INDEX. 403 



Landed property in India, division, ii. 432. Subject discussed, 438 ; deeds of sale, 

 435 ; minutes of the board of revenue at Baroche on this subject, 438 ; objections 

 against farming the lands, 440; preference to leases, 442; further discussed, 

 iii.265. 



Laodicea, rebuke to that lukewarm church, iii. 33. 



Laurentinum, Pliny's villa, compared with those in India, iii. 407. 



Leprosy, account of that malady in India, ii. 507 ; anecdote of a Mahomedan leper, 

 507. 



Lingam, great object of Hindoo superstition, iii. 70; stones of that shape found in 

 the Nerbudda, formed by the water, iii. 340- 



Lions, habits of those in the south of Africa, ii. 186. Discovery of lions in Guzerat, 

 iii. 90; interesting particulars of the hunt, iii. 91. 



Lion's Rump, mountain near the Cape of Good Hope, ii. 178. 



Lizards, their variety in India, i. 42. Blue lizard, ii. 292. 



Locke, influenced by Christianity, iv. 312. 



Locked-jaw, disorder and cure, iv. 23. 



Locusta, her skill in poisonous drugs, iii. 385. 



Locusts, their devastations in India, ii. 273. Account of a flight at Baroche, 273; 

 blue locust described, 272 ; scripture account of these insects, 274 ; quails of 

 scripture, 274 ; awful scene in the Brodera purgunna, iii. 338. Prophetical de- 

 scription of their ravages, 338. 



Lodge, in cucumber fields and melon grounds, illustrates a passage in Isaiah, ii. 450. 



Longevity in India, among the Hindoos, neither common nor desirable, i. 219; 

 causes assigned, 219- 



Lotophagi of the ancients, compared with the modern Hindoos, iii. 275. 



Lotos, beauty of the flower in the Indian lakes, iii. 275; its great variety, 275; fur- 

 ther description, 362. 



Lullabhy, his power in curing the bite of serpents, iii. 248; process described, 249 ; 

 his general character, 250; splendid weddings of his children, 250; behaviour on 

 the death of his daughter, 251; ingratitude to the English after the cession of 

 Baroche, iii. 467. His subsequent infamous conduct, iv. 233 ; his cruelty to Rha- 

 man, iv. 234 ; his death, 243. 



Lullabhy's well, significant inscription over the spring, iii. 250. 



Lustral ceremonies at Chandode, iii. 6. 



Lutoph Ally Beg, general in Tippoo Sultaun's army, iv. llG; transactions between 

 him and the English garrison at Onore, 117 ; his duplicity and treachery, 126. 



Lyttelton, Lord George, influenced by Christianity, iv. 312. 



Mackintosh, Sir James, his opinion of the Hindoos, iv. 308 ; his charge to the grand 

 jury at Bombay, iv. 291 ; his estimate of the British character and government in 

 India, iv. 295. 



