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shire. The ceremony took place at Southampton, after which the married couple set off for Ireland, where his regiment is now quartered.

17. At Haddington, Mr Francis Wright, merchant, Edinburgh, to Alison, daughter of Mr Jas. Pringle.

-At Edinburgh, Captain John White, to Janet, eldest daughter of the late Mr William Simpson, shipowner, Grangemouth.

18. At Stepney church, London, Mr David Walker, of Edinburgh, to Miss Anne Stewart, of Mileend.

-At Slains Lodge, Mr John Baigrie, Mains of Kinmundy, to Miss Mina Ann Clarke.

-At Edinburgh, Richard Huie, M.D. Dundee, to Miss Eliza Syme, daughter of the late Mr Alex. Syme, merchant there.

Át John's church, Manchester, Wm M'Laren, Esq. Glasgow, to Mary, eldest daughter of the late Robert Runcorn, Esq. Manchester.

19. At the Marine cottage, Pirniefield, Charles Anderson, M.D. Leith, to Mary, daughter of John Rhind, Esq.

20. At Dumfries, Captain Dougal Stuart, of the 1st battalion royal marines, to Miss Dalziel of

Glenae.

21. At Bogend, Mr William Young, Stenhousemuir, to Miss Elizabeth Bachop, second daughter of John Bachop of Bogend, Stirlingshire.

24. At Portobello, John Murray, Esq. W.S. to Miss Ann Jane Borland, youngest daughter of the ate James Borland, Esq. Glasgow.

At Green Cottage, near Elgin, Lachlan Macintosh, Esq of Raigmore, to Margaret, daughter of Sir Archibald Dunbar, Bart. of Northfield.

25. At Greenock, Mr Alexander Maclauchlan, merchant in London, to Elizabeth, youngest daughter of the late Mr John White, Greenock.

DEATHS.

February 13. At Calcutta, James Rattray, Esq. second in the East India Company's civil service, judge of circuit in the Dacea division, and eldest son of the late James Rattray of Arthurston.

May 6. Of a dysentery, which carried him off in the short space of two days, Mr Henry Alexander, the colonial secretary-of the Cape of Good Hope.

30. At Barbadoes, of an apoplectic fit, the honourable Geo. Maynard, chief judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and of his Majesty's council in that island. He was proceeding home, when he fell off his horse, and, as was supposed, immediately expired.

June 23. At Grenada, West Indies, Mrs Agnes M'Mahon, spouse of Thomas Duncan, Esq. surgeon there.

July 6. At Warsovia, Lieut.-general Mickrelsky, at the age of 105 years. His first entry into the profession of arms was in the service of the Empress Anne and Elizabeth of Russia, under the command of Field-marshal Munich. He then passed into the Saxon service, and served every campaign of the seven years' war. He afterwards fought under the banners of Stanislaus, and did not quit the army till he had attained the age of 80 years.

8. Janet, the infant daughter of Captain Deans Dundas, of his Majesty's ship Tagus.

12. At Baltimore, United States, America, Mrs Dr Davidge.

13. At Banff, Mrs Anna Fraser, relict of Æneas Macdonell, Esq. of Scothouse.

Mr Abraham Thornton, sen. farmer, of Castle Broomwich, Warwickshire, father of Abraham Thornton. tried and acquitted of the murder of Mary Ashford.

17. At Lisburn, Ireland, Edward Givern aged 114. His wife is still living and healthy in Lisburn, aged 109.

-At Inverness, Mrs Macbean, widow of the late Robert Macbean, Esq. of Nairnside.

19. At Grantham, on Sunday morning, Jane Watchorn. This young woman was working in the field on Thursday, and, while very hot, drank some cold water, which caused her death. There have been several instances of this sort, while others have lost their lives by plunging into the water when in a great heat.

20. At the pin-factory, Durham, in the 102d year of her age, Catherine Richard.

20. At Aberdeen, John R. Smith, Esq. of Concraig.

22. At London, William Morrison, Esq. late of Calcutta. He has bequeathed to the poor of his native parish of Campsie £100; to the British and Foreign Bible Society £500; and to the Society in Calcutta for Educating the Native Indians £100.

24. At the manse of Glenmuick, the Rev. Geo. Brown, minister of the united parishes of Glenmuick, Glengarden, and Tullich.

26. At Kilgraston-house, in the 73d year of his age, Francis Grant, Esq. of Kilgraston.

27. At Streatham, in the 10th year of her age, Emma Drury, youngest daughter of Sir George Barlow, Bart.

-James Fergusson, Esq. of Middlehaugh, late of Hanover, Jamaica.

-At Paisley, the Rev. Joseph Kitchen, one of the ministers of the Wesleyan Connexion, in the 48th year of his age, and 19th of his ministry.

-At New Galloway, after a tedious illness, attended with the most excruciating pain, Mr Robert Heron, weaver, aged 77. He was a man who possessed an extensive range of knowledge, superior to most men of his condition. It is worthy of notice to state, that this respectable tradesman was father to Major Heron, who fell, some years ago, at the taking of the Isle of Bourbon, and uncle to the unfortunate historian, Robert Heron, who died of a broken heart, at London, in the year 1807.

28. At Glasgow, Mr James Stewart, merchant in Doune.

29. At Knowsouth, William, eldest son of Wm Oliver, Esq. younger of Dinlabyre.

The infant son of Thomas Newton, Esq. of Warwick-square, London.

30. At Edinburgh, aged 36 years, Mrs Christian Craw, wife of Mr Mein, surgeon-apothecary, Leith

street.

-At Brompton, in the 75th year of her age, Miss Pope of Newman-street, London, formerly of the Theatre Royal, Drury lane.

31. At his house in St James's square, London, Viscount Anson.

At Killechieran, Lismore, the Right Rev. Dr Eneas Chisholm.

August 1. At Edinburgh, Mr George Fordyce, writer there.

2. At Port-Glasgow, Robert Paton, Esq. writer. -At Balcaskie, Sir Robert Anstruther of Balcaskie, Bart.

3. At Houndwood-house, Elizabeth Ann, the infant daughter of Captain Coulson, royal navy. -At Edinburgh, Mrs Euphemia Mitchell, widow of Peter May, Esq.

4. At No 2, Davies'-place, Miss Elizabeth Noble. -At Galway, Ireland, in a room occupied by the band of the 77th regiment, where he had been maintained the last two months, and very humanely attended by three people of his colour, Molyneux, the celebrated pugilist. From his swollen state, it was deemed necessary that his almost immediate interment should take place. He was to have been interred on Wednesday. The expenses of his funeral were to be charitably defrayed by subscription in the 77th regiment-a tomb-stone is to be erected to his memory.

-At Melrose, Mr George Mercer, eldest son of the deceased Mr Mercer of Abbotslee, writer in Melrose.

5. In Grosvenor-place, London, after a lingering illness, the Right Hon. General Lord Muncaster, aged 73. His lordship inherited the title and estates on the death of his brother in 1813, and is succeeded in both by his only son, the Hon. Lowther Augustus John Pennington, a minor.

-At Edinburgh, Admiral Alexander Græme of Græmeshall.

6. In her 27th year, Miss Agnes Rawlinson, daughter of the late Mr John Rawlinson of Lancaster.

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7. In Brook-street, London, the infant son of the Hon Thomas Erskine, aged two months.

-In the 76th year of his age, Francis Newberry, Esq. of St Paul's Church-yard, London.

8. At Edinburgh, the Hon. Walter Charteris, second son of the Earl of Wemyss and March.

At Edinburgh, Mrs Erskine, widow of the late Rev. James Erskine of Shielfield.

9. At Whitby, suddenly, Mr Thomas Nicholson, the oldest pilot in the place, having acted upwards of 43 years in that capacity. Immediately before his death, he walked home from the barber's shop.

Of an apoplectic fit, Quintin Dick, Esq. of Montague-street, Russel-square, London, aged 74. 12. At Coleraine, in the 62d year of his age, John Cuthbert, Esq. surveyor-general of customs. He had retired to rest in apparent good health and excellent spirits, and was found dead in his bed on the following morning.

At Hayfield, the Rev. F. M'Lagan, minister of Melrose.

14. At Aberdeen, in the 70th year of her age, Mrs Chalmers, widow of the late Mr James Chalmers, printer in Aberdeen.

At Kilmarnock, at the advanced age of 76, John McRae, cooper there. He was only once married; but has left behind him 12 children, 69 grandchildren, and 5 great-grand-children, in all, 86 descendants.

15. In Hallgarth-street, Durham, Mr A. Featonby, aged 82. This person, who lived during the greater part of his life in a state of abject penury, is said to have died worth £20,000! He has not unfrequently accepted employment on the turnpike roads, in the breaking of stones, &c.; and the coat which he wore, up to the time of his death, was so patched, that scarcely a particle of the cloth of which it was originally composed, could be discovered amongst the "shreds and patches" which it exhibited.

At Limehouse, aged 69, Mr Thomas Gray, check-clerk in the West India docks since their first establishment.

16. At Brighton, John Palmer, Esq. of Bath, late comptroller-general of the Post-office.

At Carphin, John Raitt, Esq. of Carphin. 17. Lady Wilson of Charlton-house, Kent, relict of the late General Sir Thomas Spencer Wilson, Bart. in the 71st year of her age.

19. At Leith, Mr Robert Young, second son of the late Mr Alexander Young, ship-owner there. 20. At Castlehill, Mrs Begbie, wife of Patrick Begbie, Esq. Castlehill.

21. Át Littlecott, Berkshire, Colonel Kellie, C.B. lieutenant-colonel of his Majesty's 24th regiment. - At his house, King's-row, Pimlico, G. C. Ashley, Esq. the celebrated performer on the violin.

-

22. In London, Captain Henry Halkett, fourth son of the late Sir John Halkett, Bart. of Pitfirane. At his seat, Daylesford-house, Worcestershire, in the 86th year of his age, the Right Hon. Warren Hastings, late governor-general of Bengal, doctor of civil law, and one of his Majesty's most honourable privy councillors.

23. At his house, in Portman-street, London, in the 63d year of his age, Francis Perceval Eliot, Esq. He was the nearest representative of an ancient family, and allied to the present Earl of St Germans. Mr Eliot was formerly colonel of the Stafford militia, and for many years, until the period of his decease, was one of the commissioners of audit in Somerset-house.

-At Pitcaithly Wells, Mr Charles Ritchie, ironmonger, Edinburgh.

-At Edinburgh, Mr Peter Ewart.

24. At Dumfries, Mr William Wallace, writer. 27. At Edinburgh, William Bishop, sen. merchant there.

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At Rome, in his 21st year, the Right Hon. Lord Henry de Roos.

At Hampstead, aged 79, Lady Colebrooke, relict of Sir George Colebrooke, Bart.

At the Ville of Dunkirk, near Bouhton-underthe-Blean, David Ferguson, aged one hundred and twenty-four years. Ferguson was a Scotsman, but had resided in the Ville of Dunkirk between fifty and sixty years; he was, until a very few years back, a very industrious, active, and hard-working labourer. He was born at Netherud, in the parish of Kirkurd. He was at school at Dunsyre, in Lanarkshire, and was bred a shoemaker at Linton, on the Dumfries road. He entered into the army in

a regiment of dragoons, called the Glasgow Greys (not the present Scots Greys); after this he served in the 70th regiment. He was about 12 or 13 years old at the battle of Sheriff Muir; remembered Queen Ann and the battle of Malplaquet; had seen the Duke of Marlborough in England; recollected Lord Stair calling upon his father, who was a farm

er.

The remains of the old man were interred in Broughton church-yard, attended by a numerous assemblage of both old and young persons, and one common sentiment of regret seemed to pervade all classes, at the last farewell of their old friend, who was universally regretted.

At York, Mr Thomas Wilkinson, formerly a saddler in that city, aged 66; an eccentric character, who for upwards of 20 years had never slept in a bed.

At the village of Leeds,' in Kent, Mr James Barham, aged 92 years, gardener to the late Lord Fairfax, an eminent change-ringer and peal conductor. The deceased stood at one time 14 hours and 44 minutes at the bell.

In Dublin, in the 83d year of his age, Cornelly, the father of the Irish stage, and the contemporary of Edwin, Shuter, O'Reilly, and Rider. In his time he was an excellent comedian, and the particular friend and companion of O'Keefe.

At Kendal, in Westmoreland, William Gawthrop, Esq. formerly of the Cumberland militia. At Greenfield, Mrs Logie, wife of Captain W. Logie of the 92d regiment.

83.

At Baledgarno, J. Gourlay, Esq. Dundee, aged

Death from Fright.-An inquisition was taken on Thursday night, at the Pine Apple, Pimlico, on the body of Mrs Mary Bandy, of No 6, Palacestreet. Sarah Garner deposed, that she was servant to the deceased, and had lived with her about nine years. On Tuesday about one o'clock, she heard a violent knocking at the street door, when she got up, opened her window, and saw two watchmen at the door. They called out that there were thieves in the house, and wished to come in and search it. She was going down stairs to let the watchmen in, when the deceased called to know what was the matter? She told her what the watchmen said, and the deceased went in an apparent fright to her chamber. Witness opened the door, and the watchmen searched about the premises, but could find no one, though a gentleman said he had seen a man get over the railings of the area. Witness returned up stairs, and the deceased seemed greatly frightened; she endeavoured to pacify her, but her terror was so great that she fell down on the floor, and soon became senseless. She died in three hours af ter, and her death was produced, in witness's opinion, by excessive fright.-Verdict-" Death by excessive fright.”

ABERDEEN, proceedings respecting the late
election of magistrates there, 106, 352.
Accidents, melancholy one, near Dumfries,
104-Distressing one at Airdrie, 349.-
Melancholy one at South Queensferry,
351.--and at a coal-pit near Glasgow, ib.
Acted Drama in London, notices of, No IV.
77.-No V. 207.-No VI. 329.
Alkali, discovery of a new one, 95.
Alpina and the Old Indian, 282.
Altham and his Wife, a tale, remarks on,
542.

Anecdotes of the Fife gypsies, 14, 393.-

Of Philoxenus of Cythera, 652.
Antara, remarks on Menil's edition of, 513.
Apparition, story of one, 705.
Appointments, Promotions, &c. 109, 236,
361, 488, 621, 730.

Aquinas, Thomas, Hume charged with
plagiarism from, 655.

Aristophanic comedy, remarks on the, 152.
Assembly, General, of Scotland, proceedings
of, 352.

Athenæus, selections from, No I. 650.
Bacon, Lord, observations on Mr Macvey
Napier's essay on his writings, 657.
Baird, Principal, report by, on the manage-
ment of the poor in Scotland, 320.
Banker, the mad, of Amsterdam, 402, 530.
Bankrupts, alphabetical list of English and
Scotch, 114, 241, 358, 485, 625, 734.
Banks for savings in Scotland, abstract of
the proposed bill for protecting, 68.
Beet-root, result of the experiments in
France, to produce sugar from, 611.
Beggar's Opera, proposed reform of the,

575.

Bellamira, a tragedy, notice of, 207.
Beppo, letter to the author of, 323.
Bernacle, or Tree-goose, strange fictions re-
corded in the early history of this bird,
671.

Biographical notices of William Russell,
LL.D. 398.

Biot, M., his observations to determine the
figure of the earth, 463.

Births, list of, 118, 244, 363, 492, 629,
737.

Blue stocking, an ancient one, 546.

Boyd, Zacharie, notice of his "Last Battel
of the Soule," 283.

Brande and Kidd, remarks on their writings,
277.

Brewster, Dr, description of his invention
of the kaleidoscope, 121.-History of
the kaleidoscope, with remarks on its sup-
posed resemblance to other inventions,
331.
Brownrigg, Sir R., Sanscrit ode in honour
of, 460.

Bruce, King Robert the, discovery of his
tomb, 104.

Bruges, the Minstrel of, an old French story,
661.

Buchan, Earl of, remarks on his anonymous
and fugitive essays, 515.
Buchanan, George, observations on the writ-
ings of, 251.

Burgh reform, Scottish, lists of burghs who
have or have not stirred in the cause of,
with their relative populations, 107.
Byron, Lord, criticism on his fourth canto
of Childe Harold, 216.

Byron, Scott, and Wordsworth, on the poe-
tical talents of, 369.

Caithness, iron and copper discovered in,
472-3.--Singular account, by an old
writer, of the inhabitants and productions

of, 674.

Calumnies against the living, remarks on,'
388.

Canals, commencement of one to connect
Edinburgh and Glasgow, 105.

Cassandra, (from the German of Schiller)
153.

Cathedral church of St Giles, Dilettanti
committee's report on the plans for its re-
pair, 408.-Letter occasioned by the re-
port, 524.

Cavern, discovery of an extensive one in
Persia, 340.

Chalmers, Rev. Dr, letter to, on his writ-
ings in the Edinburgh Review, 155.
Charles I. of England, and Louis XVI. of
France, comparison of their characters by
Madame de Stael, 638.

Charlotte, Princess, verses on the death of,

5.

Childe Harold, fragment of a fifth canto of,'
201.-Notes to, 202.-Review of the
fourth canto of, 216.

Christian Wolf, a German freebooter, in-
teresting account of, 679.

Chromate of iron discovered in Shetland,
463.

Circuit court, Stirling, distressing case of
murder in, 232.-Dumfries, trial of a
juvenile pick-pocket, 233.--Trial and
condemnation of John Lissens, for high-
way robbery, ib.

Clubs, account of some curious ones in Lon-
don, 552.-I. The Virtuoso's club, 553.
-II. The Order of the Golden Fleece.
III. The No Nose club, 554.-IV. The
Surly club.-V. The club of Ugly Faces,
555.

Clyde, trade of, 481.
Coal-gas, improvement in the purification
of, *220.-Cities lighted with, in Bri-
tain, 724.Portable apparatus, ib.

Cockney School of Poetry, No III. 453.
No IV. 519.

Coleridge, Mr, remarks on some passages in
his Biographia Literaria, 653.
Comet, a new one discovered at Marseilles,
96.

of 1811, account of the, 338.
Commercial Reports, 112, 238, 356, 480,
622, 732.

Confession, remarkable one of a murder,
596.

Court of Session, proceedings in, respecting
the Edinburgh election of magistrates,
105, 106.-Regarding the elections at
Inverness and Aberdeen, 106.
Cow-tree, account of a tree so called by
Humboldt, 724.

Craniologist's Review, the, No I. Napoleon's
head, 146.-No II. Greek heads, 298.-
No III. Oliver Cromwell, 300.-No IV.
Franklin, ib.-No V. Voltaire, ib.
Crim. Con. trial for, in the Edinburgh jury
court, 106.

Crimes, hints to speculators on the increase
of, 176.

Cromwell, Oliver, craniological view of his
head, 300.

Crystallized tin, a new discovery in art, 341.
Currents, remarks on, 579.

Cuttle-fish, colossal, on W.'s account of
the, 204.

Deaf and Dumb Institution, Edinburgh, re-
port of, for 1818, 425.

Deaths, lists of, 119, 245, 364, 493, 629,
738.

Dilettanti, report of their committee on Mr
Elliott's plans for repairing St Giles's
church, Edinburgh, 408.-Letter occa-
sioned by the report, &c. 524.

Drama, acted, in London, notices of, No

IV. 77.-No V. 207.-No VI. 329.
Dramatists, essays on the early English
ones, No V. 556.

Dresden, on the great Madonna of, 562.
Dress, remarks on, 301.-On that of the
days of Queen Elizabeth, 534.
Dunfermline, tomb of Robert the Bruce
discovered there, 104.

Earth, the, Biot's observations to determine
the figure of, 463.

Earthquakes on the continent, and in Eng-
land, 37.

Echo, in two poetical dialogues, 55.
Edinburgh, proceedings respecting a chal-

lenged election of magistrates of, 105,
106.-Commencement of a canal to con-
nect it and Glasgow, ib.-Resolutions of
the guildry of, on the subject of the Lord
Advocate's bill for regulating Scotch
burghs, 235.-On the late musical festi-⚫
val in, and its consequences, 268.-Dilet-
tanti committee's report on the plans for
the repair of St Giles'-church, 408.-Re-
port of the Deaf and Dumb Institution in,
425.-Letter occasioned by the Dilettanti
committee's report on the repair of St
Giles's church, 524-On the state of mu-
sic in, 538.

Edinburgh Review, letters to the supporters
of the, 155-No. I. to the Rev. Dr Chal-
mers, ib.

Elliston, Mr, remarks on his acting, 329.
English Poets, Hazlitt's lectures on, No
III. Burns and the old ballads, 71.
English in Paris, the, 446.

English Dramatists, essays on the early, 556.
Escape, remarkable one, of a soldier from
the Black-feet Indians, 45.

Essays, fugitive and anonymous, of the Earl
of Buchan, 515.-On the early English
Dramatists, 556.

Eye, newly discovered membrane in the,
473.

Fairies, the, a dreamlike remembrance of a
dream, 30.

Fame, on the influence of the love of, on
Genius, 701.

Farming, moral effects of overseers on farm
servants, 83.

Fiction, on the use of the preternatural in
works of, 648.

Fife gypsies, anecdotes of the, 14, 393.
Fire, destruction of a ship by, 105.
Fluids, on the boiling point of, 611.
Fortune-telling, instance of swindling under
pretence of, 236.

Fox and Pitt, sketch of, by Baron Von
Lauerwinkel, 456.

France, history of a six weeks' tour through,
review of, 412.

Franklin's head, craniological view of, 300.
Fudge Family in Paris, the, review of a
publication so entitled, 129.

Gas, cities lighted with by authority of Par-

liament, 724.-Portable gas apparatus, ib.
General Assembly, meeting of the commis-
sion of the, 230.-Proceedings of the as-
sembly, 352.

Genius, on the influence of the love of
fame on, 701.

Germany, letters on the present state of,
Letter I., 24.-Ferment in the national
mind of the Germans, ib.-Every liberty
enjoyed of thought and writing except on
politics, 25.-Effects of the late wars in
illuminating the minds of the Germans,
27. Privileges of the nobility of, galling
to the people, 28.-Probability of a re-
volution being effected without outrage or
resistance, 29.

Glasgow, letter from, 56.

manufactures of, 481.

Chronicle, remarks on its treat-
ment of Mrs Grant, 57, 187.
Gosschen's diary, extracts from, 596.
Grant, Mrs, on the liberties taken with her
literary character in the Glasgow Chroni-
cle, 57, 187.

Greek heads, craniological view of, 299.
Gwyn, letter from the celebrated Nell, 547.
Gypsies of Fife, anecdotes of the, 14, 393.
Harvest, the, neither retarded nor accelerat-
ed by an early or late spring, 229.
Hauyne, description of a mineral nearly re-
sembling, found in the island of Tiree,
583.

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Hazlitt's lectures on English Poetry-On
Burns and the old ballads, 71.
Hazlitt and Jeffrey, on the literary and cri-
tical talents of, 303.

cross-questioned, 550.

Heat, on the measure of temperatures, and
the laws of the communication of, 724.
Hogg, James, the Ettrick shepherd, a He-
brew melody, by, 90.
Hora Cambricæ, No I. 448.

Horæ Cantabrigienses, No I. 548.
Hospital scene, dreadful one in Portugal, 87.
Hume, David, and Samuel Johnson, com-
pared, 511.

charged with plagiarism from
Aquinas, 655.

Hunt, Leigh, letter from Z. to, 196.
Huttonian and Wernerian disputants, a
word to the rival, 583.

Jardine, Professor, review of his Outlines of
Philosophical Education, 420.

Jarvie, Nicol, letter to, from Andrew Fair-
service, 185.

Jeffrey, Francis, Esq. letter of Timothy
Tickler to, 75.

Jeffrey and Hazlitt, on the literary and cri-
tical talents of, 303.

Jew of Malta, remarks on Marlow's play of,
208.

Increase of crimes, hints to speculators on
the, 176.

Interesting narrative of the taking of the
island of Timor in 1811, 306.
Inverness election of magistrates, process in
the Court of Session regarding, 106.
Johnson, Samuel, and David Hume, com-
pared, 511.

Iron, chromate of, discovery of extensive
veins of, in Shetland, 463.

Ivan, the tale of, (translated from the Cor-
nish) 169.

Justiciary, High Court of, trial of a clergy-
man for celebrating clandestine marriage,
108. Of a juvenile gang of thieves in
Edinburgh, ib.

Kaleidoscope, description of the, 121.-His-
tory of, and remarks on its resemblance
to other inventions, 331.

Kean, Mr, remarks on his acting, 77.
Kidd and Brande, remarks on their writ-
ings, 277.

Klopstock, translation from the German of,
416.

Knights Errant, the, No II. 32.-No III.

33.

Körner, translation from the German of,
417.

Kraken, remarks on W.'s account of the,
204.

Lake School of Poetry, Essays on the, No I.
369.

Lamb, Charles, review of the works of, 599.
Lauerwinkel, Baron Von, description by,
of Fox and Pitt, 456.-His remarks on
the Great Madonna of Dresden, 562.-
His letter to Professor Laugner, 689.
Laugner, Professor, letter to, from Baron
Von Lauerwinkel, on his writings in the
Köningsberg Review, 689.

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from Andrew Fairservice to Dr Nicol
Jarvie, 185.

from a friend of Mrs Grant, with
note by the Editor, 187.

from Z. to Leigh Hunt, King of
the Cockneys, 196.

to the veiled conductor of Black-
wood's Magazine, 211.

of Petrarch to Posterity, 313.
to the author of Beppo, 323.
to a Politician, written after the
conclusion of the war, 381.

to Sir H. Steuart of Allanton, from
the author of the "Vindication of the
Memory of the Somervilles," 438.-Re-
marks on the letter, 709.

from the celebrated Nell Gwyn, 547.
from an English Officer to a friend
in Liverpool, 565.

to Professor Laugner, from Von
Lauerwinkel, 689.

s of Timothy Tickler, to various lite-
rary characters, 75, 461, 527.
Literary and Scientific Intelligence, 95,
*219, 338, 471, 611, 723.
Literature, remarks on Schlegel's History
of, 497.

of a national character in, 707.
Lithography, on the art of, report of a Com-
mittee of the French Academy of Fine
Arts, 725.

Lissens, John, trial of, for highway robbery,

233.

Locusts in India, devastations committed
by, 339.

London, account of some curious clubs in,

about the beginning of last century, 552.
Louis XVI. and Charles I. comparative
characters of, 638.

M'Konochie, Captain, details respecting the
Philippine Islands, by, 576.-Summary
view of the commerce, &c. of the Shores
of the Pacific Ocean, by, 695.
M'Laurin, the celebrated Colin, letter of,
127.

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Madonna, the Great, of Dresden, remarks
on, by Von Lauerwinkel, 562.
Magic Lanthern, Time's, No II.-Galileo
in the Inquisition, 3.-No III. Rem-
brandt's work shop, 4.-No IV. Bun-
yanus Obsessus, or a tift with Apollyon,
137. No V. Dialogue between Lord
Bacon and Shakspeare, 270.-No VI.
Johnson's Midnight Walk, 274.-No
VII. Adam Smith and a Highland Laird,
419.

Margaret, Queen of Navarre, comparison
between her and a modern Blue Stocking,
546.

Market Tables, 115, 242, 359, 486, 625,
734.

Marlow's Jew of Malta, remarks on, 208.
Marriage, a novel, review of, 286.

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