PAGE 174 , of, A PAGE Convict ship, Description of a, 173 349 419 Correspondence of the Baron de 353 Cotton Trade, Letters on the, ,301 86 Cupid and Hymen, An Allegory, 217 326 D 350 410 Denmark and Sweden, Boisgelin's 305 89 Deposition of the King of Sweden, 265 Description of Mr. Pitt's Monument, 421 the veil, 347 391 Discovery of the Body of Charles I., 323 83 Dryden, Notice of Scott's edition of, 139 439 Dwina, Song of, 438 156 E Earthquake at Caraccas, Education, American, 305 350 231 Egina, Discovery of Statues in the Isle 88 Emigrant, Swiss, 348 896 Emerald Ísle, Review of the, 52 S49 246 F 438 174 Flinders's, Captain, Voyage of Disco- 207 very, 439 329 404 437 French, Retreat from Russia of the, 79 263 G Gallery of Pictures, British, 350 Geography of Asia, Dr. Moodie's, 459 163 Giaour, Lord Byron's Poem of the, 380 156 414 423 249 350 353 315 87. 439 H 15S Poos, PAGE PACE Pope, Curious Advertisement of, 82 Pyrometers of Clay, Experiments on, 87 414 Q 404 153 437 R 350 221 Retreat of the French from Russia, 79 345 Reynolds, Anecdotes of Sir Joshua, 513 522 s 255 223 Scott, Walter, Notice of his edition of 222 139 223 Seat, The, 82 83 438 by Burns, 263 315 Southey's Life of Nelson, 249 Stael, Mad. de, sur L'Allemagne, 85 La Litterature, 177 439 265 348 88 Swizosiow and the beautiful Stephania, 425 421 350 T 519 459 410 82 Obituary, 510 Welsl. Colony in America, 175 Wieland, Account of C. M., 232 Wielicska, Salt Mines of, Will, Shakspeare's, Winds, Playfair's Theory of, Wollaston's, Dr. Micrometer, Woodfall's Junius, 340 Wm. 237 Years 10 Come, (Poem,) 517 Yezides, Seet of the 494 264 168 ANALECTIC MAGAZINE. FOR JULY, 1813: CONTENTS. 82 Curious Advertisement of Pope, ib. Colquhoun on the Condition of the Address to the Spirit of a departed Biography of Capt. Jacob Jones, 70 Friend, SPIRIT OF MAGAZINES. ScientiFIC INTELLIGENCE, 87 Retreat of the French from Russia, 79 LITERARY INTELLIGENCE, 88 Junius : including Letters of the same writer under other signa- [From the Eclectic Review, for February, 1813.] ANY general observations, that might be not impertinently made on the writings of Junius, will more properly follow than precede a somewhat particular and extended notice of this edi- tion, the announcement of which will have strongly excited the curiosity of many of our readers. And it is a signal testimony to the eminence of the powers displayed in these letters, that, at the distance of nearly half a century from their first coming forth; that after a great number of subsequent political censors have had each 1 his share of attention, and perhaps admiration, and are now in a great measure forgotten; and that in times like the present, superabounding with strange events, and flagrant examples of political depravity of their own-they should still hold such a place in public estimation, that the appearance of an edition enlarged and illustrated from the store of materials left by the original publisher, will be regarded as an interesting event in the course of our literature. An interest that has thus continued to subsist in vigour aster the loss of all temporary stimulants, and that is capable of so lively an excitement, at this distant period by a circumstance tending to make us a little better acquainted with the author's character, and to put us in more complete possession of his writings, gives assurance that this memorable work may maintain its fame to an indefinite period, and will go down with that portion of our literature, which, in the language of pride and poetry, we call immortal. All will now agree in opinion with the present editor, that it was not vanity in the writer himself to avow a confidence of being read by a remote generation, avoiding, however, to assign, as the strongest foundation of that confidence, his superlative execution; but assuredly this claim to perpetuity was not far from his thoughts, when he mentioned only the principles of his work as the ground of his expectation; “ When kings and ministers,” he said, “are forgotten, when the force and direction of personal satire is no longer understood, and when measures are felt only in their remotest consequences, this book will, I believe, be found to contain principles worthy to be transmitted to posterity.” The letters published with the signature of Junius constitute very considerably less than half of the present work. It begins with a Preliminary Essay of 160 pages; next are Private Letters to the late Mr. II. S. Woodfall, the publisher of the Public Advertiser, extending through nearly 100 pages; and these are followed by a private correspondence between Junius and Mr. Wilkes, occupying full 70 pages. Then come the well known Letters, reaching to within 60 or 70 pages of the end of the second volume. This last portion of the second volume, and the whole of the third, are occupied by “Miscellaneous Letters of Junius,” which appeared under various signatures, chiefly in the Public Advertiser, before and during the appearance of those of Junius, and most of them verified by internal or circumstantial evidence to be by the same hand. Thus the publication assumes the merit of being, as far as there are any means or chance of accomplishing, a recovery and collection of the entire printed works of the author of Junius's Letters, and challenges the grateful favour of the public, for a service of so much more interesting a kind than it can often happen to a private individual to have the power of conferring |