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Matthias, Mr., error of, in his postscript to Gray's works noticed,

XX. 321.

Maurice, Rev. Mr., letter to the Editor of the Classical Journal, iii. 283.
Observations on the ruins of Babylon, xix. 181. His translation of
Edipus Tyrannus noticed, viii. 466. Barker's letters to, on Pagan
Trinities, iii. 125, 137, 179. iv. 17, 89, 334, 439, 484. v. 240.
Maurier, Du, letter of Grotius to, i. 765.
Mawes, St. John, Prize Poem, xii. 273.
Maximinian's palaces, ruins of, ix. 633.
May, discoveries of the Abbé, xviii. 207.

Mayer, M., notice of his expected Mythological Lexicon, v. 9.
Measures, on the ancient Greek, xvi. 263.

Mecænas, anecdote of, ix. 41.

Mecca, captured by the Wahabis, viii. 235. And its pilgrims murdered,

ib.

Mechasphim, what they were, xviii. 302.

Mecheir, on the Egyptian month, x. 69.

Medaille, d'un de Siris, description, x. 358.

Medallists and Mathematicians at Cambridge University, vi. 413.
Medals, examination for the, at Cambridge, xvii. 209.

-, Roman, perfection of, in Adrian's, and Trajan's time, xi. 363.

Mede's explanation of 1 Cor. 11th, v. 10, i. 100.

Medea of Euripides, remarks on the, i. 563. On a passage in the, v. 128. Notæ in, edit. Porson, x. 412. Notice of Elmsley's edition, xix.

267.

Medes, habits of luxury among the, xii. 51.

Medical science, on the, of the ancient Egyptians, xviii. 1.

Medicine, remarques sur la, xvii. 95.

Medicina, Græci scriptores de, xvii. 461.

Medina, subjected by the Wahabis, viii. 235.

Meditari, its derivation, xiii. 194.

Megerlinus, doubt respecting the publication of his Moguntia Topographia,

iv. 476.

Megha Duta, the,' notice of, xii. 432.

Meierotto on the sources whence Tacitus drew his information, viii. 244.

Meinecke's edition of Leonidæ utriusque Carmina,' notice of, xii. 239. His Emendations of Horace, xvii. 13.

Meiners, Professor, of Gottingen, his work quoted, to illustrate remarks on the analogy subsisting between the English and German languages, ix. 118.

Melancholy composition, gratification of, i. 237.

Melancthon's Prologue to Terence's Eunuch, xiv. 355.

Melita, on the controversy relative to the situation of, v. 200. Reasons - for supposing that this was the island where St. Paul was shipwrecked, xix. 212.

Memnoniæ Statuæ Inscriptio, xvii. 384.

Memoir, of the ruins of Babylon, by Rich, ix. 287. Extract from a, relative to the translation of the Scriptures, xvi. 194.

Memorabilia Xenophontis, animadversiones in, iii. 444.
Memorandum of Lord Elgin's pursuits in Greece, iv. 244.
Memory, conjecture with respect to the, x. 178.

Menage, Epigram by, xvi. 185.
Menagii Distichon, xiii. 438.

Menander, praise of, iv. 180.

Menart, distich on the door of his country seat, x. 178.

Menckenius, F. O., quotation from his work, Observationum Ling.
Lat. Liber,' to illustrate the word 'amanus,' ix. 324. His ancestor Otto
Menckenius, author of Acta Eruditorum,' ib.

Mender, remarks on the stream, in the plains of Troy, ix. 609.
Menexenum in Platonis, notulæ quædam, xii. 415.

Mental affections, physical result of the, ix. 217.

Mentor, drawn by Homer from an individual character, xi. 230.

Mercury, on the mythological attributes of, xvi. 224.

Merrick's letter to Joseph Warton on Greek indexes, xx. 247.

Messina, inscription at, x. 344.

Metallic mirrors used by the Greeks, xvi. 152.

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Metals, transmutation of, examination of the question, whether this

art was possessed by the ancient Egyptians,' xix. 297.

Metallurgy, on the, of the ancient Egyptians, xviii. 298.

Metaphors, on the origin of, xvii. 32. On the use of some by Eschylus, ib.

Metaphysics of Aristotle, of little value, xvii. 334.

Metaphysicians, inadequate terms used by English, ix. 122.

Metathesi de Literarum et Verborum, v. 368.

Metempsychosis, Sidereal, the doctrine of, alluded to, in the mythology of Persia, instance of it, ix. 217.

Method of a course of classical studies arranged, iii. 352.

Methodius, a Bishop of the primitive Christian Church, ix. 88. Account of his work, entitled the Banquet of Virgins, ib.

Meting, on a mistake of, in the exposition of a passage in Tacitus, iii. 160.

Metra Horatiana, ix. 597.

Metre, on, iii. 49. Distinction of Rhythm and Metre, 50. Quintilian's and Cicero's definition of it coincide, 51. Its divisions, ib. On metre as connected with music, 59. Plutarch quoted in illustration, ib.

Its constituent parts, iv. 196.

Not indispensable in all Lyrical compositions, 208. Its affinity to music, 300. And accents, iv. 476. Restored to Eschy). Prom., xi. 63.

Metre, on Latin, i. 515. xii. 10. On the Iambic, of Phædrus, xvi. 74. Holt Okes on the Iambic, of Anacreon, v. 174.

Metres, on the Lyric, of Anacreon, iii. 31. iv. 196, 280. On the Sapphic and Alcaic, xiv. 361. xv. 105, 221. xvi. 49. On the poetical, of the ancients, iii. 79. Improvements in, iv. 515.

'Metrica Doctrinæ Hermanni,' notice of, xv. 79.

Metrical lines from various prose authors, xv. 181. xvi. 353. xvii.

349.

Metrical arrangement of Horace, remarks on the, vii. 455.

Metris, de, Tentamen, by Dr. Burney, critical notice of, i. 643.

Metrodorus on Greek accents, i. 843. Answer to his observations, iii.

476. On ancient Metres, iii. 79.

Metropolis, original derivation and meaning of the word, ix. 119.
Mexican language, iv. 350. Ten Numerals of the, 117.

Mexicans, on the state of the, when first invaded by the Spaniards, xiii. 306. On the military profession among the, 307.

Mezeriac's violation of the Rule of Terentianus Maurus, i. 288.
Michael Angelo, commendation of, iv. 27.

Middle, on the origin of the term as applied to verbs, xviii. 157. Remarks on Kuster's observations on the, verb, xv. 304. Voice, remarks on the, vi. 380.

Middleton, Dr., Epitaph by, on H. G. Prettyman, i. 142. Where educated, ix. 4.

Milbiller, M., notice of his historical German works, vi. 318.
Mildmay, Mr. St. John, verses recited at Oxford by, xiv. 97.

Military education, on, in conjunction with classical studies, viii. 442. 'Mille pericula sævæ urbis,' Latin Poem by Joy, i. 303.

Miller, Mr. J. F., on his German publications, as connected with the history of Hungary, vi. 318.

Millin, A. L., his explanation of the inscription at Sens, i. 161. His 'Observations sur le costume Théâtral, vii. 60. Critique on his 'Description d'une medaille de Siris', x. 858.

Millman's Oxford English Prize Poem, vi. 186.

Milton, where educated, ix. 5. Instances in his Latin verses of violation of the Rule of Terentianus Maurus, i. 293. On an error in his Latinity, vii. 393. On his Greek compositions, ix. 342. On his Latin Poetry, 338, The advantages and universal interest of his subject in 'Paradise Lost,' xi. 238. Coincidences in, with Synesius and Methodius, ix. 88. Passages in his works compared with some in Demosthenes, x. 120. A passage in his' Paradise Lost,' cited to explain ravnos

xéyos, in Menexenus of Plato, xii. 417. His censure of John Tzetzes, xiii. 7. Coincidence between and Seneca, i. 67. Cicero, ib. Ovid, and Longinus, ib. Falsely accused of plagiarism, xvi. 135. Compared with Euripides and Ariosto, xviii. 238.

Mines in the East, account of, i. 391.

Mingrelia language, Ten Numerals of the, iv. 109.

Minsheu's observation cited, asserting the antiquity of the Biscayan tongue, iv. 267.

Minucius Felix, observations upon passages in his writings, ix. 93, 230, 235, 240.

Miracles of Moses, on the,

Miscellanea Sacra, i. 113.

xviii. 303:

Critica, xv. 296. Classica, xv. 302. xvi, 351.

xvii. 33, 548. xviii. 232. xix. 325. xx. 7, 344.

Miscellanea Critica, Cl. Wolfii, xviii. 344.

Miscellaneous observations on ancient and modern authors, vii. 425. viii. 240. ix. 90, 229.

Mitford's History of Greece quoted, to illustrate remarks on Pagan Trinities, iii. 128. Remarks upon several of his observations, xv. 296. Mithra, Cave of, in Persia, superstitious regard paid to it, ix. 217. Rites of, appeared in Rome under Trajan, xiv. 169.

Mithras, the sun worshipped under that name in Persia, xii. 73.

Mithridates, The, of M. Adelung, noticed, as a German work upon Palæography, v. 7.

Mitscherlich, Epistle of, to C. Gail, notice of, xi. 10.

M'Knight, referred to, in illustration of a passage in 1 Cor. ch. 1st, i. 100. An omission of, noticed, on a passage in the Epistle to the Romans,

112.

Moan language, Ten Numerals of the, iv. 108.

Moderns, in what arts were they excelled by the ancients? i. 439, 681. Modern Greek, specimens of, v. 401. Its difference from the ancient Greek language, xvii. 39.

words derived from the Eastern, x. 317.

travellers, discrepancy in the accounts of, accounted for, v. 18. Moso-Gothic language, iv. 349. Ten Numerals of the, 111. Its affinity to the Latin, Greek, and Sanscrit, xi. 4.

Mogul, The Great, grand celebration of his birth-day, xii. 69.
Mohammedes, Oxford Prize Latin Poem, xv. 344.

Mohsin's description of the ancient religion of the East, referred to, iii.

181.

Moitay language, iv. 348. Ten Numerals of the, 108.

• Mola Juventutis Restauratrix,' Latin verses, xvii. 210.

Molière, character of, as a writer of comedy, i. 489.

Mollweide, M., on a geometrical query in Plato's Meno, xvii. 171.

Momi Miscellanea Subseciva, ix. 525. x. 176, xii. 261. xiii. 19.

Monasteries, anciently established for the purposes of public education, i. 827.

Monboddo, Lord, his opinions on English accents examined, i. 633. His arrogant assertion respecting the knowledge of music among the ancients, iii. 35. His commentary on the Chinese dialects referred to, 313. His opinions advanced in his System on Man,' confirmed by the Rev. W. Tooke's work, 334.

Mongeraye language, Ten Numerals of the, iv. 110.

Mongouls language, iv. 349. Ten Numerals of the, 113.

Monk's edition of the Hippolytus, critical notice of, v. 193. vi. 74, 347. vii. 206. viii. 81. ix. 133. On his excellence as a critic and a commentator, iv. 515.

Monostropha in Carmina Tragicorum Græcorum Commentarius,' Auctore G. B. vii. 167,369. viii. 140.

Montanus, his Atlas Chinesis quoted, to show that Atlas in the Greek mythology was borrowed from Eastern superstition, iv. 221. Montesquieu, on the different effects of music on the English and the Italians, i. 278. Quoted on insolvent debtors' laws, iv. 511. On the effects of climate on the human character, xii. 267.

Montfaucon's Palæography quoted, in illustration of ancient inscriptions, i. 87. On his interpretation of the Delian inscription, 94. Ancyrana Inscriptio in Palæographiâ expressa, 118. Lines in his Palæography cited, proving neglect of Rhythm in the compositions of the latter ages, iv. 200. His observations on accents, xi. 74.

Months, on the Attic, ix. 324.

• Montrolianum, in Suburbanum,' Latin verses, xx. 202.

'Monumenta Boica,' published at Munich, a German historical work, vi. 313.

Monument of Comosarya, xiii. 129.

Moods, on the, of the English verb, i. 872. iii. 1.

on the use of, after the Relative, x. 398.

-----, Essay on, xix. 336. xx. 63. On the origin of, xix. 336. Imperative Mood, 337. Indicative, 339. Subjunctive, ib. Optative and Infinitive, 340. Connexion of Moods and Tenses, ib. On the force of, in various modern languages, xx. 63.

Moon in a well, xvii. 352.

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Moor, Dr. James, Essay on Greek Prepositions, iii. 23. Objections to some of his doctrines, by Tate, 470. His essay, Vindication of Virgil,' viii. 106.

Moor's Hindu Pantheon, notice of, vii. 307. Referred to, in illustration of the notes in Dr. A. Clarke's Bible, iii. 434.

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