INDEX. 175 



PAGE 



HALE, SIR MATTHEW, his interview with Bunyan's wife, . . . . 1 59 



HOYLAND, JOHN, on Gipsy surnames, 121 



HUMBOLDT, as an ornithologist, as estimated by Waterton, .... 39 



HUNGARIAN GIPSIES, 123, 7*125, 138 



HUNTER, JOHN DUNN, on snakes in the Western States of America, . . 7*15 



On the rattlesnake swallowing its young, 34 



On the rattlesnake charming or magnetizing birds, . . ^ . 40 



How buffaloes protect their young against wolves, .... 45 



INDIA, James Mill's History of, .... 71, 85, 109 



IRISH GIPSIES in Great Britain and the United States, . . . 129, 7*132, 141 



JAMAICA, experiments on the boa wanted in, 35 



JESUITS, Waterton educated by the, 47 



The dislike of other people for them, 47 



The end of their teaching, 48 



Their policy as described by Southey, #48 



The honour in which they hold Christ and his Apostles, ... 57 



JEWS, the, disliked by the Gipsies, 130 



Their language during the Babylonian captivity, 140 



The Gipsies marry among themselves, like the Jews, . 148 



Protected by a cloud while in the wilderness, . . . . .155 

 A scattered people before the destruction of Jerusalem, . . .161 



The means of their dispersion, 161 



The Jews an exclusive family, possessing an exclusive religion, . .162 

 Their peculiar nature, special genius, and persecution keep them dis- 

 tinct from others, 163 



The isolation of the Jews effected entirely by natural causes, . .164 



How a Jew is reared, 164 



His religion a secondary consideration, 164 



The indifference of many Jews to their religion, #165 



The religion of the Jews previous to the Mosaic law, . . . . 7*165 

 The position they occupy in the world to-day, . . . . .165 

 How they were affected by the destruction of Jerusalem, . . .166 

 The light in which they look on their race and religion, . . .166 

 The phenomena of their race the greatest bar to their conversion to 



Christianity, 167 



The comparison and contrast between an Englishman and an English Jew, 1 67 

 How Jews tolerate each other in the matter of religion, . . .168 

 The profession of Christianity does not destroy the nationality of Jews, 168 

 The peculiar genius of the Jews as a scattered people, . . . .168 

 Their religion, and the light in which they look on themselves, . .169 



Their ideas of a Messiah, 169 



The phenomenon of the Jews as a scattered people, . . ... 169 



JOB on the ostrich, . . . . ... . . * . . .23 



On the mystery of his existence, 81 



JOHNSON, SAMUEL, on a person becoming religious, 64 



On a certain kind of ambition, , , 153 



