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as yet, planted the tree of liberty in Hyde Park. Nor has the wonderful and most interesting picture which London presented during the coronation of the Queen been thrown away on the diplomatic visitors assembled at that moment from all parts of Europe. For the wealth and splendour displayed in the first commercial city in the world, they might have been prepared; but the peace and order of the assembled multitude, the proofs of general contentedness and well-being, so universally displayed; the joyous welcome freely offered to foreigners, even by the most humble classes of our citizens; the beautiful combination of independence of demeanour, with devoted and loyal affection to their youthful sovereign,-these national characteristics could not fail to excite astonishment in many, and admiration in all. The deep and earnest enthusiasm with which the allegiance of a free people was tendered to their Queen, proved to the assembled princes and statesmen, that no falsehood was greater than that which represented the English as a nation of Jacobins, excited rather than controlled by a revolutionary government. A farther and a more salutary lesson may also have been derived from the evidence, then exhibited, of the effect of free institutions in insuring the fullest development of national strength; the compatibility of liberty with order; the obedience willingly yielded to laws framed and consented to by the true representatives of the people:

these were results which even those who cannot imitate, can hardly fail to appreciate. The increased population poured into the metropolis, to share in this great national festival, amounted, it is said, to half a million, a number equal to the inhabitants of some of the greatest capitals in Europe: this multitude, united to the permanent population of three times that amount, seemed animated by one noble spirit, and seemed to require no control beyond that of reason and of sound principles. The military appeared but a part of the decoration, and not the instrument of restraint or coercion; they resembled rather the diamond-hilted sword used for state ceremonial, than the weapon to be used in battle.

Varieties.

A Death-bed is a wonderful reasoner; many a proud infidel hath it humbled and refuted, without a word, who but a short time before would have defied all the ability of man to shake the foundation of his system. All is well, as long as the curtain is up, and the puppet-show of life goes on; but when the rapid representation draws to a close, and every hope of longer respite is precluded, things will ap

pear in a very different light. Would to God I could say that that great and awful moment were as often distinguished by the dew of repentance as by the groan of despair.-Dean Kirwan.

A Talkative Woman is one of the most agreeable companions in the world-the very soul of society. We like to hear a sprightly woman talk so fast and so incessantly that you cannot get in a word edgeways. It frees you from embarrassment, promotes sociability, and gives you a heart to slip in a soft saying or two, whenever such a thing is possible; whereas, silence is a bore not to be endured, breeding awkward embarrassments and restraints. Give us a woman who knows how to talk.

The Burdett Oak.-In the park of Foremark, in Leicestershire, the seat of Sir Francis Burdett, is an oak-tree, upwards of sixty feet high, with a trunk eighteen inches in diameter, and branches covering a space of fifty feet in diameter; which sprang from a single acorn planted by Sir F. Burdett when an infant.

Tea.-The exports of Tea from China to Great Britain, during the year, are variously estimated at from 25,000,000 lb. to 30,000,000 lb.

The Artesian Well, at Paris, has now reached the depth of 500 yards, or about five times the height of the Hôtel des Invalides. The thermometer shews 26o Reaumur (90° Fahr.) at the bottom of the well, which indicates an increase of temperature of one degree per yard, according as the borers descend into the earth.

Wheat.-A grain of Fullard's prize-wheat, brought from the great agricultural meeting at Oxford, in 1839, having been dibbled three inches deep in the ground, has this year produced a plant four feet nine inches high, with 116 fine ears, one of which was found to contain seventy-five corns; the whole being, therefore, an increase of 4,000 fold! whereas the introductory page of the English Agricultural Society's Journal says: "The average produce of wheat is stated at twenty-six bushels per acre; and if this could be raised to twenty-seven bushels, by a better selection of seed, (or management,) by this appa

rently small improvement, we should have added

to the nation's annual income 475,000 quarters of wheat, worth, at fifty shillings a quarter, about £1,200,000 yearly, which would be equal to a capital of £24,000,000 sterling, gained for ever to the country by this increase in the growth of one article alone, and that in England and Wales only." "-Lewes Advertiser.

Chimneys. If salt be mixed with the mortar used for plastering a chimney, there will be no necessity for sweeping it; as in every damp spell of weather the salt deliquesces, and the soot will fall down.

Ballooning.-Mr. Gypson, the aeronaut, ascended, on the 26th ult., from Daventry, in a balloon provided with a valve placed externally on the top of the bag; by means of which he exhausted the balloon of gas, and rendered it motionless, in forty seconds, an important improvement in making a descent. The valve hitherto used, opened internally, and its action being impeded by the upward pressure of the gas, the exhausting of the balloon occupied a considerable time, and thus caused it to rebound and drag along the ground, to the danger of the aeronauts.

COMPLETION OF VOL. III.

The LITERARY WORLD, Vol. III, with Sixtyeight fine Engravings, and 408 closely-printed pages, 5s. 6d., cloth, is now ready.

Also, PART XVIII., with Title-page and Index, to complete the Volume, price 8d.

LONDON: Published by GEORGE BERGER, Holywell Street, Strand. Printed by WHITEHEAD & Co. 76, Fleet Street, where all Communications for the Editor may be addressed.

GENERAL INDEX.

ABNEY Park Cemetery, the, 130,

Actors, salaries of, 235

Ainsworth, W. H., imitated, 69
Ainsworth, W. H., sketch of, 2
Air Balloon, the, lines on, 259
Alfarou branch, the, 215
American Hoax, 355

Analysis of Pensions, 355

Anecdotes of the late James Smith, 39
Antarctic Continent, discovery of, 271
Antarctic Expedition, new, 176, 304, 400
Antiquities, English, at Calais, 292
Antiquities, British, discovered, 367
Antiquities, religious, 211
Architecture, Elizabethan, 301

Architecture, improved London Street, 88

Art, critiques on, 144

Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, sketch of, 194

Ariosto and Tasso, notes on, 48

Art-Union of London, the, 317

Assam Tea, 192, 367

Aurora Borealis explained, 127

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Bethlehem Hospital, 158
Blenheim, excursion to, 326

"Bloody Tower," Tower of London, 391
Bonfires on St. John's Eve, 187
Books, New, noticed and quoted:

Account of the recent Persecution of
the Jews at Damascus. By D. Salomons,
esq., 344

Architectural Remains of the Reigns of
Elizabeth and James I. By J. C. Richard-
son, 301

Asmodeus; or, the Devil on Two Sticks,

124, 345

Boy and the Birds, 28

Buds of Poesy, 203

Principles of English Composition. By

D. Booth, 141

Queen Victoria, from her Birth to her
Bridal, 298

Servant Girl in London, 331

Songs and Ballads, by the Princes Al-
bert and Ernest, 124

Stage, the. By A. Bunn, 216, 234, 332.
Summer in Britanny. By A. B. Trol-
lope, esq., 185

Summer amongst the Bocages. By
Louisa Costello, 395

347

Table-wit and After-dinner Anecdote,

Thames and its Tributaries. By C.
Mackay, 378, 404

Tower of London. By W. H. Ains-
worth, esq., 108, 170, 231, 311, 391
Year-book of Facts, 1840, 12
Botanical Specimens, preservation of, 391
Boulogne, characteristics of, 282
Boz imitated, 70

China and its Resources. By R. Mudie, British benevolence characterized, 29

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Brougham, Lord, anecdotes of, 48, 158
Brougham, Miss, lines on her death, 31
Byron, Lord, his literary projects, 358

Cafés of Constantinople, 88
Cage, iron, of St. Michel, 395
Caius Caligula, by Condillac, 361
Canons and Whitchurch, visit to, 198
Cast-iron, spontaneous heating of, 159
Castle of Falaise, 186

Castle at Stafford, 209

Catch, by Dr. Calcott, 143

Catlin's Indian Exhibition, 29

Cavendish Chapel, Ramsgate, described, 322

Celtic Tumulus discovered, 68

Chandos, the Great Duke of, 198

Chantrey, the sculptor, characteristics of, 150
Chapeau de Paille, the, by Rubens, 140
Chapel Royal, St. James's, 158

Charles I., remains of, 143

Charles O'Malley, adventures of, 285

Chatham, Lord, death and character of, 220, 221
Chatterton, monument to, at Bristol, 66, 85
Chatterton, sketch of, 66

Children's Ball, by M. M. Waldor, 341
Chimpanzees, economy of, 295

China and its resources, 107, 126

China Trade, the, 227

Chinese, physiognomy of, 168

Chinese Tactics, 242

Church of St. Bartholomew by the Exchange, 98

Church, Corwen, N. Wales, 82

Church of St. Paul at Malta, 335

Church, Trinity, Gray's Inn Road, 50

Cities, mortality of, 256

Clergy, revenue of the, 239

Cockburn Vase, the, described, 290

Cocoa-nut Crab, the, 152

Coins, Roman, discovery of, 288
Cold, to avoid catching, 223
Comet of 1811, 128

Common Sense defined, 19
Conservative, origin of the term, 224
Cook, Captain, site of his death, 176
Cooper, the novelist, imitated, 69
Coronation "miniature" picture, 288
Cottage Vines and Beer Shops, 219

Council of Ten, at Venice, by Victor Hugo, 339
Crême de St. Gervais, 399

Cross, ancient, at Corwen, 82

Custom, curious, at Malmesbury, 203

Customs, old, vanishing of, 224

Dante, portrait of, 352

Death of the Miser Grandet, by De Balzac, 338

Death of Napoleon, the,

Death-bed, the, 408

Definition, a practical one, 254

Demaundes Joyous, the, 266

Exchequer Records, the, 52, 144, 330
Excursion to Blenheim, 326

Exhibition of the Royal Academy, 94, 120, 137
Exhibition of the New Water Colour Society, 60

Fair, ancient, 214

Familiar Letters, lines on, 116
Fashion and Adversity, 349
Fête of the Olden Times, 280

Fielding the novelist, character of, 374, 388
Fleetwood, new town of, 320

Florence, environs of, 366
Flower-woman of Paris, the, 82

Fontainebleau Grapes, &c., 383
Forsaken, the, lines on, 36
French, character of the, 407
Frog, torpidity of the, 288

Galvanoplastics, 320

Garland-weavers in Germany, 330
Gas-lighting London, 143

Gem of the Wild. By Miss Vandenhoff, 82
Ghost Story, 201

Gibbons and Orangs, distinction of, 377

Göthe and Schiller, relics of, 326
Göthe and Voltaire compared, 383
Goodwood Shield, the, 322
Greeks, physiognomy of the, 105
Gutenberg, statue of, 231

Guy Fawkes, by Ainsworth, 207
Gymnotus, living specimen of, 34

Haarlem Lake, draining the, 383
Hampton-Court, the hall at, 111, 288, 381
Hampton-Court Palace, new Picture Galleries
at, 183

Harp of Brian Boroihme, 276

Harrington, Dr., of Bath, 141

Hats, origin of, 276

Heart once lost and twice won, 293, 308
Herschel, Sir John, 192

Hobbes at Chatsworth, 176
How to cure Love, 38

Dialogue between Louis XII. and Francis I., Ice-boat, improved, 24

by Fenelon, 359

Diet, hints on, by Dr. Holland, 28

Dutch Toys, manufacture of, 355

Earthquakes in Scotland, 151

Easter Custom, 68

Edinburgh Fire Balloon, the, 258
Education, the best, 204
Education Alarmists, 221
Eglintoun Armour, sale of the, 272
Eldon School, Vauxhall, 114, 202
Electric Eel at the Adelaide Gallery, 34
Electro-magnetic Experiments, new, 74
Elegy, pastoral, by Drummond, 128
Elegant Fellow, the ; a ballad, 229
Elliston, Mr., anecdotes of, 218, 333
Embroidery, modern, 387

Emery, John, anecdote of, 91

Emigration, Report on, 181

Enough! 260

Epitaph, Latin, on a Friend interred at Kensal

Green, 135

Error Halfpence, 143

Etna, Von Raumer's ascent of, 405

Evening at Prince de Montfort's, 371
Exaggeration, on, 279

Inchkeith described, 119
India, new resources of, 268
India Jugglers, feats of, 389
Influenza of 1837, 44
Ingoldsby, Thomas, imitated, 70
Island, new, 287

James, G. P. R., imitated, 71

Jean Paul, Scraps from, 260, 371

Jehan de Beaumanoir, romance of, 395

Jedburgh Abbey, sketch of, 71

Jews, recent persecution of the, 344

Jews, the, and Sir Moses Montefiore, 176
Journey from Florence to Rome, 322

Kangaroos, new, 408

Kean, recollections of, 91, 143, 217
King's Champion, the, 51
King's Vow, the, 178, 194
Kingston-upon-Railway, 280

Kingston, New Town-hall at, 18

Ladies Flower-gardens, laying out, 224
Lampadophoria, 36

Lamps, improved, 9

Lay of the Tournament, 147

Letter to a Young Man, 5

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Mackintosh, Sir James, 221

Madeira Wine, errors respecting, 205

Maid of Athens, the, 130

Maiden Reproved, 326

Malibran, anecdotes of, 236

Mammoth Times Newspaper, the, 229
Manufacture, new, 287

Margate lodging-house keeper, the, 189
Maria's Dower, a tale, 6

Maunday Money explained, 128

Master Peter Doddle to his Parents, 4
Meadow-leather, 152

Menagerie in the Tower of London, 311
Metals, autogenous union of, 394
Midnight Reading, 203
Milan, aspect of, 316

Miles Coverdale, tomb of, 352
Mining, vicissitudes of, 224
Moon Worship, lines on, 211
Mortham Bridge, Yorkshire, 177
Mountains, height of, 163
Museums in London, 165
Musket, new percussion, 127
Mysterious Packet, the, 333

Nabobs, Dr. Knox

on,

221

Napoleon, Canova's bust of, 367
Napoleon, lines on, 190

Nelson Monument, the, 184, 288, 336

New Road, the, 159

New Zealand, state of, 143, 313
Newspaper Writing, talent for, 30
Newspapers, history of, 288

Niebuhr, industry of, 159

Night, a, in the Royal George, 171

Normal Schools, 96

North-west Passage discovered, 62, 78
Numismatics, discoveries in, 399

Oak, immense, 224

Obituary of Eminent Persons:
Biett, Dr., 46

Birch, Samuel, 255

Blumenbach, Professor, 46
Carpenter, Rev. Dr. Lant, 95
Chauncey, Commodore, 14
Clarke, Walpole, 351
Crampton, Dr. John, 191
Crombie, the Rev. Dr., 191
Daniell, Thomas, 14
Delpuech, Antoine, 15
Doyle, W., 334

Obituary, (continued.)

Drummond, Thomas, 64
Frost, John, 15

Gleig, Bishop, 14
Goodall, Rev. Dr., 15
Griffin, Gerald, 191
Hogg, John, 351
King of Prussia, the, 190
Lefevre, M., 46
Lemercier, 176

Loughlin, Andrew, 368
Marsh, Chancellor, 351
M'Gill, Dr., 351

Müller, Professor, 368, 383
Otter, Dr., 351

Phillips, Sir Richard, 32, 57

Poisson, M., 111

Prinsep, James, 95

Rickman, John, 335

Ward, William, 14

Seppings, Sir Robert, 95

Warde, J. P., 255

Weston, John Webbe, 46

Whitwell, T. S., 303

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Wyatville, Sir Jeffry, 15

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Observanda, by Correspondent, 50, 131, 169,
227, 247, 275, 7, 342, 386, 403

Ocean, phenomena of the, 253

Old Bureau Drawer, the, 3, 36, 69, 99, 147,
171, 210, 229, 245

Olives and Oranges of Genoa, 365
Opera, Italian, row at the, 207
Orang, characteristics of the, 297
"Othello," catastrophe of, 270
Ottomans, physiognomy of the, 106
Oxford Memorial, the, 231
Oysters in Britain, 341

Painter's Cruelty, 276
Painting and Cookery, 191
Painting on Glass, 187
Papier-Mâché, on, 22, 53

Parsimony of Nollekens the sculptor, 247
Pax, the, described, 211

Pendulum, length of the, 394

Penny Postage, the, 96, 112

Pensions granted to Literary and Scientific
Men, 355

Persia, Shah of, 251

Persian Peasantry, 252

Phantom Portrait, the, 38

Phantom Portrait: a Sibyl's Sketch, 262

Phillips, the late Sir Richard, recollections of,

57, 86, 102, 117, 136

Photogenic Miniatures, 352

Pisa, monuments of, 365

Plague, precautions against, 250

Poetry for a Young Lady's Album, 5

Pogson, the Bagman, a portrait, 282

Polytechnic Institution, the, 73

Popular Errors, 402

Popular Scandal, 36
Prefaces, on, 254

Prisons, by Servan, 340

Profligate, lines to a, 355

Prospectus of a Marriage and Love Assurance
Society, 245

Prussian"Lancashire," the, 322

Public Walks, 384

Queen, anecdotes of the, 298

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Arabia, and Syria, 270

Roman Essence of Anchovies, 8

Roman Roads, on, 269

Romantic, the, 228

Rome, ancient, 149

Romilly, Sir Samuel, boyhood of, 152

Ross, Captain, Expedition of, 61

Royal Academy, Exhibition of the, 94, 120, 137

Royal Exchange, the new, 135
Royal George, a night in the, 171
Royal George, wreck of the, 316

Rubens, his life and works, 139
Rubens and the Lion, 191
Runjeet Sing, sketch of, 306, 324

St. John's Day at Rome, 366
Salmon Fry, notes on, 122
Sardine, the, 181

Schools, commercial, of Lombardy, 364
Science and War, 96
Scientific Museums, 165

Scott and Byron compared, 64

Scott Monument at Edinburgh, 336, 367
Scott's "Rokeby," scenery of, 177
Scraps from Jean Paul, 260, 370
Sea, the, phenomena of, 147
Shaftesbury Prize Byzant, 212
Shakspeare, birthday of, 96
Sheffield Botanic Garden, the, 386
Sheriffs' Plate, description of, 343
Silk in France, 80

Sketches from the French, 338, 359

Skin of Mammalia, 55

Smith, the late James, anecdotes of, 39

Southey, Dr., illness of, 367

Southwark Literary Society, new house of, 354

Snowdon, ascent of, 161

Société d'Encouragement, of Paris, 96

Sonnets, by a youth of nineteen, 165

Spring, lines on, 85

Staffa, phenomenon of, 192

Stanzas, by Richard Ryan, 213

Steam-boat Passengers, 282

Steam-boilers, safety-valve for, 394

Steam-engines, improvement in, 352

Steam Power, novel application of, 338
Steamer, the "Blazer," 393

Steam Ship," Oriental," 368

Steam Ship, "President," interior of the, 370
Sugar Duties, on the, 228

Sugar, improved manufacture of, 151
Superstition, modern, 77

Tapir, habits of the, 93

Tea-plant in Brazil, 159
Temperature of April, 64, 111

July, 271

Tempest, the, by Shakspeare, 30

Temple Revel, the last, 180

Thames, scenery of the, 380

Thoughts in Rhyme, by Archæus, 350

Tooth-ache, cure for, 320

Torture-room in the Tower of London, 392

Trafalgar Square and the Nelson Column, 363
Traits of Tennessee, 133
Travelling Expenses, 384
Travelling, Rogers on, 265
Tropics, delights of the, 223
Tuileries, the, at Paris, 59
Turtle, errors respecting, 206
Two Strange Gossips, the, 114

Ungka-puti, the, 274, 318
Urns, Roman, discovery of, 128
Utilitarianism v. Classics, 400

Vatican, the, by torchlight, 366
Venetian Story, 372, 390
Venice, sketches of, 315
Ventilation, Dr. Arnott on, 399
Versailles, meditations at, 283
Vienna and Berlin compared, 315
Virgil's Grotto, ride to, 366

Wallace, Sir William, descendant of, 384
Washington, character of, by M. Guizot, 397
Water-colour Painters, New Society of, 60
Waterloo, battle of, 352

Weights carried against streams, 394
Wellington, the Duke of, 128

Westminster Abbey and Whitehall, repair

of, 47

What is Death? 149

Wheat, culture of, 408
"Who is your Friend?" 7

Who's Who? 247

Widower, the, 203

Willis, N. P., imitated, 71

Wines, French, duties on, 342

Woman, a fragment, 214

Woodstock, visit to, 326

Worshippers of Lucifer and Hesperus, 277

Writers, great, of the age of Louis XIV., by
Villemain, 360

Writing, careless, 75

Writing, early English, 75 ·

Yew-tree, celebrated, at Harlington, 146

Zummerzetshire Dialect, 92.

END OF VOL. III.

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