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Painting, connection of, with pugilism, iv. 722-sketch of the career of Barry, viii. 277-review of Sir Joshua Reynolds' Memoirs, viii. 570-the exhibition for 1821, 684-the British Gallery, ix. 340-the process of fresco, xii. 234-remarks on the Dutch school of, xv. 387-and painters in America, xvi. 131-and poetry, the limits of, 312-state of it in the United States, 650-the modern schools of, xviii. 4relations between it and poetry, xxi. 16 et seq.-Fuseli's lectures on it, xxiii. 579-Egyptian, xxiv. 316-technical mysteries of it, xxix. 214-Ignoramus on the English school of it, 508-state of it in England under Elizabeth, 519 -North, &c., on amateurs in, xxxi. 273 -the Sketcher on the study of it, 309 -Byron on it, 312-importance of professorships of it, 313-letter of Burke to Barry on it, 492-the Sketcher on pastoral and romantic, 529-distinction between it and poetry, 530the art of it partially lost, 553-on transparent, xxxvii. 340-varieties of light and shade in it, 342-causes of the inferiority of the English in it, xl. 74-obstacles to its advancement in Great Britain, 227-deterioration of it there, 554-relations of eloquence to it, xlii. 126-its degraded state at present, 331-on the relations between it and poetry, xlv. 529-moral significance of it, 810-parallel between it and poetry, 811-stanzas to it, xlvi. 162— dangers to the Romish church from it, 185-scheme of a professorship of it at Oxford, xlvii. 365-English sensibility to it, xlviii. 2-nature of its range, 271 -sketch of its history, present state, &c., in France, Belgium, &c., l. 690— See also Art, Exhibitions, Fine Arts, &c. PAINTINGS, ROYAL ACADEMY'S EXHIBITION OF, 1840, xlviii. 374.

Paintings, on the restoration of, viii. 224 -Allan's, of the death of Archbishop Sharpe, xi. 439-in Calcutta, 561French exhibitions of, 583-the Florence gallery of, xiii. 277-the exhibition at Somerset House, 1823, xiv. 10 -importation of, into Great Britain during the war, xvi. 506-the Ettrick Shepherd on, xviii. 755-the Scottish Academy's exhibition of, 1827, xxi. 353-proper arrangement of, in a National Gallery, xl. 207-those at Hampton Court, xlviii. 768-See also Exhibitions, &c.

Paisley, the state trials at, 1820, vii. 564

-Mr Lawless at, xiv. 499-the election of 1834 in, xxxv. 858-distress in, 1837, xlii. 210.

Paisley bodies-Gathering of the West,

xii. 310.

Paint King, the, xvi. 560. Pakenham, General Sir Edward, at the battle of Salamanca, xxiii. 546, 548at the siege of Badajos, xlviii. 82-the expedition against New Orleans under him, and his death there, ix. 185, xxii. 316 et seq., 327, xxiv. 354 et seq., xxxv. 415 et seq., 420-falsehood regarding his having promised the plunder of the city to the soldiers, 430.

Pakenham, captain, Sir H. Blackwood under, xxxiv. 4.

Pakenham, the Hon. Catherine, marriage of Wellington to, xli. 708.

PALACE OF THE Lamp, the, vii. 674. Palace of Morgana, the, xlii. 480. Palamon, critique on Lord Byron by, xi. 456.

Palæologoi, family of the, xliii. 819. Palais Royal, the, xvi. 659-picture of it by Ségur, xxx. 741-history of it, Xxxviii. 60 et seq.

Palatines of Hungary, the, 1. 296. Palatino, the Monte, the spring of Juturna, xxv. 101.

Palazzata of Messina, the, xxvi. 891. Palermo, beauty of the women of, v. 567

-the revolution of 1821 in, ix. 334. Palestine, Jowett's Researches in, reviewed, xviii. 591-Heber's prize poem of, xxii. 618-sketches of, by Chateaubriand, xxxi. 560-concentration of attention on, xlii. 689-general interest excited by, xlvi. 100.

Palestrina, statue of Antinous found at, XXV. 711.

Paley, Dr, remarks on his Evidences of Christianity, xviii. 160-supremacy of the philosophy of, xxvii. 945-Parr's enmity to, xxix. 907-on the anomalies of the constitution, xxx. 391-on church establishments, 719-his theory regarding an established church, xxxi. 304-on the use of the House of Lords, 395-opposition of, to Horne Tooke, xxxiv. 206.

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Palladas of Alexandria, epigram from, by
W. Hay, xxxvii. 654-the spirit of the
age from, xxxviii. 403-Life from,
xxxix. 129-the ways of Providence
from, 554-"Why this vain toil" from,
796 Fortune capricious from, xli.
624-Life short from, ib.-"Some
dæmon," &c., from, 627.
Palladian architecture, the Quarterly Re-
view and Tickler on, xviii. 134.
Pallas, the funeral obsequies of, from
Virgil, xxxi. 164.

Pallas, loss of the, xxxiv. 361.
Palliser islands, the, xi. 522.
Palm Sunday, Keble's hymn for, xxvii. 847.
Palma the painter, xlvii. 89.
Palmela, the marquis, xxiv. 505.
Palmela, the count and marchioness of,
xl. 690.

Palmer, Mr, Mrs Siddons introduced to the stage by, xxxvi. 155-theatre established by him, xlv. 398-his death, 404.

Palmer, Mr, on the West India question, xxxi. 817.

PALMER, THE, by Mrs Hemans, xxviii.

983.

Palmerston, Lord, connection of, with

Huskisson's dismissal from the Wellington administration, xxiv. 110-improvements on his Irish estates, 755on Don Miguel and the Portuguese succession question, xxvii. 859-xxviii. 411 on the Reform Bill, xxix. 663— his personal appearance, xxx. 543– blunders of, as foreign secretary, xxxi. 567--his address to his constituents in 1835, xxxvii. 442-his conduct toward Spain, xxxviii. 211 - his position, &c., as foreign secretary, xxxix. 50-refusal of aid to Turkey by him, 146-avowal of propagandist policy by him, 780-his policy toward the Continental powers, xl. 561-results of his system of foreign policy, xli. 276-his defence of his intervention in Spain,

598- defence of the proceedings of Colonel Evans and the British Legion by him, 737-the Times newspaper on him, xlii. 316-on the alleged reaction in favour of Conservatism in 1837, 530 -his connection with successive administrations, 678-epigrams on him by Tomkins, xliii. 575-his incapability, xliv. 430-his character, and contempt entertained for him, 624-the results of his foreign policy, 717-his conduct with regard to the case of the Vixen, xlviii. 86, 87-his proceedings on the boundary question, 331-and on the Turkish one, xlix. 131-his conduct with regard to France in 1841, 421 his rejection by Liverpool in 1841, 1. 237.

Palmetto tree, the, xxxiv. 518.

Palmi, destruction of, by an earthquake, xxvi. 884.

Palmyra, the kingdom of, xxxvi. 179, 180.

Pamela, marriage of, to Lord Edward

Fitzgerald, xxx. 638.

Pamphlets, different destinies of, xxxviii.

98.

PAN, THE POEM of, xxx. 128.

PAN, HOMER'S HYMN TO, Xxx. 128.
Pan of the Greeks, the, xxxiv. 272.
Pan on a rural image of, from Plato,
xxxiv. 273.

Pan to his worshippers, from Leonidas, xxxiv. 273.

Pan and Syrynx, remarks on a painting of, xxxiv. 531.

Pan, inscription for a, from Alcæus, XXXV. 880.

Pan piping, from Plato, xxxviii. 144. Pan, on a statue of, from the Greek, xxxix. 794.

Pan, from Apollonidas, xli. 625. Pan, on an image of, from Philippus, xli. 627.

Pan's lament for Daphnis, from Meleager, xxxiv. 274.

PANACEAS FOR POVERTY, xiv. 635.
PANDEMUS POLYGLOTT, xlii. 455.
Pandora, Barry's painting of, viii. 283.
Pandora, the myth of, xxxii. 168.
PANDOUR AND HIS PRINCESS, THE, XXXii.
1.

PANEGYRIC ON PRIDE, Xxvi. 914.
Panic of 1825, the, and its causes, &c,
xix. 440.

Paniput, the battle of, xlviii. 555. Pankratieff, general, xxiii. 469. Panopticon, Bentham's proposed, xvii. 608.

Pansy, the, xxxv. 804.

Pantheism, tendency to, in Germany, xliii. 637.

Pantheon, the, in London, the Whig meeting at, viii. 566.

Pantheon at Paris, the, xi. 227. Pantheon at Rome, the, xxv. 102—it was originally connected with the Baths, 103-changes it has undergone, xxvi.

61.

Pantheon Madonna, legend of the, xxvi. 60.

Pantomime, influence of, on the regular drama, xvii. 727-long-continued preeminence of Covent Garden theatre in, xli. 173.

Pantomime in Paris, the, xi. 335.
Paoli, intimacy of Napoleon with, xxxviii.
173.

Paoline chapel, the, xxi. 794.
Papacy, supremacy of the, before the

time of Luther, xxv. 27-sketch of its rise, xxxi. 535-See also Catholic, &c. Papal bull against Luther, the, xxv. 204. Papal cabinet, composition, &c., of the, xxxi. 546.

Papal church of Ireland, the, xvii. 255— See also Catholic.

Papal domination, a sonnet, by Wordsworth, xii. 181.

PAPAL GOVERNMENT, THE, Xxxi. 535.
Papal guards, the, xxvi. 184.

Papal States, the seizure of the, by Napoleon, xxii. 203-aspect, &c., of the, xxxi. 537-system of education in the, xlvi. 185.

Papal and Pagan superstitions, identity of, xxvi. 61.

PAPAL SUPREMACY, THE, NOT ACKNOWLEDGED IN GREAT BRITAIN TILL THE NINTH CENTURY, xxv. 331.

Papal supremacy, Luther's disavowal of the, xxv. 202-his formal abjuration of it, 207.

Papal system, the, as exhibited at Cologne, xliii. 85.

Papavoine, Louis, the execution of, xxiv. 785.

Paper, manufacture of, from Beetroot, v. 355-Parnell on the duty on it, xxx. 462-influence of the want of it on Athenian literature, xlix. 225. Paper currency, state of the, in 1825, and its influence upon the public distress, xix. 430 et seq.-influence of it on prices, 445-effects of the change in the system of it, 1826, 649-the alleged depreciation of it during the war, xxiii. 199-true doctrine of the working of it, 201-alleged inducement of speculation by it, 203—advantages of it during the war, 637-depreciation of it by the suspension of cash payments, xxvii. 59-effects of contraction of it, xxxi. 617, 618-advantages, &c., of it, xxxii. 690-parliamentary committee on it, xlix. 550, 551-comparative amounts of it and bullion, 1839, 553-See also Currency. Paper system, effects of the, on Ireland,

xv. 4-Lord Liverpool on it, xxvi. 944 -Burke on that of France, xxxv. 288. Papety, a French painter, 1. 698. Paphian Bower, the, an engraving, xxi. 352.

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Papineau, the Canadian demagogue, salary, &c. of, as speaker of the House of Assembly, xxxvii. 919-his character, &c., 920-his cowardice, xliii. 226parallel between him and O'Connell,387. Papists, various conspiracies of the, against Elizabeth, xix. 314— turbulence of those of Ireland in 1829, xxv. 401 -coalition between them and the Dissenters against the Established Church, Xxxviii. 250 their proceedings in Essex, xl. 614-Macnaughten on their demands and claims, xli. 306-influence of concession on them in Ireland, xlii. 431-appointments from among them to office there, xliii. 124-their political perfidies, xliv. 432-their disregard of oaths, 433 their conduct in Newfoundland, 625 et seq.violations of their oaths by them, 797 -advocacy of their claims by the Whigs, xlvi. 180-See also Catholics. Pappenheim, General, death of, at Lützen, xliii. 58.

Parachute, Cocking's attempt to descend by the, xlii. 312. Paradise, rabbinical traditions regarding,

xxxiii. 614-comparison of the descriptions of it by Avitus and Milton, xliii. 304.

Paradise of Dainty devices, the, xliv. 460. Paradise Lost and Regained, imaginary

conversation of Milton and Elwood regarding, xiv. 265.

Paradise Lost, Lessing on, xvi. 313-its doctrinal imperfections, xviii. 587comparison of it with Pollok's Course of Time, xxi. 847-remarks on it as a religious poem, xxii. 626—it is the only great English poem, xxx. 490-the alleged original of it, xliii. 304-Voltaire on it, xlvi. 333-position of it, 777-its sublimity, 778-answer to Addison and Johnson on it, ib.-See also Milton.

Paradise Regained, Socinianism of, xviii. 587.

PARAGUAY, SOUTHEY'S TALE OF, reviewed, xviii. 370-remarks on it, 386. Parallel roads of Glenroy, the, ii. 330paper by Lauder Dick on, 697-account of them, xi. 390.

Paramatta, the town of, viii. 465. PARASINA, THE STORY OF, iv. 411. Parasina, Lord Byron's, remarks on, ii. 196.

Parasites, on, from Athenæus, xxxvi. 449.

Parchment votes of Scotland, the, xxix. 921.

PARENT OAK, THE, Xxxiii. 961.

PARENTAL LOVE, by the Sketcher, xli. 300.

Pare's Leicestershire Banking Company, xli. 154.

PARGASITE, NEW MINERAL CALLED, ii. 549.

Parhelia, account of, iii. 723.
Paria, the tragedy of, xi. 218.
PARINI'S GIORNO, remarks on, x. 525.
Paris, Homer's picture of, xxix. 840.
Paris, the Abbé, the alleged miracles of,
xiv. 554.

Paris, the character of, in Romeo and
Juliet, xxxvii. 528.

PARIS, MATHEW, ACCOUNT OF THE GREATER

HISTORY OF, V. 257-prologue, 258the battle of Hastings, 259-St Patrick's purgatory, 262-reflections on the Norman conquest, vi. 84-return of oue from the grave, &c., 85-character and death of the Bishop of Durham, 86foundation of the church of Lincoln, it.-death of William the Conqueror, 87-a German count devoured by mice, 88-death, &c. of Lanfranc, ib. -character, &c., of Malcolm king of Scotland, 273-foundation of St Oswin's monastery, ib.-vision of the monks at Fulda, 274-death of William Rufus, ib.-death of Robert of Normandy, vii. 141-the battle of the Standard, 142-what things happened to Thomas of Canterbury, 143-liberties of the church of Normandy, 144appearance of St Thomas, ib.-legend of Ulfric the anchorite, 145-adventures of Richard I., 605-legend of the Wandering Jew, 608-refutation

of the power of Mahomet to work
miracles, 609-fable concerning Christ's
raising Japhet, ib.

Paris on diet, remarks on, xx. 629.
PARIS AND FONBLANQUE'S MEDICAL JURIS-
PRUDENCE, review of, xiii. 673.
PARIS, EXTRACT OF LETTER FROM, V. 160.
PARIS, A POEM, BY THE REV. GEORGE
CROLY, remarks on, viii. 20.
PARIS, LETTER FROM, ON FRENCH PERI-
ODICAL LITERATURE, NEWSPAPERS, &c.,
1821, x. 729.

PARIS, LETTER FROM, xi. 579.

PARIS, LETTER FROM, July 1822, xii. 215.
PARIS IN 1826, sketch of, xx. 183.
PARIS, AN EXECUTION IN, xxiv. 785.
PARIS MORNINGS ON THE LEFT BANK OF
THE SEINE, No. I., The Sorbonne in
1835, xxxix. 296.

PARIS, A LETTER FROM, xlii. 601.
Paris, the hospitals of, i. 191-the Eng-
lish in, 1818, iii. 446-births, &c., in,
1817, iv. 489-the theatres of, vi. 175
-number of suicides in,compared with
the number in London, vii. 692-sta-
tistics of, viii. 339-Dr Scott's return
from, x. 214-its theatre in 1822, xi.
218-sketches of its theatres, 335-its
state in July, xii. 215-state of society
in it after the Reign of Terror, xv. 67
-Odoherty on its restaurateurs, xvi.
343-and on its cafés, 344-sketches
of it, 556-Charles Edwards on it, 658
-its women, 662-sketches of the
stage in it, xviii. 298-state of the
theatre, &c., 1825, 718-the capture of
it by the allies, xix. 459-statistics of
crime in it, xx. 184-exclusiveness of
its soirées, 186-denunciation of the
Greek language by its theological fa-
culty, xxv. 29-decision of the univer-
sity of, regarding Luther, 202—the
royal library of, xxvii. 312-terms of
the treaty of, regarding Canada, &c.,
604-the insurrectionary mob at, 1830,
xxviii. 690-character of the mob, 704
et seq.-and their conduct, 837-gar-
rison of, on the outbreak of the Re-
volution of 1830, xxix. 49-conduct of
the mob on the occasion of the Revo-
lution, 53-conduct of the national
guard at various times, 622-misery
in, during the first Revolution, xxx.
603-state of trade, &c., in, after the
Revolution of 1830, ib.-its general
state, 614-Ségur's account of it in
1789, 741-comparison of London with
it, xxxi. 353-the revolt of June 1832,
in it, xxxii. 54-the revolt of, 620-
state of its press under Louis Philippe,
621-various revolts in it subsequent
to the Revolution of 1830, 623-ef-
fects of centralisation in it, 941-the
average mortality in it, xxxiii. 440,
441-state of pauperism in, compared

with its condition in London, 823the 10th of August in, 900-massacre of the prisons in, 907-alleged capture of it by the Normans, 922-the centre of democracy, xxxiv. 95-effects of the centralisation in, 108-completeness of that centralisation, 641-subjection of France to, 644-means of securing subjection in, 645-Napoleon's efforts for its embellishment, and their effects, 908-formation of the forts round, 910-license of the press in, ib. -prevalence of infidelity in, 915-state of morality in, 918-licentious works issued from, xxxv. 242-effects of retrenchment in, 1789, 627--statistics of births in, 738, note-sketch of it by morning, xxxvii. 354-Chateaubriand's house in, 621-university instruction in, xxxviii. 18-the medical school of, 22-depravity of the medical students of, 23-struggle between its parliament and the king before the Revolution, 46, 48-its press under Louis Philippe, 335-the Protestants of, and their churches, 501-early state of instruction in, xxxix. 297, note-establishment for fraudulent bills of exchange at, 419-effects of centralisation in, on the provincial towns of France, 462-its architectural beauties, xl. 230-historical associations of its buildings, 231-recent architectural achievements in, 234-the Royal colleges of, 587-the great Normal School of, 589-the faculty of medicine at, 591-ravages of cholera in, 769-state of church attendance in, 794-the erection of the Luxor obelisk in, xli. 33-Bureaux matrimonielles in, 163-the School of Art at, 189-comparison between it and London as regards their public buildings, 356-the fat bull of, 469-the suppression of the gambling-houses in, 543-state of the prisons of, xlii. 147-the Maison de force of, ib.-the criminal depôt of, 148-establishment for young criminals in, 156-progress of animal magnetism in, 384-effects on the provinces of centralisation at, xliii. 311the triumphal arches at, 461-alleged religious reaction in, 637-the elections of 1839 in, xlv. 453-wet weather in, 689-sketches at, xlvi. 19 et seq.Charles Mathews at, 792-sketch of it in the seventeenth century, xlviii. 259 -propagandist avowals of its press, xlix. 470-the fortifying of, 471-its aspect sixty years ago, 1. 374-fortification of it by Charles V., 376. PARISIAN MIRROR, THE, OR LETTERS FROM PARIS-letter first, xi. 217-letter second, 224-letter third, 335-letter fourth, 339.

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PARISIAN SKETCHES, No. I.-Six months

before and after October 1814, xvi. 193-A ball at the Opera-house, 196. PARISIANA, iv. 560.

Parish cess, proposed reduction of, in Ireland, xxxiii. 651.

Parish choirs, sketches, anecdotes, &c. of, xli. 480.

Parish club dinner, sketch of a, xli. 481. Parish schools of Scotland, the, means

by which supported, xli. 688. Parish sick and parish doctor, the, a poor-law sonnet, xliii. 493.

Parish or village system of India, the, xvii. 708.

Parishes, origin of, in Great Britain, xxviii. 278.

PARK, MUNGO, THE NEGRO'S LAMENT FOR, vi. 196.

Park, Mungo, notice of, x. 158-magnitude of the Niger as stated by, xix. 703-and the Lion, xx. 844-on the standard of value in Africa, xxviii. 340-on his finding a tuft of green moss in the desert, xliv. 288.

Park, William, ode to poverty by, xxvii. 579-verses to a human tooth, &c., 581.

Park, sketches in the, xi. 718.

Parks of London, sketches of the, xlvi. 214.

Parker, captain, pedestrian feat by, xx. 136.

Parker, the leader of the mutiny at the Nore, x. 370, note.

Parker's Domestic Economy, remarks on, xviii. 565.

Parker, Miss, and Lord Byron, xxvii. 401.

Parkinson, Mr, solicitor to the Duke of York, xxi. 634.

PARLIAMENT, THE MEETING OF (1821), viii. 585-the Queen's case before, 586.

PARLIAMENT, REVIEW OF THE SESSION OF (1821), ix. 461.

PARLIAMENT, THE LATE SESSION OF (1824), xvi. 74.

PARLIAMENT, THE LATE SESSION OF (1825), xviii. 217.

PARLIAMENT, THE MEETING OF (1826), xx. 859.

PARLIAMENT, THE ASSEMBLING of (1829), xxv. 271.

PARLIAMENT, DEBATES IN, ON THE SILK
TRADE, XXV. 685.

PARLIAMENT, REVIEW OF THE LAST SES-
SION OF (1829), xxvi. 224.
PARLIAMENT, A DISSOLUTION OF, xxvi. 251.
PARLIAMENT, THE ASSEMBLING OF (1830),
xxviii. 376.

PARLIAMENT, THE MEETING OF (1830), xxvii. 596.

PARLIAMENT, HINTS TO THE TWO HOUSES OF, Xxvii. 772.

PARLIAMENT, THE LATE CRISIS AND SESSION of (1835), xxxviii. 503. PARLIAMENT, xl. 437.

Parliament, the session of (1823), xiii. 358-the opening of it, 1823, xiv. 185 -proceedings in it with regard to Ireland, 1824, xv. 10-debates on the subject of Ireland, 1824, 269-first appearance of Burke in, xvii. 4-influence of Fox in, 12, 13-the debates on the Catholic claims in, 1825, xviii. 7 et seq.Titus on its proceedings, 1826, xix. 462— prodigality of words in it, 580-letter to John Bull on the elections for that of 1826, 631-the prorogation of it, 1826, xx. 17-anticipated consequences of the admission of Catholics into it, 435 indifference to the interests of India prevalent in, 689-discussion on the Catholic question in, 1827, xxi. 575-coalition of parties in,745 et seq.its position as regards the shipping interest, xxii. 2-the case of the shipowners before, 144-low estimation in which held, 1828, xxiv. 139-substance of Sir Robert Inglis' speech on the Catholic question in, 811-the rhetoric of, 897-the debate on the Catholic Emancipation Act, xxv. 409-opposition between it and the nation on the subject of emancipation, xxvi. 226subservience of it to the ministry in 1830, xxvii. 42-the first day of, 609 -the Silent Member's report of the proceedings in, 717, 849-the discussions on the currency question in, 792 -insignificance of O'Connell in, xxviii. 222-the approaching dissolution of it on the accession of William IV., 234— sketches of various candidates for it, 293 et seq.-on shortening the term of it, xxix. 252-the dissolution of it in 1831, 721-attempts of the Whig ministry to overawe it, * 729-the first reading of the Reform Bill in it, and discussions on it, 732-proofs as to the increase or the diminution of aristocratic predominance in it, xxx. 287character of the first reformed one, xxxiii. 115-power of the Roman Catholic party in, 223-analysis of the first reformed, 224-the report by it on Ireland, 340-the rejection of the Factories Regulation Bill by it, 423— the causes of Burke's failure in it, xxxiv. 33-means afforded by the close boroughs for the admission of talent into it, xxxv. 391-comparative strength of parties in it, 1834, 444-degradation of it through the Reform Bill, xxxvi. 252-support given to William III. by it, 323-supremacy of it in Great Britain, 673-present character of the debates in it, 674-increasing vacillation of its decisions, 679-excessive occupa

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