THE
INTERNATIONAL
MONTHLY
MAGAZINE
Of Literature, Science and Art.
VOLUME I.
AUGUST, 1850.
NEW-YORK:
STRINGER & TOWNSEND, 222 BROADWAY.
FOR SALE BY ALL BOOKSELLERS.
BY THE NUMBER, 25 Cts; THE VOLUME, $1; THE YEAR, $3.
VOLUME I. AUGUST TO NOVEMBER, 1850.
| Advancement of Learning. Portrait of Sir David Brewster, | 312 |
| Advocate, The Young.—Household Words, | 81 |
| Arts, The Fine.—Elliott's Portraits, 73.—Pictures by Mr. Kellogg, 78.—Osgood's Portrait of Captain Sutter, 73. —Horace Vernet, 112, 175.—Mr. Healy, in Paris. 141,— Powers's Statue of Calhoun, 174.—M. Ingres and M. de Luynes, 207.—Gallery of Illustrious Americans, 207.— Dr. Waagen, in England, 207.—Art in Bavaria, 269.— Exhibition at Valenciennes, 269.—Darley's Illustrations of "Sleepy Hollow," 269.—Chaucer's Monument, 269.— Lessing's new Picture, 269.—Mlle. Rachel, again, 270.— Gigantic Statue by Schwanthaler, 270.—Publications of Goupil & Co., 270.—Mr. Powell's Picture for the Capitol, 270, 324.—German Views of Art in America, 323.— Plans for the Promotion of Catholic Art in Rome, 623.— Charles Muller's Group of Statues, 323.—A Hundred Statues in Paris, 323.—Powers and his Statues, 324.— The Barberigo Gallery at Venice, 324.—Paintings and Sculptures of Early Northern Artists, 324.—A Statue to Larrey, the Surgeon, 324.—The Standish Gallery, 324.—Exhibition at Dusseldorf, 324.—Works in Antwerp Churches, 324.—Leutze's New Works, 324.— The Colossal Frescoes of Kaulbach, 482.—Fine Public Groups at Berlin, 482.—The Dusseldorf "Album," 482. —Statue of Columbus, 483.—Monument to Frederick the Great, 483.—Philadelphia Art Union, 483.—Original Portraits of Queen Elizabeth and Sir Isaac Newton, 483.—Kellogg's Full-Length of General Scott, 483.— Mount's New Picture, 483.—Archæological Institute, 483.—Sarah Biffen, 484.—Statues of Herder, Oudinot, Professor Cooper, &c., 484. | |
| Authors and Books.—Rev. Dr. Smyth, 13.—Gen. Pepe's New Work, 13.—Mr. Mayne Reed, 13.—J. E. Warren, 13.—Dr. Hawks, 13.—The Princess Belgioioso, 13.—Eugene Scribe, 13.—Alice and Phœbe Carey, 14.—Mrs. Oaksmith, 14.—Prof. Nichol on America, 14.—Dr. Croly, 14.—Sir James Alexander, 14.—Mr. James and Copyright, 39.—Albert Smith and "Protection," 39.—R. H. Stoddard, 39.—Inedited Correspondence of Goethe and Schiller, 39.—Margaret Fuller, 39.—Dr. Hœfer vs. Dr. Layard, 40.—Mr. Boker's New Play, 40.—George Sand, 71.—G. P. R. James, 71.—Botta's Nineveh, 71.—Arago, 71.—Miss Fenimore Cooper, 72.—Prof. Agassiz, 72.— Dr. Layard, 72.—Rogers, 72.—Harro Harring, 72, 112.— Dr. Gutzlaff, 73.—Literature in Paris, 73.—E. P. Whipple, 105.—Evelyn's History of Religion, 105.—Leigh Hunt and the Laureateship, 105.—E. G. Squier, 105.— Monument to Wordsworth, 105.—Francis Bowen, &c., 105.—Mrs. Child, 112.—The Literature of Supernaturalism, 138.—Remains of Poe, 138.—Dudley Bean, 138.— Mr. Young's "Beranger," 138.—Livermore on Libraries, 139.—Prof. Johnson, Charlotte Cushman, Elihu Burritt, Perley Poore, Mr. Mountford, &c., 139.—Rev. James H. Perkins, 175.—Mrs. Esling, 175.—M. St. Hillaire and his Spanish History, 175.—The Author of "Dr. Hookwell," 175.—John Mills, 175.—Mr. Prescott, 175.—Maginn's Homeric Ballads, 175.—George Wilkins Kendall, 176.—Mrs. Trollope and her Son, 176.—Dr. Wm. R. Williams, 176.—Dr. Buckland, 176.—Dr. Wayland's Tractate on Education, 176.—Charles Eames, 176.— Chateaubriand, &c., 176.—Parke Godwin and his Translation of Goethe's Autobiography, 194.—A new Life of John Randolph, 194.—Scotch Bookseller's Society, 194. —Prof. Dickson's Return to Charleston, 194.—John R. Bartlett and the Boundary Commission, 194.—William C. Richards, 194.—Guilliame Tell Poussin, 194.—Dr. John W. Francis, 195.—Illustrated Edition of Gray's Poems, 195.—M. Libri, Burns, Dr. Wiseman, &c., 195.— Wordsworth's Posthumous Poem, 196.—Miss Cooper's Rural Hours, 196.—Sydney Smith's Sketches of Modern Philosophy, 196.—Beranger and the People, 232.— Audubon and Washington Irving, 232.—Seba Smith in Mathematics, 232.—M. Flandin, on Persian Antiquities, 233.—Girardin and Chateaubriand, 233.—Guizot's Poverty, 233.—History of Art, by Schasse, 233.—History of Spain, 233.—The Paris Academy of Inscriptions, 234.— Leverrier on the Telegraph, 234.—Works of Rev. Dr. Woods, 234.—Orville Dewey, 234.—The Author of the Amber Witch, 235.—The Night Side of Nature, 235.— Milne Edwards, 235.—Miss Strickland, 235.—Sir E. L. Bulwer, 235.—Mr. Herbert's Sporting Books, 236.— Works in Press, 236.—Meyerbeer, 236.—A German Prince in New Orleans, 265.—An Arabian Newspaper, 265.—Mrs. Loud's Poems, 265.—Literature of Socialism, 265.—Ebenezer Elliot, 266.—Memorial to Mrs. Osgood, 266.—Rev. Walter Colton on California, 267.—Gallery of Illustrious Americans, 267.—Max Schlesinger, 267.— Mayo's "Berber," 267.—French Periodicals, 268.—The Vienne University, 268.—Works of the Asiatic Society at Paris, 318.—The French Academy and its Prizes, 318.— Edward Everett, 319.—Mackay's "Progress of the Intellect." 319.—Lamartine, 319.—Theodore Parker, 319.—Sir Edward Belcher, 319.—Guizot, 319.—John G. Saxe, 319. —Eliza Cook, 319.—Institute of Goethe, 320.—Books on the Slave Trade, 320.—Jules Lechevalier, 320.—The Doctrinal Tract and Book Society's Publications, 320.— Novel by Otto Muller, 320.—New Translation of M. Rochefoucauld's Maxims, 320.—"Armanese," 320.— Thackery on the Literary Profession, 321.—M. de Luynes on the Antiquities of Cyprus, 321.—Sir Robert Peel's Memoirs, 321.—John P. Brown, 321.— Burnet de Pesle on Egyptian Dynasties, 322.—Washington Irving a British Subject, 322.—Arago and Cremieux in History, 322.—New Poem by Holmes, 322.—Mr. Duganne's Satire, 322.—South Carolinian Epics, 322.—John Neal, 322.—The Baroness Blaze de Bury, 322.—Dr. Elliot on Slavery, 322.—Dacotah Dictionary, 322.—Judge Breeze on the History of Illinois, 322.—Mr. Layard, 322.—Mr. Wilson's Transted Hindu Hymns, 322.—Dr. Shelton Mackenzie, 322.— Paris Editions of Greek Authors, 471.—MSS. of Schiller and Goethe, 471.—Henry Wheaton, 471.—La Hongrie Pittoresque, 472.—Contributions to Science by French Surgeons, 472.—Walter Scott in France, 472.— Herman Melville, 472.—The Original Dr. Faust, 472.— Rev. Albert Barnes, 473.—Ledru Rollin, 473.—Mr. Bigelow's "Jamaica in 1850," 473.—Mr. Prescott in England, 473.—Dr. Schoolcraft's Great Work on the Indian Tribes, 473.—Schools in American Literature, 473.—Leon de Wailly's "Stella and Vanessa," 474.— Alaric A. Watts, "in bankruptcy," 474.—"The Lily and the Totem," by Dr. Simms, 475.—Dr. Wainwright on the Holy Land, 475.—Mr. Raymond's Discourse at Burlington, 475.—E. V. Childe's Translation of "Santarem on Americus Vespucius," 475.—Dr. Latham on the Natural History of Man, 475.—John Britton, the Antiquary, 476.—Dr. Layard, 476.—The "Vladika," 476.—Mr. Bancroft, 476.—Hebrew Translations at Padua, 476.—Theories of Light, 476.—Mr. Hildreth's History, 476.—Hungarian Tales, 476.—Yankee Hill, 476.—Criticisms by Dr. O. A. Brownson, 477.—James Nack, 477.—New Volume of Poems by Bryant, 477.—Science in America, 477.—Shiller's "Anthologie," 477. Griepenkerl, 477.—Mr Kimball's St. Leger, 477.—Etchings by Ehninger, 477.—The Weimar Festival, 478.—M. Bastiat, 478—Edinburgh Review for October, 478.—N. Lenau, 478.—"The Eclectic" upon Mr. Melville, 478.—"Lonz Powers." 478.—New English Reviewals of Ticknor, 479.—M. Villaume's History, 479.—Longfellow Illustrated, 479.—Thackeray, 479.—London Medical Schools, 480.—Robberies of the Vatican, 480.—Mr. Gallagher, 480.—Mr. McLaughlin, 480.—Lamartine in England, 480.—Discoveries in Africa, 480.—Louis Nicolardet, 480.—Hebrew Library, 480.—Berlin University, 480.—New Books, by Parke Godwin, Miss Dupuy, Timothy Pitkin, Dr. Ruffner, Mr. Putnam, De Quincy, J. I. Bailey, Grace Greenwood, and W. W. Lord, 481. | |
| Author of "Ion," The. A Biographical Speech, | 170 |
| Balzac, and the Oration of Victor Hugo on his Death, | 315 |
| Beauty.—The Leader, | 591 |
| Belgian Lace-Makers.—Household Words, | 123 |
| Beranger, Jean Pierre. With a Portrait, | 454 |
| Brooks, Maria, and Southey, | 67 |
| Brougham, Lord, Anecdote of, | 304 |
| Brougham, Lord, Memoir of. (Portrait,) | 305 |
| Catching a Lion.—C. Astor Bristed.—Fraser's Magazine, | 512 |
| Chase, The.—Miss Cooper's Rural Hours, | 77 |
| Chemistry of a Candle.—Household Words, | 292 |
| Chinese, Remarkable Work by a | 141 |
| Church of the Vasa D'Agua.—Eliza Cook's Journal, | 400 |
| Class Opinions.—Household Words, | 104 |
| Cooling a Burning Spirit.—De Vere, | 303 |
| Correspondence, Original.—Letter from Dr. Layard, upon Ancient Art, 5.—Rambles in the Peninsula, by John E. Warren, | 6, 37, 136 |
| Count Monte-Leone, or the Spy in Society.—From the French of Saint Georges, | 494 |
| Crime, in England and France, | 224 |
| Csikos of Hungary,—Max Schlesinger, | 258 |
| Death and Sleep.—From the German of Krummacher, | 255 |
| Deaths Recent—Miss Jane Porter, 10.—Matthew L. Davis, 11.—Joseph S. C. F. Frey, 11.—Count de Vittré, 11.—Richard Wyatt, the Sculptor, 42.—Dr. Griffith, 104.—F. Mansell Reynolds, 104.—John Roby, 104.—Professor Canstatt, 104,—S. S. Prentiss, 140.—Nathaniel Silsbee, 140.—Sir Robert Peel, 172.—Boyer, Ex-President of Hayti, 172.—The Duke of Cambridge, 172.—George W. Erving, 173.—Professor John Burns, 174.—Horace Sumner, 174.—Mr. Kirby, the Entomologist, 206.—Rev. Dr. Gray, 207.—Augustus William Neander, 237.—Jacob Jones, U.S.N., 237.—Julia Betterton Glover, 239.—Madame Gavaudan, 240.—General Bertrand, 240.—Robert R. Baird, 250.—S. Joseph, the Sculptor, 240.—James Wright, 240.—M. Mora, 270.—B. Simmons, 290.—Louis Philippe, 338.—Dr. Judson, 340.—John Luman, 339.—Sir Martin Archer Shee, 341.—Gerard Troost, 342.—Professor White, 340.—Perceval W. Banks, 342.—Bishop Bascomb, 342.—Robert Hunt, 342.—John Comly, 342.—Count Pire, 342.—Admiral Dudley Oliver, 600.—Rev. Dr. Ingram, President of Trinity College, 600.—Professor Kolderup, 601.—M. Chedanau, 601.—Daniel Belknap, 601. | |
| Death's Jest-Book: The Fool's Tragedy, | 229 |
| Decay of Great Families.—Burke's Aristocracy, | 260 |
| Democracy.—The Age and its Architects, | 592 |
| Dom of Dantzic, The.—Fraser's Magazine, | 43 |
| Duke of Queensbury.—Burke's Aristocracy, | 260 |
| Duke Lewis of Donauworth.—Madame Blaze de Bury, | 584 |
| Dust, or Ugliness Redeemed.—Household Words, | 243 |
| Ebba, or The Emigrants of Sweden.—E. Marmier, | 345 |
| Egypt and its Government.—Sharpe's Magazine, | 524 |
| Eldorado.—John G. Whittier, | 74 |
| Excellent Opportunity, An.—Household Words, | 249 |
| Fashions, Autumn, (Illustrated,) | 602 |
| Fire in the Woods.—Miss Fenimore Cooper, | 95 |
| Fitch, John, Life of, by Miss Leslie, | 68 |
| Frank Hamilton.—W. H. Maxwell, | 145 |
| Fuller, Margaret, Marchesa D'Ossoli, | 162 |
| Estimate of her Works and Genius, by E. A. Poe, | 162 |
| Poem upon her Death, by G. P. R. James, | 165 |
| Garibaldi, Life of General, | 224 |
| George Sand and Chateaubriand, | 65 |
| German Criticism of English Female Writers, | 161 |
| Germany in the Summer of 1850.—The Leader, | 594 |
| Ghost Stories: The Female Wrecker, and the House | |
| of Mystery.—Bentley's Miscellany, | 402 |
| Greece and Turkey.—Bentley's Miscellany, | 255 |
| Grote's History of Greece.—The Times, | 10 |
| Gutzlaff, the Missionary, | 317 |
| Hawthorne, Nathaniel, the Athenæum upon, | 102 |
| Henry Lisle: A Story of the Civil War.—G. P. R James, | 555 |
| High Prices to Artists of the Opera, | 165 |
| Hunt, Leigh, Autobiography of, | 35, 130 |
| Hunter, on the Pilgrims Fathers.—Literary Gazette, | 599 |
| Hussar of Hungary, The Wild, | 263 |
| Illuminated Books of the Middle Ages, | 69 |
| Irving, Washington, and Campbell.—The Albion, | 230 |
| Is Love Blind?—The Leader, | 536 |
| Ivory Mine. The, a Tale of the Frozen Sea, | 117, 156, 210 |
| Jenny Lind at the Castle Amphitheatre. Illustrated, | 448 |
| Jones on Chantrey: A Biographical Criticism, | 413 |
| "Junius," New Discussions respecting, | 469 |
| Jurisprudence of the Moguls.—Spectator, | 271 |
| Kanasz, The.—Max Schlesinger, | 262 |
| Kane's Discourse on the Mormons, | 36 |
| Kemble's, Fanny, Readings of. (Illustrated,) | 310 |
| Killing a Giraffe.—Cummings' Adventures, | 304 |
| Kolombeski, The Veteran.—, | 304 |
| Lady Lucy's Secret.—The Ladies' Companion, | 409 |
| Lamartine's Apology for his Confidences, | 314 |
| Lamartine's Introduction to "Genevieve," | 132 |
| Lamartine's "Genevieve" Reviewed, | 466 |
| Lamennais, The Abbe. (Portrait,) | 449 |
| Landor, Savage, Letter from.—The Examiner, | 271 |
| Landor, Savage, upon Savage Haynau.—Examiner, | 586 |
| Last of a Long Line, The.—Dickens's Household Words, | 373 |
| Latham on the Aborigines of America, | 467 |
| Lessons in Life.—Eliza Cook's Journal, | 241 |
| Lewis, George Cornewell, | 4 |
| Literary Coteries in Paris, | 97 |
| Literary Prizes in France, | 458 |
| Literature in Africa, | 311 |
| Lorgnette, The. (Portrait,) | 459 |
| Loss and Gain.—Maria J. MacIntosh, | 548 |
| Love, Is it Blind?—The Leader, | 536 |
| Man Ever the Same.—Pendennis, | 580 |
| Mansfield, The Great Lord.—The Times, | 419 |
| Marks of Barhamville.—Fraser's Magazine, | 7 |
| Marriage Ceremonies of the Kandians.—Sirr's Ceylon, | 590 |
| Memnon, The Sounding Statue of.—Fraser's Magazine, | 528 |
| Miscellanies.—Lord Brougham, 8.—A Mock Guillotine, &c., 8.—Ledru Rollin on the Decline of England, 9.—The Catastrophe of the Griffith, 9.—Poetical Composition, 29.—Death-Bed Superstitions, 30.—Arab Game, 30.—Marriage in America, 30.—Arabian Nights, 31.—Ambassadors, 32.—Guizot, 32.—Canning, 32.—The Cell of the Bee, 41.—Letter from the Duke of Wellington, 42.—Laughing in the Sleeve, 64.—Antiquarian Discovery, &c., 64.—Circumnavigating a Pope, 78.—Curious Titles of German Papers, 79.—Remarkable Trio, 79.—True Progress, 79.—Coffee among the Savans, 79.—Bad Cookery, a Cause of Drunkenness, 79.—The Monkey and the Watch, 79.—A Syrian Christian and Philosopher, 79.—The British Hierarchy, 79.—French Eulogy, 96.—What's in a Name? 104.—Names High Inscribed, 104.—Golden Rules of Life, 128.—Progress of Milton's Blindness, 128.—Once Caught, Twice Shy, &c., 128.—A Street Character of Cairo, 142.—Mendelssohn's Skill as a Conductor, 142.—Manuel Godoy,141.—Superstition in France, 143.—Libraries in Cambridge, 143.—Romantic History of the Two English Lovers, 143.—Modern School of Athens, 255.—The Athenæum on American Reporting, 443.—The Emperor of Hayti, 443.—Louis Napoleon at Lady Blessington's, 443.—American Mummies, 443.—Daniel Webster in England, 443.—Coffins of the Chaldeans, 444.—Ancient Prices of Labor, 444.—Making the Postman Wait, 441.—The Restaurant of the Sister of M. Thiers, 444.—Languages of Africa, 444.—Richardson, the Traveller, 444.—The Peace Congress at Frankfort, 445.—Project for a Zoological Garden, 445.—Is D'Israeli a Jew? 445.—Dr. Gross, the Surgeon, 445.—The Herder Festival at Weimar, 445.—The Wordsworth Monument, 445.—Revolutionary Stamps, 445.—Descendants of Warren Hastings, 445.—Mr. Pennington's Steam Balloon, 445.—Catlin, the Indian Traveller, 445.—Ages of Public Men, 446.—Ancient Discovery of California, 446.—Mr. Gliddon's Mummy, 446.—Rachel, 446.—India Rubber in 1772, 446.—Convenient Umbrella, 446.—Irish Emigration, 447.—Dwarkanth Tagore, 447.—Madame Boulanger, 447.—Traveling in France, 447.—The Lowell Institute, 447.—M. Libri, 447.—Guizot and Ledru Rollin, 447.—Dr. Southwood Smith, &c., 447.—Anecdote of Guizot, 601.—Dr. Spencer, as a Monk, 601.—Slavery, treated by The Times, 601.—Marshal Haynau and The Times, 601.—English Titles, 601.—Guizot on Politics, 601—Anecdote of Stenterello, 601. | |
| Miscellanies, Scientific.—Remingten's Bridge, 12.—Paine's Hydro-Electric Light, 12.—New Planet, &c., 12.—The Hair, 103.—Experiments by Lord Brougham, 112.—The Spanish Academy of Sciences, 264.—Improvements in the Telegraph, 264.—The British Association, 312.—American Association for the Advancement of Science, 313.—An American Academy, 313. | |
| Morris, George P. Review of his Songs, | 487 |
| Music, or Home and Abroad, | 484 |
| My Novel.—Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton, | 439, 566 |
| Mysterious Compact, The.—Dublin Univ. Mag., | 185 |
| New Prophet in the East.—Athenæum, | 300 |
| Nimrod, A Mightier Hunter than.—Household Words, | 218 |
| Numismatic Archæology, | 257 |
| Old Brank, the Forger.—Dickens's Household Words, | 521 |
| Old Churchyard Tree, The.—Household Words, | 254 |
| Old Man's Bequest, The.—Dublin University Magazine, | 106 |
| Oriental Caravans.—Fraser's Magazine, | 42 |
| Outspreading of the British People.—Fraser's Mag., | 593 |
| Peasant Life in Germany.—The Leader, | 288 |
| Peel, Life of Sir Robert.—The Times, | 196 |
| Phantom World, The, | 76 |
| Poe, Edgar A.—Rufus W. Griswold, | 325 |
| Poetry, Original.—The Bride's Farewell, M. E. Hewitt 37—To ——, Mrs. R. B. K., 37.—The Child of Fame, Mrs.Hewitt, 73.—Bob Fletcher, Townsend Haines, 104.—Azela, Alice Carey, 135.—Country Sonnets, William C. Richards, 136.—Retrospect, Hermann, 170.—Horoscope, ElizabethOakes Smith, 264.—Friendship, William C. Richards, 264.—The Balance of Life, Herma, 264.—Leonora to Tasso, Mary E. Hewitt, 488.—Forest Burial, Sidney Dyer, 488.—The Passionate Pilgrim, Mary E. Hewitt, 489.—A Rainy Morning, W. C. Richards, 489.—In Absence, 489.—Cradle and Coffin, Elizabeth Oakes Smith, 489.—The Hermit's Dell, Hermann, 489. | |
| Poetry, Selected.—Nineveh, Edwin Atherstone, 16.—The Garden Gate, Charles Mackay, 29.—The Last Year's Leaf, Philip Taylor, 31.—The Ship "Extravagance," Charles Swain, 64.—Death, Leigh Hunt, 64.—Verses from the Bohemian of Wraitsell, 70.—"Press on," 92.—Flowers, 96.—Old Feelings, 112.—To the Memory of Mrs. Osgood, Anne C. Lynch, 114.—To W. G. R. with an Autograph of Poe, R. H. Stoddard, 192.—Our "In Memoriam," Punch, 192.—The Actual, R. B. Kimball, 192.—English Hexameters, Walter Savage Landor, 219.—Manuela, Bayard Taylor, 221.—Morning Song, Barry Cornwall, 241.—On a Portrait of Cromwell, James T. Fields, 271.—Summer Pastime, 287.—An Old Haunt, 303.—"Laugh and Get Fat, John Kenyon, 344.—The Speaker Asleep, Arminius, Winthrop Mackworth Praed, 230.—Legend of the Teufal Haus, Stanzas written under a Drawing at Cambridge, Ballad Teaching how Poetry is Best Paid For, Covenanter's Lament for Bothwell Brigg, Hope and Love, Private Theatricals, Alexander and Diogenes, W. M. Praed, 396.—Cassandra, My Little Cousins, W. M. Praed, 623.—The Convict, Alice Carey, 543.—Song, George H. Boker, 546.—Helen, R. H. Stoddard, 546.—Twilight, Edith May, 546.—The Tryst, Alice Carey, 546.—The First Doubt, Grace Greenwood, 548.—Sappho to the Sybil, Mary E. Hewitt, 548.—Thoughts at the Grave of a Departed Friend, Despondency, Thoughts on Parting, John Inman, 555.—Two Sonnets from the German of Lenau, 592. | |
| "Poets and Poetry of America."—Fraser's Magazine, | 165 |
| Poets in Parliament.—The Leader, | 144 |
| Pompadour, Madame de.—Fraser's Magazine, | 389 |
| Porter, Jane, Life of. Illustrated.—The Art Journal, | 201 |
| Portrait of Cromwell.—By J. T. Fields, | 271 |
| Pottery and Porcelain.—The Spectator, | 596 |
| Power of Mercy, The.—Household Words, | 85 |
| Praed, Winthrop Mackworth, | 230, 372, 523 |
| Present Religion of Persia.—Lieut. Colonel Chesney, | 259 |
| Prentiss, Sergent S., Reminiscences of.—T. B. Thorpe, | 289 |
| Railway Wonders of the last year.—Household Words, | 583 |
| Religious Sects and Socialism in Russia, | 461 |
| Report of the British Registrar General.—The Times, | 588 |
| Rollin, Life of Ledru.—Fraser's Magazine, | 222 |
| Russian Serf, The, | 160 |
| Santa Cruz, General.—Illustrated News, | 40 |
| Serf of Pobereze, The.—Household Words, | 177 |
| Serpent Charming.—Bentley's Miscellany, | 470 |
| Sketches of the Town.—Engraving after Darley, | 33 |
| Snow Image, The.—Nathaniel Hawthorne, | 537 |
| Society in Turkey.—Princess Belgiviso, | 595 |
| Something about a Murder.—Fraser's Magazine, | 24 |
| Spanish Senate, The.—Clarke's Guzpacho, | 261 |
| Spirit of the Annuals for 1851, | 488 |
| Spotted Bower Bird, The.—Fraser's Magazine, | 386 |
| Summer Night, The.—From Jean Paul Richter, | 38 |
| Summer Vacation.—The Fourth Canto of Wordsworth's | |
| Posthumous Poem, | 208 |
| Suwarrow, The Great Marshal.—Fraser's Magazine, | 87 |
| Tea Smuggling in Russia, | 129 |
| Telegraph from New York to London.—Mechanics Magazine, | 587 |
| Tennyson's New Poem, "In Memoriam."—Spectator, | 34 |
| The Theatre in Russia and Poland, | 225 |
| The Three Gifts.—By E. Oakes Smith, | 646 |
| The Three Visits.—From the French of Vitu, | 490 |
| The White Lady, | 309 |
| Tomb of Lady Blessington.—Bentley's Miscellany, | 126 |
| Tupper, Martin Farquhar, | 2 |
| Undertaker, An, to the Trade.—Household Words, | 93 |
| Versification, English, | 485 |
| Virginia Two Hundred Years Ago.—The Athenæum, | 416 |
| Ward, the Author of "Tremaine."—Spectator, | 113 |
| Warilows of Welland, The.—Household Words, | 560 |
| Weber, Miss, and her Writings.—Miss Harriet Sargent, | 463 |
| Webster, as a Statesman and as a Man of Letters, | 297 |
| Wilde, Richard Henry, and Dante, | 2 |
| Wilde, Sir Thomas, the New Chancellor, | 240 |
| Willisen, General, of the Schleswig-Holstein Army, | 585 |
| Window Love.—By Charles G. Leland, | 544 |
| Women and Literature in France, | 193 |
| Wordsworth's New Poem.—The Examiner, | 271 |
The unusual format of VOLUME I. AUGUST TO NOVEMBER, 1850. is as in the original.