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Sage, Le, his novels, 264, 265.
Sauks, the, the most humane of
all the Indian tribes, 120.
Scarlett, Mr., characterized, 80.
Schiller, translation of his drama

of William Tell, 344.
Scott, Sir W., his parallel of
Fielding and Smollet, 263.
His appreciation of Le Sage,
265. One of his secrets, in
respect to novel writing, 266.
His appreciation of Johnson,
267, 268.
Sea-elephants, abundant in the
South Shetland Islands, 107.
Character of, ib.
Sarpi Paolo, 357.
Selkirk, Lord, bis settlements,

123.

Lady, Paul Jones's Let-

ter to, 52.

's, Lord, reply, 53.
Serapis, the, description of its
engagement with a ship under
the command of Paul Jones,

55.

Shells of moluscous animals, ab-
surd mode of classing some
noticed, 125.
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley, his
Life by Thomas Moore, 248.
Two anecdotes of, by Michael
Kelly, 236, 237.

Sophie Ariele, a novel, by the
Baron de la Motte Fouqué,
426.

Silk, value of, as a wearable

commodity, 245.

Silk Company, the British, Irish,
and Colonial, 242.
Silk-worms, art of rearing, 241.
Propriety of their cultivation
in this country, 242.
Sismondi, 352, 353.
Sloth, the, not doomed to a life
of inconvenience and pain, 69.
Smith, Sir James, his English
Flora, 99.
Society, state of, in the time of
Mr. Evelyn, 304.

Soolima, travels in the, 11. King
of, described, 14.
Souvenir, Literary, or Cabinet
of Poetry and Romance, by
A. Watts, 279.
Spain, Canga Arguelles on the
finances of, 386.

-, population of, 387. In-
come of, ib. Shipping, ib.
Trade, 388.
Spring-guns, curious anecdote
in respect to this Bill, 23.
Statutes, great benefit that would
accrue from simplifying the,
169.

Stevenson, W. B., an Historical
and Descriptive Narrative of
Twenty Years' Residence in
South America, 67.
Stewart, Charles, his translation
of original Persian letters, 195.
Walking, anecdote of,

234.

Stolberg, Princess, 229.
Storace, Nancy, anecdote of,
234.*
Surgeons of London, an address
to the Members of the Royal
College of, 463.

T
Tableau des Moeurs Françaises
aux Temps de la Chevalerie,
&c, Par L. C. P. D. N., 416.
Tasso, his love for the Princess

Leonora of Este, 316.
Taxation, system of, observ-

ations in respect to, 329.
Thierry, A., translation of his

History of the Conquest of
England by the Normans, 138.
Timannee, Travels in the, by
Major Laing, 11.

Tiraboschi, 352, 353. 355, 356.
Tressan, Comte de, his anecdote
of Le Sage, 267.
Turberville, Sir George, his
translation of Tasso's Jeru-
salem Delivered, 310.

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N.W. of the United States,
and the Antilles, 66. An ab-
stract of, 67, 68.
Watts, Alaric, his Literary Sou-

venir, or Cabinet of Poetry
and Romance, 279.
Weddell, James, his Voyage to--

wards the South Pole, 103.
Wellington, Duke of, his opera-
tions in Spain alluded to, 134.
Wiffen, J, H., his Translation of
Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered,

309.
William I., his conduct towards

Harold, 142. His conduct
towards the English, 142,
143.

Williams, Mr., his motion rela-
tive to Chancery Abuses, 23.
Wiltshire, the Beauties of, by
J. Britton, 249.
Winnepeek Lake, forms a june-
tion between the Gulf of St.
Lawrence, Hudson's Bay,
and the Gulf of Mexico, 115.
Witnesses, on the examination
of, 71.
Wolsey, Cardinal, Henry VIII.
expresses his esteem for him
to Luther, 2.
Wordsworth, his Sonnet in praise
of Walton, 26.
Worship, religious, state of, in

the time of Mr. Evelyn, 302.
Wourali poison, the, 67, 68.
Wren, Sir Christopher, curious
passage in regard to, 307,

308.


ings in South America, the Zenoni, Abate, 353. ›

END OF VOL. CVIII.

LONDON:

Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode,
New-Street-Square.

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