dence on, 730; Projected Expedition into, 775.
rican Committee, by T. E. Bowdich, 725.
rican names, &c. remark on, 620.
giers, Salamé's Narrative of the Expedition to, 276.
Bey, alias Badia, account of, 349.
tham and his Wife, a domestic Tale, 180.
merican, the, 617, 634, 6.46.
nerican Literature; Black Slaves of the South, 673;
Dissertation on Water Snakes, 692.
npthil Park, lines written at, 194.
Circulating Medium, Considerations on, 117.
Clarke's Travels, 129.
Clennel, Mr. Luke, notice of, 41.
Coal, King, his Levee, 728.
Comet, data respecting, 489.
Continent, Mr. Ormsby's Letters from, 258; Miss M. Baillie's Tour on, 453.
Cornwall, Barry, Dramatic Scenes, 321; Sicilian Story, 771; extracts, 788.
musements, historical and literary, by Professor Mea- Crete, State of, 427.
vastasius, or Memoirs of a Greek, 785, 807, 825.
necdotes and characteristic Traits, 50.
agouleme, Duke of, his Travels in France, 499. ispach's History of Newfoundland, 465, ister's Poems and Translations, 529.
atar, a Bedoueen Romance, 3, 18, 35, 54, 69.
onian Hours, by J. H. Wiffen, 632.
rithmetic, Thomson's Treatise on, 454,
ts and Sciences, U, 23, 41, 57, 75, 90, 104, 118, 153, 184, 219, 233, 248, 264, 280, 294, 314, 329, 343, 362, 377, 302, 411, 428, 444, 458, 474, 480,506,523, 539, 553, 568, 603, 620, 635, 665, 680, 693, 731, 747, 776, 798, 811, 827.
shantee, Bowdich's Account of the Mission to, 212, 227, 244, 308,
abylon, Memoir on the Ruins of, 1.
attin's Bay (North-west passage) Letters on, 23. aillie, Marianne, first Impressions upon a Tour on the Continent, 453,
anditti, Italian, 650.
anquet; a Poem, 130.
Bartholomew's Eve, a Tale, 690.
kathing, warm, cold and vapour, Essay on, 214. Beasts, Court and Parliament of, 337.
Beauharnois, Mad. Anecdote of, 487.
Berchtold Ernestus, a Tale by Dr. Polydori, 546. Biography, 43, 59; Dr. John Wolcott, 107, 122, 141; George Henry Harlow, 187, 2013; Kotzebue, 250, 297; Ali Bey, alias Badia, 349; the Abbe Morelli, 365; Cardinal Gonsalvi, 491; Prince Blücher of Wahlstedt, 669; J. Hopwood, engraver, 699; Professor Jurine,
Blachford, Mrs. Eskdale Herd-boy, 756.
Blücher, brief Memoir of, 669.
Bombay Literary Society, Transactions of, 48.
Bosset, Col. Proceedings in Parga, &c. 371.
Bowdich on the African Committee, 725.
Brazil, Southey's History of, Part 3, 690, 710, 727, 743.
Brugnatelli's Animal Pathology, 646.
Brussa, Baths of, 149.
Buckingham House, account of, 409, 426, 441. Buenos Ayres and Chili, Letters from, 674.
Buonaparte, anecdotes of, 116; Memoirs of the Court of, 375; anecdote of his law knowledge, 455; anec- dote respecting his marriage, 487; in St. Helena, O'Meara and another on his Treatment there, 353. Buonaparte, Lucien, observations on his new poem, 494. Busby, Dr. History of Music, 580.
Byron, Lord, his Poem of Mazeppa, 417; Ode from,
Cambro-briton, Numbers I and II. 694.
Crib's Memorial to Congress, 163.
Dallas, R. C. Ode to the Duke of Wellington, 455. Dante, reviewed by M. Raynouard, 71. Deism Refuted, by T. H. Horne, 616. Delmour, Julien, or the New Era, 387. Delphin Classics, the Regent's edition, 198; No. III, 311; Parts I to VIII, 709.
Dibdin, C. his Romance of Young Arthur, 484. Dodwell's Classical Tour through Greece, 197, 517, 530, 548, 565, 706, 729, 743, 772, 827.
Don Juan, 449, 470; a Biographical Account of Lord Byron and his Family, 707.
Drama, 13, 28, 45, 61, 77, 93, 109, 124, 140, 156, 168, 189, 205, 222, 237, 252, 268, 295, 301, 318, 334, 349, 366, 381, 398, 414, 431, 446, 461, 477, 492, 500, 525, 543, 557, 573, 589, 591, 606, 623, 637, 651, 670, 685, 700, 717, 784, 750, 765, 780, 797, 813, 830.
Drama, Foreign, 29, 125, 142, 190, 301, 556, 623, 781. Dramatic Scenes, and other Poems, by Barry Cornwall,
Dumont's Captivity in Algiers, 689.
Eagles's Select Letters, 617.
Elections, late, Proceedings and Results of, 56. Entomologist's Compendium, by G. Samonelle, 582. Erskine, Lord, his Poem, 177.
Eskdale Herd-boy, by Mrs. Blachford, 756. Etiquettes de la Cour, Dictionnaire des, 659. European Powers, State of, 20.
Eusebius, Chronicle of, 40.
Evadne, or the Statue, 109; remarks on, 156.
Farmer's Vision, a Poem by Lord Erskine, 177; notes on, 229.
Fire at Messrs. Bensley's Printing Office, 431. Fire-places, new, 76.
Fitzclarence, Lieut. Col. his Journey from India, 386. Fitzwilliam Museum, 681.
Fine Arts, 25, 41, 90, 104, 118, 139, 153, 168, 184, 200, 219, 234, 249, 264, 282, 294, 314, 330, 345, 362, 377, 393, 411, 428, 445, 458, 474, 488, 506, 540, 554, 569, 586, 603, 666, 681, 715, 732, 747, 763, 776, 794, 811, 828.
Greeks, modern, on the Literature of, 568.
Greenland and other Poems, by James Montgomery, 257.
Hall's Travels in France, 628.
Hallam's Letters from the North of Italy, 162. Haller von Hallerstein, Baron, communication respect ing, 88.
Happiness, Hints on the Sources of, 536, 551. Harlow, G. H. Biographical Account of, 187, 201, his
Picture of the Kemble Family, 266.
Harold the Exile, 513.
Haydon's Pupils, exhibition of Drawings by, 154. Hemans, Mrs. Tales and Historic Scenes, 593.
Hermit in London, 13: leaving Town, 32; Half Pay, 106; a Morning in High Life, 121; a Non-descript, 140; a Scene in the Drama of Life, 155; My Coun- try Cousin, 171; Assignations, or the Regent's Park, 189; Sequel, 205; Rigid Economy, 221; Street Nuisances, 236; Discoveries, 231; Principles and no Principles, 207; the Natural Child, 284; an Alarm- ist, 300; a Quality Scholar and Orator, 317; Art v. Nature, 333; Sharp-set, or a Dinner Party, 348; Coine to a Fortune, 3654 Sunday Men and others, 380; Irish Retaliation, 397; a Masquerade Scene, 413; London when deserted, 430; Scotland---Home, 445; Temper, 461; a Stage Coach, 476; Such Things Are, 491; Characters, 508; Extracts from the first Series, 519; first Series reviewed, 519, 542; Borrowing, 556, 771, 588; Maternity, 605; Scottish Discreetness, 621; Scots Fireside, 636; Debt, 684.
Heude's Voyage up the Persian Gulf, and Travels from India, 323, 399, 353, 373,
Hippesley, Col. Extracts from his Voyage to the Orino- co, &c. 532, 550, 585, 601, 613, 633, 644,
History, Ancient, Stories from, 502. Hoffland, Mrs. Description of the Mansion and Gardens of-White Knights, 614. Holy Land, Letters from, 737.
Hopwood, J. Biographical Account of, 699. Horne's Deism Refuted, 646.
Human Life, a Poem by J. Rogers, 97.
Humboldt and Bonpland's Personal Narrative, 178.
Imperial Tourists, their Travels in Britain, 218, 232, 246, 263, 279, 293, 443, 457, 473, 487, 697, 663, 679. India, Heude's Voyage and Journey from, 323, 339, 359.
India, Col. Fitzclarence's Journey from, 380. Institute, French: notice on the Life of Monsigny, 43, lomsburg, Heroic Youths of, 93.
Ireland, North, Gamble's View of Society in, 437. Ireland, Walks through by B. Trotter, Esq. 535.
Italian Literature, notice on, 695.
Italians, Tragedy, account of its representation, 237,
Campbell's Specimens of the Bri tish Poets, 114, 183, 145 Gentz on the Liberty of the Press in Great Britain, 51. Carbonari, account of the, 602.
Carib Chief, a Tragedy by Horace Twiss, 341.
Carmichael, Dr. Journey from Moscow to Constantin- ople, 561.
Carrick, Countess of, a Love-tale, by Carolan, 250.
German Literature: notice of a work on the Employ- ment of the Lower Classes, 588.
German Poem, ancient, account of, 32,
Gifford's Persius, remarks on, 196.
Gertrude von der Wart, an affecting story, 567.
Catalani, Madame, curious story of, 28; anecdotes of, Gonsalvi, Cardinal, account of, 491. 61; in Hamburg, 635.
Chalmers, Life of Mary Queen of Scots, 82.
Childe Harold in the Shades, 66; Observations on the Critique, 87.
Children, a sumınary Method of teaching them to read, by Mrs. Williams, 485.
China, articles on from the Pamphleteer, 744, 760.
Ivanhoe, a Romance by the Author of Waverley, 817. 185, 145.
Journal des Savans, Analysis of, 8, 20, 37, 57, 71, 87, 103, 136, 151, 168, 184, 199, 216, 246, 279, 293, 311, 328, 342, 360, 391, 423, 522, 537, 565, 615, 647, 696, 708, 745, 763, 791, 809.
Jurine, Professor, biographical account of, 813.
Gout and Rheumatiam, treatise on by Dr. Scudamore, Landlord, Tales of my, 3d series, 401, 419. 721, 741, 759.
Grammar, English, by Cobbett, 220.
Grattan's Poetical Romance of Philibert, 566. Greece, Dodwell's Tour through, 497, 517, 530, 548, 565, 729, 743, 772, 627.
Greece, modern Improvements in, 713.
KING'S THEATRE. This splendid house opened, earlier than usual, on Saturday last, with Mozart's fine opera of le Nozze di Fi- garo, in which a signor Albert made his
debut as Figaro. His voice is what the amateurs term a baritono, a high base, and of a good quality; but he does not seem to have surmounted the difficulties which at- tend the free and flexible utterance of sounds of this genus. We know that it is impos- sible to twist and coil a ship's cable as you may a whipcord; or, to borrow a comparison more directly froin music, to wind up a bell- rope like a piece of twine; but still there is a degree of management sometimes attained in the thickest base, which is at once de- lightful and wonderful, and which M. Al- bert has not, to any considerable extent, accomplished. His figure is eminently Fle- mish for a Frenchman; but that ought not to be strongly objected to a great singer, which was not objected to a great emperor. The other characters were sustained by their former representatives. Ambrogetti is the same lively, inclinable to low comedy, Count as ever; full of fun and frolic, and expending as much animal spirit as would serve for two characters. Madame Bellochi's Susanna was more chaste and interesting than last season. She seems deeper imbued with the feeling of Mozart; and her style, by be- ing less ornamented, is more suited to the pleasing character of the Score in this part. Miss Corri, in the Countess, afforded signs of great improvement in her professional career. In her Cavatina, she displayed firm- ness of tone and very considerable execu- tion. She is an English singer of infinite merit, and still full of promise. Miss Mori, as the Page, acted and sang with spirit; and Madame Gatti (i. e. Mrs. Gattie) late Miss Hughes, Deville (pro Righi) and the other persons, in the inferior casts, did as well as we have been accustomed to see these things done. The orchestra continues to be led by Spagnoletti; but a distinguished addition has been made to it by the return of the double bass of Dragonetti. It is altogether full and powerful.
A new ballet, entitled Le Sultan Gene- reux, followed the opera. A Mr. le Chouque, a Mr. le Blond, and a Mlle. Eliza, whose bust is perfectly sylphic, severally appeared for the first time. They are not stars of the first magnitude, but possessed of various talents, to render them all agreeable acquisi- tions to the Corps de Ballet. The ballet it- self is a grand oriental exhibition. The theatre was crowded. The same pieces were repeated on Tuesday.
DRURY LANE. - Fortunately our dramatic novelties this week do not require much com- pass of criticism. We have had the plea- sure of seeing a Mrs. Payne in Lady Teazle at this theatre. She is a clever actress, but does not fill this part so efficiently as we have been generally accustomed to see it per- formed. It requires great versatility, and great skill both in the personation of gen- teel life, and of rustic coarseness: to be the lady and the romp, the person of fashion
and the country girl, and while keeping lava, but fortunately, in a direction which distinct, to mingle these opposite qualifica- does not threaten the country at its base. tions, is no easy task, and partial failure in the effort no disgrace. When we see Mrs. Payne in other characters, we shall be able to speak more particularly of her general accomplishments. She is a sister of Miss
Theatrical Anecdote. The following in- cident is highly creditable to the new thea- trical establishment of Drury Lane. When the Fisherman's Hut was withdrawn, no re- muneration was claimed or expected by the
Mathews, we understand, and familiar with author's representative; yet on their first in- the stage, though it was evident that ex-terview, Mr. Elliston presented Mrs. T-a treme trepidation impeded the complete dis- play of her qualification on her debut.
MRS. M'GIBBON. -This lady, whom most of our readers who love the drama must re- member a few seasons ago, has again ap- peared for, we are sorry to say, a very li- mited number of nights. She has twice played Imogine, in Bertram. With a small figure, and a rather unimportant face, Mrs. M'Gibbon, by her feeling and energy, but especially by her feeling, contrives to occupy a very large and important place in the eye and mind of the audience. Wherever the character rose to a standard above medio- crity, she imparted all the interest to it, of which it is susceptible; and we have no he- sitation in saying, that for general pathos, we do not think she has an equal upon the stage. There is a degree of nature about her expression of sufferings, which reaches the heart; and we recollect, that her Mrs. Haller was one of the most touching pic- tures we ever witnessed. As pathos, after all, comprehends the finest, if not the most elevated quality of tragic power, we imagine, that essential skill in this departinent is more evinced by one who affects us the most deeply, rather than by one who fills us with the highest adımiration for grandeur and dignity. We therefore accord the palın of very superior excellence to a performer, who, as Mrs. M. does, strikes the heart with every passage which the author enables her to use for that purpose. It is much to be desired, that this lady were fixed upon the London boards.
Mrs. M'Gibbon performed Desdemona on Wednesday, her last appearance; but we were prevented from seeing her.
COVENT GARDEN. -The Comedy of Er- rors continues to delight the musical world, and is indeed a great treat to the lovers of harmony. It acts better too from the prac- tice of the performers; and taken altogether, does honour to the national stage, and con- sequently, reflects much credit on the mana- gers of this theatre.
with a hundred pounds, which he would fain have pressed on her acceptance. Asto- nishment at first precluded expostulation or acknowledgment; but the offer was steadily resisted and for the first time, perlaps, the theatre exhibited the novel scene of a gene- rous contention between a manager and the author's representative.
At Chaeewater, about a fortnight since, died Elizabeth, the daughter of Joseph Ralph. Though she had reached her 21st year, her height was only two feet teninches, she was not at all deformed, but rather well-proportioned. During her life, she was never known to laugh or cry, or utter any sound whatever, though it was evident she both saw and heard; her weight never exceeded twenty pounds.
LITERARY INTELLIGENCE.
Southey's Life of John Wesley, which has excited so much expectation, will, we understand, be published in January. That month, and the ensuing February, will be productive of great treasures to the literary world, as many works of the most valuable kind, are in a state of forwardness with the principal publishers of the metropolis.
METEOROLOGICAL JOURNAL. DECEMBER, 1819.
Thursday, 16-Thermometer from 29 to 39. Wind W. b. S.. - Clear till the evening, when it became hazy. Friday, 17-Thermometer from 36 to 49. Barometer from 29, 92 to 29, 60. Wind S. and S. b. E.4 and 1.- Generally raining. Rain fallen, 2 of an inch.
Barometer from 30, 03 to 30, 19.
Saturday, 18 - Thermometer from 48 to 55.
Barometer, from 29, 57 to 29, 92.
Wind S.W. 2.-Cloudy.
Rain fallen 375 of an inch.
Sunday, 19-Thermometer from 49 to 55. Barometer from 30, 02 to 29, 96.
Wind S.W. 3. - Cloudy.
The Christmas pantomimes are, Jack and Monday, 20-Thermometer from 50 to 37.
the Bean Stalk, at Drury Lane; Harlequin and Don Quixote, at Covent Garden.
New Comet.-M. Blanpain, Director of the Royal Observatory, of Marseilles, disco- vered, at 5 o'clock, A. M. on the 28th ult., a new comet, as yet invisible to the unassisted eye.
Barometer from 29, 83, to 29, 86. Wind S.W. 2 and 4.-Cloudy with rain in the morning.
Rain fallen, of an inch. Tuesday, 21-Thermometer from 43 to 51.
Barometer from 30, 11, to 30, 16. Wind N.W... and W. 2.-Cloudy, with rain most of the afternoon and evening. Rain fallen,075 of an inch. Wednesday, 22-Thermometer from 40 to 58, Barometer from 29, 86, to 29,90. Wind S. W. and W. 2.-Generally cloudy and about 10 till 11 in the morning. Rain fallen,4 of an inch. Lat. 51. 37. 32. Ν. Lon. 0.3.3 1. W
Rousseau (we read in a recent publica- tion), was asked by a friend, how he had be- hazy with rain in the evening. A fine halo from
come so eloquent.. thought," was the reply.
The Journal of the Two Sicilies states, that Vesuvius continues to vomit torrents of
INDEX TO THE LITERARY GAZETTE FOR THE YEAR 1819.
Leicester, Sir John, his Gallery, 41, 139.
Leyden's Poetical Remains, 162.
Literary Fund Anniversary, 313.
Literary Intelligence, 14, 30, 46, 78, 94, 110, 127, 142, 174, 191, 207, 222, 255, 270, 286, 302, 319, 335, 473, 493, 558, 624, 654, 671, 701, 718, 735, 751, 766, 782, 798, 815, 830. Literary Property: Forgeries, 713.
Lithography, notice on, 360; course of by Senefelder, 500, 521, 534.
London, a Foreigner's View of, 712.
London Theatres (from a continental journal) 26.). Louis of Prussia, Prince, original Letters of, 376.
Lozenges, fraudulent adulteration of, 714.
Lyrical Dramas, &c. by Cornelius Neale, 609.
Poems and Translations, by John Austen, 529.
Poetical Remains of Dr. Leyden, 162.
Poetry, 11, 26, 43, 58, 77, 91, 106, 120, 140, 155, 168, 185, 200, 220, 235, 240, 266, 284, 296, 316, 332, 347, 364, 379, 396, 412, 445, 459, 476, 489, 508, 524, 541, 554, 569, 587, 605, 621, 636, 650, 667, 684, 699, 745, 732, 748, 764, 779, 794, 812, 829.
Pola, Picturesque Views of the Antiquities of, by T. Al- lason, 823.
Polidori, Dr. his tale of Ernestus Berchtold, 5-46.; Pontefract Castle, 802.
Porte St. Denis, notice on, 615.
Press, In Great Britain, Reflections on the Liberty of, 51. Pretender, Prince Charles Edward Stuart, Anecdotes of, 6.
Macculloch, Dr. Description of the Scottish Western Prolusions, by Sharon Turner, 562. Islands, 753.
Magie, Histoire de la, en France, 100.
Mamluks, Salamé's Account of the, 309.
Man of Straw and the three Emperors, 503,
Manuel, Francisco, biographical account of, 235.
Marlborough, Coxe's Memoirs of, 241, 259.
Mary Queen of Scots, Chalmers' Life of, 82.
Maurice and Berghetta, or the Priest of Rahery, a Tale,
Mawe's Lessons on Mineralogy, 711.
Mazeppa, Count, biographical notice of, 379; Poem of, by Lord Byron, 417.
Mineralogy, &c. Mawe's Lessons on, 711. Miracles, modern, 620.
Mirza, Abbas, anecdote of, 207.
Meteorological Journal, 14, 30, 46, 62, 78, 127, 142, 159,
175, 191, 207, 223, 238, 270, 286, 303, 319, 335, 350, 367, 383, 399, 415, 446, 462, 479, 494, 510, 526, 543, 558, 575, 591, 608, 624, 633, 654, 671, 687, 701, 718, 735, 751, 766, 782, 799, 815, 830.
Mollien's Journey up the Gambia, notice on, 538. Monsigny, Life and Compositions of, 43.
Montgomery's Poem of Greenland, 207.
Moore, T. Esq. Epistle to, 570,
Morelli, Abbe, biographical account of, 365. Moscow, Journey from to Constantinople, by Dr. Car- michael, 561.
Music and Musical Tuition, State of in England, 9, 21. Music, Dr. Busby's History of, 580,
Naples, Count Orloff's History of, 774; Mr. Blaquiere's Letter on, 793.
Naples, Queen of, anecdote of, 615.
Neale, C. Lyrical Dramas, &c., 609.
Prussia, casualties in, 20.
Publications, New, 15, 31, 62, 78, 94, 110, 127, 142, 159, 175, 191, 207, 223, 238, 255, 271, 287, 320, 336, 351, 368, 354, 399, 416, 432, 447, 463, 479, 406, 511, 527, 544, 559, 576, 592, 603, 624, 6-40, 655, 672, 688, 703, 719, 736, 752, 767, 783, 799, 816.
Pyne, on the Royal Residences, 485, 504, 583, 643, 600.
Rhetoric and Polite Literature, Grammar of, 71; Flowers
of, by Dr. Sharp, 406.
Rhine, Picturesque Tour along, 705.
Rich's Memoir on the Ruins of Babylon, 1.
Rogers's Poem of Human Life, 97.
Rome, Letters from, 152, 184.
Romilly Sir S. Eulogium on, by Benjamin de Constant,
St. Bartholomew's Eve, a Tale, 090.
Salamé's Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers, 276, 292; his account of the Mamlucs, 309; adventures in the Desert, 324; his account of the Expedition to Algiers, 340.
Salgues, Memoires pour servir a l'Histoire de France, 166. Salathe's Captivity among Italian Banditti, 650.
New Era, or Julien Delmour, by Madame de Genlis, Samouelle's Entomologist's Compendium, 582.
Saussure Mine, de, her Life of Mme. de Staël, 789. Scandal, Ode to, and Stanzas on Fire, 34.
Newfoundland, Anspach's History of, 465. New South Wales, Wentworth's Description of, 641, Scandinavia;---Part III of Dr. Clark's Travels, 129.
Painted Chamber, notice on, 776, 794.
Palestine, Letters from, 737.
Panama, Pearl Fishery of, 110.
Panama, Bay of; important project, 410.
Parga and the Ionian Islands, Col. de Bossut's Account
Parliamentary Letters, by Q. in the Corner, 358.
Pathology, animal, 646.
Periodicals, Pleasures and Pains of Editing, 27.
Perouse, probabilities on his Death, 680.
Persian Ambassador, memoir of, 299.
Persius, remarks on Mr. Gifford's translation of, 195.
Peter Bell, Wordsworth's Tale of, 273.
Peter's Letters to his Kinsfolk, 482.
Petrarque et Laure, by Madame de Genlis, 729.
Philibert, a Poetical Romance, by T. C. Grattan, 546.
Science and the Arts, Journal of, 33.
Scottish Western Islands, Dr. Macculloch's Description of, 753.
Scudamore on Gout and Rheumatism, 721, 741, 759. Sea Serpents and Krakens, American account of, 663. Self-murder, Remedy for, 71.
Senefelder's Course of Lithography, 500, 521, 534. Shakspeare, Letter on a Portrait of, 120; Bust of, 139.
Sharp's Flowers of Rhetoric, 405.
Sheridan's Ode to Scandal, 34.
Sicilian Story, &c. by Barry Cornwall, 771.
Sicily, late Earthquake in, 75; Russell's Tour through,
Sketch-Book, by Geoffry Crayon, Esq. 617, 634, 648. Smeeton's Reprints of Scarce Tracts, 597, 611, 774.
Society, Sketches of; Masquerades at Berlin, 11, 27; Christmas at St. Petersburgh and Moscow, 44; In- dian anecdote of the Duke of Wellington, 60; Her- mit in London, 77; The Circulating Library, 232; Memoir of the Persian Ainbassador, 229; Last Tues day at Mr. Fawkes's, 333; Mazeppa, 379; Italian Ban- ditti, 668; Improvements in Modern Greece, 700; A Rosiere, 783; Story of La Bussiere, 748; French Manners, 779; Spanish Heroism, 796.
Soldier's Journal, from 1906 to 1815, 407.
South America, Notice on the Southern Part of, 622. South American Indian Dance, 532.
Southey's History of Brazil, Part 111, 690, 710, 727, 743. Specimens of the British Poets, by Thomas Campbell, 114, 133, 145.
Pinnock's improved edition of Goldsmith's History of Staël Holstein, Mme. Life &c. of, 760, 780. England, 166.
Stewart Papers, Notice on, 500,
Tombuctoo, Notice on Travels to, 583. Traytor, Specimens from Shirley's Play of, 171. Travels, Dr. Clarke's, Part III, 129. Trotter's Walks through Ireland, 515. Turkey Asiatic, Travels in, 101, 116, 136, 149, 167, 183, 195, 215, 231, 245, 326.
Turner, Sharon, his Prolusions, 562.
Twiss, H. his Tragedy of the Carib Chief, 341.
United States, Black Slaves of the South, 673.
Varietjes, 14, 29, 45, 62, 78, 94, 110, 126, 142, 18, ід 191, 207, 222, 238, 254, 270, 286, 302, 319, 334, 35, 36, 382, 398, 415, 431, 416, 462, 478, 492, 510, 308, 30, 574, 591, 607, 623, 638, 654, 671, 687, 700, 717, 735, 731, 766, 782, 798, 814, 850.
Vases, Ancient, Notice on, 565.
Vaux, James Hardy, Memoirs of, 53, 67, 85, Velocipede, 138; Lady's, 362.
Venice, Ode to, by Lord Byron, 442. Vestriad, a Poem, by Hans Dustı, Esq, 433. Voltaire and d' Alembert, Anecdotes of, 361. Vonderwart, Gertrude, Story of, 567.
Waggoner a Poem, by W. Wordsworth, 363. Walpole, Horace, his Letters, 17, 34. Water-snakes, Dissertation on, 692.
Wellington, Duke of, Indian anecdote respecting, 60
R. C. Dallas's Ode to, 455.
Wentworth's Description of New South Wales, 611, 657. White. Kniglits, Mansion and Gardens, Description of, by
Widow of the City of Nain, a Poem, 642. Wiffen's Aonian Hours, 632.
Williams, Mrs. her Summary Method of teaching Child- ren to read, -485.
Winter of 1818-19, 174. Wordsworth's Waggoner, 369.
Young Arthur, a Metrical Romance by C. Dibdin, 48
In the course of a week a Title-page for the Annual Volume of the Literary Gazette, which the present Number concludes, will be ready fot delivery, gratis, at our office.
The extent to which the review of Ivanhoe has gone, prevents us from allowing the usual space la our miscellaneous branches, and Varieties; but we trust the excuse will be thought sufficient, as we have thus anticipated the publication of a book sa ardently looked for.
Our Index has also necessarily superseded the favours of our advertising friends; to wham we take this opportunity of stating, that as we have every week more than our plan permits us to insert, we have directed our publisher to number them without partiality as they are sent in, and print them in the regular order of their priority.
A few sets of the Literary Gazette in 3 Fols. from January, 1817; Quarterly parts of the two latter years; and almost all the separate Num- bers, may now be hada
London: Printed for the Proprietors, by W. POPLE, 67, Chancery Lane: Published every Saturday, by WILLIAM CHALK, at the Literary Gazette Office, 268, Strand, where Communications (post paid, ang requested to be addressed to the Editor,
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