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Distances, how measured by the ancients, xvi. 263.

Dithmari Episcopi Chronicon, vi. 315.

Diversity of the Human Character, on the, vi. 248.

Divination, almost universal among the ancient nations, xvi. 205.
Dobree de Inscriptione Actiacâ, xvii. 366.

Dodwell's Tour through Greece, xvii. 463.

Dogs, on the howling of, v. 73.

Doric Dialect, on the, xvii. 81.

Dourri Effendi, his relation of Travels in Turkey noticed, i. 414.

Dove, Tradition respecting the, xii. 67.

Downe's Greek Ode, Coll. Dubl. xvii. 386.

Dowry, paid to the wife's father in Japan, x. 230.

Draco, Observations on the Constellation, vi. 8, 9.

Drapier, Letters of, iii. 6.

Drayton's opinion on Pastoral Poetry, xviii. 287.
Dresigius, conjecture of, on Justin, x. 21.

Dromore, Bishop of, iii. 161.

Drovelli's Letter on Egyptian Antiquities, vii. 316.

Druids, The, probably of Oriental origin, xi. 1.

on the origin of the, vii. 172. viii. 225. xi. 1. Their attachment to divination, xvi. 207.

Mythological notions of, 54.

Their notion of a Supreme Being, xviii. Similar to those of the Hindoos, 58. 'Druid,' on the etymology of the word, xiii. 411. Druidical Rites, their similarity to those of the Persians and Indians, xiv. 351.

Drummond, Sir William, Dissertations of, in the Herculanensia, noticed, i. 524. On the English version of the Old Testament, i. 872. iii. 166. iv. 63. On an Inscription at Saguntum, i. 923. iv. 263, 267. vi. 4. Notice of his Essay on a Punic Inscription by Bellamy, iii. 198. Observations on his Persius, iii. 363. On his version of some Egyptian names in the Old Testament, iii. 366. iv. 369. v. 43. Dissertation on the 49th chapter of Genesis, iii. 387. v. 30. Notice of Mr. Bellamy's Ophion, iv. 244. His defence of his version of the Egyptian names in the Old Testament, iv. 407. v. 180. On his derivation of the word Pharaoh, iv. 468. On the origin of the Phæaces, v. 289. Remarks on a Phoenician Inscription found at Malta, v. 47. On Babylonish Bricks, v. 126. His Observations on the Fall of Man answered, v. 93. Some Inscriptions from, v. 126. On the Tyrian Inscription, vi. 191. On the ancient Language of Egypt, vii. 54. Answer to his Defence of the Egyptian Names, vii. 109. On his Observations respecting the Phoenician Inscription, vii. 191. On the word 'Peor,' viii. 267. Remarks on his Essay concerning the Shield of Achilles, viii. 409. Biblical criticism of, vii. 289. viii. 161. xiii. 435.

On the Attic Months, ix. 324,
Remarks on his Dissertation

Hails on his Biblical Criticims, vii. 75.
559. Notice of some calumnies, 334.
on the 49th of Genesis, xi. 305. Observations on the Remarks on,
xii. 149. Remarks on some statements of, xii. 255. On Gwawd
Lludd y Mawr,' xiii. 420. Reply to his Remarks on Balaam, xiv. 65.
On the Phoenix, 319. xv. 1. xvi. 88. Observations on Mr. Roberts'
Reply to, xiv. 377. On the Science of the ancient Egyptians and
Chaldeans, xvi. 145, 262. xvii. 29. xviii. 1. xx. 42. On the Shield of
Achilles, xviii. 305.

Druses' Religion, on the founders of the, collected from Arabian Authors,
vii. 213.

Dryden, observations of, on the versification of Claudian, v. 29. Where
educated, ix. 4. His Latin Lines on the Death of Prince Henry of
Gloucester, xx. 388.

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Duke of Saxe-Gotha, Emilius Augustus, iv. 153.

Dumesnil, Error in, under adolescens', i. 476. iii. 162.

Dunbar, George, Classical Criticism, xiii. 74. On the particle av, xvii.
65. On a passage in Homer, 265.

Duport, i. 194. On the Latin poetry of, x. 29. On his Greek compo-
sition, xiii. 184. His Greek Prayer Book, Specimen of, xvii. 410.
Notice of a new edition of, xviii. 101.

Durer, Albert, Compliment to, xii. 181.

Durham, University intended to have been founded at, xiii. 82.

Dyes, Observations on the Jewish, xviii. 306.

'Dying in Grain,' on the expression, x. 118.

Aadouxos, in the Eleusinian Mysteries, xiv. 167.
Δάϊος δαλὸς, ix. 297.

A, meaning of the Greek particle, vi. 265.

Δεκάκλινος, xiii. 407.

Anλéoua only occurs in a passive or middle form in an active sense, xiii.

114.

Aiuas, peculiar signification of, xviii. 202.

Aià pro μità, suivant M. Auger and Coray, Observations de M. Gail sur
cette doctrine, xviii. 136.

Διάγνωσις, διαγνώμη, xii. 217.

Διάλογος Στεφάνου τοῦ Μέλανος, ν. 288.

Alaposipa, more frequent in the use of destruction than of corruption,
xii. 90.

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Δυσμαὶ, ἑσπέρα, δύσις βίου, 6 sunset of life, xi. 318. Used only in the plu-
ral: δύσις and ἀνατολὴ, in both, ib.

Aúxus, meaning of, ix. 58.

E.

E, on the penultima in dederunt, steterunt, &c., x. 125.

Earth, the opinion of the ancients with respect to the, v. 103.

"East, 'Restoration of learning in the,' Grant's Buchanan's Prize Poem,

v. 317.

East India House Museum, iii. 434.

Eastern mode of expressing sentiment by action, iii. 141.

languages, as illustrative of the Greek, v. 182. On some of the,
languages, xii. 229. Learning on, xvi. 145. Antiquities, xx. 352.
travellers, Sending portions to those for whom nothing is pre-
pared' explained, by referring to, iv. 487.

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nations of antiquity, creed of, on the subjects of emanation and
pantheism, v. 5.

Ecbatana, Cicero's error with respect to, xi. 360.

Ecclemach language, iv. 350. Ten Numerals of the, iv. 117.

Ecclesiastical researches, iv. 35.

'Ecclesiazusæ,' of Aristophanes, remarks on by Seager, i. 507.

Eclectic system of philosophers, xiv. 169.

Eclipses mentioned by Ptolemy, xvii. 24.

Eclogue, on the fourth, of Virgil, v. 55.

Eclogues, on the, of Virgil, x. 309.

Edda quoted, xv. 91.

Eden, on the site of, xvii. 2.

Edgeworth, Mr., on education, vi. 240.

Edinburgh Review, i. 470, 905. iii. 191, 287, 299, 419. iv. 157, 216, 469.
'Edinensi Scholâ,' notice of, Ex tentaminibus puerorum in,' vi. 412.

Edition, in what its excellence consists, v. 342.

Editor, the necessity for his knowledge of the Greek accents, v. 348.

Edris, or Enoch, the Book of, ascribed to the Hermesians, i. 63.

Education, relative proportion of eminent characters formed by public

and private, viii. 194, 198, 445. ix. 1.

Education, on Classical, vi. 236. Mr. Edgeworth on, vi. 240.

course of, pursued at Oxford, vi. 305.

Education, Livres sur l', xvii. 95.

Edwards, Mr., prices and purchasers of books at the sale of, xii. 35.

• Effodiuntur opes,' Latin poem by Joddrell, xiii. 394.

Ego, on the quantity of its last syllable, ix. 339.

Egypt, on the language of ancient, vii. 54.

Egyptians, respect paid by them to old age, iii. 142. On the science of

the ancient, xvi. 145, 262. xvii. 19. xviii. 1, 298. xix. 297. xx. 42.
Luxury among the ancient, xii. 49. On the alphabets of the, iv. 468.
Egyptian names, on Sir William Drummond's version of, iii. 366. Defence
of his version, iv. 369, 407. v. 43. On Sir William Drummond's
derivation of, vii. 109. Antiquities by Drovetti, vii. 316.
Egyptian Etymology, ix. 153. Idols, ix. 559.

Eichorn, M., v. 2, 6. vi. 236.

Eichstadt, M., vi. 314.

Eichstedt of Jena, iv. 143.

Elean ancient inscription, xi. 348. xiii. 113.

Electricity, history of, i. 692.

Elegia ad amicum Cantabrigiensem, i. 201.

Elegiac Latin poets, Addison's Latin Essay on, ix. 346.

Elegy of Adam on Abel's death, xx. 394.

Elements of the metrical doctrines of Professor Hermann, xv. 79.

" Elements, the,' notion of the ancients respecting, xx. 42.

Eleusinian mysteries, gradual corruption of the, xiv. 168. Included in
the proscription of Theodosius the Great, 169. Notice of Ouvaroff
on the, xiii. 399. xiv. 165. xv. 117.

Eleusis, on an ancient inscription found at, i. 736.
Eleutherius, Greek preface of, v. 382.

Elgin's, Lord, memorandum, notice of, iv. 244.

Elgin marbles, on the, xiv. 98. Inscription on the, 185.

Elias Levita, notice of his opinion respecting Hebrew points, ix. 396,

405.

Elisha, his celebrated expression in the Bible reconciled with truth, xviii.
203.

Elisions, on, in Latin poetry, xvi. 353. Of diphthongs in Latin verse,
xviii. 232.

Elliot, Mr., Greek verses to, i. 160.

Ellipsis, instances of, ix. 51.

Ellis, Greek Ode recited by Mr., at Oxford, xiv. 94.

Elly's, Sir R., letter to Professor Ward, v. 388.

Elmsley's edition of the Heraclidæ, on, vii. 298. viii. 391.

Medea, notice of, xix. 267.

Mr., referred to, iv. 459.

Elocution, boldness of, xv. 71.

Elohim, on the Hebrew word, xiii. 53. Its number, x. 335.

Elysium, Hades, and Tartarus, situated towards the West, xi. 318.

Emasculation, factitious, universally found to accompany the practice of
Polygamy, xii. 45.

Embalment of the dead, x. 235. Prevalent in ancient Egypt, xviii. 18.
Embalmers, on the Egyptian, xviii. 364.

Emendandi, de ratione,' Canteri, v. 203, 361.

Emendation proposed of Juvenal, v. 415. Of Æschylus' Prometheus,

vii. 454.

Emendations and Explanations of Lucian, by Seager, vi. 125.

Emendationes in Eschyli Supplices, i. 801. iii. 182, 412. Bentleii in
Silium Italicum, iii. 381. In Ovidium, xix. 258.

Emerald, on the, i. 65. iv. 162. Mentioned in Scripture, 67, 325.
Emims, observations on the people, vi. 39. ix. 150.

Emotion, various meanings of, ix. 69.

Emulation, on, vi. 258. On the influence of, in public education, viii. 191.
Enclitics, Remarks on, ix. 64. On Latin, with respect to poetry, 589.
Doubts respecting, xi. 273. In accentuation, rules for, xv. 54.
Encyclopædia of Classical Studies, iii. 352.

Engelbreth's Fragmenta Basmurico-Coptica, notice of, xiii. 61.
English Grammar, i. 773. Allen's, notice of, vii. 318. Grant's, notice of,
x. 174. Essentials of, Critique on, i. 254. Letters, v. 388, 394.
English Liturgy, The, illustrated by its version into the Greek and
Latin languages, xix. 178.

English Books, with respect to Classical Studies, ix. 139. Words de-
rived from the Greek, xviii. 108. Writers, paucity of, who have written
Latin elegantly and correctly, ix. 47. Words derived from the Spanish
and Italian, x. 118, and German, affinity between, 318, and Swedish,
similarity of, xi. 15. Version of the Old Testament, remarks on, iii.
166. iv. 63.

Engraving, On the Art of, i. 699.

Ennius, The boast of, iv. 337.

Epaphroditus, Information respecting, iv. 35. Whether he was a Chris-
tian, xvii. 196. Who he was, xvi. 390.

Ephesus i. 898.

Ephialtes, the only individual ever summoned before the Council of
Amphictyons, xi. 154.

Epic Poetry, anticipations of futurity in, i. 305.

Epictetus, the pupil of Epaphroditus, iv. 42.

Epicurus, on the principles of, vi. 89. Remains of, found in Hercula-
neum, vii. 273.

Epigrams, Prize, by Barker, Greek • äpxn žμcv mávros.' Latin, 'strenua
inertia,' i. 10. Prize, by Bailey, iv. 62. Prize, by Letsom, xiv. 349.
Greek and Latin, xv. 317. Cambridge Prize, xviii. 195. Of Theocritus
praised, xviii. 289.

Epigram on Cicero, vii. 42. By Porson, 248. Greek, by Jacobs and
Thiersch, x. 341. Latin, xi. 365. By Hegisander, ix. 525. Two, by
Hegisander, 528. On Pogager vinosus, ix. 42. On the Waterloo vic-
Ind. Cl. Jl.-Suppl. to No. XL.

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