Jewsbury's, Maria Jane, letters to the young, 75, et seq.; extracts, 76, et seq. Jodelen, account of them, 174; cruel su- perstition prevalent among them, ib. Johnson's specimens of the lyrical, de- scriptive, and narrative poets of Great Britain, &c. 368, et seq.; the com- piler's account of the design, &c. of the work, 368, 9; remarks on the selec- tion, 370, 1; living poets, whose works have furnished selections, 371; the war of the league, 372, 3.
Jones's Bishop Hall, his life and times, $62, et seq.; observations on the state of the times during the life of Bishop Hall, 362, 3; character and execution of the work, 363, 4; the episcopacy of the apostolic, and that of the present day considered, 366, 7.
Journal, evangelical church, 50, et seq.; See Neologism, German. Journey from Constantinople to England, Walsh's narrative of a, 84, et seq. Juvenile forget me not, the, 454, et seq.
Kennedy's, Capt. Vans, essays on Persian literature, &c. 124; on the attempt made by the emperor Akbar, to intro- duce a new religion into India, ib. Keepsake for MDCCCXXIX, 569; character of its embellishments, 571.
Lambert, the republican, made prisoner by Ingoldstadt, and breaking up of his party,
Law, Hindoo, three considerable errors en- tertained by Europeans respecting it, 18, et seq.
Le Bas's sermons on various occasions,
&c. 158 et seq.; on nonconformity to the world, 158, et seq.; his address to the younger part of his auditory, 163, et seq.; exordium to his sermon on the ascension of Christ, 165, 6; address to some young men going out to the land of idolatry, 167, et seq.; on the nature of repentance, 170, et seq.
Letters addressed to a young person in India,
by Lieut. Col. John Briggs, 281, et seq. Life, waste of, at Constantinople, 93. Lines to a friend on his returning to Ceylon as a missionary, after a visit to England, 474, 5.
Lines written upon the death of the Princess Charlotte, 468, 9.
Literary forget me not, 453, et seq.; con- tributors to the work, 454; its literary quality, ib.; superior pieces, 455; ex- tract from "an hour too many", ib., et seq.; time's takings and leavings, by Bernard Barton, 458; subjects and execution of the plates, 476.
Loonar, the salt lake of, Lieut. Alexander's visit to, 25, 6; analysis of its waters, 26. Loudon's magazine of natural history, &c.
189, et seq.; inducements to the study of natural history, 189; tendency of the present popular mode of education, ib.; natural history recommended as a means of improving it, ib.
Mackenzie, Sir Alexander, liberally vindi- cated by Capt. Franklin, with a strong testimony of his merits, 386. M'Neile's times of the Gentiles, 193, et seq.; remarks on the present dispensation, 218; Mr. Orme on the consequence of limiting the present dispensation to a short period, 218; Christianity has not been progressive, in reference to the great promise of universal blessedness, 219; cause of it, ib.; remarks on the author's statement, 221, 2.
Madras, transactions of the literary society of, 1, et seq.; contents of the work,
Mahrattas, Captain Duff's history of the, 281, et seq.; journal of Bishop Heber, 282; perplexing nature of the geogra- phy, &c. of India, ib.; advantages pos- sessed by Captain Duff, for writing the history of India, 283; outline of the political history of the Mahrattas, 284; the earliest Mahratta sovereignty, 285; reign of Shalivahan, ib.; the peculiar division of their country a singular feature in the social polity of the Hindoos, 287; Hindoo account of the original mode by which a village was peopled, 288, 9; list, &c. of taxes, 289; Colonel Wilks's ac- count of the component parts of the kingdoms in India, ib.; origin of the Rajpoot tribes, 290; the Rajpoot princes poets, ib. note; long obscurity of the Mahrattas, as a nation, ib.; hereditary feuds prevalent amongst them, 292; Shahjee's rise to power, ib.; birth and education of his son Sivajee, 293; his lawless habits, ib.; rapid progress of his conquests, 295; visits Aurungzebe at Delhi, 296; escapes from Delhi in dis- guise, and returns to the Deccan, ib.; extends his conquests at the expense of the Moguls, ib.; his death, ib.; Captain Duff's view of his character, 296, 7; Aurungzebe's testimony to his genius, 297; extent of his territories at time of his death, ib.; subsequent de- cline of the Mahratta power, 298; in- crease of predatory power, ib.; conquests and death of Aurungzebe, 298, 9; his character, 299; termination of the Mo- gul empire, under his son Shah Allum, 300; predatory expeditions of the Mah-
rattas, ib.; political state of the country at that period, ib.; causes of the rapid increase and of the stability of the Mah- ratta power, 300, 1; the sovereignty of Hindoostan transferred to Shao, the Mahratta chief, 301, 2; account of An- gria, the pirate, ib.; his letter to Captain Boone, 302, 3; revenue of the principal Mahratta officers, 304, 5; effects of their judicial system, 305, 6; political state of India in 1740, 306, 7; its pre- sent state, 307; subjects of the Au- thor's second and third volumes, 308; character, &c. of the work, ib. Malcolm on the Hindoo festival of the Dusrah, 144; account of the human sacrifices formerly offered by Kurradee Brahmins, ib., et seq.
Manna, description of a substance so called, and of the insect that produces it, 6. Man, Stewart's philosophy of the active and moral powers of, 222, et seq. Marocco, Beauclerk's journey to, 279. Mausoleum of Sultan Ibrahim II. 129. Mahomed Shah, 128. Memorials, pastoral; selected from the manuscripts of the late Rev. J. Ryland, D.D., 537, et seq.; reflections on the transitory nature of the regrets for the pious dead, 538; the departed who ob- tain a permanent remembrance not gene- rally the benefactors of mankind, 538, 9; some bright exceptions occasionally occur, 539; doubtful motives of some biographers, 540; character of the late Dr. Ryland, 541, 2; his theology, 542; observations on Mr. Hall's funeral ser- mon for Dr. R., 543; nature of the pre- sent work, 544.
Metaphysics, on the affinity between the Hindoo and the Greek, 13. Miritol Memalik; or, mirror of countries, Hammer's notice of, 123. Morgan's brief history of the life and la- bours of the Rev. T. Charles, late of Bala, 445, et seq.; schools in Wales es- tablished by the Rev. Griffith Jones, 445; fate of those schools, ib.; Mr. Charles institutes circulating schools, 445, 6; he afterwards forms Sunday schools, 446; his affectionate attention to the children, ib.; his reasons for first teach- ing children to read their vernacular tongue, 446, 7; extract from his journal, written during his visit to Ireland, 448, et seq.; he applies to the Bartlett's Buildings society to publish a Welsh edi- tion of the bible, 451, 2; consequent proceedings of the venerable society, 452; their ultimate determination strong- ly connected with the origin of the Bri- tish and Foreign Bible Society, ib.; Mr.
Charles requested to prepare a copy of the Welsh bible for the press, 452; Dr. Gaskin's opposition to the printing of his copy, ib.; recent abuse of Mr. Charles's memory by the Quarterly Re- view, 453.
Morison's exposition of the book of Psalms, 375, et seq.; the ancient dispen- sations were of a more spiritual charac- ter than is sometimes supposed, 375, 6; the book of Psalms a testimony of the pure devotion of the ancient Jewish church, 376; the book of Psalms supe- rior to all books of the kind for grandeur and majesty, ib.; treatises on the book of Psalms, 377, 8; character and design of the present work, 379; illustrative extract, 380, 1.
Mont Blanc, Auldjo's narrative of an ascent to the summit of, 146, et seq.
Names given by the Turks to the different people residing among them, 85, 6. Neologism, the German, 50, et seq.; re-
print of the evangelical church journal, ib.; Germany, the birth-place of the re- formation, 50; the spirit of popery alien from that of Christ, 52; the doctrines of Luther, &c. cherished through protestant Germany till within half a century, ib.; list of some of the eminent German theologians, ib.; the theology of Ger- many infected with the philosophy of Aristotle, 53; Semler, a great instru- ment in effecting the revolution in Ger- many, 53, 4; coadjutors of Semler, ib.; ascendancy of their opinions, ib.; the literary journals, &c. under their power, 55; Luther's principles nearly eradicated, ib.; adherents of the doctrines of the reformation, ib.; Harms publishes a new edition of the Theses of Luther, 56; causes a counter revolution, ib.; cause of the triumph of the Neologists, 56, 7; Semler's education and mode, of study, ib., et seq.; systems of theology desirable, 58; they should be biblical, ib.; rise of rationalism, the prevailing system of the Neologists, ib.; Dr. Wegscheider's Institutiones, ib.; coun- teracting efforts of the friends of the evangelical cause, 59; the King of Prus- sia friendly to the genuine principles of the reformation, 59; origin of the Evan- gelical Church Journal, ib.; prospectus of the work, ib. et seq.; Dr. Hengsten- berg's coadjutors in the present work, 63; observations in reference to the im- plied disapprobation of the old systems of theology in Germany, 64, et seq.; letter from Professor Stuart on some errors in a late article in the Eclectic
Review op German Neology, 69, et seq.; reply of the Reviewer, 73, et seq. New year's gift, and juvenile souvenir, 454, et seq.
Nicolas's notitia historica, 154, et seq.; the mode of writing the civil and the historical year, before the alteration of the style, explained, 154, 5; contents of the se- cond division of the work, 155. Nile, Delta of the, Sir Wm. Drummond's opinion of the formation of the, 44; derivation of its name, 46, note. Noel's brief inquiry into the prospects of the church of Christ, &c., 193, et seq.; the Author's statement of some probable objections to his work, 193, 4; general design of the inquiry, 194; remarks of Mr. Erskine on prophecy, 195; the kingdom of Christ stated by the Author to be contemporaneous with the day of judgement, 196, 7; the return of our Lord to this world, generally admitted by Christians, 197; the scenes of our Lord's sufferings stated to be that of his predicted personal reign, 198; remarks on this assertion, 198, 9; Mr. Noel's explanation of St. Peter's prediction, 199; Dr. Burnet on the predicted de- struction of the world, 200, 1; on the time and object of the advent of our Lord, 201, et seq.; inquiry into the just interpretation of our Lord's words to the penitent thief, 206, et seq.; the Author's scheme of interpretation appears to post- date the reign of Christ, 209; excellent spirit in which the Author writes, 210; on the design of unfulfilled prophecy, 211; danger from a disproportionate pursuit of prophetic inquiries, 212; Howe on the necessity of setting our affections on a better state of things, 213; the Author's opinion of the effects of his views of the advent of Christ, 214; remarks on our indistinct notion of hea- ven, 214, 5; Dr. Chalmers on the hap- piness of heaven, 215; the Author's hy- pothesis makes heaven more distant, 216; the duty of Christians to dis- seminate the gospel through the world, 217.
Nollekens, and his times, 525, &c. Nonconformity to the world, Le Bas's re- marks on, 158, et seq. Northampton, Baker's history and antiqui-
ties of the county of, 233, et seq. North-west passage, the question of the, as an object of scientific curiosity, suffi- ciently solved, 385.
Notitia historica, 154, et seq.
Ode on leaving Scotland, by W. Kennedy, 460, 1.
Officers, custom-house, in Russia, severity of the, 490.
Origines, by Sir Wm. Drummond, 38, et seq. Organs, digestive, Cooke's practical and pathological inquiry into the sources and effects of derangement in the, 310, et seq.
Palace of the Grand Duke Michael, de- scription of the, 502, et seq.
Paris, and its environs, from drawings by Pugin, 478, et seq. Parriana, 561, et seq.
Pearce on the ways and manners of the Abyssinians, 123, 4.
Petersburgh, St., panoramic view of, 499, et seq.
Pilgrims, the spirit of the, reprint from the, 50, et seq.; see Neologism, Ger-
Phantom, bilious, remarkable account of,
Planché's descent of the Danube, from Ratisbon to Vienna, 173, et seq.; mode of navigating the Danube, 174; the Jodelen, ib.; singular superstition preva- lent among them, ib.; the English the only people who have no idea of singing in parts, 175; banks of the Danube, from Ratisbon to Straubing, ib.; Pas- sau, the ancient Castra Batava, ib.; scenery of the banks of the river down from Passau, 170, 1; the grandest views upon the Rhine inferior to those upon the Danube, 177, 8; description of the Strudel and Wirbel, 179, 80. Poets, British, Croly's beauties of the, 868, et seq.
the lyrical, descriptive, and narra- tive, of Great Britain, Johnson's selec- tions of, 368, et seq.
Poor-rate, moral evil of it, 156, 7. Pope, the, Tynedale's account how he in- vaded the empire, 422.
Portrait of Christian candour, 358, et seq. Portrait of his Russian Imperial Majesty, 493, 4.
Princes, the great, of India, all base born but the Peishwa, 265.
Pringle's friendship's offering, 458, et seq. Printing, the art of, its rapid progress, 153, 4. Prison discipline society, seventh report of the, &c., 545, et seq.; extracts from Bishop Blomfield's serinon, preached for the benefit of the society, 545, & seq.; repentance of itself has no power to avert divine vengeance, 545; the two modes by which the prevention of crime is to be accomplished, 546, 7; peculiar case of the juvenile delinquent, 547; on the increase of juvenile delinquency, in con- nexion with the progress of education,
&c., 548; testimony of the Rev. Mr. Brown, that ignorance is productive of crime, 548, 9; inadequacy of the exist- ing means of education, &c., 549; pau- perism a sufficient cause of the increase of crime, 550; other causes adverted to by Bishop Ryder, 550, 1; extracts from the parliamentary documents of commit- ments, &c., 551, 2; excellent charge of the Bishop of Lichfield, 552. Psalms, Morison's exposition of the book of, 375, et seq.
Pugin's Paris, and its environs, 478, et seq.
Rajpoot princes of India frequently poets,
Recensio synoptica annotationis sacræ, by the Rev. T. S. Bloomfield, 428, et seq. Redford's memoirs, &c. of the late Rev. John Cooke, 552, et seq.; sketch of Mr. Cooke's early life, 553, et seq.; his con- version, 554, 5; base conduct of his uncle, 555; his progression in private devotion, 555, 6; his intimacy with Win. Huntington, 556, 7; cause of its termi- nation, 557; remarkable anecdotes, 558; his resemblance to Mr. Cecil in preaching and personal character, 559, 60; memo- randum of Sir Egerton Leigh, 560, 1; extract from a letter to Mr. Fuller, 561. Reformers, English and Scotch, Russell's
works of the, 414, et seq.
Religion, the Russian, Mr. Rae Wilson's observations on, 492.
Repentance, Le Bas on the nature of, 170, et seq.
Report, the seventh, of the committee of the society for the improvement of prison discipline, &c. 545, et seq.
Rhine, the grandest views upon, inferior to those upon the Danube, 177, 8. Rickards's India, &c., 260, et seq. See India.
Richardson's, Dr., account of his expedi-
tion to explore the north coast of North America, 385, et seq. See Franklin's narrative, &c.
Rodney's coolness in fight, instance of it,
Romans, epistle to the, Terrot and Erskine
on the, 508, et seq.; the real character of the theology of the epistle to the Romans, still a matter of polemical de- bate, 509; principal sources of the sup- posed difficulty, ib.; remarks of the Bi- shop of Chester on the peculiarity of the doctrines of the New Testament, when they were first taught, 510: the Pauline doctrine of justification by faith prevails most where the Scripture is most read, &c., ib.; conflicting opinions of the two classes of Protestants, respect-
ing the doctrine in St. Paul's writings, ib.; the doctrine of justification by faith boldly asserted by the early Protestant reformers, 511; introduction of a court- ly divinity at the restoration, ib.; pre- valence in a certain party of a sort of semi-pelagianism, at the present time, 512; opinion of Mr. Erskine, that the opponents of the doctrine of justification by faith have not been kindly or fairly answered, ib.; his statement of their ob- jections, 512, 3; his protest against these objections, 514, 5; design and charac- ter of Mr. Terrot's work, 515; specimen of his paraphrase, 516; the ear strongly attached to the phraseology of the re- ceived version, 516, 7; extracts from Mr. Terrot's translation, with critical re- marks on them, 517, et seq.; his para- phrase and remarks on Rom. chap. vi. 1, 519; opinions of Mr. Erskine on the same point, 521; remarks on his interpretation, 522; statement of the general sense of the passage, ib.; cha- racter of Mr. Erskine's essays, 523, 4; he errs in his definition of justification, ib.; extracts illustrative of his fervent piety, 524, et seq.
Roubiliac, his chief excellence as an artist, 533. See Nollekens.
Russell's works of the English and Scotch
reformers, 414, et seq.; superior merit of some of the reformers as biblical commentators, 415; character of Tyn- dale as a biblical divine, ib.; extracts from his works, 416, et seq.; on allego- ries, 417; their use, ib.; caution respect- ing them, 418; scripture has but one sense, a literal one, ib., et seq.; on obedi- ence to God's word, 420, 1; observations on his practice of prelates, 421; offices of bishop and deacon, 421, 2; how the pope invaded the empire, 422, 3; other subjects treated of, 423; character and proceedings of Cardinal Wolsey, 423, et seq.; notice of the Author's notes, 426; his remarks on the effects of the Aristo- telian ethics, 427.
Russia, travels in, &c. 481, et seq.; anti- cipations indulged by the lovers of sci- ence on the breaking out of the war between the Russians and the Turks, 481; disappointment at the close of the campaign, 432, 3; inquiry into the pro- bable causes of its failure, 483; actual force of the Russian army, 484, 5; forced marriages among the boors for the sup- ply of the army, ib.; melancholy ca- tastrophe, ib.; finances of Russia, 485; a want of moral principle among the Russian population general, ib.; a spirit for emancipation prevalent in Russia,
487; present situation of the Russians and the Ottomans, ib.; extract from the Modern Traveller, on the state of Rus- sia, 488, 9.; character of Mr. Rae Wilson's travels in Russia, 489, 90; se- verity of the Russian custom-house officers, 490; rapid travelling of the Russian cabinet couriers, 491; Mr. Wil- son's observations on the religion of the Russians, 492; number of churches in Moscow, ib.; celebration of Lent and Easter, ib.; Russian superstition ex- 'ceeds Roman bigotry, ib.; religious dis- tinctions no bar to eligibility to office in Russia, 493; portrait, by Mr. Wilson, of his Imperial Majesty, 493, 4; Dr. Granville's St. Petersburgh, 495; rigo- rous system of espionage in Russia, 497, 8; severe treatment of the Rev. Mr. Withy, and Mr. Holman, 498; joking rewarded by a journey to Siberia, 499; panoramic view of the city, by Dr. Gran- ville, 499, et seq.; description of the pa- lace of the grand-duke Michael, 502, et seq.; splendid room, with white scagliola walls painted in oil, and gilded, 506, 7; remaining subjects treated of in Dr. Granville's work, 508.
Ryder's, Dr., second charge delivered to the diocese of Lichfield and Coventry, 545; See Prison Discipline. Ryland, the late Rev. John, pastoral me-
morials of, 537, et seq.
Sabre, the Turkish, its great excellence, 83. Sacrifices, human, formerly offered by the
Kurradee Brahmins, 144, et seq. Salathiel, a story of the past, the present, and the future, 27, et seq.; subject of the story, and extracts, ib.
Saul journeying to Damascus; a sonnet, by T. Roscoe, 461.
Schools, circulating, instituted in Wales, by the Rev. T. Charles, of Bala, 445, 6. Schools, Irish, existed prior to those of Oxford, Paris, &c., 347.
Scripture has but one sense, a literal one, 418, et seq.
Sea, polar, Capt. Franklin's expedition to the shores of the, 385, et seq. Sermons on various occasions, by Charles Webb Le Bas, 158, et seq.
Shao, a Mahratta prince, account of him, 301, et seq.
Shepherd's metropolitan improvements, 478, et seq.
Shoberl's literary forget me not, 453, et
Shoberl's present state of Christianity, and of the missionary establishments, &c., 182, et seq.; objections to some of the Author's statements, ib.
Sivajee, a Mahratta prince, his history, 293, et seq.
Slavonians, pleasing account of their cha- racter, 93.
Smith's Nollekens, and his times, 526, &c., his early success, 527; lucrative resto- ration of a Minerva, ib.; ingenious mode of smuggling lace, &c., ib.; dish of cuttings, 528; generous act of Nollekens, ib.; Mrs. Nollekens, 529; condescen- sion of the king and of the queen of Eng- land, 530; Nollekens utterly ignorant of true science, 538; his mode of giving his testimony respecting the Elgin mar- bles, &c., 530; his professional educa- tion and merits as an artist, 531; his monument of Mr. Pitt, at Cambridge, ib.; his enormous gains, ib.; his vulgar habits, 532; notice of Roubiliac, 533; his statue of Shakspeare, ib.; his supe- riority over Flaxman, ib.; characteristic anecdotes of him, 533, 4; his birth- place, &c. 534; process used in sculpture, ib.; notice of Barry, 536; Blake, ib.; anecdote of Mortimer, 537. Snake-stone, Davy's analysis of the, 3. Society, the royal Asiatic of Great Bri- tain, and Ireland, transactions of, 1, et seq.; origin of the royal Asiatic society, 2; articles contained in the thirteenth volume of the Asiatic researches of the Calcutta society, ib., et seq.; contents of the fourteenth volume, 4, et seq.; Capt. Hodgson's description of the Chur, one of the Himalaya mountains, 4, 5; Lieut. Herbert's survey of the Himalaya range, 5; highest elevations of the Hi- malayas, 5, 6; description of a zoophyte, on the Singapore coast, 6; and of a sub- stance called manna, and the insect pro- ducing it, 6, 7; account of a discovery of a modern imitation of the Vedas, 7; Wilford, on the ancient geography of India, 8; contents of the first volume of the royal Asiatic society, ib.; antiquity of China, as an empire, overrated, 9; the Chi- nese had no real science of their own, ib. ; extracts from the Peking gazettes, 9, 10; Governor Ching's proclamation, 10, 11; contributions relating to Hindoo lite- rature, 12; philosophy, &c. of the Hin- doos, ib., et seq.; remarks on the Zend characters found on two coins, by Col. Todd, 16.
Souvenir, literary, by Alaric Watts, 569, et seq.
Stewart's philosophy of the active and mo- ral powers of man, 222, et seq,; the Author's system of mental science si- milar to that of Dr. Reid, 223; objec- tions to his arrangement of the powers of the mind, 224; Dr. Brown's division
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