Adams, the Mutineer of the Bounty, 40. Friendly advice to the Lords, Review of, An awfu'leein'-like Story, by the Ettrick 330_Question of the Lord Chancel. Shepherd, 448.
lor's authorship thereof, 331. Anglesea, Marquis, Dialogue betwixt Greek Drama, No. I., Agamemnon of
him and the Ghost of his Leg, 715. Æschylus ; Review thereof, and of Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan, Symmons's translation, 350.
by Colonel Tod, Review of, 691. Green, artist, 655. Audubon’s Ornithological Biography, Gregson, his alleged inadvertence, 393. Review of, 1, 217.
Historians, inodern French, No. I., Sal- Beechey's Voyage to the Pacific and vandy, 230— No. II., Segur, 731. Bebring's Strait, 34.
Hogarth, artist, 655. Belgium, 491.
Ignoramus on the Fine Arts, No. III. Bewick, artist, 655.
Hogarth, Bewick, and Green, 655. Bull, John, Fragments from his History. Ireland and the Reform Bill, 52. Im- See Fragments.
prudence of the Irish character, ib. Chapman, his translation of Homer. See Greater strictness, not greater relaxa- Sotheby.
tion of government, requisite in Ire- Citizen Kings, Letter on, by a Bystander, land, 53—Objections to the Irish Bill, 705.
55. Colonial Empire of Great Britain, Letter Kerry, O'Connell an unfit representative
concerning, from James Macqueen, thereof, 54. Esq. to Earl Grey, 744.
Lyttil Pinkie, by the Ettrick Shepherd, Conversation on the Reform Bill, 296. 782. Cowper, his translation of Homer, see Macqueen, James, Esq., his Letter on Sotheby.
termination of Niger, 130. Curliana, 965.
Madelaine, La Petite, 205. Debates, the late, on Reform, 391. See Ministerial plan of Reform, by Lieut.- Reform.
Col. Matthew Stewart, Reviewed, 506. Education of the People, 306.
Moore, Thomas, Review of his Life of Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, Review of his Lord Edward Fitzgerald, 631. Life, by Moore, 631.
Mother and Son, see Passages from the Foreign Policy of the Whig Administra- Diary of a late Physician.
tion. No. I., Belgium, 491–Impo- Narrative of an imprisonment in France licy of dismantling the fortresses, ib. during the Reign of Terror, 920.
- No. II., Portugal, 912– Wine trade Niger, the River Termination in the with Portugal abandoned, 915—Don Sea, 180. Miguel not recognised, 916—Insults Noctes Ambrosianæ, No. LVII, 400
of France to Portugal permitted, 917. Sir Francis Burdett, 402—Lord Al- Fragments from the History of John thorp, 403— Hunt, 404–Hume, 405
Bull-Chap. I. How Arthur mana- O'Connell, 406—Lord John Russell, ged John's matters, and how he gave up _407_Stanley, 408_Lord Advocate his place, 954.—Chap. II. How Gaf- Jeffrey, 409-Macaulay, 410—Croker, fer Gray tried to bring Madam Reform 412_Bankes, ib. – Song, “ In the into John's house, and how she was Summer when Flowers,” &c. 414- knocked down stairs as she was getting “ Would you know what a Whig is ?" into the second story, 958.
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Grey, 545-Lord Mansfield, Lord Brougham, 546-Song, "Who dares to say?" 552-Prospect of Revolution, 556-Sir Henry Hardinge, 561-Song, "Whate'er thy Creed may be," 561- Song, "Pray for the Soul," 562. No, LIX. Description of a Sumph, 808— Origin and Growth of Love, 826- Pleasures of Imagination, and tenden- cies of the habit of indulging them, 828-Croker, 829-His Review in the Edinburgh Review refuted, 830- "The Monitors," "The Lift looks Cauldrife," &c. 843.
North American Review, Review of its Opinions on Reform, 506. Observations on a Pamphlet, &c. Review of, 330.
O'Connell, his Letter on the Reform Bill, 54.
Opinions of an American Republican, and of a British Whig on the Bill, 506. Orange Processions, 616.
Owl, by the Translator of Homer's Hymns, 789.
Parnell, Sir Henry, Letter on his Finan- cial Reform, 457.
Passages from the Diary of a late Physi- cian, Chap. XI. The Ruined Mer- chant, 60-Chap. XII. Mother and Son, and a Word with the Reader at Parting, 566.
Peerage, British, not separated by Privi- leges from the other classes, but con- nected therewith by their younger branches, 83-The recent elevations from desert alone, 84- Professions raised by Nobility entering them, 85- Hereditary Titles a cause of stability to Governments, ib.- Vacillation of Democracies, 89. Poetry-The Plaint of Absence, by Delta, 58-Family Poetry, No. II. My Let- ters, 126-Homer's Hymns, No. I. Pan, 128-Homer's Hymns, No. II. The Ballad of Bacchus, 227-The Eglantine, by Delta, 245-The Wish- ing Tree, 423-Dreams of Heaven, by Mrs Hemans, 529- The Lunatic's Complaint, by Delta, 646-The Magic Mirror, by the Ettrick Shepherd, 650 -Homer's Hymns, No. III. Apollo, 669.-Marguerite of France, by Mrs Hemans, 697-The Freed Bird, by Mrs Hemans, 699-Lines written on Tweedside, 701-" Ye Rascals and Robbers," &c. 962-The Four Even- ings, by Delta, 964.
Poetry, An Hour's Talk about, 475. Pope, his Translation of Homer, see Sotheby.
Pringle, exposure of his misrepresenta- tions, &c. in the case of Mr and Mrs Wood, of Antigua, &c. 745. Pumpkin, Sir Frizzle, passages in his Life, 192.
Rajasthan, Annals and Antiquities there- of, by Colonel Tod, Reviewed, 681. Rational Fear, or Friendly Advice to the Lords, 348.
Reform, Parliamentary and the French Revolution, No. VIII., 281-Consti- tution threatened, by Executive be- coming more reckless than Legislature, 18-tendency of concessions to popular clamour, 19-progress to Revolution more rapid than that of the great French Revolution, ib.-want of union the cause of the present crisis, 21-duty of the House of Peers, 22-their supe- riority to the Lower House in talent and property, 23-great decline of their influence in the House of Commons, 25-in making a resolute stand, the Peers only exercise their influence once -namely, in the Upper House, 27— consequences of yielding to the demands of the People, illustrated by examples from the French history, 30-flourish- ing state of the Empire, when Reform was proposed, 282--evils of uniformity in Representation, 286-lower class of Electors always coincide with innova- ting party, 290-the Press, and exten- sion of Manufactures, the causes of innovating democratical influence, 294
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debates on Reform, Sir James Mackintosh, 394-Mr Bruce, ib.- Mr Cutlar Fergusson, ib.-Lord Por- chester, 395-Mr Gally Knight, ib.- Mr R. A. Dundas, ib. - Sir John Malcolm, 396-Sir Edward Dering, ib. Mr Macaulay, ib.-Sir George Murray, 397-Sir Charles Wetherell and Sir Robert Peel, 398.--Parlia- mentary Reform and the French Re- volution, No. IX., consequences of Re- form, 432-great increase of general prosperity of late years, 433-first con- sequence, repeal of the Corn Laws, 436 -the Funds, 430-the Church, 440 -Poor Rates, 443-confiscation of great properties, ib.-imposition of a maximum on the price of Grain, and forced requisitions, 444-dismember- ment of the Colonies, 446. —No. X., What is the Bill now? 600-advan- tages of delay in discussing it, 601- present distress the effect of the Bill, and not of the prospect of its being refused, 603--effects of Reform have been anticipated before too late to pre- vent it, 605-new features which the Bill has assumed, 606-influence of the middling orders to be extinguished, 608-contest to be betwixt the Demo- cratic and Aristocratic parties,—the latter soon to give way, 609-difference in the characters of £10 householders in different towns no advantage, but the reverse, 610-Revolutions most formidable when supported by the
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lower class of the middling orders, 611 Rennie, Professor, 6. -no security against Revolution that Revolution, on the approaching, in Great the majority of Elector's pay more than Britain, in a Letter to a Friend, 313. £10 rent, ib.-effects of the extension Ruined Merchant, 60. of the Franchise upon agriculture and Salvandy, modern French Historian, population, 613.-No. XI., the rejec- review of, 230. tion of the Bill-Scottish Reform, 765 Scotland, its Prosperous State at the in- -character of debates in the House of troduction of the Reform Bill, 773. Peers, 767-influence of Democratic Segur, Count, modern French Historian, pledges on the ability and independence Review of, 731– Progress towards the of the House of Commons, 770—po-
French Revolution described by him, pular elections do not settle on the per- 732_Concurrence of the higher orders sons fittest for government, ib. pros- in destroying the French Constitution, perous state of Scotland, 773—supe- 734-Parallel betwixt this country riority of its institutions to those of and France in their revolutionary England, 774. — No. XII., public tendencies, 736. opinion—popular violence, 890—the Shepherd, Ettrick, an awfu' leein'-like leaders in Democratic movements soon Story by him, 448–Lyttil Pynkie by become unpopular, 891-begin to be him, 782. so already in this country, 892–exam- Song, a new, to be sung by all the True ples from the French history, ib.- Knaves of Political Unions, “ Ye Ras- Reformers responsible for the effects of cals,:' &c. 962. popular violence, 895-demands of the Sotheby, his Homer, critique III., 93- people progressive, 896 — policy of Critique IV., Achilles, 847. yielding to these demands, and on the Stewart, Lieut.-Col. Matthew, his Mi- innovations of the Constituent Assem- nisterial plan of Reform Reviewed,
- a quotation from one of Mr 506, 513_his sentiments on popular Brougham's early writings, 897—con- Education, 518. duct of the Political Union Club of Symmons, review of his translation of Bristol, on the late Riots, 901-No the Agamemnon of Æschylus, 350. reaction among the inob admitted, 902 Tod, Colonel, his Annals and Antiqui- Firmness against popular commotion ties of Rajasthan, reviewed, 681. rare, 903— National Guards, their use- Tom Cringle's Log, the Piccaroon, 795. lessness in serious convulsions, 907- Unimore, a Dream of the Highlands, by Reaction proved by results of election, Professor Wilson, 137. 909-Ultimate views of Radical Re- Unseasonable Story, extracts from, chap. formers now apparent, 910-A list of T., 616. their projects, ib.
What should the Peer's do ? 702. Reform, a Conversation on the Bill, 296 Wilson, James, bis American Ornitho- - Opinions of an American Republi-
logy, 247. can and of a British Whiy on the Bill, Wilson, Professor, his Poem of Unimore, 506— Bill already essentially altered, 137. 507.
Wood, Mr and Mrs, of Antigua, 744.
Edinburgh: Printed by Ballantyne & Co., Paul's Work, Canongate.
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