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Legislative assembly of France, proceedings of the, xxix. 430-comparison of it and its proceedings with those of the Constituent, 750-its conduct during the revolt of the 10th August, xxxiii. 901 et seq.-the meeting of it, xxxviii. 64-review of its career, 447. Legislative council of Canada, the, xxvi. 337, xxxvii. 921, xliii. 233. Legislative debates, influence of democratic ascendancy on, xxxvi. 676. Legislator, Burke on the true spirit of the, xxxv. 282.

Legislature, the British, vacillations and inconsistencies of the, xxxv. 538. Legislature, the French, Brougham on it, and its proceedings in 1789, xxix. 751-position of it in 1830, xxxiv. 649 et seq.

Legitimacy, influence of the principle of, xxxii. 945-Berryer and Guizot on it, xlii. 127, 128.

Legitimists, the French, difference between, and the English conservatives, xlii. 763.

Leibnitz, foresight of, as regards the French revolution, iv. 267-the Latin style of, xxix. 775-anecdote of, xxxii. 788-memorial to Louis XIV. by him on the importance of Egypt, xlvii. 458 -his birthplace, xlix. 167.

Leicester, the earl of, in the Netherlands, xxxi. 373.

Leicester, Mr Otway Cave at, xxix. 189

-address of the conservative association of, on the reformed town council, xl. 599.

Leigh, colonel, xxvii. 525.

Leigh's Accedence of Armorie, xliv. 405. Leigh woods, sketches in, xxxiv. 766-a cavern in, xxxviii. 482.

Leighton, Mr, his descriptions of the Scottish lakes, xxxix. 295. LEILA, chap. first, xli. 312-chap. second, 314-chap. third, 318-chap. fourth, 320.

Leinster, the duke of, xlvi. 535-visit of

Mrs Siddons to, xxxvi. 356. Leinster, province of, where it adjoins Ulster, xxiv. 760-small farms in, xxvii. 750-statistics of crime in, xxxiii. 357, xxxiv. 783.

Leipsic, discussions between Carolostadius and Eckius at, xxv. 201-decision of the university of, against Luther, 202-defeat of Tilly at, during the Thirty Years' war, xliii. 50- battle of, xix. 458, xxii. 205, 1. 569-effects of the battle on the fortunes of Napoleon, xiv. 193.

Leith, general, at the battle of Salamanca, xxiii. 546-at that of Corunna, xxvii. 529.

Leith, sketch of, in 1694, v. 427-sketch

of the races at, x. 389-Omai's account

of it, xi. 710-progress of the king from it, xii. 259, 320. Leith bath stove, the, i. 500. Leitrim, ironworks in, xxiv. 759-antipopish movement in, 1830, xxvii. 173 -state of the labouring classes in, xl. 502.

Leland, Hurd's attack on, xxix. 901, 902 -account of Burke at the university by, xxxiii. 279.

Lely the painter, xxix. 525—superiority
of, to modern English painters, xl. 77.
Lemaire, a French sculptor, 1. 706.
Leman, lake, xii. 431, 432.
Lemene, Francisco de, the Dream from,
xxvi. 830.

Lemie, village of, xxxix. 141.
Lempriere, captain, xxi. 421.
LEMUR, THE, A HALLOWE'EN DIVERTI-
MENTO, xii. 668-part two, 764.
L'Enfant, the historian of Huss, xii. 415.
L'Enfant, the abbé, during the massacres
of the prisons, xxix. 939.

Lengerke, sketch of the Hebrew drama by, 1. 610 et seq.

Lengua Romana, the dialect of the Troubadours, xxxix. 243.

Lenney, the pass of, xx. 402. Lennox, colonel, his duel with the Duke of York, xxi. 231.

Lennox, Lord William, on the second reading of the Reform Bill, xxx. 397. Lenoir, A., a French architect, 1. 707. Lenses, comparison of, with reflectors for lighthouses, xxxiv. 366.

Lentulus, defeat of, by Spartacus, xl. 381. L'Envoy, vol. tenth, x. 756.

L'Envoy to the Cockney school, the, xii. 781..

Lenz, translation of Love's Labour Lost by, xxxvii. 241.

Leo IV. swearing on the Gospels, Raffaelle's, xxv. 321.

Leo X., the court of, xviii. 117-honourable position of the artist under him, xxi. 402-his connection with the reformation, xxv. 31-letter of Luther to him, 202-his death, 212-patronage of literature by, xli. 618.

Leo, account of central Africa by, xxxi. 205.

Leodiensis, sonnets on the Giant's Causeway by, xxix. 342.

Leon, the Isla de, xxi. 696, xl. 389. LEONARD MAYBURNE AND SUSAN HENDRIE, Xxii. 362.

LEONARDO DA VINCI AND COREGGIO, xlviii. 270.

LEONARDO DA VINCI, ON AN ECCE HOMO BY, XXXV. 632.

Leonardo da Vinci, on, vi. 96-the Last Supper of, xii. 583-his processes of painting, xlv. 749, 750.

Leonatus in All's well that ends well, character of, xxxiii. 150.

Leoni, translation of Childe Harold, &c. by, xi. 551.

Leoni, the singer, in the Duenna, xx. 25. Leonidas, xii. 480.

Leonidas, the epitaph on, translations of, χχχίν. 970.

Leonidas of Tarentum, epitaph from, xxxiv. 125-on a dying shepherd from, 136-translations from, 273on fishermen from, 384-on a grasshopper from, 388-on Anacreon from, 981 on the Venus of Apelles from, xxxviii. 195-epitaph on an angler from, 646-on a small vessel from, xxxix. 553-on Homer from, 597-on a muddy fountain from, xl. 559-the suicide from, ib.-epitaph from, 560— the goat and the vine from, xlii. 558. Leontes, the character of, in the Winter's Tale, xxxiii. 149.

Leopold, afterwards emperor, administration of Tuscany by, xvi. 263. Leopold, prince, at the Tent, v. 728

song in honour of, 730-his refusal of the throne of Greece, xxviii. 93, 224policy of the whigs with reference to him, &c., xxx. 501-his position in Belgium, 614, xxxi. 379-the guaran teeing of his throne in Belgium, 463– the conduct of the whig ministry with regard to him, 456, 457-his revolutionary position, 459-circumstances of his accession to the throne of Belgium, xxxii. 1001-his marriage to the daughter of Louis Philippe, 1002-his pension from Great Britain, xli. 477-measures of, on the accession of Victoria, xliii. 513.

Leopoldina, the archduchess, marriage of, to Dom Pedro, xxxiii. 6. Leopoldina, empress of the Brazils, death and character of, xxxiii. 14. Lepanto, the battle of, commencement of the decline of Turkey with, xxxiii. 482.

Leper, the, by Willis, xxxviii. 266. Lepidus, law of, regarding entertainments, xxiii. 582.

Lepoitterin, the French painter, 1. 703. LERMINIER'S BEYOND THE RHINE, XXXviii. 332.

Lerminier, as a lecturer at the College

de France, xxxix. 311.

Lesbia, to, from Catullus, ix. 515. Lesbia's Sparrow, on, from Catullus, ix. 508.

Lesghees, the, a Caucasian tribe, xxi. 159, xlii. 638.

LESLIE'S MS. HISTORY OF SCOTLAND, account of, ii. 52. Leslie, the paintings of, xv. 567, xvi. 505

-Charles II. and Lady Bellenden by, xlii. 336-Dulcinea by, xlvi. 315portrait of Lord Cottenham by, xlviii. 378-Fairlop fair by, 1. 347.

LESLIE VERSUS HEBREW, vi. 501. Leslie, Sir John, discoveries in congelation by, i. 86-researches in heat and congelation by, 303-Dr Olinthus Petre on him, viii. 208-the trial for libel on him, xix. Preface, xiv.-his connection with the lighthouse board, xxxiv. 366. Leslie, Mr, the American painter, xvi.

134.

Leslie, Mr, on poor-laws, xl. 826.
Leslie's Evidences, on, xviii. 160.
Lesly's portrait of Sir Walter Scott, on,
xxiv. 699.

Lesné, M., controversy of Dibdin with, xxvii. 309.

L'Esprit du peuple, and imitation of it, x. 553.

Lessillon, fort of, xl. 250.

LESSING'S LAOCOON, ACCOUNT OF, XVI. 312.

LESSING, xx. 728-his Laocoon_translated, with notes, by the English Opium-eater, No. I., 731- No. II.,

xxi. 9.

Lessing, the dramas of, vi. 121— his influence on German literature, xviii. 286-his criticism, xxv. 538-effects of his criticism on Shakspeare in Germany, xxxvii. 240-influence of French literature upon himself, xlvi. 324-his birth-place, xlix. 167-his influence on German literature, 1. 144.

LESSON, THE, FROM KLOPSTOCK, i. 405.
LESSONS FROM THE PAST, 1. 276.

"Let dandies to M'Culloch go," ii. 689.
"LET HER DEPART," by Mrs Hemans,
xxxii. 234.

"Let ither anglers chuse their ain,” xxxviii. 125.

"Let others talk of Elcho," xxviii. 394. "Let them cant about Adam and Eve," xxvi. 403.

"LET US DEPART," by Mrs Hemans, xxxi. 218.

"Let us drink and be merry," with music, xii. 699.

"Let us laugh at the asses," xxiv. 511. "Let wit and waggery," with music, xii. 707.

Letellier, the Père, a Jesuit, xxxix. 301. Letourneur's translation of Shakspeare,

remarks on, xi. 449 note-Voltaire on it, xlvi. 334.

LETTER FROM ABERDEEN, A, with imitation of Horace, xii. 217.

LETTER FROM LONDON, A, by Titus, xix. 462, xx. 16.

LETTER FROM MAJOR SPENCER MOG

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LOWER HOUSE, to an old member of the Upper house, xx. 352. LETTER FROM A SCOTTISH FREEHOLDER,

on the effects of the introduction of foreign grain upon the labouring population, xxi. 1.

Letter of Boccaccio, Cornwall's, review of, xiii. 540.

LETTER ON THE POLITICAL CHANGES, XXviii. 984.

Letter to a Noble Lord, Burke's, xxxv. 516.

LETTER TO CHRISTOPHER NORTH ON THE

SPIRIT OF THE AGE, XXviii. 900. LETTER WRITING, THOUGHTS ON, xi. 301. LETTERS AND PAPERS, SORTING MY, xxvi. 748.

Letters from abroad, the Liberal's, xiii. 272.

LETTERS FROM THE DEAD TO THE LIVING,

No. I., Barrettiana, xi. 207-No. II., Cattiana, xii. 194.

Letters from the Irish Highlands, remarks on, xxiv. 455.

LETTERS FROM A LADY OF DISTINCTION, review of, v. 416.

LETTERS FROM PARIS, letter first, xi. 217 -letter second, 224.

LETTERS FROM THE PENINSULA, No. I., the battle of Barrossa, xxi. 695-No. II., the battle of Vittoria, xxiii. 183No. III., depot at the isle of Wight, 431-No. IV., the battle of Salamanca, 535-No. V., xxviii. 200.

Letters from Portugal, &c., review of, v. 547.

LETTERS FROM THE VICARAGE, No. I.,

xvi. 548-No. II., xvii. 20-No. III., 167-remarks on them, xviii. 574. LETTERS OF CHARLES EDWARDS, No. I., xv. 154-No. II., 391-No. III., xvi. 45-No. IV., 658-No. V., xviii. 417 -No. VI., xix. 18.

LETTERS OF AN OLD BACHELOR, the, ii.

192.

Letters of the Teutonic dialects, the, xlvii. 201.

LETTERA SPETTANTE AL CHRISTOFORO NORTH, Xiii. 159.

Lettres de Cachet, Mirabeau on, xxxvi. 464.

LETTSOM'S CORRESPONDENCE, EXTRACTS FROM, ii. 636.

Leuwenhoek on the food of fishes, xliv. 178 of the herring, 179. Levaillant on observation in natural history, xxx. 3.

Levasseur, misrepresentations of, regard

ing the battle of New Orleans, xxxv. 416 et seq.-views of, regarding revolution, xxxvi. 88.

Levasseur, Therese, the mistress of Rousseau, vii. 27, xi. 150.

LEVCHINE'S ACCOUNT OF THE KIRGHIZ KAZAKS, xlix. 791.

Levée at Holyrood, the, xii. 291, 327. Levée of Blois, the, xxxvii. 364. LEVELLERS, LAYS OF THE, No. I., "Go the whole hog," xxxvii. *446-No. II., the grand junction, 657-No. III., "We've nothing to lose," 658.

Leven, loch, scenery of, xxxix. 293. Leven river, the, xxxix. 293-angling in the, xxxviii. 164.

Levers water, xxxi. 866.

Levi, point, xliii. 215.

Levites, the, among the Jews, xxxii. 729 -proportion borne by them to the entire population, xxxiii. 731. Levitical order among the Jews, the, xxvi. 430.

Levrault, M., on the effects of the factory system on health, xli. 844. Lewesdon hill, Crowe's poem on, xxvii. 287.

Lewis, Mr Frankland, and the education commissioners, xxxi. 293-on the Kildare Street Society, 302.

Lewis, captain, conduct of, at Bristol,

xxxi. 476-his trial there, xxxii. 958. Lewis, J. F., bull-fight at Seville by, xl.

553.

Lewis, to a grasshopper by, xxxiv. 389. Lewis the actor as Ranger, xviii. 492. Lewis, the Sketcher on a river scene by, Xxxviii. 202.

Lewis of Bavaria, by Uhland, xxxix. 717. Lewis and Clark's tour, remarks on, xvi. 309.

LEXICOGRAPHY, No. I., JOH BEE'S DICTIONARY, Xviii. 177.

Lexington, the combat of, conduct of Horne Tooke with reference to it, xxxiv. 215 — misrepresentations of Stuart regarding it, xxxv. 425. Leyden, Dr John, sonnet to the Yew tree by, i. 277.

LEYDEN'S POETICAL REMAINS, review of, v. 3.

Leyden, the city of, i. 487, xliii. 83. Leymouth, landscape at, xxxiv. 535. Lezay, mademoiselle de, xxxix. 181. Liancourt, the duke de, on the state of Canada, xliii. 24.

LIAR, THE, a sonnet, by the Sketcher, xxxix. 774.

Libel, the Edinburgh Review on the law of, xii. 359-the whig theory of, xv. 559-the Westminster Review on the law of, xvii. 606-recent actions for, xxii. 132-remarks on the law of, xxvii. 734-provisions against it in India, xliv. 603.

LIBER AMORIS, review of the, xiii. 640remarks on it, 603, xiv. 428. Liberal newspaper, remarks on it, xii.

697, 700, 703-on No. II. of it, xiii. 72, 380-on it, 108, 263-on its Essays on the Scottish character, 365-Paddy on it, 398-on it, 607-Southey on it,

xiv. 87-its remarks on Edward Irving, 230-on No. IV. of it, 240-the closing of it, 314, 332-its publication, and Lord Byron's connection with it, xxiii. 386.

Liberal institutions, failure of, in Sicily and Spain, xxxiv. 287.

Liberal party, corruptions, &c. of the, 1.7. Liberal press, the, xxvi. 863-abusive tone of it, xxiv. 6.

LIBERAL SYSTEM, THE, xvi. 442. Liberal system, false principles of the, regarding government, xvii. 256-its effects, 341-first effects of the, in 1826, xix. 643 et seq.-review of it as applied to Ireland, xx. 527 et seq.—the effects of it abroad, xxiv. 476-and at home, 478-effects of it, 1829, xxvi. 97. Liberal Tories, position of the, 1834, xxxviii. *717.

LIBERAL WHIG, remarks on late numbers by a, vi. 288-second letter from a, 492-letters from a, No. III., vii. 21— letter from-correction, melioration, reformation, revolution, xxix. 593-the church and its enemies by, xxxv. 954 -letters from, xxxvii. 125, 373, 937, xxxix. 836.

LIBERALS, RISE AND FALL OF THE, xxiv. 96. Liberals, principles of the, on popular education, xvii. 534 — their peculiar characteristics, xix. 475-general character of the foreign, xxii. 418-assumption by the whigs of the name of, xxiii. 180-a Whig-hater on their fall, xxiv. 184, 185, 187-proceedings of, and results of these, xxvi. 258-their hostility to the Church of England, xxvii. 696-dogmas held by them regarding religion, 700-coalition of the Wellington ministry with them, xxviii. 914-their arguments, &c. with regard to the national distress, 916-Christopher North on them, xxix. 724-their uniform hostility to the working classes, xxxv. 340-their representations regarding the Austrian government, xxxvi. 530 their progress, xxxvii. 428-system of centralisation supported by them, xxxviii. 398-true character of their advocacy of voluntaryism, xliv. 732-their alliance with the Catholics regarding education, 733. See also Whigs.

Liberalism, political, on, xvi. 81-Odoherty on, 336-history of the system of, 442-policy of the Canning ministry with regard to foreign, xxii. 417 -Canning's support of it, xxvi. 700

its spirit, xxvii. 695 influences favourable to it at the close of the war, xxxii. 59-influence of it on the present bench of bishops, xxxix. 427 -propagandist system of Great Britain in favour of it, 780-first strength and

ultimate weakness given to it by the falsehood of its principles, 1. 2. LIBERALISM OF POPERY, THE, xliv. 730. "Liberated Africans," the, at Sierra Leone, xxvi. 347 et seq.

Liberator newspaper, the, the organ of the Glasgow Unionists, xxxv. 335answer to Sir D. K. Sandford by it, 337-xliii. 284, 289.

Liberators, the order of, xxiv. 152. Libertinism, demoralising effects and prevalence of, in France, xxxiv. 739. LIBERTY, two sonnets by the Sketcher, xxxvii. 746, xxxix. 772. Liberty, obligations of civil to religious, by Wordsworth, xxxvii. 706. Liberty, Collins' ode to, xlv. 140. Liberty, influence of, on military character, v. 652-inherent hostility of Popery to it, xx. 528 et seq.-incompatibility of it with religious slavery, xxi. 859 characteristics of that of the Italian republics, xxxii. 521-personal, destroyed in France by the Revolution of 1830, 946-attachment to it in Great Britain, xxxiii. 277-failure of the French Revolution to attain it, XXXV. 42-alleged advancement of it by the French Revolution, xxxvi. 210 -influence of the Restoration on it, xlii. 131-De Tocqueville on it, xlviii. 464. See also Freedom. Liberty and necessity, the question of, xliv. 539-De Quincey on it, xxvii. 816.

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Life, lines on, by Lord Bacon, xxxviii. 403 note.

Life, from Palladas, xxxix. 129.

Life, from Lollius Bassus, xxxix. 129.
Life, from Parmenio, xxxix. 130.
Life, from Rufinus, xxxix. 130.
Life, from Richter, xl. 384, 388.
Life, rule of, from Richter, xl. 385.
Life, a sonnet, by the Sketcher, xli. 275.
Life short, from Palladas, xli. 624.
Life, xlii. 566.

Life, the worth of, xlii. 583.
Life, Brodie's views on, viii. 420-on the
right to take it away, xxvii. 866-the
sublimity of, 923-relation of literature
to it, xxx. 828-indifference to it pre-
valent in Ireland, xxxvi. 761-the
requirements of it, xliii. 359-poetry
of the intercourse of, xliv. 198-the
mystery of, 204-varieties of, in Lon-
don, xlix. 630.

Life and death, by Lord Vaux, xliv.

459.

Life and riches, a description of, xliv.

461.

Life of Man, the, by Beaumont, xlv. 318.

LIFE OF A DEMOCRAT, THE, part first,

xxxiii. 963-part second, xxxiv. 206. Life, Hymns of, see Hymns.

Life-rent franchise, proposed abolition of, xli. 381.

LIGHT AND DARKNESS, Xxxii. 681.
Light and darkness, xlii. 566.

Light and shade, varieties of, in painting, xxxvii. 342.

LIGHT IN DARKNESS, by Delta, xxxix. 264.

Light cavalry, the uniforms of the, xxiii.

92.

LIGHT TOWER, THE, A TRAGEDY, xiii. 3. Light troops, the British as, xlii. 521. Lights, various forms of, for lighthouses, χχχίν. 362.

LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH LIFE, review of, xi. 669. Lights and Shadows of Scottish life, an occasional contributor on, xi. 746Philomag and Christopher North on the review of, xii. 49-the Edinburgh Review on, xiv. 700, 701-Jeffrey on, xv. 122-comparison between, and the works of Washington Irving, xvii.

59.

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Lilac, the, its beauties, &c., xl. 132. LILIES OF THE FIELD, THE, by Mrs Hemans, xxxv. 633.

Lilith, the tradition of, xxxiii. 646.
Lille, wages of cotton-spinners in, xl. 106.
Lilley, Mr, conduct of, in Newfoundland,
xliv. 627.

Lillo's Arden of Feversham, remarks on,
Xxx. 356.

Lillo, fort, siege of, xxiii. 212. LILY, TRIPS OF THE, introduction, xlvii. 189-trip the first, 193-trip the second, 194-trip the third, 196-trip the fourth, 197.

Lily flowering by moonlight, to a, xxxvii. 154.

Lily of the valley, Mant on the, xxxvii. 695.

LILYWHITE, PATIENCE, LETTER FROM, xiii.

232.

Lima, the city of, xlv. 290-effects of its

climate upon health, character, &c., 291-sketches of it, 292 et seq. Limborch, errors of, regarding the Inquisition, xx. 73 note.

Limerick, the earl of, speech of, on the Reform Bill, xxxi. 850.

Limerick, the bishop of, defence of the Irish church by, xxv. 617-on the condition, character, &c. of the Irish peasantry, xxvii. 751.

Limerick, county of, state of the occupation, &c. of land in, xvii. 687. Limerick, the town of, xxiii. 48-dinner to Spring Rice at, xli. 303-the election of 1837 in, xlii. 436-oysters and oyster cellars, xliv. 644. Limerick, the treaty of, demands of the Catholics founded on its alleged provisions, xxiv. 87-examination of it in its relations to the Catholic question, 820.

Limestone, amber imbedded in, i. 483. Limited monarchy, true nature, &c. of, xxx. 709.

Limoges, attempt of d'Aubigné on, xxxix. 181.

Limousin, sketches in the, xxxvi. 603. Lin, commissioner, proceedings of, in

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