Page:Blackwood's Magazine volume 046.djvu/874

858 Rot your Italianos, by a man behind his age, 410.

Royal Academy and its exhibitions, 304.

Sayings and assayings, by Archæus, 669.

Scotland, letters addressed to the Protestants of, 177—on the present position of the Church of, 573-799.

Simmons, B.'s Death chant for the Sultan, 319—his inscription in the new edition of Mrs Hemans' works, 320.

Song-writing, Burns, 256—Moore, 368.

State Trials, specimen of a new edition.

By Nicholas Thirning Neville, Esq. of the Inner Temple, special pleader, reviewed, 548.

Stick, the queer, a rustic legend, in verse, 614.

Telegraph on Montmartre, Napoleon's, 689.

Ten thousand a-year, a tale, Part I. 505—Part II 620—Part III. 832.

Tenan's of Hulywell Lodge, a tale, Chap. I. 677—Chap. II. 680—Chap. III. 683—Chap. IV 688.

Tieck's tale of Pietro D'Abano, 228.

Torquato Tasso, or the prison and the crown, a drama, by the Baron von Zedlitz, 431.

Tory and Whig finance, 494.

Tour, a family continental one, and its results, 56.

Traveller, notes of a, No. II. 19.

Turkey, Egypt, and the Affairs of the East, 100—there is an enchantment in all that relates to the East, ib.—the Christian, when he thinks of the East, remembers the "Man of Sorrows," ib—the philosopher thinks of the East as a storehouse of materials for the mind, 101—a short historical sketch of Egypt, as a dependent of Turkey, 102—the treaty of Kutahia has constituted Egypt an independent state, 103—the boasting France that this treaty is favourable her views, considered, ib.—her encouragement of rebellion in Egypt asserted, 106—from the pretensions and policy of France turn to those of Russia in regard to the Porte, 108—114.

Universal suffrage and the chartists, 289.

Villemain, his history of the French literature of the 18th century, reviewed, Part I. 1—Part II. 321.

Whig and Tory finance, 494—state of the public debt in 1816 495—two most important circumstances crippled the Tory administrations from being able to reduce the public debt rapidly; the first the general distress after the war, from 1816 to 1830, 496—the second the resumption of cash payments in 1819, 497—in both respects, the Whig government have been widely different, ib.—the financial measures of the Whig government during nine years of prosperity, contrasted with those of the Tory, 499, 501—the fatal delusion of self-government in the matter, is the true cause of the present disastrous state of our finances, 502—Tory administrations injured the sinking fund, and repealed too many indirect taxes, 503—these arose from attending to Whig clamour, ib.—and so was the increase of debt occasioned by the emancipation of the negroes, ib—the reckless spirit of Whig financial legislation evinced in their, step regarding the post-office revenue, ib.

Yriarte, literary fables of, 202.

Zedlitz, Baron Von, his drama of Torquato Tasso, analysed, 431.