Bardic Meetings, some particulars concerning, 341.
"Go thou, and seek the House of Prayer," 121.
"Go, Valentine, and tell the lovely maid," 107.
Gothic coins, particulars concerning, 634. Goths and Romans, law prohibiting in- termarriages between, annulled by Receswintho, 651.
Ganga, Hymn to, by Sir William Jones, Goths, Roderick the last of the. See extract from, 578.
Ganges, the, uncertainty attached to its source, 578. Fable of its descent from heaven, 578.
Garci Ferrandez, 441. Gardener, the, of Hougoumont, anec- dote of him and his dog, 738. Gardens, profusion and ostentation dis- played by the Persians in, 265. Gaspar Poussin, Lines written on a Landscape painted by him, 136. Gate of Heaven, The, 775. Gate of Padalon, The, 617. Genii and Giants, Solomon's supposed power over, 247. Description of an Afreet, one of the evil genii, 310. Genius of Africa, To the, 100. George the Third, interesting anecdote of, 785.
German soldiers, testimony to their valour at the battle of Waterloo, 741. Ghent, the Beguinage at, its great su- periority noticed, 732. Giant's Leap, The, 58. Gibel-al-Tarif, the Mountain of Tarif, the commonly received etymology of Gibraltar, 632.
Gildas, singular anecdote of, 376.
Grandmother's Tale, The, an Eclogue,
Grapes of Casbin, description of, 267. Grasshopper, The, and St. Francis, the tale of, 13.
Great Spirit, Dwelling of the, $34. Greaves, his account of the origin of the Pyramids of Egypt, 219. Greek Church, marriage ceremonies in the, 523.
Greek Ode on Astronomy, Translation of a, 125.
Greeks, their great predilection for sacred legends, 518.
"Green grow the elder trees, and close," 444.
Green Islands of the Ocean, supersti- tions of the Welsh concerning them, 342. Grenville, Lord, Verses spoken in the Theatre at Oxford, upon his Installa. tion, 102.
Gualberto, St, 459.
Guardian angels, the doctrine of, be- lieved in by the Turks, 291. Ab- surdities coupled with this belief, 291. Guntrum, King of the Franks, singular
him of the Author's Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society,
Himakoot, the Holy Mount, 562. Himalaya mountains, Hindoo supersti- tions connected with, 577. Himiar, tribe of, (or of the Homerites,) valour of their women, 271. Hindoo Pantheon, Moore's, extracts from, illustrative of the Hindoo my- thology, 570. 588. 620. 623.
Hirah, Palace of, called by the Arabians
one of the wonders of the world, 215. "Hirlas Horn, Song of the," Literal version of this remarkable poem, 338. History, Lines on, 140.
History of Music," Dr. Burney's, ex- tracts from, respecting the use of the viol in France, 37.
"Hand of Glory," some particulars of Hoal, character of his military prowess,
Hell-Gate, a name given by the Moors and Arabs to the bitumen springs at Ait, 258.
Henderson, John, remarkable anecdote of, 403.
Henna, or hinna, its common use among the Asiatics, 239.
Henry the Hermit, 458.
Henry II. of England, anecdote of him
and his son, 73. His cruelties in his attempt upon Wales, in 1165, 317. Henry III. of England, extreme suffer- ings of his officers who accompanied him in his expedition to Wales, 357. Henry V. of England, description of his siege of Rouen, 16. His death, and particulars of his transport to Eng- land and funeral, 18.
"He pass'd unquestion'd through the camp," 432.
Hermit of Dreux and King Henry the Fifth, 432.
Hetrusci, their notions concerning the Penates, 146.
Hexameter, the Poet's reasons for adopting this measure in his " Vision of Judgement," 767. Remarks of Dr. Goldsmith respecting, 770.
mens of Sir Philip Sydney's attempt to neutralise this measure, 785, &c. "High in the air exposed the slave is hung," 99.
Highlanders, the, tribute to their va- lour at the battle of Waterloo, 737. "High on a rock, whose castle shade,"
Hill, Margaret, Lines addressed to, 139. Hill, the Rev. Herbert, Dedication to
317. His defeat and death, 315. Hoamen, Conversion of the, 374. Hoel, 384.
Hoel Dha', curious extract from, 316. Hoel, Prince, Poems of, Mr. Owen's
translation of eight of them, 350–352. Hohamho, or the Yellow River, 264. "Hold your mad hands! for ever on your plains," 99. Holinshed, his account of Joan of Arc, 6.
His description of the horrors occasioned by the siege of Rouen, 11. His account of the English and French armies, 14. His testimony to the bravery of the French, 16. His pic- ture of the city of Rouen during the siege, 16. His account of the distress of the inhabitants of Harfleur on its conquest by Henry, king of England,
Holly Tree, The, 129.
Holy Ark of the Camara Santa, a parti- cular description of, 692. Homerites. See Himiar. Homer, Translation of, remarks upon that of Cowper, 3. Of Pope, 3. Home-Scene, The, 575. Honorius, Inscription for his Cell at the Cork Convent, near Cintra, 172. Hopes of Man, The, 751. Horn. See Hirlas Horn. Horned helmet, the, description of those used by the Goths, 634. Horror, To, 116.
Horse, the, Oriental description of, 573. Horses, the Arabian, divided into two great classes, the Kadischi and the Kochlani, 262.
Hotun Nor, or the Sea of Stars, 264. Hougoumont, Farewell to, 739. Household Gods. See Penates. "How darkly o'er yon far-off mountain frowns," 108.
"How does the water come down at Lodore?" 164.
"How long, O Ireland, from thy guilty ground," 200.
"How many hearts are happy at this hour," 136.
Human greatness, confession of its vanity, by several illustrious indi- viduals, 745.
Hummums, origin of this term, 263. Hundred Springs of the Whang-ho, The, 264.
Hy Brasail, the Enchanted Island, 342.
Hyke, the, of the Arabs, 245. Hymen, To, 120.
Hymn to Ganga, by Sir William Jones, extracts from, 578. Hymn to Love, 86.
Idols, names of the four worshipped by the Adites, with remarks, 217. Idols of the Mexicans, reason of the great variety in their figures, 415. "If thou didst find on Western plains of yore," 108.
"If thy debtor be poor,' old Christoval said," 433.
Ignis fatuus, extraordinary appearances presented by one in the vallies of Mount Ephraim, 263.
Illusions, optical, common to the de- serts of Arabia, 250.
"I marvel not, O Sun, that unto thee," 109.
Immoral publications, the Author's animadversions upon, 769.
Immortality, the Water of. See Am-
"In an evil day, and an hour of woe," 441.
"In arms and in anger, in struggle and strife," 452.
"In a vision I was seized," 205. Inchcape Rock, The, 446. Incubi, the, notice concerning, 420. Indians, American, Songs of the, 132- 134.
Inflammability of saints, some curious extracts and ironical observations upon this subject, 287.
"In happy hour doth he receive," 184. Innovation, repugnance to, a singular case of, 365.
Inquisition, the Spanish, remarks upon, 539.
INSCRIPTIONS: -For a Column at New- bury, 170. For a Cavern that over- looks the River Avon, 170. For a Tablet at Silbury, 170. For a Monu. ment in the New Forest, 170. For a Tablet on the Banks of a Stream, 170. For the Cenotaph at Ermenon- ville, 171. For a Monument at Ox- ford, 171. For a Monument in the Vale of Ewias, 171. In a Forest, 172. For a Monument at Torde- sillas, 172. For a Column at Truxillo, 172. For the Cell of Honorius, 172. For a Monument at Taunton, 172. For a Tablet at Penshurst, 173. For a Monument at Rolissa, 173. For a Monument at Vimeiro, 174. At Co- runna, 174. For the Banks of the Douro, 175. For the Field of Battle at Talavera, 175. For the Deserto de Busaco, 176. For the Lines of Torres Vedras, 176. At Santarem, 176. At Fuentes D'Onoro, 177. At Barrosa, 177. To the Memory of Sir W. Myers, 178. For the Walls of Ciudad Rodrigo, 178. To the Memory of Major-General Mackinnon, 178. For the Affair at Arroya Molinos, 179. Written in an unpublished volume of Letters and Miscellaneous Papers, by B. C. Roberts, 179. For the Cale- donian Canal:-1. At Clachnacharry,
180. 2. At Fort Augusta, 181. At Banavie, 181.
Installation at Oxford, Lines written the Winter after the, 161. Institutes of Menu, extracts from, 490. 552. 554. 591. 594.
Intermediate state, Mahommedan no- tions concerning the, 227. Ireland, Ode written after the King's Visit to, 200. Settlement of an Afri- can colony in, 215.
Irish kerns, great numbers of them en- gaged at the siege of Rouen - some particulars respecting, 16.
upon them, 4. Statements of the al- terations made in the poem since its first publication, 4, 5. Dedication of the poem to Edith Southey, 5. Ac- count of Joan of Arc, extracted from a History of the Siege of Orleans, 6. Holinshed's account of her, 6. Mon- taigne's description of the original dwelling of her father, 8. Some par- ticulars respecting her, collected from Le Grand's Fabliaux, and from Ra- pin, 12. Extract from the Life of St. Teresa, illustrative of some pecu- liarities in the Maid of Orleans, 12.
Island of the Blessed, description of, Jones, Sir William, extracts from his 499.
Island of the Seven Cities, story of the,
Island, The Enchanted, 342. Isle of Palms, The, 234.
Ism-Ablah, the, science of the name of God, 244.
Italico, Luca, vicar general of the Archbishopric of Rouen, his death in prison after the siege of that city, 17. "It is Antidius the Bishop," 451. "It was a Christian minister," 100. "It was a little island where he dwelt," 458.
"It was a summer evening," 449. "It was strange that he loved her, for youth was gone by," 435.
"I would I were that portly gentle- man," 114.
422. Jaga-naut. See Juggernaut. Jaguar, the, some particulars concern- ing, 488.
works, on the subject of Hindoo man- ners and worship, 553. 563. 570. 584. 585. 612. 617, 626.
Journal of Paris, some particulars re- specting Joan of Arc contained in,
Jaspar was poor, and vice and want," Kadischi and Kochlani, the two classes into which the Arabian horses are di- vided, 262. Katharine, St., princess of Alexandria, legend of, 30. Extract from the "Je. rusalen Conquistado" respecting her, 30. One of the saints especially reverenced by Joan of Arc, 27. KEHAMA, THE CURSE OF, 548. See Curse of Kehama.
Jayadeva, Songs of, extract from, 596. Jefferies, Judge, Inscription for a Mo- nument to his memory at Taunton, 172.
Jenner, Dr., a Poet's tribute to his memory, 487.
"Jerusalen Conquistada" of Lope de King Charlemain, 435.
Vega, extracts from, 634, 635.
Jerusalem, The Destruction of, 127. Jewish Maid, the, 439.
Langoemagog, the Giant's Leap. 58. Last of the Family, The, an Eclogue, 156.
Latimer and Ridley, Inscription for a Monument to their Memory at Ox- ford, 171.
LAY OF THE LAUREATE, THE, 756. Proem, 756. The Dream, 758. The Epilogue, 764.
Lebanon, cedars of, De la Roque's ac- count of, 294.
Le Grand's Fabliaux, some particulars respecting Joan of Arc taken from, 12. His glowing description of the grand banquet, 31. Leilel-ul-beraeth, the night on which it was believed the recording angels delivered up their accounts of the year, 299. Leileth-ul-cadr, the night supposed to be consecrated to ineffable mysteries,
"Let no man write my epitaph - let
my grave," 140. Liberty, some observations upon, in connection with Mr. Wilkes, 777. Dr. Franklin's account of the state of things in his time, 777. Lilies of Arabia, their peculiarities, 266. Lincoya, 324. Death of, 405. Lizard, the, description of the traces left by them on the sands of the De- sert, 269.
Llawrudd, the Red Hand, 315. Llewelyn, 347.
Locust-bird, the, particular account of this singular bird, 241. Locust, the, particulars respecting, 240.
Lodore, The Cataract of, 164.
"Lo I, the man who from the Muse did ask," 119.
"Lord! who art merciful as well as just," 143.
Lorraine, the city of, reputed to be fa- mous for its singers, 6.
King Henry the Fifth and the Hermit Lotus, the, of India, description of its of Dreux, 432.
King of the Crocodiles, The, 437.
Jews, persecution of the, remarks upon, King Ramira, 442. 631.
Jiggerkhar, the, or liver-eater, curious particulars relating to this Hindoo imposture, 387, 588.
Joachin, St., Legend of his visit to the saints in Limbo, 508.
JOAN OF ARC; a Poem in Ten Books, 1. Circumstances under which the poem was originally written, 1. Ori- ginal preface, 2. Joan's history as mysterious as it is remarkable, 2. Great difficulty of determining the real nature of her pretensions, 3. This mysteriousness renders the story peculiarly fit for poetry, 3. General faults of Epic Poems, 3. The Odyssey and the Iliad, 3. Reasons for prefer- ring Statius to Virgil, 3. The Italian Heroic poets, Tasso, &c., 3. The author's apology for reversing the prescribed order for an Epic Poem, 4. Various works published on the subject of this poem-some remarks
Machicolation, description of, 49. Mackinnon, Major-General, Lines to the memory of, 178. Madelon, story of, supposed to be re- lated by Joan of Arc, 9. MADOC: a Poem, in Two Parts, 313. Statement of the historical facts re- ferred to in the Poem, 313. Madoc in Wales: - The Return to Wales, 314. The Marriage Feast, 316. Cadwallon, 319. The Voyage, 321. Lincoya, 324. Erillyab, 326. The Battle, 330. The Peace, 332. Emma, 336. Mathraval, 337. The Gorsedd, 341. Dinevawr, 345. Llewelyn, 347.
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