Miss ones taste là gì

Page 2

is the head. That school costs France a hun. Charles Horn; the melody is simple, but not The Tartar Drum. Ballad sung by Miss M. dred thousand francs a year; and there have very striking. “ Poor last leaf of summer, Glover, in the “ Black Vulture.'

Poetry never been in it more than twenty students in very pretty stanzas, by that evergreen, Lord by Mr. Fitz Ball: the Music by G. H. Rodthe three branches of the fine arts which are Ashtown. 66 We return no more,” is worthy

well

. London. Goulding and D'Almaine. taught. According to the proposition of M. of its gifted authoress, Mrs. Hemans: the Of the sweet effect of this ballad we spoke in Vernet, the expense of twenty boarders would music which is attached to these lines is com- noticing the piece in which it was produced, amount only to sixty thousand francs. He posed by Mr. Lodge, and has much merit. and we have now only to repeat that the air is advises, therefore, that each student should • Waltz,” composed by F. Burrowes : the first truly beautiful. Plaintive and perfectly suited receive three thousand francs a year; four part is sweet and elegant; but the animato to the words, it is just one of those things which hundred and fifty to be paid to him quarterly, movement by no means suits our taste.

6 Mo

are calculated for universal popularity. by the French ambassador, and twelve hundred zart,” by the author of the “ Roué,” is both on the remittance to France of his studies every elegant and entertaining, and quite surprised This Rose I plucked at Morn. year-those studies to be sent to the Academy us how so much interest could have been con

My Loved Home. of the Fine Arts at Paris, in order that they ferred on so oft-told a tale. The“ Sonnet,” by THESE tivo, of the sweetest of Mr. John Barmay decide whether the student should remain Miss M. A. Browne, is exceedingly sweet. nett's compositions, are published by him from at Rome, or be recalled. To the forty thou-" La Tenerezza,” composed by C. Czerny, is the Carnival at Naples, in which they are sung sand francs annually which would thus be pleasing and shewy: we do not like the last G by Miss Taylor. To praise one of them is to saved by the suppression of the school, might in the sixth bar of the second page; nor do we praise both, for they bear a strong resemblance be added thirty thousand francs, the rent of exactly understand the 25th, 26th, and 27th to each other, and are in the same key, though the hotel of the French ambassador at Rome, bars of the same page. “ The Young Matron” different in time. Simple and pretty, we think who might reside in the beautiful hotel of the is a charming sketch, by Mrs. Cornwell Baron they must become great favourites off, as well academy.

Wilson. “ The Widow," by T. H. Bayly,

another beauty, but not more beautiful than is
ORIGINAL POETRY.
the lithographic drawing by T. Childs, from

DRAMA.
an original drawing by G. Cattermole: Bishop, THE SONG OF BEAUTY.

the pride of English composers, has added some


SONTAG.-Miss Sontag arrived at Hamburg I Turn on every side,

charming notes to this song. “ The Royalist on the 9th instant, in the steam-boat from St. And gaze along the land,

Souvenir,” for the harp, by N. C. Bochsa : all Petersburg. She has been received with every And yet, both far and wide,

that Bochsa writes for the harp must be good.mark of distinction by the principal members The lowly and the grand,

“ Aria alla Francese,” by T. Valentine, is very of that city, and by the hereditary Prince of The noble and the clown,

light, and, we doubt not, will be played by Mecklenburg, who chanced to be on a visit The fallen and the free,

young boarding-school misses with great satis- there with his princess. Miss Sontag has given The court, the camp, the crown,

faction. “An Air," by Bishop, arranged by two private concerts, and has sung twice in the Alike are slaves to me!

V. Novello. Can Novello arrange any thing theatre; of course to half-suffocated and quite The soldier wields his sword,

badly? No! “ The Poet's Bride," by Miss enraptured audiences. She has received an inAnd glories in the fight;

Pardoe: as it is written by a fair hand we will vitation from the citizens of Bremen, who offer The miser views his hoard,

not censure. " I love thee,” by J. R. Planché, a carte blanche as to terms, and assure her that And revels in delight;

is, like all his poetry, exceedingly sweet : Miss she cannot fix any price upon her attractions The statesman's dearest aim

Dance is the composer, and the music is very which will exceed the value they set on them. Is rank and high degree;

pretty. “I'll meet thee, love," -- we would She has, however, declined the offer, and stated But power, gold, and fame,

rather not have met thee. “ Melancholy her resolution to retire altogether from public They'd give them all for me!

Musings” is quite equal to, if not better than, life. At a supper given in compliment to her,

any thing we have seen by Richard Ryan; we by a spirited and distinguished English mera Let fraud or force obtain

like his lines very much. * Night and Dawn,” chant at Hamburg, she announced that her last A mastery on earth

by R. J. Raymond, composed by J. Barnetc. farewell to the stage would take place on the I hold my right to reign

Popularity will never dawn upon this night. 20th inst. She added, that she should testify From nature at my birth :

“ The Stranger's Goodnight” is a long fare. her sense of the gratifying reception which she I care not for the strife,

well, but pretty,

“ The Motherless ;” the au- had met with on that her last professional visit, Who conquer or who flee ;

thor appears to have no name; but, if he con- by a valedictory address, in which she should So long as there is life,

tinues to write, we prophesy he will very soon subscribe herself, for the first time, Grafine There will be slaves for me!

gain one. There is a beautiful drawing by Rossi. All mystery is now cleared away, and The monarch is my tool,

G. Childs, from a design by John Wright, as with it will vanish, we hope, the pale cast of The soldier is my lamb,

an embellishment to this little poem. The two melancholy which her former equivocal position The scholar is my fool,

pieces for the piano-forte, by F. Kalkbrenner with society cast over her delicate cheek. Yet mistress as I am

and Henri Herz, are clever and brilliant. Of all beneath the sun,

DRURY LANE. “ Impromptu," by T. A. Rawlings. The Of man, and earth, and sea,

young ladies will thank him for making it very Orway's Venice Preserved was performed on I'd give them all for one

easy. “ The Birth and Progress of Music," Monday evening, for the purpose of introducing I'd give them all for thee !

by T. C. N. To read an account of the birth, the long-promised Miss Huddart as Belvidera. F. M. R. parentage, and education, of so old a dame as We always question the taste of a lady who

Music, startled us at first, we confess ; but chooses this character for her début ; and if

having commenced, we were led on by de- Niss Huddart was a free agent in the business, MUSIC.

grees, until at last we felt sorry the account her judgment is equally to be doubted ;--as, NEW PUBLICATIONS.

was so short. “ The Witch," by Lord Nu- in the whole range of the drama, there is The Musical Bijou ; an Album of Music, gent, we shall at once dismiss, by saying it is scarcely a part which she is less qualified to

Poetry, and Prose, for 1831. Edited by excellent. My home, dear love, and thee, sustain. The masterly construction of the

F. H. Burney. Goulding and D'Almaine. by F. H. Burney, is highly creditable to his play will always keep it before the public ; but THE Bijou was the first Musical Annual pub- talents ; the music, by Addison, although not it is one of the least affecting to us, from the lished in England ; and if Mr. Burney be able, very striking, is pretty.

“ Lord Ronald,"total want of interest in the dramatis persone. each succeeding year, to send forth such a com- by George Linley. Mr. Linley will oblige Who could possibly care if the whole of them bination of talents as the present volume con- every one by writing much more. Song of were swallowed by an earthquake? The autains, it must continue to be also among, if the Highland piper," old words, new music by thor has not forgotten to prejudice us against not, the first in merit. This truly elegant G. H. Rodwell, is one of the most spirited com. the Doge, Priuli, and all the rest of the “ work commences with a short poetical intro- positions of modern music; with it we close verend rogues in robes,” who compose the duction ; then follows one of these charming the book, and could not do so under more fa- senate. We certainly feel that, as far as they ballads which none better than Thomas vourable impressions than it has produced. are concerned, we could ourselves carry Haynes Bayly knows how to write, entitled,

torch to the arsenal and set its gates on fire;" " Why comes he not ?” meant, as we should

yet we should be loath to do it in the company think, to illustrate Mr. Parris's beautiful pic

of such conspirators as the execrable Renault, ture, exhibited last year. It is set to music by |

the contemptible Jaffier, or the quarrelsome

Page 3

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Page 4

visited the monastery of Mount Casino, to, The subject matter of the third book of Regimen Sanitatis Salernitanum; a Poem on recommend themselves to the prayers of the another imitator, Ægidius, is far too valuable

the Preservation of Health, in Rhyming Latin monks, and the protection of Saint Benedict. for us to pass over unnoticed. Its contents Verse. Addressed by the School of Salerno From hence they sailed over to Durazzo, ar- supply us with “ advice that young and inerto Robert of Normandy, Son of William the rived at Constantinople, and joined the armies perienced physicians are to be avoided.;also Conqueror : with an ancient Translation, and of the crusaders at the siege of Nice. It is * the description of a good physician:" this

, an Introduction and Notes. By Sir Alexander Croke, D.C.L. and F.A.S. 8vo. pp. valour performed by Duke Robert in Palestine. but presume it can only be meant as ideal

. unnecessary to relate here the prodigies of we confess, we should very much like to see 199. Oxford, 1830. D. A. Talboys.

After the conquest of the holy city, the victory The same book moreover asserts, that "the To the medical professor this volume will not at Ascalon, the election of Godfrey, and the circumstances of cases should be inquired into:”. fail to be highly interesting from its matter ; establishment of the kingdom of Jerusalem, in the propriety of this, Mr. Abernethy will of and, from the quaintness of its style, to be the greater part of the crusaders returned course consistently acquiesce. It may not be infinitely amusing. He will sometimes indeed home, crowned with glory, and exhausted by amiss to give the acknowledgments of the same have to restrain the smile of superiority, at the their labours. The Duke of Normandy and writer, for the extra services of him who does grave simplicity and dogmatic absurdity with the Count of Flanders, by the way of Constan. rather' more for your money than would be which, in the eleventh century, the College of tinople, returned into Apulia in September, generally required at his hands : Physicians were wont to afflict their patients; 1099. Robert was received by his countrymen Qui requiem monachis in acutis febribus offert, while he will more frequently have to trace and relations, Ruggiero Count of Sicily, and

Et requiem facit æternam. the modern discovery and the specific nostrum his nephew Ruggiero Duke of Apulia, with These lines may be considered as peculiarly to some antique common-place. Nor will he the cordiality and honours due to the successful applicable to one Sanctus Johannes Longinus, seldom find reason to exult, how soon the champions of the cross, and in a round of fes- whose memory lives in the minds of every one twilight of his science began to dispel the tivities they forgot the sufferings of their —but his patients. Our fair readers will sup. profound darkness of the middle ages, and feel Christian warfare. "Robert was vanquished by pose the censure to be passed upon the em. proud of the stout infancy of his profession, the charms of Sybilla, the daughter of Geoffrey piric, who, in fulfilling his promise of repose, which while in the cradle strangled the Typhon, Count of Conversano, the nephew of Robert relieves his patients by what may be translated and commenced its vigorous labours of antici- Guiscard. She was a lady of great beauty, the long sleep. . pating or alleviating human suffering,—in elegant manners, and superior understanding.

We trust our readers will not think we aiding to rid the world of the ravages and At a subsequent period, after their return to mean to insult them by proceeding to quote havoc of disease. To the antiquary,—if there Normandy, she was said to have conducted the the old English version, in preference to the be one whose researches this little book may affairs of the duchy, during his temporary ab- original Latin. The exposition of the line, have eluded,-a rich fund of delight will be sences, with more judgment than her impru. Unica nux prodest, nocet altera, tertia mors est. opened. Even if he should have met with the dent husband. He had a son by her named is neat, quaint, and pretty: original, his veneration for antiquity will not William, who became Count of Flanders. Yet

“ This speeche perhapes is somewhat darke, be violated by meeting an old friend with a she appears to have fallen early a sacrifice to

The stile thereof with common sense new face: we have the authority of Sir Alex- the envy and factiousness of some Norman

Doth not so well agree. ander Croke's introduction for our declaration, ladies of nobility. Upon this marriage, from

But for to tell by passinge nutt that the poem is “in the precise state in which his father-in-law and other friends, Robert Our author what he meanse, it was sent to the King of England;" that is, received a large treasure to enable him to The nutmegge first he profereth,

And that to good intense. Duke Robert of Normandy, who was to have redeem his dominions. Besides visiting his

In second place, what hurtfull is been king, provided he had lived long enough, Norman friends, a principal object in Robert's

He seemeth for to tuche, had not flung his crown at the Saracens, and his return to Italy was to consult the physicians of Wherein he meaneth the wallnutte brother William Rufus, the pawnbroker, had Salerno, for a wound which he had received in

Doth hurte us over muche. thought proper to let him. We quote Duke his right arm from an arrow supposed to have

But in the last what perils moughte

Be hidde therein I'muse, Robert's history; since to him the poem was been poisoned, and which had degenerated Because to eate or cracke that nutte dedicated.

into a deep ulcer, called a fistula. The story No man did ever use. “ Such was the situation of the country, and that the poison was sucked out by his affec- As well inoughe he knew that wratte the state of medical science at Salerno, when tionate wife during his sleep, is probably one of

This plesante pretye verse,

So doeth he bringe in pretilye Robert Duke of Normandy, the eldest son of the romantic tales of that romantic period,

What nutte doth use to perse. William the Conqueror, having mortgaged his and has been told of other heroes. That his And in his talke of nuttes in deede dukedom for ten thousand marks to his brother cure was owing to the skill of the doctors of

In sadness first he spake;

But at the last the name of nutte William Rufus, set out upon his expedition to Salerno is more probable. Amidst the hospi

As loughte for to forsake. Palestine. This army of the crusaders, which tality of his countrymen, the luxuries of Italy,

He sayeth that full manye a man consisted of Britons, Normans, and French, and the endearments of his bride, Robert was.

The crosse-bowe hath yslane, was conducted principally by Hugh the great ted near a year, and by this delay he lost the

The nutte whereof he blames therefore

His meaning now is playne; Count of Vermandois, the Duke of Normandy, crown of England, and ended a brave but And I do tell you, not in vaine, Robert Count of Flanders, Stephen Count of imprudent life in a captivity of eight and 'Tis good from such nuttes

to refrain." Chartres and Blois, Eustace Count of Bologne, twenty years.".

The Salernian poem opens thus :and Odo Bishop of Bayeux. Whilst Godfrey Before entering upon the merits of the Sa- " The Salerne Schoole doth by these lines impart of Bouillon with his companions marched lernian poem, we should state, that the extraor

All health to England's king, and doth aduise

From care his head to keepe, from wrath his harte. through Hungary, this division left France, in dinary popularity with which it was welcomed, Drink not much wine, sup light, and soone arise; September 1096, and crossed the Alps into called forth many imitations. Among other When meat is gone, long sitting breedeth smart; Italy. At Lucca they received the benediction emulatory productions, was one by Otho of

And after one still waking keepe your eies;

When mu't you f'd your selfe to nature's need, of the pope, visited the tombs of the apostles at Cremona. We shall take the freedom of mak- Forbeare in a not, for that much danger breeds; Rome, and repaired to Salerno, the metropolis ing the annexed extract from Mr. Otho’s

Cinars --first, doctor Quiet, of the Norman duchy of Apulia. Robert of poem, for the sole and especial gratification of

Next doctor Very 1.77, and doctor Dyet." Normandy was nearly related to the reigning our medical friends. Sir Alexander remarks:

The physicians of former days, like those of family. Ruggiero, the duke, had married “ The following prudential advice enters too the present, were very much of St. Paul's way Adela, Robert's first cousin, the daughter of deeply into the mysteries of the profession to of thinking in regard to wine. It must have Robert le Frison, who was brother to Matilda, have been designed for the use of the profane: been a "bee's wing” gentleman who gave the the wife of William the Conqueror. The

De prudentia Medici sumentis pro lahore.

following lints season was too far advanced to proceed safely

Non didici gratis, nec sagax Musa Hippocratis “ Chuse wine you mean shall serve you all the year, Ægris in stratis serviet absque datis.

well, and color'd cleere; by sea to the coast of Epirus. The impetu.

Sumpta solet care multum medicina juvare,

Fiue qualites there a.Wine's praise aduancing, osity, however, of the Counts of Vermandois Si quæ datur gratis nil habet utilitatis.

Strong, be swfuli, and fragrant, coole, and dauncing. and Flanders impelled them to brave the

Res dare pro rebus, pro verbis verba solemus.

White Muskarrell and t'andy wine, and Greeke, Pro vanis verbis montanis utimur herbis,

Do make men's wits and bewies grosse and fat; dangers of the sea, and to pass over with their Pro caris rebus, pigmentis et speciebus.

Red wyne doch make the venue oft time to seek, troops. The Duke of Normandy, and the Est medicinalis medis data regula talis :

And hath a binding qua tiat; Counts of Chartres and Bologne, passed the

Ut dicatur, da, da, dum profert languidus, ha, ha, Canary and Madera, borbe i ke Da medicis primo medium, medio, nihil imo.

To make one lenne inden! but wot you what]: winter at Salerno. In the April following Dum dolet infirmus medicus sit pignore firmus. Who say they make one learne, wold make one laffethey proceeded on their expedition from the

Instantèr quære nummos, ut pignus, habere.

They meane, they make outlenne vpon a staffe. ports of Apulia. In their way to Bari they

Fædus et antiquum conservat pignus amicum,

Wine, women, baths, by art or nature warme, Nam si post quæris quærens seinper esis,".

Ys'd or abus'd, do men much jod or harme."

Page 5

Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopædia, Vol. XIII. practitioner of some consideration at Jamaica, order, the president alluded to Chenevix, a

The Western World; Vol. 1. The United that it was probable the milky juice of the name long known to all our scientific readers, States. 12mo. pp. 344. London, 1830. Long- Calotropis gigantea, diluted with mucilage, as being identified with chemistry. On Mr.

would prove a useful application in cases of Smithson, the president was very eloquent: it man and Co. The present volume of Dr. Lardner's Cabinet chronic ophthalmia : it appears that Mr. Mac- appeared they had studied together at Oxford; Cyclopædia commences the history of the fadyn had applied it successfully in cases of and the friendship of youth grew with their Western World : this, in a concise and con

ulcers of the palate; he recommends its trial growth. Chemistry was also Smithson's fanected form, was much wanted. The necessary

in cases of aphthæ in children :- from P. J. vourite pursuit; a list of his papers on this matter for such a work has been in the present Brown, Esq., of Thun, canton of Bern, com- most interesting subject, was read: many of instance, diligently collected, and perspicuously municating some interesting particulars rela- these, we believe, bave been given, under arranged. The volume is written in a plain tive to the use of the leaves of the walnut tree, the head of the Royal Society, in the Literary and pleasing style, and is altogether well calcu- for the more rapidly dispersing of milk in Gazette. An anecdote related of him by the lated to win and retain the attention of the females. Dr. Sigmond read a paper descriptive president in his speech, we shall attempt

Smithson mind, and repay it with solid information. of certain valuable seeds, presented by Sir J. to narrate as closely as possible. We must defer our illustrations till next week. Macgrigor.

happened once to observe a tear gliding down

a lady's cheek; he endeavoured to catch it on LITERARY AND LEARNED. a crystal — one half of the drop escaped; he ARTS AND SCIENCES.

ROYAL SOCIETY: ANNIVERSARY MEETING. preserved the other however, submitted it to On Thursday afternoon a very interesting On Tuesday we were present at the anniversary michrocosmic-salt, with muriate of soda, and

re-agents, and detected what was then called meeting of this Society took place in one of the meeting of this learned body, which has lately three or four more saline substances, held in museum rooms, Bruton Street; J. E. Bicheno, The attendance of the fellows was unprece- zie, Sir Lucas Pepys, and his Grace the Duke

popularity. solution.

Mr. Browne, Lieut.-Col. MackenEsq. in the chair. Mr. Vigors read a brief dentedly numerous ; and we noticed amongst of Atholl, were severally alluded to by the prebut satisfactory report ; which shewed that, them many of the chief scientific Englishmen sident; the latter was a warm patron of sciduring the gloomy month of November, 8676 of the day, and also several fellows of high ence, especially that most important, interestpersons had visited the gardens ;-that the

rank and distinction. Society's receipts during the same period Canterbury was an attentive auditor. At 11 though its birth-place was the Continent, had

The Archbishop of ing, and improving branch, geology, which; 20251. 108. 6d.; and the expenditure 9531. "From o'clock, Davies Gilbert, Esq. took the chair : been fostered by Dr. Hutton in this country.

before him was placed the splendid mace * of another report, also read by Mr. Vigors, we learned that the whole of his Majesty's col-delivered his annual speech.

The patronage of his grace, and the facilities

the Society. The president then rose, and for prosecuting the study of geology which lection had been removed from the menagerie

He began by his extensive domain presented, both of which at Sand-pit Gate, Windsor, and was now in adverting, in feeling and appropriate language, were bestowed by him on the well-known

to the loss of eminent persons sustained by the geologist, M'Culloch, were very happily chathe Society's possession ;---that a committee of science and correspondence, comprising eleven Society since the last anniversary: the list of racterised. After paying a warm, but me. individuals , had been formed, by which means Atholl ; Sir Frederick F. Baker ; Sir Richard Lawrence, the president concluded, by stating

these embraced the names of the Duke of rited, panegyric to the memory of Sir Thomas a friendly intercourse with the learned bodies Brooke'; Nicholas Browne, Esq.; Henry Browne, that he was not aware of the death of any of of the continent and foreign parts might be Esq.; Richard Chenevix, Esq; ; Lieut.-Col. the foreign members having taken place during cultivated, thereby facilitating the spread of Cocks; Sir R. T. Farquhar; Jeremiah Ives, the past year. He then announced, that the the knowledge of comparative anatomy and animal physiology. A warm tribute of thanks kenzie ; Sir C. M. Pole ; Sir Lucas Pepys; ster, for various communications on light; Esq. ; Sir T. Lawrence; Lieut.-Col. Mac

royal medal had been awarded to Dr. Brew. was paid to Captain King and Major Franklin; Lord Redesdale ; Major Rennell; Dr. Shackleto the latter, for his collection of birds from the Himalaya Mountains, the Society and science Esq.'; the Rev. Stephen Weston ; Sir Robert session. The other royal medal had been awarded ford; James Smithson, Esq.; Edmund Turner,

many

of which we have published in the Lite

rary Gazette, from time to time, during the past in general . would feel much indebted :—of Wigram; and Sir F. Barnard. The worthy to M. Balard, of Ứontpelier, for his recent that they were alive on the Himalaya Moun: president characterised these as individuals of discovery in springs of brome, so called from the tains eight months ago, they arrived in Eng, and of splendid talents, whose loss would long Copley and Rumford medals were not awarded.

great distinction, of extensive acquirements, motion of the sea, and its peculiar odour. The land five weeks since, and were now placed be remembered, not only in the walks of scion the Society's table, accompanied by accu

At the close of the address, a new council rately coloured figures, life-size. These birds, ence, but in the more familiar society of the was balloted for. The election fell upon the

. England ; their form and plumage are exceed- several particulars of the life of Major Rennell, ville, Sir George Murray, Sir Astley Cooper, **

an officer frequently introduced to the notice Col. Fitzclarence, Messrs. Barrow. Caven: ingly beautiful. The report further noticed a collection of American quails [genus ortyx] a lifetime : of his works, that on the Geography Barlow, Ellis, Faraday, Gilbert, Capts. Kater,

of the readers of the Literary Gazette in his dish,* Children, Lubbock,* Peacock, Vigors,* group analogous to the partridge of the old of Africa, his Atlas of Bengal, his Map of the Philip, 'Pond, Rennie, and Dr. Roget. lately known; now there are eleven, four of Mogul empire, and several others, have gained

Those marked thus * are new members the him a name honourable in science. which were introduced to science by the Zoolo

With a others were of the last council.

vigour of intellect that reminded classical gical Society.

A ballot for president, treasurer, and secrereaders of the greatest of the Roman cen- taries, then took place : for the former office Lord Kinnoul, Lord De Tabley, Colonel Fitzclarence, and a number of other individuals sors, Major Rennell

, after he had passed a there were only two candidates_H. R. H. the distinguished for rank and science, were bal- mature age, gained a knowledge of Greek, Duke of Sussex and Mr. Herschel the astrono

sufficient to enable him to consult with ad-mer: the result of the ballot was loted for, and elected.

vantage the early writers in that language. MEDICO-BOTANICAL SOCIETY.

His Geographical System of Herodotus, in. EARL STANHOPE in the chair. A list of cluding the expedition of Darius Hystaspes valuable donations connected with medical

to Scythia, the site of Babylon; the Tem. ple of Jupiter Ammon — a dissertation on

Mr. Lubbock was elected treasurer, and Dr. botany, made to the Society by sundry dis- the locality of Troy, &c., were the fruits of Roget and Mr. Children were chosen secretatinguished individuals, was read.' Letters were also read from Mr. Lockhart, of St. Ann's, this acquirement in his later years. Next iy ries. It was then resolved that a deputation

of the fellows should wait upon his royal highWest Indies, containing observations on the * As the gilding of this ensign of royalty forms one ofness, and communicate the result of the elecbark of the Cantaria speciosa, which is found Sir James South's charges against the Society, we may tion; after which Mr. Gilbert briefly thanked to be of great use in disordered stomachs, in length, and very massive; it was some time ago gilded, the Society for the attention shewn to him acting both as emetic and cathartic ; it is the expense of which was 2012. It is the same which was during the three years of his presidency: he much esteemed by those of tie old French in use, crime omtof minden nebei solised theommons: and then vacated the chair, shaking hands in the families resident on the island, who are ac-ment, alluded in the words, " Take away that bauble!" most cordial manner with those around him. quainted with its worth :--from Dr. W. Hamil- Shortly after, it was presented to the Royal Society by ton, of Plymouth, stating, upon the authority by the one now borne by Col. Seymour, the sergeant-at- of the ballot ; but, in effect, it appears to have been to

† There is some confusion afloat touching the mode of Mr. Macfadyn, a botanist and medical arms.

.decide this question.

For H. R. H. the Duke of Sussex .......... 119 For Mr. Herschel ....

111

Page 6

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Page 8

is obtained has hitherto remained totally un-| Gazette, by the Medical Gazette, the Age that there is not a jury in England with whom known. Dioscorides, whose opinion is adopted newspaper, and others of our gentle craft, in he would have the fair chance which it is al. by all subsequent writers, derives the name which, it must be confessed, a joke of our own, leged every subject of Britain is entitled to ammoniacum from Ammon, or Hammon, the to a medical friend, has been converted into a enjoy, however heinous his crimes. Jupiter of the Libyans, whose temple was solemn truth, and we have been most mirasituated in the desert of Cyrene, near to which culously horsed and unhorsed. But we would the plant was said to grow : but it appears to not allude to this subject on our own account: The rapid advance of the cholera morbus, the author, that Dioscorides was altogether mis- we think something is, in common honesty, which comes from the extremity of India, and taken as to its native country; and that the demanded from us respecting Mr. Long, lest the certain fact, that it always follows the name ammoniacum, or armoniacum, as it is our total silence should operate to his disad-migration of large bodies of men, such as the indifferently written, is really a corruption of vantage.

march of armies and caravans, should warn Armeniacum; for it is now ascertained beyond We have been accused of being his partisans. Western Europe of the near invasion of this all doubt, that it is a native of the north We refer to the Literary Gazette ; and we say

dreadful scourge.

Two Russian divisions, of Persia ; and in ancient authors the name of that we might, with equal truth, have been which have advanced to the frontiers of Poland, the apricot is sometimes found written malum called the partisans of a man who pretended come from the governments of Koursk and Cherarmeniacum. The author then proceeds to to have discovered the longitude, the elixir son, where this epidemic rages. M. Moreau de give the essential character and a detailed de- vitæ, or the philosopher's stone. We did in Jonnès, on the 22d November, read before the scription of the plant, which he regards as a his case what we do in all others: we men- Academy of Sciences at Paris a report of connew genus, and has called it dorema ammonia- tioned the claims of the party to be able to siderable interest, respecting this new species cum; concluding with some observations on cure consumption. We inquired of many in- of plague.

“ Will the cold," asks M. Moreau the plant which yields the analogous gum, gal- telligent patients what were the results of his de Jonnès, “ extinguish the cholera morbus banum, which he considers also to form a new treatment; and we stated, as stated to us,

this

But has cold done so during the genus, and proposes for it the name of galba- their answers. The investigation was one of fifteen years it has ravaged Asia ? Did it even num officinale. The plant which has hitherto great interest to humanity; and we should at Orenbourg, under a latitude more northern been considered as yielding the gum galbanum, have been ashamed, as public journalists anxi-than Paris ? Besides, we forget too easily the namely, the bubon galb. of Linnæus, and of the ous to lay every kind of information before our memorable plague which desolated Wallachia pharmacopeias, Mr. Don has shewn to be readers,-of pursuing any other course.

We and Russia from 1769 to 1771. It was im. totally different, possessing neither the smell gave no opinion whatever ; but we should be ported into Moscow during the autumn, and nor taste of galbanum.

guilty of falsehood were we not to acknowledge continued its fearful career during three very

that the testimony of these individuals induced severe winters. Will this scourge reach Po. DR. HENDERSON in the chair. Two commu- Mr. Long's system. us to entertain a very favourable opinion of land, Germany, and, at last, France ? We

dare not dwell on these fearful thoughts : we nications were read, viz. on the different kinds

He is now run down, secundum artem; and shudder when we remember that the cholera of pine-apples cultivated in the Society's garden the prejudice against him is so virulently kept morbus, engendered in India, has already at Chiswick. It appeared, that of five hundred alive, that we believe he can have no chance of stretched to the north, far beyond the latitude pines previously supposed to be of different a fair trial. To be called a quack and a murderer, of Paris and the principal states of Europe, sorts, only fifty

are entitled to that distinction. for months, in almost every periodical journal, and nothing has stopped its progress.”. M. The meteorological journal kept at the garden is quite enough, with the influence of the Moreau de Jonnès adds also some new facts. was the other communication. The journal press, to procure the legal murder of any Already has this pestilent disease thrice adwas accompanied by remarks, and, upon the victim so designated for universal reproba- vanced towards Europe by different routes. whole, was interesting and curious; the table tion.

We are not going into the merits Imported in the year 1819 from Bengal into regularly published in the Literary Gazette, or demerits of the question ; but we would the Isles of France and Bourbon, it threatened however, supersedes any analysis : it may be sufficient to observe, that the following is a man has had fair play ?

put it candidly to every just bosom, if this to arrive on our shores by some of the many

No highwayman ships belonging to France or England. Prenotation of the quantity of rain which fell or burglar was ever pre-condemned, as he cautions taken at the Cape of Good Hope preduring the corresponding months of 1829 and has been ; and though we are well aware that vented this misfortune. In 1821 the commu1830, from which it appears that the harvest the hostility against him is almost overwhelm- nication between Bombay and the ports in the season of 1830 has been reckoned a wet one : ing, we do fancy we can perceive a re-action Gulf of Arabia, brought the cholera morbus to it was considerably exceeded by that of 1829.

in the public sentiment, and people begin to Bassora : it ascended the Euphrates, crossed July

doubt whether he is really a monster, invading Mesopotamia, and following step by step the August........ 3.71

the medical world to devour its practitioners, commercial communications, it arrived in Syria. September

or something of a martyr to persecution. We There it yielded to the cold during the winter, have had many dangerous quacks ;

but

re-appeared in the spring with redoubled The chairman announced that a course of

other quack was ever singled out as he has force, and during three years decimated the

been. spring lectures on botany, in connexion with

He offered the proof of his remedy population. It spread into most of the cities horticulture, would be delivered at the Society's nished by the faculty ; but instead of this

, he of 1825 it appeared at Bukara, and continued its

upon a given number of patients, to be fura situated on the Mediterranean. In the spring house in Regent Street, and that a fète was has had the trial of two strange coroner's in- ravages towards Moscow, where it penetrated were placed several varieties of the beet-root : quests, and one verdict against him, which on the 28th of September last. M. Moreau de a deep yellow colour seems to be the distin: every lawyer declares to be against the law. Jonnès is of opinion that in the provinces of

the Russian empire which lie between 45o and This was the working of popular prejudice ;guishing characteristic of that species from which sugar is made.

cry “Mad dog !” and the poor dog has a bad 57°, the cold of winter will stop the progress of chance. Yet, in spite of his horrible system,

the contagion ; but from experience, it is proa multitude of persons cured by it came for- bable that it will re-appear in spring, with all its On Monday last, Mr. Churchill, V. P., in the ward to express their gratitude, - a matter activity and violence; and he fears its descent chair. Mr. Levison gave an account of an in- of no avail, it seems, against evidence to a into the milder climates of Europe, where its teresting case, illustrated by a cast, of an enor- specific charge:- really these areq ueer laws, ravages will be more terrible, as the population mous development of the organ of amativeness, and queer doctrines ! There is not a physician, is more dense, and communications more rapid accompanied by the corresponding feeling, in a surgeon, an apothecary, or an accoucheur, in and more numerous. a girl only four years old, and now in the work- Great Britain, who is not liable to be banged house at Hull. He also exhibited the skull of for murder, on the principles applied to this LITERARY AND LEARNED. the murderer Keppell, and some others, as quack; who is reported to have made [oh, proofs of the truth of the science of phreno- grievous offence !], we do not know whether We last year adopted the course of giving logy. A singular case of absence [congenital] ten or twenty thousand pounds a-year by kill- monthly returns of the proceedings of the Uniof the anterior lobes of the brain, with a similar ing patients !

versities, instead of casual reports : we now deficiency of the intellect, was also read.

Again, we repeat, that we are not deciding, recommence with the term ; also bringing up adhuc sub judice lis est, whether Long be inno- our lee-way, so as to make the whole complete:

cent or guilty; but we are free to say, it ap- -Ed. We have been amused with some personalities pears to us, that his enemies have pursued him aimed at the declared] Editor of the Literary with such notable and persevering acrimony, I ration of Founders and Benefactors was holden in the

LONDON PHRENOLOGICAL SOCIETY.

OXFORD, June 23d.-Commemoration: The Commemo.

Page 9

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Page 11

Pales upon Pales cant put it out. Severil

One used to s!itch a collar then,

Another hemmed a frill; Shells of a bombastic nater as been picked up

I had more purses netted then in his Back Yard and the old Cro's nest as

Than I could hope to fill.

I once could get a button on, bean Perpetrated rite thro by a Rockit. We

But now I never can,hav sent out the Def Shopmun to here wat he My buttons then were bachelor'scan and he says their is so Manny Crackers

I'm not a single man! going he dont no witch report to Belive, but Oh how they hated politics

Thrust on me by papa: the Fishmongerers has Cotchd and with all his

But now iny chat--they all leave that Stock compleatly Guttid. The Brazers next

To entertain mamma. Dore is lickwise in Hashes, but it is hopped

Mamma, who praises her own self,

Instead of Jane or Ann, he has assurance enuf to cover him All over.-

And lays her girls' upon the shelfThey say nothink can save the Dwellins ad

I'm not a single man! journing. O Mrs. H. how greatful ought J and Ah me, how strange it is the change, I to bee that our hone Premiss and propperty

In parlour and in hall,

They treat me so, if I but go is next to nothing! The effex of the lit on Bild- To make a morning call. ings is marvulous. The Turrit of St. Magnum

If they had hair in papers once,

Boli up the stairs they ran ; Bonum is quit clear and you can tell wat Time

They now sit still in dishabille it is by the Clock verry planely only it stands ! I'm not a single man! The noise is enuf to Drive won deleterious ! Miss Mary Bond was once so fond

Of Romans and of Greeks; Too Specious Conestabbles is persewing littel

She daily sought my cabinet, Tidmash down the Hi Street and Sho grate

To study my antiques. fermness, but I trembel for the Pelisse. Peple Well, now she doesn't care a dump

For ancient pot or pan; drops in with New News every Momentum.

Her taste at once is modernizedSum say All is Lost- and the town Criar is

I'm not a single man ! missin. Mrs. Griggs is quite retched at herein My spouse is fond of homely life, five littel Boys is throwd off a spirituous Cob

And all that sort of thing;

I go to balls without my wife, among the Catherend Weals. But I hope it

And never wear a ring: wants cobbobboration. Another Yuth its sed And yet each Miss to whom I come has had his hies Blasted by sum blowd Gun

As strange as Genghis Khan,

Knows by some sign, I can't divine,Powder. You Mrs. H. are Patrimonial, and

I'm not a single man! may supose how these flying rummers Upsetts Go where I will, I but intrude, a Mothers Sperrits. o lrs. Humphris how I

I'm left in crowded rooms,

Like Zimmerman on Solitude, envy you that is not tossing on the raging

Or Hervey at his Tombs. bellows of these Flatulent Times, but living From head to heel, they make me feel, under a Mild Dispotic Govinment in such

of quite another clan;

Compelled to own, though left alone, Sequestrated spots as Lonnon and Padington.

I'm not a single man! May you never go thro such Transubstantiation

Miss Towne the toast, though she can boast as I have bean riting in! Things that stood

I nose of Roman line, for Sentries as bean removd in a Minuet and

Will turn up even that in scorn

Of coinpliments of mine : the verry effigis of wat is venerablest is now She should have seen that I have been burning in Bove Fires. The Worshipfull chaer

Her sex's partisan,

And really married all I could is empty. The Mare as gon off clandestiny

I'm not a single man ! with a pare of Hossis, and without his diner.

'Tis hard to see how others fare, They say he complanes that his Corperation Whilst I rejected stand, did no stik to him as it shold have dun But

Will no one take my arm because

They cannot have my hand ? went over to the other Side. Pore Sole-in

Miss Parry, that for some would go sich a case I dont wunder he lost his Stommich.

A trip to Hindostan,

With me don't care to mount a stairYisterdy he was at the summut of Pour. Them

I'm not a single man! that hours ago ware enjoying parrish officious.

Some change, of course, should be in force, ness as been turnd out of there Dignittis !

But, surely, not so much- Mr. Barber says in futer all the Perukial There may be hands I may not squeeze,

But must I never touch! Authoritis will be Wigs. Pray let me no wat Must I forbear to hand a chair, his Magisty and the Prim Minester think of

And not pick up a fan? Stock Poggis's constitution, and believe me

Put I have been myself picked up

I'm not a single man! conclusively my deer Mrs. Humphris most

Others may hint a larly's tint frendly and trully BRIDGET JOnes."

Is purest red and white For variety's sake, we now turn to a clever May say her eyes are like the skies,

So very blue and bright,poetical jeu-d'esprit.

I must not say that she has eyes,

Or if I so began, I'm not a Single Man.

I have my fears about my ears, " Double, single, and the rub."-Hoyle.

I'm not a single man ! “ This, this is solitude."-Byron.

I must confess I did not guess " Well, I confess, I did not guess

A simple marriage-vow A simple marriage vow

Would make me find all women-kind Would make me find all womenkind

Such unkind women now:- Such unkind women now!

I might be hash'd to death, or smash'd
They need not, sure, as distant be

By Mr. Pickford's van,
As Java or Japan,-

Without, I fear, a single tear-
Yet ev'ry Miss reminds me this--

I'm not a single man!"
I'm not a single man !

The poem which follows this is a “ May-day Once they made choice of my base voice

Vision," by Miss Isabel Hill, an extremely To share in each duet ; So well I danced, I somehow chanced

fanciful and very pretty composition. We To stand in every set:

regret we have not room for it now, and that They now declare I cannot sing, And dance on Bruin's plan;

we can only say, it is worthy of the best of the Me draw !--me paint !--ine any thing! company with which it is associated. The I'm not a single man!

“ Portrait of a Blind Man" is Hood all over, Once I was asked advice and task'd

so that it is no wonder he cannot see. What works to buy or not, And • would I rend that passage out

An“ ode to Mr. Vigors, on the publication I so admired in Scott?"

of the Gardens and Menagerie of the Zoological They then could bear to hear one read; Society," is another of the so-peculiarly-peculiar

But if I now began, How they would snub, my pretty page,'

Hood-isms, and the subject itself is so gene- I'm not a single man?'

rally popular, that we are tempted to extract it.

a Gire you good den."-Shakupedre. “ So Mr. V.,-no, Vigors- I beg pardon,

You've published your Zoological Garden! A book of which I've heard a deal of talk,

And your Menagerie-indeed, 'tis bad o' me, But I have never seen your Beast Academy!

Or set my feet

In Brute-on Street, Or ever wander'd in your · Bird-cage Walk."

Yet I believe that you were truly born To be a kind of brutal overseer,

And, like the royal quarterings, appear

Between a lion and a unicorn ; There is a sort of reason about rhyme, That I have ponder'd many, many a time;

Where words, like birds of feather,

Likely to come together, Are quite prophetically made to chime;- So your own office is forestall'd, o Vigors! Your proper surname having but one single Appropriate jingle,

-Tigers ! What is your gardening volume?-like old Mave's! Containing rules for cultivating brutes,

Like fruits,

Through April, May, or June; As thus-now rake your lion's manes, and

prune Your tiger's claws; About the middle of the month, if fair,

Give your chameleons air, Choose shady walls for owls,

Water your fowls, And plant your leopards in the sunniest spots;. Earth up your beavers; train your bears to climb; Thin out your elephants about this time, And set some early kangaroos in pots;

In soire warm shelter'd place Prepare a hot-bed for the boa race,

Leaving them room to swell; Prick out your porcupines, and blanch your ermine ; Stick up opossums; trim your monkeys well;

And destroy all vermin.' O tell me, Mr. Vigors! for the fileas Of curiosity begin to tease- If they bite rudely, I must crave your pardon-

But if a man may ask,

What is the task You have to do in this exotic garden? Jf from your title one may guess your ends, You are a sort of Secretary Bird,

To write home word From ignorant brute beasts to absent friends. Does ever the poor little coatamondi

Beg you to write to ma'
To send him a new suit to wear on Sunday?

Does Mrs. L. request you'll be so good-
Acting a sort of Urban to Sylvanus-

As write to her · Two Children in the Wood,' Address'd, post-paid, to Leo Africanus? Does ever the great sea-bear Londinensis

Make you amanuensis To send out news to some old arctic stager * Pray write that Brother Bruin on the whole

Has got a head on this day's pole, And say iny Ursa has been made a Major ?" Do you not write dejected letters-very-

Describing England for poor • Happy Jerry,"

Unlike those emigrants who take in Hats, Throwing out New South Wales for catching sprats? Of course your penmanship you ne'er refuse, For begging letters' from poor kangaroos;

Of course you inanage bills and their acquittance, And sometimes pen for Pelican a double Letter to Mrs. P. and brood in trouble,

Enclosing a small dab, as a remittance; Or send from Mrs. B. to her old cadger, Her full-length, done by Harvey, that rare

draughtsman,

And skilful craftsman ; A game one too, for he can draw a badger. Does Doctor Bennett never come and trouble you

To break the Death of Wolf to Mrs. W.?


To say poor Buffalo his last has puff d, And died quite suddenly, without a will, Soothing the widow with a tender quill,

And gently hinting, ' would she like him stuff d ? Does no old sentimental monkey weary

Your hand, at times, to vent his scribbling itch? And then your pen must answer to the query of Dame Giraffe, who has been told her deary

Died on the spot, and wishes to know tchy New candidates, meanwhile, your help are waiting; To fill up cards of thanks, with due refinement, For Missis 'Possum, after her confinement;

To pen a note of pretty Poll's dictating, Or write how Charles the Tenth's departed reiga

Disquiets the crown'd crane And all the royal tigers; To send a bulletin to brother Asses, Of Zebra's health, what sort of night he passes;

Is this your duty, Secretary Vigors? Or are your brutes but garden-brutes, indeed,

of the old shrubby breed, Dragons of holly,

peacocks cut in yew? But no-I've seen your book, And all the creatures look

Like real creatures, natural and true;

Page 12

ble, than the sufferance of this tragedy. That

Frederic the Second, emperor of the Romans,

VARIETIES. it should be repeated twice vouches far more

on the fifth of October, 1230.” It appeared, for her ability than the forty nights' run of

Paper from Wood.-A Mr. Brad, in Upper therefore, that the pike was two hundred and Romeo and Juliet.

Provence, has succeeded in producing a good sixty-seven years old when thus caught; it On Tuesday evening Miss Inverarity made sort of grayish paper, fit for writing upon, or weighed three hundred and fifty pounds; and her appearance in Cinderella, to a bumper for conversion into a light and serviceable an exact representation of it exists to this day house, and with most complete success.

It is a pasteboard, from the fibrous parts of rotten against one of the gates of Heilbronn. triumph of which she may well be proud, for it pine wood. places her at once at the head of her profession. Reform. A rusty shield addressed the sun,

LITERARY NOVELTIES. We trust she will be able to maintain the giddy and cried, “ 0, sun! enlighten me !" To

[Literary Gazette Weekly Advertisement, No. LI. Dec. 18.] elevation—and we have great hopes that she which the sun returned. ."0, shield! be- The third volume of Colonel Napier's History of the will; for, through all the embarrassment of a cleanse thyself!"

Peninsular War.-The History and Antiquities of Sofirst appearance on the stage-on such a stage, A new Sect... A new religious society has mersalsthice

, by the area phelps a: B., vicar of Meare, and in such a character—there were gleams of been formed at Paris, under the title of " the views in the Mauritius, on stone, by William Rider, intelligence which gratified us more by the pro- Society of Saint Simon;" the professed object from original Drawings by T. Bradshaw, Esq., with a mise than the mere mechanical ability she ex- of which appears to be the extermination of each View.-A narrative entitled An Only Son, by the hibited, great and original as we are happy to bigotry and superstition, and the establishment Author of "My Early Days." acknowledge it. Her voice is of a most delicious of “ peace on earth and good-will towards men.” quality, and her style unexceptionable : she is The meetings of the society are held at the

Loudon's Gardener's Magazine, Vol. VI. 8vo. 11. 18. bds. fair, tall, and her smile is particularly engag- Hall Taitbout, and are attended by crowded --Key to Butler's Latin Praxis, 8vo. 6s. bds.-Hawthorn ing. As an actress, she has, of course, every and brilliant audiences. It having been stated on Ventilation, 12mo. 2s. 6l. bds. — Trial of the Unithing to learn that can be learned ; but, for- that Madame Malibran was one of the preach- torical Literature, 8vo. 78. od. bds. ; Household Book of tunately, she possesses that first grand qualifi

. ers of the society, that lady bas addressed a Elizabeth of York, 8vo. 11. 18. bds.--Betham's Dignities, cation, which no teaching can bestow, and letter to several of the Parisian journals, deny- Romance of History, France, 3 vols. post 8vo. 17. 11.. Gd. without which all teaching is in vain. We ing the truth of the assertion.

Margate, a Poem, with Cruikshank's designs, understand, also, that she is yet in her eight- La Bibliothèque du Roi.—The sub-librarians 12mo, 19. 6d. sewed.-Becker's German Grammar, 8vo. eenth year! increasing power, therefore, may of the King's Library at Paris have published, 8vo. 1!. 48. bds.—Green's British Merchant's Assistant, be confidently calculated upon - and opera in the Moniteur, a complaint of the insuffi- royal Avo. 11. 118. Gd. bds.-A Visit to the Zoological “ looks up,” as they say in the city. Mr. Wil ciency of their salaries, especially as compared Debates

, Vol. xxv. royal svo. 11. 105. bds. ; 11. 135.

bd

. son relieved us from some previous apprehen- with the emoluments enjoyed by the keepers, hf.-bd.--Hood's Comic Annual for 1831, 128. hf.-bd. mosions into which we had lately fallen respecting and other superior officers of that establish- rocco.-- The Emperor's Rout, 12mo. 28. 6d. sewed.

Anecdotes of Napoleon, 3 vols. 18mo. 98. bds:- Tempest, him: we are most happy to say, that his per- ment.

Gallery of Shakspeare, 12mo. 28. sewed.-Campbell's Lays formance on Tuesday fully justified our first

Mr. Pentland's Researches in Bolivia.- from the East, fcp. 68. bds.-Logan's Scottish Gael, 2 vols. favourable impressions respecting him. He M. Arago laid before the Academy of Sciences, demy 8vo. 1l. 10s. bdse; royal 8vo. 21. 28. bds. was loudly applauded throughout; as, indeed, on the 12th of July last, the geographical was the whole opera, most deservedly. We labours of_Mr. Pentland in the republic of METEOROLOGICAL JOURNAL, 1830. should mention that Miss Rarity, as we may Bolivia. The author, who has carried on his

Thursday.. 9
justly abbreviate her inconvenient name, was observations at considerable heights, carefully Friday
rapturously encored in the great trial song, noted the variations of the chronometer on the Saturday which forms the finale, and which, after sing- mountains, dependent upon the diminution of Sunday ing through three long acts, is no trifling exer- atmospheric pressure.

This important fact Tuesday tion, taking the lungs alone into consideration. had been previously neglected, and the obser- Wednesday 15 The opera was announced for repetition on vations of Mr. Pentland will consequently Wind variable, N.W. prevailing. Friday, amidst thunders of applause. We can cause an alteration in the position given to all about an hour before noon of the 12th.

Alternately clear and cloudy, rain at times; some snow not dismiss this subject without noticing the the places where he has been.

Rain fallen, •575 of an inch. singular fact, that to Covent Garden we are Benjamin Constant. The Paris papers of Aurora Borealis.-Except that of the 15th, every evenindebted for nearly all the most popular per- last week announce the death of the celebrated been more or less illumined by the aurora borealis : from

ing since Friday the northern parts of our horizon have formers of late years. Miss Stephens, Miss Benjamin Constant. He was a fine German midnight of the 11th, till about three in the morning of Tree, Miss Paton, Miss Love, Mr. Wood, Mr. scholar, and contributed much to introduce the the 12th, the continued flashing of the immense body of Sinclair, amongst the vocals; Miss O'Neil, philosophy of Germany into France. We ob- culiarly interesting; the coruscations, however, were Miss Kemble, Mr. Young, Mr. Macready, serve, by another paragraph, that the govern- neither so strong nor so numerous as during the night of Farren, Liston, Jones, amongst the comedians, ment has decreed the Pantheon to be re-opened visible, rolling from the E. by N. to about the same dishave all emanated from, or acquired their re- for the reception of the ashes of great men, and tance westward of the north, and darting in a direction putation on, the boards of Covent Garden. that M. Constant is to be interred there;nearly perpendicular to the horizon, to a height of about Kean and Madame Vestris are the two princi- forming, to begin with, an exception to the crackling noise which frequently attends this phenomepal stars that have arisen in the other hemi- general rule, that ten years must elapse after non, could be heard. From one till four in the morning sphere.

the death of the individuals, to enable posterity of the 14th, the generalised light which overspread every to judge of the validity of their claim to this light reflected from our moon when at her quadrature.

national honour. By right of custom, and we believe of rank, Population of Poland. At the beginning of Drury Lane stands in all columns before 1829, the kingdom of Poland [i. e. the Russian

TO CORRESPONDENTS. Covent Garden ; but the Fair Penitent and province so called, of which Warsaw is the The point of the concluding line, that Adam and Eve Cinderella having the start by time, and de- metropolis] contained 4,088,289 souls, exclu- were the first who, Mac-Adamised the globe,” is very

but the rest of the poem will not bear printing. manding so much notice, we are compelled to sive of the army. The increase since the year O Our effort to do ample justice this week to Hood's restrict our account of Werner, this week, to the 1825 had therefore been 383,983. The Jewish comicalities com pels us to postpone many favours, as mere fact of its having greatly and justly suc- portion of the inhabitants had been almost well as Reviews of new works, conclusions, &c. We re

gret also to defer our account of Colonel Blom's Transceeded, not more from its own intrinsic merits universally located in distinct quarters ; they portable Houses; but as it is illustrated by a woodthan the admirable acting of Macready, Wal- amounted to 384,263 individuals. The extent engraving, we found it too inconvenient to have it upon lack, and Cooper. We have seldom seen three of property insured in the Warsaw Assurance

In answer to the queries put to us by a correspondent, characters so perfectly conceived and executed Office was 420,000,000 guldens [33,250,0001.] we have to say, that the

wolophon is new to the public in in one play. We hail the addition of Werner in value. Warsaw itself

possesses a population instrument are similar to the German xolina, but may be to our poor stock of tragedies, and feel our- of 136,554 souls, independently of a garrison traced back to the Chinese organ, which has been long selves doubly indebted to Macready, by whose of about 15,000 'men ; and of this population known in this country, and consists of a small circle of

in judicious and unpresuming adaptation, we are 30,146 are of the Israelitish faith.

the reeds are blown into with the mouth. The novelty enabled to place the name of Byron on the Ancient Pike. In the year 1497, a pike was of the present instrument is the mode of application of roll of modern dramatists, and in the rank, too, caught in standing water, at Heilbronn on the these tongues or springs, in such a form as to admit of a such a name should occupy, next to the only Neckar, which had a copper ring round its octaves, from double 'F upwards. Several have been English poet who surpasses him in famo,-a sta- head; the ring bore the following inscription imported, and attempts made here on the organ prin. tion which has too long been claimed for Rowe, in Greek :-" I am the first fish that was but none have come near it in the qualities above deby those who ought to have known better. launched into this pond, and was thrown in by scribed..

Thermometer. From 40.

to 49. 38. 42. 30. 40. 26. 30. 26. 35.

22. 41.

28. 39.

Barometer. 28.94 to 28.90 28.96 29.16 29.18 29.25 29.31 29.83 30.06 30.14 30.26 30.22 30.36 30.38

Page 13

Price 19. in rich crimson silk,

Under the Superintendence of the Seciety for the Difusies

of Useful Krowledge. By the Rev. W. M. KINSEY, B.D.

Preparing for publication, for 1831.

Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford, and Lecturer of St. Nicholas. Edited by ALARIC A. WATTS.

Delivered in the Parish Church of St. Helen, Abingdon, before With Twelve splendid Line Engravings, by J. H. Watt, J. C. the Mayor and Corporation, on Sunday, December 5th, 1530, and

ILLUSTRATED. Edwards, E. Goodall, W. H. Watt, C. Rolls, É. Finden, E. Port published at their desire.

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To which will be prefixed, a Prelitninary D. Surses the Davis.

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* Orders for the large paper Copies to be sent before Turkey morocco, containing the only published account of the Parish

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PRE M I ER!!! MEMOIR of the LIFE, WRITINGS,

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II. and CORRESPONDENCE OSJAMES CURRIE, M.D. E R N E R; a

F.R.S. of Liverpool, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, The Siamese Twins, a Satirical Tale of the By LORD BYRON. Edinburgh, of the london Medical Society, &c. &c.

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Painting by Sir Thomas Lawrence, will embellish the Number The Turf, a Satirical Novel. 2 Fols. Kotzebue's Almanach Dramatischer Spiele. for February.

VII. 29r Jahrgang. limo. 61. 6d. Hamburg, 1831.

Published by Whittaker and Co. London ; W'auch and Innes,

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HE TEMPLE of MELEKARTHA. In

HE ANNUAL BIOGRAPHY and

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tal Pride

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19. The Splendid Traitor illustrating various Phenomena of the Celestial Bodies To TPE “At this epicurean season of the year, tit-bits of all kinds are 4. The Fall of Ambition

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14. Advice to a Prince

season, upwards of Fifty Vignettes, on sood, will be cirer, which these tit-bits are intended to vratify, and some of them 6. A Brunt of Galleys

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Days of Fly-fishing, a new edition, with wards her of that exalted individual to whom s nany lisks ERMONS, on various Subjects and Plates and Woodcuis, 126.

Printed for Edward Bull, New Public Subscription Libzst, Occasions.

96, Holles Street, Carendish Square. By the Rev. WILLIAM JONES, A.M. F.R.S.

On the 1st of January, 1831, will be published, in small 8vo. price Late Minister of Nayland.

56. cloth boards, with a Portrait ito be continued every other Now first published from the Original MSS.

Month], Vol. I. of Edited by the Rev. WILLIAM HENRY WALKER, A.M. THE SUNDAY LIBRARY; or, the Pro- LONDON: Published every Saturday, by F. A. SCRIPPS, .. Fellow of Queen's College, Cambridge, and Chaplain to

Page 14

where love lights its beacon and keeps its vigils, tude shines the rainbow of the wave which is

Along our being's course, where'er it streams,

Some haunting fever of decay-some shade to greet the returning wanderer, weary of a to obliterate for ever the memory of bis woes. From whose destructive taint, no aid redeems! cheerless pilgrimage by flood or field. God The ensuing is worse, for it is unjust :- Wo, that it reached thy generous heart, sweet maid; help those for whom every country wears a “ The capture of Ciudad Rodrigo was deno- Wo! that so white a breast should be so darkly laid :* foreign aspect—who avert their steps from the minated a brilliant operation.' Of the con. Out of the very beautiful minor poems we dwelling of their fathers, banished by the clouds tending parties at least two thousand perished select two favourites. of discord, or the rank weeds of desolation ! ere the close of the siege. Many of the wound

Truth, Youth, and Age. Pleasant to me, as the face of an early friend, ed died from exposure to the elements at an

Truth. What is Immortality? were the broken shores of Pembroke, and the inclement season. Calamity was throned in

Youth. It is the glory of the mind,

The deathless voice of ancient Time; bay of St. Bride's. The vessel touched at funeral state upon the ramparts of the trem

The light of genius, pure, refined ! Tlfracombe, where my luggage was consigned bling city. It was for national gratitude to The monument of deeds sublime ! to the care of Jonathan, who was to make a overbalance ills inseparable from warfare. Lord

O'er the cold ashes of the dead

It breathes a grandeur and a power, short stay there with a relation : as it was but Wellington was created a Spanish grandee and Which shine when countless years have fled, two days' journey to Thorncroft, I proceeded an English earl. The British parliament added Magnificent as the first hour!

Truth. What is Immortality? direct, and on foot. Spring was in its prime. a yearly pension of £2,000 to keep the titles in

Age. Ask it of the gloomy waves, The morn I started was as rosy as the matin countenance. Of the humble instruments of of the old forgotten graves, flush of midsummer; the virgin breath of the his will, the survivors were made supremely

Whereof not one stone remains;

Ask it of the ruined fanes, meadows and gardens, through which the road happy by a vote of thanks.'”

Temples that have passed away, meandered, gave lightness to the bosom, elasti. Mr. Kennedy forgets, that but for the com- Leaving not a wreck to say, city to the footstep. The vine-branches were manding genius of the man who baffled Napo

Here an empire once hath stood!

Ask it in thy solitude, shooting forth their infant foliage, and orchard leon's best generals, and, finally, Napoleon of thy solemn musing mind, after orchard, ever and anon, enriched the himself--that man whose justly earned reward And, too truly, wilt thou find breeze with a tide of fragrance, inspiring, in is thus meanly grudged, and whose ser.

Earthly immortality

Is a splendid mockery!" the fervour of noon-day, a voluptuous langour. vices are thus depreciated—those very scenes

“ Reminiscences. Gladsome to the eye that expatiates on nature of warfare, all that he holds in such just ab- I know it is not beautiful! is the matronal beauty of the blossoming apple- horrence, would, in all human probability,

That in the vale below, tree ; surpassingly gladsome was it to me, just have found their theatre in our own country, Far gayer gifts of summer bloom,

And brighter waters flow; landed from the waters, in the county of my and have been acted more bloodily in London I know it is not beautiful! birth, where I had, from childhood, been en- than at Ciudad Rodrigo. The whole repre

But, oh! unto my heart circled by its peaceful glories. The hues of sentation of the Spanish war is singularly un

It breathes a charm of vanished days,

No other scenes impart. sunset were glowingly interstreaked, varying fair: for example, a scene of fearful suffering

The days once eloquent with tones from the warmest crimson to the tenderest and aggression is introduced, and the aggres- They never more may bring: green, and in their wavy irradiations imparted sors are British soldiers. Now, in common Sweet as e'er wooed a woman's lip

To Love's delicious spring; to the western sky the fanciful resemblance of honesty, it ought to have been stated how rare

Deep as the distant clarion's breath a superb ocean-shell. Tired of travel, I came were such occurrences in our army, and how

Upon the moonlight air, in sight of the rustic chapel where I used to go strictly the Duke of Wellington enforced that

Inspiring high and glorious deeds,

li were a pride to share! up, with our house, to worship. My feet were discipline which prevented them. These scenes

The form whose beauty imaged forth blistered, my shoes arid with dust. I turned were of daily recurrence among the French The vision of my sleep, into the cool, grassy burying-ground, to calm troops. The only just view to take is this :- The painting of a youthful heart,

Romantic, warm, and deep; the futter of my spirits, to rest my limbs, and the Peninsular war was one of great bloodshed

The voice, that music of my mind to refresh my soiled apparel, lest a chance en- and suffering; but it was endured in a rightful Are with the spells of yore,, counter with an acquaintance should betray cause--a lesser evil to prevent a greater. We

On which the morn may brightly rise,

But never waken more! my pedestrian return. The chapel had been drove an invader from a foreign land, to pre

No gift of thine, love, ineets my gaze, whitewashed and repainted, and, peering vent his carrying desolation into our pwn.

No token fond and fairthrough its shade of larch and yew, presented We have now only to say, that we hold No, not, to soothe me in my tears, a soothing emblem of Christian tranquillity. his talents in higher estimation than we do his

A single lock of hair :

Thou 'st passed, my love, like some pale star Time, place, and circumstance, were masters opinions. The tale itself we think equally

We look in vain to find, of my mood. I did not wish to dispel the reli- beautiful and interesting; the facts have all Nor left to cheer my blighted path gious awe that solemnised the soul; and from the simplicity of truth, while the style is in.

One lonely ray behind! a resistless reverence for those who slept be- vested with the rich colouring of the imagina

They tell me I am waning fast,

That leaf by leaf I fade neath, I refrained from profaning the luxuri- tion.

They bear me forth with wreathed hair, ant herbage by the taint of the highway. I

In jewelled robes arrayed ;

They deem the festive dance may yoo passed to the lonely spot where, apart from the Beauties of the Mind; a poetical Sketch: with

My memory from this spot, rest, beneath a weeping willow, was my mo. Lays IIistorical and Romantic. By Charles But, ah ! amidst the courtly crowd, ther's grave. The shrubs which surrounded Swain.

Thou art the least forgot.

12mo. pp. 197. London, 1831. it were flourishing-no unseemly weed had Simpkin and Marshall.

My eyes are wandering fast and far

To other shores away, permission to vegetate there—the birds nestled MR. Swain possesses one of those minds which,

My soul is with thee in thy grave! in the branches of the overshadowing tree, as poetical in themselves, imbue all they touch

How can I then be gay?

I perish in their festive light, secure of protection near the remains of her with poetry. A poet's eye sheds its own co

I die amidst their mirth who was meek and merciful to all the creatures louring around; and the passing thought, the

Oh! take me to thine arms, dear love, of God. The moss-covered headstone had been slight hint, are developed into beauty by the

From this cold, cheerless earth !" displaced by one of recent construction. In light of his words. Mr. Swain is especially little volume much : it has grace, truth, and

We have only to repeat, that we admire this addition to the simple consecration to the me. happy in his historical illustrations ; his descripmory of the departed, it bore the inscription of, tions are as rich as the moral he deduces is tenderness, told in music; and we cannot dwel

Blessed are they who die in the Lord.' i touching: he links human feeling and human on its page without experiencing a feeling a bared my brow, pressed my lip and cheek to

pomp well together.

The first poem had best liking and respect towards the author. the name of my parent cut in the cold slab, be read as a whole “ harmonious chain of and prayed that her dove-like spirit might re- thought.” The two following stanzas are prosume its ascendency over him whom, like her, mising specimens.

Trant's Travels in Greece. I loved, but whom, unlike her, I dreaded."

[Second notice:-[see p. 762] Conclusion.] “ For, oh! the bliss to love, and to believe There is too much of theoretic digression in Ourselves beloved !--to linger o'er each dream

We broke off from this interesting volume with the latter part of the narrative. Like most Of happiness we cannot choose but weave;

a reference to a strange story about the govern young men, Mr. Kennedy [we believe the au

To breathe but only in the beauteous beam

Of Love's fond, eloquent, delicious eyes!-to deem ment mail being robbed by order of the presi. thor's name is not meant to be a secret] is san- Onc form the paragon of earth! Oh, fair

dent, Capo d'Istrias : ve now resume our es. guine in his expectations, and sweeping in his

As moonlight upon lilies of the stream!

tracts with some other curious incidents. censure. Such a passage as the following is Those chaste and fitting wreaths for Beauty's raven hair. Those water-jewels, delicate and rare,

Upon the president and his party the folos. grandiloquent absurdity: “ After the soldier

ing extract throws still greater light. and the tax-gatherer have left the martyr of Alas! there is no chord of human life

'Shortly after our return to Argns, the misrule on the salt shores of misery, the hope

Whose natural tone breather not of wo!--there seems

nomination of Prince Leopold to the preof absorption into a boundless ocean of beati.

Even in boyhood, when the world is rife With buds and birds-with flowers and sunny beams

reignty of Greece became publicly known; sod

Page 15

thick, and weighs ten and three quarter pounds. varied character given to them - the larvæ of The jaws were broken, so that the number of flies successfully.

INDE X. teeth could not be ascertained. Specific Identity of Anagallis arvensis and

REVIEW. The Essex Herald states that the rest of a cærulea.- The Rev. J. S. Henslow, professor of wagtail, with four perfect eggs, was lately sawn botany in the University of Cambridge, received ABERCROMBIE JDT on the Intellectual Powers, 7*

Addise out of a solid elm-tree, at the distance of nine last year some specimens and seeds of Anagallis [J.], Miscellaneous Works of, 155. Adventures of inches from the surface or bark, and that no cærulea, gathered in Yorkshire. From these

Griffin, 656. Adventures of an Irish Gentleman, 7

Adventures of Ariston, 449. Albert, a tale, 656. Alcun flaw or aperture leading to this curious enclo- seeds the professor raised a dozen plants, nine

Description of the Bible presented by him to Charle sure could be discovered.

of which had blue flowers, and three red. magne, 288. Aldine Poets, 351, 400, 433, 509, 594, I Magnificent Vase of Aventurine. A short French Journals.-In a pamphlet lately pub

Alexander Alexander's [A.] Life of Himself, 366.

[Capt.] Travels to the Seat of War in the East, kry time ago mention was made in the public lished in Paris it is asserted, that the sum ex- 560. Alexandrians, the, an Egyptian tale, 571. Alps papers of a costly vase which the Emperor pended by the old government in the purchase Hannibal's Passage of the, 316. American Revolution of Russia had presented to Baron Alexander of a portion of the daily press of the French

History of the, 642. Amulet, 715, 752. Anderson's C

Historical Sketches of the Native Irish, 288. Andres de Humboldt. This vase is now exhibiting in capital, amounted to 4,075,439 francs ; and the [Bp.] Sermons on Prayer, 35]. Anglo-French Coinage. the Hall of Antiques in the Museum at Berlin. manner in which that sum was distributed is

Illustrations of, 319, 383. Aneddoti piacevoli e inters

santi, 481. Annual Biography and Obituary, 17. AnThe peculiar stone out of which it has been detailed.

thologie Française, 656. Arcana of Science and Art, wrought, renders it unique of its kind ; as

191. Arnold's [Dr.] History of the Peloponnesian War. it is not found either in the central or southern

by Thucydides, 177. Atheneum, 303. Atherstone's[E. LITERARY NOVELTIES.

Fall of Nineveh, &c., 270; Sea Kings in England, pail: countries of Europe, but seems to be an exclu

[Literary Gazette Weekly Advertisement, No. LII. Dec. 25.]

Affection's Offering, 818. Almanac, Companion to the sive production of Siberia. The name which

833. An Analysis of Archbishop Secker's Lectures on the the attendant at the museum gives to it, is that Church Catechism, by the Rev. R. Lee. - Raphael's Bacon's Life of Francis 1.,... Balfour's [A.] Weeds

and Wild Flowers, 303. Ball's [W] Creation, zu of Aventurine. From the transparency and Witch, by the Author of the Prophetic Messenger;"

Bardsley [Dr.] on the Efficacy of Strychnia, Brucia, variegated colours of its veins, its crystalline lington's Epitome of the Elementary Principles of Me

&c., 23.]. Bayley's [F. W. N.] Four Years' Residence ir

in the West Indies, 364; French Revolution of 12, fineness of texture, and its high susceptibility chanical Philosophy. --A Key to a Complete Set of Arith

656. Bayley's [J.] History, &c. of the Tower of Loof polish, it bears a striking resemblance to Two Lectures on the Study of Anatomy and Physiology.

don, 432. Bell's [J.] History of the First Revolutions the finest sort of agate, “the sardonyx, or -A Collection of Statutes relating to the Town of King

in France, 800, 809. Bennett's [J. W.] Fishes of Ceylon,

223. Bernard's [J.] Retrospections of the Stage, 356 onyx;" in substance it is like the former, and ston-upon-Hull, by William Woolley.- Professor M‘Cul.

575, 592, 608. Bernays' [A.] German Grammar, in its strata and parti-coloured spots it re- tical Dictionary of Commerce and Commercial Navigaloch is preparing for publication a Theoretical and Prac

Bible, new version of the, 145. Boaden's [J.] Life sembles the latter. For multiplicity and alte- tion.-A Course of Lessons in French Literature, on the

Mrs. Jordan, 777. Buonaparte's [C. L.] American O

nithology, 40. Boscobel Tracts, 544. Boswell's ad ration of tints, it is in no respect inferior to the plan of his Gerinan Lessons,” by Mr. Rowbotham.

Life of Dr. Johnson, 513. Bourrienne's Memoirs e 'The Life and Death of Lord Edward Fitzgerald, by Thomost brilliant opal or jasper of Sicily or the mas Moore, Esq., is nearly ready.

Buonaparte, 223, 288. Bower's [A.] History of the lo

versity of Edinburgh, 176, 255. Bowring's [Dr.] M5 Indies. This rare production of nature, which

LIST OF NEW BOOKS.

yar Poetry, 82. Bowles's [Rev. W. L.] Life of Bishop stands, inclusive of the pedestal, eight feet

Ken, 431. Bradfield's [H. J.] Athenaid, 270; Tales o high, shews that Siberia possesses a description Rask's Anglo-Saxon Grammar, by Thorpe, 8vo. 158. 6d.

Stapleton's Life of Canning, 3 vols. 8vo. 11. 168. bds.- the Cyclades, 673. Bray's [Mrs.] Fitz of Fitz-Ford, :

Talba, a romance, 800, 815. Brenan's J.] Utility of quartz better adapted than any other yet bds.--Tales of a Grandfather, Fourth Series, Stories from Latin discussed, 736. Browne's [Capt. Biographica known in southern climates for works of mag. Morrison's Counsels to Sunday School Teachers, 32mo.

the History of France, 3 vols. 18mo. 108. 6d. hf.-bd.- Sketches, &c. of Horses, 606. Brooke's W. H.] Traiki nitude; for the block from which it was 18. bds.-Rowlatt's Sermons at the Temple, 8vo. 128. bds.

and Stories of the Irish Peasantry, 236, 233. Brighten,

a comic sketch, 529. British Domestic Animals, 3 wrought cannot have contained much short of --James's Sermons on the Sacraments and Sabbath, 8vo. Britton [J.] and Brayley's [E. W.] Memoirs of the seventy cubic feet of pare stone. The vase is 86. 6. bds...Cadeau, a Musical Annual for 1831, folio,

Tower of London, 118. Britton's [J.] History of Bris 12s. bds.--White's Naval Researches, 8vo. 78. 64. bds. tol Cathedral, 191; Architectural Dictionary, 672. Bri finely moulded after the antique, and has two Prometheus of Æschylus, English notes, &c., post 8vo. tish Naturalist, 433. Burckhardt's [J. L.] Notes on the superb raised arms of massive gold, carved 56. bds.--Andre's French Teacher, 12mo. 78. sheep. - Bedouins and Wahabys, 284. Burgoyne [M.] on Public

Billing's First Principles of Medicine, 8vo. 68. bds. with much taste.-Berlin, 30th September.

Charity Schools, 717. Byron's [Lady] Remarks oca, Vizier's Son, 3 vols. 12mo. ll. 48. bds. --Bruce's Cypress sioned by Mr. Moore's Life of Lord Byron, 1st Denmark. The Royal Society of Northern Wreath, 18mo. 38. Gl. bds. - Taylor's German Poetry, Biden's Naval Discipline, 833. Antiquaries at Copenhagen, whose object is to Vol 11. 8vo. 159. bds.. Bernays German Prose Antho, Cabinet Album, 594. Caillie's [R.] Travels to Timber

too, 38, 55, 69, 81. Callanan's [J. J.] Recluse of Inchpublish, first, works on ancient northern lite- Pauperism, 8vo. 128. bds. —-Infant's Daily Sacrifice, 16mo. dony, 415. Cameo, 704. Campbell's [A.] Perkin We rature, and then whatever may throw light on 5s. bds.-Annals of My Village, crown 8vo. 128. bds. beck, 303. Carwell, 239. Caunter's [Rev. H.] Iasi the ancient history of the north of Europe, its

Bride, 270. Chambers's [W.] Book of Scotland, 50,

639. Chartley, a novel, 688. Cheltenham Lyrics, 72. language, its antiquities, &c.; and under whose METEOROLOGICAL JOURNAL, 1830. Child's own Book, 594. Christian Physiologist, 113 auspices a number of the Icelandic Sagas [or Extracts from a Meteorological Register kept at High

Chronological Chart of Inventions and Discoveries, os ancient fables], with Latin and Danish transla- Wycombe, Bucks, by a Member of the London Meteoro

Christinas Box, 672. Clara Gazul, S03. Clarence, 1 logical Society. November 1830.

tale, 507, Clarke's [Dr.] Succession of Sacret Liter tions, have appeared ; having determined, that Thermometer-Highest........ 56-750

ture, 699. Clarkson's [E.] Robert Montgomery and h from the present year, in order to give its transa

Lowest

Reviewers, 368. Clark [Dr.] on the Intluence of CHMean.. 41.0 1791

mate, 271. Classical Cullings, &c., 784. Cliffe's Land actions the greatest possible publicity, it would

Barometer-Highest

Anecdotical Reminiscences, 208, 255. Coates's [Mrs] communicate, in a regular journal, an account

Lowest ........ 28-82

Weird Woman of the Wraagh, 368. Colman's ital of its sittings, of its labours, and of the works

Mean 29-55655

Random Records, 65, 99, 153. Comic Offering, 23. addressed to it, has accordingly published a

Number of days of rain, 16.

Conolly [Dr.] on the Indications of Insanity, 410. Ci Quantity of rain in inches and decimals, 3.01275.

stable's Miscellany, 23, 72, 189, 351, 443, 513, 594, 6 procès-verbal of the general assembly of the Winds.- 6 East-4 West-o North-8 South-0 North

782, 784. Constant's [M.] Private Life of Buonaparte

,

393. Conversations on Chronology and History, k Society on the 15th of April last ; by which it east-7 South-east--4 South-west-1 North-west.

General Observations.--Thirteen days might be denomi

Country Curate, 49. Croke's [Sir A.] Translation appears to have been very actively engaged in nated fine; and the thermometer reached an elevation

Regimen Sanitatis Salernitanum, 78. Croly's [Res. prosecuting the interesting purposes of its esta- above any in the same month during the last seven years;

G.] Poetical Works, 239; Memoir of George IV., 1. blishment. while the mean temperature was nearly 4° higher than in

Cruickshank's [T.] Practical Planter, 335. CutNovember last year. The barometer was generally low,

Dry System of Criticism, 249. Additions to the British Fauna.-It is not and the mean gave a depression greater than since 1826 Damley, 18. Davis's [G; W. Child's own Drawing-Bock. generally known that three distinct species of the quantity of rain much greater than usually falls in

De L'Orme, 621. Denounced, the, 304. Der er three-spined stichlebachs, have been constantly ones were seen on the nights of the 25th and 27th, and a

water, a tale, 256. Descent into Hell, 270. Devilı confounded under the name of gasterosteus faint aurora borealis was observed on the 17th, about

Progress, the, 563. D'Israeli's [1.] Commentaries in

Charles I., 329. Divines of the Church of Engles, aculeatus of Linnæus. Mr. Yarell has fished half-past eleven P.M. The evaporation 0.13125 of an inch.

545, 642. Dobell's [P.] Travels in Kamtchaths all three species up in the Thames, near Wool

Siberia, 217. Doddridge's [Dr.] Diary and Cortes wich. They are distinguished by the distribu

ence, 300, 673. Domivie's Legacy, 131, 712. Dori TO CORRESPONDENTS.

[M.] Irish Cottagers, 442; Hints to the Small Fame tion of the scales, which in the first extend A Christmas has robbed us of our publishing day this of Wexford, 512 Dunlop's [A.] Parochial Las, R. throughout the whole length of the side. In week, and index and title-page so cramped our limits, Duppa's [R.] Travels on the Continent, &c., 9% the second, they reach no farther backwards that we must endeavour to excuse a lame winding-up No: East India Magazine, 784. Eaton's [Mrs.] Compartir

Grammar of English, French, and Italian, 513. Es than the line of the vent; and lastly, in the request our friends and readers to believe that our course burgh Cabinet Library, 642. Elwood's [Mrs.] third species, the lateral scales extend no farther will be resumed with unabated energy for 1831. We overland from England to India, 537, 77. Ek than the ends of the rays of pectoral fins.

have nothing but thanks and continued zeal and exertion Serion on the Death of the Rev. W. Robs,

to offer for the unprecedented success which attends our Emerson's [1.] History of Modern Greece, 74. Ext Silk from Cobwebs.

At a late meeting of the labours, and to pledge ourselves to the same impartiality clopædia Americana, 155. Encyclopædia Bristo Society of Arts, a gentleman exhibited some and independence which has procured for our publication 238. English at Home, 380. Essays on Universe for

logy, 687. Evans's [Rev. R. W.] Kectory of Viet very fine silk which he had obtained from the so envied an influence, and so extended a popularity.

To Amicus: we do not see the use of Amicus's question; 715. Events in Paris from 26th to 29th of July, Sk web of the spider ; it possessed considerable but the answer is, an individual sent by and for us.

673. Excerpta Historica, 570. Excitement, the strength, and a beautiful metallic lustre. Many Royal Institution, in our last, p. 819, col. 2, fourth line

Exley's [T.] Principles of Natural Philosophy, lo

Exiles of Palestine, 794. Emperor's Rout, ils species of spider have been tried, and food of a lof the Appendix, for “ grandees," read "Guanches."

tome of the History of England, St., 81&

Page 16

Eclectic Society, 25, 236, 493. Egyptian Antiquities, 322. Hope, by Scriven, 242; Rose-bud, by Wright, 258 ;

Winter's Wreath, Illustrations of the, 639. Wollas Etruscan Vases, dicovery of, 225, 241. Excavations of Lady C. Bury, by Wright, 371; Duke of Reichstadt, [Dr.], from Sir T. Lawrence, by Lewis, 467. the Campo Scala, 274. Excerpia Historica, Prospectus by Bromley, 436; Lord Grey, by Cousins, 548; Prince of, 75. Metternich, by Cousins, 611; Sir Humphry Davy, by

ORIGINAL POETRY Foreign Literary Gazette, 158. French Institute, 610. Newton, 611. Lawrence [Sir T.], by himself, engraved German Poets of the present day, 481. Grecian Antiqui-

by Cousins, 403; Engravings from, 403. Le Keux's in almost every No. The pieces by L. E. L. will be fits.

Natural History, 579. Leslie's Sancho before the in pp. 307, 354, 548, 565. By M. A. Browne, 41, ties, 514.

Duchess, by Humphrys, 724. Literary Souvenir, Mus- 239, 275, 308, 324, 339, 372, 436, 451, 468, 453,693 King's College, 225, 300, 466, 514, 785.

trations of the, 675.

By N. T. Carrington, li, 483. By Thomson, 6a.
Literary Manæuvring, 796. Literature, present state of, Lithogrphics: Adams's [Miss] Groups from Tam O'Shan- 481. Literary Fund Society, 450. London University,

ter, by Sharp, 548. Barnard's Studies from Nature,


MUSIC. 137, 338.

371. Baynes's Views of the Canterbury and Whitstable Muhlenfel's [Dr.] Lectures on German Poetry, 306, 352,

Railway. 420. Boal [M.], Portrait of, 467. Boning- Commerts Mrs. Anderson's, 324. M. Boas's, 372. C

ton's Works, by Harding, 11, 420, 691. Delanotte's Northern Libraries, Subscription for the, 466.

Herne's Oak, 58. Edmonstone's Italian Boy, by Sharp,

Eulenstein's, 516. Philharmonic, 160. Philipps's

, i Oriental Literature, 593. Oriental Translation Fund, 106. Farrier's Deserter, by Fairland, 2:01. Green's

Potter's, 324. Sedlatzek's, 372, Spagnoletti's, . 306, 402.

Numismatic Atlas of Ancient History, 179. Hayter's New Publications, 160, 259, 276, 353, 38, 517, 613, 4
Panizzi's [Signor] Lectures on the Gerusalemme Liberata, [J.] Bower, by Sharp, 106; Malle. Sontag, by do., 106; 641, 660, 676, 691, 771.

179. Phrenological Society of London, 26, 122, 225, Miss Kemble, as Juliet, 194; Mr. C. Kemble, as Pierre, Mechanism of the Human Voice, 340. 722, 754, 101.

211; Miss Mordaunt, 419; Plavfellows, 420; Princess
Royal Asiatic Society, 25, 58, 105, 137, 179, 241, 273, 338, Vittoria, by Sharp, 643. Hullmandel's Castellated Paganini's Performance on the Violin, 469.

402, 435, 466, 498,803, 834. Royal Patronage of Public Mansions in Scotland, 106. Ink Litho-raphy, Specimen Institutions, 53]. Royal Socieiy, 41, 58, 75, 91, 103, of, [91. Johnson's Costumes of the French Pyrenees,

BIOGRAPHY: 121, 137, 157, 178, 194, 209, 224, 273, 289, 305, 320, 337, by Harding, 451. Landscape Alphabet, 548, Lane's [E.] 352, 370, 385, 401, 643, 674, 722, 738, 754, 785, 769, 8112, Great Pyramid, 194. Lanc's [R. J.] Imitations of Sir Mr. Chevenix, 243. Right Hon. W. Huskisson, 819. Royal Society of Literature, 105, 241, 257, 274, 290, T. Lawrence's Chalk Drawings, 136. Lawrence's [Sir T.]

Sir Thomas Lawrence, 27, 41, 59. Major-Gen. Da 321, 338, +17, 50, 643, 722, 754, 785, 803. Master Williams Wynn, 451; Lady Nugent, by R.

Stewart, 117. Mr. Windsor, 340. Field-Marshal la Senkovsky's [M.] Criticisms on M. Hammer, 547: Reply Lane, 643; Maternal Uffection, 194. Lawrence [Sir T.],

Yorke, 708. to, 578. Society of Schoolmasters, 803. Sotheby's by W. C. Ross, 75; by R. J. Lane, 180, 339 ; by Single- [Mr.] Version of the Iliad, Specimen of, 738. Stuart ton, 258. Lear's [E.] Sketches of Animals in the Zoolo-

SKETCHES OF SOCIETY. Papers, account of, 26.

gical Gardens, and Family of Parrots, 770. Linton's Venetian Antiquities, 435.

[W.] Sketches in Italy, 786. Newenham's Picturesque Age, the, 549. Baden, Grand Duke of, 549. Botana, University Intelligence, 210, 416, 801.

Antiquities of Ireland, by Harding, 514. Newnham's

and Womora, New Holland weapons, 516. Byrdo Illustrations of the Exodus, 29]. Newton's [G. S.]

[Lady] Remarks on Mr. Moore's Life of Lord By FINE ARTS.

Amy Robsart, by Sharp, 420. Pugin's Gothic Archi- 212, 227, 243. Canning, Mr., Anecdote of, 549. Co tecture, 27, 579. Robinson's Ruins and Scenery of

lon, Island of, 354. Charles X. of France, Inecdotes Ackermann's Juvenile Forget Me Not, Illustrations of, South Wales, 467. Ross's Bud and the Blossom, 259;

499. City Alarm, 739. Deaf and Dumnb Institutida 659. Albums, 451. Amulet, Illustrations of the, 7:23. Portrait of a Young Lady, 770. Scarlett's Twelve

Genoa, Visit to, 660. Dey of Algiers at Naples. 6 Artists' and Amateurs' Conversazione, 106, 229, 739, Heads from Rubens, 26. Schelky's Four Views of the

England and Italy, 579. English Travellers in ! 786. Artists' Benevolent Institution, 291. Athena um Action between the Shannon and Chesapeake, 548.

612. Frederick I. of Prussia, 516. Lancasterian Sex Club House, 106. Slater's [J.] Mrs. Bowdler, by J. W. Slater, 770. Stret-

in Denmark, 549. Leeches and Snails, Trathc in, iting Bartleman [James] from Hargreaves, by J. Thomson, ton's Views in the Route froin Genoa to Naples, &c.,

London, 92. Mackliniana, 484, 644. Malays, en 354. Batty's [Lieut.-Col.] Principal Cities of Europe, by Whichelo, 339. Thompson's George Iv., 339.

History of, 452. Metropolitan Improvements,

Mexican Dwarf, 28. Mistakes of Foolee Fun Fan 26, 339, 707; Six Views of Brussels, 733. British Gal- Westall's [W.] Clerical College, St. Bees, 834. Hull- lery, 75, 91, 103, 122, 138, 275, 333, 372. Britton's En- mandel's [C.] New Devil's Bridge, 834. Bouton's In-

11, 27, 76. Music, Love of, in Bohemia, 5.3 glish Cities, 396. British Artists' Exhibition, 179, 210, teriors of Churches, 834. Seerig's [Prof.] Anatomical

Police, 753. Oriental Usages and Opinions, 597. Pri 226, 242, 254, 274, 339. Burns [Robt.], original Por- Demonstrations, 834.

Polignac and Duke of Darmstadt, Anecdotes of, trait of, 372.

Public Dinners, 324. Railways in Austria, 54. Ry Lodge's Illustrious Portraits, 10, 532. Lough's Exhibi-

Descent, 244. Campanile's [Signor] Pictures, 324. Carpenter's [Mrs.] tion of Sculpture, 498.

Baroness Ribblesdale, by Scriven, 628. Chalon's Maddox Street Gallery, 259. Maratti's Joshua command-Sights of London : Petit Louvre, Burford's Paslon Duchess of Cambridge, by Say, 291. Chalon's Thomas

Panorama ing the Sun to stand still, 26. Martin's Fallof Nineveh,

&c., 138. Singers of the Alps, 835. Clarkson, Esq., by C. Turner, 258. Christmas Box, 46%. Marsden's Exhibition of St. Paul before Agrippa,

Quebec, 835. the, Illustrations of, 675. Chronological Epitome of 435. Mee's [Mrs.] Marchioness of Carmarthen, by

DRAMA. the History of England, 738. Coblen's Duchess of Kent,

Thomson, 26. Meyer's [F.] Mrs. Waylett, by T. by Woolnoth, IA. Collins's Scene on the Brent, by Hodgetts, 26. Meyer's [R.] Young Catechist, 770. Reports of the Representations and new Performen at C. Turner, 691. Cooke's [E. W.] Coast Sketches, 515. Morton's Invalid Carriage, 628. Moses' Six Views of several Theatres, weekly.

Cooke [W. B.] Sale of his Works, 436. Cooper's [A.] the ['olumbine and Experimental Squadron, 691. New Pieces: Black Vulture, 661. Blue Anchor,


Fortunate Escape of Williain 111., by Giller, 11. Cor- Moule's English Counties delineated, 739. Mills's Eve,
baux's [Miss] Juliet, by W. Say, 691. Corden's Admiral

Bricklayers' Arms, 108. Carnival at Naples, 533.

Chancery Suit, 787. Cinderella, 261, Cock Robi,
Nagle, by Ward, 227. Cork Exhibition of Fine Arts, National Cemetery, 242. National Portrait Gallery, 10,
611. Cox's Cottage, by Richardson, 691. Cruikshank's

Conscript, the, 756. Deuce is in Her, 59]. Drz
92, 179, 242, 291, 319, 371, 450, 515, 578, 057, 723. Naval

Gift, 260. Epicharis, 12. Force of Nature, 484. FON
[G.] Illustrations of Popular Works, 339; Mlustrations of Gallery at Greenwich, 628. Newton's [G. S.] Vicar of

Brothers, 50. First of Jpril, 5811, Heart of Lord
Sir Walter Scott's Demonology, 770. Cruikshank's [R.] Wakefield, by J. Burnet, 691.

123. Hide and Seek, 741. Hofer, 308. Honest Frs. High-mettled Racer, by Bonner, 804.

O'Connor's Westminster Abbey and St. Margaret's Church, 50]. Husband at Sight, 549. Husband's Mistake, . Daniell's Scene from the Red Rover, 123. Delkeskamp's 419. Octorama, 579.

Irish Girl, 597. Jack in the Box, 12. Jenkinses, i Panorama of the Maine, by Clark, 227, Diorama, 74. Panorama of Amsterdain, 388. Panorama of the Thames, 804. Jew of Arragon, 692. Marie Mignot, 6] Dobb's embossed Portrait of George IV., 467. Drawing from London to Richmond, 123. Panorama of Ma-

tional Guard, 92. Omnibus, the, 14. Past and made Easy, 518. Duncan's and Rolls' communications dras, 642, 707. Petit Louvre, 159. Petrie's Picturesque

sent, 141]. Perfection, 212. Phantom Steed, PER respecting the Print of the Orphans, 739, 753, 770.

Scer:ery in the North of Ireland, by W. Miller, 515. nologists, 44. Pop, or Sparrow Shooting, 5014 Por Elliot's [Capt.] Views in the East, 578, 659, 738, 303. Picture-dealers, Tricks of, 291. Pickersgill's [H. W.]

the Question, 212. Pilot of the Tharne, 7 Encaustic Painting, 547. M. Faraday, Esq., by Cousins, 92. Plate presented to

il, 276. Robert the Devil, 93. Scheming and se

Mr. Blount, description of, 515. Priam, the Wimer of Field of the Cloth of Gold, on glass, 239. Fisher's Illus-

677

Skeleton Lover, 48.7. Spanish Hustand,
trations of England, 339; Hlustrations of Ireland, 7:39; the Derby, 18:30, 420. Proccacini's Crucifixion, 372. Supper's Over, 76. Teddy the l'iler, lut Trois :
Views in Devonshire and Cornwall, 227, 804. Ferget Reinagle's Exhibition at the Royal Bazar, 499. Re- tanes, 741. Turning the Tables, 741. Water : Me Not, Illustrations of, 658. Fowler's Princess Vitto- menbrance, Illustrations of, 69]. Robinson's M. T. 756. Werner, 92, 821. Wigwam, 904 William To

180. Sadler, Esq., by T. Lupton, 23%. Rogers's Italy, Il-

Wreck Ashore, 708 ria, by R. Golding, 628. Fradelle's Mary Queen of

Am I to blame Scots and Chatelar, by A. Duncan, 513; Black Knight lustrations of, 361. Rome, Gallery of Arts at, 307.

Devil's Ducat, 835. King's Fire-side, 835. and the Clerk of Copinanhurst, by Say, 532; Rebecca Rowtun, from Femelly, by c. Turner, 388. Royal Oratorios, 92, 196, 228. On Dramatic Literary Proti and Ivanhoe, by Lupton, 5:12. French Academy at Academy, 75, 122, 346, 323, 338, 333, 371, 386, 402. 139. M. Dupont's Dramatic Readings. 161. 43 Rome, on the Suppression of, 770. French Sculpiure, Rubie's British Celestial Atlas, 739.

Lectures on Astronomy, 196, 212. M. H. annual prize for, 707. Friendship's Offering, Illustra- Sanders' Lord Byron, by W. Finden, 724. Scrap-Book,

Farewell, 2:28. The Prague Minstrels, 277. Exhita tions of, 6M.

123. Seymour's Living made Easy, 41. Shaw's Illu- at the Egyptian Hall, 309. Lord Burgher's
Gem, Ilustrations of the, 675. Gems of Beauty, 787. minated Ornaments, from Missals, &c., 436, 499, 707.

Opera at Florence, 324. Retrospxt of the Din General Cemetery, 387, 403. George IV., miniature

Lane and Covent Garden Seasons, 404. Shepherd's Metropolitan Improvements, 123; Modern

L'aput
medal of, 372. Gill's Orphan Ballad Singers, by J. Ro- Athens, Views of Bath and Bristol, and Noblemen's Fragments, by Talma, 517. Tyrolean Family,
mey, 707; Steeple Chase, by Alken and Duncan, 820. and Gentlemen's Seals, 158. Sketches from various
Gouldsmith [Miss], Exhibition of her Paintings, 451.

VARIETIES. Masters, 388. Smith's [C.] Model of Love among the

a
Grindlay's [Captain] Indian Scenery, &c., 291. Guest's Roses, 388. Smith's [S. M.] Kite, 211. Smith's [Major]

Exhibition, 159. Glasgow, Dilettanti Society of, 834. Account of a Collection of Drawings, 183. Smith's [T.] Under this head are containei literary ani scientifs Hamilton's English School of Painting and Sculpture, Young Artist's Assistant in drawing in Water-Colours,

formation, articles of point and humour, with inzi. 770. Harlow's Countess of Wicklow, by Say, 58. Haw- 58. Sovereign Alinanac, 58. Stanfield's [C.] Ports- both in prose and verse-each Number. kins's Countess of Verulam, by Dean, 548. Haydon's mouth, from Spithead; by Illen, 354. Stark's Scenery Gallery, 150; Napoleon at St. Helena, by Coombs, 628. of the Yare and Waveney, 184. Stothard's [A. J.]

LITERARY NOVELTIES. Heath's [W.] Looking-glass, 41; Tit-bits, 804. Hemm's Medallion of Gcorge IV., 467. Strutt's Sylva Britan- Original Penmanship, 611, 820. Holbein's [llans] Illus- nica, 460. Studies of Horses, Cattle, &c., from the Forthcoining Works, together with such as are in IT trations of the Old Testament, 258. Howard's Spirit of Great Masters, 436. Swan's Views on the [lyde, 291;

pation, are announced under this bead weekly. Shakspeare's Plays, 75, 354, 8023.

Lakes of Scotland, 611.

of Works subscribed in the Metropolis, a Ls a Jackson's Dr. Wollaston, by Skelton, 770. Juvenile For- Thom's Statues, 403. Transfiguration, Painted Window regularly in every Number.

get Me Not, Illustrations of, 690. Johnson's [J.] Cos- of the, 707. Turner's [C.] Sir T. Lawrence, 259. tumes of the French Pyrenees, by Harding, 820].

LONDON: Published ermy Saintday, by H. 4, $CUPS. Keepsake, Illustrations of the, 674. Keepsake Française, Vandyck, Picture by, 179.

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