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INDEX

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VOLUME LIV.

Alison's, Sir Archibald, History of
Europe, 154

tur-

American Questions, 121; the Protec-
torate of the Mosquitos, 122; the
Bulwer-Clayton Treaty, 123; limits
of Central America, 124; protection
of weak by strong Powers, 126;
self-denying stipulations, 126
Ancient Gems. Part I.-Ornamental
stones, 421; myrrha, 422;
quoise, 423; coral, 425; ivory, jet,
amber, 426. Fine Stones: jaspers,
429; medical virtues of jasper, 430;
fossil wood, 431; the jade, 431;
the lapis lazuli, 432. Part II.-
Transparent quartz, rock crystal,
560; agates-achates, 562; onyx,
565; sardonyx, 565; niccolo, 566;
plasma, 566; the cornelian,
feldspaths, 571; Molochites-mala-
chite, 572; calamita-the magnet,
573; obsidian, 573
Angel in the House, the, 473
Aytoun's Bothwell, 347

567;

Bashi-Bazouks, the, 375; What are
they? 376; the Turks as soldiers,
377; Bashi-Bazouks as horsemen,
378; Bashi-Bazouks in a picturesque
point of view, 379; Schoumla, 380;
Bashi-Bazouks in a ludicrous point of
view, 381; enlistment system faulty,
382; charges brought against the
Bashi-Bazouks, 383; General Beat-
son's grievance, 384; the question as to
Irregulars still unsettled, 385; the
Oriental easily managed, 386; an
anecdote of General Windham, 387;
the Bashi-Bazouks in an utilitarian
point of view, 389; their efficiency in
the presence of an enemy, 391
Bulwer's Confession of a Water Patient,
197

Campaign in the Pacific, the Last Naval,
238

Campaigns of Paskiewitch and Omer
Pacha in Asia, 64; former wars be-
tween Russia and Turkey, 65; war
with Persia, 66; capture of Kars by
Paskiewitch, 67; Paskiewitch takes
the fortresses of Akhalkalak and Ak-
hiska, 68; results of the campaign,
69; character of Paskiewitch, 71;

Mr. Oliphant's opinion of Omer
Pacha, 72; sketch of an Eastern
chieftain, 72; Omer Pacha's last
Asiatic campaign, 73; difficulties with
which Omer Pacha had to contend,
74; the battle of Ingour, 75; charac-
teristic anecdote, 76; the Mingrelians
and the Russians, 77; Turkish ad-
vance prevented by floods, 78.
Cockburn's Memorials of his Time,
79
Communications with the Far East,
574

Crimea, Journal of a Tour in the, Part
I., 407; Part II., 524
Crimean Expedition, De Bazancourt's,
97

Cromwell, Richard, and the Dawn of
the Restoration, 433
Curiosities of Contemporary Literature
from the Two Sicilies, by Vicesimus
Smatterling, B.L., 208

De Bazancourt's Crimean Expedition.

97

Denison Case, the, 732
Domestic and Foreign Politics, 736
Double House, the, by the author of
John Halifax, Gentleman, 170
Dwarfs and Giants, an Essay, in Two
Parts. Part I.-Descriptive, 140;
Sir Jeffrey Hudson, 141; Count
Joseph Boruwlaski, 143; Bébé, 145 ;
anecdotes of Boruwlaski, 147; death
of Boruwlaski, 149; Thérèse Souvray,
150; anomalies of augmentation and
diminution, 151; literature of gigan-
tology, 152; authentic examples of
giants, 153. Part II.-Explanatory,
286; difference between growth and
development, 287; abnormal pheno-
mena, 288; life under three aspects,
289; relation of the animal to the
organic functions, 291; What causes
arrest of growth and development?
293

Edinburgh during the General Assem-
bly, ; power of General Assembly,
2; Lord High Commissioner's first
levee, 3; opening day, 4; the As-
sembly Hall, 5; clerical characteris-
tics, 6; opening of the Assembly, 7 ;
the bar of the General Assembly, 8

disputed settlements, 9; a minister
on his trial, 10; communion in pri-
vate, II; annual reports, 12; Profes-
sor Robertson's speeches, 13; debates
of the Assembly, 14; the Commis-
sioner's dinner, 15; select preachers,
16;
the close of the Assembly, 17
Elections, Professorial, 637
England, Froude's History of, 31
Europe, Alison's History of, 154

Far East, Communications with the,
574; steamers and sailing vessels,
575; Suez Canal and Euphrates Val-
ley Railway, 577; pros and cons of
Euphrates Valley Railway, 579; Go-
vernment opposition to Suez Canal
scheme, 580; British trade and the
Mediterranean ports, 580

Fauna of the Frost, the, 654

Ferrier's Scottish Philosophy, the Old
and the New, 37

Foreign and Domestic Politics, 736
France before and since the Revolution
of 1789, 363

Friends, the, An Episode of Italian
Life, 644

Froude's History of England, 31
Furniss's What every Christian must
Know, 716

Gems, Ancient, Part I., 421; Part II.,
560

General Assembly, Edinburgh during
the, I

Giants, Dwarfs and, an Essay, 140, 286
Gilfillan's History of a Man, 260
Glasgow down the Water, 501; two
ways of reaching the coast from Glas-
gow, 502; the railway to Greenock,
503; going to Dunoon, 504; Names
of places down the Water, 505; Dunoon
pier, 506; the houses along the Frith,
507; Life down the Water, 509; Sun-
day at the sea-side, 510; What sort
of men are the Glasgow merchants?
511
Guizot's History of the Protectorate of
Richard Cromwell, and Dawn of the
Restoration, 433

History of a Man, Gilfillan's, 260
Holland and Everett's Memoirs of the
Life and Writings of James Mont-
gomery, 457

Hours with the Mystics, Vaughan's, 315

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forts, 411; the Wasp and Telegraph
batteries, 412; inspection of the allied
armies, 413; the fortress of Mangoup-
Kaleh, 415; the Temple of the Winds,
417; the British camp, 418; an ex-
cursion into the interior, 419. Part
II., 524; Tartar villages--a Crimean
villa, 525; Aloupka, 526; the Em-
peror's palace at Oreanda, 527;
Yalta, 528; the road to Aloushta,
529; a bivouac, 530; a panoramic
view, 531; Cossack station, 532;
Simpheropol, 533; Baktchi Serai,
535; fortress of the Karaim Jews,
536; the battle-field of Alma, 537

Kars and Erzeroum, and the Campaign
of Prince Paskiewitch, Monteith's, 64
Landseer, Sir Edwin, as a Naturalist
and Landscape Painter, 47

Land's End, the, 582

Lane's Month at Malvern, 197
Last House in C- Street, the, 392

Last Naval Campaign in the Pacific,
the, 238

Life and Manners in Persia, 220
Life at the Water-Cure, 197
Literature from the Two Sicilies, Curio-
sities of Contemporary, 208

Losely Place, the Muniment Chamber
at, 685

Lost at Cards, 54

Mansfield's Paraguay, Brazil, and the
Plate, 591

Maud Vivian, a Tale, 294
Meg of Elibank, 539

Memoirs of Frederick Perthes, 512
Memorials of his Time, Cockburn's, 79
Midsummer Day with the Poets, 231
Montalembert's Pie IX. et Lord Palmer-
ston, 345

Montgomery, James, Memoirs of the Life
and Writings of, 457; Poetical
Works, 457

Muniment Chamber at Losely Place,
685

Night Mail Train in India, 680
North Coast, Sketches on the, by a
Naturalist. No. III. The Shores
of the Scamander, 90; anecdotes
of birds, 91; ravens and 'hoodies,'
92; changes in social, domestic, and
political life, 93; condition of the na-
tives, 95; superstitions, 96; changes
which are taking place in the Eastern
Coast, 96. No. IV. The Yellow
Sands, 329; the gor-cock, 329; in-
genious ruse, 330; the coast in the
autumn, 331; boating, 332; Love-
lace's Lucasta, 333; a storm on the
North Coast, 334. No. V.-The
Land's End, 582; a morning among
the sea-fowl, 583; migration of birds,
585; old notions about natural his-
tory, 586; manners and customs of

Index to Vol. LIV.

the fishermen, 588; funeral of a
fisher-boy, 590. No. VI. and Last.
-The Fauna of the Frost, 654; a
winter sail, 655; Arctic sea-fowl,
657; the loon and the bordiwing,
659; night shooting, 660; a myste-
rious story, 661; the murderer dis-
covered, 663; concluding observa-
tions, 664

Old Rings. Part IV., 18; uses to which
rings are put, 19; conjuror's rings,
20; the custom of sealing sacks, 21;
services required of rings, 22; their
supposed powers, 23; annular fasci-
nation, 24; misfortunes caused by
rings, 25; rings restored to the dead,
26; occasions on which rings were
worn, 27; wearing of rings, 28; ring
boxes, 29; rings designated by parti-
cular names, 30
Oliphant's Transcaucasian Campaign
under Omer Pacha, 71
Opera Season of 1856, the, 186
Overland Mail Adventure, III

Pacific, Last Naval Campaign in the,
238

Paraguay, Brazil, and the Plate,
Mansfield's, 591

Paskiewitch and Omer Pacha, Cam-
paigns of, in Asia, 64
Pauli's History of England, 665
Persia, Life and Manners in, 220
Perthes, Frederick, Memoirs of, 513
Pius IX. and Lord Palmerston, 345
Poetical Works of James Montgomery,
457

Poetry: An Epistle, by C. K., 169;
Drought at Gaza, 244; In Richmond
Park, by J. T., 511; The Brothers,
by N. W. S., 602; Song of the
Buchaniers,
Uhland, 729
714; Gleanings from

Poets, Midsummer-day with the, 231
Politics, Foreign and Domestic, 736
Politics: the Central American Ques-
tion, 121; the Session of 1856, 247
Popularity, an Essay on, 623; definition

of popularity, 624; political popu
larity, 625; Tory popularity, 626;
Radical popularity, 627; word-be-
gotten popularity, 628; clerical popu-
larity, 629; How far is popularity a
thing to be desired? 630; Lord Pal-
merston at Manchester, 631; love of
popularity a connecting link between
the present and the future, 632; tea-
party popularity, 633; dark side of
popularity, 634; dangers of popu-
larity, 635; the conclusion of the
whole matter, 637

Principalities, a Peep into the, 127; a
Turkish host, 128; Giurgevo, 129;
Wallachia, 130; Moldavian justice,
131; Wallachian poste-wagen, 132;
conduct of the Austrians, 133; Count
Coronini, 134; the case of Colonel
Türr, 135; Wallachian ladies, 136;

745

a Wallachian tragedy in real life, 137;
Belgrade and the Servians, 139
Professorial Elections, 637
Prospects of the Indian Civil Service-
The open system,' 270; study of
Indian history, 271; 'Young India,'
272; study of jurisprudence, 273;
study of languages, 274; faults of the
scheme, 275; education purifies the
taste, 276; what the civilian has to
encounter in India, 277; moral effects
of the new system, 278; advantages
of Haileybury, 279; the proposed
reduction of salaries, 281; the pros
and cons of Indian Civil appointments,
283; importance of keeping up a high
tone in the service, 285
Protestantism from a Roman-Catholic
Point of View, 398

Reviews.-Froude's History of England,
31; Monteith's Kars and Erzeroum,
with the Campaigns of Prince Paskie-
witch, 64; Oliphant's Transcaucasian
Campaign under Omer Pacha, 71;
Cockburn's Memorials of his Time,
79; De Bazancourt's L'Expédition de
Crimée jusqu'à la Prise de Sébastopol,
97; Cinq Mois au Camp devant
Sébastopol, 97; Sir Archibald Alison's
History of Europe, from the Fall of
Napoleon in 1815 to the Accession of
Louis Napoleon in 1852, 154; Lane,
A Month at Malvern, under the
Water-Cure, 197; R. J. L.'s Spirits
and Water, 197; Bulwer Lytton's
Confessions of a Water-Patient, 197;
A Veteran's Hints to the Sick, the
Lame, and the Lazy; or, Passages in
the Life of a Hydropathist, 197;
Lady Sheil's Glimpses of Life and
Manners in Persia, 220; Whitting-
ham's Notes on the late Expedition
against the Russian Settlements in
Eastern Siberia, 238; Gilfillan's His-
tory of a Man, 260; Vaughan's
Hours with the Mystics, 315; Stanley's
Sinai and Palestine in Connexion with
their History, 336; Montalembert's
Pie IX. et Lord Palmerston, 345;
Aytoun's Bothwell: a Poem in Six
Parts, 347; Tocqueville On the State
of Society in France before the Revolu-
tion of 1789, 363; Perrone's Catte-
chismo interno al Protestantesimo ad
uso del popolo, 398; Guizot's History
of the Protectorate of Richard Crom-
well and Dawn of the Restoration,
433; Holland and Everett's Memoirs
of the Life and Writings of James
Montgomery, 457; Poetical Works of
James Montgomery, 457; Memoirs of
Frederick Perthes; or, Literary, Re-
ligious, and Political Life in Germany,
from 1789 to 1843, 512; Mansfield's
Paraguay, Brazil, and the Plate,
591; Ferrier's Scottish Philosophy,
the Old and the New, 637; Pauli's

Geschichte von England, 665; Fur-
niss's What every Christian must
Know, 716

Richard Cromwell and the Dawn of the
Restoration, 433

Scamander, the Shores of the, 90
Science at the Sea-side, 253
Scotch Peculiarities, Some Talk about,
702

Session of 1856, the, 247; the Adminis-
tration and the Opposition, 248; con-
duct of the Peelites, 249; failures of
the Government, 250; evils of long
speeches, 251; the Bishops' Bill, 251
Shakspeare and his Native Country, 446
Sheil's, Lady, Glimpses of Life and
Manners in Persia, 220

Sketches on the North Coast, by a
Naturalist. No. III.-The Shores of
the Scamander, 90. No. IV.-The
Yellow Sands, 329. No. V.-The
Land's End, 582. No. VI. and Last.
-The Fauna of the Frost, 654
Stanley's Sinai and Palestine, 336

Tales and Narratives.-Lost at Cards,
54. The Double House, by the
Author of John Halifax, Gentleman,
170. Maud Vivian, 294. The Last

House in C-
Street, 392.
The
Two Tuppers, 484. Meg of Elibank.
Chap. I., The Tower-Sir Gideon's
Household, 539; Chap. II., The
Foray, 543; Chap. III, The Laird
of Langshaw, 545; Chap. IV., The
Kelpie's Pool, 547; Chap. V., The
Plucking of the Flower of Elibank,
550; Chap. VI., The Reiver's Lift,
551; Chap. VII., The Reiver's Trial,
553; Chap. VIII., The Bridal, 554;
Chap. IX., Harden Dell, 556; Chap.
X., The Dame's Prize, 558.
Friends. An Episode of Italian Life,
644

The

Tocqueville's France before and since
the Revolution of 1789, 363
Tour in the Crimea, 1856, Journal of a.
Part I., 407; Part II., 524
Two Sicilies, Curiosities of Contemporary
Literature from the, 208

Two Sicilies, Kingdom of the its Pre-
sent State and Future Prospects, 486;
the events of 1848, 487; the 'Cama-
rilla,' 488; state of the city on May
16, 1848, 489; distrust of Govern-
ment, 490; opening of Parliament,
491; Political Catechism published,
492; system of reaction, 493; Baron
Poerio and his companions, 494; the
hat and beard movement, 495; men
of learning set aside, 496; the King
and the heir-apparent, 497; What
should be done for Naples? 498;
future prospects, 499

Two Tuppers, the, 484

United States, What are the, coming
to? 611

Vaughan's Hours with the Mystics, 315

Water-Cure, Life at the, 197
What are the United States coming to?
611; prosperity of the Republic, 612;
difference between Northern and
Southern colonies, 613; extension of
slavery, 615; claims of the Southerners
to superiority, 617; Mr. Brooks's at-
tack on Mr. Sumner, 618; indignities
offered by Southern to Northern
States, 619; invasion of the territory
of Kansas, 620; Southern opinions
on slave labour, 621

What every Christian must Know, 716
Whittingham's Expedition against the

Russian Settlements in Eastern Siberia,

238

Yellow Sands, the, 329

END OF VOL. LIV.

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