by their officers, 169, 4; obtain leave from the war-office to attend a dissenling place of reorship, 164; he is cold-burned a second iimne, for adılressing a religious meeting ib. ; gains the notice of Lord and Lady Robert Manners, 165 ; or.. dered into military confinemeni for ab. sence from duty, ib. ; tried by courl mar- tial, 166 ; makes his own defence, ib. ; sentenced to be picketed, ib.; his manly firmness of conduct, ib. ; receives his discharge by the interierence of Lrd R. Manners, 167; Lecoines pastor of the buptist church at Amersham, 168 ; erects
a cotton manufaclory, ib.; his death, ib. Golownia's captivity in Japan, 379, el
seq. ; aurhor appointed by Russia to explore the KurikIsles, &c. 330; is seized with six others by the Japanese, 391, 2;. humanity of the natives towards the captives, 383; curious ac- count of their examination, 334, 5; their fruitless allempt to escape, 386,7; fur- ther remarkable kindness of the Ja.
panese ti them, 388 Gospel truth, Pike's consolations of, 173 Gossamer webs, 126; great height at
which they are found, 127 Grasshoppers kept in cuges by the Greeks,
for their song, 129 Greece, modern, a poem, 598, et seq. ;
its character, ib. ; the eriles from the Morea, 598, 9; Greece under the Turks,
600, 1 Grerk language, short introduction to,
468, 9 Greek lexicon of primitive words, by
the Rev. J. Boo:b, 469, et seg. Greeks, modern, of Asia Minor, 103 Groenekloof, a Moravian settlement in
South Africa, its population, &c. 406
Hebraica, Principia, 471,2 Henderson's Iceland, 21, et seq.; strik-
ing peculiarities of the country, ib. et seq. ; uature of Dr. H.'s mission, 23; welcomed by the islanders, 24 ; first view of the dire effects of subterraneous fires, ib. ; disadvantage occasioned by his late arrival, ib. ; plan of his intended journey, 25; plain of Thingvalla, the ancient supreme court of justice, ib. ; descriplion of the eruptions of the Geysers, 26, et seq. ; the new Geyser, 27, 8; sin- gular mode of obtaining premature ex- plosions, 28,9; desolate state of the country north east of Holum, 174 ; valley of Eya fiord, ib.; excelleut cha- racter of its inhabitants, ib.; their grateful emotions on being able to purchase copies of the New Testament, ib. ; exemplary conduct of the Sys. selmand, 175; Icelandic mode of spend- ing the Sunday, ib.; dispute b: tu een two distant churches, as to the right to an old copy of the Scriptures, 175, 6; author's interview with Thorlakson, the tra slator of Milion, 176; high stale of morality in the north of Iceland, ib. ; hospilable mode of providing for reduced families, 177; boiling springs at Reykium, ib.; description of the prosligious stream of lava occasioned by the eruplions of 1724 and 1730, 177, 8; the tremendo's Sulphur Mouna tain, its craier, black liquid pool, 8c. 179; various striking travelling ad- ventures, ib. ; terrific wooden bridge over an impetuous torrent, ib.; remark- able rope bridge still more tremendous, 180; phenomenon of a profane fa- mily, ib. ; Breidamark Yokül, the mountain of ice, 181, 2; its rapid progress towards the sea, 182; author passes a dangerous torrent flowing from beneath it, ib. ; another remarkable moving ice-mountain, 183; account of the desolating explosion of Skaftar Yokul, 184 ; jis striking appearance at a distance, ib.; leprosy prevalent in Iceland, 185 ; eruption of Kotlugiả Yokul, 186; Winter residence at Reyhia- vik, 187, 8; mode of passing the long evenings, 183; exiracl, 159; surtur. brand or mineralized wood, 190; crater of Eildborg, or the fortress of fire, ib.; Snaefell, 191 ; description of a mountain disruption, 192; discovery of Thorolf's court of justice, 194; bl-istein, or stone of sacritice, ib. ; islands of the Breida. fiord, 253 ; ertensive bed of surlurhrand, 253, 4; range of morplains illonined by a midnight sun, 255; hot bath of Snorro Sturluston, 255, 6; valley or
Hackett's narrative of the expedition
which sailed tojoin the South American patriots, 575, et seq. ; character of the war in South America, 576; state of the independent armies,577,8; barbarily of the royalists, 578; wretched clothing of the independents, 579; their aversion to foreign aid, ib. ; conditions of en- trance into the patriotic service, 580; five corps of Brilish volunteers thal sailed for South America, their uniforms, equip- ments, Sc. 580,1; failure of the expe- *dition, and the misfortunes and dis-
persions of the party, 582,3 Hawksley's protestant reformation com- memorated, 275, el sag.; author's sub- ject, 276; duly of duly appreciating the principles of the protestant reformation, 277 ; principles of protestant noncon. formity neglected in the present day, ib.
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smoke, 256 ; curious account of the nau- Islanders of Scilly, their extreme wretch. tical mice of Iceland, 257; cavern of Surt.. edness, 493, et seg, shallir, 258; theroaring mount, 259; con- Israeli's, D', curiosities of literature, neaion belween its noise and the eruprion 587, et seg. of gets of steam and waler, 259; striking Italian erening, poetic description of, 52, superiority of the Icelandic clergy over those of other countries, 961,2; Italians, Eustace's private opinion that their commerce of Iceland, 262
character was bad, 278 Henrietta, Queen of Charles the First, her
character not understood by Home, Jails of Ilchester and Bristol, compared, 88, 591; engages with the Pope, and the King of France, to educate her sons in the catholic Japanese mode of interrogating prisoners, religion, ib.; the King's dismissal of her 384, 5 - French household, 598
Japan, Rickorl's account of Golownin's Hobhouse's illustrations of the fourth captivity in, 379
capto of Childe Harold, 323, et seq. ; Japanese, their great humanity to some contents of the work, 323; remarks Russian captives, 383, 388 on the author's boast of having dis. Jerram on the impolicy and tendency of corered the cause of Tasso's imprison- the poor Jaws, 202, er seg. ment, ib.; bis abuse of quotations Jews, their stated sacrifices, 354, 5 occurring in his remarks on the burn Jones's biblical cyclopædia, 266, et seg.; ing of Rome by the Goths, ib. et seg. ; description of Corinth, 267, 8; its ütera. the devastations under Genseric, Viti. dure, 268; characler of Gallio, 268, 9; ges, and Totila, 329, et seq, ; his criti remarks on the Christian church, its cism of Muratori, Gibbon, and Tira institutes and ministers, 269; inquiry boschi examined, 332, et seq.
whether the present order of Christian Hottentot rouman, account of one extremely churches is consonant to thal of the primi- corpulent, 414
tive churches, 270; author's definition of Hunt's foliage, 484, et seq. s author's ub conscience, ib.
scure intimations of his principles, Journey from Virginia to the IHinois, by 485; beautiful stangas on a sick child, Morris Birkbeck, 33, et seg. 486; poetical extract from Words: Juvenile delinquency, causes of the worth, 487, 8; Wordsworth's just estic alarming increase of, 83 mate of the trae use of the ancient mythology, 488; character of the au Kinneir's journey through Asia Minor, thor's poetic talents, 489; his Into Armenia, and Koordistan, 97, et seq.; cation, as characteristic of his style, highly advantageous situation of ib. ; further extract, 491; the Nephe these provinces, 98; wretched state liads, a song, 491, 2
of their government, ib. ; author's
plan, 99; visits Zerni George, 100; Iceland, Henderson's journal of a resi. present state of Nice, 101 ; descriplion
dence in, 21, et seq. see Henderson. of eastern posting, ib. ; expeditious tra. Ice mountain in Iceland, progressive move. velling of the Sourajees, 101, 2; an. ment of one lowards the sea, 181,2
thor encounters a mail Dervish, 102; Idiot boy, remarkable propensity in one to Asiatic Greeks, character of, 103; en- bees, 125
campment of Turkmans, 104 ; their Ilchester jail, admirable management in the character, ib. ; Angora, ib. ; its va-
conducling of it, 54, 6; contrasted with rious changes, ib.; neighbouring Bristol jail, 88, 9
country not tributary to the Porte, ib.; Illinois, Birkbeck's letters from, 169, ed independent government of Chapaan seq.
Ogłu, ib. ; wretched state of the ag. Inns, American, east of the mountains, 39 cient Cæsarea, 106; Tarsus, 107; Inquiry into some curious subjects of ruinous state of Scandaroon, 107, 8;
history, &c. by T. Moir, 385, et seq. Antioch, 108; its ancient walls very Insane world, 55, et seq.; design of the extensive, ib. ; Latakia, 109; san- writer, ib.; extract, 56, et seq.
guinary revolution at Aleppo, ib. ; Insects, motions of, 125; have no voices, account of “a peculiar people called Ancy. 128; their noises, 128
ras, ib. ; the Druses of Mount Libanus, Introduction to the Greek language, 468, 110; fine appearance of Nicosi, in Cya
prus, 111; present state of the island, Iron-wood, African, its great strength, ib. ; Caraman, 113; Konieh, ib. i 112
phenomenon of a Tarkisb attempt to
restore a mutilated piece of statuary, Gnadenthal, ib. ; visited by a Christian ib. ;. Black Castle of Opium, 114 ; Coffre roman, 408, 9; character of the Boursa, the ancient Prusa, 115; mi boors, 409; execution of five rebel boors, serable state of the author, 115, 6; bis 410,11; strength of the iron wood, 412; return to Pera, 116; renews his jour. defile of Trekata'kou, ib.; composition ney, in company with Mr. Chavasse, of the rock, ib. ; Mr. Fereira's danger- .223 ; visits Terekli or Heraclea, 224 ; ous encounter with a liger, 413 ; ac- crosses the Kizil Ermak, or Halys, 225 count of an extremely large Hottentot wo-
6; Trebisond, 228; Mr. K.'s life man, 414, 15; new missionary station • threatened by his Greek servant, ib.; the chosen, 415 ; battle between two parties party cross the Armenian mountains, of baboons, 417; curious-noises on ship- 228, 9; and the Euphrates, 229 ; plaio bourd, 418 of Érzeroum, ib. ; interest of the na- Lava, extensive streams of, see Hender- tives in the fate of Bonaparte, ib. ; son's Iceland city of Erzeroum, 230; the river Mo. Law and gospel, Colquhoun's essay on, rad or water of desire, ib; visit an en 30, et seq. canpment of Koords, ib. ; hostile visit Lectures on scripture doctrines, by W. from the lesgæ, 230, 1; Betlis, 232; B. Collyer, D.D. 151, et seq. the Beg or gove, nor, ib. ; curious account Leprosy, its prevalence in some parts of of a transmulation of four leaden bullets Iceland, 185 into gold, by a persecuted Arabian philoso Lesgæ, a people of Armenia, 230,1 pher, 233, 4; alarming illness of Mr. Letter to an English vobleman, 271, et Chavasse, 235; harassing difficulties seq. ; remarks on emancipation, 272; of their journey to Mousnl, 237, et opinion of Lord Grenville on the ca- seq. ; the Zezidees, ib. ; death of Mr. tholic claims, 273; claims of the pro-
Chadasse, 238; Mr. K. enters Bagdad, testant dissenters, ib. ; temporal power jib. ; Bussorah, 239; arcives at Bom. of the church of Rome, 874; concessions bay, ib.
justly demanded from the Roman catholics, kirby and Spence's introduction to Eu 274, 5
tomology, 116, et seq.; subjects of the Lexicon, Greek, of primitive words, 469, present volume, 117; perfect and im 70 perfect societies of insects, ib.; ex Lord's sopper, Brown's discourses on the amples of each, ib. et seq. ; first esta dispensation of, 584, 5 blishment of a colony of Termiles, 118, 9; courage and baltles of ants, 120; three M'William on the origin, operation, and materials ccllected by bees, 121, 2; prevention or cure of the dry rot, 71, longue of the bee, ib.; the propolis, 123 ; et seq. ; opposes the principles of Mr.
the bee's faculty of finding the hive, 123, Knight and Sir H. Davy in regard to ; 4; bees made use of to disperse a mob, ib.; a supposed effect of light on wood, 72;
remarkable propensity of an idiot boy to differs also from the latter on the tex- bees, 125 ; on the motions of insects, ture of oak, ib. ; fungi, the effect as ib. ; gossamer webs, 126; great height well as the causes of the dry rot, 73; at which they are found, 127; ordinary means by which the disease is con- rate of the flight of house flies, ib. ; in veyed into buildings, ships, &c., 73; sects have no voices, 128 ; noises of in modes of prevention and cure, 73, 4;
sects, 128, 9; the death watch, ib.; on obtaining a uniform circulation of i grasshoppers kept by the Greeks in cages air, 74 ; apparatus for that purpose to for their song, 129
be used on shipboard, ib. ; aynual va. Koordistan, see Kinneir's journey
lue of timber cut down in the United
Kingdoms, 75; excessive importation Lambe, Dr., his violent denih, 592, 3
of timber, 76; on planting the waste Latakia, its remarkable ruin, 109
lands, ib. Latrobe's visit to South Africa, 401, et Maid, the young, and her mother': bible,
seg. ; great importance of the Cape 389, see Lucy Smith as a settlement, 402 ; success of the Maintenance, separate, of the children Moravian missionaries, 402, 3; their of the poor, 426, et seq. judgement in selecting missionary sta. Manson, Madame, memoirs of, written tions, 403 ; cause of Mr. Latrobe's by berself, 59, el seq.; murder of M. visit to Africa, 404; his arrival at. Fualdes, 59; author's knowledge of the Groenekloof, 406; its population, &c. facts attending his violent death, 60 ib. ; Hottentot's mode of celebrating the Mearns's principles of Christian evidence author's birlitonlay, 407; proceeds to 305, et seq.; origin of the present work,
New Geyser, description of its erupiion, 27,
et seq. Nice, fornierly capital of Bythinia, its
present desolate state, 101 Nicosia in Cyprus, its beautiful appearance,
111 Nobleman, English, a letter to, in refer-
ence to the Catholic question, 271
507; assertion of Dr. Chalmers that the existence of the Deity cannot be ascertained independently of revela. tion, ib.; consequences of the Doctor's reasoning, 508 ; true effect of the his. torical evidence of Christianity, ibo; legitimate deductions of reason from a consideration of supernatural phenomena, 509; loose reasoning of Dri c. in re- gard to the Atheist, 509, 10; the Atheist not to be convinced by the ostensible agent's crplanation of miraculous phenomena, 51l; the conversion of the Atheist, who sees no design in nature, not to be effecled by miracles, ib. ; Dr. C.'s different mode of reasoning in his discourses on the modern astronomy, 514 ; fatal conse-
ence of admitting experience to be the only source of human knowledge, 515; attributes of causes legitimately deduced from the character of known effects, ib.; application of this principle
to the existence, &c. of a Deity, 516: fur- - ther objection to Dr. C.'s principle of
reasoning, 516, 17; the internal evi- dence of Christianity the most effica- cions in producing a conviction of its
Divine origin, ib. Memoirs of Fawcett, 240, et seq. Mendicants, called Tom o’ Bedlams, 596;
song of one, 596,7 Mice of Iceland, curious account of their
nautical expeditions, 257 Minutes of evidence taken before the
committee appointed to consider the petitions relating to ribbon weavers,
202, et seq. Modern Greece, a poem, 598, et seq. Moir's inquiry into some interesting sub.
jects of history, &c. 585, et seq.; origin
of the titles among the Saxons, 586, 7 Moon, mountains of, uncertainty in re-
gard to their existence, 430 Moral state of Iceland, 21, 176 Moravian missionaries, their great suc
cess, 406 Morea, exiles os, 598, 9 Morris, the Rer. Ricbard, Godwin's life
of, 160, et st9.; his severe military per- secntions on account of his religious
conduct, ib ; see Godwin's life, &c. Moss-troopers, summary mode of punishing
them, 319 Mythology, its true use in modern poetry,
438
Observations on the circumstances which
influence the condition of the labour.
ing classes of society, 202, et sig. Ocean, apostrophe to, by Lord Byron, 53, 4 Off-islands of Scilly, report of the mi.
series of, 493, et seq. Opium, Black Castle of, 114 Oraefa, Yokul, the highest mountain of
Iceland. 181. Origin of litles among the Sarons, 586 Ottoman dominions of Asia Minor,
wretched state of their government,
98, 9 Outram's dissertations on sacrifices, 550,
et seq. ; author's opinion of the origin of sacrifices, 350, 1; nature and design of the temple, 351 ; ministers of the oblations among the Jews, 332; cor. ban, a terin designating all the things offered to God before the altar, 352; animals offered in sacrifice by the Jews, 353; the four animal sacrifices, ib. ; stated sacrifices of the Jews, 354,5; types, 355; typical relation of the sacrifices, 356; on the sacrifice of Christ, ib.; bis priesthood, ib; on the sacrificial work of Christ as effecting the salvation of man, 357
Pananti's narrative of a residence in
Algiers, 472; et seq. ; degraded state of Italy, ib.; misery of the Chris- tian slaves in Barbary, 473; cause of Signor Pananti's captivity by the Algerines, ib; conduct of the Bar. barians to the captives, 474 ; their cru. elty to a Captain of a Tunisian cor- vette, 475; melancholy fate of a young lady, one of the captives, ib; appearance of the captives before the re- gency, 475,6; himane conduct of the English Consul, 476; condemnalian and imprisonment of the author and his le lios- sujerers, it ; wretchellness of a Neano- litan nobleman, a raptive at Algiers, 478 ; liberation of the author, with the total loss of his property, 478, 9; treatment of the Christian captives al Algiers, 479, 80; liberation of all the captives in consequence of Lord Exmouth's sac-
cessful attack on the city, 481 Patriots, South American, Hackett's
Nawarth castle, 320; its dungeon, ib. Neapolitan nobleman, wrelched slate of one
in slavery at Algiers, 478 Nepheliads, a song, 491,2 .
narrative of an expedition that sailed
to join them, 575; et seq. Paul's school, St. account of its foun-
ders, foundation, and scholars, &c. See Dr. Carlisle on endowed grammar
schools, &c. Peculiarity, remarkable, of the Icelanders, in
providing for decayed families, 177 Persecution, the subjects of, 483 ; the nature
of, ib. Pike's consolations of gospel truth, 173 Pleasures, domestic, by F. B. Vaux, 61-2 Pocklington school, statement of the peruer-
sion of its revenues, 362 Poor laws, pamphlets on, 201, et seq. ;
poverty and its causes, 202,3; pau- perism not dependent on population and provision, 203 ; labour and capi- tal necessary to the production of any kind of commodity, 204 ; the labourer bas no right to enforce employment, 204, 5; is entitled to a just remune- ration for his service, ib. ; injustice of the capitalist in reducing wages below the means of subsistence, 206 ; inju. rious consequence of parish relief, 208 ; poverty of the ribbon weavers of Co- ventry, and its consequences, 209, 9; Mr. Hale's report of the state of Spital- fields, 210 ; poor laws not the primary cause of poverty, 214; Mr. Courte- nay's three considerations prior to abolishing the code of poor laws, ib.; statute right of the poor to claiin sustenance of the parish, 215; origin nal pretence for appropriating livings to religious houses, ib. ; mendicity av attendant on superstition, ib; acts against vagrants, ib; begging by licence allowed, 216; origin of the poor laws, ib; Mr. Nicolls's remarks on the poor laws, ib, et seq. ; prevalence of mendicity in the Italian states, 218; note; claim of discharged seamen to legal provision, 218; folly and danger of leaving the maintenance of the poor to private benevolence, 219, 20; consequences of the subscriptions for the Spital-fields weavers, 221; singu. lar remarks of Mr. Jerram on the poor laros, 222 Poor laws, third report from the select
committee on, 420 et seq.; contents of the report, ib. ; projects for removing the radical evils of the system, 421; evil consequence of mixing relief with wages, 422; two modes of obviating it considered, 422, 3; proposition of enacting local bills, 424 ; obstacles to such a regulation, 425; separate maintenance of the children of the
poor, 426 ; its necessarily heavy ex- pense, 426,7; objections of Mr. Nicolls, to a separate maintenance of the children of the poor, 428, 9; further objections stated, 431 ; tendency of schools to perpetuate the existing evils, 433; suggestion for combining the higher and middling class in the exe- cution of the poor laws, 434; select vestries not analogous to kisk sessions, 435 ; election and duties of the elders, under the session, ib.; management of their parochial poor's fund, 436; change to be made in general vestries, accord- ing to Mr. Sturges Bourne's bill, 436,7; proposal for returning to the old law, with regard to settlements, 437; Messrs. Nicoll and Courtenay's objections to parochial benefit socielies, 437, 8; Mr. Courtenay's proposition for encouraging friendly societies, 440, 1; on the poor of the dissenters, 442; great relief afforded to parishes by dissenting places of worship, 443; evil tendency ou the feelings, of ab- stract speculations on the state of the
poor, 443 Popery, Ward's sermon on the reforma-
tion from, 275, et seq. Porden's, Miss, Arctic expeditions, a
poem, 601, et seq.; anticipatious of the Quarterly Reviewers, 603; done into verse by the present writer,
602, 3 ; further extracts, 603, 4 Port Praya, capital of the Cape Verde
islands, 454 Posts and posting in the Turkish empire,
stale of, 101 Princess Charlotte of Wales, Lord Byron's
lines on her death, 51, 2 Principia Hebraica, 471, 2 Prison discipline, Buxton on the effects
of, 82, et seq. Propolis of bees, ils use, 123 Psyche, or the soul; a poem, 263, 4
Ramparts and wall between England
and Scotland, 308 Reformation from Popery, Ward's ser-
mon on, 275, el seg. Reformation, Protestant, Hawksley's
sermon on, 275, et seq, Reykium, its boiling springs, 177 Roaring-mount, in Iceland, connerion be-
tween ils noise and the eruption of jels of
steam, 260 Rome, burning of by the Goths, Mr.
Hobhouse's remarks on it examined,
323, et seq. Rope bridge over a tremendous pass in Ice.
land, 180
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