PASSENGERS HOMEWARDS. By the St. Leonard, from Bengal:-Lieut.-Col. Fort, Bengal Army; Capt Davison (late of the Northumbrian); Lieuts. Lormer (left at Ascension) and Smith, 45th reg.; Surgeons Newmarsh and M'Rea; Mr. Hawkins; Miss S. Plumb; 2 servants, and 4 of the crew of the Northumbrian. By the Marcelly, from Bengal:-Capts. Moore and Burt, 14th Foot; Mr. J. Wilson; Mrs. Crews, and Miss Holyoak. By the Borneo, from Bencoolen :-Misses Susan Boyes and Nash; Master Nash, and two servants. By the Topaz, from the Mauritius :-Lieut. P. Fitzgerald, 29th Foot. By the Susan, from Madras: Col. Hamilton; Maj. Cole; Lieuts. Macgregor, MacKeane, Birch, and Hart; Mesdames Thomas and Bromhead; and 48 invalids of 45th Foot. By the Mountaineer, from Bombay :-Capt. Thomas, Haviside. By the Madeline, from the Mauritius:-Capts. Cochrane, (from Calcutta,) Parker (Isle of Wight); Messrs. Sergeant and Robinson, and Mrs. Sergeant. By the Alfred, from China :-Mr. James Ilberry, merchant. By the Indian Chief, from Bengal :-Lieut.-Col. J. Puller; Mr. Jas. Stewart, merchant; Master Fuller; Mrs. and Miss Fuller, and two servants. By the Othello from Bengal :-Capt. J. Kennedy; Lieut. W. Ellis, Wm. Earle, Esq.; Mrs. A. Burns; Misses S. and A. Burns, and two servants. By the Palambam, from Bombay; Capts. Frederick Browne and Wm. Eyre, and Mr. John R. Shower. By the Thames, from Bengal :-Lieut. Sykes, 45th reg., and Mr. William Brandon. By the James Sibbald, from Madras:-Major Irving, 1st Mad. N.I.: Capts. Macdonald (Royals) and Metcalfe (Mad. N. I.); Lieuts. Fothergill, (48th foot,) Armstrong, (30th foot,) and Currie (9th Mad. N. I.); Ens. Colebeck, 4th N. I.; Dr. M'Leod; Mr. Tabor; Messdames Armstrong and Newmarch and child; Masters W. Lambe and Metcalfe, 80 invalids, 9 women, and 6 children of the 30th and 89th regs. To CORRESPONDENTS. Several Articles communicated from Bengal and Bombay-ɑ Letter from Madras-an Article on Courts of Justice, from the Cape -and a Letter from a Retired Surgeon of the East India Company's Army on the Medical Service of India-are unavoidably deferred till next month. We have continued, in our present Number, the plan of giving the information reaching us from the several Presidencies, under the respective heads of the communications themselves. The minor incidents of News to be gleaned from the Indian Papers, are so scanty and unimportant as to be not worth repeating, especially as the little so to be obtained is now generally given in the Papers of the day, and thereby loses its novelty and interest. That, however, which the Daily Papers do not publish, namely, the Civil and Military Promotions, Births, Marriages, Deaths, and Shipping Intelligence of India, will still have its accustomed space. INDEX TO THE SIXTEENTH VOLUME A Arbitrary Taxation of the East India Company; efforts making in Bengal to America, Spanish, 249. African Association, and Ledyard the Traveller, 261. Algiers, State of, 289. Geographical Description, 289. Population, 290. Arracan, State of our newly acquired Territory in, 169. B Bengal Army, Declining Attachment and Fidelity of the, 113. Births, 211, 395, 593. Censorship of the Press in India, Origin, History, and present State of the, 65. Colombia, Recollections of, in 1812, 120. Carnatic Debt, Debate at the East India House on the, 203. Civil and Military Intelligence, 204, 391, 583. Captive, The, to his Harp, 248. College of Physicians, Manifesto of the, 266. Intended Petition to Parlia- ment of the Independent Physicians, 275. Court of Directors, A Call to the, 365. Committee, Letter of Mr. Babington's Successor in the, 417. Cyrenaica, Recent Travels in the, 494. Capture of the Chief Mate, of the Brig Meridian, Narrative of the, 581. Central India, Reported New Government in Upper and, 164. D Dimensions of the Ancient Egyptian Cubit, Determination of the, 142. Despotism, 279. Discontinuance of the Shems al Akhbar,' a Native Newspaper, 175. Debate at the East India House, 194. Grant to Captain Thomas Buchanan, Dillon, Trial of Captain, 547. 16. 2 S E East India Company, Claims of the, to the Right of imposing Taxes without Emigration, and the East India Company's Monopoly, 129. East India Company's Army, proposed Improvement in the, 145. Expedition from India to Egypt, Journal of the, Chap. I., 135. Departure of Elphinstone, Governor, the late Governor Adam, and the Indian John Free Trade to the East, 126. F Fergusson, Mr. Robert Cutlar, (from the Bengal Hurkaru,' of August 17th, G General Summary of News from the Eastern World, 160. H Homer, On the Poems attributed to, 81. I Italy, Travels in, by an East Indian Home on Leave, No. I., 441. Approach Introduction of Trial by Jury and Abolition of Slavery, by Sir Alexander Journal kept at Bangkok, 333. Judgments of the Three Judges of the King's Court, at Calcutta, on Registering Journey across the Peninsula of India, from Madras to Bombay, No. VI., 97. Latest Intelligence, Summary of the, connected with the Eastern World, 160. Settlers, ib. Newly acquired Territory in Arracan, 169. Account of the Progress Languages of Asia, Observations on the Classification of the, 541. Family of Monument to the Marquis of Hastings, at Calcutta, 180. Medical Reform, Progress of, in England, 266. of the Independent Physicians, 275. ded Petition to Parliament Madras Army, Injustice toons, from a Correspondent on the Coast, 381. Madras, General Letter of News from, 143. 382. 556. 559. 564. Mexico, or New Spain, 535. Its Situation, ib. Metallic Produce, 536. Its New Post and Settlement of Amherst, on the River of Martaban, Advantages 'Oriental Herald,' To the Indian Correspondents of the, 218. Oriental Literature, Progress of, 420. P Postscript-Suppression of another English Newspaper, in India, 215. 389. Pompilius, Numa, and Egeria. Scene,-The African Forest, by Moonlight, 457. Poetry-Lines on Navarino, 15. Spanish Serenade, 32. For Ever Thine, 80. Parsee Document, Curious, 192. R Reforms in India, Suggested by Sir Edward East, No. II., 17. Different Inha- |