Abinger, lord, 563.Adelaide, madame, and Chateaubriand, 44, 45.Adolphus, Mr, 553.Afghanistan, Peel's conduct on the disasters in, 359.Africa, North, military life in, 415.African Sporting, 231.Agdolo, colonel, the case of, 343.Agricultural Interest, state and prospects of the, 109.Agricultural produce, comparative value of, 112—amount of depreciation in it, 617—direct and indirect burdens on it, 614.Agriculture, capital invested in, 119—and manufactures, comparative importance of, 115—relations of small farming to,675,et seq.Alderson, baron, 553, 559, 569.Aldossar, captain, 311,et seq., 317.Alexander, the emperor, and his father's dethronement, 338,et seq. passim.Alfieri, specimens of eloquence from,649.Algeria, sketches of the war in, 415.Allen, rev. Mr, trial of, for duelling,717.Alton Locke, review of, 592.Andelot, brother of Coligny, 18.Anna Hammer, 573.Ancient and Modern Eloquence,645.Anthony of Bourbon, 456,et seq. passim.Antoinette de Bourbon, 2.Architecture, mediæval, on, 219.Aristotle, his definition of the poet, 480.Army, errors of Louis XVIII. regarding the, 35—the Prussian, rise of, 519.Art, increasing taste for, in Great Britain, 77—early, its absorption in architecture, 219.Aumale, Francis, count d', 7—his career, 9,et seq.—the duke d', his power, popularity, &c. 12.Austria, state of exports of cotton to, 127—and of imports of corn from, 130—the war between, and Frederick the Great, 522,et seq.—and Hungary, conduct of Great Britain regarding, 329—and Sardinia, 327.Aytoun, William, the architect of Heriot's hospital, 227.Bacon, account of, by Symonds d'Ewes, 142—his definition of the poet, 486.Balafré duke of Guise, 19.Bar, the English, Ledru Rollin on, 170.Baronial and EcclesiasticalAntiquities of Scotland, the, 217.Bayley, baron, on duelling,719.Bean, the attack on the queen by, 552.Bechuanas, sketches of the, 237.Belgium, state of, exports of cotton to, 127—and of imports of corn from, 129.Bellingham, the case of, 564.Benningsen, general, 338, 341,et seq.Bentinck, lord George, exposure of free trade statistics by, 123.Bèze, Theodore de, anecdote of, 460.Billings' Antiquities of Scotland, 217.Bisset's memoirs of sir A. Mitchell, 516.Bodkin, Mr, counsel for Oxford, 553.Bolza, count Joseph, 344.Borthwick castle, ruins of, 226.Bossuet, example of the oratory of,656.Bouillé'slives of the Guises, vol. i., 1—vol. ii., 456.Bourbon, the constable of, 4.Bourbon and Guise, struggles between the houses of, 456.Bourbons, difficulties of the, on the restoration, 36.Brandenburg, the electorate of, 517.Brantôme, account of the cardinal of Lorraine, by, 8.Brazil, state of exports of cotton to, 133.Brick duty, repeal of the, 612.Britain, the defences of,713.British farmer, position of, compared with the foreign, 615,682.Brougham, lord, and the criminal law reform, 357—his speech on the Durham clergy case, 378,655—on ancient and modern eloquence,657.Bulau, Professor, his work on the Mysteries of History, 335.Buller, Mr Justice, on duelling,717.Bullion committee, and its report, 360.Buonaparte, Lucien, and madame Recamier, 42.Buonaparte, Napoleon, the return of, from Elba, 37—character of, by Chateaubriand,ib.—Chateaubriand on his fall, 39—persecution of madame Recamier by, 40—and the Bourbons, Chateaubriand's pamphlet on, 34.Burke, example of the oratory of,654.Burnet's landscape painting in oil, 185.Caerlaveroc castle, ruins of, 225.Calderon, the dramas of, 539.Calisto y Melibœa, drama of, 536.Cameleopard, hunting the, 238.Campbell, sir John, at Frost's trial, 379,et seq.—counsel on Oxford's case, 553—and on Lord Cardigan's,725—his Lives of the Chancellors, &c., 374,note.Canada, Rollin on the conduct of England toward, 166.Canning, political intrigue of, 211.Capital, agricultural and manufacturing, 119—recent legislation directed to favour, 115.Capitalists, English, Rollin on, 168—Peel's connection with the, 362.Caracci, landscape style of the, 192, 193.Cardigan, the earl of, trial of, 377,720.Cardonnel, Adam de, Scottish views by, 228.Cash payments, the resumption of, in 1819, 360.Castellane's military life in North Africa, 415.Catherine of Medicis, 456,et seq. passim.Catholic question, Palmerston's speech on the, 215—Peel's conduct on the, 355, 363.Catholic emancipation, results of, 363.Catiline, speeches of, from Sallust,652.Cattle, decline in the value of, 108.Cavaignac in Algeria, 417, 418.Cavalry, on the use of, 531.Caxton, Pisistratus, My Novel by, part i., 247—part ii., 393—part iii., 499—part iv.,627.Celestina, the drama of, 535.Changarnier, general, in Algeria, 417.Charles V., war between, and Francis I., 4—siege of Metz by, 14.Charles IX., notices of, 458,et seq. passim—his death, 471.Charles X., Chateaubriand's loyalty to, 43.Charles, cardinal of Lorraine, character and career of, 11, 14.Chartist outbreak, the trials for, 381.Chateaubriand's memoirs, 33.Chess match, the London and Edinburgh, 97.Chess player's Chronicle, the, on the London and Edinburgh match, 100.China, state of exports of cotton to, 127—Peel's conduct regarding the war in, 359.Christoval de Vines, the dramas of, 538.Cicero, the representative of Roman oratory,645—on the education of the orator,660.Civilisation, influence of peasant properties on,678.Clairvoyance, remarks on, 275.Claude, duke of Guise, career of, 2—his death, 13.Claude Lorraine, the landscapes of, 192, 193.Clergy, the English, Ledru Rollin on, 169.Coal as a pigment, on, 187.Cockburn, Mr, counsel for M'Naughten, 564, 565.Cœlius, the oratory of,658.Coleridge, Mr Justice, 564.Coligny, admiral, sketches of, 16,et seq., 456,et seq. passim—his murder, 470.Commerce, British, injury inflicted on, by intervention abroad, 324.Commercial crisis of 1847, the, 124.Condamine, Charles Marie de la, 352.Condé, the prince of, 456,et seq. passim—his death, 468.Constant, B., sketch of Madame Recamier by, 41.Convulsionnaires, the, 352.Cordiner's Scottish views, on, 228.Corn, importations of, compared with exports of cotton, 128.Corn laws, Peel's conduct regarding the, 355—false application of political economy shown in the repeal of,672—Laing on,682,et seq.Corneille, the declamation of,648.Cosel, the countess, 348.Cotton manufactures, relations of free trade to, 123,et seq.—effects of free trade on, 126,et seq.—exports of, compared with imports of corn, 128—exports of, at various times, 124, 125—yarn, exports of, 1845 and 1848, 126.Courtship in the time of James I., 141.Courvoisier, the trial of, 378—sketch of, 545.Cox, D., the water-colour painter, 186.Craniology, fundamental error of, 266.Crichton castle, architecture of, 225.Crime, true causes of the increase of, 357.Criminal, responsibility of the, 547,et seq.,712.Criminal law, Peel's reform in the, 357.Croix, madame de la, 351.Crowe's night side of nature, review of, 265.Crowther, lieut., the duelling case of,719.Cultivation, effects of peasant properties on,675,et seq.Cumming's South Africa, 231.Currency measures of 1819, Peel's, 360.Dairsie, church of, 224.Daisy, the, by Δ, 471.Daun, Marshal, defeat of, at Leuthen, 529.Debt, effects of the resumption of cash payments on, 361.Defences of Britain, the,713.Delta, a Wild-Flower Garland by—The Daisy, 471—The White Rose, 472—The Sweetbriar,ib.—The Wallflower, 473.Demosthenes, the representative of Greek oratory,645—example of his,653.Denman, Lord, Oxford tried before, 553—and Lord Cardigan,725.Denmark, conduct of Britain to, 328.Despotic governments, danger of revolutionary fervour to, 321—oratory impossible under,647.D'Ewes, Symonds, the courtship of, 114.Dewint, the water-colour painter, 186.Diana of Poitiers, notices of, 11, 456.Dies Boreales.No. VIII.—Christopher under Canvass, 479—on Dugald Stewart's ideal of the Poet, 480,et seq.Direct taxes, distribution of the, 614.Direct and indirect taxation, on, 623.Doppelgangers, on, 273, 276.Domenichino, the style of, 192, 193.Drama, the English and Spanish, connection between, 537—the modern, the declamation of,648.Dramatic art, capabilities of the French for, 415.Dreams, on, 273.Dresden, the Austrian siege of, 532.Dreux, the battle of, 461.Drummond, Mr, M'Naughten's trial for the murder of, 561.Duelling, trials for,712.Dutch school of landscape, the, 191.East, oratory unknown in the,659.Ecclesiastical architecture, on, 217.Economist, the, on the American President's message, 132—on the increased exports to the East, 134—on the state of the home market, 135.Edinburgh and London chess match, the, 97.Egypt, state of exports of cotton to, 127—and of import of corn from, 130.Elephant, hunting the, 239.Elgin cathedral, state of, 220.Ellenborough, lord, on our foreign policy, 334.Elliott, the duelling case of,717.Eloquence, ancient and modern,645.England, Ledru Rollin, on, 160—the Popish partition of,745—taste for landscape painting in, 185—the water-colour painters of, 186—neglect of Spanish literature in, 535—defective training to oratory in,662—modern style of it in,666—extent of unimproved land in,686.English church, Ledru Rollin on the, 168—drama, connection of, with the Spanish, 537.Erskine, Mr, defence of Hadfield by, 552—example of the oratory of,655.Europe, Laing's observations on,671—importance of oratory in,659—extent of unimproved land in,686.Exhibition of 1851, the, 278—of paintings, the, 77.Factories, number of, in the United States, 132.Family Feud, a, 174.Farmers, loss sustained by the, through free trade, 112—their conduct toward their landlords, 113—their condition as purchasers of manufactures, 135—mode of assessing them for the income-tax, 620.Figueroa, denunciations of the drama by, 539.Fittler's Scotia Depicta, on, 228.Flamboyant architecture, the, in Scotland, 224.Flanders, the peasant proprietors of,675,et seq.Flemish school of landscape painting, the, 191.Flemming, colonel, sketches of, 348.Follett, sir W., 564,726,et seq.Foreign affairs, 319.Foreign farmer, advantages of the position of the, 615,683.Foreign policy, Peel's, review of, 360.Forey, major, in Africa, 417, 418.Forsyth's Beauties of Scotland, on, 228.Fouché, aversion of Chateaubriand to, 38.Fouvert, fidelity of, to the duke of Guise, 3.Fox, sketch of, by Ward, 207—the accession and fall of, 214.France during the sixteenth century, connection of the Guises with, 1,et seq., 456,et seq.—impatience of repose in, 36—state of exports of cotton to, 127—and of imports of corn from,ib.—moderation of England toward, 161—defence of, by Ledru Rollin, 164—rapid changes of property in, 168—aggressive spirit of, 319—English institutions unadapted to, 320—value of Prussia as a barrier against, 516—neglect of Spanish literature in, 535.Francis I., sketches of, 2,et seq.—his death, 11.Francis II., notices of, 456,et seq. passim.Francis of Lorraine, death of, 5.Francis, the attack on the Queen by, 552.Frederick the Great, career of, 520.Frederick William I., character of, 518—II., character, &c. of,ib. et seq.Free-trade and our cotton manufactures, 123—depreciation of agricultural produce under, 112—review of Peel's conduct regarding, 365—relations of taxation to, 617.Free-traders, representations of, regarding the state of the country, 106—their encomiums on sir R. Peel, 354.Freedom, the masquerade of, 475.French wars of religion, the, 456—tragedy, the perfection of,647.French, military abilities of the, 415.Frost, the trial of, 379.Funds, taxation of the, 620.Galgacus, the speech of,651.Game-law revolt in Saxony, 347.Gemsbok, description of the, 234.George III., Hadfield's attack on, 551.Germany, courts of, sketches of, 348.Gibbon's political economy, on, 620,note.Gil of the green trousers, drama of, 543.Girtin the painter, 186.Glasgow Daily Mail, letter from the, on recent legislation, 138—on the exhibition of 1851, 286, 288.Glockner, a Bavarian adventurer, 429.Gouge, rev. Mr, 142,et seq. passim.Graham, sir James, views of, regarding the prices of grain, 107.Grain, views of the free-traders regarding prices of, 107.Grattan, Mr, the oratory of,656.Great Britain, the Defences of,736,—increasing taste for art in, 77—prices at which wheat can be grown at in, 109—her moderation toward France, 161—Rollin on her conduct in the opening of the war, 164—extent of her interests, 319—effects on herself of her intervention in the Peninsula, 323—encouragement given by her to foreign liberalism, 324—her defenceless state, 333—Prussia her natural ally, 516.Great Unknown, the,698.Greece, conduct of Britain toward, 330.Greek oratory, Demosthenes the representative of,645.Green, the dramas of, 538.Green hand, the, a short yarn, part xi., 48—part xii., 291—a wind-up, 433.Gregory, professor, his translation of Reichenbach's researches, 265,et seq.Grose's Scottish antiquities, on, 228.Guise, Bouillé's Livesof the House of, vol i., 1—vol. ii., 456—Claude, duke of, 2,et seq.—Francis, 9,et seq.; 457,et seq. passim—his murder, 464—and Bourbon, struggle between the houses of, 456.Gurney, baron, 548, 553.Hadfield, James, the attack on George III. by, 551.Hamilton, W., the attack on the Queen by, 553.Hamm's campaign in Schleswig-Holstein, 308.Hanover, exports of cotton to, 127.Hanse Towns, exports of cotton to, 127.Hardenberg, Prince, the territorial reforms of,680.Havil, the water-colour painter, 186.Head's defenceless state of Britain,736.Helsham, Captain, trial of,719.Henry VIII., enmity of, to the Guises, 9.Henry II. of France, notices of, 11,et seq.—III., 467,et seq.—IV., 468,et seq.—V., Chateaubriand's speech for, 46.Henry of Guise, character, &c. of, 465.Heriot's hospital, architecture of, 227.High treason, trial of Frost for, 379Tindal's definition of, 380.History, the mysteriesof, 335.Hobbima, the style of, 88, 193.Hobert, chief-justice, 144,et seq. passim.Hohenstein, game-law revolt at, 347.Holland, state of exports of cotton to, 127—and of imports of corn, 129.Home market, value of the, 134.Horace on the Poet, 493.Hotham, baron, on duelling,716.Hours in Spain, 534.House of Guise, the, 1, 456.Huguenots, the wars with the, 456,et seq.—massacre of, at Vassy, 459.Hungarian exiles, interference of England on behalf of the, 329.Hungary, conduct of Great Britain regarding, 329.Imagination, Dugald Stewart on, 480.Income-tax, renewal of the, 611—Peel's conduct in imposing, 359—inequalities in assessment of, 620.India, state of exports of cotton to, 127—of exports and imports, 134—growth of British power in, 163—Peel's conduct regarding, 359.Indirect taxation, pressure of, on agricultural produce, 614—and direct, comparison of, 623.Industry of the people, the, 106—mutual dependence of various branches of, 115.Inheritance, law of, relations of small properties to,679.Insanity in connection with crime, on, 547,et seq.,712.Intervention, the system of, 322,et seq.Ireland, English institutions unadapted to, 320—police force introduced by Peel into, 356—results of Catholic emancipation in, 363—exemption of, from the income-tax, 622.Italian school of landscape painting, the, 191, 192.Italy, the French invasion of, under Francis I., 3—Palmerston's defence of his policy toward, 326.Jackson, Cyril, 201.James I., courtship in the time of, 141.Jarnac, battle of, 468.Jeffcott, the duelling case of,717.Jew bill, the, 73.Jew, reasons against admission of, to the legislature, 73—the modern, his character, 599.Joinville, Henry prince of, 19.John, cardinal of Lorraine, character and career of, 7—his death, 13.Johnson on duelling,714.Jones, Inigo, not the architect of Heriot's hospital, 227.Jones, trial of, with Frost, 381,et seq.Journalism, a lecture on,691.Juan de la Cueva, the dramas of, 538.Judges, Townsend's Lives of the, 374—decision of the, regarding insanity, 549.Jury trial in England, Rollin on, 168.Jutland, sketches of, 315.Kabyles, contests of the French with the, 417.Kelly, Mr Fitzroy, 388,et seq.Kerr, R., letter from, on the exhibition of 1851, 286, 288.Kinkel, Godfrey, a Family Feud by, 174.Kolin, battle of, 526.Kuruman, missionary station of, 237.Labourers, effects of free trade on, 136.La Decadence d'Angleterre, Ledru Rollin's, 160.La Harpe and Madame Recamier, 41.Laing's Observations on Europe,671.Land, unimproved, in England and the Continent,686.Landed interest, burdens on the, 614.Landed property, transfer of, 168.Landlords, prospects of the, 109—apathy of, toward their tenantry, 113.Landscape painting in oil, 185.Landscape, passion for, in England, 185.Latour Maubourg, general, 34.Lawyers, English, Rollin on, 170.Lecture on Journalism, a,691.Ledru Rollin on England, 160.Legislature, reasons against the admission of the Jew to, 74.Leuthen, battle of, 529.Lewis, Mr, on the London and Edinburgh chess match, 101.Liberal institutions, danger of forcing, on nations unprepared, 320.Liberty, necessity of, to oratory,646.Lion, hunting the, 235, 236.Litakoo, missionary station of, 237.Lombardy, conduct of Palmerston regarding, 327.London and Edinburgh chess match, the, 97.London, increasing taste for pictures in, 77—sketch of, by Ledru Rollin, 162—police force, established by Peel, 357.Lope de Vega, the dramas of, 539.Lords, trial of Lord Cardigan before the,725.Lorraine, celebrity of the house of, 1—Francis of, slain at Pavia, 5—John, cardinal of, 7—and Charles II., 456,et seq. passim, 466.Louis XII., marriage and death of, 2.Louis XVIII., the entry of, into Paris, 35—his difficulties, 36—conversation of Chateaubriand with, 38.Louis Philippe, fall of, foreseen by Chateaubriand, 44—remarkable interviews between them,ib. et seq.Louvre, the exhibition in the, 77.Ludlow, sergeant, at Frost's trial, 380.Macaulay on the restoration of the Bourbons, 36.Mackintosh, sir James, and the reforms in criminal law, 357.M'Naughten, the trial of, for murder, 378, 548, 561—interview with, 570.Madness, degree of, necessary to exonerate from crime, 547,et seq.Magnetism, Reichenbach's researches in, 266.Malta, state of exports of cotton to, 127.Manchester economists, the, 124.Mansurow, colonel, 339, 341.Manufacturers and agriculturists, comparative numbers of the, 115.Manufactures, capital invested in, 119—alleged value of the proposed exhibition to, 278—the income tax imposed for behoof of, 612—direct burdens on, 614.Marignano, the battle of, 3.Marin, lieutenant, 339, 341.Marlow, the dramas of, 538.Mary, the empress, wife of Paul, 343.Masquerade of freedom, the, 475.Massena and Madame Recamier, 41.Maule, Mr, 383.Maule, Mr justice, 553.Mayenne, the marquis of, 11.Mayo, Dr, his letters on popular superstitions, 274.Megulp as a varnish, on, 195.Méré, Poltrot de, the assassin of Guise, 464.Mesmeric trance, theory &c. of the, 274.Metz, defence of, by Guise, 14.Mexico, exports of cotton to, 133.Milanese, conquest of the, by Francis I., 3.Milianah, combat at, 417—sieges &c. of, 422.Military Life in North Africa, 415—art, capabilities of the French for the,ib.Ministry, probable policy of the, regarding the income tax, 611.Minto, lord, proceedings of, in Italy, 326.Mirfin, the duelling case of,717.Mitchell, sir Andrew, the memoirs of, 516.Modern state trials, part i., Frost, &c., 373—part ii., Oxford and M'Naughten, 545—part iii., Duelling,712.Mohamed Ould Caid Osman, adventures &c. of, 426.Moncontour, battle of, 469.Montesquiou, murder of Condé by, 468.Montluc, a partisan of the Guises, 18,et seq.Montmorency, the constable de, 17, 456,et seq. passim—his death, 467.Moral insanity, the modern dogma of, 558.Mulgrave, lord, 205,et seq. passim.My novel, by Pisistratus Caxton—initial chapter, showing how my novel came to be written, 247—chap. ii., 250—chap. iii., 252—chap. iv., 254—chap. v., 256—chap. vi., 257—chap. vii., 258—chap. viii., 260—chap. ix., 261—chap. x., 393—chap. xi., 399—chap. xii., 405—chap. xiii., 414—Book II., initial chapter, showing how this book came to have initial chapters, 499—chap. ii., 500—chap. iii., 504—chap. iv., 507—chap. v., 508—chap. vi., 511—chap. vii.,627—chap. viii.,630—chap. ix.,632—chap. x.,634—chap. xi.,638—chap. xii.,640.My peninsular medal, part viii., chap. xix., 20—chap. xx., and last, 22.Mysteries of history, the, 335.Naples, state of exports of cotton to, 127—lord Minto's proceedings at, 326.Napoleon, resistance in Spain to, 534.National debt, objects of the radicals regarding the, 109.National industry, probable effects of the exhibition of 1851 on, 283.National institute, exhibition of the, 77.Newgate chapel, a visit to, 545.New Holland, exports of cotton to, 127.Newport, the chartist outbreak at, 381.Night side of nature, the, 265.Norman architecture, remains of, in Scotland, 223.North Africa, military life in, 415.Oil, landscape painting in, by Burnet, 185—and water colours, comparison between, 190.Omars, the, an Arab tribe, 423.Oratory, extent of powers necessary for,645—ancient study of,660.Orleans, the duchess of, and Chateaubriand, 44, 45.Oryx, description of the, 234.Oued Foddha, combat of, 417.Oxford, E., sketch of, 546—the case of, 548, 551, 553,et seq.—interview with, 571.Pacifico, M., 330.Pahlen, count, 337,et seq.Paintings, the exhibitions of, 77.Palmerston, lord, the first appearance of, 214—on the probable prices of grain, 107—defence of the Spanish intervention by, 322,et seq.—on the state of Spain, 325—on that of Italy, 326—account of the Greek affair by, 330.Panin, count, 338.Paré, Ambrose, 10.Paris, entry of Louis XVIII. into, 35—removal of Napoleon's remains to, 39.Parke, Mr Baron, at Frost's trial, 380.Parker, admiral, his proceedings at Sicily, 326—interference of, on behalf of Turkey, 330—in Greece, 331.Parliament, Peel's appearances in, 368—the style of eloquence in,667.Pate, Robert, the attack on the queen by, 553, 569.Patteson, Mr Justice, on duelling,717.Paul, the emperor, history of the dethronement and death of, 336.Pavia, the battle of, 5.Peasant properties, the advantages and disadvantages of,675,et seq.Peasantry, state of the, in Saxony, 347.Peel, sir Robert, 354—his anticipations regarding the price of grain, 107—character of the legislation of, 115—circumstances under which he imposed the income tax, 612—on taxing the funds, 621.Peninsula, intervention in the, 322.Pennant's Scottish views, on, 228.Perceval, Palmerston first brought forward by, 214—Bellingham's trial for the murder of, 564.Pericles, example of the oratory of,653.Peronne, relief of, by Guise, 7.Phipps' memoirs of R. P. Ward, review of, 199.Phrenology, fundamental error of, 266.Physicians, the, on moral insanity, 548.Pictures of the season, the, 77.Pious Martha, the drama of, 542.Pirna, Frederick the Great at, 524.Pitt, charges of Ledru Rollin against, 164—ancedote of, in connection with the treason trials, 203—letter of, on the peace of Amiens, 209—letter to R. P. Ward from, 210—intrigue of Canning regarding, 211.Poet, the, on Dugald Stewart's ideal of the, 480,et seq.—Horace on the, 493,et seq.Poland, persecution of the Protestants in, 519, 520.Police, introduction of the system of, 356.Political and literary biography, 199.Political economy, misapplications of, by travellers,671.Pollock, sir F., 380,et seq., 553.Popery, effects of, on Spanish literature, 534.Popish partition of England, the,745.Population, classification of the, 116, 117.Porter, misstatements of, regarding agriculturists and manufacturers, 116.Portland gallery, exhibition of paintings in the, 77.Portland ministry, the, 214.Portugal, state of exports of cotton to, 127—Palmerston on the intervention in, 322.Poussin, Gaspar, the landscapes of, 192, 194.Pragmatic Sanction, the, 522.Prague, the battle of, 526.Presentiment, on, 273.Produce, dependence of revenue on, 614.Propagandism, system of, 320.Proposed exhibition of 1851, the, 278.Protestantism, first blows at, in France, 6—Prussia the champion of, 519.Prussia, the rise, politics, and power of, 516—Hardenberg's territorial reforms in,680.Pulpit eloquence, defects of,668.Purefoy, Mr, trial of,716.Puritans in the time of James I., the, 141.Quarterly Review, the, on the London and Edinburgh chess match, 98,et seq.Queen, Oxford's trial for shooting at the, 551.Quintilian on oratory,660—on training for it,661.Radicals, objects of the, regarding the national debt, 109.Railway crisis, effects of the, 125—losses, use made of, by the free-traders, 135.Ramsay, Mr, on peasant properties,678.Rantzau, count, free corps under, 311.Recamier, madame, 40.Reform bill, Peel's conduct regarding the, 358.Reichel, Mdlle, 268, 269.Reichenbach's Researches, review of, 265.Religion, French wars of, 456.Rembrandt, the landscapes of, 192.Renewal of the Income-tax, the, 611.Republican spirit, aggressive character of the, 319.Restoration, Chateaubriand at the, 34—his account of its errors, 35—difficulties of the government of, 36.Revenue, dependence of, on produce, 614.Revolution, alleged influence of, on commerce, 128,et seq.—propagandist system of, 320—of 1830, Chateaubriand's conduct during the, 43.Rhinoceros, hunting the, 238, 244.Ribain, captain, 417, 419.Ricot, lieut., death of, 418.Rivas, admiral, 338, 339.Robertson on duelling,714.Robespierre, the oratory of,657.Rollin, Ledru, on England, 160.Roman oratory, Cicero the representative of,645.Romantic drama, Tellez on the, 540.Romilly and the reforms in criminal law, 357.Rosbach, battle of, 528.Rouen, the siege of, 460, 461.Royal Academy, exhibition of the, 77,et seq.Rubens, the landscapes of, 197.Russell, lord John, on the probable prices of grain, 107.Russia, state of exports of cotton to, 127—history of the Revolution of 1801 in, 336—value of Prussia as a barrier against, 516.Rutowski, the countess, 344.Ruysdael, the paintings of, 88, 194.Sacken, count, Saxon minister, 344.St André, marshal, death of, 463.St Denis, battle of, 467.St Helena, the removal of Napoleon's remains from, 39.St Michael's palace, description of, 340.St Quentin, battle of, 17.St Vallier, the count of, 9.Sallust, speeches of Catiline from,652.Salvator Rosa, the style of, 193.Sandal wood tree, the, 238.Sardinia, state of exports of cotton to, 127—conduct of Palmerston toward, 327.Saxony, sketches of court of, 344.Science, love of the marvellous in, 265.Schiller, examples of eloquence from,650.Schleswig-Holstein, sketches and episodes of campaign in, 308—conduct of Great Britain regarding, 328.Schwerin, marshal, death of, 526.Scotland, Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of, 217.Scott's provincial antiquities, on, 228.Self-seeing, on, 273.Shakspeare, acquaintance of, with the Spanish drama, 536—specimens of eloquence from,649.Sicily, Minto's proceedings in, 326.Sidi Embarek, the, an Arab tribe, 425.Sidmouth, lord, intrigue of Canning against, 211.Siquot, Alfred, sketch of, 425.Sketching, colour-box for, 187, 190Sleep, Reichenbach's theory of, 269.Slezer, John, his views of Scottish castles, &c., 220, 227.Small farms, advantages and disadvantages of,675,et seq.Society of British artists, exhibition of the, 77.Somnambulism, theory of, 274.Souaves, the, an African corps, 416.Soubise, prince of, at Rosbach, 528.South America, exports of cotton to, 133.Sovereign, state of the law regarding attacks on the, 551.Spackman, classification of the population by, 116, 117.Spahis, the Algerian, 416—of Mascara, 425.Spain, hours in, 534—exports of cotton to, 127—Rollin on the conduct of England toward, 166—the intervention on behalf of, 323—heroism shown by, at various times, 534.Spanish America, the attempt to introduce liberal institutions into, 320—literature and drama, 534—treasure frigates, affair of the, 212.Sporting in South Africa, 231—alleged inhumanity of, 241.Springboks, migration of the, 234.Statistics, true value of, &c., 123.Staunton, Mr, on the London and Edinburgh chess match, 100.Stewart, Dugald, on his ideal of the poet, 480.Strozzi, marshal, death of, 18.Stuart, James, the trial of, 468—Robert, murder of, 378.Suavey, Christoval, 599.Sweet Briar, the, by Δ, 472.Tacitus, the speech of Galgacus from,651.Tailors, the working, state of, 598.Talbanow, colonel, 339, 341.Talbot, Hon. J. C., at Frost's trial, 380.Talfourd, Mr Justice, 380.Talizin, general, 338, 340.Talleyrand, Chateaubriand's aversion to, 38.Tartas, colonel, 428.Tatarinow, general, 339, 341.Taxation, necessity for adjustment of, 613—on direct and indirect, 623.Taxes, present distribution of, 614.Taylor, president, protectionist policy advocated by, 131—Mr Sidney, counsel for Oxford, 553.Taylor's medical jurisprudence, on insanity, 550—on the case of M'Naughten, 567.Telémaque, democratic character of,647.Tellez, Gabriel, 539.Temple of Folly, the, 229.Tempoure, general, 427.Therouenne, siege of, by the Germans, 16.Thiébault, sketch of Mitchell by, 523.Thionville, siege of, 18.Tindal, chief-justice, 380, 564.Titian, the landscape style of, 192, 195.Tirso de Molina, the dramas of, 539.Toulon, lord Mulgrave at, 205.Towie castle, architecture of, 225.Townsend's state trials, Part I., 373—Part II., 545—Part III.,712—sketch of the author's career, 373.Trees, Burnet on painting, 195.Tschitscherin, general, 339, 341.Tuckett, captain, the duelling case of,720.Turkey, exports of cotton to, 127—interference of Britain on behalf of, 329.Turner, paintings by, in present exhibition, 81—the water-colour paintings of, 186.United States, expectations of the free-traders from the, 130—their protectionist policy,ib.—factories in, 132—imports of grain from, and exports of cotton to, 133—aggressive spirit of, 319.Universities, the English, Ledru Rollin on, 170—value of the, 201—defective system of, as regards oratory,669.Utrecht, treaty of, violation of, 323.Valée, marshal, in Algeria, 422.Vandervelde, the sea pieces of, 198.Varley, John, the painter, 186.Vassy, the massacre of, 459.Vaughan, baron, on duelling,718.Vernet the painter, anecdote of, 421.Vivonne, François de, death of, 12.Von Ende, Saxon minister, 344.Von Sachsen, duchess, the court of, 348.Wages, state of, 136.Waldgrave, Miss Jemima, 144,et seq.—lady, 151,et seq. passim.Wallflower, the, by Δ, 473.Ward, R. P., memoirs of, reviewed, 199.Water, sketching of, 188.Water-colour painting, the English school of, 186.Water colours and oil, comparison between, 190.Wealth, classification of the creation of, 117—not the greatest social good,673.Whately on social advancement,673.Wheat, loss on cultivation of, 109.Whig ministry, attempts of the, regarding the income tax, 619.Whigs, state of the, under Fox, 206.White rose, the, by Δ, 472.Who rolled the powder in?689.Wightman, Mr Justice, 380, 553.Wild flower garland, a, by Δ—The daisy, 471—the white rose, 472—the sweetbriar,ib.—the wallflower, 473.Wilde, sir T., 379,et seq., 553, 559.Williams, Ambrose, the trial of, 378, 381et seq.—Mr Justice, 380, 564.Wilson, the landscape painter, 192.Wood carving, mediæval, 217.Working classes, condition of the, 594,et seq. passim.Wordsworth on the aim of poetry, 490.Wostitz, general, death of, 529.Wrangel, general, 313.Year of Sorrow, the—Ireland. Spring Song, 93—Autumnal Dirge, 94—Winter Dirge, 95.Yeschwel, colonel, 339, 341.Zehmin, baron, 345.Zorndorf, the battle of, 531.Zoubow, the brothers, 338,et seq.
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