motives for observing the moon on various other · grounds. In closing, therefore, this fourth volume, and quitting for the present the subject which has been principally had in view all along, I cannot withhold the expression of the pleasure I have in prospect, when, occupied hereafter in surveying the lights and shadows of the moon in a summer-night, I may reflect that there are thousands, nay tens of thousands, perhaps, who may have been induced, by the contents of these pages, to occupy them. selves at the same moment in contemplating the same inexhaustible sources of wonder, instruction, and delight. END OF THE FOURTH VOLUME, Fig. 116, Bacchus . ............ 117, The Second Lion . . . . . . . . . . Page 10 IN THE ANDRIA OF TERENCE. 31 119, The Grave or Funeral Ur ....... 121, Væ! Vå! .......... 123, The Child, separate .......... IN THE EDIPUS TYRANNUS. 124, Edipus . . . . . . . . . . ... .. • •*: · · · · · · 101 .. .' . Fig. 130, The Figure 2. . . . . . . . . .i 131, Mount Cithæron . . . . . . 132, The Boy that leads Teiresias ..... 134, Jocasta . . . . . . . . . . . . . IL PENSEROSO OF MILTON. 144, The left-hand Jay or Daw, in the moon . .: 260 145, The right-hand Jay or Daw, in the moon .. 261 146, The hieroglyphic left-hand Jay or Daw .226 147, The hieroglyphic right-hand Jay or Daw .. 263 148, The hieroglyphic letter T, or Toth .... 264 149, The Groupe of Figures formed by the Shadows of the Moon, as seen with the naked Eye . , 269 James Gillet, Printer, Crown.court, Flcet-street, London. |