HUNDRED AND NINETEENTH VOLUME OF THE QUARTERLY REVIEW.
ABD-UL-AZEEZ, assassination of, de- scribed, 202-account of his reign,204. Adelung's Mithridates' contains the Lord's Prayer in 500 languages, 399. Esthesis, meaning of the term in Plato, 133.
African discovery chiefly made from the east coast, 1-lake Shirwa, 7- care bestowed on graves, 10-manu- facture of iron tools, ib.-tyranny of fashion. 12-hair-dressing and dyeing the hair red, ib.-effects of periodical droughts, 15-sale of wives and daughters, 21.
Allen (Archdeacon) on the importance of biography, 505.
American institutions, 273-the heaviest national debt in the world, ib.—the largest number of disaffected citizens, ib.
Angelo (Michael), the Homer of paint- ing, 294.
Arabia (Palgrave's), 182-Arab con- quests and literature, 183-unchanged character, 185-sacred black stone, ib.-historical Arabia extends far be- yond the peninsula, 186-geographi- cal divisions of Arabia, ib.-the cen- tral province of Nejd (see Nejd), 187 -Mr. Palgrave's description of the sandy ocean, 198-interruption of Mahomedan pilgrimages, 206. Armagh, the Book of, 482-mutilation of it, 487.
Arnold's (Matthew) Essays on Criticism,
Artificial-flower making, statistics of,
Aryan family of languages, 401, 418. Assassin, origin of the word, 185. Attorney-General, origin of the title, 329-Attornatus Regis, 340. Audley (Lord Chancellor), character of,
Bacon's (Lord) corruption as chancellor, 357-servility to the Crown, 358. Vol. 119.-No. 238.
Baker's discovery of the Albert Nyanza,
Baron (Chief), when the title first used,
Barons of the Exchequer, origin of, 335. -, greater and lesser, 47. wars of the, 44.
Berry's (Miss) Journals and Corre- spondence, 154 - association with Horace Walpole, 157-visit to France during the Peace of Amiens, 165- friendship with Madame de Staël, 166 -imaginary epitaph on herself, 167 -her opinion of the subordinate posi- tion of her sex, 169-according to Madame de Staël, by far the cleverest woman in England,' 171-her journal, ib.her comedy of Fashionable Friends,' 175-'Comparative View of Social Life in France and Eng- land,' 176-her sense of the value of Good Society, 177.
Bible not to be used as a scientific text- book, 427.
Billing Chief Justice), Lord Campbell's attack on, 343.
Biographies in which the artist is pre- dominant, 155.
Birds, remarkable intelligence of, 6. Birmingham, manufactures of, 381. Blaauw's The Baron's War,' 26. Bright's (Mr.) support of the Ministry, 253-advice to begin with a mild Re- form Bill, 258-threat of coercing Par- liament by mobs, 558-the keeper of the conscience of the Government, 539. Browning's (Mr.) self-culture and poetry,
Bunbury's caricatures, 239.
Bunsen (Baron) and Max Müller, anec- dote concerning, 434. Burckhardt on Arabia, 187.
Burgh's (Hubert de) opposition to the Papacy, 37.
Bury (Richard de), Chancellor, 349. Buxton's (Mr.) 'Ideas of the Day on Policy,' 226.
Callot (Jacques), the caricaturist, 223. 2 P
Campbell's (Lord) Lives of the Chan- cellors,' blunders of, 342-reckless romancing, 344.
Cantilupe, the last Englishman who attained a place in the Roman ca- lendar, 54.
Carbon, its affinity for oxygen, 437— carbonic acid and oxide, ib.-carbon- ate of lime, 438.
Cardinal virtues, their first enumeration in Plato or Pindar, 144. Caricature and grotesque in literature and art, 215-origin of the word cari- cature, 216-grylli, 218-grossness and profanity of comic art in the middle ages, 219 grotesque me- diæval sculpture and carving, 221- the devils droll but not frightful, ib. -representations of the arch-fiend, ib.-Dances of Death, 223-the hor- rible repulsively mixed with the ludi- crous, early political caricatures, 225.-woodcuts in Fox's Martyrs,' 226-caricature standards in the Great Rebellion, ib.-playing cards a ve- hicle of political caricature, ib.—em- blematical character of early carica- . tures, 227.-caricatures of the British lion, 290-Hogarth an epoch in the history of the grotesque and comic, ib.-Gillray heralded a new era, 232-Sayer and Bunbury, 239- remarkable printsellers, 241-Fores's Caricature Museum, ib.-Doyle (the celebrated H. B.), ib.-the Punch' school, 243-French caricature, ib. -mixture of burlesque with the ter- rible in the caricatures of the Re- volution, 245-Tableaux de la Révo- lution Française, 245-caricatures of Louis XVIII., 246-of Louis Phi- lippe, 247.
Caroline (Princess of Wales), described by Miss Berry, 172. Carrel's (Armand) opposition to Louis Philippe, 91.
Catherine II. of Russia, her Compara- tive Dictionary, 398. Cenotaph, cenobite, encenia, from Kevós, κοινός, and καινός.
Champfleury's (M.) saying on satirists, 237 Histoire de la Caricature Mo- derne,' 243. Charivari, the, 248.
Charlet's lithographed French carica- turés, 248.
Charlotte (Princess), at fifteen, 173. Chancellor, origin of the title, 332. Children's Employment Commission, 364-children in the earthenware manufacture, 366.-enormous per-
centage of mortality among children under five, 367-occupation of mould- runners described, ib.-lucifer-match manufacture, 369-cartridges, paper- staining, and fustian-cutting, 370- children of two years old employed in lace-making, 371-lace-schools, ib.- straw-plait manufacture, 373-five a common age to commence working, 374 hosiery manufacture, 375- millinery and dressmaking, 376- artificial flower-making, 377-metal manufactures, 378-parental task- masters, 379-nail manufacture, 382 -children hired by piece-workers, 383-children attending pin-making machines the most ignorant class, ib.-ignorance of the commonest sub- jects, 384-children in the brick manufacture, 385.-children using heavy hammers, 388-glass manufac- ture, 389-gang-masters contracting for agricultural labour, 391-demo- ralisation of girls, 392.
Church (Irish), its early independence of Rome, 475-two Churches in Ireland from the conquest to the Re- formation, 495 three orders of saints of the Irish Church, 496- Archbishop Anselm's letter to Mur- tach O'Brien, 497.
Coal, nature, origin, and varieties of, 437-- formation of coal, 439.-lig- nite or brown coal, 441-stages of the transformation of vegetable matter into anthracite, 443-Chi- nese coal, 444-beds of anthracite in South Wales, 445- cannel coal, ib. coal-cutting machines, 447-
holeing,' ib.-'ten-yard' coal of South Staffordshire, 449-waste of coal in burning, 451-Swedish stoves, 453-plants poisoned by smoke, 454 -saving from the consumption of smoke, 455-invention for econo- mising fuel, 456-the slack question, 458-manufacture of oils from coal by distillation, 459-gaseous fuel, ib. -duration of our coal-fields, 463-a substitute for coal visionary, 465- export of coal, 470-the coal-tax, 471 -the largest coalfield in the world that of the United States, 472- European coalfields, ib.
Coif, origin of the Sergeant's, 336. Coke's (Sir E.) unfeeling coarseness in conducting State prosecutions, 359-noble stand for the independ- ence of the Bench, ib.-character, 360.
Common Law, its origin, 46.
Common Pleas, Chief Justice of the,
when the title first used, $30. Conservative party exists to secure the balance of all interests against the domination of a single class, 260. Conteurs, or narratores, of the Curia Regis, 336.
Conversation, English and French, compared, 178.
Crocodiles in the river Shiré, 15. Cruikshank, George, forgotten as a political caricaturist, 240-his pic- tures of society, 241. Cunningham's (Allan)
Lives of the Painters,' its style, 281.
Law of Resentment,' .-the book inaccurate, superficial, and unsound, 529.
Education, female, 499-how long it should extend, 500-what and how to teach, 502-music and drawing, 503-modern languages, Latin, and Greek, 504-against unwatched study of French and English authors, ib.- poison of French novels, ib.-import- ance of biography, 506-Smith's and Arnold's Manuals, ib.-orthography, 507 historical abstracts recom- mended, ib. ladies' colleges, 509- gregarious education for girls in-
jurious, 510-the governess system, 512-gentlemen teachers the subjects of fear, ridicule, or romance, 513. Elephant as food, 14.
English and Roman Churches, first dis- sensions of, 36-rise of a national as opposed to a papal party in the Church, 37.
Evesham, battle of, 56.
Farrar (Rev. F. W.) on the Origin of Language,' 428.
Fé, Ley, or Rey (f, 1, r), a race without,
Foss's Judges of England,' a biogra- phical dictionary of 1589 lives, 327. Fustian-cutting, description of, 270.
Gandy (William), character of his por traits, 291.
Gascoigne (Chief Justice), proof that he was deprived of his office by Henry V., 351.
Gavarni, the French caricaturist, 249. Gell (Sir William) in Italy, 174. Genlis (Madame de), anecdote of her imposture, 307-her books the essence of commonplace, ib.
Gibbs's (Mr.) able pamphlet on Reform, 535.
Gillray, the greatest of English carica- turists, 232-caricatures of George IV., 233-of George III., 234--cari- catures against the French, 235.—Mr. Bohn's re-impressions of his works, 236-coarse to excess, 237-his deli- neations of female beauty singularly successful, ib.
Gladstone's (Mr.) plan of constructing institutions according to numerical relations, 533-the borough fran- chise the exact arithmetical mean between contending proposals, 534- mathematical formulæ for determin- ing the borough and county frau- chises, ib.-his 'flesh and blood' argument, 540.
Granville (Ranulph de), unjust sentence pronounced by, 353. Glass manufacture, 389. Goldsmith's portrait by Sir Joshua Reynolds, 314.
Goodwin's (Harvey, D.D.) Memoir of Bishop Mackenzie, 1.
Goschen's (Mr.) opinions against reli- gious teaching, 253—his appointment indicates indifference to attacks on the Church, 254.
Grant's (Capt.) Walk across Africa,' 24. Grinders of Sheffield, their average
first introduced, 339 appointed 'quamdiu se bene gesserint,' or 'du- rante bene placito,' 340-independ- ence of the judges not due to George III., 341-early judges men of the sword as well as gown, 346-anec- dotes of early judges, 348-literary judges, 350-judges resuming their practice at the bar, ib.-wholesale corruption of the Bench in Edward I.'s reign, 354-offences committed by judges, ib.-extra-judicial opinions demanded of the judges by the Crown, 357-business of the courts during the Great Rebellion, 360-characters of some modern judges, 362. Jukes (Mr.) on the removal of coal from Ireland by denudation, 469. Julius Cæsar invents the designation of the ablative' case, 404-the great Ablator of his age, ib.
Justiciary of England, Chief, 332.
Karmath, founder of a Mahomedan sect, 185.
Key's (Mr.) diatribe against the San- skritist school of philologists, 412.
La Mennais (Abbé), character of, 91. Lace-making, 371.
Landed property distinguished by the Radicals from other property, 271- compulsory division of, 551. Languages, classificatory stage of, 398 -works of Hervas and Adelung traceable to Leibnitz's suggestions, ib.-the Sanscrit, 599-the Rig Veda, - comparison of Sanscrit with modern languages, 402-labours of the native philologists of India, 405 -Bopp and Humboldt's classification, ib. dialectic regeneration and phonetic decay, 407-Mr. Crawfurd's test of alliance of languages, 415- sameness of grammatical processes not a proof of hereditary connexion, 417-Aryan, Semitic, and Turanian families of languages, 419-Professor Potts's analysis of Aryan roots, 420 -theory of the original unity of lan- guage, 422 imitative sounds and interjections, 425-theory that inter- jections contribute to the formation of languages, 430-how far language is evidenee of race, 431. Latham's Descriptive Ethnology,' 399. Law terms originally only three, 329.
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