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Lt. Collins, from 2 Dr. G. with Lt. Hedley, 4 F. Dent, from 10 Dr. rec. diff. with Lt. Osborne,

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Lt. Hartley, from 37 F.

1 do.

Butler, from 22 F.

do.

Allan, from 98 F.

do.

Nash, from 4 Dr. Gds.

do.

Murray, from 66 F.

do.

Hon. H. D. Shore, from 4 Dr. Gds.

8 do.

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do.

Stevenson, from 58 F.

15 dos

Hon. H. S. Fane, from Colds,

Gds.

22 do.

do.

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Col. Thomas, as Maj. R. Wagg. Train,

Lord S. Lennox, from 28 F.

do.

do.

Palk, from 32 F.

do.

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Wemyss, from 4 Dr. Gds.

do.

Airey, from 31 F.

do.

Maj. Sir T. T. F. E. Drake, Bt. 52 F. Maj. Ouseley, Port Service

do.

Small, from 25 F. Capt. do. do.

Capt. Im Thurn, 35 F.

do.

To be Lieutenants of Infantry by purchase.

Ens. Robinson, Cape Reg.

do.

Ens. Hunter, from 61 F.

1 do.

Hon. R. Howard, from 73 F. 8 do.

Cood, from 80 F.

15 do.

Hon. G. Upton, from 43 F. Lieut. do. vice Berkeley, canc.

do.

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Resignations and Retirements.

Maj.-General Miller, late of R. Mar.
Colonel Earl of Lisburne, h. p. Sheffield Reg.
Baillie, h. p. Surrey Rang.

Light, h. p. 25 F.

Lieut.-Col. Humphry, h. p. Unat.

Rudd, h. p. Insp. Field Officer.

Major Colhurst, 97 F.

Reynolds, late 5 Vet. Bat.

Browne, h. p. 103 F.

Amory, h. p. 5 Gar- Bn.

Capt. Hassard, 6 Dr.

MacMahon, 73 F.

Agnew, 89 F.

Gammell, 92 F.

Gent. Cadet Wilkie, from R. Mil. Col.

Exchanges,

Borlase, 96 F.

do.

Warren, h. p. 25 F.

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Bt. Lt. Col. Stavely, from Staff Corps, with Capt. Jackson, h. p.

Capt. Dawson, from African Col. Corps, with Lt. Col. Rainey, h. p. 55 F.

Babington, from 1 Dr. G. rec. diff. with Capt. Quicke, h. p.

Randall, from 6 Dr. rec. diff. with Capt. Orme, h. p.

Ryamond, from 19 F.with Capt. Taylor, h. p. 40 F.

Lanphier, from 19 F. rec. diff. with Capt. Hely, h. p. 25 F.

Wroughton, from 34 F. rec. diff. with Capt. Hon. H. S. Fane, h. p.

Morton, from 53 F. rec. diff. with Gapt Hill, h. p.

Dennis, from 62 F. with Capt. Mair, h. p. Seymour from 65 F. with Capt. Wood, h. p. 5 Di. Gds.

M'Laine, from 75 F. with Capt. Hammond, h. p.

Leaper, from 79 F. rec. diff. with Capt. Marshall, h. p.

Smith from 89 F. with Capt. Thorp, h. p.
VOL. XVIII.

Sankey, h. p. 29 F.

Evelyn, h. p. 60 F.

Mulhall, h. p. Irish Brig.

Walsh, h. p. 34 F.
Morrall, h. p. 9 F.

Cole, h. p. 82 F.
Galwey, h. p. 64 F.
Bogle, h. p. Cape R.
Eustace, h. p. 8 F.
Huddleston, h. p. 46 F.

Clonard, h. p. 4 Irish Brig.
Bromhead, h. p. 28 Dr.

Lieut. Jardine, 88 F.

Michell, 80 F.

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ALPHABETICAL LIST of ENGLISH BANKRUPTCIES, announced between the 23d

of Sept. and the 19th of Oct. 1825; Aughtie, T. Poultry, grocer. Barnes, W. Richardby, Cumberland, hay and corn-merchant.

Booty, J. Newport, grocer.

Brinley, J. S. Birchin-lane, ship and insurancebroker.

Bridgeman, J. Bethnal-green, tallow-chandler.
Brown, J. Shadwell, plumber.

Butler, T. Old Radford, Nottingham, joiner.
Byers, N. Bath-street, Clerkenwell, oilman.
Collens, F. Pall Mall, man-milliner.
Coley, F. H. Broad-street, wine-merchant.
Cooper, T. W. Liverpool, chemist.

Cowdroy, W. Gorton, Lancaster, glue-maker. Dennett, C. R. Fulham-road, Little Chelsea, cheese-monger.

Dickinson, J. Church-passage, Guildhall, warehouseman.

Dobson, J. Hesketh-with-Becconsalt, grocer. Emerson, J. and S.S. Whitechapel-road, cornfactors.

Fairclough, R. Liverpool, painter and glazier.
Follett, J. Bath, innkeeper.

Ford, R. Bridgewater, merchant.

Ford, W. Broadway, Blackfriars, tea-dealer.
Hall, W. Gutter-lane, warehouseman.

Haworth, A. and J. Whitehead, Lever Banks, near Bolton, calico-printers.

Harvey, W. Cloudesley-terrace, Islington, surgeon.

Higgs, E. Thornbury, Gloucester, victualler.
Hill, W. Arundel-street, Panton-square, tailor.
Hobbs, B. and W. S. Hellyer, Redbridge, South-
ampton, ship-builders.

Houghton, J. Manchester, linen-draper.
Huddy, G. Mark-lane, hop and seed-inerchant.
Hulthin, T. Catherine-street, Tower-hill, mer-
chant.

Jacobs, E. Windsor, dealer in jewellery.

Johnson, J. B. and J. O'Callaghan, Liverpool, merchants

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Nachbar, J. jun. Old Brentford, gardener.
Nash, J. Bristol, wharfinger.

Nichol J. and P. Cornhill, merchants.
Pain, R. G. City, underwriter.

Ploudfoot, J. Queen-street, Cheapside, tallowchandler.

Potter, C. Scarborough, Yorkshire, coach-painter. Pringle, J. London-road, victualler,

Procter, S. Calverley, clothier.

Robinson, R. Friday-street, tavern-keeper.
Robson, W. J. Oxford-street, grocer.
Sandwell, J. Strand, tavern-keeper.

Smith, J. Broad-street, broker.

Squire, J. and W. and W. W. Prideaux, Kingsbridge, Devon, bankers.

Stevens, J. Lime-street, merchant.

Summer, T. Clithero, Lancashire, ironmonger.
Sutcliffe, T. Halifax, cotton-spinner.
Tristam, J. Wolverhampton, ironmaster.

Tucker, T. High-street, Borough, oil and colour

man.

Tutin, R. Birmingham, builder.

Walker, W. and T. Baker, Cannon-street, grocers. Watts, J. F. Angel-court, Throgmorton-street, stockbroker.

Welsford, J. Little Guildford-street, Southwark, timber-merchant.

Whitelock, J. Retford, Nottinghamshire, draper. Witherington, C. H. Borough-road, apothecary. Wood, D. Milk-street, woollen-warehouseman.

ALPHABETICAL LIST of SCOTCH BANKRUPTCIES, announced between the 1st August and 30th of September, extracted from the Edinburgh Gazette.

Andrew, William, of Newlandmuir. Brown, Thomas, manufacturer, Prinlaws, Lesslie, Fife.

Dougall, John, fish-hookmaker, and hardwaremerchant in Glasgow.

Elliot, Andrew, builder in Portobello.
Gibson, John, auctioneer and broker, Edinburgh.
Grant, James, shoemaker, dealer in leather, &c.
Newton-upon-Ayr.

Jacobs, R. and Company, hatters in Edinburgh. Johnston, Alexander, and Co. merchants and soda manufacturers, Strathbungo, parish of Govan.

DIVIDENDS.

Cousin, James, silk and cotton-yarn merchant in Paisley; a second dividend 17th November. Hardie, James, grocer and spirit-dealer in Kirkaldy; a dividend 12th November.

Stewart, David, junior, late oil and colourman and spirit-merchant, Edinburgh; a dividend 2d December.

Welsh and Dingwall, wood-merchants and joiners in Greenock; a second dividend 28th November.

BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, AND DEATHS.

BIRTHS.

April 26. At Madras, the Lady of Lieutenant-
Colonel George Cadell, Deputy-Adjutant-General,
of a daughter.

Aug. 6. At Malta, Lady Ross, of a son.

Sept. 5. At Hopewell, St Ann's, Jamaica, the
Lady of William Shand, Esq. of Balmakewan, of
a daughter.

18. At Naples, Mrs William Scott, of a son.
Oct. 2. At Stirling, the Lady of John Fraser,
Esq. advocate, of a daughter.

At Warriston Crescent, the Lady of Cap-
tain Campbell, of the Royal Artillery, of a daugh-

ter.

5. At Cunninghamhead, Mrs Snodgrass Bu-
chanan, of a daughter.

6. At Valleyfield, Mrs Charles Cowan, of a
daughter.

7. At Edinburgh, the Lady Juliana Warrender,

of a son.

8. At 29, Heriot Row, the Lady of Robert
Lindsay, Esq. of a daughter.

9. At Great King Street, the Countess of Glas-
gow, of a son.

10. Mrs Orr, Albany Street, of a daughter.
12. At 114, George Street, Mrs Menzies, of a

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ter.

-

At Kilrenny Manse, Mrs Brown, of a son.
- At Abercromby Place, Mrs Campbell of
Possil, of a daughter.

At Leamington Spa, the Lady of Admiral
Sir Charles Knowles, G.C.B. of a daughter.

17. At 63, Queen Street, the Lady of Dr Nicoll,
St Andrews, of a daughter.

-At Brussels, Lady Elizabeth Murray M'Gre-
gor, of a son.

Mrs. W. Buchanan, 33, Drummond Place,
of a son.

18. At Wellington Square, Ayr, the Lady of
Sir David Hunter Blair, Bart. of Brownhill, of a

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ter.

23. At Belton. the Lady of Captain James Hay,
Royal Navy, of a daughter.

25. At Edinburgh, Mrs Welsh, 60, Northum-
berland Street, of a daughter.

At Glasgow, the Lady of Captain W. A.
Riah, 79th Highlanders, of a son.

-At No. 60, Great King Street, Mrs Bridges,
of a daughter.

Mrs Smith, Albany Street, of a son.
29. At Edinburgh, the Lady of Archibald Mac-
bean, Esq. Royal Horse Artillery, of a daughter.

At Glenmoriston, the Lady of William Stuart
of Glenmoriston, of a son.

-At Darnick, Roxburghshire, Mrs Thomas
Smith, of a son.

Mrs Kirkwood, Paterson's Court, Brough-
ton, of a son.

30. At Charlotte Street, Leith, Mrs Thomas
Young, of a son.

31. At Melrose, Mrs Spencer, of a daughter.

At her house in Portland Place, London, the
Lady of James Stewart, Esq. M. P. of a son.

At Usan, Mrs Keith, of a daughter.
Nov. 2. At Wormiston, Fifeshire, Mrs David
Lindesay, of a son.

5. At 12, Pitt Street, Mrs Bayley, of a daughter
Lately, at Lochbuy House, the Lady of Mur-
doch Maclaine, Esq. of Lochbuy, of a daughter.

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liam Ritchie, of Athelstaneford, to Isabella,
daughter of Robert Brown, Esq.

-

At Crieff, the Rev. Robert Brydon, of Dun-
score, Dumfriesshire, to Matilda, daughter of the
late Lawrence Mackenzie, collector of excise at
Campbelton.

6. At Edinburgh, David Guthrie, Esq. mer-
chant, Brechin, to Anne, eldest daughter of the
late John Burns, Esq. Bo'ness.

-At Leith, Peter Gray, Esq. writer, Alloa, to
Mary, eldest daughter of Adam White, Esq. mer-
chant, Leith.

7. At Leith, James Duncan, Esq. shipowner,
Leith, to Hester, eldest daughter of the late Mr
Peter Scott, merchant, Leith.

11. At Edinburgh, the Rev. William Limont,
of South College Street Church, to Sarah, eldest
daughter of James Weddell, Esq. Hanover Street.

At St Swithin's Church, Winchester, the
Lord Bishop of Barbadoes, (Dr Coleridge), to Miss
Rennel, eldest daughter of the Very Rev. the
Dean of Winchester.

15. At Archibald Place, Thomas Alexander,
Esq. surgeon, to Isabella, second daughter of the
late Ralph Richardson, Esq. merchant, Edin-
burgh.

17. At Glencricht Cottage, Perthshire the Rev.
Allan Macpherson, A. M. rector of Barnard St
Leonard, Wilts, to Margaret, youngest daughter.
of the late William Chambers, Esq. of Glenericht.
At Shiplake, the Hon. and Rev. Frederick
Bertie, to Georgina Anne Emily Kerr, second
daughter of Rear-Admiral Lord Mark Kerr.

18. At Glasgow, the Rev. Colin Hunter, Loch-
tayside, to Janet, eldest daughter of Mr Daniel
Morrison, Glasgow.

19. At Watton Church, Herts, the Hon. Alex-
ander Leslie Melville, brother of the Earl of Le-
ven and Melville, to Charlotte, daughter of Sa-
muel Smith, Esq. M. P.

20. At Bracndam House, Andrew Wilson, jun.
Esq. of College Street, Glasgow, to Marsilla,
daughter of Alexander Macdonald, Esq. of Dal-
lilea.

At the Protestant Church of La Tour, in
Piedmont, Josiah Webb Archibald, Esq. of Porto
Rico, to Fanny, youngest daughter of Dr Andrew
Berry of Edinburgh.

29. At the Vice-Regal Lodge, in the Phoenix
Park, Dublin, his Excellency the Marquis of Wel-
lesley, to Mrs Patterson. The ceremony was per-
formed by the Primate of Ireland, and the Bishop
of Raphoe gave away the elegant and beautiful
bride. The Lord Primate having concluded the
solemn rites according to the ordinances of the
Established Church, the most Rev. Dr Murray,
the Titular Archbishop of Dublin, finally perfected
the indissoluble knot, by administering the sacra-
ment of marriage in the manner prescribed by the
Roman Catholic Church. Mrs Patterson (now
Marchioness of Wellesley) is about 35, extremely
beautiful, and immensely rich. She is of Irish
descent. Her grandfather, Mr Carrol, who is yet
alive, resides in the city of Washington. Mrs Pat-
terson's maiden name was Caton. She had been
originally married to the brother of Mrs Jerome
Buonaparte. The Marquis Wellesley is 65 years
old.

DEATHS.

April 21. At Singapore, Lieut. William Dalzell,
of the 34th Regiment Bengal Native Infantry.
26. At Colombo, in the island of Ceylon, Ensign
Mackenzie, of the 16th regiment.

May 30. At sea, in the Bay of Bengal, on board
the ship Providence, Mrs Smith, aged 27, wife
of John Smith, Esq. of Drongan, Ayrshire.

June 6. At sea, on a voyage to St Helena, Ma-
jor John Ross Cleghorn, of the Engineers, H. E.
I. C. Service, Madras, eldest son of Hugh Cleg-
horn, Esq. of Stravithie.

22. At Buenos Ayres, near Lisbon, Mary Bar-
bara, the Lady of James Charles Duff, Esq. of

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Esq. Assistant-Surgeon, H. M. S. Pylades, son of
Mr D. Sinclair, Kinloch Rannoch.

2. At Up-Park Camp, Jamaica, Lieutenant and
Adjutant James Deans, of the 92d regiment.

31. At Richmond, Virginia, U. S. Wm. Camp-
bell Kidd, A. M. &c. eldest son of James Kidd,
D.D. Professor of Oriental Languages in the Ma-
rischall College and University of Aberdeen.

Sept. 11. At Bagneres de Bijorre, department
Hautes Pyrenees, Ann Margaret, only child of
Philip B. Ainslie, Esq.

18. At the Manse of Contin, the Rev. James
Dallas, minister of that parish.

23. At Kirkhill, Linlithgowshire, Mr James
Hume, second son of Mr Hume, Kirkaldy.
- Mrs Smith of Weedrushall.

25. At Carlisle, Mrs Elizabeth Harrison, wife of
John Connell, Esq. banker in Carlisle.

-At Edinburgh, Mrs Christian Howison, wife
Mr James Rennie, slater and glazier, Edinburgh.
-At Edinburgh, Charles Gordon, Esq. son of
Sir James Gordon, Bart. of Gordonstone and Let-
terfourie.

26. At Gilmore Place, Mrs Elizabeth Hardie,
relict of Mr John Martin, Chancery Office, Edin-
burgh.

27. At Leith, William, aged 19, son of William
Ainslie, Esq.

-At Charlotte Street, Leith, Mrs Mary Bridges,
wife of Mr Robert Bruce.

28. At St Roque, in Spain, Mr James Duncan,
third son of Mr John Duncan, merchant, Kirkal-
dy, Fifeshire.

29. At Leith, Helen, second daughter of George
Carstairs, Esq. merchant there.

50. At Heavitree, near Exeter, Jessie Ann, eld-
est daughter of Francis Gordon, of Kincardine.
-At Edinburgh, Sir John Leslie, Bart. of Fin-
drassie and Wardes, in the 75th year of his age.
-At Port-Glasgow, John Young, Esq. M.D.
Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians.

Oct. 1. At Forth Street, Mrs Margaret Innes,
wife of Mr Robert Scott, druggist, Edinburgh.
2. At Edinburgh, Mr Charles Todd, of North
Shields, optician, aged 37.

At Shandwick Place, Robert Walker, Esq.
-At the Manse of Kirkliston, the Rev. Charles
Richie, minister of that parish.

5. At Edinburgh, Mr Daniel Dewar, aged 73.
-At her house, 17, George Street, Miss Marga-
ret Seton, daughter of the deceased Mr David
Seton, Kennoway, Fifeshire.

--Mr George Dickson, nursery and seedsman,
Edinburgh.

4. At lloarley Grange, near Shrewsbury, Ma-
jor-General Swinton.

-At Longford House, Exmouth, Dr William
Paget. He was on the medical staff of the army
under the immortal Wolfe and the late Marquis of
Townshend, in America.

-At Ormiston Manse, John Hope, infant son
of the Rev. John Ramsay.

5. At Archibald Place, Mrs Margaret Usher,
relict of James Usher, Esq. of Toftfield.

- At London, Lady Richards, relict of the
Chief Baron of his Majesty's Court of Exche-
quer.

7. At Huntly, Major Robert Forsyth, late of
the 60th regiment.

-At Sloan Street, London, Eliza, eldest daugh-
ter of William Stewart, Esq. formerly of Inver-
keithing.

-At his house, 3, Gayfield Place, Mr Alex.
Milne of the Royal Bank."

S. At Edinburgh, Christian, daughter of the
Rev. Andrew Chatto of Mainhouse.

9. At Eyemouth, the Rev. James Smith, D.D.
minister of that parish.

-

At Kinghorn, Irvine Black, student of divi-
nity, youngest son of the late Rev. George Black,
of the United Associate Congregation there.

10. At St David's Street, Miss Jane Simson,
daughter of the deceased John Simpson, Esq. of
Brunton.

11. Near Lausanne, Helen Marianne, infant
daughter of Alex. Scott Broomfield, Esq.

At Roseville, in the 82d year of her age, Eu-
phemia Macduff, wife of Mr David Bridges, iner-
chant, Edinburgh.

At Kirkaidy, Henry Beveridge, Esq. m the
65th year of his age,

11. At Forres, aged 82, Mrs Jean Grant, relict
of Duncan Grant, Esq. Provost of Forres.
-At Kilmartin House Dugald Campbell,
Esq. of Kilmartin.

12. At Blairlogie, Mrs Isabella Ross, relict of
Charles Adam Duff, Esq.

-At Macclesfield, John Vans Agnew, Esq. of
Sheuchan and Barnbarroch.

13 Of apoplexy, the King of Bavaria. His
Majesty had completed his 69th year, and is suc-
ceeded by his son, the Prince Royal.

- At East Linton, John Burton, Esq.
14. At Dunolly, Patrick Macdougall, Esq. of
Macdougall.

At Edinburgh, Mrs Helen Watt, relict of
John Reid, Esq. of Nelfield.

15. At Kells Manse, the Rev. William Gilles-
pie, minister of that parish.

Christina, youngest daughter of David Sim,
Esq. of Cultermains.

-

At Portobello, William Simson, Esq. soli-
citor-at-law, Edinburgh.

16. At Edinburgh, Susannah, eldest daughter
of Mr Thomas Kinnear, writer, Stonehaven.
-At Newington, Edinburgh, Captain Charles
Greg, late of the Hon. East India Company's

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-At Edinburgh, Henry, and on the 22d ult.
Eliza, children of Mr Thomas Rymer, solicitor-
at-law.

-At his house, Bo'ness, John Padon, Esq.
distiller.

At the advanced age of 103 years, John Fox,
of Castleton, Derbyshire.

Drowned on board the Steam-boat Comet,
which was run down off Gourock by the Ayr
Steam-boat, on the morning of the 21st October,
on their passage from Inverness to Glasgow,-
Hugh James Rollo, Esq. W. S.-Mr Charles Bai
lie Sutherland, youngest son of the late George
Sackville Sutherland of Rhives-Mr Charles
M'Allister, W. S. Edinburgh.-Mr John M'Alli-
ster, nephew of Mr Charles M'Allister.-Mr A.
Graham of Corpach.-Captain W. E. Sutherland,
of the 53d regiment.-Mrs Sutherland, wife of
Captain Sutherland, and daughter of H. R. Duff,
Esq. of Muirton.-Mr John Reid, youngest son
of the late James Reid, Esq. of Exchequer.-
Mr James Millar, Leith Mr M'Kenzie, gro-
cer, Canongate.-Mr Alexander Kennedy, son of
John Kennedy, Esq. of Annet Farm, near Fort
William.-Mr Rose, Inverness.-Mrs Wright,
widow of Mr Archibald Wright, Glasgow.-Do-
nald, only son of Mr Robert M'Brayne, of Sum-
merlce. By this melancholy catastrophe, about
50 other individuals are understood to have per-
ished.

22. The Lady Margaret Wildman, wife of Cap-
tain Wildman, of the 7th Hussars, and daughter of
the Earl of Wemyss and March.

- At Ledlowen, parish of Killearn, James
Provan, Esq.

Lately, at his estate in the vicinity of Paris, of
apoplexy, the Prince de Carignan.

At the Giant's Causeway, Ireland, after a
short illness, the Earl of Annesley, Viscount Gle-
rawley, and Baron of Castle Wellan.

In Jamaica, the Rev. John West, Rector of
St Thomas's in the East, a man of superior genius
and worth. He was one of the most ingenious
and accurate teachers of mathematics which Scot-
land has produced. He was for some years, be-
fore he went to Jamaica, assistant to Professo:
Vitant, in the University of St Andrews, and
when in that capacity, published, about 40 years
ago, Elements of Mathematics," a work which,
like the Diaries in England, has, since that time,
had more effect in stimulating mathematical study
and geometrical invention in this country than any
performance extant. A valuable collection of his
other mathematical papers are preparing for the
press, and may perhaps be accompanied by a new
edition of his Elements, now out of print. In that
department of science, in which Leste and Ivory
have acquired so great and well-merited distine-
tion, Mr West was their earliest teacher and pa-
tron; and to the same master they and others will
never forget how deeply they are indebted for
their elementary lessons in Mathematics.

INDEX TO VOLUME XVIII.

Ambrosiana, Noctes, XXI. 978-No.
XXII. 500-No. XXIII. 751
America, review of Knight and Bucking
ham's travels in, 422

American Books, notices of late ones, 316
-1. Peep at the Pilgrims, ib.-2. Lio-
nel Lincoln, 323-3. Memoirs of Charles
Brockden Brown, 327-4. John Bull in
America, 328-5. The Refugees, ib.-
6. North American Review, 332
American Politics, North. By a genuine
Yankee, 355

Analytical essays on the Modern English
Drama, No. III. On Babington, a tra-
gedy, 119

Antonias, the, a story of the south, 601
Appointments, Promotions, &c. 258, 519,
646, 774

Attacks on the Lord Chancellor, remarks
on the, 212

Autobiography of Mansie Wauch, tailor.

Portion fifth, 458-Portion sixth, 461
Babington, a Tragedy, review of, 119
Bacchus in Tuscany: by Leigh Hunt, re-
view of, 155

Bankrupts, British, 265, 525, 651
Bee's slang dictionary, review of, 177
Bewick, Thomas, engraver on wood, me-
moir of, 1

Bible Societies, defence of the, 621-Con-
sequences that may be expected from the
circulation of the Bible, 622-Consider-
ed merely as a literary composition, it
has no parallel, ib.-It is the best anti-
dote to fanaticism that exists, 523-Cha-
racter of those who compose the Socie-
ties, 624-Fanaticism has declined since
they came into being, 626-Causes of
the increase of the Dissenters, 627-Im-
possible to make the Bible an instru-
ment of political objects, 631-Societies
likely to produce great benefit in Ireland,
ib. They have nothing to do with doc-
trinal controversy, 632-Bible discus-
sions have had a good effect on the Ca-
tholic priesthood, 633'
Births, 266, 526, 653, 779

Book of Common Prayer, remarks on the,
573-Remodelled by Queen Elizabeth,
576-Necessity of its being revised, 577
-On the morning and evening service
of the church, 578-Athanasian creed,
579-Objections to the service on vari-
ous holidays, 580-Form of confirma-
tion, 582-Communion service-cere-
mony of marriage, 583-Errors in the
offices of visiting the sick and burial of
the dead, ib.

Broster, John, F.A.S. E., lines addressed
to him by a pupil, 730

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Campeador's spectre host, the, 5
Catholic question, the, considered-The
disabilities under which the Catholics
lie, when originally imposed, were most
just and necessary, 7-Necessity of their
proving that their religious and political
principles are no longer hostile to the
constitution, 8.-Impolicy of their iden-
tifying themselves with Cobbett and Bur-
dett, 9-Securities appended to the Ca-
tholic bill in 1823 universally laughed
at, 10-Debates in the House of Com.
mons on the bill, 13-Duke of York's
opposition to it, 15-Difficult situation
of his Majesty in regard to this ques-
tion, 16-What is the best conduct for
the Catholics to pursue for their own in-
terest, 17-Conduct of the Parliament-
ary and other advocates of the Catholics,
18-Conclusion, 20

Catholics, remarks on Mr Blanco White's
evidence against them, 102

their conduct since the Associa
tion was put down, 479-New Associa-
tion joined by Protestant nobles and
gentlemen, 480-Dangerous consequen-
ces of this junction, 482-Proofs that
the great body of the Catholics do not
care for emancipation, 484
Channing, Dr W. E. review of his dis-
course on the evidences of revealed reli
gion, 160

Chancellor, Lord, remarks on attacks on
the, 212

Charity, Protestant Sisters of, 732
Christian researches in Syria and the Holy

Land, remarks on, 591-Acre, 593
Nazareth, ib.-Tiberias, 594
Cloud, Colonel, some passages in the life
of, 32

Cockney School of Poetry, the, No. VIII.
Bacchus in Tuscany, 155
Combination laws, repeal of the, consider.
ed, 20-Sound and constitutional mode
of conducting the affairs of England de-
parted from in their repeal, 22-Expe-
rience has proved it a pernicious mea
sure, ib. There can be no free trade in
labour without restrictive laws, 23-
Outrageous conduct of the workmen, and
ludicrous figure cut by the political eco-
nomists in consequence, 24-Evil effects
of the combinations, 25-Duty of every
friend of his country to assist in putting
them down, 27

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