The Works of Winthrop Mackworth Praed, 600 The Last French Romance, . The Sources of French Literature, I 612 The Naggletons, 88 The Frog in the Block of Coal, 133. The Naggletons on their Tour, Immigration in the West Indies, Railway Travelling.–Effect on Health, 136 189 Estrangement between the United States Forgery of Bank of England Notes, 466 Death of Lieut.-Col. Wilder Dwight, 143 Letters of Mrs. Piozzi to Mr: Conway, 102 6 The Battle at Harper's Ferry, What I heard at the Coffee-Party, Mistress and Maid, 30, 78, 111, 154, 206, 293 How Thomas Jefferson foreshadowed the L283 SRI no 237 Great Britain and the United States, Es- 328 334 422 475 604 TO 190 Hunt, Leigh, Correspondence of, : 151 381 Harper's Ferry, Battle at, . Chronicles of Carlingford, 50, 242, 482 India, Dalhousie's Administration of, 191 123 Italy, Anti-Papal Literature of, 167 Join Hands—Leave Nobody out, . Charles 331 Jefferson, Thomas, how he foreshadowed 615 531 88 Dwight, Lieut.-Col., Death of, 195 Dalhousie's Administration of India, 191 Lamb, Charles, Dürkheim, 475 420 558 139 24 260 Mistress and Maid, 30, 78, 111, 154, 206, 293 Electric Sparks, 291 354, 545, 579 91 99 6 Mansfield, General J. K. F., Death of, 142 327 Marriages of Consanguinity, Forgery of Bank of England Notes, 466 Mitchel General, French Literature, Sources of, to 612 Medicine and Physiology, Gambler's Idol, 187 Grave of 316 . . on their Tour, 371 Slave Power, The, St. Clement's Eve, a Play by Henry Taylor, 373 Parliamentary History, Curiosities of, . 11 Specie Payments.- Sinking Fund, Piozzi, Mrs., Letters to Mr. Conway, 102 Solar Chemistry, 126 Simancas, Archives of,—Henry VII., 281 Saying Disagreeable Things, Praed, Winthrop Mackworth, The Works Underground Railway, The, Peru and India, Travels in, 597 379 427 Railway Travelling, Influence on Health, 136 Varnhagen, Diary of, 50, 242, 482 What I heard at the Coffee-Party, 67 Wellington Despatches, More, 178 Wales, Prince of, Marriage of, British Population and Letters, Britons, Ancient, Facts concerning, 180, 230 Brooks, Hannah, Inquest on the Body of, 603 Monogram, The, . Nunneries, 431 Peabody, Geo., Persecution of, Cod Liver Oil for fattening Cattle, 494 Pensions, New, in England, 14 Petroleum, Illuminating Power of, Diabetes, Researches on the Nature and Pracd's Charade, Solution of, Rebels, England making Ships for the, Exhibition, The, in Ten Minutes, 480 Recognition of the South, Relic, Discovery of, 144 Railway from Smyrna to Epheus, 370 | Revolutionary Debt, 449 494 Sanscrit Inscriptions, Greece, Improvements in, Spas of Europe, 318 Sensation Paragraphs, 333 389 431 282 Violins, Old, High Price of, Iron Ships, Coating the Hulls of, 318 1“ Violation of Nature," . 505 375 389 194 TALES. 50, 542, 482 Mistress and Maid, 30, 78, 111, 154, 206, 293 What I Heard at the Coffee-Party, 15 354, 545, 579 | Water Babies, The, 390, 450, 495 1 TO THE READERS OF THE “LIVING AGE.” This number of The Living Age concludes the second year of its war trials and perils. These have been severe, and have called for all possible economy; but they have been less than might have been anticipated. The loss of all subscribers in the rebel States has been followed by a great scarcity of stock for making paper, and this has obliged the newspaper press to increase its price. The Living Age has suffered under the tyranny of King Cotton, as have all other periodicals It is a strong proof of the steady attachment of the readers of The Living Age-and a proof for which we are very grateful,--that more than nine-tenths of our subscribers in the loyal States have stood by us through this “year of famine.” We have not been without anxieties, so that every letter enclosing a remittance is received as a special encouragement and personal favor. May we venture so far as to ask every man who thinks well of the work (now approaching its thousandth number, and concluding its seventy-fifth volume) to take so much personal trouble as to induce one or more of his neighbors to order it, and thus to “fill up the old regiments." Number 969, which is printed on the cover this week, is the number of years to which Methuselah attained. We do not expect to live so long, -though we cannot but think how valuable a series of the Antediluvian Age he might have published, at the rate of four volumes to a year. If we can complete twenty-five more volumes of our Living Age, 80 as to make up an invaluable set of one hundred volumes, we shall be abundantly satisfied, and shall feel that we hare left to posterity, as Milton said, a work " which it will not willingly” leave unread. Por Cot comely at two Ахт AXY broken |