School of, No VI. 70-Stanzas compos- ed in Sherewood Plantation, 136-Olden Time, ib.-Review of Alastor, and other poems, 148-Of Nuga Canoræ, 154- Don Juan unread, and Yarrow unvisited, 195 Fancy in Nubibus, 196-The Ne- gro's Lament for Mungo Park, ib.-The Rector, 197-Chevy Chace-Idem La- tine Redditum, 199-Extracts from the Literary Pocket Book, 239-Review of Cotton's voyage to Ireland, 284-Review of Cromek's remains of Nithsdale and Galloway song, 314-The Clydesdale Yeoman's return, 321-Emma, a tale, 382-The Vision, 384-Reflections on a Brumal Scene, ib.-Fragment of the Mad Banker of Amsterdam, 391--A Lay of Fairy-Land, 432-On the Church of Krisuvik, in Iceland, 435-Sonnet, by the Ettrick Shepherd, 464-Moorish ballads, 481-A Recollection, 504- Epistle to Thomas Campbell, ib.-Mu- sings, 524-Sabbath Noon, 523-Aurora Borealis, 524-Greece, a sonnet, ib.- Ode to Mrs Flanagan, by an Irish gen- tleman, 628-Review of Cornwall's poems, 643-A church-yard scene, 679 -Sailor's song, 680—Elysium, a sonnet, ib.-Hymn to the Moon, 681-Autumn, a sonnet, ib. Political Essays, entitled the Warder, No I. 208-No II. 323-No III. 331-No IV. 448, No V. 704.
Prato Fiorito, extracts from, 43. Predictions, by C. C. 33. Profanity of Dancing, 43. Promotions, Appointments, &c. 115, 229, 355, 478, 605, 722.
Public Buildings of Edinburgh, 370. Publications, monthly list of new ones, 104, 219, 346, 468, 586, 714. Pugilism, Sketches of, No IV. 66-Nọ V. 279-No VI. 610.
Queries, Musical, 69.
Radical's Saturday Night, the, 257. Recollection, a, 504.
Recollections, No I. 169-No. II.-The Cameronians-Mark Macrabin, the Cam- eronian, 513.-No III. Macrabin's ac- count of the Buchanites, 663. Reflections on a Brumal Scene, 384. Remains of King Robert Bruce, on the discovery of, 297.
Remains of Nithsdale and Galloway song, review of, 314.
Remarks on the Cockney School of Poetry, No VI. 70-On the decorations of Edin- burgh, 76-On Emigration to the Cape of Good Hope, 78-On the Cameronians, 169-On Dr Chalmers's new work, 177 -On the Edinburgh Musical Festival, 183-On De Foe on Apparitions, 201- On some of our late numbers, by a liberal whig, 288-492-On the military errors of the Duke of Wellington, 291-On the discovery of the remains of Robert Bruce, 297-By Peter Morris, on the theory of Gall and Spurzheim, 309-On
the progressive change of Poetical Style, 363-On the public buildings of Edin- burgh, 370-On the analogy between the growth of individual and national genius, 375-On the relation of Music to the Drama, 430-On the character of Sir Thomas Brown, 435-On the pheno- mena of living toads found in stones, 437 -On Heathfield's plan for the reduction of the national debt, 441-On Barlow on magnetic attractions, 507-On the writ- ings of Charles Brockden Brown and Washington Irving, 554-On the pro- posed Monument for Lord Melville, 562-On the science of Physiognomy, 650-On Sir Thomas Urquhart's Jewell, 655-On the progress of Architecture in England, 660-On the Diversity of Ge- nius, 674.
Review of Coleridge's poetry, 3-Of the Missionary, a poem, 13-Of Chalmers's Christian and Civic Economy of large Towns, No I. 18-Of Guilt, or the Anni- versary, a tragedy, by Müllner, 121- Of Alastor, and other poems, 148-Of the Literary Pocket-book, 235—Of the Ancestress, a tragedy, by Grillparzer, 247-Of Ivanhoe, a romance, by the author of Waverley, 262-Of Cotton's voyage to Ireland, 284-Of Cromek's remains of Nithsdale and Galloway song, 314 Of Buchan's annals of Peterhead, 393 Of the 29th of February, a tragic sketch, by Müllner, 398-Of Sacontala, an Indian Drama, 417-Of the Cyprus Crown, a tale, 525-Of Hodgskin's tra- vels in Germany, 536-Of Accum on the adulterations of food, 542-Of Corn- wall's poems, 643-Of the Monastery, a novel, by the author of Waverley, 692. Rocks, notice on the volcanic theory of, 215.
Reprints of curious old books, notices of, 24.
Tales of my Landlord, correspondence re- lative to a pretended new series of the, 217.
Thou, de, and Cinq-Mars, Messieurs, par- ticulars of their death at Lyons, in 1642,
Tickler, Timothy, on the dinner given to Lord Erskine, 615.
Toads, on living ones found in stones, 437 -Experiments tried on them, 438-must have been inclosed in their prisons before the deluge, 439.
Transactions of the Dilettanti Society of Edinburgh, 89, 276.
Tree, Miss, and Mr Phillips, remarks on their singing, 53.
Urquhart, Sir Thomas, on his work entitled the Jewell, 655 Vision, the, 384.
Walks round London, from the Literary Pocket-book, 244.
Warder, the, No I. 208-No II. 323-No III. 331-No IV. 448-No V. 704. Wastle, Mr, extracts from his diary, No I. 688.
Wellington, Duke of, on the military errors of the, 291.
Whig, a liberal, his remarks on some late numbers of this Magazine, 288, 492. Wilson, John, a Lay of Fairy Land, by, 432.
Wit and Humour, remarks on, by the late professor Millar, 638.
Wood, on its conversion into sugar, 710. Works preparing for publication, 101, 216, 343, 466, 584, 638, 712. Yarrow unvisited, a poem, 194.
Zara's Ear-rings, a Moorish ballad, 487.
« ZurückWeiter » |