Page images
PDF
EPUB
[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small]
[merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors]

INDEX TO VOLUME XVII.

AMERICA in 1846.-The Past-The Future...

A Vision of the Night: A Poem. By S. H. Whitman..
Administration of Indian Affairs.-1st. Annual Report of the Commission-

ers of Indian Affairs, transmitted with the President's Message, 1st
session 29th Congress. T. Barnard. 2d. Notes on the Iroquois ;
or, Contributions to the Statistics, Aboriginal History, Antiquities
and General Ethnology of Western New-York. By Henry R.
Schoolcraft..

Asdrubal's Wife. By W. H. Hosmer..

A Brief Review of the late occurrences in Poland.

Page

57

116

333

465

474

Brazil Sketches of Residence and Travels in, &c. By D. P. Kidder, A.M 444

..126

Critical and Miscellaneous Essays of Alexander H. Everett,..
Commercial Reform.-1st. Annual Report of the Secretary of the Treas-
ury of the United States, Dec., 1845-R. J. Walker. 2d. Annual
Financial Statement of the Minister of England, Sir Robert Peel...214
Captain's Story, The. By W. S. M.........

Cromwell and his Times.-1st. Letters and Speeches of Oliver Crom-
well. By Thomas Carlyle. 2d. History of the English Revolution
of 1640. By F. Guizot.

China and its Prospective Trade.

.305

..336

Etchings with a Chisel.-The Miraculous Picture-Do not be afraid of
Grace and Beauty-Prince Metternich-By their Fruits ye shall
know them..

.382

..118

English and French Intervention in the Rio de la Plata. By Hon. Caleb
Cushing....

..163, 480

Favorite, The. Translated from the German of Johanna Schopenhauer.
By Nathaniel Greene....

..353, 456

Game of North America, The; its Nomenclature, Habits, Haunts, and
Seasons, with Hints on the Science of Woodcraft. By Frank For-
ester. No. II. The Woodcock.

[blocks in formation]

Horæ Sicilianæ. By Signor Salvatore Abbate E. Migliore....
Hymn. By Hon. Caleb Cushing......

....17

.130, 187, 282

223

..368

Independent Treasury, The.-1st. House Bill. 2d. Report of Senate
Finance Committee-Warehousing Bill-Mints in New-York and
Charleston, S. C...

..323

Is it the Policy of England to Fight or Trade with the United States? By
Henry Wikoff...

421

James Nayler. By J. G. Whittier....

.193

Jackson. By J. R. Orton...

.288

Knight in Armor, The. A Fragment from the Journal of an Officer. By

Mrs. E. F. Ellet..

..112

Lament for the Old Year. By W. H. C. Hosmer...

Mystery, The. By R. S. S. Andros..

Page

..96

.30

Manufacture of Wool, Silk, Cotton, and Flax, Ancient and Modern.... ...40
Monthly Financial and Commercial Article.. .65, 148, 232, 312, 389, 467
Monthly Literary Bulletin..

.....78, 158, 240

Marginalia; embracing Critical Notices of Carlyle, Dr. Cheever, Mr.
Street, Dr. Bush, &c. By Edgar A. Poe...

Man and the Earth. By Mary Orme.

..268

Mexico. By Hon. Caleb Cushing..

..388
..444

[blocks in formation]

Progress in America; or, a Speech in Sonnets, on Great Britain and the
United States; not delivered either in Parliament or Congress. By
the author of 66 Yemassee,"
," "Life of Marion," &c....

Polish Revolution of 1830, The. By Major G. Tochman.

Political Statistics.-Census of New-York, by Counties, and the New

Providence. By Miss Mary Orme..

Apportionment.

Political Statistics.-War Bill, and Vote thereon...

.91

..47

.141

.400

.479

..273

Reflections on the "Balance of Power;" Rise, Progress and results;
Application to the New World, &c...
Report of the Secretary of War, &c.-Topographical Bureau of Engi-
neers; Military and Geographical Survey West of the Mississippi;
Survey of the Lakes, River and Harbor Improvements, &c. .......289
Rosas-Struggle of the Republican against the monarchical principle in the
Argentine Republic. By W. A. Hogg..

Songs of Labor, No. IV.; The Ship Builders. By J. G. Whittier.
Sonnet-Student's Night Watch. By the author of the "Yemassee.”.

..369

..257

.456

The Reciprocal Influence of the Physical Sciences, and of Free Poli-
tical Institutions..

.3

[blocks in formation]
[ocr errors]

THE RECIPROCAL INFLUENCE OF THE PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND OF FREE POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS.

[ocr errors]

The poor are condemned to a want of that leisure which is necessary for the improvement of the mind. They are the predestinated victims of ignorance and prejudice. All the powers they possess are engaged in the pursuit of miserable expedients to protract their existence. Whatever be the prejudice, the weakness, or the superstition of their age and country, they have scarcely any chance to escape from it. It is melancholy to reflect how few mo ments they can have of complaisance-of exultation-of honest pride, or of joy. Is there not a state of society practicable, in which leisure shall be made the inheritance of every one of its members ?"-GODWIN'S ENQUIRER.

THE innumerable schemes which, from time to time, are making their appearance in this country for the improvement of its Social Condition, is about the most conspicuous feature of our civilization. Corporations are created; capital is invested; presses are established, and, we ought, perhaps, to add, mad-houses filled, in giving expression to this fertile enthusiasm.

These reformers may be divided into the following classes, each of which behold, in their several devices, the most immediate instrumentality for emancipating society from sin and grief:

First, the religious reformer, who looks to spiritual influences entirely for man's political and social regeneration.

Second, the socialist, who fixes his hopes upon an entire re-organization of industry, and the emancipation of the cardinal passions.

Third, the agrarian, who requires a forced and periodical equalization of the landed property of the country among all its inhabitants.

Fourth, the political reformer, who relies upon the equalization of the duties and the rights of all, by the operation of laws which shall secure to every man as much freedom as may comport

with the enjoyment of an equal freedom by all his fellow-citizens.

All the various orders, sects and schools of American meliorists may be included under one or another of these denominations.

We can't have labored thus long at this our post editorial, with however indifferent success, without having defined to which of the above classes we affect to belong. We are by no means unconscious of the obligations of our race to the manifold and substantial labors of the spiritualist and the socialist, and, so far as defining prevailing social deformities, to the agrarian. But we have no faith in the schemes of either of them for bringing out and setting in motion all the progressive tendencies of a nation. It is not our purpose, however, at present, to define the insufficiency of their several systems; first, because the criticism of others is a very imperfect mode of advancing one's own opinions; and, secondly, because we can hardly hope to detain the attention of our readers, even for the space necessary to explain,--as it is our wish and will be our effort to do-the grounds of our confidence in the efficacy of political agencies, to achieve that final re

« PreviousContinue »