The Statue of Lord Byron.-There has been much misrepresentation on the subject of the statue executed by Thorwalsden of Lord Byron. It cost, not £30,000, but £2,000. This sum was raised by subscription, and paid for the statue; a fact which disposes of the imaginary reverting right of the artist's executors. and all the fanciful proceedings ascribed to them. The statue was never removed from the London Docks, where it was originally deposited. The Queen and the Jeweller.-The following is a copy of a note sent by Anna, Queen of James I, to George Heriot, the wealthy jeweller:-"Ane presept of the queen. -Geordg Heriatt, I earnestlie dissyr youe present to send me tua hundrethe pundes vith all expidition, becaus I maun hest me away presentie. ANNA R." A Novelty,-On the statue of the Duke of Wellington being elevated in front of the Royal Exchange, on the 18th instant, it was mentioned by Mr. L. Jones that that was "The first equestrian statue ever raised during the life of the person represented. Never had either king or subject the opportunity of seeing himself so represented be fore." The late Mr. Campbell.-Application has been made by Mr. Campbell's executors to the Dean and Chapter of Westminster, for the purpose of ascertaining whether permission could be granted, on application, for the interment of his remains in the Poet's Corner of the Abbey. The answer was in the affirmative. Mr. Dickens.-This gentleffia leaves England with his wife and family, to take up his abode for a time in Italy. He proceeds, in the first instance, to Genoa. King Charles's Bible.-At Broomfield, near Chelmsford, is a bible which belonged to King Charles the First, the date A.D., 1529, Norton and Bill, printers. It is a folio, bound in purple velvet; the arms of England richly embroidered on both covers; and on a fly leaf is written, "This bible was King Charles the First's, afterwards it was my grandfather's, Patrick Youngs, Esq., who was library keeper to his Majesty, now given to the church at Broomfield, by me, Sarah Atwood, August 4th, 1723." The bible is perfect, but there is no signature to sheet I; the pages run from 84 to 87, there being no 85 and 86. Slavery in England.-In the twelfth year of Edward III, a general commission was issued to manumit the slaves. The greater part of the peasants in some countries of Germany had acquired their liberty before the end of the thirteenth century; in other parts, as well as in all the northern and eastern regions of Europe, they remained much longer in a state of vassalage. Particular instruments for the manumission of slaves in England are extant of the age of Henry VIII; and instances of predial servitude have been discovered as late as the time of Elizabeth. Hints for Talkers.-He who will never condescend to remark "how very hard it rained last night;" that "the dust was very troublesome in the park;" or that the "thermometer stood this morning in the shade, at 720;" will justly be considered a morose fellow, and will be as much avoided by good company as the man who never ventures into a more questionable proposition. He who cries "Pish!" when he hears that frugality is a virtue, or that Joseph Hume sometimes talks without book, must be content to pass for a free-thinker; and he who will not stoop to vent an occasional Joe Miller, must make up his mind to sit often mumchance, and to find no favour for his most brilliant bon mot. The Monks and the People. - Dr. Ormerod, the historian of Cheshire, has collected from the MS. leger-book of Vale-Royal abbey some curious particulars relating to the hostility which the natives of Dernhall manor for a long time displayed towards their monastic proprietors in the fourteenth century. In the year 1321, says Dr. Ormerod, "the monks who ventured to pass their consecrated limits, were pursued by the Winningtons, Leightons, and Bulkeleys, and saved their lives only by flight; and, in the same year, the leger-book records a still more atrocious instance, by which it appears that the Ollingtons murdered John Boddeworth, a monk of the abbey, and played at football with the head after the perpetration of the deed." Great Minds command Respect.-"If common-place men, hurried by vulgar perplexities into a display of passionate fear, extort from us a pitying smile: on the other hand, we regard with awe a spirit in which the seed of a great destiny is sown-which can accelerate neither the good nor the evil, Editor, at the Office, 2, Tavistock-street, Covent neither the happiness nor the unhappiness, that will spring up from it."-Göethe. Anecdote of a Spanish Grandee.-Carlos IV, in friendly conversation, one day asked All communications to be addressed to the garden. LONDON: Printed and Published by AIRD and BURSTALL, 2, Tavistock street, Covent-garden, and sold by all Booksellers and Newsmen. China, Seeds collected in, 126 Coningsby, or the New Generation, 354 Annese Gennaro; or, Entertainment for a Correspondence of Sir Francis Drake, 30 Bablake Hospital, 241 Baccio Bandinelli, 92 Bacon's Weaknesses, Lord, 330 Bankrupt's Prayer, 140 Cosmoramic, Dioramic, &c., Exhibition, 237 Cuckoo, the, 355 Cultivation of the Tea Plant by the Eng- Cures by Yeast, 105 Curiosities Extraordinary, 39 Curious Particulars respecting Flora Mac- Customs and Curious Ceremonies in Arra- Damascus, a Coffee-house at, 126 Dead Guest, the, 274, 291, 306, 324, 340 Bartholomew's Hospital, History of St., 343 Deaths of Aged Persons, 264 Beckford, the late William, 294 Bell and Mr. Bunn, Mr., 191 Bernadotte, the late king of Sweden, 206 Blood for Blood, 249 Bloomfield, the Noble House of, 40 Bokhara, Plan of Dr. Wolff, the Missionary Bristol, Redcliffe-street in, 97 Bunn and a Bell, a, 200 Burdett, Death of Sir Francis, 62 Canada, Nova Scotia, &c. 124 Canadian Muskanungee Fishing, 238 Capello, Story of Bianca, 54 Decorations of the New Houses of Parlia- ment, 305, 322 Deeds of Blood, 131 Defence of Vegetable Diet, 266 De Lorraine, Henry, the last duke of Guise, Desponding Lover to his Harp, 39 Doings of the Puritans at Winchester, 269 Dry Rot in the Potatoe, 350 Duels, Condemnation of, by James I, 180 Earthquake, the, 215 Cardinal Wolsey, Contemporary Satire Electrical Magazine, 43 on, 184 Campbell, Life of the Poet, 386 Census, the Irish, in 1841, 40 Celibacy, the Horrors of, 55, Charles Kemble's Readings, Mr., 348 Elliston Papers, the, 234 Embankment of the Thames, 340 Emperor and the Comedian, the, 301 Chaucer, Passages in the life of Geoffrey, 107 English Life in the Eighteenth Century, Chemical Manure, 120 Childishness of Napoleon, 404 163, 178, 198, 216, 245, 260, 299, 315, Entomological Society, 30 Epigram on the Covent Garden Demon- Evelyn's Petition, Benevolent Appeal, 280 Excursions in the Vicinity of London, 365 Fairy Rose, the, 87 Filing Letters, a new mode of, 196 Kafirs, Doings of the, 109 Katherine of Berain, the Mother of Wales, 347 Kernan's (Dr.) Lectures, 73 Ladrone and Malay Pirates, 37 Laissez Faire and Young England, 340 Forewarned; anecdote of the Duke of Wel- Late Hour System, 187 lington, 110 Forsaken Beauty, the, 254 Fortune's Frolics, 125 Frederick the Great, anecdote of, 255 French Church in Edward-street, Soho, Funerals, Ancient, 158 Gambling in the Eighteenth Century, 198 Gatherer, 15, 31, 47, 62, 79, 94, 110, 126, Genius of Solitude, the, 125 Late Hours of Business, 30 Lavatories and Cloisters at Peterborough, 16 Lenten Fast and Promotion of Festivities, Life and its Duties, 136 Life in Germany, as it appears to an Eng- Lincoln's Inn New Hall and Library, 50 George IV's Statue and Nelson's Pillar, 27 London Bridge; Triumph of Ethelred, or George I and Sophia of Zell, 165 German Liberal, Reflections of a, 37 Gibraltar, 392 Gleanings in Middlesex, 194 Gluten Grain, 93 Meat, 13 Grecian Head, 158 the Fall of, 190 Lotteries of the Last Century, 263 Mahomet's Birthday, 861 Grandmamma's Grace before and after Malmaison, the Bells of, 73 Indian Tragedy, 26 Insects, New, 143 Intrigue and Love, 167 Irish Highwayman, the, 141 Ireland; Drainage, Railways, &c. 388 James II, Statue of, 113 Naworth Castle, History of, 346 John Perrott, the Banker of fourscore years Necromancers and Jews, 35 ago, 114 Juvenile Literature, 152 New Calamity; an Author writing too Nelson, a practical Quiz, 84 Play Licensing, or Court Folly, 253 Nicholas, the Emperor and his Empire, 361 Polytechnic Magazine, 157, 236 Noble House of Durham, the, 80 Bedford, 369 Abinger, 376 395, 410 265 Canning, 249 Notes on Buchanan's Memoirs, by the late O'Connell, Mr., Merrymaking, 183 Opening of the Tomb of Henry the First, Quid pro Quo, 400, 404 Railroads, march of, 177 Rebellion of 1798, a Scene from the, 52 Retreat from Moscow, 229 Revolt of the Harem; Moorish Ladies, 282 Riembarn, the saintly Murderer, 98 Russian Emperors on their Travels, 277 Sabbath Thoughts, 294 Sackville, Lord George, not Junius, 103 Partiality of Animals for Wine and Spirits, Sam Sly's African Journal, 399 164 Parricide, the, 243 Pasiglot System; an entirely new practical Pictorial Geography, 381 Pictorial Tour in the Mediterranean, 398 Pilgrim's Remonstrances, the, 253 Plague of Locusts, 31 Plan of Wolff, the Missionary Player's Accident, the, 94 Scandinavian Usages, 231 Scenes on the Mediterranean, 361, 392 Scientific Meetings, 42, 60, 236 Sefi, the Blood-shedder, 214, 226, 250 Servants in the Netherlands, Treatment of, Seven Sleepers of Ephesus, 122 Slavery for Ever in the United States, 374 Society, a Mysterious, 207 Southey's Portraits of Jeffrey and Scott, 78 Sporting Adventure, 415 Valencia and the Valencians, 361 Stark Lawrence, a Family Picture; a Tale Venice, Model of, 382 from the German, 9 Statistics, 14 Staudigl, Life of Herr, 252 Stoddart, Colonel, and Captain Conolly, 143 Studies of Sensation and Event, 334 Systematic Colonisation, 413 Teeth, the Handbook of the, 414 Vesuvius Guide, the, 124 Victoria and Prince Albert Gallery, the, 168 Volunteers and Militia of the Eighteenth Walker, the Ghost of Anne, 133 Westminster, the New Palace at, 353 Wife Market and Old Maid's Comfort, 397 Timber, Different Methods for the Preser- Winstanley, Mr., the Builder of the Origi nal Eddystone Lighthouse, 140 Winter Evening's Song, 105, 335 Witness, an Irish, 108 Wolff's Progress, Dr., 366 Wreck, the, 170 Wretched Miser, the; or, God's Revenge against the Oppressor, 205 Yeast, Cures by, 105 Young Queen of Spain, the, 203 LIST OF ENGRAVINGS. The New Royal Exchange, 1 Arms of Lord Langdale, 25 Herne Church, 33 Arms of Lord Bloomfield, 40 Bablake Hospital, at Coventry, 241 St. Mary's Conduit, at Lincoln, 257 Architecture of the Middle Ages, 273 The New Hall and Library of Lincoln's Interior of the King-street Exhibition of The Miser and his Treasure, 56 Arms of the Earl of Harrowby, 88 Statue of James II., 113 Arms of the Earl of Liverpool, 121 Arms of the Earl of Sandwich, 137 the Decorative Arts, 289 Napoleon's Revisit to Marengo, 296 the Pilgrim, 305 Group from a Painting by Corbould, 305 312 Principal Door of the New House of Lords, 321 Arms of the Noble House of Ailesbury, 329- View of Peterborough and its Cathedral, 129 Plan_ of the Proposed Embankment, and The Bishop's Palace at Wells, 146 Entering Church, 153 Christ Church at Turnham-green, 192 The Lavatories and Cloisters of Peterbo- Arms of the Earl of Pomfret, 169 The Warder Letter File, 196 Arms of the Earl of Lonsdale, 201 An Ancient Monument, 209 The Patent Pelletan Light Apparatus, 211 Trafalgar-square, 369 |