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THE
QUARTERLY REVIEW.
VOL. LXXV.
PUBLISHED IN
DECEMBER, 1844, & MARCH, 1845.
LONDON:
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET.
1845.
Printed by WILLIAM CLOWES and SONS, Stamford Street.
CONTENTS
OF
No. CXLIX.
ART.
I.-A Bill for the better Regulation of Medical Practice
throughout the United Kingdom. (Prepared and
brought in by Sir James Graham and Mr. Manners
Sutton, and ordered by the House of Commons to be
printed, August 7, 1844.)
II. Reports of Cases argued and determined in the Consistory
Court of London; containing the Judgments of the
Right Honourable Sir William Scott. By John Hag-
gard, LL.D., Advocate.
The Law Magazine, or Quarterly Review of Jurisprudence.
No. 33. Article-Life of Lord Stowell
III.-Eōthen, or Traces of Travel brought Home from the East -
IV.-1. A Treatise on Painting, written by Cennino Cennini in
the Year 1437, with an Introduction and Notes by
Signor Tambroni. Translated by Mrs. Merrifield.
2. Lectures on Painting and Design. By B. R. Haydon,
Historical Painter
V.-1. Palm Leaves. By R. M. Milnes, Esq., M.P.
2. The Englishwoman in Egypt: Letters from Cairo,
written during a residence there in 1842, 3, and 4, with
E. W. Lane, Esq., author of The Modern Egyptians.'
By his Sister (Mrs. Poole).
3. The Women of England; their several Duties and Do-
mestic Habits. By Mrs. Ellis.
4. The Wives of England; their Relative Duties, Domes-
tic Influence, and Social Obligations. By the Author
of The Women of England.'
5. Characteristics of Women; Moral, Poetical, and Histo-
rical. With Fifty Vignette Etchings. By Mrs. Jame-
son.
6. The Romance of Biography; or, Memoirs of Women
loved and celebrated by Poets, from the days of the
Troubadours to the present age; a series of Anecdotes
intended to illustrate the influence which female Virtue
and Beauty have exercised over the characters and
writings of men of genius. By Mrs. Jameson
Page
- 1
32
77
94
VI.-1. Report from Her Majesty's Commissioners for Inquir-
ing into the Administration and Practical Operation of
the Poor Laws in Scotland.
2. Remarks on the Evidence taken before the Poor Inquiry
Commission for Scotland. By W. P. Alison, M.D.
3. On the Contagious Fever of 1843 in connexion with
Destitution. By W. P. Alison, M.D.
4. The Poor in Scotland, compiled from the Evidence
taken before the Scotch Poor Law Commission. By
Philip Pusey, Esq., M.P.
VII. The Ideal of a Christian Church considered in Comparison
with Existing Practice. By the Rev. W. G. Ward, M.A.,
Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford
VIII.-1. The Colonial Church Atlas.
2. A History of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Ame-
rica. By Samuel Wilberforce, M.A., Chaplain to
H. R. H. Prince Albert, and Archdeacon of Surrey.
3. Journal of Visitation by the Bishops of Montreal and
Toronto, 1842, 1843.-A Letter from the Lord Bishop
of Calcutta; and Letters from the Bishop of New Zea-
land. Addressed to the Society for the Propagation of
the Gospel in Foreign Parts.
4. Documents relative to the Erection and Endowment of
additional Bishoprics in the Colonies -
IX.-1. A Memoir of the Union and the Agitations for its Re-
peal, &c. By an Irish Catholic.
2. Ireland-the Union of 1801, 41 Geo. III., c. 27 (all
on one side), does and always will draw away from Ire-
land her Men of skill, genius, capital, and rank: all
who raise and distinguish a Nation. A Federal (the
only fair) Union between Great Britain and Ireland in-
evitable, and most desirable for both Islands. Lord
John Russell and the Whigs better Conservatives than
Sir Robert Peel and the Tories. By J. G. V. Porter,
Esq.
3. Federalism-its inapplicability to the wants and neces-
sities of the Country; its assumed impracticability con-
sidered, with Remarks and Observations on the Rise
and Progress of the present Repeal Movement in Ire-
land; in reply to J. G. V. Porter, Esq. By Francis
Wyse, Esq.
-
125
149
201
· 222
No. CL.
1.-1. A New Greek and English Lexicon; the words
alphabetically arranged; distinguishing such as are
poetical, of dialectic variety, or peculiar to certain
writers and classes of writers; with examples, literally
translated, selected from the classical authors. By
James Donnegan, M.D.
2. A Greek-and-English and English-and-Greek Lexicon :
with Addenda of new matter, and an Appendix ex-
planatory of scientific terms, &c. By George Dunbar,
M.A., F.R.S.E., and Professor of Greek in the Univer-
sity of Edinburgh.
3. A Greek-English Lexicon, based on the German work
of Francis Passow. By Henry George Liddell, M.A.,
Student of Christ-Church; and Robert Scott, M.A.,
sometime Student of Christ-Church, and late Fellow of
Balliol College.
4. A Lexicon, chiefly for the use of Schools. Abridged
from the Greek-English Lexicon of H. G. Liddell,
M.A., and R. Scott, M.A.
5. A Lexicon of the Greek Language, for the use of Col-
leges and Schools: containing,-1. A Greek-English
Lexicon, combining the advantages of an alphabetical
and derivative arrangement; 2. An English-Greek
Lexicon, more copious than any that has yet appeared.
To which is prefixed a concise Grammar of the Greek
Language. By the Rev. J. A. Giles, LL.D., late Fellow
of C. C. C., Oxon.
6. A Lexicon to Eschylus, containing a critical explana-
tion of the more difficult passages in the seven Tra-
gedies. By the Rev. William Linwood, M.A., M.R.A.S.,
Student of Christ-Church, Oxford
293
II.-Poems. By Frances Anne Butler (late Fanny Kemble) 325