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Democratic equality, effects of, as shown

in Poland, xxx. 231.

Democratic era, introduction of, by the American revolution, xxxiv. 285. Democratic excitement, evils of, in Ireland, xxxiii. 76.

Democratic feeling, prevalence of, in Europe at the close of the war, xv. 321. Democratic freedom, unstable character of, xxxi. 10.

Democratic governments, prodigality of, and its causes, xxxiv. 181-causes of colonial discontent under, xlvi. 80. Democratic institutions, brief duration of, xxxi. 755-their failure in Sicily and Spain, xxxiv. 287-impossibility of their permanence in America, xxxix.

111.

Democratic movement, recent, in Germany, (1833,) xxxiv. 56.

Democratic party, arguments of, against

an Established Church, xxxv. 40— flatteries of the populace by them, 341 -character of its members as landlords, ib. its increasing strength, and necessity for a barrier against it, 535-its objects, &c. in Ireland, xxxvi. 754-revolutionary proceedings of it in Great Britain, xxxviii. 506-progressive demands of it in Great Britain, 574-rise of it in the United States, xlii. 215-character and identity of its objects in Canada and Ireland, xliii. 385.

Democratic passion, provision for the extinction of the, xxxi. 7.

Democratic power, increase of, in Great Britain before Reform, xxxi. 4-the passion for it, as distinguished from the love of freedom, xxxi. 6. Democratic press, venality of the, xxxvi. 380.

Democratic progress, character of, in the United States, xxxiv. 291. Democratic societies, vacillation of, xxx. 88 difference between them and aristocratic ones, xli. 88 et seq.-De Tocqueville on the characteristics of the two, xlviii. 465. Democratic spirit, wide diffusion of the, at the present time, xxix. 176-incompatibility of its prevalence with freedom, xxx. 236- outbreak of it in Great Britain, xxxi. 754-its propagandist tendencies, xxxii. 614-causes which have fostered it in Great Britain, XXXV. 71-how it is to be resisted, Xxxviii. 248 institutions against which it is directed in France and England, 389.

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Democratic states, brief duration of their power, xxxiii. 225-danger of centralisation in them, xxxvii. 761-want of foresight in them, xlvi. 756. Democratic writers, servility of, toward the mob, xliii. 35.

DEMODOCUS, THE SONG OF, translated by M. J. Chapman, xxxv. 714.

DEMODOCUS, THE SONG OF, by Sir D. K. Sandford, xxxix. 834.

Demodocus the bard, the song of, xxxv. *181.

DEMON OF THE MIST, THE, an adventure in Ireland, xl. 459.

Demons, Welsh stories of, iii. 189. Demons, the, Rabbinical traditions regarding, xxxiii. 647.

DEMONIAC, THE, by Thomas Aird, chap. first, Miriam's interview with Christ, xxviii. 812-chap. second, Miriam's interview with her son, 814-chap. third, Miriam follows Herman to the sepulchres, 816-chap. fourth, Herman's sickness, 817-chap. fifth, Herman's blessing, 818 - chap. sixth, Miriam at the hill of Calvary, 819chap. seventh, Miriam's interview with her sainted daughter, 820. Demonology and Witchcraft, Scott's, remarks on, xxix. 31.

Demonstrative reasoning, on, xli. 258. De Montford, the tragedy of, xvi. 163, 165, 171.

DEMORALISATION, SOCIAL, THE PROGRESS

OF, No. I., The Schoolmaster, xxxv. 228 -No. II., The Trades' Unions, 331No. III., The Prostration of Government, 526-No. IV., Decay of the wooden walls of England, 675. Demoralisation, alleged production of, by the poor-laws, xxiii. 931. De Morte, from Raleigh, xlv. 311. Demos, a song, xxix. 277.

Demosthenes, characteristics of the oratory of, xix. 582, xlix. 114, 115-his admiration of Thucydides, 116-signification of his name, l. 423.

Demotic language, the, xxiv. 317. Dempster, Mr, attack on Pitt by, xxxvii. 563.

Denham's Africa, remarks on, xx. 20. Denham and Clapperton's journal, review of, xix. 687.

Denison, Mr, on the resumption of cash payments' question, xxvii. 799. Denison, Rev. E., on the admission of Dissenters to the universities, xxxvii. 942. Denman, Mr, afterwards chief-justice, attacks on Lord Eldon by, xiv. 203on the Irish insurrection act, 461his parliamentary capacity, xvi. 82— encomium on him by Peel, xviii. 232 note-(as Sir Thomas,) attack on the Duke of Newcastle by him, xxix. 135 -speech by him on the Reform Bill, 663-his servility toward William IV. *729-his speech on the second reading of the Reform Bill, 739-on loyalty, 984-translation of the Danae of Simonides by him, xxxiii. 873translation of the Sword song of Har

modius by him, 885-his appointment by Lord Brougham, xxxv. 570-attacks on George IV. by him, xlviii. 293. Denmark, reforms introduced by Struensee into the administration of, ix. 143 -Feldberg on the literature, &c., of, reviewed, x. 172-the attack by Great Britain on her in 1807, xix. 453-the swimming schools of, xx. 148-the men-of-war of, xxi. 398-British and foreign shipping employed in the trade with her, xxii. 10, 13, 14—her restrictive religious system, xxiv. 831 -statistics, &c. of her West Indian colonies, xxxiv. 617-a party to the first armed neutrality against Great Britain, xxxvii. 4-the attack on her in 1807, xlii. 733-effects of the reciprocity system on her, xliv. 321shipping employed between Great Britain and her, xlvi. 758-statistics of the trade with her, 759-amount of exports per head of population to her, 762-rates of wages in, 1. *29-her position in 1841 as regards alliance with Great Britain, 457.

Denner the painter, head of an old woman by, xlvi. 474.

Dennie, an American writer, xvi. 566. Dennis, personalities of the criticism of, x. 312-remarks on his criticism, xxv. 538.

Denny, Rev. Mr, in Africa, xxvi. 346. Denon's Egypt, on, xi. 120. Denovan, Mr, his plan of supplying Edinburgh with fish, xx. 778, 779. Dens' Theology, on, xxxviii. 252-the adoption of it as a text-book by the Romish church in Ireland, *718. Dent d'Alençon, mount, xl. 241. DENTIST AND THE COMEDIAN, THE, a passage from the Diary of a Late Physician, xxviii. 476.

Denunciation, form of, before the Inquisition, xx. 73.

DEPARTURE, by C., xxxiv. 178.

DEPARTURE, by B. Simmons, 1. 431. DEPARTURE AND RETURN, xxxviii. 370. Depots, criminal, in France, xlii. 145, 146, 147.

DEPRAVITY AMONG ANIMALS, ii. 82. Depravity, natural, inability of secular

education to restrain, xxxv. 228. Depression, causes of the, 1826, xx. 442. DEPRIVATION, a sonnet, by Delta, xx. 282. Deputies, the French Chamber of, opening of it in 1822, xi. 218-opposition in it to the abolition of the censorship of the press, 339-position of it in 1833, xxxiv. 649-its failing consideration, 909-the appearances of Berryer in it, xlii. 135.

De Quincey, Thomas, on his Confessions

of an English Opium-cater, xiv. 485, 495-the John Bull newspaper on

him, xvi. 242-his connection with the London Magazine, xviii. 508Gallery of the German prose classics by him: No. I., Lessing, xx. 728; No. II., Lessing continued, xxi. 9; No. III., Kant, 133-his birthplace, xlv. 489 on the plagiarisms of Coleridge, xlvii. 287.

DE QUINCEY'S REVENGE, by Delta, Fytte first, xlviii. 578-Fytte second, 580Fytte third, 584.

Derbend, the town of, iv. 139-capture of it by the Russians, xxi. 159. Derbent, the Russian fort of, in the Caucasus, xlii. 638, 639.

Derby, the Reform riots at, xxx. 902, xxxi. 471.

Derby, the earl of, marriage of Miss Farren to, xlii. 329.

Derby and Fisher, the case of, xiv. 181. Dere beys of Asia Minor, the, xxxiii. 935.

Dering, Sir E., on the second reading of the Reform Bill, xxx. 396.

Dernier jour d'un Condamné, the, xxvi.

208.

De Roos, his work on the American navy, xxiv. 627.

Derry oyster, the, xliv. 637, 638. Dervenoki, the, battle of, xx. 838. Derwentwater and river, angling in, XXXV. 791.

Desaix, general, character of, xx. 302. Desaugiers the French poet, xlvi. 343. Descamisados, the Spanish democrats called, xxxii. 339.

Descartes, Dugald Stewart on, and on his philosophical system, ii. 163Coleridge on his demonstration of Deity, x. 246-attempted assassination of him, xxi. 203—his works prohibited by the Romish church, xxiv. 815-his Latin style, &c., xxix. 775, 776. DESCRIPTIVE POETRY, WHAT, xlv. 529. Descriptive poetry, remarks on, xxvii. 279-Wordsworth and North on, 874 -characteristics of it, xxxviii. 836. Descriptive power, varieties of, xix. 262. Desdemona, on the character of, xxv. 534, xxxiii. 131, 155, xxxvii. 540, 541 -comparison between her and Hermione, xxxiii. 157-the death scene of, 539.

DESERT, LAY OF THE, reviewed, xxviii. 236. Desert, passage of the, i. 624, xlix. 185

importance of the Camel to it, xxviii.
131-superstitions connected with it,
xlvii. 568-encroachments of it in
Affghanistan, xlix. 297.

Desert's use, the, xlii. 586.
Deserts of Peru, the, xlv. 399.
Deserted garden, the, by Miss Barrett,
xliv. 281.

Deserted house, the, by Tennyson, xxxi. 733.

Desertion, prevalence of, during the
campaign in the Pyrenees, xvii. 453.
Desfontaines, M., xiv. 130.
Desiderius, King of the Lombards,
Charlemagne's conduct towards, xxxii.

799.

Design, school of, proposed, xli. 183— the one at Paris, 189. DESIGN, SCHOOLS OF, xlix. 583. Desire, North, &c. on, xxxi. 707. Desmarias, the French poet, xxxix. 303. Desmond's Rebellion in Ireland, famine attending, xxx. 53.

DESOLATE VILLAGE, the, a reverie, i. 70. DESPAIR, by the Hon. Augusta Norton, xxxiii. 123.

DESPAIR, THE ISLE OF, by Delta, vii. 46. DESPONDENCY, a reverie, by Delta, vii.

45.

DESPONDENCY, a sonnet, by Delta, xx.

282.

DESPONDENCY AND ASPIRATION, by Mrs Hemans, xxxvii. 793.

Despondency, prevalence of, in Great Britain, and perils from it, xxxv. 70. Despotisın, influence of the Inquisition in sustaining it, xx. 345-influence exerted by it on art, literature, &c. 553-tendency of the so-called spirit of the age toward it, xxviii. 903-military treason always tends to the establishment of it, xxix. 617-certainty of the establishment of it in France in 1830, 618-comparative severity of democratic and monarchical, xxx. 771 -tendency of France toward it, xxxiv. 98 on the choice between it and Revolution, xxxv. 273-circumstances which impelled Napoleon to it, xxxiv. 904-fate, &c. of genius under it, 430 --extension of it to private life in France before the Revolution, xxxvi. 469-tendency of Revolution invariably to terminate in it, xxxviii. 400— impossibility of the permanence of it in Russia, xxxix. 111-the issuing of democratic ascendancy in it, xl. 600, xli. 78-causes of the superiority of colonial administration under it, xlvi. 81-distinction between it and government, xlviii. 466-De Tocqueville on the probabilities of its reappearance in Europe, 475-characteristics of the Austrian, 493.

Dessary, glen, xxxix. 291.

Destiny tragedies of the German school, the, xviii. 287.

Destitute Sick Society, the, ii. 51. Destitution, aspects of, in London, 1. 61. Destouches the French poet, xlvi. 12. DESTROYER, THE, a passage from the Diary of a Late Physician, xlii. 248. Destroyers, the, xlii. 585.

DESTRUCTION, a sonnet, by Delta, xvii.

154.

Destruction of Babylon, Wrangham's, vii. 180.

Destructive policy of the age, on the, xxii. 734.

Destructive principles, progress of, xxxvii. 378.

Destructives, consolidation of all parties into them and Conservatives, as the only two remaining, xxxv. 896, xxxvii. 798-their avowed objects, 430—their present views, principles, &c., 432, 436-deference of the Whigs to them, xlii. 242-policy of the Whigs toward them, 295.

DESULTORY DOTTINGS DOWN ON Dogs, xlv. 475.

DESULTORY VERSES, &c., xi. 752.
Detector, on Mr Kennedy and the Edin-

burgh Review, xi. 74-on a plagiarism
of Thomas Campbell from Vaughan,
xviii. 131.

DETERIORATION OF MAN AND BEAST, on the, xi. 330.

De Thou on the numbers who fell in the massacre of St Bartholomew, xxxix. 21-character of La Noue by, xl. 841. DE TRIBUS IMPOSTORIBUS, the treatise of, viii. 306.

Detroit river, the, xliii. 218.
Deucalion of Kentucky, ix. 259.
Deutz, the betrayal of the duchess de
Berri by, xxxviii. 330.

Devaney, a blacksmith, murder of, xliii. 118.

De Vere, remarks on, xxvi. 562.
Devereux, remarks on, xxvi. 562.
DEVEREUX HALL, chap. I., xxxii. 486—
chap. II., 492.

Deveria, the French painter, 1. 696.
Devil, Defoe on the, vi. 203.
Devil, hymn to the, xvii. 367.
Devil, modern impersonations of the,
xxvi. 853.

DEVIL AMONG THE ARTISTS, the, xi. 591.
Devil's bridge, the, Wales, xlvi. 69.
DEVIL'S DOINGS, the, or Warm Work in
Wirtemberg, xl. 86.

DEVIL'S DREAM ON MOUNT AKSBECK, the, xxii. 440.

DEVIL'S ELIXIR, the, reviewed, xvi. 55.
DEVIL'S LAST WALK, the, xlviii. 676.
Devil's Punch-bowl, the, xxxiii. 986.
Devil's Punch-bowl at Mangerton, the,
xxiii. 52.

DEVIL'S PUNCH-BOWL, ANOTHER LADLE-
FUL, FROM THE, xi. 159.
Devil's Walk, the, xix. 135.
Devils, Odoherty on, xvi. 343.

Devin du Village, Rousseau's opera of
the, xi. 142, xxxv. 285.
Devis, Mr, a painter, xi. 562.
Devock water, xxxii. 125-angling in,
XXXV. 791.

Devoke water, on the heights near, by
F. W. Faber, xliv. 805.

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DEVOTIONAL MELODIES, by Delta, No. I., Return, once more return, xxxii. 215 -No. II., Oh, who is like the Mighty One, ib.-No. III., How pleasant is the opening year, 216.

DEVOTIONAL SUPERSTITIONS OF ITALY, the, xxvi. 55.

Dew, Murray on, v. 233.

DE WALSTEIN THE ENTHUSIAST, xlviii. 338.

Dewanney Adawlut, court called the, xviii. 192.

Dewerstone, scenery of, xxxiii. 704.
Dewint, to, by Clare, xxxviii. 240.

spectre smitten, 361-chap. VIII., The martyr philosopher, 485-chap. IX., The Statesman, 802-chap. X., A slight cold, 946-Rich and poor, 953-Grave doings, 960-chap. XI., The ruined merchant, xxx. 60-chap. XII., Mother and Son, 565-A word with the reader at parting, 599-chap. XIII., The thunder-struck,xxxii. 279— The boxer, 284-chap. XIV., The Magdalen, 878-chap. XV., The Baronet's bride, xxxv. 81-chap. XVI., The Merchant's clerk, xli. 1-chap. XVII., The Merchant's clerk continued, 181 -chap. last, The destroyer, xlii. 248. Dias, commodore, v. 706.

Diaz, a French painter, 1. 701. Dibbie, the lake, xxx. 132-Ptolemy the geographer on it, xxxi. 204.

DIBDIN'S SEA SONGS, or scenes in the gun-room, xxvi. 570.

Dibdin's sea songs, on, vii. 35, xxi. 912 -defence of them, xxvi. 910-Ignoramus on them, xxx. 665 note.

Dibdin's pantomime of Mother Goose, on, xlviii. 371.

De Winter, admiral, the defeat of, at Dibdin, on the treatment of, by the

Camperdown, xli. 326.

Dhian Singh, the Sikh minister, 1. 171. Dhoondiah Waugh, sketch of the career of, and his overthrow by Wellington, xxii. 223, xli. 16.

Dhruva, the Indian tradition of, xlix. 775. Diable Boiteux, Sir Walter Scott on the, xv. 414.

Diablerie, tales of, viii. 498.
Dialects, American, on, xvi. 625.
Dialogue, a, by Alford, xxxix. 584.
Diamante, drama by, xviii. 681.
Diana, hymn to, vi. 240.

DIANA, HOMER'S HYMN TO, xxxii. 34.
DIANA, HYMN TO, from Callimachus, xliv.

52.

DIANA, HYMN TO, by A. Pike, xlv. 824.
Diana, the temple of, xiii. 433.

Diana, port and island of, near Holyhead, xxix. 174.

DIARY OF AN INVALID, review of the, xi. 692.

DIARY OF AN OLD CITIZEN, excerpts from the, xix. 272.

DIARY OF A LATE PHYSICIAN, passages from the, chap. I., Early Struggles, xxviii. 322-chap. II., Cancer, 474-The Dentist and the comedian, 476-A Scholar's deathbed, 477—Preparing for the house, 486-Duelling, 489-chap. III., Note to the Editor, 608-Intriguing and Madness, 609-The Broken Heart, 619-chap. IV., Consumption, 770-The Spectral Dog, 784 - The Forger, 786-chap. V., A Man about town, 921-Death at the toilet, 938chap. VI., The turned head, xxix. 105 -The wife, 113-chap. VII., The

Whigs, xiv. 237.

Dibdin's monument in Greenwich hos-
pital, stanzas on, xxvi. 913.
DIBDIN'S CRITICISM, No. I., Wakefield's
Pope, xvii. 76.

DIBDIN'S TOUR IN FRANCE AND GERMANY, xxvii. 306.

DIBDIN, THOMAS, ESQ., letter from, xxvi.

910.

Dibdin's Bibliographical Tour, remarks on, iv. 359-review of it, xi. 693. Dibdin's Library Companion, the Quarterly Review and Tickler on, xviii. 135. DIBDIN THE YOUNGER, THE CABINET, a Downing Street operetta by, xlii. 78. Dicaledon on the geology of Strathearn, i, 587-account of electric phenomena by, ii. 18-memoirs of Rob Roy by, 74, 149, 288.

DICHTUNG UND WAHRHEIT, Goethe's, part I., xlvi. 476-Book first, 477part II., Book second, 597-part III., Book third, xlvii. 31-part IV., Book fourth, 607.

Dichtung und Wahrheit, remarks on, xv. 631.

DICK, SIR T. LAUDER, HIS ACCOUNT OF THE MORAYSHIRE FLOODS, xxviii. 145. Dick, Mr Lauder, communication from, i. 239.

Dickson, Margaret, recovery of, after hanging, xiii. 683.

Dictator, origin, powers, &c. of the, in Rome, xliv. 151.

Didactic poetry, The English Opiumeater on, xxi. 21-characteristics of it, xxxviii. 836.

Diday, a Swiss painter, 1. 708.

Diderot, connection of, with Rousseau, xi. 142, 145, xxxv. 285-the philosophy and criticism of, xlvi. 14. Didian law at Rome, the, xxiii. 582. Didius, the emperor, the reign of, xxxvi. 76.

Dido, the date of the founding of Carthage by, xlv. 374.

Die, the countess of, a Troubadour, xxxix. 253.

Die Albaneserin, tragedy of, xviii. 290, 291.

Die Schuld, Mullner's tragedy of, xviii. 288.

Diebitsch, general, defeat of the Turks by, xxxiii. 942.

Dieppe, sketches at, xiv. 296.
Diet, remarks on, xxiii. 102.

Diet, Paris' work on, observations on,
XX. 629.

Diets of Poland, the, xxx. 232.

Diets under the Buckler, the Polish, XXX. 235.

Diez, researches of, into the literature of the Troubadours, xxxix. 248. Diez, Juan Martin, the Impecinado, xlix. 591 note. See Impecinado. Difficulty, Burke on the uses of, xxxv. 282. Digamma, on the original of Milton's Satan, i. 140.

Digamma, Bentley on the, 1. 414. Digestive organs, Clark on the influences of climate on diseases of the, xxviii. 374.

DINNER, THE FIRST AND LAST, Xxv. 223.
DINNER, REAL AND REPUTED, xlvi. 815.
Dinner, Odoherty on the proper order of
wines at, xvi. 349-Hogg on, xxi. 476
-Christopher on, xxii. 446.
Dinner-giving, Theodore Hook on, xv.
334.

Dinner hour, Odoherty on the, xv. 602.
Dinner party, account of a, by Count
Tims, xiii. 563-sketches of a mixed,
xix. 506-an American, xxxiv. 558.
Dinner parties, large and small, compara-
tive merits of, xix. 651 et seq.
DINNERS, LECTURES ON, by Abraham
Spoon, xix. 195.

Dinners, French and English, xlv. 687.
Dinoth, a Cambrian bishop, xxv. 337.
Dio, account of the emperor Hadrian by,
XXXV. 961.

Dioclesian, the emperor, xxxvi. 184-the baths of, xxv. 103.

Diodorus, on the constitution of Macedonia, v. 446.

Diomede, the character of, as drawn in the Iliad, xx. 829-the combat, &c. between him and Glaucus, xxix. 831 et seq.

Diomedes, account by, of the revision of the Iliad by Pisistratus, l. 625.

Dion, Wordsworth's, review of, vii. 208. Dion of Syracuse, epitaph on, xxxiv. 131. Dionigi and Gianetto, tale of, xii. 598. Dionysius, hymn to Appollo from, xxxix. 551.

DII MINORUM GENTIUM, No. I., Carew Dionysius of Halicarnassus, on Thucy

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transactions of the, No. I., Viator's letters on the history, &c. of the Fine Arts Letter first, vi. 89-No. II., Viator's letters, letter second, 276— No. III., The progress of architecture in England, 660.

Diligence, a dog-day in a, xlv. 691. Dilkes, general, at the battle of Barrossa, xxi. 701.

Dillon, Mr, on the result of Catholic
emancipation, xxxiii. 350.
Dillon, Mademoiselle, marriage of Guizot
to, xlii. 779.

Dimitri, a Greek, sketches of, xxxvi. 405.
Dimond, the Doubtful son by, xlv. 407.
Dinant, the town of, xxxviii. 319.
Dining in the United States, on, xvi. 630.
Dining, French and English, xxvi. 313.
Dining-room, sonnets for the, xliii. 720.
DINMONT, DANDIE, letter to the Lord
High Constable from, ii. 35.

dides, xlix. 117.

Diorama, on the, xiv. 472-the London, 1826, xix. 467.

Dioscorides, epitaphs from, xxxiv. 132 -translation from, xxxviii. 402.

Diotimus, Alcæus on, xxxiv. 385-epitaphs from, 972.

Diplomacy, British, illustrated in the character of her envoys, xxxix. 50. Dipper, nest of the, xxx. 7.

Direct Taxation, evils of the system of, xxxi. 607, xxxiv. 185, 190.

Direct Taxes, pressure of the, in France, xxxiv. 655, 913-their pressure upon the poor, 798-exemption of Ireland from them, xxxvi. 750.

Direction, a sonnet, by the Sketcher, xliv. 808.

DIRECTOR GENERAL, BITS BY THE, xiv. 342.

Directors of the East India company, functions, &c. of the, xx. 701, 702errors with regard to them, 704-proper qualifications for them, xxvii. 790. Directorial constitution of France, Lucien Buonaparte on the, xli. 29. Directory, the French, atrocities directed by them in Italy, xvi. 267 — their jealousy of Napoleon, xxii. 197-their overthrow by him, 198-review of the

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