Kasr, or palace of Nebuchad- nezzar, account of, 145. Kerefto, caverns in the rocks of,
Kermanshah, account of the valley and town of, 13. Killarney, lakes of, imposition on visitors to, 330. Kirby, Mr., on new genera of insects, 226.
Kirkook, in Lower Courdis- tan, described, 146. Naphtha springs of, 147. Knight, Mr. R. P., observations on his theory on taste, 298. Kuaow, or Argus Pheasant, de- scribed, 362.
Lacken, that palace described,
Laffers, Mr., cured of paralysis by lightning, 516. Lamia amputator, natural his- tory of, 367.
Larus, account of a new species of, 61.
Las Cases, Count, author of Le Sage's "Historical At- las," 308. Lawyer, shrewd and plodding, sketch of, 179. Leach, Dr., on a new genus of Byrrhidæ, 227. On a new genera of Bats, 228. On a new Glareolæ, 229. Leake, Mr., ably edits Burck- hardt's Travels in Syria, 339. His note on Cæsarea Philippi,
341. Learned lady, sketch of, 182. Leguevel, M., on the Guaco, or pliant Willow, 513. Leonidas, verses on the death of, 391.
Le Sage's "Historical Atlas" really compiled by Count las Cases, 308. Lightning, a flash of, cures pa- ralysis, 516. Lindley, Mr., on the family of Pomaceæ, 228.
Musa Paradisiaca, account of, 365.
Musa O'Connoriana, specimen of, 174.
Music, observations on the mo- dern system of teaching, 18. Mytilus, on new species of, 228.
Names of persons oddly assort- ed, 326. Naphtha, springs of, in Cour- distan, 147. Napoleon, Ex-Emperor, account of his palaces, and of a table of Sevre-china made for him, 100-103. Illustrations of his private sentiments, per- sonal character, and of his career, from his own convers- ations, 307-323. Appear- ances of his body, after death, 334. Poetical description of, in captivity, 430. His causes of war with Spain, 467. Nations, law of, respecting inter- ference with each other, 471. Nature, poetically apostroph- ized, 379. Nebuchadnezzar, ruins of his palace, or Kasr, 145. Novels, religious, observations on various sorts of, 175. On other schools of, 187. Nuphar Lutea, on varieties of, 61.
ticipated extensive commerce in that region, 275. Ovoca, Vale of, in the county of Wicklow, poetically cele- brated, 324.
Owl, Snowy, observations on, 59. Oxford, extraordinary powers of the Vice-Chancellor of, exem- plified and deprecated, 108.
Palembang, Sultan of, transac- tions of the British govern- ment with, 206.
Paralysis cured by lightning,
Paulding, Mr., an American poet, specimen of his writ- ings, 28.
Pelecanus Aquilus, on the natu- ral history of, 225. People, sovereignty of, observ-
ations on that principle, 501. Persia, view of the manners and character of the people, 3. Likelihood of a contest for the crown of, 13. The dress, visits, &c. of the females, 139. Petrel, stormy, account of, 368. Pheasant, new species of, de-
scribed, 230. Account of the Argus Pheasant, 362. Plants, method of drying, 211. New, from Nepal, description of, 367.
Poison, of snakes, remedy against, 513.
Pomaceae, observations on that family of plants, 228. Poor-rate, average of, in a series of years, 121. Population, of the states of Europe, 128. note. Of Great Britain and France in 1821, 129. note.
Poverty, sonnet to, 434. Printing made to enable a blind person to communicate her thoughts, 517. Procellaria pelagica, observ- ations on, 368.
Psittaci, account of new species of, 229.
Pyrites, copper, on the crystal- lizations of, 53.
Rackett, Mr., on some shells,
Raffles, Sir T, S., his catalogue of a zoological collection,
Rafflesia Arnoldi, a new genus
of plants, account of, 230. Revenue of Great Britain, at several periods, 131. Revolution, in France, principles established by it, and now the object of counter-revolu- tion with the ultra-royalists, 500.
Ricciardetto, of Forteguerri, translated specimen of, 356. Rio Janeiro, scenery at, 257. Rio Negro, meteorological par- ticulars of the neighbourhood of, 271. Rocks of Germany, observations on, 57. At Newfoundland, 59. Of the Orkneys, 61. Labyrinth of, at Ledja, in Syria, 344.
Rosas, anecdote during the siege of, 475.
Roscoea, new species of, 364.
Sabine, Mr., on the Chrysanthe- mum Indicum, and on the Marmots of North America, 366. St. Didier, a Troubadour, verses by, 453. Salmon, peculiar mode of dress- ing, 330.
Saltpetre, cheaply manufactured by the heat of the sun only, 518.
Samiell, account of that wind, 16.
Saxifraga, monograph of that genus, 362. Remarks on S. sedioides, 363.
Skeleton, human, found at Gua- daloupe, asserted to be of re- cent origin, 512. Large col- lection of, in a cavern at Ataruipe, in New Spain, 277. Smith, Mr., his observations on the Cabrit, 226. On some spe- cies of Carduus and Cnicus, 367.
Sir J. E., on Hypnum recognitum, &c., 364. Snakes, remedy against their bite, 513.
Song, old Norman, 539. Sonnets, 163, 164. 433, 434. Sooffees, a Persian sect, account of, 6.
Sordello, a Troubadour, verses by, 453.
Southey's song of the March to
Moscow, remarks on, 170. Sowerby, Mr.J., on a fossil-shell,
Mr. G., on Orbicula and Crania, 364. Spain, sonnet on the state of, 164. Remarks on the present struggle of that country for liberty, 421. On the Spanish clergy, 423. Account of the Conde de Abisbal, 424. Of
M. Llorente, 428. State of the people of, and of the Re- gency of Urgel, 443. Causes of Bonaparte's attack on, stated by Marshal St. Cyr, 467. Events of the war in Catalonia, 469-483.
Staël, Madame de, remarks on her criticisms on the female character for sensibility, 303. Sturdy, Mr., an attorney, sketch of, 179.
Suffi, a Persian sect, account of, 6. Superstition, essay on, 154. Swine, herd of, formed in bat- tle-array against a wolf, 513. Syphilis, cured by fumigation,
Tacitus, characterized as an historian, 236.
Troubadours, observations on the compositions of, with spe- cimens, 449-462.
Turks, manners of their soldiers on a military expedition, 373. Tuscany, Grand Duke of, his travels in England, 36. Gives a supper to Charles II., 40:
V Valet-de-chambre, of Louis Bo- naparte, anecdote of, 489. Value in exchange, observations on, 214.
Vaqueiras, a Troubadour, verses by, 455.
Venning, Mr., his amiable cha- racter, and death, 446. Ventadour, a Troubadour, verses by, 454.
Tackt-i-Bostan, description of, Vetch, Captain, his account of
Tanning, See Bark.
Taste, observations on theories of, 297. On that of Mr. Payne Knight, 298.
Taxation, of Great Britain and Ireland, 132. Of France, 133. See Burdens. Taxes, on the late and present
state of, in England, 117. Temminck, M., on new genera
of Psittaci and Columbæ, 229. Temple, called Heusn Nieha, in Syria, account of, 340. Of two others, 348. Of some in Africa, 373.
Theatre, antient, in Syria, 343. Thorough-Bass, obs. on, 20. Toad, notices respecting, 368. Toucan, particulars concerning that bird, 272.
Touch, on the sensations attri-
buted to that feeling, 405. Trappist, account of the Spanish soldier-monk so called, 445.
END OF VOL. C. OF THE NEW SERIES.
Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode,
New-Street-Square.
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