INDEX 



^veid, a panegyric on Augustus, 

 28 



j^tius, (lie Greek physician, 189 



Actuarius, the court physician at 

 Constantinople, 190 



Aldrovandi, his chapter on the vi- 

 per, .'51 



Alexander of Tralles, the physi- 

 cian, 189 



Apteryx, its alimentary organs de- 

 scribed, 297 



Apwleius, author of Golden Ass, 32 



Asliliv-de-la-Zouch, the divisions of 

 its "Coal Field, 9 



Asylums for Lunatics, what they 

 were, are, and ought to be, 72 



Attendants on the Insane, rules 

 for selecting, 73 



Austin, Mr., on the Limestones of 

 Devonshire, 291 



Avicenna, the Arabian physician, 

 41, 198 



Balon. its qualities described, 195 



Banaud or Plaintain-tree, supposed 

 to be the scriptural mandrake, 40 



Banaud, its leaf a mythological 

 symbol, 43 



Baths of cold water first employed 

 medically bv Antonius Musa, 25 



Bees, description nf their swarming, 

 196 



Bcrnsus a notice of him and his 

 writings, 181 



Brrzelhis. extracts from his Aiina- 

 l»n dor Pharmacie, 1(17 



Betony, bfusa's monograph mi this 

 herb and its properties, 32 



Bigotry directly opposed to all im- 

 provement, 118 



Biographical Sketches, 189, l!»7 



Birmingham Philosophical Institu- 

 tion, origin of ;»7. '■>'■> 



ighain 1 literary and Philoso- 

 i , s,„i,-i > . Proceedings of, 

 160, :!»2 



Blakiston on the diffusion of know- 

 ledge in large towns, 83 



Bloxam's Principles of Gothic Ec- 

 clesiastical Architecture, review- 

 ed, 158 



Blyth on the three species of wild 

 geese, 295 



Blyth on the class Aves, 296 



Browne, Analysis of his Lectures 

 on Lunatic Asylums, 57 



Brunfels, Dr. Otto, notice of, and 

 his writings, 197 



Burnett's History of his Own 

 Times, judgment of, 132 



Butler, Rev. J., his Essay on the 

 National Character of the Ro- 

 mans, 200 



Ca?sar, Julius, was the first who 

 conferred the freedom of Rome 

 on physicians, 23 



Cambrian Rocks in Derbyshire, 12 



Camillus, his character defined and 

 admired, 201 



Carboniferous group, in Derby- 

 shire, 223 



Cato killed himself in a fit of par- 

 tial insanity, 1 78 



Chalk formation of the north-west 

 of Scotland, 291 



Charnwood Forest, and its anticli- 

 nal line, 13 



Chertsey Literary and Scientific 

 Institution, notice of a Lecture 

 delivered at its opening, 150 



Coal Measures in Leicestershire, 8 



Coal Measures in Derbyshire, 221 



C im, Theory of its Price ;it diffe- 

 rent periods, 78 



Courame', or the Love of Native 

 Country : translated from the 

 French", KM 



Covenl Garden Theatre, its opera- 

 tic department, 313 



Critical Notices of New Publica- 

 tions 150, 327 



