355 



Leaves, red colouring matter in, 



Leicester Literary and Philosophi- 

 cal Institution, Proceedings of 

 162 



Leicestershire, popular sketch of its 

 Geology, 1 



Leicestershire, the bed of an an- 

 cient ocean, 15 



Semmens, his Herbal of the Bible, 

 and theorv of the Sexes of 

 Plants, 39 



Lettuce recommended to the at- 

 tention of Malthusian econo- 

 mists, 25 



Lias, in Leicestershire, 5 



Life unites mind and matter in one 

 form of co-existence, 60 



Limestone, the Mountain, of Lei- 

 cestershire, 10 



Limestone, the Magnesian, of Der- 

 byshire, 222 



Limestone, the Mountain, of Der- 

 byshire, 230 



Linnaeus, his rules for botanical de- 

 nomination, 21 



Linnaeus, account of his Philoso- 

 phia Botanica, 21 



Literature, Outlines of Periodical, 

 331 



Livingston on the Punishment of 

 Death, lf,f; 



Livy, his character as an historian, 

 203 



Ludolph, his character, and Ethio- 

 pian History, 37 



Lunatic Asylum as it ought to be, 

 exemplified, 76 



Magazine, the London and Edin- 

 burgh Philosophical, 335 



Malcolmson on the stratification of 

 Elginshire, 291 



Mammatt's Geological Facts quot- 

 ed, 9 



Man, changes in his mental econo- 

 my best effected by gradual 

 means, 115 



Martin's Bijou Litteraire, review- 

 ed, 160 



Mattioli, Dr. Andrew, account of, 

 and his botanical writings, 192 



Meleager, the anthologist, 187 



Melissa I he plant 199 



Melissa the princess, 194 



Messue, the Arabian physician, 190 



Meteorology, observations on, and 

 table "f. for January and Febru- 

 nv, 17 I : for March and April. 

 151 Hid 362 



Mendellsohn, his musical composi- 

 tions characterized, 317 



Milne, account of his Botanical 

 Dictionary, 21 



Millstone Grit of Derbyshire, 227 



Mind and Matter, their co-exist- 

 ence sustained by life, 60 



Miscellaneous Communications, — 

 162 



Monomania, its fourteen different 

 kinds described, 64 



Musa, the physician, his life and 

 writings, 22 



Musa, the physician, his treatment 

 of the Emperor Augustus, 25 



Musa, the plant, its natural and 

 medical history, 35 



Musa, the plant, the Dudaim or 

 Mandrakes of scripture, 36 



Musician about Town, 310 



Natural Historv, the Annals of, 



331 

 Natural History, the Magazine of, 



345 

 Nervous Circulation, 244 

 Nicander, a Greek grammarian and 



physician, 196 

 Norague Indians, their manners 



and costume, 108 



Oath in the romance language, 250 



Opera, the Italian, in London, 312 



Opos, the Greek term explained, 

 180 



Organic Remains of the Coal Mea- 

 sures and Millstone Grit in Der- 

 byshire, 228 



Organic Remains of the Mountain 

 Limestone, 235 



Oribasius, physician to the Empe- 

 ror Julian, 189 



Ornithological Society of London, 

 proceedings of, 294 



Ornithology, sketches of European 

 Birds, 43, 251 



Owen, Professor, on the Plessosau- 

 rus, 290 



Owen, Professor, on the alimentary 

 organs of the Apteryx, 297 



Parker, his work on the Stomach 



reviewed, 155 

 Paul of TEgina, the physician, 190 

 Patriotism, instances of, amongst 



the Romans, 201 

 Patriotic principles illustrated in a 



story, lill 

 Pedestrian travellers, directions 



li>r, 173 



