172 INDEX. 



PAGE 



BORROW, GEORGE, his speculations regarding the origin of the Gipsies, . 114 



His visit to Yetholm : The secrecy of the Gipsies in regard to the lan- 

 guage, 115; the extent of the queen's knowledge of it, Ib. ; the pe- 

 culiarities of the tribe in regard to it, 116 ; an appointment, a disap- 

 pointment, and a meeting at the fair, Ib. ; the queen and her niece, 

 Ib. ; peculiarities of Yetholm mixed Gipsies, 117, 118 ; Thomas 

 Herne's family, #117, 131 ; his estimate sf the extent of the lan- 

 guage, 118; the character of the queen, Ib. ; his definition of 

 Nokkum, niK) ; not a judge of character, Ib.; his visit to Yetholm 

 in some respects unsatisfactory, Ib. 

 Gipsy surnames, . . . . . . . . . . .121 



Gipsies stealing children, . . . . . . . .121,122 



Gipsies harbouring priests, and running wenches, 122 



His strange contradictions about the Gipsies speaking their language, . 123 

 His description of three kinds of travelling people in England, 130, 131, 133 

 Mr. Borrow a strange phenomenon connected with the Gipsies, . .132 

 On the English Gipsy language, . . . . . 138 



On the hatred the Gipsies have for other, people, #149 



BREWSTER,. SIR DAVID, his letter to Prof. James Forbes, . . . .81 

 BRIGHT, DJR., on the secrecy of the Gipsies in regard to their language, 123, 140 

 BRITANNICA, ENCYLOP^EDIA, THE, does not allude to snakes swallowing 



. their young, 10 



On the hatching of crocodiles' eggs, 32 



BRITISH QUARTERLY REVIEW, THE, on the Gipsies and John Bunyan, . ;zi6o 



v BUCKLAND, FRANK, on vipers swallowing their young, ... 8, 14, 23, ^39 



Requested to make experiments on the subject, . . . .13,14,24 



On snakes shedding their skins, . .. . . . . . . #23 



On the hatching of their eggs, 3 X 3 2 



BUFFALOES, how they protect their young against wolves, .... 45 

 BUNSEN, CHEVALIER, on sound judgments and shallow minds, . . .153 



BUNYAN, JOHN, on child-stealing, 122 



His description of what he was, and what he was not, . . . .157 



The penalties attaching to the name of Gipsy, 157 



His name calculated to raise up that of the Gipsy tribe, . . .158 

 The injustice of his biographers towards his memory, . . . .158 



His nationality still unacknowledged, 158 



He might have written works in the Gipsy language, . . . . 1 59 



His most probable pedigree as a Gipsy, 1 59 



The first of eminent Gipsies known to the world, 1 59 



A Scottish Gipsy family that illustrates that of Bunyan, . . . 1 59 



.Has a statue raised to his memory at Bedford, ni6i 



BURR, HIGFORD, on snakes shedding their skins, ' ^22 



BUTLER'S ANALOGY, the influence it had on James Mill, .... 7 



CANTING, the, of Mill, . . . . 80, 107 



CAPADOSE FAMILY, vicissitudes in the religious history of the, . . .168 



CARLYLE, THOMAS, his so-called anti-self-consciousness theory, . . -95 



The opinion of the Mills regarding him, 108 



