INDEX TO VOLUME X. 242 253 Blaize Fitztravesty, A Midsummer Night's late Rumour of a Change of, 743. Na. Blue and Yellow, learning and liberality Characters of Living Authors, by them- Cheese, civilization, and north country bal. Christmas Chit-chat, 493 Song 1. Comparisons are Odious, a Christophe, late Emperor of Hayti, letter Christopher Agonistes, 409 Cochrane, Captain, remarks on his journey Cape of Asia, 741 Coleridge, Mr, letter from, 243. Selec- ib. Letter I. From a professional friend, On the philosophical import of the words Object and Subject, 246. III. To Mr Blackwood, 253. IV. To a Junior Soph, at Cambridge, 255. Substance of a dia- retort courteous, 415. The Quip-modest bridge, 259 Columbus Secundus, the voyages and tra- vels of, 33. Children's plays in Edin. burgh, ib. Those of the Boys, 34, of the Girls, 36. A Scene in the Grass- burgh Fish Market, 206. A chapter of blunders, 210. The King's birth-day 5 C in Edinburgh, 304. Columbus mista- Edinburgh Review, on the learning and li. On the rise, pro- Columbus disturbed by a gress, decline, and fall of the, 668 Emigrants' voyage to Canada, the, 455 English Literature, on the personalities of general, 476 Epistles familiar, from an old friend with doctrines of necessity and predestination, Expedition against the Pirates of the Per- sian gulf, proceedings of the, 151 of the preparations for, 8, and the cere. Expostulatory Round-robin from 14 con- nour of, in Edinburgh, 26 Falkland Palace, account of a visit to, 61 Familiar Epistles from an old friend with On Anastasius, by Lord Byron, 200. On the personalities of the Augustine age of English literature, 312 Fifeana, No. 1. 60. Visit to Falkland Palace, 61 Fisheries, remarks on those of Shetland, 728 Floating Beacon, the, a scene on the coast of Norway, 270 Fogarty O'Fogarty, letter from, inclosing Canto VI. of Daniel O'Rourke, 428. Sonnet and lines to, 437. Brief Ab. stract of his journal, 438 Funeral of the late Queen, remarks on the Gall and Spurzheim, remarks on an in. the system of, 682 General Epistle, 476 Giorno, Parini's, remarks on, 525 the minister of, 286 Good Town, the, on the propriety of pro- viding a mansion-house and state-equi. of, 4. His account of the preparations Gracious Rain, 186 H. Hans Beudix ; a tale, 264 Hayti, and its late Emperor Christophe, letter relative to, 545 Historical view of the rise, progress, de- view, 668 marks on his auto-biography, 43 Horæ Cantabrigiensis, No. VII, 552 Howíson's Sketches of Upper Canada, re Lines on the King's landing in Ireland, dedicated to, 449 Maga, on the outcry against, 217-Disco- very of a treasonable plot against it, 406 predestination, remarks on Coplestone's, Man, the, in the Bell, 373 Man-of-War’s-Man, the, Chap. I. 161– bable influence on the character and si Whippersnapper sloop of war, 162–In the Grab fag-ship, 421 Martin, the Carder, a West-Meathian Tale, -His Majesty's welcome to, 98--Re. Mechanique Celeste; or, the Prophetic Ale manack, remarks on, 701 Patrick, 615 II. Lament of a Con. Melodies, Irish, 613 Meteorological observations extraordinary, Midnight Despondings; a Sonnet, 327 by Blaize Fitztravesty, 557_Proæmium, ib.-Drouthiness, 561 Moral and religious instruction, on the of seamen, 363, 514 me, 189-To Betsy, ib.—The evening invitation, 190~Absence, ib.-----The Moscow, lines on, written after the invasion Mother's dirge over her child, a, 187 Murder, the First, a Sacred Drama, review of, 321 from Mr Coleridge, 243 from Alexander Sydney Trott, Esq. National Melodies, ancient, No. I., 554 Native Melody, the, 301 from Thomas Hope, Esq. author trines of, 192, 376 North, Christopher, familiar epistles to, from an old friend with a new face, 43, 200, 217, 312_Sylvanus Urban and, ter to, 292_Letter from, to Miss Sarah MÓDermid, 446_Letter to, on early -expostulatory,to Christopher North, and the resumption of his office of Edi- tor, 713_See Administration North-country ballads, letter from Mr Note apologetical, 348 403 Notices of old English comedies, No. I., nary, 267 on, 383 November, in six sonnets, 641 Ireland, 447. Translations from Ossiani, 471. Christmas Chit-chat, 493. Sea- shore Reflections at Sunset, 508. The lodies, 554. Irish Melodies, No. 1. 613. ber, in six sonnets, 641. Harold's Grave, On the birto-day of Prince Charles gy on My Tom Cat, 700. L'Envoy to volume tenth, 756 Prospective Letter concerning, 125 Sclavonic traditional, remarks on, 145 Poets-on the question, Why they are in- different critics ? 180 birth-day, 372 -To the Evening Star, ib. Alpin's Public affairs at home, on the present state of, 334 Publications, monthly list of new, 230, 350, 528 Quip Modest, the, to Mr Barker, 587 Recovery, singular one, from death, 582 Reflections on the sea-shore at sunset, 508 Bishop Corbet's poems, 88–on Sclavo- nic traditional poctry, 145—on Feld- question, why poets are indifferent cri- of the Augustan age of Eng and predestination, 192—on Lord By- ron's Anastasius, 200-on the personal. Tickletoby, Bart. 73. Remarks on Es ings since the death of the late Queen, -on the philosophical import of the Chaucer and Don Juan, 295—on the -on the decline of the Tuscan ascen. 30. Our Gude Auld Man, 32. Ode Brown's Table-talk, 332—on the pre- Rennio, John, Esq, notice of the death of, Steam-Boat, the, No. VI. Voyage Third, 3-Tale X. A Jeanie Deans in love, 5. -Part II. The Preparations for his Coronation, 14-No. VII. London Ad- 168_Tale XII. The Broken Heart, James VI. 73_of the Continuation of Wig and the Black Cat, 656_Tale Stuart, Prince Charles Edward, Ode for import of these words, 246 Substance of a dialogue, with a comment- ary thereon, 256 Edinburgh Review, historical view of 103 the, 668 Tale, a Sclavonian, 149 Craniology, &c. 73-A great discovery of, 77–Proposes to improve the intellect by cross-breeds of genius, 51 respecting, 158 Vocabulary of the language of, 160 145 ligious instruction on the character and Translations from Ossian, 469 Treason against the Magazine discovered, net by Mr Twitch, 408. Christopher Agonistes, 409 282 Man-of-War's-Man," 161, 417 on the decline of, 328 Good Auld Man, 32. Excellent new 103 341 different characters on board, 458-con- versation on nautical affairs, 459_ser- mon on board, 460-a disaster befals the preacher, ib.--the emigrants disturba ed by noises in the vessel, 460-story groans below, 463_their cause disco among the cargo, 464–second sermon, by the preacher, ib. who is discovered sent, 334 |