Hindoo festivals, compared with those of other nations, iii. 75. marriage, i. 76. The nuptial ceremonies fully detailed, iii. 298. schools, i. 75; simplicity of a common education, 75; instruction of the .... village; general description of a village in Guzerat, iii. 63. Poetical, from ....... women; their delicacy, beauty, dress, manners, and general character, i. 73, &c. iv. 312. delicacy of bathing in the Nerbudda, ii. 113. ... moral and religious character, i. 137. simplicity of female manners, i. 79. expected duties of a Hindoo wife, and future rewards in consequence, Hindostan, derivation of the name, i. 59. invaded by the Mahomedans, i. 89. Hindu Pantheon, extract from, iv. 309. Hinduism compared with Christianity, iv. 311. Hippocampus, sea-horse on the Malabar coast, i. 341. Hippopotamus, river-horse, described, ii. 181. Hiroo Nand; amiable character of that visier, iii. S07; more particularly delineated, Hirrawem, dress used on the pilgrimage to Mecca, ii. 509. Hirrawen, ceremonies at Mecca during the hadje, or pilgrimage, ii. 509. Hodges, Thomas, surprizing circumstances in his life, predicted by a brahmin, Hog; wild hogs in India, ii. 286. Hog Island, taken by the English, i. 453. Holwell, governor, his character of the gentoos, iv. 308. Homer, poetical illustration of Guzerat, iii. 258. Honey, wild, food of John the Baptist, explained, i. 46. Hooghly river, formation of that stream, iv. 99. Hooli; Hindoo festival, iii. 74. Horæ Biblicæ, extracts from, i. 124. Horn, its exalted meaning in India, iii. 278. Horn of victory, Futty Sihng's chief title, iii. 278. Horne, bishop, reflections on his Commentary on the Psalms, iii. 43. Amiable cha- racter, iii. 44. Horses, their variety in India, iii. 100. Horses at Onore; infamous conduct of Tippoo's officers concerning them, iv. 170; Hospitality to travellers in Guzerat, ii. 415. Modern oriental hospitality, iii. 188— 190. Hossamlee, battle of, in Guzerat, ii. 72. Hottentots at the Cape of Good Hope, ii. 178; general character of those in the in- Hot wells at Vazarabhy, iv. 250; particularised, ibid. ... lamentations of his family, ii. 238. addresses to his horse, Zual-Jinnah, ii. 238, 9. Huma, bird of happy omen in Asia, iv. 191. chief ornament of Tippoo Sultan's throne, iv. 191. Humaioon, emperor of Delhi, iii. 146. Human sacrifice, extraordinary one at Neriad, ii. 93. Humiliation, degrading obeisance required by the Greek and Roman emperors, iii. 304. Humming birds, in South America, their great beauty and variety, i. 7. Hummums in India, their great refreshment and use, i. 83. Those at Surat de- Hunting; magnificence of the ancient royal hunts in India, ii. 488; description of a Hurra Punt, an infamous traitor among the English allies, ii. 97; his deserved fate, 99. Hyder Ally Khan, his letter to colonel Wood, iii. 287. .. his character, compared with that of his son Tippoo Sultaun, iv. 187; his birth, rise, and progress in life, 188. Hyder Nuggur, Gaut, taken from the English by Hyder's troops, iv. 113. Ice used in India, ii. 227. ... abundance prepared for Alexander the Great, ii. 227. Ichneumon, Mongouse of Malabar, i. 358. Its instinctive remedy for the bite of a Idols, manufacture of those in India, iii. 340. Infanticide in Guzerat, iii. 422; abolished by governor Duncan, ibid. Infants, given by Hindoo mothers, a living offering to alligators, iv. 310. India, its Greek derivation, i. 59; its ancient trade with the Greeks, i. 245. Indus, one of the sacred rivers of India, i. 376. Insects, at Bombay, described, i. 46. Iron earth in Malwa, iv. 25. Iron ore, smelting houses, and iron forges in Malabar, i. 366. .. particular account of those in the Gwalier district, iv. 27. ... Ispahan, particulars of a Persian funeral, iii. 380. Ivory mosque, at Ahmedabad, iii. 126. Jabo, rajah, his visit, iii. 482. Jaggernaut, account of the Hindoo temples, idols, priests, worship, and death of the Jaghire, grant of territory in India, ii. 426. Jago, St. island of, i, 5. Jaina, extraordinary tribe of brahmins, ii. 312; their cruelty to other brahmins, ibid. beauty of the lake, 63. Jami, author of the Yuzef Zelekha, iii. 236. Jane, queen of Navarre, iv, 312. Japan earth, its manufacture, i. 304. Japan rose, i. 32. Jarode, Sindia's encampment there, iii. 475. Jattara, Hindoo festival on the Nerbudda, ii. 114, 236. Java pigeon, columba coronata, ii. 185. Jeajee Appa, a great Mahratta chieftain, iii. 350; assassinated in his durbar tent, iii. 352. Jellinghy river, iv. 99. Jercoon, fortress in Malwa, iv. 20. Jereeb, measurement in India, iv. 60. Jesswant Nugger, iv. 76. Jesswant Sihng, Hindoo rajah, his beautiful letter to Aurungzebe, iii. 20. Jevanjee Furdonjee, letter from, iii. 358. Jewasse, a plant for screens in India, i. 206. Jews, at Cochin, colony there from whence emigrated, i. 328. Extraordinary history, .... and reflections on those people, i. 333. excellent reasons for their conversion to Christianity, iv. 299. Equally applica- Jiggerkhars, Liver-eaters in India, ii. 521. Johilla, romantic source of that river, ii. 308. Johnson, Dr. his opinion in favour of converting the heathen, iv. 298. Jones, Sir William, his beautiful reflection on an India voyage, ii. 212. Jones, Sir William, his illustrious character, ii. 213; his comparison between Asia Juarree, valuable grain in India, ii. 406. Jugglers, their extraordinary feats in India, ii. 476. Proofs of their swallowing a Julius Cæsar, his remark on the Druids, iv. 314. Jumma-bunda, assessment and settlement of the landed revenue in Guzerat, ii. 419. Jumna, appearance of that river at Delhi, iv. 67; its junction with the Ganges, 85. Kaaba, temples at Mecca, iii. 135. Kairah, a fortified town in Guzerat, ii. 77. Further account of it, iii. 96. Kalleah Deh, summer palace at Oojen, iv. 6. Kama-deva, Camdeo, the Hindoo god of love, ii. 510; his attributes and attendants, 510; hymn to that deity 511. Karra Nuddy, salt river in Malwa, iv. 37. Kessai, anecdote of with Al Mamon, iii. 179. Khan Khannah, lord of lords, iv. 66; his prodigality and proverbial extravagance, 67. Kimcutodra Chowkey, a celebrated Serai, ii. 214. Kimcobs or Keemcabs, a rich manufacture, iii. 182. Kistna, a sacred river of India, i. 376. Kokarea, magnificent lake near Ahmedabad, iii. 130. Koojneer, in Malwa, iv. 13. Koor, explanation of that singular custom, ii. 392. Koorios, their history, i, 446. Koran, the sacred scripture of the Mahomedans, i. 92. Kuchinder, in Malwa, iv. 16. Kurkul pagoda, near Mangulore, i. 311. Kusroe, tomb of, iv. 84. Lacedemonians, in many respects like Hindoos, i. 285. Lacoondra, river in Malwa, iv. 10. Lady, prophet's description of an oriental beauty, iii. 419. Land and sea breezes, accounted for on the coast of Malabar, 1. 308. Landed property in India, division, ii. 432. Subject discussed, 438; deeds of sale, 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 Lions, habits of those in the south of Africa, ii. 186. Discovery of lions in Guzerat, Lion's Rump, mountain near the Cape of Good Hope, ii. 178. 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, 275; Lodge, in cucumber fields and melon grounds, illustrates a passage in Isaiah, ii. 450. 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- Lullabhy, his power in curing the bite of serpents, iii. 248; process described, 249; 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. 116; transactions between 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 |