INDEX TO THE ECLECTIC MAGAZINE.-VOL. XIII.
FROM JANUARY TO APRIL, 1848.
January.—The Plate for January is a well execut- ed mezzotint from a highly popular subject by Ward, derived from an incident in Goldsmith's life, which Boswell narrates in his Life of John- son, as told by himself. "I received," said John- son,
"one morning, a message from poor Gold- smith that he was in great distress, and begging that I would come to him as soon as possible. sent him a guinea, and promised to come to him directly. I accordingly went to him as soon as I was dressed, and found that his landlady had al- rested him for his rent, at which he was in a vio- lent passion. I perceived that he had already changed my guinea, and got a bottle of Madeira and a glass before him. I put the cork into the bottle, desired that he would be calm, and began to talk to him of the means by which he might be extricated. He then told me that he had a novel ready for the press, which he produced to me. I looked into it, and saw its merit, told the landlady I should soon return, and having gone to a book- seller, sold it for sixty pounds.' This," says Boswell, was the Vicar of Wakefield." February.-The subject of this Plate is from a French artist, Labouchere, and is a finely con- ceived group, consisting of Luther, Melancthon, Pomeranius, and Cruciger, engaged in translat- ing the Bible. The attitudes and expression of the different figures are strikingly characteristic. V March.-A beautiful portrait of the poet Tennyson. April.-The Love Letter, from a subject by Hilton, R. A., possessing great merits as a work of art, which have been transferred by the engraver with unusual fidelity and force.
Girondins, Lamartine's History of.-Edin- burgh Review, Gilfillan, Rev. George.-Hogg's Weekly In- structor,
Hobbes, Thomas, Life and writings of.- British Quarterly Review,
Hints upon History.-Fraser's Magazine, 512 History of the Girondins. See Girondins.
Humboldt's Kosmos-Edinburgh Review,. Herschel's Sir John, Astronomical Obser- vations.-North British Review,
Mdlle. de Montpensier, 571; The new Archbishop of Canterbury; Reminiscences of Prince Talleyrand; Lord Rosse, a Mechanic; An Author in Difficcul- ties; King Hudson and her Majesty's English, 572.
Newspaper Press of Spain. See Spain.
Old Songs. Tait's Magazine, Oscar I. See Sweden.
Pleasure of Botany and Gardening. See Botany.
Paris to Cadiz. See Dumas.
Pastoral Cantons of Switzerland. See Swit- zerland.
173 Prison Discipline.—Quarterly Review. Pius IX.-Quarterly Review, POETRY.-Go to the Fields; A Vision; Spirit So- lace, 137; The Dumb Girl; The Truest Friend; Realization of a Dream; Judge Not, 138; The Charm of Friendship; Memory; Infancy; Princi- ple and Opinion, 139; Visions of the Past; The Return Home, 281; A Voice from Nature; Mo- therwell's Grave; Room for the Right, 282; The Pioneer of Progress; The Voice of the Grass; Remembrance, 283; Song of the Watchers on the Shore; The Angel Watch, 427; No Surrender; Days that are no more; Common things; The Wife's Song, 428; Forgiveness; Song; Stanzas; The Last Wild Flower, 567; Unknown Heroes; Retrospection, 568.
Shelley, Percy Bysshe, Life and Writings of, -North British Review,
Statistics of Commerce of America. See
MISCELLANIES-Interments in London, 65; Cracow, 74; Destruction of Chartley House, 91; The Arctic Expedition, 109; The Birth-place of Canova, 140; Pickwick, Boz, and other matters, 141; Affectation; The Dulce and the Utile; The Wars between England and France, 142; A Cottager's Daughter Marchion- ess of Exeter; Prize Essay on Hydrophobia; Shak- speare's Plays; Heathenish Christian Names, 143; The Vocative of Cat; Revival of the Earldom of Strafford; Campbell's Lives of the Lord Chancellors; Analysis of the House of Commons; Camels in Australia; Finances of Russia; Last Compliment to Jenny Lind; a Genoese Raphael, 144; A Roman Relic; Monastic Institution in Glasgow; The Pro- gress of Liverpool; The Electric Clock; Curious List of Vessels; The Edinburgh Review, 158; Sur- names; Artificial Stone, 186; Nitre Lakes of Egypt, 201; Recollections of Old Mortality, 243. man Literary Piracy; Druidical Temples of Scot- land, 257; Newspapers in Paris; Anecdote of O'Connell, 275; The National Clock, 284; Peri- odicals of the French Revolution; Literary Super- annuation; Shelley and Byron, 285; The Bur- mese Throne; Longevity; Americans inheriting Property in England, 286; Nature of Spots on the Sun, 287; What makes marriages unhappy; Very true, 295; Astronomical Discovery, 388; Naval preparations in France, 398; Cromwell Letters, 409; Lithography; Louis Philippe and Danton, 421; Progress of Milton's Blindness; Australia, 426; The Gold Mines of Russia; Summit of the Island of Ascension; A Catch, 429; The Late Prin- cess Adelaide of Orleans; The Earl of Dalhousie's Passage through Egypt and the Desert, 430; Ros- sini; Shakspeare's Name, 431; Miss Caroline Lu-Tennyson, Alfred.-Hogg's Weekly Instructor, 289 cretia Herschel; The Vernon Gallery, 432; Tra- vellers in Abyssinia; Light from Electricity, 445; Sale of Landseer's Pictures, 493; The Glass of Bo- hemia, 524; The London Press, 566; Death of the elder Disraeli, 569; Chronology of European Sove- reigns, 570; The Extraordinary Fatality of the House of Stuart; Charles the Second's Courtship of|
Separate System, the. See Prison Discipline. Syracuse, Battle of. See Battles. Sweden and Oscar I.--Fraser's Magazine, Scott, Sir Walter, Visit to.-New Monthly Magazine,.
Thorwaldsen, the Sculptor.-Bentley's Mis. 110, 178 Turner's Paintings.-British Quar. Rev., Turenne, Memoir of Marshal.-Sharpe's Magazine,.
writer. The book is hastily and carelessly put together, and adds nothing to what is already known.
The name of Shelley is an ancient one VOL. XIII. No. I.
Perry-the heiress of Penshurst, the estate of Sir Philip Sidney. The present Lord De Lisle and Dudley represents this branch of Sir Bysshe's descendants. Through
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